HomeMy WebLinkAbout2001-01-20 - Orange Coast Pilot. . . . . . . . .,... .......... ..
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SERVING THE NEWPORT -MESA COM.MUNmES SINCE 1907 ON 1HE WEB: WWW.DAILYPILOT.COM WEE~ -JANUARY 20.21, 2001
Conexant paying heavy price for power
.
•Technology company has
been fined $3 million this
month for failing to comply
with its contract with Edison.
Paul Clinton
month by . ignoring orller!> !rom
Southern Califorrua Edison to u e
less power.
Edison imposed the Imes under
terms of a >'ear-to-year contract
Wlth the company known dS an "l-6
Plan,• in wtuch Conexant swap!> a
15% discount off its power bills for
a pronuse to reduce usage when
state Stjpply runs short.
-~-\· -
I! .
fi:A
"J would like to give Conexant and
other companies encouragement.
But ther e's not much encouragem en·t
to give them."
other Newport-Mesa companies
have the 1-6 Plan. saym9 they a.re
pnvate contracts
To relieve the cnppllng power
shortage. Gov Gray DaVJ.S signed a
bill Fnday alloWl.llg the state to
spend $400 milllon to keep electnc-
1ty floWUlg DAILY PILOT John Campbell
Assemblyman CR-Irvine) NEWPORT BEACH -Technol-
ogy giant ConexcUlt Systems Inc. IS
.among a host of county businesses
paymg a hefty pnce for keepmg 1ts
lights on.
The company, which manuldc-
tures serruconductor chips for com-
puters and fax modems, has rung
up $3 million m penalties this
"We don't have the type of b~1-
ness that can 1ust be stopped.•
Cone~ant spokeswoman Ll!.d
Bnggs srud. "II we had a blackout.
it wouJd delay producbon by two to
three days.·
The large compame!. thdt
entered mto the deals are sent let-
;
ters by Edisqn ask.mg them to !>hut
down when the state's Independent
System Operator -wtuch control!>
the statew1de power gnd -
demdnds more power from the uni-
. 1ty ..
hdd the ddvdnldge of the lower
rate,· Ed1c,on spokeswomdn Kun
Scheer !>did ·But we dcknowledge
the extreme dtfhcullles LO the pdSt
six months curtailing thetr operd-
uons •
Adding to Conexant's troubles,
the state's Public Uu.IJtles Commis-
Slon ldte ldst yedf frO'Ze the con-
tracts. suspending· a pr0Vls1on
allowmg large users to opt out of
the 1-b plcUl each year
The moratonurn was put lil place
until March
"We do recognize that they have SchPer would not disclose what SEE CONEXANT PAGE A9
"I started doing this many, many years ago.
I always wanted to be an attorney.' I felt like that was my calling."
Charles Roman, on why he's a regular: watcher at the Orange County Courthouse
SEAN HU.ER /OAA.Y PlOT
On break from th~ J:t1c Bechler murder trial, court watcher Charles Roman of Newport Beach waits in the ball
outside of the courtroom ln Santa Ana.
\
/appeal
libard to miss Charles Roman if
you're walldng down the long,
oarrow comdors of the Qrange
unty Courthouse in Santa Ana.
•Did you know there are seven
homicide cases going OJl today, just .
on· this floor?• he asks in earnest,
stepping out of the elevator, flipping
through step~ poges of the Superior
Court schedule.
Roman, an avid d>urt watcher, has
traveled from hia Newport Beach
home to Santa Ana for weeks to
watch the murder trial of Eric 8echler.
What's fasdnating about the case? ·u·s about the beech and boats and
CHARLES ROMAN
OF NEWPORT BFACH
IS AN AVID B ECHLER
TRIAL WATCHER BECAUSE
HE SAYS THE CASE HITS ·
'CLOSE TO HOME'
Newport.· he said •1t•s close to home.•
Bechler, 33, is accused of murder·
ing his wife, Pegye, during a boating
aip in 1997. At the b.me. the Bechlers,
and their three children lived in a lux-
. unous CWf Drive home.
·1 even remember before th~y
bwlt those homes on CWf, • said
Roman, who has lived m the area for
more than -40 years. For most of that
time, be worked at Westinghouse,
until be'retired 15 years ago
Roman said be dnves off to the
court whenever •things get dull at
home.·
•1 started doing this many, many
years ago; h~ said. ·1 always ~ted
to be an attorney. I felt like that 'Yas
my calling.·
And be never really cared for '°4.ps.
•This ls much better than T\f, • he
said.
Over the yea.rs. he's seen hardened
SEE WATCHER PAGE M
Community loses leader who helped
write Newpo~ Beach city chatter
......
SPOllS
Sea langl'
Matt~
• Leslie Steff en.sen. 95,
iS remembered for
community involvement.
love off 8mlly. .............
OM.\' Pl.oT
Lelle ........ loagt'-. am.. .. Mir I I,.. ,.,..
........ .., ....... Newpwt
Beech dty charter, died Tu ay
ol oetutal caUle9. He wa e.s:
Dom In Bnc:el~. Minn., Stef·
femen moved with hb fan'iUy
from SUita ANi to Corona del
Mar m S938 and Met hed here ..,.llDOlt.
5'iillt w bait bil own him•
t.rt . -.bullae••'*"" bowD IM lo.-far 111111 .....
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19il&Yfl0f
Crystal Cove
activists act
up at meeting
• Environmentalists
don't take kindly to
information provided
by California Parks
and Recreation officials.
Paul Clinton
D AILY PILOT
CORONA DEL MAR -
Facing a bosttle crowd,
developer Michael Freed
tned to descnbe Thursday
rught where on the beach
he wouJd put some of the
ameruties or hls li.Lxury
resort project for Crystal
Cove
"Put 1t m Rlver5lde." one
man yelled
The Callforrua Parks ·
and Recreauon Depart·
ment held the public meet-
ing Thursday to inform
cornmuruty members about.
the status of Freed's project.
a resort that has yet to
undergo public reVlew
State parks off1oals 1omed
Freed at Corona del Mar's
Lincoln Elementary School,
where more than 600 peo·
ple crammed into an audl-
tonum to listen and voice
theu "opuuons
Freed's plan to charge
first-class room rates for the
rentaJ of. the 46 cottages m
Crystal Cove put him on
the fmng line for the nearly
three-hour meetmg
But Freed wasn't the
only one who walked into a
hornet's nest Thursday
State Parks Director Rusty
Areias fought ott h1s share
of OlbOSm
Areias , who said the
SEE CRYSTAL PAGE A9
Sea Kings lose
their principal
· • Don Martin will move from Corona del Mar
High School to trial position at Newport-Mesa
Unified School District headquarters.
Danette Goulet
DAILY PILOT
CORONA DEL MAR -
After seven years in his
reign as Neptune, Don
· Martin announced Friday
morning that he will leave
his posibon as principal at
Corona del Mar High
School to work m the dis·
tnct's admirustrab.Ve office.
Martin's new position is a
tnal one' for both the New-
port-Mesa Urufied School
District and the veteran
•
principal He will help to
align the high school cur-
riculWn with ~ew st.ate stan-
dards, preparing students
and staff for the new high
school m:it exams and jug-
gling a slew o1 other duties.
• Durtng the last couple
of years, there has been a
lot to do with content stan·
dards, the Stanford 9 and
the new high school em
exams,• seJd Jaime Castel·
lanoa, the district's 8SS1Stlmt
SEE MARTIN MGE M
lfSllm _____ ..
OAlllK IS
•IK AU •Na• M ... ~ ..
--Ill -. -·-----·
•
...
•
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•
•
A2 Saturday, Jonuory 20, 2001
Ondy Trone Christeson
MORAL OF THE STORY
Love notes from
, a higher power
•Rather than Bhocklf1g the globe with an
occasional demonstration of deity. God has
opted to display his power dally. Proverbially.
-Pounding waves. Prlsrn-cast colors. Birth,
death. life. ·We are surrounded by miracles.
God is throwing testimonies at us like fire-
works, each one exploding. 'God isl God isl"'
-Max Lucado
I D ear Mr. and Mrs. Mommy and Dad-dy, I love you tons. You are so nice.
Love, your daughter, Amy Christe-
son,· one note said.
·vou are so pretty and smart. I bet you
even know what 50 times ;30 is,• said another.
·Dear Mommy, you are the bestest mother
10 the whole world. I don't know what I'd do
without you. Say, isn't it allowance time? Love
from your oldest daughter, Kelly.·
These were just some of the notes I've dis-
covered in the many boxes I've been going
through while cleaning out our attic. We are a
family of note-writers .•
Even before our daughters learned to read,
I drew pictures of hearts or happy faces on
paper or with felt pen on bananas and· tucked
thE!filmto their backpacks before preschool.
When they came home a few hours later, they
shoveled out a morning's worth of drawings
and papers and presented them to me with
-beaming smiles. \
Once they learned to read and wnte, we all
became note fanatics.
Over the years, w~ve written 11ovels of
notes on eve ry kind of paper imaginable, and
we've left them in some of the most unusual
places. Sure, we've all left regular notes in
regular places. but we have fun being cre-
ative with th~m.
Notes have appeared taped to steering
wheels, ins1d.e day-timers and checkbooks.
and even written on mirrors in lipstick. I
always hid notes in the girls' luggage when
they went to camp or on trips, and they starh
ed doing the same for us.
One year I went skiing, and I continued to
find notes from Kelly and Amy for days. I
, found one in my slo boot, one in a coat pocket
and another tucked into my Bible. .
When Kelly and Amy were home for vaca-
tion, Jon and I left notes for them on the stairs
when we headed for bed, bouts before they
were home from visiting friends. Sure enough,
we'd find notes waiting for us the next morning.
I love notes. I thmk that God is passionate
about se nding us love notes as well. I saw
them again and again last week in the power-
ful rains and the dramatic sunsets.
The sunsets lighted up the skies in an
almost blinding array of colors. They spoke of
God's never-ending creativity. The rain shout-
ed about God's provision, as well as his
unstoppable power. The swirling clouds
changed sizes and shapes so quickly, as if
they were speeding fast-forward. They told of
God's majesty and might. The winds took
turns whlspering and shouting about God's
presence and strength.
The music of the rain sang to me about
God's tender care and mercy. The blazing
neon rainbow that greeted our wet world the
next morning was a pronouncement about
God's great forgiveness and love.
God writes multiple love notes to each of
us every day. We just need to stop and look
for them.
And you can quote me on that
• CN>Y l1'ANE CltlUS1UON Is • Newport Be.n res-
ident who speaks frequently to ~ng groups. She
m,y be reached via e-m.il 9t clndyOonthegrow.com or
through the mall at P.O. Box 61•No. 505, Newport
Beach, CA 92658. •
VOL 94. NO. 17
1MOMAS K. JOI llSOM.
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·~~· ·FAmr
COSTA MESA otUR04 OF THE NAZARENE
Costa Mesa Church of the Naz.antne has as its mlulon •to WO!lhlp God. win people of 111 ages
to Jestd Christ. build up their f afth In God. and send them out to be Christ4s wvants.., W«-' ship seMc:es lfe held at 10-AS a.m. and 6 p.m. ~ There ate act.Mtfe.f for teens at the
Sund~ evening 5efVlce and also at the 'Nednesday e\lenlng seM<e at 1 p.m. Doyle Henderson
Is senior pastor. The church Is at 1885 Anaheim St.i Costa MeY. lnfonnatlon: (949) 548-7161.
Doily Pilot
IN THE SPIRIT
St. Michael and All Angels
• IEDf'IOlt'S fllCJIE: Due to• technical .rror. last week's tn the 5plrtt ertlde
•bout St. Mlc:hMI and All Angels w.
outdated. The correct Information Is
below. We apologize for lil'ft lncon~
nlence.
Church name: St. Michael and
All ABgels
Address: 3233 Pacific View
Drive, Corona del Mar
, Telephone: (949) 644-0463
fax: (949) 644-92.47
E-mail: stmlkessdm@aol.com
Web site: http://hometown.
aol.comlstmlkescdm
Denomination: Epis'copal
Year church established: 1959
Service times: On Sunday, Holy •
Eucharist is celebrated at 8 and
10 a.m. The 10 a.m. service is a
choral Eucharist. At 9 a.m .,
associate pastor Stephen Felder
leads adult Bible study. Chit-'
dren meet for Sunday school at
10 a.m., before joining their
families in church to receive
Holy Communion. On Tuesday,
morning prayer is at 7 a.m., fol-
lowed by a peace Mass and a
public prayer service of healing
at noon.
Senior pastor: The Rev. Peter D.
Haynes.
Staff: Stephen Felder, associate
tor youth and adult education; nm Getz, minister of music1 Teri
Corbet. minister of religious edu-
cation: Kelley Samuels, assistant
for youth ministry: Susan Beech-
ner and Donnie Lewis, ministers
of administration; Burton Karson,
organist-choirmaster emeritus;
and Rick Whittaker, ministry
study year aspirant
Size of congregation: About 200
people attend Sunday worship.
Makeup of~: Mem,-
bers include all-age·gtoups and
oome primarily from the Corona
del Mar, Newport Beach, Costa
Mesa and Irvine.
Child care: Provided for all ser-
GREG AtY I OAl.V PlDT
lbe Rev. Peter D. Haynes stands ln front of the cbun:b's new
part.sh center, whJch ls e.xpected to be open by Easter.
vices and most other activities
1YPe of worship: The worship is
Eucharlstically centered, using
the traditio&<ll and contempo-
rary books of common prayer,
and reflects the rich liturgical
heritage of the Anglican Com-
munion. There is music at the 8
a.m. Sunday service several
times a year. A full choir with
organ ~r piano accompaniment,
or both, provides.hymns and
anthems for the to a.m. service.
iype of homily: Teaching com-
mentary on contemporary chal-
lenges drawing on resources
from Scripture, tradition, reason,
experience and current events·
Upcoming homily: On Sunday,
which is the ~ Sunday after
Epiphany, Haynes will prepare
the congregation for the parish's
33rd Annual Meeting, with a
message based on the story of
Jesus reading from the book of
Jsa.iah in the synagpgue at
Nazareth. The Annual Meeting
will be held after the morning
. worship. Among the ministries
considered at the meeting will
be "Building Our Faith," the
pl"Og!'am led by John Turner
that is now expancling facilities
on the church's campus: a sec-
ond •Parish Pilgrimage to the
'Holy Land:· and "St. Michael's
Neighbors,• a ministry of sup-
, port for the parish's most mature
parishioners. ·
Welcome: When visitors leave
their name and phone nwnber,
a letter is sent to them the fol-
lowing day with the current
church newsletter, "For the
Love of Mike.• When they
leave their telephone number,
they are called. A four-week
series, "Basic Cbri.stianity, • is
offered quarterly.
Outreach programs: Haynes
~the Di~ World Mis-
sion Commission. The parish
participates in both the Angli-
can and Diocesan Cycles of
Prayer, offering consideration of
needs around the world. Pro-
jects include the Episcopal Ser-
vice Alliance; Children of the
Americas, which delivers a ton or food to orphanages each
year: the Canterbury Campus
Ministry at the Interfaith Center
on the UC Irvine campus; and
Loaves and Fishes, a food min-
istry based on the scripture from
Luke 14:14.
Dress: Haynes said dress tends
to be •come-as-you-are, Califor-
nia eclectic,• and offers this
guideline, ·How would you
dress to share a meal with
Jesus?' ,
Church design: The building
and grounds are a gracious
blend of contemporary and tra-
ditional. The sanctuary houses
nine e,xtraordinarlly beautiful
stained-glass windows, eight of
Christian heroes and one repre-
senting •All Things Bright and
Beautiful.· Through its "Build-
ing Our Pa.ilhYproject, the
parish is constructing a new,
large parish center to house
offices, classrooms and a multi-
purpose room. The addition is
needed to accommodate the
parish's growing membership,
which ihcludes t:JUUlY families
with young children. The pro-
ject is scheduled for completion
in time for Easter.
Mission statement The church's
mission is to seek and share
Jesus Christ as spiritual food for
life's journey.
Interesting note: Additional
upcoming religious education
opportunities include "The
1\venty-Sometbing Book Oub, •
"The Dead Theologian's Soci-
ety,· a "Desert Spiritual Pilgrim-
age• and •Learn How to Talk to
God,• which will include walk-
ing the Lab)'.rinth, lllize Wor-1 ship, Ce.ntertng Prayer and a
special Mass on the beach.
-Michele Marr
Author to give crash course in World religions
YoungCMng
DAILY PILOT
S teven Sadleir bas read the
Bible cover to cover three
times. He has also read the
Torah, the Koran. some of the
sutras, the Ramayana. the Tul-
mud, the Mishnah, the Bbaaavad
Gita, Buddhist wrltings, the Dead
Sea Scrolls, other major religious
texts and, literally, thousands of
books on religion.
Sadleir bas joined a Druid
order, apprentiood under several
gurus living in India, studied
under Daoist masters in Asia,
worshiped in the jungles of Bor-
neo, researched Native American
religions, attended churches, syn-
agogues, mosques and cult meet-
ings and meditated for eight
hours a day, then 12 and then 23.
He said the lesson be bas
learned through his lifelong reli-
gious journey is th.at God is
everywhere.
The Laguna Beach resident.
who was born and raised in
Newport Beach, recently bad a
book published titled •Looking
for God.· On Thursday, he will
present •A Crash Course ln
Religions of the World• at the
NllifmitWlilQmlil! --..... ., ................ __________ ..._
m Beach, Sadleir frequenhy
speaks at-retreats and confer-
ences. By day, be works as an
investment banker.
•1 think it's interesting that
somebody who works as an
investment banker bas sought
to understand a world of spiritu-
al teaching since childhood,•
said Melissa Adams, communi-
cations coordinator for the
library. "We don't typically have
people who focus on religion,
(but] this is a broad, unbiased
view on religions of the world·
WHA~ •A
Crash Course
in Religions of
the World,•
WHEN: 7p.m.
Thursday
WHERE: New-
port Beach
Central
Library, 1000
Avocado Ave.
cosr. Free
CALL: (949)
717-3801 GREG Ar< I OAl.Y Pt.OT
Steven Sadletr wrote •Looking for God.•
By night., the 42-year-old,
who does not own a television,
reads books on religion.
Sadleir beg6n his spiritual
quest as a little boy. He remem-
bers times when be would sit
alone and meditate. Newport Beach Central Library.
The talk will include histories
and practices of world religions.
For Sadleir, God is his creator
and the one who enables him to
breathe.
· "God was always just God,·
be said. "l never really gave
any one religiQn or sect owner-
ship of God .... To me, God is·
bigger than any religion.•
SadJeir's book gives a practical
overview of 12 Eastern religions,
three Western and Middle East-
ern religions, 15 early "sptrltual
paths,• such as Zoroastrianism, 13
strains of contemporary spiritual
teachings and an overview of
East.em masters and movements.
"Too often, religion is what
fragments people," be said.
"My hope and my objective was
to by and bring people together.
You'll see more that unifies.•
The founder of the SeU
Awareness Institute in Laguna
•1 didn't know what it was at
the timeJ but I started searching
on my own,· he said.
He went from church to
church and ~ugbt refuge in
nature. When be was 16,
Sadleir remembers getting a
"calling• while at the Sierra
Nevada Mountains. He began
to search intensely for answers.
·God reveals himself in
moments of silence,• be said .
WIAJHEI DD SUIF POLICE PILES
~ .. ~
66146
C«~del~
66146 eon.Mesa
fi7146
Newport 8uct\
fi7146
~Co.st
66146
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1:.42 • ...__ . .OA)
~high
ltt2 pm-·-··· ... -.. 3.5
·-2.21
•
COSTA MESA
• M.Mo ..._: A aar was burglarized In the
2800 blodc at 9:24 a.m. Thursday.
• Aman '°"'""-* A hft.anckun was reported
In the 500 blade It S:54 p.m. Thutfday.
• llNtDI "'--= A tuva.ry was repotted In the
1300 blodt It 6:., p.m. Thundly. . .
NEWPOkT IEAOt
• .., ..... DtWlc Cir tires wonn $2.400 ~
stcMn In the 500 blodt It I: 10 -.in. ~. The
cw. wes left~ on a--.
• D1_.t .. llllww Vandals llftiOWd ttw U)p of
• -.. end 1tnw " Into • n8fghbaD dty
:Minrnln.11 pool In the 1 • bloc* _. u:1 s a.m.
~ • .. PlftClli_....._A_.,,.._ ..
~.,. ... bila .. Ulp.tft. .. 111;
Doily Piiot
. . . . . . . .
Sofurdoy, January 20, 2001 A3
Silence on the Costa Mesa. screening issue_ spe_aks volumes
T lUs was supposed to be
a. funny column. I was
golng to try to make you
smilebydeclnrlngtbat the
scmenlng debate in Costa
Mesa should not be about
checking people for their citi-
zenship status but about giv-
ing IQ tests to future candi-
dates for office.
I was going to suggest we
screen candidates for Hnandal
skills by requiring them to
play Monopoly with county
1\'easurer John Moorlach.
Beat him and you can run for
office.
But the subject isn't funny
and I could not get past the
raw ugliness of arbitrarily
screening the people with
whom I have worked, lived
and played for 15 years; the
people whose kids play with
my kids and the parents who
have the same hopes and
dreams for their children as I
do for mine.
Yes, the City Council
passed on the issue of creat-
ing a screening process for
commissioners, but a larger
Steve Smith
WHAT'S UP?
screening scenario is still
favored by many.
For me, as it usually does,
this debate comes down to
children, for it is impossible to
deny that the wide net cast by
those who endorse a screen-
ing policy before one can use
a city service, attend a school
or prevail upon a Costa Mesa-
based charitable organi7.ation
will snare children who are
her~ not by choice but by dr-
cyibstance.
So far, the debate has been
too narrowly focused because
another truth is that one or
two individuals cannot cause
IMAGINE FOODS
ORGANIC SOUPS V.,,_.,_ Low Fat
& Non-Dolrg -'
• Runnmt • Swelt Com
• 8ncail se ·~IMlr • Thnmlo Rm. '2.11 15 az.
these cbaoges. But to heave a
sigh of relief at this knowl-
edge ts to ~ard the voices
of more than 10,000 residents
who want to fix what is oot
broken: who want to pWlish,
not help ow neighbors, justi-
fied in the name of improve-
ment A cold heart Is no
improvement
My thoughts now tum to
the lack of local leadership to
condemn the movement to
screen my friends and neigh-
bors.
Our schools have been
publicly declared as ·dechn-
ing" by the screening crowd,
yet I have not read or heard a
single opposing opinion from
any teacher, administrator or
school board member.
• Months ago, when I stated
that a teacher dress code is in
order, Newp0rt-Mesa teach-
ers uruon president Lmda
Mook wasted no time in
responding.
And when I oppose speaf-
ic school policies, there is
always a chorus to condemn
me, even though I repeatedly
maintain support for our local
schools and express admira-
tion and appreciation of our
~ers.
Where are these voices
now, when the reputation of
our dedicated teachers and
adrn.inistratois, a much more
important subject. Is being
tarnished?
Where are you. school
board members. all of you.
and why are you not con-
demning this false attack~ the schools? You bad no
ble castigating me for far -
er critiosms. Where is your
indignation now?
Where are the voices of
City Council members Ubby
Cowan, Unda Dixon and
Gary Mona.ban again.st those
who are working overtime to
tear dbwn what they have
spent yea.rs to build? Swely
we are not relying on Cow-
an's recent well-meaning but
lukewarm speech to serve as
our answer to the movement.
Where are any of the voic-
es of the Costa Mesa Cham-
ber of Commerce, which
should condemn the speech
that threatens to scare busi-
Dr. McDOUGALI.:S
5 Miniute Meals
m• a Cup ./Quick" &sr
./Almost Fiii Fnw • MiDatJoue Pasta ./ """1t Smalt
: ~':' :..Blrtey si;~9 • RbPutaPIW
REG • ., . 75 2 az.
ness away from our greGt c:ity? removmg the local Wellnes
Where is any representa-from this segment of our poor.
tive of law enfon:ement any-• Your silence makes them
where to repudiate the feeble sttooger and Sllence has a
attempt at the manipulation ol well-known bJ.story of bestow-
crime statistics to deda.re that mg power upon the ignorant
our dty bas an "abnormally The voices I seek are sup-
b.igh crime rate?" posed to be our leaders. lt is
Bill Turpit has spoken. during b.mes such as these
Where are the voices of other wben they a.re most needed;
leaders of the Latino commu-when we hope to tum to them
oity to condemn this strategy? for the words dJld deeds that
Whece are the voices of the will maintain the proO"ress we
real estate agents to point out have made; to tell everyonf?
that property values are oot that whatever IS wrong with
declining as we are being .Costa Mesa will not be cor-
told, and that Costa Mesa is rected by sc,apegoabng.
still the best city in the county The sun IS setting m Costa'
m which to work, live anti Mesa, the a ty that embraced
play? dJversity without undue politi-
Where is the voice of any cal correctness and that
member of the dergy to embraced tolerance Without
remind us all that W~tside being strangled in return.
children are God's cluldren . We are now deafened by
too? the voices of those whose
Those who beheve that goals are to dJvide deny and
silence is Uie best defense are destroy. And no o~e IS here to
wrong, for it is not one person clllSWer them
but thousands who believe
that we should demand that
people provide proof that
their papers are in order; ,.....
thousands who support
• STP.(E SMITH IS a Costa Mesa res-
ident apd freelance writer. Readen
may leave a ~for hlm on the
Dally Pilot hotline at (949) 642-6086
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A4 Saturday.·~ 20, 2001 .
OBITUARY
KathrYn Gardner
Kathryn Gardner, a
Corona del Mar resident
and co-founder of the
Junior Assistance League,
died of a massive heart
attack in her home
Wednesday. She was 80.
Gardner wos the wife of
Robert Gardner, a former
judge and Daily Pilot
columnist. The couple has
been married for more
than 60 years.
"It's a shock, and it was
very sudden," Robert
Gardner said.
He remembered he was
sitting 111 a bar when he
first saw Kathryn walk by.
"l saw myself looking at
the best pair of legs I've
I ( 111< I\ I I \'
• HARBOR CHRISTIAN CHURCH .l (Dlaclplea ol Chr1at)
2A01 Irvine Ave. 11 S1nt1 lubel
Newport Btec!I
Sunday Worship · 10:00AM
Dr. 0.111111 W. 1110f1 Mlnlmr (949) 845-5781
The Church of
. Yahweh
www.yhwh.com
Pastor Ahyh
Welcome to
~ Olun:h of Yoh"°"'IL
Th clkmh on ,,.. w.b
---ol~ep.n.
AND II# tloit 'f ,,_. ,_ ,,.._
ever seen," he said. •t fol·
lowed them, and we got
married six months latei.!-
He described his wife
u a •very happy and out-
going person.
•She had a zillion
friends and no enemies,•
he said. She was a full-
time homemaker whQ
devoted her life to her
family and her community.
Gardner worked sever-
al projects trying to raise
money.for charity, be said.
•She would even go
door to door sometimes,"
he said.
Gardner is also sur-
vived by one daughter,
two grandchildren and
three great-grandchildren.
ewport • r
Lutheran Church
CLLC.A.J
7M Dover Dr. NewltOft lleech
TradltlOMI Lutheran
Pe.tor Dllvlcl Monge
Wonhlp Service with
Holy Communion
Sunc111y e:1 a ....
CHILD CAR• AVAJLAaU
Newport <:enter
Unittd Methocfut Church
Rtv. Cathlem Coou. Pastor
160 I Marguerite Ave.
corner of Matgucritc and
San Joaquin Hills Rd
(949) 6"-0745
&tm QuUt Wonhip Smtict
JOam WonhiJ 11,,J Chi/Jrmi
S#ndtty SeMol
Ynth m«ti11f wttltly
Fint United Mdbod.ist Church
otCOltaMaa
42t Wat 1'tb Street, Costa Mesa
Faaml otWonfllp lO:OOam
IUdaard L. £..-., Pastor
Cblll'dl SdM* 9:tlaJD le 10:15am
9"C9-54 7727
Cbriat Chwdi by the Sea
Unital MnhoaiM
I '400 VI. Balboa 81\id., ~" Beach 9:00 Lm. -Sunday School for all IF'
10:00 Lm. -Wonhip (with child care)
The Rn. Or.~ IL CtMp. PUtor
('4') 613-)IOS
. ..
Brlef'1_
IN ·THE •s
Defend the Bay sues
Irvine Ranch agency
A nonprofit environmen-
tal group hu sued the Irvine
Ranch Water District to
block the agency's plan to
convert the San Joaquin
Reservoir to a reclaimed
water facility.
Defend the Bay, based in
Newport Beach, filed the
lawsuit in Orange County
Superior Court on Wednes-
day alleging that the water
district failed to complete
adequate environmental
review of the project prior to
a Dec. 18 apprqval by its
board.
The lawsuit asks for a
temporary restraining order
to halt the project unW the
agency completes an envi-
\-saint Micbad &All¥
Poar.cv-., ~-Co...... dd Mu • 644-0463
BUILDING OUR FAJ71'1 lDllNG aousr
ANDSDWING OUR<XWMUNTTY
The R.cv'd Peter D. Haynes, R.ccror
SUNPAY SCHEDULE
8 am -Holy EucbarUt
9 am • Adult Bible Study
10 am • Choral &c:haritt
NURS.BRY C4RJJ A YA/LULE
. . .
ronmental Impact report.
An Irvine Ranch Water
District representative could
not be reached for comment '
-P•ul Olnton
Resident to sing
at inaugural ball
Resa Hempfiing's been
there and done that. l\vice,
to be precise.
In 1993 and 1997, the
Newport Coast resident and
singer performed at inau-
gural balls for President
Clinton.
It all began when mem·
bers of the White House
marine band, The Presi-
dent's Men, saw her show at
a club in Washington, D.C.
They invited her to come
out and sing for Clinton.
Tonight, as George W. Bush
will celebrate the beginning
of his preswcy· Hempfling
II\, l'-11 '-\ '-\< ,1 H .I I
TEMPLE ISAIAH
OF NEWPORT BEACH
( Consmativt)
Oranee County's Friend!~ Synaeocue
"YOU AlE A STRANCER HER.E ONLY OHa"
Sliabblt Wonhlp
Hebrew School
Ad1lt Edacatloll
~
Sodll E\te•ll
*RABBI MARC S. RUBE.NSTEIN
240 I lrvlne !Ne Newpoct Be4ldl
(949)548-6900
•A God-ccn1cdpa.risb oommuniry. insuucud b>; ch~ Word o0fGod
and rcn~ by the Sacramma
Our Lady Queen of Angels
2046 Mar Vui:a Drive
Ncwpon Beach, California 92660
~949)644-0200 Fax (949)644-1349
Rev. Mon.signor Wtlliam P. Md.augblin, Pastor UTURGI~: Sarwday, 5 p.m. (Cantor),
Sunday, 7:00 (Quiet), 8:30 (Contcmpor:uy), 10:00 (Oioir),
""'.""".,..... ___ 11"""':30,._a.,..m._. (Cantor) and 5:00 m. (Contemporuy)
FIRST CHURCH OF SECOND CHURCH OF
CHRIST, SCIENTIST CHRIST, SCIENTIST
3303 Via Udo 3100 Pacific View Dr.
Newpcst Beach Newpor1 Beach
673-1340 or 67l-6150 644-2617 or 675-4661
On.lrch 10 am • 5 pn. OUlfch J.O am ~ Scbool 10 am ~ SChool 10 am
~·~·pn ~ ........ pn •111........,,11-
And "'" ... lfl .......... Mthlf Mlrllllt know tt.thtonly trul GOd, ..... Ctwllt, _... .......
JoM17:J
·or~ ffaoci•
(Job llsU)
will enterta.in gu~ again.
And the'• just as-eXclted as
she was the first time, she
said Friday during a phone
conversation rrom the Capi·
·tol, where sh .. s been stayinq
ror &everal days. • Jt's always a surprise,
always a thrUl," the alto jazz
singer said. "It's a great hon·
or just to get a call to do any-
thing for the president of the
United States. It doesn't get
much better than that.•
Despite a little rain and
cold weather, the inaugural
bash had been going since
Thursday. -
"They had a big function
downtown with Ricky Mar-
tin,• she said, adding that
fireworks had later fired up
the sky.
Security has been tighter
than before, Hempfling said.
She's had to wear security
badges, and checkpoints
had been set up along the
parade route.
After watching the swear-
ing-in ceremony on her hotel
room television, Hempfling
said she would head to the
American History Museum
in the early evening to pre-
pare for her appearances at
the Michigan Ball.
"Fly Me to the Moon•
and ·It Had to be You• are
among the songs Hempfling
has picked so far. But that's
no indication of her political
convictions, she said. •
"I have to just remain
very apolitic'ltl when it
comes to this and go in as an
entertainer,• she said, point-
ing out that she had bought
her floor-length gown
adorned with pearls and
beads at Fashion Island.
"You have to bring a little
California finesse.· she said,
lal.\ghmg and adding that
the blue and white dress and
her red hair will color her
patriotic for the ball.
Although Michigan went
with Vice President Al Gore
-and seven other balls. will
also take place tonight -
Hempfling said Bush was
expected to stop by for a
while.
•I will be more than
THE "FOR SALE" SIGN
MEANS BUSINESS
Many people notice a "For
Sale'' sign in front of a house and
call to get information about it.
Statistics compiled by real estare
firms around the country indicate
that the majority of responses to
Realtor's advertising comes from
calls generated by yard signs and
more buyers come from "sign
inquiries" than any Other
marlceting strategy.
A yard sign alerts everyone that
a house is for sal~ only
potential buyers, but also the
neighbors. Often a neighbor will
caJI about a property because they
have friends, collctgues-or
relatives whom they would like to
have as neighbon. And its not
uncommon for a neighbor·s
inquiry to resu II in a sale.
Prospec11ve buyers who calJ for
an appointmeru after seeing a
yud sign already have a positive
~ponse to the extertor of the
house and a.re eager to see the
interior. lf you m putting your
home on the mat1cet and d,on 't
like the Idea of havin& a sign in
your ylf'd, talk with your Realtor .
Lyleen and Jeff have 29 consecutive
ycan of real estate experience in
Newport Beach. Por profes&ional
lefVice or ldvlce with all your
real at8'e needs Clll die EwiQp ..
Co.a Newport~. eow... ..... (Mt) 759-3796.
adverti
. ..
Doily Pilot
delighted to shake hls
hand,• me said, adding that
she's planning to throw in a
couple of Patsy Kline songs
ror the new president, who is
a fan of the country singer.
-M•thls Winkler
Police seek polite
Hallmark robber
Some gunmen still seem
to know their manners.
The man who robbed
Images Hallmark on Irvine
Avenue just before 7 p.m. '
Wednesday put a small, siJ.
ver-colored semiautomatic
pistol on the counter, con-
cealed it with bis hand, and
seemed nervous when he
ordered two store clerks to
open the cash register,
police said.
As be left the store after
putting about $250 into a
plastic bag. the man seemed
to feel an obligation to soften
the blow.
·Have a nice rught." he
said to the store's employees.,
and a customer, who hdd
observed the scene, said Lt
Doug Fletcher of the New-
port Beach Police Depart-
--ment. A second custom(•r
remained una9/are of thf'
robbery.
Witnesses described th<'
man as a white, heavy built
man with a reddish com-
plexion and brown hair in
bis late 30s or early 40s,
standing about 5 feet, 11
inches tall, Fletcher said.
The robber wore ddrk
pants. a blue sweatshlrt.
black gloves, yellow-tinted
glasses and a blue basebdll
cap with the initials ·s D . •
he added. The man dppdr ·
ently left the store on foot
Detectives are still mv£>!>-
tigating the incident
Store officials dechnecl to
comment.
Anyone with infonndl1on
about the crime is asked to
call the Police Department dt
(800) 550-NBPD (6273).
-Mathis Winkler
FOR THE RECORD
A story in Thursday's
Daily Pilot incorrectly stat·
ed the Someone . Cares
Soup Kitchen would be
renamed. Only the new
Shalimar Learning Center
branch to be housed at
the kitchen will be called
the Someone Cares learn·
ing Center.
Put a few words
to work for you .
Call the
Daily Pilot
CLASSIFIEDS
---)
I o
Daily Pilot Saturday, Jonuory 20, 2001 AS
A peaceful gat:"den can be sanctuary for the spirit
M y garden is my
sanctu~ry. _It allows
me qwet tune to
reflect on my life and the
lives of my family. It reas-
sures me that nature is ~r-'
feet. even in its imperfe~
tions. Life cycles contl,nue,
even through the winter,
and spring brings regenera·
tion and hope of fresh vitali·
ty. My garden is We in a
microcosm, an environment
I can nurture, appreciate
and be master of a smaller
world's destiny.
One of the priorities for
my garden scheme is to cre-
ate a peaceful palette of
plants through color. texture
and size. I want a garden
that allows opportunities for
me to putter when I have
the time and to neglect 1t
when I don't. I want a back-
ground that is luminous m
the glow of the moon and
beautiful in the middle of a
hot swnmer day. l"need a
garden that I can make mis-
takes in and still be forgiv-
en.
My garden has been an
evolution. Over the years. I
have had many garden per-
sonalities. Some years ·
called for big, bold, beauti-
ful colors with high mainte-
nance annuals. Other phas-
es included masses of roses
that ran the gamut from
grandillora to miniatures.
But the garden I always
return to is the easy-,to-care-
for and easy-on-th~-eyf{
Ka1en Wight
NO PLACE LIKE HOME
garden. A garden that is
interesting year-round, a
garden that needs a little
but not a Jot of care, a gar-
den with a simple color
scheme that is understand-
ing when the bulbs don't
get planted.
Plants with Wfferent color
combinations and strange
textures are some of my
favorites. I love to mix
whites and silvers among
the shades of green. Some-
how, adding silvers and
JU"ays to the garden make
the greens g reener and the
whites whiter. The foliage
adds a dramatic highlight
a mong the more predictable
garden residents. Good sil-
ver candidates include low-
growing Jamb's ear, hearty
artemisia and playful
helichrysum. These plants
get their unusual coloring
from tiny hairs that cover
the leaves, a natural adap-
tation (o the harsh weather
conditions of their ancestors
..
YOUR WEDDING
The Most Important Day ot your life
Wt will makt il tht best day of your life!
• Black & White PhotojournaUstic •
• Traditional Color •
• Engagement, Studio and Beach •
(949) 675-3130
www.jobnblompholograpb7.com
J7J2 E. hdllc COtit Hllthway, Corooa dd Mar, CA 92625
Celestino's ._
quality MEATS ..
The Anesi Meat and SCl'l'iCC l\l'Ollable
Smnnt C«tll Mts11 for awr 30 yun
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GROUND CHUCK CHICKEN POT PIES FAMILY PACKS ·
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POLISH SAUSAGE
Great Garik Flavor
531Z
weed, It rebounds quickly
after being cut down, and it
seems to grow in most gar·
den conditions.
Another garden staple is
Heavenly Bamboo, nandina,
if you want the Latin name.
Nandinas come in dwarf
and standard sizes, both
with beautifully pigmented
leaves that change with the
seasons, but remain on the
.Plant. Nand.inas are fabu·
lous gatden staples that
never ask for special treat-
ment.
A dramabc plant that
comes in both a standard
and dwarf size is papyrus,
commonly called umbrella·
bush. The stems and thin·
SEAN HlllER I DAILY Pit.OT
Using gray and sllv.er foliage adds dramatic interest ln the winter, when not much else
ls going on in the garden. The fuzzy, silver leaves of lamb's ear are a good choice.
· leafed pompoms cUe a
bright green al'\d g ive a dra·
matic flair to any spot i.n the
garden. These plants are a
great choice for dramabc
everung up-lighting. Thea
unusual shape and texture
is worth showing off. And,
as lbng as they are watered
well. they won't reqllire any
special treatment. in South Afnca and South
America. Gray foliage glows
in the moonlight and lights
up even the darkest corner
of the garden.
Many of the common
plants that I have relied on
for years have relatives that
come with interesting char-
acteristics: variegated
leaves, unusually colored
blooms and different growth
habits. Easy to find plants,
such as geraniums, have a
huge farruly line that
includes plenty of •varie-
gated• sheep. One of my
favorite discoveries has
been the chocolate-mint
geranium. It acts as a
ground cover with its low,
spreading growth habit, but
the leaves are the real
source of excitement. The
large fuzzy leaves are
edged in chartreuse and
filled in with an ohve green
center It's a subtle little
plant that sneaks up on you
and surprises with its
•Volume S.ledlon
• Outshwtclin1
Cvsfomet'~
• Great Price Guaront..
unique Chdractenshcs,
which include a delicious
scent.
Another interesting, low
maintenance pla.nt is horse-
tail. This prolific grower is
great in a confined space. lt
has roots that will run
amok, but in a container it
behaves itself nicely. I like
the green and black col-
oration. It's great in a vase
all by itself or as an unusual
addition to a flower
arrangement. It g rows like a
JV1ake your garden work
for you, not you work for
your garden. The garden
should be a place to renew
your soul and refresh your
spint. After all, a garden 1s
not 1ust a piace that needs
to be culbvated -if you
allow it to , your garden will
return the favor
• KAREN WIGHT is a Newport
Beach resident. Her column runs
Saturdays
C· f /t.Kgwtl', IT'S TIME FO~ ...
f"4t8 ~oW" r tKO. Ml CASA
MEXICAN RESTAURANT
OUR MEALS ARE A TRIP TO MEXICO -ALSO ON OUlt /l\EHV: OUR
"FISH TACos· MARGARITAS ARE
TOltTlllA SOUP u A. ""E \MITH CHILI SIZE tnl'\V "
CHIU CH mt OMllmt GOLD 'f EQU I LA!
296 E. 17TH ST. COSTA MESA · 949·645 ·7626
~~ {31aaona3
CDent So/ID/meJ
cfOLJUfp !!/
U O/o
&'ekdfa.mcollecttOm f!/
Zanella ~ Corbin
Barry BJicken • Starington
Cutter · & Buck
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• Belts ••••••• , ••••••••• VALUll8 P'ROM
• Tees .................. v,4Luu l"RoM
• Blouses .............. VALUU P'ROM
e Slacks ................ VAL.VU P'ROM •7 4ae
At-Ease
women's & hom·e store
F'A•HION ISLAND • NEWPORT BIEACH
..
..
..
•
{
-..
. . . . . '
Dally Pilot A6 Sa!vrdoy. Jonuory 20, 2001 •
Don't miss the chan~e to stock up on. antiq_ue bargains.
A oUquet 4 You 11 having a
big, storewide sale with mer·
cbandlse marked down 10%
to 40%. The shop carries all kinds
of antiques. including silver, china,
crystal, jewelry, art, lighting, mir-
rors, collectibles and fwniture. It's
getting ready for a move a few
doors down at the end of the mon°'
and will probably be closed the first
week of Pebrua.ry to get organized.
Antiques 4 You i.s at 412 Old New-
port Blvd., Newport Beach. lnfor·
mation: (949) 548-4123.
Greer Wylder
BEST BUYS
h.b we. Fine clothing co ection.s
on sale include Corbin, Robert Thl·
bott, 'liicotl St. Raphael, Jhane
Barnet, Ike Behar, Sany Brick.en.
Hickey-Freeman, Hart Schaffner &
Marx, Cole Ha.an and Joseph
Aboud. Posh is at Fashion Island
ln Newport Beach. lnfonn.ation:
(949) 640-8310.
South Cout Art Gallery ii
showing encaustic paintings by
Serbian artists Viatcheslav and
Natalia Belova-J'cb1sitiline through
February. Encaustic painting is a
variety of mes and styles avallable
at bwgaln prices. The gallery IJ a
few doon down from the Udo The-
ater at 3441·8 Via Udo, Newport
Beach. Information: (949) 646-.4545.
Balboa llland's new monQgram
, sbop, Sandcutle,,is having a •hia
and hers• robe special for Valen-
tine's Day. The robes are $75 and
that includes a monogram. Sand-
castle carries all kind.I of gUt items
in the store ideal for monogram-
dtlng and will mone>gTam your per-
sonal items for $7. The selection in
the store includes baby gi.ftl,
wraps, robes, towels, sachets,
linens, totes and mor~. It's a( 226
Marine Ave. Information: (949)
723-5988.
Nordstrom Rack has recently
received men's apparel from Nord-
strom at 50% to 75% off the origi·
nal price. There's also a 70% lo
75% off sale on a large selection of
women's apparel from Nordstrom.
Nordstrom Rack is ut the Metro
Pointe Shopputg Center in Costa
Mesa. lnformabon· (714) 751 -5901
the end of the month. It's having a technique dating back to the early
big liquidation sale, and there are Renaissance period, when artists
Sbaclell of Red. a popular Bay·
side Drive women's clothing 1tore,
ii having its halt-yearly winter
sale. Contemporary women's
sportswear ls reduced 40% to 70%.
Shades of Red carries name !:!rands
including 1bierry Muglar, Votre
Nom and Christine Albers. It's
open from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Mon-
day through Saturday. It's al 1024
Bayside Drive, Newport Beach.
Information: (949) 719-93~0.
Some of the beSt in Italian shoes
and accessories are SO~o off at the
Bruno Magll boutique sale at
South Coast Plaza. Women's and
men's shoes are reduced up to
50%. Bruno Magil is on the second
level, across from Gucci. informa-
tion: (714) 966-2600.
bargains available on crystal. silver, mixed pigments with melted wu
rugs, jewelry and furniture. It's ·· as a base instead of oils or other
even selling its display cases for media. "The paintings have a sur-
dealers and retailers. Most items face that feels like a candle and a
are reduced up to 75%. Anna Gray brilliance of color and a surface
Gallery is at 369 E. 17th St., Costa texture unlllce other methods,•
Mesa. lnfonnation: (949) 515-3500. says Derby Williams of the South
The best in men's clothing is Coast Art Gallery. South Coast Art
Anna Gray Gallery & Consign-
ment is closing its doors for good dt
drastically reduced through the end Gallery also will have a sale today
of the month al the semiannual on photo frames. There are a large
Another popular women's cloth-
ing store, ArmoJre, is having a
winter clearance sale. The winter
collection is reduced 50%. A.rmoire
is in the Corona del Mar Plaza at
840 Avocado Ave., Newport
Beach. Information: (949) 644-
9888.
• aUT llUYS appears Thursdays and
Saturdpys. Send information to Greer
Wylder at 330 W. Bay St .. Costa Mesa, CA
92627, or via fax at (949) 646-4170.
What's
AFLOAT
• WHAT'S AFLOAT IS published
periodically. If you are planning a
nautical event, submit the infor·
mation to the Daily Pilot. 330 W
Bay St .• Costa Mesa, CA 92627, by
fax to (949) 646-4170; or by e-mail
to dallypilotO/atlmes.com.
SAILING CLASSES
Orange Coast College's
School of Sailing and Sea-
manship will offer eight
non-credit mtermediate
Lidos sailing cldsses from
1:15 to 5 p.m . successive
Saturdays and Sundays this
month, February. March and
May at OCC's Sailing Cen-
ter, 1801 W. Coast Highway,
Newport Beach. $99. (949)
645-9412.
Orange Coast College's
School of Sailing dnd Sea-
manship will present eight
non-credit introduction to
shields sailing classes from 9
a.m. to 1 p.m . successive
Saturdays and Sundays this
month, February, March and
Mdy at OCC's Satlmg Cen-
ter, 1801 W. Coast Highway,
Newport Beach. $115. (949)
645-9412.
Orange Coast College's
School of Sailing and Sea-
mdnstup wtll offer four non-
credit advanced sailing
cldsses from J: 15 to 5 p.m.
c;uccess1ve Saturdays and
Sundays this month, Febru·
dry, March and May at
OCC's Sailing Center, 1801
W Coast Highway, Newport
BPdCh. 'i J35. (949) 645-9412.
"South of the Border" will
be the theme of Orange
Coast College's 26th annual
Sailmg Adventure Series at
7:30 p.m. Friday and Feb. 2
at OCC's Robert B. Moore
Theater, 2701 Fairview
Road, Costa Mesa. The lec-
ture topics wiU vary. Smgle
adnussion tickets are $5 to
$13. (7 14) 432-5880.
Orange Coast College's
School of Sailing and Sea-
manship will offer a week-
end class on operating a
twin-engine powerboat
from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. March
Classic Elegance, 18th Century Styling
by Lexington Furniture
F'UU. ~fRVICE DESI<.-.
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24-25 at Long Beach Harbor.
The class is limited to six
students. $295. OCC's Sail-
ing Center is at 1801 W.
Coast Highway, Newport
Beach. (949) 645-9412.
Learn to saU or windsurf at
Resort Water Sports. Wind-
surfers and 14-foot sailboats
may be rented for $15 per
hour. (949) 729-1150.
Sailboat rentals and private
lessons are available at Mari-
na Sailing in the Balboa Fun
Zone. Advanced classes
include navigation. big boat,
powerboat, introduction to
heavy weather and first-mate
instruction. {949) 673-7763;
the Blue Dolphin Sailing
Club, (949) 644-2525; or Udo
Sailing Club. (949) 675-0827.
BOAT RENTAU
Balboa Boat lleniais ca.D put
you on the water in many
ways, with single and double
kayaks, electric boats, 14·
holder sailboats, pedal boats
and runabouts for offshore
use or cruising the bay. (949)
673-7200.
Electric boat rentals are
available by the hour at
Duffy Electric Boats, 2001 W.
Coast Highway, Newport
Beach. All bo.ats are
equipped with window
enclosur"li and· CD players.
Ice and cups are provided.
Reservations are suggested.
An hour rental is $60. (949)
645-6812.
Sall airborne outside New-
port Harbor, pulled by a
motorboat at Balboa Para-
~g near the Balboa Fun
Zone. A 90-m.inute trip is $45.
(949) 673-1693.
A motorized lounge cbalr
may be rented at Resort
Waler Sports at Newport
Dunes for $25 per hour. Ped-
al boats, electric boats, boo-
gie boards, kayaks, inflatable
rafts, beach furniture and
wetsuits also are available.
(949) 729-1150.
Party pontoon1, chaparral
runabouts and family pon-
toons may be rented at
Anchors Away Boat Rentals
in the Balboa Fun Zone. {949)
673-3372.
PulcllW. -r-• ~ b1Mm •Yoo.• S_,,.0.-• ...._, • T-
• T"' CM • STVoM llOOIO • MA.-• WIDff W~ • l'l.An:I • EXrlJlr ~ tQll'
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Irvine Aw a 171h St
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(949) 631-3823
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Gondola tours are ottered
by the Gondola Co. of New-
port, 3400 Via Oporto, Suite
102-B. The $75 cost
includes a basket of bread,
cheese, salami, ice, glasses,
a blanket, music and a
Polaroid picture. Wine also
is available. (949) 675-1212.
Gondola Adventures/New-
port, 3101 W. Coast High-
way. offers one-and two-
hour gondola cruises. A
one-hour tour with cham-
pagne is $70. A two-hour
tour with dinner aod cham-
pagne is $180. Pickup is
available al waterfront
restaurants. (949) 675-
4984.
Irvine Coast Charters In
Udo Marina Village offers
two-hour electric boat cruis-
es with a gourmet dinner.
$180 for two people. (949)
675-4704.
Zip through the water on a
sea motorcycle known as a
Sea-Doo at Walk on Water.
next to the ferry on Balboa
Island. $65 per hour for a
single-or double-seater and
M..-s-ltkOtMM • 4~
2925 AinMy. S.Ut. A
WIUI M•14 CA
(714) 979-6679
$75 Pt" hour for a lhree-
seater. lQ49) 675-6800.
Streamline center-console
fishing boats may be rented
at Balboa Boat Rentals on
Balboa Peninsula. The
boats, equipped with live
bait tanks, fish-finders and
VHF rad.lo, are available by
the hour and half-day rates
at $170; full-day rates are
$240. U-Drive offshore boats
equipped with VHF radios
also may be rented by the
hour, half-day or full day
Rates range from $40 per
hour to $195 for the day.
(949) 673-7200
CRUISES
Orange Coast College's
School of Salling and Sea-
manship will sponsor an
eight-day trip March 17 to
. 24 aboard the Alaska Eagle
from Newport Beach to the
tip of Baja California. The
seven-day voyage back to
Newport is scheduled
March 25 to 31. $1,125 each
way. (949) 645-9412.
Make Room for
the New Year
and New
lnven
~111fl
al"',41' N. a •
~11/"t" If/
~Irr!
'\
Doily Pilot Saturday, January 20, 100 I A 7
Rotary clubs off er scholarships for overseas opportun'1tieS
A pplicatJons are bemg
accepted by Rotary
District 5320 for five
AmbassadonaJ Scholarships
to be awarded in the spring
for undergraduate and grad-
uate students to study
aboard for the 2002-03 acad-
emic year, says Rotary Dis-
trlct 5320 Gov. Price Shapiro,
a member of the Newport Jim de Boom Beach Sunrise Rotary Club.
The scholarships, valued at COMMUNITY & CLUBS up to $25,000 each, &re
funded by donations from
some 2,400 Rotarians m gram, Ambassadorial Schol-
O range and Southern Los arships was established in
Angeles County to The 1947. Since then, more tharl
Rotary Foundation, the 30,000 men and women
world's Largest pnvate ly from 100 nations have stud-
funded inte rndllonal scholar-1ed abroad under its aus-
ships program pices, McAulay says
More than 1,200 Amhas-The purpose of the
sadonaJ Scholdrsh1ps were Ambassadonal Scholarshtps
awarded worldwide for program is to increase
study for the 200 I -02 a ca de-international understanding
nuc year through grants and fnendly relations
tolalUlg about $26 million among people of diffe rent
Recipients from some 69 countnes. While abroad,
countries wlll study an more schol&rs serve as ambas-
than 64 dLfferent ndtions, sadors of goodwill to the
notes Robert McAuldy, Dis-people of the host country
tnct 5320 Ambassadonal and give presentations
Scholarship chamnan. In about their homelands to
comparison, 25 Rhodes Rotary clubs a nd other
Scholarships dre awurded groups. Upon returning
annually in the United home. scholars share with
States. "' local Ronuians and others
'The Rotary FoundatJon's the experie nces that led to
oldest and best-known pro-greater understanding of
"ODCE Of VACANCY
The City of Newport Beach Is currently accepting
applications to fill an expired term on the Board of
Trustees of the:
Orange County Vector Control District
(one seat)
The newly a~lnted member will serve until the expiration
of the term (December 31, 2002). The Board of Trustees
meets once per month.
The deadline for flllng applications Is 4:00 p.m. on
Jbursclay. February 1. 2001. The appointment Is scheduled
to be made on Tuesday, Febn.iary 13, 2Q01. Application
blanks and addttlonal Information about the Orange
County Vector Control .District can be obtained from the
City Clerk's Office, 3300 Newport Boulevard, or will be
malled to you by calling (949) 644-3005.
For more Information, contact the City Clerk's Office at
(949) 644-3005.
their host countnes.
A benefit not found rn
other scholarship programs
is the scholar's association
with Rotary clubs and
Rotarians. Each scholar IS
assigned both a sponsor COld
a host Rotarian counselor
who provide orientation,
advice and assistance.
Many former scholars
serve Important posts with
their governments; others
ar~ highly respected in
thelr fields. Examples of
outstanding Rofary alumni
include Bill Moyers, a
prominent U.S. 1ournalist;
Sadako Ogata, United
Nations High Commission-
e r for Refugees; Paul Vol-
cker, former chd1rman of
lhe U.S. Federal Reserve
Board; Carlos Alberto Da
Mota Pinto, former pnme
mm1ster of Portugdl; Otto
Borch, Damsh Ambassador
to the U.S.; Rep Loretta
Sanchez (D-Santd And);
and Roger Ebert, the popu-
lar him cnllc.
Prospective scholdrs must
apply through one of 51
local Rotary clubs in Rotary
District 5320. Apphcdnts
must have completed at
least two yedrs of college
when the scholarship
begms. For additional infor-
mat1on, eligibility require-
ments or al'). applacatJon, call
McAulay at (714) 532-1030.
PEA.JU. HARBO R: New-
port Beach resident profes-
sor Bill Mimiagg, a retired
Marine with 3 1 years of
experience that included
World War n, will be the fea-
tured speaker at 7:30 p .m.
Monday at Amencan Legion
Post 555. Honored guests at
the event will be Pearl Har-
bor survivors and commuru-
ty college students of a
World War JI history class.
The post is at 14582 Beach
Blvd .. Westnunster.
WELCOME TO TIIE
WORLD OF SERVICE
CLUBS: Paul Bush, spon-
sored by George Sanders,
and Gabe R.to1as, sponsored
by Harry Hartstem, 1omed
the Newport Beach-Corona
del Mar Kiwarus Club. Make
Busch, sponsored by Jim
Parsons, 1oined the Rotary
Club of Newport-lrvlne.
SERVICE CLUB MEET-
INGS THIS WEEK: Does
your New Year's resolubon
mdude getting more involved
in your conunuruty, makmg
new friends, networking or
giving something back to
your conunun1ty? Try d ser-
vice dub. You are mvited to
attend a dub meebng thas
week. Many dubs will buy
Tbt LA1fts1
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& F11/I Suviu 541011 '
iR o""'tt Cu111y
ZANELLA • IKE BEHAR
BOBBY JONES
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your br..t guest meal. balboo.org)
MONDAY THURSDAY
G:30 p.m.: The Hdfbor 7:30 a.m.: The Costa
Mesa Lions Club will meet Mesa Ordnge Coast Break-
at Zub1es Restaurant fast Lions Club wlll meet at
Mum's Cafe to hear new
TUESDAY member Jam Wagner gave a
7:30 a.m.: The Newport craft talk.
Beach Sunnse Rotary Cl1Jb Noon: Th~ KJwarus Club
will meet at the Newport of Costa Mesa will meet at
Harbor Nautical the Hobday Inn, the New-
Museum/Riverboat Restau-port Bedch-Corona del Mar
rant to,hettr Judge Geoffrey Kiwanis Club wtll meet at
Glass of Ornngf> County the Bahid ConnUuan Ydcht
Orug C'ourt. Club, the Exchdnge Club of
6:30 p.m.: The Costd Newport·Harbor Wlll meet
Mesa-Newport 1-idrbor Lions at the Riverboat Restdurant
Club will meet dt the Costd to hear Tom Moon gave cl
MeSd Gou cmd Country \Jub tdlk lilied ·oss Expenences
m World War II.• and the
WEDNESDAY Newport Irvine Rotary Club
7:15 a.m.: ThP South wilJ meet dl the Irvine Mdt-
Coast Metro Rotdry Club nott Hotel ford progrdm on
will me<>t dl the Center the youth exchdnge dnd a
Club, dnd thE' N<•wport ~1dr-craft ldlk or two (http II
bor K1wdn1s Club w1JJ meet www.n1rotary org)
dt thf' University AthletK 6:30 p.m.: The Zontd
Club Club of NE>wport Hdrbor will
Noon: ThP Orc1n~w ('<Xlst meet at the clubhouse to
cxC"hdng<• ( 'lub \Nill meet dl hear V1ctond Curtin with dn
the BdhJd Connthtdn Vdcht upddtP on the Wom<'n\
Club Opportunity Ce11ler
6 p.m .: The· l~otdfy Club • COMMUNITY & CLUBS is pub· of N<>wport -Bc1lhod wall lished every Saturday 1n the Daily mePl c1t th<' lfohtd Connth1-Pilot Send your service club's c1n Vdrhl Club to h f'dl Jim meeting information by fax to Ddlc ol I loc1q I lo1,p1tc1l dis-(949) 660-8667, e-mall to 1de cuss pldn!'.> for the nt•w boomOaol com or by mail to 2082
Wonwn's Pc1v1hon SE Bristol St . Suite 201, Newport
(http:llv.rww n£>"-(>Ofl Beach, CA 92660 1740
VILLA BELLA
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...
A8 Saturday, January 20, 2001
OBITUARY
Walter E.
Gleclder
Walter E, Gleckler, a
longtime Orange Coast
College music professor
who also taught m4rlne
activities classes, died of
C4ncer at his Seal Beach
home. Thursday. He wlls
72.
Gleckler joined OCC's
~usic depa.-tment in
1961 as director of cho.-al
musi~. He also taught
music theory and voice
classes and was vocal
• director fo'r a number of ·
OCC summer musical
productions. He i;erved
as preside nt of the
Orange County Music
Educators Assn. m 1962
and 1963.
After lus retirement in
1986, Gleckler taught
sailing classes An avid
sailor himself, Gleckler
took a year of sabbattcal
leave in 1974. when he
completed a 10,000-mtle
voyage to the South
Pacific with hts fanuly on
board lbelr boat, named
Tradition.
On his return. Gleck-
ler started the Salling
Adventure Serles and
had remained the pro-
gram's director for 20
years.
Born in Long Beach,
Pleckler earned his
bachelor's degree in
111usic from the University
of Redlands and a mas·
ter's degree in musicfrom
Cal State Long Beach. fie
also served in the Air
Force i.rrunedtately after
World WaJ n and spent
time as a radio operator
in Japan and the Philip-
pines.
He was a member of
numerous organizations.
including the American
Choral Directors Assn.,
the Southern California
Vocal Assn., the Music
Assn. of califomia Com-
muruty Colleges and the
Alarrutos Bay Yacht Club.
Gleckler is survived by
his wife, Anna; three chil-
dren: 10 grandchildren;
and two stepdaughters.
' '.
MARTIN
CONTINUED FROM A1
superintendent of secondary
education. ·we need some
help, and Don became the
obvious choice as the senior
member in a principal posi-
tion.•
Saddened Sea Kings have
little time lo get used to the
idea, as Martin will begin his
new assignment in just two
weeks.
When the school day
begins Feb. 5, Gary Norton.
who retired from the Irvine
Unified School District in 1995
but repeatedly has been
called back to service. will
step in to fill Martin's position
for the remainder of the school
year.
For now, the posibon is a
WATCHER
CONTI NUED FROM 1
criminals, hung 1uries,
wh1ms1cal 1udges and feisty
dltorneys. His c urrent
fdvorile, though, 1s Deputy
Dist. Atty Debora LJoyd,
prosecutor m the Bechler
case.
temporary one, Castellanos
said.
ln Aprll, district staff will
reevaluate their situation to
determine if it the job should
be filled full time. U &0, they'll
also dedde if Martin ls the
right man for the job.
Martin said he 'plans to
make himself invaluable, so
that come spring, he will be
left with the decision of stay-
ing at the district headquar-
ters on Bear Street, returning
to Corona del Mar High or
moving on altogether.
In the meantime, be is
eager for a new experience
after 13 years as a principal.
"I think it's going to be a
neat opportunity for me
because I can get my feet wet
and see if this is what I really
want and the district can see U
there's a need for the extra
help, .. Martin said.
"Debbie is a cool girl," he
said. "She presents herself
well, doesn't get riled up.•
He normally tends to root
for the prosecution.
"They're on the right side
-my side.• he said with a
laugh. "I can't understand
defense attorneys, why they
would want to take the side
of someone• who's been
accused of a horrible crime.
-2601 East Blutl, ~Beach
l..ocolecl at Ille Newport Becich Tennis Club
(949) 644-0050 IXI. 212
Martin assured parents,
ltaff and students, however,
that Corona del Mar High
would be the last school be
was principal of, so if he finds
he misseS campus life, he will
return to the campus after the
trial assignment
But the longtime principal
admits that he was planning
to look for a district position in
the spring anyway, so the
opportunity is ideal.
On his special assignment.
Martin will work closely with
Castellanos and Peggy Ana-
tol, the district's director of
curriculum and assessment,
but he will take on other
duties as well, Supt Robert
Barbot said.
Martin will head up a new
CIF program that Newport-
Mesa wishes to participate in,
Victory with Honor, and will
take on the-responsibility of
He's seen some funny
courtroom moments too. He
recalls a day in Suzanne
Shaw's courtroom in the
Harbor Justice Center, wb.eo
famous attorney F. Lee Bai-
ley was arguing his case.
"He was walking up and
down with loose change jin·
gling in his pocket,• Roman
recalled. "I guess it annoyed
Suzanne. Shaw, and she
Dolly Pilot
the recenUy resigned Lynn
Bloomberg, who was the
directOr of the district's alcohol
and drug awareness program.
Thal administrative Posi-
tion was • previously left
Wlfilled, Barbot said, in anbd-
pation of this move.
Parents are disappointed to
see Martin go, but said they
understand.
"Martin has been a terrific
principal and, for .the short
term, we'll manage without
him,• said Susan Kramer, PTA
ccr~'dent. "He has been
hig instnunental in bring-
ing a ut a stronger middle
school on campus and
stronger academics. He works
very efficiently with parent
groups. but we understand
he's been at [Corona del Marj
for seven years and would like
more of a professional chd.1-
lenge. •
asked him to put the change
aside. She sounded like that
woman on TV. Judge Judy?
1t was funny.•
The legal a ction keeps
him entertained. h e said.
"It's a good way to k11J
some time .... I m ean waste•
time. I hate to use the word
'kill' here,· he added Wllh d
chuckJe.
Toll-Free: 1-866-5 77-8833
Buying or Evaluating an Annuity?
Tom P. Sniechowski, Financia l Advisor
First Union Securities
620 Newport Center Drive, Suite 1300
Newport Beach, CA 92658-8730
Lie # CAOC80622
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Nt'w In Progress
MEN'S & LADIES' SPORTSWEAR
Golf Bags, Golf sh·oes,
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Mon -Fri 8:30 am -· 7:30 pm
Sat & Sun 8:00 am -5:30 pm
~
JOHn LEOnRRD'S
., eOLft eHOP
J..
I
• Newport leach
Dolty Pilot
LOSS
CONTINUED FROM A 1
community.
lo 1954, he became chw.r-
man of the board of Freehold-
ers, the group that created
the city charter. SteUensen
also served as a trustee of the
Newport Harbor High School
District and was chairman of
the Orange County Grand
.Jury. He was named Newport
Beac:.h's Citizen of the Year m
1957.
Steffensen's talents as a
master of ceremorues was
well-appreciated by the local
community, said his longtime
friend, Robert Gardner, a
Daily PUot columnist and a
former judge. Steffensen con-
tulUed as toastmaster for
Amigo Viejos. a group he and
Gardner founded in 1950.
"He was spontaneous,·
said Gardner, who knew
Steffensen from the time they
attended Huntington Park
High School together m the
1920s. "H e had a great sense
of humor. I fe and l, we never
rehearsed.•
Gardner said Steffensen
played a significant role in
writing the aty's charter.
"The charter was very
1.ffiportant for OW' city at that
time,• he said. / "It made
Newport Beach a progressive
and modem town."
Steifensen is survtved by
his son, daughter-in-law, four
grandchildren, eight great-
grandchildren and four
great-great-grandchildren
He always put his fa.trul y
first, said son Don Steffensen
of Palm Desert.
"He was a great father,"
be said. "He led the family."
The younger Steffensen
said he was happy to have
spent the last few weeks Wllh
tus father.
"We were very, very
close.• he said. "He never
lost his sense of humor, and
his mind was as sharp the
day be died as it was years
ago.•
A man of many talents, the
elder Steffensen was active in
theater during the 1930s and
'40s and played leading roles
ijl~Uch musicals as "OkJa-
horha. • He and his farruly
also put on marionette shows
for the community dunng
Christmas.
•People passmg by would
honk. and we'd come up lo
the front window and put up
a show for them,• Don Stef-
fensen recalled.
But most of all, his fdther
loved the oty and the com-
munity h e lived in, the son
said.
"He told us he moved to
Corona del Mar because he
thought it was a great place
to raise a family,· Don Stef-
fensen said. ·He never lost
that feeling of pride for Cqro-
na del Mar, where our frufu.ly
spent several happy days
together.·
I I I l " HI \ ( ) I H ·: I
( 111 >II I ( l H \I I \
Rabbitt Insurance Agency
AlTl'O • HOMEOWNERS • KEAL.TH
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Vttitour
AREA RUG STUDIO
Rugs & Runners on
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CRYSTAL
CONTINUED FROM A 1
state's 60-year concessionaire
contract with Freed was
signed under Gov. Pete Wtl-
son's administration, has
thrown his department's sup-
port behind Freed's $35-mil-
lion resort.
"There is a very pecuhar
dissonance coming from this
room,• DemocratJc Party
activist Jim Toledano said to
Areias. •For the life of me, l
can't figure out why you've
embraced this pro1 ect •
More than one speaker
Around
TOWN
• Send AROUND TOWN items to
the Daily Pilot. 330 W. Bay St., Cos-
ta Mesa, CA 92627; by fax to (949)
646-4170; or by calling (949) 574-
4268. Include the time, date and
location of the event. as well as a
contact phone number A complete
listing 1s available at
http://www.dailypilot.com.
TODAY
Orange Coast College will
host d seminar, "Malung
Money as a Comrrussioned
Notdry, • from 8 a.m to 5 p.m.
at OCC's Business Educdbon
Room 107, 2701 Fairview
Road. Costa Mesa $59 or $75.
A $20 material fee 1s pdyable
in class. plus a $40 fee for the
state appllcation. (7 14 ) 432-
5880
California World Guitar Show
2001, a semiannual world-
wide gu1tdr swap meet. show
and sale, will be held from 10
a.m. to 6 p.m. Saturddy dnd
10 a m to 5 p.m. Sunday dt
the Orange County Fair-
grounds, 88 Fair Dnve, Costa
Mesa. $10 for adults and free
for chtldren younger lhdn 12.
(9 18) 288-2222
A free workshop for new-
comers to cyberspace. "Tools
Be TAUGMT how to
yet in shape, instead
of beiny TOLD ...
'Jour results will
last a lifetime.
--/ a I I I I I I I I 1 1 I I I t I v --
Tht knowledye ~ou need
to lUCCffd.
c:JiU01.ed the state's contract
as a "back-room deal"
designed to cut the public out
of the approval process.
In response, Anas said
there was nothing secretive
about the contract, which
gives Freed a five-year win-
dow lo start construction.
Environmental groups of
all stripes have been mount-
ing a grass-roots campaign
dga.mst Freed's proiect, say-
ing 1t would pnce out the
average beachgoer
M embers of the groups -
such as the Sierra Club,
All.Janee to Rescue Crystal
Cove, League of Coastal Pro-
tection and Natural
and Tricks: Internet 101." wtll
be held at 10 a m. in the
Newport Bedch Central
Library's Friends Meeting
Room. 1000 Avocado Ave
(949) 717-3801.
"Divorce: A New Begtnnlng,"
d workshop (j>r men dnd
women m t.hc process of
d1vorCll1g or who are recently
divorced, will he hc>ld (rom 10
a.m. to 12·30 p.m dl 180 New-
port Ce>nter DnVE'. Newport
Bedch. $40 (949) h44-6435
TUESDAY
·A seminar, "Increasing Pro-
ductivity -Strdlegies for
Resources Defense Counctl
-reiterated their resistance
to the resort at lhe meeting.
•Hopefully, !Areias) wtll
go back to Sacramento with
the message that this resort is
not going to fly no matter
how long Michael Freed
deodes· to hang on,• Sierra
Club spokeswoman Jean-
nette Menilees said Fnday.
·we think the pressure
should be on him to with-
drdw" the proposal.
Opponents of the resort
found a powerful ally Tues-
ddy, when old-line heiress
Joan Irvine Srruth Joined their
ranks. Snuth SaJd she would
help to form d nonprofit con-
Building Effective Teams,·
will be held from 8:30 to 11 ·30
a.m at National University,
3390 Harbor Blvd.. Costd
Mesa. $20 or $25. (949) 651-
8286.
WEDNESDAY
The Costa Mesa Chamber of
Commerce will host a tTUXer
dl 5:30 p.m. dt Plums Resldu-
rdnt, 369 E 17th SL, Costd
Mesd. $10, or free for mem-
bPn. (714) S85-9090
A Hnanclal planning seminar
for survwing spouses w1JI be
prPsented at 6 p.m. at
PameWebber, 888 Sdn
servancy to fund the restora-
bon of the cottages m an
alternate project.
The collages, which were
placed on the National Regis-
ter of Historic Places in 1979,
must be restored to stncter
standards.
Freed, who has already
spent $1 million developing
the project, said he would
consider other plans. He has
said it would cost about $30
million to restore the cot-
tages
•If the community can find
the $30 million, we'll give up
our profits,• Freed saJd
Some groups set up regis-
tration tables outside the
Clemente Drive. Swte 300,
Newport Beach. Free. (949)
717-3915
PrudenUal SecurtUes Fash-
ion Island will present d din-
ner d1scuss10n titled "A Lookv
at D1vers1fication: M1dcaps &
Convertibles" at 6 30 p.m at
The Ritz Restaurant, 880
Newport Center Dnve,
Newport Bedcb. (949) 759-
4532
Mother's Market and Kitchen
will host a free semJndr on
cuttmg-edge brain nutnents
at 6:30 p.m at Patio Cdfe, 225
E. 17th St., Costa M esa. (949)
631-4741
Saturday, January 20, 2001 A9
school, awash in red band-
held signs opposing the
resort. Mtlli.ng around the
aud1tonum entrance before
the meeting, some held other
placards with messages such
as •Listen well to citizen
pleas. we won't tdke fail
accomplls. •
Shortly after the meebng,
Aretds said the massive out-
cry against the resort project
gave hln\..somelhlng to Uunk
about
• 1 m looking ror dltemd-
t1ves thdt mc1ke sense,•
ArPws srud. "You can't go
Uuough d meet.mg llke this
dnd have 1t not affect your
lhmlung •
CONEXANT
CONTINUED FROM A 1
Conexdnt d.nd other large
businesses in OrnngE-County
have been lobbying elected
ofhcid.ls m Sacrnmento to intro-
duce legisldbon thdt would fre(>
them trom the contrncl.!>
Bul new I} elected
Assemblyman John C ctmpbeU
(R-lrVl!le) st11d thdt lund of bill
I'> not expected to be mtro-
ducPd
·1 \~ould ltkf' tu gt\P
Con€'xdnt dild utht>r rompd!uc•-.
enrourdgemenl. · Cdrnpbell
Sdld. ·But tht.>ri>'s not much
enc ourdqemEmt tu q1ve them ··
"The mtimate Monogram Shop"
• Personalized Gifts for Frinuis
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From $1,495/Mo.
2283 Fairview at Wilson
· Costa Mesa
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For .. more information
please call:
949/646-6300 or Fax 949/646-7428
..
Al 0 Saturday, January 20, 2001 SdcIErY ' . . . I '
..
·~-
Daily Pilot
Women of Vision celebrates 10 years of international work
B efore the holidays, 1
received a letter rrom
Suaan Qampton of
Newport Beac[ concerning
the work or a local organi-
zation called Women of
Vision. The group. which 1
bondage or hunger, hurt
end death? In 1990, the lund-raising tally exceeded
went against the tide of her
time and did the right
thing. It is the calling of
Women of Vislon to follow
this example.
·have reported on before Vla
the word of Champion who
represents the Orange
County chapter. is a 10-
year-old conference dedi-
cated to helping [fupover-
isbed women and thetr ch.11-
dren around the nation and
the world.
B.W. Cook ·
THE CROWD
Women of Vision dares
to make a difference.
Granted, this organization
has a very direct connection
to Christian theology. But
what ls perhaps more sig-
nificant is the group's com-
mitment to assist the poor.
The credo or Women of
Vision asserts it is essential
that each volunteer embody
a strong commitment to the
poor, along with a Hrm
belief the affluence of one
woman can be used to help
less fortunate women not
JUSt survive, but thrive.
$2 million. That's money that goes to all
kinds of projects, many perhaps not
deemed politically correct. Projects that
include the Atf aluna School for the Deaf in
Palestine, the Maasai Female Genital Muti-
lation Project in Kenya and the Micro
Enterprise Development Project in Peru ..
At a recent gathering in
Corona del Mar at Five
·-Crowns pestaurant. some
· 100 ladies dedicated to
making a difference
through action gathered in
the dining room to cele·
brate the 10th anniversary
of the group's founding in
1990.
Women of Vision 1s an
arm of World Vision, a
Chnstian coalition with
missionary as well as
humanitanan goals.
Any orgamzation operat-
mg in the world political
arena with a connection to
a parbcular religious pur-
pose will come under the
microscope of public opin-
ion. World Vision, founded
in 1950, has come under
such scrutiny for operating
programs in developing
nations under the most dil-
ficull conditions.
Humamtanan efforts to
prevent female mut1Jat1on
in Africa mixed with the
missiondry aspect of
spreadmg Christian ideolo-
gy and beuefs in a non-
Christian world have been
met with mixed reactions.
The presence of World
V1sion in the territory occu-
pied by the Palestinian peo-
ple has fueled geo-pobtical
debate over charitable and
religion-based American
organizations working in
regions where Amencan
diplomatic foreign policy
may be in direct conflict
with the organization's
work.
The road to helping the
poor is paved with political
land mines. The issue of
religious proselytizalion by
humanitarian organfaalions
aside, the question remains:
If no one will step forward
lo help out of fear of politi-
Cdl, cultural or religious
bias and subsequent con-
demnation, how then will
the poor and disadvantaged
ever be freed from their
These are very important
ideas. So many people give
hp service to charity. They
attend functions to enliven
their social lives, donate
funds to find an avenue of
tax deduction or to elevate
their social status on the
food c.hain of who's who.
Having a real commitment
in your heart..;<> helping the
poor is a virtue.
Women of Vision are
senous about their work.
They began as a small
cadre of Orange County
ladies who traveled with
World Vision to Guatemala
and Kenya to witness con-
ditions in these sectors of
humanity. They came away
with ideas and plans to
change the lives of women
and cblldren. Today, there
are programs in 13 coun-
tries, and Women of Vision
sponsors some 900 children
around the world through
the donations of their vol-
unteers, a large majority of
whom are from Newport-
Mesa.
In 1990, the fund-raising
tally exceeded $2 million.
That's money that goes to
all kinds of projects. many
perhaps not deemed politi-
cally correct. Projects that
include the AUaluna School
for the Deaf in Palestine,
the Maasai Female Genital
Mutilation Project in Kenya
and the Micro Enterprise
Development Project in
Peru, which assists 120 wid-
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ows who must act as bead
of households without sup-
port.
In a publication explain-
ing the work of Women of
Vision, an unidentified
author us~s a biblical refer-
ence from the Book of
Esther in the Old Testa-
ment. The author rerates
the story of Queen Esther, a
Jewish woman, who had to
reveal her Jewish ancestry
to her husband. the king. in
order to save the Jewish
people from his order of
destruction.
"Who knows if you have
not attained royalty for such
a time as this,• says
Esther's Uncle Mordecai,
commenting on her selfless
act.
Simply restated, Esther
Ann McKuslck, a
founder of Women of
V1Sion, addressed the crowd
that included lOJ:al women
such as Penny Wood, direc-
tor of the group; Angela
Mason; Betsy Tarbell,
another founder; along
with Mary Hamilton,
Gail Ochs, Karen French,
Beverly Peters and Susan
Champion.
Also in attendance were
Mary Amundson with her
daughter Ann Hoover, Bin-
nie Beaumont, Bobbi Daud-
erman, Joan Hadley, Ann
Huffman, Susan Jenkins,
Becky Pollock, Karen
Stockman, Ann Sutuvan,
Diane Sweet and Kimberly
Tegarden.
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Mattress Outlet Store
Invites you to our
ROSE
PRUNING
DEMONSTRATION '
Learn how correct Rose
3165 Harbor Blvd.
Costa Mesa
One lllodl Sout.b ol .-05 r.y
545-7168
pruning multiplies blooms. Bigger
and better ROSES from your own
garden.
--"1~ '4 Master Nursery
Professionals will give this ,
-demonstration snd
answer questions.
NURSER•••, INC. I
SANTA A.NA • 2llOO N. Tllldn An... (71•) ......
C'OtTA MDA • 2100 Mleol s..t · (71tt """6j
~hrn!L• ftug into the Pik>t Classified section to find serVtCeS from eleettonics and plumbers, to landsc.apers and patnters U~, l1aJL
..
,,
Daily Pilot '
Tbean
of making
an 'Edna '
A bark-like block of
amber lays cradled in a
silver bed. A manacle-
sized bracelet appears solid
and feminine with its wrinkled
silver surface. Pearls drip from
rectangular silver plates.
The jewelry of Edna Kuhta
is strong, beautiful and far from
delicate.
"I have a reputation of mak-
ing big pieces,• said the New-
port Beach
resident. ·
"When any-
one makes
something
over an inch
square, they
say 'I made
an Edna.'"
Born on an
island, as she
likes to call
Manhattan, Jennifer Mahal Edna grew
up on the IN THE WINGS East Coast.
At 5, she
learned bow to knit and started
her love for working with mate-
rials. In the 1940s, she had a
hairdressing business -"Edna,
Your Hairdresser.·
She came to California in
1946, moving first to the San
Joaquin Valley. After a few
. stops in other Golden State _
cities, Edna and her family
moved to Newport Beach in
the late 1950s (Her husband of
61 years died in August).
"It was different then," said
the artist, who thinks the city is
getting more beautiful all the
time. ·we don't realize we live
on a little vil)age, living on the
'" peninsula.•
Edna lives close to the
Boudreau-Ruiz Gallery, where
her work is on display through
March 3.
"I'm just inspired by every-
thing I see,• said the grey-
haired mother of two. •It
could be something complete-
ly different and l see a piece
of jewelry.•
Edna, who is also an accom-
plished textile artist, has had .
her jewelry exb.ibited at the
Maxwell Museum of Art in
Albuquerque, N.M.; the Craft
and Folk Art Museum in Los
Angeles; the Bowers Museum
in Santa Ana; and the Con-
sulate General of the Republic
• of Poland.
On Sundays, people attend-
ing Our Lady of Mount Carmel
Church in Newport Beach look
at the liturgical wall hangings
she created. Edna made five
sets of hangings -for all sea-
sons -out of silk, linen and
wool.
Though she has quite a rep-
utation for her liturgical art -
of 12 pieces shown at a nation-
al liturgical conference, five
were hers -and her textile
work -the Haute Couture
Sodete gave her "Best of
Show" in the 1970s -she
prefers to work in metal now.
SEE WINGS PAGE A14
This. WEEKEND . ·
The teens of Newport Hatbor High School
star as the teens of Rydell High in thek.
school's production of ·en.... whldl
doses at 7:30 tonight In the Robert B. Wentz
Theater. oomer of 15th Street and Irvine
Avenue, Newport Beach. $6-8. (949) 515-6341
Saturday, Jonuory 20, 2001 A 11
DON EACH I DAl\.Y P!l.OT
Actress Rene Augesen, left. and director Martin Benson of "A Delicate Balance," playing at South Coast Repertory through Feb. 11.
I come from a happy family. There are no
crises brewing beneath our calm, happy life
as the Changs. I know that what seems to
be, is.
We don't drink wtuskey in the a.m. hours, we
don't have relatives who are alcoholics, we don't
settle for boredom nor apathy nor merely being
YOtJng Chong
NOTEBOOK
content, and we don't tell each
other to ctie.
We are nothing like the
family in Edward Albee's •A
Delicate Balance,· which is
playing at South Coast Reper-
tory's Mainstage througn Feb. 11.
But, somehow, I feel I've met the long-mar-
ried couple stuck in their contentment. I've met,
somewhere, the daughter, lhe multiple. divorcee
who erupts into hysterical fits. I've me t the cou-
ple's best frie nds who are equally content and
the alcoholic sister who asks her kin, "Why don't
you die?"
I have witnessed such balancing acts in my
relationships with friends, IJl other people's inter-
actions, in my wildest imagmabon and in my
grimmest fears.
FYI
WHAT: "A Delicate
Balance"
WHEN: Through Feb.
11. Show times are 8
p.m. Tuesday through
Friday, 2:30 and 8 p.m.
Saturday, and 2:30 and
7:30 p.m. Sunday
WH~RE: South Coast
Repertory's Mainstage,
655 Town Center Drive,
Costa Mesa cosrt s2s-s49
CALL: (714) 708-5555
Though my
home We does not
resemble what I
recently saw on
stage, Albee's story
is still reassunngly
familiar -reassur-
ing because I'm not
alone in what I've
seen.
"The most cWh-
cult thlng about
directing I" A Deli-
cate ·Balance" I was
finding all the deli-
cate balances that
exist in the play,·
said Martin Benson,
director of the show. •All the little revenges,
how lhe family functions as a group, the prices
being paid to keep the unit together, the
moments of hysteria."
Albee's 1967 Pulitzer Prize-winning play -
one of three for which he won U1e coveted
award -is lhe story of Tobias and Agnes, a cou-
I
pie settled in theu rout:rne and boredom, unttJ
one ordinary everung when they are visited by
their best friends, Edna and Harry
The guests move in, explauung how lhP} .,ud-
denly felt an unexpected fear. while Tobtd!> dnd
Agnes' daughter, Juba. returns home dllN the
failure of her fourth mamage
Agnes' sister, Claire, a recovenng alcoholic .
also lives in the house She constantly voUP)'"
bitter low-blows with her relatlons
Between pre-or post-med! glasses of C()(tnac
and whiskey, lhe tenst0n between the rndm cou-
ple and theu best fnends erupts Claire rnnlln-
ues to be her usudl, sharp-tongued seU Juhc1
throws multiple tcintrums because her room has
been invad~d by the non-famtly members, who
have unapologeacally tdken over the hou..,P
"Oddly enough, what's going on m the house
-she's the only one who sees it.• said Rc>nt>
Augesen, who plays Juba. "She sees the tr:uth of
it..
The role requued that Augesen regres.., to the
level of a "bratty kid,· and the actress said the
SEE BALANCE PAGE A 14
Momix: Batter up!
With 'Baseball,' eclectic dance group turns its
attention to our nation's favorite pastime
Younfl at.ng
DAILY PILOT
C an baseball be beautiful? Can it
be graceful, surreal and femi-
nine? How about artistic and
altogether otherworldly?
Moses Pendleton says yes.
"With 'Baseball,' we've taken an
American pastlme and taken 1t olf mto
a surreal impression of the gdllle lhat
is both comedlc and poetic,• Pendleton
said. "It's magical and evocative
enough that people go away Wllh dtf-
ferent unpre sions. •
He calls the one-hour 40-nunute
show a •seven-mning stretch • Seven
dancers come together to form a prop
-a baseball glove, for example -
and dance as one big object. Sotpe
perform independently. They create
Membetl of Moma contort their bodie1 tn .. B•ebUL •
The aeator and member of Momix.
a company of dancer-illusionists who
will perfonn Sunday at Orange Coast
College, bas seen it done. With some
lights, soma props, a sound collage and
the grace ol the hwnan dancing body,
Momix will portray the sport artistlc4lly. SEE MOMIX PAGE A'4
..
I • . .
Al 2 Soewday, Jo!!UOf)' 20, 200 l
'• DA'i'EeooK Daily Pilot .·
After
HOURS ··
• Send Ana HOUIS fMms to the
Dally Pilot. lJO W. Bay St., Costa
Mesa. C.A 9262'7; fax to (M9) 646-
4170 « c.-11 (949) 574-4268. A com-
plete listing may be found ..
http:JIWWW.dailypllotcom.
SPECIAL
' TROUPE OF TUMBLERS
The Peking Acrobats, a
troupe Of 26 tumbleri, con-
tortionists, j&igglers, cyclists,
gymn4Sts and live musicians
from Chin.a, will perform at 8
p.m. Peb. 3 at Orange Coast
College's Robert B. Moore
Theatre. 2701 Fairview Road,
Costa Mesa. (714) 432-5880.
MARKETPl.AQ
The Orange County Market
Place takes place from 7 a.m.
to 4 p.m. Saturdays and Sun-
days in the Orange County
Fairgrounds' main parking
lot, 88 Fair Drive, Costa
Mesa. $2 for adults, children
younger than 12 are free.
(949) 723-6616.
MUSIC
MACBETH
Opera Pacific's production of
•Macbeth• will be staged at
the Orange County Perform-
ing Arts Center through Sun-
day. The production marks
the beginning of a yearlong
commemoration of the cen-
tennial year of composer
Giuseppe Verdi's death.
Times are 7 :30 p:m. today,
and 2 p.m. Sunday. The Cen-
ter is at 600 Town Center
Drive, Costa Mesa. $29-$107.
(714) 740-7878.
CAMMTGUEST
Brdadway dl1ng star Kr1sUn
O>enoweth wtU peJfonn •
Thw1day through Sunday as
part ol the Orange Co\U\ty
Perlormlng Alb Center's
2000-01 Cabaret Series In
Founders Hall ot 600 Town
Center Drive, COlta Mesa.
Show times are 1 :30 and 9:30
p.m. today and 1 p.m. Sunday.
$49 for the 7:30 p.m. show
and $45 for the 1 and 9:30
p.m. ahows. (714) 74'0-7878.
STRINGS OE8UT
The Artem.11 String Qua.rtet
will make its Orange County
Performing Arts Center Con-
cert Serles debut at 8 p .m.
Feb. 2 in Founders Hall, 600
Town Center Drtve, Costa
M"5a. $36. (714) 740•7878.
TOTAUY TCHAIKOVSKY
The Russian National
Orchestra will perform an
all-Tchaikovsky program
under the direction of music
director Vladimir Spiva.kov at
8 p.m. Feb. 3 at the Orange ~
County Performing Arts
Center, 600 Town Center
Drive, Costa Mesa. The con-
cert ls presented by the Phil-
harmonic Society, whJch last
brought the Russian National
Orchestra to Orange County
in 1993. Eric Bromberger will
give a preview lecture at 7
p.m. from the Segerstrom
Hall stage. $15-$55. (949)
553-2422.
KORNGOLD BY KOBLER
Raymond Kobler, Pad.fie
Symphony Orchestra's con-
cert master, will perform
Komgold's romantic violin
concerto in D major with the
orchestra at 8 p.m. Feb. 7 -8
at the Orange County Per-
forming Arts Center, 600
Town Center Drtve, Cotta
Mesa. Ml.llJc Director Carl
St. Oair will dilect. S19·S52.
(714) 755.5799,
MUSIC AT MULDOOH'S
1be Pen.lam wW present a
tree cowtyard concert for the
Orange County debut of
theiJ new CD, titled •Have
Pun or Get Out.• at 3 p.m.
Peb. 10 in the cou.rtyard of
Muldoon'• Dublin Pub, 202
Newport Center Drive, New·
port Beach. The Prodigal.I, a
popular lrflb rock band from
New York. wtll make a guest
appearance. (9-49) 640-" 110.
BATTLE ON
The Orange Co\U\ty Per-
forming ArtJ Center's Voices
In Song Serles. wW continue
at 2 p.m. Feb. 1 t in
Segerstrom Hall, 600 Town
Center Drive, Costa Mesa,
with soprano Kathleen Bat-
tle. $35-$65. (714) 740-7818.
CEWSTDEBUT
Russian cellist Nina Kotova
will make her Orange Coun-
ty Performing Arts Center
Concert Serles debut at 8
p.m. Feb. 15 in Founders
Hall, 600 Town Center Drive,
Costa Mesa. $36. (714) 740-
7878.
FOUR PlAIDS
•Forever Plaid• will be ·
staged at 4 p.m. Peb. 18 at
Orange Coast College's
Robert B. Moore Theatre,
2701 Fairview Road, Costa
Mesa. $20-$25. (714) 432-
5880.
FLAMENCO, JAZZ.. ETC.
Ken Sanders, a solo guitarist,
appears fJ:om 7 to 10 p.m .
e..,ery Sunday and Tuesday,
playing classical fiamenco,
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Jazz, d&llSc pop and Brazil· GA£ASl at 1 p.m. Jan. 27, 3 p.m. Jan.
ian ~ nova at Carmelo'• 1be Mu.teal Theater Acade-28, ? f..m. Peb. 3 and 3 p.m.
Riltorante Italiano, 3520 E. my of OrAnge County will Peb. . The high school la et
Coast Highway, Corona del p resent "Grease• at the Cos· 2650 PaiMew Road, Colt.a
M01. (9"9) 4'97-2272. ta Mesa High School The-Mesa. S8 or SS. (949) 6"6-
ater, featuring the Spotlight 6624.
JAZZ OH SUNDAYS Performers at 7 p.m. today ARSENIC AND OLD L.Aa Orange County saxophonist and 3 p.m. Sunday. The high
Norm Douglal brings his school ls at 2650 Fairview The nt.togy Playhouse will
own brand of jazz to Roy's of Road. Costa Mesa. S9 or $6. present a production of
Newport Beach from 5 to 8 (9,9) 64&-662A. Joseph Kesselrlng's • A.rsenlc
p.m.. Sundays. Roy'• ii at -'53 "' aDd .Old t..ace• on Feb. 9-25
Newpon Center Drive, New-A FAJttf TAU at the playhouse, 2930 Bristol
port Bee.ch. (9"9) 640·1697. The Musical Theater Acade· St., Building C, Room 106,
~Y of Orange C~ty will Costa Mesa. Show times are
POP/ROCK a FLAMENCO present "Snow te" at the 7:30/e.m. Saturdays and
Tate 5 -a ~.·rock and Music~ The(lter Academy, Sun ays, 3:30 p.m. Sa~days
Motown act -performs at 9 2A88 Newport Blvd., Suite C, and 5 p.m. Sundays. $16 or
p.m. Saturdeys at Carmelo's Costa Mesa, at 11 o.m. and 2 $13. (714)957-3347.
Ristorante1 3520 E. Coast p.m. today and Jan. 27. $4.
Highway, Corona del Mar. (949) 646-6624. OLEAN NA
Solo guitarist Ken Sanders 705 FUN
Orange Coast College's
performs cl.a.ssical namenco Repertory will stage David
tunes at 7:30 p.m. Tuesdays •Bosoms and Neglect,• John Mamet's ·01eanna· on Feb.
and Sundays. The shows are Guare's early '70s stage com-17-18 and 24-25 at the Ora-
free. (949) 675-1922. edy, will play on South Coast ma Lab Studio, 2701
Repertory's Second Stage on Fairview Road, Costa Mesa.
..sATURDAY NIGHT RU Jan. 26-Peb. 25 at 655 Town Show times are 8 p .m. Satur-
Gerald Ishibashi and the . Center Drive, Cosfa Nfesa. days and 2 and 7 p.m. Sun-
Stone Bridge Band plays Show times are 7:45 p.m. days. $5 or $6. (714) 432-
rock and R&B at 9 p.m. Sat-Tuesday through Sunday •5640, Ext. 1.
urdays at Sutton Place and 2 p.m. Saturday and
Hotel's 1\ianon Lounge, 4500 Sunday. $18-$47. (714) 708-ART MacArthur Blvd., Newport 5555.
Beach. Pree. (949) 476-2001. •
lWOTREATS ORANGES GALORE
SENIOR aNTER AFTERNOON •Lou Gehrig Did Not Die c,f ·nan.stonnations in Orange,•
A seven-piece live band per-Cancer• and ·where Were an exhiblt of aaylic paintings
forms big band tunes from You on Your Ninth Birth-and limited edition prints by
1:30 to 3:30 p.m. Fridays at day• will be staged in tan· Laguna Beach artist Mike
the Oasis Senior Center, 800 d em at 8 p.m. Fndays and Tauber, will be on display in
Marguerite Ave., Corona del Saturdays and 2 p.m. Sun-the Newport Beach Central
Mar. $4. (949) 644-3244. da)'s on Friday, Jan. 27, 28 Ubrary's foyer through Jan.
anti Feb. 2-4 by Orange 31 at 1000 Avocado Ave ..
STAGE Coast College's Repertory in Newport Beach. The free
the Drama Lab Studio, 2701 exhibit will feature works
Fairview Road, Costa M~a. depicting the fruit Orange
BAL.AN a $5 or $6. (714) 43~5640, County was named for. (949)
•A Delicate Balance,• by Ext. 1. 717-3801.
Edward Albee, will appear .
on South Coast Repertory's MYSTERY AND MUSIC STEINBERG AT SPIRITUS
~tage through Feb. 11 . The Musical Theater Acade-The Susan Spiritus Gallery
.S o times are 8 p.m. Tues-my of Orange County will will exhibit works by Claire
day through Friday, 2:30 and present "Mystery on the Steinberg through the end of
8 p .m . Saturday and 2:30 and High cs• at the Costa Mesa January at 3929 Birch St.,
7:30 p .m. Sunday. $28-$49. High School Theater, featur-Newport Beach. (949) 474-
(714) 708-5555. ing the Starlight Performers, 4321.
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MONOCHROMATIC
An exhibition of new work
by Marcia Hafif at the Char-
lotte Jack.son Fine Art
Gallery will run through Peb.
12. The gallery is at 2429 W.
Coast Highway. Suite 101.
Newport Beach. Hafif is a
major figure in the intema-
Uonal world of monochrome
J)tlnting. (949) 645-8685.
DE LAROSA
The Boudreau-Ruiz Gallery
will present an exhibitfon of
the work of Mexican painter and sculptor Juan Manuel de
la R0$0 through Peb. 25 at
3000 Newport Bl\ICI.., New-
port Beach. (949) 675-4766.
ALTERNATIVE ART
Newport Beach City Hall
will display art by students at
Back Bay and Monte Vtsta
alternative high schools from
9 a .m. to 5 p.m. through
March 6. The exhibit is co-
sponsored by the Newport
Beach Arts Commission and
the Newport Beach Sunnse
Rotary Club. (949) 717-3870
DANCE
UNIQUE MOVES
Monu.x, a company of
dancer-illusionists, will pre-
sent "Basebdll" at 4 p.m.
Sunddy dt Orange Coast
CoUege's Robert B. Moore
Theatre, 2701 Fairview Road,
Costa Mesa The group 1s
known ror its otherworldly
imdgery, humor and origmal
use or props, light, music and
the human body. $25-$33.
(714) 432-5880.
PULSATING DANCE
The DePore Poundatlon for
the Arts, a nonprofit organi-
tation in Costa Mesa, will
present Pulse .01, an evening
of contemporary dance, at 8
p.m. Jan. 26-27 at Hunting-
ton Beach High School, 1905
Mam St., Huntington Beach.
$10 or $15. (714) 241-9908.
WORLD DANCE
Orange Coast College's
Dance Department will host
a multicultural dance concert
btled •Borderland" at 8 p.m.
Jan. 27 in OCC's Dance Stu-
ctio B, 2701 Fairview Road,
Costa Mesa. $5 or $2. (714)
791-1043.
BALLROOM FRIDAYS
The DeFore Foundation for
the Arts hosts ballroom danc-
ing from 8 to 11 p.m. Friddys
al the DeFore Dance Center,
151 Kalmus Drive, Suite G-3.
Costa Mesa. $11 admission
mcludes a free dance lesson.
(714) 241-9908
DANCE 204
Ddnce 204 offers pnvdtP dnd
group instruct.Jon 1n begin-
ning and advanced bdUroom,
Ldtm and modem dancinq dl
204 Washington St., 8dlbod
(949) 675-9082.
SENIOR BALLROOM
The Costa Mesa Senior Cen-
ter offers ballroom dancmq to
the music or the Rdy Robbins
Combo for iidults from 7 30 to
Vlolinlst Nadja Salemo--Sonnenberg will make her
debut with Music Dlredor Carl St. Clair and the
Pacific Symphony Orchestra at 8 p.m. Wednesday
and Thursday at the Orange County Performing
Arts Center, 600 Town Cen~r Drive, Costa Mesa.
St 9-$52. (714) 755-5799. I
t 0·30 p.m. Tue!>ddys. Singles
and couples dre welcome. $3.
The center u-. at 695 W 19th
St. (949) 645-2356
I '
DANSCENE STUDIO
Danscene Studio offers bdU-
room danang at 8 p.m. on
the hrst Fnday or every
month. $10. The studio is at
2980 McCllntock Way, Cost4
Mesa. (714) 641-8688.
BIG BAND DANONG
The Oasis Senior Center
holds an af temoon of danc-
ing to big band mUSl.C from
1 :30 to 3:30 p.m Fridays.
Coffee and refreshments are
served. The center is at 800
Marguerite Ave., Corona del
Mar. (949) 644-3244.
ARGENTINE TANGO
Danscene Stuclio has tango
dancing from 6 p .m. to 12:30
a .m. the first Saturday .of
every month. Danscene is at
2980 McClmtock Way, Costa
Mesa. (7 14 ) 641-8686.
BOOKS
wtlb revolutionizing detec·
tive fiction -Sue Grafton,
Sara P8fetsky and Marcia
Muller. The event begins a •
three-part screening, read-
ing and dlscu.ssion series
about female mystery writ-
e.J'S and their works. (949)
717-3001.
DINING/TASTING
SAY CHEESE
Whole Poods Market at Trl-
angle Square will host Debra
Dickerson of Neal's Yard
Dairy, one of England's most
ra.mous cheese shops, for a
European artisanal cheese
presentation and tasting at
11 a .m. Jan. 27 at 1870 Har-
bor Blvd., Costa Mesa. Free.
(949) 574-3800.
THE GREATEST STORYTIME WINE TASTINGS
Taylor Brandon and Pans HJ-Tune Wme Cellars fea-
Scfndow, duthor and illustra-tures wine tastings from 4:30
tor or "The World's Greatest to 8 p.m. Fridays and 1:30 to
Children's Books,· will hold 8 p.m. Saturdays. (949) 650-
a story-time at 11 a.m. Feb. 3 _ 8463. _
at Borders Books, Music &
Cafe, 1890 N.-wport Blvd . CLUBS
Costd M(;'Sd (110) 314-9814.
WOMEN OF MYSTERY
A screemng or ·women or
Mystf>ry" will b<• held at 7
p.m . March I to ldunch the
Callrom1d C<'ntcr for the
Book-'ipon!.or<'d senes on
delecl!ve ficlwn at the New-
port Bedch Central Library's
Fn ends Mf?elmg Room, 1000
Avocado Ave• , Newport
Bedch The documentary is
about three duthors credited
ClUB MESA
Shows begin at 9 p.m. The
club is at 843 W. 19th St.,
Costa Mesa. Adnuss1on is
$5-$10. (949) 642-6634.
FOUR SEASONS HOTEL
The Four Seasons offers live
music Mondays through
Saturdays at 690 Newport
Center Dnve, Newport
Beach. (949)759-0808
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BAI.AN CE
CONTINUED FROM A 11
project was chall~ging.
"It's difficult to give your-
self permission to go to the
extent th.at she goes to,· she
said. •she comes off as a 7-
or 8-year-old. •
Kandis Chappell. who has
performed more than a
dozen shows at the repertory,
plays Claire. While the char-
acter gets many of the funny
lines ib the play, Claire is not
a happy person, Chappell
said.
"Her humor is dark and
true, and she says things no
one else would say,• she
said. ·ni~re is anger an.d
hurt in her, and because so
much is humorous, I find it
hard to find the balance in
Claire's personality between
humor and the dark side.·
Off stage, the cast clicks.
Augesen, Chappell and Ben-
son wholeheartedly agree
the play's rehearsals were
filled with laughter and fun.
"Sometimes you put on a
play with very talented peo-
-ple but have little conflicts,•
Benson said. "But we had a
great spirit in working on a
play with such intelligence."
His goal is to have his
Orange County audience
share that spirit.
·1 hope they will .(elate to
some of the experiences in
the play," Benson said.
"What kind of comrnibnents
are we willing to make for
our friends? Do we really
think we can live up to
those commitments? What
do you do with the rest of
your life once you've
obtained comfort?"
I've thought about this,
and I don't know the
answers. To be honest, I'm
,not even sure I understand
the questions. But in the bal-
ancing act of my own life, I
think I'll take my time to
think about it.
• YOUNG OtANG is the features
writer at the Daily Pilot.
. . . .. . . .
..
MOMIX
CONTINUED FROM A 11
illusions with dance.
But the show does not tell a sto-
ry. While different sections play off
of elements of baseball and portray
the evolution of the game, the pro-
duction is more about magic and
illusion than a plot-line.
•Mom.ix draws from the natural
world,• Pendleton said. •If you
look at a rock long enough, it
starts to Jook like a human head. J
like seeing fonn in nature.•
~ndleton has also included two
commercials -a beer ad and a
Wheaties ad -which the dancers
will perform.
The 18-person group has per-
formed around the world, with five
Italian television features and a
stint representing the United
States at the European Cultural
Center in Delphi, Greece, to their
credit.
Seven of Momix's members will
put on •Baseball.·
Sunday, one dancer will play a
ball -his plight being that he
must dodge baseball bats on stage.
WINGS
CONTINUED FROM A 11
Jewelry bas been her exclusive art..
form for the past 10 years.
"I have favorite children," she
said of her jewelry, •and I like to see
who gets them ... A lot of thought
goes into each piece.•
Oftentimes, the material will dic-
tate the form the jewelry takes.
Edna said when she looks at a piece
of amber taken from the Baltic
regions or at the results of dropping
a crucible of silver into water, she
sometimes cah see what it will look
like when it's part of a finished prod-
uct.
• "1 have to back up in creation to
an actual starting point," she said. "I
.,,,. . . . .. . ' . ..
FYI
WHA't. Momllc
WHEN: 4 p.m. Sunday
Doity Pild
wttDE: Orange Coast College's
Robert 8. Moore Theatre, 2701
Fairview Road, Costa Mesa
con s2s-S33
CALL: (714) 432-5880
whirl, as if preparing to pitch.
•I think that solo kind of came
about as a reaction to trying to do
something very feminine in a very
male sport, without copying the
male jocks,• Quinn said. "And I
'I
put on a long, black, velvet dress.•___.,.
named in ballet, the dancer said
she is drawn to Momix because tbe
style of dance allows her to explore.
her own way of moving.
Momix wtll perfonn a tribute to Amertca11 national pasttime,
•Baseball," at Orange Coast College ln Costa Mesa this weekend.
Five other dancers will play a
glove trying to entice the ball into
its pocket. When caught, the per-
son playing the ball will emerge
from the dip in the glove almost
like Venus on a half.shell. This
just let it grow. I think most of my
designs are very organic and free-
spirited. •
The designs are like the woman
"'1ho creates them. Edna is willing to
take chances in order to make inter-
esting work. A necklace she wears
was made using a 20-ton hydraulic
press. She takes advantage of the
way metal melts, the shape silver
makes when dropped. in water, the
new materials on the market.
"Once you know the vocabulary
t>f silver, you can use it to your
advantage,• Edna said. "You know
how it melts, know bow it solders,
know how it forms.·
Learning the vocabulary of the
materials is Important. Edna -who
has trained with artists Sister Corita
at Immaculate Heart College and
Hudson Roysher, among others -
piece is called, appropriately
enough, "Glove at First Sight.·
Cynthia Quinn, a dancer with
Mom.ix for 16 years, will perform a
solo as a pitcher doing the "wind-
up." She will conttht her body and
said she often works on four or five
pieces of jewelry at one time, letting
the idea for one incubate while she
creates another.
"You can't force it to do some-
thing against its nature," she said of
the material. •Sometimes you find
you're in the middle of a piece and
you find you can't force it to do what
you want it to.·
Her textile experience can be
found in the elaborate knotted cords
from which she hangs some of her
heavier pendants. The cords, which
she makes in her own secret way,
are a. trademark, she said. Each
piece she creates is an original.
"You just make,· she said. "You
want to work. You make and you
wear it and somebody sees it ... I
have often sold right off my neck as
I was wearing something.•
MBut (the style) is a lot about a
way of thinking, as opposed to just
a way of moving,• she said.
Pendleton arrived at the idea for
Momix 18 years ago while suffer-
ing a broken leg. He was a trained
skier at the time, trying to recover
and qualify for the Junior National
Ski Team.
MSo no one says "break a leg'
before a show,• he quipped.
Jewelry making can get costly.
Edna works with Baltic amber, glass
pieces made by a fellow artist. silver,
pearls and more. A silver bracelet
can be as much as $70 to $80 in
materials alone. That does not
include th~ time or equipment costs.
•Unfortunately, artists never get
paid for the thinking tinie,· the
design time,• Edna said.
• • •
Do you know a local artist, writer,
painter, singer, filmmaker, etc., who
deserves to get noticed? Send your
nominee to In The Wings, Daily
Pilot, 330 W. Bay St .. Costa Mesa,
CA 92627, by fax to (949) 646-4170
or by e-mail to jenniler.mahal
@laUmes.com.
• JENNIR.R MAHAL is features editor of the
Daily Pilot.
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CeMMlJNITY . .
Doily Pilot
EDITORIAL
Panic time?
No,' but we're a
little worried about
school scores
The good news from
the past week is
that Newport-
Mesa schools con-
tinue to be among the ~t
in the state.
The troubling news is
that, instead of getting bet-
ter when compared with
similar campuses, our
schools appear to be
falling a bit behind,
according to statewide
scores released this week.
Those numbers revealed
that of the 27 Newport-
Mesa schools ranked, 12
lost ground when com-
pared with similar schools,
nine stayed at their same
level and just six gained.
Several fell significantly,
including Kaiser Primary,
ever: that school officials
did not appear deeply con-
cerned about the drop.
They suggested, among
other reasons, that it could
be the result of mistakes
made by other schools in
filling out their demo-
graphi~ data.
Certainly, these drops
could be a blip, and next
time the results could be
much improved. But rather
than looking elsewhere,
school officials should be
figuring out how to correct
possible problems here at
home, whatever they
might be. The results pro-
vide an early opportunity
for the district to ensure
which dropped from a 10 our schools stay at the top
to a five on a scale that of the class.
The ' •' safDIT
·1 thought I'd have nightmares, but •
I gueBB I slept OK. Although I was
shaking all the way fo going to
sleep."
-Elllott. a Fashion Island vendor who wl1nessed
Tuesday's gunfight between robbers and
security guards at Traditional Jewelers
EDITORIAL
How To
GET PmUSllED
I Theo.av ~welcomes letbtn OQ.iswes COflOlming ~ luct-i .nd COsta Mesa. • -Mail to Editorial P9 Editor
...._ Lee at the Dally Piiot. 330 W. B~ St..
Costa MeY. CA 92627
• READIRS MOTw. -Call (9ot9) 642~
• ~ -s.nd to (9ot9) 64M 170
• 6MAIL -Send to thllypllotOlatlf'flft.com All~ must Include full Mme, home-
town .nd phone nurN>er (for Wflflcatlon ~).
The Pilot reserves the right to edit all tubmhsions fof
darlty and length.
Saturday, Jonuory 20, 2001 AIS
...lists schools from a low of The other big bright
one to a high of 10 in com-spot in these numbers was
BlllAN POBUOA I OAJLY PILOT
John Nicks works with Sasha Cohen on a "Skating routine during a rehearsal at the Ice Chalet ln Costa Mesa.
Losing the Ice Chalet a chilling situation . ,
~=n wi~ schools. in. at the campuses that
ar soooeconouuc improved, which were pri-
L.a.reas. aril schools th
... 1 Other schools that m Y on e
tdropped substantially were Westside. Estancia High
'!Newport Harbor High, jumped from a six ran.king From the time it opened in the
early 1970s, the Ice Chalet
bas managed to become an
integral part of the Costa
Mesa community.
sorts'ilDd would soon dose itc: Joors. Unfortunately, many of those who
~ybrooke Elementary to a nine, and both Rea
and Lincolq)ilem.en.t4l:Y .......... aru1,S.Q~9l~.~!~~!}~ ·
which all fell four points to went from eights to 10.
. frequented that nnk found solace in
knowing the Ice Chalet in Costa
Mesa was not far away. Now, that
too may be lost.
It's been the frosty home to . iniddle of the road num-• In those numbers is ear-
~rs. ly proof that increased
"We are not talking about just a
personal kids' activity. We're talking
about the impression we make on
the world," Fountain Valley teen Jan
Kowski told the Costa Mesa City
Council about the impending loss.
We acknowledge that ice skating
has never reached the same level of
popularity as, say. surfing or skate-
boarding.
':. Those are big drops, efforts at the district's poor-
-..nd while one set of num-est performing schools are
Olympians and Olympic hopefuls,
hockey teams and amateur skaters. "U we lose the rink, the whole
community will suffer."
:,pers is far from a trend, it paying off. Combined with
~ clearly not the direction
But most of all, it's provided mem-
bers of the general public wjth a
small sliver of winter in these nor-
mally balmy dimes.
We tend to agree with her.
The demise of the Ice Chalet is
just one in a number of ice rinks lost
over the last few years. the most
recent being one in Irvine that
closed after the landowners sold the
site to. a religious congregation.
Nonetheless, we beiieve it
deserves a place here in our commu-
nity. ~ewport-Mesa should be the coming of 9,000 b!><>ks
::Jaeaded. It is something to -thanks to the wor~ of
:fte worried about. our Rotar.y clubs -the
•-There is another, more educational future on the •• ·~ediate concern, how-Westside looks brighter.
So we were saddened, as were
others, to learn the Mesa Verde land-
mark bad suffered a meltdown of
It's our hope that someone will
come to the aid of the ice skating
community and maintain this long-
time institution for years to come.
... ... .... •• 1 un11 Of THE WEEK .
' !Homeowner
I '!deals with noise .
:=ror convenience I
i~nearby airport •• ... .
:~ believe it is time someone
:: defended the attaclal made :=. against John Wayne Airport
•-eonceming the noise. I live in
i;&mta Ana Heights and I bear rt>i.nes all of the time. I don't
..lDind the noise at all and enjoy
: having an airport nearby.
• The airport is good for bull-
• nea and leisure travel. and
encourages growth. In abort, it
• ii ftnanda1ly good for the COWlr
• ty aDd good for U1 for having
the OoDWmlence of having a
smilll ilrport in our neighbor-
• hood. We mow Lt, the pollti-
.. dai know tt. and that ii why
• Jobn Wayne Airport is not
· gotng anywhere or wU1 ever
cbiDge.
I challenge all tbOM who
Wblm about the oo&e to wnte
.. aild .. , tbat tbey d""9 to
•Lal Angel• or Ontario,Aii'port
aDd kt\MIDy t>oycott JobD
Wayne Airport Do they fl8l1
.. friendl and nilatml to Dy
.., otl* ............ tb8
,._. 1.a 11y mto Jobn Warne
cMIUt»a-.f
You m.-ot bn'e Iii bOlla
~. ~...,, .. C!DDft* ...... ......,of ..... :i.. • allpGlt DI l'bJ'v tbm di.a ........ ....
s.mllMall 'JP
•
MAILBAG
Reader r ecommends lobbying for aviation use, not just land
Why not use lobbyists to help
us open the former Bl lbro Marine
Corps Air Station to aviation use
(•Supervisors to hire El Toro lob-
byists for $1.16 million.• Jan 5)1
Just transferring ownenblp
from the federal government to
Orange County is no guarantee
that we will ever have an airport
at Bl lbro. In fact. transferring
ownership before we have regular
O.ights may be an lmpedbnent to
realizing a commerdal airport
there. u .ownership is transferred to
Oiange County without CWTent
aviation use, this will only intensi-
fy the efforts of developen to gain
control of that valuable property.
Por ex•mple, they aDd their
paid consultants could ~.up
the~tremy, ~to the iinpNchment ol pro-airport
super rilan and rapleC::tng them
with ............ Wbio WOUid fa¥or
antl·El firo *palt dfttllopen.
We IDUlt aacuad IUCb •.,..
Dario from bel'f""lng. W. DMCI Bl
'!bro u en~ CQUDty Upart., DGNALDNY'M
~&Nell
Homeowner defends
encroachment issue
Al* Nllidlng SM'9 SIDMb'I cOl-
... (91'1 my DD to Wlw:b GD "*'1mw Plmk ....... , • .Ila. .,, .......... _ ...... ... . ... ·=-., bail.a IDai-DI• .... _ .... ..--... 1111111--.....-----· Jl
• These homes on Swan Drive
were built in 1965 and originally
sold without a rear fence or wall.
It was up to the homeowner to
build one. In most cases, the prop-
erty line was located somewhere
on a steep grade down to ,a flood
control channel.
• This land ls a forgotten sliver
of what is now called Fairview
Park. The state owned the land
back when the first homeowners
moved in. They sold it to the
county in 1973, and Costa Mesa
purchased it in 1986.
• The property in question is a
narrow -about 30 feet wide -
dead-end strip of property bor-
dered on one side bf the flood
control channel with a very unat-
tractive rusted. bent up, old chain-•
link fence. Bordering the other
side ls a slope up to our rear prop-
ing the property. zen to bold an appointed office.
Unfortunately, thanks to the l understand and appreciate
recent publicity, I've seen several the tremendous influx of Latinos
families and young kids doing into the United States and spec:ifi-
what Smith and his family did - cally Southern California.
illegally riding on the dangerous This flight from pov6ty and the
•no trespassing• county access necessity to provide for one's fami-
road above the channel to see ly is basic. But we are a nation of
what all the fuss is about laWs and the thought that dtizen-
Your ·siow news day• story ls ship no longer is important to par-
now encouraging readers to tres-ticipate in our government trou-
pass ~to the channel, and it's only bles me deeply.
a matter of time before a child t don't understand your thought
falls into the rocks and gets hurt. ptocess, as suggested in the edito-
Please remind your readers if rial, that we, as a nation ~ as a
they want to see this famous strip community, should not saeen
ot land. they should come in from people to see if they are dtizem.
Placentia Avenue instead of the Your editorial is evidence that
channel access road. ' we are slowly dJ1fting away from
• TIM CROMWELL our Comtitution and •natkln Ot
Costa Mesa laws.· Have We become a feel·
good people, no~ account-
erty walls. The maJority ot the Editorial delivers liDd that as flat and usable ls
able, no ~ respomible for ow ec:tMml
I tbb* tbe edlorial dOes e dill5-
_... • .,._ Ot us wbo are dti-= ~~:O~~ the wrong message
county end water districts. Noth, l religioully reed the Dlil.Y Plat
Ing Will 9¥er grow or can be bWlt and wu apPaJ&ed et tbl edllonll
tbm'9 betaute ol tbe ocgW.JMl etp-aRng-tbe tbouGbt ..... DODdt·
tNcb that drM through there. tzeDI lbCNld bllft ,1b9 rfgbl ID par-
• The owners ol tbll property tidpe• In our~ (•Don't have~ lt for men tbaD 35 d1lboDor d*9 wbo fou9bl to md
yean. but .eYtiral ~ blgoery •• Jen. 13).
ba~ been kiNPI• It ....wr.. 11111 •tt4ftMng .......... let WMb
la'ftagdlieow .......... ndlol lbit8tR' ...... 1
... 04l&lllN
dailmlm· '• .. mCDlll.. ln=•omeam..,. w-................. . ........ , ...,
Apll.asr t , mes ... ,..• •••.-Mii-, ...... ......... ...., ..... ,llllalllO goad.lllC11t·,,._-.. ..
•1!!._llllla. •Mld•M + 1 t•J ... .. •Tlii=-••l•pdal-.... c111w· ........ .... _.. ..., ... ~ .......... "'"i-• .._ ___ _._, rr ............... ...
111111111• ....... flf.... I ................ ..
-and .... the wrong :a.-.. to u.e who are not dtbDlnt.
God ~ti.-people wbo
Wul to~ to Ammtai for. bet-
.. IMe lor tbllir .......,. But.....,
~··~toob9fdae
laws tbat 90"«IJl aur eoulllly.
Omof .. 1 ... 6 I 2 ID
..., ail M 4 IMM mil JIN $II•
°"'~ ........ ,I .........
----~114 , ... -..... •< _ ............... 2 ... wr111111a_..._ ----
. . t • • ' .. . .
Quoie 'Of
1HEDAY
1onldlf's gcme rdy looked like a matdiup betwen
the top two teams Irr the Podfk Coo.st league ,., II
Paul Onis, CdM boys hoops coach
..
Doily Pilot • Sports Editor Roger Carlson • 949.57 44223 • Sports Fox: 949-650-0170 • Sotvrdoy, January 20, 2001 81
Corona del. Mar comes up just short, 58-55
,
• Sea Kings battle Uni to
the end, before dropping
key clash of PCL co-leaders.
Tony Altobelli
DAILY PILOT
CORONA DEL MAR -It was
the kind of scor~ Corona del Mar
High boys basketball Coach Paul
Orris wanted against University. It
just ended up in the wrong order.
"We didn't want to get into a
shooting match with those guys,•
Orris said following Friday night's
58-55 Pacific Coast Leag1:1e loss to
the Trojans. "Uni wants the score
Pirates
fail to
finish
• OCC outscored, 16-1,
in final tluee minutes of
82-72 loss to Saddleback.
Steve Virgen
PAJLY PILOT
COSTA MESA -Crunch
time meant Houdini time for
the Orange Coast College
men's basketball team Friday.
The Pirates, No. 20 in the
state, pulled a disappearing act
in the final MEN'S three minutes Hoops in~ ~~-72 loss
to VlSlting Sad-
dleback, the
state's No. 2-ranked team.
The Gauchos outscored
OCC, 16-1, in those last three
minutes as the Bucs-lost a five·
point advantage and lost their
lead in the Orange Empire
Conference.
"I was disappointed how
we closed out this game."
Coast Coach Mark Hill said.
"To be a championship team,
we have to have every play
count. We just didn't do that
tonight.•
The game could be com-
pared to a heavyweight boxing
match as the two teams
exchanged blows. But the two
were not on equal footing until
after Saddleback (21-2, 6-0),
built a 16-2 lead in the first
6:30.
After the Gauchos went up,
6-2, the Bucs quickly fell apart.
OCC sophomore guard Ryan
Earl (13 points) went down
with a left knee injury. Then,
Nick Burwell (nine points)
picked up his second foul, just
three minutes in.
After Saddleback's scoring
run, the Bucs (14-7, 5-1) used a
17-4 spree, covering five min-
utes, as Chad Hagedorn, who
scored a game-high 23 points,
began to find his way inside.
Toward the end of the first
half, the teams traded baskets
until Saddleback's Kevin
Williams sank a jumper at the
buzzer for a 35-34 lead. ..
SEE PIRATES PAGE B4
in the 70s and 80s, so we did a
good job of keeping it low ...
Scoring stayed within the
stratosphere as the Sea Kings (9-
12, 3-1 in league) tried to hound
and harass the high-scoring Tro-
jans (12-7, 4-0) on every posses-
sion. \
"We made a couple of defensiv~
adjustments and they were pretty
effective,· Orris said. "We were
right in the ballgame to the very
end. That's all you can ask from
your players."
The Trojans, who came into the
contest averaging nearly 11 treys
p er game, were 6 of 33 from
beyond Ute arc (18%) a nd only 19
of 56 from the field (34 % ). Senior
BOYS BASKETBALL .
Charlie A1shuler led the Sea Kings
with 18 points, including 10 in the
fourth quarter. ldean Shahangian
chipped in 15 points, while Zach
Brewster added 13.
"We thought we had a good
matchup with Charlie, so we went
to it," Orris said. "He managed to
get some points with his bustle.
He's a very athletic player for us."
CdM trailed, 57-53, with only 30
seconds remaining in the game
when Alshuler hit a tough 17 -foot-
er to cut the deficit to two.
A1shuler then hustled back and
forced the Trojans into a turnover
with 22.3 seconds remaining, giv-
ing CdM a chance to tie or even
win the first-place showdown.
Following a CdM timeout, the
Sea Kings managed to get three
straight good shots. at the basket,
but were unable to score the
equalize r. Uni finally corralled the
ball with 0.3 seconds remaining
and added a free throw to com-
plete the scoring.
"We had the looks, but we Just
couldn't cash in on them," Orris
said. "Tonight:s game really looked
like a matchup between the top
two teams in the Pacific Coast
League." •
Both teams traded leads in the
first quarter. Shahangian scored
'~1.; ..
• '--__ .-._~
GREG FRY/DAILY PILOT
Newport'S Jenna Booth (right) provides in-your-face defense In the Tars' 7-4 win ov!!r Capo Valley Friday.
Sailors . outlast Capo Valley, 7 -4
•Tars outscore Cougars;
3-0, in the fu1al 4:55 to win
showdown of Orange
County powerhouses.
Steve Virgen
DAILY PILOT
NEWPORT BEACH -Excuses or
no excuses, the Newport Harbor girls
water polo team was victorious over
Capistrano Valley Fpday.
The Tars, ranked No. 3 in Orange
County, outscored the No. 2-ranked
Cougars, 3..0, in the final 4:55 to earn
a 7-4 nonleague win at the Sailors' pool. .
Harbor freslunan J~sica Ball
scored a goal and senior Jenna Booth
tallied the final two to help the Sailors
avenge a 2-1 loss to the Cougars in last
week's Santa Barbara Tournament.
But the Cougars had played three
games in as many days.
On Wednesday, they lost to top-
ran.ked Foothill, 2-1. And, Thursday,
they easily defeated Mission Viejo,
17-1.
• (These were a) bunch of girls who
GIRLS WATER POLO
were unfocused,• Coach Jason Lynch
said of his Cougars. "Three games in
three days. maybe we were tired. (The
Sailors) had all week to get ready for
us. We had Foothill. And, they also
took off their last game against Santa
Barbara (in the tourney).·
Last week, Sailors' Co-Coach Bri·
an Kreutzkarnp said goalie Heather
Deyden was the only starter to play
four ~arters, while the others sat
after one, in their final game in Santa
Barbara. .
•we didn't rest · anybody on
We~esday, • Kre4tzkamp said of his
team's Y{in over Laguna Hills.
The Cougars (13-4-1) actually
began with a. 2-0 lead two minutes
into the second quarter.
The Sailors (15-4) spent the first
period searching for rhythm. But,
with seven shots that didn't find the
back of the net, the Tars continued to
search.
'"\ Just before t)le Cougars' second
goal, Harbor earned its second six-
on-five opportul).ity. Barnett shouted.
for a timeout, but the Tars played on
and a shot was quickly grabbed by
Capistrano Valley goalie Meridith
McColl, a sophomore who finished
with 11 saves.
The Cougars scored on the coun-
terattack. The goal seemed to moti-
vate Harbor, as the Tars imprGved
their intensity and quickly grabbed
the momentum.
Harbor sophomore Jenna Murphy
drew an ejection and Paige Lansing
scored on the player-up with 4:06
remaining before halftime. Less than
a minute later, Lansing drew an ejec-
tion and Belden scored her first of
three goals. Her penalty shot with
1 :45 left in the half gave the Tars'
their first leact.
·we played harder than we did
the last game (against Capistrano
Valley),• Harbor Co-Coach Bill Bar-
nett said. ".We didn't change any
strategies. I thought our defense
played very well. We swept in when
we bad to and we stole a lot of balls."
Deyden finished with 10 saves,
three in the fourth period. With 2:10
remaining, she stopped Amber Sta-
chowski (two goals} one-on-one.
SEE SAILORS PAGE B4
nine of the Sea fVngs' 18 points as
Corona del Mar traile d by one.
The Hiro Christoph-Jason
Garey twosome-had trouble find·
ing the basket early, combining on
5-for-18 shooting in the first quar-
ter.
Both teams' offenses got stuck
in the mud in the second quarter
CdM managed only.-two points on
free throws, but still only trailed by
seven at the ball.
·we started to get away from
our offense at that point." Oms
said. "We were taking out-of·CQn-
trol, spinning shots instead of
scfuanng up and shootrng "
SEE SEA KINGS PAGE 83
Mesa,
Eagles
ask out
• Local duo hopes to
move from PCL to
Golden West League.
ttarry Faulkner
DAILY PILOT
FOUNTAIN VALLEY
Principdls from Costa Mesa
and Estancia high schools sC11d
Friday they want to leave the
Pacific Coast Leagu~ and
enter
t h e RILU&Ull& Gold-
en West League for a four-year .
cycle of athletic compebtion
beginning the fall of 2002
Addressing representatives
from 61 of the '63 schools that
make up the Orange County
releaguing area, Mesa Princi-
pal Diana Carey and Estancia
Principal Tom Antal said their
schools would be a better fit in
a Golden West League they
hoped would include Santa
Ana, Ocean View, Westminster
and Saddleba~k.
Friday's teleaguing meeting
at Fountain Valley High was
the first opportunity for county
schools to officially express
preferences tor the releaguing
process, which could be com·
pleted as soon as Feb. 15.
After hearing Friday which ,
schools wish to change
leagues and which prefer the
status quo, principals, or their
des1gnees, have until Feb. 2 to
submit individual proposals
outlining league alignments
for all 63 schools.
Those proposals will be pre-
sented at a Feb. 7 releaguing
meeting, also at Fountain Val-
ley, where a voting process will
determine the top eight.
Counterproposals may then
be submitted before Feb. 9 and
voting and discussion will be
held at thf! Feb. 15 meeting, in
hopes of producing a final pro-
posal to be submitted to the
CIF Southern Section for·
approval.
U the process can not be
·completed by Feb. 15, a con-
tingency meeting is scheduled
Feb. 27.
SEE REQUEST PAGE 84
DAILY PILOT HIGH SC"O~l ATHLETE. OF THE ~EEK No sophomore jinx
Eagles, Xochitt ·B ·
•Despite playing among the tall timber, Eagles' forward has
helped lead het ~to the top of the Pacific Coast League.
She ;lna}' be a eophomore, but one
tbiftQ Is for sure about Estancia
Hig6 girls basketball standout
Xochitl Byfield: Sbe'• not l.neXpertenced. ··1-ve been pJAylng buketball since
the fifth grade with the Amen.can
lloundball Corl>ofa=~ some pretty COIDpetitlve • • Byfte)d
Mid. •tt11 a trawl team and we·~
in Pklrida. Senta 8Arbere and La . oelm ;p.c.• .m:~~~
lyllld Medi only to be IUCC:iiful ID
... aGk dtiel .. !MM. ~
lllilda. Cari1Da del MU and CClla .....
.._ JO'I WIY mucb.
lollr.• gaodb thlt DdyNoe ~
lete of the Week. Estancia opened its
Pac:Wc Coast League rcbedule with four
stteight wtn., giving the Eagles a ooe-
game edg over Colita Mesa and Uni· vemty, wtth 8yfieJd leading the attack. ·xocblu bu really stepped up her
game for us,• Estanda Cooch Paul Kirby
said. ·sbets beoi> playtng out o1 pomtiCm
most ol tbe tea0n u a forward. Sbe
URI her qWdmell to get around her
bigger ~oderl.·
That lpieed ...uy came ln handY
9m.t aoMowla rtYll COiia MIN CJD
Jan. 11. wbln ..... ICOl9d 18 polall.
grabbC u~ dllbed out...,_
.... and Md tw6 .. In lhe Eaglel'
42-38 PCl. Wift •
SRIYNLD ... D
/
I
I '
..
'82 SotVrdo): January 20, 2001 Doily Pilot
·.
Doily Pilot
SEA KINGS
CONTINUED FROM B 1
CdM battled back in the third. An 11-3 run gave
the Sea Kings the lead, 36-35. Uni overcame the
CdM run, as well as the "Corona Crazies" and
grabbed ii one-point lead heading into the fourth
quarter.
That's when Alshuler we nt to work~ During one
thr.ee-mmute stretch, he scored six of CdM's eight
points and his jumper with two minutes remaining
gave the Sea Kings a 53-52 l~ad.
A 5·0 Uni run, however, gave the Trojans the lead
for good. A Danny nan jumper and three free throws
from Andre Newsome helped the Jtojans remain
unbeaten m the PCL.
Chnstoph and Garey were 6 of 27 from three-point
range. but still scored 36 of the team's 58 points.
l "We've got to be able to do the little things right."
Oms scud. "We're right m there."
The Sea Kings will play at Costa Mesa Wednesday
m another crucial league matchup. •It's going to be a
great ballgame between two good teams. Hopefully,
we can bounce back from this and play well at Mesa."
PACIFIC COAST LEAGUE
Corona del Mer 58, University 55
Score by Quarte'1
University 19 8 13 18 -58
C0<ona del Mar 18 2 19 16 -SS
Unlventty -Christoph 19, Garey 17, Asnon 6, Newsome S,
Gomez 4, Tran 3, Allah 2. Fe1stel 2
3 pt. goals -Garey 4, Christoph 2
Fouled out -none.
Technical fouls -none.
. .
Sa1vrdoy, January 20, 2001 83
Mesa handles Artists
• Mustangs earn 40-17
edge in second half of
66-40 PCL win Frid:ay.
COSTA MESA -Costa
Mesa High boys basketball
coach Bob Serven was obvi-
BOYS HOOPS ~~1i n~~
with a paltry 26-23 half~·
lead over visiting La9U;lla
Beach Friday. And, evidr.•utly,
he effectively conveyed his
feelings to his team at mter-
mission
The Mustangs outscored
the Artists. 23-8. m the tlllrd
quarter, en route to a 66-40
PaCl.flc Coast Ledgue tnwnph.
M1ke Payne, a 6-root-7
senior center, scored eight of
his career-high 26 pomts m
the third penod blitz. which
also included seven points
from David Conte and six
from Steve Wlutldker.
Payne, whose prevtous
high was 22 this season
against Aliso Niguel, added
11 rebounds and four blocked
shots to help the Mustangs
improve to 12-7, 2-2 in league
Friday·s w:orc\
Wedne!iday's 911mes (7 p m.)
PACIFIC COAST LEAGUE
Costa Mesa 66,
Laguna Beach 40
Scor• by Quart•n
Laguna Beach 12 11 8 9 -40
Costa Mesa 15 11 23 17 · 66
UlgUn. Beach -Blodgett 16,
Brown 7, R1det 6, Chatrath 4, Leahy
3. Norfleet 2, Foes 2
3-pt goals Blodgett 3, Leahy l
Fouled out none
Technicals none Coron. del Mar • Alshuler 18, Shahangian 15, Brewster 13,
Snell 6, K. Mancillas 2, Marston 1, Richardson 0, Grey 0, Glaff 0,
B. Mancillas O. a pt. goals · Shahangian 2, Snell 1.
Fouled out · none.
Technical fouls -none.
SEAN Hil.LER I DAILY PILOT
CdM's Charlie Alshuler drives through traffic during the
Sea Kings' 58-55 Paclfic Coast League loss to Un1versity.
Wluttaker, a sewor guard,
finished with 12 pomts. nine
boards and sue asststs, while
Conte added sue assists.
Laguna Beach, led by
senaor Will Blodgett's 16
pomts, fell to 4-15, 0-4
Cost.II Mesa -Payne 26, Vak1ll
16, Whittaker 12, Conte 7, Cab1co 2.
Krikorian 2, Fregoso 1, Biggio 0,
Amburgey 0, Gandia 0, Clark 0,
Millward 0
3-pt goals Vak1l1 2, Conte 1
Fouled out none
I
iEstancia bitten by
T-wolves, 68-59
•Eagles' Micah
Young scores 27, but
Northwood prevails.
wood's 18-6 third-quarter
edge put the game away.
Drew Terry led the
Tunberwolves (15-5, 2-2)
with 22 points.
The Eagles will host
PCL front-runner Universi-
ty Wednesoay night at 7.
S. __
Sea View League ...
Woodbridge (154 ) l 0
l\lo~o Ntgu<>I ( 12 '>) 1 2
'M>ocbidge 68, AltSO Niguel 61
lrwie 53. Laguna Hills 48
Nl\•part .... tdle
WednMday·s gi.mu (7 p.m.)
AltSO Niguel at N9\•1part HMxr
IRVINE -l;he Estancia
High boys basketball
team lost to host North-
wood, 68-59, in Pacific
Coast League action Fri-
day night.
PAOFlC COAST LEAGUE IMne at Woodblidge Northwood 69, '::Lagu=na=H=rlls._id_1e _____ __,
Micah Young led the
Eagles (6-13, 1-3 in
league) with 27 points
and eight rebounds, while
added Eliasar Maldonado
chipped in with 11 points.
•"Micah did a nice job
for us. coming off bis
ankle injury," Estancia
Coach Chris Sorce said.
•"He's probably about
80% healthy right now, so
he's getting there. 11
Estancia hung tough in
the first hall, trailing only
by four points, North·
BYFIELD
CONTINUED FROM 81
"It's always nice to
beat Costa Mesa," Byfield
said with a laugh. "Our
team Is playing with a lot
of confidence right now
and we're doing a good
job of communacating
well on the court."
What a difference a
year makes for · Byfield,
both in her numbers and
in he r frame of mind.
· "As a fre!:~man last
year, I was a lot more
afraid of making mistakes
on the court," Byfield
said. ·u I had the o~n
shot, I would either h esi-
tate or just dish it off to
someone els«\. This year, I'm
much more comfortable out
there.·
If the numbers are a
reflection of playing out of
pos1Uon, the forwards
around the PCL are hoping
the 5-foot-9 Byfield moves
back to guard soon.
Byfield is leading the
Eogles in scoring in four PCL
conte&ts, avera.ging 12.poinls
per go.me. She has ficored
more than 15.polnls slx Umes•
this season and 20 or more
twice.
"Coach Kirby says 1 bavtt
a quick first step to the baa·
ket, so I try to use that to my
advantage: Byfield said. "lf
the pet10n gulll'ding ma Is
bigger and slower, l'U try to
go by them for layups:
lf the opposition awu to
slough off of.Byfield t.n order
to prevent lay:ups, •he'll beat
them from lotMJ rang •
•rve been really working
bard on shooting off tb
dribble.• 8Yfleld H d . ·co.ch Kirby has r ally
bMl1 woddnO with me on
daet. Mo.t ol m! ~e. l'Ve
bem Just a •t lbooter. My
.'
Est.ntfl'"'5'.-~~~-
Scare by Quarters
Estancia 11 21 6 20 -58
Northwood 13 23 18 15 • 69
EstMda • Maldonado 11,
Rodriguez 2, Young 27, Prado
4, b . Valbuena 4, IC, Valbutna
9, Rometo 1, cachola O.
3 pt. goals • Maldonado 1.
Fouled out • none.
Technical fouls-none.
Northwood -Susson 2,
Howard 2. Roggero 15, Terry
22, Balley 11, Lee 4, Sanchez 3,
Gr~y 4, Selway 6.
3 pt. goals -Roggero 1, Ter-
ry 1, Sanchez 1.
Fouled out -none.
Technical fouls -none.
xoatm BYFIELD
Nllmr. Xochttl Byfield
lom: July 15, 1985
~Costa
Mes. =S-foot-9 ·
120 5'*t= Baske1ball Poeldon: Forward
eo.dl: Paul Kirby
• .-... food: Eoc:hilildas r.-... M0Wtr. "NOON and
ll*l"
lllllt ...... '"°"*it: "When I
ICcnd 11 to help beet Costa Mesa u.n. 9).•
A ..... of"'9 Wlell •:Byfield
had 18 points, 11 rebounds, three
MSlst's and two rtNls In Estancla's
42-26 Padflc CoMt Lugut win
over Costa Mesa uain. 9). ....
Coll«W.,orts artJ-"" or .5
favorite play is the one
where I'm fading away from
the ball and l catcb it and
shoot it in one motion. I love
that.#
Even with seven seniors
on the team, Byfield isn't
afraid to speak her mind on
the court. •If we're down, l
try to be the spiritual leader
on the floor," Byf 1eld said.
•1•m always out there trymg
to pump our team up.·
U the sta.rs and planets
line up for Byfield, look for
her playing either down the
·road at Long Beach State, or
In Knoxville, Tenn. at the
University of Tennessee.
•t'd love to be able to play
at either on« of those schools
omeday," Byfield said.
·That's two years down the
road though. I've JUJl got to
keep working hard and do
the best t cen."
'WJlb team harmony at an
aU·time high, Byfield and
teammate Zuyin Banera
have given each other fol•
modell to pattern lbelr gam
after.
She's 'Sbaq' and I'm
'KObe,'" Byfteld sakl, refer·
rtng to lbtt Loe Mgelel LU·
en duo
Pirates
dispatch
Gauchos
• Redmond scores 22
points in 72-60 QCC win.
COSTA MESA -Janette
Redmond had 22 points, rune
rebounds and five asststs to
lead the orange WOMEN'S Coast College
women's bas-HOOPS
ketball team to
a 72-60 Orange EmpLre Con-
ference Wlil over v1siung Sad-
dleback Friday night.
Kristen Urban (Newport
Harbor High) chipped 10 13
points and 13 rebounds, while
Karyn Fierst added 10 points
dnd nine assists for the P1rates
(13-10, 3-3).
Hayley Hall led the Gau-
chos (6-14, 2-4) with 17
points, while Colleen O'Leary
had 13.
The majority of Redmond's
success came from beyond
the three-point arc. The 5-
foot· 1. guard was 5 for 8 from
ownlown.
The Pirates will contlnue
Orange Empire Conference
action a t Santa Ana Wednes-
day. beguming at 7:30 p.m.
ORANGE EMPlllE CONFERENCE
Onnge c.o.st 72.
s.ddleblldl '° s.ddhtblldl ·Hall 17, O'Leary
13, Jackson 12, Martin 8, Jenkins 4,
Hass 4, Simon 2. '
3 pt. goals -O'Leary 3. Jackson 2.
Fouled out -none.
Technical fouls· none.
0nnge Coelt • Redmond 22,
Urban 13, Fierst 10, Masuda 8, Moji-
ca 8. Melville 6, Estrada 3, Nakano
2.
3 pt. goals -Redmond S, Fl~ 2.
Estrada 1, Urban 1.
Fouled out -none.
Technical fouls -none.
Halftime -Orange Coast. 33-26
Soft.ball signups
COSTA MESA -The
Oty of Costa Meae regis-
tcnng adult 1IOftball ~ ms
for the upcoming sprtDg
leagues et the Down-
town Commuruty Center
through Tueiday.
F are S400 for coed
t ams and S400·440 for
meo'S teems. Ga.mfJi wW
be played et •thet 1\!Wln·
kW Park or DeVll PleJd
and the teeSOn begim
Jan. 29.
Por WOrmetiOin, call
(714) 327-7.580
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FLETCHER ONFB
,
84 Soturdoy. January 20, 2001 Doily Pilot
·Artists lend Costa Mesa a hand· . .
YOUTH BlSEllll
CM Pony tryQUts
scheduled today
• Hernandez's penalty
kick, after a hand ball,
gives Mustangs 1-0 win.
Tony Attobelll
OM.V' PILOT
COSTA MESA -When
the Costa Mesa High boys
soecer team plays its game, it's
preose, calculated and very
controlled.
So, how would Coach
Eugene Day describe the
Mustangs' play dunng Fn·
day's l ·O Paclf1c Coast
League win over visiting
PIRATES
CONTINUED FROM 81
The Sues took advantage
of the1I opportunitles at the
free-throw line as they made
15 of 16 in the first hall and
fuushed 21 of 23.
"It's Jusl a matter of us try·
uig to hnd a way to win the
basketbdll game,• Hill said.
·We needed to get a good
shot dt the end and we didn't
do that.'
EMI returned in the middle
of OCC's first-half scoring nm.
I le hit a three-pointer, less
than a minute after re-enter·
mg
Earl also slowed down
Sadd.leback's star freshman
point guard Mark Brown,
who firushed with 12 points,
though eight came in the first
htt.lf.
"lt wasn't much of a beau·
tlful game,· Gauchos' Coach
Bill Brummel said. "But, it
was a hard-fought game.
There weren't very many
<>asy shots.'
With Burwell m foul trou·
hie, Hill looked for other play·
ers to step up and they did.
Hagedorn upped his play
along with Randy Labistre (6)
and Je remy Madrid (1 1), who
hit a three-pointer to com·
plete a 14·2 run, giving the
Dues a 57-50 edge with 9:42
remdini.ng.
Polley
Laguna Beach?
•we played kickball
today,· Day said with a wry
smile. •When we played
under control, we controlled
the game, but any time Lagu-
na Beach put some pressure
on us, it became a game of
kickball, which is definitely
not our style."
Fortunately for the Mus-
tangs (8-4-1, 2-1 in league)
one goal was all they WQuld
need against the Artists (6·5-1,
1-2).
Seven minutes into the
game, Mesa sent a long pass
into the Artists' zone, but a
Laguna Beach player was
•Everybody is going to get
up on Nick.: Hill said. •His
problem tonight was the foul
trouble ... that took him out of
his game.·
The final seven minutes
showed fast-paced action as
both teams streaked on tran-
sitlon. After Ad.nan Arguayo
dnlled a three-pointer, the
Gauchos led. 62-59, with 6:13
remaining.
OCC, however, went on a
12-4 run over the next three
minutes. Madrid grabbed an
offensive rebound and was
fouled on the putback. But.
that would be the last field
goal made for the Bucs. When
he completed the three-point
play, CX:C Jed, 71-66. but the
hosts managed just one
Hagedorn free throw the rest
of the way.
"You can't sit here at 5-1
and say you're at the top.
Nobody is going lo give you
anything in this conference.
You have to earn it,• Hill said.
ORANGE BIW'ME COM'EENa
Saddlebedl 82. ~ 72
SaddlebKtt • McAfee 17,
Donegan 15, Williams 12, Brown
12, Arguayo 9, Batiste 6, Washing·
ton 4, Read 4, Bacchus 3 .
).pt. goals. McAfee 1, Bacdlus
1.
Orange Cont · Hagedom 23,
Earl 13, Madrid 11, Burwell 9,
Webster 8, labistre 6, Meyers 2.
3-pt. goals -. Webster 2, Madrid
1, Earl 11 Burwell 1.
Fouled out • Burwell.
Halftime · Saddleback, 35-34
ll111t·· 111111d1·111lli1w.11n• •Uf.Jr•·r IO• hau~r
ByFu
whistled for intentionally hit·
ting the ball with his hand,
resulting in a penalty kick.
Senior 1l1nldad Hernandez
took the penalty kick and
drilled a shot into the upper-
right comer of the goal for the
yame's lone tally.
•1t was definitely the right
call to make,• Day said of the
infraction. •The player swiped
at it with his arm and you can't
do that. especially ln the box.•
There may bave been only
one goal scored, but there
wete many near-misses for
both teams, especially the
Mustangs.
Hernandez him.self had
five opportunities, but was
unable to find the back of the
net on any of them.
•llini knows the game and
he knows his way around the
soccer field,• Day said.
•Today, be seemed to hurry
his shots and that's why be
was just missing out there. A
little more under control and
he's e~ got two or three more g in his pocket.•
The combination of Her-
nandez and 'senior Bern.ado
Falci worked well early. Falci
nearly headed \n a shot from
Hernandez, then minutes lat-
er, Falci returned the favor
with a nice pass to Hernandez,
But Hernandez's shot sailed
just wide, sending an agoniz-
ing Day to the ground in dis·
belief.
The Armt5 had a couple of
scoring chances in the first
half, but fill-in goalie Louis
Day (four saves) and defender
Billy Lund each came up with
the big p~y to keep the ball
out of the net.
'Day was ln goal for starter
Bryce Sheridan. who was giv·
en a red card in the Mustangs'
contest with Northwood
Wednesday. Coach Day said
Sheridan will be back in goal
Monday when Mesa plays at
University at 3: 15 p.m.
CbsTA "'1ESA-The Cos-
ta Mesa Pony baseball league
will bold tryouts today at 10
a.m. on Costa Mesa High's var-
sity baseb4ll field,
The Pony division is for
players ages 13-14.and players
may register at the tryouts.
The registration fee is $110
per player. For information,
call (949) 225-9237.
NHBA has openings
for 2001 campaign
The Newport Harbor Base-
ball Assooation still has room
for players ages 5-14 for the
upcoming baseball season.
T-wolves surprise Eagles, 2-1
Registration is $85 for play·
ers ages 5-6, $135 for ages 7-8.
$150 for ages 9-10, $160 for
ages 11 -12 and $175 for ages
13-14. There is also a $25 field
fee for each family. IRVINE -Estancia High
boys soccer coach Steve
IOYS Crenshaw said
SOCCll host Northwood's physical play
helped them earn a 2·1
Pacific Coast League victory
over the Eagles Friday.
Northwood's Jimmy Lee
opened,. the scoring, but
Estancia senior ~ndo
Ortiz curved a d1rect free
kick over a defensive wall
and away from the keeper,
REQUEST
CONTINUED FROM 81
Carey cited geography
and competitive equity
(which, along with enroll·
ment, make up the three.
releaguing criteria outlined
in the section constitution) as
reasons why the Mustangs
are seeking the change. She
also said the Mesa's demo-
graphics are more similar to
Golden West League schools.
Antal said the demo-
graphics of his school's com-
munity have led to a situation
where many sports are
•ovennatched" in the Pacific
Coast League. He cited
into the upper-Jett comer of Giovanni Gonzalez (two
the goal to create a 1-1 half-saves) and Adam Kapko
time tie. (three) split the goaltendinq
A (oul in the 18-yard box duties for the Eagles.
produced a penalty kick for Knights top Mesa Northwood and Jeff Oe1man
converted for the game-win-COSTA MESA -Costa
ner midway through the sec-Mesa High seniors Erin
ond half. ullU Bayes and Dana
Estancia fell to 6-3-3, 2-1-POLO Steenhorct scored
0 in league. The Eagles sur-two ~~ apiece,
render sole possession of the but visl..tinq Ka recorded
PCL lead, which they now a 9-4 nonfeague girls water
share with Costa Mesa. polo victory Friday.
aquatic sports as an example.
Woodbridge High Prlno-
pal Greg Cops said the Sea
View League would prefer to
add one school.
1\Jsti.n, which a consensus
of Gorden West League
schools believe should be
removed from that league,
could be a candidate to join
the Sea View.
Capistrano Unified'sTesoro
and Tustin Unified's Beckman,
opening next fall and tenta·
lively the fall of 2003, respec-
tively, expressed a desire to be
placed in the PCL.
Calvary Chapel and
Orange Lutheran, recently
grouped with county public
schools, are also candidates
to join the PCL.
SAILORS
CONTINUED FROM 81
Said Barnett, • U we contin-
ue lo do well, and that means
in the Irvine Tournament, it
will give us a much better
seeding in (the CIF playoffs).•
NONLEAGUE
Newport~7, c.po Valley 4
Score by Quarters
capistrano Valley 1 1 0 2 · 4
Newport Harbor 0 3 1 3 · 7
c..plstnno V•lley • Am. Sta-
chowski 2. Seuc 1, At. Stachowski 1.
Saves • McColl 11.
Newport HM'bor • Belden 3,
Booth 2, J. Ball 1, Lansing 1. Saves ·
Oeyden 10.
The season begins March 3
and teams will be placed by
rrud-February.
For registration information.
call (949) 451 -2228.
SCHEDULE
TODAY
• Basketball
College men -Vanguard
at Biola, 7:30 p.m.
College women -Van-
guard at Biola, 5:30 p.m.
•Wate r polo
High school girls -Santa
Margarita at Corona del
Mar, 1 p.m.; Estancia at NCSI
Tournament, TB~.
•Soccer
High school girls -Costa
Mesa at Katella Tourna-
ment, semifinal against Sun·
ny Hilts, 10:30 a.m . (Champi·
omhip game and/or third·
place-game to follow at
12:30 p.m.) .
•Wrestling
High school boys -
Estancia at University Tour-
nament, all day; Costa Mesa
at Buena Park Tournament,
all day.
..----De.lllnes ----..,
Monday ................. Friday 5:00pm
Tuesday .............. Monday 5:00pm
Wednet>day ......... Tue&l.ay 5:00pm
ByPbone By MaMll Penon: Hours Thursday ....... Wetf netii.Liy 5:00pm
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Rlltfy I Fido Wllcomel
$padolAI 2fJr 28t, t15a • • n.. ,,.,,
$200 olt NC dtp Ol1 fltst
l4li ar..t tallon. <*-to
lhoppng, ""' MnUlls from lht ~ AU tbo4Jt Olll
111«»1' 94~5'-0252
WINTER SPECIAL
2BDRM 2BATH
~ 1100 .. Aplt1menl home ,....., In • wooded
ex>mml.flly nt11 FaslllOll
ISiand w open luk:t1ll1 latVt
masltr ..... ~ ..,,. ovetlllt pallO blloony
From St,S35
888 219 0754
NP ~ta lmmac 3b1 2bt Ci w qultl loc ()perl 1 (µ 361 •B i...p.ne
Ln I t800 94g.533-6807
FIND
an apartment
throulilh claaalfled I 11°cosrA = I
•111••······· H COAST METRO :
•••••••••••• : COSTA t(ESA I SOUT
: Chamwlg JlnOf, 1 Bectoom
• surrounded by tennis. pool
&l1d 2 Bedroom 1 Bath :
in gated QOmflU'dy • • • 557-0075 • ................ Call 714-• ••••••••••• 1154~1 E'Sldt new Cfi>C'J 1& 1Ba
mlt IO bdt v8Ulild eel tno.
stoYt no rf" S750'n • $500 dip OA 1626 Newport
EM ~-4998 91-~
a-ittful Htt 381 29e Bay
Wtlldows F p 2 p.aos gar
al amen 306 Coral 8y IClCll 310-273-3300
ll'SIOE Countty WOOclt
1 Bt loft. 2-ety. patio. no
l*I, Sl7S¥o. 1 IO E 21 tt.
M~ma
l155 dll EUGANT SENIOR UVWG
ftlfOY 8 tpac;IOCI$ $Ulll. enttttaXlment crafts, lvn
,,.,., '11nfpMallon, """'' COSTA NEUPORTE'
Mid P.nln Un. unfum, 3br
2ba Ilse. :!:, 1n hvrm. new
kite. ba, pe oll mstr. many
wind $2600 949-6 73-7323
VllCltlon 8Mdl AenW 2 &
3Br 2Ba spacloo1 deluxe
condo. fully tum, 11~ lo
beh, 2c !I!! 949-67S-130
Ow nut Unit 1011lly
remodtlld. ~ d14>1t~.
4br 31)9 2 J''t~ .,.. S2900lnlo g. t 502
Howe 3bf. 2be,mod ptnl1
2 Vp'1 lrl lli!r ,_ lcllchtll,
bdll. peoo oft muter.
94H4U300
llWWIUn ~ 58
Fumlshld Stlldlo near T ~
Sqr w/deck, cov11ed p!llg, rn & wal8f paid. no rs· 25/mo. 9'9-642·281
Only -Ptrtoll pnvate & QUl8I. $67Ymo uCls il1ctd ~
$500.dep 714-548-8797 . ....n. .,.. MobW Homt
~ <Mel 12 accM$ IO S5 Wllltto.~ .,, Slngte-wlclt lie
H--. 1.5Br 1750/llo
§.2!!x no I!!!! ~206
mq Wlldowl,~ holM 5111 l2SOOrno 7323
1 1·~1 1111 -=1
WAUC TO THE BEACHll
S400 ~ 8orlUI on
Sfllc~Sflen 2 lM9t Br'a
bolh w/w1l~·m·clout1
1 58e •• Fp 1 c Qlll • 9'*lt
walk to •vttylhing' S 1795/ I.lo 949-640-5324 .
CdlMJV Fl#ft 3Br 38a hm
on 1/4 IC IV Fuh II Some
ocn w ~ St095 • 112 U1b 94 2t3t
(BRANO NEW) lbf 1be
condo, wdllra, \'.ult oelft, WO, carport $1350 Anll
Mid Feb M9-!21-I073
381' Soutt1 o4 ~/ ~· • PrudW!till Ca
RtallY tMg.219-2447
I ti mo. Reill! NiCe 28r/
t 58a lrl • c-:: Mlllr'O Stmmo S480 on 1
~ !tat' 714-960-2468
1112 IR~1
Belutlful 28t 28a, nt""Y
l9rl10deled. pool. 'Pl· frtntSS, S1,3951mo. Ptlt
Weioome l•l '41·7382
RegMrta Point ""',.,,,..,.
COllllliunlly "' !Mnl. Otlen 1118 freedOITI you
dltil't and the tnclel>end· tneeyou•=~ lllir811111lt 27
2001 LINCOLN
CONTINENTAL
Alpine A!J9fo SF.tcmJ. CD Changer,
Dnvcr Select ;)yncm
SPA<SJE FOR LEAS I DESIGN/SA~ M IG P.l .. P LAZA . EWPOR'f B EAC H
One at 88l 1q. &. and one at 201 5 "l· ft.
· 2nd 8oor/Gorgeoua ocean view wnh Cataliaa md Balboa
Ialand IW\tet. WaJ.king di•unce to fashlon Jllaod.
l!t floo,. 1902 SI/· ft. Ocean viewl. 7 offices plus.
2ntl floqr 1.500 lif ft San Miguel view. 6 offic.es pl1.1t ~. area
(wo• an b.9C;utiYe •uiteJ
3rvl /IH,. 1620 "I· ft. &.outiful offices with !tee \liew$, Y9'Y calm.
1 n .floor 367 sq. ft. Small 3 room office. Balcony views.
Pl..EASf CALL FOR ADDRESS.
SOME Of THE TENANTS: KINKO'S, FIGGE, MULDOONS, SPA
GRfGORJES, EDWARDS THEATERS, COAST MAGAZINE, 80MSAY
CO., KMS NOTARIES, THE BRIDE, ELIZABETH BENEFIEl.DS,CDWARO
JONES, DENNIS JACOSSON PlASTIC SURGERY, AND ~ MORE.
~8: ~~ JOANNA TARP LEY ()d Cdttf.3& • 281
.or.-, ..........
tonH. '425 ~ .n night 1t1nda, '200.
Kitchen tltllt, Mlltll •
lop WINtUr1I wood, ... MH46-1440 MH270
1 Cat Gtt Oldtt Oupltx 949-760-9150 ext. 2 )2 t4 P*e CMr'rt Wood
lront ~ clNll alld diNn9 --f llJla ' •
11wp ,w.. $2!1:1) ~&..., ~~~~~~~;Cc;ll~~ph=~on~e=9~4~9---2~3~0~-2~6..,8T8-:~~~~~ :'um~!, a;:= ~l~k• ~ ~~~~
949-711·2366
_Vlllegt__.;;.....:home;..;....;..;;Yf!IY:...=;..;:.;;.,_-3br I '·mfPORT~IEAQl--11--~ I ~ ~ = ol GARAGE , , .. -1 2111 ' den. 2 Clf git. WI() ""'-· """ .,._..., llllPO'I ., .. , 15•15 15.19. SALES ~ ~ hdliid firs ftplc, S3l50 conlrm recpt CSL & ______ _._ _ _
Ad cop!! 94g. 752-61()() !14~7000 306 Wallr1ront '1olnt 11.nl -. Mo.Ing Salt Sal 8-Jc>m local kln.n., eatl, ...
Channing pnva1e 38' 38t wl3 rmt Qll. Pf'I cite». NS Ofllce Spece Avail NPS corner ot Delaware & tor lldoplloll wwy s.t I conage, ntee Jard, Mw1y dodt rpace 1vai1 ptol malt Old Newpoft Blvd, In the ~s on H 8 50 s 3 Sun noon-4pftl FMNoft
pal'tled, Fp w S2150fmo pie j1m 94~7!>-7570 Artt;w Ctr leoo.t, St.6Slf, S8CbOO c.ooc11 enc: tat>•M ltWld Al9llAl NElWON(
Pell Ott Agt. 949-7t8-2721 94H40-7000 l30I t'lousellokl 1nsm1men11 & Info t4t444-22'7t
Wiik to Sano-211 0!9llgl
"""' -,_..,... unit ...,. 381 2Ba new Carpel/paint. -~1 ,......._. ,.. • blinds, lower Un.I 1 car gar
I quiet, utll Incl, no peta. $1850/mo 949-673-7800 "75/mo • $500 depotil 9411-54"797
Rtelty cw 3bt 2be home
ntwly rtlurt>llhed. QUiii ·-Vrrt l.n!yfMno room. b!A$2e00 ~g. 722-1070
Spacloua 3Br 2.58a
2·510ty Como. gated. end
untl. pa!JO, Q81'98 nur wate1 $2t501Mo Agent
949·675·4912
BA YRIOGE CONDO
2br tba, gnd comin, W/
D, deck, pool, 1p1.
$11100 Ag!. 949-721-1575
Educated Prof'I mtlt ciothes www.anlmelnetwOftl.ora
wants mYpvt entr. °' gues1 I I ~~m:~~~'.~ 214 GARAGES l 440 119CEU.ANEOOS 11 ceo IMatM. I incld u!1$~ 71+.(3N39t • -FOfl SALE INSTAUll!JITI lg. t car 911"91 for rent In
I I downlown HB Alee Sloraoe
204 ro"= = ~~.~~ ~s w<>lf ANT~~eeeos G Wor/J BUY OIRECT ANO SAVEi
I I C0t.4MERCIAGHOME UITA f9malt prtf'd IO t11t1t 3br 402 LOST & uncta from S19900
2bt condo w11 lllmalt 111 FOUNIJ L~ Molllllly Pa,.ment
Cana Potnt NtCtlCltan FREE Colc.t Catalog washer & drye< 1C10U fTOm Call 1-80().71 Hl158 be9ctl Ava/ now $725/mo u.f cal 11/'lS Hlmalayan ,.....,. np etstan com
u1ila IOCIUCltd 94~2954 male .m.tel5'Yal bpS long
HAR1!0A VrEW HOMES .,. Wilson & O<anne C W unV\ur~••-lOOO's hl•I f\amt Whrttt vc: l I 481 .,... '-l:"'~....... COM &tau 3br houM, "s :::,r,~""w' •38r 28a T~.... ~ _.., ....... N1at9 prof fem, SIC»'mo REWARD 94t-5tS-t586 "~'-'IP ~pelt IO T~ Sq $3500lmo. 94t-75H31' • ulll Ill' Incl tvlll Ftb LOST Gold Wedclln9 banO
bo' 'ell tr.de!
Oriinite Couoty
ftplc rn Mr1g rm dining 17th 94Mn-0569 6 .,. __ dllfnond5 on IOI>
1111. par.11y own lalJf1dry ~-WANTED t 1ir Ground.
oll PllO. qw ,.. ol pool Udo Isle 2Br 2Ba Fp in-Wutaldt Cot ta Mttt VICllltl'f l7th St LOl1gS
lt'ld --*'· MSY ICQISS ltllOr C1IYl'd. 2c gar no'*' lookrnO lor a mann mile IO Vons or par•ing '°' TJilUES J an. 20t IO twys. 1)""'7 $1500 C11 S2800Mo 949-718-2733 share my 38t ~ Wttll REWARD 949-720-0467 !l
MldlHI 94~583-1510 831·484·1835 JSOQ.mo 9'9·6312708 S2000 REWAROlll Older Styl. Furniture I0.~111
1 • J.1 I I 1 .. :m-=i! Ir· Va I ~!~~ .;.r4;; ~:~~
-land or Bia e-iron onv.. WE BUY ESTATtS I 1 SUNSET I BAY 'DEWS
lb< 2111. bdYlld over1ooQ r;eenblll. IV ~ashlon fslarld .800'mo 949·640-m 7
8ay11dt VIiiage 2bf 2bt,
5175tYmo. available Feb 1. year lease 94~7U695 Of
714-953-481 0
Tht Blunt 3br 2.5b•
townhm, lg, ctten on
grttn llt ll. Yrly IH
$27!5· 94~
Gated bMllt lirlgle •lOf'f
2br 2bl dllllctt hit. 2< gar.
ntwlt1lt/crp1/pain1l•lndo• :m3I $2200 ~,..1219
llufft ~ T own11omt 38' 1 58a nlCt cordbon. $190()(mo Batblra San-ptt, Rib 94~195
)8r 28a HM at Newport
Sholtl Slaps IO bell. Ing. Ip, 2-< git wd ht ..
pea $2800 ~ IO cU>
pool, ..,.,.. 949-721-8422
S.yfront 2tir 2a. Condo
Lido P~ aree W ..
to lltlch.' ahopl, 111e.tter
Viewt S27SO/MO Cltbby
Evw. !QI 94g.J9S.2m
t 920'• Rletof9d V1ctorlln
2br 2bl lg llv/do. grmt tut.
mrtlle cntrs, an hdWo nrs.
WIO jaz mn lib. 114 8C yd.
2 e !I!! $2850 949-422-6152
38r Ho11M tam rm, F'p. aw. ·~ 8Mdl IW!tll 2 941-)20-ltH 4&6 ~.
yatd & 88-q. comm pool & 381 28a "*'°"' ~· WMlllD
$3,500/Mo 949-644·4426 ""'""'· y urn, steps to 420 GARAGE spa, gated comm 2 cat 08I ""....... full , I I
-· bcrt, 2c gar 94M 7Ht30 SALES
movARE 2131 2ea, anac11 ..._ _____ _._
2car garage. very clean, 1208 OfRCES I GARAGE SALE COM
qlMlt, quiet. 8SSOC l&OOll 8 ....a -· HH
pool, ga1'd, no ptlS Avail '""'" r'llllilll"--Fu~T. = !!:~.!! .. lmmedlalley · $2675/t.40 --""""" Ageot 9'9-717~732 FV Oii bldg fol IM 1123-t 196 ctotlllng. TV, and rnot'll -Good Stvff 4e07 SW,.., Or at X/M11t Sque1t 10840 !C-H!ghilllda I flCH)
-.. ': lnttmti 71 4·751·2787 °"1191 s. SM.. 7-111111
TV, couctt. llti6es ~.
::649-4922~
SOUTH COAST AUCTION I I Warner Alll tboul HI ~ --
"';;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;: CM MO WM Sl ~ c:otrcMtt cltlll & marry "* 22t2 s., IWll St. 1:= So Coa•t P111.1 19n Pot! Chelsea, t'8 s..a. Am. CA mo1
Motel
MANAGERS
• SPECIAL•
$154 00• tax Wkty ~pr-w,. Ad)
235 rms & kllc:IWllCls.. 5'Uted M btMMl.fy landscacltd grol.rldl FEATURES 24-How
lobbyJ011ec1 dial
phones/Free HBO,
$330lmo 11 .... 1....ae -· ...,_ ........ IMM73·54t4 1-APPUAHCO I
COAST COIN NEEDS
OLO COINS! Gold. eiYtr,
jtWeliy walehel, lnllqllll ~lblll 94H42·9447
TOP ISl/flECOM>SI
.. au R & B. Soul, Rock.
elC 50'1 & 60'1
MIKE 9'9-645-7506
can't aeem to
get to alt thoee
f9P8lr jobs
around ffie ~?
Let the C&aeHled s.mc. Dlrectmr
help yoo find
rellab6e hefp.
ESPN & Oosc/Pool &
Jtcuuo Guest laun-
dry Clole 10 405 ' S5
Fwys ""' I from 0 c FairO'C15. ~ and
bells Walk!llQ dll·
lance 10 shops end
rmaurant•
Everyday is a great day
COSTA MESA
MOTOO INN '1217 Hlrt)or 8IYd
Phone 94M45 4840
in Classified!
Be a part of it ,
place your ad today!
(949) 642 ·5678
2001 MERCURY
COUGAR
2001 MERCURY
MOUNTAINEER
2.SL V6 Convenience Group.
Bodyside Molding 5.0L, V8, l.nther, Monterrey Pkg ..
Auco Temp Control. Convenience
Group, Homelink T ravclnote,
Mach Audio CD Player
.
• • • . ' .. ,
''·•••• ,,, I .a•·•• I ,, •.. , :\1()~1 \''f
we are looklng for sales Representatives who en.Joy meeting
and greeting people. Work flexlt>le hours: afternoons. evenings
and weekends. Explore our successfully proven program
throughout the orange countv area. securing new
subscriptions for the Los Angeles Times.
$ Flexlbte Hours: ettner fUll· time or part-ame
s Average $25·$50 per hour
$ No sales expertence necessary
$ Wiii train the right people
IF INTER ESTED PLE-'SE CO~TACTr
Robert Brown C714J 587·5525
........ ,_ ........... ,......,
&MIJlY.tnO~
&G£lmj
Pull·llmo:
Oly& C"l'nllllj( tJitflA
812-815
Top-Producers
HJghcr
• Rallh, l.lalW llll!UllJICf
• tol·ll l'la •l\ld _..
·~ ..........
P.-IJOWd In 1981118
(Glla)k..,
~r:-.:
~lM744
AUTO DETAILER
~Fri, CA llctflN rte1 d
mutt ~ Engtlltl ~W·
po!! Bcl1 .,... 848-2» 1221
Auto Dtlllll1"9
~ '"4te Lttd
tWposilrvt. prolttalonlJ
lttltudt & dNn OMV
Houra are Mon·F11
7 30-4 00pm S1a111ng
at se so p1ua t~
Cell M-1'21~20
Brown Enterprtsn
BABYSITTER NEEDED NEWPORT COAST CDC
lot large tamlly 1n Allio r:i. ~ P~
VltjO Lilt houstlcffPlng ~ 949-574-4248 lot moie _ _:::Clll=....7~1Hff=Mi==~7-
dtlaila NOW llRINO PHONE
90AT DOCK CAfW ~ Ful or PT ~raon, boating nper ~"tt;'_.:.,~7 llllpt\ll. AP9IY In ptrMlfl
lOlfll..2pll Frl, 5-. Sun. REAl ESTATE AGEHTS Al#r In,.,_ 1901~ Dr. COM FOCUS For A Brighter Future
CARINO P£0PlE Httded Wt n aq>andlng and need
PT/llta peld hr1. MIU a 10 carMr·minded llctnttd ~ In lht ._ of and 1Q-non.llctoMd
ltla lldlrtr In lhtlr llolnM. ~ In terning
Compenlonalllp, lllMll, S3S 000 ·$50 000
trl'llldl. • lhtlr ~ TNl's mt ~ s.11 .,.
t ide. No c.rtltlc1llon Qletttal ~ In flt
!!QUfrwd. 714 4M 4llO wond-VA Houalng tor No Money ()own11
Wcwti ""*'cl countw It 11 Unllmhfcf Roof Time
cot'9t hcMIM -bttefl. Ltndlr OINlltltd lluywl Ata holn A«Jy In l*10ll No c.r.v-
0 The Kind Gilrid 2 I 3 82nd No Oocw Knoc«lng
St. N!wpon Bch, otl PCH Come "°JOH1°'t' ~IMdty.
OAOSSIHG GUARDS PT Jan 23 0 7 00 PM and INnl
Grttt hows. no n1g1111 or lbaA en ••CltlnQ and
wk t n d 1 • T re I n I 11 g tnnCMllMI IPPOfCtl ~ taal
ptOVldtd. 1n-11M2M tm\11 .-c.. Eht -Fragoso
VETERAN RE 0£MONSTRATOAS PT 1·800·723-6857 2 ID 3 dlyl -Y MeMnd -...:....::::...:..::::..='--
al1rt1ng lmmedotltly ti
~ SlOr• In your ., ..
~-4283
DfUVEASICUST SYC Flf'T
fOf "-ahop In NPB.
""-eel Aidt '41-1»-1113
MEDICAL ASSISTANT
Rttlturtnt
Fun l buty Cofltt,
Bar" Nttdt PT/FT
El~ Cofttt m.un 10 join our
IH llll
F11hlon ltMnd
M9-121·1to1
~m
It'~ the solution
rou're ~
for·whdher
rou're min~
a home,
. \
THI GALLUP POLL
• Su~y Phone Interviewer
• No Sales, Earn $9-12/hr
• Paid Training/Benefits
• Positive Work Environment
• Flexible Scheduling
• Full and Part-time
For further information:
(800) 713-2595 .
• Irvine
don_dusatko@ llu
•, l.., -r
•
CA.DIU.AC CATERA 'W
Blldt. lfv. moonrool.1 llloys
(1138431) •14,988 NAllEAI
(?14)540-1100 I "' -=.= I ~ .=t = • _ GrHI Loe, Newport
llelch. Mt-75M74a Clldllllc Dtvltle ...
PllMt bt -lhll the Hdnga In INI
Clllllgoly NY ,..-.
YCMI lo cell I toO
number In which
"*9 II a cfllrQlt per
mlnllte.
whit•. good concltlon, low
... 1 • ___ =:_1 ....... 1 "-'~"-'!Hso-=·....;.;,~=.;,.-.$_1990_c.-_
• -CA.DIU.AC DEVU! '00 low 17\ ml, lwonzt ..... ~~lft ~~ (250730) NAHAS 129.988
Ylld 1986 cord-(714)540-1100
I • 1u11ai I :·::~,.::::-~ _CADUA_va--o.;ledltf"'"""c'"'~""NO..i.r""'"""*'---... -
OPPORTUllT8 llr1gll ult Can be !.-cl tor (614744) 18.988
Klyab 11to $400 Cal NABERS
""-llt wwy of -of artt compenltt.
Qlldl Wlfl ltla loail
Better llutlntte Bu-
,_, btfOl't YCM1 tend
any money or lttt
tor ltrVlcM. RNd
and undtrstlnd anr
conhC1I btfOl't YCMI algn.
... ~, (714)540-1100
1--=-1
Udo 8ldt Tit for eallboal
le> ID Mft and bttm 12ft or "*· .. anllWa fJ«1I waier b:ld 1MU73-7en
Sida Ill tor 10ft • Slllbolil
Grett loc, El ecc.t to
!Min dllnntl. Cell JJ
MH75-7570
• Up '° 22ft Sida Tit ,..., Bay llllnd (Covt) _,
fol eltc1ric boat. ehate bo9t
lor !p!C! ~M73-11MJ
CADILLAC Eldonldo '13
low 75k ml. ltd. i.n hhr (902315) $11,988
NABERS
(714)540-tl 00
CADLLAC Eldorldo '11
low mt '*'· moomlOI (508793) $10.988
NABERS
(714 )540-tl 00
Cedlllec 9fttllt STS 't:S
Slate lldltt. ~
(834036) s 11.eee
NABERS
11141540-9100
c.dlllec 8"lllt SLS 'M
I I ~ ... 5811 ml ........
-~ ::.;~:.:.~..:.:';;;.;:4..:.114=.::3~:.:.:·'---11-or
• • C40 SEYIUE 71
Acute 2.2 CL ~ '17 1 OwMf. ptrftct cond,
5311 mi, lotdtd wltver· c:rd· dependable,
ything, mnrf, tthtr, alloya, l dtlwta ~
ABS bftak.a. ttc 15.160 $4500 MIMM6-UM
9'19-65().2302 9-280-2"4 CHEVY CORVETTE M
Acura 3.5 RL '91
"-f· White. auto, lthr
(P1408) $23,"5
Sou1tl Cont Acura
714-179·2500
White, 2411 1111, snso
MM50-1184
Chrysler Concorde '93
4dr, V6, auto, cllen car
(20769A) l&,"5
FLETCHER JOHU
llOTORCARI
S300 ...... Aoed
"::l:i .. ~
Ford Tauru• Wegon M euto, AC, tun pwr, lo ml
(P14St) 18,"5
South Colet Ac1lrl
714-179-2500
GOU' QTI '2001
$17... (2 .. lhll Plb)
1 WOUtt411402H'2
TUl'bol llr, llloy ......
MotCtMI Yolbwaoon
.... 541-0517
HONDA CMC LX '99
4-dr, Wtltt., Milo, AC
(P1429A) 54,"5
South eo..t Aeun
714-171-2500
HONDA CRV EX '99
4X4, Bi.ck Beeuty
(207t9A) S.AVE
South Coett Acw'I
714·979-2500
JEEP Orllld CllerollM 91
,. • • -~ t • "'W
............ Aid. low ml, .. oardlon.
(304813) Se.Ill
MAHRI
(1141MM100
Mlfcedle C230 ... '°'· ~ ""° (P1522) 111,"5 Saudi CoMt A.ctn
714-t7t-2500
Nlsun Attlma GXE '99
Milo, full pwr, low ml
(P1413) 113,495 South Cout Acur1
714·179-2500
Nl-.i Nair NX 87 2c*
00t4>'. 13911, mtallc grttn.
IUIO pt ntWI~
& ........ tor. very OINn
$1g95 IM~18&8 Bkr
OldarnoOlt Cieri .., va. IUO, eariiltnl OOldllorl
(357885) $3,988
HABEAS (114)540=1\00
• Oldlmoblle lnlrlgue '00 ve. llver, ~ ,.....
(113186) s1s.•
NAHAS
(71 4)540:1100
Doily Pilot
I . ,
-... · --.I
VOLVO 110 Turtle W e6K
ni. ~ .till, --... l!IOOIHOOI. co. bNUdlA
orig cond, S1U116 OCPA
Bl(S Yin 1421 7788
941-6§&=1888
1-m=.I
Classlfkd i5
CONVENIENT
whnhcr )'OU'rc:
buylni. ~Ulng. Of jU5l
look.Ing. cLwllkd lw
•"fut you Ottd1
CLASSIFIED
(949) 642-5678
~=-·=-= ••••• t ptltonlily IO malctl, wt
Atta II
Nead Hp'd Sllea Aatoc
tor daa1gntr woman'
boutique fn St" MtMo Pl1Yfoua ... In 'MllTlln I
taahlon1 pref d Fu
,...... 626·799-9382
apartmen~
pet or new
occupationJ
Sl8y llomt ' "°" onllnt. Fluibif11y, $500-$7000/mo BEmE GLS '2001 m .-12 " ""' Plbl 1MUat1411M4S0827
South Coat Acura
714-979-2600 wtllte wmllr. IUllFOOf, -.......................... .. powr, clttnl Gtragadl
Into pannel, 44K 1111,
115.IOOfobo MH7S-2035
BABYSITTER NEEDED '°' llrot family In Allio Vtljo Utt~. c.-849-67~48 lor -detail•
tw... 1111 OllPOflUnllY lof )'OU
in a spedtlized mtdcel
pr9Clic:e wl1h peraonal and
financial rt•trcll Call
SIWWIOll II 9'9-SI~
=Certified Pre-Owned :=
by BMW
lo 'f".11 II*• """ Step-by· atep ayaltm Complete
11a1n1ng. Fru Into
IOMtWn3
WWW.ll!ft!'ln!fob,com
For oltimatc peace of mind, ~cry umfied Pr<'·Owncd BMW is backed by The Cuti6ed Pre.Owned BMW
Prot.caion Plan, cov<'ring tht vthiclt for up to 2 ycus or ~0.000 miles (whichcvtr mmcs fint) form the date of
c:xpiration of the 4-ym/50.000-mile BMW N~ Vch1dc limited Warranty.•• Tht Pro1cct1on Plan mcludt$ two key
dcmcnu·
Certified Prt-Owned BMW Umited Warranty ,. Racked by BMW of Nonh Amcri~. Inc .. anJ m
iucionwidc nctWorl< of BMW cc:mcrs, covtrtd rrp:urs arr m~c only by BMW-craincd 1«hn1e1ans using on~ gcnumt
BMW rcplaamtnt pans
BMW Roadside Assi.stancc .. Pc.ice of m1nJ follows you ~nywhcrr in the USA. 24 hours achy, 36S days a ycu.
1998 BMW
740iL
PRE OWNED LEASE FOR
20,031 M1, Loaded with Opuon.s !
$6,495 tocal to ~cart. I 0,000 mi per vear.
25¢ per excess mile. Tocal payments = $26,631.00,
Residual $23,546.00. uro steunty deposit,
(M18781) PER MO. 36 MO.
•TAX ON APPROVED CREDIT
'97 528i ,.,__ tn. BUtJ. 1'&~1·111
'97 318i
Alla>. Ill .. •l\tNI tK.2.IOHI
'98 323;
Coot-IN< "4.m \olwt(IX/r1!1
'98 J l8i ........ ro. ,..,,._ .,.,,....so .• 1,~111
'98 .J2JI
c.-..mi.it ' ~ tu...• w.d OXMM ~I~
'983181
A... CD. Abnit (K2.6l 11 t
WJ28i "->,..., ~ (Vft461ql
'97 J281
,_ .. -!\end I IV\:ll~t
WM.J
\. ... 4 Ok M.O •i\o...,j t1T~X.Jl
11.r.JniS
LovMiJ.a
$19.995
.l7K•i
'98 540i
A..n.. <..0 Aq>nl wllllodt. tlXHI L49J -
'97 S28i
\ Sp!. ~ Miki Lk URYXWI)---· •• --.•.
'98 740iL
lD. P1m11•m So.ind IMllH61
'98 S28i
U0.995 rn. ,__ ~ "'-<W>N4rn
'99J28i
.l5K ai V"'4 rn. '"""'KiOS1'21 ----
'99 ll8i
S2 I .99S \ \pd ~.CO. etd (4EllL1161
'99 j28i
Low Mi/a Miii. ill. '&'luw. Hk ""l~rKR)Jln
W740il.
$.2.2.991 ttl -.._ c;.... (M1"16l-
'SJ9 "8J
U. MilM YMae. tl'X • 0151Wl---·---
'jl 7""'1-
lAfl1 Mila
$29,995
17K,,.i
16/( ,.,
~Spd. ........ "'Clt l)pt_,llXFV't'l 12$.99$ "-e,cn . .,_(4ATU:'OI $J1,99J w su; .,, 140/L •
,._,en ,._,,.,. "~ <"',..4111 17K ,,.; aw-co 14AZXtt '> $J9.99S
'.N .Jal ~ ZJ
cn.s,..~.i-M 1tCuoo1 ~ ui...w...1•1~ SAVE
•JWa u low u4.9°/o APR on apprcMCI credit
• AU c.cnified to 1 OOK Mi • Ma.n1 More c.atified
• U.Ht, Lecldde Aaim.aciel Pre-Owned BMW'1 to CbOORJ
Luxury pecbge, llr, alloy
...... Miit-roof, -Mc:Kenna Yolbwegon
111-541 o0$17
BMW Coupe '91
auto, AC, full pwr, lo IJ)I
(P1491) S8.:Ji5 Sou1tl Cout Acurl
714-971-2500
llMW 540I 't5 8711 mt,
bllclc. tin .. boclb, lllW•
lrg9d. non _,...,, 111111 ,_
cond S18 9K OCPA BKS
Yin 1759211 949-51&:1811
BMW 740IL W
"'°""8. co
(4AZXl15) --CAEYIEA BMW
71+ff!=!171
CHEVY CORVETTE 95
Trtoll blecll, I IPd. 7511 1111.
S1t,750 14~71IO
C220 Stdlll ..
0 ~ Arlandne OAC
C! Jow •arc= llM24-1401
JETT A Ql.S '2001
S11.7'11C (2 II .. Plb)
1 lll034t7111 MOll002
T\lltlo ' ~ lkKenna Yolktngon
-.541-o111
U20 s.dtll ._ LAND ROVER co. 15K M11ea. HurTy NEWPORT BEACH l&e81151 12S.lllO 1540 JAMBOREE RO ~ "°'* ...,_. Ml-203-33S3 IU-t24-1401
cag Sedlrl W LHUI ES30ii ~iS-~
(~Cyl. llnm1e1~ (l;~)IUID, Ai;~
,,.... Jonea ...,_. South Cout Aci.n
llM24-1401 714·171-2500
A
GOOD
ADI
"Employee ...
"Empleado ...
b . h •• ~ eune in.er. _,£... ., ...:. .I tJ Dmpi.uyc.
'
TAXI
nNAICIAL
... II.RECTORY
(949) 646-8803
AU. TAX FORMS • All STATES
INOfV · CORPORAl10NS-FIOUC~
PAAlNERSHIP • U.C -ESWES
350 E l TTI -STE 117
COSTA MESA, CA 92627
30+ YEARS EXPERIENCE
GET ntE PEAQ OF MIND
ONLY A CPA CAN GM YOUI
he you geftiig al !he dldldklns you n
amtled to7HMYf1.Irellmdone171 tax
CM at I REASOHA8LE rMe!
214 ADOmONS
IREMOOILING
I 231 UTHAOOMS I
HOME/lair
&lbtt1b ~"X Regl.ut> Rt-1u1h.,1i
P()(l('IJtn • r 1h1·11;l.1"
Smit' • Sh 1v. ''"
( OUnll"f\
949-645-7723
GENERAL REPAIRS
....,._~..,.
.l(,~~lf(e
• PVnbing FolllnS Etc
• Wf/H HelltNl. • TOlletS
• CoLflter fOl)lo • S.. <S
C...llllt ....... IUJC. 1949) 589-1124
I 250 CARPENTRY I
A TO Z HANOYMAH
1na11n reface c.b1nt1s
kJtclMnlbalhidooftJw1ndows
Doug 71•·546-7258
CARPET CARm
Rep91rs P 11e1tong nsia 1
CountoOS Any size )00s
wtoolesale' 949~92-0205
~· c1..=:r'
Save on oD carpet,
upllolmry, fine nig
deaning and ~-
' 00% sotisfoclbl guaranlM. Yon
equip. or dJy clton
• Sine• 1987
Brothers Carpet
Services
1·800·559·7181
SERVES YOU RIGHT
CAl<PE T ~ ,Pt<'." • .Sl[:l1
CLEAtllNG
Clean All 5 Rooms
$99.00
fl l\U II llA!h * 5 fOO<llS
Clean .tft Carpets Only
$149.00 (or less)
Up 10 oJ rooms 2 o.irns 2 hJ s Ind ~igl\I ,,, SIJ1rs
' • "ount.O h• t""e"I • Re n ~t SPOft"'Q r rn1urt MO'f'UliQ
Siorwtg OC lo' ro \'Mrs
Pus FREE ~ Tm.Oii WUll Gu.w>
M t-581-1487 a 800-30:J..4717 •
Custom Carpet CIMn Sys1em Ralld 11 by
sumer report
S29 5l)fm .ncludmg
prt·spontng KOtch
guard No hlddeo C06t.
no i.c>-sale call Aober1 714-504-M6S
.. ..
COMPUTER ASSISTAHCE
0 "°"' ~ 0 )'CK.I home
"' ale lnCMlJll c-:tq, lnlenwtt, Program lnsl&lla·
hon Dennis 949-723-9372
IT SHOUUl BE F\114
Computer ln1tall1Uon,
Repair, Service. on yoot
01vld VtfltUrl Contr8Ct0< hOme O<agno4be pre~en
A Concrete & Mlsolwy Co tNt maint 949-631-4367
Bnck Bladt Sble Wabay
LJ7'74'8 714-~
JAG Muonty-Bloclc • Bnck • S4in • Cone. lie Repeir-s
DRYWALL
SERVICES
old CMlily WOf\. l•730089 -------Guw. rats 714-531·1'43
..
YARD CLEAN-UP
Tr-·Pruned & RemcM!cl
Spntilde!s Rt11a•re<I n9W ,._ Call 714-7S 1-3471
303 HANDYMAN
/HOME REPAIR
Wtions • Kitchen
Bathroom • Repoi's
Call the leocler
in So. Colifomio
Fr• Eslindf lie# mm acm1G.
949•137•5642
A lo z Home lmpnM!mefcs
LICENSED CONTRACTOR Re~11s Electoul and
No )Ob 100 1111 Al _, Plumbing loc•65052•
Aepetr, 1911lOde1, lans, lfll, c111 714·269· 11 as 01
,_ -IMM45-3IS5e 9'f.2~11.
..
Ctwtltlen H8ndJll••
F'Nll c.i--.
!Inca. ctywll
11\j(XO 11.f) lcxn
wrdowli~ -!.:I bolrOI & l*'"C"'9 Ser.er Oi9COll'll frw
911rn11f Cal Jom
71 '..e3&-8235
Skilled Carpenter
Electr 1c1an/Plumbcr
I'll help you resolve
those nagging home
repair arid remodel
issues
Keith 949-574-1748
QUALITY CRAFTSYAJi
20 YN1$ ~ Reta
rM YOUR HAHOYMAH•
MARK 949-650-952~
J\IM( TO Tl1E OUttlPH!
714·968-1832 AVAILABLE TODAY!
!MH73·SS66
PUf AFEW
WORDS TO
WORK FOR
YOU
(~i~ b42·;b78
• 1, f t I ~ ''\ \
newoortan!1a91ng ~0m
1'nu"'' ,..,... Lr-v••'-
t .. ....... ,,. "'"""" ..
NEW TlEATMUlT
FOi ClflONIC PAIN R • ._l. ,,.._.,L 9'n .. -.
••• ,. I ,.U•Uld.-t •,,,'"'-'en • -...u I f•"-l'•t•lu.•h11n
-800-700-8774
Iott I •119\Aln
TIME TO BEGIN
YOUR HOME
IMPROVEMEHT
• PROJECT?
call II plumbef,
painter, handy·
man. or lll'f al ttw
vreat serv1i;11
ll$ted here 111 our
direcloiyt-THESE
LOCAL
SVC PEOPI.£
CAN HEl.,P YOU
TODAY!
PUBLIC
NOTICE
The Cafrf oWI<
Ut11 ties Com·
m!k on REQUIRES ltlal .. _...., ~
hold goodS ITIOV« i
pon: ttie•r P U C
cat r runb8f 11mOs
and crautttrs 11nn1
ttleo! T ~ p nun-oer
in ll ~ieru
11 Y' " have a QI* too abOIJI Ille 1e9a;.
11y ' a mc)llef Imo or 1 l'lalJfft!f caJ
PU )l.IC lJTlL.llES
A)MMISION
14 ~"8·•151
PA'-TING J
~,.,. ...
HT(~~ -~ . --#It ~~--·--· ,. "-"--. --...-· 114.ui.,,... < ......... )IM ...... , ·-
Cl .UNG S 1>•1t1TING
l7 Yun "•~ G<~ Pru Gua• 1 It~ Fr91 E•
l•J·.~ ~-~1S34
........ ., ...... -.
, .. IOCAJ-.o
IUC'flONC SlM LIMl DITlcnoH h.,..r*""•
'~~5-9304
RS Ptlnlmg Co .)rv, J'le P lfCISE PUIWBIHG
btSI ,9eni1...,, '"""' P"'.W'lli flepaom & Re'TIOOM i11ll ttC0t!WT' o-i t'(t< f"AEE EST'MATES
------· ~ 41)V" 714-C:l:M..!!_ ~17398 714"50~
~
H o o fing
~peciall~tlJ ,._ .. _ .... , ,, ..
949-"'22-8846
71't-75 J-884& '--,......... ~
G & G UPHOl..S'TmY
$o.10t I 3 Cuslarn o/IW!,,.
.V--, WO a.~ ii"
!!M....!!f!! 71~:!!.!L
-\'/AU. ~OVEAINns
FARTlflHG IH'i!RIORS
~-•IO' • Rl<l"llMI'' ~ IV1t~ring1
~75 --~
SELL
your home
through closs1hed
REACH 80,000 HOMES
EACH WEEK FOR ONLY
$28 per week
4-tc. min.
New 01t. Beach
36 mo.lease
"
+ 99c + tax Closed end lease 36 mo. 10ic mi. per yfff, .20c per mile therNfter. $4,499 total to
stal1. Residual SlS,700 Total ~ts. St2,239 +tax..~ to prior sale and aedlt approval.
Prior rental. Price good fhn.1 0112.610t. (284506) ll3377.1)
l'b lmt '8 monlh cloeed...d lecae on~ aeOI 2C • o. -•
-I 21( mi'-'/)'80' I at lh11 proce $ l 055 due cJI Mgr ng .._..,l...de,
$350-clep(9021911
~ tmc 4 n'O i... uc~mile ,,._ 121t pl")~ On ~ bil dri-ot-oft l3n 6 1~38A)
FACTORY SCHEDULED M .illNT•NANC8*
ftf 3~ llltt L"1CL\!DEO ... ,_!-,~
........... ......
•
.. ..
. 84 Saturday. January 20. 200 l
Daily Pilot
Artists lend Costa Mesa a hand • YOUTH BASEBALL
CM Pony tryouts
scheduled today
•Hernandez's pt>nctlty
kick , dfte r d hdnd bdU ,
y1ves Muslctng!:i 1-0 win.
Tony Altobelli
DAILY PILOT
cus·r A Ml.:.SA Whvn
tlH' c ·ostt• Me!>a I f11Jh bur ..
'IX'<'i't lt'dlll pldy'o IL'> <Jdn u•, tl\
I tfl'('I~('. ( r1lnlf,1tl'(J dlld Vt'ry
I OlllfOlfl'd
So, how w1111ld ( orwlt
L·uql'rw lh1y cl1•-.111111• llw
f\h1!>tdlllJ'o0 pl.1 ~ d11ntl<j 1·11
clcty'.., 1 Cl P.i< Ill< ( 0llct'ol
l 1•cl(llll' WIJI llVl'I Vl">lllll<I
l.rtqund Aedch?
"Wl· playPd k1<kl>t1U
lt1<foy: IJdy Sdlt.1 With d wry
!>lllllt• "When wt• µldyt•d
undt>r c untrol, we t unlrollt>tl
the gdine, but any ume Ldyu-
fld Bcdch µut ... 01111~ fJrP!.!>un •
on W>, ti became d ydrn!• of
k1< klldli, wluch L" d1 ·l1111lt•ly
11ut our style:
Fortunulely IM llw Mu.,·
lclJllJS (8-4· 1 , "l.· I 111 lt•cHJUI')
llllt' god.I wni. oil Uwy would
nt•Pd dCJillilSl thP 1\r11 ... i... (h ') l
I l)
S1•ven mllhJtt•., 111111 thl'
lfdJlll', Mt•M. 'l'lll cl h1l HJ pd..,.,
mlo the Artists' 11111t· hut r1
Ld<Jlllld Bf'cH"h pl<1y1•1 ,.,,1..,
wlustled fur mtenllonally lut·
Ung the bd.ll Wlth lus hd!ld,
rt>'>ultmg m d penalty k.tck
SPrlior lhnidad H emdndez
took the penalty kKk and
dnllc>d rt shot mto lhi:> upper-
n9ht comN uf Ull' ylJdl for tht-
qc1nw's lone ld.lly
"It WJS dehrutely the n9hl
1 .111 to mdk e: Ddy sdtd of the
111lrnc lion "The pldyPr SWlpt•d
rtl 1t with Im. <1m1 dlld you C'an't
do U1t1t, l''>l)('C"ldlly m tlw box •
flWrt' nldY hdV(' bt'Pll 011ly
w11· q11c1l .. r un•d, hut th•·ll·
Wt•111 111<111y lll'ctr-rm.,sP<; for
hoth t1•c1111i., l''>pt·t 1<1lly !hi'
t--1 ll"ldll(~ ...
I lt•mdnd!'1 h1111-..·lf h11d
hve opporturubes, but was
Wlable to find the back of the
net on any of them.
"Turu knows the game and
he knows his wdy around the
soccer held." Day said
"Today, he seemed to hurry
lus shots and that's why he
Wdl> just missing out there. A
lilUe more under control dJld
he's PttSily got two or three
more goals in his pocket •
The combination of Her·
ndlldez and senior Bemddo
Pei.Id worked weU ed!ly. Fdln
nearly headed Ill d shot from
I iemdndez. then rrunutes lat·
Pr. Fcilo returned the favor
with d ruce JJ<l!>S to I IPmandez
But I lemdndez's shot sdiled
JUSt wide, send.mg an agoruz-
tng Day to the ground tn dis-
belief
The Artists had a couple of
sconng chances m the ti.rsl
half. but fill-in goabe Lows
Ody (four saves) dnd defender
Billy Lund each ca.me up with
the big play to keep the ball
out of the net.
Ody WdS tn gOd.l for starter
Bryce ShenddJl, who was gw·
en d red cdid m the Mustangs'
cont<:'!>l with Northwood
Wednt?sddy C0c1ch Day Sclld
Shenddll w1U be bdck in gOc1.I
Monddy when MeSd play!> at
Uruvt•f'>1ty d t "i I 5 I' m.
COSTA MESA -The Cos
ta Mesa Pony baseball league
will hold tryouts today at 10
d .m . on Costa Mesa Hlgh's Vdf-
s1ty bd.seball field.
The Pony d1v1s1on IS for
players ages 13-14 and pldyers
may register at the tryouts.
The regtSLratlon fee IS $110
per player. For mformation,
call (949) 225-9237.
NI IHA has openings
for 2001 campaign
The Newport Hcubor Bd.Se·
l>cil.1 Assoc1dtion !>llll hdS room
for playen. dges 5-14 for thP
upcoming basel>dU !>e<1son
PIRATES
CONTINUED FROM 81
"Lvl'ryhod y L., 4011111 h1ql'I
up Oil N1lk: lull ..... 111 "111-.
pmhl<•m tCJrnqht "'"' lh1· !11111
troulilt' thdl tonk h1111 11111 ul
Ju ... <JtlfllP •
T-wolves surprise Eagles, 2-1
RegtStralJOn is $85 for play-
ers dges 5·b, $135 ror agto>s 7 -8,
$150 for t1ges 9-10, $1b0 for
dges 11 -12 ctnd $175 for dQP'
13-14 There is ~o d $25 hc>ld
lc>e for edch farruly
fht• Ulll' t"ok 1HJV1tlll<H1"
• 11 tlll'll <1pport\lllltll'' otl th1•
l11•t-11t111w hnt· , • .., tilt•\ 111<.111"
1 'l 111 I h 111 llll' !11,t h.111 <Jnd
I 11 ll'>ht •cl 2.1 111 .n
TIW fu1cil <.,PVl'll 1111111111•°'
'oftUWt•d ldSt-pdC Pd 1H 111111 '"
1111111 tt•ctJlb slrt•dk<·d 011 tr.in
..,1t1on Aflpr Ad11.111 /\rq11t1yo
dnlh·d " Lhr1·Ec"pU1111t•r, tlt1•
< •till< ho'> It'd, h.l-';CJ, w1tl1 h 1 l
lt'llhHnlllCJ
IRVINE -Estancia High
boys soccer coach Steve
BOYS C renshaw said
SOCCER host ~orthwood's
into the upper-left comer of
Ule goal to create a t -1 half·
tune tie.
A foul in the 18-yard box
produced a penalty kick for
Northwood and Jeff Oelinan
converted for the game-win-
ner rrudway thro ugh the sec-
ond half.
Giovanni Gonzalez (two
saves) and Adam Kapko
(three) split the goaltending
duties for the Eagles.
The sea~on begms Mdrt h ·1
and ted!Tl!> wtll be pldced by
nud-February
For reg1slJdlton 1111otrnd1Jon
c.1111<WI) 45 1-2228 physical play Knights top Mesa ..
"It\ Jll'ol o1111.tllt·r 11! 110., If)·
11lq 111 fi11d <I W1Jy !11 WUI !ht•
hct'okl'!brtll CJdllll' • 11111 '>did
"Wt· nt"'t '((Pel to qt •I 11 qood
'hot rtl tJi1 • I •rte! r111d WI' d1d11'I
du th<1t •
< >< ( ', how1•v1•1, Wl'lll 011 ,,
J.l 4 run civt>r Uw rn·xt lhn·t•
rrunutt> ... t--1.idnrl qr.illlu•d t111
o ff1 •l)SIV(' fl'br11md <tnd Wfl~
l1111h •d 1m th(' J'lllb.irk 1\111,
llir1t would hi• llw ld'>l lu·lcl
uoctl 111<1d<' for the> Bue'> Wh1 •11
hP cor11plt•1t·d th1• thH''' p11111t
pldy, l >< "< • lt·cl, 71-llh, but tlw
ho-;ts ll1<1ll<1CJ!'d fll"I 11111·
I l<1<JPdrn11 !11't· thru"' tiu• '""'
of thp Wtl'y
helped them earn a 2-1
Pacific Coast League victory
over the Eagles Friday.
Northwood's Jinuny Lee
opened the scoring, but
Estancia senior Atmdf1do
Ortiz curved a direct free
ldck over a defensive wall
dnd away from the keeper,
Estancia fell to 6-3-3, 2-1-
0 in league. The Eagles sur-
render sole possession of the
PC L lead, which they now
share with Costa M esa.
COSTA MESA -Costa
Mesa High seniors Erin
GIRLS Bayes and Dana
POLO Steenhard sc~red
two goals apiece,
but visiting Katella recorded
a 9-4 nonleague girls water
polo victory Friday.
SCHEDULE
TODAY
• Basketball
Et1rl rt•h11111·d Ill tlH' 1111ddl1•
ol ( >< ·c\ ltr..,t -h.tll ..,, onnq nm
I It· 1111 " Ut1t'P·f>01Jllt•1, It .......
lht.111 .i rrnnuli> .altr•r '" 1•nll·r·
111q
REQUEST cHj\l~UC :.ports d"> <ill l'Xdmpl1• SAILORS
College men · Vanguard
at Bio la, 7:30 p.m
College women -Van
guard at Biola, S 30 p m .
•Water polo l::cJrl <1l~o ... t11\.\ 1'tl down
'\,tcldlP!JJI k ''o 'otdl l1t •">ftllt1lll
p•Hlll q11t.111I f\l,11k B1nw11 ,
who frnL..,ht'(l with IL poull ....
tl1011qh 1•1qhl c.1mt • 111 th1• flf<.,I
ht1ll
"You < 1111 t sit lwn• t1t '>·I
e1nd '>d~ yuu'n• di lht• top
Nohody I'> qumg to q1v<· you
<1n~1.hmq m Uus conf PrC'n< t•
Voll hr1vP tu e dm II," I hll !><lid
CONTINUED FROM B 1
Woudbncl~JI' I hqh Pnnn·
p.al C rPg Cop~ st11d thf• S<•e1
V11•w l...edgur> wnnld prf'll'r lo
.sdd one srhciol
CONTINUED FROM B 1
High school girls · Santa
Margarita at Corona del
Mar, 1 p.m .; Estaneta at N CSI
Tournament, TBA
"It Wd ... 11'1 lllllC h Of rJ f>Poll·
11!11! <Jdllll'." CdtH hn'o ( 0ll<H h
Bill Brnmml'l '>t11d But. ll
w,1 ... ,1 hrtrcl l1111qhl q11n11·
ThrorP wpn•n I v1•1y rr1r111y
ORANGE EM'fRE CONFERENCE
Saddleback 82, OCC 72
Saddlebadl -McAfee 17,
< ·,m•y c 1tt·d <JPoqrctph)
rtrHI c OffifWlltlV(• equity
I which. ,slonq wllh enroll-
rrwnt. 111dkP uµ lh1' thn:•<'
rc•fpc1gu11u1 r ntPnd oullinP<I
111 the> <,Pelion conslttulton) cL'>
n·t1~on... why Uw Mustdfl!J"
cm• '>l'<·kllly tlw Chdl1lJC' Shi'
elbo '>rtld the> Mesd's clPmo-
g rd ph 1C"\ dH' morf' c;;mtlJdI to
< :oldt'n W<''it Lectgl1to> ~chcx>b
Tuslln, whu h d c-oni.Pn!>us
of GotrlPn WP~l LC'r1gw·
... r huols bPltev£• should ht•
n •m11vPcl from th al let1glH'.
rnuld lw d rctnthddl<• lo Jotn
l.ht> Spa View
Scud Bdml'tt, ''If we conltn-
u1• lo do wPll, and that met1ns
in lhf' Irvine Tournament. 11
will q1vP us c1 much bellf>r
..,c•t•dtng 111 {the> CIF playoff s) •
•Soccer
High school g1r Is · Costa
Mesa at Katella Tourna·
ment. semifinal against Sun
ny Hills. 10:30 a.m. (Champ1·
onship game and/or third·
place game to follow at
12:30 p.m .)
'"1"~ '>hob· Donegan 15, Wllhams 12. Brown
12. Arguayo 9, Batiste 6, Washing
ton 4, Read 4, Bacchus 3
3 pt. goals McAfee I, Bacchus
NONLEAGUf
Newport Harbor 7,
Capo Valley 4
Score by Quarters
With Burw1·ll in It nil truu
1111·. I ILll hiuk1•d lt1r ntht•r pl.1y-
1·r., lo ... t1•p 11p 11rul tltt•y did.
I f,l(JPdOrn upp1•d hl'o ploy
.ahinq with R.imly L.1111..,trP (h)
.111d Jt>rPrny t-. lr1dnd ( 1 I). who
1111 u ll1r1>11·prnnlt'r to rom-
plt •ti• c1 14 ·.l run cpvrnq Uw
l\11r·.., ct 57-'iO t•dql' with lJ:4"L
11 'llldlnUlq
Cdp1Slrd.11o UrulJ1'<i'!> T1~J111
dJ1d Tusun Unl11ed's 8 (.>ckmd.11,
op• •11my nf'Xl tctll c.tnd lenlrl·
IJV1•ly thf' ldlJ of 2003, rC'Spi'<"·
tlV(>ly. c>xpres.c;ed d dPSII<' to h<·
plctred in the• PCL
Capistrano Valley 1 1 0 2 · 4
•Wrestling Orange Coast · Hagedorn 23,
Earl 13, Madrid 11, Burwell 9.
Webster 8, Labistre 6, Meyers 2
Antr1l !>did the d Prn11 -
qrr1ph1c ... of lus school'~ n1rr1
111u111ly ht1v<> led to d si tut1l111n
whPrP m<lny sports dll'
"ov1•ni1<1tched· m the l't1nl1<
< '11d'-I L<·.iguP I IP nlt·d
Cnlvc1ry <"hc1p1·I ,incl
Newport Harbor 0 3 1 3 · 7
Capis1reno Valley • Am. 5ta-
choW1kt 2. Seuc 1, A1. StachoW1k1 1
Saves McColl 11
High school boys -
Estancia at University Tour
nament, all day; Costa M esa
at Buena Park Tournament.
all day.
Polley
3 pt. goals · Webster 2, Madrid
1, Earl I, Burwell 1
Fouled out Burwell
Halftime · Saddlebatk, 35 34
< )rdntJf' Lt1lhPrr1n, rt•rC>ntly
CJIOUJ>Pcl with <OWlty public
..,, hoots. arP dlso cand1c.ldtes
lo ft>m the> PCL.
llow to Place A
Newport Harbor • Belden 3,
Booth 2. J. Ball 1, Lansing 1 Saves
Deyden 10
fl.111 • ,11111 d1·aell1111 -;Ill" .111111·1 t I•• e 1111111!1·
\111!111111 1111111 1 1111· p11l1li.lll'r 11·•1°t\t'• 1111
11!!111 1 .. , , ""'' ,; 'la-.il 1 rn 1-t· •11 1e·1e·1·1
1111 • l.t-.ilwcl .1.t"'' 11.e·1111·111 1'11·11·•· n·t••ll
•11•1 'I 1111 tl111I 111.1\ ''" 111 I eotll • l1t••lfit•tl 1111
tllllllt'• ltit le fl I l1o I l,111 I f 'if,.1 :te'•"<'f •I· Ill•
l1.tlJ1f11 I !111 ltlll •'t •111 111 .111 ,11l11·1 11.e•1111 Ill
(111 11 l11e f1 II ltloll f,.. IC'•11••1t•if1l1• t'\1 ' p l f111
1111• • •l•I 111 tfi,. •l'•I'' It• 11111 111 ·~' llfltt'c) 111
1111 e·11111 I 11·dt1 e •Ill 11111> f,.. allH\\l•d 1111 tit<
IE • ~IFIEIJAD l\1m1dH\ ................. Fndny :l:OOprn
TUt·,..du~ .... .. \10111111) :>:OOp111
Wed1w~d11y ... , .... T1w:-dt1) :>:OOp111
II)· •"'ax Ry PhcHK• Hy MaJWn PerNOU:
0 -t1iJ (1°11 f)-111.t 1l/1t11 11 .. :.! :.1i~:; 1.111 \\ "'' B111 "'I ll•t I
'""'' ltl,t'ftlUtl
1'!1 +I•• 111! 111+1' 'flW HtHW utd
t•tlt•UI lllllt1l .. 11m•l ... 1 u ... 11, ltt
h 1; l • 1tt1 ,, t•••• t 'I'"'" t
I ·IS
101 ·2H
Discount Casket
C 1< 111.111 .. 11 .111<1 Bur 1.tl \, 1 \ 1• •
CmnK Srrrnrr and Quality C11km fo r J.m
Direct Cremation .. $495
Immediate BuriaJ .. $995
, (frirludn l .11""'
1'1l·~rr.inKcrnrn1 l'ro~r.1m, Available for
.. uncral ~rvtl.C5, ( rC'mJllOns a.nd U5kC'U
« c > '\ 11' \It I .1111 I " \ \ I
I 1 I I I
I XHX . .,,( \-..1,1 I
I I ' I • ,l .. I ' I.,~ • \ '
STARTING
ANEW
BUSINESS?.
• • • • • • • • • • •
PIERCE IROTHEJIS
BEU lllOADWAY
Mortuary * Chapel
Cremahon
110 Broadway
Costa Mesa
842-9150
',., ''K*'' '''/+"'"'""'N' ,,,, tJ.,. I J.,,,. '''"'' ,, "'' .. '""I• ""'"''"'''HI"' "''" ,,, I,,, "'"' "'""'""It",,.,.,~ ""'''"'"'' \II, w.;1U """' \J.,Aflr If,,,_,""''"/'",...,"' 't-f' ,..,.,..,,, ,J.ffl~' ""'"' 1.,., "'~ 1h,.
,,,,., .,.J ,,., ,..,, '" 1iv I fOH-f 114,.,. , .. ~.,,AM I"""'· 1t/ ''""'"' "'''' ,,~
l#lfrrlt H ,.,,_,,1,nr.,1._. r,,'fU fU, J"" .. ~ ""'MC. M''" tlJI&,..,.,,., flNIA 1./., ' ~¥~,., (Jn.It, """""4 .",... lllW<f"" ~ ........ "'""""'"" ""· """ ,J,, .. fl, -· ,.._, •f ,,..1.1,,.,.,.,. """'~~a..
'""'" ,,., "' ,,. fi'-r"' fi'"-'-'-_, *' ,,,., '"'"· /\i,.1, 1111 II' '*'? <;, f .,,_ M•"' If,_ '"'""'' ,,., h,.... ,,J/.., #I (°'4YI MJ 4 IJ I .r..J ... •• u _..., __ ,,,,_, .... ,., ,.. ....... .JJ,""' ,,..,.. ... ,,, ~
ff-,,.._J.1 J.,,w 1•t /-~ ,,..,.,,,,..._ 1"-r.JI w •.J .,., -.11 ~ .... ,. 1i.. .. pJ le •not ,..... t "....J /~ '"' ,..,, """'._,,.rut
220 . Jtl
400 -412
Flctltlou1 Bu1lne11
Name Stlltement
The lollow1ng persons
are domg business es
CAA TOY2', 2470 New
porl Blvd Costa Mesa.
CA 92627
Pll1llp C Moncrtel.
27092 C111111 Dot Cid.
MISSIOO VlejO. CA 92691
This business 1s con
ducted by an tndMdu&I
Have you ll&rled
dotnO bu~ti•8~• yet?
YM. 12/t/'95
Pholop C Mnncnel
Th11 stalemnnl wu
ltled w1rh !he Counly
Cter1t of 0<11nu11 Covn!y
on o t II 2.l200 t
2001&151821 DeJIV P1to1 Jan 13 20
u...£.._tb i. 200~ Sa~I
PUBLIC NOTICE
CITY OF
NEWPORT BEACH
Pl•nnl~ep•r1mant of 1he C ol NawpOl1
O.actl Nawpo11
Boulav11d Newport
Beectl
Planning Olreotor'•
UM Permit No 71
No4ioa .. he(aby given
lha1 an appllcatlon hH
bHt1 llbmlhed by Larry
O"Aoul'lle, to at!ow Iha
~lry UM ol p.-opo
at1y fOr Ille tlO<IQt And
r9'1'ifl to 1n atd•llnO
bOeil tor • Pl'IOd °' lime not '° ellt>Md one .,..,
Tha be* ooauplM a pot
llOn °' ltlt ~"'° toe Ind ~ & .....,
off e1reet parking
.... The PIOl*1Y .. ~ ., .,. 8P & Dfit-
' 11•111 \lt·-.1 (. \ 11:.!11..!-
\1 \,. , •• ,. 111 .. 1 ,\ 11 ... •1
Index
Incl (Manners M•le Spe·
cdlc Plan Area)
P1ope•ty lncalPd el
2244 West Coasf Hwy
Thea p<Oject has Oe9f1
reviewed. a11cl 11 hes
been delermtned lhal II
1s calegorlcally eaempr unaar Iha raquttements
or the CalHornla
Envtronmental Ouehty
Aci under Cius t Exl!t·
1ng F eethlles
Pl•nnin9. DtteCIO• I
Uee Permit No 79 it
sohlldUled IQ< reV111w by
Iha Plann1~ Dep&rt
ment of Ille Clly ol New
port 04!ach on or afte•
't uasday January 30
2001 Wnnon COO'W'll4IOI• °' mpul related lo Iha
prorecl 1hould be
1ubm<Med lo Ille Plan·
n1ng Department by
Mon<hly January 29,
200 t tn 0<daf lo !>@ oon-
~td 1n Iha Ptannong
Ot<ecior • dectlOofl If 11p-
pt0\fetl Al Iha time of re-
view. Iha a,ppeel petlod
ol t 4 d1y1 will b991n
ltom lhll dell, during
which lime 11ny in-
larH1ad party or lt>alr
•u1homltd 1gan1 •o· gnaved ol INI Oeci8lon
mAy Illa • none. al ~
peel to !h• Planning
CommlMlon w!ttl • llling
'" ~ 1714 00 to defray the ooat ol Iha llJC)ell ptoc.Gura
MOTE Tt141 ••Pll'M al .. r'IOtloe la peld from
• 1111'11 '" OQllllc:ltd from
IN,.=: Newport a .. ch·CO•t• M ...
~ Piiot JalMlfY 10. '°°1 8t412
420
ao ·46•
PUBLIC NOTICE
CITY OF
NEWPORT BEACH
Planning Depar1ment ol
the City ol Newpor1
Beach '.1300 Newport
Boulevs•cl. Nowporl
Beach
PDA2001 ·004
for UP200Hl01
Nohce 1s hereby given
that en epphca11on has
been submllfed by
Suzanne POflner lo e•·
labhsh s personal Im
provemen1 factl11y spa·
c1a1111ng 1n hair and
beauty prOducla and
MMC98 The l)foperty la
locat90 '" lhe SP·S 0... Incl (Manners Mila Spao-
etli<: Plan Ataa)
Property located •I
120 T ustJn Ave Sulle B
Thl1 Pfoteci hu bMt1
reviewed and n hH
beet> delennin.Q "'411 ii
11 catego<tully ax.mp!
under the raqulremen"
ol the Caltlornla
Env1ronman11t Oo1111y
Ac1 ut>d9< Cle .. 1, bill>
Ing F ttcilillea Uaa P.,mlt No
UP200t-001 11 ~
ullld lor review by !fie
Ptenntng Oeparun.nt of
1he cr1y of Nawpo11
8Moti on QI after T !Me
dey, Jenuery 30, 2001
Written oomtT!lnb QI In-
put r1llllted '° .. ptoj9d ~bl~to
Iha PleMlng ()epar1·
"*11 by Mondlly. Jiwiu-
tuy 20. 2001, In °"* '° be OOMldet9d In the
P\etwlinQ OlttdOt'• °'" dllol'I ff llPPIOWd .. ..
.... fll ....... .. ... Plltod fll ,. dlY'I
HourH
Ir l1·pl11111•· I\ .\011111-:-, Ollp111
\l111ul11\ I 111h1\
\\ .dk 111 I: 11111111 -, OOp111
\l1•1i•l11\ f r11l.i\
will begin from lhet dare.
during wt14ct> time any in·
1ertsfed perry 01 thotr
aulhortzad agon1 eg·
grieved ot that doclSIOn
may me a notl<:e of ap-
peel lo lhe Planning
Commt&slon wtth a flflng
IH of $7U 00 IO delf"lly
the cost ot the appeal
procedure
The apphcalton and
development plans of
the ptopoaed projac! ire
111etleble IOI pubttc re
view and lnapacilorl 11
lhe P11nn1ng Dep1f1·
menl City ol Newpon
8e1cll. 3300 Nawpon
Bouteverd Newport
BHch. Calllornla,
92669 t768 For lurthet
1nf01m11lon comaci Iha
Newpo<1 Beach Plan·
nlng Department ti
(940) 6-«·3200
MOT'E The ••~H ol
tNI notiOe " peld ITom • l~lnO '" co1141cied from .,.,. ICJPljeant
Publi1had Newport
BHCh·Colle Men
Dally Pllol January 20.
2001
51493
.,., • 471
Purcha11ng Olllce.
f 0844 Ellis Avenue,
Fountain Valley, Cal1for·
nla. for the l~lowmg
PURCHASE Of' SIX j8) FORD TAURUS SE
SEDANS
SPECIFICATION NO.
2000/01-18 Sealed bide must be
1ubrnltted on Iha lorm
eupplled by the D11trict
Jn accordance with all
p<cMslons of the apecifi.
cationa Spacif 1e111on1,
bid blanka and lvf1hat ln-
lormahOn m11y be Ob
lalOa<I 81 1tie lboYe iwj.. °'"' 181e(>tlona (714) 593·'7583
Publl1had Newport
BHch Co111 MeH
Delly Pilot Janu1ry 20.
200t
S1484
Flcthloua Bualne ..
Heme Statement
Th9 following per1on1
are dQjng bueliW ..
Dregonfly Cettrl09,
20212 OrtHd St . .._.
por1 BHdl CA 92880
WMdy Olllttt. 202t2
Orchid St ..L..-~•wpor1 e..d1, CA v-~
Erto QllleQ, 20212
Orchid St., Newport 8Ncltl, CA '2990
Thia bualneal II con•
Mt«! by lubend end
wife
H•ve )IOU 1t•rted ~~yf/f? No
Thie • ....,,.,..,. ...
lllecl ...... "" ~ ~,r,J::r Ccult'f ..... ...... °*,...-to. n p:.:_ 3, IQ. pt itiC
'l'lau r~duv ....... \\1·d111•:-d<1) .):OOp111
Frid11'\' ............. Tl1ur!-d11v .).00p111
Suturdn) ............ I· r1d11\ .):OOp111
All IHI nlalt a<Mrttstno
tn 1111'\ ntwSpaper II tu~
to '"* fll(!fral ~•h ti0u11no A<.t ot 1968 u 1m1no10
whtcl! moea 11 •llfl911 lo Mlvertllt ·.,,y preftrence.
llm1tat;on or d1scnmrn111on btsed on tact. COior r.llo· ton, sn . Nndlcap tamlliil
ltl\111 or tlllhonai orlQln, or an lnlenllon lo mw .,,,
such P•slt~ llmi~hon or~-,,.~ nwspaper -nor -nowtngly JCupl any •d•1ti1u m1nt lor 1ut eslal1 wtllch II In ~IOIAlion
ol !he law Ou< rU0.11 art hor11>y tnlo1mtO tll•I all
OW.UlllQW "-llM<I Ill 11111
"8WIC)ljl« llll .wallltOlt 00
an ICllM5 oe llKlt To~ n ol ~Ifni.
nation HUD 1011 ''" 11 l·I00 .. 24-9690
~I
6M ·697
•
......... ., .... ' ..
V .A. SO MOVE.-.
fflH CouflM4ln9 FRfE Utt 01 1toMea
HIJOJVA REJIOS
714-534-18()()
V...,.,, AMI &tMt
EmaU:
vre11ge1dnc.com
CLASSIC DUPLEX
Open Set ' Sun Large front houte w/361b &
large 1ta1 1 Br unrt This ts Ill
e•celtent cond111on $8251< Mldlael Brinkman Agent
Coeetllne Rff 11y
9-49-759··0177
BEST BUY
CHEERFUL & SPACIOUS
detcnbes thlS 2Br l O't'l'l'oll5e
end-uM wll4)dated knchen
& OC!lel UllQl ldeS $389 900
Prudential CA Realty CaU
BJ JolY\llon 949 219 2«1
Fl,.t Dey ~ tor ....
vt.w, IO ol PCH,
Open S.l/Sun 1 H
31& Han! Drive
$895,000
Jim & Pi ny McDon1ld
COM HorMa i4HSH070
I "-:nn l
NEW HOME~ HouM
from S271 990 Pt1vale
E nciave QI t 7 Home!> Only
1 lett• TYw<>-Sty 3 Bis ? • /
Ba 2c an oar Up 10 1 !>05
Sq rt Adjatent to Newpon
Beach & 1 nani;e Sqw1e
~49·650· 1440
•2Br 2.SBI, Twnhm S 1751<
-4Br 2B1, 1 ·Story S294•
714·241·4S32
• AellEalitera.net •
E SIDE 4bt, :H>., cloM 10
blck bey. l01 aln over 1/4
ICll w/pool Loll of
upgredM 3A 1 Vlett Blye
BY OWNER
Wiii Colop with broklre.
VRM $660,000 $475,00
9.49·54&·5758
E Sidi CM 3bt :H>. 1seo sf
6500 R2 comer lol below
17th. 24 7 KHOX Sl
OPEN SAT/SUN 12-4
$-449,000
Br Owner 94~211-nes
lnne<loop MESA VERDE
OPEN SAT 11-4
2921 Pembe Dr 3llf 2ba 3
bonue rm•. clen, encl
pello w.i-eum By Owner
S343,000 71 M34-043.4
··-.............
•
-
-.. ~
•' • IA
PRIME ESTATH
Loi. ' OceM .,...., call Pmtell Tenott
AQ!!'lt 94M5M706
BAYVIEW ml llA, Loft
~ .. Vlt PW(, PWl
4 Wl'dl ·~ polet1llll $-4 7111< Prud Cl RMlly
AQ!!l1 94i-219·2422
OPEN SAT/SUH 12~
880 HAL Y ARO
CAP COO eyll 1owMomt Ocu n BrtnHI 2br
2.25bt 2 ctr 1ttadl get,
By Owner S29t,OOO
Ruth MH50-8430
Mt tton 31 C>-992-793-4
Super Buyl S289,000
2Br 2Ba, 2 de<:Q, pool, spa,
tennis 12 C.nyon fellnd
(Ford Road) Open Sun,_.
Co<Ofll def ..., Propert!M
949·673-1494
Top of lht Hiii 2Br 2 58a!h,
one! UNI condo In Ille Cape
COd communt1y Harll<>t
View l<r><Als Ttios unique
p<OC>8'1'f " al Ille lql ol !he
l<nol W!ln a I~ wrap
dlound gr"'1belt lllill olt&B
a leet;ng QI a latge pnvate
lawn Olteied a1 $.460 000
Open s.t ' Sun 1-4 A I MHlH721
JUST LISTED Wat...,,ew
Duple• comer loC 28fs
eacn " gar•ge s no ooo a en1 949 642 1872
OPEN SAT /SUN 11 "5
1030 Beyllldt Cove
2bt 1 5l>I condo, dlennel
view, cloM to 1Wbo8 II.
boat ~k IVlll $895K
9*721·9270
LIDO SANDS
P"' comm t 00 yd5 10 bdl' Completely remod lo15 ot
upgraoes• By Owner S575K
714 848·8222 Woll x221
Eves 9"49·646-7162
PORT STREET
HOME FOR SALE
Highelil point 1n aJ Hatbof Vtew Homes
Stunno09 m0tmta1n & ctty
lqlts View 10 000 • sl lot
•Br 2 58a $925 000
Gerry Long
Coldwell Banker
949·7 I 8·2366
• • Btutte Ntw Ustlng ,
dewable 4bo w mstr on
main M 2 li'g pallOS gr_..
oe" s.c 35K Sany SlllJ)Yly,
Prue! Ca Alty 94H19-2414
Sea F1lr1 BHu lg 1Br
Condo w pool view lrplc
oak & Bert>ei llOO<s W1D
AC iac tub S224 000
Br Owne• 949 51 S.28n
BEACH RETREAT
$379,000. 3BR 3BA ••••• BRAND NEW
CAPE COD $689,000
LAGUNA NIGUEL PRIME LOCATION
PresllQIOO!o 111ew locallon * * * * * nea1 ocean beaches New BEACH GIANT 5 700 sl custom ~ bull
w1U1 and detail F01 mOle $n5,000 78R 4BA
11110 r.an Truman Ba~ey * * * * * Agt 949 49!>-5<120 ON THE WATER
Pne. $2,295.000 Amaz.lng Low Price ••••• 111-=-= I AGENT M•72U120 ::.7:'" I .. .:na I
Adjac.nt to Newport • -
Beech & Triangle
Square. 94 9-650-1 «-0
•&tN Uquldetlon Vllue
Palalwl 5Br Back bey view
7687 II Emte w pool & ,.,a.
SI 495 000 Call Patr"k
Tenore IQ! 949 8!i6 97~
LIDO ISLE T rad111onal
Home com;t< loC SOUlhern
8Xj)O!M.lfe 38r 3811 M sac
sys1em. 2c 931 Offered at s 1 195,000 Sri GIU'ldy
ReahOIS, 949·675·6161
OPEN SUN 12-4
2107 Windward Ln
Blyc:res1 Horth .48r 3.SBe
l1<ge k11chen, bonue rm,
grH I l1mlly neighbor·
hood. By Owner. $849,000
t49-t31-t114
Monlc1Rugglerl.com
949·300·8600
PRIME ESTATES
Lots & OCMn Vltwll
Call PWiclt T tnof'I
Agent 949-356-9705
I'" =i:il
NEWPORT OFFICE
CONDO 1 bloc~ to Hoag
Hogp11a1 :il)4 eq II, end unit,
0111as A9f!!11, Prudentlal Ca Realty 949·!>48-9064
2001 LINCOLN
NAVIGATOR
... ,, .......... . .. .... , ...... ""• • ., • "" •••• -... •# # -
Fumlehed 28r 281 Fp,
hlgll ce~lngs. deck, WtD,
~. 6mo or yffy $2200/ mo • dep 949-675-5634
1 oon to Slndl S<Jnny 28t
1 Ba. new peinVcerpetlble
Fp, w/d hl\-;ips, cerport
$1950/mo 1leo !Br tBa
$1150/mo 949-673--4383
l=--~1
Bring Flulty ' Fido Y0411 s-dl Ende Herwl
Cl!y oonvenoence w.ooastal
Clllml' Ovetmed 18r & 2&
llClC homes Wiit\ IP8QOU$
rooms and ~ 510ra08'
Healed pools a/Id apes
Dogs under 60 lbs welcome' trom S 121 S Cal ioaay 10
-'f(1.K new beach llddress I 888·2 t g.,0754
28r 1 Ba. bn!1ll & 3llY dean
w/d deck dlw S 1350
721 <h Marguerite Ave.
AVill now 949-72 H)4 SS
OCEAN SIDE OE POi
Huge 1b1 1ba gar $1495
Showing Sal ~ & Sun
3pm, 94~574.no1 e~ 122 I 110COITA :m I
Fluffy I Fido W.tcorMI s,_io.. 28r 28a. 11"5. I 3Bf ZS., SINO.
S200 olf sec dep on hrrt
VISlf Greet loallJon. ~ IO
!lllopprtg. lf>d lfWIUfes from
ttt. beach AsA lbour our
~W' ~~50252
WINTER SPECIAL
280RM 2BATH
~ 1100 $1 Apamiem
home ~ 111 a wooded
oommunr1'f near ~ asnion
ISiand w open Mdl9ll large
maSle< s..o1e ample Slorage
<Mll'Sl18 pabo & balOOny
From $1 !'>35
888 219 0754
HP ~II tmmac Jex 2ba ~r W qu1e1 toe Open
un 10·4 361 •B Lllj>erle
Ln $1!!00 94g.,53).68()7
FIND
an apartment
throuli!h classllled I 110COSTA :en I
••••••••••• ••••••••••••
: COSTA MESA I SOUT H COAST METRO • • .. Ciiam1lng Jll\IOI I Bedroom ! 500oooded by tennis. pool
alld 2 Bedroom 1 Batll
111 gated OOll1fTlUMy
• • • • 557-0075 Call 714-* ••••••••••••
• • •••••••••••
1154 ::Mi l E'Sldt re.. oory 1 Br I Ba
ITllle to tld'I va"19Cl eej Ing
stove nor S750m • S500
dell OA t626 Ne"llOl1
Blvd 9"49-6il2-4998 9a·~
a..utitul HM 3Br 28a Bay
wondows F p 2 pa!IOS gar'
a• amen 306 Coral By illlPl
310·273·3300
E'SIDE CO<lntry Woodt
tBr loft, 21ty, petlo. no
pell, S875rtkl. 180 £ 211L
M~s-ma
1 155 ~1 ELEGANT SENIOR UVING
fnioy II spar>ous swre
ente11arnmenl. er alts fun
rnps. rransportafJOtl. more'
COSTA NEUPORTE'
Mid Penln tum unl\Jm 3bl
2ba hM! Ip .n hvrm new
tutc. ba. pabo oH mstr many
wind $2600 949-673-7323
VeceUon Beech Rental 2 &
3Br 2Ba spacious deluxe
949-646·6300
ffllfllrnum !!2! S8
Furnltl»d Studio near T n-
Sqr w/deck. covere<l prl\g rn & water paid, no pets
725/mo 9"49·642·2818
condo tully furt\ 51eps to
bcli 0 2C !j!!r 9-49-6 7 !r 7130
Own ere Unit totally
Only one P..-i prrvate &
quiet. $67!.'mo u!!s 1nctd ,
$500~ 714·548·8797
remodeled UOSlilfS duple-
4b< 3ba. 2 IJ1$. ~ area $2600/mo 949 72 1502
HOUM 3bt. 2ba,mld penn
2 Ups 111 ~/fr new tutcnen.
bat!ls, pall() oil mas1er
~ ,...,,. Mot"'9 Horne i::· <Met ez ilCC85$ lo 55 walklO~ "" Slngle-wlde obit• Home. 1.SBr S750/Mo
~ no !!!IS 94~206
ITllWl'f WW'dows open house
Sat S2SOOmo MH73-73ZI
l'"::nl
Splc-n·Spen 2 llllge Br's
both wrwa lk on clouts
t 50as Fp IC gar llC)llC8
wal~ 10 everytt11n9• S 179!),
Mo 949-640 5324
CcM'ltg Furn 3Br 3Ba hm on 114 ac nr Fash Is Some
ocn 11\1 3c gar $1095 • 112
utls M~·2939
11t ~ llACM
WALK TO THE BEACHll
$400 Mcw.-ln Bonus on
1st mo. Ren II Noce 281
t 581 111 a ~acefli selllng $1220imo ve $480 on 1
~ear lease' 714-960-2468
1112 IR=I
8"utlful 2Br 28e new1y
(BRAND HEW) ll>f lbe
condo, wdllrw, veul1 cells,
WO, cerpof1 $1350 Avell
Mid Feb i4H21-t073
3Br South of Hwy Fp wl
t'~pelS S2200/mo , Prudenbal Ca
Rea!JX 949-219-244 7
remode4ed pool. spa,
l"t\85$, $1,395/mo. Pets
Weloome (8881 641-7362
Re91nll Point Retirement
Community In Irvine.
Oiiers ltie lrtedom '(QIJ
detlre and the lndepend·
IOOt 'fOIJ e.poo lor yoor
rtllrement 800-278-8898
l'·=n1
COM HOME
FOR LEASE
Ola CdM-381 • 2Ba
I Car Gar Oloer Duple•
Iron! un~ clean and ll\al'P E tron1 & reai
yatds $2500 Mo
Gerry Long
Coldwell Banker
949-718·2366
Village home "9!Y nice 3llr
2ba • den 2 car 9'11 WIQ
........, tlOwd ftrs lrplC S3150
All! 949-640-7000 306
l''°-:nl
Only one ri:r, unit Pf" & qultt. I Incl, no pell.
$475/mo • $600 ~It.
949-64&-8797
Rfftly Cute 3bt 2ba home.
newly rel\Jrt11shed quiet
area f:' lam~~ room bog yr $2600 9-7 ·1070
•BEAUTIFUL STUDIO•
P'll entr'f'l)llO q\li8t single
occ no. ~Open House 290.5 SUN 1-4
$750oMO 949-S.8·8226
UBr 28e lownhome walk
llVOu!1l par\ 10 T nangJe Sqr
Frplc: 1n IMIJil rm clming
area pantry own laundry
Oii pellO qar use ol pool
and ameMl8S easy access
10 lwy$ nrsmkl S 1500 Cal
Michael 949-583· 1510
Saturday, January 20, 2001
Pl.EASE CAU FOR ADDRESS.
SOME Of THE TENANTS: KINKO'S, FIGGE, MULDOONS, SPA
GREGORIES, EDWARDS THEATERS, COAST MAGAZINE, BOMBAY
CO., KMS NOTARIES. THE BRIDE, ELIZABETH BENEFIELDS, EDWARD
JONES, DENNIS JACOBSON PlASTIC SURGERY, AND M/1tNY MORE.
~ "°" ........ .-91 tonee, S-425 ~ wn.
nlghl 1t1nd1, 1200.
Kltd1en IMIM, wtllle Ille t09 ....,,... wood, ...
kf.t46.1440 142-6270 ,e JOANNA TARPLEY
949-760-9 150 ext. 212
Cell phone 949-230-2688
t4 ~ Cherry Wood
dlnln9 room ..c. f '°' & a
cNK1 bllltl & ~ '-*" New 5111 baaed DOii l9000
SiCl~ICf $2300 MMctwlg
54H'i411 $400 Mm ·22.11.
Welk to Sand-211 Orenge
3Br 2Ba new carpevpainl
b4tnds. lower unn 1 C81 oa•
$1850/mo 949-673·7800
Spacious 3Br 2.5Ba
2·Story Condo gated end
unit. pal•O garage near
water S2 I 50.'Mo Agen1
949 675·4912
BAYRIOGE CONDO
2br Iba, (Iii.cl comm, WI
0, deck, pool, 1p1.
SISOO Agt. M~nt-t575
Educated Prol't male
wants rmpv1 entr Ot QU851
hOu&e 10 steep1study wnte
n01k1Cli.\m~g S400·S700
1ncld utl& Bob 714 432 1391
1204 RENTALS I TO SHARE
Ftmale Pf•fd to 1h1rt 3llf
2b• condo w 1 ldrnale 1n
Oano1 Pomr Nice clean
1tashe1 & cJr'ler MOSS lrom
beacll A•a• ll<.>" V25 mo
utlls oncluded 'J4'.l 4.ol.j 295-4
HARBOR VIEW HOMES COM B11u lbr house, 48r 2BI. large L-:!Jrplc· 1hare prol fem, S800/mo. ~~on!M!l-75!1-9l14 • utll glr Incl avtlt F~
11th MM7l-OS69
Udo Isle 28r 281 Fp 11>-
lenor Cl1yrd 2c 9ilf no pets
$2800 Mo 949· 7 t 8·2 733
831·484·1835
Wnt11d• Costa Meu
lookJng tar a maMe rr.aie 10
share my .!Br hOme w1lll
$500 mo 949 631 2708
I
I
l8w Flrm Ila~ 2 ""'°* ol
ice "' Mal.M!>u• Coun airport B1ea1 1),15 15,9
cont 1m 1ecp1 DSL &
copier 9-49 752·6100
~rs 11 ... • ____ ....
Moving Sele Sat 8·3pm local iun.nt, C81a, dofl
comer ot 0111a .. are & tor tOo9llon _., Sit &
Memphi& 1n H B SO s J Sun noon-4pm FlllHon
sectron cooch end labl~ lllend AHllrtAl NETWORK
hOusehOkl 1nstrum~nts & Info 94~2271
I
clothes www .1nlmalnetwof11.otA Lg~: . ..:::11~~11 ~~1
oowntown HB area Sl01age
only pnva1e & secure $125 WOLFF TANNING BEDS 1 VJ: .I J ~ 714.374.1221 111e msg TAN AT HOME G uwl tOT1°iAUl BUY DIAECl AND SAVE'
I 1 I COMMERCIAL HOME 402 LOST a U"'1S trom SI~ 00 FO,UND Low Monltlly PavlTlelll _ _ FREE Coo Cd~ ...._ ____ ..._ _ _. Call 1800·71' C•58
Loet ct1 t 112S Hlmaltyen
male wn11e s~ver lJ9S Jong
hair name Wt11tie Vronoty
Wilson & 01ange CM
REWARD i4•51S-1565
LOST GOid wedding oandr
6 Ma~ c>a~ on toq
Vic1My 17th St LOOQS Vons or par~rng lot
REWARD 949 720·0467
$2000 REWA.RDI!!
www np e1s1ao ,..,m
1448 ==~1
WA TED
ANTIQUES
lOOO 's
hu\ w it trade!
Oranie County
t"air Ground.
l*J:I. 11113::Nli11-a I LOST WIDE gold wecldi119
bind, wttll center stone 6
c111t upphlre, hurt
1h1ped cll1mondt 1l0t.
p1v1 Vicinity Belboa 11·
lend Of Big Cinyon Drive.
Older Style Furnrture
PIANOS & Collectibles ."""'" .... ~.-p • s-..-........ ~·". ,.. •
S$ CASH PAID S$
-~·"*'""' -WE BUY ESTATES
Jan. 20th
J a1~~2ist
llhlm-Spm
te~a uotat'$110WS com
1 -BQ~-1 38r HouM tam rm Fp air
ef1oc:*.s yard & BB·Q comm pool
sland spa. gatoo convn. 2 ca• 091
$3,500/Mo 949·644·4426
SUNSET & BAY VIEWS
3l>r 2ba, backiard OY
~eenbell. rv ashoon I 800/mo 949·640·17t7
B•rlde v1111~br 2b•. s 1 5Ulmo. ave• Fea 1.
TROV A.RE 2Br 2Ba anach
2car garage very clean,
or Qlllel QUMlt assoc 1ennos &
pool galoo. no pets Avail
lmmed1atley $26751Mo
1 Agent 949·717-4732
year lease 949-673-8695
714·953·481 0
The BluHe 3br 2.5b
lownhm, lg, CIHn 0
grHn bell. Yrly I•
S2795. MM44-0865
Gated bNut 11ngee sto
2br 2ba deladl Ilse 2< r. new/hlelcrpUpamt/wm o w
cvnng $2200 M~7~121 g
Bluth 0.111119 Town
38r I 581 lllCe condrllOn
$19()0,mo Blrt>ara San
Q!e<e11 Rllr 949-6-44-0195
3Br 2B• HM al Ne
Shores S1eps to Dctl. Ing
tp 2< J;; wd 111<·14>$ pellOS $2 aooess 10 db
pool, l4IOl\IS 949-721·8422
B1ytront 2br 28e C ondo
k Lido Peninsula area Wal
to beach. 5hops, theater
View• $2750/Mo Oebb
Evans, aQI 949-79!r2nJ
1920'• Restored Vlciori111
2b< 2ba lg Irv/din gnn1 kJt
mrbje cntrs. all hdwd llrs
WIO iaz msll tub, 1/4 ao yd
2 c gai $2850 949-42Ni152
HARBOR AREA
Current YNfly L.euas em Grum, Realtor
94M7 -e1&1
Mot ti
MANAGERS
t SPECIAL•
$154 00 , lax Wkty
("'51 p!esen1 ths Adi
235 rms & tutchlnells
5'11.iated on beeutdlAy
landscaped ground$
FEATURES 24-+iour
LobbylOirecl doat
phones/Free HBO,
ESPN & 0.SCIPoo &
Jacuur Gues1 laun·
cty Cloee IO 405 & ~
F"')'S Mm s trom 0 C
fairgrds college and
bchs Wal~1ng dis·
lance lo shol>S and
restaurants
COSTA MESA
MOTOR INN
22n Hart>or Blvd
Phone M~s-4MO
* Vtcatlon Beech Rentll 2 949· 720-8199
& 3Br 28a se>aC•OUS delu•e --------
coodo lully lurn steps to I Q) GARAGE I bch, 2c oar 94g.575.1130 SALES
1
208.,.... ~ , .__GA_RA_G-E S-ALE_C_DM.-
"'" ..,..~ SAT JAN 20 8AM-2PM
Furn, car eudlo, book•,
clothing, TV, end m0f'8! FV Oft b4dg l0t 1Se 823-ti 96
sl XIM1le Square 108-40
Warner A$ll ebol.lt H1 Speed
Good Stutt 4607 Sumv Dr
(Clmto H!Qhllnd! & flCH)
Internet 714·751 2787 Glrege Sale Sat., 7·1 l tm
TV COUCll. tables. dr-
CM &SO Baker SL ~ COl'l'C)Y1er des!< & many mlSC So Cout Plu.1 1972 POil Ct1elsaa NB
S330/mo 714-641-.4a08
949-t73·54M
For lmmedlete Ocwpency
Two I urn d olliee 5PKef ,.,.,, lor ~ on 8Jrdl
I St Kl1Cllen laA and rM
room SSOO.mo tor large
space & $350 lor smlller
For oetarls cal DD or
Connre 94!>-474--0600
Moving Sale Bllbot 11-
lend 302 Sovth 8tytront
SAT JAH 20'nt ICWMl'lll
Lom ' lob ol good lltmt..
E Y'llytlllng lllUIC :'.'c:: -'° bllew. JemborM to M"1nt A.we,
right on Part! A.we. left on
GITMI Ave. 7 hou9M
Soulh. ol 1"8 ltty on the
w1ter1ront.
• 1'!"1~ .. TC~ i.,.r.,j., ~·• "-
::64M922V:
SOUTH COAST
AUCTION
2202S.. ... k. S-AM. CA t270l ~li,._P'\o9"A•."bl
I• APPlWDI I
CLASSIFIED
(949) 5.42·5678
COAST COIN NEEDS
OLD COIKSt Gold. ellvet,
1ewe1ry. watchtl, 1111bquel
collectibles 94H42·1M47
TOP SSSIRECOft0$1
•Ill R & B, Soul. Rbcli.
81(. SO'S & 60'1
MIKE 949-645-7506
Can't seem to
get to all those
repair jobs
aroond the house?
Everyda y is a great day
in Classified!
Be a part of it ,
plac e your ad today!
(949) 642-5678
2001 MERCURY
COUGAR
2001 MERCURY
MOUNTAINEER
2. SL V6 onvenience Group.
Bodyside Molding
$21,950
5.0L. V8. ~ather, Monterrey Pkg.,
Auto Temp Control. Convenience
Group. Homdink Travelnot(',
Mach Audio CD Player
2001 LINCOLN
CONTINENTAL
,.,...,,_, lknoJ VrtU<k
2000Mcrcwy
Gnmd Marquia LS
Rtvc:rsc Sensing, 17" Chrome Wheels.
CD Clwlger, Alpine Audio System
Alpine Au~io SF.fem~ CD Changer,
Dnver Select ~ystem
THI GALLUP POLL
• Survey Phone /ntervlew.r
• No Sales, Earn $9-12/hr ·
• Paid Training/Benefits
• Positive Wor~ Environment
• Flexible Scheduling
• Full and Part-time
For fUrther information:
(800) 713-2595 .
/rvfM
We are looking fOr sales Representatives who enJoy meeting
and greeting people. worl( flexlt>le hours: afternoons. evenings
and weekends. Explore our successfully proven program
throughout the orange countv area. securing new
don dusatkoO
sut>scrlptlons fOr the Los Angeles Times.
$ Flexft>Mt HOurs: either f u ll-t ime or part-time
$ Ave,..ge $25-$50 per hour
$ No n les expertence necessary
$ wm t,..ln the r1ght people
IF I NTER ESTED P LE-'SE CONTA.c'T1
Robert Brown C714> 587·5525
Brown Entert>rlses ......... ,_ ...........
T.-....r
U81!1lVA110~
.AG&YIS
Full·Umr
O.,&~Milfts
812·816
Top-Producers
Higher
• ~w IA!auuct •401·~ ·f'lild ~ • l.aitlt.t'8 ~
r.oui.tw1J tn 1989 lO
Cooui Mt• -ir;:n& Call ~ ~.-.a•Ll744 .
~ lllAHAGEA PIT Enlulllllc, IMlll plsyer lor =a.,. In N.wp<>11 Days a -k.
' aalet and mUU
tallt 94~1).9019
AUTO · OET All.EA
Mon-Frt. CA hcef>M rtq'd,
tnull r:r!k E= New·
I!!!! -~2»1221
Auto ONlffng
Bu1lnea1 eeek• lead
w/politive, ptoleulonal
aft!lude & Clean OMV
Hou11 are Mon·Fn 7•»400pm S11r11ng •1 $8 50 plu1 tJps
c.11 9*n1-4820
••••• BABYSITTER NEEDED
lot ~ femlly In Allio ~· • houMltaepng,
949-5 7 4-'248 lor more
BABYSITTER NEEDED NEWPORT COAST CDC Salee
lot largs l&mlfy •n AJlto T eac:t*I nl "-"'* AJOVE AU. t1 Ute houslkaeplng. Fl.f-llml 0< Plll·llml do )'OU hlYI 1lll dawt IO
94H 7.._.248 lor more Clll 71~ N1T1 a Iii liguft Income?
det11t1 NaUonal lntemel co. needll NOW HIAIHO PtiOHE help with upantioo CaH
llOAT OOCK CREW ,._utlv• Full or PT now 9411·251-8078 Full
~n, boeUng uper S7.etir. no ~ traJn~
I. Apply In PlfM>tl CaH 1-eoo-131-17 7
1 ~2plll Fri, Set. !kin. REAL EST A TE AGEHTS S..11111/MI PT for N8, ~ FOCUS F..illon o.igrier. ~ 1801 ___ Or. Ct>M hOme, c:ommarcl&I FOf A Bright« Future a mull. panam maldng
CARINO PEOPLE Need9d Wt are expardng Ind need ~· car r-.ary Brill PT/lie• peld ""· Malle 1 1 O career-minded llotnsed 9 87~·2174
~ In the llwe of and 10-non·bnled
1M lldll1y In their ,_, nerested in MtTWlQ
Compenlontlllp, 111Ml1, $35,000 ·S50.000 ~m .,.,..,., .. lhllr rr:= Thal s firll ywr s.. lhe
aldt. No cert tlcatlon W891e5I proclld In Iha
r~lrtd. 71 4 444 4llO WO!ld-VA Housing 10< No
,.:::::; 0own'I It's the ~lution Wotli bthlnd coontw II II U FloOI TI1111
coftM houM llHr bMctl. L8ftOlf Quallfted llll'f'"
Flex holn ~ ri = Hoc--
0 The~ 21 62nd Ho Door Knocldng you're~ St I N!'!!IXJl1 Bch, elf PCH Ho Open ~
Come jOlll In on T uetdly.
CAOSSINO GUARDS PT Jan 23 0 7 00 PM nl INm
GrMt "°""· no nlglltl "' abolA an tllClllftQ and
for.whether wk1nd1. Tnlnlng IMOVlllMI approech IO real
provided. en-7a&-12M 89111• sales. Cal Ernie
Fr,tto•o
OEMONSTRATOAS PT VETE N RE yoo'remin~ 1·800·723·885 7 2 IO 3 dlyt l'o/lf'J weelc.tt1d 11an1ng Immediately 11
~ •• '" your arN
-~ R11llurant
a home, Call 14 -Oil Fun 6 buey Cof!M,
Bar• NMde PT/FT
OAIVERSICUST SVC FM E lperi.nced CoffM
for llonr tllop In NPB. makM1 to Join our ~~ PleMe caM AlcM t11ml
MM3l-1N3 F ulllon llllnd
Mt.721-1801
MEDICAL ASSISTANT ~or new ~~·~ • pertonUly to match, we
occupaOOn! hlYI 1111 oppor\lrity ~ In a ll*lalized ~ Wltt1 pel'IOtllf and l111nc al reward• Call
detail•. Shannen II 949-51~
=Certified Pre-Owned =
bif llMW
PleMe be -11111 Ille M1tl1191 In ttlll ~ may .......
you to c.11 1 IOO
number In which
..... a dwtt ptt
Mlnut..
p.._ be wwy of out
of .,.. compenlee.
CMcll wlltl the local
e.tt.r 8ueinffl Bu-,., befofl you tend
1ny ,,,_y or IMI
for MrVlcM. ANCI
end und9rltlnd 1ny
contrac1I b9for9 you
1lgn.
IUM MAAS
13,00MIO. (IMllltlc}
1 t Vending "'91,
no COlllPICllb i. I hrtlmo ... 716 c:aatl ~
1-I00-29Me01 (2411r11
'MOST SELL:
Local VlllCllnQ Route s 1~ polentlll OnOnly
'8495 lnves1 FREE INFO
1 ·800-655·8'43124hll
MHI MAAS
S2,700IMO. (l'Mlletk)
22 Vending"*·
ftO .. c;;r:.: .. r!i.,.iw,:no
1-I00-2tMe01 11411,.)
CAAf'ET CLEAHINO I
lntllrlnC9 AeetOfltlon
Frtndl!M tvallatile. C-
plet9 trelnlng. For lllOfl
detail• call Butch at
1-IOG-847-ltM
Slay ,_ • "°"' onllnt. Flexibillly, $SOO·S7000/rno
In your spare lime Sl~·
1tep 1yslem Compleia
training Free Into
eoo-ttwm
www.pulne!ob.cOM
for ultimate peace of mind, mry u nified Pre-Owned BMW is backed by The Cettilied Pre-Owned BMW
Protection Plan, covering the vehicle fot up to 2 y~rs or 50,000 miles {whichc-ver comes first) form the dm: of
a pir.nion of the 4-ym/50.00U-mile BMW New Vehicle L1mi1ed Warranty.°' The Pnmq1on Pbn includes rwo key
dc-mrnu:
Certified Pre-Owned BMW Limited Warranty ~ Backed ·by BMW of Nonh Amem:a, Inc., and us
nationwidc-nerwork of BMW crnters, covered repairs arc made only by BMW-1rained technicians using only genuine
BMW rcplacc:mcnt pam.
BMW Roadside Assistance ,. Pc.u;e of mind follows you anywhere in the USA. 24 hours a <lay. 365 chys a ym
1998 BMW
740iL
20.031 Mi, Loaded wich Opuons 1
S6.495 cotal 10 sun . I 0,000 mi per year.
25¢ per excess mile. To1al payments = $26,631 .00,
Residual $23.546.00. Zero securiry deposit,
{Ml8781)
'97 528i
""eo. CD. Bbd. tWnWJI LowMiln
'97 318i
Aua~ Blue w/Sond I Kl.I021\ $19,995
'98323i
C....-.il>l<,Auro. ~tw. llXIY"lll 17K,,,.;
'911 318i
A.-. CO, !'mat..,,, S..U"" 1~1\~1 1 w Jn;
$10,995
eo-.niblr, S·Sjocl. Blw wl~\ ( l'(MM l~t 1 25KMi
'911 3181
Aer-. co. Alann ll062 I 11
'911 J28i
$21,!/95
AM.. s,..... ~ cvw.v11 '--1Mik1
'973281
Atlte, 8loO w/'MNI I IVl.HIWl1
'98MJ S.22.5>95
"5pd. 4 OIL 111.t wl~ llTQS16l) ,., »31$ LowMik1
s.Sp4. l....w "'"' 0,..-I \Xf"\~ I \I .,., $281 S25.995
fl-. CD,'"--........ f"l7"4~1 27K•i '911J2M
PRE OWNED LEASE FOR
PER M O . 3 6 MO.
+TAX ON APPROVED CREDIT
'98 540i
A»i,. CD. AlfC" wllllodl OXHR49)
'97 528i
S-Sf>d. 1.-Mile.. 81.clo ()A~)., ...
'98 741HL
CO "'-'~"' Sc>und (M1U\6J
'98 5281
CO. l'!.mNN P~. Wlltu 14AON4SI I
'99 328i
S·s,.I. CO. Seim l<M S921
'993281
~s,.I. ~CO, llloc:lr (41'.81 71161
'99 5281
Moc>. CO • .-t..11r, 141C "" (4FICF06SI
'98 740i.L
U>. So4oad. C...o (MllS~l
'995281 ~. 17K "' (Yljl~) .... ........... ______
,., 7""1.
""--CD."'-(4Al'\170J ___ ... _ .
'911 1 ""1.
o.-co1~m1.
'99ZJ
LowMiln
. S2!J,995
... 17K,,,;
SJ0.5>95
.SJ0.5>95
.. $.32,995
$36.995
I6K ,,,.;
Q),S,0.........,.1-Mllnl4C4K4)01 .~$ U l,n,~(4JU3-"l-------··-· ~-SAVE
•Rata u low u4.9°/o APR on apprcmd credit
• ALL CArtified to IOOK Ml
•24-Hr. laecWck~!
• Many More Urti&~
Pft..Owned BMW'a to Choote!
c~ 111*111 con-~ ator9 tor .....
GrH t Loe, Newport
CADll.UC CAnAA 't7
Blldc. llhr. tnOCllV'OCI ! liloyt
(831431) t 14,988
NABEAI
{714)!40:!100
'-"-Mt-11M1a CIClll6lc Devlle 'II whit•. good condlion, low I. • ___ •_ ..... I ~==-=-=-a=·_,_,1°6tf=-'-1990_._C111_
-• CADIU.AC DEVL1.f '00 Low 171! 11'1. bronze ...... a-le 11ft Duffy Eec:lrlc (2:50730) 129.888
loll !kid Dy SdlOdc Boll NASE RI
Ylld 1986 ~ concf. _ __..(7:..:1.;:,4)$40-t=~100"'-tion, $8.950 MHM-37'1.
CADIU.AC Eldoredo 'M
11 8oel T,.., 1111 1 lft VB, ledle<, Not1hl1lr
lingle ult. Can be 1.-d tor (614744) SU88 Kayaq alto $400 Cal NABERS
t4t-5'f:60P (714154H100
Udo Side Tie 10< Slll>oat
14> lo 6511 and beam 12!1 or
.... lidl em.nee ~
w8ll< ilCld 94H73-nn
Side tte for 20ft • Slllboll
Grett loc, EZ -• to rneln cNnnel. c.n JJ
t4H75-7570
CADUAC Eldcndo 'N
Low 751t ""· red, 1ln llhr. (802315) $11,988
NA BEAS
(714 !540-1100
CAOUAC Eldofedo '91
low ~. red, moorvool
(!!08793) $10,988
HABEAS
(714)540-1100
Cadlflec &ev1111 m 't3 Slate. leather, NOOhltar
(834036) $11,988
NABERS
( 714)540:!100
CAD SEV'IUE 7t
Acute 2.2 Cl COlljll '97 1 0-, l*fect cond,
5311 m., loeded w/IVlf· f:::rd, depend1bl1,
ything, mnrl. lther, alloya, I dr1vee l*fect.
ABS br11kl, lie 15.150 -'HIOOa::=::::....:M:;::t~l:;:;M:...:2211=,__
941).650-2302 9·2&0-2m CHEVY CORVETTE 84
Acura 3.5 RL 'ti White, 24K 1111, snso
Pelf1 white, auto, lthr Ht-l60-71IO
(Pt408) 123,"5 Chrysler Concorde '93 South eo..t Acunt 714-171·2500 4dr, VI, euto, eleln cer (207HA) N,915
8£ffiE GU '2001 South Coat Acurt
117.... (2 11 tllll price) 714-179-2500
1M42t11411MU0127
Llllllt'f ptebgl, *· llloy CHEVY CORVETTE 915 ....... aun-fOol, ,_. Trtllle b6edl, I llld. 7111 Ml.
McKenna Vo1UWl90fl s1t,750 ...-11ao
111-641 '°517
C220 Sedlrl .. 8EETlE '2001 O OoWft Flnlndng OAC
113,MI (231500) 111,tlO
2 .... ""°' ........ "°'* ....,_. 1M413Hl/11lU0211 IM-124-t401 Mcltanna Volll:nefon
.... 541.()517 W2IO Sedlrl ...
BMW ,..,.._ '91 co, 15K ...... Hllr'Y ......_ ( ..... ) 121.llO auto, AC, tun pwr, lo ml "'*"" "°'* llk*IRarl (P1491) N,315 NM24-1401 South eo..t Acute
714·979·2500 C2tO ....... -• Cy!, """llC ullle
BMW S28I '911
5-epcl, SllYer w/9lacll (~EVIER .:i•
714 ... 35-3171
BMW 5211 '97
llUIO, 30K ml, ....
(W29110) 131,M
Cl(EVIEA BMW
714""3&-3171
BMW 5211 't7
s-.c>d. bllcll •"'** (3AYXt50) 121."5
CAtVIER BMW
714""3&-3171
(46a41} 124,llO "'*"" ~ illloklrcwa ...... 24-t401
DATSUfl 2IOZX 2 • 2 '12
1 own, 231< orv ml, Aunt
Lucy died A colleclol1
pil()I Aulo ••• ~ ~~129
Doclet TrecleelMn 100 72
new aorlnol. lllocib, lltef· ""°'· .... ,..,. 311() ., ,... thin 500 Iii. 4• Ill kk.
~ co ...,.., ....
S2§0C¥080. 949-51s.1849
"Employee. '
0 Empleado. '
"Arbeit'nehmer."
"Em.P,loff. ,.
Ford TIUNI Wlglllfl II
.WO, AC, full pwr, lo ml
(P14M) ..... IOllth COllt Acurt
714·179-2500
GOLF GT1 '2001
!17.... (2 It .. Ptlce)
1wot3"411402*2
Tutbof *• =. wi:= Met('""' y
..... 141-4)117
HONDA CMC lX '99 4-Gr, white, Mc>, AC
(P1429A) 54,"5
South CoMt Acute
714-171·2500
HONDA CRV EX 't9
4X4, Blactc a..vtv
(201t9A) UVE
South COllt Acurt
714-179-2500
JEEP Grllld ChtfoMI ..
Wll"9 wllttw, eunrool, all power, c:INnl Oangedt
Info pennel, 44K 1111,
!15,eotNobo !!M71-20U
JETTA Gll '2001
!11,7* (2 .... price)
1 M034171/1 MOlt002 TUltlo I ~t
Mcl(enn1 voiu...,., lll=f41=O!17
LAND ROVER
NEWPORT BEACH
1540 JAlllOREE RD
149-203-3333
I.H UI ES300 't5 ~. Mc>, AC, lthr
(P15e1A) 115,915
South Coetl Acute
714·179-2500
A
GOOD
ADI
Cll
<•>•-1111
'
N11un Altlml GXE 'ti euto. full pwr, tow ml
(P1413) S1a,4ts South COllt Acura
714-t71·2500
NMM PulMf NX '87 2a
CCJ14>t, 13811.. mellllc grttn.
euto pa, new/~eakl
& llternlt«. wry cleen
f 1995 949-§8&-1888 8kt
~a...'t:S
VII, lllAO, I~ oondtlon
(357865) $3,988
NAHAS
(714)540:! 100
~ Culltel .. ve. Low m11ea • .J)m ren111
(335443) $11,1188
NAHAS
(714)640:1100
~ lnlrtgllt '00
VI, ... pr9Wloul ,...,
(113111) tts..m
NAHAS
1714)640:t100
PAISAT Gll WAQOH, '01 ~ (211flllllflcl)
1 E0042t411 E032457
Utxury Pl*e. ., ....
MclCeiww YolllHfOll
.... 14t-ol17
Qusified ls
CONVENIENT
~you·~
buying. JC.Wng. Of' !Ull
look.Ing, cbsl1tled bat
what you oeedl
CLASSIFIED
(949) 642-5678
·TIX
ftllllllL
DllEmlY
HERE'S THE
EXPERTS
I 114 • \I \ "" 4 I : I 1 1, I I :
(949) 646-8803
AU. TAX FOAMS -AU SWEI
NW. CORPORAJ1()M. FDJCWW
PARNRSHIP ·UC -ESWES
350 E 17"' -STE 117
COSTA MESA, CA 9262J
30+ YEARS EXPERIENCE
GET ntl PIAQ Of MIND
ONLY A CM CAN GM YOUI
Ne yQJ gtllitg .. "' ~ yQJ ..
tidied to? ... '(QI'*" )bw by tlx
CM It I llEAIOtMU f'llel
-· .. ·~··· .
• Doily Pilot
214 ADOITIONS
/REMODEUNO
FARTHING INTERIORS
~ Bath Remodll
Ind Room Ad!tllOlll l.1560875 949-M5·9325
( 231 BATHROOMS I
HOME flair ' Bathtub R'lLa"'X
Kt"~IM• K1·1111h .ti
P11r11 l.1111 • I 11• 11 I,"'
\onl• • ~h""''"
( Ullnll'f\
949-645-7723
GENERAL REPAIRS
~ -Gu.elltr Wort
• Kitc.heni&!tli Ri.n!1~dt•·
• Plumbong h•W't'~ ~Lt
• WrrtPr Hl'Hte<-• Tu µl
• Cot.tltN lop • 'i• •
C....W.. ..... llllffC
19491689-&1 24
12.50 CARPENTRY I
A TO Z H~DYUAN
Install retace ab >tis k11chen'ba1h door\ w noows
Doug 7" 546-7258
~r!.1:re
Serve on on <Clfll'f,
upholstery, fine rug
ct.aning mid repairs.
1 ()()I satlsfodioft
gucronlte. Van
~-or dry dean
' Silvt 1987
Brothers Carpet
Services
1 ·800·559-7181
SERVES YOU R1r,HT
CARPET\ uPH).STU~1
CLEANltJG
l1u1 ~ M011•1ltO EQu1pmen1 Sl·~I Hernnv1n~1e Sponono f urnnure Movmo
Sft>mg 0C fVf rO YeJrs
Plus FREE
DIJPo•n TtflOti Wuit GuMD
.133:13U~U.
Custom Celplt CINn Sy~tem Ralld 11 by
onsum1r rtpor1
$29 'leltm oncludlng
p11 1pothn9 t<:Olch
ptd No Nddln oolt.
no ICl-11111 C.. Robtt1
71•·50'-M65 .....__ _____ _.
.. ..
COMPUTER HELP! .,,..... .... '*"" ... .,.. ..... ... .e ...
........ uQl*o
COMPUTER ASSISTANCE
• yoot pace • )'OU' home °' ck fniMlull Coeclwlg. Internet, Prog11m l111tal1a·
uon ,Oennlt 9'9·723·9372
rT SHOULD BE FVH
A to Z Home lmpr~
Remodellig & ~ On bme & on Budget, Rer1
Lt65052• 714-26~7185 at
949-246-6018. Computer ln1i.ll1llon1 R1p1lr, Senile•. In your
David Venl\lf1 Conlnctor hom1 O.a~uc. preven· ,. Concfete & MatOtWy Co twe rnatnt 9'9-631-4367
Brick Btocll Slone~ Ln47"8 71
DAYWAU. SERVICES
::..~.~ t • a.:a:.1 I 2e0 CERAllC I Fftplc. eaa.. R.ra. 25yra --TH.I ., Terry m -557·7ss. SMAU J08 EXP£RTI
--------E..,.,u In 1111. jobs and DUNCAN ELECTRIC .-------.. CUSTOM CREATIVE TILE rtpen. Reuonebly pnced loc:aiouock re.ponse
1
252 CARPETS l I Jnr.ta!'i.ltlOtlll slate ceramoc liG1nMnd. ri:= 9'9-SeMcelRemodela "' • ~RPET Cl.EANlf«i malt>le &tone Eatab ms 817-0203, 1'-n&-0783 L.J>sejo e:f::C,."';00
. '
YARD CLEAN-UP
Tr-Pruned & R«noYtld,
Spnnlo.ltrs Rtp11rtd nelO
·-Call 71•151·3478
Hortk:ulturlll SeNlcft
$15/hr F1ne·lune 1 garden
0t lo114h I •"'-'I PIOfeCI Clll Doug MM57.Ql3e
303 HANDYMAN
/HOME REPAIR
Alkttions • Kitthen
8crlhroom • Repairs
Coll the leoder
1n So. co1a°'n1o
fr• Eminltt ta sm12
U COISlllCnOll !O.
949'137•5642 • • "12044 Jttl 71W1z.t911 --
~ Flo« S,.CWleta A to Z Homl ~ CARPET CARPET LEAKY S11owwt Repeked Chemic;al reslslallt ht"lllOSs LICENSED CONTRACTOR Repalra. El1ctnc1I 1nd
Repa11s Pa1ch1ng ln'9all Reg<outing & Installation epoxy lloors by P9nnH'llx No job IOo 1m Al MIVIQlll Plumbin9 L1c•6SOS2•
Couneous Any ~·1~ 1<>b~ DEAN TILE MM7:MOl5, Wlierproollng SYt11mt Repw, remocltl, ltna. epa, C1ll 714·28t·7185 or
Wholesale• 9•9·4~2~ 71H4e-852!w 94t-723-1114 new -M~ !M9-246-t018.
Skilled CarpentN
Elcclr 1c1an/Plumber
I'll help you resolve
those nagging home
repair and remodel
Issues.
Keith 949-574-1748
OllAUTY CRAFTSMAN
20 YeaB Ex~ Refs rM YOUR HANDYMAN!
MARK .94~650-9525
1304 HAULING I
JUNK TO THE OUUPlll
714·968-1182
AVAILABLE TODAY!
!MH73-SS&6
PUf AFEW
1WORDSTO
WORK FOR
YOU
(~4~ M2-;b78
\! . I 1 111 \' 11 \1 I t
' I I I\• I
newportantia ing com
PHEN+DIET ~~f~t.• $~9' /11,.1 Mon1h ":J '/ with thl• Ml
Mod•l.,.k.okd
ViAG•k~• •• 1 v.~,,
lnt~l«rt"""' t .rowth
I 1.,..,...n. Vt'OfMC y
NEW TlUTMENT
FOR CHIONIC PAIN
ft•t t.. ,...,. .. , L t\.n'"c.
t ltr of '-i.houh.t<'r
•No 'iu,wC'rl'
• N e1 t lutptt..altz .. ttun .soo.1oo.sn4
I rrr I \lllftlln
TWE TO BEGIH
YOUR HOME
IMPROVEMENT
PROJECT?
CaU I plumber,
painter, handy·
man, or atl'f of the
graal 181VICH
listed here in our
direct()('fl THESE
LOCAL
SVC PEOPLE
CAN HELP YOU
TODAY!
,...:
Saturday, Jon~ry 20, 2001 81''
PUBLIC
NOTICE
The Cahf Pubhc·
Ut1l1t1es Com·
ITllUIOl't REQUIRES
lha1 aD used house-
hold goods moY8fS
pnnt their P U C cat T l'U'llbef lwnos
and chauflers pnnl
their T C P number
1n al adllertosmenlS
If you have a ques-
hon about the 1e_9a1-
1ty al a mover limo or chaufler, call
PUBLIC UTILITIES
COMMISION
714 558-4151
PAIHTING I
IESTO.PAIOG CO. INTERIOR EXTERIOR
CHUNG S PAINTING
V Y...-. EllP Greal Pnce•
Gu.r.me. Wt;A FrM ESl
L•3 75602 71'·538-153-4
1-~1
1'1911«/Stucco PllCll Set'Mo $oulhem Clio!om. for 25 rears l.13268&4
2• holn' 11~7131
...... 11 ............
,.. LOCAJ1HG
ILKTRONIC SlAa UAK
OfTKTIOH
~s.mc.
675-9304
1"it Neighborhood
Plum&.rl
DIAlN & SIWll ••
(LIANMi Sl'tOAUST
TWEEDY PLUMBING
949-645-2352 - -
RAIN80W CIRCLE MAINT HOHEST l REASON.ABLE
P11nl ng·lnLut HOUM/Apt PLUMBER No dtlrn deao-
quahly f(>b' Free est•lnill ~ L•566586 Tooieis-~
L•569897 714-63CHl888 Sh<Wter rep 71.:235-9150
R.S Painting Co. Only Ille PRECISE PLUMBING
be61 IE!eojamon Moore paintl RepalrS & Remc>Otlll
ln~Ex11Comm Owner opet· FREE ESTIMATES
aled 40Yrs 71'"429-9744 L'687398 714·969· 1090
~
Roonng
~peclaUsts , .. ""•-.. "-•• ,, ,..,,,
949-722-8846
714-751 -8846 ... ,... ...... ~
Q & Q UPHOl..ST£RY
5tnOo 681 Cullom tumrt111e
upl\()jS18fY slop covers an·
bQ!le l!plll 71W42-4612
388 WALL COVERINGS
FARTHING INTERIORS
ln11au11.on • Removalt
Otlcount W11lcovennvs
Ll560875 9'_HU-t325~~~-
THE ST'RIPPERI ~"'!I"'
walpaj>el ·-al Lt '1 71'-96).5037
SELL
your home
through classified
REACH ·80,000· HOMES
EACH WEEK FOR ONLY
$28 per week
4wk. min.
New 011 Be~1ch
s339 36 mo.I••••
+ 99c + tax CloH<Und 1 .. se 36 mo. 10k mi. pe< year, .20c per mi'-thereefter. $4,499 tot.al to
start Residual 515,700 Total ~yments; S12,239 +tu. Subj4tct to prior ui. and cr.drt apprOllal.
Prior rent.I. Price good thN 01/2.6I01. (284506) (133771)
Volvo of Orange County
Plus lax, '8 monlh de.cl-end leowt on ~ aed.1 20< pw ml.
-121< rfll1es/'fC' l ot lh1s price S 1055 due al •ign•ng lncludn $35() MK dep (902191)
" Down Payment
(Cap Reduction) ~~$ 25
per month
Plln lax "8 mo. i.o. 15~ps mile
a4t 121tper~ On ad. Tolol am.e.off $3 6 (()()93M)
FACTORY SCH•DUL•D MAINT•NANC•• rot 3~mles lNCWDEDwldl,_._•1-t..
per .......
..
'
. . . .. . ,, • j ..
886otutday, January 20, 2001 . Daily Pilot
2000 Escalade
Stodc 1t212990Y
si1ver sand Llat Prlca..$46 925
SALE $39,9S5 .-'t\!J 21liti<! .. F .. I , ... ,
$
.1
Llat Price $49.1.288
SALE $40,9~5 .-yNA ¥11filf .+: ..... F ... t
$
Stock #C088836Y
Rain Fotest
-t* •.
'
2000 Seville STS
List Price 4.1.192
. SALE $44 ,9~5 .-J&A ?lli1\IWll'l! .. i» ....
$ -
FINANCE CHARGES ..
ON ALL NEW 2001 OLDSMOBILE MODELS
•1st payment due 2/1/02. ••No finance charges until 1/1/02. Customer must be approved by GMAC under A or 8 Tier Rate System.
OVER SO QUALITY PRE-0\NNED VEHICLES AVAILABLE
'88 BUICK LE SABRE 5 2,988 '00 OLDSMOBILE INTRIGUE 512,988 V·6, light blue, runs great! (461054) ~c~.;~;c~;-~~,133166} '93 OLDSMOBILE CIERA .s3,988 s13,988 V·6, auto, exalllent condition, ideal transportation earl (357885) Low , block, leother, alloy & morel Bol. al warranty (938A31 I
'90 BUICK RIVIERA s5,988 '00 OLDSMOBILE SILHOUET?~ s16,988 Clo»ic style! Low miles, leather & mon1I (106089) Low I 8k miles, whi .. , duol doors, ,.,,. AC & mof91 Previou5 rentoll (2~ 18)
'92 MAZDA MIATA 56,988 '98 CHEVROLET BLAZER 516,988 Red, low miles, eic.cellent condition! (304913) LS, iwo, low 24 miles, whi .. , many eidros, exciellent condition I ( 132'88)
'94 CADILLAC ELDORADO 59,988 '98 CADILLAC CATERA 516,9.88 V·8 Nonhstor, leather, olloyJ & mof91 Reduced! (6147 4') Low miles, bloc:lc, leather, many &Jdl"o5I (000823) .
'95 OLDSMOBILE AURORA 59,988 '95 CADILLAC SEVILLE STS 518,988 Low mile5, leather & mof91 ( 10608.9) Low miles, V·8 Northstar, whi .. peat!, gotgeoUSI (824649) ..
'96 CHRYSLER LHS 5 9,988 '98 CADILLAC ELDORADO 5 20,988 Whii. pearl, leather, alloy,, mony extrcul ( 10265.4) :;c;~~i;M~:.i~~;~A· '91 CADILLAC ELDORADO s9,988 5 21,988 Touring, low miles, red, moonroof & montl (608793) Only 5950 miles! Whi .. , I.other, CO & mot91 ( 17.U33)
'93 CADILLAC SEVILLE STS 510,988 '96 CADILLAC SEVILLE STS 521,988 Low mil.J, 290 H.P. ~stor, leather, wper dean! (83-4036) Low miles, whi"' peat!, 70k mil.J, ciertified warranty! (8347.W)
'95 OLDSMOBILE EIGHTY-EIGHT 510,988 '98 CADILLAC SEVILLE 523,98 8 Low 38k mil.5, beige, ton leather, immoculaMI (833567) low Uk miles, black, CD, alloys & mon1I (927.S.U)
'99 OLDSMOBILE CUTLASS 511,9~8
100 CADILLAC DEVILLE 5 28,98 8 V-6, low miles, ~. ol WOtTanly, pt'W¥ious rnal (335443) low 1 lit miles, bronz., Ian leaf., ~. ol WC:WiCMtf)', prW'l'ious,..,.,, (250730)
'95 CHEVROLET BLAZER 512,988 '99 CADILLAC SEVILLE STS 531,988 W , low miles, leather & mcnl (236933) · _,,A. Low 16" miles! Shale, CD, aloys & morel (90525.41
N ABE·RS <ii?
2600 Harbor Boulevard • Costa Mesa ~------.. . (888) 527·· 18 4
www.nabenauto.con1