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HomeMy WebLinkAbout2001-02-02 - Orange Coast PilotSERVING THE NEWPORT -ME.SA COl+AMUNmES SINCE 1907 ON D4E WEB: WWW.DAILYPILOT.COM FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 2001 VOICES Thoughts and reactions to the verdict "He's got the life insurance policy he deserves." -Deputy Dist. Atty. Debora Lloyd "We've been devas- tated for 3 112 years. It's been really hard. . . . We just have to keep dealing with this. " -June M arshall, Pegye Bechler's mother "We all know what Tina New is. It goes without saying." -Llndll Bechler, Eric Bechler's mothet "They nailed him. This was a good call." -Steve Ott, Newport Beach resident "It's hard to imagine that such a good-look- ing person could do something like this. That is surprising." -Costa Mesa resident April Vidll, who once worked next-door to Eric Bechler "They never even found the wife's body, so how do they know?" -Pat Ke lly, Newport Beach resident "I think people are getting weirder and weirder. Weird things happen a lot these days." -Charlie Vllla loboz, manager of Balboa Boat Rentals. where Bechler got the boat for his final cruise with his wife "It's all so sad. If "' they make a movie · though, the money should go to the kids, because what else do. they have left? It's never the one you expect. Never." -Debbie Smith, who works In Newport Beech • I PHOTOS BY SEAN HIUER I OAllY I'll.OT Llnda BechJer, Eric Bechler's mother, Is escorted from the courthouse ln Santa Ana by Jlm Bechler, Eric's uncle, after the Jury returned a verdict convicting the Newport Beach man of first-degree murder. ------------ Verdict hailed by many ·as 'just' • Reactions in the community to the jury decision range from shock to dismay to laughter. Stefanie Frith DAILY PILOT NEWPORT-MESA -Steve Ott laughed when he spoke about Eric Bechler's murder conviction Thursday. And he kept laughing as he discussed with his friends near the BaJ&a Fun Zone how Bechler got just what he deserved. "They nailed h.un. This was a good call,· the 46-year-old New- port Beach resident said. "It was shaky from the beginning. I mean, I hate lo see it happen, but it was just. It's funny because most knew be had done it all along.• Residents of Newport Beach and Costa Mesa were surprised Thursday to bear that Bechler, a Newport Beach resµient and father of three, was convicted of murdering his wife while boating with her off the coast of Newport Beach in 1997. Most said, however, that he got what he deserved and that tbey bad never believed his story that his wife bad drowned after a wave washed her overboard. •He [Bechler) used to work next-door to me ln Newport Kim Marsba1l, Pegye BecbJer's sister, and her mother, June Marshall. speak to members of the media after learning the verdict lbunday. Beach, and I remember all the girls m my office would talk about how good-looking he was,• said Apnl Vida, 32, of Costa Mesa, while shopping at Westclilf Court in Costa Mesa. "It's hard to imag- ine that such a good-looking per- son could do something like this. That is surprising.• What Pab'ida Dashner, a thir· tysomething faciaUst at James Albert Salon in Costa Mesa, finds frtghtening is that she lives in the same city as Bechler. • 1 kept up on the story because 1l was someone from-my own oty, my own neighborhood,• Dashner said. ·1 had that gut feeling all along that be had done it, though. The fact that he would benefit from all that life insurance was part of it. They say the first person to go to in something like this is the spouse.• Pat Kelly, 49, of Newport Beach said he was surprised Bechler was 1 SEE REACTION PAGE 6 •Three-year case of missing body and intriguing court trial ends with first-degree murder verdict. Dffpa Bh•rath DAJLY PILOT SANTA ANA -Eric Bechler, the debonair father of three and athletic beach volleyball player from Newport Heights, was found guilty of first. degree murder Thursday. marking a shocking clunax to a nussing-body murder case that has mtngued the commuruty for 3 1/2 years . A jury of seven women and five men deliberated for 30 hOW'S over seven days before convicb.ng Bechler, 33, of murdenng lus 38-year-old vrue, • Pegye, during a boating tnp m July 1997. He faces We without the possi- _bility of parole after he is sentenced March 16. I Jurors also found Bechler gwlty of a speoal orcumstance of "lying m wait,• and deterrruned that be attacked her sud- denly tn an unsus- pecting moment. Jurors. how ever, acquitted Bechler of a charge that he murdered for hnan- cial gain. Prosecutors had argued that Bechler wanted to get his hands on tus wife's We msurance poll· des worth $2.5 mil· lioa. Bechler had continually derued those charges and claimed that hls wlfe, an expert swunmer anl:t b'iath- lete. was swept underwater by a large wave when she was driving their rented 18-foot speedboat while towing him on a bodyboard,. Her body was never found. On Thursday, Pegye Bechler's mother, June Mar- shall, reacted instantly. bending down and weeping "' AIDmOUL COVIUll 01Piil6 LMJmlG l'VIDINCE: The .Eric Bechler verdict ls the third murder conviction Deputy Dist. Atty. Debor• Uoydhas won when the vktim'l bodyWllS not found. NO """"-Y EVBAPTa: Eric and Pegye 8ecNer' wet'9 rnwried ina German c.astte. buf thefrend softly. when the verdict was re.ad in the packed courtroom at about 11 a.m. Pegye's sisters and best friend Glenda Mason also turned around to comfort each other. tears glistening in their eyes. Members of Pegye Bechler's family said they were too overwhelmed and emobonal even to talk or comment "We've been devastated for 3 1/2 · years· Marshall said as she ttied to hold back tea.rs. "It's been really hard. ... We just have to keep dealing wtth this .• Bechler showed no reaction · as be sat stanng straight ahead as the ver- dict was read. His mother, Unda Bech- ler, who sat outside the courtroom all seven days dunng jury deliberatiom, was comforted by her family mem- bers. She said she believes the jury came out w!th the •wrong verdict.• SEE BECHLE'R fl4GE ' Greenlight most costly campaign in Newport - •Opponents of slow-growth measure spent more than $720,000 in losing effort, . including $427 ,000 in donations from Irvine Co. • ............. 0MY PM.OT cled''I office Thursday. Tl\e Irvine Co. toppecjl the list of Measure T contnbutors wtth 5427,000. Supporten of Me&l\U'e S, the Green- Ught Initiative, who rabed less than St00,000, la.id 1bUrlday their gra - roots campeigning led to their suc:ceu. •lbe residents ol the dty were too ~to let the ltvtne Co. and outside developers buy our dty, • Mid Phil Ant, • Greerillgbt leader. Arwt added that his group hoped company oftidU would now U.. to nlklenta more caNfuDY. •rt 11timetaralrelb11a11. ·be Mid. eddiDg tMt ~ .... olUina upon the =-z: c:MllmAn. Dam.a :,:.:.: ·=-=== our pablc -oll. • MID allo llihoald WW ~J promises to no longer seek major developments at Newport Center, as well es to stay out of any legal cbAl- leng against Greenligbt, Am M.ld. · ·we ewait bis timely answer,• h said. Orang County's lalvett developer pnwtoualy set the record by doliDg out about SSl0,000 to oppoee a 1986 ballot lnitta~ve against the np&D.l!on of NewPe>rt Center. Greenllght author Allan Beek Uo ~ to defMt tbe ('Ol'ftpU1y tn that electlOn. While~ ol the anti-Green· Ugbl MeUUl'9 T ldll had about 113.852 In~ debb at tbe dl»e ol IM a.t ~ period. Dec. 31, cam· JMlgn lllld dMy hid peid oft . .....,.,,~ -GMINUGMT fMI 7 - IWTIUOIT The c:M.lopet of a r'ISOf't It ~caw Mys he his no l111teotb 1 of ct. lgif 1g the ~ dlspit9 locll outl:Jy. S.'9J U11111 on 'A blown trensformer miH• fot • long dly at T.wlnkle Middle SchoO&. _,.... RYm- =::.~~ . ,..,, ... ,,..,... ....... ~Airport ........... ....... QDllS _____ n MLOOI S ...:eam 11 SNJS ' --Sandy Duran. oon eon.ii .net Guy Stron., WUl)Otr\'9dfk~ '-'*'-*iar ..,....,....,,. ...... J '' 2 Friday, February 2, 2001 on SATURDAY This photo by Orenge Coat College photography student Damian lWtsuml~ Is one cl 50 works on display at "Zone t, • OCC's juried studem exhibit. The exhibit will open Monday and runs through March 2 In OCC's Photo Gallery. In Saturday's Datebook, we Ufk with students about their ways of seeing the wOi1d and documenting 11. Doily Pilot Musical triple treat CHECK IT OUT Library delivers all that jazz J , Sandy Duncan, Don Correia and Guy Stroman will join Pacific Symphony Pops next week for 'singing, dancing show' Young Chang DAILY PILOT S andy Duncan has a playful, cartoon voice. It resonated well in the title role of ·Peter Pan." for which the Broadway singing and dancing star is widely known. It has been &ppropn ate m car- toons, including "Scooby Doo, H in which she played herself. Her voice catches clul- dren's attention. A wait- ress m Florida recently told her so. The waitress said her duld, who has Down syndrome, hardly pays attention to anythlng. But when she heard Dun- can's voice on television, she looked up and focused. ·I do a lot of children's things because I think if you can inspire children's imaginations, it's one of the more important things to do in this world, H said Duncan, a mother of two boys. "If you inspire them that way, it's a gift. H And as her Emmy and three Tony Award nomi- nations show, adults lis- ten up too. Duncan will team with Don Correia, Guy Stro- man and the Pacific Sym- phony Pops for a Valen- tine's celebration at the Orange County Perform- ing Arts Center next weeke nd. The program includes the Broadway classics "I Remember It Well,• "You Were There " and "Singin' in the Rain.· "We're doing all sorts of different numbers, H said Correia, who is mar- ried to Duncan. "You don't usually get this kind of show. It's usually either someone sittinq on a stool or someonr ~land­ ing by the piano. but this Brief IJ in DATIBOOK F or PBS viewers inspired by Ken Bums' "Jazz,. documentary. Newport Beach's public libraries a.re rife with resources a bout America's music. ln addition to books about the country's origi- nal art form, circu- lating CDs and videos feature the artistry of numerous jazz legends. jazz. The overview includes detailed sidebars with rec- onunended listening, plus exhaustive appendixes on jazz singers. There are discussions about such mainstream artists as Miles Davis, CharlJe Parker and Dizzy Gillespie m Francis Davis' "Beebop and Nothingness." The well- known jazz critic also exam- ines alternative directions in contemporary jazz and a broad swath of popular music, ranging from Tony Bennett to Michael Jackson and Prince, in his third essay collection. For jazz aficionados inter- ested in one of the greatest performers of our time, histo- rian Joshua Berrett provides eight From left, Sandy Duncan, Guy Stroman and Don Correla wW perform Feb. 9-10 with the Pad.fie Symphony Pops at the Orange County Performing Arts Center. All 10 videocassettes of Bums' masterpiece are now available at the Central Ubrary. With 75 interviews, more than 500 pieces of music. 2,400 still photographs and more than 2,000 rare film clips, the 19-bour tribute to jazz is a must-see for any- one interested in a musical journey through the most American of musical forms. decades of auto- bio- graphi- cal wnt- ings in "The Loub Ann- strong Com- panion." Other FYI WHAT: Sandy Duncan performs with the Pacific Symphony Pops WHEN:8 p.m. Feb. 9-10 WHERE: Orange coun- ty Performing Arts Center, 600 Town Cen- ter Drive, Costa Mesa COST: $14-$72 CALL: (714) 755-5799 is more of a singing, dancing show." Principal Pops Con- ductor Richard Kaufman will lead the symphony in such works as Mikhail Glinka's Overture to • Russlan and Ludmilla· and Dvorjak's Slavonic Dance No. 7 during the first half of the perfor- mance. Correia, who was nominated for a Tony Award in 1986 for bis performance as Don Lockwood in "Singin' In The Ram," has worked with his wife on numer- ous projects. His credits include "Oklahoma,• "Gypsy." "You're A Good Man, Charlie Brown• and "Funny Girl. H Stroman, who originat- ed the role of Frankie in ''Forever Plaid,• has won twst actor awards from both the L.A. Drama Crit- ics Circle and Drama League. Though Duncan is a singer, actor and dancer, she said she would stick to the label •actor• if she had to choose one. "Because whatevet I do, whether it's singing or dancing, I approach it from an acting point of view,• the Texas native said. "I interpret songs rather than stand there and sing a bunch of notes. It's supposed to tell a story.• Duncan left Lon Morris College in Texas after one year to pursue a career in New York. After appear- ing as Louise in Agnes De Mille's production of •carousel,• Duncan con- tinued in off-Broadway productions -•ceremo- ny of Innocence" won her the Theater World Award -and broke onto the Broadway scene with "Canterbury Tales.• Duncan was nominat- ed for her third Tony in 1980 for her title role in "Peter Pan." "'Peter Pan' was when a lot of people first saw me on stage," said Dun- can, 55. "Because of that, that's what they remem- ber me for. Doing the part was absolutely thrilling because it's won- derful, and it reaches all ages. It's not an adult show or a kids show - it's just a people show.• Her television credits include the comedy series "Funny Face• and "The Hogan Family,• "Roots " "Vanities • "Sandy ill Disneyl~d" and "The Sandy Duncan Show.· Her more dubious distinctions include appearing as herself in cartoon form irl "Scooby Doo, • starring as Pinoc- chio with Danny Kaye and being the first gues~ on "The Muppet Show.• Duncan met Correia almost 30 years ago. He was a dancer on "Sandy in Disneyland.• It was the first of numerous pro- jects together. One night, she was returning home from woi:king_on_ "FeteI.Ean," and Correia was coming back from his work on "A Chorus Une, • in which he made his Broadway debut. He pro- posed -he did the whole knee bit -and 21 years later the couple looks forward to putting on a Valentine's Day per- formance together. •It's problematic, I suppose some people say. But for us, it's not - we really love working together,• Duncan said. •Jazz: A History of Amer- ica's Music.,. the companion volume to the series, follows the film episode by episode. The lavishly illustrated col- laboration with Geoffrey Ward features more than 500 previously unseen shots of musicians and venues glimpsed in the 10-part doc- urnen- tary. ... & -Richly detailed text pro- vides back-0.. ground ~ ~ about .__,,....,..-~--.J jazz from tum-of-the-century New Orleans to its transformation into swing, bebop and fusion. Equally comprehensive is "Jazz, The flrst Century,,. featuring essays by jazz authorities, headed by Smith- sonian music curator John Hasse. From the music's mul- ticultural roots to its evolution Into world music, this photo- rich text covers all aspects of jazz and concludes with a list of 100 essential jazz aJbwns. In "Jazz 101," Yale Uni- versity music professor John Szwed takes a more academ- ic approach to the heritage and types of 20th century volumes about individual artists include "Groovtn High: The Llfe of Dlzzy Gillespie," by Alyn Shipton, and "As Though I Had Wings: The Lost Me moir," featuring diary entries of the late C het Baker. There are videos about such legends as Sarah Vaughn, Count Basie, Billie Holiday and John Coltrane in the library's seven-day loan collection. For listening pleasure, the artistry of Wyn- ton Marsalis, on-camera host of the Bums' series, may be heard on "Hot House Flow- ers.,. Other circulating CDs include fine offerings from such jazz greats as Ella Fitzgerald, Glenn Miller and Dave Brubeck, among more than 500 sound recordings that will keep any jazz fan from singing the blues. • CJtE(J( rr our 1s written by the staff of the Newport Beach Public Library. This 'Nl!ek's column is by Melissa Adams. in collaboration with Sara Bamlde. All titles may be reserved from home °' office com- puters by accessing the catalog at http:Jlww.v.newportbeachlibrary.org. "Over the Rainbow· from the "Wizard of Oz.• Arts Center, 600 Town Center Drive, Costa Mesa. Ticke ts are Sl 1-$16. Informa- tion: (714) 740-7878. Orange Coast College The company performs the lat- est contemporary styles, including tup-!'op, jazz, ballet and modem, 1 and is geared for intermediate lo advanced-level performers. Partic- ipants will each earn three units of college credit. Information: (714) 432-5506. Symphony,• a concert illustrating how music can tell stories without using words, at 10 and 11 :30 a.m. Feb. 10 at the Orange County Per- forming Arts Center, 600 Town Center Drive, Costa Mesa. The concert, part of the Mervyn's Musical Mornings, will be led by assistant conductor Mark Mandarano. The program will include •The Little Mer- maid• orchestra suite by Alan Menken, Aaron Copland's hoe- down from •Rodeo: Pour Dance Episodes" and Harold Arlen's 'Magic of Mozart' to visit the Center The concert will offer audi- e nces a chance to interact with the director as he unveils the We and work of Amadeus Mozart in the 70-minute concert, which is part of the orchestra's adult edu- cation programs. Featured pieces include the overture to "The Marriage of Figaro• and Symphony No. 39 in E-Plat Major. to hold dance auditions f\ Audillons will be held from noon to 2 p .m . today fo r Orange Coast College's R6rforming dance ensemble DANC'N ET,C in OCC's Dance Studio B, 2701 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa. Musical storytelling with Pacific Symphony • Dail¥J l!ilot VOL 95, NO. 28 TNOMAS H. JOIM°"- ~ TONY DODBIO. Editor U.CNIN, OtyEdtot •• ••MAHA&. ~EdltOt .,_CM9°" Spof1s ldllW ............ NllMlcMor WMD ...... ,...°"9W .,.,. lllOCI, -,,..........,, ,,.,,_,_, \di 1111f9Dndor ~-··-fl a!Oiil• The Pacific Symphony Orches- tra will hold "Story Time with the BEAQEBS t:tQIU~E CA 92626. Copyright NO news sto- (949) 642~86 ries. II~ tdltc>Nl !Ntt9r Record your c.oml'MllU about or~ herein ain ti. rtipl'Oduced without wrttt.n per-the Dally Piiot Of news lips. mmlon of CXJA"'lgM ONn«. AQQRESS HOW IO ltEACH US Our address Is 330 W. Bay St., C<Mta Mesa, CA 92627 ~ C()RRECDQNS The Times Or.nge County (800) 252-9141 It is the Pi.lot's policy to ptompt· ~ ly ron'Kt aU erron of substance. Clnlfled (949) '42-5618 "'-ase all (949) 574-4233. o~ <949) w..w1 m ldtoNI Th. Newport leecM:os'Ca Mes.a News (949) 642-5680 0.lty l'llOt (USl'S-1.....oo) "pub. Spof1J (Mt) 574-Qll llSMd Mond.ty through Saturdlty • Newt. SpofU f M (949) feM 17t> In Nlw'pot1 le.ch ~ COltl Mell, [--fMll: dMlypflot9t.tlme.QMTI IUblcriptlonl .. .valt.ble only bv MlllnOftb llUbtc:rlblnQ 10 The l1n"9 Or~ IUll,,_ Offb (Mt) IQ.4l21 County (IOO) 2Sl-tW. In.,... Mn. Jo (Mt) 6lM12t owlde of~ 1.-d\ end • ~---. .... lpdoww tD 1he DaiJy Not .... ~ ~by m.n fot uo ,,., monlh. s.cand r.-PG1t1i1e plld Ill COM,,._,, CA~ lndl* .. •ltllbk ~-OJ •!Wiit--- ""'-Ind *"-.l f'OS1'MAS.. 11111111 TO: lend ..... -....nw ~~ .... ~ ~,O .. tMQ.CO....._, Music director Carl St. Clair will lead the Pacilic Symphony Orchestra in the Classical Con- nections copcert •Tue Magic of Mozart" at 3:30 p.m . Feb. 10 at the Orange County Performing WEATHER AID SURF TEM'EltAlURES Balboa 72147 Corona de! Mar 72147 Costa MeM 72147 Newport Beach 72147 Newport Coast '2153 WPCmCAST W..-Wiii be knff-to waist~ TIDES 100AY ,First low 11:15 a.m .................... 0.9 first high l :30a.m .................... "AI Second low 9:.S1 p.m ................... .l.2 Secondhlgh 5:34 p.m._ ................... 2.7 IAJUllDAY ,lrst low 12:12 a m ............ '" .. -.1.l First high 4:.JO a.m ... n .......... -••••• 4.l SecOrid loW 10:52 p. -.-2.1 sandt"Oh l:.&5 p.m ,, • Tickets are $12-$32. Informa- tion: (714) 740-7878. POLICE f lllS ' Doily Pilot . . .. · Friday, Febrvofy 2, 2001 3 Newport Beach officials to mull flight futures lights out ·at TeWmkJ " • City Council to meet today to discuss number of departures allowed at John Wayne Airport. Peul Clinton DAILY PILOT NEWPORT BEACH -In a special closed-session meet- ing today, the City Coundl is expected to hanuner out Us position on a pending deal with Orange County that could pave the way for a new commercial airline at John Wayne Airport. The city, county and two actiVISt groups are in final talks to extend an agreement known as the •cargo stipula- tion,• which has permitted two cargo flights per day out- side the regular number of flights permitted under the 1985 settlement agreement. Newport Beach, the county Board of Supervisors, the Air· port Working Group and Stop Polluting Our Newport -the four original co-signers of the 1985 deal -must all sign on to ~nd the cargo flights. ·As a new council, we haven't dJscussed it,• Mayor Gary Adams said. ·we need to sit down and make sure we have a consensus.• An extension of the deal could free up two departures for an outside carrier such as Aloha Airlines, which has requested daily flights to Hawaii and Las Vegas. Under the terms of the set- tlement agreement, the airport may allocate 39 dally Class A flights, the loudest of the air- port's three noise categories. The bulk of the airport's com; merc:ial flights, as well as the two cargo Oights, fall under the Class A category. Since cargo flights were introduced in 1995, the air- port has lleld back two of those 39 flights as supple- mental departures, giving one each to Conbnental and lfans World Alrlines. U the four groups cannot agree to an extension, those flights would be stnpped and given to the cargo operators. Airport officials have sug- gested extending the cargo exception -for one flight a day each by Federal Express and United Parcel Service -· until the end of 2005. when the settlement agreement expires. Under that deal, which has been on the table since Octo· ber, the county would agree to shift the cargo flights. Eventually, the proposed, though controversial, airport at El Toro could be put into the mix as well. "If El Toro !airport) becomes avAilable for cargo, the county will act to reposi- tion cargo from John Wayne to El Toro,• said John Leyerle, the airport's access and noise manager. • Blown transf omier , electricity in the momJ.pg - were· thrown out at aboUt causes daylong power 10:.45 e.m., wbeD tbl tcboal outage at the school. learned the ~ wou1d ~Kho be out for the Nit ol tbe 0 n. day. AILY ,-,LOT Students had a pnCtjce COSTA MESA -When evacuation drill, did home· Te Winkle Middle School work and took turns bavin1 students first found the lunch. New food was lights out • in thelr class-brought in t>e'<:ause school rooms Thursday, they employees were unsure if thought it wa..a great tun the refrigerated food woukt Then reality set in, Prin-"6till be safe to eat. cipal Sharon Fry said. Parent volunteers, cl.i.J. Developer to press on with Crystal C~ve resort •we bad no phones trict employees and staff working, they couldn't buy memben called parents on things from the vending the emergency phone line, machines, there were no the only working phone lights on in the bathroom.• line for several hours, and she said. •AU of a sudden, between 500 and 600 stu- they began to realize how dents -about half the dependent we are on elec-school -received pennis· tricity for a lot or things in sion to leave early. our lives.• Fry said she was The school had a limited impressed by the students' amount of power in the good behavior and the morning, when Fry wa~. cornmuruty's willingness to notified of the problem at 1p1tch in. Peul Clinton DAILY PILOT CRYSTAL COVE -For Mike Freed, it's full steam ahead. The concessionaire devel- oper who signed a controver- sial deal with the state in 1997 said he will press on with his $35-milllon resort for Crystal Cove State Park. Freed's pledge comes a day after a state parks spokesman said the department will evict the residents living in the 46 cottages on the .state-owned land in mid-March. Freed has already spent nearly $2 million toward developing the resort, which has drawn heavy criticism for expected luxury room rates of as much as $375 per night. At a Jan. 18 public meeting, hundreds of locals expressed their ob1ections to Freed. In the aftermath of the meet- mg. state parks offioals ques- tioned their conunitment to the contract, signed under former Gov. Pete Wtlson's admirustra- tion. Freed, on the other hand, said he won't be deterred. "I'm not going to• pull the resort plan off the table, Freed said. "We're going for- ward." During a break in a string of high-level meetings about Crystal Cove's future, state parks director Rusty Areias said the agency was consid- ering buying out Freed's con- tract. The state would proba- bly be forced to reimburse the San Francisco developer's expenses. C· f A#.gwU", IT'S TIME FOR ... f~t~ qo«t' r#.a MI CASA · MEXICAN RESTAURANT 296 E. 17TH ST. COSTA MESA · 949·64S·76l6 "It's one of the options, but it's an opbon without money,• Areias said. The state has tentabvely set Feb. 15 as the date 1t plans to send out 30-day evictlon notices to tenants livtng on land the state bought rrom the Irvine Co. m 1979 for $32.6 million. The tenants must be removed, officials said, to make way for the removal of septic tanks that are suspect- ed of leaking sewage into the cove The Santa Ana Region- al Water Quality Control Board cited the cottages, in a Nov. 16 cease and desist or<ter. as a potential hazard. The stale plans to mstall $10 million in tnfrastructure improvements -mcluding new sewers, gas pipes and Warehouse Sale! · on all furniture .. ~ telephone lines. There are no plans to allow those livmg in the cottages back in when the work IS done. Crystal Cove residents were qwck to cnbcize the state for aba.ndorung the cot- tages, placed m the National Register of Historic Places in 1979. The state receives about $480,000 a year in rent. "By jwnping the gun (on the evictions), the state is losing valuable income and they're contributing to the destruction of the cottages.• Crystal Cove resident Al Will.lnger said. That's not the intention, state parks spokesman Roy Stearns said. "We do not want them to deteriorate,• Stearns said. "Our intent is to preserve and protect.· 6:40 a.m. 1 "People really Jps! But the remaining power jumped in to help, and had to be turned off before that's a ruce sign of what a Southern California Edison compassionate community could repair the culprit, a and staff we have,• she transformer that blew out said. Wednesday night, she said. And despite rumors Fry Lesson plans -which said she heard among some Fry said were followed students Thursday, school is "creatively• and to the expected to open as usual degree possible without today. PETER BUFFA has moved. He and his column, Comments & Curiosities, may be found in the first Sunday edition of the Pilot.· Watch for it this weekend. £5~ Mattress Outlet Store BRAND NEW· COSMETJCAJ..LY IMPERFECT Get the Best for Less! lE • • 3165 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa OH IMoc:.k South of ~5 f'wy 545-7168 STOREVVIDE Super Savings CJn DeSigner Labels . . . . . 4 Friday, Feb!uaty 2, 2001 • Send AROUND TOWN Items to the Dally "lot 330 W. Bay St., Cos-ta Mesa, CA 9M27; by fax to (949) 646-4170; °' by calllng (949) 574- 4291. lndude the time, date and ioc.tlon of the event. as well as a contact phone number. A com- ~~· llstlng Is avallable at •/lwww.thllypllotcom. TODAY A. brain tumor support group w1ll meet at 7 p.m. on the first and third Thursday of the month at the Patty and George Hoag Cancer Center Auditorium, 1 Hoag Drive, Newport Beach. Free. (949) 722-6237. Jewbb Family Service of Orange County will sponsor an ongoing Jewish healing support group for people with a chronic illness at 7 p.m. at Jewish Family Service, 250 E. Baker St., Suite G, Costa Mesa. Free. (714) 445-4950. The Orange County Japan- ese American Assn. will pre- sent a free children's work- shop on origami kai at 3:30 p.m. at the Mesa Verde Branch Library, 2969 Mesa Verde Drive, Costa Mesa. (714) 546-5274. The Orange County Chapter of Republicans For Choice will hold its first official meet- ing at 6:30 p.m., with registra- tion beginning at 6 p.m., at the Sutton Place Hotel, 4500 MacArthur Blvd., Newport Beach. (714) 633-6373, Ext 115. "Employee or Independent Contractor?• a program on the ramifications of hlring full-time employees rather than freelance consultants, will be held at 7 p.m. at the Newport Beach Central Ubrary's Friends Meeting Room, 1000 Avocado Ave. Pree. (949) 717-3801 . SATURDAY David Loomsteln of Symantec will present Norton Utiliti~s for Macintosh computers and more from 8 a.m. to 1 :30 p.m . at the Chemistry Building at Orange Coast College, 2701 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa. Free to first time visitors. (949) 770-1865. A workshop for small busi- nesses titled "Tactics to Make E-commerce Successful for Small Business• will be held from 9 a .m. to noon at Nation- al University, 3390 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa. $25, but SS may be discounted i1 fee is prepaid. The meeting is spon- sored by the Orange County Chapter of the Service Corps of Retired Executives Assn. (714) 550-7369. Green Systems International will hold an orchid sale from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. at Green Sys- tems International Orchid Nursery, 20362 Birch St., Newport Beach. (949) 756- 1211. Author Unda McMlWn Pyle will speak about her book "Peaks, Palms & Picnics - Day ,Journeys in the Moun- • @!_wiiiiwW/1 Floral & Gifts 50%-75% Off WAREHOUSE CLEARANCE SALE on Selected Merchandise, Stems and Arrangemenrs Mon-Fri 10-6, Sat 10-5, Sun 10-4 369 E. I ?ch Screec, Costa Mesa, (.A Phone (949) 646-6745 Locarcd in Wcs1pon Sq11.1tt across from Ralph& l.lllCh 11 )() 2 )() l<N:Jn· Sii • ~ 9.1 Set>.6drv & ~ Dwnr !>-l(lpn E~ • ~ fllr, l\llPI & Plzu 11 lO. 1QPm 414 Otd Newport Blvd • Newport Beach (949) 645-6086 llSI IET The Newport Hubor Nautical Museum will host two tall ships battle reenactments and tours led by period-costumed crew Saturday and Sunday at the museum docks, 151 E. Coast Highway, Newport Beach. The tours will take place from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Admission ls S7 for families, S3 for adults, $2 for students and seniors, and $1 for chlldrert 12 and younger. (949) 673-7863. The sailing reenactments will take place from 2 to 5 p.m. and cost $40 for adults and $20 for children 12 and younger. Reser- vations requested. (800) 200-LADY. tains and Deserts of Palm Springs and the Coachella Valley of Southern Califor- nia· at 2 p.m. at Borders Books, Music & Cale at South Coast Plaza, 3333 Bear St., Costa Mesa. (714) 432-7854. Etiquette expert Theresa Thomas will teach children between 8 and 12 about table manners from 4:45 to 8 p.m. at the Four Seasons Hotel, 690 Newport Center Drive, Newport Beach. $105. (949) 760-4951. SUNDAY \ A blood drlve wtlJ be held from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. at Tem- ple Bat Yah.m, 1011 Camel- back Road, Newport Beach. Free. (949) 509-1355. MONDAY Support Our Schools The Orange Coast Mineral and Lapidary Society will present a screening of a film on diamonds at 7:3q p.m. at the Costa Mesa Neighbor- hood Community Center, 1845 Park Ave Free. (714) 546-4389. TUESDAY Vanguard University of Southern California will cele- brate Homecoming 2001 with five days of activities themed "Come Home to the Futwe" on 1\Jesday through Feb. 10 at the campus, 55 Fau Drive, Costa Mesa. There will be concerts, services, dinners and more. Prices vary. (714) 556-3610. A lour-week, military-style fitness course·will be held at 6 p.m. 1\Jesdays and Thurs- days, beginning 1\Jesday, at TUF Productions, 2902 W. Pacific Coast Highway, New- port Beach. $200, or $160 tor members. (949) 646-8828. Onnge Cout College wlll host a workshop for people who want to start their own business from 9 o.m. to noon at National University, 3390 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa. $25. (714) 432-5880. The Orange County Chapter of the Service Corps of Retired Executives Assn. will host a workshop for small businesses on developing a business plan from 9 a.m. to noon at National University. 3390 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa. $20 in advance and $25 at the door. (714) 550- 7369. David Gabbe, author of two books on vegetarian nutrition and cooking, will teach a cooking class titled "Explor- ing Soy• from 6 to 9 p.m. at the Costa Mesa Neighbor- hood Community Center, 1845 Park Ave. $30, plus a $10 materials fee. (714) 327- 7525. WEDNESDAY A worluhop, "Money-Mak- ing Opportunities with Your Home-Based Computer,• will be offered at 6:30 p.m. at Cos- ta Mesa High School, 2650 Fairview Drive. $45. (714) 432-5880. A time-management work- shop will begin at 8 a.m. at Orange Coast College, 2701 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa. $175. (71 4) 432-5880. A Cal Poly university repre- sentative will be available from 1 to 4 p.m. at Orange Coast College, 2701 Fairview Road. Costa Mesa. Free. (714) '432-5894. A workshop on devel-g great resources will be offered from 6 to 9 p.m. at Costa Mesa High School, 2650 Fairview Road. $75. (714) 432-5880. A workshop, "Growing Plants Indoors . . . The Easy Way,# will be presented at 9:30 a.m. at Sherman Library & Gardens, 2647 E. Coast Highway, Corona del Mar. $25. Reservations are required. (949) 673-2261. Shop Harbor Blvd. of Cars NFLEMAN1S NIGHT l-l :\ f\ 1~-1 \ F,h J ( .: ( ·.11-. ~ u.t411t14ay, Pt6. 7, i-1 p. m. Cu1id will be on hand •tfP with your ~dentine's Day sit ippfng, plus 10% off all services gifts, special vrndor sh~14"ases, refi:a'untnts, cigars, chair massage and morel Stop by or call for aa •pointmeotl (9.49) 644-6671 •~com lo N.wport Cmc., tNtwMn Edwuda aa.n.. • Muldoona The Dream Gallery BE OUR GUEST AT Huntington 'Ferrace as we unveil exquisite art work on oringinal canvas and oil paintings displayed by "The Dream Gallery" International Artists. Unveiling will be Saturday, February 3 llam -3pm complimentary rc&eshmcnu ~~SSANCE at HUNl1NGlON TERRfCE ,11.Mllll 11Nt9fl llVIHO 18800 Florida Street, Huntington Beach, CA 92648 (714) 848-8811 UcCDM tJ(l6001064 Located Neu five Poinc -Pin.a " • Daily Pilot 1be American CAIK'er Soci- ety will present a clau titled •Look Good ..• Peel Better• tor cancer patients at 10 a.m. at Hoag Hospital, 1 Hoag Dttve, Building 41, Newport Beach. 1\-a.lned cosmetolo- gists will work with patients with makeup, wig and turban tips to help hide the sigps of radiation and chemotherapy ~eatment. Free. (949) 261- .. ~46. THURSDAY A workshop on helping your child succeed in school will be held from 7 to 9 p.m. at Orange Coast College, 2701 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa. $45. (714) 432-5880. A sbt-sesslon wrtttng work- shop hosted by the Newport Beach Community Services Department will begin at 7 p.m . at Oasis Senior Center, 800 Marguerite Ave., Room 4, Corona del Mar. $98. (949) 644-3151. A four-week session on how to change careers will begin at 6:30 p.m. at Costa Mesa High School, 2650 Fairview Road. $185. (714) 432-5880. An lnformaUonal meeting on a monthlong foreign lan- guage program in Italy will be presented at 6 p .m . at Orange Coast College, 2701 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa Free. (714) 438-4702. South Coast Plaza will host the 21st Orchids International Show and Sale Feb. 8 to 11 on all three levels of the Crate & Barrel/Macy's Home Wing, 3333 Bear St., Costa Mesa. Hours are 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. Feb. 8 and 9, 10 a.m. to 7 p.m Feb. 10 and 11 a.m. to 6:30 p.m. Feb. 11 . (949) 261-2216. .. State and Federal Payroll Reporting Requirements,• a program presented by Lon Everson, will be held at 7 p.m. at the Newport Beach Central Library's Friends Meeting Room, 1000 Avocado Ave. Free. (949) 717-3801. FEI. 10 Orange Coast College accounting students will offer free income tax preparation services to low-income, dis- abled, non-English-speaking residents and senior citizens from 1 to 5 p.m . Feb. 10, 17, 24, March 3, 10, 17, 24, 31 and April 14 at the campus, 2701 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa. (714) 432-5685. The Prestdenttal Motorcade Cassie Car and Motorcyde Show will be held from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m . at the Orange County Market Place, 88 Pair Drive, Costa Mesa. The event will featwe more than 1,000 ven- dors, entertainment, a cherry- pie eating contest and a peanut bag-tossing competi- tion. $10 or $15. (949) 723- 6663. Green SystemJ InternaUonal will hold an orchid sale from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Feb. 10 and 11 at Green Systems Interna- tional Orchid Nursery, 20362 Birch St., Newport Beach. (949) 756-1211. lbe 552 Club's 2001 Sweet- Heart Ball will be held at 6:30 p.m. al the Pour Seasons Hotel, 690 Newport Center Drive, Newport Beach. $450 per couple, $225 per individ- ual. Reservations • are required. (949) 574-7208. Fii. 11 The Newport Beacb Central Ubrary will present •A Rag· time Pea.st• a c:bance to learn about a mlisical style unique to Amarlca, at 3 p.m. in the Friend.I Meeting Room, 1000 Avocado Ave. (949) 117-3801. Hl.14 1be Newport Harbor Area Chamber of Commerce WW preMDt nutrit:lonaJ end fitness expert Rodpey Bun.on of Rou Inc. at the ooon net· working luncbeoa. et the Hyett Newporter, 1107 Jam· botee Roed, Newport Bee.ch. $25, or S20 for memben. (949) 729 .. 400. Daily Pilot • Woven shirts are an essential part of a modern woman's wardrobe. At $29.50, this long-sleeved gingham version is not only fashionable, but afford~ With long sleeves, short sleeves or no sleeves, it is available in more than 40 colors and patterns. • The trench coat is back, the ideal outer layer for spring. Available in classic gray, navy or stone with contrasting color detail ($78), it provides a clean. confident look whether rain or shine. l THELoOK Friday, February 2, 2001 5 plorin,gTh ay a.w. Cook V lbrant color, clean lines and classic fabrics define a new gener- ation of icon pieces at The Gap this spring. Look for new sil- houettes in polos and woven shirts, the evolution of the sweater, and the revolution of the sweatshirt -all in a range of bril- liant.tones. Local stores at Triangle Square, South Coast Plaza and Crystal Court have confirmed that they are carrying the new spring style. So go and have a look. •This chunky tennis crew sweater in lavender (S42) is a great way to stay warm without using any heating. Their new line of sweaters run the gamut from crew neck and cable knit to stretch cashmere and silk. • Yes, folks, that is a sweatshirt. Redesigned with classic lines, The Gap sweatshirt ($29.50) creates a modern way of layering with style. Made of soft French terry, these are not your ordinary gray gym .................................. sweats. • The polo is the must-have shirt for spring. The classic gets reinvented. now infused with modern a~utes. Whether solid or striped, in cotton pique or classic fine-ribbed, the polo provides enduring Style and substance. Priced at $26.50, it comes in more than 30 colors. Orange County MUSEUM OF Mr 850 San Clemente Dr. Newport Beach (949) 759-1122 2001 CURRENT SUPPORT CAMPAIGN KICKS OFF FEB 1 -MARCH 1 Last year, the YMCA of Orange County's eight branches, helped more than 50,000 youths and families feel good about themselves and others through programs that promote healthy spirit, mind and body. But every year, Orange County's need for values-based YMCA programs continues to grow. You can help. Each year, your friends, neighbors, family and coworkers give their time and therr money to support YMCA solutions to the pressing needs of our local youth. Join their efforts today with a generous gift to the YMCA. Together, you and the'YMCA build strong kids, strong families and strong communities. O.LHelMI~ lnltM Communtty Dewtapment Compen, ~ UoM Oub·Coete M ... Newport...._, PnM:iom Tec:hnat•n The lt.C. .... ,......,. . c.J.••• ...... as- ••••"~11ctt..,a.._. .... Wt 1'-* ,_ • c.J. l111t•www a SW tw the ............. .., Aw11111,. •• " ~ ••• ,, • . I I '6 Friday, FebNory 2, 2001 A miggng piece of cruci8.l evidence • Lecktng a body in murder caw bu not kep ~puty l)jst Atty. Debora Uoyd fri>m getting convictions in the put. ........... DMY Plt.oT Throughout the trial of Bric Becbler. • au· dal"pMc:e ot evidence WU rililiing: th8 bOdy ol b& wtfe, .Pegye, whkh was never found. But thot1 didn't 1top Deputy Oiat. Atty. Debora tJoyd from winning a murder con· viCtlc)n. It bun't in the pest, either. Becblei"• conviction ThUJ'IC:lay for mur· dming hll 38-year-old wUe more than three ,yean ego wu Uoyd'a third cue that lDwlved. ~body. But this one ii sped.al for Uoyd because it II the only one ot the three in whk:b the clef en· dmt WU oonvk:ted of first-degree murder. •t don't think this cue ii unique,• Uoyd sakl. "There have been other no.body cu- •· and each c.ase has some apedal issues." Uoyd won second-degree convictions in .bei previoul two missing-body cases. Bechler'1 c.aM 1J Orange County's fifth mi11ing·body case in more than three decades. So far, including Bechler, all five defendants have been found guilty. The moet recent verdict before Bechler's, also protee:Uted by Lloyd, ended the Janu- ary 2000 trtol or Judy Valot of Irvine. She wu convicted of second-degree murder for killing her boyfrland. Valot's cue wu similar to Becbler's in its Jack of physical evidence. What did it take for the jury to find Valot guilty? Seven drops ot blood found in Valot's home that matched her bOyfriend's blood type. Tbe Bechler case has now strengthened Orange County juries' reputation for lumding down guilty verdicts in missing body cases. Llayd la.id that although an important ~of the puzzle in the Bechler case -the bOdy of Pegye Bechler -wu missing, she never doubted the strength of her evidence. •we had a lot of evidence,• she said. •we were pretty confident.• BECHLER CONTINUED FROM 1 Sbe attlc:ized her eon'• former girlfriend Tina New, who cooperat- ed with lnvestigatQn to secreUy record her convenatiom with Beeb· ler ln a crowded ~urant when he admitted to the murder. Bechler was arrested that night in October 1999. •we all know what 1lna New ii,• Unda Bechler Mid 1bunday. "I& goes without saying." Erle Bechler'• aunt Gall Bechler said she believes her nephew ii innocent and \)lat she feell sorry for his three children. "They 101t their mother. Now they've lost their father,• she said. "We're shocked.• Jurors said it was one of the most difficult decisions they have ever made. A male juror who identified himself only u "Cesar• said the bi- al was difficult for him. "None of us was convinced right away when we started, dellberat· ing, he said. "The first day we start· ed, I said to myself that this guy is innocent.• Most Jurors had a problem with the lack of physical evidence in the case, he said. •For me, what did it wa.s (Bech- ler's) best friend saying that he talked to him about killing his wife,• the juror said. Kobi La.leer, Bechler's friend and best man at his wedding, testified that Bechler asked him four months before Pegye's murder, "What do you think about the possibility of killing my wife?" Deputy Dist. Atty, Debora Lloyd said she was •very concerned• to see jurors deliberate so long. Lloyd said she was confident the prosecu- tion had enough evidence that they could have pulled through even without Tina New, who was consid- ered to be their star witness. "I had 50 witnesses lined up,• she said. Despite the jury's decision, Lloyd said she believed Bechler • dRi it for the money.• · "He's got the lite insurance poli- cy he deserves.• she said. Defense attorney John Barnett, S Hit.UR I OAll.V PllOT Defeme attomev John Barnett. addreues the media outside the Santa Ana .courthouse Thursday. who had argued that Bechler made up the story of murder to impress New, said he thought ·u would be dif- ficult for the jury to reach a decision. "There wa.s a lot of evidence, but it was compllc4ted, • he said. He w111 file an appeal on behalf of Bechler based on jwisdicti.on issues, Barnett said. Barnett had submitted a motion earlier this month stating that a Cali- fornia court did not have the jurisdic- tion in this case because, according to the prosecution's theory, the incident took place eight miles off the New- port Beach 'coast California's jw1sdic- tion ends less than four miles from the coast The motion was denied. Pegye Bechler's best friend, Glenda Mason, said it has been a long and emotional trtal •Personally, I feel a sense of clo- sure,• said Mason, who introduced Pegye to Eric Bechler on the sands of Newport Beach eight years ago. Talking about Bechler's lack of reaction, Mason said she ls not sur- prised. "That's Eric,• she said. "That's wha.t he was ... and I'm glad Eric is where he should be.• Jamie Sue Franchini, a friend of the MaJsballs, let out a whoop of joy over th~ phone as she spo~ from her home m R~ell, N.M. Pajye Bechler grew up in the nearby town of Dexter. "We've been so frightened because the jury was out for so long,• she said. •rm so relieved for the fam- ily, for [Pegye's parents). This w111 help them get on with their lives.• t I Daity Pilot TILL DEATH DID THEY PART .---."'!!91!--. ,,_ Pegye Mri1ll 1nd Erk a.c:hlet 1re lntrodUGed. 1"2: The couple b IMfTfed In Neuschwlnsteln Clstle, Getman)'. 11N: The lechlers decide to sell Pegye's physk.11 ther- •PY business to • Corti Mes1 corpor1tlon. They Bric leam they won't receive Pegye Bechler the agreed amount In Bechler their convict. July 1tt7: The Bechlers celebr1te their fifth wedding anniver- sary with 1 bolting trip off the Newport coast. Only Eric Bech- ler returns from the trip. He said his wife must havt been thrown overboard by a wive. Her body Is never found. October 1ttt: Bed'ller Is charged with his wife's murder, more than tWo years 1fter she disappeared, after police record conversetlons between him and his glrlfrlend, Tln1 Ntw. Prose· cutors say he was seeking a life lnsur1nce policy In his wife's name. Bechler pleads not guilty. Mwctt ZOOO: Prosecutors file 1 98-plge tr1nscrlpt detalllng the taped conversation, In which Bechler tells his glrtfrlend: ·1 felt like 1 was backed in a corner. llke she was going to steal the kids away, and I'd never see them ag1ln. I me1n, she was just super-controlling of the children.• August ZOOO: New files a S1G-milllon clvll lawsult ag1inst Newport Beach resident and former NBA star Dennis Rodman alleging he sexually assaulted her In his home. No criminal charges are filed. F•ll ZOOO: Bechler's trial Is repeatedly delayed. Dec. 5, ZOOO:judge rules th1t the taped conversation between Bechler and New may be Introduced as evidence . Dec. 7, 2000: Bechler's trial begins. Dec. 11, ZOOO: New takes the stand as the trial's star witness for the beginning of several days of testimony. While she relates how Bechler told her he killed his wife, defense attorney John Barnett calls Into question her belief that she is psychic. Dec. 14. ZOOO: Bechler's best man testifies that Bechler had told him he was thinking about "taking [Pegye) out to sea and dumping her In the ocean.• Jwi. J, 2001: After a two-week recess, the trial resumes with the jury seeing a videotape of a sobbing Bechler talking about his wife's disappearance a day after the Incident. hm. 17, Z001: Barnett asks that the case be dismissed because where it happened -off the coast of Newport Beach -Is not within California's jurisdiction. hm. 11. Z001: Bechler takes the stand after the judge refuses to throw out the case. He describes his story that a wave must have thrown his wife Into the ocean while he was being pulled behind their rented speedboat on a bodyboard. He also said he lied to New about killing his wife to impress New. Jwt. 2J, 2001: Closing arguments begin In the trial. JM. Z4. Z001: Jury deliberatl0ns begin. Feb. 1, Z001: Jury convicts Bechler of first-degree murder. REACTION CONTINUED FROM 1 convicted because there was so little evidence in the case. "They never even found the wife's body, so how do they know?• Kelly asked as he took a break from a bike ride near the Fun Zone. "But I smelled a rat. His story was always shaky. He probably deserved it. The strange thing is that things like th.ts just don't happen around here.• The Greatest Show in Orange County is Back. Susan Smith, 35, who grew up in Orange .C-ounty and now lives in. Wyoming, swd Newport Beach has the image of being a safe commu- nity, where murders such as this do not happen . • The legends of the Senior Tour are ready to make their annual visit to the Toshiba Senior Classic. They've treated local galleries to six straight years of riveting action, and they've provided decades of memories to golf fans across the world. At $14 fo r a single-day ticket, you don't want to miss the only official Orange County appearance of players like Lee Trevino, Hale Irwin, Chi Chi Rodriguez and defen~ing champion Allen Doyle. Because when the Senior Tour stars tee it up at Newpon Beach Country Club this year, it's not just a competition-it's a curtain call. TOSHIBA B E N 0 A CLASSIC Newport Beach Country Club February 26 -March 4 Single-day tickets just $14 Call 949/515-4840 or vl1lt www.ToshlbaSenlorClaulc.com , ... "This was really surprising that this happened here, it seems so safe,• Smith swd while sitting in a courtyard at Fashion Island in Newport Beach. "I have been on vaca- tion here with family, and we have been looking in the paper every day for the ver- dict. I had a suspicion that he had done it. It was just too much like a Monday night movie and he was the good- looking star. If I had been on the jury, I would have said he was guilty too.• Sitting behind the counter at Balboa Boat Rentals, where Bechler rented the boat for that fi.ncll cruile, manager Charlie VWclloboz, 45, of Newwrt Bfech laid Bechler's story ii outlandish but possi- ble: "It remlndf me of a movie plot, but the story could be true, you don't reelly know,· Vlllaloboz Mid .• "I do know that when It happened. there were a lot of people around here asking questiom, but ao far, no one around really knows about tt, which ii fine with me. But you know, I think people are getting weirder end weirder. Weird things happen a lot these daYI.• Debbie Smlth, 42, a recep- tlonllt at the laDla Mlon e• Duhne:r, Mid tt II Nd that 8echler'1 three cb.1ldren have lost their mother end now their father. •Jt'1 .U just like a movie, and lt probably will beCQme one,• Smith 1&1d; 1haldng bar heed 1n d.Wnay, "lt'• all IO ted, U lMy mUe a movie though. UM JQOMY aboWd go to the IDdl, b9ci1Ult what .. do tbey ..... left• lt'I IM\W tbt OM you apect. Nfter,• • Daily Pilot 1 Friday, February 2, 2001 1· Campaign money went mostly to winners BRIEFLY IN THI lllWS Authorities catch suspected burglar • Chris Steel outpaces other candidates in Costa Mesa City Council fund-raising race. Jennifer Kho D AILY PILO~ COSTA MESA -Chris Steel came on strong. In the home stretch of the November City Council race, the new councilman raised almost $10,000, bnnging his total to $25,002, the most of any candidate. By Oct. 26, he had raised GREEN LIGHT CONTINUED FROM 1 Final contributors will be rel~ased with the next report, due July 31, said former May- or Tom Edwards, a co-chair of the Measure T campaign. "We want to thank every- body who worked so hard,# Edwards said. "Wm or lose, we did our best and we should be congratulated for standing up for what was right. .. Apart from the lrvine CO:-:- other top contributors to the Measure T C8JVpaign includ- ed the Califom1a Assn of Put a few words to work for you. Call the Daily Pilot CLASSIFIEDS just $15,559. St~ ended up winning 10,664 votes -the most of any candidate. Councilwoman Libby Cowan, who was reelected After receiving the second- hlghest number of votes, 10,276, was third in the mon- ey race with $20,292, although she spent only $15,129. But in comparison to Steel, she raised just $4,000 in the dosing days of the campaign. "I think (the amount r raised) shows I had a lot of support in the community from people who were willing Realtors, with $52,000. and the Building Industry of Southern California, with $24,500. By comparison, Greenligbt supporters forked out about $97,000 to lead their inltiative to victory. Most of the contri- butions came from the city's residents, with only a few larger than $1,000. ln two of the three council district seats up for election, the biggest fund-raisers also made it behind the dais. In District 2, where former Councilwoman Jan Debay was forced to vacate her seat because of term Umits, Councilman Gary Proctor emerged as the victor, rais- I'm not worried, my agent Is Cr•lg Brown lnsunance Call today for auto & home owner's Insurance! (949) 760-1255 Fashion Island I to write me checks for my run for City Council,• she said. "But while 1 raised that much money, which shows support, I did not spend it all.• Cowan spent less money than Planning Com.missioner Tom Sutro, for instance, who raised $20,611 and spent $18,128. Sutro, however, didn't have the luck of Cowan and Steel, coming in at eighth place of the 11 candidates vying for the three council seats. In the tight race for the last council seat, wluch Council- woman Karen Robinson won 109 $68, 145 and spending $51.909. Dennis Lahey, one of his opponents, had not filed a report as of Thursday. As of November, Lahey had raised about $2,44 9. Steven Rosansky, the third candi- date, did not have to file a report because he spent less than $1,000. Councilman Steve Bromberg, who replaced for- mer Mayor John Noyes as the representative for 01.Stnct 5, raised $62,802 and spent $62,544 . Runner-up Patncia M. Beek also had not filed new reports but had raised about $21,997 by election day. The third contender, Robert Schoonmaker, spent 'lj • New rt Beach • Llcis 0550290 s A" e co· ... ~ WITNESS HISTORY INT.HE MAKING A special edition of the Dally Pilot on Friday, February 23, 2001 will be your ticket into the Toshiba Senior Clas.5k. l1iousehold names like Palmer, Irwin, watson. Kite, Trevino, Rodriguez and M<:Cord are coming to Newport Beach. Jt's your only chance to participate in a PGA TOUR saocdoned event in Orange County aD year. rtbe playefs of the Senior TOUR have bttJl writing golf h1slory for d«ades. Advertise in the 'nJ&b1ba Senior amtc spedal edldon 'dl'im-and be a part of the next~· TOSHIBA ... l) l t) \' I ' l . I : over former Councilwoman Heather Somers by Just 32 votes, 1t 1s still unclear whether money played a cru- cial role: Robinson has yet to turn in her latest campaign bnanoal statements, cover- ing the last two months last year, to the city clerk. Robinson had raised $9,228 by Oct 26. At that pomt, Somers had brought in $4,425. Somers went on to raise a total of $8,857 She spent $6,117. Dan Worthington, a Costa Mesa Sarutary Distnct board member who ended up m less than $1,000 on tus cam- paign and was not required to file a report Un!Jke the other wmners, Councilman John Heffernan, who defeated incumbent Tom Thomson and former City Manager Bob Wynn in the race for DI.Strict 7, was elected desptte spending much less than his oppo- nents Heffernan, who put up $31.443 of tus own money and did not accept contribu- Support Our Schools Shop Harbor Blvd. of Cars 11 A I{11• .. J~ nh 1.I," ( "'"" KtiiJ;T~ &LXth place, rlUSed and spent $3,500. Willlam Perk.ms, a retail saJesman at ln-N-Out Burger Corp. who received 1,8.45 votes to come m at last place, raised $1 .390 c!llld spent $1,022 The other four candidates -Joel Fans, RJck Rodgers, Ron Channels, Michael CW- ford -who placed h.fth, sev- enth, run th and 10th. respec- tively, were not reqwred to file fmal financial statements because they spent less than $1,000. During their campaigns, all four swd they were not accepting money. lions, spent about $30,594 Thomson rcllsed $61 , 7 50 ttnd spent $52,902, with Wynn rat.Sing $63,906 and spending $63,886 Thomson, Bromberg and Proctor also benefited from mailers and newspdper advertisements thdt the New- port Beach Police Assn. Votc~r Awareness Committee put out on theu behaU The group spent about $5,552 for each of the three C"and1dates Huntington Beach pohce on Thursday arrest· ed a 36-year-old parolee suspected of burglarl.zing several Newport Beach homes, ofhaals S8ld. John Robert Her- show1tz was caught by detectives as he was allegedly trying to break mto a home near New- land Street and Arnett Dnve, pobce said. Officers received Her- show1tz's license plate number from Newport Bedch police They spot- ted tus 1977 wtute utility truck Thursday mommg HershoWltz tned to escape in his truck but was Cdught after a bnef vetu- cle chdse and foot purswt In a subsequent search of HershoWlt:z's home, pohce found thousands of dollars worth of ~ewelry and coms. He ts being held m Orange County Jail Wlthout bail. Vict.uns of Jewelry a.nd com thefts are asked to Cdll the Newport Beach Pohc.e Department at (94ql 550-6273 -Oeepa Bharath SABATINO'S Lunch • Dinner • Sunday Brunch 251 Shipyard Way • Newport Beach Please call for hours directions & reservattons. : (949) 723-0621 : ---· ... ---··-------·----· ---· T , I f I I t I I • I• f 8 Friday, Feb!uory 2, 2001 • II' I ' ' I I , . Dal~ Piiot Is • - .. ' _ Are you ready for more - Local News? Your daily news just got better . ·· ' • - ·SUN DAY EDITION• ... f It begins February 4 ( ' . ' .. • ' Doily Pilot Off season madness trip to the Strawberry Bowl meant more lo the Orange Coast College oolball team than an extra week of practice or free rood at the event's banquet. Because of ()('C's Mission Central Division Conference co-championship. coupled wtth the bowl game. Coast's sophomore footbdU pldyers hdve been find- ing places to conlmue their careers. And. the OCC football program has put itself on another level, d new level that has changed the Bucs. "It JUSt seems bke it's d d1Herent feel,· OCC Coach Mike Taylor said of this year's incoming recru1tmg proce'>'> Whether the n<'w level will put the Bucs on the same platedu d., tedmi. like Mt. San Antonio and Palomar will be seen in the fall. But, in the meantime, players who helped OCC reach its first bowl game in seven years and 1ti. first conference title in a decade, arc !>chcduhnq trips to four-year universitici.. After vis1l!> to Temple (Philadelphia), San Jose State and M1<,soun, tight end Ben Fredn ckson dended to play w1th the Tigers. When the !>Cason ended, Oregon Slate pursued him, but then the Beavers were planning to s1gn'two JUCO Light endi. and Fredrickson reu out of the picture. He v1s1ted Temple and then San Jose State, but 'ilill couldn't make up hjs mind. Then, one day before h<' left for Missouri. Oregon State cdllPd back and said Fredrickson was back 10 the picture because one of the light ends did not sign with them. Frednckson said he would v1s1t the Beavers, but after tounng M1ssoun dnd meeting with first-year coach Gary Pmkel, Frednckson jumped at the Tigers. Pinke! was hired in December and turned Steve Virgen COASTERS his focu!> to OCC for a linebacker. But, after gaining knowledge of r:redrickson, Pinkel wanted the 6-fool-4, 248-pound tight end who Cdughl 68 passes (or rune touchdowns m his two- yea r career at OCC. "lt'i. just been crazy." Frednckson said of the past month. ·Now I need to yet big. Those are big boys over there.· Justin DaJe, the 5-foot-9, 175-pound r£>r('1ver, has not expenenced Frednckson's fortunes Mainly becaui.e of his stze. DaJe has not been able to find a school that will "take a chance" on hun. ' Dale, a unarumous All-Mtss16n Conference selertJon. 1s a true playrnaker with gamebreakmg speed. But, the big schools have turned away from him because of hls size. Steve Largent, the former All-Pro wtde receiver of the Seattle Seahawks, called DaJe two weeks ago to lend support. The fiance of Dale's sister is a close friend of Largent and he set up the phone caJl. Largent basically told Dale to never give up. Largent told Dale that he is at a rusadvantage because of rus size and he has to work even harder to gel noticed. The inspiring words onJy strengthened DaJe's love for the game. OCC's linebacker trio of Justin Blackard, Dustin Davis and Marlln Janzon have been enduring the recruiting process. Blackard, along with punter EddJe Johnson (Newport I farbor High) and offensive lineman Adam Fisher, vtsited Arkansas Stale last weekend Blackard signed with Arkansas State on Wednesday. Davis cornntltted to West Vu ginja Wesleyan, a Division a university. Cal Poly San Luis Obispo brought him up for a visit. but, surprisingly, they asked him to tryout as a walkon, He also was pursued by Sacramento Slate and UC Davis. Janzon's story is probably the most intriflQing of the bunch. ~n went back home to Sweden after the season and missed out on all of the recruiting trips. But, TaylOr sald, the Swedish government pays for Janzon 's eduction. So, Janzon might tJy out as a walk on at UCLA. 'lllylor ls confident Janzon will make the team and start. M eanwhile, at OCC, Taylor and his coaches are watching high school game film arid talking to recruit.I who might play for them . On Thursday night, Taylor and his staff spoke to more than 50 recruits for three houn. Among the recruits: Newport Harbor fullback 'travis nimble, who has enrolled in a spring class at OCC. 'Illylor said 1\'\mble hat tho abWty lo be one of the better fullbacks ln the conference ii he ltays with the Pirat Tttmble's running met.o, Chris Mandarino, might walk on at UC1.A, Taylor Mid. •we would love to g t Manderino, • n ylor said. •He should come here. H won't hev to poy, h could ll p ln and probably be the futured tailback. Obvtou 1y, ha., a grut player! Newport Harbofa n~m , lrvlne, mlgbt b.av tom former Vaqu rOl N ting up for the Bua ln r«e2 r Dave DoOmey Md d.temlve end &Mn .Porteoua Al1de trom recruttmg, 1ay'°' Will be • pert of thft lnteMewlng and 1lllctioo ol OCC 1 new ......,,1 lootbell coach. 'llayior mqM9C.'b more tMD 100 appaw.ta • otc bopel lo ftU &be potHjoa by~ 2. Quote Of IHEDAY •it was this gcme Of never. If I didn't play tonight, I may as well have been oot f Df the rest of the season . • Kristin McCoy, CdM senior II ~P!kt 11 ... FWumy s honor• • "411JrWtWon -llm IWISEM-ollll -·- Sports Edit0< Roger Corlsoo • 949-574..4223 •Sports Fax 949-650.0170 •Friday, February 2, 2001 9 I Mustahgs back in the hunt with 41-38 win • Mesa fights off pesky Northwood quintet to pull to within one game of Estancia, Uruversity and Corona del Mar. IRVINE The Costa Mesa High girls bdsketball team over- came d fust-hali scare to defeat ho!>t Northwood. 41-38. rn Paclf1c Codst Leagu<' drl:lon Thursddy rug ht. Sophomore Rhond1 Naff led the Mustang-. (14-10, 5-3 m ledgue) with 14 poants. wh.tle senior guard Nancy I latsush1 added 11 points, SIX rebounds. eight assists and c;1x steals J<•IJl fA, H1 DAIL< PILOT Corona del Mar Hlgh's Jackie M cCoy goes up for a sho t against a sm othering Estancia defense. ·Just dnother day m the office for Nancy," Me~d Codch Jim Wet:'k~ Sdld. Eagles feel McCoy's pain The f\1ustrtngs dre onJy one gdme behmd Estancia, Corona del Mdr dnd Uruvers1ty for the top spot in the PC L. thanks to the Sea Kings' 47-46 win over the Eagles • Inj ured Corona del Mar senior leads a 4 7-46 PCL win over Estancia to fo rce three-way tie for first place. Barry Faulkner D AILY PILOT COSTA MESA -As the biggest game of her final prep campajgn tipped off Thursddy nigh t, Corona del Mar I ligh senior Kristin McCoy chose to rehabilitate her team's season. rather than her ailing left ankle. So, last year's Newport-Mesa District Player of the YeM, who had not played or pracl.iced since sprajrung her ankle Jan. 25 against Laguna Beach, didn't wajt long lo let Coach Elbert Davis know she was good to go against Paaflc Coast League host Estanaa. "I didn't start her, but I told her to let me know when she wai. ready to go m, • Davis sa.id. "As they were throwing up the Jump ball, being the wamor that she 1s, she swd "I'm ready:· Inserted 2:19 into the contest. McCoy went on to lead the Sed Kings to a 47-46 victory that drew the defending PCL chdmpLOns ( 12-12, 6-2 m league) into a three-way lJe for first with two games to play. Estancia (1 4-9, 6-2), fdced with deficits of 16-0 and 42-24, rallied for a 46-44 lead, when freshmdll Thsha Wase converted a th.ree- point play after raang the length of the court with a steal with 3:22 left. CdM, however, answered on its next possession, as McCoy recovered a low mbound pass and banked m a layup, while being fouled with 3:04 remain- ing. McCoy sank the foul shot, then made the one-pomt lead stand up. She made two steals down the stretch, as Estancia missed its only two sh ot attempts to disappoint the home crowd. "It was beautiful basketball by both teams," said a pumped-up Davis, who, lamenting what be called the team's worst practice of the season Wednesday, Padfic Coast League WL CdM (12·12) 6 2 Estancia (14-9) 6 2 University ( 13· 10) 6 2 Mesa (14-10) 5 ] Northwood (9-16) 1 7 ug. Beach (2-12) 0 8 Thursday's scores ON 47, &al.cia 46 eo.. Miiia • 1, Northwood 38 Untwolty 56. ~ 8eadl l8 ~Y (5:30 p.m.) ~y (5:30 p.m.) C-M-..nON &w.mat~ ~8-t>-~ (f'C) "1<.v.NI !lAION Eagles' Tisha G ray puts up a shot attempt entNed the gamP dl the othrr end of the emolJonal specti:um "llus is why I coach,· DaV1S continued "To battle like thl'> agamst a great tedfll and d gredt coach in a gamf' thdt hdcl lhc1t kind of intensity and passion . thc1l's whdt makes 1t fun " CdM hdd all the fun eaII)'. dS Estctnc1a nussed lls first SIX held- godl attempts and committed seven turnovers. while the S0a Krngs consistently clicked "They were on hre, • Estancia Coach PauJ Kuby ~aid of the v1s1- tors, who got sconng conlnbu- bons from five players, before Estanaa·-. L.Lsa liJrata ended the shutout 1."1.lb a three-pomter With 1 ;25 left 10 the first qudrter Huata, whose unrelenting effort helped fuel her l£>am's comeback. finished with a career-hlgh 19 points, mcludmg four three-pointers. With Xochitl Byfield, Wase and Hirata keying full-court defensive pressure the enl:lre sec- ond hall, the Eagles chipped away alter Courtney Kawata's three-pointer gave CdM . its biggest lead (42-24) with JUSt more than 11 minutes left. t Estancia scored the final l 0 points of thr thml quarter, then extendC'd the run with a Wase laym to open the fourth. Arter M cCoy h1t a 15-foot 1umpN. consecullve Lhree-pomt- Prs b) I ltrntd <1nd Wase pulled the hosts w1thm 44-42 wtth 4:50 ((>f I. Sophomore Tishd Gray (rune p01nts dnd d team-high eight rc>bou nds) netted .a I ree throw to hdlVC' thr dehc1t, before Wase's thrt>e-pmnt play put the Edgles on the mountain top But M cCoy knocked the EstdnCJa from the sumnut 18 sec- onds later. considerably clouding the PCL lltle picture m the process CdM, Estanna and Uruvers1ty tall 6-2), dS well as 5-3 Costa Mesa, enter the hnal week with reahsbc title dreams "It was Uus game or never,· McCoy said. ·u I didn't play torught, I may dS well have been out for the rest of the season " Jacloe MoCoy (SllC points. sev- el'\ boards and st.x assists) and Andrea·Gruber (six points, seven assists and four steals), were also catalysts for the winners. Estancia standout Zuyin Bar- rera sat out due to illness. Co~ld Mesd fell behind, 19-15. after thf' first hali, thanks to the strong play ol T1mberwolves' 1umor gudrd Elrrurd Rezae1, who hmi.he<l with 24 points. But Costd t-.1esa bounced bd"k c:illd outscored Northwood. 2h-Hl, m the second hdll The Mustdngs will continue PCL dCl1on Tuesddy night at Luguna Beach, beforp conclud- mg the week dt Corona del Mar Both games d!e al 5 30 p.m. ds pdrt of d boys-g1rb basketball doublehedder. "It should be a very interest· mg week.· Weeks pred1ctro Warriors handle Tars NEWPORT BEACH -The Ne\.'fP()rt Hc1Ibor Hlgh guls bas- ket ball team lost a 71-14 Sea View League dens1on to V1S1tmg Woodbndge (23-0 b-0 Ill league) Thuri.day rught Lmdse} Woller led the SdJlors with seven points, all m the fourth quarter Newport (2-21. 0-7 m the Seri View League) closes out thf' sedson at Aliso Niguel Thursday rught at 7. MOf1C COAST L.IMIUl-CosTA MBA 41, ~ :J8 Costa M...a 11 4 12 14 41 Nonhwood 10 9 9 10 38 eo.t. Mew CMon 2. Cooper I. H•bu'iht 11, i..uos 3. MMsn.11 S. Munll b N•ff 1 l. Trttlo 0, C.rl<h 0 J pL goiok • H•UUIN 2. MaM<lll 1 Fouled out • non. T«Ntluls none -1tl ood Ml~ 1 ..... ..i 14 lfP'Comb 11, Albaugh 0, Nichols 0 )-pt goatJ ~.1"1 l Fouled out Noc:hob TKtin.cak none MOl'IC COAST La-. COllOMA D1L MAii 47, ESTMOA 46 kof9.., 0.--W Cotona de4 MM 11 11 1) S 47 Esanc.. 6 11 I 7 12 46 C-de! Mw K McCoy 17, ICAw.n• 10. I McCoy 6 Grub9< 6 H~•M 4 Snell 4 ""'""'0. l(h..-0. M.n.s 0 )-pl 90"" IC-au 2. Grut.. 2 Fouled out .._..., TKl>nouts none bt-'-HlfllY 19 W-10 C,1.,, 'I ~' Mmufu~ 2. v_...z o ~ o ]pt~ H·••U .. W-I FouMd out notW Tl<hnlt:ah none NewportS Deyden stops Sea Kirigs • Sailors' goalie rises for key save in 7-5 victory over Back Bay rival Corona del Mar in Irvine tourney. StllW Virgen 0M.Y Pl.of CORONA DEL MAR -Not even b d con- gestion nor the thought of Corona del Mor High'J Cb.dltinA.Hewlr.o p~pe.rtng for a penal· ty shot could bring a frown to Newport Har- bor's Heother Deyden. Instead. Deyden, ·~ Tari' gull water polo Hnlor goalie, was all, Smiles before 1he ros to 1lop away Hewko'• abot and awung th momentum «> Harbor. Deyd n hoped h f smile WOUid diltRct. H wko. Afterward, Oeyden might hev been lb.ow· tng a llD11k u ber key 11 helped Ul4t S&ilon to a 7-5 ~ over Baek Bay rival CdM, Thunday, In the 32-team lMne 1l>Utn4nMmt •l the Sea KiDgl' pool. • Harbor ( 18.:SJ, ranked No. l Orang GIRLS WATER POLO were rested for us.• Deyden also made a k.ey save W1th one County, stormed back from a 3-1 deflat as Jen· minute remainlng. And, he was supportAtd by no Booth, Katherine Belden and Annie Wight Hatbo defense. Belden and Wight fin1lhed scored two goals each. Wlth three steals each. ·u sh looks at me and I'm smiling, it kind Today at 6 p.m., the Tan will fa Santa of thro~ (the hooter) off,• sa.ld Oeyd n, who Margortta, a 6·5 sudden-death wmncr O\fef missed Harbor' nnt game on Thursday Santa Barbara. which takJ on C.dM at 5 p.m. Both gornea a.re at CdM. beca~ of ckn . ·When I mil lt ~ Th Sailo~ t up th matchup aoa1mt me up and giv me en rgy,• Cd.M w1th an easy 16-4 vk:tory over Millikan. Said Tan' Coecb Bill Ba tt, •Wb n sh Harbor SCQJ.ot Erin K Uy Ba and IOpbomal'e blocked th penalty lbot. that w a v ry b g Junior Amber Bralay ICOted three goe each u lift. Th.at was a big twning point, ptychologl· nn 1tarters aa.t out the LUt thri9e pmtodl. ally." CdM toOk care of Canyon. 14 .e, ranked No. C dM (12-10) built a 3· 1 fin t·pedod leed as to m Orange County before c.be 8ec.k Bay nlor Unc:be\i., Oat y scored two goall arid gam Hewko .rorect lhree goals IQ a t-.2 W:· sophomor DANcill Carlton tbntw Jin her ftm tory, but SM Kings UIW'I played until 1 "6 ot two 1be Kin had a cban<'e to go up, ~ lO MCUft the -'n 4·l , but Deyden mme up b6g With Ole on · .;.,.,..=,,..._am.., .. _. .. ,-"'' th j>en.alty hot, ~~ 1 ii I t •:'I ·w ca.me out strong and J nm out Of a;=:.:::.. .... 1.~~....,.i;.....,..~ • ' 1 •1 gas/ CdM COech JJOhn Varg6) •'.J'beY =-·~~-...,lO!W!!I...,., baa • lot game ln e ftm round They ..... .-.~ 10 Friday, February 2, 2001 SPORTS Doily Pilot COMMUNITY COLLEGE FOOTBALL OCC's linebackers move on Dustin Davis and Justin Blackard, two of Orange Coast Col- lege's remarkable linebacker trio, have committed to universi- ties, Pirates' Coach Mike Taylor said. Davis, a 6-foot-t. 205-pound outside linebacker, will attend West Virguua Wesleyan after committing Sunday. Blackard, a hard-bitting middle linebacker, committed to Arkansas State on Wednesday. Martin Janzon has returned from Sweden where he was born and ra,i.sed. The unanimous All-Mission Conference Selection has been trying to catch up with phone calls from universities, Taylor said. The three llnebackers combined for 389 tackles Uus season. Davis recorded 143. Offensive lineman Adam Fisher and punter Eddie Johnson, both All-Mission Conference first-team selections, also visited Arkansas State with Blackard, but decided to hold out for oth- er prospects. Fisher will visit Portlc:Uld State this weekend and Johnson will V1.S1t Idaho State. Johnson, a Newport Harbor High pro<1- uct, will most likely play for Idaho State because they play in a dome stadium, Taylor said. Vance Babin, a 6-foot-4 defensive tackle who was an All- Mission Conference selection, is being heavily pursued by lJ!'ILV and Taylor said he will most likely play there in the fall. -Steve Virgen COLLEGE BASKETBALL SUMMARIES GOLDEN STATE AlltLETIC CONFERENCE WOMEN V•nguard 69, Cal llapttst S:J C.I Baptist • Sko 17, Scruggs 13, Cason 6, Patee 5, McElroy 5, Holmes 4, Busken 3. 3-pt. goals · Scruggs 2, McElroy 1, Busken 1. Fouled out -Scruggs. Technt<als -none. Vanguard -Huddle 18, Fikse 16, Boeke 14, Lee 12, Dittenbtr 7, Weidler 2 3-pt. goals -Lee 2, Fikse 1 Fouled out · none. Technicals · none. Halftime -Vanguard, 39-31 . Vanguard now 14-6, 7-4 in GSAC. GOU>£N STATE AlltLET1C CONFERENCE MEN Cal a.ptist 76, V.....,-cf 6:J Cal a.ptlst · Lopez 23, Nichols 16, Mackey 13, Brown 11, Gillman 9, Brewington 4. 3-pt. goals · Maclcey 2, Giiiman 1. Fouled out · none. Technicals • none. Vengulll'd ·Keane 19, cablay 14, Burg~s 12, Boys 6, Beeler 4, Corkery 3, candelaria 3, Curtis 2. 3-pt. goals · Keane 2, Burgess 2, cablay 2, Corkery 1. Fouled out -none. Technkals • none. Halftime · tied, 37-37. Vanguard now 5-17, 1-10 in GSAC. HIGH SCHOOL GIRLS WATER POLO Eagles fall to Lakewood's St. J oseph, 12-4 • Nine-goal second quarter does in Estancia. LAKEWOOD The Estancia High girls water polo team led early, but lost to host St. Joseph. 12-4, 10 non- league action Thursday. A rune-goal second quar- ter by the Jesters proved cost- ly ro,the Eagles (3-10). S0mer Flaherty and Katie Menden each had two goals ' I. • • for the Eagles, while goalie Laura Morton had six saves. NONLEAGUE S\ Jo5EJ1H 12. Es'TANCA 4 Estancia 2 1 1 0 -4 St. Joseph 1 9 1 1 -12 Estancia -Flaherty 2, Menden 2. Saves • Morton 6. St. JoMptt · Perdomo 5, Crigger 4, Mallen 3. Saves -Fierros 5. C'l ~ .. = ...... ...... .. ..... ..._I>.--~ ...... occ ~ .......a.a. ......... =.Mu I 0 MSnMU. ::=-@ socx:. • .. """LMa ~ a.· •• CoM1' eou... IOCXlll SCHEDULE TODAY • ...ac.tbell Community college men • Fullerton at Ofange Coast. 7:30 p.m. Community college women -Fullerton at Ofange Coast. 5'.30 p.m. High school boys • Costa Mesa at Northwood, 7 p.m~ Woodbridge at Newport Harbor, 7 p m.; CofON del Mar at Estancia, 7 p m. • 5occet' High school boys • Woodbridge at Newport Harbor, 5 p.m.; CorON del Mar at Estancia. 3:15 p.m.; Costa Mesa at Nof1tl'.wod, 3 1 S p m • Softblltl Community college • Orange Coast at College of the Desert Challenge, all day •.....al Community college -Matt O'Brien Memorial Tournament. Mt. San Jacinto at Ofange Coast. 2 p.m • w.ter' polo High school girls -Irvine Sovthem ulrfumia Championships, at Corona del Mar High: Santa Barbara vs Corona del Mar, S p.m.; Santa Margarita 115 Newport Harbor, 6 p.m. DEEP SEA n.MSOAY'S COUNTS Newport Landtng • 1 boat, 9 ang~. 3 sand bass, 4 sand dabs, 90 sculptn. o.vey's Lode.er -1 boat. 4 anglers. 20 bonito, 2 c.abezon. 2 ~. $0 DOWN! 0.9°/o!* ON ALL 2001 MODELS Now!! Au fW SUZUKI XL-7 • I ~ I ~ ' I I V.t1ml7 FREE WARRUTl 10YEARS·100 •·MILE WARRANTY --- NEW 2001 ESTEEM SEDA# 40 ., .~· . / I .! a • ... ._ .... ,. ____ _ ----·-·-- FABULOUS PRICE • NEW MODELS 2001 SWI" 1 ' . . l 714 J '''· 1115 2141 HAllll ILVI, CllTA •••• ......... --·----·--MA. Tars, rally overruled • Sailors nearly tie game, but a late controversial call gives the Sea View League victory to Woodbridge, 2-1. Tony Altobelli DAllv Pit.or NEWPORT BEACH -Perhaps the biggest compliment of the Newport Harbor High girls soccer. team came from Woodbridge Coach Jon Szc:zuka following the Sailors' 2-1 loss to the Sea View League kingpin Warriors. "I'm glad we don't have to face them in the playoffs,• Szczuka said following the game. "Newport gave us two hard fought games that went down to the final whistle. They're prob- ably the most underestimated learn in Orange County." The Warriors (13-1-4, 5-0-1 10 league}, rariked No. 3 in CIF Division Il drdes, Jumped out to a 2-0 lead after 20 minutes and held on by the skin of their teeth in the final minutes against the host Sailors (10-5-4, 4-1-2). Controversy loomed large in those final minutes. Trailing, 2-1, Sailors' sophomore standout Amy Burlingham appeared to tie the game with a perfectly placed goal into the upper-left comer of the goal from 20-plus yards out. Upon further review between the referee and linesman, the ball went through a hole over the crossbar and fell into the goal. The goal was not allowed c:Uld play continued. HSome of the players close to the play said it went over the crossbar,• Newport Coach Jason Sorrell said. •But when my assistant coach went out to fix the hole, he didn't see how a ball could fit through it. I yelled and screamed a little bit, but it didn't work.• Szczuka saw it this way. "The linesman saw it right away and made the call right away,• he said. •Newport's players were cele- HIGH SCHOOL GIRU SOCCER · brattng and I wanted to make sure the referee and linesman talked it over before making the call. In my heart or hearts 1 don't think it went in .• Burlingham's near goal was just one ol numerous scoring opportunities for the Sailors in the game's final 20 minutes. •we got off to a slow start, but after we set- tled down, we pounded them in the second half.• Sorrell said. "It was a tremendous effort againsLone of the top teams in all of Orange County.• Woodbridge took advantage of two defen- sive breakdowns and scored quickly. Chris .. tene Johnson (eighth minute) and Danielle Shank (19th minute) gave the Warriors an ear- ly 2-0 lead. The Warriors had two other golden oppor- turuties to blow the game wide open before halftime. but could not convert. •I told the girls at halftime to come out with some pride,• Sorrell said. "l think we came out timid in the first half and it showed with the 2-0 defiat. • Finally, ln the 61 st minute, senior Laura Kauth put the Sailors on the scoreboard. Fol- lowing a throw 1n and a minor scrum in front of the net, Kauth found the ball among the fighting bcdies and ripped a shot into the upper portion of the net, giving Newport life once again . Johnson nearly answered Newport's goaJ with a goal of her own. but her shot ripped off the crossbar, setting up the Sailors' near goal moments later. The Sailors sent every ball they could toward the Wamors' net, but could not find the equalizer. ·we have nothing to be ashamed of," Sor- re ll said. ·we can pull a lot of positives out of this. It was a great game by both teams.· Mesa/alls ~? Northwood JC tennis: Pirates split IRVINE -The Co'sta Mesa SOCCER NONCONFERENCE MEN High girls soccer team a-ros 7, occ 2 dropped a t -0 Pacific Coast League deo-Slnv'-·Harper (OCO lost sion to host Northwood Thursday after-to Capistrano, 7-5, 1-6. 5-7. VU (OCO def. Upshaw, 6-1, 6-3, noon. Andreasian COCO lost to Mesa goalie Chelsea Soria had four Young Kim, <>-6, <>-6; Gama saves, but Mustangs: senior right fullback COCO def. Vasquez. 7-6, 7-6; Faride Loera sustained a knee inj'ury dur-Wine COCO lost to Orejel, 2-6, 1-6; Romano (OCQ lost to ing the game and is gone for the season, Moo<e, 1-6, 0-6. according to Coach Dan Johnston. . OcM.lbles -Harper-vu coco "She was taken down from behind but lost to Capistrano-Upshaw, the referees didn't make a call • John'.ston 4-8; Andresian-Garcia COCO 'd "It' f tr · be 'N rth lost to Vasquez-Orejel, 2-8; sai . s rus ating cause o wood Wine-Romano (OCQ lost to scored later that same drive.• Moore-Garcia, HI ~·~' ,,,~.1115 2141 HAllll ILVI, CllTA •••• ---------·- .. NONCXNIRENCE~ occ 7, Cuy...wc.a 1 Singfes • Sommer COCO def. KOl'oly, 6-2, 6-0; Roxborough (Cuy) def. Mat, 1-6, 6-2, 6-<4; Lawson (OCQ def. Rector. 7·5, 6-3; Bohm (OCQ def. Duran, 6-1, 6-3; Yoshida (OCQ def. Silveria, 7-6, 6-2; Mazza (OCQ def. Regan, 6-2. 6-2. OcM.lbles • Sommef-Chang (OCO def. Koroly-Roxboro. 6-2, 6-1; Yoshida-aohm (OCC) def. Duran-Regan, 6-1, 6-0 . • r ,.f._. ducl.O b'/' ~ lndi'MAll lhweWI 9or TICE OA IN WRITTEH COHTAACTO"· a..'lla Mola. CA UM1M11Y o4 Celltornl•, SNvle• l•UIPf'lettt Hav• you 1tert9d ~ of Mid CORRESPONDENCE ~blddlil9 who I*' 80405-293' Irma, 11,...,,.., Con-Subcontr.We Quell. 200M2tm doing buslne" yet? COde. 0£LIVEREO TO THE ~ 1>ot1 tit PY• ~10) -.teoo ~ Aoom. MMe OI• nc.tton ._._,,, Oft ·~21S1 · Y ... 7/1!2000 MAfn' E~ PLANNING COM· ~end !he Mlto CoottNMlon let IMitno. 4004 Meet .. for-.~ by IN OUAUl.T ~~Adami ~ ~ ~..... MISSION AT..r. OR Job Wilk In lhtlr Co., In& Aaied, Sub 3000, !Mne, tN Unh......,, M mn A CUD Of ••~ wu ~ al PR~ TO, THt PUB-lnllNty, wll bt llowtd 30 Huc!Nt. ~ 208 c.itfofnil t2987, .......... eo ._ .... ~t...~~~rm· MAY 5 hied wllh lht County Put>tl~ Ntwpon UC HEARING. to bid on fie PfOjecl M INN, "CA tte1•1t18 (t4I) U+ee30 • lkt, 1kt ,... end Uflle 1114 ~'(OU T Cltl1t of Ofwllle Coun!Y Btach·Co•ta Mte1 1. GENERAL PLAN p111M contraotor1. FOi (t4t) ae&.2MO ind Pr1C4119 Md ~ ACTIOH PR IT on 12/2V/200(f Oally Pllol January 28, AMENDMENT OP· lul1her lnbmellon, OOft-PRIOUAUNO t :OO A.II. TUHd1y, 81d 'or"' (If 1p• V<:Af 8E AT A 20009850481 Fet>nwy 2. 2001 00-08/AEZONE PETI· taot UCI Contracte 0.. CURTAIN WAW ~. 2!i ~litomla. inoablt~. IC ~ ~!}~. ~t 12F~ FO!O I~~~RE~.<:.°~hJ.Ff~ r~~ :~::: .. w11:~~~~N~ ~~..,,Mident'• eon. c='1~ ~ Flctltloue Buelnese F~~~=· rn~RIZif C~~~~J ~82~~ at Ti.Am:: ~:~ U~OOIUMIOS ~ Name Statement The fol~ PARTNERS, LlCIOR· The 8llCC9Mlul Bldd« ~..... Aoed. &1119 3000, IMne, ONLY TO THE FOL· ~ia""-= .,~~lo~ er;.~Cuttom :10 ~To~1.18~ ~btn.,.::::: 11~~St r::r:.=1 ~~~ .. , .. r:rg~a;. .. ,_. b 11 OUETZ.A"LCOATL Pllnting, 17671 MeUlef LAHD USC Pl.AN MAP the 11codlect'.mll11t1on r• 92808-2609 AntHoANCI! AT TRACfORI: be: M21 ~ NATIVE AMERICAN Ln . Suitt IA·l . Hunt-FROM NEIGHBOR· qulrementa Mt foflh In (71 4) 630-7221 IOTH PAI -IUD CON-SdPac Inc. dtle, 1115'1 Colll .......... CA FLVTES ANO DRUMS, lnglon BHch, CA HOOD COMMERCIAL lht Bidding Dooument1 Tower OIMe lne. FEMNCEI II MA... SolWl Pedflc 1211128-~~~ ......... ~a 28691 MOdJee~a C1· 92647·8252 TO MEDIUM DENSITY 1/ld 10 pay prev•lllng 9670 PattiWay Street, OEORY l'OR All 2"24 eong, ... SttMt Pwoll__. ~"'::tr~··~ nyon Roe'd, SllVtrMIO, T&L Sliva Enrt'fr\Me, RESIDENTIAL AND C 1 wage ratH 81 tht 1oce--SY!tt A '? EQUALIFIED PAtME San 019go, CA. osr-lN -C.llfomta 92876 Inc . (CA), 7871 TO R2·MO, LOCATED tlon of lhe WoR. SanlM, CA 92071 ~ CTORI; THE 92110·2888 ~ ... : frvnl Gulllermo Lopez M•tzltt l.n., Huntington AT 1011-1046 EL The IUOCltMfut Blddet (619) S9&-e199 M ITINGI Will II! (619) 298-e247 700 MertJnez, 28691 MOd· Betdl, CA 92&'7-e252 CAMINO DRIVE, IN A w\11 be required 10 have Woodbrtdge CL.Ola) AT f'.ot AJI, (81~) 296-0730 (Fu) w..t. S... jMlcA CAnyon Roed, Sit-Thia buslnt.. II oon-C I Z 0 N E 1he lollowing St.le of Olmil, Inc-. AHY PRIE-.QUAU'1£0 E1timt1ot 1onll"lllNl!rY vetlldo, Caittorn. 92978 eluded by· • oorporalion ENVIRONMENTAL OE· Ca.hlorni. ContrM:tO(• 18e61 ~ Awt PRIME CONTRAC· Kevlll CanvM11 \, • 2;00 PM, ID dli 0.wn Calle Mar\lntz, H1v1 you 111r1ed T E A M I N AT I 0 N Hc9nM OJrTtOI 11 the IMllt, CA 02eo&-6138 TORS ARRIVIHO AF· H.A. Lewte, Inc. "'*"'=-.=.-: ~OCan~lll~a ~~~,~= ytl? ~~:.TIVE(A~['tJt'e ~olM>mluionalthe PREt.~l~ ~ :isa:J'}~ 21281..oe~~ ClllNtr'e cf** dt9Wll by 1 92676 T&L $live Enterprlffe, FOR AEVI~ AT THE LICENSE ELECTRICAL PARTICIPATE IN THE CA 90025 i~~. =: Thl1 bu1lne11 le con· Inc PLANNING DIVISION CLASSIFICATION· SUICOHT,.ACTOR8 110 PROClll AS A (310) 478-1511 ad Un1oti or 1 dueled by an Individual Ronald Eagleton FROM FEBRUARY 8, LICENSE CODES. ARE: PRIME CONTRACTOR. (310) 4n·2887 (Fax) ~ • -or Heve you atarttd Thia llllltmtnl wae 2001 TO FEBRUARY Low Voh9ge Syateme Andenon & Howent INTI:REITED Etttmator Aoti.n Lewie Ind loln dotng t>usintse y817 No filed with Iha County 28, 2001). C-7 or 98c:ttlcal C·IO Eltctrlc, lne. 8UI CONTRACTOR8 Bidding Doc:umente llUCldmlicn. ~ Dewn C Manlnez Cltr1t ol Orange County FOR FURTHER IN· OTHER PROJECT 1791 Aeynoldl ARE INVITED TO AT· will bt evalllblt to Pr• ~ °'n = This stettmanl w11 on 01/23/2001 FORMATION ON THE SPECIFICS: Avenue, lrvlnt, TEND THE PRE·81D quelilitd Gent11I Con· 5io2 ;;;;-'Flwdll Cod4I ltltd v.1th the County 2001H52t2t ABOVE APPLICA· Blddw OualtftcMlone CA 92914 CONFERENCES. lttclor Blddere on a#lolbd IO do CleOI of Orange County Delly PllOI Jan. 28, Feb TIONS, TELEPHONE cell•d for to be t'~o 2~ S-'9d b~ fOf' the Thursday, Febn.lery 1, Cdwnla The on Ol/t7/2001 2. 9, 18. 200\ F812 (714) 754<5245 OR eubmltted et time of ~-...., LUfllp Sum lteM Bid 2001 Ind Wiii be UJlld TMIN 20018152230 CALL AT THE OFFICE b6c1 lndude, but ... not 12900 Alondra Blvd wtll not bt ~el-et = labllv air Delly Pi1oc Jan \9. 2e. Flctltloua Bu1lneH OF THE PLANNING -...111y Nmfted to: CerTftol, CA 90703 ttr. 2~00 P.M., Thur.. CONSOLIDATED ilOOI.:;;;;;:" ..J' ~ Feb 2, 9. 2001 Fl!Q6 Nal'M Statement DIVISION, ROOM 200, (•) Five yHr requlr• (562) 926-0900 day, Mlreh "· 2001 . REPROORAPHICS .,.., .,,._ The following peraone n FAIR DRIVE, COSTA !Mnt for n1me ind PREQUALIFIED At: Deaion and Con· 3182 Pullmen St1Mt, ~ ~· It Flctltlou1 BuelnHI 1111 dOtng busfne11 u : MESA, CALIFORNIA llc•nM end (b) com-FIRE PROTECTION ltrvction ~.rv1ce.. Ce>Wt ...... CA 9292.e s.io .... wit tie mldt Neme Statement Street l:iodl & COllec-Pubhahed Newp011 pletW thrM pn>fecte In ENOINEERINO (FIRE University of C1lllom11, (714) 7S1·2el0 w1111o111 COV91W11 or The loltow1np pereon1 tlblee, 14361 Buch BHch·Colla Mt11 Pett ttw'M Y*lf'I elnM-SUPPRESSIONI lrvlna, !l6oo Berhlay Attention: Rici& a..1ottt ~. ,.;::::: or are doing buSlnlss as Blvd., We1tmlntl11 CA Dally Pilot February 2, !er In eta Mel acope to SPRINKLERS) Place, Irvine, CA °' Sal Oeloldlllo ~. Ille, Rose's Donut & Sand-92683 2001 thl9 profec:t. SUBCONTRACTORS 92697-2450 Prequallfltcf Prime 111111111111, °' w1ehes. 891 Beker St Gary Kai.eris. 612 F816 THE .REGENTS OF ARE: Sealed bide fOf' Unit Conlraclort may pd! up ~~ Stt A-2. Coste Mesa Heliotrope Ave Coron1 Flctttloue BuelneH THE UNIVERSITY OF Coetco Fire ProtKtlon PtfCM 1nd Atlwne1ff frff of charge oot (1) ~ by aid Died. CA 92626 de4 M.r, CA 92625 Name St.tement CALIFORNIA 501 W Soulhttn wUt not I» ~ 9'· MClla and tour (4) 1e1a of ~ 'O'f Pwnt1e E Say Soeun. 736 W Th11 business 11 con-FEBAUAAY, 2001 Avanue, Orange, ter: 4:00 P.11 .. Thur. bidding documenta et w,,,_ tn unnwr1ed Beker St Apt C·3 ducted by: an IOdlvldutl The following peraona Published Newpon CA 92865 day, Men:h 21, 2001 ~ end ConslructlOO l'WOfl*\, as llUalCI<. Costa Mesa CA 92626 Have you 11ar11d .,.. dOtng l:MNMM 11 BHch·Cosla M111 (7141 974-8770 At Design end Con· Sel'Vlce1, Umversrty of rwcorded on Mey 16,,1994, This business is eon· dok'tg business yet? No Hool< Up Marbling, Deity Pilot Febluary 2, 8, Orlnntl Coriioretlon struellon Service•. Uni-Califom1a, 1rv1n1, 3500 O'!-lnlArutretl(,. ot -... ~ ducied by an ind1111dual Oasry Katsaria 26282 Bu-dor, Mi•· 2001 dbt Gr1nnefl Fife vtralty ol C•lilorn11, Berkeley Place, IMn•. ,,_..... .... .,...... Hav tarted This stalement wH •Ion Viejo, Calllornla FTH820 Protection Sy11eme lrvlnt, 3500 Ber1111ay CA 92697·2450 Addi· ~o10rwr:ecu~ doing ~X~~ y!t? No IHed with the County 92892 Comp.any Place, lrvlne, CA tional sets may be pur· =--d o. \jtipeld Soeun Say Clerlc ol Otailge County P11rlck Newbold, Flctltloue Buelneea 1521 E Orangelhorpt 92697·2450 chased at Contreciors bltlenct d the otJllgltllctl This statement was on 01124/2001 26282 Buscadot, Ml•· Neme Statement Ave .. Suite 100 SMled Sida '°' Lump cost from Con1ohdat.ct NCUl'ed ~ lhl P"Ol*'Y ID ltled with the County 20016153127 elon Viejo, C•hlornll The folio'#tng person• Fullerlon. CA 92831 Sum 81M Bid, end Aeprogrephles be eold Ind rMIOlllltlly Clarie ()( Ow,,_ r~....u Delly Pllol Jan 26, Fib 92692 ere doing bu*'-ae (714) 870-1010 Sealed Bide for Unit NOTE: rT ts THE ..........., COiia, llXS*W on Ot11112Q01 ~ .. , 2. 9. 16. 2001 F813 This busme" 11 oon· Patad!N Pa~. 884 Llnk·Nlleen Pttcee 1nd Altematff SUB·CONTRACTORS' :-' .. ~~ °": 20015852306 ducted by an lndlVldual Cortez St, Coeta Mela Corporetlon will be opened et 4:05 RESPOH~BIUTY TO lllt NOllcl 'OTSij;' II Dally Pilot Jen. 26, Feb PUBLIC HEARINGS Have yo.11 Slltled CA 92626 130 E. Santa Cltr1 P.M., Thul'ldey, Men:h REGISTER WITH THE Sl4',414.2s In lhl 8V9t'll 2 9 16 2001 F807 WILL BE HELO BY THE doing bulw-yet? No Warberg 0Hlgn In· Street, Afcadle. 28, 2001. UNIVERSfTY OR llndlf othfi than CM11 11'11 COSTA MESA PLAN· Patrick Newbold corpor•ted (CA), 884 CA 91006-3237 Bid Securlly in the CONSOLIDATED ~ 111t Trustte tn1Y Flctltlou1 BuelneH NING COMMISSION AT This stat&menh was Cortez St, Coeta Mtsa. Ch 445·3414 amount ol 10% of the REPROORAPHICS TO ~iw::. "C'°' UO: Heme Statam.nt ~~~ CJIJvtA~'osn ~:~ ~it'Q.:;. ~~ c~h~slneu 11 oon· .Protect~o~~ny ~i::.~a~t:1i ~i~~w~o~EE bldl bltccml ...,..... ID The lolloW1ng persooa MESA, CALIFORNIA, on 01/30J2001 ducted by a oorpotltion 215 Eall El Sot SlrMI eccompany Heh Bid UNDERGRADUATE ~orendotlM U I are dOt~ business u AT 6 30 PM OR AS 20018153615 H•ve you 1t•rl1d MonrOWI, CA 91018 The Surtty luulng 1ht HOUSING DIMd-cf~ 11 2001 ~ ~m:-~=. ~ SOON AS POSSIBLE Dtlly Piloe Feb 2, 9 \8, domg business yet? (626) 359-oo34 Bod Bond ahell be, on the EXPANSION, MESA V"'90 T"*-8 ~ lomoa 92627•2725 THEREAFTER ON 231 2001 F821 Y•. Oll20/01 PREOUALIFIEO HVAC Bid Oe•dllnt, 11119d 1t1 COIJWOHS 810 OOCU- Coro • Mid Tl\ltlllll p OG .... MONDAY. FEBRUARY W•rt>erv Dlllgn In· (WET " DRY/ the ltlHI put>llah•d MEHTS WHO HAVE 271b 'Wlnonl A-111 Michael · , rav,, 12, 2001 REGARDING ADVERTISEMENT corporalad SUBCONTRACTORS State o1 Call1om11. De· REGISTERED WITH floor luttenk. CA 111504, l82'4 Viola Place, Cosla THE FOLLOWING AP· FOR BIDS TOIY Thompeon, Pree· ARE: crtmant of lneurence, DESIGN AND CON· By: C&ludll 5tgln Mesa· California PLICATIONS. Subj-... 10 cond1t•--1 '"ent A 0 n-... & Co ol 1~·~-Adm,..ed STRUCTION Tiultlll'a S.. Proceltot 92627·2?25 IF ANY OF THE FOl '""' """ "' .. ,,_, ' T ·~vsu•• 1111 For Sllet 1n1om-.c1cn Clll This business Is con· • praeonbed by the under· This 1tatam1nt wu 4 m Auffnet Street to rllllSllCI rety nsur· SERVICES OR u.7,...... LOWING ACTIONS ·'"ned. aetled boda lot a filed wilh the County San Diego, CA 92111 ance in Thia St.II CONSOLIDATED (lll81S.. .,,_ dueled by· an individual ARE CHALLENGED IN -vL,....,., Sum "~r ...... ••e Clerlc o1 °'"""" r-.-. (858) 565-4131 -The sucoet1lul Bidder REPROGRAPHICS, OF ~2852 Have you started -·.,. ""'" .,., u• -..,.. ~ .. , 01111/0I, 01/20.'01, doing business yel? COURT, THE lnvrted lot the followtng on 01/29/2001 Crttchtleld end rte Subcontractor& ADDENDA WHICH O~I Yes. OllOll2000 CHALLENGE MAY BE Work 20016153473 Mechanical, Inc. Wiit be required lo folow ARE AVAILABLE AT ___ __:C::.:;Hs-::::;;.,;1~"'"'=::. Midlael p O'Gr1dy LIMITED TO ONLY TELECOM CABLING, Dally Pilot Feb 2 9, 16, 4085 ~ Ave the noncl*rimintllon ,.. DESIGN ANO CON· I tl B Th1& stalement was THOSE ISSUES SOME· STEJNHAUSIBIO SQ 2 23, 20QI F822 M9n1o Pt/ti, CA 94025 qulremenll set forth 1n STRUCTION SERV· F ctl OU• uslnHa I "-·· ONE RAISES AT THE PROJECT NO.: (650) 321·7801 the Bidding Oocl.lments ICES. Neme Statement •led with the uuvnty PUBLIC HEARING DE· UCl-SF·219! ADVERTISEMENT Control Air ind to pay prevaillng THE MANDATORY The lollo'Mng persons ~~11,~~ County SCRIBED IN THIS NO-(EE·5322) FOR SUB-BIDS Conditioning wage ralea et tht loca· PRE·BIO 111 doing business as 20016951550 TICE OR IN WRITTEN UNIVERSITY OF Subj~ to conditions Corporetlon lion of lhe Work. CONFERENCE lhall be Kun Behrens, 2630 W Daily Pilot Jan 26, Feb. CORRESPONDENCE CALIFORNIA, IAVINE praecribed by the under· 2301 N. Gluaa• StrHI All ln1ut1nce poll-held as lollow1 1:00 llncoln Ave . •308. DELIVERED TO THE IRVINE, CALIFORNIA .i.. bide I Ot.nga, CA 92885 dee required to be ob-P.M. Frldey, February Atlehelm, CA 92801 2· 9· 16• 200I F811 PLANNING COM· 92697 -vned. sealed Of 11 (714) 283-8100 t1lned by ContrlCtOf' 9 2001 Kun Allen Behrens, CITY OF Ml SSION AT. OR PROJECT lump Sum ContT8ct ~ PREOUALIFIED end ContreclOf"t De-Univers11'( of Celllorntt. 2630 W. Lincoln Ave COSTA MESA PRIOR TO. THE PUB· DESCRIPTION: :z:~ lot 1ht tollO LABORATORY etgn ~ lhell Irvine, Arroyo Viall •308. Anaheim CA ORANGE COUNTY, LIC HEARING Provide All l1bor. CROUL HALL CASEWORK .AHO be ~ to IPPft'Val Housmg. 1000 Attoyo 92801 CAL FORNIA 1 PLANNING AP· equ1pm1n1, 1uppht1, PROJECT NO 11111020 COUHTERTOPS by UnfYWalty fOf form Drive Conference This bulU18$S 1s con· NOi TICE PLICATION PA·00·53 metenals and suptt· UNtVERsrrY OF SUBCONTRACTORS 1nd 1ub9t•nce. All Room B. lrvtne Calllof· ducl.0 by an indMOulll FOR SAM KHAN, AU· vision necnsary 10 In· CALIFORNIA, IRVINE ARE: -" polc:tee llMll I» n111 92697 Heve wou at•rled INVmNG BIDS THORIZED AGENT aall Cat SE cable be· DESCRIPTION OF Dow Dlverelfted, Inc. l..ued' by 1 compeny, (949) 824~ doing business yet? No NOTICE IS HEREBY FOR MAS INVEST· !ween telephone termi· WORK: 1879 ~ Avenue which le hied by a.et AlTENOANCE AT Kurt B•hrens GIVEN that Hlltd MENTS FOR A CONDI· n1I rooma on each 11oor The propoaed Crout Cosla M-.. CA 92627 Ind aNll lwve • retfng THE PRE·BIO CON- TIQ llCatement wes proposals foi furnishing TIONAL USE PERMIT and the v•nou1 l1b1, H 11 . cti (949) 650-9000 Of A-°' better encl e Fl-FERENCE IS MAN· filed with lhe County ell lebor. m8111i1l1, TO ALLOW OlJTOOOR ct11.11rooms, end office• 1 " 11 new llHll ISIEC l~tld, Ml'IClll cleHlflc:atlon DATOAY FOR ALL Clerk ol Orange County oqu1pmant, lreneport•· STORAGE OF MOTOR per the drawlnge. Build-=~ ~f' 1ht 10601 LH, Of VII M better. PR E. QUA LI FIE D on 01/10/2001 lion and SOCh Olher flcif. VEHICLES IN CON· Inge Included ert SctencH n'lft;; •P· Suite 1190, The aucoeaeful Bidder PRIME CONTRAC· 20016151585 tltes •• may be required JUNCTION WITH A Steinhaus Hell (5 lloriee Los Alamiloe, CA 90720 w1M be required to hive TORS; TME MEETINGS Deily Pilo4 Jan 12 19, for BAKER ST1'EET TAXI CAB FACILITY. • baHment, 111,184 ~tety ~ ~ (714) 781-5151 the fotlowlng Sl1t1 of W!L.L BE CLOSED AT 26. Fet> 2, 2001 F803 WALL AND FENCE LOCATEO AT 2301 sq n ) and Bio Sci 11 (5 i;"h'Jgh~, ex>n1t~ad Kewauw Scientific Cellfoml• Contr•ctot's 1:05 P.M. ANY PRE· PROJECT FROM NEWPORT BOULE· tlOltH • beHmenl, WIO't e caat-1~ oon-Cotp0retl0ft ~ OJtttnt 11 the QUALIFIED PRIME Flctltlou1 8u1lnese CLEVELAND AVENUE VAAD IN A C2 ZONE 214,586 IQ. ft ) crete frame. lloor 1y11tm 2700 W"' Fronl SlrMI 11n111 al tubmiu1o11 of the CONTRACTORS AR· Name StaterMnt TO BABB STREET, ENVIRONMENTAL DE· Each lloor aha• be • Ind ahtar Wllll, 11111· StttMl!flle, NC 'llltJT7 Bid. RIVING AnER THIS The following pereons City Project No. 01"°2. TERMINATION EX· complete lnetatlatlon eonry Infill axttrlor Wlllt, {704) 673-7202 G-raJ Bulldlng TIME Will NOT BE ere doing business as wlll be reoelvad by tho EMPT with testing and u 'buln alngla·ply membr1ne PREQUALIFl!D Cont11cior ELIGIBLE TO PARTICt-Pertormance Col'ISul· City of Cosla Mesa et 2 PLANNING AP· drew!nga provided al the roof, feature ikyllghl MASONRY IU8C()N. (Ucense CIHalflctllon) PATE IN THE BIO PAO- tinte, IS Calle Del the Office ol the City PLICATION PA·00·56 oomp1et1on al Ndl lloor. ltNclure, 3 ...,,... etl'lum T1'ACTORI ARI: B CESS AS A PRIME Norte, Aencho Sama Clark. 77 Fair Drive, F 0 A • ED M 0 ND ES1'1MATED wtlt1 INturt ~~ ltbora· R & R "'9eonry, Inc. (Lloenle Code) CONTRACTOR. Marg1rll•. Callfornle Co511 Mesa, California, DECKERT, AUTHOR· CONSTRUCTION lory CIHwork •nd 5337 Cahutngl THE REGENTS OF INTERESTED 92688 unlll the hour of 10:00 IZEO AGENT FOR COST: '2$0,000.00. equipment, tecltcullllng Blvd., A~ THE UNIVERSITY OF SUBCONTRACTORS Jtlfrey L Myers. IS e.m., Monct.y, FebN· FIRST BAPTIST Note: Pr11M Blddert Ind non·rectrcullling Nof1h Holvwood. CALIFORNIA ARE INVlTED TO AT· cw Del Norte. Rancho ery 12, 2001, at wtldl CHURCH OF COSTA who do not meet tN HVAC ayeteme, CA 91~1 Fecrutrv 2001 TEND THE PRf.810 Sef11a Margarlla CalrlOf· time !hey 'Wiii be opened MESA/LIGHTHOUSE qU1llflcatlOM In the elevalors •nd glu.ct (323) 8n·2\18 Pul>II1hed Newport CONFERENCE. ni. 92688 PUbllCly end read aloud C 0 AST AL C 0 M • Contrect Doeumtn1• curttinwall. Tht project Southern CounU.. BHch-Co111 M•H Sellld bldt fOf' the Ricardo M Camenllo. in lht Council MUNITY CHURCH FOR may not!» 1ftg1bte fOf will alto Include lhe at.llty ""-wy, Inc. Daily P11o1 February 2. 9. Lump Sum B1M B.ld l5 Celle Del Norte, Chembars. SHlld A MASTER PLAN tw11d. demolillon •nd remov•I 1517 N. F11rv1tw wtll not I»~ ... Rancho S.ma propouls shall bear lhe AMENDMENT FOR Bidding Ooc:uman11 01 an eMlettng building, Santa Anl, CA 92706 ADVERTISEMENT tier. 2:00 P.M .. TliURs- Margerlla, Cahlornre llllt of ltie work end L I G H T H 0 U S E wtll be avtllllble 10 Bid-which Includes preeael (714) 5~222 FOR SUB-BIDS DAY, FEBRUARY 22, 926ee name of lt1e bidder bu1 COASTAL COM· del'S on FRIDAY, ooncrelt ClOllllNdlon on Wln.g•rdntf Subject 10 oondltlona 2001. , Thie business 15 con· no other dlstingullhlno MUNITV CHURCH AS FEBRUARY 2, 200t • portion ol lhl bulldlng w-wy, Inc. preealbed by lhl under· At: Design Ind Con· dueled by 8 general m.nit Any bid ,_ve(j REQUIRED PEA CON· and wt1 be flluad at. ind lrtl'l'te oontlrucllon 32147 Ounllp Blvd elgrMd eeeled bldl for • etructlon S.Mc:... Unt· •her !he achedUted de»-DITION OF APPROVAL DESIGN & on lhe cctier portion ()( Yuc:aipl. CA 92399 ~'Sum ~ are varsity ol C•llfom11 ,P•~:r:t''~ou aterted Ing bmt IOf the **Pt of 14 FOR ZA-00-19, LO-CONSTRUCTION lhe bullclng, project wll (909) 795-9711 l!Wiled lot lhe lollowlng IMM, 3500 Berhlty doing business yet? No b.da shall be returned lo CATEO AT 300-301 SERVICES Include oonneclion of PREQUALIFIED Wortt: Piece. lrvlnt CA JaffJey L. Myers bidder unop4loed 11 ahall MAGNOllA STREET IN Un1vertny o1 U1llitlee from IOca1ione In PLUMBING 8U8COH-UNDERGRADUATE 92697·2450 This slatement """ be the sole reepooalbilrty AN I & R Z 0 N E Cdomil, !Nine Iha vlclnify ol lhe new TRACTORS ARI: HOUllNO S..lad bldt for Unit llled wlttl tht County ~.lhe~r:.~ed~~ ~~x~~~~~~~L ~~: I-~. CBtfldeyA N><tnPtaoe7•2•50 001111ruc1ion end ette de--4~·.=r·~ .,.f..,X.,PAC~I :f:c :'~Altemet: Clelll al Orange County ,...,,. "'"" .. vtlopment Including ...... ....,."" p M UR., on 01/08l2001 proper time. EMPT. (IM9) 82~ l1ndacepe ind htrcf· San Diego, CA 92111 PROJtCT NO. W. 4:00 • •• -2001N51299 A HI ol Bid Ooc:u-3 PLANNING • AP· Hot Une: (858)~ ...,.,, I DAY. FEBRUARY 22, De Piiot Jen 2 g menll may be oblUl8d PLICATION PA-01-01 (Mt) UW1t7 ec~ bidden muet O/t( --UNIVERSl'TY Of 2001 At: Oealgn end '20.l~fb. 2. 2001 1 f!'n aEI the Olftcen alF the,_2~ FNOINRG PAGCRIOFIUCP PLAAUN· Bidding Document• certify t llet th• ~ecr-· ~:.. CAUFORHIA, IRVINE ConUn'"~errvct~~ CaSel1mc.t~·!· ngioeet. 81! .,......,, ' • wtl nol be tvlllable to lheetmetef, CO.Pl"'' -·v ~ .,......, DESCRIPTION OF IT "' ~·-· FlctltJoua Bullnn• Coat• Mesa. CallfonQ, THORIZEO AGENT Pr1nle Bldd« .,..,. Roon~ •nd ll'dl1t9 Anaheim, 92807 WORK: lrvlne, 500 Betttatey upon nonretund1ble F 0 R PUBLIC FAIOAY, FEBRUARY t, luboontredol llM lfttll (714) 83().7979 The propc>Md Mau Piece, lrvlne, CA Na!M Statement payment °' 110.00. An STORAGE, 2001 the mlnlmllftl qu.11· ,.~ecmo Commone 'Dining Fed-92697·2450 The IOllowlng persons 9ddltlonel cherve of INCORPORATED/ Checb '°' • ~ flcetlOM ... tOf'th In fltumbfnt eo.. lty ... 36 yMI old~ IHl•d 8 1d• tor art doing buA1"S u U .00 wm be med• II RICHARD G PEN· ~tee wt1 bt ,.... the Contract Doc~ 17911 Mltchll South Ing, wtlldl requlret ~ Lump Sum a-81d Bjorn Fine Dtlllling, hendl9d by mell. Bid JOYAN TRUST, FOR CIW.0 In tht 1rnount of raent ll'Mt, CA 82814 vetlon and elq)t.neion. Md ...eM bide tor 120 lnduelr1al W1y, Ooc:umenll 1nd other CONDITIONAL USE '25.00 per HI of Bid· co..:TAUCTION (949) 47+9170 The exllll'lg bultding ii 1 Unit PrtoM end ~ Coate M .... CA 92627 contracl docUmtnll may PERMITS TO EXPAND ding Document.. COST EST1MATI Bidding Oocumtnl1 2-etoty muJ11 .,., mulll nMel d be .....-ct Ill ~Adv' lnc.enotd, 120Autf_..D_!ta1n!i 1Jlo bt alCMllntd 11 tht A MINI-WAREHOUSE Cti.oka are 19 be lt1000,000.00 : ~ be &Vllleble to p,.... •egmenled llNcturt 4:0I ~:~..:i.... TM0"80AY, •ouu• QffiQe of lht 9lty Clel1I al PROJECT EXISTING mede peyablt to "The PtlOV10E IUMIDt qualllled General Con-compriMd al ooncna. .i FE8Rwun 12, l001, ~· Coetl MeM, CA the Qty of Coate Mela AT 2075 NEWPORT Regen11 of the UnMtr· ONLY TO THI fOL-tre<:W 8lddel"I on iow.t end wood oon-Bid ~ In the 9t_~7 .... _1 __ ~ Bid Oocumentl wf not BOULEVARD TO AD· Illy of Callomll " LOWING PR!-OUAIJ. Thurtdty, ~~ llndlcn 11 l4lC* ft11t1 amounc of 1 ~ Ille ,,_ ...__ II con-bt mlled ur"'-lhe Id-JOINING PROPERTIES Seeled Ilda w11 not bt fllD PRIME CON• 2001 Ind wll bt The Frday w11 bt ~ ~&me...-... Ill• ; ~.by y~uccxi:.= ~ "W: =...ii ~k~~T ANgo~ ~p=.,::•r 2=00 TR•=-=,,.. al' COH&OLIDATl.D ~~ ~ m.:...,,.-= -.: dOlng bullntN yet? Each bid ahtll be VA.RO, AHO TO MJ.J:1N ~y t*. 2001. Conetrudon Co. RIEPROQ1'APHICS mtnl•, lnolUdlng the The '-ling the Y ... fl1M001 made on the Propoeel TRUCK RENTALS, Bid Securtty In 1he 2415 r-.... OtM. 1112 PWllMn ..,_ contttuetlon of new bt. on 1he Advanced Auto 0.1111-tonn. lhMta P·I lhrougl\ WTTH A MINOR CON[)!, •mount of 101!(. of Ille M97oo 0.. ...... CA ... anlry ~ Ind Ulelb Bid 0..dl!nt, tlettd In Ing. Inc., 8jam Welleer. p.9 ptcw\dtd In the oon-TIONAI. use PERMIT lump &#'II Bue Bid.... !Mie, CA wt12 (714) 7'1..-...,.. Md demollllorll of lh• l•tHt publl•hltd PtHldent trlCt documenll, Ind TO AUOW Ski.RED duding &1t...-ne1.. eheM ("'48) &62.0l l l AtllMlon floll ........ elliltlnQ onte 1'9COn• St• of Ctlltotnle, 0.- Thlm utement WN .. be eooompenled by ACCESS. IN A C2 ~~ .~ Bid (94) 852-0218 (Fu ) °' ... C ...... a llgur1tron of ' Interior pal'fnlenl of lnllllranot, t11tc1 with the County • certified Of euhler'1 ZONE. ENVIRONMEff. The O/WJ•flwa ._,;,.,g the Edfnltor• ~ MM Con-,..,.,.,. end addltlol\ o1 Ill ol lnll.nlw Admll9d t~l?:~2001ttt~t••2 ::'*....°'~~~;:~~A~·=~.~': ~~ ~~1~-= :roo!~A11~~~ :!\~':"*"' " -1moun1 cf lhelt bid. FOA FURTHEA IN· Ille let.et publllhed I~ encl tow (4) .... of '*"' le¥tl Thie ~ ~ The •ice n8'ul 8dder ~ Piiot Jtn. 12. 19, ll'ltdt 11tY9b1e to !he City FORMATION ON THE ._ of c.1fom1a. 0.-_., PltltlnOl.l1I !MS., clng dOa.f'** tt 0.-...._ modlllcllllol• encl and ... luboor."'10rl ~ 2. 2001 fOQQ of CO.la Meta No ABOVE APPl.ICA· C'r~"::f SU.. 100. ~ ~ txpentlont 10 the .. be reqiAr9d to kllow FlcUtloua Butlntt• :=' =:, ~ g'Y~s. 154~~~~~ to Trwect ~ INUr-~..=112 ~ ..::'· i~ ~~; ~~ I: t,:::::-:;. ': I 'T~":1o~ =~-:c:,:-.: O~T'H~"'1LA~~ arr:.=!Ofy "'-·lid~~~ CA 8*74460. Addi-~~,eg: .. : and~y°= att 001rQ ~ u : bond Dl\'ISION.i..-~ 200. Conlarenct and """'° PRIQUAU..10 liorlM ... ~ M PIA': ~ wt"9 a t..eory W9G9 ,..._ Ill tit ,._. I Karen l:annon, 12104 No bid *" be con-n '"'A lm!YC, COSTA dRllY Pt..aa Job Wflll IUICONTitAOTOM d...o .. COntr.cllCW WMt txpeneton wiO ~of .. Wortt. "Nt•pon Av•. IA. eldtr9d unlw ... me6e MESA. CALJ~IA. .. bt condUCfitd on ..... "" I t4 OOtl4 "'°"' ~ flOllM the llllcti.n The tllCClll'llll 8liMlf , "Tulln. cA .. ~.~ ~~ .... PfOPOllll,..,.. '°'!!: , •• ~·c.,,o'°••• N•=··"· flM)A~ ......., .. • ....., " ~nm --.. oooa.,,_.; ;: ~:z:1 Kalen nM ....,,.,...,. ...,, _ _, v~ lht ta<;..' "' ~.,Pt.a. F t i.1 ~ .. Ill .., ..... C:.. ~OM• t. ll!ld Cl9le • i...-CtMornia II! 1271<' ~ AY9 .. ~~-"" m.::: i'O'Ol ~ • II t:tO --. Cliftlllt Wf/111 ...Oll•LrTY TO ..._. and 1t0fe91, ..._ ~ • b = 't,,.!U:.,.. ~oon-~one ot 01t Fiii .,.. ~ a : ••:::=i = WI• WITM nta :.-:,:: .. -;: = .... d ~ti fie • dU*d by Ill lr!dMcMll .-.[.';'I =I,.,,,..,. PUIUC HEARINGS CONSTRUCTION '". t • ......... ..,. am CM CQto ' .... , .... ..,. ltd • 2!v~ ~fl~ he~ I Ot:.!. o.; = WlU. IE HELD rN THB .~!~ ........ I " ? • ~ ,:": .,. :: ...... ....... ~=-~ ,_.. ~ 01ae W r#Of 0.. COSTA .-eSA PL.4H-~'tMnl !l!!';ltn~ L!i~~ IUIOWl.IDOI H • :::. =-. -,_:.: t....,_ ()111'llcl9llor1t Ttile ~ WU ••1• Contta.e1Ct b'IM ~ ~ ~ ~~ ."!!f-\;j • CHa•MI 6 C9J't 0. Tm CMM., £rri ft liMly f'-,. .__! ~) ""° -"" the County '°' llodl W8' Mleor'rt ,NR OAIVl. 008TA ~ Cl = 11pa • ....., MALL •M> DOCU-i.v1r111n1 •OI ... ·--~ a.tc d OIMge ~ Ind lllO Ille~ Mu.A CAUFOfUftA. ~ DIM eM _,; ....._. ~ ~ ............. II MW ??! !!!!!'!r'f ,...' en Otflcv.2Q01 ~~c!'.:'ot .. AT 13o PM. 0.. Al ;::u-~4 .................. Ol;M---w• 11 w .... ~ vr 2001Mltm c.,• ~ ..._ ,._ ~ AS POettlll -.7•1480 ~ ·=-'1-. • ~ mtUCmCMe ........ ~ IMI ._.. Mlwf D l Nol~ ll. 1t. MIWI h lilfll lll l'llflCI fHlt!Unlf' ON AT18IDllNCI AT ....: -0..-. ... OA COii· ::... .. ~ .,., .. ~ N6?tM ....._,. .,,:11blda. MONDAY, .... UMY TMI ; ......... ca.. Cl l II --TW. ~ ._ .. ,_ ... IOOB::""..:-~~ complf~-:= i!i!.~~ ~r;.·r.:-.t:. &10.="2 .. 1= -..J"'-"=.::"': .. , ~ ~ ~· d ....... 'N(y(;; Tl4I '°" ,., '°" ~;; .. .. ... ..... "" • .._ ......... rno•••~LOWIHQ ACflONi c ..... .... a .............. A•Ul•t II --=-=~~.-· ,. _ _;= .. =--= ~:: .. -!. ..... CA ==: r3r-= IMV • .cm. ,...... CH· E· .:;,~~ .. .. .... -..., 1,.,..._ o......._....... o.·"Jo~ •-1•..., ._ • • _N,~mt w . • , ... ~ ......... ~Cllll --.......... -· -,i..,........, . .., "'"°" " ·~~ = ~DI· ~ ~r•U· :=. .. = >,C\~ ....... -,. ~ =-= ,......... I If .,.. fO 1 M Friday, February 2, 2001 11 '~ . Elcr'Ow No. 1HM-JP NOTIC!TO CR.El)CTORS OF II.JU< SAU! AND OF ~TO TRAHSFE.ft AL.Co+tOUC RVl!AAGe UC!H!! (UCC Sec. 1104 IC uq. Ind I l P 24073 et ltq.) NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that I bulk .... al 8IMtl Ind I trllllfer ct llooholle bever'lge ac.nte II lboul to be rnadt The nlll'le(I). Soael S«:u-ity or F eo.11 Tu Humberl and butlnlu tddresa ol the Mlltr(1).1ioenlH(1) are JU KYU BAN INC , 2010 Mlin StrMI •1as. t1111ne CA92714 OOtng busineu .. JUKYUBAN All ocrier bull1-I name(•) anc lddreu( .. ) UMd tty the M11att1).1icen-(1) within the put three )'8111, IS Staled by the Hier(• ).11cenlH(a). illlre None The name{a). Soclsl StQinty or Fldelal Tu l'Unbett ano ltdd!ua cf the buyer{l)/tpplic:anl{I) ii.I-HOI TRAN and AMIE TRAN. 210 S Cooper SlrMI. Santa Ana. CA 927 04 The aaaels being IOld ITll llfntl'llly delctlbed u 11.imiture, ftxU'll tQUipment gcodwtl1 tr'9de -· ... lelMhold ~. CO\'ef\11111 noc to COO'C*8 wwenlDIY ct llDC:k 1n trade end ABC On Sale Gentrll, Elting Piece UeenM 147· 211n111 Ind It/ere locltad It 2010 Mam Street. 1185, IMne, CA 92714 The iyp.{1) of blse IO be nnaferr9d 111arw ABC On Sale Generl!. E1ang PllCe Ucenst 147 -297791 now 1111UeO ll:)t the ~ IOClted II ume The bulk .... Ind traoatw ol the lllcohotlc beverage llcenle(•) lall/'e IManded IO be COl'llUITVTlated et the olllce of' ALDEN l YMAH ESCROW CORP , vwtlOM ld<ll1ISa II 1 I S26 South SllMt Camlol CA 90703. Ind Ile llltlcipaltCI ..,. data la Feblulry 25, 2001 The Bulk aale " aubiec:l IO Callfomle Unltonn comm.ra.t Code Section 51oa 2 The~ pnce OI oonUdetdon In CDMadlon wllh lie .. d tit ~ and lninlflll' ct the llc:.nM la !he eum d 171.250 oo. lnduding trventory M1lr'l*ad at 13,000 00. llrtllc:h CONlltl of the ~ by ctieclt • 18,175.00 Blllra oue P'1ot to ABC 228 lo A8C by CMl'liel'I c:tledl 184,375.00 It hp bewl llg191d belW9tn tht ::*1')11~ buyer(•~•) ... l9QUirld by Sec. 24073 of the ~ end Pren 1 ': • ccde, lllt e. CQI 11111 .,, 9or ...,.,., d .. ~ Ind ...... to bt s*d otty ..., the.,..,,..,.. bMI\ ltppl'OYld by the ~ °' Aloot'lollc ~~~ 111. 2000 JU ICYV BAN, INC , &y-IUifdto ryome, ~ ~ HOI TIWt. AMIE TR.AH. ~~ CNSMOS2 1eea&..IP Feb 2. 2001 FORD Trllbr (Hackel) Ford. b10Wn • Teri .-t 8WIY ""' 21 .. the ... of M ..... e I01f rteldlnt of ..... letlnd. SN le MVtwd by I dtughlltr. A tnemOl'lel NfVlce Wiii bt l'ltkl ~ Feb e, 2001 11 noon, It tht Behle Corinttllan YICtlt Oub. In lltu of flowr1, donatl()(ta etlould bt mldt to your f1110t'lte Charity. WATFORD Albt rlh1 (dllll Welford, ''1• U , Stlektr Helgtlte, Ohio, btlovtd wife of tht Ille W1lttr "8 w1tty" Thomu Watford, p111td aw1y eud· denly, palnlt11ly, and quletly Jenuery 24, 2001 It home. The catllt of dM1h WU I he1rt 1rrllythmla. She r.ctntly r.tocated to Ohio 1flltr llvlng In tht Newport/Coeta .,. .. .,.. for over 40 yass. She w11 retired from Big Canyon Country Club wtitre eht MrVed loyally, •'°'19 with her hu1b1nd. Som Auguet 12, 1915 In Ntwpott News, VA, ehe llved there wtth her mother 1nd lfattf until 1960. She gradu- ated from Huntington High School, end Jeter return9d there 11 the 1chool'1 c1ltttrla manager. Upon mov· Ing to C1lltornl1, she worked lor Mra. George (Greet) H099, •long with htr hu1- band, for over 16 yeare. She JO•ned Big Canyon In 1972 H one ol Its orlgln•I empioy•H. She 11 1urvlv9d by h11 1l1t11, Viole Sterling. r Newport Hewe, VA. two (2) chlldren, W11t11 Thom11 W1ttord, Jr .. Coale Me... CA and Harrletle Wilford Lowenthal, Shaker Heights, OH; daughttf· In-law, Oebor1h Beavere Welford and 1on-ln·l1w, Brl1n David; nine (9) grand- children; eeven (7) grut·grtndchlldren, ind many lovlng friends. The Internment wlll be private, P1cltlc View Memorl1I Perk., Newport Beech CA. A memorlel Mrvlce will be held, Monday, Febru1ry 5, 2001, t 1 :001m •1 The Presbyttf'l1n Church of the Cov.nant. 2850 Felrvlew Rold. Cotta Mea, CA. In lieu of flowers, !he family 1'9QUtltl mem<> ri1I contributions to: The Hoeo Foundation (tte1rt tenttf'), P.O. Box 6100, Newpor1 Beect11 CA 926~100 LOCAL lJPAmtAo~'tl0 /U) llKJldi. '. 1Aeua14.fout;U. CONROY'S FLOWERS 2983 H~ Bh'd: ~dHl!tu& .. l 14.540.3135 I ) i 't· o u n t ( ~a\ k t.' l ~ I I • ' ' ... I I~.' I .I '' ,,,,,,.,,~I .... 1-....\\I I :-.. '.', • 1C \'-..I, I I ... ·- .. .-. ~ I • .. ~ . , •E.-Uquidltlon Vllul P•lill 58f Badl bey view, 7687 " Elllle w{pcxA & .. St ,495,000 Call P1111ck TIOOl'e, !QI !M~705 OPEN SUN 12-4 2107 Windward Ln ...,... Ned • 3.581 ... kitchen, bolMM nn. = ··=-~ :rfi!, .. 114 S338K Plctin "-1ec:t Mtdlterr1,,..n VIiie. 2br 2be.. wd< to und & !hop! All 941H23-8120 e'IOCH AETREATt Wlltc to bly • ~. 1br lbe '3191000 Agt M•71H120 WINTER SPECIAL 2BDAM 2BATH Sc>ecbll 1100 If Apnnlr1I homl llllllec! i'I I wooded oomlTU1lty ,_ F..tion *Id wfoplrl ldlct*1 llrve ,,.... ....... -Piiio ' bl6cony FIOlll $ f ,535 888·219·0754 .... ·---· \' . Bewtol'IMeA ~DlEhJAD By .... ! (9-t9) f>42·!''671\ Sy Mll&'lll Pa I I Bl :J30 ~""' Dal. Kutt1 C.1"'1a \W,., C.\ l)'l6'l7 ,, ""'"''" llhd .• ""'"' -··-· lf'l"f>l'4MHI R·:iO.n,,...\rlK'11111 ""'"'"·-···· Y.elk-ln 8 ,J0.1:n--.'S OOpm Older Style Fumlt\n PIANOS l Collectibles . ..,.._._ ·-·-·or..-$$ CASH PAID $$ ............... WE BUY E8TATf.8 .............. ........,,_ .. CONSIGNM-ENTSl • ... I ' I , I ""LOVI llAf • COUCH'" ............. \lo.o.t.,~ .... ------Deadllne8 ------. Monday ............ Friday S:OOpm ThUJ'llday .. WedMtMJtay 5:00pm 1\re.day ......... Mooday S:OOpm fritlMy .......... Thunday S:OOpm Wedneeday .•.. TueMlay 5:00pm S.turday ........... f"ritt.y S:OOpm I"' ~1 .,..... be .... .,.. IN 119111191 In tflla ~11111Yr9Cll*w you to call I IOO numblf In which ... le I dlirvl I* minute. WORK FOR THE BEST Gerontology Aide I Cereglvere I Companions FOR PRIVATE DUTY • Mirumum 2 years cxperitn<X with Ah.hamer, Dementia or ~ro-Psych. • Live-In I Live-Out I 4 hr I 6 hr I 8 hr I 12 hr Shift Available • We off et ac.dlcnt benefits I Training I Top Pay / 40 I K Plan Join the LlvHOME Te•rnl Lo•AfteetM O.U Mrbsu (Jlj) 9J3.S880 c,,,u ::(~9470 VI.et ue et o.. • ....,.., www.lhrhonle.oom ---· ..... NJW. ......,...,,...,_ ..... , ........... FAX thla form to (949) 831-6594 ......... Neme~----~~----~--~No ·-~------­...... ~· ~~----~~~-~-~-~~~---... my: vi-..... __ ..,MQ-..,.._ ___ ,...&l!. ...... ___ ........ DltocMir __ ._ __ _ Oredlc.w'dll ______ ,_....,;. ____ -1:_ .. i-. ___ _ 7i ( M&M MARS 12,70Cllfll0. (IMH11k) 22 VMClng ... no -r:'°"• • hrtlmo ~~1i:=1 I· ==I FUiiy loldld, lOOO DUFFY 11 dlf'llO model, 1 IYlll, 115 HS 1911 OUFfli 21, fully lolldld $20,195 t4H45-6812 PVl'IUlt 2270 cenltf COii· salt, Ylllllhl 225 H P Alt w1St1 MON VHF GPS liltfl findaf OUlngge<I CD Du.i Bait 1100 Pn1tine 71•~10 9t673-6695 SUZUIU 15hp CMllbotrd boat motor UOO Mt-71t-1374 13ft Bolton Water 40hp JoMlon llAly loldl(j UMd once lor «iy I Olltl S7 995 obo IM9-71i-2311 Im s:::I Dock for nawar 1111 Etectrie Duffy S250mo plus usaoe Bllboa Island Pnme tocallon 949· 752-288 t Sida tie for 30ll ! Sailboat Grail loc, EZ acce" to main dlanMI. Call JJ 94M7S-7570 • Up IO 2211 near Bay Island (Cova) Ideal f0t ellClroe boll, posSlbll rate r~ lor use 94M73-t943 261t & 181t aide Ilea, no aall boats, Balboa Island, neer fifty. 949-673-1440 < LL"~IO<'d '' < ONVl"'lll V I -..twlhf·r \OU IT bu)iOM ....,.;:ltlnfi( '•' IU"'* loc•luna t. t_.,..,"loff1<,1 h•' Wt'u:I )UU Ac.ttl• Cl.A..,~IFJl'I > (949> <> 1 2-sc,~H POLICY In an lflort IO oltti the 1>111 WW:. pollllt>ll to OUI tellO- M lilld~ WI ... 1equi11 Cont11ctors who ldvlft!M Ill Ille S.MCI 0.ICIOly 10 lndudl Nit Con1tactors Ltc1n11 numblr WI ltlW ~ "*11 Your oo-optr 1tion • gr•ltt !ppfecil!ld. JAMES Ml\llAJ'l'Y L k.C'n-..ed f'Mpllft' •Refund .. nlk 1f'tltkM loaf' •fDt t1kd hy IH.' e ft .. 62Q l crm111al Way 125 (. ••4'tn Mc~n 949 548-3329' 224 ADOITIONS /REMODELING FARTHING INTERIORS Kilctllll I 81111 I Remodel ""' Room Adciticn ll5e0875 ~~ AUTO SERVICES ~----1 .. ANTIQUE & CLASSIC CARS 13 Cars , 2 motorcycles, all in perfect condition. 100% restored. Sale all in one block or individually Private Party OPEN HOUSE 10am·4pm Sat Feb 3rd Sun Feb 4th 2001 1229 w Shelly Ct Orange, Callf Call for llstlng 941-719-9317 BMW Z3 :U Conv W Only 13.500 mt. loldecl chtome ~g CD. hNted ...... ~ lttw $28,000 949-574-11295 BMW Z3 W Ullr,111¥w (4JEF'331) SAVE CA£VIEA llMW 714-l3W171 BMW SI• 'II auto, co. llarm (1<29211) Ul.195 CREVIER BMW 7 t 4-135-3171 BMW 32311 'II 5 ep, loldld, w/opllonl (3XEV715) '25,995 CREVIER BMW 714-135-3171 BMW 3231 '98 Conmlblt s ep, blue (3XMM381) 251( • CREVIER BMW 714-135-3171 • BMW 32&1 'II 5-spd, lpOft, co. bid (4EBl7•l 132,115 CREVIER BMW 714-835·3171 BMW 5281 W auto, CD, wtlltl, 14K .. ( 4ACF065) S35,ll5 CREVIER BMW 714-135-3171 BMW 5211 '99 Caahmtta, 17K ml (Y25150) "8.195 CREVIER BMW 714-135-3171 Brothers Carp!'! Servic!'s 1·800·559·7181 GOOD JOBS. RBLL4BLE SBRVICBS. NG 111_1NGS TO BlJY. rrsA.U H1JJlB BVBRYlMY IN CLUSIPEll (,.,) 642.J611 r-r· t ·--~ IMW M "' m m1, tllldC, WI ... boGill, O-· *Old.non..._, ..... oand 111.9'( <>CPA BKS ~ !?ff21f t!H!!f.11!!1 ....... =a:=~ 11W!tl111 llMW 74111 ... 751( ~ .... ~ blut. 111'1 ""· co. boob. lhowlOom CIOfld. mull -IO lflP'clU, $17,995, OCPA BKS Vin 1215627. IMf.586-1888 BMW 740ll 1' C eo, ( 4AZX9 Pl.1115 C BMW 714-aW111 Buick"*" 'IO a..ic llyte, lo ml, .... (108089) $6,.988 NABERS l71C)540:!100 c.... MnlColw .. 4S* oi'9 Iii. 8IDtll lllr, boob'r-m, a... orig cond, Qlf'lllld, """""'*' Villl021'0& -$14,995 o.c """ a.is ~ 1888 CADIU.AC CATERA V7 8llck. lllv, moanrool, lloyt (938431) $13,988 NABERS 1m)540=!100 Caclllac a..tle STS 't3 Sleta. -.. Nor1hlt.lr (834036) $10,988 NABERS 1714 )540-9100 CAO SEVU.E 79 , OWnar, peltact cond, garaged, ct.pendablt, lookl • drtYll l*fKt. "500 MM46-mt CltEVROlET lllAZER 'II 2wd. 2Ck "' wlllle (132488) S18,988 NABERS (71C)54!):!100 -,:~ "' Muell WV Ye '93 70k + ml. orig -· while, fully loecMd, ,.., air, Ilk• naw cond, Vln-t 851291 O.C Auto Brok• 48250 14MH-1111 ljlrldge By CHARLES GOREN with OMAR SHARJF and TANNAH HIRSCH . . DIAMONDS MAY BE F'OR£VER Both vulncl9blc. South deah NORTH the lltempt. U1e or the Stayman coo vamon led to the opwnwn COOU11C1 of four sJ)lldes. • KJ 103 1;1 K72 954 .,5.l WIST • 94 EAST ';(/ 8 J 10 J I) J7 • Q IU4 2 SOUTH • AQ 72 64 AKll •AK.IS .. 86 s A98S 10 6 J 2 • 8 7 Wesa fed the queen °' beans. and continued wuh the jllCl. Ul fC\~ IO E.u1'1 1i.,W with the rune Dummy'' king lost to the Ile, and East switched LO the e1Jh1 of club6. declllT· er postponing the fine~'iC by rism11 wuh the lung ' The king Of dJaml)fl(b WIL~ ClWlctJ, fetehmg low canh from boch defend ers, followed hy two round' ul trumps. ending in dummy. The: remaining heart Wll.\ ruffed 111 the dosed hand 1111d, leavml! a ll\lmp oul Manding. declarer now c.uhcd the .itcc Of diamonds and Cllllcd Wtth 8 dta NORTH EAST mOnd. West w1Mmg with the queen J• PllSS West was now faced wllh the u~ly 4• PbS cho~ of g1vmg dcclattr a &luff-rufl Operung lead. Qu"11 of or leadm1 11 dub uito South'• 11..c· iack aenace, both Imes 11vm1 ~lar er the fulfilling tnck. Is there wch 1 thtng as being ovcr· Once Eai.t has lhown up with the loodcd m dwnonds? Puhaps not m ace of hcans. simple anthmell\; rul hfc (ti depend.' on your valuc:s). should bavc convinced West OW last but 111 lhe bndie table... could oot bold ll10lher lu&b card 11'1 the modern style, LI IS permilli. Thal md lbe endplay euy tO fore· ble tO open two no tnunp wi&b one ec. 'The 011ly hope to avoid 11 was to SUll unstopped 1r your ti.id mcc11 aU fmd East °ll'ith thc Len of dwnonds. IO the other rcqu1rcmcnts To open the West should have JCllliOned the Soulh hand With I one-bid feids 10 queen and JaClt Of diamonds under cnormou> d1fficult1~ m trying to the ace and kmg Now E.ibt t:an wui dc'iCTibc both the ~umglh lllld shape the Uurd dwnond and le...J anodler of the hand. One of Ul05C two fea club, and the queen of club\ will be IUl'C$ will Wm<>'>I ccru11nly get l~t m · the seumg encl. 1-~11-~11_-__ Olclamol)lle SOhouettit '00 Wlila low mlla. Dual doof. (250411) _. Sll,988 NAatRS Jt714!540-9100 Toyota Camry 'H 4dr alalm. llOwer seats, loaded, lg tndt, good tlree, 11n1 oond, $8000 949-54t8797 VolklWagon Euro V111 '93 Not camper, 5spcl rnanuel, c.tt S Calh I In a lleahlll Arly runntog car 0< trucl! '35·'99 grouse polluter• eooepted Wt will ff neoee- llry Ullll lalaltog finlnca 94~586-1888 7 day• • wfflt Bkr 7~ ml, new bit ~ ............ ... bnl $8,400 949-160-1644 VOlV') S70TS Turtlo 'II 191( raf, 3.5 year WWT, loecled, llhr' Ira control, CD, *-it wNtla, 11111 roof Mc CMa 71~7CZ.f509 VOlVO 850 Twtlo '98 851< mt, 1'9111 llt*, oatmell lh, mooll-fOOf co. beeubllA ong c:ond, StS,99&. OCPA llKS Vin 14217791 949' 888 PUf AFEW WORDS TO WORK FOR YOU (9'9 642-;678 f-1ti1t{ , ~ --~~ .. ·~·~ J. GENERAL REPAIRS ..,...._~..,.. • l<I~ Rencwet1 • PUnbrng Fr.rtlnl. Et.c. • W8UK' Hlltn • Tollta • Cart.er Topt • SirU c.. ........... .,, , ... , .... , .;.: .. ···J .. , 1, •• : "'· ~ Friday, February 2, 2001 '13 TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE 31 CIMall dol&n J2 P""1 I mot 33 T~otwng ~ Stwolry pen 1!. Gorllil lll P0511M1 1115pOM9 38 Co..,. War ~I 39 WB&deo 4 I l UX u110U1o 42CrOIOi all .... t •ecl<laaly 43 Pnl.,., bMOI 44 C..llllf""n -4S Say -Che-I' 46 W1 .. d In Illa Wllllf "°'"""~ 48 lrudgM 49 O.noer Casile !>() M\Arny ~1 8"Mlk1itll brMO ~ Towa•O lhuller ~ Cte'"on property ~II 11'9 l!leboell ""o ____ _ STUMPED1 Calf« Mswefs I Tcu:tr tll tr by !ms •~irme1~ext~~ PUBLIC NOTICE The Caltf. PubllC· u11lilles Com- mlaslon REQUIRES that al UMd house- hold goodS movers print their P U.C. Cal T l'ollTiber: ~ and chauffers pnnl lheir T.C.P. number In .. advernsments. If you have a ques- llon about the leQal- ity d a mover. llno Of chaufler, cal: PUSUC UTlLmes COMMISION 714-558-4151 NEWPORT PLASTtRING • Stu000 Repairs • Room Addottons • Old Fashion 1n1enor Plaster Aestorallon • No job too small fW.YICllllD //IC MUIB llSM601 Loca um ....... tlllWJJ ........ "" LOCATING lllC11tONC S&.Aa LIAK DfTKT10N ~ ....... 675-9304 SELL yun llujdl1l1d \ ~ Roonna Speclallst<1 f'•• ,.,.._.,_,.,, 4H 949-722-884(; 714-751-8846 u....._ ...... WATERPROOf" ROOFING • • fl '' ' f • I I f •• I • t I 14 Fridoy, February 2, ~001 . Daily Pilot CALIFORNI A. 's N UMB.E'R ONE ... • JAG UA R DEALER . ,, . "I • THE JAGUAR XJ SERIES STARTrNG AT $56,950 ]AGUA THE JAGUAR XK CONVERTlBLE STARTING AT $74,950 r THE ART of PERFORMANCE 1455 South Auto Mall Drive Santa Ana • 55 Freeway at Edinger 7 1 · 4 • 9 5 3 • 4 8 0 0 • w w w . b a u e r j a g u a r .. c o m . 2001 S. TYPE AJ-V6 MSRP SM.250. 2001 S-TYPE AJ.Y8 MSRP $-49,950. 2001 XK8 CONVEIITTBLE MSRP S74,9SO. 2001 XJ8 MSRP $56,950. . AU PRICES PLUS TAX. TITLE. LICENSE & P.MISstON PEES. •