HomeMy WebLinkAbout2000-02-24 - Orange Coast Pilot' . r .. .
SERVING THE NEWPORT -MESA COMMUNmEs SINCE 1907 TI-IURSDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 2000
I
All in .. the ' f a:mil y
Joseph N. BeU
THE IELL CURVE
Don't buy the
pro-Measure F
pr0paganda; ·
I had lwich last week with
Michael Lapin, who JS an
old friend. He is also the
program manager for the El
Toro Manne Corps Air Std-
tion Master Development
Program Freely translated,
tlus means he's LO chdrge of
unplernentLOg Ornnge Coun-
ty's comnutment to an airport
at the former Marine base al
El Toro.
Because I Live about a
hall-rruJe off the end of the
runway at John Wayne Air-
port and there's an election
coming up on March 7
involving
thls issue, r had El I don't
Toro on understand my mind.
So I talk about
steered compromise. the con-
versallon Either a
in that commercial chrection.
nus 1s airport is
not a built at comfort-
able place El Toro or
for it isn't. Michael
Lapin,
since he
cannot become pollt1cally
involved in the El Toro dts-
pute. But be dtd offer up
some generic observations
that might 'be helpful to vot-
ers who haven't yet made up
their minds.
He said the greatest myth
to arise in this long dispute is
the effort to paint El Toro as
LAX -Los Angeles Interna-
tional Airport -m the mid-
dle of Orange County.
"It's very instructive," he
said, •to overlay an aendl
shot of LAX on El Toro and
see how many Los Angeles
homes fall within the 14,000
acres around El Toro where
there are no homes -dnd
would be none -since
development has been pro-
hibited there because of the
Marine air station
"John Wayne, on a small-
er scale, is much closer to the
Los Angeles picture, with
residential backed up right to
the edge of the airport. The
unpact around El Toro would
be far below the graphic
descriptions of an airport
there raining death on their ,
way of lile."
He pointed oul that there
are onJy two workable alter-
natives to.an airport at El
Toro: expanding John Wayne
SEE BELL PAGE A6
TAYA KASHUBA I DAILY PILOT
George P. Bush, left, grandson of former President Bush and n ephew of
George W. Bush, speaks with Doug Cox, vice chairman of the Young
Republicans of Orange County, during one of their meetings at the El
Todto Crill In Irvine.
• George P: Bush, .
nephew of presidential
hopef uJ and grand~on of
former chief executive, -
campaigns m Newport.
Greg Aisling
D AILY PILOT
NEWPORT BEACH -One
look al George P Bush and you
mt.1y not see a seasoned polJti-
cttl pldyer.
Fashtonubly dressed and
well-spoken, he appears more
of d club-hopper than a cam-
paign crusdder.
Look agarn. .
It's chifi.cult to unagine dny.
23-yPar-old wouJd be involved
LO his third presidential cam-
paign. But lhls is a young man
• S[AN H rR I DAILY PILOT
Ignoring heavy rain Monday morning, dog sitter Gary Ballantyne of Corcrna gets a hug from one of
the 16 dogs he cares for during a visit to Costa Mesa's Bark Park. Agnes Brown, right, joins Ballan-
tyne ln laughter. ·
It's raining dogs?
The storm that rolled across
Southern California late Tuesday
evening had moved on by late
Wednesday afternoon. The storm's
rainfall totals as of Wedne day w ere
0.30 inches m Newport Beach and
0.55 inches m Costa Mesa, said
Greg Martln, semor forecastN for
the Nationt.11 Weather Service.
However, seasonal rainfdll totals
are still below nom1ctl.
"We got a very dry start but we
are catching up at the moment,"
Martin said.
Today will be partly cloudy wilh
a shghl chance of showers and
highs in the lower· to nud-60s.
More scattered showers are expect-
ed Sunday.
-Daily Pilot staff
,
MARI~ DAY MASSEY I DAlY PlOl
A student at OCC b'ies to tay dry as he makes his way to
class Wednesday.
INDEX
ClASSIREDS ____ .... :..--.86 School district reassures
· future of Balearic Park
• School board, Costa
Mesa council agree the site
will remain a park, but
must still work out details.
.,.. .... ...._.a Andlew ae--
DAA.v Pk.OT
COSTA MESA -8aleerlc Park
may change handl but must
remain open space, the school
boerd agreed at a atudy Miiiion
1\aelday Dlgbt.
The recommendation came
from Newport·M... Unified
School Distnct Supt. Robert Barbot
and is what residents urroundmg
the park and ill tenant, the city of
Costa Mesa, have been seeking
from the d1strlct for weeks. ;!
In fact, while the s<:hool board
was ~,tjie matter Tuesda
some 'City" Cillicil members w •
dered if the council should tQne
down lts enthUlialm for the park,
leering it may harm future negoti·
ltiom.
~we're very concerned about
~ in lhe ctty, but we could get
SEE PARK fllll'GI M
COMMUllflY ~UM. .Al S
• D\lllOOK ·--·-·---·-··---.Al 1
PUIUC MOTKIS .... _ , .• ·--·14
S()(llY" • ._........... • ..... tt..AlO
5'0l1'S ···--·-·· .. -·-·----81
UIKLEDOM ..... ---·-·--·J.12 ......
YamlMh Cruz. 6, writes an
eMy on what she would do
If she hlld S 100 ulng
P~Elementafy'scet.
bradOn of 100 dlys In ldlOOf
-........ Al
whose lather '1s governor of.
Aof\da, whose uncle is vigor-
ously campaigning for the
presidency und whoi.ti grand-
father has already been there,
done that.
Meet the guy affectionately
known by his fdm,tly as "P."
From his childhood memory
of former Pws1dent George
Bush dcclanng his lust candi-
.dac:y for the office in 1979,
Bush has been part of d colorful
pohbcal family.
The Texds native is dl tl
agam this week dS he speaks in
support of his u.\c!P., Thxd.S
Gov. George W Bush, arpund
Orange County. .
He has d two-prongc.'CI goal·
spur enthusiasm among young ,
SEE CAMPAIGN PAGF. AS
City OKs
plans to
revitalize
Balboa
• Work to start on
$7 .5-million plan for
improvements, which
include more parking,·
wider sidewalks. .
Noakl Schwartz
DAILY PILOT
BALBOA PENINSULA -
After years of bt.s dJld starts.
the City Counril on Tuesday
unanimously gdve its approvdl
• to begm the BaJbod Pcrunswa
revuall.zation pldll.
"It goes beyond a step,•
saJd Councilman Tod Ridge-
way. H lt's what I would call d
giant leap.~
For more than d dCC'dde,
business owners have watched
as the once-prosperous COpl·
muruty darkened LOlo dn area
Wlth few re<;idents strollin9 the
streets at rught.
The council's dcctS1on to
endorse the "Village Pldll" and
Balboa Pier pdrk.ing lot
improvements is the first m a
senes of move. to revlVe the
rommwuty that re 1dents" say
~ odd.led Wlth broken s1dc-
w~ d.Jld cracking fdcad .
"(The moneyJ should've
been spent over the lilst 20
years,· said fru.c;tratt'd n.~1dcnl
Kurt Herbert. "Get the thing
fixed and as lqng as you're
domg it, do it nght. •
The e lllnatcd $7.5-million
plan is an effort to rndke the
peninsula more pedcstnan •
friendJy. It mclud<' widerung
the> 8-foot sidewalks on both
sides of Balbod BoulC'va1d to 14
feet. reducing strC'Ct parking
and increasing the number
spaces m the parking lot: and
SEE BALBOA PAGE A6
•
IN
A2 Thursday, February 24, 2000 •
WORKING
IUSlllSS II llllf .
New Staples store to hold
grand opening ceremony
ham USA Equities, Inc., a Newport Beach-
based commercial property owner.
The lister Staples store west of Newport
Boulevard on 17th Street will remain open,
said Scott Burnham, president of Burnham
USA.
A new Staples Superstore opened its doon
th.is week lea than a mile away from another
branch of the national chain.
Although the office supplies store has been
open on East 17th Street for nearly a week,
the otticial grand opening event is Saturday.
Staples will lease the building from Bum-
•When you have a big boulevard like New-
port, people don't tend to cros it to do their
shopping,• he said. •we think the two stores
will seJVe two different trade areas.•
-Andrew Glazer
Dai~ Pilot
Gardening classes offered
in time for spring blooms
G ar4ening enthusiasts ··
can get tips from
experts at the Institute
of the Gardens classes
offered at Jloger'a Gardens.
Classes cost $125. and con-
sist of four meetings run ..
nlng from 9 a.m. to 11 a.m.
There also will be an
intermediate gardening
class offered March 8, 15,
22 and 29. The prerequisite
for the class is beginning
gardening. Students will
learn more about.tile selec-
tion and care of specific
plants for appropriate gar-
den areas, taking into con-
. sideration the existing land-
scapes as well as a home's
architectural features. Stu-
dents will learn more about
the tools needed to make
each plant a vital part of the
overall garden design.
Greer Wylder
BEST BUYS
shows the extensive selec-
tion of merchandise that
Sport Rack carries. There
are bike mounts for your
garage, portable chairs, car
seats and ski and snow-
board mounts. The store
offers installation and
rentals. Sports Rack Vehicle
Outfitters is at 1995 Harbor
Blvd. in Costa Mesa. Call
(949) 574-9990.
Alice and Vahan Cetinelian
Also, on March 9, 16, 23
and 30, them will be a cot-
tage garden class. The pre-
requisite for the class is
beginning gardening. The
class will teach students
how to incorporate cottage
garden vignettes into sunny
gardens, for any size gar-
den. Each class builds upon
the previous session, tying
new designs with past ones.
Arts and crafts types will
love the spring preview sale
at Michaels through Satur-
day. On sale are silk florals,
dried bouquets, silk green-
ery, candles, ribbons, paints,
modeling clay, yarns, paml-
ing instruction books, clay
pots, and ready-lo-finish
wood. Michaels is al 610 W.
17th St. in Costa Mesa. Call
(949) 548-6053.
THEY ARE ...
Running a garment hospital.
WEDDING BELLS
Alice Cetinellan and her husband,
Vahan, have run The Velvet Hanger for
more than two decades. The couple are
masters at delicately repairing, restor-
ing and reviving precious clothing,
including wedding gowns.
Trained in their home country of
Armenia, the couple moved to America
in 1979 and almost immediately
opened their shop on Via Lido. With
more than 35 years of experience, their
work has been featured tn Vogue and
In Style magazines. spurring what has
become a nationwide clientele.
WEAVING THROUGH THE YEARS
Whal makes the shop particularly
unique is Vahan's French weaving
technique that flawlessly repairs ciga-
rette bums in cashmere and moth holes
in wool. The painstaking work is done
by hand and takes hours to complete.
Thread is taken from the edges of
the garment and slowly woven into the
material, eventually eclipsing the hole.
With the help of a thick magnifying
Tying up
loose ends
glass, Vahan copies the intricate weav-
ing patterns. The only evidence of.the
repair work are the nearly invf!iible
beige threads holding the patchwork in
on the back of a gannei'it.
"It takes one hour to do a small bole
in some pants,• he said as his soft fin-
gers nimbly worked around a half-inch
snag.
The most difficult materials, Vahan
said, are thin scarves and materials
with detailed patterns.
PASSING ON THE CRAFT
The craft of French weaving is a
"lost art,• Vahan said. These days, the
nwnber of experts in the field are
becoming)ewer and fewe r.
While Vahan's favorite aspect is the
patience and thoroughness required by
the art, it. is not very appealing to most
youngsters, he said.
"This is my hobby," he said. •1 love
the challenge."
His daughter and son decided on
different career paths and are com-
pletely helpless with a needle and
thread. They bring both their cloth.es
that need repairs and their ironing to
the shop.
HOLDING ON TO THE PAST
Alice also brings the past to We with
her dressmaking and alterations. She
makes flawless Chanel-style suits and
silk blouses that look like they could
sneak unnoticed onto a Dior hanger.
But her specialties are wedding
dresses and gowns for the motber-of-
the-bride. She has made wedding
dresses for waifish women who were
unable to find a proper-fitting gown.
She once took two dresses apart and
sewed together one perfect gown.
Perhaps the project she's most proud
of is the century-old wedding dress that
was worn by a great granddaughter.
•tt was falling apart,• she said. "The
inside lining was completely falling
apart.•
Photos of the repaired dress, howev-
er, showed a beaming bride in a soft,
silk off-white gown that fit like a glove.
-Story by Noakl Schwartz; ·
photo by Brian Pobuda
If you're interested in the
classes, advanced registra-
tion is required. Students
. receive a coupon for 1'0%
off for purchases made dur-
ing the month they are tak-
ing the class. The beginning
gardening class that is a
prerequisite for most classes
is being offered May 3, 17,
24 and 31. Call (949) 721-
2100, ext. 569. Roger's Gar-
dens is at 2301 San Joaquin
Hills Road in Corona del
Mar.
The best casual sboe sale
is going on at Vans.
1brough March 12, when
you buy one pair of regular-
ly priced Vans shoes, you'll
get a second pair of equal
or lesser value at half price.
There's a good selection of
shoes to choose from,
although the offer excludes
snowboard boots. Also on
sale are selected tops at
$19.99, selected fleece
sweatshirts at $29.99, select-
ed outerwear al $49.99 and
selected T-shirts at $14.99.
Vans is in Costa Mesa al
1666 Newport Blvd. Call
(949) 642-5753.
Glabman ~Furniture celebrates a century of business
Now's the time to find
deals on window coverings
and upholstery on sale at
Alden's Carpet and
Draperies. The savings on
window coverings are up to
65% off and upholstery is
up to 40% off. There is a
nice selection of window
coverings that includes
Hunter Douglas privacy
sheers, vertical blinds, wood
blinds, Honeycomb shades,
woven woods and .fabric
Roman shades. Also
reduced are upholstery fab-
rics and trims up to 25% off,
and drapery fabrics up to
40% off. Alden's Carpet and
Draperies, the oldest floor-
ing company in Orange
County, is at 1663 Placentia
in Costa Mesa. Call (949)
646-4838.
Summerhlll Floral &
Gifts is having a 50% off
sale on all topiaries and flo-
ral arrangements. The home
accessories store carries
specialty furniture, silk flo-
rals, custom florals and
arrangements. It's at 369 E.
17th St. in Costa Mesa. Call
(949) 646-6745.
Office Depot is having
specials on ergonomic and
executive chairs through
Saturday. A lot of the chairs
come with an instant rebate
that allows you to gel $10 to
$50 off the purchase price.
Also, some of the chairs can
be customized. There are
more than 70 colors and
fabric options to choose
from. The selection of chairs
varies from drafting chairs,
leather chairs, manager's
chairs and task chairs. It's at
2ZOO Harbor Blvd. in Costa
Mesa.
TI year marks the 100th anniver-
sary for Glabman's Fwniture, the
Costa Mesa home furnishings
store owned and operated by the Glab-
man family for four generations.
To celebrate, the store will open an
antiques department, scheduled to
debut m May. The 11llported antique
items, which are being shipped from
Europe, prove the hard-to-believe fact
that furruturc did indeed exist before
Glabman's went into business in 1900.
The Glabman's showrooms feature
home furnishings for every part of the
house -patio furniture, draperies, rugs
and carpets. And for the customer's
shopping convenience, there are interi-
or decorators stationed at the store in
lieu of salespeople.
Glabman's also has locations in
Pasadena, West Los Angeles and
VOL 94, N0.47
THOMAS H. JOHNsoH.
Pubhsher
TONY OOO£RO,
Editor
JIMfU lllAG&.ANO,
Senior Crty Editor
J~Lll.
Asslmtnt Oty EdltOf
NANCY CJBYQ,
Futures Editor
ROGllt CMLSON.
Sports EdttOf
MMCMMT1N,
Photo fdrtor NmtOHY NCI(,
~f<*tor
JOM '· SAHrOS, P.ge OesigflH
NOY OITTINCl
Cl.tUIMd Adllertlt&ng
LNllA JOIMON.
fll'omotionl
PMllDO .....
Oitf ~ Offlclt
'
Jasmine Lee
RETAIL ROUNDUP
Woodland Hills. The Costa Mesa store
is at 3089 Bristol SL
SHERATON HOTEL TO
BECOME RADISSON
A hotel by any other name would
provide sleep just as sweet. And so the
Sheraton Hotel Newport Beach will
continue to offer business travelers a
convenient place to lay their heads -
just under'"a different name.
The 339-room hotel by midsummer
will make the switch to become a
Radisson. The lobby will get new mar-
ble flooring and the rooms will be refur-
bished in preparation for the change,
tentatively scheduled for July 12.
or ~~ herein can be
r.pr~ Without written per·
m1U10n of topyright owner.
HOW TO REACH US
Ora.lldon
The Times Orange County
(800) 252-9141
~ O•lf1ed (949) 642·5671
Display (949) 642"'4321
EdttorW
News (949) 642-5680
Spotb(949)57~3
The hotel, located in the highly com-
petitive area near John Wayne Allport.
specializes in corporate business clients
and conventions. Management has
been refurbishing the nine-story main
building and is planning to do work on
the towers as well. Once there is some
down time, the main lobby will get a
face-lift, too.
SKUNG AT TRIANGLE SQUARE
If the recent rains are any indication,
ski season should be in full swing by
now.
And those who want to get in on the
snowy action, but can't go to the moun-
tains this weekend, can attend a Winter
ski expo from 1 to 4 p.m. Saturday at
niangle Square, at the corner of New-
port Boulevard and West 19th Street in
Costa Mesa.
WEATHER lllD SUlf
TEMPIRAlURES
BalOO.
63151
TIDES
TODAY
Fir1t low
If you've alWays wanted
a hitch or hitch rack for your
car for hauling bikes, skis or
snowboard equipment.
now's a good time to buy
one at Sports hck Vehicle
Outfitters. There's a 20% off
sale on all hitches and hitch
racks. Top name brands
available include Thule,
Yaldma, Valley, BMG and
Draw-nte .• The store carries
a huge selection of hitches,
racks and just about every
kind of car and sport acces-
sory you'd want. There's a
catalog in the store that
• 9EST IUYS appears on Thurs-
days and Saturdays. Send lnfor
mation to Greer Wytder at 330 W.
Bay St., Costa Mesa 92627, or via
fax at (949) 646-4170 ·
POLICE fllES
COSTA MESA .
Corona del Mar
64152
6.34a.m ....................... 1.3
• Antion loul..v...t A J>UfW and Its contents worth
$450 were stolen from a CM In the 600 bkxk between 2
and 3 p.m. Saturday.
Costa Mesa
65153
Fir1t high
12:12 1.m~ ...................... 4.5
Second low
6:18 p.m ....................... 1.3
Second high
• lenl: • om..: NI ampli1ler and a P1lr of Spffk.n
worth $500 were stolen from a CM In the l 100 bkXt
~2and 10a.m.feb.15.
New\ Sports F111 (949) &46"'4170
E·mall. dallypllotelatlmes com
Main Office
Newport Beach
64152
NewportC~
64152
12:24 p.m ..................... 3.S
PllDAY
First low
• ......... ~ A Compact dltc p4ayer worth $400
w.n stolen from a car In the 1100 bloCk the ewnlng of
Feb. 16.
• ._.. ....... -..... A video c:atMtt9 r9Corder and
• con:lllll phone WOrth $220 were stoi.n from • h6fne
In the JOO btock between 1 :Z and 2:]() p.m. fteb. 16.
Buslneu Off1Ce (949) 642"'4321
luslMll Fax (949) 631-7126
f'ublbhM ~nm. Community~
• cMlloft of INt l.M Mtelw nm..
a..POMCAST
A northwtst-w9Sterly
swefl produces wMt• to
chest.f'tigh sets todly.
LOCATION llD
Wedgt .............. J.5 nwlW
~.-1-5 rfWlw
llldl----.3-5 rM/w
ltMr Jltty. .. -..3-5 nwlW
~ .... " ....... -•• ).5 r'Nl/w
7:52 1.m ........... """""" t .4
Rnthlgh
12:SI a.m .. " ................. 4.5
s.cond low
6:SI p.m,""'•HH .... ., .... .,2.0
.s.cond high
1 :45 p m ........................ J.O ....
.......... 61
NIWPORT 1EAOt
• lilt ........ lln•• A weNet Ind Its c:o1•1t1
worth $100 Wint ..... from t CM In ttie MOO block bib••• noon ind 4 p.m. Feb. 17.
• Wiit e..t 1..-.ssq1 A~ phone wont\ S150
Wll _.,from I UI In the 1IOO btock '*-ulln 4 n 4
p.m.feb.12. ........... ,.,_...,phone wat1ti ........
In tt. 100 blDdl ,. n ,
.I
·.
. .
Doily Pilot Thursday, February 24~ 2000· A3
DUI .charges yet to be filed against Rodman
~ Prosecutors, citing
.: 'further investigation,' also
looking into neighbors'
complaints about NBA
star's loud parties.
Greg Rlsling
DAILY PILOT
COSTA MESA -Prosecutors
have held off. on filing drunk drt-
ving charges against basketball
superstar Dennis Rodman because
of ~further investigation,• despite
the fact that he was arrested two
months ago.
Although the case was submit-
ted to the Orange County District
Attorney's office in early January
and a subsequent test showed that
Rodman's blood-alcohol level was
nearly twice the legal limit on the
night he was arrested, prosecutors
haven't filed charges against the
•newest member or the Dallas
Mavericks.
"We are gathering more infor-
mation," said Tori Richards, a
spokeswoman for the d1stnct
attorney's office •These things
can sometimes take more than a
couple of weeks, depending on
the complexity of the investiga-
tion.•
Rodman, 38, of Newport Beach,
was pulled over by Costa Mesa
police near South Coast Plaza on
Dec. 23 after dining at the Club-
house Restaurant. Police were
notified by mall security about
Rodman, who was stopped after
an officer noticed his passenger
wasn't wearing a seat belt.
The holdup may be due to con-
flicting reports that Rodman
appeared intoxicated as he left the
restaurant. Some patrons said
Rodman didn't show any outward
signs of drunkenness.
When Rodman, a former Los
Angeles Laker, was taken to Cos"'-
ta Mesa Jail, he submitted a blood
test. Re$ults showed his blood-
alcohol level was 0.15. The state's
legal limit is 0.08. He posted
$2,500 bail and was freed hours
after his arrest.
Rodman was arrested on susp1-
COSTA MESA CITY COUNCIL WRAP·UP
oon of public drunkenness last
August at Woody's Wharf restau-
rant in Newport Beach. Witnesses
srud they saw Rod.man fall out of
his boat and walk mto the restau-
rant soppmg wet. He v,cas later
seen banging his head against the
wall and was mvolved in a scuffle
with another patron, police said.
Despite the evidence gajhered,
the charges were dropped by the
district attorney's office in October.
Richards was unable to delve
into the details of the current
investigation, but acknowledged
the department has .received
another Rodman case -this one
from the Newport Beach Police
Deparbnent.
Police said they have been
called to Rodman's Balboa Perun-
sula home SIX times over the last
year, responding to complaints by
neighbors Rodman has paid more
thdn $2,200 in fines, but he has
continued to throw ~I-night par-
lles. Police said they have
exhausted nearly every measure
and felt it necessary to submit the
case to. the district attorney. Dennis Rodman
Inside.
CITY HALL
WHAT HAPPENED:
The city approved plans by
a large Orang~based high-
tech firm to construct four
office buildings on a parcel
of land that the city original-
ly designated for three struc-
tures.
WHAT HAPPENED:
The City Council approved
hiring a Long Beach-based
electrician for approximately
$290,000 to install an emer-
gency generator and move
an electrical switchboard in
City Hall.
Window . Covering· &
ALDENS UPHOLSTERY SALE·
WHAT IT MEANS:
4-0
APPROVED
((o,1n< 1h/.~H r1,)n
l ti l (f, I f)1) < lf ! 1,•..,,t '>
.thv •nt)
It was
the city's
final step
in allow-
ing
Experian
-a.com-
pany pro-
viding
retailers information about
consumers to help with mar-
keting -to begin planning
its new Costa Mesa head-
quarters.
Company off 1cials say the
move will bring the etty
1,500 new jobs. The office
complex, to be built at 595
Anton Blvd., will include
offices, restaurants and a
health club.
WHAT THEY SAID:
H After working with Exper-
ian for many months, we are
very pleased that they decid·
ed to come to Costa Mesa,"
said Donald Lamm, deputy
city manager. ult will bring
major economic develop-
ment to the city."
IN BRIEF .
Flag pole to be
dedicated in honor
of Ronald Reagan
A new flag pole purch~ed
by an Iranian organizauon
will be dedicated at the coun-
ty's GOP headquarters in
Costa Mesa this Saturday.
The lraruan Amencan
Republican Council Nauonal
Organization donated the
flag pole in the name of for-
mer President Ronald Rea-
gan, who was the group's fin:;t
honorary member bdck in the
1980s.
An American flag flown at
WHAT IT MEANS:
Once the
generator is
installed, City
Hall will be lit
and fully elec·
tric even if an
earthquake or other disaster
knocks down power lines.
WHAT HAPPENED:
The City Council voted to
raise the amount it charges
nonresidents for paramedic
services.
WHAi IT MEANS:
,:;:~~'fa
de~_who
are tnJured
and require
paramedics
within the city will pay
slightly more than they had
before.
WHAT THEY SAID:
ffWhy are we subsidizing
out-of-town emergency ser-
vices?" asked Councilwoman
Heather Somers, who ques-
tioned the previous fee.
Somers suggested the fee
adopted by the council Tues·
day night.
the Capitol in Washington,
D.C. will be hoisted on the
new pole.
Attending the even~ will
be Ali Bayrami; president of
the lraruan council, and
members of the county's
Republican party.
·we are proud of the
growmg diversity of our party
and we are grateful for the
support of Mr. Bayrami, • said
Tom Fuentes, chairman of the
Republican Party of Orange
County.
The ceremony will be held
at noon at party headquar-
ters, 245 Fischer Ave., Suite
C2, in Costa Mesa. For more
information, call (714) 556-
8555.
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complete listing may be found at
dallypllot.com
TODAY
Mother's Market wUJ hold 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
is at 225 ·E. 17th St., Costa
Mesa. For more information,
call (800) 595-MOMS.
The February meeting of the
International Marketing
Assn. of Orange County will
feature a talk by IMA presi-
dent Dr. Joe Greco utled
"Penetrating Overseas Mar-
kets.• Refreshments and hors
d'oeuvres will be served and
admission is free. The meet-
ing will be held in the lobby
of the Manufacturers Bank,
1301 Dove St., Newport
Beach. For more information,
call (949) 553-3686.
The Newport Beach Publtc
Library will hold a free pro-
gram at 7 p.m. on "Managing
Parental Anger.• Dr. Richard
PARK
CONTINUED FROM A 1
into negotiations," said Coun-
cilwoman Libby Cowan. "We
will already have too many
cards on the table to have
good negotiations.• .
While Mayor Gary Mona-
·han conceded that the CJty
shouldn't show its entire hand,
he did want the residents to
know the city is committed to
preserving open space.
"I want to reassure the
neighborhood that the city
and school district will work
together to keep this a park,·
he said Wednesday. #The
same kids will be affected
whether the school district
owns it or we do."
Balearic Park is a 9.25-acre
lot owned by the school dis-
trict that serves as a neighbor-
hood park with soccer fields
and a new playground. For
more than 22 years, the aty of
·Costa Mesa's recreation
depd11ment has run a commu-
nity and day-care center
there.
Residents became alanned
l~t month when a c;itizens
committee recommended the
school board sell the park to
help pay for SC'hool mainte-
nance if a proposed $110-mil-
lion bond passes to fund facil-
IESTID
Shulman, a NeWp<>rt Beach
therdpist, will speak. The
library is at 1000 Avocado
Ave., Newport Beach. For
more mfonnation, call (949)
717-3801.
Borders Books, Music and
Cafe will present a free semi-
nar titled "Pr.otectin9 Our
Parents, Their Assets and
Therr Health Care," featuring
attorney Jerry O'Brien, at 7
p.m. Borders is at 3333 Bear
St., Costa Mesa. For more
information, call (714) 432-
7854 ..
The Newport Jaycees will
hold a social mixer for young .
professionals ages 21 to 39.
ities reprurs.
Many residents were con-
cerned that the. school district
would seek the most lucrative
<1ption and sell the park to a
pnvale developer.
Slate Jaw requires, howev-
er, that the school district gwe
pubhc entities, such as the aty
and county, first crack at buy-
ing or ledsing the property,
Barbot said. .
Barbot proposed that the
property be offered for long-
leon lease or sale, with three
stringent conditions:
• the site must remain a
park, ·
• the district could take th~
property back arid build a
school there if an increase in
students demanded a new
campus,
• and any revenue gained
from the lease or sale must be
used by the district for funding
school maintenance and
repairs.
"We're interested m an
agreement With some agency,
probably the city; who we've
had a great relationstup with,•
Barbot said. •But we're inter-
ested in establishing a longer
term lease. ln the process,
we're reviewing what a rea-
sonable amount is."
The school bod.rd will vote
on what to do with Balearic
Pdrk at a special meeting
Tuesday, when it votes on the
SABATINO'S
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•Dinner
• Sunday Brunch
(949) 723-0621
Doily Pilot
Orange Coast College
librarian Vlnta M.
Shumway will gtve a lec-
t\lre titled "A Foreigner
in a Foreign Land -
Growing Up in India,. at
'7:30 p.m. March 2 at
OCC's Udo Isle Club-
house, 701 Via Udo
Soud. The event b $5 for
nonmembers and seating
ts llmlted. For reserva-
tions and more informa-
tion, call (714) 432-5087.
The $5 event, wruch starts at •
6:30 p.m., includei; hors
d'oeuvres. The nuxer is at the
Shark Club, 841 Baker St.,
Costa Mesa.·
FRIDAY
Poet Susan Kinsolving will
read poems from her critically
acclaimed collection, "Dailies
& Rushes," at 7 p.m. at Bor-
ders Books, Music and Cafe.
Kinsolving has published
poems in many anthologies
and magazines, including
The Paris Review, The New
Republic and Grand Street.
Borders is at 3333 Bear St.,
Costa Mesa. For more infor-
mation, call (714) 432-7854.
potenlldl school bond.
Residents who have bom-
barded the school board with
letters and pleas to save the
neighborhood park were
relieved by Barbot's sugges-
tion, but remruned wary
"That's what we had in
rrund all along, so if the City
Council goes along with ll,
we'll be really happy," swd
Fran Hill, a resident leading
the effort to save Baleanc
Park. • Jl the bod.rd agrees, I
think that would be great I
assume they will follow his
recommendation. But we will
be at the meeting to see.•
IN BRIEF
Arts center panel
asks district for h elp
Supporters of the proposed
$12-milllon Arts and Educa-
tion Center in Newport Beach
approached the Newport-
Mesa school bodrd seek:ing 1ts
support Tuesday night
Walter Howald, a member
of a committee supporting the
center, provtded the board
with a bnef description of the
project and asked that it con-
sider wnting a letter or sup-
port to the city of Newport
Beach .
The proposed center
would occupy 3.5 deres of
land behind lbe Newport
Beach Public Library on Avo-
cado Avenue. The complex
would house an auditonum,
reception hall, public art
gallery, three studio class-
rooms, offices, sculpture gar-
dens and a two-story parking
facility with a landscaped
roof
School board member
Serene Stokes told board
members she had reviewed
the project and asked that 1t
be placed on the March 15
agenda.
The board will consider
Howald's request at that time.
If you would like a
fr '(' n•view of your
jnvt• tment ,
pl(•ast• cull or top
hy today.
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NMrpOrt &..•ch, CA 926'0
(949) 717-7662 .,. corn
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•, 0
Doily Pilot
Counting the
Days
Paularino Elementary first-graders celebrate 100
days of school with traditional counting actiyities.
Danette Goulet
DAILY PILOT
adored by both students and'
,. tedchers. .
On the 1 OOth day of school.
hundreds of firSt-gradC'rs gave
100% while domg Uungs 100
times.
Stude..nts from all sue f11St-
grade classrooms dt Pdularino
'Elementary School celebrated
their 1 OOth ddy m school
Wednesday with a mardthon
of acllvilles that involved
counting to 100.
"Counting lo 100 and rec-
ogru.zmg numbers is a big dedl
in the first grade,• said Pdl
lnsley, principal at Pdularino.
It is a tradition at the school,
CAMPAIGN.
CONTINUED FROM A 1
, people to vote and generate a
groundswell of support for tus
uncle.
"There are n~ discipline
problems because everybody
is doing something," said
Marcia Encinas, a first-grade .
teacher.
Students dashed around to
13 activity stations set up in
the school's, multipurpose
room They made necklaces
wtlh 100 Cheenos. They
bounced a ball 100 times.
They drew pictures of them-
selves now and in 100 years.
They gave a lollipop 100 licks.
Around each little neck
hung a bright orange paper
that listed the various activities.
the Latino community .
. lie doesn't have any poli tical
dSpiralions right ·now. His only
plan is traveling to Baja califor-
nia after the March 7 primary
- a muc}l-needed break from .
the campaign trail. ·nus is a
time where people our age
find out what they really want
to do," he said. "Pohtic:s are
not for me. My prionties right
now are to help my uncle get
to the Wlute House and get
my law degree.•
DON 11ACH I DAI.. Y Pt-OT
First-grader Claire Hern Oies over a jump rope In ata attempt to clear it 100 times dur-
lng Paularlno Elementary School's celebration of the 100th day of school. Jumping
rope was one of several activities that involved counting to 100.
When a child completed a
task, a hole would be
punched m the paper next to
the item to help them keep
track.
"I liked the one where you
draw yourself 100 years old,"
said 6-year-old Delane Frear
"I was very old, but I bad a lot
of hau that stuck out like
lhts. •
As students scampered
Thursday, February 2.4, 2000 AS
around. haWlg the time bf
the11 lives, th y didn't stop to
realize they were pro.cticng
the11 math and wnting skills.
When making a hat with
100 marks on it, students
counted by hveft . J
When making a snack bag,
they counted out l 0 Fruit
L:oops, 10 M&Ms and 10
mdrihma.llows until they had
100 pieces in theu
pack. ·
Student!> particularly
enjoyed the stcHion where
they WTote down whdt they
would buy with $100
"If I had $100, l would buy
my motorcycle so I could
race,• silld 7-year-old ~bra
ham Leopo "My dad did that
when he was little • .
Zachery Greensite was .
going to buy a house with his
$100
"I'll buy new snow dt my
house,• said 6-year-old
Stephen Vayda. "Then I'll
buy a new snowbourd No -
two new snowboards.•
Wh.tle the youngsters may
not have learned the actual
value o( $100, they certamly
learned to count.
"I'm trying more to spo.rk
interest ·among young people,
but I'm also putb.ng m d plug
for my uncle's campdign, • Sdld
Bush, who spoke from the fam-
ily's Orange County headqutU-
ters in Newport Bedch on
Wednesday. ·we have a lot or
first-tune voters out there dOd
it's unportant for them to know
what is going on."
Bush has cnsscrossed the
oat.Jon for the pdst three
months, spreacling his uncle's
mesSc1ge. He has spoken dt 50
high schools clild 13 colleges
and uruvers1ties in that time.
Over the past couple weeks,
Bush hdS canvassed the state
from the Bay Area to Los
Angeles, where he currently
resides.
Directions to · Arnold Palmer, Lee Trevino, Gary McCord,
Chi Chi Rodriguez and 74 Other Senior Tour Legends.
•
His number of spedkmg
engagements has leveled oU,
but 1l is a cnbcal ltme m the
campaign, Bush said -espe-
cially since lus uncle's oppo-
nent, Sen John McCd.J.J1, won
the lion's share of votes m the
Michigan and Anzona pri-
maries this week.
"It is appdfent we diem the
nuddle of a senous battle,"
Bush said "A lot of people
thought my uncle was gomg to
stroll into the Republican Con-
vention. This is a true test of
him as a person and I know he
has a lot of fire m lus belly."
Bush has lived a charmed
life, lined with wealth and
privilege most wouJd envy. His
name carries clout, but he
rarely uses it for personal gain.
Although he is accustomed lo
introducm'g lus grandfather dt
party conventions and speak-
ing in front of ldrge crowds,
Bush has taken d dilferent
route -one he doesn't regret.
Bush wdS born m Texas and
spent a portion of tus We m
Venezuela. After his grandfa-
ther was elN.1.cd president m
1988, he spent a month living at
the Wlute Ho~. Afraid he was
beconung sp<?iled, Conner FU'St
Lady Barbara Bush made her
grandson work al tt. homeless
shelter m Washington, D.C
He graduated from Rice
University in 1998 and has
been working as dfl mtem at
several law firms. He plans to
move to Boston later tlus year
while he await!. word on
acceptance to law school.
While his name may be
familiar to voters, tus appear-
ance is not; his mother ha.Us
from Mexico.
•Some pcoplo just don't
belie ve it," he Selle! "It's been
strange bcCause sometimes I
have been called roost and
·other tim I've been subject·
ed to discrimination." •
Bush has also lived in the
political shadow of a powerful
family. Ho was thrust into the
national spoWght at an early
age and not au of the publio ty
was J>051bvc.
In 1988, th"'n-Vicc Pre5i·
dent Georg Bush was chas-
tised m the media for rc(crrmg
to his grandchildren as "little
brown ones."
George P. Bush has strug·
gled with the publicity -even
the numerous questions about
his pohtical ideologies that
aren't romp&etely ln line With
the elder Bushel.
•Just like two people aren't
the same, I don't hold the
ilame political Views held 'bY
my dad and uncle," he said.
•we have our debates at
home and drop them.• ·
.... ctoet. bowevrgy port his unde -when It ~ ucadaD ·
reform and .. ~ out to
..
Newport Beach
Country Club
Advance-Purchase Tickets
Week~Long Badges begin at
For tickets log on to www.ToshibaSeniorClassic.com
or call 949/S I S-4840
Tickets are also available at Roger Dunn Golf Shops
TOSHIBA
S E N I 0 R CLASSIC
February 2• -March 5, 2000
Newport Beach CountrJ Club
,.
A6 Thursday, Februc>ry 24. 2000
BELL
CONTINUED FROM A 1
or domg nothing. Then he added: •u
· we choose the second, we·have to
accept the fact that pressures are
going to grow steadily on John
Wayne, and when they become intol·
erable, the El Toro option will hav~
been foreclosed. The cost of doing this
jornewhere else later will be so very
much greater because it will be with-
out the gut we've been given at El
Toro.·
He admitted that "it's difficult to
get people not under the flight path to
get passionate about thiS issue. But
there's really no one in Orange Coun-
. ty who isn't impacted in some way.
Much of the high level of air pollution
m several areas of North County, for
example, comes from freeway traffic
on its way to LAX because of the lim-
ited air cargo and passenger resources
here.•
My passion has been increasing
along with my blood pressure over the
past few weeks with each new high-
pnced mailing piece I get Crom the
a.Uport opponents who are cranking
up the hysteria exponentially. I read
this feverish rhetoric and I wonder
bow it is being received by the people
in North County who will finally
decide the fate of Measure P. . ..
The cover of the most recent mail·
..
. -
ing pieCe is supenmpoeed on the Dec·
laration ol lndependence, for God'•
sake, and the messoge wrappec:t tn
this sac:rotanet cloak is that a two-
tbirdl voting reqwrement for a public
entity like tbe El Thro ~ii pre-
cisely the position ThOmu Jefferson.
if he were a.round, would urge. nus,
apparently, puts King George m on
the side of airport proponents.
These fliers throw allegedly objec·
tive numbers around that were devel·
· oped in a stUdy co:mmissloned by the
city 'of lrvtne -hardly a neutral play-
er tn this game. They make dark
claims about conspiracies and draw
paranoid pictures about how life will
be blighted for the residents of South
County by a commercial airport at El
Toro. nus shouldn't swprise me Slnce
such tactics are on par for political hit
pieces,
But I guess the argument that heats
up my blood the most is the outra-
geous exaggeration of the impact on
residential areas nearest to the airport.
I'm an expert on this point. For 15
years, I've lived close enough to the.
nmway at John Wayne to bit it with a
Mark McGwire home rµn, given a
bounce or two, from my backyard.
Tilat means I'm about five miles closer
than the folks who are supposedly
going to be blighted around El Toro.
The periodic noise assuredly isn't
pleasant, espedally when we're enter-
. taining company on our patio on a
warm summer evening or when I'm
' -
~ to talk on the phone tn my
etfiCe in early morning. But the aggra-
vation doesn't even come close to the
hysterical predictions the ·ves on p•
people are putting OUL
·Rather, it's an infrequent imtant
that I certainly wouldn't want to have
compounded by the~ of
John Wayne. But I knew this airport
was my neighbor when l moved here,
just as the people around El Toro
knew they were moving into an area
adjacent to the Marine base. And I
can assure those South County folks
who have been paralyzed by fear of
the switch to a commerdal airport that
1
the dark predictions in the propagan-
da they've been fed aren't even close
to accurate.
I don't understand talk about com-
promise. Either a commercial airport iS
built at El Thro or it isn't. The compro-
mise on hours of operation, noise lev-
els, pennissible traffic and the like
comes after the primary issue is set-
tled.
Although Michael Lapin said the
passage of Measure F wouldn't stop
the development program or overturn
the two earlier affirmative votes on an
El Toro airport. defeating it would
declare loud and clear that we are sb.ll
fumly committed to accepting this El
Toro gift for the third -and, hopeful-
ly, the last -time.
• JOSEJltt N. BELL is a Santa Ana Heights
resident. His column runs Thursdays.
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BALBOA
CONTINUED FROM A 1
bcaub!ymg the area with land·
scapmg
In addition. a clock tower and a
stonn drain system will be built.
However, one lingering protr
tern that the plan doesn't address is
' improving shop facades, Ridgeway
said.
The effort to reshape the penin·
sula evolved from a five-year strug·
gle to find a way to revitalize the
community. Following a study on
the peninsula, a group of nine resi·
dents and business owners formed
the Balboa Peninsula Planning
Advisory Committee, which dis-
banded about three years ago.
They drafted 60 pages of recom·
mendabons, which eventually fell
by the wayside because it suggest·
ed controversial sweeping
changes.
•Tuey wanted to take away
parking and put in large docks .....
recalled Mayor John Noyes. ·niey
wanted things that scared people.•
In the aftermath, council mem-
bers Jan Debay, John Hedges and
Noyes formed a more conservative
citizens group, the Promote Revi-
talization of Our Peninsula Com-
mittee.
~we had a conunittee meeting
every month pretty religiously over
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the ~t three years,· Noy said.
•we've got consensus with both
the residents and bUSUl people.
It'~ time to do something.•
While peninsula bu.sin own-
ers are pleased with th news. they
say the changes won't come fast
enough. Ridgeway estimated that
it may take several yean; before
construction and Jandscapmg are
complete. In the medllllme, pcrun-
sula bUSUlesses will have to cany
on under the present circum-·
stances. ' .
"It's not soon enough <ind it'!, not
fast enough," said Britta's Cafe
owner Britta Pulliane, who for 13
yea.rs has watched the communi-
ty's docline. "But the sooner the
better. There's not many of~ lelt."
Cooncilwomdn Norma Glover
suggested th.al residents need to
comntil to shopping m theu village
instead of turning lo larger stores
outside the peninsula Noyes
agreed that •you can't run a hdfd·
ware store. when you're up dgcl.inst
Home Depot•
. "1Towists) don't slop, they don't
stay,• added Balboa Inn general
manager Rod Harter. "Our cdlling
card is not attractive •
N~yes dgreed that the aty
needed to concentrate its efforts on
reviving and beduti.fying the part of
the city.
"It's Newport's old heart,·
Noyes said. "It's our historic district
The future of Balboa is in its past."
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Doily Pilot Thursday, Februciry 24, 2000 A7
ADVERTISEMENT
00.0
New laser technology shows great promise
For firness mentor Sally
Stanron, exercise was, at
one time, nothing less
than hard labor.
"I really hated it," she realls.
"The only way I would really
move would be to hail a cab
when I was trying to gcr
somewhere in a hurry. I rried
gyms, only lasting about a
month each time."
Stanton's attitude really
changed when she joined a
<bnccrc1se ~pe'program at the
YMCA ·
•Now that was fun,• Scanton
said. "After working for the "Y"'
for a year, I created my own
program !lnd went to work for
the Ciry of Newport Beach in
197'8. teaching Disco-
Dancercise."
Two decades latu, Stanton is a
local fimcss fixture, known for
classes chat arc fun and effective
as weU as reasonably priced. AJI
feature a friendly environment
and are based on the latest fitness
techniques.
Three years ago. Stanton med
a Deep Water Workout and
found a whole other world. She
attests that her water programs
provide powerful strength,
cardiovascuJar wd AcxibiJiry
conditioning.
To intptire about classes and
l.ocations, call Sally Stanton at
(949) 646-6446, e-mail her 111
Sa/ly@waurwannups.com or fax
h" at (949) 646-6743.
Here we grow again
I t', a New Year and we're all
looking for a new body. At the
Athletic Club for Women in
Ncwpon lk.ach, we re here to help
you stay on crack th.i~ time.
Whether you are staning for the
fim umc, starting O\ler aga.in after
a few mondu of bad food and
bramlcu beh:lVlor, or swung again
after just plain abuse to your poor
body, don't worry. You rue like
most Americans embarking on a
new workout program. And like
others, you have high hopei that
your new fitnc\S regiment will
succeed. However, you could
ubotagc thu new found fitncn
energy with a number of mist.1kcs
that everyone has made ar one umc
or another. There arc great bencfiu
to having a 1ramtr i.n your corntr.
Herc is a lin of rhc mosc
common mistal~ and how a
traificr can help you to avoid them.
3. Motivation or lack of it.
Whatever you do for longer than
10 minutes at a time y0u will
benefit from, so find something
you cn1oy. A cr.Uner wilJ hive all
kinds of new and exciting
possibtlitics for you to try. ;u well '
~supplying the mocivation you
need to start on your new body.
4. Inexperience. If you arc not
an experienced fitness fuiatic,
trainers arc a great resource for all
the current trends in the fon~~
industry; someone who can reach
you all rhe techniques required to
have a safe and effective workout.
5. Ow.rtra.ioing. Start slowly and
listen to your body. This means
don't lift weights thar arc coo heavy
or stretch too fu if you're not limber
enough yet. A trainer will help you
learn the correct frequency and
durauon nciedcd w worl<.our safdy
attd dTccrivcly.
Good luck stanmg your new
ficness adventure.
If you "" inumuti m fintimx 11
rt11t pmoMI trtZinn to hdp you ftl
s/l:lrttd. contlUI Ho/J1 Ill n1e Athlmc
Club for m,mm, (949) 852-8655
N ow dark and olive·
skinned individual~ ~n
achieve fucial ·
rejuvenation and rC$urfacing
results comparable wich those
enjoyed for year~ by lighter
skinned individu.1ls wtth 1he
well-known C02 laser.
.. While the C02 laser provide~
su~rb rl'sult~ for many, there
were cert.1in drawb.;1t:k.\ aod
limitations for d.ukc:r skinned
people,• ~aid Dr /,..in Kadri of
The Center for hc1aJ Surgery in
Newport Bca1.:h.
Newer erbium hybrid l~cr~
avoid or minimize the likelihood
of skin-discoloration that
typically limirs C02 la~r
technology urilrz.ation for darker
~kinning individuals.
Recovery umc 1s minimiud
and redne~s 1s reduced because
jnu:rnaJ damage is ~1gnificanrly
decfC".lScO wich rhe uul1umon of
newer technology.
04Parienrs will require only
mild post·treacment and can
usually return co work an a week
or so without concern about
1heir appearance," Dr. K'.li.dn
said.
Fitness Festival & Fair at
Central .Orange Coast YMCA
You're i11v11cd to the: Central
Orange ( <>.m YMt.A's
r1tnc:~ l·cmval & Lair on
Wcdn~day, Much I. Tim all dJy
evcm beg1m with c.:arly morning
workout d.u~c\, both on land and'
in·rhe water, followed by health and
fitnc:!>S \cminaf\ prc~cntcd by
profc:\S1onal\ in our wmmumty, .l
health fair, health screening\ and
lunch. Thi\ rvent i\ free ro rhc:
public
, fhc YMCA promoro a healthy lif~tyie and encourag~ yuu to
attend the Fc~tival to learn mo're
about your he.ilrh. The YMCA also
offers a Life.\cylcs for Living
program which is a 12-weck
comprehensive progr.im focusing on
behavior modifrCilt10n, nutriooh
ar.d proper cxcr1.:i\C deliigncd to
f.lcilime he:ihhy lifc:style c.hangcs
under the guidance of~ medical
doctor.
For morr mformauon, caLI the
&mm/ Orant.t Coast YMCA. (!)·f9)
642-9990 It i1 lo.·autl at 13()()
Unii'n11ty Drnoe. Ntu.'Por1 lk11d1.
Stay well bY. using Imagery
you always scrcs.scd
1c? Do you flnd yoursdf
ting too mu<ll.
moking too much or bchaVing
in a less posicive manner • .UI as a
rc:.,ult of too much ~tress)
Imagery i~ a w.iy of.u ing our
im.igination. Without learning
how to use our im.igination
skillfulJy, worry is the mo~t
common use of the imagination.
The rault of thir. worry is the
repetitive focusing on images and
thoughu of tmuble, problems or
diSutcn ...aiting to happen.
le it nuural m worry ac ~me
time or anochct. Worrying ~n
allowt us to sol~ problems bY
examining the situacion. If you
~re a chronic worrier, yuu an
kam to bralt that tubir and -
rq>lact it with a new habir: ·
po~itivc from ncprivc. You can
learn ro focus your imagination
on thoughts and thing) that
creace calm, relaxation,
peac.cfulness and a scn't' of inner
security. This $hift in focus then
allows yow body and mind to
rcf rcsh themselves, allowing you
to use your coping and probltm-
$0lving abilicie. bcuer.
lm~ery ii. a natural and
pecific w:iy of thinking that
invo!VQ all the .ef\SCi inc.I uJing
memories, Jrcams and
daydreams, plans :&nd "i~ion\ u
well as fant:wa. Intcraccivc
guided imagery is a ~pccilic wa1
of using imaginauon and
imagery with panicula'r
applic:arions in mind/body
healing and weUn~
c.u ~ Owrtp H]pusis
•Ni Aq>IM Mo~~ Cmm"'
(94!)) 723-4728 for >Kip.
l. l'O do it next week
procranina.tioo. People alwafi uk
when is the best ume ro workout.
The answer 1$, "Whenever you
make a concentrated efTon ro!"
Choose a ume that works for you
and your .5Chcdule, then sec an
appoinrmcnc with a trainer so you
arc held respo nsible for that time.
2. Ladt of goals.. Scuing
realistic goal' u ~ important as
working out. Sit down with a
cruner ro di~cu • how you will
manage your 11mc while in the
&YV' and how much weight you
wane to lose and muscles you want
to gain lO benefit you.
POWER WATER WORKOUT
Shallow Of
Deep
Watlf Available!
Prese~t this ad for a
Newport, Laguna, Irvine, Mission Viejo
Checkout "Water Warm-ups" & Oass ~
Schedule @ www.waterwarmups.com
Tel: (949) 646-6446 01°M:~ ~
inf o@wattrWCJl'.fnups.com Rates • No Contracts.
, .. LIV l'oT•NTON
T OTAL P IT•lll
• Senior Fitness
•Aerobia
• 2 Pools
Kickboxing
• Karate
•Yoga
·M-.
COMP&IMIN'IAlf •ftee
2·WlllC MIMlllSHIP
C omplimentary 2 week pass will be valid for
2 weeks from ·initial visit & u~n completion
of member interest card & facility tour.
~ lnU/J strong ltiJs,
Stro"f fa."'i/in ,
,,,.,,,, "'''"''"'"""·
Because the surgeon can
control the depth of injury, hair
follicles and sweat due.ts m'!-Y be
spared and healing is
significantly accelerated.
1 he advanragcs arc possible
due ro the dcvclopmenc o(che lat~t generarion combined·
coagularive/.;1blauvc hybrid
lasers. The la.scr cmics a very
'>hon ablative pulse combined
with a longer pulse rhat
produces rhefmaJ coagulation ..
The device aho enables the
physician co modify the
inscrumcnc senings for each
rndividu.U patient.
"The flrxibiliry and prec;1,ion
ofthis instrument provide
opumal resurfacing results with
minimized trc.nmcnr and
healing 1ime," Ot. ~dra added
He also noted chat whiJe this
technology 1s ideal for darker
skinned individu<1h, the C02
laser remains the oprimaJ laser
choice for lighrer skinned people
with extensive skin damage.
For mort infarmt111on or 11
pm•au consultation, call Dr
/Vuln at (9-19) 219 OJ I I or
(800) MD 4 FACE.
Nurses on call day or night
T he idea of being able to caU
a nuN~ :after hours wllcn
you need to is very
<.on'ven1enc and requires less
waning.
Our med1~I profcu1onals and
c.trc provide" arc: mun<latcd wnh
legal, financial and ocher
rcspons1b1lmc\, nun<latc\ and
compliance ... chat their rime is
.. managed to the bone: Bcau'>C it
1s, the ume spent in providing care
a.,J ~<'rv1cc has also been "man.iged
to the bone" re-\ulung in quality
is.sue~ \Uc.h as increa.'.c.'<f waiting
nmc a1 the doc::tor's office, limited
access to <.-arc. 01.ercrowdcd
Emcrgen<.y Rael"l\ and
\Ub)tand.ird nur\ing to patient
rano
Hcalthc4rc comumers, can help
allC'111atc the si1u;uion \0 ir doesn't
worsen.
The goal ar tht-Call Center is to
empower members 10 be
arrropriare and cfTct:.tivc provider\
of their own ca~. Our objeccive 1.,
to provide ~re, cflectivc and
appropriate <.:arc over the phone.-.
We U\C AT&T langwge line for
non·f ngl1sh \peaking pcr\on> so
care 1m1ructiOl'J.5 arc <.amcd out
s.ifcly and 1nformat1on 1\
understood. Our arc ~tan<lard\
and protoc:ob are widely u-.cd and
accepced by the mcdi'-'11
t:0mmun1cy and hosp1tah 3.\ well ~
chc health plam.
Our role is to cmphas1u the
ncc:d for \emiblc, pm:uc.:i.I .md
prcvcn11vc healthurc me.lSure~
through education. c;oun!>tlmg and
lollow-up. In addmon, 11 "
reassuring to know that when umc
;md conven1ent:c .uc a factor, the
CaJI Center •~ a phone call aw.;ay.
Our s1it·month membef\h1p fu
I\ $23 per pc~on or family. A.' a
member. you can call .;1 nur~ to
request health inform.uion, .uk
quC)llOns pc~ning to your health
and well-being, ;md get help
\Orting your opuons and manav.ing
your t:ate dcu~1oru with I~ W21ung.
Our nunm{ s1aff 1s aw11/ahk 24
houn a day. CaLI (949) 706 6665:
fax. (949) 706 6644 Vim o1'r web
Slit at u'Ww.nuruoncaO.ott.
Call For Private Consultation
(949) 723-4728
DR. AUDRE D. DENARD, PH.D.
1500 W. Balbo~ • Newport Beach
. www.alphaome g a.nv.swltchboard.com
Suzanne A Fidle
Boord Certified Inter
Specializing
in Women's
Health Care
(949) 631-00
Newport Beach
I
I
I
Positive data reported on· hor~one
replacement therapy (HRT)
By Dr. Jane lkning (HR'D bccaUK lhcy perceive
themselves to have mcd..ical-lcgal
habilicy.
I encou.rage us to tUrn _io the
wumen will dae of heart d1~.
One in 25 wilJ die ofbrc.st c:ltlccr.
The mortality rate from hcarr
d~ in menopausal women who Everyday we are bOmbarded
with another medical nudy
or tmimonial article
implicating ~trogcn therapy u a
cause of breast c.:ancer h can be
difficulc'for the panem to maneuver
cluough 1his confusing issuf
Ph)"ici.lns may be hesicanc about
encouraging women to take
hormone replacement thc~py
mC'<Lcal d.ica. There arc mort than
30 well-done. ~icnriEic m.ils that
rtfurc the norion chat HRT a,uso .
brC25t cancer In fau, cherc is very
liulc we can do to alter our risk of
geuing brClit cancer.
't.ake HRT is rcdu«d by 50 percent.
Women who ta.kt HRT live a
longu. more active 2nd vital life.
let's liuen TO wencific reason and
nor be swayed by scnsation.t.liud
media bias.
On the ocher hand, our lifesrylc
choices have a grcac impact on our
risk ofhcan di~. Cfne-third of
Dr Jan~ lkninlt Gyn~ro"'tiJt.
351 Hosp1ut1 &tul, #61 /,Newport
lkach. CAii (9.f9) 642-1362.
Heartburn pain should not be Ignored
M ore than 60 million Americans
experience heartburn every
month and 15 million on a
daily basis. It is mo t common among
chc elderly and women during pregnancy.
"That burrung feeling you cxpcnencc after
meals m;ay sct'm h.lrmle6S but should not
be ignored. If you were able to rake a
look insidC your body after dinner, you
would sec a ~nulJ wive bccween the
scomach and rh<' ooph.agus. This valve is ·
ailed 1he l~r aophagcaJ sphinuc:r.
Wh<'o this value letks, fr all~ digcsuvc
Ouids and stomach acids 10 go back up
1he esophagus, C1us1ng due bumang
..cru:uiun.
Ovcr-the-<:ountcr ancacid can hdp
relieve che )ympcorru, buc ifhcr.nbum is
en t &
0/0 0FF
"'99UI Training *
Join with a friend
and get
FREE!
for both of you
• 1 month, offer ends 2/29/00
frequent it may be more serious than you
think. When the acids and fluids back up
into the esophagus ic can damage the
dc.liatc c:s<jphagus lining. If left
unire;atcd, at can lead co more KrioUs
condirioru.
To rrcac hcanbum,, $« a
gastroenrerologist who spcciali7.cs in
disorders and conditions of the stomach
and inratincs. Gascrocncerologisu arc
board cenified in inrcrnal medicine with
w addmonal two co th rec yean
~pccifacally an conduioru of the
~1roan1aranal tract.
Dr. DhailllHll hai bun manni parinlu
for"'"" than 111K11 :!'an and 1pmaliut in
t,aitrrNnu-ro'/ogy. Ci// (949) 650-6731 to
make an appomtnunt far lln n.ia/wuion.
Women
SPIRTIVI
HEALTH&FITNESS, INC. l
Announces
It. Upcoming Community
HeaHh Fair Expo
Saturday, APrll 15
9:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m.
21 21 E. COIMI Hwy. CorOllll del Mar
(949)121.ff#IS
Women'• Health Center will be
primary fOcu• In 20001
H•.,,,, ._....,,_and._,..,,,.
Blood Pressure Exams
Pulmonary Function Tests·
Skin Cancer Screenings
Body Fat Analysis
Massage Therapy
Allergy Testing
Spins/ Evslustfon/App/led .Klnoslology
Vision Screenings
Osteoporosis ($25 fee)
Cancer Prevention
Nutrition
Heart Disease Prevention
Hormone Therapy
.
Daily Pilot
ADVERTISEMENT
0
SPORTIVA supports
women's health In
Orange County
Fimcss, Inc., a prtv-.ate low-cost blood panel will ~ Spa q rcgoric's, Newpon Bc:ach's
p~mier day spa, h:u teamed up
with five Newport Bc:ach
re~taurams -Bandera, Roy's, The
Riverboat, Tommy Bahamas and
Tucro Marc -to provide a valuable
and creative package for couples: Spa
Date.
S POJfflVA Health & prevention. An additional
health and firncss srudio available to help measure
located in Corona dcl Mar, is Follide Stimulating Hormone
pleased to announce their (FSH). FSH is an indiacor of
participation in the 23rd pre-mcnopau e. An eleyarcd
Annual Health Fair Expo on FSH may rdl a woman char
The Spa Dace indudei:
Sarurcby, ApriJ ---------her body has
t 5. The expo is 23rd Annual begun ro enter
made possible Health Fair Expo chc menopau~ • Ooe-hour massage or f.icial foe him
• One-houc massage or facial for her
• A $ I 5 gift certificate to one of the
participating rcscauranu.
by a partnership Id scage. This will be he on c ~tween che inrormacion well
American Red Saturday, April .15. allow a women
Priced ar $150. the package
~pr~nts a 10 percent discount off
Cross and NBC SPORTIVA will ro ~tart focusinp.
Channel 4. offer the new on her body,
the cuscomary price of rhe ~rvtees if
purchased individually.
SPOR1 IVA diet and
will offer the component to the
new component
co the Health
Health Fair Expo -
Women's Health
exercise.
SPORT/VA
Health and The Spa Oare for 2 has traditionalJy
been one of our most popular
packages and it just got bccrcr with an
inclusion of fine dining at one of the
best local rcstauranrs.
Fair Expo -Center. Fimm. Inc. and
Women's Health ---------its team of
Center. The profmionals look
Spa Grtgorit's is l«11ttd aJ 200
Newport Cmur Driv~. nna to Edwards
CintmtJJ. Opm daily. spa houn art
Monday. J J a.m. -9 p.m. and Tumiay
through Sunday. 9 a. m. • 9 p. m.
center will include screening forward IQ surng you on Apnl
and information on I 5. For mort mfonnation. call
osreoporosis, hormone (949) 721·9965. It i1 Jocattd
replacement therapy, and at 2 J 2 1 E Coast Highway. Su.
breast and cervical cancer 260, Corona Ml Mar.
Parminder Dhaliwal, MD
Board Certified in
Internal M~d.icine & Gastroenterology .
(949) 650'...6731
To Advertise
in Health
ESTROGEN THERAPY
By Dr. Jane Bening, M.D., Gynecologist
The Myth of Breast Cancer Risk
View and Call In: Live
OCN Channel 47
Friday, Feb. 25th, 12:30 p.m.
Reruns at 3:30 pm
Feb. 25 & Saturday, Feb. 26
JANE BENING, M .D.
Board Certified
J Sl Hoepital Rd., Suite 611
Newport Bach, CA 92'63
949-642-1363
. NURSE ON CALL
How do you know when to go to the
Emergency Room? ·
Should you go to the Emergency Room?
Are you without Health Insurance?
Insured or Not ... Emergency or not ...
What should you do?
TallC to a nurse about it.
Know what you can do to provide safe,
effective and appropriate care for you
and your family.
Visit our website @ ~
www.nurseoncall.org
For registration and membersh ip
information, please call:
(949) 706-6665
..
21, it djdn't takt much to
maJntatn that tiny waist and
ut cummy. Bur now, even
months of dieting and hours of
aerobics may not guar<1mec you rh:u
feminine Victoria') Seem figure.
Doctors warn that when a
woman's da.ssi pear \hape plump<;
to apple proponions, her nsk of
'hcan di.sc2sc, diabcta. ~nd cerC2in
kinds of ana:r ~ay swdl, too, a~
fat accumulates around internal
organs. While time may 5ecm ro be
against you, you can put up an
incredible rC$istance ro thi\ with
mi.stance training
Weight mining bu1l1b lean
muscle tissue. Bu1ld1ng' lean muse.le
11~\UC 1$ extremely 1mporranc
because after age 30, no matter how
much you cxerd1.e a1:rob1caJly, you
may lose half a pound of muscle per
year. And, you may ~n :1bour one
and a ha.If pounm of body fat per
yur -much of which 1~ deporncd ·
;tround your middle:,
fat accurpulato when we eat
rnol't' alorio dun we burn. And
mu~le is the body'~ most dlicient
calorie burner. The more rnu\<;IC we
h.ivc, the higher our ~Hing
merabolic rate 1$, which u the rate
';.1( which our bodiC$ burn alone~
when ~c .ire at rcsr. So wuh po1,1nc:b
of mu"'le lo$t over the ya rs,
calories don t get burned the way
they ~hould and fat accumli&l.ucs.
fhe bc$t oprion te> compensate
for .i luf,gbh meraboli\m: Qdd
. ahout 50 minutes of resistanc~
traming per Wttk. And, keep up
your cardio program a\ daily ac:robic
.miv11y is ~ntial co hc-.in health
.ind weight maamenance
Rc\l~t.incc tr.Unang i~ 1he only
way m prevcm the lu~~ of musclt
and bone dcnmy :ind mJintafo your
21-ycar old mecabol1c r.a1c. Whcrc;is
aerobic C'\erCISC meh~ away
\upcrfi i.il fat around rhc waist ,
rc:)i\t.1nce trammg di\SOlvo the
mncrmo~t f.11 around 1mernaJ
org.am, And that is a tremendous
far acfvamagc.
Holly Pineda, owner
Hiring a personal trainer c.a11
really be an advantage to hdping
you gee back to that 21-year-old
body. Holly Pinedal, owner a1 Thl"
A1h]e1ic Club for Women un hdp
you You will ccccivc 50 percent ofr
on your Am monrh of training
Call !loll) f>medal at Th,. AthltttC"
Club for ~mm, (949) 852-~655
Health and Fitness 2000 at UAC
I n these f;m p..iced, \trcs.o.ful
times, it is important you look
and feel your bc:51. The new
Univccs1ry Athktic Club u
dedicated to enhanCJng their
members' lives and C"Xcc:c-ding their
cxpcc1.iuoru. The new ownership
and management tontinuc the
tr'1d1t1oru of the UAC provrdmg
an exclusive membenhip 10 a
limi~d number of C'Xecutivc\
~lung a do~-knn fmcrnal
acmo pherc Thu ir~dicional
gentlemen\ athlcrk dub offers the
finest m personal \c:rvice, fuctl1t1C$
11nd amenmcs to M:leu groups of
bu.\tnffirncn in Newport Beach.
Univcrsiry Achlwc Club 1s a full
\Crvi~ fitness center, offering
e"\'crything from \()~'h, lundball,
baskeckll and a Jr Olympic
~w1mrpmg pool to ~c1ghr tr.unmg
'1nd sporu rchab1lit.mon therapy;
without the crowd\ ch.u large
THE
UNIVERSITY
ATHLETJC
CLUB -one of
·. ch.tan fitness center\ have Every
amermy 1\ provided including fresh
workout app:irel, 10<.kcn, 1owds,
milt:1;1c\ and complimenr;iry
'hoe~h me.
Vic R.ll<luhana (a former use
lullback) has gotim.<d a rcpuwJOn for
nlttrmg the dive~ hc:.tlch and
lltncs.\ net.'<ls for men, women and
.uhll"tl"> m Orange County. We are
proud 10 ha'c !Ukh\hiln15 fitness,
wdlnc~ and penonal tramlllg
progr;a.m .ivailablc 10 our members.
Rakh~ant provad~ penorul
&.\\1\IIDCC to mc:mbe~ wuh their
fltn~ needs and proper use of
equipment, t«.hniquc ;ind nu\,mion.
Wirh h1~ cxcemivc backgrouril m
hum.to performance. soft ll'>.\UC
rch.ab1l11;iuon and nutritional
march, he imcgme. hL\ ycan of
cicperienc:.c: and sue~ in the
applied ~ic~ of cxercl5C
phr.rology, athleuc perform.im;e,
rehabilnauon, and blood an.il~i\
and clinical nurrition.
We welcome businw. meetings
m the club'$ confefcna: room\.
Healthy breakfasts and lunches .a.re
~rvcd duran~ the ~ck in the
dubs cale. After ~'Our workout,
relax anJ enjoy a dnnk in the ·
lounge wnh a pool table, dam and
a big $Crcen cclevi~ion.
Mmt amponanrly, Univc~11y
Athlcuc Club promotes your
person.ii he.i.lth and profosional
groW1h wuh their scare-of·the·art •
flmcss and cardiovascular facllitics,
relaxing \p.l, dining and conference
facilitic,,
UAC u locimd at 1701 Quail SI.
in Newport &arh, nrar the john
W~lt' A1rpon. one bkxlt ftom the 73
Frrrwtl) amJ COfltJnttnll to the 55
Nttway. For a r:ompbmmtmy sn1m·
day pass 111111 ptTJOn4/1ud tour, caU
(949) 752-7903.
AN
bringing
a whole
new look to
Orange County's premier
private athletic fraternities -
our state-of-
the-art facilities. With only
a Jtandful of memberships
available, be sure co call for
a complimentary tour and
guest pass.
' proudly announces new
ownership and management!
We're building on UAC's
winning history as the
exclusive gentlemen's athletic
club in Newport Beach ,
Otherwise, you might
have to join the crowd at
one of those other places.
"
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. .
Thursday, Februory 24, 2000 A9
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' I . .
AIO Thunday. F"""'°7 24, 2000 SOcIEIY . Oaity Pilot
Celebrity chefs battle in cook-off beY/efiting homeless ·
F amilies Forward, former-ly known as Irvine Tum-
,porary Housing, siath-
ered last week for a wme
event at the Monda.vi Wine
and Food Center, Costa Mesa.
Some 140o80ests raised more
than $13, for the nonprofit
org.anization, which heJ:ps
homeless families in OrC\llge
County. Their goal is to assist B.W. Cook families a~ting to anive
at a ~el of -sufficiency.
Executive director of Fam-THE CROWD ilies Forward, Margte Wake·
man, was on hand and
thrilled at the local response. poverty ~nd homelessness.
"What a success," Wake-The organization is-proof that
man exclaimed. •we had a we can make a difference.
cross-section of community For more information, call
rupport from individuals and Britton Jasper at (949) 552·
businesses in the community, 2724. ..
and everyone had a wonder-•
ful time.• · The 21st annual Walter
Part of the everit included Knott Service Awards were
a cook-off between two of·: presented last week at an
Orange CoWlty's celebrity emotional luncheon staged
chefs: Pascal Olhats of Pascal at Newport Beach's Sutton
and Alan Greeley of The Place Hotel. Although the
Gold~n nuttle. The two culi-honorees came from different
nary masters displayed their avenues of our diverse soci-
formidable talents to the ety, an emphasis on over-
deligl\t of the crowd.
Families Forward, founded·
coming odds was surely a
theme of the event.
in 1984, has served people in
crisis ever since. The results
Among the guests of honor
were Brad Parks, founder and
have changed lives for many
touched by the plight of
president of the National
Foundation of Wheelchair
AetF...,a-
818' 7
•
llllltructor. Plllty Davidson
~bnmy 3. 17 • 7-9 pm
Y0)'98el' Urot with Julie King
workshop on Love at Relatlonihlps
Sat. r'ebn.tary 12th
1·3pm
Valentine gifts, love
bOo.ks, candles ~ more.
Psychic Readings
(call store for appointment)
.•Tarot
• Script Channeling
·Astrology
• Handwriting Analysis
891 Baker Street A 16 • osta Mesa 71 4 751._ l IS I
• Corner of Baker & Bear streets t 'r
Tennis Players, and Mark
Wellman, paralytnpian.
mountain climber and athlete.
Also among~ service award
Ndpients w~ Juat Gold-
man, world-class runner and
spokesperson for Adidas, and
Ertk Weibenmayer, adventur-
er, writer and athlete.
The reception, named in
recognition of the community
contribution made by the
late Walter Knott, foW'lder of
Knott's Berry Farm, is one of
the more significant lun-
·ch~ons respondin~ to the
needs of community service
and volunteerism.
Co-chaired by Mike
Valentine and Joann
Waldron, a board of ~rs
· -consisting of local partid-
pants Stephanie A:rgyros,
Dan Armstrong, Rlcbard
Cole, John Combt. Jack
Fields, Marda Forsyth, Todd
Hart, Doy Henley, Blan Hor-
ton, Sharon Kawal, Parker
Kennedy, Frederick I.Jnton.
Dan Manning, David Nagy,
Alexander Nalle, Trang
Nguyellf Richard Porras, Bet·
ty Belden Palmer, Gene Scar-
brough. Rogers Severson and
Caleb 7Ja, president G~rge
~Inger and chairman BID
Wood -made enormous per-
sonal and financial contribu-
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..
tions to the process.
Awards p~esentP.rs includ-
ed Walter Knott's daughters,
:•Knott Bender, Mart-
U MODtapert and
Toni Knott Oliphant. Also
presenting were Rick Boggs,
Renee Bondi, and Judllh
Partridge. Ed Arnold served
as master of ceremonies.
The 21st 8l1Jlual event
was produced in partnership
with Goodwill Industries of
Orange County.
• . This coming Saturday
evening, the Mon4avi Cen-
ter hosts the Orange County
chapter of the national Multi-
ple Sclerosis Society for a
grand casino night party.
The $55-per-person event
iS open to all of Orange
County to benefit programs
and services and research to
help those suffering from the
disease. Organizers are plan-
ning a major Las V~as--style
casino setting w'ith Winning
tickets redeemable for all
kinds of prizes including
weekend trips and wonder-
fuJ merchandise donated by
local merchants. 1 A Mondavi wine bar, hors
d'oeuvres and music from a
live band will round out the
festivities. To fight MS Vegas
style, last minute reserva-Joan Irvtne Smith joined
tions can still be made by her cousin Anita Zlebe and
calling (949) 752-1680. fellow Mission supporters
• State Sen. BW Morrow,
N~rt social hostess SbeOa Sonnemhlne, Calber-
~ • """'"""· Peggy
lne lbyen. Madeline and Len
dwater Clay, championed Zuckerman. Sally Thatcher,
week's elegant cocktail Eve Komyel, Pran Mulvanla.
Qt the waterfront estate . Gerry and Shana Lanen.
of IJnda and Harvey Smith. Catherine and Jim.Emmi.
The midweek soiree Maralou and Jerry :::t:3·
served as an underwriting ton. Sbarl Esaytan. BW an
party for the upcoming Ann Lusk, Katna Lutge, and
Capistrano Pageant ~at Blllur Wallerich.
Clay is chairing on behalf of Goldwater Clay is work·
the Mission San J uan Cap~-ing with R.J. and Gloria
trano. Unda and Harvey Brand'es, Irvine Smith, and
Smith graciously welcomed Unda Jrvtne and Harvey
dpnors to their Shangri-La Smith to create a spectacular
overlooking the Pacific as ~eant filled with the living
wonderful food was served ory of old California. The
by society caterer Neff Neff. Foundation, a nonprofit, ded-
Of special note was a icates all net proceeds to the
mashed potato martini education,proinotion,and
served in a large martini preservation of early Calif or-
glass consisting of a mashed nia history antt heritage in
potato base and a choice of addition to the restoration of
delectable, edible toppings, Mission San Juan CapistraJlO.
sans the vodka or gin. To help support the mis-
Goldwater, attending the sion, the pageant and to get
evening with her husband. involved .in California Her-
BOO Clay, shared with the itage Week which Will show-
crowd some of the grand plans case our local history, call
for the upcoming pageant, Goldwater-Clay at (714) 979.:
which. with some producing, is 1190.
expected to become a comer-
stone of Orange County event • a.w. COOK's column appears
spectacles . Thursdays and Saturdays.
tLUfHERAN CHURCH OF THE MAsTER
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Corona del Mar, California 92625
(949) 759-1146
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639 Paularino Ave., Costa Mesa
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He knows that even normal sucss
can cause misalignments, called
mbluxadons, chat can disturb the
nervous system.
That's why Dan visics his
chiropractor regularly. Using
advanced tcehnologics and proven
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Olympic Dtcath""' Golt/ MttWis1 !Mn O'Brim UIJS• "ff'..""''
for cliiroprt1Ctit, I wou/J Mt :h.111 won tht ~It/ mitJAL ~'
Dan in.~n i'! '!" cteiml' hiDl--mnrJ vUko tlMt's 111 m~rt111n1n16J tt u Ni"""101t11l •
l
10 irtJOllr fiw llitl#, aJJ 11ow:
Brian J. Stanton, D.e.
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3010 B Harbor Blvd., Coita Mesa t
(71') 662-21U
. '
Doily Pilot DATEBOOK Thur5doy, February 24, 2000 Al1
'Boiler Room' is hot, 'Hanging ·up' better left ullanswered
. , .
• EDITOR'S NOTE: The Reel Critics
column • features mo111e critiques
written by community members
• serving on out panel.
'Boiler Room' is a
worthy investment
W hat drives us as
human beings? Is it
the basic need for
food and shelter? ls it more
primitive, like jealousy or
greed? Or, with the latest
onslaught of game shows, is
it to be a millionaire?
At the stock brokerage
fmn of JT Marlin, everyone
is frantic and obsessed, like
junkies searching for their
Reel
CRITICS
next high
-gam-
bllng, sex,
drugs, or
the insa·
tiable
appetite to be a millionaire
by the age of 25. Everyone
except for Seth Davis (Gio-
vanni Ribisi), a minnow in a
swann of piranhas, who
appears unusually numb to
his surroundings.
In "Boiler Room,· Ribisi's
masterful performance gen-
tly exp9ses the struggles a
young man goes through
when trying lo do the right
thing.
Narrated by Seth, •Boiler
Room" opens to a stark win·
ter scene, Ansel Adams-
esque, with bare alabaster
trees against a stark black
background, perhaps hinting
that not everytJung is as sim-
ple as black and white, at
·least not for our narrator
Seth, a college dfopout
who is running an illegal
casino from his apdrtrnent to
entertain the nearby Queens
~-~
College
students, is
about to
make a
career
change.
After dis-
appointing
.his father L .m (Ron
Rifkin)-Julie Lowrance a federal
court
jtidge-
not ont:e, but twice, he is
lured to become a millionaire
at JT Marlin by the savvy
persuasive head recruiter,
Jim Young (Ben Afflec,k).
As Seth becomes success-
ful, he also begins to suspect
wrongdoing at the firm. We
learn what it seems no one 10
the firm knows or will admit
to knowing: that they are
selling stock for companies
that don't exist.
The magic of "Boiler
Room" isn't in the fraternity,
testosterone-packed man-
fests, although the dialogue
is surprisingly witty and sar-
castic as they're throwing
racial slurs and sexual innu-
endoes at each other, along
with occasional fistfights.
The magic is the subtlety of
Seth's growth into moral
maturity against his harsh,
contrasting environment.
An example of this is the
adrenaline-pumping techno-
rap soundtrack for which
Ben Younger, writer and
director, enlists the talents of
African-Amencan artists to
emphasizes the contrasting
black and white theme when
compared to the racial make-
up of the brokerage firm
Filmed entirely in New
York in "Soprano• style,
Rancfy J . Pierce, CPA
certified public accountant
tax plannlna, preparation & advice
fttt iniual consultation and price quote
free cltt!Joruc filing
no hidden clwga
CYcnina & weekend appointments
at your home or office
tenlor d1tc00nlS
honest. twdworung and affordable
949-653-1040
Celestino's
quality MEATS
Tll<' I inc>-;1 Mmr and Sen •Ke Ava1/oble
&rvint Costa Mtsa for over 30 ~11rs I ~offer ALL-NATURAL BEEF & CHICKEN l
Extra Lean Homestyle Meatloaf Mix
Southern Slab Bee/ Pork & Veal
Bacon You add your Jami&•'
$3.99 lb $3.99icib
All Natural
Bonda.. Skinless Lemon · Chicken Brmt
$4.99 lb
\
COlllll SOON
June Fenner
cool head
dDd d
deter-
ffiJJled
focus. Yet
the
moment
<my ~tress~
ful ind·
dent .
enters
their lives,
they tum
mto
inslcmt idJOts. •
It is hard to believe that
'"Hanging Up11 is a c:ollabora·
tion of at le<isl bve mteWgent,
successful women: stars Meg
Ryan, ti a Kudrow, dJld D1ane
Keaton (who dl.so directed),
wnter Delia Ephron; and pr~
ducer Nora Ephron.
Madonna and Rupert Everett star in .. The Next Best Thing," in tbeaten March 4.
Having made the deas1on
to play the movie for cutesy
laughs. the powen; behind
•Hanging Up" then have no
effective way of deahng with
the actual death of the lather
other than havmg the three
sisters retredl to the lotchen
and throw flour at each other
• a·oiler Room· has excellent
potential not to be a typical,
on·the-surface Hollywood
tale of a corrupt stock bro·
kerage firm, but underneath,
conceals complex themes of
moralistic and relationship
struggles.
The firm handpicks
young, eager, acceptance
seeking, runaway-types, dis-
card.mg anyone with experi-
ence. to blindly follow their
instructions.
•Boiler Room• is rough.
It's edgy. It's original. It's full
of racial slurs, profanity, sex·
ual innuendoes, fast-talking,
hyped-up sales pitches,
brawling and in-your-face
realism. Although flawed,
•Boiler Room• is a worthy
investment.
• JULIE LOWRANCE. 40, is a Costa
Mesa resident who wor1cs at a
Newport Beach overnight aircraft
advertising agency
15~
Mattress Outlet Stor
BRAND NEW · COSMETICALLY IMPERFECT
Get the Best for Less! I
3165 Harbor Blvd.
Costa Mesa
One Bloc.Ir. SOut.h of •oa rwy
(714) 545-7168
• C~YSTAL CAVE
SPECIAL IPl·S'IOllE ~
.., llllir7 Orea'
T..,. ~ T-.:icr6'Alldlor
Lecture· rrt. l'tarch 17
WorkShop: Sat .• Marth 18
Readlf19'1: sun .. Hardi 19
IZAM'IOIJR
YOUI llEALl'tO
rOMSllS
Sat .. March I l
Psychic Readings
(call store for appointment)
·Tarot
• Script Channellng
·Astrology
• Handwriting Analysis
891 Ba~;~e!t~ !:, ~~a Mesa 71 4-754'1151
Fem ale cast, crew
fail at 'Hanging Up'
W hen is a movie not a
movie? When it's
only a sitcom in dis·
guise.
"Ha:ngmg Up" tells the
story of three sl.Sters dealing
with the death of their father
(played by Walter Matthau).
Each of these three women
has the kind of successful
career that ~es at least a
Oh, for the days of Ros-
alind Russell and Kdthenne
Hepburn: two women who
could always hold their own
at work or at pldy' FM from
gaining ground m the bdttle
of equality in hlrns. tod1:1y's
female filmmdker:. seem
detenruned to tum every
woman mto d ditz
The bottom lme: don't
waste your time. ------• JUNE FENNER. a Costa Mesa
resident in her late 50s, is vice
president of a work force training
company
~~~
Look in the Classified secti~n
in Saturday's paper.
Publishing every Saturday
until April ! 5th.
•J I
..
I
. . DATEBooK Doily Pilot Al2 Thursday, February 2.4, 2000
UNCLE DON'S VIEWS OF Nil REPUTE SPECIAL IVlllS
'~tel) Black' good for pesky relatives MUSIC A LA MODE
The Newport Beach Mar·
riott Hotel will host
•Music a la Mode,• a
f a1hion event to beneftt
the Youth MUlic Pro·
grams of the Philhannon-
1c Society of Orange
County, at 11 a,m. March
14. The handbags and
accessories of Judith
Lieber will be featured at
the luncheon. Tickets are
$60. The hotel is at 900
Newport Center Drive,
Newport Beach. For more
infonnation,call(949)
752-6277, Ext. 234.
By Uncle DOft
(To the tune of "American Pie");
And we started singing,
Bye, bye kiss our butts
goodbye.
Pound some monsters
in the dark and they bled us
all dry.
A.s the bodies we torn
apart and we watch the parts
fly, singin' this'll be the day
that I die -this'll be the doy
that I die.
I t's dark, nearly empty,
operating in a vacuum,
and heading into noth-
ingness.
Nah, it ain't a liberal's
brrun, though it could be. It's
the runaway spaceship ·
"Somethingorpther, • outta
control, shaking like a sqwr-
rel treed by dogs, heading
toward the obligatory planet
of no return.
Of course. the thing can't
crash too hard or kill too
many of its crew and passen-
gers or the movie will end
too soon. It doesn't, and after
plowing a mile-long divot on
th.ls here planet, the ship dis-
gorges its payload of nin·
compoops, nitwits, and
Neanderthals.
Tossing in the obligatory
"The Hills Have Eyes" psy-
cho, we're off for 90 nunutes
of fun in a place where the
sun never sets.
The sun doesn't set 'cause
there's three of them sue.ken;
orbiting around out there -
except once every 22 years,
when some other big honkin'
planet with more rings than
a tenement bath tub aligns
itself just right, eclipsing the
suns.
"Pitch Black" hasn't an
original thought, line of
dialogue, plot device, set
piece, or stunt. Nowhere.
No how. No way. From the
story line ripped off or Asi-
mov's "Nightfall" to the
intro out of "Star Wars," to
plot contrivances straight
out of "Night of the Living
Dead," this flick could
dummy-up a stadium Cull of
Einsteins.
I ain't complainin'.
But a cool flick it is. It's
what "Starship Troop-
ers" should have
been. It's "The Flight
of the Phoenix" and a
space-age Dorothy
tripping through the
poppy field from hell.
Nowhere. No how. No way.
Me no think. Me stuff my fat
!ace fulla Hot Tamales and
Milk Duds as the hyperki-
netic be~g of "Pitch
Black" only recedes the
slightest as the fihn spools
on.
Oh, •Pitch Black• takes a
few vague ephemeral s~gs
atphilosophizlng.Such
effo11s are always easy to
spot. The sudden change to
two and three syllable words.
Furrowing of brows. Pensive
pauses. Like anyone's really
gonna see a flick liko this to
• think. D'oh.
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Anyhow, when the planet
goes dark, all these creepy
crawly critters come out of
crevasse:; and cracks as they
go bite in tho night on any-
thing living.
Scheduled to save the
stranded settlers are our
diametrically opposed herd
and heroine: the apple-
cheeked blonde female
pilot and the shaved-head-
ed convicted multiple mur-
derer
Light is as deadly to
these critters as the truth is
to the Clintons. So 'IWee-
dle~ee and 'IWeedle-deviate
must lead a congregation of
God-fearing Muslims, mer-
cenary drug addicts, pseudo
transgendering females,
and effeminate antique
dealers in the dark, to the
promised land of the space
ship that'll take 'em back to
whatever pabulum-
enhanced existence they
had before someone came
up with this plagiarized
excuse of a fliclc.
But a cool'flick it is. It's
what "Starship Troopers"
should have been. It's ·The
Flight of the Phoenix• and a
space-age Dorothy tripping
through the peppy field
from hell. It's •Alien• and
•Aliens.• •Jaws,•
"Tremors" and every other
creature feature.
Oh, and "Pitch Black•
does star some actors, but
hell, they're incidental to
the monsters and sets, and
msignif 1cancies tend to emit
from their mouths.
"Pitch Black" is as dumb
as they come. Filmed out in
a territory of one of them
funny little down-under
countries, it cqnsists of just
enough of the magic four-
letter words to get it an R,
but is just the flick to rec-
ommend to some unsus-
pecting relative who's
either terrified of the dark
or looks under the bed for
monsters.
• UNCLE DON reviews 'B' movies
and cheesy musical acts for the
Dally Piiot. He can be reached by
e-mail at
Real/yBadWritingOaol.com .
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For more information, call
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features wine tastings
from 4:30 to 8 p.m. on Fri-
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Daily Pilot DATEBOOK . Thursday, February 24, 2000 A13
CHILD'S PLAY Trilogy Playhouse
opens tonig:bt Newport Elementary stages original play
By Tom Titus
I f you missed the thnller
•Deathtrap• dt the Costa
Mesa Civic Playhouse last
year, fear not. Another ver-
sion, also in Cos\Fl Mesa,
opens tonight.
Tue new nilogy Playhouse
officially talces over the Bnstol
Street theater occupied for
• five years by the Theater Dis-
tri~. but if you're pldJUli.ng to
drop in tonight, be advised
that the event -which ·
includes dinner and a cham-
pagne reception -is $70.
It's the gala kickoff for
Costa Mesa's newest theater
group, an 8-year-old trans-
planted troupe formerly
known as the
THEATER N~gunlaPl 1gue ay-
house. Serend1p1tously, both
the leases of the Theater DIS-
trict and Laguna Niguel
Play house ~xpired at the end
of last year, and neither
could contfuue in its origindl
venue.
"Deathtrap," lrd Levin's
literate mystery Umller, kicks
off the adult port.ion of the
Thlogy's 2000 schedule, a
slate that also includes Neil
Simon's "Fools," Tennessee
Williams' "A Streetcar
Named Des1te" and Maxwell
Anderson's "The Bad Seed.·
Interspersed between the
grown-up offenngs will be
youth theater presentabon5
of "Into the Woods1" "Char-
lie and the Chocolate Facto-
ry," ~Little Shop of Horrors"
and "A Winrue-the-Pooh
Chnstmas Tail. "
Artistic dlrector Alicia But-
ler is staging "Deathtrap,"
which features James Newell
as the murderous older play-
wright, James Mulligan as
his precoaous student,
Denise Ducloux-Brink as
Newell's fragile wife, Mina
Kedar as the ne1ghbonng
psycluc and James Manley
G reen as the older play-
wright's attorney.
Pe rformances will be given
Thursdays through Saturdays
at 8 p.m. and Sundays at 7
p.m. through March 12 at the
remodeled Thlogy Playhouse
in the Lab Anti-Mall, 2930
Bristol St., Costa Mesa.
After tonight, tickets are
$15 and $20, with additional
.AlsoOn
STAGE
'REFERENCES TO SALVADOR
DAU MAKE ME HOT'
South Coast Re pertory pre-
sents J ose Rive ra's play
•References to Salvador Dali
Make Me Hot" through Sun-
day. nckets are $26 to $45.
The playhouse is at 655
Town Center Dnve, Costa
Mesa. For more lnlorrnation,
call (714) 708-5555.
'A VIEW FROM THE BRIDGE'
Newport TI)eatre Arts Cen-
ter presents Arthur Miller's
"A View From the Bndge"
through Sunday. Shows are
tonight through Saturday at
8 p.m ., with a Sunday mati-
nee at 2:30 p.m . Tickets are
$13. The theater is at 2501
Cliff Drive, Newport Beach.
'AU MY SONS'
Borders South Coast Plaza
will host a discussion at 7
p.r,n. today of Arthur Miller's
"All My Sons," which is an
upcoming production at
South Coast Repertory. The
store is at 3333 Bear St., Cos-
ta Mesa. For more mf orma·
tion, call (714) 432-7854.
'TAINTED JUSTICE'
'---OCC presents Don N1gro's
play "Tuinted Justice" March
2 through 5 and 9 through 12.
The play is at 8 p.m. Thurs·
dayi; through Saturdays and
at 2 p.m. Sundays. "Tainted
Justice" tells tho true story of
a sensational murder and trial
that took place in a Nova
Scotia town in 1914. nckets
are $8 to $9. OCC is at 2701
F&M.ew Road, Cost.a Mesa.
For more information, call
(714) 432-5880.
'THE BEAUTY QUEEN Of
LIENANE'
South Cout Repertory will
bolt the Southern California
~of Martin McDon·
agb'1 ecde1med play •The
Beauty Queen o/Leenane"
March 7 through April 9.
11cketa are S2I to 145. The =-· ·· 6501bWn om.. com MeM. ,_men iDfGnDllllaa. call
(11') 708-.SSS5
information dispensed at
(714) 957-3347.
CALLBOARD -A,uclitions for
OCC's springmusical,
• M 1776, • will be held at 7 p.m.
March 7 and 8 in the Drama
Lab Theater on the college
campus, 2701 Fairview Road,
Costd Mesa.
Director Alex Golson will
hedr women's auditions from
7 to 8 p.rn. and men's from 8
to 10 p.m. The cast calls for
25 men and two women. and
all roles m the production are
open.
"1776 • is the musical ver-
sion of the birth of our nation,
set m the Continental Con -
gress in Philadelphia with a
cast of characters including
John Adams, Thomas Jeffer-
son, Benjarrun Franklin and
other foundulg fathers.
The show opens May 11
for two weekends m the Dra-
ma Ldb. For more informa-
tion, call (714) 432-5640.
• TOM TrT\JS reviews local theater
for the Daily Pilot His reviews
appear Thursdays and Saturdays.
PlAY: "Riptide, the Squ1d-
fleads and the Princess of
Punctuation"
SCHOOC Newport Elemen-
tary School ·
STORY UNE:·A group of stu-
dents participating in read-
ing club contest discover
their books are my~tenously
disappeanng. They then
embark on a mystical adven-
ture through strange lanWi
This is an onginal play thdt
references more than 40
faroiiiar children's stories.
CAST: Ensemble
DIRECTOR: Robin Momson
ASSISTANT DIRECTOR:
Deborah Garrett
WHERE: Newport Elemen-
tary School Audttonum,
1327 W Balboa Blvd., New-
port Beach
WHEN: 7:30 p.m. Fnddy dnd
Saturday, 3 p.m Sunday
HOWMUCH:$5
PHONE: (949) 650-0367
We Rent Horses
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714•848•9695
18381 Coldenwest St., H.B, email: HCPEC@aol.com
MEDITERRANEAN CUISINE
Food from the oeautiful
Coastal Riviera of ltalyl
Corrado Gfanortl, formerly executive
chef at Tutto Mare of Newport Beach .
is now welcoming you to CORRADO at
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~
Tapas • Pasta • Paella
Seafood Italian Specialities
Grazle Miiiet
(949) 252-9396
I 000 Brtstol North ~ Birch &.. Jamboree)
New Beacfi, CA 92660
C ABLE CA PRI COL L ECT I O '
· .. DAVID YURMAN •
TRADITIONAL
TAYA r.A<:.>1 J8A I OAi.'f I'll.OT
Brandijo Kistler, 9, a fourth-grader at Newport Elementary School, sings during
r ehearsal of the school's upcoming play.
Huge Savings
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Al4 Thur5doy, February 24, 2000 DATEBOOK Doily Pilot
Feel like one of the family at Bistro le Crill on
8y Ste~n Santacroce
0 ne of the charms of
traveling through
Europc>an countries
like France or Italy is wander-
mg through some small vil-
la9c and stopping off <tt one
of the local bii.troo; or tratto-
rias that dot the countryside.
These arE> usudlly small,
family-nm places lhat fea-
ture simple, rustic fare, mak-
ing the best of the fresh,
local ingr~dients. The food
D• • ·tends to 1n1n1 be hearti-REV EW ~~~1:~/n
the fanci-
er Michelin Guide establish-
ments, and will often feature
wild game or fowl caught by
local hunters It's harder to
find this type of restaurant
here m the Uruted Stat~.
what with our penchant for
chains and fo:lst food.
So I was plcas<lntly sur-
prised when I WdS invited to
a wine-tasting dJnner a few
weeks ago dt B1stro le Cril·
Ion in Newport's Easlblu!f
Center. Once inside, au ves-
tiges of OranQe County sub-
urbia sl!p away as Dlego
Ostosclu, the dmmated own-
er, seats his guests m the
small dining room.
Diego, who is JtaUan,
manages the dining area like
a maestro conducting a sym-
phony, inJecbng passion over
his extenSive wipe list, and
excitement over the
evening's dishes being pre·
pared in the kitchen by his
wife, Chantal.
The setting is dark and
mtimate, without being
sedate. Mustard-colored
walls create ~ wann atmos-
phe re that's punctuated by a
candle at each table seated
in one of those old-fashioned
candleholders heroines used
to carry when dunbing up
and down staircases in
haunted houses.
Provencal CUISine has at
its heart the farms, fields and
streams of the rustic region
in southern France. Chantal
was trained in Paris, but her
roots are in the AVJgnon
region of Provence, where
she grew up in the town or
Crillon, whose name the
restaurant bears.
And whtle Provencal
cooking seems to be the cui-
sine de jour in many newer,
trendy restaurants, th.e food
here resists some of the nou-
velle ·affectations, focusing
instead on some of the more
classic dishes that are the
foundation of good French
cooking.
For example, among the
appetizers one evening was
a plate of three· terrines
($15.50) -one made with
pheasant, one with duck,
and one with pork. Each of
the homemade slices had a
unique flavor and texture:
the pheasant was coarse to
the pomt of being chunky,
while the pork temne had a
~ ~ ~ I Elegant Dining • Complete Bar • Sushi To Go I ~
Lunch M-F, 11:30 • 2 p.m. •Dinner M-S, 5-10 p.m. •Closed Sunday ~
2675 Irvine Ave. • Costa Mesa Pl
949 645-5518. 949 645-5519 iS
('
FYI
BISTRO LE CRILLON
• WHERE: 2523
Eastbluff Drive,
Newport Beach
• WHEN: Lunch,
11 :30 a.m . to 2:30
p.m. Monday
through Saturday;
Dinner, 5:30 to 10
p.m. Sunday
through Thursday,
5 p.m. to mid-
night Friday and
Saturday
•HOW MUCH:
Expensive
• PHONE: (949)
64().2804
two people can easily share
them.
French food is, 6f course,
all the better when accompa-
nied by good French wine
and I was astorushed at the
depth of the wine list here.
Diego is a true connoisseur
and has assembled a list that
on any given night featur~s
350 to 400 bottles, including
many Bordeau.x.s and Bur-
gundies that are hard to find
elsewhere.
Diego is passionate about
the wines on his list and
seems to know all of them
intimately. I like to tell him
what I'm ordering for dinner
and ask lum to pick a wine
for me -I haven't been dis-
appointed yet.
CONRAD LAU I DAl.Y Pit.OT
Chef and co-owner Chantal Berton de Crilllon dis-
plays quail with orange sauce at Bistro le Crillon.
Entree selections, as befit-
ting a Provencal bistro; fea-
ture hearty, country cooking.
This being winter, such as it
is in Southern California,
there are always several
stews on the menu.
smoother, pate like consis-
tency.
Kicking lt up a notch, as ·
another famous chef would
say, is the fois gras ($18.50).
Rich duck livers are
steamed, pressed in cheese-
cloth and then pureed with
some sauteme wine. The
puree is then chilled and
served with toast slices. The
result is a rich, silky spread
wllh an intense but not over-·
powenng flavor. My guest
protested that she didn't like
fois gras: I couldn't get the
~
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l\lh lll\ll\llO\l !IH \!"
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AlTTO • HOMEOWNERS • KEALTfl
40 Years In Business
-~ .A ... ~~-·~·=~ s S-""?~
949-631-7740
441 OJd Newport BML • Newpon Beach
(Near Hoag Hotpital)
·-·-· _ _,,. ---··-· ...... ---·--··-· ........
plate away from her once it
was served.
My favorite is the cas-
soulet ($28.50), made here
with duck confit and
Toulouse ~ausages. White·
beans are simmered with
seasonings and laced with
shredded bits or the confit,
and large chunks of the mild
sausage that is imported
from France. The result is
pure comfort food -satisfy-
ing and full of rich, earthy
flavor. It's the perlect dish to
go with the rainy weather
we've been having.
Another classic slqrter are
the mussels Provencal
($15.50). Chantal uses
plump, Canadian mussels,
which are creamier and'
milder tasting than the more
common New Zealand van-
ety. Here they're served in a
white wine broth thcst
enhances their dehcate'lra-
. vor.
I should point out that the
portions of most of the hrst
courses are qwte generous; Quail a l'orange ($28.50)
~ $,~a:~ ~YAne ~~a,;
Gr pen n
\n F Ion Is la nd
l
snoea .0.-.~andb~:" Le:~~rt~=;~ch~
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____________ _.
517•.:r:.<::r'*' (949) 719-1758 .. .._ ............ .
'I t I, •. fl I I fl .. t ,} q'
by Arthur Miller
,.
FEBRUARY 25 -APRIL 1
FINAL LOW-PRICED
PREVIEW TONIGHTI
A fresh new staging of Arthur Miller's
first Broadway hit!
~ct in a peaceful backyard during the prospcriry
boom chat followed World War II, it's a time much
like today.
There, a story unfolds chat will hold the audience
in its grasp, a masterpiece that resounds with
astonishing relevancy and proves once again char
Arthur Miller is America's greatest living playwright.
UONORAR' PROO\!( FR
AM ERJCAN AllU.INF.S
H<>NOMRYA..\S<ll IAll r11noun1u
• lll>f.UTY MTIO'IA111llt l"l\UllANC'J (OMrANY.
tML IJ.X t OIU'Ollr\llON
Mll>IA PA!t'™l:A!;
ONLYMIOT
ICKGON I~ I
MARCH 10 -
APRIL9
Low-priced previews
March 7 -9
A domestic brew spiked
with Irish humor and
cat-gripping sU$pen'ic,
thi!> first play by a
phenomenal young writer
brought aurucnco ro
c.htir fc:cr from Galway
to Broadway.
by Manin McDonagh
•
is al.Jo a good choice. Here,
two of the tiny buds are .
roasted and served with a r
tart orange sauce that adds a
nice citrus accf'nt without
being cloymg or overly
sweet. The birds are served
with two purees, one fla-
yored with celery and the
other with leeks. Both add
unique flavor to complement
the flavor of the quail, which
is similar to the dark meat of
a chicken.
U you're feeling a bit more
adventurous, try the medal-
lions of venison (28.50). Veni-
son can be tough and stnngy u not cooked properly. Here
it's done perfectly, seared to .
just the right degree of done-
ness and served with a con-
centrated red wine reduction
flavored with JWliper berries.
The pungent bemes, which
are the main llavonng in gin,
add a flavor that contrasts
nicely with the lean, clean
flavor of the deer meat.
Desserts include a classic
crepes suzette ($1 5/person, •
two-person minimum), ·
named tableside. The crepes
are made to order and
require a 45-minute lead
time, but are worth the plan-
ning.
Bistro le CrUlon is a
charming restaurant serving
excellent Provencal cuisine.
The atmosphere one feels
here is generated as much
from Diego and·Chantal as
from the decor or lighting.
It's a family place, and you'll
feel like one of the family
after the first visit.
• STEPHEN SANTACROCE's din·
ing reviews appear every other
Thursday.
~1aning fcbruary hr
Open 7 a.m.
Breakfast
To Go!
C 2}>puccino. Moch.u.
La11M and mort' ..
WHY PAY
DEPT STORE
PRICES?
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COMMUNITY .•
· QuestlonOf
1llE DAY HowTo · • .:
REKJlm
Daily Pilot
More
thoughts
.for, against
Greenlight
T ony Dodero agonizes (Edltor's
Notebook, Jan. 31) over what to .
call Greenlight and be semantically
correct. "No Growth?" "Planned
Growth?" "Slow Growth?"
Greenllght lets the citizens decide the
rate of growth, so in giving Greenlight a
label you are making a judgment about
the citizens, not about Greenlight.
Curiously, the "slow growth" label is
used even by the City Council, whose.
job is to represent the otizens. U they
recognize that we want slow growth,
and their job is to represent us, why do
they object to a measure that helps them
do their 1ob?
If Greenllgbt passes, the City Council
will still have the chore of studymg the
environ.mental, fiscal, and traffic reports.
They will still hold public heanngs, modl-
fy the proposals, and
deodewhtch FEEDBACK changes, if any, are
best for the cty.
l..tke a boss review-
ing an engineer's idea for a new product,
the citizens will then have the chance to
review the proposed changes and weigh
the pros and cons. The council will -put its
evidence on the table, and the citizens
will make the final decision .-bout the
kind of city they want to live m.
The label to describe Uus process is
"wise growth."
ALLAN BEEK
Newport Beach
Like Diogenes, Mayor John Noyes ...
searches for honesty, while another vehe-
mently opposed the councilman's guds
for battle against what he calls the
"pathetic" initiative ("Pacific Life pulls
plan for expansion·," Feb. 12). Apparent-
ly, both will rely on a city-contracted con-
sultant's forthcommg $12,000 report,
which will analyze Greenllght's "Protec-
tion from 1\'affic Density Jrutiative," a
petition signed by 10,000 of us residents.
However, if Bob Burnham, Newport
Beach city attorney, is to be believed,
neither the philosopher.nor the student
of Jame~ Carvell will find his resource in
that report, inasmuch as it will have little
credibility.
The reason is this. ln a brief before the
Regional Water Quality Control Board, in
the matter of the proposed abuse of the
Upper Newport Bay Ecological Reserve
t.. by the Irvine Ranch Water District, Burn-
ham, el al, expressed what we all know
in our hearts about the objectivity of con-
sultants. Burnham wrote this about other-
wise admittedly well-qualilied profession-
als: •Consultants are typically not
retained to prepare environmental docu-
mentation that results in dental of their
client's project."
So much for credibility and sharp
swords.
Now, for the interested bargain-seek-
ers, may I refer you to the Greenlight
Web site, where you can become familiar
with Greenligbt's particular bias at no
charge. The Web site is www.newport-
green.llg.t,t.com
TOM HYANS
Newport Beach
Although supporters of the Green.light
initiative claim that Greenllght is aimed
at slowing growth rather than stopping
growth, the initiative -if passed -
would actually stop growth.
There is no way that any representa-
tive number of voters will drive to the
polls to vote yes for a new office building,
apartment project, retail center, resfden-
ti.al neighborhood or any other develop-
ment. So, no more development m New-
port Beach.
Since Greehlight backers feel that the
voters, rather than the elected representa-
tives, should deddo on any major new
development to be consistent, these back·
en should support the anti-El Toro a.lrport
initiative, wbkh would require a two·
thirds vote of the people before any air·
port, Jail or dump is pennltted in any area
ot Orange CoWlty.
Certainly, those genuinely concerned
about future developmen t in Newport
Beec:b bave to abate their concern with
r.ldeetl ol South County duet who are
~y concerned about development
Of a m ultibillion-dollar air termlnal ln the
llikllt of tbelr dtiee, drawing traftlc not OldJ from IUITOUDdUlg dtiel in Orange
Oliaty, but fNm IAI Angil•, Sen
Q6llo, ltNJIMl9 and Sen a.nanliDO
C!OllDtielM..U.
\ .
MMIWtA. .... c.....a ......
What do you think of the The Daily Pilot wekomes kitten on'™* • concerning Newport Beach and CosUI Mew.
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Thursday, Febrvory 24, 2000 AIS
EDITORIAL •I
School safety .is · No.·· 1 p:t;iority
. .
A nyone who has ever driven
up Newport Coast Drive .J. · _
knows that it's not pedestri-~
an friendly. @ ... ~ ... _..----
Especially during morning rush
hours, when thousands of commuters
are speeding down the hill to wprk.
And especially when the pedestrians
are pint-sized children trying to cross
the busy, six-lane road en route to ele-
mentary school.
The NeWport Coast Elementary
School, now under construction, will sit
on the comer of Newport Coast Drive
and Park Ridge Road. The speed limit
on Newport Coast Drive is 60 mph,
·and a 40-mph limit is being sought for
Park' Ridge Road, which has a steep
incline.
School sites are notorious for traffic
problems -an inevitable conse-
quence to mixing hurried motorists
with oblivious children on foot. There
have been a few accidents and count-
less near-misses in .the Newport-Mesa
district on two-lam( residential streets
NEWPORT Co"~.,. E.LEMEN1'ARY StMOOL!
PosSlSLE AL1'ERNA1'•VE To FooTSR,D<":>E DEBATE?
such as Balboa Boulevard near New-ll!.USTRATION BY ERIC HUTCHISON
port Elementary and Eastbluff Drive
near Corona del Mar High School.
Imagine the increased risk on a road
three times as big with three tiµles as
two pedestrian bridges, wtuch some
estimate could cost about $1 million
each, connecting the school with the
other side of the road.
and the county -needs to take seri-
ously. Officials may think they simply
can do a traffic study and hold a cou-
ple meetings and the problem will go
away. . · many cars roaring by at a much higher
rate of speed.
No child should have to cross !iUch a
treacherous intersection on their way
to school.
Parents, "scared to death that some
little first-grader is going to get mowed
down," have organized themselves
and have already begun pleading with
county and Irvine Co. officials to build
Concerned parents have also asked
th.at the speed limits be lowered, cross-
ing guards be hired and blinking
warning lights be installed along the
streets. But the footbridges are by far
the parents' highest priority. They see
it as the only way to ensure the ulti-
mate safety of their children.
But the Newport Coast parents have
made it abundantly clear that won't
happen -even threaterung to send
their children elsewhere if the safety
measures aren't taken.
'
And that is a cause that everyone
involved -school district, Irvine Co. •
We don't blame them.
There must be a way to make those
footbndges a reality.
A child's life ma.Y be at stake.
Readers warn of Measure F 's dangers
t
AT ISSUE: The initiativ~ on
t he March 7 ballot would
require a two-t hirds public
vote to approve any new
airports, jails or hazardous
waste landfills.
0 range County voters, as
they contemplate Measure
F (the so-called Safe and
Healthy Communities Initiative)
on the March 7 ballot, should
understand one thing. H Measure
F passes, the former El Toro
Marine Corps AH Station is histo-
ry. When its runways are plowed
under, they are gone forever.
This means that in the future,
when rur travel demand has
grown to the point that air travel
reserva-Readers tions have
RESPOND ~::~0
advance,
and the freeways are so congested
-as they are even now during
certain hours of the day -you
won't even be able to get to some
regional airports, and El Toro will
not be there to meet county needs.
1llis means that m the future,
when our country is militarily
involved on some foreign shore,
El Toro will not be there, as it
has so many times in the past,
for troops and material going to
and from the combat zone.
This means that m the future,
when Orange County is hit, u it
surely will be, by some North·
ridge-like earthquake, El Toro
Will not be there to evacuate the :!t:;:c' and receive incoming
So, citizens of Orange Coun-
ty, think of the future. Vote no
on Measure F. Urge all your
friends to vote no on Measure F.
NORM EWERS
Irvine
It is astounding how stupid the
Measure F proponents think the
voters of Orange County are. They
author and back a ballot irutiabve
to require a minimum two-Uurds
of the voters to approve a jail, an
airport or a ha7.ardous waste land-
fill. When was the last time a haz-
ardous waste landfill was estab-
lished m Orange County?
Do the authors of this truba·
tive really think a hazardous
waste landfill 1D1ght be estab-
lished in Orange County? Of
course not. Then why attach it to
their initiative? To deceive and
scare the voters. What is the real
issue of their initiative? The air·
port at El Toro. Why don't they
just put the real issue on the bal-
lot and let us vote for or against
an airport? Oh yeah, we already
did that twice with Measure A
and Measure Sand both Umes
the voters of Orange County
supported the conversion of El
Toro to an airp<>rt.
Not only that. the county super-
visors voted for a commercial au·
port at El Thro. So, not liking the
results ot these votes, they l'e50rt to
deception and disguic;e theu-
attempt to block the airport as an
effort to protect us from toxic
waste beblg dumped Ill our neigh·
borboods. Don't k!t one third of the
county voters decide Orange
Coonty'1 futwe, vote no on F.
JEFF GRANT
C01t4 Mesa
I dffi amazed by the volu.mes
of false mformdllon that have
been tossed about by opponents
of the El Toro airport. Measure F
as their banners so aptly state, is
to "Stop L1e Allport," and noth-
mg else Although the airport
opponents have thrown m some
red hemngs such dS jdils and
"hazardous waste" facilibes, the
sole true obJCCllve of Measure F
IS to stop the airport that the oti-
zens of Orange County approved
in two pnor elecbons.
The claims made in the ballot
that the intent of Measure F is to
place the "auport deosion • in
the hd.llds of the public lS false. U
true democracy were contem-
plated, why the need for a two-
third vote instead of a simple
maJonty? The fact lS that the pro-
ponents know that two thirds of
the county's voters can't agree
aboutanythmg.lndecd,Ican
state as a lawyer that the process
contemplated by Measure F is a
lengthy unworkable menagerie
of red tape The bottom line is
thdt Orange County hds no other
land available to build an airport
that can meet its air travel needs.
Such needs are largely generat-
ed by Aliso Viejo, Irvine and oth-
er Cltics located m South County.
Measure F will truly be Orange
County's hand and bnng our
present econonuc growth to a
era bing halt.
CAMERON JOUY
Newport Beach
Scen4110 F: The year is 2006,
just six years after passage of
MeMUre F. The former El Toro
Ma(Ul base 1 no longer an air-
port site. It is rompl tely devel-
oped with homes, business struc-
tures cind green space. The lid
has been removed from John
Wayne fughts for a yeari fughts
have more than doubled and
there is no end m sight. The
need for additional all' service
has become UTeSlSbble and John
Wayne expansion is the obvious
and only means
Measure Z is placed on the
next ballot, IS promoted by the
same folks that gave us Measure
F, and is passed Measure Z says
"Zounds! We made a mistake
wtth Measure F Measure F must
be voided m order to get John '
Wayne expanded to fwther
serve the good pe-0ple or Orange
County." Exit stage left enb.ce
communities around John
Wayne. Huge areas are con-
demned and some are no longer
habitable. Families are driven
out, baVUlg been legally
depnvcd of their home .
Take pride, South County.
BOB BLACK
Newpdrt Beach
The answer to the question
posed m your editorial lS quite
simple ("ls what's bad for the
county bad for us?• Feb. 17).
Measure F, if paued, will allow
the nunonty to doode lSSU •
This IS not what the founding
fathers had m mind and is totally
unacceptable to anyone who
cherishes his or her freedom. I
am ambivalent about El Toro but
will certainly oppose Measure F
and hope that oth rs wW 1ee this
d feet.
..
. .
A16 Thursday. February 24, 2000
• Se?id AfTlll MOUllS items to the
Daily Pilot. 330 W Bay St., Cost.I
Mejl 92627; fax thel'Q to (949) 646-
4110; °'call (949) 764-4t330. Acom·
plete llst1n~ can be found at
www.d•ilyp1lot com.
MUSIC
'MANON LESCAU'r
Operd Pacific presents Pucci-i ni's "Manon L~caut•
· through Sunday at the
Orange County Performing
After
HOURS
Arts Cen-
ter. Perfor-
mances
are at 7:30
p.m. today
and Satur-
day and at 2 p.m. Sunday.
nckets are $32 to $107. The
Center is at 600 Town Center
Dnve, Costa Mesd. For more
information, call (800) 34-
0PERA.
.,
CAROL MARTINI
mcluding blues, Jazz and
more OCC 1s at 2701
Fairview Road, Costa Mesa.
Tickets are $24. For more
infonnation,call(714)432-
5880.
THE HARRY JAMES
ORCHESTRA
OCC presents the Harry
James Orchestra at 4 p .m.
Sunday in an evening of
SWU1g and big band music.
Tickets are $21 to $27. OCC
is at 2701 Fairview Road,
Costa Mesa. For more infor-
mation, ca.ij (714) 432-5880.
THE ALLEY CATS
Borders Books, Music & Cafe
presents The Alley Cats, an
a cappella doo-wop group
that will performs rock hits
from the ·sos at 7 p.m. Sun-
day. Borders is at 3333 Bear
St., Costa Mesa.
'THE PLANETS'
I t DA1EBOOK
HAID IOCI WELCOMES not11
Daily Pilot
KINGSTON TRIO
The Kingston nto will
appe rat 4 pm. March 5 at
Orange Coast College's
Robert B. Moore Theotre.
nckets are $25 to $33. OCC
is at 2701 Fairview Road,
Costa Mesa. For more mfor-
mation, call (714) 432-5880.
SIMCHAFEST II
The Jewish Community
Center of Ordnge County
will host SimchaFE'st II, a
festival of Jewish music and
humor, from 6 to 11 p.m.
March 11. The event will
feature voca'list Nancy Un-
der, Colle musician Osi
Barnes & Noble Metro Point
hosts Carol Martiru, acoustic
guitarist, from 7 to 9 p.m.
today. The store Js at 901 B
South Coast Drive, Suite 150,
Costa Mesa. For more infor-
mation, call (714) 444-0226.
Pacific Symphony Orchestra
presents Holst's famous work
"The Planets" at 8 p .m .
March 1 and 2 at the Orange
County Performing Arts
Center. Tickets are $10 to
$50. The Center is al 600
Town Center Drive, Costa
Mesa. For more informdtion,
Blues band Stone will play at the Hard Rock Cafe at 10 p.m. Friday. The act was
Rock City News magazine's Best Blues Rock Band of 1998. The Hard Rock Cafe ls
at 451 Newport Center Drive, Newpo~ Beach. Cover charge ls SS. Por more
tnformatton, call (949) 640-8844.
Sladek, Borscht Belt come-
dian Archie Barkan and the
Orange County Klezmers.
Tickets are $10 for center
members, $14 for nonmem-
bers and $16 at the door.·
The center 1s at 250 Edst
Baker St., Costa Mesa. For
more mformation, call (714) ..
755-0340.
PAO FIC CHORALE
Pacific Chorale presents a
concert at 7 p.m. March 12 at
the Orange County Perform-
ing Arts Center. featuring
work by Ravel, Durufle, Fau-
re, and the worl9 premiere of
a piece by Lili Boulanger.
Tickets are $14 to $48. The
Center 1s at 600 To:wn Center
Drive, Costa Mesa. For more
information. call (714) 740-
7878.
BARBERSHOP CHORUS
Barbershop chorus The Mas-
ters of Harmony will perlorm
at OCC at 8 p.m. Saturday.
The program features a
range of American mu.sic,
. call (714) 740-7878.
GLEN CAMPBELL
Glen C&mpbell comes to the
Orange County Performing
Arts Center at 8 p .m. March
3-4. Tickets to see the
-Rhinestone Cowboy" are
$14 to $54. The Center is at
600 Town Center Drive, Cos-
ta Mesa. For more informa-
tion, call (714) 740-7878.
GHOSTBUSTERS
Pacific Symphony Orches-
tra's Mervyn's Musical
Mornings Family Series
presents a program of
spooky material at 10 and
11:30 a.m. March 4, includ-
ll GOOD 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 St1x
• Ralph's Market
• Starbucks
•Champagne
• Di Marie Interior~
• Draper's & Damon's
• Kayaks Weekend Wear
• Matthew-Taylor's
1>1 /\..//\.
• Anthony's Shoe Repair
• Bank of Ameri ca
• Blue Mambo Beauty Supply
;
·• California Federal Bank
• Crown Ace Hardware
• Fast Frame
• Images Hallmark
• Mailboxes ftc.
• Robert & Taylor Salon
• Sav-o,n Drug Store
• • .Shape Up Newport
• Shell Oil
• Westcliff Plaza Cleaners
Ralph'• Martcet • Sav-on Drup • 17th Street at Irvine A~e. -N~ Beach
ing Humperdinck's "Hansel
a nd G retel," Wagner's
"Lohengrin" and Liszt's
"Mephisto Waltz." The pro-
gram is $13 for adults, $11
for children under 14. The
Cente r is at 600 Town Cen-
ter Drive, Costa Mesa. For
more information, call (714) ·
740-7878.
llHPERGO
for only
$5.99 Sq. Ft.
ln'\l.illt•d
s499oo
UPT03MOS ~re""' Based on so sq. yd. Padding & Installation Included
Shop l ls l..asl ... You'JI B~ (;Jad You Did!
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~ (949) 722-9642
Lie# 64~9-4'""9-1 _....v.,--,, U\> on the 11<ut> at www ca~t~Pol net lit ••
CRUISE THE GREEK
ISLES WITH TREND
HOUSE.
A special cruise tour for those
interested in interior design ,
architecture, history ... and
SHOPPING.
May 29 I 2000 13 day1 LAX·
l1tanbul·Rome·LAX ·
nd three days in exotic Istanbul
the designers from Newport's
tony TREND HOUSE ... see the
monuments and ~ for the region's finest carpets.
Boord Orient Lines' elegant ~ CROWN ODYSSEY Ragship
for o seven night cruiMt of the Greek Islands, including o visit
to the fabulous ruins of the Romon
city of Ephesus. Noted designer
JON JAHR will offer insight into this
and other sites as ~ savor the
climate Qnd cuisine of the Aegean.
Afternoon tao on shipboard will
feature Q&A discussions with the
Trend House teom ••• brlng your
~otatMg problems to the
experts a1 you ICIH on to Rome.
Save hundredr. off published rater. while enjoying a like·
minded group of art and history buffs .
Contact Margaret at UDO TRAVEL for detail1
949.673.3310
STEVEN MI CHAELS'
TltiND i]·HOUSE
3406 VIA LIDO, NEWPORT BEACH • (949) 723-5335
r
'
Palmer has some business
to attend to, then.he'll
arrive in town for the
Toshiba Senior Classic.
A s long as fans keep asking
for the King, he'll try to
accommodate them.
And even if his scores aren't
always under par, Arnold Palmer is
an ace for the ages in the eyes or
his adoring rans.
The 70-year-old legend, who
will make his debut in the Toshiba
Senior Classic next week at
Newport Beach Country Club,
leaves today for the West Coast
from lus office at the Bay Hill Club
m Orlando, Fla.
Belore Amie brings his arnw to
Newport Beach for the Senior PGA
Tour stop, he'll inspect two golf
courses his design and develop-
ment company is currently working
on in Las
Vegas and
Salt Lake
City.
Then,
early next ·
week,
Palmer will
spend some
time at Qis
new home
at the nadi-
tion Goll
Club in La
Quinta,
which be
Richard Dunn
GOLF
designed, before arriving here.
So, while the timing is good for
this year's Toshiba Classic, it isn't.
the sole reason for his first
appearance in the six-year-old
tournament, Palmer's longtime
administrative assistant, Doc Giffin,
said Wednesday from Latrobe, Pa.
"One of the reasons why he's
coming to Newport Beach is so he
HIGH SCHOOL GIRLS BASKITBAlL ·
Mustangs bow
out in quarters
• Second-seeded Bishop
Montgomery breaks CIF
Division Ill-AA contest
open in the second half
for a 62-31 triumph.
Bany Faulkner
DAILY PILOT
COSTA MESA -Costa Mesa
High 91.flS basketball coach Jim
Weeks bas seen second-seeded
Bishop Montgomery's last two
playoff games, including
Wednesday's 62-31 road trounc-
ing of his Mustangs in a CIP
Southern Section Division In-AA
quarterfinal.
Quote Of
THE DAY
"1-* wfd b No. 1 seed {JJenaiy) has, t.mM I w don'I
see 1111tunllIt,.._,biq1111 beler fai (Mor;pnm y) _ •
Jim Weeks, Costa Mesa girls hoops coach
. .
~.!-.
OPIN R ...
... Feb. 24. hcmree
PAUL HAHN
Sports Editor Roger Carlson • 949-.5744223 • Thursday, February 24, 2090 BJ •
can spend more tim'e in Palm
Spnngs," Gillin said. "He spent
almost a month there in January ...
he felt at was a .good place to go
alter Mrs. (Winrue) Palmer passed
· away (on Nov. 30). He felt he could
get away from things at Latrobe
(lus hometown) and Bay Hill (lus
longtime winter home)."
Ip lus career, Palmer has also
had tremendous success m
Southern Chlifornia, winrunSJ bve
b.mes at the Bob Hope Classic 10
the desert, three times in Los
Angeles and twice in San Diego.
·He does well in Southern
Callf omia, and he has a lot of
friends in Palm Springs, and a lot of
people in the Newport Beach area
are also from there," Giffin said. •A
lot of his friends have been urging
him for years to play (in the. Toshi·
ba Classic), and this year an
opportunity presented itseU more
so than in the past, date-wise and
ot}\erwise."
· "A lot of his friends have
been urging him for years
to play (in the Toshiba
Classic), and this year an
opportunity presented
itself more so than Jn the
past, datewise, and
otherwise ... "
Doc Giffin
Administrative assistant
In previous years, the Toshiba
was a week before the PGA Tour's
Bay Hill Invitational, wtuch Palmer,
perhaps the most famoul\ player in
golf history, hosts at his club.
Palmer committed to the Toshi'ba
event two weeks ago, creating a
frenzy among tournament officials.
•He 1ust loves to play so much,•
GJ.lfin said, ·1 don't know when
he'll flnally dt>CJde to stop. People
love to watch hiin pldy, so he plays,
even though at grinds on lum
because of tu.s andbility to score
better But people keep saying,
"Don't qwt.' dlld that's an influence
on tum to keep lum 9010g. •
Giffin, a former PGA Tour press
secretary, ha!. worked for Palmer
smce 1966.
The owner of 92 victories
worldWJde, Palmer has captured
eight major champaonstups rn lu.s
career: four Masters titles, two
Bnl.lsh Opens, one U.S Open and
one U.S. Amateur (1 954), the
springboard to his professional
fame.
SEE GOLF PAGE 83
· TAYA ~HUBA I DAILY PILOT
Orange Lutheran's Brett Ziegler (19) tries to move 1n on Estanda's Jorge Lopez, who has the ball under control
Eagles stay afloat, 5-2
• Despite sloppy conditions,
Estancia disposes of Orange
Lutheran; will square off with
Santa Ynez in quarterfinals.
Tony Altobelli
DAILY PILOT
ORANGE -With bodies slip-
pmg and shchng dunng Wednes-
day's CIF Southern Section Division
IV boys soccer playoff contest,
Estancia High's Esaul Mendoza
looked right at home.
Despite numerous mud puddles
big enough for some Eagles' players
to swim in, Mendoza scored a hat
s c
tnck, helping the Eagles to a 5-2
wm against host Orange Lutheran,
leaving the Lancers, well, high and
dry.
"He's so fast and be is able to
keep lus bdlance so well out there,·
Eagles' Coach Steve Crenshaw
said. •with everyone else sltding
and falling all over the place, Esau!
was ctble to keep 1t together and get
the job done."
The win moves the No. 2-seeded
Eagles mto the qu(lrterfinals where
they will take on Santa Ynez Friday
at 3 p.m. at a site to be determined
by a coin fbp. The Pirates advanced
to the quarters with a 3-2 overtime
win over Monrovid
Was Cren!>haw nervous about
the adverse playing concbbons?
·1 was scared to death the whole
game," Crenshaw aid Wlth a
laugh. "I was on the cell phone all
afternoon ask.lng, 'Are we really
gonna play today?' We're such a
touch-pass and speed-onented
club, today's weather was not ideal
for our style."
Despite an early steady down-
pour, Estancia (17·1·1) used its
explosive offense early a Mendoza,
off a pas!> from hvmg Islas, fought
SEE ESTANCIA PAGE 82
And there's one pressing con-
cern he wanted to get off his
chest after his team, which has
reached at least the quarterfinals
the last three seasons, finished up
18-11.
•1 wonder what the No. 1 seed
(Alemany) has, because I swe
don't see any team in this division
being any better than (the
Kmghts), • Weeks said.
CONRAD LAU I DAILY PllOT
Mesa's LeJgh Manhall defends:
the period, just 1-of-10 shooting
for Mesa from the field, a.22-pomt
deficit at the end of three quarters
and complete and utter frustra-
tion.
DAILY PILOT HIGH SCHOOL ATHLETE OF THE .WEEK
It would be hard to argue after
the visitors (23·3) held the Mus-
tangs to one fleld goal in both the
second and thiid quarters, forced
20 second-half turnovers (28
overall) and shot nearly 56% from
the field after halftime (15 of 27)
to tum a 27-18 iriterrn1sston lead
into a lopsided lost cause.
·1 thought we played a real
good fint half," said Weeks, who
had a well-conceived plan of
attack against the vilitors' 1-2-2
zone.
Mela, using a high post to dish
to perimeter shooters, got three·
point buketa frOm Leigh Mar-
lhall, Nancy Hataulhl, and Chris·
tine Caron, u well u an lB·foot·
er from Jenny Earnest, to main·
tain ltrildnO distance.
But the Dtl Rey Leeque co-
cht..,...,., wbo bad both a
blilgllt ad qmctme. advant.ege,
•n'nsbed their atblMldlm ln •
............ ~ to ltalt the
lblrdqums.
1'be Nlult WU 12 tumoftn In
I latsushi, a 5-foot-5 point
guard, bore the brunt of the
Knight pressure, as 5-10 fresh-
man Noelle Quinn shuffled and
swatted at Hatsusbi's dribble,
forcing her to expend senous
energy just to start any Mesa
offensive set.
"Once they showed they had
the~ to guard us, as well
as all that size, we knew it was
going to be tough," Weeki said.
The Mustangs, however, hung
tough, battling to the finllb, even
aa Wee.ks substituted, one-by·
one, for the players who keyed a
solid campaign.
senion Autumn Smith (seven
points, ftve rebounds and one
block, which 41.lowed her to
match her ICbool llngl• ••IOll
record o( 113 ... IMt year) IDd
Jelmy ear.-( .... ,... ud
thlM bo91di) got .......,
hugs froai .... c.cti ...... ..,
eutecl, for tbe final Ume. tn ...
'
• C?Sta Mesa High center
cleans up on both ends
of the basketball floor,
but she never talks trash.
l8'"ry Feutknet'
0MY Pl.OT
T ho,e With commenswate
shot·blocking lkWI ~,,.
been known to acmntuate
tbeit rejedio61 by grunting,
growtlng. wegginf a cautionary
ala ftnget or tbl-.V tbllU' .... In moCk diMppftwal o( tbe .... ~.~
ICDltnga.....,..
M AuluiilD 9mMb. CaMa
Miii Hllib'* &-foal ...... cmli9r.
SllAUNMN
...
_B_2 _Th_ur_tdo~r~:F~ebrvo.:....;..;.~~~2'~·~2000:.;.:.. ________________________ ~~J>()JrfS _____ ...._. __________________________ ~--Da~i~-r~il.;..;.a
A T, k • h ·b COLUGE IASlmALL
J. ur -IS . oot . lions chew up Christian Heritage
•Looking back on days of '42.
C harlie (furk.) Denrus was a
reserve title man for Coach
Wendell Pickens' champion
Newport Harbor High varsity grid
team in HM2. He was a popular chap
with many players and students on
through Im senior year of 1943-44
Dennis had no problem Wlth
Pickens in the football sec:sson of '42.
He was set for a future jump into
college and showed the promise of
becoming-a solid player for Santa
·Ana Junior College.
His only ptoblem after Pickens left
Harbor High to enlist in the Navy for
World War U came after new coach
Les Miller took charge or the '42
football team.
Miller, a native of Kansas. was not
a popular grtd tutor when he first
arrived, according to Pilot sports Hall
of Farner Joe Muniz. Miller would, in
time, become a likable and popular
guy, but not in the beginning, Muniz
said.
In addition, Miller's razzle-dazzle
plays and strange system baffled a lot
of players. ln fact, Dennis, who wore
thick glasses, was confused once or
twice and ran the wrong way on a
line play.
Obviously, Miller was appalled by
the mistakes of Denn.ls, who, when
bent over, suddenly felt a boot into
his back side.
Muniz, amused in reflecting back;
said, "One would probably get sued
for something like that today."
However, guard Muniz did not
recall anything like that happening
again.
Two other coac:be 1n the
Sunset League prompted
laughs out of Muniz and
others during the 1944
season. Muniz loved to
observe the sideline antiai of
Santa Ana High Coach Bill
Cole, since he sometimes lost
his temper and flew off the
handle.
where he jomed Pleger'1
staff.
• In time, Pulaski launched
his own fiqJl and 15 now
currenUy set to lay out ster-
ling plans for the old Can-
nery building ln the har-
bor.
ln late fall, after the Navy
drafted Muniz for World War n, the '44 team got a hilarl-
ous round of laughs from the
Orange coach at Davidson
Don Cantrell
SIDELINES
Two grld marks on a
distant list from yesteryear
fail~d so spell things out
correctly for Pul8$ki,.
His scoring marks from
the early days were the
Field. He hated the ram and roared at
Miller, because the Tar coach insisted
they would play in the downpour.
Hence, the Orange coach showed
his tempestuous side by splashing up
and down in the W1de mid puddles
and yelling sour words.
It may be ln the past, but It ls
never too late to express a salute tQ
anyone who helps a high school
..athlete struggling with a future
career.
Rolly Pulaski, a remarkable
quarterback for Newport i.n the
1950-52 era under Al Irwin, once
indicated that he had no ide«J what
would fit him for a career in high
school.
Irwin suspected that, but drew
enough clues to phone local architect
Dick Pleger and see if he could spend
some fair time to help Pulaskl pon-
der on the w.orld of architecture.
Pulaski still speaks fondly of the
late Pleger. He followed his advice,
which took him to USC and
eventually back to Corona del Mar,
. same as quarterback Steve
Bultich, 1971-73, at 102 points.
Pulaslti's passing efficiency should
have been logged at 49.3%,
according to one old record book.
Pulaski is also a Pilot Sports Hall
of Famer.
And It ls fair to add another Hall
of Farner named Eddie Stephens,
Class of '452, and a former running
guard for legendary fullback Harold
Sheflin.
Stephens, whose late mother,
Helen, owned the old yellow cabins
on the Balboa bayside shoreline.
stirred up a cloud of bristling chatter
once with his novel Hone More
Swruner.H
The late Frank Watts got a bang
out of it and thought he would never
hear all the fuss fade away out of the
Balboa Liquor Store where he
worked.
Balboa denizens were trying to
figure out who was who in the book.
What made it funnier was that even if
they didn't know, they would try to fit
a composite on someone.
TAYA KASHUBA I OAA.Y PILOT
Estancia Higb's Luis Rivera moves up field as Orange Lutheran's Erle Dewert (left) and Bryan Bui give chase.
ESTANCIA
CONTINUED FROM B 1
through a pile of Lancers' players and
ripped a shot mto the lower-nght cor-
ner of the net at the filth minute of
play.
Five minutes later, Orange Luther-
an responded when Jon Talmage, off
an outlet pass from Marcos Rojas, was
given a free lock off an Eagles' foul.
Talmage found the upper-left comer
of the goal past the wall of Eagles'
players, tying the score.
"Orange Lutheran played smart in
these conditions by going for the
long, outlet pass," Crenshaw said.
"We're not the best transition defen-
sive team in the whole wor\d and they
were trying to exploit that."
The Lancers' tying goal seemed to
give Estancia a wake-up call as the
Eagles maintained possession for
much of the · first half on Orange
Lutheran's ide of the field.
•Once the ram slopped and the
water started seeping off the field, I
think we got more comfortable out
there,• Crenshaw said ·we JUSt had
to keep applymg the pressure and
eventually, our key players would
find a way to get it done."
Mendoza opened the second half
with a goal similar to his first. In a pile
of Orange Lutheran players. Men-
doza slid a shot into the lower-left cor-
ner of the goal, giving Estancia a 2-1
lead.
Estancia played most of the game
with.out one of its top srupers, Cesar
Terrones. The Eagles' senior was
stranded m Riverside and did not
make it to the game until late in the
second half.
The Eagles, who defeated the
Lancers, 6-0, in the second game of
the season~ missed numerous oppor-
tunities du& to the nasty weather.
Armando Ortiz scored what
appeared to be Estancia's third goal
of the game, but it was disallowed
due to an offsides call.
MThese conditions really limited
what we could do out there," Cren-
shaw said. "We missed some chances
to sea.re out there because of the
ram."
Terrones arrived at the game with
approximately 18 minutes remaining,
giving the Eagles all the hrepower
they would need.
Mendoza finally gave Estancia an
important two-goal cushion with a
goal off a pass from Islas in the 65th
minute, sending many Eagles' play-
ers diving into one of the bigger mud
holes on the field.
Orange Lutheran would not go
away. Before the celebration died
down on the Eagles' side of the field,
Robert Farrington knocked a header
shot past Eagles' goalie Hilario Atrla-
ga. cutting the lead to 3-2.
nmones made the most of his
short time in the game, knocking a
header of bis own past the Lancers'
goalkeeper, giving the Eagles anoth·
er two-goal cushion.
•Most teams have one really good
forward to go to," Crenshaw said.
"We're real fortunate to have two
with Cesar and Esau!."
Islas, already with two dsslsts,
added an insurance goal 1n the 17th
minute when he ripped a shot off a
Lancers' player into· the goal.
It was only the third time all season
that the Eagles had allowed more
than one goal.
On the other side of the spectrum,
1t was the 12th game the Eagles have
scored five or more goals tlus season.
They have outscored the op~ition
this year, 106-11.
•Lee scores 16 in Vanguard women's win:
EL CAJON -Laura Lee
scored 16 points, including four
three-pointers to lead the Van·
guard University women's bas·
ketball team to a 68-46 Golden
State .Athletic Conference win
over host Christian Heritage
Tuesday night.
B~cky Huddle added 13
points, six rebounds and five
assists for the Lions (25·5, 14-3 in
conference), while Rachel Fiske
chipJ)ed in with 12 points.
The Llom held Christian Her·
1tage to 5 of 18 shooting in the
first half and led, 34-22, never
looking back.
The Lions will wrap up the
GSAC schedule with a Satw'day
borne contest against Hope
International at 5;30 p.m.
GO&.DIN RMI ATMU11C cbJ .. Btm
VAMllJN/ID JIMvM:inY A
o-nAN HarfNil 46 I
VangulN'd untv.ntty • Lee 16~
Huddle 13, Fi,ke 12. McKinney 9, ·
Boeke 9. Emde 5, Weidler 2, Seaman 2.
3 pt. goals · Lee 4, Emde 1, Huddle 1.
Fouled out · None.
OwtstiM ttertt.ge • dsneros 11.
Hamllton 8, Stevenson 7, Gray 6,.
Epps 4, Ftlesner 2, Napier 2, Tapija 2,
Zunk 2, Humann 2.
3 pt. goals · Stevenson 1.
Fouled out · None.
Halftime • Vanguard, 34-22.
Vanguard Die;n fall, 77 -65
• Burgess'. 22 not enough in loss to Christian Heritage.
EL CAJON -The visiting
Vanguard University men's bas-
ketball team could not overcome
a hot-shooting Christian Heritage
squad and fell to the Hawks,
77-65, Tuesday night in Golden
State Athletic Conference action.
The Hawks shot 51 % from the
field and 60% from three-point
land, opening up a 42-33 lead in
the first half.
Kemmy Burgess led the Lions
(11-15, 3-11 i.n conference) with
22 points, while John Kohlhaas
added 14.
Rich Reinebacb had 20
points, while Brad Nicholson
chipped in with 18 for Christian
Heritage. ·
COLLEGE BASEBALL
;The Lions will wrap up GSAC
play with a home contest with
Hope International Friday at 7:30
p.m.
Gol.DEN RATE Antl.ETIC CONRRE.NCI
OtlumAN tfotrTAGa 77
VANGUMD UNIVPSITY 65
Vanguard unfv.ntty • Burgess 22,
Kohlhaas 14, Keane 8. Corkey 8,
cablay 5, Curtis 4, U?e 2, Holechek 2.
3 pt. goals · Burgess 2. Corkey 2,
Cablay 1.
Fouled out · None.
Ovistlan Herttllge · Reinebach 20,
Nicholson 18, Lowery 14, Layton 13,
Fellows s. Griffin 4, Warner 2,
Watson 1.
3 pt. goals • Nicholson 6, Lowery 2 .•
Fellows 1.
Fouled out · None.
Halftime -Christian Heritage, 42-33.
lions drop one to Concordia
•Six erroIS costly in 11-3 conference loss to the visiting Eagles.
COSTA MESA -Concordla including a home run and two
University pounded out t 7 hits RBis, and Tom Powell had three
and took' advantage of six errors hits and an RBI for the Eagles.
to win, 11-3. over host Vanguard GOU>EN STATE ATHLETIC CONRltlNCI!
Untversity in Golden State Ath-CoNc.oRotA UMvutsnY 11
letic Conference baseball action VANGU.MO lJNnmtSnY J
Tuesday. Concordia 011 131 013 -11 17 2
Kevin Candelaria went 2 for 4' Vanguard 000 010 101 -3 10 6
with an RBI, while James Dent Stodrton, Marquart (7) and Miranda;
smacked a solo home run for the case. Williams (6), Shaffer (9) and Dodos. w -Stockton. L -case. Lions (1-7, 1-5 in conference). 2B . Broesamle <O. Mcclintic (0.
Jeff Curcio had three RBis, Powell (0. Candelaria (VU).
Derek Patterson had three hits, HR -Patterson (0, Dent (VU).
COMUNITY COLLEGE TENNIS
OCC edges Southwestern, 5-4
• Strong singles play the difference for Pirates.
COSTA MESA -Marcel
Brouwer and Shakti Chemitigan-
ti were double-winners for the
Orange Coast College men's ten-
nis team in Wednesday's 5-4 non-
conference win over visiting
Southwestern.
Brouwer won, 6-0, 6-3, while
Chemitiganti prevailed, 6-4, 6-7~
6-1, in singles competition.
The Pirates' twosome then
teammed up and won, 6-4, 6-2. in
doubles action.
With the win, OCC improves
to 3-t . while Southwestern f8.lls to
2-2.
The Pirates will open Orange
Empire Conference action today
at 2 p.m at home against Irvme
Valley.
NONCONRMNCI
OMNGI CooAsT 5, ~ 4
Singles· Brouwer (OCO def.
Saloman, 6-0, 6-3; Wei (OCO def.
Cecena, 6-4, 6·3; Chemltigantl (OCO def, Parker, 6-4, 6-7, 6-1; Vartanian
(OCO def. Whittman, 6-4, 6-2; Morales
(OCO lost to Tampooso, 4-6, 6-7;
Mlstilno (SW) won by default.
DcM.mlee • Brouwer Chemltigantr
(OCO def. S.loman-Parker, 6-4, 6-2,
Wel-Varunlan (OCO lost to
Cecena·WMtman, 6-3, 6-7, 6-7,
Tamponso-Mishino (SW) won by def.ult.
BENNETT INDUCTED INTO HOOPS HAIL OF FAME
• occ·~ executive director
will be honored at a March
10 luncheon ceremony.
Doug Benn<?tt, executive director
of the Orange C'oast Coll qe
Foundation ond the publlc
addr<•ss announr,•r for nll the
women's baitkl'lbttU hom~ games,
will be inclurtrd into th<> C'alilomin
Community Collpge Women's
Basketball I full or Pam on March 1 o.
Th c r· mony wlll take place
dun.ng a halJ of fam4• lunch.con prior
to the state commuruty coUege
women's basketball toum~ment.
Bennett i belllg honored for h1
•outstanding record of ttch1evemcnt
alld enthuliastic work toward the
advancement di community college
women'• balketball in Califomaa."
Beilnett hat been the •gold n
t
throat• for all home
game:, played by
the Pi.rate ' women
since 1989. f le
chaired the 1995
state women's
tournament, held at
OCC and agam la t
year when tho
tournament was at
ConcorclJa
Univen.it)' in Irvine.
Each ycM,
Benn tt also
personally rund1 n
· scholarship for a
Tony Altobeli
COWGES
graduating JOphomoro on the Lndy
Pirates' squad who l8 tlan r mng to
o four-year ~ollege or un1ver5ity.
Of c:oune, such an honor cltn't go
Without a funny tale or two
11He had a tough time at c:onrtJrdie, •
· Pirates Coach Mike Thornton Mid
with a chuckle. "When you're dolll9
those tournaments, there's a million
things to ~~p track of. Doug tqok
respons1bility on screWing up on
some number calls. He also
acodentally shut the llghli off in the
gym, causing abOut a JO-minute
delay ln the game. I think he'd seen
maybe three C1r four garnet before I
got there and he started helplng me
out.
"But 11eriou.sly. Doug has been
great for our program,• Thornton
added. "He's really a work.aholic,
golng above and beyond bil job
responsibWties. He'• hem a ._
boolter for our group tbrougbout tbe
h:~ and I couldn't be MpP6lr 1or
w .. u oaly tool&, •• ,... ..
~ buttbeOCC--.a ...tld UJ> Win No. I,• Peb .
• With an 8-5 VidOry avs la Diego
Mesa.
That win put the Pirates' overall
record at 1,000-7<44-15, a .573 win-
rung percentage. They are 514-431·5
(.544) all time in conference play.
Former skipper Mike Mayne
(1977·89, '91-92) led the Pirates to
400 of those wiils, while the Pirates' ·
founding father Wendel Pickens
(1949·68) is second with 375 wins.
Within the 1,000 wins Are three
stalf tiUc , three Southern Ca..Womia
titles and 14 conference crowns.
And ln th'ose t ,000 wins and near·
ly t ,800 games played, there has
been ohly ONE no-hitte r in Pirates'
history. That was by Wayne
Coughtry aga.tmt Pullerton in 19.56.
On Priday, Mike Carey nearly
equaled Cougbtry'1 feet. The
' ~hurler totMd a one-htt
1hutout over 'n'euwe VaDey, ~
out ftve, wbUe walldng only one.
..
_Da__.ily...._Pi~lo_t~~~------------~--------------------~~~~----~~~J>(}f{'fS ________________ ~-----------------Th~u~rsday_;.t.;..'-fe_~_oo_ry~2-4~,2-000 ___ B3_
Corona del Mar girls fall in quarterfinals
•Harvard-Westlake
had the inches over
the Sea Kings, 51-27.
loss at Harvard-WesUak(!.
-They had four 6--foot-
ers," CdM Coach Elbert
Davis said. ·we can't match
up with that."
HIGH SCHOOL GIRLS BASl<ETBALL
Joseph Boo
DAILY Ptl.OT
NORTII HOLLYWOOD -
It was a tall order, literally, for
Corona del Mar High's girls
basketball team to beat Har-
vard-Westlake in Wednes-
day's CIF Southern Section
Division Ill-AA quarterfinals.
The No. 3~seeded Wolver-
ines had four players 6-feet
and over and that height
advantage proved to be too
much for the Paofic Coast
League Champion Sea Kings,
who had only one player over
6-0,. CdM's Cinderella sea·
son came to an end in a 51-27
·MESA
CONTINUED FROM 81
closing minutes.
Hatsushi, a junior point
guard in lier third varsity sea-
son, also received plaudits
from her coach, and the
appreciation of the crowd,
when she put the wraps on an
eight-point, six-rebound,
three-assist performance.
Caron, a sophomore, and
Marshall, a Junior. who
rounded out the starting line-
up all sedson, also were
subbed out one at a rune, as
was seruor reserve Julie Hitt.
Senior Pauline Le scored
two points m her swan~song
effort, while Eileen Bello,
called up from the junior var-
Slty for the postseason, scored
her first varsity point.
Tamara Quinn, the only
prominent senior, scored a
game-high 111 _ mcluding a
trio of thre~-pointers, while
Noelle Qumn finished with 15
and 6-3 f~eshman post Lciuren
Ervin added 12 points to her
14 rebOunds.
•1 Uunk we did a great job
this year," Weeks · said. ·we
won our tournament m Decem·
ber. We struggled a little in
league, but we finished it off
with two strong playoff wirlS "
HIGH SOtOOl Gtltl.S
OE OfvtSK>N •AA QUM'TIRFHCAL
8tSHC» MoHTGOllmrt 62
CosTA MESA 31
Score by Quamrs
B Montgomery 19 8 16 19 • 62
Costa Mesa 13 5 3 10 • 31
Bishop Montgomery • T.
Quinn 17, N. Quinn 15, Ervin 12,
Thomas 6, Loera 5, Batalla! 3,
Fifita 2, Warreo 2.
3-pt. goals • T. Quinn 3,
N. Quinn 1.
Fouled out -None.
Technicals ·Thomas 1. eon. Mesa -Hauushl 8,
Earnest 7, Smith 5, Caron 3,
Marshalf 3. Muniz 2, Le 2, Bello 1,
Trejo 0, Hitt 0, Lazos 0, Cooper 0,
Naff 0, Grewal 0.
3-pt. goals · Hauushi 1, Caron 1,
Marshall 1.
The Wolvennes (21-7), the
second-place team in the
Mission League, aqually had
no points in the paint in the
hrst quarter scoring only
eight points.
But CdM {22-6) cOuld not
take advantage, hitting only 2
of 11 field goals and scoring
five points.
It was from the second
quarter on where Harvard-
Westlake's size advantage
showed through and it came
in the form of 6-foot-f guard
L'Tanya Robnett. She scored
13 points in the second quar-
ter alone, 12 on layups. Her
20 points led all scorers.
Harvard-Westlake threat-
ened to run away with the
game early, but Charlene
Quon, who had a team-high
13 points, hit a pair of free
throws to keep them within
23-14 at halftime.
The Sea Kings did not help
themselves, hitting only 7 of
42 field goals. Quon was the
only Sea King with double-
digit scoring, finishing with
13. But they kept the Wolver-
, ines Crom putting together a
killer run.
The longest sconng streak
Harvard-Westlake strung
together was six.
"We played pretty well,~
Davis said. ¥We just couldn't
put the ball m the bdsket.
Whenever you can't score,
you're in big trouble."
The closest Hung to a
knockout punch was Rob-
nett's three-pointer at the
four-minute md.fk of the thud
quarter, which gave Harvard-
Westlake a 32-18 lead. From
that poml on, CdM only
scored nine pomts.
Despite Harvdrd-West-
lake's height advantage,
· Kristin McCoy grabbed eight
rebounds and her seven
points was second highest for
CdM. Carrie Hawkins, who
had three points, Chns Eyre
(two points) and Mi1anou
Pham (two pomts) were the
only other Sea Kings to score
Fooled out· None.
Technicals · None.
CONRAD ~U I OMV PllOT
Costa Mesa's Autumn Smith looks for an open teammate in Wednesday's CIF contest
GOLF
CONTINUED FROM 81
He ranks fourth on the all-time PGA
Tour victory list Wlth 60 titles and was
the first player m tour history to reach
the $1 million mark m omctal earnings.
Palmer plays a Unuted schedule on
the Senior PGA Tour, especially since
having recovered from prostate cancer
surgery on Jan. 15, 1997.
•(The senior tour) ls e ntertamment,
and there isn't a much more
entertaining player than Amie,"
Toshiba Classic tournament director
Jeff Purser said .
The To hiba Classic features a field
of 78 seniors (50 and older). The event
benefits Hoag H ospital. nckets:
(949) 515-4840.
Gllftn wu the PCA Tour's press
secretary during the 1962 Orange
County Open at Mesa Verde Country
Club, when the legend of Tony
"Champagne" Lema was born.
Lema defeated Bob Rosburg in a
three-hole playoff and ordered
champagne for the media -about
three r:epc:mers, Giffin saad -at his
victory celebration.
Lema laid he'd buy champagne for
the preu if he won, and Giffin was the
guy in charge of making sure the
bottles of bubbly w re in stock upon
hil wtn. •
Poltowtng Lema 's tragic death in an
~ auh four years later, Mesa
Verde designated itl main dining l'G011'l
.. •'lbny Lema Room ...
GoUlng legend ArDold Nmer.
•J '91t terrlble when Tony WU killed,"
GUlln .aid. •He wu a helluva guy ... a good
man and a colorful guy. Prom my point of
YWW, U I media guy, he WU good copy. He
wouldw .,... truly one ot the start oo the
..... Dar If ba WM ltill altft, He WU that
aoail oil a playw. He WM~ )ult coming i19D Im OWD al tba tmirlt be WM kllled. He'd ............. Opmtwo,..._.... ...
CIBll llld be..._... a lat about L9iM
after Payne Stewart wei killed lut year ln an
airplane cruh. •
..
HAPPY BIRTHDAY
SCHEDULE
TODAY ..........
College Northwest Nazarene
at~;::rd Uni..,ers1ty, 2:30 p.m.
• I
Community colltg1t • Fullerton
at Ora094t Coast. l p m. ....
Community college men • IMne
Valley at Orange Co.Ht, 2 p.m.
Commonity coll• women • Orange Coast at IMne Valley,
2p.m .
• Goff
Community college,. Golden
Wat vs. Or -no-com, at YJestern
Hltts, noon.
• lecioer High school girls • Cl, DMst0n IV
Quefuirllnal· i.. C.Nda at COfon.t
del Mat. 3 p m.
IASIUIALL
CdMwtnsmp
ARTESIA -Coron.ft del
Mar High'• boys basketball
teem won the nip and Will
bOlt Centennial Higb ol COIDl*Jll In tbe CIP DMslon m-AA ~ at
..... Hlgb. ....... 11?:30
Pltdly algllt.
While Harvard-Westlake
ended CdM's remarkable
1.eason, it did not put a
ddmper on the team which
came from the bottom of the
Sea View League to win the
. PCL championship
"I didn't think we would
get much farther than this
point,• Davis satd. •we
reached the Uurd round of the
CIF playoffs, we were only ·
down nine points at halftime
to a good team and we won a
league chdmpionship.
Nqbody can take that away
from us."
With QuQn being the only
graduating player from this
year's squad, there's is a
sense of opb.JTusm surround·
mg the Sea Kings
"We're just starting,•
AUTUMN
CONTINUED FROM B1
pc.tSses on such postunng.
Instead, sh<> stoically plays
on, mmnld1rung ct.typicdl
politeness m the pamt.
Srruth does not
apologize for hN rude ·
treatment of oval
attac.kers. But she never
publicly revels. m 1t either
"Block.mg shots as cool,"
1.a1d the Mustangs' leading
SCOH'r and rebounder,
whose impressive play in
two playoff games last
week. IE'd Mesa to Wednes-
day's CIF Southern Section
D1VJs1on ill-AA girls
ba'>ketbdll quarterflnals.
She scored eight of her
DaVlS scud, ·we're starting to
build a winrung tradition. To
be honest, J expected us to do
well, but our team, our com-
munity and our opponents
weren't expectmg mQcb. I
saw what we bad and knew it
the ball bounced right, we
cowd go pretty far."
Cf DNlstON ut-M
HMVNU>-~t CoM 27
CdM 5 9 7 6 • ~7 Harvard 8 15 17 11 -51 c.oron. del Mar • Quon 13, IC.
McCoy 7, Eyre 2. J Mc.Coy O.
MeserveyO, Pham 2. Hav'.tlns 3,
Gruber 0, Kawata 0, ICletn 0
) pt. goals • Quon 1
Fouled out· none.
HMvaf'd.Westlake • Robnett 20,
Agonaftr 6, Porter 6, Stepheson 4,
Katay 4, Butte 0, Brooks 0, Walters
0, Medders 6, Logan 0, Taylor 2,
Karub1an 0
3 pt. goals· Robnett 1
Fouled out • none
AUTUMN SMITH
9om: Sept. •• 1982
lkMMtown: Newport
Beach ~6-foot Wellht: 150
spcwt: Basketball
P'oeltion: Center
~JimWeek.s
fft'Ofttie food: ~·, ho~ .-pple pie •
,__. mcwle: "Romeo Ind Juliet"
llest .thletk "'°''•It: "W1M1ng {Cosa Mesl's own) Wint41r o..ic ttMs
season, (deteatmg Vil61 Pwtc. 54-42.
in the Dec. 30 championship game) •
A...._'Of h WMll V.: She Nd
18 points, 18 rebounds Ind fiw
blocb In a 52·39 fim ~OF DM-
sion lll·M ~ Wtn OWK Oilmond
Ranch. tl*I Nd 12 points. ntnl
boanh and two b&oclts in a 5CM.J
sec~ound triumph OW< AzuN.
Dllf Plot
Coll«tor JpOt1I Qrd wies ~S
18 points m the fourth quarter of a Feb 15 ftrst-round victory
over Diamond Ranch, dddmg 18 rebounds and five block.ed shots
to help the Mustangs pull away lJl a gdJlle that seesawed for
three quarters
In a second-round upset of Azusa two nights later. th~ Daily
Pl.lot Athlete of the Week scored 14 of Mcsd's 17 hrst-haJf porn.ts
and added rune rebounds and two blocks. ,
Averagmg 12.4 points and 10.8 rebounds, Snuth is hmshmg
off an unpressive three-year varsity career, wtuch mcluded
first-team All-ClF Division lU and Newport-Me'la Distnct
Co·Player of the Year recogoitioa last season
Yet bravado lS no more an element of her game than a
half-court hook shot.
There are some who believe Snuth's unasswrung nature
sometunes luruls her confidence But, with the wm-or-go-hotne
atmosphere apparent in the postseason, she cledTly asserted
hersell when her team needed 1t most.
"She really same out with some confidence those hrst two
playoff games,• Mesa Coach Jun Weeks said. "She always
competes hard, but when she plays with confidence, he's very
unpressave. She stepped at up in the fourth quarter against
Dia.mood Ranch and especially In the hrst half agamst Azusa.
She raised her game a level.•
Still developing as an ins1de scorer. Srruth's defense and
rebounding have been the staples or a game she began
horung in recess pick-up games agairut male dassmates in the
fourth grade.
"Bloclong shots has always been my favonte, • she Sc1.1d
"I notice it 1 block one or two shots. the other team can become
a llttle hesitant to get therr shots off And I IJ.ke the way it gets
my team fired up."
However, Srruth, who set school single-season records last
season with 399 rebounds and 113 blocks, is hardly
one-dimensional. ·
•We've had centers who could do things offensively or
defensively, but she's the best l think the school has ever bad
at blending the two, n Weeks said. "It has really been a great
pleasure watctung her play."
Snuth said her even-keeled appearance on the floor 15
sometimes misleading.
• 1 guess I act pretty well, because I Wee tlungs pretty hard,"
she said .
College coaches are among tho e who have caught her act
and Redlands has been the most vtgilant Ill its recnutmg efforts.
But Snuth, who boasts a 4.1 GPA and i.S has applied to
several UC chools. said she is undecided on whether to
continue pl~ying in college.
•When I firush this season. I'll think about whether I want to
keep playing,• She said "College is a whole new level "
U she doesn't accept an athlebc scholarstup, Srruth said he
could become a recreation league nnger.
"I've alway· played basketball because al's fun and and I
enjoy it," she said "I still have that en1oyment. U I don't play in
college, I'll probably have to hnd a little hve-on-hve league
somewhere.·
CdM streaking into today's
CIF Division IV quarterfinals
• Pacific Coast League champion, which hosts
La Canada, hasn't lost a game since Jan. 6
NEWPORT BEACH -Behtting GIRLS SOCCER recent storm aetlvity. the Corona del
Mar High girls soccer team has been
rauung goals on opponents the last few w ks.
Coach Ron Evans's Pacific Coast League champions (16-4-
4), the No. 2 seed, ~ attempt to continue a pau of r!K'911t
treaks when they host La Canada (6·8.J) today at 3 p.m . in a
CIF Southern Section D1w11on IV quarterfinal.
CdM enters with an 11-game unbeaten streak (9-0-2) smce
being edged by Laguna Beach, anoth r Divislon IV quarterfi·
nalist, 3-2. in the PCL opener Ja.n. 6.
Yet another CdM streak involves 51X straight shutouts, dur-
ing which the Sea Kings have outicored f , 11·0
CdM has doounated ats two playoff gun thus tar, though
overtime was required to dispetc-h hOlt St. Paul ln Tuelday~
tcrond round.
La Canada, the No, 3 repre9entative from the Ric> Hondo
League, also earned an overtime vent.id Tuelday, ICOl'lng ln
th 107th mlnute (18Yen minutes into iudden deethJ to upllll
0e Ania l.eaQ\Mt cha~ Bee.umont. 2-1.
CdM outsbot St. P8Ulf37.2, after llnOlling ftnt·round 'flllllDr'
Orange Lutheran, 5·0, Saturday.
CdM, \n ltl lint po1t11•on llncel911. hM remlwed = = from rnthmn ElilM MofgaD ~). =--and~'-;~ ~'3. •• .:.:.~:.i
been. CONlfWlt plaJIMI*.
Tbe Sea KblglareetW14•'*ilJ •aw.,..•••fl• ttuw gktl 11M>1t1 ~ br1CIP .. W .......................... ,, ....... -.. .,
..,. ........ & •• , ,...~ _..,
-..
•• I
_B4 __ Th_u_rado):_._._Febrvo __ ~ry_2~~~2_000 ________________________ ~--~~f>()Jl'fS ~----------~-:------~--~..-....,.,---------Da--ify_P_il_ot
1
C __ ....... ..........
D1•l1l1
DIGl·--.lliown
---·~· .............. 2.,11 .,....,.,., ...... .
Gnuh11-. ... ller tr , ... Colllde
Wiil Salila Monica
Prtday la Ole Clf
DITlllon IV wmfflpal1
81 NeWl>oe't tr.bor
... startlaf at 4 p.m.
SEAN Hlillll J DAlY Pll.Ol
·-·.
MEN'S WATER POLO
Team USA edges . Canada, 9-7·
• Oeding strikes for two goals. .
CORONA DEL MAR -The United
States men's national water polo team
defeated Canada, 9-7, in the first of a two-
game series at Corona del Mar High.
Orange Coast College water polo coach
and Team USA captain Chris ·Oeding bad
two goals, while Tony Azevedo also
chipped in With two,
Single tallies were scored by Chi Kredell,
Omar Amr, Sean Kem, Ryan Aynn and
Ryan Bailey.
In goal f~r the United States, Dan Hack-
ett had 10 saves, while Chris Aguilera had
four:
Zottan Csepregi, Darryl Bourne and Mikael
Sabo each scored two goals for Canada.
SOCCER CHIMPS
After falling behind, 2-1, in the first quar-
ter, the U.S. scored five straight goals to
take the lead for good.
Canada is preparing for the Olympic
Qualification Tournall'lent in Hanover, Ger-
many, May 6-14, trying' to secure one of the
four remaining spots for the 2000 Ol}'mpic
G~es. .
Tbe United States .. qualified for the
Olympics last July by taking first place in
the Pan American Games in Winnipeg.
The U.S. team will depart March 15 for a
10-day training trip to Austr:alia in Canber-
ra and Sydney.
Game two of the series is tonight at 7 at
the Los Alilmitos Reserve "fi"aining Center.
Admission is free.
VOLLEYBALL
Pirates drop
OEC opener
CLUB SOCCER
Slammers take state crown
• Boys under-11 team knocks off San Diego Surf
in shootout to claim crown in the open division.
EL CAJON -The Orange
Coast College men's volley-LANCASTER -The Newport Beach Slammers, a boys
ball team opened the Orange under 11 club soccer team captured the California State
Empire Conference on the Champio~hip in the open ruvision with a shootout win over
W'rong foot, losing to host the San Diego Surf.
Grossmont, 15-5, 15-9, 15-13, After Uie game ended in a 3-3 tie, two overtime periods
Wednesday night. could not decide a winner.
Dave Moser had 25 kills ta Finally in a shootout, goals by RJchard Gadbois, Oscar
lead the Pirates (5-l overall). Aguero, Logan Condon, Adam Holstein and' Jarrett Daniel proved enough for the win. ~or Gross~ont (lsO over.all) Holstein also !;>locked two Surf shots in goal to seal the win. Se~o Meredith had 21 hills, The Slammers have won vanous tournaments throughout
while Leonardo Moraes the season including the Surf Cup, League Cup, State Cup and
added 14 and Matt Olson had · were named the Coast Soccer League Champions.
13. . · · The group has been selected to go to France in June to com~
OCC will contln_ue OEC pete. They are currently seeking donations or looking for a
play at home agamst San team sponsor to raise money for the trip.
Diego Mesa Friday at 7 p.m. ' Anyone interested in sponsorship opportunities, contact
Randy Daniel at (949) 760-8284.
Region 120 Matrix tie, win
• After a sloppy 1-1 tie with CdM, boys.under 12
team reh?unds with 5-0 victory over S~uth Irvine.
COSTA MESA -The Matrix, a boys under 1vso
12 Silver All-Star soccer team from AYSO l I
Region 120, tied Corona del Mar 1-1, before·
blanking South Irvine, 5-0, last weekend.
In the tie against Corona del Mar, Garrett McMasters
scored the Matrix's lone goal off an assist from Nickolas
Juarez.
In the win over South Irvine, Austin Evett scored two goals,
while single tallies were added by McMasters, Kosnosky and
Gandhy Nava.
Kenneth Zich had two assists for the Matnx. while Kyle
Thorsness and Kosn~ky eacl\ played well as goalkeepers.
Leading the defense was AJbert Nava, Christian Medina,
Steven Brown and Luis Andrade, while Luis Cozza and Ger-
man Higadera pushed the offense.
Region 57 Tidal Waves blank two foes
IRVINE -The Corona del Mar nctaI waves AVSO
of AYSO Region 57 defeated South Irvine, 1-0, 1 I
before blanking Newport Beach, 3-0, last week-
end in girls under 10 gold all-star action.
Taylor Jones scored the Tidal WaVf:s' lone goal in game
one, while Emily Hillgren had the assist.
Goalkeeper Jessica Poulsen had numerous saves for the
Tidal Waves.
TI White Ughtnlng team of the Newport Beach Women's Soccer League won the fall championship, taking
e crown In a ~hootout against the Back Bay· Blast, 4-2, with the wlnnlng goal by Sue Bradley. Kneeling,
om left: Tricia Echternach, Robin Kdech, Stacey Shurtleff, Carol Crane, Sabrina Witt, Melanie
Newenham, 'n'ad Keene and Suzy Strauuula. Standing, from left Sue Bradley, Michelle Mullen, Tina Bright,
Kent Henrie, Lori Rabas, Donna Haith, Carol Ortiz, Sue Lamoreau, JennUer Zilstra, Roya Redja and Coach
Benny Zamantan. Not plcturtd were A11sba Lopez, Anne Yardley, Usa Dale, Lisa Richards and Maria Ricco.
In game two, Alex Tobiessen scored all three goals, while
Su-Yin Blckner, Leah Zartan and Claire Schloemer added
assists for the Tidal Waves.
Kimmy Von der Ahe, Colleen Hoyler, Chelsea Dalton and
Juliane Plggot controlled the midfield, while Undsay Seeley,
Rachael Parker, Alison Luke and Courlney Heard anchored
the defense.
The Tidal Waves will take on Tustin for first place in the
Area Q playoffs on Saturday.
"Affordable
Alternative"
Qiscount Casket,
Cremation&
8urla1 Senice
Why should you subject
yourself & your family to
paying inflated prices for
casket & services????
call Toll fttt J~S4CASUI'
Sa'rial Onl&i a Sur1111111 r.oucna
..,.... -.... .,.
Doily Pifot ThursdOy, February 2.4, 2000 ~
'iYmnral[.IVl\lf-l IMUC~ll ~II w1DTM:Ul I PWUCNOlaSll ~-I MUC-I MUC-1 f w:..,.I
flctltlou• ButlneH SUPERIOR COURt Flctltloue Buelnfft Fictlt,ut Buelnff1 Fietltfoue ButlneH Fictitious ButlnHe FIGtltlou1 BualnHt ou• Ut ,,.., FlctJtlout BCl•lnee• Ffc:1itloue 8u1lneu
Heme Statement OF CALIFORNIA N1me 8tete1Mnt N81M ..... ment N1me Statement N•,,,. Statement N1me Statement N1me Stltament Name Stetement NaN ~menl
TM fOllowlng P1r110n1 COUNTY OF ' The follow1n11 pertone The lolloW!l'IO pe...ons The lolfQWll'g persona Thll tonow1no ci-r-.ons The I04tow1no persons Th11 followlng persona The totloWlog perkltlt T~ folioWfng pettON .,. dolno bu.inen as ORANGE era CIOlng bu•lnet• as are doing butineN a1· are doi11g 1>U11nen •• are Cluing tx.rsineM u are doing bu•1m1n as are Ckling busineu ea ere OOlnO b\4lnect as are OOing bu$lnfft u:
I) IBIJQ, b) lntemet 341TheCuyOI\ SluOlo"'l,UiOCel'ltlen· Sebtll 0e~1gn Seiv· 1Step Merl(etlng V11ui.IThermalMa11age· Motion Luger allO A6 VISUAl XPLANA Coaataf Advtrlllll'g, Emerald Pl1,1mc1ng a.Md lklllne11 Group POit Ott~ Bo t4v:ir1 11181, Tustin, CA 92780 ICH, 6000 DrrOh. Ste 24501 TabuerlCll Or. nltnt, 105 Terra Bella, IOClatea, Inc • 205 TIONS. 2340 Santa Ana 1565 Se4tnlc Ave ~I• SeMC8S 313 Atlanta . l ~ t~ s~u~ Avenuec • Or~noe. CA • Jeff Salmt, 14G01 4000, Newpc)(1 Beach. MllllOl'I Viejo. CA 928112 Irvine. CA 92820 CamallOll Ave . Unit e, Ave Unit llA2. Costa F, co,ta Meaa, CA Ave 131,, Huntmgton n • n • ley, A 92813 1571 Newport Ave., #38, CA 92660 Ant1·10ny Bta110 Adia, frtnk Buday, 12 Corona diJl Mar, CA Mesa, CA 82627 92620 Beaeh CA 926'8 92~708 0 IN THE MATTER CIR Tustin CA 92780 Gall Sta\lffer Seblt•. 24501 Tebuenca Or. Cl\andon. Newport 92625 Sean Pa111ck OOonnelt, Safeguard Properbes Roy 'M Pean:e, Jr. M1Hrlk, THE PETITION TO ThlS buslnen II con· 413 Bay Hiii :ir .. New· MllSIOl'I Viejo, CA 92692 Coast. CA 92657 M1ltorl Luger and As· 2340 Santa Ana Ave .• Inc ' (CA), 1565 Satnle 313 Atlanta Aw 1131!l. ff Stella Avenue, CHANGE THE NAME ducted by· an lndMdual port Beadl, CA 82860 Ralph Cllnton Pyall 111, Rocnard Buday. 105 SOC1ate1. Inc •(~). 205 IA2, Costa Me'8, CA Ave . ~I• f. COlta Hunhngtoo Beedl. CA :~:••n Valley, CA OF Parente on Behatl 01 Have you 11art1d Thi• business Is eon· 15 Ngpalltos Way. Aliso Ter,. Bella, trv1ne CA CarnatlOfl Ave Unit 6. 92627 Mesa CA 92626 • 926.cs
T .. ,_ butlneaa 11 """'· Minor Children ror doing bu''"'" yet? ducted by an lndNIClual Viejo, CA 92656 92620 Corona del Mar. CA This bU51ness IS con-TM business is con· Wttltarn Wallace ,,.. ""'' Ch&nnt> ot Child 5' Yes, 2·8-00 Hive you s1ar11d Tht1 business '• CIOn· This business ts con· 92625 ducted by an lnclMduaJ duateo by a corporation MacBealh 1911 w ducted by. an lndrvidual N r On ren Jell Salmi de>1ng bualness yet? No ducted by CO·partl\flrs ducted by co·partnel'l Tl'tls w111neas Is <:.on· Have you started Have you started Willow Ave, Orange, CA
Heva YOU started Lame• 9 \Y N 11 This statement wae Gall s Sebll• Have you starred Have you statted ducted by a corporatlOl'I doing business yet? No doing busmen yet? 9286a-2434 dOlng buafness vet? No c8u{aksn \ and e filed wtth the County Thi$ statement was dOlng bus1ne1f yet? No doing busrnes.s yel? No Have you started Sean Patllek O'Donnell Yes, 1987 Tnl• businesa 11 con·
Raaltde D. Mlietak ru' an on behalt 01 Clerlt of ora11ge Coonty tiled with the County AnlllOny Blaise Adza Frank BU<Say doing business yet? No Thts statement waa sateguard PropertHts, ouc:ted by co·P41'1ntrt
Thie statement WH Jam~ M ~ru~tlan~, on 02·22"2000 Olelk of Orange County Tnls statement was This 11atemen1 was Miilon Luger and As· filed lff.rth the County Inc , Roland Earle Have you &tatted llled with the County ~ mlctu.~ \ avin 200068203.41 on 02·18·2000 l1led wllh the County filed with the County 1oclates Inc . Milton Olene ol Orange County Weid'lman. President doing t>1..111ness yet? Cltfl( of Orange Coonty ~ DE an · 11 mfnot Dafly Pilot Feb. 24, Mar 20006'20195 Clefk of Orange Couniy Cler"k ot Orange County Luger · President on 02-08·2000 This s1a1emen1 waa y81 l·25-l995
on 01·21·2000 c SsE: TO SHOW 2. 9, 16. 2000 Tn.t38 Dally Pllot Feb 24, Mar on 2·15·2000 on 02·04·2000 Th19 statement was 2000G8'9101 1118<1 with the County Roy M Petree Jr
D II P IO 2000H1'7307 A OF ~~~~ANGE Flc:t11loua BuilneH 2, 9, t8, 2000 Th434 20006819774 20006818781 tiled with the ,COunty Daily Pilot Feb 10, t7, Ctetk or orange County TNs &taiemetit was
a i I t Jan. 27, Feb CASE NUMBER N Stat t Dally PllOI Feb 17~ 24, Dally PllQI Feb 10. 17, Ctetk ol O~ County 24. Mar. 2, 2000 Tl\393 on 02-08·2000 hied witn ltl9 County !~e~ ~:Plcation A201098 Th!"i:loWlng•~~~ons Flctltlou• Bu1lne.. Mer· 2· 9• 2000 Tl\429 24, Mar. 2, 2000 Th403 on 02·04-2 Flctltlou1 Bualneu 20006819090 Clertt °' Orange Co\.lnty
Feb. 24 2000 Th444 PETITIONER(SJ are Ckling business as· Heme Statement Fictltlou1 BualneH 20006818780 Name Statement Daily Pilot Feb 10, 17, on 02-01·2000
' Laura Ball and tteil LoBlarrltz Catering, The lollowlng per$ons Fictitious BualneJa Name Statement Dally PilOI Feb. 10· 17• The lotloW!ng persoos 24, Mar 2. 2000 Th385 2000M1M2S
Crutcllshank on t>ehali 01 Inc , 2642 Newport are ~business as· Naf'fte Statement 24• Mar. 2• 2000 Th398 are dotng bustne» as Fictitious BualnHe Dally P110t Feb 3, 10,
CNS1'1t4'0t • James M Cru1•kshan" E IL 2025 The following perl()ns flc1ltlous BuslneH Aer...,.,.,..(f.. 18312 Senta N•"'e Statement 17, 24, 2000 Th382 " "' BIVd. "Costa Mesa, CA CREATI MA , The lotlow1ng persons are doing business as """"" .. , NOTICE OF a minor;• ancs Gavin A. 92627 . Anatietm Ave. #E, Costa are doll'g bu~tness as A & A Brokers, 11 Serena Name Statement Belinda irde • F011nta1n ' The following persons Fictitious Bualn .. i PETITION TO Cru1c:1<shank a minor La B1arrit2 Catering, Mesa, CA 92627 COASl CHALLENGE. coun, NewPOrt Beach, The I04low1ng persons Valley, CA 92708 are doing business u • Name Statement
ADMINISTER • HAVE FILED A PETI· Inc., (CA), 2642 Newpo!1 Shannon Shea 2025 310 El Modena, Newport CA 92663 are dOirlg bu5ineu as· Joseph A Catalano, Nof1h COunty Plumbing Ttie tottowtng persons ESTATE OF: , TION FOR AN ORDER Bflld , Cosla Mna, CA Anaheim Ave #E, Costa Beach. CA 92663 Debbie ·H Rotcnie. a Prolessfonal Drywall 18312 San1a Bl!hnda 629 Terminal Way, #1 3. are dom busrness as TO CHANGE NAMES 92627 Mesa, CA 92627 Claudia Jennings 434 Serena Coun, Newport Services, 239 22nd SI , Circle, Fountain Valley, <;:osia Mesa CA 92627 E L Og A M p E o N ROBERT E. FROM JAMES This business Is con· This b11s1ness ls con· Esll'ler, Costa Mesa, CA Beach. CA 92663 Costa Mesa CA 92627 CA 92708 Gerald W Sohl. Jr CARNICERIA 112 517
O 'NBL AKA McPHERSON dueled by; a COl;J>?ratlon ducted by· an Individual 92627 This business 1s con· Ronald G. Smith, 239 This business ls con· 312 Colton St Newport w w Ison SI 'Cos1a ROBERT EMMET CRUICKSHANK and Have you started Have you -started .Alleen Feuerberg. 310 <lucted by an lndtvldual 2nd SI , Costa Mesa, ducted by an ind1vldual Beacti. CA 92663 Me5a CA 9262i
Q'NEIL AKA GAVIN REA doing buslne$S yet? dOlng business yet? No El Modena. Newport Hav• you started CA 92627 Have you s1aned This business is con· Sergio Gonzalez ROBERT O'NEJL CRUICKSHANK TO Yes, August 18. 1998 Shannon Shea ee.ach, CA 92663 CIOlng business yet? No Thl!I buslness 1s con· doing business yet? ducted by an tndrvldual 14362 L~ St, Gar: CASE NO JAMES McPHERSON La Blarntz Catering, This statement was This business 1s con· Debbie H A•lctile ducted by' an Individual Yes, 01/01/2000 Have you started den GrO'le CA 92843 • CRUICKSHANK BALL Inc., Christine Brlee. llfed with the County duGted by co-partners This stalement was , Have you started Jo~ph A Catalano doing business yet? Marieela Gonzelez. A200967 an<! GAVIN REA President Clertt of Orange Coonty Have you started llled with the County doing business yet? T1l1s statement was Yes, 6/111990 14362 Lyndon St Gar·
To all heirs, CRUICKSHANK BALL ThiS statemenl was on 02·18·2000 doing busrness ye!? No Clerk ol Orange County Yes. 2·2·2000 hied with the County Gerald W Sohl,.Jr den Grove CA 92843 , benef1c111nes, credi· II is tiereby Ofdered filed w11h me Coonty 200068201G7 Claudia Jennings on 02·04·2000 Ronald G. Smith Clef1( ot Orange Coonty Tl\ls s1atemen1 was Th•s business 15 con·
tors, contingent tha1 all persons in· Cler11olOrangeCounty OallyPllotFeb.24,Mar This statement was 200068187113 This S1atemen1 was on02-08·2000 flleo with the County d Cle<lb h sbandand
creditors, ond per· terested In this matter on 02·22·2000 2. 9, 16, 2000 Th435 file<f w1lh the C04n1y Oal(y Pilot Feb. 1.0. 17, rited with the County ... 2F0006'b 19105 Clelk of Orange County w~le Y u
eons Who rney other· appear belore this court 20006820346 Cieri< ot Orange County 24, Mar. 2. 2000 Th405 Clef1( ol Orange County Dally nlol e 10, 17, on 02·08·2000 Have you started
w19e be interested in tn Department No. L73 Daily Pilot Feb 24, Mar Fictitious Bualneas on 02·1 t·2000 Fl ti 1 8 1 on 02·04·2000 24, Mar 2, 2000 Th395 20006819094 -'-'no bus.lnesa yet? No
the will or estate, or ot ttle 01ange County 2, !l, 16, 2000 · Th439 Name Statement • 20006819498 c t ous us neu 2000681877&1 Fictitious Businees Oally P110t Feb 10. 17, Sergio Gonzalez
both. of: ROBERT E. Superior Court at the ad· NOTICE OF ThJo.lol~ng ·persons Dally P110t Feb t 7, 24 f,!~~,:~~~e~~~ns Dalli PtlOt Feb. 10, 17, Name Statement 24, Mar. 2, 2000 Th387 This statemenCout was
O'NEIL AKA ROBERT ~'.~~Jo.5~~""~.o6~~~0: PUBLIC AUCTION are ng(y s1ness as. Mar 2, 9, 2000 Th423 are doing business es. 2F4l.o••atlrou2.
9
29ooouslThne3s9s9 T"8 lotlowino pergons Fictltlou• Bualne19 fifed with the nty
"EMMET O'NEIL AKA pm. and then and there Notice Is hereby given · HowCa · 28672 Sil· Pro·Active Exercise & " are doing business as Name Statement 9ter1t 01 Orange Co\.lnty
ROBERT O'NEIL show cause 11 any they thal lhe undersigned wlll verado Can~n Road, Flctltloue Buslne.u Rehab1htatlon Ser111ces Name Statement Rise and Shine L.L.C.. The toOowing person' on 02-01·2000 A PEilTION hes have, why 1"8 pelillOn sell at POBLIC Calllomla92 76 Name Statement 2175PactllcAve.•B·5 Thetotlowlngpersons 120Almador,lrvine,CA ared01ngbuslnessas 2000681 .. 26 been flied ·by EFFIE AUCTION on 03113100 Cathy Leigh Lasc:oe, c st M a CA 92627 are do111g business as. 92614 Urt>antech Turkey LLC. Dally Piiot Feb. 3.. 10,
MAE RIVERA in lhe ~~~~p~ ~~a:i::e at 11:00 a.m al 19351 Maynard Wa~ ar~t;;'0i';;:;0~1~1~:S~r:~s ~a~ C:~·Plallo. 2175 Rlteway Mongage Cor· Rise ano Shine, '3300 Irvine Ave . Suite 17. 24, 2000 Th384
Superior Court of It ~ further ordered AUSPACE. 8564 HAM· ~~:fs Ana, Calllom Coast Line tmportr>. 728 Paclllc Ave . •B·5, porallon. 4199 Campus L L.s;. 120 Almador, 225, NewporfBeaeh, CA Fletltlou1 Bu.Ines•
Cahfor1110. County of that 8 copy ol this order tLTON AVE , HUNT· Thia buSlness 15 con· w 16111 St.. Costa Costa Mesa, CA 92627 Or . Ste 720. lrvrne, CA llV!ne, CA 92614 92660 ~ame Statem.nt
Orange. 10 show cause be pub· ING TON ~CH, CA ducte<f by an lndlVlduat Mesa. Cahlorma 92627 Alice Agnes Ginter, 926l2 Thts business Is CQO· UT Tur>tey LLC (CA). The lottowtng persons THE PETITION ltshed In Daily Pilot, 92646 the personal Have 110 started Mark F oasiou. 728 21201 WhtlehOrse lane. R11eway Morlgage ducted by Limited Lia· 3300 Irvine Ave .. Suite are doing business as
requests that EFFIE a newspaper ol general property of !he lollow1ng· dOlng bus(ne~s yet? No w 16th SL, Costa Hun11ng1on Baac;h, CA· Corporation, (CA). 4199 blllty Co 225, Newpert Beach CA NEW CENTURY AU·
MAE RIVERA be cuculahon published in NAME, UNIT II, Cath L . h La Mesa. Cahfomla 92627 92646 Campus Dr ' Ste 720 Have you s1ar1ed 92660 TO 443 WHI Bay erpornted os perfon· 11\is county et least once INVENTORY This y sl~~men~~s This business 1$ con· This business IS con· Irvine, CA 92612 . doing business yet? This business rs con· Street. Costa Mau. CA
a copreSflntauve to a wee!\ for four oon· STEVE GRAHAM, lrled wflh the County ducted by an indrvidual ducted by· a general du Thct'~ ~si~~spl~r~f~ Y;is1~·8~9,;'d Shine duct1 edCoby Limited Lia· 92627 administer the estate secu11ve weeks pttor lo 0020. HOUSEHOLD Clef1( ol Orange County Have you started partnarstl1p 8 1 r . R' bl 11y Oktay Ozoour. 2212
of the decedent. It.a day ol tl\e heal1ng ITEMS on 02·18·2000 doing busfness yet? No Have you s1ar1ed Have you siarted L L C • William Have y_ou started Laurel Place Newpor1 THE PETITION DATE: FEB 16, 2000 LARRY WEISSMAN, 20006820198 Mark Dastoli doing business yet? dolnp, business yel7 No Macbeth. CEO doing business yet? Beach CA 92663 JAMES P. GRAY, 0026, HOUSEHOLD Dally Pilot Feb, 24, Mar. This s1a1ement was Yes 11112000 Ai eway Mortgage This statement was Yes. 9 DEC 99 This. business IS oon-
' e q u e s t s l h e JUDGEJ TEMS d he C Nan c Platto CorporaHon. Jeb c filed with the County UT Turt<ey LLC. Gary ducte<I by an lndovjjuat'
decedent 9 WILL and COMMISSIONER OF ERNEST ANTHONY 2· 9• 16· 2000 Th43S ~~rk ~1~,.:nge c~~~ This statement was Koerber Cte11< 01 Orange County W Pomeroy, Mana(l1ng Have you started
cod1c1'5, '' any, L>a THE S UPERIOR EDWARDS, F001 , on02·07·2000 filed w11h the County Thrs statement was on02·04·2000 Member dOlng business yet? No admitted to proboto: COURT HOUSEHOLD ITEMS Flctltlous Business 000681895Q' Clerk of orange County Oled with the County 20006818702 This s(atement was Oktay Olonur
The WILL end anv LINDA A IANNELLI. DANIEL Name Statement Dally P•lot 2Feb 101 17 on 02·04·2000 Clerk ot Orange CC>Ynty Oalltt•lot Feb 10, 17, filed wllh the COYnty Trlls s1atement was
cod1c1ls are available ESO , LAW OFFICE OF MARCOGLIESE, FOt2, The following persons 24 M 2 2000 TMtO 20006818795 on 02·04-2000 24, ar. 2. 2000 Th396 Clerk ol Orange County hleo wrth the County
tor examina\IOn In LINDA A IANNELLI. HOUSEHOLD ITEMS are doing business as· • ar ' Dally PtlOI Feb 10, 17, 20006818n6 Flctitlou• BualneH on 02·08-2000 Cterlt of Orange County
the 1110 kept by the 'LINDA A IANNELLI, DAVID LIGHT, F081, Zubtes Chicken COop Fl tltl B I 24, Mar. 2, 2000 Th406 Dail~'./''01 Feb. 10, 17, Name Statement 20006819093 on ONH·2000 court. ESQ, 110 NEWPORT HOUSEHOLD ITEMS Inc., 414 Old Newpon e ous ua neu Fictitious Buslneaa 24, er 2, 2000 TMOO The lollOwlng persons Dally P1lo1 Feb. 10, 17, 2000681 .. 52
THI: PETITION CENTER DRIVE, SUITE CHRIS BEBEDICT, Blvd .. Newpor1 Beach, Name Statement N St t t Flctltloua Business a<e doing buslnes.s as 24, Mar 2.. 2000 Th388 Dally Pilot Feb 3 ,0
tequests authority to zoo, NE w Po RT FI OS, HOUSEHOLD CA 92663 Tl'le lo410w•ng persons ame 8 emen Name Statement Westbourna Designs. Fictitious Bu1ine91 17 24, 2000 Th375
adm1nu1ter the estate BEACH, CA 92660 ITEMS Zub1es Chicken Coop are doing business as The lollowirg· persons The toUowing persons 1161 Irvine Ave., Costa Na01e Statement Fictitious Bu1lneH Und•r tho lnd•pen· ATIORNEY FOR RACE RICHARDSON, Inc •. (CA), 414 Old New· ANALOCKS. 830 Cenlet aSorre1d80llmn2, buesscoinems.s6a1s00· ... . bu Mesa, CA 92627 The f-"-·•nn per~""s Name 5•ate--t • " " PETITIONERS G122, HOUSEHOLD S\, #11, Costa Mesa. -w are u0100 siness as. M' .... ael T Marchak "'"'"'"" ......,, .. .,...,, • dent Admrn1stret1on GOODS port Blvd., Newport Cahlornia !j2627 was Coast Hwy., New· St1ateg1c Flnanclal Serv· '"" . are oomg buslneS$ as The fotlOwing persons of Estetes Act. (Thra ATTORNEY BA.A# PETER FASI, H046 Beacil. CA 92663 David E Ort12 Cruz, port Beach. CA 92663 Ices, 3150 Bnstol Street, 1761 IMne Ave , ~S1a J ACK BALD Wt N ani d6ing business as
authonty will allow 1678n HOUSEHOLD ITEMS Thedls business is con· 830 Center SI #1 1, Paahc Coast Presen· Sulle 170, Costa Mesa, Mesa, CA,92627 FLOOR COVERING, THE G COMPANY the petsonal repre· Published Nawpon duct by. a corporaUon •~•ions tnc (CA) 6100 CA 926Z6 This business IS oon· 1 3810 E Coast Hwy., 725 Domin 0 Dr ,6 sentauve to teke Beach-Costa Mesa JULIE Have you started ~~ Mesa, CaliJomla W~st coast' Hwy . New· Craig Anthony Wong ducted by an lndtvldual Suite #3, Corona dot Newport a1each CA
many aottoM with· Daily Pilot February 24, ANTONGIORGI, H053, doing business yet7 No POr1 Beach CA 92663 41 29 I! 7th Street •3, Have lVou started Mar, CA 92625 92660 ou1 obta1n1ng court Marcf'l 2, 9. 18, 2000 HOUSEHOLD ITEMS Zubles Chicken Coop te~~f. ~1 ~~s~~~:: This business is con· Lono Beach, CA 90804 doing bus(ness yet7 No Da111d w Pumphrey. Wynne Grant 725
approval. Before Th441 SEKRSicEA~~Tl~O~ Inc., Salvador Jiminez. Calilomta92627 ducted by: a.corporation This business ls con· MIChaelT Marchak 3,910 E Coast Hwy, Domingo Dr •e' New·
1e1t1no carto1n very Fictitious Bualnees · · ' President This business ts COi)· Have you started dueled by an lncliVldual This statement was Su;te #3, Corona det port eeacn CA 9'2660
important actions, Name Statement 508• PATTON, CA This statement was dueled by husband and domg busfnes.s yet? No Have r,ou started filed with the County Mar, CA 92625 -This buSIOest is con·
however.-tho par· The lolloWlng persons ~2r19 JACKSON TEL: tiled with tl'le County wile PacillC Coast Pre$en• "'doing bus "8SS yet? No Cle11< ot Orange County This business is con· ducted by an irld1vldual
sonal reprosentatrve o1 b 1 Cler1c of O~e Coon!'( Heve you started tallons, Inc • Edo Craio A Wong on °2-04·2000 ctucted by an lndlvldoal Have you started II b d aresd 7'9Jo~sS~s· 9 o 9 • 8 6 3 . 1 1 3 1 on 02·18-2 doing business yet? No GuldOttl, President This s1.a1emen1 was 20006&18781 Have you started doino business yet?
w1 e teQurre to ~~ s;$, 1262~ Harbor AUCTION BOND " 20006820199 David Ortiz Cruz This statement was hied with the County Daily PrlOI Feb 10, 17, I doing busl"8SS yet? Yes 1·28-00 give notice to intor· 8 1 4 G d 723-41-19 Dally PllOI Feb 24, Mar This stalement was filed with the County Cieri\> of Orange County 24, Mar 2. 2000Th397 Yes, 2·1·2000 wYnne Grant I.Isled porson1 unless lvd • " 4 • ar en Published Newport 2. 9, 16, 2000 Th437 Cleti! 01 ow;ae Coun"' on 02·04·2000 David w. Pumphrey This ~tatement was thay hove waived Grove, CA 92840 Beach·Costa Mesa filed with the Coon!y '1 20006818775 1 8 1 Th' t 1 1 .. notice or consented Edgar E Balley, Ill, Dai"'· Pilot February 24, Cler1c ol Orange Coul'ly on 02·04·2 lo F 7 F ctltioua ua neH 1s 1 a emen was hied with tile County 12625 Harbor Blvd . M ~ 2 2000 Flctltloua Butlneu on 02·07·2.000 20006818796 Dallt/' 1 eb 10, 1 • Name Statement liled wrlh the County c1eni ol Orange County to tho proposed #144, Garden Gf'Olle, a . Th440 Name Statement 20006618953 Dally Pilot Feb. 10, 17, 24, ar 2. 2000 Th400 The lotlOWlng pers.ons Clerk or Orange County on 02•01·2000
action I The rndetwi· CA 92540 Dally Piiot Feb. 10, 17. 24, Mar 2, 2000 Th407 Fictitious Bu•lneas are doing business as on 02-08·2000 2000Mta.&48
dont fldmimsmrnon This business ls con· Fletltloue 8utlneH ar!~~1o:;~1~r~s 24, Mar 2. 2000 Th411 Fletftlou1 Bualneaa Heme Statement FULLER CONSULT· Daily Pilot 2~~~/. D
17
allv .P12000
tot Feb J,Th1
3
on,
authot1ty will be ducted by en Individual Name Statement HARDBALL FITNESS, Name Statement The IOllowlng persons ING. 4910 Campus M Th389 -:;'-2..,.. ....... --..,--..---
granted unlei;s an Have you started The tolto'Mng persons 12121 Hermon Dr., Flctltlou's eualneH The loll6wing persons are doing business as: Dnve, Newport Beach, 2.c. ar 2• 2000 F(ct1tlou1 Buslnffs
rn1erested person ctotng buslne~ yet? Nn are dOlng business as Tustin, CA 92782 Name Statement are doing buslnes.s as Gomez lnterpreung. 930 CA 92660 Fictitious Busln••• Name Sta~t
Illes an ob1ect1on to E.Elgar Bailey, 111 Clean Gou Panners, Franklln s. Char1es, The lotlowing persons lnvestmenllind com. 380 Wast Seventeenth St. Richard A FuUer, 45 Name Stetement The lolk>Wlng pe1$0r'IS
the pe1111on tlnd This statement was 46l Santa Ana Avenue. 12121 Hermon Dr.. are doing buSlneu as La Canada Way. Costa C, Santa Ana, CA 92706 Canyon Island Dnve, The following persons are doing blJslne&S as
shown good couso. filed With the County Newport BeaOh, Calif Tustin. CA 92782 Mister Angel Flowel'1l, 12 Mesa, Calitorma 92627 Jo$e M Gomei. 406 Newpon Beach, CA are doing business a.s Sierra Pac:1fte Transfer why l ho court Clertt of Orange County 92663 This business 1,. con· Calls; Newpon Beach, PeulJ.C8pulo,380La N. Via Roma Anaheim, 92860 THE WINE GROUP Corr!Pany 2052 New·
should nol gr1.1n1 1ho on 02·22·2000 Richard H Meaney, dUcte<t by: an Individual Callfomla 92633 Canada Way. Costa CA 92806 This business 18 cOn· CONSULTANTS, 303 por1 Blvd • .' Suite 6, Costa
authority. 2000682042A 461 Santa A11a Avenue, Have you started Janice Ashton, !2 Mesa, Calllomla 92627 This business Is COil· dueled by an lndlvldual Marguerite llA, Corona Mesa CA 92627
A HEARING on Daily Piiot Feb 24, Mar Newpof'I eead'l, Call! dofng buslneu yet? No Ca~&. Newport Beach, This business IS con· ducted by. an 1nc:11v1dual Have you started det Mar CA 92625 Stewart GOf.nsteln, 6
the pe1111on will be 2. 9. 16, 2000 Th«5 92663 Franklin S. Chane& CaTilom1a 92633 ducted by· an lndlVldual Have you started doing bullness yet? Brian ~ Mahood, 303 Calico, ttvlne, CA 92614
held on March 16, Ctlflsune Backus, 461 Thfs 5tatemenl was This buslneu Is con· Have you started doing busfnes.s yet? No Yes, 1 1-00 Marguente #A, Corona This business ts OOf'I· 2000 at f:4S P M. Santa Ana Avenue, llled wl(h the Coun!V ducted by an tndlvldual doing busfness yet? No Jose M Gomez AtcMrd A Futter del Mar, CA 92625 ducted by an lndNldual m Dep1 L 7 3 toca1ed Flctltlou1 Business Newport Beach. ca111 Clerk 01 oranoe County Have you started Paul J Caputo This statement was Tl'lis statement was Susan L Davts, 303 Have you staned
at 341 Tho C11y Name Statement 92663 on 02·11·2000 doing business yel? No This statement was hied with the County filed wtth the County Ma1guente #A, Corona doing buatnesa yet? Drive Orange CA The following persons This business Is con· 20006819501 Janice Ashton hied with the County Clerfc or Orange County Cletk ol O~e Co\.lnly del Mar, CA 92625 Yes. 3·2·99
92668. are CIO!nO business a.s ducted by: a general Dally Piiot Feb. 17, 24, This statement was Cletk of Orange County on 02-04·2000 on Ol ·26· Thia busir\eU ls con· Stewart Gorenstetn IF YOU OBJECT WEIN"CO, 16791 partnership Mar. 2. 9, 2000 Th420 filed w1111 the County on02·07·2000 20006818785 2000681m 3 ducted by' a general This statement waa TO the granung of South Pac1llc, Sunset Have you started Clflrlt of Omnge County 20006818944 Daily PrlOt Feb 10, 17, Daily Ptlol Feb 3, 10, p1111nersl\lp hied ""•th IM County t'lfe Beath, CA 90742 doing buslnen yet? on 01.31.2000 • Dally PilOt Feb 10, 17, 24, Mar 2, 2000 Th400 17. 24, 2000 Th372 Have you started Clertt of Orange County ~h~u1J':~~~~; 01 ~~~ Allen John We ins, Yes. January ol 1995 Flctltloua Buelneaa 20006818273 24, Mar 2, 2000 Th408 Flctltlout Bualneta Flctltlou1 BuslneH doing busfness yet? No on 02·01-2000
d ,6791 South Pac11lc, Richard H Meaney Hime Statement Dally Pt"" Feb 10, 17, Fl ti I B 1 Na"'• Statement Name Statement Bnan M Mahood 20006tt .. 2f heertng an ttate Sunset Beach, CA This statement was The lollowlng persons Ma "" e t oua ua ne•• .. .,. This statement was Daily Piiot Fet>. 3, 10, your ob1ccMns or llled with the County are doing business as: 24, r. 2. 2000 TM12 Name Statement The lolk>Wlng persons The tollOWing persons filed with Iha CounlY 17, 24, 2000 Th383
file wmton o!J1ec· 00714e21a Mar1e Welos. Clerk or Orange Coun"' TRIM, 1600 w Pae1llc The followtno persons are doing business as are doing buslnessaas:el Cle11< of Orange County Flctltloua Busi==• uons with the court " 00 02·11·2000 '' Coast Hwy, Newpon Fictitious 84.telneea ere doing business as Coastline Plumbing, 220 Sunset PC, 22 1111 on 02-08·2000 """•
before the heanno ~~7:,'et SoB~~c:ac~~ 20006819486 Beach, CA 92663 Name Statement Sliver 11111& Entertain· Nice Lane •110. New· CC>Yrt, Newpon Beach, 20006819088 Name Statement
You1 appearnnce 90742 Dally Prtot Feb. 17, 24, Renee Lynnette The following persons ment, 35 Starlrsh Court, P°.<~~~~rts9tp~:~3el· c:..~::~\ Bart>er, 22 Dally Pilot Feb 10. 17, The lollowlog persona mov be 1n person or This business 11 000• Mar 2. 9, 2000 Th427 Cartelon. 13932 Pegg are doing business as· Newport Beach, Cal1lor· anson. 220 Nice Lane Gretel Coun, Newpot1 24 Mar 2 2000 Th390 are doing buStness u
by vour ottornev. ducted by· husband and St • Westminster. CA James Architects. 419 nla 92663 #110, Newpon Beacti. BeaOh, CA 92663 Fictltlou1 BualneH Sa1561eg5 ~~~ Gf.'!'P,·seolrtu11e' IF YOU ARE A I Flctltlou1 Bualnea1 92683 East Sevanteenth St. Jerry Garcia, 35 Start1Sh b S ~-,..,. wi e Name Statement This business la con· Suite 203, Costa Mesa. Coun. Newport Beach, CA 92663 This uslneu Is con· Name tatement F, Cosla Mesa. CA CREDITOR or a H11ve you started ducte<t by, an Individual CA 92627 Cahlornla 92663 ThtS business ls con· ducted by· an lndMdual Tl\e lolloW1ng pe'10N 92626
con tingent ored1tor d01og busrness yet? No The lotlOWtno persona Have you started Jamee J Samay, 345 This business Is COO· ducted by. en lnd1Y1duaf Have you started l'ir9 OOing business as Safeguard f'ropemes, i
of tho deceased, you Allen J Wetl\s are doing business as: doing t>uslnen yet? #L·J, Cos.ta Mesa, CA ducted by: an tl'ldlvldual Have you started doing buSlness yet? No o Electronics. 2.960 Air· Inc .. (CA). 1565 Scef'llC mutt file your claim This statement was Glaciers Edge Dis· Yes, 2•9•2000 92627 Have you started dOfngbuslness yet? No Mitchell Bart>er way Ave Suite A·102 Ave SUlte F, Costa
with tho court end rited with the County trtoU1ing, 11 o 35th St. A. R •nee LY n nett e This buStness ts oon· doing bu11neas yet? Keith Melanson Thl5 stalem&m was Costa Mesa, CA 92626 Mess, CA. 92626
meil a ooi:>y to the Clertt ol O~ C9Unty Newporl Beach, CA Carleton indivld 1 Yes, 2!2-()0 , This statement was hied with the County Mustafa Atjall, 31 Sit· This business ta oon-
paraonal repreaente on °2• 11 •2 92663 This $tatement was dH'.~e by~~~ star::d Jerry Garcia llli;d wllh the Coonty Clerk 01 Orange County verptne Dr" Newpon ducte<l by a corpor11uon
tlve appointed by the 200068'·11483 Ryan Mosle~, 110 filed With the County ooing business yet? This statement was Clertt ol Orange County °" 02·01•2000 Beach, CA 112657 · Have you 11art1d
court wrth1n four ~:1:Y /.'~1 /c:Jo 1lh422~ ~~cn~bA ~663ewport Clerk ot Orange County Yes, 11·10-99 filed whl'I the County on 02-04-2000 7 0111~ PtlOI~~~~ Thlt outlness IS con· doing bustnen yet? month• from the I on 02·11·2000 James J, Bamey Clelll ol Orange County 20006818 87 -r...a 6 duded by; an lndlvldUAI Yes, 1999 dote of firat 1 .. uanao Flctltloua Bu1JnH1 This business s con· 2000681050(9 This i talemenl wa.a on 02·02·2000 OaNy Pilot Feb 10, 17, 17. 4, 2000 .,...,7 Have you staned Safeguard Propen141S,
of lettore ea provided Name Statement d~a~et>y~~~ 1'1\~l:~ Deity Piiot Feb. 17, 24, filed w11h the County 20006818655 24, Mat 2, 2000 Th403 Flciltloua Buelne•• ck>tng business yet7 No Inc , Rol<1nd Earle
In section g 1 oo of The lotlowtng persona doing buslne1S yet? No Mar i, 9, 2000 Th421 Cler1t of Onal'ge county Dally P1tot Feb 10, 17, Fictitious BualneH Name Statement M\JStafa AIJ8rf Wllchtnan P19slden1
th. C.llfornla Pro. are doing business as: R~an • ...._,_y on.02·()8..2000 24, Mar 2, 2000 Th409 S The following pe1$001 Thl.s Shllernent was Thia 1111emen1 was
LOCAL WOOD, t630 ........, 2oooe&10084 1 Name tatement are d01ng business as· filed with tl\e Couniy hied ""'"' the Co\.lflty bate Code. The ume s. Lyon, Senta Ana, CA T Is statement was Flctltlou1 Bualne.. DsllV Pilot Feb. 10• 17• FlctJtlou1 Bui neaa The following pert0ns PACIFIC COAST LIV· Clertt °'orange Couniy c1en.. 01 Orange Courtly
for flllng cl111m1 wlll 92705 llled With tl\e Coonty Heme Statement 24• Mer 2, 2000 Th413 Name Statement ere Ckling business as ERV SERVICE, 2730 on 02-0IHOOO on 02·08·2000
not expire before B 11 1 y o e way 11 e Cler1< of or:;ae County The lollowlog persona The lolloWing persons Tile MeetlnO Speoat· Seaview Ave , Corona 20006t190t7 2000M19092
four month• (rom Rushing, 1415 s '34roh on 02·18-2 are dotng buslneu ai' are dO!ng tx.rslnen as· i.1. 28861 Trabuco Del Mar, CA 92625 DallV Piiot Feb. 10. 17. Dally PllOI Feb 10. 11
tho heer1n11 dote St.. Santa Ana, CA 2000&e20206 FfDUCIARY AUTO Flctltloua Buelne.. JasfTlln'1 Care Home. Road, Suite E·145, Mis· Paul A Blank, 2730 24, Mar 2, 20001'1391 2• Mtt 2. 2000 Th385 notloed above. 92707 Daily Pilot Feb. 24• Mar CONSUL TING 2929 Name Statement Z817 San Juan ln.. slon Viet<>. CA 926!H Sealllew Ave , Corona
YOU MA y EX· Aptll Joy Rushlno, 2, 9, 18, 2000 T1'1431 Newport Blvd .. N11wpo11 The lotloWlng persons Costa M'3a. CA 92626 Shh1ey Ann Marley, Del Mar, CA 92625
AMINE tho ftle kept \415 s Blrctt SI , Senta Beach, CA 92863 are doing business as Manuel G Peru. 22'52 Canaveral...! Mts· Thl8 bual°"' 11 con· ~
by the court. ti you Ana, CA 92707 Ffctltlou1 Bualne.. Fran~uca Inc., (CA), Fo1u11 Equt~ent, 28t7 San Juan ln, sion VlejO, CA 92091 d\JCted by an individual _ f/zt' ••• t ,hi bu~• t N S•-te--t 2929 Newport Blvd 1•10 C St -w Colla Meaa CA 92626 Thia "'"Sf"a•s Is con· H I d are a pereon int r s ,..nen • con em• ... .. .... , 84 •• .. · ... • Vtlme 8 Perez. 2811 ducCed bv' ~Mndlvtd\lal eve you 1 ert•
ed In the etuno. you <111cted by l\u$band and Tht lollowlng persona ~:~ort each. CA Santa Ana, r-9r05 Sen JUlln l.11 . Coste Have yov started ~ng 1btsli:~t yet? No ~~~t f~e lo~~~' ~~~ w'::ave you started "~C:ZOvi:!e~~(:. Thi• bustneae 11 con· u~iwacd St ~~~e~: Mesa. CA. G2628 oolng business yet? ~~ iiatement wH ~\.lllt IOI Stieclal dntng bu1111eu yet? lions 1834 Newpol1 ducted by I CQl"POnlllon Santi AN. CA 9i105 This butlness If con· Ye1, H/87 flied Wllh lhe Coonty
Ot'ce of thM tiling Yes, t H!i·9G BIVd ' Colt• Me&a CA Heve you 111t11d Till' bualne11 Is con· ciuc;ttd by· husband and Shirley Ann Maney Clerk 01 Ora~ County •
• v .. "I J A htng "282T • doing bUlll'ltll yet? <IUC1ed by; an lndlVlduaJ wilt Thi• &latement Wei 02 Ot .. of en Invent ory end T~;~ ~olo~~ant was •Paul Mo,,lt 10261 Yee, 2+00 Hav• you 11a1ttd Heve you started tiled with the County otl . "'aoooea1M4t
eppralsel of ettete ltltKI with tne CounlY Oelano Or Cyprau CA Franoeltca, Inc., Ben dOlng l>IJSlnen yet? No dOing buafoess yet? NO CktOl of Orange County DailY PllOI Feb 3, 10,
aa11t1 or ot any Clerl< ol OrMgll County 90630 • • Berger, V~ Prealdent EdWeld T r:o.ier Manuel G Perez on 02-0t·2000 17, ~4• 2000 Th371
petition or oceount on 02 11 2000 Thia bualneN I• 000• Thls 1t.atement was This itatement w•• Thlt 111111men1 was 20006816'34 Fl,..:t:Jou• Buat:==::
H provided in .. , 2000fl114t7 ducted by• en Individual lifed wrth the Coon1V filed with t'1e County med witl'I 11\e CounfV Delly Piiot Ftb l. 10, .. uu ,.,__
t•on l 250 of tho 081ry Ptlot Feb t1, 24. Have you •tarted Ctertt ol Orange County Clerk ol Orange Covnty Cl~ ol Orange County 11. 24, 2000 Th380 NllM S~nMnt
California Probote Mnr 2 9, 2000 Th425 doing bualneH yet? No on 02·11-2000 on 02 11·2000 on 02-0S·2000 Flcthlo\la Builnea1 Th• lolloW!Og i>ellOnl Code., A Rtquett lot P•;" Morris 2000'81Mtt 2000H1MOO 2000M1t0tt H $ t ,,.. doing bueineu aa.
Spec1ol Nr>t1ce lorn\ Flctltlout ButlneH Thit etatemerit wu Dally PHOI Ftt> 17. 24, Dally Piiot Feb. 17, 24, Dell¥ PllOI Feb 1<>; t7, ..... !me1_......!.--.me.!1,... Cllbon SOf!Ware. to
ta evetloble from the Neme Statement flled with the County Mar 2. 9. 2000 Th422 Mar 2. o, 2000 Th418 24, Mar 2 2000 Th3!11 .... .,....,...rig pe • ...,..s Via AtcHol 18401. "Ourt clork Thi lollnwtnO s>erton• ,., .... -• ..._ Coun .,. doing~.... 11'111'11, CA 82912
l .. -...y fot •r• ttOlnv b1J1tn"' u . "::'0'"21e""2
111"nge IY Flc:'tltlou• Bu•I-•• Flctltlout Bu1lneH Flctttlou• Bu1lnaH Profeuior\al Preeen· Jimmv Henwell. Jr .. 10 ~·-·-Newport Br11101 Ex· "" • • ~-Ne-9 • ..._..:::;.t NllM 8tatem.nt Neme Ste-.ment •ttoos, •533 MIC.Arthur via Rlcesot •8'401, .-eddoner: llC\ltlve Su11 .. , 1300 ·-.... v, ..... --.. -· •332. N4twpc:xt Betdl. Irvine CA 92812 DetM Alen o •·t I SI N rth O•lly PilOI Fetl 241.MM· Thi loflolMnn pertona The lotlowlng l)ereona The followtng P8110nt CA DZ660 _,_ ................ It ........ •-...-.en r .. 0 reet 0 "· 2 a 16 2000 1n432 ~ ,.,. ·' •re dOtl1o ""'""' ••· .,. dOinO ~·· DIYtd L. Arno4d, 2521 ... ·.::z. ::-.::-, ............ ""'."'~ ,_ Sutt• 100..1 Newport • · · are bull~94 u ) A.Mnced Com C.l1'1e0 MoclOal Bill· ....,.., ... .,, ......... ._. =:-J.-:' uw Dtlo1:i" M~~ P=roe• 11• J!lcatlOu• Lilriiii ~ic12 1~!~R1~:: ~1. Ent9rp11ta. t1) ~8·. 2~~~ P~7~~ P•0~ ~:en~b~ae~wPOrt ~vu:_ :!«871:.:
,._. •• Le ,alma LLC. C.llfomla ltmtled Neme ... tM!ent HUntlngton &.1eh, Cal Par Ktng by ACE. C) N:M 92669 ,~ Th1t butineU 16 COO· Jltl\ ~ Jf.
Aw .. 6103 Llllti•hly CornpM'ty, (CA). The IOl!owlng pereone m.ee ~r Ktngl, '7~ AmiOoa Joan Gt11ndlll0, 234t2 dueled by. an lndMd\ial TNI ~ W8I ~CA 92807 !J\!lt Alrwly Avenue, 111re doing bu"*" M. Clete MolllCltk, 22072 IY f • ••POrl P9ctflt Palk. 20, A~IO Havt you atatled hied Wiit• Ill County
02/24, 02/25. 03102 Suite T-3, .Costa Mlll8, Poling A.HOCletH, ltlandtr Ave , H~nl· ~,;A :meeu, VllllO, CA mSft ~ bul~ ~?NO Clertt o1 On1nae CGunt'f
CA 82616 :u:~ .::=• er~ ~ 9t:.:;: ~= 730 ~ Wey n . Thia butin!tll te oon• DMI l. Amofd. on 02 0!•2000 ... !~ ~k~~ ~· MerQtrtt•. CA 92981 lefMder AV9., Hunt· N••pott Beach, CA duded by .o lndlV!Wal ,..!:'~·~cc:; 1)11.v .._ 'r:~ A
""'"' ,.._.,,, Kim PollnG. 2t7t2 =n Buoh, CA. taeeo Have yo1,1 ttarted Cttftl of Ot9ngt Col.lntY 111 .• ~ 4. 2000 ~ bitty""' ....... llnda Ad',.. H38, Thie llUilneel II ClllO': doltig ~ ... ?No ...._" ,,....,,,.. ..-.:i•..o;..;.-.-..-----.......,•1 Have you et•rted ..... .. -..... .......... ._ .... ...-.....,....,. ~ ~ .,., " """"' OOlnQ bUlirttH y•I? " • " c" 0 •• n I • .. ... bwlNM te OIWI• -.. ., ...... ..._ 2000ll11QS
Vu 1211/99 Maraelfta. CA taell clucMd by. hulCllnd "1d H••:..i=. ~n= ...:-~·-;:'~ OalW Pilol ,_ 13, 10, Chlftcla 119
Del Mer Prope~ nil bullMN II con-wle dllllo:...s ~ Clet1t Of °*'II County 17, 2•1 ~ Th38t .-., .. H . L~~C2t.!c.lltomla L OuCtild 11y, an lndMdUel Hav:.,.z:. •taned "Tiiie l·*IOO ,_
l-111Y c~. C.tM Have you ~''" OOlrlll e ............... Yf/(1 Ho• ...., ......... .:"'~ on ot ti· -tml When you.,.. wMI 1°" Mid
MolWnO, o.Nt'el ,... ~ =-· ,... .. No =;;;;; . Clltlt of a..~ o.lr Pld ,. ,.,, 14. • Cf111••• M. ......... ·~ - -,.!\"'..,.,.::,,: ~~:= ..,.,.,,~-,.,, !>!.---· rou-•• ~="' ... = ~.~~ ~· ecu.v =r."'t:t: 'IM_~ LL ...... "'M.r.A:" an02·tl· ... .,... ... ..
-11111 tt• OM1 •= ,... P!!fa,Plot.Alt>. 1z.-14, MfllDll Mir. DllW fl'llll 10 11, _J-!.-!!!.!J!~__,;,-...... .... ............. --.... •;-=.;..;;;o!:.,!_...,..llOOO-....._'TMll ........ -. !. •• , .. -....... ,, .. ,,. -......... -
~~----------------~~
•
. .
lluh .. 11111l 1f1•111llirn·• 1111• •11ltj1·1·1 10' 11.111::1·
\\ii hrn1t 11111 i1·1" 1'111 p11l1h·lwr n· .. 1·n ,., 1111'
11;tl11 111 1·t·11 .. 111 nt•l11••11\. n•\ I"" 11r n •j1•1·1
1111~. d11 .... 1rw1l wh1·r1i~·111r111. Pl1•i1 .... • n·pmt
1111\ 1·1ror 111111 11111\ lw 111 '°"' d11-..1ri1•1l 111 I
i11111u·1li11ll'h 'I Iii' 'l>Hil~ Pil111 111•1·1·p1• 1111
1i.1hi1il\ 1111 1111\ l'Hlll i1111111111\1•r1i .... ·1111•111 ror \\ l1id1 II Illa~ IH• rt'•fHlll•il1f1• 1•\1 l'pl (111'
1lw 1•11•111r dw •p111·1• ,w111oll~ tw111pi1·1l l1~
tlll' 1•1wr ( 11·.fil 1·1il11111h IH· .1llm1nl l111 il11·
fir.,1 i11·1·rti1111, . "
1 •IS
101 • 216
i du1101u11hcd •u11con and
CK•n'r Cou111}' ra.ckn1 uoa 1941. puttd aW>y •t h1t home
on fd>NU)' 19, 2000 from conpm hon f•oli;n Ht wu arano&cL · Dr llttkha-n aubluhtd ha mcdKal pumu in .S.,,u
Ana 1n 190 ud wu • ~al Sc Joo!r.h• tt.M11l 111 ~ wbac he wu
dv founh .lt«nwd 8oud Canf!Cd S..tl'!lfl 1n °'-C...AIJ Uln, h< WU af'.Ju1td wiih tM JOllNO«l-CnldCI
Mcd.c&I Cluuc ,. AnW.m ..+icrc II« ptaructd •1 M..ttin U.iha IWia Hcioptul. Sc Judci HoJPlul in Fullmoti.
Hoa1 H'!>p•lal •• N~ lluth and Aiuhcim
MemonJ Heoptul fDt "'°" 1hM1 40 f"'• 0. llc:rkJliuJCll hfld llWly J>OMllOIU Ill htJ liftt1mt U1clud1111 Pm1clfli1 of the Onnv Coonty SwVaJ So<~, member of thr <Kan,. County M..cLcal Auoci•~. "-'1wl MtdJOI AM«uuon, a Fellow of IM Amtt1cAJ1 Collet• of S..11coru. • Dlplom11 o( lhe Mrrlan Mnlkal llOard of S~ and a mtmbn of
111< Royal Soaety of Mtdmne of EaalancL He tu1ttd from ICIJW prl(tl« in .,89
•0t 8" WU tum ph,.;c.•n (01 the An.h<1m High
School FG01btll 1um Clunna •k Cure Van Hoo1tbe:~ m of the I ')SO. and 19601 a!MI Fn<rou.Jy p~ h11 umc
to 1h< Anaheim ·cot.nim" for mor< than )0 y~
Du11n1 the 1980s. 114' wa. tum ph)'.!K~n f01 lhr World
Tram Trnn11 Anahrim Onngct Owr the yun, ht
h<IPCd coundm hiah Khool. collrJt ·~4 prOl'astONI ath~ 1ndc'!'l,J1m P.uwU. Don l.Jrytd.ak. Billk Jwo Kina. Ro.oc , Muon• Navu11fova., Staey Miraolia, Vina Van rauna. Pit ~h. H.t11k l,foy.!. MM!t Y• and
many oth(f• He • ., an aV>d 1cnni. puyu and pl•)'<d
...ml umo a wrck ~P io the •i< ol 15. liu famJy Ofl&lft1lly from BuR'1lo, Nrw York wu living 1n l.ocidoft. &t.f.lnd whnt llrnncu wu botn on JlnlllfY 12. 1912 Thal umr yni. th<Y •m 111 ~ 10 ttlWft 10 Nrw Yot\ on 11M 1U.f11ed ~
of tht 1i1an1< 11nul •• 11lon• Yonu11oudy fore.rd 11U
llnuly to flO"POllC dicit lllP.
ICJa;lllftl Complt1ccl lo.J lltlM&r.clu•lt nucha U
• SyrKll>< Uo1"'trm7 and araduattd . from Columbia
Unl"m!I}' ~Of Phyacwu 111:P:?eoru Jn 1'39. !'riot io WW.II. ht compl.ttd pou rt teud.n ••
Mwuch, Cnm.nr -titre ~e h th< h11to11call1
"l"ific:ul1 oc:-to mttt both H11Jcr 1Ad Mu.uolint 0. 8atJuuarn Y'DN111ttttd 10 .fCMO die US Nm'! MrdlUI Corp on ~ 12. l'M2 and ~ 111 ~ •nlt tllc Fifilt lnfllllf)' du11nc .WWII fOf O¥CI dutt rar• wi1h S1 Lultl• H~w lJnu (one of th<
or1c1u l •M"A'S'H• <YJ<u.111on ho.p11•f 11n1u) He pottlC'f"'t.d '" fin m•101 Europt11n camp.i1p• a11d l«Clvtd • Pwplt Hnn ind llie l!R>nJ.C St.it from 1h<
U.S Cow1n1Mnl for mn11011....a wrvi<r 1n 11ound
Qlmbll l&'•nU atmccl rocm7 du11n1 the Bank. of the
lul&r m lk!Jium on J,inuary I, 190 lilt urut wu
amon& the ffiit 11l1<d hbt1111111 fc11<tt 10 llflYC end
pton<k mccllcal aunutK< •I Bu<hrnwUcl conwiu•llOCI
amp 1n Cnmany
Bennn1 mt1 h11 wifr, O.•n• 1n 1he Unntd Kin~
whm w -11<:rv1n1 u lJI oll'l<lrf on En5W'1 Royil Ait 1'>rc:r. Af1a th. wiy, lhf)' ltvtd bri<lly 1n C~mown,
New Yotlt btforc ~ultng in Onn&r Counry in 1.,.8.
lknnctt a!MI !Mn• ...re mmkd ~~.,a, durin1.whkh dim they trivc.ltd ent1U1Vdy 1hmud!Ou1 the world lknntu hvtd lift 10 the Mlcu ind rdutd by
p11niin1. <r«11n1 nudlrpo1nt nitchcrr. fi1h1n&: •rdcn1na. and collttt1n1 anuqun Ht .,., an 1YHI
liinori1n 111d conduc1<d wukl7 ltcturo st ~
WtlliJl(IOn 1n Lapn.a H1llt unttl die ttmt of lus death
He Wiii bt rnnmibaccl by au who ~ lum .. I
ltlM'IUIJlll Ph,..0.11. ca1i111 IT!ftld and l""'nl fldirt Ht wid Ii< deMIJ 1111..<d by Ilia _.., ftWncla a!MI hu
-!Inoa 9nklu116<11 of c...i>na cltl ~ Im ~U&hm 5111&11 Urman of Ntwpot! llac:h. hta 6w lrNl'kltii.lrca. an4 hb 1111n Marprcc Bo11111t of Bvtr.ro, New YoriL
la111e11'1 •1fc, O.u1. prcdeuued lua 1• D«cmbc:r
1"9.
NMtal -fl will lie beW Friday, F~ 2S.
2000" 1 p_,.. 11 w~ c~ a.t.ced 11 11od Eu! F.ii~ .. ...., .. AM. lltm will lie llO ...... ._...
T1IC h.nufr ~ 111 llN ol llowirn. m-W. lie
di:r«ccd .. -o( 1lic ~. Q#,llblc otplllM•-
~ H..t A-i~ C-.,~ "600 Campa°' • ,,.,_, .., ... 9}611
r.alcs..dt-Yo.aT..i. .._., .....
clo USTA Soulhcm CalJonu• Sc.won PO. lo1 l~ I s-1 . .ot Aftstks. CA !I0014
Gt'
EQUAL HOUSING
OPPORlUNITY .. , ......... ....,...... .. ....
..... .,.i ........... , ...
llfllft llllMtllltAdtl I .. ..
......,.. wllln ••n 11111..,1
,. tfmlllf ••• , ,. • ..,,_,
fMllCtlltl Of •lntl•lttllH
'"'' .. ~. u ttt, ,...,..,,
..... -..ic ... t ........... "
.-..Mtlltfl,tt .. ....... to••.., •n• ,,,.._,,
............ , '1t1.
llltt H••••,., wlll ttl k""'"" ..... .., ...... ......................
......... tC ..... °" ttMn '" ..,,., .......... "'
f•tMI ... •••ttttee• II ltlh _,...." ............. ....,..,....., __ .,._
...................... llUO
Jiii 1111 et I .... ,...... Jet .............. oc ... ,,.... ........ .,. ...
PLUG
IN
I •
...
By.Fu
(CJ.tl)l fl tJ 11.·11)-t
11r...1 .. 11• II•~ """ ·~lll• •Ill I 1J"''~ 11111"'" t ''"'' ... 11 •. 111 \Oii
''·" l 'i1l1 '' 111•' 'I'~'" '
ByPhone
(1H11) (H:!·.->h.,11
220. 3tl
•V.A.•
SO DOn ·SO MOVE.If
FREE COUNSELING
Fall UST OF HOt.ES
HUONAREPOS
714·534-8100
VETER.~'. REAL ESTATE
Size of
Ad
2x2
By MaMn Penom
:rn1 \\c·•t Bm . trc·t·t
(·,,._Iii \fl',U. ('\ 11:!1>:!°'
\1 \1·•1•111 111111 ~ IL11 'I
Index
420
•
Boors
1..tq1l111111· ll:J011111-:,.oop111
. \11•111,11-l fltl.11
\\ ull-111 IU0.1111-:"i;Oll11111 \f,.,,1.1, I ri•l.11
470. 471
ChlnDtl .,,
you .. llnd .,...,.,Mid ........
,..., .... Pilr .... ,..,,... = ... 19
;
·.
Doily Pilot
,_ ___ DNdllnes -----.
Monday ....... : ......... Frida) 5:00pm
Tue:iday .............. Monday 5:00pm
Wednesday ......... Tue 'duy 5:00pm
Thursday ....... Wt.>dnesday 5:00pm •
F ri<lay ............... Thur day 5;00ppt .
aturclay ............... Friday S:OOpm
••o. ••1
..
Doily Pilot ·
l~l r~11-cma11-~1 ____,,, ...... _. _________ _
Subtle Tones
Ston M•n•SJef W•nt9CJ
SeeflVlg Stoie Mil\IOCf lor
OU1 COiona del Mar Plaza
5IO!e 2 yetll ~
PpetltRCe teqtared SublJe
Tonti olleta a W'/Ondtl1<11 women·• ~et m1<1ge
home 1Urrll5hrlg\ and beth and beeUly produtts BeM-
lds 401k lllO e•cel""d salary Offeild F1x rll6Ul'l\e
to the attention 0( S\1$iln
WalsMiuman R•~ourca.
310-223-2940 Uve ~le tn
comlOfl Sobde T Olle6
Wicka Furniture
In Cosl• Mesa is now hlt111g WAREHOUSE WORKEAS
ClERICAUCUST SVC
CONCIERGES
Corpoflle benefit peck·
191. Included. Full and
Pwt llm• po11tlon1 evall.
ANlt hOura. Ple11t aipply
In ptl'IOfl. Eny ICCHI to
405 FWY. 3200 Hll'bof
Blvd, Co1t1 Me11
4 PHONE REPS.
FUI I.me, ene1ge1c tor
Mot1gaga Co earn 10 S600
-rweek + benelt.s. aa:8' •XI> prtf'd Contltl Motassa
949·250-5719
478 EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES
I MW JJtlSA 'ti ,.._be wwy of N ~ ual 17 Bleelr/Tln
of 1nt c~. LI Pv. ladll a (T362S3} '32.MO Chedl .... lie Ioctl wl11clo••. ..... ITtftUNG l llllW ltn• lueinel1 l u-n..et14ll MM41-llOO
r1111 be10t9 you aenc1 8ilfW i2i IA 'i1
ll'ly money Of .... Acur• LIQencl wLH 'IO co Qwlgef!
f0t MfVlcel. RHd White. 4dr V8, IUIO A/C, (W18792} .. SJl,.00
flllcl llndtfltlNS 1rty lhl, fl' pwr, pe pb pw, ITtRUNG ..... •
eontracta befOtt y~ CMlt CCf*ol am-Im c•. Mt4U-5IOO •~n. ~~ .. ~ ~=~1= IOICK COUPE 'ff
Hottell •Bos Opponinty BMW M3 'it $500. 71+.a2-o338 1oi 2000 S11ver & llOkl coina Loaded lliici< AeoXL ts ·ii
Clll Joe IM8-S4"24 I (E11356) $37.600 V·8, mioys. leather. ABS.
STEAUNG BMW (>fl0111r11QI
1
484 MONEY I IMM45·5900 (208SC/514251) 118,999 :ro LENNWunrft a .. w n •91 coA&T cADILLAc • ..",...,_ • Low Milts 1400-'ft.COAST
Ara you drowning In (B78023) S28·245 BUICK no AOMAST"'., ,.,. ovtrdue bllla? S1attwlde STERLING BMW n ,. """ -Agency cen help you get 94M45·5900 Low 511< mlles, beige,
beck on top with eny BMW 318 ICA 97 leathei, rare model. MINTI
llnanclel dlltlcultlu, Low miles, "Foplessl <411348l~8EAS 111•988
bu1ln11111, hom11, (878023) S28.700 r;f14~100 boata, t\ave VKetlon INS STERLING BMW ;n n Ti'DI 't7
personal. en.JH-1454 MM-45-5900 -.... • .......
81 CHARLES GOREN
With OMAR SHARIF
and TANNAH HlllSCtf
WES't
• 9 5
l'IORTJI
.t.KQJ 73
0 76
0 98 7 s
• 9 2 EAST
106 2 o K lOll S
(\ l06~3
• l07 J
°" AQJ9 0 ,\J 2
• K85 SOUTH
•A tl4
""4 J 2 o KQ •AQJ64
BMW 321 CONV.'91 Beau. Low mites, btlU!i tan
I I l!NI MIQlllc BllWGreen. lelther, llloyl. bl! oi wa11 The b1JJ1nir 690 POWER Perltc:t Condition. 1n . (0192161.:.A.E~S $18.988 EA.•ff sotint \\'ESr :-.ORTH """" n I• PilSt Piwr t • BOATS l mt $33,000. 949-706-0806 _ (714)540-tlOO Pow Jvt' Pa;s ~
. • BMW m IA '17 CAOillC clftRA 'ii Piw
OWN 18 Of 20ft ELECTRIC Low mies! Chrome$! Low 311 mites. red IM!hlt. g INC~~~-0~~ :C~ IV~~UNG 8J:·995 more•(1~:~AS S21,988 • Op.:mn~ lead foe of Q
Maggie MM73·nOO M~S-5900 (714)540-9\00 Wtnntn!,! ddcn..c ,, not ca.•)' 1-1
fl88 EJeCtrlC liy Boat 181 BMW 328 IA '17 CADILLAC CATERA '98 learn. onJ C\Cn oilier you hJ\C mJ» Runs gn, IUSI needS $OfR9 SpOlt Package Chfome wtllels. llalhef. 1cred lhc technique a monl(nl> .:a~
cosmetic TLC Gt111t buy at (V46106) $29,735 ABS. cassde le) ~~) c:in ruin every1h1nr We>t
$6990 obo. 949-723·5961 STERLING BMW (20680(.CAYH754) St9.995 l..nown :is an excellent ddendcr. :::======::! 193 15BW D1untlt11 70hp Ml-645-5900 COAST CAOlLLAC made one good pl3y ;,nJ on.: baJ. and Johnaon full cover, Gelv BMW 328 IA 197 1..eoo-79-COAST Ea.s1 Wi:<.t paid the: pn1:e. Piia• 1>e •ware 1h11
lhe lllllng• In 1hl1
category m•r require
you to eel • 900
number In which
lhere la 1 charge per
minute.
CLASSIFll!D
Trlllor, xlnt cond. S1 t ,56o Stiver wfGray Leather CADILLAC Concour1 •97 If you ¥1!1 fixed tn the b1Jdtng, ''a>
obo. 949-650.2565 (V«634} S19.995 295 Hp Nonnstar low li~1.-d Once E~t opened in Sou1h\
'97 Purauh 2270 c;o,., STER UNG BMW miles, Sea' MIS1. lthr & inore long ~u11. 11 was com:cU<ir, S11u1h to
Console T·lop, 01Jtngge1s, 948-645-5900 • (212804) S24,988 pass Om: nt> 1rump·1~ Jn mknnr
VHF. Furuno 687 hsh finder, BMW 328 ISA '97 NABERS Fururio GPS, ball system, 5pon Pacbge (714)540-9100
350/hrs 71 4·953·4810 (T35439) 129,995 CADILLAC Concoura •91
949·673-8695 STERLING BMW While diamond finish, lttu.
948-645-5900 chrome wheels, cd s1acker1
llt;llf'n. '"''' 11,..,c 1111ihl ""' he ;i
SQlll'CC: of lfl~"' "-hen~ nh maJ.:
qlll:\hun:ihk bol~111.u1w 1'1111 ol one p.~k. South .Jc 11kJ lhcr•• .. J, a
11u.kl d1Jn,-e 1ha1 ~onh h ~ m..:
VJIUC$ 1n hc:irh. in.J ~I Ch11~ '" h1J
three no trump · w,.,, o.kl:iJcJ lh.11 \uu!h 111u~1 ha\C ~lop~ Well )l<Jp~J. un1J 'fl.lJC) WU~
n1>1 un ..i11r..a.;t10.c lo: aJ Tho.•rdorc, the
Jo.:fcntl~ r ctc~u:J h> .111.1, ~ "'11h hc:Jrt\,
1hc hcucr 11t 1ho.: ro.:mJ1111iig \Ull\ [~1
m;hlc 11): 1.h~<>Hry plu,Y. ot 1n,tnmii
the J.,..J, whkh \loc n lpc Jdc:nlkJ
1hcn conunuc: w11h tli.: ~ :inJ queen
OI ll<!:iJ1S \\o.:,I O\t:lltll,I. \lollh lhc
l.tni: anJ CJ~locd lhl' 1c11 tu con1plc10.:
11-...: Jclcn\l\I.~ be.(! TI>e dtfcn-c Wib
at lhc , ru\)l\~IAJs
II fu,t held the ace ol 'lf'3<.1CS, 11
\Ii;" unhl.d) lh.11 the contr.ict coulJ
he nraJc 110 m;.11,r \lot .. 11 Bui 11 East
helJ 11 m1nur ull c II r11111h1 be
• YUJI in ti 1nL 11 1mn : ,:"•h \lier
.i n>ttkrattlc lho11~h1 \\. ~ led tu
\haft 10 1 club the u 1 partracr h.IJ
l>cJ Ckd.u~r qu1d ly 111r:ippcJ up
nine Incl." th:in~~ to lu~ bn:~1n11
C\cnly
Till! J.td ol hc:.m, t incl. nnc IA-OI\
111<! !l<J\Kl pl.1y B\J1 [ .. ~. erred UI lnCk
1hn:e tiy ~M11•1u11111 .... 1111the11uccn ol
hcJrt\ C o. •ITC(! '""oh 10 hrM c.1,h tho.:
.t•e ol J1amuno.h , lhcn rcvcn m
hc.irh 0JJI \lo11ul,J hJ\C cn$ur~J a
unc· ltld. M: I
. ... .. .
Thursday, f eQ<uary 24. 2000 87
TODAY'S
&ROSSWORP PUZZLE
ACROSS
1 l<ono OI tQUad
, S 0. I Ll/llA ' COUIWY 10 'l'NM
1• Atll\fllUITWIWI 15 Hdl
16 Col!te llOldclrs
17 lelltrman • •tvl l 1e 811.0
111-a••S 20 BuAO n E<:OnOmtC11 one 2• "Les M1st1104u' •<1r110r 27 Aeason11>1e 28 Cosmetic buv 32 Aenoezvou• .)(;Rot
37 Ec11eme 39 T IOl>'Cl1 vine ,
•o E~yelloW •2 Agrffmt11l1
•• S.ar •S Gi.d.a!ofl Plet@
"7 PJOl\ol>llJOl'I •II M.tny l.mM, 101
POel SOS1n~ ltllltUmen1$
SI AIO..nl
53 Ontnel>I~
Mi e.M Ol I••• 5 7 Type ol blM:uol a 1 iu.Nk co.n
IS5JI -
'l l 14
17
66 Cetll &9-mii;
10 CIA Ol IMll 71 si.a~ 72. ... , .. ..,_.
73 RH()lr1ltoty
organ
7• -Allall Pot ~~ Hurry
DOWN
1 Glen 2 Cen1u11on s
highway
3 ice-c:,..m lrffl •Gay N.ne1 .. 1
111<1 Roa11ng Twem~ s 113 lbsp
6 Down W•lll Ille nu
'J Gletnour •!ems
8 Sagas 9 AQu•rourn hltl
10.SP<Ct·tlCk ~Mi I I E1YV41'9P • 12 eonc.rnang 13 ~uncw or
•~an 21 S.llel 811111 23 l.Ae the UN 25 0ecot81e an I
way
26 Eoghl voces 28 F111Nul
12 I'
11'1 1ho resource you
c"n count on to 1111 • , my1l111d or merchen-
cll•e llem:s, btc•u••
our column• compol
quelllled buyer• to
cell I
BMW 328 iSA '97 (20912/3XV09301 $27,957 _______ ,, .. -------.. -------692 SLIPS/DOCKS Low Mdes COAST CAO LI.AC I ' /MOORINGS (T341 t4l $32,500 t-eoo-n-coAST 695 CARWTRUCKS 695 CARS/TRUCKS 695 CARSfTOUCKS I ·------
STERLING BMW CAOILI.AC DEVILLE '96 NAHSISUVS NANSISUVS NANSISUVS I
842-58 78
WANTED Pnva1e boat sHp
in N B tor 65 h power boat
Xlnl rels 949-474-0404
EXI 315 Ask"lor Malt
STARTING
ANEW
BUSINESS??
94M4S-5900 Low rrujes. wtii11.1an IOlefl01 '-----..,,...;;;;;:;;;c -------~ "'--------' V·8 Nolthstar. xlnt cond CAOIL S '95 DRAIN SVC VAN Fully MERCEDES E300 '911 CLASSIFIE D
842-5978 (2?9825) $16.988 Spotles diamond whit equipped '92 Aelostarin Turbo d1uel RAREll NABERS Chrome wheels, Bose C01 excel t cond S5000'0BO 3i> monlhl. ll'l'kllfllllg O
(714)5-40-9100 (208n/3KM6845) $19,89 T 0 0 Ls and AL LI S7J3?,;"7o, payoff IS
. CADl!+AC DEVILLE '97 COAST CAOILI.AC 714--4J8.8062 I $43 8M"'1£~ mt BlaclV ~~!_.~~~.ti!; wS•apphi
1
rt C1f»"0 SN-CEVILOLEA~~ FORD EXPLOYER '97 , Tan ••adl..'<!1949·7Z0·9796 ......,.. .....,.. .,. ,. .., Eddi• Bauer Edition,
(283272) $19.988 Grey/grey. 45K low miles. white, apo11t1a. $2'2,000
NABEAS 1 OWntr, good condition. 949-955-M49
(714)540-t100 S700Clt'080 949-722-4IOll FORD XLT RANGER ·97
• CADILLAC Sdn oevU1e 113 CAD STRETCH UMO •93 Truck, Extra cab, bleckl
Leatr.t. 54.28.c miles. ABS. 30K mllta, must Mii black, 5 speed, 2.3, AC, ~ (2091~G8385) $8'00 562~7.-.01 em.fm ca1, 3~ m~ rue,
WON'T LAST CHEVROLET Cavalitf '98 atra. cleanl Btdllner
COAST CADILLAC Low lllllls, bal of wan. new $10,900 949-631-6673
1-800-N-COAST car trade-lnl GMC SLE Extend. CM> '97
CADILLAC Sein DeVUle '92 (871304) $9,988 >Jloys. bed liner, pwr 541811
MetcedH 380 SL '3
Showroom Pwf9dl
Cl181Man. V8 2 '°"'· ps, pC>, p.ot am-Im CUI,
RilW 11n. upg Wiling
bell Musi 1191 SI 1 450
obo MN48-7097 Ca lor Ans-. • r...--· "-"!-. • "'ll0'-1·90().37~tl00 tlCI code 500
~ U,11/ /kp4,,,,.,.,., 111 1k IM11] P1l.1 iJ pkt1MJ,. 111111111•1ttt 11 1lnll '""'"
,,_ 1111t11J.bk I# nrw '"1111tun
Red leather. 801< miles. su-HABEAS windllocb cd
per vakJe'(275493) $8.988 (n~)540-9100 (20892/SL96995) Sl9 ~5
NISSAN MAXIMA '99
Moontoof enoys co ~
pwr Sl'itl/WlllCVIOCkl 1-------------------------
\ii; .""II"""' SEARCH tht "'""'for JO" 111 11• Dttnf tha'ft. •"" 111w JO" u,,
tifN 11,.J tk trip ,. rlH Ol1m H"'" 111 5"11111 All4. Thm, of ""TY· ofor tht
ttttrth ;, t11mpkuJ wt ,.,,11 jiu JO"' fie1111oiu •iui111u IUlllU 1111umDJJ 1111m tlu
Ct"lllJ a"ft• /"/,/iJ/, O/ftt J lllt!tft for fo"r wtlltJ 41 IWJ"irrJ., J.11111nd J,n.:fi/,
,..,, prrof of P""ic11111>11 "'"" "11 c,,,,,,,, Clnlt. •
f'k41, 114p !oy,. filt_r"' fi";,,,,., '""11"' '"''"""'' 1111k °"'" Pi/JJ1, JJO W.
&,, St, Coll• Mn11. If JO" '"11"'1111#/ ~ '""" t11U IU ., (949) 642..fJll 1111tl 1111U _,,, .,.,,,,,,,,,,,mtr for JO" ,. INlnJu 1/1111~'"" !oy ,,.,,,£ If JO" 11»11/J haw ""1 fimlur 'f"tJ110111, pkt11t cwU 111 a,,J ""' 1111/J bt morr th.11
fllltl 10 41JUI )'Oil G.,,./ /~/, 111 JO"' llt'lll 'IUiJtm.'
NABERS CHEVROLET LUMINA '91 COAST CADILLAC
(714)540-9100 Euro, V·6, 4DR xlnl con<I-1-800-79-COAST
CADILLAC Sdn oeYitle 1911 IJOn, won' last! Snow wNle lintsh, tealhllr, (255934) $.c,988 cass, Northstar! NABERS
(2{)65(Y408L949) 527.968 (714)540-9100
C~ST CADILLAC CHEVROLET VAN '95
1-800-79-COAST Conversion, low 32K miles.
CADILLAC sfs '94 bubble lop, lealller. power Sootless while diamond lln-sol a bed. loaOadl !Sh. hl'lr. Wheels. B05t COi (205603) $16.988 (20918/039950) $17.999 NABEAS
COAST CADILLAC (714)540-9100 t-t()().7M:OAST --------I CHEVY G20. ¥•TOH COH·
RENT
thtough classine<I
VERSION VAN '93. loaded,
v1pt1 Alarm, anll·lock
br1kes. •lnl cond11ron,
$7000 .Frm 773-251-9-498
HONDA ACCORD EX '91
Alloys, Cass/CO, low mites
j)OW8f wandoWs/1oclc.s
CLEANI (2092M!XOB732)
COAST CADILLAC
1-80().7M:OAST
• Jeep Cherok11 L TO '87.
4-WD. am'lm disk, pwr. 6or1
hhr int. S3K below blue book
$4995fobo 949·760>2614
MERCEDES BENZ 300E
'90. ReG'lan Lonnser pkg
lowered tinted. lmmac
100+kml, (2AJR804) s 16.000 pp 949-673-2044
HOME, HEAL TH AND SUSIVESS
~--..
(20744.210201) $19 9fJS
COAST CADILLAC
;::=l-8()().=====
1
M:
0
::::AST=-CaU The Pilot Classifieds at 64 2·5678
\ 1 l\E Mpi,,~
0
' 1 • ~;> to place you r Garage Sa'e Ad! "1 ,S,f. ~~2 ~ Da' ~ C' Pil· ot Si111pltly yorn _
lifr> tllrouqh
CLASSIFIED
(949, <»I;> 56 711
330 MOVING&
STORAGE 1 220 :~ll::::~J1 270 ~J1-E~11~111:;~=::l l
In an ellon to ohe1 the blsl 1ypel.. Lt~srn remodeing. LICENSED CONTRACTOR QUALITY CRAFTSMAN Trees-Pruned/Removed !::::=======--ii(
servteepowtlle1oouriead-Sel\'ldn<I Orange CM'Cy HANDYMAN Nojoblooam 1J~l 20Yeet1EX!**U Ref's Non-ltclnSedconUactoi PUBLIC •The Stucco Doctor•
Room eddottOnS, stucco patohln!I rHIUCCO L•388781 714-63H9S4 ers and llOVlltlSelS we wil lor 34 'leers l •191801 Contractors Repair 1emodll. fans. lj)I, .... YOUR HA.NOYMANI 714-751-3476
1equ1r1 Concracto1s who MC/Vasa 714-968-3564 • new MM* MM45·3'5' MARK 949-650-9525 Lin~ Sod ii'rig'1lon N QTICE
ad'.'ert!Se In Int SeMCe I I All Home Repairs seflll Aeclred Contr1C10t detaching, trtt caie &
Oliee1ory 10 indudl "* 252 CARPETS l Plumbm • Elrct11al Aeollrsll~avaments Sm removal. ganjenng & Clean Contr1c1ors Uc ans~ CAl'll-.c1 iu.-,..._ g Jobs Ou•hty/lnlegroty ~ Call Al 71063 ... 974
runber 111 their advertlff-• """11;' ~ . '-"rprniry 1 c..., Ken Me-&42-fnO
men1 ... v°"" :;.c:r•llOfl " CARPET ~CARPET 1 IM91 15~·52H en 1•
gieat., lllPI FWtpe.rs. Pelehrlg Install. Ll<Mstd
TAXES
TAX 8c ACCOUNTINC
PROFESSIONALS EW Elcmonic fi11n '"ch w p~pua11on
llt/Wllll11 I•''°'""'• IW Call NOW! '49-IS 1 ·9676
HOME Ra fr ' &tht11b Rli/ai111
Reglm'/ReTurbiUI
f'Qf(tf.11n • F1h<!rgl.m
S1nb • Showrr~
Countrr\
949-645-7723
... -"'~' ....;• ~ .. ·
I ' ~ ' .. -· .. .• t' -
Coulleous Any Size )Obs • ~~ :=1,. m--~---TMJC--C'Tl-ION--1 I 2t0 • TIU I LEWIS CONSTRUCTIOI<
LEAKY Show.a Repeired Ramodelin9 * ~man
R«pou111g & '~~bOR Uc• 70477:f locll Resider( DEAN TILE IMM73-9065, 714-657-5925
71W4M526
H'I al there
every dllY 1na........ .......,.
1 21·~1
TttE COMPUTER TUTOR
Wo1d, Excel claues
lorming now ooly S89
Loe In CM 949·548·9595
PC hlVAn WSONS
I locus on )'OUr rlffGs
from Word, to 'M.idol'fl,
10 Web r<!S'!Mth, IO y<MJf own on-lint bu1o1ms
Bill IOLDUC
949.646.4192 c.. , __ 1)•)'1
--------·11;~7~
.'ll, , . ' .
I 'I • ' )I . --t"'[.," ~ . ',I •"' J 4 • J .
H! \II 11'11 \{ • t P\1\11 Ml • 'I
. P'I' . •II ! ,. \t.i\~t I
New C.tulJRmMMlcl
Rm Alld1tio11 • Tn..,11 Imp
• Soc/Mmr UPlr.odt
• R,...ir•
• T1..,bluhM11111
Rtf,'" • l'MI / Sl'A • 1110..td .. , Lu.
Faru • N.,. Circ•i1t • <'•11-J. RH IS7/MAll-
(949lZ~lu~7478
I 211 FIREW~D I
GREAT FlREWOOOlll Order you(a nowt Only
$150kold. S8Mvlll ~ Fret delVll't 714·88S-1432
JUNK TO THE DtWlll
71W6t-1'82 AYMLABlE TOOAYI
MM73-S56'
t:1ml111ir.if111 •lt<r111r
'·"""' 111n/~,, ii Im
lrrr mtWI w11/l11/i 11,.
1-MASONRY I
M11tc'1 Maaonry Home &
Garden SpeaaWstl Al l'1Pb
Mont. bt1ck, block Sm IObS
Oii L11M942 714 969-1298
-=1
PERSONAL TOUCH
The Cali!. Publlo-
u 111111 es Com·
nllSSIOll REQUIRES
lhat al used house-
hold goods movers
pnnl lhe1r P U.C
Cal T number, ~mos
end chauflers pMt
lheir T.C P. number
1n al advertismenls
II you have a ques·
loon abou1 lhe klpal·
1ty of a mover, limo
or chauffer, call
PUBLIC UTILITIES
COMMISION
714-558·41 51
I :wo PAINTING I
( a~ PLUMBING J
Th• Local PlumlMr • ...,..,,,..,J......,,ir.
li'IH lOCATINO
lllCftONIC SLU LIAK DnlCTlON
Friendly S«vke
675·9304
Le7S~497 !Murad
lhtNeighborhood
Plumber! OWN 6 SEWU .; ;::
CWHIHG Sf'lCIAUSf
TWEEDY PLU"1BING
949-645-2352
• me •
DAN DAWSON PLUMBING
~.Remodel Repc>e, OrllRS 241U SIMce. Exoen gas system reppe1.
L•™722 MM4f .. 120
hP£Rf Dnifii c1ean1ng
Plumt;>ing 1ep11rs, 20y11
exp Al w..,r11 ouai.....i STEVE 714·54W298
PAECiSE KW
RepUs & Aemocllll FAEE ESTIMATES
Llt87391 714-989 1090
Cai<lornte Scat.
L.oc No C3!J.6 IC5.J9
All t'tJ>eS of roofing
and repairs
1..Jab1litv and Worker 1
Compensation
Insurance
Member Naoonal
Roofing ConttaetOrS
Assn
Since 1987
(949) 85().8651
wwwevanarool
I* -=I ·~Wlndow9 •
Clftaintlld W¥ ~
& Piiio doorl WI .... Alty Eett l.Jc/lrW 94!HS0-3214
\( HI I ' l>OOH
l>ot I OH
\\ 1mk1\• l>tl'f'f'll
l>l rt't'.11 Doon tic
f'rt>t" Estlllllll~
\\'«' lll••kl' ho11J(' l'lills
7 14.64 1.3119
C a ll
642-5678
Ufe, 'ff
lfe/;?
tfou.
w;,,,-ce
,
88 Thur~oy, Feb;uory 24, 2000
T ·HE ·2000 CADILLACS
·ARE ARRIVING DAILY!· AFFORDABLE
STYLE
1999 Cate~a · 2000 Catera
LEASE FOR s359/MO
• tax f()( 36 monlll INSe "3950 OO·cash down Of trldt tQllily, ,
• Phis lllC4l>(lon !tu • $$108 9S 1 only 4427
Or Purchase For Only s32,)8840
2000 Escalade
LEASE FOR
S485/MO
·+ taa IOf 38 mont11 leMe $4950 00 cash down or trade equ1fy,
plus Inception IMs • $6745 75 1 only 4188 ·
Or Purchas_e fo~ Only S 42,S0689
y. .
2000 Seville STS
SA~E $27 500
PRICE ' 1only4288
+ tax IOf 36 month teas. $4950.00 Of trlClt equ;ty,
plus lnctption lea • S7092.ae. l onty 4213
or Purchase tor Only S 4] ,800
With GM OWNER'S LOYALTY PROGRAM, you could save an additional $500!
See dealer for details.
The 2000 Intrigue All New 2001 Aurora The 2000 Alero Sedan ·
$0 SECURITY DEPOSIT So 1ST PAYMENT
$0 SECURITY DEPOSIT .
So 1ST PAYMENT
·LEASE FOR s249f_MO LEASE FOR S339J MO
+95i +tax IOf 36 mont'1£. Closed tnd lease on lf)proved ciedn Toi.II dr!W-all $2,1158 30
Resid~Sl3.08.UO TOtal of pa~ts S8,991l 20 +!all t only 199781.
• tu foi 38 monlh• Clofed tnd ....,411 epprowd crtclrt S4~ doWn llld sianelltd drive·
of!. Resldllll St8,172 Toi.II of peymtnta St 1,865 +Wt. 1only70859
Or Purchase For Only $20,890 Or Purcha.~ For Only S29,8424S
"FOR THE GREATEST SELECTION OF PRE-OWNED CARS ••• SEE NABERS"
191 CHEVROLET LUMINA
Euro, Y·6, 4DR, xlnt condition, won't lost! (255934)
'9 5 FORD TAURUS
Low 46K miles> V6, white, non·smoker, squeaky clean! (325315)
'90 CADILLAC DEVILLE
Midnig~t blue, leather, oirbog and more! New car trade in! (261532)
'98 CHEVROLET CAVALIER
Low miles, bal. of worr., new car trade·in! (871304)
s4,988
5z,988
58,988
ss,988
'94 BUICK ROADMASTER S 88 Low 51 K miles, beige, leather, rare model, mint condition! (411348) 11, 9
199 BUICK CENTURY s
Low 5930 miles, beige, snint cond, bol or warr. (426312) 18,988
._. '98 CADILLAC CATERA S 88
Low 3k miles, red, lthr, & more! ( 190825) 21, 9
'99 CADILLAC CATERA S 8.. 8
I.ow 7300 miles, black, leather, many luxury features I Bal of ';'arr. (021296) 2 3 t 9
'97 CADILLAC CONCOURS $ 8 8 . 295 H.P. Northstar, low miles, Sea Mist, lthr & morel (212804) 24, 9
'96 CADILLAC SEVILLE SYS $ ~88
Low miles, 290 H.P. Northstar, CD, Alloys & morel (803910) 24, 9
1 99 OLDSft\OBILE BRAVADA s 88 Only 5420 miles! White, lthr, moonroof, CD, bal. of worr. (723936) 24, 9
1 97 CADILLAC SEVILLE . $ 6 88 low 21 k miles, dork cherry, leather, VS Northstar, bol of warr. (817 466) 2 t 9
1 98 CADILLAC ELDORADO S 6 88 Low miles, VB NorthStar, green, many extras, bal. of warr. (6127 40) 2 t 9
199 CADILLAC DEVILLE S 88
low 12k miles, white pearl, ton leather, bal of warr, previoos rental. (805590) 2 7 f 9
'99 CADILLAC CONCOURS S 88· White pearl, low 4520 mi, 300 H.P. Northstar, bal of warr, immocl (735418) 3 5 t 9
1 2000 CADILLAC SEVILLE S 88
· Cashmere beige, low 8800 mi, CD, alloys, bal of warr, previoos rental. (145489) 37 t 9
) f I v () fJ (, I I J ,, • ( (} 'I ,, : I ', , ,, ( j I ·, l· I
2600 Harbor Boulevard
' I
Costa · Mesa .
<114> 540·91 DO .
www.nabena .....
'(·Ji •.•
2000· Catera 2000 Escalade 200() Seville STS
A FORDABLE
STY E
1999 Catera
2,506 47.800
SALE s
PRICE
500
' : 8Y
~ . ~ ~
With .GM OWNER'S LOYALTY PROGRAM, you could save an additional $500!
, · See dealer for details.
The 2000 Intrigue All New 2001 Aurora The 2000 Alero Sedan
LEASE ~OR $ /M
) 5£ JR TY [ Pt)C)IT
<,, iST PAYMENl
/MO LEA SE FOR $199/MO
"FOR THE GREATEST SELECTION OF PRE-OWNED CARS ••• SEE NABERS"
'91 CHEVROLET LUMINA
: ;I Jtr !ti/( I.
'95 FORD TAURUS
: , I/I ,. ' "I . '
'90 CADILLAC DEVILLE
l 1 t r t 1 ti J l ' " •' w lf ' l I•
'98 CHEVROLET CAVALIER
I I W f I lr (d/ 3 J1
'94 BUICK ROADMASTER
'99 BUICK CENTURY
w 1 I lU 1 1 ·~ I,, 1q1 • 1111n I ind l 11 1 "" 1 ti I
'98 CADILLAC CATERA
1 • • r r 1 I ltl 1 .., ir,., I 11 1()8 7) I
'99 CADILLAC CATERA
I L •' I I ' I ( ,,
.:
4,988
,988
,988
98
1,988
18,988
21,988
. ,. 23,988
'97 CADILLAC CONCOURS S 88 /9~ H P Northstor I, iw l'1 les Seo M1~1 lthr & morel {212804) 2 4 J 9
'96 CADILLAC SEVILLE STS s 88
I ow miles ?90 H P Northstor CD Alloys & morel (80391 0) 2 4' 9
'99 OLDSMOBILE BRAVADA 88
Only 5470 rrnlr4 White, lthr moonroof CD bol of worr (723936) 2 4 J 9
'97 CADILLAC SEVILLE s 6 88
low 2' miles dork cherry leother V8 Northstm bo ol worr (817 466) 2 t 9
:o?~rlP~~~o~~~~ee~~~~~~Rr worr (612740)$26,988
'99 CADILLAC DEVILLE S 88
low 12k miles white pearl Ion leather, bol of warr previous r~ntol 1805590) 2 7 9 9
'99 CADILLAC CONCOURS :J 88
White peorl low 4570 m1 300 HP Northstar, bal of worr 1mmac' (735418) 3 5 J 9
'2000 CADILLAC SEVILLE s 88
mhmrre he1gf' low 8800 m CD alloys bal of worr prl'!VtOUS rel"tol 11 45489) 3 7 J 9
~ NABERS Q;;
Serving Orar19 r (ounly Since 196 7
I CIEOO
• UNION ••DIRECT • l.INDINQ
2600 Harbor Boulevard
Costa Mesa
(71 ) 540·91 00
www.nabersauto.com
t.11 >ehule-. vbt'ct IQ p1101 \Ole~ ued1t ow1ovol plU\ tox lt1 dO! •.mog It de-;hoollOn fees No ~v\rolitrs Nol responsible for typoQrophkal erron Pl<lurH for ilustrotl~• purpows only. bilirH ~of!« puWkatlon.
Codilla< and Old\mobilt leo\t\ 17~ rrnl11 per year 70< ptr r111lt In mm. listed srod ond/or vln numbtl'l onty, wlljed 10 prtcw sole lease lllW be opprond by ~t
Offer good throufi 4/3/00 on Codiloc ltaits with approvecl utdll.