HomeMy WebLinkAbout2000-02-10 - Orange Coast Pilot..
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SERVING THE NEWPORT -MESA CO~UNffiES SINCE 1907 THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 2000
Make way .f~r
• Toshiba Senior Classic will include golf legend Arnold
Palmer for the first time at Newport Beach Country Club.
Richard Dunn
DAILY PILOT
NEWPORT BEACH -Arnold
Palmer, perhaps the most famous
player in the history of golf, on
Wednesday committed to the
Toshiba Senior Classic at Newport
Beach Country Club.
It will be Palmer's first appear-
ance in the Senior PGA Tour
event.
The 70-year-old legend plays a
lmuted schedule on the seruor
tour, J>ut had always passed up the
Toshiba Classic, mainly because of
the date. ln previous years, it was
o played a week before the PGA
Tour's Bay Hill lnvitabonal, which
Palmer hosts.
This year, the Toshiba Classic
was moved up a week to March 3-
5. It is the sixth of 39 offioal senior
tour events in the 2000 schedule.
"This is obviously a big day for
us,• Toshiba Classic tournament
STATE YOUR PORPOISE, PLEASE
·e's
director Jeff Purser said Wednes-
day. ·rve been striving to get hlm,
not since I've been here (for three
years), but since I've been at
Grand Rapids (Mich., as director
for two years of another seruor
tour event).
"It's terribly exciting. Arnie
brings an element to the tourna-
ment that's very special. When
you run a tournament, you always
want the legends, so it's pretty
gratifying. Not just for me, but for
the whole toiimament. To get
someone like Amie is somewhat
or a stamp of approval."
y
The owner of 92 victories
worldwide, Palmer bas captured
eight ma1or championships m tus
career: four Masters titles, two
Bntish Opens, one U .S Open and
one US. Amateur (1954), the
spnngboard to his professional
fame.
He ranks fourth on the all-time
PGA Tour victory list with 60 titles
and was the first player m tour his-
tory to reach the $1 million mark
m official earnings.
The Senior PGA Tour was ere-
SEE GOLF PAGE A 14
DON LEACH I DAILY PILOT
A paddling surfer ls joine d by a trio of harbor porpoises as they leisurely make their way along the coastline north of the Newport Pier.
Taxi company hails cleaner-burning cabs . ,
• The natural gas-powered vehicles purchased in Costa
Mesa will make up one of few fleets of its kind in the U.S.
Andrew Glazer
DAILY PILOT
COSTA MESA-A taxi compa-
ny purchased 70 new natural gas-
powered cars from a local Ford
dealer on Wednesday, making it
one of the only fleets in the country
with exclusively "clean-fueled"
cabs.
Rick Schorling, president of
Santa Ana-based American Livery,
Inc .. said the $3 million the compa-
ny spent on the Crown Victorlas -
almost $43,000 per cab will have
economic and ecological benefits.
"I'm sure all of the taxi compa-
nies in the area will follow our
lead," Schorling said.
He said the new cars, wluch
bum compressed methane gas,
can travel more than 450,000 miles
without serious maintenance prob-
lems.
Used police cars, which cypical-
ly make up a taxi fleet, last much
less time and progressively spit out
more toxic fumes, Schorllng said.
But the exhaust from natural gas-
powered cabs does not become
dutler as the cars get older, said
Terry Ryan, who sells natural gas-
powered cars for Ford.
Martin Schlageter of the Sierra
Club's Los Angeles chapter, a pro-
environment nonprofit that does
not readily support automobiles,
said the taxi company should be
commended.
"It's wonderful," he said.
Trying to educate
and not to alienate
ON VACATION
• Author and journalist
Susan Faludi will talk
about her new book
th.is weekend at the
Newport Beach library.
AluC.DllMn
OMV Pit.OT
SUMO Faludi bu trouble
making .,. fbody happy. n. 40-yeu-old writer,
wbowiD ...... WllUnd
., P9lt al a. N9wpolt lw:h
Public Ulnry'I ....... --
ture series, is best known tor
her groundbreaking 1992
book "Backlash," which
drew attention to the anti·
feminilt trend in American
society and media.
But Paludi'1 'new work,
•stiffed: The Betrayal of the
American Man.• ii one tbat
baa been fuffling just ••
mat'ly ... then.
•1bere are days,• the
author IAkl. tpMldng ba llow;
eloq\ltnt 18Dt8DCM, •Wbln I
SEE FALUDI Ma AM
"These cars are debrutely deaner
than what mo t of us are dnving
around. They are unprovtng d.U'
qua.l.Jty and that's what will make
Orange County hvoble in the
future.·
Much of the ddik smog visible
during the day m the l.os Angeles
basin comes from automobile
tailpipes, said Charles Zender, an
earth atmosphenc physicist at UC
Irvine.
He said exhdust from natural
gas-powered rars would produce
SEE TAXI PAGE A13
Arnold Palmer
Newport
weak on
sales tax,
report says
• Expenditure and
revenue comparisons
show how Ne'wport
Beach and Costa Mesa
rank among county cities.
Noak l Schwartz
DAILY PILOT
NEWPORT BEACH -The
weakest source of maJOr rev-
enue in Newport Beach is
sales tax, according to a
recent city report companng
the city's revenues and
expendltures to the 31 other
cties m Orange County
•Perhaps we're not captur-
ing enough sales tax from
tounsm, • said adrn.mistrabve
services director Denrus Dan-
ner, who headed the study
The comparison, an exten-
sion of last fall 's five-year
financial forecast, compared
such areas as general rev-
enue, property tax, sales tax,
public safety exp~nditures
and general go"emment
expenditures.
In terms of bed tax and
property tax, Newport Beach
ranks second and fourth,
respectively. However, the
city spends more on public
safety per capita than any
other cty in the county. The
top-ranking cty m the major-
ity of categories was Anaheun
-not surpnsing mce it's also
the home of a rna1or tounst
attraction in 01Sneyland. • .r think the real lSSUe is
that we need to protect our
sales tax," said Mayor John
Noyes, adding that with the
newly renovated Shops in
Mission Viejo, compebtion on
the important source of rev·
enue is groWUlg
As for Costa Mesa, it ranks
lower than Newport Beach in
most revenue categories,
except sales tax. Thanks to
SEE REPORT PAGE A 13
lllDEI
QASSRDS " muum FOUi ''
DWOOl 16 Ml llll1CfS __ _..
SOCl1Y . &15
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Hill appoihted to· theater board IN Noted Newport Beach architect
Ind philanthropist Rush Hiii has
joined the Balboa Perlormlng
Arts Theatre Foundnlon board.
The board, now with 13 mem-
bers, has been actively raising
funds to renovate the historic
1927 Balboa Theater. Aiming at a
M .3-mllllon goal, the group has
another S2.3 million to raise.
Members Sf¥'I that Hiii's architec--
tural expertise, state and city gov-
ernment experience and local
community alliances will be a
welCome addition to the group's
efforts.
A2 T1'ursdoy, February 10, 2000
HE IS •.•
Helping people break through their
own barriers.
DEVOTION TO THE ARTS
Spencling 20 years in any profession is
~ true testament to devotion. especially
when you can swnmon the strength to
throw thousancts· of hip tosses or thrust
your firsts into a heavy bag.
Bob White has been instructing karate
students at his Costa Mesa studio for 20
years. ShoWlllg his longevity and commit·
ment to the art of self-defense, White has
taught more than 10,000 students during
that time. ·nus is a full-time job for me,• White
said. ·rve been able to be successful, but
I can always work on methods to be a bet-
ter teacher.•
Tia,e sport of karate is more than a
series of hmges, lacks and punches for
White. Karate is not only his career, it is
bis passion.
White, 50, was a student long before
he was a teacher. He is gifted in many
sports, even playing baseball at Golden-
west College. However, karate was
White's calling as be began winning
many regional tournaments. He credits
his teacher, legend Ed Parker, for molding
him into a well-disciplined karate
machine.
Those outside the karate world may
not recognize Parker's name, but he was
partially responsible for bringing back a
WORKING
Longtime karate instructor
creates a martial art form
in his Costa Mesa studio
resurgence in martial arts dunng the
1970s and '80s. A flurry of martial art
movies were made, starring the likes of
Bruce Lee and Chuck Norris.
A TRUE KARATE IOO
White, who is a ninth-degree black
belt, opened his first school in 1972 but
moved eight years later to his studio on
Victoria Street near the Santa Ana River.
-His methods were gaining attention.
He worked with some of the Los Angeles
Rams football players, teaching them
skills they could use on the field. His atti-
tude is infectious. Seven world champi-
ons are under his tutelage.
White was even tapped for the first
Karate Kid movie, where be played the
part of a referee. Although there was a
wave of interest after the karate-themed
trilogy, White said martial arts is more
popular-now than ever.
·n·s at an all-time high,· he said. "The
need for it is still great. There are many
children and adults who want to learn the
techniques.•
MIND OVER MAmR
The art of karate goes beyond the del-
icate balance, the precise movements and
the usual routine, White professed.
Karate can make a shy person confident
and show a cocky student some humility.
Karate is a sport that goes beyond the
physical parameters, he added.
•niere are a lot of people who come
here and are searching for a JlllSSing
piece of their life," he said. -We hope
they can find what they are looking for.
We have a lot of answers here.•
Martial arts has been a blessing for
White. Besides winning numerous tro-
phies, he met his wife Kathleen while
teaching. White's unrelenting motivation
is educating others while continually
learning himself.
"I'm blessed I get to do something I
love and at the same time make a living
helping shape people's lives,• White
added. "One of the best parts of my job is
sharing my knowledge with others.
Knowing that I can make a difference in
people's lives is a tremendous feeling."
-Story by Greg Risling;
photo by Sean Hiller
Costa Mesas net1X!St one-stop eat and grocery shop
P erhaps the next-best
thing to haVl.ng a
gounnct chef in your
kitchen is having a culinary
profeSSlonal help while you
shop for chnner.
Chef Ma simo, who cre-
ates delcOable delights for
Amid 'Ifattoria in Costa
Mesa, now also doles out
cooking tips to customers of
the restaurant's new addi-
tion, Amid Calf~. The grand
opening will be on March 20.
Because shopping should
never be done on an empty
stomach, the Ca!M offers the
VOL 94, NO. JS
Jasmine Lee
RETAIL ROUNDUP
ingredients needed to fix an
Italian meal and a menu of
eat-in or to-go cuisfne.
The foccada bread and
tomato sauce are made dally
and other items, such as
smoked fish, fresh mozzarel-
la and olive oil are available
for purchase.
And, of course, what caJe
would be complete without
drinks? Amid Caff~ also
serves a mini-cup of espresso
or a glass of port. There will
also be monthly wine tast-
ings
HAUTE COUTURE
MEETS NATURE
Wondering what fabrics
• are ~tn• for next season?
New Man, a South Coast
Plaza boutique, will unveil its
Spring 2000 collection next
week and the new line fea·.
tures all natural materials.
The French-manufactured
slacks, shirts and dresses
come in lush linens and com-
fy cottons But the men's and
°'~herein ain be
reproduced wrthoUt written per·
mllJIOn of copvrigtlt OWl'MI'
women's clothing also comes
in tactaJ, a rayon-type fiber.
This rayon is not your
average fabric -it is appar-
ently made from the bark of
a tree. But like the synthetic
rayon, it travels well.
The upscale apparel -
casual Euro chic mingled
with down-to-earth fabrics -
is designed to fit in at the
office, evening events and
weekend treks.
Robert Taylor, president of
the Paris label, will showcase
his spring fashions on
Wednesday at the South
Coast store.
WEATHER AND SURF
HOW IO BEACH US
CJra"-don
TEMPEM.1\MES
Balboa
11DU
TODAY
Flm low 67152
Hiii is the chairman and found-
ing ~rtner of Hill Partnership,
Inc., an architectural firm.
. • -Dally Pilot
Doily Pilot
Sales just in time
for Valentine's Day
Meagan Marriott,
manager of New-
port Clocks and
Watches, would like read-
ers to see the •gallery of
magnificent, practical,
educational antiques and
whimsical clocks• at
Newport Clocks. "With
Valentine's Day just
around thE!'"comer, we
welcome you to tour the
wide range of unique and
interesting time pieces,•
says Marriott. •Among
the favorites are clocks
that provide the one side
of a toy handbag and the
other side a visible 9-inch
clock with bold Roman
numerals; clocks made' to
look like your favorite pet
and clocks that play a
variety of tunes on the
hour, complete with mov-
ing figwines and instru-
ments.• Newport Clocks
and Watches is at 3441-C
Via Lido in Newport
Beach. Call (949) 723-
2333.
The best selection of
fresh seafood can be
found at Santa Monica
Seafood. The market car-
ries more than 30 varieties
of fresh seafood daily frbm
around the world. Includ-
ed in the daily selections
are Mexican shrimp, Dun-
geness crabs, live Maine
lobsters, dam chowder,
prepared fresh fish meals,
seafood salads, sushi, spe-
cialty breads, and hot arid
cold smoked seafood.
Santa Monica Seafood is
at 154 E. 17th St. in Costa
Mesa. Call (949) 574-
8862.
There's a new spot to
meet for lunch. Bayside
Restaurant added a lunch
menu last month. The
full-service restaurant is
family owned and operat-
ed by the same proprietor
of Bistango Restaurant in
Irvine. Award-winning
Chef Paul Gstrein will be
the executive chef coming
from Bistango after over-
seeing that kitchen for the
last 10 years. Bayside
Restaurant has an eclectic
menu of American con-
temporary cuisine. Lunch
selections include salads,
pasta entrees, fresh
seafood and daily selec-
tions. Lunch is served sev-
en days a week from
11 :30 a.m. to 3 p .m., and
served dinner nightly
from 5 p.m. It's at 900
Bayside Drive in Newport
Beach.
Tiffany & Co. always
has the best selection of·
gifts for important occa-
sions. For Valentine's Day,
ntfany & Co. is offering
the ultimate gift, a
bracelet set with 125
vibrant pink sapphires
alternating with 125 daz-
zling round diamonds in
five flexible rows of sheer
glamour. This beautiful
Greer Wylder
BEST BUYS
linear design is set in 18-
karat gold and platinum.
There is also a ntfany
"heart" locket with lul 18-
i.nch cha.in in 14-karat
gold. The locket, a tradi-
tional design of elegant
simplicity, is available in
two sl.zes and engravable
with initials, date, or term
of endearment. The heart
is also romantically inter-
preted in the •L'Oeil de
Perdrix, • a ntfany private
stock Llmoges porcelain
box. The pink and white
hand-painted design with
gold highlights is
inscribed with •11ove
you." Tlffany & Co. iS on
the lower level o"f South
Coast Plaza, near Nord-
strom. Call (71o4) 640·
5330.
The Spirit Run, a fun
fund-raiser for local
schools, is happening on
Feb. 27 at Fashion Island
in Newport Beach. The
races consist of a SK and
tOK run-walk and a fami-
ly toddler trot. This year,
there will be a Mighty
Ducks and Anaheim
Angels kid's expo from 7
a .m. to 11 a.m. The Spirit
Run benefits Lincoln,
Andersen, Eastbluff and
Harbor View elementary
schools. Participating
sponsors include Fashion
Island, Edwards Theatres,
OCN, Fletch.er Jones, OC
Family, and First Estates.
For more information,
please call (949) 222-3344.
LahaJna Galleries in
Fashion Island is featuring
the latest works by
Romantic Impressionist
Aldo Luongo at an artist
reception and exhibition
from 7 to 9 p .m. Friday
and from 5 to 8 p.m. Sat-
urday. Luongo's subjects
are broad, ranging from
dramatic landscapes with
mysterious shadows and
coastal scenes, to a cafe in
Buenos Aires or a rooftop
in Italy. His works have
brought hlm cntical
acclaim and a bevy of
celebrity collectors,
including Dionne War-
wick, Cary Grant, Antho-
ny Quinn, and Yul Bryn-
ner. For more infonnation,
please call (949) ?21-9117.
• llST IUYS Is Wbllshed
Thursdays and Saturdays. If you
know of• good buy, send a fax
to (949) 646-4170 or writ• to
Daily Piiot. Best Buys, 330 W.
Bey St., Cosu Mesa 92627.
POLICE FILES
COSTA MESA
The Times Orange County
(IOO) 252-9141
AcMnlllng
Coroo. del Mar
67153
6 10 a.m ............ '" .• -... 1.6
• Anton........,,-* A llJ)top Compute< •od cash Worth
$7,500 were stolen from 1 business In the 500 block at
8:25 1.m. Friday.
11tOMAS "·JOHNSON. Publisher
TONY DODOO,
Editor
.... RAGl•ND,
Senior City Editor rwcvoavu.
'tatUftt Editor
ROGBCNUOH,
SpofU ldltor .
MMCMMnN.
Photo Editor
ANntONY PICX,
N9WJ Editor
IOllJ.~
'• Oellgrlef NltYOlll .... ~~
LMMD9•0lll.
"'~ .... PIDD~
OWf Finlndal Oft'lcft
C1-lfled (949) 642·5611 =.:"") 642..4121
....... t't"9) 642·5680
$pOftl.,., 574-4223
NIM. Sports, .. (949) 646-4170
f-fftlft. cl9flypl4otelatlme.com
Melf'I Office
IUllnesa Office (949) 642-4121
8U'Anet1 F .. (949) 611·7126
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Costa Mes.
68153
Newport 8Nch
67152
Newport Co.tst
67152
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6;15 p.m ....................... 0.9
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5ecand low
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• .._. ~ lWo shotguns end two r~
worth S 1,733 were stoten from • home in the 2300 bfodc
Friday
• ,.......... A""'-A cellular phone worth $200 wm
stolen from• car lti the 2300 blodc ~ 3 end 4 p.m.
Monday.
• .... ca ........ A Ce>mc*t diK player and two
ampllfltrs worth M65 were stolen from e ~r In the 1900
blod( the twnlng of Jan. 26
,
NEWPOKT IEACH
• ..... c..t llW as;. A Cetlulet phone wonh $140
Ml nohln from I CM In the 2600 btock the *-'ting of
Jin. J1.
• ...... ~ ....... A cettullr Phor'9 worth f.100
W9I **" from a c.-In the IOO block b«t·;11n t 8"d I
p.m. Mn. 2J.
• .. Jll't Ctlletr ....._ A pur-. and hi aw••
worth ......... frOm. ~In thl toD blodl
Mn.JO,
• I •
..
Doily Pilot
NEWPORT·MESl
SCtlOOL BOARD
bWRlP·UP
Inside'
EDUCATION
I WHAi HAPPENED:
The school board select-
ed the law firm of Kronlck,
M0skowiU, lledemann &
Girard as its bond counsel.
WHAT IT MEANS:
If the board decides to
, put a bond measure
before residents, the attor-
neys will help in the devel-
e>pment and writing of the
bond.
WHAT THE Y SAID:
School
~°:~e~~-
Leece want-
ed everyone
to know
that she, Dana Black and
Jim Ferryman interviewed
many potential bond
attorneys. "We learned a
lot -we still have a lot to
learn," Leece said.
WHAT HAPPENED:
The board approved
the district's revised plan
for expelled students.
WHAT IT MEANS:
Each year, the district is
required to update the
educational plan for
expelled students. When
the plan was reviewed this
year, the board found the
same holes in the plan -
that have been a problem
in the past. The plan did
not adequately cover what
to do with seventh-and
eighth-grade students who
have been expelled. This
year, the district has added
a community day program
for those students.
WHAT THEY SAID:
"When
the ACCESS
program for
expelled
youth
began,
there were 112 sites in
Orange County with
19,000 students. There are
now more than 28,000,"
said M ike Murphy, director
of alternative programs
for the district. "That also.
includes students who did-
n't fit into our comprehen-
sive school model. H
WHAT HAPPENED:
The school board
approved a resolution that
will allow the district to
receive the latest county
bankruptcy payment.
WHAT IT MEANS:
By
approving
the resolu-
tion, the
board has
made it par
sible for the district to
receive about S2 million in
settlement payments from
the 1994 Orange County
Bankruptcy. The district
expects to receive the
funds on Feb. 24. The
money will be used to pay
off debts from previous
facility repairs and
enhancements.
••••••• •we are
recommending
them aa being
the best
pecauae we leel
we can get the
ma.t bang tor
our buclL •
~~ ....... . ................ ...........
fYI
NEXT MEETINGS
.. Thursday, February 10, 2000 A3
School board should pay aftention .to gay club controlJerS)l
I 'd like to suggest some
required reading for the
Newport-Mesa Unified
School District's board and
administrators. It's short,
only 14 pages, and a fast
read. And it's free U you
have access to the Internet.
Just point your browser to
www.latimes.com/gayclub.
What will come up is the
text of U.S. District Court
Judge David "Carter's deci-
sion to grant a preliminary
injunction on behalf of the
Gay-Straight Alliance Club
of El Mode na High School
against the Orange Unified
School District Board of
Education .
No weaseling here. The
judge tends to write in clear,
declarative sentences.
For example: ·The reason
for the First Amendment's
ban on official censorship is
because in a free society we
rely on the •marketplace of
ideas.' Thoug h. the state
education system has the
awesome responsibility of
l.Ilculcating moral and politi-
cal values, that does n ot per-
mit educators to act as
•thought police' inhibiting
all discussion that is not
approved by and in accord
with the official position of
the state."
This is our m onth at
Newport-Mesa to study the
problems of neighboring
school districts so we can
avoid -or a t least be fore-
warned of -educabonal
pitfalls from which they are
Joseph N. Bell
THE BELL CURVE
struggling to escape.
A few weeks ago, we
'learned from the ll"Vlne Uni-
fied School District that-a
very small group of voters
can undermine a thriving
school system, thus drama-
tizing the importance of get-
ting lid of the two-Uurds
rcqwrement for school
bonds and undersconng the
unportance of getting out
the abysmally low vote an
most school bourd and
school bond elections.
Now, With the no-non-
sense assistance of (' arter,
Orange Urufied has shown U~ Whdt hdppens when a
political and religious agen-
da supersedes both educa-
bondl priorities and the laws
of our land in the gover-
nance of a local school dis-
trict.
If you have followed this
story at au, you know the
history. 1\vo El Modena stu-
dents, with broad support
from both gay and straight
fellow students, applied to
school authorities for ofhettll on here that is outside the
recognition of a club to b scope of this case -and 1s
called the Gdy-Straight probably even more tmpor-
Alliance. The club would he wnt for us to learn in New-
dedicated, according to d port-Mc a.
mission statement, to "rdts· The Orange Unified D1s-
ing public awareness and tnct has been in a state of
promoting tolernnce by p10-hostility and confrontallon
viding a safe forum for dis-for several yPars thdt is now
cussion of issues relate>d to approdching chaos Cali.for-
sexual orientation dOd nia Tedchers Assn . president
homophobia." Wayne Johnson told the Los
Contrary to long-estal>-Angeles limes th.ts week, *I
lished policy of leaving such don't know of any other dis·
a decision to the school tnct m the state -and there
ac::tnunistratlon, the school ' are 990 where the level of
board demanded that 1t ldke anger and anldgorusm is
over approval in Uus anywhere nedr that of .
instance. Orunge. Unified.".
After hearing arguments ThiS is the residue of edu-
at a public forum and twice cational dec1Sions made
delaying a vote on the mat-from the perspective of polit-
ter while the students were 1cal dbsolutism Among oth-
pressured to change the er things, the Orange school
name and nature of their bodrd has tned to free its
club, the board voted unam-camp~es of slate regula-
mously to deny the dppl.Jca-lions on teacher credentidls.
tion. The decision was refused federal i.lSStslance
accompanied by such com-funds, barred its schooh
ments from bourd members from a busmess-onented
-quoted in the court docu-and supported career pro-
ment -as MThe Bible says gram, canceled a state-fund-
we're all sinners, but lhLS, in ed psychological counseling
my opinion, ts dsking us to program and been m con-
legitimize sin,· and "We slant conflict with its teach-
k.now the lc1w is on their ors over broken promises
side, but our community and much-needed rais~s.
members don't wc1nt 1t. ~ As, d, result, some 350
The legal orguments teachers with d decade or
raised by the attorneys for more of experienc~ have left
the board are all discussed the d1strtct during the past
and then shot down by three years
Carter m hls ruling. They As one teacher who has
make interesting and stuck it out was quoted as
mstrucbve reading. saying m a Feb. 6 Tunes
But there's a second lcs-Orange County article· ·We
hdte lo see a du;trtct we've
loved and workP.d tn so long
be destroyed."
And the pnncipal victuns
of all th1~ 1deolog1cal car-
nage are, of course, the chil-
dren who attend the schools.
This will be worth
r<>membenng when issues
lik<• the club at El Modena
come up m Nc>wport-Mesa.
Such d club did surface
brieflylasty~df. uul never
got beyond the peripheral
vision of the Q<>ard . That
wc1s enough, however, to
insp11e board member
Wendy U>ece to say tn a
Nov. 20 Daily Pilot story:
·Approving the dub gives
dpproval to teen sex.•
When thts lSsue comes up
dgdm -and 1t probably will
-you might want to con-
trdsl LP£>Ce's comment Wlth
th1s_condus1on from Judge
CartPr's ruling: "The Board
will not likely be able to
show that groups of students
discussing homophobia and
acceptance of all students
regc1rdless of sexual orienta-
t10n !>omehow serves as a
mdJOT disruption to· the edu·
col.ion of students. Indeed,
this club t<; actually being
tonnf'd to dVOid the disrup-
tions to education that can
take place wheo students
am haras!>N1 based on sexu-
dl onentation. •
• JOSEPff N. BEU. is a resident of
santa Ana Heights. His {Olumn
appears Thursdays
MAKING BIRD -IES
The players on the Se nior Tour have made a career
out of showing all the young whippersnappers in the
gallery how it's done.
So you don't wane co mi s the only Orange County appcar;mcr llf
legends like Lee Trevino, Chi Chi Rodriguez. Hale Irwin. l()m ~1te
and defending champion Ga17 McCord ..
These guys hav~ made more birdil"s, won more tourn.mwnt' .ind
electnfied more crowds than .rnyhody on the face of the planet.
But tbtrt~ plmty mort wbtrt that came from .
Newport Beach Country Club o February 28 -March S
TOSHIBA
.
S E N 0 R C L A S S c
www.To s h i ba S en ior C l a ssc .com
A4 Thursday, February 10, 2000
Council votes \ to
oppose Measure F
Jasmine LAM
0Alt.Y Pit.or
The City Council may have
started a trend this week when
it unanimously approved a res-
olution opposmg Measure P.
The ballot initiative, which
wW be put before voters in the
March 7 primary election, ls
designed to block the county's
proposal to build a $2.9-billion
a.ilport at the dosed El Toro
Marine base. If passed, certain
projects, such as ai.rp<>rts, jails
and landfills, must be
approved by two-thirds of
county voters.
Newport Beach Mayor
John Noyes said the council's
action should come as no sur-
prise. The council has consis-
tently supported the El Toro
project, especially to prevent
the expansion of John Wayne
Airport. ·we have to go on record
opposing something that we
think is wrong for the county,"
Noyes said. "l doJ.l'l believe, in
my personal opinion, . that
these types of initiatives are
good for anyone.•
During the post year, the
rouncil bas passed several oth-
er resolutions to support an air-
port at El Toro.
This latest resolution states
that, in addition to blocking a
second county airport, Mea-
sure F could lead to expansion
at John Wayne Airport.
I
I
I
I
I
Ei Toro advocates have said
that John Wayne could tnple
in s12e if the county does not
build a second airport.
The threat of uncontrolled
growth at John Wayne has
prompted the Costa Mesa City
Council to also consider a res-
olution to oppose1the measure.
Costa Mesa has stayed out of
airport issues, Mayor Gary
Monahan admitted, but is
more than ready to join the
fight. .
The initiative would do
nothing to stop expansion at
John Wayne, Monahan said.
The Costa Mesa City Council
on Feb. 22 will consider an ·
anti-Me~ure F resolution of its
own.
• 'F' is for failure,• Monahan
said. ·u fails Costa Mesa, it
fails Newport Beach, it fails the
county,•he said.
Monahan said he and other
council members are exploring
other options to support El
Toro airport.
The Newport-Mesa Unified
School District has also been
less a,ctive than Newport
Beach ih fighting John Wayne
expansion. That, too, may
change.
There will be a community
meeting Tuesday evening at
Kaiser Elementary School in
. Costa Mesa to warn residents
about the possibility of John
Wayne expansion.
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l.xplret 02/29/00 I . I L---------------...
Opily Pilot
City to help with . 'VISion 2004~
• Caltrans will need
to relinqwsh a one-
mile stretch of East
Coast Highway before
plans move ahead.
Noakl Schw•rtz
DAILY PILOT
NEWPORT BEACH
City Council members
agreed to help Corona del
Mar business leaders wres-
tle control of a one-mile
stretch of East Coast High·
w ay for a pedestrian·
. friendly village.
The Corona del Mar
Business Improvement Dis-
trict has proposed a plan
called "Vision 2004," which
calls for wider sidewalks,
trees, improved building
facades, drinking fountains,
benches, and hanging
flower baske ts, among oth-
er things.
The goal is to attract
more visitors to stop and
walk around Corona del
Mar, rather than simply dri-
ve through.
"We've been working on
this for three years," said
business district chairman
Don Glasgow. "We want to
move ahead."
Council members on
Tuesday voted to attempt to
gain control of the one-mile
stretch of the highway that
runs through the communi-
ty's business district and is
now controlled by the state
Department of Transporta-
tion.
Plans to renovate the
area took off last summer
wheu the group met with
architects, business people
and residents to explore
how they could improve the
business district and
strengthen the community
atmosphere of Corona del
Mar.
•The concept is novel
and innovative,• said
Cound.lman Dennis O'Neil,
who represents Corona del
Mar. "We have a phenome-
non in old Corona del Mar
[on this proposal]. We have
the business and residential
community in agreement.''
O'Neil added that the
unity inspires him to do all
he can to support the
effort.
Howev.er, Councilman
Tod Ridgeway pointed out
that the council also need-
ed to explore the loI)g-term
maintenance costs·· of the
highway.
Still, council members
voted unanimously to begin
the negotiation process
with the state, which, if suc-
cessful, will lead to a relin-
quishment of the highway
by Caltrans by next year.
District members hope to
present their plan to the
City Council later this
year.
~~
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Man dies week after
he was struck by car
• Police are baffled
because inj uries to
Hideaki Tochikuoo
did not appear to be
life-threatening.
Greg RJsling
D AILY PILOT
A 66-year-old Costa
Mesa man died at Hoag
Hospital on Tuesday
night, a week after be
was struck by a motorist
who was backing out of
her driveway.
Hideaki Tochikubo
died fro!fl · mJuries suf-
fered on Feb. 1 while he
was gardening in an
upscale Corona del Mar
neighborhood.
His death surprised
Newport Beach police
who had investigated
what appeared lo be a
minor traffic accident.
•It was very unexpect-
ed," said Newport Beach
police Sgt. Mike McDer-
mott. •we thought this
was a routine trafhc
injury.•
Apparently, the injury
was severe unbeknownst
to police officers
Tochikubo was work-
ing near the intersection
of Way Lane and Femleaf
Avenue, an area known
for its narrow streets ..
Pohce said he was
using a leaf blower and
didn't hear or see the
vehicle coming his way
Jenmfer Wagner, 26, of
Corona del Mar, probably
didn't see Toch1kubo
working in the street,
police said.
She backed her 1996
'Ford Explorer and hit the
diminutive Tochikubo.
When police amved ~
. the vktirn was COflSClOUS
and had suffered a
bloody nose and abra-
sions on his arms.
Toch1kubo was taken
to Hoag Hospital where
he remamed alert.
However. he under-
went surgery for his head
injury.
He died at about 9
p.m. Tuesday.
The Orange Co\Jnty
Corqner's Department
will conduct an autopsy
in the coming days.
Neither the victim's
family nor Wagner could
be reached tor comment.
McDermott said traffic
investigators are delving
further into the cal>e.
Wdgner may be cited
for a traffic violallon,
pending the outcome of
the investigation. Pohce
have ruled out veluculdr
J'(ldnslaughter.
'
Senior center volunteer receives Mayor's Awar.d
• Marie Maples
honorCld by city for
her tireless work and
. dedication.
Andrew Glazer
DAILY PILOT
Thf're's nothing relaxmg
duoul rl"llrement for Marie
Maples.
HYou might call me the
Hunky," said Maples, who
stands with a book-on-the~
head posture and speaks with
a Southern drawl. ·Any JOb
that ne<>ds lo gel done, I'll do
it."
That is precisely why May-
or Gary Monahan presented
MaplPs With a oouquet of lilies
dnd a diploma at Monday
night's City Council meeting
Monahan dwarded Maples
Wlth the• Mayor's Award for the
thousand<> of hours she's vol-
unteered at the seruor center
since she helped to found 1t
eight yed.rs ago
HShc HCls very pdSsionate, •
Monahan Sdld. "She's a ·big
movl"r und shaker for getting
pubbnty for the senior center.
I fer vo1r<• hrts I.wen heard."
Mapl<>s sdid she wdJltcd to
find a way to keep herself busy
t1lter h<'f husbtlnd Jack died in
1983
"l n•alized it was Just me
dnd that's the way We is now,•
she sdid. ·I nt'l'<.lcd to shop for
another life.'
Maples began raising fund::.
for a place where seniors in the
city could enjoy each other's
company, play pool and partic-
ipate in countless other activi-
ties.
Once the center finally
opened in 1992, Maples began
her daily routine of cleaning,
answering phones, greeting
visitors and waking nappers in
the senior center's library at
closing time.
"She's all over the place,•
said Allan Meyers, the seruor
center's executive dJre>ctor
#Sometimes T feel bad. We JUSl
want Mr to enjoy her time
here a lot."
But Maples Sdld she enjoys
her work at the center. dean-
ing included. She Sdld last year
she noticed the building's
facade looked dirty.
"So I scrubbed 1t, • she said.
·Anything I can do to help, I'll
do it with a smile. Cleaning the
building was a fun thing."
Maples IS 'also board mem-
her at the senior center.
She was instrumental in
bringing severaJ programs to
the center, such as a shared
housing referral service for
seniors.
"Not only is she involved
physically,• said Marilyn Con-
nors, social service coordinator
at the center, "but she also has
the three -w'i' of a great board
member. She works, has a bit
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Marie Maples was given the Costa Mesa Mdyor's Award
for her extensive volunteer work at the senior center.
of WNlth and a wonderful
wit.
Mdplcs, with her energy,
enthusiosm and Southern
charm, plans to keep powing
her etfort.s into th<? senior cen-
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A6 Thur.day, February l 0, 2000 Daily Pilot
.
' •
FYI
WINNERS
Fourth Grade
• 1st pl.ce -Ben
Kane, Kaiser
'Do I have to spell it out for you?'
• 2nd placa -Andrew
Watt, Eastbluff
Fifth Grade
• 1st place -Tiff any
Liu, Eastbluff
• 2nd place -Brooke
Sharp, Newport
Sixth Grade
• 1st place -Hong An
Nguyen, Davis
• 2nd place -Sara
Salam, Eastbluff
SnJMPERS
Here are some of the
words from the fourth-
grade spelllng bee:
denominator
' I ..,ostrophe
capitalism
authentic
desirable
erroneous
certfflcate
alllance
complex Ion
tutelage
• In the final round,
•residence• was spelled
correctly and "accelerator"
was misspelled.
TRIANGLE
SQUARE
• Newport-Mesa
elementary school .
students rise to top of
district spelling bee.
Danette Goulet
DAILY PILOT
NEWPORT-MESA -Ten-
sions were high Wednesday
morning as students from
across the district competed
for the spelling bee titles.
Each elementary school
sent one to two students from
the fourth, fifth and sixth
grades to compete in dis-
trictwide spelling bees.
•Mymom says I'm a natur-
al speUer, • said 9-year-old
Jo,.epb Ludlow.
Joseph was the fourth-
grade spelling bee contender
from Adams Elementary
School, but he was tripped up
during the second round by
-the word •benefactor.•
He had made the first cut
of the competition -a 20-
word written competition -
and was one of 11 fou.rth-
grad.ers to advance to the oral
round.
"l studied every night and
Vendor•
my mom quizzed me on some
words,• he said. •And my
prinopal qwzzed me, too.•
Colton Dillion from Ander-
sen Elementary School said
he studied 10 pages a night
for the last month and a hall.
Colton made a good run until
he stumbled on the word
"denominator.•
"Everyone else got all the
easy ones," Colton said.
While the fourth-graders
were sweating it out at Victo-
ria Elementary School, the
fifth-graders were struggling
over at KaISer Elementary
School.
•tt was the longest
spelling bee we've ever had,•
said Daryle Palmer, principal
at Kaiser. "Brooke Sharp and
ntfany Liu went for about 25
words -just the two of
them. It was amazing.•
In the end, ntfany was the
victor. But it is only Hong An
Nguyen, the slxth-grade
champion from Davis Ele-
mentary School, who will
move on to the Oral\ge Coun-
ty competition.
Hong will be spelling
against the best sixth-grade
spellers of each district in
Orange County on March 2.
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Wednesday's d.lsb1ctwtde spelling
bee held at Victoria Elementary in
Costa Mesa.
LEFT
. . .. •• .. •• A judge's hand holds the offtdal :~
stop watch during the final roWld. ::
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Doily Pilot Thursday, f: bruory 10, 2000 A7
Indiana law reignites commandments debate
•Board member
Wendy Leece says the
religious standards
should be posted in
every classroom.
Danett• Goul.t
bAJLY Ptlor
NEWPORT-MESA -As
the state of Indiana preparPS to
pass a law alloWing schools to
J>0.9t the Ten Commandments
in classrooms, local proponent
Wendy Leece says lt will still
never Oy in Cahfomid.
·The bill -which would
also allow courts and other
public facilities to post the bib-
lical laws in the context of a
historical documents dlsplay
-IS awaiting the governor's
signature.
Lawmakers in nine other
states are expected to consider
similar proposals.
Leece, a Newport-Mesa
Unified School District board
member, has been suggesting
the Ten Conunandrnents be
posted in classrooms since the
May 1998 school shooting in
Springfield, Ore
Her suggestion met wtth
much controversy. Although
school board members said
they could agree wtth her sen-
timent, they could not see
approving it.
"It's a battle Indiana is pro-
voking here, one that districts
can't afford," Leece said. "l
think it's good that they are on
the cutting edge. But that's
Indiana. Calif omia ... I don't
think we have the votes in Cal-
ifornia to do it. That's the reali-
ty."
That does not diminish her
belief that they should be there
and that religion does belong
m the classroom, she said.
"It's encouraging that other
states have seen the value of
posting the Ten Command-
ments because lt is a moral
code of authority,• Leece said.
"There 1S the opinion that
America is in a cultural decline
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U. your VISA. M8llCn:lnl or American Expraa
and we have not done well to
t ach ow kids the dilference
bctwCt>n right and wrong."
But she said he and othP.rs
believe that a secular sooety ic;
causing more harm than
good.
"Without having a moral
compass, without realizing
that there lS right and wrong,
students don't know and shoot
up other classmates," Lcecc
said. .
But one teacher who
spends his days shaping the
youth in Newport-Mesa said
there are several holes in the
theory that .posting the com-
mandmP.nts will help
·People who say thdt's
going to cure the ails of
teenagers don't know
teenagers," said Joe Robinson,
who has taught history at
Newport Harbor High School
for the ~t 30 yecirs.
As many parents could
tell you, Robinson sa1d, the
best way to get teenagers to
do something ts to tell them
18TH CENTURY
2-LJGHT SCONCE
Avo1loble 1n Antique
Burnished Bross and Nick.el
Height 19.S"
Hodson
Lighting
QwJily I i1hlin1 ~noK:~
for 30 v~an
Optn TutsAri. 9-5, Sal. 9·4
not to do it.
For that reason, posting th
commandments on the walJ
may very well backfire. .
When Leece propo!>ed post-
ing the com.mandmf>nts last
year, Robinson photocopied
the pages in the Old Thsta-
ment o( the Bible dea.lJng with
the Ten Commandments and
asked students to translate
them.
"Each student came btick
with something different," he
.said. ·Jews, Catholics and
Protestants alJ have different
vemons."
For both S1des, it comes
down to freedom of reli<pon
"Yes, [God) has a place m
the classroom," Leece said.
"Because of freedom of reli-
gion, however, the [Amencan
Civil liberties Union) has so
intimidated parents and teach-
ers that they are unable to
share their faith "
But as a historian, Robl.IlSOn
said he feelS inclined to point
out that the worst killings have
come when a tale tries to put
on religion over another.
•we have hdd the lea.st per-
secution m Arnenca, because or religion,• he said. "By not
BRIEFLY IN
EDUCATION
OCC dean to·
receive award
OCC's admirustralive
dean of Economic Devel-
opment and Community
Education, George L.
Blanc, wift be awarded tbe
Economic Development
•Person of the Year
Award" at next month's
annual conference of the
Assn. of Community and
Continuing Education.
. The assoctauon is a pro-
fessional body represent-
ing California community
college administrators and
t.alang ides, we have allowed
America to be d very religious
country. To me, that's the
anbtheus of what they're try·
mg to say.•
managers resPQnstble for
o~rating community edu·
cabon and contmumg edu-
cation programs.
. Blanc, 63, 1s being rec-
ogruzed for his significant
leadership and contribu-
tion in the field of econom-
ic development, and for his
contribution in enhancmq
the recognition, growth
and advancement of eco-
nomic development at the
community college level.
Blanc operat~ one of
the largest commuruty col-
lege commuruty education
programs in the ndtion.
The conference will
take place Feb. 15-17 m
Santa Barbara. ·
Caught ya lookin'
didn't I!
Don't you deserve a smile like this?
Peter T. Smrece~D.D.S., F.A.G.D.
Fellow of the Academy of General Dentistry .
Preventive, Cosmetic and Resrorarive Dentistry
1401 Avocado Ave., Suite 806, Newport Beach
(near Fashion Island)
(949) 759-8606
Member American Deneal Associacion
Orange Councy Deneal Sociecy
CaJifornia Deneal Association
American Academy of Cosmetic Dentistry
+ • BMer • Hente<k>n • Century • Jeffco • Swaim •
• Hidu>ry White to name a few.
+ Let one Of our certifiea inteoor designers
assist you.
•
A8 Thur.day, February 10, 2000
Lynne Pllhel of Newport Beach, Terry O'Brien of
Cotta Mesa and Krtst1 Kirkpatrick visit Victoria Falls,
Zimbabwe.
ON VACATION . Doily Pilot .,
Emily McA~ in Williamsburg, VlrgtnJa. Emily trav-
elled with her grandmother, Janet DeRuff. Both are from
Newport Beach.
Dillon. Nikki and Dane Flinn o1 Corona del Mar, Katelyn
and Danny Baker of Newport Beach; all cousins enjoytny
a trip to Mauna Kea Resort ln Kona. Hawall. !
• CRY ·. rAL CAVE
~a-VoJ-.a-taot with Julie KJng
Be.al ' • 'worbhop on ~e ~ RdatJonshlps
lnMl'Uc.lon Patty Davidson Set. rebruaary 12th
l'cbruary 3. 17 • 7-9 pm I ·3 pm
Valentine gifts. love
books, candles ~ more.
Psychic Readings
(Call store ror appointment)
·Tarot ·
• Script Channeling '
·Astrology
• Handwriting Analysis
891 Bakers~::~!;~~ Mesa 71.\t 75.\t115 J
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Acccg., Audics, Taxes 1
15% di count to CM Resident<
(714) 546-4272
· 35o/o-50% off
All equipment at
cost or below cost .
• Snowboards
• Boots • Bindings
• Golf • Baseball
•.Hockey
• lrf-Line Skates
• Soccer • Tennis
• Weter Sports end
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...... & Ml*1hlr ""' tlO Met 1111
17141 841·7487
-Daily Pilot
I I . . · . ON VACATION Thursday, February 10, 2000 A9
n tane, Erika, Robert and Jan-Erik Palm of Newport Ron and Sandy Baers of Balboa ln Lockeroy, Antarctica. Corona del Mar resident Elana Peters on vacation
Beach hold the Daily Pilot ln front of the statue of "Posei-
don .. ln .ran-Erik's hometown. G_othenburg, Sweden.
S Nautilus Teak
639 Paularino Ave., Costa Mesa
(South of Bristol)
Tues-Fri hm-6pm •Sat 1~ •Shown by appontrnent 511'1 & Mon
www.teakhomecom 14 546-0670
Savings
up to
B~c s.1ecT arkaa Reg. $488.00 to $498.00
NOW$239.99
De Neve
In the Boot Stretch pant• A~. $150.00
NOW$99.99
Obermeyer
Fleece Wlndbloc Veat
Reg. $99.50
NOW$59.99
SRS)rtlDI
Bib• Reg. $80.00
NOW 9.99
Burton
Balance Snowboard
A~: $439.95
NOW$399.99
All Forum
Snowboards
NOWonSALE
All Terrain Binding•
Ae9..: .$149.9& NOW$99.99
~ Cortex 2
Snowboard Boots
Re9.= _$150.00 NOW$99.99
Sun~le "
N81ifts.99
PROGRESSIVE SALE
Now In Progress
All Perkea, Sweetera,
& One-Piece Ski Sulta
25o/o OFF
•
ln France. She stands near in the Venus de Milo at the
Louvre. ·
(
t LUTHERAN CHURCH OF THE MAs'fER
M ORNING PRE-S CHOOL PROGRAM
Abercrombie
Photogra y
949.673.1571
Enrolling Now
• Christian lnstruccion
• Developmental Program
• Pborics
• Computer instruction 8:30 AM to 11:30 AM
Ages 3 to S years
2900 Pacific View Drive
Corona del Mar, California 92625
(949) 759-1146
SKIS & BOOTS
NorcHca
Next 7.0 Sid
NOW$289.99
K2..
Four Clanlc Ski
NOW$359.99
Lange
AC8 Boots
NOW$299.99
Marker
M 8.1 EPS Binding•
NOW$169.99
FOOTWEAR
VtVAAn.Boot ~._ •. 00 NOW$611.119
a.~or
After aid lloot NBliJi• All •'° 30%0FF
JOHN BLO~R •. eARPET ONE
Presents
ONCE IN A MILLENNIUM SAVINGS EVENT
AVE UP TO 400/o
8 IONTHS SAME AS CASH O.A.C.
Thoueand of gorgeous carpets from famous manufacturers like
Hc>ne)1well, makers of Anso brand carpets, stunning hantwoocla,
......... bwltltul vinyl floors, ceramic tile and a complete wool
oaleollon. Au dlacounted for our once in a Millennium SIMi1g8 EvenL
BONUS SAVINGS CHECK
100
OFF
2129/00
Namral
. Stone
Collection
• Send AllOUND TOWN Items to
h Delly fltlot. 330 W hy St., (Os-.
ta Mell 92627; fax them to (949)
646-4110; «cell (949) 764--4330. A
~ listing may be found at
dMl)fp/lotcom.
TOIAY
St.ve Holmes, a cllntcal
nub1tionist, will speak on
·vacdnation: The Myth" at 7
p.m. at Borders Books, Music
and Cote at South Coast Plaza,
3333 Bear St, Costa Mesa. For
DlOnl information, call (714)
•32·78.S4.
LMderihlp Tomorrow's
•Alumni Br~kfast Fonun"
will feature Orange County
Sheriff Michael Carona. The
forum is from 7 to 9 a. m. at The
Wyndham Garden HoteL 3350
Avenue of the Arts, Costa
Mesa. nckets are $15 to $20.
lb RSVP, call (949) 644-8283.
Whole Foods Market Triangle
Square will hold a seminar on
aphrodisiac foods at 7 p.m.
The seminar is free, but reser-
vations are required. Whole
Foods Market ii at 1870 Har·
bor Blvd., Costa Mesa. For
information or to make reser·
vations, call (949) 574·3800.
Speak Up Newport'• 19th
annual Mayor's Dinner will be
held at the Newport Beach
Marriott. Leigh Steinberg,
sports attorney and author, will
speak. Reception starts at 6
p.m. and dinner starts at 7 p.m.
Forinfonnation,call(949)224·
2266.
Hoeg Health Center wU1 hold
a CPR Heart Saver course,
wluch will teach essential lif~
._saving techniques for adults
·and children. The course is
$25. The center is at 1190 Bak·
er Sl, Costa Mesa. For more
information, call (949) 631-
3623.
OFange Coast College French
instructor Ua Raileanu will
We're new in your neighborhood but
old in cndition
Established in 1983
16 Years io Newpon Beach
Fine j(Wclry (I 4 K-l 8K-Pla11num)
Custom Designs
Full Servi« J(Wclcr
Grad1U.1c Gemologist
Expcrrjcwdry &
·waich Repair
~ 00~
( FJ.-...:E. JEWELRY)
Costa Mesa
2706 Harbor Blvd.
·(3 doors south of Pier I Imports)
714.241·9404
Tues -Fri 10am -6pm •Sat 10am · 4pm
Th\S
Va\ent\ne's oav
" FREE
WINROSF.S
FORA YEAR
Stop by either of our 'llOrtl
Ind re1istcr to win I doun
arranged long tem roses
each month for one year.
(Value S67$ 001
Of'FEROOOD
TltRU 2·14
2275 cwport Blvd.
Costa Me .. n
Co.mer of cwpon i: 1rv1cw
(949) 645·0246
2986 Harbor Blvd.
Costa Mesa
C met ofl:tarnor & Bali:cr
{714) 540-3135
preview a one-month program
she'll lead to Pans this summer
in an onentabon ~on at 5
p.m. in the Faculty House.
Admission to the event is free.
The trip will take place from
June 30 through July 31. OCC
is ~t 2701 Fairvie'f Road, Cos·
ta M~. For more information,
call (714) 438 .. 704.
The Lattno luuel Forum wm
hold a seminar on the Latino
asthma crisis from 9 a.m. to
1 :30 p.m. at the Holiday Inn at
the Cos~ Mesa Orange Coun·
ty Airport, 3131 South Bristol.
Costa Meso,. The seminar .will
provide a general overview of
asthma and its disproportion-
ate effects on the Latino com-
munity m Orange County. For
more tnfonnatiori, call (415)
284-7220.
FRIDAY
Jean Krueger, a Weight
Watchers group leader, will
discuss •win the Weight
Game" by Sarah, Duchess of
York, at 7 p.m. at Borders
Books, Music and Cafe at
South Coast Plaza. The store
is at 3333 Bear St., Costa
Mesa. For more information,
call (714) 432.7854.
The fifth program in Orange
Coast College's •Armchair
Adventure" series will feature
•Route 66 -A Road to
Remember." The event will
feature filnunaker and world
traveler Charles Hartman,
who has mode many travel· ·
ogues about the American
West. 11ckets are $6 to $9.
OCC is at 2701 Fairview Road,
Costa Mesa. For more infor-
mation, call (714) 432·5880.
The Orange County chapter
of The Single Gourmet will
bold a gourmet dining event
at Scott's, 3300 Bristol St.,
Costa Mesa. For more infor·
matlon, call (800) 750-DINB.
S P E
v.lentlne'a Dey
Mon., Feb14
Chef Flmllndo ,_
JM logltllf • .,,..
manuwlttlld
5':8qi• bell Ind •
molt poJJIAll dlll..i
CALL FOR YOUR VALENTINE RE9ERVAT10Nt
UNITED COLORS
OF BENETTON.
final
reduction
entire
faJVwinter
collection
starts at
500/o off
hurry in
before
new spring
amval•
F89hlon lll•nd
Newport~
nlde Atrtum CoUrt
(949) 760-6577
SllUIDIY
The Hyatt Newporter wtll
host a KOST 103-FM Valen·
tine Celebration. The free
event will feature the band
Rockola. performing dance
music from the '60s Uuough
the '80s. The hotel is at 1107
Jamboree Road, Newport
Beach. For more mformation,
call (213) 427-7281.
Robert Bruce Woodcox,
author of •Tue Golf Gods are
Laughing,• will discuss and
sign his book at 7 p .m. at Bor-
ders Books, Music and Cale at
South Coast Plaza. The store is
at 3333 Bear St., Costa Mesa.
For more inf onnation, call
. (714) 432·7854.
The YWCA of North Orange
County will partner with the
Harbor Christian Fellowship
Church to provide free breast
cancer screenings at the
church, 740 W. Wilson at
JoAnn in Costa Mesa. lior
more information or to sched·
ule an appointment, call (71•)
935-9120.
A MLove Your Beach"
cleanup is scheduled for 9
a.m. at Crystal Cove State
Park. Volunteers will meet at
the Reef Point entrance to
the park. Bags and gloves
will be provided, and park·
ing ~ees will be waived for
all participants. For in.(onna·
lion, call (949) 491·76"7.
The Latest Thing Teaching •
and Healing Center presents
"A Day of love" with San·
dra Sauer from 10 a.m . to 3
p.m. The event features a
discussion of the ancient art
of romantic preparation,
including the use of foods, .'
beverages and environment.
The fee is $25. The Latest
Thing is at 217 East 17th St.,
Costa Mesa. For informa-
tion, call (949) 645-6211.
• CAl<ES • PASTRIES
• COOKIES • PIES • TORTES •
. ROLLS & BREAD
o.. ao .....,_. klMe o1..,..........,...., ..... ,._.,,,
COSTA MESA IRVINE · •llllJll VIEJO
1170 w. Bak• 14443 CutYer 24000 Allclia Pkwy
(.t Felrvlew) Walnut V1tege c.nt« Gmw9J !lhoPPlnG ctr.
(714) 548-8388 (IMt) 282·9270 iMtt 830-He()
A I .\< \It! I ~11 Nl' Pl l '-\ 1'111 SI Sl't < L\I .\
Fn. Feb 11th thru Mon. Feb 14th Su.r'Unl
• Shrimp PA.KORA Salad
Sifad of iPICY gfHnS, shrirnps J)akOl'I, lamltlnd ~ drtiSin9
• Lamb RAVIOLI in Basil coconut curried sauce
Tandoor lamb r>Aoli M•PPl'd WI CUfTifd SIUtf. Nan brud
M11i" c..r.,
ScrwJ with kmon•muawd basnun ria and Nan b..d
• Shrimp MAKHANI
Jumbo lhrunpi, dtllcMety JalJtftod In our fltl'ICM Malthn s.uct
• Rack ofl..AMB
Tindoofl grifftd Juicy IMnb chops, mashed P!Mc.f.. r~ .a
• Tandoori grilled SALMON or SWORDFISH
fl't!h lliltftOn ar Mordftth. ITllrinMld, ~ .., Iii """9oclft, ~NUC9 S«wd Clf't bed of~'""' IA#ml •
• Mango Cttmc Brulcc or
• .KuJfi OndiaA ice cream> with druftbn cbeiria
I
.(f
II
•.J
JI ,,
u
·l
,J
-;
Daily Pilot
essary. The church is at 1850
Fairview Road, Costa Mesa.
For more information, call
(714) 557-3340.
SUNDAY
Tbe Orange County Young
Republicans' President's Ball
Will run from 5 p .m. to mid-
night at the Balboa Bay Club,
1221 W. Coast Highway. For-
mal attire is requested, black
tie optional. For more infor-
mation, call (949) 488-9597. Crystal Cove State Park will
bold "Gray Whale Sunday"
The Ouls Senior Center will for whale watching from 9
hold a pancake breakfast a .m . to noon at the boardwalk
from 7:30 to 10 a.m. The overlook by Pelican Point
break.fast includes chetries parking lot No. 2. A spotting
jubilee or regular pancakes, scope, binoCulars and natural
sausage, coffee and orange history information will be
juice. The cost is $2 for adults available. Parking fee is $6.
and $1 for children. The pub--For more information, call
Uc is welcome. The center is (949) 497-1321 .
at 800 Marguerite, Corona
del Mar. For more inlonna-
tion, call (949) 644-3244,
The Health Ministries of
Presbyterian Church of the
Covenant will conduct a CPR
class from 8 a.m. to noon.
There is no charge for the
class, but registration is nee-
The Latest Thing Teacblng &
Healing Center offers v Who
is the onQ for me?" based on
the best-selling books by.Bar-
bara De Angeli.s and taught
by John H. Seeley. The
course runs from 1 to 5 p.m.
and costs $25. Topics to be
discussed include love myths,
AROUND TOWN '
love choices and compatibili-
ty time bombs. The Latest
Tiling is at 217 E. 17th St.,
Costa Mesa. For more infor-
mation, call (949) 645-6211.
TUESDAY
1be Corona del Mar Cham-
ber of Conunerce will hold a
luncheon meeting at Five
Crowns beginning at 11 :30
a.m . Newport Beach mayor
John Noyes will speak on
#The Challenges Facing New-
port Beach in the New Millen-
niwn." The event is $15 and
includes a glass pf wine. For
reservations, call (949} 673-
4050.
The Newport Harbor Area
Chamber of Commerce will
hold a Business Referral
Breakfast at the Newport
Beach Yacht Club at 7:30 a.m.
Business and marketing con-
sul~t Nick Smith will speak.
The event is $15 10 $20. The
Yacht Club is at 1099 Bayside
Drive, Newport Beach. Call
(949) 729-4400.
The Newport Beach Public
Library will hold a free lnteme~
workshop for teens at 7 p .m
The program will include
demonstrations of search
engines and location of infor-
mation on the Web. The
library is at 1000 Avocado
Ave., Newport Beach. For
more information, call (949)
717-3801.
Mother's Market presents a
free semµtar title •Preventing
Heart Disease in the 21st Cen-
tury# with clirucal nutritionist
Steve Holmes. The event will
be held from 6:30 to 7:30 p.m.
in the Patio Cafe. Mother's is at
225 East 17th St., Costa Mesa.
Seminar reservations are nec-
essary. For more infonnation,
call (800) 595-MOMS.
Thursday, February 10, 2000 All
WEDNESDAY
The OWIS (Retired Officers'
Wives League of Orange
County) will hold a luncheon
at noon at the Bcilboa Yacht
Club, 1801 Bayside Dnve,
Corona del Mar. Retired offi-
cers' wives and Wldows and
women officers from all
branches of the military art!
welcome. ·The event ~
Wlth a social hour at 11 a m.
For more information, call
Charlotte Walker at (714) 549-
2028.
Hoag Health Center will hold
a 'free seminar tiUed #The
Stress of PMS" from 7 to 8:30
p.m. The center L'i df 1190 Bak-
er St, Costa Me.c;a. For reser-
vations or -more infonnallon,
call (800) 514-4624.
Estancla High . School's
Authentic Open House will be
held Feb 16-18 to give com-
muruty members d chonce to
visit the campus while S<'.hool
lS m session VLSHing hours are
8:30 a.m. to 2 p.m. The school
is at 2323 Placentia, Costd
Mesa. For more i11fonnation,
call ·(949) 645-0715.
Women in Buslne59, Orange
County Chapter, will hold d
meeting at 5.30 p.m. at The
5hP.raton Hotel, 4545
MacArthur Blvd., Newport
Beach. Karen L. Bonnett, own-
er ot Ltfe Mani.tgement Con-
sulting, will speak. The event
is $35 ·for mPmhers, $42 for
guests. ror more infonnallon1
cdll (714) 731 -1077.
Hoag Hospital wlll bold a
fr<>e seminar lltlPd ~counnet
the Healthy Wdy". from 6 to
7 30 p.m . dt tL<> Conferencf:•
C<:!nter, 1 Hoag Dove, build-
ing 44, Newport Beach. For
rn'>ervdtioi;-is, cdU (800) 514
4b24
~-------------:-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------~~----~
• Cute & Sexy Lingerie
• 100's of Love Lotions
HOURS
MH.·Sat. s..uy
COSTA MESA RIVtRSIDE MOMTCl.Alft MORENO
7•• •.a. -.. 18111 ~ -.. t1'1 ~Ml. VALLEY MALL w .. lhvn1 llalll~ '*'Ct* .. ..._.....,.
Ulick W. Bristol ao. • Tytei •H (9119) 626-6221 (IOI) l6H43f
(714) 429-1911 (IOll3SZ"'405
warii taste is AlV1ays
le at
Cif
CU PC AK BAKERY
Cookie Trays
Heart Shape Bread
Valentine Cakes
Pies
Brownies
TEL. 949 642·0571 • FAX 949-642 5551
273 17th Street, Costa Mesa
Learn the French Secret of
Permanent'W'eightLo~
Lose 8 inches in 4 Weeks
"SYN ERG IE"
Revolutionary Subdermal Vacuum Massage
StwiM Offer: 2 For l
You & a Friend sign-up for a s,-p Sn;. for the Price Of one ,., ,,,,, ..
lO'lll OFF,., ~ DYNAMICS
A French Htalm Spa In Produa Form .. Lose 15 lbs. in 14 Days
..... Jiil ll. lOllO
FRE.E CONSULTATION
(Ht)SIUPIT (4111)
MOIJ. IM a..-C... "-
'
/J,.J.,..,,-'
•Dmnn suwd
•Prrm.e Rib Aru Jus
·Pe~Labl.es
•Ma.rlu:d pol.Jllou & grovy
OINNE~ FOR ~
4pm t'lpm
$34 .. 95
•A glass of lwu.u wirU! or rhamf•ugrv •rre.rlt 1lnrwberr11ts u'1ih w luppnl cream
and cltocolat.e sauce.
R ... r.,,uon• octa~.1r,.. ~Mtdtd Bar ((
I OS Moin •treet, N.B. (Balboa P.nin•u/f:a)
(949) 675-7382
Oft Jle lloanl..tlt At S..~tilwl Bal6oa Inn
'Ct>l<'brate \·aJcntin<'1ft·'
AJI Weekend Long ...
Friday, Saturday,
Sunday, Monday!
Dancing, romancing
and cuisine fit for
a King and Queen! •
We promise all the
above, you supply
the love!
Choose your evening ef romance with your
reservation Fri., Sa.t., Sun. or Mon. night.
For Rettrvations Call (949) 67 [,_} '>22
3520 B. PACIFIC COAST HWY • CORONA OEL MAR
~~ Adam and Eve C-ttl~ e got started over a RIB... ~ J What could he more romantic? · l,
'1
NEWp0 ~o!li8~> ~PAM'i
Complimentary Photo & Card for all Valentines
l Now Accepting Limited Reservations \
I
, 'l 2196 Harbor Blvd. . Costa Mesa r
c; . 949-631-2110 ~
Ci)~ ~~
• Cute & Sexy Lingerie
• JQO's of Love Lotions
• Clrocolate Dipped Strawberries
• R0thllnce & Adult Videos
HOURS
Mon.-Stt.
Sunday
COSTA MESA RIVERSIDE MOMTClAIR MORENO
mn Mlpelld" t1tl ce ... u111 VAUEY MALL 7438akerStnet ••o.,_ia '*'"* .. ,...,.......
1 bled w. Bristol .... ~.... (IOll '2Hut l•l ISM43t
(114) 429·1911 (90tl3S2-4405 •
. ,. .
Long-stemmed ch01.·ot.1te uumc roses
Heart·sh~ boxes
Chocolate champagne bottle~
lndi\idual chocolatr hew .. ~
Gourmet caramri apples
over l 00 choo:ll.atc Sp«ialtles
Watdlffe Plua. 11:24 lnllil
(tJIJl'/W ~ l nA • "*"' ( '6.1
..
I •• f
I
J
Al2 Thuradoy, februory 10, 2000
Salomon Sm.1th Baraey will • tand.ing Night• from 7 to 9
hold a free emmar titled p.m. Youth for UndeThtand·
•Making the Most of Your ing, a group that encourages
401K• at noon at 650 Town international student
Center Dnve, Suite 100, Cos-exchange programs, will pro-
ta Mesa. Lunch will be pro· vtde inionnation on becom-
vided. For reservations, call ing an exchange student. The
(800) 846-6337. store is at 3333 Bear St., Cos-
ta Mesa. For more informa-FEI. 17 oon, call (714) 432-7854.
8oag Health Center will .
hold a free seminar titled FEI. 19
•Keeping Your Heart in
Sync,• from 6 to 7:30 p.m. Banies & Noble Fashion
The center is at 1190 Baker Island will hos\ a 7 p.m. St .. Costa Mesa. For reserva-tions call (800) 514.4624 . appearan~e by Dave. Free-' ' man, president and editor-in·
FEI. 18
The Prtends of the Newport
Beach Public Library will
hold a book sale to benefit the
llbrazy at 1000 Avocado A'Ve.,
Newport Beach. A preview
sale, for Friends members
only, will be held from 1 to 5
p.m. Feb. 18, while a sale for
the general public will run
from 9 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Feb.
19. For more information, call
(949) 759-9667.
Sherman Ubrary & Gardens
in Corona del Mar will be fea-
tured in a cable teleVist0n
program, "Secret Gardens,"
at 8 p.m. on the Home and
Garden Channel. The pro-
gram features unique botanic
gardens from all over the
country. For more informa-
tion, call (949) 673-2261 .
Borders Books, Music and
Cafe hosts •Youth for Under-
chief of WhatsGoingOn.com
and author of •100 Things to
Do Before You Die: navel
Events You Just Can't Miss.•
The store is at 953 Newport
Center Dnve, Newport
Beach. For more mlormation,
call (949) 759-0982.
ONGOING
Ess.entlals Counseling Js
offenng two free seminars on
Mondays and Wednesdays in
January and February.
"Learn how to stop binge eat-
mg" will be 6:30 to 8 pm.
Wednesdays, and •Are you
concerned about your child's
weight?" will be Mondays
from 6:30 to 8 p.m. For more
information, call (949) 548-
4437.
A women's therapy support
group meets to discuss reld-·
tionstup issues at 6:30 p.m
Tuesdays at 1151 Dove St.,
No. 105, Newport Beach. For
'
,/ I t t I
ARoUNDToWN
more mformabon, call Bar-The Jewbh Family Sel'Vice of
bara at (~9) 261-8003. Orange County sponson a
discussion group focusing on
The Friends of the Newport issues, concerns and respon-
Bcach Public Library Used sibilities of adult children car-
Book Store needs to replenish . mg for their elderly .Pa!ents at
its book stock. Patrons are 7:30 p.m. Tuesdays at 250 B.
urged to bring in unwanted Baker St., Costa Mnsa. The
books. With the exception of purpose of the group is to \
law books or magazines, all help children and other con-
donahom -hardcover and cemed relatives to identify
paperback -are welcome problems and issues and
and are tax-deductible. develop appropriate solu·
Books may be left at any of tions. The cost is $30. For
the three branch libraries -more information, call (714)
Bdlboa, Mariners or Corona 445-4950.
del Mar. They can also be left
m the speaal book closet next
to the store at 1000 Avocado
Ave. For more information,
call (949) 759-9667.
The Newport Beach New-
comers Club meets at 10 am.
the third Wednesday of each
month at different homes.
The group of about 100
women go on the road, play
golf, tennis, bridge and more.
The group also holds several
evening parties. For informa-
bon, call (949) 854-4501.
St. Marie Health MJ.nlstrtes
presents Love Without Honor
support groups for women
coping with domestic vio-
lence at 10 a.m. and 7 p.m.
~ondays through December.
the groups will meet for two
hours at St Mark Presbyter-
idn Church, 2100 Mar Vista
Ave , Newport Beach. For
infonnation, call l949) 721-
8079
The Costa Mesa Chamber of
Commerce holds networking
luncheon meetings from
11~45 a.m. to 1 p.m. at the
Costa Mesa Country Club,
1701 Golf Course Drive, Cos-
ta Mesa Visitors are wel-
come. Cost is $12. For more
information, call (714) 885-
9090.
The Udo Isle Toastmasten
Club meets at 6:30 p.m. Mon-
days at the Oakwood Apart·
ments, 1700 16th St., in the
clubhouse on the main level,
in Newport 'Beach. For more
information, call (949) 515-
9470.
The John Henry Foundation
sponsors the Comfort Zone, a
mental illness support group,
which meets from 7:30 to 9
p.m. Thursdays at the Light-
house Coastal Community
Church, 301 Magnolia St.,
Costa Mesa. For more infor-
mation, call {949) 548-7274.
,
Doily P.ilpt
At 7 p.m. Feb. 19, Barnes & Noble FashJon Island
will host an appearance by Dave Freeman, presi-
dent and edltor-ln-cbtef of WbatsGolngOn.com and
author o( .. 100 Things to Do Before You Dle: Travel
Events You Just Can't Mlss ... The store ls at 953
Newport Center Drive, Newport Beach. For more
information. call (949) 759-0982.
ANTIQ UE R OW & GARDEN CAFE
Jewish Panilly Service of
Orange County sponsors an
ongoing Jewish healing sup-
port group for people expen-
encing chronic illness. The
purpose is to provide partici-
pants with emotional and
spiritual support to managE!
illness and its consequences.
The group meets at 7 p.m.
Thursdays at Jewish Family
SerVice, 250 E. Baker St.,
Costa Mes~ Attendance is
free, but registration is
required. To register or fot
more mformation, call (714)
44 5-4950.
Scrabble Club No. 350
meets from 6 to 10 p .m.
Thursdays at Borde rs Books,
Music and Cafe on 19th
Street and Newport Boule-
vard, Costa Mesa. The cost
is $3. New players are wel-
come. For more information,
call (949) 759-4871.
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Daily Pilot " Thursday, February 10, 2000 AJ3
REPORT REVENUE COMPARISONS
CONTINUED FROM A 1
NEWPORT BEACH Sales Tax
South Coast Plaza, Costa Mesa
ranks fourth in comparison to other
cities in the county.
The city also &pends much more
on general government -nearly
one-third more than Newport
Beach. Ulce its neighbor, however,
Costa Mesa places a great deal of
lmportance on public safety and
spends almost the same amount as
Newport Beach.
• Newport Beach ranked 13th in
population among 31 Orange
County cities.
$13,655,616 8 6 Anaheim
1\-anslent Occupancy Tax
$7,053,397 2 4 Anaheim
REVENUES
Amount Rank
Per Cap Rank No 1 Cjty
Total Revenue
EXPENDITURES
Amount Rank
Per Cap Rank No 1 City
"{The figµres] are pretty accu-
rate in terms of quantifying and
comparing revenue from one city to
another,• said Costa Mesa City·
Manager Allan Roeder. "But on the
expenditures side, the accuracy
falls oH unless you go through each
city's budget, line by line.•
$101,761,579 6 3 Anaheim
General Revenue
Total Expe~dituNS
$108,864,323 4 2 Anaheim
Public Safety
$37,988,843 4 1 Santa Ana
Culture and Leisure $51,546,084 7 2 Anaheim
Functional Revenue
$50,214, 771 5 J Anaheim
Property Tax
S.18,389,466 4 4 Santa Ana
S 13,208,848 6 3 Anaheim
General Government
$6,442,703 7 3 Anaheim
Community Development
$6,432,650 6 8 Anaheim
The conclusion that Newport
Beach might need to boost its sales
tax supports last November's five-
year fina.ncal forecast, which pre-
dicted the dty needed to find addi-
tional Ievenue sources to maintain
its high level of service in the
future.
study.
Sales. tax is a lingering issue in
the city, especially with the Irvine
Co.'s recent withdrawal of its New-
port Center expansion plans.
Glover said the council should
encourage the Irvine Co. to go for-
ward with its plans to improve
Macy's and Neiman Marcus.
While these improvements
might help, Fashion Island still does
significantly less business than
. South Coast Plaza. Fashion Island
dtd about $350 million last year;
South Coast Plaza did more lhdll $1
billion, said Councilman Tod
Ridgeway.
"I wasn't really surprised about
the sales tax,• said Councilwoman
Norma Glover, who requested the
TAXI
CONTINUED FROM A 1
much less smog. And he said
carbon monoxide emissions
from cars is the primary cause
of the unnatural warming of
the earth's atmosphere. Natur-
al gas-fueled cars would emit
20% less carbon than gasoline-
fueled cars, be said.
The only way natural gas
cars could potentially create
more pollution than their gaso-
line-powered counterparts
would be U methane was able
to escape from its storage can-
ister, Zender said. Unburned
m~thane gas has a greater
effect on global warming than
carbon dioxide does.
"Just a 1 % leak would more
than counteract the benefits of
natural gas,• he said.
Taxi drivers have begun ·
switching to natural gas-pow-
ered cabs in Mexico City,
where smog is bad enough
some days to require schools to
close. Cabbies also drive natur-
al gas ca.rs in England, Belgium
and Spain.
But one barrier preventing
other taxi companies and fanu-
ly car owners in the United
States from switclung to natu.r-
The study was based on revenue
al gas-powered autos is the
lack of fueling stations.
Approximately 250 stations in
California off er the methane
canisters while 5,000 have the
traditional gasoline pumps,
said R.E. Price Jr. lrom the nat-
ural gas division of The Gas
Co.
The Sierra Club's
Schlageter said it nught take
awhile before local Exxon,
Unocal and Arco stations begm
offenng alternative fuels.
·nus is not a 'Buck Rogers'
vision of the future," ·
Schlageter said. •sut people
JUSt need to get used to some-
thlng new."
COSTA MESA
• Costa Mesa ranked eighth in
population among 31 Orange
County cities.
REVENUES
Amount Rank Per cap Ran~ ·
Total Revenue
$67,417,022 9 18
General Revenue
$49,907,236 6 5
Functional Revenue
$17,509,581 15 21
Property Tax
$9,629,038 10 14
Sales Tax
S2S,525,908 4 3
and expenditure datd compiled
annually by the State Controller.
The most recent figures were from
hscal yeur 1996-97.
Some new res.identlal develop-
ments around Newport Beach -
such as Bonita Canyon, One Ford
Road, Newport North, Castaways
and Newport Coast -were not
Transient Occupancy Tax
$3,466,942 5 7
EXPENDITURES
Amount Rank Per Cap Rank
Total Expenditures
$74,233,675 9 8
Public Safety
$37,005,330 5 4
Culture and Leisure
$7,229,990 8 12
General Government
$9,270,834 3 4
Community Development
$5,628,753 7 15
SOURCE City of Newport Beach
administrative ~ervtces department
reflected m the report Also, m the
last four r"ur , two new c1hC! have
incorpordted ·
Upddted mfom1allon will be
avdilablf~. pending the release of
iniormaoon from hscal year 1997-
98 th1-. :.prmg. Dclnner bdld he
would k(.•ep informal tabs on New-
port'~ dnnua.1 rdnk.ing.
Santa Ana-
based American
Livery Taxi Cab
president Rick
Schorllng, cen-
ter, answers
questions about
hls company's
recent purchase '
of 70 natural
gas-powered
vehicles from
the Ford dealer-.
ship ln Costa
Mesa.
SE.AN Hll.llll
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A14 Thurldoy. February 10, 2000
FALU DI
CONTINUED FROM A 1
think I've managed to alienate
everybody.•
"Stiffed• has won praise for its
fair-minded reporting and its com-
passionate approach to men's situa-
tions, but it has also flustered some
critics and readers who are no longer
sure of what to make of Faludi's pol-
itics.
•A lot of men don't want to be
looked at, and most particularly
don't want to be looked at by a fem-
inist woman,• said Faludi, who is
now a contributing editor to
Newsweek.
•0n the other hand, there were
women whose resi>onse to the very
idea of the book was, "Who care
about men? Who cares about their
pain? Enough about you.··
Paludi's approach to her subject is
complex. She isn't a rabid, man-
loathing feminist stereotype and she
isn't a "family values"-championing
reactionary. '
In America, where, as Faludi says,
•everybody wants ideas that can be
expressed on the batjc of a match-
box," her unwillingness to be dog·
matic makes her something of an
intellectual loose cannon.
And that, she says, is fine with
her.
"One likes to think that as you get
older, you wrttc more complicated
books -not Jess," Paludi said.
•Stiffed" gets at the story of
American men by looking at the .
places they work -at a shipyard in
Long Beach, a grocery store in Watts,
a shabby office of a Van Nuys
pornographer.
In each of her case studies, Faludi
comes to a similar conclusion: men's
ability to perform work that is useful
and meaningful, once a cornerstone
Susan Faludi
of masculine identity, is gradually
eroding. Paludi attributes this to a
change in societal values -away
from industry and toward what she
calls •ornamental culture."
"There's been a breakdown of the
whole social promise that being a
man was about public engagement,
was about loyalty, was about ser-
vice,• Faludi said.
In place of these faded ideals,
American culture focuses increas-
ingly on •the values of being seen,
marketing and sex appeal and con-
sumerism.• she said.
This focus encourages men to
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fashion themselves in the same nar-
row roles, as ornaments and sex
objects, that were once considered
stereotypically fem.urine.
"It's an artificial femininiW creat-
ed by commercial interests, where
you're valued for your image and
your appearance and your youth,
which is the exact sort of "femininity'
that the feminist movement rose up
to confront," Paludi said.
The writer thinks men -whether
they are unemployed steel workers
hoping for a break or "ghetto super-
stars• trying to cobble together some
meager version of street celebrity -.
m\l!';t realize that the lessons of femi-
nism ~e just as relevant to them.
•As much as men are led to
believe that women are their enemy,
the truth is that their greatest ally
may be feminism, because it was the.
women's movement that went up
against the same forces that are
proving so stultifying and humlliat·
ing to men,• she said.
The d_ilficulty of putting this
insight info practice, Faludi believes,
is that it takes away the easy
answers. -If women aren't purely to
blame for men's problems and men
aren't purely to blame for women's
problems, things get complicated.
But complicated isn't a dirty word
in the Faludi vocabulary.
"Part of having a mature femi-
nism is to recognize the subtleties
and nuances and complexities of
gende" relations," she said.
Paludi's Friday talk, scheduled for
2 p.m., is sold out. About 60 tickets ·
are still available for her Saturday
talk, scheduled for 7 p.m.
Her appearance is the first in this
year's Martin W. Witte Distinguished
Speakers Lecture Series. Other
planned speakers include Tom
Brokaw, Orville Schell and Stephen
Jay Gould.
The library is at 1000 Avocado
Ave., Newport Beach.
Huge Savings
up to
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Corona del Mar Plaza
Doily Pilot
GO
CONTNJED FllC».1 A1 , \
aeed m 1980 ~to
Uep leplllh-41 .. Palm8J
active ID mi..-. gait.
He .... tbe flat player to
win tbe U.S. Ope ad
U.S. senior ()pm, wldch
be~IDtlll.
Named the AlliocHted
Pre11' Atbletl9 of tlla
Decade for the 1NOI,
Palmer ln 1960 was
Mmed the Hickok Ath·
late of the Year and
Sports Dlultrated'I Sports·
man of the Year.
In 1960, Palmer helped
usher in tbe ~ of
sports agents u bii
worldwide popularity
grew and bis dominance
on the profeak>nal golf
tour incieued. That yeu,
Milte McCormick found-
ed the lnternatlOnal Man-
agement Group -with
Palmer u his first client
-and a sports revolution
was born.
Palmer, the PGA Tour
Player of the Year in 1960
and '62, has also been
greatly ii11luential In golf
course design, construc-
tion and development
around the world.
No player older than
63 has ever won a senior
tour event, and Palmer
hasn't won since 1988.
But Purser believes his
appearance shoWd boost
ticket sales by a •tew
thousand."
•tt is entertainment,
.and there isn't .a mucll
more entertalnirig player
than Amie,• PUrser said.
Palmer has won 10
senior tour events in bis
career. LaSt year, he made
only 10 appearances on
the tour, his fewest on the
circuit since 1983, after
recovering from prOltate
cancer sm.gery.
The Toshiba Classic
features a field of 78
seniors (50 and older).
The event benefits ~
Hospital. For tickets, call
(949) 515-•UUO.
YOU ARE WHAT
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Daily Pilot
Designer opens showroom
doors for after~bours soiree
A nn Dennis opened her
design showroom after
hours at the Stonemlll
Center, Costa Mesa for a little
mid-week mingling in honor
of renowned antiques dealer
Patrick Dunne.
Dunne, a sophisticated
Texan -who halls from
New Orleans where he is the '
proprietor and design direc-8 W ( k
tor of Lucullus, a shop de'vot-• • 00
ed to culinary antiques -THE CROWD
donned his signature hand-
tied bow tie with white
starched dress $hirt. He
pressed the flesh with the
local crowd of design afi-
cionados who had come to
share stories regaling hand-
crafted George m cabinets
found in hidden attics, and
Louis IV fauteuils in need of
restoration. Dunne was of
course ready and willing to
expand the exchange to
include his own exploration
into the realm of old English
silver serving pieces and
French Creole table accou-
terments.
designer/dealer to display
the work of such creators as
Colefax and Fowler, Jane
Churchill, Hinson and Co.,
Manuel Canovas, John Hall,
Bruce Graney, Kathryn Ire-
land (featured in the Febru-
ary 2000 issue of House
Beautiful) and the in-vogue
Bristish-colonial-inspired
-------pieces or
The designer
cast his m agic
over the
crowd, his
Los
Ange-
1es-
based
designer
Brenda
broad southern Antin.
The designer cast his
magic over the crowd, his
broad southern smile wann-#We
ing the hearts of the most smile warming are here
ferocious antiques collector. the hearts of . to expe-
InVited by the Decorative the most.fero-nan·ednce
Arts Society of Newport
Beach, Dunne ca.me to town cious antiques learn
as one in a series of five collector. ~~~aryt internationally recGQllized
designers to share his wealth design
of knowledge specifically culture
concerning the •philosophy to benefit New Directions for
of taste" relating to the table. Women,· shared Ann Nutt,
His boutique, in New local community activist rep-
Orleans is the last word in resenting New Directions.
English and Continental culi-Actually, the entire lecture
nary objects from the 17th, series of five presentations,
18th and 19th centuries. Pea-which began in O~ober
tured in such publications as 1999 and runs through April
Architectural Digest, Bon 2000, features upcoming
Appetite, House Beautiful, appearances by two promi-
and Martha Stewart's Living, nent designers, Suzanne
Lucullus (named after the Turner (March 14) and
Roman general, Lucius Jonathan Prawn (April 11)
Llcinius (c. 100 -c. 56 BC) and benefits the organization
who preferred feasting to founded to change lives and
fighting) is a design destina-help families of women
tion for the serious collector struggling with personal
of culinary objects. . demons.
All of the magic of the "We've bad tremendous
Lucullus pursuit was response so far, with nearly
absorbed by locals with seri-full capacity turnout for the
ous collecting bents llke Dunne presentation,• said
Marlon Palley of·Udo Isle hostess Dennis. Some 275
and Sandra Ayres whom, · guests participated in the
with her h usband, is neanng event.
completion on an exquisite All of the proceeds will
Georgian-inspired residence benefit New Directions pro-
in the Newport Heights. grams to assist women with
Also, in the meet-and-dependency problems, help-
greet cocktail crowd were ing them to put their lives
Lldo's smashing Mary Anna back on course. Maureen
Jeppe, a Mississippi-to-Cali-Madigan, CarolY'n Garett.
fomla transplant who came Louise Ewing, Kae Ewing,
with her h usband, Arthur. Cecllla Nott. Barry and Car-
"There is a different atti-ol Steele, Lols and Dave Tin-
tude in the South,• said gler, Peggy and Michael
Jeppe with a twinkle in her Strong, all supported New
eye. "It has something to do Directions and Dennis as she
with a respect and a love for entertained guests learning
the land. And it is something more about Dunne, while
not quite understood in Cali-nibbling on delicacies pre-
fornia. pared by Alan Greeley's
•Have you ever experi-restaurant. The Golden nuf-
enced South Carolina?• she fie in Costa Mesa.
questioned. •1t is a very Guest of honor Dunne
uruque and special place:" could not have been more
Meredith Foreman saun-gracious. When asked, "Can
tered into the room along you compare the Calif omia
with Carol Porter, Julia Jen-style to the Southern style?•
Dings, Ann Dennis' husband Dunne replied, ·w ould you
BW, Jerry and Bonnie dare to compare two beauti-
McClellan. Sharon Hen-ful, yet very different
wood and Joan Sammis. women?".
Guests meandered the Not on your life.
Dennis showroom, studying
the varlous room vignettes
arranged by the
• •.W. COOK'S column appears
every Thursday ap<i Saturday.
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•
' .
Al6 Thu~ February lO, 2000 DATEBOOK
•
Daily Pilot
·shepard~s 'Simpatico~ fails to deliver suspense
Movie namesake is
reviewer's favorite
. .
• IDll'Olt'S NOTE: The R~I Ct1t1a
column features movie critiques
written by community memben
MNlng ~ oor panel.
Nice try, but try
it again, Sam
scam, it
turns out),
a name 1
think
Shepard
used as
symbolic of
his theme:
Cecelia. At the end, howev-
er, you have the feeling she's
l Willing to sell out to Simms
• (Pinney) because of her ·
dream to see the Kentucky
Derby. Ambiffi!OUS dOsure?
Not really. I n searching for an apt ·
description of •silnpati-
co, • Mr. Webster's dictio-
nary offered limited elucida-
tion with the words likable,
I s impatico • opens with a disheveled Vinny
· (Nick Nolte) making
a frantic call from Celi.fom.ia '
to Lyle (Jeff Bridges) in .Lex-
ington, Ky., about being
arrested on a complaint by
bis cummt girllriend, Cecelia
(Catheri~e Keener). Vmny
Ukemost
of the plot,
this is aJso
a scam,
because
he is not
interested
Eleanore
Humphrey.
genial and
sympathy
depending
on the
Spanish or
Italian
derivation.
persuades RMI Lyle, now
CRITICS ~:'rs8:!r~l-
so much in involving his
audience's sympathies f~r his
people as to let them in on a
dirty little secret: people are
trashy no matter what their
facade.
VlrgtnJe Ledoyen, Leonardo DICaPrlo ilDd Guillaume
Canet star in "The Beach," coming to theaten soon.
One of the reasons one
goes to the movies is for
momentary suspension from
the daily logic and logistics of
the real world. But the moti-
vation ,or Lyle to abandon his
machinations in Lexington
and bolt for the West Coast
are imperfectly set up, as is
v'mny's timing for his call.
1llis is distracting to the audi-
ence. Motives, in general as
well as in particular, become
a weakness in the tale.
The
movie has
fo\lr main
characters
whose
Elaine England commonal-ity is
avarice, greed and malice.
While young adults, the char-
acters, portrayed by Sharon
Sone, Nick Nolte and Jeff
Bridges, concoct a scheme to
substitute horses in a Derby
race with the assist of a rac-
ing official, Albert F"'inney. In
so ctoing the "Substitution, the
long shot becomes the win-
ning horse, resulting in a
huge payout.
mg
mogul, that prosecution
could expose the dreadful
secret the two have been liv-
ing with for 20 years.
But its all a scam, a basic
facet or the devious lives
these two -and Sharon
Stone, who plays Lyle's wife.
Rose, in an overwrought way
-have been living. In more
than one way, •Simpatico,"
is a dour tale. Writer Sam
Shepard seems to be saying
that getting away with these
scams may be a slow-killing
poison to a person's life, but
he offers no real redemption
or expiation in this picture.
•stmpatico" is the name
of a horse (also part of the
Somewhere in the film,
Vinny transfonns himsell
from an alcoholic ne'er-do-
well into a reasonable fac-
simile of his alter ego, Lyle,
not to redeem himsell, but to
blackmail either of two oth-
ers involved in the onginal
scam. It doesn't change the
essential Vmny, who remains
a small caliber miscreant,
just like his "tonier" col-
leagues.
In "Simpatico," Shepard
deals with a part of Ameri-
can life -horse .racing -of
limited interest to the aver-
age citizen. The implication
is that Lyle has been cutting
comers and pulling scams
even after he attains wealth
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and respectability as a major
hgure in this specific world.
The reaction of the yjewer is,
•so what?"
There are scams within
scams, all stemming from the
original corrUption of a race-
track official (a superb Albert
Finney) to the current one
involving the film-flam of
buyers of a current racing
champion. Money -or, more
exactly, greed -is the driVing
force of the story. But some-
how in this particular version
it doesn't have the tragic
impact it should have had.
And so it goes throughout
the movie, without the
and hitch racks
..,,.,
VIHICU OVfflTTlltS
Location.Coet. Meea
Addrele:1995 Hamor BIW.
Phc>Ml.949.574.9980
enlightenment and uplift one
would like to experience
when this cynical mod m
parable epds.
Shepard likes to unveil his
characters layer by layer,
and the exposition in this
picture occurs by enigmatic
cµts of relevant action which,
while helping to telescope
the necessary exposition,
does not add any real ten-
sion to the events. The great
production values and the
expected proficiency of the
major actors fails to obscure
the triviality of the premise.
The only person of
integrity in the story is
Sam Shepard. He is
always provocative and per-
ceptive of the complexities of
people. He is more skilled
than many writers at captur-
ing the way real people talk,
think and feel. Shepard is
deservedly one of our most
distinguished writers of plays
that get under your s~ and
expose the dark sides of the
hwnan psyche. In the
instance of "Simpatico," he
intrigues you, but doesn't
make any real impact on
your sensibilities. It doesn't
really deliver on suspense,
intrigue or betrayal -as the
ads promise. .
Not a trivial movie, but
certainly a minor one from
the usually strong Shepard.
Try again, Sam.
•ELEANORE~. "over
65," lives in Costa Mesa and is a
politic.al junkie involved with sev-
eral city committees.
Past forward and the three
are leading disparate lives.
Nolte is the consummate
bum, Stone is married to
Bridges, living high, 'but
enjoying little. Now we move
to a blackmail scheme. There
are.innumerable flashbacks,
fist fights, yellin~; generally
people leading lives of quiet
desperation and it does earn
our sympathy. "Simpatico• is
the horse. I liked him best.
• ELAINE ENGLAND, 65, lives in
Newport Beach and owns a gift-
basket business.
NANCY CALHOUN'S
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Doily Pilot
. . DATEBOOK Thurs9oY. February 10, 2000 Al7
'Perversity' makes Mamet evening worth-While AlsoOll
STAGE .
By Tom Titus
D avid Mamet's "Sexual
Perversity in Chica-
go" remains, a gener-
ation after it was written, one
of the theater's flashiest, fun-
niest and sharpest-edged
comments on the twen-
tysomething singles scene. It
was 'made to order for the
student repertory company
atOCC.
It is, however, a short play,
a long one-act if you will.
Theater
REVIEW
Thus,
when
OCC's
student
rep play-
ers elect-
ed to revtve it, they didn't
want to cheat the audience,
so they padded the evening
with a collection of Mamet
vignettes under the collec-
tive title, "I Titink, Therefore
I Mamet.~
Mamet, for all his later
brilliance, didn't have much
of that incisive zing in his
earlier years, when the other
playlets in the OCC
menagerie were created. But
it's almost worth sitting
through the first hall of the
program to bask in the
earthy hilarity of "Sexual
Perversity.•
You may recall the movie
version, "About Last Night,·
an entettaining flick, but
lacking \he outlandish sizzle
of the stage version. It cen-
ters on a young couple who
meet, fall in love, move in
together and then split. But
the hefty end or the funny
business belongs to their
respective sidekicks.
Or at least, it should At
OCC, there's a brilliantly
blatant performance by the •
male buddy (who, to be fair,
has all the best lines), but
not much heat from the
opposite comer. Neverthe-
less, it's an R-rated riot,
competently staged by
Shawn Shryer.
Angel Correa enacts the
shy guy who lucks into a
------great
The show-
stopping role
of Correa~
hedonistic
relation-
slup, and
then
puts his
foot into
it, with a
comrade is natural
done to a sense of appre-
comical crisp hension.
by C. Russell ~j~~ of
Fowler, who'll his affec-
make feminists ti.on, a
. th . slyly m e grinning
audience Dahlia
. 'th h' Alony crmge w1 lS catches
misogynistic the irony
assessment of Mor t' arne s the opposite dialogue
sex. nicely,
------------missing
only in
the area of volume, which
could amplify her character.
The show-stopping role of
Correa's hedonistic comrade
is done to a comical cnsp by
C. Russell Fowler, who'll
make feminists in the audi-
ence cringe with his misogy-
nistic assessment of the
FYI
'/ THINK, THEREFORE I MAMET'
•'WHERE:
OCC Studio
Theater
•WHEN:
Closing per-
formances
tonight at
8 p.m., Sun·
day at 2
and 7 p.m.
•HOW
MUCH:$5
and $6
•PHONE:
(714) 432-
5640
-#If CONRAD I.AU I DAllY PILOT
Dalhia Alony and Angel Correa in a scene from David Mamet's
"Sexual PerversJty in Chicago," one of the many playlets in OCC's "I
Think, Therefore I Mamet." playing thr~ugb Sunday.
opposite sex. It's a whopper
of a characterization, unfor-
tunately unmatched by Ali-
son Hartson's tepid interpre-
tation of Alony's gal J>al,
whose pllt-downs lack the
requisite punch.
The other Mamet offer-
ings, which comprise the first
act, are little more than the-
ater exercises. The best of
this bunch 1S • 4 a.m., •
directed by Gary B. Finesil-
ver, involving an all-night
talk show h0$t and a goofy
caller who wants to resurrect
the DNA of all the world's
dead people and relocate
them on Jupiter.
Hugh Goodearl produces
a pungent radio host, pleas-
antly dissecting the nut case
without really putting him
down. Stephen Isaac Moore
plays the caller as though
he's from Jupiter himself, d
study in comic hesitation.
"The Blue How" 1S a col-
lection of skits possibly pdt-
temed on Edward Albee's
"The Zoo Story," each
involving two people -t:in
aggressor and a pa!.sive per-
sonality. They bedr the
imprint of a playwnght in
development, none of them
traveling full cuclc.
Their common bond is
Celestino's
quality MEATS
The f-1ncs1 Mccit and sen •Jee Atialtablt•
Smmtt Cost4 Meu for rrwr 30 ytt1n
I ~offer AIL-NATURAL BEEF & CHICKEN I
Valtntint~ Speci l
• BMort 'Wtwp~tl Fi/Ua
• lW"1 Yori Sullla • Fi/Ut ROIUl1
• LoJ,RMJa • LoJJ CboJU
• p,;,. Ri"6 .
Frwll s..feJ ~,,.,.
s r .. .,,,. ap °' 1lwdJl.,
._.,,,DY& mtl Dtii'1
.everyday frustrations, and
Sherrie Stone hil<; the mw·lc.
best 41 the C'pen·•r as a
woman µn . .'1=><"lt0" lriPr c'oc-
tor's over-iuuated bill.
Others involvmg the pur-
chase of d wardrobe, two
businessmen on an airplane
and two others waiting for a
bus bdve all the consistency
of soggy cereal.
Nevertheless, "Sexual
Perversity in Chicago"·
makes the evenmg worth-
while, and could have been
an event m itself.
• TOM TITUS reviews local theater
for the Daily Pilot. His reviews
appear Thursdays and saturdays
'THE HOUOW LANDS'
South Coast Repertory
presents Howard Korder'I
play •The Hollow Landi•
through Sunday. Tickets
are $28 to $41. The play-
hou50 1S at 655 Town ·
Center Dnve, Costa
Mesa. For more informa-
tion, call (714) 708-5555. .
'REFERENas TO
SALVADOR DAU .. .'
South Coast Repertory
presents Jose Rivera's play
"Re!erenccs to Salvador .
Dali Make Me Hot"
through Feb. 27. Tickets
are $26 to $45, wtth a pay-
wbat-you-will show today.
The playhouse is at 655
Town Center Drive, Cost.a
Mesa. For more informa-
tion, call (714) 708-5555.
'A VIEW FROM THE
BR)DGE'
Newport Theatre Arts Cen-
ter presents Arthur Mille.r's
•A Vi,.. .... "'.:'rom the Bridge"
thrnugh Feb. 27. Shows are
'!'bu1s<lays through Satur-
dctys at 8 p.m., with Sunday
matinees at 2:30 p.m. Tick-
ets dfe $13, $15 for opening
night The theater is at
2501 CWf Drive, Newport
Beach
'BEAUTY MACHINE'
Orange Coast College
presents •aeauty
Machine,• a pldy
'designed to help young
people value their individ-
uality, at 9:15 and 11:45
a.m. Friday in the Robert
B. Moore Theatre. Tickets
are $5. OCC is at 2701 ·
Fairview Road. COsta
M~. For more informa-
tion, cd.ll (714) 432-5880.
•
•
• .
AJ8 Thursday, Febrvory 10, 2000 DATEBOOK Daily Pilot
Put some romance in your dining on Valentine's Day
ly Stilphen Santacroce
A s any flower mer-
chant or See's Candy·
emploJ.ee knows,
Monday is Vc11Pntine's Day
Some of YO\l might protest
that this is a commercialized
excuse trumped up by greet-
ing card companies to push
merchandise. While this con-
cept might be correct, it
won't get you a tlale.
Valentine's Day b a tune
to let one's true romantic
nature shine, and as the say-
ing goes, the way to a man\
(or
Din In' ~~;t1~'s) . REV EW ~o~g~r
~tomach
-never mind if a few arter-
ies get clogged along the
way.
Food is often associated
with love, Indeed items such
as oysters and chocolate
have long been considered
aphrodisiacs. Many ot the
area's finer restaurants have
something special planned
for star-crossed lovers, and
your intrepid reviewer has
some suggestions for a fine,
romantic everung.
Chef Pasca.J Ohlats, owner
of Pascal Restaurant ( l 000
N. Bristol St., Newport
Beach, (949) 752-0107) •
cla.ims that be wants to bnng
love to Orange County. I
think love, or at least lust,
has been here for a while,
but Pascal's four-course din-
ner for two can't help, but
keep the fires burrung.
Dinner starts with a
PLUG IN
cdrousel of hors d'ocuvres, t
featunng pate mous cs, '
gravlax dnd seared tuna.
Diners then .have a choice of
lobster bisque, or the excel-
lent duck confit with herb
ravioli. I
In the food-is-~~I;t~t
better-than-sex
category,
entrees include
roasted lobster
tail With
caramelized
mushrooms
and truffle
bouillon, or
how about
Canard aux
Navets, a
ragout of duck
and turnips
with roasted
fingerling
potatoes. Just
pronouncing
this stuff sounds
romantic.
ter. Cou-
ples will
then
have to
prove
their
love for
each
other by
select-
ing an
en tree
for two.
Hope-
fully it
won't be
the only
thing
agreed
on 'dur-
ing tho
evening.
Choices
include
rack or
lamb
with a
roasted
garlic
and
-------mustard
sauce,
chateaubriand served with
two sauces: a black trufOe
reduction and a bem&ise or
steamed lobster. Dessert will
consist of chocolate hedfls
for two, small cakes of wrute
chocolate, flourless chocolate
and chocolate mousse. Din-
ner for two is $120.
Ono of my favonte roman-
tic spot is Aubergine (608
29th St., Newport Beach,
(949) 723-4150), Tun and
Liza Goodell's charming little
hideaway on the Balboa
Peninsula. Featuring either a
five-or nine-course tasting
menu in an intimate, quiet
settmg, Aubergine is the per·
f~ct spot to relax with a
loved one.
Valentine's Ody was origi-
naUy a pagan fesbval cele-
brating fertility and sensual
pleasure. Pope GelasiuS out-nm and Uza Goodell own
lawed the festivd.l in 496 AD,
but offered a replacement he Aubergine, a romantic
considered more appropri-restaurant on the Newport
ate. Needing a patron, he peninsula.
chose St. Valentine, who had dining portion) with lovers'
been beheaded for helping passion fruit souffle, with a
young lovers many against coconut anglaise sauce
the wishes of mad emperor Another romantic setbng
Claudius. is the tiny Issay (485 N.
Today young lovers might Newport Blvd., Newport
toast St. VaJentlne while din· Beach, (949) 722-2992). Th.is
mg at Pavtllons at the Four Northern Italian jewel will
Seasons Hotel {690 Newport . be featuring a special menu
Center Drive, Newport that starts with a smoked
Beach, (949) 760-4920), The salmon-topped salad of
. fixed-price menu starts off mixed baby field greens.
with lobster consomme with this refreshing starter is fol-
vegetable hearts. Second lowed by a choice of entree,
course choices mclude a , including swordfish with a
fnsee salad with baby am.. sauce.of tomato, mango and
chokes and marinated porto-basil. Or try the veal scalop-
bello mushrooms, or ahi tuna plni sauteed with Italian
carpaccio with green papaya mushrooms and a cognac
and pickled ginger. t;iemi glaze. Dinner, which is
For an entree, Romeo ·· · $45 per person, includes a
might choose the beef tender-complimentary glass of rose
loin with brat.sed stuffed champagne.
morels e1.nd truffle sauce, Rumor bas it that St.
whlle Juliet might prefer the Valentine fell ln love with h.lS
roasted sahnon with charn-jailor's daughter while wait-
pagne sauce. The evening ing for his execution. Before
can be completed (at least the being carted off to be
..
TWILIGHT DINING
AT VlllA NOVA
Villa Nova Restaurant offers
a "1\vilight Dining~ menu
featuring dishes such as
Chicken Parmigiana and
Calamari Plcante at low ear-
ly evening prices. The
menus are offered from 5 to
6 p.m. every day except Sat-
urday and from 4 to 6 p.m.
Sundays. The restaurant is
at 3131 West Coast High-
way, Newport Beach. For
Pl into the Pilot C~ied ion to find s.Mees from
electron;cs nd plumbers. to landscapers and painters
'
oeheaded, he left her a note
signed from your Valentine. nus note appa:r.ently fell into
the hands of the ruling Hall-
mark family, and the rest is
history.
One of my favorite newer
restnurants in the area is
Ptnot Provence (686 Anton
Blvd., -Costa Mesa, (714} 444-
5900), Joachim Splichal's
Orange County eatery.
Yalentine's diners can enjoy
a four-course dinner here
that starts with a choice of
marinated salmon and
cucumber with chervil
cream, or a red onion and
artichoke l.d.rt with shaved
Parmesan. Next comes e.ither
pan-seared diver scallops
with a puree of celery root, or
grilled monkfisb with tomato
confit and sweet garlic.
In the food-is-better-than-
sex category, entrees Include
roasted lobster tail with
caramelized mushrooms and
truffle bouillon, or bow about
Canarc! owe Novets, a ragout
of duck and turnips with
roasted fingerling potatoes.
Just pronouncing this stuff
sounds romantic. Dinner at
Pinot Provence is $58 per
person.
According to research
done for the Hartz company,
.3% of pet owners will give
VaJentine's gifts to their pets.
Dogs aren't allowed at
Accents restaurant at the
Sutton Place Hotel (4500
MacArthur Blvd, Newport
Beach, (949) 476-2001), but
that shouldn't stop you from
enjoying the speoal dinner
they have planned. This
four-course feast includes, an
ON THE MENU
more Information, call (949)
642-7880.
APHRODISIAC MENU
The Yard House will offer
an aphrodisiac menu Feb.
11 througb 14 in connection
with Valentine's Day. The
offerings include oyster
chowder, white and dark
chocolate mousse, and pan-
roasted lobster tail. The
Yard House is at the inter-
section of Newport and Har-
INIRf'
• oyster shooter with assorted
grarutes, carrot soup with
seared jumbo shrimp, and
roasted pheasant with a
black mission fig sauce.
The Golden Trume (1767
Newport Blvd., Costa Mesa,
(949} 645-9858), Alan Gree-
ley's elegant and imaginative
Costa Mesa Restaurant, is
also featuring a fixed-price
menu featuring some of his
exotic creations. For an
appetizer, you might try the
sweet shrimp martini or the
cream of abalone soup with
shrimp chips.
1'he salad course includes
a fried oyster salad with
soulslaw (coleslaw with soul,
I guess). All Ute stops are
pulled out for the main
courses, which include wild
salmon with spinach and
hibiscus champagne sauce,
or Swiss chard ravioli with a
tomato cheese ragu. Finish
!j>.e everung with the flour-
Iess chocolate torte, or the
passion fruit waffles. Dinner
is $68 per person. ·
Whatever the histocy, it's
wonderful to have a special
day to celebrate with the
person you love. So add to
your checklist, right after 'the
flow,ers and Godiva Choco-
lates, dinner reservations,
dnd spend some time with
someone special. By the
way ladies, this migt:it be the
appropriate place for me to
shamelessly point out that
your favorite food critic is-
single and unattached.
• STEPHEN SANTACJtOCE'S din·
ing reviews appear every other
Thursday He' can be rHChed via e-
mail at food_criticOhotmail.com
bor Boulevards irt Triangle
Square, Costa Mesa. For
more information, call (949)
642-0090. '
VALENTINE'S OFFERINGS
Mp.ggiano's Little Italy will
offer three seatings. on
Valentine's Day to accom-
modate the amorous, hun-
gry masses. A Valentine's
menu with special entrees
and desserts will be fea-
tured and live music will be
provided. Maggiano's is at
3333 Bristol Road, Costa
Mesa. For more information.
call (714) 546-9550.
Suning February lu
Opc:n 7 a.m.
Breakfut
To Gol
WHY PAY
DEPT STORE
PRICES?
Visic our
AREA RUG STUDIO
Rugs & Runners on
Sale '
f
" I'
G:oMMuNiTY
Daily Pilot
QuestionOf
1llE DAY
Should the city of CosU Mesa
pwc:hAse Balurtc Park from the
Newport-Mesa Unified School I District? Call our Readers Hotline at
(949) 642-6086 or e-mail your com-
ments to dailypilotO/atimes.com.
Please spell your name and tell us
your hometown and phone number
(for verificatfon purposes only). •
EDITORIAL
How To
REKHUS
The Dally Pilot wek~ letten on Issues
concerning Newport Beach and Costa Mesa.
There are four ways to send in your com·
ments:
• LETT£M -Mail to the Daily Pilot. 330 w.
Bay St., Costa Mesa 92627
• READERS HOTUNE -<:all (949) 642 6086
•FAX --~nd to (949) 646-4170
• E-MAIL -~nd to dailyp1lotOlatm,~s com
All correspondence murt include your full
name, hometown and phone number (for
ver1ficat1on purposes only)
Thursday, Februory 10, 2000 AJ9 .
MAILBAG
Thanks for . City hit homer on youth ·baseball issue
being El· Toro
cheerleader
T bank you so very much for your
attention to the El Toro airport
issue. Those of us that have been
active in this struggle find the apathy of
the residents of Newport Beach to be
most dishearterung. The residents that
are not directly affected by the future
expansion of John Wayne Airport can
and should have enough community
spirit to support those of us that are
affected.
Newport Beach has long been a
scapegoat for the Goliath city to the
south, and those activists continually
speak as though their hght is with
Newport Beach alone. We need some-
one powerful on our side to deflect and
dispute the lies and exaggerations that
seem to be rampant. The residents of
Newport Beach and Costa Mesa are
strangely unconcerned with th.is threat.
We need a cheerleader, and it seems .
that you have the job.
Thank you Keep up the good work.
FLORENCE STASCH
Newport Beach
Reader is soaking up
boating articles
It is very nice to read about the Boy
Scout Sea Base that has been here
longer than most can remember
("Scouting the waters," Jan. 24). You
should report an in-depth article on the.
base and what the base is to not only
Newport Beach but also Southern Cali·
fomia.
Also, I have worked on a comnuttee
with a member m the harbor who is
known as the expert for the bay. Mike
Whitehead sits on the base's committee,
plus he is the chairman of a number of
other committees and active with the
Newport Chamber of Commerce to
help Newport Bay. You should explore
how he helps the harbor as an unsung
hero for boaters.
Keep up the articles on boating.
OANWAm
r; Newport Beach
'Jlvo-thirds vote a
needed safeguard
I enjoy Joe Bell's style, rarely enjoy
his philosophy, and always respect his
right to speak his mind ("Plain and sim-
ple, majority's will depends on Prop.
26," Jan. 27). But au contraire, mon
frere, the two-thirds majority require-
ment for passage of local general oblig-
ation bonds, including school bonds,
was "hung around !his) neck• by the
state constitution in 1879. Were it not
for that perennial whipping boy, Propo-
sition 13 and its 2°10 cap on property tax
increases, his own Santa Ana Heights
property taxes could be two to 2 112
times higher than they are.
s omewhere the
birds are singing.
Flowers are in
bloom, moms are
busy baking apple pies and
peace reigns on Earth. .,
Yes, all is right with the
world.
Baseball has been saved
at Te Winkle Park.
At the start of the week, it
didn't l~k like it was going
to be that way.
Costa Mesa officials were
leaning toward tossing the
national pastime from the
park and instead were
going to make it a haven for
America's favorite dfter-
work sport -softball.
That made sense, most
cynics would say. Dollars
· and cents.
Even though the four dia-
monds at TeWinkle were
originally designed for base-
ball, softball had taken root
there over the years as the
grounds deteriorated.
It's no secret that the city's
recreation department
makes much more money on
softball than it does on youth
baseball.Softballteain
members, who pay hefty
recreation fees, took over.
And, it was alleged, the
recreation department at the
city purposefully allowed the
baseball fields at TeWmkle to
fall apart for that very reason.
ERIC HUTCHISON
MARC MARTIN I DAllY Pit.OT
A cojlch talks to his Costa Mesa softball team at TeWlnk.le Park. The park will feature three
softball fields ·and a baseball diamond after renovations are completed.
We don't necessarily sub-
scribe to such conspiracy
theories, but we are sure
about one thlng: youth
sports should not be sacri-
ficed for the sake of adult
recreation -ever.
Youth sports, whether it
be baseball, football, soccer,
swimming or· tennis, is
important to the very fabric
ofourcom.munity.They
teach children camaraderie,
teamwork and discipline,
and most of all, gives them a
constructive activity at·a·
time in their lives when peer
pressure to engage in other, .
less constructive activities is
great.
So it was disappointing to
hear that city officials were
considering plans to make
TeWmkle a softball-only
park, leaving youth baseball
in the dust, literally.
Thankfully, some youth
baseball proponents were
able to convince city officials
to scrap those original plans.
The city has agreed to make
one of the four fields a base-
ball diamond.
Costa Mesa officials did
the right thing by giving
youth sports'-and baseball
-the priority they deserve.
It's a hit that really should
be heard 'round the world.
HOW TO COITAO
YOUI llPllSllllAm--m-
cnY OF COSTA MESA
Costa Mesa City Hell.
77 Fair Drive, 92626,
(714) 754-5223
Mayor: Gary Monahan
Coundl: Joe EriCkson,
Heather Soman, Ubby
Cowan and Unda Dison
OTY Of NEWPORT llAOt
NE?WJ>Qrt Beech Oty
Hall, 3300 Newpoit Blvd.,
92663, (949) 644-3309
Mayor. John Noyes
Coundl: Gary Adam11 Jan Oebay, Norma
Glover, Tod RidgeW.y,
Dennis O'Neil and Tom
Thomson
COAST COMMUNfTY •
. COUEGE DIS1RICT
1370 Adams Ave •• Coe·
ta Mesa 92626, (714) '32·
5898
CMncellor. William M.
Vega
ao.rd: Walter Howald.
Sherry Beum. Paul B\119·
er, Armando Rua ad
Jerry Pattel'900 .
The use-of-school-bonds issue is siin-
ply a tactic by wtuch our tax-and-spend
bureaucrats propose, by means of Prop.
26, to eliminate a coristitutional safe-
guard that has protected taxpayers for
121 years. Removing the two-thuds
ma1Qrity requirement will do more than
benefit school bond issues. It will
remove the inherently conservative cap
on all local bond issues. Your •pre-
dictable, torpedoing minority,~ this
writer included would be receptive to
self-imposing indebtedness il school
district bureaucrats would adhere to a
rational checklist for grading school
bond initiatives. Such a checklist has
been proposed by the Orange County
Taxpayers Assn. Give it a look, and let's
hear from you again.
And keep smiling -all two-thirds
majonties are not God-awful. But I
agree, the Safe and Healthy Communi-
ties Initiative iS that.
, ...
ALL THE i(1NG-:S HCR~!s ANo At.L THE KlN&S
MEN, COULDN'T PuT HUMPTY To'*!MER AGAtN.''
TOMHYANS
Newport Beach
Readers off er more feedback on Greenlight initiative
AT ISSUE: The Irvine
Co. last week scrapped
iti plans to expend In
~Center, what ~light suppOrters dilarect • victory.
ued pollution, traffic and
degradation Of quality of Uf e.
Unfortunately, the Newport
Beach political Jaaden don't
tecognlze tbe CODCeml of
South County relating to a
propoeed 24-bour • ct.y
international airport. or their own,...,.... ccnmm1
about local tramc and open
lpll09 ....
ICIVllLCDOK AJlloVllto
.... , llDow ....... ···-mad• ...
......
RESPOND
much. While most increases
are deemed • inlignlficant •
by tba developer, the reU•
dents are capable of deter·
rninlng if they agree with
this judgment, Just Bl they
are capable Of determlnlng U
they want the J)l'Q)ect in their
dty.
NANCY~
CoraaamlMar
Jwtnbea...tDWltJ9
lot a.-.lgN ._.am· .... -,_.d&fllDm .... ....... -..
'
•
• • ..
t
A20 Thursday, February lO, 2000
• ~ NTElt HOURS It.ms to iM
Daily Pilot. 330 w. Bay St., Cosu
Mesa 92627; fax ~m to (949)
~170, °'call (949) 764-4330. A
complete hs11t19 an be found at
wwwda1/yp1/or.com .
ART·
'OTYUGHTS'
The Newport Beach Public
Library pre ents ·city
Lights,• an exlubtt of water-
colors by Mary Monge, Tues-
After
HOURS
day
through
Feb. 29.
Monge
focuses on
wban
activities -from eating a
French dip sandwich at
Phillipe's to taking in a night
at the theater. The library is
at 1000 Avocado Ave., New-
port Beach. For more infor-
mation, call (949) 717-3870.
ALDO LUONGO
Lahaina Gallcnes ID Fashion
Island will feature works by
Romantic lmpressiorust Aldo
Luongo at cm artist reception
and exhlbit.aon from 7 to 9
p.m . Friday and from 5 to 8
p.m . Saturday. The gallery is
at 1173 Newport Center On-
ve, NeWJ>Ort B ach. For Wor·
mation, call (949) 721-9117.
TUESDAY ART LECTURES
The Oronge County Muse·
um of Art is hosting an
ongoing series of free noon
lectures on Tuesdays. Tom
Wudl, whos.e work is fea· · ·
tured in the museum's per-
manent collection, will
bpeak about his work th15
COJlliJng Tuesday. The ·
museum is a t 850 San
Clemente Drive, Newport
Beach. For information, call
(949) ?59-1122.
'EUROPEAN IMPRESSIONS'
The lmpresslorust-inspued
011 paintings of Lenora Mon-
ahan and the work of Molly
Greenberg will be on diSplay
through Monday l1l the
Newport Beach City Hall
Gallery. The paintings depict
landscapes in Tuscany,
Provence and Southern Cali·
• fornia. City Hall is at 3300
Newport Blvd., Newport
Beach. -For more information,
call (949) 717-3870.
'IN COLOR'
The Orange County Museum
of Arts ptesents "In Color:
Silkscreen Prints from the
Collect.ion• through Sdturday.
Th elhib1tion cxplor the
silk-sa n pnntl1lg process
and th emergence of the Pop
Art movement of tlt~ 19605.
The how is at the museum's
satellite gallery l1l South Coo t
Plaza, 3333 Bear St., Costa
MCSd. ror more lllfonnation,
call (949) 7596 1122. ·
DANA RIDENOUR
Newport Beach artist Dana
Ridenour is displaying her lat-
est collection of oil paintings
at the Pour Seasons Hotel in
Newport Beach .through
spnng. The hotel ic; at 690
Newport Center Drive, New-
port Beach. For more informa-
tion. call (949) 642-5787.
FILM
'NORTH BY NORTHWEST'
The Orange County Muse-
um of Art presents Alfred
Hitchcock's •North by North-
west• at 6:30 p .m Feb. 18.
The museUm is at 850 San
Clemente Drive, Newport
Beach. Tickets are $4 to $6.
For more information, call ,
(949) 759-1122, ext. 204.
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GANAHL LUMBER • • COMPANY
BANFF MOUNTAIN
FILM FESTIVAL
OCC will c1een thr • hour
of "the be t of thl• best" of
the 24th annual B1mff Moun-
t.1m Film Fe ttval at 7 p .m
March 22. Th progrum
inc:lude~ hims from Canada,
Scotlcmcl, Gt·rmany, th~ U.S.
dnd llaly. Tickets dTC $8 lo
$9. OCC is at 2701 FaJrv1ew
Road; Costa M Sil. f'or infor-
mation, C<tll (714) 432-5601.
POETRY
THE FACTORY READINGS
An cverung of p<'rformance
poetry will be ht•ld the first
Tuesday of every month at
the Gypsy Df'n Cafe dnd
Redding Room at ThC' Lab
Anti-Mall. 2930 Bristol St.,
Costa Mesa. For morn infor,
mation, call (714) 549-7012.
Admission is free, but volun-
tary donations ara accepted
for the performers.
LOVE POETRY
Alta Coffee House will hold u
love poetry contest di 8 pm
Saturday. Admission 1s free to
the general public. Entry fee
for the contest is $3. Alta is at
506 31st St., Newport Beach
For more mforma llon, cdJl
9949) 675-0233.
LITERARY
lHE REV. DONALD
PEDERSON
Barnes & Noble r:dshion
Island will host the Rev Don·
ald Pederson, author of the
hook •Mental Laxatives For
a Constipated Mmd, • at 7
p .m. S 1turday. The i.tore is dl
953 Newport Center Drive,
Newport Beach. Fo1 infonna-
Uon, call (949) 759-0982.
JOEY O'CONNOR
Barnes & Noble Fashion
Island will host Joey O'Con-
nor, author of "J Know You
Love Me, But Do You Uke
Mer at 2 p.m. Saturday. The
store 1s at 953 Newport Cen·
ter Onve, Newport Beach
ror more information, call
(949) 759-0982.
PATRIOA GUrvER
Borders Books, Music and
Cafe hosts Patricia Guiver,
author of "DeWah Doolittle
and the Missing Macaw• at 3
p.m. Saturdcty The store is al
1890 Newport Blvd., Costa
Mesa. For more mfonnation,
call (949) 631-8661.
AMERICAN GIRLS ClUB
Barnes & Noble fasluon
Jslcmd's Amencan Girls Club
will meet to discuss " 100
Great 1lungs About Bemg a
Gut• at 4:30 p.m. Feb. 17. The
store is at ~53 Newport Cen-
ter D1we, Newport Beach.
C all (949) 759-0982.
'HOW TO BECOME
A MILLIONAIRE'
M<lffh Akh, .author of #I low
to Become a Miillonaite, •
will discuss his book at 7
p.m. Feb. 18 at Barnes &
Noble Fashion Island, 953
Newport Center Drive, New·
port Beach. For more mfor-
mation, call (949) 759-0982.
The Original
MIKE'S
CARPET$
OVER 25 YEA RS IN COSTA MESA
· Now Owned & Operated by Mesa Upholstery*
ALL CARPET & FLOORING
CURRENTLY MARKED DOWN
30°/ooff
Doily Pilot
'LISTENING TO
WILD DOLPHINS'
·-
Bobbi Sandoz, th author ot
"Llsterun9 to Wild Dolp
will qw.ak at &mes & No
Metro Pomt • at 7 p m. Fe
The store bat 901 B. South
Coast Dnvc, Swte 150, Costa
. M • Call (714) 444-0226.
DETECTIVE NOVELISTS
Borders Book5, Music and ·
Cafe host!> a radio interview
at 7 p m fc>b 24 with Max-
UlC O'Cullt.1gh1m, author of
•Down for the Count," Gary
Phillips (•Violent Spring")
dDd Carroll Lachnit ("A
Bles!>ed Death"). The store is
al 1890 N"wport Blvd., Costa
MN.a. Call (949) 631~8661.
OPRAH BOOK CLUB
This club meNs the third
Thursddy of every month at
7 p .m to discuss Oprah's
most recent hook selections
at Barnes & Noble Newport
Brach Barnes & Noble
Newport Beach is at 953
Newport Center Dnve,
Newport B<>ach For infor-
mal.Jon, Cdll (949) 759-0982.
SPECIAL
FESTIVAL OF ANIMATION
Spike and Mike's Festival of
Animation is playing at
Edwards Cmama, 1534
Adams Ave., Costa Mesa,
through today. Tickets are
$7 .50. For tnnE's and infor-
mation, call (714) 546-3102.
DRAWING ON THE RIGHT
SIDE OF THE BRAIN
The Newport Beach Publ.tc
LibrdJ)' presents Drdwing on
the Right Side of the Brdin, a
free drawing program, at 7
p.m. today. Arlene C&ozian, a
Cal State Long Beach art pro·
tessor, will help students mas-
ter basic, perceptual drawing
skills The hbntry is at 1000
Avocad o Ave., Newport
Beach. Ca11(949)717-3801.
Vinyls • Ceramics
Wood • Laminates
CAL L NOW
642-8400
DESIGN CENTER
''f,Q r All Your Decorating Needs!''
FURNITURE
RE UPHOLSTERY
• Custom-Made Furniture
• Slip Covers
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• Draperies. Shades.
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Adcfl 5% Oii for Sbopplnt Ibis Saturdaf lllt/00.
I ' ' ' \ ~ I l • I ' I • -I I ' ' ' I •
I • I I I • 1 I I f ., • , _ t I t . ,
1
..
gy_~· Of lHEDAY
"This is a heart-wrenching loss,
because we had it in our hands .. :
I '
Bob Serven, Costa Mesa hoops coach
~N
... Feb. 14 honor ..
A .UN .cKUVEI
Sports Editor Roger Carlson • 949-57 44223 • Thursd?)', February 10, 2000 B 1
TA KING CdM girls grab share of PCL crown
THE
FI FTH
Treacherous hole No. 5
at Newport Beach Country
Club is now suitable for
framing as Toshiba Senior
Classic approaches.
Al ngtime danger zone
or members of the
eruor PGA Tour, the
fth hole at Newport
each Country Club is
now more customer friendly.
Not lhat lhe senior tour's
SO-something field needs a break
wnen they play in the upcoming
Toshiba Senior Cldssrc, but hole. No.
5 has been anything but welcoming
for the past four years.
Newport Beach has hosted the
senior tour ovent smce 1996, and
each year players have "taken the
filth" midway through the front
nlJ\e when it comes to making
b1Id1es.
The 430-yard par four ranked as
the toughest hole on the golf course
Richard Dunn
GOLF
in 1996 and '97,
was lhe
fourth-hardest
hole in '98 and
ranked second
last year,
Inducing a
toumcunent-high
67 bogeys (tied
with hole No. 9),
even though the
( amous fifth was
shortened 25
yards before the
1999 event.
But a mound
was constructed
behmd the fifth green last fall and
club offictals believe it will make
the hole easier.
While 1l's still no cream puff, the
fifth hole should certainly lend itself
to more birdies in this year's
Toshiba CldSs1c tv'larch 3-5.
"Before, you would look through
that green and see the 11th green
(behind it), but now the new mound
blocks that, and the green is framed
m with the mounding and palm
trees,• Newport Beach Country
Club President Jerry Anderson said.
"It gives that hole much better
definition of dlstance to the green,
and you're no longer looking at just
the 11th fairway and 1 llh green.
.You see the mounding thete, too.
IL kind of frames everything in."
The hole has always played
uphill and upwind, requiring
careful club selection on the
approach shot to the green, which
is bordered by two bunkers.
"With the new mound behind
hve, that's going to help the players
select the proper club,• Newport
Beach head professional Paul Hahn
said. "That's a much easier green
now visually Wlth the moundmg.
They'll be hitting some rrud-to
short-iron shots m there now.•
Hahn said the mound will make
lhe hole seem shorter to the
players.
Not everyone has struggled on
the fifth, however. tn 1996, after the
event was moved to Newport Beach
from Mesa Verde Country Club,
Jim Colbert made a living there,
lapping the field with birdies in all
three rounds to win the tournament.
SEE GOLF PAGE 83
•Sea Kings' 11 -3 victory over
Mesa sends the m into playoffs
.. with ~hampionship credentials.
Joseph Boo
DAILY PILOT
CORONA DEL MAR -Corond del Mar
Hlgh's girls water polo t~am didn't wast<! d
lot of time or opportunities m wrappmg up
a CIF Southern Section playoff spot
Wednesday.
In the last regular-season game for both
CdM and Paci.fie Coast League nval Costa
Mesa, the Sea Kings scored early and often
as they cti.spatcbed the VlSiting Mustdng~.
11-3, to grab a three-way share of the
league crown with Laguna Bedch and Uni-
versity. The win also clinches an automdllr
·ClF Division IV playoff berth.
"This was a very l!nportant game for
us," CdM Coach John Vargas said. ~our
girls realized that and came out focused."
Costa Mesa (7-18, 1-3 in league) simply
had J;lO chance with CdM (15-11, 3-1) get-
WATER POLO
tmg nine six-on-five opportunities. The
Sed Kmgs, ranked No 5 in Division ·N,
were startlmgly effiaent with the one-
pldyer advantage, convert>ng six times.
CdM built an 8-0 lead m the $irst hdll,
sconng on its first &ut shots: Mesa finally
got on the scoreboard when Enn Bayes
took a pass from Jan Grub1s1ch and got her
hrst of two six-on-five goals. The Mustangs
had dll three of theu goals with a one-play-
e r advantage Denee Hemnchs hooked up
with Dana Steenhard wtth a pass und the
ldller accounted for Mesd's tturd score
Freshman DarueUe Cdrlson, commg off
an eight-goal game against Coront1do Sat-
urdc:ty in the Irvine Southern Cahfonua
Chc.1mpionships Tournament, led CdM
agam with four goals and two assists.
The Sea Kings' top four scorers of the
season came through, accounting for ttU 11
godls. Senior Hayley I ldpeman had CdM's
firsl two goals and finLc;hed with three
SEE POLO PAGE 83
DIANA MULVIH1ll /DAILY PILOf
CdM's Melinda Tucker (left) passes off to a teammate.
. . Artists sµp past
Mustangs, 53-52:
• Hanour's two free throws
with 0:07 left negate Mesa's
valiant fourth-quarter rally.
Barry Faulkner
DAILY PILOT
COSTA MESA -According to
Coach Bob Serven, the Costa Mesa
High boys basketball team lost its
equivalent of a Pacific Coast
League semifinal game, 53-52, to
V1S1ting Laguna Beach Wednesday
night.
Torught, the Mustangs ( 17-8, 3-4
m league) host Corona del Mac in
whdt, for Serven's squad, amounts
to a third-place game.
"This is a heart-wrendung loss,
because we had 1t in our 1iands,"
Serven said ·But I'm haf.PY to be
playing again torughl) 'd rather
get right back on the court, than sit
around another day and think
about Uus one.•
There WdS as much to think ·
about as there was at stake for both
teams.
Mesa came m with a chance to
earn a share of its hrst league
chdmpionship ever.
Laguna Beach (7-17, 4-4) need-
ed a win to retam its hopes of mak-
. ing the CIF Sou them Section Divi-
sion IV playoffs, after forfeiting
nine wins previously for the use of
an ine1Jg1ble player.
Mesd, even lf it drops to fourth
place with a loss to league-leading
CdM torught, will advance to the
postseason as an at-large team,
having met the 10-win require-
ment.
Should Mesa win, it would force
a playoff including, at least Laguna
Beach, and possibly Uruversity
(which enters tonight's game at
Estancia 4-3 m league). Any league
playoff(s) would be held Fnday at
Northwood High m Irvine.
·we came in hoping to win two
this week and get a piece of the
championship,• Serven said. ·we
did all the things we wanted to do
tonight and I thought we should
have won Uus game."
Hia.h school bots
BASKETBAlL
STANDINGS
·------·'!'·--~
~--==--~-!.::..~
I ·"I""'' lh-n• It 11 111 4 4
Co~ta Meo~" (17·8) l 4 --------------1 ' • I I i 1, I } s
Wednesday's scon
Tonight's gamfl
lead mto a 42-30 edge.
"You don't have a three-pomt
quarter (all Joul shots) and wm
games,• Serven growled to no one
in particular as the third-quarter
wound down ·
But lhe Mustangs nearly did JUSt
that with a valJant fourth-quarter
surge, which included four of theU'
10 threc-pomters.
A three-ball by senior Ryan Neill
with 6:36 left ignited a 13-0 Mus-
tang run, which included a pau of
three-pointers by semor pomt
guard Rick f latsushi.
Hatsl.1Shi's second bomb from
the top of the key gave the hosts an
improbable 45-44 lead wtth 3:28
left
Chns Manker, Laguna's 6-foot~
10 seruor center, ~cored five
straight pomts to put the visitors up
by fo?rr W1th 1 :39 left, but Naff
drilled a thiee-pomter 16 seconds
later and the Mesa defense forced
three straight tumove~ to assume
apparent command.
After a Naff fre~ throw tied it,
Hatsushi picked an Arb.st guard
clean for a steal, then dclShed the
dlStancc for a laym 'to ina'kc 1t 52-50
with 41 seconds left.
CONRAD LAU I DAILY PILOT
Rick Hatusht scores with 41 econds lett after stealing the ball in
a clutch situation Wednesday in a 53-52 PacUJc Coast League lo s.
That argument strained credibil·
ity when the Artists )leld Mesa
without a field goal in the third
quarter, turrung a 28-27 halftime
N<tff intercepted a pass on the
SEE HOOPS PAGE 82
OF TIE WEii
Estancia
Higb's
Pacific Coast
League
wresttlng
champion
Abe Inouye,
with a couple
of hl1
teammatea
on hll
sboulden
(left. Nate
Thalerud
rlgllt. Josb
Veach.
•Estancia champion keeps on ticking, until
he can eventually give opponents the licking.
lany FaulkMr
DAILY PILOT
Estancia High nlor Abe Jouye lS a 112-pound
time bomb with a short fuse. If he hasn't
exploded during the fmt four minutes of his
slx-mmuto matches, his opponents nught want to take
cover.
•t•m a third·period wrestler," Mid Inouye, who
needed just less than one period to pln bll younger
brother Ben, a IOphornore repteMnting Cor6ne · del
Mar, in the l22·pound championahlp metdl of tbe
Padtic Cout League PlnA1I Saturday at CdM ttigh.
•What J don't have in 1klll and speed. I try to maa
up for Wlth endurance.•
Abe IDGUye. Who won the PCL aown at 103 pouDdl •a jumar, ~it was aWkwald. *"9' ._.,
aMlpedld. lq\mtng a8 _. ..... ,.,. .........
•INOUVI--·
,....B_2_Th_ur_~~· f_ebr_uo_ry __ lO.;..., 2000 __ ,.;;.._ _______ ~---SPORTS---------"-----------Doily Pilot
.
In earlier days, it was
usually something to
break up the monotony.
Tlhe long now of yams on the
Daily Pilot Sport$ Hall of
PaJners has been entertaining
to reade1l this past year, but there
is still roQtn to touch upoo pa.st
interest and humor.
National and
mtemational
tennis got fair
play m the early
days, but it was-
n't constant.
Little attention
was paid to
college and high
school players
and most women
were ignored,
until Billie Jean
King arose in the
60s to wm an
intense match
Don Contrell
SIDELINES
' .
tenrus and guided a young adult
team to an astonishing victory over
the visiting Harlem Globetrotters.
The Yardley brothers rarely
drew much press out of the print
media for their shining
accomplishments in tennis during
and after high school.
Upon reflecting back recently,
George claJmed •Brother Bob was
a great tennis player in high
school" Sob letterea all four years.
for the champ '51 OCC gnd team,
uw1ted a Palm Springs recrwt to
sneak Into a side door of the Lido
Theater one evening.
The desert recrw.t was shaky
about trying to ease through
without buying a ticket, but
Smalley encouraged him to knock
and sllde right through.
Unfortunately, the theater guard
opened the door and then led the
pair to the office of owner Mason
Siler, who always fared well with
the local students. Hence, he knew
most of them.
locals around.
Some local athletes chose to do
someUung about it and tt brought
fun and success.
Rolph Freitag, the Harbor High
fullback who once drew the
attention of the Chicago Bears,
stuifed his car with about four or
five pals and drove them around
the Balboa Fun Zone area. One
passenger included the late Don
Vaughn, a 6-foot-7 gnd center, in
the back.
Many of the top names drew
lugh accolades, especially in earlier
years, for their fabulous talents in
one sport. Pans and writers.had a
hobit ()f forgetting other sparkling
talents. over male Bobby Riggs.
Sinular praise once came from
Bob to one writer saluting brother
George. He claimed George •in
those days" could beat people at a
high level. Some recall George's
stunning play at the Balboa Bay
Club.
. Seeing Smalley, however, was a
slight shock and Siler said, ·vou
wdn't have to do that, Mel. If you
had no money, I would have let you
in for free.•
After the first group of
out-of-towners appeared in
Freitag's V(indow to ask a few
imposing' questioris, he opened the
car door to allow Vaughn and
others to rise and introduce
themselves.
Tennis is a big sport now on a
local and national level, as readers
may note from sports sections. Not
so in the old days.
Five early Pilot Hall of Famers
were outstanding tennis players in
their prime, such as Craig Phoenix,
Class of '3?; George Barnett, Class
of '41; Bud Attridge, Cl~s of '44;
George Yardley, Class of '46 and
Bob Yardley, Class of '49.
Phoenix, who played football
and basketball, was a sterling ace
m Orange League tennis and i.ome
from the 30s.recall that only one
other pldyer could beat Phoerux.
· Barnett was outstanding in
basketball, track and field, CJF
badminton and tennis. He helped
bring championships to Harbor
High in track, tennis, basketball
and badminton.
George once won five national
championships in tennis and did
note, upon questioning, that be
never lost to the pro Pancho
Gonzalez, which is remarkable.
·r know that, Mason,• Smalley
exclaimed. •But it wouldn't have
been fwi the n.•
Freitag laughed to recall the
episode. He said, •When they saw
Vaughn stepping out, they backed
off and tried to smooth things over.
One invited us lo a nice party with
thefr friends. One wanted to shake
bands and be friends.~
They are basically remembered
for their skills in basketball.
Attridge helped produce
championships in basketball and
One of the hlJarious events on
the local scene in 1951 was when
Mel Smalley, the '49 Harbor High
halfback whiz and defensive back
Many local students b"om the
mid-40s remember an irritating
period one spring break in Balboa
when a few groups of
out-0£-towners chose to bully the
It is fair to say the locals had lit-
tle trouble with the #foreigners•
after that confrontation.
IN OUYE
FROM 81
m the title match.
•I had beaten ·
him on a technicaJ
fall, 15-0, in our dual
meet,• the Daily
Pilot Athlete of the
Week said. "As soon
as the brackets
came out, my coach
(Nate Skaar) said
·You're wrestling
your brother in the
final.'
•we hung out at
league finals and
our dad was
coaching us both.
I didn't want to pin
him, but (Skaar) told
llorn: M~ 10, 1982
Hometown:Costa
Mes. =.S-foot-4
112
Sport Wrestling
P1191tion.122-pounder
c..ch: Nate Skaar
'8vw lte food: lee Cream Peww1te movie: "'The Princess Bri~·
......... moment: •ust ye«
•t (Pacific Coast) le.lg~ finals, when
I beat the guy from Laguna Hills in
the (103-pound) finals.•
Athleeeofthew.tekvt·~
Nr:nfd his iecond league
cNrriplonshlp in as many~
domlnatll'lg the competition in the
112-pound dass at SatufdaY's Pacific
C~ league Finals.
me we needed the points, because we were in a
dogfight with University for the team championship.
During the match, I could hear my fathe r from the front
row yelling 'Go Abe,' and 'Go Ben.' It was kind of
weird.•
To help his team, Inouye wrestled most of the season
in the 119-pound division, which has plenty to do With
his strong, though less than pristine, 27-10 record.
"His recotd doesn't show what kind of wrestler he
is,• Skaar said. "Whenever he gets the chance to
wr~stle 112-pounders, he shows bis true abilities. He
was our best wrestler durtng league finals.• ....
Inouye has appUed his abilities to formulate his
uruquely aggressive, attaclang style, which seeks to
wear opponents down, then dominate them.
•rve always been called a head.hunter," Inouye
said. "Because when you pin people, you usually grab
up around their head. The people who wrestle me have
to be careful. because if they let their guard down,
they're going to get pinned really quickly.•
His willingness to go for the pin, often leaves him
vulnerable to more technically sound foes.
·I'm a really dangerous wrestler and I get a lot of
points scored on me, because I'm always trying to pin
people," Inouye said. ·u I try something and it doesn't
work, I usually get into a situation I have to worm out
of.•
Skaar said Inouye's style translates into thoroughly
entertaining matches.
"He's very fun to watch," Skaar said. "I'm really
gomg to miss him next year, because I always look
forward to his matches. He's a scrambler and, if he's
still around in the Uurd period, anything can happen.
He can be down by a lot, but he keeps his composure.
Then, in Uult thud period, he really comes on .and he
usually comes out on top.•
Inouye built his endurance as a member of the
Eagles' cross cowitry team He also added muscle by
playing last summer with the school's water polo team.
His 10th-place finish.at PCL finals helped the Eagles
share the PCL team title in cross country last fall. His
top-10 finish earned him all·league recognition.
"I ran CCO$S country to help my endurance," said
Inouye, who maintains a 3.8 GPA, aspires to attend UC
Berkeley ahd wants to become a lawyer. "A lot of
people die out in the third period, but I'm still gomg
strong. Even if I'm behind cm points, I know I have a
pretty good shot at winning!
Winiling a league title was the first step toward a
post.season lnouye hopes will end at the CIF State
Cham'1tomhlps.
#Winning a league title ill never anticlimactic, but tl
was expected," Inouye said. •coming into this season, I
was shooting for state. CIP (Southern Section Division
IV) will be a challenge, but I feel confident I can
advance to the Masten; Meet There's a bi~ chfference
between 1 l 9 and 112. But J wrestled up this year to
help the team, bocau.~e we had two 112 pounders, and
my coach thought I could handle 119s better than he
could. I knew it would htut my record, but, in the long
run, it wowd help me gain experience agamst better
competition. It was a trade-off. I feel like I'm on top of
the world at 112s. •
HOOPS
FROM 81
ensub\g po s s ion and
teammato Steve Whittaker
hit the front end of a onc-
and-ono to make it a thre •
pomt load with 33 Ucks
.remoining. •
Hanour, who drew a
blocking foul 25 feet from
tho basket with seven sec-
onds left. 1 fanour sank
both free tlu'ows.
Mesa's ensumg driving
layup attempt caromed off
the side of the rim.
HKitt IOtOOl IOYI
MOAC COAIT LMGW LMuM lw>t SJ, 0.. MaA 52
~t.yQuMW'I
Mahker wois fouled tty.
lng to follow hit o*n Jhlss
inlid and dralnM both
foul shots With 13 second
left.
M6' wu fouled lmrne·
dlately op the naul.,g
ill~ ,,.iay. tlaen mb9ed
the ltant end. Monk r
rebobndect and outlelled
to senior guard Travis
" \ ,
1A9una h..P, 1S IJ '" 11 ·SJ Con.a MeMI IS 12 J U • S.l ~ 9MCh • H•nour p, Mrier 20, luttert 4, Boyd 4,
llodgett 2.
S pt ~" • H•novr 1, Fouftd ovt • None
TtchnJuh • None. c-lll M9111 •~1S, ~I 14,
Weir 7, Whittek« 7, '°'* 6,
'"".Y!'T*'l l. com. o. ,.,. 0 . ,.,,., go.th • N.tf 4, Hetl&IJN 2.
~-2,Wflr.l
•GUiid out • Jones
Ttdlnlcals • Hone
BLENDING
• Cutenese exdted about u~ming 2000 season.
Tony Altobelli
DAILY PILOT
be Josh ~er, Enc Barnes
and Christian Manotti.
•
. Tiii PlllllS
COSTA MESA -With
three Orange Empire COnfer-
ence crowns in the put six
years, the Orange Coat Col-
lege men's volleyb611 coach
Chuck Cutenese knows a
good team when be teeS it
and he's very exdted about
th.is year's squad.
•niese three should pro-
vide some stability and
strength in the outside hit-
ters."
1be strength of the Pirates,
according to Cutenese, is in
the middle, with 6-foot-4
Brown and 6-foot-5 Moser
leading the way.
1 Brad Evans 6-3 So. 11 Eric Barnes 6-1 Fr.
12 Christian Mariotti 6-2 fr. 2 Brian Brown M So.
J Nick PUschinski 6-0 Fr. 1J David Engle 6-3 Fr.
4 Chris bgle . 5-11 Fr. 14 Dave Elliott • 6-7 Fr.
5 Dave Moser 6-5 So. 15 Josh Miller 5-11 So.
• MOJt of our experience
cornes in the middle," Cute-
nese said. •These guys each
gained a ton of experience
last year and with their size,
they'll be tough to beat."
I Edwin Chun S.5 Fr. 16 Scott Alley 6-2 Fr.
"In my years coaching
here, I haven't had a team
come together anCl work as
hard as this group has," Cute-
p.ese said. "This team ts just
that, a team. The leadership
has really brought this group
together"
7 Patrick McCarty • 6-3 So. 17 Scott Winant 6-1 Fr.
I 8.J. Li9htYoet 6-1 Fr. 11 Joseph Lattanzio 6-4 So.
9 Nathan Hallett 6-5 Fr. Coach: Chuck Cutenese
The Pirates have four play-
ers returning from lut year's
17·4 squad: middle blockers
Dave Moser and Bdail Brown
and outside bitten Brad
Evans and Patrick ~.
·niese guys didn't ,start
last year, but all saw consid-
erable action as freshmen last
year,• Cutenese scUd. •
Backing up Evans and
McCarty on the outside will ..
Backing up the middle will
be 6-foot-4 Joseph Lattanzio.
The Pirates will have
height working to their
advantage at opposite with
Moser and Nathan Hallett.
each 6-foot·5, 4lon9 with 6-
foot-1 B.J. Ughtvoot.
"They're all big and physi-
cal,• ·cutenese said. "B.J. is
our biggest jumper (skying
five feet over his frame) and
Nathan is left-handed, which
is an advantage at the opp<?·
site position.•
The setter position is up for
grabs with freshmen Scott
Alley. Nick Ptaschinski and
Scott Winant vying for the
job.
•1t will come down to wbo
lS setting well in practice that
will determine who sets for
this team,• Cutenese said.
"All three have roughly the
same size and ability, so it Will
be close.•
OCC's defense will be led
by DaVid Engle and Edwin
Chun.
"The key to our def euse
will be quickness,• Cutenese
said. •niose guys should be
able to cover a lot of ground
in a hurry.•
Despite the gloWing
praise, nothing 1s for certain
in the always-tough Orange
Emp1.re Conference.
•crossmont has all its
players returning and both
Irvine Valley and Golden
West each had strong recruit·
ing classes,• Cutenese said.
•niere's defirutely no clear-
cut fav~rites out there.•
Black Magic wins tourney title
• Girls Division 3 squad wins
Southern California 2000 AYSO
Plus Tournament with wins over
Youth
SPORTS
Pasadena and Fountain Valley. Cope, Laura Clayton and Rachel
MISSION VIEJO -SOCCER D,.onald.son kept Newport on top, with The Black Mame, an help Crom goalkeepers Gina Krotee and
~· na Sbefflette. AYSO Region 97 , D bo Division 3 gu· ls team, captured the In iviston 5 ys' action: • Newport All-Star llhtnos 3, Costa Southern California 2000 AYSO Plus Mesa 2 _Jamie Galey, Garrett Heiler
Tournament with wins over Pasadena, and Brandon Parole each scored for the
3-0, and Founta.J.n Valley, 3-0. Rhinos, with assists coming from Taylor
Lauren Curtts, Barbara Jullian and • Friend and Jake Kalwltz.
Jenelle Arnold each scored for the Black JU. D'Cruz and Calvin Jhunjhnuwala
Magic in their semifinals win over led the defense, wlule Avery Paulson
PclSadena Jullian, Arnold and Kara made numerous saves in goal.
DeMtUe tallied the goals in the finals' • Corona del Mar 2, Newport All-Star
win over Fountain Valley. Rhinos 1 -Adrian Buonanoce scored off
Leading the offensive charges were assists from Andrew Kahan and Andrew
Amanda HoffenbeJ'g, Casey Ibbetson, Wilson in the Rhinos' 2-1 loss to Corona Alyson Jenntngs, Kimmy Miller, Robin del Mar.
Senor and Ally Stoltz. Kyle Caldwell, Nicholas Shettteld and
Goalkeeper Kara DeMJlle maintained Gerardo Avila helped control the
the two shutouts with sterling saves; midfield, while Eril«Bonn limited CdM's
while Kelly Boler, Victoria Swigart. Kim offense. In Division 4 boys' action:
Hanley and Krlsten Jendrusfna anchored • Newport Midnight Strikers 1, North
the Black Magic's defense. lrvlne o-Chris Vu scored the game's
In Region 97, DiV'lS1on S girls' action: Jone goal to lead the Midnight Strikers to
• Newport Gold All-Stars'· Costa Mesa 2 a 1..0 wtn over No 1 ranked North Irvine.
• Brittany P•tch·Dlflore scored two Vu's goal came off a corner kick from
goals, while Kade Kay and Leslie Boler Kevtn Gowdy ..
each added single tallies for the Newport Alex Boullon, Leon Gluer, Kyle
Gold All·Stars in their 4-2 win over Costa lloban, Shane Vultee, Tanner Pralr1e
Mesa. and goalkeepers Tony Riva and CanOn
Solid often iv work was turned in Hendrick helped preserved the shutout.
by Racb•l Baugh, Allee Cope, Leann On offense, strong play was turned in
Dick.en.son, Uly DlerkM, Rachel Foster by Luke Sequeira, MlCkey Gardner,
and amantlla Hill. 'liavts Mayfield, Cameron Kilmer ond
On def ens"', Kath rtne Parmer, Sarah Andrew Nahtn.
Matrix under 12s All-Stars
handle Newport Beach, 3-t
COSTAMESA-
The Matrix, an AYSO
Region 120 boys-under-
SOCCER
12 All-Star team defeated Newport
Beach, 3-1 last weekend.
Austin Evett scored two goals, while
German Hlgadera added another goal.
Luis Andrade and KennJth Zich each
had assists for the Motrix, while Luis
Cozza, and Albert Nava each led
offensive charges.
Goalkeepers Kyle Thorsness and
Thomas Kosnoslcy each played well,
while Shawn Engmann, Christian Medi-
na, Cody Waldron and Gandhy Nava
anchored the defense.
Newport-Mesa girls NJB
team tops Encinitas, 4 7-40
CORONA DEL MAR
-The Newport-Mesa HOOPS
National Junior
Basketball Girls All-Net eighth-grade
Stiilgrays defeated Encinitas, 47-40, in
recent play.
St.ecy Metervey led the Stingrays with
13 points, while Jennifer Rennon added
11.
Other offensive contributors included
Kate Heeschen with eight points, Sara
Stem and DMiree Wilson each with six,
and KelUe Flint with four.
The Stingrays will ho t Hacienda
Heights Feb. 20 at 2:45 p.m.
CORONA D.EL MAR 'IIDAL WAVES WIN, TIE
• Under-10 gold Tidal Waves of Corona del Mar from Region 57
knocks off Newport Beach before tying Tustin in All-Stars playoffs.
• The Tidtll Wav , an AYSO IVSO Tohiessen tc0red the Jone g~l tn the
R<.-g1on 51 gtrls under tO ttll-11, Uo aglllnst Tultin with an assllt coming
tar team from Corona d 1 Mar, from Su-Yin Btdmer. Poulsen stopped
defeated Newport 8 ach, 3-0, before tying two penalty shotl to hold a l·O 1 ad
Tu!ttin, 1-J, lh Area Q All-Stars playoff before a late Tustin goal evened it, 1-1.
action la t weekend. Clalre Sdll11•er, MU Plggol arid
Jn the Win against Newport Beach, aa..y Voa ._ A.be oontrolled the
Alu Tob._..a scored au three of CdM'1 m6dftlld lor CdM. Solid defense wu
goals, while lachel hner and Colae. prorided by• b#ny l11hy, ~ a-.
Heyler each had a lits. Goalkeeper and CowLf ....... Wldle forwardi
J....-a PoulMn had numerous saves to l!ldy ffllll'm, .,._,_and '-II
pr rv tb shutout. Z.... l9d the o!I...,. .attackl.
I
Jn (){vtston 3 gll:ls action:
The CdM gfrlt under 14 squad won
two game1 l8lt weekend in the Al a Q
all·star playotft, imprc>vlng to 3·1-1.
Elizabeth Ahiluu.scorod two
thlrd·quarter goa3 to lead CdM to a 2· t
wtn over Newport Beach.
In game two, AlmarU, Prltdlla
Swmtoa and swua. Imm each
IC'Ol'ed for a 3· 1 win over 1\astin.
Contributing to CdM't Wtm were
co.1My c. •-....._ ••uw. .., .................... ....
lh 11 s , ... J'rlh ......,, .... ..
..... ......., •r•ldl and .lly. AYllL
. , • • • f , , • 'II • • ' " •• , • f f ..
'
... I ' ' _Do~ily;...._Pi_lo_t ~~~----------------_;_-------------~J>{)J{~~--~~-------------------Th-o_ridoy __ ._Februo ___ ry..__10~,2-000 ___ 83_
ORANGE COAST GETS IASER TAGGED ••• 1WICE
• Bucs nearly overcome
25-point deficit in 59-55
setback to Irvine Valley.
Tony Altobelli
DAILY PILOT
COSTA MESA lo a
game where ice-cold shoot-
·ing was the in thing to do,
Shauna Steward refused to
conform.
The 5-foot-7 shooting
gl.lard driUed eight three
pointers and finished the
game with 28 points, but a
miserable first half proved
JC SOFTBALL
Coast
r oasts
Pier ce
• Orange Coast 6-0
after drubbing host
L.A: Pierce, 10-2.
WOODLAND HILLS -
Orange Coast College's soft-
ball team continues to blitz
the opposition, th.is time it
was host L.A. Pierce, which
receipted for a 10-2 noncon-
ference loss Wednesday.
Moruca O rtega ran her
record to 4-0, striking out nine
en route to the two-hit victory,
allowing one earned run.
Pierce, which led 1-0 after
one inning, saw its hopes
ripped ap art in the third
inning when the Pirates
' struck for five runs, keyed by
Tasha Thurmond's two-run
base hit.
Thurmond was 3 for 4 for
the day, and teanµnate R.enee
Snyder was 2 for 3 with a
triple and solo horner.
Next on the agenda for the
Pirates is the College of the
Desert Tournament this
weekend.
The Pirates are schedule to
play three games on Satur-
d ay, and if things go as they
have to this point, a th.ree-
g ame single-elimination for-
mat would await on Sunday.
NONCOfftREHCIE
OltAHGIE CoAST 10, Piiia 2
Score by Innings
Orange Coast 015 103 • 10 12 1
Pierce 100 100 -2 2 3
Ortega and Valdez; Matthews,
Nichlolson (2) and Sampos.
W • Ortega, 4-0. L -Nicholson, 0.1.
28 • Thurmond (OCQ. 38 -Snyder
(OCQ. HR • Snyder (OCQ.
DEEP SEA
WEDNESDAY'S COUNTS
~ Lwtlng -1 boat.
20 ang ers: 4 sand bass. 16 sculpln,
27 blue perch, 50 white croakers.
3 rockftsh released.
Davey's Lodlw · 1 boat
26 anglers. 4 sand bass, 34 sculpln,
5 blacksmith perch.
costly to the Orange Coast
College women's basketball
team, losing at home to Irvine
Valley, 59-55, Wednesd ay
evening.
WOMEN'S HOOPS Lasers a head, 57-55 with
Wlder a rrunute remauung.
we've played all year,•
Thornton said. ·1 Sdld at the
beginning of the year that we
would be a good shooting
team and we haven't been.
We 're good at times, like we
were tonigh t. That just won't
get it done.•
mlitakes down the stretch
that cost us.•
·we had two poor defen-
sive efforts down the stretch
that turned into easy baskets
for them,• Thornton said. The Pirates (24-4, 8-3 in
conference) shot 11 % (4 for
36) from the field in the first
half and trailed by as many as
25 points, before staging a
furious comeback led by
Steward.
IVC (19-8, 8-3) led, 36·13
at the half and scored the first
basket of the second half to
lead by 25, before OCC went
to work.
1n 12 minutes, the Pirates
outscored the Lasers, 28-3, to
tie the game at 41-41 with
8:30 remaining. Steward bad
16 of those 28 points.
The Bucs had a coupl~ of
opportunities to even the
score, but a missed lay-up
and a traveling violation end-
ed their chances.
The loss puts the Pirates in
a first-place tie with the
Lasers, but with a tough road
matchup with Santa Ana on
the horizon, OCC has the dis-
advantage.
•1t•s bard to come all the
way back from such a big
. hole, but we managed to do
so,• Coach Mike Thornton
said. "We had two mental
OCC actually led by three
before a 7-2 run put the
With the exception of
Steward, the Pirates shot 20%
for the e ntire game (11 for
55). Eleven three-pointe rs
kept the Pirates m th~ game. ·nus game reflects how
"We can get it done. We
can beat Santa Ana,• Thorn-
ton said.
DIANA MULVIHIU. I DAJLY PILOT
Mesa's Erin Bayes (white cap) is pressured by Corona del Mar defender Hayley Hapeman ln Wednesday's game.
POLO
'CONTINUED FROM 81
scores and two assists. Melinda Tucker,
Cd.M's second-leading scorer, had two
goals. Christina Hewko 5COred twice,
and contributed three assists.
"Our offense starts with defense,•
Vargas said. "The girls did a good job
causing turnovers. That dictated the
tempo of the game, and that goes
along with getting counters and good
shots."
·0ur passing was bad,• Costa
Mesa Coach Eric Berg said. "We made
too many bad passes and turnovers.
You can't give that many opportunities
to a team capable of taking advan-
tage."
Cd.M now waits for today's coin llip
to detennine whether it will be a No.
1,2 or 3 seed in the playoffs. The brack-
ets will be announced Sunday.
"It all depends on how that flip goes
and where we land," Vargas said. •If
we get a third seed, then we have to
play a No. 1 from another league.
Newport hammers Aliso Niguel, 15-1
•Tars wrap up league p~ay.
ALISO VIEJO-Newport Harbor
Hi(ib's girls water polo team crushed
Sea View League host Aliso Niguel,
15-t; Wednesday. .
Tbe Selklrs, ranked No. 8 in CIP
Southern Section Division I con-
dudeil their league season 3-1, and
19-7 overall. They move on to the CIF
p&ayofts flS the league's No. 2 seed.
Katherine Belden and Jenna
M~by led NewpQrt with three
Hopefully, that won't happen.•
Meanwhile, in another Pacific Coast
League game:
• University 15, Estancia 3: Host Uru-
versity jumped to a 4-0 first-quarter
lead and ·was not threated by the
Eag les, who finished 0-4 agamst PCL
varsity competition.
Some r Flaherty scored all three
goals for Estancia in the season-hnale.
Colby Jacobs led the way for Uni·
versity with four goals.
goals each. Ten different Sailors
scored, with Belden, Murphy and
H eather Tangen the only Newport
player with more than one goal.
llAV-....,...
NlwrGln' tlo••• 15. AIJlo --1 Sa119bf•• ..... Newport Hwbor 2 S 3 S • 1 S
Alho Niguel 0 0 0 1 • 1 •
Nea•ptll't ....._ • Belden 3; Murphy 3,
Tangen 2, hit 1, Booth 1, T~ 1,
A.; Weber 1, BMes 1, Dolk.s 1, B. w.ber 1.
Saws -Deyden 2. Grori 3, Be6dei\ 3.
Mio ........ lemard 1.
SaYes • Aliso f:flguel 1.
MCJflC COAST LIAGUf
CoAoNA Oil MAit 11, CosTA MUA 3
Costa Mesa O 1 1 1 · 3
Corona del Mar 3 5 3 0 • 11
Cost.II Mesa · Bayes 2, Steenhard 1.
Saves -C. Petersen 9.
CoroM del Mar • Carlson 4, Hapeman 3,
Tucker 2, Hewko 2 Saves • Hendrickson 6. ..
Untvenity 15, EstAlnda l
Estancia O 2 O 1 • 3
University 4 3 5 3 -15
Estllnda • ~laherty 3 Saves: Rassmussen, 15.
University -Mayer 1, Grodin 1, Gee 3,
Worhees 2, Sudrth 1, McManus 1, Canby 2,
Jacobs 4. Saves: n/a.
• Foul trouble denies
Pirates' rally, 84-79.
Tony Altobefli
DAILY PILOT
COSTA MESA -MEN The Orange Coac;t
College men's bas-
ketball team refused to die, but
a lack of playen> down the
stre tch proved costly in
Wednesday's 84 -79 overtime
loss to lrvlne Valley m Orange
Empire Conference action .
David Castleton, Chad
Hagedorn and Dave Elliott, 40
of the host Pirates' 79 points,
were turned to mere spectatofS
by the midway point of over-
time due to fouling out.
"When you are only six
deep to begin wtth, losUlg half
· of your offense 1s pretty tough
to overcome,· Coach Mark
Hill said •We hung tough,
though We haven't won many
conference games, but our
players haven't quit and that's
what I'm most proud of.·
After losing by 29 m their
previous meeting and falling
behind by as many as 15 m this
game, OCC (13-13, 2-9 in con-
ference) could have · eastly
hung in the towE'I. but didn't
Thailing, 28-13, OCC w~nt
on a 10-0 run and managed to
trail only by seven at the half
The lead was rune before
Jeff Beeler score seven stra.Jght
points with 13 minutes remain-
mg to pull OCC to wtthin one.
Beeler led the Buo. Wlth 1~
points and 11 rebounds.
IVC ( 17 • 10, 6-5) regained
control and led by 11 wtth sev-
en minutes left With 2:40
remairung and OCC down by
four, DaVld Castleton, held m
check with only four points,
finally found the hot hand.
The sophomore guard hit a
three-pomter and was fouled,
brtngmg the Pirates to wtthin
two with 48 seconds left
After two IVC free throws,
Castleton drained another trey
wtth 20 seconds left, cutting
the lead to one.
Two made lVC free throws
Later, Castleton sent the game
into overtime with a leaner
three-pointer Wlth 10 seconds
left. \
But with three of O~
shoot~ on the bench, the
Lasers took control of the
game m overtime.
CO-..uNITY COlUGE MEN
c.ANCll ._.. C10t• mm
.,,.. YAU.rt M. 0.W.. CoAn 7t
IMM valley Ah!Md 22. S.~
2 1, Ellis 9, Bozek .. McGhee .. Sool>-
lokov 7. Garrett 5, R1<e 4
3 pt. goals • s.n<Mz 2. Ellis 1
Fouled out • None.
Onnw c.o.t · IMI« 19. Castleton
16, ~ 13, NgU)'9n 12, ElltOtt 11,
Earl 7, RIYef1 1
3 pt. goals · C.nleton l , Nguyen 2.
Hagedorn 2. Earl 1, ISeelef 1
Fouled out • Elliott. Hagedofn.
Castleton
Halftime· Irvine Vallr;, 35-28.
Regulation • 7~70.
COfllNUMTY COLI.EGE WOWN
OAAHGI Dt1Pm COii EllHC1
...._ VMUY C:0U.. 59,. 0CX 55
nine Y9'1ey • Regan 12. SUlauno.
11, O'KMfe 10, Mcekdkey 4, KllNdl 0.
O'H1ra 6, Allred 6, RM-le 2, A\le'.StNZ 8
l pt. goals. Su~ l
<>ninge c:o.t · Stewwd 2t, Wilde 12,
TQmlinson 2. ~ 0, Johnson 0,
Fierst 7, Mtddleboob 6, ~ 0, LewW 0
l pt. go.ts .~ .. Wiide 2. Fis1t 1. ~lft1me -Irvine Valley. 36-1 l
GOLF near the tennis courts.
"We haven't had a reJationship with the
Marriott m the past, because they've had
con ventions or other activities happening
during the week of Toshiba,• Purser said.
SCHEDULE HIGH SCHOOL BOYS SOCCER
CONTINUED FROM B 1
Speakmg of mounds, former major league
pitcher Jim Abbott, a Corona del Mar
resident and member of the Daily Pilot Sports
Hilll of Fame, has been taking golf lessons
from Hahn for the past month and his swing
reportedly is improving.
"He can hit that ball,• Hahn said of
Abbott, wllo played for Milwaukee last
season and apparently is finished with his
big league care~r.
Abbott, whose best year came with the
Angels in 1991 when he posted an 18-11
record with a 2.89 earned-run average in 243
lIUlings, was bom without a right hand -as
most of the world knows.
But just as Abbott was so efficient
transferring the ball and glove with his left
hand and fielding his position on the mound,
he swings a ~oU d u b as well as anybody.
•Actually, Hahn said, "it's been kind of
fWl giving him l~ns. and trying to
understand how he handles it.
•Teaching hi.ril golf, I relate to him with
his career in baseball. There are so many
similanties in body movements as a pitcher.•
Abbott, who plays to • 14'b4ndicap,
pitched a no-hitter for the New York Yan.keel
on Sept. 4, 1993, against Clevelaild.
The Angell traded tbelr beloved hero to
New York on Dec. 6, 1992, then got him beck
in a trade with the White Sox in July 1995.
But Abbott never regained hll '91 form.
• FYI: Accotdlng to ~ leech supenntendent Ron sen there ue ab<>ut
2,000 trees on the goU coune, lDdUding 631
palm tree1. •This ii my offk:e, • he M1d of the
1 OO·eae layout.
• Toelalba Clwlc:...,....... dlNdor Jeff
Purler Mid the Newport Bw:h Marriott
Hotel wU1 be heavily liwolftd ln ttm yar's
event l0t tht ftnt time,
The hotel, edjamnt to the MCGDd and
third bolee, wtDww M tbe ~
coq>ound for BSPN. pnMdlng 1be
toumammt whb pm fnm 1119 puklDQ IDI
The Marriott will also host the community
breakfast Feb. 29 featuring defending
champion Gary McCord.
•He'll be a .riot.• Purser said of the
wisecracking McCord.
• This column reporled on Jan. 29 lt was •
•good possibility" that Arnold Palmer would
make his Toshiba Classic debut this ye ar. It
was announced Wednesday the 70-year-old
legend was coming. Miracles do happen.
Can't wait unW March 2 (Thursday), the day
Amie is expected to arrive ln Newport Beach.
• lbe tournament ls thriving with mo.re
. hospitallty tents and corpora te sponsorships
-about 250 companies are involved in some
capacity.
•it's been a good year,• said Purser,
whose goal ls to reach $1 million for the
tournament'• operating charity, Hoag
Memorial Hospital Presbyterian.
About 50 companies are mvolvcd in some
f onn of hospitality, Purser said, and one of
the more unique corporate pavilions this year
will be at the 17th green. Newport Beach's
signature bole. •
Three companies are shanng a sk y box
tbet will be situated on the lake. •vou'U get
to it from the land. but the sky box actually
lita on the water,• Purser said.
The 17th green could be the most popular
lpOt to watch the tournament, especially in
the ftnal round.
• No. 17 r..ad M ... loagtlell bol• OG the
golf coune tn 1ut year's event, fofdng the
mo1t triple bogeys. (four) and double ~eys
(~t), wblle yWcUng the fttth·fewalt birdies (23 .
lar'g9 laU aeepl prec:er1outly C)OM
to the~ and • ..._ bunker gUltdt the
froi'lt ~ ol tbl two-a..t green. A MC:Obd
bunMr WM Md9d tn front of tbe pMA lalt
fall ud Will aDI intltplay for the tint JDe.·
,__ ....... -~torOU .......... .......... , d.
TODAY
• Bask9'tball
High school boys -Corona
del Mar at Costa Mesa, 7 p.m.;
University at Estaooa, 7 p.m.
High school girls -Costa
Mesa at Corona del Mar, 7
p.m.; Estancia at Urnverslty, 7
p.m.; Ah~ Niguel at Newport
Harbor. 7:30 p.m
• Soa.r
High school girls • Aliso
Nlguel at N~ Harbor,
3:15 p.m .• Costa Mesa at
Corona del Mar, 3:15 p.m.:
Unlvenity at Estancia,
3:15 p.m
• Tennis
Community college women •
Marymount at Orange Coast.
2p.m.
• Golf
Community college men ·
Mt. San Jldnto vs. Orange
Com. at Costa Mew GICC.
noon.
JC GOLF
OCC falls in the
desert by 12 strokes
PALM DeSERT -Orange
Coatt College men'• goUer
Bnan Winston flnlshed 1l.x
•hob behind the medalist
from Cop.ige Of the Deeert.
which delmed a 392..fCW non·
conference wm \YectDMday
at Delert Wiiiow GOif Coune.
Km Kato .g:>• Erik Hebert (80). llrtc (13J md MOEe
A~(Mt_.._....., •
almaMforlbl ........ (l·lt.
FINAL PACIFIC COAST LUGUE STANDINGS
•ESTANCIA:
• CORONA DEL MAR
• LAGUNA BEAot:
•UNIVERSITY:
• COSTA MESA:
CMral l.ague
WLT WLTPb.
15 1 1 8 0 0 16
10 6 1 4 3 , 9
593 2 4 2 6
10 9 4 l 5 1 5
4 12 5 1 s 2 4
Cd.M wins, CIF n ext
• Schrank tallies only
goal in 1-0 victory over
Mesa; PCL champion
Estancia rambles, 8-1.
COSTA MESA -Corona
del Mar High's boys soccer
team tuned up for the CIF
Divtsion IV soccer playoffs
with a 1-0 Pacific Coast
League victory over host Cos-
te Mesa.
The only score of the game
came 20 minutes into the sec-
ond hall when Senior Jon
SChrank took a tree kick from
Mike Pala2011a and beaded
the b4lJ into the Mesa net
from some five yards out.
Goalie Ced.rte Chun had
five saves In plcldng up the
shutout victory.
a bid to the playoffs for the
first time since 1993.
• &tanda. meanwhile, wrap·
pcd up the finest regular sea-
son record in scllool history
with a 8-t rout of visiting Uru-
v 1ty, unproving the Eegl •
~potl league retard to 8-0 .
Overall the Eagles, ranked
No. 2 in ClP Divilion IV dr·
des. are 15·1·1.
E54ul Mendou cor d
four goals, gi~ h1m 33 for
the season, :and teammate
Cesar Terrones connected
once, to raise his sea.On
recotd to 29.
Also ICOl1ng ~ for Estanda wme
Medina, Jorge Lopez and
Martin sachei.
Hilario ~ga WU credit•
8d with three MWI fot tbe
~· Al9o playtng w9ll aDd
.dfewlna ...... lftm 11111
ltando(rt. a.da. ..... Ca t ?wt ,..
' l>ehinlMly, ~ Reed
Glyer W8I --... CdM
Costa Mesa plk!Mper IWllP"..._~
Juttin Schoettler bad twO 0¥.wlll lbe ..... a.n. ...... ---i-. ....... ..
TbeS.. ..... 4-3-1 latM ... .., • ---· PCL•t ... fouaA. .... a If
..
_84_;...Th~u~rsdo);~,-Febru~o-ryc....;..;;10~,2~000;..:;.;,. ______ _;_ ________________ __.:,~~(}~~~....___---......... ~~--------------------------Do~io/:.__Pi.;.;_lot
Coron.ft df!l Mu t11ab·1 bop 'bs••-IMm
advances Into Ille null Cl lla9 CIP ...,.n s.c._ ·
Olvls1on IV·A playols Withe 'n .. .._emir
Shernum O.kl Notre :o.m.. A"--t· and at.
Ptecalo1y ench ICOte 16 forCdM.
Jn boys bftaketball DtVtmon tv·A ~ •
action, CdM gelS' 64S"'9 win over ()elpl. Dombdc
DeCrazter't 17 points JMdl the SM Kbigs.
Estanc1a's bays buketbeU teiUD ...,,. 68-62
triumph over ~de In .the DMtiOn m-'A
quarterfinals. JCevta ~and Clilk CD41Mb
combine to score 37 Eltabda points. f.st.anda used a 15.() run
dw1ny its wm.
Ncw}>ort Harbor's girll basketball team advanoes to the •
01vis1on lll·A :serilifinals wtth a 60-36 blowout of Rtm of the World.
Mandy Clayton J>'Ces the Sailors wttb 15 poliits.
Jn the flll>t round, the Tar1' girls buketbell teem~ks by
South forrance, 36-32. Mary Andenon gets six potntl and a
team-high nine rebounds for the s.Dort.
CdM' yl.rl ba ketb&ll teamlWlm it DiYillon IV·A playoff
OJ>enet Wlth a close 66-63 victory over Stiennan Oaks Notre
Damr.. Lindsay w~ lead8 the sea KiDgl With 23 points .•
But C<lM falls in the nest round to top-ranked Senta .Yna, 77-32.
Costa Mesa's girls bftsketball tiNm get.I a 65-'11 Win over South
Hill•, 65-47, m the fl?St ro.nd.of the Divisioo ID·A playOf&. Xoo
JCJm. leads the Must4ngs with 20 points.
o:·.-,~· "1 ·
I I
.:. 'i. '.(.., ,.
Flctltloua Bu•ln•H
N8me stai.ment
The lolloWlng persont
are doing business 111:
POPP'Y' STAEET·AN.·
NEX, 23782 Mercury Rotld, Lake Forest. CA
92930 Marcia G. Br11hler, 413 Poppy Avenue, Co-rona def Mar, CA 92828
Janet Shrelar, 23
Augusta LaneJ.._~ewpor1 BMch, CA 92oou
This buslneH Is COO-
ducled by co-partners
Have you 1u1rted
doing bu11ne11 yet? Yu, 11115199
Janet Shreiar ·
• Marda G Braahler • This statement waa
hied with the County
Cle~ ol Orange Couo1y on Ol-21-2000
• 2000681m1
Dally Pilot Jan 27, Feb.
3, 10, 17,2000 Th349
Flcthloua BualneH
Name Statem.nt
The followlng persona
are doing business u ·
HUTCHESON'$ AUTO BODY. 140 lnclullrial
Way. Co$ta Mesa, CA
92827 Pllll Erben, 17612 Jen-
nlfer Or, Yorba Linda,
CA 92886
George H. Farley, 2327 Tustin Ave., New·
port Beach, Cehf 926e0
Thia buslness Is con-
ducted by I general
partnership
Have you 11arteo
doing buslooas yel7 No
George H. Farley
This Slll&mefll ..,., ..
flied with lhe County
Clelt( °' Orange County on 01·21-2000
20006817380
Dally Pilot Jan 27, Feb
3, 10, 17, 2000 Th350
Flctltlou1 BualnHa
Name Statement
The lolloWlng persons
are dolng'buslnen e1:
MURRAY PUBLISH·
ING, 1750 Whittler Ave ,
Ste. 65, Costa Mna, CA
92627 Murray Mood. 1750
Whinier Ave , Sulle 85,
Coata Mesa, CA 92627
· This business Is con-
ducted by an lncl1vlcloal
Have you 1111r1ed
doing bullneH yet? No
Murray Mead This statement wu
ftled Wllh the Cdunty
Clellt ol Orange County on Q1·21 ·2000
2000A17171
DallY Pllol Jan 27.!_~ 3, 10, 17, 2000 IOJ:>1
.
I I •
' . ! . '
"Affordable
Alternative"
DJscowit casket,
Cremation&
Burial Service
Why sh• 11<.I ybu sn 1ject
yourself & your. fainily to
pating inflated prices for
caskets & er:vJces????
Call rou fru 1-111-~
knttgO,..IS.11 "•C11srla
,
I I 7 r ... I
• : t f~ . :
..
EMnda'• borl JNtaketbell IMm advancet in the
DMllan 3·AA playeaa with• "14·71 MCODd rowid 10 wm over Pomona. Gilly......_ ICOr8I ~ points for
the Eaglel In the Ont round, Heredia and Mike
Rm score 19 polnti apiece as the Eagles blow out
South Tonance, 98-57.
Ne)Vp<>rt Harbor's boys ba:sketbllll tC?am also Wµ)J
Ill Dtvillon 3·AA flist round game aqoinit Laguna
Hilll, 70·45. Craig DeBusk score.s 13 for the Sailor&,
who loae to Culver City, 93-66, ill the~ond round,.
CdM'• boys bask.etbO!l team advances m the
DtVbdon 3·A pl4yciffs with a 71·58·.socood round win over St. Paul.
Joba hulMn'• to pomts lS CdM's hlgh.
St. Paul beats Costa Mesa's boys basketball team, 85·19, tn the
first .round of the Division 3-A playoffs, despue xavter Hanna'1 26
polAta ror the..Mu&tany$.
Costa Mesa's girls basketball team Wlll$ Its Division 3·.A,lint
round game over Workman. 55-30. Olhta DtC.mlllt leeds the
Mustangs with 18 points.
Estancia bainmers Th>y, 63-29, LO the Ii.tit round of the Division
~AA girls basketball playoffs. Melody Earle scores 17 for
Estanda.
Newport Harbor's girls basketball team falls in the first round
of the Division 3-A playoUs to Savanna, 51-43. Stace)' Glem
ICOret 25 pointa in her last game wtth the Sailors.
Estancia'• boys socceT team upsets El Segundo1 3-1 in the first
round of the ~vision J-A playoffs. -cogiplled by JoMpb aoo
CLUB ROLLER HOCKEY
Newpo.rt tops
Woodbridge,
Lagup.a Hi11s
•Newport Harbor club team
outlasts Woodbridge, 7-5, after
rolling past Laguna Hills, 9-1.
, ffiVINE -Newport Harbor's varsity club
roller hockey team posted back-to-back winS
over Laguna Hills, 9-1, and Woodbndge, 7-5.
In the win over Laguna Hills, Jason Spencer
and Mike Brownell each scored three goals,
while Guy Vackar chipped m with two and R.J. •
Rutter added one.
Calvin Anderson led the passmg With lhrE>e
assists and Jaines Egan stopped 15 or 16 shots
in goal.
In Newport's win over Woodbridge, Dane
Barton.. had four _ goals and an assist, while
Spencer addetl two goals and an assist.
Egan had 33 saves in goal for Newport Hur-
bor (7-6-JJ.
Newport will take on Fountain Valley on
Feb. 17 at the Gretzky Center.
E;~~"T~,I· -, • r . •
' . . .
, ~._) ~ : ; .. I .. -..... ·,, 1. ' " ... •
Doily ~ilot
~u•Bualneiu ~ St8te1Nftt n.fOI~~ are OOlno __.. u PACtFTC COAST LIV• ERV SERVIC 2730
SeeYiew Ave COfONI Del Mar, CA e282s
PN A BIW., 2130
S..1119W Ave Corona Del Mar, CA em&
"111 bualneH I& OOI\·
ducted by. an 1nd111ielull
Have you 1ter1ed doing bu11neas yet? No Paul A Blank
Thi• 1111enient waa
hied vnth the County
Cleflt of Orange County
on 02-01-2000 2000l818'4'0
Dally Pilot Feb. 3t 10, 17,24,2000 Tn378
FlctltlOue Bu1lneH
Name St•tement
The following per1Qn1 •re doing bu1ine11 es· ClellOn Software, 10
Via Alceaol •B•Ot,
Irvine, CA 92612 J1mmv Hartwell, Jr . JO Via Rlceaol 18401,
lrvlne, CA 92612 Thia bUSinlll II COO•
due1ed by. an Individual
Have YOl! started doing business ye1? No
Jim Hartwell, Jr.
Thll llalemtnt WU
hied w11tl the County
Cterlt ol er.nge Covniy
on 02-01 2000
2000681 '445 Dally PllOI F41b 3, to.
17,24. 2000 Th379
Flctltlo"s Bu1lnH1
N•me Statement
The lollOWif!Q persons
ara domo t>uelneaa 11 The Meeting Special-
lst. 26881 Trabuco
Roarj, Surto E-145, Mis·
alon Vle)O, CA 92691
Shllley Ann Marley,
22452 Canaveraa, Mis-
sion VlejO, CA 92691 Tttls bustnest Is con·
ducted by an Individual
Have you started doing bu1lne11 yet?
Yes, I t/87
Shirley ,t.nn Martey
This statement was
filed With the County
Ctet* of Orange County on 02-01-2000
20006811434
Da1lr Piiot Feb 3, 10,
l7,2C, 2000 Th380
Flcildoue BuelneH
F1ctttloue au.in... Nem.~t
The ldloWlng PMe111
.,.. doing lll.lllll9Q ..
NEW CENTURY AU• TO, 443 WNI Bay
Street, Colla Mesa CA
92827
Dl.tay 01oour. 2212 Lau<tl Place. Newpol1 9-dl, CA 92083
Thll bus'ineas la con ducted by. an lndiVldual
Have · yov started
doing buslntH yet? No
Oktay Ozonur
Thie etatemtrnt was hied with lhe County
Clerf< ol Orange Cout1ty on 02-0 I ·2000
2000et19452
Dally Pilot Feb 3, 10, 17, 24,2000 Th375
Flctltloue BuelneH
Neme Statement
The tallowing persons are doing iiu11nes1 as
THE G COMPANY,
725 Domingo Dr '8.
Newport Beach, CA
82660
Wynne Grant, 725
Domingo Or #6, New·
1)(1(1 Beach. CA 92860
Thi$ business Is COO·
ducted by an lnc!Mdval Have you storied
doing business yet?
VH, 1·28-00
Wynne Grant
Th11 statement wat filed w11h tha County
Cle11< ol Orange County
on 02-0t-2000 200068111448 Delly P1lol Feb 3, 10,
11. 24.2000 Th3n
FlctiUow Bueln .. e Flct.ltloua Buain...
Neme sattement NIKM Statement
Tl'MJ t(lllowlng pefll009 The IO!lowlng perlOl'll 9•• dQ!flg ~ .u a•• doing bu1!0NI ... rooomp, 18312 Coas!Me Plombing, 220
8cllndl C410. • Fount.ell Niett l.Ar-. I 1 10, New· v ... y. CA 92708 Pol\ Do en, CA 82613 Joleph A Calalano, Ka•th CM&tophe< Mel·
18312 8#lla ~ aoton 220 Nie» Lane Cltae, Foun\All\ VaUlly, • 11 o. Ne~ Bud\,
CA 82708 CA 82tS63
llllS bU&klelS II ODO· Thia bvlloell II con. dUCled by. an lrovldual ducted by an 100!\lldu&I
Have you 1111ted H•v• you 11ar11d
doing buslneu yet? doing t>utines& ye1? No
YN. Ot/01/2000 Ktlltl Me•anson
Joseph A Catalano Th11 1tatement was This 11atemen1 wa1; lli.d with tne County
filed With lhe COUnty Cleflt of Orange County
Clellt of °"'1loe County on 02-<M 2000 on 02-08·2000' 200068111787
200Gell19105 Da11Y Piiot Feb. 10, t7,
D1111y Pilot FelJ tO, 17, 24', Mar. 2. 2000 Th..03
24. Mar 2. 2000 Th395 FlctltlOUI Bu1ln•'8
Flctldoua BualneH N•me Statement
N•m• Statement The lollowlnO per1001
The following peraona are dotf'lg buslne&s at·
are dOlng buSll'less es Coast Line 1mpon1, 728 RIA and Shme LL c .. w 18th St.. Coale
120 Almad<>r. IMne. CA Mesa. ce111om1a 92827
92614 Marie F Dastoli, 728 Rise and Shine, w 16th SI , Co111
L.l C, t20 Almador, Mesa, calllomla 92627
IMnO. CA 92614 This bUStneH II COil·
This business 11 con· ducted by an lndNldval ducted by· Llmlled Lia· Have you started
bthly Co dOing bus!nen v-11 No
Have you started Mall< Delloll
doing buslnen yet? This 11atemen1 wn
Yes. 11 ·8·99-' Med wrttl lhe County
Rise and Shine Clellt oC Orange County
L L.C , Wllllam R on 02-07·2000
Mac:beU'I, CEO 20006111959
ThlS statemenl was Oallv Pilot Feb to, 17,
hied with the County 24. Mar 2. 2000 Th410
Clell< or Orange County FlctltJous Bualn .. a on 02-04'·2000 s t 20006818782 Name tatemen
Dally Pitol Feb 1 o 11 The lolloWtng persona Flctltloua BuslneH 24 Mar 2 2000 Th396' are dein_g.~lna" as Name Statement ~ ' ANALO<(KS, 830 Center
The lollOwlnQ persont Flctltlou1 BuelneH SI •11, Costa Mesa,
are dolng bOslhess as. Name Staten:ient Cahfoinla 82827
S1erra Pacillc Transfer The following persons DaVld E. Ortiz Crvz.
Company, 2052 New· are dOlng business as. 830 Cen1er SI •11.
pOft Blv<f., Suite 6, Costa Westboutne Designs, Costa Mose, ca111omla Mesa CA 92627 1781 lrvlne Avo., Costa 92627
SleWart Go<enstem, 8 Mesa. CA 92.627 Aria G Ortiz. 830 Cen-Callco, Irvine. CA 926 t 4 Mlchael T. Marchak, tar St #1 t , Costa Mesa,
This buslneH Is con· 176 t Irvine Ave., Coste Callfomla 92627
dooed by an lndMduat Mesa, CA. 92827 This business Is ooo·
Have you slarted This bustness ls COO· ducted by h111b8nd and doing buslnesa yet? ducted by an lnd1111dv{ll wife Yes 3·2·99 Have you started Have you 111r11d
siitwart Gorenstetn doing business yel? No doing oosln8$S yet? No
Thi& 5lalement was Mdlael T Matcl\ak Oavtd Ortiz Cruz filed W•th the County This statement was This statemenl was c1en1 or Orange Coon1y It.Jed with lhe County hie<! with the County on 02-0t-2000 Clar1C of Orange County Cler11. ol Orange County
20006819427 on 02·04·2000 on 02-07-2000
Daily Piiot Feb 3 tO 20006818781 200068111953 17 :!4 2000 ThJs3 Dally Pilot Feb 10, 17, Dady Piiot Feb 10, t7,
• 24, Mar 2. 20QO Th397 24, Mar 2 2000 Th4' 11 Name Statement
1he lollo¥1\ng peraons
arv OO>ng buslneal as. 1""'F.-lc""tr.lt.-fo:-:"u:-:s:-:B"u:-:"s=ilr.:n~a-=s=s Actitlout BualneH
P1olesst00al PraMn· Heme Statement Name Statement
Fictitious Bu1lneH
Name Statement
The lolloWlng persons
are doing buslnus H
Mister Mgel Flowers, 12
Cah~. Newport Beacn,
ca111om1a 92633
U111ona, '4533 MacAMur The folk>Wlng persons The followlng pel$Olll
#332, Newpon Beach, ara doing buS11'18SS as are doing business as C~~~ Al'nald. 252t THE WINE GROUP Milton luger and As·
Alta Vista. Newpon CONSULTANTS, 303 sociates. Inc • 205 Beactt, CA 92660 Marguente •A. Corona Camation Ave , Unit 6 ...... 1s business 11 con def Mar, CA 92625 Corona def Mar, CA
'" Bnan M Mahood, 303 92625 due1ed by. an Individual Mar~uertte #A, Corona Mitton Luger and As· Have you llarled ... 1 CA 92625 ocl 1 (C~ 205 doing bvs•ness ye1? No ""' ar, · s ates. nc · " · DaVld l AmoJd SVs.n L Davis, 303 CamatiOn Ave , nu 6,
Thts statemenl was Marguente IA. Corona Corona del Mar CA def Mar, CA 92625 92625 filed wllfl Iha County This business Is con· This business 1s con· Clerlt or Orange County dvcted by a general ducted by: a corporation
on 2·1·2000 ptrtn8flhip Have you started 20006818433 t cl ? N Dal~ Pilot Feb 3. t0'1 Have you Siar e doing business yet o doing bvafness yel? No Milton Luger and As
17, 4, 2000 Th38 Brian M MahOOd soclates, rnc., Milton
Flctitloue BuelneH Thi. statemem was Luger -President
Name Statement hied w1lh the Oounly This statement was
The tottowlng peraons Qel1< of Ql'ange County Hied wi1tt 1he County are doing business u on 02-08·2000 Clel1c ol °2&;88 County
si=.'d 31~1u~~~ Dally Piiot }:>611J.~ on °2-04· 2000&818780
Ave 1313, Huntington 24. Mar. 2, 2000 Th390 Dally Pllol Feb 10, 17, S..ch. CA 92646 24, Mai 2, 2000 Th398
Roy M Pearce, Jr • Fictitious Busln•H Flctltloin Buslneu
313 Atlanta Ave. t3t3, N•me Statement Name Statement
Hunltngton BNch, CA The Joi tow ·r\11 persons The folloWlng persona
92&48 ere doing buslness n are clomg t>uuless as W1lllam Wallace e Eledronics, 2960 Nr· Protassronal Drywall M1cBeafh. 1911 w way Ave .. Sult• A·102. ServteeS. 239 22nd SI .
WllkJw Ave • Orange, CA COsUt ....... CA 92626 Coste Mesa, CA 92627 9~2bU"!:,.U Is con-MUJtafa Al1att3t Sil· Ronald G Smllh. 239 ·• verpTne Dr , Newpcrt 2nd St . Costa Mesa ducted by. a>partne,. Beach, CA 82657 CA. 92627
Have you 11ar1ed Th1t bu11neas Is con· Thia busUl&ss 18 oon·
doing bu11ne11 yet? dueled by· an lndMdoal ducted t1y an lnd/Vldual
YH, 1-25-1995 Have you sllrtad Have you started
Roy M Pearce, Jr . doing buafneu ye!? No doing business yet?
This statement WU M1111ala AIJalf Yes. 2·2·2000
hied with the County This 1tatement was Ronald G Sm\lh
Clellt o1 Ofange County filed wtlh the County This statement was
on 02·01-2000 Clert< of Orange Counly filed with lhe County
Janice Ash1on, 12
Calls, Newpofl Beach, Cal1tom1a 92633
Tl'11s bUslness 1:. con·
dU<:ted by an lndMdual Have you s1ar1ed
doing busfness yot? No
Janice Ashton This alatament was
ltlod wllh lhe County
Clarll or Orange County
on Ot 31·2000 20006818273
Dally PtlOt Feb 10, 17.
24, Mar 2, 2000 Th4t2
Flctltloua BuslneH
Name Statement
The followtng pertOOS
are doing butintsa as ;
James Ardlltacta. 4 t8
East SevenlMnttl St
SUlte 203 Costa Mae,
CA 92627 James J. Barney, 3'45
1L·3, Costa Mtu, CA
9262,.
This bU5"'8SS Is c:on-
dUCled by an indNldval Have you 11aned
domg bu11ne11 yet?
Yes. 11-10-99 James J Barney
Thia 1ta11mem was
Med v.1th the County
Cterlt ol Orange Coumy
on 02-08-2000
2000&819084
Dally Pilot Feb. 10, 17,
24, Mar 2, 20QO TM13
20006819425 on 02·08·2000 Cle ..... ol Ouranng e Covn"' Dally Pflo1 Feb. 3, 10, 20006819097 on 0'2-04-2000 " Flctltlou1 Butlneu
17. 2c, 2000 Th382 Dally Piiot Feb 10, t7. 20006818nll N•m• St.iement
Flctlt1ou1 BuslneH 24, Mar 2, 2000 Th39t Dally Piiot Feb 10, 17 The followtng persona
Name Statement 24, Mar 2, 2000 Th399 are doing buslnest es
The following persons Fletltlou• BuslneH Fictitious Bu1inH1 visual Thermal Manage·
a111 ~ buSltl8$s •• N•me Statement N•m• Statement ment. 10s Terra Balla,
E l C A M P E 0 N The foltowtng persons The lollowlng persoos Irvine, CA 92620 CAA NICE RIA 12, 517 ere dOlng buslilesa as. 818 doing business as Frank Buday, 12 W, W1laon SI .• Costa Jasmin's Care Home. Riteway Mongage Cor Chandon. Newport ~ .... CA 92621 J Ln ~ratloO, 4199 Carnpu• Coall. CA 92657 Sergio Gonzelez, 2817 San uan ·• RICtlard BUday, t06 1"362 L~ SL. Gar· Coste Mna, CA 92826 . Ste. 720• IMne CA Terra Belle. Ir.Me, CA uan QA)lle, CA 92843 Manuel G Perez, 92612 92620 •• 1 G t 2817 San Juan Ln R11eway. Mong1g1 Thie t>usinea• 11 000• M80ca • onza e2, "-ta ••··-. C" ""'".... ,.._,..,tiOn (CA) 4199 14362 L~ St . Gar ..,.,. ..,..._ "•'2"8'1"7 VY".,..... · ducted by oo partntra d~n Grove. CA 92843 Vilma s . Perez, =.u~Aoeis1S:• 720 Have you started
Thia businen .. con-San Juan Ln • Costa doing bUsfneu yet? No _.. b h sband and Men CA 92628 This busloeu •con· Frank Buday ~uct, .... y u TN b~!!.~ con-nd duded by .• ()()(JIOnl\IOI\ This statement WU ~· d • .-.... by ,.......,.., a Have you started ,.._,A Have you started wt;;-doing buSlnesS )l'ol? No filed with 1tie .....,.,.,iy ~ butfne• yet? No Have yov sllrted Rlfeway Mo11gag• Cieri\ ot Ofange County
MfOIO Gof\zaltz """"'buslne" v-t? No Corporation, Jel> "£. on °2·04·~11,...1 !hi• atalamtnt WN ........ ~uel o Perez KC>efber ,...,.,.. '" hltlt.I with 1ne c;oo,,ty This ata'~"f ¥¥85 T'h..a S1atemenl was 0 ily Piiot Feb. 10, t7, ~ oC Orange county _,,...,, "-24, Mat 2. 2000 Th4'03
on 02 01.2000 ~':'11< ~~:;:_ ~~ ~dr11. :r~~~. ~~ Fictltloua BuelneH
2000M184" on 02-08-2000 on 02-0..·2000 Name Statel'Mnt D tv Ptlot Feb 3~1i. 1oooee10009 20006a18ne The folk>Wtno peraona 17, 24, 2000 1~ Daltv Pltol Feb 10, 17, Dally Piiot Feb tO, 17. ara doing bt111ntM N
Flcthlou• auelneM 24, Mar 2, 2000 Th391 24. Mar 2, 2000 Th400 R & R Brokers, 8 Serena S t Court, Newsx>l1 Beacn, ~~:~~~. flctltlout B1>elneH Flctltloue Bualnea• CA 82683
are doing 1>utlne11 as Name Statement ~t!~:=-r:n• Se~:·~,,~~~
coastel Advert11lnQ, 'fhe following pel"IOrll ere doing busli'lass 81 Beach, CA 92683
1565 SCenlc Ave., Sut{e 111 doing bualneu aa. , Preclaton imaging Thlt bualne11 la ooo· F. Coate Meta, CA KC • ENTERPRISES, Cenlet 2900 Brlstol ducrtecl by· an lnd1vklval
92626 22072 lalander Ave .. Streel • Suite F203 Hav• you 1tarted
Saltguerd Proptrt'91, Huntl~ton Beach. cal. Costa 'Mesa Ca1Uomt8 doing bullneM "191? No
Inc, (C.N1 1565 SCente 92846 92626 ' Debbie H. Rite.hit
Avrf . ~le f , Coll• Cleta Moltlcell. 22072 ASL Inc (Cakf) 2~ Thll llaternent "' ~.~=la con· Islander AvtCA~~ Brlatoi si1eet, 'suue llled wtlh fhe County
dJd';J by a oorporatlQn '11:. ~~.C.k. 2201a F203, eo.ta Mau. Cnll ;,"c)12 ~=-county
Have vov alerted lst11nder Ava Hllnf· fomta 92626 • 2000M11TN
d.:>tng buslneu yet? lngton Buch, CA ~ ~~ o My Piiot Feb 10. 17,
Vu. 1967 02646 tiavt you llatltd 24. M r 2. 2000 Th4M ln~ale~.:d~~~-~ ~:~ '= doing oualneu yet7 No F(ctltloue Bu•lnii• wticM\an, Prealden1 \lille ASL. Inc ' Sheron E Nam. Stetement
Thia a\altemenl wa Heve you 1tar1ad Santo. Prelidenl TM I~ pa~
...... ,.. ...... .., .....inn bUSlntU -t? No Thll sca1emen1 w .. 819 clOlnO MNn 81 fllecl with ti.. ...,.,,,.", -ci:t. MQlltelk-hied With 1t'1e COunty Pro Acllv• Elltrdae I
Ctillk ol =-County Mdlcell Clelk of 0!9n0• County Rehlbllltetlcn Moie, °" 02 OI 2000MHOto ~ tat.men• was on OM8·~·1H3'P 21711 Padflc: Ave, •D.S.
0 11v fpn...a .,..... 10 17 fl'-.. ....... 1119 ,.,.,......., ,..,.,..... Cos .. Mota, CA 82827 •, Mt """ ,..... ' ' ~ d'O,., ~ Daly Plld J n 20 1.7. Niil Olll'OI ""'"° ~175 1F~'_To.lor. u2.e'20001utats. ;,1e02·0I ~ F•t> 3JO. 2000 Th3.16 Pacll1c Ave • 18·&,
""" ,.,_ 2000111t100 Jlcttt1oua Bu1tniii C<it.t M • CA 2827
N9me lta~t o 1rv Pikll rw 10, 11. Nem. Statement Alice AOMI qtnt~. •r!':o.'~':°' :;>4 Mat. 2, 2000 Th383 'The ~ petliOM 2t201 Wnlf.norN ....,,.,
UrtMantech TUl\.ty LLC. FlcthlOue l uelMi• •1• ~ bUIWIMI ... H~lng10n Beadl. CA,
3300 IMne Ave, &one Heme ~t AQUA ECH.. 8084 9 lhll bUt!Mta 11 con-~~1..~9WJ>Ol'1 Boadl, CA 'The tollc)wlng penotlt C-:::, A~, SUlrtton. OuatO by a ~rw ~2aau .,. dOllla ~ aa CA 8COlt E Whflten a.. partnitllf'llP
rhur,doy. r.bruory to: 2000 BS
. . I o
~·~ .· ..
Fk:ttdoua l uelneH Flct.ltlou• ButlMH F'ICt.itlou• auein.u· Aetttloua Butlneu flc:Utloua BuelneN Name M8tefMnt
Name Stat9ment Name Statement N me Statement Name Statement Name Statement Tne ldklWlrtg perlOtll T~ loftOW!ng peiaona Trie lalkwMg penons 'The follo¥Mo persona T1 follOW!ng P9f'IOl'l6 Thf IOllowlnO C>911(Wl1 are doing bualrlft • al are ~ bunleu 11 are «Joil'IQ t>usliltlaa u ate c10inQ busiOeu as are doloQ ~ u rt duinlJ bU5lnHI es s1 teglc F'onenciet Setv·
SCJnol!MQtS OOl'll, 8100 Bil & Reola, 111671 RON SIPIORA CON ALLEN ADAMS PER· TOM-TOM llOOKS, 503 kM ll160 9rtA:i1 S ~~~ ~~-Beectl Blvd . HununglOl'I SUL TING, 267 Santa CUSSION INSTR UC· 11 "' SI . Hunungton Sult• t70, Cotta .....
Pedtic: CO.st PteHO-Baadl, CA 82648 Tomaa fA, Colt• M TION 7211 Aptlco Beec:h.. CA tn6"e CA 92828
\.ll!Ofll..:,lll(; ,~), 8100 Wtlllam A Guuardo, CA 02827 ' Drlvt, ll'\llne CA 028"19 Thomaa Harotd Craig Anthony Wong
\Alai Ne 515 Walnut. Apl •3 Ronald PtlllliC> Slpiofe, AQ8f1 H Alf maon. MacRa•. 503 11th St . 4129 I: 1tll Stfffl ''· ~It Be ell~ CA eieet' Hun!lngton Beacn. CA 287 Santo Tomu I A, 721 1 AIHICOI Drtv•. HunllnglOn Baactl CA Lona 8-dl CA 90904
1llll bUtlnell II con-112648 Colll Maaa, CA Irvine, CA 82918 82&48 nila buli' .. u II oon· duCited by • corporatt00 Thi• buMeH is con· Thia 1>1>11ne11 11 con• Thia buaine11 11 ooo Thia blJlinel• " ain-duel~ by .,, IMMdual Hevt you llatted d\lded by an lndMOU4I duded by an lndMdual c;tucted by •n lndNldual esuctecl by an lndlVlc;tual Have you allrtec:I
cl"""'VI busfnesa yel? No Have you 111ned Have you 111r110 Have you 'tallld Have you a11rte<1 cso;ng buhlef;s yes? No pi'Of 1e Coast Prffln· doing bu11neu y1t7 doing buslnell ye1? doing t>u11neu y.M7 No doing business yet7 N<> Craig A Wong
I E Yet, 1985 Ves, 211199 Alhm H Adamson Thoma• H MacA.ee T111a Statement ~ .. ~~~r, 'p,.~~nt 00 w 1n1am A Guzzardo Ronald 8+f>IOl'I This 11atement was This 1111emen1 was filed ¥¥Ith the County
Thi• statement was 'Thi• 11.a1amen1 was Thia 11atemen1 WH l1h1d Wtlh the Cou111y filed With the eouniy Clarlt 01 Orange County ftlud with the County 1116d W•th tne County filed with lhe County C1er11 al Orange County Clellt ol Ofange County on 02-04 2000 Cler1l ol Orange County Clel1< o1 Orange County on 01-18-2000 on01·21·2000 20006911771 Clent of or;;ae County on 01-1 4·2000 0t1 n1·14·2000 20006a10902 2000681'1•01 Dally Pilot Feb 10: t7,
on 02-04-2200069111786 200064111759 20006a1f738 Daily Piiot Jan. 20, 27, Dalty Pilot Jin 27, Feb 2" Mer 2 2000 Th400
0 11 P'lot F b 10 17 Dally PilOt Jan 20, 27, Dally Pilot Jan 20, 27. Feb 3, 10, 2000 Th335 3, H>. 11, 2000 Th3"3 Flctltlou• Buefnua
2:. r.!: 2, 2~ rti4oi Feb 3. 10. 2000 Th318 Feb 3, 10. 2000 Th325 FICiJtloua Bu1lneH Flctltloue Butlnese Name StatetMnt
Flcthfou• BuefneH Fictitious BusineH Fictltloue BuelneH Name Statement Name Statement The lolloWtf!Q pel'IOr19
Name Statement N•me Statement Neme Statament The following P111100s The following perton1 ara dong bualnM& as
The follow! The lolluwtng persons The following pen1ons ere doing buSineu es are dotng business u Gomez lntery>re!IM. 930 ng persons are doing busmen as are domg ooslness as Panache Enterprises, H E I ML E R & A S· wes1 Seventaentfl S1 , ~~:.'!r'i:n::U~:.·~ Tha Pac11tc Slone KEY REAL TORS. 350 891 West 161h Street. SOCIATES CPA, 7700 C, Senta Ana, CA 92706
La Canada Way. Costa Company, 328 Prospect E 17th 1119, Cos11 Newport Beach. CA Irvine Can11r 01, 1870 Jose M Gomez 409 Ave. Newpon Be~, Mesa. CA 92627 926&3 • lrvtne. CA 92618 • N Via Roma Anaheim. Mesa, California 92627 CA 92663 RICharo I( McKasson, Panacne EnterprlsH. Jeffrey A He1mlar. CA r-2806
PaulJ CIP\rto, 380 La Jonathan Lee, 328 2283 t.• Lll'ld• CL, New-(Calllom1a) f221 West 1915 Pon Bn~tol C.n::ie ThtS business 11 ez>n· Canada Way, Costa Prospect Ave , Ne¥¥pof1 P<>f1 Belen, CA 92660 Coast Hwy •220. New-Newport Beach, CA dvctll<l by 8., inoMdvel
Mesa, calilomia 92627 Beacn, CA 92663 This bu"'1fft IS oon· Pof1 Beacn, CA 92663 92680 Have you atarted
This bwinets IS con· This bUsiness is con· ducted by. en lndNldual ThlS 1>11S1ness IS ooo· This bUlineH " con· CIOlng buafnen lf91? No df;e~e by'~•~ 1~1-Z:::~ ducted b~ an 1nd1111dual Have you a11r1ed d\lded by a cxlfponuion ducted by: an individual JOH M Gome.t
doing bu ss ...,11 No Have you star1ad domg business ye1? Have you started Ha'(e you slarled Thia atatement was
Paut J Caputo-OOll'Q ouslness yef7 No ves e•1n5 doing bu~·ness yet? No d01ng bu11nesa y11? tiled with Iha eoun1y
Johathan Lee Richard I( Mct<a.uon Panacne Enterpnses Yes 111/00 Cieri< o1 Orange County ThtS llatemenl was This statement was This statement wu Paul Baktfwln. PreSldem Jeffrey He•mktr on 02·04' 2000 ~':'111 ~Ith~::,~,.!! filed with lhe County tiled wrth lhe Coonty ThlS statement was Thia statement wu 200068117'5 on 02-07.2000 ......... , Clenl o1 Orange County Cleric o1 Orange County hied with the Couoty filed With the County Dally PtlOt Feb 10. 11.
20006811194-4 on·o1 14·2000 on 01 14'·2000 Cle!11 ol Oranoe County Cieri\ ot Orang11 Counly 24 Mar 2 2000 TMOO 20006816753 200068111737 on 01-14'·2006 on 1-21-2000 Daily Piiot Feb. lO, l7, Daily Piiot Jan 20, 27, Dally Pilot Jan 20, 27, 2000&8187.tl 20006817399
24• Mar. 2, 2000 ~ Feb 3, 10. 2000 Th319 Feb 3, 10, 2000 Th326 Daily Pilot JBll 20. 27, Dally Pilot Jan 27 Feb Flctltlou• Bu1tne11
Fictitious BuelneH Fictitious euslneH Flctltloue BuelneH Feb. 3, 10, 2000Th329 3 10, 11, 2000 Th3« Neme Stawment
Name Statement Name Statement Name Statement Flcthloue Bu1iness Flctltlou1 BuelneH "~"&':oll°i:s~':°'
The lollowtng persons The followlng persons The follow""' -·son• N•me Statement Name Statament M-... Ma""•~· are doln2 business es· bu ~.,, .--T"A f~"---'n ..... --s ..... "' are dOlng s1ness as ara doing buslneH as '"" """""' g. ,... • ....,.. The lollowlng persona 3628 MacArthlJf B Sliver ile Ental1aln· On Target Voice and The Cunningham are doing business as: a1a doing buSJness as 1212. Santa Ana CA
ment, 35 Starfish Cour1. Dale, 130 39th St., New-Group, 3186·L Airway CB4 Pholography, Asia Aviation. 2855 92704 ~~~:eaeh, Call1or-pert Beacti. CA 92663 Ave . cos1a Mesa. CA 10"8 Irvine Ava 1359, Plnecteek Dr #C427, Wiiliam Bohvi.lavllkl,
Ian G Schoenberger, 92626 Nawpor1 Beach. CA Costa Mesa, CA 92626 .CS Dartmouth, Irvine CA Jerry Garcia, 35 Starfish 130 39th St . Ne¥¥PQf1 Leslie Cunningham. 92660 Naruml Asavml, 2855 92612
Covrt. Newport Beach, Beacti, CA 92663 3009 Zell onve. Laguna Cart C Bruce IV. 3n Ptnecreek Or #C427, Ne• Harnng1on, 3629 Calllornle 92663 Aaron Egdahl, 2176 Beach. CA 92651 161h Ptaoe IA, Costa Costa Mesa, CA 92826 MacAnl1ur Blvd 1212. Thia business is oon-Pacific Ave .. IB, Cosla This blJslneu. 11 con· Mesa. CA 92627 This business 11 coo-Santa Ana. CA 92704
dueled by an lndl\llclual Mesa. CA 92627 ducted by an lndrvldual This bvslness ts con-ducted by an indMdual This business Is oon·
Heva yov Slarted This business Is con· t'leve you started ducted by· an lndlvldual Have you s1ar1ed ducted by a 101n1
doing business yel? dlJCled by oo-partnera doing bullnlls vet? Have r,ou atarted oo.ng business yel? venlvre
Ves, 2·2-00 Have you started vea, 1/29/9t doing bus ll&Ss yet? No Yes, Juty 1, 99 Have you staned
Jerry Garcia doing business yet? No LeslHI Cunningham Cart C Bruce IV Narvm1 Aaauml doing business ye1?
Thia statement was fan G. Schoenberger This staiement w Thrs 11ateman1 was This stal&matll was Yes, 12/30f"9
hied wilh lhe County ThlS statemenl was hied with the County filed With the County flied w1lh 1"41 County Wiiham eoovs1a111tld ~~$2?:;;98 County fllecl with tne Counly Cterlt ol Orange County Ctertt al Orange County Cterlt of Ofange County This staiement wu
2..,,_.18655 Clerk of Orange County on ot-14-2000 on 01-t4·2000 on 01·2t 2000 hied ~rth lhe County
VVYVV on 1-14'·2000 20006l16741 2000681675& 200068173118 Cteril ot Orange COunty OaM~llol Feb to, t7" 20006816754 Deity PilOt Jan 20. 27. Dally Piiot Jan 20, 27 oa.iy Piiot Jan 27. Feb on 0,.,4 2000 24, r 2 2000 Th409 Daily PilOt Jan 20. 27, Feb 3, 10. 2000 Th327 Feb 3. tO. 2000 Th323 3, 10. 17, 2000 Th3A5. 20006816768
Flctltlou1 Business Feb 3, lO, 2000 Th320 Fictitious Bueln .. a Flctltloue Bu1lneu Actltloua Bueln .. • Daly Pilot Jan 20. 27,
N•m• Statement Fictitious BuelneH Name Statement N•m• Statement Name Statement Feb 3 10 2000 Th315
The followlng pel$Olls Name Statament The folloWlng pe'500$ The lollOwlng persons The followlng persons
are doing buSlneSS as The following pe!'P'ls are doing business as ere doing bus.ness as. are dotng business as 1 9 LG Partnel9, 2231 Pa· are domQ business as PGC Web Servteea, GLOBAL TRADING •l IBEG. b) lnlemel Flctlt OUI ueln ... clhc Ave , B2. Costa 00-AfTE INSPEC· 204 Mayfair l.al)e, Cosll MARKETPLACE INC • Based Business Groop, N•me Statement
Mesa, CA 92627 TION SERVICES, 85 Mesa, CA 92627 4570 CeMpus Dnve. 8950 La Stella Avenue, The lollowing peraona
Linda A Garbelt. 223t Jasmine Creek Dr, CO· Kaldar LLC. (CA!, 204' Sulla 100, Newport Fountain Valley, CA are dom~bullner.a as P&e1flc Ave .• B2, Costa rona Del Mar. CA 92625 Mayf 111 lane. Costa Beact'I, CA 92660 92708 ABLE IN GUTTER
Mesa, CA 92627 Ovdley A. Styiith, 85 Mesa, CA 92627 Global Tradlllg Ma~el Re&jlda D Mlzerall. CLEANING & RE·
This business Is con-Jasmine Creek Or., Co-Thia buslneas 1s con· Place Inc . (Nevada), 8950 La Stena Avenue, PAIRS, 501 36tll Street,
ducted by an lndlVldval rona Del Mar, CA 92625 ducted by llrl\lleo Ue 4570 Campus Drive, Fovntatn Valley. CA ·Newport Beach CA
Have you staned This business Is con· bihty co. Suite 100. Newport 92706 i2663
doing business yet? No ducted by. an lndlVldual Have you started Beacti. CA 92660 This business 1s oon-Peter R ZotOYICl'I, 60t
Linda A Garbelt Have you slarled doing business yet? This business Is oon-ducted by an Individual 361h Street, Newpor1 This sta11men1 was doing business yet? Yea, 11120/99 ducted by: a oorporauon Have you started Beacti. CA 92663
fifed wllh the Counly Yes. 1113100 I Kaldar LLC, Darcy Have r,ov started dorng busfneas yel7 No Patnda A Zotovlch,
Clet11 of Orar\ge County Ovdl"'J A. Smith Mayer, Preslden1 dOlng bus ness yel? No Rasflda D Mrzarak !501 36th SlrMt, New-
on 01·21·2000 This sta1ement was Thia alatement waa Global Trading Marltet ThlS sta\ement was Pol1 Bach. C~ 112663
20006817408 filed wllh the County filed with the Coonty Place Inc., Dr Felix P filed with 1he County Th11 b1J1lne&1 Is con·
Dally Pllol Jan 27, Feb Cieri\ of o:;;r County Clerk of Orange Counly Lapuz, CEONkle Prest-Clerk of ~ County dUC1ed b'f l<Jltll 1/911\ure
3, 11>. 17. 2000 Th339 on 01-14· on 01·1•·2000 dent on 01-21 2 ~av!. .• you s11~r~d
Flctltlou• Business 20006818756 2oooea111.-2 Thia statement was 2000et11397 uuong uwtfneSS ye 0
Na-.. Statement Dally Pltol Jan 20, 27. Dally Piiot Jan 20. 27, filed with the couniy Dally PllOI Jan 27. Feb Pater R ZotoV'k:tl
""" Feb 3, 10, 2000 Th321 Feb 3, 10, 2000 Th328 Clerlt of Ol9009 County 3. 10. 11. 2000 Th3A6 This statement waa ar~~~'~s FICtltlous Bu1lnH• Flctltlou1 BuelneH on Ot 14'-2~16'™ FlctltJous BuelneH ~':'rte :;i~::_ =
a) SoUI Fitness, b) Name Statament Name Statement Dally Piiot Jen 20. 27, N~me Statement on 01-1 " 2000
Soul Fllness com, c) The lollowtng pertoOS The loll6wlng peflOlls Feb 3, 10. 2000 Th330 nwt lollowlng persons 2000l811712
Kenna Maree Produc-are doing bUsfness as· are dOlng busiMss as STATEMENT OF are dOlng bustnest as oa~y PllOC Jen. 20. 27,
Uon•, 4t5 Flagship tndY'v'iSions f>hotogra· WORM BOV, 184 ABANDONMENT OF Bea~~ryl1~~. Feb 3 to, 2000 Th318 ~. Nawpon B8actl. pny, 'Jn 16th Place •B. Yorlttown Ln COSla Aver ..,.,....., .-.......
CA 82663 COsta Men. CA 92627 Meu CA 92tl26 USE OF ACTITIOUS 8f1 Easl Bay. e.100.. L -a:lal , Kanna Levinson, 415 E ll'ldlgo FemJflno. Makolo Harada, 18" BUSINESS NAME CA 92661-4295 -~
Flagship Road, Newport Jn t 6th Piece •B. YOl1ttown Lane. Costa The lollawing peraon(s) Thomas E Reynold1 cta-Beech, CA 92663 Costa Mesa. CA 92627 Mesa, CA 92626 haa (have) abandoned Manag•ng Trustee tor Todayl
Lawrence Levinson, This bUSHless Is oon-1lua buSlneu 11 coo-the use ot the flCl.lllOUS Consumer Tranaporll· M2-H78
415 Flagship Road. ducted by. an lndlvldual ducted by en lnc:INldual business name teon, 811 East Bay, New•
Newport Beach, CA' Have you started Have you II art ad Orange Co Mott .. r port Ba lb o •. CA
92663 doing buSlness yer7 No doing business yet? No Serva 4'96 Old New· 92661·•295
Thi• busineas 1$ con-Edwardo lndlgo Fer· Mlll<olo Harada port Blvd , Newport This buSlness 11 con·
ducted by husband and rufll'IO This statement was Beech. CA 92663 dueled by Pure Tru51
wife This s1a1emen1 was riled w11h the County The Flctluous Busl· Have you alerted
Have you slerted filed w.th ltle County Clell< of Orange County ness name referred to doing blJstnesa yet? No
doing buslneu ye11 No Clerk ot Oranoe County on 01·l4·2000 above was l11ed tn Or-ThOmas F. Reynolds.
KarfnaLevmson onOH4·200(J 20006811750 enge Covnly on ManagingTrust119
This s\atement was 20006411757 Daily Pilot Jan 20, 27. 8·5·t 996, FILE NO This statement wal
flied with the COUnty Dally Piiot Jan. 20, 27, Feb. 3, 10, 2000 Th331 1996369t910 Nied wrth the County
Clefl< ol Orange County Feb. 3, 10. 2000Th322 FICiltloua fjuelnea• James l Crockel1, ~"g',.~t'?i~ Covnly
on 01 -21-2~11..oe Flctltlout Butlryeu Name Statement 496 112 Otd Newpon 200068173116
Dally PllOt Jan. 27, Feb. Name Statement ·Tha foltowlng persons ~,rie2f638WP01t Beach, Dai~ P1lo1 Jan. 27t Feb
3, tO, 17, 2000 ~O Th:O,f~g~~':." ar~ ... ~ngl~Eslcr:rea:io Ariene M Cl'ocilett, 3, 1 • 17, 2000 h347
Flctltlou. ·euelneH are · '"" ET • 496 112 Old Newport Flctltlou• BuafnH• R & R Umouslne, Newport canter Dl1ve, j BIVd N r1 o--cn Name Statement 26371 Paloma, Suite ts, 110. Newpon Beach, CA I CA 92~wpo .,.,.. • Name Statement
The lolloWtng persons Foolhlll Ranch. CA 92660 This business 18 oon· The ttillow1ng persona ar~=~~i~ 92!J~11 Ramo•1..._~80 WAor~~~~rahlgr 11!~~1::eoby' hvsbandand ar:r=•~~",~9
1nd Spa, 423 .klliel, Adair SI . Long .,..c;n, Anthem, CA 92802 Ariene M Croc;l(en Debra Drive, Costa Hunllngton Beach, CA CA 90805. This buS<neH II con T>.... t I I Mase CA 92&26 82848 ThtS buslnell is con-dueled by an lndMdual • ·-1 a amen was Gad AM LM, 1129 Colby James Pallter, ducted by an lndlvkluel Have you 11artad ftled With the ~ty Debra Drive, Coal•
4'23 Joaet, Huntington Have you 11arted dOlng business yet? ';::;'.~8~ Cou 1y Meta. CA 82626
8eacl'I, CA 9284a doing buSfneSI yet'? No Vas. 1<>12511899 2000M16911 ~~in:::-
WHAT
HAPPENS
'' rou DON'T
ADVERTISE?
flOTHlllG.
can the -~
Classifieds 91~:.~: ~=: =-~nt wu ~· ~~~= wul Da~ Ptlot Jan 20• z7• Have you 1ter1ec1
Hunttngtoo Beach, CA filed with the County filed with lt'le COunty Feb • 10• 2000 Th333 doing bu11ne11 yel?
82848Thll ... -.~.. •• ......... Cler\ o1 Onanoe County Clerlt o1 Orange eouniy uE •• Vas 5199 642 5678 ......... .. ......... on OH4-200(J on 01-18·2000 -" "(n "" i.-~ Ga• AM LM IMf) • dueled by • general 2000l8117S1 200CJl811903 OT-.... ? Thia statament was
ptll1ntrshtp Oa;y Pilol Jan 20, 27, Dally Piiot Jan 20, 27 • • fllect v.llh the Coumy
Have you alartad Feb 3. 10, 2000 Th324 Fab. 3, 10, 2000 Th334 Cieri! of Otanoe County do!nv bulineu yet? No Actffiou• e uelnu• on 01-21-2000 ~ Jamea Par1cer .... _ .. Statement 2000A17'H This statement was ,_,,,.. Flctltlou• Bualne11 'oa1~ Pilat Jan 27 Feb The follOVfinO peraona Na-Statement 7 2000 Th3"8 tiled with lhe County are ....... n~slneu u ..... 3. 1 • 1 • Cle~ of Orenoe Couflty ""' ._. The lollowlng persons .;;.;O--..;-.t_h'----~-:f:-on 01·21·2000 COM Cn FINAN· ere dOlng bUSlnell.. SI I" n • move 20006817W CIAL, 4790 Irvine Blvd GLOBAL CAPITAL, mp HY your
oa11y P11ot Jan. 21, Feb 111~8tl:'L'w<;::_2:,~3 1817 waetclltt or 1200. life through Sell your extra
3, 101 17, 2000 Th341 Abeto. INfne, CA 92820 N92·-~~ort Baach, ' CA CLASS IFIED household
Flct tloue Bu•ln•H This buslneas II con-o.:;t,.1 Cenlral Inc . (949) 642-.5678 Items
Name Statement clOoted by an 1ndlvldual (CA). 2973 Hart>or Blvd • J.!======:li--!.D..~lawwiw._..u.~;.;.;~~lallrii=L, The 1onow1ng persona Have you aterted Costa M8M, CA 112626
are doing bUllnesa all doing bvslnaaa vet? This bualnen la oon-
Wllll • Ink.. Hi802 Vea, 1-•-00 ducted by •• COfl)Oratlon Sprlngd1la, Su. 89, Krl1tle Weellley. tiave vou 1tarted
Huntington BN<:tl, CA TN• 1tatemtnt ¥<U doing bualne11 yet?
92&48 filed With 1he County Yes, 1211995
Ame EC writ•.~21~ ';:g'-,~4~ COunty Global Central Inc., Delpttl Ire•· un ....,......,1,...11 Suun Han, PrealdenC IN!ton e.ecn. CA 92649 .......,.. •• Thie 1111eme111 w Thie bUSll'lelt II con-~ Pilot Jan 20. 27, n•-.. _..., 1...... ,.. __ ....,
<M:led by an 1ndMdua1 Ftb 3 to, 2000 Th311 ct;'r11 ~"Oni;;. c;;.;;y
Have you eta rled I ;:::;;::;=;=:;:;=:;=~on Ol • 14·2000
Y••· Jen 1, 2000 O.tty PllOt Jan 20. 21.
S-TARXJNG
ANEW
BUSINESS fr OOlng bualf'lea. yet? PLUG 2000ll1t71t
Anne E. Whit• Feb 3JO. 2000 Th313
Thia 1tete1TMnt WN FICtfiioua BualMii • • • • • • • • • • • ~II<:"~= IN NIMM Stat9ment on OM1..a000' The followlnO ~ 2000Mt.,.°' are OOlnQ bUalne• a• Da11Y PloC Jen V Feb SALVAGE HOUSE,
3. 11> 11 2000 hl:M2 -w.lhe ~. 2t7S Herbot 81\fd .
'"" CO.C. MWa. CA t2S29
IMtt 642·5678 (~ liOll ~73~,:,~:
It W *"" M9N, CA 12629 f!aiultillil• Thie bullnMa. II ODO• clueMd by • corpor91ion 11!11 ~It Have you starttd
I...."-• c:lcl!nO "'"*' yen No _.,.,, OIObll Centtll Inc.,
UT J\l!'Nly LlC (CA), VISUAl XPLANA• C.thenneA.119 tt8nton Have you alerted
3300 1~ AVlt., Suite TIOHS,,~~ S8nta Ana CA ooeeo .. ' d01ng bu11neu ye1? 11~,lllllSll•Jl!I ~1..~ OHch, CA AW , uon IA2. CO.ta J Dtmn ~taWlall Vu, 1'1/7000 ~ MllU.~At2917 .......... __ ,. t17'o Vie~ Stan: NaoC Plfllo
& jlllllltl\ luaen Hin. ""'8ldM ,,,.. ......,.. .....
-..., "" Qounly hallu''mL-' Olilltl t:A OlwlOI ~
l'1lll t>UelM•• 11 con a.en Plllfl«* O''IU<Wi.n, ~ CA IOMO t Tl'lll et•llmtnl Ml ~ed Or l.lmlt9d U8• 2~0 Santa A,. Avt,. ~ bl>lll'letl It CX)I ftled ..tin h C°<MWV
blllty CO l~L Coeltt Mela CA IMU<I tiy a geMfal Cleltt Of OflnOe County
H•v• you •tarted 82UT 11 J*ltne'1lhll> on 02 04.QOOO'
met.:..l.:'I"" on OM44000' _,1111
842 5978 ~ ,...,. Jen, 'IO. ·11,
FW S JO IOOO Tht1 •
e:\~l~H yel1 ~~~ Havu:_tt•;'~o.tvPilot~~~
UTTUft11¥LlC,a..y H•v:u.z:. ·"i: ~E ~ 2•.Mw !,IOOO'TMOI When you're tuned a·nto clas w ~. MelMIQlltO =,.... =-J o.m re•• tdll °' ••11•-•
• ~~ i::'d&-"1:! ~t~= .. ::.~-you're tuned into your co
btt -on• IJ!!O!!etel ~Mm NW :,•=•","',•II R\.r"taU· P,\..,,aM 11.T.A ~ ... .,__~......,....-------------~-...,....~~~-~~
Rtutt iand •""a1Di11 Ott ~uhjt-c·t to d1an,r
'i1hou1 001i1'f', Tht publi ht r "'""nts tht
nght to rtn.,or. rtdft) 1(~, n'\i"" or n-jer1
an~ rla ~ifitd aclHni..,.nirm . P~asc rtpon
am rrror that Olll\ IK" in 'our cla) ifttd ad
imi1wdio1rh. Tiit ba)h flilot arrrpt'I no
lia.hili1' for em trror iii If\ ad\tn1i,tn~1H
for • i.;rh it ma~ tit n• pon .. iblt ""!'t'P' for
the t'Ol>t o( tht pact ac·t uall\' oc.-c·upird hr
tbt tnur. Cr«li1 ran cml\ ht allo•rcl for '1he
fil':'!t in""nio11 . ·
........................ """""' .............. .... ... , ............ , .. ..................... ....................... ......... ., .... ......,.. ....... ,.. ............. . ..................... ...................... .......................
.......... $ •• , .................. ........................ ........................
II ,,, • 216
CmOfCO..~
IPICIAL
PINANCINQ
'"' .....
........ .. .. .._ .. ,...... Ima.""' ... kl l cM. FP .. ...., ....... ... .. ~ -~ rm. klrmll ctnna.
.................. Mi $335,000 .714-981-7743 .................. ...........................
........... ,. 8 --......... , ...... .. ..... ," .... ..... ........... I
-" T
~ ... 41f 381. IWI flfll
home. 0... piln i> ""' IWllOdll 211•. aw Now n
.. 11891(. t4f.30c>.2221
~:V-·™ ~~~'=
By Fu
(9i9) c,:J 1.(,:)l)i
(P\r1.t 1111 f.1\r ll>Uf fl;ollM' 111<1
phi>fll' numlott 11111 u II 1 all mu
ti. ... ~ 'uh 1 ,.,.,. '4'"•tt ) '
---;--.
-
: "' ' .. ' . ;•
•THE•
SHORES
APTS .............
Short term
Corporate
Rental1
Starting et
$1095/MO.
..
Fuml1hed 1pt1
avaJI. e block•
from the beach.
MM44-2611
no-a•• rJ .
, ......... "'I··_,.,~
• \; 1• :, : ."; ,'3' ., '"I ' ' ' . .,,,,. .
• •, . J•
, •, . .. .,., ". "'"· .... ~
--.. -· .. --2 -2 jlrdoe. 2r: 1111'191 • • 1539.111 IQt.714-2'5-3071 .. : HOMES OF : t0tmrWR>vATtO ~~ ~ l. dldc
·. , "'\ . ' .. ' .
. . . .
• THE WEEK • .. Ubl I ~Jw. (Nfl "" c "" OPEN ~ • • ~-~~ s usoimo Broke r 2 Lg. br, kidl/peta wtf.
: ~ . : . •"·
: Showclll : ...... T....,_.. In J1nt 94H7Wl89. 8l533--e653 come, gtrage, pVt yard, • HomM • ~MN.000 $1495mo M~951
• For~....._ :·kt .. 1t• tm E'CiOl 381. aen. FP. FA • -hell,~ •wnodlled. • In Our Sat • NEWPOflT HBOHT1 w/d '*oUPI· 11395/MO : Real Eatlte : 114 tort W/Yltw l Owntr~H42-8899
• : A.!!!.._~ ?!t-. !t-J\Qot t btcffoonl and Li1 IMiiiHiil 2lt Uiii • Supplement r • ..,.,.---1• -1btdroorn,.,2 bedroom Mitt &Ml• ccr'l4o. ""°· : Dleplay Adi a DUllUX .a UNITS 1 bll\. OU111 git.rd corn-blk, 2o ti gw. l1450fmo
: · Swt 11t $85. • CMr'rllld lal. ta0 YIEW1 1TU111y. poo1, ""'*· -.y ~ OevtlSlrd
• Dlldflne : "•.:;:=: .A:,':,g•· :;-,,_: ~=~ ~J~:~o= 227::..~ : TUMdly SPM • y; iL on 61U11i nnt ~ ~ani : Aleo... • HAMOtt VIEW ttLLI ti.:h, w/d :1:;;f· 1c ow. . 94H45'1
• ()pen Hou• : ~~, =:.· l:t ~ =:.. pet «*. SILL : Ultlnge Avl. : -.W"""' • RB1AX ta.. LCi1 91y L.to 2e; • Deecllne • MN00-2t1I t&a, PlllO. $925hno. Ho your home • Th ..Aw • WlftR MONT FIXER Piii. seoo.dlo. m Unlvtt· ttv"' ..... classlfled • u, ._, •. THE PRICE lily IL UM. "9-54M083 uuv•• •• SPM ~ =::=:::T-• WLL AMAZE YOU I
: ;ft Pmy8 to : AGENT Mt-72H120 • Actve111• • w llf11tl : In the BHt : HofNI, Condol, Eame.
• LOCAL : ~ t..,.:i ~= : Rell !ltlU • ~
: 8don : !:!'::...'™' : C... T odly II : llC9PttCI IW*'D ~ 1i11ct11n,
: LISA : ~ .. ~·
: RIVERA : £1.= ... i. ~~NE2s2 i. Ool:=:.~~.5bl "" 2~~.~ : WILLEY I i 9*721.aeM
• 141-t74-42'8 • • • •••••••••••••••••
,•.; I l" •. • •• .-· T
fret UM Of A~ .....
~
• r 'I •
By Mdtn Penom
.. > :tJ~ \t·, • .,, Utt\ ~IN'f'I
C:o .. tu \lf . .,a. C:.\ l)2():27
\( \r•1••r1 81\11 .. U..1 "'•
Index
¥',..~ r t< ~~ ~ , • ~!.. J . ' ~# ·~ ,:· ••• '~' ' •I ,:;,;:;_ ••. , O• -'-d
McMI
MANAGERS
.. SPECIAL•
$154.00+ tax~ ~in:~.
Sltulttd on btlUllultf :=:.~
420
........
Lobby/Olrtct dl•I
p/lontl/FrH HBO, 2202 It. .. k.
ESPN & OllrJPool & ..... -. CA mtl =-~ ~ 111"'-lo!odocl __ ._l ___ CA_•*--
Fwys. ...,., lfom O.C.
F~da. collgl Md bc:tll Weblg cb-wa IO thlPI Md ......... COSTA MESA
MOTOR INN
'lZT1 Hrrbor 8lvd flhone Mtt41 4140
'.. .. ·i. - . . ' :-:
~ . .
Good Jobi
reliable HMCtl
lnterntlng thing•
to buy
.....
1i•lrpho1w 8::JOam-S:OOpm
\~11111.t,-f nda1 •
\\ uJl-l 11 8::1oor11-:>:00p111
''''"'"~ ....f nda\
• ~--F -
,
--.1_ --~
C111't tHm to
get to all tho ..
rtpalr Jobe
around tht houae?
Let tht C .... llled
and Say '°Y'
C/Ja/emUzeJ §l)~
1,, - , -
~..:. ; .. , ~I 1 4, • -,
-~"'. . .~
~... . ~ ...... .. . ' .
''
2 J,.ina •
,u,..
4Ullf!I
~'WY QJ~;
!ZJqJI
Doily Pilot
Monday ................. Friday 5:00pm
Tuesday .............. Monday 5:00pm
Wednesday ......... Tuesday 5:00pm
Thursday ....... Wedne day 5:00pm
Friday ............... Thu1"8day 5:00pm
Saturday ............... Friday 5:00pm -
~ .,. .. ,,.
ITARTYOUR
OWN IUSIHESSI
Stl 'f04ll °""' td"6-•. Conlrol yo11t own
Income Sii lroin '/fNf home, 11 work ,
~ ll#ldrPlllfl llt rn Avon ~ un1111v1 Cell
(888)581 ·2888
Room a,
apartment•,
home•
CIUllfled
can 1atl1fy
your
hou91ng Meda.
, .
""".'' 20 Chlratters per line. Yoo ml'f UM II 4 lines. For laroer ldl, call an adYef1lsitg rep today! .....
FAX thl• form to (Ml) 831-elM .... ,,.. ____ _,_~---------~·"°"' No._. ------
lleMtll~""'!------------------~-------------....,.-
Mmf, Vlll--.~-M__ ~
Credlteaffl----------------•·Dlll------
••
..
. . ..
-. ..
Doily Pilot
VE'TtRINARY "-"' end Tedi for bu9y
1nl11111 hoep. £11p
pttftrrtd. PIUH ~ In '*'°" al ·· 120e U . Bntol,
"""8 AN Helaht• (7U)714-tofs .
Wicka Furniture
In COlta ..._. II rWWt hWlno
WAREHOU$E WORKERS
CLSUCALJCUIT IVC CONCIERGES eorpcwaet beMftt peck·
... tnc!Uded. Full Ind
Pllt time poaJtlont IV ... AMiii houri. ,... lllPIY
• In l*'.ton • uoo HaifMW llYd,ColU .....
4 PHONE REPS.
·.
,
-
• • .,,l ...... J IUW 111 ifX 1t (tt .. ) . $11,ISO
SltNJNO lllW
,_.. bOllOlll, !tit OIA-dlt\lt, I• 141 MOO
II new bllterlel, Ill, water-~ ' '1Hllna. xw condl '3600 Tony MM3t.f707
1161 IEAflXv
SUNDANCER 27FT. too
hrs. Incl •mndlcl ""'· U7,000 14M44-tl70
8MWnllA 'l7 (45t11) HUSO
stEAUNOBMW
14M4HIOO
WWWmlC'i1 (12~) SU,150
ITtRUHO lllW
MtlUMOO
lllW Bl '1 'if
ME AL PfO-A.rntrican 23" 10hp Honda (U.UI) S21,llO
CM1 1AMm dllml Lo-otAtlOMI. IW61lp 11111tv 11UUNO lllW cal nrq & ..._ PlflOtl hied, 3 Ill blgl, -VHr:'. ' 141 UMIOO
pnMdld 1~ ltabemldt 111111. S3000 IUWIW'if ROilii b OiJiiOit\dY ot>o 94H3H 9e0 (W':luw..o 1,::aso
lor2000 ~&,fl:uc:GN 1 .. UHtOO CllJoe 4 vENOIHd 8UICK COUPE ''h
ly CH.MW GOREN
with OMAR SHARIF
and TANNAH HllUCH
.
SA\ f.1HO\il. tO""l ROl.S
NOR1 II
• Q 10 4
0 (> J
A K 6
• K J 10 7 2 Wl-.ST
• K 3 :; 8 IU 5 2 0 JO 7 SJ
• A4
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• 852
17 K 98 74 () J 9 • 863
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.. AJ976 AJ
.1 942
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MIRfll EAST I• P
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SOlJTll W~I
&• r .. ... p.,.
1e f1011'4: In I CJ~ duh l>pCll•llf t>1d
U\UJlly \huw• • r. .. e ,..,J Ull. but I
r 11\l' 11 cc!IT«l e\cn 11 the I( pon\C
11u&lll t>c 111, :a lnur.c; 1J.:o, a11J Swth
W3' ""'" ""(J(th th<: JUlllp I() ¥UlllC, W~1 led the'""" ol l'K'llrt\, tn .. en hy
lhe !KC 'occ;lan:r lOUld 11111 WQll to
cru IO dummy "1th the .. IOll or thl•
monJs to run the ten or 'flllllcs . Wc\l
rrahbcd the kina. ca ht'd the queen of
ho!arb and returned • d11r11ond and
JedlU"tr eould not •~md conctd1n1 1
tll" .. in ca<.h pl1111 \u1t In :iJ<l11100 to
the km& of trump' for 1 one· trick set
FIA iwne, energellc for
Mol1glgl Co. Mm to MOO
+week + blnafa. &1111
"" prtf'd COtuct ...... ... ~2SG-5719
SUK/yr Unique •·In· $500. 714132--0338
Comet, Mew Loc:aitlonsl Uttlt ~ ... Pftvltl BUICK Ci(vllJli( t2 (~OlllJ h~ad T ... () of Q
m~VEHO oiW lldHt, -.. alectl1C. (\.uJUfY Otlnd Sport VI
All the conuacf ntctl.:J to utl
home was for d«larer 10 1pum the
trump Ii~ Ah~r winning the 11ec
ol hurts. declarer •houlJ 1mmeJfatc•
" plunl du""n the ICE or •pa.kl and conunue l'<llh a trump The hell Wei.I
Clll'I do IS 10 Wiii the king or paJC\.
ca•h I hcan and ~th II> I d•lll)OncJ
11\at 111,;k '' t,.ken """h dummy·~
I.mg. the l'"\l trump '' dra1Nn and tic a.;e or duM I) fotced OUI 11ic ace or
J1amond' 1s sull m dummy as an
entry 10 the aood clubi. v.hi<:h fuml)h
all the d1\Canb declaier m1&h1 need Sell your 9vt .. a •. ._ 30ll S300 I* mar.-. lft9N LOS) I cyt. AT, ""' • MM7s.s7t7 4 ap, AC, lltY tmar, PS,
One of the hr~t pla)S taught by
many 1n~1ruc11~ t\ ho1o1. tu rinc:~~
llic:y might do better 1r they concen·
trau:d on 1c1ehing ..,,hen not 101 household ctwlfted MOORING PW. em4m, CC, caueltt, ltf)ma Todtlyt Newport e.:ti mocwobo MMS0-4140 ,.=~~l=s='=;;a...1.-•M-2:;;·H;:.7~8==d. ON W-30 $900 CAOilUC CATERA 'ii 949-723-5424 L.o 15k mllla, .....,, ltlthet,
HERE 'S A GRE•1T e!.m:::r=-:. =~~:~: ~1188
The au~11on wu s1 raigh1rorwtin.l.
Nvrlh cllfTcdl y ran.~'\! ~pa.Jes rathe•
than rch1J club'> (1 onc-srndc
ft ~.' r::~~lndd. (714)540-ttOO
WAY TO .GET ~~7,;i ~~~{!!~11-~I CLIENTS COMI Nf TO (714)54o.tl00 CADILLAC DEVILLE '97 C1dlll1C E16o: 'N ""J"""agu_11_XJ_1 V.,.andt.-,nmPwlal
295 HP., NonhSW. loW Blot bal ol warr green, bel ol warr & morel $37,"5 ~ YOUR DOOR. CADl(Llc Concour1 117 V·B Nor1hslar. Sapphire LOii( rrles, VB, Notlhstar. Stdan 4Dr 'II
mtlM. Sea Miit, nhr & rllOft (283272) $21,988 (612740) $29,988 BAUER JAOUAf'
\I' I'' 11 I I IC: .., ""I'' I ' I '"
I ' ! I ~ I I I \ .' ' I I I II I l ' \ I ' 11 t
---------
·Tne Dally Piiot w111 publish a
Tax • F1nanc1a1 Directory to
assi st our r19aders In flndfng a
tax professional. Reaching over
40,000 homes In a n1gh·end
market. you are sure to find
many wno neeo your ne1p.
A smart move on your part
would be to take advantage of
our lncredlt>IY low rates and
place your ad w1tn us. Only us
per week If you sign up for the
entire 11 weeles, or a minimum 4·
week run at $40 per week.
TAX TIME
IS COMING
(212804) $26.988 NABERS NABERS 71~
NABERS (714)f40-1100 (714)54o.t100
(714)54MtOO CAOilUC OEVILlE '" CADILLAC Stvil11 '00 .
CADILLAC OEVILLS 'II V·S Northst11, lo'# 1811 Bk '""41$' 8eigt, un llhr. Stden 4Dr '17 Low mill wntt, 11n "1lenor !TM lee.Iller bllWlCe o1 CO. bal ol wan, Prv rental Ut,"s 17-4751 V-8 N'olhW, .,,_ oond . wwriny, prwious reotal (142672) $39.988 BAUER JAGUAft
(2N82S) NABERS S17,98S (7&209) NABERS $25,9118 1 (11~5~~00 71'-'5~
(7t4)54M1oo c11c1S40-9100 &citnlec c11«1 Sdli ·11 JAGUAR u ... VAHDEH
$21,195 97-4161 Pt.AS 4~. llAI P"!'. Ul
BAUER JAGUM roof, ....... -.... 1 owner,
STARTING
ANEW·
71 4-ISMIOO llCOl'dl, rtlly c:i.i car
HONOA ciVIC EX 't5 $4.500 94H~1504
Wti. loaded. Jdrt cond, '°" ml, bou!tlC new cat "11151 stl JAGUAR XJI 't7
$6800 Obo 9"4~51S.3n4 6£0AN 40
lnttnltl 130 Stdtn 4D ••
$35,ttS 17-4163
BAUER JAGUAR
714-t53-4IOO
BUSINESS?? .
• • • • • • • • • •
UA.195 IMl7 BAUER JAGUAR
714-t53-4IOO
JAGUAR XJ6 l '97 Mtrcury Vlfleger
SEDAN 4D Ntutlca Wagon '97
$35,995 97 $11,ttS 17-4151
BAUER JAGUAR BAUER JAGUAR
714-05).CIOO 71W6MIOO
..
Thursday, February lO, 2000 87
-
.-....--...lll'i.IT1.o1.0 ... D~A .. Y~'Sr...x.1-..._· ] CROSSWORD PUZZLE _
Turbo dltUI, RAREll OLDSMOBILE Cltra 'H
36 mcQtw rtmallwlg e Slwloon. loW 53k miles, :lfd
S733/mo or payoff Is seal & ffiOfll
$43.800. 12,500 ml, Bladll (360019) $8.988
Tan loaded! IM9-720-9796 NABERS (714)540-8100
NISSAN SENTRA GXE 'IS Oldamobllt Siihouette '" 5 Spd Maroal, 4 Or, Whits, GLS, bellle... I tan •N lo'# l<lk Gnly Interior, Xtt Condi-ml. CD. 00.. doofS & moist lion Rtllblt, Deolndlble ( 175525} $21.988 GINI Prlct fOf I Qreai c.11 NABERS M150 Call Mt-5114012 (714)540-t100
SElL"YOVR USED VEHICLE
THROUGH CIASSlFIED
P\. YMOUTl1 GRAND
VOYAGER n e c:yl. Iran' , .. , lie, loldtd. all pwl
$5,400 71 ..... 1657
i\oul ROYCE "ii
CORHICHE HARDTOP
Whltellan, 60K orlglnal ml,
rww AC Ind CO. Mtdng
'20,000 M•Tf0.71U
fovofA CAiiAAY SE COUPE 'M 9lllt ml, e cyl, Ml't loeded. Jdrt cond, 009
(Nlrlf '7000 94M33-0302
... -
Size of
Ad
2x2
When you're tuned into clas"sified,
·you're tuned into your community ...
"hnonal Income Tai '1..,auon, Ftdltll & si•-Cel IC)( Low ,..
•• 714~7537 .
·-
'
= "'f 3 rooma a git ,,... c.11 CtA'lll ..
f 'f' '"""" • • .... 9 r l • •
..
~· ~. ~'
,, . ......
~u 'Fa• DUH Tl.I Ml.f7S.al, 11u•----
ry • .:1 , ••.
I
• ... . ... :t ..... f
HANDYMAN Contractors
All Home ~airs
Plumbing • Ekcincal
Cari>tntry
t•1•1•1111•
-- - -
I .. : • · · 1· ,
..
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....... .., .,, --.>
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...... • •• • ••• _, •· .l .-
•• 71: • • • .
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JUNK TO THE OUWlll n..-.1112 AVAal.AIU TOOAYI
MM7WMI
----
.
J ."'f"'f"'. I • • t
HANDMADE OlD
WORID PAINTS
INrIJUOIVDCTUJOll Jr.~ fi-.AMl;,./i,,
UMEWASH BONCOT!
FlfSCO
MILK PAINT
For Estmwtts Cnwt
llOBEJO' ISBEU.
COMPANY . Prtfr:a"""'1 p,,;,.,;,,,
Lie 1-4943~
TtL '49.646.3006
,., . .'49.SI0.9626
In ti Est Small Jobs 0 .J<.
,... J>rwJ.1 btfo.
a1a.6 .9394 llti==~~
.... ,.. . ;
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l
,
88 Thuridor, F!bruory W, 2000 ' 'J Doily'P~ot
I '
THE 2000 CADILLACS ARE ARRIVING DAILY!
Th 2000 Catera The· ·2000 Escal-de The 2ooe> Seville STS
LEASE FOR S.3 5 91 MO
+ tax for 36 month lease $3950 00 cash down or trade equity, plus lncep· tton fees $5108.95. 121< miles per year 20t per mile in excess. Offer
good thru 4/3/00 on approved credit This stock number only. No dealers
or brokers, please! Lease must be approved my GMAC 1 only 4427
Or PurchHe for Only $32,38840
..
LEASE FOR S485/MO
+ tax for 36 month lease $4950.00 cash down or trade equity, plus lncep· tlon fees • $6745 75 12k miles per year. 20e per mile in excess Offer good thru '113/00 on approved credit This stock number only. No dealers or brokers. pleaser Lease must be approved my GMAC 1 only 4188
Or Purch~se for Only S 43,56570
LEASE FORS549/MO
+ tax for 36 month lease. $4950.00 cash down or trade equity, plus lncep·
hon fees = $7092.86. 12k miles per year 20e per mile In excess Otter
good thru 4/3/00 on approved credit. This stock number only No dealers
or brokers. pleasel lease must be approved my GMAC 1 only 4213
Or Purchase for Only S 4 7 t 8 00
With GM OWNER'S LOYALTY PROGRAM, you could ".av(~ an additional $500!
• ••••••• ,1., .... ,j, .... 1 ~
THE INDESCRIBABLE OLDSMOBILE
s!~URITY~~s~~ fntrl(U Th 2000 Silhouette The 2000 Alero Sedan -
So 1ST PAYMENT
LEASE FOR$249/M~
·~ • 11.• lor mon1lls Closed end 1NM on ll>Plowd Clldl\. TOllll dmit.oft $2, 159 30 Aecldul $ 13 064 40 1oUI Ol 111~ $8.999 20 • IU 12' 1111111 lllowtd per ,_ 20C
pet mle In~ 0ll$ 'Ill! lllllllOeJ cnly ~ IO pnor 1111 Ho ....,.. Of brola,.
I W:.1111111 m..,..,. lly GMAC 1Ol/ltt191711
Or Purchase 'or Only $20,890
-
EASE FOR $299' MO
+l!if • t.u tor 36 mont!ll CIOsed end lnM 001 ~ cr.i. TOlll ClfflHll $2293 3S
Aaldual $1 $.111 IO To!M or payments $1 o 798 20 • IA< 12k 111ileull0Wld per yw 20s
pa mll 111 t-Thia m numllff odt lulljeCt 10 prior sale i. dUl!lrs or blol.ets.
Dime' L-INit 1111 ll!IP'MCI lrf c.MAC 1 Giily 140776
Or Pu(chase For Only $24,164
So SECURITY DEPOSIT
$0 tST PAYMENT
LEASE FOR $199' MO
+96t •II.< for 18 lllOl'llht Cloeld 11111 ..... on IPIWowd Clldt TOlll dllvHlf 11.719 14 ~
Relidolll SUl7 20 l<U of paywllntl S7.19Ulh lax. 12X ........... per yui 201 P11 m8t
In•-Tllll WI llUmber odf ~IO prior Qll No ...... or IWObrl, .._., l'8M 1111111
111 IPP'O'ttd ray GMAC 1odt303457.
Or Purchase For Only $15,941
"FOR THE GREATEST SELECTION OF PRE -OWNED CARS ... SEE NABERS"
-~~---
'92 CADILLAC SEDAN DEVILLE Red leather, SOK miles, super value! (2754931
'94 BUICK ROADMASTER
Low 51 K milea, beige, leather, rare model, mint condition I (41 1348)
197 CADILLAC CATERA
Low miles, beige, tan leather, alloys, bal of warr. & morel 1019216)
1 96 CADILLAC DEVILLE
Low miles, white, Ion int., VS Northstar, xlnt cond. (279825)
1 97 CADILLAC DEVILLE
V 8 Northstar, Sapphire Blue, bol of worr. (283272)
ss,988
511,988
$16,988
S17,988
$19,988
'98 CADILLAC CATERA S 88
Low 15k miles, silver, leather, moonroof, CD, bot. of worr., only 1022364) 2 0 t 9
'99 OLDSMOBILE SILHOUEnE S 88
GLS, beige, ton leather, low 1 OK miles, CD, dual doors & morel 1175525) 2 0 t 9
'99 CADILLAC DEVILLE $ 88 V·8 Northstar, low 18k miles, lthr. & morel bol of worr., prev. rent.1762098) 24, 9
1 97 CADILLAC CONCOURS S 88
295 H.P., Northstar, low miles, Seo Mist, lthr. & morel (2 1280.4) 25,9 ..
'98 CADILLAC ELDORADO S 8. 88
loW miles, ve, Northstar, green, bol. of worr. & morel (6127 .40) 2 '9
NABERS
2600 Harbor Boulevard
Costa Mesa
(714) 540·91 00
www.naber1auto.com
M Midet •lo llfiOr Wt la•""'°"' ,M •IL. M.. 1111 l •1111 .... a•~ Ill•••• •ht."'*' ..... emn. Mn t. ...... ,.,.. .......... , P A