HomeMy WebLinkAbout2000-02-14 - Orange Coast Pilot;-. •···· . . :·:·: ...... . . ·.· ~:: .. . ·.· . . ...... . . . . . . . .. . . . ·.· .. . . ·-·
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SERVING THE NEWPORT -MESA COf.#AUNmES SINCE 1907 MONDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 2000
Inside
SCOOP
Using the
age-old
excitSe
W hen asked if he was
going to show up at
Thursday's mayor's
dinner, John
Noyes, who
sports a
bushy mus-
tache, jok-
ingly said
that he was-
n't sure
because he
had to wash
his hair.
It must
take longer John Noyes
than most
residents realize to arrange
that stylish facial coif.
GONE FISHING FOR SNACKS
When a reporter went to
interview Mike Lohrman,
lead singer of the punk band
The Stitches, at lus Laguna
Beach record shop last week,
he round the mus1dan gone.
There was only a little
note tacked to the shop door.
"Went for snacks. Be right
back," said the note, which
was signed "Mike" and had
a little heart scrawled on it.
A few minutes later,
Lohrman matenalized at the
end of the block, chatting
with a friend and carrying his
ldea of some good •snacks"
-two sue-packs of cold
Newcastle beer.
BRmSH INVASION,
LITERALLY SPEAKING
If the real Susan Egan,
who plays Sally Bowles in the
Broadway musical "Cabaret,"
has any kind of accent, it's a
faintly Southern California
twang that comes from h.av-
ing grown up m Seal Beach.
But Egan spends so much
time in the mind of Sally
Bowles, a character from
Chelsea, that her spe~ch pat•
terns occasionally take on a
decidedly English tone.
Anybody might agree that
the actor Kevin Spacey is
•talented" or "temlic."
But Egan7
She thinks he's "bloody
brilliant..
TO GO DIGITAL ..
It takes more than 1ust
computers to become a digi-
tal high school, said Estanoa
High School princpal Tom
Antal.
As he was cliscussmg lus
desire to become a digital
school, Antal explained some
programs must be in place to
receive the distinction.
He said With all the great
programs at Estancia, the
school has a good chance of
becoming a digital high
school .
That ls, once Antal Cigures
out what all those great pro-
grams arel
-Dally Pilot staff
Dipping into the red
in the name of Cupid
•Merchants and florists are hit by a last-minute shopping
frenzy for those seeking the perfect gift for their loved ones.
Noaki Schwartz
DAILY PILOT
NEWPORT BEACH -Armed with
credit cards and cash, last-minute
romantics rut the shops as the Vdlen-
tine's Day hunting season drew to a
close this ~ekend.
er unmentionables
Chocolate shops competed with
each other, one bylllg to outdo the next
with more hearts, more red wrappmg
and more pounds of chocoldte per box
Lovers, searching for that pertect
gift they somenow couldn't find earlier
in the week, poured into South Coast
Plaza eyeing perfwnes, books and oth-
Hit's been really busy, H said Mdrtuc-
ci Angiano, one of the owners of Bode-
ga Fudge and Chocolates. ·1 think
!Valentine's Day) U; when we're going
SEE VALENTINE PAGE 5
RYAN RAYBURIH A Y Pl.OT
Marla Espinosa arranges a dozen roses for customers who
sloped by her garage flower stand for Valentines Day shopping .
The ties
that bind
Exploring what it takes and what it
means to become a Blue Ribbon school.
Danette Goulet
DAILY PILOT
NEWPORT-MESA -Schools are continu-
ously striving for and bragging about the covet-
ed National Blue Ribbon School Award.
But what does it take, aside from a 30-page '
application, to become a blue nbbon school and
what makes it worth the countless hours that go
The DAILY PILOT
reexamines a story that has
made headlines
into the applica-
tion process7
It is a distinc-
tion that one
Newport-Mesa
lugh school bas
under its belt, that
one school 1S like-
ly on its way to
edming and for
which two have yet
to try.
·You've got to
set yourself apart,• said Bob Boies, pnncipal of
Newport Harbor I hgh School, which is dose to
receiving the honor
WHY APPLY?
The Blue Ribbon program was developed by
the secretary of education m 1982 to identify
and give recognition to outstanding schools
nationwide. The schools would then become
models, providing a frnmework of criteria for
other schools.
Before any school Cdn become a Blue Ribbon
school, they must first earn the honor or Califor-
nia Distingwshed Scho<?l. Once a school
receives that award, it is invited to apply for the
national award. Those applications are evaluat-
ed by the California Department of Education,
which detenrunes hnallsts to be sent on to the
national evaluation.
To become a h.na.list, schools need to prove
that they are a model for other schools to emu-
late, Boies said
•for instance, at Tuslln High School, we won a distingmshed school award for our support
program and technology program,• he said.
That is not to say that a school will become d
success by copying what a Blue Ribbon school
does, Boies added. Rather, schools should look
at the needs of the students and create pro-
grams that address those needs.
•What J would look at is evaluating what you
do with what you've got,• srud Don Martin,
principal of Corond del Meir, which got the Blue
Ribbon award two years dgo. "What kinds of
programs do you have in place to make sure
that kids are learning? What has the school
done, looking at the resources?"
DON LEACH I OAll.Y PILOT
Newport Harbor ls In the running for the national Blue Ribbon school award.
When Corona del Mar won the d1sllnction,
Boies served as d consultant to the> U.S Depart-
ment or Educahon dnd helped in evaluating the
school. .
"I thought one strength was their coriurut-
ment to restructuring when they recogruzed thaC
thoy have at-risk students,• he said. •1 was
impressed by the quality of fclmily involvement
-of students and community involvement.•·
Martin attributes the i.chool's success to stu-
dent achievement and the community business
partnerships.
In the last five years, the foculty and ~tatf al
Corona has been dedicated to ra1 mg the level
of students' achievement, Martin said.
Other schools in the d1stnct have also rccog-
SEE TIES P~GE S
City to unveil West Side
revita.lization strategy ~6111 "It ts entertainment. and there
. , isn't a mvch mo,. en(~rtammg
pla)lf!r than Arnie •
-JEFF PURSER,
Toshiba tournament
"I •PPfK .. ~ /)«)pie that h.ve to llDEI go through It. it's • lot toug~
than foott»n ever WA At INs:t <USSlACDS --·----·I in footbalt you h.ve • ~me
planC..~ts~· P>fl'OR'S NOTtBOO« _3
• Latino community
eager to see if city
Will improve housing,
traffic problems and
shopping diversity.
sent the draft plan to the
Planrung Commission and
the City Council dunng a
study session this afternoon.
"This 1s not• 'Buck Rogers•
v1s1on of ttit future. but people
just need to get u~ to some
thing new"
-MARTIN SCHlAG£TER.
of The Slerr• Club, sp«ul•tlng
that It may~ • whi,. befo,.
• gas Jt•tfons ~In offeflng
•lr.m.6-.. tu.ls
"Without having • moral com·
director, of Arnold Palmer:
•My mom yys I'm • natural
SMiier."
-JOSEPH LUDLOW,
9, who was ttt. fourth~ra<:J. ~I/mg bH contntant frrim
Ad•ms Elementary SCtrool.
•You don't dare touch m. Girl
srout House or t~ Am«k•n
-fUCH SAUL.. PUil.iC NOTim--1 fomw Los An~ Rams center ~ ·-•M-•H--H-· •nd c•f)('f( survivor.
"'I'm not anti'50ftt»ll, but you
cani sacnflc» ~ c/ll#drM. •
-KIRI( IAUE1tMEISltR. lllSlll
afhldc dltwctor .rd eo«h at Cos•
ta MilJ.a High Scnool. on Ire.ping nu Of m llllDI
bliRW •f ~ ""*-More than 1,000 gatMI' at
r..-.--COSTA MESA -City·
"The consultants have
taken a whole lot of public
lnput, • Said City Manager
Allan L. Roeder, who as of
Friday still had not seen the·
draft. • 1t will be mterestin to
888 hOW' wor t into
anadUal~.·
PISS. MtlNJOf Ni1ll'!n9 tNt
,,,.,,. Is right Mfd ~ St\I
L~ or you'd,,. ... • not. In
Mc• dfsturblng • bffhfve W. ·one likes to rttint «inat • )OIJ
the Orange County Muleum
of Alt to c.lebtate the hired consultants are sched·
uJed today to unYeil a long·
awaited plan to 1'8Yitalize the
dty'1 W•t Side.
Elwood c. n.dler, of the
Loi Angelel·beled EIP Aao-
dml. Mid be wW cnDy pre-
Roeder laid he expects the
consultantl to present the
dty wttb the full written Plan
lawtbllweek.
SEE WIST SIDE Mm I
..a don'r know Md shoot up
ottt.t~·
-WINDY LllCE,
Ntwpott""-........
on ponlng b lM Clu I I Id-
JIU ......
Mt don't Mw that kid ol con· stltwncy Mre ,.
-STIWART IE9'KSMM.
Ma~~ .... "
on c#velopnwnt ~
for Np~
~t ~ ..., ..,,.. mot9 com-OttMMNewYNr, pHc~ bOob -not -• ....... 1 -WJIMWD&.
~--.--· MMW,-. ec *:I: Nt•.,aort..,. ---~ ..... •a.,.:: .......... ---~,..-...
•
ON THE
2 Mondoy1 Febroory 14, 2000
Yachts °' V.aw.l Galatea YESIERYEAR I 4
This ttadrtional yaw1 w~ home-
ported In Newport Harbor from
1935 to 1938. She was owned by
the fimOUS violinist JascN Heifet1..
....tlo moored the ~ for• ancj aft
off his leased home near the her·
bor entrance at 212 E. Balboa Blvd
Galatea was designed by A. Nyrgen
and built in Stockton, Sweden In
1899. Her dimensions are 68 feet
owrall, 44-foot length on the
waterline, 12-foot·S-indl In beam,
with a draft of nine ffft.
Heifetz t!fljoyed the rhythm and
quiet of salbng HoweYer; thefe
was a wry large Insurance policy
on his fingers which did not allow
him to J)Ull on lines or make them
fast. But he enthusiast.ally helped
wtth the 1'i991ng in a limited way.
-John aa.ich,
Corona del Mar yacht
historian and active sailor
TAVA KASHUBA/ OAllV PILOT
Part of the exhibit called "Island Pathways: Wayfinders of the PacWc" at the Newport Harbor Nautical Museum
in Newport Beach. Below, a ceremonial shark hook ts displayed. I ·
Rowfug back to early sea travel
•The exhibit, 'Island Pathways: Wayfinders of
the Pacific,' showcases ancient pottery and
canoes used by Polynesian voyagers.
Jasmine Lee
DAILY PILOT
NEWPORT DEAC'l l -
Ask any seamdO: the boats
that go m and out of New-
port Harbor could not fmd
thcit Wdy around the vast
Pacific Ocean without the
convenience of today's higb-
tech naVlgabonaJ tools.
DeChevrieux, the curator of
the exhibit. u Each aspect of
canoeing, from the selection
of the tree to the end of the
voyage, was under the aus-
pices of the gods.•
The display returns to
the origins of sea travel, fea-
turing the canoes of Polyne-
sian voyagers m the 18th,
19th and early 20th cen·
luries. These early sailers
traveled from island to
island m their surpnsmgly ·
seaworthy, handcrafted
canoes.
The exhibit also features
ancient pottery -some dat.
mg back as far as 1100 BC.
There are also primitive
tools, wbkh were used to
cut the wood for the canoes.
The Polynesians always
sought permission from
their gods before taking a
tree to build a boat.
The artifacts, which also
include war clubs, paddles
and decorative items, are on
loan from the Kelton Foun-
dation, which has the
largest collection of Pao.tic
Rim items, DeChevrieux
said.
Daily Pilot
Terrance Phillips
THE HARBOR COLUMN
Nautical gifts
to give on a day
of panting hearts
There's a boat floating around
Newport Harbor with a big
red heart on the hull. It sports
another large heart With Cupid Stt-
ting on top of an arrow.
Scrolled e)egdJltly across the d!l-
work appears the boat's name,
Valentine.
The thought ocCUJTed to me that
hearts have vessels for the purpose
oftransportmg blood, so lS Uus yacht
a "blood vbsew
Or, was this craft given to anoth-
er on this day when many exchange
romantic gifts like lingerie, dark
chocolate confections packaged
With a red ribbon, or a chunk of Cdf-
bonized coal perched atop a band of
gold -I paused and I wondered.
Then 1t tut me; Uus must be W<.e
giving mama thdt new table saw
you've always wanted for Chnstmas
However, lS such a gift romantic?
. After ta.king a long hard look at
the issue I came up with a very logi-
cal answer. As we've c1ll seen on T\I,
the boat Valentine lS defirutely "a
gift that keeps on gwing. • Sailing IS
romantic, very romantic.
A bottle of Opus One, a l.lttle
Andrea Boccelli wafting through the
speakers, a gentle kiss as the sun
dips beneath the honzon -yep,
there you have it -romance -and
the Ju.sbficabon that gwing a boat on
Valentine's Day, lS both romantic
and appropnate.
ln reality. Valentine is raced and
skippered by its owner, Mary Long-
pre of the Balboa Yacht Club Mary
usually races with an all-women
crew, however, every once 10 a -.
Just a little bit of that 68-
million square miles of
water is visible from outstde
the Newport Harbor Naµti-
cal Musewn. But inside are
the 1>0crets lo waytindmg -
the art of navigating with
no instruments, 1ust sldrs
and wave patterns.
An exhibit, "Island Path-
Wdys: Wayfmders of the
Pacific,• opened this week-
end at the museum, and If
visitors look closely enough
-they may be able to see·
the ocean as the fu'St mdf-
itime explorers did.
Legend has ll that a
great Hawaiian chief made
regular trips between his
home and Tahiti. On one of
his visits, he fell in love with
a Tahitian woman, who
ultimately rejected hls ad-
vances. The chief, frustrat-
ed and deflated, returned
to Hawaii and never sailed
again.
Paintings by Hawaiian
artist Herb "Kawainw·
Kane show scenes of canoe
building and sailing in vivid
colors.
Miniature models of the
.old·fashloned canoes, craft-
ed by Melvin Schinkel, are
also on display.
can still fail. ·rr you have a wayfinder
with you, you'll have no
problem,• DeChevrteux
said.
while she allows a man or two on
board for ballast. The boat has
appeared in hundreds of races
around our pond and had its share •
of good racing fortune.
Happy Valentine's Day to Mary
Longpre and her Valentine. Alter
·reading this column, Mary will prob-
ably go out and purchase a new out-
fit from Moncli or Escada for her
husband, Bob Longpre.
·For the Polynesians,
there was no separation
between dSpecls of the nat-
ural world, and those of the
spuitudl world,• said Marcus
·somewhere, there is
probably a gram of truth in
there,• said DeChevriewc,
who tells the legend in one
of hls displays.
Lile-sized canoes, and
wayfinding, are making
somewhat of a comeback,
DeChevrieux said. Some
modem-day mariners are
bringing back the method
of sea travel without instru-
ments.
The exlubit will be on
display unW Juno 18 in the
Grand Salon of the New-
port Harbor Nautical Muse-
um, 151 E. Coast Hlghwdy.
The hours are 10 am to 5
p.m. Tuesday through Sun-
day.
Oh, by the way Bob, there's a
new HomP Depot up on Harbor
Boulevard. I hear they have a won-
derful gift department. It's a handy skill to have,
because hi-tech gadgets
For more infonnation,
call (949) 673-7863. Another fine nautical gift to gwe
on this day of panting hearts -how
about a gondola en.use around the
harbor. Music, wine, a cozy blanket
and a guy weanng a barrette,
stnj)ed shirt with a red bandanna,
standing on the back Adventures
At Sea Yacht Charters has an entire
fleet of gondolas facilitating hun-
dreds of proposals for mamage.
What's
AFLOAT
•WHATS AR.OAT runs periodtcally 1n the
Daily Pilot on a rotating basis If you know
of an event °' activity that could appear in
this column, please mail the Information
to Daily Pilot. 330 W. Bay St, Costa Mesa
92627; fax it to (949) 646-4170; or ~mail it
to dallypilotOlatimes.com.
SAILING
OCC's Salling Program has
scheduled a non-credit interme-
diate shields class that mC'cts
during February dnd M(jrch. The
course will emphasize seaman-
ship and finite sail trim and sail
shape It also covers man· over-
board and anchoring, and stu-
dents will have an opportunity to
do some racing. 'The five-week
session meets from 1:15 to 5 p.m.
Saturdays, Feb. 12, 19,26,March
4 and 11 at OCC's Sailing Center,
1801 W. Pacific Coast Highway,
Newport Beach. Registration is
$115. For more information, ctJU
(949) 645-9412.
A five-part advanced shields class
will be ottered m February and
March by OCC's Sailing Program.
Students must have basic boat hdJl-
dling, terminology and points of sail
mastered before taking the course.
Taught in shields sloops, the non-
credit course focuses on refining
helm work and sail trimming skills.
The class meets on Sundays, Feb.
13, 20, 27, March 5 and 12, from
1 ·15 to 5 p.m. at OCC's Sailing Cen-
ter, 1801 W. Pacific Coast Highway,
Nl'wport Beach. Registration 1S
$125. Por more information, call
(949) 645-94 t 2.
OCC wtll offer a four-week
keclboat cldss, designed for
women who have been on boats,
but are begmnmg sailors. The
course will be offered Saturddys
m February and Match at the
schools' Sa1hng Center, 1801 W.
Pacific Coast Highway, Newport
Beach. The course will meet
Feb. 12, 19, 26 and March 4,
from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Registra-
tion is $215. The course will be
taught by Coast G uard licensed
women sailors and will cover
terminology dnd ngging, basic
sail theory, points of sail, man
overbodrd retrieval, steering
techmques, docking and reef-
ing. For more mformation, call
(949) 645-9412.
U you prefer to "pop " the ques-
tion m a more pnvate environment,
rent your own sWTey-topped electnc
boat from Duffy Electnc Boat
Rentals on West Coast Highway.
Me -I've got the boat, but no
one to pop questions to. Oh well,
Happy Valentine's Day, anyway.
• TERRANCE PHIUJPS is the Dally Piiot's
boating writer You can leave a message for
him at (949) 642-6086 or vta e-mail at dai-
lypilotOlatlmes.com .
Jlail¥ P.ilot
READERS t:fOTU~I; or ~·semenu he:re"' c.en be rtpfoductd without wrrtten per· WEATHER AND SURF POLICE TIPS
(949) 642-6086
Record your comments about
the Daily Pilot or news tips .•
VOL. 94, NO. 38 ~e~
Our addreu 1s 330 W. Bay St .. '°'ta Mesa. CA 92627.
THOMAS H. JOHNSON. CO!UW:D.QNS Publisher
TONY DOD£M>, It Is tM Pilot's policy to prompt·
Editor ly correct all errors of substance.
JENIRlt MGLANO, Plea~ call (949) 574-4268
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SenJor Editor, Copy ON:
.,,.. ~ CN M,.... _..,
TEMPERATURES
Balboa
64152
Corona del Mar
63151
Costa Mesa
65154
Newport Beach
63151
Newport Coast
6.3151
MMFFOMCASt
Waves htt the head-high
rNfk today as a south·
west swell Increases
LOCATION SIZE
Wedge ............ 4-7 SW
Newport .......... 4-7 SW
81ac.k~. ·-·""" 4 7 SW Rlftf Jetty.-•.•. '" .. 4 7 SW
CdM-.. ·······-··· .. "' 4 7 SW TIDIS
TODAY
First low
11:48 am ................. 0.0
First hrgh
4:13 a.m ..................... 5.1
Second low
10:50 p.m ................. 2 2
Second high
6:23 p.m ." ............ -3 2
l\JISOAV
First low
12:43 a.m,_ ............. 0.6
First high
5:19 a.m ................ 5.7
Second low
11.59 pm .............. 2.0
Se<ond high
WATllt
Tal&lAW: S6
' '
• P...t.:M, occupMd vehldes containing one Oii
more persons are especially significant if observed at an
unusual hour. They could be possible lookouts for a bur·
glary in progr~. even if the occupants appear to be
love~.
• Any v.hlde moving slowty and whhout lights Ott
following • course that appears a1mleu or repetitive is
suspicious Occupants may be casing for places to rob or
burglarize
• App9Nf wt ... ,.... trMlactlons conducted from
• vehlcle, especially eround schools or parks and If juve·
nlles are involved, could mean possible drug sales
• Petsont being forced Into vehfcles -especially If they
ere juveniles or females -may mean • posjjbfe kldnep-
ptng. Record the Ileen~ plates and call pof1ce.
• .,... ... ., lb ned ""6de ,.,. ... Oft ,... blodl
rNY be stolen Contllct J)Mklng control with 1 lkense
J*te number.
....................... --.. ,...,. cmfto
ctmtd *>ut prowten Tht noise of tomeone ~
on tt wftl ...w to alef1 you,
I
Doily Pilot Monday, February 14, 2000 3
Political stars dazzle at Speak up Newport Mayor's Dinner
D on't tell my boss,
former Daily Pilot
Editor Bill Lobdell,
that I said this, but Peter Buf-
fa did a pretty good job of
replacing him as this year's
emcee for the 19th annual
Speak Up Newport Mayor's
Dinner.
Buffa, a former Costa
Mesa mayor and now colum-
nist for us, managed to roast
and toast several folks who
dared show up at Thursday's
soiree at the Newport Mar-
riot.
He took speaal aim at the
members of the Newport
Beach Library board of
trustees and founddtion
members for their recent
penchant for brawling over
finances.
Indeed, there were lots of
jokes about the ensuing
debates over development
and, of course, the whole
Greenlight Initiative, which 1f
Tony Dodero
EDITOR'S NOTEBOOK
passed r'ould go a long way
to curbing some of the city's
big plans.
The lightheartedness even
managed to crack a smile on
Tun Quinn, the propnetor of
the Dunes resort, the site of a
proposed major hotel pro1ect.
The Dunes and Quinn have
been high-profile Greenlight
tarqets and have taken a
pound.mg over the last few
months.
But Quinn was m friendly
temtory at the Irvme Co.
sponsored event. Though I
know there were more than
a few Greenlighters m the
crowd, some tolks seemed to
do a polite hlss, every time
the subject came up.
Despite all of that, if you
were looking for a place to
mingle with Newport's
political stars, this was the
place. A few of those heavy
hitters out that rught were
state Assemblywomd.Il Mar-
ilyn Brewer and former
mayors Clarence Turner,
Evelyn Hart and Jackie
"Heather.
And there was a speaal
photo of former Mayor and
Councilman Phil Sansone,
who has recen~y packed hls
bags and moved to Hawaii to
become a professional surfer.
Well, OK, I'm kidding, but
I'm sure he's having a good
time there even though he's
A day of tradition and culture
•More thap 1,000
celebrate the lunar New
Year at the Orarige
County Musewn of Art.
Noakl Schwartz
DAILY PILOT
NEWPORT BEACH
1Wo colorful dragons bobbed
and danced, then later bdt-
Ued -supported by a line of
people 1urnpmg to the beat of
drums
The popular Chmese pro-
cession marked the operung
the Orange County Museum
of Art's lunar New Year cele-
bration Sunday, part of the
museum's ongoing Family
Arts Day programs.
The fesbval drew more
than 1,000 people to the
Asian celebration -now an
annual event, said museum
spokeswoman Elena Arrojo
The museum traditionally
has a number of Asian cul-
Volu.-teer
DIRECTORY
• VOLUNTEER DIRECTORY· runs
penod1cally on a rotating basis in
the Daily Pilot. If you'd ltke infor-
mation on having your organiza-
tion ltsted, call (949) 574-4228.
COSTA MESA
HISTORICAL SOCIETY
The soaety collects mforma-
tion, photos and dfb.facts relat-
irlg to the history of Costa
Mesa and the harbor area. Vol-
unteers are needed for clencal
tasks, computer mput and help
in the library. For more infor-
mation, call (949} 631-5918.
COSTA MESA
lJTERACY COUNOL
The Costa Mesa Literacy
Center needs volunteer tutors
to teach English cts a second
language. A $30 materials fee
proVldes evcrytlung needed
to lead a student through two
skill books. To reqister, or for
more information, call (949)
548-3384 or (949) 548-6584.
COSTA MESA SENIOR CENTER
The mulbpurpose senior ser-
vices facility at the comer of
tures represented at the event
through a variety of dances,
music, theater performances
arid visual atts.
#We try.to present as many
dif!erent art forms as we
can," Arro10 said. It took Sl.)(
months to plan the daylong
event.
The idea for the New Year
celebration grew out of a
budding relal.lonship
between local musewns and
the Asian community. Over
the years, the musewn fea-
tured a number of exhibitions
by Vietnamese, Chmese and
other artists. To mamtain
these relationships, the muse-
um started hosting the lunar
festivals four years ago, Arro·
jo said. Parents and children
spent the afternoon making
masks and banners, listening
to a Chinese youth orchestra,
watching performances by
the East West acting troupe,
and touring the museum
exhibitions. too.
19th Street and Pomona
Avenue seeks volunteers for a
variety of tasks. For more
mformation, call (949) 645-
2356 between 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
COSTA MESA
POLICE DEPARTMENT
Seniors age 55 and up are
bemg sought to help staff the
westside substation. Volun-
teers would be asked to work
two four-hour daytime shilts
per week and would be
responsible for answering
phones, bicycle registration,
fingerprinting. data entry and
assist with other citywide pro-
jects. Bilingual seniors m
Spanish and English are also
needed. For an application or
There were vending
stands serving snacks for
hungry little artists. Other
tables featured a display of
intriguing gifts from Asia,
such as traditional brush cal-
ligraphy sets.
Melissa and Mikayla
Peterson spent a good part of
theU' Visit makmg animal
masks ·out of colorful paper
and shmy bits of foil.
~I'm goirlg to use (thls rab-
bit) for Easter," said Melissa,
5, sitting beside her sister.
Her father stood by smil-
ing, carrying other artistic
masterpieces the girls had
made. ·
Arro10 said the popular
Family Arts Day events are
held several times a year and
feature a different theme
each time. In spring, the
museum will host "Tapestry
of Cultures,• celebrating the
traditions of different coun-
tnes around the globe.
more information, contact
Senior Yolunteer Fred
Gaeckler at (714) 754-5208.
CRISIS ASSISTANCE
PROGRAM INC.
Tius nonproht organization
is seek.mg volunteers for its
expanding trauma response
program. Volunteers would ·
assist law enforcement. fu~
ftghters and emergency-type
responders by providing
emotional first aid and sup-
port to injured or trauma-
tized people. Other volun-
teers would provide dispatch
and ofhce support. For more
information, call (949) 588-
1414.
~J:,, ctff u~ti~~eif' e.! p.facnq1r~I\• K~.u11.t ~~~ l-0 Q .\t . :_f 4t4' 'l o.f'4 .
:J'?-U' gQ"4t la d ... ~J.op; Q1 6fAt-Ctat~e.t 46it£,
Holoflll pr edlllB tall !It lllird IO unontttld :rn.i-. MIY our ll.tt I to ~IUI• ..ith '*"'* AMI 911, 1110t ltl0Utd Ml ~
It lptcitl~ trl!MO to -PllPI* "'°""' Pllt tMrlPY. llld j)ltln ..... Wiii! .... '-""'*'°" '" --""""' c.11 (1& •> W"20M
l DRE N'S H 0 S P T A L
au~
greatly missed here.
Speak Up Newport hon-
ored Sansone with its Sun-
shine Award. Pretty htllng
for a guy who's probably get-
ting lots or sunshinP these
days.
Also m the giant ballroom
were several school board
members dnd planning com-
missioners dnd, of course,
Mayor John Noyes ttnd the
entire current council. except
for one -Councilmdn Tom
Thomson.
. Who knows, maybe he's
still smarting from bemg
passed over for the mayors
post by his colleagues? .
Of course the big draw tor
the rught was mega sports
agent Leigh Steinberg, who
gave thP. keynote address.
Sternberg was accompd-
nied by his wile, Lucy, who
is the chturwoman of the
upcorrung Spirit Run lund-
raising event for local schools
on Feb. 27.
A resident of Newport
Beach foJ 13 years, Steinberg
had the line of the night
when he noted that you (:an't
get a more powerful political
ndme than "Mayor Noyes."
•
S peaking of mayors and
IJbrary donors, longtime
advocate for books Luo.lle
Kuehn sent me a recent note
correcting a descnpbon of
her thtit we publiShed.
The description appeared
below a piece she wrote for
ou:r Corrunuruty Forum page
regarding the squdbble
between the trustees dlld the
foundation.
"Thank you for bestowmg
the honor and title of may-
or.' However. 1t is maccurate.
I Wds ~unply a member of
the Newport Beach City
Counol from 1975-78."
Sorry Lucille But, m
hindsight. 1f you weren't
mayor you dam well should
have been.
•
We recently asked our read-
erio what they thought of the·
nP.w Htubor Center, the
rebuilt Costa Mesa shopping
complex that features several
large new stores But one
reader, who didn't leave a
hame, wasn't too unpressed
with the new space-age look.
"It's gone from an old ugly
shoppmg center to a new
ugly shopping center. It
looks like somPthing outof a
• Jetsons' Cdrtoon."
Though the reader has a
. point, I must say the new
center is a vast unprovement
from the old one and I'm
looking forward to seemg
similar progress m other
parts of the West Side:
• TONY DODERO is the editor of
the Daily Pilot. He can be reached
at 949-574-4258 or via e-mail at
tonydoderoOfat1mes. com.
DON LEACH I DAILY PILOT
R~presenting happiness and good spirit, a dragon puppet in the Hue Quang Dragon
Team performs during a C~nese Lunar New Year Celebration at the Orange Coun-
ty Museum of Art's FamUy Arts Day.
'
and hitch racks
l«l....,Ca1t1.._.
w11•:t•H11MrM.
~
,
4 Mcodciy, February 1 A, 2000 Daily Pilot
Workshop teaches girls to make life-changing decisions
• 'Choices and
Dreams' addressed.
issues from career
decisions to teen
pregnancy, violence
and self-esteem.
Amy R. Spurgeon
OUR TIMES
COSTA MESA -It was a
day for girls, about girls and
by quls.
Mor" thdn 100 Orange
County youths went to
Orange· LOdSt CoUege SdtUr-
ddy to ledm about hfe-
chcmgmg dens1ons at "Guls:
2000 Choices and Dreams"
the !>(>COnd dOnual con(e r-
ence for girls and theu men-
tors. ·
Planned by the American
Assoc1dtion of University
Women Orange County
lnterbranch Counctl, and a
codhlJon d local nonprofit
groups, the conference pro-
vided opportunities for girls
to learn from ndltOndJ experts
about hedlth core, financid.l
independence, alternative
careers, body unage and pre-
vent.J.ng violence. said Lee
Winocur Field, the conier-
enc.:e's chairwoman~
·Studies show lhdt our
daughters dre largely unpre-
pared to meet the financial,
technologicdl and biological
demands of the future,• said
Field. ·They must learn
about 1obs, health care and
finanetal independence
Advertorial
Auto .. Facts
by Paul Frech
SERVIC8 A R8PAIR
GERMAN • SWEDISH
JAPAN•U AUTOMOIJIUS
PEAK PREVIEW
While torque may be defined as
r<l(ating force. horsepo"'er h the
measurement of 1orque 1hrough a
'pecific amoun1 of lime In 1cnns
that an auto e.nlhu~13.\t can
understand, 1orquc 1s the
mu~ular acceler.Almg force fe ll at
low engine rpm, and hoNpower
" the bu<;y high-rpm power that
drivers encounter when revving
the engine. There 111 a ho~t of
factors that help 10 detcnnine
whether arr engine is torqucy, a
lugh-rpm revver, or something in
between By paying particular
.1uention to the rpm that the
horsepower .ind torque peaks
ob1ained. auto enthu't13\I!. can gel
a feel for how the engine will
pcrfonn. The rule of thumb i~ that
torque lakes on mcre~d
"gnificance at a lower rpm peal.
HI f: Engine force i\ mea.wred
directly by an engine dynamometer
in a research lab.
COOL RU
One primary function of a
vehicle's an1ifrcc1,e " to circulate
through the engine and ab-.orh
heat created by 1he comlMtion
proce's Modem cooling 'tyMems
are dc,igncd to mam1am overall
engine 1cmpcra1un!' between
ahout 195 .ind 260 degrees F.
Water oml't at 212 degrees F1 while an11frcc1c doc' nol hoil
until ahout 1 lO degree\ F By
combmmr water and .mlifrcctt in
a 50/50 mixture. the lifeblood of
the cooling 'Y'll:m I' created. If a
.C,0/50 mhturc i' good, would
100'.f antifrl'C/e be bcltcr7
Decidedly not. At lhe 200-degrcc-
mmimum poml, purt antJf recte
c;m only abo:.orb about 65~ of the
heat that water can. rcn<knng 11
inadequate tor engine operation
ln1ac:id of al1J111g J1qu1J'i lo a
vehicle\ cooling 'Y tcm
haphaJardly, h3vc 11 chcc~cd oul.
Keeping your fluid lcvch whal
they houlJ be i\ one \Ure way to
.ivouJ having car problem\ when
you arc oul on the mad Al C&P,
2090 Placentia Co,ta Mc~a. we
put the cu,tomcr fin1. Md you'll
find th.ii 111ti1ude 'hows in all we
do Oo )'<lU own • Ocnnan or
Swcdl\h cut! We' urc happy 10 do
u 1cmkd warranty work. Call
(949) 646 69 IO. We accept ma1or
crcd11 carJ .
PHOTOS 8Y MARIANNA DAY MASSY /OAllY Pll.01
Brittany Cephas, left, an eighth-grader at Kraemer Mid-
dle School, tries to keep a straight face while E.J. Gage
poses questions during a mock father/daughter relnact-
ment put on by the theatre company Stop-Gap.
before they become tomor-
row's wives, mothers and
employees.·
Girls ages 9 to 18 met in
the morning at the Robert B.
Moore Theater before break-
mg up into smaller groups rn
classrooms throughout the
campus to talk about careers
and goal-setting, sex, sub-
stance abuse, violence. and
hate crimes, and body image
and self-esteem.
encouraged girls to pursue
hobbies as possible career
goals. They discussed how
the media affects lheir self·
esteem and taught positive
ways to redct to aggressive
people.
From left to right: Leonela Orozco, Julie Sanchez, Rocio Santana, Eugenia Alvarado
and Indira Mazon from Lathrop and Century Middle Schools compare notes on which
workshops they are golng to at Girls 2000: Choices and Dreams conference at OCC.
"This event gives the guls
a chance to talk about their
dreams and challenges,• said
Win.Lfred Strong, chairperson
of the American Association
of University Women. •rt
gives them a safe. place to
talk.• During different ses-
sions, peer facilitators
Costa Mesa I Iigh School
seventh-grader Mic belle
White sat with her 12-year-
old peers at a ldrge, round
table. But the diaper-clad
bundle she cradled in her lap
made he r stand out from the
crowd.
The computerized doll
was loaned to her through
the "Baby Think it Over·
program run by Girls Inc of
Ort1nge County The non-
profit orgdrnzalion has been
helping girls and women
SJ~
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responsible adults. The com-
puterized doll is designed to
help young women redJ1ze
through scheduled feedings
and changmgs how dem.md-
mg il can be to care for dn
infant. Like real babies, 1t
cries when 1t . doesn't get
what it wants. ·
·it's embarrassing,• Sd1d
White. her small mouth
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wired with braces. "People
stop and stare al you.•
The Baby Think It Over
progrdm discourages baby-
sitting, so White had to bring
lhc infant with her to the con-
ference. Throughou~ the day
sne was required to feed and
change the baby's diaper, all
of which was recorded by a
computer clup inside the doll.
Re presentatives of the
organ1zdtion, Planned Par-
enthood, discussed the issu~e
of teen pregnancy during a
session on sexuahty. The
nahonal organization
believes that 1t is lhe right of
every individual to bave
access to he'aJth care infor-
fnatton and services that can
allow one to lake responsibil-
ity ror one's health. Girls who
pdrtic1pdted iil the class said
it was informative. Many of
the sessions were conducted
by peer facilitators -girls
theu own age.
"They taught us about
condoms, getting pap smears
and different birth control
methods,• said 16-year-old
Silvia Arellano.
Arellano's classmate, 14-
nd
TOWN
• Send AROUND TOWN
items to the Daily Pilot, 330
W. Bay St., Costa Mesa
92627; fax them to (949) 646-
4170; or call (949) 764-4330.
A complete listing may be
found at dai/ypilot.com.
TODAY
South Coast Plaza ls holding
a Valentine's Day event
today Le Mirage Florist will
have displays in front of the
Carousel Court and at the
elevator m the Crate & Barrel
wing featuring single-stem
rose , bouquets and a variety
or romanl:lc and exotic Doral
arrangements. For more
mformation, call (714) 435-
8571.
TUESDAY
The Corona del Mar Ch.am-
ber of Commerce will hold a
luncheon me~ting at 11 :30
a.rn . at Five Crowns. Newport
Beach Mayor John Noyes will
speak on •The Challenges
Pdcing Newport Beach in the
New Millenruum. • The event
l.!. $15 dild includes a glass of
wme For re ervations, call
(949) 673-4050.
The Ne~rt Harbor Area
Chamber of Commerce will
hold a Business Referral
Breakfa~t at 7:30 a.m. al the
Newport Beach Yacht Club.
Busine s and marketing con-
sultant Nick Smith will speak.
The event is $15 to $20. The
Yacht Club i al 1099 Bayside
Dnvc, Newport Beach. For
more information, Cdll (949)
729-4400.
The Newport Beach Public
lJbrary wtU hold a free Inter-
net workshop for teens at 1
p .m. Tho program will
include demonstrations of
arch engmes and location
of informl'lllon on the Web.
Th library ls at 1000 Avoca·
do Ave .. N wport Beach. For
more mfonnation, call (9.t9)
717-3801.
Mother'• Maillet wUI pnteat
a free seminar tiUed ·Pre-
year-old Melissa Martinez
said some of the biggest
pressures teens face today
are sex and drugs.
"I give the girls credit who
taught us things today
because they are our dge, ~
said Martinez.
Both girls wore red Girls
Inc. T-shirts lhat read,
"Strong, Smart and Bold.•
They said they would take
part in the program next
year.
Conference leaders wrap-
ped-up the day Wlth a brain-
storming session with the
girls back m the Robert B.
Moore Theatre.
Together, they devised
ways of dealing with some of
lhe issues discussed at the
conference. Their findings
will be submitted to the
Orange County Bodrd of
Education dnd the county
Board of Supervisors later
this week.
"It is neat for U1e girls to
come together and learn
about diversity and how to
deal with issues teen girls dre
laced with,· said Orleda Roa,
volunteer coordinator and
tee n facilitator for Girls Inc.
venting Heart Disease 1Il the ·
21st Century• with clirucal
nutritiomst Steve I lolmes.
The event will be held from
6:30 to 7:30 p.m m lhe Patio
Cafe. Mother's is at 225 E.
17th St., Costa Mesd Seminar
reservations are necessary.
For more rnformat1on, call
(800) 595-MOMS.
Reform Party presidential
candidate Robert Bowman
will speak at 7:30 p .m. 1.11 the
little yellow build.Jog on
Riverside between Avon and
ClifC Dnve, m Newport
Beach. For infonndtion, call
(949) 645-1419.
WEDNESDAY
The OWLS (Retired Officers'
Wives League of Orange
County) will hold a luncheon
at noon at the Balbod Yacht
Club. 1801 Bayside Dnve,
Corond del Mar. Retired offi-
cers' wives and widows a nd
women officers from dU
branches of· the military are--
welcome. The event begins
with a social how at 11 a.m.
For more information, call
Charlotte Walke r at (714)
549-2028.
Hoag Health Center wtlJ bold
a free semindf titled •Tue
Stress of PMS" from 7 to 8:30
p.m. The center is at 1190
Baker St , Co ta Mc-sa. For
reservations Qr more mfomia-
tion, call (800) 514 ·4624.
Estancia Hlgb School'•
Authentic Open Houc;c will
be held today through Feb. 18
to give comrnuruty members
a chance to visit tho campus
while school JS m se ion. Vis·
iting hours arc 8 30 a .m. to 2
p.m. The school ls at 2323
Placentia, Costa Mesa. For
more information, rall (949)
645-0715.
Estancia High School will
hold a town hall meeting at 7
p.m. in tho commons, Th
meeting is nn opporturuty to
learn about the Digital High
School and the many pro·
grams offered at the school.
Estancia High is a t 2323 Pia·
C"entia, Costa Mesa. For more
information, call (949) 6'S·
0'115.
l
Doily Pilot
TIES
CONTINUED FROM 1
nized the bcnehts or the dis-
tinction. Pnnc1pals at both
Costa Mesa and E.c;tdnda lugh
schools said they hope to apply
for the honor in the future.
WHAT IT TAKES
The Blue Ribbon applica-
tion delves into every nuance
of the school, mcluding test
scores, curriculum, technolo-
gy, the level of student and
parent and community
involvement
Admini,strntors are asked
·to describe the student popu-
lation and its needs, to
describe students' opportuni-
ties to build sustained caring
relationships with teachers
and how extracurricular
-acti.viUes support acadenucs.
There are 50 questions put
before lhe schools. And every
school applymg will have
answers for th,ose questions.
The secret to success, Boies
sa.id, is in going the extra mile.
"You ha~e to have special
programs,. he said. uwe
have (Advancement Via Indi-
vidual Determination), a spe-
cial program for at-risk stu-
dents. We have programs that
challenge kids to excel. (And)
we place an emphasis on aca-
demics in uthlellcs. •
It is however, Newport
Harbor's academy program
that teachers and administra-
tors feel will earn them Blue
Ribbon status.
Newport Harbor has six
acaderrues that students may
join as freshman. The Da Vin-
ci Academy speciah7.C.!> m
math and science, the
Franklin Academy in commu-
nications and technology; the
Robinson Academy in health,
athletics and fitness; the
W EST ·SID E
CONTINUED FROM 1
The City Council voted
three yedrs dQO lo develop d
strategy for improving the
neighborhood'!. traffic prob-
lems, decaymg housmg and
streets and lack of dtVerse
retail. City plcmnen; told the
counoJ that the area had an
unusual nuxture of small,
farruly-run stores, light indus-
try and homes.
VALENTINE
CONTINUED FROM 1
to find all the men m hPre,
though,•
At See's Candles, shopper
Don Limacher walked pur-
posefully up to a box of
chocolates wrapped m red
paper, thinking 1t would
make a fine adchtion to the
video •The Bodyguard" that
he bought for his wile.
Flower shops were also
laking advantage ·of the
Valentine's Day rush by
charging sigruhcantly more
for flowers. A single long-
stemrned red rose wtlh some
greenery ma vase -typical-
ly $4 to $7 was more than
$20 at some flower stdncls
By Sunday, Le Mirage
Florists had already run out of
some types of roses, said the
shop's Ed Price. I le said aside
from lhe traditional red rose,
many men were buying whit~
roses
"They signify purity d.Od
innocence,• Price said.
Not all florists took advan-
EASTCOAST SWING DANCE
FIVE CLASSES s49
CCUft.IS Ol SINGW
Wllcc.
CWs 5ms lMl1D
ENIOi.l NOw SISICIN.._
Al.17nl
t'IONL(A( I r
Newport Harbor stude nts Mike Porteous, Rachael Kone, Julle Renfro, Breanna Jordan,
and Sarai Segura look at teen magazines in the library during 6th. p e riod homeroom.
Shakespeare Academy m !.enior m the Da Vinet Acade-school when dpplymq to rnl-
visual and perforrrung arts, my. "The biggest commit-lege, ~ Robinson Sdtd, ··And
the Magellan Academy m hb-ment 1s that you're dlways though 1t will proh,1hly not
eral arts and humaruties; and doi~g projects thdt other have any duc•c.I fmttric i..il
the Roosevelt Academy m frestunc•n don't typically get effect, tl wtll h~lp wht•n jU1r>
leadership and public service. to do.~ school 1s) «pplytrHJ lor
The purpose of the acade-It 1s extra work. Kepner grclflts.A
mies is to encourage students S<..lld, but he wouldn't have it It is certdi11ly c1 covet(•d slc1-
to explore study areas thilt any olhN way. tus. Pnnc.ipdls al holh C 'osltt
interest them and provide the "You're just kind of ahead Mesa c1nd Estc1nr1t1 h1yh
dose-knil feeling of d small of the> rest of the student school~ hope to apply fen th~
school environment m a body,• he Sd1d. "It g..ivc you d honor m the fulure.
school of more than 2,000 stu· senw of purpose." "I'd love to tw ti Bh1<• Rih·
dents. bon school,• scud Tom Antul,
Students m acadenues fol-WHAT YOU GET pnnc1pal of Estt1nctct. "The
low the regular college Joe Robinson. who has run school I came from wao.; ,, BhH•
preparatory curriculum, but the Dd Vinci Academy since 1t' Ribbon school ..
tedchers work within each heqan. hc1s seen hrsthand lhe Still dcsplt(• the h1qh pres-
academy theme to 1.0tegratc benefits of thP ac:adenue.s. He tige of ttttammu blut>. nhhon
studJes with cross-curriculnr has h1•en instrumental in status, 1t doP ... n't g1vP studcmts
projects. applymy lor the dWdrd .. with dn edge m ~·\cry dH'Oc1
"We started our freshman the behef tht1l it, too, will help Susun Wtlh11r, dm•ctor 1)1
year hdving four of six classes studenL'>. adm1ss1on dncl rPlC1l10ns with
with all Da V1.00 students, -.o ·1t '-"lll go on their chplomd other .,choob for UC lrvmt•,
we had a real tight cama-and tt is onP more• udvanlage <,aid lhP umwrs1l~ do . .., not
rnderie, • said Paul Kepner, a to havl' gone lo d Blu<• Ribbon give spt><'tril prt:>f PwnrP tu .. tu-
. In the summer of 1998, El P
Assooates began drafting the
plan, wluch was expected to
be completed within a yedf.
But in August 1999, a
g roup of the city's Lc1tlno
leaders --including busmess
owners, lawyers and conunu-
ruty residents --told the
council that the consulldnls
had neglected the input of
the neighborhood's larg<''it
ethruc group. The West <i1de
is 45110 Latino, accordmg lo a
report prepared by a UC
Irvine graduate study
I.age of these sometimes con-
fbcting feelings of love and
obligation that tug dl on<''s
pocketbook. A small, mak~hift
gardge stand off Nf"wport
Boulevard caused cars to peel
off the road with s1gns
dnnounang a dozen long-
stemmed roses for only $10.
Mana Espinosa's family
hds rose farms in Ecuador and
this Valentine's Day harvest
had some extra blooms wluch
they shipped to Newport. Not
ThP c:1ty postponed the
tlue dc1tc• lor the pldn dnd
forrm>d th(• L<ihno Communi-
ty J\dv1sors, made up of the
sc1m<> Latino lcc1clers The
group h('Jd m<•et.mgs m the
ne1qhborhood, collecting
mput trom Lc1tmo rec;idents. It
dho collc1boraled with a UC
lrvme grc1duc1te urbdfl plan-
ning clc1!.S to c;urvPy the
nc•tghborhood's needs
Last month, th<' advisors
pre ntC!d lhl' City Council
and its <·onsultants with a
report, otin9 unproved hous-
1s to trim the ends daily,
change the> wdtcr and sprin-
klt> some sugar dnd aspirin in
the walt>r.
Adults werC'n't lhc only peo-
plC' thmkinq about loved ones
Children dl'io bought dnd
mdde gift.!>. Meredith Davin, 4,
covered in glue and glitter,
made a "lrcusurc box• that she
planned to fill Wlth candy.
"I'm gomg to gJve it to my
mommy and daddy,· she
Sdld.
surprisingly. lhe U"'"""'."--::::----:-r.i~~-~""11rr7:71
roses that came in
dozens of colors
and scents, were
swept away m less
than a day. By
Sunday evening,
they were all but
scattered petals on
the ground.
Both men and
women bought
dozens of blooms
for friends and
lovers Espinosa
said that the best
way to ensure the
blooms stay fresh
'
mg and shoppmq c1w.1s rt11d
building d midcllC? sc:hool dS
priori ti<''i
'Tm confident about th<'
report." sdtd Pt1ty Mc1<1ueno,
d mPml.wr of the ttdvisory
group "The nty rnctlly did its
best to h0ar from the wholl•
commuruty"
She said the group will
l
Monday, February 14, 2000 5
SCHOOLS NEED TO BE ABLE TO DESCRIBE
SUCCESSES IN THE FOUOWING CAITERlA:
1. Student Focus and Support
2. School Organization and Culture
3. Challenging Standards and Cumc:ulum
4. AC'tive Teaching and Leanung
5. Profc'Ss1onaJ. Commuruty
6. Leadf'rship and Educational Vitality
7. School, r:amily, and Commwuty Partner h1~
O. Indicators of Success
SCHOOLS MUST MEET SEVEN BAStC ELIGIBILITY
REQUIREMENTS IN COMPLIANCE WITH THE U.S.
DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION, OFFICE OF CIVIL RIGHTS:
l. TI1e school is a 11liddle school, JUnior high school. or a
i;emor high schooJ
2. The school has been in existence for at )Past ltve full
year'>. .
3. The school has not received natlonul recogrution as a
Blm• Ribbon school since September 1994.
4. The nornindled school is not refusing the Office of
Civil Rights access lo information necessary to mvesbgate
any civtl nghts complamt or to conduct a dbtnctwide com-
pUance revtew.
5. The school has not violated any evil nghts stdtute .
6. The U S Department of Justice does not have a pend-
ing ~UJt d.llC>gmg that the school, r distnct, has violated one
or more civil rights statutes or the Constitutions cqudl pro-
tection dduse.
1. There are no tinclings of violations of the Individuals
with Disabilities Act.
OTHER FACTS
•Smee the program's rnception, nearly 3,700 schools have
hC<'ll 1 ecognized.
• Awards alternate each year: between Elem •ntary and
Secondary schools.
• Last year Lincoln Elemeoldry School received the Blue
Ribbon Award. •
dPnts from Blue Rihhon
M.'hoc>ls.
·1 n:rt<unly cdn't speak tor
ull c oll(•g(•s, but . we do not
yive 11 dny weight." Wilbur
st11d "It's still an mctication
thot the i.rhool 1s a (me
sc:hool. hut m making the
c1dnuss1on cleosion v .. ·e don't
cons1cler 1t dt the Uruvers1ty of
t ontrnuc pushing the city lo
mducl<· it!:. proposf'd improve-
1rn•nh 11 they arc not included
m Uw draft plc1n ..
Rol•dcr suid he expects the
t ounbl will hold several com-
m11mt1 forwns in thP corruny
months to qdlher more public
mput
•Now we hdve something
Cdhlomtd.·
Howc•ver, Bot~ said the
awdrd 1s not 1ust for the stu-
cients.
"ThP alwnni tdke a lot of
pnde in 11, illld lso do) a lot of
pcopk• m Newport Beach.• he
saJd "EveryonP knows about
our dlhlellcs, this lC'ts them
know dbout our ocaderruc;.,. •
to work with," hP suid "I
expect the plan w1U have a
number of options. We will
hdve som<!lhtnCJ tangible to
work from ·•
The study session is
schedul<>d to begm at 4 ·30
p m toddy m the council
chambers of City Hall, 77
Fair Onve.
Quote Of
1llE DAY
"Wt were told WI WIMild not~ d ~.
so I have a problem ltilti lhi.s • :
Jim Weeks. Costa Mesa girls hoops coach
• Dlily.'ftlt • ... Ftb. 21 honor•
5PORTSHMLOfMME ALVIN WHITE -"-
6 Sports Editor Roger Carlson • 949-57 44223 • Monday, February 14, 2000 Doily Pilot
HI 111
SPORTS HALL OF FAME
CELEBRATING THE MILLENNIUM
c
• He has been a power player, on the field at USC,
in the NFl with the Rams, and in the political world.
Richard Dunn
DAILY PILOT
M arlin McKeever's •
weight was fell
almost as much
on the political turf in the
oU-season as it wru. on lhe
football field every Sunday tor 13
autumns.
A former Pro Bowl selection
as a tight end, who later earned
team MVP honors as a
linebacker for the 1971 Rams,
McKeever could also rrux 1t up
pretty well off the gndlron.
lo 1968, McKeever, who
served on two pre&dential
campaigns for Richard Nixon,
moved to Washington, D.C , and
launched a unique
dual career -football
and politics. -
three full seasons before
switching to tight end.
At USC, McKeever and lus
twin brother, Mike, were
All-Amencans m the same year
('59) for the same school, the
only time'"10 college football
annals that twin -brothers were so
honored. Both were inducted
into the USC Hall of Fame 10
June 1995. Mike McKeever was
killed in an automobile aectdent
in the m.id-60s.
"Both of us bad planned to
play pro football from the b..rne
we were in high school,"
srud McKeever, who attended
Mt. Carmel High, a
Los Angeles-based parochial
school. (Mike McKeever, a
national-record holder
m the 6-pound shot
put, suffered a head
injury playing college
football. preventing
lum from a pro career).
"I decided it would
be a good place to go,
(and) it would be good
for (my) kids to live in
the nation's capital,"
McKeever once Sdld.
"Living in the nation's
capital and going
through the full
political gamut, J1 you
will, was very
educational.
"I just think being
McKeevcr, who
moved to the Newport
Seach area in 1968, a
year alter bis brother
died, was also an
Academic
All-Amencan for use
in 1960. lo track and Marlin McKeever held, be won the 1959
on a first name bdsis Wlth tho~e
who were later lilvolved m
Watergate, and being on a flISt
name basis with the president
and bis advisors, was a very
heady experience."
Later, when McKeever would
read about Watergate history, he
could idenWy with some of the
events and people. ln addition to
being a veteran on the Nixon
campaign trail, McKcever
worked in the off-season as a
lobbyist in Sacramento for the
milk industry and an oil
company, among other
businesses.
But McKeever, a former USC
_, All-Amencan, could also relate
to some of football's greatest
historical figures, including
legendary coach Vmce Lombardi,
for whom he played in 1969 with
the Washington Redskins.
•1t was Just fantastic, (and)
really one of the best things that
happened to me in my
professional f ootbdll career,• he
said of playing for Lombardi,
who died before the next season
and was replaced by George
Allen, who eventually traded
McKeever back to th Rams
•(Allen) and l didn't always
see eye to eye,• said Mc.Keever,
who played six seasons for the
Rams (1961-66), one for the
Minnesota Vikings ('67), throe
for Washington and then two
more for the Rams (1971-72),
before concluding his career m
1973 with the Philadelphia
Eagles.
McKeever, a first-team
All-American for the Tto1an:o; ui
1959 and '60, was a No. 1 draft
choice of the Rams and broke
. into the NFL as a linebacker, a
position hP played for almOit
Paafic Coast
Conference championship in the
shot put.
McKeever, the Thojans' Player
of the Game in their 17-6 victory
over UCLA in 1960, was active
off the field during his collegiate
career, speaking at various
functions throughout Southern
California and representing USC
at clinics, tugh school assemblies
and numerous Lions Club,
Rotary Club and Chamber of
Commerce meetings -a
precursor to his political
endeavors.
McKeever, who played an
incredible 505 minutes on the
field for the 'Trojans m 1960,
worked for Newport Beach
resident Gary Davidson in the
now-defunct World Football
League after retiring as a player.
But, as it turned out, McKeever
wasn't interested in staying U\
football.
McKeever became a
stockbroker, then embarked on a
career in the insurance business
in 1975. Three years later,
Mt Keever left tus own firm to
become affiliated with Alexander
& Alexander as a vice president.
He has been with his current
brokerage firm, Andreini & Co.,
for 11 yeari.
A longtime Balboa Bay Club
member and past president or
the Newport Beach Country
Club, McKcever, who turned 60
on Jan. 1, is today's llonoree in
the Daily Pilot Sports Hclll of
Fame.
Alter living in Newport for
over 30 years, McKcevcr
remarncd and moved to Irvine
with his n~ Wife, Judy.
McKeever has four grown
children -three of thf'!m live ln
Newport.
Tars, Cd.M in po~tseason play
CERRITOS-N wport Hnrbor High POLO PLAVOf f $ opens defense of its CJP Southom Sec· 1 I
tion D1vi5ion I championship, while
Corona dP.1 Mar makes tt. poaticason debut whon tho girls water 1>9lo
pl4yoff a begin thi wuek
CdM (15-11), whi<:h shared the Pacifl<.· C'01tst League ctuunpion hip
with Uruv n~~ anc.1 Laguna Beach, ho L» Katclla Wedneldny at 3:15
p.m. in a D1v1.Sion JV wild-card g8m.,
. The Sailors, who econd·placo S a View Le gue finl h ndt•d o
two·year strangl hold on thA tiUc, visJt Cnpi trano Voll y in the fll1tt
round Satwday at 11 a m. at Saddlcback Colleg .
The S4ilors (20-7) hav plit agalnst the Cougars th11 don.
including an 9--4 tback lb th 1t latest m ting, Jon. 21 .
Should Harbor g t pa t Capo Vall y, {t would likely toke on top·
IMded Esperanz.a in the F b. 22 quarterflMls If CdM Wl1ll Wednos·
day, it would advanc to Saturday's ftnl roWld at Orange League
champion B Olinda. -by a.rry P•ulkner
(~ ..
• CdM, third-seeded in CIF
IIl·AA, gets a first-round bye;
Harbor is at· home in II-AA,
while Estancia and Costa Mesa
hit the road Wednesday night.
Bany Faulkner
DAILY PILOT
CERRITOS-
Though the
familiarity factor
clirrunishes con-
siderably, Pacific
Coast League
boys basketball
teams from
Corona del Mar,
Costa Mesa ttnd·
Estancia high
schools will count on the steady flow
of intensity their league campaign
provided to hold them in good stead
when the CIF Southern Section Divi-
sion Ill-AA playoffs tip off this week.
Sunilarly, Newport Harbor (17-8},
the second-place fimsher in the Sea
View League, will continue to test its
mettle in the D-AA bracket, beginning
Friday at home against Gahr (19-7).
PCL champion CdM (20-6), the No.
3 seed in Ill-AA after making the W-A
findl a year ago, gets a first-round bye
Wednesday. Coach· Paul Orris' Sea
Kings, who earned their brst outright
league crown smce 1987, will host
either Cabrillo or Northview Friday.
"I thought the PCL this season pre-
pared us very well for the playoffs,
because every team we played in
league wdS solid and there were no
easy touches," said Orris, whose Sea
Kings moved to the PCL from the Sea
View League after last season.
"The PC.L was very similar lo what
the Sea Vi~w League had been for us
the last oouple years,• Orris said Sun-
day at1he section office, where pair-
-ings were released. •And l always
thought playing in that league was to
.our great advantage when we entered
the playoffs.•
Costa Mesa and Estancia, both at-
large entnes in the Ill-AA bracket
(which combined former ID-AA and
ID-A schooJs into one division), are
both hopeful tbelT rugged league sea-
sons can help them produce some
postseason surprises
•1 wouldn't want to play us in t,he
flISl round,• said Mesa Coach Bob
Serven, whose Mustangs (17-9) visit
Rio Hondo League champion Mon-
rovia (22-2) Wednesday. ·our lads are excited to be in the
playoffs (for the first time since all
schools .were admitted in 1992).
Teams better be prepared to play us,
because every game was a playoff
game in the PCL."
Coach Rieb Boyce's Estanoa squad
(14 -12), which finished 2-6 in the PCL,
but was 4-t against Sea View schools
in nonleague play, including a 60-54
December wm over Sea View cham-
pion Woodbridge, vi.sits Verbum Dei
HIGH SCHOOL BOYS BASKETBALL PLAYOFFS
STEVE M.CRANK I DAILY PILOT
Corona del Mar's KeVin Hansen takes It to the hoop on the way to the
Pacific Coast League crown and a bye In the first round of the playoffs.
(15-11) Wednesday. majority of its losses (two each) to
•Our klds believe we have a nationally top-ranked Dominguez of
chance agamst anyone in our divi-Compton (a San Gabriel Valley
sion," Boyce srud •1 tlunk 70% of our League nval) and Orange League
games were agdinst DivisioR I teams champion Brea Olinda (20-6),
this year. And there was no better way Should the Tars get past the Gladi-
to prepare for the playoffs than the ators, they would likely meet Brea in
PCL Uus year." the second round Feb. 22. From there,
U Estancia can get hot, a potenbal should the draw hold fonn. No. 2-
FelJ 22 quarterfinal date with CdM seeded Chapparal {24-3) would loom
could be in the oUing. 10 the Feb. 25 quarterfinals.
CdM swept the Eagles in league, "We're pretty worried about Gahr
but the latest meeting, Feb. 4 at the and, in the back of our mind, thinking
Sea Kings' gym, required the hosts to about Brea," Harbor Coach Larry
overcome a 13-point fourth-quarter Hirst said.
deficit to escape with a 58-55 triumph. Bishop Montgomery (20-5) is the
lf victorious Wednesday, Estancia No. 1 seed in ffi-AA, followed by San
would likely have to knock off Notre Dimas (23-3), CdM and f larvard-
Damc of Sherman Oaks (20-6) to Westlake (20-5).
make the qudlterfinals. The aforementioned Dominguez
Th<' Eagles' first-round foe, Ver-Dons, who handled then-No. l ·
bum Dei, lost to CdM, 50-39, in the ranked Oak Hill Academy from Vir-
Sonora Tournament in December. girua Feb. 5 at Long Beach State, are
Newport, wlucb dropped two of its No. 1 m TI-AA.
final three league games to lose its The ID-AA title game is March 3 at
grasp on the Sea View crown, faces a Loyola Marymount; the Il-AA final
Gahr squad which compiled the March 4 at the Arrowhead Pond.
Mustangs 'shortchanged'
• Costa Mesa girls must open
two days early in Div. ill-AA;
Corona del Mar and Estancia
are at home, and on schedule.
Bany Faulkner
DAILY PtLOT
CERRITOS -Costa Mesa High
coach Jim Weeks and his players are
in serious scramble mode today,_
thanks to a scheduling anomaly
which reqwres them to open the CTF
Southern Section Division m-M girls
basketball playoffs Tuesday, two days
ahead of schedule.
And Weeks was less then pleased
about the news Sunday at the South-
ern Section Off1ce.
The Mustangs (16-10) will vi~1t
Diamond Ranch (18-8) Tuesday at
7:30 p.m. for the chance to advance to
Thursday's second-round game ot
Azusa (21-3).
All other ID-AA teams, including
Estancia (16-9), which opens Thurs·
day at home against South Pasadena
(10-11), wm play no sooner than
Thursday.
Corona del Mar (21-5), which
edged Mesa in the final ~onds in thP
Pacific Coast League fmale Thursday
to eem its hn;t league tiUo in recent
memory, ls one of five teams to
re<:e1ve a first-round bye. Coach
Elbert Davis' Sea Kings Will open Sat·
urday at home against Thursday' Lo
Canada-Banning w1M r,
Mesa'J schedul was adjust d ·
becaUle Azule'I gym ii being used
for lndiv\dual ledioh ~ finals
Friday and S.t\irdey.
•we were told we would not play
until Thundey, '° I have a prOblem
.
HIGH SCHOOL GIRLS BASKETBALL PLAYOFFS
with th.is,'' said Weeks, who waged mation.
hls protest, to no avail, with section Weeks was somewhat relieved to
administrators Sunday. leant Diamond Ranch, in only its third
"I don't understand why we're the year, does not have a senior class.
onrs stuck having to play Tuesday," Estancia Coach Paul Kirby, as well
Weeks said." And I can't imagine Dia-as Davis, were happy with the playoff
mond RMch is too pleased about it, picture awaiting their teams.
either It'll be a miracle if I can find CdM, ranked No. 6 in the final UI-
anything out about Diamond Ranch I AA coaches' poll, is anxious to begin
can use for (today's) practice to pre-its first postseason in four years. But,
pare for them. All 1 can do b try fo Davis said, the week-long break will
work on information about Asuza and help Junior scoring and rebounding
hope we can get past the first round • leader Kristin McCoy (15.S points per
~eeks attempted to get section game and 10.1 boards per game)
ofhcial to force Azusa to use an alter-. rca>ver from a brwsed knee ustained
nate site Saturday, allowing Mesa to against Costa Mesa.
open at Dtamond Ranch Thursday. •she'll be OK, <but a few days off
Section Commissioner Jim are a big help," DaVlS said, "We just
Stounton and mtenm basketball want to ride the wave out and sco
dmUllStrator Hal· Harkness, though now far we can go."
sympathetic to Weeks' concerns, said If victonous Saturday, CdM cowd
doing o would penalize AZusa for collide with No. 3-seeded Harvard-
volunteenng to host wrestling. Westlake (18-7) in the Feb. 23 quar·
•we can not disen!ranchise bas-terfinal.s.
ketball teams from schools who h<>!\t Kirby, wh0&c team won its finAl
wr Uing, or we would never get any-seven regular-season garnet to cap-
on to uffer their gym for wrestling," ture second place in the PCL, 14ld he
Harkn • s &,aid. is happy to be opening at hOl{le.
•vou got us,• Staunton told Weeks. •1t•s great not to be traveling and
•But we made a dcterin.lnation we our giili really,Hke playtn~ at home,"
hac.1 to make." Kirby said. "We hope we re peaking
Th same confltct affoctcd tho boys at tho nght Ume."
basketball team ut Rancho Cucamon-U victorious Thursday, Estancia
go, where the gym ii also being used would play Saturday at Ganesho (2-4·
F'riday and Saturday for wrest.ting 5), which drew a ftrst·round bye.
rom~dtion Alemany (2l·S) ii top-teeded In DI·
section offidal said a dildaimar, AA, Bilhop Montgomery (21 ·3) No. 2
noting the polli~= and Immaculate Heart ( ••·8) No ....
c:heng• due to The c.bamplonthlp game would be
nte c0Mict1, should end WW be held Mardi 3 or 4 at Long 8MCh
1ndUded In next year's playotf lnfor· State' Pyramid.
f • , ..
_Do __ ily~Pi_lo_t~~--:-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--~~f>()J{'fS~~~~~~~~~~~~--.-~~M.o~nd_o~y~Fe_b_roo_ry._14~,_2000~~7
REMEMBERING ·THE PAST ..
Glasgow, Ile r recognized
for their athletic efforts.
occurred.
The plaque under the hanging
1ersey will mad, •A great fnend,
ledder and. ledm.mate, you will
ulways be rPme-mbered. •
the UC l.rvine
Hall ol Fame.
competitions center fielder Bnan WahH.mnk and
nght fielder J<S on HP.USS wcrn out
of t})e Pwat.P.S' lineup in Sdturday's
7-5 loss to Edsl Los Angelf!5
Collegt-m the Ap<iche Classu:. O ne dominated the
community college
. Glasgow wtts
honored Feb. 5
by UCI for his
legendary aquat
1c career, both dS
a wimmerand
waler polo play-
er
Perhaps even more ldsting 1:.
that Glasgow was one of the
original'> to comp up with UCl's
Anteater mascot.
Jed through the Wdter with
the grace of a dolphin.
One was haVing his volley.ball
jersey number retired; one was
being inducted into the UC Irvine
Hall of Fame.
Unfortunately, only one ts still
with us.
The Irvine Vdlley players will
also wear a f>dtch in ller's honor
this season
Lasers Coach Tom Pestolcsi said
that a rnemoneil scholdrslup fund
has been started at Irvme Valley in
lier's name. Contributions can be
made to the Irvine Valley College
Foundation dl 5500 lrvmc Center ..,,.
Dnve, lrvine, CA 92618
Glasgow was
a 1965 NCAA
All-AmencM in
water polo. dS
well as an
All-Amencan
Tony Altobelli
COLLEGES
Now you know who to bldme.
Before UCJ. Glasgow was d
two-time state swururung champion
at Orange Coast College. H~ won
the state title m the 500 free ds a
freshman dnd took part Ill U1r.
Ldws and Wahlhnnk are
hampered Wllh b11cic problem .
while Reuss hds u hyperextr>nded
knee.
Thi ·u statu., tor Tuec;dav's game
at PdlorrtCJr and this weekend's
·('y Coast toumurnent remains
Wltt>rtdlfl.
title WlJlrung medley relay tedm 1I1
1 %5. Both wor<' nationaJ records
Former Newport Harbor High
and Irvine Valley College volleybdll
standout Billy Nguyen Iler, who
was killed in an June 27 .auto
accident, had his uniform No. 13
retired by the Lasers before thc>ir
Feb. 8 home opener match against
the Orange County Spikers.
Her was the Orange Empire
Conference most valuable player
and captain of the Lasers' 1993
championship team.
swirruncl' in 1967.
Glasgow wus a SurtSet Lodgue .
champion m the 200 and 400 at
Newport Httrl>or l Ugh, CldSS of '63.
Reuc,s, who had 15 home rune;
fur the Pirate us u fwshman last
Y<'<JC, hit three dmgers m thP Sues'
hr:.t tour gdffic~.
On a much happier note, Pat
Glasgow a Daily Pi.lot Sports Hall of
Fame inductee, lS now a member of
Jn '67, he placed _second Ill the .
1,650-yttrd frePstyle and third m the
200 butterfly at the NCAA
C'hamp1onsh1ps, the first year UCI
WdS eligible for such
The injury bug ts back ·at
Ornnge Coast College and 1s
currently mlesung the oulf1E•ld of
the Puc1tes hdseball tedITl.
"It's someth109 wc"re going to
hnvf• to hght thruuuh, ft' Coach
John Altobelli stt1d • Evef) tt>am
uoes through it f'VPf)' }'t?dr We're
JUst !}Pl ting It ~oon('I thdn moi.t •• Iler was 26 when the dccident St<1rllng left fiPlder Chris Laws,
Class of '50 returns
• The 50th re union set
for July 15 at Pavilion .
H arbor High's Class of
'50 is charting plans
for a grand 50-year
reunion July 15, 2000 at t.Pe
Balboa Pavilion.
This is the class which
helped fill the ranks of
varsity football with the VJtal
material that almost
prcxluced a champiortShip m
1949. The team, coached by
Al Irwin, which won eight,
lost one and scored 323
points.
Two of the outstanding
stars for the grid team were
Sunset League selections
Bob Berry, fullback, and Bob
Watts, halfback. Together,
Don Contrell
SIDELINES
the pt.nr
scored
more than
100 points.
Only
two varsity
gnd teams
scored in
excepbonal
fashion
from the
early days
and that
included
the champ
1942 outfit,
which
featured legendary fullback
Harold Sherlin and tackle
Manuel Muniz. Both were
named to the All-CIF squad.
The '49 team also
produced four players who
advanced to help Orange
Coast College win the
Eastern Conference
championshlp in the fall of
1951. They were Edward
Mayer, who also won the
coveted Rcxl Gould Trophy
for most time played; Harlow
Richard.son, Keith Burch and
Jack Updike.
Richardson later became a
valued field goal kicker for
the Long Beach State
College Forty-runers Mdyer
went on to be a teamrtiatE> of
Bill Walsh at San Jose State.
Walsh, in time, became head
coach of the champion San
Francisco Forty-niners.
BILL ZIMMER PHOTO
Anaheim's Lenny Weaver is tackled by Harbor's Dick Jones, backed up by Dally Pilot
Sports Hall of Farner Bob Berry and halfback Bob Watts. Harbor won, 37-20, in 1949.
Tdckle Ted Trompeter'ltnd
center Burch wound up at
Cal Poly, San Luis Obispo.
Trompeter hurt his left
shoulder and had to drop
football, but he switched
over to the boxmg ring and
eventually became the
Pacific Coast light heavy-
weight r ha,mp1on
Trompeter dbo ddvrmced
to the rcxleo world and won
numerous awards nding the
bronc;;
Another honor that came
to the Tars in 1950 was the
Sunset League track
champ1ortSlup. Seniors
featured m the track scenar-
ios were C harles Compton,
Joe Casillas. Jack Bell, Jerry
Lmgo and J~ 1 btchmdn.
The varsity swim team
placed third in the league,
but its star dlver, Jack Bell,
won All-CIF honon. along
\"lllh his brother, Rex, on the
Bee team. The Bees and
Cecs both won
championships.
Another varsity member,
Jim Seely, advanced to
UCLA and then 1oined the
Navy and became a rear
adnural. He served 34112
years and won numerous
ribbons and medals as d jet
hghter pilot.
Jack Clark, Bill Jackson,
Bill Kittle and Richardson
played varl>ity basketball and
baseball.
Missing class members
can be reported to Katie
Stuard Wild, 4164 Pico Road,
Vista, CA 92084, or FAX at
(760) 726-302!>
Missing mrmbers include
Yvonne Millt1rd Callaway,
Sonya Johns, Nancy Snyder
Jacobson, Carol Lange Berg,
Leonard Tunbcrlake, Steve
Pridham, Btll Kittle, Bill
Warne, Bill C'ldncy, Maureen
Cameron Clark, Velma
Pridham, Beverly Thompson
Lh<mlil@YmT1rfflTJJrl/zJ
Sanke, Bill Dostd, Norman
Wyers, Dave Joys, Phyhs
Watkins Wahlberg. David
Allen, B<>verly Bechtold
Curcillo, Per Peterson,
Barbara Long K.incdld, Jack
Updike, Bill Jackson. Mary
Barrett Blake, Leonard Hall,
Bob J. Monroe, Jr., CdJTolJe
Clark Rudnick, David Stone,
Joan Bryan Hadley, Lyle
Hilmerson, Doris Gate
Howdrd and Errul Dopyera.
Deceased members, C'lass
of ·so. Mona Bird, Bob
Blaisdell, Jerry Blue, Evc1
Caldwell, Ray Cook,
Cathenne Craig, D1ck Herms
and Jean Hollingsworth
Also, Jewell Mc1wson,
Jim McVey, Roger Welsh,
Diane WesUake, Bill
Wittman, John Kingston,
Robin Cross. Robert l·fdynes.
Joel Noel, Ranny McBnde,
Barden Greenlea!, Gerald
Forrest, Jack Ehlen dnd Fred
Guard.
Corona del Mer High's boys basketball team wins the CIF 5 Estanc1a's boys basketball team advances to the D1v1slon
Southern s.ction Division IV·A champ1onsh1p with• 3·AA finals with an 81·78 overtime wm over Lompoc Guty
dr.amatk 47-46 victory over St Bemard Brian COieman Herwdla cames the Eagles with 32 points In the
hhs two free throws with 35 8 seconds leh to grve CdM the sem1f1nals, Estancia defeats Western 68·57, behind 22
one point margin Btlan ff'acalosy leads the Sea Kings points from Mike HMS and 18 from Mnt Fueft>ringer.
with 15 points. CdM's boys basketball team earns a place In the D1v1sion 10
&uncle's boys basketball team ge~ tr1pped up 1n the 3 A finals with a 67 58 pasting of Sherman Oaks Notre
DMsion lll·A semifinals by Dos Pueblos, 57-48 ZAICk Dame. Walftn Johnson leads the Sea Kings with 17 ~and Chris Candlllh scores 18 and 16 points and 13 rebounds He also scores 25 in the
rtspeCtiwty for ~ Eagles Rkhardson 1s named co-MVP of quarterfinals as CdM batters Northv1ew, 75~
1tw P.afic Coast League. Costa Mesa's girls bolsketball team advances to the
Cost.a Mesa's girls bask~ball team puts up a fight before ON1s1on 3-A sem1f1nals with a 56-42 win Over Sherm•n
f•lling. SS-50, to Sherman Oaks Notre Dame In the D111is1on Olks Notre Dame. Ollvfa DK'.amHll gets 24 points and 19
lit-A iuarterflnals. Erin lk'oWn leads the Mustangs' effort rebounds for Mewi .. D1Camllh leads the MUSUngs with 16
with 6 polnu. points and 24 boards ma 47-45 second·round thriller over Bellflower.
Newport Harbor's girls basketball team lose In the D1V1s1on lll·A Estan<1a's 91rls basketball team advances to the 0 1111sion 3·AA
Mmif1n.ls, ~1. to Bishop Montgomery. Melissa Schutz and Jenny quarters ~th a 66 63 win ~r Pomon. Me~ E.aM sc:Ol'es 28 po1nu
........ are the Tars' high scorers with eight points each. Estancia's boys '<>CCer tum moYeS on to the 0 1v1slon 1 ·A quarters with •
CdM's baseball team wins its season opener by hammenng Estancia, 13-4, 2·1 overtime win over Artesia. Sergio Suarez SCO<ts tht game Wlnnet
In five innings Kevin Siu.rt'• thrH-run homer caps off the SH Kings' • David P.ttison scores with 20 seconds left In regulation to give Newport essault. a.ti Wiits pitch•~ thr e icorele~s Innings for the win. Harbor's boys soccer team a 2·1 win over keppel 1n 1 Div1~1on I A se<ond
CdM bOys tennis team also beats Esunc1.J In its season opener, 20-1. John round game.
Cwc•o and 1Ylef $lonebtuker picks up two points each for CdM. Estencia's l>an r.trone wins the 191 pound title In the Sea View lugue
c:dt.1's boys volleyball team sweeps Costa Mesa, 15 5, 15-4, 15·5. St.v• Wff)thng champ1on$h1pt with 13·2 d«lsion owr Jose Martinez of
...... 12 kllli le.ch CdM • S~ltbeck. -compiled by JoMph 9oo
BRIEFLY
. Pirates fmally drop one
•School record ~lays
in check after Orange
Coast's 8-1 start.
SP~ ~NLtJ SOFTBALL'
Tbe
Ordnge Codst College sotl-
bdl.l teclffi stretched its wm-
nmg streak to eight before•
fmally losing, 4-1, to Victor
Valley in the tlurd game of
the College of the Des£>rl
Toumdment Saturddy.
OCC (8-lJ won its first two
gdmes dgamst Cerritos. 6-2,
and lmpf'nal Vdlley, 7-2, lcdv-
ing the Pirates one wm lrom
tying the school record of
rune wins ma row set in 1992.
Monica Ortega threw com-
plete gdmcs m both of the
PIJ'ates' wms, 1mprovi.ng her
record to 6-0 In her two
start'>, Ortegd allowed only
one earned run.
Kim . Guillen and Renee
Snyder each went 2· for 3 for
the Pirates m the two wins
Knst:m Degree was 2 for :l
wtth a run scored and a stolen ·
basP in the game-three loss
She is 17 for 17 in stolen bdses
this season.
CX>UEGE OF THE DESf.RT TOURNAMIEN'f
OCC 6, CE.Mrros 2 occ 101 04 -6 .6 2
Cerritos 002 00 2 3 2
Ortega and Valdez; Flores and
Ibarra. W -Ortega 5-0. l · Flores
OCC 7, IMPERIAL VAUEY 2
Imperial Valley 000 20 • 2 1 1 occ 100 42 -1 1 2
Briseno and Mar1tnez, Ortega
and Valdes W -Ortega, 6-0;
l -Bnseno. HR -Thurmond (OCC)
VICTOR VAU.EY 4, OCC 1 occ 000 001 0 1 4 2
Victor Valley 101 200 0 · 4 8 O
Espinoza and Premeaux, Navarro
and Higgs W -Navarro
L · Espinoza, 2-1 28 Gonzales
CW), Ortega (OCC)
OCC falls, 7-5, twice
S A N
DIEGO -BASEBALL
E r 1 c
W1ethom had o double, a
home run, l'Wo runs scored
and t.hi'ee RBis for the Ordnge
Coast Colleg<' bdseba.ll team,
but missed opportumhes
proved too costly for the
Pirates in Saturday's 7-5
Apache Classic los to East
Los Angeles.
Sunday the PIJ'dtes were 7-
5 losers to host Gro smont.
In Saturday's loss,
Wiethorn (Corona del Mar
High) put the Pirates in front
m the top of the fourth Wlth a
three-run home run, but East
LA answered with four m the
bottom of the mrung.
nailing, 6-4. in the top of
the hfth ummg, the Pirates (2-
3) had the bas loaded Wlth
nobody out and the heart of
the lineup coming to bdt, but
could not scon•.
Ea t LA p1tcheffl combim'd
to stJi.ke out 11 Pirate players.
The Pirate... cored four m
Ute filth m.nmg to lle Gros •
mont, 5.5, but tht" Grithn~
scor •d in thn scv •nth, e1ghth
and runth innings .
Belden scores five
as Tars win. 8-4
N POLO S A
DIEGO
Katherin e
Seiden mdde sure the
long tnp was worthwhile
for Newport· Harbor
H1gh's girls wdler polo
team. She scored hve
times as her Sailors routed
host and San Diego Sec-
tion Division II power-
house Coronado, 0-4, m
Newport's last gdme of
the regular season Satur-
day
Newport goalie
Heather Deyden made 10
saves tor the win. Enn
Kelly Sates scored twice
and Kyndrd Cox once for
the Sallor:; (20-7). New-
port move on to the ClF
Southern Section Division
I playoffs, where 1t Is the
defending champion.
NONCONRAENCE
NEWPORT 8, Coltofw>o 4
Score by quarters
Newport 2 3 2 1·8
Coronado 1 1 l 1 -4
Newport Harbor -Belden 5,
Bates'2, Cox l.
Saves -Deyden 10
Coronado -B. Hansen 2,
K Hansen l, Welsh 1.
Saves • Gaskin 3, Keer 3
Al"ACHE ClASSIC
EAsT Los ANGELES 7, OCC 5 occ 000 400 010 5 7 2
East LA 110 401 OOx-7 90
Bostick. Greco (4), Hams (6),
Oeven (8) and Keller. Chavez,
Alvarez (4) and Duranzo
W -Chavez; L Bostick (0·2)
28 W1ethorn (OCQ, Murphy
(OCQ. Keller COCC), Hoyos (East
LA) 38 ·Anderson (OCQ, Duranzo
(East LA) HR • Valenzuela (East \
LA). W1ethorn (OCQ.
GROSSMONT 7, OCC 5
Grossmont 001 030 111 7 9 3 occ 000 040 010 • 5 10 3
Shoemaker, San91olo (6), Hershey
(8) and Allen, Brown, Devon (7),
Surdock (9), Parkin (9) and Murphy
W -5ang1ol, 1 0 L Devon, 1-1.
S Hershey. 1 28 -Bak.er (G). Laws
(OCC), McCanne (OCC). Keller
(OCO. Caro (OCC), Weithorn (OCQ
2, Hensley (OCQ. HR -Allen (G),
Thomas (G)
Vanguard falls, 8-1
T cos,\ BASEBALL
MESA-
V1s1tmg B1ola Um\ ersity's
baseball team scored ~even
runs in the fir.it three tnmngs
to defedl Vanguard. 8· l. l.n a
Golden St 1te ,\thlehc Conter-
eoce game "aturday
Second basemd.Il Timothy
Jara went 2 for 4 and hit a
solo bld'il in the thU'd tor the
Lions' onl} run. Mdrk Wode
drove m three runs for Biola
(7-3, 3-1). v.mgudfd drop to
0-5. 0-3.
GOlDEH STAn ATHLETIC C'OMUIENC1
BKM.A a. VAHGU.uo 1
ScCM"9 by innings
B1ola ,322 000 001 • 8 13 O
Vanguard 001000000 • 1 6 1
Rouwenhont. Hansen (9) and
C.rdamone, use. W alker (3),
Taylor (9) and Dodos
W • Rouwenhorst. 2-3; l • Ca~.
0.2. 28 -Rouwenhorst (BU).
Pettnak (BU). umba (VU) HR • ,.,. (VU)
If: IV"'ii-.""i~ '... . ... ~ # ~~ "";lo• • .. -j,J
:.: I ' ' • Ji ·\,:.JI
r.-,_,..-.. ; ...... ~ ~ -, ;:"! ,~-. . . .
·.. • 'j ,.
... "' .. I .. •:.; "''·".. .
. . J.. , ..,. -.
:11
•
8 Monday, F•bruory l.4, 2000
• • • ,! t ..... •.l ">'li>",•r·" ·. r ~ ' ~·· · · r··,~rc:i~-"''· ill_; ..... , ·1 · ,,Cr. -· •. "'.:'~· , .. ·~, ... -.. ·~)
I~\ ... t 1,,_..;i-:
THE COSTA MESA THORIZED AGENT THOSE IS8UE8 ~ Newpo118Mdl, ofr*'Ma ptCMOClon, 1u
ZONING AOMINIS· FOR BETTY JANE RAISED IN WRITTEN CA 12683 ~ti MOiia •ma-TR AT 0 R WI l l FOlllS TRUSTJl<OUJ CORRESPONDENCE Tiie MineA neme qo.ina1 tlene QUt cuinplt RENDER A DECISION IRVINE COMMUNITY DELIVERED TO THE UMd by lhe Mllet 11 hi oon ... I~ llt>
ON THURSDAY, FEB· ASSOCIATION. FOR A ZONING AOMINIS· loe1t1on I•: Zubl•'• gal•• 1prop1ad.. " RUAAY 24. 2000 OfUS MINOA CONOITIONAl TRATOR PRIOR TO Chit*en Coop utted qulere que la corle
SOON AS POSS18LE use PERMIT TO IN· THE ABOVE 0-'TE. TNllll.01)9tedda .. OI ncuche au caao THEREAFTER, ON STALL TWO NCW AH· FOR FURTHER IN· the lxllk....,,.,,...,. Sl Ullecf no presenw
THE FOLLOWING ll£MNASTOANEXIST FORMATION ON THE March2, 20001tttleOI· au reeputlUI a '*"PO ..
ITEMS ING 81 FOOT HIGH APPUCATIONS, TELE· flee of FREEDOM Pl.ledt PtfOer .. c:uo, y
1. ZONING APPllCA· MONOPOLE ANO 2 PHONE (714)764·5245 ESCROW.A. 2 CIVIC le P'l4lderl Q4.ltar au
TION ZA·""80 FOR EQUIPMENT CABI· OR CALL AT THE OF· PLAZA :;UITE 200, aalatlo, auctne<oyotru
LIBERTY IN FOR MA· NETS, FOR A FACILITY ACE OF THE Pl.AN· NEWPORT BEACH, CA OOlll de au ~
TION MANAGEMENT 0 RIG IN Al LY AP NING DIVISION, ROOM 92660 lin avllO acSiC:IOtlel po< sys TE M SI l L 0 y 0 PROVED UNOEA ZA· 200. n FAIR DRIVE, Thia bulk .. ,. " SUI>-part• de II cortJ, WARMAN FOR A Ml· 0&-18, LOCATED AT COSTA MESA, CALI· jeclloC8hfoml9 Unilonn Eldflan otroa 1'9QW.SI·
NOR CONDITIONAL 31g7 AIRPORT LOOP FORNIA Commercl1I Code IOI legal .. Puede QI.le
USE PERMIT TO Al· DRIVE IN AN MP Published Newport Sectlon 8106 2 ,.. ustecf qu .. nt llamar a
LOW THE ADDITION ZONE ENVIRONMEN· Beech·Cost1 Mesa lllO•ubjett, the neme Ul'l lbogado
OF THREE ANTENNAS TAL DETERMINATION Daily Piiot February 14, and addteu of the Pt<· lnrnedllllmante. SI no
AND ADDITIONAL EXEMPT 2000 aon wkh Whofn Clllmt conoce a u11 •bogado,
POWER CABINETS AT 5 ZONING APPUCA· M789 moy be Ill ad la puede ll1mtr I • on
AN EXISTING SITE.: TION ZA..()().01 FOR KATHLEEN HUNTS· HIVk:IO de telereneia de
(ORIGINAL PROJEC1 HOllY SANDLER, AU· CNS1164923 MAN. 1bog1do1 o e une
APPROVED UNDER T'HORIZED AGENT Escrow No. FREEDOM ESCROW, 2 ollolna cla •yuda leoll ZA·9e·10l, LOCATED FOR SAMUEL B COR· 34112 KH CIVIC PLAZA, SUITE (Vea el Cll~rlo tele-
AT 3158 AEOHILL AVE· LISl JR/ARNEL DE· NOTICE TO 2 0 0 . NE w p 0 RT lonlco)
NUE IN AH MP ZONE VE OPMENT COM· BEACH, CA 926eO Ind CASE NUMBER: ENVIRONMENTAL DE· PANY. FOR A MINOA CREDITORS OF the last date for hling (Numwo del C8ao)
TERMINATION. EX· 'CONDITIONAL USE (BULK SALE cllJmS anau be Maren f, 9HiL-0093t EMPT • PERMIT TO INSTAU. SECS. 6"104, 2000 which 11 the bust-The name and ld-
2 ZONINGAPPUCA· THREE CORNER· 6105 U.C.C.) nessdaybeloretheaale dr ... olthecourtlr(EI
'TION ZA·99·87 FOR MOUNTED CELLULAR Notice Is hereby given date se>edhed 1bove nomb,.~ dl'9Cdon de la NEXTEL COMMUNICA· ANTENNAE ON BUILD· to ctedltors of the Within Dalad February 1, 2000 oorte ..
TIONS AUTHORIZED ING FASCIA, WITH named seller lhal. btlll< Zubie'• ChlcMo Coop, CALIF ANIA SUPE· AGENf FOR EVERT C A 00 F M 0 UN TE 0 sate is eboullo be made Inc , 1 ca11fomll ~ RIOR COURT. OR· Al.SENZ TR. FOR A EQUIPMENT CABINET of Iha assets described rallOO ANGE COUNTY, 4801
MINOR CONDITIONAL ON AN EXISTING below. BY; /I/ Salvador Jambof'H Ac»d, New·
USE PERMIT TO IN· COMMERCIAL BUILD-The names and busl· Jimenez Jimenez, pol1 Beach, CSlilorNa
STALL FIVE ANTEN· ING LOCATED AT 901 ness eddresses of tti. Preeldent 112660-2595, HARBOR
NAS ON EACH OF SOUTH COAST DRIVE Seller are Brenda R Publlahed Newport JUSTICE CENTER
THREE EXTERIOR IN A POC ZONE. Zubleta and John M 811ch-Co8ta Meu The name, address,
ELEVATIONS OF AN ENVIRONMENTAL OE· Zl.lt>lata. 414 NoM New· Da•IY P1lol February 14, Ind telephone number EXISTING INDUSTRIAL TERMINATION EX· port Boulevard, Newport 2000 of crou-oomplal,,.nt'I
BUILDING. LOCATED EMPT Beactt, CA 92663 M788 lltomey, Of cross-oom-
AY-3000 AJRWAY AVE· e ZONING APPLICA· The locallOO In Califor· SUMMONS ON plalnanl'1 wrthoUt an at· NUE IN AH MP ZONE TION ZA--00-03 FOR nla of the chiel executNe lom4ty Is: (El nombre, la
ENVIRONMENTAL DE· P H I L L I P R . olfial of the seller Is. CROSS-dlrecclon y 11 numero de
TERMINATION. EX· SCHWARTZE. AU· same as aboVe COMPLAINT 1alelonodel1bogadodel
EMPT. THOAIZEO AGENT As listed by the seller, (CfTACION demandante, o clal de·
3. ZONING APPLICA· FOR Mt; CARTHY all other business JUDICIAL) mandanta que no tlena llON ZA·99·6!J FOR C 0 0 KI SAK I 0 K A names and addresses NOTICE TO CROSS· aboQado, 81)
WATER CLEVENGER...1 FARMS·CUAOI· used by tile seller within DEFENDANTS (Avlso. PauT Rolf Jensen.i..~SB AUTHORIZED AOENT ENGLAND COMPANY. three years before the Acusado) NEWPORT t154013J. JENSl:N & FOR THE BETTY L. FOR A PLANNED date such lilt was sent SHORE ESCROW MclNTO::;H, 1201 South DAVIES FAMILY PART· SIGNING PROGRAM, or delivered to the bl.Iyer JOHN H SOlOMON' H1clanda Boulevard,
NERSHIP6 FOR A Ml· FOR METRO CENTER are: ZIJble's Ory Dock CONSTANCE WARM; Hacienda Helohts, CaU·
NOR C NOITIONAL AND EXPERIAN, IN· Restau rant, 9059 INGTON and ROES lornl1 11174~. (826) USE PERMIT FOR A CLUDING ALL PROP· Adams Ave., Huntington MO, lndollve 389·8722 RECORDING STUDIO ERTIES FROM 443 TO Beach CA 92642. The YOU ARE. BEING DATE: AUG 10, 1998
WITHIN200FEETOFA 595 . ANTON BOULE· Guilded Cage, '1112 SUED av CROSS· ALAN SLATER. Clerk, RESIDENTIAL ZONE, VAAO, IN A PDC ZONE. Placentia Ave.. Co$ta COMPLAINANT· (A Ud NOTICE TO THE PER·
LOCATED AT t374 ENVIRONMENTAL DE· Mesa CA 92628 le esta demandando): SON SEAVEO: You.,.
LOGAN AVENUE. #C, TERMINATION· EX· The' names and busl· CARLJ STEPHENS . HIV9d as 1n lndMdual
IN AN MG ZONE EMPT ness addresses QI lhe You have 30 CALEN· delandanl.
ENVIRONMENTAL OE· IF THE ASOVE AC· buyer are : Zubte'i OAR DAYS llter ll'lls Published Nawpon
TERMINATION· EX· T I ON l S) I S/ARE Chldlen Coop, Inc , a summons 11 aerved on BHch·Co1ta Mesa
EMPT CH AL ENGE D IN CA corporation, 414 you to ftle 1 typewrttlen Oalfv Piiot January 24, 4 ZONING APPLICA· C 0 U R T , T H E North Newport Or1Ye, response 111 thlt court. 3t t:ebruary 7, 14, 2000 TION ZA·99-70 FOR CHALLENGE MAY BE Newpon Beecl'I, CA A letter or phone cal ______ M7_5_1
HOLLY SANDlER, AU· LIMITED TO ONLY 92663 . wiR not plOlect you; your
The assets to be sold typew111ten reaPonH Fl~'"loua Buslnus era descnt>ed in general must be In proper leoat '""
IS ABC Ucense and In· form 11 you want ihe Name State.m.nt
~.~·,~· -=-·---· ...
~., •.#. .... ~ .. '!..O·
' ... """ ....... litlMl'lt
The tolcMtrlg Ptl90NI .,.. doing ~&I
Global n.cn ltltema· done!. 48 Fl.monl Ave ,
~a..an. CSlllOt·
Thomas Kenneth
lAmbert, ~ Fremont Ave , Newport BNctt.
C8llfomil 92683
This ~ II oon·
duded by· an lndlVlduel
H•v• r,ou atarted doUlg bu5 neu yet? No
ThOinu K Lambert
Thlt 1t11emant wae filed with the County
Clerlt of Or1nge County on 02-02·2000 2.000N1M2C
D•llV Pilot Feb. 7, 14,
21. 28, 2000 M782
FicthlOua BualMH
NerM Statement
The loltowing pel'IOlll .,.. dolna 'buslOeaa 11:
PreclslOnBllnda, 1117
B1.1clllngham Or. IB.
Cotta ,Mese, CA 92626 Geraldo Garcil, 1340 ElclalWOOd Or • Corona,
CA 91720
Thia buslneSS Is oon-
dUcted by. an Individual
Have you 11ened
doing bu11ne11 yet?
Yes, 08/1<W9
Geraldo Garcia
This statement was
ftled with the County
Clef1c of Oranoe County
on 02-02·2006" 2000681NH Dallv Pilot Feb 7, 14,
21, 28, 2000 M756
FICtlt lOus Busln•H
Name Statement
The lolloWlng peraons are doing business as:
Source. l:>na Pllotogra·
phy end Design StualQ, 729 W. 18th Street, SUlte B-2. Costa Mes..
Calllomll 92827
Karen R. Fedel. 729 w. 16th Stl'fft, Suite
B-2, Cos1a Mesa, Call·
lomla 92827
This buslnels IS oon:.
ducted by: an lndlvidual
Have you started
dOlng business yet?
Yea, 1I01/00
Karen Fadel
This statement was flied With the County
cterlt of Oranoe County on 02-00-2006"
20006811751
Delly PllOt Feb 7, 14,
21, 28, 2000 M783 "Affordable
Alternative"
Discount Casket,
Cremation&
Burial Service
ventOfY and localed al court 10 hur your cue The foltowtng Ptrtenl
414 Nof1tt Newport Bou· If you do noc Ill• your .,. doing business as: R etltJous Busln ...
response on lltM. you Vlll•~~Y Shop, Name Statement
Why should you subject
yourself & your family to
paying inflated prices for
caskets & services????
may ...... _ ...._ ........ ....... 2428 Blvd. •1.
,._ UIW _..., ..... Col Mesa CeJ4 The following l)tllOI\$ your wages, money and ....... ~ • lomla are~ bulJnns II: propeny may be taken uuu ....... -v without further warning JoeMe l<el~ Shletds, a) The Celtton Com·
LOCAi.
IAOITUAllE5
from the court. 18 Pleasent Walk, Aliso pen~. b) The Syzygy MCIFIC VIEW There .,,. other legal Viejo, Cenfomla 92858 Group, 2307 C Via MEMORIAL PARK requirements. You may Curt Is Ma 1th e w Puerta, Laguna Hlllt,
!Cemetery • Mortuary
Chapel • Crematory
3500 Pacific View Onve
Newport Beach
644·2700
PIERCE BROTHERS
IEU BROADWAY
Mortuary * Chapel
Cremation
nt t call lt ......... Y ShleldaAI 16 Pleasant Caltfomla 92653 we o an a .,.,_ c. ------R•llV\&rt r1-t •W•'1 "Un.ti do not Wa~ ISO Viejo, Call· ........... ........ "'' · •-lomle .,..,.,56 ~Carlton), 2307 C Vil know an attorney, you "'" may call en •"ome~e-This businesl Is con· uerta. Laguna Hiiis,
I I -"-1 ducted b h sban<I and Calitomla mss erra Nmuu or 8 wtle y: u This business Is con·
•Id olfloe (li$led In { d· ...... ed by·. an lnd"""ual phone book). Hive you started ""' ,.,.., Despues de qua le dOlng busfneu yet? No Have you started When you )Vrlle
entreguen .. ta cltaclon Joanna Shields dOlno busfnaas yet? No a Clanlned ad, •
JUdlcial Ulted Ilene un This 11.l lem&nl WIS C. 'rhomas Aoppert lneJude .11 1>lazo d e 30 DIAS ftlad with the County This statement was ..,
CALENDARIOS per1 Clerlt of Orlnge County Died with the County the facts
STARTING
ANEW
BUSINESS!!
• • • • • • • • • • •
. \ .....
l ..:·
call Toll Free 1-888-54CASKET
Sming Oraagt I Surrounding Cowltries •ICllfta 8 maqulna en 2000M17230 on 01-21-2000 ot asta oorte Oalty Pilot Jen. 24, 31, OaltP~ ~r~s:. rffulta
Un1 cane o una Feb 7, 14, 2000 M749 vou want -~--·--_ -·
Doily Pilot'
642·5678
presenlar I.Ila rapuesta on 01·20·2000 Oler1t of Onange County and get the Dail~BI
llmadl tetelontea no le 21, • 2000 M757 -·~· -~·A-1,;;;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;~------------~·----...IU• ............. 1........ ______ _._ _______ ~-------L---"77----~--~--~--------:..-1. f------~
110 Broadway
Costa Mesa
642-9150
...
Pllll COUNSEOO
fMI UST Of .o.ES
HU()VA REPOS
7t4-IM-tl00
11 [ •I 1•,i 'I '• :I • 1°1 •:
~n·1 ... mto
get to an lhOH
repair fobt
round the h<>'JN?
L4tt the ClaeetnM ••moe Dtreoterr
help you tines
191'-bf• help.
'f
'
, ... ...
ltt • llt
SERVICE DIRECTORY
-For All Your Home Mld Business Needs -......... ~ ..... ··-•• "'--..i • W ....... • Ml-HJI &Ml
'
Byfu
11.+1>) M I ·b l<>-t
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ByPbene
'>ill bi:!· ";(1"8
•
•THE• SHORES
APTS .............
By rtWHn Penom
I Ill \\ ,.,, H.1\ '-rn·•·I
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puhli.lwr rt'•l'f\ ,., llw n;il11 111 1·1·ri-iir. t1•d u .. 1f\ n•\ j,., or ri•11~·1
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hul1ilil\ for om rr111r 111 m1 11d\l·nt-.·r11rt11 (!1r \I hu h 11 lllU\ lw
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1h1· 1·t-n1r. Crnl11 1 J11 1111h h•· J ll11•1·1I for 1l1r f'ir~t t11•ntr1111
1•
r-------Deadllnes -~---.
Mond.i) .......... Frida~ .i:OOpm TI1uN.lay . \\rdn day S:OOpm
Tw•"'ldy ......... Monday 5:00pm Frida~ .......... Thuri.day S:OOpm
\\e•lnt':.da>····Tu<"da\ 5:lX)pm )atunloy ........... Friday S:OOpm
~...-.;,:
~ .. . .
}. •.~I;
Put a few wor s
to work for you.
Living In Luxury
@/1-
~itestvle ..
unparalleled ln
Orange County
• 24 Hour Goted
• Full hmt concllfQt llMCt
• Elegant one Of
IWO baOroom plOna
• Gotgaous Clut>hol.IM
Ftom •1 796to JS,100 ; • Lovtth pool, S90
1-8 77-681-7 38 7 i •Fitness fOclhtltl !
Sct11o 8aMo at Soil Oflf!fllll j
Ntwp«t Bt«h :
I
a·c ,__ IWINITll• . . .... ·•·"'·-·· ., '"
yYhen you're tuned into classified,
you're tuned into your community ..
9coily Pilot
FAIRWAY APARTMENTS
AT BIG CANYON
GATED COMMUNUY BY FASHION ISlAN
Beautlful tree-tined st.reels and golf course
vi.ws. Enloy carefree living In your large
2 BR apartment home!
• llNo-car gantge
• Washer/dryer hookopa
• Fll'eplace (wOOd & gaa)
• Air c:ondillonlng
•Wot bar
• $2,260 to S2,500
Plepe call (949) 844.()5()9.Q
Ano1hor Essex Commonlt ---
VYe~~Jffar/Aa
4<U<bnenu
Bqfront communicywith priva.tc beach
& marina. Walk to Balboa hland •hop•.
I ITEM TO
HOUSEHOLD
AN11QUF3
~
COUECTJ.BU:S
PAINTINGS
POTl'ERY
$CASH PAID$
DR!VER8-f\A T8(1), Eam !hi moit with c:om.
niledl Up to ~a/milt
'Aun Weslem or 418 siatet '401K. medical, dental, Ille ':!VI" OTRft yr ftllbtd
OWnef/Opelators welocmtl
C all Kathry n
1 ·800-29<>-2327 Combined Transport (CAL'SCAH)
HOTEL FRONT DEIR
CLElllC FT/PT *Ill train.
Colt• Meaa Motor Inn,
2277 Hari>ot B~d C:M
MliL ORDER PRESON TOp money Woll( 119U1ld
410 years yOUt IChedUle Call Carol
In Newport Beach 1400o2N-7862
949.673.6223 &p, p\~~.':a~~day
I 1 2~. No wttkenda. 450 APPUANCl8 a.t-271-41787
e Pil1rmacy Cltlk Typl11
•Admiral·Hea11y Duty : f~1:t11'"'KY TICh
Oryer·20pds EXU'a l&1ge WI WIH ltaln. Call tor Int~ wrinkle out. $100 . 949-642.0122 orFu ~Admlral-Heavy ou1y Resume to 949-642•9469 .:o~~:rw:~~OO ePT BOOKKEEPER ca• 71.,596-0703 •SERVERS e HOSTIESS
B GE FRIG for R1111ut'1nt In Costa
• o at alip1 available• $50 949•278·1001 Mtaa. CALL 94M45-8384
MinutH from Fa.ah.ion Jaland. &u.-
Luge apanmenu wilh wood burning ·
fireplace and private pragc.
Sorey No Peu B.tWMn 2:00 and 41:00
NOW LEASING 2BR/2BA MAYTAG MONDAY THRU FRIDAY
and 2BRl2BA with den ~~=~Y€6'NomoN. ·PIT R1emtton Lladtf
$1'95-$2800 $200. HW63·74n Must be polite and I i=;;:;:;;;=;;;;;;:;;:;;;;; courteous to dentete. Exe>.
Please call (949) 760-0919 I I not necessaty bu1 hetplul, .i1C·!!!!~~~~=i~!!!!!!!!!!!!~~ 452 BICYCLES ~2Mlrs wee1t. evenk1gs & • ·..: • • weekends. Great seCond
I! 55 HOUSRWNOOS I 204 RENTALS 6 s p fE D s c H w INN lob & worl<ilg enviromienll
I •Al ~A!![ TO SHARE CRUISER 1110 MOUNTAIN $6 25/IV. HM«-4664 ~ "'""" BIKE $100 for bolh, PURCHASING
COM 2B APT shera 8419-673-76141 IACCTS PAYABLE POS'
$1500/Mo, 2Sr 188 Ocnlrnl wlltm1t1. Share blth. ;;;;;;:;;:;;;;:;;:;;;;:;;:;;;;:;;:;;;;:;;:;;;;:;;:mo; lor smaB fast paced Co
"'e lum tndry1 gar+sp nu 2 blocks .. om "'~ I I "n~•ter e•,,,.rience and p';1nt/ca0rpet, long·short $600/mo. ~M75~';1· 454 FURNITURE ;;;'°~zalion ~b a must
tarm, nag. 323-665-6920 NEWPORT HEIGHTS '"· -----------'· SaJ8/y + lud t>eoefits. Fax
159 HOUSE&tOHDOS
FORAENT CORONA DEL MAR
Nfwer 2Br 1 Ba, pt8111ahon &tll.mers. patio yard, month-
monlh, $1500, pet ok w/iel
9-49-721-1338 91644-6812
COmfor11bl1 2Br 1 B1 u11 w/hardwood Roors,
replace. garage, smell
ard, $1695/mo AvaJlable
eb 15 Agt 949·675-4912
~NTALS AND SALES
I CHRIS EDWARDS
949-723·5061
lrst Estates Properties
160 HOUSESICONOOS FOR RENT COSTA MESA
•E"SIDE 48r 2.SBa
'HOUSE apprO)I .2700$1,
l!tar gar, enclosed backyard f400lrno 949-64S-1o56
Sida 2bt 1 bl new dtcof, •d. gar, dlnnn, laundlY kup, 21841 Eld«I $115~ mo. MM42-41110
h11t1n lelther sofa & love-resume to 714-445-9202 ~:!,RE& a~ .. ho~~~:~.:~ seal, news~~ wrapped, very RECEPTIONIST
SSOOIMO IM0-645-1336 sott, lop quality. Was S2000 Weeklnd• only In preatl-sac $890 9<19·261·9933 glou1 Ntwport 911ch
IMgt white enter1afM11nt R111 E1t1t1 office. Com· 216 RENTALS ctr 80"hlgh, 42" wldt, 20" puter 1nd ·phone aklll• WANTED d11p. Nicety made $200. req. PlteN fu rt1uma to
STUDIO WANTED/C.M.
Reliable & Employed
949-548-0599
714-545-4147 94t-717·7602 Att: Cliff
Ltg Stctlon.i w/queen size • SALES
hide-a·bed, $500 Also sola Comm newspQper grcrop \able. $50 949-759-4516 lboklng for Inside sale$ reps
949-650--4749. Should possess strong
I I Model Ilk• Octagon y,IO phone sales abihty, be 400 AHNOUNCOIOO be111l1d m1rbt1 b1Hd organized, & have Kini cusl
• • tibia. Plld $2700. uklng sei'vlce skJls sal +comm
POSTAL JOBS S70Q.01k Vtn1tr Armolr1 Beoef~ pllg Incl 4-0lk plan $48 32J 00 yr Now hoinq for clothlng or T.V. P11d Drug screenlng/phystcal
No experience . Paid lralO: '$900., nklng $225. reqd EOE. Send resume to
mg . great benefits. 949-644-5535 Mart<ey Danels, 330 West
Call lor lists 7 days OFFICE FURNITURE Bay St. Costa Mesa, CA 800-429•3660 'ext JIOO Ex1eu1lve dnk. Hon flit 92627 or laic resume 10
(CAL 'SCAN) cabinets, chalra & morel (949) 63 l-6594.
HERPES.EveiCLR M~S-9586 SECIBKPR..PT Prop M1J!11
Stops Herpes Outt>reakS! Secoor\aJ 6llilibOO SOia set Co Compuler skllls Call
96% success rare. Toll free $195. Gas trptc & g1o togs pager. 7141-2t2-2552 or lu
Hl77·EVERCLR m .MakJ1adrUf45, 16po resume9419-&14'·1908
Info. www.eve1clr.corn w!Wle plasllc patio lum+ Subtle tone· S (CAL'SCA~ beige mar11et umbrella $95
COUNTRY CONNEC· 949'223-0254 . TIONS Newsletter. He!Drt<:I Sof1 a Lo1111eat, 16pc Store Manager Wanted
rural ~ meet slncii dining HI & bedroom See~ Store Manager for
1986 Coohdenllal reputa· furnhure MM44-8046. our Colona del Mar Ptaz~ ble plan. Free details CCN, store. 2 yea1s management
po Box 406 Superior Ne-.,58 FREE De'l'C!J experience required. Subtle bfaska 68978 E·maicou-.. r,.•~ TOl18S ,offers a wonderful
n1ryconneciionsOkspress c /ANIMAL RESCUES womens appa1et, vin1age
ornJCAL 'SCAN) F11111I• dog Dltmltlonf ::rebe~~ i::
WOLFF TANNING BEDS Lib, loveable, 1 112 yr1 Ills. 401k and excettent
Tan al home! Buy Otret1 old, Ill lhol1, spayed. S20. salary olleted Fax r,llSUme
and Sa~el Commarct&V Sianna 941~58-1222 to the attention of $usal)
Home unrts lrom $199 00 FrM to ood home • Walsh/Human Resources Low monl~ly paymenls. Ptdlgrtt 1:u.1t 1y old 310-223-2940 Uve life in Free color catalog Call to-.,, r fort Su"'' T da 1·800·842·l3lO neutered male Greal with com ... -.. .,.,e ones
(CiL'SCAN) other dog$ 949-722·t807 .... SUBTLE TONES
1114 __ ._ In NB seeks lrtenc11'1 outgo-• ,__..,_ : • • • • • • • • • •: 1466 MERCHANOISE I 1og s.i.. People. to.30hrs ~~ : HERSHEY : WANTED ~w~~rgJM
•• I NEVER REALIZED• Plaza)orcal949-640-278t
Baycrest Dov1t Shores • THAT ONE PERSON • COAST COIN HEEDS Ask IOI Coleen . ~ba 2800 aqll, • COULD LIGHT MY • OLD COINSI Gold, sllVer. .
1-n.li. " ranch style : WORLD UNTIL I : jewelry, watches. antiques, VETERINARY D-A't
1_ ... -; $3500/tno Agent • FELL IN LOVE WITH • collectitiles 949-642·9447. and TtQI for'~
MMS0-9093 • Y 0 U . H A P PY • TOP S$SIRECORDSI anlrnal hosp. Exp
BEACHI Quiet, • VALENTINE DAY . Jan, A & B, Sou~ Aoc;k, prafe1red. Plaase
2br 2b1 condo • Wm1 LOVE CESAR • etc. 50'8 & 60's apply In person 81 Mo c=r::, ally-: X•X.X• X• : MIKE 949"6415-7505 1206 S.E. Blrat.o~
a, SHOO 73·5214 • tt • • • • • • • • • • Slllta Ana Height•
Creel 3Br+hg bonus/ 1 ·-I 474 WORK' (7141)754-1033 , HBa. ~·'IV. 150051 ~' LOST & WANTED \ .~a~;11a:..c,ue~~reat FOUND. Wicks Furniture
t•ltllfy neighborhood '"Lo_1_t _b_t-1c_k_&_b-ro-w.Jn HOUSEMAN MGR ~~~~l.9W~Kir..,
Open Sun 11 '3, 11118 ,....,....,. W "'"" vn "" L.awlrd l.n 941~5741-5552 s"'"'.,... 11bbY cat, lhon ants to mangage CLERICAVCUST SVC
RENT7LEASE OPT. 38r hair, ltmalt. Vicinity Nlw· large estate or home CONCIERGES wpoft Bch H St, Ii E lxP In mulliple cklties, Corporst1 benefit pack·
388 m1rt estate.~ Balboa Blvd 04t-n3-07'1 cooking & serving, age Included. Full and :::v~.3850 1.--------.. animal & car care. Xlnt Pitt tlm1 po111Jon1 1va11.
412 CEMETERY Refs 94M31-41134 ~~r~ ~~~ .. ..=
BIO CANYON L0,,8 ,.......~ .. BROADMORE ·1 Blvd, Coet1 Mell
Willi toe 4Br 3Ba, ~ Piclflc Vfiw Memorlil 1478 EllPt.OYMENT I 4 PHONE REPS. odcupancy, xlnt oond, trg Park. Corona dtf Mar. OM OPPOATUNITlES Full tllnt. eneigellc IOI yr~. 1 year lease $45()(){mo Plot In Vlati dtl Mar, ~--.... -----' Moftgage Co. earn to $600
949•723-0940 or Discount Prlc1 $4,500. ADMIN ASSIST +week + benelllS, sales 949-509·8863/pgr (M9) 873.a.494 Chris. PIT. In reined ocean 1ront exp Pfel'd. Conllc1 Melissa
t 81Q CANYON• Pacific View Pr1me location ofc, data entry, clerical, mcsc 949-2SO.S719
2BR 2BA condo UPIC•lt Magnolia Court, hillrop duties 714'536•1618 II ,..78 ~Sl!IMCES-1 fuml1hln91, h11dwood double cremation niche .. ...,....,,_..,
1111, go" courN views. 9419-706-0907, 91278-4601 $2000/mo. ltHe Agt ApL Man1g9r Tt11n
a.M40-7000x301 I I Management team Wf -------440 MISCEU.UEOUSFOR •••I! strong teasing and ._.. BLUFFS ~ maintenance skills Sll.tnnng 3Bdrm 2.58ath needed Rent and
n4ar 8adl Bay and Newport GATEWAY COMPUTERS salary in ei«:hange for 8Nch Tenois Club $25ro' F ol 18 "" Mo.Jigtc!I. 714-576-1212 .... ac1ory·dlrect manegemenc u ...
viCUBALBOA 2 18iga ~en'i:i ~v.e:': = ~~: ~ mstr bf, 2ba, frptc, W/O able Some credit Pfoblem$ C1ll (714)633-54'06
PIHM bl IW .... 1hlt
the ll11lng• In 1hl•
cat19otY m1y require
you to call a toO
·number In which
the<• 11 a charge I*
mlnut1.
hklJl)5, newly remod ~ OKI Call by Feb 18, for free
carpet. Galed comm. pool, pr 1 n t e 1 OM c Batk Office Aulstant I,~=======
spa, le!hs lnsldt 2 car sp, 1·800-477-9016 Code I De ..,J,.,.., off' ·-w= 1 lgpatkiwloonvtew Nopetsl EC07 (CAL'SCAN) or rmat~, I08, .....,
smoke$1650949-644·5370 VINTAGE Experience only.
•LIDO ISLE• Dom P«lgnon 1vllllbl• _F_a_x_t_o._· 7_1_4-84 __ 8-6643 __
4bt 3bl, new carpte, f,,,ic. 1964 a 'f966 vlnttg11 11" ,.,,..,.,,.,,..,,, .... •
v1ullad call't. Lt111 Call t4M42..:1909 ! .. BARBEQUESo :
13000.lmo. No doo•. 224 WOLFF TANNING BEDS GALORE
Via lthlca a1o-en-ma TAN AT HOME NOW HlRINOI ..
LIDO ISlE BUY DIRECT ANO SAVEi " FUN SALES ENVIR. ~
Chamwlg 28r 2Be hOmt, 2c COMMERCIAUHOME • Some sales exp :
, t0, lrplC S199stmo u111S l1om S199 00 • ntedad FT 1oam-~0~~941;;9;;c..e~7fi6-4fn9~12 Low~ P11ymtn1 • 7irc Slart$7/'ll00fup OC /Ctt1lln1 CFRallEEt·~7rlc:-Otatoo1 ( OE) 8enel pkg vltwlt Remodeled house .,.,.,,.. G158 avai. Af1Pfy O
PIHM bl WlfY Of out
of area companlte. Chtd *llh 1hl loul
8at1lt Buslntn Bu-
ruu bllor't you 11nd
any money Of Ml
for ffNletl, Raad
and undlfllend any
contr1Ct1 bttora you
•Ion. 4000ll 4br den 3 5ba $7500 I;:;=:;:;;;;===;;:;::; Bart>eques GalOfe
2nd r~ hOu5e Sbr 448 Wn1QulwMf • 2338 tta,rbOI Blvd , : SC Rt ,
3ba ctlY •~s wlmountaln ~ " Costa Mesa 10 C88tl toe Eam 11000 + ~lulhy1td$5500 ., (OIHitelnleMflw) ,. weak, FREE video.
.... 7$0 Ag1 Robtt1. WANTED ft .... • ...... .... •• 800-387·9418
-------" 11.,....;,.::;~~~===-=u BOOKKEEPER PIT s years H'Otitst BOS oppo;twntry I t I NTIOUES IXP Sand 1M001t 1118rf tor 2000 Silver & gold cob ROOMS ~s to MM7 ... "21 or Cell Joe ..... ~4 l 1.0ii1'EMT · oidefStYl;Mmt'" call IWM16.0104. ElRH UOK HR YEAR.
· __I · l"IANOS tr Coflectlblff CiDICll fllOtif10Ni Easy me<tcai bllllo for ._._.. • •-12·111hr. No e11p. Nee local phyllCtlnl Fui sup-.,, .. _ ........ ·O-.·--FT/PT. Full ltntflt1. f>M ~r lr1Cf modtin $$CASH PAID t• 1-IOCM7l·U4e X2024 r 1 q u I t t d . C I I I _ ............. -;:::======::. 1~. bl 186 WI BUY ISTAR9 (CAL'SCAH) ·l~Mlnendlf•..-!c• Pelf~ , •• IAT'l IATtMNn
... MY llOM PA1191" "''""' StMct Pr~ 8ldltd by work Ntwutand s 911on Corp Dlllnltly meeeme 'MS Ofllct Qlound lloof oPPOrtutty ~ l11p htlplll f"'PI ~ $50 ""1111)
20·30h!l/Wk FU 8t fll 111 In your. *9111
l'9IUllle T14-tA·m2 Coll ta-59H0141
(CAL"ICAH) ~.P151amn"1inl~I iMdCJta:Lliii ING a t I( ~ ll'ICOIM S36K PYCCte1 '*""1ol c:Mil'nl
Stevena Trlf\IPOr1·0TA lOOll ...._. 6 oo. •
l i7miliriiiriiiiiirl ~ _,... ..... .... -... ICINllM4S7 ~"'"""""*'' ...... r====~----_,;.;..;.....;..;.;......
By CHARW GOREN
wllh OMAR SHARIF
and TANNAH HIHSCH
ANSWERS TO Wl'.f.Kl.Y llRIJ)C.I' Qt:Jl
Q I · Buth vuln<irabk: •• b SOlllh you
huld .
e\W c:>AKJ9876 OAQlll •Q65
The b1ddin11. has PfOCeeded· soum WE.'\'T NORTH EA!>r
l o Pass I e p~,
!
Wha1 do you btd now·l
A • S mce pllt)ncr 's one-spade
response ho..\ done n0thtng to
tmPfovc your hand, 11 m1gh1 llCeM
prudent to jump W> only three he.im
However, lhcrc 1s no way panner
c:in tell which catds in the Nonh
luind arc wnrkina so, rather than pu1
p3nncr under pressure.Jump to four
hcans. ·
Q 2 • Both vulm:rnblc, ~South )Ou
hold:
e K Q 10 6 o 7 4 O All 4 • A Q J 5
The b1dd1ng has proceeded.
NORTH EA!>T SOUTH WEST p~~ lo i'a:..~ l e 2e P:iss ?
What do you bid now"
~ • An already good hand ha.s been improve~ by panner's t:11se Howev-.:r, you must start br finding 001
more about panoer s hand. so we
suggest you bid duce cluhs now If
there •~ slam in the c:irds. fl.Inner
will have to ~how :1 hean control
S<1mewherc alnng 1hc hnc
Q 3 · Neither vulm:rnbh:. .is South
you hold:
.• K '> 6 Q A Q tO 6 SJ O 2 • A K Q
1ne htdd11111 hM procced..:d·
SOlf rH WEST NORTH EAST Piw lo::1 Pass J<:i ?
What do you bid now'
A • Regardless of whet:her y<•ur
jump raises are hmtt or forcing. th1~
hand is perfect for Blackwood. With first· °'second-round conttol or
every suit. the final contract will
depend only on how many :k.~ and
kt ngs panner holds.
Q 4 ·Buth vulncrJhlc J' So>ulh ''"'
hulJ
e 11 ! J O 111 7 5 l O V fl 4 ! A \II
P.irlncr ore••~ the t11J1l1ng wtth '"'" no trump Wh.\l do you rc~f\'1"<1 '
A • Ou nut p.1\S an 1lp:n1nl! but ol
t wo no 11u111r when ynu holJ Jn .i.;c
Hcrll. ho,.,cvcr. the h.ui.J 'houlJ pl.1~
bc:ttt:r m 1M:Jn\ 11 pJn111:r hnllh hlui
canh tn the ~uH yuo m1gh1 he ahll'
10 SCOfl.! .1 rull or 1wu 1n one hand nr
the other. B1J thr('c duh,, the St.iv·
man C'onventh>n, to died. o>n p.ui·
nc() l1uldt0i,i
Q S • Nrtthcr vulncral>k. a\ South
you hold
\
'The b1ddin11 h.1~ rm.:ccdcJ
SOl..TH \V~ST 'Ol<Tlt
to P~ •• 2• P:iss ?•
?
Whut do you hu.l nu" •
FAST Pa.~' l'aio..
A· Partner\ \paJc 11:h11J J,-.J, not
pmm1'-C much m the way of poml!.,
but ti Jt>C\ l!UJr.llllCC at ka.'t j ,,~.
.:ard suit E'en ti vou have tu h•-.c
two trump tnd,:., y11u ~huuh.l \Liii
have e>1cclleni plJ~ lnr lll 111tk\. Bia
four ~p.iJc~ A !.11\e tu three 'f111Jc11
1sclearcut. JOd .,.~ wuulJ nur 1th1ec1
ht J folt-hh)(xlcJ lcJp to c!Jlllc
Q 6 • B1>1h 'ulncr.1hl, J' <;11u1h 'nu
hnld
Ilic btJthng hJ\ pni.:0.:1..,Jcd
NOR I H F..\Sl SOU Ill I ·~ Pol3.S l •
2¢ . ""~ '! Wh.11 Jctmn ,J,1 ynu 1.11.c'
A. • Thi\ h.md ha\ all the c.irmail.s
o( a mt\lit. anc.l 11 would tic <langcr·
nu, tO Jrtvc the aucuun 1ny higher
Do n111 c'vcn thtnl. ul b1JJm~ rm
1nirnp. Thi:rc "n•> c;(lurcc oi' lfKI.' ,l\IUl~bk.
1~ ~11 115 ~~1 69& CARS/TRUCKS NANSJSUVS
CREDIT PROBLEMS? BMW 5410IA '97
Late Payments? Tax Uens? (53315) $38,850
Judgem«lts? Bankrupecy? StERUNG BMW
Foreotosures? ~7 MM45-5900
JUST $399 BUICK COUPE ·n
110% Money 8d ssoo. 714-4;32.0338 Guarantee To Get Your Credi! Back In BUICK SKYLARK 92
Order Anll Let Your Bright (Luxury Grand Spot! V6 'Future Begin. angina LGS) 6 cyt, AT,
Call 949-678:9009 i..:~:.,!~,;,.~.W::~~::
Ask for Pallc $7500/obo HM5Q.411410
Independent Aeptesenwes CADiLLAC CATERA '97
ol ICR SeMces Lo '™'es· beloe, 1an leather,
A BILL FREE UFEI aftoys, bal or wan. & more•
ConsOlidale Ind reduce (019216) • $17.988 your det>I payments Im-NABERS
mediately and conllden-(714)54o-9100
llaly. ~II debl lree CADILLAC CATERA '98
prosperity for. your lanjy. Lo 15k miles, sliver leathet
ACCC, · non-proltt. ran f'llOOn(OOf co bal ·A' warr' 1-8118-Blu.FREE .,. ' ' "' '
JAGUAR XJ6 L '97 SEDAN 40
$35,09$ 9]-4888
BAUER JAGUAR
714·953-4800
Jaguar XJ6 Venden PIH
Sedan 4Dr '96
$36,095 06-41654
BAUER JAGUAR
714·953-4800
Jaguar XJ6 Vandln Plas Stc!1n 4Dr '96 $37,095 96-4503
BAUER JAGUAR
7141-953-4800
Jaguar XJ6 Vanden Pl11
Std•n 4Dr '97
$39,KS 117 .. 758
BAUER JAGUAR
'7141-953-4llOO
Monday, February 14, 2000 9
TODAY'S
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
ACROSS lo 'Goodbve
I Gl•lci< OI OOt<'9 Pltlfl' PftEVIOIJS ~ 90l YID>
5 FOOi pan 8 1 Wild OUC1t 8 Sou/Id of r•b•t 62 Bt•llr
12 Act ~kl I Qt\Otl 63 Comput&I •t'I"
'" The otljet peopl6 6"' Ar1•St Wlrtlal I 5 Locale &5 Double agent
16 Pro10tn-bulkling ee Htll>tt fOf acid snon
17 F •Died raee IOMlr DOWN
18 t.Jquors 1 Melv1"41 ~1111 19 UnshOd 2 IWOdllott monk
21 Cause 3 N•tura~st
23 Wd'lter complliont John -24 Go" stlndatd 4 01aiu.1 Fran!. •
25 Deroy 5 Not lh4S 2tl E.tpired $ Abov• to poet~
30 Am.que 7 Green ,aw11s
32 "°48try sectlllty 8 Long SIOfY 33 Mlllleup 1emover 9 Kind ol saner
37 Wolk In water 1 O ltahllf po(!
38 Pumps and 11 Ooesn 1 own toalers ' 13 Chewy candy
39 Laich -00tain 14 Com"'81\dmef\1
~ 1n1u111 • IO'fll Slatter 42 Brdn<:O-nci.ng 213 Ouldateo ev41tlt • 22 Runn1!1Q back
43 Honk& DieJ<el$0n 44 ThlCkOI 24 1902 erupter 45 Luau fare 26 Vu!QiV "8 Votes against V Jal -
49 St Idly frutl 28 Seed· SO Onftlng about COl'l18ln4m 52 Stubbo•nly 2!I Hardy wneat
57 Blend 30 Ongm 58 F1rs1 garden 31 SmO Ilk• a.t>g
12
16
57
STUMPED? Call tor Answe15 • '"'°' .,.,.Ot~ -•~cw..,... 1·900-370.9800 eid code 500
695 CARS/TRUCKS NANSISUVS 695 c~~.:. 1695~ I
JAGUAR XJ6 '88 VANDEN M1rcury Villager OLDSMOBILE Cleft '86 PLAS 4-door lull pwr sur N1ullc1 Wagon 97 Stwagon, low 53k mites, 3rd
1 wt wheels ' $111.995 117-41851 sea1 & morel • roo ' re 1 owner, BAUER JAGUAR (360019) $8.988 records, really clean car 7141-953 4800 NABERS $4.500 949-7~·1504 •
JAGVAR XJ6 '97 ~ERVCEOES BENZ 300E (714)540-9100
SEDAN 40 90. R~an Lomser pkg, Oldamobilt Silhouette '99
$35 995 97-4363 towered, ltnted. lmmac GLS, betge tan lthr, low 11*
'BAUER JAGUAR 100 .. km1, (2RJR804) mi. CO. dual dOOls & l!lOfat
714-953-4800 $16,000 pp 949·673-0244 (175525) $21,988
JAGUAR XJ6 •97 NISSAN SENTRA GXE '95 NABERS
SEDAN 40 ' 5 Spd Ma™al:4 Or, White (7141)541().0100
$36 995 9J-480l ·G1ay Interior, Xln1 Condi·
'BAUE.R JAGUAR ~al~e ?or ~~al c.:1 7141-953-4800 Great Ci
MERCEDES EJOO ,99 $6750 Clll 949-581-3012
Turbo diesel, RAREI s ELL 36 months remain~ 0 m.~.01i'.'~p:r,o~ your home
Tan IOldedl !M9-72o.9796 through classified
P\. YMOUTH G.RAND
VOYAGER 92.'6~, trOll &
rear '4/e, loaded all pwr
$5.400 714-608-1657
TOYOTA CAMARY SE
COUPE '94 98k !TV 6 cyt,
fully loaded )(Int cond, .~
ownr $7000 949~
(2-ls-5373).(CAL•SCAN) (02236:4) NABERS $2l •9B8
DEBT OOHSOUDATiON. (714)540-9100
Lower paymel'llSI Slop. ltle CADILLAC Con court '97
leesl Slop 01 r~ in-295 K.P., Nortt1s1ar. tow
1818$11 Slop coleclor callsl miles, Sea M°tSI, tihr & more
Farnil'f Creclic ~. (21~) $26,988 NonilrofA ChnS1ian AgMi:y. NA8ERS Recorded musage. (7141)54'0-9100
. l-800-729-79&4 CADtiUC DEVILLE '!16 (CAL!';c~adrl.org Low~. wtile. tan lntenor
V-8 NortllStat, xlnl cof1d (279825) 117,988
NABERS ( 714 )540-9100
CAOtlUC DEVILLE '97
Ar1 you drownl"9 111 V·8 Northstar, Sapph11e
overdue blll1? Statawldt Bloe, ba 01 warr A~y can llelp you !I« (283272) $21,988
blclt on top with any NABERS
financial dllllculllu, (7141)540-0100
bu1tna11u, homu1 CADILLAC DEVILLE '!Ill
boll!•, 'hive vlCallon Incl V·8 Norths1ar, low 18k
personal. 8n·S3&-1454 mites, teatner, balance or
I Wllranty, PfevtOUS renlal '" -1 (76209) NABERS $25,988
HERE·'S A GREAT
WAY TO GET
CLIENTS COMING TO ·vouR DOOR!
~~. (714)540-9100
BOAT SffOW SPECIAL Cldilltc Eldorldo '98 INFLATABLE Low miles, V8, Nolths1ar,
OUTBOARD MOTOR ~""· bal ot Wllll & more•
.,..BL.,..o...,w_OUT,,_1...,.1....,M_M42 __ ·262--....8 6t2740) NABERS $29,988
1 i 9 6 S E A R A Y (7141)540-11100
SUNDANCER 27FT. 100 CAOILLAC sevhta ·oo
hrs. Incl 1tllndld warr. Bit mleS! 8tlge tan ntv
157,000 NM441-1170 co. bal. °'wan, Prv renw'
. (1412872) $39,988 1 • .'81 . P1=~00
Llltlt Balbol .... Private CadlflllC Clttfl Sdn '97 • $21,995 117-41868 pier slde·lit, Wiier, elac11ic, BAUER JAGUAR lakes 30ll S300 pe1 month 71ws3-4800
94M75-S717 MOORING FORD xlf RANGER ·111 N 8MCh TNek. &1t1 Cllb, black/
ONewporlW ..,. black, S spMd, 2.3, AC, ...., S900 am.fm c111, Hk m~ ll1ra,
949·723-542' xtre ctunl B1dllner wlkfto ••IP '°' Htt s10,to0 MM3t•1a
boll!. L1111e "' B11>o1 a RONDA CiVic ex 'tS 8albot PtnlntUlt l)ftl'd. wtc, loaded, ldnl cond, IO'# ~ Dan 949•574'-2003 mi, bouf111 new car n..i5t sea seeoo obo !M9-515·3n41
"""'"' QO s.dan 40 'M 114,MS 9M175
IAUS. JAGUAR
71 •.f53-4't00
JAGUAR VANOEN Piii 91 ~. tacelltnt eondl11on, ONLY TOKm~ Mutt Stal S12.700 t4M51_.,44
JAGUAR XJt L 97
SEDAN4D
SM.tel 91~$2 IAUER JAGUAR
714.f53.4t00
Tt.ie Dally Piiot wl l! pub lish a
Ta x & F 1nancla I 01 rectory to
assist our readers In finding a
ta x professional. Reach ing over
40 ,000 homes In a high -e nd
market, you are sure to find
many who need your help.
A sm art move on vour part
would be to take advantage of
our lncredlbly low rates and
Only $3 5 place your ad with us
per week If you sign up for the
entire 17 weeks. or a minimum 4-
week run at $40 per ~eek .
TAX TIME
IS COMING
TOI,_ -.21M0M °' 11-....Jlt.¥~~~-H ,..oo.n3·1HS EOE noomi. -....!~~!!!!~-11-..;;;.;;.;.;-.-~---.. =-=a GUW N>tl=t•,
Size of
Ad M ..... "°""~"° CUSStPID ....... · Clatdllct
II 1 the NtOUrClt yo\I Ir., 1 . CM ..... fy
ctNO counl on to ... • .mnaw
tnyYIM al ""'°'*'"' W. l*td NIP llDW! ll'T IOOd ~ die• ltelftt • .....,.. dlllllOl,......tlonlCCMIO houUlgneects.
our itC": ...,... = Cillmlll _. '*--::; ...... ~ ..• :::'.':'·a: 111:11• ,,. TN .... 1311•2
2x2
' ' '
•
TAXES
TAX It ACCOUNllNC
hoFESSIONAU
~
...-1111~ """-* • I • J '1ys wi1UAL
UI QI ~Sl-'67'
. ~-j . ' . ,.
'< . .• 1.. . .. .,. .. ··-
OU·
VALENTINE'S DAY, 2000
BARBARA,
AFTER "35 YEARS .. , I LOVE YOU
MORE THAN EVER.
YOUR CURMOOGEON
I
EXPERT CLEAN-UP
T IMS·Pnine<WRemoved Non-tcenMd eotmcUlf
714-751447f
GARDENING
Retl~e & Ouaily WOl1t at
Rel$0Nllll Rates Cal Ed eanen at Mll-54W371.
lMldtcape SOd lirlgatlon detaching, tree care &
1emov111, galdenilg & clean up can Al 11+963 .... 974
PUBLIC
NOTICE
The Calif PUbllc·
Ulilltles Com·
mission REQUIRES
lhat all used house-
hold goods movers
print their P.U.C.
C8I T number; lmos and chluffers pnnt
their T.C.P. number
In all advertlsments.
If you have a ques·
lioo about the legal·
1ty ol a mover, limo
or cheuffer. cah:
PUBLIC UTILITIES
COMMISION 714-558 ... 151
HANDMADE OW
WORLD PAINTS
INTUUORIEXTEJUOR
IMf»rm/ fiwri AJ.st,./u
UMEWASH
BON COTE
FRESCO
MILK PAINT
~i-""·· .•.
"-~ 'J ~ ........
AU TYPES~ !3Q9f!~ 71N714UZ
I
I
DOily PU&
. .
.~ • :l' ~
·~; . .. )
I I ~ . . . . ,
E11H1~ T1t1P ,, ....... ~.,
Cl'llla I· U I Miits
C.Ompos11Joft & 0101 skills, Convmo11onol (ngl11h, Om111m lot rovt~ 141·144·jlf5
1• ' -I 4 J
1( ..... -.~· J
·... ·"''t . ")
9 OOU>E.H WEST 9 WINDOW CLEANING
SIUSlec:tion GuatllfllM Uc'~ MM31·15a2
'' 111 1 ' noon
l>C )( I C >Ii
Window Screen
Screen Dool'$ etc.
Free Estimate
We malct' hou~ calls
714.641.3119
ll's all the1c
every day
111 ClasslflocJ
642-5678
CA1 L LORRAINE Ar
• • • •
<1•••.Jfap •• .,
ValenXfe's
Co ""I rli4m1u '!raJ, Clwk anJ ~lftt tool
J:,qw Yo• ................
'
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