HomeMy WebLinkAbout2000-02-26 - Orange Coast Pilotr ··
01111111
SHOii
Corona del Mar High ran into a
buu saw In the CIF-Southern Sec·
tion D1v1sion Ill AA semifinals, los·
Ing to Centennial High of Comp.
ton, 68-46 Despite the I~. the
Sea Kings will compete in the CIF
State playoffs March 7.
See Sporti. 81.
' . I . . I ' , ....... , in
l lAl ISTAll
SERVING THE NEWPORT -MESA COIYJv\UNmES SINCE 1907 WEEKEND -FEBRUARY 26-27, 2000
Robert Moody, who spent 32 · years with
the Costa Mesa Police Department,
ref)ects on the ups and downs of his career
GreQ Risling
D AILY PILOT
W hen Robert Moody
was named Cldre-
mont's police chief
after dsccndmg
through the ranks m Costa
"Mesa, he figured one tug of the
rip cord and his proverbial parn-
chute would open, mdking his
final descen( into rntirC'mcnt a
smoolh one.
hcdt from lhe community for an
olhcer-rnvolved shoot.mg of d
bldck man -an action deemed
by some d5 raciaUy motivated.
Most recenUy, Moody was
cnhcized for failing to conduct a
lhorough background check of
his handpicked replacement as
he <.1ltempts to retire. Tire CJarP-
monl City CouncH withdrew thP
offer to lhe prospective chlef
when lhcy lf'amed he hdd a
bl<•1rushed record. ,
MARC CAMPOS I AILY PILOT
Claremont Police Chief Robert Moody, formerly of the Costa Mesa Police
Department. sits ln hJs near-empty office as he prepares for retire me nt after 42
Instead, the last 13 months ol
Moody's illustrious 42-ycdr
career in law enforcement hclVf'
been marked with conlrovcrsy
His department took S('clrin~J
The timing couldn't have
bf•en worse for lhe 65-yedl-old
Moody,· who officially retire·d
ldst month but remdU1ed on lhe
fore e until an interun chief years ln law enforcemenl ·
Netanyahu
to speak at
loccil temple
• Forme r Israeli prime
minister makes visit to
Orange County as part
of his U.S. lecture circuit.
Amy R. Spurgeon
& Jasmine lee
DAILY PILOT
NEWPORT BEACH
Fonner Israeli Prune Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu, who
led his country for lhree years
until he wds voted out of
ofhce m May 1999, will speak
Sunday at Temple Bat Yahm.
It will be Netanyahu's rust
visit to Or<lnge County.
Israeli voters m 1996 made _
Netanyahu the country's
youngest pnme minister.
Netanyahu spe nt his high
school years in the United
States, where his falher, histo-'
rian dnd professor Benzion
Nelanyahu, taught history.
Returrung to lsrael in 1967, he
enlisted m the Israel Defense
Forces and served in an elite
commando unit. Later, he
studied political science at
MIT and Harvard Uruversity.
Jn 1964, he was appointed
Israel's ambassador to lhe
Uruted Nations and served
there for four years. Returning
to Israel in 1988, Neldnyahu
was elettcd to the 12th Knes·
set as a L1kud member and
was appointed deputy foreign
mmister.
On May 29, 1996,
Netanyahu was elected as
Israel's ninth prime mlnister.
He defeated incumbent Shi-
mon Peres, who had held the
office for a year after the
assassinatlon of Yitzhak
Rabin
Netanyahu held the office
for three years until he was
SEE SPEAK PAGE A 11
Spirit rising
IAYA KA HUBA I OAlLY Pll.OT
Llnc;oln Elementary School fifth-graders Btx Halford, left. Hunt Rychel and Arion Lapuz cheer at a
pep rally In preparation of Sunday's Spirit Run 2000.
More thdn 10,000 runners and spectators
arc expected to brave possible wet
w eather Sunday ror the 17th annual
Spirit Run.
The fund-raising event, which over the years
has collected more than $1 million for Newport-
Mesa schools, will begin at 7 a.m. The run's
orgaru1ers hope to rnise more than $120,000 this
year.
Students from Lincoln, licubor View, Ander-
sen and Eastbluff elementary schools wlll benefit
from a nd participate in thi year's event.
Seniors ready to take the tee
• Goll legend Arnold Palmer
to play in Toshiba Senior
Classic; 80,000 expected
at Ne\VJ)Ort Beach CC.
NoMI Schw...U
DAILY Pit.OT
NEWPORT BEACH Officials
are tying up last-minute preparations
for the 'Iblhlba senior Clank set to
begin Sunday.
Detpite the recent ratns, tourna-
ment director Jeff Puner said they are
on Kbedule.
•1t looks good,. he laid. •'Jbare
baftbemDOmajorat~ 1be
ralD bel.,.S -the COWM looks
beautiful.•
The annual tournament ut the
Newport Country Club will include
78 senior golf proless1onals who are
60 years and older. The Classic is one
of 18 eventi on the Senior Tow.
This year, officials are expecting
80,000 spectators to show up, drawn
in part by golf legend Arnold Palmer,
who will partidpote in the event.
Defending champion Gary McCord
Will lead and compete for the
$195,000 pot.
·we are antidpedn9 that um WW
by far be our bigg81t year,• Punier
.aid.
ID addition to a gNet toUmlmllid.
Puner bopel the aowd wll lllo blip .
SEETOSHmA t
could b<• found Ht-hndll·y· got
word Thursddy that he can
pack th<' last of h1i. l>OXPS
But this Hin'l how he pl<1nned
to Jeav<? -not on lhll> notl•.
MAN IN BLUE
Moody he.ls always hdd
strong tws to th1· Newport-
Mcsd clrP.d He grdductl<•d lrom
Newport HMhor I f1Hh School
and hved in Cowna dPI M<u
Even dftcr lectvmq the d<!pdrt-
menl whN<• he spt>nt mo-.t of his
cdrccr, Moody ht1'> two H•lulJVl'S
who work thNP. He st11J v1s1Ls
Ordn<.J<' Count~ 11•qulculy. Jiu;.
bodt is docked m Dctntl Pmnt.
If dnyom• blt•f'C!s cm1~1qP, 11\
Moody.
It ">t•Pms hkP d h1Plunr> dgo
· when Moody wc1s spl1ttmq ht'>
SEE MOODY PAGE A 13
·Locals react
to Irvine Co.
criticism of
El Toro report
•City offkidls dncl
activists hdve d.lffenng
interpretations of ·
development compdny\
letter to the county.
Noaki Schwartz
DAILY P1tOT
NEWPORT BEACH
Local reaclJon to the lrvme
Co 's strong c:nt1c1.,m · of the
county's enVlJ'orunentdl report
for the El Toro airport rdn the
gamut, from dCCUsdt1ons· of
seU-mter(• l to rC'bcl that lhe
. company rtusccl qucshonc;
about pot<.>ntldl t>rol>lems.
For related
story, see
Page A4
Irvine Co
Senior Vice
Pr(' s 1 d c n l
Monie~ Flon-
c1n wrote l1l d
lcttN to the
county thdl stnct noise bm1ts
must be created to prot<>ct
residents m the s1J.rroundmg
ared "if lhe county 1s lo pur-
sue the atrp0rt." The state-
ment goe on to li'>t olher con-
cern~ about runway-., flight
patterns dnd traH1c.
The county hai. propo .. ecl
to build a $2 9-billion airport
at the closed Munnc Corp
base at El Toro The El Toro
report, released m D •c •mbcr,
concluded that the airport
would not crcdtc mu1or enVl-
ronmentt1I problems lor the
area.
The county has received
an <1valanrhc of h•tters from
people IX>th oppos ·d to and
in support of the pro1ect.
TI\ ' lrvioe Co 's letter left
Newport C1ty ofhcmls and air-
port propon<'nts !:!CriltC'hmg
thC!r heads as to what the
development company'
SEE IRVINE PAGE A11
llDl l
AIOUNO TOWN ---N-10
llST ltM ------
QASSIREDS _....... .... 16
COMMUllTY & o.uas ___ ..A9
COf'JUm fOIUM 19
Dl\lOOOl __ 14
""" __ .._ ......... ___ ,.AJ.
POua RS·------'2
SOCllY IS
SftllS ------"
--JJ ______ _.. ...
Wll"S"' ' ___ __..,.
•
•
. . . . .
A2 Saturday, February 26, 2000
Saint James Church
Saint James Church is a comrnuruty .
devoted to loving Jeius Christ and serving
him as Lord and savior. A traditional ser-
vice with holy Euchanst, rite I is held on
Sunday at 7:30 a.m. A contemporary ser-
vice with holy Eqcharist, rite 1i is held on
Sunday at 9 a.m. and a charismatic service
with holy Euchanst, nte lII is held on Sun-
day at 10:45 a.m Child care it; provided fot
the 9 and 10:45 a.m. tervlces. Sunday
ichool for all children meets at 9 a.m.
There is a nte Jl Eucharist on Wednesday
at noon. David Anderson ts eruor pastor.
The church is at 3209 Via Lido, Ne~rt
Beach. For more information, c.all (949)
675-0210. .. ..
Daily Pilot
The power of positive
· Gndy Trane Christeson
MORAL OF THE STORY
Miracles happerz
even in the dumps
"God as Creator. Pensive. Excited.
lnvenUve. An artist ... a composer ... a poet."
-MaxLucado
I n addition to the church our group
worked with in Cairo, we also visite<i
a church that did powerful work in
. each of us.
It is called the Muqattam Cave Cathe-
dral. It is uruque in that it seats 20,000
people and is in an open-air cave. Most
unusual, however, is the route you must
take to reach the church. ~
Church attendees either live in or drive
through Cair6's garbage dwnps to get there.
1Ty to imagine wbdt a garbage dump
that collects about 7 ,000 tons of garbage
daily looks like Now, try to picture what
it must feel like to the 30,000 people who
live there. If you are really brave, try to
unagme what 1t smells Wee.
Why do so many people live there,
and w.hY is it the entrance to the Cave
Cathedral?
During the past 35 years, thousands of
Christians, fleeing poverty in rural Upper
Egypt, have congregated mto villages with-
in CairQ's garbage dumps. Many of the
men and their sons leave before dawn in a
cart pulled by donkey and go down the
mountain lo collect trash. They return home
before noon and the family sifts through the
garbage for anything to recycle.
Although the villages are disease-prone
and poor, a strong Christian community
has emerged, and one of the largest vil-
lages is behind Muqattam Mountain.
The Muqattam Cave Cathedral is affiliat-
ed with the Coptic Orthodox Church. We
weren't there in time for a service, but we
spent time walking and praying. We were
all deeply moved by what we saw as we
drove through the dumps. We were also sur-
prised by the story of the Cathedral's origin.
The pastor is Father Sama' an and he
attnbuted the beginrung to an Egyptian
garbage collector.
"Through him, I became a changed
JTldD and eventually a worker for the
Lord,• Sama'an said in an article I read.
Previously, Sdma'an lived and worked
in Cairo. One day, a man dressed in dirty
cloth6 and carrying a bag knocked on his
door. The man asked Sama' an if he had
lost anything and explained that he had
unsuccessfully asked the same question at
all of the apartments in the building.
The man told Sama' an that he had
picked up the garbage from the apart-
ment building and had found something
very valuable while separating it. .
"So sir, please tell me what you lost,"
the man said. Sama' an told hun he had
recently lost a precious watch, and the
man showed him the watch he found. It
was Sama' an's. ,
Sama'an was shocked and asked why
he didn't keep the watch for himself.
•My Christ told me to be honest,· the
man satd. Sama'an then said, •Because of
what you have dpne and your great
example, I will worship Chnst. •
That began a nuraculous series of
even ts over the years that included
Sama'an becoming an O rthodox priest,
and Christians worldwide helping devel-
op schools, health clinics and churches in
the dumps, including the Cave Cathedral.
Only the master artist could paint a
picture like that. O nly the creator could
be that creative.
And you can quote me on that.
• ONDY 1llANE CHftlSTESON is a Newport
Beach resident who speaks frequently to parent-
ing groups. She can be reached via e-mail at
cmdyOontf1#!9rowcom or through thtf mail at P.O.
Box 6140-No. 505, Newpe>rt Beach 92658.
Bible-based New
Thought church teaches
parishioners to eliminate
negative thoughts
Alex Coolmen
DAILY PILOT
G ail Miller lS battling a cold
when a visitor stops in at
her church office, but she
doesn't want to tatk about it.
"Nope. Don't say that," she
chirps in response to a comment
about her being sick.
Miller doesn't want to haye a
cold. She thinks of herself as
being healthy. And as far as she's
concerned, that means she's well
on the way to glowing vigor.
More than many people,
Miller believes in the power of
self-persuasion.
She is a minJster in The New
Thought Christian Church and
'Jhlth Foundation, a Soence of ·
Mind center m Costa Mesa.
The church is a Christian orga-
nization, one that invokes Jesus
and reads from the Bible. But
where some denominations dis-
tinguish themselves with elabo-
rate ntual and ornate theology,
Miller's group contents itself with
a supremely simple religious
vision.
God, in their view, lS just plain
good.
Like a disc jockey spinning
only No. 1 hits, the Science of
Mind God broadcasts a constant
stream of mellow beneficence.
Hwnans, Miller says, onJy need
to think good thoughts to tune
into this uplifting message. "All
these catastrophes don't come
from God,• Miller says. Earth-
quakes and a1r disasters -and
the common cold -originate in
human foibles rather than divine
provenance.' It's not God's will."
Bad things happen, Miller
explains, because people think a
lot about bad things happening.
U they would JUSt change their
way of looking at the world, the
world might start looking a little
different.
·we teach people through
affirmation and prayer to start
thlnking about what they want
ln.Stead of what they don't want,• .
Miller says.
Sitting with immaculate pos-
ture in the living room of the
New Thought cente r, Miller
explains the way the process has
worked for her .
·1 used to feel like 1 really did-
n't have any money," Miller says,
Faith
CILEllDll
SPECIAL IYllTS
IS THERE A HAPPY ENIMG7
Presbyterian Church of tbe
Covenant will present a mes-
sage on "II there a Hap~d-
tng?" at 10 a.m. Sundoy.
Rev. Tun McCalmont will~
The church it at 28SO PakvieW
Road, Costa Mesa. For more
information, can (114) 551·33-40.
BENJAMIN NETANYAHU
Former Israeli Prime Minister
Benjamin Neta.nyahu will speak
at Temple Bat Yalun at 1 p.m .
Sunday at the temple's Norman
Schiff Scholar Lecturer. nckets
are St8 to $300. Temple Bat
Yahm it at 1011 Camelbeck St.,
Newport Beach. for more infor·
m.ation, call (949) 644-1999.
REAPERS HOJUNi
(949) 642-6086
M 9dwrtMments Mntin CMI be
reprocknd Without wrinen ptf·
mmoon of copyright ownef.
VOL 94, NO. 49
THOMAS H. JOt4NSOff,
Publishef
TONY DODOO,
Editor
RecOfd your comments •bout
the o.11y Pilot 0t news tips,
APPRESS
OUr Mtdress Is 330 W. 81y St.,
Com Mesa, CA 92627.
CORRECTIONS
It Is the Pilot's policy to prompt·
ly corrKt 111 errors of wbst1na
Pie~ all (949) 57._.233
HOW JO REACH US
On:.ulation
The nmes Cringe County
(IOO) 252-91'1
~ CltHSlfi.ct (949) 642-5678
O~.y (949) 642-4321
ldltotW
Ntws (949) 642·5680-
Sports (M9) 57.,.223
BRIAN P06UOA/ DAILY PILOT
The Rev. Gail Miller of New Thought Christian Church and Truth Foundation ln Costa Mesa.
her golden hair shining in the
afternoon lighl "I couldn't go on
nice vacations. I thought, 'This is
the way it'll be forever.'"
·Instead of wallowing in what
was unpleasant in her life, Miller
tried looking at things a new
way.
"If I trunk of a negative
thought, the first thing I do is
stop," she says. "You say,
'Whoops, flip that coin over, and
affimi the exact opposite.'"
After enough affinnati.on, the
world started to seem like a bet-
ter place.
"You start seeing th~ results
and you notice the little steps in
between," she says.
The experience has helped
Miller anive at a conclusion of
dramatic confiden ce.
"Once we truly believe, we
can have it," she says. "There's
nothing we can't have."
That sort of conviction, she
argues, is nothing different from
what Jesus possessed. If he could
raise the dead and heal the sick,
people today can, too. Spiritual
power can be harnessed in the
day-to-day world.
ln practice, though, the sort of
miracles New Thought members
experience tend to be of a fairly
worldly, rather than spiritual,
MEN'S FEUOWS ... GROUP
Pres~ Church of the
Covenant's men's fellows~ group
will meet from 8 to 9 a .m. ednes-
day at the Wlege Parmer rest.au-
nmt ac:roa from South Coast Pla7.a
in Ccsta Mesa. For more informa-tioli. Ot.ll (714) 557~3.J.tO.
NEW INSIGHTS ON JESUS
The Newport Mesa Interfaith
Council presents •New insights
on Jelus, incl~ insights from 111am• starting at 1:45 a..rn.
March 8 at Presbyterian O\wch
of tbe Covenant, 28.50 Fairview
Road, Costa Mesa. Ticlcets, which
include lunch, are S7 .50. For
reservations and more fuforma-
lion, call (949) 660-8665, Ext. 3.
LENTEN MISSION
St. Joachim Church Will have a
Lenten MisSion March 13-15.
The Rev. John Colliril wW pre-
sent the mission after the 8:30
a .m. and 7:30 p.m. manes. A
time for questions and 1odali.i-
nature.
"I've been affinniog divine
substances, and I just got a
tremendous check in tl)e mail,"
Miller says. •And I got some jew-
elry cleaner.
"The more you believe in it,
the more it happens.·
For Costa Mesa resident Son-
dra Baker, who has been
involved with Science of Mind for
about 15 yea.rs, the religion
seems to be almcst as good as a
lucky charm, jazzing up her life
at regular intervals with pleasant
surprises.
"I have all these miraculous
things that keep happening to
me,• she says.
When she needed a mobile
home for the low price of
$10,000, God was happy to
oblige. When she wanted to
apply to college, God came
through with a scholarship. Now,
she thinks sh e might get a posi-
tion as a manager for some senior
apartments, and it looks like
God's getting ready to hit another
home run.
•It's like being in a game
show and standing in front of all
these doots and knowing that
there's no booby prize behind
any of the doors. Any of "'6e
doors I open is going to be the
tng will follow each talk. The
church ls at 1964 Orange Ave.,
Costa Mesa. For more infonna-
tion, call (949) 574-7405.
JEWISH FEDERATION SAIBATH
Temple Bat Yahln will join with
synag<>gUesthroughoutOrange
County in observance of Jewish
Federation Sabbath at 8 p .m.
Marcil 11, Temple Bat Yahm
member Chadel Karp, president
of the Jewish Foundation, will
explain the importance of the
Jewiah Foundation at the event.
Temple Bat Yabm is at 1011
Camelbeck St., Newport Beach.
For more infol'lll4tion, call (949)
644-1999.
PURIM CAltNNAL
Temple Bat Yahm WU1 hold a
Purtm Carnival ltarting at 9 a.m.
March 19. The event will feature
food, games, rides, mtertaln·
ment and more. The temple ii at
101 l Cainelback St., Newport
Beach. For more information,
WEATHER AND SURF
COSTA MESA
grand pnze," she says.
"This is what this stuff does for
me.·
People are attracted to the reli-
gion, Miller said, if "they just
haven't found what they've been
looking for in the mainstream
church."
In this respect, Miller is an ide-
al representative of the faith. She
went through stints with
Methodists, Presbyterians, Luther-
ans and the Church of Christ
before settling in her current role.
None of the other approaches
to religion seemed as practical to
Miller as that of Science of Mind.
And some of them were hung up
on negative aspe cts of life -
aspects that she found she didn't
have any use for.
"You don't have to go through
fire and bnmstone to be good,"
Miller said. •Jesus does not want th~us." d though 1l may strike some
observ as a very materialistic
interpretation of an essentially
otherworldly religion, Miller
insists that the faith runs deep.
"I don't mean it's a gimme,
gimme thing. It's JUSt kind of,
'What kind of life do you want for
yourself and your children?'
"y.Je can't do 1t if we're not
thinking right. H
call (949) 759-1881.
RE-MEMBERING GROUP
Our Lady Queen of Angels Pansh
Center is hosting cs six-week
series of talks for Catholic5 who
feel spiritually homeless. The
meetings will be at 6:15 p .m Sun-
days. The March 19 meeting will
be the l.ast in the series. The
Parish center IS at 2°'66 Mar Vista
DrtVe, Newport Beach. For mare
information, call (949) 548-3844.
WEEKLY EVENTS
NOTHING SPEOAl
1be Zen Center of Orange Coun-
ty is holding an ongoing Mrles of
•Nothing Special· Zen aware-
neu workshops. M~ are
held from 7 to 9 p.m. on the ftnt
and third 1\leldays of the month
~April 18. There ts a SlO
I center is at 120 East
18th St., Colt.a Mesa. Por JUC>re
information, call (949) 722-78 t 8.
POLICE FILES
~
TEMPERA1UllllS
Bel boa
49.465
Corona del Mar
4&'66
TIOIS
TOOAY
First low
9:321.m .. " ...... , ............ 1.3
• AWtUt of the Alta: A nng worth $500 was stolen
ftom •business In the 3300 block between 4 and 10:30
p.m Feb. 3.
COSta Mes4I
47J68
Newpott Beach
4&'66
First high
1 :54 e.m"_ .............. " .. 4 .3
Second low
7:59 p.m ....................... 2.4
Second h'9h
• lllllr• Street: A pair of sunglaues and some J..welry
worth $1,400 were stolen from 1 home In the 1100
bloc.k betWMn Ftb. 9-18
JIMfllR RAGLAND,
5-nlor City Editor
JASM•LD.
At&lstant City Editor
NANCVOBVP,
F•ttUl'es Editor
ROGIR CAla.SON.
SpotU Editor
MMCMMTIN,
PholO fdltOt
AHTNONY PIKX.
News Editor
m The Newport BMdYCosta Mew
O.lty Pilot ~144-800) Is pub· I~ Mond.iy ttwe>U9h Seturdlty
In Newpon 8eWl Ind~~.
subtcrlptlom If• •Vtli.ble only by
wbtctiblng to The TllTlft °'.,. County (800) 252 9141 In.,...
OVbldt of~ l..ctl Ind c.o... Mesi. subtctlptloN to tht
Diiiy "°' •• ., ...... Olity by "*' fot $20 Pfl! "'°""' SeGond cs.,_.,. peld et (Ml MN.
NftW.. Sports, •• (Mt) '1'-4170
E·l'Mll. ct.flypllotetftl1N1.Com ..
MM\ Offtcl
Newpott Coast
45165 4:04 p.m ....................... 2 I
SUNDAY
First low
..... MrMt: Sc•ffolding worth U ,319 Wai stol~
from• home In ttM 1100 block between Feb. 2·18.
• louttuwt Drtve: A laptop computer wor1f' $5,000
was stolen from • car In the 900 block between 2 and l
p.m. Jen. 28.
IOSI J. SMTOI;
r:.~ o.ifted Adwfthing
LNM ICll••DN.
PromotJonl .... lDDllWI.
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TtltSend ...... ~.n. ~~ .. Deity
Not. P.O. Im 1• C.-MN. ' CA--.~ND,_.,. ,. ...... _..,,,....,
luiln.. Offke (Mt) 642-4l21
lutlna F•• (949) 631-7126
NllllNll br'"""' ~ .....
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Dndlrof~~ .............. ,.. ..... ccwo.. -.-..111 .... ..-
LOCAnoll9
Wtdge
~
ltadcln
""-J9tty
CdM
11:041.m ... -............... 1.0
First high
J.06 •.m ..... " ................. 4,3
Second low
9 41 p.m ........... -.... 2.7
St<ond high
6•10 pm ....................... 3 0
..
.... OaTllAOt
• 0.W lerMI: A t.p\op C0rnputer WOrth $2,200 WM
stolen frOm 1 home In the 900 block between 6 1Jltd I
p.m. Ftb 21.
• Mic•°" C.-.. Drew. A cellular phone wonh
$ 100 WM.,..,, from I CM Jn the 400 bk>dl It 6:)0
p.m. WtdflMdirJ.
•Wllt9' ..... A•OtfgoH~wOtlhS1,aao ..
**"tram. Cir In --beodl ...... of,., 1t..
Daily Pilot Sotvrdoy, Feb<vory 26 2000 A3
Lesso~ learned, from Newport mayors lockout to Denr.zis Rodman
T he Newport lockout, the most probablo of which is 1s the lC11d<'r'>h1p of lcon r.ubl.JUc•s, but Ndtlcy and Cdy money for opera held tnps
Duy 12: Whtle Newport the lack of a compelling red-restdurunts, p<tr<>nt company S<ty 1t mt1kf!S all the chtrc>renc:P. c.md whdt money WP don't
Bcuch May<J John son to visit. Even the fdbulous of The Yctrd t louse. So sue-for them. All I get from the hdve will be used to f1X .
Noy continues the lockout Whole Foods M arket does not cessfuJ is the concept that Jeon suht1Ur~ "'9rt 15 d stiff nec;k. n<•glected building , if it ever
of his colleagues from "his• seem to be drawing people to is operung :0w more location. .. • comes. Instead, we fill most of the mall's low est level to shop, Ul Southl•m Cdhfom1a Jn thP. office, he may have time to
ponder my view of th.is child· •
ish behavior. The fact is, thut
ofhce L'> no more "his• than
this colwnn IS •mine." That
office, the furniture inside d.nd
the bwlding m which it is all
C'Ontained is the property of
the people of Newport Beach.
The mayor is a guest of the
people of Newport Beach (or
servant, 1f you so ch0ose) and
he would do well to remem-
ber Uus and act accordingly
Actually, all politicians would
do well to remember this
•
N ewport Beach resident
Ann Watt took the time to
Wlite to tellm e how much she
liked the"1dea of an "all 'G,'
all the timew theater. I replied
th.at I have been heanng th.ts
from parents over and over
again and asked her for some
suggestiolll> as to how lhE'
comrnuruty could convmce
lbe Edwards family thdl the
at least not at the peak tunes
when I've made it a point to
observe the store Down
there, I get the subterranedl\
Steve Smith homesick blues. And that's d
shame because Whole Foods
WHAT'S UP·?'
is worth repeat visits.
But the mall jinx theory,
which has been supported by
the departure of Sfuzzi and
concept is worth a six-month the downsizl.ng or dosmg of
test. Need mobvation? Just other businesses, hdS been
imagme the •Wizard or O-t • put to the test with lhE> dtTlvdl
on the big screen with big of The Yard H ouse.
sound. Now all we have to do Steve Reynolds, co-founder
1s convince the folks at of the concept, said the Cosl.d
Edwards Cmemas here m Mesa location is perfomung
Newport Beach before some well above projections And
other theater chain sled.ls our why not? Cay and I hdd dJn.
local thunder. ner there a week ugo with
• friends Kathy and Dave Miller
Bermuda Triangle Square: and relatives Nancy and
Whal lS it about the pie slice Lewis H.ines, and we're
of land at Newport, 19th and pleased lo report that we'll be
Ha.rbor called "Thangle back soon Ev<>rylh.ing -from
Square" that seems to be the the salmon spring rolls to the
kiss of death for so many bUSJ· seared a.ht to my • Dedd Guy"
nesses? I have my theoriec;, Ale was outstanding. So, too,
Mail
Oldtt 1-<.aoo) •<¥ulna/
595" c::'Js1
•Mini
•Mandarin
REG. '3.25
So, whose bright Idea was the da~ with schoolwork -
conung month~. They're also 1t to put our k.ids 111 harm's as 1t hould be lf we're not ·
opening for lunth-s1drtlng way over dt Newport C~t gomg to the OJ)('ra -and
March 15. ckrnentary School? It is hc.t.rd much of the nights with
The Ydrd I louse c.t.Mde, and to l>eLieve thdt with all of the homework There is too much
bc:tmng dny hldlnt~ tor poor . chedcs .md bdlances and homework.
pldnrung by Bermud11 Trian-bureducruts des1gruny, adjust-• gle Squdrc mt1nag<>ment, I inq und mundgUlg this pro-It's a good Ume to be Den-
can only rnnclurte· lh.dt the site Jc>C-l, no onP thought the locd· rus Rodmc.t.n. The Newport
lS an uncient buric1l ground I.Jon Wd'> d mc.t.Jor sdfety hc:tZ· . Beach resident not only saved • . drd I kPep. lhinlong th.at some tus "gf't out of Jail tree• C.d.fd,
We Jove cl~slcal music in · he lrulnp<'d it with a ·never
our home, but unbl recently upnqht person 15 going to mind" tdfd, given lo tum by we W(•re "!low to embrace stand up dlld say, "This lS my th(• OrdDge County Distnct •
qpern. The.• recently• qua.lJfi· fc.1ull. I was the one who WdS Attomt>y's office, which.
er comes d month alter Cay supposed to tdke c<:t.re of thL'>, desp1tP his over-the-top
and her sister, the dforemen-but I dJdn't and I'm sorry· hlood-akohol level two
lloned Ndncy 1 lme>s, were Well, c.1 pen.on cc.1n dream mon~ dgo, hdS not prosecut-
delighted by Uw presentation • ed hun What a tme le<;son
of Operd Pc.1clf1c"s "The McU· When l was a kJd in the liu.'> ts for our children We've
nage of f'1quro" ut the Per-Los Angeles Unified School JUSI dddcd d fourth "R" to the
forming Aru Center. Now, D1stnrt, Wf' took d held tnp to lessonc, they need to l<>am to
hve d<!ys c.1ftN '>Jtlmg up close the opcrd c.1t lhe Shnne Auc.IJ-succeed -rebounding.
lo SN' "Mdnon Lescdul," we torium once d SC'mel>ter The ..,. _
cUe reddy to sign up for next pcrfonndnces were presented • STEVE SMrnt 1s a Costa Mesa
season Thf> trick for me is "lad style· c.t.nd we enJoyeci r~m and freelance wnter.
dV01chng the English subtitles, every minute, not to mention He can be reached via e-mail at
whlch appedr dbove the the chance to yet out of class dailypilot0lat1111es com, 0< call our
stdgP I'm not a b19 fan of the Now, 1t seems. there IS no Readers Hotline at (949) 642-6086.
(Mothers )) Fruit On 'lhe&IJDm!
Non-Fat =
Baked Fresh SZ' .DaJ/gt s
REG. '3.25 32 oz.
Drew's
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• Peach • Plain
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What Makes Mother's Different?
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We 6aclt this up will} '! ~ unpara/le/ed
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Mothers uses lndependenl laborrdorg lestblfl to
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So come in, checlt out the seiectJon, our
weeltlg seminars and our evergdag low prices.
Our staH would love to he t
FARM FRESH PRODUCE
~or Vmaigrettes
• Organic Green Cojf,; ==Ranch ~4980
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REG. •1.99 32 oz..
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•
F~ 29-Tuesday
600 to 7:30 pm
DENTAL HEALTH. ••
. AVOIDING TOXIC
MATERIALS
By '/bdd B. Enge!. D.D. .
(CM Patio)
•
•
I •
A4 Saturday, February 26, 2000 Doily Pilot
• Lpcal El Toro advocates try to measure up to the competition . ~
Jasmine LH & Greg Rlsting
DAll.Y PILOT
NEWPORT-MESA -With
the pnmary election just 10
days away, El Toro advocates
are feverishly fighting Mea-
sure F dunng what is perhaps
the most crucial time in a polit-
ical campaign.
Volunteer$ for the Airport
Working Group have in the
past two months he1d conunu-
nity meetings, sponsored . by
local PTAs, telling residents
that the passage of Measure F
could devastate Costa Mesa
and Newport Beach.
Meanwhile, anti-airport
forces have continued to gain
momentum in the campaign,.
which has consisted of many
mailers and several television
commercials. A recent nm.es
Orange County poll fowid that
56% or residents countywide
+
would vote for Measure F.
· II passed, the measure,
which is designed to block the
county's plans for a $2.9-billion
ailport at the dosed Marine
CotpS base at El Toro, would
require a two-thirds majority of
voters to approve certain pro-
jects, such as commerdal air-
ports, hazardous waste land-·
fills and jails.
If a second airport is not
-built, the county could expand
John Wayne Airport, accord-
ing to an environmental study
of the El Toro proj.ect.
The Bl Toro advocacy group
~focused on the possibility
of a John Wayne expansion,
which could, in a worst-case
scenario, result in the demoli-
tion of 700 acres around the
airport to make room for
another runway and a
"Saint Michael & All¥ ~eriie ac Padfk vn
. Corona dd Mu• ~3
Ovr Anptm u UJ INtw Chri11 In~;,, 111111
""'" ""'' ,,, 0mi1 llJt _, 1111r fa1mfil .M
p-1Ma1vt Cbrun1u1 UIJtt
The Rev'd Peter D. Haynes, Rtctor
.
A "A God-centered parish community, instructed bt the Word of God
and renewed by the Sacr21T1enu
Our Lady Queen of Angels
2046 Mar Visca Drive Ncw14.04c Beach, California 92660
(949) 0220 Fax (949)644-1349
lkv. Moruignor WiUiam P. McLaughlin, Pastor
UTURGIES:Saturday, 5 p.m. [Cantor),
unday, 7:00 (Qujet), 8:30 (C.Ootemporary), 10:00 (Choir),
11 :30 a.m. (Cantor) and 5:00 p.m. (C.Ontemporary)
FIRST CHURCH OF
CHRIST, SCIENTIST
3303 Via lJdo
Newport BecCI
673-1340 or 673-6150
Ch\D'ch 10 am~ 5 pn.
SWldav Sc:hoo1 I 0 am ~ MltO'IQI. pn
SECOND CHURCH OF
CHRIST, SCIENTIST
3100 Pa::iflc VWIW Or
Newport Beach
644-2617 or 675-4661
Chwch loam
SWlday School 10 am
Wa-kJy Meee1QI 8 Jlnl
• •1•~12nocn ... I,,,,, tlH ....,,, tlH h'll.t},. iUUl tlH lifo "" ""'" c.,,,,,.,U,
,,,,.,. IH /VU,,,., ""' ,,, wu.
John 14:6 I am
Brwba tlTbe Mothtr Churcb • The First ChlllCb ot Cbrist, Sdetlth't • Belton, MamMtelts
Please join us for a free hour of insight into healing
conflicts that divide our Orange County community.
Learn how issues can be resolved through love and
prayer. This lecture will be given by Jon Harder,
C.S. B. a member of the Christian Science Board of
Lectureship, from Cape Porpoise, Maine. Mr. Harder
will share thoughts from che Bible and Science and
HeaJth chat offer cools co heal disharmony.
J his l«rurr 11 1panK1rtd by ~nd Church of Christ, Sc1cn11u1 Newport lk.i h.
J>laue oill (9"9) 644-2617 fur more infommion.
Saturday, March 4th
10:00 a.m.
&lwa.rcb Big Newport Theater
300 Ntwpon CAiiier Drift, Newpon lwla ._ .... ,...... ....
second terminal.
"I sincerely believe that if
there's no El Toro, this is what
will happen to John Wayne
because it's the only game in
town,• said Tom Naughton,
president of the Airport Work-
ing Group, .at a m~ting this
week.
Another meeting is sched-
uled for 7 p.m. Mo.nday at
Davis Education Center in
Costa Mesa.
The group's volunteers
most recently made presenta-
tions Thursday at TeWinlde
intermediate School in Costa
Mesa, and Wednesday at
Ensign Intermediate School in
Newport Beach.
Al Ensign, more than 100
people attended despite wet
weather to hear desoiptions of
a John Wayne Airport gone
out or control.
Com Mua'I
Presbyterian Church
of the Covenant .
n "ls Tbae a Happy Ending"
Ooh.n't Apocalyptic Yasioa)
·r h~ c:cn,cnam Choir will aing
Panor Tim Mc CaJmont Preadung
Pr0gra.nu for ktds and adults
28SO nilVI~ Road@Adams
714-557-3340
Sr. MARK PRF.SBYTERIAN
CHURCH
"Open Arms and Open Minds"
Worship 9:30
Jamboree It Eutbhdf In Ne~ 8-elt
Costa Mesa Mayor Gary
Monahan, one of the speakers,
said people need to spread the
word -telling their neighbors
. and writing letters to politi-
cians.
For the most part; residents
here have eagerly received the
pro~airport message, vowing
to become involved in the
campaign against Measure. P
and protesting angrily about
South County residents who
are fighting an El Toro airport.
But E'dward Carels, who
has attended some of . the
meetings, said he had heard
the same speech before. The
Newport Beach resident said
he wanted to see action.
"We sit here in these bonng
meetings, listening to these
words,-he said. ·we're being
very civilized ... But what can
we do to demonstrate that we
are passiodte, too?•
Carels, who has lived in
Newport Beach for 20 years,
suggested local El Toro sup-
porters do something drastic,
such as park thousands of cars
around John Wayne Airport in
protest.
Newport Beach Council-
woman Norma Glover, also a
speaker, said South County
has already won the war of
emotion.
·1 think th.at we're the older
part of the county; we're used
to acting in a more civilized
way,• Glover said. #South
County is still evolving. It's like
a young pup.'
She said the way for airport
advocates to win was through
bureaucracy.
The turnout was much low-
er at TeWmkle, where rows of
empty chairs far outnumbered
.. HARBOR CHRISTIAN CHURCH .i (Dlsclplea of Christ)
2401 lrvlne Ave. at Santa Isabel
Newport Beach
Sunday Worstllp -10:00.AM
Dr. D1nnl1 W. Short Mlnlatar
NEW THO UGI-IT CHURCH .. ~1!li:(:J9•4911ii)11&4•S·-·57•8•1m:=::j
Srienct of Mind Cnit" @ COMMUNITY CHURCH
~~~~· CONGREGATIONAL
Dr Don '>lwt'r ( 1 ·'pm) UNITED CHURCH Of
'ion •rh ~th CHRIST
"A~ NC.l"NIWG"
Or Don :Oll.lrrr To Sthvt ft to C..; To C.. Is to 00.
'iun<by S...-\'IC .. I 0 'IO
und;ay School 10,!l(J Bruce Van Blair, Minister
Neighborhood Community< .c,o11lC'r, Worship Services
llH!I Park A,e., (.cm.a MC'.., •a:OOam
Wed. l lraling ~VIC«' IO 50 am, 9:""--Adult Church School
1929 Tustin AvC'., Coiu MC'llil "''""" Sat Wo(l.6hop • l~l2 noon L>on~oou •10:00am-Sunday School
Call (949) &1f,.Sl99 •Child Care Provided
for information 611 HeGotropeAve., CoroN del MM
Mt111bn lni.·n,.1lt>NJ lo.rwTh• htAl1'a1w~ 949) 644-7400
Bethel Baptist
the 20 residents who turned
out. Presenters once again sold
the pomt that the rest of the
county should share the bur-
den of living under a Oigbt
path. .
"We are doing more than
our sh~.• said AWG member
Tom Anderson. "I think South
County is trying to stall this
proposal until 2005 and then
hit us with the John Wayne
expansion."
The few people who
attended did voice their oppo-
sition to Measure F.
Ellen Carroll, TeWinkle's
PTA president, said her mind
was already made up before
she attended the meeting.
"I don't want to see John
Wayne expand -bottom
line,• she said. "The chances
of expansion are greater iI
Measure F passes.•
Newport Harbor
-"t.utheran Church
798 Dovw Dr. Newport a .. ch
Tredltlonal Lutheran
. Wor•hlp S.rvlce with
Holy Communion
SUnday 9z15 am
Sunday School 9 1UI am
Chf'latlan •duc•tlon
for•HA ... 10c308m
Adult and Children's Sunday School Hour -9:45 a.m.
Worship Service -11 :00 a.m.
Sunday Evening · 6:00 p.m.
Thur~ay Bible Study · 6:40 p.m.
"God's Promise to
Weary People,,
(Matthew 11 :20 30)
"We lnulle uou to worship the Lord wilh u.. CM!« and leorn ~r(ul
pt1nclpla and trutha from God's WOfd that I/OU can build uour Ille upon
Come u WllJo'n our hurll tagahu In adorallon of the l..ord Jesu.. Christ•
901 So. Euclid Santa Ana CA 92704
714 839-3600
ST ANDREW'S PRESBITERIAN CHURCH
,() PRESENTS ~ \.:Y MARRIAGE ENRICHMENT'-1(_)
PREP PROGRAM TO BE OFFERED
Teachers: Drs. Marcia Stroup and Keith Edwards
Two Saturdays, March 4 & 18, 9:00 am -3:00 pm
Tuesday Evening, March 28, 7:00 -9:00 pm
Dicrcnficld Hall
What you ·will gain from this experience?
• Strategiu to explore four key valiu1-honor, relJ'ect,
intimacy and forgiveness
•A model for bui/Jing and maintaining commitment
• Communication 11til/s that help coupks handk
conflict son1tructively
Please send check to:
St. Andrew's
600 St. Andrews Road,
Newpon Be.ch. CA 92663
Ann: Adult F.ducadon
C.AU. ADULT EDUCATION
(~') 574-2236
. COST JS #0.00 PD COUl'U
S.tunl.ty, F.bnwy l<• 2000. S:.30 PM Sunday, l'tb1uuy·27. 2000.11 JO tit 10:1 SAM
Fl~t United Methodist Churtb or Costa Mesa
•20 w~ 19th strttt, c~t• Mesa
F l~alotW~lp JO:OOam
Richard L. bin,. P.stor
Church Schoof 9:00a"1 & lO:IS..
949-548-7717
Christ Church by the Sea
Un11rJ Mc1hod.in
1400 W. Balbot Rl•J .• ~'tin ~
9 00 • m -S1111J.11 h•K>I for all agr1
10.00 • m. -Wo,.,hir (wich ~h1l.t arc)
lltt Rev Dr C".ot0rtf R. Crup. Putot
(949) 67J 180~
Cotta·-MllA YllDI
UNmD MITHODllT CHUtlCH
1701...,.,C.M.
WereMp a Church 1cheet
•·•--10.00 ....
Or. It 171~) 919 823A
. .
I '
Daily Pilot Saturday, Februory 26, 2000 AS
StyliSh scent wafts throng South Coast Plaza
• Fashion maven
Donna Karan unleashes
her signature fragrance,
DKNYWomen.
Andrew Glazer
DAILY PILOT
COSTA MESA -A sarto-
rial superher.o flanked by
two supermodels swooped
into this fashion mecca Fri-
day, allowing Qrange Coun·
ty noses the first whiff or her
new fragrance.
"I love it here,• said Don-
nd Karan, chairman and
chief designer of
Dl<NY, who appropri-
ately wore a red leather
DKNY men's jacket.
DKNYWomen.
The perfume 1s citrus-llke
ancr spicy, with vodka and
cilantro smells.
"We're planning on mak-
mg a DKNY martini next,"
Karan quipped.
A half-hour before the
event, more than 20 fashion
fans were lined up, waiting
for the two models and
Karan lo sign their new, sky-
scraper-shaped perfume bot ..
Ues and DKNY Barbie dolls .•
Cafiadas and Vanderloo
sat in a well-lit dressing
room, talking to reporte rs
while cradling their 4-year-
old -Chalupa, a black-and-
wlute spotted Chihuahud ·
Why did OKNY deade on
Costa Mesa to uncork the
crystalline bottles for the hrst
time?
"Costa Mesa. Is that the
county we're in?" asked the
chisel-cheeked Vanderloo,
clad in a form-lilting DKNY
T-shirt and DKNY blue1<'ans.
His wife was wearing a pow-
der blue OKNY sweater and
DKNY bluejeans. The DKNY
duo met, appropriately, t>n a
DKNY photo shoot.
"Mark and Esther dre two
people pass1ondtely 1'fl love,"
said Kdran.
The designer sc.11d
she tried to bottle lhe
energy of New York
for her fragrnnce.
"What has more
energy than lhat? nus
is the real Uung." she
said
She moved conspir-
atorially closer. • Actu-
ally, I haven't seen Cos-
ta Mesa yet. I guess
that's where we are,
huh?"
The world's best-
looking couple, Esther
Caiiadas -you know,
the one with lips that
look like two Goodyear
bl.imps ready for liftoff
A press kit
descnbed the DKNY
fragrance dS Hthe per-
fect prequel to d rught
out in Soho, an art
gallery. opening in
Chelsea, a concert in
Central Park."
r1-1. )TOS BV BRIAN PO -.,,
Designer Donna Karan, left, unveils her new signature fragrance with the help of
supermodels Esther Cailadas, center, and-Mark Vanderloo, Friday at Macy's South
Coast Plaza.
-and husband Mark Supermodel Esther Caftadas, Je tt.
Vanderloo, jomed • sprays DKNY Women, a new scent by
Karan at South Coast Donna Karan, on husband/model Mark
Plaza to help pro~ole Vanderloo at South Coast Plaza.
-.
Karan said the per-
fume wpuld work for
anyone mdle,
Plug into the Pilot Classified section to find services from
electronics and plumbers, to landscapers and painters
f<'mdh', N<'w Yorker Even
Costd Mest1n
•Fragrance is a universal
ldngudgc,H she said. •it is an
dgcles<., tireless slate of
mind."
Daily Pilot
EST ABLJSHED 1922 ..______._.
But Kardn 's dens10n to
unve1l lhc> new scent m Cos-
ta Mesd sltJI confounded
some of her loydl followers.
"I find it d bit odd," said
Jimmy Lucero, 21, a fashion
student from Liigund B'!d<"h
who waited in line for 45
minutes for her ctutogruph
"I would've thought 11
would hdve bc<!n lhtly or
PctrlS w
SINCE 1864 SABATINO ~S
){,.,1.111ranl ~\ I .idu Shi[l.' ard Sau,,Jl!t' ( 11.
•Dinner
• Sunday Brunch
251 Shipyard Way • Newport Beach -, , -lE (949) 723-0621 10
----Our 77th Year ----
teak
Prime Rib
Rib Eye
Delmonico
Porterhouse
New York
Steak Tartare
(Prepared Table-Side)
Steak Diane
(Prepared Table-Side)
New York Pepper Steak
(Prepared Table-Side)
Beef Stroganoff
Fi let of Beef O scar
Filet Mignon
Si1u.l· 1 '>8.~ \\'int· Spnt.1tor: AW'A/UJ OF FXCl:11FNCF
The Premier Steak & Seafood House
*. Beef Wellington
*Chateaubriand Bouquetiere
* Rack of Lamb
Lamb Chops
Veal Chops
• Carved Tabk-SiM
Pictured Aboves
Award Winning Maitre D' of the Year
Gibby Fernanda aDd Om,er Dan Marcbcano
WEEKDAY LUNCHEON BLUE PLATE SPECIAL
OFFERING OVER 50 ITEMS PEH WEHK AU. U DEH $10.00
eafood
Swordfish, almon,
Or H alibut
(Blackened, Poached, Grilled,
Or aucecd)
Baked Shrirnp
Scampi
Deep Fried Jumbo Shrin1p
Calamari teaks
callops Belle Meunicre
Fried Deep ea callop
Australian Lobster Tail
Lobster Thennador
Abalone
Stone C rab Claws
. from Florida ..
Maryland Soft Shell Crab
Crab Cakes
Alaskan King Crab Legs
Bouillabaisse
SUNDAY AND MONDAY NIGHT DINNER SPECIALS $15. 95 0FFI::RI::D AU EVENING
EN'(REES SERVED WITH YOUR CHOICE OF SOUP OR SAl..AI>, LUMPY MASllHD POTATOES On RICE PllJ\F
OVER 30 ENTREES To CHOOSE FROM INCLUDING
LTITLE Brr OF ITALY:
BREAST OF CHICKEN PARMIGIANA• CHICKEN CACCIATOHE •VF.AL Pl<.CATA
CAI.AMARI OVER ANGEUWR PASTA• CHICKEN PICATfA • VEAi. PARMIGIANA• RAVIOl.I
GNOCCHI OR TORTEWNI •SCAMPI OVBR ANGEUWR PASTA
LINGUINI & CLAM SAUCE • AND MANY MORE
•
-~-~ • .-.:-............-.-. ................... ._,.. ~-...-.. ~-~--• -• -~· ........ ·1~ _,,,.,.. -.... • ... .. •
•
-
.
. .
A6 Saturday, February 26, 2000
BRIAN POBUOA I DAILY I'll.OT
SAY HELLO TO A BIG BIRD: Pelll Can, the new Harbor View Elemen~ mascot. receives greetings ftom stu-
dents during a school assembly Friday.
IN BRIEF .
Lifeguard sign-ups
due Wednesday
Those interested m becoming a New-
port Beach lifeguard have until
Wednesday to register for tryouts.
work by the deadline must return on
March 5 to participate in Uie tryouts.
Candidates will be required to m-
plete a 1,000-meter swim in less than 20
minutes and a 1,000-meter competitive
run-swim-run event.
The city will likely choose 40 to 50
indtVlduals, who then will attend a
series of training classes between
March and May. Pay raRge is between
$11.83 and $15.83 per hour.
Applicants must be at least 16 years
of age and must undergo a physical
examination. Registration forms are
available at the city's lifeguard head-
quarters at Newport Pier or the Human
Resources Department at City Hall,
3300 Newport Blvd.
The Newport Beach Fire and Marine
Depdrtment holds open tryouts ev.ery
winter. Applicdnts who file their paper·
Applications must be returned by 5
p.m. V{ednesday.
For more information, call (949) 644-
3170.
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OBITUARY
Roy 0 . Andersen
Stellar citizen, academ-
ic, husband and father,
Roy 0. Andersen of New·
port Beach died Dec. 21 at
his home after a lengthy
illness. He was 89.
Born in Selma, Calif. on
Feb. 2, 1910, he was a
hard-working fann boy in
the San Joaquin Valley.
Mr. Andersen learned a
strong work ethic early on,
being the youngest of five
and growing up on a farm.
Though he had tremen-
dous respect for his farm-
ing parents, his career ten-
dencies leaned toward
education.,
Mr. Andersen studied
at UC Berkeley to earn a
bachelor's degree and a
teaching credential. It was
at Berkeley where he met
his wife, Marge Jeckel.
The two married in 1936
after both had flmshed
school. They had three
children.
After college, Mr.
Andersen spent a year
teaching social .~clies in
Selma. He later applied for ..
and accepted a job as a
social stuclies teacher in
Southern California at
Newport Harbor High
School. He taught until
1943 when he was called
to active duty in the Navy
during World War ll.
Following the war, Mr.
Andersen took a position
as an administrator at a
high. school in Riverside.
But his passion for New-
port Beach· led him to
accept a position in 1949
as principal of the n ew
Ensign futermediate
School. Later, be became
superintendent of the
Newport Beach School
District before it became
Newport-Mesa Unified
School District.
Mr. Andersen retired
from his career as an edu-
cator in 1972. But retire-
ment didn't mean slowing
,.
Daily Pilot
R.oy o. Andenen
down. H.e and his wile
traveled for many years,
spent time with friends at
the Oasis Senior Center
and played bridge ori a
weekly basis. Mr. Ander·
sen was also an avid gar-
dener.
But the Anderi,ens'
favorite getaway was to
their cabiri m Montana.
, "He loved fishing,·
Marge said. "He also
spent a lot of time working
.on the cabins and iroprov-
'mg th~m. H.
But one of the most
touching days · in his life
was when Newport
Beach's Andersen Ele-
mentary School was
named after rum in the
early 1970s.
"That is the nicest hon-
or a school man can have,"
Marge said. "He loved the
schools and he loved the
school work. He told me
many times what a nice
thing that was. He could-
n't have been happier.
"It was a pleasant We in
a wonderful area,• Marge
said.
A private family service
was held in December. Mr.
Andersen is survived hls
wife of 63 years, Marge;
two sons, James Andersen
of Redondo Beach and
David Andersen of San
Jose; five grandchildren
and one great·grandchild.
NOTICE OF UNSCHEDULED VACANCY
The City of Ncwpon Beach is curn:ndy aca:pting applications to
fill the following unscheduled vacancy:
Planning Commission {one ~t)
The newly appointed mcmbtr will serve until the expiration of 1hc
current term Qune 30, 2003).
The dcadhnc for filing applications is 3:00 p.m. on Tbuuday.
March 16. 2000. The appointment is ~cduJed to be m:ide on
Tucscby, April 25. 2000. Application blanks and additional
information about the Planning Commission can be obtained from
rhe City Clerk's office, 3300 Newport Boulevard, or will be mailed
co you by calling 644.3005.
For more information comact the City Clerk's Office at ~4-3005 .
• Treadmills
• Elechonlc Steppers
Exardse Bikes • Surfboards
• Wetsuits • Boogie Boards
• Fins • Golf Cubs
&MuchMore
·~
\
Daily Pilot Saturday February 26, 2000 A7
Dresses, sm wear on sale at Young Seconds READY TO WHALE WATCH
Y oung Seeonds is having
a huge dress and sKi
wear sale. For one •
week only, hundreds of its
·p&ry Tale• dresses will be
avcilldble at an extra 50% to
70% off, beginning today
through March 4. Some are as
low as $10.
"These exqwslte dresses
are perfect for all special occa-
sions, parties, weddings, first
communions and portraits,"
say5 owner Kathy Bell. "Also,
Greer Wylder
BEST BUYS
. our entire stock of winter
snow and ski wear is marked
down to make room for our
new spring amvals." Young
Seconds is at 436 Hehotrope
Ave. in Corona del Mar. Store
hours are noon to 4 p.m. Sat·
urday and Monday: 10 a.m. to
5 p.m. Tuesday Uuough Fri-
day Call (949) 673-2120.
to Imaging is at 2905 Redhill
Ave. in Costa Mesa. Call (714)
. 556-2629.
Ramsay Photo Imaging,
formerly Ramsay Color Lab,
has added two new and
unique digital services. The
new state-of-the-art digital
systems offered are the Inter-
net upload and CD·
ROM/diskette products that
com~ with a built-.in program
called M Presenter.~
When a customer's images
come up on the screen
through the Internet or from a
CD or diskette, an entertain-
ing program appears on the
screen and guides the viewer
through myriad options, such
as adding captions and text,
running a co{llinuous slide
show, zooming m and makmg
screen savers, says company
president Johanna Ramsay.
She send the other proCiuct
allows scanning in any image
source, such as digital camera
media, CDs, diskettes, Zip dn-
ves, prints, slides and nega-
tives.
"The operator can then
change contrast, correct color,
remove red eye, add text with
many clifferent templates,
make cnJdrgements, print
pa~kagcs, photo calendars
and busmess cards," Ramsay
said. The most important
function of the new service,
she says, is that images can
now be printed directly to
photographic paper, wb.tch
has a h.tgher resolution and is
far less expellSlve and longer
lasting than any other paper
previously available.
Ramsay Photo lrnagmg bas
been in business for 27 years
and has the distinebon of
being the first custom lab on
the West COdSt to install one-
hour processing eqwpment.
With its name chdllge more
than a year ago, the business
has tclken the next step in dig·
ital technology while still pro·
viding the highest quality tra-
ditional photographic process-
ing and printing. Ramsay Pho-
WHY PAY
DEPT STORE
PRICES?
Visic our
AREA RUG STUDIO
Rugs & Runners on
Sale
Best Buys readers have
always been very happy with
the portraits taken at Yuen
Lul Portrait Photography at
South Coast Plaza in the
Crate & Barrel wing. A chil·
dren's portrait special is being
offered for $42.95, which JS a
$202 value. The special
inCludes one 8x10, two 3x5s
and eight wallets. You'll get to
select from six color proofs.
An addibvnal $5 will be
added for two or more chil-
dren. The offer is good for
children 12 and younger only.
Call (714) 545-8845.
Merchants of Corona del
Mar Plaza are offering all
kinds of sales through the end
of the month. At Subtle Tones,
there's a 30% to 75% off sale
on selected merchandise. The
store is filled with ladies casu-
al wear, linens, jewelry, gilts,
vintage mirrors', sconces, '·
chandeliers, and home acces-
sories. Call (949) 640-2781.
At the Italiano Home
Store, there's a 30o/o-off sale
on selected handmade Italian
furrushings and home acces-
sones exclusively from Italy.
Pordetails,call(949)640-
2458.
At Mottlnl, there's a sale
with fine Italian leather hand·
bags, purses, wallets and
more on sale up to 50% ofJ.
Call (949) 721-0113.
The Basttdeaux Home Col-
lec:Uon must be getting ready
for· a new shipment of furni-
ture and home accessories.
Nearly everything in the store
has been reduced, including
mirrors, coffee tables, sofas,
chairs, dining tables and
lamps. For more information,
.call (949) 640-6968
A one-day-only sale is hap-
pening today at Costa Mesa
MJtsublsbJ. It's the last Satur-
day for the special promotion
called "Zero zero zero 'bll '01
sales event." The special is
offered on the pur~ase of any
new 1999 or 2000 Mitsubishi
Montero, Montero Sport, Dia-
mante, Mirage or the 2000
Eclipse. You can put zero
down and you'll recewe zero
accrued interest and have
zero payments unW February
2001. Costa Mesa Mitsubishi
is at 2860 Harbor Blvd . in
Costa Mesa. Call (714\) 545-
1700.
• BEST BUYS rs published Thurs-
days and Saturdays. If you know of
a good buy, send a fax to (949)
646-4170 or write.to Daily Prlot.
Best Buys. 330 W. Bay St, Cost.a
Mesa 92627.
CONRAD LA'1 I DAJ v n.or
Sonora School student Ally Pattison, 8, talks with Mary Shandy, a Citation Society
volunteer, attbut her upcoming whale-watching field trip.
GET THE
POINT?
Classified ads work for
YOU!
THE Daily Pilot
Classrfred Community Marketplace
e Clown Prince
of Golf
• • • • • • • • •
,
Starting with lasl ;ear~ riveting playoff
at the Toshiba Senior Classic,
Gary McCord laughed all the way
to the bank.
All told, he won 2 Senior events in 1999
and nearly S I million.
r
..
I
• I
A8 Saturday, F~ry 26, 2000 Daily Pilot
Water elements add soothing sounds, beauty to any home
,
T he pitter-patter of light ·
ram on the roof, the
consistent pulse or •
ocean waves, the babbling of
a forest stream: water ele-
ments are one of Mother
Nature's most soothing and
peaceful components.
We are, after all, comprised
mostly of water. We begin our
journey floating in a secure water
world for nine months. The Earth
is largely covered with water. It is
no surprise that we seek to bring
water features into our environ-
ment to satisfy our tlurst for -
nature.
For centunes, the Chinese and
Japanese have been using water,
stones and plants to create bal-
ance m their homes and gardens.
Romans used founlaln.s and
st&rstep pools to cool oU hot
summer MedJterranean nights.
Watei: elements can be as sim-
ple as a birdbath or as complex
as a waterfall or ko1 pond in the
backyd!d. Developers m the
Western world finally caught on
to the intrinsic connectton
between the human condition
and the water world. Take a look
at almost any shopping mall.
Fountains are prominently dis-
pldyed and serve as focal points.
South Coast Plaza's fountains run
through the center of the pedes-
trian areas. Running water pro-
vides a backdrop of •white noise•
that promotes a feeling of weU-
bemg.
When Fashton Island had a
face-lift several years ago, the
Irvine Co. got smart and added
water elements that increase the
shopping and browsmg enjoy-
ment of viSitors. The k01 pond
was JOUled by some complex and
creative water clisplays.
In an effort to reproduce the
simplioty of nature, some of
these fountams have computer-
ized bming systems to simulate
ocedn wdves, or syncopated
rhythms for pop jets.
Karen Wight
NO PLACE LIKE HOME
Water compoD;,ents for your
home are a great mvesbnent in
time and energy. It's as easy as a
concrete birdbath in the front
planter of your home. Most feath-
ered bathers prefer one to two
inches of water to splash around
in; they add a lovely clisplay of
sights and sounds to a garden.
Next on the scale of effort 1S a
rurul.ing fountain. Adding this to
your landscape plan will take
some time and energy, but the
effort will be exponentially
returned.
You will need to provide elec-
tricity for a motor an.d if you real-
ly want to do the job the right
way, think about adding lighting
so your efforts can be seen as
well .as heard in the evening
hours.
If you have a place for a free-
standing fountain, be sure to pro-
vide a planter at the base to max-
imize the impact. AddJ.ng green-
ery or flowers enhances your
decorabve accent.
A patio or c;:>urtyard is a natur-
al place to add a water element.
Be sure to position your fountam
so 1t can be seen and heard from
as many rooms as possible.
Do you have d place that will
provide your bedroom with the
relaxing sound of trickling wdter?
This is a great enhancement to
your personal retreat.
you take care of your chores?
Another prime location.
For centuries, fonnal pools in
geometric shapes were the norm
in a proper European garden.
Pools such as these can be
sunken, raised or semi-raised.
Plantings around the pool can
increase the feeling of formality.
Incorporate a boxwood hedge or
use rows of flowering plants in
graduated l}.~ights.
For a more tropical feeling, •
consider a water garden with
water lilies, poppies, lotus or
water hyacinths. Water lilies are •
easy to grow, dependable
bloomers and are un~y
beautiful. Umbrella plants are
fast growers and provid~ neight
and texture to a water setting .
Water gardens need 1lt least four
to six hours of sun each day, so a
sunny location is a prerequisite.
A koi pond is an interesting
addition. Aficionados swear by
these ornamental carp. Owners
claim the fish are outgoing and
affectionate. Koi owners describe
theu fishy friends as #spunky~
and are considered family pets.
These creatures outlive almost
any other kind of pet -up to 60
years. Be careful, they might out-
live you.
Ponds such as these require
careful planning. Requirements
include a shallow area for feed-
mg, a deeper area for protection
from the elements and occasional
VlSitfug mammals, a filtration and
aeration system, and protection
from weather extremes.
l:lave you seen the water ele-
ments for desktops? Miniature
foun'tains for your office are pop-
ular and come in a variety of
forms and complexities. Water,
water everywhere.
Add an element of the ele-
ments to yow comer of the
world. Water is relaxing and
refreshing. Make waves.
Kids love them, adults love
them. Water just works.
''°' Do you have a window by
your kitchen sink that you stare
out of Cot hours during lhe day as
• KAREN WIGHT is a Newport Beach
.• resident. Her column runs Saturdays. ThJs free-standing fountain adds tntere g sights and sounds to a garden.
S5~
Mattress Outlet Stor
BRAND NEW -COSMET1CALLY IMPERFECT
Get the Best for Less! ·
3165 Harbor Blvd.
Costa Mesa
One Bloc.II South of 405 l'Wy
(714) 545-7168
~rv-'IYi>"t;-·e.~ ~~ ... .,..~~
~ crJ/( Qf EJ~.~~. ~
' PRESIDENT'S DAY SOFA SALE i
t ,. t ..
Look in the Classified section
in Saturday's paper.
Publishing every Saturday .
until April 15th.
"We're Bursting With Quality
Furniture at Great Savings!
•Model Home Fumiturt! •Antiques •Art Accessories
• Art!a Rugs & Morel Custom Refinishi11g & Uphol.stery
(949) 646-1822 .
670 W. 17th St., 102 •Costa Mesa
Ho11rs: -Sat. 1 I""' -4.
Sweet Local
STRAWBERRIES
· Fresh Picked Daily ·
We are not fancy but we are FI{ESH ---
FIELD FRESH PRODUCE St ND
400 EAST I 7TW (Corner 1781 A 1mda} COiia
('9) ... ,.,
l>O\'l<\11111\ISllll::
111 ~ ltl 'lll\l f(l\l I !ll I!! 11
Rabbicc Insurance Agency
AlTl'O • HOMEOWNERS• HEALTif
40 Ytars In Business
,~, ~ ~G ~~ ...... ·--··'"""" / > .. "-' 949-631-77 40 « 1 Old Newport Bhd. • Newport Bead\
(Near Hoag HOfpital)
ZAHER FALLAHI, CPA
28 yrs. exp.
Accrg., Audits, Taxes
15% discount co CM Ra1dcnr~
(714) s46-42n
j
Daily Pilot Saturday, Februo~ 26, 2000 A9 ,.,
Former mayors to be honored at Roman Feast PET OF THE WEEK
SEE YOU AT THE FEAST:
Former mayors Arlene
Schafer of Costa Mesa and
Evelyn Hart of Newport
~each will be honored at the
27th annual Roman Feast
and Charity Auction for the
benefit of the Youth Employ-
ment Service of the Harbor
Area on Thun.day at the
Costa Mesa Neighborhood
Cente r.
The evening will feature
an Italian theme with hors·
d'oeuvres donated by some
of the area's finest restau-
rants, a reception and silent
auction at 6 p m., pasta buf-
fet at 7:30, a live auction
with auctioneer Jim Dale
and music and entertamment
by Jim Roberts. Proceeds
from the dinner will support
YES programs Pre-emploY,-
ment and Job Keeping Skills,
Job Club, Job Development
and Job Referrals, Summer
Jobs for Youth, Bwlding Ufe
Options and You and Me
Tobacco-Cree programs.
More than 350 commuruty
and business leaders, elected
officials, service club mem-
bers and YES supporters are
expected to attend the event.
Barbara and I will be among
them. Hope to see you there!
For dinner reservations ($20
per person), call YES at (949)
642-8306.
GARAGE SALE: Boy Scouts
Thoop 37 is holding a garage
sale today and Sunday at the
Lido Isle Community Center.
701 Via Udo Soud. Proceeds
will be used to provide the
boys with backpacking and
camping trips as well as
scholarships for some young
scouts who otherwise would
not be able to belong to Boy
Scouts.
SPEECH CONTEST: It was a
tough deosion for Student
Speaker Coptest judges
Hank Panlan, Frank Oliver
and Sondra Anderson, but
they selected Becca Silva as
the winner of the Costa
M~ Newport Harbor ,
Breakfast Lions Club contest.
Competing with Silva were
M~ Fay, Davtd Tow,
Somer Flaherty and Lauren
Cassidy -all from Estancia
High School. Silva receivM a
check Crom dub president
Ron DeGeare for $50; the.
. other contestants received
$25 each.
TALENT CONTEST DEAD-
LINE EXTENDED: If you're
between the ages of 6 and
18, the annual Search for
Talent sponsored by the
Exchange Club of Newport
Harbor gives you a chance to
share your talent. Contes-
tants will compete in one of
three age groups. The win-
ners of each will receive a
handsome plaque and will
.be invited to compete at the
next level, ultimately for
$1 ,000. The contest will take
place at the OaslS Seruor
Center on Fnday beginrung
at 6'.30 p.m. The deadline for
entnes has been extended to
Tuesday, so call Search for
Talent chairman Deane Bot-
torf at (949) 673-8701 today!
WOMEN IN THE WORK·
PLACE: Newport Beach resi-
dent Judy Rosener will
address the topic of interrela·
Jim de Boom
COMMUNITY & CLUBS
tionslup~ of men and ~omen
in the workplace at a Special
community forum Tuesday.
Rosener, a professor at the
UCI Graduate School of
Management, is a recog-
nized expert on employment
diversity issues. Sponsored
by the National Conference
for Community and Justice,
in cooperation with Coastline
College and KOCE-TV, the
session will be held at the
Fountain Valley Regional
Medical Office Building,
11100 Warner Ave .. Suite
112, Fountain Valley, from 7
to 9:15 p.m. For reservations,
call (949) 252-5389.
SERVlCE CLUB MEETINGS
IHIS WEEK: Want to get
more involved, make new
friends, network or give
something back to your com-
munity? 1Ty a service club!
You are invited to attend a
dub meeting tbJs conung
JEFF & LYLEEN
EWING
TALKING TIRE AS
"JOINf TENANfS,,
"Jomt Tenancy" 1s one of
SC\er-aJ ways you can ulce ollc
(tcmncy) to rc:il property. A )Otnt
ctJW'IC} IS crcued by the dclibmre
act of a propcny owner or owners,
either during life by deed or at
death by will.
The ccntr.LI characterisoc of a
101nt tenancy 1s the right of
survavorslup. A 1oant tenant can
ne~cr pass rus or her interest an ~
ioant tenancy by wall or l>y
intestate ~uccessaon Upon the
death ·of a JOint tenant, the
surviving joint tenant or tenants
automatically uke ownership the
intcr~t left by the deceased joint
tcmnt.
Joint tenancy was l>om during
the feudal penod of Anglo-Suon
bw. It survives uxlay primarily as
a wall substirutc, puticularly with
unmarried persons. Legal apcru
typically advise mamed couples
to take owner hip t~rough
tenancy by the entirety, whjch
shields both spouses from the
claims a creditor has against only
one. joint tenancy docs not
proVlde the same protcctions. You
would be wise to seek sound legal
counsel before dccadlng whether
1oan1 ten1.ncy gives you the ~t
available real-property protection.
Lylcen and Jeff have 28
consccuti\.'C years of real estate
cxpcnence in Newport Beach. They
arc Coldwell Baokcn f J team.
For professional service or advice
with aU your real estate needs call
die Ewing:su('949) 718-lSSO.
··ucHING'
... •12•••• • • •••••••...
t Cl•FME
Ill CMIEITEll
... -
week. Many clubs will buy
• your first guest meal for you._
• TIJESDAY: 7:30 a.m. -
The Newport Beach Sunnse
Rotary Club meets at the
Balboa Bay Club.
•WEDNESDAY: 7:15 a.m.
-The South Coast Metro
Rotary Club will meet at the
Center Club; Newport Har-
bor Kiwanis Club meets at
the University Athletic Club.
Noon -The Excnange Club
of Ord.ngo Coast rtleets at the
Bahia Corinthian Yacht Club.
6 p.m. -The Rotary Club of
Newport Harbor meets al the
Balua Connthian Yacht Club
to hear UCl Police Chief
Kathy Hooven discuss "Your
Fnendly Force:
• TIRJR.SDAY: The Costa
Mesa Orange COdst Break-
fast Lions Club meets at
Mimi's Cafe for a program on
the propositions on the ballot
for the McLrcb 7 prunary elec-
tion. Noon -Kiwanis Club
ol Newport aeach-Corona
del Mar meets at the Balua
Conntluan; the Costa Mesa
Kiwanis Club meets at the
Holiday Inn for a program on
the Salvation Anny; the
Exchange Club of Newport
Harbor meets at the River-
boat ~eslauranl; the New-
port-Irvine Rotary ctub
meets at the Irvine Marriott
to hear Robert Gilliland, for-
mer test pilot of the SR-71
Blackbird spy plane. 6 p.m ..
-The Costa Mesa-Newport
Harbor Lions Club will meet
at the Costa Mesa Goll Com-
munity Center for the Youth
·Employment Dinner.
• COMMUNITY & CLUBS IS
published every Saturday in the
Daily Pilot. Send your service
club's meeting Information by
fax to (949) 660·8667, e-mail
to jdeboomOaol.com or send to
2082 S.E. Bristol, Suite 201,
Newport Beach 92660·1740.
'Moose'
Moose was
abandoned
recently m Coro-
na del Mar. Thls
handsome bea-
gle is looking for
a good ~ome.
He is a great
family dog who
loves kids. See
him al the Dover
Shores Pet Cdre
Center, 2075
Newport Blvd ,
Costa Mesa.
The Commu-
nity A!lunal Net-
work 1s a com-·
munity-supporl-
ed animal orga-
mzauon link.mg
people and pets
through commu-
nity acllon.
• Animals sponsored by:
The Communrty Animal Network
P 0 Box 8662, Newport Beach 92658
www an/ma/network. org
(949) 759-3646
Window Covering &
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Laminate
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Hardwood
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. .
AIO Saturday, February 26, 2000
• Send AROUM> TOWN Items to
the Dally Pilot 330 W, Bay St. Cos-
ta Mesa 92627, fax them to (949)
~ 170; or call (949) 764-4330. A
comp~te list ng fNY be found at
daityp1lot.com,
TODAY
Newport Harbor High
School will hold "Parent Uni-
versity 2000," a spedaJ edu-
cation community advisory
committee meeting. The
event includes seminars on
many different subjects for
parents, including topics
such as substarice abuse pre-
vention, Jariguage develop-
ment and learning disabili-
• ties. The day s~ with a
• continental breakfast at 8
a.m. ~d runs through 11:45
a.m. The school is at 600
Irvine Ave., Newport Beach.
For more information, call
"' (71 4) 424-5060.
. .
IERllT
The Bank of Orange County
will hold a frarichise invest-
ment workshop at the Dou-
bletree Hotel, 3050 Bristol
St., Costa Mesa. 1\vo ses-
sions of the $15 workshop
will be offered: a mom1ng
session, from 9 to 11 a.m.,
and dn afternoon session
from 2 to 4 p.m. For more
information, call (800) 981-
6680.
Orange Coast College presents the "Best of the Best" of the 24th annual Banff
Mountain FUm Festival at 7 p.m. March 22. The three-hour program of films
includes work from Scotland, Germany a,nd Switzerland. Shown here ls a scene
fr~m "Traverse tn the Land of Ayacara." OCC ls at 2701 Falrvtew Road, Costa
Mesa. For more tnJormation, call (714) 432-5601.
The Plecemakers wlU hold a
peddJer's market from 8 a.m.
to 3 p.m. The ·event, featur-
ing 65 booths of old and new
items, is free. It will be held
outside the Piecemakers
Country Store, 1720 Adams
Ave., Costa Mesa For more
mlonnation, call (714) 641-
3112
Roger's Gardens will bold a
seminar on container garden-
ing and hanging baskets at
9:15 a.m. The store is at 2301
San Joaquin Hills R0c1d, Coro-
na del Mar. For more informa-
tion, call (949) 721-2100.
Our Lady of Mount Carmel
Church will hold a •vouth
Against Violence• leader-
ship service day from 10 a.m.
to 1 p.m. The event will fea-
ture programs intended to
encourage nonviolent con-
Oict resolution. The church is
at 1441 w: Balboa' Blvd.,
Newport Beach. For more
information, call (949) 673-.
2719.
The Juvenile Diabetes Foun-
dation of Orange County will
hold its second annual VIP
Monopoly Gala at the New-
port Beach Marriott, 900
Newport Center Drive, New-
port Beach. The event will
include a silent and live auc-
tion for items such as a
Goodyear Blimp ride,
Edwards Theatre family
passes, and more. n ckets are
$150. For more information,
call (949) 553-0363.
Victoria Seitz, author of Your
Executive Image and Power
Dressing Will give a free Jec-
ture, "'High-Tech Etiquette,•
at 7 p .m. at Borders Books,
Music and Cafe. The store is
at 3333 Bear St., Costa Mesa.
Por more information, call
(714) 432-7854.
The Estancia High School
PTSA rummage sale will run
from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. in the
school's commons at 2323
Placentia, Costa Mesa. Mon-
ey raised in the sale will help
fund college scholarships.
. Tables are available for peo-
ple wishing to rent sales
space. For more information,
call (949) 64 715.
The JewtsS Federation
Young Business and Profes-
sionals Division will hold the
annual Herzl Society
Advanced Gifts Dinner at
6:30 at the Newport Beach
home of Blossom Siegel. The
Heral Society is a group of
Jewish men and women
ages 25 to 45 who pledge a
minimum of $360 to the Jew-
ish Federation's annual cam-
paign. For more information,
call (714) 755-5555, Ext. 225.
Parent Help USA will hold a
•Youth Against Violence•
Leadership Service Day at
Our Lady of Mount Carmel
Church, 1 441 W. Bdlboa
Blvd., Newport Beach. The
event,· which runs from 9:30
a.m. to 1 p .rn., seeks to pro-
mote nonviolent conflict res-
olution., For more informa-
tion, call (949) 574-8200.
SUNDAY
Sterling Optical of Newport
Beach will offer free vtS1on
screerung and a raffie of opb-
cal prizes in connection with
the Spirit Run. The screerung
will be conducted at the
Fashion Island Edwards The-
a~er at the corner of Newport
Center Dnve and San
MigueJ from 7 a.m. to about
noon. For more information,
call (949) 752-5636.
MONDAY
A Great Dedslons discussion
of •The MiddJe East at the
Millennium" will be present-
Antique Furniture, Artifacts &
Architectural Elements
Zubie's Proud y
Serving 30 Years!
414 OJd Newport Blvd.
from China
Newport Beach
645-6086
SUNDAY BREAKFAST
Country-Style & "South of the Border"'
s2.49 To '5.95
WAREHOUSE
670 W. 17th St.
Costa Mesa
Bloody Marys, Mimos~, Full Cocktail Bu
& Fresh Coffee! Served 9 am to 1 pm OPEN: TU -WED -THURS 10-4
Or by appoincmenr, call 949-929-1102, 72 1-5754
Also ac Jeffries Led., 852 Produccion Place, N.B.
BenefltlnQ Orangewood
Children s Foundation
Milke a difference in the
lift of a deserving child!
Gucci • Armani • Louis Vuitton
•· Escada • St. John • Dior & more!
Storewide Sale
Sat. February 26th & sun. Febryary 27th
New Stoia Hours: Mon-Frt 10-5•Sat11~5
NOW OPEN MRV SUNDAY 11AM -SPM
~I Pl"~\\ l\f .~:
ALL MEHCllANDISE TAKE AN ADDITIO AL
·30%0FF
cd by Bob Green lUld Ruth
Fassett from 7:30 to 9 p .m. at
St. Mark PresbytE>rian
Church, 2100 Mar Vista,
Newport Beach. The nonpar-
tisan articles used in the For-
eign Policy Assn. study
material are used as the
foundation for the discussion.
A copy of the articles that
will be used in the remairung
four weeks of the series can
be purchased at the church
for $12. For more informa-
tion, call (949) 760-1691.
TUESDAY
Mother's Market will hQSt a
free seminar on dental heaJth
hosted by Todd B. Engel in
the patio cafe Jrom 6:30 to
7·30 p.m. Mother's Market 1S
at 225 E. 17th St., Costa
Mesa. For more information,
call (949) 631-4741. ·
The Orange County chapter
of The Single Gourmet will
hold a gourmet dining event
at Bistro 201, 3333 Coast
Highway, Newport Beach.
For more information, call
(800) 750-DtNE.
Newport Dunes will bold a
leap year birthday celebra-
tion for people born on Feb.
29. The event will include a
free lunch and birthday cake
for "leap year babyn guests.
Newport Dunes is at 1131
Back Bay Drive, Newport
Beach. For more information,
call (800) 765·7661 .
WEDNESDAY
Speak Up Newport's March
meeting \41ill address Mea-
sure F. The meeting begins
with hors d'oeuvres at 5:30
p.m. and a presentabon at 6
p.m. It will be held at the
Ri'9erboat Restaurant, 151 E.
Coast Highway, Newport
Beach. For more information,
call (949) 224-2266.
Shennan Library & Gardens
will hold a workshop titled
MCymbidium Orchids," at
9:30 a.m. to discuss.feeding,
watering, repotting, light
requrrements and pest con-
trol for the plants. The course
is $20. Sherman Library is at
264 7 E. Coast Highway,
Daily Pilot
Corona deJ Mar. For more
infonnatJon, call (949) 673·
2261.
The Newport Beach Public
l.ibr~ will hold a free noon
program bUed ·uving With
Grief.• Deborah Smith of the
Pacific View Memonal Park
will speak. The library is at
1000 Avocado Ave., Newport
Beach. For more information,
call (949) 717-3801.
THURSDAY
The Newport Beach Public
Library will present a free
program titled "Gondolas of
Newport and Venice" at 7
p.m. Greg Mohr, president of
Adventwes at Sea Yacht
Charters, will speak. The
library is at 1000 Avocado
Ave., Newport Beach. For
more informabon, call (949)
717-3801.
OCC librarian Vinta M.
Shumway will give a lecture
titled •A Foreigner in a For-
eign Land -Growing Up in
India" at 7:30 p.m. at OCC's
Lido Isle Clubhouse, 701 Via
Lido Soud. The event is $5
for nonme'mbers, and seating
is limited. For reservations
and more information, call
(714) 432-5087.
The Parent Project, a family
survival skills senes for the
· parents of strong~wilJed,
noncompbant or des\ructive
adolescents, will start a six-
week session on March 2
The course meets from 7 to
9:30 p.m. Thursdays in the
library of SlMC, 2985 Bear
St., Costa MeSd. To register,
call (714) 424-7560
A career network meeting
ror the unemployed at St
Andrew's Presbytenan
Church will feature John Fry,
St. Andrew's member and
clinical psychologist, who
will speak on ~How to Stop
Past I lurts that lmpcur your
Job Search. n The free meet-
ing runs from 7:30 to 9 p.m.
m the Stewart Lounge at St.
Andrew's. The church is at
600 St. Andrew's Road, New-
port Beach. For more infor-
mabon, call (949) 574-2239.
UPf03MOS ~re_.,
Based on 50 sq. yd. Padding & Installation Included
Shop l 's Last. .. You'll B<.· ( ;Jml You Diel!
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Doily Pilot
IRVINE
CONTINUED FROM A 1
J
polillcal lance lS.
· The county's largei;t
developer is a ffidJOr
landowner dround El Toro
and until the drafting of the
letter, had not assumed a
st.tong public voice regard-
ing the project.
Some, however, believe
the company still hasn't
taken a position.
•A spokesperson for the
Irvine <;o. said they weren:t
taking a. posillon . on it,"
said City Mdllager Homer
Bludau. •At this point, it
remains to be seen. Their
comments have to be
addressed. Thdt doesn't
mean th.ose concerns can't
be dealt with •
Others say the company
. 1S simply being self-serv-
ing.
"I don't Uunk thelf posi-
tion has changed one bit,"
Sfild former mdyor and cur-
port activist Torn Edwards.
"They've always been out
to protect whatever's at
stake for them. They've
positioned themselves very
strategically." ·
Clarence Turner, anoth-
er former mayor and
activist, said he was also
suspicious of the Irvine
Co.'s motives.
"It seems strange hand-
ing assurances on El Toro,"
Turner said "They didn't
provide the same assur-
ances for John Wayne."
Turner dlso said he
thinks the Irvine Co. knows
exdcUy what 1t wants and
has probably stud.led the
project for yedrs.
SW!, others bel.Jeve the
Irvine Co.'s reservations
about the airport are
unfounded.
Mayor John Noyes, part
of the city'$ airport commit-
tee, said he disagrees with
the Irvine Co. comments
that the report doesn't dis-
close all the effects of the
project. Councilwoman
Norma Glover, also on the
committee, agreed.
"I don't tlunk the Irvine
Co. has concentrated on
this enough to understand
the noise impacts,• Glover
said.
All is not lost for El Toro
proponents, however.
· Some h9pe the comments
can be used constructively
to bring proponents and
opponents together for a
comm'unity-friendly air-
port.
Supervisor Cynthia
Coad previously suggested
luni ting both airports as a
compromise.
• 1 think a lot of those
(complaints] really line up
with what the Airport
Working Group has come
out with since the middle of
last year," said Airport
Working Group
spokesman Tom
Naughton, who has yet to
see the letter. "I'm very
pleased that the Irvine Co.
has gone to the point of
writing this to the county
and making specific state-
ments about noise and run-
way safety."
Regardless of North
County interpretations of
the letter, El Toro oppo-
nents received the news
with open anns.
"We wer-e glad to sec
them weigh in so strongly
on it,· said Meg Waters,
spokeswoman for the anti-
airport El Toro Reuse Plan-
ning Authority.
•The county hds been ·
planing an airport that
defies the laws of acrody-
nd.Dllcs. We were encour-
aged by the comments they
made. Many of the con-
cerns they raised are con-
cerns we have been raising
for seven years."
floe~
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Celebrating U yean of
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With the
Daily Pilot ·
CLASSIFIEDS
CALL 642-5678
TOSHIBA
CONTINUED FROM A 1
the group reach its gOdl of
making $1 mil.I.Jon for charity
The ledd chcirity dnd event
organizer is the Hodg Hospi-
lal Founddhon. Additional
recipients dre Orahgewood
Charities dnd the Southern
Califom1a PGA Foundcltion.
City officidls said they're
excited about hosting the
event.
MThe med.lei coverdge will
FYI
• What Toshiba Senior Classic
• When: Sunday through
March 5
• Where: Newport Beach
Count,.Y Club at 1600 East
· Pacific CoaSt Highway
•How much: Advance·pur-
chase, good-an}'-one-day
exchangeable coupons are
S 14. Single-day tickets good
Monday through Thursday
provide a fabulous opportuni-
ty to show otr our beaulllul
Sotvrdoy, Feb.-uory 26, 2000 Al I
Signs are
stacked
in Ute
parking
lot of the
Ne\vport
Beach
Country
Club as
workers
prepare
for the
Toshiba
Senior
Classic.
MAR.IANt~
DAY MASSEY I
DAii. Y PllOT
are $15. Single-day tickets
good Friday through Sunday
are S17. A weeklong
grounds badge, good Mon-
day through Sunday is SSO.
And a season clubhouse
badge, good Monday
through Sunday is S 100. • can: Tickets are available by
calling tournament headquar-
ters at (949) 515-4840 or at
www.ToshibaSeniorClassic.com
city," Mayor John Noyess
said
SPEAK
CONTINUED FROM A 1
defeated 10 the May
1999 election by Ehud
Bo.rak.
Shortly after his
dereat, Netanyahu's
aides announced the
right-wmg pohtical
leader would write a
new book ahd embark
upon a U.S. lecture cir-
cwt,
Netanyahu'~ book, "A
Durable Peace Israel
and Its Place Among the
Nabons," WdS published
in Jdnuary Some literary
critics helve descobed
the book as a well-done,
dlbc>1t one-sided. primer
to Zlorusm.
Temple Bat Yahrn has
named Netanyahu its
Norman Schiff Scholar
LecturPr for this year.
The lecture will begin
at 7 p.m. at the temple,
1011 Cumelbacl< Street.
nckets will be sold at
the door. Reserved seat-
ing is $50, general
adrmss1on $25 and stu-
dents and seruors $18.
For more information,.
ccill (949) 644-1999.
li GOOD TASTE AND I "GREAT STYLE I THAT SE·RVES YOU WELL
• .Helen Grace Chocolates •Cha mpagne • Anthony's Shoe Repair
• Champagne Ba~ery • Di Marie Interior • Bank of America
• Mrs. Beasley 's & Miss Grace • Draper's & Damon's • Blue Mambo Beauty Supply
Lemon Cake Co. • Kayaks Weekend Wear • California Federal Bank
• Pasta Bravo • Matthew-Taylor's • Crown Ace Hardware
• Pick Up Stix • Fast Frame
• Ralph's Market • Images Hallmark
• Starbucks • Mailboxes Etc.
• Robert & Taylor Salon
• Sav-on Drug Store
(
• Shape Up N wport
• Shell Oil
• Westcliff Plaza Cleaner
•
. ....
; .
0
When it comes to news about our community, the Daily Pilot delivers the whole enchilada.
With all the local news, high school sports coverage, and local columnists,
the Daily Pilot ill always be my main course for news.
Got the Pilot?
Call 1 (800) LATIMES to subscribe • CaJ1 (949) 642-4321 to advertlae
·'
...
r .
I : Doily Pilot
I
~MOODY
CONTINUED FROM A1
; time between 'working at a I semce station and a machin·
ery plant. He knew a few
police officers and they told
• him about the benents.
' Moody thought ll wa an
' interesting vocation and
• became a reserve officer. He
was hired by Costa Mesa in
. June 1957.
, "I liked the idea or n ot
: having the same routine
• every day,• Moody said.
"Every day; sometlung new
could happen. It sounded
exciting and I saw an oppor-·
• tunlty to do some good.•
: Bright-eyed and rocuseq,
: Moody was only 22 years old
• when he tut the streets or
, Costcl Mesa. The city then
• resembled Claremont today:
• a sleepy, close-knit, low-• . crune area.
But Costa Mesa was
expanding rapidly and so
· was the Police Department.
Moody caught the recruiting
: wave and rode it to a high-
ranking position. Within a
' couple years, his bosses took
notice of his hard work and
• promoted him to sergeant.
He thri\fed in the detec-
: tive bureau where he spent
: most of his career and was
: awarded lieutenant stripes.
Amazingly, six years after he
entered the force, he was
bumped up to captain.
. During that time, Moody
saw Costa. Mesa endure the
' gTOwmg pains of a suburban
city: increased traffic and
violent crime.
One of Moody's last
assignments as detective
was a senes of unsolved
, murders Ulat had paralyzed
the county. Youl}g women
: were being brutally raped
and killed, · three of whom
lived m Costa Mesa. Five
: women had died at the
hands of their assailant.
Another woman, who was
' pregnant, was left for dead.
: Her unborn Child died in the
grisly attack.
Moody never heard about
the final outcome. The killer
had been caught several
yedrs ago and was sent to
death row for lus crimes. No
one thought to inform
• Moody, who was one of the j lead mvestigators m the Cos-
ta Mesa homicides.
·No one told me that they
had caught the guy,• he said.
"Those were some temble
..
FYI
PROFILE
• NAME; Robert' Moody
•AGE: 65
• CITY: Claremont
• FAMILY: Married with
two daughters and a son
• WORK HISTORY: 32
years with the Costa
Mesa Police Department
and 10 years as
Claremont Police Chief
• FUTURE PLANS:
Mediation work and
traveling the w_orld
murders and it was quite
stressful for us to find the
killer. before he struck
again."
Wtule solving crunes was
a lucrative reward for
Moody, lus eye was on the
bounty prize -being chris·
tened police chief. He had a
chance when Chief Robert
Neth retired in late 1986. He
applied for the joo, but 1t was
given to an outside candi-
date, current Chief Dave
Snowden.
Moody .was devastated by
the decision. .
~I guess it wasn't in the
cards," he said. "l was
tremendously disappointed.·
By that time, I had reached
retirement age but I wasn't
ready to go."·
Moody didn't want to
leave Costa Mesa, but the
only challenge left was run-
rung lus own department He
applied to different cities and
went through a series of
mtemews.
In July 1989, the city of
Claremont. picked Mpody as
their new chief. Costa Mesa
had lost one of their long-
standing officers.
"He was always a con-
summate professional,• said
Snowden, who befnended
Moody. "rt could have been
an awkward situation
between him and me, but it
was quite the contrary. l le
made the transition smooth
and easy for me."
HOME SWEET HOME
Moody was fortunate to
find a quaint town like
Claremont in the urban
sprawl known as the greater
Los Angeles area. Nestled at
the foot of the San Gabrtel
Mountains, the city has
about 35,000 residents and
sits on the cusp of Los Ange-
les County. It is home to sev-
eral colleges as well as his-
toric Route 66, which cuts
through th town's core~ •
City Hall in the heart of
the business distrtct, an area
devoid of Home Depots and
({marts. Neighborhoods are
shaded by archiilg trees Wlth
budding branches draped
over the streets. The city is
lined with spacious parks
and a mix of Victonan and
Spanish-themed homes.
Moody was unpressed, to
say the least. But little did he
know the job would be more
demanding than he thought.
"I didn't think 'the job
would be as busy at it was,•
he said. "The citizens
demand a lot out of their city
employees I saw a real chal-
lenge here."
His first order of business
was to rearrange the mtemal
structure of the department.
He dismantled the hierarchy
of l 0 commanders and gave
them lower ranks of lieu-
tenant and sergeant. It may
have not been a popu~r
move among officers; but
Moody fell it would work
better.
He reestablished the
reserve police corps that was
dormant for 15 years and
added a· K-9 unit. During
Moody's tenure, the depart-
ment was awarded a grant to
fund fingerprint machines
and laptop computers for its
41 officers.
"I don't like to dwell
on the few rocks on
my road. I'm not
made· that way."
Robert Moody
Claremont Police Chief
He h~lped start an adopt·
a-cop program where offi-
cers would spend their lunch
hours wtth school kids. He
also contributed to the cre-
ation of a trauma interven-
tion program that sent volun-
teers to incidents where peo-
ple needed consoling.
vwe were able to accom-
plish a lot with the fmanoal
constraints of the city.ff
Moody said "I'm proud of
what we have done here at
the department.•
Moody may not be
remembered for the stndes
he made I.I\ Claremont, but
rather the fallout over a traf·
fie stop gone wrong that left
one young man dead and a
Ntwporti Fitust Ntifhborboot! Maritn
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This tuttlti lrlllNmi
"NIKjHIORHoodyAL.uE IUYI"
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IUON '1im LocM. Mlrlt WI
LOC.AL DEUVERY AVAii.ABU!
~,... ........ '-' ....
1121Wb dW~MI•,....._. ..... ~-.i.
pohce department under
heavy scrutiny.
UNDER FIRE
Moody cilll't forget th~
night or Jan. 11, 1999. It nngs
m his head like an alarm
clock and hds led to many
sleepless nights.
He remembers receiving
a Cdll at tus home informing
him that a shooting htid
occurred. l le drove to the
scene where he learned an
18-year-old motorist had
been shot by two of his ofli-
cers. The victim was lrvm
Landrum Jr, a forklift dnver
aod father of two.
Landrum was black. The
of(jcers, Hany Hanna 1md
Kent Jacks, are white.
An investigation, deter-
mined the officers shot I.I\
self-defense after Ldndrum
reportedly pulled a loaded
· handgun from hls waistband
The ofhcers defended
themselves by saying they
saw a muzzle flash, cilthough
forensic tests showed the
gun was never fired Fmgcr·
prints were never found on
the gun, gwmg some protest-
ers the notion the gun was
planted. The officers were
eventudlly cleared of any
wrongdoing.
"The officers responded
the way they were.teamed,"
Moody said. "I feel very bad
for the officers and hdve
deep sympathy for the Lan·
drum fanuly. But I know this
was a jusW1ed shootmg."
Much like th<> mfdmous
Rodney King case, the Cidre·
mont comrouruty was npped
apart by raadl stnfe over the
shooting. And when the offi.
cers were named city
employees of the year. the
controversy exploded like a
powder keg, leaving the
department maligned and
scorned
"It dehrutely left a bad
taste m p~ople's mouths,·
said Mike Nunen, a city
activist who hds followed the
shootmg closely. "The situa-
tion has been very bad here.
Sotvrdoy, February 26, 2000 AJ3
I think the shooung gave
Moody a lot of mcenave for
him to finally qwt. •
Moody said he had decid-
ed lo retire severcil months
before the shooting He
added that while some peo-
ple lost faith in hun, he wdS
willing to take the brunt of
the criticism.
H He was always a
consummate
professional. 1 t could
have been an
awkward situation
between him and me,
but it was quite the
contrary. "
Dave Snowden
Costa Mesa Police Chief
"You will always be criti-
cized as a police officer,· he
said. "If that bothers you, you
shouldn't be in this profes-
sion.
M It is dishearterung to
know that you are devoted to
your job but have an element
of your community calling
you a Nazi and a racist. If
there is any departrnf!nt that
is sensil:lve to the community
needs, it's ours. n
Claremont City Manager
Glenn Southard defended
his top law enforcement offi-
cer, saying the people who
protested d~partmenl tactics
were from outside the com-
munity He points out that
more than 300 people
attended Moody's retirement
dinner last month.
Moody appeared to put
the worst behind him until
recently, when the Clare-
moot City Council withdrew
their offer to the new police
chief.
Moody conducted the
background investigation on
former Ripon Police Ctuef
Thomas Scheidecker, but
failed to discover that the
applicant had been uspend·
ed. for 15 day!> when he was
employed by the Los Ange·
les Police Depdrtment. An
mv~tigation showed Schei-
. decker had ml handled con-
hdenllal pohce documents
and then tned to cover his
tracks
Nunen did C1ty Mdnager
Southard, not thr! police
chief, hds been the main
problem
·Moody never did <iny·
thmg that wasn't approved
by SouU1ard hrsV he ddd£:od
"I Uunk Moody was kP.pt on
a short ledsh. Moody has
t.rj.P.d to do o good JOb, hut 1.t
was unposs1blc to do under
· the city mandger. I sec
Moody as partly the v1ct1m m
this whole mess·•
THE GOOD LIFE
The boxes dre hUed with
photos and awdrds, a liJetime
m law enforcement now
stuffed Ullo his Cdr.
Moody's last day m office
wo.s Thursday. endmg his
six-wt.?ek mtenm stmt. A
retired pohce chief trom
Long Beach will ds~um~~ his
duties unlll a permdnent
re placement Cdn be found
But Moody isn't moving
anywhern He's stdymq m
the community thdt ht> has
grown fond of over t~e fMSl
10 years.
Forty-two years of fight·
mg crime hdsn't '>lowed him
down He pldns to c onllnuE'
working, this lime dS a mPd1-
ator. He take~ dfter his moth=
er, who worked dS tsn in tenor
decorator until she d1c.>d dt
age 87
Moody sa7s he won't let ·
the pundits gPl thf• ht'tll•r of
him. He can look bc1ck on d
long career hlled with dCCO·
lades and some pitldUS, but
plans lo en1oy his well-
deserved retirement.
• 1 don't like to clw<>ll oo
the few rocks on my rodd, •
he said "I'm not mctde that
way."
Al4 Saturday. February 26, 2000
0
-NextWEEK
Next week we preview the Newport
Beach International film Festival, an
eight-day event that wlll include features,
documentaries - such as "Six Days in
Roswell." right -and short films. . .
By Alex Coolman
BRIAN P06UOA I OAll.V PILOT
Susan Sptritus h as represented fine art photography in the Newport-Mesa area since 1975.
HE GALLERY SMELLED LIKE
wet paint, and it was filled with
the soWld of a whining drill, but
the red gladiolus in the comer was
unmaculate.
•Those flowers have been with
me for a long time," explained
Susan Spiritus, looking over her
new space. •They just never die.
Pho+o9..-aphy deale ..-SV\san
Spil'"ittAs moves ~e ..-9alle ..-y to
an inconspictAOV\S location on
B i.,.ch St..-eet. Why?
just anybody to find, but for the clients who
knew her -companies like Cox Communica-
tions and Sprint PCS -she was tireless and
responsive.
"I will meet anybody, any time," Spiritus said.
•This is my love. I will accommodate them."
What a Jot of corporations like, aesthetically
speaking, is photography that Spiritus describes
as "very safe."
Because they're silk." ·
Any plant less hardy would
have had a rough time keeping up with Spintus
m recent years. The photography dealer has
ma4'tained a gallery in the Newport-Mesa area
since 1975. But she's packed up the moving van
on a regular basis dunng that period, shifting to
different spaces as h~r business has evolved.
She's 9one co..-porate. Nature scenes are a big seller, as long as their
symbolism lS o'f the appropriate sort. Flowers are
gredt. Running water is sure to please.
In her new Birch Street digs, framed pho-
tographs sat stacked against ttie wall in their
plastic wrappers and the gray carpet still bore
the parallel tracks of a tidying vacuum cleaner.
vard and Thang le Square, the gallery WdS ori-'
e nled toward walk-in customers. Although she
had the strong eye for photograpl)y that distin-
guishes her style as a gallery director today, she
hadn't yet come to her current focus on provid-
ing ~rt for the business environment.
Dead trees, she said, are out.
•You sort of talk lo people and work with
them· to figure out what they're looking for," she
srud.
And that process -finding just the right
unage for a client -is something Spiritus does
very well. She has •the eye," the knack for
kpowing what kind of photograph will work in a
given spot and knowing what photographer can
give it to her.
But the long-term grind of catering to the
public taught her its weary lesson.
Larry Vogel, a photographer Spiritus repre-
sents who also does installation work for he~
was hanging pictures on the concrete walls,
pulling drill bits and wall anchors out of a ratty
overnight bag.
•vou had to be open seven days a week,
morning noon and rught, all the time," she said.
The new gallery is 1,100 square feet: not
much room for putting on mows but perfect for
Spintus' work She focuses primarily on selling
images to corporate clJents, and her offices need
to be correspondingly no-nonsense.
And Thdngle Square's ability to a~tract the
public, which she h oped would be a blessing,
eventually turned out to be a curse. Bored
teenagers used the space as a hangout after
school.
•she actually came out with me one time and
watched me photograph with one of my big
VJew cameras," said Patrick Alt, a Los Angeles
photographer whose gorgeous plati.pum prints
are one of Spuitus' mainstays. ·she's not an
artist, but she has an enormous sensitivity to
artlsts and to therr work."
Not many of them, it turned out, were inter-
ested in buying art photography ·
Sofipmtus took a look. at where her money
was commg from' and made a decision.
Alt's relabonship with Spiritus, like many of
the photographers she works with, goes back
more than two decades. She doesn't n eed airy halls for curious people
to stroll around in; she needs a place to get
down to business.
"I d.Idn't need the walk-in traffic," she Sdld. "I
didn't need the exposwe." Back in the '80s, he said, he was shooting a
lot of nudes, images that weren't appropriate for
most of her clients. Spiritus' philosophy about her work has
evolved over the years. In its earliest incarna-
tions, in spaces on Via Lido, old Newport Boule-
With the space she was occupying until
recently, a smaller office nea r the Orange Coun-
ty Museum of Art in Newport Beach, her pnori-
ties were made clear. Spiritus wasn't easy for SEE GALLERY PAGE A18
She's history
• After being pigeonholed as a romance novelist, Newport
Beach author Diane Haeger is back doing w~at she does
best: writing historical novels about fractured love.
Alex Coolman
DAILY PILOT
S he was s1tbng in a classroom
at Pepperctine Uruversity in
1990, but her mind was in
16th century Paris.
Diane Haeger was tom. She was
supposed to be working on her
master's degree in psychology, but
somewhere along the line she bad
gottPn interested in a story about an
old romance: the passionate, con-
flicted affair between King Henri ll
of France and a woman narned
Diane de Poitiers.
The more she learned about the
story, through trips to Europe and
reacting history books, the more
compelling she found it.
This wasn't some abstract ques~
lion of academic psychology. This
was the Juicy reality or human pas-
sion
year off from school and devoted
herself to wnting a novel based on
the story of the love affair.
She didn't know if the book
would be successful; she just knew
she had to write 1t.
Today, Haeger is cln established
noveUst. She's about to bring out
her sixth book, a historical noveJ
called "The Secret Wife of King
George IV." ·
Like the first story that captured
her attention, "The Secret Wife"
tells the tale of u royaJ love from the
history books: the troubled marridgc
between King George IV of Eng·
land and a Catholic woman nwned
Maria Fitzherbert.
King George secretly married
Fitzherbert, on Haegcr's redding, in
large part because of his over-
whelming need to flout the will of
his father.
It was ad os1on that brought Finally, with the encowagemeot
of her husband, Ken, th~ golden-
haircd Newport Beach resident
made a fateful deosion. She took a
• h.un as much rrusery a happmess.
•••,.•tic F
TODAY
Who...., .. Thi squldhNdl? Hlto'orl fllmln., ldtool ................. .---wllh h lludlnti* bouwd""' ..., ......... , ..... ...
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ll•fom'tldlll\ al ..... It., ....
George was forced not only to keep
his relationship with Fitzherbert
_. .. .. ,.... ............ 41~.,,. c.nw ...
.., 1'CMft c.. .,... c.. Mlle For
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w • .. ,,,,, ,, .~ ... ' ' { ' .• '
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/
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. ~ Iii 11 'ff . .
l!f f f, .l /' ., .. , I
~ ' .II ' ' • .
,f I ·«
J,· .• I ,.·<
··'
SEAN HILLER I DAILY PllOT
Newport Beach author Diane Haeger will soon release her sixth
novel, "The Secret Wife of KJng George IV."
under wraps but also to marry the
German princess Caroline of
Brunswick.
•The Secret Wife" may have a
romance at its heart. But unlike the
standard fictional bo<hce-npper it
doesn't Jet the characters nde off
into the happy resolution of a meJ-
Jow sun.set.
And as far as'Haeger lS con-
... -.,.,, teeMS. "" .... upon .... ~ ................... .. ••1 1 ... tram "" o.11 s.... c.;. ~ u\eldDr~lNftMll ..
thrOugh Mird\ 2t. Qr ....... -
l'Wt1portltwd.,N9in-e.dLForMC111
In~ al (tllfeu-t711.
cemed, that's temfic. She likes her
stories a little messy.
•George," as she calls the book,
•would never sell as a romance. A
romance has to have a happy ending
and a strong male character. King
George is strong, but he's flawed.•
SEE HAEGER PAGE A11
TlllllY
"lootdllt· prlltld ........ of .... I
end~ ......... NDW .... HlllWI
rilMI •• ,.,
•otl'IA Ill ..... a ..... ................ ,ti .... .....,. ... , ........
~•-...~-1 .... •·W-
Doily Pilot
A .doo-
wopping
good
time
The Alley Cats bring
'50s-and '60s-style
a· cappella doo-wop
to Borders.
C ardigans come to
mind, and monster
Chevrolets with tail
fins, when the music of The
Alley Cats begins to play.
That's because The
Alley Cats sing a cappella
doo-wop, a style that had
its heyday in the '50s and
early '60s. And they sing it
just like it was sung.back
then.
The Alley Cats perform
at Borders Books, Music &
Cafe at 7 p.m . Sunday.
The group, composed of
bass Royce Reynolds,
tenors Armando Fonseca
ana Phil Gold, and ban-
tone John O'Campo, was
formed in l!?'t7 at Fuller-
ton College.
At a _variety nig11t, Fon-
seca suggested that he
and Reynolds perf onn an a
GappeUa version of Billy
Joel's tune "The Longest
Tune."
•1t was a big hlt that
night,• Reynolds said .
•Another teacher said,
'fiey, can you come sing al
'Our concert, and can you
sing a couple of songs?' •
Just like that, the ball
was rolling.
A few days later, after
the next performance,
Reynolds heard another
question.
•Hey, do you guys do
parties?"
·Uh, yeah," was his
qwck response. • 1 guess
we do now."
A year later, they were
perfonrung in Disney's
•Blast to the Past" show
and went on to appear on
numerous television
shows, including "The
Arsenio Hall Show" and
Richard Simmons' •Dance
Your Pants Off" workout
video.
·u·s a music that's kind
of timeless," Reynolds
said. •tt's very pop, bub-
blegum, innocent if you
will. It's up and it's Jove.
Most of the things that
have to with that have a
timeless quality."
In their recordings, the
group takes a flexible
approach to the classics.
They run through chest-
nuts such as The Tempta~
bons' •My Girt• and The
C lovers' •Love Potion No.
9," but they do the tunes
their own way, bringing
their own vocal strengths
to the arrangement.
The group's engaging
reinterpretation of the ear-
lier material has earned it
a slot as an opening act for
many of the artists who
onginally wrote doo-wop
songs, such as The Coast-
ers, The Tokens, Chubby
C hecker and Bill Medley.
•1t•s great to be in the
presence or the people
who started that era of
music," Reynolds said.
Borders is at 3333 Bear
St., Costa Mesa.
-Alex Coolman
I•
•
' .
Daily Pilot Saturday, February 26, 2000 AJS
Children S H,ospital benefits from fashion fund-raiser
T he 38th annual au.
guilds !ash.Jon show
benefiting Children's
Hospital of Ordnge County
held a patron brunch lttsl
Sunday al The Center Club,
Costa Mesa.
An enormous turnout
boosted the positive outlook
for fashion show gcnc rdl
chainnan ChrtsUna Hughes
of the Glass Slipper Guild.
Putting on the evmt lS d
JlldjOT responsibility The two-
event fashion s how, which
includes a luncheon dnd a
dinner show set for Wednes-
day at the Anaheun Mdrriott,
is expected to roise nearly
$200,000 for the h~p1lc1l. ·
Hughes is assisted Uiis
year in coordinating the mas-
sive e ffort by d very dedJcat-
ed local team tha t mdudes
Sylvia Burnett. Mary Mal-
donado, Marcla Grittin, Dana
Davis, Beverly Singer, Susan
Carter, Kim Lazarus, Anne
Nelsh, Carol Ojers, Liz Clem,
Sue Krause, Jean Hamann,
8.W. Cook
THE CROWD
Lula Hatfield, Andrea North-
cote, Fran Paulson, Pat
Calderone, Frances Stawicki
dild Helen Wardner.
As spring fashions from St.
John Kruts were displayed
dnd paraded throughout the
Center Club, Marcia Grtff1n
of the Littlest Angel Gwld
d.lld Mary Maldonado of the
1Tes Osos Gwld handled the
execubve chair duties of the
pa tron b runch with class.
Silent auction items
enticed the locals to bid for
From left. Joan Irvine Smith, Laurie Firestone, John Lor-
ing and Carol Porter at the CHOC fund-raise r.
ROSEY'S AUTOBODY
You Have the Right
to Choose Your
Repair Facility
Insist on the Best
Lifetime Warranty
Lido Consignment Gallery
3439 Via Oporto, Newport Beach
Mon -un lOam-Spm
(949) 723-6480
the kids to help underwnte
the last-minute details for the
big event next week
Honored patrons of the
event are Marllyn and Don
Balley, Jean and Fred
Hamann, Robert and Peggy
Sprague, Sally Gallagher,
BonnJe and Michael Duck-
worth, Nancy Edgall, Peggy
Holland, Lols Montgomery,
a nd Tom and Kathy Hacker,
to Odffie only a few.
The fdShion show, which
began m 1963, even before
the hospital officially opened,
has come a long way. In its
first oubng, the gallant ladies
and ge nts rdJ.Sed $2,332.05
Last year, the volunteers
exceeded the $200,000 mark.
lrt all, the producbon has
assisted the hospital with $3.4
million m donatioflS. Based on
the enthusiastic turnout at the
patron brunch, d sellout IS
once again antiopated.
For last-minute reserva-
tions, call the hospital's' Guild omce at (714) 532 8690. Tick-
ets to eilhc r the luncheon or
dinner are $65 per person.
From left, John and Marcia Griffin, Michael and Christina Hughes, and Juan and Mary.
Maldonado mingle at the Center Club during the Children's Hospital of Orange c oun-
ty's Patron Brunch and Fashion Show.
•
The Smithsonid.ll lnstitute's
secretary, Lawrence Small,
Rew m to Orange County last
. w eek for d small, pnvate din-
ner party on the coast at the
home of Suzanne and Jlm
Mellor
It was the flr'it o!hc1al visit
to the West COdst by Smdll,
recently insldlled as the t.lth
secretary of the tnSllrure in
Washington, D.C. Mellor, the
former chdiJmd.fl dn d CEO of
General DyndJTl.ics, dnd a
bodrd member of the Nation·
dJ Museum of Amencdll His·
tory, b~ted Smdll m order to
mtroduce locaJ phildn-
throptSts to the work of the
Smithsorucm, illld to estdbllsh
strong Calif orrua lies with the
new secretary.
Overlook.mg the C alilomid
coast at sunset, the confob of
·1ocaJ mtelligents1a rdlSed their
wine glasses to the dssocid·
lion. Included m the gulhering
were the esteemed UC't Chdn
cellor Ralph Cicerone d.llrt tus
equal.ly fomuddble w1fo.
Carol, the lrvtnc Co l'Xl.'CUtive
David Fields and his Wlfc,
Karla; dl'ld Gibson Owm c111d
Crutcher chaumd.ll Ronald
Beard and tus Wlfe, Karin
Also on hdnd to mC'et
Smdll were Steve Johnson, c1
foundmg pdrtner of the ven·
lure Cdp1tdl hnn Johnson
Technology Group; rellwd
chair of H.C. Price, Harold
THE ULTIMATE CONSIGNMENT SHOP
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Consignment opportunltits available call today
·~
dandelion h¥'old gooda
432 E. 17th Sc., Cosca Mesa, Tuo.~Fri. I 0 am -6 pm
two doo~ l:.asr of Ruby's Sat. 1 0 am-4 pm
949-548-7286
Discontinued and overstocked items includ ing slipcovered
sofas carried by major national retailers like Z ·Gollerie,
Restoration Hardware ond others wo can't
name but you will recognize
You can special order from over 200 fabrics.
Everything here is new, obtained directfy from the factory
·No Used fumifure or consignment items.
Furnishings Direct conies uphol~ $0fos, sleepers, leather
sofas and choirs, entertainment centers, ormoirs, beds,
handmade rugs, desks, lamps ond more.
tl nd Sandra Price; Raymond
Watson, vice chdir of the
Irvine Co., and the distin-
guished couple Ivan dnd
Nina Selin lvdn Sehn is the
CEO of Phoemx lntemallondl
dnd the bodrd chiil! for the
Ndllondl Musetim of A.men~
Ctln I ustory.
Cledrly, a most accom-
plish<:d guest list. Beyond the
SOCJdl connection, the Mellor
dtnner party was m part
designed to foster further
interaction between The
Snuthsoruan dnd local m~tJtu
llons of ledrrung.
Lat<>r m the week, David
i,lnd Karld Fit•lds orgdruzed d
din ner at the Arnold dn d
Mdbf'I Be<'krnan C<'ntN or
the NcttlonaJ An.1dem1er, of
Science a.net Engllle •nny on
twhdlf ot lhe Ndllona.I Muv•·
um of Amencan I hstory
Steve Johnson sponsored thP
Srruthsorucm's .ldl7 MdSlf'r-
works Orche-.trd to entertam
the l\icwport crowd fol10W111g
the Beckman Cl•nter dinner.
We'll b<• h£>cmnq a great
dc•al more• dbout the Snuth-
SOntdn ( onnecllon m months
ilhf'etd
• B.W. COOK's column appears
every Thursday and Saturday
Randy J. Pierce, CPA
cemfied public accountant'
tax planning, preparation & advict
free in1ual consuhalton and pnct quo1e
free clec1ron1c filing
no hidden charge<:
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A16 ~rday, February 26, 2000 DATEBOOK Daily Pilot
New Voices stages Deach
playlets at Civic Playhouse .
l y Tom T1tut beach outside the site of the
cast party, they reminisce on
their earlier, failed relation-
ship with honesty and
believability.
apprehension at baring bis
own manhood are the
chuckle-inducing situations
plumbed by Lipford and
Rudi Jurado.
"Hourglass• by Tom
Swimm contains tragic over-
tones, as. the couple involved
(Michael Buss and Llsa
'REFEltlNCES TO
SALVADOR DAU ••• '
Suuth Coast Repertory
present.I Joee Rivera's ploy
•References to Salvador
. Dali Make Me Hot•
through Sunday. Tickets
are $26 to $45. The play-
house is at 655 Town Cen·
ter Drive, Costa Mesa. For
$10. Vanguard Univemty
is at 65 fair Drive, Coata
Mesa. for more informa-
tion, call (714) 668-6145. .
'TAINTED JUSTICE'
will perform •sbake-
1peare'1 Greetest tilts.• a
one-hour show of some of
Shakespeue'1 most
famous sonnell, soWoquies
and scenes, March. 17
through 19. Show times
are at 10 a.m. March 17, 4
and 8 p .m. March 18, and
2 and 7 p .m. March 19.
nckets are SS to $6. OCC
is at 2701 Fairview Road,
Costa Mesa. For more
information, call (714) 432·
56~0, Ext. 1.
W hen life mves you
lemons, you make
lemonade. When
the stage on which you're
scheduled to present an
evening of original plays is
covered with sand, you cre-
ate a collection of ~Beach
Plays.•
The New Vokes Play·
wrights Workshop found
itself in such a sandy s1tua·
tion Sunday night. since its
Apditionally, both actors
were •off book,• lending
further credibility to the
piece in a night of staged
readings. "Beach Baby,"
written and directed by
New Voices founder
Christopher Trela, is a witty
account of a directionless
guy (Greg Lipford) and a
pregnant, but unmarried,
woman (Kimberly Wind)
who meet and chat, without
any semblance of llirtation,
yet with a hint that they'll
meet again. Her line con-
cerning her departed lover,
"I didn't think he was the
man J wanted visiting my
kid every other weekend,•
sums up her view of the
permanence of romance.
Uken) appear lo be the sole
survivors of a boating acci·
dent. The dpparent infidelity •
of one of the parties height·
enS the solemnity of the
more information, call
(714) 708-5555.
'A VIEW
FROM THE BRIDGE'
Ne"1>C)rt Theatre Ans
·Center presents Arthur
Miller's •A View From the
Bridge" through Sunday.
Shows are tonight at 8
p.m. and a Sunday mati-
nee at 2:30 p .m . Tickets
are $13. The theater is at
2501 CWf Drive, Newport
Beach.
OCC presents Don Nigro's
play •Tainted Justice•
March 2 through 5 and 9
through 12. The play is at
8 p.m. Thursdays through
Saturdays and at 2 p.m.
Sundays. •Tainted Justice"
tells the true story of a
sensational murder and tri-
al that took place in a
Nova Scotia town in 1914.
nckets are S8 to $9. OCC
is at 2701 Fairview Road,
Costa Mesa. For more ·
information, call (714) 432·
5880.
SALZBURG
MARIONElTE THEATRE
The Salzburg Marionette
Theatre appears at the
Orange Councy Perform·
mg Arts Center March 17
t.hrough 19. The puppet
ensemble will perform ver·
s1ons of Mozart's •Mar·
riage of Figaro" at 7 p.m.
March 17, •Don Giovanni"
at 7 p.m. March 18 and
"The Magic Flute" at 2
'HEIJER base of
operations,
the Costa
Mesa Civic Playhouse, has
been turned into a beach for
the production of "Coastal
Disturbances.• But the New
Voices folks are nothing iJ
not adaptable.
•The Beach Plays,• a half·
dozen vignettes situated on
the shoreline, demonstrated
the skills of the playwlights'
group in creating theater for
specific venues. They had
written for such occasions
previously with ploys cen-
tered on Christmas and
Valentine's Day. or the six short plays
presented Sunday night, the
blue-ribbon winner, at least
from th.ts comer, was "The
Sands of Discontent" by µte
newest·of the New Voices,
John Bolen, and directed by
hi> wife, Lynne. The play.
examined the age-old
theme of lost love and
potential reconciliation
without becoming either
trite or overstated.
The man and woman
involved (played by Carl
Kline and Karen Chapin)
have just finished a movie
project and, as they stroll the
Playwright Stephen Lud·
wig talces a big page out of
David Mamet's book with
"Big Al at the Beach,• which
appears quite derivative of
the final scene of •Sexual
Perversity in Chicago.·
Here the loquacious,
hedonistic Al (David Beatty)
revels and drools over the
pulchritudinous beach
scenery, but it's bis ceticent
buddy (Eric Eisenbrey) with
his one-syllable responses
who ultimately scores with
bea<;b bunny Rachel Daven-
port:
In •Tue Naked liuth, •
playwright John Lane pre-
sents a similar sttuabon, two
guys on the prowl, but this
time it's at a nude beach.
How to approach the situa-
tion and the shy guy's
I can't believe ..... .
occasion.
Finally, "Rmg of liuth,"
wntten and directed by Bu.Ss,
focuses on a honeymooning
couple whose bliss sours
when his wedding ring turns
up missing. Both the conflict
and the resolution are some·
what manufactured, but the
performances of Jurado and
Theresa Reid are lively and
involving.
The New Voices Play-
wrights Workshop is con-
ducting a fund-raising drive
in the hopes of becoming the
New Voices Playwrights
Theater, with a home base in
which to produce both short
and full·length plays. Those
seeking further information
can contact the group at
(949) 225·4125.
For now, the Civic Play·
house is home, and the next
New Voices project will be a
two·weekend engagement
titled "The Bed Plays," sto-
ries centered around that
particuJar piece of furniture.
Performance dates are
March 25·26 and April 1-2.
• TOM nrus reviews local theater
for the Daily Piiot. His reviews
appear Thursdays and Saturdays.
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'All MY SONS'
Arthur Miller's play •AU
My Sons" runs through
April 1 at South Coast
Repertory, 655 Town Cen-
ter Drive, Costa Mesa.
Tickets are $28 to $47. For
more information, call
(714) 708-5555.
'RIPTIDE ... '
Newport Elementary
School will present the
student-performed child's
play •Riptide, the Squid-
heads and the Princess of
PunctuationH at 7·30 p.Dl.
today and at 3 p.m. Sun-
day. The $5 play will be
held at the !.chool. 1327 W.
Balboa Blvd .. Newport
Beach. For more mforma·
tion, call Teresa at (949)
650-0367.
'A PIECE OF MY HEART'
The Lyceum Theatre of
Vanguard University of
South California will pre-
sent Shirley Lduro's drama
"A Piece of My Heart"
March 2 through 5. Perfor·
mances are 8 p.m. March 2
through 4 and at 2 p.m.
March 4 and 5. Tickets are
~~·
'THE BEAUTY
QUEEN OF LEENANE'
South Coast Repertory Will
host the Southern Califor·
nia premiere of Martin
McDonagh's acclaimed
play •The Beauty Queen
of Leenane" March 7
through April 9. Tickets
arc $26 to $45. The play·
house is at 650 Town Cen·
ter Drive, Costa Mesa. For
more information, call
°C714t 708-5555.
'CHAPTER lWO'
Oasis Dinner Theater pre-
sents Neil Simon's "Chap·
ter Two" at 5:30 p.m.
March 11. Tickets, which
include dinner and the
show, are $25. Oasis is at
800 Marguen(e Ave., Coro-
na del Mar. For more infor-
Dlation, call (949) 644·
3244
'THE ROSE TAITOO'
Readers Repertory Theatre
will present a free reading
of Tennessee Williams'
play "The Rose Tattoo• at 7
p.m. March 13 at the New·
port Beach Central Library,
1000 Avocado Ave., New-
port Beach. For more infor·
rnation,call{949)717·
3801.
'SHAKESPEARE'S
GREATEST HITS'
OCC's Touring Company
p m. March 19. Tickets are
$20 to $65. The Center is
at 600 Town Center Drive,
Costa Mesa. For more
information, CC1U (714) 755-
0236.
'HIDDEN; THE STORY
OF ANNE FRANK'
OCC will present •Hid·
den: The Story of Anne
Frank" March 25 and 26
and April 1 and 2. Show
times will be at 8 p.m. Sat·
urdays and at 2 and 7 p.m .
Sundays. The play, by
Frances Goodnch and
Albert Hackett. is based
on Anne Frank's diary.
Tickets are $5 to $6. OCC
is at 2701 Fairview Road,
Costa Mesa. For more
information, caU (714) 432·
5640, Ext. 1.
'AMY'S VIEW
South Coast Repertory
presents David Hare's
"Amy's View" from. April 7
through May 14. Tick~ts
are $28 to $47. The play-
house is at 655 Town Town
Center Dnve, Costa Mesa.
For more 1nf ormation, call
(714) 708-5555.,
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Daily Pilot. 330 W Bay St., Costa
Mesa 92627, fa.x them to (949)
64M 170; or call (949) 764-4330. A
complete listing can be found at
wi>vw.d•llypilot.com
MUSIC
'MANON LESCAUT'
Opera Pacific presents Pucd-
ni 's "Manon Lescaut"
through Sunday at the
Orange County Performing
Arts Center. Performances
are at 7:30 p.m. today and at
2 P·l1l· SUJ1day. Tickets are
$32 to $107. The Center is a t
600 ToWl'I. Center Dnve, Cos-
ta Mesa. For more informa-
tion, tall (800) 34-0PERA
• BARBERSHOP CHORUS
Barbershop chorus The Mas-
ters of Harmony will perform
at OCC at 8 p.m today. The
After
HOURS
program
features a
range of
Amencan
music,
mcluding blues, Jazz and
more. OCC is at 2701
Fairview Road, Costa Mesa.
Tickets are $24. For more
information, call (714) 432·
5880.
THE HARRY JAMES
ORCHESTRA
OCC presents the Harry
James Orchestra at 4' p.m
Sunday in an everung of
sWing and big band music.
'tickets are $21 to $27. OCC
is at 2701 Fairv.iew. Road,
Costa Mesa. For more infor-
mation, call (714) 432-5880
'THE PLANETS'
Pacif1c Symphony Orchestra
presents Holst's famous work,
"The Planets,· at 8 p.m
Wednesday and Thursday at
the Orange County Perfonn-
ing Arts Center. Tickets are
$10 to $50. The Center is at
600 Town Center Drive. Cos·
ta Mesa. For more informa-
tion. call (714) 740-7878.
' . . .
GHOSTBUSTERS
Paa.fie Symphony Orchestra's
Mervyn's Musical Morrungs
Family Senes presents a pro-
gram of spooky material at 10
and 11:30 a.m. March 4,
including Hwnperdinck's
"Hansel and Gretel,• Wagn-
er's "Lohengrin" and Liszt's
"Mephisto Waltz.• The pro-
gram is $13 for adults, $11 for
children tmder 14. The Center
is at 600 Town Center Dnve,
Costa Mesa. For more infor-
mation, call (714) 740-7878.
KINGSTON TRIO
The Kingston Trio will
appear at 4 p.m. March 5 at
Orange Coast Coll~ge's
Robert B. Moore Theatre.
Tickets are $25 to $33. OCC
1S at 2701 Fairview Road,
Costa Mesa. For more infor-
mation, call (71 4) 432-5880. ...
'SIMCHAfEST II
The Jewish Conununity Cen-
ter of Orange County will
hostSirnchaFestil,a festival
of Jewish mUSlc and humor,
from 8 to 11 p.m. March 11.
The event will feature vocal-
ist Nancy Linder, folk musi-
cian Osi Sladek, Borscht Belt
comedian Archie Barkan and
the Orange County
Klezmers. Tickets are $10 for
center members, $14 for non-
members and $16 at the
door. The center is at 250
East Baker St., Costa Mesa.
For more information, call
(714) 755-0340.
PHOENIX CLUB
' GERMAN CHOIR
The Newport Beach Public
Library will present "Cele-
brate Spring,~ a free mus1·
cale by The Phoenix Club
Gerrruin Choir, at 3 p.m
March 12. The. library is at
1000 Avocado Ave., Newport
Beach. For more infonnation,
call (949) 717-3801.
PAOFIC CHORALE
Pacific Chorale presents a
concert at '1 p .m. March 12
at the Orange County Per-
forming Arts Center, featur-
ing work by Ravel, Durufle,
Faure, and the world pre-
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•
DATEBOOK
IUI CAMPIELL
miere of a piece by Lili
Boulanger. Tickets are $14
to $48. The Center is at 600
Town Center Drive, Costa
Mesa. For more information,
call (7 14) 740-7878.
ART
PHISH BLACKLER
The AAA Electrd Open
Forum Co-Op Art Museum
and Gallery will host an
artist's reception Sunday wtth
work by Phlsh Blackler and
poetry by Charles Ardinger.
The event stara at 6 p.m. ·
The gallery is at 4320 Cam-
pus Drive, Swte 110, New-
port Beach. For more mfor-
mabon, call _(949) 833-7718
ISLAND PATHWAYS
The Newport Harbor Naub-
cal Museum is holding an
exhibit on the hlstory of tra-
ditional navigation tech-
niques and watercraft used
by the island people of the
Pacific. The free exhibit,
which features ancient pot-
tery, war clubs, paddles, tools
and decorative items from
many Pacific Rim cultures,
will be up through June 18
The museum is open 10 a.m.
to 5 p.m. Tuesday through
Sunday and is at 151 East
· Coast Highway, Newport
Beach. For more information,
call (949) 673-7863.
TUESDAY ART LECTURES
The Orange County Muse·
um of Art is hosting an ongo-
ing series of free noon lec-
tures on Tuesdays The
museum is at 850 San
Clemente Dnve, Newport
Beach For more information,
call(949)759-1122
'CITY LIGHTS'
The Newport Beach Publ.Jc
Library presents "City Lights,•
an exfub1t of watercolors by
Mary Monge, through Tues·
day. Monge focuses on urbdn
activities -· from eatmg a
French dip sandwich at
Phillipe's to taking in a rughl
at the theater. The library \S at
1000 Avocado Ave., Newport
..
Soturdoy, February 26, 2000 Al 7
Glen Campbell
• comes to. the Orange
County Performing
Arts C~nter at 8 p.m.
March 3~. Tickets to
see the "Rhinestone
Cowboy" a.re $14 to
$54. The Cente r is at
600 Town Center
Drive, Costa Mesa.
For more informa-
Uon, call (714) 740-
7878.
Beach For more Ulformabon,
call(949)717-3870
'DRAWN INTO THE LIGHT'
The Newport Bedch Central
Library presents "Drawn lnto
the Light," mixed Wdler
medid paintings by Lynn
Welker, Wednesday through
March 31. Welker's work is
dbstrdcl, With compos1tiondl
elements drawn from natural
and drcbitecturdl Sources.
The librdry is at 1000 Avoca-
do Ave . Newport Beach. For
more inlormat1on, call (949)
717-3801.
SENIOR CENTER
WATERCOLORS
The Newport Beach City
I ldll hds an exhibit of water-
colors from the Oasis Semor
Center's Wdlercolor class
The show is up through ·
~ldrch 21 City Hall is al
3300 Newport Blvd., New-
port Beach For more mfor-
mation, CdU (949) 642-1796.
JEROME MUUER
The Robert MondaVl Wine &
Food Center will host M
exhibition of the work of
Jerome Muller from 1950 to
2000 A receptlon will be held
March 16 at the center, 1510
Sceruc Ave , Costa Mesa For
Ume> and more mformanon,
c~ (71 4) 540-0808.
DANCE
BIG BAND DANCING
The Oasis Senior Center
holds sn afternoon of danc-
mg Jo live big band music
Fndays from 1 :30 to 3.30
p.m Coffee and re.fresh-
mPnts are served. The center
1s a\ 800 Marguente Ave.,
Corona del Mar. For more
mfbnnation,call(949)644·
3244.
BALLROOM DANCING
The DeFore Foundation for
the Arts will hold swing and
. Latin dancmg dasses on fn·
day and Saturday rughts
from 8 to 11 pm $10 admis-
sion covers tho hour dance
lesson and the open dancmg
session that follows. The·
cla!>S is dl 151 Kdlmus Dnve,
Costa Mesa. For more mfor-
mation, cdll (949) 241-9908
I
FILM
BANFF MOUNTAIN
FILM FESTIVAL
OCC will screen three hours
of wthe best of the best" of the
24th annual Banff Mountain
Film Fesbval at 7 p.m March
22. The program mcludes
films from Canada, Scotland.
Germany. the US and Italy.
Tickets dfe $8 to $9 OCC is
at 2701 FdlfVleW ROdd. Cost.a
Mesa For more Wonnatlon,
cdll (714) 432-5601.
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NICK'S GRAND RE-Ot>ENING
(
1
•
A18 Saturday, February 26, 2000
GALLERY
CONTINUED FROM A 14
·she alwdys liked my work,
but I didn't scU anything the h.rst
three yean; I was with her,• Alt
said
Spintus E-ventudlly told the
photographer she couldn't repre·
sent him. That's something she
says she has no quc.1lms about
domg; it's just one of the realities
of the buslness.
But rndny yedrs lc.1ler, when .
Spiritus took a look at his plat-
mwn prints, she immediatel y
knew she was seeing something
she could use.
It's the kind or spontdneous
but happily c.1ccurat«> Judgment
i.he's been making from the ddy
she flfst tned lo put on a show.
DATEBOOK
, BRIAN P08UOA I OAl.Y PILOT
Susan Splrltus unwraps a photograph as she prepares her new
gallery for business.
business.
HAEGER
CONTINUED FROM A14
Maybe it's the psychologist m
Hdeger, but the flaws are what she
finds interesting m her characters.
•p ople uren't all perf,ect," she
!ia1d. "They aren't always constructed
m a neat little package."
To be able to write a fairly com-
plex story ~uch c.1!> "The Secret Wife"
is c.1ctually something of a luxury for
the dUthor.
After she sold her hrst novel,
"Courtesan," her pul>li<Jhers got the
idea that shP needed to be packaged
as a lightweight, formula1c novelist.
They pushed her to write more sto-
ries -and never rrund lhe history -
that could be stuck between the flim-
sy covers of a paperback
•1 got pigeonholed pretty quickly
into the romance market," she said.
But wnting simple stones with
hdppy endings wc.1sn't the reason
Doily Pilot
contractual obligation to her old pub··
lisher, she got back to working on the
kind of book he enJOY d. She dove
back mto the archive:., the libraries
and the h1~torical sites that she found
compelling.
• J read their letters and really
steeped myseU m U1eir story• in
reconstructing the story of George
and Fitzherbert. Hoeger traveled to
Bnghton Pavtlhon and Richmond to
get the detail she n<>eded and spent
time burrowing into the "treasure
trove" of old books at Cal State Long
Beach.
I laeger's emphasis on detail shows
on the page. Her chc.1ractCTS move
through a world who!>O setting has
been meucuJously pieced together -
right down to the clo1sonne enamel
on an dntiquc vase, the sheen of the
sabnwood tables, and .ule guttering
candles in a gucmdole
Even .the words in the character's
mouths, she sdys, are carefully
researched. She doesn't want her
characters u.smg slang from the
wrong century.
Spiritus remembers negol.Jat-
mg with George Tice, the fm;t
photographer she ever exhibited.
Tice was reluctdnt to give up his
unc.1ges to her on consignment.
• 1 said, 'Fine, then I'll buy it.'
I bought the whole show.• For
each print, she plunked down
about $100 -one-ninth of what
the imc.1ges go for today.
Those early ddys, she ddnuts,
were a bit improvtsallonal Much
of her approach ~o running d
gallery was copied from lhmgs
sl1e saw nosmg around gdllenes
in New York.
Manhattan, she had to rel y on
her mstincts.
Fortunately for Spiritus and
the photographers she repre-
sents, her judgments aged as
well dS the silk gladiolus.
"Everyone whose work I have
here in Uus gallery sells exccp·
tiondlly well, H she said. "It
wouldn't exist il I clido't do really
well tor them. H
I laeger got tnto the business She
had be<'n inspired in the ~ginrung
by writer~ such as lrvtng Stone,
whose books bdsed on the lives of
Van Gogh and Michaelangelo a.re
nch with VIVld foctudl detail and
nudnced observdllons.
"J Ie took tuc;tory d}1d he wdnted to
bring it ctlave for people,· Haeger
said. And thal wtts what she wanted
lo do, too.
"I c.1lways check out the use of a
word, and how was tl used, and was
it appropnate, • sh e silld. •
But it's ultimately the people at the
heart Qf the story that get Haeger
gotng: thear motives, thetr hopes,
their loves and their losses.
Spirit.us then proceeded to sell
virtually the whole show, and
Tice realized he wc.1s dealing
with a womt1n who knew her
It had to be that wc.1y bcct1usc
there was nothing like her busi-
ness in Newport Beach of 1975.
Besjdes what she could sC'e in
Club
LISTINGS
ALTA COFFEE
The Altd Coffee House pre-
sents musical acts dt 8.30
p.m Thur'>ddys through Sat-
urdays Admission is free
Alld Coffee 1s dl 506 31st St,
Newport Beach f,or more
informallon, call (949) 675-
0233
ATRIUM MARQUIS HOTEL
The Atrium offers a vanety
of live mu!.1c played every
day at its Auporter Club,
18700 MacArthur Blvd.,
lrvine. For more information,
call (949) 833-2770.
BIRRAPORETTI'S
Birraporetti's offers swing
music by the 12-piece Don
Miller Orchestra dl 8 pm on
Mondays. Birraporetti's 1c; dt
South Coast Plazd, 3333 Bns-
tol St., Costa Mesa For more
i.nformation,call(714)850-
9090.
BISTRO 201
B1Stro 201 offers 1azz perfor-
mances at 8 p.m. on Fridays
and Saturdays and 11 a.m. on
Sundays. Bistro 201 is at 3333
W. Coast J-bghway, Newport
Bedch. For more informal.Jon,
call (949) 631-1551.
CARMELO'S RISTORANTE
Carmelo's offers Live music
Tuesdays through Sundays
and is at 3520 E. Coast H igh-
way, Corona .del Mar. Tate S.
a funk, rock and Motown
dCt, pldys at 9:30 tonight. No
cover charge. For more in:for-
ffidl.Jon, call (949) 675-1922.
CLUB MESA
rtub Mescl offer<; lJve music
eve>ry rug ht of the week
except Wednesday, which is
reserved for a spoken word
and poetry c;how. Club Mesa
1s dt 843 W 19th St., Costa
M esa. For more information,
caU (949) 642-6634.
DURTY NELLY'S
Nelly's offers live music at 9
· p.m. on Fridays dfld Saturdays
and is at 2915 Red Hill Ave.,
Costa Mesa. For more infor-
mal.Jon, call (714) 957-1951.
..
---·-· ---n•• __ ......
-~-· --· ..........
""'"'
When the wntcr had fulfilled her
"I'm faso.nated by relationships,"
she said. "Whdt makes people come
together, and what makes them
break apdrt?"
FOUR SEASONS HOTEL
The Four Seasons offers lJVe
music M onday<; through Sat-
urdays and IS at 690 Newport
Center Drive, Newport
Beach. For more infonndllon,
call (949) 759-0808
HARD ROCK CAFE
The Hard Rock offers live
music on Sundays dnd iJ. ul
451 Newport Center Dnve,
Newport Bedch For more
t.nfonnallon,caU (949)640-
8844.
THE HARP INN
The inn offers hve music
Thursdays through Sdtur-
days and is at 130 E. 17th St.,
Costa M esa. For more inlor·
mation, call (949) 646-8855
HOGUE BARMICHAEL'S
Banruchael's offers llVe
music Wednesdays through
Saturdays and 1s at 3950
Campus Drive. Newport
Beach. For more information,
call (949) 261-6270
•'fl th 1• fl1 ,t I '1 \ t .t CJ t•
MARGARITAVILLE
Margaritdville offers llve
music dnd is at 2332 W.
C"odst I bghway, Newport
Bedch. For more infonnation,
cdll (949) 631-8220.
MULOOON'S JRISH PUB AND
RESTAURANT
MuJdoon's offers live music
Thursdays through Sundays
and is at 202 Newport Center
Drive, Fashion lsldOd, New-
port Beach. For more infor-
mation, call·(714J 640-4110.
OYSTER BAR LOUNGE
Newport Landing's Oyster
Bdf Lounge showcases locdl
pop dnd light rock acts Fn-
dc.1yi, and Sdturdays. The
lounge is at 503 East Edge-
water at the Balboa Ferry
Landing. For more informd-
tion, cttll (949) 675-2373
THEMARRIOTI
The Marriott offers live
music Mondays through Sat-
urdays and lS at 900 Newport
NOW THROUGH APRIL l
A fresh new staging of Arthur Miller's
first Broadway hit!
Ser in a peaccf ul backyard during rhc prosperity
boom chat followed World War JI , ic's a rime much
like coday.
T here, a ~cory unfolds dm will hold the Jud1encc
in ics grasp, a mas1crp1ecc chat resounds with
asronishing relevancy and proves once again rhar
Arthur MiOcr is America's greatest living playwright.
I ION ORA k\ I'll< IUl 'C'I R
AMERICAN AIRLINES
llON(IMRY AW.>< IAll rMotllK IR.\
~ll>llJlY ~TIONAI 1 In I l~IJ ltA:->n < OMl'A.,'\'.
\If ntA l'AA rN1 R\
llAllY 1111H t.1;<:0 fM 10~ I I .\fl 1 fl( l 01\l'ORA I IOS
MARCH 10-
APRIL9
LOw-priced previews
March 7 -9
A domestic brew spiked
wich Irish humor and
~t·gripping su~pcnsc,
1his first play by a
phcnom cn.&1 young writer
broughr audiences to
1heir feet from Galw..y
to Broadway.
f
Center Dnve, Newport
Beach. For more information,
ca ll (949) 640-4000.
TRIANON LOUNGE
The lounge m the Sutton
Plc.1ce I lotel offers live music
by the Stonebridge Band on
Saturdc.1ys 9:30 pm. unW
closing. No cover charge.
The hotel 1s ctl 4500
MacArthur Blvd , Newport
Beuch. For more mformabon,
call (949) 476-2001
THETEA ROOM
Kdraoke from 7 to 11 p .m. on
Thursdayi,. The Tea Room is
at 3100 Irvine Ave., N ewport
Bec.1ch. For more information,
CdJl (949) 756-0121.
VILLA NOVA
EnJOY pidno bctr music with
Rich Fauno at 9 p.m Sun-
duys through Wednesdays.
Pappa Bedr Patterson per-
forms jdzzlblues/pop at 9
pm. Thursdays through Sdt-
urdc.1ys Villa Nova is at 3131
W Coa!.l 1 lighway, Newport
Beach For more mformatiori,
call(949)642-7880
}]~fllJ}]
by G,.,ory R. G~u. D.D.S.
CHIP OFF THE OLD TOOTH
Wl'lerl teeth develop chips the denllSI may
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amounts ol enamel (enamel recontounng) to
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Otherwise, boodiog may be a n:iore llMtable
option This ltM>lves painting a c:ompos11e
r'611l directly onto the tooth To enhance fie
dlllion ol the composite resin. the deo1isl
flfst elChM the looth ~th phosphoric 1C1C1
~eby crealtlg a rC>tql 1Utfac1 IO whiCh
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tht dtn:isl ~ lhl titSI coat °' ,., and
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Finally lht bonded POt'10n ol I'll IOOltl
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Do you hM a dlipptld k>olll? Bordng can
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~ ... -..
COMMUNITY Quote Of
111EWEEK
How To
REACH US
The Oa1fy Pilot welcomes lettm on 1uues
concerning Newport Beach ~ Costa MeY
There are four ways to ~ In your com·
ments·
Doily Pilot
Let's .keep
the peril out
of getting
to school
W lule pehlous tdles such as,
•When I was your age I had to
walk eight mtles to school, in
bare feet, with snow up to my waist,
through live rrune fields" are incredu-
lous to hear, we can probably all agree
that we don't want our children to
encounter danger or extreme discomfort
on their daily trek to school. Apparently,
crossing Newport Coast Drive looms as a
threat to future Newport Coast Elemen-
tary School students ( M Is safety as tmpor-
tant as aesthetics?" Community Com-
mentary, Feb. 8).
Safety to and from school 1s an essen-
tial issue that concem5 all parents. Even
though the commentary specifically
addresses the perceived need for a foot-
bndge at Newport Coast Elementary, the
Newport-Mesa Unified School DtStrict
and our commuruties need to thoroughly
examine the impact of traffic on all or our
students.
' Unfortunately, action to unprove safety
is frequently neglected until a tragic acci-
dent occurs There are extremely danger-
ous intersections, crosswalks and even
parking lots at evE>..ry campus m our d.J.strtct.
Many parents are concerned about specific
traffic hazards. some have complamed, but
many hazardous LellerOf condibons have
T persisted for yM.rs
with .very little HE WEEK effort applied to
correct them.
While not every school is asking for a
footbridge, some schools desperately
need a crossing guard, or trafhc lights or
at least a few well-placed orange cones.
This is a great opporturuty to examine
the accessibility and safety orau our
campuses in regard to the students-ver-
sus-vehicles assue.
Some of the schools in our d.J.stnct have
coped with precarious traffic situations
surrounding their campuses, but just
because a tragic aCCtdent has not
occurred does not JUStify allowing these
dangerous condlboris to contmue.
Tilis would also be a good time to
explore new soluboris to old problems.
Schools near intersections with traffic
lights should analyze the tirnmg of the
green lights for pedestnans and ensure
that the light stays green long enough for
a group of small children, with short legs,
to cross salely. •
Maybe radical changes need to be
made to our traffic control surrounding
schools. As an added safety precaution,
maybe a signal should stay red in all
directions when a pedestrian is in a cross-
walk. There could be stop signs, or even
ringing bells, flashing red lights and pro-
tective gates (Uunk tram-crossing inter-
sections) at all crosswalks. ·
Ensuring our children have a safe
amval at school iS ultimately the responsi-
bility of parents. However, if potentially
unsafe conditions threaten the safety of
our children on a daily baslS, then our
commwuty needs to take actloo.
Our school distnct is fortunate that many
bright. creabve, concerned mdlvtduals
dwell in this commwuty. U enough great
minds combine forces on the issue of sate
travel to school, then some terrific solutions
will be found to prevent future tales of:
~When I was your age we had lo cross a
six-lane lughway, with no crossing quard."
BARBARA MORIHIRO
Costa Mesa
s1r .. 1TILK
HWhen they told me it was compli-
ments of the shenlf's department, 1 said
lift me on up. H •
-Costa Mesa resident ANITA HALLOCK, who was •
one of six gold-panner5 rescued from the Angeles
Nation~ Forest during last week's storm.
• LETTERS -Ma I to the Oa ty Pilot. 330 W.
Bay St. Costa Meu 92627
• READERS HOTLINE -Call (949) 642 6086
•FAX -Send to (949) 646-4t170
• E-MAIL .... Send to da1lyp1lot0tat1~ com
All correspondence must Include your full
name. hometown arid phone number (for
vent1Catlon pur~ only)
Soturdoy, Februory 26, 2000 A19
EDITORIAL ~
How. will the W~st Side story· end?
C osta Mesa's West Side has
long been a thorn in the side
of city fathers.
As other areas of town
have blossomed and prospered, the
West Side remained shackled to the ' very symbols of urban blight:
• A spotty collection of merchants
and businesses;
•The homeless and homeless.shelters
•Gang-infested neighborhoods
• Old, decaying shopping centers
•Traffic and worn-down streets
•Drug peddling and abuse
• Assorted criminal activity, includ-
ing prostitution
These are heady problems for any
i:nere mortal to fix. That's no excuse for
letting the area stagnate for years.
Artist's rendering of the proposed development of Placentia Avenue and 19th Street.
But now, city officials, armed with a
report on the problems associated with
the West Side, must decide if they are
prepared to pump money and
resources into the area and give it a
rebirth worthy of the rest of town, as
well as those on the West Side who
have endured the problems.
an-fnendly, Mam Street-style 'neigh-
borhood; a central plaza, nPws and
For now, city ofhc1dls vow to collect
input from West Side residents and
. flower stands; more trees; and repairs
to streets and sidewalks.
. merchants.
And we'll be edger to hedr what
they have to say.
The report, done by a Los Angeles-
West Siders need only gldnce north
along Harbor Boulevdrd to see that
major change is possible in Costd
Mesa. The Harbor Center, once a
decayed and blighted strip mall m its
'own right, has been given new life
through the cooperntion of city dnd
business leaders.
But in the meantime, it is hoped that
everyone -oty officials dnd West
Siders alike -keep dn open mind on
the changes that are bemg considered
for the neighborhood.
. based consultant, identified some of
the key·problems the West Side faces
and offered some solutions that would
call for radical changes to the look and
feel 6f the West Side.
Those solutions include a pedestri-
It's a good start toward a worthy
goal.
Greenlight answers· chamber's questions
H ere are the answers to the
questions posed by
Chamber or Commerce
President Rlchard Luehrs' in his
Community Commentary,
(•Chamber questions Greenlighl
initiative,· Feb. 12).
l. Does Greenllgbt apply to
schools, churches, etc. 'l
Only U the project is large
enough to require a General Plan
amendment: ln the ldsl 12 years,
there have been four dmcnd-
ments for churches -none of
which would have required a
vote -and one for a school,
which would have.
2. What effect would Green-
Ught have on the revlse d Traffic
Phasing Ordlnancet
None. The irubabve does not
dffect any ordinances
3. Where will the funding
come from to bold the numerous
special elections the lnlttaUve
would b1ggert
Allan Beek
COMMUNITY
COMMENTARY
5 (a). Does
the lnitlattve ,.
ensure that
new develop-
ment ls still
studied for its
environmen-
tal tmpacts'l
There will
be no change
to the envi-
ronmental
review
process.
5 (b). Will
all new pro-
jects go on
the ballot
without this sort of review?
No, only ma1or General Plan
amendments go on the ballot.
Only about one out of 2,000 pro-
Jecls requires a major General
Plan amendment.
6. Does the lnltlattve include
all developments in the •preced-
ing 10 yearsf"
into i..mdller phdses m order to
avoid voter scrutiny.
7. How will the Greenllght
lnittaUve amend the city's Gen-
eral Plan on various require-
ments not related to traffic?
It doesn't. It amends the City
Chdtter.
8. Is thJs a citywide measure,
or Is it segmented into 49 lndJ-
vtdual "zones" of the cltyt
The GreenlJght irubative looks
dt pnor dffiendments m the samE>
stausbcal area. (City planners
chvtded the oty mto 49 statistical
clre<.1s, which have been accepted
Wlthout change ever ~mce )
9. U the city is to be broken
down Into 49 lnd!vldual zones,
what sort of city adminJstratlve
co t wlJl the lniUatlve create to
track all of these zones?
The 49 areas simplify the work
for the city. In processmg an
amendmP.nl, 1t will only be nec-
es ary to review the records for
one area. not for the whole oty.
t 0. Who wlU pay for all the
research that will need to be
conducted to determine if a spe-
cial election ls neededf
, Detrrrrurung tf a vote LS
11. Will the Greenllght lJil~
UvOeally stop any traffic prob-
lems in the city? ·
It already has Reque!>ts for
aboul 1 million !>quarc feet of
ofhce space were recently
·dropped Grcenli9ht was given
dS the red on, ThjS IS a reductlon
of almost 2,300 pedk-hour Celt
tnps every day. Prevention 1s the
best solution
12. Is this initlatlve lntend~d
to replace the revtew of new
developments conducted by the
city's trained and qua UUed staff,
the Planning CommJsslon and
the City CounclH
Dehrutcly not But we belte' e
1t will be conducted with greater
Cdre when it as known Chat the
results must b explained to the
c1tizens
It is good nt>ws to read
Richard Luehrs' promise that the
Chamber of Commerce will
become educated on the Gr en-
light l!Ullabve.
W • thank the Pilot for publish-
mg the e quc tJons and answers.
We have found that the better
people understand the Green·
light uutlative, the more they
support 1t. ·
Greenlight will not trigger any
special elections. The trutiabve
specifies that any vote be at the
next muniopal election. Howev-
er, a developer may request a
special election at hls own
experase.
No amendment adopted
before 2000 will be reconsidered
or put to a vote However, earlier
amendments will be looked at as
one of a senes of minor amend-
ments which, taken together,
could be equivalent to a ma1or
amendment and the trafhc con·
gestion caused by 1t. This provt-
sion was added to prevent devel-
opers from splitting large pro1ects
• required doesn't take any • ALI.AN BEEK cs a member of Grffn·
light. the group pushing the Protect
from Traffic and Density init1at1Ve on
the March 7 ballot .•
4~ How many special elections
would actually take placet
None (se above).
re earch. It 1s a mdtte r of sunple
tlnthmetic that the city staff can
perform No expense is involved.
HOW TO CONTACT YOUR REPRESENTATIVES
We asked sho~ at Stnan & Fina.I on W~ 19th Street: CITY Of COSTA MESA
Costa Mc!>6 City Hall, 77 Fair
Dnve, 92626, (714) 754-5223
Mayor: Gary Monahan
Council: Joe Enckson.
Board: Dnna Black, Judy Fran-
<'O, Jim focnyman, Martha Auor,
Wendy Leece, Serem~ Stok and
David Brooks How should the city improve the West Side?
H 4th r Somers. Libby Cowan
and Lmda Dixon
CJTY OF NEWPORT BEACH
N<>wporl Beach City Hall, 3300
Newport Blvd., 92663, (949) 6'4-
3309 t
Mayor. John Noye
Coundl: Gary Adam , Jan
Dehay, Nonna Glover, Tod
Ridgeway, Denni O'Neil and
Tom Thom5on •
COAST COft:IMUNITY
COUIGI DISlllCT
l 370 Adtm1 Ave., COlta Mete
92626, (714) 432-5898
CMllOI ... WUllam M . \Wa ..... w.-HaWUt, SMny a.um. P.8ul ...... AnDllDdo
RUii and Jeny '9tlilr90D
MESA CONSOLIDATED
WATtRotsnttCT
t 965 Plac nua Ave • C a
M 92627, (9'9) 631·1200
Board: ThJdy Ohlig·HaU. Milt
H le , Frro 80<'.kmlll r, D M
Hayn and Jam Atkinson
COSTA MESA SANITATION ...,a.5_T_lti(._.CT_
P. 0. Box l 200, Costa M-
9l628-1200, (714J 754-50t3
lolfrd: Jim Perry--. Alt Per-
ry. Arlene Sc:hiWr, Gnig ~
side and Dan Wordlm(lloD
OMNGI COUNIY
WM O*'M•m•
.... of Ml 9 ,., ... lOCMc
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Quote Of --"Once we scOfe, we're like sharks, ,
and everybody hos to get in on It ... "
Steve Crenshaw, Estancia soccer coach·
BPen ..
... Feb. 28 honoree
PAUL HAHN
Sports Editor Roger Carlson ~ 949-57 44223 • Saturday, February 26, 2000 81
CdM falls; but Sea ~gs aren't done
• Despite a 68-46 loss to
Centennial in CIF III-AA
semifinal, the Sea Kings
qualify for st~te pl.~yo'ffs.
Barry Faulkner
DAILY PILOT
March 7.
T,tle unusual extension came as a
result of the section combining two
divisions into one Ul-AA classifica-
tion, allowing the four semifinalists
.to earn the section's four guaran-
teed state tournament berths.
..
BOYS BASKETBALL Hansen ended the
14-0 run with a tb.ree-
who took. advantage for 13 first-half point play, but it
points. proved to be the first o(
The Sea Kings led, 27-15 after only two CdM fie1d
Hans':n's 15 .f<?Oter with 2:28 left in goals in a span of
tbe half, bul it proved to be the apex 14:03.
fen the hosts. Unleashing a· tena-
A Myles layup, his first field goal cious man-to-man
"That three at the·
end of (he half
first five points of the
fourth. CdM, which
'shot JUSt 37.5% from
Lhe held after the
bredk (6 of 16), never
got closer than 11, as
the Apache fans cele-
brated with consistent
war whoops and
melodk chants.
'
COSTA MESA -The Corona
del Mar High boys basketball team
didn't look like it had much basket-
ball left, after visiting Centennial of
Compton erased a 27-20 halftime
deficit to win going away, 68-46, in
Friday's CIF Southern Section Divi-
sion ill-AA semifinal at · Estancia
High. ·.
For nearly 16 minutes Friday, it
appeared the third-seeded hosts
wouldn't need any loopholes to
keep playing, as they executed a
well-conceived game plan with pur-
pose on both ends of the court.
Switching from man-to-man to
matchup zone on defense, sagging
effectively on Centennial's 6-foot-8,
235-pound big man Ellis Myles, tbe
Sea Kings held the visitors to 15
points through the first 15:32.
of tbe game, cut the deficit to 10 and defense, unseeded
was big. Not only
because it cut a .
10-point lead to
seven; but
because it really
fired them up ... "
Apache senior point guard Eric Centennial, which
Alvarez threw m a 26-foot three-improved to 20-11 with
pointer at the buzzer to signal a its 10th straight Win,
clear momentum change. took the Sea Kings out .Paul Orris
"That three at the end of the half of their offense. CdM coach
was big," CdM Coach Paul Orris Equally as impor-
said. "Not only because it' cut a 10-tant, the Ap~ches
point lead to seven, but because it ·began exploiting their
teally fired them up." inside size advantage
Hansen. who hit all
three of his three-
pointers before inter-
misSion, finished with
22 points, but spent so
much energy trying to
nd himself of defend-
ers, he was visibly
gasping in the fowth
But, a 22-7 campaign which
included a Pacific Coast League1itle
will continue for the Sea Kings in
the CIF state playoffs, which begin
On the offensive end, unselfish
ball movement and solid screens
helped create open looks, primarily
for All-ClF senior Kevin Hansen,
Centennial carried the emotional and-also collecting transitiop buck-
boost into the third quarter, scoring .. ets to c~:mtinue to pull away.
the first nine points to take a 29-27 • Centennial led, 43-36, at the end
lead with 5: 13 left. ... of the third quarter, then scored the
quarter.
CdM senior Brooks Morris added
SEE HOOPS PAGE BS
, CONRAD lAU I DAILY PILOT
Cd.M defender Danielle Carlson dominates her foe.
BOUND!
CdM finds the net just enough to advance to
the Division IV finals, 5-4, over Santa Monica.
Tqny Altobelli
DAILY PILOT
NEWPORT BEACH -
When John Vargas took the
Corona del Mar High girls
water polo program over this
year the team was excited, for
a little while.
•I think tha't excitement
went away after they figured
out how much work I was
gonna put them though,"
Vargas said with a grin.
Well, the excitement's
back as the Sea Kings
advanced to the CIF Southern
Section Division N finals with
a 5-4 win over Santa Monica
at Newport Harbor High.
"I knew that down the
stretch, our conditioning
. would pay off," Vargas said.
"We struggled offensively,
but J thirik our all-around
game was very good."
Corona del Mar will duel
Santa Margarita Wednesday
al Belmont Plaza for the
championship.
Despite the one-goal dif-
ference, it was an all-around
superior effort for the Sea
Kings (20-11).
WATER POLO
"It's funny saying this with
a 5-4 score, but I thought we
outswam them and did every-
thing we could to be success-
ful," Vargas said. "We just
didn't have the focus we
needed in front of the goal."
For Santa Monica (22-8), it
was a matter of not taking
advantage of CdM'spenal-
ties. The Vtkings were 0 for 4
with a 6-on-5 advantage,
while the Sea Kings connect-
ed on. half of their four
attempts.
CdM (reshman Danielle
Carlson and sophomore Lau-
ren Guthrie each had two
goals, while ju:nior Lindsay
Daley added a single tally.·
Carlson also played a
major factor on defense with
seven steals. "She's really
played well on both sides of
the pool." Vargas said. "She
had a real solid game today,
both offensively and defen-
sively.•
Santa Monica took a 1-0
SEE POLO PAGE 83
BRIAN POBUDA (DAILY PILOT
Eagles' Esaul Mendoza flicks the ball backward as teammate Jorge Lopez (9) looks on during Estancia's 7-0 rout
Eagles explode ·for 7-0 win
• After 38 sloppy minutes, Estancia breaks loose for seven
goals to eliminate Pirates and move on to the' CIF semifinals.
Joseph Boo hour trip to Santa Ynez. A good home
DAILY P1LOT crowd turned out and the Estancia
sideline was packed with fans from
c;::osTA MESA -Talk about a bad goal line to goal line.
road lrip. Despite the 7-0 victory, only the
Santa Ynez High's boys soccer team coach of a team that outscored oppo-
drove down from its home four hours nents this year, 113-11, can find a lot of
away, got drop-kicked by Estancia, 7-things to quibble about, and that's
0, and immediately started its long what Estancia Coach Steve Crenshaw
journey back. did.
That meant the No. 2 seed and HWe were pretty sloppy in the first
Pacific Coast League champion Eagles half,· he said. ~we were not sharp. I
earned a trip to the CIF Southern Sec-thought we were tired. It's something I
tion Division N semifinals Tuesday don't want to see again."
against St. Francis, a 4-0 winner Santa For the first 38 minutes, Estanoa
Paula, with the site to be determined. outshot the Los Padres League cham-
The host Eagles (18-1-1) took full • pion .Pirates, 10-3; but Santa Ynez'
advantage of a fortunate coin flip that tough and physical defense kept the
prevented them from taking a four-Eagles scoreless.
BOYS SOCCER
Two minutes before hdlftime.
Estanoa finally got on the scoreboard
when senior rrudflelder Irving Islas set
up outside the penalty box and hred a
rocket in the upper left comer.
Three minutes into the second hall,
Esaul Mendozd scored a fluke goal
that was a heartbreak~r tor Santa Ynez
(16-3-3). Mendoza trapped a lob pass
in the penaJty box and feebly Jocked
the ball .backward. He wdlked away
looking at the ground dejectedly, nuss-
ing the sight of the Pirates' goalie
allowing the ball to inexpticiably go
through his hands and into the goal.
Mendoza turned around, saw the gift.
and started celebrating.
SEE EAGLES PAGE 84
DAILY PILOT HIGH SCHOOL ATHLETE OF THE WEEK
:
• Corona del Mar High senior posts national indoor
best of 2:10.26 in 800 meters at the LA Invitational.
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Doily Pilot
DAl.'1' PILOT PHOTO'; BY CONRAD LAU
CdM goalie Arin He ndrickson goes up for a save. Below, Hayley Hapeman pulls
the plug on her Santa Monica defender in Friday's 5-4 Corona del Mar victory.
POLO
CONTINUED FROM 81
lead when Marta Altarrura-
no scored her hrst of three
goc:tls on the afternoon off c.1
pass from Byanka Delgc.1chJ-
lo four minutes into the first
quarter
On the Sea Kings' next
possession, they answered
when Carlson found the
back of the net on a 6-on~s
advantage.
After a Vikings' turnover,
Guthrie scored on a four-
meter penalty shot, g1vmg
CdM a 2-1 lead
Altarrurano closed out
the flJ'St quarter Wlth a god.I
off another Delgadillo assist,
tying the score.
The Vtlungs stayed in the
gdJlle thanks lo some good
fortune and the goal posts
as ~ree Sea Kings' shots
popped off the gocll instead
of going m the god!.
Santd Monica goalie
Cindy Ayala had seven
saves, three from point-
blank variety, whiJP semor
Arin Hendnckson had five
forCdM.
"Ann has been solid
back there c:tl1 yedr for us,•
Vargas said. "Toddy, she
was an unportanl pcUt or our
defense."
After a scoreles!. second
quarter, CdM increased the
presswe On another 6-on-5
advantage, Carson and
freshman Christina H ewko
worked the offense WJth a
game of cross-pool catch,
until Carlson found the low-
er-right comer of the goc:tl,
giving the Sec.1 Kings a 3-2
lead.
"Chlistina does -a lot of
good thing~ out there that
sometimes go ururoticed, •
Vargas sdid. "She's good on
defense. solid on offense,
she's JUSt a workhorse out
there."
With 4:19 left m the third,
Daley npped a shot that was
slowed by Ayala, but not
slowed enough as the bc:tll
crept mto the yodl, mdking
it, 4-2.
The Vlkmgs' Helen Kim,
denied on a solid save from
Hendrickson on a 6-on-5,
found the upper-right cor-
ner on an arching shot from
the comer, cutting the lead
to 4-3 with 2:30 left in the
third.
Early m the fowlh quar-
ter, another man-up advan-
tage came and went for
Santa Moruca as a DelgacW-
lo shot rang off the left gOdl
post.
Off a pass down low from
Hewko, Guthne back.bdlld-
ed a shot past the surprised
Ayala, givi.og CdM a much-
needed two-goal cushion
with 4.18 left
It was much needed
because 23 seconds later,
Altarrurano scored her Uurd
of the game off a lob shot,
CDM GIRLS ON THE ROAD TUESDAY '
cutung the lead to, 5-4.
CdM turned up the
defense down the stretch
With 1 ·08 rema1rung and
the Vllongs' possession, the
Sea Kings forced a shot-
clock violallon, sending the
CdM crowd to its feel
"We didn't do anything
different on the play,· Var-
gas sc1id "We Just stayed
with our normal man-on-
mdn coverage."
Sdnta Momca had one
more chance after a CdM
turnover, but Cailson came
up \vith a big steal, ending
the • V1kings' chances for
ovcrtune.
For Wednesday's ftnals
matchup against the Eagles,
will Vargds attempt to reJU·
venate the Sea Kings'
offense?
"We've got some 1deds,
but I'll tell the girls after our
talk here,• the secretive
Vargas said with a laugh.
OF OMStOH IV GIRLS
Semifinals
~onM.uS
SANTA MoNICA 4
Sclnta Monica 2 0 1 1 • 4
Corona del Mar 2 0 2 1 -5
Santa Monk.a Altamirano 3,
Kim 1. Saves Ayala, 9.
Corona chi Mar Guthrie 2,
Carlson 2, Daley
Saves -Hendrick.son (CdM) 5.
Silver
All-Stars
win 2-1 . '
• Division 5 Newport
Beach team gets past
Corona dc1 Mar unit.
N E WP O RT 1vso
BEAC ll -The ~I
Newport Beach
Silver All·Stars from AYSO
Region 97 Diruion 5 knocked.
off Corona dcl Mar, 2-1,
remaming undefeatt..'Ci m the
all-tar soccer sea"on.
Newport Beach goals were
scored by l.&uren DeVoy and
Sara Gomez. while CUsldy
Gllynor added an assi!it.
Strong midfield pley ftom
Shannon aobaa. lrluna
Ustoa, Amy l.&ytoa, Ally
Sdaataletil and GaYJlC)r con·
lrlbuted to the offensive
attadt for Newport.
Defmltvely,~ tor, Katy lloldl. ....,,.Am .... end o•m.e. upe the daager
away nm=~ .... .... bet.., ...
RTS Saturday, f ebt'uory 26, 2000 B3
Pirates aiming for the· flags
• Anything•s possible
fo r the 2000 sed'c.;on ut
Orange Coast College.
COSTA MCSA -With
tough compet1t1on m the
Orange Empire Confcrt•nc "·
the Orcmge Coe.1st Coll<'<JC
men's golf team will dPfm1te·
ly .have lts hand!. lull, but tor ·
Coach Ba rry Wullcic<>, .my-
lhing's poss1hlP.
"As long ds we? plt1y our
style of golf,. wt•'ll he· in lhP
hunt." the th1rd·yPc.1r cnt11 h
said. ~we hc.1v1• 10 tP .. .11ns m
our conlerencP c.1nd frMn lhc
standpoint of who's to h"<1I, I
think S<inla Ana c.1nrl S<1clcllc>-
back are c.1mong the nedm ot
the crop."
Leading Pirdtt·~· goll1·r~
will be freshm11n Enk I iPr-~
bert, someone thc.1l Wc1ll<11 <'
tlunks could rdnk dJnOOU llll'
conference's b(>~t
"He's been pld)'lll!J No. I
for us for most of th<• !.ct1~or1,"
Wallace said. ·He's lwcn snl-
1d au year dnd I'm expNillllCJ
big things from him. 11<' hu"
JC m n's 9olf
OUTLOOK
THE PIRATES
Michael Akahoshi Fr.
Ron Galmarini Fr'.
Erik Herbert Fr.
Eric Hird So.
Ken Kat o Fr.
Bryan McKnight Fr.
Brock Noteboom Fr.
Timo Sakkinan So.
Kyle Wic:ks · Fr ..
Brian Winston fr.
Coach: Barry Wallace
th<' abihty to be one of th~
best Ill thP OEC "
Another key plc.1.yer tor the
P1r<1les will he sophomow
Tirno Sakkinan. 1 -le played for
llw l'trc.tl<·s two yf'ors ago and
wrts t1 No 1 quobher for the
'onlernnc e hnals.
Thi' capldlO, of the? Pu ates'
squad will be sophomore Em
I iml "t le's a very stea<.ly
• Track and field
pldy r w1th ci ton of expen-
enr." • Wnllc1CP. aid
With l hrd and Sakkinan-
thc only two s<Jphumon on
lhP quad. f..rPshmen Kyle
Wicks and Bn n W1n~tun wdJ
dlso be> c dllPd upon to pro-
duc1> nyht cJwtty.
Th<• twosome• IPd the
Pirates ut Wc•dnesddy's con-
l<~t with Golden Wl..>st, Palo-
rnur noel Sctnt1dgo Canyon,
· l!dCh lum9 a hvP·ovcr·par, 77,
ut We tern } hll
On~ ol th~ µlu t':, on Wal-
ltt< e's te~m tt. th<• depth of the
group ••
·we only have si.x playen>
pl<1y10g ut ca< h event and
lhe11>'s eight (Jf our guys that
rnuld pl.iy from o 1-6 out
thtirc, ~Wallace s .. .ud. ·our JOb
ts to mck the nyht !>lX who are
pl<t~ mg the best at that partic-
uldf l fop •
lJhJ>ltl! the f rr>shman-
hedV)' ... qudd, Wttllace likes
his chdnCP!> with h1:, group.
"W(• hdVU the ldlent out
thPn•, ~ Wttlldce said. "It's JU'it
a m<Jttf•r ol lutting the clutch
shotc; whPn 1t counts."
!==" SCHEDULE Colltg<>
~·Hope lnt•1n4t.onal " Vanqutrd, 7 lO pm
!><•1Jlll('rr1 Cat.torn n "PlJ•O(lat\,
fir1t round O.•r>qr Cua1t .ti LA
v.111t ~ 7 10 p "'
• eas.et..tl
Commuruty tot~r !'flt>!' and
wom• n Or•rig• Co.in 111 ,..,., t
IM t.11UOMI, 9 • rt1
wotnl!n 0••"9" CO•·t at So<llh oftl < a )Id .. ll'Wota\~, '1
P1lom.•, •II oaf
• lennf•
Col "9'! m•n ll•n9word •t
C" L.il~ra noon
Comtnumty col~ "'tmen
Ori~ Co1ht •I South~•rn
Toornan~t a ll•v
Collq "'°"'•" Hope lnt~llt•on.l IN Vanguard
Un1wn1ty, S JO p m
~ommunoty collt!9<' men
(Olltog• V•ngu~rd Un •t•$•1Y
at l'oln' tmn• Nd1••H>•,
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• Softball
Co•lege V.if'lguatd .it UC ~"
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' 'I
84 Solvfday, fobtliary26, 2000 SPOR'fS Daily Pilot
TOMORROW IS HERE FOR THE TARS
A heady mix of veterans and newcomers may well
give Newport perhaps its strongest team ever.
Joseph Boo
DAILY Pit.or
NEWP O R •. BEACH -New-
ort Harbor
f11gh 's · girls •
swimming' coach
Ken LaMonl hopes ·
this is one of those years
where everything falls . m
place. With a lot of qudhty
pieces, he thinks his team is
capable of great success.
The Sailors Me returning
the majority of last yedr's
young squad thdt finished
fifth 111 the Sea View League.
Bolstering the tedm 1s a
plethora of newcomers who
will raise the talent level
immensely dl Newport.
EAGLES
CONTINUED FROM B 1
Of Estancid 's seven goals,
Mendoza got-three. He now
has 42 goals this yedr, a
team-high.
His second gOdl, 30 sec-
onds late r, was more traw-
lional. Mendoza used his
speed to gel behind Santa
Ynez' defense and locked
the ball through a small
operung on the left side of
the goal
Estancid''> Cesar Terrones
scored hlS 31st goal of the
year in the 55th minute Wltb
a flying header off a comer
lock. dnd 1ust l.tke that, the
Eagles turned a close 1-0
game into a 5-0 blowout.
•We settled down lll the
second half,• C renshaw
said. ·once we score, we're
hke sharks', and everybody
has to get m on it. Esaul
Mendoza, Cesar Terrones,
you can't hold theip down.
They'll score even•uaUy."
The Pirates responded
dgamst Estancia's high~
powered offense with brute
force, and they racked up
four yellows and one red
card. Estancia had three
yellow cards of its own. San-
ta Ynez' red card and player
e1ecbon came in the 60lh
minute, settmg up an
Estancia tree luck 1ust out-
side the Pirates' penalty
box Islas responde d by
nllrng the ball over the
goalie for his second score
of the day
Mendoza got his thud
godl five minutes later when
he chased down a lob pass,
coUided with Santa Ynez'
goalie and knocked the ball
inadvertently into the net.
· Juan Zarate capped off
Estancia's scoring on the
77th minute by chipping a
pass from Freddy Murillo
into an empty net.
With that, the carnage
was over, and Santa Ynez
left the held in a stupor The
Pirates' scouting report on
Estanoa consisted of scores
pnnted in newspape rs and a
secondhand account from
Monrovia Coach Mike
Headley, whose team lost to
Estancia 10 the first round,
8-0.
·Any tune somebody
doesn't know anything
dbout us, they're m for a
shock, H Crenshaw sa1d. "If
they can't sustain their
mtertsity for the entire game,
we're going to get our shots.
And once that starts, they
can't deal with it.•
So Mission League cham·
pwn St. Francis will have
four days to get acquamted
with the Eagles before both
teams meet with a berth in
the CIP championship finals
at stake.
Sophomore Carly Geehr
hds Newport's most impres-
sive resume. She won a silver
medaJ in the Pan American
Games last year in the 800·
meter freestyle. Geehr has a
world ranking of 14th in the
1,500 freestyle and 31st in the
200 freestyle. She gives LaM·
ont a potent weapon who can
wm any event.
•What can't she do~" he
asked rhetorically.
Arny Murphy is the only
definite senior on the Sdilors.
She qualified for the ClF
Southern Section meet last
year in the SO, 200 and 500
freestyle, placing in the top
16 for the latter two events,
Kyndra Cox, Katherine
I , .
E stancta's Fernando
Med.Ina (14) above,
heads the ball off
over Santa Ynez's Ian
Clark. At right. Esaul
Mendoza keeps the
ball in play as Matt
Swartwood of Santa
Ynez falls. Estancia
started slowly, but
once the Eagles scored
with two minutes left
before halftime, it
turned into a 7-0
blowouL
OAA.Y Pl.OT PHOTOS BY BIUAN P08\JOA
Gregg, Ronnie McKendry
and Ali Taylor, four seruors
from Newport's girls water
polo team, a're undecided and
have until Monday to decide
whether tojoin the team.
'IWo freshmen, Nicole
Mackey and Hayley Peirsol,
bring impressive credentials
to Newport. Both qualified for
the United Sates Swimming
Seruor Nationals, both are
ranked in the lop 25 for their
. age groups and both are ver-
satile swimmers.
Mackey will be plugged in
wherever she's needed, and
Peirsol, sister of Newport
boys' CfF swi.mrrung champi-
on Aaron Peirsol, will be used
primanly in the individual
medley and 500 freestyle.
'IWo more freshmen on
Newport's squad are Peggy
Beebe and Jenna Murphy.
Beebe will be used m long-
c.ru.tance freestyle and butter-
fly events. Murphy, Amy's
younger sister, will swim
backstroke. JunJors Erin Ball
and Erin Kelly Bates will also
swim backstroke.
The Tars' best breaststro-
ker is junior Jenruf er Arrow,
who was a CIP qualifier in the
100-meter breaststroke. But a
broken ankle &1deiined her
for six months.
Sophomore Katherine
Beld~n and junior Amber
Braly will swim the butterfly
events. Junior Rebecca Car-
_roll is Newport's sprinter, and
junior Sara Daum is a
freestyle swimmer.
Newport's depth will be
evident dunng the relays,
where LaMont has a vanety
of options.
"I have the luxury of hav.-
Team USA sweeps Canada away
• After 9-7 win on Wednesday, the Americans
make it two in a row over the Canadians , 10-8.
LOS ALAMITOS -The
United St.dU"J men's national
water polo warn swept a two·
game enes with Canada,
defeating tho Canadian..~. 10-
8, Thursday at the Los Alami-
tos R serve 1Ta.inlng CentN.
Sec-ond-quartcr goals b~
Ryan Bailey and Woll Wingo
broke a 4·4 lie, putbng Umt-
od States Ahead for good.
Tony Az v •do led the
Amcncans w1U1 four g0t1l1,
while Bail y odd xi thr~ .
The Canodfans cut USA's
lead down to on on four dif·
fer nt occa1ion1, but the
Amencans h Id on for thP.
win.
Dan Hackett had four
saves for the United States,
while Canada's Robin Ran·
dall matched. him wiJh four
sovcs.
. lt was the second win in o
tow for tho Americans over
Ctmada Team USA won, 9-7,
W dnesday night at Corona
dcJ Mar High.
MIN'S"WATIR POLO
UMTlo STATU 10, C'>NW I c.nac:ta " 1 t 2 • a
United States 4 .J 1 2 -10
c.n.de . Cseptegi 2. Sabo 2,
l.azarevk 1, Hardhty 1. Bourne 1,
Mtlltt 1; ....... st.-. A.nvtdo .. hll·
., 3, l(rtdeft 1, Wigo 1. ~ 1.
StY9S • H41Ckett (USA) 4, Hol«I
(USA) O; ~I (CAN) 4.
BRIEFLY
'Fearsome Foursome'
at OC Marketplace • COSTA MESA For Los
Angelos Rams defensive
greets Deacon Jones, Merlin
01.Sen, Lam4r Lundy and Roo-
aevelt •Rosey" Grier, othar-
wise known ns the "P~arsorne
Foursome," will make u rare
public appearnnce together dt
th Orang County Market-
plac ln support of th Dea-
con Jones Foundation.
The f amod bn wlll appcar
March 11-12 from 11 a.m. to 1
p,m , on both days llt the
Orange County Fairgrounds.
The "Fear ome Pour·
some" wtll he 1grung auto-
grdphs r<?r the general pubUc
with all proceeds from the
$25 per autograph and mem-
orabilia sales going directly to
support scholttr hips 10 the
Orange County •Adopted
Area" of the D aeon Jones
Foundation.
The Foundation provides
an mtenslvn SPvon-ycar schol-
arship/community dovelop·
ment pr<>grnm to dis4dvan-
taged youtM in Adopted
Areas around tho nntion.
For Rams' fans tntcr led tn
cmg tho former greats. lt has
been hve yeAnl ainm the four·
some In t appeared together
in SOuthcm Ca.Womia
For more uuormation, call
(71-4) 281·2842.
.
ing two relay teams,• he said.
"I can also load up one team
and have one great team,
which I'll probably do for
CIP."
What JS even more excit-
ing for LaMont is the team's
youth. Teamed with some
returning veterans, he feels
this is a breakout year for the
Sailors.
· "This is the year where au
the pieces kind of come
together,• he said. "Arny is a
big asset to us, and with all
these freshmen, we're in for
quite a turnaround. We could
go from second-to-last to a
league title, possibly CrF. •
And with only one delirute
seruor graduating, the futurP
is even more optimistic.
"We'll continue to be
strong for the next two-to
three years,• LdMont said.
THE SAILORS
Jennifer Arrow
Erin Ball
Erin Kelly Bates
Peggy Beebe
Katherine Belden
Amber Braly
Rebecca Carroll
Kyndra Cox
Sara DalJm
Carly Geehr
Katherine Gregg
. Nicole Mackey
Ronnie McKendry
Amy Murphy
Jenna Murphr
Hayley Peirso
Ali Taylor
Coach: Ken LaMont
Jr.
Jr.
Jr.
Fr.
So.
Jr.
Jr.
Sr.
Jr
So.
Sr.
Fr.
Sr.
Sr
Fr.
Fr.
Sr.
The Spoils
of success
• CdM girls swim
-coach Volding hopes
the winning from th~
winter sports rub off.
Joseph Boo
DAILY PILOT
CORONA DEL MAR -
Corona del Mar High's girls
basketball team underwent a
complete turnaround this
year from a last-place team to
Pacilic Coast League champi-
on. The Sea Kings' girls soc-
cer team is in the semifinals.
And in its first playoff appear-
ance ever, CdM's girls water
polo team advanced to the
CIF Southern Section Divi-
sion IV finals after going in as
a wild card team. These are
happy times for CdM's winter
sports, and Sea Kings' girls
swun team coach Doug Void-
ing is smiling.
He's happy despite the fact
that all Uus winning will keep
hun from fielding a full team
unW right before the swun
season starts But if Voiding
bas lhll\gs go hi.s way, he
would not have a team in
lll'ne for the first meet. His
swunmers would be wmrung
championships eLc;ewhere.
"I've never been in this sit-
uation before," he said. "It's
really unique. I'm happy fo.r
all of them."
When the girls eventually
come around to swimming,
they'll give Voiding a deep
squad. He is also hoping they
bring a winning attitude to a
CdM team which finished
fourth in the Sea Vie w
League last year.
Voiding says junior Lauren
Powers is CdM's most valu-
able swun.mer. In the 100-
meter butterfly, she fimshed
third m the Sea View League
ldst year. She was also fifth in
league m the 50 freestyle
with a personal best of
1:00.43.
All but one member of the
varsity girls water polo team
w;ill join the SWIDl team. They
~ude seruor Melinda Tuck-
er, who finished 12th dt the
ClP meet in the 100 butterfly.
Voiding also considers her the
team's top backstroker.
Other varsity water polo
players include senior Hayley
Hapeman, who will swim
breaststroke and freestyle
events. Her sister, sophomore
Heather Hapeman, can SWim
all strokes. Seruor Ellen Orbe
is strong in butterfly, and
senior Molly Strack will swun
butterfly and freestyle. Lind-
sey Daley and Malia Tarayao
could also help the varsity
team.
•1 know (girls water polo
Coach John) Vargas worked
his girls bard,• Volding aid,
• o I knQw they'll be in
shape. I heard there's a lot of
great new players who could
help us."
··Danielle Carlson, Christina
Hewko and Daniela DiGiaco·
mo are threo freshmen who
atartcd on the varsity water
polo team and can help
immediately. Sophomore
speedater Lauren Guthrie will
swim freestyle sprints and
Vanguard men lose
YHE SEA KINGS
Nichole Ahmadi Sr.
Stephanie Arnett Fr.
Danielle Azzalino So.
Jennifer Belli Sr.
Michelle Belh Fr.
Janae Bo'usema Sr.
Brittney Bowlus Fr.
Danielle Carlson Fr.
Kathryn Cole So.
Lindsey Daley Jr.
Daniela DiGiacomo Fr.
Jessica Fries So.
Lauren Guthrie So.
Kari Hammerschmitt Jr.
Hayley Hapeman Sr.
Heather Hapeman So.
Jessica Hcfrkins Fr.
Oimitra Havriluk Sr.
Nikola Hendrickson Fr.
Christina Hewko Fr
Bridgett lnghs Jr.
Lauren Jones Jr.
Kelli Kline · Fr
Jessica Luchesi .Sr.
Allvia Mazura Fr.
Jackie McCoy Fr.
Kristin M cCoy Jr.
Alexa Miller So.
Ellen Orbe Sr
Lauren Powers Jr.
Hayley Sheetz So.
Astrid Soto So.
Catherine Stockstill Sr.
Molly Strack Sr.
Malia Tarayao Jr.
Alexis Tilsen So.
Melinda Tucker Sr.
Yvette Zaharson So.
Coach: Doug Voiding
sophomore Jess1cd Fnes is a · ·
1ack-of-d.ll-trades, capable of
all four strokes.
Five other freshmen who
can contnbute are Michelle
Belli, Bnttney Bowlus, Jessica
Harkins, Nikola I fendnckson
and Kelli Kline
Seruor Jessica Luchesi,
who 1s on CdM's soccer tedm,
is the top butterfly swtlnrner
for the Sed Kings. Another
soccer-playing swimmer 1s
freshman Al1vtd Muzura.
Experienced seniors
mclude volleyball stcmdout
Dim1tra f fovnluk, who will
swim freestyle dnd breas-
troke, freestyle sprinters Nic-
hole Ahmadi and Janae
Bousemd, butterfly swunrner
Jenrufer Belli and Catherine
Stockstill, who will swim
breastroke and freestyle
races.
Finally, the McCoy si tcl"b,
Kristin and Jackie, jom the
team fresh off basketball sea-
on. Juruor Kn bn McCoy IS a
trong m free tyle events.
While Voiding ha yet to s
Ire hman Jacltio McCoy, h is
aware of h r cndeavon; m
basketball and golf.
•1 hear he's a gr at ath-
let<•, • he'sa1d.
SW1mmcn:> who could ee
time on the var ity level
include Stephanie Arnett,
:Daniello Aziali'no, Kathryn
Cole, Kari Hammerschmitt,
Bridgett lnt1lis, Lauren Jones,
Juhe Mendelson, Alexa
Maller. Hayley Sh~l7., Ast.rid
Soto, Alexis 1llscn and Yv tte
Zaha~on.
COLUIE RlllllS
~~~ SP~---------~-~--~-~-~-o-~~~-~-~-ry~2_6_,_2~--~-
•
Junior-laden CdM loaded, agai-.,
• Sea Kings will be tested early in their
own national tournament March 16-18.
Richard Dunn
DAILY PILOT
·coRONA DEL£ MAR As '
defending CIF .1
Southern Sec-·
llon Division I
boys tennis cham·
p1ons, Corond del
Mar H1gh's Sea Kmgs real-
ize everyone will be aurung
at them this season.
And 1t won't JUst be the
teams m their new Pdctf1c
Coast League, or other top
cofllendf'~ m CIF 01V1sion I,
pointing rdckets at them
nus year, with the
Hig~ school tennis
OUTLOOK
THE SEA KINGS
Brian Morton
Randy Myers
Peter ~ulmaticki
Michael Bean
Robert Kennedy.·
Cameron Ball
Hunter Jack
Justin Ning
Shaan Wadhwa
Ryan Stockwell
Landon Everson
Jay Reed
Josh Stuart
Coach: Tim Mang
Jr.
Jr.
Jr.
Jr.
Jr.
So.
Jr
Jr.
Jr.
Jr.
Jr
Sr
Fr.
launch.mg of the CdMHS-
Pav1lions National High
School All-Amencan Team
Invitational, hosted by CdM
March 16-18, some of the
best programs m the nation
will put a target on the back
of the Sea Kings. HThey're going to see how
DON llACI I DA r Pl~OT
Cameron Ball ls one of Corona d el Mar's blg guns as the '00 season approaches.
CdM, which features close they can come to last
three nationally rnnked year's team, and it's going to
players and returns a total of be tough, because last year's
five from last year's title team had so much depth. ff
tedm, has added two top Led by seniors Parker
pldyers -a transfer from Collins (USC), Chrishdn
Texas and dn exchdnge stu-Jensen (USC) an'd Sam
dent from Austrc.llia. Shahmardi, CdM firushed
Of the lhre<• players the '99 season ·ranked No 2
ranked d.Jnong the nation's -m the nation, according to
best m the boys 16s, one dld the USA Today.
not play for Codch Tim Corona del Mar was sec-
Mang's Sed Klngs m 1999, ond m the Tournament of
when they flrushed 22-t and Champions at Ov.erland
captured the chool's eighth Pdrk, Mo., which was won
C IF ledm chdmpionship m by Cardinal Gibbons of Fort
the sport (but the hrsl ID 16 Lauderddle, Fla The team
yeqrs). mvttational in three weeks,
If the proverb about a cllrected by Mang and hedd-.
"strong tedm not rebulldmg quartered at Pcilisades Teh-
l,lut relodd1ng" nngs a bell, ru.'i Club, will repldce the
it's because the 2000 version now-defWlct Tournament of
of the Sea Kings appears dS Chdmpions on the national
c,oJid dS ever with juruors Bn-ldndscape.
cm Morton, Randy Myers, "This 1Sn't your average
Peter Kulmat1ck1, Michdel prep event, and it's the
Bean dnd Robert Kennedy, begmnmg of somethmg
dnd sophomore sensation g1anl," said Mang, executive
Cameron Bdit. dlrector of the National High .
Add junior Hunter Jack to School Tennis All-American
the rmx d player ranked Foundation, a nonprofit cor-
75th nahonally and a former porntlon - created by Mang
tenrus acddemy student - -thdt will operdte the
and Coronu del Mar could event
oval last yedr's stdf-studded While the Pavtl1ons
Lineup NatJonaJ High School All-
"Tha t'c; what they're Amencan Team Invitational
shooting for," Mang said will provide plenty of early-
Vaccuum
• A young Eagles
team tries to duplicate
last season's success
without star pitcher.
COSTA MESA fl -It seemed as u
all of Costa Me!.d \ ..
held 1ts breath to
see if Joanna Dan-
ner would pitch thtS
year for Estdnoa H1gh's
softball tecUll And the dnswer
unfortunately, is no, she's not
playing, so the Eagles hdve a
big pair of softball cleats to fill
this year.
As d sophomore last yedr,
D.mner pitched four no-rut-
ters, mcludlng one perfect
game, earned the Newport-
Mesa SoftbdU Player of the
Yecir honor, and led the
Eagles to a 15-9 r«.>cord and
theu hrst po!.tseason dppear-
ance since 1992.
After a brief stay at Pac1fk,
Danner transferred back to
Estancia, sans softball.
Danner is not the only loss
for Estancia. The Eagles dre
only returning six players
from last year's team, givmg
first-year coach Jenny Hart a
difficult task of shaping a new
team out of inexperienced
players.
•We're a young team,~ she
said.
One veteran who E tancia
w11l rely is seruor Ot>bra
Wyman, who teamed with
Danner to fonn Estanc1a's
starting pitching duo. She
also has a potent bdt and will
play center held when not
pitching.
Senior Lauren Ca ity,
THE EAGLES
Gaby Acosta Fr.
Stefanie cacflola Jr
Lauren Cassity Sr
Sarah Chaisson Sr
Melissa Friel Sr
Helen Flores Sr.
JeNea Gudvagen Jr.
Sarah Hess Sr
Vivian Laopantrak Fr
Laura Morton Fr.
Karina Rutz Sr
Alisha Tantelu Jr
Rebecca Zenus So
Coach: Jenny Hart
Estanc1a's star basketbaU
player, will provide some
offensive pop in left field
Senior Sarah Hess will roam
nght field.
Teaming with Wyman on
the mound 1s senior Melissa
Friel. who played JV last
year. She has the daunting
task of replacing Danner's
spot in the pitdung rotation.
Nevertheless, pitching should
be one of Estancia's strength.
•They're looking all right,•
Hart said about her two pitch-
ers "The thing is, everyone's
gonna have to pull together
so the pitchers are not the
team.·
The offense from the team
is a question mark so far. That
1s expected from a young
team with three freshmen.
and should come into its own
later m the year. But tho
defense, especially the
infield, already looks solid,
according to Hatt.
COMMUNln COLLEGE. MEN'S VOLLEYIALL
Pirates roll over San Diego Mesa
COSTA MESA -TI1 San Olego Mesa College men'• vol-
leyb41J team learned a valuable 1 son ii\ Friday's Orange
Bmpire Conferenc Wlth host Orange Coast: You can't leech
h ght.
With nearly a thr ·tnch heiRht advantage average per
player, lhe Pirat made short work of the Olympians, Wlnnlng
15-4. 15·0, 15·11. .
Deve Mater led the Pirates (6-1, 1-1 U\ conference) with 13
kllla. while Cotta Mesa High product B.J. Ughtvoet added 11
kiDI and Bred Evans chipped in with 10.
~ Monterola led Sen OMtgoMesa (l·l ln cc>nferenc:e)
wttb 13 kWI.
'
season C>xc1tenwnl dnd pos· ·.tv1yers and Kulmdt1ck1 dre But th<' b1q test will come
sibly decide this yrc1r's myth-, two of Mang's best doublt''> Pc.lrly this sedson for the Sea
icdl nallonc1l champion, ~.'dM players, while Kennedy, the Kmgs, beginning m the
will also hdVC' its tltlnds fu1J excl}ange student from Aus-NdtiOn<ll 1 hgh School Ali-
m PdCJfi(' C'ousl Ledgue trdlla, dnd Bean, u transfc>r Amencan T<>dm Invitational
action with Univer..,1ty. from Scilnl Stephen's Acdde-Pc•ninsuld will be ·seeded
•our. new ledguc will bP my in Texas, give Mdng d lot hrst. whtlc the Sea Kings will
really mtNcstmg, • sd1d of room for shuJOmg h<' '>eedeo se< oncl.
Mang. whoSP lt•c1m (om pet-Vymg for spots on th<' nw (!Vl!nt IS sancboned
ed 10 the SPd V1£>w LcdQUP. thud doubles team df<• by thP Nc.ltiontll High School
for severc.ll yedrc;. 1uruors Justin Nmg, Shddn Tenm'> All-Amencdn Foun-
Morton, rnnkl'd 72nd Wddhwa, Rydn Stockwell, dallon tlncl highlight mdny of
ncillonaUy m the tbs, and Ldndon Everson, sc>n1or Jay the ndtton's top teams,
Ball, rankt>(l 140th 11nd pldy-Reed <lnd fre'>hinan Josh acc-orchnq to the USA
mg a Jev<'l dbove his age, dre Studrt. Todc.ly's hnill 1 gqg rankings
expected to b • C'dM's top ·our first cmd '>econcl The helrt mdudes severdl
two smgles pld)'E'f'>, whLlP doubles Cdn be very -.lrong. pnvate schools dnd teams
Jdck could play tturd ..,mgles. dnd I can't see many t,edms trom Anzond., Plondd., V:-u-
dependmg on how quickly bredkmg them m Or<1nge lJlnld, New York, Oregon,
he rccovc>rs from d broken County nyht now," Mdng Colorado c.lncl Connecticut,
colldrbone suffered dunn~J SdJc.i ·And, hopefully, our us W<'ll us Ct1hfom1d
dn ectrly-Jdntu1f) snow-third doubles will be ret1dy Th~ <>wnt, wluch kicks
boardmg dc:c1clcnt by the time the big ti.me rolls off with openmq cNemorues
Lasl ycdr, Morton pldyed dround." · Mcuch 16, will b~ played at
mostly doublf's, cornp1l111g d Last year, CdM knockNJ sevNdl clubs m the dred,
62-3 record. olf PeninsuJd, 11-7. on the w1lli Palisades hosllng the
• Bnan c.1nd CdmPron had road at the Jack Krnmer MMch 18 llllc• mdtch.
fantc.lsbc summers m op(>n Club m Rollmg Hilb m the Prot<'l'ds from the tourna-
tourndment play,• Mdn'g ClF DiV1s1on l semifinals, nwnt qo towdrd recogrnzmq
s<:11d. "And, redlly gredt news avenging the Sed Kings' ear-hHJh school tenms All-Amer-
with Brian is that ht> beat thf> lier nonleague loss to th<.' 1caru; vid the> Nauonal High
No. 1 k1d from Peninsula Panthers in games, 88-81, School Tc>nms All-Arnencdn
(Goh Fukuqaki) and also alter a 9-9 tie. Foundcillon.
beat the No 1-seNled player CdM fdced Sea View nvdl Tickets c1re available
m the 18s ui Southern Cdll-Woodbndge in the OiV1s1on I through ETM at Vons and
forma (Fdllbrook's Rydn hnaJ and served up a 12-6 Pavilions stores. Call (888)
Redondo dl the Fullerton hdlTUOenng at the Pahsades ETM-TIXS or purchdse uck-
Open Tourndnlent).w Club. ets onlme dt www.etm.com.
·HOOPS
CONTINUED FROM 1
14 pomts off the bench, but
the rest of the lineup com-
bined for only 10 points
Myles, a transfer lrom
Compton Htgh, had l 7 of his
20 pomlc; m the second hdlf.
Alvdrez, d 5-10, 170-
pound dyndffio, amclssed 16
points, eight dssisls, hve
stedlS c.lnd three rebounds
1 hs hery leddt:rsh1p dlso
eemed to Wt his teammates.
not to mention the rather siz-
able Centennial crowd in
attendance.
"They turned 1t up a notch
and we rd.O out ol ... , "Oms
said. ·we shot the ball well
early, but they made 1t hard
lor us to run our offense in the
second hall. Our kids pletyed
hurd and this season 1s noth-
mg to hang our hedds dbout
We've got another shot m the
state plc.lyoffs and we have
nothing to low "
HIGH SotOOC. BOYS
CIF DIVISION lll·AA SEMIFINAL
CVmNNIAL 6' CoM 46
Score by Quarters
Centennial 9 11 23 25 68
Corona del Mar 17 10 9 10 46 c.m.nna.t Myles 20,
Alvarez 16, Davis 11, Joubert 9,
Barnes 6, Coleman 4, Smith 2.
3 pt. goals· Alvarez 2. Barnes 1,
Davis 1.
Fouled out • None..
Technicals. My~ 1.
Cororwt del Mllr • Han~ 22,
Moms 14, Hietbf1nk 4, Hanson 3,
TMtpl ton 3, SMll 0, Pattenon 0,
Shahang1an 0, Bottom 0, Owen o.
Najar 0.
3 pt ~Is • Hansen 3. Moms 2.
CONRAD LAU I DAL y PlOT
Kevin Han en goes u p for two in Friday's game.
Hanson 1.
Foul.cl out .. Templeton.
Technlc.al' • None.
,,
La:urels for Billy Clayton, Matt Mueller
•National Football Foundation
and Colleg I lall of Fame banquet
will honor these scholar-athletes.
Newport Harbor High senior Billy Cltty·
ton and Eatancia 1 ligh lenior Matt Muell •1
will be honorftd Mard\ 6 at the 13th annual
NatioftaJ Pootbell Foundation and College
Hall of Fame b&nquet NCOgDlzlng .l ~
prep lootball ICho&ar.athletel.
O.yton. • 6-foot·5 receiver and safety.
wa All-CIP Southern Sedkin for the CJF
Otvilk>n V1 champion Sallon, wbO nnbhed
FOORALL
13-0· l. .
Cla'(ton. who also plays volleyball and
l~tered in basketball, will play voUeybell at
Stanford next year.
Muflller, e senior UnebaCker and full·
bick, helped the ~I« a Padl·
k CoeM lMtgue until tbe
rtnal W9ek ol the rwgWar teUOft. EltandA
ftnilhedM .... m.o wr..o.d and ii • vMeran rwturd·
er on the blllebd team.
'
LIZ MORSE
aom: Mly 22 .. 1912 "°'*''' II: Ne\';port lle.m =S.foot-6
10S
lpoft: Tr1<k
....9Wftt:800
metefJ
CAll9dt: lldl Surmler .
•
F.wortte food: Ire crNm or pkkles
,., ..... mcwle: • Amenan 8eiuty"
9eSt ~moment "Winning
the (CIF State Division IV)
championship with my uou c.ountry
team (last fall) •
A~ of the WMll VIII: She Ported this year'~ ~t1onbH)est
1ndqor time of 2.10 26 In the 800
nwtl"r\ fm1shing fourth m the open
race at Saturday's LA, lnv1tat1onal at the Sporu Arena.
LIZ MORSE
CONTINUED FROM 81
rememUPr how l felt dt spec1flc
llllte!. 10 the race Something 1ust
took over and I went \\Ith 1t. I
went out fdst dnd tnf'd to stay up
with the lcdders. I kt>pl WclJting
for them to dnnounc:c my 400
spht, bul I ncvc•1 ht!ctrc.l 11. I ylwss
1 went out m 6~i Sl'C onds cmd. 11
I'd have known I hc1d tht1t long to
go. 1 n11qht hdw '.'>hu •d ofl tht·
pa((!.. .
Morse c.hdn't g<'df clown. but
lhrPe more rnt1tun• col1(•g1t1lt•
runnNs, includmu the NCAA
1,500 runner-up ldst '>('dson,
pulled ctWd}' Still, -.h .. hrushed
ahead ol thn•<• UC LA alhlet"s
dnd took !JWdl pndP in her
nationdl hPsl
CdM Coach Bill Sunmc>r mdy
huvP bpen eve n mori> exnted
about the suJ.><'rh pre!.Pason
effort, c>spt>nally on dn older,
wood trdck cono.;1dl•red to hP
subsldrlddrd for an indoor fdnlity
• Ht1vtnq thP No 1 tmw lil the
ndtion 1c; hkt· wmnmq an
AcdclE•rpy Awcml. ~ Si.tmn<'r said.
"lt's hke d pPqwtut1l uwarc.I, but
it's hPrs now She· told m1~ ~he
and he>r pttre>nts w..rc gomy tu
Wdil to c·elPhrdtc uncl I aid
"Don'l you cldfl'' Tht1t wus u
ht•Uuva mrlrk !or thdl surl<tc-P and
thts tun<• ol yP,1r ·
SurnnN hil-. coml• to c>xpc< t
excellence I rum Mor:-.c•, who
entered high '>chool cJ~ a soc-c-er
player with no cumpN1live
runrung bdckground dnd hd)i
evolved mto one of thf• nabon's
elite.
"I don't know if she'U ever
Wlil an Olympic gold medal and
I don't care,• Sumner aid. "But
I'll be the ldst one to tell her he
can't She's gomg 1.9 Pnnccton,
she scored 1540 on the SAT, she
has d 4 15 GPA and everybody
loves her She's a swt• theart kid
with mtethgl•nce dnd tdl<.>nt. I
don't mean this the wrong way,
but that's weird. It's a storybook
tale."
Sumner semi MorsP will
chaJJenge her top 1><•ers c1l the
nalJonal scholashC' indoor
chcm1p1onsh1ps, Mdrch 11-12 m
New York But her best runmng
likely won't occur until ld.le May
and Junt-, wh<•n thP high school
sed'>OO wmd-. down
"She's d little dh••ad of the
game nghl nO\\, • SumnP.r said.
•Tue good news is, we haven't
done any crazy spec>d work yet."
Mor,,e smd her off-cason,
between cro ... s country and track,
was much smoothN this year.
Helpmg ledd the Sea King to
the Pacil1c Coast Lt.>t1gu ~.
Southern Section dnd stdle
D1vlSlon IV tJtlcs la~t fall, Morse
emerged m1ury free from the
eras country St'dsOn for the hrst
tirm~ m thrC'o years
"I only took two w 'Cks off
dnd I ttpprc>c1ate ~vc>ry ddy I'm
ln1ury-frN•. I even W('llt -;ki1ng.
wluch l Wd n't dllowe<l to do ldst
year. My fdmily goes to Sun
Valley fldaho) cvr.ry Yt!i.lr lor
Christmas und 1 drr1d<.'Cl to have
ome fWl (on the lope,<;). I was
C'a reful, but my tlthtude wns, • u
I g<>t hurt, I q •l hurt.' •
Mor.; , wbose 1~rsonal bec'>l
outdoors LS 2 10 ll'J at !ac:t year'
Golden W c;t lnvtt~ llonal, ~•d
she would love to urc ~ at
nationals. But h r ultim l goal
i a ClP state c.hamp1onship
·G tung thud l~!>t yc~n (m
th 800 at th stat m t) wa
exnting, but I want lo try to win
1t this · ar, • h aid
6 Soturday, February 26, 2000
B II ... -ue .-
rJ , ...
9 .... It ., .
Cl '" .... Byt'u
11-t•>J Ii.I l-(1 "1•1-t ..... ,.
SERVICE DmEci'ORY
t-1. ,, "' .. .-i1lt '""r t1 itJ"' ~1
• ,....,. II'! nlr111..J ~• II• .. 11 \I~
twL -uh' 1ttn •1t11••
-~ All Your Home and 8usOwss Needs -
f . . ;'
t ·~· I' ........ ' t~ • ~ ..... . . . ~
CfTY OF NEWPORT BEACH
City Council
Ch•mbet'e of
·the City of
Newport S..ch •
3300 Newport
Boulev•rd, ,
Newport Beach
PLANNING
COMMISSION
AGENDA
Regular Meet.Ing •
March 9, 2000 •
7:00 p.m .
1. SUBJECT· Big Belly
Dell (Lon Biu, arChltect)
e310 w .. t eoa1t Hwy.
SUMMARY: A request
to conven 111 eXlstino
1,500 square foot retal
bulldlng lo a lull ... Mde. tmal ICale eallf'IQ 11111>-
llshment (olzzaldlfl) with
24 IUla, lhat lndude• a welWf ol the olf·ltlMI ~~i=:n:. estabUlhment ol a new
elcohollc be'lerage MMoe outlet pursuant
10 Chap!er 20 89 ol the
MunlQoll Code
.APPLICATION Use
Permh No. 3IWl8
CEO.A COMPLIANCE
This projed llU been re·
viewed and h hll been
determln41d that It It cat-
egorically exempt under
the CllH 3 (New Con·
structlon or Conversion
or Sman Structure•) re· qulrement.1 ol tht Celi·
lornla Environmental
Quality Act 2. SUBJECT: Brlt lol
Farms (TOdd Sllngley,
•PP41cant) 40t NeWpoft
Center Dnve, Sult•
A100
SUMMARY· A r9QUM1
by ~ Farms to up-
grade their elClsting AJco.
hole BeYerage CMlet
......... ~-----• -' 14 .... _J. Cll ~. 642-1'71 d41
,..,• .,.:i.~·-.·rh' ...
.,. \ •' ~I • .. _ ..... --· ·.!I
approval for an olf·sale
beer and wine llcense
(Type 20) to off·••• tor general alelohol (Ty~
21 ), end rf'lain ltiel1 ex·
1111ng on·alle ule lk:ense lor beer end win. (Type 41), No In· crea~e tn uare toocage 11 pr .
AP LICATION: Use
Permit No. 3670
CECA COMPLIANCE.
This profect Ila• been re· viewed. and h has been
determined that h Is cat·
egoncally e11emp1 under the {Class 1, Existing
Facilllles) requirements
ol tile Callfornla Environmental Ouallly
Act
Publl1hed Newpon
BHCh ·Co•~· Mesa = Piloe Fel>n.laty 26,
Sa312
ollh• ~,,r ::f'I ._ M V. '" ot
E N FrMdom Escrow llld EnV11onmental Ouaht ecrow o.: the enllclpated sate dale
Aetun0erClass1,Exi$· 3.4116-KH llMARCHl4,2000 "'j Fadl1ties NOTICE TO The bulk 9118 is NOT lannln~ Dlr1ctor'1 CREDITORS OF 1Ubjecl to California Uni· ~~~ ,'o, ~~x b~ BULK SALE fonn Commercial Code
the Planning Depart· (UCC Sec. 6105) ~nae1~.2and ad· ment ol the City ot New· NOTICE IS HEREBY 1 ... ,.,...
Port Beach a1 3:00 p.m. GIVEN ll)al 1 built sale I• dress of the person whh
on 'ruelday, March 7 about 10 bl made. The Whom clalms may be
2000. Wrinen commenti namo(1), business ad· flied 11: Kalhleen Hunls·
or Input related IO the dress(e1) ol the Seller(1l man, Freedom Escrow,
project shpuld be are NE w P 0 At 2 CivlC Center Plaza,
1ubmllted to the Plan· SPORTS CORP., a call· Suite 200, Newpor1
nlng Oepanment by fomla oorporallon. 2801 Beacl't, CA 92660 and Monday March & 2000. EASTBLUFF DRIVE Ille ltil date for . llHng
In order to be considered NEWPORT BEACH, CA claims by any aed11or 11
In the Planning Direc· 92860 MARCH 13, 2000 Is the
tor's decision 11 ap· [)ojng Buslneu as ~uslness day before the
prOYed at the time o1 re· NEWPORT BEACH ule date specified
view the appeal period TENNIS CLUB above
of t4 dayg Will bloln All other bualneu Dated F. ebfuary 16,
from tllat date durfng name(•) end ad 2000 whlcl't Ume any In· dress(H ) used by the BUYER($). terested patty or thei SeHer(s) v.1thin the past Y A A R 0 W P 0 I N T
authorized agent ag· three years,•• stated by VENTURES, LLC.. a
grieved o1 that declslOn Iha SeHer(•). ls/are Calilomla LllTllled Llabll·
may file a notice of ap· NONE l.!Y ~INl!'Y peat to the Planning The name(I) and ad· By: 7sl Sieve Joyce,
PUBLIC NOTICE ConwniSSlon w•lh a hllng dress of the Buyer(s) Isl Me"*9f Member
Pl•nnlng Director'• lee of $691 oo to defray are Y!oRAOW PQINT Publll hed Newport u .. Permit No. 57 the cost ol the ap~al VENTURES. LLC. Bea~h·COlla Mesa
NotJce i. hereby given procedure. CIO ABC Licensing = Piiot February 29.
that an applicabOn hU The appllcation and Servtce, 3991 Mee S.313
bean 1ubmllted by development plans of ~~Pr 0~1vd9,:t~• ~ Flctllloue 8u11n .. 1 Houehlne KhacMml, 10 the proposed prOject are • Name Statement
Hl1bll1h • take·out available for public: re· 92:0 bll IOld The lollowlng persons
HMcl llmiled eating View and inspection at e ":Jr do~bed are doing business as
Ind drinking faclhty Af-th• Planning Depan· ·~ ri~:r LICENSE Precl$l00 Door and Win·
cohotlc beverage ment, City ol Newf)Ofl r~VENTORY ' dow, 760 N. Main Unit HMce Is not pre>posed Beach, 3300 Newpon FURNITURE' M, Orange, Catlfomta
In conj~lon with this Boulevard, Newport FIXTURES• EQUIP· 92867
lln)lk:lllOO Thi raciltly Beach, California, MENT LEASEHOLD Scoll EdWard Boonds,
Wiii not provide any pa· 92659-1768. For fur11ler 1 MP R'o v E MEN Ts 760 N. Main Unit M, Or·
trorueaung either Inside lnlormatlon contact tile GOODWILL cove'. ange, Cel1fomla 92867 or outtlde ol the facility. Nawpon Beach Plan· • • This business la oon·
The property Is located nlng Depa11ment at ~r,.TE NOl J8 ~L dUcied by: an Individual
In tile RSC Olstrlct In Co-(949) 644-3200 OTHER' ASSETS USED Have you started
ron11 del Mar NOTE: Tile expense TON doing butlness yet? No Property located el. of this nottee ls paid lrom IN THE OPERA I S<:On E. BouOOs
2939. East Coast High· a fillng lee COl!ecied from OF THE BUSINESS and This statement was w~ the applicant. are located at. 2601 filed w'rth the County
Thlt projed has been Publlshed Newport EASTBLUFF DRIVE, Clerl< ol O~Coomy
reviewed, Ind It has Beach·COllll Meu ~~POAT BEACH. CA on OHtJ..
been determioed that 11 Dally Pilot February 28, The bulk ute 11 In· 2 18604
Is aitfO()(lc:dy exempt 2000 Sa tended to bl consum· Dally Pilot Feb. 12, 19, under the reqlilrements 314 Mar 4, 2000 5a308
=:Certified Pre-Owned = -------·by BMW -------· , For ultimate peace of mind, C"Very C.Crtificd Pre-Owned BMW is backed by The Ctrti6ed Ptt>-Owncd BMW
Protection Plan, covering the vehicle for up 10 2 years or 50.000 mil~ {whichever coma fim) form the date of
cxpiracion of 1he 4-ycar/50,000·milc BMW New Vehicle l.1miccd Warraoty. •• The Proccction Plan mdudcs cwo key
clc-mems:
unified Pre-Owned BMW Limited Warranty ,.. Backed by BMW of Nonh ,\tn(rica, Inc., and ics
natronwide nerwork of BMW ccncen, covered repairs a.re madt. only by BMW-uaincd technicians using only genuine
BMW rtpbctment pans. .
BMW Roadside A.uista.oce ,.. Peace of mind follows you anywhere in the USA, 24 hours a day, 365 days a year.
1997BMW
Z3
Auto, 2.8 Liter, Baled on I OK mi/yr
S2995. Total ·ro St;in.
foial Paymcnu $%23 (C02304)
1997BMW
328iS
(..I), Chroma, 8~ on IOK m1/yr
S2995. ·rou.1 Ju Sun
loul Payrmnu • $12,529 • f.u (fJ.4592)
96318i CD, '5 Speed, Bladt w/S.tnd (C~ I JIM) .. $21,995 .
96 32s1 eo,..,1.
28K Mi . Spon Pkg (3 IC JIM) ............. $30,995
96328i
Auto, Bl.K.k w/Ssnd, Lo.:idcd! (VI 5524) $25,995
97 318i Con11t.
Silm w/Blat.k, ( D' (YOl590),""'""""'"$2J,995
97 318Ti .
Auco. l.ow Mile, Lmd~dl (U39659) ........ $18,99.5
97 3281
Amo, J~ Miko, Wh1u: w/SanJ .................. SAVE!
(IS other 1528'1 to chCMC)
(Rata to 4.9o/o AP.R. OAC.)
97 z.J
Low Mile, Btack w/Sand (882747) ......... $21,995
(12 othcr i'.Ji 10 chOOM')
97 528i .
CD. Blad w/Ulack! (31 PYJll) ...... : ........ $32,995
Cl S other S28't to choose)
977./0iL
151' Mi. Wbne w/l\lack .......... '" ................ SAVEi
' (10 otlm 7'8 10 ,J,t:...,")
98328i
21 K M1, Spt. Pkg. CO &. More!. ................ SA VE1
(Cenificd to iOOKmi)
TheU......M!N ..........
CREVIER BMW
S..Ota Ana Auto Mall, SS Faecway at Edinger
11 •1 3171 www.crniabmw.com
. ' \1 "•1••1 ... , ~ fl' ...
llOurs • 11 l1-pl111111• :: .. lll.1111-:11101'"'
• \h '" ''"" \\,1IL-l11 II I0.111i-;-, 111111111
\~ ,, .1,.i.,
Daily Pilot
tl.111·· mul 1l1·111lli1u·, 1111• •llltj•'l·t It• d1.1111t1· 1111lt11111 111111n• I h1•
f'lll1li,f11·1 11 .. 1•1\1'• 1111 I 1µ111 Ill 1'1'11•111, (t•1 fo -.1r1 II'\ l•I' 111 11·j1•1 I
'"'' 1•l11-.1lw1I 11tl\1"111•1'1111111 1'11•,f•I' ll'f"" I Ull\ 1•11or 111.11 Ill.I\ f H·
Ill \ lltll f'1;1-.1rM•tl ,1tl llllllll'"lllfl'h I Ill' l),1ih 1%11 UI I q 1h 1111
ll11l11fi1\ 1111 11111,11111 111 u11 uil11•111·1·1111·111 ,;,, ~h1111 11 11111\ 111•
r•··1w111.1l1l1 ,.,,.,.,,,fur 1111•, 11-1 of tilt' •p.11·1· .w111.1lh ,,. ,..,,.i1•1l It\
rfw 1•11rn. ( 11·tl1t •'o1111111h Ill' .1llm11·1I r111 tfw lt1•t u i.1•1111111
r-------Deadllnes -------.
\11111da~ ............ Fri<la1 5:00pm Htur .. clay .. \\1•tl11t·•1lo) .1!00p11t
Tut•-.cla~ ......... \1oncla) 5:1Xtpm t riclay ......... 1 hu~ilJy .):(.l()pm
\\t>cl11r.•-da) .... Tue .. da) 5:00pm ~alurclay .......... .Fri1l.iy ,);()Opm
l.t!fe!!:I l'-Wll·-'l:~t!HYI
Name Statemen1 •-•••••••••••••• * lleeutlful w .. front Junior 1 bedroom and W/O, FP, 1)-amalle gated The following perlOl'ls O • Owll8f is out ol lhl CCU1lrYI 1 bedroom also 2 bedroom eniry On Ille busKitneas are dolno busenelS u · HOMES f • The price Wll amaze yool 1 ball aUlet g,attd com-ctnlat Pe11ect Newpo"I
Copy Suppty Center, THE WEEK : Agerit 949-723-8120 mun1y. pool, tennis, easy Coast Loc:atlon From 2sot Alton, !rime, Cell· • 1BA sTOoiO gated comm ICCe6S to treeway, oelCh, $t330 1·888-279-445t 1~~ 9=.sa1e Inc Showcaae • new 11xtur91, ~ 111 clolet: #Id malls 71.w57o0015 .,. 28' wlpYI gll'. W/O, Fp.
(NV) 2501 Alton 'irvme' H : v~ recessed lighting In N1wpor1 Acron The Ptr11C1 NewpOrt Coast toe
Calilomla 92606 • • ome1 • klldl&n, SI 15,000. Owner/ street 2B<11m 1.sealh, ...w on adgl o1 CdM AoProx
This business is con· For Sale • Bkt. 949·250-4525 carpet Pllnt. 1tov1, etc 10mln from JOIV\ Wa"yne
ducted by· a oorporatlon In Our Sat • 2Br 2Ba Lovely remodeled S109MAo. No pats. 1H5 Alrpol1/1Mne Spectrum 111 Have you started • Condolnagreatloc,St84K. 1tVlne Av•H.Clll011Tell, 73 Fwy From $1585
doing bUSlness yet? No Real Estate : Hurry wont 1as11 Eait & Judy Ag1. 94t-72o-t422 Ext 203 1·888·279-4451
Oto Wholesai.. Inc, Supplement I • Taylor, AQI. 949-842-4122 1Bfo.t:actil(j Cottagewun
Vincent M. SenFilippo, Dlaplay Ads • Prime Beach Duplu . patio, ne11 beac;n. Catll 1154 :MI President • s.uhof'I Drfvt '4Bdrm's cell, lrldQ, SICMJ Mov•ln
This statement was Start at $85. : up. 2Bdml's 1owet French speclal S?20. + dep t2.mo
flied with the County Deadline • doors, premier 1ocauon1 lease. 133 E 161h S1 (No
Cler1< of Orange County T d 5PM • S754,900BkrlMH23-4494 Pets) 94~2421 .,.. 2 11111 llo w/d
on 01-06·2000 ues ay 8llJFFSBESfBUYi211K 8"t Value In Town !*ups ~loc '1~ to
20006818027 Also... L H 2Brgorgeo115greet'lbel 1Br $750 Includes fng. ~·g s1 795/Mo ~:11~/~•b. ~dli Open House view. Balblra Snegret, 2Br $850 quiet, Dke new .,. aBt 2v.a.. tam rm. bite. . . Lfatlngs Avl Aallor 94~-0195 Great 1enants & locatlonl gar, w/.d hkupll Pflml toe. t Flctltlou1 Bu1lnn1 • LOWEST PRICE BLUFFS can 949-548-0492 "* 10 bcMhop g, S2195.'Mo
.,.ame Statement Oeadllne Twmns!,ti'.25~~= EXSTSlo~ Large 18r 18i &4H7s-Oe72 • a~~':°9 Thursday ~~~9-632-8489 Apt upsta111,belc.2Wllk~ I '•:111 I SPM .. __ .. ..._, ;;c; 2 ns: cioMno ,.!: ~...:.. gaa+ ~ Novus nt1rac11ve, ....... .,_ ...,. ,,.,. ,... .... $815/n.., -.v'"'
2501 Alton, Irvine, Cell-It Pay• to Twmn his been upgraded MMSG-3735 CllllDU f~~nde, inc.. Advertise =-~ ~ ~ ~w't~~~ 4Br 2ea 1.Jo.ci ft """'
CNVl. 2501 Alton, 1rv1ne. in the Best caipet & more! Malll & Lou-181 wllrldQI 171Mno with l*ll ctpts, drpes, ~
Calllomia 9~ LOCAL 1se Rou. egt ~279-5252 caipon st~ gar1g1 510V9 V11w, 2~ 10 betl.
d::, ~~c::; Real Eatate • Lido 111and B11uty S450 dio. 1111 MIPll Ave. rVpels sms 949~73-8157 Hav~u started Section • =~,:'.i~ ::, Agent. t4Mll -400o * ~~MJ~Jg * doiG~o··~ 0!.!.l91~~ Call Today II www RulEs111er1 net
1
1 ~
1
E 3Br 281 S2700fmo. """' ,..,.., ·· LISA 7 14-241-4532. 1-&_... 28r 181 11175/mo. Vlnoeol M. SanFUlppo, 4¥ _....,, • STUDIO 1175/mo,
President RIVERA BIG CYN VILLAS N1WPORJ HAClf ·941-723•5135 lhls sl81ement wa• Open SAT.SUN 1-4 • • •
flied wl1h the County TWNHOME Bordorlng Big .... 1 Bt wlprtvate garage,
Clerl< ol Orange County 949·574-4252 Cyn GoH CoUl'll. 2·3brs W/O FP dramatic l)llld LOOICIHQ??
on 01·06-2000 ANNE Ford Road Ptbper11es erlrf. on site buslfhll FOR A RINTAL?
20006816024 94~75g.noo cenlor. Per1ect Newpon l.aurl ltoetvold, Baa
Dally Pilot Feb. 5. 12, WILLEY lido tile Home Lovely Coast Location. From (Mt) 4tMM1
19, 26, 2000 Sa302 2·Stv Cstm home 58r 4Ba, $1330. 1-888·27M451
FICtltioua Bu1ln .. 1 949-574-4249 30llOs1ollN11ea $997500 "" Comfortable 28r 1Ba
N S ....... ' Hou11 small yard. wlhard-ame tatement ............... Bii GtUndy ._,ors .,. 281 wlpYI gar, WIO, Fp wood loors flr81liace g• The followlng persons I 949-875-6181 Penect Newpor1 Cout Loe rage. 11695.irno Call Agei..
are doing business as: The 8rlifffl ena unit 2& on • of CdM. AoPtox 94H7S-4012
Don Felipe MelClcan tA DOii SOllOYUN '+loll, 2.5ba. mastM rlllleat. 1 omn lrom John Wayne ;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;o;;;;;i0pi;;;;o;;;;=i
Restaurant, 12485 .. • • upgnded klt, 2 patJos, Alrpolt/IMne SpedlUITI II 1 ....,311 I I Beach Blvd.. Stanton, FRll COUNSELING ocean & bey vus $498,711 73 Fwy From $1!>85 1e.,.
Cellfomia 90680 FRU USTOF>GES Anall. aat 949·2t2-2.837. 1-888-27M451
Felipe Gomez G•rela, U11nA1AREPOS 714·285-3o'7t LldO 1111 Bay Front AeiCL 11731 Clover l.atle, Gar· rn,iy, '· .... 38< ·:ie.-On The Sand Jn
den Grove, C&litomla 7t 4-534.alOO $2JSOr'Mo. E'Sldl Lrg SBt U8a com-
92&4 t 1 ·:11~ ~2Br 1.58a.eeau"" Vt&W plete remodel jacl\Jb'FP In This business Is oon· $2250/Mo Aval 311 41S Mstr Br, 2c Ill gar AYI V28
ducted by: an lndlYldual z vi. Udo SOUd. PlllM Cd S1850r'mo 94Mi50-83SS
Have you started I 'CR I . MMn-1213or175-3551 EASTS10£28f 1ildUplfx. ~:g1Ji~~~•19 yet? Best View Home BEACH APT. lgr 2Bt 2Be. ~ y11d, pet olc 200 E.
Fetipe Gomez Garcia COiicitA s.na Lucie Dev. Fp, a1 app11, 2c1r 1111. 1o1s 1an St. TINlnl wt1 show This •tatement WIS 4BA USA office appl'Oll of storage, petiO. cal lo Mii S129S'mo 949-873-3588
filed wrtn the County RENTALS A SALES 4000ef $1,350,00CI f1400o'Mo 582-426-4860 j)-OAEYSTOHE 38r 2 Mi.
Clertc ol Orange County SPECIALIST Stlf1nle Meurer e Rlmu c• ... SSll'l•D 2·Sty lWM, llt dlll ell elec on 01·20-2000 Mt-717-7894 ._ gai. wld hk·upt, t300tt
20006817312 11'• the rHource you St700/Mo 2110 ThuM
Delly Piiot Feb. 19, 26, c•n c:cxint on to ••11 • AYI (Victoria/Newport
Mar. 4, 11, 2000 Sa309 1191 .... I ;r.:~·~ .• !~. mi:;::. Blvd) IMH.31-4622
oor column• compel FIND -qualified buyer., to . ~ .... "'""' .... .-:v:o'fba ~.,F~I e42.ee79 ttvouoh classlllod
parking, poo~ dock option
CHRIS EDWARDS no p111. -Avail now.
949-723-6061 S1800mo ytty?4!Ml73-6640
EQUAL HOUSING Arst Estates Properties Step• to iiiiG great 2er ~t;~;;ii
OPPORlUNITY CharmJng 2Sr front hOUse, 181, gar, piltldry otean, _
All •ttl nlll• '"'""'" 11 r.11 custom tlxturlS plua e brlghl cal to'"' 617 W Biibo& l;Yeii~J~ """""''"'ltellttlief .. 3Br ~uni\. 4Clr gar, $1895/mo 562-428-4860 ._,.,,.£"', .....
mt rt1t "-lflt Act t1 '"'" $635,000Bkt D&-723-4494 J7A,,.,,-#-..n•i/&
......., .. "' -.•" 11 IM•e.r Chlmiln11 Hi 28i AOmt I •1 '""""~e1 .....,.,c.c;1,
t1 H\1111111 .,., "''"'"'· In Stlorecllftl. AvllA 311/00 lilt :'.'~ -. : Bay(ront community with privat.e beach
11•1111111 tr l lml•l11llu b 8 mot II $3,llSQ(per CORClll4 _ 8C marina. Walk to Balboa Wand ehop•.
""' " '"'· "'"· """"· monlh Cat K Llndlay 11 1 MiAuca from Fuh.ion ltland. Extra:. "'· ..._.,, INllllll .-. " 949-844· 1600 lor lnlo ___ _. b •
NdtNI "1fla. "" hlkllltt OCEAN YU LOTIHSE 2Br •THE4 large apanmcnca with -unung
..... , "' "'' '"'"'"'· 281. FP. dbl gar, So o1 Hwyl fircpl9CC and pri¥ate pragc.
........ ~.-Donna Fallon, Agent SHORES 1'1s ... ,,.,., •Ill ul 1149-278-0345 (eel) • Boat 1Jip1 available • •-""'1 '"'".., "'"'"' APTS So"}' No Pcu
•• "''''' Ul11t •lllci 1t • 1 tt1 MN'!ll I NOW LEASING 2BR/2BA ......... et .. &a• °" ""'" ,. _,. •••••••..... an_d 2BR/28A with cl.en ........ , ••tt1 ... !hi •II Sh rt t ,..u .. ,, ,,,.,1111, 11 "'' o erm s199s-s2soo ....,.,.r "' ••tllaMt .. 111 ====== Corporate Ple:ue call (949) 760-0919
"'" ~ "'"-'--CITY°' CC>aTA MUA Rental• "'"ti .iwlMebte, "" HUO ten.wt11 ..... t ....... r. SPICIAL Starting at
, ... .....,.. •• 11e ... ,.. ... FINANCING $10951MO.
FAIRWAY APARTMENTS
AT BIG CANYON
u1111tJO 11 n•·• · Furnl1hed apts GATJ!D COMMUN11Y BY FASHION ISLAND
Beautiful t,...lined etreeta and golr course
views. Enloy c819free llvlng In your large ~ BR apartment homel
"Affordable
Alternative"
Discount Casket,
Cremation&
Burial Service
Why should you ubject
yourself & your family to
paying ~ted prices for
caskets & services????
ClllTollPml ..... ~
krftlt°"'Fl .. 111fll&C1~
avail. 6 blocks
from the beach.
949-644-2611
@A ~·A
~i6estyle.
unparalleled In
Orange Countv
From •1,795lo15,100
1-877-681 -7387 \
S«lfD l«boro "' Soo <Nt• NlwpodB«xlt •
• 24 HOUt Goted
• Full· lime concierge MM01
• Elegant one°'
t\'YO '*'room plons
• Gorgeous club'!OO•
• Lovlll'I pool, spa (.
• F1.,ea toc ltlles
• Steps 1o r OShiOn lllol'td.
~taskluraM
ltlOppf!G. ono enhlnmn
' .-.... ~ . .-w. I .•,if
• • •
Doily Pilot
r; ' . . . 'Y,.. .....,
' \, ..
... •• 9
l '
k,. I ,', .~rj
.... , · ;' 4 llf I • l
L. --~ ~.:..! • r.o".
j~-:W--~ r : . ~1 . . • ' ,. ,.
'. i '
: -r • ... -~ j• -·
4,7 WAL.HUT Pl.ACE
Ho111twern, elothn,
boolll, toy1, vld101, IPO'tlne gooct1, furn Rfisrat.m SALE OF
MILl.ENNIUMI luinllure,
many ho\tsthold ltem1, clolhu, Wedgwood, ~ & OChlf dec«ator
lter'M Excetltol • cond • rllly 501 Play a (Vista del
Oro & Vllta Pllllda East
M bluff) NB Sat. 2ne 8-1 pm
2 saa. ~ M¥t UdO llii 220 vie 'Plilmio S250CVmo 949-n2-7~. SAT 1-2:00 94U3CM100(~ Wadding Oown eize I. IAY CAlS'T 38f+liiga BabY• to bo.11, dttl9ntt ~ollice, 2 5Ba. '19' -'-clothtt.__..;..;;.:...ttc.;...;.;.. ___ _
"Y. Jlchc>9. 1500tt lol NtWPOii BelCtl Sil: only S2600rmo.-lftf/j 311 lnddl aam.3pm. Fum1111t1,caivtd
gardanlf and IPI cartll .-....... ~-nw Open Sii/Sun 11..a. 1t11 _,.....,, . ...,,.., ' .
LMwlfd Ln 14•574-1552 =· =-· 11'11, ~ s• Dll lUXUry unit Wiiti l1bl11, ch1lr1, ladlts
bey View, oo.t dodl. Oltld desi<1ltr clolhts sz 2-4 ~ 2c gar.12~ 0 39 Ha111ord Of, com9f
BrokM. 94H42·3850 Jambof~ code 1492 &ft cy;; ill 2 661 oean _10....;lfltef....;.;.. ____ _
Twnlwnl, guard gated tum. sect bemboo SOfa Mt $195
3 car gar, exec houWlg Gu lrpk: glo logs S95,
14250 Call for appt Makita dl1ll $145. 16 pc Mt-293-4630 wtvte pll&llc pallO llJrn •
2bf 2bl, V9fY cltlnlcui. beige mid umbrella S95 cal
VIUhd celll, WIO hJcup, lor addrtu 949-223-0254
2 Clf 911, wall! to nndl
S141Mno. MM73-7to0
liGCAHYOH
BAOADMOAE
Wfll loc. 48' 3Ba, lmmecl
OCQlPlllOY, mt cond. lrg
yrd, 1 'JNI 11811. S4500'mo
94• 723-0940 Of 949-509-~r Spec10Ua 3bf COnoo . Vp, pool, '11/Y j)llYal.t &
qui«, pll1c .. Ntthg
$1495/mo 80t-244-59"1
Al/XL iiliMED. l23<11Mo mo CANYON TWMHE
AGENT MM44-0195 iJl' LI)() 1sl£ chlmiliig 28'
281 home, 2cat glllge,
petJO, llrtollol. S199Wo
.. !MM'ls-4912 t8r LUXURY coRoo
llcttttble OcellVSUnMc YU,
5lh Iii', pool, MCU!b. IVll
411 S2000ino 714-3'3-118118
SUMWT 3br 2 5bl ~
IWMml, patio, Upgl'ad, MC
gatld, W/O Nwp, 2 cer gat
S26SO ~ 94M73-7800 4br Ube yr1 new home,
gated, ptlYllt pool .. 191-
No ,eta. Good~. I.MN SHOO/mo. Call Agent
Cieri 94M32-47H
$2575 mo a.ct, Jbr ,.,., 2 Cll 91'·
1-80H40-6661
....
1 ITEM TO
HOUSFJIOLD
ANTIQurs
BooKs
COlJ.ECTlBW
PAINTINGS
. P011lln'
$CASH PAID$
40yun
In Newport Beach
BOAT MECHANI
DOCK POSITIONS
F« bu1y bolt Compeny. In Bllboa. Call Meg91t
·MM73-720G ..
Cold Slone Crumtty IS
seeklflg f\r\, COUnlll' team,
PT, lor new. oounnec Ice
Cltam shop on Balboa Pan
Greal 1'psl 949-661-6116
CUSTOMER SERVICE
Welilroomed, perlONlble,
rliable, ~.
c:oqMer·lrlendlv penon IO
wQl1( wltq> end dertllt In
CUSIOmef IYC & ptOClletlon.
Rex llouts Fu resume rel·
trence& to 949-675-4179
DENTAL
Bu1y Group PrKtlce. In
NPS Nttdl lull tlmt
Otntal Auletant. Pltue C.M 94M40-1122
EARN $530. WEEXL Y
Dlltrlbutlng ptlont Cltdl, no t1p nee., FIT, M , Cell
1..oo.53<>-7524.
MANAGERS
•SPECIAL•
$154.00 + lax W'tJy
(l.4Ull PftMnl thla Ad)
zis rrnt' '*'**11 SUtld on beNlllJly
949.67S.6223 !::==::;;::;;::::;;:::=.1 Jusl blodls from ltll Paafie
WANTED Or.Ml, = HOlfll1al *
~groundl FEATURES 24-Hour
lobby/Olroct dl11
phon1a/Fru HBO.
ESPH & D«JPool 6
Jlcuul, GIJllt laun-
dry CloM lo 405 & 55 Fwys M111'1 from 0 C.
Fli"111. colllgl Ind bc:hs Wllldng dis·
llnOI 10 sl'I09I and
rtataur11111.
• COSTAMESA
MOTOR INN 22n Hartlor llvd
PtlontMM4MMO
CdM 4 hit, Clble, W/
0' *" Pf'l'd, Wiik to bch. no llTlkg, Pt4I $475hno (ti 11111 pd) 714-"9-42211
IFT.-•I ~ ' ~ r . • . J ' .. . :. ~ ~. ~~~ . .' .. ' .
ANTIQUES ~~
Older Styit Fumitvft ltll following areas
P1ANOS a Con.ctibles MEDICAL ASSTS
~649-492~
so~~~8AsT
2202S..lllllltSt. ._.. Aae. CA t2107
........ l..-CA•at
.Admlfll·HllVY Duty
Or,taf-20pdl Extra lllDI "" wrlnklt oul. $JOO. •Admlral·H11vy Duty
Wllhlr-20pd cap S 100
•Ho90fnt·WIShtr $100
Cal 94H&t-3880
-. . ~1
. ' .. ,.,' .:·;·"'" .. . ....
FO & flO.Requires MA -..fl
blnooal ~. exp Ill OPT': IC0.8 codng e J*6
Rtceptlon In MO ofticeS
LIMITED
XRAYTECHS
Requires MA, exp preferred MD ollic:es
PBX
Requires experlenct In PBX, hospital preftrrtd
Mus1 bl ~er 1ttra11
ll'd llendle hNYy ptlOlll
v<*lme.
CAFETERIA
WORKERS/
FOOD SERVICE
RtqU11t1 .. ce11en1 com-mun1e1t1on slulls. loOd
Mlvlcl ~ hlfplul
KtlD'Medge of Anllbon and
lood SfJflty prtltned
!'_-r.r·~
'-·~t.1
Gn THE PEACE OF MINO
ONLY A CPA CAN GIVE YOUI
ke you getting at the d~ions you n e.-itled
to? Have Yott reti.n done by a tax
PROFESSIONAL al a REASONABLE rate!
•!rd~ Tax Retl6ns
• F,.. Elle1ronic fling
• Get your rWid 1111 lo 3 days'
•Get a t.nt of Cltdlt IO P1Y YIM tax• due'
lodenhOiiffl' l Stathes "Of9: Saturtll~ }4Jg~~~.:~~:W~.';0~t6.12=ss1-96:1
Ne 11 lkok.h CA 9lG60 ·•· 11WlllOC""""•°"
(949) 646-8803
ALL TAX FORMS -ALL STATES
INDIV ·CORPORATIONS -FIDUCIARY
PARTNERSHIP • llC -ESTATES
' 350 E I '71'" -STE 117
COSTA MESA, CA 92627 • 30 YEAR E PERIE CE
25 \an UI bJIN
FUI rcfYnd1, tkculll'lic ~bng 1'ea« of mind guann1«,
wt pi)' pm.ilua ~nJ inttml if wt miler a mi11Jh.
Technology hu t1ublcd ut to offrr fctt ilm are
Compt"llivr with JWI about anyone and your return •tll
bt prcpiml by onr of our 3 CrAi. ~·, tn)O)' nuking the
LU laws wurk for YOU! Opm ynr round Con1enicn1
loa11on. Ask for J.in and mention thu ~ m alhng.
Union Bank Bulldi11111 Wcndilf & Dom
I SOI Wcstclifr Orin, Solie 2501 Ncwpoit Bach
949.548.4494 ·-·-·-·-·-·-·-· ZAHER F ALLAID, CPA
28Jrs. up.
Accounting • Audits· Taxes
%
Discoun t with this ad
(714) 546-4272 -·-·-·-·-·-·-··
ERE 'S A GREAT
WAY TO GET
CLIENTS COMING TO
YOUR DOOR[
~.-,-, : ~-.~-.,-~-1-,,-.. -. ---,
l~=~--l' 'iii' I'" \1 -', •1\I
- -------_,
Tne oa11v· Piiot w111 publlsn a
Tax & Flnanc1a1 01rectorv to
assist our readers In flnOlno a
tax professtonal. Reacntno over
•o.ooo 1,omes\ In a nton-tnd
market. vou art sure to ttno
many wno need your help,
A smart mo..,. on your part
wou1a bt to tau advantage of
our tncredlblY low rates and
i>llCI your Id With US, Only us
per w111t If you sign up tor tne
entire 17 w•~ks, or a minimum•·
Wttlt run It $40 .,., WHk.
TAX TIME
IS COMING
Size of
Ad
lx2
SOturdoy, February 26, 2()()() 7
..
s299/mo.
8 Sotutdoy, February 26, 2000
TODAY'S
CROSSWORD PUZZLE By CHMUS GORIN
wllh OMAR SHAalF
end TAHNNI HtffKH
..
Wt l~KI.\ UIUl>Gti Q I/
C::AOllUC DIVUI '17
V·I NC>ntlllll S~e
Blue. bfllMi;e o4 inir
Q I •Al Soulh, \'UlllffDhk, )ou
holJ
(283272) SIU81 1>11 NAIERI
(714)140-1100
• AK J HI 9 8 O 10 Y 4 o 1 • K 0 • 7 o K CJ 10 7 2 o It t 5 J • 7 fl 5 CAOll.LAC Un 04'11Mle 'tJ
11W' hiddlll.11 h3\ J"fKCCJrJ l'UR I ti P.AS I M>Vl II ,., 2 > l •
4• r... ' Wl1.11 du you bid now'
Q 2 • A\ South, "ulncruhlc. yuu
hull!
n~ h1JJ111g h11•1ir1J1.ec:lk:d
W• .. I NORfl Jl.A41l WU'Ut
Iv Obi IM 1
Whlll 11<;llon do you take'!
Q $ ·Neither vulncruble, •• S1•u1h
you huld
l11ttter. 54.284 mllll. AS&.
llC>y' (20914/3EG8385) WONi UST • COAST CAOM..LAC
1-eoc>-ft.COAST
CADlt.UC Sdn beYI" 112 Red 181111«. 80K mllta, 111-pe< v.iutl!275493) S8.988
NABERS
• Q '> 1J <::1 J IU o I J •A 7 6J '(714)5*t100
• 10 o Q u~.o Kus • Q 104 cAOilUcS<inbeVNll 'A The htddlllg hit{ flfOC~"t"IJ NORTH F.AS-1 S<>Vltl W~-'ir Snow wt11t tnlh, IMther,
l• IO ? ~~9) '21.968
Wh,11 do YQO b1J now!,,, COAST CAOllLAC
1-I00-7~0A8T • ~~ • A~ Sntnh, vul11m1hk:, }VU CAOILUC ITS 'M
Q 3 -Uo1h vullk111hlr, IS !;ou1h )OU $t)olllll dlelllond White,
liolJ • 111914 O J AQJ1 •AKQ 5 =r.=5-r:I~
11ic b10J1n1• h•n proceeded NOHTll M~r 'Olflll W•sr
10 I'll~ I Q 1'-1• Paw 7
WllJI du you t>1d nuw !
•AKI06 J 5 OAKIOl •Al065 1111: b1JJ1ng ha< pr~ttdtd COAST CAOllLAC
1-IOO-ft.COAST
The h1J<linir h.i, jll'ncc~'C.I
~OlTl ll Wt.')r f\IOIOH
1'UR1 ff EA!> I SOlTTll WFST
I• 4~ ? Wh.u Jo )'UU bKI oow !
CADiiliC stS 'A SOOdlll whit dllmoncl ~ llh. llv, whNll BON Cot
(rot 1 MXJ&950) s 17 .199 lo Plllli I• ?
Whal do )'OU huJ now? COAST CAOtlLAC
1-IOO-ft.COAST
Clo seviltE '90
Greylgf9y, 45K low mllM, I ..,WI I 111¥1 ~---~-~ .. n-,·.-·~-1·' !~~!~
CAOILLAC ConCOIJrt '97 SHOO 512-4127 .. 801
BMW 321 IA '97
Sil\ler W/Grey Leather
(V4-4634) $29,995
ST£RUNG BMW
.14M4S-5900.
Bliw m ISl 191
SPol\ PaelcaOe
(T354391 $29,995
ST£AUNGIMW
MM4S-5to0 illiw 321 ISA ·17
LowMhl
(T34114) $32,500
SltRUNOIMW 14M4MIOO
eiliW i21 ISl 'ii Blldc/Tan
CAOll-lAC CATERA 'ti ~5 Hp , Northster, low CiiEVAOLET C1v1ll« '9~
Low 3k mites. red, leathlw, & miles, Sea Ml6t, nnr & more Low mllol. bal ol warr., new
mor11(190825l $21,988 (212804) $24,988 car lrede.fl!
NAB'1RS NABERS (871304) $9,988
(71 4)540-9100 (714)540·1100 I NABERS
CADILLAC CAruA ·h CADILLAC Concoure 'H (114)540-t100
Chrome wheels, lealtlef, Wl11• dllmOOd lnah, lth1,
ASS, CjlSSette chrome whffls, cd st.ICMfl
(20880(4AVH754) $19,995 (209\21J)(V0930) $27,957
COAST CADILLAC COAST CADILLAC 1-t00-79-COAST 1-t00-79-COAST
Call
STUMPED?· Calb~•t--·-.--
• 11e,. -1-IOG-37IHIOO ut code 500
CT~J,. S32.980 UNOIMW
........ MtoO
8iiW' bi IA •ff co Cl\angef1
STARTING
ANEW
BUSINESS?? ~ . ..,,. .. l"Y' ~ /, .·· ( ., .. )~ w .. 'fl.
Thi City of"'""'°" e.d\ IS~ blda lorfll ula o4 twee Slbo4 tu1s n two Udo 14 11'111 s.lled blda
wlll be ICCIPttd untlf
5.00pm Frldly, Ml/Ch 3td
Pick up boe1 bid pac:Qge II
the eommunny SelV1c11
Dlpal1rnent et City Hiii
(3300 Nerwpotl Blvd.) 01 by calng 949-644-3151,
~ .-·~
BMWM3 '17
loldld
(E11356l $37,600
STERUNGBMW
MM4Hto0
8MwZ3 'if
Low Mies
(W18792) 4 $38,400
ITOUNG BMW MN4S-5to0
BUICK COUPE ·n
8MW 311 ICA ·97 $500. 714-632..()338
Low miles, Topless! 8Uick REGA( LS 'i9
(878023) $28,700 V-8, llloys, INther, ASS,
STERLING BMW prlof rnll MM4S-5to0 (20854/514251) $16,999 BMW ml COHV.'9f aea;;: COAST CADILLAC
1'ul Metalic &.!&'Green. 1400-79-COAST
Perfect Condtion. 14k+ ml IOick ROADMASTEA 'A
S31,500. 949-70&--0806 Low 51~ mlles. beige, eiiw 328 IA •97 IHther, rare model, MIRTI
towmleslCtvomesl (411348) $11.988
(V4-4642) $29.9~5 NAaEAS •
sttAUNO 1N1W S4°'9100 (878023) · $28,2,45 MH4f.tto0 CA CATERA 117
. .. ·~~~=w BMW 32J IX i1 Low mll... O•lg•, lln
I ello I ~ PllCUQe lealhlr, 1119P, 1111 o4 warr
in NB 14r~ lll>ll can the 1v.ce1~, m .m co11121e1 s1e.988 ~a~·~-~ Classifieds s~ (11~~00
TIH Up/~.,"" lMily ''"''is 1k-'" •JtNlllAtt. MW ln>it« -•-Wu ,. ,,,.,., bt11i11t:11n. ""° tv1U nftl SEAR.CH iJu 1111mlfor-J9" •t 11• a,.. dH.rr. ou ""' '9" iJu
,,_ •AJ JN trt/ "' ti,, C#11r1 H•-;,, S....to A-n,,,,, •f nt1ru, •far ti,,
-rrlt iJ n1r11krrJ"" wiU fiu 1'"" fin11io1U b1U1nas ,,.m, ''°''"""'' 111i1h U,, c.,,,,,, Cln*. p11WiJlt ontt • wul for j11.r wultt., '"I"'"'' '1 t.w •U thtn fik
'9'" ,,..r ofl .. blie.rini with rlN o .... ,, CJ,,/,.
PfMs, 1,.1 '1 ,. fi~r"' .fittitiot11 h1inn1 11umm11 u ''" D••'1 Pilot, JJo w.
&,St. 011111 M1111. I/JO" c•nnot M/ ~ pk11u c•I/ IU •t (p.f!J) 6'243~1 •""
will -Xt •mi"ttmmtJ fir JO" to ""11/b thu 1rw-rJ11rr bJ m.11/ If l"" Jho,,JJ h.,,, •"1 fimhw fwtri•N, p{,AJt uU IU •""...,. w11/ ., morr th•n
tfMI # /OJUI JOIL CoH ~It 11t l""' """ bwlnm'
-U3il~ot
HoME, liEALTH AND BuslNESS
~ ......
POUCY
In an elfOl1 to ofter the belt ~ l)C)lli!lll IO our llld-era anG idYer11MIS, WI wll require ContrlClOfl wtlo ~ In !hi StMoe
Dndory 10 lndude hlr Conlrectors llcenu ~ lnlhelf ~
men! Your co-opetdon II ec:lllad
L r.~ ~ ~:··.···3 ·~~ .. '
.;'-..... ·:.· .. '!•'r.. . '.
. ------~!' .... l •
==:r~.~.! lndl G<.. ;i.i"iM~
2*6504 Of t-49-548-4285
Moline tiouMClumng
CINrl l>IMC>oltd, ~.
Clblneta kitchen, bath..1
~· tie rr.. l.I018731r 714445-4111, 7/42•5MI
VICKY'S cllANIHO
Wt dter THE BEST
House 6 Vt1nOow CleenilO IC>f11 eicpeMnt't, ldnt ref'al
Vick(• 114 tfl.0311
HANDYMAN Contractors
All Home Repairs
Mumlnns • FJc"mcal
C.rJ'fntry
1141) IS~·SZH tal 1'
il-~3 . 'J ~: I'! I" ,j,lj •I"' '11 ,.,,
I• 11 1lt• I lt'H•\1• t
RIC4" CoNmt.a IN
h 'lm
800-7
=mlOodJoba ~·MMe ..
lnterntJng things
to buy
It'• all th9r•
every day
In CllilMllld ....-n
. .
The Calif Pubhc-
U ti 1111 es Com·
mlsslotl REQUIRES
that ell used house·
hold goods movers
pnnl their P U C
Cal T numbef; limos
and Chaulfars pnnt
their TC P. number
In a• advammerns.
II you have aquas·
lion about tht·l~aJ
ity of 1 mover, ltmo or ctlavffer, caH
PUBLIC UTILITIES
COMMISION
714 558·4151
,..,.,'! ' '
~ . lilliil...t.1 .• • 4 ...
CMEVfK>UT UMMA tt **DA lJl tt Euco V-4 40A _.. Cord-Aloyl c..a>. low,,_ '°"' wonl llMt pow«~
..... I
12~) $4,988 Cl.EAHI ~X08732) NA8EM COAST CAOI LAC
(114)MM100 1.aoo.?KOAST
cHMOttf YAM 'iC ~ JMp ~ ll1> '17. ~lion. !Ow 32K "*6. 4-WO.llMmcllli..,,_, wt.
tdltllt ·~· PoWll lhr 1111. S3K beloW bM bOoll eola bed, t 14995.lobo M9·7ec>-2t14
(~) 119.981 ...., CiWOiiM lM'iflO ..
, (11~~00 ec,f. IUIO. AIC, hAI pwr, pb, _.,...,...........,,...__......,.,,,,_1 pw, ... lllt"'1 ea. 11111. llloyl CHEVY 020. MON cOU: 14500 obo 114-t40-1°'7.
VERSION VAN 't). lolded, liEAClbli EJ00 'Ii
Vlp" Alum. 1n1Hock T\11bp dlUtl, RAREll b11kt1, •Int cond1tlon, 36 monit. remalnlla e·
$7000 Firm 773-251·9-498 $733/mo or p1yoTI 11
DRAIN ave VAN FUliV $43,800. 12,500 ml. 911CW ~pped '92 AerOltll 1n Tan loededl 849-720-1798 ••celfllnt cond $5000r'080 flitieidi1 240 dil 'ff TOOLS end A.LU Standafdtr ...,., ....... A 714 438·8062 n. ···' ._,, -,o.,...A ..... o-e-x-,~,O~Y~E-R~'l~7-1 ~j>p-=~mlon
Eddie l1uer Edition,
wtlhe, epotl111. 122.000 .,_.. tlO k 'a
MMS5-M41 ~ GMC Sll Extend. Clb '17 "'"'OOM ..__ ~ Cf~Vl,2tops, bed~· P'*' Mat/ Pl. pb, pw, ~ C.,
• "" new •w. upg '"*'O (20892l5l96995) $19.995 ~ Mlll(Mtl•l1,4SO COAST CA.Oil.LAC • 1-eoc>-Jt..COAST obo. ......_70l1
ELL YOUR USED VEHICLE
TllROVGH CIASSlFJED
Doily Pilot
-. .
~ ..
·klert
}lei;
tfoa .
~'te
·GOOD
ADI
The Newporc Beach/Costa· Mesa
Daily Pilot presents you wich a
GREAT OPPORTUNilY ro
promote antiques & coUecri.bl~
Perfect for shops, dealers, auctions,
booksellers, decoracors, refinishers,
arr galleri es -develop your business
with us!
Our Antiques & Collccciblcs
S1)Cml Section Deadline.\ on March 171h.
Don't Miss Out! Call1Markcy
The Local Plumb.r ....... ,.,....,.Ire
""lOCAT...0
WCT110NIC ~· LIAIC DlTKTIOH
friendly lervk•
675·9304
Ll7S2497 lntuf'M
(949) 574-4246
~St.c.
Uc No C39-61lmJ9
All types of roofing and repan
1Jab1lty and Worker's
Compensation
Insurance
1h•Nti9hborhood Member NatlOnal Plumber! Roofing Contractort
OllAJ# • Stwt• ~;,.;-Assn
WAMNG UICIAUST Since 198 7
TWEEDY PLUMBING ' (94&) 850.S851 949-645-2352 1 www 11Y1nvoolin com
-CID.
. . .
.. . .. . . . . . .
r .. ,.,"~,. ·,· .. -: -~ ..
~~ -: . ~
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\\'1ndn1V Sc,_,.
~rttn OoorJ .!ct.
fw• E11h1111tc
\\'e 011111• h<11ue ,iJIJ
114.4M1.3119
. . Daify Pilot . . . . . . . ..
Saturday, °Fe~ry 26, '2000 89
$
"' .
Per Month
the
TV /Video Entertainment System ......
Fae ory I stalled at •o
On all new 2000 Escalades during February & March 2000
•tu, le., S6 ,...ill IHH. Toi.I .. ,. off '4623.SJ ~ 'O MCWlly ••"· 201 tutu ... dottft ""
ltt .... , pt<,_. S"'fe<t It., ... """ti. I 11 tW1,.-,-1 Vlltl Yl1Htt7
================~======
COAST ~~~ . .
Larg~st ··.
Selection
of N~w and
Pre-owned
Cadillacs i.n
California
Lease Forsevill
48
Per Mo11th
• JC + .... le.. J6 ....... loMI '1ft off J,tU.t4 ..... 't .-fly ........ 20< UWl ... cliorft
•-11) liltt,. ,_. ~ te 0..-..,.mil I 11 *' ,.,_, VW Yl"4ltl
Ask about
GM Customer
Loyalty Rebate .
arid save an
additional $500
• 7JC •tu. lc.,,. -~ i.... lttll .._off '4,stO i.wi., 't Ncwtty .....,.. nc ui.t• ... d.p
-12' .... ,. .,... ~le~""'°"" I 11 !Ilk,.,_, VIII TU1717'4
QUALITY PRE-OWNED VEHICLES AT GREAT PRICES
'93 CADILLAC Sedan DeVille WON STI '97 CADILLAC Seville SLS WO I '91 CHEVY Tahoe LT $2 ,
LCMJrr-. A8S Aloyt OnlV 5ot 2M c:efli119d ~ (3~) CIVC>m9 ~. lCMJltler On$lof Oon I l'nlll lhla one! (3UUMS9S) tllOO lone fnatl. l~ •x• AllS Qwome Wl>ffla CO Plove<. llock (3Cn>71)
'91 HONDA Accord EX VERY Cl N! '99 CADILLAC Seville STS SA ! '99 OLDSMOBILE Aurora $25,9 7
Allo'(1. Coa Pw! W1n/l.ka . 111 CrUIM low M l4N (2XQl732) 6 :ns Cert IW!es, Uhf Bo. Co.&/CO. crvome Whll Mem Poc:koge (928903) leo!Mf. ChfotM WhMU. Ca./CO Dual Pw! Seot1 Kev-Pemote (109960)
199 OLDSMOBILE Alero $12,878 '92 PONTIAC Sunbird WHAT A FINDI '95 CADILLAC Sedan DeVille 0 'T LAST!
CON/CO, Pwr Seo1/WlndOW1/Lockl, 2 •UR lW1n Com. Prev Rnll (•DVN2•2) Conv 28. l 1• Cert. Mlle1. 3 I V6, Alloy1, Pwr Wln/Lkl 1111 CrulM, Co• (2ZUM70) leolhlH ACllYe Audio COii. Alloys. Gold Pock. ABS (3ll(l(Jl4)
197 CADILLAC Eldorado PORES ! · 199 CADILLAC Catera GREAT VA u I '94 CADILLAC Eldorado DO 'T
lowing c pe. Whit• o.amone1 Fin.eh. ao.. co Sloc:ker, crw Whffl• (3UHCt.ol•> 8.19• C811 Ml* Chrome Whffll loM CO/Cou leather (091151) Sim lop crvome WhMll ._ COii/CO ~k. leo!hel Gold Pock (3TCM711)
'98 CADILLAC Catera WOWI '98 CADILLAC Catera $19, '98 CADILLAC Eldorado
U37C•rt M~ ... CrvomeWhla ao..COll/CO lttw Cronbeltyflnllh (3XH)IS71) louring Cpe. Ctvome WMela 80M co Slack UIV Soble llock fftlh (600080)
'99 BUICK Regal LS $1 ,999 . '86 CADILLAC Sedan DeVllle VERY UN UEI '98 CHEVY Tahoe LT
leoltlef. Co•/CO. AllOya. 3 8 V6 Engine ABS. Prev Renlol (51 .. ~51) Slm top CUiiom Giffie. Only 66.293 Mii ... Nol many Ilk•""' around (2CHl.340) l•,3 IS Cert Ml4el leather, co Rock. Pwr Seal Alloy• <"'PVl90)
'99 VOLVO V70 XC WHA A Fl DI '97 GMC Extended Cab $19, '98 CADILLAC Concours · I
Whtie Ooomond Flnill'I etworne WMela. co lloc•er l8'Qlher (3XV09l0)
7
AWO leolhet Moonloo(, Coa/CO On1V 9 d Mil-. (.VH£6n) SU. Alloya hdllner. CO. Pwr Seo1/W1n /lockl T• C1\AM 5 7 vs (&9'1995)
'95 CADILLAC Seville STS $19,8 '99 CADILLAC Eldorado '00 CADILLAC Seville SLS
Spollea, While Olornond Flnllh, CNO<w Wheelt '°"co. unr Nortllllor (lK~) Touring Cpe 8locit Beauty Only 3 761 Mllu Bole CO Cllt WhHll,Ulv (613310) Chlome WMelf. i..cJll'let. C.0. ~ '1enlol So-.. ThOUIOndll (.&HGUOOI)
'99 NISSAN Maxima $19,
Moonrool. AJloyl, co. C>eck Wing Pwr Seol/Wtn /I.kl Ptev Renlol (210201)
'99 CADIUAC Sedan DeVille 27,
Snow Whtie Fln!Sh. leo!Mr CON ABS Nol'Nlor low "'1"-1 Pr'°' Renle>I ('°9l949)
'97 CADILLAC Cotera LO LESI
Moonrool Chrome Wheel•. lloM, lCMJlhef ~. low Mt181 (083999)
'98 CADll1AC Sedan DeVle MUST EEf '93 CADILLAC Seville VEI '00 CADILLAC Escalade 2. n
ChlOme .,.,_..leather ABS.17 502 ~ (3XOT003) leolhet. Ctvome WMelt 9°" CO/Coll Tiii, CNIM . .US (1199'6) leathel OnSt<lr Chlome WhMll Corgo Ooort (R 115769)
COAST CADILLAC CELEBRATES OVER 402 YEARS OF EXPERIENCE
Don Partch Shawn S. Nehrlr CrelQhton F. Joscelyn Ill
General Mmiager Genef'aJ Sales Manager Sain Manager
32 Yen 20 Yen 28 y_..
RUSMI Udlnk •
Sales Mana~
18Yeara
I
........
~c.. ..... , 21-.
.. ..
.. •
.. •
. '
'
..
•
26,2000 '. . Doily Pilot
TH ... E 200·0 CADILLACS. AFFORDABLE
STYLE
1999 Catera
AR E A-R R IV I N G DA I LY!
2000 Catera
LEASE FOR ·s359/MO
• .. lor 31 lllOll1h INN 53960 00 Cllh llO!wll or trldl tQUlty
plut inCtPliOn ,_ .. '5108115 1 only 4427.
Or Purchase For Only s32 ,J8840
2000 Escalade
• Ille for 36 lllOl1lll ~ $4950 00 cull down Of 111dt eq,;.ty
plus ~ ..... $6745 7!1 1 onty ·" 188
O.r Purchas~ For Only S 42,S06 89
2000 Seville STS
•
• lllt lor 36 lllOlllll leu. $4i50 00 cash Of !Tide fClll'IY.
plus itUplloll 1-. $709? 98 1 onty 4213
Or Purchase For Only S 47,800 SAtE s27 500
PRICE t 1~~2ag
With GM OWNER'S LOYALTY PROGRAM, you could save an additional $500!
See d eale r for d etails .
The 2000 Intrigue All New 2001 .Aurora The 2000 Alero Sedan
So SECURITY DEPOSIT .
So iST PAYMENT So SECURITY DEPOSIT So 1ST PAYMENT
LEASE FOR ~24 9J MO LEASE FORS339/MO LEASE FOR $199/ MO .
·~ • tax fl)( 36 monlht CIOMO tnd .. on IPPfowd ctedlt. TOl.11 dn.<t.otl $2.168 30
RUldUll s13 oeu o TQQI o111aymen1118.998 ~+tu 1on1y199111
• llll tor 36 monrtia C1o9<ld end ltue Oii IPPIMd cttdll. $4950 down 111d stan<Wd dtNe
off RtlldUll $18.172 ToQJ ot paymenu $11,865. t.u I only 70859 •95C + IM for 36 months CIONd end ieas. on IOPfowd cr.d11 ToQI drlvt-olf S 1. 759 14
ReSldual S9.517.20 Toi.ti of peymen11 S7,198 20 • tilt 1 only 303'457
OrPurchaseforOntyS20 890 . . t Or Purchase For Only $29,84245 Or Purc.hase for Only 515,941
"FOR THE GREATEST SELECTION OF PRE-OWNED CARS ••• SEE NABERS"
1 91 CHEVROLET LUMINA s s·s
Euro, V·6, 4DR, xlnt condition, won't last! (255934) 4,9
1 95 FORD TAURUS s
low 46K miles, V6, white, non-smoker, squeaky cleon l (325315) 7,, 9 8 8
190 CADILLAC DEVILLE s
Midnight blue, leather, ai~ and morel New car trade in! (261532) 8 t 9 8 8
'98 CHEVROLET CAVALIER . SS 88
low miles, bal. of worr., new car trode·inl (871304) '9
1 94 BUICK ROADMASTER S 88 Low 51 K miles, beige, leather, rare model, mint condition! (411 348) 11, 9
'9.9 BUICK CENTURY .s 8 SS LoW 5930 m~les, beige, mint cond, bal or worr. (426312) 1 t 9
1 98 CADILLAC CATERA s 88 low 3k miles, red, lthr, & morel (190825) 21,9
'99 CADILLAC CATERA . s 88
low 7300 miles, block, leather, many luxury features! Bal of worr (021296) 2 3 t 9
'97 CADILLAC CONCOURS S 88 295 H.P. Northstar, low miles, Sea Mist, hhr & morel (212804) 24, 9
'96 CADILLAC SEVILLE STS S 88
low miles, 290 H.P. Northstar, CD, Alloys & morel (803910) 24, 9
1 99 OLDSMOBILE BRAVADA S 88 Only 5420 miles! White, lthr, moonroof, CD, bal. of warr. (723936) 2 4 t 9
'97 CADILLAC SEVILLE S 6 88
low 21k miles, done cherry, leather, V8 Northstar, bol of warr. (817466) 2 '9
198 CADILLAC ELDORADO S 6 88 low miles, V8 NorthStor, green, many extras, bal. of warr. (6127 40) 2 t 9
1 99 CADILLAC DEVILLE S 88 low 12k miles, white pearl, Ion leather, bol of warr, previous rentol. (8055901 2 7 t 9
199 CADILLAC CONCOURS S · 88 White pearl, low A.520 mi, 300 H.P. Norttulor, bol of worr, immacl (7354181 3 5 t 9
'2000 CADILLAC SEVILLE S 88
Cashmere bei~, low 8800 mi, CD, alloys, bat of warr, previous rentol. 11 A.5489) 3 7 t 9
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