HomeMy WebLinkAbout2000-01-08 - Orange Coast Pilot. . Th• be tin
11A11n1n
SERVING THE NEWPORT -MESA COMMUNmES SINCE 1907 WEEKEND -JANUARY 8-9, 2000
WHAT'S UP?
steve
smith
Leaders a re lo
blcunej(>r 0 11r
-Going above and
beyond his -call
•.Ferry worker Brian
Dunham pulls from icy
harbor waters a woman
whom authonb.es say was
trying to take her own hfe.
(,l{J<.RNIM.
Ooiy Nol
NEWPORT J fARBOR A 40-
ham: who was shuttling motonsls
lwtween BaJboa Island and the
perunsulc1 on the Bd.lboa Ferry
Dunham was waiting for tus shill
to end dnd was headed lo his girl-
lnend's house. where he was ready
to Jump mto d steaming hot tub,
when shortly after 6:30 p m . he
hcc1rd d ccill over the feny radlo
en 1, rn hi i1 zp, sch<>< >Is
M y cornnwnts c1huut llw
ments of d nl'w t<1x to
fix our schools W<'fl'
going tO Wdll Ullt1) \\ t' !J()I
closer Lo Lhe votf!. hut lrom
readmg the Dd1l't Pilot, 1t
appedrs thdl thP cl1..,t ll'-'>11111
has alrQady hl'CJUn So. I vv11l
begin. too
yedr-old woman who rc•portedJy
tned to Lake her own life Thur~dr1y
mghl was saved by an dlert Nl•w-
port Beach man, who dove mto. llw
chilly waters of NC'wport Hc1rbor
and rescued her
IL was dl10ther cldy ctl work for
20-yeclJ-old f Prry worker Bnun I Jun
Someone hac;I jumped mto lhe
fnq1d , 54-degree water off of one of
the ferries hedded toward Lhe ·
peninsttla. Loaded with passengers,
lhe bodt had to be docked ana crew
members let the other people off.
Dunhdm, who WdS on the other fer-
ry, '-J>OltNl lhe woman bobbing m
SEE FERRY PAGE A11
S TE'v l MC< AANK DAI V 1'1l.OT
Balboa ferry operators Brian Dunham, 20, tront, and Chase Corum, 22,
worked ~ogether to rescue a woman who jumped from the ferry. Corum ·.
spotted Ute woman while. Dunham jumped into the cold water to pull her
back to the ferry after she refused to grab a buoy thrown to her.
Fu-st. 1t 1., m1port,int to rt>c-
ogruze lhat no oll1nc1l
acknowledgnwnt of tlw tc1x
has been g1\'l'n ...,o, \"'h1IP 1t\
noL a sure thmq 11 would lw t1
surpnsc to this w nh•r 11 1t cl1cl
not occur
The tdX,
which wiU
appear on
your ballot
as a "bond,"
is estin1att>d
to told! $10]
million.
Thdt's a
lot of mon<"t
It's enough
to buy 7,7bl
new Ford
Windstar
miruvans,
which
would
stretch from
Bui the tax is
·more than o
number. It is
also the lot~
in o series of
indicators of a
severe lock of
leadership in
this school
board.
Newport Beach to Cc1tc1hna.
With $163 rrull1on, you can
g et a oew t}vfoc computt>r for
everyone m both Co'>ld 1'-1Psc1
and Newport Beach. And I
h ave no doubt that l111• c1mc11-
ing Jean Forbath could ..,trt•t< h
$163 million into enough food
to feed the hungry wm ldw1dp
unW the next n11Jltin111um
But the tax 1s more thdn c1
n umber It 1s dlso the> latest in
a senes of md1caLor., of c1
severe ldck of IE•c1dt•r-.h1p 111
tlus school bodrcl And 11 I
have doubts dhout thP bot1rcl's
leadership, I hc1v<' doubts
about ILS ah111ty lo cHlmm1s-
trate $163 million 111 r<•pc11rs lo
our schoolc,
CRI" SANTUCCI/ DAILY PILOT
Coco La Salle, 8, right, and Canani Smith, 7, both students from the Speech and Language Development
Center, work on a mural that was led by internationally renowned artist Synthia Saint James at the New·
port Dunes Resort in observance of national Autism Month.
~bing A group of 36 autistic children
1ne SIZP of this ldX md1 -
cates to me lhdt for t1 v<'I)
long trnle, someom• Wd'>
asleep at thf> whee>! Amonq
the quesllons Id likt• lo hc1vc•
answered beforl' I cc1st 111}
vote on a new tdx 1s th1., onP.
Exactly whc>re wert• the• bot1rcl
m embers and whc1L WP.ft' they
doing a few ycc1r<, c1qo when
the bill was $120 rrulhon? $80
million? How about "only"
$30 rrullion? Did lhe r\nll-ldX
reputation of local voters
frighten them so much thclt
they deliberately let our
schools deteriorate? Did they
not know how bad thE> prob-
lems were unW they rec1chNl
from the Buena Park Speech and
Language Development
ace Center spend the
· day painting at
Newport Dunes.
NUAXI 5( I fWAR'l /
Oo1y Fib
how to make skip," he srud halting-
ly.
SEE SMITH PAGE A9
A sk 9-year-olcl Andy
Pisc1ewicz about the pdmt-
ing he's JUSt hmshcd and
hls answer skips over logic
like the flat stones thaL absorb his
thou ghts.
"You see," said his teacher, H ar-
riet Hasson. "He's more interested
in skipping rocks over the water
lhdn m talk.l'ng to you. M
Like the othe r half-million Amer-
icans who suffer from ·aub.sm, Andy
went from being a loving, affectJon~
a te ch.ild to withering into his own w1 enjoyed fun Now practice
Macy's unveils plans for home store
8 New South Coast Plaza West
location will become the largest
ho~e furnishings retailer in
Southern California.
JtNtn:R RAc..1 AND
lblt flit
C.J . Segerstrom & Sons aj\d Macy's West
unveiled plans Friday for a first ·of.its-kind
Macy's Home Store lo be b t at the old
Macy's Cry l4l Court location in South Coast
Plaia.
In a p bnehng Pnday rooming, man·
aging partner Henry Segcrstrom said the
addttion ts one of th most 1gn1ficant com·
ponents of the company plans for a new
South Coa t Plaza
C.J. Segontrom & Sons i 11l th midst of o
$i~O-million renovation of the west wing of
South Coast Plau. formerly known as Cry -
tal Court. The unproveme nts include a new
Borders Books and Mu ic, the la rgest Crate &
Barrel on the We t Coast, which o~ned m
November, and a foot bndgc connecting the
ne w retail center with the mam wmg of
South Coast Plaza, aid spokcswomdn D bra
Gunn·Downing.
Macy's Home wm cover 189,000 ~quare
feet and will utilize three level or the w t
wing on the comer of B t1r anrl Sunflower
streets: TI1e focad ·win bO totally r don ,
mostly in gla , so cu tom n; can { in id
the stor '1rom th tr t. Wh n it i bni hed, which hould be in
August at thi y Br, Macy' Home WW be th
large~t home furmsh.ing tore ln Southern
little world.
A complex developmental dls-
db1hty, autlsm usudlly surfaces dur-
ing lht.' first three yec1rs of life. Par-
ents watch their smiling, bubbly
youngster suddenly lo e their ahil·
ity to talk. To touch. To play. To
laugh. To be chlldrcn.
SEE DUNES PAGE A11
Twiri Pahns
.quietly calls
~it' quits
Newport Center
restaurant will close Jan.
31 because of consistent
noise complaints from
hotel guests.
NuA~I !:ll 11\\ARTI
Ori1 Pilot
FASHION ISLAND -Tum
Palms Rcstaulant will d i • ~ts
doors at the end of th s onth
because of persistent o -
(>lamts of noise from !JUl ~ts oJ
the Four Sea_ons hotel lhdt
have haunted the restaurdnt
~mce 1t opened less than four
years ago.
And, m a stretnge twbt of
fate, tht.~ Four Sec1sons will
convert the sill' mto a hanquet
facility. ·
The rcstaurdnt opened · in
November 19% and notse
problems began almost unme-
d1ately. Complamts from near-
by Four Seasons guests -who
coi.J.Jdn't sleep bccc1use of the
late-night partying -bounced
from the tropt desk to the
police and eventually the city.
"Who knew that 1t would
be such a ronfbct?" said Four
Seasons spok woman Came
Olson. ·cue~ts would' call
down and we would have to
find altemallv accommoda-
tions for them.·
Eventually. the hotel stdrted
losmg no1..,e-sen::.1tive gue .. ts
and at time had to offer com-
plimentary rooms, said New-
port Beach Polic Sgt. Mike
McDem1ott. . ·u 1s a very quiet conunum -
ty," ttdm1tted Vtclor Ciulla.
spokesman for 1Win Palms.
·so, if thcre'c: noise, lt travel~ a
lot.• ·
D p1tl~ th e city's efforts to
control the prohlem over the
years by plaC'lng r lricbon~ on
SEE PALMS PAGE A11
I DEX
AIOOtlD TOWN ....._ _ _...._
l6T
QASSlflDS • -14
' 17
DMllOOI ... _ "'""-" • .A12
fMnl--·----" P000"6, ___ _.,.. mn ____ _.,,.
--~·---.. --·--------
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f
... ~ Sotur~, January 8, 2000 . faith Doily Pilot
r------------------~---------------------------. ............................ mr-------------------------·--------------------, MOIAL OF
Tlil STOIY
: IN TIE SPllll !
. -
let God give you ,
a news/a,te j
I I I "New begirmlrJ~<IFe God's specialty ..
1 He is the author of life, who deligh~ in ·
giving his ch1Jdren clean, white pages.•
-Unknown
.i::,e.I t's a new month. It's a new year. It's ·a
new millennium. I like taking down
the old marked-up calendar and ~ging up a clean new one. I like tak-
'lng down all the Cluistrnas decorations
·and thinkinQ: that somehow less clutter in
my house will lead to less clutter in my
head. I like getting fewer catalogs iii the
mail and getting more time to try to get .
caught up with life. I loved hearing and
singing Christmas carols: but I had
" reached my limit just as we reached the
end of the year.
I like tbe feeling that I can ge.t a fresh
start, and a clean slate, and that I can ~."Out with the old, and in with the
• ne\vl"
A friend of mine had a ctifferent
approach to all the newness, however.
This Jnend hadn't had a very good holi-
day season. In fact, she hadn't bad a
very good year.
"I'm so glad it's the new millennium,"
she said. • r was getting pretty tired of the
old one. I'd had enough of
ll" This friend had a year filled with neg-
ative consequences from poor choices
and decisions in previous years.
"I wish I coUld live it all over," she
said. "But I know that will never hap-
~ pen."
t; I was reminded of a story that a ·
friend of mine named Debbie told me
about her son, Christopher, an 8-year-
• old who often surprises bis mother with
profound statements. Several months
ago he looked at Debbie and said: "You
, know what, Mom? There are really only
'; two things in life you can't really
Change."
"Oh really?" Debbie replied. "And
,; what are those?•
11You can't change God's love and
what you've already ~ done.•
"Wow, that's awesome, Chris. Where
r did you learn that?"
"I don't know," he answered. "Prob-
• ably in Sunday school. But it's true."'
"You know, Chris, you're rlght."
"It's kind of like trying to put tooth-
paste back in the tube. It just can't be
" ddne, • Chris continued.
~ I I •
Address: 1723 Westcllff Dnve,
Newport Beach
Phone; (949) 646-1152
Fax: (949) 650-9541
E-mail: strnatthewacc®earthlinl<.net
Web site: www.stmatthewsacc.com
Denomination: the Anglican ~
Catholic Church
Year established: 1982
Servke times: Sunday: Holy Com-
munion at 8 and 10:30 a.m., Utur-
gy of the word for young people,
morning prayer with adult
instruction and Sunday school for
youth of all ages at 9:15 a.m.;
Tuesday: adult Bible study at 7:30
p.m.; Wednesday: noon Bible
study and sung evening prayer at
6 p.m.1 Thursday: Holy Commu-
nion at 9:30 a.m. followed by
Bible study at 10:15 a.m.; Friday:
sung morning prayer at 6 a.m.
Senior minister. The Rev. Stephen
~·Scarlett
Pastoral staff: The ~ev. Richard
Stapp, deacon: The Rev. Joseph P.
Miller, assisting; Bob Blytbin,
David Brounstein and Bart
Dellinger, lay readers.
Size of congregation: 100 families
Makeup of congregation: A mix
of all ages
Child care: Provided for all ser-
vices and most other activities.
iype of worship: The worship
services are traditional Episcopal
from the 1928 Book of Common
Prayer. The 8 and 10:30 a.m. Sun-
day services have music and con-
gregational singing. The cho11
sings at the 10:30 a.m. service.
The Sunday 9:15 a.m. service is
sung morning prayer with an
extended period of adult instruc-
tion. The daily office of morning
prayer is sung on Friday at 8 a.m.
The daily office of evening prayer
is sung on Wednesday at 6 p.m.
The sung offices include seasonal
· hymns, psalms set to Gregorian
chant and sung canticles.
iype of sermon: Sermon topics
generally follow the seasons gt
the church year, which include
Advent, Christma.s"'"Epiph~y.
Lent, Easter, Pentecost, Ascension
and Tiinity. Typically the focus is
on a scriptural text or theme and
how it applies practically to a
Christian's spiritual life, under-
standing and growth.
Past sermons: Past sermons are
available at the church's Web site
at stmatthewsacc.com.
DON LEACH I DAl\.Y PILOT
lbe Rev. Stephen C. Scarlett is pastor at SL Matthew's Church in Newport Beach.
Welcome wagon: There is a guest
book for visitors who wish to
identify themselves and for any-
one who wishes more information
about the church, prayer or asm-
tance from the church. The
instruction at the 9:15 am. prayer
service is an ongoing
adulVinquirers class. Newcomers
are encouraged to come and ask
questions. Sunday school and
Bible studies during the week are
open to anyone who wants to
know more about Christian faith
and the church. St. Matthew's bas
periodic parish suppers. New
members are especially e ncour-
aged to attend to get to know
others in the congregation.
Outreach programs: Members
work with FISH (Friends in Ser-
vice to Humanity), a local organi-
zation that fights homelessness
and hunger in Costa Mesa, New-
port Beach and Irvine, and with
LivingWell Medical Clurics,-a
group of clinics throughout
Orange County that provides
medical care and other sustairung
services to women facing crisis
pregnancies. St. Matthew's gives
regularly to S}lpport ~ orphan-
age and school for approximately
400 children in India. 11\e St.
Matthew's Women's G~d orga-
ruzes various functions through-
out the year to support programs
for the needy and a local orphan-
age for boys. The church also pro-
vides one-on-one assistance, on a
case-by-case basis, to people who
have fallen on bard times.
Dress: Casual to business dress .
Church design: The church is in a
leased retatl space. It has a West-
cliff Drive address but faces Sher-
ington Place. From the outside it
is not readily identifiable as a
church building, excep or a
broad burgundy a · g with tbe
church's name in Jar e white let-
ter,; above the entry. e work of
local artist Llnda Q · aiid a
number of hard~working mem-
bers has transfonned the inside
into a traditional place o( worship.
Statement of faith: St Matthew's
believes and practices "the faith
once delivered to the saints"
(Jude 3). We believe it is impor-
tant that the faith and practice of
the church be firmly rooted in the
teachings of the Bible. Our inter-
pretation of the Bible is guided by
the tradition of the church -that
which all Christians have
belJeved and practiced from the
beginning of the church (2 Thes-
salonians 2:15). Our life of prayer
and worship is rooted in the
Anglican tradition and the Book
of Common Prayer.
Mission statement "To follow
Christ, to worship God every
Sunday in his church and to work
and pray and give for the spread
of his kingdom.• In addition to
their mission statement. the con-
gregation has adopted the follow-
ing statement to describe its life
in Christ: •St. Matthew's is a fam-
ily of Christians committed to
knowing Jesus Christ through the
Bible, ·sacraments, traditional
!'orship, pra'yer and fellowship.·
Interesting note: St. Matthew's
has purchased a parcel of land at
the intersection of Bonita Canyon
Road arid Prairie ROdd in New-
port Beach. PlclilS are underway
to build a campus of bwJdings
including a new church, a
presdlool, an administration
bwJd.ing and a parish hall. Pastor
Scarlett says that construction will
begin sometime during this year,
•God willing." The church's Web
site is currently under construc-
tion and now provides service .
tunes, a map and directions to the
church and the content of PilSt
sennons by Scarlc.tt.
-Compiled by Michele M. Marr •
"You're right again, Chris. 1jlat's
why it's important that you use wisdom
in the decisions you make," Debbie
said.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------·---------------------------------------------
PLACES TO WORSllP FAITI CALENDAR ·
Then Chris went off to play. "It was
one of those short, spur-of-the-moment,
1-can't-belfove-he-said-that times,"
· Debbie told me later. We both agreed
that there was great wisdom in Christo-
pher's words.
• EDm>R'S NOTE: Places_to VJ9rship fea-
tures bf'ifl descriptions of churches .00 tem-
i>fes In our community. They appear each
week on a rotating basis.
I thought of those words after talking
~ to my friend. While she can't change United Methodist
• what has happened, she can learn from
her mistakes. She can make apologies ~ when needed and changes if possible. CHRIST CHURCH BY THE SEA
4 And if she involves G¢ in her life and
includes him in her decisions, she can
" have a fresh start and a clean slate.
, I explained to my friend that when
•1 my life feels like an Etch A Sketch that
,' ts all mixed up and messy, I can hand it
over to God, and he Shakes it clean.
And best of all we can ask for and
4 experience fresh starts every day, no
matter what the ~alenda.r says. We can
• always ask God for fresh new starts. ·
•• They are one of his specialties.
• And you can quote me on that.
Christ ChurCh by the SN seetts to proYide a
loving, nurturing environment fOf praising
GOd and meeting the splrttu.1 needs of
members and friend$. The church ako oper-
ates a preschool, extended-qr. and tutc>Ong
program year-round. A traditional worship
service IS held on Sunday et 10 a.m. Child
care is provided fOf' botti services. The Re'i.
George R. Crisp Is senior pmtOf. The church
was established in 1932 .wld Is et 1400 W.
Balboa Blvd., Ne"WP<>rt Beach. For more
church lntonnation,. (alt (949) 673·3805 FOt
lnformatJon about the preschool, aill (949)
673·380S.
• ONOY TlltANE ·CHRISTESON ii a Newport
Beach resident who speaks frequently to parent-
ing groups. She can be reached via e-mail at
c/ndyOonthegrowcom or through the mall at
P.O. Box 6140-No. SOS, Newport Beach 92658..
ARST UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
Flm United Methodkt Church ieeks to cre-
ate a nurturing environment fof promoting
8EAQ£BS HOTUN£ OI' adwrtilements ti«e1n c.an be
(949) 642--6086 r•oduced without -•tten per·
Record yout comments about mlSlion of c.opyrlght O\Nnlf,
the Daily Pilot or news tips. HQW IQ BEACH US
VOL 94, N0. 7 AQQRESS CJrcutation Our lddress Is 330 W. Bay St, The Times Orange County Costa MeM, CA 92627. (800) 252-9141 THOMAS H. IOHNSON, ~· Pvbhsher CORRECDQNS
TONYDOODO, It is the Pilot's pohcy to prompt• CIG1f1ed (949) 642-5678
Editor ly corrKt all errors of substAn<e. Ditplay (949) 642-4121
JIMfU MGUND, Please c.11 (949) 574-4268 (dttofial
News (949) 642·!1680 Stnl« Ci1y fd1tor rn 5ports(949)574-422l S.J. CAHN, The Newport BffcM:osw Mesa News,. Sports Fax (949) 646=-4f70 Oty Editor
NANCY OtUVIR, Daily Piiot (IJSPS.144-800) Is pub-E·rNll: dellypilotOletlmeuom llshed Monday through Saturday Miiin~ Features Editor In Newpott a.ad\ tnd en.ta Meu, Butl'*' Office (949) 64Nll1 lllOGllR CMLJON. subsctlf:'°"' -. avlll.ble only by 8utlnett Fax (949) 611-7126 Sports Editor subtctl ng to The Tlme& Orano-MMCMMnflt, County (800) 252-9141, In""' Photo Editor outsJd9 of Newpof1 lffch end ~-Timi&~ .....
ANntONY NO<. Cotta Mela, subsalptions to the ·""'*~~ ~
Ntws Editor ~Pilot.,. ~labtt only~ W....LGWel, ... JOSI J, SANTOS. ' for S20 per month 5econc:t Edttof ':£., OeigflfK ti•~ at C.oA9 Mell. ............. OllTTINQ, CA CPriteS .it~ ~ ~Adwft ng ltnt end lot.el....., POSTMAS-
TIA· send lddra m...,. to The lMIA JOHNION, NjWpoft ....we.a ... D9ly Dhder of"'°'°"~ Promotioris fl'jloe. '-0. toll 1SIO, Cab~ ....................
PUPIDO ltWt, CA t2l2' ~ N6 MW1 ltO-Ser*" fdltor, ~OW!
CNef RNndal OffkM ,. ........ eclblNI matt.t .,_fttllioOIM~.-...
..
Christian spiritual growth and to create
opportunities to serve humanity. Worship
services include prayer, readings from
Scripture, a sermon and music, accompa·
nied by a broad selection of instruments.
The Sunday service 1s at 10 a .m. Adult and
children's Sunday school meets at 8:45 a.m.
Child care is provided for children under 4 ,
Richard l. Ewing 1s senior pastor. The
church was established 1n 1912 and is at
420 W. 19th St., Costa Mesa. For informa-
tion, call (949) 548-n21.
M~SA VERDE UNITED
METHODIST CHURCH .
Mesa Verde United Methodist Cf'\urch
has the vision: •Every visitor a friend. Every
member in ministry • Worship, featuring a
music program with several choirs, is held
on Sunday at 8 30 and 10 a.m Child care 1s
available at both services. Adult Bible
study meets at 8:30 a.m. and Sunday
school for kindergarten through high
school youth ~ets et 10 am. Dick George
is senior pastor, The chur(h I\ at 1701 Bak·
er St., Costa Mesa. For more information,
calf (714) 97~8234. •
W'EATHER AND ·
ftMPERATURES TIDES
Balboa TODAY
5Mi8 First low
SPECIAL EVENTS
BENJAMIN NETANYAHU
Former lsraeli Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu will speak
at Temple Bat Yahm at 7 p.m.
Feb. 27 as the Temple's Norman
Schiff Scholar Lecturer. Tic.kets
are $18 to $300. Temple Bat
Yahm is at 1011 Camelbac.k St.,
Newport Beach. For more infor-
mation, call (949) 644-1999.
RE-MEMBERING GROUP
Our Lady Queen of Angels
Pansh Center will host a six·
week series of talks for
Catholics who feel spiritually
homeless starting Sunday. The
meetings wUl be at 6:15 p .m·
Sundays. Father Bill McLaugh-
lin will speak at this Sunday's
meeting. The Parish Center is at
2046 Mar Vista Drive, Newport·
Beach. For more information,
calt{949) 548.-3844'.
NEW THOUGHT WORKSHOPS
New Thought Christian Church
and 1hlth Foundation hosts .
weekly workshops for the com-.
munity. The talks run from 10
a.m. to noon Sundays at the
center, 1845 Park Ave .• Costa
Mesa For co~e fees and more
information,call(949)646-3199
BUILDING OUR FAITH
The Episcopal Church of Saint
Michael & All Angels will hold a
"Building Our Faith" celebration
after its worship services Sun-
day. The church is at 3233 Pacif-
ic View Drive, Corona del Mar.
For more information, call (949)
644-0463.
• Is your church or place of worship
planning a special event? If so, send
the typed information to the Dally
Pilot. 330 W. Bay St., Costa Mesa, CA
92627, attn: Nancy Cheever, religion
editor; fax it to (949) 646-4170; ore..
mail It to daifypilotOfatimes.com •
Information should be sent at least
two weeks before the event date.
SURF POLICE f ILES
.
COSTA MESA
•Bristol Strwet: A stereo system worth S2,300 was stolen
from a store In the 3300 block between 7 and 8 30 p.m. Corona del Mar 3:11 a.m ............................ 2.3 Dec. 29.
47169 First high • c.dilllle Avenue: A sewing machine and f'bric cutter CoSta Mesa 9 23 a.m ...................... :~ ••. 5.8 worth SS,000 were stolen from a stOf'e in the 3500 block 45170 Second low at 4 a.m. Dec. 31. Newport Beach 4:40 p.m.-.: ......... -.......... ..().5 • Hlwbor loulevard: A bicycle worth J 199 was stolen in 49168 Second high the 2100 block 1t 12:30 a.m, Jan. 1. Newport Coast 11:16 p.m .......................... 3.7 • Pitcairn Drive: Two diamond rings worth SS,000 were 47168 nolen from • home In the 1800 block betwt n Dec. 20
SURI' f'OMCAST SUNDAY and Dec. 28.
First low A small lncrea~ In swell
size may bring a little life to 3:47 1.m ......................... t.2 4 NIWPOln llAClt
the antmte conditions at First high • ...... ..._.cl A Compact disc player-w0t1h S 120 Ms
IOQI~. 9:55 a.m ............................ 5.6 stolen from a CJJI In the 2600 blOdt the ewnlng of oec. a
Second low • Newport c.Mr Drtve: A cellular phone wo.1h S200
LOCAnON sm 5:13 p.m ....................... .OJ w• S10len from a car n the 900 blOClt bet'NMn 5 end I
wedge 1 2 Second high pm.O.C.30.
Nf\t'PC)tt . 2·3 11 :5' p 111': ............. ,_ ... 3.8 • Ncsuport C..... Dttve: A cellular phOr'9 worth S100
81eddts 1·2 ~ stOlen from 8 CM In the to0 btodt Wtdf ....
Alwr Jetty 1·2 WATa • ._ ..,._ sev.ra1 Items ot dotMn9 worth s190..,.. CdM • 1 2 65 stoMn from a UI lri lhrt ~00 btodt ttie 8' • •• of Die. ..
I I I
I I I I
Doily Pilot
, Mesa Verde residents concerned
' . .
. about propOsed develo:Rment
• HomeoWners say traffic cotild become
Wlbearable if· new homes are built in their area.
ANDREW GLAZER
omy Plot
MESA VERDE -A number
of homeowners here are con-
cerned their neighbors don't
· know about a proposed hous-
ing development that may
bring more traffic to the neigh-
borhood.
The Planrung Commission
iS scheduled to approve the 90-
home Pdc1.hc Standard project
on Mesa Verde Drive, which
planners say conforms with
area standards, at its Monday
meeting.
~t JUSt camf' to my attention
yesterday," Peg Howard, who
lives near the site, sa.1d on ·
Wednesday. "I don't think
they're trying to snectk some-
thing by US, but ll).ey are in a
hurry.•
City Manager Allan Roeder
said he can understdJld why
residents may feel slJghlly sur-
pnsed by the development, but
added that it shouldn't hdve a
major impact on the neighbor-
hood.
"There is a huge demand
for residennal single-family
homes," he said. •t think it's a
very positive thing."
And, he said, lrafftc would
be worse if the site were devel-
oped for stores or offrces.
Willa Bouwens-KillPf'n, the
city's project manager, said the
city actually designated the
site for more than 90 homes.
She also sdid the city fol-
lowed state. regulations by
sendmg, several weeks ago, au
residents livmg within a 300-
foot radius of the proposed gat-
ed community a letter explain-
ing the pro1ect. .
The development will
include two-story, smgle-farni-
iy homes selling in the high
$300,000s, said Scott Stowell,
president of Standard Pacific of
Orange County. the project's
~cveloper. The entrance to the
ga,ted commuruty will be at the
intersection of Goll Course Dn·
ve and Mesa Verd~.
Peg IJowarcl und Robin Lef-
fler, who is on the Mesa Verde
homeowners• board, say they
worry Urnt. after work, home-
owners wc1iting m therr cars to
enter the gated community will
bottleneck onto the two streets,
"There will be an hour's
worth of mtensP traffic each
night,• Leffler •utid
But StowelJ sdid an inde-
pendent traffic study showed
the new development wouldn't
overburden the two roads.
The Planrung Commission
meets at 6 pm. on Monday at
City Hall, 66 Fdlr Drive,
BULK SALE
~'r1eR
· Organic. Coffee
Assorta/ Flavors
•Regular • Decaf
REG. '9 -REG.13.25
Sotvrday, Jonuory 8, 2000 A3
El Toro meeting
A{Onday f!ight
~PIO!
Rcstd<'nts who Wdnt
more 1nformalion on thP
proposed El Toro airport Cdn
tttlcmd d town hall meeting
from 7 to 9 p.m. on Monday
at 'the Co::.ta Mesa Neigh·
borhood Community Cen-
ter.
Th"e pubhc meehng,
sponsor~d by the county's El
Toro Mdster Development
Progrum office, will featurP.
fomu!r Mdnne Corps pilot
Tom Wall.
Wdll wlll speak dbout
whc1.t has ,been going on
32oz.
with the planrun~ proc s
i.nce 1993 -when the fed·
<>ml government
announced that the El Toro
Mann~ Corps A1~ Stat.Jon
would be shut down. He
will give the audience an
overview of the reuse allet-
nat ives of the former mili-
tary base.
Th£> conunuruty center is
..it 1845 Park Ave. Add1tion-
ul town hdU mectin~s at the
same locdtion will held
monthly.
For more tnformation,
Cdll the El Toro Master
Development Program
offico dl (714) 834-3000 •
~Fat-Free
~Broths
.-------,-40% Less
New Large Size! Sodium
OMEGA FOODS
Natwal Value
1Una in Water
lt7th or W1lhout Sall
Chunk • Solid White
10ogol 1\ma Albacore
f.f5ft~!I~
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YOU SAVE $11.01 !
MAGNA PAK
IDGH POTENCY MULTI-VITAMIN
&-MINERAL PAK
A combination of 6 capsules and talJlets
supplglng 20 high potency vilamJns & 14
minerals In one neat packet
Convenient /Or evergdag
& for trmJel1 . -
SUGG. *21 .00
FARM FRESH PRODUCE
•
• VE91!table
• Chicken
REG. '3.19
Cal-Mag Citrate
Help Maintain .
Bone Densi/f tflftft It Strength• iT7
10D
SUGG.~5.22 11111
Vitamin E -400
100% Natural Mixed Tbcophero/s
..
teinberg shells out cash for Spirit Run
Superagent and wife reportedly happy to give
the annudl school fund-raiser.
~lilm
NEWPORT BEACH -He
t keeps giving and giving.
Sports superagent and
e~rt Beach resident Leigh
eihberg is spreading his
ealth once again by donat·
g $60,000 to the annual
ool fund-raiser, Spirit Run.
The money, which will be
ed over a three-year period,
ows Steinberg and his wife,
cy, to have their names
ched to the title sponsor
le.
"The community spirit and
oeaJ support for tbls event
has always impressed us,"
Steinberg said. "We ,..are
delighted to support this
meaningful event and help
the local coounumty schools
realize their important ob1ec-
tive of enhancing pupllc edu-
cation."
It shouldn't come as a sur-
prise that Steinberg offered a
small portion of his fil\anctal
fortune to event organizers.
But it was somewhat of a jaw.
dropper to see Steinberg at a
recent meeting at LlncolI) Ele-
mentary School. ·When par-
ents and teachers learned
°"' ~ u II NW Clmst hw Ill., Ill
.,Jn rlMJ 1• CJ,,.;s, lllt _, ""' f111thfol •""
about the agent. who rubs
clboW!i with some of sports'
b1gge t names, ihey were
excilca.
•He's defmiteJy stepped up
to the plate,• said Rita Gold-
berg, a board member for
Spirit Run 2000. ·1 admire
him tor tying together his pro-
fessional and pmsonal goals,
which says a lot about his
total value system."
The 50-year-old agent who
represents such gridiron
great:; as quarterbacks Steve
Young and Drew Bledsoe, has
consistently helped communi-
ty organizations, especially
when it comes to children.
Steinberg and partners Jef-
frey Moorad and DaVid Dunn
also challenge theu clients to
support cau es that benefit
their hometowns or the c1ties
in whIC.h tliey play.
The Spint Run is one of the
large.st children's races in the
state and attempts to raise
money for four Newport
Beach elementary schools -
Andersen, Ea~tbluff, Harbor
View and Lincoln. Since its
inception 17 years ago, the
annual event has netted about
$1.5 million.
The event features several
races tor all ages, family-ori-
ented activities and entertain-
ment. This year's run will be
held Feb. 27 beginning at 7
a.m. For more information,
call (949)640-5350.
,,_Jwtiw Clnisti.r"" U""-...... ,, ....
The R.cv'd Pmr D. Haynes. Rec1or
"A God-centered parish communiiy, insrrucced by r:hc Word of God
and renewed by the Saccamcnts"
Our Lady Queeriof A nge ls
2046 Mar Vista Drive
New1404~ Beach, Califomia 92660
(949) 0220 Fax (949)644-1349
Rev. Monsignor William P. Mclaughlin, Pastor
UTURGJES:Sarunby, 5 p.m. (Cantor),
Sunday. 7:00 (Qu1c1), 8:30 (Contemporary). 10:00 (Chotr),
11.30 a.m. (Cantor) and 5:00 p.m. (Contcmpbrary)
FIRST CHURCH OF
CHRIST, SCIENTIST
3303 VlaUdo Newport Beach
673-1340 or 673-6150
Church 10 am & 5 pm,
SWlday School 10 am ~~·pm
SECOND CHURCH OF
CHRIST, SCIENTIST
3100 Pcdtic V'Sw Dr. Newport Bea::h
644-2617 or 6754661
Church lOam
Sw\day School. 1 O am
~MMangaepm
6 Ill w.c:r.:tay 12 noon
••• Jolni i""-1 IHT/'.tiutl ,,,;n, ~
lnlt r 1btJJ 0. IHtpti.WI ,,,;J}, tlH Holy GHn.
ka ll:l6john
Braides ofllit Motba' Chul'ft ·TM rna Cburdi "Grist, Sdtatist • Bostol. Maaldlusttts
{miah 43: J-Jb, I 0-12)
S.rurday, January 8, ~:30 P.M.
Sunday. J1111uary 9, 8:.10 k tO:IS A.M.
•
Or. JC>bn H. Scc\ltn1, Senior Mlni tu
firll i'rNhyllTl4•1 ('J1iq, l1, ( ••lmodo ~pro./J', C ,1./r.,,t.Jr/11
(aueN fl• NfWJ!Vn Hatbtw Hish ~htiul er fmllC aad I f1hl '"I) ~. AnJrtWS Ro•d. WJ'(Jl't ki4 h, (;,l1forn" ~260 j ll S (9-49) •H·21180
l MAU n1f114ktandtnnpm.cq Wfft ..,...,.sr,~.cirg
Bethel Baptis~ .
Adult and Children's Sunday School Hour -9:45 a.m.
· Worship Service -11 :00 a.m.
Sunday Evening • 6:00 p.m.
Thursday Bible Study -6:40 p.m.
•We Invite you IO WOi'Shlp the Lord With us. Corn« and latrn powirful
prlncfpla lltld truUu from Ood"s word lhat you can build your II~ upon.
Thi.$ W«lr Pastor Ditulcaon wUI be Sf"!JJltlng from Psalm 100. COOK' as we
join our heMl5 IOQelher In lldonttJon Of the Lord~ ChrlsL •
901 So. Euclid Santa Ana CA 92704
714 839-3600'.
ChrUt Church by the Sea
Unrtcd Mcthodm
0 . 9:00 a.m. -Sunday School for all ages
10:00 a.m. -Wonh1p (wnh child' ca.re) I 1400 W. Balboz Blvd .• New~ri lkach
The Rev. Dr. Ceorgt R. Crisp. Pw.or
(949) 67)-38~
NEW THOUGHT CHURCH lllF1:!.rsl!t~Ulnllted•MlelthlodllsltlClhlurlcbl
Scimce of Mind Ontn of Costa Mesa
'Mturd;a~ai1uary 11, 2000 420 West 19th Street. Costa Mesa ~ t.~~fi .. ~AY Festival of Worship JO:OOam
":.!.Z.~~a11u..r~ .• ~ Richard L. Ewing. Pastor
.. r. AB ".,. Chu.rcb Scltool 9:00ain & 10:151m
G...t r 949.548. 7727 Sund.ay Scn1cc I U 30
Sunda) School 10:31)
~C'll(hborhoocl Community C~i..r,
184!1 l'.uk AH:, Co.1:.1 ,\t.ua
\\nl H~"'lt <,r,...,~ JO~ am,
11129 Tumn ,.\•oe , c ..... 1.:a .. I-. '•·ll \\ rhhnp • 10.12 rl<JOn Oonauan
1ht>,\tti t' W.1)"
Call (94~1) f>-46-3199
for inlorm.ttion
'\llunc C' •
Costa Mesa
MHAVIRDI
UNITED MllHODIST CHURCH
1701 lloker, ~.M.
Wors hip & Church Schoot
1130 and 10:00 a.m.
Or. Riehord George (71 ") 979·823A
NEWPORT CENTER
UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
1601 M¥9uer11~Ave Corort.1 def M.lr
f949J 644-0745
Worship at S!OOAM & I O.OOAM
Children Sunday School I 0 OQM.1 ST. MARK PRESBYTERIAN ....,~-J~r &_s_r._H-.111gh~S-·oll!""o_PM_....-
CHURCH
Worship 9:30
Newport H•rbor
Luth•r•n ChUrch
7MDoverDr.Ne...,. ......
TradltlQDlll L......,M
........ rdo ......
.._..Owsa1_..... ......... ~ ...
..... , ......... ta ...
• HARIOR CHRllTIAM CHUflCH .l (DlsclplH of Chrtlt)
2401 lnlne Aw. at l ent• IHMI Na.,ort 1 .. cll S111M1ay Wonhlp • 10:00AM
COMMUNITY CHURCH CONGREGATIONAL
UNITED CHURCH Of CHRIST
Bruce VM'I Bi.ir, Minister
Worship Services •e:OOlfn
9 OOMI AdUlt Ouch 5Chool
., ():()()n -5uftdey SchCol
*Child c.. PrO¥lded
611 Afl.C...dllMll'
----~~A.-... ... ~~6iM-7400
'
Doily Pilot -'
OllTUllY . .
fames Rimpau Seals
James •Jim" Rimpau Seals,
a physkian and local yachts-
man, died aboard his yacht,
Dos Pocas, in Newport Harbor
on Jan. 2. He was 75.
Mr. Seals was born in Los
Angeles on Sept. 11, 1924, and
was a sixth-generation Cali-
fornian.
He was the great-great-
grandson of Don Francisco De
Avila and Dona Encarnacion
Sepulveda De . Avila,· who
came to Los Angeles about
1790 and built the historic Avi·
la adobe, Los Angeles' oldest
building still standing on
Olvera Street.
For tbe past 14 years, Mr.
Seals and his wife, Mary, lived
in Palm Springs. They were in
tbe pr'Ocess of building their
dream home in Carlsbad. '
Mr. Seals was a graduate of
USC and UCI Medical School.
He practiced as an obstetrician
and gynecologist in Orange
County for more than 30 years,
delivering more than ' 10,000
babies during his career.
Mr. Seals also helped found
several hospitals in Orange
County. He was a member of
the Califomja Medical Assn.
. During World War Il, Mr. Seals
served as a medic in the A:rmy
while stationed in the Philip-
pines.
Mr. Seals' passion for boat-
ing was well known. He par-
ticipated in 10 Transpac races
from Los Angeles to Honolulu,
JEFF & LYLEEN
EWING
REAL ESTATE MATCHMAKERS
When you list your house in
the Newport Beach area with a
Realtor who participates in the
MuJtiple Listing Service (MLS).
you get a lot of service for your
money. In the Orange Coast
region there are nearly 15,000
participating members with
access to the .MLS!
The real esutc professional
who lists your home works to get
it sold. This is done by
marketing directly .to home
buyers, but an even more
powerful cool is marketing your
home to other a.gents who have
buyers. As your real estate
prpfessionals, we make all the ·
crucial infonnation about your
home available to other members
through the MLS.
The location, size, the number
of rooms, the style of
arcbitccrure, personal property
included and any other special
features arc listed. The MLS
description will also contain
information about any special
financing that might be available,
the showing instn1ctions, and
speoaJ needs you may have with
respect to closing. It · as a
powerful tool for real estate
matchmakers.
Jeff and Lyleen have 28
consecutive years of real esute
experience m Newport Beach.
They are Coldwell Banker's fl
team. For professional service or
advise with all your rcaJ estate
needs caU the Ewings at (949)
644-9060 :d 1S.
James R.llilpau Seals
22 Newport to Ensenadd races,
and sailed to Hawaii on four
separate trips by himseli.
He spent the last 15 years
cruising the coasts of Califor-
nia , and Mexico. He was a
member of the Balboa Yacht
Club and was a pdSt com-
modore of the Voyagers Yacht
Club. '
In addition to his w1f£',
Mary N. Seals, he is suMvecl
by his st~pmother, Helen
Seals1 his sister, Nancy Had-
den: lus children, Susan Seah
Bill Seals, Dan Seals, and Kel-
ly Phifer; and !iix grandchil-
dren.
A buridl at sea is planned
for 10 a.m. today A memoridl
service will follow at noon. The
family is asking in lieu of flow-
ers that donations be made in
Mr. Seals' honor to: Newport
Balboa Sailing & Seamanship
Assn., Attn: John Pentz, c/o
Balboa Yacht Club, 1801 Bay-
side Dnve,.. Corona del Mar
92625.
l>O\Ol 1\\0\\'
\Ol R \C,l \I~
.Rabbitt Insurance Agency
AUTO • HOMEOWNERS • H.EALTH
40 Ytars In Business
~.<7~ ·-· ... -......... ./ > ."J
949-631-77 40
441 Old Nc:wport Bhd. •~"Beach
(Near Ho.g Hoipital)
WHY PAY
DERl! S t ORE
PRICES?
Visit our
AREA RUG STUDIO
Rugs & Runners on
Sale
HandnuJc wools. synthetic. 1isals
A ALDEN'S
1663 Placencia St., Costa Mesa
(949)646-4838
Put a few words to
work for you. Call the
Daily Pilot
ClASSIFIEDS 642-5678
I '
Doily Pilot Soturdoy, Jonuory 81 2000 Ai
Nothing is sweeter than sweet peas .
S weet peas are one of
Mother Nature's best
creations. They are easy
to grow, look fabulous 1n the
garden, provide bundles and
bundles of intoxicating flow-
ers and sell-seed almost to a
fault.
I started my sweet pea
fascination years ago, and
since then I have fine-tuned
the process so I get maxi-
mum result~ with minimum
effort. Let me walk you
through the process so you
and your family cah revel in
these early spring miracles.
Pick a spot in your garden
that has full sun, moist soil •
and room·enough for a trel-
lis, bamboo tepee or wire
structure. lf you need to
~end the soil, do it now.
Any effort at this stage will
reap exponential benefits.
Sweet peas' tendrils need
something to cling to, so
ctepending on your style,
select a method of support.
U you are growing your
sweet peas against a fence
or wall, provide netting for
th&-tendrils to grab. This will
give you a dramatic plane of
green leaves, reaching ten-
drils and beautiful flowers. lf
you choose a location in the
middle of your garden, you
will need a free-standing
structure.
There are many ways to
provide support. One of my
· favorites is a bamboo tepee.
I use three bamboo poles,
karen
wag ht
approximately 4 feet tall, "'
and secure the top together
with raffia or jute. I dig three
)loles in a triangular pattern
and plant the bamboo ends
in the dirt. At this point I
wrap the poles with nylon
netting so the young plants
will find a spot to grab. Met-'
al wire fttames such as
obelisks, cones or triangles
are other lovely ways to give
your plants the support they
nee'd to give you maximum
results. The plants climb
upward toward the sun, and
stems, leaves and tendrils
;ust seem to grow before
your. very eyes.
Next, the seeds. Most of
mine are cultivated from last
year's harvest, but I add at
least one packet of new.
seeds a year to my mix.
SALE IN PROGRESS
UP T060%0FF
WOMEN'S C CHILDREN'S
MAGASIN 209
209 Marine Ave., Balboa Island • (949) 673·5542
Sometimes my experiments
lead to new generations of
favorites, sometJ.mes not.
,4st year I tried some heir-
loom varieties. Seeds are
called ••heirloom" when
they have been around for
several generations. A fe~
of these._ are charming and
fragrant, but I have found
the best performers to be
the improved strains that are
disease-resistant, vigorous
and produce bountiful flow-
ers on long, sturdy stems.
Sweet peas come in a
huge array of colors. Color
mixtures include deep rQse,·
blue, purple, Scdrlet, laven-
der, white, cream, amethyst
on white ground, salmon,
salmon pink on cream, and
red. TI»s is not the time for
color coordinauon; plant a
variety of seed types and
colors to frnd which varieties
grow best in your location
and soil. Soak your seeds in
water for 24 hours before
planting. This will help with
seed gennination. Sow seeds
1 inch deep, 1 to 2 inches
apart at the base of your
supp_ort structure. Water well
and fertilize. It might sound
c,liche, but using Miracle Gro
once a week will help pro-
quce a breathtaking display
of flowers.
Once your sweet peas
start flowering, cut, cut, cut.
Sweet peas are prolific; the
more you cut, the more flow-
ers your plants wUl produce.
As you cut your flowers,
Sweet peas come ln many floral colors. Choose a wide variety for a showy display.
arrange them in a bouquet
style, tallest in the center ·
and shorter toward the out-
side. Think of a traditional
bridal bouquet and place the
flowers accordingly. Before
you place them in a vase, cut
the ends of the stems
straight across. then place
them in a container.
And speak.mg of contain-
ers, sweet peas look good in
any sm'all vase. If you have
small vases with narrow
necks, this is the time to pull
them off the shelf and fill as ·
manY. as you can find. The
only problem with.sweet
peas is that you migbt run
out of things to put them in
or places to put them. A few
sweet peas brighten a room
and add a wonderful fra-
grance that lasts for days.
When you have filled all
of your bedrooms, bath-
rooms, kitchen and living
room, give a bouquet to your
orrection
children's teachers, your
neighbors and your c;o-work-
. ers. These flowers were •
meant for random acts of
kindness. The cled.n, sweet
fragrance is one of.the best
parts of spring.
It's one or Mother Nature's"
loveliest muacles.
• KAREN WIGHT is a Newport "
Beach resident who owned.Wight
House Design for 10 years Her •
column runs Saturdays
Join the thousands Of thrillftl
patients who have discoverftl
better vision at laserCare. LASER CARE
Charles D. Fri!~~l M.D. F.A.C.S Du«tor ot FDA :)tU(J)' o(
Famghtecfney and Astigmatism
Donald Serafano, M.D.
EducatioMI Seminar Dates
Saturday, January 8th • 101m
Th~rsday, January 13th ~ 6:)0pm
· Saturdav, January I Sth • 101m
ME DI C AL C E NT E R Mayo Clinic Trained
Aste about our f DA Approved VtSX late{I
~SMurdays
I .
. . . . . ..
A6 Saturday, January 8, 2000 i. ~ ~rn about travel far and wide
o Linda Slaughter, a travel
,consult.ant at Newport Travel
Concepts -a full-service trav-
el agency -writes a newslet-
ter packed full of infonnation
or people who love to travel,
with firsthand reconunendn-
tions on train bips and cruises,
as well as general information.
:Jns:lde her latest letter, Slaugh-
~r wiites that she is excited
about the "great train escapes•
-with tours of New England, the
Sollthwest and Mexico's Cop-
per Canyon.
"My personal favorite is
,ijeparting from Boston in Sep-
.1 tember or October (six dates in
hll) and traveling to Maine,
'New Hampshire, Vermont
Connecticut, Cape Cod and
return to Boston, staying each
'night in a hotel or inn," Slaugh-
ter writes.
•There are four days aboard ·
'4 private rail car and four days
aboard a deluxe motor coach.
•This seven-rught trip costs
~1 ,999 per person inclutling
4otels, meals and sightseeing
tours in such place as Mystic
and Newpurt. What a great ,,ay to view the fall foliage.•
Slaughter also recommends
the new train route to the
"Grand Canyon from Amtrak.
• The new route makes it pos-
. '1ble to travel from Fullerton to
'"Williams overnight in a deluxe
ASouthwest Chief full-service
train connecting with Grand
(,;anyon Railroad for a trip to
the SoUth Rim. You have the
option of JOdging at the Grand
Canyc>!l or returning to
WilliaJils,
For cnWies, Slaughter rec-
ommends the Colwnbia
Queen, which will be opera.led
by the Delta Queen Steamboat
Company beg:iruiing in March.
The steamboat will be traveling
from Portland to Idaho and .
return along the Columbia and
Snake rivets.
There are 70 eabins, mostly
outside, and same with bal-
conies. Fares range from $2,000
to $4,000 for the eight-night
trip, depending on the season ,
and the cabin choice.
•there is a repeaters dis-
count for past passengers of the
Delta steamships, as well as
early booking discount for their
inaugural year,• Slaughter
wiites. For more information on
travel. or to receive a newslet-
ter, please call Slaughter 4t
(949) 261-8660.
A'Maree's, at (949) 642 ..... 423,
is having a •super millennium
sale,• says owner Nancy
Brown.
The sale starts today at 10
a.m. The high-end ladies' cloth-
ing store canies the best in
designer fashions, and the sales
are always great. There will be
markdowns up to 75% off. ·
The sale incllJdes selected
clothing, shoes and accessories.
A'~'s is open Monday
through-Friday from 10 a.m. to
6 p.m., Satur~~ from 10 a.m.
to 5:30 p.m. and is closed Sun-
days. •
It's located at 1649 Westcliff
Drive in Newport Beach. ·
. Gary's Island is closing its
Laguna Beach and Balboa
Island stores and consolidating -
all of its merchandise into its
Fashion Island store.
The Fashion Island store will
be expanded and will reopen in
the spring. Merchandise on
sale is reduced up to 70%.
Name brands on sale include
Reyn Spooner, Tommy
Bahama, Back East, Tom Rich-
land and Blue Water. The Bal-
boa Island store is located at
~ .. w.__You Have the Right
to Choose Your
•
Repair Facl_li~
· nsist on the Best
Lifetime Warranty
Full Service Collision Center
lnsuraf'.'lce Approved Shop---•
(949) 642-4522
121 Industrial Way • Costa Mesa
'*' f ,,i,,.tf t/f• fr•>q
<i•,..,'"'•· Italy
.. \J,.j~,. ff•"t f?
f.,..,.Jt,. $/i•p,
t" E.~f~ve (;,., .J.
~ic;<ha,. ~f}t/JJ.Jy ,.,..,.
't €~~;c 'fite~fr•'t
:M1lfl. Italy
... l~i 'P1iitCt.U ~ .. ,
+VI~~
306-D Marine Ave., and the
Laguna Beach tore is located
at 357.S. Coast Highway.
1be Padfk: Design House,
at (949) 642.3600 and located at
1931 Newport Blvd. in Costa
Met»a, is having a going-out-of-
business sale on all rugs, which
are reduced 60%. .
Included in the sale are rugs
from China, Pakistan, Persia,
Turkey, as well as Aubason
weave, vegetable dyes and
antique wash rugs. ·
Furniture is also reduced for
the sale. Name brands on sale
include Pulaski, Lane, Hooker,
Platt and John Charles.
MJner Mistakes Designer
Outtet. at (714) 549-1442, is
having ctmQving sale on
Wednesday, Thursday and Fri-
day.
The three-day aale is consid-
ered a ~rogressive sale because
the savings increase with the
amount of mE;rchandise you
buy. If you 1'\ly one item, you'll
get 10% off; two items -15%
off, and three items -20% off.
The outlet is a showroom of
furniture and accessories, fea-
turing new and discontinued •
items.
There are tables, dining
room sets, mirrors, lamps,
upholstery, bedroom acces-
• sories, coff ee·tables and art-
work reduced for the sale. All
sales are linal.
Name-brand furniture man-
ufacturers on sale include Drex--
el Heritage, ~gton, Hickory
White and Platt. It's located at
3030 Pullman St. in Costa
Mesa.
A family portrait special is
being offered at Yuen Lul Por-
trait Photograph" studio in the
Crate & Barrel wmg of South
Coast Plaza.
A family p6rtrait costs $38 (a
$100 value) arld includes the
sitting fee and one 8-by-10 col-
or photograph. .
• BEST BUYS is published Thursdays
and saturdays. If you know of a good
buy, send a fax to (949) 646-4170 or
write to Daily Pilot. Best Buys. 330 W.
Bay St., Costa Mesa 92627.
Samantha Mangione (right. top photo) ·
and Gabriela Tena, both third-graders at
Our Lady of Angels Elementary School
in Newport Beach, dressed up in Roa.ring
'20s style during the school's "Blast
Through TI.me" celebration. Right, third-
graders Charlie NornandJn (left) and
Nick Klein await their turn to parade
around the school patto area. Students
from preschool through eighth grade
dressed up ln costumes representing eras
during the last 1,~00 years in the United
States.
PHOTOS BY CARl HCALGO I OAJLY PILOT
.____/
6 II f 0 /'{'(/JI "{J rl'I t lf !)
dfi.~t11rc,
3-l NI 1111111 .... 21rn11111 • .::..' t fl n
srlrro1t1iJ c.ln ..!£1,,,J,; (')otS ..
<)'111/1 '!!flm11 .!_1111-n--i
()f) J4" #ft JI•
Hodson
Lighting
QUallt.r Li.htini S.ni« I
for30Yura I
I t
Optn Tuu.-Fn. 9-5, S•I. 9.4 f
1510 Ntwport Blvd ., Costa Mcs.t
I • I
YOUR WEDDING D
with memorable wedding photographs,
color and black & white
~22@1J ~-~ .. Jtl~~~
,;.., .• n,.,,.1ue.&ee ~.12.ee.:Jiee
(&,.I (I.. ,, :h£J
• '9d.it • • .W, • iff a II '+1 • . (949) 675-3 30
~~; j-'1"2-10.~e
NEWPORT COASTAL PODlit ROUP, INC.
NO! YOUR FEET ARE NOT SUPPOSED TO HURT. ,
The feet are the foundation of your body, and can often cause
BACK, KNEE and HIP pain.
Pain is your body' way of indicating sotnc:tbinf is wrona.
Dr. Yihinc:n can help reline pain-throug_b non surgical mcrhOds.
• Bunion corredio~o hospltallzatioci • lnarown toenails
, New treatmtnt tor tunaus nails • Spectallzlna In the treatment ol athletk &
ports lnjurlet • Utllizlna ne" computerized fOOt analy I
• Diabetic Footcare and Evaluation
Dr. Vihineo utili1c computeriud gait analytis to bc9' evaluate and diagnott
di10tdm of tM lowtr extmniba.
Preferred provider for rriott intutancca including Medicare
30~ Placentia, Ste. 207, Newport Beach
;_,.,.......,.. c.... 949-645-6544
..... ·~ .............. a-........ El«trolyN.
• Modwr Th 8t Prosfttn • ~ a Fooc Can • Glft Certi6ce<w •
1e% Ditc:ooo& ftlMI few .. ...nc.. a«pt .n.dy llUcounl.d ~.
reeall produrta or i. ~ wWi Ul'f odMr diec011111. •
3732 Eat Cout mM.af
Coroaa del Mar, Callto;;G tJOS
--~--~~~~~~~.:...=-~•----..,....~~~-w~~-4'
Can you really buy a car over the IQtemet?
Yes You Can!
• Send AROUND TOWN items to the
Dally Pilot. 330 W. Bay St., Costa
M@sa 92627; fax them to (949) 646·
4170, or call (949) 764-4330. A com·
plete listlng may be" found at
dallypilot.com •
Sherman Ubrary and Gardens
presents •Rose Pruning,• a free
program that will be held at
9:30 a.m. Garden director
Wade Roberts will demonstrate
correct rose pruning and dis-
cuss the cultural needs fo1
growing healthy roses. The
Sherman Library and Gardens.
is at 2647 East Coast Highway,
Corona del Mar. For more
inlormation, call (949) 67'3-
2261 ..
Motlvattonal speaker and
author Becky Tirabassi wlli
hold an afternoon tea from 2 to
4:30 p.m. at the Hyatt New-
porter, 1107 Jamboree ROdd,
Newport Beach. For tickets
and more information, call
(949) 718-6232.
the corner of
East Bluff Dri-
ve and Back
Bay Road in
Newport
Beach. The
.tours are free.
For more infor-
mation, call ·
(949) 786-8878:
SUNDAY
around town
BEST BET Cleanse & Nour-
ish Yourself with
Super Green
Foods &
Herbs•trom '6:30
to 8 p.m. in. its
patio ca.fe.
Mother's 1s at
225 E. 17th St.,
Costa Mesa, For
reservations al\d
mQre informa-
tion, call (800)
. 595-MOMS
WEDNESDAY
,.
.
Saturday, January 8, 2000 A7
The lat t Thing Te dUng and
Healing C nter pr ents a free
10-week med1tallon clas ,
"The Proct1c.al Art of Medita-
tion," taught by Rev. Dr. Crystal
C. Bu1ol, from 7 to 9 p.rn.
through March 15. For mor
information, call t949) 6'
6211
The Newport Beach Co~
.. ruty Services will present ·"'l
c;enes of drawing and pa.intin
workshops featunng .mdiVl
ual msttuction for begmQe
thr9ugh advanct•d students i.a
mixed mecha Artl:>t und lectur-
er Mtmi Sharon Stem will con-
ct1.1ct the !.l'mmars, which will
run for eight 'Wednesdays, 10
a.m. to 12:30 p.m .. ~tartlng on -
Jan. 12: The work~hops will be •
held 1n the Vmce .Jorgensen
Center ad1arent to Manner~ -
L1brdT)', 2005 Dover Dnve,
Newport Beach. The fee tor the
senes is $63. for more mtonna-
tion,'cdll (949) 644-3151.
Crystal Cove State Park will
be holding •tide pool talks· at 3
p.m. State Park staff and
docents will lead tours of the
tide pools, which will be
exposed by exceptionally low
tides. Meet at the Pelican Point
Parking Lot No. 2. Participants
should wear water booties or
rubber-soled shoes with good
traction. The parking fee is $6.
For more information, call (94 9)
491--1321.
The Newport
Beach Central
Library''s
Friends Meet-
ing Room will
host •Tue Art
of the Song" at
3 p.m. Soprano
Judith
Townsend will
perform works
by Schumann,
Schubert, Lisit
and Strauss.
The library is
at 1000 Avoca-
do Ave., New-
port Beach. For·
more informa-
tion, call (949)
717-3801.
The Orarige
County chap-
ter of The Sin-
-Crystal Cove State Park will hold a "Gray Whale Sunday" Crom 9 a.m. to noon at
the boardwalk overlook of Pelican Point· parking lot No. 2. A spotting scope,
binoculars, whale props, games and natural history information wiU be available.
Newport Beach
Community Ser-
vices invttes par-
ents. tedchers
and elementary
school students
to the grand
operung of 'Kid-
Scene, lrom 4 to
6 p.m. The event
will; be dt ·the
Vincent · Jor-
gensen Commu-
nity Center m
Manners Park,
at Dover Dnve
and Irvine
The. Newport-Mesa Cribbage
Club meets <1l b:45 p m at the
Oas1~ Center, 5th dlld MciI·
guente, Corond del Mar. Ca,ll
(94tl) 64b-52<"3
A~enue. Pizza, ' Tbe Finan ial E ecutives drink and cook-c x ·Parking is $6. For more information, call (949) 497-1321. · ies wilJ be 1 l?stltute>, Ordnge C'ounty
The meeting of the Orange
County Apple Computer Club
will feature a slide show and
video presentation by Dean
Cleary, who will demonstrate
new technology from the
recent MacWorld Expo. The
meeting will run from 8 a.m. to
1:30 p.m. in the Chemistry
buildi.Rg of OrdJlge COdSt Col-
lege, 2701 Fairview Road, Cos-
ta Mesa. Dues for the club are
$45 a year. For more informa-
tion, call (714) 836-0522.
Friends of Newport Bay will
hold guided walking tours of
the Upper Newport Bay Eco-
logical Reserve. Tours will
leave every 15 minutes
between 9 and 10:15 a.m. from
gle Gourmet
will l).old one of
its dining events at 1 p.m. at
The Grill at Pelican Hill, 22651
...... Pelican Hill Road South, New-
port Coast. For more informa-
tion, call1800) 750-DlNE.
·The Latest Tblng Teaching &
Healing Center offers an "lntu-
ihon · Development \'+'ork-
sbop•with Zack P.erlman from
2:30 to 7 p.m. The class 1s $35.
The store is at 270 East 17th
St., Newport ~each. For more
information, call (949) 645-
6211.
Crystal Cove State Park wUJ
hold a "Gray Whale
Sunday"trom 9 a.m. to noon at
the boardwalk overlook of Pel-
ican Point Parking lot No. 2. A
spotting scope, binoculars,
whale props, games and natur-
al history information will be
available. Parking is $6. For
more information, call (949)
497-1321.
MONDAY·
CoasUJne Counseling Center
of Newport Beach will bold a
free fecture titled ·ADD
Overview· al 7 p.m at the cen-
ter. CoasUme founder Joan
Andrews will speak about the
symptoms, diagnosis and treat-
ment of Attention Defiot DlSor-
der COdstline is at 1200 Quail,
Swte 105, Newport Beach. For
more mformat1on, call (949)
476-0991
TUESDAY
The Latest Thing Teaching
and 1 lealing Center presents a
"Sacred Drummmg"class with
Jim Kinney, stdrting al 7 p.m.
The course 1s $5. For more
mfonndtion, calf (949) 645-
6211.
GB Ca.ECTED TO @omcast
. · DIGITAL CABLE r
• H•
SUndap 9PM/8C
$9.95 Connection
(Save over $24.00!)
Plus, order now and receive 1 /2 off your 1st month of ·
any HBO and/or Cinemax package!
Call today and ask for the Digital Gold Package
including 12 screens of HBO and 8 screens of Cinemaxl
Borders Books, Music and Cafe I
presents a free work.shop on
1 "Goal. Aduevi.ng Ln the New
Millennium"at 7 p.m.,Jttcque
Daruel. professional business I
coach, will speak The store is
at 1890 Newport Blvd., Costa
Mesa For more mformabon,
call (714)256-0353 I
The National A.<.sn. of Women
Busmess Owners wtll meet
from 6 tQ 9 p m. at the Wynd-
ham Garden Hotel, 3350
Avenue of the Arts, Costa
Mesa. The topic of the meeting
Will be'"Mars and Venus tn the
Workplace. "Tho meeting,
whlch includes dinner, is-$44
for nonmembers and $34 for
first-time guests. For more
information, call (714) 832-
5741.
Mother's Market will hold a
semmar tltled "Detoxify,
setved. For more I Chdpter, will meet dl b p m, dt
information. cdll The Center Clu~. 65!> Town
(949) 644-3151 . \ente1 Unve, Cosh1 Mesa.
Sherman Library and Gardens
presents a class titled •Rora!
Design tor Formal Dmmg"at
9·30 a.m. All ma nals are pro-
vided. The course is $40 The
Sherman Library and Gardens·
is at 2647 E. Coa~t Highway,
Corona del Mar. For more I
mformanon, call (S49) 673-
2261.
C hdpmdn University pw:.1dent
James Doh will !.pedk. To
RSVP. Cdll (714 ) 278-6201. ...
Mother's Market wtll hold •
a seminar titled
• Answenng Your NutnbonaJ
Queshons"from 0:30 to 7:30
p,m. in 1l<> pauo cafe "1other's
is at 215 E. 17th St , Costa
Mesa. For resef\ations and
more mfonnation, call (800J
The Newport Harbor Area 595-MOMS
-Chamber of Commerce ... will I .
hold a noon networking Jun-Developments in the Crystal
cheon....at the Sutton Pldcc Cove issue will oo the su.bJ~
, Hotel, 4500 Ma ur Blvd., I of tht• Coastal Comnuss1~ •
Newport Beach. Wilson, m1..>etm~ at 9 a.m., which ~
rndnaging director 0 consult-1 be held dt the Four Points
mg services at Richard Chaug Sheraton }jotel, 5~0 Pico Blvd.,
Associates Inc., will spedk. The SdJlta . Morurd Per:.ons mter-
evenl lS $15 for members v.rith ested m dttendt.ng Cdn contact.
reservations, $20 for potentlal the AlllancE• to Rescuf' Crystdl
members and amv:als dt t.tie Cove, which is ammqmg cd.r•
door. For more infonnabon, cd.11 I pools to Los Angeles. Call (94
(949) 729-4400. . 852-0199. .
• I
aroUnd town
. Orange Cout College wlll
bold a seminar on daily over-
"' time laws for payroU person-
nel and human resource pro-
fessionals. Registration for the
workshop, •The New Millcn-
um Means the Return of
Daily bvertirne, • costs $79 in
advance and $89 at the door.
:nie workshop wµl be held
from 8 to 11 :30 a.m. m the
Community Education BuUd-
:1tlg conference room at OCC,
701 Fairview Road, Costa
Mesa. For more information,
Cttll {714) 43.2-5880.
The Balboa Island Historical
Society will meet..at 1 p.m. at
"' private home. For informa-
tion, call (949} 675-9019.
:rHURSOAY $4
The Newport Beach Central
Library will be hosting an
estate planning financial sem-
inar at 7 p.m. in its Frienos
Meeting Room. The free pt'o-
gram will focus on the compo-
nents of estate plans, wills
nnd trusts. The library is at
1000 'Avocado Ave., Newport
Beach. For more information,
call (949) 717-3801.
The Latest Thing Teaching
and Healing Center presents
• Knowing your Sprit Ouide
Made Easy" with Jim and
Anne Kinney, starting at 7
p.m. The class is $10. For
more mformation, call (949)
645-6211.
the Orange County HJstor~
cal Society will bold a ge9eral
meeting at 7:30 p.m. at the
Bower5 Museum, 2001 North
Main Street, Santa Ana. The
program will cover the evolu-
tion of the boats of the Balboa
, Island Ferry. The event Is free
and features refreshments
For more information. call
(714) 993-7009. • Mother's Market will bold a
booksigning and workshop
with Cheryl Thiele, author of
~ The Sacred Journey,• from
6:30 to 8 p .m. in it~ patio cafe.
Mother's is at 225 E. 17th St ..
Costa Mesa. For reservations
and more informdtion, call
(800) 595-MOMS
FRIDAY
Orange Coast· Colle~ wlll
hold its 25th annual Sailing
Adventwe Senes, a four-part
series of meetings for nautical
enthusia~ts, at 8 p.m. Fridiry
evening§ today through F;eb.
4. The meetings will be in the
Robert BJ Moore Theater of
the college, 2701 Fairview
Road, Costa Mesa. Tickets to
the series are $40, with sing!
tickets available for $13. For
more information, call (714)
432-5880.
The · Newport Harbor
Christmas Boat Parade
Awards Dinner and Auction
will be held starting at 6 p.m.
at the Four Seasons Hotel, 690
Newport Center Drive, New-
port Beach. 1ickets are $60
per person, with tables for 10
available for $600. For more
information and to make
reservations, call (949) 729-
4400.
-~
danddioo h;;told soodt
S~LE
up to 500/o Off
select items
432 E. 17th ST .• Costa Mesa
M·F; 10 am· 6 pm • SAT 10 am-4 pm
CAU. FOR CO~OOARY CONSULTATION
941-721-1113
•SAN MIGUEL DRM, IUnt 207 •NEWPORT BEACH
Dr. El1m'1 Uwt llrtlcll lnl•caata www.Nlln1surw1ry.com
The Costa Mesa Church off
Religious Science ..will hold a
three-day workshop on • atti-
tudinal healing• at the
church, 2850 Mesa Verde Dn-
ve East, Costa Mesa. The
event runs from 7 to 9:30 p.rn.
Jan. 14; 9 a.rn. to. 5 p.m. Jan.
15; and 1 to 5 p.m. Jan. 16.
Cost 1s $89. For more informa-
tion, call (?14) 754-7399.
JAN. 15
The Newport Beach Public
Library will hold a seminar
called " Using the Libra.ry:
Internet Travel Resources• at
10 a..m. in the Friends meeting
room. The free program will
show participants how to
make trave l plans on the
Web. The library is at 1000
Avocado Ave., Newport
Beach. For more information,
call (949) 717-3801.
The Orange County Chapter
of The Single Gourmet will
. bold a gourmet dinner at 6:30
p.m. at the Robert Mondavi ·
'Wine & Food Center,. 1570
Scenic Ave .. Costa Mesa. For
information and rese,rvations,
call (800) 750-DINE.
The Colonel WllUam Cabell
Chapter of the National Soci-
ety Daughters of the Ameri-
can Revolution wlll hold a
genealogy workshop from
9:30 a.m. to 2 p.m. at the
Northbluff Clubhouse, 2490
Vista del Oro in Eastbluff,
Newport Beach. For more
information, call (949) 494-'
3833.
The Costa Mesa Senior Cen·
ter will hold a free • Senior
Asset Survival Workshop" at
. 10:30 a.m. The center is at 695
W. 19th St., Costa Mesa. For
more information. call (888)
Lowest Prtcn Guaranllld
In AJI Of Soilthem Clllfomlal
2000
2189 I •kewood Blvd •.long Beach
.... I
(562) 986-5305 =.:i'=
MtMy pl«:q bt •todfor I,.,..._ uliWryl
Due 1o ule pricea we can't qUOll prices over the phone. t -. I II • tr. C>.A
·,
Therapist Maxine Cohen will
hold a divorce workshop from
10 d.m. to 12:30 p.m. at 180
Newport Center Drive. The
workshop is for men and
women in the process of
divorcing or recently
divorced. For more infOnnd-
tion, call (949) 644-6435.
Orange Coast College's Sail-
ing Center wtll hold a sailing
seminar titled " Voyage and
Route Planning" from 1 to 4
p.m. Master mariner Jimmy
Cornell will speak. The semi-
nar ls $35 for singles, $55 for
couples. The center is at 1801
West Paafic Co~st Highway,
Newport Beach. ~or more
information, call (949) 645-
9412.
Borders Books, Music and
Cafe will pres~fll a free work-
shop titled • l'Vrdfketing Your
Business in the New Millenni-
um" at 10 a.m. Jacque
Daniel, author dr-How to
Network (& Prospect) Your
Way to Prosl>{:?rity, • will sign
her book followmg the work-
shop. The store is at 3333 Bear
St., Costd Mesa. For more
information, call (714} 432-
7854 ..
JAN. 17.
The Newport Beach Public
Library will hold a series of
workshops designed to help
seventh-through 12th-
graders unprov~ their skills at
using the Internet. Preregis-
tratton is required for the
courses, whi~h will meet at 7
p.m. Jan. 17, Feb'. 15, March
20 and April 24. The library is
at 100 Avocado Ave., Newport
Beach. For more information,
call (949} 717~3801.
FITSTART
Personal Training
"Your Fitness
Starts Here"
• Personal Satisfaction
Guaranteed
1st Session
FREE
• Advanced Exercise Technology
• lntrofit Nutrition
• Facilities in Newport &
Huntington Beoch
• licensed & Insured
• Results Oriented
Derek J. Archer
Certified Tech & C.P.T.
(714) 841-5900
Pager (714) 216-7501
I
r: The Latest Thing Teaching &
Heabng Center will hold .a
workshop titled • How to
Write about Youc SJ?iritual
Experiences,• from 7 to 9 p.m.
Tho class is $10. Tho Latest
Thing is at 270 East 17th. Cos-
ta Mesa. For more ioforma-
tioq, call (949) 645-6211.
Coast Consulting will bold a
free seminar, • Live Your
Dreams!", from 7 to 9 p m.
The office as at 180 Newport
Center Drive, Newport Beach.
For more information, call
(9490 651-5544.
JAN. 18
Mother's Market will hold a
tofu and tempeh cooking
class from 6:30 to 7 p.m. m its
Pdtio Cafe. The store is at 225
E. 17th St., Costa Mesa. The
course is $10. For reservations
and more information, call
(800) 595·MOMS.
The Newport Harbor Are
Chamber of Commerce Busi
ness Referral Breakfast wi
feature speaker and author
Fran B~an at 7:30 a.m. at
the Newport Beach Yacht
Club. Berman will speak on
the effective use of technolo-
gy. Tickets are $15 for mem-
bers, $20 for non-members.
The Yacht Club is at l 099
Bayside Drive.' Newport
Bedch. For more information,
call (949} 729-4400.
David Gabbe, author of two
books on vegetarian nutrition
dnd cooking will teach an
Introduction to Vegetarian
Cooking class from 6 to 9 p.m.
Tuesdays Jan. 18 and 25. The
courses will be held at the
Neighborhood Community
Center, 1845 Par Ave., Costa
Mesa. The cost is $30 plus d
Doily Pilot
$10 materials fee. Fo mor
information, call (714 327-
7525.
JAN. 19
Mesa Consoltdated Water
District will hold·a meeting of
its Water Issues Study Group
(WlSG) at 7 p.m. at the distnct
office at 1965 Placentia Ave.,
Costa Mesa. The meeting is
intended to educate tmd
inform community members
about important water issues.
For more information, call
(949) 631-1205.
JAN. 20
The Costa MeS"a Cha.mber of
Commerce will hold a 90-
minute B1eak1ast Boost from
7:15 to 8:ri5 a.m. at the Costa
Mesa Country Club, 1701
Golf Cours~ Drive, .Costa
Mesa. Tickets' are $12, in
advance, $17 at'the door. Fer
more infonnaf.lon,. call (714)
885-9090.
Author Jim Tl'elease wUI
address parents, teachers and
the generaJ public at 7:30
p.m. at TeWinkle Middle
School. Trelease is the author
of • Reading Aloud. ff For
more information, call (714)
424-7965. .
JAN. 26
The Costa Mesa Chamber o
Commerce will hold an afte
hours business mixer from
5:30 to 7:30 p.m. at Birraporet-
ti's, South Coast Plaza, 333
Bristol St., Costa Mesa. Th
event is f(ee for members and
$10 for potential members
For more information, ca
(714) 885-9090.
Have you considered a i
PRIVATE SCHOOL EDUCATION
for your child?· ·
~~ ~ ~
The Pegasus School invites you to join us for
Middle SchQol Information Night
January 19, 2000 • 7:00 p.m.
Kindergarten Information Night
January 26, 2000 • 7:00 p.m.
Now ac~tptJng appUcatlona for J>ruchoo1 .. :8th grade for 2000·2001
Campus tours are now being scheduled.
Please cab to reservt your personal tour t.lmt.
The Pegaaus School
19692 Lexington Lane, Huntington Beach, CA 92646
(714) 964-1224 •FAX (714L962·6047
Doily Pilot
SMITH
CONTINUED FROM A 1
in exce!>S of, say, $120 million?
~rn this vantage point,
8.imost any answer is sufticicnt
.10 r4.i.se questions about the
leadership of the current pan-
el.
_Tu top it off, only one
-· month ago, many of our chil-
dren were sent home with a
pitch to buy products from a ·
company called "Shop-
forschool.com." That's a pro-
gram in which loca l schools
get a srnaU percentage of the
saJe of products.
Among the six music CDs
available was one featuring
music from one of the stars of
the television program "Daw-
sorU_Creek. • Anyone familiar
with that show? It features an
affalT between a high school
student and his teacher
And if our kids log onto the
Shopforschool.com Web site,
they can preVlew or buy
music from "Shyne,• a 19-
yeM-old rapper who was
mdicted this week on three
counts of attempted murder,
or leer at the CD cover for
something called "VA-Mon-
ster Funk Party,• which fea-
tures a scantily clad woman in
C\ suggestive pose.
As was predicted in this
s~ce several months ago, this
<fesperate school board has
sold its moral code of conduct
for a few retail dollars. I 1ust
, d:tdn't think il would happen
'°quickly.
Added up, we have a board
that cannot find Its way. And
until there are answers anp
unless some of the board
members want to come out
from biding, I cannot trust
them to properly admtnlstrate
$163 million rn new tax rev-
enue.
And yet, as usual, our ctul-
l
dren will suffer for the mis-
takes of their elders. It uo thb
sole consequence that stands
rn my way of proclaimrng out-
right opposition to the pro-
posed tax. •
It is not the students' fault
that in some of our schools the
bathrooms are unfit to u.sc or
that roofs leak. It lS our fault
and it is my fault. After all, we
elect the people who were
supposed to watch over these
things. .
Weltch for the blame game.
The school board will careful-
ly choose a few scapegoats on
which to pin their need for
more money. I expect they'll
blame Sacramento, the county
bankruptcy and the embezzle-
ment. Some will even reach
back over 20 years and chng
to the last bit of blame they
can place on ·Proposition 13.
They'll point the hnger at
anything and anyone except
themselves. Leaders, on the
other hand, accept responsl-
bility.
Not having seen enough
conslStent responsible conduct
by this board is why l don't
trust them with the money at
this time. I'd feel better If built
into the tax proposal is the
creation of a ~eparate panel or
person wbo will oversee the
spending of the tax dollars. I'd
like to see the board hire
someone with character and
with school experience to do
that. I'd like lo see them hire
someone like Jim de Boom.
What we've got now with a
new tax proposal is a hdfldout
and more fodder for the pro-
voucher crowd. For this public
school supporter, asking tax-
payers for $163 million makes
it much harder to deny them a
turn at bat.
• STEVE SMITH is a Costa Mesa rest·
dent and frei!lance writer He can be
reached at (949) 642-6086 or bye·
mail at dailypllot0lat1mes.com.
Sat. Jan. 8th I i. Jan; 2ht.
including surfboards
New Styles Arriving Dai_ly
We need to make room for our Sot. Jon. 22nd
SEMI· ANNUAL SALE 9:00 o.m. -5:00 p.m.
€elestino's
quality MEATS
Tix· Finest MC'Ot and S<'n.11ce Auallpble
&ruing Cor11t Mts11 for over JO yt11n
I we off" A.LL-NATURAL BEEF & CHICKEN I
Ba/u 1 Hr. @350
Chicken Breast Pork Chops
Stuffed StuJfed .
wiih Combrad, CdC"ry &c Onion~ with Applci., Cinnamon 8c Albpicc
$3.99 lb . $3.99 lb
AM y/n,;,..-, M"'Jm>.,,, w,.. s."" • n*' &wn
Yz Lemon
Chickens
$2.69 lb
Lemon Garlic
·Tri Ups
$4.99 lb
n,.,,, ~I.,,,_,., o-Hm ~ """' ""1 •f llM. &mu
' I ' I I \ ( I ' I '"' ' I \ I I I \I '\ { I, I I I I ',I I I '
I,',' I
I
\ /
' ' '
Fmb SMfoo" !Hliwntl O.ily
El Toro B,..vo Cltipl 0-TortiJIM ,
r • ..u. DJimwJ lMily
1Mt 11'h.M.. Coetll Meia. tMlt 141-7111
...... l:OOto 7:GD Man. • Sil • 10:00 to &GO .....
,.-
'
Sotvrdoy, January 8, 2000 Al
In the new year, a number of clubs to choose from)
N1W YEAR'S RESOLU~
TIONl Want to get more
fun out of lifc1 Be more
purpo:>erul? Make new
friends? Network? Give some-
thing bdc&< to the commuruty?
Se<? the world? Show pnde in
Amenca? Then con::.1der 1oin-
in9 d servin• club in 20001
ThPre an> USA-only clubs dS
well as sNvke clubs that hdve
m~mbcrs around the world
C 0 M M U N I T f E S
• CLUBS
11m
de boom
Rotary is the fin;t of U1e ser-
vices club~. founded in 1905
by Paul Harris, d Chicago ,
lawyer. Thday, Rolary has 1 2
million membNs in 29,000
clubs in 159 countries around
the world and 1s the leader in
eliminuting polio t1s d disease
as d chtldhood d1sedse. Four found in children, wluch caw.-
local club:s provide for bredk-es retardation. Three local
(a!.t, lunch or dinner meetings. clubs meet for bredkfas.t dnd
The first local Ex'=hange lunch weekly.
Club WdS fanned m Detroit m l.Jons began in 1917 m
1911 by Charles A. Berkey Chicago, led by insurance
and 1s now 1s made up of man Melvin Jones It has
nearly 1,000 dubs and 33,000 grown to include more.th~n
members throughout the Umt-1.5 million members in 170
cd States dnd Puerto Rico. countnes. Lions are known
Their ma1or naltonctl thrust is worldwide for lheir work with
the prevention of cluld abuse. the hdrd of hettring und s1ght-
and there dfe two local noon less. Three locctl Lion Clubs
time cluhs. meet for dmner, while one
Allen Simpson Browne, a meets for bredkfdst. ·
Moosf' lodge orgamzer and Soroptimist Intcmutton«I
Joseph Prance, a tailor, found-• . hds ctl.moM 100,000 members
ed Kiwarus lntemdtiondl in 111 119 countncs drotmd the
1915. Today, KlwaIUS member-world. The first Soroptimist
ship spans the globe with · club was formed m 1921 by d
mort• than 300,000 me·mbers group of 80 women in AldmC'-
m 8,000 clubs m 82 countnes. da County, CaWomia They
Their ffidJOr worldwide project ·chose their name from two
dPals with lOchne deficiency Latin words meaning "best for
• A \ot Su l'rac/1tumu/ ,\ 11mr For A \ot 'i11 Traditional Rrstu11ra11t
Macaroni • Pizza • Salads • Sandwiches
California Pina & Pasta. BBQ Chicken, Garik Shrimp.
Goat Chresc Pizzas, Cltickrn Tequila, Fusili & More
Tl IF CHITICS .. ~J,L \(~BFI ·::
Winner Silver Medal Awa(d
by Southt>rn fallfomia Restaurant Wrltt'rb A.~0t·latJoa.
·,1 ma~trruwk. .. tlie bl'st saure J lial'e toastrd in yrar~. • / n.' \ngl'IN1 nml'11
"l:'xtratlfd111ar111 • an ltalin11 lrl'Osure. -Orang1• r uunt11 Rl'glstrr
"I-mm my jirlil bite to m11 last stp .. \/y dmm·r u•as del1ghtf11l.
/\ lut of f/'x><I fiHJd • · • ~ l'rrss · Mrqram
Nmrf /)ll/'s TY'rnmnJrnds: ·mrour < tRIJ /."ood;..\ .-twwdt>ISf.'rt•ire::A ~alul'=f1 01wall-1 • t rr¥5ii11.ft/2PRlfEI
I i.ui au) I 11ln•I!, 1'1111, 1•11 UI vr Salild t. I I Bu) Jlfl~ I ntn'l!, l'Wa Pa\UI or '&Lid I'.
Ciel ln1J 11r I qual or I• "'r \'alu1J t'l\LU ~l 2nd ur I qual nr I'*" r Valu~ Jfl f'nc"
lllllW'Jlair"t.,_lpk•IUIW. ~-~~ tll'"lf19$l•l\•.r ~ llu*rl I .... '4 .,,.. #-.,..•l..P,.2.Vl!Ul I L '°l•:dil• "' •I vv.'IJll. I ... ______ ... ______ ...
550 Pac. Coast Hwy. eal Beach (562) 430-4303
901 South Coast Dr., Cost~ Mesa (714) 641-3000
T\KE Ol 'r AVAILABLE • UF.l:H. WINE. COCKTAll.5 • OPl N 11:00 A.M • 7 DAYS
Invites you to our
ROSE .J
PRUNING
DEMONSTRATION '
Lesm how correct Rose
pruning multiplies blooms. Bigger
and better-ROSES from your own
garden.
. .
7~16 Master Nursery
Professionals wlll give this
demonstration and
NURSERllS, INC.
COIAETE ~ Salta Ala• 2800 N. Tltil Ave. • (714) 633-9200
UCIMINO 30IW f,oll lal I 2700 lristol St. I (714) 7st466J
wom1m. • They contmue to
focu:s on women's opporturu-
ties today. The locdl dub
m ts for lunch ..
Ptrr A SERVICE CLUB JN
YOUR FUfURE: If you made
a New Yedt's resolution to get
involved in your community or
the world, to expand your cir-·
cle ()( friends, to network thPn
check out our local service
dubs. Some clubs mc<>t week·
ly, while others mee"t twice a ·
month. AU provided lot of fun)
fellowship and servtce oppor·
tunilies. The cost of ll}eD)ber-
ship "and p<.1rticipabon vanes
from club to club. Most «Je
coed.
You <1re mvited to vtSJt the
service club of your chOlce to
check ttiem out while they
check you out. Most will buy
your hr.,t meal for you. They
mdke ti difference in our rom-
munity dnd world, and you
can tool
WORTH REPEATING:
From thl' Newport Beach-
C orond del Mark Ki\Vdnis
C'lub "Scuttlebutt" .. "The
cbctionury 1s the on,ly pldce
where success comes before
work"
ERVICE CLUB MEET·
INGS UilS COMING WEEK
. TUESDAY: The Newport
Beac.h Sunnse Rotary Club
meets at the Balboa Bay Club
at 7 .30 a .m.: the Costa Mcsa-
"lewport Harbor l.Jons Club
• Personal Training
• Chiropractic
will meet at the Costa Mesa 1
GoU cu1d Country Club cit {.)-30,
p.m
, r WEDNESDAY: The South
Coa t Metro Rotdry Club will ,..
meet at the Center Club, and
the Newport Harbor Kiwanis •
Club meets at the University 'i
Athleuc C'lub. both dt 7:15
<.1 m The Exchange Club of
ClMnge Coast meeLc; at the
8dh1a Connthion Yacht Club
ell noon; th<? N~wport Balboa
Rotdry mcPts at the Bahia f
Corinthi<.1n Yacht Club to hear
I !arbor Master Cdptdlll Marty
Kdsules of the Orange County!
Shcnff's Department at 6 p.m.,
TIIURSDAY: The Costa ,.
Mesa Orang(. Coast Breakfast
Lions Club m<'ets dt Mimi's
Cale to hPar Dale Carlson,
maker of balloons; The Klwa-
rus Club of Newport Beach-
Coronu cir! Mar mE•ets at the
Hahi<.1 Corinth1dn Yii,ht; the
Costa Me..,d Kiwanis Club ·
meets at the Hohday Inn; the
Exchange Club of Newport
J lurbor m<'et!> cit tt1<> Riverboat
to hedr John Moorlach,
Orange County tredsurer/t.ix !
collector; and the Newport-
lrvmr Roldry Club meets at· 11 the Irvine Mamott, aU at noon;
• COMMUNITY & CLUBS is pub-;,
hshed Saturdays in the Daily Pilot
Send your service club's meeting 1
I information by Fax to (949) 660-
8667, e-mail to JdeboomOaol.com or
by mail to 2082 S E Snstol, Suite
201, Newport Beach, CA 92660-
1740
•Nutrition
• Physical Therapy
Get Fit & Energize
For T. e New 'Year!
TRODUCTOR
OFFER
$J20
...
~ . -·
. .
"
Reading the Daily Pilot is one of the best investments I make all day.
Its pages detail the increasing value of our community and its leaders.
Improve your personal net worth by investing time in the Daily Pilot.
.
Got the Pilot?
Csll 1 (800) LATIMES to subecribe •Call {949) 642-4321 to advertise
. -
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[Doily Pilot
STORE FERRY
CON)'JNUED FROM A1
. CONTINUED FROM A 1 the water.
,...~111~ ...... i:a -G~nwninn_-t--chu"l bied to help he1 out but ~._, ~-~ didn't respond, id Dun-
said. ham, who said he threw her a
It is a prototype store for ring buoy. "She wdSn't swun-
Macy's 'because the mer-ming to it She looked really
chandise will be laid out by confused.•
Westyle as opposed to fype. Police said the Fullerton
For example, all casual din-woman left a swcide note
ing wear will be displayed behind in her car, which WdS on
next to casual furniture and the ferry.
formal dining wear next to When Dunham's efforts to
more formal furniture. help the woman from ~e boal·
· The 'existing South Coast failed, he went the extra dis-
Plaza MacV:s store is the tdnce. He stripped down to his
third-highest grossing store board shorts and jumped into
iri the company's chain, the water. The woman, who
which is why the Costa was flailing and screaming, had
Mesa shopping center was been afloat for about five min-
' fl logical choice for the new utes.
concept, Gunn-Downing The woman was shivering to
said. . .. the extent she looked as il she
\he w<Jmdn to I lwg li0!,p1ta..1,
where she underwent a ~ycho
)ogical evaluation.
ushe was yelling dlld talking
mcoher('ntly," said Lt.. John
Blauer of the Newport Beach
Fire> and · Marine De~nen .
#That water WdS pretty chilly,
but 1t would take t1 ball on hour
or longer for someorn~ tb lose.
consciousness, H
Dunhcun !>aid he tigw-ed the
womdn prohctl.>ly would have
dJ.ed iJ nu OJI(> hod ,heclfC} the
splash ·
"She wouldn't hdve made
It,'' he Sdld uThe water isn'.t thut
deep lliere, but J was think.mg
we hdd to get her on board dS
fast as possible!
CARL HIDALGO I DAILY PILOT
CEO of Macy's West, Jeremiah Sullivan, and Henry
Segerstrom, managing partner of C.J. Segerstrom& _Sons,
preview and discuss the new Macy's Home Store at South
Coast Plaza.
•The Orange County was having a seizure, Dunhct.m
market is underserved right said. Trained in first a.id and
now in furniture retail, so CPR -a requirement for ferry
this will be heavy on tumi-employees -Dunham watched
ture .. ~. she said. over the woman to make sure
The woman dfdn't have
much to Sd'y to Dunhdlll, who
has been work.mg for the terry
servicf• for more than tour yedrs.
But Dunhd.ffi took the rescue in
stnde, knoWIIlg lhat he hdped d
woman in dlStress
"Smee I've worked there,
I've . neve1 heard of dnyone
JWllp111g off the 'ferry,• he s.nd
·"It's kind of weird to Ulink dboul
it now, lookw.g hack I hgrued 1t
was the right thmg to do "
~PALMS . . ~CONTINUED FROM A 1
• I
: the restaurant's late-night · activities, it
: closed anyway. ·
"It improved for quite a while and thella.._ ~about a year ago. it started up agaiJ1, H
' said Assistant City Manager Sharon
~Wood.
· ., The Four Seasons will take over the
~ 10,000 square feet of space on FeQ. 1 and
~turn it into a banquet facility f.or its guests.
• "It's a great concept and great idea. ~We're ~ed, H Olson said ..
Four Seasons will change the interior
.,of the tented facility to suit the weddings,
~anniversaries, engagement parties and
holiday events that will be held tht!re.
Mapagement of the Pasadena-baseq
1\.vin Palms cbain, however, finds the
,arrangement somewh at ironic
•,although the restaurant had to· close
because of noise, the Four Seasons will be c-
'taking it over for large banquet events.
~ Hit is very sad to us," Ciulla · said,
"adding that after seeing a rash of r-estau-
~ rant closures in the community, they "saw
11 the handwriting on the wall." · ·
~
'I
DUNES
CONTINUED FROM A 1
Every day, six children across
the nation are diagnosed as autistic
· -a number that is sadly increas-
ing· each year, according to the
Autism Society of America.
It is .a mysterious affliction that
does not discriminate between
race, e thnicity or societal bound-
aries. It is, however, four times
more common in boys than in girls.
In an effort to increase aware-
ness about the condition, January
has been designated national
Autism Month. Along with 35 other
students from the Speech and Lan-
guage Development Center in
Buena Park, Andy participated in
painting a mural with the guidance
of renowned artist Synthia Saint
James at the Newport Dunes resort
on Friday.
Little fingers grabbed brushes
and created layer upon layer of
she was OK. ·
Paramedics amved and took
paint.
Bold blue triangles. Red
squares. Brigbt yellow su.ni.
Clear shapes were ~mothered
with hyper streaks of green. Drippy
§Pl~$hes of· dark blue: And finally,
black ....... everywhere. Covering
everything. Small flo}Vers and smi-
ley faces tried to peek out unsuc-
cessfully from under the solid black
that stretched over the c~:vasi..
Like the focused...chaos of each
layer of the painting, autistic chil·
dren typically get extremely
focused on one specific thing,. but
lose track of everything else. Activ-
ities, thoughts or emotions sudden-
ly develop intense meaning only
discernible by the individual.
At times, autistics develop abili-.
ties that border on genius, such as
the ability to .count cards or play a
piece of music 4{ter hearing it only
once.
"One of the children didn't
understand what we were doing
today, w Hasson said. • 1t had no
meaning for him. H
Following this illusive ray of
"meaning" is how Hassan and oth-
er teachers dt the Speech and Lan-
guage 'bevclopment Center reach
into the children's fragile existence
fo pull them out into the world -to
show them that the outside mdeed
has me~nin~ for them.
"If you go where they are ?nd
get into their world, you'll get very
'close," Hasson saitl.
She worked with one boy.Awho
collected bottle caps incessantly.
Hasson used the caps to show tiim
how to count, to reward him for
good work, and in d<?ing so,
learned to speak his language.
As for Andy. while the other
children rambled over the play-
groWld, he spent the afternoon
searcning for smooth stones.
•rm trying to find the big Oattest
rock, w Andy said, concentrating on
the sand as he wdlke'd away from
the bay toward the yellow school
bus.
"He'll be talking about it tomor-
row, too," said Hasson.
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wtute spc1.yed female
Wd!ltmg the wannth of
your Jove dn.d new home.
She is waiting dl the
Newport Beach Animal I
Shelter, located within
the DoVfH Shores Pet
Care CentPr, 2075 New-
port Blvd., Costa M~sa.
For more mlonndtion.
cc.ill (949) 722-8301.
Upcoming Petco
· adoption events will be.
• Noo~ to 3:30 p.m .
Jan. 8 at Petco m New-
port Bedch, Bison dnd
MacArthur_ Boulevatcl
• 10:30 a m. to 4 p.m.
Jan. 15 dt Petco m Costd
Mesa, 18th Street and
Newport Boulevdfd
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P.O. Box 8662 Newport
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Eric Askew is a colorful Newport Beach artist who lived in Tahiti and studied
velvet painting with-Edgar Leeteg.· But his lifelong pass~on is keeping himself fit.
By Alex Coolman
n 1939, Eric Askew was living a stm-
ple life in Tuhiti. He spent $4 a week
on expenses, ca_ught his dinner with
a fishing pole, and spent the days
training as a weightlifter.
The New Zealand youth -·he
was in bis early 20s at the time -
wanted to make it.to the Olympics.
And, having won weightlifting tiUes
·in New Zealand and Austria, Askew
thought he had a pretty good shot if bis Tahiti
training paid off. · •
Askew and bis weighUifting friend Alex Dick
shipped 400 pounds of weights to the islands and
set up camp.
"We went over there and built a but," Askew
said. "We had somebody plait the coconut fronds
[for the thatched roof] and we trained there in
the garden."
As it turned out, the 132-pound lifter found the
physical limitations of his body impossible to
overcome, no matter how hard he trained.
"You get to a certain level, and you don't get
beyond that," he said.
But the time on the tropical island bad unex-
pected consequences. Though the shot at the
Olympics never materialized, a neighbor, Edgar
Leeteg, gave Askew· an introduction to an art
· form that seemed ~cularly well-suited to cap-
turing the lush Tahitian scenery: velvet paihting.
Leeteg, who died in 1953, has since become a
· sort of cult hero in art circles for his wor~ on vel-.
,. vet. The Huntington 'Beach Art Center presented
a show of his work last February, and a Culver
City gallery is featuring a "Thbute to Leeteg"
group show through Jan. 31.
Askew, now a wiry and energetic 83-year-old,
has. a few paintings i.p. the Culver City shoy.r as
well, works that showcase his mastery of the art
style he learned at th! bands of the velvet king.
SEE ASKEW PAGE A16
. C\.. _ DON LEACl;l / DAILY PILOT
Newport Beach resident Eric Askew, 83, creates Images on velv.et that reflect the time he spent 'tVJ"ahlU studying with dill arttst
Edgar Leeteg. He says he's "83 and pain-free, .. because of his regiment of .windsurfing, siding and diet Here, he hangs out on
his porch with one of his favorite paintings.
[.
lighten up
AL.Ex COOtMAN I ~Ph !N othing seemed quite so attractive
· to Judith Viorst when she was
young as a good. _romantic death.
Her mother had often read to her Edgar
Allan foe's poem "Annabel Lee," the one
whose beautiful heroine ends up in "the ·
sepulchre there by the sea," and it
seemed to her that literature couldn't get
any finer or more tragic.
At the age of 7, Vi.erst decided, with
extreme earnestness, to embark on a
career as a poet, and she modeled her
early efforts on the literary example she
so admired. .
"If it didn't have a co~e, it wasn't a
poem," recalled Viorst, who is in her 60s.
"I thought of myself as a very, very seri-
ous poet. I didn't think you could say any-
thing in a funny way and still have it be
i;erious."
That lesson -that serious themes and lhumor could happily coexist -came lat-er in life for Viorst, author of the musical
•Alexander and the Terrible, Honible, No
Good, Very Bad Oayl" which comes to
OCC on Sunday.
Vlorst originally wrote "Afexander" in
1972 as a children's book, a tale whose
whimsical portrayal of a particularly frus-
qating day in the life .of its protagonist
has sold more than 2 million copies.
But between the dawn of her obses-
sion with gothic demise and the develop-
!Ilent of the wise, comic perspective of
TODAY
Author Judith Worsts
~lexander & the
Terrible, Horrible, No
Good, Very Bad l)ayf'·
comes to OCC
her most famous work, Viorst spent many
years trying to find a voice and a vision
that somebody else would enjoy as much
as she did.
"I think of myself as an inspiratioh to
all late-blooming aspiring writers," she
said. "I never got a poem published until
I was in my 30s."
Viorst scribbled verse through her teen
years and into college, eventually moving
to New York with the belief that she
would be doing •brilliant, sensitive edit-
ing on the works of great writers and ~
somebody would notice this great genius
in their midst .•
The plan foundered as the rejection
slips began to pour in. She worked at
Women's Wear Daily and scribbled fash-
ion columns that the editors found
unpublishable. She worked for 'Ihle Con-
fessions and wrote up crilne stories that
the magazine wouldn't print. She wrote a
couple children's books, and from all the
presses she consulted the response was
unanimous: no thanks.
It wasn't until she had wallowed in this
rejection for a while, got married and ·
abandoned New York for life in Washing-
ton, D.C. that Viorst's literary career final-
ly began to gel. A stringer position with
the New York Herald Thbune led to her
printing poems in New York Magazine -
poems that maintained a light tone rather
than dwelling on •this death and desire,
crumpled-in-the-comer stuff I was always
writing," Viorst said.
Since that time, a touch of humor has
brightened Viorst's work, including 1.4
books for children, six collections of
poems and novels and nonfiction work for
adults.
Thematically, Viorst continues to
address issues that concerned her at the
outset. U she isn't writing about beautiful
ladies succumbing to terrible fates, she
nevertheless remains interested in the
difficult challenges people encounter in
life and the ways they manage to deal
with them.
"I think that virtually everything I l
write for adults I can write for children,"
Viorst said. "I think there's very little dif·
ference in subject matter. Feelings of
love, feelings of bate, concerns with sepa-
ration and connection, fears, envies. All of
that stuff is material that applies to both
audiences."
SEE ALEXANDER PAGE A 16
Memben of tlie Kennedy Center's • Aleunder & tile Tent·
ble, Horrible, No Good, Very Bacl Dayl • will appear at .
OCC u part of the center's Imagination Celebration on
Tour program.
...
Doily Pilot
, ..
r dcitebook · Saturday, Jonuory 8, '2000 Al3
Pomp and circumstance Cap European culinary delight -
group of men and
women dedicated to
the dining ex~rience
-the baillage of Newport
Beach, Conlrerle de la Chalne
des Rotisseurs -held its
induction ceremony and lavish
millenniwn dinner at a formal
ceremony in the ballroom of
The Balboa Bay Club.
"' The Bay Club's president,
Henry Schleleln, who serves
as the Par West Bailli provin-
cial comrnandeur of the
Chalne des Rotisseurs, wel-
comed the new members to
the gastronomic high court.
Les Inductees et elevees
include Lb)da Hughea,
. Lawrence Higby .. Gilbert
LeVasseur, Marlin IQetn Ill
and Thomas Rlach. In add.t-
tion, a special medal of dis-
tinction was bestowed upon
Ralph Gabal. The dinner cere-
mony was hosted by Wllllam
thews, Newport Beach
thropist and physician,
bis elegant wife, Ire.e.
'irathews also serves as an r of the Newport Beach .
· of the orgaruzation, hold-
i the title vice cbargee de
s. For those not f amillar
. . th the ChaJne des Rollsseurs
ell of the verbiage associ-. )Jed with the club and its pur-
s:s>se, here's a very brief intro-
ooction and explanabon: First, iLbaim or baillage is simply a
. ~trict or division, defining the
Bench word. In 1248, under
lie reign of St. Lows, king of
ance, a royal guild of Oyers
t.Lsseurs was established.
· was an organization of
ecutive chefs, or masters, as
ey were called, who roasted
e king's geese. Later, the
· translated and expanded l encompass the roasting of ti! kinds of meat and fowl.
I It was in fact the beginning bi a guild that would oversee ~ge and work standards, and t:lher areas of culinary prac-
~· all under royal patronege. ·
, The Chalne des Rotisseurs
uld flourish in Europe
ugh wa; and politi.cal
ge for some 600 years until
time of the French Revolu·
Louis XIV would declare
~om from all work laws in
p[l attempt to halt the coming
tile of change. His efforts filled. The revolution changed
B'ance and the rest of the Western world, including the ~ted States, and the Chaine .
dissolved and disappeared.
Fast forward some 160 ye6rs to 1950, when Europe
was rebuilding following
World War II. As is well-noted,
food was in short supply in the
gastronomic capital of Europe:
Enjoy a Spacious Suite,
Sumptuou Dining,
rtainment, Bingo, Crafu,
Billiard., Beauty Salon,
Tranlportation to Doctor,
Shopping, Fun TriP9f
Friendly Caring People.
From $1~95/Mo.
:'2283 Fairview at WU.on
. Co.ta Mes.a
Minimum age 58
For more infonnadon
pleue callc
949/6-46-6300 or
Fu: 949/646-7428
THE Cl-OWD
i( ·\_;.· . .d . ~ . ~.:_": ~'-1 . ~..... ..,
r . •
b.w.
cook
Paris. Foi that matter, the peo-
ple of the rest of the continent
were not eating so well, either.
To restQre the grand pnde
of the French in culinary
excellence, and as a. sign to
the world that the ravages and
shortages of war would be
overcome and a new standard
of excellence established, a
group of Frenchmen, includ-
ing Jean Valby1 considered
the grand chancelier of the
organization, recreated the
Chaine des RotitJSeurs.
Today, a half-century later,
the Chaine has baillages
around the world. In the Unit-
e(i States, Burton Hobson, a
close friend of Schielein,
serves cis the bailli delegue des
Etats Unis, or the president of
the national conference .
Here in Newport Beach, in
addition to Schielein and
Mathews, Dan Abbott, Darrel
Anderson, Ralph Gabai,
Robert Utile, Irene Mathews
and David Smith serve the
local chapter board with ener-
gy and honor.
Local members include
Dick Allen, Robert Burns,
Leslie Cotton, Bill Conlin,
Elaine Martin. Elaine Marttn,
llnda Lund, Jerry Harrington
and Gayle Wldyolar, to name
a small sample. · \
What is special about this
organization is the cama-
raderie shared by the mem-
bers who gather under formal
ocial calling to sample all
sorts of culinary work by the
full range of chefs and kitchen
crews in Amenca and aroupd
the world. More important,
the e~perience may be the last
ci~ed vestige of communi-
cation and friendship shared
over a meal where good man-
ners and old traditions mix
with new·values and ideas
and old friends.
This dining club was once
reserved for those in the indus-
try, so to speak. And today, it is
still largely organized by pro-
fessionals in the restaurant,
hotel and hospitality business.
More and more, however, new
members tend to come from all
walks of life, as evidenced by
the induction of locals tn the
Newport chapter. Tom Rlach is
a developer. Lawrence IDgby
is a tµgh-level financial execu-
tive. Gilbert Le Vasseur is an
investor and entrepreneur.
With great pomp and cir-
cumstance, s individuals
were knigh d into the organi-
zation. An oa f allegiance
was cited, the a sword cere-
mony and a · s sealed the
brotherhood Applause came
from the crowd, which sipped
fine champagne in advance of
the dinner of the century in
Newport Beach.
In honor of the millenniwn
and as a tribute to the well-
known chef of the 19th centu-
ry, Auguste Escoffier,
Schielein and his chef, Jean-
Pierre Elgenheer, recreated
the dinner served by Escoffier
on the occasion of the New
Year's Eve celebration in 1899
at The Carlton Hotel in Lon-
don. Irene Mathews served as
the chanrung hostess of the
affair, ensuring a perfect din-
ner on tables set with red ros-
es and crisp white linens.
The dinner began with
salade beaucaire, a mix of cel-
ery, endive, smoked duck,
apple, beet, chevril and tar-
ragon. A Billecart Brut Rose
wine WdS served with this first
course. Then, a filet de sole,
From left. Marty Klein, Unda Hughes, Gil Le Vasseur, Larry Higby and Tom RJach were
inducted into the Confrerle de la Chaine des Rotisseurs at the Balboa Bay Club~
avec huitres, enticed the d.tn-
ing crowd with a Pernot
Puligny Montrachet 1996 to
accompany the fish dish. · .
To cleanse the pallet, a sor-
bet de groseille et Porto (a red
currant sorbet) with a smooth
port wine followed. Toumedos
de boeuf Lili, a filet of beef
with duck liver, mushrooms
and truffle sauce, was present-
ed as the main course with a
Roty .Channes-Chambertin
1992 wine. Finally, for dessert,
Charlotte Russe en praline, a
ladyfinger with a healthy infu-
Don and Ramona Bernamontt,
BW and Laila Conlin, Mar-
garet Richardson, John and
Erin Macaluso, Wally and Ger-
ry Schroeder, Dorothy Ben-
ford, BW and Barbara Adams,
Craig and Susan Combs, ~d
Jeff and Amy Vieth.
With 21,000 members in
147 countnes, the Chaine has
an even more unportant pur-
pose. Funds are raised to sup-
port students wishing to pur-
sue a career in the kitchen. ·-
. Chaine runds progrdms at
major culinary universities
around the world, enabling
young people who might not
otherwise haw the opportuni-
ty to learn the art of fine cook-
ing to feed the next generation
and to keep the tradition of the
table dlive and well dfld flour-
ishing m 2000 dlld beyond.
• B.W. COOK is the editor of the Bay
Window Magazine, a Balboa Bay
Club publication His column appears
I every Thursday and Saturday
sion of praline &Isle served · ., ¥.. ..,..._ ~-:Jr---~~ with a Royal TokaJi Red Label • ~:J,, ) -.> 'Yi>•;, -..rt' v • a .. ...... ~ .....,. • , ..... , ..
1995 wine to end the meal. ~ (fJJ{ @fa
The generous Ron aAJwl}; uWJlllw Loutberback and his wife, >
Therese, owners of The Wme • • • . •
Club, provided the outstand·
ing fruit of the vine.
In the well-dressed crowd,
dining and bemg entertained
Chorus, were Bob and Patrlda .,
Marshall, Dlck and Pat Allen,
by the Costa Mesa High School At• j~ .
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dlHlypllot com •
~ DELTA BLUES AND RAGTIME
Briari Barrett will play acoustic
blues and ragtime music start-
ing ~ 9 p.m. Wednesdays in
JanU8.JY. at Sid's, 445 N. New-
port Blvd., Newport Beach. The
show is tree. For more informa-
tion, call (949) 650-7437.
THE TINKER'S OWN
Borders Books and Music
South Coast Plaza hosts ,The
nnker's
AFTER HOURS ~ ~~
other folk
music from 8:30 to 10:30 p.m:
today. The store is at 3333
Bear St., Costa Mesa. The
show is free. For more infor-
"Inatibn, call (714) 432-7854.
-nfE NIGHT RAINBOW'
. . .
the John F. Kennedy Center
tor the Performing Arts at 2
p .m. Sunday in a presentation
of the musical plaY. • Alexan-
der & The Terrible; Horrible,
No Good, Very Bad Dayl"
nckets are $10 to 5 14. occ is
at 2701 Fairview Road, Costa
Mesa. For more information,
call (71.C) 432-5880. .
LEIF OVE ANOSNES
Pianist LeU OVe Andsnes per-
forms at the Orange County
Performing Arts Center at 8 ·
p.m. Friday. The program of
works by Bach, Prokofiev and
others will demonstrate And-
snes' technical brilliance and
versatility. The center is at 600
Town Center Drive, Costa
Mesa. Fol' more information,
call (714) 740-7878.
JENNY SUTHERlAND
Borders Books & Music South
Coast Pla7.a hosts pop musician
Jenny Sutherland at 8:30 p.m.
Friday. The store is at 3333
Bear St., Costa .Mesa. The
show is free. For more informa-
tion, call (714) 432-7854.
JOSEPH YASHAR
Pacific Symphony Orchestra
presents the world premiere of
composer-in-residence
Richard Danielpow's wor~
"The Night Rainbow,• along'
with Respighi's "Pines of
Rome,• at 3:30 and 8 p.m .
today at the Orange County
Performing Arts Center.
Orchestra music director Carl
St. Clair'will speak about the
music of Respighi at the 3:30 .
p .m. today "Oassical Connec-
tions• performance. Tickets to
the Classical Connections
show are $26, with $10 stu-
dent rush tickets available.
nckets to the evening con-
certs are $10 to $50. For more
infonnatlon,call(714)740-
7878.
Borders Books & Music South
..Coast Plaza hosts classical gui-
tarist Joseph Yashar at 8:30
- -p.m. Friday. The store is at
3333 Bear St., Costa Mesa. The
show is free. For more informa-
tion, call (714) 432-7854.
'ALEXANDER ... t
OCC hosts the performers of .
THE AMERICAN
STRING QUARTET
The Orange County P~rfonn
ing Arts Center-hosts the
American String Quartet at 8
p.m. Jan. 15. The group will
play works by Mozart, Bartok
and Dvorak. There will also
be a free preview talk with
Herbert Glass one hour before
the performance. Tickets are
$34. The center is at 600 Town
dalebook
•
Tbe ~-of Stan of Magic will preleDt a lllow of
w~ at occ at 8 p.m. Jan. 22. The show .. $14 to
$33. OCC la at 2701 Fairview R~ Costa Mesa. For
more Information. call (714) 432-5880.
Center Drive, Costa Mesa. For
more information, call (714)
740-7878.
'OKLAHOMA I'
The Musical Theater Acade-
my of Orange County presents
·oklahoma1• at-the Costa
Mesa High School theater,
2650 Fairview Road, Costa
Mesa. Shows are at 7 p .m.
Jan. 15, 3 p.m. Jan. 16, 7 p .m.
Jan. 22 and 3 p.m. Jan. 23.
Tickets are $6 to $9. For more
infonnation,ca11(949)6'6-
6624.
'CHARLIE BROWN'
\
The Musical Theater Acade·
my of Orangt! County presents
"Charlie Brown" at 11 a.m.
and 2 p.m. Jan. 22. The show
will be held at the theater,
2488 Newport Blvd., Suite C,
Costa Mesa. nckets are M .
For more information, call
(949) 646-6624.
'AIN'T MISBEHAVJN•
,
OCC presents "Ain't Misbe-
havin• at 4 p.m. Jan. 23. The
show celebrates the music and
style of musician "Fats• Waller.
• nckets are $21 to $27. OCC is
• at 2701 Fairview Road, Costa
Mesa. For more information,
call (714) 432-5880.
THOMAS HAMPSON
Acclaimed baritone Thomas
Hampson will perform at 7:30
p.m. Jan. 25 at the Orange
County Perlonn$ng Arts Cen-
ter. Hampson's recital will fea-
ture compositions by Schu-
bert, Mahler, Barber, Copland
and others. Tickets are $35 to
$44. The Center is at 600 ·
Town Center Drive, Costa
Mesa. For more information-;-
call (714) 740-7878.
STAGE
'THE HOLLOW LANDS'
South Coast Repertory pre-
. sents Howard Korder's play
"The Hollow Lands" through
Feb. 13. Tickets are $28 to
$47, with a pay-what-you-will
show Jan. 15. The playhouse
is at 655 Town Center Drive,
Costa Mesa. For more infor-
mation, call (714) 708-5555.
'HOLLOW LANDS' DISCUSSION
Jennifer Kiger, dramaturgf:? for
South Coast Repertory, will
Dail)' Pila
discuss Howard Korder's play
"Hollow Lands" at the SOuth
Coast Plaza Borders Books,
Music and Cafe at 7 p.m.
Tuesday. The store is at 3333
Bear St., Costa Melia. For
more information, c411 (714)
432-7854. •
'REFERENCES TO SALVADOR
DAU MAKE ME Hor
South Coast Repertory pre-
sents Jose Rivera's play "Ref-
erences to Salvador Dall Make
Me Hot• Jan. 25 through Feb.
27. Tickets are $26 to $45,
with a pay-what-you-will
show Jan. 29. The playhouse .
is at 655 Town Center Drive,
Costa ~esa. For more infor-
mation, call (714) 108-5555.
'ANNIE'
The Musical Theater Acade-·
my of Orange County presents
•Annie" at the Costa Mesa
High School theater, 2650
· Fairview Road, Costa Mesa.
Shows are at 7 p.m. Jan. 29, 3
p.m. Jan. 30, 7 p.m. Feb. 5 and
3 p.m. Feb. 6. Tickets are $5 to
$8. For more information, call
(949) 646-6624.
'IN THE. OTY'
OCMA's exhibit "Jn the City:
Urban Views 1900-1940: looks
at early 20th century visions of
the city, and comprises more
than ~ paintings from the per-
manent collection of tlie Whit-
ney Museum of American Art.
The exhibit runs through Jan.
23. The museum iS open 11
a.m. to 3 p.m. 'lUesday through
Friday. Admission is $5, $4 for
seniors and students. The
museum is at 850 San
Oemente Drive, Newport
Beach. For more information.
call (949) 759-1122 ..
BRIEFLY IN DATEBOOI
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1Z4 &Ir n"' ITllBT
t:UTA llOA. tJA IAR7 a:t=
Ballet company
seeks extras
The Stuttgart Ballet is
searching for extras for its pro-
duction of •onegin," which
comes to the Orange County
.Performing Arts Center on
Feb. 4 through 6.
Show coordinators are
searching for nine men to fill
non-dancing roles. Applicants
should be between the ages of
16 and 30 and have a dancer's
physique .•
Auditions will be held at
The Center at 6 p.m . Thurs-
day. The ~enter is at 600
Town Center Drive, Costa
Mesa. For more information,
call (714) 556-2787, Ext. 557.
Comedy star to
appear at The Center
Broadway and musical
comedy star Richard Kinsey
will perform at the Orange
County Performing Arts Cen-
ter in a free lunchtime concert
at noon Wednesday.
The concert, part of the "A
Little Lunch Music• series of
shows, will take place in
Founders Hall.
Kinsey has appeared as
Inspector Javert in "Les Mis-
erables,• and has also played
Don Quixote in "The Man of
La Mancha,• Lancelot in
"Camelot• and the Pirate
King in "Pirates of Pen-
zance.• He will perform pop-
ular songs and show tunes at
the concert.
The Center is at 600 Town
Center Drive, Costa Mesa. For
.more information, call 714)
556-ARTS.
ANTIQUE ROW & GARDEN CAFE
"N~Un.iq~ShopJ'(ill~ wU:ht T~(oy-yow-ffottt.ell"
Fine Hom• Fumislting•
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Gift• & G11rdm Dtcor
Wish List & Dtlivny
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Custom Pichlr• Fr11ming
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11114 m11clt mor•I
949 722-1177
130 Eal 1711t Sired
CHU Mnll, CA
(&JU"' , ,.,, '""'
l VfitAT PIOP\.I Altl IAYINO HOUND TOWN W AIOUT OUR CATlltlNO/P'OOD
HRYICll DIPAltTMINT ...
•'fhcu catering help«! nW1\llC my parenu bad 10
good hcl.lthl w~ IOYtd wb food '° much we had chLm caru ouc Chrlnmu Dinner .••
le w.u amordi11&17 ... ~look furward musing
them fur all o( our Jpcctalty ~u. •
Siu.,, umln -Ntf1110n BNch
"l had chem cater my compuiy Christm.u pany u • 1Wll -.1C¥ttal ~ca dunna the bo.t pandt ... chcir
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DBUVIJ/lY AVAJLAllUI
l!K'Ji~ Pilot
•MIWNNIUM RETftOSPECTIVE'
~ Jewish Commuruty Cen-
ter of Orange County IS hold-
ing a • Millenruum Retrospec-
bve' featuring art works the
center has displayed over the
last J.ive years. The show is
free. The center is at 250 E.
Baker St., Costa Mesa. For
more information, call (714)
155-'0340. · ...
DANA RIDENOUR
Newport Beach arti,st Dana
Ridenour is displaying her lat-
est collection of oil paintings
at the Pow Seasons Hotel in
Newport Beach through the
sprin!J. The botel is at 690
Newport Center Drive, New-
port Beach. For more informa-
tion, call (949) 642-5787.
QANCE
ARGENTINE TANGO
Dan Scene Studio has tango
dancing from 8 p.m. to 12·30
a.m. the first Saturday of every
month. Dan Scene is at 2980 A
McClintoc.k Way, Costa Mesa.
For more inf ormatipn, call
(Q49) 833-1844.
OANU204
Dance 204 offers private and
group instruction in begi.ruilitg
and advanced ballroom, Latin
and modem·dancing at 204
Washington St., Balboa. For
more information, call (949)
675-9082.
BALLROOM FOR SENIORS
The Costa Mesa Senior Cen-
ter offers ballroom dancing to
the music of the Ray Robbins
Combo for adults from 7:30 to
10:30 p.m. every Tuesday. Sin-
gles and couples are welcome.
Cost is $3. The center is at 695
W. 19th St., Costa Mesa. For
more information, call (949)
645-2356. .
BIG BAND DANONG
The Oasis Seni01 Center holds
an afternoon of dancing to live
big band music Fridays from
1:30 to 3:30 p.m. Coffee and
refreshments are served. The
center is at 800 Marguerite
, Ave., Corona del Mar. For
more information, call (949)
644-3244.
BALLROOM DANCING
The Defore Foundation for
the Arts will bold swing and
Latin dancing classes on Fri·
day and Saturday nights from
S to 11 p.m. SlO admission
covers the hour dance lesson
and the open dancing session
that follows. The class is at
151 Kalmus Drive, Costa
Mesa. For more information,
call (949) 241-9908.
JAZZ MASTER CLASS
Orange Coast College will
h06t a pair of jazz master
classes, designed for high
intermediate to advanced-lev-
el dancers, at 10 a.m. Jan. 16
and 17. The course is $10 for
OCC students, $15 for the
general public. The college is
at 2701 Fairview Road, Costa
Mesa. For more information,
(714) 432-5506.
WEST COAST SWING
OCC is offering a noncredit
West Coast Swing class Jan.
20 through MarCh.9. The
course will be held in the
dance room of Corona del Mar
High School, 2101 ~astbuff
Drive, Corona del Mar. The
fee is $65. Courses will be
lield from 6:30 to 8 p.m.
Thursday evenings. For.more
infonnation,call{714)432·
5880.
EASTERN SWING AND
CONTEMPORARY TWO-STEP
OCC is offering a noncredit
Eastern Swing and Contempo-
rary 1Wo-Step class Jan. 20
through March 9. The course
will be held in the dance room
of Corona del Mar High
School, 2101 Eastbuff Drive,
Corona del Mar. The fee is
$65. Courses will be held from
8 to 9:30 p.m. Thursday
evenings. For more informa-
tion, c~ (714) 432-5880.
DANCE AUDmONS
OCC will bold auditions for its
perfonn.ing dance ensemble
from noon to 2 p.m. Jan. 21.
Jazz, modem pop and~ballet
dance skills are desirea. Audi-
tions will be held in Dance
Studio B of OCC, 2701
Fairview ftoad, Costa Mesa.
For more mlormation, call
(714) 432-5506 ..
BIG BAND SWING
The Jewish Community <:enter
of Orange County will host
swing dancing to the music of d
10-piece live band from 7 to 10
p.m. Jan. 30. The evening will
feature the music of Benny
Goodman, Tommy Dorsey,
Glenn Miller and others. Tick-
ets are $10 for members, $15 for
nonmembers. The center is at
250 E. Baker St., Costa Mesa.
fl.L.M
REAR WINDOW
The Orange County Musewn
of Art presents Alfred Hitch-
cock's •Rear Window• at 6;30
p.m. Friday. The museum is at
850 San Clemente Drive,
Newport Beach. nckets are
$6. For more information, call
(949) 759-1122.
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name but you will recognize.
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You con special order from over 200 fobria.
Everything kere is rtfNI, obtained directly from the factory
·No U..d Fumiture or conJign_ntent ilenu.
Furnishings Direct carries upholstered sob, sleepers, leather
solos and chain, enter1oinment centen, annoin, beds,
handinod. rugs, desks, lamps ~ men.
date book Saturday, Jonuory 8, 2000 Al5 '
ICIOllTS book •Prcscnption for~ rror,' a
psycho)Qgical thriller. Th store
is at 901B South Coast Urive,
Costa Mesa. For more informa·
tion,call(949)63l-0614.
STORY TIME
Barnes & Noble Pash.ion •
Island hosts story time every
Tuesday from 10:45.to 11·30
· a.m. Barnes &~oble Fashion
Island is at 953 Newport Cen-
ter Drive, Newport Beach. For
more information, caU (949)
759-0982.
STARLIGHT STORY TIME .
Children ages 3 to 7 are mvit-
ed to participate m songs and
finger puppet plays at 1 pm.
Mondays at the Costa Mesa
Ubrary, 1855 Pdl'k Ave., Costa
Mesa0For more information,
.call (949) 646-8845
NEWPORT LIBRARY
STORY TIMES
OCC presenb the ~ Aaobab at 8 p.m. Jan. 15. The acrobats pedorm daring,
complex maneuven while balancing on chairs and wires. Tickets are $16 to $31. OCC
ts at 2701 Fairview Road. Costa MescL For more information, call (714) 432-5880.
The Newport Beach Central
library offers story time Mon-
days at 7 p .m and Saturdays
at 10:30 a .m . The library is al
1000 Avocado Ave., Newport
Beach Children are invited to
wear pajamas to the everung
story times For more informa·
tion, call (949) 717-3801.
POETRY
THE FACTORY READINGS.,
An evening of performance
poetry will be held the first
Tuesday of every month at the
Gypsy Den Cafe and Reading
Room at The Lab Anti-Mall,
2930 Bristol St., Costa Mesa.
For more information, call
(714) 549-7012. Admission is
free, but voluntary donations
are accepted for the perform-
ers
ALTA COFFEE HOUSE
Alta Coffee House's Jan. 19
poetry reading will featUre the
work of Bil and Carole Luther,
John Harrell, Curt Last and
Misty Mallory. The reading
sldrls dt 8 p.m. Alta Coffee
House is at 506 31st St., New-
port Beach. For more informa-
tion, call (949) 675-0233.
DENNIS. LEE ASKEW READING
Poet Dennis Lee Askew will
read his work at 7 p.m. Jan. 21
at Borders South Coast Plaza.
The store is at 3333 Bear St.,
r Costa mesa. For more infor-
mation, call (714) 432-7854.
LITERARY
BOOK DISCUSSION GROUP
The Newport Beach PublJc
Ubrary Foundation's Book
Discussion Group will meet di
9:30 a .m. and 7 p.m. WednE>.s-.
day at the Newport Beach
Central Library, 1000 Avocddo
Place, Newport Beach The
group will discuss Amandd
Valli's "Everybody Wds So
Young: The meeting is fre('
and includes refreshments.
For more information, call
(9~9) 717-3890.
WRITERS WORKSHOP
Borders Books, Music & Cafe.
will hold a writers workshop
starting at 7:30 p.m. Thursday.
Author Donald Stanwood Will
lead the workshop. The group
will meet ol'l the seconfi anct
fourth Thursdays of the
month. The store is at 1890
Newport Blvd., Costa Mesa.
ror more information, call
(949) 631-8661.
RELEASING AN
INDEPENDENT CD
Borders Books, Music & Cafe
will ho5.t a. free seminar at 7
p.m. Thursday by author/com-
pos~r Ldurie z, who will dis-
cu~s her book "Laurie Z's Do-
lt· Yourself Gwde te> Releasmg
dn lndependent CD • The
store is al 3333 Bear St, Costa
Mesa. For more information,
call (714) 432-7854
SANDRA LEVY CEREN
REAQING .
P~-ychologist and author Sandra 1
Levy Ceren will appear at
Rames & Noble Metro-Pointe at
2 p .m. Jan. 15 to talk about her
STORY TIME
TRIANGLE SQUARE
Barnes & Noble Tuangle
Square hosts story tune the
second and fourth Tuesday or
each month for children of all
ages, 1870 Harbor Blvd., Cos·
ta Mesa For more infonna-
tion, call (949) 631-0614.
ORIGAMI-KAI
CRAFT PROGRAM
The Mesa Verde Llbra.iy will
have an ongarru workshop for
school-age children from 3:30
to 4;30 p.m. Jan. 20 at the Mesa
Verde Ubrary The library is at
2969 Mesa Verde Dnve, Costa
Mesa. For more mfonnabon,
call (714) 546-5274.
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_ Al6 Soluf# Jonuary e, 2000
ASKEW
CONTINUED FROM A12
He paces around the living
room of his Newport Beach
nome, wnere a Tow velvets re
assembled, and critiques the
wotk.
, "lt's·a fairly difficillt medi-
um to )\'Ork with," Askew
says. Then ari intensity comes
,..., into his eyes, and he adds a
caveat: "But there are a few
tricks.·.·
What those tricks are,
: Askew refuses to disclose.
Leeteg is said to have
worked with a very limited
palette, USing only six colors ·
and white, and reportedly
spent many days applying lay-
ers of pigment to achieve the
luminosity of his work, accord-
ing to ~Leeteg or Tahiti," a
f
book by John Turner and
Greg Escalante. ..
But Leeteg wasn't fond of I ·sharing specifics about his
. technique. "He was very I secretive about it," Askew
I said. "Wh.en people would
1 come into his house, he used
1 to cover his stuff."
: Askew doesn't cover his I own velvet canvases today,
1
1 but he.does decline, ever so
politely, to explain how he
I created them.
L Velvet poses special chal-
lenges to painters because it
dulls pigment and is difficult
to rework.
But some contemporary
artists-Juliari Schnabel arid
Peter Alexander are perhaps
the most promment cxampl
-have embraced the maten-
al for the richness of its black-
ness and, to a certain extent,
for the nchne_s of its camp
appeal.
·niere's this whole Lvelvet]
art movement that seems to
definitely be taking place of
sort of younger hipster
artists,• said Escalante, who
co-curated the Leeteg show in
Huntington Beach.
Escalante said be met
Askew soon after last year's
show closed. ·we kept hoping that
someone like that would sur-
f ace so we could get some
new inf onnation • about the
birth oJ the art form, Escalante
said.
Askew's style is similar to
that Leeteg practiced, and his
work in the Culver City show
-in one painting, a young
woman swims through the
ocean, a freshly killeq fish
impaled on her spear -treats
many of the same tropical
themes. But there are differ-
ences between Leeteg's work
and the paintings Askew went
on to produce.
Where Leeteg was famous,
or perhaps notorious, for his
emphasis on bare-breasted
island beauties, Askew's most
characteristic work treats a
subject that bas long been
close t-o his heart: pumping
iron.
The walls of Zuver's Gym
Equipment in Costa Mesa
were once graced by an enor-
mous-velvet mural Askew cre-
ated.
Cl"'!!R ... !.!•• I~ Mo scow -St. Petersburg
c
i.
Depal'tUrN May 20 Thru Sept. 09. 2000
SAii.. ON nn: MIS ·RUSS-OR ova Ol1(ER 0£LUX£ RI~ W.SS£LS ~ ........... o.19Md*~'
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All Ollcshk c.binJ • 16 al1hl 1fr/cm1ise p1<:kl1c.
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pKbaa IO P,.,uc/Budepql or the Bellies. Call (Of Illa. • ... ,.,....,,,._
J
datehOOk ·
his face ligh~ up with enthusi-
dSm.
Askew attributes his ph~1·
cal endurance to a ngorous
program of diet and exerdsc,
one that differs sharply from
that followed by many of the
we1gntlifters lie'lUiew iii hIS
youth.
•111ose guys used to.say
•All you need is a big fat
st~ak and a quart of milk.••
Asliew recalled. M Now all
those guys, every sirlgle one
·of them, are dead.•
_ DON UACH I DAllY PllOT
l,,n order to avoid a similar
fate, Askew keeps to a strictly
vegetarian diet and engages
in a whole battery of sports of
the sort not typically practiced
by octogenarians.
"He's one of the best skiers
I know,• said Bryan Barr, an
Aliso Viejo resident who tack-
les the slopes with Askew.
·Erle Askew ~VS the key to fitness ls to eat only fresh fruits
and vegetables. .
The work consisted of 14,
6-foot-high portraits of some
of the sport's greatest muscle
men, their bulbous pectorals
and fierce some deltoids ren ..
dered m vivid flesh· tones
against the~ darkness of
the velvet backdrop.
"The black velvet makes it
look good because you get
depth,• Askew explained.
The Weightlifting Hall of
Fame iii York, Pa., aj.so has
featured some of his velvet
murals.
Askew eventually went on
to do a number of works in
what might be called the
"cowboy• vein. These paint-
ings, on standard canvas, fea-. ·
ture bucking broncos and
mysterious strangers wander-
ing through the dust ol West-
ern landscape.
The motivation Cor these
works, Askew said, was eco-·
nomic. When cowboys were in
vogue, he painted cowboys.
When velvet painting was
•
popular -its original, non-
ironic heyday happened about
30 years ago -it was velvet
paintings that he produced. _
•pacific Bamboo and Rat-
tan used to buy and sell my
stuff,• Askew said. •Then the
phase for velvet sort of
peaked, arid I got back into
doing regular painting, which
I liked better ariyway. •
~at has stayed consistent
-in Askew's work, no matter
what the style, is an apprecia-
tion for physical exuberance.
Whether he paints a flexing
strongman, a leaping horse or
a pirouetting dancer, he paints
with the eye of a man who
enjoys the grace and power of
physical perfection.
And Askew, though h~ is
not the strapping weighUilter
he was in the 130s, still works
to keep his own body strong
and graceful. ·rm 83 and pam-free, • he
declares, strolling around his
living room. A red flannel slurt
hangs from his thin shoulders
and a pair of brown slacks
wrap around his legs. As he
discusses his fitness program,
•I Just wish that I grnw to
be that old. He's full of energy.
I mean, he's got more energy
thdil me or my wife, and we're
in our 40s, • Barr said.
Askew is also an avid
windsurfer. He frequently
cruises in the waters of Lake
J lodges and around Newport
Beach. ln the past, he also
used lo be a regular at surf
spots like Blackie's. Wh.at
eventually drove him away
from the sport was not the
physical exertion involved but
simply the fact that the waves•
begari to get crowded, and it
became difficult to get a prop-
er workout.
•As you get older, one of
the key things is you have to
exercise on a regular basis,•
he says.
The sedentary approach is
ell.so an option, Askew admits,
but that's never been his style.
He isn't trying to make it to
the Olympics any more and
he's a long way from Tahib,
but that doesn't mean he
plans to stop training any time
soon.
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WORLD PREMIERE
by Howard Kordcr
on the m1lnsU9•
January 14 • February 13
low·Prictd rrninft January 7 • 13
In the WJt, unlllmcJ Amcril.t ai the 19th (Cntury, •
a man might meet Iii• de 1iny 1f hC' i "illing to let gu of his worlJ. .
I he mou aJvcnturnu~ produ~11011 ''' r f1toc111rJ on S< R tagd hrmp ·
l•>gc-1hc1 a rc.:im of 1111tma11rmally rrnowncJ rum for an 'I>'~ pl .. y of
sw«ping 1hca111al11y. 'I ullo'olo a ••uni; rnan on ' 10111ntv of nouly h.tlt ..
unrury through It l:anJ when:• m;1nlr.111<l wall nl'Vcr lie~· fire ltlg.tifl -~1,J
Qlptncn.:t the brn1l11.il.111g IC lfK' OI 1f11t w<>.uly• ntk1p:11cJ worl.I JllCllll(.lr.
llONOR.\llY I Kl tmk fll ~ UUH ANO t'l>M\JNO OUVlf a Of VI JIN
MlntArARr IK
c~ rnur NAGUIN•
..
DOily Pilot
ALEXANDER
~ CONTINUED FROM A12
+ WHA'I •Ale~
& the Terrible, HOrri·
ble, No Good, Very
BadD~ + W1 • OCC's
Robert B. Moore The-
atre, 2701 Fairview
Road, COsta Mesa + WHIN: 2 p.m.
Sunday + HOW MUCH: $10
(j $14 + PHONE: fl 14) 432·
5880
A best-selling 1986
nonfiction book. •Neces-
sary Los~s." pointed to
the relationship between
loss and emotional growth
-a theme that, implicitly
at least, is very much a
concern in the struggles
Alexander encounters
over the course of his dif;
ficult day. His challenges
in coping with a bead full
of chewing gum and a
lunch with no dessert are
not so far removed, Viorst
said, from the struggles
adults face in lives
marked by divorce, death
and suffering.
The difference, she said,
is that m the musical, the
goal is primarily to provide
pleasure for the audience,
to emphasize laughter
rather than the morbid
spint of Annabel Lee
"You're telling a story
that you hope will entertain
and captivate kids," Viorst
said. •If you have some
other messages, they're
there without your bitting
them on the head."
When l8elh mm flacUes and
c:hPs, ht best way IO llplW them may be IO
~ llTICdl .. -edges. ~ ~ ~ call lof I rnilimal
lmOllll d lootl~ ~ .. need
lor In ..... HowMr, In hi Ml'll llal
I Sll1l1I int WOUid def by hMlg a klolfl
lhol1ened, c:onlourilg would not be
apptopriate. Because .. lglrlg process
nalllatf ... hi 111-.le int and r8ClJces
"' wrtal dimnion cl tit mouth. the
"'°"1, tie dentist woold not want to
oonlrWt lo 111 aged ~ance by
~ down arry leelh. Instead, It would be
a beler idea lo fix the dlip or fracture with
bondlog, railer than rtduol toolh he91l with
conlDlling.
Prolelsion8' dfofUI ltMoel. &UCh as
<X>llTlllt contotmg, root canals, &ngs,
I*'* or UI dentins, crowne or tn:lges.
end •x1raonl •• ;.. IOll'll cl 119 SIMClll
M ollet. For PCtplJonll ddal caie, cal
94~-0922 to ld.oole 1n 1ppoullt*".
We're located It 400 NNport C.. DIM.
&lit t408. ~ 8-tl. ... " wanl
IO ptO¥lde 10' dn i.t1'y wtlh Ill tilt
en poallle We "91 I routillt of pll\ilc
~--... ·~--.. 1111111 'lirtJ lol'QMy cl 10' "811.
P.S. Spottl mJlilltl e1n ~ t11ir ,_
d fnand Ind~ -by~
~onlhlCIMtlnd~~
Put a few words to
work for you. Call
the
ear-end
tributes
1---=-'~·
!:
appreciated
Y our front-page photograph
and story on Emma Jane
Riley in the Daily Pilot ("Pass-
lngS, •Dec. 31) so moved me. Emma
Jane was a mother and best friend to
me. My life· was greaUy enriched by
knowing her. How many li'les are
touched daily by her presence
among us.
MARY BARRm BLAKE
--Newport Beach
lllank you for remembering our
friend Sarah Nevins in your •Pass-
ings" column on Dec. 31. While she
is no longer with us on Earth, she is
still with us in our thoughts and
minds. It was kind of you to memo-
rialize her in your year-end issue.
DAVID JAMES
Costa Mesa
School bond measure
must be passed
The discussion about the schools
and their condition in the Newport-
4Mesa District is amazing to me
("Passing school bond is a tough
prospect,• Jan. 3). Of course the
bond measure must be passed.
Whether we have chil-
FEEDBA(K dren attending the
schools or not (we
don't; ours are grown)
is immaterial. The issue is, do we
want the children to go to adequate
schools, learn properly and become
. good, functioning adults so. they can
pay their taxes? Of course we dol
The issue of the bond is extremely
in1portant. Most of us have money
to eat out in restaurants, to go on
vacations and to do things that are
personally exhilarating to us. It is
time to think about the children. I
hope everyone votes positively on
the bond.
MIRIAM GOLDBERG
Newport Beach
Ra.Stor·s letter about
homosexuality was wrong
It's unfortunate that a pastor
would write such an uninformed
and misleading letter as Dr. Gary ·
Barmore ~.::.Aa:eptance of others
'lS Ch.ristlail way," Dec. 18). He
wrote that some are •created natu·
rally homosexuat. • Well, homosexu-
,r .. ,. ~ rty is about as natural as trying to
eet through one's nose. He states
twice that Jesus said nothing abOut
homosexuality. That iS false.
Yes, Jesus lS loving and compas-
stonate. He said to the woman tak-
en in adultery, •Neither do 1 con-
Clemn thee: go, and sin no more.•
You c@ love someone and still dis·
approve of their behavior. U you
love a drug addict or alcoholic, you
try to help them stop before it's too
. late. So, we need to love the homo~
sexual by encouraging them to give
up that Westyle before it's too late.
JEFF OSTBY
Newport Beach
Talks must include
19th Street bridge
I would like to comment upon
the column m the paper today
regarding the communication
between the West Side and City
Hall ("Latino concerns to be
addressed," Jan. 5). The City Coun-
cil, by denying the residents of Cos-
ta Mesa and specif1c4lly the West
Side to even have an option of look-
ing at the extension of 19th Street to
the beech, shows how out of touch
the City Council iS with the needs
of the West S1de. And it just reflects
poorly on their ablli,ty to tty to
understand all of the issues on the
West Side.
ROIOT GRAHAM.
Costa Mesa
Chosen skate park site
deserves criticism
T' hank you, Mike Schaefer, for
your Community Commentary
published in tho Daily Pilot
today about the skateboard park site
("Chosen Slte for skate park not good
enough," Jan. 4). It's an inappropriate
if not downright insulting·tocation.
I have been a skateboarder since
Uie age of 12, and at the age of 37,
that makes 25 yean. It ii lflY primary
lpOrt/activity and hos been lrice I ..
llart9d. In the lut couple yea.n, I've
watched dtles from oll aaoa America
building iute para by the hun~.
In almost every lnMnCe they've.
becoma nnwdMt.iy the moet·uted
~-ltd--in the ctty. ~,,.... ...... ol tblt,. ....,,_dam Nlli8rdl on d 1be loml
._ pmtm wtlldD a coupl9 bolDOI
.... ... .... ... wMtt WClllrlld
'
. . . • • I . commun1 forum Soturdot. January 8, 2000 Al7
EDITORIAL
Comicil should side with the people"'----·
T he people's right to
take a measure to
the voters by gath-
ering enough valid
signatures is the foundation
-upon which democracy is
built.
Political causes -no matter
how noble -are not always
endorsed by the lawmaking
body, whether it be the state
Legislature or the local city
. council. That is why the peti-
tioning process exists.
So withottt weighing in on
the merits or potential short-
comings of the controversial
Greenlightinitiative,we
believ.e it should be allowed
on the ballot.
The small group of com-
munity members made up of
both environmentalists and
resident activists spent sever-
al months gathering signa-
tures for the petition. The
measure, if passed, would
require public votes on devel-
opment projects that ¥.'.Ould
generate more than 100
peak-hour car trips, create
more than 100 homes or add
more than 40,000 square feet
of floor space over what the
general plan allows for a.giv-
en area.
At least 10,000 people
agreed with that premise an
·signed the petition. The 6,800
~arnes required to put the ini-
tiati.Ye..on the ballot were vali-
dated by the Orange County
Registrar of Voters.
The city clerk is the desig-
nated election officer for the
city. Newport Beach's
La Vonne Harkless checked
the petition for its compliance
with the state elections code
before sending it to the coun-
ty registrar for certification.
She has maintained that
-under normal circum-
stances -as long as the sig-
natures are validated, the
City Council must set an ·
e lection date.·
But the Greenlight case iS
not normal because the city
attorney was asked to review.
the petition after the city
clerk had already accepted it.
Now the deos1on on whether
to send the Greenlight pro-
ponents back to the drawing
board appears to be up to the
City Coi.J.ncil, which usually
would not have a say in the
matter.
Is that the way democracy
should go?
· Shouldn't the signatures
of 6,800 Newport Beach res-
idents and the cily clerk out-
weigh the opinion of one
city attorney?
We do understand the city's
caution. As we know, initia-
tives often end up in court
and the city could be held
liable for sending a faulty ·
petition to the ballot box.
Ifot what they shouldn't
forget is that it could easily
go the olher'way. Initiative
proponents could and proba-·
bly would sue the city for
rejecting a viable petillon.
We trust that because the
city clerk sent the petition to
the registrar in the first place,
she was confident that -
although it was clearly not
perfect -there was no fatal
flaw.
We urge the counctl to
stand behind her judgment
and side with 10,000 New-
port Beach residents.
New Harbor Center draws mixed reviews
• AT ISSUE: The renovated
Harbor Center, which opened
its largest tenant, The Home
Depot, this week ("Harbor
Center comes to life," Jan. 5).
I live on College Drive and was
one of the initial members of the
Neighbors of the Harbor Center.
I see the opening of the Harbor
Center as something fearful. We
. have survived a year of assault
witlf dirt and dust that literally
scoured the pa'int off our cars and
our windowsills and covered our
plants. We have heard all of the
noise of construction, and now-Ole
Harbor Center will open at 6 a.m.
The traffic from people bringing
goods in goes directly behind our
wall. This is a great concern apart
from the noise -the visual assault.
READERS
RESPOND
We back up to the
center, and those on
the other side of the
street face the center.
Stand on their front
steps. Every time those
people come out of their homes
they are assaulted with the cement
walls of the buildings. Some people
in some sections of town receive
great sympathy if a tree obstructs
their view. We have these prison
walls that are a visual assault. And
I don't believe any members of the
Planning Commission or the City
Council realized just how great
that visual assault would be.
I am also very concerned about
the traffic. I noticed that finally
there is a direct sidewalk access
along Wtlson. That has been closed
off at various spots all during con-
struction, so somebody going along ·
there with small children is told in
the middle of the block -far, far
from any crosswalks-•do not pro-
ceed further.• I think signage
should have been put at crosswalks
to let people know that further on
down the block that this would be a
problem.
Of course I rejoice ii the city feels
that it is going to increase its tax
base, but at what a cost. The cost
was ours.
KATHARINE BEQUmE
Costa Mesa
I think the new Harbor Center
will definitely improve the area, and
it is coming together just fine. I can't
wait unW it is finished so that I can
go shopping there.
I have already been to Rite Aid,
KIM HAGGERTY-lYUUS I DAILY Pl.OT
·Kevin Kneedler puts up letters at the new Albertson's grocery store at Harbor Center in Costa Mesa.
and I am looking forward to the
opening of Home Depot and Albert·
son's market, as well as all the other
stores.
ELEANORE TRIGHER
Costa Mesa
In response to your request for
feedback regarding the newly reno-
vated Harbor Center, I would just
like to say: What a waste of prime
retail space! Not to mention the nw-
sance and inconvenience it has and
will continue (to a greater degree)
to impose on the surrounding resi-
dents.
I happen to live approxunately 20
to 30 yards from the' new·Home
Depot. I am one of the forgotten
and discounted residents. J live in
an apartment, and I've been here
for three years. I believe the only
reason the developers were able to
get this center built 1s because the
property is surrounded by apart-
ment-dwellers, and very few home
owners live close"entsilgh to po e a
threat of protest to the deSign. On
the other hand there are probably ·
close to a thousand apartment-
dwellers who were probably
expected to •just move away" if the
center was an inconvenience, only
to be replaced by new residents
who would have to accept the cen-
ter smce 1t was there pnor to their
arrival.
This •new• center is much too
industrial for this residential area.
Most of the new stores are redun-
dant and unnecessary. This residen-
tial area has no need for another
•1umbcryard," nor did it need .
another supermarket. This area
already has more supermarkets per
square mile than anywh~re else on
Earth. I alSo think the •day labor"
problems that will soon start daily at
The Home Depot will be another
salute to poor planning.
I thank God •Nick's" is still there.
Maybe it's timo to •just move,"
but then where would l get great
pizza? It's a tough call.
DAVE LAW
Costa Mesa
The new Harbor Center is as yet
unfirushed and.has already caused .
financial strru.n on Costa Mesa tax·
payers, who will now have to pay
$75,000 annually to open the Job
Center doors every Sunday, because
of the expected overflow of day
laborers expected to line up looking
for work near the new Home Depot
at the completed Harbor Center.
Whatever happened to Sunday
being the day of rest1 Costa Mesa
council has no right to run the Job
Center seven days a week. It is not
the taxpayers' duty lo provtde the
Job Center. Except for operating
emergency erviccs, the council
members should be promoting the
godly practice of keeping Sunday
the •Lord's Day• not a •Home
Depot work day.•
On a po ltive note, at least the
far-out 11 Jetsons• conuc ardutectural
style of the Harbor Center accurate-
ly reflects the personallty of Costa
Mesa's council.
RUSSELL NIEW1AROWSK1
Santa Ana Heights
LITTll OF Ill Wiii
.
and what hasn't. They also made
graphs showing different levell of
acceptability for at leut 30 locations
throughout the d~. and thls site wu
never al the top of that Ust.l gu811 the
City Council forgot to read the list, or
listen to thote working for the dty who
were paid to create lt.
So why is lt that Jhey chose to put
our skate park in a most lnapprppriate
and unsavory location within our dtyf
When I drove by and looked at this
aite (on Charle and HamiMoa ltreetl), I
realized the City CoUndl mutt bave ..
very little relpeCt far tbil JOU1b lD lta
community. Pini. me.......,..
apptOVal of a pllla to bald• m•
put. tbe\"ft dnigged Eoul blDDlitla........... ....
tag ....... to ........ ....
=:::.·-=~~~-----·· -.....................
skate by themselves, and they've got
to wonder what's next -fourth-grade
field trips to introduce them to the
local drug dealerlf •
That park will be tagged the firlt
night. and then they'll say that the
lkaten are gangsten. I know that
iltaten aren't the most vocal political
group in the dty, but skaters do
d8181V9 some rmpect m COi'-Mete.
Dael the dty know that of abcMil 14mln
tubstantial 1kateb0aid factories In the
Unlt9d Stat81, three ol them are loeat·
eel In Colt.a M-. Mnplo,ylng many
people and mN'ng .. ol thOuNndl . GI......,...,_ moaibf But I~ ... .., .. , ................... .... ----=mder Just llk .. 111ldeall a.new
......... qa 111 .... ..,. .......................... .. ... , . -~ ..... ..
... Jan. 10 honor ..
AlllAl*tws ---
Saturday, Jqnuory 8, 2000 • Sports Editor Roger Carlson • 949-57 44223
SPORTS HALL OF FAME ~~BRAllNG THE MILLENNIUM
Boxing
•Going the distance in and out of the ring, he became
one of Costa Mesa's own with 'Save Our Youth' work.
HJc:tlARD DUNN
Known as the •Boxing llllli
Professor" in the 1111111
1930s, George Latka
covered every spectrum of the
ring in his illustrious career,
which spanned seven decades.
As a fighter (amateur and
professional), referee, instructor
and, at times, an actor in boxing
movies, Latka has never seen a
punch he couldn't take.
"I'd say I was an exceptionally
good defensive fighter,• Latkct
said, when pressed to describe
his specialty in tbe ring as a
5-foot-6, 135-pound lightweight.
After a long career that
included 159 amateur fights and
55 professional bouts,
Lalka hung up his
golden gloves in 1944
and became a referee
for 30 years. .
· earned bis nickname the
"Boxing Professor" when, as a
student at San Jose State on a ·
boxing scholarship, he became
the boxing coach at the
University.of Santa Clara.
"I'd say fighting four fonner
world champions, and not losing
to any one of them, is as good as
it gets, .. Lalka proudly said of his
boxing highlight.
Lalka, who once judged a
Muhammad Ali-Ken Norton
heavyweight bout in the 1970s,
was instrumental in helping to
launch the boxing program at
Costa Mesa-based Save.Our
Yollth m 1994_. It wasn't a long
stint at SOY, but Lalka helped
kids stay off the streets and out
of gangs by teaching
them a competibve
spirit and the
fundamentals of
boxing.
As a professional',
Latka's contract was
owned by movie star
George Raft. Lalka 's
only disappointment is
tbat he never got a title
fight, but be faced four
former world
champions, including Sammy Angott, and
never lost.
George Latka
"Some of those
kids could've been
top-notch fighters, but
I was runrung out of
gas, spend.mg too
much time there,"
Lalka said. ·1 loved
the organization; it
was great."
Latka, born in
Lalka, who fought Angott to a
"controversial" draw in San
Francisco, also went toe to toe
with former world champions
Willie Pep, Petey Scalzo and
Richie Lamos. His last fight (and
victory) came in 1944 against
Lamos, the 1941 National Boxing
Association featherweight
champion.
When Uitka fought Angott to .
a draw, it was a non-title fight,
· but at least one
San Francisco-based sportswrtter
thought Lalka had won. ·1 got a
newspaper decision,• Lalka sa.id .
•sack then, the newspapers
really covered boxing well and
their decisions carried a lot of
weight."
Lalka, who lost only five pro
fights in his career, also fought
in the first televised bout against
Jimmy Garrison from the
Hollywood Legend Stadium in
1940. It was during television's
experimental stages. Previously,
fight fans could only see
.__,__,.,ghlights on a newsreel at
theaters.
Lalka, who later played bit
roles in movies such as
"Matilda" and "Raging Bull/
Kalamazoo, Mich.,
and raised in Pueblo, Colo.,
is part of the Daily Pilot Sports
Hall of Fame, celebrating the
millennium.
It's the fourth hall of fame of
which Lalka is a member; he's
also m the World Boxmg Hall _
of Fame (based m Los Angeles),
Orange County Sports Hcill of
Fame and San Jose Sldte
Athletic Hall of Fame.
Latka, an 85-year-old
Huntington Beach resident, was
named Senior Citizen of the Year
in Huntington Beach five years
ago and rode in the oty's armual
Fourth of July Parade.
Lalka was born Nov. 12, 1914,
as the 10th of 12 children, and is
the only sibling still alive. His
parents emigrated from
Czechoslovakia to America
and ,worked in the steel mills,
including the largest in the West
at the time in Pueblo. ·
·1 had a great boyhood," said
Latka, who would hunt, fish and
swim, while growing up Wlthi.n
eyeshot of Pikes Peak m
Colorado.
Lalka and bis wife, 1\"udie,
are inseparable these days.
Lalka has two children and 22
grandchildren or great
grandchildren.
HIGH
tre
• Costa M esa n eeds overtime,
but end 30-game losing streak
to Eagles, 58-50, t9 open PCL.
BARRY F'AUL.KNER
COSTA MESA -
~en it has been 18
years since you've
beaten your cross-
town rival, a little four-
minute overtime peri-
od is nothing more
than a minor inconve-
·nience.
The Costa Mesa
High boys basketball
team used its overtime
THE PCL
WL
Mustangs 1 0
Art1sh 1 0
Trojans O O
Sea Kings O 1
opportunity to earn a 58-50 Pacillc Coast
League-opening victory Friday gver vis-
iting Estancia, ending the Eagles' 30-
game winning streak in the series.
:It's my senior year and we h<ldn't
beaten Estancia since 1982," said Mesa
senior Rick Hatsushi, himself one year
younger than the now-terminated
streak
Hatsushi, a 5-foot-10 point guard,
was the primary reason the Mustangs
ended the drought, exploding for a
.career-high 19 points, including a three-
point play to open the extra session,
which put the hosts up for good.
H 1 was really pumped up for this
game and coach told me I had to make a
few baskets tonight/ said Hatsushi,
who helped send the biggest Mesa
crowd in recent memory home pound-
ing its collective chest
Me5a guard Dave Weir, whom Mesa
Coach Bob Serven inserted in the start-
ing lineup because he wa5 a senior, was
also huge for the Mustangs (14-4),
adding a career-high 12 points and
smothering defense to the winning
cause.
· "These seniors (who won the PCL
crown as freshmen) deserve this,• said
Serven, who, ID his first year at the
school, pleaded ignorance about the
enomuty of the triumph
"I don't know any of those nwnbers;w
Serven said •rve heard this and that,
but l knew this would be a good quality
basketball game. We played hard and
(Estancia) played hard. At the pep rally
today at school, they introduced our
team and said •and they even have a
winning record.' I guess they're·not used
to Uus."
The Mustangs aren't used. to oppo-
nents shutting down their top two scor-
ers, either. But, despite just seven com-
bined regulation points from Ryan Naff
and Nate Jones, a duo which had aver ..
aged nearly 32 coming in, they nearly
finished off the Eagles (11-6) without a
' ..
QUOTE Of E DAY
•Af h pep rr/Jy today at whool, by introcluced M....; ft sail '11111
they mn haw a wDing reawd.' I pss lhey're not used to" .. :
Bob Serven, Costa Mesa boys basketball coach
IOYS IASIETIALL
·nsters! . .
BRIAN POBUOA I DAILY PILOT
Some happy campers from Costa ~esa after the Mustangs upset Estancia
Friday night, 58-50, to snap a 30-game losing streak over a course of 18
years. Among the revelers from Mesa, Ryan Naff (left), Mike Payne (31),
Rick Hatsushi (12) and behind them, in the middle, Shaun Ferryman.
~ ~
h.fth period. •
Jones and Naff, however, sparkled in
overtime to finish with seven points
apiece. Fellow seruor Shaw.n Fenyman
added 11 points, wh1fe junior Steve
Whittaker chipped ID two points, five
rebounds, three assists and two steals.
E!.tancia led at the end of the first and
second quarters, but Mesa squeezed
ahead, 32-31, heading into the fourth
penod.
Estancia's Travis Chandler hi~ a..·15-
foot jumper to o~n the fourth quarter,
but Mesa scored th~ next eight points to
establish apparent command ·
Three-points by seruor guards Jon
Cantrell and Jason Sunco, however,
drew the Eagles to with.in 42-41, before
a Sinrco steal and layup erased the
deficit with 1:25 left in regulation.
Jones drilled a three-pointer for his
first points of the· night with 1: 10 left,
before Chandler tied it with a layin with
45 ticks remaining.
Hatsushi and Estanoa'!> Darshaun
Gamer each hit front e nds of one-and-
one free-throw s1tuations and Gamer
blocked Mesa's last-second shot to force
the extra session.
"(Serven) told us to give him the best
four minutes we had,• Hatsushi said.
That they did, outscoring the visitors,
12-2. before giving up a concession
bucket at the buzzer.
In addition to his 19 points. Hatsushi
added six rebounds, five as ists and two
steals
"(Hatsush1) was · outstandrng, •
Estanoa Coach Rich Boyce said. "When
we were ahead, he kept them in 1t and
y.ihen they were pullmg away, he was
the catalyst. He was the differeocemak-
er. • ·
Sunco finished with 17 powts to pace
the Eagles. Cantrell, battling a box-and-
one defense with Weir glued to his jer-
sey, tint.shed wtth 12, as did Chandler.
Cantrell, who was a part of Mesa's
championship freshmen team before
transferring, rut his first four three-point
attempts, but managed just seven shots.
He did not shoot a foul shot.
Gamer amassed 18 rebounds, but
managed just ·five points as Mesa's
active zone helped limit inside sconng
chances, much to Boyce's constemabon
The victory puts the Mustangs witlun
one of matching their highest win total
since 1982. They are only four shy of the
school single-season record of 18.
•1 don't think we get enough credit,•
Hatsuslu said. "But we could prove our·
selves in the long run and we will prove
ourselves."
CdM . drops league opener
• Laguna Beach survives late
Sea Kings' rally to win, 61-52.
T<M Al.TOeSJJ "'
talrf'h
CORONA DEL MAR -Laguna
Beath High's ~ besketball team
took advantage of the physical,
aggressive play allowed in Priday
night's Pacific Coast League opener,
outlasting host Corona del Mar, 61-52.
•The off1ciills definitely let the
rough stuff go both ways,• Coach
Paul Onis said afterward. •That style
fits right Into their game plan
They're a goOd, physical team.•
lillvis Hanour, tho Artists' 6-foot-6
shooting guard, upheld his JOb title
and scored 27 points, while dishing
out eight assists.
•vou gotta give naVlS credit out
there,• Onis said. ·ue shot the lights
out on us.•
Kevin Hansen led the Sea Kings
(12-5) with 19 points before fouling
out late in the fourth quarter.
CdM led by two afteJ the first
quarter and led by as many as five
early in the second, courtesy of
Hamm and Alec Hanson (13 fi.rst-
lid pomtii).
Tbat's wHen Laguna Beach (1()..6}
ll4tted to U5e il$ big guy. 6-foot'" 11
Chris Manker, who scored 11 ol his
19 points m the second quart~.
Cdf\tt came out flat in the third
quarter and Laguna Beach took
advantage. stretching its lead to 110.
"We ca.me out and we didn't even
get a shQt off in the first foW' minutes
of the third,• Orris said.
A 7-0 nm late in the third quarter
by the Sea Kings trimmed the lead to
46·42 before Hanour took over.
In the the f<;>wth quarter, Hanour
·was 3 for 4 from the field and 4 for 6
from the free-throw line, scoring 1 t ol
hiS team's 15 fowth-quarter pomts.
"I told the guys afterward that this
is just one game• oms said.
DAILY PILOT HIGH SCHOOL ATHLETE OF THE WEii GIRLS VOLLEYIALL
•The Sailors' senior enjoyed free reign in
Carson City, leading team to tou~ent
championship and earning MVP tionors.
JOtN Al l'OBt1JJ
• After countless games of double and IOl'Detimes
triple coverage, Newport Harbor High's bOys
basketball playw Dustin Dlingworth -
experienced IOJllethlng almolt alien to him.
Qne.on-one coverage.
11'11 wu tbe cue for tbe Sallorl' Mnior at !Mt
Week'• canon Oty ~tOl oa.tc, whtre he faced
tMml that bed DlrVW Men his, nor the team'• sty\e of
,..,. wM 10 iUce Mwag all tbat l'OCm down tbarl •
~ ..... Wtlb. anOe. •J a1mallt diiM't know
a.w1oN1Ct•11.·
~ ....... fMt learner,~ 28 pohall
511 ...
l
Gatorade says Ross;
o. 1 in Calif orni
• Newport Harbor senior
in hunt for national honor .• ..
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f':
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'II!! •
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. . . 8, 2000 ,,.__...___..~-
1
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This Saturday & Sunday, January 8th & 9th,
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MISSION VIEJO
1he future is now. What's next ... ?
••
j
'
. HIGH SCHOOL IOYS HOOPS
Tars pound Irvine
•Tars win, 66-50, to the delight-of Newport fans.
Jo-.1·P1t Boo Newpbrt center o.tsbn Illing-
~ rtot worth or go down t:Iying. The
Vaqueros usually went down.
Illingworth scored 18 points,
hitting two three-point plays in
the first half even though Irvine
double-and triple-teamed him
for most of the game.
NEWPORT BEACH -How
impressive was Newport Har-
bor High's boys basketball
team:s 66-50 Se~ View League ~
victory over visiting. Irvine on
Friday? After the game, the
mother of a Newport cheer-
leader c~e up to Sailors
Coach Larry Hirst and
expressed her gratitude for a
job well done.
"I'm embarrassed," Hirst
said. "That never happened to
me before. Nobody came up to
me and said plat on Tuesday.•
Tuesday was Newport's 54-
49 nonleague loss to archrtval
Corona del Mar. Looking to
rebound from that game, the
Sailors (11-5. 1-0 m league)
turned in a performance that
can only be called a smash
revival, getting the lead up to
24 points in the third quarter.
•Coming off a loss to CdM,
playing at home in the first
league game of the season,
that all adds up to a huge win,•
Hirst said.
Irvine (5-12, 0-1) came into
the game detennlned to stop
"I can't make claims on how
good be is,• Hi,rst said. "It
takes three guys to stop him.
And when three guys did col-
lapse on him, he was unsellish
enough to kick the ball out.··
Sean Rorden was the main
benefactor J;vine's d9uble-
teams. He hit two three-point-
ers and scored lOpoints. Aaron
Yamal added 15 points, most of
tJ:tem c~rruµg off of his six
st~. Tony Metum gave his
best Yamal impersonation on
one play, getting a steal and
finishing with a dunk. He end-
ed up with 10 points. .... v.w UIACIU9 Nl-.-r HAMOll 66, .._ 50 seo.. by C)IIefw. ,,,,,,,. 12 12 12 1' • so
Newport H•lbor 20 17 21 8 · 66
Irvine • GutM 8. ~ 7, Schles.t 5,
0-rlts 5, P.ttot'\ 2, Spur 0, Hulett 15, <:.m~r 8,
Srlv1 0, S.fleJ 0. )1lt goals • H11M!tt 3 Technl<als ·Spear, o.rries.
~ HMtlor • Illingworth 18. Y1rnal 15, Ror~ IO. Peulne 4, Rl'Y'IOl<K 2, Mttum 10,
Martin 4, Murray 0, Knutt! 2, Si>19ner 1,
S™'<lenrNnn 0, Coolt 0. ~ 0, ~ldy 0.
).pt. goals • Rorden 2
H I G H S C H 0 0 L 8 0. Y S S 0 C C E R
Estancia's Terrones
terrorizes Mesa, 5-0
• He scores three goals
in Friday's PCL conquest.
·COSTA MESA -Another
game, another three goals for
Cesar Terrones.
Terrones' backup,· Juan
Zarate, scored Estancia's hnal
goal. That gives Estanaa 55
goals scored m nine games,
compared to four goals given
up. -by Joseph Boo
Estancia's senior forward
scored three tines for the sec-CdM roe~. 2-0
ond consecutive game, all in CORONA DEL MAR ~ Jon
the first half. That was more Schrank scored twice in the
than enough for the Eagles to first half off assists from Scott
defeat cross-town rival arrd Baker, from a pass across the
host Costa Mesa, 5-0, in the mouth of the goal, and Kevin
Pacific Coast League opener Kramer on a throw-lh in the
for both teams. ' Terrones also scored three first hall and goaltender Cednc Chun made it stand up with
times agamst Ocean View .... ~r"'ven saves as the host Sea
partner at the forward spot, Kings dealt Laguna Beach a
Esaul Mendoza. scored one 2-0 Paofic Coast League loss
goal and assISted on Estanda's Friday.
first goal of the game. Corona del . Mar, which
"Cesar and Esaul are on a improves to 7-3, 1-0 in th1e PCL, tedr Uus year,• Estanaa Coach Steve Crenshaw said. "Mesa was boosted by the d efensive
Played great, but we have so play o1 fullback Ethcm Austin and sweeper Mike Palazolla. many ways to score.• La falls 3 6 o Estancia (7-1-1, 1-0-0 m guna to --1 , -1.
league) flaunted its talents, Tars, Irvine tie, 1_1
controlling the ball for the
majority of the game with deft NEWPORT BEACH
passing and touches. The Behind the strong goaltending
Eagles outshot the Mustangs of Duke Burchell, Newport
(3-8-3, 0-1-0) by a whopping Harbor High's boys soccer
margin of 25-2 m the game, team battled visiting Irvine to a
and Estancia goalie Hilario 1-1 tie m Friday's Sea View
Arriaga only made three saves, League opener for both clubs.
none in the second hall. Burchell had eight saves for
•They're too good,• Costa the Sailors (4-5-2), some from
Mesa. Coach Mike Dunn said. point-blank range. Junior They
·Our boys played well, but Meek scored the Sailors lone
they were too much.• goal in the fifth minute of the
Costa Mesa goahe Jose game, with an assist from
Perez made. 17 saves. Tyson Wahl.
Irv 1n1 ( '> 111 I 1
Frid"y's uor~
Wednesday. Jan. 12 (7 30 pm.)
Nw .,art ft.bar at Laguna Hills
Aliso Niguel at Irvine
Fnd<1y, Jan. 14 (7:30 p m.)
~at N91Juport ......
Laguna Hi at ~iso Niguel •
Newport wins two
NEWPORT ----
BEACH-New-P 0 l 0
port Harbor High's grrls water
polo team won its fJr..t two games
in the Newport Harbor/Corona
del Mar Tournament on Friday to
advance to today's semlfinal at
11 am.
In the first game, Erin Ball,
Kathryn Belden, McKenna
Mosier and Kyndra Cox edch
scored two goals us the Sailors .
(10-1) easily defeated Peninsula,
11-3. In the next game, Cox
scored three times to lead New-
port to a 7-3 Win over Capistrano
Valley.
Newport goalie Heather Dey-
den ~ad 15 combined saves.
HAPPY
BIRTHDAY
~~~~J:-:::::::
r---~----------------, ! 1 I I f I . . !
I I
I I
I I
I I
I I L--------------------~
SCHEDULE
TODAY
• Basketball
College men -Fresno Pacific at
Vanguard Uni\!ersity, 7:30 p.m.
College women • Fresno PaC1fic at
Vanguard University, 5;30 p.m
High school boY5 Western at
Costa Mesa, 7 p.m
High school girls -Ocean View at
Corona del Mar. 6 p.m
• Waterpolo
Htgh school girls -Newport Har-
bor Corona del Mar Tournament. at
Newport Harbor: Consolation, 8
a m .. El Toro vs. Corona del Mar;
Championship semifinal: 11 a.m., at
Newport Harbor; Third place, 2 p.m.;
First place, 3 p .m
• Soc.cer
High school girls · Costa Mesa at
Katella Tournament
• Wrestling
High school • Newport Harbor at .
Orange Glen Tournament, 9 a.m.
D'E E P SI A
FRIDAY'S COUNTS
Newport Uncling • 1 boat.
17 anglers. 2.sand bass,• sculpin.
2 sheephead, 52 whitefish.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~
DUSTIN •1 have a very strong family DUSTIN IL.LINGwoRnt bond,· he said. "I grew gomg
to a stnct Catholic school where
they 11l5tilled that do-whatever-
1t-takes attitude m me. I guess
I've brought that into my
basketball game."
CONTINUED FROM 81
and 12 rebounds a game,
leadlllg the Sailors to the
tournament title, while talong
home the tournament's Most
Valuable Player award.
l-Us best game came at the
perfect time, scoring 31 points
and grabbing 11 rebounds m
the 61-59 overtime win against
prevl.ously-unbeaten Kennedy
High or Sacramento m the
c.bamplonship game
•y had never gotten an MVP
award an a tournament before:
llllngworth said. •1t was i.o
great picking up that award
after we had won the
tournament. We really played
well out there.•
According to Coach Lany
Hirst, it was a typical Illingworth perfonnance at •
JU.St the right time.
•n•s so hMd to rato his j>clformanccs because
he works 50 hard every game,• Hust _aid. •He
docs so many thing out there both with and
without the ball.•
Playmg in his fourth yeclJ at the varsity level,
llli.rigworlh has had to stay one step ahead of his
Sea View League competition by leanung ,
differ nt moves ln order to find breathing room
under the basket.
It helps to have a 6-foot·7 coach with tnon of
playing experience to go to for pointer •
•coach Hint has taught me f!Veiything I
know," llllng'Worth Ja)d. "I've got at )eut .even
different fakes and moves that l c=to and he'• been great at helping me to ect thein. •
Hint points tbe ftngei' toward '• f~
and uj>brtngtng for hit toughria. and work ethk:.
•That lnlkle fire that be bU It IOIMtbtDg you
can't coecb, • Hint .Aid •He'• goJ tbet deep
deltr'9 to win md • .,...,.. for ....... tbat's
been wtlb blm longbtfore l got• bold of blin.·
llllftgwortb .....
Now in his senior season,
Illingworth has also donned the
cap as one of the team leaders,·
something that he has arcepted
and is constantly working to
unprove. •
"Each year that I've been
here, there has always been a
s<!nior to step up and be the
leuder," Illingworth said. •nus
year, I've tried to step up more
and be that leader out there.".
So Is it easy going mto each
gdJlle knowmg that two or
maybe three players will be
following your every move'I
•1t takes a lot or menld.l
preparation wtlh each game,"
Illingworth said. "We've been tdught to adapt
and adjust to what' yoing on out there. l JUSt
have to tell myself ah d of time so 1t lin't a big
shodt when 1t happen • '
To further prepare for his pounding ,
Illingworth bulked up dunng the off·seuoa to
compete with the bigger guys, enabling him ~
use another weapon: power. ·u I'm playing a 5ma1Jer guy, I can post b1in up
better with my size,• rumgworlh said. ·aut ll l'm
up against a bigger guy, which is usually the cue,
I can still use quickness to get around him.•
A leader off the court u well, Illingworth has a
3 8 grade point average and looks to perhepl play
a little further IOUth alter Newport.
"I've been talking with UC San Diego a lot,•
Illingworth Mid. •They have an outstanding
program and I would loft to play and 09 lo 9Chool
time.
Por tun. Dultinl ·1 ~ you could c.u ...
gMk. .. be Mid wttb • Jaugb •• '°"
~OW'· llUD1ww'9it-.d .i/IO ~IOIDe bMda ~=~ ... do m bodywurtmg oa tM w1.__._.
.,,-.• ~'¥-,---,---~~
l..;-. -_ __) ~: _,-._ -~--
Tonight's game (7) . .
Western at Coma~ (nonleague)
Wedneday. J.-,n. 12 (7 p.m.)
HIGff SQto<M. IOYS
Mane COrUJ u..... CoslA Mo.A 51, Es1MQA 50 (Ol)
Scof9 by l'wtodl
[~ 11 10 9 15 .. so
GoN ~ 8 U U 1.C ll SI
EsUnda • 5'mco 17, c.ntretl, 12, 0.4"\dl#f 12,
G¥ner 5, Rodng~z :t "91iilM l, M.tldonldo 0
ConcepdonO
l-pt go."· <Mlttri • Simco 3
Fooled out • Simco Cost. ~ • H•twrhl 19, Woor 12, fefrymln
11, Naff 7, )Ollft 7, WMuk.rr >. P.yne 0.
Conte 0, ~~ 0, ""~on .. n O, Kr\O• 0
l-9'-goa" • Hatsushl 2, We-tr l, Jone\ 1
Fouled out • Non.
MOAC CO.Uf UAGUI lAGuHA BEACH 61. ~ Df.L MAii 52
Scot'9 by Qwtrten •
l.llguna BN<h •S 21 10 1~ 61
Co<oo• del Ma• 11 1~ 10 to • Sl
~ llMch Hoindour 27, M•nlttr 19
Blodgett 9, Butttrs 6, 8oyd 0
l pt go.ls H•ndOOf ~. Blodgett 2
Fouled out • none Tedinta1f foolt • HMdour I
CAlfona del M.w • H•nien 19, H•mon 1.1. Templ~on 10, ~11 S, Hletbflnk S, Patt•r.on 0,
Shahangl•n 0
3 p\. ge»ls Hil'l)On l, SNll 1
fouled out -HdMt'n
..
Saturday, January 8, 2000 83
COMMUNIR COLLEGE llSKETlllL
OCCbusted
in double OT
• Pirates' good fortune
in OT ends against OEC
foe Cypt;ess, 101-98.
COSTA MESA -,
Orang€' Coast · Col-M E N
lege's men's basketball team
has been livmg the good We m
overtime contests
Double-overtime lS a different
story, however
Despite a 25-poirit mght from
David CasUetdn, the Puates
·(12-5, 1-1) fell short against w.-
1ting Cypress in 2 OTs, 101-98,
if Orange Empire Conference
action Fnday night
Towan Oliver led the Cbdtg-
ers (8· 11 overall) with 35 pomts
and 14 re bounds.
Chad Hagedorn scored 19
point:> for the Bucs. while Dave
Elliott added 15 and Ryan Earl
an~ Due Nguyen each dupped.
tn with 14.
OIWOGI! -CDNfllEllllild ~ 101, OlwGCoAsTM
~ Olr-lS,,ll«h n 2t, Gl.m 1~.
bquh•rt tO Stewllft 10, JmllN!non 6. ~f~ 4
l pt \)Oii ·Oliver S. Rachlrn 3'
fool•'Cl out ~hhn. JOrnlr'erton, ~oe
~.,. Coast C..nlf'\On 2S.. H~tdorn 19.
Elliott IS. £1rl 14. N(luyt?n 14, Cutlef S, Rr-• l
8Hler l r
3 pl pis Gtn~oo 4, Earl l, NguY'ffi J '
Bffltr 1, River•'!, H.igtdom 1
Fouled OUl Nguyen. Beeler
Halftime· Cyprm, 4\-40
Regulat•on · 79 79
Fr,,\ OW<tune • 89-89
Pi:rates make
it 16 straight
• It's longest winning
streak in school history
as Cypress falls, 68-63.
COSTA WOMlll M€SA -
OrdngP Codst College'i;
womPn's lJasketball team gave
nuw meumng to the term
"Sw<•et 16 •
With Prlddy's 68-63 pran~e
Em[Jtte Conference win over
Cypress, the P1rntes mcreasi>
tbe1r wmmng streak to 16 Ula
row, breokinCJ previous mark of
15 straight. set b~· the 1992-93
team.
Kctryn fu~r~t and Shauna
Steward ea< h had 12 points for
thP Bucs ( t 8·2 2-0 in OECJ,
wh1le Safdh M1ddlebrooke
added 10 points a nd 14
rebounds.
OCC wlll travel to Fullerton
CoUcqe to takP on the Hornets
Wednesday dl 7.30 p rn.
OllAHC){ (-CONJ-NCI OMH<it CoAsl 61, CYl'MU 6l
Cypreu /lo •~ J I 1 '" 19, I!-IU <C P111• l
J. ufi)u 1, Cl» J C 011 1
J pt \l?.tt Anen 4
foull'd out none
0...,. Cout F•!Hlt 12. Stewafd t2,
M.d<ltt-br~r 10. Wride '1 lM!t 8 \Jrti.n 1,
lohnion 6. ~•1ud• l, Tomi nson t
J p\ ~" loM\011 2. Stew.,d }, M<KOO• '·
Flef'1 1 Wild( 1, U•b<in t
Foulfod OUl ~ .. .
In 1999, we exceeJcJ all McrceJl'..,,
Ben: sales records. A-:, a re-.ulc , we hcl\e
earned the bigge·r tactory allocatilm c\·er,
and no~ve more th,m l,200 new
vehicles to choose from.
We also took in a recorJ .. breakm~
number of clean, lare,mtx.lel craJe,iru .
I ;
And even though we onl~ keep one C>Ut of
three, we are completely mcr.;ttx..kL\.1. , •
We have more th.m 120 t.h01Lc ... tarn1arl
Mercedes.-Benz m mventt)f)' ., .~ll lie
ragged for immediate clearance.
Our inventor)' is !.'i(..) hu~c, we arc ~wring
cars at three off~ite locario~. As a "hr\:wd
puyer, you know what th.it means
With our sales volume, ~lltr cconnmi~!"
of scale, and our Preferred Owner Program,
no ohe gives you greater value for your
money. £.specially now, during our Ei ,hth
·Anniversary Celebration
FLETCHFRJONES
M·O·T·O R·C·A·R ·S
300 Jamboree Road • 800 927 .. 3576
' ~Moo Fn 8am·.9rm • S. ~-7pm •Sun 10Mn-6pm • www tjmtrc~des co•
I
.. ....... .
I • •• ..... " 4H
111 .... O,· Fa.'\ By Phone By ~lalMn Person:
t1-tll 11 II ·II "11 H 11-141 11-+.! ;,,1-:: ;o \\,•I II.I\ ... ,,,...,
" .. ,. .. ,. ( .... I \I·. I I '1•.!1t:.!~
SERVICE DIRECTOJlY· ~~~ I \ I h I .. I"•
Hours
-For All Your Home and Business NCi.'<b -............. ........, ........ ,.. &·•dBi l1 l1 pl1u111 II ;11.1111~i 111~1111
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.. m 14 ""' ,,__,. W Mettle " .. 1~ 111 " '°'"" :, 1101'111 11 .... , ,, I r•I
PUBLIC
NOTICES
PUBLIC NOTICES j" "°~} ___ NO_p¥.c_
8_rr_s.J
PUB C NOTICE 1g way epa men Y ay, available IOf public re-PUBLIC NOTICE CJ Newpon Boulevard
f.!•nnlng Director's This prOject has beel\ Janu1ry 17, 2000, In Of· view and Inspection at CITY OF SUMMARY: A use permit
uae Permit No. 52 reviewed. a"d 11 has der 10 be considered In the Planning Depart· NEWPORT BEACH to allow approximately
Notice Is hereby given been determined that 111s the Planning Director's ment. City of Newpon City Council 900 square feet of add!· categorically exempt un-decision If approved at Beach. · 3300 Newport tlonal lloor area for a bit an application has der the requirements of the time of review, the Boulevard, Newport Chamber• of the ~roposed ofl1C8 budding oiten Submitted by o.. c I I r: ,,..,, f 1 ~ ... City of .. _ I I •IGn fntet'Ventlon (Kirk the a I I or n a ap 881 perouu o .. uoys Beach. California, ,.., apphcant aso n-
WMaon, eppllcanl), to Environmental Oualtty wd begin from that date, 92659·1768 For funner Newport Beach -dudtt1 a lot lane adjust·
rtfQuest the establi!ih Act under Class 1 EJOst· during which bme any in· Information contact the 3300 Newport ment to merge three ex· ment of health and tng Faethlles terested party or tnetr au-Newport Beach Plamtng Boulevard, 1s11ng lots into a s•ngle lot Planning Olroctor's lhorized &nAl"lt aggrieved De .. _ 1 1 N B h and o request ol an Oil· fitness facility in an eieti.t Use Permit No 52 IS of that decisk:in marc ltle a pa, .,,...,n 8 ewport eac Street earlung credit. '"g commercial oll1c.e (949) 644-3200 PLANNING 11 JI g. The lacihty will scheduled for review by no11ce of appeal o the NOTE: The expense ot COMMISSION APP ICAT ON Plan· tho Planning Oepartmont Planning Commission this notice Is paid from a mng 01rector's Use Per·
provide massage ol the Ctty ol Newpon with a filing lee of llllng toe collected from AGENDA . mlt No 47, Lot Line Ad·
ldlVity.s ~np~:!~9<>~ Beach at 3:00 p.m. on $691 00 to del111y the the applicant Regular Meeting 1ustment No 99·16 =led.In the APF Tuesday. January 11, cost ol the appeal Published Newport Januery 20, 2000 CEQA COMPLIANCE·
2000. Written comments procedure Beach.COSta Mesa Oaity 7:00 p.m . This project has been rt·
fc or input retaled to the The appt1catlon and de· p lot J 8 2000 s BJ C Viewed, and 11 has been ·~ roperty local p ro1ect should be velopment plans ol the 1 anuary 1 U E T Old Now· determined that ills cate·
z __ o_s_e_a_•t-----~--__,.:...&:ut>=:.:m~1n~eo~t:U.Uh~li.SL\.ll~u..1~r~o~~ed~~ro~ec~t-•~~~•..!.-------------~---9~por1~--0e~v-e_1opme..;...~"'~·-4_5 __ 5 gorlcal~ exempt under Class 32 (ln·FMI Dovelop-
,rnent Projects) of the re-
qulremen1s of the Caltlor-
nla Eovironl"T)enlat Qual-
ity Act
2 SUBJECT Newport
Ounes Partnership. 101
North Bayside Dnve and
1131 Baell Bay Dnve
SUMMARY The
proposed pro1ect in·
volves the adoption of a
set of Planned Com
munlty District regu-
lations for the 100-acre
Ne.,qport Dunes property
The appllcatlon includes
a conceptual precise
plan for a hotel and ttme·
11hara complex on a
JO.acre s11e located on
the west side 01 the
Swimming lagoon and a
final precise plan for the
dev•tope<I areas of 1he
Newport Dunes properly
The proposed hotel and
11me·share complex will
provide up to 400 hotel
rooms end 100 11me· -.-i• share· units (each have the . capabdoty oC being ~1oc1<9Q-0H" to create two
separate rentable
rooms), 55,000 square
leet of conference
rooms. meeting rooms,
banquet laclhtles, pre·
fuoolion assembly ilJld
circulation areas. 13 650
square feet lot eatong
and dr1nking ~ tabush·
menls. 8.000 square feet lof health Clublspa faol-
'''"· 4,600 squaro leet o1 retail and services. an<'
swimming pools an(
i.ndscaped garden
areas The applieattoo in-
cludes an amendment lo
Iha Land Use Element o'
lhe General Plan and the
Local Coastal Program
Land Use Plan II> cnange
the land use designation
on the 30-acre holeV
time-share sue from Rec·
reatlonal and
Environmental Open
Space to Retail and
Service Commercial and
an amendment 10 the
Land Use Element text to
rc11lect the proposed in·
creases in the number of
rooms and IQUare foot-
age ol the hotel The ap·
pllcatlon also includes an
amendment to Chaplir
20 85 (Height Limits\ ol
the Zoning Code to per-
mit the maximum height
hm Is proposed ln the PC
Development J>lan.
APPUCA TION Oer.eral
Plan Amendment No
97·3(F)
Local Coastal Plan
Amendment No 51
Zoning Code Amend·
ment No. 878
Planned Community Dis-
trict Pia!) (PC-418)
Development Agreemet1t No. 12
Traffic StUdy No 115
Envtronmental Impact
Aepon No 157
Conceptual Preen. Plan
Final Preclie Ptan
CEOA COMPLIANCE
A Final EnVlroomental
l.fllpaCI Repon (SCH#
98061113) has been
prepared by tho City of
Newpon Beach 1n coo
necllOO with tho 1ppl1C8
lion noted above Coples
of Iha Flllll Environmen·
lal Impact Report and
supporting documents
111 available fc~ .public
review ancJ lnspec.tlon 11
th Plar>n1ng Depart-
ment, City ol Newport
B Ch, J300 Newport
Boulevard..1. Newport
Beach. valllornla.
92G59· I 76lJ ~:J!:·~~rt
Boach Costa Mesa Dally
Pilot JallUlry 8, 2000
' S~290
NOTICE OF
APPLICATION TO
SELL ALCOHOLIC
. BEVERAGES
Date of Filing
Applicatl.ln:
December 2' 1999
To 'Mlom It May
concern. ~ The Name(sl
Applfcant(s) Isl: re.
BIGLARY ABBAS
GHAZIMIRSAIED
SOHILA
The applk:ants fisted
above are applying to the
Department or AlcohoUc
Beverage Control to sen
alcoholic beverages at
891 W BAKER ST
STE. A COSTA MESA.
CA 92626
Type ol hcense(s) As::·
piled for '41 • ON·SALE
BEER AND WINE·
EATING PLACE
Published Newpo11
Beach·Costa Me.a Dally
Pilot Janoary 1, 8, 1s.
2000 • Sa28'7 --..,,.c"""rr"'"v'""o""F=-
cosTA MESA
NOTICE INVITING
BIDS FOR
POLICE PATRCL
VEHICLES
BID ITEM NO. 1041
NOTICE IS HEREBY
-GIVEN that sealed bids
w1U be reoatved t.y the
Ctly ol Costa Mesa to Wit
The Ctty Clerk, P 0 Box
T200, Costa Mesa. Catt·
lomla 92628·1200, on or
before lhe nour of 10.00
a m on Jenuary 24,
2000. It sh8" be the ,..
sponslb1ftty of the bidder
to deliver hts bid to the
City Clerl<'s Offrce by the
proper announced time.
Delivery Location Coty of
Cosla Mesa. City Clerk, n FairDnlle, Room 101,
Costa Mesa, Callfomla
92626
Bids •hall be returned
to the a1tenuon of the City
Cieri!, wtlhtn sc.id time
limit, In a sealed
envelope Identified' on
the outSide with the Btd
Item Number and the
Opening Date. Bids will
be publlcly opened and
read aloud at 10.00 a.m.
or 81 soon thereafter as
practicable on January
24. 2000 In the Council
Chambers
Addttl0081 sets ot the
Nola tnv11tng Bids may
be obtatned by author·
1zed vendor's at the Office
ol t11e Purchasing Super·
visor, n Fan Dnve •
Room 100. Costa Mela,
C11hlomla 92626.
Publlshed Newport
Beach.COSta Mesa Dally
Pilot January 8, 2000
Se288
Fictitious BuelneH
Name Statement
The following persons
are dOtng business as
Mind Software. Inc .•
22211 Malibu Lane.
Huntington Beach.
Calltomla 92648
Backyard AesHrch
Inc, (Nevada). 22211
Mahbu Lane, tiunbngtoo
Beach, Cellfomla 92646 This t>uslness Is con-
docted by a corporation
Have yoo slar1ed doing
business yet? Yet.
04f01/99
Backyard Research
Inc., Michael B Gelger,
President
Th•• statement waa
ftled With the County
Cletk of Or&nge County on 12-30-99
19996815511
D11ty Poot Jan 8. 1s. 22.
29, 1999 Sa292
£all the
Classifieds
, .. ,, 642·5678
"Affordable
Alternative"
Discount Casket,
Cremadon&
'1
.J ....
Burial Service
Why should you subject
yourself &.your family to
paying anfl;ued prices· for
caskets & services????
Call Toll Frtt I ·888-S~Q'I'
Senill 0rM&t I Simi .... ea.-.
lf.111·· .111ol 1l•·.1oll11w· .tt•' .111•1• 11 .. • 11.111::1· '11111111111 111111; •' 1111•
j !ll•li h It t I• (111 fi!!fll lu • • 11"11 I• 1 l.t••lh l•"I I"' Ill ll"ft"t I
11111l,1·•1fw1l111hnt1•1 ut11tl Pl111•1"1• 1•ull .1111 1·11111 !1111 111,11 lw
111111111 1 l.1-·ilw•I .11111111111 .f1.11o·h 1111 l>.11h 1111111.1111·p1·1111
l1,1l11lt11 1111 1111\ 1"11111 111illl 111111·1·11·1·1111 Ill 1111 111111 It 11 Ill.I\ 111•
n··p1111-it,1 ••• , •.•• ,., r ... 1111' 1'11•1 111 tl11· ·I'·" •. •I• 111.1111 Ill I llf'll"ll 11\
''"' t ""'I 11•11111·,1111111h 111 .11111111·,f '"' 1l11· lt1·I 111•11111111
----Deadlines ---......
Monday ............ FritlJ\. :l:OOpm fhu,...1la1 \\1·tlih"·•lt11 .=i·l~lpm
fw·-..lo\ ......... Mornb\-."i:OOpm ~ rnlJt ... . Thurs<IJ~ S;OOpm
\\e1l11l•sda) , ... ftlt'sday .):OOp111 "'utunlu) ........... Fridu~ 5:00pm
(&) ... .__10_HOUSESICONOOS __ FOR_SA_LE_ COSTAllESA
EQUAL HOUSING
OPPORTUNITY
All rt1l t1lll1 1n11llslte II 11111
..... ,.,.. ,, .. ~ct ,. '" ,. ••
e11I h lr flw•hlt Acl ti , .. n
11111 .... wMc• ll!HH " Nltpl
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11 mah ••r nc• '"'"""· llmlt.tlltt ., tllnrlnll•1tlt1 •
lhlt "'"'''" wlll HI kHllllltlf 8'ct,I HJ tlhtt11U
11tlll "' rut nlll• ••k• k Ill •i.lllllt ti IN law Ott 1nhrs
111 hn•y l1lt11111• l)tl tll
•111lll1p dttlllutl I• '"'
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Jltlt ti t111crlml1111 ... call HUO
ltlHro ti H00·4H·ISto ftt , .. w .. .,.,, ... oc 1111 , .....
call HUii ti 4tf-3SCll.
1 HO~OM>OS
FOASALE GENERAL
•••••••••••• : u SOLDu ! • • ! SHOWCASE !
• HOMES •
: FOR SALE ! ! In Our Sat . :
• Real Emte • ! Supplement! !
: HOMES OF !
! THE WEEK ! • • : Display Ads : * Start at $751 * * Deadline • • • : Tuesday SPM :
• Open House • ! Listings !
• Only $151 * ! Deadline ! t Thursday 5PM ! ! It Pays to :
• Advertise • ! in the Best : * LOCAL * : Real Estate ! ! Section !
: Call Todayll :
~ LISA RIVERA !
• 949-5744252 •
! ANNE WILLEY .!
: 949-5744249 : ••••••••••••
8EA MESA VERDE HME
OPEN SUN 12 ... :00
VSS Bunting Clrcle
5br 3ba ~ remod, over $150K~ 1educedto
$529, ~ Aicl1 office 71'4· -6100
S020 Jivill'Oi*l Sat l Sun t.4818 Verde Country Club ~ 9600 sl loc. 461 2 58a s .000 949-378--0664 Suc~u Propertll•
19 HOUSESJCONOOS
FOR SALE HUNTING TOH
8EACH
4SALEHUNT1NGTONBCH
1BR', 1BA CONDO.
53 Unh Senior Complex $'45,000 (lncitjd&S i;SCIOW
Fees) Joanne 949·50&·7072
32 HOUSESICONOOS FOR SALE NEWPORT BEACH
OCEAN I BAY VIEWS 1Br
1 Ba Penthoose untl, IVgll cetls, gated comm, pool. SPI
Vacant. ready to sell
$239.000. Bkr 949-25()..11525
1BR STUDIO new luctures,
wall ln closet. vacanl. ~ ~ing In lutcnen, C comm ~,000 r181o-949-2 525
BIG CYN VILLAS
TWNHOME Bordering Big
Cy" Golf CourM. 2'30rs O~SunH FORD R AO PROPERTIES
949-759-nOO
HARBOR VIEW AREA
4bt 2 5ba A.II new Wlfldow$.
doors Clblnets Yf1~a &labs & laOOsc Pool 91<
Blulown 949-711Hl00
PRIME ESTATES
Homes. Condos, E&1at•
23 yrs Se!Vlng All Orange ~Call Patrick Tenore
·9705 •'
S.. l•'*'d Rtaort Living
3Br 3 58a. plus :':1 rm.
oran11e kit cmtom but .ins. marble entry $7\19.000
Broker 949-646-20 I I
NEWPORT HEIGHTS
Extra lar~ Lot 381 2Ba house included Call
9-49-646-2011
BANKRUPTCY
--TRUSTEE SALE
Luxury Property IOclted In
1ht e~e= corn-mtnty ol lhe rt T OWl'I
Colecborl o" F ORI Rold In
Newpott Beach Plan two model. 3320 sl, 28d. 381.
2< gtrago and luKUrtOUS
llmefljties th!~ Usled price Is $753, T rustoe's
Agetll ta~ namtl Ind
numbers ~opte In· lefes18d WI I bKI on ==tty Property not~ to snow. floor
Ind llddrlSI may be laxed to l"'J irltet8$1ad party Al In-
terlSled partlf!S must regia· tar with agenl CaM the
Trultee's Agen1. Doug
Edlelberer. lor more rt· tormatlon at 949-49&-nt 1. ,-
OLD COM OPEN SUH 12 ...
332 Haz11l Dr, Oen Vu On Cln{t! bl! IO bet lmmac ColtilijU 2bt • 1 Sb.l. frplc
$769,000 ArJ. 9'49-75!M1070 •••••• CAMEO HIGHLANDS
START 200 IN STYLEI
Light, Bright, 38r 2'h Ba
Large Familyroom • V'8w Home Unusual & Fun.
$898,000. (By Appl)
~ '41.AI...
~ ... 9~ ~67.l·~
••••••
L~
MOITllAllES
MCl'ICVllW MIMORIAL PARK
810 CANYON TWM 3800 st
481 38a, office, remodll8d.
al new appls. Jae, phone 'Y'·
Cedar ~ must see! $799. 000 72 I ..()404
OPEN HOUSE
SUNDAY 1-4
VILLA BALBOA
280 Ca~ne,la Lane #119
2Br 2Ba, amily Room
Dining Rm, Huge Patio
Largest Model
$318.000
MatyAnn McGuire
949'646-6no
Prud Ca Real~
WATER FRONT FIXER
THE PRICE
WILL AMAZE YOU I
AGENT 949-723-8120
ocean cto .. ·3Br 2 5Ba
TwnlM. 2-sty wflc. 111 ge1
.. ~ Plfll, .... ber, l'.Cn 3 dedcs sm.ooo
Buike. Afl. 9-t9-759-9314
1 BR STUDIO new iocturea
walk Ir\ CIOWI vacanc.
ltceiaed lghting ., ki1cNJn, = comm. $11~.ooo r'Bkr. 949-2.5(>-4525
1
33=-1 Hr Ula Ofllecl comm, kg
comer loc. lush 1~
pool, 2c gar S939.
Juon Hartman. Fred Sandt
Platn.tm P1£f 949 ·5!.8-0505
l11:'1ifl
llr Den :Ua. T ownflouM n Unit Oalff comm, PofN
WIMll crt ctoea lo fr~f ocean. $Z)()I( Ctlll MNY
ltlllff9f. 1M Lion ..._"Y t\I .... 940'473-6354 C«nttery • MQf1u.ry
Chlpel • Cremetety I
~=.,[)riyt :• .... 1700
LAICl...,..NJO
..... l*"8 .... ...
Pfloe M41K lllriOWMf
Mt-711-1MO
c
MllT =·=
I
I
104 APTS
BALBOA ISLAND
•LIKE NEW 18R 1BA•
on at1"f 1*1Cfng, avail
now. HOO/mo. Agent
Ml-673-'4062
1105 -•I
Biiio• Octanffonl Ape.
Yearly. 3br 2ba, lriQ, W/d.
2 permg spaces. St 800r'mo
+ deposit 714-637*99
•STEPS fo BEACHt•
1br, upstairs, new ba. Utll
paid. W/D, yllrly S1t()()(mo
NW'4&-50Se 11333
OCEAN FRON'T ON SAHD
S119Slmo 1br fully tum
cltlle • all utll. Patio, llun·
dry, pa<klng. 949-&4~
109 APTS
CORONA DEL MAR
2 2Ba + Ole 1 '4 bile$ lo
ocean, aw. wd. Ip. garege pee ok. $1950 ~ 1l~r 18a
0 S1100 949-723-3'423
THE SHORES
APTS
1 & 2BR
TOWN HOMES
$300 OFF
MOVE-IN
Selected Units •••••••••••
Starting 0
$1095/mo.
Mo to Mo lease.
·~we are a pet°
community.
6 blocks
from the beach.
949-644-2611
2br 1bl South of Hwy,
Wuhtf/dryer, 1un•tclr,
garage, no 1111okt/ptt
S1~o. 949'673·5061
Unbelievable BelutliUi 281
28a ... pv1 gat w FfJ)lt
dramalJC gated oc II) On slk
IMot1tlne$S centet l'er1ect
Newpott Coast Loe on tdg.
of CdM. $1645 Wort last 888-882-9809
Avlliablt /or • Limited
Time Only! 2Br. Fp Wid gar, awesome location ~r
COM end N8 9'1U40-2800
SoU1tl of Hwy, studio, open
and brlgflt, kltchentt •
wuhtr, ckyer hkup•. lltll
lncL ms 94g.723.oe10
Olclt COM, lire-2bf 2bl,
trplc, clfl)Ort, patio, W/D
hlwp. Anll now. $1800fmo
+ utll. Open 1·8 l Ml
108m-12$>m 949-640-43'0
s1uc110 Ape. ~1e. -.11rv ,CQIM8
Mfll loc Al'al 1111 \\Ge._ ol
Feb Open HM S.VSun 1-'4
tVpetS sn5 949-6'." ..... a
2BR 1BA SOUTH OF HYfi
Upper, no ,_ia, I .II
gwage, S180olmo WMll·
days AM 949-553-7445
.. •
' .
fAJRWAY APARTMENTS
AT BIG CANYON
QAJTO COMMUNITY DY FASHION ISi.ANO
8Mut1ful tree·h~ 1tree11 and golf courn
views. Enjoy carefree hv1ng In your large 2 BR !lpartr"-nt hom41!
1•-:g
2-. fnMft I l.ovtly
38c 2 ~ hM Fo, ... d 2c
98'. Ill CIJ)lt/peonl. Wd 6 !rig
l1CI S25otVmo 2112~
IOtil'I ~ 949 581-4000
Sllnlili9d st\ldlO, SilPi to
leedl, OC9ltl ~L Vltvte
lilt • QJWlll -ptllO ;m1·178S~lliOI • Two-cw Qarage -• Wlllhet'/dryer hooku.... ROHT 'bf 2~ ..... main dlamel VllWI. &no • Flleplace (wood & ges) tease avlll, S.C950, bolt dock
• Air conclltiOnlng avail blu t ·800-909-2765 •Wet bar
• S2JOO to s~.500 ~~~w!bl' ~ = ~ evad, m~m11. boat d«1I
Please can (949) 844·0509 L:.I avail bkr t.f00.909-2765
=~==Ano=th:;Of:;:Eu=e=• :Co:m;mu;;n:•ty=:-::-;~ I ~:::I
VYe~upo.r~ .fhtNia .MAR
v~a.rtnuwl& 3BR VIEW HOMES
BayfTonc community wil.h privalc: beach $2300 I $2750/Mo
& marina. Walk to Ba.lboa ltland shopJ,, AGENT (949) 717-47~
Mi11utu from fa.hion bland. £inn. Hal1)0; VilW HUii SOUti\O
l.ugc apanmc:nu with wood burning 3Bt 1~ home wf3c Olf,
fireplace and private gua-. S3200lmO Cal KaflV. 8gl ,.. 844-6200 Ext 159
• Boat i.lip• avadable • Oluw11111\g 28r 1Brgar. wld
Sorry No Pua • hk-tJpS, Ill carp movH\ cond 514 Mill!JOld s 1850 NOW LEASING 2BRl2BA 949-675-3888 949-533-6553
and 2BRl2BA with dc:n
S l 99S--S2800
-.. Soturdoy, Jonuory 8, 2000 Bil
J
1••:11 1400 ~ I 472 DOMESTIC . . /CHILO CAAi! cmca MAR ... lOM Wtlghl·Eam U'"
47$ EMPlOYMENT
OPPTYS
~~~.,.."11"':~~.,~4 Ellecllo, Allotdlbl•, LOVING HANNY lol z 3yf OtUVEHY P£RSUN
Newt Decor-.d26r lid Ou•entMcl. Earn mon•r fololf'lgi.t AM/PT,Ult'hsllpg AUTOllSTRO l'IOW Aldllthrs PT MIJSI '""' ~ Pl Ml $142!ilmo wM• IOllng weight Cal ""' ouc ~pl h fl I" g In ti u r. ~ Cit ca Otianes Of lyr..... JtCM7f.tM2. 1141491-4131. Refs/Orl\-t 94!!·64~1 COUl1clM swtt IOI .. ~ 71'·~19
speclO\ie llr avpti11 ,,11 HERBAUFE I I PoSlllOl1I lltll>Og 11 biHINO ROOM SERVERS
urw1 WIA 1o beldl l<.11 Jt Ketry 474 W~~OK 17.2""1 plut INdlcal nJPT no etp nee ~ ~· A'til Ftb. 5ll\ll Famleal Su cc I H• hll b alllt • ivuii; M1'111lt1, bonu1 • pt1$00 F1~Sll 4t:T5 Clti9
I =·= 11~""2flff(/ LOST a I ~s:::~~::i~ ~~~r.= !~~rJorC:~:2: tiff FOUND ~dutltt, cool!lnt & Please ltevt mt$AOI Ananllof\ En111Pfll*.ln lllA , animal & car care. 949-833 14ot tlC1 13 own pert oh 50 b9C
COlr FOUND BEA.OLE MIX, re t4M3l~t:J4 ~=:=lirie
E Side 38r 2B• ~ lam FEMALE HUNTINGTON Unlllad ...... "' .. arp hme all app1s tuu upgrldilt BCH Newl1nd1Yorktown. 476 EMPLOYMENT 476 EMPLOYMENT Tr11rVOpeiallONI support
ige yd 2c ga1 3mt to bcti no Old dl>'J. 11 '-53&-9404 OPPTYS OPPTY9 ln'l951ment r~ed
petsSi7SOmo949-842·tilo4 FOUND COM SIAMESE ~======::!l:======~I FREEOe1alCS.~ S&mp&os • STUOiO • CAT CALL TO DESCRIBE .., ca• HIC)().7~-4434
476 EMPLOYMENT
Of'PTYS
JR SECAETARY
An u 6"1llll cnict w Ill
lttrTiriSU tunr;:.
tmns Typwig _ 45 IO~
WPM and general ~
ll)gl ol ~ fY(n-
dt;r,,., 95) E•panenced 11 xaro11ng, tihn,g ty111og
QOl'lelll corr~ and
VA:IOU$ oftce &UllC>O!\.iMllS
Real llSlaleJleOI' ••petlefU llelplul Call Arlene 949.759 9531. EA 247
lsw FWl'I •
Gnat Jobi Wiii 1t11n
Rece1111on111. 0111
Entry St111 llnl'Mdiate~ S9:'ht Cltl
Jeon.iei 949 756·5250 With 1Br & lefgo pallo, greal 949-723-6315 ... ,. J E. Y~. ~ at b EAX 'Rttl Eatltl needs VIEW II no pets $700/mo (OST MALE YOUNG CAT -• .., 1' your nelp NOWI State
uUs IOci 949-&15-1121 GREY W/whlte paw1. course IOO 11811\1119 provided MO EL
EASTSiOE CM 38r 2YtBI E SIDE Costa Meu, Call J s et no CO$l to you! DESK CLERK Ffr
2 lilory, 16005Q fl Tnolex 1ve1 11411·515.0337 R EA N 800-400-5391 tXI 119 2274 ,,._wport Blvd , Slncffoar 't space, evd2/1 LOST HB . Aut1r1ll1n • Costa Mtaa (11411)6U-7445
S15b0mo 149-<541-51135 1hlphlnl mixed dog male, I :11111 • How hlriilg I« toddler• & 2iidrmts/C!!?1et~ •• ft•wl.lpor r1 , ~1~~.~~~11:f~1~~~~5 . prnchool.f/f & P/f In NB.
Heiph U;ot -r ~ A New Store Experience Avede. Must ,,.w Of be WOIJung patio carpon, avail Jan 1 A cereer. toward 12 ECE Units. ~eat
S1075/m0 IMll~ 412 CEMETERY A Paaslon. working env11onm1nt t!!~ 3bilii2-0i*\Ba. ""$!'~12·3 LOTS . Is Brewlno In Benel1ts & •Int sa~ry .... ,_ 9< l JV ' e Avtda " Amela s 111emoe1 Call 14g.955.21n .
IVOOgs. S1400•mo 2 &-A A Private Family Buriel • c1eator and marlce!er ol Play Play Playl
Fullerton Aw. 91552-8842 E1tat1 Gardin f()( 4 or •• Costa Mesa! natural. plant-based ha~. A Dtand new pr~ Co
Located at Pacdic v-sk#l make up, and Pure-IS IOOkfl!I IOI 12 ptOPl8 wtlO As~ing S 125. 000 Call fume • pro<lucls Heie's ate onfy 1111ous about 112 HOUIESICON>08 ~ FOARPT
471
,..... .,. .......
tha 1jflfl In Ihle
e9ory m•t requk ~ou to can a
nu111b1r 111 wlllc
-thtrt • .,,.,..
allfMl1e
Plt111 bl wary Of out
of .,.. compenlH.
Chick wilti thl local
BeCltr Bus!Mu l u-
raau before you Mnd
anv mOMY or tee• ror
HfVICll. Re8d and
undt1111nel any .con·
Ir act 1 before you
sign.
LllH...,.,• local route avu '
pit esca1> tn yo4J1 1111 E1m' s 100K 151 vr'rnin invest ,
unoel SSK t.a&S SS1·VEND• •
!83631 24hr ~
AIEDICAL BlillNG pr~
fruurence claim• Locat•
lrallllll<J & ~ prO-.ided 1·~
Please call (949) 760-0919 .,....-++-....... NEWPORT BEACH
Steven 949-722·7902 ~ your chance to expeiience having llS'I. mal<wlg money
2CholceBuna1Gr1vnl« ~ Full Be Part-Time ••e<1atromthe1l\Slde Learn andgoolingott WeJ)iy"'ell ~:r~ ~:v;:~~,;.~e ~-Baristas, cashiers :":ai = ~ ... J: ~OF~
$COKEJWELCHESiFRifOf 30 • HI Tralfic Loe s , $1_500' ... ~ pro((, •
Fll\lllOll;I FREE -.idto • 800-03f, 1375 2""'1 .,J
'LIMITED TIME OlllY
COR0 1 ADO
. It .., \ t'¥11pmot
~~
Newport Heights is Orange County's trendiest neighborhood.
Coronado at Newport makes it affordable.
• • Gited commu111ty wtresort pools spas
cabanas tennis, volley & basketball
• Tile countertops, hardwood·style floors
• glass shower enclosures mirrored
closets. ce1hng rans & hreplaces
·fully run .siled availat>'e maid service. too
• Health Club on-site TV theater too
•Walk to 17th Street bOIJhQues d•ninO.
St.lrbuclts Blockbuster. Ralph r
Minutes lo the beach and 55 Freeway
• Smart Studios large 1 & dual rr aster 2
~rooms from $850' 10 S1451i
7h~l9iP.#'
~./l
Living ~n Luxury
.-!. 1frcst1jl e ...
un lleled In
Oru •• ge County
From 12.100 IO '5 100
1-877-681-7387
Santo Babam at Son Cltmtnt1
NPttpad &och
• 24 Hour Guard Gar.
• Full-rune conc•efQtt o;111 c~ •
• Elegant one or
rwo bedroom plans
• Gorgeous clubhouse
• lOVISh pool, spa
• Fitness loc1hties
• Slaps lo Foshron lstona.
wondefful restouronts,
shopping. ond enterto1nmen1
EXCLUSIVE GATED COMMUNITY
ATOP NEWPOIIT COAST
• Enclosed Garage • Alann System
• Washer/Dryer/RefTigerator ·
• Fit1iess, Business, Clubhouse Cn~ters
• Rrsurt-St)le l'ool • Vnulte<L Ceilings
• Bubbling Spa • l1tsh Grten Lanrucaping
•Small Pets Welcome
Two Bt'clroom Town Homes from $1,530
Thrtt.·Redr()om Apartment Ho~tt from $1,550
$2fXJ Suwit /Jtpo1it ttilh Approt~d Crrdil
(/)Ot'& Ml iftfludt ptt tltposil)
281' 2B1 Vtraallle Ocean
\lleW, "' carpfl. fr8'h pMll lite, brlghl, 111/Y. llll8Mres.
St50C.Vmo 949-7S!H7'8
Newport Heights 2bt 2bl.
Vllta Balboa, bay view,
vllAled cell, l/p, wld. 2-car
.space, $1800 11•227-73J4.
MUST SEEi 3br 2ba dpl1, newlr remod, walk 10 bchl Gr.ti loc. S1115(l(lno. Cell
for Info. IMt-723·1502
3Br 2.SB1 go& course view. 2c garage. S24()()'mo Call Barbara Sangooret
IM9-644-0195
LIDO /SLEJf
2·Sty, lmmacl w/Jc gar.
Immediate Occupancy
15,000.
CHRIS EDWARDS
949-72~5()6,
First Estate• Properties
Elqulllte remodeled ocean
Vll8W 29r t clen. 281 I sty
$379.000 Olant Seidel. First
Team 949-452·55 HYpgi
BiG CANYON
'BROADMORE
Well localed 4Br 38a. lnvned
occupancy, 1W11cond, hg yro.
1 year lease Msro'mo
949· 723-0940 or
949-509-88631pgr ' 2Br Hou ... 1btk lo ocean.
Grea1 netghbomoodl living
room. new paint, S1SOO/mo
151 + lasl, e23-269-8600 dly. 94~75-2814 aftei 5pm
OH THE SANDI 2bt 2ba • garage, 7004 Oceanlronl IA
l yr tse Express !easing
$250CYmo 949-87~3869
28R 28A new paint,
bllc:ony, MCurily .911td.
Near Hoag HolPftll $1300mo Ap194M7HIOO
'NEWPORT PENINSULA'
SBR 1BA Hew pelnt and
carpe l. S1C75/mo.
A.gt MM73·7IOO
'NEWPORT PENINSULA'
2BR 1 BA Hew pilnt/cwpet..
2 car genge. $1300/mo
Agt MM73-7IOO
'BAYRIDGE' 2BR 2BA
vwlttd ctillng1, lmmac
woodty view, 2 car 91r.
S17SOfmo Age 9'19-293-4830
Ocetn Vu Condo rv beach. •
1 Br t den, 1 Y.t>a Gated
comm w/pool, 11>1. 1ennls & fh Onlr New_., carpet & awll-Sou1h factio so lots of sun & ocean vu'1 rrom every
room S150Q(mo. S2500/sec
NotpetSls/nl!rs 9'718-1520
LIDO ISLE
4Br/38t Spacious IN room.
lormal dllWlg. 2 uppe1
extenor $Ul\ dicks, 2c oa•.
$175,000. Biii Grundy
RMl!on MM7M111.
1202
Motel
MANAGERS
•SPECIAL•
$154.00 + tax Wkly (~ pt...,. Ihle Ad)
235 nne I lllefltnlal
S.IJatld on~
landtclPed grounds FEATVR£S 2A·Hour
Lobby/Olrtct dlal
phOl'llS/Frtt HBO,
ESPN & Ollc/Pool &
Jecuzzj. Guel1 launclrY
Cloll 10 ~ & S$
Fwys Min's lrom O.C
F111rgr0&, college ll'ld
bchl Walkrlg clstanct to .nope & rnlaurtnts
COSTA MESA
MOTOR INN 22n twt>or Blvd
l'tlone Mt.445-4840
.... ·Jr:r: . p ~
' , -i
.·.· '
Can't ""'" lo
get to .. thoM
,..,..,~
8found the .... ,
Lat ........ .. ............. ,,
Disc~ ell 702·914-4457. Em111onmen1a1 l.ltestyle ~ry 'Mii llij.11 Interested? Be Shift Leads 'tores we nave op-cat Loretie 714-375-0m.
420 GARAGE I ponum85 avallable at our •PT 0€MONST~TOFIS• South Coast Plaza and Wlcends 1n groceiy ~Q!IS in SALES ~ Bevelfy Center 1oca1oos aree car nee. must be ne11 Along with a fun coffee 111endty w·u11s ab•llty
CM Huge Gllrage Sale, h i t We are seeking lllO!Vlduals 949642·42831714 n1·65n
Sil S-12. 2040 Palom• Dr. ouse env ronmen • With strong customer set'<iC8 PIT Orlver, 3 daya/Wk, 10
VCR, golf, couch, casaette )' j Diedrich Coffee offers: skl!IS preferably Within the deliver m..ctical 1111uip Must pl1yer, computer, 1oys, ' C0$111GliC lndUstl) for the be refiable have gocxJ OMV
dlahe1, clothea, movies, ~· lo41owing po511tons dme Co van Cl49-b42·2010 p1t10 furn • Great pay. -• Stora Team Leader al Pft Ole Work, local erianos N.pJ&at Only eam-12 • Flex scheduling. South Coast Plaza Flex hours 10 ht you1 schcel
2200 Holly Lane St Ad I • • Leader AC!Vtsor • FT Sales ule Computer olhce 5l1,1Us plantt, lumiture, bicycle, • Vancement opportun tteS. al Beverly Cenler nee<led $10-lir No smolung
toot• and much more! • Aveda MvtSOr. FT/PT East CM loc 949 642 0101
Sales at bolh locallons RDA ntt<lad lor busy Apply In Person Endoclontlc Otllc9. 440 MISCELLANEOUS c.~ At Our New Location: ~riS:~~~\~~ ~!.';;~~:~~~~
SEASONED filREWOOD ~ Monday-~day, Dec. I 0-14 3333 BnS1ol Street •n Costa IL CLERK 1111 hr•,
$165 CORD •""' Mesa or Beverly Center FT'PT for local Pharmacy
FOR SALE
FREE DELIVERY within 9am-5pm 131 N Le Cle~ Blvd lfl Beoel~s Cal CMl1es or
rtuon. 714-8~16 1170 Bakar l.0$ Ang&leS Ot ar resu'Tle Vincent 714·~8919 " lo 31()..631-0037 EOE s •L£s WOLFF TANNING BEDS "
TAN AT HOME ~ Suite 1 Dl~l_ll[H AVCQA FT HELP tor chlldrena BUY OIRECT ANO SA VE! !;;;. c:loll\ing tl«t In COM
COMMERCtAL.JHOME Costa Mesa !MM7H120
utMt' llomSt9900 cf' wwwavedacom SALES Low Moo!hly Paymen& * * • COlll'l'I ne ...... paper g•oup
FREE Color Catalog EOE M/F/ON www .it4ri<11..<-loolUng 1• · mde sales 1~ Call t.80().7t 1-015& FLO RA L DEL Iv E RY Should '}JOSUSi strong
2 m .. = .... n , •• 2 IM DRIVER FT, good OMV, pnone 5118$ ebllll~ t>8
.,..,, 80... flO •';:==============:;;'I d1y1, L1gun1 Buch, ' room 1ereo Chairs. 21 1 940•4117•2282 OR FAX orgarued & have •lnl CU$1 womeos pi bags & Clubs. Newly Renovated INFO. ~M97•9074 sel\'ice sk!ll5 saJary•comm
bool.caS(; SctiwtllO exe1case ~ p m Benet~ pkg ind 401k plan b1ka. rowin7 machine l u s GROUNOSKEEPER I« Lrg Oruo ~creen1119 physical
¥9-64 ·2726 ~ _ =-~~ Si:! =e;og.= ~~~
English Exp(refs a MUST Bay St, Coste Me;;a CA 448 AHTIQUESIART 40hrM Chris 949·475-9100 92627 or lu r8$ume lo /COLLECTIBLES !949t 631 6594
I N C 0 ST A MES A Ho1p1ta1 Salta DISTRICT
;,'64949229
SOUTH·COAST AUCTION
2202S..Meln St. Santa Alla. CA 12707
-·l-C..•l!M
NEED CASH?
$& MONEY FOR $S
~ANTIQUES Boo~
COLLECTIBLES
PAINTINGS
POTTFRY
I ITEM TO
Housmou> i
40yMtS
"' N8 ... ,POfl 88ach 949.673.622
1454 FURNmJRE I
Circular ~enllh din llblt w/4 niMch g chelra, S250.
NOW HIRING ALL POSlftONS ~~~,~~0~:~ SALES MANAGER
Seeking: Reliable, profeuionol & Fnendly service leVel oppottuniUes
individuols who enjoy working ill o worm, lor individuals with wong
cu$lomer service oriented env1roment CUSIOl'()ef servlcE sMls in 1he 41 yeai leglata11Ve re:.ean:h
llrm bas management opponu11111es •~&liable 10
dave4op ~10 sales rep!'•
sertatlVes in 1lle irrlfnedlato area Con11c1 bUsmtss
owners/maf\191115, no com-pet~IOI\. no IOVtStmenl H9I live to low .ix foOurt income
Liberal conmsslonS. ovtt·
naes bonusu oiiarantees
pad benefcs managemeni ·expenses lntert5ted part•
IT'AIS1 haye rtcenl ~
pPeneta (rTWlll'IUTI ol 3
yeatS) .. devwlopng end
managing a direct 511.s stall -Send resume 10
Rodney Mayes, National
Write Your CC>nfl'eHman, 21411 E, Brtanwood Dr ..
Allror1, CO 80011 or IH to
303-417-4871.
Cafe (Breolclost & Lunch Shilts only}
Servers • Hosts
Bartender /Borris to
Delivery Drivers
(Must hove clean driving record/
Appfr in Person
All days 8 OOom t t OOom
2 OOpm · 4 OOpm
369 East 171" St • Cosio Mew, CA (949} 722·PWMS {7S86J
GENERAL OFFICE BACK 8A Y CAFE
APIAR pleasant • Cootie
wOl1ling environment. • Dlthwaahtta
Mollvated, sell Starler H•mg now tor FT &. PT
MS, Word & Exclf a Pl>'lllOnS ~ In pelf·
must. PIT 20-3otn. son 0 NIWl)Oll Dunes
Rtsor1 MR Oepl
Send resume w/ulflY 1131 Bec:k Bay O!lvt,
his1ory lO Houghton Newpon Beach. CA
ConstNC1ion 949-729-3863 EOE
P.O. BoK 4163 Newpot'I
Beach, CA 92661. BANOUET SERVERS •
fax: BANQUET SET·UP
949-673·2098. /#W'P«'f Dun .. IW•Ott
ollers Ol*IUe banqUtl lea!-~mail: 11ies end an eJtCePl)Onal wOftc shcinc990eot.com tnVl1orment From beach
*' parlllt lo tl8ganl = our blluldul ttnl on flt woMIU! fut' On-QI & PT 1>0S*on now
lla11111 rw11lc ..... llbte ~ In cson 10
HR Ot(ll 1131 8Ck ~
,U"l"OINlllE.Vf Drive.~ Beach. 949.7 EOE SF.lmlS
FT/Pf •BAR8EOU£S• I k\r & nttlillg <\lufo; GALORE
'l'op·pro<luccrs HOW HIAfNGI
Wor11 In 1 tun Nita higher 1nvlto11m1ftt, Some ..... ..,. ,...,,
lollowlng areas •
MEDICAL ASSTS
FO & B().Aequ res MA .,.,rth
bllengl.lll helpful exp Ill CPT
IC0-9 COdlnQ a pe Recep-
llOll '1 MO ollas.
LIMITED
XRAY TECHS
Reqwes MA exp preferred
MO olfices
CAFETERIA
WORKERS/
FOOD SERVICE
Rl(luires a1tcell811l com·
mumcatlon skills, food aervlce expenence helpful
Knowledge cl senitaoon and
IOOd salely prelened
NUTRITION
ASSISTANTS
MUSI hive eJ<cellenl com-
www.nwyc.com
Salta P.rton ..-dtd for
Balboa t•tand Woman1 Boutique. FulMlme or 1*1· time, $7/'tlr. 9411-675-&040
%ELF STORAGE has °'*"' 1f19S f« PIT Relief Mgrs
Nteo 'fO'Jr smile & energy to
work in our piol 1 but casull
re1at operation GOOd re1'1
f'11 r11um1 (114)894-0880
°'call (114)894-47'27
rt.unicetlon sklls W1lh Ille START YOUR
ab*1y lo I~ in e 1asl OWN BUSlNESSI
paced envifOIYIWll'll FOOd Sec )'Olll o.n ldlld-18Mc9 expenence pielemld 1H Cortrol you1 own
inComl Sel l!om y04ll SERVICE CARE llome. II WOlli; thrmigtl
TECHNICIANS lundraisers e. an
Rtqu191 strong eomrronica· A..on Repr...-• ~•
llOf1 sklls. customet $8MCe 'Cell !888 )561 2866
.... ~be llexille lrld
a team player 4 PHONE REPS. Fl.I 1!1118,
elll!fgatie lor Moc1glgl Co HOUSE KEEPER Eam to S600 • v.ll • btnetu
R..,,.•111 "'eviOUs ~ Sales 11CP pr""1ed Cortld
VENDING ...
S65~r U111que ~
New Locallon1•
en-t23·VEND
A le PHONE CARO ROUTE
,.C.ll< e $I 00 000 -yr A!.J.
CASH LO".AI 18$ Free ril~
I llO<YJ97·91U!S 2•hrs l 66
MARINE BUSIN.ESS •
A :;iiol~ablt. tum ~ey
!~ua~c.n Call lor datailS BM
!l tl41l·2011 01 9•683·89 ll
I 'fa llNMI= l
Do ~ou have flnancftf problem1? No credil'?
Bad crtd•? Tht WOfM cttdlt? Starting oft 1 llMI or bog bus1M11 Cd
1-IU~SMOlf '.I
I BUY WELL SECURlll
TRUST DEEOS 11 d
for own accounta. Ru Oonlef111 M9-t72.f1 .....
690
16ft Duffv •
Good Condition
$4950 949-675-1
1711 Boaton Whaler
Montaulc wtaShp Suzutit Bimini top, SU ,50.i;
t;'t-142-4110.
16FT DUFFY '1996""' 7 i>a:.s. teal top wMe
al!Vlm cm e1SengliS, I.A
boll cover. new cont,..
board 12-sv t>anenu. t4
& c1ttin• St 1,000
1811 DUFFY '1986
8 pass blue moon rool t wtide neu1 anvcass.
glM. lu• boat COl/tt, rebui&
rno1or. 12'6V batterl8S ,.-
add ice' s10,soo.
1Sft E-80AT '1999 .,
5 pass N.Y lap, MY'/
1111c c:ockpil. bufganOy
hollilllfY. /1189'1oonY dee* S1f1!11aS new ri!Qid
boe1 COYll ntW.... IOt
chncttfl S12.500.
949-723-5535
27" SLOOP·1t3J
--lln Ill make 94!Hl7~128
t~.=!1
$12. ptf loot. Goocl ~
dock bow. w1111/11eci:;
949-675-6128 •
SLIP SPACE on •
BALBOA ISLANO tot sil
Boll UJ> to JO ft. • MM73-4062 :
*BOAT SUP * a
In Bay Island Cove.,... • to 1211 bum. 40 10 50ft
length Eltc1/Wll«. P or 1111. t4M73·1M3.
65ft QOAT SHI
(Can I• t up 10 7511 )
Av .. Now 9'H73-28,._
-..-,.. MM$SI e IMS-~5719 ~~ ~ :::=:::.H=E=R=E=, s=-A-==C=RE=~:::r~ 101' cu1tom dt1~ner aof1,
$200. MMJ ... 913 • fkr.!·~ l\.W 1-r FT, 10ltn-7pm. St.It
Eiectr~ic L•t•• Bed
·ll•llil\ia $7/hour up (D.O.E.)
•I'll I 1111.1111Un 8entf plc9 avell. Apply Never sed New$1650 • l..'(lll'!llttq'-·' • 1811>tqut9 Galore
Wdl sett lor S800 Make 1 ..... 1.1,<11;1l lt1 l'lfflt~ 23Jt Hert>or Blvd., Offer!! 9~9-759·0504 I Cottt ... N 1'1..t.1 \1, ..... 11111an lellhlr sol• & IOve-.. , •• il'I"''"" Met, new 1111 wr~~ (~II luf •11~ IOI!, top quality as l ..H8~313-41U sacllf S890 949·261-9933
1458 o IUll!.!!1! I A COOL JOBI ~•se•-. Entiy lellel posllon,Airor
25 Gellon Rah Tri Wllll ~ no.:~:ih == tvlfYthlno Ind fl5ll I month wl\He utabllshln~ ntw Old. szso-ot>o Mf'T21.as72. 1C1COU1U 1n majOf ano
88 GALLON FiSH t9IOlt treas (NY, F • HI,
TANK with llght11 ~le:~ ~e~i:
3 filters, stand, mllbt ::i...OH4ots
f I I h . $ 1 s 0 • ADMINISTRATION
714-540-5995 Wt •I gr .. lllWOtWNnt lrld ~II 10 grow Wt •t t ·-.w1 ~~ -• pollticn llal .... ltlil _C_ON_SO_LE_PIA_NO_,,, IPf Acct Cler' SMv
sounds ?fell orly $750 ePT ()ptrlllOnl Cln SWtw 71'-527'°800 Plla$8 llll lts\llTlt wlttl ·~=;.;;;;;;;:;;;;;;:liiiiiii°' I COY9f 1&ur 1t11r10 ua atlCul 1--.1 ;:;:
c&ff sow WM strOng INlll'cl Ind~·
OlD COIHll Gold IMf. itNrQ .... ntedlcl ltwtllv. ~ 11111QUM. Rt11t ancs 11Wy ~ 148-&42·9447. ••c:QlnOI IOf """'1P· ~ mett 01 11 Id .1" Jail, R & 8. SOUi, Aock ~ ~ tn flt r/lf ot ~0'1 & IO'a <:OMa .._. PllMeCll
lkE MH4&-7505 (714)633~
(On-Ille ln"'""'w) VaJ~ Of Cleltc rolll lrll:lud WAY TO C ET ~~ 1£~=-~-=to5 CLIENTS COMING TO ~c::~1~=:~~ mt<llcallermlnology YOUR DOOR r.
BILLING CLERK
lut ·paced buSln8i& olb other !Obi ll$O avlallablell
8 00 A 5 OOP. Job Rnt (tu)71C»n1
Thi Cllldlda4t wll be wtll
Ofganlled Ind lblt IO hlncte H04t9 otftrt exctlltnt ~
1 vllllly al Of .dtplltment 1• •is including 28 deys PTO ~ Wfllc:ll Midt. bil-(peld lime ott). 1 lfl8ICl'lllg
Ing day ~ and .-iy ~1(11) plan, cNtt Olildcar•
rl)CXR A nWrinU!I ol 1 ¥t1f C«1lef and peid l'lellln bene-
billN'll Gib~""" Ills Emil IOllWat• ~ ~ Cllnlideruon ~ ~ l'leeourc.e
mall o. IU your ,_,.,,. lo "°'8 .....
Aftn: c..dlt...... Ont Holg l>rW Box &100,
SJO W 19¥ IC. Ntwpoct 8Mdl. CA
Colla 111eta. CA 12127 02958-tlOO FAX (MtlaM12t E.°0.£. r Cl ill I 0 p port"" It y (ftlllloys, We ~ • *llihe~tnd
perfonll .,,......'"'..,. .,. ........ •
rne oa11v Piiot wm out>llsn a
rax -. Flnaric1a1 D!r•ctorv to
assist our rudars In finding a
tax profess1onal1 Reaching over
40,000 nomes In a n1on · no
market. you are sure to flno
manv wno neea vour ne10.
A smut move on your part
would be to talCe 1dvantag1 of
our 1ncr1d101v low ratu ana
p1act your Id wltn us Only U5
per week If vou stgn up for Cftl
enctrt 17 wfflls. or 1 minimum 4a
wttlr run It $«> per Wftk
Size of
Ad
. . .
• ACROSS " i lnMCI restn
64 Penh's ptaoe
67 Oevo~ PA£VlOUS PUU\.E SOl..Y'"O
• c.!iebf1cy dmner l amb-
•. Pie·mod41 ~ comec:tor
&tiger Qofme o-tymodlp one
6" Use civnain.te on 89"1'm~u Fast Can
70."°""efs . 11 Fffdl Ille P-9'
72 N;tor GtbSon ~nee • = ~Ol:g:? 1 To'l°WN
• number ejQllt 2 Wnter W&fl\er :*> HuAk1eat 3 Oose'1 plants fl CU!blng 4 Lie beok
:IS Mediocre 5 Popeye's gill,
:ie Do potteiy work Ottve -a St4tloneiy Item e emus quencher
I Roe 7 Mate htle$
Roof ovemangs 8 E•arns ~·1 racllel 9 Colofful drapery
38 Uncommon fabric 1-e.GO o -·"""""'"""•8'/Nkoto
~Flower pe'1 . to Enormous 32 Kiiter wtiate 53 Fe.51 horses
42 T Oledo's lake 11 Harem rooms 33 CO(I09tled 55 Muslim's "3 FMms 12 Fur 34 UaUan river reHglOn ~ l a•ge eyed 15 Extras 36 Meacts 58 Ruckus fllOOkey 17 Jet'oc workplace 57 Symbol ol
"1 OVestlon 21 *Alley -' 39 Slrengeoess Slowness
48 Patka 23 A tide 4 l CraV!Og S8 8te1111sh
!IO F111g1ant 24 JudOe's need --..C CoWtiand's 59 PotyneS1an blossoms 27 Dlsc:ourage seat tuber t Brainstorm 29 Puppetee1 48 Some 60 Surrounded by Acl'loelles 8aird response; 81 Bonng Norm 30 Ramt>ow 49 New Zealand 65 -Paulo
&2 Actor Wel1es goddess parrot 66 Recipe oo Bedoutn's mount 31 Onions on 51 Poet Teasdale qty,
ACURA INTEGRA S '97 * Cacllli."c tn O.Vllle
.. Meta Ille burgundy/g:,U. '96 · Wh~1 rellable1 grNt
leafier. asto, air, mooor , cond 71M ml, pp 114,250
anVlm cass, cd, p<emtum ~bo t4M4C-7100 wtieeis. bal tact warranty ~ (005414) $14,995 ;
lEXUS OF WESTMINSTER CAD_CLLAC ELDORADO 93 • (800)291·3747 Tounng, lo ml, ve Nofthstar. ~....,...--.,._-....,,,,,..,---t ctvome wheels, S14>er shalpf
t Acura LAgtncl 94. (604387) $13 988 .. Origional owner, lealller NABERS '
white. loaded. 50k ml, xln (714)540.1100 COnd $16,500 949-675-1
'1... BUICK LE SABRE '97
TO, low 33k ml, beige, lthr.
CD, and morel SIJpe< clean!
(511328) $16.988
' NABERS (714)540-t100
CtidUlac Concoura '95 low 44k miles. V8 NOl1hs1ar. IN!hef, alloys. SOpe< cieanr
(289724) $19,988 NABERS (714)$40.1100
CADILLAC Fltetwood '92
Lo ml. '#rt leather, relable &
IUxufious! New car lrede-i'll (221768) SB,988
NABERS
(714)5*9100
Cacllllac: Seville STS '95
Low miles, silver.gray, cd, ._
loys .New car ltade-inl
(830509) $1.8.988 NABERS
(714)540-9100
---!"'""'l~'"ft'll"""'I
CHEVROl.ET TAHOE W 2WO. lealher. many xtras,
excellanl condilioo.I
(108654) $24.988 HA BERS ~14)$40.t100
CH Y A§tflO LS '99
Sliver/grey, automallc, <lla1
air, tull power pak. roof rack,
~tcf glass, dwome aloys .
637921 $19,995
US OF WESTMINSTER
-(800)291·3747
CHEVY ASTRO VAN 199
Low 16k miles, wNte, rear air
& morel Balance ol warranty,
Plevlous Rental.
(1639n) s 1e,988
NABERS
l (714)540-9.!f!
By CHARLES GOREN
with OMAR SHARIF
and TA.NHAM HIHSCH
Wt-:t•KI.\' IJKH>GE QlU/,
VI · I\, ~uutlt. vul111:1<1hlc. )l•ll Q ~. J\,.Suutlt. wl11c1.1hk. )•t\r
hokl ltt•hl
• \uld el (J llH1 ~ 2 o <J Ill Y H • .17 ,\ • A K Y 7 2 Q A CJ 7 u K 4 • 11111 7
I Ill' hrthlrlll! It," pd11.·t•t·dcd Wli.11 ")011r "f'l.''""11 hr<I' MHUll b \"i l 1-UU lll \\Uol
I• 2• l'o,, I':"' Q ~ • J\~ Suullr, \Ul11.-rnhl•'. )1111 .l• I'll'' '/ ltultl Whal <lu ) 1111 flrtl 11111\ 1
<.) 2 • /h South. vulnc111hlc. y1111
hold.
• \ulcl '1 K111<1 .a ,c <J lllfo~ .,\HH2
fl,11111\'C 1111\:1,_ llll' ht\ftftrll) \lllh Oii\'
duh WhJt llu yvu 1c~po11J'! •.IHJ ti ~V7 2 0 (15 •CJ H<tl
rtu: hklJmg ha' pmc;ccdcd WFS I NOIU II l~t\Sf :,()l 1 U1
<.) 6 ·I\' S111nh. 'ulrtcruhk. )<•11
hold· .
Pu"~ IN I • Uhl '! • ,\ K 14 6l ,? VvkJ ¢ 7 S + t\ <J Y 6 S 2
Ilic h1dJi11~ ft:l\ jlllll'l.'Ctk<l.
Whm .1c11011 Jtt you 111kc 1
Q ~ • 0111h \ ulncruOlc, .1~ Suulh you
ho Ill • SOU'lll WFST NOIO II Jo:i\S'I
I• 11UM I.;> 1111~
What do yuu hill rhm"I .
North 111~"' lhc h!J<l111~ 14 tlh liw l..011/.. jm· 111m1·tn 1111 M1111tl111. J1m110111.k Wh,11 ai:unn tlo ynu 1.1~c'!
695 CARS/TRUCKS NANSISUVS
Chevy O.luu 112 Ton
lQtl9bed 79. 350 VB, auto.
tow pkg, Slereo, regiSlered
812000 s 1200 949-631-3852
Ct1tvy silv.aclo '95 Z71
4X4 E11r1 Cab Fullv loaded AJC, 70k "!_11 $17,000
949·548·5485 1"!9·378-9881
ci'lryaltr ciiru1 lX 'iS Automatic:, !Jr Condlionihg,
TM!, Fol Pov;er Pall. Super Clean, Lexus trade-In
(594150) SB,995
LEXUS OF WESTMINSTER • (800)291-3747 * FORD BRONCO 196 * Eddie Bauer Edh, white/tao.
loaded, mrnt concl, 4X4, CO
jllay111. onfy 39k ml, $17,999 080 714-7~-0737 Of cal
phone 714-473-0001
FORD EXPLORER '96 Group, 4x4, aloys, abs, ride
(99B00,tA33074) $15,995
MCKENNAVOl.KSWAGEN
714.842.2000
FORD EXPLORER 't7
Spn. group, cass. allQys, abs (99889/A 1ll587) $15,995
MCKENNA VOLKSWAGEN
714.842.2000
Fotd Explorer XL T '93
W~te, tan leathef lnteriof,
al power, C8f -phone, grea1
shape, $9500 949-721-84~
FORD F100 '54
Cla11lc, Auna good, muat
NII, 14000 or beet offer.
949-631-6532
FORD WINDSTAR lX '115
WhiteAan, auto. dull air, lull power pacil, privacy
~• roofracil. am1m cass.
5827) S11,995
EXUS OF WESTMINSTER
(800)291-3747
Jagu1t XJR Stdan 4Dr 'M
$40,llH 9&-4740
BAUER JAGUAR
714-953""900
Jaguar XJS '96
2 + 2 CONVERTIBLE
$35,995 96-4840 BAUER JAGUAR
714-953-4800
695 CARSll'RUCKS NANS/8UYS
A XJf l '91
SEDAN 4D
$37,995 97-4822
BAUER JAGUAR
714-9534800
JAGUAR XJ6 L '97
SEOAN40
$37,895 97 ... 352
BAUER JAGUAR
714-953-4800
JAGUAR )(Ji SDN 4D '97
$31,995 97-4655
BAUER JAGUAR 714-953-4800
Jaguar XJ6 Vandtn P111
Sedln 4Dr '117
$44,9$5 97-4661
BAUER JAGUAR
714-953-4800
Jaguar XJ6 Vanden Pl11 S.-.. 4Dr '97
142,995 97-4713
• BAUER JAGUAR
714-953-4800
J1911ar )(J6 vanaen Piii '
Sedan 4Dr '97
$39,995 117-4758
BAUER JAGUAR
714-953-4800
Jaguar XJ6 Vencltn Plaa
Stdln 4Dr '96
S38,995 ~03
BAUER JAGUAR
714-953-4800
Jaguar XJI Vanden Pl•
Std.Ill 40t 'M
S3U96 9&-4654
BAUER JAGUAR
714:-953-4800
Jaguar XJ6 '88 Metalllc, h
!*le. 6cyl, auto, tthr. AIC. lull
pwr, cc, sunrt, till, chrome
~s $7500 949·76<>-07~
JAGUAR,XJ6 '88 VANDEH
Pt.AS 4'4oor, lul pwr, sun root, wire wfleels. 1 owner,
records. really clean caJ. $5900/obo. ~723-1504
G CherokM '95
6 • auto. AIC. llhr, tull pwr. cc. llnled, CUS1om til$$/Whls,
$13,900 obo 714-848-7064.
JtEP GAA'NO CkliiokEE
LAREDO '118 Wlllte/Q1ey Int,
Fullyloacled, V6,ASS. new
Ures, orig owner. au 18COl'dS. BeautifufM111t Selll $10,MO
080 Mt-721-41872
695 CAR81TRUCKS
NANS/SUVS
LEXUS ES300 '97 Peart Wille
(042204) $23,995 Lexus OF WESTMINSTER
(800)291·3747
LEXUS £§300 198
Pearl White
l119S!J4) . · $27.795 EXUS OF WESTMINSTER
(800)291-3747
LEXUS GS300 '95
Black (101044) $24,995
LEXUS OF WESTMINSln
(800)291·374'1'
• LEXUS LS4oo 'es
Sapphire (025014) $28.995
LEXUS OF WESl'MINSlER
(800)291·3747
LEXUS (§400 '92
Cashmere(11871$1l S18,B95
LEXUS O~ ,WES1111NSTER
(*'0)291-37 4 7
Lincoln Contliilntal '89
Fully customized, auto, lo ml. new dres. 1-owner. all pwr,
OC, $7500 .. fl.76().()754 * Metc:edt1 Benz 300 SL '91 Great looklng, charcOf
blackllan rnt, fully loaded,
absolutely beS1 condition
$28.200 obo 949-640·7100
Mercedes E320 Cl6ri01et
'95 L TO ConVtHlblt,
Smoked sliver/brown lop, UUl inllll\or, excelent Wild, lullt/
loaded, chrome Wheals. 8311
miles, origlnal OWl\t!
SS0,000 949-721-1078
Mercedta SE300 Sedan 92
Lcms new. mechanically
pe!fed, black, Sldde tthr. 1G-CD, sunrf, Bose Sound,
S4lt ""· 1 owner. $29,500 Howard 949-831-3577
MERCEDES 300E '17 Sllvertgr.Y. 6K In recent 1epalrs, redone eng, delaled & garaged, no. accidents, meChani:s car, 100 wall co player. 800-531-7123 1t761B
Mereedu 320£ ;95
2..tk mile&, champ/111n.
leather. chtome whls. new
llres. alarm, CO, phone,
Oliglnal owner $27,,000
949-261·9013 days
949-759-9303 evtri)g
HOME, HEAJ:.TH~AND BUSINESS
~ ........
VW VAN '71
45K ml on rtbullt Mt. tUM
great, camper b9'11 S\~~A~•
< ...
SEU YOUR USED VEHICl.JI
THROUGH CLASSIFIED· ;
w~·dding
Experls
SHOWCASE~
!Publishes 7 anuary 261/;, 2000
'
Our ne_xl special sec/ion
jealuring lhe experls in
ea ch field o/ 1£e weddiny
spec/rum IS cominy soon.
.91's a yreal place lo
aduerlise -calf
YJ(czrk ey al
, (949) 574-4246
.. ¥
ford your needs... ~ ERVICE
..
,
AFFORDABLF. FAST, I
REUABLB. PERsONAL
SERVICE .
SURFSIDE
INTERNET
All O.grtal 56k. Connec60C1S
• Frtt l Moolhs!
• Sttllp Fret!
• Uolimlltd AcetS5!
l"l\J; I .I • ''" • II
( '\ ,1 ' I I
NcwC.~
Rm Add;ti.oe • TCIWIC I.mp.
• S\lt/Mcta Upsndc
•a.win
• TrotaMaliood•1 Rcpt.it• PMI I SPA
• l.w<Nwoor Lu.
FM. • NfW Omiiu • Curoe FREE ESTIMATE
SUSONED RREWOOO
$150/cord, sas 112 cord •
• mEE DELIVERY
714-1112413&
R£C~CoNRooo IN
IVIStT! ~
1ooi»'"4
'
BEST MOVERS
au e111t1 Insured. 1as1.
COUr180uf & Wllfllll
1.eoo.2.QO.BHT
1./J00.2*2111 UT11M44
""MOVIN · MAN
The C&llf, Public·
Utilities Commission
REQUIRES that all
used household
QOOds movers pllnt their P.U.C. Cal T
number; limos and
chauffers print their
T C.P. number in all
advertlsments. If you
have a question
about the leoa.lity of a mov1;r, ff mo or
chauffer; call.
PUBllC IJTILITIES
COMM I SI ON
714-558-4151
HANDMADE OLD
WORW PAJflITS
IN'llAIORJrxr£1UOR1
lm,.rtd /"''" A1Um11in
llMEWASH 80NCOTE
FRtsco
Mill< rAINT ~
CHUNG' PAINTING
24 Ynra Exp • Great Prtcel
Guaranlee WOlll • Free Est.
L'375602 714·538-1534
DAVE'S PAINTiHG
No lob too lJQ. or smell. Free
E5tlmales. 15 Yrs Elal/24Hrs lJc.t 697347 MMts.3722
IKE'S CUSTOM PAJHTIHG
Ptolesslonel. Clean, quality work Int/Ht & dOcks
l.1703468 949-831-4810
RAINBOW CIACl:E MAJNT. p mtlng.lnl/axt. Hou$el Apt
qual'rty !Obi Free estimaie L1569~7 714-638-8888
26YRS OUAltTY PAINTING
TOUCHUPS TOO
24 H911rs • Rld\aro Sinor Ll280644 ~M5H892
,. ....
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1M Local l'tumbet-e...._-' _, .....,, ..
"" LOCATING ~UM .,.....,s.r.b
675·9304
ffteN~hborftood Plumbtrl
DIWfl' RWl.R ~ CUAIMG SPICIALIST
TWEEDY PLUMllNG
949-645-2352 -..
" • •
.
~ily Pilot '
--
. . . .
• MERCURY
25 Mountaineers
23 Villagers
56-Cougars
41 Grand Marquis'
16 2000 Sables
10 MyStiques
. . . , . .
LINCOLN
.16 LS World Cars
21 Navigators
1 ~Continentals
18 Town · Cars
• Sotu«x1y, January 8, 2oo0 81!''
THIS llf/EEK'S USED SPECIALS
LOOK FOR THE FORD QUALITY CERTIFIED HOLOGF~AM THE HISTORY IS NO MYSTERY BECAUSE WE U S E CARFAX
'98 Mercury Tracer '97 Mercury Tracer LS '97 Ford Taurus GL Wgn '96 Ford Taurus LX '95 Ply Grand Voyager Wgn
~3i~~~ 85 I 85 ~o. '
88 I 85 iS: s I I 75 ~s:: I 883 ~a 9885 CASSETTE. FAOlrf WllEtl. ORM, OUAl AIR 1AG6 Al.LOY WH£flS A1S SPA$$OllltR
DON.. AIR llAGS DUAi. AIR llAGS ROOI' MCI(. A1$ f!IOllT 'M!ttl Dfl!V£, fllOllT WH((l DflM _
(SllC P121t) (STK. Pllll) (ID Wl'UM27) 01MB C81'D THIRD WT DUAi. Alll IAGS (STlPl212)
(10 &RIX187) OEN.BICDITff(I '" •• STll P11 10 YA3205.SI llUtUJI &DITllD (STIC '1111•111> 1.vtlQ) lfAUllctllflf'IO ID 5X5tlt4S «Al.a!Cllt"'9
, FULL LINE of NEW and CERTIFIED
RE-SALE VEHICLES . .
• "GOLD KEY DELIVERY"
on ·all vehicles... · . ·.
includes· 24-Hour Roadside Service
STOCKED PARTS BOUTIQUE •••
Custom and Standard Accessories
-
THE ~ . . .
INCOMPARABLE
.. CADILLAC
·GO
dldsmo -ne
f •
II COMPLiMENTARY ~SERVICE
SHUTTLE... .
·· includes _Airport Drop-off/Pick-up (JWAJ
COURTESY TRANSPORTATION CARS
FREE SATURDAY CAR WASH
FULL SERVICE COWSION QNTER