HomeMy WebLinkAbout1997-11-11 - Orange Coast PilotNEWPORT BSM:tl -H the
forgotten land at the Santa An.a
River mouth is someday trans-
fonned into a hot spbt for natwe
appreciation, city offidals here
Denis O'Neil said.
The Friends of Harbors,
Beeches and Parks -a recently
fonned citizens group beaded by
former Councilwoman.Jean Watt
-spawned the idea. Now, Watt .met.. the group is working to gar-
ner community support for the
plan.
A West Newport Beach Associ-
ation meeting planned for Nov. 19
at City Hall will mark the start of
that process.
•west Newport Beach is an
area that I think is undei1cpce•••ted
• SEE PARK PAGE 4
•Council agrees to come up with a better way to
discern between serious and petty legal violations.
to city staff ud gift a bett.er'def-
inltion u to which ftolations.
should recelft q, ~· Howevs, no·daiie wu set for
that meeting;, f . By Tim Grenda, Daily Pilot Coun~ Heather
COSTA MESA -Just how
unlawful is unlawful?
maken, a local Christian com-
mune that owns and operates
the Piecenu1kers Country Store.
The group, which bas been
aiticized by some for its stern
anti-government views and reli-
gious beliefs, has repeatedly
been cited by the city for build-
ing and fire code violations and
for refusing to get permits for
events they hold at their shop.
Somers said that when she
joined the c:oundl last year, she
was unclear about what dty
code violations received imme-
diate staff attention and which
were considered less serious.
The aty Council tackled that
tough question Monday night
and informally agn!led to give ·
staff members a better way to
separate serious lawbreakers
from not-so-serious violators.
The policy discussion came
on the heels of recent legal steps
the city took against the Piece-
On Monday, the ~ouncil
agreed to look at shuffling its
cmrent enforcement guidelines
"As a new council member, I
was very unclear and left in sort
of a gray area on this,• Somets
said.
• SEE COUNCIL PAGE 4
, .
American
Legion
celebrates
Veterans Day
The local Sons
of the American
Legion will salute
Veterans Day with
a ceremony and
luncheon today.
A 10:30 a.m.
ceremony will
precede an 11
a.m. luncheon at
215 1Sth St., New-
port BHdl. The
festivities will fea-
ture Medal of
Honor winner
William D. Barber,
a lifetime mem-
ber of the chapter
and guest of hon-
or.
For more infor-
mation, call 673-
5070.
ALSO TODAY •..
The following
publk agencies
and businesses
will be dosed in
Newport Beach
and Costa Mesa
today in honor of
Veterans Day.
•Banks
•City halls
•Courts
• K-12 Schools
• Post offices
• Street sweeping
• Ubraries
The city of
Newport Beach
will be collecting
trash as usual
iocsav.
'
Father may
sue over
'censored'
writings
• Parent of school newspaper editor says
students owed an apology, compares new
district guidelines to 'Nazi Germany.'
By Husein Mashni, Daily Pilot
NEWPORT-MESA -Claiming his daughter's
First Amendment rights were infringed, Arcadia
attorney Michael Miller said
he stands ready to file-a law-
suit against the Newport-
Mesa Unified School District.
Miller's daughter, Canie
Miller, was the editor of the
Costa Mesa High School
newspaper last school year. Near the end of her
senior year, there were several articles about sex sub-
mitted for publication by various students.
Wanting the articles published, Miller spoke with
Costa Mesa Principal Andy Hernandez, who said he
found some of the materials objectionable.
• SEE LETTER PAGE 4
City rejects crash
victims' claims
By Jennifer Armstrong, Daily Pilot
NEWPORT BEACH -The city won't be settling
the first five claims filed by students involved in the'
May 23 acddent on Irvine Avenue that killed 18-
year-old Donnie Bridgman and injured nine others.
City Manager Kevin Murphy bas denied claims
filed by the families of Bridgman, Amanda Arthur,
Kevy McNeil. Den 1bwmend and William Watson.
Murphy has not yat ieviewed the claim filed Friday
on behalf of Heidi Punderburk.
The dlbm eiBege ...._med conditions Oil 1"ilae
Avenue -where 10 Newport Harbor High School
students were riding in a Oievrolet Blazer when tt
overturned -were to blame for the accident. 1be
•SEE Cl.AIMS MOE 4
eliminated Writings from a
Costa Mesa High ~ication
that they deemed offensNe.
Fnet"..rm of tbe pw w a Impar-
t.ant pert of tbe tingl our~
believed in. 1bef did not talk of lmW+"'l1
these freedanl to a me.en group of peo-
ple. but in tbe BID of Rlgbls errten.1ed
them to all
It WU the Hiden and StaJim of tbe
world who wanled to limit them to Cl!I'·
Wn groups. Tbe Newport-Mesa 1Jultees
say its •not a matter of c:aJIQllbtp but al
annnon decmcy. good bebmm and
good rules of jmrrnetipn • Wrong.
1bme who oppoee1ree speech always
try to iro1-.e those goody~ tmml to
stop free speech.
reacttog it.
You would be cballei>ged to find a
greater suppoltel' al our freedom al
speech than L But as with an of our
rights, interpretatilOn is varied and am-
plex.
In a simple scenario as applied to
writing, freedom of speech allows Per-
son A to wdte anything be wants. How-
ever, Penon 8 ii not obligated to pub-
lish it PiDally Person C cannot arbifrar.
ily bum or otherwise prohibit Person D
'Ibat41 llfe's liltle ..... banblJ
1eamed bf nery atlf'dug Wittler. Wiit-
ing and rwling are the beditas. Pub-
Hcattcm js a pmilege wtlo9e parameten
are mandated by otben. And in the
real wcDl of pub1k:8tlnn. temibOitiM
and jonmalistlc styles, aeattvtty and
Regarding the Daily PDot edito-
rial that aitici:zed the IChool boud
and stated. • As supertntendent.
Bernd ought ta be abje to do his
job w)thout S<meODe staring
down over ms shoulder, second-
giiessing him an the while.·
I would like to point out that
the Daily Pilot seems uncon-
cerned about the students. I
applaud the trustees for being
concerned about the students.
I want to thank you for print-
ing Martha Pluor's mmments. I
quote from tbe art1de printed
Oct. 23, •1 think we're sending
miRd messages to our stu-
dents,• Pluoc said ·we have our
student policies regarding cheat-
ing, and staff sboWd live up to
or exceed tbOle standards.
We're mocteHng behavior. That's
what I want teacben to do.•
The Daily Pilot edltodal
seems to care about Mac Bernd
• • . ·.1111 1.• .••
9t II the Nat'I palty to
prompdy CDn9CI .. """'°' ......... ..... Clll 57<M233.
WCW ..... ilill'llS
hnlnc.lbe~
dlad.-out~ perm"" llW• °' CIDl¥'lllht ....
but it never
mentions the
students.
I hope the
editors of the
Daily Pilot wl1l
think back tO
their days in
high school
and remember
how much
rebuttals
Stlldent•s
1mpubllshed
prosesparb
a>ntroversy •wrtltDg_............,..,....,.
bf dlltdd oftldala. But • .,..,.
.,. It ebot*i Mft beml pmMd
•• ~~UlJW9Y· ., ................... °"",..
•raa.•N1Lea• are MMom tbe t.ue.
Men aftm the det&n•mg--18
emtt. Amprtcan freedom. the~ to
. ..... money. 1bank beawm foi"....U
pl"W e1, Bterary joumaJI (both of wbk:b
still maintain their own aiterla) and
self-publbhing.
A teamer ghiDg tMt answers
to studems ii no ecddent and
any teacher wbo does this
should not be teeddng. A super-
intendent should not accept this
behavior from any of the teach-
ers.
To quote you, •The boUd's
role ii to Mt polk:y, • and then
you acaisecl tbe trustees ol
miaomaDagtng when they
ezpect excellence from tbe
tHCben in this dlstdd and an
eppl'Ol)date punllhrnent from.
the supertnteudeGt.
h. tbe boud's ~stbility
to see that the polM'W are
adhered to. In lllf. ~Ion there
is no~' ... we .cbeettng,
either Jw. did GI' ... not c:beat.
n.cMri WllO lilt ..... kind of
n•mpltt lllGUl •~be tn
.. ddMiiliDcJllL
NANCY CARPENTER
Newport Beach
l •I
{
. . . . . .
in front,
from time to
time sang a in a voice
vaguely~ tllat of bis brother.
'The names of the members I
remember from that band are
Yank Lawson, Billy Butterfield,
Eddie.Miller, Matty Matlock.
Nappy Lam.a.re, Ray Bauduc, Jess
Stacy and Bruce Squires. Bruce
had started out as a Rendezvous
gate boy when I worked there.
That's an awesome list of Big
Band immortals.
Not long after that summer, I
began to visit various romantic
tropical islands bearing such
names as Kwaja)ein. Eniwetok.
Saipan. Guam. 1lnian. Leyt9 and
Okinawa. When I returned m
UM5, the Big Band era WU just
about to become a thing of the
past
About that time, Stan Kenton,
who played at the Rendezvous
years before with Everett
Hoagland's Band, had become
the guru of so-called progressive
jazz. He took over the Ren-
dezvous with middling sucooss.
Kenton was an innovator. I
remember the first band he put
together. It was an brass except
one lone saxophone. h laid an
egg. Kenton persevered with his
modern jazz, which was great
wilh music critics but didn't pack
~ ...... ted '5fiE~:::~..! . ~.~· ...... ..::. -\Wint ·~ ..... ... NiwlM -~ ...... .
· Stdnp. I lltll8 reumNence '
to the BaJbo8; 1he pre-Wodd Wat u dance that bed also originated
at the Rendezvous.
Then came Aug. 6, 1966. A fhe
broke out. and the Rendezvous
bumecl to the~ It bad
bumed m 1935 and been rebuilt.
Tbil time it wam't, and today is a
rather large mndmrlnttnn
But from Phil Hanis in 1928 to
Dick Dale in 1966, the Ren-
~WU one of Soutbeln Cal-
tfmda'I great ballrooms, drawing
hundreds of tboulands of young
people who came to dance during
its almolt -'O years of history. I
have a hunch that quite a f~ of
them made their ftnt visit to our
town to danoe at the Rendezvous,
saw what they liked, came back
and eventually lived here.
• RDIEU GAnDrB ls a retired judge
and a Corona def Mar resident. Hts coJ-
umn runs on~
Body washes to shore near Newport Pier
By Tlm Grenda, Daly Pilot
NEWPORT BEACH -The
body of a man offldals suspect
may have been reported missing
from Anaheim last.week washed
up on the beach near the Newport
pter on Monday moming, police
said.
The man, who did not have any
identification on him and whose
identity was still unknown Mon-
day evening, was found at about
9:~0 ll.m. by two women walking
on the beach near 2"th Street.
pdice said.
The women, Pat Sherrtck of
Garden Grove and Carol Olson of
Bellflower, said they were using
metal detectors on the beach
when Sherrick saw something
bobbing in knee-deep water just a
few yards off the beach.
At first Sherrick said she was
unsure what she saw but eventu-
ally recognized it as a man't body
and rushed to call poHce.
Ufeguards arrived soon after
and used their 'lf'bides to bJock
the view of the body frQll1 passers-
by and homes a.long West Ocean
Avenue.
Cormty coroner nffidals arrived
.
by 11 a.m. to take the body away.
1be man. who appeared to be
either white or Latino and middle-
aged, was dressed in brown pants,
a blue shirt, white sweat shirt and
white running shoes, authorities
said.
Newport Beach police Officer
Mike Deladurantey said~ was
"some speculation" that the dead
man was the same person who
was reported missing from Ana-
heim recently.
An abandoned car registered to
the man was found parked in a
nearby beach lot, Deladurantey
said.
., .. . -'~iC" ·I ,,,.. . .,,.· •.. :.... .. .:.-•••s •• "-•WHATEVER YOU'RE ~
LOO-KING FOR ...
KIM HAGGERTY I DAl.Y PLOT
Kite tails sway ln the wind as Les Short of Newport Beach gets ready to Oy a double Prencb
m.Wtary ldte at Newport Beach on Monday. Short bought the stunt kite two yean ago and
hu been hooked ever since. On this day he was flying four different ldtes. . ,
RECYCLED
RAGS
OPEN EVERY DAY!
2731 E. Coast Hwy
Corona del Mar
(714 675-5553
We'D ship any of our prepack.aged &ifts valued over $20.00 anywhere in
the continental United States FREE.
For arrival by Christmas place your
order before November 27, 1997.
Vislt our store today for details #222 Her;f:age nn
Christmas Blend Coffee is Bade f
Available Only At Hickory Farms.
Stop in f or a FRE E Cup! . . ' ; ' . ~ .
IDLLGREN SQUARE
(formerly locaJ•d in Westcliff Plavi)
270 E. 17th St., Suite 3
17th St between Santa Ana & Onngt Ave. near Mi Cua Restaanal
Open Daily
642-0972
. ..
'!'
roll-over acddent kiDed BDd9· man. put Al:tbur m a two-month
coma and caused brain damage
to her and 'lbwmmd. •
The daDm l8ek unspedfied
mooetary damages~ the city road ii poOOy d and
maintained. They blame the
road's banking, automatic sprtn-
VETERAN
CONTINUED FROM 1
Phillips prepared alongside
men he hardly knew but would
soon trust with bis life. He was pre-
pared for the worst
"I didn't think I would live
through whatever we were going
to go through,• be said. "I had
pretty much written that off."
Phillips didn't exactly begin the
historic invasion with the best of
luck: His squad was assigned to
drop from one of the last planes to
fly in over Normandy, all but elim-
tni\ting the element of~·
But as he stepped out of the
plane and into the warm. clear
June night, his chute opened and
be floated slowly -and a little off
course -into the French country-
side and an unlmown fate below.
·we may have done better by
being scattered around because
the Germans didn't know where
the hell we were," be said.
Using a cricket -a small metal
signaling device Anny soldiers
used to find each other in the dark-
ness -Phillips contacted another
American paratrooper who bad
landed in the same field.
By the next day, they bad
linked up with six other U.S. sol-
diers, including a second lieu·
tenant who took C()ITlTDand of the
squad.
lbe group -now without
sleep for almost two days -con·
tinned to move mostly unnoticed
through sleepy French villages fat
a day lDltil they were sunounded.
shot at and captured by German
soldiers.
After a brief interrogation by a
German officer who spoke impec-
cable English, Phillips and the oth-
er prisoners were loaded onto
trucks, train.I and later marched
through several German prisoner
of war camps over the next few
days.
One stop was a monastery not-
so-attectionately dubbed "Starva-
tion Hill" by American soldiers.
"They called it that because all
you got to eat was a little grass
soup every day,• Phillips recalled.
Soon after, Phillips was moved
to Stalag 12A near Umburg, Ger-
many, where be was issued his
identification tag -a thin metal
plate bearing the stamp "Sf XU A
8t883• -and later to Stalag 4B, a
German detention camp near
Mublberg that was his home for
the next 11 months.
Although he bad lost 50 pounds
since his capture and living condi-
tions were miserable, Phillips said
be was treated humane\)' by the
/
Banquet ROoms
· in Costa Mesa
enemy, and his spirits remained
high. His only confrontation with a
German officer was a slap aaoss
the mouth when be talked back,
he said.
Phillips passed the time by talk-
ing with a buddy about philosophy
and what each of them planned to
do after the war, he said.
lb.en,. after almost a year as a
POW, Phillips' ordeal ended sud-
denly.
One morning, after the prison-
ers bad been forced to march 15
miles to elude invading Russian
forces, Phillips and the others woke
to find their guards had vanished.
Presumably afraid of post-war
life under the Russians, the Ger·
man guards apparently donned
civilian clothes and fled into the
countryside, Phillips said.
Free but still in British infantry
uniforms given to them when they
w~ captured, Phillips and a few
other liberated prisoners wan-
dered the streets for a few days
\µltil they were spotted by Ameri-
can soldiers.
·Tu~ two American aoktiers
drove up in a jeep and said. 'Hey,
you guys are in the wroog sector,••
Phillips said. •They thought we
were Brits. But we said. We're
Americans.'"
Within days, Phillips-who bad
spent almost a year held against
his will -was in the relative com-
fort of Camp Lucky Strike, an
American base in France that
served as first stop for freed, POWs
on the way back home.
"The best thing I remember
about befug there was they bad a
~-hour mess tent.• PhiIUps said.
Within weeks, Phillips was on a
90-day furlough from the war and
heard the news the war had ended.
He marked the OCCASion by party-
µtg in Hollywood with mends.
"That was a wonderful day," he
said. "Lots of jubilation."
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C1..to ... P o
Cailenda•_
Your 12 Favorite Photos, Laminated Covers, Spiral Bound
•cea-co•r
l>~P~C~
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Corrur of~ Nl#atl ""-/1
Mon-Fri: 8-7, Sat: 9-5
548-0700
Tinder Box
Pre oilum Cigars
• Arturo Fuente • Ashton Cabinet • Avo
• Punch • Excalibur • Savine/Ii • Davidoff • Cifuentes
• Griffin • Macanudo • Montecristo • Padron • Partagas
COMING SOON -Cohibas
-Large selection of Getman Steins & English Pewter Flasb ' ; Humidors by Elie Bleu, Avo, Davidoff
l ocated In •
CRYSTAL COURT • SOUTH COAST PLAZA
714-540-8262
• And ~tlllll1'141!
drought at a.ti! .. ·we're boPDCJ
year~ bal been tllrl~IWUW's
ol an blch ol rain llllC8 tbe
start o1 the mm year, July 1. This
is average, but just shy of ndnfail
totals at the same time lMt year.
1be average annual ndnfall Jn the
Colt.a ?wiela mea is t 1.82 Inches.
Last year there were 12.S lncbes ot
rain.
0 0
0
. .................. . .... .
:Share your holiaay!
The Daily Pilot is c oming to
you this holiday season
(and, we 're bringi,ng goodies, too!)
Look for u s : '
Where you shop
LOM'f--·
RISK,
HIGH
~· RETURN
Concern over allowing
big play was inspiration
behind first of two Brett .
Baker punt returns for ;
Sailors' touchdowns. : . -----------: By Barry Faulkner, Daily Pilot . . . . .
NEWPORT BEACH -When •
lrvine High lined up in punt for-:
mation at its own 37-yard line, :
mere minutes into Friday's Sea : t
View League football game with :
Newport Harbor, the last thing •
Sailor Coach Jeff Brinkley want-
ed was a big play.
c
•In an arena where form almost always
holds up ... Corona del Mar is seeded No. 1;
and, rival Newport Harbor is in the same
bracket in CIF Division I play at No. 4 spot.
By Richard Dunn, Daily Pilot Still haunted by the memory of
an El Toro fake punt, which pro-
duced a 29-yard run up the mid-CERRITOS -As if the
dle to the Harbor 15 and led to much-ballyhooed Back
the Chargers' only touchdown in Bay girls tennis rivalry
the second quarter the week wasn't enough in Sea
before, Brinkley pulled hard on ·View League action for
his rushers' reins. Corona del Mar and New-
»J called a return and the rea-• port Harbor high schools,
son we were going with the : the two Orange County
t I : t ..
return (rather than a full-scale : and CIP Southern Section
rush) was because El Toro had : Division I powers are on
.~ • I run the fake on us,· Brinkley : course to converge a third .. ~
said. : time thi9 season in semifi-
However, Irvine punter ! nals.
Andrew Howard, also the Vaque-: Following the
ros' quarterback., did not play into : announcement Monday of
Brinkley's concerns, booting the : the CIF Division I pairings
ball away to deep man Brett B<-.k-: from the section office,
er. :
1
Corona del Mar (17-1), as
Baker, whose then-18 tquch-: : expected. was seeded No.
downs on the season bad yet to : 1 1 in the bracket with New-
include a punt return, caught it in : I port Harbor (14-6) seeded
the air at his own 31. He quickly : l fourth.
cut to the south sideline, where a : l •This is fantastic, being
convoy .of blockers had created : ~ seeded No. 1, • CdM
plenty of running room. : Coach nm Mang said.
Baker, who amassed 300 all-: •'Ill.at i:neam WoOdbridge
purpose yards in Harbor's 28-17 : (No. 3 seed) ls playing Peninsula (No. 2) in the semifi.
victory, followed a crucial block : nals, and th.a\ will tell us a lot. I think Woodbridge can
by Brant Hill, then simply ran : beat them.• over Howard. CdM defeated Peninsula, 11-7, in a nonleague
Harbor's Lucas Kerr managed : match Sept. 29. The Sea Kings beat Newport Harbor
to hold up the only other defend-: twice, but split with Woodbridge. CdM gained the
er that could have stopped Baker : league's No. 1 entry because of its margin of victory in
and the resulting 69-yard jaunt, : sets, 19-17.
which followed Baker's 69-yard : Heavily favored CdM will host Fountain Va.Jley, the
scoring run on the Sailors' second : : Sunset League's No. 3 team, on Thursday at 3 p.m . in
I • ·' •
play from saimmage, created a : : the first round of the playoffs.
14 -0 lead with only 2:21 elapsed. : : Newport Harbor, CIF Division I finalists two of th, •
After Irvine rallied to claim a : : last three autumns, will host the winner between vaf.. :
17-0 lead, Baker returned the l ley View and Chaffey on Thursday. Chaffey-Valley :
next Vaquero punt 75 yards for a 1 View play a wild card match today. :
touchdown, once again following : •we're actually kind of happy ~th that draw,• :
a key block by Hill. It was the first : DON\.EACH /OM.Y Ill.OT Newport Harbor Coach Pletcher Olson said after last 1
time in Bnn.kley's memory the : Erica Nebon and the Newport Harbor Sallon enter the CIF Southern Section Dtvtslon I Playoffa lbunday :
Sailors had returned two kicks for l afternoon when they'll host the wild card winner of today'• match between Chaffey and Valley Vlew. • SEE TENNIS PAGE 7 1 touchdowns in the same game. • : L---------------------------------------------------------------------------------·----------------------------------------------------------~
••
LAii' wllR'I J9lff SCHOOL POOTaAU. ftAn Oii 30 YAID8 OI Mtm
.·
. ,
MIKE
BRIANO
ANDY • 75 • an. Bak• (N&wport Harbor) punt return for touchdown ,(
~e 5-foot-11, J. 230-pound
senior fullback.
consistently
demolished
foes with lead
blocks and also
gained 4 of
Eagles' -'29
rushing yards.
GALICIA
A 5-foot-11,
J-\.192-pound
senior two-way
starter, he
collected five
tackles, one
intercept1on.
one tumble
recovery end a
12-yud receptlon.
"T'le 6...foot-2,
.1 220-pound
senior went
both ways at
tight end end
def enslve
tackle,
supplying
m\18cle JD the
trencbe1Mesa.
• It· anet BMer (Newport Harbar) touchdown nm -'01
• H -Brett Bakw (Newport Harbor) punt return for tom~d hll
• 48 -i..... Lee (Newport l:iarbar) lddroff return ... u bne ,al"
• 38 -Stlrft lt,nog (Costa M-> intercepti9n returfl9w it-
·•~>U ,bio\r-
Breakfast
... too!
• It's Friday morning,
at the Balboa Bay Club.
A breakfast rally at the Balboa
Bay Club ts scheduled for Friday
at 7:30 a.m., booortng th098 who
will be vying in the •Battle of the
Bay• Friday night when Newport
Harbor and Corona del Mar bigh
school football teems duel in their
Sea view League ftnalet for 1997.
Among thole in attendance
will be players fnm both schools,
, head coacbes. cbeerieeden, foot-
ball boolten and otben.
The event~~ by the
Omnnodcrei OUll of the New-
port Harbor Ar86 Chamber of
C<onmen:e.
Tlcteti for tbe event are $20
per penon. and $200 per table of
10, with students admitted at
· half-price.
Proceeds are ticketed toward
both boosters' clubs.
For reservations, call 729-
4400.
. .
Newport Aquatic Center to host autumn festival .
: . 'JO'•
. · ! : I I I : ,
Newport Aquatic Center (One Whitecliffl Dri-
ve).
The best place to watch the ·boats during
the race is from either the \Ila Udo or PCH
bddges, or at the ftn1sh line. '
A buffet breakfut will be available at NAC
for a nomtnat charge for all partidpants and
spectators. Details: 646-1725.
College's women's soccer
team earns playoffs shot.
Tie Southern California
College women's soccer
team will make its second
playoff appearance in the
program's five-year history.
Tbe Vanguants (13-7, 5-5 in the
Golden State Athletic
Conference) earned the No. 4
seed in the Par West Regionals,
Friday and Saturday at
Westmonl College in Santa
Barbara.
The host Warriors own the top
seed.
Q
Tbe sec men's --dldn1
make it to the playoffs after
posting a 7-13, 2-8 reco~
Individual honors did not
escape tbe blue and gold's grasp,
however, as Senion Matt
Clement and MArtin Uppens
earned spots on the All-GSAC
team. as did freshman Josh
Mcleish ·
Uppens was SCC's leading
scorer with 27 points (10 goals,
seven assists.)
Mel .ebb, soo of Coach Dave
Mcleish, turned down several
scb.olarsbip often fnm Oivilloo I
~ to.p)Ay 10( Ids t8JtMr at sec. Tbe CapUtnmo &am
native, though, will transfer to
Cal State Pullertoo for next
a
Keeptng up with Newport
Haibor High graduate Misty
May isn't an easy task. One
week the junior setter at Long
Beach State is raking tn Big West
Player of the Week honors. the
next sbe is guiding the 49en to
their toughest victOiy of the
season -a four-set barn-burner
over No. 6 UC Santa Barbara.
The 49ers moved into the
nation's No. 1 spot Jut week as
Penn State lost its first match at
Witcmstn
But Lc:mg Beach State bad
to bold on tightly to that new
politioo as UCSB gave the hosts
everything they could band.le
Nov. 4. May's team won. 15-13,
16-14, 7-15, 20-18. (Gulp.)
May recorded her third
triple-double ol the seuon with
15 aaists, 13 ki11I and 16 digs .
Tbe win puts the 49en in
prime posltloD to take the Big
West title as they went on to
bury Idaho and No. 18 Pacific.
ney at.and 32-1, 13-0 tn
ClOllfenmce with two men
TENNIS
CONTINUED FROM 6
molly
yanity
conference games, including
Friday at ua (1:30 p.m.)
Q
Hayden Aley, .......
standout ptt.cher at Corona del
Mar High. will be settling into a
deep pitching staff at Point Loma
Nazarene College in San Diego. ·
The Crusaders wrapped up
their fall slate Friday with a
doubleheader scrimmage at
NCAA Division I University of
San Diego, a team with wbich
Point Loma has been competitive
over the past few seasam.
In the tint game. AJl!!y pitched
two scoreless innings in relief,
but the Toreros had already
gotten to starter Jennifer Jeaen.
a senior out ol 1\-oy High. and
went on to a 5-3 win.
Aley got some action at first
bue, however, as Point Loma
came back to take the nigtdmp,
8-3.
As it stands, first-year coach
Dave Williams is banking on the
pitching talents ol Brittany
Carlson. a transfer fnmf Div. m
powerhouse.
Presl>man Joey Miller will jCJm
the team when volleyball leO.IOD
concludes and, according to
Wllliaml, is a hot pttdrlng
prospect. u well.
With her imp!eaive outing
against USO, Aley will lib1y 1M
time as a cmpstent reliever b
the Jessen-Cadlon-Mmer
rotation when the season begiDI
in Pebruary.
Q
Newpod llllbar lllodlld
Juatin Kerr, DOW a fnwhnMn for
the PrincetoG 'Oger 900Cl!I' team.
9COl'9d his flnt mu.1tiple'1JO&l
game with two tn. 3-2
c:ome-from-b@Mnd win aver Ivy
League foe Columbia.
Kar, who b9lpect lead the
Sailon to. Sootbem ~
tmdftMI tMrth last 9eUCO., ii
leoond Oil the team tn points
with tour~ and two ....
j
~: --.
Hove A
Garage Sale!
ClaaeltlM M2eeTa
4 I
~~··
::ao'USISI ::coimos ::m• SALB
IUttena R•acu•d.
Harbof VJew Homff,
Botti• fed . 130.
IWMka ....... 2228.
Le-ador 8lack AKC
pupplea. 4 malea.
Champ llnn 1550.
TU!ng dep. eu.6380.
GAUTHIY·
ITIGllAll •STATaSAUI ••••• Antiqun. Fumlture,
O&usware. Jewelry, Patio, Appllanc ...
Vintage Clothing.
~I 0...,. Fulll
t9"'"'9tone
(WoocSbrtdg9)
Frt. ·ht. Nov. ,, a 15, •2
CLASSll'laD
It'• tl\9 re90UfC9 ~ can count on to ... a
myrt.d ol ~
dlM kems, ~· .. our cotumns compel
qualln9d buy•ra to
calll
e~ you're tuned into classified
ou're tuned into your communit
SERVICE
DIRECTORY
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3834 PAINTJNG -------------------