HomeMy WebLinkAbout2000-01-21 - Orange Coast PilotSERVING THE NEWPORT -MESA COMMUNmES SINCE 1907 ·.FRIDAY, JANUARY 21, 2000
"" Co~unity hears airpOrt horror stories
.
• Residents attending.meeting at Mariners School shocked ence gasped when volunteers from
the Newport B~ch-based Airport
Working Group told them that il a
second Orange County airport is
not built, the 500-acre John Wayne
Airport could more than double in
size, growing nearer to businesses,
homes and schools.
Wayne -'hhich now m 1999
serve'd about 7 million passengers
-could be forced to handle 25 mil-
lion pas engers annually by 2020.
wh en informed of possible alternatives to airport at El Toro. .
' JASMINE LEE
Dalt Pb
NEWPORT BEACH -Con-
cerned parents and other communi-
ty members vowed Thwsday night
to strengthen support for the pro-
posed El Toro airport after hearing
speakers paint a frightening picture
of the possible expansiQn of John
Wayne Airport.
More than 300 people attended
the meeting at Manners Elemen-
tary School, where pro-airport
activists presented numbers, maps
and scenarios of John Wayne' gone
awry.
· Several members of tlie audi-
Richard Taylor, a member of the
group, warned that ·unless the
county goes through with its plaris
to build a $2.9-billion airport at the
closed El Toro Manne base, John
LUNARGLCDM
•Where do you think the flights
are going to fly out of?• he said.
•vour backyard Your frontyard.
Your school.•
Taylor said many nearby schools
would suffer Crom even more 1et
noise than the roar heard overhead
as he spoke.
"It's shocking to know what
H idden above a shroud of dei;ise clouds, the first total
lunar eclipse of the 21st century took place Thurs·
day, much to the dismay of disappointed stargazers
who bad gathered at Orange Coast College for the event.
•1t•s kind of depressing,• said Nicholas Contopoulos,
associate professor of OCC's astronomy department •usu-
ally, we have good luck at these events. I always remain
hopeful.•
the event, 10, 28-pound telescopes were available for
stargazers to use. However, they didn't do much good.
During the eclipse, all that was visible was a patch of
orange-colored clouds.
·1 really love the moon and this is the bomb·equip-
ment, • said Jai Gabe, 22, of Costa Mesa, an OCC student.
•vou just get kind of burnt when this happens. I WlSh I had
a car, so I could drive up to the mountains.•
Despite the gloomy, cloudy weather, OCC's astronomy
department presented a Lunar Eclipse Party from 6 to 10
p.m. on the lawn in front of the school's planetariwn. For
Owing a lunar eclipse, the moon passes through the
Earth's shadow and takes on a range of colors, from dark
brown to red to bright orange and yellow.
Owners of. 'three-story' Samoa Place home sue city
• Homeowners are attempting to lift restrictions they
say preve nt them from putting a roof over their .heads.
At the crux. of the issue is one
simple question: Is the top portion
of the Stevenson home an attic or
a third story? Tilree-story homes
ar~n't allowed in the neighbor-
hood. Attics are. ANDREW GLAZER
lb1yi'b
MESA VERDE -The owner of
a home on Samoa Place filed a
lawsult against the city Wednes-
day in an effort to lift res~ons
preventing her from putting a roof
on her home, her attorney sald
Thursday.
•she h ad no choice but to sue
thein. • said Jennifer Friend, attor-
ney for bomeowner nacy Steven-
son. •w e allowed the city time to
find out if they could make a deal
with Tracy. But it was to no avail.•
The city granted Stevenson
building permits for the home
more than 10 months ago. But
when the Samoa Place home was
under construction in the swnmer,
disgruntled neighbors brought to
·72 HOURS IN SPOR15
1 ~.
Sister Hele'n
Prejean, author of
the Pulitzer Prize-
nominated book,
•Dead Man Walldng, • and coun-
selor to death-row inmates, will
speak at 7:30 p.m. Friday at Our
Lady Queen ol Angell, 2046 Mar
Vista Drive, Newport Beach. For
more infonnation, call (949) &U-
0200.
2 DIGGING POa lllSTOn:
The JeWb ~Can·
-of Orange County wtU ..... ta!>19111D OD lae lldMd-
Oft of blblklll..., tram l tD 3:30 p.m. SUnday. Dr.~ ..
Stieglitz, former
curator for the
National Mantime
Museum in Haifa,
and Or. Ziony
Zevit, professor of
biblical literature at L.A.'s Univer-
idty of Judaism, will speak. 1\ckets
are $10 to $25. The center ts at
2SO B. Baker St., C0&ta Mesa. For
more information, call (714) 755·
0340.
3 SECONJ>..HAND StJKna:
18mple IMi8b will bold ••
yearly num:nege Nie~
at 8 a.m. SUnday at 6308 W9it
Cout Highway, Newport ee.cb •
Par more lnformatlOn. mil ($48)
548 6800.
the city's attention that it had vio-
lated neighborhood building
codes. City leaders eventually
ruled that the home had a Uurd
story and that a stauwell spilled
beyond property lines.
•When you buy a home in an
old residential neighborhood, you
come to expect what you bought
into would be preserved," s~id
SEE HOUSE PAGE 7
could happen,• said Paula DUrman,
who has two daughteri> attending
Mariners. "l want to get involved
and let everyone know about this.·
Doreen Ross, who recently
moved into the neighborhood, said
she is womt'Cl that airport expan-
sion would rwn the quality of life in
the area. She and Durman passed
out fliers for the meetlng and plan
to continue domg what they can to
SEE REACTION PAGE 7
Bush opens·
• campaign
office in
Newport
•The new regional
headquarters is one of
two offices in Calif orrua.
GRFC. R1-;1.1,c
NEWPORT BEACH -Repub·
Hean presidential candidate
George W. Busti opened one of
two regional headquarters on
lrvme Avenue on Wednesday m
preparation for the state's March 7
prunary
Bush, the 53-year-old governor
of Texas, was aided by fellow
Republican Rep. Christopher Cox
(R-Newport ,Beach) in locating a
swtable office deep in the heart of
GOP country
"It made sense to have an office
where there is a central grass-
roots effort for the Republlcan par·
ty, • ·swd Margita Thompson, a
Bush campaign spokesperson. •Jt
will be a hub for hundreds or vol·
unteers and a portal to most or the
Southland.•
The new headquarters on
Irvine Avenue is the second office
Bush has established in California.
The other location was opened last
July on Wilshire 6oulevard in
Brentwood. Only two other states,
New Hampshire and South Car·
olina, have more than one cam-
paign office, signaling Bush's
intent to make a strong push
toward the Cali!orrua primary.
·operung an Orange County
headquarters shows more of Gov.
Bush's deterrrunation to carry the
Golden State," said Gerald
Parsky, the state's campaign chair
for the Bush camp
Overseeing the Orange County
operation will be William Brough,
a former Cox staffer in Washing-
ton, D.C. He was mstrumental in
hnding an office in what is consid-
ered a Republican stronghold.
Brough also worked £01 the Bob
Dole presidential campaign in
1996.
No one was around at the
Irvine Avenue swte Thursday, but
organizers expect the headquar-
ters will be opened more often as
SEE CAMPAIGN PAGE 7 _,
INDEX
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2 Friday, January 21, 2000
' date book· Doily Pilot
CHECK IT OUT
A 'best book' for each
year of the 90s
A 'Marriage' of wits
Mozart's comedy, 'The Marriage of Figaro,' hits a ·high note at the
Orange Couhty Performing Arts Center ·
A }though we've finally
turned the page on the
'90s, readers may want
to return to pages of some of
the decade's best books.
Listed on at least two •best
books• lists published by the
Theroux's parable about a
magician, a ~away girl and
their unlikely odyssey. The irre·
sistible tale concludes that
America's digestive system
needs cleansing,. that image tri-
umphs over art and that our
best hope is the power of love.
D rolt du seigneur.
It's the sonorQus term for
the scandalous practice at the
heart of Mozart's opera •Tue
Marriage of Figaro.•
• WHllll: The ter Drive, Costa Orange County Per· Meu
form.:P Arts ~ • • ••111••1t:• 7:30 p.m. ter, Town Cen-. ~ 2 p.m. s..tnday
• .HOW MUOI: S32 to $107 • PMON£: (714) 740-
7171
Los Ange-
les limes,
The New
YorkTimes,
Library
Journal,
Magill's Lit·
erary Annu-
al and
Bowker
Annual
were these
best bets:
"The Paperboy" -Pete
Dexter's dark meditation on
the responsibilities of the
media examines father-son
relationships and the burden
of guilty knowledge. The
action involves investigative
reporters who reopen the case
against a man condemned to
die for murdering the county
sberill.
The phrase -literally translated,
it means •rtght of the lord" -refers
to the feudal custom of a lord's sleep-'
ing with the bride of a. vassal before .
turning her over to her husband. It's
"The Grown-Ups" -After a
sudden stroke, P.hilosopher-
turned~ TV-personality Dr. Leo
Ulm causes friends, wives and
lovers to question their rela-
tionship with him. Victoria
Glend.inning's entertaining
novel explores the complexities
of relationships, the q.ature of
fame and the llinits or individ-
ual perception. .
"A Soldier of the Great
War" -Mark Helprin conveys
the message that women, with
the promise of love and new
life, are civilization's salvation
in war's tragic aftermath. His
sweeping narrative focuses on
one man's experiences during
World War I.
• Jau" -Harlem is both
setting and character in this
lyrical novel by Pulitzer Prize-
winner Toni Morrison. The sto-
ry begins in
1926, when
50-ish door-
to-door
salesman
Joelface
mwders his
teenage
lover,
whom his
hairdresser
wife tries to
disfigure at
the funeral.
"Einstein's Dreams" -MIT
physics professor Alan Llght-
man takes a playful look at
thoughts Einstein might have
had while concocting 'his theo-
ry of relativity. Thirty vignettes
portray the great physicist
when he was a patent clerk
sorting through dreams in
which time runs haywire.
"Mlllroy the Magician" -
The message is salvation
through health food in Paul
"The Moor's Last Sigh" -
Salman Rushdie's epic encom-
passes a grand struggle
between good and evil. Speak-
ing through his narrator (the
embodioient of lndia, who ages
at twice the normal human
rate), the author tells his tale
with humor and inventive
wordplay.
"Straight Man" -West
Central
Pennsylva-
nia Uni-
versity
English
chair Hank
Devereaux
is quirky
and
endearing
in Richard
Russo's
funny tale
about nonsense that gets in
the way of scholariohip. Real-
ism and farce are not distant
cousins in this wry skewering
of academia.
"Damascus Gate• -Politi-
cal intrigue and religious
obsession blend in Robert
Stone's ~werful tbrtller. The
multilayered tale involves an
American journalist writing a
book about religious pilgrims, a
manic-depressive convinced he
is the Messiah and fundamen-
talist Christians plotting with
Orthodox Jews.
"Losing Nelson" -A con-
temporary Londoner obsessed
with Britain's greatest naval
hero is the protagonist of Barry
Unsworth's psychological nov-
el. The suspenseful narrative
ingeniously blends historical
details into the portrait of a dis·
integrating personality.
• OtECX IT our is written by the
staff of the Newport Beach Publk
Library. This week's column Is by
Melissa Adams, In collaboration
with Sara Bamic;le.
the attempt of a particularly lecher-
ous nobleman to claim this libidinous
privilege that sets Ille stage for the
Christine
Brandes
comic mayhem of
Mozart's work.
now on stage at
the Orange Coun-
ty Perlorming Arts
Center.
"Figaro• is
being petformed
at by Opera Pacif-
ic through Sunday
in a production as
technically gor-
geous as it is hilar-
ious and moving.
Richard Bern·
stein, in the role of-Figaro, the hus·
band who attempts to def end his
wife's honor, gives a performance
charged with madcap energy. The
towering John Hancock, who sings
the part of amorous Cotmt Almaviva,
has his own kind of slightly foolish
grandeur, acting imperious one
moment and repentant the next.
At the heart of the action is the
woman whose charms are the object
of both men's desire, Sus.anna, Chris-
tine Brandes, who sings the role,
imbues her character with a grace
and intelligence that brings the
work's witty libretto vividly to life.
·she's actually sort of the central
figure to the show even though it's
called "The Marriage of Figaro,' "
Brandes said. •She's the one who
actually has very clearly defined
relationships with everyone.•
•The Marriage of Figaro• draws
frequently -almost relentlessly, in
fact -on the humorous potential of
misidentification and purposeful
deception. When Susanna isn't try-
ing to conceal the presence of the
young heartthrob Cherubino by
dressing him up as a woman, she's
pretending to be the Countess Alma-
viva or in some other way conspiring
to restore grace and good humor to
moments in which the straight truth
is painfully awkward.
Countess Almaviva does a little
work in disguise herself, and
absolutely all of the majoI characters
at some point end up biding behind
chairs or pillars to facilitate that oth-
er staple of stage comedy: the over-
heard conversation.
Although Figaro, with his happy
talent for shameless improvisation in
sticky situations, is perhaps the guid-
ing personality of the opera, it is
Susanna who generally seems to
have the clearest understanding of
what's really going on.
Early in the first act, Figaro won-
ders why his wife-to-be is suspicious
that the count has given the couple' a
good room in his castle. Susanna's
answer is that of a woman who
knows the motives of men before .
they themselves do.
•Because I'm Su.sa.nJ}a, • she tells
Figaro. •And you're a fool.•
Ideally, Brandes said, the character
of Susanna "should have a very spe-
cific way of talking" to each character
in the opera, whether it's the affec·
tionate abuse she administers to
Figaro or the proud one-upwoman-
ship she trades with the countess.
"It's been my goal to find slightly dif.
ferent ways in which I use my pace of
language and affect. She does juggle
all of the balls in this plot and also has
to juggle all of these temperaments."
U Brandes has developed a close
undel'Standing of her character, it's a
testament to the many performances
of •Figaro• she has been involved
with. She played the same role with
the operas of Montreal and Quebec
and, just a month ago, sang Susan-
na's part with the Philadelphia opera
opposite Bernstein and Rinat Sha-
ham. the boisterous soprano who
plays Cherubino in the cwrent show.
The experience has helped her
develop an ear for the nuances of
the performance.
In the fourth act, for example,
Susanna sings an aria that is ostensi-
bly addressed to Count Almaviva
but which rs actually intended to
stoke the jealousy of Figaro, who she
knows is listening.
At some point in the melody,
though, the emotional tone of the
singing changes subtly. Susanna no
longer seems to be trying to provoke
her beloved but is simply expressing•
her affection for him. In an opera
filled with ulterior motives and
veiled comments, it is a moment of
powerful openness.
•in my own internal monologue
during that aria, early on in her heart
she simply can't hold out in the
deception any longer,• Brandes said.
"It really becomes about Figaro, and
I think in a way that Figaro does
know that She is so true in her
statement of love that r th.ink even
be recognizes it.• ··
Brandes pointed out that the
nuances of "Figaro• are' not only
emotional.
"It's a very political opera,• she
said. "The play (by Beaumarchais, on
which the libretto is based) was actu-
ally banned in several countries.•
In order to persuade Joseph II of
Austria to let Mozart create the
opera, the ruler had to be convinced
that •anything that might off end
good taste or public decency" would
be excised from the text of the play.
"Mozart really had to jump
through hoops,• Brandes said.
In practice, revisions to the work
had less to do with sex-•Figaro" is
still a racy story -than with the
libretto's critique of the aristocracy.
Figaro's third-act complaint abo~t .
the behavior of woroen, for example,
once bad as itS target the ills of
social injustice.
At its core, though, the play still
strikes at the presumptuous behavior
of Lord Almaviva. And if Mozart pre-
sents his argument in comic tenns, he
nevertheless makes it clear that the
droit of that particular seigneur is one
that has long since lost its legitimacy.
At th~ Jazz Club~ the more Dizzy the better
Tribute to Dizzy Gillespie
includes all-stat lineup
0 ne of the great jazz com-
posers of the 20th century,
Dizzy Gillespie, will be
honored at a trtbute concert pt the
Jazz Club at The Center today
through Sunday.
•Dizzy: The Man and Hts·
Music" features an impressive
lineup of artists including Roy Har-
~e, Don Braden, Robin
Eubankl, Mulgrew Miller, John
Lee aDd l9114cio Berroa.
uptumed trumpe!
He began u a self-taught play-
er, and bis gift won him a scbolar·
ship at the Laurinburg lmtitule. ln
19~ be moved to PbUedelpbla
and recorded with Teddy Hill, and
in 1939 jOined Cab Calloway's
band.
It was the after-hows work dur-
ing the early 1940s that led to the
bebop sound, a movement that
wowd spawn a new generation of
jazz m1 •sk:lans.
m . .___ ...............
.......... is scheduled for
7:30 and 9'30 p.m. today
and s.turdaY and 1 p.m.
Sunday. Tkkets .. $36 for
the 9:j() p.m. perfonMnce$
and S42 fo( the 1 and 7:30
p.m. performances.
The er.,. c;ounty
Performing Arts Cer"8r Is at
600 Town Center DrM,
Costa Mesi. For men Infor-
mation. call (714) 556-2787. Gillespie, known as one of tho
founden of the bebop jazz
movement, ls most recognized
by hls bubbling cheeks and
DuriDg bis lifetime, Gillespie
petfoi:med with such greats at Ella
Fitzger8ld, Billie Holiday, ChArlie
Parker, Thelomous Monk. DUke
Ellingw.o. Lionel~ 8nd
othen. He died bl 1993 al cancer.
Selections from Gme.ple's
career will bi lboWmled at the
Jazz Club with ffergroYe OD trulll•
~ READERS HQDJHE or~ het91n tlll be WEATHER
(949) 642-6086 reproducld without written per·
Recofd your comments •bout mlllkln of~ owntr.
TIMPERAl'UIES .
the 011ly fllot or MM tips. t:tOW IQ REAOf US hlboa
VOL.~ N0.18 ADDRESS Orc:u6Mion 7°'51 Our addreu Is 330 W. Bay St., The llmes Orange County COfona del Mar
ntOMAS H. JOtlltSON,
Costa Mew. CA 926j· (800) 252-9141 7°'51 CC>RRECD<>HS ~ Publisher C1-lfled (949) 642-5678 Costa Mesa
TOHVDOODO. It is the Pilot's policy to prompt-Olspl.y (949) 642"4321 71152
Edrtor ly corr1<1 all ~"ors of subsi.nce. fcltoNI Newport leach
JIMfB MG&.AND, Please call (949) 57~6& News (949) 642·5680 71151
Senior CJty Ed1t0f m Sports (949) s 74-4223 Newport Co.st NANCY OtUVlR. The Newport BeacMosta ~ News, Sports FM (949) 646-4170
FMtures Edit« O.Uy Ptlot (USPS-l44-800) b P'JI> E·mall: dalf>'pilotet.tlmes com 7°'51
llsMd ~through Seturdey Main Offk.e M>Cillllt CAMSON. In Newport Buch and Costa Mele. Busl'*' ~ (949) 642-4321 SURPPOMCAIY Sports EditOf IObtc:rlpttonS ere mill.tble only ~ luslnes ~" (M9) 631-112' The sMel Wiii be out of MMCMMTIN. subtcnbing to The 11mes Orllngt
Photo Edttot County (IOO) 252-9141 In ., .. ~ .. '""*~ ....... the west todey for Mb
NmtONYNOC. outi1de of Newport leac.'tl and • TI!l!ll Mmw ~. ~ In the """" to waist· NtWJ EdltOf (ostA ~~to the high llwt. . "* J. IANTOI, ~ Piiot.,. W8illblt onty ~ ---.......... ~ fot S20 Pl' month. SeCond l .. '-91Deti9'* "-~ ~ 9t C.oetl ........ .......... LOCAnGll ...
Nll'f '*' tMG. CA (Prtc .. R)ude .a ......... ::i:..HllOJ ~AIMfthlng lt.lte and locAf ~) POSTMASo
LWJOfMDN. TU· Send~~ to TM
Dlr'ector of ...... """' ,.,Of1'0donl Newpon ~Mlle-.............. ...... " ................... 1•JW Piiot. 11.0. b 1-. Coa ......
PU MOO IMAM. CA t2l2I ~No MM• s.llOt ...... C4" °'* ... Jlfty... __ ,.w 1•) W
Olief INntW Officer • ,. ....... edltorill """"'. .,.._.°' ... ~--CdM---·-1·) w
•
pet. Braden on saxophone,
Eubank.I on trombone, Miller on
pano and Berroa on drums.
Braden bas worked with Wyn-
ton Maisalil, Freddie Hubbard
and Roy Haynes, and is the music
arranger for the new Bill Cosby sit-
com, "Cosby.•
blues/g<>1j>el flavor Of his native
Mississippi. In 1971 he performed
in New York with Ellington, anti in
1995 a New York Times poll voted
hiin most in-demand pianist by bis
peers.
Eubanks has a wide musicdl
background and performed with
tbe Rolling Stones, Talking
Heads and Barbra Streisand on
her 1994 tour. He ii mUlic direc-
tor for Art Blakey and the Jazz
Messengen.
Cuban-born Berroa graduated
from the National Conservatory of
Music in 1970 and in 1980 moved
to New York Oty, where he began
perlorming and recording. He was
included in the Dizzy Gillespie
quartet in 1981, and WU affiliated
With the late musician until 1992.
He toured Africa m 1989 with
Gillespie in a U.S. State Depart·
ment·sponsored •Jazz Ambu-
sa.oor• event.
Compoeer, educator and pro-
ducer Lee perfonns, writes and
produce1 the Dizzy OillesPio All·
I Stan and vUiOUI other jazz bends.
MWer bu a beck.ground in the
AID SU If
TIDES
lOOAY
First low
2:30 a.m ......... M ............ 1.5
First high
8·42a.m ....................... 6.8
S.condlow
3:49 p.m ...................... -1.7
S.condhlgh
10:16 p.m ..................... 4.3
,
SAlUN>AY
First low
3:21 a.m ................. on .. 1.5
first Ngtl
9:30 a.m ........ """"""' .. 6.7
Second6ow
4:JJ p.m ............. -...... 1.4
Second high
11:02 p.m_ ..... -.. _ ....... 5 -,......... 57
POLICE FILES
COSTA MESA
• .._ 5'rMt: A cellular phone worth S 140 was stolen
from• CM In the 600 bklck ~ 6 and 8 p.m. JM!. 12.
• lrttltOI s...t A purse .00 Its contents worth S75
were stolen from • store In the 3300 block during the
day of Jan. 11.
• Hert.or loulev..t A car s1e<eo worth $200 was
stolen In the 2600 block 'the evening Of Jen. 4.
• South c;:o-t Drtw: A purM and Its contents worth
S90 were stolen from • car In the 900 block the
~Ing of Jan.10.
.... ORTlmAat
• ....... -.ad: A~ end tts oom.nts wonh SJ50
wete stolen from a CM In the 300 bbit It 4 p.m. ~
• ...... c:o.t: A ceflul« phone, pagtr and pelt' of =-S 1,JO() w.rt stolen from I home Ir\ the MOl*Y~.
• ........ A P1M141 and ltl CG9411i111 WDfttt s•..,.. "°""from• bUsinels 1n the•~ 1t 11 :JO p.m. Jin. 13. .
• ...... 1111 11: A wallet ri clamond necka.c. worth
~-_,._..,..from a CM In IM 400 lllOG -..Z1•1
11 a.m. and , p.tn. Dee. 17.
'
I
•
What's with this wacky 'winier' weather?
\ I • it just me, or did we recent arrivals are too good beginning with ·n • A· ~.mehow sWltc~ places C O M M E II T S & •to pass ~P· · Knee. · '
mth the ~u_str~an Out-( U 11 0 5 I T I E S The fll'St is a list of The 'second 1s a list of back? I adrmt 1t. I m not a answers from contestants answers from three re ulars
hot weather fan But this is on the Bntish version of on the onginal HollyJ'ood
sill§o ·Family Feud,• which is Squares -Paul Lynde
, far this "winter,• c~e~ •Family Fortunes.· Charley Weaver and Don
we ve had an average tem-It s ruce to know that peo-Knotts _ comptled b the J>E:r~ture of 84 arid about 10 ple on the other side of the show's host Peter Mlrshall
millimeters of rain. And Big Pond are stwnbling If you've se~n the new '
h.ow about those weather through life just as we are, show, Utis is one llrne when
reports? Dead on, as e ven the ones with those older is defirutely better
always. Th~ first real rain is wonderful British accents. •According to Movie.
always coming -thls . Q: Name something a Life, Ann-Mar ttret would
weekend, or next Tuesda1. blind person might use. A: like to start haemg babies
or late next week. But next .A .sword. Q. Name a song soon but her husband
week never comes. • peter Wlth ·moon• in the. title A-' . •
• So now ~hat's the prob-buff a Blue Suede Moon. Q: . . r~:.e~~\ wailt ~hy?
lem? El Nmo, La Niiia, El Name an occupation where "Wh · t ~u alo own.
Toro, La 1Taviata? What is you need a torch. A: A bur-cattle?"aL~~ nfu.rpose
it? Right you are -La get real big, they make the glar. Q:Name a famous . : ey gtv~ ~ifta. But tlus tune, she's green blobs, well, they brother and sister. A: Bon-=t ~c~~k.Je~·!ut 1 k
bigger and meaner and cause a change in the, I rue & Clyde. . en e coo ·
colder than ever. mean, the blue blobs get:· Q:Narne a famous race. ies .• In fact, some soentists at well ... it's bad. And that's A: Arabs. Q: Name an item Who would be preg-
JPL are predicting that Utis how Pacific Decadal Oscil-of clothing wom by the ~ant for a longer penod of ·
is only the beginning of 20 lation works. Three Musketeers. A. A time -Y0.ur wile or your
years of much warmer, and Depressing, isn't it? I horse. Q: Name something elephant? LYNDE. Who
much drier, winters for mean, I'm noi' asking for that floats m the bath. A: told you about my ele-
Southern Ccilifomia and blizzards and ice storms Water. Q: Name something ph~nt? .
points south. At the same here, but a few weeks of red. A: My cardigan. Q: Jackie Gleas~n recently
time, the northwest and the cool air ~d a couple of Name a famous Royal. A: rev~aled that he finnly
east will get unheard of inches of rain would be Mail. Q: Name a number ~lieves ID ~em, and has
amounts of rain and snow. nice. you have to memorize. A: seen th~ himself on at least
Interestingly, the villa.in Our one hope is that the Seven. two o:;:casions. Wha~ are
isn't global warming. It all JPL predictions came from Q: Name something in they? wi;AVE~: His feet.
has to do with somelh,ing the same crew who were at the garden that's green. A: If you re .going to make
called ~Pacific Decadal the steering wheel for the Shed. Q: Name something a parachute JUJI)p, you
Oscillation. 11 Very compli-Mars lander missions. If yo~ ntjght be allergic to. A: s~oul~ be at ledsl how
cated. There's no way a sci-not, we're looking at 20 S~g. Q: Name a famous high? WEAVER: Three
enlist like myself can years of oppressive heat, bndge. A: Bridge over trou-days of ste~dy dnnk.ing
explain it to a layperson drought, pestilence and bled waters. Q: Name a should do it.
like you, but I'll try. plague. Just kidding on the noise a cat makes. A: Pee-"ln what state w_as Abra-
U you look at infrared last two, but it's fun to say mg Q: Name something ham Lincoln born? LYN-
satellite photos of the earth, -•beat, drought, pesti-· you do m th~ bathroom. A: I?E: Naked and screarrung
ocean water at norm 1 t _ lence and plague.• Decorate. Q. Name a sign like the rest of us. .
peratures looks like a e!: Sorry. Anyway, if you of th~ zodiac A· April. . I "Do female frogs croak?"
blobs. Warmer watei1f ooks need to know anything else Q. Name something Wlth L~E: Yes, il you hold
like red blob d 1 about meteorology, I'm a hole in it A: Wmdow Q . theu-little heads under
s, an coo er thinking of doing my O\Yll Name an marumate obJect water.
water looks like blue or weather Web site, Dense-with legs. A: A plant. Q: Well, OK. After that.
~~~ bl~b~ ~ght n~w, Fog.com. Name a domestic arum.al. there's not much left to say,
bl b re ~ to purp e . Speaking of cyberspace A: A leopard. Q: Name an is there? I gotta go
o s -w a we soentists and beyond, I am very animal you'd seem the zoo
refer t~ a.s "purple blobs" selective about things that A: A dog. Q: Name a way ·
-out m the ocean. fall off the Internet and roll of cooking fish. A: Cod. Q:
When the purple blobs onto my desk. But two Name a part of the body
,
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L----------------------------------~
• PETER BUFFA is a former Costa
Mesa mayor. His column runs Fri
days. E-mail him at
Ptr840aol.com.
Frtdoy. Jonuary 2 I, 2000 3
Plans to upgrade high
schools move foiward
• Athletic facilities
improvements were
left out of a panel's
recornrnendationsfor
school repairs.
0A!'l.lrf11' Gouurr
r lbly Pl?!
COSTA MESA -Support-
ers . of the city's two high
schools are moving ahead
With plans to update theu
athletic facilities after a citi-
zens' corrunittee deemed the
projects unnecessary.
ln its recommendations to
the school board last week,
the facilities committee
included repalI'S to Davidson
Field at Newport Harbor
High School while leaving off
athletic unprovements to Cos-
ta Mesa and Est~ncia tugh
schools
For years, officlals at Costa
Mesa High School have
Wdnlcd to install a 50-meter
pool. similctr to lhe ones at
C'orona del Mar and Newport
1 ldrbor high schools, and to
unprove its pitiful practice
Ilelds
At Estanad, school sup-
porters want to repair fields
and have been loolting to
upgrade the football held mto
a 2,500-seat stactium
As a means to accomplish
these tasks, the foundations
of the two high schools jomed
forces. creating a third foun-
dation, which they call the
Costa Mesa Community· Ath-
letic Foundatlon.
All the district's high
schools now use DaVJdson
•Field.
"We all use one-football
stadiwn and that's OK, but
lhe ripple effect it causes is
football games on Thursday
mght, and that's a school
night,• said Jun Scott, presi-
dent of the new foundation.
Although the community
foundation had previously
gained its nonprofit status, its
members had been wa.ibng to
bear 1f the facility report
womd mclude . thell project
before pushing on, said David
BrOQJs:;, foundauon member
and Vice president of the •
school board
The committee's rationale,
,said school board member
Jun Ferryman, was that
Davidson Field already exists
where the other two schools
are l~g to build new facil-
ities
With the report out and the
project not included, the
foundation plans to forge full
steam ahead with its plans.
, ·Tue citizen committee
has excluded it. so we're still
explonng it,• Brooks said.
"The work needs to be done
JUSl the same.•
Scott said the entire
endeavor wilh additions and
upgrades to both schools will
cost about $6 or $7 milllon.
The school board has
pledged $500,000 to the
undertaking, Scott said -
$365,000 or which the foun-
dabon has already roceived to
pay for engmeenng drawing
and renderings.
The foundation is treading
very carefully to avoid any
oppos1bon and to smooth the
way for when fund-rdlSing
begins
"Because of its proxunity
to Faionew Park we're look-
rng into if we need an envi-
ro~ental impact report on
Utis, • Brooks said.
Although it won't be part
of the d.lstnctwtde unprove-
ments, the foundation is
working with the district on
planrung lhe new facilities.
•Our focus is to really
make these two pro1ects hap-
pen: Scott s&d. "It's for the
young people.~
Your Choice
Nokia 5190
TIMEPD;:fT$
i4ji9* 29~9 *
PACIFIC 1:1 BELL e
WW...
..
January 21, 2000
Trying to bridge the gap
• Robert Graham's relentless crusade for a river crossing at
19th Street is starting to irritate some on the council.
~,.,,
COSTA rvtESA -Mo!itpeople don't
see the relation between bridges and
parking. Or bridges and trees. Especial-
ly not bridges and day laborers.
But that's because they're not Robert
Graham.
Graham thiJ).ks the city should com-
mit to studymg whether a bridge on
• West 19th Street -extending the street -
across the Santa Ana River to Hunting-
ton Beach -would raise property val-
ues and draw new shops to the area. He
said he's frustrated that the council
won't seriously consider conducting the
economic study. Graham believes the
council would need this infonnation to
make an educated decision.
opposed. Fountain Valley is considered
a neutral party.
De:sPite their positions, Graham and
severiil others who have joined his
cause insist the 19th Street bridge
would be godlt1or the city. . -
• In order to convince them. Graham
bas brought up the bridge at nearly
every council meeting for the past year.
He speaks about the bridge during
public comments, which is perfectly
fine with most col.lllcil members.
But be also brings up the bridge dur-
ing the public comments period of near-
ly every item on the council's agenda,
which has become annoying to them.
"If it wasn't such a big issue, I would-
n't be doing this,• he said. ·
ed angry outbursts, laughs, smirks and
rolling eyes. •
"I'll admit, he does a good Job of
tying the bridge into every issue,• said
Councilwoman Ubby Cowan. "We
have to take Lt as a light moment, other-
wise it would be real frustrating.• But
Graham got the better of the normally
stoic Mayor Gary Monahan at Mon-
day's council meeting when he brought
up the bridge during a discussion about
parking.
"Yeah, I got frustrat.ed, • Monahan
said. "But when you take a rubber band
and keep stretching it, it breaks. That's
what happened.• _
Monahan said he was thin.king
about calling Graham to ask him to
keep his bridge discusslons where they
belong.
The mayor said he could be more
stringent ·by calling Graham to order
with his gavel .. But he said for now he
didn't want to make a big deal out of his
bridge obsession.
, .
llllf LY
Ill llW
/.
lot
Puljlc invited tO day-care~
A granite ~honortag the memory f two·
children killed May
'WW be dedicated at,.1tn
Bat Side day-care center
at 2 p.m. Sa~.
· The public is invited to
attend th~ ceremony,
which will be a tribute to
the lives of 4-year-old
Siena Soto an<t 3-year-
old Bra.dlipn Wiener. The
two 'yo~gsters were "
killed last May at the
Southcoast Early Child-
hood Leaming Center
when a 39~year-old Santa
Ana man drove bis car
into the playground. Four
. otlier children and a
teacher's aide were The debate about whether to elimi·
nate the 19th Street bridge from Orange
County's master plan has gone on for
more than a decade. The county won't
erase the bndge until all four adjoining
alies reach a consensus. Newport
Beach officials are in favor of the bridge,
while both Costa M~ and Huntington
Beach aty councils are vehemently
Sometimes a connection to the issue
the council is discussing is 'obvious. But
more often, Graham is forced to perform
rhetorical flips and somersaults, bridg-
ing the bridge to seemingly unrelated
issues. He always finishes bis three·
minute speeches gracefully, thanking
the council.
· "I think I've gotten quite good at it,•
Graham said.
The council's reactions have includ-
•At some point, we may need to
reign him in,• he said. •But at this point.
I don't think we need to be more strin-
gent."
Graham said he'll keep talking
about the bridge as much as possible
until the city comes up with a reason for
him to stop.
MARC MARTIN I DAllY ~OT
Costa Mesa resident Robert Gra-
ham bas been persistent for
more than a year on his quest to
sway the dty toward supporting
a bridge at West 19th Street
injured.
Hundreds of people
may attend the event,
given the tremendous
outpouring of support by
. the community after the
tragedy. Plowers, cards
Md toys were left by
numerous visitors who
came by the day-care
center in the weeks fol-
lowing the incident. Costa Mesa teenager sexually harassed by motorist
The plaque will b~
placed on a concrete wall
that surrounds the school.
The wall was built to
replace a chain-link
fence that did little to
stop the oncoming car.
• Police are looking for a man they say made
comments to a Costa Mesa High School student.
GRF.G R.lsuNc
~Pi>I
COSTA MESA -Police are
looking for a man who made
sexual overtures to a 14-year-
old bo~ .during the past two
weeks, authorities said Thurs-
day.
The teenager, who attends
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C~ Mesa High School, was
approached on two occasions
by a man who tried to lure the
boy into his car.
The first encounter
between occurred Jan. 6,
when the boy was walking
home from school near Baker
Street and Fillmore Way,
authorities said. The man
ptilled up next to the teen and
asked him if he knew where
another kid lived. As the driver
was leaving, police said be told
the boy, "You look good.• The
boy also provided his first
name and the man drove
away.
A week later on Jan. 13, the
driver saw the boy at about
2:15 p.m. in the same vicinity
as the first meeting and called
to him, using the victim's first
name. police said.
The boy tried to ignore the
driver, who allegedly wanted
to meet him in an -alley. The
boy walked away in the oppo-
site direction.
Several minutes later the
boy noticed the driver again,
who told him he •didn't need
to be nervous," according to
the police report. Then the
Hoag J!rea$t Care & Imaging Cen
-..
•
'ioag Hospital continues its commitment to sming the ~ of women by
estabfl4;hing a new state-of-the-art oompreheoSive b~ care center.
Join the Gr.llld Opening Celebradon
Weclnetday, January 26 from 4:30pm IO 7:00pm
• Tour ti# friclllty
• Meet tbe physicians and slll.lf
•Bnjoy~S
• Win ezdtblf tloOr prlasl
(ureellend 8f1tliiltti.P, 111,,,,.,., l/Jll h¥1tlhfltmls)
Hoag Breast Cm a IJDlllftl Center •
35 l HOspltll tqd, Lawlr 1-1, Salle 007, Newport 8eacb
motorist allegedly harassed
the boy with some sexually ori-
ented statements.
"They were pretty lewd
comments,~ said Sgt. Don Hol-
ford. who wouldn't elaborate
because there is an ongoing
investigation.
Police said the driver tried-
to grab the boy's hand and
offered him $5 to come with
him. The boy refused and ran
home, where he told bis par-
ents about the incidents.
The man is described as
African-American, about 5
feet, 9 inch.es tall and weigh-
ing 140 pounds. He had short,
black hair, brown eyes and a
goatee. He was last seen dri-
ving an older model red Hon-
da Civic, described. as a two-
door hatchback with gold
chains hanging from its
reaiview mirror.
Anyone with in.fonnation is
asked to call the Costa Mesa
Police Department at (714)
754-5205.
The plaque bears the
slain children's favorite
items --for Sierra, a
shooting star; and Bran-
don, a teddy bear. Both
mothers will attend the
ceremony, along with
many of the teachers and
children's families.
Representatives from
the Costa Mesa Police
and Fire departments will
also be on hand, as will
grief counselors from the
1i'auma Intervention Pro-
gram.
Por 'additional infor-
mation, call the day-care
center at (9'9) 646-4334.
-Greg Rlsltng
CAU. FOR ~MY CONIULTATIOM
14•721-1113
• IAll Ml8UEl ORM, IUITf m • llEWPORT IEACH
Dr. Ellm'I Lift ... ICll lra••••tl WWW.OllllHlll1fl'Y.COm
Price and Service.
What a Concept. ~~
t11 ..
Afttt..'J1 The New Ski & ~" r, Snow Board Shop
._, You 've Never Heard Of
Mid-Winter Sale
I I . . I o I ..
Doily Pilot
Alesia Erickson,
wlfe of CoJlJlcll-
man Joe Erick-
son, and Gary
Hook, a Costa
Mesa building
inspector, exam-
ine a model of
the new recre-
ation center'
being bullt on
Anaheim
Avenue. Con-
struction on the
buUding should
take one year.
)(Ff CHoNG I DAILY Pit.OT
Friday, Jonuory 21 , 2000 5
~ ~'
AROUND TOWN
• Send AJtOUND TOWN items
to the Daily Pilot. 330 W Bay St.,
Costa Mesa 92627; fax them to
(949) 646--t 170; or call (949) 764-
4330. A complete listing may be
found at dailypilot.com .
TODAY . .
Sister Helen Prejean,
author of the Pulitzer Prize-
nominated book •Dead
Man Walking" and coun-
selor to death-row inmates,
'will speak at 7:30 p.m. at
Our Lady Queen of Angels,
2046 Mar Vista Drive; New-
port Beach. For lnore infor-
mation, call (949) 644-0200
. The Je'wt h Community
Center ot Orange County
will hol<l a program on the
archeology of b1bhca1 histo-
ry from 1 to 3:30 p m. Dr.
·Robert R. SbC"glitz, former
curator for th<' Nal..lonal
Mant.unc• Musc>tun m • laila,
and Dr. Z1ony Zev1t, profes-
sor of b1bllcal hternture at
L.A.'s Universlty of J,udaism,
will speak. Tickets dtc $10 to
$25 The cent(:r ts dt 250 E.
Baker St, <;osta Mesa. "For
more mfanndlJon, cu U (714)
755-0340.
Temple lsa1ah ~111 hold its
yedrly rummi:lge sale start-
mg dl 8 a m. at 6..108 West
Coast ~ hghW<J}'. Newport
Bei:lrh. For morP mforma-
tton C':ill (Q4(j) 548·6900.
MONDAY
Construction begir;ls on downtown center
OCC wtll bold a program,
"Voyaging on lnland Seas"
at 8 p.m. in its Robert B.
Moore Theatre. The pro-
gram will feature Newport
Beach mariners Michael
LeButt, who sailed the
Great Lakes of North Amer-
ica. Tickets are $5 to $13.
OCC is at 2701 Famriew ·
Road, Costa Mesa. For
more infonnation, call (714)
432-5880.
Author Jim Trelea e wtll
dddress pdrents, IE>dchers
and tht" g<>neral public at
7:30 p .111. dl TPWmkJe Mid-
dle School. Trel<•ase is the
author of "Rc>.idmq Aloud.•
For morn t.nf<>nntttlon, call
(714) 424 7%5.
• Costa Mesa officials
say the new building's
construction will take
one year to complete.
ANDRtW GLA7LR
Dlif Pilot
COSTA MESA -The
new Downtown Recreation
Facility will open in exactly
one year, parks officials said
at the center's ground-
breaking ceremony Thurs-
day.
The 18,000-square-foot
building on Anaheim Street
at Lions Park will feature a
swimming pool, gymnastics
room, gymnasium, offices,
locker rooms, a snack bar
and a social hall, according
to a floor plan.
The planning commif>-
sion unanimously voted in
February to replace the
existing World War II-era
facility with the new gym-
nasium. The existing build-
ing is not earthquake-safe.
"This facility was very
old and needed some
work," said Steve Hayman,
a city administrator working
on the project. pointing to
the old gymnasium. "It was
no longer cost-effective."
The entire pro1ect is
expected to cost the city
about $4.2 milhon, Recre-
ation Manager Stacia
Mancini said.
Councilman Joe Enckson
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Newport Beach
644-2464
SERVING ORANGE CO. SlNCE 1967
" i. ' • J 1, fl • " 1· 1 n 1 r • '. ·
We've upd1ted Ollf look 1t the Cosa Mesa Sou plantation with:
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I .31J
SATURDAY
said he couldn't wait for the
new fac1lity to open. During
a lunch reception at the <¥d
gymnasium, his 2-year-old
daughter Emma rolled
around on the lacquer floor.
ushe'll be one of the kids
using it," he said. •1 think
she'll really love it."
Pmk-cheeked Emma
seetned to be happy with
the old gym.
"She has fun every-
where," Erickson con-
of the old gymnasium -
said he is excited about the
new facibly. He has 11Ved
across the street from Lions
Park for nearly 40 years.
But he said he is sad the
old building has to go. He
!raid neighborhood volun-
teers raised the money and
constructed the gymnasium
and pool almost 60 years
ago.
"Kids came out here after
school and dug chrt," he
said. "It was really a symbol
of what a community can do
together"
T~erapist M~ne Cohen I St. Andrew's Presbyterian
will hold a divorce work-Church prPwnb nMmage sho~ from 10 a.m. to 12.30 and fcmuly muuster Daruel
p.m. at 180 Newport Center f-ldhn. who will !>pec1k on
Dnve. The workshop ts for · Shapmq Kids with Bdlance
men and women in the and Wisdom • from 7 to 9
process of d1vorcmg or I p.m. m D1err•nf1<'ld Hull. St
recently divorced. For more
fessed. · ~ -
Rod MacMillan -who
helped hammer nails, dig
·ditches and stack the bricks
information, call (949) 644-·
6435 SEE CALENDAR PAGE 6
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CALENDAR
CONTINUED FROM 5
Andrew' is at 600 St.
Andrew's Road. Newport
Beach. 1be event is free Ctuld
care lS available, but please
call ahead to arrange details.
For more tnfonnation, call
{949) 574-2218.
JAN. 24
Mark A.. Lemly, professor at
Boalt Hall S<;hool of Law at
UC Berkeley, will give a talk
on technology dlld the law at 5
p.m. at Whittier Law School,
·3333 Harbor Blvd., Costa
Mesa, The free faLk will be
held in RQOm 10. For more
information, call (714) 444-
4141.
Sherman IJbrary and Gar-
dens in Corona del Mar 1S
looking for people mterested
in giving tours of the gardens
to children and adults. An on-
entation class will be held dt 9
a .m. in the Central Patio Room
of the Gardens, 264 7 East
Coast Highway, Corona del
Mar. For more information,
calJ (949) 673-2261 . ..
JAN. 25
The Corona del Mar Cham-
ber of Commerce will hold its
43rd annual installation din-
ner at 6:30 p.m. at P1ve
Crowns, 3801 East Coast
Highway,· Corona del Mar.
The fN ot ts $35 pe1 person.
For more information, call
(9-49) 673-4050.
The Orange County Chapter
of The Single Gourmet will
hold a •gourmet dining
event• at 6:30 p ,m. at Tutto
Mar~. 545 Newport Center
Dnve, Newport Beach. For
more mfonnation, call (800)
750-DINE. .
The Costa Mesa Neighbor-
hood Commuruty Center will
hold a cl~s on cooking with
tofu and tempeh from 6 to 9
p.m. <:pst is $30 pluc; a $10
matenals fee. The center ts at
1845 Park Ave., Costa Mesa ..
For. mQre information, call
(714) 327-7525.
The Hyatt Newporter wUJ
host a serrunar btled •A New
You in the New Millenruum •
from 6:30 to 9 p.m. The cost is
$45. The Hyatt NewportPr is
at 1107 Jamboree Road, New-
port Beach. For more inlorma-
tion, call (714) 449-1004.
Commercial Real Estate
Women will bold its 2000
Cocktail Party from 6 to 9 p.m
at The Center Club, 650 Town
Center Drive, Costa Mesa.
The event is free, with cornplJ-
mentary hors d'oeuvres and <.1
no-host bar. For more informa-
tion or to RSVP, call (714) 549-
1377.
The Jewish Federation of
Orange County presents · a
seminar titled ·women and
Money: Talung Charge of
Your Iim.ancial LlJe• from 8:30
a m. to 2:30 p.m. at the Dou-
bletr Hotel, 3050 Bnstol St.,
Costa Mesa. The event is $55
and includes lunch. For reser-
vations and more information,
caU (7141 433-2272.
JAN. 26
The Costa Mesa Chamber of
Commerce will hold an after-
hours business mixer from
5;30 to 7:30 p.m. at Btrraporet-
ti's, South COdst Plaza, 3333
Bnstol St., Costa Mesa. The
event i5 free for members and
$10 for potential members~For
.more information, call U14)
885-9090.
Britt Ltd. wlll have a· .. Girl's
Night Out• from 6 to 9 p.m.
Jan. 26. Britt will demonstrate
her •tastuon and accessory
ma91c. • The event mcludes
refreshments, and an RSVP IS
necessary The store is at 3442
Vio Oporto #103, Newport
Beach. For more information;
call (949) 675-2174.
The Newport Beach Publlc
Library will celebrate Aus-
tralla Day with a noon presen-
tation by Australia Travel
Heddquarters. The event is
free. The library is at lOOO
Avocado Ave., Newport
Beach. For more information,
caU (949} 717-3801.
The Orange County Oracle
User Group will hold its quar-
terly meeting from 8:30 a.m. to
noon at the Oracle 'fraining
Facility, 600 Anton Blvd., Suite
New Spring Products,
Surfboards, and More
%· F
Dean Miller Bedding
1400, Costa Mesa. The cost11
$15 for one meeting or $25 for
a one-yeer membership to the
group. For more information,
ca1l (949) 477-9160.
JAN. 27 .
OCC president emeritus
David A. Grant presents a lec-
ture tiUed -nu~ Extraordinary
Voyage of Ernest Shackleton•
to be held al OCC's Udo Isle
C lubhouse at 7:30 p.m.
Admission is $5. The Club-
house is at 701 Via Udo Soud,
Newport Beach. For mote
.information, call (714) 432-
5087. ..
The Eastbluff Elementary
School PTA will host a com-
munity education program at
7 p.m. at the school's theater.
The Alrport Worlo.ng Group
will discuss Plans F and G of
the El Toro environmental
impact report, which are the
backup plans for expanding
John Wayne Airport. For more
informatJon, call (949) 263-
0708.
The Newport Harbor Area
Chamber of Commerce will
hold a seminar on Microsoft
sottware training from 9 a.m.
to 4 p.m. at th~ Sutton Place
Hotel, 4500 MacArthur Blvd.,
Newpo{'l Beach. The event is
$69. For more information, call
(949) ?-29-4400. .
FEB.3
South Coast Plaza wlll host
the •Fascination of Orchids
International Show and Sale•
from Feb. 3-6 at the Crate &
Barrel Wing of the mall.
Orchids from more than 60
growers will be represented
and each day of the show will
feature seminars and speak-
ers. South Coast Plaza is al
3333 Bear St., Costa Mesa. For
more inlonmition, call (714)
435-2160.
ONGOING
Essentials Counseling ls
offering two free seminars on
Mondays and Wednesdays in
January and February. •Learn
how to stop binge eating" ~
be held from 6:30 to 8 p .m.
Wednesday' and •Are you
concerned about your child's
weight?" will be held Mon-
days from 6:30 to 8 p.m. For
more infonnation, call (949)
5-48-4437.
A women's tbenpy support
group meets to discuss rela-
tionship issues at 6:30 p.m.
Tuesdays at 1151 Dove St.,
No. 105, Newport Beach. For
more information, call Barbara
at (949) 261-8003.
The Fdends of the Newport
Beach Public J,:.ibrary Used
Book Stoie needs to replenish
its book stock. Patrons are
urged to bring in unwanted
books. With the exception of
law books or magazines, all
donations -hardcover and
paperback -are welcome
and are tax-deductible. Books
may be left at any of the three
branch libraries -Balboa,
Mariners or Corona del Mar.
They can also be left in the
special book closet next to the
store at 1000 Avocado Ave.
For more information, call (949
759-9667.
The Newport Beach New-
comers Club meets at 10 a.m.
the third Wednesday of each
month at different homes. The
group of about 100 women go
on the road, play golf, tennis,
bridge and more. The group
also holds several .evening
parties. For more information,
call (949) 854-4501.
SL Marte Health Mlnisbies
presents Love Without Honor
support groups for women
coping with domestic violence
at 10 a .m . and 7 p.m. Mondays
through December. The
groups will meet for two hours
at St. Mark· Presbyterian
Church, 2100 Mar VlSta Ave.,
Newport Beach. For more
information, call (949) 721-
Daily Pilot
bilibes of adult children canng
for their elderly porents at 7:30
p.m. Tuesdays at 250 E. Baker
Sl, Costa Mesa. The purpose
of the group is to help children
and other concerned relatives
to identify problems and
issues and develop appropri-
ate solutions. The cost ls $30.
For more infonnallon, call
(714) 445-4950.
' The Costa Mesa Chamber of
Commerce holds networking
lunch.eon meetings from 11 :45
a.m. to 1 p.m. at the Costa
Mesa Country Club, 1701 Golf
Course Drive, Costa Mes~.
VtSitors are welcome. CQSt is
$12. For more information, call
(714) 885-9090.
The Udo Isle Toastmasters
Club meets at 6:30 p.m. Mon-
days at the Oakwood Apart-
ments, 1700 .16th St., m the
clubhouse on the mmn level,
in Newport Beach. For more
lllfonnation, call (949) 515-
9470. . .
The John Henry Foundatton
sponsors the Comfort Zone, a
mental illness support group,
which meets from 7 :30 to 9
p.m. Thursdays at the Llght-·
house Coastal Community
Church, 301 Magnolid St ..
Costa Mesa. For more infor-
mation, call (949) 548-7274.
Jewish Famlly Service of
Orange County sponsors dil
ongoing Jewish healing sup·
port group for people expen-
encing chrome illness. The
purpose is to provide partici-
pants ,With emotional and 'spir-
itual support to manage illness
and its consequences. The
group meets at 7. p.m. Thur...-
days at Jewish Fanuly Serv\ce.
250 E Baker St., Costa Mesa
Attendance is free, but pre-
registra bon is required. To
register or for more infonna-
tion, call (714) 445-4950.
' Scrabble Club No. 350 meets
The Jewish Family Service of from 6 to 10 p.m. Thursdays (lt
Orange County sponsors a Borders Books and Music on
discussion group focusing on 19th Street and Newport
issues, concerns and responsi-BouJevard, Costa Mesa. The
cost is $3. New players are
welcome. For more informa-
tion, call (949) 759-4871.
8079.
The Coln and Stamp Club
meets from 1 to 3 p.m. Mon-
days at the OASIS Senior
Center. New members who
are mterested m trading, buy-
ing and selling stamps and
coins are being sought to JOin
these mformal meetings.
There are no fees required.
For more information, call
(949) 644-32~4.
Jewish Family Service otters
ongoing bereavement support
groups for aduJts at all stages
of loss. The groups share
experiences, hear how othets
deal with grief, receive sup·
port and learn ways to cope
with sadness and loss. One
group meets at 7 p .m. Tues-
days at Beth Jacob in lIVine.
The second group meets at 10
a.m. Tuesdays at Temple
Judea in Laguna Hills. The
third group meets at 1 p.m.
Thursdays at the Ezra Center
ill Anahew. There ts no fee
for these groups, but preregis-
tration is required. For more
information, call (714) 445-
4950.
• mter
-~
JOHO LEOOARD'S
GOLP aHOP
J.
•
Doily Pilot
Residents def end park
• More than 100 at a
community meeting
say district should not
sell their beloved
Balearic Park.
DANElTI GQuLll'l
~"°'
COSTA MESA -More
than 100 Costd Mesa res1-
dents gathered at Balearic
Park on Thursddy night Ill
protest of the park's poten-
tial sale.
"Costa Mesa only has
two public buildings that
residents can rent out," said
resident Kelly Feldman
·we need the build.mg. We
need the park space.•
As anQT}' residents shot
question alter question al
school ~ board member
David Brooks, most seemed
reassured by Costa Mesa
City Councilman Joe Erick-
son's desire for the city to
buy the P!Operty.
•My commitment as a
councilman iS that we need
the open space," he said.
REACTION
' CONTINUED FROM 1
support an airport at El
Toro. ·
Several other concerned
residents, frightened at t.he
prospect of John Wayne
expansion, sa.td they will
start spreadmg the word
about the need for another
airport.
El Toro advocates
showed maps that pointed
out the 253 schools -pub-
Uc, private and day·care
CAMPAIGN
CONTINUED FROM 1
the prunary draws closer A
look inside the window
revealed neatly stacked cam-
paign signs and wooden
stakes, a large supply of ma.tl-
mg envelopes and a giant
banner on the wall that says
·caring for Amenca is elect-
ing George Bush president •
While Bush has fired a vol-
ley over the GOP gangplank,
candidate and billionaire
Steve Forbes established a
presence wtth his Irvine office
late last year.
Tom Fuentes, chairman of
the county's Republican party,
welcomes the addition of
Bush and any other cdildi-
dates willing to try therr hand
in Orange County.
"It's particularly positive if
any and all candidates open
campaign headquarters here
because it will stir energy,•
Fuentes said. "Campaigns
usually have to have a physi-
cal presence to draw volun-
teers. Bush's public profile lo
date here Ill the county has
been primarily money-orient-
ed."
ZAHER PALL.AHi, CPA
28 yrs. exp.
Acccg., Audits, Taxes
15% di5COunt to CM Rcsidcnrs
(714) 546-4272
The park is a 9.25-acre
lot owned by the Newport-
Mesa Unified School Dis-
trict that serves as a neigh·
borhood park.
For more than 22 years,
the city of Costa Mesa's
recreation department has
run a community and day-
care center at Balearic Park.
.6 Now, as talk of selling
the property escalates, resi-
dents fear they will lose the
park to developers.
Erickson proposed two
possible solutions to resi-
dents.
The .first was a trade-off
in which the park would not
be sold as long as the school
bond passes.
The second was increas-
ing the oty's hotel tax to '
raise the mQney needed to
buy the p~rk from the
school district.
The tax to stay m a hotel
10 Costa Mesa is currently
6%, Erickson said, whereas
in Newport Beach it is 10%
and more than 15% in Ana-
heim.
His suggestions were
met with applause from the
centers -that are within a
5-mile radius of John
Wayne. They said the
4,700-acre El Toro property
has a built-Jn butter zone
protecting homes and
schools from 1et noise.
Mariners PTA member
Linda Wooters, who orga-
nized the meeting, said she
wants everyone to realize
the gravity of the situation.
"I think it's pretty obvi-
ous. Tbe impact is so great
because there is no butter
zone -it is' scary,• Wooters
said. "In Soutb County, they
keep talking a bout their
•
otherwise hostile group.
Although the concept of
selling the property ts not a
new one, residents went on
the defensive when the dis·
tnct received a recommen-
dation last week to sell the
land.
That recommendation
was part of the facilities
committee's final report.
The committee, responsible
for examining. Newpprt-
Mesa's crumbling schools
and finding a way to fund
the needed ref)airs, sug-
gested selling the park and
another distnct-owned
property to fund future
upkeep and maintenance of
schools
Although wary of what
may happen lo the proper-
ty, many residents sdid they
have faith that the city will
buy and preserve it as a
park.
"Personally, I could nev-
er see the oty allowing this
to be developed," said Tun
Cromwell, who lives across
the street from the park
with his wile and children.
schools, but it's not as bad
as this. What about our chil-
dren?"
During the presentation,
speakers told parents that
Mariners students hear
louder noise from airplanes
than South County children
would ever experience if El
Toro is built.
Jeff Grant, the father of
two Manners students, said
that idea worries him.
•Right now, 'it's fine,•
Grant said. •If there are
more planes, then we have
a problem.•
Sabatino Tommy Peter . PhH Vince
Flavorful & Delicious Lunches & Dinner
l!lllqw •1M l'OOlll ~ diftln& ,_ n•illlllt ror .,_, INll.--clllp 1114 prfr•lt tlUldlom
723-0645 Please Call For ReservalJont and Dlttctiom
251 Shipyard Way • Newport Beach
Fridoy, Jonuory 21, 2000 7
Ci-l U.A! • PILOT
The unfinished home at 3007 Samoa Place stirred up the surrounding community lhls
summer. Its owners are now suing the city in an attempt to lift building restrictions.
HOUSE
CONTINUED FROM 1
Robin Leffler, d member of
the Mesa Verde homeowners
board, d who is aclively
oppose to the home's
remodeling "The city 1s
benc:ting over backwards to
make thing!> work out •
But Fnend ms~ts the top of
the Stevenson home is an
attic She said the room has
no electric1ty, no plumbing.
will be used only for storage
dnd has no ceiling, makmg 1t
under city dehnibons -1:1n
. dlllc.
City Planner Perry Vd!dn·
tine said the city found other
fttults w1lb the building,
mcludmg the stairwell violcs-
tion He declined to give
detttils because of the pend-
ing hbgabon But according
to a report prepared l:Sy plan-
rung stdll in .Jum• 1999,. the
city deten:r1.11wcl thf• height
and the windows of the
H ttlllC' .. Ul lciC'l ffidd<? II d thtrd
floor
The uty dtlorm•y's office
would not ~omment. saymg it
wasrl"'t nollhed ol the l<UVSUit.
The l'ldf\nm~ Corruruss1on
on Mondtty ts scheduled to
vote on a mettsure thttl would
clarify the defm1bon of d third
story, designed to prPvent fur-
ther proble~.
----.. --.-Y ..
---ca .. ~------..
Classified ads work
foryoul
8 Doily Pilot
. . .
_.Jan.2411anor.
IUSSILL GAi
QUOTE Of THE DAY
~ pn? 1hey are only "*' snor1cils ... "
April Ross; Newport Harbor High girls volleyball
~
Cream alW:ayS rises to the top
• April Ross is in line for
national honors today.
T his morning at 10, Newport
Harbor High's April Ross will
be honored at Newport's
Davidson Field hy Gatorade as the r
National Volleyball Player of the
Year.
In the long line of volleyball
success in the Newport-Mesa
area, she is the first Gatorade
Player of the Year recipient.
La.st year's winner was Logan
Tom from Utah, who was a
first-team NCAA All-American at
Stanford University this past fall.
This morning's ceremony will
honor Newport's CIP champion
football team, as well.
April is the most versatile
volleyball player to ever play in our
area. After middle blocking as a
freshman on the varsity, she moved
to the ball-control outside hitting
spot for her sophomore and junior
years, and, after moving to setter,
played all three positidns during
BOYS WATER POLO
Belden, Gentry
lead parade of
All-Americans
• Stx locals are named to
the All-American squad.
TONY AlTOBf'JJJ
Dcff Pb
.-------.. NEWPORT
BEACH -Four
boys water polo
players from
Newport Harbor
High and two
from Corona del
Mar were named
to the 1999 All-
American team,
as chosen by a
Belden select group of
bigb school
coaches.
Sailors junior
Peter Belden and
CdM senior Gar-
rett Gentry were
each first-team
selections, while
Newport's Tim
Bird.song was sec-
ond-team.
CdM junior
Garrett Bowlus is
Gentry a fifth-team AU-
American, while
Newport's Ryan Cook is a seventh-
·tearn selection and teammate Bren-
dan Hansen is honorable mention.
Belden, a Daily Pilot Dream Team
Co-Most Valuable Player with Gen-
try, scored 68 goals to lead the Sailors.
As w~ as hand.ling all the spnnts
· and taking all the penalty shots,
what set Belden apart was his
defense, recording 93 steals in 1999.
Gentry was named the Pacific
Coast League's Most Valuable Play-
er after he helped lead his team to
the CIF Division Southern Section D
crown.
Coach John Vargas labeled Gen-
try a utility player, as he was used at
the two-meter spot, on the wing and
at the point throughout the season.
With his array of moves from any
position, Gentry led CdM in scoring.
Birdsong was the Sea View
League's MVP, establishing himself
as one of the best goalies at the high
school level.
With his long arms, Birdsong not
only made the big save time and
again, but his awareness allowed
him to start numerous attacks, as his
17 assists would indicate.
Playing next to Gentry, Bowlus
steadily improved as the season went
along and stood tall in "the CIF Oivt-
&.ion n title game, scoring four goals
in CdM's 8-6 win over Servile.
Cook teamed up with Belden
many times throughout the sea.son
and look for the duo to reach even
higher numbers as they both enter
their senior year next year.
Cook scored four goaJs in New-
port's 8-6 win over Loyola in the ec-
• ond round of the CIP playoff and his
65 assists led the team.
Hansen was a first-team, AU-Sea
View League selection on defense,
collecting 52 steals for the year.
His tough play on defense and
strong shot from the point on offense
allowed Cook and Belden more free~ r1
dom to produc offensively.
These sh: players were also select·
ed to th 1999 All-Southern Califor-
nia team.a, With Belden, Gentry and
Birdsong each a first-team self.'ction.
The All-Southern California team
was rompilad by taking the All·CIP
t am.a from oil six diviiiona to fonn
one list. •
This team was then combined
with litt.J from Northern Ctllfornle,
San Diego County and Hawaii to
farm the All·Anlerlcaii tMm.
her senior year, which
ended with Newport
winning the California
State Division I
championship, again.
'She joins an elite group
of former area players who
were honored as the
natiOnal'Players of the
Year. In the 80s, Newport's
Lara Asper and Jenny
As a sophomore who started on
many Orange County Volleyball
Club NII<E teams, which won the
Volleyball Festival National
Championships, she led from the
middle blocking position in the 18s
division made up of mostly seniors
in high school.
After a junior year as CIF Player •
of the Yeat and state champion, she
was understandably confident.
Evans were National
Players of the Year by AprURoss
I asked her high school
volleyball coach,. Dan
Glenn, to give me a funny
M April" story that nobody
had ever reported and this
is the result. It seems that
during a very stressful
moment of the 1997 CIP
semifinal match with Mira
Costa, April, only a
sophomnre, looked at her
teammates and asked,
"Why panic? They are As a senior, April ha_s the
confidence and understanding to
maint&n a role that few people
ever reach. Obviously talented and
very charismatic, she understands
that volleyball is a team game. To
me, she is the consununate team
player, which is the greatest
compliment one can receive.
another group, as well as a
midwest publication singhng out
from the 1994 national title
Newport team, Misty May, who,
like April, could play many
different positions, although she
was used as an outside hitter.
Extremely talented, April was a
very good soccer player in her
pre-high school days. In track, she
excels in the jwnping everits and
was a state finalist in the high
jump. She played three years of
basketball for Newport and was
named the Newport-Mesa Player
of the Year last y~ar.
only mere mortals.~ Dan
could not understand why his team
was laughing so hard during this
big-time match until he heard her
comment.
One of the great joys of my
profession is to observe as
hundreds of athletes move through.
their lives. The changes and life
paths chosen are the reward.
April's progression from a
wide-eyed eighth-grader who
played with great enthusiasm to
an even more wide-eyed freshman
on Newport's varsity, we.re
in9-ications-of her love for the sport.
Last night, Gatorade sponsored
a dinner to honor April. She could
invite anybody she :.vanted. The
invitations went to her family, Dan
Glenn and Athletic Director Eric
'IWeit from Newport, Jerritt .Elliot,
who will be her college coach at
the University of Southern
California, and myself. The
HIGH SCHOOL GIRLS BASKETBALL
YOLLIYllLL
remairung invitees were her entire
Newport Harbor girls volleyball
team, which is another example of
their importance to her.
Talented athletically, blessed
with tremendous charisma, coupled
with great passion for sports and
their inherent relationships, April
Ross is a person who should be one
of those great role mod~ls which
younger players can emulate and
respect for many years.
t
CDM EXPLODES!
• Surprising Sea Kings
Unleash second-half fury
to thrash Mesa, 64-31.
BARRY FAULKNER
Deft Ph
COSTA MESA -Tums out it
was the Sea View League which
may have gotten a break when
releaguing shifted the Corona del
Mar High girls basketball team into
the Pacific Coast League this sea-
son.
Coach Elbert Davis' squad,
which lost its final 33 Sea View
games, completed its inaugural first
round of PCL competition with 8Il
emphatic second-half explosion
Thursday at Costa Mesa to win the
showdown of PCL unbeatens,
64-31.
The victory, Cd.M's sixth straight
and 13th in its last 14 games,
improved the surprising league
leader to 16-4, 4·0 in league.
It will also tum a few heads,
resoundingly rewarding the
unranked program with the respect
it has coveted all season.
"This is easily the best win l've
had here,• said Davis, 12-37 his
first two years at the helm. •And it's
been a long road to get here.•
Costa Mesa (13-6, 3-1 and
ranked No. 6 in ClP Southern Sec-
tion ID-AA), did its part to put CdM
on a rocky road, seizing a 2.4-21
halftime lead.
But after a Laura Muniz putback
upped the lead to 28-23 with 6:04
left in the third quarter, CdM used
unrelenting full-court pressure and
uncanny outside shooting to
outscore the beleaguered favorites,
41-2, until Mesa hit a free throw
with 15 ticks left.
•1 knew if we could get them to
play our way, which is a hectic, up-
tempo style, sooner or later, they'd
break down,• Davis said. •we were
hitting our shots, the girls were
playing their butts off on defense
and everyone was in the mix. Once
we get on a roll, we're a tough team
to beat.•
Sophomore guard Andrea Gru-
ber's 19-footer ignited a roll whi~h
included 12 straight CdM points,
before a Mesa. free throw ended the
third quarter and pulled the hosts
within 35·29.
The perimeter pyrotechnics,
however, were just getting started
and point guard Charlene Quon
put the flame to the fuse
It was Quon, the team's lone
senior and a holdover from the lean
years, who led a dear-the-air dis-
cussion which superseded practice
Wednesday. Davis said before tipoff
SEAN HIU£R I DAILY PILOT
Costa Mesa's Autumn Smith (white jersey) and Co rona del Mar's
Carne Hawk.ins duel as CdM's Charlene Quon (left) and Costa
Mesa's Laura Muniz (right) look on ln Thursday's PCL showdown.
he wasn't sure whether the
impromptu confab would increase,
or alleviate the team's growing ten-
sion.
But Quon helped bury any lin-
gering bitterness by knocking
down four three-PQinters within a
span of 3:05. Season Meservey,
who sat out Wednesday's game
while her residential eligibility
could be deared, added another
lhree--pointer to the · Cd.M
onslaught, which was aided by
Mesa's 18 second-half turnovers.
"We came together in the sec-
ond half,• said Quon, whose 18
points were one sby of her season
high. HJ'm glad we pulled jt oU."
The M~tangs' cause was signif-
icantly hampered when juruor
poml guard and Orange County
assist leader Nancy Hatsushi left
the game for good with a leg
cramp, rrudway through the third
quarter
But Mesa Coach Jim Weeks
offered no excuses, only praise for
the victors.
"They played a great game,•
Weeks said. "They're pressure was
outstanding and they were bitting
their shots. (Cd.M) did everything it
wanted to in that second half. I was
coaching ·when (CdM) won CIF
(Division 3-A in 1983) and I don't
remember them ever dominating
the way they did tonight, back
then.•
That dominance helped force 28
Mesa turnovers and hold the hosts
lo O-for-6 shooting in the fourth
quarter, 2 for 16 in the second half.
(12.5%) and 7 !or 33 overall (21.2%).
CdM junior Kristin McCoy col-
lected nine points, 10 rebounds and
six steals off the bench.
Me ervey added 11 points,
while junior center Chris Eyre (10
board-; and five points) and sopho·
more Carrie Hawkins (seven
rebounds and four points) helped
control the paint.
Gruber added six points and
four as ists, while Mijanou Pham,
Courtney Kawata and Jackie
McCoy also contributed heavily as
Davis shuttled in substitutions to
ustain the defensive t.0lens1ty.
CdM (16-4) 4 0
Cost.11 Mr-s.1 ( 1 l h) J 1
... ~ . 1 _.._. -.
Un1vers1ty (7·13) 1 3
Thursd.ay's scores
Tonight's game
Saturdily's game
Westminster at C.olta Meu
(nonleague)
Tuesday's game
Ccnnlt dlil MIW at Santa Ana
(nonleague)
Eagles fly
past Uni
• Cassity, Lenhart lead
Estancia to 66-43 victory
over the visiting 1Tojans.
TONY ALTOllEIJJ
laf Pb
COSTA MESA-Four solid
quarters from Lauren Cassity
and one minute of hot shooting
from Becky Lenhart were all
Estancia High's girls basket-
ball team would need in
Thursday's 66-43 Pacific Coast
League rout over visiting Uni-
versity.
Cassity led the Eagles with
22 points, while Lenhart added
12 points, all on three-point
baskets.
Despite the heroics from
Cassity and Lenhart, Coach
Paul Kirby was especially
pleased with lus entire team's
performance.
•we played well from top to
bottom,• Kirby said. ~we had a
lot of people do a lot of good
things out there.•
Alter the Eagles (11·9, 2-2
in league) jumped out to a six-
point, first-quarter lead, Uni-
versity (7-13, 1-3) hung tough,
thanks to the solid play of Rea-
gan Anders. She finished with
a team-high 17 points.
Uni cut the lead to two ear-
ly in the S«ond quarter, before
Lenhart went to work.
SEE ESTANCIA MGE 9
Tars fall shOrt at Aliso ·Niguel, 55-22
• Newport Harbor limits Pederson, but rest of Wolverines , Utree·pomter at the buzzer that gave
th Wolvenn a 13-pomt lead at
halftime. Hastie and Pederson com-
bmed for all of Aliso Niguel's (11-8,
1 ·2 in league) 23 points 1o that half.
too much fo! Sailors to handle in Sea View League play.
Jo:.rPu Boo determined to stop Pederson, the
IW'f Pb Wolverines' star freshman, who
came in averaging a little over 20
points per game. Matched up
against Newport's Lauren Gallardo,
she scored 14.
ALISO VlEJO -Newport Har-
bor High's girls basketball team
came ln determined not to let Allio
Niguel'• Julio Pederson )>eat them.
She didn't, but Nilda Hutie did.
' Hostie scored 26 potnts to lead
ber team to a 55·22 win over visiting
Newport Harbor ln a Sea V\ew
l.Mgue game.bfl 1bunday. The ~
drops the Sallon to 3·16, o..c in
leegUe.
Newport came 1Dto tbe game
•Gallardo did an excellent job on
defense,• NewpOr:t Hubbr Coach
Gregg Savege said. •we wanted
everybody elee to beat UI. lhUoltD·
nately, everybody did.·
Aliso Niguel took adv ... Cl
Newport's boK4Ad"One ...._,
mtt&lled just um week HMtle
ICOted 14 m the ftnt half, tact....,.•
Molly Weedn scored the first f ow
points as the Sailors led, 4-3, five
minutes in the game. Weedn entsed
up With m potnts.
UN Getlath led the SaUorl With
eicJht points and rune rebounda. Gal-
lardo got fow polnll, and hir
...... provided two tteeli. Nicole
Aabton uo ICOl'ed four to rotmd out
Newport'1 ICOl'lng.
·0vsau. we plaY'ed good. Mnt
bUMltbd.. Sewage ..... .,,..... d
I am Mk ol tbedl dgl»l now.•
I •
_~_i_~_P_i~-t--~------------~~r~ h~~~21.2~9
llGH SCHOOLS
Sunset League plan
seeks to deny smaller
schools chance to win
CIF Division I crowns
• Newport Harbor, Corona del
Mar volleyball, tennis would be
affected if the proposal is passed.
8AJlRY FAUlJ<NER
~Pio!
BUENA PARK -The Swiset League
introduced a proposal which would ban
schools from Mplaying up" in CIF South•
em Section division playoffs at Thursday's
section council meeting at the Sequoia
Athletic Club.
If passed l\pril 13 by the council, com-
prised of one representative from each of
the section's 76 leagues, this would forbid
teams, including Back Bay powers New-
port Harbor and Corona del Mar high
schools, in boys and girls volleyball and
boys and girls tennis, from seeking the
best postseason competition.
Instead, all schools would be required
to compete in their enrollment-based divi-
sion, regardless of the strength of their
program. ·
Newport Harbor boys and girls volley-
ball coach Dan Glenn, as well as CdM
boys tennis coach nm ,Mang, have long
advocate(l the current option to move up
to a higher division. .
Newport Harbor's girls volleyball team
has used this option to win three straight
Division I-AA section championships.·
The CdM boys tennis team moved up
to Division l and won a section crown last
spring, wJien the CdM boys volleyball
team also chose to move up. leading to an
all-Back Bay Division I section tmal won
by Newport Harbor.
Los Alamitos Assistant Principal Jerry
Halpin spoke on behalf of the proposal
Thursday. He said schools which move up
often deny those in upper wvisions play-
off spots, even seeds. ·u playoffs are enrollment-based,
nothing else should matter,• Halpin said.
A similar proposal was defeated, 33-31,
by the council's majority vote, Oct. 22,
1998.
A proposal to create an additional 12-
minute quarter to break ties in CIF foot-
ball championship games was introduced
as a non-action item by the Serra League.
Mater Dei Principal Patrick Mwphy
spoke on behalf of the plan, which would
end the current practice of recognizing
co-champions il a ClF title game is tied at
the end of regulation. The extra quarter
(not sudden death) differs from the cur-
rent tiebreaker (modeled after the NCAA
version with both teams taking turns try-
ing to score from the 25-yard line) used in
playoff games lead.mg to the finals.
This will be voted upo~ April 13.
The council voted to allow boys and
girls water polo teams to increase their
regular season from 18 games to 20.
Other proposals, to be voted upon
April 13, include a plan to increase boys
and girls swimming and diving from three
wvisions to four and to allow track and
field athletes to qualify for CIF preliminar-
ies based on their individual school's
eruollment, rather than wvision place-
ment by league.
. .--..
~<'*"-· ~-~c-.iJ01u••
SClllDUll
c_,.,..,..,...._.~ .. o. .... c-. , .. _
...,__....,.·~llMWttAM ..... 1JO-.;c..-. •'-•""" 1,.....,,_.~ 1,.. ... ·-. ..... -llla'lt·~-·,.._...._)1Sl'"'·'--•C-..•"'-l1Spl0\.;~"~)IS-·-.-HW!tlt.ooltlftl· ~ -· ~-~, _
TIM ELY MATT ER: COM ESCA PES
0 1Meara1s goal in added
time gives CdM a 1-0 win.
.IO'irP11 Boo
~Pb
COSTA MESA -1t .cdn't over
'W it's over.
Costa Mesa high's girls soccer
team learned Yogi Berra's mantra
in thE! most gutwrenching fashion
possible against Corona del Mar.
CdM's Molly O'Mcara scored in
the ad.ditional time after regulation
to give the Sea Kings a wild and
dramatic 1-0 Pacific Coast League
win over the host Mustangs on
Thursday. CdM, ranked No. 2 in
the CIF Southern Section Division
IV, is now 4-0-0 in the PCL.
•soth teams played great, and
then the game ended on a silly
goal,• an exasperated Costa Mesa
Coach Dan Johnston srud. •Tius is
so frustrating.•
The ending was cruel for Costd
GIRLS SOCCER
Mesa because only the referee
knew when the game would end,
and Mesa seemed to have pulled
out an important tie. The Mus-
tangs (7-3-6, 1-2-1 in league) had
the game ending almost two min-
utes before O'Meara's goal.
But the referees saw it different-
ly. They tacked on the added time
on becaitse of a seemingly innocu-ous play earlier in the second haU.
. "(Mesa's) swe$er tried to cledr
the ball and it almost went into the
street," CdM Coach· Ron Evdns
srud. •That's why the refs added
the extra time."
The ball wdn't go mto the
street, but into a bush lining a
fence. The time it took a bystander
to retrieve the ball ended up being
the added time.
CdM (11-4-2) had O'Meara's
yoal 44 seconds into the added
time O'Meara found the ball m
the rrudst of a rnelee and squmned
the ball into Mesa's gOdl.
After a close first half, CdM's
offense found more opporturuties
lll the second. Elisha Morgan and
Jennifer Long both hdd clear shots
on goal, but it was sdved by Mus-
tang goalie Margttrct Landeros,
who ended up with nine. And
CdM's. Knstm Hanson and
O'Meard had shots that Just went
lugh.
"We gave them too mciny scor-
mg opportunities m the seconc\
'haff, • Johnston said •And CdM is
too good not to take ddvantage.
Costa Mesa also had its oppor-
tunities to score. It's best chance
cdme on the §0th minute, when
Nichelle Janti made a lead pass for
Sharon Day. But CdM goabe Britta
Vogele ran out dlld made a danng
save.
The Mustangs had the last
chance to score m regulation t.une
on a throw-JD n ar CdM's goal.
But the Seo Kings' Allison Harvey
cleared the ball away .
·we w~e brilliant on defense,·
Evans sllld ·we didn't give up a
lot of opporturuues."
Neither team gave up a lot of
opportunities Ln d defensive strug-
gle. Before tho game, Johnston
stressed how 1mpcrdtlve it was tor
the Mustangs to get off to a fast
start They tlld, controlling the hrst
15 rrunutes, before CdM fought
bdck.
"T}ley <J.re .'. humongously
unproved ft om last year," Evans
said of Mesa. ·We knew it was
going fo be tough '>conng on
them.•
"Both team<> played great,•
Johnston said. "CdM did a good
1ob of attdcking We d1d every-
thing right to win. except for
putting the bdll m the net,"
GIRLS . SOCCER
Newport Harbor falls at Aliso Niguel, 4-0
ALISO VIEJO -Newport Harbor High's girts soccer team
dropped d 4-0 Sea View League verdict to host Aliso Niguel
Thursday as freshman standout Stdcy Lindstrom scored three
goals, dropping the Sailors to 2-8-2 overall, 1-3 ln ledgue
Amy Niles and Heather Metcalf combined for eight saves,
but Aliso's 18-7 assault proved decisive
Estancia drops 1-0 verdict to University
· IRVINE -Estanaa High's girls soccer team dropped a 1-0
Paafic Coast League decision at Uruverstty Thursday as Jen
Marquand scored tli'e game's only goal.
Helen Flores was crec:tited with 12 saves for the Eagles, who
fell to 5-8-0 overall, 0-3 in league.
WRESTLING
CdM pins Mesa
•Sea Kings do the Mustangs in, 51-30.
CORONA DEL MAR -~~~COSf.~MDAlO
Corona -·d~1 Mar High's 103 . Turco (CdM) pinned Donovan.
wrestling team won the key 309 2 matches and prevailed, 51-112 ·Inouye <CdM) plnn(!d En~.
M 3'.51 30, over visiting Costa esa 119 Freedman (CdM) won by forlett
1n Pacific Coast League 125 . Bello (CdM) won by torle1t
a~on Thursday night. no · Wynkoop (CdM) def. YMnz.
1n the 145-pound weight 15;';s F•nlSI (CM) pinned del Ponte,
cl s, CdM's Anthony 307.
Trclnkiem pUUled lu.s oppo-140-Casarrubial (CM) pinned Varner,
nenl at 3;08 3 ~!s . Tr<lnloem (CdM) pinned D<lVid, Sophomore Ben Wynkoop, H>e
fresh off a comeback pm last 152 • Tr.-cy (CM) pinned C•<lOC\lilh,
week agamst Estancia, dom:i-31::o. Ha<Jter 1 won by fort.it
nated lus opponent. WIJUling 111 • Larr~ (caMl won by forfeit
by a 15-8 decision. 189 • AronM (CM) pmned Of~.
The Sea Kings, travel to I ~ ~~5 Shipman (CdM) pi~ Northwood to take on the Schepens, 100
Timberwolves Thursday Hwt Grub&ch (CM) p.noed ~ l 1 t.
ESTANCIA knock them down."
CONTINUED FROM 8
SIAM HILLER I DAlY Pl.OT
COllA Mesa-a Aulwlul Smith rebounds u CdM's Jackie McCoy defends.
Following two made free
throws from Erika Avalos,
Lenhart found the hot hand,
connecting on three consecu-
bve three-pointers in a one-
nunutc span, twning a four-
poi.nt lead into a comfortable
23-10 cusluon.
Uruvers1ty would not be
able to recover from that
shooting streak. The TrOJdDS
got as dose as nine three dif-
ferent times, but Estancia was
able to hold them off.
1111 SCIOOL GIRLS HOOPS SUMMlllES
•They were playing a zone
and we really shoot better
against the zone defense,"
Kirby said. "We were able to
execute our offense and find
our outside shooter. Fortu-
nately, Becky was able to
•vou could almost see the
other team drop the1t heads
after that,• Kirby S8.ld.
The Eagles' full-court
press, the key in their come-
bdck wm over Saddleback on
Tuesday, was JUSt as tough on
Thursday, forcing t 8 Uni
turnovers. Estancia 's· Marie
Rodn-guez chipped m with
eight pomb. olf the bench.
while Qaudta Villa added six
m reserve.
f;l.~. -, • . • -~ r . . . -.... '_;_~
•' t _. I . ' . . .
''. N81M8t81MMnt
The followlng petlOnl
ere doing bualileu u • STEPXSTEP, 21
CN<MdM Lane, Allto
VleJo, Cellfo rnl•
82658·1815 Mlcheel Bergen, 21
CN<MdM Lane, Alllo VleJo1 Cellfornle
826!ie-1815
This bulloeu II CM-duc:ttd by: .,.. lndMduel Heve .you aterttd doll'9 bullneat )'91? No
Mlc::hMI Bergen
Thia tiattmtnl WU llltd wllh IN councy
Cleltl of ()ange ~ on 12·1-IMt 1 .... 1'°74
o.llY Pltot Otc. 31, 1"8, Jen 7, 14, 21, 2000 f207
....... ....__
"Affordable
Altttnative"
Discount Casket,
Cremadona:
e,.mal Serrice
,
"
10 Friday. lonuory 21, 2000 .
SUMMARY OF PAOPOl!D
ORDINANCE
CfTYOF
'COSTA MESA
A PAOPOSED OA·
DfNANCE le scheduled
lof lldo9tl0n at ""'~ ... Ct COUflQI
of F~ry 7, ,
bevig Ordinance 00·3,
amending "'' Cotti MIN Munldl)4al Codi
llllbnO IO IMl'l\berahlp
In lhe Pa"-AKrn,uon Fldllllft Ind P1t11.waya
CommiaalOn. c111111ng
the DOtltlOn of Halter• na11·r:~~
THE MOTION to givt 01dln1nce 00·3 first reeding cerrled by the
lollowiOQ 1oll call vote.
COUNC"IC,; MEMBERS:
AYEI~ Mon1h 1n, Cowen, l!rlckeon ,
Somere, Dixon. NOES:
Hone. ABSENT: Hone. THE FULL TEXT of
lhe Ofdnlnc. mey be
rud In lhe CltY 0.111.'a
Ofta, n Faff DIM, co.ca tHla MARY T. ELLIOTT,
Deputy City Clm
Publfahed Newport
BllCh·COatl MIU = Piiot Janulty 21,
F231 ORDINANCE
NO. 00-2
AH URGENCY
ORDtNANCE OF
THE crrv COUNCIL
OF THE crrv OF
COSTA MESA,
CALIFORNIA
EXTENDING
INTERIM
ORDtHANCE NO.
99-18 IMPOSING A
MORATORIUM ON
CERTAIN NEW
USES WITHIN THE
WESTSIDE
SPECIFIC PLAN
AREA.
THE CITY COUNCIL
OF THE CITY OF
COSTA MESA DOES
HEREBY ORDAIN AS
FOU.OWS. SectJon 1 Flnd•nga.
Thi City Couldl of the City of Colla Mell finds
and dedarea that Or·
dlnance No 99-18 WIS
~on December II,
1899, u en urgency In·
f F!#~ I [ FAtri ~:i' 11 -• 1 i.flm Of'CSlnlnOI 10 111ow )anuaty, <lUOO A MMMI , -..kl In e
81Atlcienl ll'n.,. lot !I'll GARY MONAHAN NO. AllCA?tlJH newsp1pe1 1'9QY111rty • 01y eo ~ .,,_ IUwof ot tt1e NOnce cw aued ano or general
WMttio. ~ 'tin City of COMA.._. COW\..UfT '°" eilcu1111on In Co1ta
Study ..-.0 I.Ille any MC· AT'TUTl ~ANO MeN Orange County,
HHty 11epe to tmpll-MAllY T. fUJOTI A,.MIT 0 , Cdtomla ment lhl ~· Deputy t;fty ~ PROHA1Y 5 AH'/ CLAIMANT •Uon• of lhe lludy con-lftCf 111~ Ctertl Of To 1t1r and all dai· ~IN. OR TO SAID CAlfnlnQ larld !IMS ,,_,. tN Chy COWtcll of IM man!I Of, In, or to lhe R~f90N0£NT PAOP·
ml!ltdln tne •!Udy 11111. City °' CoeQ ..... R11pond1n1 Property EATY MUST FllE A tl\al tht inltr1m Of· STATE Of" whiCtl II lhl IUbject of CLAIM WITH THE Cllnance IOlt>adl the ls· CALIFORNIA) lhll ldlOn. NOTICE IS CLERK ol lhl Unn.d
tuanW ol any perm. Of' COUNTY OF GIVEN THAT Stattl Oillnet Court.
approval.I IWhiCh woutct ORANGE) SS 1. A Vellhd Com· W11tern DlllflCt of
altow aommencernent of CITY OF plaint for FOlfeiture h.. TtQI, Aultln OMalon,
any new Niii of aJoo. COSTA MESA) bffn Iii.ct In thl1 ColJtt wi1hin ten (10) daya from
hollc bev•faQll, bars, I, MARY T. ELLIOTT, on 12-09·99. by tht lhl dllt ol ltft publk:a·
llquo( atores, and conve-Oej)uty Crty Cletti and United Statea Aflomey tlon of tti 1 not~ and
ntel'IOI s1oi11 within 1111 eic-otflelo dirt< of lhl for Ille Western Ol&tl1et any ~ claimant ahlll atudy area: Ille! sine. Crty Council of the City of Te1t11, 1oaln1t lhl 1erve an 1nswer Within
tile ecloption ot the In· ol eosi. MIA, her.by Re~( 1998 twentv (20) daya afler
terim ordlnallQI th• City cef11fy lt\81 the above Lamborghini Dlablo SV, the filing of the dalm, u
1tall and conaultant and foregoing Or· VIN. p10Vldla by Tille 28
havewOOltddlligenttyto d1oanoeNo.oo-2wa1ln· ZA90U21B4WLA12007, US.C Rule C(6) ol the
complell lhl 11uoy, but lloduc4d and con· hl191naflllr referl9d to 11 Supplemental F\UIM for
that addnionat time Is 1lder1d HC11on by Chi "Respondenl Prop. Certain Admfralty and
1u11 nalded tor thl1 HCtion at • 1egutar trty", ton10lation• of Tl-Mar 111 m • CI a Im•.
purpoM; that 111e ... 10 meeting of llld City U• 18 United si.111 Ftd R °"' p
daYI belot'I rhe lnttflm Councffhlld on lhe 17th Codt (U.S C.) Sec11ona e. ""4Y INDIVIDUAL or~ 1xplreu writ· dey of Januaty. 2000, 195hnd 11157 and Title OR PARTY V1HO IS
ien report purwant to end tflefeetc11 pused 18 U 8 C. S«don 981. PEASONM.l Y
Govtrnmtnf Code and adopted U I whole 2 An Older hU been SERVED with Nolloe of •ection 65858{d) was II· 11 • regular ITlffllng of "'ltred by lhe Unl1td Comolllnt for Forlel1Uft
1uld • d11crlblng the lllid Cit)' Counol held on State• Olafrlct Court INI and Arrat ol Property In meesure1 taken to al· lhe _171h daV of January, a W1~1 for Arrest. be this cau11, hOW1ve1,
lelltete oondrtlona lead• 2000, by the loltowvlg Issued u pniyed tor by &hell Ille a dalm within
ing to the adoption of lhe rol call vote. Petitioner Undid State• ten (1 O) d•YI after SUCh tntenm ordinanee; end A Y E S : C o w a n , of Amttice .. rv1ce has been 1x-
thlt lhere oonttnUtl lo Erlchon, Somer•, 3. A We~ lot AtrNt ICUlld, and lhlM serve
be a amtnt and Im-Dixon wu IUued by the Otr1t an INW9r wilhl'I twenty
meclial• tnrut to tile NOES: Monahen of lhe Court command· (20) daYI 1ner the filing
publtC health 181e1y or ABSENT: None Ing me, or other autnol· of the clelm. 11 provided
wettare and' that 'ap-I N W I T N E S S lzld law enforcement of· by Tille 28 U SC. Rule
pro111f o1 any of the WHEREOF, I have Iler.. lloer or any other pel'l«t C(8) of Ille Supplemen-
prohlbltld uses would unto M4 my hind and If· or orsianlatlon 1uthor· tal AUii• for Certain
reaull In lhll threat to the flxed the Seal of !I'll City lzed by law to enforce Adm•rallV and Manflmt
public hHlth, aalety, of Costa Mela lhi• 18th the warrant, to arrest thl Clalma, ,.Id A.Clv P end wettare. day ol January. 2000 R11pondent Property SIGNED this 17 day of Secloo 2. Elttenslon MAFW T. ELLIOTT deactlbld 1boV1 end Oeoember, 11199.
lntetlm Ordinance No. Deputy City Clefk •nd I a k • 1 t In I o m y /SI Oery Gallman,
119·18 11 hlrtby t•· 11.:0fffclo Clertt of the poaaenlon for Hie St>eclel Agent,
tended for en add1Uonel City Councll of "" custocfy •• provided by Depertmem of Tru .. 1 year, 10 monll'lt and City of Coeta M... Tltlt 28 U.l .C. Aull ury, lntem•I Revenue
15 dily1 from Januaiy Published Newport E(4)(b) of th• Sup· Service, Crlmlnal ln-
21, 2000, to and lnclud· &each-Costa Mesa pllmentel Rulet lor~r· v1et1g1tlon OM elon
Ing December 6, 2001. Dally Pilot January 21 , taln Adnilrally and for '"' Wfft•m 0 1 ..
J:1Urtuant to Government 2000 Mallllme Claims, until trlct of Texea
Code section 6~(a). F232 further order ol lht Publlihed Newpolt
Section 3. Effective UNITED STATES Court, Ind to make my Beach· Cotta Meaa Date and Publlc:atJon. otSTRICT COURT return u prOlllded by Dally PtlOtJanuary 7, 14, Thia Ordinance &haU WESTERN law, end 181d W1rf1ltlt 21, 2000
lake effect and be In full DISTRICT for Arrest hu been 11t· CNS17'58878 F208
lore. end effect Im· eaJttcl SUPERIOR COURT mediately from and after OF TEXAS 4. I wu further «· OF CALIFORNIA
1t1 paasage and, before AUSTIN DIVISION dared IO cau. publk:a· COUNTY OF ' the expiration ol liftten UNITED STATES OF tlon of Publlc Nodol ..
(15) daYI attar 111 pas· AMERICA, PetltloMr, requllld by Title 2.8 ORANGE
nge, lllall be pUbloahed v. U S.C. Rule C{4) of lhe Lamoftaux Justice
once lo a newspaper of 1991 LAMBORGHINI Supplemental AUlet lor Center· Probete
general clrculatlon, OIABLO .~I~-·_ Ceftaln Adrnlfally and Poa34ll0f~-CIBoty 01'!'917•1 pnnttd and pubbhed In MOTOR v~ Maritime Clal!N, ,...,. • ,. •
the City of Costa Mesa. VIN: Fed.A.Clv.P.. to be Orange, CA
PASSE 0 AN 0 ZA.IOU2184WLA12007 tTlllde not lln thin once 92863-1571
ADOPTED tnls 171h dly Reeciono.nt. 1 week for lhlM (3) oon· IN THE MATTER OF ' THE PETITION T
II ---· la ...
Doily Pilot
~~ 1,;;....,..-11 P:mlOllClt11 l'JU--11
CHANGE THE NAME l'WIOUt &u.tM;, TION8 TELEPHONE &immona and Pt\Jflon ttval PMI llmbol con·
OF CAAOLVN CONOii Namt ~t (7 14 )'54·52•~ OR a1111Mldonyoutollll yugee, tanto el llJIC*
VILLAREAL. on behall Tile following PlflON CALL AT THE OFFICE • A(; Jl()nll (fOfm 1212) oomo la eepoN, hllla
of CHRISTOPHER .,. dolna bulli!eu a• OF THE PL.ANNl~G .. h coun Ind ......... Q\lt 11 pet~-...
MICHAELLOPEZ. SURF 'l'HE &TARS DIVISION AOOM200, copyonlhlpelltlonerA 1~11-una
I M4"0t CAFE, 7391 Warner n fAIA DRIVE. COSTA letter Of phone <:911 w1I declllon ftnll O la Q0111 OROER TO IHOW Ave, Unit Q, Huoi.ngton MESA. CALIFORNIA. nol prolld you upld1 ln1trueceon11
CAUSE FOR CHANGE e..cn. Celilornia 9247 PublllhlCI Ntwport U VtMI do not tile your 1dle1onelt1 Otchaa
Oii' NA• AdOlf)h N Blankl 3257 811ch·Co1ta Miu ~"l>O(lll on titne, lhe p1ohlb1clofl11 puedtn
CASE NUMBER Tu rte.ck Dr., Coal a DaJIY PllOC January 21. c:iourt ·may rnalc9 ordt,. haclrae ~C:= A20CM01 Ml ... calilomil 92&47 2000 ettecting Y'J4M rnarnage, quiet pe ... .,.
PETITIONER(S) Thia buSlnffl 11 oon· F22t you1 property, and P<lf cualquler ageota dtl
CAROLYN ~OE VIL· dueted by an Individual SUMMAAY OF cuatody of your Children ~den ':= QUI lu
LAAEAL. on behalf of H•Y• you 1tart1d PROPOSED You may be Ofdered to ~':!! .,L o Cl!;!! CHRISTOPHER doing bulfneat ye1? No ORDINANCE pey tue>POtt and at· ·~1~ -to une cop11.,. MICHAEL LOPEZ •• Ml· AdOlph Al Blanld tomey fees Ind CO.ta " enu
l'IOI HAS FILED A 1'"" 1ta1ement Wal CfTY OF you cennot pey lht flling 1. Thi namt anct Id·
PETITION FOR AN ltted 'With the County COSTA MESA '"· Hk 1t11 cltlll for 1 dtua of lhl oourt II (El ORDER TO CHANGE Cle11t o1 Of1nge County ORDINANCE 00-1 II lee waMlr lo<m nombre Y dlrecdon de II NAMES FROM on 12·17·99 scheduled to be lo lull II you w1nt legal cor1• es) Supertor Court
CHRISTOPHER tMMt14HO force Ind ettecc 30 daya 1<Mee, C01nact a lawyer of Caltlomla, Count)' of
MICHAEL LOPEZ TO 011tv Plfoe J4n. 14, 21, lromltUdoPIJOnonJan. Immediately. 011nge, 0341 Tht CICIY CHRISTOPHER 28, Feb. 4, 2000 F228 Utlty 171 2000, Ind ~91 Usted Ilene 30 DIAS Drive, range, A
MICHAEL LOPEZ VIL· THE COSTA MESA tdoptea by the lollowlng CALCNOAAIOS 9286!._ _,.,. LAAEAl. ZONING AOMINIS· fotl call vote. de1pu11 de r1clblr 2 ,.,. nMll. --..reu
It .. hereby ordered T A A T 0 R w I L L COUNCIL MEMBERS: ollclatmente ••ta dta· Ind ttlephone number
ttlat all person1 In· RENDER A DECISION AYE 8 : Mon 1h 1 n , c1on JiJdlclal y petk:lor\, of pelltlc:a'ler'uttomey or
terealed In this matter ON THURSDAY FEB· Cowan, Er l ck1 on, para completar y pelttlone11r 1wcE11tlOUt en 81·
appear before thll oourt AUARY 10 2oo<)OR AS Somer•, Dixon. NOES: presentar tu lormulaflo t.omey nomt>re, ta
In Department No L73 SOON .AS POSSIBLE None. ABSENTi None, dt AHpu1111 (At· dlrtcc:lon Y el numero di
of Ille Superior Court ol THEREAFTER ON Ordlnanct 00·1 In· SJ)Onll form 1282) ante telefonodelabOgadOdtl
California at tht tddreas TH E F 0 LL0 w1 N G cmasea lhe annual busl· la cort• Une carta o una demandanle, o del de·
shown at>ove on FEB ITEMS· neu amprovement area llamada 1t1etonica no le mandante que no uene
15, 2000. at 2.00 o'docl< 1 ZONING APPUCA· asseument lflVlld on ofrece11 J>IO(ICClon aboOadO. ") p.m ~ then and there TION ZA·ll9.47 FOR lhe CllV'e MVen largesl Si US1ed no pre11nt1 SHARON L Gl..aAIEA,
ShOW..c:auM.Jf .A(1Y they DHC PAOPEA'TY OE· holets from one peroent IU Respuetta • lltmpo, AtlornlY at "'· 1125
have, why the t>itlltion VE L 0 p M e NT I JI M to 1""0 peroent. ta cort1 pulde expedit The City Otlve, Suitt
tor change ol name THEUSCH AUTHOR· THE FUlL TEXT of ordenes que allden 1u 431, Orlnge, CA 92868 shoUld not be granted IZED AGENT FOR lhe ordnance may be ma Ir Im 0 n I 0. • u 714-750-4-425
II II further ordertd DAYTON HUDSON reed In lhe City Cletll.'I propildad y que or· 148664 ) ~l 11 copy of lhll order CORPORATION FOR A Office, n Fair 011ve, denen que ualld pague Oete (FICNI :
to lhOw C8UM be out>-MINOR CONOfTIONAL Cotta Mesa manltncion, !JOnQf'lnos SEP ~ •• 1"8 fished In COSTA MESA use PERMIT FOA THE MARY T. EU.IOTT, de a.bOgado yr.. COii.ii ALAN SLATER, Clenc DAILY PILOT, a news· GARDEN CENTER Deputy Cl1y Clertit Si no pulde pegar las (Actuerlo)1 by JANE M.
paper of general cirtula· PROPOSED FOR THE Publf1fl1d Newport eo&tas por It pretenta· f:IQut:ROA, Deputy
lion pubhshld In thia NEW TARGET STORE 811ch·Costa Me111 c:1on dt ta dtmandl, Published Newpolt coonty. at least once a LOCATED AT 3030 OallY Piiot Ja/\Uaty 21, plda al acti.erlo de la Beach·Co111 Mesa week for four con· HARBOR BOULEVARD 2000 cone que 11 oe un for· OdVPl!QtJanuery7. 14,
sec;utive weeka prior to IN A C •1 z ONE F230 mult11o de eJConeraaon 21 , 28. 2000
the day ol lhe heating ENVIRONMENTAL DE· SUMMONS de las m1sma1 <W•IVer CNS1758733 F209
DATE: DEC 30, 1990 TE A M IN AT 1 o N • FAMILY LAW of Court Fell and
JAMES P. GRAY, NEGATIVE OECLARA· Costs)
JUDGE/ , TION (AVAILABLE CITACION 81 deaea obllner con-
COMMISSIONER OF FOR REVIEW AT THE JUDICIAL 5* legal, comunlqueae
THE SUPER I Q A PLANNING DIVISION • DERECHO DE de lnmedlalo con un
COURT • FROM JANUARY 12 fAMILIA abooado. CAROLYN CONDE VIL· 2000 TO JANUARY 3( NOTICE TO ~OTICE The 11straln· l A A E A L • 2 2 4 5 2000) RESPONDENT (Name Ing orders on lhe baCk
ANAHErM AVENUE, IF THE ABOVE AC· (AVISO AL Ol:MAN are effective agalnal
COSTA MESA, CA TIONlS) IS/ARE OAOO (Nombre) bo1~ husband and wtfe 92627·2511 CHAL £NGEO IN ELBERT WAYNE until the petrtlOn Is dis·
IN PRO PER c o U A T T H e AABOUIN mtssed, a Judgemenl la
Published Newport CHALLENGE' MAY BE You are being sued. ell!ered, or Illa court Btach·Costa Mesa LIMITED TO ONLY usttd le estan dema makes further Oldera. Oalfv Pilot January 14, THOSE ISSUES dando These orders are
21 , 28, Februasy 4, 2000 RAISED IN WRITTEN PETITIONER'S NAM enforceable 1nywllere In
F225 CORRESPONDENCE IS (EL NOMBAE OE Cafifornia by any law .,e""fa=""•"' .. ""riid::'7"li.,,.e.-,_-. --DELIVERED TO THE OEMANDANTE ES)· enforotment ofllcer who CONVSM~aNT ZONING ADMINIS· BETH AABOUIN 1'181 l9Cllved OI '"°I whelhet you" blly• TRATOR PRIOR TO CASE NUMBER copy of them. fn9, ..mng, or Jue• THE ABOVE DATE. (Numet'O dll Cuo) AVtSO Lu prohlbi·
tooklng, cAu.m.d hu FOR FURTHER IN· 980009312 aonea fud!Clales que wtr•~t:.=llD FORMATION ON THE You havt 30 CAL£N apereoen II revtreo Cle
MSoee7• ABOVE APPLICA· OAR DAYS '"" esta Citadeln Ion tfec.
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-Fot AJI Your Home ~nd Businns Needs -
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G:t EQUAL HOUSING
OPPORTUNITY
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' i ~ ... ' ~ .. • ' -·---·-• HOMES OF • • • • • • THE WEEK • • • • ShowcaM • • • • Homtt • • • • Foe Siie • • tn OUr S•t • • • • ANIEat.te • • Supplement I • • • • Ollplay Ada • • Start It $85 • • DNdtln• • • Tue1dly SPM • • Alto ... • Open HouM • • Ultlnge AVI. • • Deldtlnt • Thurtday • • SPM • • It Paya to • • AdYertlM • tn the S..t • • LOCAL • • ANl!atat• • Section • • Call TodlY II • • LISA. • • • ' . RIVERA • • • • MM74-4252 • • • • ANNE • • • • WILLEY • • • • • • ....74-U41 • • •
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***** CAMEO HIGHLANDS
4e07
DORCHESTER RD.
$898,000
OPEN SAT/SUN 12-tp
L-. J.IJI.. • gr~ .. , ...
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U Unit Senior Comoltx "'C.ilnct Eacrow F't11) 94~509-7072
.. ilii 3Cgar. pool~· Id Pit. wall to bNdl.
upotadtd, faWoul
CUl·de·HC 1539,000 . Heney. AQ!. 714413-4105
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NEW CUST<* HOlll
PortlttMta
$1,395,000
. 8y0wrter PRINCl»AU OHL Y
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• Junior t btdloom and 1 btdloom, lllo 2 bedroom
1 ~. Quiet galtd com-
muntty, pool, tifd, llSY ~ lo frtfWIY, l>MC:h.
and melt 7t WSN >07S
28r 18e on 61Uii1 nw boaetl, w/d hie-up, tc gar,
$835(mo ""'' '* Ok, 1149-642·116119
FAIRWAY APARTMENTS
AT BIG CANYON
C.ATlD COMMVNm' I Y fASHION ISLAND
O..Ubf\.1 ,,.... liMd '""'' end golf COUtM vitws. Ell.JOY ctnfrM Mvlng in 'fOY' lar~
2 BR eperttntnt home!
• -r.o-c. gM1IOI • w....,,,,,.,., l'M>c*upe
• ~(wood & 04M)
• Air COi' Oltlonlng
•Wttbw
• 1:2.2fM> to 12,800
----Deadlines ---__,
Monday ............ Fnday 5:00pm Thursdav .. WednetK!av 5:00ptn
1uelldav ......... Monda~ 5:00pm friday ......... Thurs<lav 5:00pm
Wtdnbday .... Tue:.day 5:00pm Sntunlay .......... .fnday S:OOpm
r. J~~: .. ~T;;~·--·~1 it;~~ ;·~.:'i'. ;
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C/f@~~~
liDGE
·Exclusive Gated Communit;y
AT~NEWPORT COAST
• Enclosed Garage • Alarm Sysum •
• Washer/Dryer/Rdffgerator •
• Fitness. Business. Clubhouse Centers •
One /Jedroom Apartment Homes$
from 1370
1Wo&drocmA.partmmt H":$l645
SAN JOAQUIN HILLS
~~JW/~0~
1(888) 882-9809 www.iac:.c:om
'J.6~[<?.!?JI
Living In Luxury
~ ... .. ..... :····~·~~·~Gated
:£i6es tvle .. .
unparalleled In
Orange County
.
F«>m 11, 795IO 15,100 i ' 1-877-681-7387 !
I SoW Bodlanl ot .son C1em«tlt i
• "-P«f led I l
• E legonl one °'
two bedfoom plans
• G<woeou• clubhoust
• Lavlth pool, apo
• FINll loellm.
• S• IO Foltl~ lllOnd .
wonderlll~
~ onil tnllrtO~
--Daily Pilo! fr day, Jonuo~y 21 2000 1 J
I ~.::;: 11 ~ .= I 400EASONALS 448 ..to~J:fil I •54 FURNlfURE I 47UllP!Oa::m 47HllPl.OJ;Ws 411 ~= l 690 • = I
____ ,_, • • • • Holy It, ~ MIO IOIVI Moving SM: hl!IOfdWWY ,__l!l!l!i!l!!!l!ll!ili==~ • .
al Pfoblems, who ~11 II ~.!.,1111 Sale',!:!:,'llOlrrJonlil}' ~ Oi!)El5I Frlldl MITTIMf -B-IL_L_IN_G_C_L_E_R_K_1 SALES I Oeculc 811eo..1Ml. II
Ocean Breezes
•Resort-Style Pool
•Spacious Floor Plans
• Vaulted Ceilings
• Bubbling Spa • lush Green Landscaping
• Small Pets Welcome
Two Bedroom Town Homes from $1 ,575
Three-Bedroom Apartment Homes from $1,595
.$300 Security Deposit with Approved Credit
(Does not include pet deposit)
Newport Heights
1-888-577-7560
• ~ed communr<y w/resort pools. s~s
~. tennis. volley & ':lasketball
•Health Club on-s11e TV theater. 100
·Via,'( 10 171h Streel boutiques. dining,
S1.i1buck's, Blockbuster. Ralrh's
Minutes lo lhe beach and 55 fr'!eway
• Tiit counlertops, hardwood-style lloot's,
gills Sh<tNer enclosures, mmo1ed
closets. ce1hng tans & lireptaces • Sma~ Studios. large I & dual masler 2
bedrooms from ssso· lo $1450 • fuly tull'lshed avi~. ~ servu. too
.. ~ . ) .... ·~-=-:---~~ .,..!.,, ·-·--,. -...m ----· " ....., !"" .,.,_,
I
Mir Twnhm• from $1575. ll8f Apt Hme from $15t5. Sp1clo111 Floor Plana.
Vded c.ls, Reaort Slyll
Pool, l.ulh ~ 714-MS-O'l52
BAY VIEW duptH 111 ll'ont
of 81y Street Stach. Large 2br 2ba, trplc,
pr19t, $2000lmo yrty. lhowtnCI Sit/Sun 10.2
I011!fW. Bly AYI. or by lp!llt. Ml-12W4ot
ONA DELMAR
a8R VIEW HOMES
IUOO a $2,75Mlo
AGEHT,';4~17_.746 COii ALS
3bdrm 2bl IMnt T ttr8Ct
Sp9dol.-home Wlllt. to btec:Mown. Patio/yard
Htw palnH1t1 & 1><111 si soo. can Dllnnt.
Oldl CCWona dll Mlt Stand
new "*· OcMl lldl Pai 2 & 3bcllml Ciistom & ~ From $2,UO. HARBOR REAL lY
MH7M400
C~• 9' 11a. AOUae.
Oerlgl..I. !'I!· lleflgl, lllPI lfom \;(JM &at• beach
1115Q'mo .... nwnt
OCON llDI RR. Sir
2bl lif9I llvll, no dogs ·:x ..... S2IOOr'MO Rusty .&411-~ll11 n" <>Plii '"" 12"1 Jbf 11tl ho11111, W/0
hlutpe, MWll.J::.o4• $1 UMno. 11 II
Co111f0f11bi• Hr 111 MIMI ~ floorl,
llttptece, ga1191, amd
Ylld. 11~ AVlllllllt F'll> 15. Af &4M7M912
....... "1•~ .....,~28r.bd
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'LIMITED TIME Oltl.Y
CORONADO
~ 11 ,. \~11/)()rl
Jn111c Ana1uc ut 16lh In Nc'~lMlrt. O..:ud1
(949) 722-3898 llll1•HllOC-.ll
1112 .. 11202 Fo:=I
5 Mtn to CdM 28r 281
TUttft Aoc:tc QOndo lJ9 dbt Olf, t!ld lnl, $1550 open ftae S.VSun. to.Sp; 15
SunetrMm. MMn-4141
•TURfl£ Roco·
2bt + den, 2bl nom., 2
c1r 111r, no pela, $11Wmo. 94M7M374
oc;M~o '
s1soewo. Near belct1281
(0< 1er+= 1v.ea Gallld comm w . spa, tennis &
ltl cntr tw paint, carpet &
lppls Sooth lacing Iola d sun & OCfl&n vu·s from trJtry room Nolpets/smkrs
948(71 .. 1520.
LIDO ISLE
48R, 2.5BA, 3c Gar1gt
CHRIS EDWARDS
Hf.123-506f
First f$/alet PfO(»ftles
eUOOISLE•
4bf Iba. ""' CM'f>8l. frplc, veulttd cell'•· LHH
$3000mlo. No doll. 224
Vie ttn.c. 31CM1'-1313
NEAR ltOAd 2b1 261. v ..
Bllbol. bay view. Yd cell. Vp, W/d lneldt 2-c:ar space,
$1800 1119·227·7384 uoo ISLE
Channing 28r 281homt.2t
gar1gt, petlo, fir~. $11WmO. AvMttllt Feb S
Agtnl, &49-675-4g 12
ttilUFFi•• S1Unring 38df'm 2 58111'1 near Baek Bly end Newpofl
BtlCh Ttnnil CU> ~
Mo Yni7t4·576'1212 UL8oX
28r 28a. IMlll Patio
EWOf)tltl Dto0t . 11,700
28' ~ F1111 Room ~&~\ $1,700
MlryAM McGuire ......... no
PNd Ca A!llly
Motet ·
MANAGERS
•SPECIAL•
$154.00 + tax Wkly
(Must present this Ml 235 111'11 & tolChefletts
541ate<I on beaulduly
llndlcaped grounds
FEATURES 24-tiOut Lobby/Direct dial
pllones/Frea HBO
ESPN & 019c1Pool &
Jlc:unl. Guest lul-
dry CI058 IO 405 & 55
Fwys tM's lrom O C
Flifgrca, college end
bctls W11king els· mnce 10 shopS end
18Stll.WanlS
COSTA MESA MOTOR INN 22n Hart>or Blvd
Phone ~M45-414()
N.BJW. OcMntrontmnd.
Pflvate room, unlumlshed,
shale bath, Ulla paid, non
amllg. kllchenette. llundly,
1 Broclc to Newport Pier.
SS35 ~r mo c111 sam et 949-67~808 (betw9en
9•5p)
1-~1
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home ""'•we per.on. Furn m1, no 8moU S50Clf mo. IM""31-2708
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PrWflOnt 949-722-6138
l•E:-1 OPY
Em1tgln9 anlet '"'" angel tor emlll monty gr ... 1. MM4<M1n
• ij()Ad HOSM'XL * THRIFT SHOP 17~MOHA, UNrT F-2
OPEN TUE·WEO 1°"3
1~ .-.1
LOST IJALE YOUNG CAT
OREY Wfwhlle pawe.
E SIDE Coet> MeA. Call
tvet. MM11-0n7
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tfou. tliie
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=~':!c:~ac::;: k~iC:~~~~~ ,:t!~~~ MAIKmNOIHTUN Comn ~ goup' = CJt1ai ~= DMJle gill to forgt.1 Ind IO malble 'lamp$ ~ P"8 criest & end.-bea\11 wnio No-in llUr '"'nmllh Commuruty H1w1tpap11 lool<iig fOf ir$de rwa 149.ns.stll ~ II awil llJl!r6t "" d1C$t & encl 1· , beallt~ut WOOd game rt.I. once 11.'0fl< )~udicindultrylt.lirt. Gtoupt11unopeflllQ111 Snou!O posuu r.11ong -------and lhal 111 al arcumstanca IAaid W')Od IJlllllll table &llillOo, g.111 9111. wr°'9tl ~ idlir'i lw.pecec:t ~ phone ae s atlila)' tie
ol rrry Ida yw are Wilt! 1111-I O#llf •11ri 949 644 2200 1100 6 .g1ut ~ ltl rir.v '11MMV1 tttcnoon, •lcml 1001~~ ~~ed & haw ~~ 1192 SUPSIDOCt(S I Mint tnll lflOlt pitylt to J W LFIY «Ill beef .. ckiVinl1 thef IOI• uJ Uk,w"'I' ~., _ • ..., -·~·• ~·~e hnll yoo lot Ill lhnO' and Why Pey Retell? Jtt#Cl.ry 1!11SC Mi-644-2200 4~im;.l.JrJc.kn .. ,_ " etQll'Qed *1d llllt BenefA pl!9 lrr::I 401k plan 1~ lo confirm once egall\ NI I Wt!Oie581e 10 putJllc We tiardl a·~ ol depetl· D1u9 KtelnifJ? physical
l'llVtr wani IO bl --a te<J .... • .... ..._....,.,,, & ""'"" I I Nonh Amrna. ll.r OCl mtn1 l!ilcilonl Mliclt n-reqd EOE Send resume to N 8J611M t• !Of up to 17ft
...,,. 111 -o ""' ,.,..~., .,.,....,..,. 456 PETS/ '"'""I'" ittlJnsP"" 1unt Wdl bikJg dilily Marlley Daniell 330 W1!$1 1100/Mo 10·175•4111 ~~r:.:.~"'1: ·sci~o: .. ~~~:;~eK LIVESTOCK m.11iltt11-c1n1rn"'" llld wee~ repe>r11 Am~ 8'tv St Cos~ Mesa CA ""'711'11,._1..,.o ... 1pm,__. ----....--·
to bl Wllh ywr 11e1nal • FH 94N«~IS1 . _..,.i ..... , J • .., "'"'l'Y' by ilium ol I year biting on: 92627 Of lax rt!SIJml to S•O. T• I« 5011 1al1boel
GIOly Thank you '°' ywr FREE to I loYi~ home 1-h.··~ baCkgfOUnd Wllh EllCel aoll (9~9) 631·6594. • 512. I* toot. Good locl·
meicy 10wa1d mt and llltne 8t1U11f11I 2yr old lem11t ""' mwc h.h ""ilf8 experlVCe hetpllJI 20tlr RHI Eflate Auittant llon d«k bO•. water 8!eCI..
The person rwst HY this } ITEM TO Black Lab 94•515·5111 • l.>tq~1<>n.J l:ii/\ll'"cr Foi C011$1d8'¥b0n pie Compuler & 01~1at.onal 949 IJ75 6128
p1ayt1 f0< 3 consdcuu111 88 GALLON ~lull mal or lax your'~ to ~ • rrius1 pioblem SOivl!f -....------
"-Ahlf 3 llaY' .... tav~ HOUSEHOLD 1 Ann: Credit M111ager F·~r-u-· ..... 717 •751 ~lad Wiii 1>1"9""rant0d FRESH flSH TANK wittl •C,unJl11e·n1ng~ 330 W8 S -.,, ""' .. .-..
even If 11 may appear dd ANTIQUES lights, 3 fitters. &land fl~h • l'lt-""4111 l'hunt Co1ta Mua, ~A ~$27 4 PHONE R~ 695 CA~!'J~~= llCUt Thia Pll)'tl mut.I be "$150 714·$40·S995 l'r,.,. .. ..J11y FAX (949)631-7171 Full time ~lfgellC tor "" ~ishlll llllmOdlltely 1fler BooKs • ll1gh i-,,..,~&-l'\X"' EQ uat Opportunity MOf1gage Co earn Iv S600 '--------
t114 tov0t 11 g11nte<l "Wltnoul COll£,..,.,0 Lf.S 460 MUSICAL Employ1r. W1 maintain • v.6('~·'' • ,.~..::,rU> .aa!es mtnllcn#lg !ht favo1 Cl G ".... M I HJ().(, OOpm drug ''" worlq>t.c. and ••P phn d ............. ~ISU JAG PAl~TINGS INSTRUMENTS to/hour 1....-..ocw.u.J, perform pr94111ploymenl &49-250-5719
lric-r.lly .... r1c,~ )C.U dr119 1cr111ning. ;;:;;;;;;====;::;:;-
PO'Jl'ERY ·P.R.S. t990 CE Boll on m•r.1 1,. ololr iu JW1 •p 8 IU<.E P£ 478 EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES
..
_42_o __ a_AAA!~G~t: ... $CASH P~D$ e1 lectnc bllllWoP!~°.: l4 uoninl!wdy J·AX 'SERVERS tel, very raie .. _... frll ilf~\UMI Arl"N· "HOSTtrESS
board hard shell cast irO t,I I N"' !?4?)724· IOI rHtaurent In Co1ta ======= $3150 Qbo 9491159~.A2 !ll;,6,"'8Cknn.i(94?) Mtu. Cllt 94M4S.e314 BtQ Moving Salel Sii 10-4
115 Ollmoild Av•~ Bal le. 1ucal Clll, gluswa11
many OCilef It.ms'°
40yeara·
In l'iti..port lk-ach Sieve :?~ 14 H c:rt t<•~ •oe-bttwMn 2:00 and 4:00
cnuil ~ 1., M9nd•Y lhfu Frid1y
PIHM bl IWlfl \hit
the Ustrng1 in this
c1t1Q01Y may requite
you to call a IOO number In which
thlH• Is • charve I*
m1nU1e.
949.673.622J. 466 MERCHANDISE
WANTED EUitliuif Oattgt Si1e1 Sun l•f2
Oak lf'lnOlll. m1rbllfglass table. TV. hoJsehold nema.
designer &lhll ml$C
WANTED COAST COIN NEEDS
ANTIQUES ~0:a~Goldlfft::·
5114 GIOfietta
ESTATE SALE
Fu1n1t11re , Czach Pecock gl;lss lamp,
!loot I~ • Franascan
apple pattern, Douflon
mugs. t1al1an glass,
relflg washer, dry8f,
etc Jan 20-21, 8-3pm
J11n 22, t0.39m r's al
630am. 2115 Arana,
Newpol't Bch. Sile by
Older Styt. Furniture I Coleebbll!S 949 642·9«7
PIANOS &Collectibles 1 t KAMBUCHAI Needed .""°' ...... "'......,,.. I a Quality start. good
•$$\, .. CASH.;Aj~$"$' (r1e n~ B tr na rd
Jacob Schrem.
94M73·9424
1
440 lllSCELLAHEOOS I ;: 649·4S22~
FOR SALE SOUTH COAST AUCTION Aecom HHltr Malling 2202 So Mai 5 Sy11tm 335, with lllldef •--•--· c• 11
2 t.07 Ind hrgll Spel(I S2200 ..... ta ...... .. • 1
rt4-42US32
Estate Sall GirdM 'tatu
1 1 ary, dinrm tb1 & cllan 450 APPLIANCES Macon051\ s11reo 1cJ I*· 1181'1 fU9S & lilllogfaph ______ _..
Hospital & watert>ed. crystat GE FRIG
~~ ~~7E~ $50 949-278-1001
Exclu1lve Centlf Club Side by side Relriclgerator 21.5 cubic ft. Almond In Gold Membership $7000 c 0 I o r , S2 O O I o b o
pp Call 949·859·1502 94H21-ol71
()( 949·212-3396 ;:;;::=====::;
SEASONED FIREWOOD
S165 CORO
714-33()..3253
• TOP SS$/RECORDSf Jau. R & B Soul Rode elC SO's & Ii(,.,
MIKE li49-64H505
474 WORK
WANTED
HOUSEMAN Mgr wo1tung large &l>tate 0< home exp in
rrul!lple duties. i;ookJng &
serv.ng animal & car caie refs 949-631 ·493-4
476 EMPLOYMENT
OPPTYS
loo~for ~I
llappf People
1~)D'OIL\T
SE'IT£RS
I Fr/PT
!)if a. m'IWll( ,1,Ji,
Top·pnxluc.:rs
higher
• 11t.~h lbw .ft.,
•!Ill Ii !'Lii
c .hrf!C'dk.-.'<1 !en , recepllOl'I, data ~eainpi Sp
"-h111n1
( 011 IU'l>lll rtJi.11.k,
sulT •Jr11ng ii
S7 25/hr plul n1td1c.il
~nrlir" bonu.., Jnd
ilu.k ''r'IOO pmgr~m
SlLiry higher
drpcndmg un
npcnrn•• l~uM:
ltl~c mna .. r,c
'119111 H I ~08 <111 I.)
Apl Manager Tum
Ma~ team wJ
6tiong teasing and
ma1ntenanc1 aklfl•
needed. Rent 1nd
wary 1n exchar(lt '°' ~ol18unrt AfA COIMI001y Ill ... city ot Coc11 Mesa
Call (714)63)..5406
SELL
your home
through classlfled
Compuler 1118fate
IX t8S &49-574·3971
·-
Call 642-5678.
MERCURY IABlf f1
lSP flocb &
windo ws $2500
71~Ht-49H
ACURA INTEGRA 14 5 1(>ffd AC, 100Kml, new
'"'"119 bell, 1 o-. YefY cle111 Set, dnve & com-
p-sasoo. 11444 ... 1011
BUICK COUPE ·n ssoo. 714-632-0338
BUICK L£ SABRE 87 l TD low :13•, flll bclge l:hr co Bn<l more! 5tJP8f de.VI' {511.328) $t5 988
NABERS
(714)540-9100
• C1d1ll1e sedan OeVlll•
116 WMe, 1ehlblt, grelt
cond 71,140 m1, pp
St4,2SO obo 94"'640-7100
CADILLAC CATEFIA '97
l ' 1111 betOI! t.in leattoel, 81· kiy~ bal ol waH & rno111
(0Ht21fi) $18 988
NABERS (714)540·9100
We come to ycu.
Nothing c ver
1 O years old.
FREE DELIVERY whhln re1eon. 71~94-0911
WOLFF TANNING BEO§
TAN AT HOME
BUY DIRECT ANO SAVEt
COMMERCtAUHOME
units from $199 00 Low M~y Payment
FREE ColO< Catak>Q
Cell HI00·711-01~
1454 FURNITURE I
ltellen IHthef sofa & tov• ll'!at, new 11111 wrapped, veiy &Olt. lop quality Was S2000 sac $890 949·281·9933
It's all there
every day
•l'aicl1....w ..
• 1,.,. .. ,. ct!!•hlll<ll'
f-.c.d~l,h<tl IN l'Wl 111 ( ...... )l,..a
lll•l l(Jl ... llljl <•llf•w•wt
1-8H8-.,IM744 In. Classlfled
~~0~4~2~·56---~1-8~-,.,...__~
Put a few words
to work for you.
----
Tell your loved one how
~eaO/ they 3.re ...
and Say
Valmtines Messages Appearing
Feb. 14th
I Ltn(
.) Lind
20 CNt~1e1s per line You !Ny use .i1 4 llnes kw tuoer ads CJll an adWM•no llP !Od.1¥'
\&\"'H .. .Jr I.I I.., /w ,..t!
.
FAX this form to (949) 631"6594 )
HMnf' P9loN No·
SIQNture ;
till""' v.w _w_ AiE..:__ 0t1.c0¥11
CrldlCC.101 It . s., O.•·
'
·.!J
....
Sle1 "1 ., -t1 ,. ti. LM.,, rJ.1 •/fii, •
\.}O W. 8.Ay SU((t
Cu~u Mt~ ... C.\ QJ(,~"
or C..ill l'>4')) li4?·~h7K
To pl.a .. C' V•Hlf ~J 10J,l\4
When you're tuned into cla
tun • I
'
.. •
12 Friday, Jon(lory 21, 2000
I
TODAY'S
CROSSWORD PUZZ LE
DOWN
1 Yawn 2 Aj)plealoOnt
3 Olyer·lrlP .,,,." 4 F191'dl t11plor«
5 -Grtnde &~blle
1 Crazy 8 S......m.d •
9 Matt Dllofl WU -10 MelYlle no..i
I 1 Handwlot.ng on IN-· omen
12 Moll 14 Gel ,.adv
20 T~lf dance 24
26 • remll'I!
27 Bl'Mklut lltm
STtJMPED?
•9 Np1ne aonos 51 AoundT ... 63~''*' 55 P\Mf!L• se Andenl Panr.1lln
57 G.a Of Min ...
59 Mlkle'-te
61 Dim
62 Rocky Moon•
lain l*>P'4 63C-apa1t ee Sonnat kin
Crill The Pilot Classifieds at 642-5678
to place your Garage Sole Ad ~
---~~Pilot
~:·:-r· ·1'4
• ~ J ... _i.;,.. . • rr--4,
•••••••••••••••••
I • ' ..
' ,,.
• TtlNK/WMrl •
: ~lor~.Mt. : • W"*9,~. ~
.. oldpt~ •
• T~ • ~. lNlllllol : OUlc:t: ac:QIMa, • .. ~.. .
OMnalTlt 1· ...... ~. ..... 734085. 7/14&ot52t : ••••••••••••••• :
•
Bridge
By CHARLES GOREN
with OMAR SHARIF
•nd TANNNt HIHSCH
SIMPLE ANO SAi'&
Ouch ~ulncrablc South dealJ. 11111nt) by JUmpms to t~u nu trump
11nJ North hid no rt'uon to IUf'Pl!!C
lh II I h>Uf•\l)lde ColltflCI Wt>Vkl bl'
uny better than 1hrce no trump. hr111:e
1hc ratW! rather than dlt'd.1111 back
lur lhrce-card pade suppon .
WliST
"K 9 o K9
0 11765
NORTH
"A J 107 6
4:)543
0 J2 • JllJ EAST
•A 107 62 .
• 8 543
0 3 aos 2 o IU8
• 94
SQUTll
.. Q2 o AJ 76 o A K4J
• KQ5
W~t It'd the fourth-betr club und
dcdarcr woo 1n hand 10 !(ad the
queen or spades, covered by the k1na
lmpreued with the 5UCCCSS of the
ln~'IC. declarer nhiC with rhc ace ond ~t11ncd running the ~p1dcs Unlo<tu·
natcly for South. the 1u11 broke
nc1:1.,-d1ng 10 the probab1h11cs. ind d~larcr C<lt.lld come 10 only c1Jht 111d.~ when the dcfen5e did ntit faltet,
The b1dd111v·
SOUTll WES'f NOKTll f:AST
~fore p!:iy1ng ro the first tnd.
cJC\lllrcr 'hould pause to take stock
Once the .ce of clubs 1s fon:cd 0111.
declarer has five 1ncks out11dc
dummy's ~n suit, IO the spadn 10 r.s.. I• 1'111 i.vr PIM JNT Paa need ooly four rricb to l1nd ra ~ the game. itl Cllll be 1equ1rl'd by the
Opcmn11 lc11d: St~ of •
This hand 1s the fincsscr's joy and
~ny wrapped into one. It is al~ a
Coununs C0ursc IOI in the textbook
on play of the hand
1 he b1dd1ng. 1s srra11htfonurd.
~1mplc upcdient of allowtnf the king
of s~ to win the fil'$1 trick 1n rhc ~ult If the defender pcr5CVCICi with
dulx, that sets up the ninth trick. and
u shift to hearts c1nno1 possibly both·
er declarer.
South howcd a balanced 19·20
CADIU.AC FIMtwood '92
lo mi. gray llht reQablt &
luxunou1! New '* lrede-lnl (221768) $7,9811
NABERS
(714)54M100
cA01LLAc smi11 ·111
Low mies, V-8 NonhsW.
mat!'/ exit•. beeu1llul1
(8111WO) $23,988
NABERS
(714)540-9100
CHEVROLET TAHOE '98
2WO, leather, many xtras.
ellClllln COfllUollJ
(108654) $23.988
NABERS (714)54M100
JAGUAR XJe '81 VANOE.N
PL.AS •-door. lull pwr, aun root. wwe wtwll. 1 owner, OlDSMOBlLE ClltllU 'M records, tNlk{ ctoen cat. Wl11e. VS, martt extrm,
$4 .500 949-723-1504 ldell lnnSpOrla1ion cer1
JEEP GRANO CHEROKEE (416632) $8,988
LAREDO '13 Wti1t1k:1r1 ~ NA8£1'S Futy loeded, VII, ASS, ·new (114)54H100
11< ... ong owner, al reconll
Beauuf\i Must seasio,990 Oldlmoblll Sllhouttt• '9e
080 949-721-6172 GLS, beige, tin llhr, low 10k
ml, co. clill dOors & morel * Mtrcadel Benz 300 SL (175525) $22,988
'91 Great loOklng. charcol NABERS blackJlan lnl, luUy loaded. (114),!4N100 ~ i:1~ RANGEROVEA '92 VI, All PoWll', CC, tll,
iiERCE0£S E3oo 'ti •t•r•o c11Htt•, co,
Turbo dl11el, RAREll l\IV1, moorw1, LOA.OEOll
36 moncna ~· Mint Cond, Mutt S.lft 113,000 obo. Ona CHEVY ASTRO VAN '99 $733mlo 12,500 ml, MM4S-t03S
Low 1611 mtles. wMe, Hiit Tan loldldl 949-720-9796 -.,....,,==.,......"'""'"'-
lir & mcnl Balance ol wat· Mercedet EJ20 CtiiJriOlti RANGE ROVER 115 ~:;}evtous ~i.98S '15 L TO Conmllbl•, ::;:1_,-iz"',u:n!'::•
NABERS Smoked lltvtrlbfown top, Cl>lpf'lone 47K ml1 SU.t00
(714)54o-9100 tan lntef1or. excellent cond, Cijl T1m H2-'M-41il fully loeded, chrorne TOYOTA PICtx'tP ,,... Chevy DeiuJCt 1h Ton wheels, 63k rtlllel, 1 owner, f'.U ...
Longbed 79. 350 ve. euto, $50,000 Me-121-1011 s •PMCI, cem'* al,
tow i*Q, stereo, regrslered MERCEDES 3006 •17 whht, 1111..fm CO. $5200 M>O; $1200 94~f-3852 SdverJgrey, el< In recent Mt-759·1"4 • FORD BRONCO 'Ill* repairs, redone eng. VOLVO 940 WAOON 'iS
Eddie Bauer Edit, ¥1fvtei\an, dttalltd/ga1ag1d, no mt cond. 62,500k ml, MW loeded, mn cond. 4X4, co ecclderU, mechank:I car, Pitel tir ... leelhtf lnttllof,
pleyflf.only39kmi,$17,999 100 watt CO player $10,750.Cel71~ 080 714-754-0737 or cell SI o.soo 800·537· 7123 Ask tor Tom
pllont 714-473-0001 I x111111 _,vw=rxiocsrx-:J~m~x"'·w,.._.
iNANifi QiS ·90 NISSAN SENTRA •b . Fully loededl Rad, at..e Bladl. lolded, llnted. HMvy body damaat, but condition, IOK ml, I Diec
CUllOln "" ......... Must drlvu, ssoo7obo. co. pr9m sound, mutt ~ Ce1949-874-7000 31M91-3551. Miii 11499. MM4M750
PUBLIC
NOTICE
The Calif. PubliC·
Utllltlu Com·
mission REQUIRES
!hat ea used house·
hold goods movt11
pnnt their P.U.C.
Cal T number; hmos and chaulfers pr'lnt
their T.C.P. number In all advettilments
If you have a ques·
tlon~the~· lty of a m<Mtr, lime> or ct11uner. cal:
PUBLIC UTILITIES
COMMISION
714-558-4151
F"~· !f \r. l • :
!."<.r· •! ,._ . . '
n..., •
lt'e all there
~day
In Cl••lfled
Ma1e11
Doily Pilot
HERE'S A GREAT
WAY TO GET
CLIENTS COMIN TO . .
YOUR DOOR. •
1\ppcaring Saturd11ys frorn
January 22, 2000 to 1\pril 1 i, 2000
The Dally Piiot w111 publish a
Tax & F Ina ncla 1. 01 recto ry to
assist our readers In finding a
tax professional. Rea ch ing over
4 0,000 homes In a nigh -end
market, you are sure to find
many who need your help.
A smart move on your part
would be to take advantage of
our Incredibly low rates and
place your ad with us. only $35
per week If you sign up tor the
entire 17 weeks. or a minimum 4·
week run at $40 per week.
TAX TIME
IS COMINC
·Size of
Ad
2x2
HANDMADE OW
WORID PAINTS
INTEJUOR/EXIUJOR
/,,,,.~ frP. Aiu""IU
UM£ WASH
BON COTE
FRESCO
MILKPAJNT
lW Estiwuta Co1f14irt
ROBERT ISBELL
COMPANY
r+.fns#ul P,,irtti"t
LK.,.'4J50
Tel '49.'46.3006
Pgr. 949.580.9626
Int/Ext Small Jobs 0 .IC.
For Prwlwt i11fo.
818.623.9394
The Locol Plumber ...... " ...........
"" LOCATING IUCT1lONIC SLU LIAK DITICTIOH ·~~ 675·9304'
U752497~
,.. ......
·ft•••llP~ ·Mlfmsr ...
•lilr..t·• .............
141 . 141 • 1211
,,.(CIS( P\.UllllNO
Atolilrl l R«nodlll FAEE ESTIMATES
To reserve your
spate, call .
A1111i§ Willey
949-574-4.249
Q3ll~P.ilot
.. rftll(.~ .,....., • ( ..
o'l ·~"'.. :t, ~ ..... , ~..... : .... t tIJr._ .. _~·--". ~
~~ .... -.~ r-it'-f:~. . ' -i ~t-1':'.i,. '' ~ .~\i..· .•• '°1 . .
~··-:.J·~ I;,. -
!".£ .;_Y'l '
. ..... , .
1.-'. ~~ --. •.• ~ . l
------.... ~ ~! ........ , ,., ...,.,'" .~ l .. }\ .;. \ » •
t .,_,. ,, .
·l.-ii!o: . .. • , '
°"( HI I ' 1>04 1 H
IHH ICIH
\\indow StTffn
Screen Dooru•tc ...
Free Estimate
\\'e muke ho\Jsp calls
714.641.3119
WHAT
HAPPlllS
LJ887398 714-9119-t080 ~~' I...• ·.r:?I '' rou 0011'1
~-.ii-... -.. ·. ' ,. r. '
•·I 1". .. · " ..
-'"' --r • . .
~-.
•. 1..., -·· '
.... ,....... _ ... --
~Sotbn ~ r--UC..-;..t.W.._ __ IONDID __ , .. _ ,.._,... tliiiif • TAI lf\JCCO DOe1tM Room adOltlonS. ltUCCO patching, ra-atueco.
Lt381171J1 714-aWllM ~
I
• ,.. ,T •• ..... II ' '"< Ar roliOi1t'll
I< IJ 0 ~ I N r.
...........
..... •. 1!1Mlll
(1111p°'1ho• ' r'~ skills, Cmtnollo-o htltsh,
Dtcoc¥m for ii 11144
• I
r r • .,. .. , ... , · _ ...
ADVOJISff
1101111118
Call the
Cla111flec11
tM9t 642·5671
...
Air Conditioning, Cassette,
. Airbags, Power Steering.
2· Year/24k-Mile Full Warranty &
Roadside Assistance.
10-Year/100K-Mlle Powertrain
Warranty. Model 1V75M3
f ' f f t f • f
Automatic. Air Conditioning,
cassette., Power Windows &
Locks, Tilt, Power Steering,
Airbags. 2-Year/24K-Mlle Full .
Warranty & Roadside Assistance.
10-Year/100K-Mile Powertrain
Warranfy. Mod~I 3B24K9
f • • • FrictoY, Jon~ry 21 : '2ocio 13
W1rld
Cl111
Di1l1rlhl
Serving California
Since 1956