HomeMy WebLinkAbout1999-11-05 - Orange Coast PilotIn Sporta
Newport tWbor 42
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.
SERVING THE ,NEWPORT -MESA CON\MUNITIES SINCE 1907
Foundation unveils theater plans.
. . .
• Balboa Theater Foundation
is planning a fund-raising
campaign for next year.
-· NOAKI 5cHWAR1l
BALBOA PENINSULA In the
"We ~ht we'd try o big campaign for the
comroonity. We wont lo get11S mony people
from the community involved as ~le:
Michelle Roberge
Foundation executive director
at. the Riverboat Rcstaur~nt. "They
were all amazed al whdl we've accom-
plished.·
that will be tric~y because of the Amer-•
1cans With Disabilities Act, which
re qulfes, among other lhmgs, wider
aISles.
Foundation executive director
Michelle Roberge also is detemu.ned
that edch patron has a great view of the "
stage and that the seats aesthetically
corres pond with the theater's 1920s
charm.
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 1999
same room where a small group of resi-.
dents formed the Balbod Theater Poun.
dabon years ago, foundallon members
gathered Wednesday night and pre-
sented the first glimpse of the drawings
for the refurbished theater.
ult went really well," foundation
pi:esident Dayna Pettit said of the Spedk
Op Newport meeting, which was he!~
One issue discussed at the meet.mg
was how the foundation pl~ns to resolve
the theater's sealing dilemma. In order
to make enough money, the thedtcr will
need to have more than 300 sedts. But
Although Disney generously donat-
ed 400 seats, they are cumbersome
screening room chairs -far too big for
the theater's quaint intenor. While most
theater seats are 18 inches wide, the ·
Disney s~ats are 24 inches. Because of
N DLA VN.OT
IN DATllOOK: Greg Watanabe un<.I Tc1mlrn Torrntc1 m a
scene from "Summer Moon• at South Coc1st HPpt>11or) ':.
Second Stdge. See Page 2. ·
SEE THEATER PAGE 8
..
·ONE ON ONE
·.
....
r
District
encouraged
by.pond
vote results
The sucTc->ss of two
bond measures bode>s
well for locc.11 schools,
of hc1als su y.
lk;rrf'ilol
NEWt>ORT-~1ESA -\ot»r
support of ... chool h<H)<I m
Sanh1 Ana and Sc111 luun
<:api trano Uus w Pk h n•
many N •\~ port-M a d1 tnct
olhcia ls leclmg optumsUC"
about a po SJblt> f<Jciliti bond'
tor t.h<>Jr schot>l
•My rnterprell!llOO I" II
clearly how ... when 11 oom " to
~chool m ne d nt repau the
commura11J~:s get hehmd
them," to.aid scbol)I l>oard
memhcr t-.Jarth(I Flum
The "ucccs of "anta ·Ana ...
$145-nuJhon bond and Cap1..,.
tra no's ~f>S.rmlhon bond r _... _ _._ __ :-7":"""'--:-;-7-'--....;._'"'""."_-=---.:__-.....,...-~..:_-ll,..... ___ -:-'°'~~;._;..--..:..:._-+-..,....J---~-'rlfYmnmtmlt?t~ptthilC' , tOlt•r-~
DON LEACH I DAILY PILOT
Taking advantage of a day oU, Michael Thuresson, left, and Ryan Seckinger play a UtUe one-on-one basketball at Newport Elementary.
The pair traveled from Costa Mesa to play near the beach. ·
,
I RUDER RESPONDS
Costa Mesa schools offer an education in diversity
• EDITOR'S NOTE The following is a letter
to the Daily Pilot wntten by Estancia High
School graduate Bret Taboada. Who ncrw
~ e •
to an art1~te published Oct. 21 titled
"Education's changing faces."
Racial tension in the Newport-
Mesa Unified School District is
nothing n~w. It has been going
on.for years and frankly l'm embar-
rassed to be part of a community
lhat is so blatantly racist and pro-
segregation when 1t comes to edu-
cation.
I am an alumnu5 of both TeWin-
lcle and Estancia and have experi-
11m whole situation is r
unfortunate. Al our district schools
should be equally clverse, because on~
theo is true education received."
enced, firsthand, the racist attJ.tuclC's
of Costa Mesa residents Most of the
kids I grew up with in my Mesa
Verde neighborhood end.Pd up
traosf emng to schoolS m Newport
Beach or neighboring £listrtcts by
the time lugh school approachl'<l: In
fact. I can probably count on a sin-
gle hand the number of kids who
. have gone lo school Wlth me with
c;mce kindergarten. nus lb quite unfortunate because
I had a great tune in both juruor
high and lugh school, and received
d great {'ducation, to boot. The fact
is, TeWinkle ahd Estancia are top·
. notch schools. Many Mesa Verde
parents claim to have transferred
their kids out of the Estancta zone •
• bec·ause •the schools did not offer as good an education as others
nround. • But how many parents' and
students actually do their research ?
Do the)' VlStt the e schools. take a
to talk to teachers and admirus-
trators a e s ancia g
for example. If parents would have
done research, they would have
found lh«t the school offers out·
st~nding academic, athletic, and
artistic opporturutics
Instead of listening to tho e old
rumors about •gang running ram-
pant at Estancia,• parents would
have found out inst~ad that Estanoa
has been declared Uie safest high
SEE LETI'ER PAGE 8
72 HOURS
est m makinq edm ciltoual prQ·
grdlris <1nd lttc1htwi> c1 prl\)nt\ .•
sd1d hoard 11wmh1>1 Od\ 1d
Brooks.
"Thill should bodt" WPll for
us, should we de<:JCfo to go lhut
Wd)'," he "<Ud.
Although both uc·oe ful
bond" w e1c dramnl.Jcally dlf·
ferent 1ron1 that ... ~luch N '" -
port-Mesa rem! nt ma} f ac .
the tatewid" tr •nci toward
chool hood~ is a po iuv ~ on •
SEE BOND PAGE 8
Cl.4SSIAEDS ........... '" ......... 13
COMMENTS & CURIOSITIES ""_,_3
POLICE FlijS ...... " .... -.: .. -:-2
PUBU~ NOTICl'S -.. .•. -.. -•• -12
SPORTS ............. -... --..... , ..... 10
~_,..~f----~----+~+-~...c..!11.r.id.l.Ollll'.Jla:l~GOOD Tl?.tES:Ncwport0~\~1n~~~r:-:::'::""=:::T-::~::r.::=:-=:=-r--"'-1nni~~~
'· poht1< . ..,
Residents WPre civic-minded
earlier in the century
Al I '< C.0<>1 MAN
llltf Plot politics pohttc.i. of the
11rca.
----~---------
For today's
Mlllennlwn Moment. ... , ... ,
A me ting of
the B lboa Island
Improvement
A STI. In 1919 pro-
vtcl nn Uluminat-
Even in the
f1ffit decade
of the centu-
ry, Newport·Mesa
r 1ctents were ct1splaymg a Ide
of them elves that would be
pronounC'OO in later y ars· they
w re a ovic-minded lot, full of
op1mon -ometim :rath r
cantankerous on -on -th •
lng Vl w of the pohtiml maneu-
v nnu of the um : tt member of
the ·uu1kh ad Committee,"
and th Bnbsh Amen-
<'an Busm s Counctl arc
holding un ev nt to eel •
brate Guy Fawkc Day.
Fawk attem1>ted to blow up the Bntish
Parliam~nt m 1605. Th• eVt•nt, whi h tartb
at 6 pm. tonight, fcatur a buff t dinner,
music, a bonfire, anrt more. Ticket are $25
to $.'lO N wport Dun • at l 131 lmc..k B y
Onvo, Newport Beoch. for more infomtn·
lion, call (949) 729·3863 .
. .
• .. . . .
" t
2 frtdoy, NoVember 5, l999
,
CHICK IT OUT
-Get iri tune ldth
. .
Atnerican music
" T he shelves are alive with the
sound and sense of American
music,"in the Newport Beach
C!'!ntral Library's new collection of
"Timeless Treasures."
• For learning and listening plea-
sure, "American Mustc, Sound,
Sight and
Words" features
CDs, videos and
book_s offering
an overview of
ow tuneful her-
itage. -
If you'te a
' popular music
,, fan, explore its
,. , evolution from
. .:. .. the Civil. War to
· ·" today with .. And .
.,. the Beat Goes On." Intended as an
.. introductory course on what author
.• Michael Campbell deems our most
,, dist:i.Qctive cultural achievement, this
, one-vol~e swvey traces popular
:, music styles from minstrel-era songs
• to contemporary funk.
Nineteenth-century politics are
captured in song on "Tippecanoe
and Tyler Too," a CD collection
" honoring such historical bench-
marks as Lee's surrender and Lin-
coln's assassination. Performed by
The Chestnut Brass Company and
-five vocalists, the pieces cover the
gamut of political expression in
.. music, from exalting war heroes .to
• ridiculing corrupt bureaucrats.
' • For blues lovers and anyone
• interested in legends of the Old
South, "Mississippi Blues" is an
• easygoing docu-
-. mentary about
• the landscape,
• customs and ~ music of a dis-
:.. tinctive Ameri-
~ 011!, :9. \.; . . L /
• Grace," another r
• video collection, (~ -
· , provides an
entertaining
~. look at a song
'-' that's been
--
' • Tecorded by more popular artists
' than any other hymn. Collection
biographies concentrate on such
· celebrated musicians as Irving
· Berlin, Charles lves, B.B. King and
. .
Cole Porter. Check out ~e World
Don't Owe Me Nothing" for a fasci-
nating narrative about Delta blues-
. man Honeyboy Edwards.
• Read "Aaron Copland" fot
insight about one-of America's most
revered composers, gleaned from
lett~rs. diaries and interviews. You'll
find enlightening perspectives eval-
uating the music of an American
original in "The Gershwin Style."
Make your own "appraisal of the
popular musician after listening to the
San Francisco Symphony perform
selections from • Porgy and Bess•
and other tunes on "George-Gersh:. · wtn. The Birthday Celebration."
You can enjoy st.age favorites per-
formed by one of ~y's m~ talen\e(i .
sing~ on "Barbra, Back ~o Broad-
way," f~turing hmes from "The
Phantom oftbe Opera." "Sunset
Boulevard" and "West Slde Story."
H you're inclined to perform,
check out "Broadway Belter's
• Song-
.911-book," a
collection
for female
singers,
complete ·
with music.
· For jazz
fans,
"Strlders to
Beboppers
and
Beyond" explores the jazz piano
styles of such legends as Fats
Waller, Eubie Blake and T.helonious
Monk. After reading about such ·
masters, sample the sounds of
another celebrated pianist with
"Decca Presents Art Tatum."
Of all the events of contemporary
music history, Woodstock is surely
among the most memorable. Revisit
the legenda.ty rock concert with
"Woodstock, The Summer of Our
Lives," a volume that recreates the
1969 love fest through the eyes of
those touched by it. Round out the
experience with "Woodstock," an
Academy Award-winning documen-
tary powered by 13 onstage musical
legends.
• OtECK tT OUT Is written by ttte staff ct
the Newport Beach Public library. This
week's column is by Melissa Aderos. In col·
laboration with 5ara Bamlcle.
East meets West
""• Oott Plot
'--;---.-ne,>tay-S-ummer Moon.,,
explores the meeting between
East and West -an eternally
complex theme that has resulted in
a piece that is not only for theater-
goers but one for actors as well. •
For Greg Watanabe1 playing Nao-
.. take Fukushima - a Japanese sala.ry-
man adjusti:ag to ~ar America -
it is a subtle reminder of his own con-
flicting experience of~ up
Asian in a white neighoom6od.
An<l.for 'J'am1Yn Tomita, playing
Rosie gives her the opportunity to
delve further into the ~rience
and character of a Japanese-Ameii-
·can farm worker. Written by John
Olive, "Summer Moon" won the
Kennedy Center Fund for New
American Plays. It tak~s p~ace in
time when Japan and Amenca are
reluctant Allies, suffering from a
growing cultural chasm.
The story iS about a Ja~ese
businessman whose honor depends
on his success in completing an
impossible task: selling the Sakata
T-1, the rust Japanese truck export-
ed to the United States. And SO;
PUkushima sets off on this difficult
mission, headlong through a treach-
erous and hilarious fore st of cultural
+ WHEN: Today through Dec.
S; show times.are 7:45 p.m.
Tuesday through Sunday and 2
and 7:45 p.m. Saturday and
differences.
Along the way he encounters
Yoshida. a farm worker, who teaches
him about slid< salesmanship and,
more importantly that, in America,
the end justifies the means. He also
meets Amie, a war veteran, who
insists that stealing and risking
everything a.re essential in order to
get through life. On a deeper level,
..
··datebook · . . •
ve
.~J
Doily Pilot
Hollywood Bowl Orchestra conductor John Mauceri steps away from
classical pop to conduct Opera Pacific's 'La 1i'~viata' at The Center . .
ALEX Cool.MAN
!W(Pb
A fter three million people
saw him do it, John
Mauceri started to get a
reputation.
That's the reason so many music
lovers Ullnlc of Mau,ceri as a figure
from the classical "pop• scene: he's
been the prmcipal conductor of the
Hollywood Bowl Orchestra since ·
1991, and has wave<;! his baton.at 1
some fairly-commercial work in
front of some fairly big audiences
durihg that time. _
But Mauceri's true passion as a
musician lies in a somewhat more
challenging vein, one that will be
evident starting Tuesday night wpen
he conducts Opera Pacific in a per-
formance of Verdi's "La lfaviata:
Mauceri, 54, is a conductor for
four American opera companies
and is a Verdi scholar -a member
of the advisory board of the. Verdi
Institute at New York University.
·I spend most of my life con-
ducting opera,• he said.
The appeal of such work, for the
conductor, lies in the eombination of
emotional ~wer and intell~ com-
plexity that opera -more so than pop
classical material -can offer.
"There's something in the nature
of opera that touches on a very
basic human tradition, .. Mauceri
said. "The need of the human
species to ~~stories using music
and drama:• Works like "La 1favia-
ta• or "La Boheme• tell stories, as
Mauceri puts it, that are "ba~ic, or
mythic.• They use archetypal char-
acters to deliver an emotional
punch that translates across barri-
ers of language and culture.
Wrapped around the emotive
core of these tales, however, are
countless layers of musical and cul-·
tural traditions -layers that, for -
Mauceri, make opera a source of
endless scholarly fascination.
"Every opera encapsulates so
much history and culture that learn-
ing any one of them means learning
many different things,• he said.
This is particularly true in the
case of "La 'Ii'aviata: a work whose
19th-century source material is fertile
growid for' literary theorizing and
whose modern-day performance is a
subject of some controversy.
+WHERE:
The Orange
County Per-
forming ArtS
Center, 600
Town Center
Drive, Costa
Mesa
+WHEN:
Tuesday and
Nov. 11
through 14.
All perfor-
mances begin
at 7:30 p.m.
except the
Nov. 14 show,
which starts ·
at2 p.m.
.+HOW
MUCH:S32
Above, John Mauceri
takes a break from
rehearsals with Opera
Pactftc's "La Travtata" at
to $107 ..
·~e:·
(800) 34-
the Orange County.
0PeRA
Performing Arts Center.
RJaht, Mauceri at work.
PHOTOS SY DON LEACH I DAILY f'.ILOT
The core story of the opera - a
romance between a young gentle-
man and a courtesan ls tragically
disrupted by the man~ father-is
drawn from a play by Alexander
Dumas, a fact which, in itseU, makes ·
Mauceri light.up·with speculatioz;t.
In his view, the strong presence
of the father in the tale reflects the
overshadowing force that Dumas .
fue elder represented in the young
writer's life.
"He was a much lesser Writer,•
Mauceri explained of the son, The
father's dramatic presence in some
ways echoes th~ role Dumas' father
played in his life.
And this is just one of the angles
on •La 'Ii'aviata• the conductor
enjoys exploring.
"You cen study it from the point
of view of the literary souice, from
the point of view of the composer ...
and you can study it from the point
of view of the people-in Italy at the
time. And there's also a political
dimension to consider,• he said.
Underlying .all these issues, of
cowse, is the music itself. There, too,
Mauceri finds the opera engaging.
He's made several adjustments to the
perloi:mance of the piece based on
his examination of Verdi's original
manuscript of the score, changes that
he sa}rs make the work both more
true to its composer's iritentions and
more rewarding for the audience.
In one telling scene, the heroine
Violetta, alone on the stage, reads,a
letter. Opera companies tjpically
accompany Jhe stage action with a
melody played on a single, tremu-
lous yjolin.
~That isn't the way Verdi wrote.
it,• Mauceri said. •1t•s for two vio-
lins playing together.•
The restoration of the second
violin, he says, renders the music
"slightly detached and ethereal,·
whereas a solo violin is very senti-
mental.··
Th.is sort of conection -seem-
ingly minor, but producing a sigajf-
icant alteration in the emotional
tone of the work -is something
Mauceri has performed throughout
"La 'Ii'aviata."
The result,. he says, is a work •
that allows the audience to respond-•
more authentically to Verdi's work. -
It's not~ "pop• approach to music,
and that's just fin~ with Mauceri.
'Summer Moon' at South ~oast Repertory explores
an. Asian family living in American .culture :
~ when he vlsited Asian commumties1 1
It wasn't until he became lL
involved with an Asian-American l
~...-...-~------"----:--;--_.._....,...,..11.len:roupe-whtte meandeiiny •
through university at Berkeley, that: :
he fowid himsell, Watanabe said. I
"Being in character is-like gettin~
away from yo.urself," he said. "You, 1
don't have to worry about the l
responsibility of judgment."
He was first introduced to the
character, Naotake Fukushima, :
while reading through the script
during a Sundance PlayWrites Lab,
he said. He was immediately
intrigued and ~cited.
•John [Olive) has a real feeling 1
for depth of emotion and an eye tot. . l . numor" w . •
+ WHERE: South Coast Reper-
tory, 655 Town Center Drive,
Costa Mesa + HOW MUOt: $26 to $45
Lett. Greg Watanab.e and :ramtyn
Tomita tn a scene from "Summer
~,.-·Moon." Above are Watanabe and
e s en with the play ever since. I
For Tomita, who starred in the . 1
film "Joy Luck Club," haVing the :
opportunity to play the brash Rosie:
~ . . .
JohnUnton.
the play .explores the universal
question of identity and the societal
masks people wear.
-J think that's a pretty universal
feeling," Olive said. '"When I Write
'these things I'm not very clear as to
why rm doing it. Why some ideas
muscle themselves into actually
being is sometimes mysterious.•
Though American, Olive was born
in Ja~ but he said he left too early
to form any real memories of the coun·
try. He has since felt a lingering curios-
ity about his birthplace, which surely
triclcled into his writing this piece. -
For Watanabe, the theme of being
an outsider wa,s not entirely unfamil-
iar. Growing up in an .. all white"
neighborhood in Fullerton, Watan-
abe said he often felt displaced
round out the character. !
•Being in TV and film gives you•
more money and exposure, but the!
ater is more fulfilling,• she said,
adding that on &tage she could
experiment with the Japanese-
American character tmng to survive
in the 1950s only through her wits.'
Ahd through years of surviving in
a primarily ·white-dominated field, '
Tomita surely has a well of experi-;
ence to draw upon to play Yoshida.·
READERS HORINE
(949) 642-6086
Record your comments about
'the Dally Piiot or news tips.
or edvertlsements herein can be
re1)foduotd without written per·
mlulon of copyright owner
WE AT H'E R ANtD SURF POLICE FILES
VOL 93, NO. 259 ADPRES$
Our address Is 33
esa, CA 92627. •
CORRECTJONS
It Is the Pilot's policy to prompt-
ly correct all errors of substance.
Please all (949) 574-4268.
" HOW TO RW:H US
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TEMP£RAlURES
Balboa
68155
68155
Costa Mrsa
69156
Newport Beach
68155
TIDES
TOOAY
First low
1:02 a..m ............................ 0.7
Flm high
7:20 a.m ............................ 5.6
Second low
1:46 p.m ............ : .............. 0.4
COSTA MESA
• Beker Street: Several Items of clothing worth $ 100 were
stolen from a ~r In the ~ bl«k the evening of Oct. 26.
• lrlstol Stnet: A cat stereo worth $200 was stolen In
the 2900 block the evening of Oct. 28.
• West 19th Street: A purse and Its contents worth $175
were stolen from a store in the 400 block •t 12:30 p.m. •
Oct. 27. ·m Thi Newport ludl/Corul Mfla
O.lly Pilot (USPS-14WOO} Is pub-
lished Monci.y th<QU9h saturdey.
In Newport lheh end Costa Mesa,
subscr1ptiom «• ev11l1bl1 only by
subscribing to Thi Tlmft Ot~ ·
County (800) 252-9141. In lffff
~of Newport llNCh end
Catt.e ~. subscrlpttom to the
Dally l'tlot are avallablt onty by
rn.1r tor s10 per month. Second
deu ~ peid at CON Mesa.
CA (Prices Include ell eppli<able mi. end tocat t8xes.) ~ m . Send llddress changM to 'The
NMpOrt e..cM:osl.e Mes.t O.ily Piiot, P.O. lox 1560, Costa Mela,
CA 92626 ~ight No news sto n., lll~tt•tiom. •<htorial tNtt«
News. Sports Fax (949) 646-4170
E-mall: dallypllotOlatlmes.com
Main Offlce
Newport Coast
68155
IUftF FORECAST
Second high
7:46 p.m ........................... 4.6
SAl\MDAY
NEWPORT leAOt
• W.St Coast HlgtJway: A cellular phont worth S300
was stolen from a ~r In the 2300 block between 9 and 11
p.m Oct. 29.
Buslnes.s Office (949) 642-4321
8vslntu Fax (949) 631-7126
~by nm.Community~ •nm.. Mlrrcw c~. "'11
WtMtm t,obdtll. "'
£dltof \ swv.~ ..
Maneglng !dttOf
MMMatdn.
Olrl(tO( of PhOtography
SMmuin 1\lmtlM.,
Sfniof Edit«, Copy 0-.
• •1'-CH AAl'9$-
Tht swell ln<reases out of
the west today for sets In
the waist· to chest-high
level. The iun r~ is 6:13
a.m. TM sun set Is 4:57 p.m.
LOCATION 5IZI
Wtdge .............. 2-4 w
~ ....... , •..• 2•3W
Blac.kles ..•. , ••.••• 2·3 w
ftlvtr Jttty .......... 2-3 w
CdM ••••..••..•••. 2·3 w
Fim low
1:.33 •.m .... o ....... , ............. 0.9
First high
7~48 1.m .•.••....•. " ............... 5.9
SKondlow
2:21 p.m ................. MUHhh•0.2
Second high
8~26 p.m ... " ....................... 4.6
• ~ Drtve: A gold ring worth $3, 500 was stolen from
Hoa~ H~pltal betwten Oct. 29 and Sunday
•Newport loutevllrct. An outbO.\rd motor worth $1,300
was 5tolen In the 2600 block Saturday evtnlt19.
• River Avenue: A cellular phone worth $21 O wu stolen
from • car in tN 5400 block betWeen 4 and S:.30 p.m •
Tuesday
• J19t S11wt: A w1lltt and its contents wOrtti S30wtr•
stolen In the 500 bloc.k ~ evenlog of Oct. 7.
,•
Daily Pilot -
.iµore dummies are vying for the Darwin Awards
I • You've probably heard of
them. Maybe not. The
• Darwin Awards. Pasci-
p.ating stuff. There .are a
pum9,er of organizations that •
claim to be the official
arbiters of the annual Darwin
;.\wards, but it's really a con-
e;tantly evolving list of stories
~bout people who have
removed themselves from this
imperfect world through acts
pf unimaginable stupidity.
COMMENTS &
CU.RIOSITIES .
their watches accordingly.
Unfortunately for them, no
one remembered that the
timing devices on the car
bombs were now set an hour
later than the time on their
watches. When each big
bang turned rnto a b.1g dud,
the 60-minute error was just. long enough for the te rrorists
to climb back mto their cars
and travel far frOJn the center
.of each city. thinking they
were on their wp.y back home
which, I suppose you could
say, they were. Result?
instant Darwin Award win-
ners.
In August, s Gennan man
outlandish hair colors, nucro·
nun.is and outrageously tall
platform shoes -anywhere
between stx and 12 mches
tall. Last Monday, a 25·ycar·
old woman was killed when
she drove into a wall al high
speed because her platform
shoe became wedged
between the brake pedal and
the accelerator, making 1t
impossible to sto{>.
• Hopefully, the connection
between people who go on to
lheir greater reward in this
way and Danvtnism is obvi-
bns, because we are on sensi-
Jive ground here and I'm not
about to explAin it.
· I can't U¥gtne why, but I
get a lot of e-mail, calls, etc.,
about new contenders for
Parwin Awards. ·The relative
incidence of death-by-stupid-!ty bas become so inte~e in
recent months that, as Willie
l:.owman's wife in •Deatti of a
~esman" said, • ... attention
inust be paid .•
-----------. wanted to get a good vi.ew of
It was, in (act, the second
Darwin·ellgible death this
year directly attnbutable to
platform shoes. The story
jogged my memory and sent
me scunying lo my files to
find a list of excuses extract-
ed from police reports of traf-
fic acciqents around the
country:
As you· know, last Sunday
\Yas the day we set our c!<>Ocs
bade. You know, "Spring for-
ward, Fall back.~ I love those
Pithy sayings. It's what I
· rem~mber best frorn eight ·
yell!S of CatPollc grade ·
school. Know how to remem-
ber when to use "desert" and
when to use "dessert?" You
always want two servings of
dessert, so it has two S's.
l{now when to use·"prinGi-
ple" versus •principal?" The
f~ci~ is. your ~· Get il?. Prinapal ... pal? I got a mil-
lion of those. Yo~'re lucky 1
only get so much space.
Where were we? Ah, yes.
The Darwin Awards.
You may recall a recent
news item about a pair of car
bombiflgs in two Israeli cities.
Incredibly. the explosives in
each car detonated prema-
turely, killing all the terror-
ists, save one, far from theiI
il).tended targets and, fortu-
. nately, minimizing the may-
hem th~y had planned. Only
recently were tl1e details of
what really happened
·released.•
Apparently, Israel switches
between daylight savings
and standard time as do we,
but its neighbors do not. The
bombe'rs crossed'the Israeli
border the day before their
planned reign of terror. At
some point, they noticed the
time difference and adjusted
Cock1011s
Phone Ahead tor
Food To Go
a near-total eclipse of the
sun, which, he calculated,
would occur during a busi-
ness trip he was making on
tbe autobahn. To be safe, he
purchased a pail" of near-
opaque glasses, with which
to view the celestial
pyrotechnics.
Unfortunately, instead of
pulling off.the road, he decid-
ed to obsetve the solar
· eclipse through, appropriate-
ly enough, the sunroof. When.
he glanced back to the road;
he discover~d. sadly, that
opaque glasses dre good for
·watching eclipses but bad for
driving -~specially at-the
average autobahn speed of
Mach 2. It was a spectacular
single-car crash, and a well-
deserved Darwin Award win-
ner.
ln Japan, a current fashion
craze for young. women is
1. "The pedestrian was
uncertain which way to run,
so I ran over him.•
Z. •Tue other car collided
with mine Wlthout gtvmg
warning of its mtention "
3. •A truck backed
through my windshield into
my wife's face.•
4. "My car was legally
parked when it backed mto
the other vehicle."
5 .. •A pedestnan hit me,
then went under my car."
6. NI was at,temptmg to kill
a fly when l drove mto the
telephon~ pole."
It's OK. bud. At least you
weren't watching an eclipse.
My sentrmental favorite
was a recent Darwin Award
candidate who was ultimately
disqualilied because no one
actually died.
ON OUR
I NEW LOCATION : I
'
ln the Midwest, a }Voman
came home, walked into her
kitchen and found her hus-
band clutching a counter top,
shaking violently and jerking
hlS head back and forth -
apparently bemg electrocut-
ed before her eyes. SheJlad
the presence of mind rft>t to
touch hun, charge<;{ outside
and found a piece· of 2-by-4
beside the kitchen door She
ran back to the kitchen,
reared back and· whacked
her still convulsing husband -
as hard as she could, knock-
ing him to the floor and
breakfug his wrist m the
process. ·
Only then was he able to
rip the headphones from his
ears and scream, ·What the
[expletive] are you doing?•
Thmking he was home alone,
he had strapped on his head-
phones, cranked up his
fdvonte track on his mini-CD
player, and got a little earned
away with his dancing
, The story may not have
edrned a Darwm Award, but I
trunk it's a valuable insight
into the spe6al way of com-
municating that every long·
tenn relationship needs to
survive. l gotta go.
• PETER BUFFA 1s a former Costa
Mesa mayor. His column runs Fri·
days. He can be reached via e-mail
at Ptr840AOL.com
.
Flavorful &
Deliciou s
Lunches &
Dinner
•
Friday, Nov'ember 5, 1999 3
MIUENNIUM MOMENT
Keeping charitable
work at bay
F:r 20, years, William D.
Ray was the c:haimuin
and chief executive offi-
cer of International Bay Clubs,
th~ company Ulat owns the
Balbod Boy Club and the
Newport Beach Country
Cl~b Ray,, who bad beeu
orphaned dt dJl edl'ly age and
ran awoy
from his fos-
ter home to
JOID the
Nat1onC:tl
Guard,
eventually
became
known as a
savvy and William
qwetly pow-D. Ray
ertul busi-
nessman. Ray was an enthUSl-
asbc sportSman .and an advo-
cate for the conservation of
natural resources. He was
given a.n award by the Dale
Mcintosh Center tor the ~
abled for his work with dis-
abled children and was
. posthumously 'given th~ Ken
Sampson AnnuaJ Awa.rd by
the Orange County Coast
Assoaabon for tus civic and
charitable efforts He passed
away in 1991
• MILLENNIUM MOMENT cele·
brates the peopl~ who made a
. major contnbut1on to the New-
port·Mesa community during this
century
. .
Your illeas were just too big for our old place.
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• 4 Friday, NO"t'ember 5, l 999
Balboa Island
ip.onsignor dies
• Msgr. Joseph
Sharpe led efforts to
renovate Balboa's
St. John Vianney
Chapel in 1996.
SlJsAN MCCORMACK
~Nor
COSTA MESA -Msgr.
Joseph Sharpe, longtime
priest, educatot and adven-
turer, died of C<ll\Cer Tues-
day rught. He was 85.
Sharpe was best .known
m the Newport-Mesa area
for his straightforward ser-
mons at St. John The Bap-
tist Church in Costa Mesa.
where he presided from
1976-78, and at St. John
Vianney Chapel on Balboa
Island, where he presided
for 20 years until 1998.
As monsignor at St.
Vianney, Sharpe led major
efforts in 1996 to renovate
the church, complete with
a redecorated interior, a
new stained-glass mural
above the main doorway
and a new electric organ. A
courtyard at the church is
expected to be dedicated to
Sharpe.
Pansh1oners described
Sharpe as •complex• and
"hard to please,• as well as
a "loyaV "intellectual,·
• "compassionate" and hav-
• mg a ·wry sense of
~humor.·
• •He was a wonderful,
: compassionate, holy man,•
: said Frank McNamara, a
: parishioner and architect
• who worked on the
• renovation of St. ~anney.
Sharpe was born in Den-
; ver and was the sixth of
: eight children. In 1943,
= Sharpe was ordained·at St.
Vibiana's Catholic Church
= in Los Angeles. He earned
le can be a quiet
candlelit dinner for two,
or maybe four co uples
ccJebraci n g a bi rchday,
anniversary, or just getting
together.
The reasons for
Duffy cruising are end-
less. Prepare a favorite
dish, or maybe call ahead
a waterfront
r ,, ,, restaurant ror a co-go
order. .
Fall, winter, spring
and sµmmcr-each season
of-fers a unique Newport
a doctoral degree in educa-
tional psychology and 4
Jaw degree, and he spoke
Gennan and French.
Sharpe served as a Navy
chaplain for 26 years, ·retir-
ing as a commMder. He
was licensed to fly heli-
copters, single-and twin-•
engined planes, and . ·
owned a t}eechcraft Bonan-.
za A36, which he kept· at
John Wayne Airport until
three years ago. Sharpe.
also owned a yacht docked
at Newport Harbor, which
be donated to the Sea
Scouts.
Before settling m the·
area, Shazpe worked as -a
superintendent for high
schools and as a college
professor in the Archdio-
cese of Los Angeles. In the
1950s, he was the first prin-
cipal at Pius X.High School
in Downey, the archdio-
cese's first coed school.
"I spent my life trying to
please him,• said Costa
Mesa resident Dorothy
Jean, who was one of
Sharpe's first students at
Pius X. "I'm going to miss
him terribly.•
Shaq>e was honored for
his work by being named a
Knight Commander of the
Equestrian Order of the
Holy Sepulchre of
Jerusalem, which was
founded during the 11th
century and is the oldest
knighthood in the world.
Sharpe is survived by his
sister, Sister Patrick Marie,
a retired nun living in San
Diego; and his brother,
Father John Sharpe, who
lives in Arizona.
Services for Sharpe will
be held at 11 a.m. today at
St. Vincent's C:::hurch in Los
Angeles, and at Cunning-
l}am & O'Connor Mortuary,
Los Angeles.
Some people think the fall
"and winter arc the end of the -
boating season. Noc true,
and especially not true with
Our new models! Our
wonderful new all weather
features provide year-
•
www.dl;lfJyboau.com
2001 W. H~ Newport Beach, c.A
949.645.6812
P L.a·y I I G I H E F I E L D
Doily Pilo~, ..
'
I
~
' I
I I
CONRAD LAU I OAllY PILOT
Eric Telles, ? , defends his goal during a pick-up soccer game Wednesday afternoon at J:standa High School's Held.
He Is Joined by his brother Benny, 9, and cousin Johnny Sotomayor, 9.
Lake Forest creek project to help protect bay
• Quiet Oak Creek feeds into Serrano Creek,
which is a tributary to the ecological reserve.
said conservancy founder Matt
Rayl, who donated tractors and
hired workers for the project.
Quiet Oak Creek's runoff
now cames fertilizer, oil and
other pollutants that end up in
Serrano Creek and the bay.
widen banks to slow tlie creek
and decrease erosion. ~
The conservancy is a group. ..
of homeowners associations .. resi~enfs and busine~ decli.~
cated to halting erosion of Serra.-
no Creek and beautifying i~~
Al.EX KATZ
~fib
NEWPORT BEACH-Efio~
to repair the eroded and polluted
Quiet Oak Creek in Lake Forest
will have a ttickJe.:down effect on
th~ health of Upper Newport
Bay, which is where the creek's
runoff ends up. ·
Quiet Oak Creek is in Serra-
no Creek Park off of Serrano
Road and Toledo Way. It slows
round comfort. New cabin
windows, heating systems,
fabric cushions and more
ma.kc a December cruise as
enjoy-able as a July cruise.
It's our goal co provide
a craft worthy of you!'
waccr-fronc. A craft more
inviting, comfortable and
pleasurable than any ocher
boat on the water. Our
professional stafL. will
answer your questions, and
prove che best time co
Duffy is now!
to a trickle m the dry season,
when the water is "all runoff
from lawns and people washing
their cars,• said Gary Beeler, a
founder of the Serrano Creek
Conservancy.
Thursday marked.the begin-
ning of the conservancy's
restoration project, which will
indude building new banks,
moving rocks to slow erosion
from a small waterfall and
adding plants to filler pollutants,
Planting native plants such
as cattails and reeds in the creek
Will "take out fertilizers and also
help break· up the petroleum
products, the gas and oil and
stuff like that,• Beeler said.
He said the plants also would
bring more birds and wildlife
into the area.
The conservancy cilso will
...... =-.... "~ ..... UUJ.~· • .·~ ~
Similar repairs are planne9!:
for Serrano Creelf., which has:
been damaged by 10 years Ot'
heavy flooding and polluted b)'" :
runoff from developments • :
Volunteers' can sign up fat ·:
conservqncy's Nov. 20 planting·:
project by calling (949) 768;~~:
5921.
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Friday, November 5, 1999 5
Residerits reassured about future Caltrans work ' . ' ii Constructiori will cause
~ed Hill overpass to be closed
f pr nine months next year.
5usAN McCORMACK
I
: COSTA MESA -Participants
Vf ere armed with questions when
they anived at a Wedn~sday night I • meetmg on the 405/55 Improvement
Project, but most said they left feeling
reassured about the construction's
. e)cpected effects on traffic.
• The Orange County l\'ansportation
Authority and Caltrans, who are
working together oh the project, held
ilie meeting to answer those ques-
tibns and ease concerns about the
p~oject, which began its Costa Mesa
p'1ase last week. When the construe-
I
tion is finished in 2004, carpool lanes
on the San Diego and Costa Mesa
freeways will be linked, eliminabng
the need for motorists to weave across
lanes when switching freeways
As part of the work;-tiw Red Hill
Avenue overpass at the San Diego
Freeway will be closed for rune
months beginning in March. The
bndge will be raised 16 feet to accom-
modate the new carpool lane connec-
tor.
That has residents and busmess
people conceme~ .
Jim Bradford, who for 19 years bas
lived at bis Sturgeon Drive home just
two blocks from the San .Diego Free·
way, asked how he could protect hi!.
home from increased noise. Bradford
said be is concerned that an improved
carpool lane and extra ramps will
entice 'more motonsts to use lhe free-
way -and bring up noise levels.
•Any time there's Santa Ana
winds, it already sounds like you're O!J-the center divider,• explnined
Br.edford, who added that from tbe
s~nd story of his home, he could see
the cars on the freeway at eye level.
Transportation authority engineer ..
Rick Grebner said Caltrans is working
on finding out which parts of Costa
Mesa will need noise abatement. ·
~There Me pretty strict require-
ments as to where sotind rrutigahon is.
justified,· be said.
Grebner suggested that concerned
residen~ wnte the transportation
authority or Caltrans.to let the agen~
des know if they believe they will
'require noise dbatement.
Mahmoud Ghafouri, a traffic coor-
dinator With Caltrans, srud one of the
first things planners do is conduct
studies on noise. before gomg ahead
w;ith a project. Then they can include
features liko sound wall~ tn their free·
way p)ans to protect nearby bu.c;iness-
es and residents.
Ed Fawcett. president of the
Chamber of Commerce, . aid rerouted
traffic may a.fleet busme around Red
Hill, but he hopes two extra signals
being p1ttced in t)le area will help.. .
For 2~ yf?ar.resident Albert Mqo1-
weer, the mam worry was th~. project
isn't tacklmg what he perce1ves'to be
the most crowded area on the· San
Diego Freeway: · the •bottleneck•
where the freeway narrows between
Bnstol Street and Htµ"bor Boulevard
' "T can't see how Uus [construction]
wiU h~lp Wlth the flow,~ Moo1weer
said.
Diane Pritchett, executive dll'ector of
South Coast Metro Alliance, said while
the>.re probably will bc'some "hiccups·
dunng tht• construction procf!SS, busi-•
n<'~ owners shouldn't worry. • r thmk it's really just making sure
that we under:.tand what's betng
plann(~, • Pntchett said. ·There may
he a few unhappy wople, but lt will
be betau:.e they don't know what's
going on: . , •
Spenhci. of the proJ'ect mclude an
onrnrnp to be built at Anton Boule-
VcUd and cin offramp at Avenue of the
Arts at Anton. .
Also, constructton will ~in· this
month on widening .MclcArthur
Bouleva,rd..b.y one lane in each direc-
tion. Officials expect this work to be
compl~t<>d by nudsununer.
Upddled mtormabon on the project
may be obtained by calling (8001 724-
0353 or logging on to
www.octa.net1405-55map.asp.
$ave Our Youth to take field agaillst city leaders -. .
•Annual softball game boosts kids' self-esteem
and gives them a chance to meet council members.
SUSAN McCORMACK
lblt Pl'.>!
: COSTA MESA -Baseball
season may be over, but fans
need not despair. They can get
U}e next-best thing this Satur-
day morning at Lions Park
when members of the Costa
Mesd City Council take on
staffers from the Save Our
Youth gang intervention center
in a long-awaited softball game.
. Since 1~4, the game has
taken place each summ
except for last year, an~ the cty
has won three of the four
games. But Oscar• Santoyo,
Save Our Youth director, said
his team is poised to win tlus
year because several members
of his 25-person team have par-
ticipated in the eve~t since its
inception, and they are now
grown up.
·rcouncilman) Joe Erick-
Monday -Friday Nov. 1n.5t1t, 10am-4pm
· Saturday, Nov. 6t1t, 9am-4pm
Tremendous Savings on_
Lexington, Drexel
Heritage, Hickory White,·
Platt
More •••
son's been talking trash ... say-
ing that they're going to wm,
but we're pretty~ con!tdent,"
Santoyo said. •This yedf, some
of these kids are abJe to actual-
ly have som~ P<>wer behind
their swing."
Erickson satd his team will
include City Manager Allan
Roeder, Counctl members Lib·
by Cowan and Linda Dixon and
several commissioners and fire-
fighters. Mayor Gary Monahan
is not expected to play due to a
back injury.
. Erickson is not shy about
FYI
•!• WHAT: Save Our
Youth vs. Crty Council + WHERE: Lions Park,
570 W. 18th Street
.z, WHEN: 10 a.m.
Saturday
bragging or nhng UP. lus team-
mates.
·1 think we can win, even
with our f~male council mem-
1999 Holiday Boutique
-Thursday, ovembcr 11th
11 :00 am-7:00 pm
Bahia Corinthian Yacht Club ,
1601 Bayside Dr Newport Beach
(94 644-9530
• bers on the tecun," he joked
Though the gdme is pla}ed
m good fun, Enckson cmd San-
toyo said 1t L'> unportant bccduse
1t continues tho l~acy of Roy
Alvarado, founder of Save Our
Youth, who d1ed m 1996 after d
iong battle wtth cancer.
·Normally, the City Council
wouldn't get a chdnce to meet
these kids,· Santoyo said. •And
when [these lodsJ see (council
I members) on the streets, they
have something m common
w 1th them -they played ball
together. So these k.!ds can feel
like, 'hey, l know that guy, and l
-pldyed-.&Qd.U\St him. And l beat
him.'" I
Enck.son said the relation-·
ship ts worth bwlding.
"People tend to put doWn
young people ... but there is no
bigger group of volunteers thdll
Save Our Youth,· he said.·
"They're such a good asset to
the commwuty."
RUFFLES UPHOLSTERY
Where Your Dollar Covers Moret
WE'vE MOVED 1 BLOCK NORTH
Sofa $10000• OFF
Club Chair $5000• OFF.
. ·with a purchase of Fabric & ~bor til 11112199
1998 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA' 548-1156
Nine NeW .Reasolls
To Shop A South--l:oast -P:laza-.-----'I
South Coa:.t Plaza wt>l<-ornt•:.
the following retailer.., lo tlw nt'w Cralt~ & Barrel '\\ing.
ow then• are t'H'n more n·a~ons to rnakt> South ~:oast Plaza
your shopping, dining, and entertainm<•11t destination.
BORDERS.
fttU eHIC •ttU Uf I Uri
Books, music & ca(e
Openlnt late November
CRABTREJ:o.
&EVELY~
· Home merchandise,
bfestyle & gifts
Of>enlnf Mid-November
. A new, two-story, 42,0<lg sq fl.
ffaishlp store, feotunnftheir
oaloimed ~mtture, houseware •
& home occessones
Grand Of>enint November 4tb
Styl~h watches, SUrl(fasses
& small leathtr ~
Anf.i..o//erren prOducts & accessories
Of>en1n1 Mid-November
Casual fo•rich sportswear
(or men & women
Now Of>en
RAN GO NI
Ekgant mens
& women's shoe salon
Now 0 en
SCANDIA 00\\N'
Fine quality •
European-style beddmt
Reloc.oimr EDrly N~mber
\\l!croy&.Boch
Housewore for the table,
lr.ir.chen & bathroom
RelocatJl'lf Mid-November
ew outh oast l~laza.
For a complrt(l 1lirec lntJ uf our worltJ n-no" Ol'!tl 11lnn" 11lr• • 1111 th11 • onr1rrgr. et l 00 782.:8888.
..
Friday, November 5, 1999
an accused of ~aking
~ GHB will stand trial · . . • • : A grand jury has re~ed . ! an tnd.lctment against a 25-
• year-old Lido . Isle man
: charged with manufacturing
: and posse.cising the date rape
: drug, GHB.
Jonah Allen was scheduled
to have a prellminary hearing
Thursday, but the case was
dismissed in lieu of the grand
jury's review of the allega-
: tions.
: Deputy Dist. Atty. Jon Fish
• ·Said. his office opted for the
·: grand jury route because it is
usually a speedier process.
•It's a more convenient way
of putting on a case like this
that has a lot of scientific evi-
dence,• he sald. ·some of the
evidence is sensitive and
won't be revealed until there
• is a trial.•
• Allen is accused of having a
makeshift laboratory in his Via
Waziers home on Lido Isle.
Inside, authorities said they
found 32 ounce::. of gamma-·
-hydroxy-butrate, otherwi. e .
known as •uquid ecstasy.•
The drug was found in two
plastic bottles that wele each
marked with a skull and cross-
bones.
The drug is clear and odor-
less dlld usually taken in small
doses. T};l.e drtlg can give users
a heavy, groggy feeling, and it
can sometimes render them
unconscious.
Allen, a Newport Harbor
High School graduate, faces
four charges pending from his
July arrest •. including manu-
facturing and possessing GHB,
possession of methampheta-
mine and resisting arrest.
Allen has been released
after posting $100,000 bail. He
will be arraigned on Nov. 9 in
Orange .County Superior
Court. His trial will likely take
place early next year.
. -Greg Risling
FDIC-INSUiiEI) CDs
AT RATES THAT ARE
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shon acme local bink. CDs availabl~ chrough A.G~ F.dwardt arc now paying:
• Send AAOlN> TOWN items to the
Daily Pilot. 330 w. Bay St., Costa
Mesa 92627; fax them to (949) 646=
4170; °'call (949) 7~330. A com-pl~e ll,S11ng may M found at d•ilyp-
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!ODAY
Newport Dunes and tbe
British American Business
Council are holding an event
to celebrate Guy Fawkes Day ..
P~wkes attempted to blow up
the British Parliament in 1605.
The event, whicll starts at 6
p.m., featur.es a buffet dinner,
music, a bonfire; and more.
Tickets are $25 to $30. New-
port Dunes is at 1131 Back Bay
Drive, Newport Beach. For
more information, call (949)
729-3863.
The Building Industry Associ-
ation of Southern California
Orange County Chapter will
hold its Installation Gala for
2000 president Jeff Porstor
and its board of directors at the
Westin South Coast Plaza, 686
Anton Blvd., Costa Mesa. The
event starts at 6:30 p.m. For
more information. call (949)
224-0321.
Newport Harbor NauUcal
Museum's gift shop is having
a previey.' of holiday gifts from
10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Local author
Dee Cache will sign hei: new
book "Captain Tugalong."
The museum is at 151 East '
..
AROUND TOWN ..
Pacific Coast Highway, New-
port Beach. For more tnforma-
tion, call (949). 673-7863.
Newport Beach City Hall will
bold a reception to honor
artists whose works appear m
the 1999 Newport Beach Fall
Juried Art Show. The event
fUl\S from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m.,
features refreshments, and
~ be highlighted by an
appearance by Mayor Dennis
O'Neil. City Hall ls at 3300
Newport Blvd. For more infor-
mation, call (949) 717-3870.
SATURDAY
OCC will be holding a Jw:y
rigging and sail repair course
at its Sailing Center from 1 to 5
p .m. Students of the $25
course will learn. bow to keep
potential problems from
developing into ma1or d.lfficul-
ties. The center is at 1801 West
Pacific Coast Highway, New-
port Beach. For more inf orma-
tion, call (949) 645-9412.
The Pour Seasons Hotel hosts
etiquette expert Theresa
Thomas, who will teach table
manners for children in a
course that runs from 4:45 to
7:30 p .m. The $105 tutorial
and dinner cov.ers such dining
niceties as napkin and utensil
"placement, posture, and prop-
er soup-supping technique.
The Pour Seasons is at 690
Newport Center Drive, New-
port Beach. To make reserva-
tions, call (949) 759-0808 .
Shel'man Ubi'afy and Gardens
presents 'Fems for the Home
Garden,• an early-morrung
program on fem growing and
the purchase of specii;J.lized
fems. The free event starts at
9:30 a.m. The library is at 2647
East Pacific eoast Hignway,
Corona del Mar:For more infor-
mation. call (949) 673-2261.
Young Professionals Against
Cancer will hold "Toast of the
Centwy• at the Balboa Bay
Club from 8 p.m. to midnight.
The evening will feature a
dance, silent auction and casi-
no tables and will benefit the
Orange County Foundation for
Oncology Children and Fami-
lies. The event is $50 for YPAC
members: $6() for nonmembers
and $65 for tickets at the door.
For more information, call
(800) 405-2766, ext 83.
The Newcomer's Club of
Newport Beach will hold a
garage sale from 8 a.m. to 3
p.m. The event is at ;2300
Windward Lane, Newport
Be{lch. For more information,
call (949) 854-4450.
The First Church of Christ,
Scientist of Costa Mesa is
holding a book-talk event
regarding the textbook •Sci-
ence and Health, With a Key
to the Scriptures" at 3 p.m. For
more informatioIY, call (714)
963-1240.
OCC ts holding a Needle Arts
Festival Nov. 6-7 as part of its
__;./
·• 1
Daily Pilat
Fall Fair at 2701 Faimew ~d,
Costa Mesa. For more Womla-
tion, call (714) 432-5880.
Green Systems International ls
having a sale on orchids and
anthuriwns Saturday and Sun-
day to coincide with UC
Irvine's Orchid Show. The s4}e
will run from 9 d.m. to 4 p.91.
The store is at 20362 Birch st.,
Newport Beach.
SUNDAY
The Jewish Community Cen-
ter of Orange County hosts the
Aetcher Jone., Tolerance Lec-
ture at 2 p.m. The lecture w\ll
examine the response or Cali-
fornia communities to acts of
hatred and raosm. Tickets -to
. the event are $10 for mem-
bers, $15 for non-members
and $5 for students. The JCC
is at 250 E. Baker Street, Costa
Mesa. For more information,
cal (714) 755-0340.
The Udo Isle Yacht Club hosts
a sailing regatta for Lasets,
Udo 14s, Harbor 20s and
CPJs. The skippers' meeting is
at noon. For more informaLon,
call (949) 723-8268.
'MQNDAY
....
CoasUlne Counsellng of New-
port Beach will hold a free lec-
ture on Attention Deficit Disor-
der, ·ADD Overview." The lec-
ture will be held at Coastbrle,
1200 Quail, Suite 105, Newport
Beach. For more inf onnabon,
call (~9) 476-0991.
n Month 6.25°/o ~~~
The Sutton Place Hotel hoSts
the program "Beyond the Mil-
lennium Bug: What Investors
Can Expect Now• from·5:30 to
7 p.m. The seminar is free. The
hotel is at 4500 MacArthur
Blvd., Newport Beach. For
more information, call (9..Q})
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I
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I
I
I
: All In-Store Ms. Mq[fy & Accessories
I Cati Store for ~pt •
air,.. JJfl/IM
ANY'PuRCHASE FRO'M
~ ~~y ~~ WA;,;;~;l<b)
Our Christmas Specialty Boutique
(Located at the comer of Newport Bl•d. • Via Udo)
Daily Pilot· . . . ' . .
AROUND TOWN
TUESDAY
'OcC bolds a workshop on vio-
lence, · "Victory Over Vio-
lence,• ·today and Nov. ·10.
Admission is free. OCC is af
2701 Pa.irview !toad, Costa
.Mesa. Por more information,
call (714) 432-5063.
• , Tbe Newport Beach PUbllc
Ubrary Foundation's "Manu-
scripts• lecture series features
Suzanne Mucbnic, author of
"Odd Man In: Norton Simon
and the Pursuit of Culture.•
,Much.nic will speak from 1 to
, 6:30 p.m.. The event is $8 to ~10 and reservations are
,required. For more informa-
1tion, call (949) 717-3890. . .
• Salomon Smith Barney hosts a
free noon seminar titled
"Investing 999: The Internet,•
The event will be at 650 Town
,Center Drive, Suite 100, Costa
,Mesa. For more information or
to make·reservations, call (80Q)
846-6337.
. WEDNESDAY
The Costa Mesa Senior Center .is holding a tai chi course start-
ing today and running through
Dec. 15. The course will meet
Wednesdays from 9 to 10:30
a .m. The Senior Center is at
f;95 W. 19th St., Costa Mesa.
For prices and more informa-
tion, call (949) 645-2356.
The Newport Harbor Area
Chamber of Commerce hosts
,author Robert Davis at its
Noon Networking Luncheon
at the Sutton Place Hotel, 4500
.MacArthur Blvd., Newport
•Beach. The noon lunch is $15
for members and $20 for
1potential members or arrivals
·a t the door. For more informa-
tion, call (949) 729-4400.
I
10CC hosts a free ledute on
"The History and Size of the
Universe~ from 6 to 7:30 p.m.
in the Robert B. Moore Theater.
Cbrtstopber D. Impey, · associ-
' : ;ate professor of astronomy at
•• the University of Arizona, will
'•tpea.k. OCC is at 2701 Fairview
~ 'tloed, Costa MeS&.
:ibe Costa Mesa Historical Sod-
~ety holds a talk by Ron Wilder-
muth, who seived as an aide to
General Norman Swartzkoff
during Desert Storm, at 7 p.m.
The Historlcal Society is at 1870
Anaheim Ave., Costa Mesa. For
mo.re info}lllation, call (949)
631-5918. •.
The Newport Beach Crtbbage
Club meets Nov. 10 at 6:45
' p.m. at the Oasis Center, 5th
1 and Marguerite, in Corona del
1 Mar. For information, call (949)
I • ~6-5293.
Wh.oie Foods Market hosts
chef Paul Buchanan of Topaz
Cafe, who will present dishes
from his annual Native Ameri-
can feast, in a free event at 7
p.m. The store is at 1870 Har-
bor Blvd., Costa Mesa. For
1 more information, call (949)
574-3800.
' I The Monthly Meeting of the
Balboa Bay. Republican
1 Women Federated will be held
11 a.m. at the Balboa Bay
Club. Irvin F. Gellman, biogra-
pher of Richard Nixon, will
speak. The event is $22 for
members or $25 for non-metn-
bers. For more information,
THURS PAY
St. Andrew's Presbyterian '. I Church offers "The Relation-
ship Seminar" for divorced or
separated adults at 7:30 p.m.
John Jolliffe, a marriage, fami-
ly and child therapist will
headline the evening. The $5
tickets Include refreshmen ts.
St. Andrew's is at 600 St.
Andrews Road, Newport
Beach. For more inf onnation,
call (949) 574-2214.
. . .
The Ebell Club of Newport
Beech will meet at 11:30 a.m.
at the Bahia Corinthian Yacht
Club, 1601 Bayside Drive,
Newport Beach. Diane ~aher
ty, Peng Sltui consultant, will
spea k. For more information or
reservations, call (949) 721-
9267.
den," the third in its senes of
11 Armchair Adventures,• at 1
p.m. in the Robert 8. Moore
Theatre.Theeventwillfeature
television director Dale John-
son, wh'o will describe his
recent trip to Sweden. Tickets
are $6 to $9. OCC is ,at 2701
Fairview Road, Costa .Mesa.
For more informatiOil'\ call
(714) 432-5880.
NOVEMBER 13
The Pjecemakers' Country
Store Wfil hold a •Peddlers'
Market• from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.
The . event will include a
garage sale and refreshments.
· The store is at 1720 Adams
Ave., Costa Mesa. For more
. information, call (714) 641-
3112.
Family Doctors Office wU1 offer
$5 flu shots for community
members from 9 to 11 a .m. The
office is at the Kmart Plaza •
Center, 2200 Harbor Blvd ..
Suite B210l Costa Mesa. For
more information, call (949)
548-2273. .
ONGOING
A women's therapy support
group meets to discuss rela-
tionship issues at 6:30 p.m.
Tuesdays· at-1151 Dove St.,
#105, Newport Beach. For
more information, call Bar-
bara at (949) 261-8003.
The Friends of the Newpprt
Beach Public Library Used
Book Store neeas to replenish
its book stock. Patrons are
urged to bring in unwanted
books. With the exception of
law books or magazines, all
donations · -hardcover and
paperback -are welcome·
and are tax-deductible. Books
may be left ~t any of the three
branch libraries -Balboa,
Mariners or Corona del Mar.
They cQuld ajso be left in the
special book closet next to the
store, 1000 Avocado Ave. For
more inf onnation, call (949
759-9667.
The ·Newport Beach New~
comers Club meets at 10 a.m.
the t,bird Wednesdays of each
rith at different homes. The
group of about 100 women '40
on the road, play golf, tenrus,
. bridge and more. The group
also holds several evening
parties. For more information,
call (949) 854-4501.
SL Mark Health Ministries
presents Love Without Honor
support groups tor' women
coping with domestic violence
at 10 a.m·. and 7 p.m. Mon-
days through December. The
groups will meet for two hours
at St: ~ark Presbyterian
Church, 2100 Mar Vista Ave.,
Newport Beach. For more
information, call (949) 721-
8079.
·The Jewish Family Service of
Orange County sponsors a
discussion group focusing on
issues. concerns and responsi-
bilities of adult children car-
ing for their elderly parents at
7:30 p.m . Tuesdays at 250 E.
Baker St, Costa Mesa. The
purpose of the group is to help
children and other concerned
relatives to identify problems
and issues and develop
appropriate solutions. The
·cost is $30. For more informa-
The Co~ta Mesa Chamber of
Commerce holds networking
luncheon meetings from 11 :45
a.m. to 1 p.m. at the Costa
Mesa Country C lub, 1701
Goll Course Drive, Costa
Mesa. Visitors are welcome.
Cost is $12. For more informa-
tion, call (714) 885-9090.
The Udo Isle Toastmasters
Club meets at 6:30 p.m. Mon -
day~ a t the Oakwobd Apart·
m ents, 1700 16th St.1• in .the
clubhouse on the main level,
Newport Bef\ch. For m ore
information, caU (949) 515-
9470.
The John Henry FowadaUon
sponsors the Comfort Zone, a
m ental illness< support group,
which ineets from 7:30 to 9
p.m . Thursdays a t the Ught-
house Coastal Community
C hurch, 301 Magnolia S t.,
Costa Mesa. For more infor·
mation, call (949) 548-7274.
CIYlll lleedlon often a .....
cla1181 at '1:30 a.m. and 4 p.m.
Tuesdayw and Thundays at
3928 ~ Drive, Newport
Beech. The lint claa ii free
and any daa alter that will
Colt 110 or S80 fol' 10 de 11.
Parttdpanbl lbould brlnO a
towel. Por more WOrmadon. cd(~9)~~27
Friday, November 5, 1999 7
1999 . .
"Cuy of ~ l'.~.. '
1700 Adams Ave., Ste. 101, Costa Mesa, CA 92626 • (714) 885-9090 •fax (714) 885-9094 • www.costamesa-chamber.com
C A L E NDAR ·
Monc,tay, Nov. 8
Thursday, Nov. 11
Friday II Saturday,
Nov. 1l k 13 ·
Tuesday, Nov. 16
Wedne5day, Nov, 17
Thursday, Nov. 18
Education Committee
7:30 a.m. · Chamber Office
Executive Committef?
7:30 ~.m. -Chamber Office
Board Lwicl1 . DARK
Chamber Office Closed for Annual
Board of Directors Planning Retreat
Ambassadors Committee
Noon • Chamber Office · ' ·
Legislative Committee
Noon -Chamber Office
90-Minute Breakfast Boost
7 a.m. -Costa Mesa Country Club
1J01 .Country Club Drive
Chamber Office Closed for
Thanksgivjng
DETOUR IN FOR BUSINESSES
NEAR RED HILL -405 FREEWAY
Just when everyone will have just about overcome any Y2K
crises they may have experienced with the turn of the century,
businesses in the vicinity of Red Hill Avenue and 1-405 will have to
face the closure of the Red Hill bridge over the freeway, now
scheduled for demolition early irM.he year. An article in the
August edition of Business Outlook exptaihed that raising the Red
Hill bridge was necessary to accommodate a high occupancy
vehicle (HOV) lane from southbound SR-55 to southbound 1-405.
The new Red Hill bridge over 1-405 will be built 16 feet higher.
It is expected to ta~e nine months from demolition of the
existing bridge to completion of the new bridge. During this •
time, traffic will be forced to use aJtemate routes. Businesses in
this area are encouraged to advise employees, vendors and
transportalion companies to alter their routes.
Several intersections in Costa Mesa are expected to be
especially hard hit with additional traffic when the bridge comes
down. During the afternoon rush hour, westbound tFaffic on both
P.aularino Avenue and Baker Street between Red Hill and SR-55
will be even heavier than it is now. During the morning rush
hour, southbound traffic on SR-55 using the Baker/Paularino off
ramp 'is expected to increase signlficantly:At this date the only
improvements being planned to handle this extra traffic during
the bridge closure are dedicated left turn signals on eastbound
and westbound Paularino at SR-55. The intersection of Red Hill
and Bristol is expected'to be able to accommodate the
anticipated Increase in traffic without any Improvements.
The Costa Mesa Chamber is working with Costa Mesa's .
Transportation Department officials, OCTA and Caltrans to bring
updated information to Costa Mesa businesses as it is available.
SEPTEMBER NEW MEMBE RS
Wells Fa rgo Bank
lmran Patel
Tim Fahl
2970 Harbor Blvd.
Costa Mesa, CA 92626
714/S45-5278 vbice
AT&T Local Phone Services
Laura Archer
111 W. Ocean Blvd., Ste. 1200
Long Beach, CA 90802
New Horizons Computer
Leaming Center
Walt Stark
1231 E. Dyer Road, Ste. 140
Santa Ana, CA 92705-5643
714/556-1220 voice
714/431-9246 fax
Precise Comn)unlcatlons, Inc.
James Parker
23257 La Palma Avenue, Ste. 8
Yorba Linda, CA 92887
800/350·8500 voice
714/692-0081 fax
TelePadflc Communications
Rodney P Allen ·
625 The City Drive, 2nd Floor
. Orange .. CA 92868
213/213-36S2 voice
213/213-3652 fax
Trader 'Joe's
Richard C. Payne
640 West 1 7th Street
Costa Mesa, CA 92627
949/642~5 1 34 voice
949/574-7891 fax
The Yard House
Steve Reynold s
1875 Newport Blvd.
Costa Mesa, CA 92627
949/64~·0090 voice
PorterfleJ'1 Enterprises: Ltd.
Andy Porterfield
1 767 Placentia Avenue
Costa Mesa, CA 92627
949/548-4470 VOICe
949/548-7783 fax
Cleaners Emporium
Michael Naber
2263 Fairview Road, #M
Costa Mesa, CA 92627
94~/722-7138 voice
Heywood & Associates
Carol Heywood ·
15610 Tustin Village Way, Ste. 23
Tustin, CA 92780
714/558-7226 voice
714/435-8522 fax
SEPTEMBER RENEWALS
40 yearsnt! 6 years ._
Mesa Consolidated Water District Union Bank •Westcliff
21 yearstt
College Pharmacy
17 years
South Coast Metro Alliance
lS years .
Youth Employment Service
13 years ,
Jacqueline Gillis, Realtor
12 years
Triangle Square Management
10 years
Linscott, Law & Greenspan
Newport Rib'Company
9 years
Longs Drug Store
8 years
Tempest Equities
Costa Mesa Motor Inn .
7 years
GTE Directories
·Ice Chalet
Balboa Instruments
Costa Mesa Firefighter~
Association
5 years
Dunn-Edwards
_ American Heritage Trust
Costa Mesa ~ederal Credit
Union
Heli-Mart, Inc.
4 years
Sig 0 Tire Store #5650
Share Our Selves
., Ware Disposal Co., Inc.
Rkhard's luggage Depot
J years
Suzy Ferling
Gooing Chrropractic
Champion Auto Rental
George J.B. Cote, Attorney
Ergo Elements
lalique Costa Mesa, Inc. _.--:..-.
Outback Steakf1ouse . -
Orange Coast Interfaith
. Shelter
.?years
Mind & Body Connection, Inc.
eCompany, LLC
Avant Gardens
ICI Development
Best Western Newport Mesa Inn
1999 Business Expo at
~.c. Market Place a tluge success
or e 1rst ome, e annua Cham her ot Commerce Place fuocl service staff kept the rent supplied with cold warer
Business Expo took place during the weekend of <tnd bottled juices.
September 25 & 26 under its own "big top" in the middle A!> cveral punicipanrs 1~ this .md past expos agreed, "The
of the Orange County Market Place. This year\ location, with Orange County Market Place 1s, by far, the best location of all
the support of the Orange County Market Place, was :r great .m<l has great furure potcntt:iJ. tt .. · •
way to t:ake advant:age of the up to 20,000 visitor..; per day at 1 he 1999 Uusine"s fapo wa!I a succc~ful experiment that the
the Market Place. Chamber hopes l<> repe.·lt and impro\'e '\!\ ne.xt year Thanls
The Chamber realized that having to set up a hooth earl>• in should be exprcv•cd co Bob andJcffTdlt;t, and Ryan Miller~nd
the morning, staff it until 4 p.m. and pack it all up on Saturday, his st:aff. Special thank.' to Su1ie and her staff for those hot·out·
only to repeat the process on Sunday (as is the rule fot Market of-the-oven -.ticL;}' buns. \\ ithout these contributions the event
Place Vendors) was burdensome for parudp<lnt!>. <;o, the would not have been possible. Thanls aho go to the Orange
Chamber rented a 5,000 qua.re foot~ ~::""l""lr.""'-"""'lllr----~.,.___,._ County Faiq~,'l'Ounds for allowing the·.
open-sided tent, complete with rent to remain up over the weekend; to
t:ables, table cover..; and chairs, thl• Daily Pilot ~10d MediaOne for
reducing the set up needs for promotional time tnd spa~c: and; m t
individual p:micipants. In Addition, importnntl), to all of the Chamber
the M arket Plac:e hosted coffee, joice mcmhers who in~estc<l an entire
ant.I hot~out-of-the..ovcn, cinnamon wed.end o uppan.thc.Chaml>cr...a.od-a.1~•
14sticq 6uns" for an Expo promote their 0"1l husin Sec) OU
pan:icipan~. In the afternoon, M:arkct nat year!!
••• ..
hood schools. lETTER .,
CONTINUED FROM 1
become a •digital high
6Chool, • as declared by the
state of Calif omia .
This-whole situation is real-
• ly unfortunate. All our district
• >&ool in the district, with far
fewer mddenbl than the other
three high schools. They
would have alsO foun.d that '
Estanoa offers an amazing
Advanced Placement program
(with sometlung like 14 classes
offered) and often boasts the
highest AP exam pass rate in
the district. They would also
know that the teachers are
first-rate, experienced educa-
tors. Or that ~stahcia is home
to the finest drama department
m all of Orange County. Or
that the class sizes have been
.kept low, and the school is
undergoing a transition to
2000
CONTINUED FROM 1
which was formed to oversee
the repair of the bulkhead that
protected the island, loudly pro-'
claimed that it would be for the
best if the enb.re body of land
sank into the bay.
The ISland, after all, had been
"sold by a bunch of (expletive)
crooks and bought by a bunch
of (expletive) fools," this individ-
ual pointed out.
Joseph Allan Beek bad a dif-
ferent perspective, though. He
was all for making improve-
But the sad thing is that
mo:.t parents don•t do therr
research. They simply drive by
these schools and look a t its
color, or base their declSlons
on neighborhood gossip and
myths. But how can we blame
them when the district so
o~nly allows such segrega-
ti&n to take place? By allowing
intradistrlct transfers, our
board sends the message that
some schools are •better" than
others.
If it truly startds 100%
behind each school and its
quality of education, the dis-
trict would reform the transfer
policy and simply require stu-
dents to go to their neighbor-
ments on the island and assert-
ed that "if the assoaation pro-
gram for improvements is ear-
ned out. [property) values will
surely increase.•
He predicted, according to
the minutes of the meeting,
•that the time will come when
there won't be a lot on the island
worth less than five hundred
dollars, and that front lots will
some day be worth $5,000! •
The political challenges of
the time had not yet morphed
into the main-warping com-
plexity of today's issues, and the
structure of government was
correspondingly simple. New-
port Beach's political structure
chools should be equally
diverse, because only then is
true education received. I'm so
grateful that I went to a
diverse school; it holds so
many advantages and oppol'-
tunities. l've made friends of
all different colors and back-
grounds, and isn't it more
rewarding to have a broad
view on lile instead of a nar-
row one? .
Sure, a Costa Mesa child
can be transferred to Corona ·
del Mar to "receive a better
education,• but all he'll really
learn is ignorance and segre-
gation.
BRET TABOADA
Philadelphia University
retained·the same format that it
started with at the incorporation
of the city in 1906, featuring a
president and a board of
trustees. It would not be until
the late 1920s before the city
had an official mayor.
The Harper/Fairview area,
despite the financial difficulties
that afflicted it, was sprouting its
own early forms of civic organi-
zation. A women'!i club, .a boys'
club and a library had grown up
in Harper. It wouldn't be long, in
the early '20s, that the· growing
sense of community identity in
the region would find expres-
sion in a new town name -
Costa Mesa.
V OLVO'~oc .. S
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For more than a quarter of a
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Beach has provided a living
classroom to thousands of
school children who learn about
science through a hands-on
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of California's native plant
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red,wood forest to a de5ert, have
been replicated, and the ENC's
wi habitats and walking
trails make children eager to
learn about the world of nature.
Today. the ENC has an
unparalleled, once·in a lifetime Pille
opportunity to expand their
nature preserve and add new
educational f actlitles. A one-acre
parcel of land adjacent to the IC!!!~ ENC has become available.
With this additional acre, the .. .,,__l'e
center can continue helping
children learn In this
.. environmental Wonderland."
With the generous support of
the corporations, foundations
and indMduals llsted on the ..... __ 111
SUJViving, thrlving, and grO\Mng
so that future gcnera_qons can
enjoy this special place.
Call Bo Glover at the ENC,
(949) 645 8489, to learn more
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resource Md find out how you
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Ttl.'ENC 11 o nonpr0f1t educollonol
°'goniz:otlon, and 'is ~ lo IM public fOJ touu.
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The Oa~ Pilot (In.Kind Services)
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Kenneth & Robin Colbaugh
The Jamu Irvine Fwidation
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Mrs Richard Sleelt
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Cly ol NCWIJ0'1 Baodl
f\p Fo.nlation
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Ufbmolh famtf Fcudallan
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Nfiyf.W'Mnt
'BOND
CONTINUED FROM 1 ·
said Michael Fine, alSSJ!>tant
superintendent of finance.
For instance, CapiStrano is
concerned with growth as
OpJX>$¢ to repiilr.
· The bond to watch is next
week's vote in Huntington
Beach, where there is a sirru-
lar problem or disrepair and a
. diverse voting population.
"Generally speakmg,
regarding bonds it is a matter
of particular districts address-
ing the needS of their own
community,• said Supt.
Robert BarlX>t. .
-Although the trend doesn't"
hurt the cause, neither does it
really help, said Barbot, who
lS more concerned with ma.le-.
ing sure the district has all its
bases covered.
Before it is decided if New-
port-Mesa will go to a bond
vote, Barbot wants to have
four areas nailed down to
reassure the public.
First, the master plan
THEATER
CONTINUED FROM 1
their size, the foundation is
considering selling them and
using the money to purchase
more appropriate chairs.
Foundation members also
explored ideas for fund-rais-
ing. While it was initially esti-
detciiling standards for cam-
puses and classrooms needs
to bo defmed, he said.
Next, the district needs to
look at \fhat options it bas to
hnance the repairs and then
how the community feels
about ti,e proposed plan.
It then needs to be made
clear to residents that the
money will go where it is
intended, Barbot said.
Board members agree that
the community's comfort level
in this area is crucial .
"We )lave w.orked very
hard to overcome any
.doubts," Brooks said. •1'.hat is
why it was a citizen commit-
tee. The recommendations
have not come from the board
-that' should go a long way
to reassure."
And if the commuruty
needs reassurance the facili-
ties are in need of repair and
upgrade, all they need to do is
look, said Linda Mook, presi-
dent of the Newport-Mesa
Federation of Teachers, who
reels tlle passing of the multi-
rnillion-dollar·bonds this week
showed great promise.
mated that the theater would
cost $1 million -a rather naive
estimation Roberge conceded
-the group now realizes it
will need to raise an additional
$2.5 million.
·we thought we'd try a big
campaign for the community,"
Roberge said. "We want to get
as many people from the com-
munity involved as possible.·
The millennium fund-raiser
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Doily Pilot_•
At the ~e tune, few felt
the failure or Irvine's $95-per-
parcel tax hould discourage
them. •
•Irvine used a parcel tax,
whlcbt1ls a dilfe1enl way of
funding a bond; an<;tJt w~ for '
programs so that was already
two strikes against them,•
said Jill Money, president of
the Harbor Council PTA.
Although undeaded on the •
whole, board member Wendy
Leece agreed that the Irvine
defeat may be the result of an
"anti-tax sentiment.•
As the board awaits lhe
facility committee's recom-
mendation and the probabili-
ty of a bond strengthens, offi.
cials return thell' attention to
the initial bond study survey
•I can "tell you the original ,
survey reaction was very }>Os·
itive in terms of fixing the
meat and potatoes -which is
what we're talking about. We
also found out what they
would not support,• Fine said.
"Ultimately, if we are faced
with a bond, I think they can
be pleased with the plan we'll
put together.•
they· are planning will be
called ·2,000 in 2000." If 2000
pepple donate $1,000, the the-
ater will have raised $2 million,
Roberge explained. The foun-
dation plans to give each donor
part of a large 2,000-piece puz-
zle. A replica of the puzzle will
bang in the finished .theater's
lobby with every donor's name
on it.
"(This effort] was done
through the community's ini-
tiative, and we really want to
acknowledge that," said
Roberge.
The foundation will release
more architectural drawings.at
a press conference in two
weeks, Roberge sdid.
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Newport Beach residents Jon Iler and Marilyn McKenna stand next to a guard at the Tomb Newport Harbor High School's water polo team, currently ranked No. 1 ln Orange
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Qar Shallenberger of Laguna'Beach and Bob Todd of Newport Beach get together with the. ScottJ!erkins was equipped with his Daily Pilot as he began a two-week Earthwatch
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10 Doily Pilot
Newport boys,· S.teen,: win titles
. •Boys dominate at Sea View
league finals; Steen cruises to
victory for second-place girls.
ORANGE. :-The Newport Har~r
High boys wrapped· up their th!fd
straight championship and junioJ
Amber Steen claim~ an indivi~ual girls
title for the Sailors Thursday at the Sea
View League Cross Country· Fin~ at
Irvine Park.
Steen topped the field in 17:20, 19
seconds faster th~ her closest competi-
tor, to help the Sailors finish second to
Woodbridge in the girls team standings.
Coach Bim Barry's boys squad·, which
went unbeaten' in league dual meets,
got strong petformances from seniors
Chris Landgren and Doug Dukes, who
finished third and fourth, respectively, in
15:23 and 15~27.
The Sailors' boys team finished with
32 points, well ahead of second-place
Laguna Hills, despite having its top run-
ner, junior Chris McMillen, hampered
CROSS COUNTRY
by Wness. McMillen ran a.ttywaY, and
linished 16th (16:23), but bis effort was
not needed for scoring.
In addition to Landgren and Dukes,
whom Ba?TY said ran the best races of
their season, Junior John Pesch~lt fin-
·ished seventh (15:57), while sophomo~es
Ivan Rome:ro (16:05) and Joel Furman
(16:06) ran personal-best times to finish
eighth and 10th, ri!spectively,
Steen, seventh at league finals as a
sophomore, is at the top of h~r game,
according to Coach Eric 1Weit, Newport
Harbor's girls' coach. Her effort, as well
as the fifth-plas;e showi,ng of junior
Sonya Mechkor (17:58), broke up Wood-
bridge's domination.
Along with Mechkor, 1\veit said'
juniors Lynn Rin'.ek (18:45) and Erin
Friedman ( 18:58). ran their ~st rates of
the season to finish 11th and 12th,
respectively. Junior Natalie St. Andre
also improved, finishing 16th in 19:28 .
Newport's boys and girls squads, both
ranked No. 3 in CIF Division Il, will com-
pete in section preliminaries Nov. 13.
SEA V1EW LEAGUE FINALS Boys .
Team SCIONS: 1. Newport Harbor 32,
2. Laguna Hills, 65; 3. Irvine, 75; 4. Aliso Niguel,
87; 5. Woodbridge, 101. , .
Individuals: 1. Rocha (LH), 15:05; 2. Armijo
(AN), 15:17; 3. Landgren (NH), 15:23;
4. Dukes (NH), 15:27; S. Warner (LH), 15:28;
6. Metcalf (AN), 15:41; 7. Pesc:helt (NH),
15:,57; 8. Romero (NH), 16:05; 9. Schwarz
~. 16:05; 10. Furman (NH), 16:06. Others:
16. McMillen (NH), 16:23; 18. Cort~.(NH), 16:42.
Girts .
Team SCONS: 1. Woodbridge, 22;
2. Newport Harbor, 45; 3. Laguna Hills, 83;
4. Aliso Niguel, 110; 5. Irvine, 126.
Individuals: 1. Am.·Steen (NH), 17:20;
2. Scott~. 17:39; 3. Kanin ~. 17:49;
4, Berglas ~. 17:51; 5. Mechkor (NH), 17:58;
6. Bellotti~. 18:00; 7. Kredel ~. 18:18; •
8. Stephens~. 18:20; 9. Cox (LH), 18:24; 10.
Warino (AN), 18:33. Others: 11. Rinek (NH),
18:45; 12. Friedman (NH), 18:58; 16. St. Andre
(NH), 19:28; 19. As. Steen (NH), 19:55; 21. Foss
(NH), 20:05.
HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL
• DON LEACH I DAILY PILOT
Newport Harbor's Chad Smith (left) and Andy Rankin (right) do a number on Fairfax's Ryan Ferguson (83).
Sailors unload with a barrage of
21 points in a span of five plays
and less than 60 seconds, then
lighten up en route to victory.
-..
Sea View League
WL
•Newport Harbor (8·0 1) 3 0
•1 don't tfink I coUld have played nUh better.
Espe(ialy with my wvice. I'm realy tqipy ... •
Natalie Braverman, Sea View singles champion
Friday, November 5, 1999 • spOrn Editor Roger Carlson • 949~7.4-4Q23
• SPORTS HALL OF FAM
CELEBRATING .THE ·MILLENNIUM . .
-· ..
.. ..
Corona-del Mar·~
I
•Former Female Athlete of the Year still making qcit~
· a splash, and, there seems to be no end in sight for her. ·
games) in the CIF (5-A}fillal!f. ,.
then ~e came back and ~at, l·
them in state," said Noonan, 1:
E ven with a plate HI who grew up playing club :
full of sports, it is volleyball and·soccer, but feltsije
unJikely Jennifer • needed a break from those sporfs
Noonan will ever have enough: as she entered college. ' :
Volleyball and soccer were A three-time all-league soccer
Noonan's strengths. She also player and former member of :
swam, competed in track and CdM's CIF-qualifying 200-yaTd :
field and played softball. Now, free relay team, Noonan gave 1
she'.s "into triathlons• and · -up setting and spiking for
coaches the Orange Coast swimming, then eventually
United Rusli, a high-prqlile returned to volleyball. .
13-and-under girls club soccer Noonan, who once serve<lflS a
program. lifeguard and taught swimming '
"Sports havE: been a big part at the Newport-Mesa YMCA,
of my life, throughout -went from Golden West•
my whole life, and they to UC Santa Barba{~.
will continue to be a where she met Gauchos
part of my life for the womeQ's volleyball
rest of my life ... I should coach Kathy Gregory,
quote woat I just said," who "has been very
the vivacious Noonan inspirational in my life,
said. from a coaching aspect
Noonan, Corona del' and from a friendship
Mar High 's Female aspect."
Athlete of the Year in Noonan, however, ,
1986, was also the was,rehabilitating a
Female Athlete of the Jenniier Noonan knee injury ana
Year as an eighth . discovered her playing ,
graderat Our Lady Queen of time at UCSB would be limited,:
Angels School. · so she asked Gregory to help htfr
Though soccer a.fld volley.ball instead with her beach game,
were Noonan's best sports in Noonan still plays on the beach
high school, she went to Arizona today. In 1995, she paired with ,
State with the intention of Burton, her former high schoo~ :
making the Sun Devils' women's teammate, to win the AAA Opep
swim team. division at the Santa Monica
"I started working out ·and State Beach Open Tournament.
realized I was ·competing against But Noonan, who earned
all these Olympic (caliber) seven varsity letters at CdM, :
swimmers, and I just wanted to and once finished second in , 1 swim,• Noonan said. "Sol ended th~ andl'lal Pier to Pier Swim...is
1 up beiiig a lifeguard.• focused these days"On helping ,
For two years at ASU, Noonan young.girls attain their athletic ,
patrolled the student pool, then dreams in more ways than o~e: : .
transferred to Golden West "My quote of the day is this,"
College and returned to Noonan said, refening to her
volleyball, leading Coach Al players on the OCU Rush. a ... ,
Gasparian's Rustlers to the state Talk and they will listen, listen
championship as a setter in the and you will learn. We get a lot
fall of 1988. from these kids.~
Noonan, a former All-ClF, Noonan, who coaches with
Southern Section choice in her sister. Stephanie, -also work&
soccer as a striker for the Sea in the real estate industry and is
Kings, was a jUn.ior setter on starting her own business as a
Coach Charlie Brande's CdM scout and recruiting consultant
girls volleyball team that for Orange County high school
captured the CCF State Division I athletes.
championship in 1984. "I've finally found my passion
Noonan and teammate and I'm pursuing it," said.
Brooke Herrington were named Noonan, who scouts and recn$
~Pb .. FAIRFAX
to the all-state tournament team tes in ~l sports foLC01.leg,t:__
-t-"t--after CdM defeated Gahr in four programs. "It is designed to ·
games in the title m,atch at GWC, create more opportunities for
while Andrea Reddick, 'Christy athletes who want to go on to
Moiso, Linda Burton and Monica college.•
NEWPORT BEACH -Looking at some
of the usual key players on Newport Har-
bor High's offense, their longest stretch on
the field was when they ran through the
banners before the game.
Perhaps the most efficient three drives
in prep sports history, Newport Harbor
High jumped out to a 21-0. lead and
cruised to a 42-0 nonleague football win
over winless Fairfax High Thurs-
day night.
yard touchdown pass from quarterback
Chris Manderin.o to Justin Jacobs on the
first play of the drlve, making it 14..0.
After the Lions (Q..9) turned the ball
over on downs on their own 27-yard line,
Stewart brought ba~k to the end zone
two plays later on a 7-yard run.
The Sailors (8-0-1), ranked No.
2 in CIF Southern Section Oivi-•
sion VI and Orange County,
needed only five plays, 61 yards
and less than a minute combined
on their first three drives, turning
each one to seven points and
putti,ng the game out of reach
early.
MWe have a tough matchup
ahead of us with Aliso Niguel
next week and we had an •This was the opportunity tQ rest a lot of guys ~ of ~ame tonight," Brinkley said. "I was ere • I I proud of how the younger guys w.nted wm to stepped up and also the seniors
wtn'the game that haven't played as much as
end not Q9t they would have liked this
•,.,one hwt ... • year, did well for their final
"It'~ always tough to pley a
nonleague game in the middle of
' home game.· ~ lilr.lilii"1i~~i Ryan Brill came in for Stew-
a tight league race,• Coach Jeff
Brinkley said. "This was the.type of game
where all I wanted was to win the game
and not .gel anyone hurt, I think we did
that tonight.•
Brinkley had a goldan opportunity to
rest a majority of hls starters for nearly
three <w.arters of the game, following the
quick 21-0 start.
The.Sailors took a.dvantage of tremen-
dous field position, starting in Lions ide of
the field all but twice in the first half.
After a 4-yard punt by Falrfax, Newport
Harbor scored on its second play from
scri1nrnagc as Andre Stewart scored on a
9-yard run. ·
Another poor Uons punt once aP.ain
· gave the Sailors excellent Jleld position
and they took advantage early with a 25-
.., .
art ldte in the first quarter and
rushed for 58 yards on six car-
ries, including a 22-yard touchdown run
early in the second quarter. ·
With most of the starters gone by the
end of the first quarter, it gave opportuni-
ties for guys like sophomore Matt Casser-
ly to step and have a big game.
Jn his first·meaningful time at the var.;i-
ty level, Casserly rushed 24 ti.mes tor 117 .
yards and scored both of the Sailors' two
second-hall touchdowns.
"He played great tonight,• Brinkley
i>Ald. "He's had a few snaps since he's
been up here, but nothing like tonight."
F&rlax had a couple of chances to
score, but two costly lumbh~s. recovered
by nior Brad Rothwell end sophomore
Bryan Breland ended the scoring opportu-
nities for the Lions.
Woodbndge (5-2) 0 2
• Cinched No. 1 spot f'O( OF Playoffs
Thursday's scores
,_.Jport 42. Fairfax O (nonleague)
Irvine 16, Laguna Hiiis 14
Tonight's game (7:30)
Aliso Niguel vs. 'NOodbrldge. at Irvine
Friday, Nov. 12
Newport Hart:>or at AflSO Niguel, 7
Woodbridge at LMne. 7:30
t.os Amigos vs. Laguna Hills, at WN. 7
Bl) MGAM 51A.SOH
( (J',f.• M ....... , ,,, ) I 1 1
lhur.cl.ty, No11 1 1
Stew~ also contributed to the Noonan, 31, is single and lives
school's first of three state on Balboa Island. She is the
championships (CdM also won latest honoree in the Daily Pilot
state titles in 1992 and '93). Sports Hall of Fame, celebrating
¥We had lost to Gahr (in three · the millennium.
FRIDAY NIGHT LIGHTS
Tonight's high school football
.·
• • . . . .
. . . . • .
COM MESA ~EAGLES
UNI LAGUNA~ M'CLAll . . . . -----.-------~-:-:---------------CosTA MBA : EsTANOA .. VI. • vs.
lAGuNA llAat aa..a----.
• Sttlt: Irvine High, 7 p.rn. ! • stt.: ~na Buch
• mottom llne: The SQ : Htn7 p.m.
Kings can clinch at lust : • -. llne:
a share of the PCL crown : Mustangs have bNten
with 1 win, but ·an : ttie Artists nine straight
inconsistent offense : times end •• fltllOrtd to
1 .. ves the defenii llttte : run the dee*. MiM's
room for error. Uni's : CJ. Zuni,. ls closing In
wing T offeme ls : on l.000 Nlhfng yerd&,
trlggtred ~ tenlOt : while MJsu .... dosing
standout Pit Jostf". : In on sixth slralght loll .
• ...vn•~ ........... _
; • llt9: Newport ~
: Hloh. 7 p.m. : •llUitcwn .. The •
: &gles .,. loolcl"9 b;
: flm points In slx ~
: and vkltl"9 Mouritles ... : no .tOft toUctt. ~
; It's 1 nohlMgue 9l'Mt
: &tande r..as 10 ~
: stNct confldence fof
: run it a PO. title. '
Doily Pilot
~"''¥ 0 L L E Y 11 L L
~'Clayton • Newport sophomore
mows down Warriors. Stanford COTO DE CAZA -New-
port Harbor High sophomore
WPORT BEACH -Billy Natalie Bravenn_an swept to
on, a 6-foot-5 wido receiv-the Sea View League.girls ten-
er on the foot" nis singles crown Thursday
ball team and . afternoon at Coto de Caza Rac-
a major force quet Chib, defeating a pau of
in the front Woodbridge High-standouts in
line in volley-the process.
ball, has ver-"I don't think I could have
bally commit-played much better, n said
ted to Stan-Braverman. •Especially with
ford on a vol-my service. I'm really happy•"
leyball schal-Braverman, the leader in
Billy Clayton arship. Harbor's domination of the
_ . MThe letter league in team play, defeated
is on its way m the mail,• said Elizabeth Exon in the serrufi-
volleyball coach Dan Glenn. nals, 6-2, 5-7, 6-1; then went
Billy's pretty excited about three again, dispatching Susan-
this. • Also in the running for nu Llngma.n, 5-7, 6·1, ~.
Clayton was BYU. Teammate Audra Adams
Sports
~
WINS SFA VIEW
H I G H . S C H 0 0 l G I R LS T E N N.I S
was knodced out in the semilt-
nal by Llngman, 6-2, 6-7, 2-6.
Adams salvaged the alter-
nate spot for ClF (third place)
with a 7-6, 6-3 win over Exon.
Newport Harbor's doubles
team of Kristen Case and Jen-
ny Meyer mcJ.Iched into the
finals with a victory in the
·semis, but fell to Wood bridge's
No 2-seedetl tandem of Evan-·
gelina Soriano and Adrianna
l lockicko, 3-6, 6-4, 2-6.
Katie TenereU1 at the. PCL
Championship at Costa Mesa
Tennls Center Th~day.•
Danuen and Gnfhth entered
as the fifth seed, while Claster
and Tcncrelli were seeded sev-
enth, and both teams were sur-
prise finalists.
In the singles townament,
Laguna B~ach's Ashley Mad-
docks f11st defeated CdM's
Nadla Vaughan, 7-6 (7-6) 6-1,
and then moved on and won
against former USTA doubles
CdM d • PCL partner and CdM freshman UO WlDS • Anne Yelsey, 7-6 (7-5}, 6-2, to
COSTA MESA-Corona del wm the PCL ti.Uc m a match
Mar High's Leslie Danuen and that lasted over two hour:>.
Kristen Gnffith won the Pacific To reoch the finals, Yelsey
Coast League doubles champi-disposed of another touted
onship with a 6-2, 6-4 win over f freshman, University's Aimie
teammates Laura Claster and Kim. 6-7 (4-7), 6-4, 6-0.
HIGH SCHOOL WATER ·POLO
Fr!doY, November Si 1999 11
HIGH SCHOOL GIRLS VOLLEYBALL
Perfection
• April"Ross makes it
38-0 in her four-year
tour as a.Tar against
Sea View Le~gue foes.
NEW-
p 0 RT.
BEACH
-New-
p<?rt Har-
bor High
senior
April
Ross led
the way
for the
guls vol-April Ross
ley ball
team against VlSlting Aliso
Niguel Thursday afternoon,
and it sort of figures.
The USC-bound Ross
hod 26 assists and 9 kills in
Harbor's 15-5, 15-4, 15-7
FIELD .
HOCKEY ..
Sailors fall
in shootout
•Newport shoots for
t}lird place on Saturday.
HUNTINGTON BEACH -
Newport Harbor High's girls
f1cld hockey· team plcsys for
third place Saturday against
Huntington Beach m a 3
:'·~ea Kings complete sweep
•Corona.cl.el Mar wraps up an
undefeate9 Pact#c Coast League
seasori with 12-4 victory over
• vtctory as Newport closed
out Sea View League play
with an 8-0 mark, improv-
ing Ross' personal record as
a Tar to 38-0 over a span of
four years in the Sea View.
-t>'clock match dt Pleasant
View School m Huntington
Beach folloWtng a day of great
defense Th~dc1y, only to see
tl}e effort fall in .. vam in a
shootout aftE'r the Sailors and
VlCtonous ,..Marina battled
through regulation and over-· time in a scoreless fashion at
the Tournament of Champions
se.m.i.f inals.
"We've done well,• said
·Newport Haroor Coach
Sharon Wolfe, who saw here
team outshot from the field
overwhelm.mg, yet vJ.rtually
everyth4ng host Marina had to
offer offensively. the Sailors
had a.n answer.
· Costa Mesa in Winner's pool. -. ' JO'ilPll Boo
Datt""
CORONA DEL MAR -Wi'lfl the
!:Pacific Coast League championship
· wrapped up, Corona del Mar High's
ooys wi\tP.r polo team bad one objective
in its game agamst Costa Mesa.
•we wanted everybody to play
' • tooay, • CdM Coach John Vargas said.
'The Sea Kings (14-9, 4'-0 in league)
d,c,hieved that in a 12-4 win over the
· Mustangs that WTapped up an undefeat-
ed league season for CdM while denymg
'tosta Mesa a .500 record.
CdM's first team dominated early and
billlt up a huge lead before coasting to
the easy victory.
' "We just have to set realistic goals,•
·Costa Mesa Coach Eric Berg said. "CdM
~ a good team. They're really deep."
CclM displayed that early with five
goals in the first quarter. Ryari -Jetton
scored the first goal, and Garrett Gentry
scored two of his three goals in the quar-
~t-er.
·· -· The Sea. Kings originally planned to
limit Costa Mesa (10-12, 1-3) star Mike
\1'diliancourt. Instead, the Sea Kings took Jlte entire Mustangs' offense out with a
·~arn\ing defense. •
' CdM extended the lead to 8-0 in the
"second quarter, with Morgen Johnston
scbring two of his three goals m that · •J~lf~ro;, 'qllarter.
~Alex Sarris finally scored for the Mus-
tangs in the middle of the second quarter
to break the CdM run. Vaillancourt fol-
,,lowed with another goal for Costa Mesa.
' · ··ed.M bad six open shotrlut-the-posHn
'the game, including three·in succession
BRJAN {)BUDA I DAllV Pll.OT
CorQna del Mar's Garrett pentry (4) slams home a score past Costa Mesa
_goali.ILC.bri~Dolloff in Pac:,Utc Coast League water polo play Thursday.
in the second quarter.
'''''After extending the lead to 10-2, CdM
effiptied its bench in the second half,
including two freshmen and both backup
g-oalies. The Sea Kings' starters did see
indeed, the Mustangs c.-ut down on llon Division 11, moves on to the playoffs
turnovers and the defense bghtened up next week. Playoff pairings will be
in the second half. After CdM added two announced Monday.
more goals, Mike Whltmore and Sdrris PAOAC COAST LEAGUE
added two mor~ goals for the Mustangs. CoRoNA DEL MAR 12, CosTA MESA 4
"Th.is game is a reason to see whicb Costa Mesa o 2 O 2 4
spot duty in the second half. kid • B · d • F 1 Corona del Mar 5 3 3 1 • 12 · steps up, erg sai . or exarnp e, Costa ·----· 5 . 2 v .11 rt 1 •our whole team played today, and J C b. 1 ed th of '-·s life ~. arns • ar ancou ,
I'm happy with that,· Vargas said
.ll i• •You have to give Costa Mesa credit
'though. They play~d hard to the end.•
ason. a ico Pay e game iu Whitmore 1. Saves: Dolloff 5.
today. Corona del Mar. Gentry 3, Johnston 3,
While Costd Mesa''i season is over, I Jetton 2. Flynn 1. Jackson 1. Petry 1, St. reet 1.
CclM, ranked No 2 m ClF Southern ")ec.--Sa1tes: Netherton 6, Krm 4, Stockstill 3
u <
·~ . JC MEN'S SOCCER
I\ ll'J
10_CC moves on
• Pirates will dos~ out the season with team intact.
COSTA MESA -No suspensions were handed out to any
·range Coast College men's soccer players as a result of a fight
during the Ptrates game with Cypress College Tuesday.
•w ith all the reports we've read from the players, coaches and ~cials, we've dctemuned that no OCC player will be suspend·
ed, ~ Athletic Director Jane l lilgendorf said. "There was a player,
however, that did receive a red card 10 minutes earlier in a sepa-
rate incident and be will miss the final game of the season.•
According to Hilgendorf, the reports she received from head
coach Laird Hayes as well as numerous players, coincided with
the report written by the head official of the game. •
"It was n•ally an altercation more than a "bench-clearing
brawl' in regards to the event,• Hilgendorf said. "There was only
one red card issued m the altercation and that was to the Cypr
layer that hit (Pirates goalkeeper) Carlos Loza.•
• That Cypre~s player ·was given a red card for "violent conduct·
will be suspended the. final two games of the Chargers' sea-
Newport
Harbor's
Andre
Stewart
step on
the goal
..line .lQr_
amtn
Sailors'
42-0
victory •
over
Fairfax
High
ThurSday
night.
DONUACH
/DAILY P\OT
Ross, along with eight -
other seniors, turned Aliso
away in the first two games,
then Coach Dan Glenn
went to his bench.
Lisa Addeo and Shannon
Backus had 6 kills each and
Enn Haller and Knsta Dill
had 5 kills for Harbor, now
27-2 overall.
. "We're fired up for
tomorrow,• said Glenn,
alluding to his Sailors' 5:45
date at Corona del Mar.
.
CdM perfect in
PCL campaign
COSTA MESA -The
Corona del Mar High girls
volleyball team wrapped
up its u.ridefeated Pacific
Coast League champi-
onship campaign with a 15-
6, 15-6, 15-9 sweep of Cos-
ta Mesa.
Jamie Brownell led a
balanced Sea King (12-4,
8-0"111 league) attack with
12 kills. Lindsay Anstand.ig
had e1gbt kills and Meghan
Gallagher had six for CclM.
Marissa Becker led the
winnen. with 22-assists and
12 digs as CdM defeated
Costa Mec;a for the second
·time this year.
• Estancia dropped a 15-1,
15-3, 14-6 PCL.decison to
visiting University. Lauren
Casstty .led the Eagles
(2-12, 0-8) with eight kills.
Left back Sarah Green and
goaltender Su an Lear (16
saves) were the ce.ntrdl fig-
ures, but center back Kelly
Kraus, nght back Ntcole Dore,
sweeper Shirin O:.koo1, out-
side back Allison M<;Kenzie
and Carlin Schneider all
shared in the near-miss:
Marina connected twice in
the shootout to finish it o1f,
and will duel Edison at 1 p.m.
Saturday for the title.
Newport.· (9-3-4) meets
Huntington for third place.
Tbe latte~ lost to Edison, 1-0.
HAPPY
8 ·1 RT HD A Y
c.tebratlng 1he ~!t Pilot's AUto lei. of 1fM Mries
r---------------~-------, l I fi I ff l
I I I I
I I
I I
I I I • I
I I L-----------------------J
JC WATER POLO
OCC's teams heading south
•Men and women at t :30 p.m .
The women's tournament Saddleback today for will shadow the men's bracket
OEC championships. at OCC (20-5, 3-0) will take on
MISSION VIEJO_ Saddle-Cypres~ I 10-10, 0-3) today at
back College"will be the Stte of 3:30 p.m. whife R1verside l26-·
the upcoming Orange Empire 4-1. 2-1) ~'ill battw Saddleback
Conference men's and (l5-9• 1-2) at 4:45 Pm Saturday's third-place game women's water polo champi-will take place at 12:15 p.m. onship tournaments today and Saturday at the Gauchos' pool. and the championship game
Orange Coast Cottege-ttttre· will be played at 2.45 pm,.... .,.....,..._-~·•
top-ranked team in both tour-Orange Coast men's te~m is
naments, followed by River-currently ranked thud m the
side, Saddleback-and Cypress. state w1th Riverside ranked
The men's tournament· fifth and Sdddleback 12th.
bracket will have the Pirates On the women's side, the
(21-6-2, 3.0 m OEC) take on Pirates are ranked second m , •
Cypress (10-17, 0-3) at 1 p.m. the state, behind Golden We.st.
today, while Riverside ( 19-10-while RivcNde is ranked third
2, 2-1) takes on Saddleback and Suddlcb{'ick eighth.
(11-14-1, t-2} at 2;\5 p.m. ' The conterence toumament
The : 'third-place contel>t champion rec.-etve an outo-
betw en the two losers of the matic berth mto the 12·team
above games will play Satur-Southern Caltfom1a regional
day at 11 a.m. while the cha.rn-playoff which ere t to begin
pionsh.tp between the two win-Nov. 12-13 at Ml. San .Antonio
nmg schools will be played at ColWge.
Newport Rowing Festival unday
ilh the game deadlocked at 2-2, a skinnish broke out on the
e a ana oolJl oefieheS' emptied onto the fieid:-·~-~--=~-:------~1k .......... bf~ Qu•rtmrl
Lo7.a suffered a broken nose and Ken Yanagimachi suffered a Fairfax o o o o •
INDIVIDUAL PASStNG • Colleges, junior programs R 0 W 11 I
-, •• POlt 9 ~. 11e~---to attend annual meet. -----------....-·11
NH · Mandertno, 1.:'2-0, 25, 1 TO, cut below his nght eye in the brawl, which lasted about~ minute Newport ~First~ O 14 • 42
<D?nd d the gclIDe. ..a.\ if)bviously, it was a very unfortunate· incident,• Hilgendorl NH · Stewart 9 tun (Gaeta.4(r,..,., ·~!P"!I-. "lt'ta something that we will addrcc;s to the coaches and play; .1 ~: Ja<obs 25 pass from
• other t nms rcga.rdirig emotional plaY. and violent conduct. Manderino (Gaeta kick). 7:42.
" • • -by Tony Altobelli Mt. St....,art 7 run (G.¥t.l kickl, 5:14.
COLLEGE .. WOMEN'S VOLLEYIALL
V~nguard University falls in five
AZU~A -Vanguard Unlvcn;1ty' womens volleyb811 t m losC
to host Azusa Paoflc ln five tough gomes, 12·15, 15·6, 13-15,
l51i4 ts .. 7 Thursday night on the wtnner's floor. ~· J\iter pulling out two games to take a 2· 1 lead, th Uon ~19, 4-14 lli contorenoe) could not overcome 12 serving acet by A.ib.e Podfic (14·13, ?·11). •
Megan Godll'fly'1 33 kllla and 22 digs for Vanguard. and both
match hlghl K Uy IGllnlnUth bad 98 asdltl for 1hft ucm
i
Second QullftW
NM · Brill 22 run (GMta kick),
11:32.
Poufth"'Qwlltef'
NH • C:.SS.rly' run (GMta kkk), f1.56. • ••
NH · c.swty 2 run (GNU kick).
1.08
Attendanc:t: 1,000 (estlm1ted).
llNDMDUAL MIRMCI ...., • L1Mf1s 10-33; Post, 10.21:
Baldonado, 5·10; Ftrg\Mf\ 4-10;
~ M; ~ ~. Bueknef. 4-3 --~ty. 24-117, 2Tt>s; lr11L
6-SI. 1 TD: Stewlr't. 36. 2 TO\: Of"9i. 24: [nrlQuu 2 s; Cr•lg. 2 2.
Gaeta, 1-2-0, 12: Craig, 2·3-0, 25.
N>MDUAL MCEMNG
hlfr -Umitcho, 3-88, Beaman.
2-49; Grant. 1·28; f.,9U$0f\ 1-6;
Washington. 1·5; Linem. 1·2.
Nt1 ·Jacobs, 1·2S, 1 TO, Gray, M~
Caldwell, 1-12; Giordan1, 1-1 1.
~STATISnCS
Fair NH
fim downs 10 16
Rushes y1tdfge 8-106 38-230 Paulngy~ 178 62
PNlng 9-25' 0 4 HM>
Net rttum y1tdage• 17 0
S.00.yan:s.ge , , 6 t "'
NetyMdage 215 216
Mb' $-156 u
FurnbleS·fumblts !Ost 5 2 0-0 ~ ·y1tct.ge w1 ·~s1
llme of poMssion 24 5 23!05
•Punt ,~~ rnter~tlom. fumble
retUm:S
) 2 Fddoy. Novombor 5, 1999 ----............... .
SC HEDULE
TODAY
• Footblall
High school Corona dc·I Mdr ~.
Un1vcn11y, at lrv1no H gh, 7 pm :
• "t<Kta Mesa ..,t Uguna Beach, 7 pm.;
Montclair Pfep vs. Estancia, at
.Newport Harbor, 7 p.m
•It doesn't slow down around here when it's
. approaching winter ... hmmm, maybe that's
because there's no snow around.
Senes wUtbe held November
21 Pot more informanon,
contact Vo}'8ger race
committee chairman Pred
Mdsino at (949) 7.23-5107.
mignon.are already spok
for. What's a yachty to do?
In addition, several clu
have already sold out the
• ~tl!r polo y ou would thmk that
Community college men. Orange boabnn ""UrisL<> would Coan at OEC'Chdmp1onshl1» at ~' ,..
Saddlebdtk College. Ftrst round: slack oU when the water
115 Cypress, 1 p.m. cools down. Not so
Community tollege women Starting Saturday, ~<l tho
-literally. This was the race u1 which U1e uncontrolable
bloke, who was being
protested, tned to resolve the
issue by exercising the
Marquis of Queensbeny rules,
rat.her than taldng the more
conventional "Corinthian~ ·
approach.·
. ~.
Add1Uonal races being
held in November:
Nov. 13 -Newport Harbor
YC Winter #2 inside race,
Dana Point Yaqit Club J/24
Fall Series; Voyagers YC
Commodore's Race PHR.F;
Voyager YC Campbell Sloop
to blow a millenni\un horn
a.nd wear 8 silly pofnty hat
The Bahia Corinthian has
been sold out for a month or
more.
Orange Coast at OfC Chtlmp1onships first Saturday dild Sunday of
at Saddlebad. College First round · · the ne..'Ct four months, the ~. Cypress, )·30 p m
High S<.hool bo~ Los Amigos ' ~alboa Yacht Club will,
I don 'l get it. Newport
resident Chris Cothn,
currently ln Auckland, NeW'. 1
ZeaJand, headini up the • ~ at Esta(\C1a;3 p.rn~ Costa MIJ\a • present the Sunkist Series.
at Serviie/Eo;perann Tournament Thi!i_, like the Voyt!gers Hot
• Cross country Rwn Seri~. is en UlSide-thc-
However, this "Mike
Tyson" of yachting has bit of~
more than he can chew, as I ·
understand the race
comrruttee will seek PHRP
action concerning rule 69.
Race. ,
Nbv. 14 -South Shore YC
Turkey Regatta PHRF. OD.
AJnerlcaTrue syncticate in. _ •
the Amenca 's Cup Cballeng
Com nunity collPge men and harbor race. The series is open
women -01ange Coa~t at Southern to all Sabots, Melcalfs, Lido 14 C.ahfornla Champ1onsht1», at
Bakersfield A's and B'~. Thistles, CPJs,
Corinthian YC, ta.king second,
and Dan Rosen of the South _
Shore YC's Problem Child in
third place for the "A Class."
Nov. 20 • Dana Point YC
-Commodores Challenge
Invitational PHR.F.
tells me the least expensive •
restaurant New Year's Eve. .J
packages are going for SSOO, "
per person down under! , High S<.hool boys, and girls corona Lasers, T-12s and any other
del Mar, Costa Mesa, btanc1a class under 20 feet in length,
at Pac1f1c Coast League Finals wilh five boats per start.
at Irvine Par.-. 2 p.m For more information about
a rule that basically forbids
unsportsrpanlike conduct. In the "B Class," it was
Growl, owned by Rowell
Green of the Balboa YC, first;
Pintado, skippered by Dave
Williams of Newport Beach
YC, second; and also from the
NBYC, Jack Hester's
FascinaUon //landing third
place.
Nov 21 -Voyager YC Hot
Rwn#2PHRF.
Nov. 27 -Dana Point YC
J/24 Fall.
This ls just another
ind.icationJ)'lat being
• Volle~ll
community college women • this small boat series, call lroy
Orange Coa~t dt Saddfoback, 7 p.m Heidemann at the Balboa
High ~hool 91rls -Newport Harbor Yacht Cluo race office (949)
at Corona del Mar, 5 45 Pm 673-35,15, ext. 131.
•Soccer
In splte of lhe Hot Rum
Sunday punch, the Sunday
race went smoothly with
Vortex, owned by Bruce
1Wichell of SBYRC, wuming
first-place honors. Llckety
Split, owned by Joe
Degenhardt of the Bahia ·
Thls mlllennJum thing ls
causi,ng yacht clubs some
major problems.
associated with boats can be • •
pricey. To me, it's just another•
tick on the dock and it places •
my birth date one more year~
further away. Have a hoot. ·-:
.... Community wlltge men • Golden
West at Orange Coast, ~ p.m
Community college women •
Golden West at Orange Coast. 1 pm
The first race of the
Voydger Yacht Club's Hot
Rum Series was a real h1t The second of the Hot Rwn
Can't buy Dom Pergnon,
Crystal or Chandon White
Star? Lobsters and even filet
• TERRANCE PHIWPS' boating
column appears on Frtdays.
.·
II N~~1 ~= I" •I I -=1 I ;
"'F .. lc_t_lt-lo_u_e_,B .. u'"'•ll""n• .. •.• 'al Tr1111 rtcGrdld o&t9ill6 ctltlou1 8u6 ::e.. AJo)(an(lra Chelsey Hsu ol the chief exeaJhl office 10305, Newport Beach, OCEAN OUTFAU.S NO u s IMAHIM AND •11 ' ~~]
Name Statement 11 Oocimllll t~2~ Name Statement TO Alexandra Tate Hsu ol lhl eelltr 1nre Sltl'll as CA 92663 SJ>Klflcatlon No. :::fo.:...~ 't;;.,, ':: r.MDm ENI! IMAHIM,
The following persons ol Ol!!Clal ftec«dl in Ille The following persons It Is hereby Of'dered lbCM This business Is oon· 89()0.()3.01 REBID HUSBAND AHO W.E
are Oalng business as Olfice of lht ReconW al are dOing buSlness as: thal 111 per1on1 In· ·The naml(1) encl bus!· ducted by· an lndMclual Proposals must be OOOIOl40C.I l1Ue Ofder Duly ~nt.ct Tna-
M A s. INTEANA· ()ange County. Callana. Regency Building terestedinthlsmaneraP· nessldehssollhlbiye1(s) Haveyouataneddolng submitted on ttie form No.00fl1.al~ARE t•: OOLDeN ~T
TIONAL. 892 West 18th Executed-~ ~uctey B Services, 9550 Wamer pear before 1hll coun In ~ MJ SOlllTKlNS. UC. buSln8$1 yet? No supplied by Ille District In '" Dm'AIA.T A SAVINGS AAOC1A-
SlrMI, Co.sta Mesa Call· Busby • ""'IPW woman ¥1111 Avenue, Suite 33.il, De~nment No. L73 of (A Limlleel ~ Col'POll· H.G. Brian Schuot accordance with all ~ Ofl ....... :: TION IERVICe CO., A
fomla &2627 Ml 11 PIA>lic luc:tJon lo the Fountam Valley. ltl8 Orange Coumy Su· llOn lo bl fotmed), 1G734 This statement was provillonl of ttie 8')Gelli· -~ YOU• TAKE CAL..UROftHIA CORPOo
Andrew fl t-A1rtaolt l'lightll boddlr '°' ·cnn « Caltforrua 92708 penor coon 81 the ad· OUltlOm Slrfet. Chllswollll, hied with the County cauona. Specifications, *=TION TO PROTECT RATION ~
222 B 3rd s1re'e1. Hunt ~to ~ mac»_pey-D & L Investments, dress ahown above on CA 01311 Cler1t of Orange County propoaal blanlc1 and YOUft ~TY rT 04121'11• u lnlCN-
tnglOn Beacti, c~1 fomla =~._,..~.,.. ~'f Inc., 9550 Wamec Ave· 12·7, 1999. at The ISSeb being sold on H>-12·99 fur1tler lnfonnatton may MAY BE SO&..D AT A ment No ... 111• In 926"8 ...,,...,_.__.,...1to1 ._y-nue, SI.lie 33.il. Fountain 2.00 o'CIOdl p"m. end n Qlntlllly daalbld as 199M807914 be obtained at the above _ booll , page of otndal
Tht1 business Is con· 1111e 11111e trne al .... and Valley, Caltlomta 92708 then and there snow kMn1D4Y, ecppmenl encl Daily Ptlot Ott 15, 22. addrass, telephone (71.il) ~UC J:LL~ Alcofda In Che omc. of
duded by an indJVidUll 111 accaraance Vlllll Section 'rNS t>Osiness ls con-cause, d any they nave, lumiShflOS 11 we1 a ca11an 29, NOY 5, 1999 F125 982·2411. TION Of! nta *'""" UM ~ of °"·
Have"''" s11rted OQlnn 292411\b) ol the Caldarrlll eluded by: a cdfporation why the petition for OClllr ~tH and·~ Flctltlou1 Bu1lne.. Pubhhed := ANGa Courly, CALJ-,~ ... ,. _ _. ,......._ 111d --~ ed.....,,,. ....,~..._ of ........... ........... • ........ "'-ta ... O .. •ly Ofl THE ~IBMHO w ... u ........... ~ busJnes, yet? No """'........ ~ Have YoU stan ...,..'V ........ 'V"I ·-·-.. ........, mets NamJ Statement .,..,...,_,,,, --an~ YOU. YOU .---._. .,. Andrrew R M1rzaoll IO Ille TrustM) ii • buslnus yet? Yes, 001 be granled. Ind 111 te>c* at The foltow.nn persons Pilot November 5, t999 iHOeA.,D CONTACT A S.18:1111M• at 1:00
This stal&man1 was Mlln (NOffl) Enhllce"1D 10-3.99 lllsfunheron:lered !NI 1~ ONroom SU'eel -·· ______ F_1se_ LAWYlll. A putMlc flM f9IKe of &Me: AT
filed w1ttt the County II• County Cou~'.! o & L Investment! Inc, a ~Y of t!_l'! Of'defb"-.. ~~ Chllswonn, ~ 111311 ~;E~ng bu$1nesa 81 FJctltioue Bual--• auction ..,. to the !?!.. .. ~TO""*'fTH• Clerk of Orange County 700 Qlllc c.MH ..,.,.. David L Curtiss, a • ..,_c:euse .,.,pu ,...,.., The bUlk m tS in-ACUPVNCTURE·HERB '"'• ~bldcleffofcuh, ~,,__.
on t0-13·99 W..t tantl Ml. c.-w. President in Newpoit Beadl/Costa lltndldllllllconaimmaledat CLINIC, 2900· Brlttol Name Statement ~. cMdl dnlwn COUNTY ·COUIO'·
1999680812& Ml •• ngtc. ttjle and r'll•· This statement was Mesa Pilot, a newspaper the otlice of NU SOl.tlllONS. Street, ~ulte •G·103, The lollowlng persona ~ a aute or Nldonal HOUaa, 700 CMC
Dally Pilot Oct 15 22 est conveyed to and no# hied With the CourttY of peneral clrculatlon UC, (A llmtld l..labltty Costa Mesa, CA 92626 ara doing buslM&S as· be." checJt dn1wn by a C!HTa DIUVI WEST,
29, Nov. 5. t999 F12l ~T~~-llncW111 .o.a~~ Clettc of Orange County publtshed In this county, "~ to bl f"........n, EdWard Kim, 1426 112 OAKLEY MEMORY _._._ Of fedefal credit SANTA ANA, CA&J. "' ..... u ..... ...-.. 10-8 99 at least onoe a week ror ...... ...,....,., ~ .. -, -~ AmcMant of Fictitious Bu1lries• situated 111 sad County. on · 19906807805 IOI.Ir consecu11V• weeks 111734 Dult>om Sbett. South Bronson Avenue, SALES, 2326 FOf'dham unlOft, Of a check un.,.ad ~ and
Name Statement Cahlornia The •Ml ad· Daily Pilot Oct. 15• 22, prior 10 the day of the Cllltswolth. CA G1311 ano Los Angeles, C&lifomla Or., Coeta:Seu, drl!Wn by •a .a.t• Of ottlet chafvu:
The lollowtng parsons chn (J( othw cormion '29 Nov 5, 1999 F130 hesnrig. lht ~pated Ult dall IS ~~9· l II Cl~ All:~ Broesa· fedenll ~ and S2M,20SA7• lti'Mt are doing buslne~s as. e1e5tgnat100 ff snli:~ ' DATE: OCT 181 11199 Nowmtlef24, 1GGll 5 bus neu COO· ha loM u • or Addfdl or octw com-RA w. Design, 17905 ,.111 PfopetlY Flctltlous·Bu1lnue JAMES p, GRAV, · The bulk sale 19 sutiiect dueled by: an lndlvldual mle, 2326 Ford m Dr., NVtnga ulOdMJon, Of mondfflONUon of,...
Sky Pari< Circle. lrv1no, nertm •• P\lll)Olted to be . Name Statement JUDGE/ to C.lomia U,..lotm Com-Have YoU startM·qotng Coste Mese, CaUfomla aavtnga bank IPIC#led propetty: • VALDf.
CA 92614 166 Vtg1ma Place COila The followlng pers~ COMMISSIONER OF metaal Code SecilOll 610&2. business yet? Vea, G2626 In Sectloft 1102 ol UM QA" S~ COSTA
Roben A Wilhfllrn, 192 Metll Ca 92626 Counly are doing business as. T H E s u p E A I 0 A (11 lht ... IS subied to Seil:' 1, 1 ~9 ~~ bbyu~=~~1c1':t =-~a: bU~ Ml!SA, CA 12121 APN #: Adm11a1 Way. Costa AasesW1 Parcel Nlrl'ilet Soulll Wood· Liquor, COURT Sec. 61062. the IOllowino dWard m 141-41144G The under·
Me5.l, CA 92627 ~oe2 11 The under-2200 lia rbor Blvd . TOfly s Ha~ .and 511 p 1~onnnon mm 111 pio. This statement was Ha\19 YoU started doing neaa In thla at.lie wtU algned Tru8'1e Clta.-
This bustness ts con· "llneCI Trust• caactams •A140, Cosla Mesa, CA Hsu 49 Harbor R ll!deCI) Ried witfl the County busjnus yet? No be l*d by UM dUly dUna any Kablllty fot
<1ue1ec:1 by an 1001vidua1 snv IO!lbtlity I« any lnea· 92627 OrlV8, Newport , ... ,.!'!-.... ~ ~ ... ~ ~le~o-f~ange County ~:!::!~~ :=:-:.OW~ :; any lncofrectnua of Have yCXJ s11nod domg r~ of the sllMt .0. Ayman Gammoh, 739 CA 92660 .., v.. ,...._, ....,, .. ,.,.,. end the ltr... addt... Of
bus1neu yet? Yes er.. and other common PaulaMO tE101, Costa Published Newport Claimt may bl hied is OAl/D Dal"' P·"-!~57,8::, flied With the County ~~·to .:: OUMr common •ato-September. 1996 ~ ti anJ, allllWI Mesa. CA 92626 Beectt-Coat1 Mesa Dally ADEl..MAN, EsQ , GRf£H-•1 "" ..,,... ClerJI of Oranoe County r-Nltion, If any, ataowr1
Roben A Wllhetm to.ein Sa.Cl Ille 'Ml be Thts buslness_ II con· P1lo1 October 29, Nov· BERG & BASS, 1ecm Ven-29, Nov 5, 1999 F126 on 11·2·99 l*d ~.J:,at.. In aboW. If no ICrMt
This statement Wa\ midi ..ihoul CO'lltllnl °' ducted by: an indMdual ember 5, 12, 19, 1999 ""aw. Stlltl 11XXl. ~ Flctitlou• Bu.Inna Dally Pllol .J:9:'11:2f; ~ ........ pr~"'.:: eddren ot oUMll com-hleel w1t11 Itta· County -raoly exprllted or m-Have you started doing Ctl$17"8628 F143 1no, CA 111438 Ind .,. last Name Statement · • • • _._ --·" mon ~ I•
C•eril of Orange County pied r.gwding lllle pol· busmess ylft?.NQ Flc:titlout Bu1lneee dlr lo< r•no dams by"" The followlng persons 26, 1999 F157 :r ~::O,°:: shown, dndtofts to
on 1CH2•99 senion « •llC\ITl>r'lneee ~Gammon Nam• Statement ~shit bl NiMl'nbe:r are dolno bullrless 81 A ctltloue BuafneH t*ow The.-""' be UM Joc:aaon of UM t099G807873 to pey the ~Itel balance s statement ,.., The following persons 23 tllOe. Wlltell IS 1111 buSI· THE CUBICl.E GUY, INlde,. M wttftOut PfOl*1Y may be •
oa11y Pilot Oct \5, 22 d lh• obl!OltlOn lllCllldlnO llled with tile County ...... ~ ... ~ nus di')' bef0tt Ille •'*2· 931 Sunsel ortve. Costa Nem• Statement ~-_ -"•""· blMd ·by Mndlng a 29. Nov 5, 1"'''" Ft 1n .W•. acfwancee. end Ii Clerk of Oran"" County are uv uuilll8SS u · ...-.. ............ 5~....... ...... • .-... ..... -..... ::::;:=..-::,. ........ --;:.....::, Mftten --to Ute .,.,., • ;j..., 10-20 99 .,-TOY TOR SPORTS. -_. .-c .,_.,""" Mesa, California 92627 ,.,. ~--.. .,, ,......,_,. .......,.__ ... ,.,.,..__ •-.-Fictitious Buainess olhlr cto.gea 11C1r .. , on · 1........., ......... 17452 Ash St, Fountain llXM Sakuttal Pearson 931 ere~ bultneA 11 r--ntll... -... ........ ~ .. ~ -~ N S llld PfqJertJ The total • ._ GREEMIEAG& BASS Sunset Drive. Coata West CO.st Kida an In· --.. --. ...--.,,. -... ,,._ •me t•t•ment MIOllfll al the UllCllUd bef. Daily PllOI Ott 22, 29• Valley, Caltlomia 92706 · tematlonal s-. Group, ....,,., .. or enc:um-o1 thl•
• Tfle follollllng persoos allCI °'Ille obligation.. NOY 5 12 1999 F135' M•hmut Ozonur • ~~~ ...... s) MeJ:. CA 9.::: 2915 Recl\JU Ave., Suite tnnc:a. '° P9Y _Ute ..... o.te: are dotng business as Cl.'941>'1 said P'Ol*1Y and Flctltl ' B I t7452 Ash St., FOUltaln ._.., _, ... , clOcted gus l~c:;· 9201 .F, Costa Mesa, remalnlnO pnnctpel Oc:tobef a , 1 .. GOSHE PHVSICl\L ranonllbly eafrnated 0118 us ness Valley, Calrlom.la 92708 ~~Mal Y an C.llfomla 92628 · Mlftll .ol UM note(1) GOLDEN WEIT &AV·
THERAPY, 4C>-1 west COiis ~ and .o. Name Statement This business Is con· Hov5. 19Qll Have YoU started dOin9 Dwlgtl1 0 llland ese7 9ICUled by Ute a.eel of IHGS UIOC&AT10N
minster A..,e • Su•te •3 vances at the trne al the The loliowtng persol\6 Cluctod by. 011 lndlvtdual NOTICE OF ~:i~n~a~ Ashbury Clrcte, • Hul1t· Truat. wttn lnteteat and SERVtCa co •• A CAU-
Newport Beach, CA llllClll pli>loeall«t a1 tllll Ho· are doing business as Have you ffaned doing A PPLICATION TO This statement Wll 1n
9
1oton Beach, canfomla later th4non, ~ ~ 92663 hce 15 Sl&l,t7Ut Date OLSEN PROPERTIES, bus1nesr. yet? No SEU ALCOHOLIC 26-48 H In the T10N 4101 WIMnWI Laune Joanne Go:.ho 1008199 Attorneya liqllity 426 CabnHo St Co51a Mahmu! Ozonur llled with the County Thlt bu$lneN Is con· not a). edYancu, 9ouleY8fd ,.., Ian
603 Lalo.evlew Lane. HitonaL Corporalon Mesa. CA ~2627 Thts statement was ~:VERAGES Cler1it of o,tt<ran,._ge_Cou_nty--1 dllaed ~Hlfl under UM tanna ot U. Teua 11211
Actltloue Butlnee
Heme Statement ..
The following persons
are doing buslneu as • al Goll Media Group, b Las V-egas Goll,
c Ventura County Goll d) San Bernardin•
County Goll, e) ~~ County Goll, I) Ind~
County Goll, 1800 I?; Garry, Ste 215 Santi
Ana, Cal1fom11 927'05 .t
John Rober1 LV<lfl, 3 Twthght Lane, Rancne
Santa Marganta,
caltlomll 92688 '
Eric Damon~
1160 Orangewood.. Or~ Brea. CaJ1tomla 92821 ..
This business Is COf'I'
ducted by a giene
pa11nershlp
Have you staneel ~ buslnesa yet? Yes, / !:
07/01199 I"
John R Lyon •
This statement was
flied wlll'I lhe eoun~
Cle,_ of Ofange Countj
on 10-25·99
1""808351
Dally Piiot Nov 5, 12, "' 26, 1999 .ft5J PUBLIC NOTICE •
NOTICE OF •
AVAILABILITY OF.
ANNUAL REPOR.T.
In acoordanca wilf\JA$
SECTION 8104(6) a
copy of the amuat re~
or the c M. & E~ P'! Cotton Famlly FOtrita
uon, Cynthia FoWl6i'.
Pl!flQpel Menea-r lorN
l11C11I year 1m & 20®
la available tor pub!'c
Inspection at 1509 E. Bay Ave., Balboa. Celifomla,
92661, during 19Ql.llf
buSlneU hoUrt Said r•
poft wn remain ava.1~ able tor a period of 1eo·
days comme
the date of Ihle no Published ,_,...,..,uw..,.
Beactl-COSta Mesa
Piiot November 5, "'1
COsta Mesa ~ 92626 °'"'" Olu00$ Foiwclo4u" -Alie!\-9--0laefl, 426-filed ""th tmr County tO-tt-19996808019 Have you atar1ed doing "' • This business is con o.p.rtmtnf C30.illl2 Cabr111o St .. Costa Mesa, Clettc of Orange County AppHcatlon: • . · buslnesa yet? Yes, tMfeon, ,..., chargu (210 M>-4• Sale When you wrn.
<IUC1eel by an ind1vldua1 1~ !!15 111121999 CA 92627 on 10·26·99 October 14, 1999 Dally Pilot Oct 15.L 22, 8/0111999 and upenHa ol the lltatua Una: ('11) m -a Clanin-.. -. Have you started domg ' ' This bUslness Is con-19996800444 To Whom rt May 29, Nov 5, 1999 1-132 1 TruaU. fot the total 1121 Nett a.ndefa, ...... .., bu~~~i!' Jo'::~n~oGoslle F~~~~u:t:~~~~~· du.fa~~ 8,~i:,,'!j:i~g ~.•\1~.~1~t ~9 29, ~~5 ~~ame(sl ot ihe s~:~to";EgF ~rt.~,!~~1 waa =:.J8;u:9ic!'3:: Aulstant lac~~ Include all
Thii statement wes Tt1e lonowing persons ouslness yet? Yes Flctltlou1 Bu1lneu Appllcanl(I) ls/are· ORDINANCE ~r1t ~"in.':;. ~~~ th• Hatke ol 8-:J rnotll1R7 T1 • th• facta
hied with the County a1e doing business as: 01/05198 Name Statement .MULE LYNN CITY OF on 11 •2•99 to'~~Yr-~~... •od get th• Cieri< of Or,.nno Count'y THE WR£ NCH. 57 Holly· Allen 0 Olsen The appl""•n•0 l•"'l_,. 1-•1 ,_ ... """' .......... ,._ oo 10-12·99~·.. leaf, Aliso Viejo, C:A This statement was The foUowtng persons """ "" _...,, COSTA MESA .......... 0125 TM amount may be ,.,u, ..
1"""""."7"""" 92658 flied with the County aredolngbus•nessas aboYeareapplytngtothe• A PROPOSED OR· DailyPllOtNov.5,1~19, nrener on the~ you want. •• ........, ...., N 9u1 10.il8 lrvl Deper1ment of Aloohohc: 26 1999 1"'169 • ---· through Classlfled ~~~~1~n 1~~M~~.~ ~rl<dO~Cou~ Ur·"· M ~~ge~~~~,~~~~~ -·------~~~·=~=··=~==~--~----~-------29 Nov 5, 1999 F120 Hol eat, Aliso Viejo, CA on 10·8-99 Ave. 1195, Newport etcohOIK: beverages at for adoption at the reou·
gz 19996807743 Beach. California 92660 TO CENTER OFI lar City Councll rneetJng Nola al Trust•·s Sale Amber M Sarieant 57 Daily Piiot Ott 22, 29. Marie A Stan:?, HM8 ~~ 1:fM of November 15, 1999, !o~ y!,~, "'~ Holryteat Ahso V1eio CA Nov S, t2, 1999 F136 Irvine Ave . 11 • New· COSTA MESA, CA being Ordinance lllH7,
92656 . . CNS1747418 pol1 Beach, ca11fom1a 92626 ooveming hlstotle pres· ~~~,...::.-~ daiZ du~~.!, b~~ne:s :.m~i LEGAL NQTICE 9:VL. Thurston.100! Tyi:ol llOlnse(s) eir::rMOTION to give
adJOn to prQted rru prop. 1Mnnersllip . THE OHIO DIVISION Irvine Ave, 11116, New-Appl for: E B ER OrdlnanCe 99.17 first
erty. • l'l\ay be IOld al a ttlJ\19 .. ,, .. staned dot"" OF SECURITIES, PVR· port Beach, C.Momla ~!, · ON.SAL E reading can1ed by Iha fol. ~,... If )'Oii need ill l>Usfoessyet? Yea ... SUANT TO OHIO RE· 92660 ""o WINE -EATING lowlng roll call vote ~ ol Ille nature ol OCT 4 1999 ' VISED CODE Cl-IAPTER This buslne&S IS con· Pt.ACE COUNCtL MEMBERS:
Ille ~n;s 9ltlll Constance M Votgt 1707 ~O CHAPTER ducted by; co.pertner9 ~~e=rt OeflV A y ES: M one h a n, .you 'fOAJ Should contad 1 This statement was 119, HAS ISSUED A Have YoU at.aned «Jeng ta sa 2SJ. Cowan. Erickson, r.awyw On 11111111 II U5 lllod with the County CEASE AND DESIST business Y!Jl? No ::. October 9l:· • Dillon. NOES: None. AM, Allcrneys E~y N•· Cieltc of Orange Count) ORDER TO JAMES A Marte A. Stanley mber 5, 1 ABSENT: Somet9.
bonal Co!poralion (TrUllM) on tO t2 99 CUNNINGliAM . THE Thll statement was F141 THE FULL TEXT oltne
23n! 8'rtche.-Onve. Lal\e J ORDER ANOS THAT filed wiltl the County Actltlo ua_Jl\lllOUJ µiicmnanca.m~ialudJrt nr. "°' ~ Dally P11ol Oct 15 22 ~A Mc S ~ cttH Ctllf1f Of Onin;. C'amfY Neme Statement the ClfY Cle s Office, n (IM9)707·5640 H the Cluly 29 Nov 5 1999 Flit NINGHAM HAS VIC-on 10-27·99 The lollowtno persons Fatr Drive.1..Coata..,.... ~nteel Trus!H under ' . LATED OHIO 19996I00586 dot buslr\ess MARY T. EWOTT,
ano pinuant to the Oted Flctltloue BullnHe REVISED CODE Dally Pilot Oct 29, Nov ~':R1,.~FORESTS8~ Deputy City Cleft(
Nama Statement SECTIONS AS FOL· 5, 12, 19, t999 F15t CIETY 75 Sea Island Publl1heel Newport Tl)8 lotlow1ng persons LOWS. t707.44(C)(1) SUMMARV OF ' Bea -Cot Me ally
8re doing tiuslness as: BY SELLING PROPOSED ~~ee'rwpon Beaeh, CA Piiot ~e:ber 5~1~ Ava Dental Group, UNREGISTERED, M '-'--F ,6 (CA) F153 1 t25 E. 17th Street, NON-EXEMPT SECUR· O RDINANCE a'""' ores ... , • .,.. ______ ,., tN458 Sante Ana CA ITIES..1. AND 1707.44(0) CITY OF ' 75 Sea lliand Dr., New· SUMMARY OF
PACIFIC V11iW 92701° ' BY ::>ELLING SECllR COSTA MESA f>C>.f'Ni:-~~9~~-PROPOSED MEMORIAL PARK Mexk:al Management ITIES FRAUDULENTL V A PROPOSED OR ducted by: 1 non·proftt ORDINANCE
Group, (CA), 1125 E J AM E S A CU N DINANCE ls lched4.lled COfl)Ot'8tlon CrTY OF Cemetery • Mortuary
Chapel • CromatOf'y
3500 Pac1fie VtfN# Drive
Neiwport BelKh
144--2700
PIERCE IROlllERS
IW.IROADWAY
Morluary • Chapel
Cremation
110 Btoadway
Cotta Mesa
642~0150
17th Street, 1N458, NINGHAM MAY AP· for adoption at the rwgu Mari ne Fores ta, COSTA MESA
Senla Ana, CA 92701 PEAL THE FINAL OR· lar City Council meelfng R 0 d o I p h e A PROPOSED OR•
This buslner.s Is con DER AS DESCRIBED IN of November 15, 1999, Stftlk:he berg&r OINANCE Is ~
ductttd by • oorporatoon OHIO REVISED CODE being Ordinance 99· us. PrehSe~ ' for ~liOn •I tf\9 rlQU•
Hive you Slar1eel doing CHAPTER 119. A COPY epptoYlng the. develop-TI\11 ltltetnent WU ler 'City Councll meetfng bu~1nesa yet? No OF THIS DIVISION OR ment agreement be· t~ with ttie c;:ounty of NoVember 15, 1999", Me•ucat management DEA IS AVAILABLE tv.oen the Coy of Costa Cle of Orange County being OnstnanC9 ""15,
Group, Fred Sahall, FROM THE OHIO M111 and Slkloke on 0-12-99 relatklg~off·street~rk·
Pretielent DIVISION OF SECUR· Farms , 1"'6907tn Ina atandam.
Th11 1tatement Wat ITIES, 77 SOUTH HIGH THE MOTION lo olYe Da.t1y Pilot Oct 15 22 THE MOTION to give
ftlad wltfl the County STREET, 22ND FLOOR, Ordinance 99·t8 Ttrst 29 Nov 6 11m f:12i Ordina.nce 91H5 flrat
Cler1t of Ofahge COunty COLUMBUS, OHIO reeding earned by the fol• ' ' ' reet:Jng c:errled by the tof·
on 10.12-99 432t5. lowtflg roll cell vote Flctltloue Bueineee IOwlng roll call vote:
1IMll07t'TI Published Newport COUNCIL MEMBERS: Neme Statement COUNCI. MEMMRS: DAiy fTllot Ott 15 22. a..cn-coste Mau D!lllY AYES: Monahen, • The lollOwlrig pel'IOOS AYES: Monetlen.
2P NOY 5. 1m F123 Pilot OGtober 22. 2!J, Cowan, Erlclcaon, are~ butlMu u Cowan, Erlckaon, l~--l:~~~~~~~;;~;;;;;;;;;;~ Noveml>lr 5. 111119 Dixon. NOES: NOM. BlnkC.rd Prooelllng Dbcon. NOES: None. F138 ABSENT: 80nlef'9. C.mot'f!Ji\I~~· ASSENT: Som -=~~=Hiiiitt=.f.nE fiJlHeKT• . sen~. "Affordable
Alternative"
Discount Cask t,
Cremation&
Burial Service
Why shouJd you subject
yourself & your fan1ily to
paying inflated pri e (or
c:. ket & ervic s????
CaJl Toll Free J6 ·S CASKKI'
Senf ~ I Sum ndl Counlrles
SUPERIOR COURT 0tdinance ma>.: be reed In 02101 Ofclnance may be !Nd In
OF CALIFORNIA the City Cletk I O!llee, n '"' t SetvlcN Group, .,. City Clerk' a Otfq, n F Ir Oflve Coat.a M sa Inc • (OE), e HUiton Falt Dove, Costa ~ .. COUNTY OF MARY t. ELLIOTT, Cenlre. U100, Santa MARY T. ELLIOTT,
ORANGE Deputy City Clet11 AN. CA 92707 o.puty City C .. rtl
341 lh C.tt Publllhtd New1>ort Thia t>Uslfleaa It con· Publlthed Newport
Dnve, Post Office • 0ti11cti Costa Meu Dally du<.telt by a OOf PofttJon S.ach-Coeta Meta 0..ly
Box f4171, PllUt Novernber 6, 1eug H1V9 you star1ed doing PtlOt November 6, 1999
Orant, CA F11S2 bualne" yol? No P1&4
IN r~':t;..l~lrR OF U OC"EllfTORJ Credit S.Mcie• Qruup. Rl!OOEIT FOR
THC PETITION TO 0,IUUtlAlf lflC., Gene Hirai, PJtOP08AL8
CHANGE THe NAME ~,M..l1hl ·..., p~~::-nt tatarnant waa The 0~ ~nty ~ Al••A ..... _ Cl t ""''""" llND• ,.. __ ,,., Sanitation Dlltnc:t wld ra• '"".. .. ..... ..,,. io •11y GM:H ht 1 bJI Nie ., ttlftd wllh the .......,... .. , oelve ... led propoeala H u, by t'Klr Pa11rttt TOily ........ IO,...--. Cle"' of ~ County I T d H 9 tt5u end Uly p H.tu ..,...., .,.,,_ on !O-t2·90 unll uet 'fi• OY•
OADEA TO IHOW The Nml(11~a) ~ ~ 1"9MCl7• ember 11, PHI, It
CAU E '0A CHA..O IOOllS${1 "' .... o 11y P"'"" ,.._ t• '"2 ft:OO 1.m. fOPOMll
Ofll NAME ... lt(I) •Wt 29Ff NOY gi1ooe ;>~1"24 mutt be~ 9t 1hl CASE NUMBER GIQJP. INC ' ~ Olttrltl'a Purchu lng
AttMOt hl~lll cafanM • ctltloU 8ueineM DMlton oftlca, 1~ PfllTIONU~{S) • lall!Mn • ',.._ ......._t E .. AYWnUI, FOUntllln
AloXMd Qlelsoy H$U, SOLUTDG The fOlr.wmg PMOtli Vat.y, C8lllom6a by 1hl fl. htlr Paroru TM~ M olW llanot ·~IJUlnltl ... .. 8'ld lme Mreln ~~eLlloA ' ~e:' .. ~J 3253"-'~ ~~.,. PETIT~ ron AN b" -1... •....., ~ ~ B1tan MOPOIA&.: nw> '°"
ORDER ~O Ct1ANQE _ .. 11111(1 .Mlt Nin Scitlull. ltS S::'• Ln IUIMITCWW.A 1r
Have A
:----GD rfffi ~a I e-~~
Coll The ·Pilot Clossifieds at 64 2-567~
to place your _Gorcige Sare Ad!
ot ·
i:il EQUAL HOUSING
clPPC>RT\JNTY .............................
.................... f ..
.... h .. .....,..Adtlt•• .....................
" ........ ·"1 "'"''-· ... !ltMM tt lltetl•l••Ut• ........... , ........... .
........... IHllllal mtn ., ......., """· " .. , ...... .. """ "'' "'' ,..,.. .... . ...... ".-h!llHI .... · ,.,. . ... ,.,., ""' .. . ......... "'"' . ., ........ .. ...C ltt 1•11 ttlllt wMtt It le ........ "th law 0• ""'" tft MfRl l«lttatf IMI tll
........ ... ,, ..... 11 ,.,,
: ......... tanl!Mlt• N
..-~ .... ··-,.. 9f e.citnllll1•11. Al HllO ......... , ... _,. ............ DC_,...,.
... NUO•awste
1~~ .
. .l• •. J .• ,
*********** -. "'a SOLDu •
SHOWCASE :
HOMES * FOR SALE : * In Our Sat : ·2 Real Ettafe •
..-SupJ..lementl :
t HOMES OF ·:
: . Tff E WEEK i
• Display Ads • f Start at $751 %
• Deadline :
: Tuesday SPM t
*' Open House * t Listings :
: Only $151 :
Deadline *
,,. Thursday 5PM :
: tt Pays to : * Advertise * i In the Best :
i ·LOCAl * I\. * • '8eal Estate t
::. Section * *' Cati Todayll *
•.* USA RIVERA : .-~574-4252 : *~NE WILLEY * t · 949-574-4249 i I'"··~········ TRA8UCO CANYON
• flt* On NeMly 4 ~~T~ qenyon 1111 uli>Oliewble ~ t;ld 6592 Sq Fl. Erfor1 .. MY~ In klxvly reson ~ Wlltl pool, 9'>1 lind ~COUl'll $1,540.000 =~5454 .....
. . . . ·~ °""';,ill .·. . .,.,..
',
4 I 'I l • ~ ' . -·1 ' .. m Ha Or, Oen vu On
C#lyon. 1 bl! to bch lrnnw: Ollllllll 2bf t 5be, lrplc 1718,'00o Af a.t9-75$-ll070
' OPEN SAT 1-4
S21 MARtGOLO
IBR 21A.mt,ooo.
John Kenney, R.f.
149-72).4040
NEW LISTIHOI DUPLEX
$551,000
In desi'lbll 100 block, llOll
sand, bOfl uflj!S lrl ;l81fl8a . Balm Newport Aeefty
949-723~94
.eBIG CANYONi 2bl ~
2000lf, '550K, Owner Mey carry, ,.. opt. $3800(1110
Exclusive. Gate'd Community
.-·AT.OP NEWPORT COAST
· • Enclose~ Garage
· • Alarm System
• Washer/Dryer/Refrigerator
• Fitness, Business, Clubhou~e Centers
One Bedroom Apartment Homes from $1290
Two Bedroom Apartment Homes from $1490
$200 Security Deposit with apprcwed credit
(Does not indwk ~t deposit)
San Joaquin Hiiis at
Newport Rici Drive
By Owner t4MtM1S7
BACK BAY MOBILE HOME wiC.i>ena & carpo!t 21>< 2ba
l!plc, many c:lo$ets. storage &had, large IOI, wNll wooct
fence. custom btlellwollc.
lulh !188ll lawn 1prinkle11
VlflW cA boats & water on
bldl bey c.,, be 11111
SAT NOV 13t!f, ~.
tit by teqUllt Cell Own« e
94M7S.t264 .,._---------------------1 33~1
OPE~ SAT/SUN 1-5 2 DAUPHIHE The Summit,
3bt, 311&, lprOI 1100 If.
New wood fin 6 bllnd1. 1 BY OWrMt REDUCED TO '
"'°9,000 Mt-718-0817
2WkiTESANOS
Newport Coelt Polme 4br
Ubl, s Cll' g1r, 3 "1>1c'a. on lg pnv corner lol. l<lnt-
atu mat 1utte. $928,000
Agt Jamie MM5M211
Ai"so&.U'TEL'( BEST 8UY1
Lwge Townhome, exqWlle ' gerckln. itone 08llo. tilt
fCM¥1(all, 2Br 2.se.. 3 bl!, $585.000. Jucty Kola.r
BfoQ(, 949--318-5575
BEST AOY
OPEN SAT 1-4, 12 ANJOU
3Br .... ,,811$ l&ke ~· lanlly/lmm.cultte. Recblfld
10 $409,000 Must S..1 San<>/ OeleyJPrud Ce Riiy
· 901'21HSl8
WALK TO BALBOA ~ ' + LOii vaurlld ctll, i.o peljOI, '1830 00 (888) 783-8788
THE SHORES
APTS
1 & 2BR
TOWN HOMES
$300 OFF
MOVE-4N
Selected Unit• • • • • • • • • • • •
Starting O
$1095/mo.
Mo1o Mo leaae • .. w •• ,. • pet**
community.
8 block•
from tht beach.
94~2811
: • . .... 7""", .• :·
• ~ ' I • ~·
• 'W
" ..,. ·YT-..... ~ .... ..,.
Spectacular
Otean And· Harbor Views
Newly Renovated
• Wallc to Balboa Island, • Spacious Ooorplans
Fashion Island, • Concierge service
restaurants & theatres p . L--ch • nvate~
• 3 lighted tennis courts • PctS wdc.omc
• Resort style pools, spas, • Purnislfcd luxury
fim.css center & sauna ..suites available
· One bedroom from $1,550
One bedroom with loft from $1,725
1'Po bedrooms from $1,945 .
Promontory Point
Pacific Coast Hwy at Jamboree
888-783-8786
OPEN DAILY 8:30AM-6:30PM
Mari11t·1· Squart'
• Ocean Breezes • Spacwus Floor Plans
• Resort Style Pool • Vaulted Ceilings
· • Bubbling Spa • Lush Green Landscaping
$200. Security Deposit with Approved Crtdil
(Does not inclu<k pet ckposit)
949-645-0252
l IVE ·1 N LUXURY ~
..
APARTMENT HOMES
Exclusive Fas~ion Island Lifestyle
• 24 HR Se<.urity Cate
• Clubhouse Facility
2 Bed trom S2l60
2 Bedfden from $3010
• Concierge SeMce
• 24 HR Fitness Center
' I Bed frorri S 1870
I Bed/den fro m 52075
Cas F'ireplaces
'>root Celllnes
Condo Specs
$ubt rr nean Par n&
Custom Home Dts1gn Program Ava1fablt
Fndoy, November S, 1999 13
['L-.=11420 ~J 1-==11471 EMPL=I r;::::;::=============::'I fr Ntwpoit Beacn * · · OFRCE Ht:l.I' r Newport Mann· a ••• Giant °"199 Sele 'ff Tlllelll OCI N2 lfona For conltrudlOn co phof'86 NoVMlbtf Ith It 3-PW, Tru T~ senst-•
2300 Wlndwerd Lane '°'9.A-300 Shi.ha ~cdn ~~..:;a; Aprartm. ent~ . 5111 to be Slturdly Only ~ (3 ~ , .... , Fu•Re$ M~Z..9103 '0t from 1:00 AM untll 3:00 PM $399 obO ~3-64s-6797 * i4M42·3700 Bayfronl c:ommurtuy wnh pnva1e beaeh Meny Flbulov1 lt1m1! Pmrt iliiW
&r rparina Walk to Balboa t.land sho~. NP SAT IAAM :a.a llER"""..-r 0 · W d Minutes Crom Fashion Island 202t Vllte Cljon ._.. "~ river ante
SperWI 51ytl etedenza end WAMTEO oSt.22 per hour plua ..
• Wood-burntnflgas fireplaces
• Private garages-
• Boat •hps available
Now Lc11,.lng l BR :md 2BR
Sl300-S2100 ,
llblel. household items. COAST COIN NEE s mlluge =·II==~ speed 01..Q COINS! Gold, 5Mf, .
R0MAGE SALE Sii l Sun ~~~2~s, = t~~4~~~. ~~
Nov tth ' 7th t-3:30 Coll• TOP IUIRECOROSI dltional work m1y be ... ... Vl181'1111 Memoriel ... u, 567 w 11th St. Lot• of Jw R & B. SOUi ROCie etc 1v1llable • Sorry No Pets tt.ma, computen, lier-, MIKE SO's & 60'a PleaK call (9'49) 760-0919 .: TV1, c1m1u1, trHur, 949-645-7505 Mutt have truck or Van,
llability ln1ur1~ with
proof or p1yment11 drivet1 licenM, 80Ci1l
security card, and
ci.en O.M.V. print out.
•48R SBA llouM•
+ den, 275 E 11111 St, m~o. No·peclfllnoM.
94M4§.04411
PriVlie 381 2 saa. Np, 2-c gar w/C>penef, W/d, dlw, dis·
pQ6af, patio, ccwerld entry,
$1600/tno. 949-780-0929
WESTCLIFF Cozy 2br houM, lg IWm, bNm eel, pttv pa!IO, no pets, $1400
AVlll Hov I. 14MU·2'03
lawn mower, clothltlg, etc •
Si1u1c1ay, Nov &th 7-11.-n 468 TRAVEL
GIANT MOVING SALElll N ACATION
1117 Mangolc:I. COione dll
Mar. in lllley ~ 3rdl'lh
Sit f.12 Fumhure, tooi.,
blQI, clothe•, metdllng eolld Olk uphollltrtd 1ol1 l low Nit, book lhlllv•,
I 2 Ro\.W'ld Trip Amlrlk
Tlckel• lel'M!l Slnta Ml \o
Denver. $ISO.each °'*' l•IYll Cal 51~288-S2M
t•ble. 4&5 s.n Bernardino 470 SCHOOLS
Ave., Newport Beech. Pf9-lfNSTnUCTI N ule on furn &4~2·5554 • n 0
ROOMS Set. a.m o 608 1ri1 CdM FOR RENT 11n alley) Lots o1 tun stutt1 Phlebotomy Course
Boston Reed Co Calfl Reg
•3901291 1-1100·2011141
Mole!
MANAGERS
•SPECIAL•
$154.00 + tax Wldy
(Must presenl this Ad)
235nns&~ smi..cs on beaulltuty ~~r Lobby/Olfect diet phones/Free HBO,
ESPN & Disc/Pool &
Jacuu1, Gu851 '11Undty
CIO$e to 405 & 55
Fwys Min's lrom 0 C Felr~. co1eoe end bells wanq clsln:e
10 $hOp$ & 11$\CIUIW\IS COSTA MESA
...OTOR INN • ttn Hltbof 81Yd
Ptlonl MM45 '940
cwe.1t11dt Pmaae 11ome.
pll1ly furnished $300Jper mo.• 15% eiec. +MC dep
No pets, 949-6-42-4185
Womens ciothillg. neft' sam-ple fleece jllekets ~ &
ldults ctiild1ens lays &
doltwlg 4·&fr, ~ 9IC
144o~~1
POOl COVER PLUS ADJUSTABLE REEL $150
.0949'-~5 •lier 4pm
SEASOltED AREWOOD 1't4S CARD
FREE DELIVERY wltl)ln renon. 714-1114-0916
TAOPICll OUTDOOR
Pllme l plentl. All typetl
1 Giiion 'tHRU 24"80XES,
S2 to &200 714-646-6341
XTRA LONG TWIN SOX
SPR1NGJMATIRESS. S110
XMAS TREE NEW 7FT
Stlind Ind $50949-645-951 s
I 8 Y AU. PIAHOSI
Antlq\IGS • Quality tumrture one~ or w!lole houseful!
Cash peid l!OO-t>49-4922
1m~o:1
APPODDILYI'
SEITERS
fT/J7I'
ci., & E•na~ "Mlb 812-~~o -Per Hour
Tup-pnxlut•as
higher
• flnhll o.....l•i.....n..:
•WI It""" . ...,. ..... . •u... .... ............
Ea. In 19119 Ill CAJl!la ~le
aivl gn>ll"UlR • •Call b llpf>l.
1-888-31$-474-1
f AT EASE"
MENS STORE
Fuhion llllnd IS now hlMg .se11on•d comm nles
ISSCC'' & gill wr1ClP91S Apply In peraon. Acrou ,__,_......,_....,....,,,..,~--.• tfom lloomlnpdll ..
OAT EASE(l
WOMENS I HOME
Siert Fasl\IOn ls181id
seeks txp'd PT ,.aales
assoc·s and seasoned
~ng application•
Mon to thru Frt from
l :001m to 4:00pm.
P""9 bring all r•
quf red. lnfOfmltlon.
ThMt Orange County
Attn: Pem Beddngham
2901 GlfTY A~.
5-nta An1, Cl 92704
714-549-8548
IOM33-4080
UNntO COt.OAS
OF BEN~
SolM CC>Nt Pllzl FIT~~~ CGmn
..... benllll
PIT Sl7hr + Ccrnm
NB/Pl'orl Fem to &Mre; ~v tum Twitwne. els to Fllh II/
Fwtp Mlnkg. 1M ~
~=~-~= Gllt wrappe11, AW'Y WI -======:::: person or Can Leann o
mo. + Ilda. 949-&44~72
CMh nn1 evt. Eiec 11omt
quiet. gated, pool, $450 &
S500 + dep + ref's. U&'Shr
bdl. . L<we C11Slll\l\ipbMI
949-631-2111 .
NewpoiiJl~lne Live In
Luxury 2 mestet. 11111•
Shlte w.tussron. Endless 11crullona lac. Th•
949·759-7985
UllitNte Loe. to IMt, W'Oltt & _ii• 649 Al.I~
play$650mo 1149-729-7170 ""r.J" ~ liN\itiful N ~ 00¥er SilOill
ttn LO erw,,...,1111t1.c:atJW som~8~ST
phone lloolwp. ITllle prel'd.
AUT0 8tSTAO now hiring m11u11.
COUrtlOUI stall IOt d
polilJOns Sl•llJnO at
f1 ™" pit.I$ ll')ldcal benttu bOniJ5 I stotll ~ Pf0!11m. Salary 1'11!1* depending on
••p.1rl1nc1 PIHH
te1v1 mes11ge
!M9-833 I~ IJt 13
"4$)+11111 949-645-9515 2202 St. lllllla St. •BARBEOU£h
.._,._,CA 12101 GALORE t--~!, ,.__ ... ___ &_l< ___ CA_•._M__.'H Wor:'r! ~~~~-
""' ...... ,~ 1nvlronm1nt Some
......... neeoed. HP HEIGHTS, lg llttnletlw NEED CASH? FT, to.m.7pm. Slllrt
epece fOf 11chltec1 or u MONEY R>lt $$ 17/hour up (D.O.E.) comm clMlgnet lo aharw 99 e.n.t l*g ivlil. Apply
MO/MO MM31-42A ~ ~BOOaD e 8etbeqUM Galore •PRIME AIRPORT L6Ci 2a3t Klltlor Blvd~
5'onemlll ~ c.rMr Costa Meu =-.:ltlf*I 1.'8:6 COW:CTIBUS (~..W int.n4NI
l'lflltl.11M3Wl7t PAIN'l'IM<lS card l Gift Shop PIT wmi POnm ::f. acme ....,._, ,.
1hDI1'0 ~ ~1-~ HOtmtou>l CASHIER/CLERK 111&1 Ptwmacy FT. k~ In,
40 ~ Cd Chlltel 114-5'0-6811
., N6wlxxt 8Nct? EliA Real Ett111 ,...
a.11111111 -~ you1 help NOWI S111t -.vr _ _... COUIM Wld lrtnno PfOYidtd
u no coal lo tou!
I00-4()().5311 t Pl 1111
PIH99 bit IWll9 tlllt
the 1m1n91 In th cat·
egory m1y require
you 10 cell 1 900
number In whlcl\
there 11 • c:h1191 I*
minute
480 BUs.NESS
OPPORTUNmES
P..._ be'wwy ol ouc
of ... COl'llPll\lff.
Ctl9ctl wilt\ the local een.r Bu1lnee1 Bu· mu before you IWlCI
~,~ .... lot-
NfVlc"-Reid Incl
undtrstend «iy eon·
lr1ct1 before vou
sign.
WOtt F1om Home• t 111Chno FIT. S3KMto Pff
potentlel. 611-4tl-41U
Hl. 45'7
1~~1
BAD CREDfT OK
Consohd1hon, Per1on1I
Ek""'4SS I.Ow int•• ntla no up tronl l•s Call
Stralfotd 1-t77·954-8002.
=I
.. 1 OUfl'Y 11fl.
COUNSELOR t YEAR Ol.D BATTEMS & ~ Sc*illst STEREO Sll500
-· .... ,.,._ .. ···~'·;J;l
~ .. . ' t .• ,~
·1 7"
,., ... .;• .. , ,, .
\Yell. -Mt-723-4445 ~~~~~~ .. '-ff~,:;;.=-=--.:==-=====-:;;;;;:;;1-
BA In P1ych l for • •
••P81•811Ct Pf•letrtd SUP AVA!l"-6NQ Ttftll
37 5 houlWI( SNS~ l EASE. SellbcMI up 10 •· DOE Ful Btntftla F• In length, j)'1 tllP Ml!1 to ~ Attn ~ 8CYC. Mt-tia.4405 d (714)54U141
,
...
EJdeirty COllS* neeclS OOod ~ Notcwef s 1100 lie ...... ~ condiarl nwt. You .. ~
f ridoy, November 5, 1999
~ ....... ---..1 18
" ~== 11 IM~ I
Cedlll1c Concourt '97 CADILLAC Dt:Yll.U: w CADll.LAC ELDORADO '91 Low m11es. beige Ian ttlv, lo 14k ml, white tan 1eat11e1, Touring, 300 HP. Nonhslar,
11t0001ool. cit & motel VB, Nonhs1ar. bar ol warr. white pearl, Ian lthr. 1200320 524,988 (746n2) -• S2&.9ee gorgeous! (6041sn $32,988 NABERS Naber1 NAllERS
(714)540-9100 714-540·9100 (714)540-9100
C ADILLAC 6£vltl£ ·§1
Lo mi. lthr, VB Northstar, bal
ol waH\21774(1) $20,988
Nabers
71 4-540.9100
SEU YOUR USED VEHICLE
THB.OV<µl 'ClASSIFlED
.
• n:sTYOUR PLAY
Nonh·South vulnenblc. South deals.
WEST • 976
09852 o KQ4 •QJ 10 SOUTH
EAST
• 42 o K107
0 J 108 •AK972
+AKQJ5J OAO J 0 A(J .
•S ·'
The bidding: ...
SOIJlll WF.SI l• P .. l• • P .. •• p ..
Opening lead: Queeo of •
UauaUy, we urge our readers to
spurn a finesse if at all possible. On
this deal the opposita holds true..
Cover the Eut-Wesl bands and
decide how you would play fQ\lr
spades 4fltr tho lead of the queen or
clubs and a club continuation.
South's openin& bid WI\! an artifi-
"
cial same for~e and two diamonds
w• neaatlve. P@l1 of tl\c two-club
pmc·force conven<ion is that a rebid by responder or tw6 ·no INmp shows
nlues, '° the cheaper IT\ll)Or is used
for a second' neaative. With nine
trick.a in hand 111d iu little u a dol.I·
bleton diamond probably cnouah ro
make aame, to bid less ch.an four apades with the South hand would be
the hoi&ht of pess11nism. The Only posslble play for a 10th trick i9 via a heart finesse. However,
o~ finesse is unlikelyto be enough -
playing East for a dou~leton kina of
hearts miuin& seven card$ in the 'uit
fuu little p.l'06pect and there is only
one sure entry to dummy. But anoth·
er finesse rrilght provide a second
entry I ,
Ruff the second club with a high
INmp, lead a trump and finesse the
ei&ht! If it loses, you will go down
two trick.a instead of one, but that is
little enough to pay for a ru)istic
chance to make the conlract. When that wins. take.the bean finesse. Now get back to the tablo with the ten of
SJ)ades to repeat the heart finesse. Your sparldinr play has lal!ded you a
game contr11Ct and the plaudi!S of the
other players in tho pme.
1:9.J t:::EJ l:.::=J
8 passenger, silver/grey, V·8, at. ps, pb, eel '?!-tow $32.995 96-47a1
My 261< miles, automatic, pci\g, eustom lnl, wmows, . BAUER JAGUAR
dual sir, &mnm stereo, hM 1 owner, 102k ml, xtn1 cond 714-953-4800
power pak, privacy ·glass, $6, 195, 714·968-9992 JAGUAJI l(J6 SON 40 '96
lactoiy alloys. HONDA ACCORD DX '91 $33,995 96-4721 (207181) $19,995 Sliver bluefgrey inlerlof, ao-BAUER JAGUAR LEXUS OF WESTMINSTER tornado. air, am/Im cassette, 714-953-4800
(714)192"'906 on I y 1 5 K m 11 es . JAGUAJI XJ6 SON 40 •97
DURANGO DODGE '91 C1n528) $15,995 $37,995 91-4655
Low mites, super dean LEXUS OF WESTMINSTER BAUER JAGUAR
buy lor wholesale. (114)892_.906 714-953-4800
$25,995+ lees rWF144740 HONDA ACCOAlil LX''h JAGUAR XJS SON 40 '98 . UNO ROVE'R Forest gr~ge. auto-$32 995 96-4732
Newport 8ch 94M40-6445 mallc, arr, llJ'Mm cassette, ' 9 ER G '
FORD AEROSTAA \llR '91 power pak, till & cruise,~ ~~ ... 95~A_.::R
Extended, very low mileage, 8 • 0 0 0 m 1 I e s . JAGUAR XJ8 SON 40 '96 tut~ loaded, am·lm cassette, (013025) $17,995 $33 995 98-4676 Ilk> ~. $7500 OBO. Lexus OF WESTMINSTER ' BAUER JAGUAR 714-540-5995 714-785-611B (714)89~ 714-953-4800
*FORD BRONCO •ii* * INFiiii'Ya3o '93 * JAGOAR XJ6 SON 40 '96 Eddie Bauer Edit, whllMan, taMan, hhr, d power, Bose $33 995 . 96-465t
loaded, mini cond, 4X4, CO CO, stereo, sunroof, Mint ' BAUER JAGUAR l)layer, ~ 39k ml, $18,900 cond. $8995. 949-494-4120
080. 714-754-0737 or cell JAGUAR XJ-6 ·11 714-953-4800
phOne 714-473-0001 Low miles, Whl1e. tan leather, J19u1r XJ6 V1nden Pl11
FORD T·BIRD UC 95 colec1or quality! (471720) S3t,99rc'1114°' '9:&...665 VI, Auto, Pell'!' whltllgf9y $4,988 lthr Inter, UK mllH, NABERS • BAVER JAGUAR
1 owner, gwlged, !*feet (714)540-9100 714-953-4800
~ondltlon: t10, 500. JAGUAR XJ6 L SON 40 •97 Ja9u1t XJ6 Vandell Pl11 949-645-1629 ~J995 97-4352 Sedan-40r '96 •
FORD TlURUS '93 BAUER JAGUAR S36,9:luER JAau:-4654
Auto, all pwT, WIWtlle grey 714-963-4800
"hr V.er, completely loadedl JAGUAR XJ6 SON 40 '.95 • 71c.953.c800 Key1ess entry, CO, aontool. $261995 95-473a It's Bl! there
Stand new eng. wfth 4K mi BAUER JAGUAR every day
$9500 714-~5262 714-953-4800 ·n i 1
HOME, HEALTH JWD BuSINESS
·~~ ....
~-
I 220 =~NTWO 112'0 CE~ I
In an elfon to 011111 the best LEAKY .Sl\oWllB-RllPl!red. ~l>MCe possible to our read-Regroutlng l ln1t1fl1tlon. 11rs and advertisers, we will LH70130 ON1 ofTtle.
r.11u1re Contractors who 94M7a.8065 714-M6-e526
ii•Jvert1se In the Service ''WOAK OF ARt'
U.r1Kl0ty to IOClude tttelr M1rbte
1
111e & Granite Slab
Gontractoo License number Specla latl Ll6S571 C.11
••their advertlS8melll Your IOf Fr• Est. 714·297-SOOJ LO·operatton Is greatly
apprecia19d
224 ADDmONS
/REMOOEUNO
FARn.ING 1"1£RIORS
Kitr.hen I Balh I AemocJel ~ AddiU<Q Visa/MC
l•560875 949-645-9325
226 AIR COND
/HEATING
FOl.GER HEATING l AIR lnstaftatlon & repair on all
t><ands. Low Aal881Free Est.
ll763312 714-215-0011
Loul Au 'Pair P1aw.m
Qualified Host F.am1hes
Cuhura11y Enrich1ns F11'~1ble,
legal. 4Sh~ Many N.J
P•i" to choose from
Am~c~S24~.
Call 800-713·2002
www.euriuJNir.com 274 c.:a
· Cotn~er Rtp1lr
and Nt1WOl'tlfn9 We buy and sell computers, parts, soft· ware, bOOlc.t Assemble custom PC Netwolk computelS a<I business
FIX PC, ~. Mac,
WS. On ookio Hoiklaya
Sale. 1oo:MAdams,HB.
~769·1811
PC Rapelr, Upgrldet, New
&iik;ls, NlllWOllUnQ.. Progr*ll
& Tremg. On lite SSCE Oeoree+ •llP ~9-574·9848
AFl'ORDABiE, IMF,
REUABLB, PERSONAL
• SERVICE
SURFSIDE
INTERNET
All 0.gital S6k COllnttllOOS
• J'm l ~ton!M!
• Sdupfnt!
• Uoliftlllfd Acl'all
• IAicllAct PtiOocNlritr.
All for S96 00 tqUal to
$6.86 per month!
When you sign up on line at
www.surfisidt.nd
18600 M.11n Suttt l29S
HuntiJll100 Bndl. CA 92648
1.amJRfStf)H
(l..fn.87 ·7'433)
ACTIONUNE ELECTRIC
Latgelsmal Jobi, 1rouble sho0t1no and lnstaltatlon expert. focal, quick response 71~30 US1A63 uc£ASEb CONTRACTOR
No Job too small All SYC'8
Aeplk, Remodel, F.,., Soll: New Servtoes 94645-3456
I
Ntw C...uit.t.ocltl
it.. Mdide111 . r .... ,.,
• Sw1Me1• Upptllt
• RfwlN
• TIOllblahoot.iq
Lpalr • r.ol I SPA
• le/Outil..r Lb.
F.t • Ntw Orabca • C....
FREE ESTIMATE
(949tz22 • 7478
., ..... , ' .
-... , ...... , ' ..
Harbot Bay
Gius &. Minor, Inc.
lruaJlations • ~ll Sh~r tic Tub 1indc1111ra Windowt • P,uo Doon
5<lttn• • Scrttn Ooots
949-642-0424'
-, ... -., ... ,, ~ ~ .... ,...-... --i "~"-
I '' r !>-~ . . ' " .. , . . . ;,t-'. . . ~ . . f:'rll
HOM£ IMPAOVEMEN'TSll t;:~~~
AH Tttidll HOini
lm~•.lfltollrl 611 Kitchen remodellno. pgr 1141888·20n. pt1 71V
26'>-7185. Ouk:ll toMliOfi· HOiiERd Al!M00£UNO ·FREE EST. Ruld,ttomm. Oeck1/
FtneWCarpentry/EleCVTIIW OlvweNSmlta Jobe old Loe refs aw 71~~
QOmtY CRlfftlllA
.. --y-.... fr" . .
PHEN+DIET
Complete Mr~I Prot
$ 79/ Wdaht Lou .... Medo llld...i..I
VIAGRA
REcAJN CoHRooQ IN
lV&n~
S00.700-8"4
J"p Grand Cherokee Laredo '9) While, lully
loaded, VS, ABS, rtlfW lire•. 1•ownar, 111 rGc;orda.
11111'11 oond 11 uoo obo
I Mt-721 .. n I
JEEP Gr1nd Cherolulct 93
V6, whllefO!ty. pnSllne cood
ln51de/out Ort(J owner wlorr>v 681< ml. AC. ca.ss. PIW, PIS.
Ult, tint, rack, oversized
tires end upgraded $h0Clla.
Wiii not laall $13,950
Private f)lfty. 94t-720-7337
LANO ROVER DISC '99
Sleek, Low mlles,
Former service loaner.
$27,999 t fells tXA79201 UNOROVEJI ·
Newport Sch 949-64~5
LEXUS 0$300 '98 ~ry. auto, air, lea.fief, moonrool. co, cfltorne elloys.
fUlpowerpa
(121371) $3t,995 LEXUS OF WEST.MINSTER
{714)192-QOe
LEXUS LS400 '97
Moonstooe.1Yoiy, auto, air,
lthr, fut power pale, moon.
roof, Cd, dYome aMoys
(068653) $38.995
LEXUS OF WEST"41NSTE.R
(714)892.f90I
MAZDA MIATA '90
Conv Jwlhard top. blue, 5 speed, super Cteanl (143570) SS,988
NABERS
(714)540-9100
MERCEDES
MBZ5420 '95
Low mi, 1 own,
· xlnt cond.
Vf220381 $33,900
MERCEDES.
MBZ 5320 '95
Low mi xlnt cond
Vlt233029 $31,900 ,
MERCEDES
MBZ 300SE 92
xlnt cond.
Vf048847 '126,900
MERCEDES
MBZ560SL 89
.xlnt cond.
Vf091884 $18,900
EZ FINANCING
AVAILABLE
ANY KIND OF
••CREDIT*~
310-559-6146
Ganleninef L<wlst!lllt
lntrn rnnYSprinklm
Tm can11ru111/lntttidRtm«t
LABELS
!tAYc roui
SICNATUlf£ IElllJIDt w,.,'-1 .... f u1,,4
PiMml>i"I' wt11rt1torr
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Ct1amp1gne, low ml.
$35,1195 + ... tSA2229&4 LANO ROVEft Newpcll1 8ch MM4CM.._
MEACE6£i IENZ iJ .... WAGON••••
fmltljl(), ~an. lthr. IU!llf;
3<d Mil. mt cond. loldedl
M'ake alter 7fH6+0137 0t
Ctl pmie 114-473-0001
Meroede• Bena iU50 94
Smo.ke 111Y«, ltKMd e~.I
2 tope wfraclt 1 Owner, ""' mllee, S4t.SOO. Aatc for George 14M40-10M
NISSAN IOOZX 't1
2+2. T·Top, 2lld ownw, Pearl wftlte, MK t1111et. great cul 111,ns.
MM424102
RANGE AOVER 'M Auto,~....-,._.,
euntoot 111 rf.1 •Int cond, on SOI< m S15,200 080 94~ZC.791 MH40-151f
Slab tOO TlM'bo Conv 'ti
pre11c1 condition, fully loaded. 1 ·owner. 11,500 949-646-2227
Mtf'c:edee iOOE '16
6eyl, arctic whVpalomino
lltv lnl, '94 c:ortYel'SIOn.' new tints, air beg, ~ pwr, smog l
tag lhrOU!tl Oci 2000 M'ust see belofe you buY AA-Y car This II class S1!!,600 Obo TOYOTA AVALON XLS 'It private~. 94~760-1421. Cobell bluelttor;. IN!he<. 4'
MEACEDUA50SL'74 81Aomallc. air, lul pcNler ---~-~~
White, ne~ top, cuatom pack, lactoiy chrolTle iiovs.
wheel11 ~ Condition. lll'Mm ~· ABS, show-
$5900. 11 220.utt (~B) • 121,995
MERCURY COUGAR '95 LEXUS OF WESTMIHSTEI' V·6, good condidon, super • (714)192.(i90I vaJuel (636692) SS,988
NABERS TOYOTA TAOOMA 'ff (714)540-t100 Trd Pre Runoer, lores1
Mercury Mountaineer 'ii7 gre&Man, aulomttic.. sport
Alt Wheel dllve, blect(fgrey package, air. am/Im •ltlef. rrty 39k, automatic, casseue. lactoiy elloys. 31" 11\r, flAI power pak, ABS, tires. becjifler, ful power
moonrool, alloys, runnlna ~ aiding rear window. boalds, anv'lm cassette & ea 551Ss1) $21,995 stacker. • • exus OF WESTMINSTER ~23796) $21,995 (714)192"'908 EXUS OF WESTMINSTER
• (714)891'6906 JOYOTA 4 RUNNER 98
MlTSUBISHIMONftRO'ii Lbw ml, Super c:leanl
SUP,erelean!S17,995 -t lees $20,995 -t f88$ l0027092 #WP001852 lANO AOVEA LAND ROVER Newport Bch 949·64().844~ Newport Bch 94H40-6445
VW JETTA GL 'f7 "
5 tpd, pmr, cc
!9949Ml90894) s10.-Ma<EHHA VOU<SW 714-142-2000
NISSAN 300 ZJ( 2 + 2 193 -White/grey, t·bar. factory al-VW BEETtE 'M , VW PAUAT -IOys. automalic, air, full Auto, ac, cassttte. pw, pd, Sspd,IC,c:ua,~;;;11
P.Owtr pak, BOK mJlas. ·1 I I I t • a I I b y s • 70 lS36948) $14,795 (9970&'004762) S17,995
LEXUS OF WESTMINSTER MCKENNA VOU<SWAGEN (714)m690e 114442·2000
Put a fe w wor
HANDMADE OLD
WOJUl> PAINTS l~ORIOOEJUOR
l"l}"'rtd fem AUJtrrtl11
UMEWASH
80NCOTE
FRF.SCO
MllKPAINT .
For Esmn.tes un111Ct
ROBE.RT ISBEll
COMPANY
Profmiolllli p.,;,,,;l't
LK •4C)43W
Td. 949.646.3006
Pgr. 949.580.9626
lnrl~t Sm111 jobJ O.K.
For Protl11c1 info.
818.623~39'4
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Re-roofl • Repelra
Fr" Estimate• All~ofRoot. All Wor'k ou.,...,tMd
(949) 631.·1085
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M.S.R.P. WAS UO.t1S
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M.S.R.P. WAS S17,57S
Friday, November 5, 1999 IS
World -Class
Daalar.s--lp .
5 .9 .9
Plus 98 cents per month, plus tax. 47-mo closed-end lease on approved
credit. $1999 down plus drive-offs. 15 cents per mile over 12K miles per
ar. 1 at this rice. 2718
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troducing a
of Jaguar
....