HomeMy WebLinkAbout2000-01-10 - Orange Coast Pilot..
• • • • •
SERVING THE NEWPORT -MESA COM.f\AUNITlES SINCE 1907 MONDAY, JANUARY 10, 2000
LoCal environmentalists gearing up for fight .
•Coastal Commission expected to decide Wednesday Envi.rorunentalists,whoforyears
have been fighting de\>elopmenl
along the coast, are heartened that
the state agency is concerned about
a proposed detention basin in Mud-
dy Canyon Creek. The basm would
go against the state agency's gwde-
lines for buildmg m sensitive habitat
areas, aecording to·a Coastal Com-
nussion staff report.
30 years.. Const.ruction on d reldtecl; but
County officials in 1998 granted I separate, project to build 200 hems s
the development penrut to the and a retail centr r m the area ha~
Irvine Co., but the Coastal Commis-I begun and could b~ complet<! by
on whether to grant the Irvine Co. a key permit for housing
development near Crystal Cove.
sion can overturn the deos1on. summer. JASMINE LE£ preserve the beach, said they are
hopeful the commission will deny a
IWv fib d~velopment permit to the Irvine Co:
The commission m October voted The proposed prowct to bmld 635
to begul the appeal process to deny homes, ll approved .. would probdhly
the pemut. not brndk ground immechately. More than 35 Newport Beach res-"I think it is JUSt goµig to set a Paul Kranhold, a spokesman for Kranhold said. The development
the Irvine Co., said the 980-acre pro-wouJd be the hnal JJhac;P. of the
ject has been redesigned dunng the lrvme C'o ·s Newport Coast <;omrnu-
past six months in an effort to address ruty -10.000 aC'res between Lagu-
many environmental concerns, such~ na Beach and Corond del Mar.
idents are expected show up at a Cal-precedent for the future,• s<µd Mary
ifornia Coastal Commission meeting Blake, the founder of the alliance.
in Santa Monica on Wednesday to "We need to look at the cumulative
urge state officials to block an Irvine effects of development.•
Laura Davie!<. president of the
alliance, said the group -along
with their environmental experts -
hopes to convirlce the commission
the beach is indeed threatened by
the residential development,· which
has been in the works for more than
Co. project to build 635 homes above The group has been pnmanly as water quality and erosion f\.1ore thdn 70no of the land will b • Crystal Cove State Park. concerned over runoff from the pro-ln adclition to the homes, the preserved dS wildJands as d re ult of
plans mclude recreational faalibes Members of the Alliance to Res-posed development contaminating
cue Crystal Cove, a group fighting to the beach. and open space SEE FIGHT PAGE 4
Lamb wool
be missed
E very journalist knows a few .
sources whose bottomless reserves
of knowledge and good sense can
be called on to bring a story together in
a crunch. For the ~~~t=nt~riters at the Daily Pilot, mb ress
contact for The Orange County er-
forming Arts Center, was just such a
valuable person.
Lamb, who recently abandoned us to
take a job handling media for the Los
Angeles Opera, was stunningly ddept at
peslenng the agents of
performers. juggling
complicated schedules
and holding the hands
of frantic wnters. ,
Still, for all his tal-
ents, Lamb never
qwte mastered the .
1.,-.._. ..... ~ Ollffie of ~ilot reporter
NoakJ Schwartz.
•He would pronounce it differently
every single time,· Schwartz noted .
•And he would try to say it really Cast so
I wouldn't nonce.•
Despite considerable eclitorial brain·
wracking, the Pilot staff has been unable
to come up with anything else Lamb
ever messed up. He did a fantastic JOb,
and will be sorely missed.
'BUT OFFICER, l'M ON A HOT STORY'
And here's another little story about
our Newport Beach reporter.
Costa Mesa police appeared to be out
in full force on Friday looking for speed-
ers when Schwartz, rushing off on
assignment, was pulled over for driVing
10 miles above the speed limit.
However, after admltting to the officer
she was driving too fast, he praised her
for her honesty and sent her off with a
warning.
Good thing, because speeding tickets
aren't something reporters can write off
on an expense report.
THEENDOFY2K
OK, we know. Everyone is sick of
hearing about Y2K, the nonevent of the
millennium. But we promise -this 1S the
last mention of any Y2K craziness.
Rita Goldberg, who helps orgamze
the annual Spirit Run for the Newport-
Mesa Unified School Distnct, must not
have wanted to upgrade her fax machine
to prevent the so-called millennium
bug's attack.
The •URGENT~ fax she sent over last
week about this year's race had a not-so-
urgent date: Aug. 27, 1956.
-The Dally Pilot staff
INSIDE
..
.. .,,...,.,.-
ARIEL MANEUVERS
c; AN 11 P n Y Pl.OJ
Ariel Abbott, 10, of San Diego goes airborne during a visJt to the famlly vacation home ln Newport Beach. Abbott and her brother
Chance spent the afternoon playing ln the sand.
Netanyahu to speak in Orange County·
•Former Israeli prime minister . yo':11lgest lead~r. e.nded his three-y.ear term in a~d forceful exponent of the right·ot-centcr
. . office after losing m the May elections to cur-view, which represenl6 many people m to make first appearance m rent prime minister Ehud Barak. Israel,· Miller said.
Newport Beach in February Community interest in what Netanyahu Netanydhu's appea.rance at Temple Bat
· has to say has been "overwhelming" even Yahm af? p.m. Feb. 27 1!> part ot promotional
before tickets went on sale this month, said tour for hls new book "A D udble Peace: ERoN BEN-YEHUOA
" NEWPORT BEACH -Controversial .for-
mer Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu will be making his first VlSit to
Orange County in February when he is
schedule to speak at J'emple Bat Ya.hril.
Netanyahu, the Middle Eastern nation's
l
'
SAY AGAIN
'"I am an individual who
makes lemonade out of my
lemons and to dwell on the . f•ct that W@ would ha~
lilc«i to do it d~rMtly
would hurt the ~nvironment
that we want."
-n.w n.11111"" presi-
dent of the Or-. County
region of the N9tlorwl Con*-
lfU fOr ~"*ice. on tht llCk of a ~
---for .. of er.,.. CauntYs MulRml to wllbr• ..........
•i told tny ttull»ttd •1 mn1
..., ::.::.--Its ... 1Dgo .. -=,_,...U•• . .-..... _... ......
Rabbi Mark S. Miller, who leads the temple Israel and It's Pldce Among the N<1tions •
congregation Many praise him for taking 11 tou~h stance·
Many people are eager to hear his conser-on peace and secunty, but others cntic1zt> him
vative opinions about the current peace for stalling _the peace pr<><: ... s .• Some ay
negotiations with Syria and the "thorny• Netanyahu. man effo_rt to mamtdm hi' pow-
issues surrounding the Palestinians' quest for er, deepened the div1s1ons in J rc1 h society by
a sovereigri state, Miller said.
•tte is a most articulate, knowledgeable SEE SPEECH PAGE 4
INDEX
Harbor Center this week. studies, but I know about AROONO TOWR ---A4
gridlock. I'm not a farmer,
'"The (California Environ-but I know about fertilizer." QASSffDS ____ "JJ
mental Quality Act} requires -Slow-growth actMst 1bm that the report be pref»red, tty-, on th• presentation by it doesn't require that any-proponents of the Newport EDUUl10MAUY SPWIMG. ,u
body unckrstand it" OUnti Hotel,
-Leorwd Kr-. an oppo-POUam ____ --J2
nent of ttM propoMd El Toro
airport. on the county's "If,,. had M'Ndy ~
65-pound envfronrnef'MI "*' w. ~'t ~ h ..
doc~ ., out lut if M MoW SfllllS I i AS
• JDmlOf 9@ will be .,,.,. •
-W.'# struw" through it ---•'d9ttd" out -.......-.... ... II
Ow NfPOl9I ii.,.., CM do• fOll'dlw.· _..,... .. efthlt= IDtf// ..... ~two ....
la1ch b••• Airport -• •art•----SdlDGI ar..,.on•111nt ---.,, ........... ...... ~ ,...... -••-... w,... .......
., dran't ,,,_,,,..,, hMc ~---. ..... ,Mlal
t
(J
2 Monday, Januo; 10, 2000 IOcalS Only • Daily Pilot
Fairgrounds hosts county's largest Eid al-Fitr celebration ·
•More thari 14,000 Muslims made the best ;'
of crampeo quarters Safuiday to celeorate
the end to the holy month of Ramadan.
llattPb
More than 14,000 Muslims
gathered together Saturday
to celebrate the end of
Ramadan at the Orange
County Fairgrounds -the
largest gathering in the co~
ty and the first. time in at least
five years that the celebration
has been in Costa Mesa.
In a day of celebration
called Eid al-Fitr, they gath-
ered in community prayer,
reflecting on the past month
spent tasting between sunrise
and sunset as a sign of self-
discipline and self-control.
"We had a very blessed
month. We thank God for all
~ gifts,• said internationally
kriown Dr. Muzammil H. Sid-
diqi, director of the Islamic
Society of Orange County -
the largest and oldest group
of its kind in the western
United States. Siddiqi, the
spiritual leader or "lmam,"
lead the first of two morning
services.
Heena Qureshi. "ThiS is too
small. People are standing on
the side. because there is not
enough room for people to
't • Sl . • l -
But despite-the cramped
quarters, worshipers tried to
make the best of the situa-
tion. ·u is a good turnout,"
. said Haitham Ahmed Bun-
dakji, chairman of the soci-
ety's public relations depart-
ment.
Men knelt side-by-side on
prayer mats in the front of the
building while women did
the same in the back. Prayer
participants strategically
placed thei.t mats in the
direction of the Kiblah, or a
holy plffe in the Middle East.
Shoes were removed during
the prayer as a sign of
respect. '
Eid has traditionally been
-celebrated at the Anaheim
Convention Center, which is
· larger and can accommodate
more worshipers. But
because the space could not
be reserved in time this year,
MUilims had to pray in shifts
at the fairgrounds and at sev-
eral other smaller venues
throughout the county.
Qureshi dressed in a tradi-
tional gown festively
adorned with gold. Although
she did not cover her. hair
with a scarf, the majority of
Islamic women in attendance
did. Women also had their
hands and arms adorned
with henna, a reddish-brown
dye. Tb.ey also wore gold
bracelets called bangles.
Women prepared for the
prayer by bathing in a pre-
scribed manner, according to
Qureshi.
RAFAEL FRANCO I DAILY PILOT
From left, M. Zamin Farukhl, Dr. Sultan Shah, and Mohammad Noor join in prayer for Eid al~Fltr, the last day of
Ramadan, Saturday. Approximately 14,000 musllms gathered at the Orange County Fairgrounds Expo Center.
"First they wash their face
three times, tlfen they wash
from their forearms to their
elbows three times and then
they wash from their feet to
their ankles three times,"
Qureshi said of the {itual
called Wad.bu.
long sleeved top that hangs
past the knees, and the Shal-
war, a loose-fitting pair of
pants.
People spilled out of the
building onto the surround-
ing concrete.
Toward the end of the ser-
vice, small children got up to
talk with one another while
some mothers chronicled the
event with camcorders.
iffs Department. Lt. Steve
Fauchier said no unusual
calls or activity were reported
during the event, although
the department had not antic-
ipated any problems.
place throughout the last
century, ·
•1 urge Muslims through-
out the nation to get involved
politically and soop.l.ly m this
country we have chosen as
our new home A country that
gives us freedom,· he said.
"Cod bless America. God
bless America . God bless
A.menca. A land of love,
ethics and freedom.
Chain-link fences separat-
ed those participating in the
massive prayer from those
shopping for bargains at the
swap meet.
"They should have picked
a different place," said 23-
year .old Anaheim resident
Men also. wore traditional
garb such as the Kurhta, a
The bwldmg fell silent
when Siddiqi began the
responsive prayer. The only
sounds other than Siddiqi in
the building were the ai.es of
infants. Many whispered
prayers silently with their
eyes closed and arms folded.
The day was consid,ered a
success not only by members
of the Islamic Society, but also
by the Orange County Sher-
•1 pray to the almighty
that this new millennium
will be peaceful for every-
one throughout the world,•
said Bundakji, citing the war
and bloodshed that took
Fate of Greenlight Initiative
may be decided Tuesday
• City Council expected to vote on.proposal that would give
residences say over potential deyelopment.
~Pb
than 100 dwelling unit~ or more than
40,000 square feet of floor area above what
the general plan allows.
NEWPORT BEACH -The fate of the
so-called Greenlight Initiative, which pro-
poses to give residents the decision-ma.king
power over potential development, may be
decided by the City Council Tuesday.
Other issues the council will tackle
include whether to approve a 164-room,
four-story hotel with 173 parking spaces at
the comer of Birch Street and Von Karman
Avenue. To make way for the project, a
food court known as Plaza de Caf es will be
demolished, according to a city memo.
City Atty. Bob Burnham recommended
the council reject the petition that brought
forward the initiative, after being asked by
city leaders to review the petition. He
argued the way signatures were gathered
violated the state's election code.
The council could vote to either accept
or reject Bumham's suggestion or autho-
rize an election regardless of any problems
with the petition, according to a city memo
dated Jan. 11. .
In addition, the council will appoint vol-
unteers to serve on the Environmental
Quality Affairs Citizens Advisory Commit-
tee and the Aviation Committee. Nomina-
tions will be confirmed for the appoinbnent
of a planning commissioner. The resigna·
tion of Mark Hoglund, accepted on Nov. 8,
created the vacancy.
The initiative would require a majority
vote on developments that would create
more than 100 peak-hour car trips, more
This will be the first Tuesday meeting
for the council, which has normally met on
Mondays. The 7 p.m. meeting will be held
in council chambers, 3300 Newport Blvd.
VOLUNTEER DIRECTORY
• VOLUNTEER DIRECTORY runs
periodically In the Dally Pilot. If
you'd like Information on get·
ting your organization listed, call
(949) 764-4330.
SAVE OUR YOUTH
The West Side Costa Mesa
youth organization is looking
for volunteers to help create a
positive alternative for .peo-
ple 12 to 23 years old. Volun-
teers are needed to help in
areas such as boxing, sports,
health, fitness, aerobics and
academic tutoring. For infor-
mation, call (949) 548-3255.
SERVING PEOPLE IN NEED
Serve as a guide for home·
less families by helping
them set goals and maintain
a basic budget. Bilingual
skills needed. For more
information, contact There-
sa Rowe at (~9) 757-1456.
FOR THE RE~D I Library, we·misspelled the•name of the
In a story that ran Jan. 1 about a lee-series. It is the Martin w. Witte Dlstin·
flue series at the Newport Beach Public guiahed Speakers Lecture series.
VOL 94. NO. 8
READERS HOTLINE
(949) 642"6086
Record your comments about
the 0.1ly Pilot or news tips
APPRESS
OUr addr~ Is 330 W. Bay St.,
Cotta Mesa, CA 92627.
COR8ECJJ()NS
tt Is the Pilot's polky to prompt·
ly corrtct all erron of substan<.•.
Plus. call (949) 57~268.
fll
The Newport~ ....
O.ily Pilot (USPS-144-800) h pub-
hthed Monday through S.turd.ty.
In NMP0rt hech and Con. Met.. subtcr1ptions.,. ~only bv
tubtctlblno to The l1fNs Orange
County (900) 2S2-91'1. In..-
outside of NMpOtt hectl Ind
Colla MtM. ~to the
O.llv Pflot .. .w.llllM ~ bv . rNil tor S20 pw iriorlltt 5llCond
da poltage peld .. '°"' Mia, CA. <Prtc. lndlldi ......
""' .. loal-.J P05TMMo m:,.,.. ........ ='°,,.. ~···"'* ~ flllot. ,.0. ..... c.. ...... CA12131.~NlrwM.i.
l1el.lll1tAol ................
.
Of .ctYert1Mlmtf'lts ~tin c.an be
r~ wlthout Written ~r·
m1t110n of copyright ~
HOW JO REACH US
Orcut.tlon
The Times Orange Coonty
(800) 252·9141
Adllef1hln9 Clawfled (949) 642·5678
Display (949) 642-4321
fdltoNI
News (949) 642·5680
Sports(949)S74-4223
NrM. Spon:s , .. (949) 646--4170
E·ma1I· dallypllotetatlmeuom
Mamotfke
81.151"6 Offt<• (949) 642-4321
8\Nneu Fax (949) 631-7126 •
NllWl9d ~ l1INe CommUnlty NIM
• lll!"9 ~~ .,.
~LoWll, ~
c~
~ ... Editor ........
Dhctcw of "'°'°""'*"' ............ ..,..., NIW, Qllf ._ .....,._OI • ..,_...,_
WISH OF TH.E WEEK
• ORGANIZATION: Wilson Elementary School
• CONTAcr. Pamela Coughlin, prindpal
• ADDRESS: 801 Wilson St., Costa Mesa 92627
• PHONE: (949) 515-6995
• NEEDs: Books for students, mostly fiction books that kids can read at a fim-, second· and
third-grade level.
• WISH: An additional piece of playground equipment for the newly expanded playground
ENGAGEMENT
("'pu· r· :geon Lioiffi ate of El Modene High School J j -F.l.. 4 . m. an. and the University of Arizona. The groom-to-be ts a grad-
-uate of Irvine High . School,
Bradley Hortman, son of UCLA and Uruversity of San
Arnold and Jane Hoffman, of Dleg0'1.aw School.
Dr. and Mrs. Lincoln Spur-
geon of Orange Park Acres
have announced the
engagement of their daugh-
ter, Amy Rebecca, to Jason
Irvine. Both reside in New-A June 2001 wedding is
port Beach. planned in Orange Park
WEATHER
TEM'ERATURES
Balboa
67/42
Corona def Mar
67/43
(omrMesa
68144
Newpott Beach
67143
Newport Com
67/43
SURF FOMCAIT
The swell wtll be out of the
west today for sets In the
waltt·to chest-high area,
LOCATIOlll SID •
~ ................... n1t"4W N1'41JpOtt~..: ••• ,, ....... 1-"4 w
81-*les.-............... 1 .... w
RMr Jetty ... _.tto ..... 1-4 w .
~ ....... _"·-·· ...... 1-4w -1IDDAY
Arlt low
The bride-to-be is a gradu-Acres.
AND SUIF
4:28 a.m ......................... 2.4
First high
10'.18 a.m ........................ 5.1
Second low
5:46 p.m .......................... 0.0
Second high
nla
TUISDAY
First low
5:21 a.m ...................... 2.6
first high
12:15 •.mu ................... 3.8
Second low •
6:25 p.m .................... 0.3
Second high
11 :11 p.m ........ -•• , ......... 4.I ... ,. a.._ .,
POLICE TIPS
• Panced, occupied vehlcles containing one or
more persons are especially s1gn1f1cant 1f -~at an unusual hour. They could be pos·
sible looltouts for a burglary In progreu, even If
the occupants appear to be lovers
~ Any Vehicle moving slowly and without lights
or following a coune th.t appears aimless or
repetitlw is suspicious Occ~nts may be c~ng
for places to rob or bli<glame.
• Apparent business trans.ctlons conducted
from a vthkle, especially around schools or ~
and If )Wtnllft •re involved, could mMn possibte drug Miies.
•lf'9rsons being~ Into vehki.4-espec1a1 tf"Y .. jwtnllls ot f9mlte -mlY = :o.~~· Mccwd tht lk"'9e
• 1he abelldOtllld vehldt Pitt.cl on ~ "'-...... Com.ct ~ comtol ......... """"-.
• ........ DWidt wttldowt --.
--·· lbout IW0\*11. 1hl "* ol w•11 •on1tW11.--to~,_.
..
Doily Pilot schools Monday, January 10, 2000 3
Seeing the sites I rorrz a slow-moving tra~n
A s many of you spen't •
the Wet'k after Christ-mas prePartng to see
the world end, our family was
off seeing the world. Actually,
just a part of it, but when you
go by tram, it looks much dif-
ferent from the cloud bank
seen from the air. We left from
the Fullerton train station,
which doesn't have the old
Hollywood movie feel of
Union Station.
· Unlike ai}ports, where you
go through metal detectors
and check in an hour ahead
of time, you just show up and
, get on the train. The standard
luggage includes at least one
large black gaibage bag with
• who knows what inside
Coach passengers don't even
get peanuts, so many had
brought food.
If you have a short family.
you can get a family sleeper
car, where two of the four
beds are four feet, nine inches
in length. None of my family
wanted to have thei( legs cut
off, so we got two sleeper
cars. The attendant at the sta-
-------... --.--could 1001< out the windows EDUCATIONALLY
SPEAKING
gay geiser
sondoval
tion sa,id tt was a little tight for
much luggage in the sleeper
car. He wasn't k1dcling: The
size of the sleeper car was
akin to two storage bins on an
airplane. The only thing is, I .
might have felt saler in the
storage bin.
Upon boarding, we went to
the dining car for dinner. It
was quite nice, with fresh
flowers and real dishes. We
and see all of the holiday dee-·
orations as we made our way
to San Bernardino The
lounge car was aglow ~
windows on the roof, which
let in the stars, dS we inean-
de~ Uuough the d~rt.
The coach cars hdd a
knowledgeable group of pctS-
sengers. They hcid taken sc>ats·
away from the nJ'.>lS)' and cold
doors, and were wrapped up
in sleeping bags and bld.n-
kets, snoozmg away before 9
p.m. They knew what we clid-
n't. 'J'l.?.e trai.n·tnp gets rougher
as the train picks up speed
By ffildrughl, 1 deaded we
were on the longest version of
Space Mountam ever. The
flashing Ugh~ of passmg
trains ana towns C9nuningl~
with the noise of the whistle
and the cbcketyclack of the
track .. Added to th.ls were the
unexpected lurches cUld jerks.
More than one person walk-
mg in the clirung CdC ended
up in somebody's soup.
Bedtime found the sleeper
car converted mto two berths,
one on top of the other. In
front of the berths, there was
just enough room for one per-
son to stand up and still have
the door closed"'I would tell
you to imagine a pnsoli cell,
but you would imagine way
too much room.
It was a trick to get Qn the
lop bunk Once you were
there, there were two straps ·
and a haller that you were to
use to keep from falling out of
the bed However, I couldn't
figure out where in the world
you }\ooked the straps First
my husband was above, and
left the straps dangling One
almost took me out, when it
swung in the dark at full
force. On the return trip, I got
up on top.
Theigoocl news is, m the
morrGn'g, we c;aw the sights of
Anzona and New Mexico
essentially as they had looked
for the last 1,000 years A
Native Amencdll boardl'd the
traID to explam the sights and
to tell us about lhe culture. lt
had snowed the day before,
and the landscape suggested
the ''Great Baker m the Sky"
had dusted the place with
powdered sugar There was
magtc in the a.JI as we got out
on solid land and headed to
Sandoval County, N.M.
Santa Fe was great We
Vt.Sited six museums m one
day. We got thoroughly .fdu-
cated in the arectS of cut. folk
art, Native Americans, history
and culture. W~ ate at some
great restaurants, but tl1ey all
had the du.le wammg They
only serve food with hot chile.
which they will not remove, ·
nor will they take your co°'-
plaints about 1t being too hot
Orie restaurant even defined
the word JillillillO, pronounced
he-yee-yee-o, as mearung the
sound you make when you.
eat chile th.at is too hot.
Gambling JS obviously seen
as the panacea for each Indi-
an Pueblo. so that casmos dot
the desert and mountains of
New Mexico. So do explo-
.sives. As we made ow-. way to
the Anasazi ruins at Bandalier
National Monument. we skirt-
ed the National Laboratory at
Los Alamos, which JS run by
the lJruvemty of California.
Miles and miles of barbed
wire fence warned o! the dan-
ger of explosives. The rwJl$
arc quite impressive and
made us appreoate the large
sizes of our _r~idential ~ooms.
The tram company obviously
went to VlSlt these rums to
detemune what size to make
thetr sleeper cars. The Brad-
bury Museum, in Los Alamos,
JS a must-see.
Finally, I'd lik~ to suggest
aty officials from Costa Mesa
VlSlt the sports complex in
Wlute Rock There were at
least eight playing fields for
socceT c:Uld baseball, alJ with
the deadest-loolang grass I've
ever seen They were all open
tor play. My husband, who is
f{om New Mexico, said the
grass was dormant. All I know
is that may~ Cahf omians are
a httle too fussy about theu
pldying fields.
• GAY GEISE.R-SAHDOVAL is a
Costa Mesa resident. Her column
runs Mondays. She can be reached
by e-mail at GGSesqOaol.com .
ON CAMPUS
ts· OF THOUGHT?
"My top choice 1s Duke Unrversity
in North Carolina. It has a really
good academic reputation, but the
kids didn't seem pompous or schol-
arly. It was a very warm, accepting
atmosphere. The students and
administrators were friendly. I
want to.major In En9lrsh. I-either
want to become a 1)1gh school
teacher or college professor.,.
ROBIN LETOSTAK, 17
Costa Mesa
"My very first chotce is UCLA. I went
there to visit a friend's brother who
goes there. We sat in one of has sci-
ence das.ses. The professor was very
interesting. He was very charismatic
The food in the dorm was actually
pretty good. I am planning on
maj0<ing in economics •
lAURA COTE, 17
Costa Mesa
·1 want to go to UC something. I
applied to six UC schools I want to
go to a UC school because they are
close -they are in california I
want to study engmeenng. My
first chOrce rrgl')t now looks lrke UC
San Oiego or san Lurs Obispo •
TRAVIS CHANDLER, 17
Costa Mesa
-------------Carpet Cleaning
Coit' powerful.mobile carpet cleaning equipment removes
ground in dirt to help extend carpet life. We are certified to
comply with all major carpet manufacturer' cleaning
specifications, including stain resistant carpets.
1-800-FOR-COIT
Red~~nt!!!~!m~~!~~~g
fre h while reducing mold, fungi, and d~t . h<t
{
•
We a-.ked ~ix gm<luaring ~nior~ from E.'>lancia High "x hool what c:ollegc~ they plan
ro go to Jnd w h) ~ Herc's \\ h..tt they had to '>.ly:
..
"I've applied to UCI and UCLA. I
am going to apply to BYU 1n
Hawaii. UCI 1s my strongest choice
nght now I want to study pre-
c med And the campus 1s close to
home. I either want to go really far
away or really close to home. I
want to do something related to
medicine or aviation "
BRETT HELLMICH, 17
Costa Mesa
•1 just got accepted to BYU in·
Utah That 1s where I will be going.
I am really exerted. I already have
my housing and my sister goes
there. I am going to maJor in
anthropol<>\)Y· I want to get
involved in 1ournahsm abroad I am
Mormon so the environment at
BYU will be comfortable. "
BECCA SILVA, 17
Costa Mesa
·1 am applying to five schools all in
Southern California I ltke UC San
Diego the most nght now 1 love La
Jolla I can take a train and be
home in an hoor, but yet It 1s far
enough away that I can become
independent of my parents. Right
now my mom still does my laundry
She deserves a break. I want to
study ecQnom1c:s."
MATTHEW MUEUER, 18
Costa Mesa
GET CONNECTBJ TO @omcast .
v DIGITAL CABL~
Sundays 9PM/8C
$9.95 Connection
·(Save over $24.001)
HB9
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
inctu~ing 12 screens of HBO and 8 screens of Cinemaxl
:.
• • . .:>. ... .. .. ...
4 Mondoy, January 10, 2oo0
FIGHT
CONTINUED FROM 1
a court settlement
Between the lrvfue Co.
anq another environ-
mental group, Friends of
the Irvine Coast. As a
part of the settlement,
the grass-roots group
• Send AltOUNO TOWN items to
the Daily Pilot, 330 W. Bay St., Cos-
ta ~ 92627; fax them to (949)
~170: or call (949) 764--4330. A
complete listing may be found at
dailypllotcom .
JO DAY
Coa.stllne Counseling Center
of Newport Beach will hold a
free lecture titled •ADD
Overview• at 7 p.m. at the
center. Coastline founder
Joan Andrews will speak
about the symptoms, diagno~
sis and treatment of Attention
Deficit .Disorder. Coastline is
at 1200 Quail, Suite 105,
Newport Beach. For more
information, call (949) 476-
0991.
TUESDAY
The Latest 1b1ng Teaching
and Healing Center presents
a "Sacred Dmmming" class
with Jim Kinney, starting at 7
p.m. The, course is $5. For
' Advertorial
Auto.Facts
byl'aul~
Ufttnell A MNJll 0.ltllllAll .... ,,,.,,
J~ AC/f'O#DMJI•
BREAKING THE
CODE
Whei1 the "checlc engine" Ught
flashes, what dots it mean? ne
ans~er involves the .l.ldlic le' s
clectrooic control sysiem. It is made
up of a series of sensors (thrott.le.
oxygen.-knock, etc.) tha1 monitor
the various engine parameferS. a
computer that monim the signals
from these sensor and calculaies any
neccs.wy adjustments, and a variety
of actuators that carry out the
adjustments. 'JYpicalJy, if the
com.put.er detects an electrical
problem a warning Ught will come
oo in the mtrument cluster to alat
the driver. At the same time, the
compoler wilJ st<l'C in its memory.
owneric code that identifies the
specific e1carical circuit in which
the problem lies. By cbectiJ1g this
diagnostic code, the technicial can
quietly identify the irob1cm.
HIN'r. After the repair i amplefed,
the tecbniciail will ~ the .codes
from theoomputer's memory.
SHOCKS TO THE
SYSTEM
The need for new shock aboorbcrs
should be considered if the front end
of a vehicle seems 10 float up and
down after going over a bump, or if
the froot end of the vehicle dives
upon braking. To oonfinn thal new
shock absorber$ may be in order,
exert downward pressure on the
6umper adjacent to any wheel. The
vehicle should not bouoct more
thal oru. Prior IO complete f ailW'C,
a shock absorter can gradually
deteriorate u a re5Ull of leakage of
hydiaulit fluid 'JM ~ will be
made evident by stalllS that ~
oo the shock bou.\ing. When a
visual imp«bOO reveal such~.
rcplacemena shOtk absortM:rs shooki
be i.n$talkd, and they should be
rq>laced in nlalched
C&..F is easy to l'CICb at 2090
Placentia, Costa Mtaa. our
ttdrUci.w ~ly rewm IO
IC.hool IO ~ thc1r ~ill hohCd 90
YQU act the best wc:R ~'1ble. Noc
all shopS commurucaic well with
their CU$1omert, but al OW' ~. WC
male fl a primty to pvc you the
~ you need to make
dlclWar1I *"-your Cit IO ~ "'*is nae held up. We~
llllllarciedllmdl.
Cal tM> 646-6910 a n ht\i ,. .....
Wb barred from filing
any further legal actlon
agamst the company'
developments.
. ~ near Big Sur to defend SPEECH dog NetAnyahu even after he
left office. An investigation is
under way into whether he
accepted illegal gilts dunng his
ten we.
CONTINUED FROM 1 ' But there is nothinQ
holdin other beacb
lovers flrom continuing
the ftght -not even dts-
tance.
Sue Ficker, a longti.!ne
Crystal Cove advocate,
traveled from her home
her f ormcr stomping
grounds. Ficker dnd
Blake have been enjoy-
ing the beach smce
childhood.
•I'm liere to substantl·
ate the fact that things .
have not ilnprov.ed slJlce
I left,• said Ficker, who
moved out of Newport
Beach m 1992.
pitting secular and religious
Jews against each other. But
Miller said Netanyahu ·w~n·t .
lhe first, or the last prime minis-
ter to do so, especially becauie
religion is intertwined in the
politics of the Jewish state.
•Playing the religion card is
inevitable,• he said.
Controversy continues to
Police raided his home in'"
October and reportedly found
boxG\i of pictw'es, gold and sil-
verware that officials suspect
were given to Netanyahu while
he was prime minister. Under
Israeli law, such gi.f~ are state
property. He also waSTeported-
ly questioned over a bill for
$100,000 in COGtracti.ng work at
A ~ 0 U N D T'"O W N
more information, call (949)
645-6211 .•
Borders Books, Music and
Cafe presents a free work-
shop on "Goal Acluevmg in
the New Millenniwn • at ?
p.m. Jacque Daniel, profes-
sional business coach, will
speak. The store is at 1890
Newport Blvd., Costa Mesa.
For more information, call
(714) 256-0353.
The National Assn. of
Women Business Owners will
meet from 6 to 9 p.m. at the
Wyndham Garden Hotel,
3350 Avenue of the Arts, Cos-
ta Mesa. The topic of lhe
meeting will be #Mars and
Venus in the Workplace."
The meeting, which includes
dinner, is $44 for nonmem-
bers and $34 .tor first-time
guests. For more inf opnation,
call (714) 832-5741.
Mother's Market will hold a
seminar titled ·Detoxify,
Cleanse & Nourish Yourself
with Super Green Foods &
Herbs" from 6:30 to 8 p.m. m
its patio cafe. Mother's is at
225 E. 17th St., Costa Mesa.
Por reservations and more
information, call (800) 595-
MO.MS
,
WEDNESDAY
Newport Beach Community
Services invites parents, teach-
ers and elementary school stu-
dents to the grand opening of
KidScene, from 4 to 6 p.m. The
event will be at the Vincent
Jorgensen Community Cent~
in Mariners Park. at Dover Dri-
ve and Irvine Avenue. Pizza,
drink and cookies will be
served. For more information,
call (949) 644-3151.
Sherman Ubrary and Gar-.
<tens presents a class titled
"Floral Design for Formal
Dining" at 9:30 a.m . All mate-
rials are provided. The course
is $40. The Sherman Library
and Gardens is at 2647 E.
Coast Highway, Corona del
Mar. For more information,
call (949) 673-2261.
The Newport Harbor Area
Chamber of Commerce will
YOUR LIFESTYLES. YOUR BUDGET. IT'S ALL
ABOUT YOU! DRESS WELL. SMELL GOOD.
LIVE HEALTHY. BE GENEROUS.
• • W"". . ~www.-.tyou.com
THE WORLD'S LARGEST FASHION COLLECTIONS
ONLINE. AND MORE. UP TO 80% OFF.
Sabatino Tommy Peter Phil Vince
Flavorful & Delicious Lunches & Dinner
tJlilqw ••,_I dlalna ,_ avtU.blt r• er-. b!Ml-"*1i.ta ud prhace ruai..
723-0645 Please Call For Rtwrvatlon and l>irutlons
251 Shipyard Way • Newport Beach
hold .a. noon networking lun-
cheo9 ·at the Sutton Place
Hotel, 4500 MacArthur Blvd.,
Newport Beach. Joe Wilson,
managing director of consult-
ing services at Richard Chang
Associates Inc., will speak.
The event is $15 for members
with reservations, $20 for
potential----members and
arrivals at the door. For more
information, call (949) 729-
4400.
The latest Thing Teachlng
and Healing Center presents
a free 10-week meditation
class, "The Practical Art of
Meditation,• taught by the
Rev. Crystal C. Bujol, from 1
to 9 p.m. through March 15.
FQr more information, call
(949) 645-6211.
The Newport Beach Commu-
nity Services will present a
series of drawing and painting
workshops featuring individual.
instruction for beginners·
through advanced students in
mixed media. Artist and lectur-
er Min:ii Sharon Stein will con-
duct the seminars, which will
run for eight Wednesdays, 10
a.m. to 12:30 p.m., starting on
Jan. 12. The workshops will be
held in the Vince Jorgensen
Ceater adjacent to Mariners
Library, 2005 Dover Drive,·
Newport Beach. The fee for the
series is $63. For more informa-
tion. call (949) 644-3151.
The Newport-Mesa Crib-
bage Club meets at 6:45 p.m.
at the Oasis Center, 5th and
ZAHER FALLAHI, CPA
28 yrs. exp.
Acccg., Audits, Taxes
15% discount ro CM Residents
(714) 546-4272 '
Marguente, Corona del Mar.
For more information, call
(949) 646-5293.
The Financial Executives
Institute, Orange County
Chapter, will meet at 6 p.m. at
The Center Club, 650 Town
Center Drive, Costa Mesa.
Chapman University presi-
dent James Doti will speak.
To RSVP, call (714) 278-6201.
Mother's Market will hold '8
seminar titled •Answering
Yow Nu..tritionaJ Questions"
from 6:30 to 7:30 p.m. in its
patio cafe. Mother's is at 225
E . 17th St., Costa Mesa. For
reservations and more inf or~
mat.ion, call (800) 595-
MOMS.
Developments ln the Crystal
Cove issue will be the subject
of the Coastal Commission
meeting a( 9 a.tn.,.wbicb will
be held at the Four Points
Sheraton Hotel, 530 Pico
Blvd .. Santa Monica. Persons
interested in attending can
contact,the Alliance to Res-
cue Crystal Cove, which is
arranging carpools to Los
Angeles. For more informa-
tion, call (949) 852~0199.
Orange Coast College wtll
bold a seminar on daily over-
time laws for payroll person-
nel and human resource pro-
fessionals. Registration for the
workshop, "The New Millen-
nium Means the Retl.µn of
Daily Overtime," costs $79 in
advance and $89 at the door.
The workshop will be held
from 8 to 11:30 a.m. in ·the
Community EducaQ,on Build-
ing conference room at OCC,
2701 Fairview Roa'd, Costa
Mesa. For more information,
call (714) 432-5880.
The Balboa Island H1stortcal
Society will meet at 1 p.m. at
a private home. For informa-
tion, call (949) 675-9019.
THURSDAY
The Newport Beach Central
Library will be hosting an
estate planning financial
3165 Harbor Blvd.
Costa Mesa
• One llodl Soat.b ol 405 rw,
(714) 545-7168
,,,_,,,, ~
APPAREL
SALE
25o/cr40%
OFF
Daily Pilot
his private residen~. A con-
tractor in Jerusalem ts suspect-
ed of giVlllg bribes lll exchange
for favors and presenting mtlat-
ed bills tor work he earned out
for Netanyahu. who didn't pay
b.im. •
nckets for th engagement~_,_
are $50 for reserved seating,
$25 for general admission and
$18 for students and seniors 65
and older. The temple is at 1011
Camelbaclc St., Newport Beach.
For moc.e information, call Tem-
ple Bat Yahin at (949) 644-1999.
seminar at . 1 p.m. in its
Friends Meeting Room. The
free program willlocus on the
components of estate plans,
wills and trusts. The library is
at 1000 Avocado Ave., New-
port Beach. For more infor-
mation, call (949) 717-3801.
The Latest Thing Teaching
and Healing Center presents
•Knowing your Sprit Guide
Made Easy" with Jun and
Anne Kinney, starting at 7
p.m. The class ts $10. For
more inf onnation, call (949)
645-6211.
The Orange County Hlstorl·
cal Society will hold a gener-
al meeting at 7 :30 p.m. at the
Bowers Museum, 2001 North
Main Street, Santa Ana. The
program will cover the evolu-
tion of the boats of the Balboa
Island Feny. The event is free and features refreshments.
For more information, call
{714) 993-7009. •
Mother's Market wtll hold a
booksigning and workshop
with Cheryl Tinele, author of
"The Sacred Journey," from
6:30 to 8 p.m. in its patio cafe.
Mother's is at 225 E . 17th St.,
Costa Mesa. For reservations
and more inf onnation, call
(800) 595-MOMS.
FRIDAY
Orange Coast College wht
hold its 25th annual Sailing
Adventure Series, a four-part
series of meetings for nautical .
enthusiasts, at 8 p.m. Fri.day
evenings today through Feb.
4. The meetings will be in the
Robert B. Moore Theater of
the college, 2701 Fairview
Road, Costa Mesa. TI.ckets to
the series are $40, with single
tickets available for $13. For
more information, call (714)
432-5880. .
The Newport Harbor Christ·
mas Boat Parade Awards Din-
ner and Auction Will be held
starting at 6 p.m. at the Fm1r
Seasons Hotel, 690 Newport
Center Drive, Newport Beach.
Tickets are $60 per person,
with tables for 10 available for
$600. For more information
and to make reservations, call
(9'9) 729--4400.
The Costa Mesa Church of
Religious Science will hold a
three-day workshop on ~ atti-
tudinal healing" at the
chur<".11. 2850 Mesa Verde
Qrive East, Costa Mesa. The
event runs from 7 to 9;3D p.m.
Jan. 14; 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Jan.
15; and 1 to 5 p.m. Jan. 16.
Cost is $89. For more lllfor-
mation, call (714) 754-7399.
JAN. 15
The Newport Beach Publtc
Library will hold a seminar
called ·usmg the Library:
Internet Travel Resources~ at
10 a.m. in the Friends meet-
ing room. The free program
will show participants how to
make travel plans on the
Web. The library is at 1000
Avocado Ave., Newport
Beach. For more information,
call (949) 717-3801.
The Orange County Chapter
o.f The Single Gourmet will
hold a gourmet dinner at 6:30
p.m. at the Robert Mondavi
Wine & Food Center, 1570
Scenic Ave., Costa Mesa. For
information and reservations,
call (800) 750-DINE.
I
1)e Colonel WUllam cabeU
Chapter of the Natiolial Sod·
ety Daughters of the Amert·
can Revolution will hold a
genealogy workshop from
9:30 a.m, to 2 p.m. at the
Northbluff Clubhouse, 2-'90
Vista deJ Oro iil &stbluff,
Newport Beach. Por more
Information. call {949) 494-3833.
. ' • .. .
. ..
• t
I
• l t
..
I ''
u
..., .
' .
... Jan. 17 honoree
100 MIUlll or • "We held them to one le;timote goal fl the first holf.
But we were so bod after that .. : -"-Brian Kreutzluunp, Newport girls water polo coach . ~. Jonuaty 10,_2000 • Spom Editor Roger Carlson • 949S7 44223
S'OITS HILL OF FAME
MILLENNIUM MONDAY
I n an effort to create a
deeper basis of longevity
· for the Daily Pilot's Sports
· Hall of Fame, this series will
. continue on a weekly basis,
beginning today. Every
·~· SPORTS .HAU. OF FAME I
CELEBRATING THE MIUENNIUM
Monday, from now until ,
the current series of 1,003 is completed, one of the Pilot's ·
sports heroes who were brought into focus in the Jan. 1, 2000
Millennium Issue, will be 'featured. This move extends the~
series until about 2013, giving the continuation of the format
a much better foundation for such an extension, as well as
accentuating the impact of current Hall of Famers. The move
pushes back the production of parts II and Ill (photos) of the
Millennium "5ue and publication of those will be announced at
a later date.
Ill Ill
·SPORTS HALL OF FAME
CELEBRATING THE MILLENNIUM -.
Doily Pilot 5
PO LO
A L A . DMY PllOf PHOTOS SY 01ANA MlllVIHIU.
, • . . _ Newport 7r goalie Heather Deyden goes up lor an attempt to block a shot In Saturday's llUe showdown.
·DREW S .Still some w ork to do
Boating
•His name is synonymous with not only the high
waves of Newport Harbor, but the cream of the sport.
TrnRAN<.f. PltlUJ~
Ian Andrews, it's a Ill
ame symbolic of
pturing the
waves.
The famous nautical Newport
native and race boat deSigner
Alan Andrews graduated from
Newport Harbor High m 1973
He went on fo Stanford
University, receiving a
mechanical engineenng degree
in 1977.
While attending Stan.ford, he
was a member of the Cardinal
sailing team, becoming an
All-American collegiate sailor.
About this time, Andrews
began designing boats for Doug
Peterson Yachts in San
Diego.
•1 was always
interested in sailing •
and began like almost
everyone else, sailing
Sabots in junior high
school,• Andrews said.
Orange Coast College Sailing
Center.
Front Runner holds the record
for the longest distance traveled
in a 24-hour period in the L.A. to
Honolulu Transpac Race.
Another Andrews-70 called
Cheval, was first to finish in the
1995 Tra.Dspac, the first year that
turbos were allowed.
Other significant Andrews
boats include the famous
Andrews-56 veteran, Medicine
Man; winner of the prestigious
1994 "Kenwood Cup," an
Andrews-40 called Growler, and
last year, with Andrews himself .
aboard, he crewed an Andrews·
53 named Kera Koa, winning the
"Kings Cup" in Thailand.
Another recent and
somewhat famous
design was his
Andrews-60 named
America's Challenge,
owned by local
Oenologist Neil Barth.
At Newport Harbor.
he moved up to raong
P.J.s, Kites and Solings
He also became
proficient m Cal-20s
and was checked out
aboard hls fa.miliy's
Alan Andrews
The boat was
entered in last year's
"Whitbread" around
the wo'rld race but was
forced to abandon the
series due to a lack of
corporate sponsorship.
·1 was approached
Ranger-30, which they still own
today.
It was the 1979 Transpac Race
when be and two other boat
designers teamed up to create a
King-Choate-Andrews boat
called Arriba, which took first
place in its· class. That same year,
Andrews opened his own design
office and by 1982, he designed
his first big boat, a 30-footer
named' Detallf to be competitive
in international-type regattas.
Since that time, he has
designed boats from 26-f~t. up
to his largest to date, a 72-foot
performance cruiser.
Loeally, we frequently see the
navy blue hull of an Andrews-70
called Front Runner (fonnally
VictoriaJ, now owned by the
I
by an America's Cup
Syndicate but didn't get the
nod,• Andrews said. •1 would
really like to design an AC boat.
The race itself is so innovative.
"With today's technology, new
ways to do things, new materials
and lighter boats, boats are
going faster and faster, who
knows what will happen."
Andrews continued. "C~ting
keels and rigs, water ballast, it's
so much more sophisticated than
it used to be. The future looks
exciting.•
This internationally recog-
nized race boat designer
currently s.its on the board of
directors of the Balboa Yacht
Club and lives in Corona del
Mar, as well as within the Daily
Pilot Sports Hall of Fame,
celebrating, the m.illenruum.
Sixth-place finish fo r Cor ona del Mar's girls
NEWPORT BEACH-Corona del Mar High's girls water polo team defeated El Toro but
lost to Capistrano Valley to finish si.Xth at the Newport Harbor/Corona del Mar tournament
Saturday at Newport Harbor High.
In the first game, Hayley Hapeman and Daniela D1Giacomo each cored two goals as
CdM (8-7) got a 5-2 win ovei El Toro. CdM goalie Arin H ndrick<on was instrumental, get-
ting 1 r saves to preserve the victory.
But the Sea Kings fell to Capo Valley in the fifth·place game, 7-5. Fre hman Danielle Carl-
son scored three times for Cd.M, which got four goals m the fourth period. But Capo Valley's ,
Alhley and Amy Stackowski combined for five goals to lead the Cougars.
.. Harbor hs;ls to settle
for second after Villa
Park's rally for 8-7 win
in championship game.
.10">1 I'll BtK)
~Plot
NEWPORT BE
Rap per Rob Base sw.d it best,
it takes two to make things go
nghl. .
After getting squashed by
Newport Harbor High's·gvls
water polo team, Orange
County's No 1 team, m the
first half, No. 4 Villa Park
gave its two-me ter player
Knstyan Pulver compcm y in
the post. The move sparked a
Spartans' comeback that led
to an 8-7 victory m Saturday's
final of the Newport Har-
bor/Corona del Mar Tourna-
ment.
•our defense completely
failed in the second half,"
Newport Harbor Coach Bnan
Kreutzkamp said, •and I'm
not happy about that. We
held them to one legitimate
goal in the hr:st })all. But we
were so bad after that."
"By changing our
offense,· .Villa Pa rk Coach
John Carc1ch aid. ·w e
forced them to change therr
defense."
The fmt hall was not a
good one for the Spartans
(11-3) Nt>wport Harbor (11-
2) donunatf'd, even though 1t.i.
star two-rn ter player, Kyn-
dra Cox, wa., con tamed·
Ul51de. ..
Instead of hndmg shots,
Cox sunply kirked the ball
out and as isted on two goals.
Het' fin;t assU;t was to Kather.-
10e Belden, which tied the
game at one goat apiece .
McKenna Mosier scored on
Cox's second kick -out.
Newport led, 4-1, in the
second with goals from Cox
and Jenna Murphy. Mean-
while, Newport' defense
and goalie H atti r Deyd n,
who had 12 "ave m the
game, hut down Villa Park
and Putv "r. The game
c:eemed to be In control for
SEE POLO MGI 6
A promise! Ute Inst Top 10
•In case you missed anything on the college level from 1999 ...
or, as they say in the business, the leftovers we couldn't get inl
Sitting at my desk pondering a Nothing aga.inSt the prep1ten,
topic for my college column, it hit but at Orange Cout Co119ge and
me. ••Hey I know. I'll hig=t Vanguatd Umvenlty, there bave
the top JO eventl of the yeu in e been 101De winners, lhaUn ad
sports. Prom l to 10 and to make We beacllimM1l4lten thtOu(lboUt tbll pilll
~ ~-f.OU, I'll put No. 1 ftnt. 365-day ~· PJ!NJU811' Now it I time for ttM>le =~bub' That's Why I achWlemantl to be nr:1CDC111Dli111ilmd•11.. '°'~:'1..i"'C,o1111e 20lh ...::,.~o': o1 ,~-=: ~ llaw -•tbil MWJGUrapplamtmll ... -.S. m:-~IDCbtllllllb :..a::::11: ...
since 1981, both the men's AND
women's cross"''country teams won
ltate championships at Wood·
ward Park in Ftetno. .,
In What wu delcribed as, •The
belt te.m ellort I've ever seen,•
K'CXJldlDg to Coach John Goktman,
the IDlll'• IQmd edged Mt. San
Anlloak>, 100.108, with Glendale ( 109)
Md s. 1>19go~ (111) dOle
HMM n. ,__bed au tourn...-s .................. .,..
lrn+•W-.llPhid-..tD-..
• ....... tn'W
6 Monday, January 10, 2000 t v Sports Do ily Pilot
POLO
CONTINUED FROM 5
'Intensity and focus' COLLlll IOOP.S
the Sailor~, although ViOa • The scoreboard said it
Park's Shan Meyer cored on a all in CdM's 72-13 win. lllLS HOOPS
Vanguard U. bolds
on for 45th Straight
•Jones scores 31 as Costa Mesa's 15-4 Mustangs
wallop Western High, 85·69, in a norueague tuneup. desperation heave at the close · lOSfl'H Rao-.---McG'oy had the -most .......,..,._--cos T A ~----r-of the half.
Cardcb, who had the !dea to
switch to a double-post offen.~
with Pulver and Cindy Hamm
in the second, didn't deploy il
until the start of the third. New-
port still extended the lead to
6-3 as Cox and Mosier scored
again. Then Villa Park's offen-
sive switch paid dividends, and
three goals from Hamm. Pulver
and Danei French tied the
game after three quarters, 6·6.
Villa Park had the momen-
tum at this point. and it took a
7-6 lead at the start of the
fourth on a goal from Meyer.
Cox tied the game with her first
two-meter goal, but Pulver
scored agdin to gwe the Spar-
tans the lead with 2:47 left.
"In the first half, we had
three or fov.r perimeter goals,"
Kreutzkamp said. "In the sec-
ond half, the girls refused to
shoot the ball. They tightened
Up." I
And Card.ch reels thankful
t.h~t Newport didn't find a way
to score.
"When you play Newport,"
he said, "first you have to stop
their counter. Then you have to
stop No. 8 (Cox). Then you
work your way to their other
players. All six of their starters
are good, and they have so
many scoring threats. They're
good fundamentally. I feel for·
tunate we came away with the victory,.
In the semifinal, the Sailors
struggled with No. 2 Santa
Margarita for three quarters
before scoring four goals in the
----------. Wlth 15, toll.owed by 12 each MESA -W 0 M I N ....... Pb -r from Gruber and Chris Eyre. Vanguard's Becki Huddle
And when Mijanou Pham hit &. scored 19 po~.ts, 15 from free
layup with 1:58 left in the . throws, and dished out nine
game, Jt completed the rota-assists as the Lions (14·2, 3-0 in
tion. conlerence) fought off Fresno
CORONA DEL MAR
:rhero's not a whole lot one can
say about Corona del Mar
High's 72-13 WUl over visiting
Ocean View in a nonleague
game on Saturday except,
wellJ the Sea Kings won.
The statistics in thi!I
Annageddon of a game tells
the whole story. CdM was up
21-0 after one quarter, Oce&11
View c<>mmitted 49 turnovers
and all nine Sea Kings scored.
After the game, Cd.M Coach
Elbert Davis siµlply shook his
head. At the same time, he saw
one important thing his team
took from the game.
•we finally played with
intensity and focus," he said.
Just because Ocean View
carried a 1-10 record into the
game didn't mean CdM (11-4,
1-0) was going to assume 1-11
was definite. The Sea Kings'
deCense was ferocious, as evi-
denced by the 49 turnovers.
. Andrea Gruber and Courtney
Kawata each had six steals to
lead the Sea Kings, while Jack-
-ie McCoy and Charlene Quon
had five each.
Ocean View rudn't score
unW 1:35 into the second quar-
ter. When it scored seven
points in the fourth, it rnore
th.an doubled the point total in
its previous three quarters.
On the flip side, Cd.M had
no trouble scoring. with all
nine players in the act. Kristin
Davts was obviously happy PaClfic Saturday in a Golden
with the win, not because it State Athletic Conference
was by 59 points, but because game on the winner's court.
of CdM's tenacity. He was so The win gives Vanguard 45
womed about his team's effort, fn a row at home. Kelly Boeke
he juggled his starting lineup, also scored 19 and grabbed 10
keeping McCoy, Eyre and Sea-. rebounds for the Llons before
son Meservey in, but putting in foulin.3!,ut. ·
STA1'I ~WU Cl Pham and Kawata. v...._ 11, ,.._, ~ M
"The problem wtth this ~~~~~.'.:'.:''-';.~" team is the mental part," he 3-pt. go&11-a.v-uare1y 2. Hurt 2
said about his team. "I'm wor-=.,°';'.;.r::--
ned about their mindset." ~ · lofta 19, Huddle 11, Erncte ,,,
·we had no intensity m our ~~1at1a 7, Wtldlet l. Airetton 1.
previous games," he said. l pt. p1s-Emde l. i..e 2 Fo.Aed out -~ loelit •Against Laguna Beach, we . Technb11 • ~ •
weren't focused, and we didn't .Halftime· Vangu.rd. 32-29
come out ready. We were
focused today." CdM won its
Pacific Coast League against
the Artists, by the way, 51-22,
although Davis pointed out it
was only 14-6 afte.r one quar-
ter .
U CdM doesn't know about
the rest of its oppo~nts, then
imagine the possibilities. Tustin
and Estancia, who face the Sea
Kings this week, should rev up
their fax machine right now,
~· COliloNA D1L MM 72. C>aM Vllw 13 law'tby~
Otffn\11-0 2 2 1 -13
Colona del Mw 21 14 24 13 -n
Oceel'I View· Gtrm 1, Valflitl 4, ~ 2
3-¢ goals -Gr""" 1
C.00-de! Mar• I( McCoy 15, Quon 10.
E_rft 12. ~ 4. IC.-at.e 2. Grubef 12,
Quon 10, J McCoy 9, Hawt1,. 6, 3-iJt. goal1 • Gtubw 2. Quon 1
Vanguard wins, 60-48
COSTA MESA M 111
--D"es.nis Keane
scored 14 points and grabbed
12 rebounds to lead V~guard
University to a 60-48 win over
visiting Fresno Pacific Saturday
in a Golden State Athletic Con-
!ere}lce game.
Brandon Cablay scored 16
for the Llons (9--6, 1-2 in confer-
ence).
OOLDIJll STA1'I AftlUnC ~ V"""1AJMD A, ,_.., ~ 50
FtwrlO hdfk-French 14, Al"99f 9,
MaloM 7, Snow I. Butcher 4, Aletlo 6. Mlll.r 2.
3-iJt. pis -Malone '· Snow 1, Alnger 1 Fouled out -None ~ -CMllay 16, K.-14. ICohhM 1.. ~ ~ 1. CUnis 2, i..e U 4, a.Jrvni~ 6,
3 pt. goals -CAblay 1. IC-1.
Fouled out -None
tt.lftilM -VanguerC1. •2s
JOS£Ptt Boo
lkf1Pb
COSTA MESA -Instead of
experiencing a letdown
against Western on Saturday
after Friday's emotional over-
tirpe win against Estancia, Cos-
ta Mesa High's boYS basketball
team didn't let up. The Mus-
tangs scored 59 first half points
on their way to an 85-69 win in
their last nonleague game of
the season.
•1 was afraid Qf a letdown,•
Costa Mesa Coach Bob Serven
said. •aut we had a·great first
half.•
The win gives the Mustangs
15 for the year, as opposed to .
four losses, and it is the most
wins Costa Mesa had since
1982. Only three wins keep the
Mustangs lrom the highest win
total in school history (18).
The star for Costa Mesa was
Nate Jones, who cbnnected for
a season-high 31 points,
including two three-pointers.
Jones was helped by Steve
Whittaker, who scored 20 points
and hit six three-pointers.
"Whittaker really stepped
up,• Serven said, "and Jones
had a nice game. It seems that
in every game, we always find
somebodY. who steps up.•
Rick Hatsushi scored nine
for Costa Mesa, and Dave
Weir, who made his second
straight start, scored · five
points. Westem's center, 6-
foot-8 Robert 1\Jmer, scored 29
IOYS HOO.PS
points, but unlike Jones, none
of his mates helped hlm out
While the first hall was nice
for the Mustangs, the second
half was ingratiating. Costa
Mesa scored eight points in the
thir'd quarter, 18 in the fourth.
· ·we took bad shots,• Ser-
ven said, •and the kids got
caught up ln trying to match
the pace of the first half. They
felt they could go out and score
59 points again, and it doesir't
work like that."
Nevertheless, Costa Mesa
had to come down at some
point, and it did when a win wci.s
wrapped .up. Now, the school's
single-season win record is ui
real danger from this year1s
squad. But the Mustangs ~
to think about that yet.
"Our kids are really
focused,• Serven said. "They
have goals of being successful
further in the season. We just
'have to take it one game at a
time." -· CastA MDA as, wu,... tt
law'9 11!r~ w.Jtem 11 15 17 19 •9
CMta M.w 26 ll a 11 • •s ......., ·Turner 29, l'tfH 1 .. , f'llnMll 10,
Wij~ 6, Watts S, Kim 4, Ch~ 1, McGet 0
J-pt. ooall -Turner 2. Wans 1, Per.i 1. Fouled oul • Noflt 'TtcMob (.oed\ l'tf•z. ea.ta~ -Jone 31, Whittaker 20.
Hatul\I 9, pgff 7, c.onte 7, Weir 5, P'J'll'I 4,
ftrfYl"llMI 1. IC.tikorlWI , 1Cno11 0, AtMdr.t>o 0
3-pC.. goall -Whitt.K« 6. Jones 1. Cont• 1,
Wtlr 1, ~ff 1
Foultd out -hynt Tldlnic.ab l'wr)'INll
fourth qud.rter to win, 7-4. Ali COLLEGES Taylor scored three times and
Murphy got two goals for the
completed 190 of 330 attempts, both new school
records, for 2,454 yards, second all-time behind
Keith Jarrett's 1987 mark.
helped the ijucs break several offensive team
records, including home runs (57), runs (382) and
busted out name plates on the scoreboard (one). Sailors. Deyden had eight CONTINUED FROM 5 saves.
After 19 seasons as a volleyball coach and interim
-AD at OCC, Hilgendorf helped the Pirates regain not
only their respect and luster of years past, but also
the Orange Empire Conference Supremacy Award
for the 1998-99 school year.
Rftt,,._
~ VNJIY 7, QJM 5
CllpJtrano v.11.y 3 2 1 I -1
Corona del Mw 1 O o 4 S
C F IJtrWIO VeUey. As Si.clcowslci 4, Ml
SUdlowskJ 1, ~ 1, Elt\liCh 1 Sr4t Md:.oll 2.
C-. de! Mr. c..1son 3, Ha HepeiNn 1,
Tudler 1 S.-: H.ndrtduon 1
Afdl ,.._ Mfftlftrwl
CClaolilA 11& MM 5, &. TOM> 2
EITOfO 0020 2
CofON Ml Mw 1 2 0 2 5
ll Toro! ICeragy 1, <Mter 1 SaVft! "" Cof-de! Mer: Ha H~n 2. o.GiacO!YIO 2. TUdter 1 Saves ~ 11
FOR THE RECORD
Daily Pilot Athlete of the
· Week Dustin Illingworth of
Newport Harbor High spent
bis early education at Costa
Mesa's Christ Lutheran
School.
Not bad for only one year on the job.
3Quisenbeny dies -Former OCC pitcher Dan
Quisenberry, the man credited for MFinding a
delivery in my flaw," passed away from brain cancer
at the age of l5. ~
Quisenberry, better known as "Quiz,• played 12
major league seasons and finished with 244 saves
and a 2.76 ERA in 674 appearances, all in relief
While at OCC from 1972-73, Quisenberry was
15-15 in his two-year career with a stellar 1.88 ERA
iri 254 1/3 innings of work. He struck out 166 while
wallcing only 38 in his two seasons with the Bucs.
He was a two-time All-South Coast Conference
first-team selection and OCC's team captain and
MVP.
After moving on to the University of La Verne, Qwz
signed with the Kansas City Royals and was brought ·
up to the big leagues in 1979. -
He was enshrined in the Royals' Hall of Fame in
1998.
4 Fllng'n Jared Flint -The sophpomore
quarterback set numerous records for OCC
football team this fall.
· Flint set OCC records in career passing attempts
(572), completions (311) and passing yards (3,999)
breaking Alvin White's previous records set tn
1971-72. .
This season, The University of Hawaii-bound Flint
"Affordable
Alternative"
Discount dlsket,
Cremation &.
Burial Service
Why should you subject
yourself & your family to
paying inflated prices for
caskets & erviccs????
CaU Toll Free l4'8·MCMUT
~°'Ill' I 1111111191 Celllrlcs
'
5Travis htt.s 17 feet -OCC sophomore pole
vaulter Travis Vandrovec set the new OCC and
Orange Empire Conference record by cleanng 17
feet at the conference finals April 24.
Vandrovec broke the Pirates' old standard of 16-6
1/2 set by Greg Woepse in 1976 and shattered the
OEC's high mark of 16-0 1/2 by Scott Hanes of
Riverside College.
Vandrovec won the Southern California title in the
pole vault and took second at the state finals. He
was named OCC's Male Athlete of the Year, the first
track and field athlete to win the award since Mike
Hancock in 1994-95.
6Vanguud lady hoqpsters keep wtnntng -It just
. keeps going and going for the Vanguard ..
University women's basketball team.
After back-to-back wins in the Vanguard
University Christmas Classic, the Lions have now
won 43 straight games at the Pit.
-Their last home loss came Feb. 25, 1997 against
Point Loma Nazarene. 85-84, in overtime.
From there, it's been ALL Lions. This season, the
Lions are 7-0 at home, winning by an average of 50
points a game.
Cal Baptist tried on Thursday, then Fresno Pacific
on Saturday. Neither work.
The streak is at 45 now.
70CC's baseball bashers -Freshmen Jason Reuss
and Ryan Clark and sophomore Brandon
Thompson threw some serious pop into the Pirates'
batting order, combining for 46 home runs, 144 runs
and 167 RBis. •
The threesome helped the Pirates reach the
playoffs for the first time since 1993. They also
COSTA MESA
ORANGE COUNTY,
CALIFORNIA
NOTICE
INVITIN08'0S NOTICE IS HEREBY
GIVEN thal .. aled proposala lor lumllhiog all labor, mat1rlal1,
equipment, 1'8r\8j)Of11·
lion and IUCh octter .fad!·
hie• .. may be reqUlrwd
for TtiE REHABIUTA· TION OF THE MAIN
ELECTRICAL.
SWITCHBOARD ANO ASSOCIATED POWER
DISTRIBUTION EQUIP-
MENT ANO INSTALLA-
TION OF AN EMER· GENCV GENERATOR
SYSTEM FOR CITY
HALL, City Protect No 119-18 ... bl~ by
!he Cl(y of eo.11 Me.a It
IM otfa of the Olly
Cler1c. n Fair Drive,
Cotta Mesa, Calllomle.
untll !he hout of
10:00 1.m., Monday,
~ 11.L?:OOO· •• wtlldl time ~ wll be ~~~ Chambera. 8 11l1d
PRIPOlell INI beer Ill
-o4 "" WOfk and NllM Of the lllddtr bUt no
other dieting~ me.-. Any ll*f *"• the tdllCMld dell· Ina lime le){ N reotlPt of
blCll ahell be l'91UfMd '°
blddtr unoc>INd. " ... bl Ill eote *PO'~
of the blOOtr lo '" hit hit bid II ~ In
PT: :rlld DoCuNnll
8Vanguard U softball goes to the series, aga.ln -
After reaching the NAIA World Serles last season,
the Lions, with a senior-heavy squad reached the
tournament.for the second year in a row, the first
Lions squad to accomplish such a feat.
After two wins to open the tournament, the Uons
were nipped by No. 2-seeded Oklahoma City
College, 5-4, and Alabama's Spring Hill College, 4-1 ,
finishing the season with a record of 48-13.
90CC's 6-0T thrtller-ln a game that refused to
end, Orange Coast Cotrege's football team finally
put away Long Beach City, 48-42.
No game in the history of the NCAA has ever gone
six overtimes, like the Nov. 6 homecoming thriller.
Pirates quarterback Jared Flint threw for 348 yards
and three touchdowns m the game, while .
USC-bound Jimmy Banks scored the gdJDe-winn.ing
touchdown on a 12-yard rumble to paydirt.
The game took nearly four hours to complete as
both teams combined for nearly 1,000 yards of
offense.
The funny thing was that it was a 7-7 defensive
battle for the first three quarters, before the
fireworks.
..
1 OVU women's hoops reaches sweet 16 -After
reaching the NAIA Tournament the previous
season, the unseeded Llons returned to the "little big
dance" and knocked off fifth-seeded Lipsomb
College, 71-66, March 17. .
The Llons hit a tournament-record 12
three-pointers in the game, including five by Amee
Pina, who finished with 17 points.
Kristi Wright led the Lions with 25 points in the
school's e biggest win ever. HAPPY 2000 everyone!
;~~;. :·.·-. 4; ' ( '.
~ ,'-.. _.: . .,,.
Pl!''".;' .~. ~ t"'~ L
k ....
I
mey be ObC.ined ...
Oflfcl of lie Cly Englo nMr, 77 Fllr DIM. CCII* ...... c.llDmll. upon Hftrefu11,.IM1 ,,.. ............. ................. ;:.:i.:.~l: · II'• all there
.c1aa ...... ,..9:.0:£~ ev,ery day ~:-Ii In Claulfled
c-. .. 642-5878 •
..
asc~I L.w~,J L .. .w~I L_.,.:::J IPOBLfC~I ecu~•G :!::!.
NOTICE OF The W~ and any eodldl1 A HEARING ~ the months trom Ille "•MO NOTICE OF THRV FIESTAUAANT}
PETITION lr9 ava•I b1e lor llt· pe1111on w111 be held on dell noticed at>Ove NEGATIVE LOCATED AT 3030
TO ADMINISTER aminatlOl'l In tne lile kept FEBRUARY 10, 2000 11 YOU MAY EXAMINE DECLARATION r~RE~)R C 8;>U}~~~~
ESTATE OF: byrm ~TITION re· ·~~!f: ~~~7~~ :re~ ~~f :Y~. p~~Nt~8Sl~lv~f8~ ENVIRONMENTAL
F. RUTH RYAN Quests authority 10 ad· Drive South, Orange, CA teres1e<1 1n lhe t,tta!e, HAS PREPARED A OETEl'lt.41NATION
;,ot CASE NO. A200459 min1st11 the ntate llnder 92868 you may l~a with the NEGATIVE OECLARA· NEGATIVE OECLARA To d heUs, beneU the ll'ldepand9nt Adnun IF :YOU 08JEC1'. IO the court a RttQuesUor 506-: TION ADOAl!-SSING TION. (AVAILAB1£f08... , c:ia11e1, cradlto,., COl\I• lstrattOll of E&1at11 ACI oranung o1 Iha petition, Cllll Notice (torrn OE·154) POSSIBLE REVIEW AT THE PLAN ~nt Oled•IOIS Ind ~I· (lhi• Aull'lonty llrill allOw yoo ltlOUld appear •I Iha ol lhe f11oog of an lnvan· ENVIRONMENTAL IM· JN!~.ou • .°R'vvt1S210NTO JF~9u~ sons who may otheiw1'8 ht personal reprewnt· headno and stall your tory and 1pPrar1al ol es· PACTS FOR THE FOL """ " """'
t>elnlt,.Sle<l In the Wiii or attve to take many ac-ObjeetlOns Of fol& wrin•n tat• aueta orol any ~ti LOWING PROJECT AAIFV 3v•o2000u )),IS'-' TO •eata\e, o< both, o1 t1ons 11r1tt10u1 c»ta.~ objecoon:> wilt\ the ooun \Ion or account as OEVELOPMENL RE W n
F. RUTH RYAN court approval. Before belOI• the hearing 'foor p1ovlded tn Probate VIEW OR·99·22 FOR OPRR008VIDTE .. ,Neot.AFUMRTEHNETRS
A PETITION FOR 1aklngc.artalnyery1mP<>fo ap~anince may be In Code lectiOn 1250. A JIM lHEUSCH AU· ....
PROBATiha1bffnf,1ed lantL~s however. person or by yout at· AeqtJest for si::1 No-THORIZEDAGEN,TFOR ~i?.f~EAT~!tl THE
by JANICE FIESEL the P"raonal represent· torney tk:oformlsavalablelrom DAVTON HUTTON PL'"NNING OIVISIO"' ln theSu~norCourtOf awawittbeniqulrtdto IFVOUARE A CRE:DI theoouncler1< CORPORATION TO " ''
, Calllomll, County of give notice to Interested TOR ot contingent credi Attorney for the CONSTRUCT A 143 500 !T...,\Zt~!}N548·=5245. f ~ANGE. persons unleu Chey tOf' o1 lhe deceased, ~ Pttllloner: 5 0 FT TA R G' ET ruu ''""" .attE PETITION FOR have ""elved not~ or musr Ille your cla1trt w\ln DOMINIC e. RAINONE, STORE WITH A 9 000 Beacll·Coi>ta esa Daily
, ~ATE raquesta that con sen tad Io I he t~ court and mall a copy ESQ., (CS81 1 n2.26), SQ FT GARDEN CEN Pilot January 10. 2000
JANICE FIESEL proposed action.) The In· to tho ~rsonal repre· ATTORNEY AT LAW, TEA ANO A s OOO M73R _ be appointed u personal dependent admlnls· .an1a11ve appointed by 4189 CAMPUS OA., SQ FT DISTRICT ' OF t-::TH..,,.--..-:i"""'...--mo.;rr
1epresent1M 10 admWI-ttatlon aUlhonty Wiii be U\e court within lour SUITE 550, IAVINE, CA FICE 58 200 SO FT OF ZONING AOMINIS·
1ster Iha e11ate of Che de-018tlled unle11 an In· months ftom I.he date of 92e12 MAJOR ' TENANT IN TR.A TOR WILL RENDER
<*Sent . terested person Illes an the first taauance of lef· Published Nnport LINE SHOPS ANO FIVE A 0 E C I SI 0 N 0 N
• THE PETITION rt• ot>teaion to Iha pelltlon lers as prowded tn Pro· Beacri-Costa Mesa Dally FREESTANDING PAO THURsDAV. JANUARY
• queat• the deoedenl'I and shows OOod c.use bale COde MCllOn 9100 P110t January 10. 14, 17, 81JILOINGS TOTALING 20 2000 OR AS SOON •. w• Ind codteilt, it any. why the CX>Urt should not The hme tor hllllO clalms 2000 M736 17.925 SO.FT ' (IN AS POSSIBLE THERE·
PUB UC
NOTICES
, ON THE FOt.·
LOWING ITEMS
I ZONING APPUCA·
I ION ZA·99 57 FOR
COMPASS TELCOM
SERVICE. AUTHOR·
IZED AGENT FO A
SOUTHERN CALIFOA
NIA DISON COM PANY1R06EATI C:RAN
FOR A MINOR CONDI·
TION•L use PERMIT ro AOO AN EOVIP·
MENT CABINET, RE·
PLACE POWER CASI·
NET AND ADO THREE
ANTENNAS FOR A TO
TAL OF 12 ANTENNAS.
ON A M ONOPOLE
ORI G INALLY AP -
PROVED UNDER Z>.
95·08, l,OCATEO AT
1300 GISLER AVENUE
IN AN l&R ZONE
ENVIRONMENTAL OE
TERMINATION
E>CEMPT •
2 ZONING APPLICA·
TION ZA·99·59 FOR
COMPASS TELECOM.
SERVICES, ~UTHOR
llow to Place A
a r n m~111
•• ....... .. Mii
1 ·H ll•ID•liuaTI .... ..... "
1'1 •1H l:J .,. .. ,.
SERVICE DIRECTORY
-For All Your Home and Business Needs -
...., .. ..,........,,._.. ne. *
......
• •
...... ,
a....+. eo.ooo ....._ ,,,.h """ ,.,.. 0n1. s2a ....... , ... 1c. """·' • c.11 '-""'-. .t 641.s•r• •24s
flASSIFIE IJAD
o,· Fa\:
.,,.., tdf ·11°•''1
I'!. ""' I ~" ,. 4•111' 111111· t ,,,, f'I
11.,(l •1tf1 I l'flll •1l1toh
B~·Phone
1)~11 tt-+.!· ·,,.-;:
th· UalVln Person: .
l Ill \\. ,, II " ..... ' ' I
I 11 I 1 \I. •·I I \ '1_!11..!-
lr \, ., • .,, 1,1 ol .\ I~. •1
Hours
l..lo l'li1o111 ;{ lll.1111-·, Hltp111
\L,...[JI hhl.t•
\\ . .tl-lu ;: :11.1111-; llCJI''"
11 ... ~, I n-1n
7
I N~~~11 ..=11 ~1
NEWPORT MESA SELF FORMATION ON TliE Ttus statement wat
STORAGE/LYLE ABOVE APPLICA· ltle<I with lt'4'l County
PARl(S JR FOR A Ml· ftONS, TELEPHONE C1e1t1 of Orange County _
NOR CONDITIONAL (714) 7S4·6245 OR on 12·16-99
USE PERMIT TO ADD CALL AT THE OFFICE 1'"611'421
THREE ANTENNAS OF WE PLANNING ()ally PiloC Dec 20. 27.
AND THREE EQUIP· DIVISION ROOM 200 Jan 3 ~o. HMI M722 ME.NT CABINETS TO T7 FAIR DRIVE. COSTA A>/ ANTENNA FAC4UTV MES,. CALIFORNIA fi~ltlOUI 8ua nett ;__
0 R I G IN AL L v A p PUblisheO Newl>(>n N•m• SU..ment
PROVED UNDER ZA· 8eeeh·C0511 Meu Dally TN! t ~ P4Jrson$
96·11 , LOCATED AT Plloc Janua!) 10 2000 aredo!not>u:.inessas
2550 NEWPORT BOU· M737 •) Webs f()( Sucass
LEVARO IN A Ct ZONE Fl~iUoua BualneH t>) Fun IOI Pett, 22l 2nd
ENVIR0Nt.4ENTAL OE· Name St81ement St. HuntJngton Beaen.
TERMINATION E~· The lollowlflO !*'ON CA 92848
EMPT • ar• doing buSineas 15 Ano M Jotines, 221
IF THE ABOVE AC• SNUG KARBOR CAFE, 2nd St Hunllnglon
TI 0 N ( s ) Is I A A E 2S. Hill Place. Costa Beacn CA 92648
CHALLENGED IN ~.CA 9l627 r~ bVS!neSS II\ 000-
COURT, THE , Timothy J Murman & dueled by an ll'ld1vldUBI
CHALLENGE MAY BE ·Cynthia D. Murman.. 254 Have you 11811ed doing
LIMITED TO ONL y H II Plei;e. Costa Ma~ bo51n(JSS )ti?"'°
TH 0 S E t SS U E S CA &2627 • AM M. Johnes.
RAISED IN WRITIEN T"45 b\Js Nin IS con· Tl\il • sta1eme111 was
CORRESPONDENCE dUC1td by l'll.ISban<I and ltled ..., ll\ the County
DELIVERED TO THE wilt Clerk o1 Orange Counly
ZONING ADMINI S· Have you started doing on 12·28·911
TRATOA PRIOR TO bu1>1nus yet1 No • 19998115259
THE ABOVE DATE Timothv J Murman Dally Pilot Jan 3 10. 17 • F.OR FURTH£R IN· 24 2000 M 'J
ll,111·· ,11111.to 1oll1111 t 111•' •1llo111 I 111 t l1,1Jl!,!I' II llltt11tl 111111'1 I fw
1'lll1l1·l111 I• •11\t •tho 11:,lll 111 •I ll•UI 11~ f.1-.1f. 11 II"'' ur 1•')•1 I
1111.t.1--1r1 .. 1 ... 11.111···1111·111 1.1.-.1 ... ''I"'"·"" . 11 .. , 111" 111,1\ 1 .•
111 ''"" d.1··1h··•l ... I 1111111 ... t..11• h I hi· I> uh P1l111 ",, ,,,. 1111
lt.1!.1l1t1 1111 Ill\ 1·11111 Ill olll ·1''"'111•1 1111111 l••I ~ 1111 Ii II Ill.II f11•
It 'I"'''"''''' ,.,, q•I 1111 it ... ' 11•1 ool 11 .. ·1· •·' "Ill 1lh •• , 111'1• .1111
lu • 11111 I ''•Ill 1,111 """ 1 .. 11l111u d (111 1111 tir .. i 111·••1111111
....-----Deadlines ·-----.
\luncl,I\ ............ rnda) :l:OOp111 rhur-.1lo.11 .. \\1·d1w ... d,1\ 5:00pnt
I u1·-1l,J\ ........ \tondJ\ 'l;OOpm ~ ;,tl,1~ .... 1 ltur .. .fa~ ;i:OOp111
\\1·d1w ... da1 .... Tu1· ... dm .):(IOp111 ..., 1111nl.1, ........... Frirl111 ,);(l(lpm
112 HOUSWCOffOOS 204 RENTALS 1448 ANTIOUESIARTI 471 EMPl.OYMfNT '476 EMPLOnENT 476 EUPLOYllENT
FOR Raff TO SHARE /COU.ECTJBLiS:I OPPrYS OPPTYS OPPTYI NEWPORTB~CH -.~----~....,1 ;::=:=:=:::::==:=.r..::===::======:.i..:=:==:=====::;"
92HOUSEllCOllJOS · 1109 APTS I FOR SALE CORONA DEL MAR NEWPORT BEACH
132 AP.TS NEWPORT BEACH . @
EQUAL HOUSING BANKRUPTCY
OPPORTUNITY TRUSTEE SALE
Alt ,. ........ •fttlllll•• Ill tllll Luxuty Pfopet1y looeled In
Iha ~· Oiled com-_,,.. 11 M'itd " '" ,... roor.ty oe the e.lcoun Town
"'11 tlf llHil•t Ari tlltM 11 Colection oft Ford Ao.s In _,.. .. ~ .. .-n lllhtpl
It tt1tt11t, llf ~Hct, Ne#p()lt 8eactl Plan two
llllllltllta ti flmi•IHllH model, 3320 sf, 28d, 38a ~ ...... net. ultt, 1tllf.... 2-c var• and klxunous amtnltiec lhrOUQhout USled .... ~ .... 1•1111111111•1" ptlce Is S753.000 Truslee's
a11ltw1I tfltle, "" "*llitl Agelll taJung n11118$ and 1' ... , ftf •te• ll'fltfftct. numbers o1 . people in·
lhllllltM • •""""""' • tefe&ted In malling • bid on n11 ... ,,,,., ,.111 '" ,,. P'Ol*'r Propeny nee yet
Uttl!etfl ICct,l lllJ Wnlt!t.. IYllllable to silo\¥, ftool plafr
•HI "' "'' 1.rt11t .-a h It anc1 llddlM$ may be faxed 10 ---............ r.-.. ""' lrtet'elled pet1y Id In-
•• '" .... .., ........ 11111 111 ltleSted petties must reois·
fwtttllfl ''"'llu• II i.11 tel ..... th agent Cal the
..,.....,. '" "'..... .. .. T1ustee'1 Agent. Doug ........ "1 .... l .. tM· Eohelb«tt; IOI more .,.
..... tf ................. hll ltUO IC>m\lllOn It 94~9&-nl 1 '*""" 1·"''424 IMI rw NEWPORT HElGHTS I ... WIUlltlff, DC lttl ,tent Ext•a large Loi 38r 2Ba ullHUh•~ I houae Tneluded Call
949-646-201 1 I i ---1 -w-A-TE~R-F=R...,.0-NT~F~IX~.E~R
TME PRICE
WILlAMAZE YOU I
AGE.NT 94t-7234120 :****•*****: Ocean CfO&e-381 2.688 * QLD'O • Twrne. Ntv w/2c an 911, • • d new pwe. wet bar, llJ)lc, * SHOWCASE * 3 decks S289.ooo Joan t HOMES : Suttee.~ 949-759-9314 * FOR SALE * 18A ~fuOio new l&fui'iS. • * "'* II\ cloMt. YICll't. ~· In Our Sat : '9C'5Std llgtOlg 1n l<i1cllln, : Real Eitate * gaced comm · s11e.ooo. * * ~r ~250"'525 * S~plementl • I 1 I : HOMES OF : as~
! THE WEEK : ...GRi"cOm • • • Dlaplay Ada : 38f 3.681 gated oomm. 11g : Start at $751 * comer kll IUltl ~
_: Deadline t ~ ~~. F:3~nds
• Tuesday SP~ : l'talnlmProc>.949-558-0S05
.-: Open House • r~: .Ll1tlng1 : 17~ Lt Only $151 : ICllftl
• Deadline • ! Thursday SPM : * It Paya to :
1 t Advertise * i In the Best : * LOCAL :
: Real Estate •
: Section :
·: Call Todayll :
j ~s~~:S~ i * ANNE WILLEY t
: 949-574-4249 : •••••••••••••
------
• : .. T.. •
xn am Uti<lD
36 e<;r• $19.900 Beeutrt\11
ranch In WI~
• ,... petfed 8 100' cJmale.
~ lllOUIUln Yl8WS,
bOfdels lllle lend Easy
terms Call AZLR
1 ·877 ·244•1439
(CAL 'IC"'")
!Jllllf··~ ,,<' . t ~1f'4:. I~.; • I
\' ~ '. >, .. . ·' -.-.-
THE SHORES
"APTS
2br 2J>a, HEAR HOAG, NB Home tem prtrd Private '¥Hiler, dryer, g1r1ge, MUST 6E£1 3t>r '2bl Clf>li, 1oom/balh, poo111acuzz1. WANTED
wallc to beacttl S1175/mo. newly remod, walk 10 bell! lulehen prtvs ~s garage ANTil\UES 94H4WM3 Great toe. S195tVmo. Call $650/mo 949-S74-4013 V
2bf Hii, MW!y tor Info. 949-723·1502 ~ 1 & 2BR
TOWN HOMES
$300 OFF
MOVE·IN
Selected Units
38 <sea ;:;;;;i I I O~r Style l'Urniture returblthed, 1 car gartge, r '-_. COUl18 WlW 208 FOR AENTUASEOFFICES PIA.NOS a. CollectJblH Hewpott Heloht• 1re1, 2c garage, S2400lmo • -··. r ..... ...,...
S1200imo. 94\..219-7305 CBI! Batbara Sa~rel ·s·..-.·-·OI'-<•'-·•
Sf>1clou1 28r/291 Condo 949-644--019 CANNERY VllLAGE $$ CASH PAID $$ Style WIO. lrplc gated UDO ISLE/I ... .,..,. ..... ..,.-..
4 Avaiablel S218S.S2,400, 2·Sty, lmmiot wt.Jc gar. 1400 s 1 laige open space WE BUY ESTATES
••••••••••• 1-877"68t·7387 Immediate Occupancy ~~~·ut:C:r'Oi
Eie91frt 1 Of '28r'1 24 Hour $5,000. dnve by, 419 30\h St. New· Starting 0
$1095/mo.
glled. ~pool, spa, steps . ,........,---=----. port 8each. 949-723-6333 to Fastllon lsllnd From
S2100 can f?8n-681-1aa1 Mo to Mo lease.
•*We are a pet ..
community. 1 155 ~:=1 6 blocks
from the beach •
949-644-2611 Sanlllad StUdlo, Stepe to CHRIS EDWARDS
Belc:h, • OC*ll Vtlt#, while .. ~9-723-5061
2br 1bl Sovlh of Hwy,
W11her/dfY9t, aundec)c,
garage, no an\oktlpet.
ble & Qllf1lle llnal j)lllO le 949-83f..1785 949-363-1506 Arif E1taft1 Propert •
Sl400fmo. tcM7J.S069
Av1111hre fOi • Umlt;d
Time Ontyl 2Br, Fp. ""Id, oar, IW9SOIT'.e location near
COM end NB 949-640-2800
Studio Apt. lie. lily eotMe-
ntanl toe AvtJ 151 Wtelf ol
Fett ()pell HM Sii/Sun 1-4.
iVpets sns 949173«>78
2BR 18A SOUfH OF HWV
UPP'f, no peta. 1 "' Ol'l98• SHOO/mo. WMll·
day• AM MMS3-7445
1114-·=I
*COSTA MESA'S ltEST * Junior I bedroom and
I bedtoom. also 2 bedroom
I bdl 0\1181 gated com-lnt!MY. pool, teMIS. easy
access 10 freeway, beticti.
and l!llla. 114-557-0075
t9dnn $67!/iTiO.+ $500
dip 352 VICtolla Clean.
neei. QOl1Y9IW1C 10 freeways
' beach. 949-548-0540 2er 1L on biJis neer beaeh, W/d hk-\JP, 1C git,
$835/mo small pet otc, ~2-9699
l"'=nl]
CORONA DEL MAR
3BR VIEW HOMES
• $2300 ' '2750/Mo AGENT (949) 717-4746
tt.w vie# Hilla SOiltii.
38r I~ home Wl3c: ga.r, S320Mno Cal Ka\tly agt 544~&t 159
Cflarmlng 28r 1SI Olf W/d hk-ups, nu CllJ>. movHI c:ond 514 Mal10old s 1850
IM9-675·3888 IM'9-53U553
FAJRWAY APARTMENTS
AT BIG CANYON
GATED COMMUNTTY BY FASHION ISLAND
Beautlfol tree•llned atreeta and golf courae
v .. ws. Enjoy cerefree IMng in your tariie
2 SR apartment hOmel
~~t~>revf/~na
~:r,tuu-bnu1/.~
~· cot11m-iqr will. -'""* beKh
8' muina. Walk • Balboa lal*Ad ·~ Minute• f'rom FMhion ha-d. Eircra-
t H,... ,,. ,,."'""" wht. _,,...,.,. "11rni,. ..
tirepl*A lMMi pn~19 pnrp.
• Baet ·Ii~~, .... SonyNo~
NOW LEASING 2BlltllBA
-cl.llRllaA ..... -· Sl9"...U.00
PSeue call (949) '8-0919
Eiqvlllti remodeled ocean
V1'IW 28r+den. 28a, 1-sty,
$379,000. Diane Seidel, f11$I
TIMI 94~52·5511.~pgr
BIG CANYON
BROAOMORE
Wdloe:lled 48•S8a Irr.med occupancy, m l eood, lrg yrd,
• 'f8ll lels4 S4500l'mo
949-723-0940 Of
IMll-'S09-886l'pf
2&; Hou•, 1blll lo°'"*'·
GrNI ~t LMn!I
room. new Plll\I. S1500tmo 'st • ltlSt. 323-269-8600 dly 94H7S-2814 aner Sprn.
OR THE S»ioi 2bf 2t>1 •
oarage. 7004 0cean1rorc •A I yr is. Express ~ S2500'mo 949-67$-3869
iii\ 2BA new paint,
btk:ony, MCUnty 911tecl.
N8lf Hoeg Hoepllal
S1300mo Agt IMM73-7100
"NEWPORT Pbi1NSULA'
38R 1 BA New paint Ind
carpet. $1175/mo.
AgtMM7HIOO
'NEWJIOliT PbiiNSULA' 28A 1 BA Mew paln'/carpet.
2 ear ~-S 130Clmo Agt IMMn-1eoo
1BAYRiOoe· 28A 2BA
YIUlltd celhnga, ltnmac
Woodsy vi.w, l c:11 oar.
S1750rmo ~ 94~630
OCHn Vu Ofido nr beaCh 1&~ din, 11.t>I Galic!
COIMl wlpOOI, ape. tennll &
fie cntr ""$, carpet & ~ So\Ah IO loll of aun & ocean vu·s tom ~ery
room S 1500t'mo S2500t'MC ~9f71S.IS20
UDO ISLE
48t'* 5plCIOUI llY room.
formal clrtlrlO. 2 ~ ~~~.2cgar, $175,000. 1111 OMdj
Aealt0t1 MM7M111 •
1-~1
... Loee Welght.£am $$'"
Ell1etlv1, ~lford11bl1,
GuWlfllMd. Earn moner while Joaing weight. cal
714/491-4f31.
POSTAL JOBS
$48.323 00 yt Now hlrl~ •
No expenence • P8id t1aioog
. grut benllils Cal '°' 1$($, 7 days 800-429-3660 ext
J100 (CAL'SCAN)
HERPESOEvelCLR Stops Heflle$ Outbl'e~' ~ success rate. T ~ tree
1·877-EVERCLR Info
www ever c lr c om
(CAl'SCAN)
lOST' I FOUND
FOUND SEAGLE MIX,
FEMALE HUNTINGTON
SCH Nfttand/Yorktown. Old dog, 714-536-9404
FOUND COM stAMESE
CAT CALl TO DESCRIBE
M .. 7'23'6325
LOST NALE YOUNG CAT OREY W/wtllle p1w1. e SIDE Com ...._, Call evea. tcf.5t5<03S7
LOST HB. Au1treH1n lhlpherd mlxtd dog mile,
1 Y't-CM tage MIM Cole.
Tf "'81-51S171 ""41-t$05 1412 -z=I
A Plivlte Family Butlel
&tMll Garden '"' 4 Of .. L~ 11 Pacrl~ VitW Askin~ $125.000 Cati
SlMn. IM9· 722-780'l
1·-=1
OELL COMPUTalS
.... Fac101y•d11ect so ~ lJ)w titorlHy Pl'/" men P.-.utn Ill llOO 1111111-
lblt R ~ed ctt<M prOl>-
lllM ()1(1 Cal by Jan " for lru printer O MC
1-800-41HOl8 Code ~
(CAL'SCAH) sUsoAto FIREWOOD
S116 COAD
'"EE DELIVERY -.1111111 reeeon. 71"""'"°'1 t
WOlJf fAhNHd Ros
TAN AT HOME
8UY DIRECT ANO SAvt:I COMMERCI~
unb from$ 190 00
Low~ PIVfl*JI FMt ColOf Cetaloo Cll t 800-711-0151
IGDCASH? .. llMTIOI ..
~ ·--.....
;:649-49229
SOUTHC8AST AUCTI N
~So. llWll St. Saott1 AM. CA 12707 ~·\ r.,.....C.A •ltia
1454 FURNITURE J
Clrcultr Sp1nllh din tibia
w/4 matchlnQ chairs, S250. 1on cuatom d811gnef eofa,
$200. MM32..e913
25 Gallon Aah T ante Wllll
r.arytllng n:1 kt! I mnn<h
old, $250 Obo IMt-7'21 .. 572.
88 GALLON F1SH
TANK with llghts,
3 flltert, 1tand, I fJsh. $150.
714--540-5995
r~1 1
CONSOLE PtANO
IOUndS great O<tv $150
714-527-0800
-,.. .
~.·.
-----
Work for Census 2000
A Good PayingTemporary Job.
The Census 2000 needs you co help count in your
commun1cy. We'll train and pay you 'as census
mkers (we call them enumberacors). You ll be paid
wcckJy. These temporary full-time and part-time
jobs lase for four to six wc;eks and hours ace flexible.
You'll worke~nings and weekends
h 's a great way to earn money as a second 1ob. or
jwr a way co e.ir1 che extra mo ney you need. But
the bcsc part is hat you can be prou.d, knowing
·you're helping yot.r comtnuniry. We need you oow-
so get involved. Call us today.
1-888-325-7733
www.census.gov/jobs2000
An Equal Opporrunicy Employer
ceFrsus
2000
AN IMPORTANT JOB ·THAT PAYS
8 Mondo)t1 Jonuory' to, 200<1 • · • •
I
TODAY'S
. __ c_R_o_s ___ s ___ w_o_Ro_r_u .......... z_z_LE---'
ACROSS 63 Mole! !Mtur•
t Utnlme<J &4 Seu-et mow.
5 Sl/atagema 85 Alimony
10 ao.a.i 1'1K*V9fl I• o.tedwe Wolle H F.ii.ating
15 SaYtna •• '8 LIMl-Ot pen:el 87 SnOoped
17 In d\alOOt ot ee Compui.r
l 8 Rav!M ft0111ge 19 Ptld(lyeMdt • ~ ~ hOIClers ' DOWN
23 Actor -IQhneon t Sld'ck·up 24 Type ot crtrne ()( !*toll
cl*l • 2 CIOIN« SlllWU 25 'tlf*\ng 3 PitC:her
moournent ~
28S.1 . 4 ~ 33 Adl90 Streep 5 Farm vehicle•
34 Sc:arc:e e Goddess'
3e Gymnast Ko!tlut stalue 37 TUl'kiell t.ille 7 Pie-cust 38~ ~edlenl
38 ~ gat1and 8 Breakfast Mier
40 TMkenfe IOOfld , , 9 Espv "2 Taverns .o c~ '3 ·-we 1 pellf' government ~ Spring !lower OfOhlbltfon 47 Four SCOle 11 Smear
llWlUI ten 12 Barrette user 49 Mdse."lnlo 13 Other 50 Stage of a 21 Food wrapping,
J()llmey ~ -Antonio 5t r,_ Spurs
54 Argued In llVOf 24 Troublta ol 25 Old cattle town
80 Exated 26 Get uncJlf wa~ et Boy SQout unit 27 Wipe out •
Ba T !Out's 11ome 28 Danish doltat •
1
, ..
•Pl OE~STAATORS•
Wkends In grocery stores In area, car nee, must bl n1tt.
frjendly wtaales ablllty
1MH<&N 283/714-n 1-esn
PRIVIOUS PUZZU &<X.VED
28 Salad gtMn 48 Wadded
30 a.rtiJO of rums HCl'etty
31 007, e.g. 51 Bind
32 Congr.gatlon. 52 Composer e.g. StravlnSky 35 COlumn1$1 53 Midday •
Landela $.i canoonist Pe1er
38 Metal fOf 55 Many pets =ling 56 M«lse ooualtl "1 51 u .... __ .. "'"', tranapon conti.balld ~ S8 -out makN 43 With, In do Marse1llH 59 Omc.
4" Wined and lurn1Sh1ng dlnl<I 61 Catch eome
48 Ajlr, IO a poet rays
'!'ll"""'n'!~~l ~~ ..
PIT Dl'tv.r, 3 dayl/Wk, to
dallVer medlcd ~. ~
bl rellllble, have good OMV,.
dtlv& Co. Vlll 94~2·2010.
SALES
Comm lllMPllP9f OfOOP ~for lnllde Siles repe Shollfd possess strong phone sales ablllty, be
organiz.ed, & have xir. cUSl PfT Otc Worti, IOcal errands. servtoe sk*8 Sllaly+comm. Flex h<KKs to flt your sched-Benallt pkg lrd 401 k plan
Ille. Computer, oftlce sklb Drug screenlng/physlc11 needed.$~. No amolcilg. reqd. EOE. ~reeume to
East CM ~ 949-642.0101. t:::'Jc Dini*, 330 W81t
AETAL CWIK flex lv1, -~ "" ~ :::. Cfo ·FTfPT IOf local PIWmlcy. (949) 831~94 Senella. cart Chllllll or · Vinoenl 7t4·540-89f9.
FIND. ~
By CHARW GOREN
wllh OMAR SHARIF
and TAHNNf HIUSCH
Q I • f\\ ~.1u1h 'uln.:1,1hlc, )OU
11111<1
-
there i~ the flO\Mhthtv ul l\\11 •f!UCI.:
lo 1.'.I' 111 Hll\! Ill 1111,•111 1\1\\.
I • Q 4 • A' ';uuth. vul11cr ,ihlc. wu
hold I IK' h11ld111~ ha\ p1111:l'l'Wtl
NORllJ MSI' SOVlll I• 2• ll11s~ \\'"~°'I • • /\ I\ 9 7 l 'Y' A () 7 <> I< 4 • JO IJ 7 1'11\~ J• P11~~ ?
Wh•1f du you hul mm !
A • Parmer 1s \hH\\ lllj! ,, very JlllWer
·ful l1o111d, 11nd you crn1kl have noth
lllJ! I lo1A-cv.:r. your 11Ao t1vc·1:.trd
IL.., \Ull\, t:lll.'.h l"·a<li:d hy an h11nor.
n:1>1cc;cnt n f,'X>ll hold111i,t. Cc11m11ly. y11u c;innot liJ li:~s thal fuur hcans,
hut we rrclcl'" a i:uc h1J ~I h111r
duh,, a\ldnttJ1arh1CJ1 10 d1uo..c 1111.·
w11 Slam rn 1nm11111.I~ could he a
~tll'i pmpo~11i1111 th.111 11:nnc m
hl'•ll I\ on 1>11111c holdtng-~. '
Q 2. J\~ Sou1h, vohwrJhl.:, )'1)11 • 1 IK>ld
•JllJ O AQ72 () 65 •Q R62,
The h1tk.lin!! ha<; pnxcct.lcd. W~T NOR 111 E/\SJ SOUJ H
l•11s.s I NT Uhl ?
Whtn ~liun do you t:ikc?
A • Ynur firs1 task i~ 111111!01111 r art·
ni:r Iha• lhc ha11J hc:le111g.R to ynur
side 'Ilic tcxtt>tx1t.. w;1y to ui:cu111·
[lliSh tlUll IS (O n .. -Jc1uhfc. 'lllat k3VCS
1hc way vpc11 111 dnohlc tile orro-
ncnts for pcnaltie~ or to buy the
hanJ )Our wny.
Q 3 • Buth vulncrahlc, U.\ South you
hold. •
•75 43 c;>9 765"<>~6 +AK8
N1mh opc11~· 1hc hiJJing..-wi1h five
d1:1111011d~. What xtiun Ju you ta~c'/
A -Panncr's prcc111r1 should show
nine lricks al 1l11s vuh~ral>ihty. ond
your 1hrcc hrings the total up to 12.
However. partner ca111101 h.1vt tiigh
curd control of hoth 11m1or suits. so
What 1s your 11pc11111g hid 1
' A · llicn.· .ire tho"4! who r\'lu ... h>
upc11 011c nu~1u1111l wl11:11 hol.t111~11
livc·cllrd mawr. But suppow '11u
open 11nc ~r1111t• and p.irtrn;r I\ pond'
one no 11u111p Whal m1w·l 'I''•• 110
trump i, 1111 ovcrh11l und a11ytl111ll! ·
• i:I~ 1111srcpresenh your holdm"
• AvuiJ the l)tohlcm hy 011e1111w 01~
110 trump.
Q S ·As South, \uh1~·111hlc, \1•11
IK1IJ·
•Void c;>KJ064 0 (,111165 • \K752
l'.1rtncr upen~ tlk: b1JJ111g. \\ 11h 111k!
duh. Wh.1l do you rc.\111111d'
A • You wanl to prll~ lur u •t I Iii
in a major, hul there i$ 11n rc.1-.. •n
why you shoulJ oOI hid you• ,1111'\
up the line Respond Olk! dm1111md.
P.inncr will mtroduc.e)k!art<o 1\ 11h a
four ·ciud holdintt· Ir pOrtncr 11111'
011y1h111g olM'. r.ll~C duhs llC XI
Q 6 ·.A~ Sou1h, vulncrnhlc, )1•11
huld·
•A K86 ? c;>Void 0 75 •/\1.)\1652
'lhe hiddm~ hasf mci:cdcd. SOU'IH WK~ NOR'IH l.M1"l'
• • Pa~ Jo l'1is~ 7
Whut Jo you hid now'!
A -You hnve the mali.ing-; nl .1 pow-
erful di~lnbulwnal hand -ii p.utncr
has fillers for your suits. But ''"'re 1s
the possih1h1y uf :i mi<>lit -;(1, h?1 1hc nonce, he conh•nt with a 1chul 11f
one spack.
1 471 -=11~11~~1
Do you h1v. ftntnei.I Plaut be IWll'e thit ~~R~::u~~~ probleme? Ho credit?
the llltlngt In thllcet· sltuallon. cari tcir <letllls. 8kt BM credit? The wont tgory may require 91646-2011 or 91683-S911 6tecffl? Startlni off • 1111all
you to ca11 a eoo COi<EJP£PSWJEicR'S/ r ~,~ Cell ue
number In which Flilo Veodln!t Roules 30+ t'*-1t • chal've ·per ·high ttalfic 16callolw. F>rora minute. up to $1500 weeldyll Mil·
m.ii Investment $-4,000. A-
n 1 n c Ing. Free Video.
Hl00·337-1375 (24 hOurs). {CAL"SCAN)
Plt111 be W1fY of out ot .,... companlet.
Check with the loc1I Better Bullnesa Bu· rel\I blfcn you eend an~ money or fM• for MrVlcM. Reid end
undef'stlnd 80Y con-tract• before you
llgn.
1-· .-·1
8EEH TUR~~D DOWN?
Need a home loan? Bl<'s,
toredocuras, lale PIYIT*llS· It's OKI Putchlse, rellnence,
debtCOOIOltdation, home Im-
~-f0116366M>RE yerifk:atlon 1(918)227 "°931.
Platlnum ·CaplUI.
1 ·800-699 ·53 83 ,
www.platlnumc1p1111.com (CAL'SCAH)
mHEED A LOAN? Coosolldate debts! Same
I»/ apptOVal Cut= up 10 50%11 No tlon
leesll 1•800·8 ·9008 ixt.949. www.help·pay-
bils.com (CAL'SCAN)
CASH HOWi FOR ·luttJre peymet'QI We bW lnsulance secllemenls,
lodel'f Mlnlngs end (/Wl18( linlnced mortgages c.n
A&P Cal)ltal 1 ·800-338-5815 ext 100. (CAL "SCAN)
11fl 8 01ton w1111er
Morauk wll5hp Suzvkl.
Bimini top, $14,SOO. M'""'1-"t10.
• HOME, HEAL TH AND BUSINESS
~1111111111111 ..
iUP IPlcton
BALBOA ISLAND for Silt
8oM up to 30 ft. . MM7M012
• 80lTsOP;
lnBlyfllandCCM .... 10 to 12ft ben, 40 to 50ft In
lengttl. Elec:tlWIW. ltowar
Of Ull. MM71·1143,
6Sft BOAT SHIP
(Cen take up lo 7511.)
Av_. ~ow. ~2810
MJ
Low 18k mllel, wNte, r...-lit
I lllOlll 8.tlance ol Wlrlanly.
Pr..OOU. Rental
(183917) $18.988 NABERS ,
(714)$40-9100
Chevy Delu11.e f/2 Ton
l.ongbed 79 350 V8, auto,
1ow oleo. stereo, realstefld 8'ZOOO $1200 IM9~1..:J852 ~:ilt!"c:,~~~.
AIC, 70k ml, $17,000
949·548-5485 949-378-9881
Cllijalef Clmit iJt 'M
Autom1tic, Air ConOtlonlng,
Tit, Full Powet Plk, Super
Cleln. Lexus trade-In. • (594150) $8.995
LEXUS OF WESTMINSTER
(900)2.91-3747
FORD EXf>LORER 198 ACURA IHTEGRA GS '97 (.1roup, •x4, aloys, lbs, rack
Metalllc burgundy/g1e1 (~A33074l $15.995 leattier, auto, afr, moonrool Mct<EHNA VO KSWAGEH
am'lm cass, Cd, premlur 1 714.142.2000
l<g=;.lbal. fact. 7f:.: 5 FORD EXPLORER •97
U$ OF WESTMINS'Tf .A Sprt, gr~.C!!'· el~. abe (998891At~r/ $15,995 (800)291-3747 MCKEMHA VOLKSWAGEN
ACura c:eg;nd 'M -714.142.2000 ~ owner. leather, FOl'd EiPi0i'9i' XLT'93 COO:·,l<:,=·94~6.g.1;: White, tan teathef lntfrio<,
BUICK LE SAB~E 't7 • ~95&f ~·.ct
LTD, low 33k ml, beige, nn!i FORD F100 !5'i co, and morel Super Clearu c•--1c R ,,_,. .. ... (511328) $18,988 -• • Ill)• ......... m ... , NABERS Mii, S.-OOO °' bett ott.r.
(714)540-9100 NM3t.fi532 * CadHLIC sea.,. oevi11e FORD WiNDSTAR LX 195 'N WJ\lte retlablt great wtila.'tan, auto,· dual" air,
conct 118' m~ Pf> S14,250 lull power P~ privacy
obo NM40-7100 ~· rooltadl. am1m cass. 5827) $11,9:95 Cldlllac COliCoure '95 CUS OF WESTMINSTER
J,.ow 4"k miles, V8 Nofthstar, (800)291-3747
leatlier, alloys, super cleant ..,.J1-9u-w""'x:l~R""Sid-:-an--..4Di.,-.·e&=
(289n•) $19,988 5401995 ""'740 (71~)5~~0o BAUER JAGUAR· 714-953.-480() CADILLAC ElbORADO ·93 J1g111r XJS '96
Touring, lo ml, VS Nol1hstar. 2+2 CONvtRTIBLE chrome Wheels. super &tlatp! $35,995 98-4840
(604387) $l3,988 BAUER JAGUAR
NABERS 714-9$3-4800
(7t4)540-9100 JAGUAR XJ5 L '97
CADILLAC FIMtwood '92 SEOAN 40
Lo ml. gray teath8f, reliable & ss7,995 e1..a22 IUXU!lousl New~ tradH'll u •au (221768) $8,988 BA ER J,. AR NABERS • 714-953-4900
(714)5*9too JAGUAR XJi L 'et
clldUiae sevllle StS '95 $37,995 SEOAH 40 97-4352
Low miles. s!Ner.gniy, cd, al-BAUER JAGUAR iovs. New car ttadHl! 71 • """3· ... ,.,. (830509) $18,988 ..---
NABERS (714)S40-9100
CHEVROLET TAHOE '91
2WD1 ~111\ef, many wttas,
8Xcellllnl condition.I (108654) $24,988
NABERS (714)UO-~OO
CHEVY ASTRO LS '99
SlN&rlgrrtf, automatic, dUal ~. tutr poWef pal(. roof rack.
oiass, chrome ~· !) $19,995 Of WESTMINSTER
(800)291·1747
SELL
through classified
JAGUAR XJS SOH 40 '97
138,995 97-4655
BAUER JAGUAR
71"'9n-4800
JlgUa" XJ6 Vanden Plu
Stdltl 40r '97
5"4,995 97-4661 BAUER JAGUAR
714-953-4800
Jagu11 XJ6 Vanden Plu
Sadan 40!' 'f7
S'2,9t5 97-"783 BA~RJAGUAR
714-953-4800
Jaguw XJf Vanden Plu
Sadan 4Dr '97
$39,915 97-4751
BA~RJAGUAR
714-85M800
~ .......
ail~ '1"' • .....
l
Low mllea, non·emoll.,,
leather, co. lllOVI & lllOftl
(807189) Sl.988
NAIE"I (714)'40-1100
olbiiioed llDo ... Gt.S-. lo 1911 It'll, l9d lnlh8f, v-e. co. a1oys & lllOl'lt
(3&ms) s1ue1 NAllE'RS •
('714)64Mt00
OtbSllOIJLt Aunn 'ii
Jaguw XJ8 1M MilililC, II
bkle, ecyt, llM, llhf, NC. IUll pwr, cc, sunrt. tint, chrome ~ $7500 949-760-0754 Low 27lt ml. lllM•. tan th.·
JAGUAR iii 'M vlNDtH xlnl com , bll. ol wwr.I
PUS «loaf, lul pwf, sun • (125539) NABERS 119,988·
rool. wire wheels. 1 owner, (714~9100 rllCOldl, roly clean car _
$5900tob0. 9'9·723-1604 PONTIAC f 'ii
Jeep Grind &Obi '" Power J:o h'aclloil control,
6 cyl. II.Ito, NC, lttv, lull pwr, = lvacy ~an;: ~a~o:s:~:=· rectc.' &LY f9K1'1l£S
JEEP MXHo cH£AOKEE l'£<>furbi: wesn.J:im
LAREDO '93 Wfjte/grey int. (to0)2tt4747
FUiiy loaded, V8, ASS, new IHNm OU 'to
tires, Ol1o owner, d reconss. Bladt IOlded lilted CUilom eeautttur Must se1u 1to.tto ures!Wllee1s Musi Seel 080 94•721-N72 . LEXUS Es300 '97 $10.350. Ctll 949-874-7000
Peart White AAH0E ROVER 't2 (042204) $2i1 995 VI, All PoMt, CC, tllf.
LEXUS OF WESTMINSTER et~ cauette. co1 •umt.
(I00)291-3747 ~::1 .. ~~~tl'=
LEXUS ESiOO 'N obo. b1v. NM-45..fiOU Peer1 White , (119594) $27 795 VW BEETLE ti LEXu~~~~~~sru (99~mc:1>· ~·1~5
LEXUS GS300 'es MCKENNA VO\.KSWAGEN
Black (101~1 $24,995 714442•2000
LEXUS OF·W£STMINSTER •
(800}29t4747 VW BEETLE '99 fExus LS400 1ii 5 spct, ac. cass. pwl r>d. cd SaootWe C02S014J $28.995 C99n81433034) 116.995
LEXUS Ot: WES1MINST'Efl McKENHA VOLKSWAGEN
(800)291·3147 714441-2000
LEXUS LS400 '92 VW GOlf Gt! 4Cy:I '97
Caslvnere(118761) $18,895 5 spd, Cd, abs, pmr, aloys.
LEXUS OF WESTMIHSTEA (99785/020985) $12 995
(I00)2tH747 MCKENNA VOU<SWAGEN
. Lincoln Conttneni.i 119 714.842.2000
Fully customlZed, 11110. lo ml, VW JETT A GU 't7 new dres, I-owner, Ill pwr; 5 &pd, pmt, alloys, cc, $7500 Mt-710-0754 (99747~1) $13,995 * ilitfcedlt 8en1 306 SL McKENNA VOLKSWAGEN
'91 Greal 100klng. charcol 714-842-2000 •
blacMan W, fuJ)'' loaded; VW JmA Gil i7 1bsolutaly best condition 5 spd, ac, pw, 1)(1, root elOys
S28.200 ot>o 949-&4<H 100 C9974Ml37950> s13,m
Mercedtl E320 Clbrlolet MCXENNA VOLKSWAGEN
't5 LTD Convertlble, 114-14.2•2000
Smoked silver/brown top, tan VW JETTA GL 195
ln1arior, exoelent cond. lutlY (999Ml026281 S8,995
loaded, chrome wheels, 83k MCKENNA VOLKSWAGEN
miles, . Ollglnal owner 714-8424000
S50.000 949-721-1078 vw JETTA al •97
Merctdff $E300 Sedan 92
Loolls new, mechanlcaly
perfect, bleclt. s8(lde lln<.
10-CO, sul')tf, Bose Sound,
641( ml, 1 0Wll8J, $29,500
Howard 949-831·35n
MERCEDES 800E '87
Sltver/gi'ey, 6K ~ recent
repairs, 1eoone eng, clelalecl
& garaged, no accidents,
l1'l8Ctlana car, 100 watt co ptaye1. 800-537-7123 x78111
Mtrcedet 320£ '95 .
24k mllas, champ/tan, leather, Chrome wllls, new ti1as, alarm, CD, pllOne.
ortgmal • owner $27,000
949-261 ·9013 day$
949-759.9303 evening
MERCEDES 450SL 75
2 Tope, BVS 161n Whlelt,
newer paln1~~1soo.
11'846-1669 Of WM2'3850
Mercad11 sio SL 'tt
Outstanding car. Redls8dcle Interior Loaclecl $28,000
94!Hi44-6610
5 spd. pmr, cc (99491W90894) $12,995
MCKENNA VOU<$WAG~
714-842·2000
VWVAN 71
•SK ml on rebuM eng, runs
grut, camper bad convettlon, oood ,.....,
$1800 M•n2"9261
Sell your extra
household
items in
CLASSIFIED
Call 642-5678
-~ .
ERVICE
far all your needs... ~
1;.-.-1
POU CY
In *' ellort to olle< the best
sefYice possible to our reacf. era llld edYertlsels, we wMI
require Contr1ct0fs Who
lclV9111se In ll'lll Service
Directory to ilcllide their
Conltactors llcenle number In their ldvet1lsemenl. y~
co-operation Is grelltly appredatld.
FAATllNOINT~RIOflS '°'1wl I Ba111 I Remodel Room Addldcn ... VlsalMC
Ll5808'75 IM~5
HOMEflair
&tthtw'1 R,;;;t;f,z
R(>lll,ize/ReTurbisfi
• 1~rcel.a1n • Flberglm
Sinks • Showers Counters
949-645-7723
II 8locll Stone Tiie
Concrele, Pillo, ~.
Firaplc BBO'e, Rete, 25'frl exp. teny 714·557·75M
blVld V111t1111 contractor
A Concfete'l =· Bltcll'Blodl 'Slone'W
Ll747448 71
TiflM<IWRfTE tor Webpages, Ads,
Orig Wrfllog, Reports,
Word processing, T~
Ing Quick accurate,
heljlfUI. Sue 9am-5pm
MM4W473
Is your computer
Y2K
ready yet?
Y21C c~ i.11.n9 on tile
S-K•ng N 8 '°' 2 ~· w• www.Hl(ICIUtlCKMU ~,, •• , M0-7•12
Ill
Order yOU(s nowt Or1IY $1 S()icord, $85/l\all oord! i:r.= 71 .... 1432 SEA FfREWOOO
S150(cord. MS 112 cord.
FAEt OEUVERY
714-112.,,tH
--r -· -' .. , ·•· . . -.. .
1 \\, I 0 •
• -....,, • ......,-: :i
PHEN+D
Complete Mcdlcal Prot
S,.,,91 Wdaht Lon 'I 1-·Mcdol~
--·--
"-· \~~-~ 't .' ·:-
'
• ' ..... ·_.i.~ • ·J
£.;. .... ' \ '• , .' I ,,...; • I ~.t.l.:._ .. -Jr. £4
MOVIN ·MAN
Ctttlul. Courteous, Exp'd,
Proe, 1111 warclrobee 1 hr min
MN7WM$ Lmll3e0
PUBLIC
NOTICE
The Calif. Pubffc·
U1llitles Commission
REQUIRES lhat att
used • household
QOOds movers print iheir P.U.C. C81 T
number: nmos and
chauffera print their
T.C.P. number In au
ad\lertlsment.s. If you
have a questlon
about the leQa.hty of a mover, fl'mo or
chautler, caft: •
PUBLIC UTILITIES
COMMISION
714-558-4151
' .; ~ ...... ·---·~ . 'i:'J~
~..Ji.td.'I~ '·'.~·
CHUNG'S PAINTINO 24 Yen Exo -Gleet Prlcel
Guatan111 WOik • Free Est.
Ll375602 714-538-1534
DAVE'S PAINTING No lob too l.tg, or smlll. Free Estlmatll. t S Yrs EJQll'24Hrs
Uct 697347 Mt;.6t5-S122
lt(E'i CUSTOfli PAIHfiNG
Professional, c:INn, quality
wortc. lnVex1 & docks.
Lt703468 94H31-4610
liAiH80W ClACLE iOONf. Pllnllng-~ext House/Ape
QUllllv Jobi Fflt esllmate Lt560897 714-638-8888
HYRS OUALiTY PAINTING
TOUCHUPS TOO
24 Hours • Aldwd Sinor L.l280644 949·951·1892
• -=' r , 1. J.t .,
't-. '
. ' -~
SeMng SouMm c..toinll
for 25 ytara Ll3268&4 24 hcAAll T1W54-71S1
• THE STUCCO ~OR Room 1ddltlons. Sluc;co
pitching, re·atucco.
Lt38978t 71~
' I ,. Ye
The Loco.I Plumbef
o ..... tlMIU ........ lnt
.... LOCATING
ll.ICY'tONIC S&AI LIAIC • Dl'flCTION
fn.ndty s.mc.
6 75·9304
~752'ff7 ln-.4 .........
•ftnrm .. Dem ·H•r-t•
• fll flrml. -.......... » ....
141 .141 . ua
A FF 0 R 0 A 8 ~t
ROOFING
Ff'Mie .. 11 a.Nor CMtccwnt All~ Of -.00""9
714/195·6677
For quality rooting call
EVANS ROOFING CO. IHC.
800 540-0028 Free estlme1e.
WWWAVllltrOOflng.Cllftl
~:1.,,.,-_-~ ..... 1::1
~ ' ' ,, ~-... ... . ,. . \
It' ~ ·' , • ·~ , . I_ i;-•r ·.:;
Priv.if P 8th 12th
Gr ldC' CrC'dent1Jl<'d
Engl1~.ll Tutor
Composition, Lrtetatu.re &
Standardized Test
Preparation. Cal
9)780-3195
.,-.. 4-'!' ~-~ y "
. ',· " .
' .
Sinai '681 CuSIOm IUrrVture,
upholalery, allp covers,
ll1llque r.,,.tr 714-542-.4012
... --. .. .. ' . . .
~ ~~-. . '
wt Ql[J IHOOlb RlNO
TOOETHlft. Sttlp, lnellll, ~ ~ ld'Act 10
tht CIUy Ll'N5978
t4M31-lt11
!-.1 ft'llll I>• M ti~ 4•lc •
"' F1°l•t' Eslf111.1t1·
\\ 1• 11mk1• hrnl"' 1-.111~ ·
714.U4 l ,:l I 2t>
Call·.
Cl...atled
WHAJ
HAPP INS
IFYOU
0011'1
nranstr
1101HlllG.
Call the
Cla11lfled1