HomeMy WebLinkAbout2000-02-16 - Orange Coast Pilot. •
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SERVING THE NEWPORT -MESA CO,vJ.AUNmES SINCE 1907 WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 16, 2000
Steve Marble
NOTEBOOK
Internet readers
are co1ning out of
cylx!r-woodwork
T hc1nks to the Internet, I
now htiVP rriends and
enemies throughout
the world.
A sense of closure
• Some business owners
say revenues are down •
since the old supermarket
left the shopping center
on Harbor Boulevard.
And,.w Glazer
DAILY PILOT
COSTA MESA -Retailers at
a quarter-century-old shopping
center on Harbor Boulevard are
feeling the squeeze from the
brand-new Harbor Center.
The aging shopping center's
largest tenaJ}l -a Lucky super·
market, tu1'rled Albertson's
moved down the street ldst
month, sucking with it thousands
of regular customers.
'
. space-dge steel and curves ot the
Harbor Center.
But it' is hard to predict how
businesses m the sboppmg cen-
ter -which now has a gap dS
conspicuous as a 6-yedr-old's
smile -will survive.
"We're going to lose· a lot of
mon,•y u they don't do something
fdst. • said Llnda Vmiegra, owner
of Gourmet Water, a store selling
cup<; of fresh 1wces and water by
the JUQ ·we would move closer
to where Albertson's is now, but
it's 1ust too much money.•
Viniegra said she renewed the
store's three-year ledse ldsl y<>dr
without being told the supennc)r-
kct wouJd be moving. ShP Sd id
shf> ledmed dbOul it soon aftpr
she i;igned the lease.
Once upon u time -back
when the> mail was delivered
by the postman -I managed
to disappoint, anger or con-
fuse only those who picked
up their f><lper on tho dnve-
way or the local news rack.
It's not difficult to imagine why
the supermarket moved from its
dilapidated; wood-shingled,
orange-tiled digs to the shiny.
"And whdt we know was Sf'C-
ondhdnd mformation, • she said
"I read dbout tl ma magazme."
SEE CENTER PAGE 5
MARIANUA DAY MAS'fl' I DAll,'I' I'll.OT
The old AJbertson's grocery store, formerly Lucky, sits vacant ln the
2800 block of Harbor Boulevard.
But the• Daily Pilot is deliv-
e red on the Internet along
with everything else, widen-
ing my chdnces of offending
readers
dOd
throw-
ing me
mto the
cross
hutrS of
pPople
I don't
know
who liv<•
LO pldCCS
I have
nevPr
Sometimes
the Internet
leads you into
a part of town
where you
really didn't .
want to go.
~1t u dnd believe m things I
don't understand
A strnngPr m a strange
ldnd
Sometimes the responses
are quuky, womsom.,, twist·
ed. Sornetunes they cite more
of an aside, like the person is
situng nght next to you. pdt·
ting you on the back, when,
m fact, they are wnti.Og you
from Vermont.
Last year, I wrote a col-
umn about the city's mability
to grow grass at a soccer
complex tn Costa Mesa.
They'd been at 1t for months
and JUSt couldn't make a go
of it. They could pave streets,
prune trees and pick up
trash. But they couldn't grow
grass. And as a consequence,
the kids couldn't play soccer.
Dan from Quincy, Ill. was
the first to e-mail me.
"Gypsum. Did they try
Gypsum?"
That was it. the entire
message. Just a little bp
floating in from the Midwest.
Gypsum. And did tbPy use
1t? Now, I suppose they did.
Never really checked. But
then you tart thinking:
Maybe he knows someone
on tho city's lawn detail
ndJTlcd "Gyp. um" and he
wants to know whether they
used him because he's the
king of growing grass.
Someone named Rod from
the Bay Area dropped me a
kind UtU<> note after I wrote a
column about my personal
· sickness of being a Rams fan
and the bitter Monday mom·
ings whE'n I would realize,
SEE MARBLE PAGE 5
BOARD MEETING
OON LEACH I OMV P1lOT
A surfer cruises the face of a huge wave off 21st Street in Newport Beach on Tuesday. Recent storms
pr~duced large swells. at west-facing beaches, much to the enjoyment of surfer . See story, Page 4.
Planners reject proposal for developlllent
• More than 100 residents
from a Costa Mesa
neighborhood oppose the
90-home project; developer
expected to appeal.
And,.w Glazer
Dally Pilot
COSTA MESA -The Plan-
ning Commission on Monday
night narrowly re1ected a local
developer's request to build 90
homes m Mesa Verde as more
than 100 residents from the area
pressed oty oUtcials to block tho
pro1ect
The commission voted 3-2
against Cosw MeSd-based Stun-
See related
story on
Pege•
dard Pacific's
plans to develop
a vacant lot on
Adams Avenue
and Mesa Verde
Drive, even
though city planners srud the pro·
1ect conformed with city codes.
The lot iS actually designated for
more them 90 homes, said Perry
Valantinc. an official with the
oty's planning department.
But more than 100 re idents .
flooded council chambers to
oppose the prowct Monday rughl.
Approx1matPly 30 homeowners
told the commission that the pro-
ject would rill the neighborhood's
small stre ts with cars, the n<>arest
elemP.ntary SC'hOOI with extra clill-
dren and the landscdpe with
homes that didn't match.
"The ne1ghborhoo<l came
t<?{Jcthcr and mud<• them realize
they nc<~ded to tdk' a closer look
at the project,• said Rohm Leffler,
a Mesa Verde homeowners' board
SEE PROPOSAL PAGE 5
Petition drafted for footbridge at new elementary school
• Angry Newport Coast parents say they may not send their
children to the new school unless safety concerns are met.
Denette Goulet
DAILY P!LOl
NEWPORT COA ST -Angry
r sidents have now drafted a peti-
tion demanding 11 footbridge be
constrncted near the new elemen·
tary achool, claiming their previoul
requests have fallen on deaf eart.
•The rounty ii dragging their
feet.• aald Diana Snider-Henion, .
one of the parent adVOCA9t• for the
proposed rootbrtdp •we're not
getting a lot o1 ~· I ddlik
8Veryone 11 trying lo J>U1 it olf. •
•
Newport Coast Elementary
School will sit on the rom er of New-
port Coast Drive -a six-lane high·
way with e 1peed limit of 60 mph -
and Park Ridge Road, a street With a
steep incline that doet not yet have
e speed Umlt. Parenti aay they are
terrified that a IChOOl·bowld child
C10ll1ng the busy highway ~ be
ltruck by a lpeedlng car.
The group hu Implored Orange
County omdall to l'9Mdy the situ·
atkia by low*tnO •the lpeed limit
and bitldtng two pedl ..........
~ to prowtde _,. pwaga foi
0
"People are extremely
upset. They are not going
to Jet their children walk
to school and this ls not a
driving school -it itt not
set up for it."
Dl8na lnlder-HeMon
Parent ldvoatte
..
assu urrounding the new school
•p oplc are extremely up t,"
Snid r·H nson a1d. •Th y are not
going to 1 t their children walk to
school and this is not a drivtng
• chool -it ls not set up for 1t. •
Tho school ii tchedUled to open
thi1 fllll with 3'° ltudentl, most of
whom live Within a twO<\mlle radius
of th school, Mid Dana SchonWit,
the enutve \ik:e pielkkmt ol the
PTA b04rd.
Although parents t..ve many
tratftc concerm -Wth •.a Id ol
puking and .. med far a.mg
guards. bUnkUlt ......... .......
•J>Md·limlt ..... -tbe -... of .........
Pro-airport .
fore es losing
money war
•South County cilles'
multimillion-dollar
war chest dppedrs to
be paying ruvidcnds
in public opinion.
Jenifer Ragland &
Jasmin• ~e
DAILY PILOT
NEWPORT BEACH -
Tho e p~hing for an inlema·
tional airport at El Toro were
not surpnsed by news that
upport for the project 1s wan·
mg, dttributmg the shift main-
ly to being outspent by the
opposition.
A Tunes Orange County
poll published Tuesday shows
44'.V.. of county n•s1dents
oppose converting the dosed
military base mlo a commer-
aal airport servmq up to 28
milhon annut1l passenqcrs.
whilC' only 39% favor 1t.
While the county has
always bN•n d1v1dcd on the
issue, this lS the hrst tune in
lour years that the anti-airport
!>Jde has come out on top.
"f Uunk the phenomenon
1s it's always easier to ga..m
support out of fedr Ulan out of
logic, dnd what's in the be t
SEE MONEY PAGE 5
THI NIT If f ICT
For more Information
about the airport debate,
log on to The Times' newly
expanded Web site at
www.latlmes.CC'imleltom.
The site 1nclud~s a compre-
hensive Measure F voter
guide, special research sec·
tions, interactive bulletin
boards, an insider column
and the latest news.
INDEX
AlMAHAC 2
WSSITIEOS -· f
PUBllC NOOOS ·-·-.. -1
srom -'
SUlf "" .2
WUnt0 --2
PIO Ill COi
The first public debMe
over the so-ollN
Gr.enllght ln~Jw 11 lllt
for tort'9ht 9t ........
...., City Hell. .....,,
2 Wedne5doy, February 16, 2000
" ,. GErnNG INvotVED
'
. I
TAYA KASHUBA I OAJLY PILOT
A shoulder to cry on
• Red Cross volunteer Sierra
Miller talks about helping
victims' families following the
Jan. 31 Alaska Airlines crash.
Amy "· Spurgeon DAILY PILOT
On Jan. 31, Sierra Miller had just
returned home after a nine-hour shift as a
registered nurse at Fairview Develop-
mental Center in Costa Mesa when she
rece)ved the phone call.
Alaska Airlines Flight 261 had
plunged into the Pacific Ocean off the
Ventura County coast and American Red
Cross relief workers from Orange County
were needed. .
Miller, a mental health volunteer with
the Santa Ana-based organization, hdd
seen the news and was expecting the call.
•The last thing r wanted was to go to
an air disaster," said the 5?-year-old
Newport Beach resident.
But she agreed to go, not knowing that
she would soon embark on a 96-hour mis-
sion.
Miller reported for duty at a hotel near
Los Angeles International Airport on the
Friday following the crash. She and 500
other Red Cross volunteers shuttled
. between two hotels, assisting grieving
relatives. ·
Miller admitted that she expected to
. For a
GOOD CAUSE
that was not the case.
find a
media cir-
cus upon
her arrival,
but to he r
s urprise,
"The hotels, the airline ... they would
give you anything you needed," Miller
said.
She said an•entire wing of one hotel
was set up for the relief effort. A nurses'
station, eating area, child-care center and
briefing room were all stationed in the
wing. Only relatives and :volunteers
wearing identification badges were
admitted.
The grieving process was different for
everyone, Miller said. One family gath-
ered around a piano to play some favorite
songs.
But the mood darkened with the
• 219 Via Quito, $875,000
recovery of each body, Miller said The
grim reality -0f the disaster seemed to
sharpen with each horrifying discovery.
Over the course of her marathon vol-
unteer effort, Miller held the hand of a
man who had lost his only daughter. She
offered countless tissues and glasses of
water and made lunch runs to the nearest
hamblll'ger stand.
"When things go bad," she said,
•grease is good for the soul. H
. As a victim of tragedy herself, Miller
understands all tOo well about the griev-
ing process.
"I've walked in the shoes of the victims
and I know their pain," she said, ch'OOSing
not to divulge her own experience.
"There is nothing you can say that is
~ght. Just being there anonymously
helps."
Returning home turned out to be a
challenge for Miller. She has been adjust-
ing to life as usual, but it bas been a slcsw
process.
Despite it all, she's ready to jump the
next ti.me the Red Cross calls.
"ft isn't just about giving blood," Miller
said. ''People see that red cross and it's
just like apple pie in America." ·
ALMANAC
RIAL ESTATE
TRANSACTIONS
• 4305 Dana Road, $214,000
• 983 Bayside Drive, $300,000 ·ENGAGEMENTS
• 341 VtSta Baya, $425,000 Miller-Wray
,
Volunteer
DIRECTORY
• VOLUNTIER DIUC1'0RY
runs periodically on a rotating
basis in the Daily Pilot. For
Information on adding your
organization to this listing, call
(949) 574-4228 .
SAVE OUR YOUTH
The West Side ·Costa
Mesa youth organization
is loo.king for volunteers to
help create a positive
alternative for people 12
to 23 years old. Volunteers
are needed to he lp in
areas such ~s boxing,
sports, health, fitness,• aer-
obics and academic tutor-
ing. For information, call
(949) 548-3255. .
SERVING PEOPLE
IN NEED
Serve as a guide for
homeless families by
helping them set goals
and maintain a basic bud-
get. Bilingual skills need-
ed. Orientation and train-
ing provided .. For more
information, contact
Theresa Rowe at (949)
757-1456.
SlNIOR MEALS AND
SERVICES, INC.
Volunteers n~eded to
deliver meals to home-
bound senior citizens
residing in Costa M esa
who .are not able to pre -
pare their own meals and ·
do not have anyon~ to
prepare meals for them. A
hot lunch is dE!livered
Monday through Friday
between 11 a.m. and 1
p.m. to the senior's home.
A one-day-a-week com-
mitment is all that is
asked. -Substitute drivers
'are also needed to fill in
for regular drivers. For
mote information, call
(7 14) _894-9779.
SHARE! HIGH
SCHOOL· EXCHANGE
PROGRAM
Host families are needed
in the Costa Mesa area to
COSTA MESA
• 452 Magnolia St .. $383,000
• 2182 Pacific Ave., $179,500
• 2183 Rural Lane, $250,000
• 158 Santa Isabel Ave., $112,000
• 2479 Rue de Cannes, $239,000
• 1199 Bismark Way, $229,000
DUI ARRESTS
The following people were
arrested recently on suspicion of
driving under the influence of an
intoxicant. They have only been
arrested on suspicion of a crime,
and, as with all such crimes, they
are considered innocent until
Mr. and Mrs. H . Todd Miller, of Chevy Chase, Md ..
are pleased to announce tbe engagement of their
daughter, Catharine Maclay, to Jonathan Albert Wray,
·son of Mr. and Mrs. Richard K. Wray of Newport
Beach. Mr. Wray is the grandson of Mrs. Vuginia
Phin.izy of Newport Beach.
• 2837 Clubhouse Road, $379,000
• 1864 Samar Drive, $446,000
• 1056 Concord St .. $269,000
• 2028 S. Capella Court, $343,500
• 968 Magellan St., $230,000
• 3058 Clubhouse Road, $181 ,000
• 1858 Kinglet Court, $439,000
• 3021 Clubhouse Circle,
$190,000
• 3951 S. Plaza Drive, $326,000
• 1051 Cheyenne St., $255,000
• 1937 Killdeer Circle, $320,000
proved guilty. ·
NEWPORT BEACH
Feb. 10
• Ivar William Southern, 24 New-
port Beach
•Daniel r')rdon Green, 42, lrvine
• Mar1 L .... 'le Tomberg, 44 , Hunt-
ington ueach
Feb. 11
The bride-to-be is a graduate of Duke University.
She is currently doing research for th'e Alzheimer's
Disease Research Center in Seattle.
The groom-to-be is a graduate of University High
School in Irvine. He attended Duke University and
earned a degree in electrical and computer engineer-
ing in 1998. He is currently a software design engineer
for the Microsoft Corporation in Redmond, Wash.
An August wedding is planned .
, Daily Pilot
I
provide a bed, meals and
a loving home for hlgh
school students from over
28 countries including
Germany, Japan, Brazil,
China and Poland. The
students, all between ages
15 and 18, participate in·
'Cross-cultural exchange to
learn about America and
share their own culture.
The students stay for five
to 10 months and are
screened twice for acade-
mic excellence and profi-
ciency in English. For
more infonnation1 call 1-
888·533-8514.
SHARE OUR SELVES
FREE MEDICAL AND •
DENTAL CLINIC
The organization needs
volunteer ct.hvers and food
handlers for its Emer-
gency Services. Its Free
Derital Clinic needs vol-
unteer dental staff and •
administrative help. The
Free Medical Clinic is
recruiting medical person-
nel, data e ntry help and
volunteers to answer
phones. Por more infor-
mation, call Lee at Emer-
gency Medical Services,
(949) 642-3451; Dr. Vu
with Dental at (949) 650-
2072; Diane with Medical
a t (949) 650-018~.
SHERMAN LIBRARY
AND· GARDEN
You could assist with the
garden or help in the gift
and tea shop of Corona
del Mar's botanical gar-
den and historical
resear ch library. For more
information, contact
Dorothy Wood at (949)
673-2261.
SrQLL BUSINESS
ASSISTANCE CENTER
The Small Business Assis-
tance Center of Orange
Coast College needs vol-
unteers to advise small
business own ers in
finance, accounting, ·law,
marketing, sates, human
resources and other areas.
For more information, call
(714) 432-5916.
• 19061 Randi Lane, $430,000
• 2354 Littleton Circle, $340,000
NEWPORT BEACH
• 621 lido Park Drive, $563,000
• 113 26th St .. $445,000
• 5450 Downey Ave .. $287,000
• 1900 W. Balboa Blvd., $420,000
• 270 Cagney Lane, $237 ,000
• 235 62nd St., $112,000
•Jerome Schubert, 67, Newport
Beach
Feb. 12
• Jos& Antonio Ramirez, 22, Cov-
ina
Feb. 13
• Wayne Robert Asper, 42, Penn-
sylvania
NEIGHBORS
Bleu Cotton and Alison Pierce of
Blue Cotton Photography in Costa Mesa
were invited as the keynote speakers to
the Federation of Filipino Photographers'
PhotoWorld 2000, a convention held in
Makat1 Crty. Cotton and Pierce partiapat·
ed in the nbbon-cutting ceremony tor
the event's opening with Philippines Vite
President Glortll M•.-e•l-Arroyo ....
Girt SclOuts l"°°P UJ1 of Costa Mesa
provided food for the volunteers work•
Ing at the Wallace Avenue site of a Habl·
tat for Humanity construction project.
Among those lending a hand were troop
leaders~ Wells and 11ffl!"r Gee-
sey, and SCOU1S Prildla. ~ M..tlMn
Geaey, lt9d..n. Wells, ......... Kipp.
Kytle Crivello, Michelle 1Mtmen.
... .,. hho, Ind flllnll Wood ... The
"Evening of Memories" gala that w.s
held earlier this month to honor MMI-
,..,. ........ raised $90,000 to provide
services for Orange County families
affected by Alzheimer's dl.sease. Hon·
orary «><hairs of the event were Lort
~of Newport Beach and
,__~of Los Angeles .... The
presldent4al ~lgn of Sen. lohl1
Mc:C.alft (R·AlllO«,\a) In Orange County
has chosen a.-. Diets of Corona del
Mar to hnd Its effort In Newport Beach,
Corona del Mar and Newport Coast.
Dietz was a member of the natJoNI aim-
paign siaff for President IUdwd Nlwl
from 1971-1973 and is active In many
Republican women's organlutlons ... The
Garden GrOYe Unified School District has
a.,.,&ntec:t Newport llffch resident Vlr--
glnle Lomlll .. principal of Slntlago
Hlt»h School. l.omtNrdl replk.es G 11 ...
Wlll9oft, who Is retiring after 41 yHl'S
with the district.
• 2 Latitude Court. $171,000
• 270 Cagney Lane, $425,000
• 100 Scholz Place, $186,000
• 21 VlSla Barranca, $200,000
• 5216 River Ave., $490,000
• 136 Via Waziers, $620,000
Dall¥ Pilot
VOL 94, NO. 40
THOMAS H. J()ffNSON,
Publisher
TONY 000£.RO,
Editor
JENIFER RAGl.AHO,
Stn1or City Editor
NANCY otUVE ...
F•atures Ed11or
ROGER CARLSON.
S9otts Editor
MMICMMTIN,
PhOto Editor
ANTHONY PEQ(,
New5 Editor
JOR J. SANTOS.
Page~ner
AIOY OtrmNG,
ON!fied Advtrtl..ng
LANA IOfW!eON,
P\'omotlOOS
........,SHAH,
Chief financ11I Offi<«
• Jason Michael Smith, 31, Las
Vegas
• James John Hertenstein, 19,
Corona
•David Aaron Wilson, 31, Foun-
tain Valley
8EAl2£BS t:tOTUNE or ildvertl~nu hef11n c.ail bt'
(949} 642-6086 reprodU<ed wrthovt written per·
Re<ord your comments about m1ulOl'I of 'opyrtght owner
the Dally Pilot or news tips ltQW TO BEACH !JS
AQQ8W Circulation Our address Is 330 W. Bay St., The Times Orange County Costa Mesa. CA 92627. (800) 252-9141
CORRECTIONS Advertising
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CQvnty (800) 252 9141, In areal Mltihed by llfMI Comrnunrty H'1W'I, outside of Newport Bffdl end •Times MJrteo: (~ .....,. COl!t MN, tobtcrlptions to the 0.1~ Pilot.,._ IYlllfble only by Wlllllm l.obcW, tri.11111 mal f0t '20 s>« month. St<ond
d•n post• peid 1t Co\t. MN. Editor
CA (Prr<• Incl~ Ill 8'lf>luble Se.wMlttlle,
rurtt and IO<.al t.llft) POSTMAS. MtNglng £drt0r
TER· Sand~-~ to The M.rt--.
~ IHc:IVCotta ~ Diiiy OlrtctOf af Photogrlphy
Piiot, PO lox 1560, eon. Mft4, SNttNn~.
CA 92621 C~igttt No MWS ito s.rtl(lf E.dlt.Or, Copy 0.-
rift. 1111H1tltion&, ldrtor11I nwittflf e1M1INIOI M~-..d
• NllGH90llS spotlights acNMments In
the community. fltease direct notewonhy
Information to AltX eootm.n WI fax at
(949) 646-4170; or send e-mail to "'11/ypl-
lotO/ati~ com.
WEATHER AND SURF POLICE FILES
TEMPERA~S
eat boa
6SISS
Corona del Mar
66156
Costa M sa
67157
Newport Beach
65156
Newport Coast
65156
SURF fOMCAST
Lar91! swells loOmlng off
the coast will sweep In
today for sets In the
thest· to head·high ., ...
LOCA110N SIZI
~ ... , .•••• , .........• ~w
~ .... ~ ............ ~w
BtadlNdrn.,..,,..,,..,., •• 4-6 W
TIDES
TODAY
First low
1:27 a.m ...................... 1.1
First high
612 a.ni ....................... 6.0
Second low
rva
second high
?:56 p.m ..................... 4.0
1"UMOAY
first tow
12:54 a.m ..................... 1.7
F1nt high
7:06 • m .... r ............ n ... 6.5
S.Condlow
2:11 p.m ..................... ·1.4
Second high
8:36 p.m ....................... 4 4
COSTA MESA
• Mstol ltr'Mt A cellular phone worth $200 was stolen
from a store in the 3300 block between 4 and 6 p.m. on
Feb. 5.
• Pomon9 Avenue: A wallet and Its contents worth $35
were stolen from a car in the 1800 block the evening of
feb 1. '
• ~ Av.nue: A purse and Its contents Worth
S 1 OS were stolen from a car In the 1100 block between
1 and 4 p.m. Feb. 4.
NEWPofn' BEACH
• lrtnol Str..e: ThrM roll1 of stamps worth S110 wtl'e
stot.n In the 1400 blodt sometime betw.en Fib. 1·7.
• w.t c.wt ,..,_.Y. A ctllutar Phone worth $220
wn stolen from a buMneu In the 1200 blodt tt'f ewning
of Feb. 9.
• a...-.. Courtr A Cef.luler phone worth S100 wet
56 ltOltn ftom • <.II in the tint btodt the tven'"9 of Ptb ...
lo
Doily Pilot \ Wednesday, February 16, 2000 3
First Greenlight
initiative · debate
set for tonight
Reform Party hopeful tries to . calm waters
• Proponent Phil Arst
and Newport chamber
president. Richard
Luehrs will fa ce off
on the hot issue.
Noaki Schwartz
DAILY PILOT
NEWPORT BEACH
The so-called Greonbght
slow-growth measure will be
debated m a public forum for
the first time tonight at City
Hall.
The We t Newport Beach
As<;n. is hosting the event,
which will feature Greenlight
spokesmdn Phil Arst and
Chamber of Commerce pres-
ident Richard Luehrs. Both
will mdke a short prescnta·
tion and then field questions
from the audience.
ThP "Protect From Traffic
and Density" initiative, set to
appear on the November bal·
lot, proposes tp give voters
the ftndl say on develop·
ments that reqwre "maJor•
general plan amendments.
"MaJor" 1s defi.ned aI. those
that will genernte a certain
number of tralhc trips, houses
or square footage, but
because of the way the mea-
sure is wntten. even small
pevelopments could reqwre
Citywide VOtC'S .
Proponents have argued
that the measure wtll curb
the increasing traffic problem
m the aty -an issue that
appealed to lhC" 9,000 resi-
dents who signed the petition
to get the measure on the
bu Dot.
"I'm going to cover the
ba<;ic question of whether we
have two ch01res on how we
IN BRIEF
Lakewood couple
wins Dunes contest
The wmmng couple or
the Newport Dunes'
•Love Story• contest were
Paul and Jill Miller, who
lost their material wealth
but gained a family.
The newlywed couple
thought they had every-
thing: a plush South
County home, new cars
and their first son. Then
Jill became pregnant
again, but this time Jt was
with triplets. Over tbe
next two yea.rs, with four
children in diapers, the
couple struggled to keep
their family hnanc1ally
afloat. They sold every-
thing, mcludmg their
house.
Now, d0ip1te their
hardship, the couple
inslS\s they "truly have 1t
all.
The Millers 1oaned sev-
en other couples for a
Valentine's Day luncheon
at the Back Bay Cttfe on
Monday. A panel of
·1udges chose the Millers
as the winning couple and
have awarded them a
wr.ekend getaway in San
Diego.
"It was a real surprise,"
PaW Miller said. "They
could've given it to any of
them I don't know U they
thought we c;ould just use
the break more than any-
one else."
Miller added that he
hopes the trip will remain
valid until th1i 1ummer,
when hil parents wW villt
from the E4lt Cout and
can cere lor the four cbtl·
dren
FOR THI RECORD
In Monday'1 D~uly
Pilot, the Editor'!! Note-
book cuh1mn mcorrectly
stated that the Speak Up
Newport Mayor's Dinn~r
was ponsored by the
lrvm Co.
Actually, no alngl
group or entity ·~
events by Speak Up
Newport, a nonprofit,
nonpmtltan group that
hi9 been orginizlng the
uawal JMyOl'l dlllw lar .. ,.....
FYI
The debate on the
Greenllght Initiative,
hosted by the West New-
Port Assn., begins at 7
p.m. today in council
chambers at City Hall,
33~ Newport Blvd.
proceed with the city," Arst
said "Will there be a knee·
. Jerk reaction whenever
there's an alleged financial
need, or are we going to seek
a balanced city stressing high
· quality of life for residents."
The measure's opponents,
including most o! the city
counctl, say tt will be ineffec-
tive against tralfic. Co.undJ·
woman Jan Debay said
developments will simply
move next door and Newport
will be stuck with corrunuter
traffic.
There is also the fear that
residents will be continually
called to the ballot box to
vote on proposals. As a result,
opponents believe voters will
simply vote against every-
thlng, thereby strangling the
city's financial ~ources.
The forum IS part of an
effort by the new leadership
of the West Newport Assn.,
led by president Al Silcock, to
mcrease community involve-
ment m local government.
The Green.light initial.lve
-which would drasbcally
change the way the city oper·
ates -has become one of the
most unportant issues facmg
city residents and its leaders.
As such, debate orgaruz-
ers are encouraging as many
people as possible to attend
tonight's meeting.
•Presidential
candidate Robert
Bowman stops for
a quick visit in
Newport Beach.
Greg Rl1llng
DAILY PILOT
NEWPORT BEACH
What a week it bas been for
the Reform Party.
First, billionaire develop-
er Donald Trump bowed
out of the presidential race.
Then, Jesse Ventura -the
flamboyant wresUer-
tumed-govemor of Min-
nesota -said the party
wasn't worthy of his sup-
port and labeled 1t hope-
lessly dysfunctional
The day after Ventura's
announcement, party lead-
e rs shouted dnd argued
. with each other at a meet-
ing in Nashville, Tenn.,
proVlng to the nation it
must make g reat political
strides before one of their
condidates can win the
presidential ticket.
The pdrty's nomination is
still up for grabs and candi-
date Robert Bowman
believes he can gamer
enough support between
now and the March 7 pn·
mary for an execubve bid.
"We have a long road
before the party nomina-
tion.· said Bowman, who
spoke to about 20 residents
in Newport Beach on Tues.:
day night "Once we get
past that point, beating
[George W.) Bush and (Al]
Go.re wtll be the easy part.
If I am involved in a debate
with those two, I'll clean
their clock."
The 65-year-old rocket
scientist, who grew up in
Cahforrna, bas been
spreading his message
across the nation for the
pa!>t several months. Trav-
Allen takes a shot at
sobriety in rehab
• Mark David Allen,
the city's record-holder
for arrests, enters rehab
and could avoid jail
time if he stays sober.
Greg Rl1Ung
D AILV PILOT
Mark David Allen, who
accumulated more than 100
alcohol-related arrests in
Newport Beach, was
released from Orange Coun·
ty Jail and admitted mto a
rehabilitation program Tues·
day.
The 38-year-old transient
was enrolled into a program
sponsored by the Salvation
Army. Allen will live at the
Anaheim facility, where he
will attend counseling ses-
sions and work in the organi-
zation's warehouse.
The program is designed
to bnng sobriety to residents,
but it is voluntary and people
can leave at any point during
treatment, said Mike Russell,
director of reh.abilitativP ser-
vices.
"The people who don't
quit and stay here a couple of
months do get motivated,• he
said. "Some people como
here to satisfy court require-
ments and some really want
to gel clean. The h.rst 30 to 60
days is crucial to success.•
Allen has been a familiar
face on the Balboa Peninsula.
Smee 1985, he has been
arrested by Newport Beach
police 106 times, mainly for
alcohol-related incidents. He
pleaded guilty last week to
four counts of public drunk·
enness and was released into
the care of Salvation Anny
staffers. He must complete
the progrdm or return to jail.
Dave Sperling, who shot a
documentary film about
Allen's notoriety, had a
chance to talk with him upon
his release Tuesday. He said
Allen appeared upbeat and
coherent but was wary of his
promises to stay sober.
•tte was delighted to be
out, but J don't think he got a
full grasp of where he was
going," said Sperling, who
said he taped their conversa-
bon so he could update his
film, w.tuch he hopes will be
selected for Newport's film
festival next month. •He was
saying some good things but
maybe he thinks it's what
people> want to hear. The
plact\ he's entenng is the type
of place hl' cart make it.•
(Qr~ftbr, l)l.1 I DAllV PllOT
Presidential candidate Robert Bowman speaks to potential supporters In Newport.
eling with his w11e m the
family motor home , Bow-
man has been buHdrnq
steam with v1rtutilly no
advertising or nattondl
media coverage.
"We don't w • .mt Pdt
Buchanan trumpet.mg his
tdeas for this party," said
Allan Beek, who mv1ted
Bowman to speak m New-
port Beach. "Dr Bowman is
a reasonable person with
reasonable ideas I have
three bot-button issues and
he pushes all of them •
Bowman must fend off
challenges from party nvtl.ls
Pat Buchanan, a staunch
conservative, dnd John
Anderson, a former con-
gressman.
One Flonda newspaper
called Bowman the longest
of longshots, but with the
defections of Trump and
Ventura, Bowman hds
emerged as one of the par-
ty's leading candidates.
With Buchanan onutted
from the March 7 Cahforrua
primdcy election. Bowmdn
who bested hls opponent
m the Iowa primary last
month -could keep gdlll-
ing ground.
The victory may prove
vitttl to tus campaign. The
candidate who wms the
. nomination will receive the
party's $12.6 rrullion m fed-
erdl funds that can be used
for the presidential run.
Bowmc1I1 said the party's
two fdctions -neither of
which he supports -has
produC'ed undue fm:li<m
may hdve caused irrepara-
ble damage.
"I don't know lf lhls will
brt'ak up the party or keep
1t together,• he said. "But
I'd like to bnng botl1 Sldes
together cUld then create a
broad codlttlon of third par-
ties.•
Bowmdn lS surely arnbi·
tious Not only is he sPeking
the Reform Pdrty norrund-
tJOn. but dlso the Green,
"Pdc1f1st and Labor bid!> tts
weU
His plc1Uom1 auns to dis·
suadP corporate fdl cats
from national and foreign
politics. He sd1d, i1 elected,
he will let the pt'<>ple wield
the powor
The ideus come from a
man who wants to seP. the
FBI and the CIA c:ontroUed.
nd the country or "useless"
nuclear weapons <md t!>sue
pardons to Leonard Peltier
and Muml<i Abu Jamal,
dffionq other thmgs.
•om' ttung I have riever
been l!> d pohhaan and I
won't start now," h~ aid.
"The only r<'ason l wdnt to
go to Wd&hington, D C' is to
give th<' power bdck tcJ the
people. ff
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4 Wednesday, February 16, 2000 Doily Pilot
·p1an, albeit vague,
pleases residents
· • West Side activists ~~=~~ say they are confident
rrught suggest the city
restrict new auto body
shops and family-run gro-
cery stores
PHOTOS ev OON I.EACH I OAllY I'll.OT
A surfer shreds the top of a breaker near 21st Street ln Newport Beach as another Sllrfer watches from below.
I r
Surfers ride high on big breakers
• Optimum conditions
produced by series of storms
attract large groups of wave· ·
riders to the Newport shoreline.
Greg Risling
DAILY PtlOT
NEWPORT BEACH -The skies
mc1y l1dve dppe d.TNJ gloomy und gray
for most peoph• Tucsddy, but surfers
found thP W<!d.lher conctitions no less
than pe rfect ac., r..ccent storms pushed 5-
to 7-foot sw<'lls onto Newport's west-
lacmg bPdches. ·
Although the Wdter temperature was
cl c m p 56 degre<>s, hundreds of surlers
too'K advMtage of the optimal condJ-
l.loni:; and flocked to the beaches.
"ll ws<? a re the days you live tor,•
sa1<J 19-yedr-old Adam Samuels of
t luntmgton B<'ach, who was changing
into some dry clothes nedr 32nd Street
on Tuesdcly evening. "J haven't been out
for ii whtle, but 1t looks hke I picked a
HOO<J dt1.y. Them• were d lot of people out
in the water.•
Most of the good surf could be found
between Newport Pte r dnd 32nd Street.
Srores of surfe rs littered the shorebne,
Jockeying for the next prime wave.
"I would say there are between 200
to 300 people at any given time m the
Wdler today,• sdid Mike f lalphide, life-
gudJ'd sup<>CVl.t;or for the Newport Beach
Fire and Mdnnc> Department. •1t
llpJ>f>dr5 people are skipping school and
work to com<> down here.•
Tired but satisfied surfers stroll away from the beach at Blackle's after taking
advantage of Tue,sday' excellent surf condJUon.s.
Swfers can thank the recent series of
storms that have rolled through South-
ern California. Most of the west-facing
beaches in the Southland received large
swells that were favorable lo surlers.
Some sets in Ventura and Santa Barbdfa
counties reportedly peaked between 12
and 14 feet.
Ne~rt surfers were unable to boast
about waves that big, but no one was
really complaining about the conctibons,
which before Tuesday had been falrly
average.
•There is no doubt there were excel-
lent conditions tbday, • I Ialphide added.
·some waves were four to five feet
overhead. This has been the best day to
surl here this year. 11
SCHOOL
LUNCH MENU
ed for less than S17.SO; elemen-Ocl<:hos; baby peeled c..rrats with
low·fat dip, frozen 100"' fruit
ju1Ce bar; choke of milk '
tomatoes, crackers and protein
sources such as cheese, sunflower
seeds, fruit yogurt. honey r~ed
pe¥1uts end dressing.
Students haYe three menu
choices WWfY day StUdents may
cho<Ke a vegetarian errtree .ach
d<>y af desired The vegetarian
sel«t1on vari8' and may be
either a salad, sandwich or hot
entree.
NOTE: Checks are not 0tecept·
tary lunches are S 1.75. ·
TOOAY
Muncheble Lunch Salad or grilled
cheese sandwich or "r1b-b-q"4?"
sandWkh on a bun; oven-baked
poUltoes; choice of fruit; choice
of milk ·
THURSDAY
Munchable Lunch Salad with Dan·
non fruit yogurt or chili<~
FRIDAY
Peanut butter and jelly sandWi<:h
Of teriyakl beef dippers; tossed
9reen salad with low·fat dressing;
choice of fruit; Cherry Health
bread; Cho1Ce of milk
• The "Munchable Lunch Salad•
contains tossed greens. cherry
In the ~atx>n of child fHd.
mg programJ. no child will be dis·
criminated ag•lnrt bee•~ of
race, ~x. color, national origin,
age or handicap If )OU believe •
you have bHn d;sc,,mmated
against. write 1mir>ediately to the
Secretary of Agflculture, Wash·
ington, D.C. 20250
ST ANDREW'S
PRESBYTERIAN
CHURCH
19th ANNUAL
WOMEN'S RETREAT
Satu.rday, February 19,2000
8:30am .. J:30pm
Guest Speaker: Sharol H ayner
Topic: "Are You Living In Fear?
-T here Is A Way Out!,,
Cost: $20.00 incl udes lunch
Mail Check to:
600 St. AndttWS Road ,
Ncwpon Beach, California 92663-325
OR .. , .,
S"'I "1 .. Mf_ offea_ to ~I
(949,)\·S74-2236
I
.
strategies presented
Monday will improve
their neighborhood.
And~w Glazer
DAllV PllOT
WEST SLOE Mer-
chants and residents said
they are pleased V(ith a
plan to revitalize their
neighborhood, regardless
of its vague, fast-forward
debut Monday evening.
"I'm really excited
about it,• said Manfredo
Lespier, a member of the
Latino Advisory Commit-
tee. "They really took into
consideration the housing
issue.•
Lespier was smitten·
with the plan even though
Woody Tescher, director of
urban planning at EIP
Associates -the consul-
tants hired by the city to
drait a plan -admittedly
presented no more than a
brief overview.
"l spoke very fast
because I had very little
time," said Tescher, who
docked in just oyer half an
hour. •Tue City Council
and PldJUUJlg Commission
had other meetings.•
He recommended the
city concentrate on devel-
opwg a shopping village
in the neighborhood,
incredse its stock of afford-
able housing and continue
to .allow auto _repair shops
and small businesses to
operate there.
The city hired Tescher
in the swnmer of 1998 to
develop ·a strategy to
improve the neighbor-
hood's longtime traffic
problems, decaying hous-
ing, crumbling streets and
lack of shopping.
City planners said
many of the problems
stemmed from the West
Side's unusual mix of
industry, homes and retail
businesses. Rumors circu-
lated around the commu-
ruty that the consultants
Aroun d
TOWN
• Send AROUND TOWN items to
the Daily Pilot. 330 W. Bay St., Cov
ta Mesa 92627; fax them to (949)
646-4170; or call (949) 7644330. A
complete listing may be found at
dailypllot.com.
TODAY
The OWLS (Retired OWcers'
Wives League of Orange
County) will hold a noon lun-
cheon at the Balboa Yacht
Club, 1801 Bayside Drive,
Corona del Mar. Retired offi-
cers' wives and widows and
women officers from all
branches of the military are
welcome. The event begins
Wlth a social hour at 11 a.m.
For more information, call
Charlotte Walker at (714)
549-2028.
Estancia High School's
Authentic Open House will
be held today through Feb.
18 to give community mem-
bers a chance to visit the
. campus while school is in
session. Visiting hours are
8:30 a.m. to 2 p .m. The school
is al 2323 Placentia, Coste
Mesa For more infonnalion,
call (949) 645-0715.
Estancia High School wtU
hold a town hall mee ting at 7
p.m. in the commons. The
meeting is an opportunity to
learn about the Digital High
School and the many pro-
grams offered at the school.
Estanod High is at 2323 Pla-
centia, Coste Mesa. For more
In August, 1999, a
group of the city's Latino
leaders, including Lespier,
told the City Council that
the consultants had
neglected input from the
neighborhood's largest
ethnic group. Latinos
make up almost 50% of
the West Side's popula-
tion, according to a recent
UC Irvine graduate study.
The city delayed the
plan's due date and
formed the Latino Com-
munity Advisors. The
advisors met with commu-
nity members, compiled a
report and passed it on· to
the consultants.
"It came in late but it
looks like they took our
suggestions into consider-
ation, 11 Lespier said. "We'll
see when it's in writing,
but i'm very confident.•
Ed Fawcett, president
and CEO of the city's
Chamber of Commerce,
said the plan appeared to
be fair to the neighbor-
hood's business commuru-
ty.
·we 're reheved that
they're letting businesses
continue operating in the
neighborhood," he said.
"They truly did ·listen.·
City Councilman Joe
Erickson said he agreed
with several of the con-
cepts Tescher presented,
but questioned how they
would be tmplemented.
"A lot of lbese ideas
would cost a lot or money.•
he said. "But we need to
know a lot more.•
Tescher said he would
deliver the full written
report to the City Council
on Friday. He said copies
will be made available to
the public early next
week.
The Planrung Couunis-
s1on and City Council will
hold several public meet-
ings on the proposed plan
before malung a decision.
information, call (949) 645-
0715.
Hoag Health Center will hold
a free seminar on '"The Stress
of PMS" from 7 to 8:30 p.m.
The center is at 1190 Baker
St., Costa Mesa. For reserva-
tions or more lnlorrnalion,
call (800) 514·4624.
Women to Bmtness, Orange
County chapte r, will hold a
meetmg at 5:30 p.m. at The
Sheraton Hotel, 4545
MacArthur Blvd., NeWJ>ort
Beach. Karen L. Bonnett,
owner of Ute Management
Consulting, will speak. The
event is $35 for members,
$42 for guests. For more
informabon, call (714) 731-
1077.
Hoag Hospital will h old a
free seminar titled •Gourmet
the Healthy Way• from 6 to
7:30 p.m. al its Conference
Center, 1 Hoag Drive, build·
ing 44, Newport Beach. For
reservations, call (800) 514-
462.t.
Salomon Smith Barney will
hold a free seminar titled
"Making the Most of Your
401K• at noon et 650 Town
Center Drive, Suite 100, Cos-
ta Mesa. Lunch will be pro-
vid d. For r rvations, call
(800) 846-6337.
THUISDIY
Hot1g Health Center will hold
a froe semmar titled "Keep-
ing Your Heart in Sync,• from
6 to 7:30 p.m. The center is at
1190 Baker St., CO'Jta Mesa.
For reservations, caU (800)
514-4624.
EASTCOAST SWING DANCE
FM CLASSES •49 ....... .... v.::-T.r.
Doily Pilot
CENTER
CONTINUED FROM 1
Sh claims he1 sales have
dropped by approximately
40,% Slllce the supermarket
relocated.
"People used to come in
after they shopped and buy
water," she sa1d.
Forest Fisher, owner of the
shopping center, said he
thought he informed all of his
ienants about the move as
soon as he found out.
"It's a hardship to every-
body,~ he said. •All I can say
is the problem exists and
we're trying to fix It.•
Part of the problem is that
Albertson's continues to
lease the empty building.
Fisher said the supermarket
has the option lo continue
extendJ.ng its lease for up to
15 years.
Alberu.on's officials could
not be reached for comment.
"We're talking about get-
ting them out or there," he
said. "But until l control the
property, I'm not in position
to do anything but talk to
people.•
Ed Fawcett, president and
CEO of the Costa Mesa
Chamber of Commerce, said
the supennarket chain may
not be in a hurry to give up
its old store. He said doing so
might open the property to a
competitor.
MARIANNA DAY MASSfV I OAAV PilOT
Martha Velazquez, who works at Water Gourmet in Costa Mesa, fills a bottle for a cus-
tomer. Business has slowed since the shopping center's supennarket closed its doors
with the opening of the new Albertson's store at Harbor Cent.er.
Other store owners in the
shopping center, including
BRIDGE
CONTINUED FROM 1
Newport Coast O.nve is by
far the most worrisome.
As a result, the PTA
Conned a parent traffic con-
trol committee, which
asked for the footbndges
and reduced speed limits.
But before any action
could be taken, county offi·
cials S&d, a traffic study
must be conducted.
Jim Swatzel, the county
traftic engineer who con-
ducted a itudy of the a rea,
will present his recommen-
dations to the Orange
County Traffic Committee
on Thursday Hi~ repo,-t
will suggest keeping the
speed limit of Newport
Coast at 60 mpb and
imposing a ~O-mph lim'.it
on Park Ridge Road.
•1t•s just mind-boggling
to me, first, tHat (Swatzel]
wowd make that recom-
mendation, and seco.nd,
that parents are supposed
to let their children cross
that road," Snider-Henson
saJd.
Frustrated residents say
they will consider other
options if a footbridge is
not bililt.
"We are not going to let
our children walk," said
concerned parent Steven
Fink. •The alternatives are
private school, which is
certainly a viable opbon, or
to have our children
remain at Lincoln (Elemen-
tary), which is a fine
&Chool."
In the meantime, Fink
said, parents have drafted
a petition asking for the
safety m9'sures. Once
completed, the petition wW
be sent to the Orange
County Board of Supei'vi-
son, the county Board of
Education, the dty of New·
port Beach, the Irvine Co,
and the Newport-Mesa
Unified School Di1bict.
•1be reat bottom une II, '
IOftle kid, at 90lll8 time, is
gOlng to try to <7089 NeW-
port Coast Drive and not
make It. And I don't want
to .. that bappen;. Pink
Mid. •n may aot be my
Jdd. but that woa't .1D1A II
anyeiilier.·
the owners of China Kitchen
and Best Cleaners, said busi-
ness has dropped significant-
ly since the supermarket
closed. They said they hope
Fisher finds a new tenant
soon.
•Maybe the best thing to
Me>NEY
CONTINUED FROM 1
interests of the region,•
said Newport Beach Coun-
olman Dennis O'Neil. •1
believe those of us that
favor the airport need to do
a lot more than what's been
done in motivating ow side
of the issl)e."
Presently, the largest
threat to the county's air-
PQrt plans for El Toro 15
Measure F. which will be
decided by voters Mcirch 7.
According to the Times
poll, 56% of likely voters
would vote yes and only
18% would vote no. About
26% remained undeoded.
If the measure passes,
every auport, Jail or landfill
projetl proposed for a resi-
dential area would require
approval from two-thirds or
the county's voters.
But Bruce Nestande,
who is heading up the •No
on F" campaign through
Citizens for Jobs and the
Economy, sa1d his group's
polling figures show a
much less dramatic gap
between Measure F sup-
porters and detractors.
"If we were to belleve
the results in the (poll),
we'd qwt the campaign
right now,• Nestande said.
"We'll have a very intense
three-week campaign and
I th.ink the issue will turn on
our side.•
David Ellis, spokesman
PROPOSAL
CONTINUED FROM 1
member who has been a
vocal opponent of lhe project.
Michael BattagUa of Stan-
dard Pacific did not return
calls for comment. However,
city officials said th'ey expect
he will appeal the decision to
the City Council.
Planning Commissioner
Tom Sutro, who voted to
approve the project, said
Mesa Verde residents are
being unrealistic m what they
expect for the lot.
"People don't like change,
ZAHER FALLAHI, CPA
28 yrs. exp.
Acctg., Audits, Ta.xc..;
I 5% diKount 10 <.M Residenr•
(71,) 546-4272
Look in the Classified section
in Saturday's paper.
Publishing every Saturday
undl·April 15th.
do is to scrap it and start all
over again, H Fawcett said. "It
could use much more than a.
face-lift. H
But Aaron Millstein, the
owner of QC Pizza, srud busi-
ness has been even better for
him smce the change. He
for the Newport Beach-
based Auport Working
Group, said the key differ-
ence between the two SJdes
is money: He said South
County ahes will spend
between $1 l and $13 mil-
Uon this yP-ar to discredit
the airport A piece of anh-
a1rport mdll arrives in
North Orange County
every three ddys, he added.
"This avalanche of pub-
lic money I!\ having an
effect on El Toro support,'
Ellis scud. "It's something
we warned everyone about
a year and a half ago.•
Ellis said lus group will
spend about $1 million in
public funds -most of it
from the oty of Newport
Beach.
Still, other pro-airport
groups will also receive
public money to push the
El Toro Cduse.
And these figures do not
include the vast amount of
money both anti-and pro-
airport groups have and
wHJ receive from private
sourcos.
Meg Waters, a spokes-
woman for a coalition of
South County cities fight-
ing lhe county's dlrport
plans, said residents
throughout the county are
respondlng to the group's
mailers and meetings She
said there has been
mcreased support to block
an airport at El Toro since
the county released its
envuonmental report m
December
of course,• he said. "The lot
has bceh vacant for some
lune. They don't remember
that there used to be a gds
station there. But no matter
what you put there, mchJding
a park, it's going to generate
more traffic •
Sutro dlso swd the New-
port-Mesa Unified School
Distrlct concluded that near-
said the move hds freed up
the shoppmg center's pork-·
ing lot, which hdd been per-
petually cluttered dunng
supermdrket hours.
"We're more visible now,•
he said. "I think thlS m1qht
actuaUy help us •
However, Waters said
the anh-airport camp<1Jgn -
does not mcJude d push to
expand John Wayne Air-
port in lieu of a second dir-
port.
HNobody an South
County wants to see John
Wayne expand, bul we also
don't want to lose. our
investments," said Waters,
who has cons1stenUy invit-
ed local El Toro activists to
join forces.
Peggy Duce~ execuuve
director of the Orange
County Reg1ondl Airport
Authority -wtuch is chs-
trlbuting pro-ru.rport infor~
mation on a $300,000
annual budget -also
attnbuted the poll's results
to dispardte resources
between the two sides
• J thmk we arc facing a
barrage of information
from a very well-hnanced
campaign,• she Sdid
Nestande agreed. but
has yet to give up all hope.
He said in the next three
weeks, the "No on F" cam-
paign will focus on the
public safety angle, primar-
ily the frightening image of
crlmmdls bejng turned
loose on lhe street!">
because jails can't be built
:cenerally speaking,
people make up their
minds m the last 10 days
and that's when we'U mdke
our case," he said. "If we
dldrt't feel we could win,
we wouldrt't put forth the
financial resources lo
eru;ure defeat."
by Adams Elementary School
would adequately ab orb
children Crom the new devel-
opment. But Karen Robinson,
another proj<'c-l opponent,
said the data was "bogus.
•They said the 90 homes
would yield only 24 elomen-
tdry school-age children,• she
said •That just didn't add
up."
~~
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Wednesday, February I 6, 2000 5
MARBLE
CONTINUED FROM 1 .
once again, that my team
h4d lost.
·rhe Rams are losers
and they'll a/Ways be
losers and you're a loser."
Ah. that's great. Thanks.
I've heard worse, of
course. Most Rams fans
have. But they don't usual-
ly send mail to rub it in.
And now that the Rams
have won their first Super
Bowl. I've lost Rod's e-mail
8ddress. Such unfairness.
An~ so it goes. Some·
one from Michigan wanted
to know why I used to dri-
ve a Nissan rather than an
Amencan car. Someone
from Texas wanted to let
me know where their son
went to college. Someone
-several someones, actu-
ally -wanted lo know if
I'm really so dim that I
actually thought that Tru·
man capote, rather than
HcUper Lee, wrote "To Kill
A Mockingbird.•
You think of answering
them, but then you just
relent, absorb it.
Sometimes you find that
you've turned a comer and
plunged into a neighbor-
hood that is fascinating.
A few weeks ago, I
wrote a column about the
family dog -Morgan.
Morgan had a trying pup-
pyhood. I explruned. We
got her froro the pound
and tried ow mightiest to
get her to sh.ake off her
-· demons. I recounted her
fincil days and the irilpact it
had on my family. I med
not to get maudlin, but evi-
dently I failed.
Mac Bernd, the former
Newport-Mesa Unified
School District supennten-
, dent, wrote me from Texas.
•Shelley and I would
take it very hard if we lost
Haiku, our Akita."
Nancy Palme, a onetime
Costa Mesa activist who
now lives in Alabama,
wrote Wlth some advice
"Caring for 'second-
hand' pets is never' easy. .
They always come with
some baggage."
And, yeah, that dog
came with a full forklift of
baggage.
A guy from Scotland
wrote that he'd lost a collie
as a lad and still pined for
her. His e-mail. mostly
memories of Bandit, filled
my screen three times
A guy at an animal
shelter in Boston wrote to
say that be had copied my
column and passed it out
to all of bis workers and
wanted -with my permis-
sion -to distribute it to
everyon dopting a dog.
And o woman from
North Carolina, who'd lost
a dog named Smok y.
WCllltcd m to know thot ii
I was really taking t.hls las
hard, l could find comfort
and olztc • in a book
called, "Rover's Tales: A
carune Crusad~r and his
Travels m the Dog World."
So now -thanks to the
Internet -1 have sorno
poor blo"-e in Scotland
worked up in tears, an
entire work force in Boston
distributing my column
and a woman in North
Carolina WOQ"Ylllg over my well-bein~
. SomelirilWtthe internet
leads you into a part of
town where you rt:ally did-
n't want to go.
Last year, J wrote a
piece dbout a senes of chil-
dren's books featuring a
central character named
Harry Potter. The books -
so populd.I they dominated
the thin air of the New
York Times Bestseller List
-have been attacked by
some as hdving Sdtanic
undertones. l concluded in
the colwnn thdt iJ Jdds
read 1t, then something
good's probdbly happen·
mg. ..
"Mr. Marble, you are
obviously unschooled in
the ways the devil disguis-
es himself ... •
That from a woman
named Mary in Flagstaff,
Ariz.
• 1 liked your column.
but I do feel sorry for you.
I will pray for you. I hope
you do not have kids ... I
have shared your column .•
with my church and all of
us feel the same."
Within days, I had
received c·mails from -
I'm asswnlng -the entire
congregauon.
"I know you ffl(>Ont well,
but you should know that
you are wrong. And some·
day you wlll know just how
wrong you a1e and then
you may have no hope
because it wlll be too late.•
Again, a flurry of e-
mails ctmved within days.
The next week, more
came. The week after,
even more. And now,
nearly four months alter
the column was printed,
the e-mails still amve -
sometimes in big swoosh-
ing waves, other tiines in
little clinks and clanks.
And they may never
stop. I know that now.
Some&imes, the Internet
sca1es me.
• STEVE MADt.E is the manag-
ing editor at Times Community
News. He can be reached at
steve.marbleO/atimes.com
Quote Of
IHEDAY
•Jemy (Earnest) was stepping ff up,
SG 1.-.dtodothesome _•
ALitumn .Smith. Costa Mesa senior
• ~PU«• ... Feb. 21 honoree
5'ClmtWJ.Ofr.wE AlVIN WHITE ----
6 Sports Editor Roget Carlson • 949-57 44223 • Wedne5Clay, februory 16, 2000 Doily Pilot .
10-wins-and-in is on its way out of CIF
• Southern Section official declares criteria for
basketball playoff admission is a one-time deal.
dvocates for the 10-wm
minimum, by which scares
f additional teams -
~~luchng the Cpsta Mesa Higl} and
tstanda boys -earned entry into
this season's ClF Southern Section
basketball pldyofrs, must enjoy it
while it lasts.
For, despite a less damning
statement to media from Southern
Section Commissioner Jim
Staunton Sunday, it appears the
10-win rule will be disposed of
after this seclSon.
•Ten wins is a one-bme deal we
won't do again,· Hal Harkness,
interim assistant commissione1
and the section's basketball
adnunistrator this season,
emphatically told a coach Sunday.
•Jt will never happen· again; J
guarantee you that.~
Staunton, speaking mom
ctiplomatically, later told rePQrters
the section will follow 10-wtn teams
in the playoffs, then evaluate
whether the standard will remam
in place.
~ether you llke It or not -
and there has been ample critio-;m
that 10 wins aren't enough to
<Ustingwsh teams
t1s playoff worthy
-the fonnat
certttlnly
delivered
well-deserved
postseason
opportunities to
Costd Me~a
(17-8) and
Estancia (14-12)
this season.
Anyone who
doe.-,n't believe
the Mustangs or
Eagles aren't
Barry Faulkner
PREPS
playoff worthy, did.n 't see them play
dlld, certainly, never had to
compete against them.
U either the Eagles fat 15-11
Verbwn Dei tonight) or Mustangs
(at 22-21Monrovia tonight), or both,
don't win in the first round1 I'll be
more than mildly surprised.
With byes created by five-team
Sea View Ledgue and Pacific Coast
League schedules th.is season, as
weU as PCL boys basketball teams
electmg to conclude their seasons
on Thursday, not Fnday, two local
coaches made good use of their
increased scouting opportunities.
Newport Harbor Coach Larry ·
Hirst said he utilized a league bye
to go scout Brea Olinda, wluch, it
turns out, could be the S<iilors'
second-round ·foe in Division TI-AA.
·we had a free night, so me and
my staff looked m the paper and
picked one game to go to, which
happened to be Brea against
Valencia," stud Hirst, who earned
hiS 100th win as a prep head coach
Friday against Aliso Niguel. "It
may work out for us.•
Costa Mesa Coach Bob Serven
also got lucky, dri~ing out to watch
Pomona Friday. The Red Dev'Us, as
it turns out, could be Mesa's
5econd-round foe i.n the III-AA
bracket.
Serven, whose Mustangs are
appearing in the playoffs for the
first time smce 1992, when all
teams were invited, said the
postsedson is a valuable
SEE PREPS PAGE 7
COLLEGE HOOPS
Vanguard Seniors ignite Mesa victory
• womennp
Westmont, .
73-40;men
fall, 78-63
• Lions maintain le.ad in the
GSAC behind Kelly Boeke's
17 points, 11 boards in 21
minutes of play Tuesday.
COSTA MESA -Vanguard Uni·
versity's women's bdsketball team
got an c.1sy victory against visiting
Westmont, 73-40, on Tuesday for its
12th Golden State Athletic Confer-
ence triwnph. The win keeps the
Lions in first place ahead of Concor-
dia and Azusa Paci.He.
Kelly Boeke led Vanguard (23-5,
12-3 in conference) with 17 points
and 11 rebounds in only 21 minutes.
Beth Weidler scored 16 for the Lions,
hitting 3-of-5 three-pointers. The
Llons Jed, 44-15, at halftime, allowmg
all Vanguard players to log less than
20 minutes or playtng time.
Tena Mensonides led Wesb'nont
(7-16, 4-11) with 11 points. But West-
mont put itself in an early deficit by
shooting 29% from the floor, and only
18% in the first half.
For its next game, Vanguard trav-
els to B1ola on Saturday attempting to
avenge the Eagles' road win at the
Pit on Jan. 22. Biola broke the Lions'
46-game home winning streak in that'
game.
1n the meri's game Tuesday:
Vanguard dropped a 78-63 deci-
. sion to visiting Westmont in Golden
State Athleltc Conference action.
Vanguard (11-16, 3-12 in confer-
ence) got 12 points apiece from Bran-
don Cablay, Garld Beeler and Kem-
my Burgess. Beeler also grabbed six
rebounds.
Westmont (15-10, 7-8) also got a
balanced attack lrom Ryan Monroe
and Mitch Pierce, who scored 15
each.
Westmont, wruch rut rune three·
pomters, took a 40-26 halftime lead
and kept the Lions from getting any
closer.
Corey Blick chipped m with 13
points, while Chris Gonzctles added
1 t for Westmont.
Archs Curtis had nine pomts and
11 assists lor the Lions.
The Uons continue GSAC play at
Biola Saturday at 7:30 p.m.
C osta
Mesa
Hlgh's
Leigh
Marshall
(above) goes
to the floor
to grab a
loose ball
in Tuesday
night's CIF
Playoffs
duel with
Diamond
Ranch.
At left,
. Autumn
Smith goes
over the
top of a
Diamond
Ranch
defender for
a clear shot
in Mesa's
52-39 victory
at Carey
High.
OAllY PILOI PHOTO~
BY KATHERINE HEAD
• Smith, Earnest combine
for 37 points in 52-39 CIF
! ill-AA first-round road win.
Barry Faulkner
D AILY PILOT
POMONA -Members of Costa
Mesa High's Class of 2000 already
passed out flowers and posed for
pictures with theu parents two
weeks ago al the fmal regular-sea-
son home game. But Tuesday
night's CJF Southern Section D1vi-
sion nI-AA first-round girls basket-
ball playoff game against Diamond
Ranch at.Garey High, may have
been a more appropnate senior-
rught celebration.
Mesa's Autumn Smith exploded
for 18 points, 18 rebounds arid five
blocked shots, while fellow
impending gr-aduate Jenny Earnest
contributed 19 points, four steals,
three assists and three rebounds to
lead the Mustangs to a 52-39 win in
a game that seesawed unW the
final four minutes.
The win, whlch ups the Mus-
taogi' record to 17-10 and e~ends
theJ.i 11th titTaJght tnp to the post-
season, advances them to Thurs-
day's second-round clash at Azusa
High (21-3).
•J•m very happy to be moving
on," said Earnest, who scored 13
points dfter halftime, including
nine m the lhrrd quarter, when few
other offensive options appeared
for the visitors.
·1 asked.Jenny to attack the bas·
ket and she did tonight," Mesa
Coach Jim Weeks said. ·she really
stepped up."
Snuth, who had scored more
points only once in her previous 16
games (22 against winless Laguna
Beach), apparently decided H was-
n't time, just yet, to take the final
bow on a noteworthy wee-year
van;ity career.
•Jenny wdS stepping it up, so 1
wanted. to do the same," said the 6-
foot center, who was first-team AU-
CJF and shared Newport-Mesa
District Player of the Year laurels
last season.
Smith, battling dn active and
athletic Diamond Ranch front liile
all night, seized control for the visi·
tors by scoring Mesa's first eight
fourth-quarter pomts.
. Two putbdcks, two tree throws
and a five-foot bank shot helped
the Mustangs extend a 31-30 lead
at the end of three quarters to 39-35
with 4: 15 left.
After a Diamond Ranch !oul shot
CIF _pla1off s · GIRLs··ffOOPS
cut the deftctt to three, sophomore
Christine Caron sank a three-point-
er Crom the comer. Juruor point
guard Nancy Hatsush1, another
third-year varsity veteran, stole the
ensuing inbounds pass and laid it
m to force a Panther timeout.
•That was a huge three Chris·
bne hit," Weeks said ·And when
Nancy converted the steal nght
alter that, 1t may have been the key
stretch In the game. •
The instant hve-pomt firestorm
put Mesa up, 44-36, with 3:40 left,
then Earnest and Hatsushi edch
scored four points down the stretch
to hold off the seniorless hosts.
H It was close for a while," said
Smith, who was also utilized heavi-
ly in the backcourt, as a passing
option against Diamond Ranch's
relentless full-court defense.
The P(!nther press helped create
16 turnovers, frequently forced. the
visitors to use more than half the
30-second shot clock to break nud·
court, and helped keep I fatsushi,
sc-oreless unW 1 :33 left 111 the· Uurd
quarter, out of the offensive flow.
"They ctid a good 1ob on their
press," said Weeks, who added
having JUSt one day to prepare and
having zero scouting i.nfonnation
on the Miramonte League runner-
up, added to Tuesday's chfficulty.
Mesa's defense, primarily a
swarming hall-court man-to-man,
was similarly difficult for the Pan-
thers to make progress against.
Diamond Ranch, which opened
three years ago and won't play in
its on gym until next season,
amassed 19 turnovers and shot a
mere 25% from the field {13 of 52) .
Mesa shot even worse for three
quarters, sinking just 10 of 46 field·
goal attempts t21 .7%), until con-
verting 7 of 15 in the final penod to
finish close to 28~. overall.
Hatsuslu, who netted all four
free throws in the fmal 1 :46, fin·
ished with eight points. She also
added five rebounds and three
assu;ts.
Weeks credited JUnior Leigh
Marshall (six rebounds, three steals
and two points before f c!tuling out),
with inSJ?ired defense against talle r
opponents.
Julie Hitt, the only other senior
who played, as well as juruors Bar-
bara Trejo and Laura Muniz, con-
tributed valuable minute off the
bench for the Winnors
Wholesale· changes for Lions
•Vanguard University tries
to recover from the loss of
five four-year starters.
COSTA MESA -lf you're Van-
guard Univcn;1ty softball coach Beth
Renko:-.ki, how do you rebound from
losing five four-year starters from
your two·time Golcicn Stat~ Athletic
onferenC'e championship team?
Pitching, pitchmg, pitching.
"It's nice that even though we
till have some question. mMks in
di.ffemnt po ition , wo still have
some strong pitching to Ufrow out
lhero." Renko!lk.J said. "Having
some rctummg pitchers will really
heJp u a our new players g t com•
fortahl ...
Leading th L:lom' patching taff
wllJ be ophomor Gina Lteben·
c ood, Who wa1 a second-team All·
:Ar'nerlcan Mlection as a freshpum,
going 22·4 With 4 0.'18 BRA.
Junior Alysia Atchley (S.0, 1. t t
ERA) and sophomore Cheri Smith
'
(4-0, 3.39 ERA) Wlll dlso soo a ton of
innings, both as starter ancl reliev-ers. .
•I'll use a.JI three ot my returning
pitchers os ~tarters 01 in rtalief, •
Renkoski said.
Freshman Cdtch •r Mcrr.d1th
Devey will hove a lot of f af>t leurrung
ahead of her m ordN to h incllc the
Lions' pitching c;tatf.
•Jt's obv1ou~ly a 1119 change
going from high chool to c olh•ge
and she's got a h1u load ahead of
her," Renkosk1 nut. "But she's
doing pretty w ll with al] of \t. Stw
cdrnes n lot ronfldcnc•' on the
field .-
Fnst ba'em n Vnhm Vonilkcn
(,.150, 41 RBis) and outfielder R chcl
Carver (.271, 21 RDI ) ore the only
two sehlors on th y t' quttct and
Renkosk1 will look •owtml them for
I act«>.rshfp nd ofh·n iv produci-
Uon.
•we 111 hov • omc good I· 'ct r
on this t "am," Renko kt ft d.
"We'r gt>nna hav to rely on
-
al returners to keep our traditton
moving tn the nght ducction."
In the infield, second baseman
Enn Gomez, aJong with Vanake n at
fm,t. will anchor the right side, while
Junior college fran fer hortstop
Andr a Sauredo and freshman lhird
bas ·man Jill Jen en will hold down
th left ide.
•The b1gg t thing with the
Infield 11> how well they m • h
together," Rcnkoska Hml • Portu·
nilt••ly, we have plCJyc,$ that c-,in
play d1ffcrnnt po~1tions, o w have
oni • option,.• .
Carver Will ff! ct th(• ouUu'!ld m
left, while speedy sophomore
Stctcey Caggiano tak~ care of cen-
t •r and juruor Nikki Benning holds
down nght.
Off~n ivrly, Renko k1 fpcl U1at
thi • t um h more pee<t Md pow-
er from top to bottom, but CXJK>~
c nc• couM UC the main mi lng
mtan91hl • •our~~~ togeth r is lhe
h ggest faci6t. • ltenkoski 1a1d. •we•
need to get some innings under our
belt playing together. Once we do
that, our confidence should get
tronger and we'll be more comfort-
able.•
They better get co¢)' fast. The
Lions havo the bulls eye on thuir
umtorrn!'i, bcmg the def ending
GSAC champion~.
Despite the ttw>sing players, Van-
guard, dlong with fellow GSAC
teams Azusa Pacific .-nd Point Loma
Naz~r •nc, were all preseason lop·
25 U•arn~, according to thf; NAfA.
-The h1ggost thing wiU1 the
GSAC 1 th mtcmal combative·
ness," Renkoska 1aiet. "Everyone
wants to beat everyone in ow con·
ferenn. I think the biggest thing
wW be :winnmg the games that
you'r supposed to wtn. The team
that de that Wlll take t. •
Can the 21st century Uons have
thu me IUC<' as the teams that
ended the~ cen~ •1 believe we c;an," ieftkosld
said. •we have the tal•t to do.it •
Coll!I.•
SOFTBALL
OUTLOOK
2 Meredith Devey, dinf
5 Sirah Ashley, of
6 Celirwi Carnartllo, p/of
7 Atysia Atchley, plof a Jitr Ramsey, Inf
I Erin Gomez, inf
11 Rachel Carver, of/c
12 Stacey Caggianol of
1J Christi Fortner, of/c
14 Alison Stnidt. Inf
15 Marianne Nichols, inf
11 Che(f Smith, pllnf
11 Nikki Benning, of
20 Vain V.naken, inf =~,p
~ Beth Renkoski
Fr.
Fr.
Fr.
Jr.
Fr.
Jr.
Sr.
So.
So.
Fr.
Fr.
So.
Jr.
Sr.
So.
Fr.
_~_il_y_P_ib_t ____________________ ~Q~ ~~~ry1&~1
OCC armed and loaded
•·If you're looking for a good example of a 180, all
you have to do is take a look at the Pirates of '00.
•Either at the high school level or on
travel teams, I wanted to see whdt
kind of players they were and whdt
they were made of."
Lead.mg the offense i.n different
capacities will be freshman infielder
Kristin Degree and freshman out-
fielder Renee Snyder.
slstenl l'ower h1llPr, • Huommgo
Sil1d . "She'll play c(•nter held and
bal thud for us.•
Buon,uigo hrti; been really hurp-
mg on th<• bds1cs as the key to being
SUCCC$Sf Ul ,
~O'FiiXli°'~
OUTLOOK...., staff with an array of pitches to
chose from.
COSTA MESA -With last sea-
son a forgotten nightmare for
Orange Coast College's softball
team, the Pirates have revamped
their offense and pitching for an
Orange Empire Conference title run.
"Despite the number of fresh-
man, we have actually gained a lot
of experience this year,• Coach Rick
Buonarigo said. •A Jot of these play-
ers have pldyed'ln various travelball
leagues, so they're used to plsying
against high levels of competition.
It's a totally d.ilference dlmosphere
this year.·
"She can throw the rise well and
h4s a nice drop ball," Buonarigo
said. "Those are her main pitches,
but she can also come in with a fast-
ball and change-up at times.•
Aiding Ortega tor the Pirates'
pitching staff is Noelle Espinoza, the
only remaining player from 1999
Degree will bat second m the
Pirbtes' order and with her quick-
ness, will be a threat on the basepa-
ths for Buonarigo's squad.
"This year we really wanted to
bdc:k to fundttmentals, • Buonango
said "Wllh the e player~ and the
exp<>r1enC"l-' thPy have playmg ot t.1U
these> hw<•ls, wE> now have t.1 very
luncitlrnPntally-sound ledffi. •
THE PIRAHS
. 1 Tasha Thurmond. of So.
3 Meredith Miles, inf Fr.
4 Kristin Degree, inf • Fr.
Following last year's 5-32 season,
Buonarigo wanted to make sure he
knew what be was getting for the
2000 season by rutting the road in
search of talent.
"She's really dolilg a great joh for
us, not j~t offensively, but dt third
base, which· is a new posillon for
her,• Buonango said. "She's mciking
a.11 the routine plays and 1s starting
to pull in some of the more dttf1cull
plays.•
Jn the tJlwdy!.-tough OEC.
Buonarigo sees d pretty even sldte
across the board.
5 Renee Snyder, of Fr.
7 Kelly Lee Keller, inf/of Fr.
9 Jennifer Jensen, inf Fr.
10 Amy Sorenby, inf/of Fr.
21 Noelle Espinoza, p/of So.
22 Angelia Valdez, c Fr
Leading the spring cledl'ling is
freshman pitcher/lilfielder Monica
Ortega. She will dnchor the pitching
•Anybody that was going to play
. for us, I wanted to make sure that
we saw them play,• Buonango said.
U Degree gets on, look for Snydm
to dnve her m
·Renee is probably ow most con-
· #rullt>rton is loddt>d, Saddlehack
and Cypwss ttre alwdys tough and
Sdntd Am.1 has some hitters."
Buonangu sd1d. "With our 1mprove-
m<•nts, 1t could be anyone's guess
who ••nds up where.•
-by T1my AllobellJ
24 Monica Ortega, p/inf Fr.
33 Kimberly Guillen, inf Fr.
Coach: Ron Buonarigo
PREPS
CONTINUED FROM 6
opportunity for lower-level
coaches, as well as tus
players.
ul have some guys on my
staff who a re basketball
junkies (including former
Mustangs players Donny
Ogo and Duy i'ran). I'll send
them out to tape gd.mes for
scouting P,Urposes. We'll go
over those videos and,
hopefully, 1 can teach them
something about what to
look for."
Serven, a fonner Newport
Harbor head coach who
spent the last sue seasons
making extended postseason
runs as an assistant dt Santa
Marganta, said videotape.
however, can only do so
much when it comes to
scouting.
"Watching tape give~ you
an idea of what a team likes
to do, but it doesn't g1ve you
a good idea about a team's
quickness,• Serven said.
Scott OdoH ot Dana Hills
High will coach the South m
the 41 st Orange Coun~
All-Star F09tball Game.
scheduled July 14 at Orange
Coast College.
Orloff replaces Marina's
Mark Rehling, who was fired
last week and elected to
relinquish South coaching
duties. Orloff coached three
·Seasons at Santa Ana Valley
before spending the last four
al Dana Hills. A former
All-Empire League lineman
dt El Dorado High (Class of
1982). Orloff, 36, has also
. wo'rked as an assistant at
Century, Laguna Hills, El
Dorado and Sonora.
John Turek from Troy
High will coach the North
in the annual summer
showcase
Mike Bergey, a former
Corona del Mar High
quarterback and safety, who
spent his senior season at
Dana Hills last fall, will be a
preferred football walk-on at
Ohio State.
Bergey will most likely
wind up on the defensive
side of the b<µI, according to
Brent Melbon, a former CdM
player (Class of 1982), who is
the offensive coordinator at
Dana I lills.
., Melbon will work with
Orloff in the All-Stdf Game.
SCHEDULE
TODAY
• Baske1bllll
Community college men -
Orange Coast at Sclddleback,
7:30 p.m.
Community college women
OCC at Saddleback. 5:30 p.m.
High school boys • CIF 01v1sion
Ill-AA Playoffs, first round:
Estancia at Verbum Oei,
7:30 p.m.; Costa Mesa at Monrovia,
7:30 pm.
• Socxl9r
High school boys • CIF Division II
Playoffs, wild card: Anaheim at
Ne~ Harbor, 3 p.m.
• Water polo
High school girls -CIF D1v1sion IV
Playoffs, wild card· Katella at
Corona del Mar, 3:15 p.m. . .....,.,,
College -The Master's at
Vanguard University, 2:30 p.m.
Community college • Orange
Coast at Palomar, 2 p m.
• Softball
Community coUege -Orange
Coast at El Camino, 3 p.m.
• Golf
Community college men • El
Camino vs. Orange Coast at Costa
Mesa G&ct, noon.
Lions .get the 'w' BASKETBALL
SUMMARIES
• Case, Dent lead
Vanguard to 3-2 win
over host Point Loma.
D ISE '6 ~ BASEBALL
-Joshua
Case (Orange Coast College)
pitched eight strong innings.
leading Vanguard University
to a 3-2 Golden State Athletic
Conference wm over host
Point Lomd Nazarene Tues-
ddy
The win was the first for
the Lions m six gdmes (1-3 lD
conference), while the Cru-
saders fdJ.1 to 6-3, 3-1 in the
GSAC.
Case allowed only two
runs through eight mrungs,
stnkmg out six
With the 1..tons leading, 2-
1, James Dent smacked a solo
home run in the top of the
sixth in.rung, giving the wons
dll the runs they would need.
Point Loma scored in the
seventh inning, cutting the
lead to, 3-2, and had two run-
ners on in the ninth but could
not even the score.
GOt.DEN STATE ATHL.EnC a>NfBEllC£
VANGUARD UNfVERSITY 3
Po!NT I.OMA NAzM£NE 2
Vanguard 101 001 000 • 3 6 1
PLNU 100 000 100 • 2 6 2
Case, Schaeffer (9) and Dodds;
Newell, Le1tske (4), VanVassan (7),
Vericker (9) and Trelut. W • Case
L· Newell (1-1) S ·Schaeffer (1).
HR • Dent (VU).
Pirates win first
Mis~ s T A TENNIS
Orange Coast
College's women's tennis
team won its first match of the
year, 5-2 over visiting San
Diego Mesa in a nonconfer-
ence meeting, with two split
College
SPORTS
points.
Sondra McNttmdrn dnd
Merin Yosh1dJ won thl'lr sin-
gles matches, then ledmed up
in a 6-0, 6-0 doubles win The
Pirates improve to 1-1. while
San Diego Mesa drops to 1-2.
NONCONF'EflENCE
OttAHGE CoAST 5,
SAN DttGO M tsA 2
Singles · Ke1jzer (OCC) def.
Ste1yo (SOM) 6-7 (9 7). 6 2, 6 4,
Goode (OCO lost to Martinez
Kruze (SOM) 2-6, 3-6, MGNamara
(OC0 def Lange (SOM) 6 1, 3 6,
6-2; Yoshida (OCC) def Faye (SOM)
1-4, retired; Gibson (OCO lost to
Mondorf (SOM) 2-6, 1·6, Anorus
(OCO def. Porotesno (SOM) 6 1,
6-3.
Doubles -Keijzer-Goode (OCC)
splits Set!YO·Martmez Kruze (SOM)
6-1; McNamara-Yoshida (OCC) def
Ogata-Lange (SOM) 6-0, 6 0,
Gibson-Andrus (OC<:) splits
Mondorf-Porotesno (SOM) 7 6
Vanguard defeats
Dominguez Hills
G Du°~1N:Z SOFTBALL '
HILLS
Valerie Vdllaken hit a grand
slam m the fourth inning,
leading the Vanguard Uru-
versity Softball team to d 10-6
oonconterence wm over host
Cell State Dorrunguez Hills
Tuesday afternoon.
The Lions (4-3) led
throughout and Vanaken's
blast. followed by ct three-run
fifth inrung proved too much
for Dommguez I lJlls (5-2) ~o
overcome.
Andrea Saucedo went 5
for 5 with four runs scored
crnd Stucey Cdgg1dno added
four hit<; dnd lwo RBI for thf>
Lions (2-5)
NON CONFERENCE
VANGUARD UWIVERSITY 10
CAL STATE DoMINGU£Z H 1u.s 6
Vanguard 210 430 O · 10 14 1
CSUDH 010 200 3 · 6 7 2
Atchley, Smith (5) and Devey, Diaz,
Rios (6) and Flores W Atchley
(2 1); L Diaz (2· 1). 28 Saucedo
(VU). HR -Vanaken (VU).
Orange Coast (alls
Cl IULA VlSTA -After an
~': ~ ~t~;~ SOFTBALL
LOdSl C'ol·
lege's ~ofthc1ll team dropped
1ls thud gdme m d rc,w to host
Southwestern 7-4 ·
Pitcher Morucd Ortega 16-
2) pitched d complete qame
for OCC (8-3), striking out
SCVPn She dLSO drove an two
runs OCC "s Knstm Degree
went l.· tor <i dnd stole two
bases without gelling caught,
rnnnmg her !>lredk to 19 m
the theft department
NONCONFEAENCE
SouTMwlsTERN 7, OCC 4 occ 020 020 0 4 9 3
Southwestern 610 000 o -7 10 o
Ortega and Valdez. Vanderbalt
and Ostberg. W Vanderbalt.
5-4, L Ortega, 6-2 28 • Ortega.
Vanguard falls. 9-0
ATH~~ TENNIS
'"'· l..oto&A ~ '· VNGJAllll 0
Slnglft • Doyal (VU) Ion to S1ezc.ka
(PLNU) 6-1. 6-2, Godfrey (VU) lost to
Alvarado (PLNUl 6-4, 6-1; Martinez (VU)
lost to A.ncla1r-D,;s19le (Pt.NU) 6-1. &-0,
Speer Pardtt (VU) lost to Dl.fffin (PLNU)
6-1, 6 o. Boyd (VU) lost to Nar'chello
(PLNU) 6-0, 6-0. N1hau (VU) lost to
leont1eff (PLNU) &-0. 6·0
Doubles Doyal-Godfrey (VU) Ion to
S1t>zcka.-.anda1r Daigle (Pl.NU) 8-1.
Martinez Ferree (VU) lost to
DuH•n Nard1ello (PlNU) 8-0,
Boyd Speer-Pardee (VU) lost to
Alvarado leont1eff (PLNU) e.o
COLI.EGE MUI
ClCll.DtJI ft"n ATllUnC ~ wes~ 11. v~ 6l
W"\mont Pn•lllJK I, Momoe IS, Blick I l,
Paynt O. GollztlM 11. Gulltry l. nnff)' l, l111t 2,
Ollt'11011 ), P1t•c• IS, llom1»19 0, Eltry S
l pt go.sit Bite~ 4, Mon•o. 3, Gui~ 1,
Eley I
Fouled out none
Te<lln1c .. 11 nc>nP V~rd ICU,,. 6. C.b'-Y 12, Curt11 9,
BP, It< 12. Kohl~> 'I. C0tlut<y o. Lft " )
8Ul'Jf"' 11 ~ p\ ~!\ Clbl•y 1, Curt11 1, 8ur9"1 I
fouled OU\ llO"t
TochrJK.i• LH II
tlaiftHn• Vilf\tmonl. 40-16
CiOU)(N JTAn A-.n'IC ~-NO v-7J, WUTMOHJ 40
~t ~ GM'No 0. V•'I ~· l ,
Of< G. w \ <I M-~ 11, lomtll !>.
Brown 1, Will.on 9 Lake l, B•~ 0. oi-, 2.
P..,t l
J Pl P" LC>tMI I
f ,.,.,..J out none v........ lff 8 (~ l l'!Uddi. 8
F•• ~ 8. Borl• 17, l.ndf<man 0 Wrid "f 16 s. '1 ...... """'°° 0 A>c.tton 0.
t-1< K fl<"'Y l Co1•tdoo ar1o1 0
3 Pl go.111\ W_..,., ) lff 1, Emde 1, .,,.,..,...,I
Fw\«1 out M<K1n.wy
H.tllt•""' Van~d. ~ !>
"IGH SOtOOl G"'U
OJ DIV-Mj.,M FlllST llOUNO
COSr.a Mr.SA 52, °"""°"'° ~ )9 5c:of'9by~
Costa M~ 8 10 1) 21 S2
O•a.rnond Ran<ll 7 10 I) 9 39 eo.t. ....... (atl'W'SI 19, Smith II.~ ..
CMon 3. Mar\htll 2, Trorjo 2. Murtll O. H•tt 0
l pt go1ls CA<on I
fouled out Mar VI.all
Di..r-.d ~ fl~c ..... ll, f~~I 10,
M<C...11 S. 8"'Y Boya 4, ThomPtOO 2, Madrid 1.
llom\Jto 2. Knott 1
) pt go.ab · NOM
foul«! out • 1""9 Boy•
HAPPY BIRTHDAY
C.WWatina the o.ltj Not'I A1hlete of the Week..,._
r---------------~----, I I I
I I 11 I I I I
I I
I I
I I I I
I I L-------------------~
"Affordable
Alternative"
Dlscowit Casket,
Cremation A
Burial Service
...
. . . . • • • ' J . ' '. . ... , ~ : . . . . . .....
• ~ ... r ll8C 9157 am1n1t1on In fie ._,. ) 1h9 llllnO Of an In
NOTICE OF ..., the OOl#1 I, YOU 08.JECT to venloty and appta!MI of
"'THE PETITION re· lhe llflnllnQ Of fie petf-e1tate MMtl 0< of aoy PfTITIONITE que•t• authotlty ID ICI-uon. ·you llfwxJld appear pelltiOn or aooounc u TO AOW.t R mlnllter the e111te under at lhe heating and 1\lte 11rovleftd In •Prob11e
ESTAT£ OF: lhe Independent Admln· your Obledk>M or 11141 Code eec:tlon 1250 A WILLIAM P. lllration o1 Estac.. Ac1. wtftteo objectione with Reqvea1 for Spedal No-
HAOLEY (Thia Authority wW 1111ow CM ooun belore Ille lloe form It avaW>le CASE NO. A200ll3 lhe pettonll ~· hearing. Your ap· from lhe court clerk
To .. hen, benefl· nv. IO lake meny ec· ~'9(1Ct may be In per· A'90meY for~ a.nea, a.dlfotl, oonl· tlOn6 wlltQ.C ~ son 0t bY ycliir attorney PMtctoner:
lngenc credllofs, and QOUrt ~-Betofe IF YOO ME A OREO· McOennott, Wiii &
pert0ne who may Olhef· taking c.naln very Im· ITOR or contingent aed· Emwy
Wiit be lnt9rNted lo the pc>IWll KtlON how-llor of lhe deOeaMd, you ~ lchufman,
wtt °' ••tate, or both, of. ~r. Ille pe~ ~· mutt "8 your clam With Eeq. H10l4 WILLIAM p HADLEY tenta!M Wfl be requited lhe ooutt and tnell a IMn K. HlaalM,
A PETITION FOR ID give noetoe '° In· copytolhepereonalre_p-Eeq. 11Ml'r
PROBATE hu been ttf .. tlCI pellOOI unless re.maUYe eooolnled by 11111 Von Kerm1n
flled by JOAN e they haV9 walVed nollce the oourt Within four Ave., Ste. 500, lrvlne,
HADlEY In the Superior 0t c:on11n11<1 to the montri. from the dlte of CA t2t12.0117
court 01 C•llfornl•, propoted 1C11on.) The the first It~ of let· Publlehed Newport County°' ORANGE lnd•pendent 1dmlnl1· cers as provided In Pro-Beach-Costa Meu THE PETITION FOR tr11Jon authority Wiii be bete Code MCtlOn 9100. Dally Piiot Februety 9,
PROBATE *IUlll• that granted unte11 en tn-The time for fifing clalm• 15, 16, 2000 JOAN B HADlEY be fereetlCI person ftlel an Will not expire before WT7Qe
eppolnted u peqonel obtldton to ~bhon tour montri. from.~~ c• ••••PllD ~eenta.IMl to IClmln-and shows ~ cauee heaNng date not....., -~11taleoflhede· ;:'J,.':i.":,.~not ~MAY EXAMINE ;:,, ~~_.r.
THE PETITION re· A HEARING on Che lhe IM Upt by the court myriad of m«oNtt-
Que111 Ille dec»denl'• petition Wfl be held on If you are • person lo· dlH HMM, ~"
Wtl and oodlCll, 1 any, MARCH 9, 2000 et 1:45 teresled In the estate, :~11f.:1~~~y:,>~~
be ec:tmltted 10 ~-p.m. In 0e9t. L73 lo-you may Ille Wllh the 41111 The w1a and any OOdloill cated 11 341 The City oourt a Request tor Sot· tor ex· Dtlw Soulh, Ore cial Notice. (lorm OE·
,,..
. • r·
. "' .r
NOTICI OF PETITION
TO ADMIHllTER
ESTATE OF:
DOROTHY HASS
aka DORY HASS au DOROTHY
ANN HASS CAie NO. A200t57
To all heill, bentlf..
aane1. creditors, oonc·
lngent Cted•tOfl, Ind pereont Who may 04hel"·
Witt be k\ter"ted In the
Wiii ()( Nllle, Ol both, of
DOROTHY HASS Ilka
DORY HASS eka
DOROTHY ANN HASS
A PETITION FOR
PR09ATE has been 1111<1 by HERBERT F.
HASS lfl lhe Superior
Court of Cetltomla,
County of OAANGE THE' PETITION FOR PROBATE 1equeste that
HERSERT F. H,\SS be
•ppolnled .. peflOllaj
repreMrUtlve to edmln·
Iller Che estate of the de· c.dent
THE PETITION rt·
Ind •• any,
be eClmllled IO proOlle
~Wll Ind any COdk:llt .,. 1'lalllll>le tor H·
lmlnatlon In the Ille upt
b)' the court.
THE PETITION ft·
que1ts luthotlty lo ICI·
mlniatef !he estate under lhe Independent Mmln· lltreuon ol E•tat" Act.
(Thie Aulhomy will •low
tne ~ repretenl·
etNe lO lake many IC·
llonl wlth«>IA obtaining
OOIJrt apl)fOVll Befote taking certain very Im·
Portant letlon•. ho'#· ever, the personal repre·
1eot1bve wilt be required
JO give notle9 to In·
lerestlCI peraona unlN•
they tiave waived notJce
or consentlCI 10 the P«>POMd llCllOn ) The
lndepeno.nt 1<fmlnl•·
tratlon authol'lty Wiii be
QfantlCI ~leU an in-litrMllCI pereon fllet an
objection 10 the pe1111on
and ltlOWt good cause why the court~ not
grant lhe..authol'lty.
A HEARING on lhe
petJtJon Will be held on
Doily Pilot
·_ .J
''. pm. In Oept L73 lo· ltreetec:t In the ... te. Name atet.ment ,.__ 8tlilement
cated at 341 The City you m~ file With the The follOWlng pel'ION The fo11oW1nO peteont
Dtlw South, Or1nge, QOUl'1 I ReQUest lor Soe· are doing bu1lne1S 11. •our,.. dolllQ buelileu ••· CA 82868 • Cl.II Nolloe (loon 0£. Roar Anoc11111 3e0 r~
IF YOU OOJECT to 154) of lhe filing of an in• San Miguel, NewpOrt &· ACOUSTICS, t IN Pa·
the grant~ thl pell· ~IOfY and appr11M1 Of eon, Clilllomia 82680 clftc: Cout ~-, Suite o
lion. you """". Id 1ppe11 Htlle 1uet1 01 of •ny RoQer E Riiey, DOS 1120, 5ea1 BMd\, CA
II fle bea •• ..., and &tale petrtlon or llCClOUnt ., Inc , (CA), 400 ~ 90740
your ot>,eooona or Ille 11rov1deo In Ptob11e Canter Onve_ Newoon Ralph Ga/1..ict, 20332
wn11en qbjec11onf with Code MCtlon t250. A BMd't, cailfofnia 82&60 Gerclen a Dr.. Hunt·
1M OOUl1 befort the Request fOI Spedet No-This bullnel1 11 con· lngton Beach, CA heer1ng. Your ap· IJce lorm II ~llable duaed by 1 c::orponillon 9284e
pearanc:. may be In per· from ttle covn deft<. Have you ttart•d Thi ~ It con-'fF ~o'3' ~ :=. p::::::f: for the doing bulr Ernea yet?0DNSo ducted by· an lndMdual
ttOAorcontingentc:rlCI· Kenneth O. Botomon, lnc~o-..r~' RH•• Have J:!u •lerled
ltor of the decleasec:t, you Eeq. (CIBt '4t24) ~ 1 DOS p;:'° y, ~: Gart:J811 No
must Ille your c:talm With 2-U Broedway, Leguna Thll statement was This statement wa•
the court end mall a Beech, CA 12151 1111<1 with the County filed wllh the County
COl>Y to the pertonat rep· Publlehed Newport Clem Of Or1nge County Clork of Orenge County
rHentatlve ap~led by Buch·Coete Mese on OM0-2000 on 01·20-2000 !he court within lour OaUy Piiot February 8, 2000ll18312 2000N1711t
months from ttle elate Of 15, 18, 2000 Oally Piiot Feb 8, 18, Dally Pilot Feb 18, 23,
Che llrst tssuenoe of let· WT708 23 Mar 1 2000 W107 Mat 1, 8, 2000 W708 ~$5 h~ lN;,h UmJ kJ,z/b
lout months from the w~ 1 ~ (JVf/V =g Cf1te noticed A GOOD A. DI
YOU MAY EXAMINE e
the ftle ~Pl by the 00Uf'1.
If you are a person In·
Monday ............. : ... Friday 5;00pm
Tuesday .............. Monday S:OOpm
Wednesday ......... Tuesday S:OOpm
R1111·" 1u11l 1l1·u1llirw ... un· -11lijl•1·1 ro du111gl'
"11l11n111101i1•t>. ·nrl' 1mlifi .. f11'r n·"'rit"· 1lw
npJ11 w 1•1·11 ... 1r. rrda .. ,ir~. 11•\ j.,.. or n •jf'1·1
um da-. .. 1f11·d 111r\1·n1-.t11w111 PIN1.,.. rtport
811\ rrmr 1hat n1u\ lie· iu \Ullr rl.1.,.ifir.t 1111
i111i11t'lh,1trl~. 'I lir 1>111h P'ilo1 111·1·1·ph 1111
liuhil11\ fur um rrror in 1111 111h1•n1.,...111r111
fur 9o fiidt II Ola~ lH• fl''fHllhif 1fr l'\l'l·fll ror
tlw 1·11 .. 1 of 1111• 'f'IH't' 111·1111111~ 111•1•11pi1-.l l1~
By Fax
(9-+'J) f>:J f .().)IJ-+
ByPbooe By MaMn Person: Doors
'I l'lq 1lr111w 8::lllu111-:">. OOp111
\ lun• L11 ~ n•LI\
\\ull-111 8::lOu111-;>.00p111
\11111.t,n I rulu'
Thursday ....... Wedne day S:OOpm
f9-+'J) CH:!-><>78
1 t.r mw Cwdit 1·011 mrh I H' 111111\\ 1•!1 for 1 ht•
ftN i11 .. 1·nio11.
II'~•~ mtfu.i.-""" 11-rnc 11n•I 11l~11M muulll'r 11ml u I( ,.,,If \uo
11111 ~ v. uh• I""~ 11111111 .
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\1 \1·•1oun llh•I & S.1' ''
.......,...,..---
• I'\
... ·-~
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. '
Gt EQUAl HOUSING COLEEN BAENNAN llO CAHYOH 11,U0,000
OPPORT\HTY Stf19 Corona def Mar I The ullimale prtcy, Piil' oramlc ¥leMI Lovlly 58' Al,.., ................ ..-------..... hofM. Cell Geotglnl 6mlfl
......,. ............. ftf. at 949-759-3710 Of Stell
tr1l hlf "-llt Act If UN• Wercl. AfP· 949-758-3729 . "'"'"•lllctl 111111". ..... -It llttrll.. • lllJ tHtltftHt,
ll•lltltll tr .. tcrl•IHllH
""4 ti Ifft , ctltr, rtlltltll,
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......... --..1.111111.· '"' M•••••tt •Ill 111 .......,~., ......... ...... ,... ............... .............. ow,....
"' lltn'1 l•I•••• 11111 '" "''".... . ... ,..... .. ... . .....,.,., ............ ... ..... .........,..._Ttl-·
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."!.' .. "'21.:-·
•V.A.•
.... . StlMll
FMt COUNSEl.IOO
nDUSTOF~S
HUONAREPOS
714-134-000
a••·········· .... : HOMES OF : • • : THE WEEK :
: Showcase :
a Homes •
: For Sale :
: In Our Sat :
• Real Estate • • • • Supplement I •
: Ol1play Ada :
: Start at $85. :
• Deadline : Tue1day 5PM
· : Alto ...
• Open House : U1tlng1 Avl.
: Oeedllne
• Thureday
: 5PM
: h Paya to
• Advertise •
: In the Beat
: LOCAL
• Rell E1t1te
: Section
: Cell Today II
: LISA
: RIVERA
: 849-574-4252
: ANNE
: WILLEY
: MM74-4249 .................
•• ~,,' 'f,-, .. -·:
'· . ( ,. . ... "
: ~ ._ • J' • ~ ...
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l_..,, ._ .!... ... ·~ -. . . ~ 2Br 291 din, wfd hllllpl, ,.~,,. ,.~ u-. 1 "'ger, tundlclk, no pell, ""IT ...,.. """'Ill' -IVlil 3/1, fenlll lillP re<( d SPICIAL 11450 94!Hl73-130e eve.
FINANCING
800-290-1995
x500
... FOR SALE IY OWNE" 31.ar 291. IOUltt rHone •
2c ow W1pr1cQ tor ~, rg 1o1
3':11 20tl' ~75K. Crlll1Ye = 949-300-2221 ~IMIUVlfdlAO
4& 281, flPP'OX 2000 If,
1-M, fern rm; lrg tell, !l.181 Fp,
pooV11t g11. $297 ,500
Agere, 8tt1Y Pl/Mr Clll lor £ 714-5"&4·1403 FilMtWM2iftlto bdl 2 My towMGIM. 2tlf Ubl Open 111-lun 1M
2171 Ptcfllc Awe.1221,NO
11111•eou
. .. . ' . . . ' . .. ' . . t '11 •
~T"T .. ~ ..-, ... ,"'f"ll'
.. . . . ' -....
\s" ' ' I
.... 411· • :
·.~" :r :1
•THE•
SHORES
APTS
Short term
Corporate
Rentals
Starting at
$1095/MO.
Furnished apt1
avail. 8 block•
from the beach.
94M4+26J1
< 1 -• ~. ~ ~ • l I' ~ .'6
.. ~ • ' 1 ' . . . : .( .. i
.. , T
Index
2to. 391
. -,_ --
''
• J ' . '•. ... -ao -461
FAIRWAY APARTMENTS
AT BIG CANYON
CATED COMMUNITY BY PASHJON ISLAND
Beautiful W.lined •1,..t• and golf course
view.., Enjoy caref!M living In your large
2 dR ape.rtment homel
• Two-cer gerage
• Wnh«/dtylf hookupa
• Fire~ (wood & gu)
• "" conditioning •Wetber
• '2.290 to '2.500
,,..... cal (949) 844-0!509_..:a:t
Another eu.11 --
VY'~~ -Bay&ont c:ommu.nity with private beach
& muin.a. Walk to a.Jbo. I.tand shopt.
Minuca fiom Fuhion lei.and. Ext,.:.
...... apartmcrltll with wood bumin1
&ftp~ .nd priva~ p.racc.
• Bo&c elifM available •
Sorry No Pea
NOW LEASING 2BRl2BA
and 2BR/2BA with dc.n
S 199S-S2800
Plcue call (94'9) 760·<>919
--. .· . -:v .. . ,
·. . . . . 'l
•. • . •• ·"ti
Motel MANAGERS
•SPECIAL•
$154.00+ tax Wkly
(Mull prll«ll .. Alf)
Z15 ""' ' lft:twlelll 5*llled on bMU!My
larldiclped QIWldS
FEATURES· 24-Hour
Lobby/Direct dlal
phont1/Fr11 HBO •
ESPN & Dile/Pool &
JIMZI, Guell laun-
dry Clole to 405 & 55
Fwyt Min's lrom 0 C
Flk"dl. COiiege and bchl. Wdtlng cls-
latlee lo lhops anCf
IMlltltlnCI COSTA MESA MOTOA ll~N
2271 Hlrtlot llvd ~M~
-----. . ' ,-' . .
I .. ' t ti :'
'• • \ • ,•. I '' • . • '1-4 . ..-.. -
'.-I
. ' ...... ,. . . . .. ·
I ITFM TO
HOUSFJIOLD
ANnQw
8ooKs
COU£CTIBW
PAJNTINGS
P0'1Tr.RY
Friday ............... Thursday S:OOpm
aturday ............... Friday 5;00pm
470. 471
Earn Extra Money. -
Work for Census 2000 :
Census 2000 Is recruiting Individuals to help
take the Census in communities across the
country. This job offers flexible hours,
competitive pay, and work close-to-home. If
you want a second job or are retired, lt"s
perfect! Mo.st Census field jobs last
approximately four to six weeks .... We provide
training and mileage reimbursement, and we
pay our Census takers and crew leaders
weekly. We need you, so call the Local Census
Office or our toll free number . l~~:.:::.::;.::i~;.,::=1111 ,~:;:tto.":!i~. Do it Now! . ..,_._.r_
-~~Eu 1-888-325-7733
WR BUY 19TAftS ..._..._~.;;. www.census.gov/jobs2000
~ corJ.SIG~J~,~HJTS !
I • " • TD0:1·800-341·1310
AH IMPORTANT JoB -THAT PAYS~!!!!!~!!!!!~. , , . I
,, I . _,
llAYTAo
WASHEM>f'YEA. EXC£Ll.flfT COHOmOH.
UDO. MNP-7'72 Yi~ Kenmore
helYyGAy 11\MCNno ...... ,.,.,, '230el 11..-.nt1 ... .... , ,: . ~·
·-. '·. > ... .
---
'
....... ---
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'I I • ! • '-~ ...... : '· •'."""". I •• I
-·· . .: . .
I.fl -;
Doily Pilot
• . --~ "nL-'9Q
lo·• . ~.
--d~·1
'I . I • ' .
ftllii/SOLOS NEEOlO
111 h Calf9fllia area Com-
1*1Y Ind lnClepencjer11 eon. ulCiortwelotml.ForlTIOlt
1nlo1m111on call
1·800-555·CWTS (2987)
EOE (CAL•SCAN)
VETERINARY Recp·t
Ind T ICh 10( busy
enlmal hosp Exp
preferred Please
ape>IY 111 person 81 t2oe S.E. Brlatol,
Santa An• Hefghta
(714)754-1033
Wicka Furniture
In eo.ta Mese 15 now t.iong WAREHOUSE WORKERS
CL.ERICALJCUST SVC
CONCIERGES
Corpot8't benefit pacll. 991 Included. full •lld
Plt'I tllne po1t1lon1 avail.
Retell hours. Pleue apply
In pweon e 3200 Hlrbor
81Yd, Coate .....
'4 PHONE REPS.
!'\Al time. ene<gelle IOf ~Co, eam 10 $600
it week + benefits. sa"'..s
1XP prefd Contact Meli!>Sa
!49·250-5719
PIHM be 1were that
the llatlnga In thlt
cattgory m.tY require
you to cell 1 900
num~r In which
tlwl II e ch11ge per
minute.
·1·11 ~l~ll 4f2 siBI
CARE GIVER """° f()f GOOD wliRLY IACoUf OVER YOUR HlAD ~ Yf dd man wlPllklnlOI~ PlocesMlO 11'111 f1 IUll" 111 OOIJI??? 0o you need
NlffM Comfllnlonahil'fY, Illes, ~ ~>Onun!ly l!IOle brtathilg room??? ""~ w~ nurtunng ~usti llOng Slll·w S()IJ..t Debi ~uon no QU11
rllrlble 1'i115 PIT ITl<MaY atamped Pdloj)I) 10 ACt ifyJOOI' 'FREE con&UllatJon
Cal Jolee 949-376-3985 ~ 503. P 0 Bo• 5769 lolbee (IOO) 556-154'
Olllnond Bit. CA 91765 WWW 1n1whon~on «II
I I {CAl 'SCAN) LJcenWd t>ondlld non· 4800~ UiORIDINCOME'IN prolll/Nalion1I Co
• • ,Vending$$$ 4K·12 SK I~ (CAL'SCAN) r======= ~ ="F=llHl,i===-=:;;=;;1
P ..... be wwy ol out IV•lable wilh QOO<l trectl 464 ' ~
ot .,., CO!n91rtin. caa (wt# 1.a zse-2011 TO LSDWANTID
Chtcll With the local {CAL'SCAN) • •
Btttlt Butlntu Bu· •MEDICAL 9ilLINO• Are you drowning In
r11u belore you Mild Process inwrante dallTIS overdue bllla? Stlttwlde
any mon.y or '"' Local lliMIWlg 6 doc:W~ Agency can htlp you !1411
for 1trvlc11. Read pr<W~ 800-890-4467 beck on top wfth any and underl1alld 1ny lln1ncl1I dlfllcultl11,
contrecta bet •FOR SALE• butlnuau, hom11
•lgn. ore you HANDYMAN BUSINESS boll•, h1v1 VIC:ltlon .rid
Eatlb 20 yre. pertontl. en.538-1'54
Hott11t Bus Opponunity Tum:z operation "CASH" fOf~ S.lvet&QoldcOB 94 31-6609 llMlecNte SSS Up lrunl
Clll Joe Mt-UMi24 I , I cash lot tncome Mream. COl<EJWELCHESIFR1TO 482 CREDIT tram ~ate nolet, Real Es·
JO• HI TrlHc Loc's SERV1CfS lalt, Amutties and insur· S 1500'weelclv ol~ an:e payments viatlcal se1
F'lnllldng FR~r¥1doo CREDIT PROBLEMS? Uements CaQ Wendy II
800-33M375 24/ht~ • 1 Late Paymenls1 Tox 1Jen5? ~ G t -~~-~~ I t h
BILLERS UP to #W·S40/hr Ju<lljements? 8anJ11uptcy? (CAL°SCAN)
Easv medocal li4ding lrom Foreclos111es? Repoa'I Ir;===-=-=-=;;;;
home. we traon MIA.I o....,, JUST $399
Crof1'lPUle1 & roodem Cal "°'Money Back 690 POWER 1-81!8·792-0805 ex1 785 Guwan1e1 BOATS
(CAL'SCAH} To Get VOUI Crecltl 6ac11 In ·~~~---:-~~-==
I Oeder. Aro Let Your 8right 1 II 9 6 S I! A R A Y
COl<EIPEPSllWELCH SI Fulute 8eglll SUNDANCER 27FT. 100
Fnto Vendilg Routes 30. Call 949-678-9009 hr• Incl 1X11nded warr.
high trat1rc kicat1ons Prolita Asll IOf Plllk $57,000149-644·1170
up 10 S 1500 ~ekly!I Min. lndep Represen1a11ves
lmum investment $4.000 ICR Services 692 SUPS/DOCKS
F1n1ncin?. free Video CREDIT CARD DEST? /MOORINGS 1 ~33 •1375 (24 hours) A~ood bankruptcy 'Stop 1.._~~-~--~ (CAL SCAN) Colecll()n cah 'Cut ~nanc:e WANTED tUp tor 26ft AO VER ft SE STATE· cl\allJ8S 'Cul peymenls up bolt lJttle 1'51 Bal>oa a
WIDE!ll Up 10 2S.words to 50-x. Debt consolidation S.alboa Peninsula pref d
$450 1n 220 Cahlomla F~t App!ovll' No ctedrt ~ Dan 949 574·2003
newspapers ateulallon O'<er check (800)270·9894 3 m1111on. Nat1onw1da (CAL'SCAN)
network class1lr8dld1Splay --------
op11ons also av11llable SELL CALSCAN (916)288 6019
or (916)288-00tO your home wwwaipa com
(CAL'SCAH) through classified
695 CARS/TRUCKS
NANSISUVS
Bridge
By CHARLES GOREN
wilh OMAR SHARIF
and TANN.Ni HlllSCH
Wlllt'll 11~1 ..,._I,
Uu1h Yul11cr.1ble Nunh oc;il~
NORTH • Q IU85
I\ OJ 9 o KJ871
•\old
\\EST J'..\S1
•63 •72 1 1073 o KI S () Q 10 5 0 3
•AK984 •JI076532 'IOUTlf
•A KJ 94 642
A4J64
•V
lli.. l:>KIJ111~
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5.) l'rm
PM-.s 1''"11
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I• l'a ' 5 I'll.a
66 '""~
Opening lc.-1 King of •
U\Wlfly, 11-hcn f11.:t0 With 8 Cil<.>Kt'
of two finc'.U<." 11 t\ t>h~1oot 11.hteh 1
111< naht one to Ul~C But lhjt " nut
al"'ays the coK Cun\1Jcr th1\ h•lno
North 1:()1110 nt~ ha~c w1~J for u
~ner resp~in\c to the onc·Ju1m1111J
orenmg btd 1han 11oc 'pill.le -~11d1.k11
ly a IJ·p<>ml hanJ hitd hccorne 1 llJ
20 pointer (h~r ttlt.· 11¥81l'\~l'.e nu'll:
tu four spa.JI.'\ ~th 'uc·b1d ora
111111111. h1 try lo, 1,. 11 11 h,• 111 ~uo-1•10
trotu ruinu 111.1 11.11<·11N111h •~1l1g· cd \H'lll Mflllltlol tu lht >p.i<le l.1111
lllktn m 1\<>l•111<H1, Ifie pcn.ot 111~r'-'
play IJI Ille niJ MJll~ I\ 101 Ul~\" Ilic
hcan fir~\C nJ pla; luf die dti,lJ• on
di 1111lll(f\ I >c:d;un 11111\"d the chih
Cl[lCn1n~ lead end drrw irum~ 111111.0
r11UnJ\ /\ hc.ut finr~~ 111 t It• tlW'
~1111! lanJ u IK:Ull \\II: M•llll<:•I \\hen
tk\;fan: r 111 •W 1111.'!I I I 1h11p 1hc 1111< \'fl
l•I tli 11111111J,, h.:r h1i;h11e\~ v ... ui.t 1101
ohh1'" 011"'n ""t'
I'"''' lrt.1111m. "'ere l i. de1;l 11c1
coul1I l11H• ,1h1K•\t cl.unit I 1hc """'
lllK I ~It, r rulhng the duh 11111f ,J1 1v.·
'111g lllllllf•\ .rtd111J1 \II h 11111 ckCl;ue1
i>11oul1I h<t•C c::1 ho.'d th.: iw.c ul 11~1
llltl111.h 111d lltlll Im wJ 11 IJI. ~ A•
1tw <;lflh he 1lia1 ""',.,, 1ml tkdar\'r
· ln)C\ 11111) 11 !1<':111 111 ~
llu\.\\'H'r, kl u '"l'JMJ\• thal I M
"'"•' llll' w1<1r1l.I 111.1111111111 "'"" thi: 'j"c'" Iii.it l'O.l1;111~h th~ ildi:11il.:1\'
I ldll!OllO •• 11111 1:3 I ,, U't ('ilhcr CC•n
~C'\lc 1 lull rull, 1llm .. 11g d~ 1~1c1 to J1~rd a h<:irt Ir •II h nd tv ~··c
1k\:I Ill •• ~'C11llll l11:o111 Ill I b1 kl!J
m~ lhJt ~u1t Into lfu111m~ ~ • maJ<lf
1< 1u t' bthcr "·I,)' Iii;; I 1llli •Ir 1111 11i.l
l.t~l' \1~11.' ul di:, IJICI \ ldll 1111111~
hcwt '""' 1, 11110 the ~l.1111 1~ 11 .. 1111 ,, ,,
th1· lu.,,~ uf fU\I 0111.' 1l1.111lond Ill( I
695 CARsrrRUCKS NAHSISUVS 695 CARS/TRUCKS I 695 CARS/TRUCKS NANS/SUVS /VANSISUVS
CADILLAC CATERA '97
lo miles beige. 111/\ lealhor
lloya, bal or Wltr & morel (01~16) $16.988
f\ORO EXPLOYER '117 I MERCEDES BENZ 300E
Eddie B1utr Edition, ·90, AedlHn llf11nser pkg
whlll, epo1le11. $22,000 1 lowered tmtr-cJ lmmac
949.955.1449 1(~0 t km1 (2RJR804,
FORD XLT RANGER 97 Siil 000 PP 949 673·2044
STARTING
ANEW
BUSINESS??
MERCURY SABLE 17
LS Power tock.I &
window• $2100
114-931-4915 •
Acure legend L" ·90
~1e. 4dt VB 111110 NC.
llh1. lull pwr ps, pl) pw
cruise conll<il. am Im cass.
137k ml. snn. 1 ·ownet, nnnt
cOl'otl $8 800 949·723·1963
BMW G181C '114
Conv, black/black, no
NABERS (714)540-9100
CADILLAC Concourt ·97
295 H P Northstar low
1111186 Sea M<:>t lttv & mvr•
(212804) $25.988
NABERS
(114)540·9100
CADILLAC DEVILLE '99
V·8 Northstar. low 18k mile~ ~alhtlr billnct ol
warranty prtv10U$ rental 1ttldeot., orlg.11111 owner, 1762093f $24 988
new brltcn a btlta, lully I NABERS ·
Truck, Erltl clb. black/ NISSAN SENl RA GXE 95
black, 5 apeed. 2.3. AC, 5 Spd t.Carllat ~ Of White
em·fm can, 36k ml, ll1rt Gr11~ lr~enor ):.,,t Coo01-
xlra clunl Bedllner bon Aek:.Ltc Ot?~
$10,9001149-631·6673 Gri>~t Puce 101 a Great Car•
HONOA c1V1c EX"iS _!_6750 Call 949·581-3012
Whl toadlld xlnt con<I tpw Oldsmobile Siihouette '99
ml. bought new car mo\t set GLS l'<l~ ta11 t1h1. lo.v 10k
$6800 obo 949.r,15 '3114. Ill! ct, dva doors & mo1e1
JAGUAR VANDEN PIH 9t l115'•25) S20988
Grey, lltcellent condrllon, (7.~A5B4~'!~00 ONLY 701Cml. Mull Seel ••) .,.., $12,700 949 .. 51-8345 PLYMO'"'u::::'TH:-:--::G"'R'"A""N=-D--
JAGUAR XJ6 'n VANDEN VOYAGER 92 6 cyl lroot &
PlAS 4-<IOOr lull VNl, sun reer a. '°'1(k"1 au. pwr
•~~~~~~., loaded, $18,500/obo (71•)540-9100 94M45·33n • • • • •
TIN Ltfo1 J),ptlrt,,,,nt •t 1/., V..rlj f'r/.or u pk11Jt' 10 •n•intmtt • "'"' """"
[IN .... ""1tk • """' •..-twJ
\l'.i ,,,JJ -SEARCH lhr ,.._for)'"' 111 ,.. "'"" t'-ft. •nl "''"' Jll" 1J r """ ""* '"f 111 * c.,.,,_ H11W1 ;,, S.nlJI AIM. Tl>nt. •f '""'" 11far thr
-"" u t'llm,w./ tw 111J/ fik Jll'" finm11111 hl•Mfl NI-"'""""'' 11.11h 1ht
C-111] Onit, 1111H11h lllW't • _,k far fo11r ..,,,}a ., "'l"'rrJ "1 J,,J,. •n' IMn fik
Jll"r 1-f •/1••ltt111"'" ""'rh lk c-n,, Ckrlr ~JUI "1 to fik Jll'" fim1111111 llMJu>nt Jt•tt1W1ff •t th O..JJ Pil.r, 3 'O \I'.'
Bl]SI. um1Ma4. If JO" n11t1Nt 1to/ "",,,.,, r11U 111 •1 (949)642-43111111' u.~
1111U 1r111kt •rrtl"l""'"" for JO" ,.. h.ruik 1/111 ~'""" J., ,,.,,,/ . If!""""'""'),,,,., •11] fort/Hr fWllllMI, /UaU tt11/ ,., •nl n f;•l/I br "llJrt t/111'1
~ 111 .illll yow. C..J l11tlt "' yowr nt'kl br.Jrntu1
Ill> BMW 328 CONV.197 CADILLAC DEVILLE '117
Beaulllul Metalllc Gr1tn, V·8 No1'1hs1a1, Sapphtr• Blue, balaroe of warf rool Wiit whe(it~ 1 ""'"'" SS.400 '14 608·1657
1ec0tds, rea"y Cl'la11 car TOYOTA -CAMARV SE
$4,500. 949 723 1504 COUPE 94 "8~ 11'11. 6 cyl
Ill> Jeep Chlrokat L TO 87. turty fu,.,Jt.'() •Int cC>l'ld 0119
4 WO am'lm dts.k ~"' ~orl owr r S7o00 ~'I (l'.13-0302
Perfect Condition. 14k · 12832721 S l9.98~
ml. S33,000. 949-7o&-0806 NABERS
BUICK COUPE ·n (714)540-9100
$500. 714~2-0338 CADILLAC DEVILLE '116
BUICK ROADMASTEJI '94 Low miles '4tilte. tin rttenor
low 51 k motes be19e V·8 Northstar •tnl oond
11111 It'll. $31\ btla ... blUe bOO~
S4995 941l 760-2() 14
lelllllr. rare lllOOOI. MlNTt (279825) S 17 .988 (• 11348) $11 988 NABERS Jttp ChtrollM limited
NABERS (714)5~·9100 '90 S.dl 4 wtt dr red "'
(71 4)5~·9100 Cidlllic EldOreCIO '§8 giay •hr 111t tow p1k9, pwr
CADILLAC CATERA '118 Low .miles. VB. Northstar, seal./WlndQws, 1oul rack
Lo 15k m1k!s. s-ve1, tea1hur. 91eeo, bal ol wa11 & more• extraordinary low m1. 76k
mooncool CO. bal ol wan (6t2740) $28 988 ml. keyless enlry AskllllJ
(0223&4) $20988 NABERS $8500 714 424.9tl89
NABERS (714)540-9100 MERCEDES E300 ff
(714)540·9100 CADILLAC Sein OevUit '116 Turbo diesel RARE I 0 Red leather 80I< ITllla w-J6 ~ remainlnQ C R e move per va1t.1e•<i75'93) $8,988
1
$733/mo 01 peyofl IS Call NABERS $43.800 12 500 1111 ~ Cl1taalfted . (714)540-9100 Tan loaded 949 720-97%
Simplify your
life through
CLASSIFIED
(949) 642-5678
HOME, HEAL TH AND SUSINESS
~ ......
ERVICE
Wednesday, February 16, 2000 9
TODAY'S
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
STUMPED?
:J2 Swebr
33 TOIJ'
3A H ... oo :l6 f4ede;hM oj
bo•ing 37 LL 0 l>OIOat
40 Songer V•k1
"3 0.S•l'1 ptwtomene u .••-of
i><da •e Pew~Ul'd
•9 Comrnercida
SI Pr1p1•M llol6 ~ SC)tWtg llowef S3 llcaf!f Gnlt.ln
~to llilmes
6e Ttll
57 W1nt•d0<ecas1 se Cep1tC01n
SU Tlc:kll$h Muppet to HarnHt pen
8 I ~ "'*l> ll1llt 64 Trrretlbiel!llo
12 1J
C.•.IOf """"e< • '"""' -... ~ .... -• ~ .... -1.goo.310.te00eic1 codt500
Coll The Pilot Classifieds at 64 2-56 7 8
to place your Garage Sole Ad~
Da' \'Pilot
•
f • ACCOUNTING I
TAXES
252 CARPETS a
CARPET CLEANING 27'0. CONCRETE /MASONRY 286 ELECTRICAL SERVICES 1304 HAULING I l 318 LANDSCAPING I l34o
JUHi< TO THE DUMPlll AV~=\~~AYI S Ht\ E'
PAINTING , , [;. ,.,..,..lllllQ II 370 TILES::~~ I 3M ~
• The Local Plu1nber "PHONE IMPROVEMENT" --------....:.. \, \ I I -;, /I .,
TAX at ACCOUNnNC
PltoFISSIONALS
El«tron.ic 6lin
wiib w p~ancioo
V'41Al 10)d.nwu!IRAI.
Ca.O NOW! '49·&Sl·9'76
l>erton•I Income Tax
Pr1p1tstlon, Federal &
Slatt Cal for low riles
• 71.t-1165-7537 .
POOCY In an ellort to ofler the bell
MMce poujble 10 OUf ~
"' IOd ldVetllStrs, we wll require Cont11Ctors who
1dYen11t In the SeMce Ol1ec10fY to lnCllide their
Con111c101s ltcenu
numbe1 ln lhett ld>wert ... ment YC1411 ~operabOn Is Pf!!l!y~ed
·-~ .. ~ ~:
.. •9!fo/.-·. •
"' CARPET Yf CARPET i) RopMs. P11Ctwlg 11151111,
Courteous Arr, Sile )obi Wholeealel 94M92-0205
12'0 ·c~I
LEAK.Y Shower• RepaJred
Aegrouttng & lnstallatiOn
DEAN TILE 94M73..ao6S,
7H~21
1~1
HANDYMAN Contractors
All Home Rep~ir~
Plumbing • l:b:mal
Carpentry
IM9J 151-5295 tll 14
Llunud
272 CONSTRUCT10N itONlRACTOAS
LfWIS COHSTRUCTION
Rel'1lodlliOg * Handyman LA• 704773' loc:ll Raide'1I
714-657-5925 t HATE TO CLEAN? *'
Aesldenlial/olllce 20'il O C 1ets Oualrty wO(lc. A'eason-
atAt Bonnie 149-548-7603 27• COMPUT!R
Ho111t c1ttnlng By Lucy SERVICES
Lu 1efs. reasoii\ltjje rtlN
12 Yurt Exp. Ollices lool
949·246-1142 Ml31-<l980 HoUMCIUn~e Exo1d WklvlBl·..t~ rww.
tndl GIMI 11111 909-
246-6504 or 949-648-4285
Moline Houtec:leenfng
Clean basel>Oerd, wtndoWS,
cablntls. kitchen, l»llh. 8"Pf'I Mc lnl. Lt0117317
71w.u..e611. 7/42MMt
Vici(Y'S CLEANING
THE COMPUTER TUTOR
Word h:cel CIHIH
lo11n1og now only S69
Loe In CM 949·548·9595
PC PlrvAn WSONS
1 focus on )'OU( oetdl
fiom Word, to v.1~.
lO ~ rtsNfd\ lO YoUf
own on-n bulllltU
kl lol.Duc
'49.646.4192 Wt oiler THE lfST ~ tal c--. 1 ,. .. , tbM & WtndOW ~ _____ __.
IO't-19 ~MrU xh 1t1'6
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PUBLIC·
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The CaM Publie-
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N01HlllG
Call the
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• • . -·----~----~--~-------
PICTURE
Color in each space that contains a letter.
SEEKrJ;J:QFIND
FIND THESE WORDS IN THE PUZZLE BELOW.
ARCTIC
BRISK
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COLD
COOL
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WINTRY
CHILLUFHYN
BRIBRUMALE
RDREWDWQLA
N I P P Y L I D I S
F G F R G 0 N H H J
R I L A R C T I C K
ORMLNBRISK
S F R 0 S T Y C 0 L
T B V P C Z C 0 0 L
I F R I G D I N I P
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Come see the new spring line of
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Phone 949.646.1544 www.network 17 .com
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PLAYMATES
PRE-SCHOOL
• Developmental & Early
C hildhood Education Pro grams
for 2 Veare thru Pre-K
• &p.ciel Emph .. ta on Klndergerten
RetKtmeu •11"9 p,....K Level
Full & Momlng Half Day &tsslons.
Monday-Friday 6:30am~m
Director Arlene Shapiro
i.......;==:a.=.=~-Affl.IATlO wmi p,.111( PAIVATE DAY 8CHOOt. 714•540-1919 ··---.. ---.... i NEWPORT COAST JI
I CHILD DEVELOPMENT I
PRESCHOOL I ~I Now cnrOUing our afternoon 'II
ee .. ion. 2, 3, of* 5 daya JI
from 1 :00-of:OO pm I
I JJSf Fw'. 'N,.,.,., '*"'"·CA '1"'° I
ii H,.fH,4,141-u ""· U4.4'1S • . ~r• G~•. IN~1w ,fl ------··
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'~ U., WHtfflH ...... •""'••rt ht•h~, :w· ·•· ,,,' ,,,,
(llT & (0.llfVTftS)
Jfter ·Sc)ool frotraa
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~~ v£0Pl4' ~ 1
~ All breeds, O ~ boarding & grooming, O
A. 35 years experience ·-
We seU Poodles, Puppl~s,
T-Cups & Mints
714-546-2848
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Start I
Here T
. .
Christian Montessori Schools
· and Academy
Preschool • Kindergarten • Elementary
~
We Accept Children 18Monthto12
• Strong Academic Programs
• Worm, Intimate
Environment
• Computer, Ballet,
Gymnastics, Music
Irvine
7000 Troboco Rd
949.653-1091
1539~rAll9
714-997-8242
• Foreign Languages
(French & Spanish)
• Toddler /Infant Program
Available
Orange
1130 E Walnut
714-744 1578
Newport
2591 Irvine Ave
949.631.97 49
E-Mail: cmontessoriOeorthlnk.net
A Fine Children'!5 Boutique
SnoE. Sf~'//
~ ~eOp'CI + rou
1829 Westcliff Drive • N~rt Beach
(949) 645 -1355
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