HomeMy WebLinkAbout1999-10-02 - Orange Coast Pilot. .
SERVING THE NEWPORT-~SA COMtv\UNmES SINCE 1907 SATURDAY, OCTOBER 2, 1999
f
·Harbor Center
conrlrig tOgether
• Harbor Center construction
is right on track, and new
businesses are following.
EusEGEf
~Pb
COSTA MESA -Harbor Center,
once the site of the oldest shopping
·center in the oty, is setting sail for new
waters.
1Wo tenants -Rite Aid and Chuck
E · Cheese's -are already open for
business and the rest of the center
should be completed in less than a
Ferraris
on their
way to
Costa Mesa
•Italian auto d ealership
is planning to move to
Harbor Boulevard,
bringing with it add1t10nal
revenue for the city.
l11sr{,11
COSTA MESA -A 'new F~r
rari dealership m Costa Mesa is
expected to help rev up sales on
the oty's Harbor Boulevard of
Ccus.
The Ferrdri Dedlersh1p of
Orange County. now in West-
mmster, closed escrow two
weeks ago on the old Mazda
dealership buildmg on Baker
Street, JUSl
off Hdrbor
Boulevard,
said Josh
Zenor, the
dealership's
6ales man-
dger.
·1rs 1ust d
better loca-
bon for us dS
far as bemg
closer to the
405, • Zenor
Sdld.
"It's just a
better location
fDI us as far as
being doser to
the 405."
Josh Zenor
sates manager
Zenor said Ferran has been
thinking about moving to Costa
Mesa since lt settled hve months
ago mto a temporary locabon m
Westrrunster
Costa Mesa Chamber of Com-
merce President Ed Fawcett said
the addition is Just another
•feather in the cap" for the
already well-known and well-
established Harbor Boulevard of
Cars.
It's a lucrative feather, as well.
In 1998, the city received $2.9
million in sales tax revenue from
SEE FERRARI PAGE A10
• m sports
Friday's
Football Scores
For complete coverage.
s..pege•1
.. _--
year, with other tenants operung in
phases.
For many in the community, the
development of the center signifies a
long-awaited turning point for what
had become a dilapidated eyesore on
Harbor Boulevard.
•I'm watching it, and they're really
moving quickly and I'm delighted,•
said. Costa Mesa Chamber of Com-
merce President Ed Fawcett. "It's going
to till a void that's been there for a long
time as far as tax revenue fOr the city."
The $55-million center, anchored by
SEE HARBOR PAGE A10 Computer-generated photo of the new Harbor Shopping center.
"I was hoping that it would sail for .
a long time and maybe wind up in another country"
.. WJIC t-AAA 1N/DAll.V PILOT
Sasha Smith, 10, looks out over Newport Harbor where a message in a bottle she sent out was found by Greg Moore,
who runs a gondola service in the bay.
The container tossed off a Lido Isle
bridge got only as far as a Newport
Beach gondola company, but brought a
father and daughter closer together.
A\h' R ~rli'RuEO"'
lk41 pt;
Single dad Glen Smith of Newport Beach only hds room
for one love m his life right now -his 10-year-o1d daugh-
ter, Sasha.
The fact that Clsha doesn't live with her dad only
strengthens the bond thdl the two share. •
"We have a lot of people who come through our lives,•
said 38-year old Smith. "But nothing will ever come
between the bond r you and your chil~ .•
MILLENN IUM MOMENT
She practiced and
defended poetry as art
M agny Laridstad Jen n cam to
the Uruted States from O lo an
1926 . She wa known, both m
her native Norway and m her new
home of Costa Mescl, Jor her poetry, an
art form she practiced and defended,
Samples ol Jensen' poetry w re dis·
played at the National Llbrary of Nor·
way. She WllS given an award m 1970
by the Cabfotnia 1'ederation of Chap·
arr al Poets for the strength of her work
Landstad lamented the leek Of interest ln the art f onn h
prac:tked •Maybe I should put poems insid of balloons 5nd I t
them loose from atwJanes;" the said • ··-• •••n CllllD'1111 the,,.. who t.. ma•"'*" ~toour~ll*wntury
SEE BOTTLE PAGE A11
doilypilot®latim .com
We've moved. W II, vlrwattv.
anyway If you're trying to
get a messag to the Pilot via the
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dltHyp/lofftMf/mn.eotn SC) If y0Y
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INDEX
QASSlflDS _ .. _IS
IAJllOOl ••no----.A12
fAlnt ·-------
SOCEY ----u-""
5'CllS -
Neighbors
joined iI1
protest ~·· . '
and became
true friends
• In ousting convicted sex
off ender from the Newport
Crest complex, residents
became a community.
ln1¥ pt;
J NEWPORT BEACH -A con-_
Vlcted sex offender first brought
· them together, but neighbors m
the Newport Crest condomiruwn
complex who helped drive out
James Lee Crummel sa.td the
weekS of feIVld picketing and
protesting was the beginning a
beautiful fn~ndship. ·
They will celebrate that
friendship, and Crummel's Sep-
tember sentenong to at least W
yean; in pnson, at a community
party torught at Brick Oven Pizza
in Newport Beach .
The neighbors will recall
tho~e first scary, angry day ,
when they learned that Crurn-
mel, 55, a sexual predator con-
V\c:led of molestation and murder
in four states, was living in their
tidy condominium complex .
• They will recall their angry
speeches at City Council meet·
mgs and their decision to picket
his house, his landlord's office
SEE NEIGHBORS PAGE A11
Public or
private?
That is the
question
• Which direction will the
arts center take. Cases are
being made both ways,
but no consensus.
NoA.:i ~ {" 1\1'-
Pb
1 f\.~WPORT BEACH -A
Library Board Chairman Jim
Wood has admitted, the ad-hoc
committ~e trying to plan the pro-
po ed Arts and Cultural Center t
·on the horns ol a dilemma."
The conuruttee, made up of
library board and aty Ara Com-
m1 s1on members, has b 'en
divided on whether the govcr·
mince board for the $12 million
center should be publicly or pn-
vately run ,
A faction of the committe
SEE ARTS PAGE A10
•OllL Of
Ill llOIY
Stay connected to
your power source
"God is not in need of anythlng,
but all things are In need of him.,.
-Marcianus Aristides
I don't know a great deal about
computers, but I know I use my
computer a great deal. In fact, I use
my computer almost every day.
I use it to e-mail my daughters, oth-
• er famlly members and friends. I use
my computer to write reports and
papers I use my computer to write
this weekly column. r use my comput-
~r every weekday for a service 1 pro-
vih.e of sendJ.ng brief e-mails of
~couragement. My computer greatly
·~txnplil1es my life, that IS, until I have a
pJOblem. Then it compllcates it to no
end.There must be a Murphy's law of
computers that says, "If you have a
cqmputer, 1t will bomb • The adden-
~rn must be "Your computer wili
bemb on the day you need it the
roost " i . I once heard someone say, "To en:
b human. but to really mess up
~uires a computer· 1 agree. Fortu-
nately I have a good fnend named
S\eve who IS a computer genius with
e.compass1onate heart, and he has
Tescued me frequently from a comput-
8' gone wild. He calms me down, he
\la:rll.es the madune, and I'm back Ill
'l:tusmess again.
My most recent computer problem
wasn't caused by hardware. or by
&0ftware. It was caused by a floppy
):n.emory on my part. Often when I
1~ve town, my editor, Nancy, needs
to clarify something about my column
and she has patiently tracked me
down several times. When we took
Jl\Y daughter, Amy, to college, l called
tt> check my messages to make sure
eryt.lung was dear in the column.
• t only dtd I leave something out, I
left the enbre column out. Apparently
:J~ent her an old column that had
11!,ready run, and she wondered what
.. t6 do. So did r
Fortunately' I had my computer
With me. so I told her I'd send the cor-
,ect one, which I did
When I came home a few days lat-
er. I set up my computer and sat down
• ~ send out e-malls. But I couldn't find
Ute power cord and my computer
t.s:ryickly armounced that 1t was run-
iting on reserve energy, and needed to lfe plugged in soon. I couldn't find the
QOwer cord anywhere and couldn't
Temember where I'd left it, though I
•assumed I had left it in my daughter's
taom or my hotel.
• After several phone calls, 1t was
• sp.ll nowhere to be found. and my
(¥)mputer was m no way working, so I
qUickly called the manufacturer to
lfave a new one sent.
It took two days for the cord to
l ts,rrive, and I almost hugged the deLiv-
eryman when he handed me the
J>ackage I plugged my computer m,
.: ~ed it on and it almost seemed to
Zll\un in a way to thank me i I sat back and looked at the black
• bbx that had so much potential, but
• j:Jc)uldn't function without bemg
·plugged in to its power source. I'm
,. teally the same way. My battenes run
'..down and I don't function well when I
• d.6n't stay connected to God. He's my
• littimate power source.
• And you can quote me on that
I
., ______________ _
, ONDY TRANE OtRISTESON is a Newport 1 ffeach resident who speaks frequently to par-
enting groups. She can be reached via e-mail at
«rMyOonthegrow.com °' through the mall at
t.1,o. Box 6140-No 505, Newport Beach 92658 . •
faith ••
New women's church fonned to create an intimacy and communal understancling ·not found at mixed gatherings
AU!X COOLMAN.
~Pb
A s a child, Crysldl Bu1ol liked to
read the Bible, but it was a book
that always left her with the
same question: "Where is God's wife?"
Women, as far as Bujol could tell,
didn't play a very prominent role in the
Christianity of .her parents. For that mat-
ter, it didn't seem to Bujol, who is black,
that the men who were at the core of
the religion were much like her either.
•All the Sunday schools ... had a
blond-haired, blue-eyed Jesus." Bujol
said.
These early experiences left Bu1ol
with a desire for a more flexible and
personal idea of religion -a desire
th~t, many years later, has led her to
open a Costa Mesa chapter of a church
spe¢.fically for women.
•The First Woman's Church• -the
name refers to the "first" woman, who
some believe lS the llJlcestor of all
hwnans -held its first meeting in Sep-
tember al The Latest Thing Metaphysi-
cal Bookstore and Teaching and Heal-
ing Center. For Bujol, the meeting rep-
resents the articulation of a viSion of
religion she has been developing for
decades. Bujol said it was at a Religious
Science service in the early 1970s that
she first heard a preacher speak of
"father/mother God." The moment sud-
denly crystallized for her the misgivings
she had about a falth that didn't recog-
nize the divinity in women.
"That was the first tune I had heard
"mother God," said Bujol, whose feelings
on the subject were so powerful that she
stayed with that church for 10 years.
Eventually, though, Bu1ol's inqUlSi·
uve approach to the church services
led her to question the practices she
was following, reminding her of anoth-
er mystery she had pondered as a child
reading the Bible.
MEOIHA FEJZAGIC OIMAATN> I OAl.Y PLOT
The Rev. Covese Silken, left. the Rev. Yvonne Stuckey and the Rev. Crystal Bujol recite prayers during the first
meeting of The First Woman's Church at The Latest 1b1ng bookstore In Costa Mesa.
of women's expen ence. The idea, rather, was to create an
environment in which "we could have
the freedom and the privacy to prac-
tice women's spintuality without
being distracted by our wonderful
men," Bujol said.
THE FIRST WOMAN'S CHURCH The white candle is intended to rep-
resent virginity, the red candle the
expene nce of menstruation, the green
candle pregriancy, and the black can-
dle menopause. Each of these phases
of life, Bujol said, has been denigrated
in various ways by Western culture and
each needs to reclawed as a source of
power for women.
•I started craving the other part of my
question: when is it going to be my tum
to be one of the chosen people? ... I was
also studying African spirituality at the
time. I wanted more of that," she said.
"It's not a man-bashing church," she
said. •we're not'exduding men because
we don't want to be bothered."
+ WHERE: The Latest Thing Meta-
physical Bookstore and Teaching
and Healing Center, 270 17th St.,
Costa Mesa
With the encouragement of het hus-
band and friends, Bujol eventually
formed her own church, whl.ch she
called The Inner Circle Church of
Graduate Christians. It was a place, she
said, ·where the student could reach
out a little bit more to the feminine
energy and to the Afncan spmtuality. •
Bujol said the women-only gathering
1S able to create a kind of intimacy and
communal understanding .that can't bE'
achieved in a mixed gathering.
"When a man is present, (women]
tend to think (men) don't understand
what we're talking about, so we have to
explain things a certain way." Bujol said.
+ WHEN: 10 a.m. to noon, the
fourth Sunday of every month
• PHONE: (949) 645-6211
From the Sikhs we have a chant that
we use. From the Baptists we have
music that we bring in. We change the
words, though, to make everything
feminine." In addition to the songs and
chanting, the services incorporate
drumming, techniques of tai chi, and a
ceremonial lighting of candles.
"We're saying, 'Wait a minute. We
gave birth to you. We're the hand that
rocks the cradle and you can not take
that power away from us,'• Bujol said.
"When it's just women, we don't
have to explain it."
The church strives to illwninate the
divinity within women, Bujol said, to rec-
ognize that, whatever negative messages
they may have absorbed from their
upbringing and experiences in life, they
are still a source of power and rebirth.
The first branch of Bu10J's church
was in Los Angeles and was open to all
comers. In time, and as the church
expanded, Bujol made an_ important
mochfication to the services. she decid-
ed that they should be for women only.
The services of the church draw
from a vanety of dillerent faiths and
customs.
•we have gathered energy and
parts of our ritual from many sources,•
Bujol said. "From the American Ind.t-
ans, we have a prayer chant we use.
"We light four basic candles in our
ritual to honor the four phases of wom-
anhood," Bujol said.
It's an easier message for women to
understand, Bujol said, when they hear
it from the mouth of someone who is
like them. The point of Uus change, Bujol said,
was not to attack men or to create an
exclusionary atmosphere
A white, a black, a red and a green
candle are used in the ritual -each
one corresponding to a specific ~
"It takes a woman to talk to a
woman," she said.
PLACES TO WORSHIP FAITH CALENDAR
• EDfTOR'S NOlE: Places to Wor·
ship features brief descriptions of
churches and temples ln our commo·
nlty. Thev appear each week on a
rotating basis
Nazarene
COSTA MESA CHURCH
OF THE NAZARENE
Costa Mesa Church of the Nazarene
has ~ its mission "to worship God,
win people of all ages to Jesus Christ.
build up their faith 1n God, aod send
them oot to be Chnst's servants "
WOrship services are held on ·Sunday
at 10;45 a en. and 6 p.m. There are
activities for teens at the Sunday
evening service and also at the
Wednesday evening service at 7 p.m.
Doyle Hendenon is senior pastor. The
church 1s at 1885 Anaheim St (at
Plummer), Costa Mesa For more
information, call (714) 5@.7161.
Nondenominational
CALVARY CHURCH
NEWPORT MESA
Calvary Church Newport Mesa alms
to help people say [to God In every
facet of their lives being real, rele·
vant and rela~lona . The congrega-
tlon comprises mostly yoong adults
and young families. Highly contem-
porary worship service'$, using music.
multimedia and drama are held at 6
p.m. Saturday and at S. 9:30 and 11
a.m. Sunday. A full children's pro-
gr1m is provided for children in nurs-
ery through elementary school. nm
Celek ls senior pastor. The church was
established in 1988 and is at 190 E.
23rd St., Costa Mesa For informa-
tion, call (949) 645-5050.
COSTA MESA·
CHURCH OF CHRIST
Costa Mesa Church of Christ ts a
family of believers devoted to loving
end 9 lorifving God through pro-
claiming the good news Of Jesus
Christ and serving others. Worship
services are held Sunday at 10 a .m.
and 6 p.m., with the first Sunday
night of each month designated as a
special family night. Bible classes for
all ages are at 9 a .m. Children's
church, for age 3 to 6. meets during
the 10 a.m. worship serv1ee. Andy
Wall Is senior pastor. The church was
established in 1923 and Is at 287 W.
Wilson SJ., Costa Mesa. For informa-
tion, call (949) 64S.3191.
FAl~W
COMMUNITY CHURCH
Fa1rvifw Community Church is a
open-minded ministry that combil'W!S
the traditional strengths of biblical
faith with contemporary realities
and insight -with special em,hasls
on music. The church emphasizes the
value of community members know·
Ing each other In a church that is
small enough to meet that need. The
congregation prays and works with
other faiths toward a goal of God's
will of peace, justice, love and Joy
Services are held <Nery Sunday at 1 O
a m Child care is provided for infants
and toddlers Older children attend
Sunday school after ·"kid 's t ime."
The church is at 2525 Fairview Road,
Costa Mesa. Gary Barmore is senior ~astor. For more •nformation, call
(714) 545-4610.
GRACE FELLOWSHIP CHURCH
Grace Fello'NSh1p Church seeks to
passionately know God in his entire-
ty and encourage followers of Jesus
Christ who are led by the Holy Spirit
to walk in righteousness and· to
share his eternal promke of forgive-
ness with all others. Wonhlp is Sun·
d.W at 9:1 S a.m. Preschool and Sun·
day school for all ages are provided.
Elders of the fellowship are Bill Beck,
Earle Craig and Shelley Klrl<patrldt.
The church is at 3170 Redhill Ave ,
Costa Me5a. For more information,
call (714) 549-8599.
SPECIAL EVENTS
JUBILEE 2000
St. Joachim's Catholic Church
presents Jubilee 2000 at 7:30
p.m. Thursday evenings through
Oct. 21. No registration 1s neces-
sary. The church is at 1964
Orange Ave., Costa Mesa. For
more jnformallon, call (949) 574-
7405.
MEETINGS FOR
THE UNEMPLOYED
St. Andrew's Presbytenan
Church h osts an ongoing series
of Thursday evening meetings
for the unemployed, with speak-
ers on various subjects. The
meetings are free and open to
the public .. St Andrew's is at 600
St. Andrew's Road, Newport
Beach. For more information, call
(949) 574-2239.
MEN'S FELLOWSt;tlP BREAKFAST
St. Andrew's Presbytenan
Church hosts a fellowship break-
fast from 7 to 8 a.m Wednes-
days. All men of the church and
community ate invited to the
event, which costs $2.50. The
church is at 600 St. Andrew's
Road, Newport Beach. For more
information, call (949) 574-2239 .
TESTIMONIAL MEETING
The public lS invited to a one-
hour testimonial meeting
Wednesday at Second Church of
Christ, Saentist in Corona del
Mar. The meeting will run from
• noon \o 1 p.m. The church is at
3100 Pacilic View Drive.
CLASSES/WORKSHOPS
NEW THOUGHT WORKSHOPS
New T}lought Community
Church hosts a variety of work-
shops from 10 a.m. to noon Sat-
urdays. The Rev. Gail Miller will
speak today on the subject of
"'Iruth." The workshops cost $15
or a "love donation," and are
held at 1929 Tustin Ave., Casta
Mesa. For more informa tion, call
(949) 646-3199.
REAPERS HOTLINE
(949) 642-6086
Of advertiwments hefe1n c.an bt
reproduced without written per·
mt9f0n of copyright owner
WEATHER SURF POLICE FILES
VOL 93, NO. 231
Record yoor comments about
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~OPRESS
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CQBBECDONS
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County (800) 252 9141 , In areas
outside of Newport Btleh end
Costa Mftl, 1UbKtlptlons to tht
o.lly '11ot irt 1v.1ltble only by
""M for $10 per month S«ond
d.u pan.age peld at Costa Mesa.
CA. cPt1cft lndud9 aa 1PPlicabi.
state ind locM UMt.) ~~
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Ntwp0!1 lea~ Mell Oii~ Pilot P.O lcili 1560, ColtA Mel.I.
CA 91616 ~·No MM sto-
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HOW TO REACH US
Orculttion
The limet Of1n9t County
(800) 252 9141
Advenislng
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~ liyllrtw~tr~
•'TlrMl...,Of ~ ~
w.m UlbcW, .....
[di.Of'
S..MllWe.
~[dltOI'
MM Martin.
Director of PhOtogfapey
ShenNn 'ftlmdne.
Senlot (dlt()f, CoPY Ottlt .,..,._°' ,...,._
TEMPERATURES
Balboa.
SM9
Cor00.1 del Mar
80l60
Costa Mesa
81161
Newport Beach
80r'60 .
Newport Coast
8MO
SURI' llORECAST
LOCATION SIZE
Wedge .... , 2-4 SW
Newport ,, .. 1 ·3 SW
81.ckles •• , , •• 1•3 SW
RIYtf Jetty. • 1 ·3 SW
CdM •• ••,. 2·3 WI
TIDES
TOOAY
First low
9:56 am ••••••• 2.9
Ftrst high
5:27 a.m ••••••• 3.7
Second low
11:37 p.m ...... 0.3
s~ond htgh
404 pm .•••• , •• 5.0
SUNDAY
First low
11:321m ....... 2 6
First high
6:33 1 m ••••••• 4.1
Sf<ond low
after midnight
Sec°'1d high
5:26 p m ~ , , ••• 5.1
The weather cools
off 1 bit this week·
end as we see highs
In th• 70s and lows
1n the 60s The
waves will be Mnall
due to • fading
southwest swell. Sets
Wiii be t\igheSt It
the points and reefs,
rMybe reaching
Chest·hlgh. The sw.U
wtll fade again by
SUndq for Wllst·
high WIWS. Wltf/I
condltlom and vlsl·
blllty will be good
We Will also haW
some light afternoon
winds S.tirilY TI\t
IUn wtll Mt at 6:37
pm.
COSTA MESA
• ._ ltreet: A CO ~ worth $175 was stolen from a car
1n the 600 blodt at 6:41 p m Monday.
• ......_. S"'9e1: A ttllular phone worth $200 was stolen In
the 3300 block at 7;50 p m. Monday •
• Alrpoirt ~ Drtwe: Money, cigarettes and • blender worth
$7SO wtre stolen from • store 1n th• 3000 block at 9.15 p m.
Sept. 27. • ftw•••-......: A,,.. Window of a car was smashed with
a rock in the 2200 b&«I( at 11:10 am. Sunday.
... ORTIUQI
• Wiit Colill lltltus&J11 AA outboard mot0t wtxth S5,000 wat
stolen from a boM In the 2000 blcx.k at 3.46 p.m. Tuesday.
• Qual ...... A~ hlrd drive and a laptop comput9f
woRh an unknown atnouM wtrt stolen In the 1000 bloc:lc at 10
p.m. TUeldly.
• Nscapll1 C.... DJllWe: A ctllular phont worth S'°° wM
**"'In h 700 ~ 81 11.40 • m. WtdnttcMy.
• ....._ ...._ A ca' Wll Wlndlllltd In the 5000 blodc et I
p.m;~
Daily Pilot
In search of G-ra"ted movies in Orange Counry John
Thanks to some gifts I
received in appreciation of
a few small favors, our
family has been sitting on 16
moVie passes for several weeks.
We love gomg to thP. movies. We·
love the big screen, the buttered
popcorn and the exatement of
being in a pitch-dark room full of
total'strangers. We don't even
mind the sticky floors. But with
two small kids, ages 6 1/2 and 9,
it's, difficult these days to go to
the movies. It's not the parking
or the price of popcorn that has
us down, it's the racl that we
can't find a G-rated moVie to
save our lives. Last weekend, m
fact, there wasn't a single G-rat-
ed movie to be found in all of
Costa Mesa or Newport Beach.
In fact, in all of the theaters o·per-
ated by all of the theater chains
with screens in Orange Cowity,
including Edwards Cinemas,
Regal Cinemas, Century The-
atres, AMC, Krikorian .Theatres,
United Artist Theatres and sever-
al independents, only the
Edwards Cinema at Woodbridge
in Irvine had a G-rated movie -.
WHAT'S UPf
st eve
smith
•Tanan. • It was showing al one
theater, tow shows daily.
In recent weeks, some famous
folks have gotten together to
lambaste the entertainment
industry for abdicating its
responsibility to our children. In
a newspaper editorial, these
well-meaning people, including
Gerald Ford, Jimmy Carter.
William Bennett and Cohn Pow-
ell, stated, "Violence and explicit
~cxudl content in television,·
films, mu ·1c and Video games
have escalated sharply in recent
years.•
Perhaps that's true. Still, the
best, most effective way of
reducing lads' exposure to sex
and Vlolence has always been for
parents to •limit exposure.• In
plcun tdlk, it means not letting
them Weltch TV, not buying the
offensive vid~ games and not
going to the movies until there 1s
something decent on the screen.
J;asy? No, it's hard -that's wny
there aren't loo many parents
doing it. Instead, we gi'?e in to
television because.it's conve-
nient, we buy th& Video game
because our kids drive us crazy
and we go to the movies becquse
we think it's OK these days for a
9-year-old to hear bad language
and see people being blown
away. It's not. •The Iron Giant,•
one of my favonte movies this
year, 15 rated "PG" because of
five utterances of two mild exple-
tives. What a shame.
I was cunous about how
movies are selec'ted so I made a I
local can to the folks at Edwardi.
Cinemas m Ne~rt Beach to
find out. I al50 wanted to pro-
mote an idea I've had: a family·
fnendly theater where only G·
rated moVies, old and new, are
hown
In their baseball sta<liwn, the
Angels have had d family section
for years und it seems to do well.
It seems to me that with all of the
outstanding and generous contn-
butions the Edwards family has
made to the area, they may con-
s1det this idea. J believe tt would
send a strong message to HoUy-
wood and would be yet another
huge contnbution to the commu-
nity by the Edwards family.
Instead of tallong about family
values here m Newport-Mesa,
we'd be doing something about
them
Jim Wooden, Edwards' gener-·
dl manager, was leaVing for the
airport to attend the grand open-
ing of some theaters in Houston .
He wtts grnc1ous enough to refer
me elsewhere, but we <lid not
connect hc·fore my deadline.
Smee I could not get m touch
with anyone at Edwards, I'll pnnt
the one question I have. Why not
designate one theater as family-
tnendly and show only G-rated
movies? Our lods love the Marx
Brothers, The Sound of Mu JC,
the Pmk Panther Senes and o
many other great old moVles.
And I'd welcome the chance to
see them on the big scre~m once
again. ·
All I want is a big screen
where f can take my lads w~
after week without having to
wotry even for a moment about
what they may see or bear. And I
thmk it would be no Jess than ·
histonc for a company like
Edwards to make this bold,
courageous statement right here
m our area Who knows, it may
even be profitable.
In the meantime, help has
arrived and we're usmg a few
tickets this weekend. "Elmo m
Grouchland • has just opened So
long, "Tarzan.•
•STEVE SMmt 1s a Costa Mesa resi·
dent and freelance wrrter. He can be
reached at (949) 642-{)086 or by e-mail
at da1/ypilot0/atimes.com.
Aiiliae ~~ through John ,.,_
port WU higher lD Augull
this year than tbe
month ~ 1998, accordblg
Joan Leblow, mterim.eur.ICll.,..
for the airport.
About 122,007 penen·
gen traveled through Jobn
Wayne in Augt1$t c1 199&
compared to 680,40.C last
year m August -u
increase Ol 6.2%.
Total aircraft operations
-takeoffs and landings -
and general aviation activii.y
were also higher this~·
up 19% and 22.3% respec-
tively. · .. ,. ..
Commuter carrier flight!
declined 19.4%, while conr::
meroai' earner flights were
up 10% for the period.
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Newport · Beach fire ghters battle two blazes
'
• One fire causes $25,000 damage, while the second is
controlled quickly at the Newport Beach Country Club.
SUSAN McCORMACK .
' NEWPORT BEACH -During
a busy night for the Newport
Beoch Fire Department, firefight-
ers battled two separate fires, one
that caused $35,000 damage to a
Newport Beach apartment com-
plex and another at the Newport
Beach Country Club. 1 'IWo fires in one night is unusu-
al, said John Blauer, the depart-
ment's spokesman.
•niese Uungs come in waves,•
Blauer said, adding that it coulq
be weeks until the department
sees another hre.
Officials said no one was seri-
ously injured m either metdent.
Thirty-two firefighters from
Newport Beach, Costa Me.')4 and
Huntington Beacli collaborated to
put out flames at a fully engulfed
garage m an apartment complex
in the 4500 block of Balboa Boule-
vard.
The hre was reported at 2:12
a.m., Blauer said.
Blauer said a fesident noticed
smoke escaping from his partially
opened garage door as he was
driving up his driveway. When
the man entered the ga.rdge. he
reported the smoke was so thick
tl\at he <;;ouldn't see the flames
burning his property. The man
then alerted the Fire Department
and helped evacuate the build-
ing.
The only injury was to Gabe
Young, 24,' an off-duty Northrop
Celestino's
quality MEATS
1111 · 1 1111 • ...,, \ti ·111 1111c I ~<·n •u ,. 1\1 •wlal>le
&rving Costtt Mn a for over 30 years .
\tre offer ALL NATURAL BEEF & C HICKEN
CELESTINO 'SALL NATIIRAL BEEF
GROUND CUUCK ..................... $2.39 lh.
Tor SIRI 0 11' S'l lAKS ............... $5.99 lh.
ExTRA Lt-.AN BH· f STEW .......... $4.99 lh.
• CELESTINO 'S DOWN HOME FAVORITES
COUNTRY STUfH D C HICKEN BREAST .......... $3.99 lb.
French Appk S'I UHfD PORK C HOPS .............. $3.99 lh.
Old Fashion MlAllOAI GRIND Pork. Buf, and Veal •••• $3.99 lh.
C ELESTINOS SEA.FOOD
Spinach Stuffed Salmon
Smoked AJbacore
Swordfoh, HaJibut, Ono, Ahi
32 Varieties pfllouzcmatk Sausages
Ce/ntino 's Bu.for Turko lerk;y
Wu:all)' Boar Hea4 Deli Products
270 East 17th St. • Costa Mesa • (949) 642-7191
(Hiltgren Square) 9:00 to 7:00 Mon. -Sat. • 10:00 to 6:00 Sun.
J'A Threefold Challenge"
-l~®R;: !Romans 12.l-R)
FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST
3303 Via Udo wp:Kt BcOth.
673 1340 or 673-6150
Ch.Jich 10 am & s 1.m
SundOY School 10 am
~..:may • JXll
Saint Michael & All¥
Muguerite ac P.cific View
C.Orooa dd Mar• 6"-0463
Ch.r l't.~ u ti lvw Owi1t /n.,"' ur"'
-'n thtu '" Chrut w ""'} un• fa11/tfol •""
/f#W1tW ChriJtrln J /loft,
The Rc:v'd Peter 0 . Haynes, R.cctor
SECOND CHURCH OF CHruST,SCIENTIST
3100 PtrtfJc View Dr Newport BC'!Clch
644-2617 or 675-4661
Ltt "' '"°°" to 111jltlitn!"'tt: kt "' '"'°"' 11111~•1 ••r1tlH1 ,,,,,., u pt/. Job'414 . •
lnM'lld it Tiie Mollitr a.tdi • 1\t f1r; Ollrdl fl Clnl,ldllllll • ..... M-' 1111
hrcf1ghter, who was nearby VLSit-
mg friends when he lea.med of
the fue. Blauer s4id Young tried to
wake up residents iii the complex
and slipped as he climbed off the
bwlping's roof: Paramedics treat-
ed Young for pain in his right hip
and an a bras1on on his left fore-
arm.
Blauer said the fire was under
control by 2:33 a.m. Structural
damage was limited to the lower'
level garage and estimated at
$25,000. A vehicle just outside the
garage suffered $10,000 damage.
The fue was still under investi-
gation Friday, but mauer said it
was not suspicious.
Later Ftiday morning, a New-
port Beach Country Qub employ-
ee smellf'd smoke in a storage
dfea next to a dining room at
about 7 a.m., Blauer said. The
man entered the room, where
automatic sprinklers had already
been activated, and used a fire
extingwsber to tty "to blast the
flames, although be could not see
them due to the dense smoke.
Firefighters were called to the
dub and evacuated 15 people
from the building. Blauer said the
situation was particularly danger-
ous because the burning storage
room contained paints and other
combustibles.
When firefighters arrived,
Blauer said, smoke reached from
the ceiling down to their knees.
However, the fire had already
been extinguished. The club
resumed tee times at about 8 a.m.
Damage was estimated at
about$500.
•nus fire could have been an 1
absolute disaster, if it wasn't for
the automatic sprinklers,• Blauer
said. • 1t could have ta.ken the
whole country dub .. . They got I
lucky.•
~•d•I•. Maua1•. Mlc:to4amabr1tloa,
Hyd,.otber1py, Manic ure /Pedic ure, Sceem Room•,
Dod y Wr1ps, A: Scrub•, W1al n1. Elec 1ro ly1h , Paeh,
Mo th•r-t o-8 e, G ift Cer1lfl c 11e1 81 m o re.
ST. MARK PRESBYTERIAN
CHURCH
"Open Am1s and Open Minds"
Worship 9:30
Jambortt & [a)tblulfln Ne,.,port Beach
Newport Harbor
Lutheran Church
7M Dover Dr. Newpoft .. •ch
Tradltl oQal Lutheran
Won hlp .. rvlce with ·
Holy Communion •unct.v ec1 a am
Chttatlen Education
for ell A ...
10•30 .....
COMMUNITY CHURCH
CONGREGATIONAL
UNITED CHURCH Of CHRIST
II to C:..: To C.. II to DO.
8rubt V.n Blair, Minister
Worship Services •a:oo.m
9;00em MAI Churdl Sdlool
•10:00em. ~School
•Chfld c.. Provided
611 tteidbope Art. Coront ct.I Mar
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THE Daily Pilot
.. HARBOR CHRISTIAN CHURCH J.. (Dtsctpl .. of Christ)
2401 lrvlne Ave. •I S.nt• 1 .. bef Newport BHch
Sunday Worship -10:00AM
First UnJted Methodist Church
of Costa Mesa
420 We t 19th Street. Costa Me a
Fe tivaJ of Wot'\hip I O:OOam
Richard L. Ewing. Pa tor
Chun:h School 9:00am & I 0: I Sam
949-548-7727
Costa Mesa
MESA VERDI
UNITED MITHODIST CHURCH
1701 Boker, C.M.
Worahlp a Church School
8 t30 and 10100 a .m.
Dr. Richard Geor 979·823.4
NEWPORT CENTER
UNITED Ml'THODIST CHURCH
1 60 I Marguente Ave
Corona def M: r
644-0745
worship ar e:ooAM & to OCN\M
Children Sunday Schoof 1 o OOAM
Jr. & Sr: High S.OOPM
NEW 'J llOU<~HT CHURCH
Srien<f. of Mi"'I Cmtl'r
·s1111cl.1y Mrchw11011 HUX>
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"\llliMI-~
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l 645 P;ark ~ .. e., <.A,.111.1 Mr:u
Wro llrahng ~¥fee 10 ~I am,
19291utun Ave1.. C:o4U M~
t. Wotbhop • ll~lx noon Donation
• "Sclct1c.c of Mind"
Call (949) f'46-!H 99
for lnformadOn
..
Daily Pilot
Rodman stalker
pleads guilty
• Chicago woman gets
one-year sentence and
three years p robation for
threatening phone calls.
ALEX COOLMAN
~Pfd
The Illinois woman accused of
stalking former NBA star and
Newport Beach resident Dennis
Rodman pleaded guilty in
Orange County Superior Court
Friday to 10 misdemeanor counts
of making annoying and threat-
ening phone calls.
Marie Boguszewski, 36, was
given a one-year prison sentence.
much of which she has already
served, and three years of proba-
tion.
Boguszewsi bad also faced
three felony counts of making ter-
rorist threats and one count of
electronic stalking, charges
which were dropped as part of
her agreement to plead guilty to
the misdemeanors.
Boguszewski ran afoul or the
authorities in March when she
was arrested for attempting to
send threatening messages and
e-mails to Rodman through tus
business associates. She had
been calling the answering
machine of Rodman 's former
JEFF & LYLEEN
EWING
EXCLUSIVE!
WHAT DOES IT REALLY MEAN!
A fnend of ours rcccntl)' came up w
\JS and said that she wished we could
sell the house ou t door to her
because the •for Sale" ~1gn had
bttome a permanent fhrure in her
neighborhood. She asswncd that only
the brokeragt listed on the sign oould
sell the house because u sard
•Exdusl\·c".
T he f.m is anybody can ~II thi\
property. Io the la~t dcade the
Multiple Listing Ser vice has
revolutionized the way real estate is
901d all over the country. When h(ting
your home a Realtor enters tht
perunent informauon about your
property into a computeriied
invcnrory bank.
Having your home placed on the
Multiple Listing Service provides the
most ~ffective advertising 11vailable
because agenb all over town have
UT1medutc access to such information
as the price, location, number of
bedrooms and baths, as well as the
sia of the ya.rd, the type of heaung
and air conditioOU\g sy term, and any
special fcarures. T he MLS allQw~
agents to feed in a buyers' b.tSiC need\
and match them up to the hsungs of
11l 1tt1 Realtors. When yuu Im your
homeo, you arc employing not only the
ltSnng agent to market your home,
but hundreds of the agent'~ colleagues
who wilJ work cooperatively to get
your property sold as quickly u
po15ible ..
Jeff and Lylccn have 2 7 con<ecunvc
years o( real estate upen ence in
Newport Beach. They trc Coldwell
Banker's ti team. For profe ional
service or adVJce with all your real
c.i.nite needs call the Ewings at
(949) 718-1514.
edw<ttM!"""'
agent, Dwight Manley, so often
that she clogged the phone line
and the answering machine tape.
After Rodman's marriage to
actress Carmen Electra last
November, Boguszewski's
attempts to make contact with the
former Laker became increasing-
ly frequent and violent in tone.
She threatened to cut the throat of
the owner of a Chicago dub Rod-
man frequented and .left a mes-
sa9e on Manley's line saying she
intended •to high-tail it to Cali-
fornia and kill every one of you
Md your friends.•
Boguszewski's attorney, Philip
Zalewski, said that her actions,
though no doubt disconcerting,
never constituted an immediate
and credible threat to Rodman, a
fact, he stressed. that undercut
the force of the charges of terror-
ism and stalking.
"This poor woman bad never
even left Illinois before the police
came and got her," Zalewski said.
"It's hard to be an immediate and
credible threat when you're in
Illinois."
Superior Court Judge Susanne
Shaw ordered that Boguszewslo
refrain from contacting Rodman,
Electra, Manley and two of Man·
ley's employees as part of her sen-
tence. A restraining order filed
Friday by Deputy District Attor-
ney Ray Armstrong will reinforce
this restriction .
Business
center site
of arson
attempt
• Baker Street business.
center site target of
suspected arsonist
who escaped.
Costa Mesa police thwarted
an alleged arson attempt at a
business center at 660 Baker
St. early Friday morning.
A robbery alarm at the cen-
ter alerted police to suspicious
activity at 3 a.m. Friday, Costa
Mesa Police Sgt. Don Holford
said. Upon arrival, officers
responding to the alarm said
they saw a white man in his
early 20s fleeing the center.
The suspect was dressed in all
black .
Officers chased the suspect
and later called in a biood-
ho und from Irvine Police
Department, but they could ·
not find him, Holford said. At
the center, police found a bag
containing nine Molotov cock-
tails -flammable liquid in
bottles that can be used· as
illegal devices to start fires.
Holford said the bomb
squad searched the center for
more explosive devices, but
found none. The police
department is investigating
the incident and still searching
for a mohve, said Holford. He
said this is the fust time this
center has been targeted in an
arson attempt.
-Susan McCormack
~J'l~Z>4'
Tuesday, Oct. 5 Only!
Pll4t•·~ ~
•
_?aily Pilot
Rigatoni, garlic bread ·\and prerace jitter
• Again, all involved combine
to make this year's Harbor
Heritage Run pasta night
a success.
!Qtf Pb
NEWPORT BEACl I -The air was·
chilly at the annual pre-Harbor
Heritc1ge Run pasta night, but the pas-
, ta WdS warm and so, said pasta-
eaters, was the company.
The Harbor Heritage run is the
Newport Harbor High. School PTA's
only fund-raiser, and, in its 13-year
history, hds become a conununity
insbtution·
In ts community spmt, warm
sense of neighborliness and a pleni-
tud· of scr ·aming, laughing chil-
dren the pa~ta night is overshad-
owr.d -diners said -only by the
run it .elf. .
And the annual carbo-feed offers a
better chance for long conversation,
coolocs and the chance to trade gos-
sip over tht> latest Dennis Rodman
sightings.
#Look dt how nice all the young
fdmilic!> arc, with their kids,# said
the
Carol Dore, gesturing to a pas mg
father, who had two plates of pasta
and salad balanced precariously on
top of a running stroller.
"Their kids don't even go to this
school yet, and they're here.• she
added, noting that she thinks she has
seen some of them cheering on high
school students at football and basket-
ball games.
"That's why I'm glad I didn't go to
a private school," said her daughter,
Nicole, a senior.
Nicole won't be running the race
today because of a field hockey tour-
. nament.
But that won't stop her mother from
getting out of bed bright and early to
go volunteer at the race.
ln the six years that she hds been
offering water and encouraging run-
ners as they pass by, Carol Dore has
always stood on the same comer.
·1 know the neighbors. They bring
me coffee every year," she said. "I
just love watching the people run by.
All different types of people.
Nicole, alas, has never run in the
race, because she's always had a field
hockey tournament.
"Maybe next year I'll come home
from school for the race," she said.
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Coldwell<
Buker
volunteer
Sharon
Grimes, left.
serves LU ·
Ann Drury.
and
husband.
Mike
during a
pasta dhiner
for Harbor.
Heritage ·
partieipant.s
Friday.
Please Join us for the
,, "f#. ~ ie'e-t!)~
of
'U4~ul6~
Featuliing
\
~~
Fl( ral & Gift
a Specialty Boutique
and
""~~-~ ....... Our Specialty
Friday, Octooer ---
. . . . . . .
it• ~October 2, 1999 Doily Pilot
fublic Safety Day scheduled for Sunday Paddling for the
""'Ple~tyof attraction~ Sn l;e of the ocean ~be offered by police, ~
fire and other safety
service units.
i'h~J I ~DIL.. '"' ' .,..., .... •tA>:r, ·~ .. Public Safety .Day will take
tplace this Sunday from 10 a.m. to
3 p.m. at the Newport Center Fire
J\\ation at Santa Barbara Drive
~Jamboree Road.
f,.-(1,be event
~.\>~an about to
• y~ ago with a
"'fire service day,
said John
Blauer, conunu-
~ relations
• .!Qfticer with the
.~ Depart-
\m.~nt. It quickly
-grbw to include
tthe police and
-"iDtarine depart-
'ments and other
tft~encies serv-
ing the New-
s-po.rt Beach area.
-";The event is ~ and all res-
idents a.re invit-
ed, Blauer said.
"It's a good
~nee for the
a?lic to meet
scjlety service
1[6'fticers) and
"h's a good
chance for the
public to meet
safety service
[officeB] and
get a chance to
ask questions
they might not
normclfly hove
the chance to
do when fire
fighters and
poli<e ore on
the scene, 11
John Bfauer
community
relations
officer
I a chance to
questions they might not nor-t y have the chance to do when
; fighters and police are on the
e," Blauer said.
• The Surfrider Fowida-.
tion is holding a fund-
raiser today, organizers
hope to raise $15,000.
SUSAN McCORMACK
BALBOA PENINSULA
They won'_t be paddling for
waves. Not today. Instead, they'll
be, pushing themselves for a·
good cause. ·
The fifth annual Clean Water
Paddle-a-thon takes place from 8
·a.m. to noon at Balboa Pier to
benefit the local Surfrider Foun-
dation's programs.
The Surfrider Foundation is a
nonprofit organization that pro-
motes the quality of the coastline
I and works to ensure that the
ocean is kept clean.
DON LEACH I DAU..Y PILOT
Firefighters move in and knock down a backdraft fire in a room during a demonstration at Public
Safety Day at Newport Center fire station and police headquarters.
Organizer Paul Mudge said
he ·expects about 150 partici-
pants, two to three times as
many as last year's event attract-
ed.
That increase may be due to
the additional option partici-
pants have this year -they·can
walk.
The event will include displays
and demonstrations from Ule-
guards, harbor patrol, SWAT
teams, Orange County Burn
Association, the Red Cross, ani-
(
mal control .and mo.re. As part of
the Fire Department's offerings,
children will be invited to partici-
pate in spraying.fire extinguisher
hoses and riding in fire trucks,
said Blauer, Demonstrations
begin at noon.
Tours of the fire and police sta-
tions also will be given, and
refres.tunents will be provided.
'
"We did this for people that
didn't want to or couldn't get into
the water," Mudge said. "We
didn't want them to feel left out.'
Participants have raised
pledges to be redeemed upon
N'S
CARPET & DRAPERIES
The Oldest Flooring Company in Orange County
e a Year Flooring
Warehouse Clearance
This is a REAi, Sale!
No Time To Lose!
Now through Sunday, Oct. 10th
Room Size Carpet Remnants Hardwood Floors
only $ 95
(12'x9') to (12'xl 5') Material only 'J
.
Carpet Rolls ·stock Close Outs ~ ...
Berbers, Plushes, Commercial grade
$ 3!~d-$ 8?l.yd.
Limited to rolls in stock. Material only
Jn5callation Available ....
Anderson Maple Stock Close O ut
$ 99
sq.ft. Material only
Inscallation Available
Area Rugs
D iscontinued Patterns in Stock
completion of the event of their .
choice. Paddlers may surf, body-
board, kayak or use another
human-powered craft to finish
courses ranging from a half-mile
to three and a half miles. Walk-
ers will tour historical places
between Balboa and Newport
Piers.
The event continues after the
courses are completed. A live
band and activities for children
will set the mood for prizes to be
awarded to the biggest fund-
raisers.
The group is hoping to raise
$15,000 to help toward its
"Teach and Test" educational
program in which students test
water for bacteria, an indicator
of polluted runoff or sewage
leaks, Mudge said.· Four county
high schools will receive testing
kits from the event: Newport
Harbor and Corona del Mar
high schools, plus University in
Irvine and Esperanza in Yorba'
Linda.
Proceeds Will also benefit a
recently proposed storm water
diversion plan for the Santa Ana
River as well as for Respect the
Beach, an educational program
for elementary level students.
The event is also being spon-
sored by Mother's Market &
Kitchen, REI, Spyderbill, Island
Bend, ProLite, TK's Froghouse,
Ocean Storm and Mudge Fas-
teners Inc.
by Gregory It Glass, D.D.S.
A TOOTH FOR A TOOTH
While dentures and bridges remain
the most popular tooth·replacement
treatments with dental patients, dental
implants are fast gaining ground. The
primary reaso11 for their increasing
popularity is that implants come the
closest to looking and tunctroning like
natural teeth. With an Implant, a tiny
metal cylinder implanted ln the jawbone
acts as a kind of artificial root. Another
piece, screwed into the cylinder
protrudes through the gums to create an
anchor for a new tooth to match the rest
of the teeth in thE! mouth. Thus, a dental
implant stays firmly planted in the
ja~bone, independent of any adjacent
support. It can be brushed and ffossed
like a regular tooth, and can scarcely be
detected as a replacement tooth.
During October, •National Dental
Hygiene Month," we would like to
increase public dental aware"ne,.ss and
stress the importance of preventative
oral health care and the dental
hygienist's role as the preventive
professional. We believe in the
importance of regular dental health
care. We're located at 400 Newport
Center Drive, Suite #408, Newport
Beach, where we encourage everyone
to start and continue a healthy habtt of
regular dental checkups so their smiles
win last ~ lifetime. We want you to look
and feel your very best. Please call us
at 949·644·0922 to schedule an
appoinlr!lent.
P.S. The best candidates for dental
implants have dense bone where the
implant is Intended to lodge and remaln
stable.
'
Re
Painting?
If you 're
looking to paint
or repaint,
reb'u1.ld it,
replace it or
restore it, look
in the Pilot
Classifieds to
find the service
best fitting your
needs.
Daily Pilot
\
....
Dai Pilot ,,
' I
' I . . . . .
A sale with a continental flavor in the Cannery Village 110111
• Send ~ 1u.. ..... Si T be Cannery WJ.-ge in
Newport Beach is hosting
another European Pall
Street Pair at 31st Street tbday
from 10 a.m; to .c p.m. The festivi-
ties are free and open to the pub-
lic. Helen Japenga, an organizer
of the street fair says: •1n addition
to the fun of browsin9, there will
be outstanding buys m original
paintings by local artists,
antiques, gifts and specialty
items, plus live music and
refreshments." Participating mer-
chants include The Feathered
Nest, The South Of Prance, Can-
nery Exchange, Le Canard,
Dandng Bear Gallery, Alta Cof-
fee House, Cannery Paints Stu-
dio, NobW Antiques, Ardenia
Capannelli, Mathieu·~ Antiques, ·
UlJes and I.ace, Jane EWot•s
Cottage, Uvtng Creattons, Dona
and Cora Studio. For directions,
please call (949) 675-0851.
The City of Newport Beach is
having a free Plre and Police
Open House ideal for the whole
family on Sunday from 10 a.m. to
3 p.m. The event was created as
a public safety day that coincides
with the city's fire prevention
week. Included in the event will
be tours of the fire and police sta-
tions and live fire and SWAT
team demonstrations. There will
be displays from the lifeguards,
harbor patrol, Red Cross, Orange
County·Burn Association,
D.A.R.E., crime prevention, ani-
mal control and many others. The
demonstrations will begin at
noon. Food and drinks are avail-
able, with proceeds going toward
1111 IUYS
greer
Wylder
the Orange County Burn Assn.
The open house will be at the
Newport Center Fire Station No.
3 at Santa Barbara Drive and •
Jamboree Road.
If you're a car enthusiast,
you'll love the vintage and clas-
sic car show Sunday at the Peli-
can Hill Golf Club in the New-
port Coast from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.
It's the ATSC's 17th annual
Newport Beach Concourse d'El-
egance presented by Lincoln and
celebrating Packard's 100th
anniversary and ATSC's 25th
anniversary. On display at the
show will be more than 180
antique, vintage, and classic
cars, plus hot rods and automo-
tive fine arts. ATSC is the
Assessment & Theatment Ser-
vices Center that's dedicated to
the purpose: M Arrest the Prob-
lem, Not the Child." Tickets to
the exhibit are $20 for adults,
seniors and students $15, and
kids 12 and undr.,. are free.
CHIEN PHOTOGRAPHER
•
AM we hope 11'1 the 1811 --1. As voo may know. we suppon the
Susan G Komen &east Cancer Foundation. and have f0t three years We'd hke 1t to
be our last. But only 1f wt find a cure. So. come help. Visit Cnwier on October 8th
betwlMJf\ 1 Oem Ind 6pin arid test drMt a new BMW. Then we'll donate one dollef for
fMl(y mlte you dnw It's that si!TIPfe.
So join us for a day of fun. food, retrllhments and • few surpnse guests
CREVIER BMW
ltlilU '81 l"9 •all, II fr11w1y ti Elll11tr 11.,..·1111 www.trm...._ ....
The Orange Comity M1lleam
of Art is offering fall art pr:ograms
for children. 'Jbe classes were
created for children ages 6 to 13,
depending on the subject. Topics
include "Retro-mania,.' a look
back at the art and design of pop
culture and fashion from earlier
in the century, on four consecu-
tive Thursdays -Oct. 14, 21, 28;
and Nov. 4 -from 3:30 p.m. to 5
p.m. There will be •Ceramics for
Kids• for ages 6-12 where the~"ll
get to learn the basics of working
with clay, including coil, slab, and
free-form technlques, plus crea.te-
their-own kiln-fired pieces on
four Wednesdays -Oct 20, 27,
Nov. 9, 10 -from .;3:30 p.m. to 5
p .m. For youths ages 8 to 12,
there will be •The Making of A
City: Urban Sculpture.• Children
will create four city-based pro-
jects made of hardware store
supplies and recycled materials,
inspired by paintings of Edward
Hopper, on four Thursdays -
Nov. 11, 18; Dec. 2, 9 -from 3:30
p .m. to 5 p.m. For ages 6 to 12,
there will be a •Basics of Draw-
ing Workshop• Young artists will
explore line, texture, and gesture
through a series of drawing expe-
riences in different media on
Tuesday, Nov. 2, from 3:'5 p.m. to
5:.CS p.m. The fee is $15 for mem-
l>ers and $20 for nonmembers for
the one-day draWUlg workshop.
The four-week classes are $45 for
members and $50 for nonmem-
bers. Also, on Saturdays at South
Coast Plaza beginning Oct. J 6
and running through Dec. 11
from 2 to 4 p.m. there will be
drop-off art programs for kids
ages 6 to 12. Each program will
feature a different art activity col-
. lage, drawing, printmaking or
sculpting. Space is limited and
registration is required. To regis-
ter for classes, or for more infor-
mation, please call (949) 759-
1122, ext. 204.
Hemphlll's liug's & Carpets,
at (949) 722-7224, is having
another sale on Karastan area
rugs, hand-knotted tea wash
rugs, all Masland carpets and
custom rugs and wool • scrugs •
from $49. The sale ends Nov. 1.
Hemphill's Rugs & Carpets is at
230 E. 17th St. m Costa Mesa: j
John L Blom Custom Pbotog-j
raphy Ud., at (949) 675-3130, is 'j
having a Toys for Tots spectal on
children's sittings that are
booked now through Oct.30. The J
special requires that for each
child, you bring in a new l
unwrapped toy of a $20 or more ~
value, which will be doMted to
"Toys for Tots," a fund-raiser for
underprivileged children. It's at
3732 E. Coast Hwy. in Corona
del Mar.
Pagllacd, a local art gallery is
closing its doors permanenUy on
Wednesday and is having a
going-out-of-business sale until
then. On sale is art by Red Skel-
ton, Disney; plus clowns, fig-
urines and gifts. The merchan-
dise is reduced 25% to 40%.
Pagliacci, (949) 673-6292, is m
the Lido Marina Vt.Ua'ge.
• BEST BUYS is fublished Thursdays
and Saturdays. I you know of a good
buy, send a fax to (949) 646-4170 or
write to Daily Pilot, Best Buys, 330 W.
Bay St., Costa Mesa 92627.
o.i .-tlot, 3)0 w. 5t., CGlt8
g2'tJ1; fax them to';.: 646-41
cMI (949) 642-5680. Ext. 221. A
listing of AllOl.M> tuw. ~ found at dallypllot.com,
TODAY
AttenUon all Newport ~
High School graduates from tbla
class of 19491 A 50th high ~
reunion will be presented ~·
For more information, call ( )
548-2678.
The Orange County Pair ar ~
sition Center will hold a ~
expo frQm 9 a.m. to .C p.m. at tb8
fairgrounds in Building 10. co.t'lir
$7 for adults, and children 12 ad
under are free. For more infonnit-
tion, call (949) 4.CJ-3735. • n
A free progrun c.alled •For y._
Personal Safety• is being oft~
at noon in the Newport Beedl
Central Library Friends meetiig
room, 1000 Avocado Ave. ~
sented by Andrea Queery, ~
program will focus on what c;ili-
zens can and cannot do to ensure
their personal safety. For 1Il(U.e
information, call (949) 717-3801.
NEW
2000MODELS
• 001'StANDING C\IS10MF.I SEIV1CE •VOLUME SELECTION• GREAT PRJCD GllAJtANTEfD • -~ln~~p
WHEN DINING GETS BORING, IT'S TIME FOR .• ,
-•*'ta+faf~·•·
OUR MEALS ARE A TRIP TO MEXICO.,
HERE, WE MAKE DINING
MORE THAN A MEAL.
Have You
~Heard
The News?
There's A ew outh Coast Plaza in your future.
We 're undergoing a major transformation, w have
over 25 new tore and re taurants opening by year-end.
Look for The CJuhhou Restaurant, Manrico Cashmere,
and Border· Book , Music and Cafe.
On ovember 4th, discover Crate & Barrel'
spectacular new two-tory, 42,000 quare foot tore,
featuring their acclaimed furniture coll tion.
Inspiration. Imagination. Innovations eve~here you turn".
All to make South Coast Plaza your ultimate
shopping, dining, and entertainment de tination.
The big new is here.:.there' more to come.
. A ew South Coast Plaza.
For a complt!tC": tlf~tory or our world·ten41Wfttd llom
pleaw. call the conciforp •t 1-80()..782-8888 •
Cockto11s
Phone Ahead 10·
Food To Go
. .
10111 LUICI Wiii Ill IP IOI
Henry E. Schieleln, left, president of the Balboa Bay Club; Henry Segerstrom, chief executive officer of Segerstrom and
Sons; and Newport Beach Mayor Dennis O'Neil share handshakes at the annual DP 103 most influential luncheon at the
Balboa Bay Club. Top right, DP 103 recipients Bob Cuyler and Tina Hoover sing along at the luncheon. At right, Times
Community News Editor Deniene Husted gets her hair cut and styled by DP 103 recipient Ron Perez.
p H 0 T ·O s B y M A R I A N N A D A y M A s s E y I D A I L y p I L 0 T
No Cover Charge!
• Evening cruising
• Winter cruismg
• Du./JJ bo11ting made easier
• Front window defog,tr
• Safa for children
949.645.6812
• Every window opens & closes
• UV protected glass
• Vmt1'4tion system
• Classic Looft & stylt
• Gmerous Tradt Up J>rugr11ms
• Duffy'• Cabin Endosure eliminata the need for a boat ooftl'!
~.duffyboats.com
Hodson Lighting
Oprn Tu ts.·Fri. 9·5. Sat. 9·4
1510 Ntwport Blvd .. Costa MHa
Quality Li1luln1 Sn~k• ror 30 Yeare
(949) 548-9341
,
Daily Pilot
WHY PAY
DEPT STORE
PRICES?
Visit our
AREA RUG STUDIO
Rugs & Runners on
Sale
No matter what you're doing,
)'Ollr hometO"Nn newspaper
RTS IN •••
. .
1JJGily Pilot Saturday, October 2, i 999 NI . .
~efting her sights across the globe for SoroptimistS:
E LECTED TO INTERNA-
TIONAL BOARD: On
Sept. t, Dawn Mane
J.,emondl, a member and past
president of Soroptimist Interna-
tional of Newport Harbor,
began a two-year term on the
board of directors of Soroptimist l
International of the Americas, a
volunteer service organization
founded in 1921 for women 1n
' management, business and the
professions. She joins 12 other
members on Soroptimist's Inter-
national board, which is respon-
sible for strategic planning, pol-
Jcy and program development.
The Newport-Harbor club is
one of 3 , 100 Soroptimist clubs
worldwide with a membership
of more than 100,000 women
wbo contribute time and finan-
cial support to community-
based projects benefiting
women. Lemonds has been a
Soroptimist since 1982,and bas
'erved as governor of the Desert
Coast Region and received the
organization's Distinguished
•
COMMUllTY
& CLUIS
Woman Award. An employee of
the state of California for 27
ye$ll'S, sbe currently serves as
director of the South Coast
Regional Project, headquarte red
at Fairvi~w Regional Center.
llOllING ON THE RIVER-
BOAT: The Newport Harbor
Nautical Museum and the New-
port Balboa Rotary Club have
teamed up for a evening of
Riverboat gambling, food sta-
tions, silent auction and live
entertainment tonight at the
museum. Prom 6 to 10 p.m ..
guests wW dine on food provid-
ed by the Riverboat Restaurant
and play at professionally oper-
a ted gaming tables, from which
winners will receive points for a
special ratne. Silent auction
prizes include weekends at a
variety of Orange County and
Las Vegas hotels, dinners for
two at local restaurants and a
variety or merchandise. Tickets
at $40 per person a re available
by calling (949) 675--8915.
VIVA LAS VEGAS: The Har-
bor Mesa Llons Club h olds it
annual casino night, Viva Las
Vegas Friday at the Costa Mesa
Community Center. Tickets are
$25 each and include $100 in
playing chips, a Mexican buffet
dinner, entertainment, prizes,
no-host bar and a lot of fun.
Proceeds will benefit the Lions
Sight and Hearing Foundation. to your commuruty? Try a ser-
For more information, call Carol vice club! You are mVlted to
Van Holt at 714/962-0265. attend a club meeting this com-
SUPPORTING YOUI'H PllO-jng week. Many clubs will buy
GRAMS: Costa Mesa Kiwanis . your fust guest meal for you.
Club member Charlie Markel MONDAY -6:30 p.m.: The
presented checks from the club Harbor-Mesa Lions Clubs meets
in the amount of $500 to Harlan at Costa Mesa Country Club for
Anderson of the Boys & Glils a program on Camp Wilderness.
C lub and to John Provost of the TUESDAY -7:30 a.m.: The
YMCA lo be used for youth pro-Newport Beach Sunnse Rotary
grams. Club meets at the Balboa Bay ·
WORTH REPEATING: From Club. 6:30 p.m.: The Costa
the Scuttlebutt, publication of Mesa-Newport Harbor Lions
the Ne wport Beach-Corona del Club meets at the Costa Mesa
Mar Kiwanis Club ... "Wisdom Golf and Country Club.
is the reward you get from a WEDNESDAY -7:15 a.m.:
lifetime of listening, when you The South Coast Metro Rotary .
would have preferred to talk.• Club will meet at the Center
WELCOME TO THE WORLD Club Newport Harbor Kiwanis
OF SEllVICE CLUBS: Henry Club meets at the University
Catrow, sponsor by. Bob Uttle, Athletic Club. Noon: The
who Joined the Newport-lrvme Exchange Club of Orange Coast
Rotary Club. meets at the Bahia Corinthian
SERVICE CLUB MEETINGS I Yacht Club 6:00 p.m.: The
THJS COMlNG WE~K: Want to Newport Balboa Rotary meets at
get more involved in your com-the Bahia Connth1an Yacht to
munity, make new fnends, net-I hear Len Brass discuss Toddy's
work, or to give somethmg back Youth. 6:30 p.m.: The Newport
Bedch Llons Club me ts a t th~
Riverboat Cafe. l
THURSDAY -7:00 a.m.:
The Costd Mesa Orange Coast
Breakfast Lions Club meets at
Mimi's Cafe to hear Lion Mar-
vin Kravitz. Nooq: Kiwanis
Club of Newport Beach -Coro-.
na del Mdr meets at the Ba hia
Connth1an to }lear Carol Hoff~
man of the Irvine Company.
The exchange Club of New-
port Harbor meets at the
Riverbodt for a business meet-
mg The Newport-Irvme
Rotary Club meets at the
Irvine Marriott to bear New-'
port aeach Deputy. City Man-1 ager David KJH. The Costa
Mesa K1wan1s Club meets at ,
the Holiday Inn to hear from
Lt. Gov. Ken Dilley.
• COMMUNITY & CLUBS 1s published
every Saturday in the Daily Pilot. Send
your service club's meeting informa·
t1on by fax to (949) 660-8667, ~mail to
1ckboomOaol.com or by mall to 2082
SE Bristol, Suite 201, Newport Beacti,
CA 92660 1740 '
Pd( kdhlr . L1 shio11'thl P "Slink y Wrdt .. SPpt11 dtrs
<.n·,1t for lr.l\('I~ -1~!:..'!~
Cardigan
Vest,
Tank,
and Pants
Cropped Jkt.
ONLY:$26°0
Tunic
oNLv:s38°0
H•/p SdnlaMIJU
a Child's DutUn
Come Tru~!
OCTOBER
TOYS 1-'0R TOTS
SPECIAL
We will trade you
ch1ldren·s llling
for toys. ONLY: s24oo I ·-~, Trendy
Crochet-hook
Pouch
oNLv: s1 s00
All toy donated
to the Marines.
"Toya for Tots"
We have donaied
over 2.<XX.l
toys
the pa<it 15 years.
I
CONTEMPORARY WOMEN'S WEAR & ACCESSORIES
Plan now
f or Holiday Carrb
alf.d Gifts
BA1.80A ISLAND University Center Downtown Palm Spring•
332 Marine Ave. 4237 Campus Dr. 192 So. PaJm Canyon
(loolt For Brisht Y~llow Awolna) (Am. From UCl) Na Sprinp
(949) 675-6887 (~9) 854MS2 (619) 320-4844
Call now, /or best appointment times:
(949) 675-3130
C1<..N T~1 3132 East Coast ,Hwy • Corona del .\hr • 91625
BARGAIN-RATE CAR INSURANCE
WITH BARGAIN-RATE SERVICE
IS NO BARGAIN •.
,,,
.,.
Trust one of these State Farm agents with your car insurance:
COSTA MF..SA EAST
Ken Dilley
2482 Newport Blvd. #10
(in Sea Coast Village)
949-631-1080
lie 0490103
Don Julien
474 E. 17th St. #203
(at Irvine, above Diedrich's)
949-646-4848
lie 0256186
George tlsom
350 E. 17th St. #211
(at 17th St. & Newport)
949-646-9393
lie OB72182
COSTA MESA SOUTH
Jerry Tardie
1518 Newport Blvd.
(Newport Blvd. & 15"' Street)
949-553-1115
lie 0515017
Pat McLeod
2651 Irvine Ave. #138
(next to Farmer's Market)
949-631-1082
lie 0492147
CORONA DEL MAR
Chip Slalltl
3810 E. Coast Hwy
{at Poppy across from 5 Crowns)
949-72.MOOO
licOC08488
Jerry F.atabroolt
2711 E. Com Hwy #C
(PCH & Goldenrod)
'49-67 3-1643
lk0486862
NEWPORT BEACH
Dennis Rosene
2610 Avon St. #C
(near the Riverside Ave. Post Office)
949-645-6000
lie OB63316
Bob ullivan
227 20th Street, Ste. 103
(one blk past old
Spaghetti Factory on the bay side)
949-673-9391
lie 0567334
Dian Roy
2400 W. Coast Hwy # 1
(next to Jack Shrimp)
949-631-5530
lie 0563198
JefTLong
2633 W. Pacific Coast Hwy.I Ste. B
(2 blocks So. of Newport 8 vd.
between Riverside & Tustin Ave.)
949-574-9200
lie 0724779
Wayne Ireland
4500 Campus Dr. #SOS
(at Campus & MacArthur)
949-852-8!73 •
lie 0618494
COSTA MESA NORTH
MatlMW Kenatdy
891 W. Baker St. Ste. A·8
(Baker & Bear St.)
714-9!7~
lic0731154
Mike Schearer
1551 Baker St. Ste. B
(Baker & Harbor)
714-4l5-8JOO
lie 0645331
Buddy Bearbower
2850 Mesa Verde Dr. East Ste. P
(Adams I Mesa Verde)
714-546-1711
lie 0196112 11an ••••
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AIO ~.October 2. 1999
fERRARI
CONTINUED FROM A1
the 15 new car dealerships in Cos·
ta Mesa.
The Ferrari Dealership of
' Orange County sells an est.i.mated
: 150 ca.rs a year, Zenor said.
More than o dozen dealerships
dot Harbor Boulevard between the
San Diego Freeway 8.nB Newport
Boulevard, said Jon Gray, the deal·
~r's association president and gen-
eral manager at Orange Coast
Jeep Isuzu.
The old Mazda site has a valid
conditional-use pennit for an auto
dealeIShip already filed with the
ctty, said Mike Robinson, principal
planner for the city. That precludes
' Ferrari from • having to seek
approval from the Planning Com-
misston, unless they want to open
a service shop, he said.
·1rs a wonderful thing for the
Harbor Boulevard of Cars but
more importantly for Costa Mesa,"
Gray said. •first of all, currently
it's an empty lot. With the creation
of a business it will create more
JObs, not to mention the sales tax to
the a ty, especially considering the
price of Ferraris.
1 • . . '
ARTS
CONTINUED FROM A 1
firmly belie;es the center should
be in the hands of a private foun-
dation. But Wood, who is leading
the crusade for an arts center,
fUmly believes the opposite.
It's a question of money and
artistic freedom, said Howard
Herzog, president of the Arts
Foundation, the new private
fund-raising arm of the Arts
Commission.
Herzog and many of the Arts
Commission representatives on
the committee would like to see
a privately run center.
•According to [Herzog), he's
spoken to one or two corpora-
tions who said they would l:>e
ready (to· make donations) if it
wasn't government-run,• said
Arts Commission member Don
Gregory.
The committee estimates that
it would cost between $150,000
and $250,000 to run the center
annually, Gregory said. Dona-
tions are a vital part of the equa-
tion.
Herzog said some businesses
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he'• talked tO indicated they may
be hesitant to donate to a pri-
vately owned entity for fear that
the dty may not want to dedicate
certain company names to a hall,
staarcase or chair in the proposed
center.
The other issue is artistic free-
dom. U, for example, the center
wanted to display a collection of
the controversial photographs of
Robert Mapplethorpe, the City
Council could object, Gregory
said.
Wood, however, and many of
the other library board members,
thi;nk it would be simpler to have
the entire center o~ned and
operated by the city.
"l think if would remove a
huge unknown: Wood said. "I
don't know whether a private
foundation can· exist and who
would be the backbone of it."
Under Wood's leadership .. the
committee is explonng whether
the City Council would donate
an estimated $75,000 in opera-
tional costs. Wood believes that
the city would be interested in
donating to the center, which he
envisions as a central meeting
place for Newport Beach.
After all, the city has funded
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the library, Wood said. Most
recently, the council voted to
donate Sl00,000 to add 2,000
booki to a colledion focuslng on
arts and culture, be said. Some
have also voiced concerns that
the Artl Foundation would have
difficulty railing the necessary
operational funds.
Others, however, are not as
convinced that the city would
donate a greot dfal of money to
an entity tht\t ia.not a basic pub-
lic service. Also there is the issue
of the center being at the whim
of the city's budget restrictions
every year.
Herzog and Gregory believe
that the Arts Foundation should
be allowed the chance to show
that it can raise enough money to
make the center operate inde-
pendently of the city.
"I don't understand the skep-
ticism,• Gregory said. "The Arts .
Foundation hasn't had a cha.nee
to raise money.•
Despite their differences in
opinions, committee members
say that this issue is simply a
bump on the road toward build-
ing the center.
However, more than a month
into the process and two straw
votes later, there is still no con-
sensus on the issue.
The ne~t comrru1tee meeting
is Oct. 19. The group will present
the arts center proposal to Speak
Up Newport Wednesday.
HARBOR
CONTINUED FROM A1
the Home Depot and Lucky
supermarket, ii upected to gen-
erate more than St million in tax
revenue for the dty each year.
Developer ICI expects the center
will ultimately include about 35
tenants.
So far they have signed leases
with Barbeques Galore, T.J .
Maxx 'n' More, Nick's Pizza,
McDonald's, Supercuts, a nail
salon and a beauty supply store.
Negotiations are pending with
Famous Footwear, Panda
Express, Togo's, a major coffee
chain and a local Mexican food
chain restaurant, said Tamra
Greenlee, senior vice president
at IO.
"Our anchor teDAnts are in
place and excited to open in
Harbor Center and we are
pleased with the strong interest
from other tenants,• said ICI
President Scott Bell.
Bell added that he was
pleased with the mix of tenants
who have signed with ICI, espe-
cially Lucky, since the area is
crying out for a major grocery
store.
Lucky plans on opening a
62,000-square-toot combination
grocery and drug store with its
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sister company Sav-On, said
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woman. Tbe store will haft an
· expended greeting card sectiqn
and other amenities, including a
bakery, dell, meaVseafood sec·
tion and a noral department.
Pall attempts to develop Har-
bor Center, including ones by
The Home Depot, were unsuc-
cessful because there were mul-
tiple owners, many of whom
were absentee landlords.
.:our prospective tenants are
ecstatic about not only the
remodel of the center but also its
Harbor Boulevard location,• 1
Greenlee said. · ,_
Tenants who have stuck it out
through the years are also
pleased about the face lift the. ·
center is getting. Rite Aid and
Chuck E Cheese's have been
interested in having the center
redeveloped for quite sotpe
lime, Greenlee said.
For Elisa Fodera, whose fami-
ly has run Nick's Pizza at Harbor
Center for 31 years, the demoli-
tion was bittersweet. Nick's
stayed open throughout most of
construction but closed at the
end of August when their build-
ing had to be demolished.
•We waited for a very Jong
time for this center to be remod-
eled because it was so run-
down, but it was very sad for us
to get out of our old place,"
Fodera said.
Nick's Pizza is scheduled to
be opened by early to mid-
November, followed by T.J.
Maxx 'n' More and Barbeques
Galore in late November, and
The Home Depot and Lucky in .
January. The last phase of the
center will be a food court area
at the comer of Harbor Boule-
vard and Wilson Street. ICI plans
to complete the entire center by
the first quarter of next year.
The development pIOcess
was a painful one for neighbors
who lived behind the center and
were concerned about increased
noise, traffic and pollution from
the new center that will be locat-
ed much closer to their homes
than thP old one. The project
underwent several appeals and
ultimately a lawsuit that was set-
tled with neighbors in the Col-
lege Park tract.
In the end, the project was
approved with more than 50
conditions and other measures,
including agreements with resi-
dents to install double-pane
windows, air conditioning and a
landscaped berm between the
homes and the center. The berm
was the first part of the center to
be constructed.
"It's ainazing how it's grown
since we planted," Greenlee
said of the landscaped buffer.
"It's a veritable forest back
there.•
Many of the center's features
are taking shape, including a
nautical theme that features
mast-like overhangs on the
buildings. The center was
designed by Nadel Architects
Inc. Fawcett said the finished
center will become a showcase
for Harbor Boulevard.
Although Fodera said she and
her family will always harbor
nostalgia for the family restau-
rant that sustained them for so
many years, they are looking
forward to their new and more
visible location out front.
·we feel that era kind of end·
ed and we have to start a new
one,• she said.
• Stt us for all your Color questions
• Senior citiztn discoums on Sundays
777 7 7
1·
and anyone else they could think
of to induce Crummel to move.
• They will reminisce about how
they drove straight from that
council meeting to the store, and
bought posterboard and markers
and then went home and
AQ"aWled angry signs.
.. They will laugh at those first
crude picket signs, about how
Uiey didn't even have sticks for
th.em, but were forced, with
aching arms, to hoist them above
their heads.
Like attendees at a high school
reunion, they will look back upon
,.the learning process, and the
14ccomplisQ.ments they racked up:
the community they developed,
the publiaty they garnered, and
finally, the arrest of the man they
viewed as a predator in their
_Itlidst.
, ,,. It was their e fforts, they
believe, that spurred Jaw enforce-
ment officials to build a case
against Crummel. He was sen-
tenced Sept 17 to 60 years to life,
and was immediately sent to
Riverside County where he faces
murder charges in the 1979 death
of a Costa Mesa boy.
Crummel's roommate at the
condominium and partner-in-.
pi.me, former practicing psychia-
trist Burnell Forgey, 82, pleaded
.guilty to five counts of oral copu-•
~lion with a minor in July. ·
Forgey was sentenced to time
already served-about two years
-and is now hvmg confined to a
t t t • I
MARC MARTIN I OAll.Y PILOT
Residents of tt,ie Newport Crest com.munity were jubilant on
May 30, 1997 after sheriff's deputies arrested J ames Lee Crum-
mel on multiple molestation charges.
wheelchair.
From December 199.f to June
1995, Crummel and Forgey, who
have known each other since the
1970s, drugged and then molest-
ed a Costa Mesa man in Forgey's
Newport Crest condominium
The man, who was then 16 and a
patient of Forgey's at New Alter-
natives, a Costa Mesa group
home for troubled adolescents,
later sued Forgey and Crurnmel
in a civil suit.
Crummel was the first New-
port Beach resident to be the sub-
ject of Megan's Law, which
requires neighbors to be notified
when sex offenders move into the
area.
When neighbors learned m
1997 through Megan's law that
Crummel was living with Forgey
m a Newport Crest condominium,
1t was then they responded with a
fury of protest and picketing.
That dnger and protest brought
the disparate group of condomini-
um dwellers together and turned
them into a neighborhood.
"It. wasn't a neighborhood
before. Nobody knew anyt>ody, ~
said Darlene Savoji, who spear-
headed the picketing efforts.
"Now we call each other and
say. 'You got milk?' They're my
bdby sitters. My workout buddies.
My very dedr friends.~
Those first days, they came
together and educated them-
selves in the theater of protest.
They made bigger, better
signs, and mounted them on
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sticks.
They learned to bring their
children and iSOfUy glowing can·
dies to theu v191ls, and they
encowaged lhel.I' children lo smg
anti-Crummel ong for the tel •
Vl!tlOn camerds.
They invited the reporteri:. into
their homei:.. and they worked
with the police.
When people saw them on the
news and called to casllgate them
as vigilantes, they changed their
phone numbers, but kept protest-
ing.
When they had nightmares
about Crummel hurting them or
people commg after them, they
shuddered to themselves, but cur-
ried on
And torughi. they are going to
celebrate what they see as their
success in getting Crummel put
firmly behind bars.
But they are also going to cele-
brate the creation of their neigh-
borhood. which Savo11 said IS now
a place where ·we count on each
other and look after each other ...
Sgt Mike McDennott of the
Newport Beach Pohce Depart-
ment said the police would be out
to support the neighbOrhood.
"It's a good example of getting
a neighborhood involved m a
community problem,• he said of
the protesters' efforts. "They took
some steps that brought attention
to this guy, and between their
efforts and our efforts, ICrum-
mel's in prison) •
•They die celebrating some-
thing great," Sdlrl Ldurel Crofoot,
who Sdid she can't attend the par-
ty because she has chotr practice.
"I'm JUSt glad it's over.•
BOTTLE
CONTINUED FROM A 1
Three months ago, the pair
decided to show how muCb
they cdred aoout one another
by participatmg in an activity
down by the water. Snuth and
Sasha stOod at the peak of the
Lido Isle bndgP. and threw a
bottle -contairung a message
and a dolltt.r bill -into the
water with hopes of it travel·
ing to fd1away lands. They
·closed their eyes and said a
prayer th.at whoever should
find the bottle would be
ble::;sed with happincs and
good health tor We •
"I was hoping that it would
. sail co·r d long time and maybe
wind up m another country,•
Sasha said.
But the bottle c;imply flOdled
a.round m the Lido Channel for
days before being spotted by a
gondolier for Adventur~ at
Sea Yacht Charters and
Romantic Gondolas in New-
port Beach A heavy workload
forced gondola workers to
push the bottle aside with
plans of opening it later.
The gondola company con-
tacted Smith last week to alert
him of the find and offered the
Cather-daughter pair a compli-
mentdl)' crwse on <\ gondola.
Srruth had placed one of tus
businec;s cards in the bottle m
hopes of being contacted.
"It -was huge that c;omeone
Soturdoy. October 2, 1999 AD
found the bottle,• Smith ID&l.-
"libat boU1e repreteDted oal.
special time together."
Sasha was 3 when hei-..a
left the family ~.
without contact and since that
time, she has lived with ~
paternal grandmother in Cer
ritos. Snutb scud work OOD-
,stralilts prevent hlS daughter
from hving with him hill time.
The hours the two spend
together at the beach on the
weekend are prooous, dCCOrd"
mg to Smith,
•My love for Sasha is
unconditional,• Sffilth said.
•we will always hnd a way to '
beat overwhelming con di-
tions.• Last Fnday the pair
.cruised the barbor in a gondo
la fQr mor than an how. •
"This i really nice news,•
said Kathy Leek, a spokes-
woman for Adventures at Sea
"So much of what we bear
t9day ii; negative. It's eitfiel' ba~ parenting or bad relation..'.' '
ships.•
·Th.i.5 is a story about quali-
ty family tune,· Leek said.
Sasha, who wants to be a
singer when she grows up.
said she may even wnte a
song someday about her expe
nence wiU1 the bottle.
She said the fir~1 couple of
lines m.ight go something like
this:
"J went out to the water and
stuck money m a bottle and 1
Uuew •t in. Then it was gone. I
told my dad I loved him. It was
really cool.•
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Dai~ Pilot
•
Costa Mesa percussionist .
Kurt Rasmussen has
traveled the world with
Paul Anka, performed a t
Carnaval in Brazil and
was tattooed to show his
commitment to Escola de
.
Samba Vai-Vaihis. But
··now he's gathering up his .. > .
; . drums and h eading to
•
~ Las Vegas, where he
~ plans to settle down with
Cirque du Soleil's 'O.' ·
By Alex Coohnan
urt Rasmussen hasn't
changed apartments in
18 years. Now he's
finally moving out, and
it's easy to see why he
waited th.Ls long.
Rasmussen's Costa
Mesa apartment is
filled with drums: drums in enormous
cardboard boxes and drums in cloth
travel bags and drums in hard-shell
travel cases. He has tambourines and
cymbals. timbales and bongos. piles of
drumsticks and mallets, and seemingly
every other deVtce that ct>uld conceiv-
ably be used to raise a percussive
racket.
They are the tools of the trade for
Rasmussen, 48, a professional percus-
sionist. They just happen to be very
bulky tools.
The reason Rasmussen is leaving,
despite the eqwpment-shJeppmg
required to do so, is that he's just
accepted a job in Las Vegas with
Cl!que du SoleU, the Canadian per-
Saturday, OCTOllER 2, 1999
-.. .
SEAN HUER I DA(t.Y PlOT
Kurt Rasmussen ls leaving Costa Mesa after 18 years to join Cirque du Solell's "O" in Las Vegas. •
forming arts show that puts American
circuses to shame with its aestl).etic and
t~chnlcal complexity.
Rasmussen will be the percussionist
in the band for Cirque's intricate under-
water "O" show, which is about 90
minutes long and fairly challenging
musicaJly,
"It's a combi.nabon of a lot of things,•
Rasmussen said, describing the pro-
gram he will play. •it's an eclectic mix
of class1cal, jazz and world eUmic influ-
ences.•
Ironically, the motivation for Ras-
mussen 's move is a desire to stay put
more often. He's been traveling for
years as a percussionist and musical
coordinator for Paul Anka's band, as
well as taking numerous side trips for
other projects.
"I'd been wanting to get off the road
for a long time,• Rasmussen said. •I
finally just hit the wall• Besides work-
ing with Anka for the la¥ 10 years, the
drwnmer has perfonned'with artists
from Sergio Mendez to Quincy Jones
and groups such dS the Long Beach
and AUanta symphonies. His music hds -. ..J
appeared on dozens of records, as well JI
as on television and radio programs
and movies such as the recent IMAX
film ·Everest." He has also been active
over the years in the local music scene.
Rasmussen had a steel drwn band at
the Ritz Carlton in Laguna Nigel and a
Latin Jazz band that played the Studio
Cafe through the early '80s.
SEE 'O' PAGE A16 •
.. The notes that bind them San Francisco Ballet's
'Giselle' staged at Center .. 'friends since high school, the Eroica
Trio brings commitment, connection
bnd a love of chamber music to The
' Center's Founders Hall
ALEX COOLMAN
• T o say that the Eroica Tho has consider-
able experience playing together is to
commit something of an understate-
ment; the group has, in fact, been creating its
distinctive brand of chamber music since its
fnembers were children.
, The trio, which plays The Orange County
erfonning Arts Center's Founders Hall Sun-
ay, has its origins in a Greenwich Village
tneeting between pianist Erika Nickrenz and
fnollnist Adela Pena, who were working
k>gether on a performance. At that time, they
,vere both only 9 years old.
A few years later, when Erika was 12, she
an into cellist Sara Sant' Ambrogi.a while
attending chamber music courses offered by
Sara's grandmother. The three young women
t.>ound up cementing their friendship
pirough the course of their formal education
t Juilliard.
From the start, Nkkrenz said, there was a
sremendous energy in the group's musical
viteraction. • ,...__
SEE EROICA PAGE A18
EROICA TRIO
+ WHERE: The Orange
County Performing Art
Center's Founders Hall,
600 Town Center Drive,
Costa Mesa + WHEN: 11 a.m. Sun-day
+ HOW MUCH: $34 + PHONE: (714) 740-
7878
The Erolca Trio, A<k!la
Pena; Ertka Nlckrenz
and Sara SanfAmb~
glo formed a bond that
makes thi highly
acclaimed group one
of the hottest chamber
acts around.
fllll
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The San Francisco Ballet
swoops into the Orange
County Performing Arts Cen-
ter's Segerstrom Hall
Wednesday with the opening
of MGiselle. •
The ballet, which runs
through Oct. 10, is a full-
length work choreographed
by the company's artistic
d.lrector, Helgi Tomasson. It
was originally written by poet
Theophlle Gautier, who was
inspired by Heinrich Heine.
Thematically, the work treats
the doomed nature of the
human search for ideal love.
· •Giselle• is the final work
in The Center's 1999 Interna-
tional Classic J)ance Season
and is also the first perfor-
mance the San Francisco bal-
let bas giVen at Tho Center
since 1996.
Tomasson, who took over
as director of the ballet in
1985, brings experience and
sophistication derived from
working with the Joffrey,
Harkness and New York City
ballets. He has choreographed
more than 29 ballets and has
overseen the growth of the
San Francisco company from a
strong but parochial presence
into a more truly international
troupe.
The arustlc director, in con-
junction with Danish scene
designer Mikael Melbye,
looked closely at earlier stag-
ings of •GLSelle• in preparing
for the upcoming perfor-
mance. Aspects of the setting
and costumes a.re drawn from
details of lithographs of the
dancers who first tackled tho
work tn 1841. Revisions made
by these same dancon; in the
1880$ also influence the con·
temporary stagmg, producng
a work that is both vital and
historically nuanced.
Perf onnances will be at 8
p.m Wcdne day through Oct.
9 clS well as at 2 p.m. Oct 9
and 10. Tickets are $10 to $68.
The Center is at 600 Town
Center Drive, Co ta Mesa. For
more information, call (714)
556-2122.
t
• • ... society SOtvrdoy, Odober 2, 1999 AJ3
·Couple feted for outstanding work tmth The Center
A n ocean-view estate was
the setting for an evening
honoring Marilyn and
Tom NlelMn of Newport Beach
for their years of service to The ·
Orange County Performing Arts
Center.
It was an e vening for founders
and major patrons of The Center
to gather and cele brate the suc-
cess of local citizens who have
proudly created a remarkable
cultural center for the performing
arts that has become a world-
dass model of local citizenship.
. The model has been the pur-.
~ and pursuit of the group
known locally as "Founders
Plus,• a cadre of diverse niem-
t>ers of the N ewpt>rt-Mesa com -
munity who work to enhance the
entire agenda of The Center.
Tom Nielsen served as forme r
chairman of the board of The
Center, and with his wile, Mari-
lyn, was instrumental in launch-
ing the community fund-raising
aunpaign for the ptesent per-
forming arts structure, following
the initial gift of land from the
Segerstrom Foundation. The
Nielsens also co-chaired the
Community Council for the Per-
formance Fund, help\ru1 to
secure underwriting that enables
tlle s:ommunlty, through The
Center, to share in myriad cultur-
al expositions that otherwise
might not be available to local
audiences.
Marilyn Nielsen, a much-
loved and respected community
advocate, ~ supported a variety
wt.6irt1u·
rielllfaradlll,
locill•glllillls ........ .........
...... lht
fOUllller's WI In
lhli hanar was
utlyci..v.d·
cn1...,.,as
'9yni.wd
aneof .. ~
on lhi Orange
Comtwhoadout
ofareald8*tto
share lhe best of
the tun.. spirit
with ~who may
benefit from 1he
greater good.
of Center
intetests in .
addition to
numerous
other social,
cultural, edu-
cational and
• scientific
causes and
·concerns that
improve and
strengthen ·
the fabric of
life in this
region and
beyond.
When
there is a
need for
action, local
organizers
often rely on
the Nielsens
to make
things hap-
pen. The
Founder's
Gala in their
honor was
surely.
deserved and
appropriate, as they are indeed
one of the couples on the Orange
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Tom and MartlYpi Nielsen, left, stand with Orange Courity Per-
forming Arts board chairman Roger Kirwan at an event that
honored the couple for their work with the Center.
Coast who act out of a real desire
to share the best of the human
spirit with all who may benefit
from the greater good. In fact,
they will be embarrassed by this
coverage, as publicity of the per-
sonal variety is not really their
style, even though their names
are frequently listed in this col-
umn and others for their partici-
pation in community life.
The point is quite simple. The
Nielsens are involved with The
Center, and other endeavors,
because they believe in the posi-
tive impact The Center has on us
all. They do not act out of a
desire for personal recognition or
gain. They do not attend func-
tions because they wish to share
their new wardrobe with friends.
And, even though involvement
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in community does have a strong
business connection that can be
beneficial, (and as a past presi-
dent and vice chainnan of the
Irvine Company, Tom Nielsen
certainly did and continues to
have a strong business reason to
be involved in the cultural devel-
opment of this region), bis moti-
vation is not about profit, but
rather about positive growth for a
family community .
It is growth that will enh&nce
the lives of men, women and
children, and will also benefit
business in the region th.at will in
turn benefit schools and hospitals
and every other part of life. Iri
other words, everything iS con-
nected. A strong community
takes strong leaders to make
sure the connection is positive.
In this spirit, an elegant dinner
catered by Top Hat began with
sunset cocktails and hors d'oeu-
vres including Parmesan arti-
choke hearts and crab-stuffed
mushrooms, followed by Caesar
salad and ca.J11ed sirloin, and
capped off with the ultimate ice
cream sundae. It enticed a very
particular crowd that mcluded
the new Orange County Perform-
ing Arts Center chairman Roger
Kirwan and bis lovely wife, Gall.
The Kirwans chatted with fellow
Center patrons Vesta Curry, who
chaired the evening, Sharl and till
Harry Elayta:o, Eve Foussard.
Ruth Dlng, Barbara and Keith
Johannes, Nora and .Ttm John-
son. Jan Landstrom, Jean and
Tom Moon. Dorcas Preston. GlnJ
and Bob Robins~ Elizabeth Vin-
cent. and Carol and Kent Wilken.
Also in the crowd were Bar-
bara and David White, Mary and
Peter Muth, Kathryn Glassmey-
er, Don Castle, Joyce Hanson,
Rosalie and Paddy Lyske, Elaine
Redfleld, Darlene and Rodger
Swearingen, Barbara Trainor,
Betty Belden-Palmer, and Jean
.and Fred Hamann. The evening
fe<\tured the vocal talents of Ali-
son England, a performer with
impressive credits in concerts
halls worldwide.
England was accompanied by~
Sandy McCune, a talented
pianist who serves as an accom-
panist for The Center's "Infor-
mally Yo\lfS" series, a behind-
the-scenes program designed to
introduce audiences to the back-
stage workings of The Center.
The pair charmed the crowd and
enhanced the evening of acco-
lades bestowed upon the
Nielsens. ln all, it was a wonder-
ful and positive gathering for and
about folks who make a differ·
ence.
• B.W. COOK's column appears every
Thursday and Saturday. •
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14 Saturday, October 2, l 999 . datebOok Doily Pilot
Shepard's 'True West' examines extreme sibling rivalry
S outh Coast Repertory dis-
covered Sam Shepard early
: -too early. Our first expo-
sure to Shepard via SCR was one
of the playwright's egregiously
awfu1 one-acts written during his
(and SCR's) formative perioo,
"la Turista,. in 1969.
' That experience would have
soured
most the-THfATER REVIEW ater com-
"' . panies on a
playwright, but both SCR and
Shepard matured considerably
over the years. Their next ti.me
out together, in 1981, produced
the powerful comic drama ·nue
'West.•
SCR and Shepard have inter-
twined smce, most notably on
the Pulitzer Prize-winner •Burted
<;hild, • but •nue West" remains
the playwright's most brilliantly
conceived -and intensely per-
sonal -exercise. Small wonder
\t's being revived on the Second
Stage in an equally senses-jolt-
ing production.
Director Hope Alexander had-
n't read nor seen "lhle West"
before she took on the project,
but that hasn't hindered her from
delivering a superior rendition of
Shepard's brother-vs.-brother
faceoff. The playwnght adnuts
his two malJl characters, darker
versions of Neil Sunon's •Odd
Couple,• are drawn from equal
but opp<:>Site facets of his own
personality.
·nue west• places its sibling
combatants in their mother's
temporarily vacated home on the
edge of a Calif omia desert
where Austin is pounding out a
movie script and Lee is provid·
ing a loud, beer-swilling d\strac-
tion. Each has designs on the
olher's territory, and their
respective efforts to claim a por-
tion of it propel Shepard's story
from chronic irritation to murder-
ous violence.
Cameron Dye arms his intel-
lectually superior Austin with a
gritty intensity and thirst for
physical control that supplies a
form of crazed logic for hLs
eventual transition to the •dark
side." Dye operates from a well-
grounded sense of sanity and
reason, and displays his frustra-
tion superbly as he elects to
take on his brother on the lat-
ter's turf.
As the larcenous, slovenly 1
Lee, who lives off the land and'
rules by sheer physical force,
Paul Perri turns in a dynamic
portrayal. His own frustrations -
which take the form of crazed
assaults on a typewriter with a
golf club -may be scarier than
Austin's, but dramatically they're
on an equal level. He may, how-
ever, be the first actor to play the
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role with glasses, carefully doff-
ing them before the final, violent
scene.
Hal Landon Jr. enacts the
smarmy literary agent with a
practiced phoniness that stands •
as Shepard's backhanded slap to
the breed. Martha McFarland
contributes a marvelously con-
trasting cameo as the brothers'
befuddled mother, who returns to
find her home transformed into a
war zone.
Alexander keeps an aura of
tension ever present, whether
through anticipation of Perri's
violent outbursts or the simmer-
ing prospect of intellectual
burnout from Dye. A filth,
unseen but often referenced,
character is the specter of the
brothers' drunken shell 9f a
rather, reportedly modeled after
Shepard's own.
•nue West• boasts an impres-
sively immaculate (at least at the
outset) scenic design, splendidly
lit by Lonnie Rafael Alcarez with
the atmospheric sounds of crick-
ets and coyotes provided by Max
Kin berg.
· Shepard has evolved into a
major force as a playwright, and
·nue West,• n ow almost two
decades old, remains a vital,
visceral portrayal of sibling
rivalry taken to outrageotts
extremes.
• TOM TI1US reviews local theater for
the Daily Pilot His reviews appear
Thursdays and Saturdays.
E Sic· onid-..m 1bwlt center Drtw. eost. u.. ..... .,..
tw.~
p.m •• ~ and~m
2 and 7:45 p.m.
throuah Od. 24 • tlOWMUCH:
S26-S45 + PllONI: (714)
108-5555
Cameron Dye
bu the upper
band on his
brother (Paul
Perri) as thetr
mother, played
by Manha
McFarland,
watches ln a
climactic scene
from .. True
West" at South
Coast Repertory.
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Open
Mon thruSat
10am to 8pm
Sunday
noon-6pm
'FIVE WOMEN WEARING
THE SAME DRESS'
Alan Ball's play •Five Women
Wearing the Same Dress" runs
through today at The Theatre
District, with a performance at 8
p.m. Tickets for the show are
$20. The Theatre District is at
2930 Bristol St., Costd Mesa. For
more information, call (714) 435-
4043.
'MOON OVER BUFFALO'
Newport Theatre Arts Center
presents Ken Ludwig's •Moon
Over Buffalo" through Oct. 10.
Tickets for the comic play are
$15 for opening rugbt, $13 for
general admission The theater is
at 2501 Cliff Dnve, Newport
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Beach. For more information, call
(949) 631-0288.
SHAW'S ~PHILANDERER'
South Coast Repertory has
opened its 1999-2000 season with
#The Philanderer• by George
Bernard Shaw. The play, a comic
look at the avoidance of marriage
and the cultivation of "charming
friendships," will nm through
Oct. 10. SCR is at 655 Town Cen-
ter Drive, Costa Mesa. Tickets
are $18 to $47 and may be pur-
chas~ by calling (714) 708-5555.
'DEATH DEFYING ACTS'
OCC presents •oeath Defying
Acts.' three one-act plays by
Elame May, David Mamet and
Woody Allen, through Sunday.
Show times are at 8 p.m . today
and at 2 p.m. Sunday. Tickets are
$6 to $9. OCC is at 2701 Fairview
Road, Costa Mesa. For more
information, call (714) 432-5880.
'IN THE WESTERN GARDEN'
South Coast Repertory presents a
reading of Stuart Spencer's •1n-
The Western Garden' Monday at
7:30 p.m. Tickets are $8. South
Coast Repertory is at 655 Town
Center Drive, Costa Mesa. For
more information, (714) 708-5500.
'I HATE HAMLEr
OCC presents Paul Rudnick's
comic play •1 Hate Hamlet• Oct.
9 through 10 and 16 through 17.
Shows are at 8 p.m. Saturdays
and at 7 p.m. Sundays. Advance
tickets are $5. For more informa-
tion, call (714) 432-5640.
'THE PIANO LESSON'
South Coast Repertory presents
August Wilson's "Piano Lesson•
Oct. 22 through Nov. 21. Pre-
views begin Oct. 15. Tickets are
$28 to $47. Showtimes are Tues-
day through Friday at 8 p.m.,
Saturday at 2:30 and 8 p.m., and
Sunday at 2:30 and 7:30 p .m.
SCR is at 655 Town Center Ori·
ve, Costa Mesa. For more infor-
mation, call (714) 708-5555.
WENDY ROBIE
Actress Wendy Robie will per-
form a one-woman show at 8
p.m . Oct. 22 at OCC. Tickets are
$5. The show is in the Drama
Lab Theatre, at 2701 Fairview
Road, Costa Mesa. For more
information, call (714) 432-5640.
'Y2K'
OCC presents ·v2K," a program
of short plays related to the mil-
lennium, Oct. 30 through 31 and
Nov. 6 through 7. Show times aro
8 p.m. on Saturdays and 2 and 7
p.m. on Sundays. Tickets are 5'
to $6. OCC is at 2701 Fairview
Rd., Costa Mesa. For more lnfor·
mation, call (714) 432·5640.
'COMEDIENNE'
Ully Tomlin is coming to the
Orange County Performing Al'tl
Center Dec. 3 and 4. 1lc:btl *
the two-time Tony Award-Win·
nlng comlc actreu ruge froai
S36 to $49 and go on tale OCt.
~.The Orange County Per·
f onntng Arts Center ii at 600
1bwD c.... Drift, c.o.ta ~ ncaea ... , be pun:11...s
~*~~·&. •1&(114) .
(
1 E>eiily Pilot
-BRIAN BARRmt
JASON WILKINS TRIO
The Bnan &netVJason Wil.k.i.ils
liio will play Jan at That's Aro-
rna from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m Sun.
days. That's Aroma 15 at 1870
Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa. For
lllOre information, call (949) 548-1999. .
. MAHLER'S 'SYMPHONY
Of A THOUSAND'
· Pacific Symphony Orchestra will ,
play Mahler's "Symph6ny of a
!Thousand" today at the Orange
County Pedorming Arts Center's
~erstrom Hall. The con'Ce!t starts
at 8 p.m. Tickets are $18 to $50.
~e Center 1S at 600 Town Center
Drive, Costa Mesa. For more infor-
mation. call (?14) 740-78?8.
PIANIST MARGARITA CHKEIDZE
Russian concert pianist Margarita
Chkeidze will perform today at 5
p.m. at Orange Coast Unitarian
Universalist Church. Suggested
donation is $8. The church is al
1259 Victona St., Costa Mesa.
For more information, call (714)
639-9301.
NEWPORT JAZZ CAPERS
Jazz bdllds will pldy from 1 to 1 o
p.m. at the Bahia Corinthian
Yacht Club today for the seventh
annual Newport Jan Capers.
Tickets dre $12 to $15. The club
is at 1601 Bayside Drive, Corona
del Mar. For more information,
call (949) 631-5069.
ALDI MEOLA
Al Dt Meola plays at OCC at 8
p.m. Oct. 9. Tt.ckets are $24 to
$31 OCC is at 2701 Fa.uview
Rd., Costa Mesa. For more Ul.for-
matton, call (714) 432-5880.
OTY OF BIELLA
GENZIANELLA CHOIR
The CbUich of Jesus Christ of
Latter-Day Saints o( Newport
Beach presents the City of Biella
Genzianella Chotr at 7 p.m. Oct.
9. The event 1S free. The chwch
is at 2150 Bonita Canyon Road,
Newport Beach. For more infor-
mation, call (9"49) 642-1123.
UIRARY MUSIC
The Newport Beach Public
Library and the Newport Beach
Arts Conurussion present ~Piano
and Violin Selections• by The
Azonni Duo at 3 p.m. Oct. 10 m
the Newport Beach Central
Library's Friends Meeting Room.
The event 1S free. The lib1ary is
at 1000 Avocado Ave. For more
information, call (949) 717-3801.
OCC SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
The OCC Symphony Orchestra
kicks off its new season at 7:30
p.m. Oct. 10 with a concert to
include Beethoven's Violin Con-
certo. Tickets are $6, $10 at the
door. OCC IS at 2701 Fairview
Road, Costa Mesa. For more
information, call (714) 432-5880.
MOSCOW STATE AAOto
SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
The Moscow State Radio Sym-
phony Orchestra performs works
by Rachmaninoff at 8 p m. Oct.
11 at The Orange County Per-
forming Arts Center. Tickets are
$15 t<> $55. The Center is at 600
Town Center Drive, Costa Mesa.
For more information, call (714)
740-7878.
'OUTSIDE THE BOX: PHOTO PORT-
FOLIOS FROM THE COUECTION'
This exhibit highlights the
remarkable collection of photos
from the permanent collection of
the Orange Gounty Museum of
Art, featuring works by more
than 30 photographers. The pho-
tos will be on display through
Oct. 17. in the museum's
Pick/Laudati Gallery. The
Orange County Museum of Art is
at 850 San Clemente Drive,
Newport Beach. For more mfor-
· datebOOk
mation call (9"49) 759-1122.
TUESDAY TALKS
AT THE MUSEUM
The Orange County Museum of
Art 1S offenng an ongoing series
of free talks related to the art of
the musewn's galleries. The talks
are held at noon Tuesdays. UCI
art Professor Stephen Barker
speaks this coming Tuesday on
·city as Dream and Nightmare·
fllusjons and Urban Llfe. •L.A.-
based. critic David Pagel talks
Oct. 12 on contemporary paint-
ing. OCMA is at 850 San
Clemente Drive. For more inf or~
mation, call (949) 759-1122.
DANCE
Mesa. For more mtormation, call
(949) 645-2356 .
BAU.ROOM DANONG
The Defore Foundation tor the
Arts will hold ballroom danang
classe on Fnday and Saturday
nights from 7 30 to 11 p.m. $8
adnussion covers the hour dance
le son and the open danang es-
s1on that follows The class 1s at
151 Kalmus Drive, Co ta Mesa.
Por more information, call (949)
241-9908.
JUMP RHYTHM JAZ.Z PROJECT
OCC presents a one-week resi-
dency by Chicago's Jump
Rhythm Jazz Project, a tounng
dance group that will teach class-
< es Oct 13 through 19. Classes
TWIN PALMS clTe from $6 to $12 and take place
1\vin Pal.ms offers swing music at • mostly m the motR.J.ng OCC ls at
8 p.m. Sundays, dinner jazz from · 2701 Fairview Road, Costa Me~.
6 to 10 p.m. Wednesdays and For more mfonnabon, call (714J
Saturdays, a rhythm and blues 432-5880.
band Thursdays, and a top 40
funk band Fridays. The eatery is
at Fashion Island, 630 Newport
Center Drive, Newport Beach.
For more information, call (949)
721-8288.
ARGENTINE TANGO
DanScene Studio has tango
dancing from 8 p.m. to 12:30 a.m .
the first Saturday of every month.
DanScene is at 2980 A McClin-
tock Way, Costa Mesa. For more
infonnation,call (949)833-1844.
BALLROOM FOR SENIORS
The Costa Mesa Senior Center
offers ballroom dancing to the
music of the Ray Robbins Combo
for adults from 7 :30 to 10:30 p.m.
every Tuesday. Singles and cou-
ples are welcome. Cost is $3. The
center is at 695 W. 19th St., Costa
BAUET COURSE AT OCC
OCC will conduct a nine-week
h.tgh intermediate-level ballet
course beginrung Oct. 18 OCC
is at 2701 Fairview Rd., Costa
Mesa For more information, call
(714) 432-5072. •.
POETRY
THE FACTORY READINGS
An evfmng of performance poet~
ry will be held the first Tuesday
of every month at the Gypsy Den
Cafe and Reading Room at The
Lab Anti-Mall, 2930 Bristol St.,
Costa Mesa. Btl and Carole
L'Uther. publishers of FarStarFire
Press, along wtth the poell:i pub-
lished by the press, will appear
this coming Tuesday. For more
information,ccill(714)549~7012
..
AdmisSion is f:ree, but voluntary
donations are accepted for the
~dorme~.
ALTA COFFEE HOUSE
Poets Katya Gtntsky and Oay
.Leeds will appear at 8 p.m. Oct. 13
at Alta Coffee House, 506 31st Sl,
Newport Beach. An open read.i.r\g
will also take place. For more
infonnation, cail (949) 675-0233.
LITE RABY
'SIMPLE ABUNDANCE'
DISCUSSION GROUP
Based on the books of Sarah Ban
Breathnach, Uus ~ct,LSsion group
focuses on appreaation, expres-
sion and gratitude. Led by Audre
de Nard at Borders Books, Music
and Cafe the fust Thursday of
each month at 6:30 p .m . Borders
iS at 1890 Newport Blvd., Costa
Mesa For more mfonnation, call
(949) 631-8661
WRITER'S GROUP
Barnes & Noble Metro Pomte
hosts a wnter's group at 7 p.m.
Tuesday. All experience levels
are welcome The store is at 901
B. South Coast Dnve, Costa
Mesa For more mformafon, call
(714) 444-0226.
THERAPY AUTHORS
The father/daughter team of
Daniel L. DeGoede and Danae
Drews will sign their book
·Be lief Therapy: A Gwde to
Enhancing Everyday We" at 7
p.m . Wednesday at Barnes &
Noble Metro Pointe. the store ts
at 901 B South Coast Drive, Cos-
ta Mesa For more information,
call (714) 444-0226.
So1urday, October 2. 1999 AAS
KEN RE.ADY REAOtNG
The author of '"Smashing Out If
the Com.tort Zone,'" Ken Rea<fy,
will appear at Borders Books, ...
Music and Cafe at 3 p.m. Oct. 9.
The store is at 1890 Newport
Blvd , Co!rta Mesa. For more
infonnation, call (714) 631..a66t.
VETERINARIAN APP£AAANCE
Vetennarian Elam Wexler-
Mitchell will discuss cat care aftd
sign her book, "The Complete
Idiot's Guide to a Healthy Cat,•
al Borders Books, Music and
Cafe at 3 p.m. Oct. 9. The store iS
at 1890 Newport Blvd., Costa
Mesa For more information, call .
(714) 631-8661. . ...
BELIEF THERAPY
Daniel L OeGoede and Dana
Drews, authors of •Belief Thera-
'py A Gwde to Enhanong Evety-
1 day Life,• will appear at Barnes •
and Noble Newport Beach at 2 ·
pm OcL 9. The store is at 953, ·•
Newport Center Dnve, Newport
Beach. For more mlormation, 04.ll
I (949) 759-0982.
CAROLE FEUERMAN
APPEARANCE I
Sculptor Carole A. Feuennan will
sign copies of her book at Barnes
& Noble Metro Pointe at 7 p.m.
Oct. 11 . Refreshments will be pro-
vided.. The store is at 901 B South
Coast Drive, Suite 105, Costa ,
Mesa. For more tnformation or t9
RSVP, call (714) 444-1653.
SPECIAL J. . .
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Newport Beach
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Sotvrdoy, October 2, 1999
EROICA
CONTINUED FROM A12
I I •wt rally hvc nunut after
we start('d d Mend I ohn piece
we felt ecstatic about the chem-
i!;try, • she ~a1d.
"It JUst felt very natural. We
• qould immediately be sponta-
neous musically and do whatev-
er we wdnted to do. Ct seemed
ltke we could almost read edch
qther's minds.•
The group formed a bond that
was both personal and profes-
iondl. offk1dlly begmning their
existence as thf.'I Eroica Trio in
\986. Smee lhdt tune -in a
1oumey thdt hdi. l>een challeng-
mg but also remarkably success-
ful -the group hdS played dates
~"ros the UmtC'd Stales, Europe,
.ldpan and Vi<'lnam, including an
c(pp<>Manr<' di the Distinctive
U>c•but~ series at <"dmeg1e Hall.
1 The Tno's eponymous first
CD. r<1ledsecl on AngeVEMI
Cldsstc'> c1ltPr the Carnegie Hall
dppeardn< t•, WdS voted "Debut
Recordmg of lhf> Year" by NPR's
Pertomtdnn• Today.• and one
of the lop I 0 icco1dings of 1997
hy "Tlilie Out New York."
N1ck1en1 c1tlnbut<:!s the sue'-
< l"•'> or lhl' group lo the dynamic
c ombu1c1lton of thP members'
pc•rsont1Ltlic•'>
"WP <111 hkc• lo take chdnces
with music," stw said. "We don't
plc1) '>t1f<' with tlw repc>rtoire.
We're very pal ionatc players.
Thdt's one of the reasons we
named ourselves Ero1ca. •
Al Fowiders Hdll, the tno will
perform works by cveral dilfer-
ent composers, mwng together
music by loillet, the artist N1ck-
renz calls •the French Vivaldi,"
with the tangQ rhythms of Piaz-
zolla, and Penaforte's ·An Ero1ca
Trio, 1999, • which the composer
created specifically {or the group.
"It's very challenging techni-
cally,· Nickrenz sa1d of the
piece. Hit's very virtuoslc. People
said when they hear it they want
to dance in the aisles." • !
The group will aJso perform ~
Dvorak's "Dumky" in E. Minor. :.;
This was d work they recorded
for their second disc on EMI, a . ~:'
.record that persuaded even the .~
sober critics of "The New York l
Tunes• to do a little gushing j
"It's a very unusual program, f
actually,• Nickrenz said. "We've
never played tlus program with
these pieces in tlus order.·
The kind of success that has
brought the trio to Founders Hall
is a relief for Nickrenz, who says it
wasn't initially easy for the three-
some to feel like they had made it
"There were some lean ye.us
m the beginning, definitely,• she
said . "Every year got a btUe bit
better.
. "We still feel incredibly lucky
that we can actually make a living
playirlg chamber music. But it was
never ju:;t a side lhi.ng for us. We
were very intensely committed."
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date
'O'
CONTINUED FROM A12 •
As a t~acher, he has worked
at Cal State Long Beach teaching
Afro-Cuban and Afro-Brazilidn
percus ion. Most cxoling for .
Rasmussen has been the experi-
ence of playing in Brazil's Car-
ntlVdl, the enormous celebration
that consumes the streets· of Sao
Paulo cmd Rio de Janeiro in the
days before Lent. Rasmussen is a
member of the Brasllian EscoJa
de Sdffiba Vai-Vai. one of the ..
drumming groups that perfonns
in Camaval parades. For a pri-
marily English-speaking drum-·
mer, he Sdid: membership in an
<•scola ("school" m Portuguese) is
d rare and remarkable honor.
More surprising still, for Ras-
mussen, WdS the experience of
Vai-Vtu's wmnmg the top
awdrd at the parade the first
year he drummed with the
group, m 1998. and then doing
the same thjng in the following
yedr. •It was lhe best experi-
ence of my~1e as a professwnal
plctycr," suid Rasmussen, who
wns one of 500 main drummers
forming the escola's "bateria, •
or core percussion group (the
complete escola has 5,.000
drummers).
Vai-Vai's theme for the·first
yedf's parad<' was "Banzai Va1-
Vt11." which meant that Ras-
mussen had lo perform the
Orange Cf)ast College
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(714) 432-5880, ext •. 1
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SEAN HILLER I DAl.Y Pl.OT
Kurt Rasmussen packs up the last of bis belongings in his Costa Mesa apartment Since he moved
in 18 years ago, he's traveled the world and performed in Camaval 1n BrazU.
g roup's energetic 70-minute pre-
etsion drum routine m a chain
mail Samurai costume -all
while sweating In the tropical
hedt a nd 100% humidity.
"You're judged on your songs,
on your singers, on your dancers,
your floats,• he said. "Everytlung
is scrutinized.•
For the competition, Ras-
mussen had his left arm tattooed
with the distinctive Va1-Vdi logo,
a mark that all the drummers of
the escola are expected to dis-
play. "It would have been dis·
honoring the school tf I'd have
gone down there without it,• he
said. ·r would never have gotten
a tattoo othefWlSe. l mean, I was
scared." In addition to this per-
manent rerrunder of his role m
the escola, Rasmussen's wnsts
are encircled with numerous
bracelets and colorful ribbons,
each of which. he says, repre·
sen ts specific honors and' cere-
monies he has experienced in
connection with his drumming.
"These ribbons are all blessings,•
he said. "They have to do with
Candomble, • an Afro-Brazilian
religion practiced by many Sam-
ba players.
But if the outward evidence of
Rasmussen's participation in Car·
naval is conspicuous, he says the
experience itself was far more
vivid.
•1 can't even explain the feel-
ing you get,• he said. "They
·helped me to remember why I
even started playing.• Ras-
mussen's roots as a percuss1orust
go all the way back to his child-
hood m East L.A.'s Ltncoln
Heights, where he was frequent-
ly exposed to rhythmic Afro-
Cuban styles of music. •There
was a park across the street
where they would play rumba,·
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NOTICE OF
UNSCHEDULED
VACANCY
The Cit} of Newport Beach is currently accepting application to fill
the following unscheduled vacancy:
ARTS COMMISSION (ONE SEAT)
The newly appointed member will ~rve until lhe expiration of
the current tcnn (June 30. 200 I).
The deadline for tiling applications i'> 4:00 p.m. on Thur. day. October
14. 1999. The appointment 1s scheduled to be made on Monday,
November 22. 1999. Application blanks and additional infom1a11on about
1he Art~ Com1"i-;sion cun be obtained from The City Clerk's office, 3300
Newport Boulevard. or will be mailed 10 you by calling 644-1005.
For more information contact The C11y Clerk'5 office at 644-3005
he said. "I heard it all the time
dnd I grew up digging it." The
love of the drumming irl such
musical styles is what. has
brought Rasmussen through his
varied career to his current posi-
tion with Cirque. Although the
group is perhaps best known for
the complexity of its staging and
the the acrobatic dexterity of its
performers, Rasmussen says the
mus1c is something that struck
him the first time he saw the
show.
"The sound system fat the
Bellagio hotel, where C1tque
takes place) IS amazing,• Ras-
mussen said. "I reallyiike the
music.·
But transporting rus entire life
-dnd rus life's gear -to Las
Vegas is proving to be a bit of a •
chQre. In addition to all the
Afncan jun-jun drums and
djembe drums that he has
packed carefully away and the
Brazilian pandeiro that has its
own hard cuse, he also has to
transport a few delicate and
eccentnc instruments like the
gamelon gong he picked up m
Java. As il this weren't chal-
lenge e nough, Rasmussen hdS to
cope with the all the additional
gear he has acCfOlred through
another hobby, one that has
nothing to do with hls profes-
sional life· Rasmussen has an
enlhusidsm for toy robots.
·u took me eight hours a day
tor three days to pack up all the
toy robots I've got,* he said. ges-
turing at a bedroom full of card-
bodrd boxes.
"Thc>se are au robots. These
boxes.•
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• •• COIDDlUDI fonui1 SoMdoy, October 2, 1999 A 17
llllOlllL
Newport Dunes has earned a 'good neiWIDor policy' extension.
Driving on East Coast Highway
toward Laguna Beach and
seeing the masses of bulldoz·
ers just Waiting to plow away
the beautiful coastal hills, it's easy to
understand the anti.development sen-
timent that seems to have pervaded
Newport Beach of late.
which runs Ule Dunes along with
three other hotels in San Diego -is
looking to add 400 hotel rooms, 100
two-room time-share units and other
amenities including swimming pools
and restaurants to the recreational
vehicle resort.
But before the Dunes expansion
gets lumped into the city's antidevel-
opment fervor and killed before it
even has a chance, we feel there are
some ·points to be made.
suffer any problems the project would
cause, and thus have pledged to do
what they can to minimize those prob-
lems.
Secondly, the Dunes has proven it
can be il good neighbor. The business
has been there since the 1940s and
has become an integ-ral part of the
community. The Fourth of July fire-
~vorks show is a Newport Beach tiadi-
tion. Any longtime Newport Beaah
resident has fond memories of swim-
ming in the lagoon as a child. And the
resort is host to numerous charity and
community events. Just this week the
Quinns treated local blind children to ·
an educational tour of the natural
environment and kayak trips around
Upper Newport Bay.
And last, but perhaps most impor-
tantly, the hotel project ab"eady has
. approval to move forward today with-
out the mitigation measures being-
proposed as part of the expansion.
Back in the 1980s, when local gov-
ernments were not so environmentally
conscious, city leaders gave the Quinn
family the go-ahead to build a 275-
room hotel and required no improve-
ments to Bayside Drtve -the resort's
primary entrance -and no no1se-
reduction measures for the neighbors
in the Bayside Village mobile home
park,·
park,, a stonn water runoff diversion
system to upgrade water quality and
· widening of Bayside Drive including
extra turn lanes to improve traffit flow
at the road's intersection with East
Coast Higllway.
Residents who oppose the project
will have to a~k themselves what's
worse: a 275-room hotel at the Dunes
with none of the above mitigation
measures or a 500-unit resort with
them.
Although the majority of City
Council members seem to want to
increase the area's tax base through .
econl>mic development, there is clear-
ly a segment of the community that
would rather put the brakes on any
new building project that comes
along. ·• '
Qne of those projects is the pro-
posed expansion of the Newport
Dunes Resort. The Quinn family -
First, the Dunes is a fa,mily-owned,
family-operated and family-oriented
local business. Tim Quihn, who is
managing the project, lives with his
wife, Annie, and their three young
sons directly across the bay in Dover
Shores. That means they will have to
But now, because a full environ-·' .
mental impact report w~ required for
the expansion, the project will include
sound walls to shield the mqbile home
We are not wholeheartedly
endorsing the Dunes expansion until
all of the facts are known .. But for:
now, we ask the city's residents to
keep an open mind about the project
and give a family that has been a
good neighbor to Ule community a
chance.
, Joe Bell's column falls
i .short on accuracy
Daily Pilot columnist Joseph
Bell's comments regarding Dr.
Laura's battle with the local surf
shop owner are meant to be
humorous but fall short of truth-
1 fulness. He leaves out too much
of the details to be accurate. He
wants us to feel sorry for Mr.
Moore -the surf shop owner
being sued by Dr. Laura for
having called her a liar.
Hey, if he does not want the
lawsuit against him to continue
all he has to do is admit Dr.
Laura's version of the incident is
correct. You know, just say,
"Sorry, I made a mistake,W
allowing inappropriate material
to be left out for minors to read
and Dr. Laura was correct in her •
version of the story." Apparent-
ly, the man is too puffed up With
all the publicity being created
to want to end it all by that sim-
ple ad.mission of the truth. With
big financial backers like Hus-
tler magazine editor Larry Flynt
coming to his rescue, and with
editorials like Mr. Bell's making
him look like a victim, he is
enjoying the whole episode. So
1 Dr. Laura is forced to prove in a
court of law that she is not a
liar.
1 wonder what Flynt, Bell
and Moore will come up with to
discredit her once a judge and
jury say she is the one who has
been made the victim, not Mr.
Moore. You see, their liberal,
let -everyone-do-whatever-they-
think-is-correct philosophy is
very much opposed to Dr. Lau-
ra's conservative moral
approach. They love discredit·
1 ing her any chance they get.
ANDREA MASON
Costa Mesa
Lack of textbooks is a
real problem
I have children at several
schools in the Newport-Mesa
Unified School District and they
all are lacking books ("Text-
1 book shortage gets school off to
slow start,• Sept. 30). Mr. Boies
at Newport Harbor High School
may want to explain why the
students do not have a Physical
Science b90k to bring home or
why the students taking Span-
ish are required to spend $12 of
their own (parents') money to
purchase the Spanish workbook
that is mandatory. At Ensign
Middle School they, too, have a
shortage of Spanish textbooks.
Even at the elementary school
level there does not seem to be
enough English workbooks fot
the students to use as their own.
Wby would the district even
think of raising the issue of the
possibility of a tax bond mea-
sure when they can't even suc-
cessfully provide textbooks to
all students?
KATIE COW NS
Newport Beach
Zero tolerance policy
doesn'tiive up to name
, "Zero" tolerance really isn't.
If it were, the violator would be
EXPELLED after the first viola-
tion. Instead, he is TRANS-
FERRED.
That's like eating in a restau-
rant and finding a fly in your
soup. The waiter TRANSFERS it
to the SA.LA.f> instead of dis-
carding it altogether.
Zero Tolerance is a typical
government program: misguid-
ed in concept, ineptly executed,
mindlessly punitive and uncon·
stitutionally intrusive.
• DON HULL
Costa Mesa
El Toro debate should
focus on fairness
It is fair for South County res-
idents to voice their concerns
about El Toro airport. What is
t)Ot right is for them to perpetu-
. ate misinformation about the
subject. That is especially true
when done for the purpose of
gaining sympathy from people
who are less involved and not
. likely to know all the facts.
Certainly not the only exam-
ple, but a particularly despica-
ble ohe, is their claim that New-
port Beach residents are trying
to shove their airport problems
upon them. The truth is there
are absolutely no plans to close
John Wayne Airport or to
reduce the number of flights.
Newport Beach residents will
still have the same amount of
air traffic even with El Toro.
lt was the majority of county-
wide voters who passed pro-air-
port Measure A and Measure S
-not just Newport Beach. It is
not the Newport Beach City
Council who is planning El Toro
or who has any authority, it is a
county project being accom-
plished to benefit the majority
of county citizens.
The reason our county needs
El Toro is to satisfy the predict-
ed future needs, certainly not
the ridiculous and offensive
assertion that it is to appease
Newport Beach residents. Oh,
yes, those against El Toro will
claim John Wayne isn't even at
capacity. Well, John Wayne has
125 flights each day, double
what it w~s just a few years
ago. On the other hand, South
MAILBAG
LETTER OF THE WEEK .
The ·Back Bay should n ot be
everyone's personal trash can
. .
The article by Amy Litton (·In the
trenches in the war against beach lit-
ter,• Sept. 28) is right on target. The lit-
ter that will be deposited in the Upper New-
port Bay Ecological Reserve this Winter
already bas accumulated in the tributaries of
the Delhi Channel and San Diego Creek.
This picture taken today looks identical to
pictures taken in 1992.
Residents are continuing to use these
channels as disposal sites for trash in spite of
efforts to alter behavior. Will we ever ledfn?
County residents have none
now that the military jets have
left. Experts have predicted the
demand on airports will contin-
ue to increase and everyone is
aware John Wayne is far too
small to handle the additional
growth without destroying a
multitude of existing homes and
businesses. Obviously, Newport ·
Beach does not want the airport
to impact them far more than it
already does. It would destroy
their city.
• South County people have
no legitimate right to criticize
others for expecting them to
share the coWlty's air traffic
needs. That is especially true
considering: 1) The El Toro site
is 10 times the size of John
Wayne. 2) El Toro has 10,000
acres of buffer zone keeping it
from residents. John Wayne has
OUT IN ll4E FIELD
Bristol Street. 3) South County
residents are among the biggest
users of John Wayne. Knowing
the facts makes a big difference
in deciding which commuruty is
being unreasonable.
8. TAYLOR
NeWp<>rt Beach
Fellow skater shares
frustration with officials
I am commenting on the
community forum the other day
by Bill Sharp ("Time to get
rolling on building skate
parks," Sept. 21) I, like Bill, am
looked down upon by society
because l skateboard -even
though I have a family and two
kids and own a home in this
fine city and employ 100 people
in Costa Mesa making skate-
boards. And I need the 1;upport
JOHN F. SKINNER, M.O.
Newport Beach
of this community to make this
skate park project happen. We
have been fighting it for a year
and a half. We keep getting
knocked off, with people say-
ing, "Not in my neighborhood,
not here.• •Hey, let's support
the kids~ ... "Not here" ... "Let's
support the kids• ... "Not
here.• We have petitions and
the parents in the neighbor-
hood signing for no skateparks
and the kids signing for a
skatepark. The problem with
generational change and one of
the problems in society is the
fact that people won't listen to
the current generation. Skate-
boarding is not going away. It is
not disappearing. Our society
needs to accept it and give
these kids a safe and legal'
place to play.
PAUL SCHMITT
Newport Beach
WEEK" Ill REVIEW
OPENING ELEVATOR DOORS
IE I UTT l l ,
OASIS and Costa
Mesa Senior
Center must
work together
I was so sad when I read in
the paper this morning
the controversy between
the OASIS supporters and •
the Costa Mesa Senior Cen-
ter (•OASIS angered by Cos-
ta Mesa tund~raising, • Sept.
29J. lam on the board of
directors at the Costa Mesa
Senior Center and I can tell
you from experience how
important OASIS has been to
the senior center over the
yea.rs. Before there was a
CQSta Mesa Senior Center
there was the OASIS center.
And many Costa Mesa resi-
dents used that center When
Costa Mesa built its own •
Senior Center we welcomed
with.open arms those people
from Newport Beach who
chose to participate there. In
fact. many seniors partj.cipate
in both locations. I am very
sad that OASIS sees th.is as a
couflict. Because 1 see it as
an opwrtunity for both cen-
ters to raise the issue of
senior rigbt3 and .seruor
issues -senior concerns.
Jt just seems to me that
OASIS might use this as an
opporh.i.nity instead of a neg-
ative and tag on to what
Costa Mesa lS doing. Just
because one ~nter is doing
more aggressive fund-raising
with an eye to building bet-•
ter facilities for seniors and
providing better program-
ming doesn't mean that it
baS to hurt anyone else. It
JUSI makes me very frustrat-
ed because the seruor issues
are too important to get lost
in this kind of controversy.
And I would extend an invt-•
talion as a board member at
the senior center to the
OASIS officials to come and
see what we are doing there
and find a way that the two
centers can work together to
provide better access tor
seruors. We do serve in Costa
Mesa a great nwnber of
Newp<>rt Beach seniors Sim-
ply beCause we are closer to
their homes and bec4use we
offer difterent ,kinds of pro-
gramming. So this could be a
positive for hOtb organi.za·
tions, bUt we have to get
beyond tldi competition
mbde.
Thursday morning's field ttip to the Upper
Newport Bay provided a wonderful opportunity
for a group of children to learn about the environ-
ment. Coordinated by tbe Santa Ana Blind Chil-
dren's Learning Center, the Upper Ne~rt Bay
Natura.lists and the Newport Dunes Resort, th~
trip gave the children -all blind or partially ·
sighted -the chance to touch and smell the won-
ders of nature that most of us. take for granted.
Maybe even better, the children got to play in the
mud, and as Elafl)e Strong of the leamlng center
said, ·u they go home clMn. we dtdni do ow
job." wen. lt turns out they did (tbelr JOb) and the
There was good news -and bad -out of the
Costa Me~ City Hall this. week. The bad ne\\'S
was that, due to an oversight, part of the Planning
Commi!>s1on's study session was not open to the
public. The good news was that once the dty
lt-amect that th~re w~re meetings being held on •
floor the pubbc cm1ldn't ~ct to after 6 p.m., dty
tatf aid they would hie Uu1t tuatiol'l and make
ure ros1dcnt~ can u the elevators tO get to lbe
second floor. It' qlllck work like tbet by City
N1anager Allen Roed r an~ his stall that k~
Costa Mesa running well.
"Now itB
like a com-
petitive
thing and
there's nu
aell8e1n that.
lt~Jike a
Cold war.,,
kids didn't (go' home cleant. .
RHINO A SUCa5SfUl AGHT
The largest-ever Race for the Cure prov.d tUt
nothing Is lmponlble. SOme !.400 breut cencw
survtvon W9N among 25,000 runners and waUr.-
en wbO beJped ralle St.3 mWiOia -ni.t money
WW go dlNctly to good Ula: JllDCbDi wrda
91'Utl, proVkting memmogram iCNeDIDOI and
be!ptng WOIMft dMJ with the dlieese.
LOST TIME. lOST EDUCATION
Another troubling Item emerged flom tbe New·
port·Mesa ScbOC>l Dtstiiet· Costa Mliila and Corilm
del Mer high lthooll aie uperilDctaig a .. ..._.
shortage Wb1le boob are~ to laWe my
dey now, w:h day ·lt\Jden11J:;ilbaal ._ .. • loet~:Thebomd .., .. ,.£ ..
~•t ~tts·Oct. 121111et1ng. ay-,w...,..
tMr ca tAlk about~ to awld.._ .-•111 •
Mst,..rlDdaatbntlto .... Olt•·--tafboob that d bave not aaTtwld tldl ~
•
-AnMJI• ..... ., ... olCM58 ,,, ..... ... ..,. ..
..
. . . " . . . .
. .
... 90~ _,.._
Saturday, October 2, 1999 • Sports Editor Roger Carbon • 949-57 44223
HIGH SCHOOL FOOTIALL
•Harbor, while playing shorthanded,
still overwhelms Glendora's Tartans.
BAHRY fAULKNl•R
~Pb
AZUSA -Even shorthanded and on what
Coach Jeff Brinkley considered less than all
cylinders, the Newport Harbor High football
team had way loo much for host Glendora Fri-
day night.
The Sailors (3-0-1) exploded to a 21-0 half-
time lead, then extended 1t to 28-0 before
cruising to a 28-13 nonleague victory at Citrus
College. .
Playing without mjured two-way starters
Billy Clayton and Mike Tunney, as well as
defensive end Garrett noncale. Harbor over-
whelmed the Tartans (2-2).
MOur backups stepped up, which is what
you have to do,· said Bnnkley, who became
the all-time Newport-Mesa District .victory
leader with lus 107th triumph at Harbor.
Brinkley, in has 14th season at Harbor, passed
former Corona del Mar Coach Dave Holland,
who had 106 wins in 20 seasons.
Backup end Brad Rothwell sparkled in
place of noncale and outside linebacker
Andy Rank.In had an interception and blocked
a punt spelling Tunney
1\'avis Tumble, who usually shares time
.·
TARS
GLENDORA
with Tunney at fufJback, scored the Sailors'
first touchdown and Kelsey Peterson (safety)
and Chad Smith (receiver) made sure the Tars
didn't miss Clayton too badly. .
"When you get your chance, that's your
time to shine,• Rothwell said. ·vou have to do
your best for the team, so there won't be cl let-
down.•
There was nothing close to a letdown early
for the visitors.
After Nathan Caldwell's 50-yard punt
pinned Glendora at its 2-yard line, Rothwell
flushed quarterback Bruce Hatch from the
pocket and nose guard Andy Kalanz grabbed
STAGGERED
Anaheim snaps 24-game losing
streak with victory over Estancia.
I O"l) A.110111 UJ
lbtt""
COSTA MESA -That's why the game is
played on the held and not in the stats book.
For Estanaa High Coach Dave Perkins
there were many reasons for the Eagles' 21-12
loss to Anaheim Friday rught at Orange Coast
College, snapping the Colonists' 24-game los-
ing streak, but only one stands out.
"That's high school football for you," he
said, shaking his head. "That's what happens
when you come into a game not mentally pre-
pared to go to battle."
For the Eagles (3-1) Jt was a total opposite
showing of their previous three weeks, where
they dominated the time of possession and
mmimlzed their mistakes. ·we had one turnover in our first three
SEE EAGLES PAGE 84
him for a safety to open the scoring.
Harbor went 52 yards in nine plays with the
ensumg free kick, then cashed in a Rankin
intercepbon with a four-p]4y, 43-yard to.uch-
down drive to lead 15-0 with 2:48 left in the
first quarter.
Seruor tailback Andre Stewart scored the
first .. of his two TDs ·to cap the early Sailor
onslaught, en route to 135 rushing yards.
Justin Jacobs, who intercepted in the end
zone to kill GJendora's best first-hall scoring
threat, returned a punt 78 yards for a TD ear-
ly m the second quarter to make it 21-0.
After Dayne Pfaff returned the first of his
two second-half interceptions 22 yards to the
Tartans' 22, Ste wart earned three straight
ti.mes to finalize Harbor's scoring with 6:58 left
in the third,
Brinkley began substituting and Glendora
turned two big plays into fourth-quarter
touchdowns to make the game closer than it
appeared
Kalanz added a second sack and Brad
Craig had another. And Nick Langsdon also
tipped the pass Rankin intercepted.
Glendora scored on a reverse by Brandon
Rohrer, who threw a 63-yard flea-flicker to set
up the hosts' final TD.
Jacobs had three catches for 38 yards to
help the Tars post 15 first downs to Glendora's
eight.
EAGLES
Estanda
Hlgh's
Jeremy
Valdes (right)
ls run out of
bounds while
being
face-masked
at the same
time in the
Eagles'
nonleague
football game
with Anaheim
Friday night at
Orange Coast
College.
An ah elm
surprised the
Eagles with
a 21-12 victory,
snapping a
24-game losing
streak in the
process and
handing Estancia
Its first Joss of
the season.·
DON LEACH
I DAILY PILOT
ANAHEIM
'1hln higll schall,... w YIM· 1Ws ........ ,_ ................ ,.. ........... _.
o.ve Perkins, Estancia High football coach
tit
SPORTS HALL OF FAME
CELEBRATING THE MILLENNIUM
Costa Mesa
•Three home runs in one game was a prep highlight
for this two-time All-CIF Southern Section catcher.
Rm !ARD Dt 'N
I n one of the most '1111·
unforgettable rugh 1111111
school baseball
performances of all ti.me in
the Newport·.Mesa District,
former Costa Mesa High
standout Jeff Field came about
two feet from power-hitting
immortality
It was a Sea View League
game at home against University
in 1982. Field, Mesa's catcher
and a third-year starter under
Coach Klrk Bauermeister,
homered in his first at-bat. He
went yard again in his second
plate appearance. In
his third at-bat, Field
drove another pitch
deep and set the school
record for home runs m
a game.
But Field, 5-foot-11.
175-pounder, wasn't
quite finished on that
memorable day in a big
Costa Mesa victory.
Field came up to bat
once more, this time
home runs.)
Field, also a basketball pomt
guard, was instrumental in the
Mustangs' run to the 1981 CIP
baseball playoffs. Corona del
Mar's Jeff Pries and Garden
Grove's Lenny Dykstra were also
members of the All-CIF 3-A
squad with Field that year.
#Coach Bauermeister was a
big inlluence on me," Field said.
•I had a lot of respect for him. I
thought he did a great job back .
then, and I think it's great that
•he's back coaching at Costa
Mesa.·
Field earned a partial baseball
scholarship tQ UCI, where he
played for five years (mcluding a
redshirt season when
he underwent elbow
surgery) and teamed
with Brady Anderson.
the longtime Baltimore
Oriole outfielder.
·1 didn't play (at
UCI) qwte as much as
I would've liked to,
with the bases loaded. Jeff. Field
He got a pitch to
but 1t was a good
expen.ence, • said
Field, who once.
homered against La
Verne as a freshman in
1983. handle and delivered another
monster blast The only question
was whether it would stay fair to
give Field four home runs m one
game.
The ball hooked foul.
Then, a few pitches later,
Field walked to force home a run
as the Mustangs romped. But
he'll never forget the thnll of
socking three homers m one day
and ~ming awfully close to four.
A first-team All-ClF Southern
Section 3-A selection as a 1uruor
in 1981 and a second-team
All-CIF choice in '82, Field
ended his Costa Mesa career
with a school record 13 home
runs, includmg seven his senior
year and five as a juruor. (In
1999, Ruben Mancilla broke the
single-season record with 10
Field, who graduated from
UCI with an econonucs degree in
1987, works these days as a
systems analyst for CB Richard
Ellis, a commeraal real estate
and property management fum.
Field played basketball at
Costa Mesa with his twm
brother, Greg. His older brother,
Mike, was a football standout for
the Mustangs and graduated m
1980
Field, 36, iS a member of the
Daily Pilot Sports Hall of Fame,
celebrating the millennium. He's
single and lives. in Costa Mesa.
He has a 10-year-old daughter,
Samantha. MShe comes do
here and I coach her at the •
Harbor Area Boys and Girls
Club,• he said.
TENNIS .
Davenport loses in Grand Slam Cup se
MUNICH, Germany -Lindsay Davenport of Newport Beach
a shot at redempbon at U S Open champion Serena Williams Fnd
the Grand Slam Cup. but could not malCe the most of it.
After lasing to Williams m the semis at flushing Meadows, Da
port fell again to the youngest of the Williams' sisters, 6-3, 6-4, in
semifma.lS.
With elde1 sJSter :Venus Williams' 6-2, 6·1 (6-8), 9-7, wm over
tina Hmgi..s, that means that Serena and Venus Will meet in the
assUTUlg the family bank account a $1.3 million increase,
$800,000 going to the winner.
DAILY PILOT HIGH SCHOOL ATHLETE OF THE WEEK
•Newport Harbor girls golf standout never relents
when it comes to keeping her game in top form.
BAAAY F ui~ f:>t been my lifelong dieam since I wa 5 yea.rs old.•
IQtr Pim Now 16, Hunt IS driven daily
decade.
I lunt, golf detective,
worked th same •
for mor than a
Her afllgnment: Dissect
her own swing every 24 hours,
never ,..ung until any
Olfend.tna Daw ha been cornered; then rehabilitated
et the correcdonal fadllty
otherWiM known • the drlvtng
~t to get• lgolf)
to Stahford and I
W ltD~to mlkett OD tbe lJl<M.• .. Nwwpolt HartMlr
~~ ... .,,_..
~
by her dream, often rising eorly
to hit balls before school and
frequently following he.r
weekday rounds for th sailors'
girls team by repeatedly
ripping round white remlnden
Into the datbeta. ·u it woru, greet· Mid the
Dally Pilot Atba.te of the Week.
who c~ medalilt hoaon
in Mc:h cl the Sailon' ftrJl 11 GUti~IDOlt ihe1f :matcbel) and
lat ...... One bUdim
and Mmlft pen o.er 2? lM1'el M
SU HUNT
.. . .. .. ..
ti 2 Saturday, October 2, 1999
Daily Pilot
r
The Future is Now.
.
J
1
Go for it!
I f )Cl I* ,
M I S S I 0 N· V I E J 0
The future is now. What's next...?
28400 MARGUERITC PARKWAY. 5 FRl:.EWAY, AVL RY PARKWAY E IT. TEL 949.364.0664 • www.lexu 41es .com
Doily Pilot
I ' r Sports Saturday, Octobe< 2, 1999
CO~MUllTY COLLEGE fOOTllLL
NO. 1 CO TS HIT OCC ·.T
•Nation's top-ranked
team invades Orange
Coast College today
with a 1 o'clock start.
TONY ALTOBIUJ
lblt Pb
COSTA MESA -There
appears to be an amnesia prob-
lem. with Orange Coast College
as they look to forget last week's
52-6 Joss to Santa Ana and focus
on powerhouse Palomar today at
1 p.m . at OCC.
•That's old news," Coach
: Mike Taylor said referring to last
• week's setback. #During this past
. week, we've solved some Uungs
J and we've had some good prac-
• tices. Last week is in the past. We
got through it and we're ready to
go at it again.•
With a combination of a grind-
it-out style of offense and a
smashmoulh defense, Palomar
,, College, ranked No. 1 in the
country by the J .C. Grid-Wire,
': appears to have all the tools :~ needed to be a championship
:HUNT
CONTINUED FROM 81
• some of the toughest courses in
• Orange County. "But if not, I just
• keep doing it until tt does work."
" Hunt, inspired to tackle the
• game after watching •some guy
~ named Jack Nicklaus• on
• television, said she became
" serious about golf when she was
' 13.
"Since then, it's been tons and
tons of work,• said Hunt, whose
only interruption in her daily goli
routine came the summer before
eighth grade, when she took e
two-week trip to Yellowstone with
: a friend.
~ ·t did take a putter, H she said
.: sheepishly. •I'm the type of
person who, if I don't hit goll balls
at least once a day, my game
becomes a complete disaster. It's
almost im~1ble for me not to
goU. It's add1ctin9. •
Hunt said she spends evenings
· being social, but when asked
, about other interests, cited a
part-time job at Big Canyon
Country Club. Her favorite movie?
"Caddyshack," of course.
·n·s not \µ\usual for Kelly to
spend all day at the goU course,•
said Newport Harbor Coach Jim
Warren, who marvels at Hunt's
consistency and distance off the
tee.
·she has a lot of talent, and
she stays mentally focused,"
Warren said of his No. 1 plclyer.
Hunt was also the Tars' top
player last fall, when she finished
PLIYEIS
RAYMOND
OH REL
ne sophom<>fe
from Newport H4'lfO' High caught seven passes for 65
yards and S«>red
the Pirates' only
touchdown from
one yard.
club.
OF
"They don't seem to be as
flashy on offense as they have
been in the past,• Taylor said.
•niey look to be more of a
pounding style, runnin g more
than passing.•
Comets quarterback Greg
Cicero, a transfe r from the Uni-
versity of Texas statted slowly, but
last week he threw for 234 yards
on 15 of 23 passing with three
touchdowns in their 28-14 win
over Mt. San Antonio College.
Taylor believes tpat the
strength to the Comets is their
lorn: Feb. 18, 1983
Hometawn:
Huntington BHch
ttelgtwt: S-foot .9
~135 ~Golf ~:No.1~ Oledll Jim Warren ,. ...... food: Chldten fajius
............. : "Caddyshack" _ .... moment
•p,obtb!y the 18th hole where
I mlde "'I par putt to win
(the Mentat HNth Aw«eness
Chempionship) tournament at
Mesa Verde<'-summer)." A..._ of ttM ._.Ill: She was
meet.list In three contests last
~ ci>lltcting three birdies and seven ~ on some of the
~courses in Orange County.
Ollt' Prut
Coll«tol" ~ alTJ Wiet 911-F
third at Sea Vlew League Finals,
was 45th in the Southern Section,
and finished in the top 30 at the
SCGA Finals.
·she hits the ball tremendously
long off the tee, out around 250
yards, and she's very good with
her short game. She does a lot of
work on her putting and she's
spent the Jast ix months to a year
concentrating on her short game,
which has made a lot of
difference."
Hunt makes a difference for
the Sailors, who were unbeaten
through Thursday's matches.
Hunt's rune-hole average entering
tlus week was 42, according to
Warren.
She shot 5-over 41 at Big
Canyon, 4-over 40 at Yorba Linda
Country Club and 6-over 42 at
SENIOR TENNIS
"T1le freshman I from Huntington
Beach High had a
team-high seven
tackles and three
assists, eamlng
him a starter's role
for today's game.
defense, which leads the Mission
Conference with allowing only
186 yards of total offense to their
opponents .
•That group is real aggressive
on defense, H Taylor sald . "We're
going to have to play one of our
best games of the year to have a
chance against them.•
The Pirates will have to keep
an eye on a couple of Comets
defenders, Garrett Pavelko and
Ricky Hayes.
Pavelko bad seven tackles
(four unassisted) with an intercep-
tion and two pass deflections,
Western Hills Country Club Last
week.
Hunt won her first junior
tournament last summer, the
Mental He(l}th Awareness.
Championship at Mesa Verde
Country Oub, and also won a
long-dri'Ve contest at Western
Hills.
She plans to intensify her
Junior tournament schedule, upon
which most college coaches make
deci.Sions about prospective
recruits.
She believes, however, high
school golf is a more pressurized
environment, which is helping her
hone the mental portion of her
game.
•1 like the team aspect of (high
school golf), but there is more
pressure, because you're being
counted on to do well for your
teammates,• Hunt said. "I've
overcome my fear of feeling like
all the pressure is put on me,
being the No. 1 player, but it docs
wear on you,.
But the game, including the
sell-imposed practice regunen
with which she pursues
perfection, never gets old
"My passion never goc<. away,"
she said. ·u·s kmd of fun to figure
out what I'm doing wrong, wnen
I'm not playing well."
Hunt, a member at Old Ranch
Country Club in Seal Beach, said
she is well beyond getting strange
looks or comments from pdtrons
about her time-consuming
Vigilance on the range.
#By now, most people know
why I'm there," she said •They
know I'm just trying to fix my
game."
,~Cheney wins again at Newport Beach
' •Three other finals set
for today at Newport
Beach Tennis Club.
NEWPORT BEACH -Dodo
Cheney (La Jolla), the all-time
wuuungest player in United
States Tenrus Assooation history
with over 300 gold balls, won her
sixth doubles btle in six years Fri-
day at the U.S. National Senior
Women's Hard Court Champi-
onships at the Newport Beach
Tennis Club.
Cheney and partner Lucy
Dettmer (Palo Alto) defeated Ellie
Harbula (Sylmar) and Carolyn
Henry in a har<:~·fougbt 75s fmal,
1-6, 7-5, 1-5.
Three other finals are sched-
uled for today, with action starting
at 9 a .m. In the 65 singles, defe nd-
tng champion Ada Cowan (Palo
Alto) will meet her doubles part-
ner, Betsy Roberti (Santa Monica).
Cowan defeated Hattie
Somerville (Hawaii), 6-4, 6-1, in
the semifinals to advance, while
Roberti beat an injured Georgia
Turner (El Cajon) to advance.
Following will be the 75 singles
final, featuring defendmg champi-
on Betty Eisenstein (Washington
D.C.) against Henry. Eisenstein
beat Harbula, 6-2, 6-0, Friday,
while Henry topped Jeny Goldmg
(Utah), 6-2, 3-6, 7-6, in a semifmal
nail-biter.
In the 65s doubles final, sched-
uled for 1 p.m., Cowan-Roberti
advanced over Julie Hayward
(Newport Beach) and Turner, 6-2,
6-2, Pnday. Angie Ray and Mary AJJn Mitcham (PhoeniX) upset
defending champions Bev Winans
(Newport Beach) and Jane Buffin-
gton (Cannel) in a tight, 7-6, 7·6
match.
The feed-in championships
feature 65 singles semifinal con-
tender Cathie Hall (Newport
SCHEDULE
Beach) and Hayward, who are
vying to meet in the finals.
· Cheney, in April, won her
300th gold ball, signifying a USfA
ndb.onal champ1onship, at age 82.
Cheney, whose mother, May ·
Sutton Bundy, became the first
American to win a Wimbledon
title in 1905, is the all-ti.me leader
in gold balls. According to USTA
history, no one else has won even
half as many national bUes as
Cheney.
Considered the No 6 woman
m the world m 1946 by the inter-
national tennis media, Cheney
w as the nation's third-ranked
player in 1937, '38 and '41.
The event at Newport Beach
Tennis Cub is the second USTA
national championship hosted
throughout the year by the club. It
also hosts the U.S. National Senior
Father-and-Son Hard Court
Championships in June, with the
finals on Father'!> Day.
DEEP
Sil
D.f~'S
FEARLESS PICK
So, once
again,
we'll check
comparative
scores' and
see what
prevails ...
hmm mm,
nevermind ..
Palomar by 13.
while Hayes had eight tackles
(three unassisted) and an inter-
ception last week against Mt.
SAC.
Palomar will have its defensive
hands full going ~ p against
Pirates quarterbad• Jared Flint
and the conlerence's top passing
offense with 279 yards per game.
For Flint to be successful, he
must get ample time in the pock-
et, like He dld against Sadclleback
in the Pirates' 42-25 win two
weeks ago.
~Last week, it seemed that
Jared never had that extra second
ORANGE COAST LINEUPS
<>FRHsl l>£FEHsE
No. l't•y.t 1tt. Wt. a . Pos. No. "-Y« ttt. Wt. a. ,__
11 JAMI> FuifT 6-6 191 so Q8
4 RAYMOM:> OHM\. S-9 195 So Tl
M J--llMKS 6-0 247 So. f8
2 DAVIO CAnlnOfl 6-1 200 So WR
12 Jusl1N DAU s-9 17S Fr Wl\
41 ..... ~ 6-2230 ff TE
71 YAlfMO( 8oCA 6-3 310 fr LT
64 Joi Folu<aT 6-0 274 So LG
SI JISSl CHAGOUA 6-4 328 So c
17 AHTitofcy KNursoN 6-3 27• Fr RG
79 "'°'-CHIO ROOIOGUU '6·5 31 S fr RT
to find that open guy,• Taylor
said-. ~sttnta Ana did a great job
penetrating our line and making
Jared scramble.•
Another way to help out the air
attack is an effective ground
game, something that was miss-
ing in last week's loss.
This won't be easy as the
Comets have allowed only 56
yards , per game rushing against
their opponents.
~we're not going to be able to
pound it out against Palomar,"
Taylor said. •What we need to do
is have solid basics and we have
57 W..... MMuY 6-4 2'0 ff OE
74 Kan ANDlll5C* 6-2 2IO So. OT
75 VAHa 9MIN 6-4 285 ff OT
97 JAMES ~m••NA 6-4 200 Fr. OE
49· ANDMW MEouY 6-J 2AS So. Ot.J
59 DoUa Mc:DNllll. 6-3 240 So. MLI
I 0USTtH DAW 6-0 205 fr Ol8
3 RoeEJrr PAUOTTO S-10 18S So. Cl
27 JoHNNIE PIM.ls S-10 180 Fr. Cl
40 WOODY 0ns 6-0 190 So. SS
10 Boley ~ 6-2 215 So. FS
to control the clock and keep the
ball out of their hands.•
The Comets (3-0) take a
game wmning streak into
contest with the Pirates (2-1).
Pafomar has won three str
head-to-head meetings
Orange Coast, the last coming
last year in a 42-17 win.
In that game Aint completed
only 18 of 48 passes for 203 yards
while the Comets' offeIU
exploded for 565 yards of
offense
Orange Coast leads the·
with Palomar, 8-7.
Complimentary Cat Washes
Airport Shuttle & Parking
Courtesy Loan Car
Pref erred Service AP,pts.
Satufday, October 2, 1999
YOlllYllll
Tars win.
1tkvice in
I " !<thic8go
I I I CfUCAGO -Newport Harbor
Hi~'s girls volleyball team won Willi room to spare Friday in pool
pl~ of the Nike Challenge at
Mother McAuley High, putting
away Wisconsin's Divine Savior
Holy Angels, 15-7, 15-11.., and
I Asbsi Academy of lllinois, 15-6,
I 15;1 l.
: faVJng the wdy in the opener
• for•Dan Glenn's unbeaten Sailors I • were April Ross (eight kills), Tay-
: lor Govaars (five kills) and Bren-
: da Waterman (four kills).
: Waterman had six kills m the
: victory over Mt. AssISi, with
1 ~ta D1U contnbutmg four kills
and Andrea Schutz delivering
• three ace serves.
• l-!a.rbor, ranked No. 1 m Califor-
: nia, meets Downers Grove South
, of ,Chicago today at 10:15 a.m ..
1 Thf: semifinals dnd finals are
12~5 and 5 p.m.
• OGC spikes SDCC
SAN DIEGO -Orange Coast
CoJfege was a four-set winner in
women's volleyball Friday as
Chuck Cutenese's Pirates han-
, dled host Sdn Diego City. 15-2.
' 15-~. 15-17, 15-6.
-Beth Wdterman led the way
._..., . ._. e Pirates (5-3) with 13 kills
e final nonconlerence IThltch
the season Stln D1e9Q JS 0-6.
SOCCER
· ates tie Fullerton
COSTA MESA -Orange
Coast College and Fullerton Col-
• lege battled lo a 1-1 he m Orange
, Empue Conference men's soccer
: art.Jon Fridcly di OCC
Frank Cctbrera converted on a
point-blank shot in the SOth
mirlute from ltsukl N1shunura to
gw~ the P1rntes (1 -8-2, 0-2-1) a 1-
, 0 lead.
1 Eight minutes later, Fullerton's
, (9-2-2, 2-0-1) tied the game on
An(irew May's g0c1l JUSt inside
• the OCC pendlty box. , __
r ,--• WATER POLO
· COsta Mesa s plits
• YIU.A PARK Costa Mesa Jl.i~h's boys water polo team split
two games at the Vtlld Park Tour-
, nament Fnday and have been
· sent off to El Dorado for today's
' competttion following an 8-6 vic-
tory over Glendale and a 12-7
os to Jurupa Valley.
VIUA PARK TOURNAMENT
I• Costa Mesa 8, Glendale 6 uma Mesa 4 4 0 0 -8
' iGfendale 1 2 1 2 -6 I.. Costa Mesa: Biron 2, Vaillancourt
2. Bolt 2. Dunn 1, Witman 1 Saves·
Dolloff, 7
1. Jurupa Valley 12. Cost.II Mesa 7
Costa Mesa 2 1 2 2 -7
J..rwpa Valley 4 3 1 4 -12
.. Costa Mesa: Sams 2, Vaillancourt :·~Witman 2, Bolt 1 Saves Dolloff 11 . .,, . -
t "llTTLE LEAGUE J .,t
CMNL registration
COSTA MESA Early regis-
tration for the C'osta Mesa
Na'tfonal Little League will be
S~turday, Oct. 2 from 7 a.m to 1
rr,m. at Costa Mesa •. hgh. r fF' n . . $65 ,.., , "egistration 1s per player
"tu>d a maximum of $160 per family.
...... ·Families of first-time players
.:~fflP._st bring a utility bill and play-
·""et' s birth certificate For inlonna-
• atllon, call the C'osta Mesa Nation-
•:i1a1 UtUe League at (714) , .....
·~-.. ~Warmington wins gold
.. •·•Molly Warmington of Newport
. • ach f m1shed with a perfect
tlf Wld of show jumpmg to win the
ne star (prclinunary level) overall
old medal at the North American
\1:'1g Riders Champion'>hip, held
Hl~~iently at Temple Farms just
tt01U11L.u of Chicago.
A Newport f larbor 1 ligh prod-
,~-ho is now a j1.uuo1 at the UnJ· ~ity of Sun Diego, Wamungton
;fll~i;>ocl her rompctitJon m the com· ~lllll.Cd v nt, which fclttur 5how
pu1g, dr ag ond cros coun-
. '
Sports
1111 ICIOOl f OOTllLL
RICK HEARN I DAILY PILOT
Corona del Mar High's Payton Kelly (bottom) and Jason Kurtz (top) put a stop on Saddleback's Emmanuel Pedroza in Friday's game.
CdM lets· this one get away
• Saddle back accepts a
few gifts to top Sea Kings.
Jzy..fPll Boo
OcftPb
NEWPORT BEACH -Corona
del' Mar High's football team
needed it's offense to get going
after scoring 10 points in three
games. Against Saddleback, the
Sea Kings got the big plays they
wanted, but none of them count-
ed. Four big plays were called
back by penalties m the first half.
CdM could not recover and fell,
10-7.
The Sea Kings' defense cclJTle
up big in place of the offense,
causing three turnovers in the first
half and sacking Roadrunner
quarterback Victor Ortiz four
times 10 the game, whtle not
allowing an offensive touchdown.
All three turnovers were from
sernor David Beser. He had two
interceptions, including one al
CdM's 9. He also recovered anoth-
er fumble at CdM's 10-yard line.
But Saddleback's defense stuck
with the Sea Kings the whole way.
CdM running back Grant
Estabrook carried the ball 29 times
for 77 yards. But 28 of them came
on one play, and he only had 15 at
halftime.
With CdM's top two quarter-
backs Matt Moore and Joe Barber,
out with injuries, CdM went to
Evan Burden. He responded with
a 7-for-16 day with one touchdown
and one interception.
Burden and the rest of the
offense was really limited though,
by four huge plays that got called
back on penalties.
• On CdM's first play on
offense, Burden threw a 32-yard
EAGLES
CONTINUED FROM 81
games and tomght, Jl seemed like
we were handling a hot potato
out there,• Perkins said. •Not to
take anything away from Ana-
heim. They played a great game
and they came in here wanting to
win."
The Eagles and an intercep·
tion, three fumbles (none lost), 10
penalties for 95 yards and loi.t an
additional 28 yards on quarter-
back sacks.
• 1t seemed ).ike we were con-
stantly first and 15, first and 25,
second and 20, • Perk.ins said.
For Anaheim Coach Allen
Carter, it was a wm that was long
overdue for his players.
•Of course I'm happy for the
victory, but I'm even more happy
for our players,• said Carter.
•They've been working hard all
season and they deserve It:
David Lopez rushed for 133
yards on 22 co.rnes and a touch·
down for Anahfilim.
Matt MueUer had a sobd game
running for the Eagles, rushing
for 61 yards on 10 came .
The Colonists (1 -3) diet u greut
job of contalmng th explo iv •
bark. MnrShall 1 lendrkk
Despite 1eorlng oolh Eagles
touchdown , Hendricks managed
only l 02 ra rct C)f total of fens and
was held behJnd th line of scrim·
mage hve tim .
Aft r th I? gl turned th
ball over on flown , Anllh 1m
marehed 68 yatd on 10 plays and
cored on a 9·yMd touchdown
7
10
play-action pass to Elliot Patterson
that was called back on a holding
penalty.
• A 56-yard Estabrook run in
the first quarter was nullified by
another holding call. ·
• A 60-yard touchdown pass 10
the second quarter to Patterson
was brought back by a cllppmg
call.
• A 59-yard touchdown run by
Estabrook in the second was
brought back by an illegal proce-
dure call.
The penalties seemed to deflate
CdM, but Saddleback could not
take advantage and only managed
a 27-yard field goal to take a 3-0
halftime lead.
Saddleback's offense struggled
agamst CdM's defense. Star run-
ning back Joel Gonzalez was held
to 25 yards in the first half, and it
failed to convert on a fourth-down
conversion. But Gonzalez scored
the first touchdown of the game
when he returned an interception
30 yards to give the Roadrunnen. a
10-7 lead
CdM's offense started to move
the ball in the second half, but 1t
could not convert. A 34-yard field
goal attempt went wide in the
third. The Sea Kings had a 62-yard
run by Sergio Martinez.
The Eagles, whQ were inside
Colorusts territory the first three
out of fow times in the first half,
could only muster six first-half
pomts as Hendricks took it in from
two yards out with ju5t over a
minute remaining in the first hall.
HThey managed to make the
big play when they needed to
and we couldn't tonight,~ Perkins
said. "They did a lot of good
things out there and they capital-
ized on our mistakes."
After Hendricks made a touch-
down-saving tackle on the sec-
ond-half kickoff at midfield, a 15-
yard penalty put the Colonists on
the Eagles' 35-yard llile to start.
Anaheun's biggest play of the
night came on a foUrth-down and
10 when quclrterback Ryan Pater-
son hooked up with Oscar Mateo
with a 25-yard completion .
Three plays later, Paterson
scored from 1-yard out to extend
Anaheim's 1 dd to 14-6.
Both teams' defenses ttght-
cncd up in the third quarter,
before Anaheun broke through
agam, this time on a 4·yard
touchdown run by Lopez, cap·
pmg off a seven-play, 45·yard dn·
vo, making tho score 21•6.
The Eagles scored on the fol-
lowing 67-yarct dnve, but they
had to 96 yards lo corc1 due to
penalties. The drive took a valu·
able 5:14 oU the fourth quarter
dock and when the two-point try
failed, Estancia w11 tlll down
two or , 21·12.
Lopez, who gamed 64 of h
133 yard in th ccond hall,
g-round out li couple of fmt downs
and th ColonlsU rM out the
dock. ·
Cd.M's Mike Hayes holds on in tough going against Saddleback.
dnve cdrry over to the fourth quar-
ter, which wds kept alive by a fake
punt pass from Burden to Eric
Snell. But Sdddleback stuffed
Estabrook on it's 1-yard line to
keep CdM from scoring.
CdM finally scored on a 4-yard
pass from Burden to Estabrook.
But there wets only a 1 :49 left on
the clock. After Gonzalez got a
crucial first down, Saddleback ran
out the clock for a hard-fought
win.
""It wa<, a good effort,• CdM
Coach Dick Freeman !Ml1d. ""We
shol ourselves in the foot. We
deserved to wm it. We did every-
thing po s1ble. •
Indeed, CdM had many strong
performances. Burden missed
some open receivers, but he also
made some tough throws, and had
bad luck with two big plays being
called back. Jay Bottom had two
sacks and numerous tackles to
control the line of scrimmage.
Mike Hayes caused a fumble on a
sack and Scott Biggs chased down
Ortiz for CdM's fourth sack.
· The wjury-depleted Sea K.tngs
were missing seven players, and
had a scare in the fourth when Jon
Schrank bad to be earned off the
field after an end around But he
seems to be OK. according to CdM
Coach Dick Freeman.
DON LEACH I OAllY ~OT
Estancla's Marshall Hendricks (above) scores a touchdown.
Below, he's pulled do~n by a host of Anaheim defe nders.
Daily Pilot
SClnt.,Q&mWs
Saddleback 0 3 7 0 -10
Corona del Mar 0 0 0 7 -7
5eClond Quwt« s.t -Chavez. 27 FG, 3:57.
1hlrd Quwt«
s.t -Gonzales 30 return with
Interception (Chavez kick), 4:29.
Four1h~
CdM -Estabrook 4 pass from Burden
(McKeever kick), 1:47_
Attendance: 800 (estimated).
INOMDUAL llUSHING s.t -Gonzales. 19-102; Courdy, 2-14;
Hrnandez, 2-5; Ma9<1na. 1-4;
V. Ortiz. 10-mins-23.
CdM -Estabrook, 29-n;
Schrank. 4-39; Beser, 1-11; Hayes, 1-45;
Burden, 4-minus-O.
INDIVIDUAL MSSING
5.t -V. Ortiz, 2-6-2, 36.
CdM-Burden, 7-16-1, 71, 1 TD.
l~AL RECEMNG s.t -lslis. 1-17; R. Ortiz. 1-19.
CdM -Snell, 3-50; Hayes, 1-12;
Schrank. 1-10; Estabrook. 1-4, 1 TD;
Beser, 1-minus-5.
GAME STAnstlCS
s.t CdM
First downs 5 10
Rushes-yardage 30-122 38-130
Passing yardage 36 71
Passing 2-6-2 7-16-1
Net return yardage• 43 37
Sacks-yardage 4 -10 1-5
Net yardage 181 233
Punts 5-27.8 4-36.3
Fumbles-fumbles lost 3· 1 5-2
Flags-net yardage 9-52 11-87
lime of possession 20:16 27:44
*Punt returns, interceptions, fumble
returns
Scont by QuMters
Newport 15 6 7 O -28
Glendora 0 0 0 13 -13
FirstQu..ur
NH -Safe'Y, Colands tackled
quarterback in end zone, 8:18.
NH -Trimble 1 run (Bargas kick), 4:29.
NH -Stewart 6 run (kick failed), 2:48.
Second Quarter
NH -Jacobs 78 punt return (kick
failed), 9:41.
lhlrd Quarter
NH -Stewart 6 run (Bargas kid<), 6:58.
Fourth Quarter
Glen -Rohrer 47 run (Wilkes kklc),
9:52.
Glen -Reid 5 pass from Hatch (kid<
failed). 5:05.
Attendance: 2.700 (estimated).
INDIVIDUAL RUSHING
NH -Stewart 29-135, 2 TDs; Brill, 14-
70; Manderino, 9-36; Trimble 1-1, 1 TO.
Glen -Nall, 18-91; Rohrer, 1-47, 1 TO,
Hatch, 3-14; Lage, 1-9; Lombardi, 1-1.
INDIVIDUAL PASSING
NH -Manderino, 4-10-2, 57;
Gaeta, 0-3·1, O.
Glen -Hatch, 8-18-4, 54, 1 TO;
Rohrer, 1-1·0, 63.
INDIVIDUAL RECEIVING
NH -Jacobs, 3-38; Langsdon, 1-19.
Glen -Reid, 2-68, 1 TD; Nall. 4-34;
Lage. 2-9; Gilmore, 1-fi.
GAME STATlmCS
NH Glen
First downs 15 8
Rushes-yardage 52-247 24-162
Passing yardage 57 117
Passing 4-13-3 9-19-4
Net return yardage• 100 3
Sacks-yardage 1 -5 3 -10
Net yardage 399 272
Punts 3·38 5-35.6
Fumbles-fumbles lost 3-1 0-0
Flags-net yard~ 6-48 4-31
Time of possession 27:50 20:10*
P\.flt returns. Interceptions, hmble returns
Score by Quarters
Anaheim 7 7 O 7 -21
Estancia O 6 O 6 -12
First QuMter
Ana -Martinez 19 run (Esc: .vel kick),
3:22.
SeconCI Qu.wW
Est -Hendricks 2 ruh (kklc failed),
1:19.
Third qu.,...
Ana -Paterson 1 run (Esquivel kick),
8:56.
Fou~Quan.r
Ana -Lopez 4 run (Esquivel kick),
9.S8.
1st -Hendricks 2 run (pass failed),
4:14.
Attendance 700 (estimated).
INOMOUAL flUSHING
Ana· H. Lope%., 22·133, 1 TO;
Martinez, 9-44, 1 TD; Patenon, 8-24, ,
TD; Sanchez, 1·2: C. Lopet., l ·minus-3.
Est • Hendrie.Its, 2o-88, 2 TDs, Mueller,
10-61: Jah1d, 4-9; Romo, 1-13; Freeman,
1 ·mlnu-2; Valdes, 6-minus-26.
INDMDUA&. MSllNG
AN • Pet~. 3-8-0, 39.
Est· Veldez. •12·1, 37.
INDIVIDUAL MC8VING
Ana -Jimenez, 2-14; Mateo, 1·25.
lbt· Hendrkks, 1-14; Romo, MO;
Jahld, 1·8, MuellH, M .
~STAnmc:s
AN
12
40-200
39
3-1-0 s 1 .,
241
1·3' ~lost )~ ,
F~ ·y.wdlgt 7-95 10-
Tlmt of~ 2U2 2':1 •Nnt""'"' ~fumble f'WtUmt
she •••
l . \I I \ t I I l ) I\ . \ l I ..,, I I ) I\ I\. I . LES T R ER. L f F Exdusivc Agent AllslalW .. MY aJENTS ARE FROM All OVER AND OET THE REST PRICE & RATis." )Oll'llE IN 0000 llAMll
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VISlt our website al h ~
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101. 216
Nicoletd, Paul J., Jr. Bvm in Beverly
Hills 12/17/25, J1rJ Q/:7/99 due to
c(lmphc.11it>ru from ,1 Mroke. Third
gcnemuon C1l1fomi.m. Gr.1duated from
, Beverly Hill\ I h1:h. t:rveJ in the N;ivy and
artcndeJ University ,,( Southern C1hfom1;1.
Joined the !,CCur1t1c firm of Rumi.'r, Jackson
&. Gray, Inc. and bcican h" ~lKc~4ul cnreer
as :i :.code. bn.1kcr RcM1.led in Newport
Beach where he ra1\C\.I h1~ family; retired ln
Brtntwood. Survivors: &lei, his loving
companion, DrentW<ll1<l; Paul J. Nicoletti,
Ill , son, A ~n <.X>.~ Kllrcn M. Nicoletti,
daui:htcr, Tuoon, /\l,: Lynn P. Nicoletti,
Jauazhm, Ne~rt IX-ach; Tracey L Nicholson, tc: ~ughu:r, M1~on V1e10;
and raulcttc .., lomonc, niece. Encmo.
Pnvatc service in BrcnNl(1tld. r>.iJ you will
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man who w.u full o( life. May you
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aurvNed by Illa eona. Stew
Jonte {P•m) and Scott JonH (Vickie); daughtM,
SUM'\ Jonn; eewn arM6o
clllldrtn; slater, Adtllt
1'lolln, .
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by Illa ..... Celine .. ~i daughttf, Vtr1 It Diener °' Tomncie: eon, .....,._ A.
~":!-C ..
Pecllle VllW ......... "'ti. 8eedl.CA.
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Pl'OftftY hemmftef 4-:tibed. Trut-tor.PETE'Jt K. EYMERT a.corded Oaobet 6:
1991 u lnllr. No. 92· 674471 lo look
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Noac. of Oelllall and E--.toW....., r--. "-17. 1999 • a... No. ,,_.,31S7
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STIE J BLOG P~
COSTA MESA. CA 2621
T ol LloenM(~ tor: ct . Otoi E ANO WINE •
EATING Pt.ACE
PUtJlstwd ~ Beach-~ MIA 1Ddy f'lot ~r 25 <>adJer 2. e. 199t s.251
.... '1 ......
• l ,, l
PUIUC
Saturday, Odober 2, 1999
tr'J»,t b the most a~tacular brand new 4998
...., __ foot custom home. It offers the warmth /o 'traditional desian with outstanding
craftsman6hlp anJ tht-u.e of top quality
materials and feature . Located on an extra !arge lo" In • prime location. There att Ocean
..,d.,Jetty views from many rooms and three
CfE1:1s. This home include : formal living and
dinin& rooms, den M library, family breakfast
area. Master BR with sittinc room. 2
additional Bdrm's & rumpui. room or 4 Bdrm.
$1,895,000
"• • JOANN AKERMAN, REALTOR
(949) 721 ·9475
• -· 7 EASY • STEPS TO
'BUY YOUR
• 1ST HOME wit.ow DOWNI
FREE SEMINAR
Huntington Bch • nm. Oct 7th 6:30pm • ""tof RtaeN1tlon1 ~ 71Wn-t790
FRONT AXER
I THE PRICE
-Will AMAZE YOUI
AOEHT Mt-n3 .. 120
OfJEH SAT l SUH 11-4
321 MARIGOLD
3BR 2BA4941,000.
John Kenney, R.E.
Mt-723-4040
LEGAL TRIPI.EX
309 FERNLEAF AVENUE
$611,000
JOHN KENNEY R.E.
Mt-723..a40
NEW TOWNHOME
1356 S.F. 3BR 28A
Ocean View Dick $534,IOO
JOHN KENNEY R.E. Mt-723-4040
°""1 Sllf/Sun f .S 402 'h lrl• AllW!ut.
28' 2.6S., Zc f1M1 OWHSlnd
fem rm a din rm, 3 belconlt ..
ISff,000 Agt. Nl-376-5576
OPEH SAT l SUH 1.s
211 HELIOTROPE Oc:Hn & Jttly Vilw'I. 48r. $1,895,000
Joann A'*1nan. Rean«
Mt-721-9'75
I~ 10 HOUSESICONDOS FOR SALE COSTAIESA-
E'lldt Mlb An otfwl
Cute E'alde cott1lgl can bt
the home of yOUJ drelmtl
38r 1.2Ba. t.m rm. 1355,000
Hurry Won't Lutll
Trldlllontl Reelty
Mt-7'0-0880
E'SIDE BeautifUI custom
dllached, 2·5tOIJ. bulh Ill '92,
38r 2 sea. 53:W,OOO Eat1 &
Judy Teylor, Afl. 9'49-M2-4722
811utltul Townhome 3Br
2 sea.. loe<Jed w/ut>Qrlldes. 2c
gar, $178,000 Eail & Judy
Tayl0t, ~'· !M9-642-4722
Nr Flir'I w Pent• 2 ml to !>eh
OPEN SAT·SUN 1M
2175 PACIFIC AVE
2 $1ly tv.timl, 2 mstt Ix, 2 5ba.
132S sl. pool, apa. $21050 °"'* !M9·574-S552
3 r 1 "' FP, DR, F , $299,000
ll2052 PomON.. •harp
dplx, 2·2Bt unlit $249Km •m1 eaw ier 2ea, FP9
lrtlhly patntH, $233K
113327 Ntv• ntW9r 48r9 t t..,._ 1-.toty $179,IOO
lfwww.rt~
• 714-201-7653 .
OPEN HOUSE FRI 10-1:00
AlaoSUNMOO 2053 &enl'M>Od E Mdt hcMI,
IMll 1500sl. exqWJ\ety remod l9C oak, rnalblt.'tJI. skyllS,
beau yald By pa111. ~ pager
S38U OO 714-268-<'504
QRANOMAS'S COTTAGE
E'Sklt R·2 Lot. Rtduetd 10
$2311,IOO Sho.n VlfY nice!
2Br IBa Ed Vfll den Bo6sclle
Bfoiler IM9-65G-0943
31 HOUSE~NOOS NEWPOfrr'c8~
J
•7 HOUSES/CONDOS
fORSALE
1\JSTIH
RED .. LL RIDGE 2 story Sbf,
4bl, s "' p , 2 ""*· 1 1/2 IC of land. $978,000
•()psi kn 1-6• 2242 Pevllllon Dr
Agt MMKIMI 714..a3M317
1.80 COMwRETAIL llNQUSTSAL&
FOR SALE GARDEN STYLE
2 SIOry Proleaslonal Medlcal & Pentlll BklO localed Westdfl
Or NB 80% Leased F0t Mor&
lnlo Ca• C~ Brief CommtftjQ! 877-&44-4040
coililliEAciAL
STOREFRONT
SUL BEACH·212·A Main St.
ISOO SO.FT. Good Loe.lion
Aval! Now. Call Jim Kl!Nnln
5'2-StweOO
Exclusive Gated Community
ATOP NEWPORT COAST
• Enclosed Garage
•Alarm System
• Washer/Dryer/Refrigerator
• Fitness, Business, Clubhouse Centers
ONE ANO Two BEDRcx:>M
APARTMENT H OMES FROM $1376
San Joaquin HIUs at
Ne~ Rldp DrlVe
Wooded Newport Luxury ·
Steps To Fashion Island
OCEAN BREEZES, CITY CONVENl.BNCES,
CORONA DEL MAR LOCATION & CHAR
• Vaulted ceilings, frplcs • Heated Olympic Pool
• Country kitchens • Fabulous closets/storage
• Wooded landscaping • 11-acre nature park
• Walk to shops Ii dining • Dogs t; cats welcome
Select Location
1 Bedrooms from $1185
2 Bedrooms from $1410
:J Bedrooms from $1775
THE BAYS
of Nnq>ort &ach
MacA.rt/nu & San f OillJuin Hills
1-888-219-0754
Irvine Apartment Communities
' ~ LIVE IN LUXURY ~
I/ ' Y> ( /, /I 1/
APARTMENT HOME S
Exclusive Fashion Island Lifestyle
• Concierge Service • 24 HR Security Cate
• 24 HR Fitness Center • Clubhouse Facility
I Bed fro m $1795 2 Bed from $2385
I Bed/den from $1815 2 Bed/den fro"" $2210
Washer/Dryer
Intrusion Alarms
Gourmet Kitchens
Elevator Access
Gas Fireplaces
9 Foot Cellings
Condo Specs
Subterranean Park.ine
Custom Home Design Program Available
CALL FOR APPOINTMENT
1-888-2 22-6924
Newport Marina
Apartments
Bayfront community with fi]'c beach a: marina.Tropical bndscapit\&-L L1na.i pool a:
un deck, w.ilk to 8aJbOa I shops
Minutes f.rocn Fashioo lshnd
• Spaoous 2BR and 2BR a: den apu
• Pnvatc patios or baJconin
• Wood bum.Ing/gas fll"Cplaccs
• Pnvalc garages
• Boat 51.i.ps available
• $2050 • $ 3600 Sorry No Pru
Please call (9_.9 760-0919
e11/2 BLOCK TO 8Ctfll Spec:lout 28rl2Ba Condo
Spilt ""91. 4br'Ube, ltundry Slytt W/D, ll'Plc, gatld
clo11 to thopa. $11GOmlo. 4 Avallabltl U18S.$2,400, Ywty. MM7S-2.507 .;..94..;;.g._roe-;.;;...;.llG9e;;;;,;... ___ _
Lido ltlt on tht belctl Luaurlovt Comlllunl_ty 38' 381, ~. deln, llldly nn 2Bt12BI. W/D, lrol, O'Clllngl, $27~ 413 Via Udo Soud concierge Ac1 • Nowll
94918'73-12830tMM75-3551 949-708'9696
Oceall View Heart of NtwpOl1 8pedou• 2Br Lower Unll.
24-Hr galed, lrp, roman tubt, t door trom Octln tront, l)llJo, w IO , con c It t g 1: gw, wld, l\'lllaoon, S1•151mo 949-708-9698 P1111, Ag! Mt-7SU737 X 126
·r;~ '·. ·:"-~ ~· ~ '·. t ,-' . ~ ·. . -
OCEAN FRONT
Furn 28r 281, Big Screen
TV, Pool TMlll $3500imo
yeat1y Thi Gleatesc l/lewl
AS~TED REALTY
MH1Wl63
BAY VIEW Y9iilY liioe 2Bi
2Ba. Qlltd condo. 2c ~
pool, cJock r1,-.a1 avail. CloN lo l«IY, no pets. S1800'm0. M9~?':H640
~~··ft~ ~-l · } ,,.. . ....
I I ! ~ ,0 • • •
.~nne
PR IDftN'rti~
•TH~
SHORES APTS
1 & 2 8 R
TOWNHOMES
Starting O
$1095/mo.
'TOP l % Of Cowwlll.L BANKD. N ATIONWU>B
49) 718-2371OR014) 746-6000
Mo TO Mo lease • .. w. are a per
community.
6 blocks
from the beach.
949-644-2611
I
.. -. ...
it'EH fO ZIA ltiAI ~ trplc, ... Dri¥e by
1321 E l1lb01 ltvd'. ...... .-1
WHY RENT?
You CAN Buyl
100% fln1nclng
Call 800-256:6217
for frH lnform1tlon
•E SID£ OOTTAGU
28fl 111A 1 c.v lllnl9'1 Uto Eldtn IC
MM4M515
AvilL lmmtdllltilY for INN $140Mno. Condo loellld In EASTSIDE CM. 2 Story, 2br,
2bl, den, Lvng-nn, dlrwlg-tm.
w/d, 2-<ar gar, welling dll-
i.ia IO NB IChools Clll
94t-4S7"3303 IV nwg 111 !Mt
+ dtp req'd for move 111
iii 361 2 llOfY TWi'lhM nut Tri-square Tollly rtmOdlled, garege, w/d 18ltl St & Newport
$1600'm0 IM9-93CH527
2bf 2ba nMr Tri.square
Totally remodetld, l/J>, garaigt. PICIO. wld lath S1 & Newport $1150/mo MM30-7521.
sTOOIO £'Sidi cieen, iit>MY
tlltd, new l)llnt, redone cabin8ts, $800lmo lnddl ulls & , cable. 949-$48-8602
E'sloE IAcK UV 26r
hou11, fl'plc, great y11d, lot• or wlndowa Sf295mo+ dtp
32t Un.,..,.tlty IS LIU M1tlt
Mt-54HOl3 unit IL
CUITOM UECUTIVI
HOUSE. '61 62nd St
Open Sit 1-. ....
Cllpet "' 28e ....... IUllt, Wilkin cloHt,
Mlltll. l'llldWoocl tloiol1
Don'trMlell
MH4~~
28R 2BA 'Helt Fuhlon It'
2 Clf altlch gw, AC,
COfl'WIUWly PC>OUIPI SI 795mo 949-721·9621 • 949-640-1529
4-8dnn 2.Seth iiljjll S!Ory,
lall'tfly room. ~ 1oom.
p11v.ie yanl. 2c 041. $JOOO/Mo ~ !M!l-759·9314
QoodjO& ,..... .....
lllleflllllO,'*'Oe
to buy
It'• .. there fNef'/.,
lrt Cllll .. 11 .•.. ,.
f'>J -.·,' ~-. :",• ! .,., ..• . ' . . . . . '"'" . ' .
[
••' ,r' '.
,1 ~ ,_ • -· • •' •
rT ;31 .. •.•r:T~.........--:-•
lbr -2 -...... frplc, lluftdnl\. COIMi poOI .:.;r-. l11!1Mfto. ......
r • , . , . . ,"' .... ... :.t... . k.t. ~~·~~-~·:-· ....
•MANAGERS* t SPECIAL•
S1SUO + tu Wkty
{Mull Pf... tNs Ad) Bat Rllta, grMl Vu
235 ITlll ' klldltl llltS SUled on b8luOfutt -~ l1ooodl FEATUR S: 24-Hour
Lobby/Dlrecl dial
phonu/Frte HBO,
ESPN & otlClpool &
.JeQlul, glJell ~Close to 405 & 55 Fwys.
In lrom O.C. FalrgrdS,
co111oe anc1 bcte. war..-lnO llslance IO shops &
rtSlaUrlnlS.
COSTA MESA MOTOR INN
1277 HMbor Blvd
Phone MM45-4&40
HB: Fem11t to tflll'9 2bf 1 bl
.. btleh=l/J>, luldly. prrtlng. $700 hcl
Ull. Cal Don It MM&-2259.
LibOI Ii, blck hOU11, ilif
2ba 1 rm rtalL Pl'vf flm.
167(\lf!IO + dtp A 1f.1 ulll
Aval! Nov 1et. MM7Mla
APB BEACH ocEAN FRONT
HOUSE ON THI! SANO
metr .,..,,,.. "i;i:a· $1200 + 112 utll.M 741t
8d>ol Penln. Splclou• Otlule II ntW, kllY lum'd, 2br
2ba, 2c gar, w/d, M;, ~.
qul!C. aa to bell MM7S.7130.
EASTSIDE C01ta Mffl
GllllOI rtrUI. $20Moo, QUMt locatlon, 1111U1bt1 now.
~10
1 400 ~1
E.ucutlw Nib to lhlr•
COit of Town C./Lino seMCe
lot ~ • Shtrmln Oalcl cJll't c:orrmJt1 Cal Cory a 81M81·3541
Hallctett N~ Salll Sat 8-2pm 3092 warren lJI,
Coate Mesi lncl\ldt: Soutl\-W8'1tm Decor & At1WOlk, Daybed w/Trundlt, deluxe
Clrilj)fng Sto\19, clolhll, & iructi lllOftl
Daily Pilor
· c.iiJSAT 11111-111111 Clothing, Hou11hold a
Mlecll °"""' fllovtngl 11 S2 ICJNGSTOH ST
MulUOnge Salt Sat·Sun
8am no Htfy birds, Hugi
variety, Ind primitive ll'ltiqula 370 L9drol1 • Horth l.191111&.
. ?-•• •
.. f .. -,•_
Miiltl Home 0.,. Slltl
EASTSIDE COWi MIN
Catallnl Short St. near TUIUn
& 22nd. Sun. Morning Od 3rd
NP8 UDO ISLAND
SAT-suNH,
Uwn MOWlf, only UNd 10
thnn, $75. ~If vacuum $50.
Shop smith 1nc1 ckl"· Miider, lltht, ml19f uw, bend uw,
Wt'Jlll looll best otfw.
SSS VII Udo Soud
ltlllnl bunk bed ... w/chtat,
Ctlerr;wood cllnml Mt. NnY lltm1 NO JUHKI
WOLff TANNING BEDS
TAN AT HOME BUY DIRECT ANO SAVEi
COMMERCIALJHOME units from 11119 oo
\,OW Monlht1 p......-FREE Col«~" can 1.aoo-111-0158
Roome,
apartments,
home•
Claulfled
can aatlefy
your
hou1tng nffd1.
or.eat P rt Tim
Mt-712·1'44
'®+'M'••·lilili@M
Do you enjoy talking with people? ·
Are you a Pet Lover?
Would you enjoy educating pet owners about pet products?
National Co. seeks outgoing poslbve people to demonstrate our products
rn pet stores. AeXJble hoort including weekends. Start between S8 • $10
an hour. make up to S12Jhr. Training Is provided For more roronnation
please call toll lree
****** (800) 289 4738 #260 ******
c-l:)etail ~erchandiser J_ \.._ Part .. Tune .
Costa Mesa/Santa Ana/Fountain Valley
& Surrounding Areas
Ari CJC'.'f'C)IM\lty o-wuh &ht Ploc:ta 6o. G.mhk c-i....da Div..-The ~ ~ Nllf<Ollllhtlltla wludt &ht IMle1 6. ~ -n lhr <Am Oirl 6. Mu
FKior oudaa. 1lW • • .,_ °""°"""'"' b pr.1'it ~cnns ~"°"'bu Prior m il mtrthandl"~ up it pqfd
• lnckperidence &
FlexibleWork Scbedwe
• Candklatct Mun Be
Available At Leut
3 Full Daya Per Week
• Good Hourly Pay,
$9.00 Pu Hour
• Drive Your o-n Car
(wt reunbunc)
• Valid Driver'•
Licuue
• Proof of lnaurance
Pleiue wnte/acnd r~umc to·
Ptocler&Gamble
Co1metict Division
Attn1 Rectuitin1 Specialbt
REF tS088-S, Mail Stop 2B
l lOSO York Road
Hunt Valley, MD 21030.2098
.... ~ ... -M.f MOl'toa CAl.U PUA!
•
• • .
' .
... • •
!:Daily Piiot
I
I • r ~ , , , ......... __
""S19Mltlo ... 720-1722 t I
------- -
• ' TT.:· ·r, :1 • ..,..._ • 'wu. llOOlA. a OR.I, • 1 IOYI. IHOTI, FAWN. • CALL KAT MMtMllt
I • ..
I
--
·,· ........ ,~ ·' .. I t ,• I ...
I ' aood COldof\, IOllldl Qrtatl • 8lfldl Included, ""' ·aeso • 714-117-GIOO I
• • •
IOOKS WANTED
eo'S "' Nitlef, hlrdbldll IMM31-8113
TI# QIMEC61lbll
Jt.a, R & 8, ICMA, Rock, .-: ...
!id• & 90'• MIKE 9'M45-7&0e
WAIMDI oco cOINsl
Gold. IMf, Fllnlcli\ mlrt,
ltefh. Old wll!Chel & ~· WU'TtOA&T COINl4a
Phlebotomy Course
Boml Reed Co Call Reg 131()1291 1~201-1141 ...
....
MMKETINO ASSISfANT ~ Flf In Ntwpol18Mcl\. Mui( bl ~ Macholh _., wltn
• knowledge of Quark,
:: pholoahop. Exel!. ~ •• i... R:ludl pr..,.nng ~
•• ... lof ptt ~· SOmt
grlphlc dealgn,'ly))M9!1111g, ' oener11 ofb-Piol...,.,
•MIOll'llll .. Fu r....,. '° • Ut·717·4713 or call ..... 717--011 u--------..
.,.:111
' .,
~
~l • r • * ACOUSTIC Rf MOVAL ! KNOCKDOWN TEXTURE
I APf'Ul'D, 11W1NJM
I
,.. ' .......
cAW Fff, Pff. Newport Bueti Calt ntedl Cllhllr. $7 ()MW
Cll 949-252-0014
APPOINDitit
SEl'IUIS
Ff/Pf o., & £~ Slalfta 812-~0
Per Hour
TOP·pruchx."n'I · fiJghcr
• lltakli. Onlal '-• .01 K PIM .,.ld..,.aU..
•Loos icna ·~ &t. In 1989 bl
COiia ~1CM
and growin&
Cull for appt..
J-888-813-47"
ITARTYOUR
OWH IUSINESSI • s.t 'fCAI' own scn.cMe.
Control your own
~ 5411 lfom your
home. at WOltt, llwough
bldrlllllfl 8t en Avon
f\tpraun1111ve Call
(888)581·2866
..i:., ! .. , . . # 1.· .. -~
• '' I I ..... .
}.__ ~· ' ' ...... .
~··. .
r: ... ' . .
,,,,I ' ( 111111( \l\I
Loul Au P~1r Progr.im ~
~,,~~ Hosl fMr!llits.
Cullur~lly_Enrtehing. Flaible,
l ll, 4 Shn/wlt. Many /o.JJ
P~lnto~•om
"""• COi( s 2~ ean eoo.11 3.2002
........ c:ora
---
., ... .:1 ,, ...
Plrtdlie Driver Wanted
St.22 per hour plut
m11M9e. .
Needed Mon thN Sun
2:46em to 5:45pm. A~
tlonel wort! may be avell-
lblt.
Mutt hive truck or Van,
llabillty lntU,.nc:e with
proof or pa~, drfv·
.. 1ic.n.., toelal
eecurtty CMd. end clean
D.M.V. print out.
Accepting eppllcetlont
Mot,, to thN Fri from
l :OOem to 4:00(11'1!:
Pl .... btlnt all~ lnformetion.
nm..~ County Attn: P8lll liddugtwn
2901 Garry Ave.
Santa Ana, e. 92704
7t4-64M548
I00-93M080
•PHONE SALES•
SPORTS ADVERTISING
OFFICE IN CM 714-557-9914 ** Pott otllce Cnera tt Start s 14.0Mv. plus benlllts. FOf exam Md tiiolcdofl lnlo. c:all 80().28<>'97tl8 Ext. CA130,
6am-8pm 7 days.
'tNNl.etijobhelp com
Small firm nHdt FIT
Raceptlol lisl/Olhce Mgr COlta
MMI lffll. $10 IO sttrt, grNI
wOllllng lflWonment R~ cendldate wit bl f11endy. pron,
flexible, exp'd In Wor~ Fax raeume to 71~.
Salll/A~ Ellpandlng community
~groupMlkl hide ... ftpl Phones .-~aaplus
GrM 0000!\ntv 8aM + commliSlon. l>hyalcaV
drug -:'..-::.:-to
M..uyo.n .....
MM3145M -EOE·
. . . .
. '
: . t. ...
~~ ... ~:-· ....
•t• . ~ ... ::'(': ..
MUCK llOCK I TONE TILE
Conctece, f>!!>..1..~· fhplla, U«IU"I, fW'I. 25yra. Twry714-557·7~ * ICK'WOAK• Sma• !Ob• and .. j)81r wOltl. Cttf DOUG HARLM
IMM4M762
. --:--. ,,
VfWING: Ciiy pe11ona
dr..n Few houri • Good S
Plfcl to Ml Ft• bnJc:IMI 1~782
X U i W cXN> raw
EASY SS MONEY! loc:al 11• Eam $500-$5,00()'wk CASH!
FREE lnlo 1-8()().IKINl888
l ddlb•a1 WN UOK t
Ground Floor Opportunity
HMhly All. In Colla Mela
0 s Down 800-36~9290
ALL cAIR M oms "o"
DOWN Hershey vending
kaled In Costa Mesa. Eam
$43K Wk 5·8hra 1-811M34-5481 241n.
FRIJi'TfiATtD NETWORK
lllAftK.ETER Nol ea"*'ll wtwt your WOll'I, SlOOI< lrom home
111 reer fl8H9G.t587
' . .... .~. \~"
' •I ' ., . .
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11.W .. -,, ,.,~,. -~~ c.· . ~ ... f •
~ • • 'I;' • ' • I . . ,:~·, ..
: . . .
em~sti ·e1 Low 2511 mllu, 300 h p
Nolhllf. pOs1lnl cordllon
(819821) $29.988
NA.BfltS (714)540-1100
cAISIUlc SEVIW STS 'ii
Only 9200 ml, emerald,
lealfllt, moonrool. cd & mcHel
(900405) $35.988
NABERS (714)5'~00
•All Drywall Services•
35 YNll bp • Frae Edmlle lA308647 • 114-Sn-2111
AJICUCfW'f 03iGN
LIGHT SOfFITS/ARCHES
NITCHESICLOSETSl't>OOAS REPAIRS / 714-413-7001
wtmkSEIT DAvwm
All pllas11/amall/1rg jObl CLEAN! 20ls, lair, ff• 11t. LMOOOIO 71W»1447
8llALL JOI EXP£RTI DUNCAN ELECTRIC
LOCll.'Ouick l'll90f1ll
Setvlce/Remodela • 20yMll~
lK.!75870 MHS0-7042
'
UCINilb CONWcfOA
No job too ll'Oll All MIVICel ~. ~. f1n1, New
~. Spu IMU45-3656
laAM!i..• ....... ....... ~ ...... Tr .. . ..,.. ...... ,~.
~La. •Pllli•Ntwa...•C..-
FREE fSTIMATE (919 7ll • 7478
t • J ..... , •
81 CHMUS GOllN
M&he>IMll~
IN1d TANNAH tMSCH
WEEKLY BRIDGE QUlZ
Q l •As Soulh, ~ulntf9l>Je, )OU
hold:
Q 4 ·Both vulnerable, u South )W
hold:
•J.o o AKlOU 0 Al •Q103
The biddina has riroceeded. •
SOUT H WF.S1' NORTH EAST
•AQJU 2 o KtOI oAQlOI ·~
Your ri&ht·hand opponent opens the
biddlna with one heart Whal action
do you take? Jo Pass h Pus
?
What do you bid oow?
Q 2 • tu South, vulnerable, you
hold:
Q 5 • Net1her vulnerable, as South
you h<>ld:
• QIOl o K o KJ 1063 • KQ43
The bidding has proceeded: •Ql076 o KQJ063 ¢ AQ •K4
The biddingJL~~de.d: SOUTH WF.ST NORTH EAST
NORTH EAST SOlTfH WF.Sr
l o Paa l o Pus
l o Pass 1• Pass 20 Pa.w ?
What do you bid now? ?
What do you bid !'OW? Q 6 -Neither vulnerable, as South
Q 3 -As South, vulnerable, you
hold:
you hold:' '
• J U O K J 76 S o 10 S • Q'
•A 101 o J 102 o A KJ 10 •A 7' The biddin2 has oroceeded:
The bidding has pr~: soum WFSI' NORTH
NORTH EASr soum
1<> ..... 10 lNT P.. 1 INT hll 2• ?
What action do you talce?
1::51
Onl'f 3250 ml, beige, ""'*' mM, ed. (002864) $28,988
HABEAS
~4)540-9100 CAOi c COHCOURS '87
Low milel, beige, 1811 lealtlli',
rnoonrool, aloys, Bal of WllT
(287833) $27,988
NASERS
(714)54().1100
cADiillc oEVilll ·er
Low miles, llhr, V8 Nol1hstar,
bal. of W!llT. (217748) $22,988 Nablra Oldsmoblll Cldfllac 714-54N100
CAbililc b£ViliE ·99
Low 14k ml, wtite.18n ltdlef,
V8, Nonhltar, bll ot #Ill
~) $28,988 OldMnOble Cadlllac
714-54M100
CAOIWC ELDORADO ·ts
Low mlel, INlher, mMPf XllU,
btl. ot wan (601883) $23,988
NABERS (714~00
CHEVROilT" ASTRO 'M
Low miles. fUI pwr & moral
(207181 )Cal for QltlWl1 ollclna LEXUS OF WESTUIN$TEA-
(714)89U906
CHEVROlET TAHOE LS 'N
Low 1*. lea1hir, IVI pwr j)l!Yacy glass, alloys, roo( rad<
{306141)Cal for current pndng
LEXUS OF WESTMINSTElf
(714)192-6906
DODGE CARAVAN 193
Grand, iMll ale, loedtd (99SW604290) $7,995
MCKENNA VOLKSWAGEN
71W42·2000
OOOGE NEOH 'N .\IA0,4« AC
(99505/341544) $10,995
MCKENNA VOLKSWAGEH
714-M2.·2000
FORD AEROSTAR VAN 191
Ext.ooed, Y«Y '°"' milllot. ~ loedtd, lm-fm c:altlft•. ~ COl'llJU81, $7500 080 7t4-540-5995. 714-78S-e118
. • .• ' ; • . l'
f ""°'.'-~'·' I I I 1l . . . _,. -. ~ . •• .... •.•• i. ~'Ji.
JUNK TO THE'DOMPlll
71 ........ 1112
AVAILAllE TODAY!
MM'7USM
13,000
CHILDREN
ARE DEAD ..•
Crom ..... timl le houser.ow~ ..-.J. ...... tltM. • • ri;;...O::~
P.I* """''\ids at rjlk :r 'a.::~ ~F.0181.Eto
1'!U! ldds • bt "''· CA.LL 'IODAY
What llCl.ion do you take?
Look/or answers 0n Monday.
1-c-j jusc~j
FORD EXPEDmON '99 . LEXUS Sci&! 'ii
Edtle Bllier 4X4, auto, lfv, 11111 LJ~ 'g'F~~R pwr, pwr aeais, llloys, 8K ml 4~ _,,.,,. (A16671)Cal forcunant l)l1dng (71 ,.. •• ...,.,..,., LEXUS OF WESTMINSTER" -111-E~R;...c-eb£e.....s-a""E .... NZ_i3..,.· -
(714)H2"906 .,., WAGON ... .
FORD TROAbEABiRb 199 1mm1e, whli\an. llhr, aurnf,
'1·8 auto 1rana ale lealhlr 3rd Nit, xtnt cond. 1uny
' ' I loedtdl 714-754-0737 Of' ~~'.~.~~:ct. Cell ph. 714-473.0001
HYUNDAI •87 iii£Ac0RY liountall*f '97
Runt wall, 4 'GHd, All wN dltve, aulo, air, cd
'
$12,.,.,,... 0 11Kker, Iba, llhf, rmrf, alov aunroo , .,...., . wt1t1 & morel (J23796)
714-545-1150 Cal lor cwl'Wil Ptt*lo ·
J19uar XJI 1H LE>IUS OF WESTitlNSfER
Very clean, well mananed, (714)192-HOI ,_ urea, CID '11Cklf, 9211 ml, NISSAN MAXDIA '90 4-0A
$5995 Cel Aictl 94i-723· I 588 pwr, llr, aulo. M roof, phone
Lind Aovw o.ttnd« 90 '94 spollef Aid ee.uty Ind Oltf Rait co18Cllllt lltP 1ype 4•4, i45cillot1o. 94i-m 1504
1-owner II tadory ~ olbsMOeiLE f oronaa<> '91
Cal tor dllaits wll dtlwr. Whta IUhef rmrt. 3 8 v6.
28 51</ollet lMYe message 1entllc V111Uel (3017 49) $6 .988
a11ar 6pm 916-489-2739 NASERS tanCi Aovw DfiC ii sE7 (714)540-1100
All OC>bOfll, Hiii 7. CID, Pontlac BOMIVl11t ·a
ouardS. lnYnllc cond $24,500 N•• tlrufbatterr/palnt 7t4·322-4375e<l9·337·2111 All poww, am-Im caas, runt mos ES300 ii 9,.., u1ts 11w.7501
Cll lor c:unn pi1c1ng iATUAN SC:1 't3 LEXUS OF WESTMINST'Eft Au1o, rmrl. excellent c:oncflOant
(714)192-HOI (189218) $6,988
LEXUS 3366 'es NABERS
Call tor current orbno (714)54o.t100
LEXUS OF WESTMINSfEA Toyota Canvy VS LE 'ts
(714)192·8906 Auto, air, lul pwr, am-Im c:ass. LEXUS ES300 •ii abt, r.tv•IPJ tea1her Int.
Call for current pncillg . lmmec, 1-cMfllf, roost sell LEXUS OF WESl\!INSTEA S13 5K obo Mt-720-3990.
(714)192-Hot •TOYOTA PICKUP TACOi1 wus tS400 ••1 s"s ·• 4X•. c:1ean. mia cab. Call for current l)fiClnQ 4 cyt, A/C. 8000! Iii. Oltf
LEXUS OF WESTMlNST'ER $18,850 Cal 849-760-0287/
(714)192"'* fovofA PicRIJP -iC
MITSUBIS .. ECLIPSE '97
Ai.NJ, CIU, ed. IC, *'t (I 55269199432) $12.99! MCKENNA YOl.KSWAGEN
714-M2·2000
runs grMI. oean lnlerior, bed .,. ltlndlrd ltlnl, good
WOii! lrucll $3990 FIA pclce
714-.437-1931 dllllf
TOYOTA TERCEL •17
=-=,10ml Buy It. s.11 It. Find It. lft!lllt & Wlch. o· l!IML 0ttt s1850 11Hs1-2859
NATURAL VIAGRA
Or1ltNI C»lnt HttW f°'""* uMd for~ ot ,..,, for tCll!lilll & ~
Only S" for JO dq """1
CALL MOW! (t4t) 114-5200
tl' ., 1 • • "'I ~ ... ·'.
» ..
-~"" ·, • .! . .:111 .... r.
PUBLIC
NOTICE
The Calif Pubhe·
Utilthes Commission
REQUIRES that all
used household goods
movers f rlnt their
P U.C. Ca T number;
Umos end cnauffers
prlnl their T C.P ·
number In an adVettls-
mentt It you have •
qu1&llon about the
tegallly of a mover,
lrno or chaUlftr, call
PUBLIC UTILITIES
COMMISION 714.ss&-415,
-. -·" , . ., -. . ,.....,
Saturday, ~ 2. 1999
1695 c~11 Q5 c~ I ""-_____ ....,.
'VW BEETLE '95
5 spd City, C&S8 IC (066679199372) $9,995
MCKENNA VOLKIWAOEH
71W42·2000
vw BEETl.E 198
Allovs, IC, CISS, 11l1b19S 1oone'11995t4) $18.995
MCKENNA YOl.KSWAGEN
71WC2·2000
Wieus 'ts
UNIQUE, SHOWN BY APPT ONl.Y.SUOO
.. 1'2MI09
VW JETT A Ql '17 s IPd. pmr C!\1141 (0~95) $13.995
MCICENNA voutSWAOEH
71WC2·2000
l1M Loml Plumb«
..... flmJ .........
... UXAJ1't0
BlCTIONC AM &I.All DlnCTION ..........,, ....
675-9304
t.nt 2M7 .......
"tmf ....... ........ ....... _ . ... -.... ............ • 141 .
VW EUftOVAH CAMfl£R 't7.
Slovt, .... lr1g, lumeat,
pop lop, altepa 4, tic. cJc, new ures new blttlfY, 33 5k
ml S27.900 (FIAi Camper
Corwtrslon by Wlnnlblgo)
714-57&-0144
I
I
'
VW JETT A QL. 'II
5 spcl. pmr, ..... cd (02"859199494) s, 2.1195
MCUNNA VOlKSWAGEH
7t 4"1oU·2000
VW .aETTA 01.. '17 s IPd Pl'W. cruiat, llo¥I (090848/99500) $13 995
MCKENNA YOl.KSWAGEH 71....U..29f
t I ,·
~ .
• •
•n. ·n-· ,-
-----~
.. .... -... ·-
VWJETTAOL 'tf 5 spd. pmr, en-.
(090894l0IMIKI) t~
t;ICl(£NMA YOUts~.
114'141·2009
• I . . . . . ' .. • I
I
8 Sabday. Odaber 2, 1999
HERE NOW ... TEST DRIVE TODAY!
'96 SC300 (034546)
'95 ES300 (081'836)
'96 . ES300 (1 73140)
'96 ES300 (1 78208)
'98 ES300 (018944)
~8LX410
Automatic, Air, Full Power Pak, Leather,
Mooruoof, Chrome Alloys (005731)
CERTIFIED.
'98 TOYOTA
AVALOllXLS
Automatic, Air, Leather, Chrome Alloys
(220028)
'95 BUICK
PAIK AVEllUE
....... ,,.:;•II F• •r-
«-=· • ...-..-c::••t:
I ·~i• =i• •El ---· ·-·
'98 CHEVROLET
ASTRO
'96FORD
EXPLORER XLT
'96 SC300 (034~46)
'99 SC300 (005327)
'96 LS400 (067246)
'97 LS400 (069262)
'97 LS400 (071287)
'95 LEXUS GS300
Black, Moon.roof, Leather, Alloys,
Full Power Package (101245)
CERTIFIED!
'90 PLYMOUTH ·
VOYAGER LE
Automatic, Rear Air, Power Pa.k,Super Clean!
(209463)
'98 VOLKSWAGEN . =
PASSATGLS
Automatic, Air, Leather, Alloys, Power Low Miles, Full Power & More
(207181)
3 lk miles, White, Leather, Full Power, Tilt, CD, 4 Door, Premium Wheels, Automatic, Air, Moonroof,
Pac (613952)
'97MERCUIY
OUllTAlllEEI
'97VOLVO
850GLT
AU Wheel Drive, Automatic, Air, CD Stacker, A.BS, Automatic, Air, Full Power P~e,
Leather, Moonroof, Allo Wheels & More 23796) Moon.roof, Leather, Allo s (3641~5)
'95 TOYOTA '99 .FORD EXPEDITIO aua COllVEIBIU EDDIE BAUER 4X4
Factory Allo , Roof Rack, P · Glass (A60668) Power Pa This ha Beau (073n 3)
'99 TOYOTA '98 CHEVROLET
SIENNA LE TAHOE LS
Automatic, Air, Alloys, Rack, Full Power
Pa c, Save$$, 9,000 miles 126018)
. '95BMW
140iL
Low Miles, Leather, Full Power, Mllch More.
Pri Glass, Facto Allo , Roof Rack (306141)
'95 SATURN
SL2
White, 40K Milet, Immarulate
(024516)
Automatic, Leather, Full Power, Power Seats, White/Blac.k, Leather, Automatic, Air, Chrome Alloys Automatic, Air, Full Power Package, Alloy
Allo You Name It! 8,000 Milea Al6671 Moonroof, CD C Full Power Pak 516416) Whecla, Real Nice! ·395568
VVE BUV USED CARS -PAID FOR OR NOT!
~ e S Fll'I •,
.13590 BEACH BLVD
(714) 892 .... 6906