HomeMy WebLinkAbout2000-02-23 - Orange Coast Pilot,
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. NllT ST0~1 SEMlflNlu
Corona del Mar edged Notre
Dame of Sherman Oaks,
57 SS, in the quarterfinals of
the CIF-Southern Section
Division lll ·AA basketball
playoffs Tuesday night.
S.. SPORTS, P-V• 7.
' ' ' . ' ' I
SERVING THE NEWPORT -MESA COfvV.AUNITJES SINCE 1907
.
Schools , Costa Mesa oppose Measure F
•Both school board and city
council pass resolutions to
oppose initiative that could
block plans for airport al El Toro.
Danette Goulet & Andrew Glazer
D AILY PILOT
\T
NEWPORT-MESA With d coun-
tywide vote on Measure F just two
weeks away, the Newport-Mesa Board
of Education and the Costa Mesa City
Council each voted to stand in opposi-
tion of the mitiallve Tuesday everung.
.The ballot measure, which will
appear on the March 7 primary elec-
tion ballot, is designed to block the
county's proposal to bttild a $2.9-bllhon
auport at the closed El Toro Manne
Corps bdse The lfllliauve, 1f passed,
would rt>qwre d two-thirds mdJOrity of
r<"gistered voters to approve' certain
county projects, such as airports, haz;
ardous waste landfills and jails.
Residents in Newport Beach and
Costa Mesa rear the measure could
Airport issues
top concerns
of NeWPOrt
residents,
according to a
recent survey.
See story, •
P1199 3.
prevent an airport
at El Toro and
force the county to
expand John
Wayne Airport
The Newport
Beach City Cow'l-
cil, which has long
been active in the
push for a second
county auport. ear-
lier this months
also passed a resolution opposing Mea-
sure F.
The Costa Mesa City Council on
Tuesday unanimously approved a reso-
luLion opposing the measure
-~Measure F is not good for Costa
Mest.1, •said Mayor Gary Monahan. •1t
was part or the planning process of
South County, and they didn't look at
the rdJTllfication of the long term.•
Councilman Joe Erickson added
that it is iplportant for the council to for-
mally oppose the measure because it
could harm the commuruty. But he
warned that defeating Measure Fis not
a sure-Cue method to make sure an El
Toro airport is built or to limit expan-
sion at John Wayne.
The Newport-Mesa Urufied School
District Board of Education on Tuesday
also approved a sirrular resolution.
Alth9ugh 1t 1.S unorthodox (or school
government to speak out against land-
use policy, the board members decided
to take a position after concerned par-
SEE MEASURE F PAGE 6
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 23 I 2000
Pro.-airport forces ~
angry over crash ad '
•Anti-airport forces havP. prepared d rebuttal
etdvertJ t>rnent Wlth rellred
Mcinn~ Corps Brig. GPn.
William A Bloomer
drmouncmg the dnll-a1r-
ref use to stop ·
running commercidl.
Jasmine Lee port commerncd and ·
DAILY PILOT
El Toro dirport dtivo-
cate'> on Tuesday charg(>d
antJ-cttrport forces of usmq
Iles dnd bad taste m d tele-
vision commNodl featur-
ing bldck-and-wh1le
footage from the wreck-
age ol a 1965 rmUt<1ry dlf·
plane crash
demandlng thdt it be
pulJed from the au. Bruce
NPstande, prPs1dent ot the
pro-airport Citizens for
Jobs and the Economy,
screened the new ad Tues-
day at a news confer<'nce.
"Opponents of a new El
Toro airport are desr>crdt-
mq our mihtary dead <ind
The airport supporter.., SEE AD PAGE 6
·'Main Street'
style planned
for West Side
• Consultants show
council ne\\ neighborhood
plan wQ.ich would include
more trees, street vendors
and a central plaza.
Andrew Glazer
DAILY PILOT
·COSTA MESA Consultaql.5
showed the City Council d v1s1on of
lh£' West Side as d pedestnan-
fricndly, Mam Street-style neighbor-
hood m t.1 long-dwaited plan.
The rE'port was scheduJt>d to b+•
released to the pubbc Tuesday, but
residents will huve to wail until Fn-
day because of delays cdused L>y
pnntinq errors, pldnrung ofhc1als
Sdld
The council will us<• the report -
. which is only a dra!t -as d gu1de·
lrne as 1t contmues to collect mput
from aty residents dbout how to
reVltdllze lhe nc1gbborhood, Md}'Or
Gary Monahan ~d.ld
PHOTOS SY TAYA KAS111..1BA I DAAV Pl.
The city hired Los Angeles-ba.sed
EIP. Associates m the summer of
1998 lo develop a strategy for
1mprovmg the neighborhood's his-
tonc-aJ traffic problems, decaying
ho~rng dnd streets and lack of
shoppmg dreas
Bill Hallock, left. and his brother Mike, were rescued from the Angeles National Forest by the Los Angeles C ounty Sherlff 's Depart-
ment after they were stranded in the mountains during the storm this weekend.
Rescue
good as
Six Costa M esa prospectors,
stranded in Angel es National
Forest during weekend
storm, res~d early Tuesday.
Andrew Gl~reg Rlsllng
DAILY PTLOT
Mike Halloek sh ows a sample of gold be panned ln the
Angeles National forest this past weekend.
COSTA MESA -The si.x gold
miners wo uld've called it a good out-
ing u it hadn't ended with rescuers
yanking them out of a n inhospitable
Sheldon, Toledano clash
in debate on Prop. 22
• Attorney says m easure
is anti-gay, but Christian
leader says it's simply
about protecting marriage.
C1r99Rlsllng
DMY PILOT
COSTA MBSA -A"conserva· tan Clu1ltian leader aaerted in a
bate Tuelday wtth a local
attorney that ..... Propa.i·
tloll 22 II needed to 9111\119 • ban oa ......._ wedlOck. wtdtb be
•YI would dAIMge tb1 Mndlmo-
ny created between me n and
women.
The Rev. Lows Sheldon, chair-
man of the 1Tadational Values
Coalition, squared off against Jun
Toledano, a leading member of
the Orange County Democratic
Party and chairman of the lbtal
movement that opl'.>Ol8s the state
proposition, at WhitUer Law
School.
About 150 people, moet of
wbOm are enrolled &t tile Jew
lebool, attended the event.
Sii DUATI Mtl I
forest and into a helicopter.
But safe and dry at home Tuesday
m Costa Mesa, hundr<.'ds of rrule
away from the white waters o( the
San Gabnel River where thPy were
panning for nuggets, the prospectors
said they'll be back out there again.
That ts, everyone except Leon Bnnd-
ley.
"No tune soon, al least,• scud
Bnndley, 35, who hugged his wife
SEE"GOLO PAGE 6
Consultants seid the pnmary rea-
son for thP neighborhood's decline 1S
thdl 1t hd~ an unusual mix of home ,
auto body shops and small store .
However they did not recommend
the city prohtl>it any type of new
husmC'\'>t'S or hom~s from being
built ther •.
Instead, the.y sug~1ested the oty
pldnt more trees, repair !:>lrccts and
sidewalk and develop a centrdl
plaza on the W<•sl Side, acc-ordmg to
thP. report.
The report · "did We<:l Sid ' r st-
dcnts-would b<\ encouragt.'<i lo hold
cultural events and f~urs in the plaza,
helpmg to cwatc a ~en e of commu-
nity. .
Woody Te chcr. EIP.'s ducctor of
ur~an plannrng. sfud the zone . .
SEE PLAN PAGE 6
llDll
__ , ______ 2
QASSllD5 .... "---·'
M.IC llmCIS --··--· srom 1 --" ' WU1lll _J
I
"'11 f'.191 ~"" .. CMr•1••fi 4 p ' --·---* ', ....
A2 ~ F.bruory 23, 2000 GEITING INVOLVED /
Doily Pilot I
"The majority of patients I drive are pleasant to be around." VoluntHr
Tlle drive against cancer DIRECTORY
• VOlUNTHR DIMCTOllY runs
periodically In the Dally Piiot. If
you•d like Information on ~ng
your organization listed, call (949)
574-4228. • For 10 years, 80-year-old
Bob Cowley has provided
transportation services for
cancer patients throughout
the county.
Amy R. ~purg90n
DAILY PILOT
The ala.rm broke the silence at 6
a.m ., bringing 80-year-old Bob
Cowley to his feet.
After 20 minutes of his morning
routine, the Costa Mesa resident
sat down to a bowl of Cheerios and
cup of coffee for breakfast. Before
heading out the door into the brisk
early morning air, he bade goodbye
to Roberta, his wife of 53 years.
Cowley reached the American
Cancer Society's white minivan,
stationed at Fountain Valley
., Region-Or a al Hos-
GOOD CAUSE t!~c~:.
Center,
by 7:25 a.m. He started the engine
and took a swipe at the windshield.
Cowley, a volunteer drtver with
the organization, reviewed the
day's roster of patients. For more
than 10 years, Cowley has deliv-
ered Orange · County cancer
patients to their treatment sessions
at various hospitals around the
county.
By 7:40 a .m. he was ready to go.
• Jt keeps me out of trouble and it
gives me something to do,• said
Cowley.
En route to his first pickup, Cow-
ley passed joggers, school buses
and businessmen absorbing news-
papers waiting for the light to tum
green. By 8 a.m., Cowley pulled up
to the Better Living Retirement
Home in Garden Grove where he
quickly got out to help 85-year-old
Winifred Matthew into the yan.
Dressed casu8lly in a hot pink
shirt, blue pants and brown jacket,
Matthew, a cervical cancer patient,
used a cane to support her weak
l~s. She was in good spirits -her
lipstick matched her shirt and she
had tucked flowers into her hair.
The next stop was a rehabilita-
tion center in Santa Ana. Cowley
picked up his second patient, an
elderly woman in a wheelchair
who insisted on scolcUng Cowley
for his bad drtving.
•Tue majority of patients I drive
are pleasant to be around," Cowley
said. "But some are a little ornery. I
just try to keep cool.
•Some need to tailc and connect.
Bob Cowley helps a
cancer treatment
pattent out of a van at
UCI medical center.
Cowley drives cancer
pattents to their
appointments.
PHOTOS BY MARIANNA DAY
MASSEY I DAJLY PILOT
but others just want to be left alone
to concentrate on their illness," he
added.
Felicita Ramirez was the last
patient to be picked U(>. The strik-
ing 40-year-old Orange resident
with long, black hair said her
breast cancer diagnosis is still hard
to accept.
·1 have a 5-year-old baby,•
Ramirez said. ·1 am a fighter. I've
got to make sure that I give him a
good home.•
Minutes later, Cowley pulled up
at the Chao Family Comprehensive
Cancer Center at the UO Medical
Center in Orange. The group pro-
ceeded to a small waiting room,
where a' man was already waiting
for his wife's breast cancer treat-
ment to end.
Luanne Sims, the cancer center's
operations manager, said volunteer
drivers are critical for patients dur-
ing treatment.
"Fatigue is the No. 1 side effect
of cancer patients.• Sims said.
~They can't react and drive a car."
After their treatments, Cowley
led the group back to the minivan.
By 10 a .m., everyone had been
dropped off and Cowley was back
at the Fountain Valley Regional
Hospital parking Jot. He finishes
bis day with some paperwork.
llG IR01HERS,
BIG SISTERS Of
OUNGE COUNTY
Men and women over 20
years old who have.#ved in
Orange County for at least
six months and have been on
the job for at least three
months are needed to serve
as big brothers or big sisters
for children ages 6 to 16 from
smgle-parent homes. For
information, call (714) s.t.f-
7773.
BOY SCOUTS
Of AMERICA INC.
Volunteer opportunities for
the Orange County Council
include fund-raising, pro-
gram development and train-
ing to existing. troops and
packs. For more information,
call (714) 546-4990.
BOYS & GIRLS CLUBS OF
NEWPORT·MESI
The three area clubs need
volunteer coaches and arts
and crafts workshop teach-
ers. For locations and more
information. call (949) 642-
2245.
CENTER FOR CREATIVE
ALTERNATIVES
The organization works
through the United Way and
needs volunteers, graduate
level interns or trainees. For
more information, call (949)
642-0377.
COLLEGE HOSPITAL
The College Hospital Costa
Mesa Auxiliary is seeking
volunteers to perform cleri-
cal, reception desk, gift shop
and other duties. For more
information. call (949) 642-
2734 between 9 a.m. and .f
p.m.
ALMANAC
The followlng JnformaUon
is collected on a weeJcly
basis at the Orange County
Clerk-Recorder's Office in
Santa Ana.·
• Katherine L. Hernandez,
Jan.22
•John Leasure, Jan. 21
• Alexandra D. Leon Oliva,
Jan.22
• John King Daniel, 36,
Costa Mesa
Feb.20
• David Zinunerman, 29,
Tustin
ENGAGEMENTS
Pitchess-O'Connell
daughter of Mrs. Athena Pitcbess and the
late Sheriff Peter J . Pitchess of Newport
Beach.
The bride-to-be is a graduate of Univer,
sity High School and USC.
MARRIAGES
NEWPORT BEACH
• Thomas K. Adishian and
Valentina Eyvazian, married
Jan. 15 in Los Angeles
• Stuart V. Anderson and
Roni D. Jackson, married
Jan. 21 m Newport Beach
• Michael G. Baynes and
Synthia Bose, married Feb.
13 in San Clemente
COSTA MESA
• Armando Antunez Galan
and Ana R. Hernandez,
married Feb. 14 in Santa
Ana
• Eric N. Bergk:vist and 1\'a-
cie L. Starnes, married Feb.
11 in Santa Ana
BIRTHS
• Raul L. Limon Vazques,
Jan.22
• Andrea L . Linares, Jan. 21
• Jocelyn Marquez, Jan. 23
• Westin L. Mokhtari, Jan.
21
•Catherine J. Orihuela, Jan.
22
• Matthew Overton, Jan. 21
•Jillian C. Schutz, Jan. 21
DUI ARRESTS
The following people
were arrested on suapiclon
of driving under the Jnllu·
ence of an intoxicant. They
have only been arrested on
suspicion of a crime, and, as
with all such crimes, they
are considered innocent
until proved guilty.
NEWPORT BEACH
Feb. 16
• Brandon David Lynch, 26,
Corona del Mar
Feb.17
• John Andrew McCreary,
Feb.22
• Jerry DaVid Cain, 38, Ari-
zona
REIL ESTATE
TUHSACTIOHS
COSTA MESA
• 303 Alta Lane, $165,000
• 2164 Canyon Drive,
$208,000
• 310 Alta Lane, $170,000
• 2474 Napoli Way, $88,500
• 2463 Irwin Ave., $305,000
• 263 Knox St., $449,000
• 1933 Federal Ave.,
$192,500
• 2175 Pacific Ave., $193,000
NEWPORT BEACH
• 2323 Margaret Drive,
$495,000
• 611 Lido Park Drive,
$2,500,000
• 41 Starfish Court, $168,000
• 2 Encore Court, $242,000
• 7 Ima Loa Court, $265,000
Mr. and Mrs. John P. Pitchess of Irvine
have announced the engagement of their
daughter, Kathleen Marie, to Michael
Fitzgerald O'Connell of Chicago, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Richard O'Connell; of Mun-
ster, Ind. Miss Pitchess is also the grand-
The groom-to-be is a graduate of Culver
Academies and the University of Michi-
gan.
NEIGHIOIS
An Aug. 19, 2000 garden wedding is
planned in hvine. A reception will follow at
the Pacific Club.
university in 1970 .... At the annu-
al conference of the Association
of Canmunity and Continuing
Educ.ation. Orange Coast College's
..... tiw ..,, of economic
.-.iopment and community
edumtion. 8111 .. L ..._, wm
nlfMd •PW1oft of the v..r .• -.nc Ml Nmgnlnd for he .....
er1hlp and conb1tiutlons in the
fWd of economic development. ... oca ..-ctt and dlbm"""
flnllNd second out of 15 tchooll
It the 5'n9t Oiffs a-k ~
~held .. 111r tt1il
inanttt 1n s.n Otego. eoa Mme
Nildlnt '-...,... fln1ltwd
tNrd In the Cll9gOly of ~
to• ...... L•
Steve Marble
NOTEBOOK
I
,
• Oliver W. Lobdell, Jan. 17
•Preston J . Wheeler, Jan. 21
• Patrick J. Clynes Jr .• Jan.
22
• Joselin Cordova, Jan. 23
•Isabelle G. Cruz, Jan. 22
• Oscar D. Dominguez Mar-
tinez, Jan. 22
38, Corona .
• Keith Horst, 35, Fullerton
Feb. 18
•Lane Edwin Hamson, 47,
Huntington Beach
• 2600 Michelson Drive,
$522,045
• 220 Nice Lane, $272,000'
• 632 Woodland St.,
$373,000
Steve Marble's column
will not appear this week.
He has the day off.
• Carter Fenley, Jan. 24
• Samantha A Foy, Jan. 22
VOLM, N0.46
11tOMAS H. JOHNSON,
P\Jbllshet TONY DOODO_..._. .... ,
Editor
----~. Senior Oty Editor
JAS•-1.11. A.ulstant City Editor
NANCY OtlllVa.
Ftatur• Editor "°°"' CNUON. Spofts Edttor
MMCMMfW!l.
Photo Editor
Nft'NONY PICK.
NeWI Editor
IOll J. IMTOI. ==:... 01111fttd~ LMAJOl••a.t.
~· .... , .. w.
OWtf ftn.dt omc.r
•
• 464 62nd St., $235,000
• Cristian Ragusa, 32, New-
port Beach
• 22 Escapade Court,
$250,000
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~ .. .,,_~,........
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.,.,.. of Phil••-_....._
....... c.., ....
_._CllM!llfl9 ......
WEATHER IND SURF
TEMPOAlURES
Balboa
64152
Corona del Mar
64153
Costa Mesa
65154
Newport Beach
W53
Newport Coast
64153
.. l'ORICAST
• The WIKterty swell
.,.... today fof Mts
In the waist· to lhoulder·
hlghltwl.
LOCAnDflt ..
-...... ... -............. ..J.4w
........ _ ·-.-2-4 w
lllddll' ••k ,, , Mw ._.__.....a-.w
QIM ·--'"4•
TIDIS
TODAY
First low
5:35•m ....................... 1.1
First high
11 :30 e.m ..................... 4.2
S.Cond low
5·44 p.m ...................... 0.7
Second high
..................................... nl•
THURSDAY
Flmtow
6:36 e.m~ .................... 1.3
Ftm high
12:14 1.m." .................. 4.6
6:20 p.m ....................... 1.4
Second hlgn
12:26 pm ................ .J.6
POLICE FILES
COSTA MESA
• 14*er s"-t: AC~ d1K player worth $100 W11
stolen from • cer in the 600 block the ewnlng of Ftb. I.
• 9rtsto1 Street: A celluler phone worth $200 wm ltollri
from • car In the 2900 blodt the eyentng of Feb. 11.
•west 11th StNet: A bicycle worth $100 was stoteriM
the 400 block between 1 and • p.m. on Feb. 4.
NEWPORT BEACH
• ..._. A~ A cttlul1r phone 1nd a glob.I
tJonlng system worth $425 wet• stolen from • car In
700 block Friday ewnlng. '
• •IJ •11: A (ompact disc ~. cellular phone
about 80 '°""'*' dlta worth s '· 750 Wlf9 stDlen
ctr in the 2200 block Sunday evening .
• ~ Drtw. A~ end rtng worth SJ.GOO
stolen from a ._.,,.. in the noo blodt bet1 ••• s
7pm.~
... p1rt .. --*A~..-.--.i
Ml.,..,. from 1fMInthe2100bloctt11• a.u14 w
p.m. s.taHiJ.
(
I
Daily Pilot Wednesday, Februory 23, 2000 A3
,
ewport sllrvey reveals few surprises
Most residents polled are
concerned about "1"omoting
an airport at El Toro and
keeping restrictions on I
John Wayne Airport.
Noaki Schwartz
D AILY PtLOT
NEWPORT BEACH -Promot-
mg the reuse or the m11,itary base at
pl Toro and keepmg limits on Jonn
'WJlyne A11port are residents'
biggest concerns, accordmg to a
'recent city survey.
The so-called "seven-minute"
~uestionnaire, wtuch has been in
the works for d year, was a prelim-
inary effort to find out what com-
munity members ttunk about thes.r
city. .
I Mayor John Noyes, who spear-
jheaded the project, wants to use it 185 a springboard for a much larger
phone survey that would include al
least 600 residents.
Council members hope to use the
results to more adequately ruUill
their constituents' "vision" of New-
1port Beach's future.
"People said they really appreci·
ated being asked,• sd.id Deputy City
Manager Dave Kiff, who drafted the
questionnaire.
The survey had IJeen avdtlable dl
City Hall for some wne. but only 60
residents took the "seven minutes•
to fill it out. And while a wider sur-
1vey might produce va"rying results,
the 60 concerned citizens had some
rather surprismg opinions.
Although the traffic-inspired
Greenlight initiative has been a hot
oty issue, survey results indicated
that residents polled are more con-
cerned about promoting El Toro,
SURVEY SAYS •••
Here are some or the survey's
questions and the top three
responsf'S'
• WHAT'S GOOD ABOUT
NEWPORT BEACH?
280/e Climate and weather 18.,.. Access to the ocean and beach
14% Safe community·
• WHAT ARE THE TOP ISSUES
FACING NEWPORT BEACl-{7
25% Promoting El Toro & keeping John
Wayne Airport small
16.,._ Protecting the bay
169/• Overdevelopment
• I WOULD SPENO
MORE MONEY ON:
21% Keeping passenger caps at John
Wayne Airport
199/o Promoting El Toro as an airport.
169/o Keeping the l>ay clean
• I WOULD SPENO
LESS MONEY ON:
21% Buying more library resources
18% Adding parking capacity
14°1. Arts and cultural act1v1ties
SEAN Hill[R I DAILY PILOT
• WHAT THREE INTERSECTIONS
OR STREETS ARE THE MOST
CONGESTED? The sun sets over The Newport Aviation Center at John Wayne Airport
190/e East Coast Hrghway and Jamboree
15% Newport Boule .. ard and 17th
Street (in Costa Mesa)
'12% West Coast Highway and Dover
• WHAT SHOULD BE THE CITY'S "VISION" OF
THE FUTURE CONCERNING BOTH RESIDENTIAL
ANO BUSINESS COMMUNITIES?
• Res1dent1al communities
36% A little growth 1s OK.
33% City 1s about the right size and should now focus
on improving quality of hfe.
30% There's already been too much growth and it's
too crowded.
• Business communities:
370/o Good muc of businesses in the City
370/o Too much commercial development that 1s com-
promising neighborhoods by adding traffic and
tourists.
26.,.o City needs to enhance its business base to keep
up services.
• The city is considering adopting a .,harbor
element" to the city's General Plan. WHAT
ARE THE MOST IMPORTANT ALTERNATIVES
THE CITY SHOULD EXPLORE IN ORDER TO
MANAGE ANO BALANCE THE VARIOUS USES
OF NEWPORT HARBOR?
21•1. Increase activ1t1es that improve water quality and
the roonitonng of illegal discharges
23"/o Retain and maintain sand beaches around the
harbor. ·
18o/e Protect ex1ning hinoncal buildings and features
of the harbor.
pr«ltecting the Upper Newport Bay ~ ------------------------------------------------.---------' and stopping overdevelopment.
Tr~c concerns ranked fourth out of
11-(;hoices.
1TOverdevelopment goes to what
we're pushing," said Phil Arst,
spokesman for Greenlight, the
group that drafted the measure. "l
~think the other Greenlight members
would agree that El Toro and John
Wayne are No. 1 and overdevelop-
ment is No. 2. Overdevelopment lS
the cause or traffJc. •
On how the counal should spend
money, res1d<•nl!. dgain sd1d promot-
ing El Toro, preventinq the expan-
sion or John Wayne Airport dnd
clearung the bay were the highest
priorities Improving trnHic flow
ranked h1U1 out of 14 choices
In addition, rei.idents polled were
split when it came lo luruted growth
or no growth in the city's residential
and business commuruty Most s01.d
they would prefer housing develop-
ment over more businesses
Another surpnsing point was that
commuruty members would .IJke the
counCl.I to spend less money on
library resources, arts and cultural
actwilles and parking.
Noyes sdld the library received
perfect 10 out of 10 in overall resi-
dent satisfaction, indicating that
perhaps community members are
completely satisfied with the
resources al city's four libranes.
As to cultural activities. propo-
nents of the $12-milhon Arts and
Education Center '>did residenb
should not be concerned about city
funds going mto tht! proµo-.al
·we agree with them • sdld Don
Gregory, co-cha.tr or the> conuruttee
leading the effort. ·We' re going lo
raise the money and ask the city for
mamtendflce. The burden l.S not on
the city. Everyone that we've spo·
ken with has md.icated that this city
needs the center dnd that it should
be -.upported •
These i01llal hnchngs will l>c
more widely explon•d once the
council decides on a telephone sur-
\<t'} or mdss md1hng . The phone
sul"\.ey would cost dbout $45,000
an<l would only he for a limited
numbt•r of resident'i
"I want to give everyone ti
chance to respond." Noyes said,
indicating his support for mass
mailmg.
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A4 Wednesdoy, February 23, 2000
EDUCATION IN IRIEF
Middle College
l:figh holds open
house today at OCC
l
Newport-Mesa parPnts and studer;its who want to lctkc a
glimps~ at alternative education can visit OCC's Middle Col-
lege High School open house.
The event will be hfld al 6'.30 p.m. today m OCC's Stu-
dent Centeri..ounge, 2701 Fairview Road, Costa Mesct.
lnfonnabon about the school, which is open to high school
juniors anct seruor'S m Orange County, wllJ be distributed by
Principal Joe Fox. StaH members and tectchers will also be on
hand to discuss the school's programs and plans for the
future. •The M1ddle College High School provides a sup-
portive academJc tJtmosphere m which high potenllal stu-
dents can unprove thetr level of achievement and prepare for
the technologically rich environment of the future,· Fox said.
•w e offer a small school environment, with all the cld"> es
necessary for students lo earn their hJgh school dtploma. Our
students are also eligible to enroll concurrently m credit
courses offered by Orange Coast College • .
In collaborauon with the Newport-Mesa Unwed School
District, the hlgh school is designed for hJgh-potenuaJ,
underachi~ving students.
The school, in its fourth year, recently received a five-year
$750,000 grant from the Chancellor's Office of California
Community Colleges. The grant will pay for enhancements
of programs and services at the school, which in June will
graduate 50 of its 97 students. For more infonnation, call
(714) 432-5732.
-Amy R. Spurgeon
/ Doily Pilot
• DON LEACH I DAllY PILOT
Student Jennifer Kreger, right. laughs with KJera Nowlin as they take the same quiz on the Inte rnet during
computer class at Middle College Htgh6chool.
Cyclist critically injured in traffic accid ent What's
AFLOAT
3 and under. Spe<:;ial dis-
counts are available for
groups of 12 or more, com-
munity youth groups, service
organizations and schools.
Private charters also avail-
able. Guaranteed sightings
of whales or dolphins, or all
passengers will receive a free
pass. Davey's Locker is at 400
Main St., Newport Beach.
For more infonnation, call
(949) 673-1434.
Cost tS $14 for adults, $12 for
seruors, chlldren ages 3 to 11
are $8, ages 2 and under are
free. Groups rates also avail-
able for !>Chools, youths and
groups of 15 or more. Dis-
counts available on the Web
at www.newportwhalewatch-
ing.com The Fun Zone Boat
Co. is at the Fun Zone m
Newport Beach. For reserva-
tions, call (949) 673-0240. ·
•Victim was alle.gedly
under the influence of
alcohol; blood test for
driver of car pending.
Greg Risling
DAILY PILOT
An unidentified bicyclist
remained in criticdl condi-
tion Tuesday after he was
struck by an oncoming car in
Costa Mesa late Monday
night.
Police srud they do not
know the name of the man,
reported to be m his 20s,
because he wasn't cdrrying
any identification at the time
of the accident.
What police do know 1s al
about 11 :15 P·1!1· Monday, a
30-year-old Costa Mesa
womdll was dnvmg south-
bound on West 17th Street
when her vehicle struck the
bicyclist, who was attempt-
ing to cross the SLX·lane street
nedr Fullerton Avenue.
The victim new dbout 10
feet after bemg hit and fell
hard on the pdvement .. The
womdn, who was driving a
1998 Dodge Neon, was trav-
eling close to the speed lirrul,
posted at 35 mph, when the
accident happened, pQlice
added.
The victim, who was not
wearing a helmet, suffered a
fractured skull and was
rushed to Western Medtcal
Center m Santa Ana.
Police said the accident
may have been caused by
two factors: both parties had
allegedly been drinking and
the bicycle wasn't equipped
Wlth proper reflectors.
•There wasn't any light-
ing on the bike,• said Costa
Mesa police Sgt. Dave
Andersen. ·we are also look-
ing Into the possibility that he
failed to yield to traffic and
possibly ran the stop sign.*
While police said the dri-
ver was well below the legal
llirut for driving under the
i.nfluenc:;e, similar tests are
pending for the victim. It is
unclear whether either party
will face any charges.
• WHAT'S AR.OAT runs periodi-
cally in the Daily Pilot on a rotating
basis. If you know of an event or
activity that could appear 1n this
column, please mail the informa·
tion to Daily Pilot, 330 W. Bay St.,
Costa Mesa 92627; fax 1t to (949)
646-4170; or e-mail it to dailypi-
lo tO/atimes.com.
WHALE WATCHING
Davey's Locker operates
whale-watch cruises ·dally
through the end of March.
Operating hours ar~ 10 a.m.
and 1 p.m. w~kdays and 9
a.m., noon and 2:30 p.m. on
weekends and holidays. The
cost is $14 for adults, $12 for
seniors, $8 for children ages 4
to 12, and no charge for kids
Bongo's Sportfishlng Char-
ters oilers private party
whale-watching excursions
daily. The cost is $125 for one
hour, with a six-passenger
maximum and a three-hour
m.irumum. Bongo's is at 2130
Newport Blvd., Newport
Beach. For more information,
call (949) 673-2810.
Newport Landing Sportfish-
mg offers a low-cost way to
SAILING
---liiiiiillEiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim=m====-=========~~~~~~~~~-=-=-=-=-=======-5!!!&5!ii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;em=m=ii=Em====~=a whale-watch, from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. weekday-s and 9 a.m.
CLASSES l BOAT RENTALS
OCC's Salling Program has
scheduled a non-credtl inter-
mediate shields class that
meets during February and
March. The course will
emphasize seamanship and
finite sail lrun and sail shctpe.
It also covers man overboard
and anchormg, and students
will have an opporturuty to
do some raong. Conditions
penrutting, offshore sailing
will be permitted. The five-
week session meets from
1:15 to 5 pm. Saturdays, Feb.
12, 19, 26, March 4 and U at
OCC's Sailing Center, 1801
W. Pacific Coast ffighway.
Newport Beach. Registration
is $115. For more informa-
tion, call (949) 645-9412.
Look in the Classified section
in Saturday's paper.
Publishing every Saturday
until April 15th.
--ONE WEEK ONLYI--
300/ooll
ALL NEW BALANCE APPAREL
GQod thru 2/27 /00 . .,..l!e
~~,-
Corona del Mar Plm:a
932 Avocado St.
(PCH & MacArthur)
(94 9) 720-1602
to 2:30 p.m. weekends and
holidays. The cost is $14 for
adults, $8 for seniors and
children under 12 Special
discount rates are available
for schools, churches and
community youth groups.
Newport Landing is at 309
Palm St., Newport Beach. For
available dates and informa-
tion, call (949) 675-0550 .
fun Zone Boat Co. guaran-
tees whale or dolphin sight-
ings during its excursions, or
the next trip is free. Daily
trips weekdays are at 10 a .m.
and 1 p.m. and weekends at
9 a.m., noon and 2:30 p.m .
KAYAK TOURS
AND RENTALS
TWo-hour kayak tours begin
at 10 a .m. Sundays from
Newport Dunes. Cost is $20
per adult, $15 per child.
Kayak rentals and classes are
also available . Fro more infor-
mabon, call (949) 729-1150.
You are cordially invited to attend 95 ~ .
hJt frivll!e 0.J Sdlool Mattress Outlet Stor
2000 Kindtrgartm enrollmtnt
Parent Orlentadon Metting
on Wednesdt{y, February 2J
at 7:00p.m.
Slide Show -Academic
Program Presentadon
Child care available
Refteshments
2000-01 Middle SChOll
(Grades 6 thru 8)
Parent Orientation Metting
on~ February 24
at 7:00 p.m.
Acadtmic Program Presentation
Refteshments
261 Monte VZ:Sta Avenue
Costa Mesa, CA 9262 7
949-645-5171
ELEMENTARY • MIDDLE SCHOOL
EXT&aD CUllC\lUM TlACHERS FOR:
• Computer Education • PE • Sponlsh
• Art • Music
• Swimming !pool on premisesJ
Classified ads work
for you!
• •
BRAND NEW -COSMETICALLY IMPERFECT
Get the Best for Less!
3165 Harbor Blvd.
Costa Mesa
One IMoa Souu. ot •os rwy
(714) 545-7168
PRllRINRT
rcv~ls what the insurance companicJ don't want yuu to know.
Wu your car in1Uttd? You may be 10011 It may he WttkJ, months
or even years bC'fott you n~ pain, Riffnat, htadachf., ewn
anhrit11I Ooa't ICCdc your ceee WKJI you rHd our JIU rTPO"· •
. ~ I I ' '
' .
•
Doily Pilot
• 5end AROUND TOWN items to
the Daily Pilot. 330 W Bay St .. Cos
ta Mesa 92627; fax them to (949)
646-4170; or call (949) 764-4330. A
complete listing may be found at
dailypilot.com.
TODAY
Newport Harbor Republican
Women presents U.S. Rep.
Dana Rohrabacher, (R-Hunt-
ington Beach), who will dl.s-
cuss "The Latest from C dPl-
tol Hill" at a luncheon at tbe
Balboa Bay Club, 1221 W.
Coast Highway. The event
" starts with a social hour at
11 :30 a.m. and costs $20 per
person. Por reservations and
more infonnation, call (949)
673-0158.
Mother's Market wlll hold a
feng shw seminar from 6:30
to 7:30 p.m. a t its patio cafe.
The market is at 225 East
17th St., Costa Mesd. For
-more information, call (800)
595-MOMS (595-6667),
The Newport Harbor Area
Chamber of Conunerce will
hold a sunset after-hours
mixer from 5 to 7 p.m. at
Bander, 3201 E. Codst High-
way, Newport Beach. The
event is free for members
and $10 for potenllal mem-
bers. For more information,
call (949) 729-4400.
The Newport Beach Public
Library will hold a free noon
program tilled •01scover
Your Personal Style" with
wardrobe consultant and
persondl shopper Barbara
King. The library 1s at 1000
Avocado Ave., Newport
Beach. For more information,
call (949) 717-3801
Newport Dunes will bold a
book-s1grung and program
with Serge Dedind, duthor of
"Saving the Gray Whale,· at
6:30 p.m. in the "Bay View"
room, 11 31 Back Bay Dnve,
Newport Beach. For more
information, call (949) 723-
5424.
The Costa Mesa C hamber of
Ccmunerce will hold an after-
hours mixer from 5:30 lo 7:30
p.m. at TEN Seafood and
Sushi Restaurant, 580 Anton
Blvd., Costa Mesa. The event
IS free for members and $10
for potential memben;. For
more informabon, call (714)
885-9090.
Borders Books, Music and
Cafe will hold a "Personal
Growth and Transformation
Group" meeting led by psy-
chologist Craig Wagner at
7:30 p.m. Borders IS at 3333
Bear St., Costa Me a. For
more information, call (714)
432-7854.
The Oasis Senior Center wUJ
provide free bredst ·cancer
screenings for women age 40
and over. The center is dt 800
Marguerite, Corona del Mar.
For more information or to
make a reservation, call (714)
935-9720.
Temple Bat Yahm will hold
its sixth annual Simcha and
Celebrations Expo from 5 to
9 p.m . The event will feature
exhibits from caterers,
florists, photographers and ·
more. The temple is at 1011
• f
Camelback St., Newport
Beach. For more information,
call(949)644-1999
THURSDAY
Mother's Market will bold a
free seminar and book-sign·
ing with Karen Mastarson,
author of "Reverse Disease
with Aloe Vera," at 6:30 p.m.
on its Patio Cafe. The market
1s at 225 E:-17th St., Costa
Mesa. For more information,
Cdll (800) 595-MOMS.
The February meeting of
the International Marketing
Assn. or Orange County will
feature a talk by IMA presi-
dent Dr. Joe Greco, titled
"Penetrating Overseas Mar-
kets.• Refreshments and
hors d 'oeuvres will be
served and admission 1s free.
The meeting will be held in
the lobby of the Manufactur-
ers Bank, 1301 Dove St.,
Newport Beach. For more
information, call (949) 553-
3686.
The Newport Beach Public
L.tbrary will bold a free pro-
gram at 7 p.m . on "Manag-
ing Parental Anger.• Dr.
Richard Shulman, a Newport
Bedch therapist, will speak.
The library is at 1000 Avoca-
do Ave., Newport Beach. For
more information, call (949)
717-3801.
Borders Books, Music and
Cafe will present a free sem-
inar titled "Protecting Our
Parents, Their Assets and
Their Health Care," featur-
ing attorney Jerry O'Bnen, at
7 p.m. Borders is at 3333
Bear St., Costa Mesa. For
more information, call (714)
432-7854.
The Newport Jaycees wUJ
hold a social mixer {or young
professionals ages 21 to 39.
The $5 event, wh.Ich starts at
6:30 p.m., includes hors
d'oeuvres. The mixer is at
the Shark Club, 841 Baker
St., Costa Mesa.
FRIDAY
Poet Susan Klnsolving will
read poems fr()m her critical-
ly acclaimed collection,
"Dailies & Rushes," at 7 p.m.
at Borders Boo~. Music and
Cafe. Kinsolvirlg bas pub-
lished poems m many
anthologies and magazin&,
including The Pans Review,
The New Republic and
Grnnd ·Street. Borders 1s at
3333 Bear St., Costa Mesa.
For more information, call
(714) 432-7854.
SATURDAY
Newport Harbor High
School will hold "Parent Uni-
versity 2000/ a special edu-
cation community adviSory
committee meeting. The
event includes seminars on
many different subjects for
parents, including topics
RUFFLES . UPHOLSTERY
Wher:e Your Dollar Cove,. Morel
WE'vE MOVED 1 BLOCK NoRnt
Sofa $10000-OFF
Club Chair $5000• OFF
•with a purchase of Fabric & Labor til 3/1/00
1998 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA 548-1151
Coming
Friday, March 24
Call (949) 642-4321
, ..
. ' ARouNDToWN Wednesday, February 23, 2000 AS
such as substance abu e prc-
venbon, language develop-
ment and learning disabili-
ties. The day starts wtth a
continental breakfast at 8
a.m. and runs through 11 ·45
a.m . ·The school b' at 600
Irvine Ave., Newport Beach.
For more informuhon, call
(714) 424-5060
The B~nk of Orange County
will hold a franchise invest-
ment workshop at the Dou-
btetree I fotel. 3050 Bnstol
St., Cosld Mesd. 1Wo S(>s·
sions of the $15 workshop
will be offered: a morning
session, from 9 to 11 d.rn.,
and an afternoon session
from 2 to 4 p ,m For more
informallon, call (800J 981-
6680. •
r
The Ptece makers will bold a
peddler's market from 8 a m.
to 3 p.m. The event fedtur-
ing 65 booths of old dnd new
items, lS free. It will be held
outside the P1Pcemdkers
Country Store, 1720 Adams
Ave , Coslc1 Me~a For more
mformc1lion, cc1U (714) 641-
3112.
Roger's Gardens wtU hold a
semindr on contdiner ga.r-
dening and hdngmg baskets
a t 9:15 a.m The store 1s at
2301 San Jodqurn l lills Road,
Corona del Mar For more
mformallon, cdll (949) 721-
2100.
The JuvenUe Diabetes Foun-
ddtion of Orange Coupty will
hold its s~'cond annual VIP
Monopoly Gdla at thP New-
port Beach Marnott, 900
Newport Center Drive, New-
port Beach. The event will
mcludc a ~1Jent and live auc·
tion tor items suc·h as a
Goodyear Blimp ridt•,
EdwdTds Thecltrc family
passes, and more. Tickets are
$150. For more information,
call (949) 553-0363.
Victoria Seltz, author of Your
Executive Imc1g£> and Power
Dressing will give a free lec-
ture, ·High-Tech Etiquette/
dl 7 p m ttl Border:. Books,
Music and Cute. The storP.1s
at 3333 Bear St , Costa Mei.u
For more miom1dlton.' Cdll
(714) 432-7854.
The Estancia High School
PTSA rwnmage '>dlP will run
from 8 a.m. to 2 p,m , m the
school's commons at 2323
Placentia, Costa Mesa. Mon-
ey raised in the sale wtll help
tun college scholdrsh1ps.
Tables are ava1ldl>le for peo-
ple w1shmg to rent Sdles
space For more information,
Cdll {949) 645-0715.
The Jewish FederaUon
Young Business and Profes-
sionals Div1s1on wiJl hold the
annudl Herzl Society
Advanced Gifts Dinner at
6:30 dl the Newport BeaC'h
• home of Blossom Siegel The
Her1l. Society ts a group of
J ewi h men and wornr.n
<.1ges 25 to 45 who pledge d
rrurumwn of $360 to the Jew-
ish Federation's annual cam-
, paign. For more informauon,
call (714) 755-5555, ext. 225
Our Lady of Mount Carmel
Chwch wtll hold a -voulh
Agdinst Violence" 1£>adersh1p
seMce day from 10 a.m, to 1
· p.m. The event will feature
progrdJTlS intended to encour-
age nonviolent conllict reso·
lullon The c-hurch u; c.tl 1441
W. 8dll>oa Blvd., Newport
Bcdch. Por mon~ tnfonndtion,
ccill (949) 673-2719. . '
SUNDAY
ter)ing OpUcal of Newport
BE'dCh will offer frPe v1sion
screenUlg and a raffle of opti-
cal pnzes m connect.ion with
the Sp1rit Run. The screening
will be conducted dt lilt>
Fash.ion Island Edwards Th~
ater <il the comer of New purl
Center Dnve dnd Sau
Migtwl from 7 a.m. to about
noon. For more mlormat1on.
call (949) 752-5639
MONDAY
A Great Declslons discussion
of HThe Middle East at the
Millc>nniumff will be present-
ed by Bob Green dnd Ruth
Fac,sett irom 7:30 to 9 a.m at
St Mark Presbyten~n
TUESDAY
Mother's Mark<•t witl ho~t a
IH't' st•i111nctr cm dPJllul hectllh
hosll'Cl hy Todd n COIJPI Ill ..
the J>dllo <di., lu1111 t1 ;;!O It>
7 iO pin. f\ 1<)1hl'r' Mru k1•t ts ·
c11 225 I! 17111 ·1 Costa
l\le cl. !·or 111011• mlonnatlorr,
rttll 1<141•) F13l-47i41
[h,: Orange < ounh 'li.tpter
r I l1l• "111glt· Goum1 t wtU
tiol I d qoum1• I chm 19 PVP nt
1l lhslro 201 3 i33 ( 10::.I
H1ghwav. NP\\:J)ort 81 c,Wh
for n\otf 10lnn11 '1tio11 'dll
tBOOi 7fi0 fJINE
(H 1
"pPdk l 'p N~wport's Mdrrh
Ill •1•tinq \\Ill ,11l<lrt•S'; l\lf'd
sua• F. 1 lw mf•l'\111q ht>gm•
\\llh ho1:-. cl'Of'\l\'H~ c1l 5 rn
p.111 cin<I u pn•..,t·11t11l1on 11l ti
.p Ill It \\ 111 b1> ht' lcl (It 1 llP 1 Rwt•1bodt Rl•sl<Jlllunt. l~I E
Cut1st l l1qhwd\, N""' port
Beet< h ror mor~ m111m ul111n.
<"<Ill (~4~1 l24-22fib
IG OOD TA~TE AND GREAT STYLE THAl [SERVES YOU WELL I
• Helen Grace Chocolates •Champagne • Anthony'~ Shoe Reptl ir
• Champagne Bakery • 01 Marie Interiors • Bank oi America
• Mrs. Beasley's & Mis~ Grace • Draper'c;, & Damon's • Blue Mnmbo Beauty Supply
Lemon Cake Co. • Kayaks Weekend Wear • California Feder,11 Bank
• Pasta Bravo • Matthew-Taylor's • Crown Ate Hardware
• Pick Up Stix • fast Fram :.
• Ralph's Market • Images Hallm rk
• Starbucks • Mailboxc Etc.
• Robert & Taylor • Ion
• Sav.-on Drug tore
• Shape Up N >wport
• Shell Oil
• Westcliff Pl~ za Clean rs CLIFF ., ...
.\ '
,«
:I
. .. . .
A4 ~nesdoy, Februory 23, 2000
EDUCATION IN lllEF
Middle College
High holds open · . .
house today at occ .
Newport-Mesa parents and st\1dents who wt1nt to tdkP a
glimpse at altemabve education can visit OCC"s M!ddJe Col-
lege High School open house. . .,
The event will be held at 6:30 p.m. toddy m O< Cs Stu-
dent Center Lounge, 2701 Fairview Road, Costd Mesa.
Information about the school, which lS open to high school
juolors and seniors m Orange County, Will be <ii:5tribut~ by
Principal Joo Fox. Std.ff members dnd tedchers will also be on
hand to discuss the school's progrdIDS and pldns for the
fuf\U°e. •Tue Middle College High School provides a sup-
portive academic dtmosphere in wluch high potential stu·
dents can improve their level of achievement and prepare for
'the ledmologicuUy rich envuonment of the future," Fox srud.
·we offer a smcill school environment, with all the classes
necessary for students to ect.m thear high school diploma Our
students are al!io eltg1ble to enroll concurrenUy U1 credit
courses offered by Orange COdst College "
In collaboration with the Newport-MeSd Uruflecl School
Disbi(;t, the high school is designed tor high-potentit1l,
underachievmg students. .
The school, in its fourth year, recently received d five-y<'df
$750,000 grant from the Chdllcellor's Office of California
Community Colleges. The grant will pay for enhancements
of programs and services at the school, which in June wtll
graduate 50 ol its 97 students. For more information, CdU
(714) 432-5732.
-Amy R. Spurgeon
Doily Pilot
DON LEACH I OAllV PK.OT
Student Jennifer Kreger, right, laughs with Kiera Nowlin as they take the same ·quiz on the Internet during
computer class at Middle College High '6cbool.
Cyclist critically injured in traffic accident What's
AFLOAT
3 andl under. Special dis-
counts are available for
groups of 12 or more, com-
munity youth groups, service
orgaruzat.Jons and schools.
Private charters also avail-
able. Guaranteed sighbngs
of whales or dolphins, or all
passengers will receive a free
pass. Davey's Locker is at 400
Main St., Newport Beach.
For more information, call
(949) 673-1434.
Cost is $14 for adults, $12 for
seruors, childr~n ages 3 to 11
are $8, ages 2 dJTd under are
free. Groups rates dlso avail-
able for !.chools, youths and
groups or 15 or more. Dis-
counts dvru.lable on the Web
at www.newportwhalewatch·
ing.com The Fun Zone Boat
Co. is at the Fun Zone in
Newport Bedch. For reserva-
tions, call (949) 673-0240.
• Victim was allegedly
under the influence of
alcohol; blood test for
driver of car pending.
Greg Risling
DAILY PILOT
An unidentified bicyclist
remained in criucdl condi·
tion Tuesday after he Wd!.
struck by ~n onconung car m
Costa Mesa late Monddy
night. .
Police sdid they do not
know the name of the man,
reported to be in lus 20s,
because he wasn't cMrying
any idenWicabon dt the ~
of the acodent.
What police do know 1s at
about 11.:15 p.m. Monddy, <1
JO-year-old Costd Me!.<1
woman was dnving south-
. bound on West 17th Street
when her vehicle struck the
bicycl.JSt, who was atte.mpt-
mg to cross the suc-ldne slrPct
near Fullerton Avenue.
The vict.Jm flew ctbout 10
feet after being tut ctnd fell
hctrd on the pavemPnt. The
woffid.n, who was dnvmg ti
1998 Dodge Neon, was trav-
eling close t6 the speed limit.
posted al 35 mph, when the
accident happened, po~1ce
added.
The victim, who wa!. not
wec.tring a helmf't, suffered d
fractured skull and wds
rushed to Western Medical
Center in Santa Ana.
Police said the accident
may have been caused by
two factors: both parties had
dllegedly been ~g and
the bicycle wasn't equipped
with proper reflectors.
"There wasn't any lighf-
mg on the bike,• said Costa
Mesa pohce Sgt. Dave
Andersen. "We are also look-
ing ihto the possibility that he
foiled to yield lo traffic and
possibly ran the stop sign.•
While police said the dri-
v<>r was well below the legal
lmut for driving under the
influence, similar tests are
pend.mg for the victim. It is
unclear whether either party
will face any charges.
• WHAT'S AA.OAT runs period1·
cally in the Daily Pilot on a rotating
basls. If you know of an event or
activity that could appear in this
column, please mail the inform&-
tion to Daily Pilot. 330 W. Bay St,
Costa Mesa 92627; fax 1t to (949)
646-4170; or e-mail It' to da1/ypi·
lotOlatimes.com.
WHALE WITCHING
Davey's Lock~r operates
whale-watch cruises daily
through the end · of March.
Operating hours are 10 a.m.
and 1 p.m. weekdays and 9
a.m., noon and 2:30 p.m. on
weekends and holidays. The
cost is $14 for adults, $12 for
seniors, $8 for children ages 4
to 12, and no charge for k.tds
Bongo's Sportfishtng Char-
ters offers private party
whale-watching excursions
daily. The cost is $125 for one
hour, with a six-passenger
maximum and a three-hour
minimum. Bongo's is at 2130
Newport Blvd., Newport
Beach. For more information,
call (949) 673-2810.
Newport Landing SportfJSh·
mg offer5 a low-cost way to
SAILING
.----------!lii!5!S!!!!!iii2 ===:5iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiilliiiiiEi;;;;;o;;iiiiiiiii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;&iiii;;;;;o;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiEiii0iiiiii5iii:iilEEiiiiiE!iiiil5iiiiiiiE55i5==iEEE====;aa whale-watch, from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. weekdays and 9 a.m.
CLASSES l BOAT RENTALS
OCC's Satllng Program has
scheduled a non-credit inter-
mediate shields class that
meets during Pebrudry and
March. The course will
emphas12e seamanship and·
firute sail trun and sail shape.
It abo covers man overbodrd
and dflchortng, and students
will have an opportunity to
do som~ r51cmg. Conditions
perrnitllng, offshore sailing
will be penrulted. The five-
week session meets from
1:15 to 5 p.m. Saturdays, Feb.
12, 19, 26, March 4 and 11 at
OCC's Sailing Center, 1801
W. Paofic Coast Highway,
Newport aeach. RegistrdtiOn
is $115 Por more informa·
tton, call (949) 645-9.412.
Look in the C'4ssified section
in Sa~urday's paper.
Publishing every Saturday
until April 15th.
--ONE WEEK ONLY I--
300/ootl
ALL NEW BAI.ANCE APPAREL
Good thru 2/27 /00
Corona del Mar Plaza
932 Avocado St.
(PCH & MacArthur)
(949) 720-1602
to 2:30 p.m. weekends and
holidays. The cost is $14 for
adults, $8 for seniors and
children under 12. Special
d.J.scount rates are available
for schools, churches and
community youth groups.
Newport Landing is at 309
Palm St., Newport Beach. For
available dates and informa-
tion, c&l.l (949) 675-0550.
Fun Zone Boat Co. guaran-
tees w hale or dolphin stght-
ings during its excursions, or
the next trip is free. Daily
trips weekdays are at 10 am.
and 1 p.m. and weekends at
9 a.m., noon and 2:30 p.m.
KAYAK TOURS
IND RENTALS
1Wo-bour kayak tours begln
at 10 a.m. Sundays from
Newport Dunes. Cost is $20
per adult, $15 per child.
Kayak rentals dlld classes are
also available. Fro more infor-
mation, caJJ (949) 729-1150.
You are cordial/y invited to attend @iJ ~
hJl frlv/8.le O..J SCb.ooJ. Mattress Outlet Stor
2000 Kindergarten enrollmtnt
Parent Orientation Meeting
on Wednestkfy, February 23
at 7:00 p.m.
Slide Show -Atademic
Program Presentalion
Child care available
Refreshments
2000-01 Middle Scholl
(Grades 6 thru 8)
Parent Orientation Meeting
on 'l'hursd'{}', February 24
at 7:00 p. m.
Academic Program Presentation
Refreshments
261 Monte VISta Avenue
Costa Mesa, CA 9262 7
949-645-5171
ELEMENTARY • MIDDLE SCHOOL
EXTBaD CUllCWJM llAOIRS FOR:
• Cofll>uter Education • P.E •Spanish
• Att • Moslc
• Swimming (pool on ptemlsesl
Classified ads work
for you!
• • • • •
BRAND NEW· COSMETICALLY IMPERFECT
Get the Best for Lessl
.J 165 Harbor Blvd.
Costa Mesa
OM Block Soulh of •oa rwy
( 714) 545. 7 168
am mm 11m11
FUIUPORT
rcvC'al what the insurance comJMlnltl don't w.,1t you 10 know.
Was your car mjumi? You may be tooll Ir may he wctk , montht
or even years htfc>rt you expenence JMlin, lttffneM, headtchet, evea
~nhrin1f l>Oa't Mrdc yoar C8I! unal you rad our frtt ttp0rt.
,
I • t
Doily Pilot
• 5end AROUND TOWN items to
the Oatly Pilot 330 W. Bay St., Cos-
ta Mesa 92627; fax them to (949)
~170; or call (949) 764--4330. A
complete hrt1ng may be found at
dailyp1lot.com.
TODAY
Newport Harbor Republican
Women pre ents U.S. Rep.
Dana RohrabaC'her. (R·Hunt-
ington Beach), who will d1s-
cuss "The Latest from Capi-
tol Hill• at a luncheon at th(:'
Balboo Bay Club, 1221 W.
Coast Highway. The event
starts 'With a social hour at
11 :30 a.m. and costs $20 per
person, For reservations and
more infonnauon, call (949)
673-0158.
Camelback St., Newport
Beach. For more intormation,
call (949) 644-1999
THU!SDAY
Mother's Market will hold a
free seminar and book-sign-
ing with Karen Mastarson,
author of "Reverse Disea. e
with Aloe Vera," at 6:30 p.m.
on its Patio Cafe. The market
lS at 225 E. 17th St., Costa
Mesa. Por more inf onnation,
call (800) 595-MOMS.
The February meeUng of
the International Marketing
Assn. of Orange Couoty wtll
feature a talk by IMA presi-
dent Dr; Joe Greco, titled
"Penetrating Overse~ Mflr·
Mother's Market will hold a ' kets. • Refreshments and
feng shui seminar from 6.30 hors d'oeuvres will be
to 7:30 p.m. dt its pat.Jo Cdfe. served and adnusSion 1s free.
The market 15 at 225 East The meeting will be held in
17th st , Costa Mesa For the lobby of the Manufactur-
more information, call (800) ers Bank, 1301 Dove St.,
MOMS 59 6667 Newport Beach. For more 595-( 5· ). information, call (949) 553-
The Newport Harbor Area
Chamber of Commerce will
hold a sunset after-hours
mixer from 5 to 7 p.m. at
Bander, 3201 E. Coast High-
way, Newport Beach. The
event ls free tor members
and $10 for potential mem-
bers. For more informal.Jon,
tall (949) 729-4400.
The Newport Beach Public
Library will hold a free noon
program tttled •Discover
Your Personal Style" with
wardrobe consultdnt and
personal shopper Barbaru
King. The library 1s al 1000
Avocado Ave • Newport
Beach. For more mfonnation,
cd.11 (949) 717-3801
Newport Dunes wtll hold "-
book-s1grung and program
with Serge Dedma, author of
"Saving the Gray Whale,• al
6:30 p.m. m the "Bay View"
room, 1131 Back Bay Drive,
Newport Beach. For more
information, cull (949) 723-
5424.
The Costa Mesa Chambe r of
Commerce will hold an after-
hours rruxer from 5:30 to 7:30
p.m. at TEN Seafood and
Sushi Restaurant, 580 Anton
Blvd., Costa Mesa. The event
is free for members and $10
for potential members. For
more mlormabon, call (714)
885-9090.
Bor~ers Books, Music and
Cafe will hold a "Personal
Growth and 1Tansformatton
Group" meellng led by psy-
chologist Craig Wagner at
7:30 p.m Borders lS at 3333
Bear St., Costa Me-,a. For
more mlonnatton, call (714)
432-7854.
The Oasls Senior Center will
provide free breast ·cancer
scre@ings for women age 40
and over. The center 1s at 800
Marguente, Corona del Mar.
For more information or to
make a reservation, call (71 4)
935-9720.
Temple Bat YahJn will bold
its sixth annual Simcha and
Celebrations Expo from 5 to
9 p .m. The event will feature
exhibits from caterers,
flonsts, photographers and
more. The temple is at 1011
3686.
The Newport Beach Public
Library will hold a free pro-
gram at 7 p.m. on "Manag-
ing Parental Anger." Dr.
Richard Shulman, a Newport
Beach ttierapist, will speak.
The library is at 1000 Avoca-
do Ave., Newport Beach. For
more information. ccill (949)
717-3801.
Borders Books, Music and
Cdle will present a free sem-
mar lltled "Protecting Our
Parents, Their Assets and
The1r Health Care,• featur-
ing attorney Jerry O'Bnen. at
7 p.m Borders lS at 3333
Bl>ar St., Costa Mesa. For
more mformabon, call (714)
432-7854.
The Newport Jaycees will
hold a sooal rru.xer for young
professionals ages 21 to 39
The $5 event, wruch starts at
6;30 p.m., tncludes hors
d'oeuvres. The mixer is at
the Shark Club, 841 Baker
St., Costa Mesa.
FRIDAY
Poet Susan Kinsolving will
read poems frdm her cntical-
ly acclwmed collection,
"Dailies & Rushes,• at 7 p.m.
at Borders Books, Music and
Cafe. Kinsolving has pub-
llshed poems in many
anthologies anp Jndgazmes,
includmg The Pans ReVlew,
The New Republic and
Grand Street. Borders is at
3333 Bear St., Costa Mesa.
For more mformation, call
(714) 432-7854
SATURDAY
Newport Harbor High
School will hold "Parent Uni-
versity 2000, • a specal edu-
cation community advisory
committee meeting. The
event includes seminars on
many different .subjects for
parents, including topics
RUFFLES UPHOLSTERY
Wher:e Your DoU•r Cove,. Morel
WE'vE MOVED 1 BLOCK NoRrH
Sofa $10000• OFF
Club Chair $5000• OFF
-With a P.Jrchase of Fabric & Labor tit 3/1/00
1"8 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA •SA 548-1118
Coming
Friday, March 24
Call (949) 642-4321
, .
AROUND ToWN , Wedne~oy, February 23, 2000 A5
such a& sub tance abuse pre-
venbon, language dPvelop-
ment and learrung d1sal>1li-
ties. The day starti; with <1
continental breakfast di 8
a.m. and runs through 1 1 ·45
a.m. The <;chool 1s at bOO
Irvmc Ave., Newport BPac h.
For more informahon, c ctll
(714) 424-5060.
The Bank of Orange County
will hold u fnnch1se mvf>st-
ment workshop ttl the Dou
btetree I lotel, 3050 Bnstol
St., Costd Me'id 1\vo sf>'>·
sions of the $15 workshop
will be offNPd. a morning
session, from 9 10 11 u m.,
and an dfternoon $f!ss10n
from 2 to 4 p rn for more
infonnahon calJ (800) 981-
6680
The Piecemakers wUl hold a
peddJer'c; mdrk<>t rrom 8 d m .
to 3 p.m ThP event, fedtur-
ing 65 booths ,,f old dnd new
items, lS free :. rt will be held
outside th£? Pwcemakers
Country Store, 1720 .AddmS
Ave., Cost<• Mesd. For more
mfom1c1tt<m, C'dll (7 14) 641-
3112
Roger's Gardens will hold a
semindr on contdiner gdr-
derung t1nd hanging baskets
at 9:15 d.m. The store is dl
2301 Sdn Jouqwn I Wls Rodd,
Corona del Mdr For more
infOnTidllOn, t'i.lll (949) 721·
2100.
The JuvenJle Dlabetes Foun-
dation of Orange County will
bold its erond annual VIP
Monopoly Gald at thP NP.W•
port BP.dC'h Marnoll, 900
Newport Center Dnve, New-
port Beach. The event will
mdudf' a silent ancl live dUC.·
tlOn for items SUCh clS d
Goodyedr Blimp ncle,
Edwards Theatre family I passes, and more. lick(!ls cm•
$150 For more mfonnahon,
call (949J 551-0363. ,.
Victoria Seltz, author of Your
Executive lmagP dnd Pow£!r·
pressing will give ti frat• lrc:-
ture, 'Tbgh.Trch Ot1quC>Lt<>, d
at 1 p.m. di Bor<.lc•rs Books,
Music and Cdfe Tht.• store• is
at 3333 Bc>ar St., Co ... ta Mc<.d
For more mlonnc1l1on, Cdll
(71 4) 432-7854. .
The Estancia · High School
PTSA rummage st1le will run
Crom 8 d.m . lo 2 p.m . m the
o;chool's commons al 2323
Placentid, Costa M£>sd. Mon-
ey raised in the sdle w1ll help
fun colle~Je scholarship<>.
Tables are ava1lc1ble for peo-
ple wishing to rc>nl Sdl<:
'>pdce For more mfomldllon,
call (949) 645-0715
The Jewish Federation
Young Business und Profl''>-
s1onals D1v1s1on will hold the>
annual Herzl Socwty
Advanced (iifls DinnN ut
6-30 dl lhc~ Newport Bcuc h
homP-of Blossom Siegel. The
lfonl Society LS d group of
Jewish men and women
ages 25 to 45 who pledge a
nummum of $360 to the Jew-
ish Pederallon's annual cam.
paign. For more information,
C'all (714) 755-5555, ext. 225
Our Lady of Mof1nt Carmel
Church Mll hold d "Youth
Agc.Unst Violence" l.cddersh1p
s<•rvicC> ddy from 10 a.m. to 1
p.m. The eve>nt will fec1turt>
proqrdJTlS mtendf>d to enrnur-
uge uonv1ol<>nt conflic l r<>s<1·
' h,1Uon The church 1s at 1441
W l3dlbod Blvd., Newporl
Beac-h For more mtoanc1fton,
Cdll (94~) 673-2719.
SUNDAY
terllng OpUcal of 1'.ewport
BPdch will offer free Vt!.1on
sr.re,•nmg dnd d raffle of opt1-
Cdl pn1c·s in connect.Jun with
the ';pmt Run The ~c:reerung
will be conductPd t}t th<'
Fdsluon Island Edwards Thf!-
dter <.1l the comer of NPw p<>t t
CenlN Dnve dnd Suri
M1g1wl horn 7 a.m. lo almul
noon. For morn mformc1tion
call (949) 752-5036
MONDAY
A Great Decisions discussion
of ~Tho MtddJe Ed'>t ot thP
M1llPnmum" will be present-
ed by Bob Green dnd Huth
rc1<;sett irom 7<10 to~ a.m. (It
St. Mark Presbyl~mm
TUESDAY
Mother's M.trk••t wall hoc,t d
lr<·1· i·mmc1r <111 d1>ntal I • 111 h
lio~t11<1 hy I o<l<I I\ En•J• ·I m
tho 1)c1l10 r'tlfP fr•1111 h 30 t1J
7 W p m. Mothr r' M.trk I l~
ul '221) E 17th SI •1,1 ta
:l\;IC> ... rnr IOOll' Jllf11nii.1Uorr,
<dll l'W·•J ti31-4141
J ht• Orctngf' C 'ounh t.haph•r
r..>1 fh•· Srll!JI" Go 11 ru1 t WJ.11
twld o qourrrn•I ti ru l<J PVt nl
{JI B1~tro 201 3 iJ J t Od t
H1°ghway. N'·wpmt B1 .i1 h
F1)r m<•r~ tnlMrrl 1t1011 1 e1ll
!HOOi i:;11 DINE
ARCH
Speak l 'p Nf'wpurt's ~1drc t,
ru.-.1 Ung ...,.. 111 1Clrh<: ~lt·c
~1111' I· Thi' 1111 1 llll!J l>1-q10"
\\.1th h<lll> cl'Ol'll'li I S <II 5 ~!I
p 111 and u pn•..,1·11l<tl111n 111 o
p lll It Will ii<· h1 It! e1t tilt'
H1v1~rbo11t l{p:.tt11111111t, l '>1 r.
('<>t1..,l J (1(JhW<1', P\Jl'\\Jltil~
BC'o< h r-11r morP ul lo111 ulJOll,
('11l111Wl1 2l4-.l2bh
IG OOD TASTE AND· I GREAT STYLE I 'THAT I SERVES YOU WELL I
• Helen Grace Chocolates
•Champagne Bakery
• Mrs. Beasley's & Miss Grace
Lemon Cake Co.
• Pasta Bravo
• Pick Up Stix
• Ralph's Market
• Starbucki,
•
•Champagne
• Di Marie Interiors
• Draper's & Damon's
• Kayaks Weekend Wear
• Matthew· Taylor's
• Anthony' hoc Rep.1ir
• Bank of America
• Blue Mambo Beaut)' upply
• California Federal Bank
• Crown Ace Hardwar •
• Fast Fram
• Image Halim rk
• Mailbox ) ttt .
• Robert & Taylor ,\Ion
• Sav-on Drug Stort~
• Shape Up N wport
• Shell Oil ..
• Westcliff Pl za Clean r
.. . .
A6 Wednesday, Februory 23, 2000
MEASUREF
CONTINUED FROM 1
ents 10 December, and
then aga.m m January,
asked them to oppose the
measure.
The Newport Beach-
based Airport Worku19
Group, a pro-&n><>rt orgd·
rm.ation, has hE-Jd several
·meetings at Newport·
Mesa schools to gamer
pa.rent support for the El
Toro airpQrt and opposi-
tion to Measwe F.
Community ·opposition
to the measure has been
spreading rapidly. After a
lengthy debate last week,
the Harbor Council PTA
also came out against
Measure F.
• •What PTA is, is a
group that advocates for
children," said Jill Money,
president of Harbor Coun-
cil PTA. which comprises
all district PTAs. "It's really
not a fu,nd-J1llS.ing organi-
zation or any of that other
stuff. It really is a voice for
children. We did take a
vote to oppose Measure F
on the ballot and also,
should Measure F pass,
we would actively fight
any expansion of John
Wayne Airport.•
Parents tear that with a
possible expansion of John
Wayne, there would be
increased air traffic over
schools. Also, should the Et
Toro airport fail, the coun-
ty could demolish neigh-
borhoods around John
Wayne -which would
. include bulldozing three
private schools -to make
room for another runway
and a second terminal.
•'J'heinfonnationlhave
received shows that we
have 198 schools, not all
public schools, within a
five-mile radius of Jonn
Wayn6 Airport, whereas
El Toro has 35 lschools)
within a five-mile radius,"
Money said. •Our children
would be severely impact-
ed and it would put the
runway dangerously
close to our Newport-
Mesa schools.·
' ]
GOLD
CONTINUED FROM 1
and two children Tuesday
rooming after he and his party
had been stranded in the
woods for two rughts. Brindley
said he was afrclld he might
never again see his wife Eliza-
beth, 10-month-old son Dylan
James, or 4-year-old daughter
Melissa.
"Leon's wife won't even let
him go to O'Neil Park any-
more, .. said co-adventurer am
Hallock.
Early Saturday morning,
Brindley and his party -
friends Mike and Anita Hal-
locki Mike's brother, Bill Hal-
lock; Ed Thornell; and Dave
(no one knew his last name) -
set out to search for gold m a
part of the Angeles National
· Forest called the Narrows .
•it's basically going camp-
ing, but you come back with a
little something,• said 46-year-
old Bill Hallock, who was
squeezed into longjohns and
blue sweatpants given to him
in the woods by his sister-in-
law.
·"'He only brought one pair
of pants and shorts,• said Ani-
ta Hallock, 41 , leader of Girl
Scout Cadet noop 477. #It was
the only thing that woq.ld
stretch around him.•
. They crossed the sndking,
ankle-deep San Gabriel River
DEBATE
CONTINUED FROM 1
Both men were surprised
the measure made the March
7 ballot, but nonetheless had
differing opinions. The mea-
sure, U approved by voters,
would validate in California
only marriages between a man
and a woman, no matter
where the marriage took
place.
Toledano said if the mea-
sure passes, it would widen
the chasm between homosex -
uals and heterosexuals.
#Approving thi$ would say
that same-sex relationships are
less than others and should be
devalued,~ he said. "This
measure is being trumpeted as
a rej~on of homosexuals and
their relationships."
~ ------------
n arty 20 tunes to reach the
Narrows. Once the group
amved, they set up a high
anchor -a device used to
channel ~vel earned by the
river into their gold pan.
On Saturday night, it starj-
ed to rain. Then it began to
pour .
Whippmg winds pulled at
their tents. They could hear
rocks falling from nearby cliff
faces.
On Sunday morning, the
group found a few small
nuggets and some gold dust in
their pan and decided to stick
around. On their radio, they
heard weather for~ters pre-
dict the storm to taper off by
Monday, the day they had
planned to make their way
back down the river and
return home.
··we got together and said
Uus may be our last chance to
hike out,• Bill Hallock said
through his bushy cowboy
mustache. "We decided to
stay. We were getting good
gold.•
"Nobody was hurt, or wet,"
said Mike Hallock, 43, whose
mustache matches his broth-
er's
But the rain came down
harder and the river grew
fuller and faster. Then the rain
lwned to snow.
".We bunkered down 'at
night and then stayed put
Monday," Mike Hallock said.
That's when the party real-
0 pp 0 -
nents of lhe
measure
argue that
gay partners
would be
denied
many of the
same bene-
fits given to
straight cou-
Jim Toledano pies such as inheriting
money after a spouse's death.
Sheldon G<>untered by say-
ing same-sex marriages would
corrupt the morals and beliefs
society has valued for cen-
turies. Sheldon, himsell, said
he doesn't oppose gay rela-
tionships, but added that
same-sex maniage would be
crossing the bQundd.ries.
"The issue isn't a matter of
civil rights to us ... it's about the
protection of marriage," he
DON'T Miss THE CHANCE
to be in this annual iss ue
th at's all about Newport Beach,
Costa Mesa and Corona d el Mar!
Publication Date:
Friday, March 24, 2000
Call by March 9 to be a part
of this sp ecial edition.
(949) 642-4321
if
',.I
1zed they wouldn't be yomg
anywhere soon. Mi.kc ugge:>t·
ed they continue digging but
the others r isted. Everyone
said they were too cone med
about what their families back
home were thinking.
On Monday evening, the
Hallock.s' baby-sittci called the
Los Angeles County ShenfC's
Department to report thdt the
group hadn't retwTied. I!liza-
beth Brindley called next
Search-and-rescue ledms
from San Dimas began slosh
ing through· the now waisl-
deep river and patrolling the
forest with helicopters, st.tid
Sheriff's Deputy Carlton Jeans,
who was one of the rescuers.
At 2 a.m. Tuesday morning,
a helicopter crew found the
group when they spotted
blinking flashlights in the
woods. Al 6 a.m., once the sun
had risen, the crew began
hoisting the prospectors out of
the area.
•rt doesn't look likP they
.were prepared for the weoth-
e r," Jeans swd. •But when we
found them, they were in good
spirits."
Aruta Hallock, however,
was initially reluctant to hop
aboard. .
"I asked them heiw much
the rescue would c-ost," she
said. "When they told me tt
was compliments of U1c c:;her-
iff's department, I said lift me
on up."
said. "This has always been
about a man and a woman
How can you change that
without hamung it !the sacra-
ment of md.Criagejr
The debate became dicey
at times, straying into c;exuaJ
terminology with occasional
religious undertones that
made good fodder for the col-
lege crowd Richard BamweU
said. he appreciated view-
points from both sidPs, but
plans to vote against the mea-
sure in two weeks.
"You have to admire Shel-
don's belief and faith, but I
think the whole argument
against same-sex mamages
has always been weak," set.id
Barnwell, a second-year lttw
student.
Tuesday's debate is t.t
microcosm of the controversy
surrounding same-sex mar-
riages across the nation
Although no state has
approved same-sex mor-
riages, Vermont and I lawc.W
have grappled with the issue
State legislators have recog-
nized domestic partnerships
between gays, but same-sex
marriages have been met with
apprehension in Sacramento.
"I don't believe a small per-
centage of people should
redefine what marriage
· means in our sooety, • said
Carolyn Roney, volunteer
coordinator for Newport
Beach's Yes on Proµ. 22 cam-
paign. "This is not meant to be
mean-spirited or intoleiant
toward their lifestyle or their
choice of commitment. It's
about keeping the status quo
and the institution of mar-
riage.•
ZAHER FALLAHI, CPA
28 yrs. exp.
Acccg., Audics , Taxes
t 5% discoum co CM Residents
(714) 546-4272
AD
CONTINUED FROM 1
capitalizing on pam and
human suffering just to make
a political point," Bloomer
states in the pro-airport com-
mercial, which is expected to
air soon on Orange County
cable television systems.
The El Toro Reuse Plan-
ning Authority, a coalition of
South County cities, pro-
duced the anti-~rt com-
mercial and stands by its mes-
sage, sald spokeswoman Meg
Waters.
"They're lbe ones not
telling the truth,• Waters said.
"!The military pilots) did oat
fly passenger airer~ that way
and that's a matter of record."
There are no plans to stop
ruruung the anti-airport com-
mercial, which bas under-
gone one revision since it first
aired.
Waters said opposition was
not a factor in changing the
wording ..
The commercial is part of a
campaign to convince Orange
County residents that the pro-
posed El Toro airport is a bad
idea. The county has pro-
posed building a $2.9-billion
airport at the closed military
base.
Many local groups support
the project, hoping a second
county ru.rport will make it
unnecessary to expand J ohn
Wayne Airport. South County
residents who oppose the pro-
ject contend, however, that
the airfield would not be safe.
The anti-airport commer-
cial shows soldiers dragging
body bags away from the
wreckage of a military aircraft
that took off from El Toro and
crashed into Lo.oia Ridge -
kill.ing all 84 passengers
aboard. The voice-over states
the Marines refused to use
that runway for passenger
lights after the crash 35 years
ago.
"If it's too dangerous for
the Marines, jsn't it too dan-
gerous for you?" the commer-
cial asks.
The choirman of the
Ordnge County Business
Council, ·Tom Merrick,
announced Tuesday that the
council w9s also demanding
the anti-airport ad be pulled
from local cable channels.
Attorneys for pro-airport
efforts have sent letters to
cable comparues, askmg that
the advertisement be pulled.
PLAN
t...,... CONTINU~D FROM 1
should reflect the neighbor-
hood's predominant Latino
populati.on.
"It would e ncourage walk-
ing and public events and
fiestas,• he said. "It would be
like a public living room."
He recommended the city
create a tropical theme by
planting trees, such as
Doily Pilot
Citi1.ens for Jobs and the
Economy and the Newport
Beach-based AirpOrt Work.mg
Group, two orgaruzations lob-
bying for the proposed El Toro
airport, arc outraged at the
commercial, calling it •inac-
curate• and •offensive."
Bruce Nestande, president
of Citizens for Jobs and the
Economy, said his oppon~nts'
conunerdal will work against
them.
MI think they were foolish
to run it for many reasons," he
said. "It's always risky to use
human tragedy for political
purposes ... And they know-
ingly ran an inaccuracy."
Nestande added that once
the ad with Gen. Bloomer
airs, r~idents can decide who
to bclieve1.hemselves.
Bloomer, who was the base
commander at El Toro from
1984-86 and a Irvine city
councilman rrom 1990-93,
said during a conference call
Tuesday from Virginia that
the Marine Corps· continued
to use that runway after the
crash and that he had been a
passenger on one of those
flights.
The advertising campaigns
for both sides have become
increasingly visible as the pri~
mary election approaches. A
measure on the March 7 bal-
lot is a key factor in the airport
dispute. ·
Measure F, designed to
block the El Toro airport, if
passed, ~ould require a two-
thirds majority of registered
voter5 to approve some coun-
ty projects, such as airports,
jails and hazardous waste
landfills.
Waters said she suspects El
Toro advocates are attempt-
ing to deflect certain safety
issues from public focus in the
last couple weeks before the
election with tactics such as
the new commercial.
She cited letters sent by
two pilots groups criticizing
the proposed airport to the
county's El Toro Master
Development Program office
-which is han<.lling the air-
·port project The pilots groups
have said that the runway in
question is dangerous.
•Loma Ridge is an impedi-
ment for· northbound de par-
tures," stated a letter from
John Russell, a representative
of the Air Une Pilots Associa-
bon, International. "Flying
over the ridge instead of
around it defies common
sense·
banana trees, and designing
signs and trash cans in the
same mottf. This would visu-
ally bnng the West Side clos-
er to the beach, he said.
The report also suggested
the city encourage merchants
to open n e wsstands, side-
walk flowe r vendors and
restaurants along 19th Str~et.
. Doing so, the planners
concluded, would help attract
visitors from other areas.
Monahan said Tuesday
that he hasn't yet looked over
the plan. But he said he
looked forward to holding
workshops Wlth the commu-
nity to gather input.
Other council members
were not available for com-
ment.
PANAMA CANAL CRUISE
LIMITED AVAILABILITY
NEW ORLEANS -ACAPULCO
APRIL 20th -MAY 1st
om & Sharon Jackson·
invite you to join them WORLD TRAVEL
(714) 835-0591 .
email~
• I
Daily Pilot
GIRLS BASKETBALL
'
C<:)M steps
·into. the
·big time
• PCL champion Sea Kings
visit No. 3-seeded Harvard-
Westlake in III-AA quarters.
Barry Faulkner
DAILY PILOT
NORTil HOLLYWOOD -The
Corona del Mar High girls basket-
ball tedm ventures lo Tinseltown
tonight for a CU~ Southern Section
Division In-AA quarterfinal clash
with No. 3-seeded Harvard-West-
lake (20-7).
Codch Elbert Ddvi&' Sea Kings
(22-5) realize, however, the odds are
against a happy ending.
"This is caslly the best team
we've played all year, H Davis said. ·nus is the big time, here."
CdM hd!. had a big-time season
ot it!> own, wmrung the Pjicihc Coast
League, its hrsl league crown in
rPcenl mPmory, and winning 13 of
its lasl 14, 19 o/ 1ts 18st 21.
The Sed Kmgs extended their
dream sea. on with 8 come-from-
behind, 60-49 overtime victory over
visiting Ld Canada in Sdturday's
second round.
The Wolverines, runner-up to
top-seeded Alemany in the Mission
League, have demolished their first
two plttyofl foes. The section's Ill-A
chclmp1ons 1n 1998 hand.led We,st·
em, 87-25, in the first round, then
traunced South El Monte, 75-26, in
Saturday's second round.
"They have &ome real big-time
players, so this shouJd be a tough
one for us,• Davis said •At the
same time, il we're ever going to
step as d program, playing a team
hke Uus allows us to see were we
need to go.·
The Seo Kings should have trou-
ble going ms1de on oUense agamst
the taller Wolvennes, whose lead-
ing rebounders are 6-foot-3 sopho-
more Terbne Taylor and 6-1 Junior
Rolake Bamgbose. The Harvard-
Westlakc rotation also includes 6-0
JWllOr L'Tanya Robnett
Bamgbose averaged 10.2 points
and 9.8 rebounds in the regular sea-
son, while Taylor also chipped in 9.8
boards. •
CdM 1& paced by 5-7 junior for-
ward Kristin McCoy, who averages
15.4 point& and 10.1 rebounds. She
had 17 points, Including eight in
overtime, and nine rebounds
against La Canada.
Charlene Quon, a 5-3 gucUd, is
the only CdM senior. She averages
9.0 ppg. Jackie McCoy, a 5-6 fresh-
man, averages 7.2 ppg.
Torught's winner advances to
Saturday's senufinal against either
second-seeded Bishop Montgomery
or Costa Mesa
BOYS SOCCER
Estancia treks to
Orange Luther an
• CIF Div. IV battle today.
·ORANGE -Complacency could
' bo the biggest challenge for
.........--estanc1a l ligh, which visits Orange
Lutheran today at 3 p.m. irl the sec-
ond round of the CIP Southern Sec-
tion Otvtsion IV boys soccer play·
offs.
The No. 2-secdcd Eagles (16-1·1).
have outscored opponents, 101-9,
mcludmg a 6-0 triumph over
Orclllge Lutheran (16-6-2) the sec-
ond game of the season.
•1 think our guys will como out
f ocuscd, not tlat, • Estancia Coach
Steve Crenshaw said. '
U victonous, the PCL champions
will ad vance to meet either Santa
Ynez (15·2·3) or Monrovia (21 .. 3·2)
m Fnday' quartc rftnals.
Quote Of
DIEDAY
•it's games take this, wi1h rough conGtions on a narrow
and muddy field, that's where upse1s occur . •
Ron Evans, CdM girls soccer coach
Sports .Editor Roger Carlson • 949-5744223 •Wednesday, February 23, 2000 A7
Corona· del ·Mar ·dominates St. Paul
•Sea King outshoot Swordsmen, 37-2, but have to go into
overtime before finally putting lid on CIF Div. N verdict.
Joseph Boo
DAILY PILOT
SANTA FE SPRJNGS -It WdS
not a matter of whether Corona dcl
Mar High's girls soccer team was
goirlg to score It was as matter of
when.
Corona del Mar played host St
Pdul to the most lopsided scoreless
tie possible in 80 minutes of regula·
tion in Tuesday's ClF Division IV
game. but it took 11 more minutes or
overtime before Corona del Mar's
Knsten Hanson tiroke through.
And Julia Livingston added
another goal to complete d 2-0 CdM
victory.
CdM (16·4·4) will host La Cana-
da m Thursddy's qud.rterhnat
Play111g exemplary :.occer in
muddy cond1hons. Corond del Mdr
outshot the host Swordsmen, 37-2 m
100 rrunutes of pl<.1y .
Considering the quality of !>hots
Corona del M<1r was lakmg, il was
even more ct-.tuundmg.
Senior Kdte Simon had two clecUl
shots on goal, dnd the &econd one
dppeared to go at, only to be re1ect-
c~I.
A header by Molly O'Meard JUSt
m1S&ed, Allison Harvey hi~ a rocket
GIRLS SOCCER
that was savf'd, d.lld Hanson had
one header that just satled over the
goal.
Corona del Mar freslunan Elisha
Morgan had the most sconng
chance& with five shots on goal
In the 17th nunute she kicked it
10 off a cros\ pass from Alivia Mezu-
ra Corond's players celebrated
wildly, but gomg unnoticed was an
offiodl's ruling that d hand vtolation
negated the goal.
St. PauJ countered as CdM cele-
brated, but the Sea Kings recovered
m time to tum the St. Paul assault
awCJy.
"After Alicia's goal was taken
away,• said CdM Coach Ron Evans,
"our girls didn't have a lot to say
about it. They knew they still had 20
minutes of play ahead of them."
In the 11th minute of overtime,
HanGon knocked in a rebound from
a Pc0ge James shot and Corona del
Mar had finally scored on its 31st
shot of the game.
Seven nunutes later Ll\rlngston
broke free on the nght side of the
field dlld &he converted the easy
opportunity.
"It's games like this, Wlth rough
conchllons on a narrow 8nd muddy
field, thdt's where upsets occur,•
said Evans.
Corona del Mar, fmally drove the
natl into the St. PaQl.(15-11·2) coffin.
c • sat.the . •
CONAAD lAU I OAll.Y PILOT
CdM•s Brooks Morris (right) fights for posse Jon again t Notre
Dame's Michael Luderer in Tuesday night's Ill-AA quarterfinal.
• Kings advance to the CIF ID-AA
semis behind Hansen, Templeton,
m 57-55 victory over Notr,e Dame.
Hia.h school boy_s
BASKETBAlL
Barry Faulkner w 1 l h
DAILY P1101 48 seconds left
COS fA MESA _ The Corona The Knights (22-7) cut the lead in half with two foul shots, then
del Mdr Hiyh boy<; bdsketbaU team had to deliver four straight fouls to rod~1ts thoroughbred in the fourth put CdM 10 the bonus
qudrter, bul 1t wa<, d plow horse But the fourth such foul was
which got th<' Sea Kings to the • committed against Ha.Qsen, who
i.trelch. sank the front end of the one-and-
CdM semor Joel Templeton, a 6-one to make 1t a three-point ed.ge.
foot-7 center, scored 12 of his Two more Notre Dame free
career-high 17 points in the first throws followed with 19 seconds
hall i.tnd dlso turned v1sitirlg. Notre left and CdM ate 12 seconds off the
Dame of Sherman Oaks away clock, before the visitors couJd foul
repeatedly at the defensive end. Brooks Morris with seven ticks left
· But, even with Templeton's tal-Moms made the fust, but Notre
ents, which included eight Dame rebounded the second,
rebounds and three b'locked shots, .allowing senior guard Dann Barton
CdM was down, 49-43, with 6:59 to launch d three-pomt attempt
remaining m Tuesddy's ClF South-from the top of the key
ern Section D1v1sion III-AA quar· But Hansen, who added rune
terfinal al Estancia High rebounds, swooped m and swatted
That's when 6·4 seruor KeVUl the shot back toward rrudcourt as
Hansen, who ha!., at tlffies, earned the buzzer sounded, tnggenng a
the Sed Kings this season, took wild celebration by the winners
control "That was a great hlgb school
Hansen an All-CIF performer on b k b u • CdM c h last year's Ill-A finalist, scored 11 as et a game, oac
of the next 13 CdM po10ts rrem-Paul Orris said. "Tlus is what you
l i ' coach for.~
pleton got the other two) to propel Orris said there was no pregame
the No. 3-sceded Pacific Coast League champions to a 57_55 vic-emphasis on attacking Notre Dame's inside defense, b.ut Tem-
tohe win moves CdM (22_61 into pleton took it upon himseU to do
Frid<.1y's semifinals, agairlst Ceo-just that. J c 69 2 "Tha..t's the most assertive I've tennid of omplon, a -4 WID· seen Joel and when he hit a couple ner over second-seeded San Dimas. A com flip toddy will shots, It was ltke a shark with
decide the host school. · blood m the water,• said Oms,
Hansen began his fourth-quar-who also praised Hansen's perfor-
ter heroics with a three-poirlter to mance.
tnm the deficit to 49-46. He then "We've ridden that horse a few
netted a 12-footer and somehow--times tlns year, haven't we," he
connected on a high-arcing Hail asked, rhetoncally of the Stanford-
Mary from 10 feet, as he floated bound volleyball setter.
beyond the baselirle and behind Notre Dame did not get a field
the backboard to put CdM ahead, goal the final 6:59, while CdM
50-49, with 4:34 le ft. made 5 of 7 from the field in the
Templeton made 1t a 9-0 run final penod to firush 51°o (24 of
with d left-handed layin and, after 47).
a Notre Dame free throw, Hanson Michael Luderer rut four t,t. .. ee-
dnlled a three-pointer from the left pointers to pace the Knights Nith
comer to give CdM a 55-51 edge 21 points.
Brea Olinda tops Newport Harbor, 76-68
• Tars' season comes to an
end with second-round loss
to Orange League chdmps.
Joseph Boo
DAILY PILOT
BREA -Newport Harbor
Higb's boys basketball team wor-
ried about Brea Olinda's height,
but the Wildcats made the Sailors
wony about their outside shooting.
Orange League champion Bre8
lut eight three-pointers en route to
a 76~ home victory irl Tuesday's
CIF Southern Section Division ll-
AA second-round game.
Th~ 'Cats (22-6) ~hot 13 of 21 m
the f>econd hail to hold the Tars ort.
N<:>wpott (18·9), thf' ·second-
place team from the S~a V1ew
Le<.1guc, started 6-foot-6 sophomore
1ony Mehmt i.n an attempt to offset
Bre•'.s height advantdge. wluch
was evident in d 61-36 loss to the
Wildcat!> in a December tourney.
Melum came through (or th&
Sailors, sconng 24 pomb.
Melum and Aaron Yamal, who
cor d 22 points, were the. two
catayl~ts to1 Newport's offense.
From lhP outset, hoth teams
wer Uyiny to one-up t.'tich 0U1er.
When Melurn conv •rtcd cl thrcc-
point play in the fust quartei,
Bwa·~ Ryan Moore J~ponded Wlth
BOYS BASKETBALL · quarter gave the Wildcats a 68-58
lead with 4:01 left.
a three-point play of his own.
When Yamal nailed ~ three-
pointer with 50 seconds left m the
fU"St hdlf, the Wildcats immediately
got one of their own three-poirlters
to take their fi.n;t lead, 5-(-52 But
Melum hrt . a buzzer-beatmg
jumper to tie the game at halftune.
Brea came out energetic in the
thud quarter, scormg 24 points and
hitttng four three-pomters. But
Newport, led by its twin towers
Melum and Dustin Illingworth (6-
toot·4 ), kept it cl0$e. .
But a 10-0 run m the fourth
Newport got some hope back
when Yarn al tut a four-point play
with 2.47 left, making the score 68·
62. After both teams exchanged
baskets, Newport's Greg Perrine
picked up a loose ball and called a
timeout and Newport had the ball
down 70-64 wtth 1:33 left.
But Wilber, who led his team
with 22 pointi, stole the ball agam,
and Brea held the nus off with free
throws and two offensive rebounds
that kept Newport at bay.
Illingworth scored 13 of his 15
points in the second ball and
grabbed eight rebounds.
~esa girls heavy underdog to Bishop Montgomery
• Mustangs try to knock off the ill-AA No. 2 seed tonight. out tlnd do everything we're i.up·
posed to, ho~fully, when th fourth
quarter rolls around, wc'U be in Ulc
game."
GIRLS IASllTllLL
1.,.-yf(IUfkMr ol.M.v Ptt.oT
COSTA MESA -Costa Mesa
J Ugh hosts BtShop Montgomery's
Knights of the roundball tonight at
7:30 in the CIP Southern Section
Olv11lon lll·AA gtr)1 basketball
qUari rflnalt.
• "This ls a powerboUle program
that 11 gOlng to nale a big time,•
eu Coach Jim W..U Mid al tM
, 2"Heeied Del by LMg\le CX>-
cbunpk>n, wbidl .... outKored
aeJl'ODM'tl U1 HeNge ol 71-50 m
route to a 22<i record, clesp1t
counting upon only one prununent
senior.
•1t•s definitely David vs
Goliath," Weeu continued. ·we're
giviny up at least two inches 1 posi·
Uon.·
Though the lize dl1crepency
among .wten II not quite that IUb·
atantilL tbe Mustangl (l8·10) face
UI \lpbUI c:bllleftge, ~ p&aybJO
wbat Weeb t'Onllden their' belt
bMUtMD al lbe ....... •we have a CbeDC9, ~DOC•
good one,• "Wt1a Mid. •JI we go
The Muatangs. who hisve cor rl
more than 60 points only lwt<' ,
hope to use detenllve pl'CllUl'e and
ofhtnlM9 patience to 1low the tempo
agalmt the Knlgbtl.
•And we have to 10 n out.
became tbey get a lot of polnts on ....,.Nboundl,• n:L Mnalt'•WJ. whW:h won
beclr w:k ... ·~ tD ............. .,, ...... .3~
....... Ima. wbo••..W ll
pomts nnd to ~bound5 per game.
Noell Quinn, a S·tO freshman.
an<t Thmora Quinn, a · 5-10 temor.
average 12 and 10 polnts, ~
tlYely. wbOe Brittney Thoma 8Dd
lrll !Dulay, bodl 5.5 topbomorw,
"veraoeEo ..-.... 1be Who dlMted Notre
Deme al <>Ml. ~ ID
the MCond iauld, ..... WOil .... ....... , ...... ,1 . ,..., ...._a ' t Jt ....... Iii .. ra.. ..... , •• • ...
ftnt·IOUDd Wll oww Dir ••d
•
_A8~w-~_ne_sdoy~,_Fe_bru_o~ry_23~,2000-----r.~'·-----'-----------~--~P(}l{TS~---------f----------------------__:._-=.;:
~ CDM: Too MANY GOLFERS,
• Of ENOUGH 'IEE ~TIME
• Promising future apparent for the Sea Kings .. Hi9~ schoo!.Jlolf Needless to say, Stark-
weather believes this is one of
his very, best teams.
,
Joseph Boo much tee lime. A lot of people
D AJLY PILOT want to play golf .• OuTLOO~
CORONA DEL MAR -
lt' hard enough to gcit 4 tee
time at any goU course. But
try gettmq t times for 42
fairway warriors.
As rnuC'h us Corona del
Mar I ugh boys goll coach
Mike Starkwedthcr would
like to keep all 42 golfers that
tried out for hlS team, at is
highly unpracticdl. So, he'll
have to make some tough
dec1. ions. unless the school
does something about it.
•Mdybc the school cun
build us our own gold
course," Starkweather said
with d lauyh. "You know, the
CdM goU course.•
• t wish everyone could
play But we can't get that
BASKETBALL
SUMMARIES
HIGH SCHOOL BOYS
. . '' SICONO ROUND OF OIVISIOH U·AA
BREA OLINDA 76, 'NEWPORT 68
SCOf'9 by Quarten
Newport Harbor 19 15 20 14 68
Brea Olinda 15 19 24 18 -76
Newport Haf't>oc' • Melum 24, •
Yarnal 22, Illingworth 15, Perrine 5,
Reynolds 2, Rorden 0, Martin O
3-pt goals • Yarnal 2
Fouled out· Perrine.
&Na OUnda -Wilber 22, Lewis 19,
Moore 19, Ul1cny 2. Schreck 0,
Reimer 2, Bla~enberger 1 O, Criner 2.
3-pt. goals -lewis 3, Wilber 2,
Blattenberger 2, Moore 1
Fooled out -Reimer.
HIGH SOtOOl BOYS
OF DIVISION ltl-AA QUA«TERRNAl
CoRoftA on MAR 57
NOTM DAME 55
~by Quarters
Notre Dame 13 14 17 11 -55
Corona del Mar 16 18 9 14 -57
Notnt Dame -Luderer 21,
Pearson 17, Catkins 5, Hennessy 5,
Sanchez 3, Barton 2, Barwick 2.
3 pt. goals -Luderer 3, Sanchez 1,
Calkins 1, Hennessy 1.
Fouled out None.
Con>N del Mar -Hansen 29,
Templeton 17, Hanson 4, Hietbrlnk
2, Snell 2, Patterson 2, Morris 1,
Shahang1an O.
3-pt. goals Hansen 5
Fouled out -None.
TENNIS
COllEGE WOMEN
NONCONFIJtENCE
CAL STAn SAH BouwtotHO 7,
VAHGUAllD lJNtVERSITY 2
Singles Doyal M def. H
Kusurik, 6-4, 6-1, Godfrey M lost
to Diaz, 2-6, 6·3, 4-6; Martinez M
lost to C. Kusurik, 6-0, 4-6, 1-6;
Speer-Pardee M lost to Stieg, 2-6,
2-6; Boyd M lost to Qu1st9art 1-6,
2 6; Feree M lost to Terill, 12-6, 4-6 •
Doubfes -Doyal-Godfrey M
def. H. Kusurik Dtaz, 9-7,
Martine' Ferree M lost to C. Kursurik·Stieg,_8-1;
Nlhau·Bennett (V) lost to
Quistgart-Tenll, 1·8
SCHEDULE
TODAY
• Basket.ball
High school girls CIF D1vi~lon
111-AA Quarterfinals. Corona del
Mar at Harvard/Westlake. 7·30
p.m .• Bishop Montgomery
at Costa Mesa, 7 30 p.m
• Soc:icer
High school boys CIF D1vmon IV
secondround.EstandaatOrange
Lutheran, 3 p.m.
• llasebell
Community college • Mt San
Ant onio College at Orange Coast.
2p.m.
• Volleybell
Community collgt! men -Orange
Coast at Grossmont. 7 p .m
• SoftbaU
Community college Orange
Coast at Santa Ana, 3 pm.
• Golf
Community men college -
Cerritos vs. Orange Coast.
at Costa Mesa G&CC. noon.
•This year, we're turning
for the top two or three in (the
Paohc Coast Ledgue)," he
~aJd •Thal should get us a
Too make it even tougher
for the hopefuls dl CdM, the
Sf!ti Kings arc returning five
leltennan from last year's
team. Only two of U1rm,
lnnes MacDonald and Chris
Franta, are seniors. MacDon-
dld had the lowest i.coring
average for the Sea Kingit last
yedr.
Innes Mad>onald Sr. CIP playoff spot.• .
Chris Franta Sr. Thal would be dn impres-
sive tum~round tor d program
that lost all 10 dual matches 1t
competed m last year. The
Sea Kings rnove away from
the Sed View League, with
Irvine, Woodbridge dnd New-
port Harbor, and into the
PCL ..
Charles Halladay Jr.
John Kwon Jr.
Joe Kwon So.
Manuel Fernandez So.
Justin Smith So.
Also returning dre the
brothers Kwon, Junior John
and sophomore Joe Junior
Chris Halladay is the hllh
retilmmg lettermen.
Coach: Mike Starkweather
from itiichig<ln. B~tb are
i,ophomores CdM figures to compete
with huge PCL favorite Uni-
versity, as well as a sobd Cos-
ta Mesa squad Nevertheless,
plenlty of eager goUers, cou:
pied with a core of solid vet-
erans, signals a likely reversal
of fortune for Cd.M.
1\vo talented transfers bol-
ster CdM's talent level and
• provide even more competi-
tion tor roster space. Manuel
Fernandez ju!>t amved from
Mexico and Justin Smith is
There are talented kids on
the junior varsity level, ready
to step up if necessary. And,
for the second year in a row,
the Sea Kings will field a
frosh/soph team So the talent
resource is sizable at Cd.M.
CdM
goalie
Arin
Hen-
drickson
stops a
shot Sea
Kings'
7-6
victory
over
Rosary
Tuesday
ln the
CIF
Divtslon
IV girls
water
polo
game.
SEAN HILLER I
DAILY PILOT
CdM tops Rosary, 7 ~6
• Hewko's steal, Ca.rlson·s goal.
with four seconds left sends Sea
Kings into CIF semifinals Friday.
Roger Carlson
DAILY P•LOT
CORONA DEL MAR -Freshman
Christi.nd Hewko came up with the steal of
her season Tuesddy dltcmoon, igrubnq a
last seconds-flurry which resulted in
Danielle Carlson's fourth goal with 0 04 left
as the host Sed Kmgs pulled out a 7-6 girls
water polo thriller over third-seeded Ro ary.
The CJF Division JV deci!)1on sends
Corona de! Mar into the senuiinals Friday
against Santa Monica (a 6-5 winner over El
'Dorado), at a site to be detemiined.
I Jewko's steal averted d last-second rush
on the CdM goal, and she swept down the
pool on a fast break, pulling up and shoot-
mg from 12 feet out.
Rosary goabe Jennifer McCall was
equal to 1t with a 9!eat block, but Carlson,
positioned perfectly lo lhe right of the goal,
grabbed the ball and slipped 1t past the
Rosary goalie for the winner.
Until then Rosary had never tfdiled, and
the Royals appcdied to have things their
way behind the strong shoulders of l)CLA-
bound Natalie Golda, who for all intent and
purpose, was Rosary's offense.
HWe tried to double and lrlple her," ~d
CdM Coach John Vargas, ·and,• he con-
tinued with a smile, •keep pressure on the
ball."
Golda scored Ro ary's fin.t four goals as
the Royals pulled out to leads of 3-1, 5-3
dl'ld 6-4, but there was never d knockout
blow, thdnks to lhe qu1tk response or CdM,
which flred betck to stay within range.
~J9h school 1irls WATER-PuLO
Addmg to Carlson's four goals were two
goals from Lauren Gutherie and a single
tally from Melinda Tucker. .
In the fourth period the Sea Kings tied it
at 5~5 on a Ccirlson shot from the right sida
after goal.Je Arin Hendrickson's deep pass
to Hewko, who m tum filpped 1l to Cdflson,
who completed the 1x:1fect combindbon.
Gutherie knotted it dl 7 apiece with her
shot with 3:12 left from 15 feet out
Rosary called bme out wiU1 37 seconds
left to set up the oCfense, but c:1s the Royals
tried to get tht~ ball rnto sconng position,
Hewko darted in and stole 1t with 18 sec-
onds left.
She didn't bother with time outs, rather,
she took off without pressure. Wld then
pulled up for her shot attempt.
Rosary's gOd.l.ie was there, but so was
Carlson in the scramble, and CdM (19-11 ),
a Wild Card entry m the < ltm111dtions,
gained its first lead of the gdffie with four
ticks left.
•we were a little tight at the beginning,
and even at the end,• aid Vargas. • But the
guls did a great JOb. •
Also with sterling effort5 di both ends of
the pool were starters l iuyk. Hapeman,
Ellen Orbe and DdWcla D1G1c:1como. -
OF OIVISIOtil IV Pt.AVOf'ff
Semlflnal
CoftoNA DEt. MAit 7. ROSAllY 6
Rosary 2 1 2 1 -6
Corona del M ar 1 1 2 3 -7
Rosary -Golda 4, McGJll 1, Monahan 1,
Saves: Freyermuth 12.
Corona def MM' • Carlson 4, Gutherie 2, Tucker 1.
Saves: Hendrkkson 11,
TARS LOADE
Coach Warren
enjoys his strongest
team yet.
Joseph Boo
DAILY PILOT
NEWPORT BEACJ l -
There's an air or confiaence
about to breeze. onto area
golf courses m a few wePks,
and it's not from Tiger
Woods hitting Riviera for
the Nissan Open. lnstead,
confidence is exuding from
Newport Harbor 1-hgh,
whlch IS fielding its most
talented team since, well,
ever.
•This is the best team in
Newport history," Tars
Coach Jim Warren Sd1d
That's what happens
when a team fields eight
quality golfers, four from
last year's Sea View
League runner-up. Includ-
ed are American Junior
Golf Association players,
senior Kevin Olson, sopho-
more Dan Kush, and trans-
fer Jake Allenach.
Olson is a three-year
varsity lettem1an and was
second-team All-Sea View
League last year. As d
.freshman, Kush also mdde
second-team all-league
and finished seventh at
league finals.
But il is Allenach, d
seruor from Oregon, whom
Warren considers lus best
talent.
•He's the real deal"
Warren said. "He hits real
long and his iron play is
excellent.•
And lets not forget
senior Mitch Johns, a four-
year varsity letterman who
is yet another second-team
all-league returner.
Adding to the team
depth is the return of senior
Traighe Concannon. A var-
THf SAILORS
Jake Allenach
Tralghe Concannon
Mitch Johns
l(evln Olson
Scott Tippett
PeteWauon
Miller Akins
Dan !Cush
Coach: Jim Warren
s1ty lettem1an as a ftec;fl.
man dnd sophomore, ""
nus'>cd all of 1 ggg with u
wnsl in1ury.
"He's pla9mg real W(•ll
but he's still gomg lhrou~h
rehab," Warr<>n i,a1d
Junior Miller A kins is
another Sd1lor recovenritJ
from surgrry. When h,.
returns, he will bring lv .. u
yt"ars worth of varsity ex p l'•
rience.
Another two-year vars11y
performer is senior Smit
Tippett, the l(:•um's lon~JI'"'
driver. According to W<J1
ren, he is capdble of h1lt11HJ
350-yd!d drives. .
Senior Pete Wdlson 1 •
the only tcdll\ rnembN gt•t -
• ting his first taste of vdr~ity3
compelltion. But you cdn' -
question lus commiu1w11t
He gave up \cl!<;ity succ.-r
lo concentrate on goU
Newport's unpdrallelt'<I
depth mCJkes it one of th•·
favontes, u not the favo111 •
of the perennially touy!1
Sea View League.
alwdys. Woodbridge anc
lrvme will bf> extrenwh
tough.
"A lot of goorl thmg tlmJ
can huppen for us, hopt>t11t
ly, • Warren suid. "We• pl·ly
d lot of tough rompt~Ullc 1ri
so it'll be intcresllllg."
SOFTBALL ROUNDUP
Lions splitr
• Vanguard University trades 2-1 decisions wit II
Cal State San Bernardino; OCC splits at tounwy. ~ ' COSTA MESA -Van-
guard University spht 2-1
nonconference softball deo-
sions with visiting Cal Stale
San Bemardino Tuesday
afternoon.
The Lions dropped the
opener, 2-1, in eight inrungs.
Gina Liebengood was the
loser in the opener, and the
winner in the nightcap,
thanks to her game-winrung
double in the bottom of the
SlXth inrung.
She had reheved stdrter
Alysia Atcheley on the
mound m the top of ther sixU1
with the game knotted at 1-1.
Vanguard improves to 6-5.
NC>NCX>NfOENCE
SAN BINWmtNO 2* VANGUARD 1
Cal St. SB 000 000 11 - 2 5 2
Vanguard 000 001 00 -1 1 2
Bradford and Oltvo; Uebengood
and Meredith. W-Bradfor, 4-3.
L -Llebengood, 3-2 2B -daluz
(58), Fiola (SB), Caggiano M .
VANGUAllO 2. SAN BuNMOtNO 1
Cal St SB 000 001 0 -1 3 3
Vanguard 001 001 x -2 7 1
Sutton and Olivo; Atchley,
Uebengood (5) and Meredith.
W -Liebengood, 4-2. l -Sutton, 2-1.
2B • daLuz (SB), Uebengood M.
• In Community college> pl.~
over the weekt"nd, Orn• q •P
Coai,t spht four gd.mes ot 1i1 •
Sequoias Tournament
COIJ.EGE OF SEQUOIAS TOURHAMr: ~T
Slxth-f)lace game
REEDl.EY 6, ORANGE Co.ASl 3
Orange Coast 201 000 O -3 7 2
Reedley 202 020 x -6 4 1
Ortega and Valdez. Snider and
Ruiz W -Snider. L -Ortega, 7 4
28 -Ortega (OCC)
Pool play
ORANGE CoASl'-12, WEST H1us 4
Orange Coast 120 36 -12 12 0
West Hills 000 40 4 4 l
Espinoza and Valdez, Barba1
and O'Artenay. W Espino1a, l 1
L Barba1. 2B Thurmond (OCO
3B Oretega COCO HR -Snider
(OC02
Pool play ~ CoAST 3. RIO HoNoo 0 i
Rio Hondo 000 000 · o 1 ~
Orange Coast 001 02x 3 5 ;t
Salquerro and Ibarra, Ortega
and Val~ez. W -Ortega, 7-3
L -Salquerro.
Pool plJIY
D£ ANZ.A 4. OV.NGE CoAST 2
Orange Coast 101 00 2 8 4
Do Anza 002 20 4 7 3
Ortega and Valdez; Morgan
and Olmos. W Ortega, 6 3.
L -Morgan 28 Valdez COCO
Doily Pilot
r..x~;. ·~ flf""J
,£~...:..t ,,,.~ I ... -.~·1> ~·.,
''...V..· ~
·~ ... I • 0 I • ~ • ~· 111 ~Inc lcttUou• BualneH IDTICI Of -. Oltioll llCDQ o1 '*" ol CMftMb Cold· A °"'' NanM Statement YOU ME. OtltlOI CO...ntt C.fonu '°"' MCI ~ ,.. l111t11t Ir.... LIW, TM IOltowtng pefl00$ .. AUl T . UN0EA THE wt bl 1010 • ~Ck 11.1C:t011 c.of'dlcl ~ Wla Mbel Com-lftlM I ...... UI Mir· 1,8 doing t>ustness 11 OECUMTl>N Of CCM , & Avo,. UP "'"'IY Anoo*>tl 11' ..,. IM ........ ,.,,. FLIP N FL YER CON· MANTI, CONDOl)NS NlJ lotT""'" AT THE l33tl, PIOll t3l-217 Mlllllill ,_ ,,_... 2fltl5I NECTION, 2208 Siii• a=::-AS AM· ~l FAOHT ENTRNCE ~ •tldutlYt. OOIOll A.-tC&n '"" 1A Riner. Av B Co6ta Meo Cll ..
0 ~~A..~~~~ Caldom•of ~Rsrrntt r~==2·18~ tort'Ja92627
WC( AC00N TO PRCllfOT GAMA CAlfOAHIA 02.688 IMl!llld ID Ille IU l·1·2000 Larry Allen HuHI,
YQll' PAOP£1m rr ~y 8£ (940) 4~1182() ~ a. l)IQjltlty °'"'no 1n lht name 2208 State. Av 8, Co&ll SOU> AT A PU8lc SALE If 20lJ • tOOO :"m ID Ille ol EOWlnl Holje Jhe toe.I Good job• MeH CahfOlllla 92627
YOU NEED AM ~TJJN llQnttt bdClef'. * amount ateul'ld ~ 1.o _.1 .... 1 rvl Thia business It oon· THE NATURE OF THE •me o1 ..t ~or &t: CC4R's ., o1 thl •me ot r .. ...., • H cea ducted by en lndMdual ~ AGAICST (~~ut 1111 ama o1 Ult in 1Mll pulJICaillOn ot lbs • lnttre1tlng thlng1 Have you started You. YOU SHOULO CON· flWful ~ of tilt lnted "°'ct 11 J1,Q0360, •whcll doing buafness yet? No TACt A LAWVER NOTICE IS StlleS) Tiit Ult wilt bt •ndudts Ille !Ota amou~ ol to buy Larry Huse! HEAEBY Gii/EN 11\lt Ille ttll fTlldt -.1110u1 eovtlllnl or Ille unc>llCI bllanceJ1ndudlng This statement was
=1 known at 230 une w1111111y excma or 111\Pltd ICCll.led and unp11 ''*'"IJ lt'I all there filed with the Cooo:-, ...-.. ...... _,. "·-~ -"""no' Ut ...... , .......... or' •nd rusonitiy e~m•ltd Clerinll.Ofange Co11 1ty ~ ,_'APNiG:'i~~;"'~ •p;;'''111e costs tl(l)enses. ~ Id. every day on 02-11 2000
TT·n1 ~. Lot 9 °'l"'""'"'no pnnaP11111m of vances "Ille trrtt Of '"'"'I In Claatlfled 2oivv..a19S19 net • ltCOl'lled 1n tilt hen secul'ld ~ Slld ttll [IUti~~of tta3s1 no2000•ce .~2 .. 878 Dally Pilot reb 16, 23.
llOOlt • 11111" •·t2 PIOPlltf, Wlfl lllllltsl ~ lfY • -Mal 1, :i. ~ooo W709
Wednesday, Februory 23. 2000 A9
I MUCMnae 11 ~ 11 w..anca llf wmnca 11 ~-}
re n ta I M I N I U 1010 ·es 11~ atld must be Aetitloua ButlMH dur.led by an ltdividull NOTICE OF
PUBUC SALE OF
UENEO PROPERTY
NOliee It hereby grven
11\at a public 1ue1ion Wll
be held on MARCH 8
2000 at 2 00 o"dode PM
at 1t11 C1m1lback
Str"I. City of Newpott Beael'I. County of Or· an~. ca111om1a MINI U
STORAGE II win sell 10
satisfy the hen on the 1o1-
low1ng mlscelteneoua
hOusehold and general
~·operty &tored at 11 11
Camelbac:k Street.1. New· ~ 8each, CA 112660,
he lollowl persons lnvent~es· hsteo
below were notated by the tenants at the time ol =======
STORAGE II makes no rernov«S by 6 00 pm on Name St.te,.,.,,t Have you 1taned ,.ptesemabOn or war· the day ol tne aale The tOllowlng peraona dong bu51nen yet?
raniv that the untt1 con· &ye,. mutt provide a are doing bustnffl es Yes. 9'118:J
lain HIO llWenlOt\et current ong nel or • Sot.o Aceeuo11e1, Jonn S L" A 4 1 7 2. JEREMY ptlolOClOpy ol 1ne11 Otigl· St S Newpon Cenler Or Tflla 11tltmenl w t
TI l· T 0 N, M ISC nat resaltl permit at time NewPort Buch, CA lrteO 11w11t1 I.he County
HOUSEHOlO ol 1alo In ~eu ol ..... 92660 Cler). ol Orano• County
8362 t ROBE RT tall This Ille II IUbjed JOhn s Lee, 874 Incle• on 02·03 2000 BlAKE FOR PANDA to pnor ClnotMation rn pendence Or 13 20006f11757
PICTURES, INC , the event of Hlltemem Palatine, IL 60074 ' Dally Pllol Feb 23 Mar
BUSINESS RECORDS between tandlOrd and ThlS busineu is con· I, 8, 15. 2000 W7t2
BUSINESS FURN I obligated Pll'1y.
EQUIP Published Newport Cal I 642 5678 Purchasei must be I Beach·Coata Mesa -•
madew11hca1handpald Dally Prlot Febrvaty 23. Put a few for at the lime of Mareh 1 2000
purchHe No one under W714 :~a~10:n31t:!1:ar~'°'T:1 on t h• move? words
tanotoro reserves the Call to work for you. rlQht to bid at the sale Cl lft-..a I Afl purcnased goods are A88 wu
Index
~~--
• ~ I
I IOI • 216
• di1unlllllhcd IUf&<Oft •IMI 0nn,. Col.arr rnedcn1 un<• I,.~ puJtd IWJ'f II hu hom<
CHI ~ 19, 2000 f1om
mnprw hnn failurt Ht ,...
llfn"old
Or Bc:tkJu-n csubli6lwd
1111 111.dinl P.'•~ri't 1n Suiu
Ana 1n 190 ud •11 a ""7>!<wt " St.~·· H°'l"W •• 0.1111• wfltrt ht WU UK fourth ltcnu~ Boml Cnuficd Sw'~ Ill qnn,.
Councy u ia, he waJ •ITiliotcd wnh lhc joluuon~ Med.al 01nK 1n ANhtun wfltrt ht ~tKcsl 11 M.vlia
· Uitlm Kins Hot1>11•I, St Jlldci H0Jf'i11l 1n Fwknon,
Ho11 Hoap111I on N~n Bmh and Anaheim
M<rnorul Hotp11>I for more lhan 40 rnr• Ot. lkrlih•u1tn held rn1ny_pot<11onJ tn h11 hrt11mc
intkldtn1 Pm1dcnc of chc On111• Counry S..1&1Ql
Sootl)', me111bt1 of 1he On n1e Coun1y McdkJI Al.aocbuon, Amtrlan Mtdial Ai-wrion a FdJow or
•he Amtrlan Collqc of Sur1ton1 •• Dipkim1c or the
Atntr1a11 Mtdiul llO~rd of S11rcery. and • memb,, of IM RciyM Soc!(ty of Mcd1<1ot of En1bnd Ht rtllrcd
fiom KOW piv11ce tn 1988 _" "Of 8" WU IU/11 P.hfN<llll (Of the MJMftl lfrah Scllool Foo1b.JI cnm ilunna tht CLm: V.nJiootcbdt
en a( the I 950t wt I '60t aild ~ntrowJr p'C hlf rimt
10 tlM: An1ht 1m "Colonuuloi tnort 1hu1 )0 ycan.
Dlt11111.._ IM l '80.. be w,y •nm phJl'(1•n (oi dw World
Tum Ttnn11 A11&ham Or1111c.1 Ovtr 1ht yon, he
ht.lpcd aiuntlaa h1"9 khool, colkJ• •f!d pt:Ofrs&1oml
MJNr1a "'~' J11t1 F-11. °"" urytdlk. B.111t Jna !Yn .. ~ Cw h. MJnlru tu.,11da¥1, Sucy t.!atgolis. v,_ v .. l'an-. ~ c...t.. Hanlr. Lloyd. MMlr. Cciri and
"""1 01hcn He wu 111 avid ttnnu playtt and pl•J'<d
...WU llMCI a~ up,. di<-.: o(O HU family. ot111natly froni .. fr.lo N"' Yo.It wu im"I lft J..oridocl, l::n1.._land Wlwrt lat11ttt WU t..r. Oii Joa""'l llr 1'12. Tilar urnc y••• they wett 111 adwdllW 10 t11.ur11 co N«w YoA on 11M: 1P.f11Cd \OO)"IJt
J 1hc litant< until an ttlocu fo<1u110Wlly (Ofccd CM -~ co pootponc lhat tnp IC:tldia....., celllf>ktcd luJ undtraraduiu nud.n at
$rraC\IH Unrwrs1rr 1M anduuccl from Colum!lia
U..w111cy Coll~c Oi l'hY*'UI• .nd Sw.1eo eoft• 111 l'-'? l'c.ot co WW IL be completed poic1nOU.1c atucbc:l 11
Mun1da, Ctr111any ~rt he ha tht h111or1nlly
•p16wi1 occaMOD 10 mm bodi liultr ad Muuobn1 Ot. lkr\h1111CJ1 YOllHllftttd to 1011 1hc US Almy ~ Corp on Fdl""."I')' 12. 1942 incl "'~ 1n f,.wopt with the fi(lb lnCMuy dllr1n1 WWII for O¥tr 1h1tt ra n wi1h S1 Lulu's Hotpclll Vn11 (ont a( 1ht
on11nal ·M'A'S'll" n&e\Lllion ho1p11•I unlta}. It• pantei,,atcd 1n li\'t l'll•1or Eufoptan arnpa11n1 and
.-iwi:I • Plorplt llan and The Btonu Sm from the u s. Cowrnmc111 for ITIClllOllOUI IC••r<• '" a•ound
combat •&&11111 armed rntlllf du11n1 th• Bmlc of chc S..lsr in lk!Jt"m on jan1aty I, 174S Iii• 11n11 wu
amO!'J che fi11r all...cl ltbt1>11n1 fOfect 10 1111Yt i nd
ptcMck !Mdic..J &1111U.na 11 llu4ll<nwald ton«ncr•uon _p ,,,Cam ... ,
lcollClt mc1 h11 W1ft, O.an1 1n r.ht Unuad Ki11plom
1l'hm ~ wu acmn1 u aa olfi«r lo En~'• R.oyil Ait
Feiu Alm lhc w.y, r.hqr h..d ~ .. fly 10 Coop«mown,
Now V«k. bdort l<'llhn1 1n On.nJ• Colin!)' 1n 19.0 lauwlc and Dial\I """ mimed S6 ,.,.,,, diiri111.wilicll w. dwy invtW ncCNiwfr duou&hovt Ult world
lcancn lived lift 10 1ht rulltn and rtili{cd by
paia11n.. cru11n1 ••"''•.,.1n1 mich•ry. lisli1n1: Didai1J1S. Hd coUCC1111 ""oqun H• •a.s an avia
lif1tot1t11 ancl co11du<1id •ttlr.ly l«1uru u T1't
Wtl!Ullloft lft l.&su"' H·• 1111111 tk hDIC el htt dnlll Ht win k rc:m«mbacd lly all ..lio lr.nrw h1111 u •
1111n11n111 ~. "'""' fftald and 1.-'ins ~dwr He will k d.tly mu.Cd ., "" rruor frlnlda .... 1111 -INa lcrkluuMa of <MW drl Ma, hit dwahw S.-UllMll of N""1'9'! Bodi. lua flW uanckliolilnn,
Md hj, Ji•cr Marpttt a.it111e of &1&r.. N"' YOik, lc1tnco'1 wift. OW.a. p1cdc<tt.wd lum 111 ~ '"' Fu~ul 1tmcn will~ lldJ frida)I F~ 2S.
2000 11 t p"' ac WavalY Ch~ k.u1ed 11 t 700 E.uc
Fatl\awe 1n S..11 AAa 1\cte .,iJI bt no .,.UIJOllJ.
T1't fanuly ~ "' IN\! o( Oowu • .,tmomb bt 4.ttictcd le en< o( tl.c followia1 d111111.0le orpNPllOllJ
~Heeft~C...11~ 4600 c.mpw Or • I~•· Cali1orn11 9l6 ll
'-d6c$Mdl-V..•T...W .......... clo USTA Sot;dim C.bfomia SMIOll
PO &1 14001 S-t..H Anaclo, CA 9001•
"Affordable
Alternative"
Discount Casket,
Cremation&
Burial Sen7ice
Why should you subject
yourself & your family to
paying Inflated prices for
ca9kcts & services????
Clll 'IOll fau 1.-.stCASDT
lrita0rll&tl9lli1_..C1al/les
Beem Oron Griffith,
paned away peae.
fuJly on February 17,
2000 of natural eauMS.
8om In Jennerstown,
PA on January 31 ,
1923, Mr. Griffith
moved ro Southern
C•llfornla In 1955,
realdlng In Pasadena
untll 1965 then moving
to Newport BHch
where he owned an
lnauranc1 agency,
retiring In ~991 . Ht
WH n year1 old. Mr.
Griffith WH a llfetim•
member of the Lion'•
Club lntern1tlon1I, end
1erved 11 Deputy
Dlatrlet Governor for
thlt trll. He WH I
WWII veteran and a
member of the Com·
peny F 16th Calvary
Rteonn1l1a1ne1
Sq_uadron. An avid
golfer, Mr. Griffith WU
1 long tlme, active
member of the Meu
Verde Country Club In
Costa ...... Hit pa•
lion waa golf, but he
also enioYtd travetlng,
1wlmmln9. erot1wont pUZZJ", muale, danc-
ing Ind WU I tiger it
Scrabble. HI• wife,
Pamela Quinby,
pealed away In 1990.
He 11 survived by
two aona: Beam It (Bo)
of Monte11no, WA,
Kenneth Drew of
Newport Be8'h, •
daughter, Olene
Doughty of Cotta
Me11, Two alater1:
Sandrt Regan of
Grantda Hille, CA, and
Mtdellne Hoffmtn of
Bo1well, PA, tnd thrt1
gr1ndchlldren: Beam m (Chip) of Olymplt,
WA, Morgan Griffith of
Montes.no, WA, Ind
Gretchen Doughty Of
CosteMeaa.
A memorial MrYle.
wUI be Mid on Frnt.y
February 25, 2000 tt
Paelflc View Mor1Uary
In Newport Beach et
11 :00 A.M. with 1
private Internment to
follow.
In fltu of flowera,
donatlona In hie
memory mty be Nnt
to the loe.I Lion's
Club.
220 . 391
•V.A.• .. '°"" ... MOrull FRll COONSEUt«l
FRO UST~ HOf.ES
HUONA REPOS
714-534-HOO
VE TERA', REA~ ESTATE
.. ----' . ' ... -... '
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IPICIAL
PINA NC ING
......
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l11•Aiil * COSTA MESA'I HST Junior 1 bedroom 111d 1 becl!oom alto 2 btclfoom
I blll'I Quiet glttd com-
munl!y, pool. ltnlil. II.SY
ICCtet to rr-v. bNcti,
end mtlla 7t 44$7~7$
Newport AcroH The ....... 28dnn t 58elh, new
c.pll · J*nl, llCM. MC
• te»!wMo No l)llls 11'5
lrvtne Ave ... Cal Dan9I. Af. .... ,....u bt 20S
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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, 1t''S
perfect! Most Census field jobs last
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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.
Dolt...,
1-888-7
/
AJO ~nesdoy,' F.bnlory 23, 2000 '
TODAY'S
CROSSWORD PUZZLE 1-~lt~.~H:!!!l l-~I
~ IAIU n ChlOIN wtlells ledler, Eddi• 8•11•r Edition. LI'-• I ABS.~., wtllee, epot...._ S22,000 '~GOREN '--------------------...J with OMAR SHARIF ACAOA 82 °'*'9' CIOUllM w111dow1 tllH (~4AYH754) $19.995 MM55--144t
71'411.... COAST CAOUAC FORD xlt RANGfA 't7 1 Mlrlllhon ee Leep ~ "'1Zlll '°'-VIO and TAHNAI I HHCSCH
6 ~NIM '7 OUldech nll 10 ~IPIC9 .. ,,....
14 'Onoe -I • Cl1un:fl -ll'ilchgl1I • • 70 Mt ~ s ...._.Judd 71 °'** MCtlOrl ~. ~..... 72 c:.t'1 ullellflCll
17 Allltf me*'9I 73 VIJIY lmll 11 Mr KefllMW ' 74 -0\11 ~ do
flAkMI ....
20 P ..... loc.i. DOWN
2 1 Dellclll l9ol 1 Zwtebedl
23 Coun4ry lddr 2 You co"6d titer 25 Sodely gel drop
28 ~11·1 3 Menyblg
expllCIYI 4 Joint
31 ~ ' AmUllng llOfy 35 lJillod!, IO I I Meecl19 lat9'1
l)Olt 1 ~ qulllCily
31 Vtnnont i-ll1ol I Fbt Allen • CloN ldn
31 ...,. QI.I 10 ·-AendM" 40 Huff Ind puff 11 Adem'I IOl'I 42 OholCly 12 cnic.go, e.g
.. T1~ 13 Mountlln-mlnetll 22 Wld goal 45 POIMI-GI 24 E6'lmV
30 Down 29 OllncllM 41 Sholltl 27 8llgl1fy oalored 41 Mel -: coc:tll.lll ...,,
50 u.. • btoom 28 E.ctel1d u.·
: ~ UVI t9 '-Mii in 5eWd~age 30=~Act-
51 Anl'fOV 32 E"*"1d. • g --~---
~, ...
' . . ' .. '.. __ ·' ~ <
Subtle Tones
Store Mtn1ger W•ntld
Seek.rig Store MaQIOer for our C«ooa del MR!eza llOfe. 2 years ~ __ .....;......;....;.._....;..;._
experience '9QUlrtd. Sr..Cllle 4 PHONE REPS.
T onea olltlS I wondlrlu4 FUil llTll, tnergetiC for · ;::i:~~·anc14: tAol1gage Co. tam to $600 Ind ~-;~. Bene-+wee« + btnefrts, sales
Ill. 401 k Ind excellent tiq> Pfet'd Conlacl Melissa
sllaly oftered Fax r-.me '*250-5719
to the atlentiOn of Susan
WalsMtumtn Atsourcte 31~223-2940 u.... ... In
comlolt Suble Ton.
RENT
hough classlfled
12 13
Pltaae ti. twar• that
the llatlng1 In thlt
categoty may rtqulr•
yo11 to call e 900 number In which
there It a cher99 per
minute.
Chances 810
you Wiii flnd
what you need
at the price
you want to p.ty
when you read
Claulfted
I l' LOOKS F.AS\'
IJIJlh vulncr1hk Soulh lkllJ,
WF .. ST
N<>IU JI
• A9 7 J • 0 954
0 Q64
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50 p,....
Soulh'i rdlid 1•.i1.1 1 iil<!tc llHI clubt
on • "400 w11h C''c;clknl 111.J., t.lli..111g I"' 'lbihlle\, 001 lhc dianc c of 11 1111
Iii d1C1.Sll'tl C:IWlll>ii
Declarer won lhe np:nanjl. lead of
1hc lo.mg of hl'.tde• 10 dummy and
1111111cd1ately )turtcd on 11um1"' When
East diM:111dcd a 1~k: on lhe \crnm.I
mum.I uf trump~. ii dawned on South
1ha1 the cha1..:c\ t•f lo~in~ ._ 111~k m
euchred &u1t v.erc 11re11 And, 1n<Jccd.
th.11 r.ru1eJ lu hc 1he ca"' rJuwn
one. lry i1.
ActualJy, the ,11111 ., rn.ikollle on
lhi$ lie Of lhe earth Al I fit k I WO
declarer shook.I ruff I raJc. then le~I
1he 1rump$ When C.Ut 'ho"'' uut on
1he 1ttund roond. 1!l(re i~ JU\I one
rcal1\11C hupc uf }and1na lhc \lam -
West h.111 tu haYC: $Wried "'''h cllodl)' lhr~ \p;kleS 1t111J lhe king Of di&•
monds!
1-I00-7f.COAST Truck, btra cab, bleclll
Aevr• l-..ncl ~L" 'tO CAOILUc COl\CO\lft 't7 black, 5 lflMCI, U , AC,
W111a. 4«. \18 NO AJC. 295 Hp . NOl!lsW. low mm-Im "'"· ,.. ml, lltr .. lllf. I~ pwi, ps, pt>, pw mMI SeaMist.11hr&mora •tre clttnl 81dllnu
CAAM control 1111 Im CUI. (212804) $24,888 $10,IOO t4M31-617'
137" ml 51111 1 owntt. mn NABERS
c;or.i S8.800 14t-7U·1MS (f14)S.O.flOO OMC SLE Enend. Ctb 't7
BMW N3 '81 clbilUc Coneoura 'H Alloyl bed IN< ~ seeV.
Loaded W11118 diamOnd finish, lltlr, ~ cd '
(El 1356) . S37,800 ctwome wt.els, Cd stacl<ert (""DO""'' .:...995i) $19 Clo ..
ST£RUNO BMW (209121JXV0930) $27,957 ."'"corn CAOILLACf • .,
14H45-S900 COAST CADILLAC 1.&00-71.COAST
BMW zs •11 1.eoo.1e.coAST
Low M~• CAOiUlC DEVILLE •A HONDA ACCORD EX '81
(87802:Jl '28.245 Low •Tllles. White, 1a111ntetlof Alloys, C.WCD. low mlles,
ST£RLINO OMW V·8 Nof1tlstar, ldnl cond po.vtr wlndowllloc:kS 14t.f4S.5900 (278825) $16,988 CLEAN' (20920J2X08732)
BMW ili ICA 197 NABERS COAST CADILLAC
low'"''-· Topteul (714)540-9100 1-I00-7t-CDAST
(9780231 $28,700 CAOilUc DEVILLE 't7 MERCEDES BENZ sooE
STERLING BMW V·l Northstar, Sapphire 'IO. A~ l.(>(tnaer pkg 149.f4S.5900 Blue bal~• of wan towered, tinted. lmmae
aillwad coNV.'118e1u-(283272) $19,988 IOO+kml. (2RJA804)
t.tful Mtt11Uc Bklt/GrMn. NABERS $16.000 PP IMU73·2044 ~rl.c1 Condition. 14k• (71•)54M100 MERCEO£S E300 'ff
ml. $33,000. 14._706-080I CAOll.LAC Sein Oevlllt ·93 Turbo dlHll AAREll
BMW 32i IA 't 7 Leather 54.284 miles ABS 36 months rlll\8llW10 0 Low n.11$1 Ctwomes! lloVt (2o91413EGB385) S7331mo or payoll Is
(V4'642l •-995 WON'T LAST $43.800 12.500 ml. Btldll
NISSAN ¥AX1¥A '" Moon1ool, el40yt, CO. dee't,
pwf -~ (201441210201) $19,995 COAST CAOILUC
1 .. 00-7..COAST
Slmphfy your
life through
CLASSIFIED
(949) 642-5678
Upcnma lc..J K.inJ of •
8ewue uf hand 1ha1look100 easy
for words 1lie dloal• or dis1ribu1ion
1tt there w111rna 10 uap lhc cllrelcs.s
Soulh tashc.\ I.hr queen or hc:at1 \,
then cr~'iCS tu dummy v.11h the
11._uccn ur tlum tu ruff onttthcr \pade
Tilcn declarer \tart\ to run the du~ 'fo prcvenl dcdJrct lrum scouna 12
trick.\ hy fon:c. WeSl mu\I ruff " club
wmev.hcrc along lhc lme llul lhe
Wc\t hl1nd has httn rc:doccd 10 nt>th
mg 001 d1amooos' anJ. un lhc: rnn:cJ
diamond relum. the: queen ur d1a~
monds bccumc~ Suuth'~ 12th tnd.
STERLING BMW0
• COAST CADILLAC Tan loadldl 949-720-9798 14"'45-5900 1-800-79-COAST ;;:=:;:;::;;;;;;~;;;~::::~~===-:-::==~
BMW 321 1A'17 CAOIUACSd.n0.Vllle '92 HERE'S A GREAT
m11nncr. •
NUfth Suuth bid 1n1elligcn1ly lo
rc;iich 1n ciicellc:nt slam conl111(.l. A 3·
2 trump d1v1s1on would permit
declarer 10 cl11m 12 tncks. Note that
the slam was reacher.I even though
480 BUSINESS 480 BUSWESS
"'l_PPORT\JNITIES OPPORTUNmES
\ OWNA OOllPUTER't
PltaM be Wtty ol ou1 Put ii 10 worlll POlential
Of lfff COl"penlet. $25·S7S ger hour
Check wl1h IM loct.I 888·78 . '1 "44
e.ttet Bualnett 8u-www aweelthyu com
fHU bef0f9 you Mfld (CAL'SCAN)
any money Of ,..,
for aervlc:e1. Reid 482 CREDIT and undlnltand 111y SERVICES contrlCtt belore yOY
1lgn. .HOMEOWNERS WITH
CREDIT wornes ITll'f OC1W
Hotteat Bos Oppolwnity ~~ '°;' =1 lor 2000 SilYer &~cons lender IN ta1 Call Joe 141-M$24 1 C"1 you OYer the phone and WllhouC
obll?iatlon Call
COKE/WELCHES/FRITO HIOO-00-1242 ex1 306
JCH Hi T lllfic Loc's (CAL'SCAN)
s1~r,o111. F~ FA video 484 MOkEY 80().33 ·1375, 2«trs TO LEHMVAHTEO COKEJPEPSilWELCH'Sf
Fnto Veoding Aou1es 30 • Are you drownfng In high traffic locabons Profits overdue blll1? S1111wldl up IO $1500 weoJ<lylt MIO-Agency C111 help )'OU get llllUm tnvestmenl $4,000 blCk on to.ft with 111y Ftnencln.?,. frat Video lln1ncl1I ltllcultlu, 1-1100·33 • 1375 (24 lloor~). bualn1t1tt, homu, (CAL'SCAN~ boatt, hlYe VllCltlon Ind
peraonaJ. 877"5!16·1454
MEDICAL BIWNG. "CASH''
Uokmlled Income pocenttal lmmeclale SSS Up front
No exp necessary Free cash lor Income Slreams
Info & CD-ROM Invest from prlv11u notes, Real Es-
$4.9951$9.995 An avlil. tale. Amuitl8S Sid Insur·
Island Automated Medical ance payrnein V'lalrcal set·
Services. Inc . llements Call W&Mf at 80().322·1139 Hl 2101 J G Wentwonll
-elec1sonlcbilng net 1-80().454-9368
(CAL 'SCAN) • (CAL'SCAN)
Sport Pack191 Red lealtlel. 80K mats. su-(V46106) $29,735 per value~275493) $8,988
STERUNGBMW NABERS WAY TO GET 14U..S-5900 (714)540-9100 •
BMW 32i fl 'i7 CADILLAC Sdn Deville •tJ 1v~st:,wfG,•yli~995 ~~~·leather. CLIENTS COMINf TO ·
STERLING BMW (20650l40BL949) S27.968 Bfw~i~;~17 c~.W.1~0J'ftrc ·YOUR DOOR• 1 .
(T3543/i°11 ecl<ao:29 995 CADIUlC sts '94 I AIDA Ul\UEY I STERLING.BMW ' Sl>Otless wlllte diamond flfl· ._. 1111vn 14u 4s-5900 ish, llhf. v.tleels. Bose CD!
TO LENO.WANTED . BMW m ISA '97 I 1209J~r~DIL~2999
OVER YOUR HEAD In I (T341 ,~Low Mlies $32 500 I 1.f00-7t-COAST
debl'?? Do you need f1lOl'e U • CAOtlUC STS '95 brea11llno room??? Debi S NG BMW Spotless diamond wlllta.
consolkfatlon, no qual1· t4H4s.5900 ctvome wheels. Bose COi lvtig'll 'FREE consultAllon BMW 321 ISA ... (20677fJl<M6845) $19,898
1oa free (800) 556-1548 BlaclC/Ten COAST CADILLAC
www 1111wllorlzon org (T36253) $32.980 1.eoo.1t.coAST
Ucensed, bonded, non-STERLING BMW CAO SEVIUE 'to
pro 1111N111 on a I Co 14H4S.5900 Gt1y/gr1y 45K tow mllet (CAL'SCAN) BMW $2i IA 117 1 Ownlf, 'good eonditlon:
CD Chongerl S700<K>BO t4t-722-4809
1
690 POWER I (Wl97921 S36 400 CAO STRETCH UMO '13
Boars STERLING BMW' 30K mlln, mul1 Mll
" l4H4S.S900 $UOO 56H27-8801
TERRIFIC SAVINGS BUICK COUPE ·n 1:1.n~~°! -::: :=· $500. 714-632-0338
Clll Maggie IMM73-7200 BUICK REGAL LS 'ff
1188 Ellcirie Bay Boat 19', V-6, alloys, lealller ABS.
Runs gr1, JU$l needs some prior rlfllal
CHEVROLET C.vallet '98
Low rnoleS, bal ol wan .• new car llade-lnl
(871304) $9,988
NABERS (714)540-9100
I
cosmecic TLC Great buy 81 (20854/514251) $t6,& 9
$6990 obo 949-723-5961 COAST CADILLAC
'93 tsew b1un11e11 70llp 1.eoo.1t-00AST
Johnton lull coYlf, Galv BUICK ROlOMlSTER ''}{
Trailor, llnt cond. $11,500 Low 51k mil81, bel~1:.
CHEVROLET LUMINA 't1 1
Euro, V-6, 40A, ldrt cord
flon. won't last!
ot>o. IMM5~2565 teatllef. rare model, MIN n
197 Purauh 2270 &n1er 1411348> $'1 l ,9!';1 ' NABERS Con1ote T·top, ootrlooefs. (7141540•9100 VHF.Furuno667tlshfliider, -----------;~~rsGP~lt'91s~;~O CADILLAC CATERA '17
949-673-8695 Low miles. beige, tan ;::;;:======;;! leather, .i1e>ys, bal ol warr
892 SUPS/DOCKS (0192t6)NABERS s.16,988
(255934) $4,988 NABERS
1m 15•0-t100 I
CHEVROL£T '/AN '95 j
Conversion, low 32K miles. bobble lap. leather, power
sofa bed loadedl (205603) $16.988
NABERS
(714)540-9100 t\IOORINGS (114)540-9100
CAotLUC CATEAA 'N CHEVY G20. v.TON CON-WAHTED PnYate boat Af> Low31cmiles.ted,leattoer,& VERSIOHVAN '93.IOl<led,
111 NB lor 65 ll power bolt more1(190825) $21,988 Viper Alarm. an II· lock
lOnl ref's 949-474-0404 NABERS brakes, xlnl condition, Ext 31 S As!( lor Mall (714)54M100 I $7000. Firm 773-251 ·9498
. rne Dally Piiot w111 pub11sn a
Tax & Flnanclal Directory to
assist our readers In flndlno a
tax professiona l. Reaching 01Jer
40.000 homes In a hlOh·ena
market. you are sure to find
many who need your help.
A smart move on your part
would be t o take advantage of
our 1ncreOlblY low rates ana
place your ad with us. Only $5$
per week If you sign up for ttle
entire 17 weeks. or a minimum 4·
week run at $40 per week.
TAX TIME
IS COMING
Size of
Ad
2x2
To raerv• J!'."1' space, cilll
Annie Wi/Jn
949-574-42-19
HOME, HEAL TH AND BUSINESS
~ .......
POUCY
In an effort to ollet Ille belt
MMCe PoSlitH 10 our r~
lrS and ldvetllllta, WI wll
rtqu.ke Concraaora wtlo
IO'iet\IM In .. SeMce
Clndoty to Include !heir Cont11c1ora Llcenae nwntlef In .,.,, ~
rnenl Your· CHPtretion la PfUlly lff'ldaled
r--~.~ r.
f.1.) •. u -
HOME flair
&th111lt /UiI.r.inz
Regl.ueJReTutbisfl
Porcel'in • Ftlll'rgl.m
Sinks • Shc>Wtrs
Covn1Cr\
949-645-7723
~ERVICE
lt'I I ll there
every day
In Cla8ffted
Ma-Mn
for all your needs... ~
Al type• or roofing &ncl reptll'I
L1abfley end Wcrker 1 Compenaatron ln1ur1nce
Mtmber Netionel
Roofing Conctac:tor• Attn
Sine• 1987
IMIJ llNll1
1-
= 11 .... 3_94 __ ........
UCt$1423t llONOED
"Ciif ALL TYPES ~ ROOflNG 71~1-1111
Full I UTN
• Rlplaclmtnt Wlnclowa •
c.f11.tnt11d l/ll!yl WWldows
& patio d0or1 Wt a.at Atty Ea11 UcJI,.. 149-650-3214
,<·1u.1·:' noon
no< rcrn
\\ 111dow St:rt't'il
Sut>t•n Doors I'll. ..
f-'rrc E•llnhllt'
\\<' m.1lil' l10mt' l.JI)
71 4.641.3129
WHAT
HAP,,NS ,, rOtt
DON'T
ADVERTISE?
/
' I ' I I I I ' ' '
Daily Pil~t
PREMIER VIEW PROP ERTIES FOR SAL E
D
. :II
:11
... ..
..
• <
. .. .. •'.
FIRST ESTATES/
FIRST TEAM
.FIRST ESTATES/
FIRST TEAM
COAST NEWPORT
PROPERTIES .
COAST NEWPORT
PROPERTIES
f' . I
. . . . . . . . . ' .
II
CANNERY VILLAGE REALTY
LIDO PARK REALTY
· PRUDENTIAL CALIFORNIA REALTY
m·
SEVEN
GABLES
THE SUMMIT
REAL 'ESTATE GR.OUP .
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 2000
· W.HAT A VIEW, VoL. II No. I .
A PECIAL ADVERTISING SUPPLEMENT
TO THE
'
.!
•
·.
&~ $ruvbn~ .99e~
Awaiting finishing touches to complete this stunning landmark estate.
Situated on a quiet and private cul-de-sac wtih expansive main beach and
north coast views. Laguna's famed shopping district, superb restaurants and
beautiful beaches arc just minutes away.
$2,100,000 (36734)
~~L'c/u,ru&, Wo~u,~ ~mt>
Nestled on a single loaded cul-de-sac street, this 4 bedroom home offers
aJmost 3,500 sq. ft. of luxurious living right on the golf course. The
exquisite gourmet center island kitchen opens to the family room as the
stunning landscaping boasts a pool, spa, waterfall. This home is ideal for
entertaining.
$729,000 (36723)
tJ5fv.nA ~r" ~,4/~1-.~on1~-.~~---.......
Nestled in the pre tigJOus guard-gated community of Marblehead. Ocean
views can be enjoyed throughout the house, patio and spacious yard,
c~cating the perfect ~ctting· for elegant entertaining. Comfortable singlc-
siory living includes a bonus ·room with full bath and two large storage
areas upstair .
$985,000
. g~?U~~«e $~ g~
A stunning contemporary vilJa, this · eJegant, unique and impeccably
designed estate ·is enhanced with beveled limestone floors, incredible
state-of-the-art kitchen, two master suites and fabulous panoramic
bayfront views.
$4,995,000
~ro/'hO/t~,//.~r,,/ou, .%~ .Yin~
(36722)
Boasting an expansive 4,176 sq. ft . in the prestigious Harbour, this main
channel giant is model perfect throughout boasting rare woods, marble and
granite throughout. Enjoy breathtaking views courtyard entry and
extended boat dock.
$1,695,000 (36724)
.9'JNTrA!J,~ .99~,,~
Located in an exclusive community, this exccptionaJly maintained and
spacious, single-story, courtyard entry home oftCrs an open floorplan with
natural light and panoramic ocean views. Enjoy elegant living
complemented by exquisite details throughout.
$1,199,000 . (36727)
,
lt/t/?''I' .'.k/h/17
\Vith \ic"" of olc.rn, c.111~011 J nd c.in light'., th" 4 bedroom, 3 bath est.Uc
.,it c.; on a 30,000 "lJ . It. lot. Very quiet and pri\ .m: \ctt111g. This mw .. h land
111 ( oron.1 dd ,\ 1.1r '" c\t n:mcly rare and enjoy'> thrc.:c private bc.1che~, pool
.md l.h1ldn.·n ·, pl.t\ ground.
$1,850,000 (36728)·
. ?;,,, .YA-,/' .ft//~ y;,,,,,, ~.;/,,/,-•
Only ~t e p' to tht. Rit1 ( .1rlton n:~nrt on the diffs .1bme t ill PJLitk, this
nug11ific:cn1 t.',t.lH: ofkrc.; 6 bedroom<., 8 5 b.uhs .md C\quisiH. dct;1il.
Elcg.rnt lin.1cstonL, granite & marbtc throughout. Entertam \\.ith
~1mpruouc; dining room, gym and wine room. lk.1ut ifully IJndscaped lot
bo.lsts c:xpansh·c p.uio, pool and spa.
$4,900,000
• ni"/1nftl'l'/.llt~ r§h~,,/I
Thi dinrnung .u1d spacious home overlooks the I igun.1 \:03~tlinc.
Anwnitics indudc, a lo\ cly sunny pa.io & deck, high ceilings, h.udwood
flooring, a farrnly rornn~ or guest npJrt mcnt, with fiH·pl.tl'l" and • ch.urning
hr k k court .11d .
$899,000 (36732)
• ~r'r';t",J r:;rr'Q/~r,/1/ .;/J~,,'/,~/1? .~fi,
Thac J 1c permit ready plane, for a largc,_distincmc home .1bme the ~u rf
~itu.ued 111 a prec.;tigjouc.; area, the site has pri' ate '>tJ1rc.; th.u reach to rhc
.,,,mfr l)l.1c h bclcm C harming location with viewc.; of cr.1,h111g ·hrcJkers .rn d
gorgeom 'umet\.
$1,695,000
.<~,r'H/ r:u/l,?r'/I o/,~,~.;
(36779)
Ultimate ocean vie\\.S and privacy from this c;pJdou\ '>plit lc'd home
\\Ondcrfully c.;uitcd for family living and entertaining. Genth l.Olltcrnpor.in
in design, this hillwp residence has .1 huge yard and 1s adj.1u'.nt to m1k' ot
greenbelt open sp:ll.e.
$1,495,000 ,,. (36731 )
. /~p~eNI/ t/ffx,,A ~6An~~.~
Stunning brand new Mediterranean giant ~ith large boat dock feature
approximately fi~OOO sq. ft. crafted by a premier Newport Reach builder.
Enjoy \cm1c of the finest architectural detail throughout as breathtaking
water views .llld sunset vi tas complete this waterfront hcauty.
$2,750,000 (36725)
...
·-
•
PELI~ HILL $5,350,000
INCREDIBLE 5 Bo. 5.5 BA. CUSTOM VIEW HOME. '
CHRIS -VALLI 759-3738
& SUSAN SCANLAN 759-3717
• •• • . t, I . " f #i. ·':: ".
DEBBIE SCLAFANI 718-2716
& RON MILLAR 717-4760
LIDO ISLE $3,349,000
FABULOUS NEW CUSTOM BAYFRONT HOME WlifH
PRIVATE DOCK .
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..
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LIDO ISLE $~,595,000
ALL NEW CUSTOM BAYFRONT HOME WITH PRIVATE DOCK. .
DEBBIE SCLAFANI 718-2716
& RON MILLAR 717-4760
BILL .
. FEENEY
·717-4744
NEWPORT CoAST $2,995,000
5 Bo. 6. 5 BA. GOLF COURSE ESTATE.
QUALITY CONSTRUCTION.
IRVINE ~E~CE $2,595,000
• CUSTOM M EDITERRANEAN HOME. PRIVATE COURTYARD
ANO VIEWS.
BILL
FEENEY
. 717-4744
~· .
MICKEY
ROWE .,
759-3789
.
CoRONA DEL MAR $2,495,«>09
ESTATE HOME WITH GUEST HOUSE.
VIEWS OP BAY ANO OCEAN!
NORTH LAGUNA $1,850,000 .
COASTLINE AND CATALINA VIC\Xt\, 3 Bn. 2. 5 BA.
N EWLY REMO DEl.I D.
TAMMY '
FIGUEROA
717-4747
·NANCY P ETERSON 71 8-4749
& BETTY COMEGYS 7 17-4750
ALTEZZA $924,900 -O CEAN AND CITY VIEWS. HJ J ILY UPl,RADED.
TURN-Kl:.Y RE.ADY.
. .
l
,
, .
&citing· Condominiums
on the miter
601 Lido Park Dr.~ #3B
$675, 000 •
601 Lido Park Dr., #7F
$875,000
601 Lido Park Dr., #BB
$985,000
Great Views of J.jdo Channel, Turn mg Basin and Rhine
Ch.innel. Gracious living with 24-hour sccurity and
doorman. 2 bedrooms, 2.5 baths
--
Ray MCAfoos ·e
949/499-2838 x 127
COLD We LL
BAN~eR~1
RESIDENTIAL BROKERAGE
.
SEA ISLA"lD PARADISE. GORGEOUS SU11.SET VlEWS, TRA~'QUIL, PRIVATE LOCATION. 3 BCDR00\1S,
3 5 B,_TH!i, RECENTLY RI.MODELED KITCHEN. Willi GRANITE SINK, MASTER SUITE W/FIREJ'l.AC'E
AND WAl.J<·IS (.'\..0 ET. UPORADED MARBU: ENTRY, QUALITY CROWN MOLDING 'f!IROUGllOUr.
ALL I LEVEL. i'O STAIRS. 24-HOUR GUARD-OATED.
OFF EH.EDA]" $799,000
180' \'ll1WS OF HARROlt, LIDO. 00:.AN ANO CATALINA. £xnA LARO! , FLAT Pl.OT, MORE TllAN !!7(Xl
SQPr. AS l'f.R fTIUl CO. AllR.ACTlVE 3 BEDROOM, 2 BATH BUNOAWW YARD JNCl.lJDF. MANY
MAT1Jlll rRUn TMfF.41, l t 0WFR5 AND SHRUBS. l...EAST EXPliNSrYE VIEW PROl'tRTY IN NLWPORf.
Sf'J..U.R MOTlVAttDI
829 00()
Doily Pilot ·
I
w.dnesckiy, februo~ 23, 2oo0 87
360 .DEGREE VIEWS
®www.luxuryestates.com
ur gallery of virtual home 'tours
presents exclusive, 360 degree previews of our .fine estates and luxury
-p~operty. Take a look at ~.luxuryestates.com, and enjoy the view.~.
§&1lat1<1/ &tale
101"th <f/er<11ul.as
The city, ocean and mountains compose
a dramatic panorama below this gated
C5Wc. Over 10,000 MI· ft., custom
finishes, library, cxcn:isc room and sauna,
separate apartment with balcony, wet bar
in bon~ Gorgeous pool & spa. ·
$2,850,000
Please call Carol Rudat
949.602.5605
, /'90° 1-tew6'
to !tl1los CfJ~
This regal eMate Sprawls o n gorgeous
grounds and coruistS of over 6900 sq. ft,
with 6 spacious verandas. Two, elegant
tll2StCr suites each with fireplace and spa
tub. Billiards room, den and family room,
gourmet's kitchen w/S~Zc;ro.
$1 ,395,000
Please call
714.731.3777
°Jt;ta
360. views envelope stunning grounds,
extensive patio , verandas, pool and
private estate. Approx. 6100 sq. ft.
hardwood flooring, separate guest
quarters, profeS)ional kitchen, great
room with fireplace and bar with kitchen
amenities.
$1,375,000
Please call
714.731.3777
.. Ye1u
Buuo,n 8.uolR
Elcpm and tradlUonaJ living in a
paciou Jy de lgned floor plan with great
view. Gourmet·s granite isl.and kitchen
with breakfast nook, office, 4 fireplaces,
guc t quarter$, flnbhed basement with
full, bath. Third Ooor Ob)Crvatlon deck,
+car gangc.
$1,299,000
Please call
TaoiaiTah Ari.dcrSon
714.66S.7197
,t;ro'31im (Jolonlal
on l9ne (ere.
rue in the vicwl from behind pm"atc
ptC5, and enfoY iKiM oUtdoor tMna
With tpOrt court, pOol, .lpll, autb<>. IY1D
and BBQ. fttnch doors ~ wtndOWS,
crown moldlnfll llnd w~ wOOCl-
panckd offlcc, ~ ft)()ID, luctC
quanttt, cozy ftttplaccl.
Sl.225,000
Pleale call
Sbdla A Kim Harvey
714'.665.7110
• •
. 949.5 2.3777
714 7 .3777
JiUIB&, fWhu on the
htu-6<>,., the "°'1wnu ef-'tlte-sea •.•
experience brcathtak.lng views of the blue
ocean by day, gorgcou Pacific sunsets, and
city Ugbts by night.~
This unique condo opens to ample
outdoor areas, including expansi\'c paUo and
garden cuing in spaclou yard Elegant
de lgn clements include limestone flooring,
crown molding, travertine and marble
counters and custom carpet.
Large kitchen equipped with new
features including double oven and cooktop,
white cabinetS and quality appliance Wood-
buming fireplace in living and dlfling room.
Master ~droom wtth custom closet
organizer and armoirc new clectnc awrung
provides comfort from ducct un ln Ide
laundry, central aJr, double tandem garage
with cxtCOSi\'C cabinetry.
$1,049,000
Please call Carol Rudat 949.6o2.S605
@"ron1 Bmalina .!T'Jand l)UcLon over 1110 actt.
/<> ~/°" Cf~ ••• unforgettable . Dlstlngul5hlng the ~?me ror Intimate
. , galhcrln&1, grand fe tJvltlc and tndltlonal \11ews that capture the C$!1Cncc of this estates ,,,,4.,,. al 11 .... '"a/f'• ... 1.., ...... <&• one so nwo a mcui ....... , room, abundant luxury. Nearly every room of this • •·• h .th 1 nJ•' _,. gourmet S ... tc en 'WI grac OUS _.,,C uCS gorgeous California Contemporary is orient~ d in U 1 b dj in'"" in ... a.o a w c cc ar w t a o me Wt I to ... cws.
Luxurious and elegant, the design room. Consist.lng or a s total bedrooms, the
home lends luelf perfectly to divcnc livlna
nttcb.
pre cots dramatic formal room for
~mtttainlog, and a floor plan that opens to
s~ctacular grounds with puklJna pool and
$1.195,000
Plcase call Sbeila A Kim Hatvey 714.66S. 7110
• .. )
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. 70~.9/ 48g-f!';5$S
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/:94tt9/ $8g-//OO
San Clemente
$1,150,000
Doily Pi1ot
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~/ 040-7888