HomeMy WebLinkAbout2000-02-12 - Orange Coast PilotI·
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SERVING THE NEWPORT -MESA COMJ.AUNITIES SINCE 1907 WEEKEND -FEBRUARY l 2-13, 2000
VALINllNl'S DAY STOlllS
Pl-l 0 B'I DIANA ~UIV1t1 1AI Y r OT
Bob and Weedie Derr were one of the couples who won a Valentine's Day contest for best love story. The Newport Beach
couple have been married for 19 years. but they have been friends slnce their high school days.
Tales to warm 'the heart
Couples share Jove stories for Valentine's Day and
win a special luncheon in Newport Dunes contest.
Noaki Schwartz
DAILY PILOT
V alentine's Day for many
couples means cham-
pagne flutes, gilts in pdle
blue with white nbbon or
an exobc weekend retreat.
But for the 10 winning couples in
a Newport Dunes contest. this day of
all days is d po1gndflt reminder of
what they've overcome simply by
following their hearts. Together,
they've faced the fedt that they'd
never love again. li!e-threatening ill-
·nesses and a tum m economic pros-
perity.
Couples whose relauonships
have endured dnd mdced flouru;hed
despite adver~1ty were asked lo
wnte a one-pctge !-.ummary of their
love story. Monday, the winners will
attend a complimentary.luncheon at
the Back Bdy Cdfe.
These are three of the most touch-
ing tales:
• REDISCOVERING LOVE
Back in 1935, Bob and Wecd1e
Derr were pdrt ot lh<' <;dme group of
friends that put the hiuh school year-
book together In tht>ir grnduuting
pholo, Lhe qroup of d cloz<'n hopeful
SEE HEART PAGE A 14
Bob and Weedie Derr were pictured
side-by-side in their 1935 senior yearbook.
PLACIS TO GO
Love is in the air
Top 10 romantic spots in Newport Beach
• The Wectg. at sunset ·
• Lookout Point and the benches overlooking the rocks on the
bay side of Corona del Mar
• A deserted lifeguard tower on the beach
• The balcony of the Udo Theatnt
• The View Lounge
• Anywhere on Balboa Island·
• An evening walk down Newport or Bel~ piers
• Cryst.I Cove State S.ach
• 8ac* Bay Drive by car or foot
• The Goldenrod Bridge in Corona del Mar ·
For more places to go and things to do on Valentine's weekend,
see the Valentine's Day calendar on Pllf/9 A 1 S
'They haven't done anything wrong' INSIDE DATEIOOI
• While their mother is in jail,
suspected of running over and
killing their father with the family
car, the VanHouten children
remain in protective custody.
GNt IUlllng
OMV PlloT
NBWPORT BEACH -Their lives has
been thrown Into dilarray.
'J1Mir father WU killed Peb. 2 and their
mOtber wu arr111ted on suspldon of run·
n1Dg 1blm over wtth the family car. ·
-'IMj wwre taUn from tbl6r home by
IOdll wadlllll .. blftn't ..... w::b other
linc:e tbe dlil&bOUI 9"111.. n. aldllt cbUd II 171 her .._, e year
younger. The young I, ct boy, is only 12
years olcl .
The thr e Vrtnl loutcn children -who
family lncnds stud arc yrapphng with the
lo s of their parents -remam m protective
cu tody while county officials search for a
i;uitablc home.
•They haven't talked to each other or
had any other contact smce last week, -·said
family fnend Max Alsenz. ·1 thmk the most
important ,thtny nght now is trying to
arrange a meeting between the kids.•
The children have endured an egonbdrig
to dayt since learning that thelr 40.yaar-
old mother, LMUe VanHouten, wu jaile<I
on charges that she pwpo14!ly ran over and
kWed their father, ¥enneth, DMr H09g
HOIP'tal
SH CHILDMN MM AU
Pacific
Life pulls·
plans for
• expansion
•Company is third in d series
of appllcdtion wilhclrnwals
being attributed lo lears over
a slow-growth bdllol measur '·
Noaki Schwartz
DAILY PllOT
I NEWPORT BEAC 'I I -Pdnllc
Ltf P hdS yankPd long-st<1nchnq plcrns
to £>Xpdnd its NPwport Ct>ntN
office!., forcmg at l<'<1st onf'-follrlh of
the company's work forcP to movP to
t;outh County by summN.
The move, dnnounct>d Fncldy, is·
the third in a domino <!ffC'C:l of dJlpb-
Cdtion withdTdwab that arc being
attnhuled to unrertCJtntws creat~d
by the so-call~d Gref'ntight m1lldhVP.
· on th(J Novcrnh<'f hdllot. .
In thP ldsl two weeks, th1~ Irvine
Co. dnd thf• Cdhlorma Tedchers
Retirement SyslPm httve CJlso
scrdpped tht•ir projects, which wpw
part of <1n overall plan to add 1 mil-
lion squ<lre ll•et of ofhc e spdce dnd
200,000 squarn fopt of retcnl space to
Nr-wport C'Nller dnd Fttsh10n bldnd.
Pc1clf1C Ltfe. th(• lurgt•st lilt> crnd
health IOSUfdOC(' furn in lhP stdte.
has been h.(•ddqudrtt•rN1 in Nt>wport
Center sine<> \972.
"It WdS a chfhcult df'CISIOO," ~·aid
Tom Mriys, vice prcMdent of yow~m
ment relaltons dt PcH·ihc L1f P
The proposal mdudt>d a 4W,OOO·
square-foot expan!>10n of the cx1st-
mg msurance c:ompanv building
Unable to grow inside t•wport
SEE PACIFIC PAGE A16
Local wolllan
prompts sex
off ender bill
• Potentht.J legisldtion
that would put convtcled
sex offenders on probdtion
for life wa~ spawned by
woman's crusade.
Danette Goulet
DA• y PiLO-
C05T\ MESA - A Co,la Mc...<>a
womans lNter-wntmg Cdlllpd1gn
has prompted state SC'n . Ro.., John-
son to mtroduc<• legt lal1on thut
would dllow child mole tcr·· to be
placed on lifetime parole
Under ex1stm9 law .... d felony con-
vic-bon and pnson tcnn comes with a
standard thr<'e-ycM pdrole en-
tencc.
Johnson's bill would enable
parole outhontics to 1mpo e parole
tenru; up to hie for dny pe~on con·
v1cted ot a SPX oflensc aga1m;t a
SEE BILL PAGE A11
llDll
AlOUNO TOWN --·-·--""-
IEST IUYS-----·.M
OAS~ IS
CDMMUllTY & CJ.UIS --"-AS
COWMITY KIUM 3
DA1DOOl ---·"---"-• ..Al I fAl11L _____ • __ _..
PClJCl flES_" __ ...J'l
mn -"W"f1'1i1U1t .. Mt 1t
SNm I
--. JJ
..Sift I • AJ
A2 Sotutdoy, February 12, 2000
Ondy Trone Christeson .
MORAL OF THE STORY
Notes from the
Middlefust
"As frightening as events can he,
and as ominous as the future Is, 1 feel a
peace that doesn't come from anything
mat£rial, or anything I've done, but
from deep within. My life is with God."
-Joseph Girzone
I am so thankful that I can trust God.
I am writing this the day before my
husband, Jon, and I leave for a trip
unlike one we have ever taken. Tomor·
row we will JOin six other people for a
short-term mission ttip to Cauo, Egypt.
After five days worlong with a
chµrch tbere, we will have a change or
pace when we spend three days on a
Bedouin expedition to the Red Sea. Our
trip will come to an end after three
busy days in Israel, where we will me~t
with local misSionanes as well as tour
the city sights Today I paid bills and
packed clothes, but r have been
preparing my heart for months for this
experience. One of the last things I will
pack. and one of the first things I will
unpack, will be my Bible. ls it because
I'm spiritual? No, it's because J'm
scared.
This trip does not feel 100% safe to
me. I know J will need to read passages
about God's presence and protection.
There is so much that is unknown
about what lies ahead, but I know God,
and I know that he is trustworthy. God
was so very faithful to us. I am writing
this section quickly after heanng the
announcement that we are soon to land
in Eilat, Israel. We boarded the plane
exhausted but encouraged alter our
time in Cairo.
Too much happened to be summed
up quickly, but God was with us, and
the people in the church were so wann
and friendly. The Egyptian government
is neither wann nor friendly toward the
church, however, and we were con-
stantly followed by police. I never did
get used to seeing so many machine
guns.
1 am so thankful that I can trust God
because tomorrow we start our Bedouin
experience. There is so much that is
unknown about what lies ahead, but I
know God and 1 know that he 1s trust-
worthy. God was so very faithful to us.
This passage is being written just after
I heard the announcement that we are
about to land in Tel Aviv, Israel. Too
much happened on the Sinai Peninsula
to be summed up quickly, other than to
say that God was with us and it was
unforgettable. I was clearly out of my
comfort zone, but God's love and pres-
ence among our group was so strong
that I felt surprisingly comfortable.
Today we head to Jerusalem. There is
so much that is unknown about what hes
ahead, but I know God, and I know that
be is trustworthy. God was so very faith-
ful to us. I'm writing this dfter heanng
the announcement that we are about to
land in Los Angeles. Too much hap-·
pened in Israel to be summed up quick-
1¥. other than to say that God was with
us, and it was amazing and i.nspuing.
Today we head home. I'm excited,
but I guess I'm a bit nervous as weU.
There is so much that is unknown
about what hes ahead, but r know God
and J know that he lS trustworthy.
And you can quote me on that.
• ONDY TRANE CHRISTESON Is a Newport
Beach resident who speaks frequently to par-
enting groups. She can be reached via e-mall at
andyOon~row.com or through the mall at
PO. Box 6140-No. SOS, Newport Beach 92658
Jlai¥!Pilot
VO~ 94, NO. 37
THOMAS tt; JOHNSON.
P\Jblisher
TONYOOOOO,
£ditor
..... MGl.AND,
Senior Oty Editor NMCYo.ava.
fMtutes Editor
ROGIR CNUOH.
Sports Editor
MMCMMTIN,
Photo Editor
ANntONY PICX.
HIWIEd®f
JDll J. IANTOL
,..De¥*
A»Y OlniNG,
Qalllfl9d .Adwf't•Sll'lg
1.MAJOIMON.
Promoeb•
.... PIDDllWt.
O*f~Offkw
•"l.•l..
• Zen Center of Orange
County's 'Nothing Special'
series teaches participants
to live in the moment and
be mindful.
Alex Coolman
DAILY PILOT
A t the Superbodies gym on
18th Street in Costa
Mesa, a man was running
on a treadmill, pushing himself
hard and not going anywhere.
On the busy road outside, cars
were rushing by on their way to
J~ba Juice or NikeTown.
And inside the Zen Center of
Orange County, just across the
street from Superbodies, Debo-
rah Banett was discussJng zalu,
the small, firm pillows the shape
of jelly doughnuts that are used
in sitting meditation.
• 1t's soft enough to give you
some cushlorung, but it also
retains its consistency," said Bar-
rett, the director of Zen training
at the center. "Some of them are
filled with kapok, an.d then some
of them use buckwheat."
The matter or finding a sup-
portive seating arrangement
might seem Wee a fairly mun-
dane consideration. But in Zen
custom, more so than in many
other spiritual practices, sitting is
something of an art.
~we spend a lot of time trying
to find a good pos1tion for peo-
ple,• she said, whether it's in a
chair, kneeling, or in some varia-
tion of the lotus position.
Moreover, Barrett, unlike
some practitioners, is a firm
believer that Zen is not some-
thing to be pursued exclusively
on a mountaintop or 111 some dis-
tant retreat. Zen should embrace
all the rutty gritty realities of life,
she thinks -from the noisy
commerce of 18th Street to the
details of a properly co structed
cushion.
The Zen Center is in the mid-
dle of a series of Tuesday
evening courses, •Nothing Spe-
cial,• whose goal is to help par-
tiopants find ways to make this
real-worJd application of their
spirituality.
"All of this practice is
designed for people who are
working, who have family lives
and are living Wee any American
does,• said Barrett, a woman
with short gray hair and oval
glasses.
Even in its title, the series,
wtuch ls based on a book by
Charlotte Joko Beck, emphasizes
the everyday nature of the lessons
Faith .
CALENDAR
SPECIAL EVENTS
MORE LIGHT AND LOS RANOtOS
The More Ught Presbyterians
meeting today will discuss the
topic "More Light and Los Ran-
chos: What is the Relationship
Between the Chapter and the
Presbytery?• The meeting is at
5:30 p .m . at the church, 2100
Mar Vista Drive, Newport
Beach. For more information,
call (949) 644-1341 .
SERMON ON THE MOUNT
Presbyte rian Chu rch of the
or advertlwments herein c.n be
reproduced without written per·
mlSS!On of copyright owner
HQW TO REACH US
Ortui.tlon
The 11mes or-. County
(800) 252-9141
~ Classlfltd (949) 642·5678
Oisplty (949) 642-<4321
EdltorW
Ntws (949) 642.5680
Sports (949)574-<422l
News. SpOrts Fp (949).6llM170
£-me1I. ct.itypilotelttkill.com
MM!Offk•
Business Office (949) 642--021
8Wneia F•11(949)611-7126
~11¥ l"'-~ ....-.
• limit Mmr~. ~
wm.w LaWel. lliiillllll
fdltOI'
S-.Mettllt,
~lng(dftor
Mart Mfit11ft,
Dir~ of l"hotography
·~~ s.nlof Editor, 0., Delk
etM"'-0.M...,.._...
. econd Church of Christ Scientist
The Second Chur<:h of
Christ Scientist holds ..er-
VJces Sunday at 10 a.m Sun-
day SC'.hool for youth through
age 20 ls offered durmg the
morning service. A testimo-
nia.I service 15 held Wednel>-
day at 8 p rn. Child care 1S
provided at all services for
the very young. A noon tP ti-
monial meetmg is held on
tho first WC'dnesday of each
month. The church is at 3100
Petcific View Drive, Corona
del tvf.af. The ChriStian Sci-
ence Reading Room, at 3500
E. Coast Highway, Corona
del Mar, ls open 9 a.m. to 5
p.m Monday through Fri·
day, 10 am to 4 p.m. Satut·
day and 1 to 3 p.m. Sunday.
For more infonnation, call
(949) 644-2617.
t
~ ........ --
TAYA KASHUBA I DAILY PILOT
Deborah Barrett, pastoral counselor at the Zen Center of
Orange County in Costa Mesa, sits ln one of the positions prac-
Uced at the center.
that it is designed to impart.
"Nothing Special• doesn't
teach people how to meditate for
a dozen hours straight or to reach
a higher plane of existence, but il
does, Barrett says, have some-
thing to say for people who want
to be a liWe more •mindful" as
they go about their lives.
"For most people, it's their
childfen, their teenagers and
their spouses that are the hard
thing," she said, and not some
vague plan to achieve nirvana.
What Barrett thinks Zen can
contribute to people's struggles
with these realities is a greater
sense of centeredness and care,
the kind of "being in the
moment" that many people
assume is waiting just around
the comer but somehow never
manage to attain.
Covenant will hold a discus-
sion on •Sermon on the Mount
Seeking First the Kmgdom
of God" at 9:45 a.m Thursday.
The church is at 2850 Fairview
Road, Costa Mesa. For more
information , call (7 14) 557-
3340.
MEOrTATION WORKSHOP
The Rev. Samuel Trumbore, of
the First Unitanan Universality
Society of Albany, N.Y., will
conduct a meditation w orkshop
from 1 to 4 p.m. Feb. 19 at the
Orange Coast Urutanan Uruver-
salist Church, 1259 Victoria St.,
Costa Mesa. The workshop is
free. For more infonnation, call
(949) 733-1622. . • '•Ir
•Everyone has an rntu1tion of
Zen. because everyone has had
the experience of being com-
· pletely satisfied m watching a
sunset on vacation,• she said.
"But most of the time, we're
thmking it's the next thing that
will be satisfying" -such as
anticipating a play during dinner
and then anticipating falling
asleep while watching the play.
Through the Zen practices
involved in the workshops,
wtuch mclude sitting and walk-
ing meditation, discussions and
"mindfulness tea/ Barrett says
she's able to avoid some of these
pitfalls, and also to be more fully
engaged in whatever she hap-
pens lo be doing at the moment.
Hit doesn't draw you away from
the events of life, it bring you
more deeply into them,• she said.
BENJAMIN NETANYAHU
Fonner Israeli Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu will speak
a t Temple Bat Yahm at 7 p.m.
Feb. 27 as the temple's Noonan
Schiff Scholar Lectwer. Tickets
a te 518 to $300. Tumple Bat
Yahm is a t 1011 Ccltnelback St.,
Newport Beach. For more inJor-
mation, call (94~) 644-1999.
PURIM CARNIVAL
Temple Bat Yahm will hold a
Purim Carnival starting at 9
a .m. March 19. The event will
feature food, games, ndes,
entertainment and more. The
temple 11 at 1011 Camelback
St., Newport Beach. For rnore
' information, ca.U (949) 759-1881.
WEATHER AND SURF
Doily Pik>t
Barrett, 48, was orlgmally
S,trawn to Zen when she was in
college. She h&d considered her-
self Catholic, but her spiritual
advisor encouraged her to keep
an open mind. •
HOnce I discovered Zen, that
was really it for me," she said.
Often, the people who come
to the Zen Center -and they
come from San Clemente, from
Anaheim, from Long Beach and
elsewhere -have a similar
background. They were raised m ·
some variety of Christian faith
but tum to Zen, Without neces-
sarily feeling ariy conflict
between the practices, in search
of a greater sense of depth.
"They feel that they could be
more than they are right now,•
Barrett said. "They need some-
thing to help that happen.•
When they do get down' to
meditation, the sheer shock of
remaining still for a moment after
a Uf e full of motion and distrac-
tion can sometimes be unsettling.
"People kind of want that
sense of being close to them-
selves and immediately involved
in their lives1 and yet th.ey're
afraid of it, too,• Barrett said.
She pointed to Americans'
enthusiasm for relentless televi-
sion consumption and cell phone
chatter as a symptom of this fear
But in Zen practice, the time.
spent at least trying to meditate,
with cell phone turned off and
rear end finnly planted on zafu
pillow, is ess~tial
"The big mistake people
make is thinkmg that the y know
· all about meditation because.
they've read about It in books,·
she said.
"It would be like Ii you read a
book about swururung but had
never been in the pool. They
know these things, but it's a
question of getting them in the
nght situation where we can
help that to flourish."
When newcomen. arrive at
the center, therefore, the first the
expenence is,-essentially, noth-
ing. They sit silently on the zafu
and listen to the11 thoughts or the
nolSe of the cars humming down
the street.
For some people, tlus is not as
easy as it sounds. ·
"If they don't know how to
meditate, we just have them sit
on a chair and be quiet," Barrett
said.
The next •Nothing Special"
course will be at 1 p.m. Tuesday.
The topic for the meeting is
"Change: Experiences and
Experiencing.•
WEEKLY EVENTS
JESUS IN BLUE JEANS
ThP. Rev. Gail Miller will hold a
dass based on Laurie Beth -
Jone5' book •Jesus in Blue
Jeans· from 5 to 6 p.rn. Tu~
days. The class Will consider the
ways Jesus would deal with
practical, everyday challenges.
The dais meets at the New
Thought Commuruty Church.
1929 Tustin AVe. .• Costa Mesa.
For pricel u"1 more informa-
tion, call f949) 646-3199.
~OllCE TIPS
TEMP£RATURES
Balboa
49162
Corona del Mar
48163
Costa Mesa
48165
TIDES
TODAY
Firrt low
9.08 a.m ....................... 1.3
Ftrs1 high
• Parited, occupied vehicles containing one or more
penons are especially signifteant If obserWd at an
unusual hour. They could be possible lookouts for a
burglary In progress, even If the occupants appear to
be lovers.
Newport Beach
47162 w
Newport Coast
47163
SURF FORECAST
The current northwest
swell will drop through
the day. A new swell
arriving Sunday llfttt· noon will produce 4-to
6-foot bru keu at~
With good exposure.
LOCATION SID
~ 23
Newpoft 2 3
8'-cldtt 2-4
..,_ Jttty 2-3
CdM 3-4
1:57. m, •H .. ~•"'"'" 4 7
Se<ond low
8 02 p.m ....................... 1.9
Second high
l 02 p.m ......... _,_,_,., 3 0
SUNDAY
First IOW
10·41 a"m ......... -.. "·~ ... 0.7
First high
3 OS a m , ...... ~·-.. ·--4.9
St<ond low
9.27 p m ................... m.2.2
Second high
S.06pm ...................... 3.0 .... ~ 59 ..
• Al'ly vehicle moving slowly and without lights or fol·
lowing a course that appears aimless or repetitive Is
S\HPICIOUS Occupants may be US!ng for pl.tees to rob or burglarize.
• Apparent bus nes~ trans.ct1ons conducted from a
vehicle, especially around ~hools or !)Mks and if juv.-
nlles are involved, c~uld mean possible drug sales.
• Persons being forced Into vehicles -e:$pe(ially tf ~
are Juveniles or fflnlles -rnav mean 1 poulb&t kid·
Npp1ng. R«ord the licenw pl.m and <Ml poffce.
•The lblncb ied wNdl pMtec:t on~ t*>dc m1y be
stoten Contact~ control \'Ylth • lklnlil .... runblf. ..
• Pl«e gravel outside windows whtf9 you•,. con-
ctmed ~ ptOWlen, The nohe ot '°"'*'• ......... on h wll tlfW to elert you
..
Doily Pilot Soturdoy, February 12, 2000 A3 ·
Admit it or not, NIMBYs often get a bad rap
e than a year ago, J
wrote in this space
at little kids were
getting too many SOC'cer trcr
phies Nothing I have written
since provoked the fury of the
reaction fo that occcr column,
although one guy came dose.
On Dec. 2, the Druly Pilot
published a letter from a read-
er who wrote, "Kids today are
absolutely spoiled and Steve
Smith is one of the major con-
tributors to the over-coddling
of youth that takes place in
America tQday. •
My coddled kids enjoyed.
that one.
But the soccer reaction was
eclipsed last week by the anli-
El Toro airport crowd, not in
fury but in number Less than
five hours after last week's El
Toro column tut the lawns and
patios of the twin qties, the E
Toro reaction won.
That was the good news.
The bad news was that every
e-mail I received supported
my position that both locals
and South County residents
Steve Smith
WHAT'S UP
must jom now to stop the
expansion of John Wayne Air-
port.
Apparently, the COIWIUl
found its way onto a Web site
chat room visited by both
sides of the debate. After
much consideration, which
included a request for a ruling
from Pilot editor Tony Dodero,
J have decided not to use the
names of those who wrote.
but I cannot pass up the
chance to use some excerpts
One of the messages. from
an off10dl of an antiairport
group, stated that they had
extended "olive branches" to
the pro-airport people but
were rebuffed. Talk is chedp.
What I hope to see is action.
Instead of telling me about
the past, 1t would have been
nice to open my mailbox a
Jew days ago and read m the
latest slick brochure from the
aritiairport people that they
are also helping to limit the
expansion of Jobn Wayne A.JI.
port with a method other than
the sure-to-be-court-chal-
lenged Measure F.
Sadly, there isn't one word
on the subject in the mailer.
Slick brochures hitting hot
buttons are expensive and
there isn't money available for
olive branches.
The reaction from both
sides, which, by the way,
included Newport Beach resi-
dents opposed to an El Toro
airport, showed me that they
have more ll1 common than
they'd like to admit.
The b1ggest link is not
wanting a large auport in
their neighborhood, but not
minding 1t 1.11 someone else's.
If you adhere to ttus policy,
you are a NIMBY -which
stands for "not in my uack-
yard." •
For yean., NIMBYs have
weathered atldcks for oppos-
mg such things dS nuclear
waste dwnps, power plants,
jails and, yes -airports. So,
what's so bad about being d
NIMBY, anywdy?
Somehow, this notion thdl
not Wdilting a big jail or a
noisy, smelly auport or
nuclear wdsle dump m on.e's
area has a Sllgmd attached to
it. That's bd.loney
Are we supposed to want a
ldf9e jail or r'loisy. smelly dlr-
port w1ttun d short dnve of our
homes? ls that normal or
supremely dltruistic?
No. It's foolish. Large 1cuJs
belong m the boondocks and
so do nuclear dumps and h1g,
noisy. smelly airports.
We NIMBYs want to pr~
serve peace and qwel dnd
open spaces That's why we
Nabrcll Value
move here and that's why we
sldy NIMBYs di.I over the
counby have gotten a bad rap
for far too long
Ve5, the anu-and pro-(llf-
port groups have more in
common than they have to
disagree on, but when egos
and agendas get in the way, it.
Le; not that edSy to see
Ttus was made apparent to
me by another dillldirport offl-
oal who e-mailed that he
would be hdppy to help limit
the expansion of John Wdyne
Airport JUSt as soon as the El
Toro' airport matter was a
memory.
Not exactly a hand up Yes,
there are somt> with other
agendas, those who U\SlSl we
must grow or pP.nsh, but I
don't believe they represent
the ma1onty or those m the
area.
Scratch henedth lffe sur-
face of the blather from both
Sides and you'll find rampant
NIMBYism But rather than
use their corrunon NIMBY
ground, the two sides have
lobbed verbal and written
hand grenades at each 0U1er
to support the11 arlJUlllents.
After all, turning yourself
off and walk.Jng away from
an opposmg Vlew is easy.
The hard part ts sitting
down and working through a
problem until tl is solved.
But there is good news for
theAYSO
The gentle assault on my
e-mail system from the au-
port crowd Wds larger m
nwnber than the soccer tro-
phy response, but as it ""'as
orchestrated, 'cannot in :-
good conscience qmnt 1t as a
Vdlld contender for the
crown
So, soccer trophy fdns,
your record ts salr.
And what's so hdd ctbout
thdt? A lot of conrPm about
our kids IS qwte rl·d~!iunng.
• STEVE SMrTH is a Costa Mesa r~·
1dent and freelance writer He can be r~ached at ...
da1/ypilotfllat1rn5com
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• Valentine Heart Cake
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• Mi.so • Spinach • Green 'Tea
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• Cannelloni • Asian Noodle • !feaveget4ble • Spicy Dragon
• Brown Rice • BucJad1eat New r.-. Size! Sodium
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•Black Bean !2'28 Enchilada ~
REG. '3.49 9-10 oz.
, Dinner Speclal
• Cupid's Pasta •
Red heart-~haped ricotta cheese
ravioli topped \\-ith Ma's homest)'ie
marinara. Sel\'l'd \\-ith fresh
steamed asparagus. choke of~
or salad & bread
-
A4 Saturday, Fe~uory 12, 2000
Happy birthday, Sophia!
•Friends join Corona del Mar woman to celebrate
. her 95t}\ bJ.Ithday with soup, cake and margaritas.
Andrew Gluer
0AtLY PILOT
\
CORONA DEL MAR -
She celebrated her first
buthday party ever with
friends, margdr1tas, polka
·mumc and taco salad.
"1 was always busy work·
ing," said Sophia Cook, who
· turned 95 years old on Fri·
day. "I never had time to cel-
ebrate."
But Or} Fnday, Cook -
whose arthritis in her knees
has confined her to her bed
and wheelchair for the past
fi.ve years -partied hard.
A church group from Our
Lady Queen of Angels in
Eastbluff brought meatball
soup, a heart-shaped birth-
day cake and margaritas -
her favorite drink. They
plugged in a small boombox
and cued up "Moonlight Pol-
ka."
The women have alternat-
ed visiting Cook -who is at
home alone with her care-
taker and talking green
parakeet, Sam, most days -
for months.
Rosemary Warde brings
her soup, so Cook calls her
"Soup Lady." Vicki Klein
bnngs Gennan crepes and is
called "Blini Lady." There's
also a "Beer Lady,• "Margari-
ta Lady" and "Leftover Lady."
On Friday, they all joined
Cook at her cozy home. A
Costa Mesa hairdresr;f'r cut
and styled her whitt! h:\lr into
a neat bob. And he macle her
up lightly, to bring O\J ~ ller
eye color.
"I was afraid he ffilght tart ·
you up,• said Barba1a "B::'er
Lady" Tate.
Cook smiled and qw<'U)"
laughed at the ladies jokes
-not one slipped by.
•we were going to put in
95 candles,• said Klein as
she carried in the cake. "But
we didn't want to start a bon-
tu:el "
While she sat in her
wheelchair wrapped in a
white knit shawl, her bril-
liant green eyes darted
around the ioom like the bee
that flew into her living
room.
Cook said she's frustrated
that she can no longer make
clothes, drive her gray Toy-
0..t J\']Nx w lf1 lltlvt ( ~1J/ hr .n .. I ,r;1r, tit.Ji 1e c;,,.,, u ~ u11t j.1JfiJ ,,111
,,.: .... rill( ( /lri;IW•I UlrJ.
The Re, d Pc1d 0 Ha)' UL,, Rector
"A Cod-ccnmcd parish comn'lunit). inmuc:tcd bt the Wo1d of God
:llld renewed by the Sacramcnt.s
Our Lady Queen of Angels
2046 M:ir VisUL Drive
Newport Beach, California 92660
(949)644-0220 Fax (949)644-1349
Rev. Monsignor Williun P. McL.iughlin, Pastor
UTURGLES:Saturday, 5 p.m [Cantor),
Sunday, 7:00 (Quiet), 8:30 (Contemporary), 10:00 (Choir).
11 :30 a.m. (Cantor} and ;:00 p.m. (Contemporary)
Bethel Baptist
Adult and Children's Sunday School Hour · 9:45 a.m.
Worship Service • 1 I ·OO a.m
Sunday Evening • 6:00 p.m.
Thursday Bil>le Study • 6:40 p.m.
·~ 111111~ JIOU lo worship lh~ l..otd wllh u.s. C:om4! and lurn potlJ4!r(UI
pnnclpla and lrlltlu from Ood 'I WO«l lhat you can build IJOO' l1(c upoo
Come u uxt)oln our hmru 11¥lhcr In adoraUon o(lh;,. Lurd Jesus ChrtJt. •
901 So. Euclid Santa Ana CA 92704
714 839~3600
's Promise for When
~ou Confront Death"
lJohn l '4: J • 7)
FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST
3303 Via Udo
Nowpcxt ltcxt'I
673-1340 or 673-6150
Olwcti 10 am• & sm
!Mlday School 1 O am
~ •pn
SECOND CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST
3 t 00 Pl:JcUlc V'MW Dr
Newpa1 Becx:t\
6#2617 or 675-:4661
ChurC:h lOam
SUnday School 1 o am
~~·pn
6 tat~ 12 DCDI ..... -'..,,, _ ~.,.,, ..... ....,.., .. ,,. ,,..,.,..,,
f'illnu 96:6
Sophia Cook breaks into
a smile as she reads a card
for her 95th birthday.
old Celka sports car or tear
through crossword puzzles
as she used to.
"My rrund is still sharp
and energetic, but my flesh
is weak," she said.
But for the most part, she
said, she has enjoyed her life
-especially working. Her
favorite job she ever had was
working as a typist at the
state Department of Motor
Vehicles.
She said her secret to liv-
ing long has been working
and eating a lot. Specifically,
she recommended eating
NE\\ THOLGIITC...HLRCH
· Srinia of Mmd Cmtn
I Ftb llth
lnTh<• Oli.IOINCIOPMl'<O
Rn G.;al Milk r
c;.111 ftb .. l:lth
r.ova. MAXL~ nm "'ou oo aOl.'ND
Ot J11.u1tll.ab.•11•
'-1111<1.ly '><-r>icc: 111:50
·uncbySthool 10'°
C"tgbbn1hood C.ommunit~ (",c,nt~r.
11115 Park A~ .• C.oota Mt'11l
Wt'CI llC';ahn1 'ic:mr~ 10 !IO <&m,
19'2'1 Tu.tm Aw:, VlSIA Mc-a
"41 \\U(Uhup· 10.12 nuon Ourl4t1<111 .
<'411 (949) 641>,199
for mformauon ,_.... ,....,_ ...... ,.., lltAllilwr
Co1t4 Me111's
Pres~terian Church
of th~ Covenant
11 "Adjusting Old Hopes"
to New Reali1f s
Tiu~ UJ\cnant Choir
P.a\lor lim Mc Calmunt Pn:.u:hing
l'roitr~mt for kids and adulu
2850 I a1M<:W R<»d ftl Adami
7 14-557-3340
CHURCH
''Optn Amis and Open Minds"
Worship 9:30
Ne H•rbor
Luthenln Church
THDewrOr ...............
IredltlomlLadlwM _ ............ .... . ....,o ....... ... ...... , .... _ ...... , ......... " ..
' Doily Pilot
PHOTOS BY ERIC ~1\JCCI I DAILY PllOT
Sophia Cook takes a slice of cake as she celebrates her 95th birthday Friday with, from
left. Pamela Hottman, Rose Mary Warde and Vicki Klein.
"peasant food " -a bal-
anced diet of sauerkraut,
pig's feet and ham hocks.
At her party, she nibbled
at her portion of taco salad
and sipped her soup. For
desert, she spooned a crirn·
son rose, sculpted from icing,
right off her cake.
"Haven't you always
wanted to do that?" asked
• HARBOR CHRISTIAN CHURCH ..1 (OlsclplH of Christ)
2401 lrvln• Ave 11 Senta l11bel
Newport 811ch Sund1y Worship · 10:00AM
Bruce Van Blair, M1nm.t
Worship Services •e:00em
9-ooam Adult Church School
•10:00Mn-~School
•Child Cart Provided
611 Htiotrope Aw .• Corona del Mw
(949 644-7400
First United Methodist Church
ofC~aMesa
420 W t 19th Street, C~ta Mesa
fbtlnl ofWonllfp IO:OOam
Rlduird L. Ewio11 Pastor
Cburda S<hool 9:00.m • IO:l5am
949-541-7727
1400 W. Balboa 81.J, Nnopon Rca4h
9:00 • m -.Suncby School fut all ago 10.00 Lm. -Wunh1p (w11h child cm)
The Rn'. Or. Gtotp R. Crilp. r.ftor
1949) 67';3805
Co•taMeM
MUAVRDI
UNmD MITHOOllT CHUltCH
1701 ...... c..M.
W.ehlp a Church School
1130.,... 10.00 a.m.
Or Richard 111•1979 823'
•Leftover Lady" Pamela
Hoffman. "I think when
you're 95, you can do pretty
much whatever you like,•
The ladies said sometimes
it seems like they have more
fun visitin9 Cook than she
does herself.
"She really gives me a
great outlook on life," Klein
said.
"She's a role model and
we really teel her blessing,"
added Hoffman.
Before leaving the party,
Hoffman set the agenda for
her next visit, which is
scheduled for today.
• I'U come by and we can
eat the leftover soup and
dish on all the other ladies,•
she said, as a smile appeared
on Cook's face. •We can talk
about what they were wear-
ing and how their hair
looked.·
WA-ft' "!!t . ' WEDDINGS • ANNOUNC MENT5
CUSTOM INVITATIONS • 6ALL00~5
"lM our trained staff captul'e
that special moment"
WE DELIVER
,... stor9 for dtKa/11)
MON-SAT M CLC>8ED 8utc>AV8
270 E. 17th St., Cpsta Mesa
. (949) 722-1803
Daily Pilot r Sotvrd9)', February 12, 2000 AS .
Rotary leaders prepare for 21st century In
BRIEF
... ' OBITUARY
· Harbor-area real ei.tate
agent Price Shapiro was
among the more than 500
Rotary leaders from 66 coun-
tries who gathered an Ana-
heim this past week lo dis-
cuss Rotary and volunteensm
in the new century
"Governors-elect• repre-
senting 530 Rotary districts
focused on how lo adapt the
world's first service organiza-
tion to today's needs. The
eight-day training meeting,
wilh the theme ~create
Awdreness -Take Action,•
highlighted J.nnovabve
Rotary activities from around
the globe, including literacy,
urban peace, disaster reltef
and food distnbution pro-
jects.
Officially titled "Interna-
tional Assembly,• the pro-
ceedings were broadcast live
in six languages to prepare
the governors-elect to lead
Rotary's 1.2 million members
in more than 160 countries
beginrung July 1. In addition
to millions of hours volun-
teered annually, Rotary con-
tributes more J.}lan $28 mil-
lion in l}urnanilartan aid and
relief around the globe,
funds 1,200 scholars to study
abroad and coordinates pro-
fessional development
opportunities for 2,000 young
leaders internationally.
And through its flagship
program, PolioPlus, Rotary
will have contnbuted more
than $500 million lo erdcti-
cate polio by 2005. Shapiro ts
a member of the Newport
Beach Sunnse Rotary Club.
MOYIE BENEFIT: Save the
date of April 27, 2poo, for the
annual Exchange Club of
Newport Harbor Movie Ben-
efit being held al Edwards
Lido Theater. Event chdir
Ducan Forgey says things
are slartlng to hum with the
Rusty Pelican Restaurant one
of the first to sign up lo pro-
vide food for the event.
Movies and stdrs to be
announced I
HE WILL BE MISSED:
Members of the Rotary Club
of Newport-Balboa are
mourning the death of 22-
year member Gaylord Wag-
Huge Savings
up to
70°/o Off
Name Brand
Factory Seconds
Different
Sizes & Styles
Call for mon: infornm1on .llld
m:rnufa1:1urcr~ namr
HEMPHILL'S RUGS & CARPETS
Mon-Fri 10·6 Sat 10·5
.230 East 17th St. Costa Mesa
(949) 722-7224
J]~~l?}J
by GNgOry It Glclu. D.D.S.
DENTAL IMPLANT HISTORY
The research tha1 gave nse to dental
implant technology was undertaken by
Swedish pllyslaan Per·lngvar Branemark
nearly 40 years ago. While studying
m1croetrcutab0n of tht bone and wound
healing, ht accidentally discovered
osseolntegrabon (the. process by which
booes adheres to metal Implants). As he
placed an ~table optCal deYi<» inlO the
bone ol an animal lo obselvt circulatory w
oiUlr a changes In the bone, he IOund that
the bone adhered very strongly to the
dea's l!lanUn housing '1tW tme M IS tbs
inlonnabOn fll1 dlnlisls llO'# rely on when
~a melal c.,t'* ii*> lhl ~
of implant patients. Onct the t11amum
~ IS in place and ~ llSIUI Is dosed
ovet R, 3 lo 6 monlhs att lllowld for Ille
melal and bone" botd k>gehr. A!tM !NI,
an incision 1 made 111 lhl gums IO unoovtr
tll cyinder and a labricilld aown • tilhlf
ICIMd Of cemented inlO lhl cy!inder to
crtlle I~ IOOlh. Oemal implants 111 chahging IN way
pt09lt live. With them, people are
~ Ill COn'lfor1 and COlildlra to
NI I IPflk, laugh arid lllfOY .,. Keeping
you hMllhy and happy is OUf first conc:em
We wll 111 you knOW abOut new procedltes
Ind lldl!IQlogitl Ind whit fltY can do f«
you Rtmetfttlef ltlll m.rlO II lllOft
economicll tlWI ,.,. Olnlll d**'4ll
For"'""'~ dttllll cert ...
.. .. yoll lnlo .. 2111 wuy. e111 .. 11
....... ID .... lfl lippolltMlt
Wl'lt--• .,...,,, C.. DIM .
............. Im!
P.S 911taMr1 .. 9"*lllY nol goOd
ti! fill lat._,_. blcMI GI ................... ..........
Jim de Boom
COMMUNITY & CLUBS
ner. 1Wenty-two members of
the dub celebrated Wagner's
life with his two daughters,
tus brother and family
fnends a week go Friday as
a memorial service was held
at sea prior to the spreacting
of his ashes.
Wagner served the club in
many ways, said club presi-
dent Jlm Sirk.in, but will be
best remembered for tus con-
tribution of humor as Joke
Master for the club for many
years. Condolences to the
family.
SERVICE CLUB MEETINGS
THIS WEEK: Want to gel '
more involved in your cqm-
munity, make new friends, .
network, or to give some-
thing back to your ~ommuni·
ty? Try a service club! You
are invited to attend a club
meeting this coming week.
Md.fly clubs will buy your
first guest meal for you.
•Tuesday: 7:30 a.ra.-:-
The Newport Beach Sunrise
Rotary Club meets al the
Balboa Bay Club. 6:30 pm.
-The Coi.ta Mc a-Newport
Harbor Lion~ Club will meet
al the Costa Mesa Goll and
Country Club.
• Wednesday: 7·15 a.m:-
The South COdst Metro Rotary
Club will meet at the Center
Club. Newport Harbor Kiwa-
nis Club meets at the Uruver-
sity Athletic Club. Noon -
The Exchange Club of
Omnge Coast meets at the
Bahia CorinUudll Yacht Club.
6 p.m -The Rotary Club of
Newport Harbor meets at the
Bahia Corinthian Yacht Club
for its annual speecl) contest.
• Thu.r$day: The 'Costa
Me.5<1 Orange Coast Breakiast
Llons Club meets at Mimi's
Cafe to hear Nancy Harless
speak on NHeritage House
Activities • Noon -The
lGwanis Club of Newport
Beach-Corona del Mar meets
at the Balua Corinthian The
Costa Mesa Klwarus Club
meets at the Holiday lnn The
Exchange Club of Newport
Harbor meets dl lhe Riverboat
Restaurant fQr a program pre·
sented by Offtcer Tom
Monarch of the Newport
Beach Police Department's
OARE program. The New-
port-Irvine Rotary Club meets
at the lrvmc Marriott.
• COMMUNITY & CLUBS 1s pub-
lished every Saturday in the Daily
Pilot. Send your service club's
meeting information by fax to
(949) 660-8667, e-mail to
jdeboomOaol.com; or by mail to
2082 S.E. Bnstol St., Suite 201,
Newport Beach 92660-1740
FAA inspections
not expected to
cause delays
JOHN WAYNI! AIR-
PORT -No flights will be
canceled or drldyed
because of mandrllory air-
plane inspections by the
Federal Aviatton Admmis·
tTdlton, an airport !.pokes·
woman said Fnduy
On Friday, th" PAA
ordered dll airhnes to <1Jlow
them to \.msnsct MD 80,
MD-90, Dt::"Q and 717 JC>l-
liners -dbout one-tifttt. of
the nation's passt"nger au-
line fleet.
The Aluskrt A1rhnf>s
plane that crdshcd and
killed all 88 of its pa!-.scn-
gers 20 miles north of Los.
Angeles last month Wd'> d
MD-80.
The FAA 1s tnVl'~ttgdl
mg whether d !-.lrtppeµ
screw in the dtrplrtne's lat!
caused the cr<lsh
During inspection'> on·
Friday, FAA engmt>ers chs-
covered defective sne>ws
in six other MD-80s ·
The FAA will tnsJH'C"I
several of thE> pltmec, flying
• out of here ell lc1rge>r au-
ports around the country,
said John Wayne Airport
spokeswoman . Ngh1a
Nguyen.
-Andrew Glazer
Eddie Eader
Eddie Eader of New-
port Beach died Jan. 26.
He was 81 .
8orn m Huntington
Beach ori Mdrch 13, 1919,
Mr. Eader led a full dnd •
active life. ·
Mr. Eader's boxing
cdrePr, which started m hts
lc1tc teens, took him all the
way to M<ldison Squ<.1re
Garden m New York l le
en1oyed surfmg and, at
one potnt, was d lifeguMd
m Huntington Beach.
Mr. Eader retned in
1991 from sandblasting
boat bottoms. He was rtlso
d machinist and fisher-
man.
Vlhile livmg and boat-
ing m Newport Beach, Mr
Eader became social with
Ward Bond, Humphr<•y
BocJart, John Wayne, John
Ford, Ken Curtis und
Andrew McLaughlcn,
dCcorcling to good friend-;
Mark and Toru Arrillstead
or NC'wport Beach.
Mr Eader's pdrents,
John I fowell and Minnie
Le<' Clark, were a blCI
mfluE>ncc> on his life.
I hs favorite hobbiP'>
mdurlc>cl Listening to Dl.X.-
ie>land JaU: dnd Big Bdncl
mtLs1c In 1976, he trnve>led
with Murray f\kEachern,
the d1rector'of the Tommv
Dorsey Orchestra. ·
Mr Eader served dur-
Eddie Eader
mg World War II and par-
ltap<1lt•d trt Ute D·D<ly
tn\'a ion pf Nonndndr
After thP wm, Mr ~ 1d-
er meed Cilr , motorc\ clP...s
rtnd hoots Latt•r in hte, he
i-nJoyed trnvchng m WL<;
' niot11rhOt11P and h•lhng
stones ohout hts po-;t
experH'llC i>s
l le J'i surv1\1•d by hts
\.Vlff', Anclfl•<1; brother,
How .ml s1sti •r , Chdrlolte
Rous!1P<111 c1 ncl Lois
!\.1t('thH1ls, "h•pc h1ld1 Pn,
Lu1<ld Begnc1ud, Kcvm
W<1r!1kl'n, ,met four ... t<.•p-
qrandc h1JdrM1
A uwmon,il gctthenng
wtll t.ikc• pl11c:P from 1 to b
µ.m rel> lQ di the Amen·
c:an Lt>qum hall, 215 15th
~t Newport BPach
For ~ healthier heart,
h~re's .somet · g. you'll
find easy to cut out.
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THEN SCHEDULE AN APPOINTMENT BY CALLING
800/309-XRAY(9729).
I <lr t\H•he year,, To-.hih.\ .10J J hug Ho.,pit.:il haH· kd 1he \\il) 111 hdping Oran~'-" C ount~
n·'>i4lcnt better undcr,ti\nd and preHnt ~clrdH•"•''~ular Ji c.:i . And nu''· through th1' 'P<'-
dal Hc~rt I Jcahh Month .WOO otfor. '"c'rc pn,ud to imroJmc the nh)~t ;uhancl•d ~ard10-
'·' \:Ul.tr cr~cning tl~hnology .\\ 1il.lblc an)" hL'TC. •
..
. '
A6 Saturday, February 12, 2000 Daily Pilot
Shopping tips for last-minute Valentine's Day gifts ...........
~Inc.
changes name v alentine's Day gift Specialty bakery items for
giving is ea~ with Valentine's Day are available
local specials going at French's Putry Bakery of
on South Coast Plaza has Costa Mesa. The bakery car-
added Le Mll'age Flonst in ries fresh cookleii, cakes,
front of the carou el at pies, tortes, rolls and bread.
Carousel Court and at the It al.So does custom orders.
elevator in the Crate & Barrel It's at 1170 W. Baker SL
wing fe1tturi.ng single-stem .
r~. bouquets, and a van-And at French's Cupcake
ety of romantic and exotic Greer Wylder Bakery you can get $2 off on floral arrangements. an 8-inch and larger Valen-And, at the South Coast BEST BUYS. tine's Day decorated cake, or Plaza concierge. you can a large valentine cookie tray purchase the ·gift of choice" Bemarct's Plne Jewelry is by bringing in the Daily Pilot gift certificate. The certificate having a Vale~tine's Day coupon in today's paper. The can J>e used at more than offer is good through Mon-280 stores and restaurants at sale: The full-service jewelry day. French's Cupcake Bak· store carries 14-karat, 18-South Coast Plaza. karat and platinum jewelry, ery is at 273 E. 17th St. 1n
Roger's Gardens has bv-c:t.nd 1t Qffers watch repairs, Costa Mesa. It's making spe-
mg floral arrangements that custom designs and 1t has a cial heart-shaped breads,
will last for months and grdduate gemologist. It's at cookie trays, cakes, cup-
make great Valentine's Day 2706 Harbor Blvd. in Costa cakes, and pies for Valen-
gilts. A rose garden basket Mesa. For more ihformation, tine's Day. For more informa-
comes complete v.rith mmia-call (714) 241-9404. tion,call(949)642-0571
ture roses, cycldlllen, fems
and ivy for $75.. A Pha-At Helen Grace Choco-Yin 'n Yang Harmonious
laenoptilS orchid basket 1s lates you'll be able to find Home Accents, on Balboa
planted with an African v10-the perfect gilt for a choco-lsland, is having its first
let, ivy, ferns and French nb-holic valentiile. There are anniversary sale with many
bon {or $100. The English heart-shaped boxes, long-items marked down to more
Basket Garden comes with stemmed chocolate truffle than 50% off. Included in the
hydrangeds, azaleas, cycla-roses, individual chocolate sale are teakwek>d planter's
men, fems and ivy for $100. hearts', gourmet cdiamel chairs from Bali at $199. The
Roger's Gd!deos is at 2301 apples, and chocolate cham-sale will end Feb. 27. Yin 'n
San Joaquin Hills Road in pagne bottles. It's at WestcWf Yang is at 301 Marine Ave.
· Newport Beach. For more Plaza in Newport Beach. For #B on Balboa Island. For
information. call (949) 640-more information, call (949) more information, call (949)
5800. 631-8700. 723-5579.
••
•Lunch
•Dinner
!7i'eat._yota q;~ ·.
to apeciti/~ft
fam $JM 2eonad~ Jjbf
,
Men's & Ladies'
Sportswear, Golf Bags,
Golf Shoes, & many other items.
~
JOHn Lf onHRD'S
GOLF S HOP
Store Hours
Mon • Fri 8:30 om -7:30 pm
Sot & Sun 8:00 om • 5:30 pm
3100 Irvine Avenue • Newport Beach
949·852·8689
The Newport Harbor
NauUc:al Museum Gift Shop
is having a "grand sale• with
merchMdise marked down
15% to 50% off, The New-
port Harbor Nautical Muse-
um is at 151 E Pacific Coast
Highway in Newport Beach.
It's open from 10 a.m. (o 5:30
p.m. Tuesday through Sun-
day. For more information,
call (949) 673-7863.
Goll enthusiasts will
appreciate the latest sale
going on at GoU Day now
through Feb 23. Goll Day
carries all of the top name
brands of goU apparel, clubs, .
shoes, bags and accessories.
Currently there's a discount
on Honors Pro Walker bag
for $59.95, TuylorMade res-
cue clubs in steel for $199.95,
and graphite shafts for
$249.951 Wilson Pro-Staff
graphite shat~ for $299.95,
and Niblick shoes for $29.95.
Goll Day is at Tiiangle
Square in Costa Mesa. For
more information, call (949)
642-0315.
If you love contemporary
Italian home designs, stop by
the sale at Italiano Home
Store. There's a 30% off sale
on selected handmade Ital-
ian furnishings and home
accessories. The store is at
Duffy 21 · 99
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Corona del Mar Plaza in
Newport Beach. Por more
infonnation, call (949) 640-
2458.
Great buys can be found
on sports equipment at
Sports Consl~ent at 670
W. 17th St. m Costa Mesa.
The store lS filled with good
qudlity treadmills. boogie
boards, golf clubs. fins, wet-
suits, exorcise bikes, elec-
tronic stair steppers and
more. For more information,
call (949) 548-0660.
Now's the time to buy
bare root roses, and the
selection lS extensive at
Roger's Gardens. It's recently
added 1ts own line of bare
root roses that are available
in shrubs, hybnd teas. flori-
bundas, climbing roses, and
there are David Austins, and
AARS winners. lf you want
to learn more about roses,
there will be a free rose sem-
mar at 9·15 a.m. Thursday
taught by Rosanan Stuart
Span. Roger's Gardens is at
2301 Sdn Joaqwn Hills Road
in Newport Beach. Foi:-more
information, call (949) 640-
5800.
• BEST BUYS appears on Sator-
days and Thursdays. Send informa·
tion to Greer Wylder at 330 W. Bay
St .. Costa ~ 92627, or via fax at
(949) 646-4170
18TH CENTURY
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Avoiloble in Antique
Burnished Bross ond Nickel
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Lighting
Quality Li1h1<n1 Sen iu
for 30 v ... n
Open Tues.-fri. 9·5, Sat. 9.4
1510 Ntwporl Blvd., Cosli Mt
(949) 548-9341
The Newport Beec.h
Internet company Van·
tage lnc. has changed its
name to KORa, as part
of.an effort to revamp its
corporate identity.
• As Vantage, KORE
was involved iJl launch-
mg the • extranet" for
EMT Music Distribution.
The company ha~ also
worked with
babystyle.com and
Mosaic Records and
holds strategic· partner-
ships with Microsoft,
EMC, Nokia and Unisys.
The name change.
KORE president and
CEO J. Eric Barnes said,
is intended to symbolize
KORE's •elite stance• m
the fteld of Internet com-
merce.
KORE was founded
in 1996 by Adam Miller,
Alan Eiler and David
Nance. Miller end
Nance were both tech·
nology consultants' for
Microsoft before startlllg
the company, a.ttd Miller
continues to serve on
Microsoft's internet
Advisory Board.
The name change
will be officially
unveiled at a "VIP" par-
ty in March in Holly-
wood.
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Doily Pilot Soturdoy, February 12, 2000 A7
Add a bit of whimsy in decorating the living areas of your home
J ust like in life, every
home can use a little
humor to lighten the
mood, remind us not to take
ourselves too senously and
bring a smile lo thos<' we
keep close to us.
Whimsical elements are
accessories that are slightly
incongruous to our decorat-
ing style-such as a carved
bear hat rack in the foyer of
an elegantly appointed
British Colonial home, a
stuffed fish hanging in an
unexpected stairwell, or a
beautiful pair or sconces
that resemble Scottie dogs.
Touches of whimsy add a
giggle m our day, interrupt
our mental status quo and
bring an au of nonchalance
to the serious business of
life.
•The creation of a home
environment begms as a
declaration of indepen-
dence and evolves mto an
expression of self that is as
distinctive as a hngerprlnt •
according to Judy George,
CEO of Domain Home
Fashions and author ·o{
"The Domain Book of Intu-
itive liome Design.•
~eorge adds, "l strive to
stir my readers' passions
and encourage thetr creativ-
ity."
Adding whuns1cal ele-
ments is one way she
encourages her clients and
• readers to.exercise that rrus-
chievous inner child.
Popular intenor designer
Elizabeth Speert is famous
' fo r her sense of whimsy.
Karen Wight
NO PLACE LIKE HOME
Speert's affection for animal
art and offbeat combina-
tions have made her wacky
style enormously popular.
Speert's mantra professes
a disregard of labels and
she often rescues castoffs
from junk shops to reuphol-
ster and use among the
family heulooms and
"important" furruture. As 1f
she is humming a song from
Mary Poppins, "in every job
that must be done, there 1s
an element of fun," Speert
adds color and pattern in
reckless abandon anq
always includes an odd
piece or three in her pro-
jects. She has become the
guru of wacky, wild and
fun.
Whimsy, just like beauty,
is in the eye of the beholder.
One of the Dad's Day efforts
in our house mcluded giving
my husband a stuffed roost-
er fish-a big stuffed rooster
fish-for hls office.
I bad rescued the fish
from our orthodontist, who,
in tum, had inhented the
~
Mattress Outlet Stor
BRAND NEW -COSMETICAUY IMPERFECT
Get the Best for Less/
316.5 Harbor Blvd.
Costa Mesa
One Block South of 405 l'Wy
(714) 545-7168
r
l'HOTO COURTESY Of KAREN WIGHT
PHOTO COURlESY Of
w~Atmou
The frog bowl ls a humor-
ous serving piece that will
s urprise all of your guests.
This large rooster fish adds a note of whimsy ln a famJly room.
home, 'std rt with somPthmg
you love. ls 1t the doq~ Put
a small pencil sketch of
your loydl compdnion m ii
fclbulous frdme and plcH e 11
on d side table m the llvrnq
room Is it horses? Uw r1
horseshoed!. a drapery tu~
back. Fishing? Use• a tish-
mg tackle btisket as your
spice rack m the• k1tc:h(!n
Gardening? Hdng a le le.in I
trowel on the. front door dS
an ornament.
fish from the doctor he had
purchased his practice from.
This fish was out of luck in
the worst way and headed
for the dumpster when I was
bold enough to beg for a
reprieve and take the old
guy home.
I intended for the fish to
go straight to Ben's office, to
be kept company by various
other manly drtworks. But
the look on my husband's
face when we brought that
hsh out of hiding was just as
though I hdd presented him
with d new son
The hsh hdd to stay; 1t
was love at fust sight.
So now, m our family
room-yes, the room where
we spend most of our wdk-
ing hours-we have a mas-
cot. Big Rooster smiles at us
from overhead as we walk
into the room and seems to
thank us for his new lease
on life.
And even though Big
Rooster makes quite a
statement. whimsy should
not be too overt; after all,
the magic is in tl)e minutld.
No bash.ing over the
head required with this
type of humor. Subtle, not
slapstick 1s the key to
pulling off a touch of
whimsy in your home.
One of my past clients
has a serious art collection.
The entue home was liter-
ally d showcase for the
p1eC'es they have collected
over the yedrs. We planned
wdll size, location, art spot-
lights, stdirways and shelf
heights around their most
belov(>d items. Yet m the
middle of this serious busj-
ness dre touches of sillmess
that bring us bdck to the
redl world.
A small pnnt with outra-
geous colors, a street sign
w1th special m~arung, a
tongue-in-cheek painting ·
of d sunbathing nun Little
things sprinkled here and
there that lighten the
mood
To add a bit of the sub-
hme and nd1culous to your
Pick your passion nnd
add dn element of whimsy
to your home. Lc.1ugh dnd
the world laughs with }'OU
• KAREN WIGHT is a Newport
Beach resident Her column runs
Saturdays.
NEW
French Walnut Bed with Gold Accents by Hennedon
+ • Baker • Henredon • Century • Jeffco • Swaim •
. • Hickory White to name a few.
tf. Let one of our certified interior desigriers
assist you.
stNtb au lbowroom
23649 Hawthorne Blvd.
(riewat LocltlOn)
#-
AB Sotvrd<Jy, Febtuoty 12, 2000 ARoUNDToWN Doily Pilot
·~ AllOUND lOWN Items to
the 0~11ly Pilot. 330 W. hy St , Cos
t• Mesa 92627; fu them to (949)
646-4170; or call (949) 764-4330. A
tomplete listing may be found at
d111/ypllotcom.
TODAY
The Hyatt Newporter will
host a KOST 103-FM Valen·
tine Celebration. The free
event will feature the bond
Rockola, performing dance
music from the '60s through
the '806. The hotel is at 1107
Jamboree Road, Newport
Beach. For more information,
call (213) 427-7281.
Robert Bruce Woodcox,
auth'or of wThe Goll Gods are
Laughing,• will discuss .and
sign his book at 7 p.m. at Bor-
ders Books, Music and Cafe
at South Coast Plaza. The
store is at 3333 Bear St., Cos-
ta Mesa. For more informa-
tion, call(714)432-7854.
The YWCA of North Orange
County will partner with the
Harbor Christian ~ellowsbip
Church to provide free breast
cancer screenings at the
church, 740 W. Wilson in Cos·
ta Mesa. For more informa-
tion or to schedule an
. appointment, call (714) 935-
9720.
A "Love 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 parking fees
will be waived for all partici-
pants. For more information,
call (949) 497-7647.
.
night at the Balboa Bay Club,
1221 W. Coast Highway. For·
mal attire is requested, black
tle optional. Por more infor-
mation, call (949) 488-9597.
The Ouh Senior <Anter will
hold a pancake breakfast
from 7:30 to 10 a .m . The
breakfast includes cherries
jubilee or regular pancakes,
sausage, coffee and orange
juice. The cost is $2 for adults
and $1 for children. The pub·
lie is welcome. The center is
at 800 Marguerite, Corona
del Mar. For more ln!orma-
tion, call (949) 644-3244.
Tbe Health Mlnlstdes of
Presbyterian Church of the
Covenant will conduct a CPR
class from 8 a.m. to noon.
T.here is no Cbarge for the
class, but registration is nec-
essary. The church is at 1850
Fairview Road, Costa Mesa.
For more information, call
(714) 557-3340.
Girls Incorporated of Orange
County will hold a "Choices
and Dreams" con!erence
from &:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. at
Orange Coast College. The
con!erence wtµ give girls a
chance to explore issues not
taught in a traditional clas~
room such as career gbals,
sexuality, substance abuse
and self-esteem. The event is
free, and all girls are wel-
come. OCC is at 2701
Fairview Road, Costa Mesa.
For more information, call
(949) 376-4303.
SUNDAY
Crystal Cove State Par~ wtll
hold "Gray Whale Sunday"
for whale watching from 9
The Latest 1bing Teaching a .m. to noon at the boardwalk
and Healing Center presents overlook by Pelican Point
"A Day of Love" with Sandra parking .lot No. 2. A spotting
Sauer from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. scope, binoculars and natural
The event features a discus· history information will be
sion of the ancient art of · available. Parking fee is $6.
romantic preparation, includ-For more information, call
ing the use of foods, bever-(949) 497-1321.
ages and environment. The
fee is $25. The Latest Thing is
at 217 East 17th St., Costa
Mesa. For more information,
call (949) 645-6211.
The Orange County Young
Republicans' President's Ball
will run from 5 p.m. to mid·
lbe Latest Thing Teaching &
Healing Center offers "Who
is the one for me?" based on
the best-selling books by Bar-
bara De Angelis 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,
fove choie8 and compatibili·
ty time bombs. The Latest
Thing is a\ 217 E 17th St.,
Costa Mesa. For more infor-
mation, call (949) 6-45-6211.
MONDAY
South Coast Plaza ls holding
a Valentine's Day event
through Feb. 14. Le M.irage
Aorist will have displays in
front of the Carousel Court
and ai the elevator m the
Crate & Barrel Wing featur-
ing single-stem roses, bou-
quets and a variety of roman-
tic and exotic floral arrange-
ments. For more information,
call (714) 435-8571
TUESDAY
The Corona del Mar Cham-
ber of Commerce will hold a
lunchepn meeting at Five
Crowns beginning at 11 :30
a.m. Newport Beach Mayor
John Noyes will speak on
"The Challenges Pacing
Newport Beach in the New
Millennium.• The event is
$15 and includes a glass of
wine. For reservations, can·
(949) 673-4050.
The Newport Harl>or 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-
sultant Nick Smith will speak.
The event is $15 to $20. The
Yacht Cub is at 1099 Bayside
Drive, Newport Beach. For
more information, call (949)
729-4400.
The Newport Beach Public
Library will hold a free Inter-
net· workshop for teens at
7 p.m. The program will
include demonstrations· of
search engines and location
of information on the Web.
The library is at 1000 Avoca-
do Ave., Newport Beach. For
more information, call (949)
717-3801.
Mother's Market presents a
free seminar titled "Prevent-
ing Heart Disease in the 21st
Century" with clinical nutri-
tionist Steve Holmes. The
event will be held from 6:30
to 7 :30 p.m. in ~e Patio Cafe.
bring mg
a whole
new look to
THE
UNIVERSITY
ATHLETIC
CLUB-one of
Orange County's premier
private athletic fraternities -
proudly announces .new
ownership and management!
We're building on UAC's
winning hist0ry as the
exclusive gentlemen's athletic
club in Newport Beach ,
our state-of-
the-art facilities. With only
a handful of memberships
available, be sure to call for
a complimentary tour and
g uest pass.
Otherwise, you mig ht
have to join the crowd at
one of those other places.
RACQUJ!TBAU •SQUAW• HANDBAU • 8ASt...i!lbMI. • )• 01.YMPICSWIMMI PcX>L •
RESTAUllANT • l.ouNGE • 81WAID.S • DARTS • I.Al T lN Wl:.JGHT Tl.AININll AND
CAROIO FJTN~~ EQUIP~BN'r • CoMPUMliNTARY FnN!l! s CouN~£UNG • M.\MAGB •
SPORTS RUWIOJTATION TurllAJiY. FRf. "WORKOUT UoTHING PJtov1om 9AllY.
Co~n:UNCE Roo~ · COMPillWllTAlY Suoe SmNu • Co1P01tArn RAn.s AvAn-""'
UNIVERSITY
ATHLETIC CLUB
1701 Q.VA1l.S1RHJ
NEWrORT BEACH
(949) 752·7903
Mother's IS at 225 E. 17th St.,
Costa M . Seminar reser-
vations are· necessary. For
mor~ information, c.·all (800)
595-MOMS.
Reform Party presldentJal
candidate . Robert Bowman ,
will speak at 7:30 p.m. m the
little yellow buildmg on
Riverside botween Avon and
··Cliff Dnve, in Newport
Bettch. For information, call
(949) 645-1419.
WEDNESDAY
The OWLS (Retired OUl.cers'
Wives League of Orange
County) will hold a luncheon
at noon at the Balboa Yacht
Club, 1801 Bayside Drive,
Corona del Mar. Reb.red ofli-
cers' wlVes and WJdows and
women officers from all
branches of the military are
welcome. The event begins
with a social hour at 11 a.m.
For more information, ccill
Charlotte Walker at (714)
549-2028.
Hoag Health Center will hold
a free seminar titled -The
Stress of PMS" from 7 to 8·30
p .m. The center is at 1190
Baker St., Costa Mesa. For
reservations or more mfonna-.
tion, call (800) 514-4624 .
Estancia High School's
Authentic Open House will
·be held Feb. 16-18 to give
community members a
chdllce to Visit the campus
while school is in session. Vis-
iting hours are 8:30 a.m. to 2
p.m. The school is at 2323
Placentrn, Costa Mesa. For
more mformabon, call (949)
645-0715.
I
Estancia tf lgh School will
hold a Town Hall Meeting at
7 p.m. in the commons. The
meeting is an opportunity to
learn about the Digital High
School and the many programs
offered at the school. Estanaa
High is at 2323 Pldcenti.a", Cos-
ta Mesa. For more tnfonn.abon.
call (949) 645-0715.
Women ln B'1slness, Orange
County Chdpter, will hold a
meeting at 5.30 p.m. at The
Sheraton I lotel, 4545
MacArthur Blvd., Newport
Beach . Karen L. Bonnett,
owner of Life Management
Consulting, will speak The
event is $35 for members, $42
for gu ts. For more informa-
tion, cdll (714) 731-1077.
Hoag Hospital wtll hold a free
seminar btled "Gourmet the
Healthy Way" from 6 to 7·30
p.m. at its Conference Center,
1 Hoag Dnve, building 44,
Newport Beach. For reserva-
tions, call (800) 514-4624.
Salo1Uon Smith Barney will
hold a free seminar titlerl
•Making the Most of Yow
40tK• at noon at 650 Town
Center Drive, Suite 100, Cos·
ta Mesa. Lunch will be pro-
vided. For reservabons, call
(800) 846-6337.
THURSDAY
Hoag Health Centex will hold
a free semmar titled "Keep·
ing Your Heart in Sync,· from
6 to 7:30 p .m. The center lS al
1190 Baker St.. Costa Mesa
For reservations, call (800)
514-4624.
The Jewish CommunJty
Center of Orange County will
hold a program at 12:45 p.m
on healthy exercise for older
adults Dr. Andrea Avery of
the UCI Medical Center will
speak. The center is at 250 E.
Baker St., Costa Mesa .. For
more miormation, call (714)
755-0340, ext. 260.
The Career Network Meeting
of St. Andrew's Presbyterian
Church will fedture John
Palermo of Palermo & A~soa
ates, who will speak on
"Focusmg Your Resume for
Results.• The meeting will
be held from 7·30 to 9 p .m. in
the chapel at the Administra-
Lion Building, 600 St.
Andrew's Road,. Newport
Bearh . For more information,
call (949) 574-2239.
FRIDAY
The Friends of the Newport
Bedch Pubhc Library will hold a
book sale to benefit the library
dl 1000 Avocado Ave., Newport
Beach A preview sale, for
Friends members only, will be
held from 1 to 5 p.m. today; a
sale for the generaJ public will
run from 9 d.m. to 4:30 p.m.
Feb. 19. For more information,
call (949) 759-9667.
Sherman Ubrary & Gardens
m Corona del Mar will be fea-
tured in a cable television
Lifetime St1in ~1tt1nty
Lifetime Stll W1tt1nty . /' Lifetime F1~t W1rt1nty
llfetiMe Mitt W1tt1nty
llfttlMt ln1t1ll1tltn
program, ·~et Gardtns, •
at 8 p m. on the Home and
Garden Channel. The pro-
gram features uruque botani·
cal gardens !rom all over tho
country. For more Worma-.
tion, caU (949) 673·2261.
Borders Books, Music and
Cafe hosts "Youth for Under-
standing Nigbt • from 7 to 9
p.m. Youth for Understand-
ing, a group that encourage
international student
exchange programs, will pro-
vide information on becom-
ing an exchange student. The
store is at 3333 Bear St., Cos-
td Mesa. For more informa-
tion, call (714) 432-7854.
Borders Books, Mwlc and
Cale will hold a workshop
titled -Goal Achieving m the
New Millen.mum,• with
author dnd business coach
Jacque Daniel. The event
talces place at 8 a.m., and free
coffee will be provided. The
store is at 3333 Bear St., Cos-
ta Mesa. For more informa-
tion, call (714) 256-0353.
FEB. 19
Dames & Noble Fashion
Island will host a 7 p .m
appearance by Dave Free·
man, president and editor-m-
chief of WbatsGoingOn.com
and author of "100 Things to
Do Before You Die: llttvel
Events You Just Can't Miss.•
The store is at 953 Newport
Center Drive, Newport
Beach. For more informal.Jon,
call (949) 759-0982.
Estancia High School wtU
. hold its monthly paper dnve
from 8 a.m. to noon at the
school. Newspapef!i, maga-
zines, computer paper and
phone .books are accepted
The ~ool is at 2323 Placentid,
Costa Mesa. For more mfor-
mation, caD (949) 645-0715.
Hoag Hospital'$ Conference
Center will hold a $25 choles-
terol screerung Cit 7 a .m. The
· center is at One Hospitdl
Road, Building 44, Newport
Beach. For more informallon,
call (800) 514-4624.
Sherman U brary & Gardens
will host a program titled
•spring Blooming Oxalis, • at
9:30 a.m. Mithael Vassar,
SEE TOWN PAGE A9
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28 yrs. exp.
Acctg., Audits, Truces
I 5% discount to CM Residents
(714) 546-4272
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~ • ' ••
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·'
Doily Pilot./
TOWN
CONTINUED FROM AS
horticulturist at the Hunting-
ton Ubrary and Gardens, will
discuss the us~ of sprtng-
blooming oxabs for the
Southern Calif orrua home
garden. The event is free and
open to the public. Sherman
Library is at 2647 East Coast
Highway, Corona del Mar.
Por more information, call
(949) 673-2261.
Maxine B. Cohen wtll hold a
divorce workshop for men
and women in the process of
divorcing or recently
divorced, from 10 a.m. to
12:30 p.m. at 180 Newport
Center Drive. The cost is $40.
For more information, call
(949) 644-6435.
Crystal Cove State Park wtll
have a tide pool event to take
advantage of the low bdes at
3 p.m. Meet at Pelican Point
parking lot No. 2 at Newport
.Coast and PCH. Wear water
booties or rubber-soled
footwear with a good grip.
The parking fee is $6. For
more information, call (949)
497-1321.
FEI. 22
Mother's Market will hold a
"Hands-On Aromatherapy~
seminar from 6:30 to 7 r30 p.m.
in its Patio Cafe. Pat Bayles.
aromatherapist. will speak.
Mother's is at 225 E. 17th St.,
Costa Mesa. For more 'infor-
mation, call (800) 595-
MOMS.
The Zlnger's Toastmasters
Club will have a •speech
Crafter" program from 7 to
8:30 p.m. at Borders Books,
MuS'ic and Cafe at South
_ Coast Plaza. The event will
give an overview of the
process of improvmg skills for
business and personal com-
munication. The store is at
3333 Bear St., Costa Mesa.
For more information, call
(714) 538-9341.
ONGOING
Essentials Counseling Is
offering two free seminars on
Mondays and Wednesdays in
January and February.
•Learn bow to stop binge eat-
ing• will be 6:30 to 8 p.m.
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 dlscuss rela-
tionship issues at 6:30 p .m.
Tuesdays at 1151 Dove St.,
No. 105, Newport Beach. For
more information, call Bar-
bara at (949) 261-8003.
The Friends of the Newport
Beach Public Library Used
Book Store needs to replenish
its book stock. Patrons are
urged to bring in unwanted
books. With the exception of
law books or magazines, all
donatioris -hardcover lllld
paperback -are welcome
and are tax-deductible. Books
may be left a\ any of the three
branch librarie -Balboa,
Mariners or Corona del Mar.
They can also be left in the
special book closet next to the
store at 1000 Avocado Ave.
For more informauon, call
(949) 759-9667.
The Newport Beach
Newcomers Club meets at 10
a.m. the third Wednesday of
each month at different
homes. The group of at)out
100 women go on the road,
play golf, tennis, brid~e and
more . The group also holds
several evening parties. For
more information , call (949)
854 .... 501
SL Mark Health M.lnlstrles
"presen ts Love Without Honor
support groups for women
coping with domestic vio-
lence at 10 a.m. and 7 p.m .
Mondays through December.
The groups Will meet for two
hours at St. Mark Pre byter·
ian Church, 2100 Mar ViSta
Ave., Newport Beach. For
more information, call (949)
121-8079.
11tie Jewish family Service of
Orange County sponsors a
discussion group focusing on
lllUes, concerm and respon·
llbilities of adult c.hlldren car·
log.for their elderly parents at
?:30 p .m. Tuesdays at 250 B.
Baker St .. Calta Mesa. The
~ ot the group ii to
~ chlldren and Other COO•
Qlmed relatlftl to Identify ~ an4 illuea encl ~ appropriat• IOlU· _ ...... 'lbe ~ JI S10. Par ............. c.a (714)
The Costa Mesa Chamber of
Commerce bolds networking
luncheon meetings from
11 ·45 a.m. to 1 p.m . at the
C<>:>ta Mesa Country Club,
1701 Goll Course Drive, Cos-
ta Mesa. Visitors are wel-
come. Cost is $12. For more
information, call (714) 885-
9090.
lbe Udo Isle Toastmasters
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 Founda tion
sponsors the Comfort Zone. a
mental illness support group,
which meets from 7 :30 to 9
p.m. Thu.rSdays at the Ught-
house Coastal Community
Church, 301 Magnolia St.,
Costa Mesa. For more infor-
mation, call (949) 548-7274.
J ewish Family Service of
Orange County sponsors an
ongoing healing support
group for people experienc-
ing chronic illness. The pur-
pose is to provide participants
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 Mesa. Atten-
dance is free, but registration
is required. To register or for
more information, call (714)
445-4950.
Scrabble Club No. 350 meets
from 6 to 10 p.m. Thursdays
at Borders Books, Music and
Cafe on 19th Street and New-
port Boulevard, Costa Mesa.
The cost is $3. New players
are welcome. For more infor-
matioJ;l, call (949) 759-4871.
The Coln and Stamp Club
meets from 1 to 3 p.m. Mon-
days at the Oasis Senior Cen-
ter. New members who are
interested in. trading, buying
and selling stamps and coins
are being sought to join these
informal meetings. There are
no fees required. For more
inf onnation, call (949) 644-
3244.
Jewish Family Service offers
ongoing bereavement sup-
port gl"oups for adults at all
stages of loss. The groups
share experiences, bear how
others deal with grief, receive
support and learn ways to
cope with sadness and loss.
One group meets at 7 p.m.
Tuesdays at Beth Jacob m
Irvine. The second group
meets at 10 a.m. Tuesdays at
Temple Judea in Laguna
Hills. The third group meets
at 1 p.m. Thursdays al the
Ezra Center in Anaheim.
There is no fee for these
groups, but preregistration is
required. For more informa-
tion, call (714) 445-4950.
Newcomers to the Newport
Beach, Corona del Mar, Bal-
boa Island and the Newport
Coast. areas are invited to
meet others who are also new
at the Newport Beach New-
comers' Club. This group of
women meets once a month
on Wednesdays at different
homes and locations. For
more information, please call
(949) 644-0302.
J ewish Family Service of
Orange County provides a
support and discussion group
to assist participants in their
recovery from childhood or
teenage sexual abuse. The
group meets from 8 to 9:30
p.OL Tuesdays at 250 E. Baker
St., Costa Mesa. Preregistra·
tion is required. For more infor-
mation, call (714) 445-4950.
A Dealing with Divorce
support group is ottered by
Jewish Family Service of
Orange County. The group is
led by an experienced coun-
selor and meets at 6 p.m.
Tuesdays at tbe Jewish Fed-
eration Campus, 250 E . Baker
St. Suite G, Costa Mesa. For
more lnformetion. mcluding
dates and fees, call Heather
Wat.son at (714) 445-4950.
An lntedalth cOUplel support
group is ottered by Jewish
family Service of Orange
County. The group addnmes
issues faced ' by couples
where one partner ls Jewilb
and the other ii not, including
railing children, oblerving
holidays, displaying symbols
ln the home, as well • N&a-
tionlhip1 with utended fami·
lies. The group meets for
three weekly sessions
Wednesday 8'9ningl at Jew-
ish Pamlly Servke, 2.50 B.
Baker St., Swt• G, Cotta
Mma. for men lnformatkJn.
~'claill.Slw.cell ('114)~ •
SEE TOWN MCll Ato
Remember,
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FebruarlJ 1 ll"
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Open SundoY, 11 om to 6pm .
AJO ~rday, February 12, 2000
TOWN
CONTINUED FROM A9
The Costa Mesa Chamber of
Commerce networkers busi-
ness leads luncheon takes
.place at 11:45 a.m. Wednes-
days at the Costa Mesa
Country Club, 1701 Golf
Course Road, Costa Mesa.
For more mfonnation, call
(714) 885-9090. .
The Walking Club of
Newport Beach meets at 9
a.m. and 7 p.m. at Hospital
Road and Superior Avenue.
Lose the weight and have
fun. For more information,·
, call (949) 650-1332.
The Sea Scouts' ship Del Mar
711 of Orange County offers
a program for young men
ages 14 to 18 interested in
learning about sailing, sea-
manship, piloting, navigation
and cruising. Meebngs are
from 6 to 9 p.m. Wednesdays
at the Sea Scouts Sea Base,
1931 W Coast ·Highway,
Newport Beach. For more
infonnation, call (949) · 642-
6301 or (949) 551-8591.
The Oasls Senior Center
offers ongoing assistance,
counseling and referral ser-
vices for seniors. For appoint-
ments or more information,
call (949) 644-3244.
The Costa Mesa Senior
Citizen Square and Round
Dance Club seeks experi-
enced dancers to join its
group from 9 to 11 a.m.
Thursdays at the Costa Mesa
Senior Center, 19th Street
and Pomona Avenue, Costd
Mesa. Fot more information,
call (714) 545-5669.
A free support group for
cancer patients meets at
7 p.m. Wednesdays, and a
support group for people suf-
fering from Chronic fatigue
syndrome meets from 7 to 10
p.m. Wednesdays at the lnstJ-
tute for Holistic lreatment
and Research, 4019 Westerly
CJf'dA &ta &~ate
. c#e1~ fheatmOlb
• Pwihinl Pu/ 40 mm ... $80
• ~inl Fwl Trcatnunt 90 min ... $80
• iJoMnMi'W fW/ JO mtn ... $50
~Mini Twc Fwt, ..................................... $.40
• Fuciw Syyjq,;
Entu To Win Our Vakn!Uu Skin Care Btulut
Wixon yo,. hAL~ on' of 1ur ~mktu· tw•tmmll (V.Jw $175)
in tk month of Ftb"""l
Gift CutifuateJ Availahk For Your Valentine/
for'"' "Pf>Ointmmt t:AU a a aoa
David Benvenuti, .M.D., F.A-.C.S.
PlatllC and Recon'"""11ve SUf'IC'Y
9491650-2345
355 Placentia, Sujte I 04 • Newpon Beach
Vi u our web"~· v.ww..aftcr. ei..c:om
ARoUNDToWN
Place, Swt 100, Newport
B • c.h. For more information,
call (949) 251-8700.
ArthrlUs FoundaUon instruc-
tor H1llttry Stone leads an
exercise cla s at 11 a.m
Thursdays al the JeWlsh
Senior Center, 250 E. Baker
St., Coi.tcl Mesa. For more
information, call .(714) 513-
56Al.
Nightly meettngs are ottered
m Costa Mesa and Newport
Beach for dnyone who wants
to overcome nicotine addic-
tion. For a schedule or more
rnformation, call (714) 774-
9106 or (800) 642-0666.
The Newport Sports Collec-
tion FoWldation, a nonprofit
organization. operates a free
museum at 620 Newport Cen-
ter ·Drive, Newport Beach.
The museum, wtuch has one
pf the world's ~gest collec-
t.Jons of sports memorabilia, is
open from 9 a.m. lo 5 p.m.
·W<'Ckdclys. For more informa-
tion, call (949) 721 -9333.
The Hoag Cancer Center
sponson a free ta1 ch1 clai>s
for intermediate to
advanced levels from 10:30
to 11:30 a.m. Thursdays for
people with cancer and
their families. A beginner
session meets from 10:30 to
11:30 a.m. Fridays The
classes are designed to
reduce stress, increase
longevity and promote a
sense of well-being with
basic, easy-to-learn, non-
strenuous movements to aid
in balance and concentra-
tion. The class is free and
taught by Victor Armand.
No registration is required.
The Hoag Cancer Center is
at 4000 W. Coast Highway,
Newport Beach. For more
information, call (949) 722-
6237.
The Oasis Senior Center
offers a daily telephone
contact program for seniors
who have a limited local
support system. For more
information, call (949} 644-
3244.
We carry Lexington, Pennsylvanja House, SherrilJ
Hekman & other rtne lines.
f1Ul.I. SERVICE DESIGN CONSULTING ,.....,-.,..----.--.,
2215 HARBOR BOULEVARD
COSTA MESA
The Costa Mesa Commun!·
cators Toastmasters Club
meets from noon to 1 p.m.
Wednesdays at the Orange
County Department of Edu-
cation, 200 Kalmus Drive,
Costa Mesa. Meetings are
o~n to anyone who wants to
improve his or her pubbc
speaking skills For more
information, call (714) 444·
5030.
The Newport Beach· Dlsttn-
gulsbed Toastmasters Club
1300 meets from 7 to 9 p.m.
Tuesdays in Sgt. Pepperoni's
meeting room, 2300 Bristol
St., Newport Beach. For
reservations or more infor~
mation, call (949) 646-1274.
Mesa Messengers Toastmas-
ters Club 691 in Costa Mesa
meets at 7 p.m. Tuesdays at
Mesa Verde United
Methodist Church. 1701 W.
Baker St., Costa Mesa. For
more J.O.formation, call (714)
540-4446.
Blue Flame Toastmasters
Club 2717 meets at 7 a.m.
Jfi-'fime
Cfiocolatier
Daily Pilot
Wcd.n day at the Village
Farmer, South Coa t Plaza
Village, 1651 Sunflower Ave.,
Coi.ta Mc , The meeting is
free for first-time visitors. For
more information, call (949)
855--4308 .
Tocuti:nasters Club 231 meets
at 7 a.rn . Mondays at the
Irvine Co., 550-C Newport
Center, Newport Beach. For
more mfonnaUon, call (949)
733-2209.
Har.borlltes Toastmasters
Club meets at 7 a.m. Wednes·
days at the Bahia Corinthian
Yacht Club, 1601 Bayside
Dnve, Corona del Mar. For
more information. call (949)
293-4630.
Udo Isle Toastmasters meets
Mondays from 6:30 to 8 p.m.
at the Glendale Federal Bank
Community Room, 100 New-
port Center Drive, Fashion
Island, Newport Beach. For
more information, call (714)
964-5314.
for your finest
chocolates ...
Choose a pre-
packed or custom-
packed heart box
for your loved one.
Jelly Bellys $4.50 per pound
Champa&ne for your Love!
Lots of suckers,
candy-filled hearts,
novelty items and
much morel
ROEDER ER 1993 "Cristal" ~149.98
Uncork the favorite of Czars!
GUY LARMANDIER Bnit Rosi $32.95
Robert Parker 91 Points!
Don't forget thf' Fresh Caviar!
• .... t 405 ht! Diii• f'"'"Y
www.hitimewine.com
Hi-Time Wine Cellars
250 Ogle Str ee·t -Costa Mesa, CA 92627
{949) 650-8463 or FAX {949) 631-6863
and hitch raCks
'
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l.oaation:Co.ta Mela
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Photter.148, 574.lllO
'
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Doily Pilot
CHILDREN
CONTINUED FROM A 1
Their father died soon
after and their mother now
sits in jail awaiting trial, with
little financial means to set
.her free on $250,000 bail.
Meanwhile, the body of
their 52-year-old Cather lies in
a morgue, awaiting burial or
cremation.
All they can do is wait.
Wait for the system to work.
Wait for someone to help
them.
Some assistance came in
the form of a trust fund,
established by .iamily friends
Thursday for the three chil-
dren at a Bank of America
branch.
"The kids need to be in a
stable environment," said
another family friend,
Richard Butterfield, a pastor
at a church in Norwalk. "The
last year has been crazy for
this family. There is the obvi-
ous concern ot how the kids
will react to all Qf this."
Friends said the Van-
Houten household had been
EDUCATION
BRIEFS ·
Deadline for ACT
signups soon
Tue next nationwide ACT
testing c:i{lte tor college-
bound high school seniors is
coming up. The registration
postmark deadline ,is Feb. 25.
Late registration deadline is
March 10 and requires an ·
additional fee.
ACT is a curriculwn-
based, college entrance
exam designed to measure
students' academic achieve-
. ment. Students who have
already taken the exam may
try again for a higher score.
The test fee is $22.
For more information, call
Ken Gullette at (319) 337-
1028.
$5,000 scholarships
offered for students
Students can apply for
scholarsbip1 from three com-
munications organizations.
11me Warner Communi-
cations, Southern California
Cable and the Telecommuni-
cations Assn. are seeking
applications from exemplary
students.
JEFF & LYLEEN
EWING
MAKING SURE
TIDNGS GO RIGHT
When you buy your first
home in the Newport Beach
area, you want the best advice you
can get. You want to show the
house to friends and relatives
before you commit. They will
probibly tell you abour all of the
things that went wrong during
their own trans:aetions so you can
avoid the same mismkes. These
experts all have good intentior\S.
but sci much advice can put you
into a State of higb anxiety.
Real estate tranSactions can be
very complex, and difficulties can
arise. If you are buying your
home with the help of a
profesgonaJ Realtor, your agent
will know how to make sure that
any minor upsets do l'\ot tum into
major problems. A Realtor's
expertise is based on formal
training and aperience in many
real estate tranSactions. Their
reputation is on the line with each
sale, so they arc highly motivated
to make your purchaSe or sale go
as qnoodUy as possible. When
you are dealing with ~
profcssioria1 Realtor. you can be
SURI they will woric hard to make
evcrydUng woric out just right!
Lylecn and Jeff have 28
consecutive years of real estate
experience in Newport Beach.
They are ColdWell Banktt ..
fl tam. For professional
ter'Vice or advice with aU your
reel estate needs, call the
Ewinp at (949) 718-UJO.
No mlttlr what you'ie ~
"Pl homllaWn MWlfi~
~ DllJ•
FYI
The VanHouten Childrens'
Trust Fund has been
established at Bank of
America. Anyone wanting
to donate can send checks
or money to the attention
of the fund, 500 Newport
Center Drive, Newport
Beach 92660. The branch
phone number is (949)
760-4577.
in turmoil with the children
caught in the cross-fire. The
parents hdd tried to make
amends for their behavior,
but had fallen back into a
cycle where' they were com-
bative toward one another.
The two teenage daugh-
ters were attending Alcohol
Anonymous meetings with
their father, who had battled
bouts of remission. On a num-
ber of occasions, Kenneth
VanHauten strived to stay
sober, but suffered relapses,
friends said.
"He told me that alcohol
was ruining his life," Alsenz
said. "He was trying to reach
out for h'elp dnd be a good
The scholarships, for
$5,000 each, will be awarded
in the fall and are op~n to
graduating seniors in South-
ern California who wish to go
into telecommunications.
Last year, five out of 100
applicants won scholarships.
Applications must be in by
.March 24. Applications are
available in high school
guidance offices and by con-
father.• reported the car stolen a
Kenneth VanHouten did week before he was killed.
have his share of problems. Last month, he had also filed
He was convicted of sexual for clivorce.
battery in 1916, according to Butterfield added that the
court documents. He was pressures are gr.owing for the
required to file as a sex VanHouten family.
offender and failed to do so in The children's grandpar-
Los Angeles County in 1995. ents, who live in Northern
He was placed on five years' Califorma, haven't been con-
probation that was set to tacted .by authorities,
expire in December. although Leslie VanHoulen
He may have tried to keep has sent them a letter from
his nose clean, but friends jail.
~aid there were some cases of Owners of the trailer park
verbal abuse. Butterfield said where the family lived may·
he talked to Leslie Van-be filing eviction papers next
Houten this week from jail. week.
She told Butterfield her bus-Most important is the wel-
band inflicted emotional fare of the children, friends
damage upon her repeatedly. said. The next step is
, "She was fleeing for her unknown at this point. They ·
life,• he said. •She's viewing could be placed in a foster:
what she did as sell-defense.• home or the· grandparents
Authorities have a differ-could be given custody.
ent version of what hap-For the time being, howev-
pened. er, the children are without
Police said an argument their parents. · .
over the family car triggered Hit's painful for them right
Leslie VanHouten's rage. She . now without having a mother
allegedly ran over her hus-or father they can tum to,·
band twice while he was rid-Alsenz said. "The kids are the
ing on his bicycle. ones who got the bad end or
Newport Beach police said this. They haven't done any-
Kenneth VanHouten had ttp.ng wrong." ·
lading Time Warner at (714)
903-4170.
Parent computer
night set at school
Costa Mesa High School
on Wednesday will hold its
second parent cornputet
night. The event will be hPld
from 6 to 9 p.m . at the school,
· 2650 Fairview Road.
A variety of vendors, includ-
ing such big name companies
as Apple, Toshiba, · Earthlink
and many more will be offer-
ing discounted computers and
Internet services to parents.
The goal of this program is to
increase the number of com-
puters in students' homes.
for more information, call
Mike Lawrence at (714) 424-
7575, Ext. 4329.
Sotu;day, February 12, 2000 A 11
BILL
I CONTINUED FROM A 1
child under the age of 14.
"I'm really happy," sdid
Lynn Vogt, who implored
Johnson to work for
tougher laws. "I would
like to see more. It's not
-enough -I guess it's nev-
er gomg to be enough.•
Vogt's. crusade began
after police showed up on
her doorstep 1ast · April.
They told her that Cary
Jay Smith, a registered sex
off ender, had allegedly
kept a journal of his deme
to rape, kidnap and kill
her 7-year-old son.
Police told Vogt that
Snuth's wife had found the
journal entry in his car and
turned it over to his psy-
chologist, who then went
to the police.
But because Smith did
not deliver the letter,
police could not consider it
a threat and thus could not
arrest him. Aftet being
questioned by police,
Smith was held for 12
hours. He has since been
under psychiatric care,
which will continue until
May, a court decided. in
November.
Because charges were
not filed, the incident does
not appear on Smith's
record,
However, if Snuth had
been on parQle at the time,
he could have been put
back in jail, authorities
sa.1d.
Vogt was 11*1ng a
more stnct lifetllle proba·
tion requir~t u
opposed to paraltl, but said
she is pleased nanetbe·
less.
"l just think the118's a Jot
that needs to change,• sM
said. •Right now tbe sp-
tem just doesn't wot.k
quite nght -it's a tQWJh
crime to prove."
By placing offenders on
hfetiioe parole, John&Qll
hopes to extend their pat-
tern of good behavior
reported . dunng· parole
that often ends when .
parole ends; said Bob Tay-
lor, Johnson's spokesman.
"He knows too well that
there are repeat off enders
and that this is a way to
tighten that up a bit," Tay-
lor said.
Lifetime parole or life-
time supervision laws
have been enacted m sev-
eral states, including Ari-
...-zona, Colorado, Nevada,·
New Hampshire, Rhode
Island, Utah and Wiscon-
sin.
The bill will now go to
the Senate Public Safety
Committee for review.
Vogt is asking for help
once again. This b.Jne, sh~
is. looking for residents to
help distribute letters to
the committee to show
support.
~It's siill just the begin-
ning. There's a long way to
go," Vogt said. •But it'.s a
start."
MAKING BIRDIES
The players on the Senior Tour have made a career
out of showing all the young whippers nappers in the
gallery how it's done.
So you don't want co miss the only Orange County appearance of
legends like Lee Trevino, Chi Chi Rodriguez, H ~le Irwin, Tom Kite
and defending champion Gary McCord.
These guys have made more birdies, won more tournaments and
electrified more crowds than anybody on the face of the planet.
But thtrt's plmty morr whrrr that came from.
Newport Beach Country Club o Febr uary 28 -March 5
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440 E. 17th Street ,. Costa Mesa
We're new in/our neighborhood but
ol in lradition
E.m1blished in 1983
16 Years ia Newport Bea~
Fine Jewelry ( 14 K-18K-Platinum)
Ci.a.>com D~gns
FulJ Service Jeweler
Graduate Gemologist
Eic~rr Jewelry &.
Watch Repair
. .
00~
( F J •. E J E 'VE L RY )
Costa Mesa
2706 Harbor Blvd.
(3 doors south of Pier 1 Imports}
714·241 ·9404
Tues -Fri I Oam -6pm • Sar I Oam -4pm
Th\S
vatenune's oav
fl/I FREE LONG
S'fEMMED !l2~ES
purchase 1.doz.en \on~f:ruary 10 and
delivery betW. ea coupon for a 13 and recew .;..,\ \ong-FREE doien wra~t'J~g . stemmed roses
July 1-Sept. 1
FREE
WIN ROSES
FORA YEAR
Stop by either ot our '>lores
and reg1Mcr to win I do1,en
arran8cd long stem f'OSC.'1
e.ich monlh for one year.
(Value $67S.00)
OJ ~ l:R (j()()O
TllRU 2-14
1..aoG-PLOWlllS
2275 Ncwpon Blvd.
Co ta Mc a
Corner of Ncwpon · Fturvl w
(949) 645-0246
2986 Harbor Blvd.
o ta Mesa
0 m~r ol tlntbor & Baker
(714) 540-3135
BEU.Y
DANCERS!
TENTS I DINE IN A
ROMANTIC
SETTlNG!
Celebrate
Valentine's D~y
~-eekend With Us!
"Good food, good wine, good friends, good
laughsi and good Martinis are the main
ingredient for a happy life.~
Valentine's Day
Mon., Feb 14
Chef Fernando has
put togelher a special
menu with au of
Scampi'• best and
mosi popular dishe8l
---------· I 4.coune I
: MellforlWo !
I .......... I ..... : I I
• j , ..... ,.. ....... ,
'~.:.:: -~~'9-
576 Newport Blvd.
Costa Mesa
(949) -&5 0
UNITED COLORS
OF BENETTON.
final
reduction
entire
fall/winter
collectfon
starts at
50o/o off
hurry in
before
new spring
aritvalsj off
Feehlon 1-nd
~a..ah
....,. Atrtum Ccut
(949) 760-6577
k
' Daily Piiot
Long-stemmed chocolate truffie roses
Heart-shaped boxes
Choco!ate champagne bottles
Individual chocolate hearts
Gourmet caiamel apples
Over 100 chocolate s~alties
Westcliffe Plaza, 1124 Irvine Ave.
(comer ef 1 Tth 61 Irvine)
\94J J!-8'1 0
• OAKES • PASTRIES
• COOKIES • PIES • TORTES •
ROLL~ ·RREAD
Over 30 dltf.,.,. kinda of brNd bilked Mlly on the premtMe.
COSTA MESA IRVINE MISSION VIEJO
1170 W. Baker 14443 Cull/er 24000 Alicia Pkwy
(at Falrv~l _ Walnut VIiiage Center Gatew~ ~ Ctr.
(714) 546-6388 (149) 262-9270 (Ml) 830-9580
Valenti1zc ;!000 \pt cial1
·'A .LA CAHl'B MgN(J it.US THiiSC. Sl'ECl1\l ~'i
Fri. Feb 11th thru Mon. Feb 14th
St11rten:
• Shrimp PAKORA Salad
salad of spicy greens, shrimps 1>1kor• t.lmimnd honey-91ng« drenang
• Lamb RAVIOLI in Basil coconut curric<kaucc
Tandooo i.mb ravioli Wfapptd 1n curried Jotuce. Nan breld
M,,;,. Co.,,..:
~ with lemon-mun.a.rd b.umaci rice and Nan bread
• Shrimp MAKHANI
Jumbo wimps, delkatety JaUt~ in our l•m<M Mllr.h.lni wiuce
• Rack of LAMB
Tandoori Qr'~ JUICf lamb ctiops, m.iihf>d potatoes. 1•mpur1 saU<e
• Tandoori grilled SALMON or SWORDFISH
'rm salmon Of SWOfdflsh. nwin.wt~. (a{ffvlly Qrllled 1n tandoori
larNrind )MK. s.wd °" b9d of mango.papaye rellVI • aa.,,
MaJnao Cttmc Brulec or
ice cmm) with dnmken chmia
' Daily Pilot '
/,,J.-,, .. ,,,
•[)mn,.,· s1.zlcJd
Cookie Trays
• ieart Shape Brend
Cuoc ke
Pies
I '
#
'(\•l1 bratr \'alrutiur's '
All \\eel.end Long ...
t:ridu), Suturda),
Sunday, Monday!
D110cing, romancing
and cui ine fit for
a King und Queen!
We promise nll the
obo\e, )OU uppl}
the lo\e!
1
Choose your evening ef romance wlth your
reservaaon Fri., Sal., Sun. or Mon. nighc.
For R.-1c•r,·ahoni. Call (l) 19) f,-,, 1 'l?.2
3520 E. PACIFIC COAST HW): •CORO:\ A DhL MAR
Who/,,•/• Priei•1 011 '
All ]e•d•ry Rep•ir1
All work dono on premises
';. elry Mart
1~ 1/2 MaR.noli8. fount.sin Vnlley ~
(Ill 1\iliert • ~ Nd~ Center)
~pert JeWelry ~ dont on ple'J"l9ta
(7~.Joo. 78
Sotvrdoy, February l 2, 2000 Al3
~~ Adam and Eve ~ S I t got started over a RIB... ·
What ~ould be more romantic?
Complimentary Photo & Card for all Valentines
Now Accepting Limited Reservations l
2196 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa
• Cute & Sery Lingerie
• 100's of Loue Lotions
HOURS
Mon. ·Sat. 10-9
Sunday 11·6
COSTA MESA RIVERSIDE MONTCLAIR MORENO
lt17Ua .... 11An t1'7 c.w.t Aot VAlLEY MALL 743 Baker Street 1111111 llldltulft rm. c.i. "' ..._ ""*•
1 block W. Bristol ama • Tfltt Mall llOtl t2H221 11111 551-WO
11 1909) 352-4485
11"1) .. ., w
•
I
'
Al4 Soeutday. Febtuary 12, 2000 VALEN'i'INE's DAY Doily Pilot
.. HEART
CONTINUED FROM A 1 Call it love at second sight
year of our lives, but alto tha
best because we Jlave had
each other to guide ~
through these tragedies,•
Jodi wrote in her Dune
essay. •nie best is to know
that together we can get
through anything life thro~
t nag rs are all on the same
page. Bob made sure his pic-
ture was nght next to Wecd-
ie's,
Once the yearboOk was
completed, tassels were
thrown and diplomas were in
hand, the group parted.
Leaving the small Ohio town
with a population of 6,500,
Bob and WeedJe went their
separtlte ways.
lt was the time of the
Great Depression and only
three students in the gradu-
.ating class went off to col-
lege. The rest joined the
Anny or got jobs. Life went
on and the two married other
people, bad children and
lived their lives.
They would've forgotten
about each other entirely if it
weren't for a letter inviting
them back for a high school
reunion in 1980.
·1 was single and wanted
to see everyone,• Weedie
said.
·1 hadn't been to any of
the reunions,~ Bob added.
In the interim, both had
lost their spouses and had
never entertained the
thought of remarrying or
even falling in love again.
And so Weedle went back
to Ohio from Indiana and
Bob flew out from Cal.i!ornia.
Having bad some trouble
renting a car at the airport,
Bob pulled up late, driving a
flashy red Pontiac Pirebird
with a big gold eagle painted
on the hood. Even more
awkward, though, was the
moment he walked into the
'f'eunion and realized he was
the only person wearing a
Hawaiian-print shirt.
"It looked like an under-
taker's convention," be
.
I
• Couple first met in
Corona del Mar, fell
in love 30 yea.rs later.
families lived next door to
each other in Corona del
Mar, have been mamed for
17 years.
Angelique Flores
DAILY PILOT
The story · of their
cowtship, which began three
· decades after the two lost
touch, inspired residents of
the Huntington Beach home
to vote for Barbara and Ted. B arbara and Ted Goon
will be having a royal
Valentine's Day this
year. .
Barbara, 83, and Ted, 88,
will be crowned VaJentine's
Day king and queen Sunday
at their home at Huntington
Terrace Residential Care.
The couple, who first met
after World War ll when their
recalled.
However, his unconven-
tional California ways
intrigued Weedie. He
slippeq into the seat across
from hers and the two spent
the evening reminiscing and
laughing about old times.
They were already falling
in love and . had clearly
stepped back in time ..
The couple, then in their
mid-60s, spent the rest of the
weekend together. They
went out dancing and stayed
out into the wee hours of the
morning.
Forgetting her years,
Weedie warned Bob not to
honk his horn when he
picked her up because her
95-year-old mother didn't
like it. She also worried that
her mother would reprimand
her for staying out so late.
Eventually, the weekend
passed and the two went
home. Then the flowers,
phone calls and trips began.
The happy couple started
out as friends, b6th manied
other people and raised their
respective families in the
'same Corona del Mar neigh·
borhood.
First, one family moved
away, then the other.
•we didn't have contact
again f<1t 30 years,• Ted said.
And continued~
Bob proposed four months
later because the distance
was proving to be too expen·
sive.
However, before she
accepted, Bob called all sev-
en of Weedie's children for
their pennission, which they
happily gave. The couple
married a month later.
· "The kids keep saying,
"Bob, if you take her off our
hands, the clleck is in the
mail,•' Bob said, adding that
he still hasn't seen any mon-
ey.
Now tbe Newport Beach
couple, who are in their early
80s, are preparing to cele-
brate their 20th wedding
anniversary this year. Bob's
hoping for a \,ig fat chec.k.
But Bob c!ri attest to the
old saying, •money can't buy
me love."
•1t just happened," Bob
said. "I wasn't out looking."
"That first weekend, I was
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After th06e 30 years. both
were widowed -Ted was
living in Brentwood and Bar-
bara liyed in Marin County in
Northern California.
On a business trlp to Bar·
bara's part of the state, Ted
called her on a whim, not
expecting her to return his
call.
"I called the number and
bit the jackpot," Ted said.
When Ted told his son and
daughter about phoning Bar-
bara, they remembered how
fond they were of their for-
mer Corona del Mar neigh-
bor when they were young
childrerl. They arranged for
Barbara to come down for a
hoping and praying,• Weed-
ie recalled. "I guess it was
_ supposed to be.•
visil
•Tuey decided to take f!
over, beginning the adven-
ture," Ted said. "My cbildren
ordered me to develop a
close relationship with her or
they'd shoot me."
Soon after, Barbara and
Ted had a "Viotgun", wed-
ding.
Barbara said the small
children she remembered
had grown up to be wonder-
ful adults, who now lavish
her with love.
"I enjoyed being the cen-
ter of attention,• Barbara
said. "They were a wonder-
ful family, and now we're two
big happy families."
trips, mischievously opening
all the cabinets and poking
around after the doctor
leaves the room.
• SOUL MATES The two met a couple
That they are soul mates is years ago and after only five
not visible on the surface. months, decided to·get mar-
Jodi is Western and Eric's ri~i·ve had cancer twice
• ow way,•
Asked if he ever thought
to choose an easier path, Eric
dismissed the idea.
"It's very rare you meet
that one person,• Eric said.
"We intertwine. We're one.•
• RIMEMIERlllG
WHAT'S IMPORTANT
1· The house that newly-
1· weds Paul and Jill Miller
bought in a little community
tucked away in South
Orange Courity represented
their future together.
•it was very family-orient-
ed, • Paul said. "Everything
was new and so pretty. We
bad it all. We were the per-
fect American couple.•
It was home and the cou-
ple set about making it their
own.
In preparation of the. birth
o( their first child, Jill spent
hours -paintbrush in hand
-. decorating a brightly col-
from the East. She's just out before and told him about
of college and he's looking it," Jodi said. "He was totally· toward retirement. .
ored Disney-themed nursery.
Paul remembers her there in
the room, sweeping her paint And then there's the Un-understanding.•
geeing issue of the rare form The rare illness, however,
of cancer that has stubbornly foreshadowed the tests the
attached to a muscle under couple would endure over
her brain. the months to come. Three
Still, looking deeper from months after they were
the heart, their souls are engaged, Jodi's father was
indeed intertwined. killed in a boating accident.
•1t was right from the Two weeks later, her can-
start, • said Eric Vanpraag. cer resurfaced.
·she fills my life Wlth a lot of •Enc married me two
sunshine. It's her demeanor, weeks later,• she said.
her personality, her 1diosyn-Smee then, the two hav,e
crasies -like when she uses continued to battle the dis·
her harlds as she talks.• • ease that doctors say will
Despite their 22-year age take Jodi's life within the
difference, the two share an year. Compounding this,
innate joy in life and have both of their mothers also
the same outlook on life. became seriously ill.
They have fun, Eric said -Through it all, however,
even on their visits to the neither of them ever consid·
hospital. He makes her laugh ered leaving ..
on the otherwise sobering "This has been the worst
brush to and fro, with a full
belly.
Their child, a son, was
born and a year later, the
couple decided to add to
their family. Jill finally
became pregnant again and
the two looked forward to
their second child.
Despite a tradition of twin
births in her family, Jill never
thought she'd have them
The couple went to the doc-
tor and sure enough, be dis-
covered two heartbeats. He
offered his congratulations
and began to leave.
But the technician noticed
something and pulled the
docto{ back, pointing to the
monitor.
SEE HEART PAGE A16
----------
, ! .'i M .. . : :
· ·
110ver 6 Million Homes Cleaned" f 0 ff;
I fl I L~t:.s_~~l~-~j
efinislt.ing
Dollf' Pilot
Valentine's Day $237 a night, which includes:
champagne and truffl~ upon ACTIVITIES checking into a deluxe room
and choice of breakfast in
• Gondola Crwse or candle-bed or Sunday brunch Call
(949) 476-2001. light dinner and dancmg
aboard a yucht. Call AdVen-• Valentine's Day brunch or tu.res at Sea at (888) 4-GON-cllnner and danang at the DOLA or (949) 650 2412 Riverboat Restaunmt. $75 per
•Romantic crwse on Hom-person. Call (949) 673..3425
blower Cruises. Call (949) • Valentme's Dinner at The Q-16-0155. Ritz restaurant and garden.
The special menu includes: •Valentine's Day brunch or broLled main lobster, Porto· dinner at the Sutton Place heUo filet ~on, passion Hotel Sunday brunch is $29 creme brul served with to $39 and will be held from · strawberries soaked in Grand 10:30 a.m. to 3 pm. It will MamiPT. Call (949) 760-6686. include: internationcll settf ood
&nd salad, roasts, breakfost, . • Valentine's pd1'ty at Tommy dessert and champdgne. Din-Bahama's lroplcal Cafe and ner on Monday will include: Emporium. The festivities (our-course mecili with every-include· a floral greetings, ' thing from Norwegian three-course dinne~ unlirnit-salmon to filet mignon There ed champagne and live is also a "Two of us· Valen-entert.auunent for $40 Call tine's weekend package for (949) 760-8686.
Merchandise From Our
SEMIANNUAL SALE
(While Supplies lasts)
1036 Irvine Ave.,
Newport leach, We1kliff Pla.za
VALENDNE'S DAY
•Spa date package at Spa roses, ~ets and a van ty
Gregorte's for $150. The of romantic and exotic floral
package mcludes: a one-hour arrangements, For more infor·
mas ge or facial and a $15 mation. call (714) §35-8571.
gift certif1cato for the restau-
rant of the couple's choice •Valentine's Day ·Seruor
Restaurants mclude Tommy Prom• at the Costa Mesa
Bahamas, The Riverboat. Sen.lor Center from 1:30 to
Roy's, Turto Mare or Ban· 3.30 p ln. Monday. The event
dera. Call (949) 644-6672. will feature dancing, refresh-
ments and the crowrung of a
•Cultural Valentine's Day at prom king and queen. Por
the Orange County Museum infonnation,call(949)645-
of Art On Sunday, the muse-2356.
wn will feature a free Lunar
New Year CclebratiOn with •Leslie McCarthy will be
dragon dances, d Chinese i.nsctibing wine bottles with
Youth Orchestra, the East calligraphic letters for Valen-
West Players, art activities, tine's Day at Hl-Time Wine
refreshme-nts and gallery Cellars through Monday. The
tours. Call (949) 759-1122. store is at 250 Ogle St., Costa
Mesa. For more information,
• Valentme's Day event at call (949) 650-8463.
South Coast Plaza through
Monday. Le Mirage Aorist • ·Love Conquers All,~ an
will have displays in front of
the Carousel Court and at the
event showcasing stories of
eight couples with extraordi-
elevator in the Crate & Barrel nary love ltves, at t 1.30 a.m.
Wing, featuring single-stem Monday at Newport Dunes
M>'re Bursting With Quality
Furniture at Great Savings!
• Model Home Furniture .• Antiques •Art Accessories
• Arta Rugs & More! Custom Refi11ishing & Upholstny
(949) 646-1822
670 W. 17th St., #02 • Costa Mesa
Hours: Mot1.-Sat. J Jam -4pm
,,
Saturday, Febtuory 12, 2000 AIS
Resort's Back Bay Cafe, 1131 (949) 642-0090.
Back Bay Drive, Newport
Beach For more infonnation, • Magg1a.rlo'1 lJlde Italy will
call (949) 129-3863. off er three seati.ngs on Valen·
tine's Day to accommodate
• Muldoon's Pub will host a the amorous, hungry masses.
Celtic music & dance Valen-A Valentine's menu with spe-
tine's Day celebration starting cial entrees and desserts will
at 1 p.m. Sunday. The public be featured and live music
is invited to bring guitars. fid-will be provided. Maggiano's
dles, flutes, banJOS and other is at 3333 Bnstol Road, Costa
instruments for a Celtic jam Mesa. For more information.
session. The pub is at 202 call (714) 546-9550,
Newport Center Drive, New-
port Beach. For more infor-•The Golden Tru.fDe is
mation, call (949) 640-41.10. offenng a Valentme's Day
menu through Monddy. The
•The Yard House will offer dinner, pnced at $68 per per-
an aphrodisiac menu through son, includes entrees such as
Monday to celebrate Valen-Canadian wild salmon with
tine's Day. The offeringS' spinach and hlbl.SCUS cham-
mclude oyster chowder, pagne sauce and grilled Col-
white and dark chocolate orado lamb chops with wild
mousse and pan-roasted lob-mushroom ravioli Seabngs
ster tail. The Yard House is at are at 6 and 8:30 p m. The
the mtersection of Newport restaurant is at 1767 Newport
and Harbor boulevards at Th-Blvd .. Costa Mesa. For more
d.ngle Square, Costa Mesa. Ul.forrnabon,call(949)645-
For more Ul.fonnation, call 9970.
Un_p4rallekd IJ'Ntmmts for bady, $ hair
200 Newport Center Drive• Next to Muldoon'•
949 644-6672
• Fad.I• • Ma..Mr • Microdermabruloa • Body,.,.."' • Hrdrot.IMnpy • Bod1 PolWi •
• Pttla • Vkhy Sh~n • Stum Rooms • Wniag • Electrolysis •
• Mother-to-be prognm • Hand lie Foot Care • Gift Certificates
Sweet Local P tl"~1~telft OP"!~? ~u;aurt O!tat hrfatiPlf~?
ERRIES · It eoal'rl le a~th4Ka ·
•cwpon Children's Mcclical GrQup olfcrs Board Uni&d
Fresh Picked Daily spccialMs in pcdiauic pulmonary, emergencies, and crirical QIC, and endorinology.
Call roday for a full evaJuation for asthma and lung function
• Guaranceed Same Day Appoinunencs for acutdy ill. We are not fancy but we are FRESH
I
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• Open Sacurday & After Hours
Board Certified Specialists in:
• Primary Pediacric Care • Asrhma & Pulmonary Care
• Pediacric Emergenci~ & Crirical Care • Growth Disorders & Weight Concrol
FIELD FRESH PRO.DUCE STAND Newport
~~~tt:G~ Children's
ladi iem M.D., f W, K(~ ~feven Alielotitz M.D., fA»
Baa~~ O'(nl lD., fMP ferm Del Murn1 M.D., WP
400 EA T 17rn (Corner 17th & Tustin) Co ta Mesa
(949) 400-7659
Discontinued and overstocked items including slipcovered
sofas carried by major notional retailers like Z-Gollerie,
Restoration HardWare and others we can't
name but you will recognize.
" You can special order from over 200 fabrics ,
Everything here is new, obtained direcrly from the factory
·No Used Furniture or consignment ifem1.
Furnishings Direct carries upholstered sofas, sleepers, leather
sofas and choirs, entertainment cen~s, ormoirs, beds,
hondmode rugs, desks, lo!Tfs and more.
Celestino's
quality MEATS
1 IW rim·st Meat wxl S<•rv1re AlXlllal>le
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I ~offer.ALL.NATURAL BEEF & CHJCKEN I
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• Bacon Wr11pped Fi/Uu • Stuffed G11me Hnu
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Just in time for Valentines!
February 1st thru 14th
Everything ~ the store at least 200/o off!
/."'~•,"'""" '.A•:-J ,.. -, .. f· •.
~ Stock
\Reduction
\. Sale ,,., ""'-~ ... ~ ... "" ,~. t v "' .. ) A ,<· ... i· Up to · F~--\;, 40% j
Feb. 14111...,./~ ... 0~
,,,. , Ill:
J •' "'I
If r
As everyone who has ever attended one of
our sales knows, our sales arc truly SALES.
No tags changed ... no marking up to mark
down ... a truly righteous sale! Come early
for best selection.
CHARLES H. BARR
•
,All~ February 12, 2000 •
9UCb • ...., time,. be Mid. ·we nlflMnted me boufe.
gOt rid of Gll9 d .tbe can,
got dd OI nt1l'I bUl -but
we were bound and deter·
mtaed to bep·Qae boule.,,
~. it "bcame dear
tMt they would bave to tell
their bome. Even .o, tM
~ llted to alvage tbe
touct. tbat ..... it theln.
JIB waiMd to paint over
ti. murals In bar cbUdren'•
rooms. b\at.tbe family that
offered to buY the house
Mid thiy wouJdn't take it
witboUt the paintings. •
PACIFIC
CONTINUED FROM A 1 .
Center, the company has
decided to move 25% of its
work force to Foothill Ranch
ln June.
Mays added that the com-
pany had been wrestling
with the space crunch for two
years, and will have to come
up with a permanent solution
over the next decade.
•1 think Pacific Ufe has
heeded the message of the
(9,000) Newport Beach resi-
dents who signed the
(Greenllght) petition, saying
that they wanted less conges-
tion and crowding in . the
Tbe family Of m. even-
tually ma¥ed from Rancho
santa Margarita to a 1m411
rental in LakewOOd. . city,· said Phil Arst,
However, they've had
no regiets. ·we bated lOling what
we bad, but those are
material things,• Paul said.
"God gave us trtplets to
give us patience. ft'• made
our .relationship stronger."
spokesman for Greenligbt,
the group of community
activists that deSigned the
measure.
But at Tuesday's Newport
Beach City Council meeting,
vice mayor Gary Adams
belittled the measure's pow-
er, saying the developers
probably knew they didn't
have the council's support
•If the council did support
[the expansion), we'd proba-
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bly be subject to a referen-
dum vote,• he said. He
added that it proves the local
government system works
and does not need the Green-
light measure.
The i.tutiat1ve proposes to
give city residents the power
to vote on developments that
would requiie a major
amendment to the dty's Gen-
eral Plan. The measure
·defines •major" as any pro-
ject that would create more
than 100 peak-hour car trips,
add more than 100 homes or
contain more than 40,000
square feet of floor area
beyond current General Plan
limits.
While city officials are oy
no means siding with the
Greenlight group, they are
starting to realize the obvious
shift in the dty's voting popu-
lation against further growth.
•Tue atmosphere of the
city has changed,• said
Councilman Dennis O'Neil,
who headed the committee
that first approached the
Irvine Co. five years ago
about developing a long-
term plan for the build-out of
Newport Cenfer. •When it's
good fiiumdal times, people
tend to look more at quality
of life:
Back then. the dty was in
the midst or a recession -
starving for new revenue
sources and fretting about its
economic future. The ldea
was for a mixed-use plan that
would include retail, office
and residential development,
O'Neil said.
Unfortunately, the Irvine
Co. and other companies did-
n't start moving on the oppor-
tunity unW three years later.
By that time, the economic
win<\s had shifted, said Kevin
Murphy, former Newport
Beach dty manager. Times
were good agaio and the
community became more
interested in maintaining its
quality of life than saving city
services.
•nie tide had turned from
pro-development to anti-
development in California,•
he~d.
1b1s change in the resi-
dents' perspective on their
city's future led to the birth of
the slow-growth initiative.
Before the plans were
derailed, there were four
companies linked on one
General Plan amendment
application. The idea was to
share 'the costs of studies and
supporting documents.
The only remaining prop-
erty owner on the applica-
tion, the Newport Beach
Country Qub, is proposing to
build 150 homes on its prop-
erty.
.
Doily Pilot
II IUSllESS
Zuckerman
agency adds
new clients
Madeline Zuckennan
Public Relations & Mar-
keting Inc., a Newport
Beach company, has
added three new clients
to its roster: Seismic
Design Associates Inc.;
The 2000 Capistrano
Antiques and Garden
Show1 and South Coast
Motorcats.
The Laguna Niguel
company Seismic Struc-
tur.a.l Design Msodates
produces relnf orcement
systems for high-rise
structures.
The Antique and Gar-
den Show is a June event
that will bring more than
60 antlques dealers to
San Juan Capistrano.
South Coast Motorcars
is a dealership currently
under construction in
Mission Viejo. It is sched-
uled to open later this
year. The Zuckerman
agency has handled the
advanced marketing
campaign for the dealer-
ship.
The Zuckerman
Agency will launch pub-
lic relations programs for
each of its new clients.
NANCY CALHOUN'S
FACTORY OUTLET
GIGANTIC INVENTORY REDUCTION SALE
SAVE 40-70°/o FROM RETAIL
SATURDAY,FEBRUARY12
SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 13
•DINNERWARE
•GLASSWARE
•FLATWARE
• LACQUERWARE
• TABLE LINENS
•GIFTS
9:00 AM TO 5:00 PM
9:00 AM TO 5:00 PM~=::::-..
•BATH ACCESSORIES
YOU'VE PROBABLY SEEN OUR PRODUCTS IN MANY OF THE RETAIL
STORES, RESTAURANTS & HOTELS. WE, OF COURSE, CANNOT
MENTION THEIR NAMES. NOW YQll HAVE THE OPPORTUNITY TO BUY
DIRECT FROM THE MANUFt.crLJRER & SAYE!!!
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Lambert R.d.
lmprrial Hwy.
NANCY CALHOUN, INC.
1075 WEST LAMBERT RD., BREA CA 92821
I (IN THE KILROY INDUSTRIAL COMPLEX)
•
Doily Pilot
PET OF THE WEEK. J
Sadie Is a Labrador mix
who need5 a woman's loving
toJJcb-lhe's afraid of men.
She was tied up with a note .
around her neck saying the
owner couldn't afford to feed
her.
Sadie can be seen from
10:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. today at
Costa Mesa's Petco pet adop-
tion day. It ls at Newport
Boulevard and 18th StreeL
See Sadie and other animals
during the week at the New-
port Beat:h Animal Shelter,
located within the Dover
Shores Pet Care Center, 2075
Newport Blvd., Costa Mesa.
For more information, call
(949) 722-8301.
Animals Sponsored By:
The Community Animal
Network
P.O. Box 8662, Newport
Beach 92658
www.animalnetwork.org
(949) 759-3646
Air ntch 1000,.
The revolutionary new
synthetic material
created to Improve
golf glove comfO<t, flt,
What's . AFLOAT
• WHAT'S AFLOAT runs penod1·
cally in the Daily Pilot on a rotat·
ing basis If you know of an event
0< activity that could appear 1n
this coll.imn. please mail the 1nfor·
mat1on to Daily Pilot. 330 W Bay
St., Costa Mesa 92627, fax 1t to
(949) 646-4170, ore ma1l 1t to da1·
lypllotOlati~s.com. •
WHALE WATCHING
Davey's Locker operates
whale-watch crwses datly
through the end of Match
Operating hours arC' 10 am.
and 1 p.m. weekdays dnd 9
· a.m ., noon and 2:30 p m. on
weekends and holidays. Th£>
cost ts $14 for adults, $12 for
seniors, $8 for children ages
4 to 12, and no charge for
kids 3 and under. Spec:wl
discounts are avallable for
groups of 12 or more, com-
mumty youth groups, serv1ce
organizations and schools.
Private charters dlso dVa1l-
able. Guaranteed sightings
of whales or dolphins, or dll
passengers will recE>ive d
free pass. Davey's Locker 1s
at 400 Main St., Newport
Beach. For more infonna·
tion, call (949) 673-1434.
Saturday. February 12, 2000 Al1
Bongo's Sportfishlng Ctar·
ters offers private pdrty
whale-watching excursions
daily. The cost is $125 for
one hour, with a six-passen-
ger maxi.mum and a tbree-
hour rrurumum. Bongo's is
al 2130 Newport Blvd.,
Newport Beach. For more
mformation, call (949) 673-
2810.
dren ages 3 .to 11 are $8,
ages 2 and under are free.
Groups rates also available
for school~. youths. and
groups of 15 or more. Dis·
counts available on the Web
at www.newportwhale-
Wdtphing.com • The Pun
Zone Boat Co. IS at the Fun
Zone m Newport Beach. For r~ervabons. call (949) 673-
0240
Newport Liindlng SportfWl-
mg offers a low-cost way to SAILING CLASSES /
whale-watch, from 10 am BOAT RENTALS
l<? 1 p m. weekdays and 9 .
d.m. to 2:30 p .m weekends OCC's Satllng Program has
ond holidays. The cost is $14 scheduled ~ non-credit
tor adults, $8 for seruors and intermediate sluclds class
cluldren under 12 Speoal thal meets dunng February
discount rates a.re avdtlable . and March. The course will
lor schools, churches and emphas12P. <.r•amansh1p and
community youth groups. finite sail lnm. and sail
Newport La,Qdmg 15 at 309 shape. It als1> covers mdll
Palm St., Newport· Beach. overboard and anchonng,
For availablt:! dates and and students wtU have an
information, call (949) 675-opportunity to do c;oflle rat·
0550. mg. Cond1tions pemutting.
Furi Zone Boat Co. guaran-
tees whale or dolplun sight-
ings dunng 1ts excursions, or
the next tnp 1S free Dally
trips weekdays are at 10
a.m and 1 p m. and week·
ends at 9 a.m,, noon and
2:30 p .m. Cost 1s $14 for
adults, $12 for seruors. chil-
offshore saib.ng will be per-
mitted. ThP. hve-week se!>·
s1on meets from 1: 15 to 5
p .m Saturdays. Feb. 12. 19.
26, March 4 and 11 at OCC'~
Sailing Center, 1801 W
Pac1hc Coast . Highway.
Newport Beach Reg1s~a
ti9n is $115. For more infor-
mation, call (949) 645~9412.
Dozens of Valentine cookies. cakes &
coffee cakes -wrapped and ready to win
your heart!
;:,~nd\
The proprietary --"' .. ~~~~~~~---~. microfiber materialo -
Open Daily
• 6am -6:30pm
Closed Sunday
427 E. 17th St
Costa M•s•
(By Wherehouse Rc_acords)
(949) 646-1440
Presents
designed Into key '
areas to absort> and
wick away excess
moisture from t ...___._...,...
skin, to Improve
comfort and
performance
Cabrett. &...titer
100% Ethiopian
Cabretta leather palm
and fingers to Improve
grip, comfort and
performance.
A
ONCE IN A MILLENNIUM SAVINGS EVENT
SAVE UP TO 40°/o
6 .MONTHS SAME AS CASH O.A.C.
Thousand of gorgeous carpets from famous manufacturers like
Honeywefl, makers of Anso brand carpets, stunning henlwoode,
lemlnlltea, beautiful vinyl floors, ceramic tlle and a ~· wool calectlon. All discounted for our once in a Mlllennlui'n ,.,,.... Ev9nt.
BONUS SAVINGS CHECK
100
OFF
. 2129/00
Natural
Stone
Collection
GRAND OP G CELEBRATION
Tl1urs. Cr Fri., Fehrt1ary 17Cr 18 -9a.m.-8p.m.
• PRJZES •GIFTS • CHA.'-iPACc~l • Ho~ ool' ~Rf.)
20o/o off °"='"
\f New Spring Styles, lnclud.mg DKNY. Ellen Tracy,
Escada, St. John & More
\f Specializing in Qtuility Apparel & Acct)S()ries
\f Excellem Selection of Duigner Ck>thing
\f Looking for the "Best Kept &cret Closttl'f
\f We Offer 50/50 Consignments
333 E. 17th Screec, #4 •Cosca Mesa • 1&hmd lnr1HtJUJ111[ P"'u"lte1J
• {949) 650-7333 s:
'Ill.Ill
848.781.8730
Donald
Pliner
Personally
Spring 2000
line of shoes,
hoSlery, handbags
and eyewear .
Saturday,
11am-5pm.
PA8HION ISLAND • N•WPOllT • OH
•
t
., !
AJ8 Saturday, February 12, 2000
Next WEEK
A life history writing course at Oasis
Senior Center challenges students to
find the drama in their lives.
Doily Pilot
·South. Coast Rep's educational touring production will
bring tears to grown-ups and_ entertain youngsters.
By Ala Coolman
•
S THE SHOW OF "MY MOM'S DAD" LET OUT
at South Coast ·Repertory on Monday evening, an
odd sight unfolded in the lobby. ·
The children in the audience were smiling
. broadly and scampering around, looking very much
like kids who had just seen a funny, entertaining musical.
But the adults were behaving rather differently. Many of
them were ashen-faced, and more than a few were dabbing
a l<leenex at the tears running down their cheeks.
The show, South Coast Repertory's educational touring
production, is designed as a small-scale musical for schbol-
age children.
Much of the
performance is
full of the pep-
py songs, bright
colors and com-
ic antics that
are guaranteed
to entertain the
K-6 demo-
graphic.
"My Mom's
Dad • hits some
deeper notes,
too. The story,
which follows
the attempt of d young girl to form a friendship with her
grandfather, touches movingly on the importance -and the
difficulty -of communicating with loved ones.
If there are plenty of teenagerish lines that end in •sort
of.• there is also a kind of simple profundity to the connec-
tion the musical draws between the experiences of the
young and the old. Although the girl thinks of her grandfa-
ther as a man set in stone, she comes to learn that he is as
vulnerable and unformed as she is.
"Nobody's done growing as long as they're alive," is how
the grandfather puts it.
The musical is tounng Orange County schools that have
I
CONRAD lAU I DAllY PllOT
Above, John-David Keller and Courtney Wagner in a scene from .. My Mom's Dad," South Coast Repertory's educa-
tional touring productlon. At left. Maddy (Wagner) complains to her friend, James (Joe Alanes) about her grandfather.
hired the performance. In weeks ahead, it will appear at
many Newport-Mesa schools, including Adams Elementary
in Costa Mesa and Eastbluff Elementary in Newport Beach.
Everywhere it goes, "My Mom's Dad" generates both
laughter and tears.
Gina Ferrante, vice principal at Loara Elementary in Ana-
heim, said she found herself overcome, while watclung the
show earlier this month.
"I lost it,• Ferrante said. "I bawled my eyes out."
On the other hand, she said, the K-6 contingent was
enchanted by the musical's vibrant energy and the Viet-
namese fairly tale that forms the story's core.
"The children loved it," she said. "It was a nice balance of
the emotional, sensitive scenes and the humor. I'm not sure
how much of the deeper message they got, but it's a great
experie~ce for them just to be exposed to theater."
The Loara teacher who lobbied for "My Mom's Dad" to be
brought to the school, Carmen Guo, said the production got
students talking about their families.
"Some of them said, •1 always thought that my grandma
and grandpa and my mom and dad were so old that they
didn't have fun when they were young,'" Guo said.
For that matter, she said, the show c;aused her to remi-
nisce a little, as well.
SEE TOUR PAGE A22
The Stitches have local punk scene sewn up
Band brings its hard-edged
music to Club Mesa on Feb. 19
Alex Coolmen
DAILY PILOT
A t the K-B Club in
Long Beach, where
all the punkers and
skateboarders have their fin-
gers in their ears, things are
getting ugly.
Pabst Blue Ribbon has
been selling for a dollar at
the bar, and the crowd has
been diligently drinking its
way through the first two
acts or the night.
A small mushroom cloud
of cigarette smoke is billow-
ing up against the celling
like a, carcinogenic version of
heaven.
It's hot.
Everybody's drunk.
But nobody's dancing.
In fact, everybody in the
club is scowling. A shrill
shriek of gwtar feedback,.
the reason for their plugged
ears and the source of their
unhappiness, is blaring
through the PA.
The singer for the third dct,
The Stitches, is nowhere to be
found Stitches gwtarist John-
ny Witmer left his six-string
Fantastic FIVE
TODAY
squealing against his amplifi-
er a few minutes ago p.nd ran
off through the crowd. •
By the time he comes
back, dragging singer
Michael Lohrman to the
stage, the crowd looks less
ready to dance than to fight.
They're teetering on the
knife edge that separates
intoxicated exuberance from
surly belligerence.
But for The Stitches, and
for Lohrman in particular,
things are looking just right.
Lohrman, his body Ump
and sweaty, leers at the
scowling faces, taunting
them. Then he screams out a
count for the band, and
launches into a tune that's
sloppy, loud as bell, and
even more obnoxious than
the feedback had been.
And if the crowd didn't
understarid it before, they
get it now: The Stitches, who
play Club Mesa on Feb. 19,
are not a tidy, pleasant, .
digestible rock act. They're
punks. Their act isn't ugly by
accident; that's the way it's
suppoSed to be, and that's
what makes it exciting.
SUIDIY
Start the weetcend off on 1 vfttuotlc ~
The ~ Angelet PhllhlfmoNC and ~
Arcadl Yol1ll11 wlll •PPHt at .,.
.... County P'ri>rmlng Ml Center at
Ip m. ~ The ptogram ~ wclfll
'r flrokOfttv .nd TchaikcMkV. Tldcm ..
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,,
RYAN RAYBURN I DAILY PILOT
Stitches lead singer Michael Lohrman owns Underdog Records in Laguna Beach.
The Stitches have been
around since 1993, when
Lohnnan and Wittner started
working on a band whose
sound and image would
draw from early punk acts
such as the New York Dolls
and the Sex Pistols. Bassist
Peter Archer joined the -
IDIY
group a year later.
The band has gone
through several drummers,
with Eddie Gaxiola now fill-.
ing that role. But they've
stuck to essentially the same
sound, writing fast, blaring
tunes about the gnmmer side
of life. They've released a
couple of singles and cl1l
eight-song CD and record,
and are in the process of
record.mg a full•lengtb album.
For a long time, Costa
Mesa was a Stitches land-
mark. Lohrman lived at a
house on 20th Street that was
e sort of warren for question·
•
TllSDIY
The Na11*t lilCh Naik lblfY's MW
M ....... -0,~apn.fhe
.. of ...wcolM .., _, .... ._..°"""*' ....._ ff-...
• Ptlincft-• .....,_It ............. .... """' ................. ~ .. . -............. -----~-,,.,. ..... ~ ...... 11t~.a:
WI
able behavior and a breed.mg
ground for local bands.
"It used to be a nun's con-
vent, but w~ really kind of
turned it the other way,"
Lohrman said. •1t was a real-
ly cool scene. All the bands
were playing together and
supporting each other."
Witmer remembers that
period a little differently, say-
ing that the atmosphere was
"not too healthy• et times,
but still regards the area, and
Club Mesa in particular, as
•a kind of home spot for us.
"It was one of the first
clubs we did shows at,• he
said. Today, the band is dis-
persed around Los Angeles
and Orange County. Witmer
lives in Hollywood, while
Lohrman and Gaxiola are in
Laguna Beach and Archer
spends his days in Fullerton.
When they come together
for a live show, though, the
manic, dysfunctional energy
of the grimmest Costa Mesa
times does not seem far
away. Whether Lohrman is
knocking over the drum kit
or tightening the microphone
cord like a noose around his
neck, he gives off the vibe of
a man who knows his partic-
ular genius is for self-
destruction.
SEE STITCHES PAGE A22
I IY
l •
Daily Pilot DATEBOOK
..
Sotvrdoy, February 12, 2000 /t)9
Maureen Reagan leads ~n Evening of Memofies'
'If my father wa~ utter-ing with any other dis-
ea.~. I want you to
kilow that he would be here
tonighf. • shared Maureen
Reagan, eldest cluld of former
Pre$ident Ronald Reagan.
The fonner first daug'tlter
and her husband, Dennis
Revell, traveled to Newport
Beach from thell" home in
Sacramento to participate in
the Orange County
Alzheimer's Assn. benefit at
the Four Seasohs f lotel,
Newport Beach.
• The runner/fund-raiser
took place last Saturday, on
the eve of Ronald Reagan's
89tb birthday. The chilling
connection was not lost on
the crowd of more than 500
guests in black be who had
come to work for a cure, rius-lng more than $100,000 from
• the silent and live auction
and dinner proceeds
Maureen Reagan
addressed the ballroom with
warmth and confidence,
sharing her role in the fight
against Alzheimer's. As a
member of the national
board of the Alzheimer's
Assn., she tfdvels the.country
raising funds and awareness.
Nit's my job to spread the
word. We can give people
THE CROWD
their lives back when we
fmd ~he cure. In the me~:.
tune, we can stop the
scourge. We can deliver new
hope,• said Reagan, accept-
ing the accolades from men
dnd women in this communi-
ty who heard her message
loud and clear.
Lori Warmington hon-
orary co-chair of the
evening, shared her OWT)
personal relationship with
Alzheuner's. Introduong
Reagan, Warmington told the
crowd that her mother ism
the finaJ stages of ~he dis-
ease.
"My mother was the first
head cheerleader at UCLA
and had a long and reward-
ing career as a teacher. It's
odd to think that my mother,·
. the former cheerleader,
shares this tragic bond with
ttie fonncr president of the
Uruted States through
Alzheimer's.•
Reagan put her anns
around Warmington as U to
say that they did indeed
share a bond.
Warmington concluded,
stating: •All 4fe ts connected.
Love never dies.•
The events of the ..evening,
Including the Reagan
address, were punctuated by
the images of Alzheuner's
victuns pro1ected on two·
massive screens stationed.at
either end of The Four Sea-
sons ballroom The mothers,
fathers, siblings and friends
of guests in attendance and
conurullee members of the
assoc1dbon beh.med at the
gdthennq through photos
taken m earlier times.
Among the ftlm tributes
was the recently departed
mother of Julie David, event
co-chair, and the mother of
Alzheimer's acbvist Cathy
Torre Houghton, alive and
suffering at 88 years of age.
I foughlon looked up at
th<> screen to see the snap-
shot of her mother taken al
around age 20 just as Rea-
gan shdred with the crowd
news of her father's condition
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and his 89th birthday cele-
bration.
Then a pdssport photo
appeared of young
Houghton and her brother
with their mother in the ldte
1940s. Memones rushed
back as the Alzhellller's sup-
porter dnd caregiver
rec.ailed her tnp to Europe
as a child.
NThey used to put the
children and their mother
together on the passport
photo,• H oughton sdid
The success of the
everung can be att.nbutcd to
the bond shared by dll m
attendance. Every person m
the ballroom was touched by
Alzheuner's Some live wilh
the disease, fdcmg it daily.
Many more are caretakers of
·loved ones who are sliffer-
ing. And all want to hnd a
cure.
The room buzzed With
conversation over recent
media reports concerrung a
Los Angeles man who
underwentexpenrnenldl
surgery that reversed the
effects of his Alzheimer's.
Words of doubt and rear
mixed with words of urgent
optimism over the procedurn.
What is certain is that dware-
ne s or the d1sedse cUld its
widespread destruction of
livei. ts now very much m the
public spotlight, thanks in no
small way to Ronald Reagan
dnd his family.
The Alzheimer's Assn.
called the event, dppropn-
ately, •An Evenmg of Memo-
nes." l lonorary accolades
were bestowed upon Peter
Villegas and Lon Warming-
ton. Al7heuner's Assn. Chair-
mdn Donuld Power also pmd
tnhutc> to commuruty mem-
bers Carl Cott.ntan, Jeffrey
Cummings, Peggy Goldwa-
ter C lay dnd The Hutton
Foundation, represented by
Arlene Craig, and SupeTVl-
sor Tom Wilson, A hedrtfelt
servlce award was gwen to
Alzheimer's Assn. leader Un-
da Scheck.
There wasn't a dry eye m
the.house as all rose to thel!
feet with dpplduse for
Scheck dnd the honorees.
Local television personcili-
ty Ed Arnold hdndled the
Jndster of ceremorues duties
with style A succ~ssful dUC-
tion of art credted by
Alzheimer's potients was a
movmg testament to the sup-
port offered by the Newport-
M<•sa commuruty.
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Jacqueline DuPont, Jennifer
cUld Mike Gotuteb, Ellen
and Steve Milner, Tina'
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Samuelson, and Kim cmd
John White.
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Ka(la Hammond, Stephen
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A20 Saturday, February 12, 2000
One grain
at a time
Director transforms stage into beach
in 'Coastal Disturbances' at
Costa Mesa CiVic ·Playhouse
By Tom Titus -(f) ne thing there's no
shortage· of in. this
part of the world is
sand. From Seal Beach
to San Clerne.:1te, the coast~
line abounds in the stuff.
But if rou're putting on a
play thats set on a beach
and need, say. a few tons of
it for your setting, be pre-
pared tO break out the
checkbook.
That's what director Terri
Miller Schmidt found out
when she started looking !or
the sand required for her
play, "Coastal Disturbances,"
which opened this weekend
at the Costa Mesa Civic
Playhouse.
"You can'~ take any of the
sand from the beach,"
Schmidt said. "It's like the
landscaping. It's city property."
So, the playhouse wound
up shelling out $900 to have
151 bags of sand, al 125
pounds each, moved from
Quality Building Supply in
1 Iuntrngton Beach to the
back door of the Civic Play-
house, where it now covers
the entire stage of the the-
ater where the Tma Howe
play is unfolding.
"The Sclild is like a 10th
character i.n the play;
Schmidt said. UWhen the
actors flfst started walking
on H, they were dropping
lines and rms~ing entrances .•
Actually, the "CoaslaJ Dis-
turbances" car:.t memb"ers
had gone through a dry, or
rather sandy, run.Schmidt
took them down the coast to
Moss Point in Laguna Beach
for a recent rehearsal. But
after a half hour, the tide
washed in and put a ddmper
on the drama, forcing the
company to relocate further
down the coast.
"The bedchgoers provi~
ed an audience," she noted,
ddding that during moments '
of .conflict, some bystanders
who didn't realize 1t was a
play nearly got involved, but
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"EIJRIORDINARY" .
"Few plays are as confidently origiital
as this one, as rich with ideas about the
m~g of America, or as stimulating
to watch unfold on the stage."
-11ME MA<•AZINE
IX~ Hollow l~"'\~
by Howard Korder
llURR.Yl ANAL tERFORMANC~ MUSTCUlSF. PEBRUARY 13 ·
A supple, seRJual pnNlllCtion
that's ~ d•nlnaf"
o,.,ttt ""'~ ~
~ef trel\~es to S"( v"Jor PA(i
MAke Me Hot
DATEBOOK Daily Pilot
DON LEACH I DAllY PILOT
Costa Mesa Civic Playhouse director Terri Miller Schmidt stands on the sand-filled stage of "Coastal Di.sturbances."
chose not to interfere.
ucoastdl Disturbances" -
not to be confused with the
recently uncovered Ten-
nessee Williams play of the
same title -is a story a bout
relationships among people
from 7 years of age to 72 as
they visit the beach. The
play is seldom performed,
Schmidt said, because of the
logistics involved.
Since it'~ set on the
Atlantic C<mst, off Massa ...
chusetts, Schmidt contacted
a woman in that state -and
struck paydirt.
· "She sent out family pie-
tures, brochures, newspa-
pers and maps of the area so
we c;.ould farniliahZe our-
selves with that section of
the country," Schmidt said.
The director is a native Cali-
fornian, born in Compton,
who's been staging plays in
Costa Mesa and Newport
Beach for several years. Her
work ranges from the musi-
cal revival "Bells Are Ring-
ing" to Arthur Miller's heavy
drama "The Price," both at
lhe Newport Theater Arts
Center.
She got into theater as a
youngster, then put her avo-
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cation on hold while she
raised two children. Since ·
she's been back, Schmidt has
been one of the more
impressive directors on the
local theater scene.
"I'm really proud of the
Costa Mesa Playhouse for
taking a chance on an
unknown and difficult-to-
stage play like this,· Schmidt
said. "It's nice to put on the
popular musicals, thdt you
know will draw, but we need
plays like thi~ to provide a
sense of balance."
She and her company
will face another problem
once the play closes next
month. Namely, getting all
that sand off the stage
before the'next production
gets under way. ·u we'd thought that far
ahead, we could have fol-
lowed 'Coastal Disturbances'
with 'Seascape' and 'To
Gillian on Her 371.h Birth-
day,'# she said, laughing.
Both of those plays have
beach settings.
"Coastal Disturbances"
opened Thursday at the play·
hou.<>e, 661 Hamilton St., Cos-
ta Mesa, and runs Thursdays
through Saturdays at 8 p.m.
and Sundays at 2 p.m. until
March 5. Reservations are
being taken at (949) 650-5269.
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Featuring :
Doily Pilot DATEBOOK Sotur&y, February 12, 2000 A21
• Send AfTEA HOUltS items to the
Daily Pilot. 330 W. Bay St., Costa
Mesa 92627; fax th~ to (949)
646-4170; <><call (949) 764-4330. A
complete lirti09 can ~ found ait
www.d•ilypilot.com . · .
MUSIC
fVAN YANAt<OV
Orange Coast Urutanan Uni·
versallst Church will host d
recital by Bulgdriun pianist
Ivan ·Yanakov at 5 p.m.
After
today.
Yanakov,
a special·
ist in HOURS romantic
late-20th century Russian
music, will perform Stravin-
sky's •Petrouchka • suite,
along with works by Chopm,
Rachmaninoff an<.i Haydn
Tickets are $8 The church is
at 1259 Victona St., Costa
Mesa. For more mfonndllon, can r114) 639-9Jot.
LEONID LEVITSKY
St. Andrew's Presbytenan
• Church will host a perfor-
mance by pidrust Leonid
Levitsky at 4 p.m. Sunday.
Levitsky is the founding
director of the Pacific Virtu-
osi, formerly known as the
Newport Beach RC!cital
Series. Tickets to the event
are $15 for children and $30
for adults. St. Andrew's is at
600 Saint Andrews Road,
Newport Bedch. For more
infonnation,call(949)574-
7733.
JAl.ZY SOUNDS OF LOVE
The Newport Beach Public
Ubr:iry presents a free mus1·
cale tiUed •Jazzy Sounds of
Love-at 3 p .m. Sunday.
Piarust Richard Abraham
an<l jazz vocalist Debbi Ebert
will perform jazzy, Broad-
way-style love songs. The
library is at 1000 Avocado
Ave., Newport Beach. For
more information, call (949)
717-3801.
'THE ROMANTICS II'
Pacific Chorale presents
musical •aeauty and the
• Beast.• nckets are $42. Per·
formances are Thursday and
Fnday at 7:30 p.m .. Saturday
al 7:30 and 9:30 p.m and
Sunday 'at 1 p m The Center
is at 600 Town Center Dnve,
Co ta Mesa. For more Ul.for-
mabon, call (714) 740-7878.
STAGE
'THE HOLLOW LANDS'
"The Romantics II,• a pro-
gram of dioral works by
Brahms, Britten, John
Alexander and others, at at 7 ·
p.m Sunday. at the Ora,nge .
County Performing Arts .
Center. Tickets are $14 to
South COdSt Repertory pre-
sents Howard Korder's play
MThe Hollow Lands• through
Sunday. Tickets are $28 to
$47. The playhouse is at 655
Town Center Dnve, Costa
Mesa. For more information,
call (714) 708-5555.
'REFERENCES TO SALVADOR
DAU MAKE ME HOT' $48. The Center is at 600
Town Center Drive, Costa
Mesa For more information,
call (714) 740-7878.
BRUCE BETZ
Bdffies & Noble Metro Point
hosts Bruce Betz, acoustic
guitarist, from 7 to 9 p.nt
Thursday. The store is at 901
B Soitth Coast Drive, Suite
150, Costa Mesa. For more
information,call(714)444-
0226.
SUSAN EGAN
Broadway star Susan Egan
will appear at the Orange
County Performing Arts
Center's Pounders Hall on
• Thursday through Feb. 20.
Egan is known for her work
m the role of Belle m the
South Coast Repertory pre·
scnts Jose Rivera's play •Ref-
erences to Salvador Dali
Make Me Hot" through Feb.
27. Tickets are $26 to $45,
with a pay-what-you-will
show today. The playhouse IS
at 655 Town Center Dnve,
Costa Mesa. For more infor-
mation, call (714) 708-5555.
'A VIEW FROM THE BRIDGE'
Newport Theatre Arts Cen-
ter presents Arthur Miller's '
MA View From the Bridge•
through Feb. 27. Shows are
Thursdays through Satur-
, days at 8 p.m., with Sunday
matinees at 2;30 p.m. Tickets
are $13, $15 for opening
night The theater is at 2501
Cliff Drive, Newport Bedch.
'I THINK,
THEREFORE I MAMET'
Orange Coast College will
present a program of short
plays by David Mamet today
and Sunday in the Dram.a
Lab Studio. Shows are at 6
p.m. today and 2 and 7 p.m.
Sunday. Tickets arc $5 to $6.
OCC is at 2701 Fairview
Road, Costa Mesa For more
information, call (714) 432-
5640, ext:l
'NUDE WITH VIOLIN'
The Newport Beach Public
Library presents a readers'
repertory presentation' of.
Noel CowarCl's play, •Nude
With Violin,• at-7 p.m
Thursday. The e vent is free.
The library is at 1000 Avoca·
do Ave., Newport Beach. For
more information, ccill (949)
717-3801.
ART
'CfTY LIGHTS'
The Newport Beach Public
Library presents "City
Ugbts, • an exhibit of Wdter-
colors by Mary Monge, Tues·
day through Feb. 29. Monge
focuses on urban acllvil1es · •
from eating a French dip
sandwich at Phillipe's to tdk·
ing in a night at the theater
The library is at tQOO Avoca-
do Ave., Newport Beach. For
more infonnatfon, call (949}
717-3870.
ALDO LUONGO
l..ahd.lnct Ga.llenes m Fashion
island will feature works by
Romantic ImpresStonist Aldo
Luongo at an artist reception
and exhibition Crom 5 to 8
p.m. today. The gallery is at
1173 Newport Center Dnve,
Newport Beach For mor.e
information,call{949)721-
9117.
FAMILY ARTS DAY
The Orange County Muse-
um or Art will hold a Family
Arts Ody from noon to 4 p.m.
Sunday. The day or free
<iCtivibes includes drop-in art
pro1ects, performances and
gdllery tours, dS well as com-
plimenldry refreshments
The museum IS at 850 San
Clemente Drive, Newport
Beach. For more information,
call(949)759-1122
'EUROPEAN IMPRESSIONS'
The lmpress1orust·lllSptred
oil paintings of Lenora Mon-
ahcm and the work of Molly
Greenberg will be on display
through Monday m the I
Newport Bedch City Hall
Gallery. The paintings depict
landscapes in Tuscany,
Provence and Southern Cali-
fornia. City Hall is at 3300
Newport Blvd., Newport
Bedch. For more information,
call (949) 717·3670.
'IN COLOR'
The Orange County Muse·
um of Arts presents •1n Col-
or: Silkscreen Prints from the
Collection• through today.
The exhibition explores the
silk-scrcp,n pnnting process
and the emergence of the
Pop Art movement of the
1960s. The show i at the
museum's satellite gallery m
South Coast Plaza, 3333 Bear
St., Costa MP.sa For more
information, call (949) .759-
1122.
FILM
'NORTH BY NORTHWEST'
The Orange County Muse-
um of Art presents Alfred
Hitchcock's ·North by
Northwest• dt 6:30 p.m. Fn·
day The museum is at 850
San Clemente Dnve, New·
port Beach. Tickets are $4 to
$6. For more information,
call (949) 759-1122, ext. 204,
POETRY
LOVE POETRY
Alta Coffee House will hold
a love poetry contest at 8
-.
p .m. today. Admission is free
to the general public. Entry ·
fee for the contest ts $3. Alta
is at 506 31st St., Newport
Beach For more information,
call (949) 675·0233
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A22 Saturday. February 12, 2000
TOUR
CONTINUED FROM A 18
•1 thought about my own
grandma, who had come
from Spam and had gone
through Franco's wgune, and
I remember how she used to
tell us ~ones about all of
that,,. sne said. "I remember
her teUin~ us, the cousins
and my sister and I, about
how they had to cross the
Pyrenees to go to France."
The grandpa in this pro-
duction is played by John-
David Keller, who has direct-
ed South Coast Rep's cducd-
nonal producuons for year~.
1lu.s is the first timq Keller
has ever acted in any of the
educational mus1cals, though.
"When this show was
wntten, it became one of my
favorite children's plays the
theater has ever done.•
Keller explained.
And the role oI the grand-
pa, he said, 15 • d terrific part.
Humility aside, I think an
actor knows d good role
when he sees one. So I
asked for 1t I think they
were very surprised." Keller
said he tries to play.the
grandpa -who is a comic
·but also d very human char-
acter -in a way that will
make sense tor very young
children and be interesting
for older kids.
"You think about pldying
it tor the middle, about
fourth grad~· he said: •
·You're nor pandenng to 'tlle
sixth-graders, and there is
enough going on in the play
that the little kids ar~ gomg
to get it:
The remarkable thing, for
the actor, is the way the sub-
text of th.at fourth grade-level
performance manages to hook
the adults in the audJ"nce.
"The parents and teach-
ers are sitting there saying,
"Oh, it's a kids' show,' and
then suddenly they're
caught up in it,• Keller said.
This visceral reaction is
something that the children
notice, even if they are too
young to understand it.
"When (the adults] starf
crying. they're t.rylng to pass
it off. But the lads are aware
of the fact that their teachers
are moved by this."
For young children, it's a
very viVid introduction to the
power of the theater. And
that's auoal, Keller said,
because of the role that "My
Mom's Dad" plays m intro-
ducing people to the art form
"We realize how essential
1t is, if you're going to be
part of a community, to get
your;r»lf out in the schqol~
where the potentidl of our
future u.udienrc 1s going t,
comr-!rum," he .. aid.
'T >r inany people, th!
tounr 'J ,how could prob.1bly
be the hr!>t liv1,; .-,how they've
ever seen.•
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DATEBOOK
.
ABOI/£ PtlOTO BY CONRAD LAU I
OAllY Pl.OT
Above, J ohnrDavid
Keller talks to Amanda
Murray, 6, left, and
Bobble Zeidman, 4,
aftet: a p e rformance of
"My Mom's Dad."
-
At right, the
ensemble casl
with Plush or Berber.
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Daily Pilot
STITCHES
CONTINUED FROM A 18
•It all starts out m the
spint of a good tune,•
Lohrman satd. "But it doesn't
always end up that way. You
add a couple of dri.nkS to a
certain kind of personality
and 1t messes things up.•
FYI
THE snTCHES,
THE ZILL/ONA/RES
ANO THE SUPER
BEES
' •WHERE:
Club Mesa,
843 West 19th
St., Costa Mesa
•WHEN: 10
p.m. Feb. 19
•HOW
MUCH: $7
•PHONE:
(71 4) 642-8448
What-
ever
flaws
may
creep
irlto the
perfor-
mance,
the goal
is to
break
through
to some-
Uung
beyond
an ordl-
nary,
stale
show.
"II you
want it to be perfect, stay
home and listen to records,•
Lohrman said. "If I'm payi{lg
six bucks, 1 want to smile the
whole time and dance and
enjoy myself.•
What translates into an
exciting punk show, though,
is an odd combination of
musical skill and emotional
terrorism--what Lohrman
calls "the bell" of a live act
that gives off the impression
of teanng itself apart while
somehow managing to hold
itself together.
"It's all m the attitude,•
Lohrman said. "There's other
great live bands where it
sounds just like the record.
You just have to be enthusi-
astic about your band, and
when you play to play it with
all your heart."
Also performing with the
The Stitches are The Zillion-
aires, and The Super Bees.
[)()\'I< \II 111\I soo::
I \I~ Ill '1\1\ll ll\I I lH \I I)
Rabbitt Insurance Agency
AlTfO • HOMEOWNERS • KFAl.lli
40 Years In Business
~~~ ,_, ................ __ ./ > ,':.J
949-631-77 40
441 Old Nrwport BM. • Newport 8adi
(Neu Hoes HOif>ital)
WHY PAY
DEPT STORE .
PRICES?
V1 It our
AREA RUG STUDIO
Rugs & Runn ers on
Sale
..
COMM·UNITY
. Doily Pilot
·auoteOf
1HEWEEK ·
"Without having a mornl compass,
without realizing that there is right and
wrong, students don't know and shoot up
othei classmates. 11
-Newport-Mesa board member WENDY LEECE,
on posting the Ten Commandments in schools.
EDITORIAL
Newp_ort -Coast shoi.Jld Calm the waters ·
• A fter so many years or there would be n o dents to be compensated. agrQement for more than two
of studies. power annexation. The coast residents may years. And thdt's not what
playing dnd This has been a consis-not agree. But this time city anyone wants. It's lime to
behind-closed-tent attitude. While city officials are the ones with the compromise.
doors negotiations, it appears officials worked to meet leverage. The city is making pay-
as though the city's desired their demands, the resi-According to the agrOO!Dent men ls on a water bond from
annexation of the Newport dents of ten refused to with the water district, the city the Fountain Valley p1pelrne I
Coast could actuaJly become budge at all. need only annex a portion -project in 1995. The money
a reality. It's easy to understand as little for the payments comes from
Until now, the single why. The Newport Coast is a as one a charge on each monthly
biggest snag was the coast giant piece of prime coastal The city acre-of water b11J.
residents' desire for some tax property that tiouses some of could in effect the coast lf $11 million of the $25
relief. Alter all, their posh, the .wealthiest people in annex around in order · million were used to pay off
ocean-view mansions would Orange County, all of whom the demanding to get the that bond, it would result in
eventually pour $3 to $4 rml-know what the annexation is·. residents and $25 mil-about a 1 O'Y,, rate decrease
lion in property tax into city worth to the city. lion, and '
coffers. But this time, they are keep all of the the for Newport Beach rC'sidents,
At times, it seemed as going too far. $25 million for annexed Newport offkdls say.
though the residents' high The existing Newport its general portion That leaves $14 million to
be spent o~· thC' coast, demands could never be Beach residents deserve fund. does not
met. some of that money, too. even whether H's solely on tax
But last week, city leaders Because the city antici-have to relief or a package deal, pos-
struck a deal with the Irvine pated eventually serving the house sibly including a much-
Ranch Water District that coast with water, many any residents. needed library and commu-
would get the oty $25 rrul-facilities have, been built -The city could in eff eel mty center ..
lion in exchange for the per-with Newport Beach annex around th~ demand-Considering that the codsl
petuaJ rights to serve the ratepayer dollars -with ing residents and keep all of could easily get nothing al
coast with wd ter and sewer. oversized capacity. Now the $25 million for its gener-all, we'd say thdt's a pretty
\Vhat was the coast resi-that the ·city won't ever use al fund. good deal. One that should
dents' immediate response? that extra capacity, it seems But that's not why the city be snatched up rather lhdn
Give them all of the money fair for Newport Beach resi-has been slaving away on an sla_pped away.
Newport chamber questions Greenlight initiative
Recently, the Newport Beach
C1ty Council dgreed to
plac(• a controversial lJUba-
tive Qn the November ballot. Sup-
porters of Uus 1rut1dtive, which
could have deep-waching unpli-
cabons, have tilled 1t the "Grcen-
light lruballve. • This tmtiabve
would require a Mlywide vote on
all developments that would seek
a "ma1or• general plan amend-
ment. The •ma1or• 1s defined as
creating more than 100 peak-hour
car trips, more than 100 homes or
more than 40,000 square feet of
floor area over what th<' nly's
general plan allows.
Although tJu.s initiative seems
to be pretty strd1ghtforward, ·
num~rous arbcles have appeared
over the past few weeks that have
raised many confusing quesbons
to the Newport I farbor Area
Chamber of Commerce as well as
the community as a whole.
The chamber and volunteer
committees are concerned about
contlicting reports or lack of deh-
rutions. from the proponents of the
initiative. The following is a llst of
questions th.al dc~rve further
.analysis and discussion.
QuesUon l -Would unpor-
tant and needed establishments
such as churches, synagogues or
schools fall 1,1.J1dcr the initiati_ye?
QuesUon 2 -Would the
Greenlighl lnitiativ<' revert New-
port Beach's newly renovated
naffic Phasing Ordinance? This _
new version of the 'ITaffic Phas·
ing Ordinance (the tough(lst of its
Richard Luehrs
COMMUNITY COMMENTARY
kind in Orange County) has
brought the city out of ineVltable
lawsuits which put the oty in a
severely vulnerable state as
recently as a year ago.
Question 3 -Where will the
funding come from to hold the
numerous special elections for
developments throughout the oty
that the initiabve would trigger?
Let us remember that research
has shown (not retroactively) a
simple Starbucks on a street cor-
ner would require a vote of the
people~
Question 4 -How many spe-
cial elections would actually take
place? It is no secret that overall
voter turnout is very low for city,
state and federal elections, so
who would turn out to decide if a
new Starbucks was to be built?
Question 5 -Does the initia·
tlve ensure that new develop-· •
rnent is still studied for its envi-
rorunental unpacts, or will all
new projects simply go to the bal-
lot Wlthout this sort of review?
Question 6 -Does the iniba-•
tive include all developments tn
the "precedmg 10 years?" Some
of the supporters have said that it
is retroactive while others have
seemed to be unclear when the
Greenlightiinplicationstake
effect. The interpretation of th.ts
initiative still seems to be in
question by the people who
wrote it.
Question 7 -How will the
Greenlight lrutiative amend the
city's general plan on various
reqwrements not related to traf-
fic? For example, will current
requirements for schools and ser-
vices now reqw.red by the gener-
al plan be changed to accommo-
date the Ul.itiative?
Question 8 -ls th.is a otywide
measure, or is it segmented into 49
indiVidual ·zon~· of the city? The
supporters themselves have said
that analyzing all 49 •zon~ • of the
city (both presently and retroac-
bvely) IS a tremendously confusing
and an almost unpossible task.
QuesUon 9 -If the city IS to
be broken down into 49 individ-
ual zones, what sort of city
administrative cost will the initia-
tive create to track all of these
zones? ·
Questlqn 10 -Who will pay
for all of the research that will
n~d to be conducted to deter-
nune if a special elcruo'o Is need-
ed? Supporter~ have~ Sd.ld the city
may pay for this extensive
rescdrch, however, not more than
three months ago the city mandg-
er's ofhce reported that if New-
port Beach stdyed on its current
econorruc cour..e, debt would
engulf the city in hve years
QuestJon t 1 -Will the Green·
hght lrubdllve redUy stop any
t.r:dffic problems in the city?
. Reports have shown that the
majonty of lrclfhc comes from
commuters and beachgoers pass-
ing through Newport Beach Ini-
tiative supporters have not shown
how th.is irullalive stops traffic in
tho city itself.
Que Uon 12 -Is Uus tmtiative
intended to repldce the current
reView of new developments that
occurs by the oty's trained and
qualified staff, the Planrung Com-
mission and the City Counctll
The Newport Hdrbor Area
Chamber of Commerce will con-
tinue to ancllyze and commuru-
cate infonnatton imperative to the
Newport Beach voter:> to make · ·
responsible dca51ons for their
oty. The chamber will also con-
tinue to mvest lls resources into
determimng the answers and to
eru.ure sound governmental deo-
s1ons a.re made on behalf or the
entire community.
• IUCHARD WEHRS Is president •nd
CEO of the Newport Harbor Alta
Chamber of Commer~e.
StrHt TALK From South Coast Plaza in Costa Mesa
What are you getting your su;eetheart for Valentine's Day? . .
• •we·re not buy·
Ing anytbin~ becaUle we re buy·
Ing " hc>Ute. Thal'• ow pNMnt to each
adler.·
CINDYllVM
•Mine Ukal l\g·
C:!f"~a
.tun. Tbell lhe
wanted a ipldtic
Swatch watch. 10 I
got bet tbal And
... I mlg1ll pt bar a
rtngot ....
~lUHtMJ
•t•m a widow·
er, but I got vaJen.
tiDel far my
~~
Hfc'••
MCICCllCll 11
• Long·ltaln l'OI•
es and we're going
away far the week· end .
•We're gomg to
the Surf and sand
Hotel for th
weekend in l.egu·
na Belch.·
aL.ltOGIAS
...
"I'm bu~ my Mom flowers.
How To
REACH US
T}le Daily Pilot welc ~en on ~
concem1fl9 Newpot1 Bea<h and Costa Mesa.
There are four wa)" to ~nd 1n .'f04J! comments:
• ~ -Mail to the Dally Pilot. 130 W.
Bay St., C<*U Mesa 92627
• READERS HOTUNE -C.11 (949) 642-6086
• FAX -Send to (949) 646-4170
• E-MAIL -Send to da1/yp1JotOl•t11'n#tS. com
Al! correspondence must nclUde your full
• name. hometown and phone number (for vet-
1fat1on purposes only)
Saturday, February 12, 2000 A23
letterOf ·
THE WEEK
Don't take
support for
granted·
T he current budget for the library
system.is $4 3 million. This
amount provides for the annual
debt payment of $550,000, approxi-
mdtely $1 million for maintenance and
operations, still more for salaries and
findlly approXlmately $550,000 for
library materials. The purpose of the
Library Pounddbon, its endowment
fund dnd other support groups, 1s to
supph:;ment the library matena.ls por-
bon of the budget thereby endbling the
Bod.rd of Trustees to mamtcun d fU'St-
class library system for our citiZens.
The gOdl of the foundation's endow-
ment campaign is to rdlSe $2.5 million.
That money will be placed m rock solid
inv~tments. The interest earned from
those inve.unents d.fe to be used to sup-
plement the library system dS may be
appropridte over the ensuing years.
Conservdbvely. those funds should earn
at least $100,000 per yed.f. These earn-
ings, combined wit.h other funds that the
foundation should raise edch year, could
reach $200.000 per year of additional
funding tor the library. This is a very sig·
ruficant sum of non-taxpdyer money for
the library system. In fact. it could reach 3on., of the library matenals' budget
when the program is complete.
However, l.f we are to aclueve those
goals, the foundation and the library
trustees must mdlnla.ur a resolve not to
tap those endowment funds for instant
grabfi.cation. Rather. the foundation
should squirrel awtly those funds to level
out funding for the library dv.nng good
bmes and bdd. .
The public should also know that our
library receives generous i.-upport from
The Friends of the Llbrary and tuhds
from the Carl Ackerman Estate. In the
case of the FnP.nds. new accounts indi-
cate that therr annual contribution is in
the $100,000 range. The Ackerman
Estate contributes still another $55,000
per yed.f. Thus, one could argue that the
library depends on the public for nearly
50"o of its library matenals' budget That
translates mto fantastic pubhc support.
It is t0cumbcnt on clll mvolved to
accept the fact that lh1s support is not
to be taken for granted.
Perhaps all of us need to remember
tlu.s
CLARENCE J. TURNER
Newport Beach
• EDfTOR'S NOTE: Clarence Turner Is a former
NewPQrt Beach mayor.
Snrith correct
on Greenlight
Thank you, Steve SDUth, for stating
so well my concerns regardiilg the
recent actions of the Newport Bea.ch
C1ty Council ("Grcenlighl-A gap
between leaders and residents,· Jan.
22). My husband and I also are con-
cerned about acceleration of growth in
Newport Beach. lt seems that the coun-
cil is approving too many •excepnons"
of the general plan for our city. We
already have severe traffic on Jam·
boree Road and yet now we should
approve of th() plan for the Newport
Dun~ resort devel-F EE DIACIC opment? And what
about more devel-
opment by the mam
library-ts it too much to a k for som
open ~pace th rel I don't think so and l
do believe that the Greenlight uubabve
l an appropnat and necessary
r pons to poorly controlled growth.
IARIA..ll!A WALLACE
N wport Beech
Thank you, ~Steve " mlth), for
putting into words what 50 many Of us
feel. It is my h~ tMt the Greenlight
initiative will help to preserve our qual·
ity of lite h re ln NeW'p9rt Beech.
NMKYSlll•
Newport ltild\
I just wanted to commend S.V.
Smith on his marveloUI artk:te GD
Greenlight. I tblnll be.,.._ M OUl ID
NcbawaytNt"c:m.a•lll• 1111
It. Pattk:ularl1 . ..,_Dal .a die 11•
ment ts b9cl, to ·wld&fa M Pllfl t 11. • ....
don't tell • tblt ..... n a ....
good • 1t-.jult I .-.
edto A y ..... ,..
'Ming .. .wt..
... -
' .
Daily Pilot
• Founding fathers of
the Myron McNamara
Endowment Fund to be
recognized today before
UCI-UCLA tennis match.
at the late Myron
McNamara represented
was more than simply
attacking the net, teaching a
serve-and-volley game and
emphasizing proper court etiquette
to his hundreds of devoted pupils.
McNamara never sought the
limelight, but a light always
followed him.
A World War ll hero as a
bomber pilot, notable member of a
bams~orming tennis tour to
promote the game in the 1950s and
Richard Dunn
nNNIS
the UCI men's
tennis coach
from 1966 to
1979, McNamara
has a legacy that
bolds serve
against anyone
And, these
days, UCI is still
benefibng from
McNamara's
influence with
an endowment
in his name
instituted by a
collecbon of
former players, fnends and
colleagues.
Those who were on the ground
floor of the endowment will be
recognized today in pregarne
ceremonies before UCI's
nonconference match against
UCLA.
"What better way is there to
start (an endowment), then after
the man who basically started the
program here?" said UCI Coach
Steve Clark, a Newport Beach
resident
"(McNamara) gave the program
the reputation 1t has. He stood for
loving people, loving tenrus and
having integrity.·
The day of McNamara's
memonal service in April 1998,
Clark and a few others, including
some UCI alumni who played
under the late coach, talked about
starting an endowed scholarship
fund in his name.
Shortly thereafter, tennis legend
and longtime McNamara friend
Jack Kramer •stepped up in a
huge way,• Clark said, and the ball
started to roll. Kramer donated his
goU club in Chino Hills, the Los
Serranos Goll and CoWltry Club,
and the Myron McNamara
Endowed Scholarship Fund Goll
Townament was launched.
•Now,• said former UCI
All-Amencan Glenn Cripe, a
member of the original endowment
group, "there's $40,000 to $50,000
in it •
About a dozen membel'!i of the
group, including Cripe, a former
CIP Southern Section doubles
champion from Newport Harbor
High and part of the Daily Pilot
Sports Hall of Pa.me, will be
recognized today before the
Anteaters' match against UCLA,
which ls scheduled to start at noon.
A free barbecue lunc,h will be
SEE TENNIS PAGE 84
Quote Of
1HEDAY
•At hofftime, we decided to got to Dustin UAingworth)
· until they stopped him •. •
lany Hirst Newport hoops coach __ .,. __ ... Feb. 14 honoree
llARllll MclEMI
Sporn Editor Roger Carlson • 9.49-57 44223 • ~turdoy, February 12, 2000 BJ
Meek_inherits . the turf with hat trick_____.
• Newport Harbor heads
into CIF Playoffs on a high
note, 4--2, behind junior
Trey Meek 's three goals.
Tony Altobelli
DAILY PtLOT
NEWPORT BEACH -With the
CIF Southern Section Division II
playoffs approaching, Newport Har-
bor High's boys soccer team wanted
some momentum going in and
momentum was found in Friday's 4-
2 Sea View League win against
always-fie!\J.Y Aliso Niguel.
Coach Matt West had the correct
ad1ective to describe the perfor-
mance of junior Trey Meek, whose
three goals led the way.
"Unstoppable,• West srud. "He
really busted out of tus she ll today
He let it be known that he's arrived
and he's ready for the playoffs."
It was his first three:goal game
I
BOYS SOCCER could not hnd lhe back of taking the lead
the net. . uUnstoppale. The Wolverines
for Meek, givmg him seven goals for Juruor Juan Gonzalez, (Trey M eek) regdinPd the Jedd, 2· 11
the season. who hC>lped goalkeeper three minutes mto the
Not to be outdone, sophomore Duke Burchell cover the r eafly busted second haU, when Nick
Kevm Campos contributed with for goal post, kept Aliso off out of his shell Spangenberg's header off
three asststs for the Sailors (7-7-5, 3-the scoreboard by kicking a free kick from Scher-
1-4 in league), who finished third in , a would-be god! out of the today ... " merhom found · 1ts way
the Sea View League behind cham-area . W Ulto the net
pion Irvine and runner-up Wood-Five minutes after Matt est That lead was short-
bndge. Ahso's goal, Newport Newport Harbor lived, however, a Meek
d th boys soccer coach "We're really gorma try and cany evene e score off a giVe tied the game m the 47th
this momentum in to the postsea-dnd go pass from Meek to -------nunute and then broke
son,· West said. ·we felt all year Campos, then back to . the be two tTUnute£ ldter,
that we had something speaal and Meek, who buned the shot m the g1vmg Newport the lead for good.
we do • lower nght comer of the goal. Both goals were assisted by Cam-
Newport overcame defiots of 1-0 :Trey's b1~ge:t strength is .that pos "I told Bnan at the begmnmg of
and 2-1 in the game, scoring the he s so elusive, _West said. ~ the game that we were gonna need
final three goals to pull it out. qwck.n;ss dllows him to do so many something speaal from him today.·
Aliso scored its first goal of the things . West said. #O bVlously, 'he some-
game on a penalty kick by Brock . Burchell had four saves in the thing sper1dl happened.•
Schermerhorn in the 23rd minute. first hdlf, three co.rrung on a ~warm-Sophomore reserve goalkeeper
The Wolverines continued to put mg attack from the Wolvennes m Chnsuan Peterson had three sdves
pressure on the Sailors and had the final minutes. After a couple m the second hdlf for Newport,
three straight corner kicks but pomt-bldnk saves, he managed to ' control the ball and keep Aliso from SEE SOCCER PAGE 83
o .is 'Dustin' the wind
• Illingworth scores 24 points to
lead Newport to 60-50 win over
the Wolverines in Sea View finale.
Joseph Boo
DAILY PILOT
NEWPORT
BEACH -That
Dustin Illing-
worth is pretty
dam good.
The 6-foot-4
senior center for
Newport Harbor
High's boys 'bas-
ketball team took
what Aliso
Niguel gave him
on Fnday, which
was pretty much
the game.
He collected
24 points and cat-
apulted the
Sailors to a 60-50
triumph m their
last Sea View
League game,
breaking a two-
Hi[sschool bo_Y.s
B KETBALL
IO STAN s
Sea View le~ue
. ·----~W_L
Woobridge (11 ... ) 1 1
Pffwport H.vbor (17-81 6 2
Aliso N19u~I (12-13) 3 S
Irvine (5·20) O I
Friday's scores
Newport 60. AJl50 Nigl"4 50 •
Woodbridge 75, IM1e «>
ENO REGUl.AA ~
game losing streak and hruslung second U1
league.
Fl.fteen of Illingworth's poi,nt came in the all-
i.mportant second half. On a related note, New-
port (17-8, 6-2 in league) shook off a pesky Aliso
Niguel team after a 27-23 balfbme lead and led
by as many as 15 points l.D the fourth qudrter.
"We wanted to give our other shooters
shots, .. Newport Harbor Coach Ld'rry Hirst said.
"But that wasn't happening. At hditbme, we
decided to go to Dustin unbJ they stopped him.·
Dlingworth bad nine points m the fin;t half. as
Newport held a slun 27-23 lead Newport
sophomore Tony Melum scored six key points
in the second quarter as the Sdtlors JUSt kept
Aliso Niguel at bay.
The third quarter was where Illingworth, as
the team program eloquently puts it, showed
more moves than Casanova in a soronty house.
He scored on the dnve, from the post, off a oa.r-
mg alley-oop tip-in from an Aaron Yamal pass,
and especially from the free throw line.
The helpless Wolvennes {12-13, 3-51 could
do nothing more then back him. He got hve of
his 11 third quarter pomts from the chanty
stnpe. For the game, he was 10 for 13 on free
throws.
•it was way too clo~ at halfllme, • llling·
worth said. •we wanted to capitalize on what
they were giving us. And I just got caught up in.
the energy. -
BRIAN P08UDA I DA\Y PILOT
Newport Harbor's Justin Reynolds goes up for a shot amid a horde of defenden. SEE HOOPS PAGE 83
•Corona del Mar High sophomore has that 'go for it'
attitude, and it's been paying off for PCL champions ..
leny Faulkner
DM.Y Pll.or
Tiough she doesn't adnW to
having a scorer's menfllity.
Corona del Mar High
190phomore girls soccer forward
Allison Harvey jokes with
teemmatet about smelling the
goal.
l5 ·1 tell them. 'When you men
i lt, you've got to score,' • s~ud
I Haney, who pas experienced
the aroma more than any of h !11
.... tMmme• tbil MU<Jn,
ffuwr ICiar9d IWO gc..at and
-.ldld -......... Sela J(lngl' '"° hd8c o-1 LMgue rout of ...... ,.3.
Th effort upped her goal
total to a team-leading 16,
accordUlg to Cooch Ron Evans.
"Her poals come in a variety
of ways, Evans said of the Daily
Pilot Athlete of the Week.
•There's not one way to shut her
down. She's dangerous With both
feet, he's dangerous with her
head and she knows when to be
aelftah and umelftlh. She's an
all-around pie .•
Harvey's :.r'-enNncS w.nt has
~ CdM ema ill lint IMaue ~-wiill•lll:lm
Pill, ~---.,....'IM Sea JCb9 ........ No. 2tD
•
• f ' • I.
82 Saturday, February 12, 2000 Daily Pilot
..
..
• •
' Located in one of the most desirable locations of Orange County,
Lexus Mission Viejo wants to show you the future is now.
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Fmancing available on Lexus Certified Pre-0wned vehicles:
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M I S S I 0 N ·~ V I E J 0
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· 28400 Marguerite Parkway, 5 Freeway, Avery Parkway Exit. 800-669-5398 (949) 364-0664
. ..
" '\ I ·• ..
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•
,.....
•Pirates shoot 28%
fr om the field as Dons
claim first OEC title.
JC WOMEN'S HOOPS
SANTA ANA -The bas-
ket is getting smaller .. and
smaller for the Orange Coast
College women's basketball
team as the shooting woes
continued Fnday in a 75-59
Orange Empire Conference
match up.
OCC (24-5, 8-4 in confer-
ence) shot 28% (23 of 81)
· from the field and hit only 3 of
25 from three-point range.
Leah WUde scored 13
points and 13 rebounds,
while Shauna Steward added
12 points for the Pirates.
With the win, the Dons
(25-2, 12--0), ranked No. 2 in
state won it.S first OEC title in
school history.
Lisa Arcangel and AtdJi
Parker each scored 20 points
for Santa And, winners of 15
in a row.
ORANGE EMPIRE CONFERENCE
· SANTA AH'4 75
OftANGE CoAST 59
Orange Coast· Steward 12,
Tomlinson 6, Wilde 13,
Middlebrooke 7, Lewis 8, Fierst 1,
Urban 10, Johnson 2.
• 3 pt. goats· Wilde 2, Steward 1.
Fouled out • Steward.
Santa Ana · Parker 20. Cole 10,
Arc.angel 20, Taylor 12, Step.
Patten 11, Syd. Patten 2.
3 pt. goals • Tayler 1.
Fouled out • None.
Halftime· Santa Ana, 37-33.
Pirates fall to.Santa Ana, 105-si
•Dons' Gray, Fray too JC MEN'S HOOPS
too much to deal with.
SANTA ANA -Santa
Ana College's duo of Greg
Gray and Zach Fray com-
bined for 55 points and 16
rebounds as the · Dons
knocked off Orange Coast,
105-82, in Orange Empire
Conference men's basketball
action Friday night.
Chad Hagedorn led the
Bucs (13-14, 2,10 iri confer-
ence) with 21 points and
eight rebounds, Dave Elliott
added 19 points, while David
Castleton chipped m with 18.
The Dons (23-6, 9·3) led oy
13 after the first half and nev-
er looked back. Bnan Cham-
bers addeo to the scoring
with 13 points, while Mark
Wulf emeyer added 10.
OCC will travel lo Miss1on
Viejo to take on Saddleback
Wednesday at 7:30 p.m.
ORA.NGE EMPIRE CONFERENCE"
SANTA AHA 105
ORANGE CoAST 82
Orange Coast · Hagedorn 21,
Beeler 19, cast\eton 18, Elliott 10,
Nguyen 7, Earl 5, Wilson 2.
3 pt. goals • Castleton 2, Earl 1,
Beeler 1, Hagedorn 1, Nguyen 1.
Santa Ana • Gray 3, Fray 22,
Chambers 13, Wulfemeyer 1 O,
Nichols 9, Watson 6, Garcia 4,
Halbasch 4, Foster 3, Borger 1.
3 pt. goals -Gray 3. Wulfemeyer
2, Chambers 1, Nichols 1, Foster.
Halftime · Santa Ana, 46 33.
ORANGE COAST RUNS AWAY
FROM· THE COMPETITION
Bucs dominate four-
team meet in season-
opening event.
JC TRACK -AND FIELD
HUNTINGTON BEACH
-Orange Coast College
men's and women's track
teams opened the ·orange
Empire Conference season
on the nght track, so to
speak, as each squad won
their four-team meets Friday
afternoon.
On the men's side, Yong
Kim was a double winner,
taking top spot in the 200
(21.7 seconds) and 400-meter
runs (51.0).
Other Pirate winners
include Carl Olsson in the
110 high hurdles (11.1),
Manuel Orozco ir\. the 800
(2:00.9) and Troy Becker_jn
the pole vault (15 feet).
The Pirates' 400 retay
team of Orozco, Kim, Newton
Hoang and Scott Williams
took first at 3:33.33.
On· the women's side, the
Pirates were dominant in the
distance races. Zoila Gomez
won the 1,500 (5:07.0), while
Bernice Carbajal took the·
3,000 (11:04.4) ..
The hurdles events
belonged to Kerica Navarro,
winning the 100 hUidles at Hr.o and the 400 hurdles at
1:17.6.
Five different Pirates took
first in Jield events. Connie
Shuput won the high jump
(4-8), Nicole Hansen jumped
10 feet in the pole vault, Jen-
nifer Giffi claimed the . top
spot in the triple juror> (30-4),
Lauren McDaniel took the
shot put (36-11/2) and
Tiffaney Cordova won the
"HOOPS
CONTINUED FROM B 1
javelin throw (92-10).
OCC's next meet will take
place Thursday dt 2 p.m. at
Fullerton College against the
I-lomets and San Diego Mesa
in a tri~meet.
COMMUNITY COLLEGE MEN
ORANG! EMPfRE CONFERENCE
· Orange Coast 177, San
·Bernardino Valley 157, Golden
West 137, Mira Costa 43.
100 · 1. Huey (GW), 10.7; i .
Langston (SBV). 11.0; 3. Kukula
(OCC), 11.4. •
200 . 1. Kim (OCC), 21.7; 2. Huey
(GW), 22.0; Langston (SBV), 23.1 .
400 · 1. Kim (OCC). 51.0; 2. Suzu-
mura (GW). 52.9; 3. Gibson (SBV),
54.0.
800 -... 1. Orozco (OCC), 2:00.9; 2.
Murdo (SBV). 2:03.8; 3. Berndt
(SBV), 2:04.2.
1,SOO • 1. Hernandez (SBV),
4:.05.9; 2. Sanchez (OCC), 4:0.2.; 3.
Xinzunza (SBV), 4:o8.0.
J,000 · 1. Hernandez (SBV),
9:09.2; 2. Xinzunta (SBV). 9: 11.5,
Sanchez (OCC), 9:11 .5.
110 HH -1. Olsson (OCC), 15.1; 2.
Suzumura (GW), 15.2; 3. Loo (OCC),
15.7.
400 IH · 1. Arellano (GW), 58.0; 2.
Jefferies (SBV), 58.8; 3. Loo (OCC),
59.6.
400 Relay · 1. San Bernardino
Valley, 44.4; 2. Golden West, 45.7; 3.
n/a.
1,600 Relay -1. Orange Coast
(Orozco, Kim, Hoang. Williams),
3:33.3; 2. San Bernardino Valley.
3:33.4; 3. Golden West, 3:34.6.
HJ · 1. Hicks (SBV), 6-2; 2. Werdein
(SBV), 6-2; 3. Loo (OCC), 6-(). u -1. Jones (GW), 22-5; 2. Hicks
(SBV), 21-6; 3. Jennings (GW), 21 -
51/2.
TJ • 1. Jennings (GW), 44-7)/4; 2.
Dixon (SBV). 44-3; Loo (OCC), 41-5.
PV -1. Becker (OCC), 15-0; 2
Chrestensen (OCC), 11-0; 3. n/a.
SP • 1. Columble (GW). 45-8•/•; 2.
Dunbar (GW), 4~·10J/4; 3. Hicks
(SBV), 40-2•h.
DT • 1. Columble (GW), 130-3;
~~xcluding Illingworth, who was 2 for 3 from
the field in the first half, the Sailors were 7 for·
6 at haUti.me. But free throws cured any shoot-
ing woes for the Tars. For the game, they had
a 27-12 margin in attempts from the stripe, hit·
Dunbar (GW), 128-S; 3. Ramirez
(OCC), 117 -9.
JT • 1. Oathout (SBV). 175-4; 2.
Price (OCC), 173-5; 3. Dunbar (GW),
162-8.
COMMUNITY COLLEGE WOMEN
ORANGE EMPIRE CONFERENCE
Orange Coast 183, San
Bernardino Valley 114, Golden
West 79, Mira Costa 11
100 · 1. Lam (GW), 14.2; 2. Giffi
(OCC), 14.4; 3. Smith (SBV), 15.0.
200 · 1. Clark (SBV), 27.6; 2. War-
ren (SBV). 30.4; 3. Glenwmkel (MC),
37.6,
400 -1. Walton (SBV), 1 :06.9; 2.
Contreras (SBV), 1:10.3; 3. Engel
(OCC), 1:12.0.
800 • 1. Perkins (SBV), 2:24.4; 2.
Gomez (OCC), 2:24.7; 3. Shurtleff
(OCC). 2:25.0.
· 1,500 · 1. Gomez (OCC), 5:07.0; 2.
Shurtleff (OCC), 5:07.7; 3. Perkins
(S8V), 5:16.9.
J,000 · 1. Carbajal (OCC), 11:04.4;
2. Orozco (OCC), 11:13.4; 3. n/a.
110 HH.· 1. Nararro (OCC), 18.0; 2.
Zimmon (GW). 18.3.; 3. n/a.
400 IH • 1. Navarro (OCC), 1: 17 .6;
2. nta; 3. nla. .
400 Relay · 1. San Bernardino
Valley, 54.1; 2. Orange Coast 56.0;
3. n/a.
1,600 Relay • 1. San Bernardino
Valley, 4:25.9; 2. Orange Coast
56.0.
HJ · 1. Shuput (OCC), 4-B; 2. Giffi
(OCC), 4-8; 3. Price (GW), 4-2.
U · 1. Walton (SBV), 15-63/4; 2.
Lc1m (GW), 14-1 ll/•; 3. Zim.mon
(GW), 14-51/4,
T J • 1. Giffi (OCC). 3()...4; 2. Lam
(GW), 29·2; 3. Shuput (OCC), 28-2.
PV • 1. Hansen (OCC), 10-0; Pat-
terson (GW), 7-0; 3. n/a.
SP . 1. McDaniel (OCC), 36-1'/2; 2.
Saunders (GW), 33-11 •'2; 3. Vidato
(SBV), 29-91h.
OT · 1. Saunders (GW), 118-2J/.; 2.
Vidato (SBV), 111·9; 3. McDaniel
(OCC) 105·8•/4.
ST • 1. Cordova (OCC), 92-10; 2.
McDaniel (OCC), 86-10; 3. Vidato
(SBV). 78-7.
.,. · ~9·20 of them. ·
Aliso Niguel <lid not help its cause with two
teehnical fouls in the third quarter. Yamal got
three of his five points on technical free
throws. His filth point came when he
rebounded his one missed technical free
. throw and put the ball back in for a 43-31
Newport lead late in the third quarter.
Melum was the only other Newport player
in double digits, scoring 12 off the bench.
Newport's Gre9 Perrine contributed eight
points and four assists, including one alley-
oop feed for an Illingworth dunk at the start of .
the fourth quarter that put an exclamation
point on the whole game.
•rt was senior night,· Illingworth said. "1
wanted to go out wtfh a bang and puf on a
show for all the parents who showed up."
The show continues next week in the CIF
SOuthem Sect.ion Division U playoffs, where
Newport will enter as the second-place team
from the Sea View League.
The Sailors had a chance to grab a share of
the league title U Irvine upset Woodbridge,
but the Warriors won big, 75-40.
•we never thought about that," l Jfrst sa1d.
•we made our own beds with the Laguna
Hills loss, and we have to sleep ln it."
Nevertheless, the Sailors broke a two·
game losing streak and put on a good 1how
for the fans, and hopefully, the CIP, which Will
seed the teams Sunday.
•we wanted to end the sea10n on a high
note," Hint said. •-rw. 11 not the end of the
year, We lt1l1 haven't got to tbe end of the
chapter.•
BRIAN P08UOA I OM.Y PlOT
Justin Reynolds of Newport Harbor
(right) battles for possession with
Aliso Nlguel's Sky ChaJDben (2St.
SIA V.W LIAGUI ~ HAMClll IO, Aulo,.... 50 Scotw"' QuwWw Aliso Nlguet 12 11 11 16. 50
Newport 13 14 17 16 ·to
._ ,...... -Zanetti 13, Chamben n. Hefty a.
"<>ts 4, Sieves 3, u.met.I 5, Akoncel 0, Ebel 0. 6-cll 2,
WagsUff 2. Hanson 0. RodrlguH o.
l-pt. pis . Lamlfl '· Fouled out • NorMl
TIChnk.M -Alllltlnt CCMKh 1. ZMmlll t
Ne ...,. ........ • Rllnaworth 24. '-'lne I, ~ &. ~ J. "°'°'" 5, Miium ,~ Knuttl 0.
MlrtJn 0. ~ 0. Muff~ 0, ~ 0. ~' StaudlnlnlM o. '""" .,... -,.,,.. '· "°*" 1. Foulli out. NoM.
'nlchrbla. None.
(
SOCCER
CONTINUED FROM B 1
including d tough save off a
turT)over.
Senior Jimmy Sc.1J1ders added
an insurunce godl in the 16th
minute off of C¢mpos' third assist.
Strong deffns1v<> play. was
turned m by Juan Gonzalez. who
filled m at sweepN for the mjured
Ryc:m Heman<;lez, Victor Castillo
and Spnnger Brown
Newport's pluyoff fdte now is in
the hands of the ClF Southern
Section Committee. The Sailors,
who hdven't redched the playoffs
since 1997, will Jmd out lh(>lr play-
off wheredbouts Monddy dfter-
noon. ThE' hrst ~01.md begms Fry-
dd.y dl 3: 15 p.m .
"Once you gel mv1ted to the
dance, ciOylhmg cdn hc1ppen, ~
West su.id "Our hettllh and mordlc
IS dS good dS It Cdn bl'. We'll UC
ready to go"
HOC AN rue'' ' DAU.I Pll m
N ewport Harbor's Trey
Meek (left), seen
here in. action against
Woodbridge, was a huge.
factor in the Tars' win .
Friday, scoring three goals
in a 4.:2 verdict over Aliso
Niguel to close out Sea
View League play.
'
• . . . . . =84;.:..;;SOl\K.:;;.:.;.;doy~,-Febtuary~..-..'~2,_2000......;... __ ~-----:-------------"'!'""--~~J>()l{fS _.....~----~~-------------------------Do~i~-.p~jl_ot
ALLISON
CONTINUED FROM 81
CIF Southern Secbon
D1v1S1on IV and
completed the regular
season 1.4·<4·3. •we really wanted to
ma.ke a statement ln the
~nd round of le gue
that we were here to
win,• H rvey said. "We
could have gotten an
at-large bid last year, but
it didn't work out. This
year, we knew for sure we
were going to make the
playoffs. We're gonna Win
(in CIF) this year."
Such self-assuredness
about her team's playoff
future belies Harvey's modesties regarding her own game.
"I feel guilty if I don't perform my best," she said. "It
doesn't matter if I score goals. If I thought I could have
played better, I'm still disappointed after a game."
Harvey said she has only occasionally left the field
satisfied, but Evans has found little complaint with her
performance.
"She has a great attitude, she's a gamer and she's fun to
coach," Evans said. "She's always at practice on time, ready
to go and work hard."
A role player on last year's team, this .club veteran burst on
to the scene this season with three goals in a season·openjng
win over Foothill.
Since then, she has been detennined to be a consistent
offensive threat. .
"Now that I've scored a few goals, I have to keep it up to
keep the respect of my team,• Harvey said. "Sometimes I
smell the goal and sometimes it's luck. There are a lot of
good people on our team and I can't score if they don't play •
well."
She warrants the respect of\her opponents, who often try
to take her out of her game with aggressive, physical play.
"I might not be the stn>ngest player out there,• said the
5-foot-10, 130-pound Harvey. "It seems like with some girls
we play, their whole job is to take you out of your game. But
you have to lcnow what you're job is and not let them bother
you. Sometimes they can frustrate you', but you have to get
over il"
Harvey gets over on opponents with a wide range of
attacking maneuvers.
"We like to send a lot of crosses and Allison is one of our
finishers tn the middle,• Evans said.
Harvey, wno also runs track for the Sea Kings, began
playing soccer in the fourth grade. She started her club
career two years later and currently plays for Long
Beach-based Infinity. .
"She's also in the Olympic Development Program," Evans
said.
Harvey said she enjoys the competition soccer provides.
"Especially after going to school all day, it's great to get
Ol;lt on the field and run," she said. "It's a great release.•
Pir~tes capture·
Apache opener
• Reuss hits third home run of the year in
Orange Coast's 8-5 win over San Diego Mesa.
SAN DIEGO -The
Orange Coast College
baseball team won the
opening game of the
Apache Classic, knocking
off San Diego Mesa, 8-5,
Friday.
Jason Reuss clubbed his
third home run of the sea-
son. The sophomore scored
two runs and drove in two
for the Bucs (2-2).
Other offensive stars for
OCC were Blair Havens (3
for 3, two RBis) and catcher
Brian Murphy (2 for 5, a
home run and two RBis.
Pirate starter John Cole-
man threw Sl.X·plus innings
to get the win, while Drew
Parkin recorded his second
save of the season, throw-
JC BASEBALL
ing the final 21;3 innings.
With the loss, San Dlego
Mesa falls to 3-2.
Weather permitting,
OCC will play East L.A.
College at UC San Diego
today at 10 a.m. before tak-
ing on host Grossmont at 2
p.m .
AMOfE QASSfC
Fintllound occ 8, SAN DllEGO MEsA 5 occ 000 201 410 . 815 1 so ~ 001 000 400 • 5 6 0
Coleman, Canada (7), Parkin
(7) and Murphy; Goldman,
Bowen (6) and Lococo.
W -Coleman, 1-0; L • Goldman.
28. Wlethorn coco. Laws
COCO Havens COCO. 38 • Battle
(SOM}. HR • Reuss coco Murphy
(OCO. Binkowski (SOM).
UlllS
Vanguatd U.
sweeps CSIA
NEWPORT BEACH -
Vanguard Univemty's men's
tenrus team won all its match-
eS as its shut out Cal St.ate-Los
Angeles, 9-0, in its season
opener Friday at Cal Poly
Pomona. Stefan Johansson,
Joakim Ulfuebrand, Peter
Skrzeczynski, Josef Strom-
berg and Martin Makovec all
got 6·0, 6·0 wins in singles for
the Lions.
NONCOUFUENa VAWWNllD 9, CSlA 0 S.,.._ · Helmlnen (VU) def.
Sergendo {CS) 6-1, 6-0; Johansson
(VU) def. Luturiaga (CS) 6-0, 6-0;
Ulfuebrand (VU) def. Ramos (CS)
6-0, 6-0; Skrzeczynskl (VU) def.
Syanef (CS) 6-0, 6-0; Stromberg
(VU) def. Trang (CS) 6-0, 6-0;
Makovec (VU) def. Yip (CS) 6-0, 6-0.
Doubles • Skrzeczynski·Ulfue-
brand (VU) def. Sergendo-Ramos
(CS) 9-2; Helminen-Johansson (VU)
def. Luturiaga-Syanef (CS) 8-2;
Stromberg.Makovec (VU) def.
Trang-Liv (CS) 8-0.
WATER POLO
Pop Warner players,
cheerleaders needed
• Early bird registration
scheduled March 4-5.
COSTA MESA -Early
bird registration for Costa
Mesa Pop Warner football
and cheerleading will take
place March 4 at Costa Mesa
High school from 9 a.m. to 1
p.m. and March 5 at TeWm-
kJe Park from 1-3 p.m.
Registration for football is
$125 per player and $40 per
cheerl~ader. These prices will
increase alter this opportunity
to register.
The season will begin
August 1 at TeWinkle Park
and the league is for young-
sters ages 7-13.
For inf onnation, call Costa
Mesa/Newport Pop Warner at
(714) 404-8746.
SCHEDULE
SATURDAY
•a.ketbllll
College men • Vanguard
University at Concordia, 7:30 p.m.
College women -Vanguard
University at Concordia, 5:30 p.m. . ....,. ..
College · Blola at Vanguard
University, doubleheader. 11 a.m.
Community college • Orange
Coast at Apache Classic vs. East
Los Angeles at uc san Diego, 1 o
a.m., at Grossmont. 2 p.m.
•Wnerpolo
High school girls· Newport
Harbor at Coronado, noon.
•Tennis
College men • Vanguard
University at Cal Poly Pomona
Tournament. • Softball
Community college at College
of Desert Tournament.
SUNDAY ...........
Community college -Orange
Coast at Apache Classic, vs. El Camino, at Southwestern,
10a.m.
• SoftlNlll
Community college at College
of Desert Tournament.
DEEP SEA
ftlUOAY'S COUNTS
Newport I.Wing . 1 boat.
6 anglers. 11 sand bass, 3 sculpin.
' I •• .tlt'-; " . -• · •.. r. .·-~
1 l • ·~
........ -. ,..., -........ ,. .. I ; ,W ! ~ • ..., l. . . . . . . : "-.A
ROYCE
1"8 family of Pltl1ck ROfCt i. mouring over
lie loee of Nm. PMttck Aoyot wa1 I
celebrated la II or,
Mitt end author of
llMtll bOttlng ~ oatloftl 1uch 11
Royce'• l1llln9
lluthttd and POWtr ~ ""'*""· ,.. trtck AOyCe .... ,.....,
dent of Hewpott 8eedl
for tNrty ~·Petrick
~on FtO. to, 2000 1:30 PM at hOMe
With his flMlty bY hla
.... "'l1 IUM¥9d by ,... ... Hide Incl two
ctlldren Aldwd end
Tlnl.
. ·°'-•.; . . -~
~,.,. : .
Heme SWtt.ment
The lollowtng ptl'IOOI
.,..~ine.. .. Copy ly Cent«.
2501 Alton, Mne, Ce.11-
tomla 92606 Olo Wl'toleHle, Inc , ~~'=,IMne,
Thlt butlneu II oon·
dUc:led by. • oorporauon Have r,ou ttuted doing but nut ~t? No
OIO Wlloletale, Inc.,
Vlnc.ient M S8nF!fippo,
Pruldenl Thlt atatement waa
filed wrth the County
Ctlttc °' Ofanoe County on 01--06·200G 2000M1'°27
Daily Pb Feb 5, 12.
19. 28, 2000 S.301
Call the la al 1
"Affordable
Alternative"
DiScowtt casket;
Cremadon&·
Burial Service
Why should you subject
yourself & your family to
inflated prices for
llCllMetl &. service ????
~·' .... ' .. ~ .... ~ .... ,_ -. . -~ .
cdtlout ut 1 ORDINANCE fUme Statement The tolloWlng ptl10N NO. ~1 are doing business u · AN ORDINANCt OF
Novus lnteracllve, THE CFT'Y COUNCIL
2501 Alton, lrllne, Ce.U· OF THE CITY OF
tomle 92606 NEWfORT BEACH Groue Onde. Inc . AMENDING ~'ao~~1J~· lrvlne, OSECTIONNEIWP0.04.0IO
Tiiis business Is con· F THE RT
ducted by· a OOfJ)Ofallon BEACH MUNICIPAL
Have you 1terted CO~! P£RTAININQ
doing bullnesa yet? No TO UARBAOE AND
oro ... ond•~ Inc., REFUSE CON·
Vincent M Sanl"tllppo, TAINER REQUIRE·
Pruldent MENTS n~hlt ~tat;:nL~ Subject 01$1aoce ...
Clelf( °' ar."r;. ccu;iY lntrOOUCed on !he 254h
on 01--0e-2000 day °' Jtlnuely. 2000• 2000M1to2'4 and wa• ldOpted on the
DallV. P'!lot Feb f, 12, ~day of February,
19, ~. 2000 ta302 AYll COUNCIL ........
lt'I all there "IOCllW1D~N~
evtryday ~~YH
In Cl....m.d NOi~ COUNCIL •••...:NONI M• 197'8 ARINT COUNCIL
MQllCWllW
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c.m.tery • MClltu#Y
a..-·~
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T110mON MITAIN COUNCI.. ....... : ...
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ttm;CLIMI
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!!.!.01'•Co1t:T.'a -"'°' '9t1Nery 12,
8e30il
NOTICE OF
AV AILABIUTY OF
ANNUAL REPORT
Purtue.nt to Section 8104 (d) ol the Internal Rewnue Code, notice It
Mreby giv.n "'81the80· nual report to< lhf lllce.I
YM~ January 31, 2000 ol t:Ha May Stedman
Foundalk>n, e pr1vate
loundlllon, la IMllable
et the foundallOn'• prtn·
clpll olltce lof ~!On
duflng reguillr blltlneu
l'lou!'I lrom 9:00 • m to 5:30 pm. by lllY cdzef\
• requnt• rt W!ltWI 1IO dlyt •fter the date ol ,, .. pub!QtlOO
TM k>undatlon'' PM·
c:lp.i ~ It IOcated •t 840 Newport ¢enter ~.CO.New· Po11 , CA taeeo Foundltlon'a PMc:IC* TaleOhQM Number It 949· 'leo-0991 TM omdoel me~r of lie toundeaon ..
Aoben w. 8tldmell ,.,...,...,. w .........
l40 Nftwpott Center OrNe. fk*' 400. New· POlt a.edi, CA NleO
P'ublltMd Newport
!f.!.ch·Coata Mt1e 2QO& PlloC Febfuliy 12,
" 88301
unU.monT
s.n your extra
houlehold Mema
Jn Clauffled
Call 642-5678 ..
Leaming experience
for Orange Coast
• Six freshman out of seve~ players makes
th.is season difficult to forecast for the Pirates.
Tony Altobelli
DAILY PILOT
COSTA MESA -With
experience at a minimum, the
Orange Coast College
women's tennis team will sim·
ply take the 2000 season one
match at a time.
"We're very young, that's
for sure," Coach Janice
Maran said. "We need to get
some matches under our belt.
You can't replace experience
and that's what we're lack-
ing."
With six freshmen players
and only one sophomore, this
year is filled with unan-
swered questions. One
Community college
TENNIS /111\
OUTLOOK'-'
OCC WOMEN
Lot Keijzer Fr.
Erka Goode Fr.
Sondra McNamara Fr.
Merin Yoshida Fr.
Shannon Gibson · So.
Jessica Andrus Fr.
Kaori Nagashima Fr.
Coach: Janice Maran
thing's for sure: athleticism will not be a problem
"We definitely can hit the ball well," Maran said. "We
have some very athletic players. We'll just have to find out
how they handle playing under the conference pressure.•
The Pirates' lone returner from last year's second-place
squad is sophomore Shannon Gibson (Newport Harbor
High), who was a No. 4 singles player for Maran's team.
Another player that has stayed local is freshman Jessica
Andrus (Newport Harbor).
Look for an international flavor from OCC this year with
freshmen Lot Keijzer (Amsterdam, Holland) and Kaori
Nagashima (Yokosuka, Japan).
Looking at the Orange Empire Conference picture, Maran
feel$ that defending champion Irvine Valley as well as Sad-
dleback look to be the favorites going in.
"NC has a bunch of returners and Saddleback is always
tough to beat," Maran said. "It'll be tough in or conference,
just like it always is, especially for our young group.•
TENNIS
CONTINUED FROM 81
serVed to all fans in
attendance -or as long as
the food lasts -beginning
at 11 :30 a.m., along with a
hit-for-prizes contest.
McNamara. who com-
piled a 314-74 record at
UCI, won six NCAA Divi·
sion II titles and coached 27
All·America.ns, came back
and served as an assistant
under Clark in the 1994·95
campafgn. '
Clark, wboee ADle8ten
are 5-0, is m his eighth
season as UCI head coedl,
after replacing Greg Patton.
Oark was the bead men's
tennis coach at Chapman,
then came to UCI as an
assist.ant for three yea.rs
from 1989 through '91. He
was the bead coach for one
year at Texas Tech, then
returned to UCI to take
over the helm.
McName.ra, wbo grew
up with Kramer and playe<l
on the U.S. Junior Davis
Cup team with him,
established the tennis clubs
at Riviera Country Club ,,
and what ls now 'the Balboa
Bay Club Racquet Club. He
was also a lo~ heed
pro at the John Wa~
Tennis Qub {now Palitadet}.
·1 must say, Myron wu
on~ of the finest gentlemen
I ever met iii my :life, ud I
knew him dole to 40
yee.ns, • former Paramount
. Tennis owner Bill Hodges
once said.
Habk Uoyd of tbe Costa
Mesa Tennis Center, who
directs the Orange County
Area 'nai1*1g Center (ATq
at his dub, was honored
Monday night at the annual
Southern California Tennis ...
Association awards
dinner/banquet as the
SCTA Coach of the Year
for player development.
The public Costa Mesa
facility is hosting a
workshop for high school
coaches, as well as a
'" pl4yers' clinic. Feb. 26.
Details: (714) 557-0211.
Uoyd is also a.a.ting the
ATC Cup Feb. 19-20.for
kids aged 11through13
and featuring juniors from
eight different sections.
Local~~ repsesenting
Orange County in the ATC
Cup include Kaei; Van't
Hof, Cbarlle Farmer, Steve
Johnson and Matt Chou in
the boys, and Kellie
Animennan in the girls.
•1t•s a tun event With a
lot of activities and a variety
of pl4y for the whole
weekend," Uoyd said of
the event sponsored by
WUion and the United
States Tennis Allodation.
Members of .. Newport
Beach Tennis CIUb senior
men's teeml (50s and 60s)
have returned home from
AUltfalia. wbare they
competedm 1~
temperatures at the
r. .. • . -• . I'>-. . .. ~::of,.".,. ·~ \1.'
I• I • •, , ,..., ,. ·-. . ..l/i,_,.' " . .. -. ,......-•• J. . • •• -
lunMy
.... ~ @ •11t SGllT H._
flOOIUU.
ADllA SoanNo ~ V~•UMv•dtrY
MIKIYUU.
REC STANDINGS
COSTAMISA
WINTEJI USKfiTIAU STANDINGS
Mondey~
1. Outen, 4-0: 2. Tll:C ICrushers. 2· 1;
3 (tie) 81rigas. SnHktf SqUNkM.
2·2 e.ch; 5 (tie) SChutu Photo, Anldl, 1·2
e.ch; 7. carnivorous Apes. 0-3
"-dlly LMgue
1. Heed Hunten, 4-0: 2. W1l<bu. 3·1;
l . (tie) Mason's Fi11ng Sq~. Drlbt>U!11, 2·2
each; 5. 5ff9ate 5«>f'l)lons. 1-3; 6. Betro,
().4
WedneecMy ....... 1. The Fishing Club, 3~ 2. Pkkford, l-1,
3 Old .nd Slow, 2· I; ' Soft Tubs, 2-2,
5. 0 8 , 1 ·2; 6 Wooders, H. 7 Angels, CH
1'Nnd9y .......
1 (tie) Adv•ni.ge Fit\aOClal, TuJtin "-ndl
All-Si.rs, 3-0, l It~ Bemben. 2·1;
-'· 0 C. llebeb, 1 2. S (tie) Sierni Kiwi,
CGC. O.luch
Australian National
Championships.
The Newport Beach 50s,
led by Leo Fracalosy, Peter
Flnch, Ron Hextell, Chris
Bowen and Gacy Adams.
reached the quarterfinals,
losing to Queensland in
•grueling matches," ,
according to Newport
Beach captain Gene
Nalbandian.
It was so bot on the
courts during the third
roUnd of round.orobi.D play
at Adelaide that Pracalosy
and Heztell had to be taken
out of Uie matches because
of heat exhaustion and
Newwrt Beach forfeited
the games
The N~8'!91!h 8()1
lost a Uebre&ket to ewn-rual
champion Western
Austiallil. Bob Sheppard
pulled muscles iD his baCk
and missed 2112 days before
being able tD return.
An AuttraU.aa team wW
be bringing 20 players to
the Phoenix Challenge in
P41m Springs April 16-22.
Newport Beach won
both titles last year and,
under Phoenix Challenge
rules, can only return three
pl.ayers. One team will
consilt of Fmch, Pracalosy,
Adams and Nalbandian -
811 of whom won pivotal
matchel in Australia, along
with Bruce Malloy, Bill
Wegner and Paul Knox.
Bowen, Hextell; Mike
CODOYer and Peter Smith
are al9o expected to be
Involved for Newport Beach
al the Phoenbt Challeng~.
[-.. ,,. _,. (• t"A 'I!• t ........ 1
I • • jl
.;_ . l
ORDINANCE MEflHtE": NONE E NO. 2000-S MAYOR NOYES ~ MAYOA: John • AN ORDINANCE OF NEWPORT BOULE· NOES, COUNCIL
AN ORDINANCE OF ~m CLERK: THE CrTY COUNCIL YARD) TO REMOVE MEMBEAS: NONE
THE CITY COUNCIL uVonne M. H•r1d... OF THE CITY OF THE s u BJ E c T ABIENT COUNCIL
OF THE CITY OF The entire text i. ave"· NEWPORT BEACH PROPERTIES FROM MEMBERS: DEIAY,
NEWPORT BEACH able lor review In tM A p p R O V 1 N G TH E S P EC IF IC '"l~~f1~ COUNC1&.
APPROVING Crty Clerk'a off~ OI IM AMENDMENT NO PLAN. (PLANNING MEMBER· NONE ~=~r.:gs Ml~ CIP'u~l~~=~ri ae;r TO AMEND ~3e~~MIE~' I ~~ ..:!:OR: John I!.
NUMISEA 11, SO AS BHch·Cotta Mau DI RICTINO MAP 894) ~ CL.ERK1
TO E8TA8USH AN Dally PlloC Febrvary 12 NO. 25 TO RE· Subject ordinance wu uYonne M. Hettd"'
8 FOOT FRONT 2000 • CLASSIFY THE ln1roduced on tr. 25th TMentlretext1uve1J.
YARD SETBACK Sa305 Cp~TEOPDEARTTY407_1_:~ day of JtnU8ry, 2000, able tor review In tl'le
FOR TWO PROPER " """"" and wet ed0p1ed on Iha City Clerk't office of tile TIES LOCATED AT Flctltloua Bualnea• BOLSA AVENUE 8th dey d Februery, c1~ of~ Bffch.
3 0 1 AND 3 0 5 ~oi:::=:,. ~~0:.2~9.fo. (S:~ ~ES.L_ COUNCIL e.~~~~~011:·~e
ALVARADO PLACE, •re OOlng bua1n1u u · THE LAND USE MEMllEmt: Dally Pilot February 12, AHO DELETE THE I Precilion Door and Win-MAP FOR SPECIFIC "IOOEWAY, O'NEIL, 2000
FOOT FRONT YARD dow, 780 N Mliln Unll 1,p:!:LA~N_N!!O~· .!e.J(~O~LD~_:O.:,Lo.,_VE...;..A:_' A_DA_MS_AND_l::====Sa=-=300~ 8 E T 8 A C K A E M, Orange, Calllomil '"° ' ~1:::~Ni= ~Edward Bowida, S'T!A nrrzr'J\·J;G FOR TH! PROP· 7eo N Metn UnlC M, Or· .l...l"J..L\. .I. .J 1 y ~ ERTY LOCATED AT enge, Cellfornll 82887
301 ALVARADO TIM butlneH 11 con· '
PLACE {AMEND· ~a~•byY~~= A 1\T'CJ.W
MENT 198) doli'IO ~yet? No l Y L
Subject Ofdlnanct wu ScOn e. BoUndl ~.,::.4~ ft~W:''=8°&:n~ BTTC'T1\T-CCS;>t> and Wiit acjop1ed on tht Oelt< 0( Orange County l.J ..:J.1.11/ £..:J1 e e 8lh day of F.Oruery. on 01'13·2000 2000 2000Mt .... AYU, COUNCIL OelV PllOI Feb. 12, 19,
•Mll"I: 29, Mar '· 2000 88308 "IOOEWAY.L O'NE.~ GLOVER, AuAMI ANU MAYOR NOYll
Nfil..1..-COUNCIL •-...:NONI AUINT COUNCIL
lll M•l"I : DllAY, ntOlllON
AHTAIN COUNCL
GilM ,,_ 1_,..SiCMUT , .......... ,.,...""*la Put a few words
to work for you.
Slmpllf y your
Hfe through
CLASfMflED
(949) 642·5678
&
--'--
I Doily Pilot
H1111•, m11I llc•u1ll1111.,. .in •t1ltJ1·1·1 111 1·l1111w1·
l\ i1l111111 1111ti1·1" llw pnlili,ltt·r n··•·r"'" ,f,..
ri}llll 11f n ""''' n·d11-.1r, rt'\'"'' 11r n·11·11
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I •
'1111' nrur 111111 llHJ\ IH 111 \1111r d:1._ .. ,1 ... .i ,111 1111;1wtli1111·I~. Tiu• 'Du1h t>i1111 uc·1·1·111' 1111
liul111i1' for 1111' nr11r 11111111111\l·rt ... 1·1111•111
for \to hlrh it 111:1, IH' n·•p11n-1lilr 1·\n·p1 for
thl' 1·11,1 uf tl w 'I"""'' 1w111alh 111·1·11p11·tl '"
tlw t•rrur Cn•ilit 1·;11111111\ lw .1ll11"A1·d for tl11
ByFax ByPhone· t By MaMn Person:
(1)-ilJ) h:J 1-()-,.,.. 11-+1) M:l· )h".'tt :uo \\t--1 Ba' :--1r1..-1
fiN ithl'rl i1111. .
1'1.-,,.. "" 1111~ '""r 111111• ur•I 1·1~.1~ 1111111l•·r 11111l •1· II .. 1ll ""I
1, 11LYtllh11 prr11• 'I"""')
( ll'fll \It •,I, ( 1
\ C):!fl:.t:'
\t \ ., .... 111,.1 & )14\ "I
Gl
EQUAL HOUSING
OPPORT\.HTY
Al .... ull1I '"""*' .. 11111 """"" .. Mltd .... , ... · tnl h it ........ Ad ti 1 ... H
I • 1,5
CITY CW COltA MESA
SPICIAL
FINANCING ............. -114•• wlllc• .. nn M lllttll
•• 1n 11tt11 ., .. ,,.,.. ... ,, 800-290-1995
n11111111" " .,m 1a1111111 Short term
..... net, HI•.,......., x500 Corporate A•,-.... ............. ., Rentals 11i1Mt1 lltfl•. • " 1"111111fl .. FOR SALE BY OWHEA
1 .... ,., .. , ,.,. '"''"'"· :JAl?t 28a. totallv re-done. Starting at ,.....,.. .. ~._.-~~J~~~~i $1095/MO. ~::::; ~ 1fft1n¥ 94~:ioo-2221 Furnished apts
...,,. ................... 1020JevlJOp;l\s.t.Sun avail. 6 blocks ......_ti 111t 1tw .. rt*" Mesa Vttclt CGUnry Ck.O f h .,, ..... , ,.,.,~. 11111 111 Huot 9600 st 1ot 481 2.se. rom the beac .
•••""'' ,,..,11 .. , ,, "'' sns.ooo 949·378-0664 949-644-2611
.......,.. 111 m Mdlt " " Succet1 Propenlel
..... ~ ....._ f• -Eiclvil'tel MtiiVirde No 2Br 281 den, wld hkups,
..... ti flm l I ..... all HUI 48f 281. epptOX 2000 sf I C# gw. IUlldldt. no pe\S.
lll·ht 11 1.-wt._.. f• 1-M, In tm, lrg kt. cUll Fp, 1V1i1 311 tetU1 llW req'd
.. ......,..., oc .. , ,.. .. , pooV•l=u. $297,500 $1450 ~9-673-130hve
All Hll111141t,ntl. 1 ... Pi~. Cal IOI • South of HW)I' LMOt:
· 1PP1 71"" ·1403 newer, open, 1tudTo,
•V.A.•
1 1m1:~-
4& ••·---1 ;jltA:ml llmg, new pilnt In & out, FP * COSTA MESA'S BEST In lv nn. kw1nll dil1klg S335 ooo ri 71,..96&-n&.3 Junior t bedroom ,m ' ~ I bedroom, tbO 2 bedroom
Index
220. 391
FAIRWAY APARTMENTS
AT BIG CANYON·
GATED COMMt.INJ'IY BY FASHION ISLAND
Beautiful ttM-lined streets and golf course
views. Enloy carefree living In your large ~ BR apartment home!
SHOii ·SO IOYHI
FMI COUNSELING
Fm UST OF 1-0ES
• HUONA AEPOS
714-5344100 l~ ~~~~-u;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;11;;;i!ii~~
'JV'~Jlfcucina -.. FOR SALE IY OWNER btleh, W/d 1*·14>. 1c gar,
lido lllt 48f 381. lalVf lam $835/mo amel pet <*. ·-............ . heme Ownltl plan to All\ ~-9199 • • • • HOMES OF
THE WEEK
Showcase
Homn
For Sale
In Our Sat
Real Estate
Supplement I
Dlaplay Ada
Start at $85.
Deadline
Tuesday 5PM
Also ...
Open House
: Listing• Avl.
• Deadline • • Thursday
: 5PM
: It Paya to
• Advertise
: In the Beat
LOCAL
Real E1tate
Section •
Call Today II
LISA .
RIVERA
949-574-4252
ANNE
WILLEY
949-574-4249
• • • • •
remodel 2/14. Buy Now end 11vel S899l< 049-3()0.2221 E'Slclt Back Bly I.lg 28f
WlliR FRONT FlXER 181, plllo, 192.Slmo No THE PRICE pecs, $900 dep 329 Unlvef·
WU AMAZE YOU I acy tL llll. 949-54M093
AGENT 94$-723-8120 E'Stct. Specloua 28r 1Ba.
1 BR sTOoiO gated convn. patio, oarall'. llundly: • new ftxluftl Walk In dcltl, no pt Is. $II 76/ Mo
YIClnl ~~In 949-646-7363
ldlctlen. $115.000 °""*' llkl 94~250-4525 Gattd Community wait 10
SEA lsUNb Shopl/Thelteis LOYelY 1 Bf OPEN SUN 1_. 181,carporl FromS7~
30 OCEAN VISTA $450 dee> 1917 M..,._ Avt
Gol COU1M *-· 2br 2 SOI Agt, MNl1-4000
24 Iv !ll*d Ollilll $758,900 r--"'11'!"---~~ s.wk• Oiiing • Remax
Mll-721-8664
NEW
CUSTOM
HOME
$1 ,395 000
Princlptiii Only
Bkrtowner
8~1
: ------· • ~Condo loc ~ : =~II=+,:.
• *'1ft/Mtl, Ill'. crpt plllO
Bayfronc community with privue bach
& ma.rin.a. Walk to a.lbo. J.land .hop ..
Munaca from Fuhion bland. &tra-
large apartment.a with wood bum.ins
fireplace and private gang-e.
• Boec .Up• available •
Sony No Pcu
NO W LEASING lBR/lBA
and l BR/2BA with den
St99S-$l800 .
Please call (949) 760-0919
r ~·v;JIP.o-
...... ~.·--I~ I
f ~' 4:---I" ~' ' ' ..:
• Afl.. 11...-.7793 • ..;:.;;...;,liO.......,c..,v'"A~w:u""""'.-rs-
: TWNHOM! 8of'dtrl119 I lg
• Cyn Oo" Couret. 2·31>11
Newport Heights Is Orange County's trendiest nelghb mood.
Coronado at Newport makes it affordable.
• FOid Rotd Propet1111
: 9411-758-nOO
• Open tei:Swt 12.s • nM Port lMWlcll Pl
• G.tad commumy wlflSOrt pools. spas, • Hllflh Club O(l-Slte TV ltll*r. 100
cabws. tennis. volley & bublbd • Walk to 17111 Strllt bollllQUIS. dlninO.
• Trll counltr'lops, 11¥dw0od·stfle llo0ts, SlatbUck's. Blockbuster, Ralphs.
• Harbor Vlaw homu. glass shower enctot111•. mifrortd M111111n to 1111 btatll and SS Ffwwlff • Monlaoc> PIWI ~ stoiy. • 4br 21)1 See& .ooo °""* .................. 94~145 71 -6578
closlta, <*lirlO lw & liel)las • Smart $1\idios. large 1 & dual muter 2
• F"V M"""'11l'M1bll.111111 stMCI. too bedrooms from seso· to $1450 ,,
J
,. . .. · .
... J. ~
li*IM OdO Home L<MllV 2.stv Custom home.
58r 481, 3(!eO I f ol tlv lltl
$1197,500 Bill GMdY AMllOlt
94H7Ht81
•lllflto TIME ORY
~~ . . co_~~po
. :::ir. _-.· -
' ;-::2 ·~ .. -·~ ,. ·~
420
430· 461
• 'd
Hours
l1•l1·pli1111t' a .llla11!-·1:0llp111
\I '"' L11 I rn\11 \\.ilk 111 :: .m.1111-:,·oop111
\f.,11,1,., I"''·" • I
•
470. 471
Sorurdoy, February 12, 2000 85
.,. ...
Monday .............. : .. Frida) 5:00pm
Tuc-.da) .............. Mum.Id) 5:00pm
\\ednt·..,<la) ........ Tut' .... dd) 5:00pm .
Thur.;day ....... \\t'dnt'-.day 5:00pm
Fri<la\ .............. Thur .. <la~ 5:00pm
~dtunluv ............... f n<la\ 5:00pm
690. 697
'
86 Soturdoy, FcbnJory 12, 2000
I
1·,.~1
~nS•·Sun124
I02 Avocado Lrg SuMy
:itlf 2be So al hwy
'2800 94H23-5135
RENTALS ANO SALES
CHRIS EDWARDS
949-723-5061
First Estates Properties
Nntt 2Br 181, ii!*iiallOn lhlllters. patio yard. moni~ month. $1500. pel ok wlJfA
949-72\.1338 9'~-6812
Comfortable 2Br 181
Houee ~dwood lloor$
llreplace ga1age, sma
yard $1695/mo AvUlble
Ftb IS Agl 949-67s-4912
160HOUSftl
COSTA llESA
ltg Beautiful 2Br 2.Sba
M11r ·Suite· condo. pabO.
bllc 2c att gilt $ t 45CYmo
949-645 6035 Oav&'Slndl
..,.e •&ioE iBr 2.sea
HOUSE approx 2700$1,
2cat gar. er1CiOMd beckyatd
S2Wltlo 949-645' I 056
112HOUSE~S FOARENT
NEWPORT BEACH
Baycreat Dover Shena
4br 2.5ba 2100 aqtt,
lradltlonal ranch atyl•
home. $350Q(tno Agenl
94Mso.9093
,~1·::91
ft(Nlll.IAll Of'T. • ...... (In AlttWl x. ~-
381 mn ....... tMGt OtllO M •.,•GERS a. ,..-., 1"' 1-2s11ri. • lol wlR'/ ICC ... s:.!OOO;Mo. ~"' Llltlt of ~fl ~9 642-leO • SPECIAL• IAilPLEJOAAAOt CALii
llOCAHYOH $1~00 +tllt~ SAT ... lp
IAOADMORE (Mutl P'tMn1 tie Ad) ""' boOlll IOVS gitll llc'I
W• loc 4Br as. 1mmec1 i35 nns & lolctwflllll 273 P......, ltJoff a.nta ~ m c:«d. ..... SlllMed on l>MLdlAly AM (between 1 Slhl'l ldl)
y1d, 1,_, 1eee 54500t'ri: llndlClped grounc11 tlfATE Sill Slf.a ~723-0!MO 0t FEATURES 24 Hour 1-3:00 • 2210 Ne*OOft
149-60'l-ll8l:J1'0' Lobby101r1c1 dlal llYd. eom Mtn. tine
it' 'A•. ·.., • • . -~
. . .· ' . --· .
l llEM TO
HOUSEHOLD
ANllQLt.\
Rooi..-.
C<1111 c;11111 t~
fl \l\fl\(,>;
Po>fll M' .:1
2br 26a, new paint, pl'lonff/Free HBO. tl.m, btdnlll, Uvrm, d•l'W'l'll. ~=t= Wci.5r; '~ifit~12 SCASHPAID$ w=~~::oe suoo AfN 1J.7 Fwys Min'a llom 0 c t7'tnft&U\&IA, ......... F·2 !alga •tal• or home •NfW~T PfNiN• F frvmvl" """' 111 Y'"'" ln Jbf 1ba, townhouM, new wgrdl, cclege llld OPEN TUE·WEO 104 iii No WI url 11 ... ,~h eYp mul!lple dUllll.
p1lnHcarpe1/bllnd1. = t~a= ::; Huge Mo111i'i9 sate 91!J.673.ui23 :::tc!,c!!~~ $1650. Agtt4M7J.7IOO IHtatnlltl Every!Nng muSl got Feb 12 Ref ... ... Big Cyn"jji 2561 ONil COSTAMESA &t3,8·2pnl'1621Hllfl\Pdljn -------. 1 M31 934
TO'M'l>Ome, gu11d gated MOTOR INN Rd CdM,Ctmeo Shof1• I ... -.. ..1.1111
rum.3caig11.Dec:llOuSing 22nHatbor1tvd •--E•tat9S•lel 450~~ I "7'~ I $4250 C11t 101 appt Phone Mt-t45-4'40 -r • 14t-2t3-4630 Sun lleln·2pm, Admlral·Heavy Duly S .8iG CANYOH• FunV!ure, AICIQutl ·20pds Ext1a 1&1ge "' "'· ____ ...._~.
28R 28A condo lloaeale I I I AcceltoMI. CloCIWlg w r1n111 e o u I s f o o AOMIN ASSIST
furnlahlnga, herdwood 204, TA!NTO au!! Plll'l;ngsc .• ~. N~~· ..,.Admlr1l-He1vy Duly PfT. In tll&Jled Gee*! lt0t1 llfa, oolf c .. -2i4I c ... .,. Wlilhe1·20pd c;ap. $100 olc data tnlly. d•tleal. nwc: Olm 04lfM v wa. NPS SAT·SUH t=S •ttolp0int·Wl$her $100 dUtlll 714-538·1818 no:,.~7~:0, Agl COM 28R APT 1h1t• 2:21 SANTA ANA AVI! Cel 714-598-0703 AOiiiAAiAICTHO Xssisf
""""""'" BLUF.'i"s wn1m11t. Sher• blth. Sola. bed. tllbtel, bUlkl GE FRIG sma1 CdM co PT 20-»111 ....,.. :r 2 block• from Ocean. equp. dllhta, Iota of etc. ,_ week "'tong """""'
StuMng 3Bdrm B Batll S&OO/rno. 94M75 .. m $50 949-278-1001 ...... er~ ldnwl"'IWi'i
neerBack8ayandNewpol1 P9frthOUM Condo Fum'd , .. ~,,.-• a-N1111 I MAYTAG ~10-1~ EITIM rt1, Beach Terna Qub $2500( pvt m8$111( IU•lt, oce.Way ~ --WASHERIDRVER. canld•OktvSPtlktrl com
Mo Agent. 714 576-1212 view: very ctun, HCU•td fOR 8AL! EXCELLENT CONDITION. 949-e7s.785e .
Nl2 wpo11 Shorn New '1br l>ldo. no petsl&mk, Plo('I ""· -----~-s200. MW63·74n -::::======~ bl. steps ID beech, gar, ptefd $11 !Olmo ulil'a Incl SHORES INTERIOR ;:=o==::;;;::;;:::::;;;;;;:;;o Apt. Man19tt TNm
vauttd ceil, "a ava.a 211 NM7S·7851 INVENTORY SALE I I Management 181111 w/ S2.39S'mo Mt-930.7528 NEWPORT HEIGHTS 2Q.40% OFFI Lampe, 452 BICYCLES atrong leulng and
VILLA BALBOA 2 large sttARE 3bf hou1t, 1)1'1v111 Armoh, eec:.uorlta, art, • maln1tn1nce akllla
"1$11 bf, 2ba frpc. W/O room • ba. No arnoke. upholat«y, lat>lta, lllON. • SPEED SCHWINN nHdld.' Aonl Ind ~ rHv lemod P8f'N SSOOIMO MM.cS-1331 2140 AVOM ST. H.B. CRUISER altoMOUHTAIN 111aiy In ad1ilnge IOI carpel Ga'ed comm. pool, (Behind Marin«e Mlle) BIKE SIOO for both. ~al 18 ll'lit ~1::'ocn-= 2~~ 1218 RINTWANm>ALS l 14H'12·2:255 MMn-7614 Ac>t COl'MlJMy in tilt ~· $1650 949-644-5370 L I City ol Costa Miit. tLIOO ISLEe VINTAGE 454 FUANITUAI Call (114)133-5406 Oom Per1gnon available 4br Sbe. new ClfPll, trplc, STUDIO WANTEOIC.M. 1964 • fO&e vlnUgH ATI Molherl and ol'*•
vaullld cell'•· L1111 RtUable 1 Employed Cllt M~WOOt llan leethtf Iola & kW• WOf'lt from home, 1500r'PT
S:tOOQlnlo. Ho doa•. 224 94" r ~ • "599 ""'w""o"'"LF=F~r=•~N""'Nl""'::x"'"'°'eE=o~s seal, new s111 wraooed. very or S4SOOIFT per mo. Call Via "h•c• 31M1l·1'13 .r...-v " .,,.. '°"·lop quallly Wu $2000 800-961'°952 LIDO ISLE TAN AT HOME aac:S8909•9-26l·9933 www.wfhonllne.com
Cl\alrnlng 28r 2Ba home. 2c 1400 NIOJNCBISfT I 8~l>~1n~,m~~EI ~· wllhe •ntertllnment 1011711 ~ tipc Sl9951mo . . i.:.~~'t~ :'...,~ .. ~~4~~,2~: --A-V'""O-N~R~E=P-S-OCEA~:,:2 HERBALIFE ~···, .. , .. ~. 714•545-4147 Buy, Hll, fund ralH.
vlew!I Remodtltd house .Ill Ktrry·714-536-0152 ~~~R~ Lrg S.ctJOnal •'queen Sil• 7l4-53•sa12
4000ll 4bf den 3 5bl S7600 -w.1uccus·he1b1t111 hidH-bed. SSOO NttJ sola Back OffiCt Aui1tant
2nd remodeled houM !i!f CIJlr/lt,erry/ lable S50 949-759--*S 16 for DermatolOgy office
3bl coty lltlt• wlmounlWI 1-=m 1 MM50-4749 Expenence only v..ws 81Q Tuati ywd SSSOO , .._ I OFflCE RJRNTURE Fu to: 71~ t49-7IO-f750 Agt Robert. ,.... LOST A Esecutlv• deal!, Hon Illa
28r 181 P9nlfitt concso FOUND cat>tneta, c11a1ra 1i lll0(9t Banking
'WMeW, fN9( 1100sf Wflll. WANTED MM-15-9516 Pl1Nlnie Ullllty P"lllon•
10 bch, pooVape 1emi1 LOii bl1ck 6 brown secilOOil 1>1m1>00 $Ola sec llYlllable Ill lht Costa Mesa
s131smo 9'19/646-4701 •tripped labby cM, •hor1 ANTinUEs s195 0as 'fJJlc, "° logs "" D\Ales ar• wwemo
I hair, female. Vicinity Hew· g: $95, Makita drdl f14l 16 pc phones. preparing slQnalure
183 HO• I wpol1 Bch ti SI, 6 E while plasll(: pallo furn• cards & UCC, D&B & credll ~ B11bo1 Blvd Ml-72U711 Older Style Fumltu,. beige mafl<et umbrella 595 repol1 r8Selleh & ftllng'
PIANOS & Colt.ctibles 1149.223-0254 Other ruponalblhlles
I . ~ft.'-~· lr'"dJdl to.\ doct#'nefl 412 ~ 1 ·S<t<-•.Voo•Olf ... -... SOfa & Loveteat, tiPC 1-...... rler ~atlOfl SUMMIT 3br 2 ~ blauCdul $$ CASH PAID $$ dining NI Ii bedroom """""Y• cou ...,....-up,
IWrilmt pat_, llPQ(8d. sec • • ... _ ........ ..._ furniture MUH 1045. ~-=-~~
galtd WIO hlwp: 2 car oar ,.;Ille View Mlf'l'lorlal WE BUY ESTATES I I I notice ~ lhdl.s S26SOAg19•U73-7800 Pn.CoronadelM.w.One ·~•ff.-.dyMMC• •fl'l&PITSI avlillblt tllr;il
Ploetn Vl"a del Mw, "Wl PAY llOR£ $FASTER" #AW(; l9CIJll $12·15pefhv. pass
(9491 642-5678 r;::,0:~..:w'CJ:·soo. Ferne.: dog OUnat~ ~ ~Alln ~11: c w 11me Lib, lovelb1e, 1 112 yr• (877)851·9008 EOE
M1gnotl1 Coun hllltop ok11 Ill ahot1, IOIY9d. $20. 0 • • • • • • .. • .. •••• ..
• ----·double cremation niche. :>lenne M9'-451-l222 : HBARBEOUESH :
949-706-0907, 9f2ia..4e01 Frtt to good homt • OALORE •
2 CtiOG BUl'lll Gravt1 I01 Pedlgrtt lleeglt 1yr old " NOW HIRINOI "
Cttdlt Balance Auditor
Carden cro,~
Do )'Oii hM •hit k takes IO be a mmibtt d the
Acc~I lnsunance llec:Ol'try Solutlons &eam? Our
tr»n o( proli onab 15 m:ide up of mwt, nhical,
~i'fe, and committed lndMduils who Itta!
our CUS10mtn, 111d our competition •1th the
utmOSt rnpttt and COUrl('S)' Do )'OU h;i~e •lw Is
takes? •
f.lteUent Opportvnlry. Credit 8alance Auditor
will be ..upon ble for fdtntll)1nJ. YlllcWlnx and
c:alculating crtda1 balances and/or Improper
pl)n>en!S loc:a1rd withl.n p~idcr o4kes
Su«essful candidate WIU perlonn &$1SOCWed 111di1
funcdons 10 asi.un: tlWn~nl of budgtt goals ind
to Improve lhe work Dow~ to mulmlze &he
dfeaivencss and efficiency of audit and proper
pa)mtnl ttVlcwS
• One )eat medical dalms, mtdlcal bill
proccs.slng, ctiagii05b codJng. or pa11Cnl
iccounb cxper1encc requlrtd.
• ICnot.iedge of insunnce ~ry and
hospiW!provider organlzallons must be
pmtfll
• Excdlen1 telephone skills. good lnlerpersonil
skills, and strong lbtenlng skills nwidafor-,:
• Must be self·moclvated and goal orltnlt'd v.ith
good personal credit record.
• Must be wtlling 10 tmel up 10 SO% al the llmc.
AcanJ ojfm a profosskmtJ/ "''"• 11wfron1Mnl,
comprdnlsii• bnwjits paella~ u:blch lnclutltt
fall bH/Jb 11114 tknla/ lnsuro11a, paflJ t'OCtllion,
tuition rnmhunnwnl, a 401 (•)plan aM
profit sb'1rlng Ac«nl is a comfJtlny tbal
lftXJf'ds hard u'<>r• anti lkdlcaHon
Apply in person or send resume and salary
history to:
Accent lnsu1'311Ce R~ry SolutJoM
Attention M211iger al Human Resources
7171 M~Ro2d.SUlle2SO
Omaha, tiE 68106
(fax) 402-384-6361
sale 81yvlew TtrllCI :!!549 jft22alft oeutef8CI male. Greal wllh : FUN SALES E!NIR. " Pldlic View Memorlal Pllk _ 11 ~ other dogs 949-722· 1807 .. Som• 11111 exp :
Disc 20% oll 702-914""457 ~ needtd FT 10am-• S0}1~8~ST SELL i ~~ i 1;;; ~=71=EllP&.O::::;:::•=.::;::;T;n;;;:411=~==::;r
" 2338 Harbor 8IYd • IOPTICWI• SALES
=:Certified Pre-Owned = b~ BMW --------
.. ColtlMela
(C»tllt ln!IMH) &p, PT. Tuetday.f'rlday Convn newspapet orouci 2Pfn-'pm. No weebncla. lookr1g tor Wlllde 58les reps
Mt-27M717 Shoukl possesa strong
BOOKKEEPER PIT Syears e Pflennac:y Clefi 'fYPI• phone '81e1 abiloiy. bl tlCP Send ltsllllt Sllaty e Catllltt OlglnlZed, & have mt cusl
req'a IO MM71-ff21 or • Uc'd Phennacy Tech. selVice Sldls saf.toomm call MM71-0I04. Wit train. Clll lor lnlelYlew Benet~ pkg Incl 401k plen
CLERICAL POStTIOHS 949-642·0122 or Fax Ofup screenlng/physlcal
t2·1Mlr. No exp. Nee Ae&4J11111 IO 949-642·9469 roqd EOE Send resu.me 10
FT/PT. Full Btnellla. ePT 8001CkEEPER Marl<ey DarMls. 330 West
1-IOC).l73..1Mf X2014 e SERVERS Bay St. Cosla Mesa, CA
e HOSTIESS m27 Of lu te5ume 10
-------for Rtaeavran1 In Coa11 (949) 63Hl594.
Mtu. CALL ~14 SEC/81(PR-PT Prop Mgmc
8etWMn 2.-00 and '1:00 Co ~tet tlQls Cal
MOHOAY THRU FRIDAY f)IOel 714~25S2 Ol flll
Clefbl/RecepUonllt
PIT lnlt<llllng alb
work N1wu 11nd
mtglZll'lt MS Olfa
~ Exp hllptlA 20·30hralwk f u
rHUIN 114412·7722
p(f RKrNtJOn lAtdef lestlM 94 1908
Muat b• pollte end Subtle Tones couteous to ~ ... E-i>
not ntce1111y but htlpllA. Store Managtf Wanted ,__ _____ _, ~~~~-= ~ Stor:O ~'1az'°'
lob & w0il1dng erw11onmem1 our ona 1 .... r a Prr, gr.,1 hours, oo ~ts. S6 25/tv MM .. •-4H'1 store 2 yeats management
:,'<-endlJ.=:f:92:• PURCHASING ~:."7.;.~r~,:
bEilONSTRATOAS IACCTS PAYABLE P.OS women'1 IPP&fel, v1n18gt
for ultimate peace of mind, every Ccctificd Pre-Owned BMW is ba,kc<l by The Cutil1ed Pre·Owned BMW
Protection elan, covering the \chicle for up to 2 years or 50.000 m1la (whichever comes first}" form the due of
op1ration or the 4-ycar/SO,OOO·milc BMW New Vehicle Limited Warranry:• The Protection Plan mcludcs cwo key
we need help nowt PT food for tmd last paced Co home fumlStwlgs and belh
dernoa nMded from COM to Compuler ·~ end end blauly produc\s. Berlt-San Cltmenle lflCI IMne orgftzallon 11C11a a rrut1 lb. 401 k and uotllnt
We can WOO! good pey exp 511,,y + tul benllilS Fax Mitty olllfed Fax ltU1'le
& own ICdaiicea a • ·cal *"""IO 714-445-9202 IO lhl attenllOn of SuMn
Tine 94M8&-1357 ex1 2 RECEPTiONST Wll5Miumln Resources clcmcnb •
Certified Pre-Owned BMW Limited Warranty .. B~ckcd by BMW of Nonh Amcri~. Inc., and its
n~11onw1dc nct'o\ork of BMW ccnrm. covered repairs arc made only by BMW-er.lined c~hnicians using only g(nuinc
BMW replacement pJm.
BMW Roadside Assistance .. Peace or mind follows you anywhcrt' in the USA. 24 hour~ a day, 365 days ~ y~r.
1997BMWZ3
2.8 LTR.
C :n. < hroma & ~fore!
S2'J?S. Joul fo Smt
l1>1.'1l l'•ymcntl • StJ,800 • 'liiac (C 00797)
Wh11t wl !\la k I .wdC'd !
S 11J'l'i, lot;il In "wr
11110&1 1'.iymenr~ • S2o,%S • l:u {MOz.lH'i)
96JI8i ~ \ptl. iHK M1, libd• wflan ............. WADED/
96JJ8ic
/\11111, 3'>Kn11 liilvt:r w/Sa11J ...... ~........... SA VE/
97ZJ
'i li1l(I, I.o M1, Blad: ~/S;111,I (l\~~747).u.$22,995
(Ill other Z :h 111 c ho•JSC')
97M-3 r\um. 4 1>1, l iQ M1, l.mclrct.
97328i
Auw I At Mi, \X'h11, w/ Jnd
(ti othu lRuu d lOOM.')
97 528i
··············-~VE/
I o.ulrd, lil.ack w/lll"ck (5 1 ort7113) ...... $32,995
I ll 11thtr ~ 11c• 111 4hoovJ
(Rat to 4.9o/o A.P.R. O.A.C.)
97M-3
27K Mi, CD. S ~pd (3UHR472) ............ $34,995
97740/L
fir< m1um Pkg. Hlack w/lilack (M0537l).$39,99.S
c I l mh(I 1'• IC) cho.>toe)
98ZJ
'2 8 l u, S Sr<i. l.n .. ufrd <3X•1P3 1) .......... $29,995
987j
I H l rr ~ pd, Loaded (4AN87<1ll· ...... $26,995
98.iJBTi
20Kll'lj,Aum, Loaded (4COWW..0) ......... t$19,995
(Certified to lOOKmi)
~VIER BMW
anta Ana ~to Mall, 55 Frecw•r at Edinger
714/83S· 171 ~erbmw.com
I
HOTEL FRONT DESK w..uncsa only In prun· 310-123-2940 lM ... 111
CLERK FT/PT win lrlln. tlOUI Newport 8t1ch comlOlt Subdt Tonti
Coate Mt11 Motor tnn. Reel Eatale omoe. eom. Iii" suellE TONES
2Z77 Harbor Btvd CM putlf and phone akllla r1 N B seokS I~~
MAIL ORDER PRESOH 'i'..:.'i:~:O~ A~·'Clm'0 i10 51't' ~,._In Top mor.y WOl1C tfound • per wee PlfSOll,
yOUf achtdule Call Carol II h 344 Avoca Plaza (CdM 1400-2M-7M2 Ca t e Plaza) or call 949-640-2781
MAJiolRiTAv1UE Classifieds Ask tor Coleen. ;;~..$~ 1"9J 642·5678 c.::~::.~
nMded '°' tl\ICldOld carrier
HERE'S A GREAT ~~1J!~~
WAY TO GET
CLIENTS COMING TO
YOUR DOORf
\l'i'' II 'I: \ Ii"•! 11' 11 .. 111
1.111 '' 11 \ .' _1 _,,It )I I Ii I '111 I! I ' .1 (II HI
Tne Oally Piiot Wiii PUDllsn •
Tax It Ftnanclat Directory to
assist our readers In finding a
tax professional. Reaching over
40,000 homes tn a hlon·end
market, you are sure to flnCI
many wno neeCl your help
A smart mov!t on your part
would De to ttkt advantage Of
our lncreatDIV low rates ana
Place vour ad ytltn us. Only Us
per week If vou sign up for. the
entire 17 weeks. or a m1n1mum 4·
week run 1t $40 per w11k.
TAX TIME
IS COMING
Size of
Ad
2x2
VETERINARY ~·1
and T tc:h IOI bUay
1nlm11 hosp Exp prelerrt<I PIHH
IPPIY In PfHIOll at t2·oe S.E. Blratol,
S1ni. Ana Helghta
(TI 4)754-1 °'3
Wick• Furniture
In Costa ..._. la now hlma
WA"lHOUSE ~KERf
Cl.£RtCAUCUIT IVC
CONC)EAQ(S
Corpor• benefit peck-
... lncWed. Full end ,wt tllM poaltlont tvlll. ftettll hol.n; ,..... WfY
lrl peraon • 3200 Hriof 81\'d, Cotta .....
4 PHONE REPS.
F utl 1me, energeeic lor
MQl1gage Co, eam to S600
~ ¥Wtek + blnelill. ...
exp prlJl'd eon.ct MtliUI
9'111·2~5719
Ooity Pilot
•MEDICM. alui.ll9
PIHM be w_., of OUl PruceM lnlUIWICI clllm5..
ol .,.. .....,....-. lOCll ~ & doC10l'I
<:heck wlltt "" Ioctl PfO'tided ia10-890-44e7 letter luainHt lu-~' §.;. :§ .I w~MI
conltilCt.I bllott )'04' Are you dro.ln
elgfl OW9tdlll billl? I~ A9tf'CY C8ll hilt> ~ g.-~L~-=-,"'-lf-• ..,.Loc-11...-::Rt,,..r• back on 10P with any av11~ P11 111.ab In your llnanclal dllflcultlH,
.... Eam S100K lat yr/ bualneuu, tromu1 min. lnveat under ISK bo9ta, he'll Yacallon ana
.... 151.YENO (1363) 14hr penonal. ln-Ul-1454
Hottell &ii oppc;,,"'111Y I I lor=::~s~ 910 =
col<E/WEtcREMRlfO • • 30. HI Ttalltc Loe'•, BOAT SHOW SPECIAL Slsro'wetklv pral•. INFlATAILE FlnencinO FREE video OUTBOARD MOTOR
800-33f.t375. 24hn 8LOWOUTll 94M42·2S2t
VENDING I i 9 8 S £ A R A V
SISK/yr Unique l·lll· SUNOANCER 27FT. 100
comu, New Locadonel hra. Incl extended wan. ln-123-VENO $57,000 ... M44-1170
UHIOUE BUSINESS
Aelil.1tbe $100,000 .. "'" ~·ar prolll po1en11a1 No tnvercory requtrements-lJnLmlted
gtowth We are I leader
~ the mobile HMce
tutD & ltuCk l(l(juslry
end • NallOllll supplcer
ol Valvohne ol, Auto-
l ont, C11QU111 Ind No lieclSp Auto Parts aeetona one quatdied ucluilve ''Turnlley"
Malter O.alw. $4SK·
~ 6K tnvlSlmtnt ,..
~ed No sellng
Financing Av11l1bl1
Cal 1·80().7~
TAX&
FINANCIAL
DIRECTORY
it's
almos
time! .. .,ic.111111!!~
Tax plano'iog & preparation
Senior Discounts
Free Initial Consultation
Evening & Weekend Appointments
At Your Home Or Office
Honest, Hardworking And Affordable
949-653-1040
TllO .\I .\~ c: BFc1,1·:u
(949) 646-8803
ALL TAX FORMS -ALL STATES
INDIV -CORPORATIONS -FIDUCIARY
PARTNERSHIP· llC ·ESTATES
350 E 17ru -STE 117
COSTA MESA, CA 92627
:iO YEARS EXPER IENCE
2S YW'I in BUnn.
F.ur rd'und1, tl«tronic filing. Pact o( mind parinttt,
we pay pen~ua and unan1 if Wt mah J mu!Ut
1c,hnoloiy hu rnabltd u1 10 ofl'tr fttt char arc
cnmpctlltl't with 1wt about anyont alld your rttutn w1U
bt ptqr.aml by one of our J CPAI. We tnjoy rnakinc I.ht
ui l~wt v.ork for YOU! Opm yru ro1111d Convtnitn1
loci1111n Ask fur J.,in and mcnuon this .d ~ alhtlc
Union Suk Buildi•g t.l Wtsedilf & Ocmr
I SO l Watdifr Ori'°', Suite lSO, Newport ~
9•9.548.«94
LJ011y r1101 \
mc~11 •
BMW 3l11C 't4 BUICK COUPE 'T7 ~1-~1 _Brld~•·------~~~~
CAOIU.AC OEVIUi II ly CHAALES GOREN COft\', blK~IKll, no ssoo 714-632--0338 ~ .. otlflNI o-. . new brawa & belts, fully BUiCk SKVLAAi( 12 loedff, 511,500/obo (linllf'Y Gr.nd Spot1 VI 14MU·»n engine LGS) I cyt, AT,
Bl.IW 111 IC '1 4 ap, AC, lltlf '""'· "' (11IOOk S2USO PW, 1m-fltl, CC, cn..cte. S AUHO BMW' 17500lobo t4M$Ml40
LOW llHI wfWlt. IMi iMllOr V·I Nolfll•ar, ldlt cond w ith OMAR SHARlf
(219825) 117.818 and TA/-INAH HINSCH NABERS
(714)14M100
cloiUic OEVill 111 v.a NotlhStar. SapplW•
Blue. bll gj Wlifr. WANTEO a11p fOf 2111
bOlt. Ul1lt Id Blllbol ' Balbol PllfWOll 111erd
14"4S.Stoo CAOiillC CAftRA 'tf
8MW 311 UA '17 • Lo """· ~ tan lea&hel,
(283272) $21918 NABERS \\I I l\J ,\ lllUllC.t (J I I/
• Con1aCt Olin 949 574 2003
81S CAASITRUCK9 NANSISUVS
.-.CURY IAllE 17 ' L8 POWlf lodll l
window• 12500 11•..e31....,s
(111Sll 111,150 $ ERLIHO BMW
14M4S.5IOO
BMWUllA 197
(45111fe $26,850 S RLtNOBMW
14M45·5IOO
BMW328 IC '17
(625503i 133,850 ST RUHO BMW
14M4S-5IOO
BMW 329 laA '97
= bll '*llr & morel ( 111) 111• NABERS
(714 )540-9100
CADILLAC CATERA ·91
Lo 1 Sk mites. &Mr, IN!ht<,
mooruoo4. CD. bll of warr
(022364) $21,988 NABERS
(714)540-1100
C,AOILLAC Concoura '17
295 H P • NOltt1Slar, low mokls. Sea Mist, 11hr & more
(212804) $26,18$
(714)5*t100 <J I • flo•lh \ul11rn1hk, "S(ju1ll u;u
CADILLAC DEVILLE 'ii h 1.1
'1·11 Nortti.tar, low 11
ll'lllel. ltafltr, belllQ of A\1iitl \l\1 1111 71o Q,\f}lfl •IJ'•~
warranly preYIOul rtn!M
(76209) $25.988 NABERS (714 )540-1100
lltt l•1.l•lt11j.' II.I\ f>r<M.u'llal
'1111111 ,q ,r ~rnt111 '~''' I 1•,1 " I• l'.1•• J Cac1h1ac Eldorado 'ii Low ~. VI, Nonhf11r, \\ lf;1I clo \Hll i.1t111rn1 1
gieen, bel ol w11r & morel
(812740) $29,9811 C) 2 • B1°1h \11l11cr.1hll', ·" S11111h >"''
NABERS h"t•I
(71')5*9100
CADtLLlC sevilie 100 • "1.J 111 r, (35431J $28,850 ~BEAS
S ERLING BMW (71 )540-91 00
14H4S.SIOO Acur• Legend "L" '90 Bk mle$• Beige. IMi lllw,
Whitt, 4df, V8. 111110 A-C CD. ba1 of wtn, Prv rtnlll I 11, h1,l.h11r 11.1 prn .. ccJnl -IMW s40IA '17 Ontbemove? llllt h.i p#f Pl lib pw ( 142672) $38,988
Clllll4I Ctltltsol am-fm cass (53316) 131,aso J , Call · HABEAS •
111<1 II I. \Ii I Sill 111
le;. 1'.1 I•
1:m.: mi MV1. l"°"'"ner ~ stEAUNG BMW (7t4)540-t100
r _;cond;;;:::::Sl::800=::::"::::'"=72=3=·1=963:::J.==::":H4:::::w::IOO=· =~=C='="::•::•:;lfl=ed==... Cld11tlac Clitr1 &an '17
2A J',1\ I
\\ h. I du \Oli lud 110~ 1
Have A
.. Garage Sale!
$21,115 91-4111 BAUER JAGUAR () \ • Ncnl" r ~ul11c1rihk, "S1•uth
714-fS3-4IOO ~· •U hold
FORO XL T RANGER 117 .. I\ " " " I} Ill 6 !i .1 0 ? .. \ " v Truck, Extra cab. black/
black. 5 epeld, U, AC,
lm-fm Cltl, 3411 m~ iltrl,
1tr1 clunl Btdllntr
$10,IOO MM31"6673
HONDA CIYiC EX '95 Wli.11 1111 y1•11 h1I1111\1. I
Whl. loaded, Jdt1I cond. low
~~ ':9.tt,'~;e' tJ-' · llnlh Hll11c1.1hl1•, ,\\ S•>ulli >'"'
lnfinhl 130 s.dan 40 '911
124,"S tl-4875 BAUER JAGUAR
""''
'''~J O.\
II l•ul1h11 h.1.1111u1 l~cl ~01 111 \\I °' t '\1 >ltl 11 I 1•.1 I•
l• 1•.1 l • .,
\\.hottiJuH11J'11J 1"" 1
fJ (1 • ll<ith llhlt'.I hi
hulil
• \ 117 .j I 7 IJ
1 IM· '11tkhn.i• I ' J11 I I 'lllU 11 I \\I 'Ill 111
IQ l\m I• 20 1·~" '
\\ hal 11111 do)
' /,1Hlf<1I (II II
\\I 'I , .... ,,
714·953-4800
JAGUAR VANDEN PIH 91 695 CARSITAUCKS
Grey, excellent condhlon, NAHSISUVS
695 CAASITRUCkS
NANSISUVS
695 CAASITRUCKS
/VANSISUVS
Soturdoy, February 12, 2000 HI
TODAY'S I
....,..<;~R.-0.¥.S,._,,~W~O-=-Ru;;;P-.:P:...;:U._.Z_Z.alr,,;i;,E_·
ONLY 70Kml, Mu1t Sttl --------' -------.11"'-------' $12,700 141-851-8345 JAGUAR XJ8 '118 VANDEN M~VCEDES BENZ 300E Oldsmob1l1 Sllnoutllt W ,
PlAS 4-<loc>f, lull pwr. sun ·eo. R8(t'lan Lonnser p~g. GLS bei<,JIJ t&n hilt low 10k
JAGUAR XJ& L '97
SEDAN 4D
root. IMl8 wtleels. 1 owne<. lowered. unted. lmmar r111 CD •Ju'll il00<s & mort 1
rlCOfds, realy clean car 100+ kml, (2RJR804) (175".<'Sl • $21,!11111
~."s 97-4352 $4,500 949-723-1504 $16,000 PP 949-673-0244' NABERS
NISSAN SENTAA GXE 95 (714)540·9100
Coll The Pilot Classifieds at 642-5678
to place your Garage Sale Ad ~
P..~il~f .rnot
BAUER JAGUAR
714-953-4800
JAGUAR iJg l '97
SEDAN 4D
S35,"5 • 17-4111
BAUER JAGUAR 714-95)-41()()
Jaguar xJi venaen Pile I s.ctan 4Dr 'M ~."5 -M-4154
I
BAUER JAGUAR
714-t53-4800
JagUll XJ6 Vandtn Plu
Stclan 4Dr 'M
$37,"5 N-4503
BAUElt JAGUAR
714-t»-4800
Jaguw J6 andtn Plu
Std.n 4Dr '97
'39.115 97-4759
I BAUER JAGUAR ________ ...:._ _____ __J. 714-95).480()
JAGUAR XJS '97
SEDAN 4D
$35,995 17 ~3
BAUER JAGUAR
714-ISMIOO
JAGUAR "iii 'i'7
SEDAH 'D 13$,"5 97-41&1
BAUER JAGUAR
714-1Ss-4t00
iliERCEOES E300 '" ,Turbo d1estf, RARE ll
36 monh 18f11111Wlg 0
$733/mo or peyoft 1s
$43 800. 12.500 ml. Blade/
Tan loedtdl 949· 720-9796
Mercury vui19«
N1utlc1 Wagon 'I]
$19,"5 17-4151
BAUER JAGU~A 714-953-4800
When you're t uned iato classified ,
yo~'re tuned into your community.
5 Spd Mansal 4 Dr Wlvto PLYMOUfH CRANO
Gray lnt811or Xlnt Cone> VOYAGER 12, 6 cyf, Ir~ &
llOn Rekable. Dependablt 1ear ale loaded 1 pwr GreatPncelOfa~eatCat• 55400 "''•~ 1657
$6750 Clll 14~1-3012
OLDSMOBILE Cieri '86 Slwaocn. low 5311 mtes 3td
54111 & more•
(360019) $8,988 NABERS (714)540-9100
' Simplify your
life through
CLASSIFIED
(949) 642-5678
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A
GOOD
-ADI
HOME, HEAL TH AND BUSINESS
~ .......
~ERVICE
STUMPED? ~ foi.Ansi.ors • ·"""'-"~"'-
• Mc,., ...... 1-900-370-MOO tlll eoot 500
Coll The .Pilot Classifieds at 642-5678
to place your Garage Sole Ad ~
na· \'Pilot
COSTA MESA
. "¥.
for all your needs ...
I 220 ACCOUHTIHG I
Ptrsonal Income Tu
Prtp1tatlon, federal &
SUit. Cal lot Low rates
• 714 C165-7$37 . POUCY
In at! tftOll 10 off er the bell
HIVU~IOOUI ~ trallld~ ......
tequlrt Cor4r• IOfl who
~ortiSe W'I the SeM:e
Dtrtt1ory to rv:tudt um
Contractors Llctnae
numbtl 111 Uleir 1ct.1tr1i~
menl Vou1 co-opera:wn is
9rN1ly tpp!ecialed
l~I
lnlMlor/EXWlor Painting,
Drywell/Slucco repalts
Electrlall, etc FrM tat.Cal 8111 Of Rob at 71~-850-0162
f:11nl111i11il.111H[v111)'
/,1111 n mnf.1tm'11J.f1 n
(111 <t11t1f nit111111/11:itvRl'fll•-~
Tne Cali!. Pliblic-
U t 11111ts Com· mlSSlon REQUIRES
that al used hoVSO-
hold ~s move11
pf1nt their P U C
Cal T numw, Umos
and chauffere prinl
their T C P number
in •" advt IMITI(lf\1$ II you have a qu
lion a.bout 111e 1o9 • rtyofamov r,lmo
or ehautfer, can
PUBLIC UTR.ITIES
COMMISION
714 $5141St
tlANDMAOf 0 1 n
WOIUI> PAINTS
t~'tERJUM.XTEIUOR
lmpmtiifo"' A rw@4
I l~lf1\\ASH nos• on ~RtS(O
Mii K l'AIST
EACH 80,000 HOMES
---~KL.t~LMllliU.~~~~ ~Y.._ __ ...._. ..... --.. ..... --w
..
12,2000 · · Daily'Pnot . .
00 CADILLACS ARE ARRIVING DAILY!
The 2000 Catera The 2000 Escalade. . The 20.00 Seville STS
LEASE O s359/MO
+ tax for 36 month lease. $3950.00 cash down or trade equity, plus incep-
tion fees= $5108.95. 12k miles per year. 20e 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.
. .
LEASE FORS485/MO
+ tax for 36 month lease. $4950.00 cash down 01 trade equity, plus incep·
tion fees .. $6745.75. 12k miles per year. 20e per mile in excess. Offer good thr\I 413/00 on approved credit. This stock number only. No dealers or brokers, pleaser Lease must be approved my GMAC. 1 onty 4188.
~ Porch~e For Ont~ S 43,56 510
. LEASE FORS549/MO
. ' + tax for 36 month lease. $4950.00 cash down or trade equity, plus Incep-tion fees = $7092.86. 12k miles per year. 20C 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 4213.
or Purchase ~or onty S 47 ,BOO
With GM OWNER'S LOYALTY PROGRAM, you could save an additional $500!
Sec dealer for details.
HE INDESCRIBABLE OLDSMOBILE
The 2000 Intrigue lhe 20·00 Silhouette The 2000 Alero Se.dan
SO SE f1iY DEPQSfl · . So SECURITY DEPOSIT 'So 151\' . So lST PAYMENT
+95t + 11X for 361110111he Cloild end !MM Oil epprowd Clldll Total dM-oll $2,168 30. Aelldull $13,0&UO TOii! Of peymenll $UOUO +tall mm• allowed I* YI" 20c
per mile In •-This ~n number only. aub)eel to Pl1ol' u Ho ~ Of bfObrs.
pltael lllSt must be IPPfOYld by GMAC 1 orrly 199781
·QI
520,890
·~ +lax IOf 36 montllS CloMd end 1eaM Oil tW«Md crldrt. Total drtvt-oll 5226.135
Relldllll $15.11160 Total Of paymt!TtS $10.791120 +tax. t2k mfteullow'4 peryeet m.
I* milt tn ll!Cel$ Thill llll tlllfTIW only, •ubfed to priclt 1111. Ho~ or~
please! Leue musi be IPPIO't'td by GMAC 1 orrly 140711
Or Purchase For Only S24,164
•951 • tall for 3a monlha Cloeed lllld leaM on 191)r!MNI ~IL Total dlM-<lft Sf.75914
Reeldual $8.517 20 TOlll Of PIYl'f*l1I $7, 1111.20 t tu. 12lt milts llloWld I* )'Ill' m. Pt! mile
In.-. Thi• WI numbtr only, 5ubllCt to poor ... No dlaletl or bloll111, ple&MI t.. ._
be IPl)rlMNI my GMAC 1 orrly J03.457
• Or P\o chase forOnty S15,941
"FOR THE GREATEST SELECTION OF PRE-OWNED CARS ••• SEE NABERS"
1 92 CADl.LLAC SEDAN DEVILLE
Red leather, SOK miles, super value! (275493)
194 BUICK ROADMASTER .
low 51 K miles, beige, leather, rare model, mint condition! (411348)
197 CADILLAC CATERA
Low miles, beige, tan leather, alloys, bol. of worr. & morel (019216}
'96 CADILLAC DEVILLE
low miles, white, tan int., VS Northstar, xlnt. cond. (279S25)
'97 CADILLAC DEVILLE
V-S Northstar, Sapphire Blue, bol of worr. (283272)
58,988
~11,988
516,988
517,988
519,9ss ·
1 98 .CADILLAC CATERA S 88 low 1 Sk miles, silver, leather, moon roof, CD, bol, of worr., only 1022364) 2 0 t 9
1 99 'OLDSMOBILE SILHOUETTE S 88 GLS, beige, ton leo1her, low 1 OK miles, CD, dual doors & morel 1175525) 2 0 t 9
'99 CADILLAC DEVILLE S 88 V-8 Northstar, !ow 18k miles,hhr. & morel bol of worr., prev. rent. (762098) 24, 9
'97 CADILLAC CONCOURS S 88
295 H.P., Northstar, low miles, Sea Mist, lthr. & morel (212S04) 2 5, 9
"98 CADILLAC ELDORADO $ 8 88 Low ·miles, VS, Northstar, green, bOI. of warr. & morel (6127 40) 2 '9
NABERS <0
~ • 1 , • • ; ,7 : ,; , ./ , · ( o u '1 t y S 1 n < , . I q 0 '
· 2600 Harbor Boulevard
Costa Mesa
<7.14) 540·9 l -OO
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