HomeMy WebLinkAbout2001-02-23 - Orange Coast PilotTOSHIBA
A 1 FRIDAY, February 23, 2001 , .
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SERVING THE NEWPORT -MESA COMMUNmES SINCE 1907
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• Is the Toshiba Senior
Classic the best stop on
the Senior PGA Tour?
Richard Dunn
DAILY PILOT
NEWP ORT
BEACH -Welcome ~ to 21st century par-
adise. Home of palm
trees and cool ocean
breezes, fine dining
and high-class fashion, luxury
yachts and millionrure lots.
Members of the Senior
PGA Tour love coming here .
They circle the Toshiba
Senior Classic on their calen-
dars along Wlth major cham-
pionships and family birth-
days.
In addition to the timing of
the event, occupying the
year's runth week, players
love the golf course, a tradi-
tional layout like most of them
grew up playirlg.
For the golfer and his fam-
ily members, getting around
from airport to hotel to golf
course is the easiest on the
entire Senior Tour, according
to Toshiba Classic tourna-
ment director Jeff Purser, who
has been to almost every stop.
To call the Toshiba Classic
a full-field event on the tour ts
like sayirlg a Mercedes-Benz
is parked outside Newport
Beach Country Club. Players
stand in line to get a spot in
the 78-player field.
But, for the underlmmg
reason why some argue the
Toshiba Classic is the best
stop on the Senior PGA Tour,
money donated to charity
puts the event over the top.
It is a community. after all,
which must support a profes-
sional golf tournament for
operational success, and
there are none on the~Senior
Tour that can compare to the
charitable achievements of
the Toshiba Classic.
Stops on the Senior Tour
are managed by obarities,
while the tour supplies the
players and communities
around the nation host tour-
naments almost every week-
end.
Tens of thousands of fans
come to see golf and the tour's
legends, but dollars to charity
are what keeps a tournament
alive.
To set a Senior Tour single-
event record last year and
become the first event to
crack the $1-million mark in .
charitable contribution!t, the
Toshiba Classic raised
$1.011,000 in 2000, a feat
tournament officials hope to
repeat in 2001.
Hank Adler, Toshiba Oas-
sic tournament chairman
along with Jake Rohrer,
emphasized the bottom line.
"I think most of you know
SEE HOLY LAND PAGE A19
. ..
•
•Toshiba '01 goes on v,dthout one
of its staunchest supporters, and a
key to the foundation of success.
s the gates get ready to open
or Newport Beach's mo~t
ignificant event, sporting
or otherwise, the first orpet of
business for the 2001 Toshiba
Senior Classic Ui a moment of silence for the
late Rosalind Williams.
Thank you.
U anyone in this town deserves a tribute,
it's the one whose srnilin.g face will be missed
next week al the Senior PGA Tour stop at
Newport Beach Country Club, though her
spirit lives on.
No one was a stronger supporter of the
Toshiba Classic than Rosalind Williams, the
city's enthus1asllc ambassador to the world.
The vivacious and courageous Williams,
who lost her 4112-year battle Wlth breast
cancer on June 25, 2000, helped lure the
Senior Tour event to Newport Beach, and,
dlmost two years later, helped keep it here
during a tumultuous b.me for the event's
betu.nd-the-scenes operations.
As President and Chief Execullve Officer
of the Newport Beach Conference and
V1S1tors Bureau for sue years. Williams
completely transformed the orgaruzation,
positioning the city as a premier destination
m Southern California and a strong
competitor to many larger surrounding
locations.
¥d. when the new promoters of the
Toshiba Seruor Classic were lookmg for
another venue lo host the event. after the
maugural Toshiba Classic al Mesd Verde
COuntry Club in 1995, Williams was among
those ~e~g Newport Beach.
"Rosalind earned a tremendous vision for
what a sigruficant event th.ls could be for
Newport Beach,• said Rush HW
, former Chairman of the Board of
D~rs for tbe Newport Harbor
Area Chamber of Commerce
atld part of the original
leadership group that ushered
in the Toshiba Classic to
Newport Beach.
"l think as Rosalind
talked about that (vision),
no one really understood
the depth of her convictions
or methodology of what
could be achieved, that this
event would make a
worldwide pronouncement
about Newport Beach with
the international broadcasting
of (ESPN) television.
Rosalind understood with her
background what that meant,• Hill
added. '-.
·She was part of the tournament from
the beginning, and with national
broadcasting, she jumped on that right away
and started working with the media. So the
real achievement of putting Newport Beach
on the map, once again through this
tournament. came from Rosalind.•
A USC graduate and 20-year veteran of
the travel industry, Rosalind set up media
tours and introduced television producers to
Newport Beach's visual highlights, like the
coastline and harbor. She invited them to film
early for beauty-shot fillers and her proactive
interaction increased media exposure and
VlSibility for the city on a domestic and
international level.
"I think (Rqsalind) even wiggled in a little
(air time for Newport) the year before when
it was at Mesa Verde,• Hill said. "When you
saw the broadcast of that first Toshiba, the
weather was marginal. There were some
overcast days, a little drizzly iven.
• Qut the televtsiqn footage
throughout the event, when it
wasn't a live broadcast. was
just unbelievable. Talk about
a chamber of commerce
day. You bad the bay, you
had coastal vistas. No one
understood the impact
,and knew ·how to take
advantage of the
opportunity more than
Rosalind. The city will
always be indebted to
her, no doubt about
that.•
With Williams as
bureau chief, the city also
hosted the Olympic Torch
Relay, the Davis Cup, the
men's senior tennis tour and
various alumru groups
associated with the Rose Bowl
game.
•Her dedication, perseverance and
leadership bad us all working together to
make Newport Beach a better city to visit,
talk about and enjoy,• said Mehdi Efteka.ri,
General Manager of the Fow Seasons Hotel
and Chairman of the Conference and VtSitors
Bureau Board of Directors.
She was dedicated to a number of
community, professional and charitable
organizations, and, during her battle with
breast cancer, acted as an activist who
brought hope to many other patients, while
inspiring family members, friends and
associates.
"It will be unpossible to replace her,•
mayor John Noyes said. "She was invaluable
to the ~ty. • It will also be impossible to
replace Rosalind Williams' contribution to the
Toshiba Classic, especially in the dark ages
of May 1997, when not all was well with the
tournament's inner workings.
Bank of Newport
I f timing lS everything.
as some believe, the
Tostubd Senior
Classic is headed for
another $1 million m
charitable proceeds. the heartbeat
of the Seruor PGA Tour event al
Newport Beach Country Club.
Good weather should attract
enough walk-up llcket sales for the
event to get over the milestone
hump again, following last year's
unprecedented single-year Senior
Tour total of $1,011,000 donated to
charity.
And, despite a hnaJ-round
ram out.
"Last year we were fortunate
to raise over a million dollars for
Hoag Hospital and we hope to do
that again this year, (but) it's
going to take weather like today
.
Tour's philanthropic list. best weather."
The professional golf
circuits begin in January.
Before March Madness
and spring training, it is
atop the sporting world's
headlines.
The timing of the
tournament, played in the
year's ninth week, is
favorable, though some
would argue a week or two
later is even better, as 2000
proved (weekend weather
was perlect for several
weeks following the -
final-round cancellation).
The season of golf starts
in the winter with perhaps
greater interest among
aficionados than any other
time of the year, excluding,
possibly, the weekends of the
Masters and U.S. Open.
Richard Dunn
GOLF
Aside from the Super
Bowl, the high-ratings
games slow down from
mid-January to March.
unless you're an avid
NBA Of Ntll. fan, and,
even then, those
audiences don't really
beat up until the playoffs.
"Yeah, so you're anxious to get
playing,• defending Toshiba Senior
Classic champion Allen Doyle said
last April at the Las Vegas Senio~
Classic, referring to the Toshiba
Classic's Week 9 slot. INDEX
Doily Pilot
Prior to the transition from the event's
former managing charity to its cunent one,
ttoag Hospital, WilllamB and Hill often tried
to play the role of moderator in the·
discussions between the club and managing
charity, which ultimately ended in an
acrimonious split.
"She bad been one of the legs of the
Toshiba table that helped bold it up,• said
Dave Wooten, president of the company that
owns Newport Beach Country Club, which
took over the event in 1996 and has hosted 1t
every year since.
But. before the PG.A Tour stepped in to
save the event by bringing in Hoag Hospital
as the new managing charity, there was wide
local belief that the Toshiba Classic was
finished after three years.
"During the transition period (of
tournament management from May to
August in 1997), the best thing Rosalind did
was be such a strong supporter of the
tournament,• Wooten said. "And, as a result,
the community has become a strong
supporter of the tournament ... everybody's
going to miss ber and her involvement. She
was involved from day one, when the first
(Toshiba Classic) came around.·
When the new regime came aboard,
her assistance was needed more than ever.
·Coming off three years when the
tournament wasn't successful (lrom a
charitable standpoint). ~ lot of organizations
did and could have abandoned the event.
But her organization stepped forward,•
Toshiba Classic Tournament Director Jeff
Purser said.
A Newport Beach resident since 1968,
Rosalind Williams is survived by her
husband, Rick John. and two sons, Jeff and
Gregg Williams.
"Rosalind was the source of my strength
and the strength of many others,• her
husband said. :-.bY Richard Dunn
,, to get there,· Tostuba Classic
co-volunteer chairman Hank Adler
said on Jan. 22, the event's media
day, when slues were blue and
short sleeves were required on the
goll course.
Winter isn't the same in Florida
and California as the fest of the
country, so when blizzards and
bone-chilling arctic winds keep
people inside in Cront of the
fireplace, Californians are able to
tee it up virtually every day of the
year.
"It's a golf course a lot of guys
feel they can play well. It's an older
golf course, where the older guys
feel they can go out and be on
equal grounds with younger guys.
And it's early in the year.
Everybody's excited. You just get
through with Florida, and some
guys don't play well on the Florida
swing, so they're anxious to get
. Renwnb9rlng Rosalind . A2
AS
A6
A6
A7
A8
A9
"(Raising $1 million for Hoag)
is not locked in. This is not easy to
do. But if we get five days of today,
we will surpass H pretty easily. And
our goal IS agam to make a million
dollars, wbich'is to date the most
amount of money any Senior Tour
event has raised for charity, and we
do 1.hat with Jake (Rohrer's) 1,200
volunteers.•
Ah. the coastal Southern
California climate. It can ram goll
here. And if Mother Nature
cooperates, expect Toshiba Classic
VI1 to beat last year's charitable
record and remain atop the Senior
"California always has the best
climate in the country, and there
are so many, beautiful golf courses
there," said Senior Tour veteran
Harold Henning, a winner of more
than 50 titles around the world,
including victories in Australia,
New Zealand, Germany, Italy,
Denmark, Switzerland, South
Africa and the United States.
"I can't think of any other state
that's got better golling than
California, You can play golf there
365 days of the year. Where else
are you going to Cio that? Florida,
maybe, but it's so humid there. •
California traditionally has got the
.
to the West Coast and play on
(poa annua) greens."
Weather permitting. it doesn't
, get any better than this on the
Senior PGA Tour.
"Newport Beach Country Club
is just the ideal spot really on the
Senior Tour 1n my opinion,"
townament direction Jeff Purser
said, •rve been to just about all of
them." '
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CITY OF NEWPORT BEACH
oma op nm MAYOR
(9'9) 6"-3004
On behalf of the City Council of Ntwport &ach, I offn-
yqu a warm wekome to our jiM city anJ to the Toshiba
Smior C/4ssie. As you travel throughout Ntwport &ach,
you'll stt tht prUk thtll tach midmt shares in this unique
anJ wonJnfol """11. PleaH taltt part in our world cl.ass
hospit4Jjty, our jiM hotels anJ restaurants, our prosptr0us
_ .... proftssionAls cmt:m anJ harbor, anJ some of tht bttt
~,;.o."'31 shopping anJ mtn"tainmmt artm in tht country.
wt art proud that tht Toshiba Smior Cl.assic has chosm
Newport Bucl,1 Ill its host city for tht seventh straight year.
Toshiba, in conjunclUJn with Newport's own Hoag
Memorial Hospit41 Pmbytman, ma/us this a top stop on
tht Smior Ttlur.
Again, ple11U mjtJJ Newport &ach during Toshib11
Smior Clmsk wuk -just 111 Ntwport Buch rttUimts anti
visitors Jo tA&h 11714 ~ "'6y. P'4n to bring your clubs .,,J
your tame btzck to u1usllfllin11nJ 111ain.
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Doily Pilot
;;
1bur .......
1tl21MC
ICMnlpllll a..lc
•N Mlmber of the 1969 end 197)
United States
Ryder Cup turns
... bmtd Senior Tour's Boul'lCleback
Award In 1992 ... Won two Georgia
State Amateur titles ... Member of the
Georgia Sports Hall of Fame ... age 64.
yle
~·· MMti;IMlll••MI_,-~
the crOwd of for.
mer dUb ptofes.
slonefs to um his
Wrjoo1othe
Senior Toor ...
' .
WM head teedllng
ptO at Des Mo4fles Goff 6 Country
Club, the site of last year's U.S. Senior
Open, between 1980 and 1985 ...
President of Executive Golf .. age 52.
.......... CLU,,
Chlmpk>nshlp ...
A four-time
Metre>politan PGA
Section Player of
the Vear and a
member of Its
Hall of Fame ... •
PGA Oub Pro of the Y•• ln'1990 it
Started at Mission Viejo CC. commUtini, '
from UCLA on a motorcycle with t'lfJ •
three-legged dog. "Beer tan.· ... agt60.
•Def ending Toshiba Classic champion Doyle was a distinguished amateur
who chose to stay close to home; now, he's swimming in Senior Tour riches.
Richard Dunn "I've always been the type of guy who
DAILY PILOT doesn't plan too far in advance," Doyle Sdld
at media day m January for the 2001 Toshlbd
en Allen Doyle amved as Classic at Newport Beach Country Club
the oldest rookie in PGA •At that time I was still an amateur goller I
Tour history at age 47, didn't have much money. Both my guls were
there was a bit of culture shock for getting ready for college. If they had come to
the dnVUlg-range operator from La TOSHIBA me and said, "I want to go here' and 1t was
Grange, Ga., who played most or going to be $.15,000 a year, I was going to
his career as an amateur. redirect them to a $20.000-a-year school.
"I've only done this for about five year!>,• So I thought, worst-casP sccmario, I can tedch
Doyle said of the weekly routine for golfers at my driving rdnge and make up the•
on the PGA, Senior PGA or LPGA tours, difference between what I had and whdt I
which generally includes uruque non-golhng needed. That Wd'> about all I was thinking
perks and hrst-class service everywhere ·1 thought I could pldy a tittle in the
"You come to a place where you get Southeast. We've got d couple of tour events
picked up at the airport and you gel a in Georgia and there were a couple of Nike
courtesy car when you get here and you events in Georgia. The ~looters Tour lund of
almost can't do anything for yourself And. stayed in that pdrt of the rountry, so I WdS
it's a neat thing, but, you know, for a guy Lake 1ust kind of hoping I could do a Little teaching
me ... I think maybe I appreciate it just a LitUe'at my range and keep pldyany and maybe tn
more because of the road I took to gel here." four or five yedrs I could havP my shot at the
Doyle's road Jess traveled to reach the top Semor Tour dnd mdybe, 1ust maybe, get out
of the Seruor PGA Tour is certainly different here.·
than most of his peers. But fanuly values As an old man at 46 on the former Nike
weighed in heavier than trying to qualify for Tour in March 1995, Doyle made an Lmmed.J-
the PGA Tow when he was younger. ate splash, winrung three tournaments.
Doyle, the defending champion of the In 1994, hlS hnal year as an amateur.
Toshiba Seruor Classic, desued to be home Doyle won five titles, mcludmg the Porter
with his wife, K~te, and two daughters as . Cup dnd the Sunnehanna Amateur
they were growing up. ~ h_e had ever mdde 1t Championship.
DON l[A(H I DAILY Pl T
Allen Doyle, and rain-soaked '00 spoils.
through PGA Tour Qualifying School, Doyle In two seasons on the PGA Tour following
knew he'd hardly ever see them while tiVUlg his big year on the Nike Tour, Doyle won
out of a suitcase. That simply wasn't his style. slightly more than $200,000. Then , in 1999,
Grenelefe, Fla., was d Senior Tour Nal.londl
Qualifying Tournament record
As the mid-1990s rolled around, Doyle Doyle became fully exempt on the Senior
decided to give the professional circuit a Tour by earning medalist honors at Q School.
In two full years on the Senior Tour. Doyle,
a member of bQAih the Georgia Sports Hall of
Fame and Georgtd GoU Hall of Fdme, has
won enough to pay for mq,re colll•ge twt1onc, shot, despite being in his mid-40s. In fact. Doyle's 13-under-par 275 dl
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HC::-:::a••fl
111.nd a.-"-. Won 1211nw
on the PGA Taut
with his biggest
VICtOf}' c.oming llt
the 1919 Mast«S
... Named the
Senior Tour's
Comeback Pia-ye<
of the Year 1n 1997 and ~ of
the Vetr In 1991 ... Won INugi..nl
Toshiba Oassk at Mesa Ve<de CC In '95,
shooting 64 in final round . age 61.
r
than he Pver drcdmed possible
la'>I yE>c1r, although the Toshibd Seruor
Classic WdS his solt> VJctory. Doyle was
seventh on the money list at $1 ,505.4 71 ,
posang 17 top-10 hrushes -hflh-best on lour.
In 1 <l99, Doyle won four events dlld hrushed
third on the money hst at $1.911,640.
"Thdt's the big thing for guys like me
ThPy kerp {the Senior Tour) such a closed
shop thdl you hrsl have to get out here,·
Doyl<' '>ct1d, refemnq lo his rww-found nches
on thP 50-and-ovN nrcu1t. which is dlfhcult
lo CTdC k for amdtC'urs becduse of the lifetime
exemptions for career money leaders and
llm1t£•cl playing h<'lds (78 player!> at each
stop, us oppo'>ed 10 144 on the PGA Tour).
"ThNP dre guy'> that aren't playing out
herP thdt were more than Cdpdble of playing
out ht'r<·," he add<'d ·so I didn't want to Jus1
assume• 11 would happen (to me) I played
hctrd. I Wd'> fortun.ite to gel d sponsorship
£>xempl1on to the Nike event m Pensacold
!Fla ) in ·q5 dJ1d ftn1shed high enough there
lo gt>I in the next WC'ek. And then I won And
then .tll of d sudden I WdS exempt oo the
N1k£> and had a good start and hnilbed
second that year ?.n the money Last and then
mov<><I lo the bt~J tour
"So, I gue!>s 11 you re asking am I a Little
surpn-.cd to look back four years later dnd
hdvc• $4 m1U1on m career edmmgs, yeah. I
rrught tw d htUc c,urpnsed •
A d1-.t10gwshed amateur who played on
two Wctlker Cup tectms t1991 dnd '93) and
thret> Vvorlcl Amdteur Cup teams ( 1990. '92
and '44), Doyle wds d serm1mdtist at the 1992
U.S Amdteur Chdlllp1onsh1p. losing to Jusb.n
Leondfd 2 and 1
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D!,8"1aA
DaJIJ.. Pilot Quiz
CAN YOU NAME THESE TOSHIBA VETERANS?
1 2 3 4 5
6 7 8 9 10
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6. Allen Doyle S215,667
7. Tom Kite S166,025
8. Jim Thorpe S 165, 143
9. Tom Jenkins S 157,043
10. Ed Dougherty S 155,811
11.DougTewell S145,347
12. Leonard Thompson S144,593
13. Bobby Walzel S141,540
14. lsao Aoki S137,690
15. Stewart Ginn S 119,448
16. Ray Floyd S 118.067
17.DaveStockton S109,177
18. Bob Eastwood S 109, 177
19. Jose Maria Canizares Sl00,077
20. Vicente Fernandez S99, 585
21. Tom Watson SS0,387
22. Gary McCord S75,620
23. Hale Irwin $65,225
24. Dave Eichelberger $62,348
25. Jim Ahern $58, 158
26. Terry Mauney $56,420
27. Walter Hall $515,846
28. Steve Veriato $55,531
29. Mike McCullough $54,871
30. Graham Marsh $54, 180
30. Gary Player S54, 180
32. John Bland $53,431
33. Christy O'Connor S50,400
34. Tom Wargo , S50,050
35. George Alcher
36. Bruce Summerhays
37. Fred Gibson
38. Hubert Green
39. John Mahaffey
40. John Jacobs
41 . Jack Nicklaus
42. Hugh Baiocchi
43. Terry Dill
44. Bob Duval
45. Andy North
46. Mike Hill
47. Lee Trevino
48. Sammy Rachels
49. Lanny Wadkins
50. Howard Twitty
51 . Doug Johnson
52. Bob Murphy
53. Jim Dent
54. Joe Inman
55. David Graham
56. Jerry McGee
57. David Lundstrom
58. Jim Holtgrieve
59. Jim Albus
60. Tom McGinnis
61 . Bob Charles
62. Dale Douglass
63. Watter Morgan
64. Jim Colbert
65. Larry Ziegler
66. Gibby Gilbert
67. DeWitt Weaver
68. Steve Stull
69. John Schroeder
$49,990
$46,690
$44,820
$39,187
$37,530
$37,490
$30,620
$30,403
$30, 175
$28,740
$28,350
$28,070
$27,970
$26,927
$26,910
$26,469
$25,200
$24,057
$23,870
$22,901
$21,670
$21, 187
$19,754
$19,297
S18,013
S17,475
S16,310
S15,937
$15,820
$13,790
$13, 113
S11,620
• $10, 108
$9,450
$8,610
Larry
Nelson
(left) and
Jlm Albus
(right), two
of the tour's
mainstays.
DAILY PILOT
PHOTOS BY
MARC MAKT1N
70. Mark Hayes
71. Tommy Aaron
72. Bill Holstead
73. Al Geiberger
74. Rex Caldwell
74. Bob Dickson
74. Ted Goin
77. J.C. Snead
78. Bill Brask
79. Harold Henning
80. Jesse Patino
81. Rocky Thompson
82. Tony Peterson
83. Walter Zembriski
84. Frank Conner
85. Orville Moody
86. Kurt Cox
87. Randy Erskine
88. Jimmy Powell
89. Miiier Barber
90. Tom Shaw
91. John Calabria
91. Charles Coody
91. Bobby Heins
91. Chi Chi Rodriguez
95. Jim Sheerin
96. Calvin Peete
97. Dennis Milne
97. Tommy Price
99. Bunky Henry
99. Tony Jacklin
101. Tom Terry
102. Fritz Gambetta
102. Gene Littler
104. Mike Di Buono
1970 Port Dunlcigb Circle, Newport Beach
S8,5S4
S8,428
S7,560
S7.490
S7,280
S7,280
S7,280
S7,014
S6.720
S6, 160
S5,726
S4,844
S4.620
S4.116
S3,612
S3,360
S3,220
S3,080
S2,940
S2,464
S2,408
S2,380
S2,380
S2,380
S2,380 s 1.470 . s 1.456 s 1, 148 s 1, 148
S1,022
Sl,022
S980
S952
S952
S756
Purchase wile under conscruction, huge 7S'xl30' lot. S bedrooms+ office, 4.5 baths, 4100+ sf.
On mosc desirable street. Sale price will correlate to stage of completion.
$1,275,000 to $2,075,000
2421 Bonnie Place, Co.ta Maa
Outstanding location ~n prime cul-de-sac 4 bedrooms, 3 baths, main level bed and bath, French
doors and windows, wood floors., large private lot, many appealing f carurcs.
$699,000
LARAINE SHAW
'6/,,(.ll~'?l'laN .i 'ff;;)(('~
(949) 219-2413
LshawRE.@aol.eom
\ __
_Oo __ i~.:__P_ilo_t ____ ...:..._ _____________________ • ______________ ~..ra._.__ ________________________________ F_ridoy--L:.'-Febr.;.._oo_ry.__23~,_2_00_1_A~7
.... ~. •ha ·-Yoe.d ,.
Comib«t ,..,.,
of the YNr Mier
being the !Mdlng
~winner
and Player of the
Year on the circuit In 1995 and 1996
... Also was the tour's Rookie of the
Year in 1991 ... Won Toshlbe Senior
Classk In '96 by two strokes, the
largest in event history ... age 59.
TOBHlllA
==:.. ~ofGolf dtfe In 1tll .., ...
ttw. PGA Tour
tldei lndude the 1971~ wt.. he JWdied
the last fOllr holes
to edge.Jack
Nicklaus and
Johnny Miiier ... Has captured fiYe
officlal Senior PGA Tour tttfes. the last
coming at the 1996 du Maurier
Champions In t:anada ... age 63.
H•won12 tlrNSonthl
Senior P'CiA Tour
whh hit IMt two
winsc~at -
The Home Depot lrwtutlonal
(1997-1998) •.. Hes
been among the
top-31 money
winners every
year he's been on
the Senior Tour ...
Led the tour In driving distance from
1989-94 ... Grew up In Augusu, Ga.,
and served as a caddie at Augusta
National Golf Club .. age 61
\Alonthetltt V.V ... One
0.-ln~ Ky~ for his lone
Senior PGA Tour
win ... Led tour in
driv)ng disUnc.e in
'96 with an evw-
age of 287.2 yard~-drive ...
A 1976 graduate
of U. of Texas Law
School and taught
tax law at Texas A&M fOf three years
before r~uming his golf career ... Had
malignant tumor near right ear
removed 1n '91 .. age 61.
on 2000
•Recap of 2000 Tos hiba Classic included the King,
Arnold Palmer, wet weather and another close finish.
under 136, while 1Witty 1111Ssed a
long birdie attempt at 18
·1 saw H oward's putt at 18. and I
thought he made 1t. But, Like the
wedther, I have no control over it.·
Richard Dunn
DAILY PILOT
NEWPORT BEACH -
Even though inclement
weather canceled the
final round of the 2000 -
Toshiba Senior Classic, TOSHIBA
the Senior PGA Tour event was
buzzing with the arrival of the King.
For the first time in his legendary
career, Arnold Palmer played com-
petitive golf in Orange County,
making his debut m the Toshiba
Classic at Newport Beach Country
Club.
Palmer's Toshiba pro-am round
drew a larger gallery than most
marquee names m the first round,
and his two regular rounds were
accompanied by nothmg less than
an army of followers.
·People get mto the (Toshiba
Seruor Classic),• tour veteran John
Jacobs said at the Las Vegas Senior
Classic in April. •Arnold Palmer's
·there (last) year (for the first time)
and it's like Jesus Christ showed up
to tease the fans.·
Palmer, however, had no miracles
and his presence couldn't stop a
late-winter storm from crashing
down on Newport Beach before
Sunday as Saturday's club.house
leader, Allen Doyle, was decldred
the champion of the rain-shortened,
36-hole event.
Close hnishes are typical for the
Toshiba Classic, and last yedr's tour-
nament was no different as Doyle
edged Howard 1Witty by one strok e
With the exception of Jun Colbert\
two-stroke victory in 1996, every
wirmer in the event's six-year histo-
ry has won by one stroke, including
memorable playoffs in 1997 (Bob
Murphy) and 1999 (Gary McCord).
Doyle's victory was his only
Senior Tour title last year, the fifth of
his brief career.
After an openmg-round 69,
Doyle carded a roller c0c1ster 67 on
Saturday in sometimes ramy condi-
tions. Stdrting off hot m the second
round. Doyle made btrdJes on three
of the first four holes, then made
three bogeys on the next four holes
as heavy ram began to fall.
H e rallied, though, with five
birdies on the fmal eight holes,
mcluding a clutch bm:lie at t 7 to I.le
for the lead and a go-ahead b1Idle al
18.
"It was an odd round,• Doyle
said after the second round ldst year,
addmg that he was aware of the
possibility of a rain-shortened tour-
nament when he arrived at the 18th
hole lied Wlth 1Witty and Jim Thor-
pe.
"I was very conscious of (d possi-
ble cancellation),• said Doyle,
whose btrdie at 18 put him at six-
1Witty rrussed finishing in a tie at
sue-under with Doyle by less than dn
inch, when his 15-foot putt from the
fnnge at 18 dldn't fall.
Had Twitty made birdie, there
would have been a playoff Sunday
between him and Doyle for the
Toshibd title on one of the par-3
holes.
Trailing Doyle by one stroke as
he got lo the 18th hole 111 the second
round, Twitty said it was in the back
of his nund that a birdie was neces-
sary.
"I hit a real good putt on 18,"
Twltty said. •It had a good chance.
When you see 1t raining, you think
you nught sbll have d chance, but
the course was pretty wet (Sun-
ddy) .•
Twltty's putt burned the nght
edge of the cup as 1t slid past. One
mch, perhaps. cost him a shot at a
playoff.
• 1t was a lot less than an mch, •
said Twitty, who settled for a sec-
ond-place tie and earned $104,000.
his highest fuush in two years on the
Senior Tour, while Doyle won
$195,000.
·11 happens, but it doesn't hap-
pen often,· Doyle said, referring to
his 36-hole win. "I'm thrilled to win
under any circumstances."
MARC MARTIN I OAl.Y PILOT
Arnold Palmer m ade his debut on the Newport Beach CC course.
No pldyers teed off Sunddy Th£•
c>vent Wd'> oPlayNI dbout 45 nun-
utes, befor<.' Senior PGA Tour ofhnaJ
Orure Sudderth dnnounred to thP
pldy(•r., lhdt the fmdl rouncl would
be CdnrelNJ DoylP '>did he Wd'>
.1nformNI ol the• rcincellahon dboul
!Od.m
"The golt rourc,<• Wd'> totally
unpldydble, .ind thdt\ whdt made
our clc>c1swn," Sudderth Sd1d.
"ThrN• holi>s WC'r<' totally
unpl.iydble /Suncldyl. rncludinq No.
18, dnd (N<>wport BPdC'h Country
Cluh) '>UJ><>rtnlt•ndcnl (Ron Hern'-
chctJ Sdld he wouldn't have been
dble to get 1t playdble •
l>oyle ~did when he woke up
Sunddy dnd hedrd the weather
r£>port, •you hdd d pretty good idea
(d Cdnc<>lldllonJ rrught happen •
11 Wd~ the first tune m Toshiba
Cla!>s1c h1!>tory thdt a round, fmal or
otherwise. WdS canceled.
For three straight yedrs, the
Senior Tour stop at Newport Beach
hdd been, in a sense, walk.mg
between the rdmdrops with mcredl-
blc hru~hes. But, last yecu, Sunday
!Jghtrung stnick.
Franl{lin Financial
Specializ ing in
sales & leasing
of homes in
Newpo..-t B each1
Col'"ona del Maro &
ewpo...+ Coast
FRANKLIN R6AL,-Y
· 3250 c. wast Hw~.
C<,.,..o.,a D el Mar-, G..A 92625
REAL ESTATE FINANCING
Low interest rates, higher conforming limits
means you could save money by refinancing nowl
We've been serving the
community for over 40 years.
Give us a call today
949·721-0905
949/640-7000 ext. 306
949/500-0870 sba'4:ser226@gol.com
3242 E. Coast Hwy.,
Corona Dal Mar, CA 92625
UiiiliW., fill ,_ ft/ Oililallll Dif W!lll ft/~ E'llfllit ........... ,.,.... , .. fanlia D• I I d
Liicam , .... . . ...
A8 Friday, February 23, 2001
~::'=1 ......,_.20
~winners lllt-..on ...
Lone PGA Tour
triumph CMne st
the 1995 Deposit
Guaranty C1tisic
.t age<4? ... Was
named as the
PGA of America's
Club Professional
lllY
of the Year In 1985 after winning
the National Club Professional
Championship that same season ..
Serious model tram enthusiast age 53
-
H • .,,.,,
... on the 5-1lor PGA Tour
"'**""" wtthChwlel ~forthrM more Liberty
Mutual IAgeflds
of Gott tttles ..
Biggest Senior Tour victory came
at the 1986 U.S.
Senior Open at
Scioto ... Won three PGA Tour titles
and played on the 1969 U.S. Ryder
Cup team ... Was vke president of the
PGA in 1972 turns 65 on March 5.
... .. .. •· I ' , .
a=s~~ .....
Senior Tour ... .,.,fmnld
Co.stCJaK ,n
Victoty~
whlle son David
won The Players
Championship,
making them UWt
first father-son
duo to earn tour titles on the same
weekend ... Was a club pro in northern
Florida ... Played colleglate golf at
Florida St. with Hubert Green .. age 54
,.,. ...
y v Senior"" ToUrttdl•the
1997 lell Attantic
Cles6l(and
followed It up
wfth•t«ond
vktOty late in the
same year st the
Raley's Gold Rush
Classk ... Won
three times on
the PGA Tour and
Doily Pilot _
led the circuit In sand saves In 1980 ...
Played In the old Crosby Southern ,
Pro-Am at Newport Beach in the ·7~
before making PGA Tour ... age SS.
Shop until you drop
• For players' wives who love to
shop while pop does his thing,
Newport Beach is d sLicc of heaven.
Richard Dunn
0AJLY PILOT
NEWPORT HcAC'l I Tlw iOf ctl
shopplllg IS so good tor th<•
players' w1ves-al thP To'>h1btt
Senior Cldss1c, most VC'ter,in-. on
the Senior PGA Tour wouldn't TOSHIBA
ddr<' mJSS lhe stop
When it comes to -.<'rvwt•<, and cxtrds,
players c1nd lhe1r -.pour;e., <H<' q1ven carte
blanche everywhere on tour Every stop 1s
cWferent. but edch ur;11<tlly olfNs d fuU
agenda ot interesting aclJv1l1Ps dunng
tOUrndmenl week for thC' WlV('S
Companng the dmemll("> cmd S(>C'Cldl
pdCkdges dt edch tournc1nwnt 1-. lc1rgely
bdsed on mdlvidual ldsl<>. cmd. ds most
pldyers dgree, there dr<' no bad <,lop'> on the
Sf>n1or Tour
All lournarnenh cHfl qrc1nouo, hosh who
roll out lhc> rPcl curpC'I , c1nf1 wh1lt• '>ome do it
better lhrm others. <'d«h <'v<•nl ,., '>JWnr1l m
IL'> own way
Tc1kC' the Tosh1bc1 C'ld<,<.1c
It\ c1 bredd·dnd-huttPr -.top on thP SC'n1or
Tour with its hefty pur'>P 'l\1 4 11111l1on this
Y''dl, but it hd'> c1l<.o hec onH• ,1 rn<l1n<.tdy on
the• tour
In 1ls S('VPnth yec1r. thl' To'>hll>d Cl<t'>'>IC 1s
c1 tournc1ment pldyer., c dn b.ink on every late
winlPr, or nng up cJn Pnorn1011<, '>hopping bill
from Ft1sh1on lslcmd 01 South ( '1ltlc,l PIM.a or
Coronc1 dt>I Mc1r Plc11r1 01 MPt io Point or ..
wC'll. you ge>l the point
Sun'. thC' host o;1lc'. Nc•wport Bc•c1ch
Country \lub. 1r; c1 trr1d1t11in.t1 qoll l<1yout <1ncl
BOUY DESIGN
considered by many on the tour a "perfect
seniors golf course.• And the convenience. of
nearby John Wa}'lle Airport and posh hotels
mdke it desirable for the players who prefer
a road less traveled.
Furthermore, in Newport Beach, there
LS, of course, the beach. There's mild,
yedr-round weather, the largest
recreation-only harbor in the United States
and some of the world's finest drt gallenes
1ust south m Laguna Beach.
A few Big Bertha drives north of Newport
Beach Country Club is lbe Upper Newport
Bdy, home of Olympic kayakers and
canoeists and the largest bird estuary
between Santa Barbara and Mexico.
Newport Beach also has a reputabon lor
fine dining, luxury yachts and gorgeous
sunsets
So. for pldyers' wives and fam1ly
member'>, Newport Beach offers a little bit of
everytlung And, for shoppers, cl lttlle shce of
heaven
Th<1t's why tour wives can get dntsy c1bout
returning to Newport, which boasts of
mynad upscdle shopping excursions,
catenng lo dn drrluent crowd in which
high-end retdilcrs are accustomed lo
servmg.
Accorchng lo former back-to·bdc'k Senior
Tour Player of the Year Dave Stockton, the
Toshiba C ldss1c m Newport Bedch ts circled
on the fdm1ly calendar as soon as the tour
schedule 1s rcledsed.
"The golf course and the tournament I'd
rdte d 10, but the shopping's probably a
one," Stockton Sdid, refemng to t1 to-to-I
'-Cdle, In which 10 ts best and one is wori.l.
and to the customary empty pocketbook by
toumdment week's end.
"You S~('. there's a Jot of pressure on you
when you tee olf lll that tournament,
~<[;)~~
S 1cp & Sculpt 1~ one of the nl<N effective "'aY' to bum fat while 1ooi.ng mu1.-
clc. The cla.'~ \tan.\ "'1th a 5-1! minute warm-up. folowed b) 40 mmulell of
\tL'(lping ~) nunutes of ClnJll lr.IJnlOg 00 lllJChioo. aOO fim!Jung up With
J~1mmJ.1, and \lrelchmg
S culpl Circuit " mtenal tr.uning cumb1111ng free \\C1gh1 and cnrd10
L'JU1pn-cn1. h 'llirt.' "''th a \\arm up and lim\he\ with a 'tetch.
L .itin Rhythm incorporate\ "11..a. Cha-cha and rn.-rengue in a fun and
mfoonal card10-...e,wn We \\111 lticu' on rhythm. poi<;c and \tyling to cnhanct your grace and confidence on any
dance floor Smgle\-11(1 PJllncnng
P1~Ba.<icd \ti1 .... uo. \lll:ngthcn' the mu..c~ .... 1u1e lengthliling and toning The focu,~ 1s on the alxJomen.
pelVI\ and !al BJ) wmhi.mng breathing. concenrra11on and ~mment. you'll ~e Oe~1bility, range of ITlCllOO
anJ body a"'are~' All lc\cl~ wekOITk!.
s trelLh .... ill 111cn:.t-.c llc~1h1l11y. r.mgc of moti6n and hody awarenc"'· All level\ \\Clcome.
Stnde Rttc 1' for "'alkcl\ of all le\cl' and dc,\1gned as a low ilTl(XJCt cardio workout It's a blast'
Tap'' J gn:a1 .... ay tu h:i\c lun tu mu'ic "'h1le leanung to coordinate movement and \lep\.
Lyrical JJ111' a ~·ginmng lc\cl d.tncc cla\.' lh:!l 1~ great for toning. ~dung. and learning to move to fun mu~ic
Hp Hop" lur our )Cltln),'l'f danlc Lll1\\J 1ntere<;!Cd m learning the latN MTV
\l)'le IOO\l°'
• Dance cla\\C) requm: • m101mum of four clients: 1f a chm doe not
con\lstently have four chenh. 1t will !)(cancelled.
• Payment due upon \Igo-up
• Plea~ ~ne out 24 hour can«llauoa policy There will be 1 full
elm fee to 1nyone who c1DCel\ less than 24 hou~ pnor 10 a cl .
• Cll\~\ that requ1rt • rrc-~1ah up "''II ft()( be held "'lthout Ihm d1tnts sigocd-up prior 10 ti
because 1f you don't finish in the top two or
three, you're going to lose money for the
week. There's not a single wile that isn't
going to have her husband pldy in Newport
Beach.•
Hale lrwm, the Sen1or Tour's dll-t.une
leading money wmner and also a former
back-to-back Player of the Year, likes the
fact that his wife, Sally, will dehrutely not get
bored here
"It's a popular place to go, not JUSt for
myself, but for my famlly, • said lfWln, who
won the 1998 Toshibd Senior Classic, after d
course-record 62 m the final round to come
from five strokes bdck and leapfrog past a
handful of players, d round that included the
Famous Bunker Rak<> c1t 17. which stopped
his ball from rolhng m the water, allowing
hun to get up and down to save par
"My wife cdn shop dnd there are a lot of
activities she can do there We en1oy that
part of the world, the Newport area. It's
been great. I also have some business
associates in the drea, <>o for me it's an
all-around good stop.·
Among the activities for the wives dunng
Toshiba week is a shuttle bus to South Coast
Plaza, "the grandest mall on the lour,"
according to Sports Illustrated.
Jn the same magazine article, Led
Thompson. the wue of Seruor Tour player
Leonard Thompson, said "caU me a
professional shopper,· as she walked toward.
Nordstrom department store at South Coast
Plaza. "I know this place by heart." There
were only three shopping ddys lefl until the
tour hit the road again.
Whether it's a fancy-schmancy bouttque
or trendy clothing store, tour wives with
champagne tastes can visit high society
while at the Toshiba Classic.
DON LEACH I DAILY !~I '
Who'll ever forge t Bob Murphy's winning
80-foot putt on the ninth extra hole in 1997.
r.11,11rl.1v 1111 'i 1\ ','J• 'i•1'"''L1,; Tt•:n·.•L1v FrrddV S,lfi ird,iy r:, .•i·I h' --------
7.00-830am 8:00-900em 7 Q0.8:30 am 700-SOOam 7 00.8·30 am 8 00.9 00 am
Step & Sculpt Master Stretch Step & Sculpt Allegro C1<curt Step & Sculpt Master Stretch
Alexis Vi kt or AlexlS Pippt Alexis V1k10<
8:30· 10:00 am 9:30·10.30 am 8:30-10:00 am 8:30-9:30 am 8:30-10:00 am 9:30-10:30 am
Step & Sculpt Allegro Circuit Step & Sculpt Pilates Mat Step & Sculpt P1lates Mat
Susan P1ppi Susan Knsll Susan Pippi
10.00-11 00 am 1030-11.30am 10 00.11.00 am 9.30-10 30 am 10.00.11.00 am 11:00.12~ 10:00.11 :30 am
Allegro Lattn Rhythm Allegro Allegro Allegro \llzla-. Step & Sculpt
Darci Mary Darci Kr1stl Dara Alexis
12:00.1 :00 pm 12:00.1:00 pm
Yoga H" Hop
~
4 00-5 00 pm 4 00-5 00 pm 4 00-5 00 pm
Sculpt Circurt Childrens Balet Sculpt C.rrut
Darci DatCl
5:()0.6 00 pm 5:()().8;00 pm 5:()0.6:00 pm
Teen Tap Allegro Allegro (age 12+)
Ctw;t Spnng Spnng
6 3(). 7:30 pm 8:3().7:30 pm II 00-7 00 pm
Pilate8 Mat Lyrical Jazz Muter Slrft:fl
139 Vlldcif
848-722·
r
Daily Pilot
•Tournament has Hollywood history on its side, as well as a
dark age and a great comeback; it's like a Walter Mitty story.
Rktulrd Dunn
DAILY PILOT
NEWPORT BEACH -
If you judged the merits
of the Toshiba Senior
Classic on go~ alone, 1t TOSHIBA would rank high on the .....__ ___ _
Seruor PGA Tour list of exating fin-
ishes and classic Sunddys
As a whole, taking toumdment
operations and history into consider-
ation, the Toshiba Classic would
also stand as one of the most mter-
esting and eclectic stops on tour
with a Hollywood srnpt and bizarre,
yet incredible, economic turn-
around.
Off the goll course, the toumd-
ment has riswi from near ruins to the
tour's crown jewel. Once on the
brink of destruction, the Toshiba
Classic has become the single-
greatest philanthropic event on the
Senior PGA Tour
Not a bad statement for a tourna-
ment once filled with lawswts, d
bankruptcy, a public controversy
over a $25,000 food and beverage
mvo1ce and no money for chanty
"It's a pretty phenomenal story,·
former Senior PGA Tour official Tm1
Crosby said m Apnl "ll's the old
Walter Mitty type thing •
Crosby, now an ofhc1al for the
PGA Tour, was the Sc>nior Tour'!>
point man m May 1<)97, when the
ownershlp group of NC'wport Beach
'·
Country Club refused to continue
hosting the Toshiba Classic as long
as the managing chanty remained
intact.
That was a major problem for the
Seruor Tour, which Vlewed the goll
course and surrounding area ds an
ideal location for its tournament.
An acnmoruous split between the
country club and the tournament
operator, International Sports Mar·
keting. left the future of the Toshiba
Classic m doubt.
But Crosby intervened and
phoned his old buddies from the
Taco Bell Newport Classic Pro-Am,
Hdnk Adler and Jake Rohrer. and
Within weeks a new managmg char-
ity was in place to save the touma·
ment Hoag I losp1ldl.
In three years dS tournament
operator, volunteers of the 552 Club,
the hosp1tdl's fund-ra1smg group,
have reached record proportions in
chdntable glVing. lopping the $1-
million mark last year lo become the
Seruor Tour's first stop to achieve the
nulestone
Like a roller coastc>r with a senes
of hard-to-believe, behind-the-
scenes events. the toumdffient 1s a
classic rags-to-riches story and 1s
now considered a possible Senior
Tour stop for decade<> to come
·I know a few years ago they had
some problems, bul whoever's come
m and grabbed the bull by the horns
has done a helluva JOb I'd hdve to
say.• Allen Doyle said at the Las
Vegas Seruor Classic m Apnl, sue
weeks after winrung the 2000 Toshi·
ba Classic. ·wasn't 1t in trouble at
one time? O r they were losing the
event? And a few years later they're
giving a million bucks to charity.
That's a pretty good turnaround •
To fully appreciate and under-
stand the deep-rooted history of the
Toshiba C lassic. one must tum back
to the wtld and crazy 1970s and the
former C rosby Southern Pro-Am
Clambake in Newport Beach. or
•Little Crosby," which was ndJTled
after Hollywood legend Bmg Cros·
by .
It started mnocenUy as d rruru·
lour event, a phin' for golfers to
come who d1dn't n1dke the cut at the
famous Crosby Ni!llonal Pro-Am at
Pebble Beach
l\vo Newport Oe>ach lttdn!> and
H oilg supporters, Marshall Duffield
and Charley He'>te>r started the
Crosby Southern Pro-Am m Jdnuary
197 5 as a benefit for -1:1oag. They
had only one month to put thE' uiau-
gurdl pro-dJll logethN, held dt Irvine
C'OdSl Country Club (now Newport
Bedch). The 11.tSl loumament was a
success w1th 72 amateurs and Fred
MdcMurray as a celt'hnty player
Duffield, a former USC football
star dlld college fraterruty brother of
John Wayne (then Mdtlon Mom-
son), teed II up W1lh Bmg Crosby
and other • lollywood types for sev·
era! years. And, tor a long l.lme,
Duffield urged Crosby during 19th-
hole d1Scuss10ns to bnng a Sdlellite
tr.=. C rt,,.._ .,._,_.,,_., ..._ ... ,....
Clllllc -tht .. dnw -HM ...... """"-~ . l"MIOnt ••• OwN
22 PGA Tour tttlet
... IS onlY Dll)W to Win a !'GA TOUt
and s.nror Tour event In same tHSOn (1 992) ... ~
won four majon: Two PGA
Championships, one Masters and one
U.S. ~n .. ~e 51.
event to Newport Beach for the pros
who were w1thout a place to play
when they got cut at Pebble Beach
One toasty day, Crosby sa1d yes
and Newport Beach changed forev-
er With the Crosby Southern Pro·
Am, presented by Hoag H ospital's
552 Club. whlch Duffield helped
start.
The goU tournament would last
for 23 years and the managing char·
tty, Hoag, would Idler merge With
the Toshiba Seruor Classic, which 1i.
now No. 1 on the Seruor PGA Tour'i.
chantable-giving chart.
For a bit of irony, veterdn golfer
John Jacobs, whose huanous lhe-
atncs m the 1999 Toshiba CldssK
playoff with eventual chdmp10n
Gary M cCord w1U forever be
remembered m Newport Bc>dch goll
lore. appeared in more Crosby
Southern Pro-Am event!> (later
called the Newport Classic) thdn
any other profess1ondl (131
In thE' unforgettable ·qq Toshil>c1
playoff, Jacobs dppeared to hdvt•
clmched 11 on the fttSt playoff hole
But a mdg1cal performance by thE>
showman McCord stole lhe ledd
role.
Jacobo:; chipped m for edgle from
l!O feet and turned the 18th green
into a circus act, gomg from twmkle-
toes steps to a Chi Chi Rodngue1
sword dance. then falling backwdrd
onto the turf
But McCord kt>pt the playoff
dltve with d stunning 18-foot eagle
pull dnd the best show on the Senior
PGA Tour for 1999, wtuch stdrted as
Friday, Febrvory 23, 2001 A9
E:L. ....
C..11'1ta .... °' ........ ...... '" .. .... ...... , . ..,..,~
lltthec;,....., ~ lntett!N9t
~lltnge ... WOn
11 tlmies on the
PGATour;the
bJggtst coming et ~ ,
the '66 PGA Champk>mhlp ... ~
fl11t tu~ score In PGA TOYr hlstOfY,
a 59, tn route to '77 Danny Thomas-
Memphls Cluslc title ~e 63
a four-man playoff. was underway
In 1998. Hale lrwm shot a course-
record 62 on Sunday to come from
hve strokes back and leapfrog past
11 players on the leaderboard, wm-
rung rruroculously whtle tnggenng
dnother Pldyer of the Year season.
clamung tus first of seven tourna-
ment bUe!>
lrwln wai. helped .it 17 by the
Famous Bunker Rake, which
stopped his bdll from rolling into a
lak e allowing hun to get up and
down for par on his w11y tO d memo-
rable course-record f1n.1sh
In 1997, Bob Murphy defeated
Jay Sigel m a tour-record rune-hole
playoff With an BO-loot bttdte putt at
17, which chugged its way up a dil-
f1cult, two-tiered green The rune-
hole record would later be broken
Jim Colbert won the 1996 Toshi-
ba Classic by two strokes, the
largec,t margin of Vlctory m tourna-
ment history dnd George Archer
capturt>d the inaugural Toshiba
Clas'>tC dl Mesa Verde Country C lub
LO ]qq5
La'>I year. the hnal round was
rdrned out and Doyle was dedared
the winner, talung home $195.000 nw .2000 Cld!>SIC also featured
Arnold Pdlmer for the hrst ume. The
70-yr>dr-old legend played tus hrst
compet1Ltve rounds of golf m
Orange County
Doyle. a former dnvmg-rangP
pro with an unusual oacksWing.
becamE' the slXth cWferent champt·
~n-m the event's SlX·year history
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est level ji1st above the sand lVith n1raparo11nd
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Oceanfront with Mediterran ean a rchitutllre
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-~~...__~__.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~·'~-'--~~~_:_~~-·-J----------.;.._-----:---------Do--.i~-P_ilo_t AIO Friday, February 23, 2001 · :Im:-I
~-..s..w .,.,..,,,
l'l*'9r wtnnen lilt~ fot 1he ftnt time ... l1ed
fot second et 1999 NatlONI
~lfyfng TourNment ... A mainstay
on Australasian and Japan PGA tours
for ye.In".~ restoring antiques
and cars ... age 51 .
T08MIU
=----............. ..., .... .,
It maNr winners
1he ... three
......... WlnNt of Tl leffry PGA
Senion
Championship on EuropNn Seniors
Tour ... Woft(ed In sales for an
appllance distributor prior to pro golf career ... age 53. ·
---c • • or111a swmg
• It's now a three-swing circu s
for the Senior PGA Tour, and it
all begins in Newport Beach .
Richard Dunn
DAILY PILOT
NEWPORT BEACH -Now that the West
Coast Swing has company, the Toshiba
Senior Classic can finally stop dancing
alone. For the first time in seven years, the
Senior PGA Tour event at Newport Beach
Country Club will not be an island on the
schedule.
While the Toshiba Classic has enjoyed
tremendous success on and off the golf
course in recent years, it has always asked
.. "pla.yers to travel out here for a single
event,· tournament director Jeff Purser said.
Now, with the move of the SBC Senior
Classic from October to March and the addi-
tion of the Siebel Classic in San Jose, the
Toshiba Senior Classic will be the first of
three Senior Tour stops in California.
"Our playing fields have always been
strong. but we definitely anticipate them
getting even better." Purser said.
ln six previous years, the only PGA Tour-
sanctioned tournament in Orange County
has never been followed by another West
Coast stop, let alone two in the same state.
Newport Beach, then back to St. Augustine,
Fla.
Player recruiting and media coverage
should increase with the addition of two oth-
er Senior Tour events in California, after
Toshiba Classic VII Feb. 26 through March 4.
This year, the Toshiba Classic will once
again occupy week nine of the calendar, but
it will be followed by the SBC Senior Classic
at Wilshire Country Club in Los Angeles and
the new Senior Tour stop in San Jose, the
Siebel Classic at the Jack Nicklaus-designed
Coyote Creek Golf Club.
"The biggest advantage should be with
player recruitment because we'll be able to
develop some synergy with the other
events,• Purser said.
One thing's for almost certain: Nicklaus
isn't playing in the Toshiba Classit.
Nicklaus has never played in the Toshiba
Classic -the tournament is not a major and
he did not design the golf course -and prob-
ably never will.
"But I'll probably play San Jose, because
that's a course I built," Nicklaus said in
Dec.e.mber.
Toshiba Senior Classic officials also
expect the new West Coast triad of tourna-
ments to experience a rise in stature, similar
to the Senior PGA Tour's Florida sWing every
January and February.
uThis new schedule is a boost not just for
the Toshiba Senior Classic, but for the other
two events. as well," Purser said. "We should
Last year, the Toshiba Classic was
wedged b~tween events in Sarasota, Fla.,
and Puebla, Mexico. In 1999, members of the
Senior Tour traveled from Naples, Fla., to be able to generate some momentum that DON l.fACH / DAILY PILOT
attracts both players and fans." Hale Irwin's course-record 62 on the final day won the 1998 Toshiba championship.
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-Da__,;.ily_P_ilo_t ____________________________________ ~~--------------------------------1..:..-----'-~---~ll =-= Friday, February 23, 2001
RS: ~-..... "°"'* .... blldl to dllfn
T09MllU
....,__.on
draalt In 1117 and
..... Oelmtd
1runo·.~ 0Mlkln 1~ ..• Won 1999
MMtef(Md
20 tides on PGA Tour, hlghllohted by
WM U.S. Opens (1974, 1979, 1990) ...
Won 1991 Toshlbli with course-record
62 In flnal round ... • SS.
Chlmplonshlp ...
s.nk mem«able
90-foot eagle dllp
on flrst playoff hole In 1999 Toshlbli ...
Was first Amerk.an to lead the ~an
Tour's Order of Merit In 1984 ... turns
56 on March 18.
$1 million ••• and rising
•The Senior PGA Tour's $1-rnillion stop.
Rk:twlrd Dunn
DAILY PILOT
NEWPORT BEACH -Despite the can-
cellation of the final round of the 2000
Toshiba Senior Classic at Newport Beach
Country Club, Hoag Hospital, the man-TOSHIBA
aging charity of the Seruor PGA Tour ..-:..=..=..;;...:.:=.:
event, came out a record-setting winner.
Charitable proceeds from the tournament
eclipsed the $1-million mark shattenng the Seruor
Tour record for the largest donation in a single year.
"Even this weather could not put a damper on
the charitable mission of the Toshiba Senior Clas-
sic,• tournament co-chauman Jake Rohrer. a long-
time Hoag volunteer, said last year, when Allen
Doyle was declared the champion of a ram-short-
ened, 36-hole event
The Toshiba Classic became the hrst tournament
in the 21-year history of the Seruor Tour to surpass
$1 million in charitable contnbubons, topped the
previous tour record of $938,000 set in 1999 by the
Coldwell Banker Burnet Classic, played at Bunker
Hills Goll Club in Coon Rapids, ~1lnn .. outside Min-
neapolis. ·u we had good weather. I thlnk we really
would've set the bdr h.tgh for the future.· added
Rohrer, who was largely responsible for operating
the hospital's mini-tour event, the Taco Bell New-
port Classic Pro-Am. before the Senior Tour asked
Hoag to take over as mdnagmg chant)• the then-
struggling Tosh.Iba event m May 1997.
"We are ecstatic to armounce that we have mdde
a million dollars for charity.· Toshiba co-chaumdn
Hank Adler added
1n the final tally. the 2000 Toshiba Classic genPr-
ated $1,011 ,000, leading the way ui d year the
entire Senior PGA Tour established a chantable
record of $11,587,706 from its 45 events. The 2000
chantable sum for the Seruor Tour topped the pre-
vious standard by nearly $400,000.
"It's satisfying to play such an important role m
the Senior Tour's nationwide effort to make a ctiffer-
ence, • Adler said. "We've seen first hand how
mea!lingful the charitable efforts are m Orange
County, and it's rewarding to see such a substantial
cumulative effect from all the Seruor Tour events
"From the moment Hoag Hospital got mvol~ed
with this tournament, we've had our sights set on
becoming the most philanthropic event on the
Seruor Tour.•
In three years smce Hoag look over as managmg
operator of the event, it has raised more than $2.5
million for chanty.
Of the 2000 proceeds, $900,000 will be distnb-
uted to the Hoag Cancer Center, Hoag Heart Insti-
tute. Hoag Orthopedic Services and Hoag Women's
Health Servlces Several other chanlles also
received funds
"Our sponsors have supported us for three years
in a manner that lS unparalleled on tour.· tourna-
ment director Jeff Purser said
Last year. alter Chamber of Commerce weather
most of the week for the pro-ams and a ftrst-round
tournament-record crowd on Fnday (an estimated
15,000). because of the Newport Beach debut of
Arnold Palmer, the event had a less-than-ideal
turnout at the gate Saturday because of ram and
Sunday's ftnal round was completely washed out.
"Our heartiest congratulauons to the staff and
hundreds of volunteers who helped the Tosh.Iba
Senior ClasstC reach this year's h.tstonc milestone,·
PGA Tour Comnuss1oncr Ttm Fmchem scUd "Wlule
the dolldf amount 1tseU 1s very unpressive, the ben-
efits and servirPs thdt lhls money will provide to the
people of Ordnge County and surrounding areas
are even morE' c;rgmlrrant •
Ne..,port's Favorite
Waterfront
Restaurant
• c:.9-Awlnnlrflltt
PGAlburtldll ............... =~ et P9bble hlch ...
Wws PGA Tour's
IHdlng money wtnne< In 1981
and 1989 and was first In tour hlstOfY
to reach S6-• S7·, SS. and S9-mllllon martts In career earnings ... captain of
U.S. Ryder Cup team In 1997 ... age 51
MA~( MARnN I OAJlY Pll.Ol
G ary McCord looks it over on the greens of Newport Beach Country Club.
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. .
2001
TOSHIBA
SENIOR CIASSIC
I
' I
T H E
LEGEND NEWPORT BEACH
CD GRANDSTANDS
VOLUNTEERS '01
Chairmen
Hank Adler
Jake Rohrer
Volunteer Services
.. y BrldJch Voluntl'<'r Management
P4tte Cuneo Volunt..er Management
John Dlmarto -Voluntec!r Management
9on Stnger Volunte<>r Unilonns
,.usta Vll&IJ -VoluntM>r Hospitality
C 0 U N T Jl Y C L U 8
CJ First Aid
IDJ Restoorns
m Concessions
Spo~r Services
Dean Gale -Credential Venl1catJon
Jlldde Bou&ey -Sponsor Services
Shella lbomMD -Will Call
Profeuional PJ.yer Services
Mary Boyle -Transportation
Becky Dahl -ProfesswnaJ H06pitahty and
Registration
BW Dahl -Pro Hospltahty and Regi.strallon
C.yle Morrow -Professional & Family
Outings
Stephen Baum -Ma.ll and Package
Distribution
Pro-Am Services
Courtney Emery -Pro-Ams
BW Plerpolnt -Pro-Ams
Bruce Olson -Pro-Am Handtcapplllg
GoU OpeniUona
WUlWD Barbdale -Marshals
Dfck Clark -Manhals
Bob Young -MaBhals
Dk:k Yulinlre ~ (speoalty areas)
Terry Inland -Course Rep&r
Mika Man -Starters
Bob Mt.b&lko -Starters
Joe Ryan -Caddies
Marlene Ryan -Caddies
Scortng
Sue Jobnloo -Sconng
Cary Knoche -Gree~1de Reporters
Kara l<aodM -WaJlung Scorers an.n Carter -1..eaderboards
Cordle Pltzel -Standard Bearers
ROIM.nDe Levan -Sconng Tents
Ann Cuter -Telev1s1on Markers
Admtnbtrattoo
Lya Lacan.lata -Finance/ Admission
IC.an>I Jeana MerWe -Finance/ Adnu.ssion
Mm'y Loo GolorUl -Tournament Office
Admirustrotiqn "\
Daily Pilot
Com.munluUon1
Tom Carey -Commurucabons Control
Sandy Nyqul.lt -lnformabon Booth
FKWU. Svppon
Barbara tt.ge.rty -Course Ecology
Joe Testone -Coune Services
Judy Sim.mom -FU'lt Aid
Scbolanhtpe
(
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->"...._.. ... .= ·;;.,.....,...._
tail!Oldolfthe
dfQlll ..... of.
~~
1979 U.S. ftyder
Cupt..m ...
Wottced as • dub pro In eastern
Ohio .nd Wat the
lli-Stat• PGA Section's Teacher of the
Year In 1991 ... Has 19 career holes in
one .•. Nicknamed •Magoo• by his
PftB ... age 57.
•A special, yet tricky, golf course for the seniors,
who generally tour Newport Beach CC in style.
Richard Dunn
DAILY PILOT
NEWPORT
BEACH -The own-
er of Newport
Beach Country -
Club, Beverly Ray, TOSHIBA
will never get bred of heanng
members of the Seruor PGA
Tour glwt about the 47-year-
old tree-llned golf course.
When Mother Nature pro-
vides the weather. the s1te 1s
almost heaven wtth its ocean
breezes and gently rolhng
terrain, and only 6,584 yards
(par 71) of golf real estate.
It has often been referred
to as the perfect seruors golf
course, mosUy, or course. by
those who have won here
(Jim Colbert and Allen Doyle.
espeaally) or playpd well
It isn't alwdys dtfhcult
reaching the greens. but
when you do, 1l isn't aJways
easy malun'g putts.
HaJe Irwin sWI holds LhP
course record at o2. accom-
plished Ln the ftnal roLLnd at
the 1998 Toshlba Senior Clas·
sic, thanks, m large part. to
the Famous BunkPT Rake at
17.
But even lrwm that day.
when he passed 11 players
and clunbed from hve strokes
down to wm on Sunday,
made a bogey at the par-3
No. 8.
As Newport Beach
embarks on Toshiba Seruor
Classic Vll. we hnng you our
annual look dt the Links wtlh
a hole-by-hole glimpse
Trad1t1onally one
_:...:at ... of the ea'>1es1 on the
~ coUISe, it's a dogleg
left and fnendJy start
for the seniors with trees and
bunkers llnmg both sides of
the fal!Way
~e 339-yard par-4 has a
two-tiered green, leaving a
tricky approach shot Bud1es
here are frequent
• The fairway 1s -~ wide, but the 390-
~ yard par-4 is uphlll
from tee to green It
provtded the most pars ( 11 5)
on the front nine last year.
From t 996 through '99,
No. 2 ranked fust m pars for
the entlre tournament.
In hve years at Newport
Beach, however, onJy one
eagle has been made (DaVld
Graham accompllshed 1t m
the openLng round of '97)
. The onJy par-5 on .~--. the front (549 yards)
~ generally has the
seruors sa.l..tvatmg with
a green approachable in two.
Last year, the only two
eagles on the front rune were
made here. whlJe No 3 bed
with No. t for the most birdies
yielded (35), giving the
seruors a ruce start
The h.rst par-3 on ':.:t°'lii the course IS a sceruc
..., one, and aJso favor-
, able for the seniors,
who played the water hole to
the thud-most pars ( 109) and
bud1es (28) on the front last
year The green 1s a large tar-
get.
Th1s 1s where 1s
~~gets tough for the
~seniors, a 430-yard
par-4 that ranked as
lhe hardest hole on the golf
course in 1996 and '97. and
was fourth m '98, when 1t was
shortened 25 yards. Last yedT,
11 ranked as the second-
toughest hole (behmd No. 6)
It plays uphill and upwind,
r.equmng a nud-to long-iron
shot to an uniriendJy green
bordered by two bunkers.
For the rust time m :..:..~ hve Tostuba Classics,
~ the 418-yard par-4
played as the toughest
hole. albeit a rd.JJl-shortened.
36-hole tournament.
rt's a dogleg left with an
mtinudating tree line on the
left side It played harder
than usual because of
SWlTllng winds last year. Also,
a fal!Way bunker was added
to No 6 dbout 240 yards off
the tee. wtuch came mto play
for a number of players who
strayed a llttle nght.
Not surpnsmgly. no eagle
has ever been ·carded on the
hole in five years at Newport
Beach
nus fedtures the
~--most severe green on
.., the golf course,.mak-
mg at tunes great the·
ater on the 368-yard par-4.
where no two putts are alike.
From the tee, long hitters
play over the big tree on the
nght Stde of the fauway: for
others, the best play is down
the middJe with a long iron. It
LS advised n6l to rut your
• GRe£nNG CARDS
• PAP.ER600D&
• CUSTOM GI
E ... {
Sllilor ToUr MJOCIO ..... ~~
dtllis on CJfCUit ...
First WW\ came 1 ' ct.ys •fter tu~ 50. becoming t1\e
Senior Tour's
youngest winner
tn history It the
1996 Rafphs
Senior Cfassk ...
H.WDI' ....
Slrliot Tour
t ........ W.woc.d '°""',. Comack...,
oftheYMI "
Earned tours
ll'onm.n honot In
'97 by pl-v!ng 11]
rounds In 36
events ... Sefwd
20 yeaB in U.S.
Army and two
~~ :=-..::..-:--
money wlniner,
.... Mnng.
~lix
Ut* ... Ha 11
aweet Senior Tour
wfns sl1u ,JC>fnlng
cirwlt In 1998 ...
Won 1 O tides on
PGA Toor ~nd w~
lled fC>f third at 1997 Toshiba Classic
with 5-under 208 was tour's Rookie
of the Year that season . Won seven
PGA Tour titles .. age S4
tours of duty In Vietnam .. Was
All-Service champion in 1975 and '76
Cousin of baseball Hall of Farner Joe
Morgan age 59
winner of 1981 and 1987 PGA
Champ1onsh1ps, as well m 1981 US
• Open Played on ttne U S Ryder Cup
teams and had a 9 3· 1 record age 53
approach above the pin
It's the home ol ~~ lrwm's bogt•y dunnq
~ hls course-re>cord b2,
and a surpnsingly dil-
ftcuJt par-3, where the green
can glVe opllcdl 1llu'>1ons on
reads
Last year. 1t surrPnden•d
the second-fewest pd rs t8'1) 1r1
the tournament It rdnked in
the top five m terms of tough-
ness three years in d ro.,.,
(including the t.turd-mo!>I chi
hcuJt in '98), and ld'>t year
ranked fourth
. A dogleg right ~· the 407-yMd pM-4 ~crowns d f1v1··hok
stnng of d1fhculty fur
the seruors on the front rune
From the fairway. 11 1s hdTcl
to 1udge your distancf' to an
uphill green, whtl<> ldrgt·
trees gudrd both s1c1''" of thf'
fauway
ln l 99b, the holP rdnked ct'>
the second-most dtfhcult ctncl
has been in the top h\f' eve~
year for toughness
With thE• turn no\-.. _jli't' an easy spin on thP ~golf cart !or tlw
seruors lollowmg ld..,t
year's on-course 1mpro" f'·
ments, players face a 42q.
yard par-4, whlch allowed the
most pars ( 1 11 ) last year ol'l
the back rune along wtth 18
The small, elevdted green
must be taken into cons1dera-
llon on the approach, wlule
severaJ bunkers also pose d
threat
Players llck their
:5"0 chops at this par-4
.,, It's short 1344 y(lfdsl
has a wid<> fd1rwa)
and has never caust>d a tnple
bogey in hve years
It IS usually generous wtlh
gwing paT'S It aJso ledtures a
small, elevated gre<'n Off the
tee. it's almost unpo.,s1ble for
the pros to miss Lhe fdmvay
Doyle started his w1rmmg
stretch here last yedT with a
birdie, one of hve he mdde Ln
the finaJ eight holes
Another generous .!2"0 par-4 (373 ydrds). 1t
~ has a narrow landing
area, reqwnng a pre-
cise tee shot, while the
approach must navigate
around several eucalyptus
trees that spnng from the
front right of the green.
The amount of birdies 1t
allows consistently ranks it m
0
the top '>IX-to-P1ght holes for
l'dSLne<,<,
I\ lo~t plc1'y E'TS \vtlJ . ..;: ki:l tn to keE•p the ball
,..,. twlow tlw holf• on this
170-ydrri pdr-·~ which
h·<1turec., c1 .., .. v('rPI~ .. loped
CJfPi.'0
The nqhl SldP of I hf' la LT·
Wd) IS <JUI nl lwunclc., rind the
11'11 ~1dl• ol thP qreen 1-. yudfd-
1•d h\ d pot hunkn In terms
ol 1ouq hn"""· thP hole g<•t
h<Jrder t•\ l'r\ \.Par, havinq
lwf'n rdnk1·cl 12th 1 '4h) runth,
rnnth. 1 oth c1n<I wvt•nlh ld'>t
}Pdf
from the• lf•f>, plc1\"·
.~ lifj. N'> lm1k into d hon-
.., ion on d '>liqht dog-
IPq 11qht \\'Ith d clov:n-
h11l c1ppro111 h· to th(• grec>n
ThP ll'fl '>1<'11' of the fctlf\\'d\ IS
hnc•d w 11 h toU trP<•'> dnd the
nqhl '>1111 "' lrttuqht with
lctrCJP clt·Pp hunk1•r.,
Thi' !'17·\.ctrcl pt1r-4
11•qutrP"' .1 v.£'11 -pluced t~
..,hot Tlw '>ffidll, well-
hunkPn·cl qri,Pn hc1c., never
<tllOWPcl 1110 ffidn\" l11rciles
\\ Plconll' to b1rd1e
.,: ~ ... pcHdCh'>C Tht• 492-
~ 'yclfd par-5 has
rdnked as thP eas1Pst hole on
the goU come.,£> every year
Lncluding la!>I year when dn
dliTio<>t nd1c ulous 4CJ bucl..te..,
were mddl' in only two
rounds 114 rnorP bud 1e., than
th£> next holP on lhe• qPneros-
1ty Listi
The qn•Pn .., redchable in
two dOd " quurded h} <,evcr-
ctl hunkPT'> inc ludinq a
lrPdC"herou., pot hunker to the
nght
In I 4<17 c1nd '98, thP hole
INl the tourndmtmt 1n tmd1ec.,
with 85 <tnd 88. resp<•C l1v<,ly
It'<, lhe hrc.,t of a
~ t. ~ l\\ o-holt:> stn•tch thdt
~ Will tpc.,t thf' nwlllf' of
lhc• ll'rHIPrc..
The 4'i?·\drd pcH-4 is
where G~11"\ 'kCorcl <.hnched
hL'> f1ve-holl· pld\IJff \.ICtOI) lfl
QCJ. lhP '1 edr 11 surrt·ndered
th<' f P\\'f''>I lmdH•s on the
c oun.e
Plaver'> c dn hit out ol
houn&., to thl' left <.tncl the
long-iron ttpproach muc.,t con-
IPnd with two hunkf'Ts up
front dnd c1 rollinq qn•en
Thf' courc.,<•., s1gna-
~ ~ ~ tun· hole 1s dbo onP
~ of th1• toughec.,t "nth
a massive lake dnd
large bunkers in front of d
nusty two-twred grPen It
rt1nkPd as the most dJ..fhcuJt in
YCJ t1nd lh1rd-most d1fhcuJt
Id'>! 'yPdr
It., the mo'>t fdll1oU'> hole
on thl' cuurw \'l;tlh Bob Mur-
ph\ s 80-foot lmdw putt 1n
I CJ47 to win t1 record rune·
holf' pldV<Jff dnd Irwin s
mirdculou., up and down !Cir
pdr m 48 with thE-help of a
hunker rdkt•
The most drastic
~tit: I changP on the golf
-., cour'>f' comes at thf:
end with d remodeled
qreen whlch 1s now elevated
\\1th mound'> be~ 1t
The 510-yrtrd par-5 IS USU·
t1ll\. birdte ht--aven but it'~ a
ch1ferent hole no'A from 100
ydrds in dnd player'> could be
rdurtant to go for lhe grPen
in two
,.\.., a whol.-""ev.:port Bedch
( ountr) Cl uh playf'd dS lhe
'>l:'Venth-touc1hest course on
lhl:' Seruor PGA Tour tn 2000
\\1th an average score of
7 2 404 or I 404 stroke., over
pt1r
Abo thl' pdr-4 • o b, was
thP tour'<; fourth tough(><,l 'A'lth
a scormg average of 4 l<n
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~A~1~4_Fr~iday:-L:-'-Fe_bruo--1.ry_2_3~,2-00_1 _______________________________ ·-~-· __ · __ ·_·------~-----------------------------Do_i~ly_P_il_ot
TOMMY AARON
JIM AHERN
JIM ALBus
ISAO Amo
GEORGE AROIER
HUGH BAJOCCHJ
Miu.ER BARBER
DoN BIES
JOHN BLAND
JOSE MARIA CAN17.ARES
Boa CHARLES
JIM Cot.BERT
.CHARLES COODY
JIM DENT
TERRY Dill
Eo DouGHER'IY
DAlE DoUGLASS •
AUEN DoYLE
Boe DUVAL
'· Boe EAslwooo
DAVE EICHEi.BERGER
VICENTE FERNANDEZ
BRUCE FLEISHER
RAYMOND FwYo
AL GElBERGER
GIBBY GllBERT
STEWART GINN
H UBERT GREEN
WALTER HALL
HARow HENNING
Bill HOLSTEAD
JOE lNMAN
HAJ..E l RWlN
JOHN JACOBS
TOM JENKINS
RE·NATO
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of this 1•lf'jtllnl , <><,.,..,front N'•IAuraul
complimrnh it• t'llc·r11tiu11al 1told
mrdal award-winninit !1 .. l1an
c uisin1• and old-worl.l ho•p1tal1ty.
Only th .. frrNhr•I in1trt·1ti1·11b ar1•
u•<'d in th .. ir «u11111; ..... ,J •i>r .. ial
rrqu<'•h Ar,. tlw .-1,,.f'. plr,.aurr.
J>.-dir .. trd t o 1•urll1·nr•• in fin1•
dininit, R1·nato offrr• a w1d1· var irty
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consultation
TOM KrrE
GENE lrrn.ER
l DAVID LUNDSTROM '
JOHN MAHAFFEY
GRAHAM MARsH
TERRY MAUNEY
GARY McCORD
MIKE McCuu.ouGH
JERRl' McGEE
0RVlllE MOODY
GIL MORGAN
WAl:fER MORGAN
l.ARRV NELSON
A.Nov Nmrr11
JIMMY POWEU.
DANA QUIGLEY
SAMMY RACHEL'i
CH1 Cm RODRIGUEZ
JouN SumoEDER
TOM SHAW
J.C. SNFAD
DAVE STO<:KTON
BRUCE SUMMEIUIAYS
LEONARD THOMPSON
ROCKY T HOMPSON
J IM THORPE
LEE TREVINO
HOWARD TwnTY
STEVEN V ERIATO
LANNY WADKINS
BOBBY WALZEt
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built-in orthotics also available. www.footcomfort.com
2001 RATES ARE HEM!
More afferda.ble than ever.
Best value in Orange Coun-ty!
Monday-Thursday Satwday
$80 $115
I
Friday & Sunday Twilight $60 any day
$95 Replay $35 any day
Senion ~O yrs.+ $50 Monday & Tuesday
' Q
nJDAICltUIC ...._coua.ua
Doily Pilot
=~Tour :z=.:-won == Colbert ... Spent
Owns four
Senior Tour
Victories ..• After
winning First of
Amelia In 1995
and Brickyard
Crossing
Championship In
1996, he became
the only player to
win Mastercard
Championship
and overall super
Oneofihe Senior Tour's •1ronrnen. •H Has
won four titles.
lnduding .... yew"S
TD W.tetftc>ute Championship ...
Became sixth
player in toor hist~ to Monday
qualify and go on
to win when he
claimed '97
I I
M=i. ..
Sen.oro.uk debut ... Won the
'94 PGA Natlonel
OubPro
Championship
and was second In
the 1992 event ...
Played 10 years
on PGA Tour. Tied
for second at
1983 Danny '
Friday, February 23, 2001 AJS
rv-ot• V rnost popi,&w
ftgU'et in 5POf1s -Own5 eight PGA
Tour and22
senk>t' tides . •
Holds senior
circuit reco<d for
most consecutM!
birdies (eight
straight at 'J7
Silver P~
Classic) .. Became
the t.st MYe<al
years serving as a
color ana~t on
ESPN golf
telecasts ...
Captured three
titles duting PGA Tour career. most
notably two majOI' champ1onsh1ps,
the 1978 and 1985 U.S. Open
Championships ... tyrns 51 on March 9
seniors event twice ... 1973 Southern
California Player of the Year and
qualified for PGA Tour at age 46,
Northville Long Island Classic .. Was
New England PGA Player of the Year
seven times and won New England
PGA ~ion title five times ... age 54.
Thomas·Memphis Classte and ~/'lk of
Boston Classic ... Took up golf at young
age to avoid working on fa~m and
construction business ag~ SO.
first playtll' 1n seniOI' history to w1~
same ev~nt three times at '88 D191tal
SeniO(> Classic Was Senior Tour's
leading money winner 1n '87 age 65 the second oldest in history ... age 66.
Facts 'n figures
• What: Toshtbd Senior Cld'>'ilc
• Who: 78 Senior PGA Tour prolP'>'>londl'>. 54
holes of stroke pldy with no cuts
•Where: Newport BedC'h Count!) Cluh, lhOO TOSHIBA
East Paohc COdsl t hqhwd'r, Nc•wport Bl•dch
Par: 35-36-71, 6,584 ydrcl'>
•When: Feb 26 lhrouqh f\.1c11ch 4, 2001 (thwe-round
Seruor Tour pldy as f\.1drrh .l-4 I
• Purse: $1 4 m1lhon. wmnPr rPet'IV<'" $210 ODO
•TV coverage: CNBC, March 2, 2 p.m to 4 pm (tdpl'
delayedl; Mdrc·h 3, 'J pm to S p rn lhw on CNBC'),
March 4, 3 pm to S p rn (hv<• on CNB<'I SchedulP
subject to chdnCJP
• Past champions:
2000 -Allen Doyh·
1999 -G<1ry McCord
1998 -Hc1le Irwin
1997 -Bob Murphy
1996 -Jim Colbert
1995 -GPorgt-Arc hPr (di I\ li•'>d VPrdl' Country c"luh)
• Course designers: Tt'd Rolun'>Oll ( 1tJH'l1. llc1rry Rc1inv1U£>
(1973) and W1lh<1m B1•ll llW>:ll
•Managing charity: I lo<1q l\ll'monc1I I lo..,p1tctl
Presbytendn
•Tournament chairmen: i lt1nk AcllN c1ncl Jdkl' RohrPr
• Tournament director: .lf'll ~)ur,c•r
• Monday qualifier : rPh 2h ttl Strt1whPrl) Fc1ml', Gull
Oub, Jrvme
•Tickets:
Advdnce pure hc1..,1• (qoocl <1n'r dct) I S 14
Smgle dc1y (f\.londt1y throuqh Tirnr..,dd\ c1t qt1tt•I. SI 5
Smgle ddy 1rndc1) throuCJh Sundd')-di qt1ll'I SlH
Week-lonq l>cHlew (f\lonclc1y lhrouqh '-;undd) qrouncb
only). $50
Sedson cluhhouw l>c1dcw (l\londrt) throuqh Sundc1~.
grounds and duhhouw1. $100
• For Uck els, c·t1ll 19441 "> 15-4840, or purd1c1..,<• lie kl'I'>
online di ...,,......, ...... Tos/11/>uSenwrClu.'iM< <om or <11 RoqN
Dunn Golf Shop!>
MAR( MARltN I OAILY PILOT
One of the great chases in
Toshiba was In 1998 with
Hubert G reen and his duel
with the klngpln, Hale Irwin.
Television update
•Tour television moves from ESPN to CNBC.
NEWPORT HEACI I Th<> Senior PC.A
Tour's d9reement lo ..,w1tch from ESPN to
CNBC medns chdn<JtnCJ C'hdnnels for tht•
Tosh1bd Senior C 'ldSSlC dl Newport Bedch
Country Club
Th<> four-) !'ctr d<Jrccment betwe<>n th<• tour
and cdble nt>twork s1q ned ld'>l Apnl. 1s
exp<.•ctPcl to ll'c1d to '>1gnihC'd nt unprov<•menls
111 productwn qudhty, cons1!.tent ndt1onwide
dlf t1mP'> c1nd co\ <·rdq<• ol ddd1l1ondl Senior
Tour <>ve>nls
CNHC' will hroc1dc t1st TJ SPnior PCA Tour
Pvents this ye>c1r. n11w more lhdn ESPN lc1st
yedr Th<• c1qrc'<'ITll'lll IPc1tur<.''> nms1slent dlr
llfllC'S on WPl'kPnds n p .lll to 5 p.m . for dll Sat~
urdc1y drld Sundc1y ( OVf'fcl(j('). r11ctc1y dCUon
will he LPlev1s<1cl by tlw PAX-TV r c1bll' nl't·
work, whKh 1s 1oinlly own<'CI l>y PAX Com-
municc1 t1on'> c1ncl NB<·
Telev1swn tun<-'> un FncJc1y ,..-111 lw .!. p 111 to
4 pm (ld(W deld)'PdJ Thi• To ... h1llc1 SPn11ir
( 'ldss1c will hdve six hour'> ol sch1•dul••cl < o\ •
erdge (11 has been hve hour., in 'f'dr" pc1'>ll
The popular 10-nunute lnc,1d" thP Sen111r
PGA Tour" progrdm will dlso mov1• to <'NB<·
It wtll be refortndtlPd to serv1• d'> c1 wf•<'kh
• pregamP show" cnnng 10 mm ult•.., lwlori-
toumc1ment coverc1qe on Sundc1y'> It will dbo
tw rP·dtrPd Sundd) niqht!> di 11 p m dncl
upddlc•d to tnclucJp 1n-cll'plh c1ndly'>IS ol Sur
dc1 y''> c1ct10n
CNBC redchc·.., on up'>< r1lt· t1ucl1en< P c1nd 1-.
n1rwnlly c1vc11lc1t>lt• in mon• them 77 n11lh11n
• houi.Pholds m thP U S cmd C'c1nc1dc1 It ts rl'! •
oqmted dS the qlobr1l IPc1dPr 111 hu'>lnl'"S m•v. "·
providing rec1l-llme linc1n< lcil mr1rkPI rovPrd<JP
c1ncl husmcss mlom1c1t1on to mon• lhctn Jt1n
m1l11on home'> worldwHl<' ..
Scholarships benefit the preps
•Senior event reachmg out to
Newport-Mesd School D1stncl.
NEWPORT BEAC'l I Now in 11'> '>ec-
oncl YPdr, th(• Tosh1hd Sc•n1or Clc1s'>1c
Scholt1r'>hlp Fund I'> Pxpc1nclmq to l)('ntJ-
111 th<> locdl h1qh <,Chools
Th<' sc holdr!>h1ps, which mcludP r1
$2,500 qrc1nt dncl Tosh1hc1 computer. will
l>C' prt'sentNI to om• '><'ntOr from edch of
lht• lour high school!> 1n th<> N(•wpnrt-
tvle'>d U nil wcl Schou I D1stnct
In 2000, lhC' i.c holdf!>h1p's 1naugurc1l
ye>c1 r, 11 bc•n<•ht<•cl five• ..,, hools in the
Irvin!• Umhrcl School [)1\tnc t Both ch'>· two recomnwncldUOn'> hum ..,<hoot r<•p·
tnch will h<1vP rcnp1Pnl'> in 200 I re'>f'nldllH''>, dnd d<•mon..,trc1tt• lt-dcl•·r •
ThP progrdm 1s d ioint plfort h'r thf• .. hip dndlor mvoh·<·mPnl in l'Xtrc1cumc u-
t11urnc1nwnt Ull<> '>ponsor dnd monc1gmg idf dCtl\1Ut>'> or communtl\' ..,<•rv1c P
c h<tnly. I lodq l lo'>plldl Edch 5Choul hdi. b<><>n dskcd to non11-
ApphcdltOn'> for th<• Tosh1bc1 ~wmor nc1tf' di IPctsl two CdncJ1clc1tP'> St holdrsh1p
Clc1.,..1c Scholdr'>hlp Fund drt• now dVdll· wmner'> ,.,.,11 lw dnnounn•d Pt•h 27 dt
dhlt> in tht• coun!.ehng cll'J>dr1ml•nls of the Tm.tuhc1 Spmor Cld"'-'C Community
tht· clec,1qndled htgh school'> •• Newport Bredkfd5L
I l<1rbor, Coronc1 etc! Mc1r. E'>tdncto c1nd The seventh dnnuctl $1 4 nulhnn
('u.,1c1 Mesd Semor PGA Tour event. hostPd h) NC'\.,.·
To h<' con!>1clNC'd , dpp1Jc<1nl'> must be port Beach Country Club, I'> PPh .lh
c1 high school wnior. rdnk in lhP upper.~ 1.hrough March 4 DE'lcub 144lll 'i 1 '.l·
hc11f of thc>tr qr<1dudt1nu ddS'>, rPcc•1ve 4840
I ' • t t I I'
-A16 Friday, February 23, 2001
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Your daily news just got better
· Seven days a week
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io subscribe call
(800) 252-9141
Jim Colbert (left) chips out of the
bunker en route to the championship
in 1996. Above, a Newport Beach
Country Club member inspects the
recenOy remodeled par-3 bole No. 4
with its cascading waterfall and
two-lake clearance to the green.
The bole was remodeled prior to the
2000 Toshiba Classic.
Doily Pilot
T H E
NEWPORT BEACli
C 0 U N T R Y C L U 8
OPEN HOUSE SUNDAY
1:30-5:00
Tunic Rocle Summit Towne Collection.
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Shaws like a model.
$SS9,000
MARLENE LAGROW
(949) 219-2515. (949) 455-5010
lagrowpru@homc .. com
www.marlenelagrow.com ••
,.. .. , 5 t 'b O..... lllill °""""' ....... .,,..
; \
Daily Pilot ,._
MA.LI GULLEDGE &
REUBEN GULLEDGE
(r /wr"nna" J (r ,·J(cle {/olr/
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23 2001 A17 .
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.. , . .
~A~18~Fr~idoy:::.t.:..-.F~ebruo.,._ry._23~,-200 __ 1 ____________________________ ~-~,..:_---------------------------------------Da--i~---Pi~lot
tJttellll~et
Stat9 Fwm Sei'licw d-'<.. beating
~Aoki Ina
playoff ..• \Non
three PGA Toor·
titles, with the
last coming at the
1989 Buick Open
... Woo. first
Senior .Tour title
at 1998 Coldwell Banker Burnet
Classlc, also defeating Aoki In 1 playoff
Played at Wake Forest with Joe
Inman and Lanny Wadkins ... age 54.
T09HIM
Oft s.e.""I: ... l'lnllhld 1tlh on ~Alt In flnt full Y9" In 1999 ...
~ '6A Tour from 1976-1991 ~
YllOl'l ttne times ••. Winner of 1982
c:..lln PGA O\ampionsh(p •N • 52.
two .s. ap.,,. two lrtdlh
OpensAnd two'
P<lA~ ... Leiding~
winner In 1970 nt ~of y.., In
1971 ... Thr,.time s.nlorTow Player
of Ye.r .•. ege 61.
Taking it up a few notches
• Remodeled hole No. 18
will probably change
seniors' approach at
Newport Beach CC.
Richard Dunn
DAILY PILOT
NEWPORT BEACI I -A
The rough \'Ifill br longer
ctnd the greens faster, as
mc1ndated by lhe SeruorTOBHlaA
PC,A Tour. But the most
notable change at Newport Beach
C ·ount.ry Club smce last year's Toshi-
'hc1 Seruor Classic is the 18th hole.
In keeping with tradlllon, the
rltt,P has remodeled certain areas of
th<> 9oll course m hopes of maklng it
morP challenging and interesting
for lh,e seniors, as well as its dues-
pr1yuig membefs. f
For the sixth straight year, New-
port Beach Country Club will host
the only regular-season stop in
Orange County for the PGA, Seruor
l'GA or LPGA tours, and each year
< lub management does someUung
~penal to remvest m the golf course
How the changes at 18 affect
pldy in next week's Toshiba Classic
r<'mdlns to be seen, but it's almost
c Prtam to lmut the ammmt of play-
c•rs going for the green in two on the
510-yard par-5.
Leist summer, a remodeling pro-
wct wds completed at the finishing
hole, which ts bound to gJve golfers
Wednesday1 6:00-9:00p.m.
FrHL8$$0IU
s~=~'
(Live Music & Rec.Ne 'tcOUnls wit#t Your Churdi Ptogtom}
ALL DAVI
a more difficult time than in years
past.
From 100 yards in, No. 18 is com-
pletely different. The green is now
elevated and undulated, mounds
have been built behind the green to
give it some ·nash, • according to
Newport Beach Country Club Presi-
dent Jerry Anderson, and new
bunkers have been added.
A flower planter behind the
green, on the lower end of a large
mound, proudly displays the letters
NBCC.
From the fairway, the clubhouse
is no longer in the backdrop and a
stronger premium on placement will
be required.
·From 10-to-12 yards off the
green, (the fairway) is about seven
feet lower than the putting surface,•
Anderson said.
So the mature, tree-lined goU
course with a traditional layout,
which opened in 1954 as Irvine
Coast Country Club and is known
Color Mt Mine • .,,._Alt of Hfv#(tg Fvn •
a.. ........ ...........
lbe 18th hole at
Newport Beach
CountryOub
has been
elevated and
mounds up to 14
feet have been
comtructed
behind the
green to give It
more "llasb,"
according to
dub ottidah.
From 100 yards
In. the hole ls
completely
dlff erenl
r r
DON I.EACH I OAll.Y PILOT
for its gently rolling terrain, will
have a smprise ending for members
of the Senior Tour next week.
But not everyone is convinced
the change will be good.
·vou don't know (how it's going
to play) until the event gets going,·
defending Toshiba Classic champi-
on Allen Doyle said during Media
Day, after inspecting the remodeled
hole. •u you th.ink back to (1999),
the playoff with (Gary) McCord and
(John) Jacobs, I was in the playoff
and it was exciting to be there. I'm
sure it was even more exciting to
watch it.
•So you don't know how an 18th
hole will play out then. Will it be
quite as exciting if as many guys
can't get home? Maybe .... I don't
think it will have too much bearing,
but you do have a 1.ittle bit of change
there and you did have such excite-
ment in yea.rs past that it will be
interesting to see.•
Hole No. 18 has historically
played as one of the easiest in the
Toshiba Classic, but will probably
no longer induce visions of birdies.
The hole ranked as the second-
easiest hole on the course in four of
the five yea.rs the event has been
played at Newport Beach, but start-
in,.g this year seniors will have an
uphill approach to 16 and a critical
third shot to the green.
The green has been raised about
four feet in the back, and mounds
are behind the green, of which the
highest point is about 14 feet.
Construction was started on the
bole after the 2000 Toshiba Senior
Classic. In 1999, No. 18 set a tourna-
ment record with 99 birdies allowed.
The club, which has said it is
committed to impr<>jing the golf
course each year it hosts the Senior
Tour event, has completed other
minor projects and planted 20 new
pine trees. But the change at 18
could provide a dramatic finishing
touch.
r
.. • f ' •
Daily Pilot Friday, February 23, 2001 Al9
HOLY LAND
CONTINUED FROM A 1
that Jake and mine and Jeff's
ultimate job is to raise money
for Hoag Hospital,• Adler said.
"That's what we're here for.
It's a great event, but it's not
mission accomplished unless
we make a lot of money for the
hospital.·
Even if you take away play-
er conveniences, sound tour-
nament logistics, an ideal
seniors golf course and chan-
table donations, all of which
rank near or at the top on the
Senior Tour, the Toshiba Clas-
sic would still have to be con-
sidered one of the most exot-
ing stops on tour because of its
close finishes and memorable
playoffs.
• Some are convinced that
Gary McCord's five-hole play-
off victory over John Jacobs m
the 1999 Toshiba Classic, filled
with incredible shots and hilar-
ious'behavior, Jump-started the
Senior Tour that year with its
great theater.
With the exception of Jun
Colbert's two-stroke win in
1996, every Toshiba Classic
has been decided by one
stroke, including McCord's
comic-relief effort in '99 and a
Senior Tour-record nine-hole
playoff in 1997 won by Bob
Mwphy with an BO-foot birdie
putt at 17.
In 1998, Hale lrwin shot a
COW"Se-record 62 on Sunday to
come from five strokes back
...
.... Pla; ••• A =-°" To&irwho
ClipCl.nd 21 "'*.
lndudlng three In bod\ 1912 end
1985 ~·Won 19n PGA ~Ip
at Pebble ~ ... Second on money
list In 1985 ... captain of 199S Rydet
Cup tum ... H.s reputation as 1*te
Competitor ... age 51.
and leapfrog past 11 players on
the leaderboard, winning
miraculously while triggering
another Player of the Year sea-
son, claiming his first of seven
tournament titles.
So, taking everything into
consideration, the question
·begs to be asked: Is the Toshi-
ba Seruor Classic the best stop
on the Senior PGA Tour?
lf it isn't the nabon's largest
recreation-only 'harbor that
enraptures Senior Tour visi-
tors, it's the first-class treat-
ment given to the players by
tournament officials and a core
of well-established volunteers,
the backbone of the Toshiba
Classic.
"It's one of my fdvorites, •
Jacobs said of the Toshiba Oas-
stc. ·At my hoteJ (the Balboa
Bay Club), my room looks right
out at million-dollar yachts.
... And what makes (the
tournament) real cool on the
golf course is that there's not a
housing development, no
homes between the fairways
on the course, so people can
get in and mingle with you.
When people are excited, the
players get excited.
"People get mto the tourna-
ment. too . .. Arnold Palmer's
there (last) year (for the first
time) and it's like Jesus Christ
showed up to lease the fans.
·And the people who run it,
they're so accommodating
there that you've got to like it.•
For the aforementioned
reasons, tour veteran Dave
Stockton. a two-tlme Senior
Tour Player of the Year, lists
the Toshiba Classic at the top.
"ls it the best stop for all-
around? Yes,• Stockton con-
cluded. "But, first of all, the
Senior Tour has no bad stops.
There are good things about
all of them. But Newport
Beach has it all together, no
quesbon about it.•
Irwin has also been
unpressed with the service of
tournament offiaals and vol-
unteers, and, when his round
of golf is over, the three-time
U.S. Open champion loves to
sabsfy his appetite at one of
Newport's finest restaurants.
·(Tournament officials) have
taken exceptional care of us,·
lrwin said.· And, from a culinary
perspective, it's been great·
Another tour veteran,
Harold Henning, said New-
port Beach was ·an ideal
place.· and last year's runner·
up, Howard Twitty, said "the
Toshiba is always one of the
more popular tournaments. I
thmk a big pd.rt of that is the
golf course.·
Defending Toshiba champi-
on Allen Doyle said he "loves
the golf course.•
Not only is Newport Beach
good for the Senior Tour as a
regular stop, but the Toshiba
Classic has helped give the
city a diff~nt identity other
then an affluent beach and
harbor town with corporate
muscle being flexed from the
Newport Center skyline.
In many ways, the Toshiba
Classic is redefining Newport
Beach and reshaping the
Senior PGA Tour.
On or off the golf course, your
ticket to quality watches is found
at Watch Connection.
RAYMOND WEIL
GEJIEYE
0
OMEGA
~WATCH
( (I ' ' I ( I I 11 '
3033 sotrrn BRISTOL, COSTA MESA
One block South of San Diego Freeway ( 405)
(714) 432-8200. (949) 675-7662
OPEN TUES-FRI. 11-S~ •SAT. 11-Spm • U.OSED SUN & MON
r
• IN lllllLU _..._
SllC£1"l
J(
EBEL
Sinus and Allerif:'LUer Provides Relief
for Sufferen of #1 Chronic Health Complaint
' ,
M ....... ""'*'9 .......
..... 118ft .. ... °"' O•t\lbllhlp -· Is 11th on flGA
TOIJl''S •II-time win list with 34 titles ...
Has eight major c.Nmplonshlps: flve
British Opens. two Masten and one
U.S. Open Championship ... Six-time
PGA Player of Year ... age 51.
ntOMA.S H. JOHNSON
Publisher
TONYDOOaO
Editor
ROCiEJt CARLSON
Sports Editor
SlEVE McCllANK
fltlolo Editor
JUDY OETTING
AdvertJsl ng Director
AP~SS Our ress Is 330 W. Bay St.,
Costa Mesa. CA 92627
Sports (949) 574-4223
Sports fax (949) 650-0170
E-mail: dallypllotOlatimes.com
Published by Tlrrws Comm\JMy New\,
a fimeos Mirr0t Company.
02l:l01 TWw<CH All ngltb-
PARKING
D
l
1 l
Senior Tour player headshots
C 2001 PGA Tour
Paritlng is in afffS 0 , 1he Dunes off Badt Bay Road.
ariet E. on the north side of FMhion Island.
with shuttle service from both sites.
Mondlly, Feb. 26 -Open qualifying at Strawberry
farms Goff Club (not open to the public).
-Player practice rounds at Newport Beach Country
Club, all day.
1\Msday, Feb. 27 -Delortte & Toudle Community
Breakfast. 7:30 a.m., Newport Beach Marriott Hotel
(Tom Watson is keynote speaker).
-Three-hole Walking Clinic by Watson for breakfast
attendees
-Player practice rounds at Newport Beach CC.
all day.
-Junior Clink, 4 p.m .. at Practice Range.
w.dnesdlly, Feb. 21 -Toshiba Senior Classic
Pro-Am, shotgun starts at 7 a.m. and 12:30 p.m
SCHEDULE OF EVENTS
lhuncky, Mard'I 1 -Toshiba Senior ClassK Pro-Am,
shotgun starts at 7 a.m. and 12:30 p.m.
Friday, March 2 -Toshiba Senior Classic first round,
tee times begin at approximately 8 a.m
Sllta.rday, Mard'I J -Toshiba Senior Classic second
round
s....tay, Mm'dt 4 -Toshiba Senror Oassk final r~.md.
Monc:t.y, March 5 -Celebrity Pro-Am, shotgun
start at 8:30 a.m. (not open to the public)
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SERVING THE NEWPORT -N.ESA COMt'AUNffiES SINCE 1907 ON n. WEI: WWW.DAILYPILOT.COM FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 23 I 2001
I
South County expected to end support for flight caps
• Newport Beach officials
see move as an etf ort to get
publicity for second county
initiative against proposed
El Toro airport.
Paul Clinton
DAILY PILOT
NEWPORT BEACH -South
County cities aligned against plans
for an auport at the closed El Toro
Marine air base will likely end their
public support next week for extend-
mg fight caps at John Wayne Airport.
All TUNED UP
The El Toro Reuse Planning
Authority, a coalition of nine South
County cities, is expected to
announce the move at its board
meeting Monday.
If the authority board approves
the policy shift, It would begin con-
sidering legal action, lobbying state
and federal officials and including
the issue in public information cam-
paigns, said Allan Songstad, author-
ity vice chairman.
"The reason this is on the agenda
as a matter of frustration,• Songstad
said Thursday. "How can we sit
back and let the hard-1.i.ne Newport
Beach groups consistently say, 'We
need more airport capaoty.' •
A year ago, the authority passed
a resolution supporting the exten-
sion of caps at John Wayne.
Officials in Newport Beach and
surrounding cities have pushed for
an airport at El Toro since shortly
after the base was placed on the
federal government's base closure
list in 1993.
The seven-year battle, likened by
some to a "holy war,· has pitted the
county against itsell amid a growing
regional need for more flights to
accommodate air travel.
"We're at a standoff,• Newport
Beach Councilman John Heffemdn
said Thursday. ·And they want to
tum up the heat.•
"They a re not wtlhng to be part of
the solution,• Bromberg said. "They
want to put (add.ltional air travel
demand I on the backs of the people
of Newport Beach •
Heffernan, along-with his newly
elected council colleagues Gary Proc-
tor and Steve Bromberg, has revital-izea the city's pro-El Toro dnve. The county, the oty of Newport
Beach and two Newport Beach
polltical actlon committees -the
Allport Working Group and Stop
Pollutmg Our Newport -have set
the wheels m motion to extend the
1985 settlement agreement until
2005. It was those parties that
signed the deal that brought fight
restnction!> to John Wayne
The three have strongly called on
South County civtc leaders to shoul-
der a portion of the county's fught
needs by agreeing to a second air-
port.
The authonty's move would have
clear repercussions, Bromberg said.
Lobbying for an end to the restnc-
t.JOns at the county's only other func-
borung airport would pave the wdy
for future expan~1on dt John Wayne. SEE CAPS PAGE 85
•
DON LEACH I DAILY PILOT
Top-dollar
home sales
now norm
•Average price hits $1 million
in NewPort Beach as growing
mi.rn be r of buyers pick up
properties in seven-figure range.
Stefanie Frith
DAILY PILOT
NEWPORT BEACH -l'wo years
ago, Vic Wedel bought a piece of prop-
erty m Corona del Mar that overlooks
the ocean for $1.6 nu.ll10n. Today, he is
selling the land and the home he built
on it for nearly $4 million and Wednes-
day bought another home on Balboa
Island for $1.575 milbon .
Wedel·is one of many in the city who,
despite the news of economic gloom
and doom nationwide, have been snap-
ping up homes with $1-nullion pnce
tags or more over the last year or two,
accord.mg to real estate figures.
Local real estate agents have noticed
the trend and are having a hard time
keepmg up with the tugh demand.
·we don't have enough mventory, •
said Steve High. president of Strada
Properties in Newport Beach. "This
marketplace has always been one ol the
most affluent m Orange County, and the
toughest pcyt of our jobs now bas not
been selling but having enough to sell.•
He's not quite singing the blues yet, but Bryan Harris, 3, ls on bls way as be plays along wtth m~lc at Rock Harbor Church.
High said the average million-dollar
home m 1999 stayed on the market for
100 days. That dropped to 92 days last
year Th.Ls year, he said, has also been
qwte strong.
Aloha Air)ines announces Hawaiian flights
• But the carrier still has major hurdles to cross before
it can offer service from John Wayne to Honolulu.
Paul Clinton
DAILY P1lOT
JOHN WAYNE AIRPORT -
Pressing a.bead with plans to ini-
tiate ·Haw~an . flights into
Orange County, Aloha Airlines
announced Thursday that service
would begin al John Wayne Air-
port OD May 1.
But the announcement may
be premature.
The airline said it would begin
two flights. one to Honolulu and
one to Las Vegas, from the airport.
Aloha representatives ·also said
the carrier would add a second
Hawaiian flight, between John
Wayne and Maui, on June 1.
"We're working with the air-
port to finalize the details,• Alo-
ha spokeswoman Julie King said.
•we're excited to bring our ser-
vice to Orange County.•
1be airline was awarded the
three flights Feb. 6, when the
Orange County Board of Supervi-
sors approved Airport Director
Alan Murphy's recommendations
for distributing Oights to 10 com-
mercial airlines using John Wa"f'De.
Despite the announcement.
Hawaiian fights are far from a
done deal for John Wayne.
The Board of Supel'Visors still
must approve the leases for the
Olghts -with a four-fifths vote.
Two supervisors have said
they would vote against the leas-
es if the county continues to pur-
sue shifting the airport's two car-
go flights to an airport at the for-
mer El Toro Marine base.
Todd Spitzer and Tom Wilson.
whose 5th District includes New-
port Beach and many of the
South County cities fighting an
El Toro airport, both pledged to
oppose the leases.
Still, Murphy is expected to
offer the items to the board next
month.
•w e are still working on
preparing the leases,· John
Wayne spokeswoman Ann
McCarley said. •The leases need
to be approved before any ser-
vice begins.•
SEE ALOHA PAGE 15
INSIDE SPORTS
72
HOUIS
A qulck
gulde to the
weekend
\
A used book sale will be held by the ff lends of tM New-
port Beach Ubmy from 1 to S p.m. today for members
only and from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. s.tutday at the Central
Ubfary, 1000 AllOQdo Ave. Free. (949) 75~7.
A seminar for peopte who pl.n to stwt • busina or
have recwitly establl~ed a business Wiii be held from
l:JO a.m. to 4 p.m. s.turday It NatJonal Un~. U90
HMt>or tlvd .. c~ Mew. The progr..n is sponsored by
the Ortnge County Chapter of the SeMce («pl of
Retired EMcutives ~ (714) 550-73'9. •
High said the average price of a
Newport Beach home in 1999 was
$894,000, growing to $1.048 million m
2000, d 17 '}., increase.
In Orange County, the number of
homes selling for $1 million or more bas
increased 51 o,,, smce 1999, according to
a report released by DataQuick Infor-
mation Systems
Karen Lynch, a saJes assooate With
Coldwell Banker, said lf a prospective
home buyer is looking in Newport
Beach, chances are that buyer won't
find anything for less than $1 million.
The number of homes selling for
more than S 1 million has also tncreased.
from 25? homes·in 1999 to 324 in 2000,
High said. Homes selling for $2 million
have gone from 69 on the market in
1999 to 76 in 2000, and homes selling for
$3 million or more went from 25 in 1999
to 34 in 2000. I
SEE HOMES PAGE 15
INDll --------QSlllS ____ _
..... IMDfD __ _
lllLOlll-----· ...c mwm ___ _
' .
82 Fndoy, February 23, 2001
')
f>,111 \ "' dllllll·, 0 1lloltjll ,ii 'I 1 t!o '1<111
IOI 1:11--.1111' o111t! '\.1 1111·1 I .ii
"" ( I~ 111' I p .... 11 It' p I .i \ t I ti 111 .. I 1 \ I
Yowtg Chang
DAILY PILOT
Darcy Scanlin had to think like a
neurotic to do her job.
The set designer for John Guare's
·Bosoms and Neglect,• which closes·
Sunday at South Coast Repertory's
Second Stage, hod to ask herself,
•Where would an obsessive psychi-
atric patient live?"
•How would she think? How neat
would she be?"
Her answers -her creations -are
convincing.
cussions with
show director
David Chambers
about the look of
the set
They modern-
ized the setting of
the late '70s play,
takin liberties
with Hie aesthetic
elements and giv-
ing a baii.ntingly
magical air to the
stage.
1art1v•ruON STAGE
"Arthur -A I.Ive Adventure" will debUt TUesda)' n p&ly through MMd\ 4 It the Orange County
Perfotmlng M's ~ In Costa Mesa. In Saturdly'I
o.teboolt. c.mt nwnbers and kids tell 1.15 wtrf the a.-ddty
Arthur RMd ind hts sister, D.W., ire so much fun. .
Daily Pilot
CHECK IT OUT
Grammys may be over,
but the beat goes on
W hether or not your
favorite recording
artists wa,lked away
with Grammy Awards at this
week's ceremonies, there's a
good chance you can bear
their artistry on library CDs.
From traditional blues to
rock. alternative music and
instrumental offerings, the
collection includes a wide
range of talent on CDs avail-
able for two-week loan.
1Wo decades after the
release of its last album,
jazz-rock duo Steely Dan
returned to the studio last
year to record "'JWo Agaln.st
Nature ... The Grammy win-
ner for both album of the
year and best pop vocal
album features familiar har-
monic flourishes, funky
song-plots and the trade-
mark cynicism that Walter
Becker and Donald Fagen
first made popular in songs
such as "Hey Nineteen."
Superstar Paul Simon also
rock, pop, and country and
western strains in this collec-
tion of orchestral epics, lazy-
aftemoon dance music and
blues ballads.
Fans of more established
artists may enjoy Madonna's
reinc:amation of henel.f as an
urban cowgirl on "Musk,"
nominat-
ed as
best pop
vocal
album.
The
main-
stream
pop
queen
adds funky Parisian-pop
stylings to her musical court
on this collection of infec-
tious tunes.
More traditional sounds
are featured on "TI.meless:
Everything's white. The Roman
sofa is white, the one-seater is white,
the foot rest is white, the backdrop is
white. The floor, the blanket and even
the books are all completely bleached
white.
·we certainly
did want to make
it feel more con-
temporary,.
Chambers said.
·we look at the-
ater very differ-
ently than we did
20 years ago.•
PHOTOS BY DON LEACH I DA.lY PLOT
Darcy Scanlin designed this set tor South Coast
Repertory's productton of "Bosoms and Neglect."
received
an album
of the
year nom-
ination for
"You're
the One."
The 11-
song col-
lection of
catchy
Uve lD Concert." a best tra-
ditional pop vocal album
nominee from the legendary
Barbra Stretsand.. On this
two-disc offering, the cele-
brated singer provides a life
retrospective that traces her
career in song, monologues
and acted-out sequences.
The ·Bosoms and Neglect" set
reflects the neurotic mentality of char-
acters Scooper and Deirdre -two
psychiatric patients who begin an odd
affair when their doctor, James, goes
on vacation. Scooper, a 38-year-old
unmarried man who has recuning
nightmares about his mother, Henny,
is played by
TimChoate.
Cindy Katz
perfonns as
I>eirdre,and
Lynn Milgrim
plays Henny.
Scanlin. a graduate of the Califor-
nia Institute of the Arts and the Uni-
versity of the Pad.fie Conservatory, got
~ into set design about five years ago
during stage productions m which she
sang opera.
Cham-
bers said
her work
for
"Bosoms
and
Neglect"
was
•mventtve
and very
alive.•
Made ner-
vous by the
absence of
their doctor,
Scooper and
Deirdre find a
crazy sort of
solace and
conflict in
each other. Scanlin with an interesting part of the 1et.
On the
set.
Deirdre's
books are
stacked
b.ighand
unevenly. ·1 think it
evokes the sterility of a hospital,·
Scanlin, 25, said of the while set "It's
a unifying factor. I think it has to do
with obsessive people creating sort of
a pseudo-perlect world.•
In •Bosoms and Neglect," which
precedes Guare's well-known work
•Six Degrees of Separation," the
world belongs to Deirdre, a thir-
tysomething bibliophile who lives in a
dean, modem, New York apartment
Only her second professional project
out of school. Scanlin had many dls-
Early in the story, Deirdre opens
the cover of one of the books. Inside is
a new bottle of wine. She uncorks it,
refills both her and Scooper's glasses
and canies on as if nothing out of the
ordinary bad just happened.
·we wanted the books to serve
many functions,• Scanlin said. •So
that there was an element of magic
realism to the space."
Henny floats. She didn't in the orig-
inal production, but Scanlin and
Chambers decided that the characters
Bring a book to The Center
to meet aardvark .Artbm
Y~ters who bring• new or med _.at 6 p.m. Tueeday to tbe Orange
Quaty Performing Artl Cenl8l'i prochac· lklll of • ArthW' -A Uve Adveintant• wtn
... an opportunity to meet the fabled
•dtwk.
Apdlenoe iPemberi wbo bdna'a camera
to ...,_.trom Hall Wil1 U.O be abla to bave
._.pcture tUeli witb ldm. n. dzrttd
tioaliiwtll be given to the~~
1'llllC ~and UbrarMI ~
.m
WHA~ ·eosoms and Negtect•
WHEN: 7:45 p.m. through Sun-
day, with 2 p.m. shows Saturday
and Sunday
WHERE: South Coast Repertory's
Second Stage, 655 Town Center
Drive, Costa Mesa
COST: $26-$47
CAU: (714) 708-5555
in the play are sort of like ·random
atoms• that bump into each other. She
is lowered and raised in a swing-like
seat between two white vertical bars
that resemble the structure of a guillo-
tine.
•we wanted to magnify the inteiisi-
ty of this event to look like when you
would have a traumatic experience,•
ScanUn said.
But the backdrop to the setting
may be the most perplexing. It shows
an aerial view of the inside-of an
apartment complex. Almost every
apartment bas a little white television,
a little white couch, a bed, a lamp and
other home furnishings but as seen
from above.
Scanlin came up with the idea. Her
explanation is that our consumer cul-
ture mass produces products. One
apartment can, therefore, look ahnost
just like the next.
"Everyone's kind of living parallel
lives,• she said. "Yet everyone Is sepa-
rate from each other."
tunes is an effective come-
back from an artist with a
well-desecved reputation for
reflective lyrical musings
and elhnologically tinged
compositions.
Cutting-edge voices were
represented in the albUII\ of
the year category, with nom·
inations for Radlobead's
"Kid A" and Beck's "Mld-
nJte Vultures." Radiobead
lost that category, but won
for best alternative music
album.
In the best rock album
category, popular ska-punk
band No Doul)t received a
nomination for "Return of
Saturn." On ~ long-antici-
pated follow-up to "Tragic
Kingdom," Gwen Stefani
agam pouts and growls,
backed by the band's fuven-
tive blend of punk, reggae
and new-wave quirkiness.
Among •new• talents on
the scene is the artist behind
"I Am Shelby Lynne," a best
new artist winner. The
Alabama-born, twentysome-
lhing singer melds soul,
able show proof of reSidency lot a mini·
mum ot 12 montbl and may obtaiD m •
oppliCation by ca1liftg (N9) '"4-'233.
Slides Will 1P1tWly be J9riewed Mlicb 3,
and selected applicants wm proceed to tbe
l8CODd pbue for the j~ Meidl
11. Tbe maclied worb~~
duJmg the Laguna Be.cb feltlftl'l 1dn8-
Weelt nm over tM IUllllD8r.
JnfonDation; (949) 49'-1145.
OCC gets 'Shakespeartence•
from South Coast ~rtory
ScMilh CoMt ~ u I w Hll Lin-dall Jr. imd Dan 1bOk allr .... ,....
.... to advmcld Orw;vl a.~
.......... flam 10 ..... to ... Milda 1
.. OCCt or.ma Lab...,....., ..... llllllt
Folk fans are likely to rel-
ish Stew Earle's "Transcen·
dental Blues," a best con-
temporary folk album nomi-
nee. The country rocker
blurs the lines between
British invasion pop, Celtic-
Oavored jaunts and blue-
grass romps on his latest
eclectic recording.
Listeners looking for
something far edgier may be
well
served by
Tbe
Cure'•
"Blood-nowen.·
While it's
filled
, with
doom-laden lyrics, this best
alternative music nominee
could be a fine choice for
anyone in the mood for bit-
tersweet melancholy deliv-
ered with this band's signa-
ture buoyant guitar licks and
melodic keyboard arrange-
ments.
• OIECX rT OUT is written by the
staff of the Newport Beach Public
Library. This week's column Is by
Melissa Adams. In coll.t>oratlon
with Debbie Walker. All titles may
be reserved from home or office
computers by .ccesslng the cata-
log at http:llwww.newportbHch
library.org.
.Dail;IPJlot READERS HOruNE CA 92626. ~No news sto-WUlllEI DD SUlf POUCE flLES
(949) 6-Q-6086
fteoofd Y04llf commenu about
the Dally Piiot °' news tips.
VOL ts. NO. 49 ApbMu Our..._ k 330 W. lay St..
1'MDIMt "' a••°" C0Jt.a Miia. CA 92627.
Nlllltllr COlllECDONS ...., IJil ICl8IQ, tt .. iht Piiot's polky to prompt-
lcMor' ly Q)fNCt .. 9TOf1 of SUbltanm.
u.~ ,.... cal (9i\9) 57"'42.ll.
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rlpVduc:9d without wrialln per-
millton of aiwtght-.
HOW m ltfAOt us
~
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o.tfled ~ W-Sf71 ~ (M9) '42-4121 ........
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to heed-Ngh. Thi
blggtst surf will be
In the efternoon.
LOCA1'llmt -~-·-·-W _.....,.,"----w
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Flntlow
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• ..... -....Md,.......,.._. A whlde coOWon
redting In en ~'-Y w. repClf1lld at 10'.25 •·"'-~.
• ......... -...: A P9ttY theft Ml repor1lld In b 2'00
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h 2900 ~lit 6:JI p.m. ~ • "*~All .. theft w. ~at t-.2J p.m.
~lnbhbb*..
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coflWon ~ In an~ MS reported• J:tl p.m.
Mondly.
• ......_ .. iAlua4l: A commerdal burgl«y w r1ipOftld
In 1N l700 bloc* • 2!1t p.m. ~
Nl\WORY llAOf
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-
. .
'.
n this court, theres no law against tr;nng new tricks
ou're never too old to
learn new things.
There are just too many
people out thern who say, *I've
always wanted to do that.•
But they don't.
I've put up with a good bit of
ribbing and been on the receiv-
ing end of many disbelieving
cotrunents since I decided to sign
up for tennis lessons.
l had always wanted to learn
to play tennis, but when you're
one of six kids, there are no frivo-
lous lessons -especially at the
price of lessons at the country
dub near where I grew up.
So, I decided last month that,
by God, I was going to do it.
Of course, as I was drlVlllg
over to the Murdy Community
Center m Huntington Beach for
my first lesson, I was struck with
Briefly Jn
THE NEWS
Assemblyman to hold
forum on energy crisis
In an effort to bnng greater
understanding of energy issues to
the district, Assemblyman John
Campbell (R-lrvine) will hold a
community forum at Orange
Coast College on Saturday.
Campbell, whose district
includes Newport Beach and Cos-
ta Mesa, has invited representa-
tives from Southern California
Edison, The Gas Co. a nd the
Orange County Business Council
to join him at the forum.
A spokeswoman for the assem-
blyman said he would breakdown
Danette Goulet
REPORTER'S NOTEBOOK
Uus fear that, being 5 feet 5 and
27 years old, I wouJd be this
ungracefuJ klutz towering over a
pack of agile youth.
I was delighted to find that,
while I do have the grace of a
buffalo, or moose, as the instruc-
tor bas informed me, my fellow
the state's current energy crislS,
offer a snapshot of legislation
auned at solVUlg the shortage and
lay out hls own views on the lSsue
But the bulk of the 90-minute
forum, scheduJed to start at 2 p.m.,
will be devoted to quesbons from
the public to the panel of those on
the front tines of the issue.
The forum will take place in
Room 119 of the Fine Arts Hall at
the college, 2701 FCWVlew Road,
Costa Mesa.
Information: (949) 863-7070.
-Paul Clinton
Fair to begin selling
reserved concert seats
The Orange County Fair-
grounds board on Thursday unan-
students are -with the excep-
tion of one kid -gutsy adults
out there trying something new.
And let's make no mistake
about it. It is not just getting up
the nerve and off your duff to sign
up for lessons that is a hurdle.
It's going week after week and
being terrible at something.
It's standing there awkwardly
in front of strangers and whiffing
completely or whacking the ball
clear out of the courts. Again and
again.
It's going from your normal
life, where you hopefully are
respected and in control, to hav-
ing a punk, 24-year-old, Kurt
Cobain-looking coach make fun
of you.
But after the inillal shock of
having someone scoff at you and
correct you, it actually becomes
imously approved opening a
reserved seating section at Arling-
ton Theater during the annual
sununer fair.
The board in December agreed
to increase the theater's tempo-
rary lawn seating -from 6,500 to
9,300 seats -and to reduce the
number of shows from two to one
per night.
The shows, which have in pre-
vious years been scheduJed for 7
and 9 p.m., Uus year will be
scheduJed for 8 p.m.
ReguJar seating for the show
will continue to be induded in the
fau"s admission pnce, but now
fairgoers will have the opporturu-
ty to buy reserved seats for $10.
"The Orange Circle Reserved
Seat Program is about conve-
nience,· said Steve Beazley,
deputy general manager for the
l8'S appalling and more amusmg.
The thing is, this is exacUy
what it was like to learn new
things as a yaungster. It just
didn't (a.ze you then.
So no matter bow bad you
think you are at something, no
matter how many excuses you
may come up with to not go do
something that you've always
wanted to do, just throw out the
old child mentality and do it.
Sure, it may be difficult to pick
up or learn. But better to be
defeated by an opponent on a
tennis court, or whatever your
new hobby, than to defeat your-
self from your couch.
Th.ls old dog will prove it can
learn new tricks.
• DANETTE GOUlET covers education
for the Pilot.
fairgrounds. "For most of our con-
certs, people wtlJ start lining up at
3 p.m Tius offers them the oppor-
turuty not to wait in line at all by
buying a pre-sale seat.•
About 1,600 seats in the front of
the theater will be labeled Orange
Circle Reserved seats, leavmg
about 7,700 free.
Those who don't buy reserved
seats wtlJ not get spots in the front,
but Beazley said there will still be
"really good" free seats available
for those willing to wait in line to
be among the first lo enter.
The fair began considering a
reserved seat program after con-
ducting a survey m which 60% of
the respondents said they would
buy a reserved seat for shows they
are mterested in
-Jennifer Kho
Friday, Febrvoly 23, 2001 83
Nasty weekend of
weather on the way
•Rain is a sure thing
Saturday l)ight. according
to forecasters.
It's go6Jl9 to be an illdting week-
end. at least accOrdmg to the Nation·
al Weather Service.
The ftnt o( two storms will bring a •
?0% Cbince Of rain~. 18.id Mart
Moede, a met~ witb tbe
weether leMce.
Saturday will be dry and mostly
cloudy1 with the ~n~ol1Jl expect-
ed to bit Saturday night. Moede
expects an almost 100% chance of
rain for Saturday mgbt and Sunday,
Wlth 1 to 1 112 inches of rainfall.
The storms will ~ wttb them
cold temperatures, with highs in tbe
50s and possible th\lnderstorms and
hail. Funnel clouds and water spouts
are also expected, he saJd. 1be storm
is expected to clear by Sunday night.
leaving lbe rest of the week with
cloudY weather, Moede sakL •nus week.end will be active and
exciting. Variety in weather is always
good," Moede said. •The storms
make you appreciate the 5WlllY
days.•
By Thursday afternoon, Newport
Beach lifeguards were feeling the
onset of the storm as wind blew sand
across the beach and the swf was
small and choppy.
•With the storm this weekend, we
will see bigger swf with the high
tides, but it won't be good for surfing
because the waves will come in dose
intervals,• said John Moore, a life-
guard spedalisl •Even today (Thurs-
day}, the water has been at 53
degrees, making it very uncomfort-
able and not good for recreation.•
C· f Aw.gwU", IT'S TIME FOR ...
fko.t't ~otJf' iK.o. Ml CASA
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It can be a qu.iet can-
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The reasons for Duffy
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HARBOR BLVD
COSTA MESA
(114}
-111
• s.nd AllOUND TOWN Items to
the Dally "'ot. 330 W. B~ St., Com Mesa. CA 92627; by fax to
(949) 646-4170; ot bv calling (949)
574-4291. Include the time. date
and location of the event. as well
as • contact phone number. A
complei. listing Is 1vallable at
http:llwww.dallypllot.com.
TODAY
Today II the deadllne for
scholanhip applications at
Orange Coast College, 2701
Pai.Mew Road, Costa Mesa.
Free. (71-4) .t32-5730.
A med book ate will be host·
ed by the Friends of the New-
port Beach Library from 1 to 5
p.m. today for members only
and from 9 a.m. to 4 p .m. Sat-
urday at the Central Llbrary,
1000 Avocado Ave. Free.
(949) 759-9667.
SAJUIDIY
A seminar for people who
plan to start a business or
hllve recently established a
business will be held from
8:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. at National
University, 3390 Harbor Blvd.,
Costa Mesa. The program is
sponsored. by the Orange
County Chapter of the Ser-
vice Corps of Retired Execu-
tives Assn. (714) 550-7369.
TUESDAY
A yoga work.shop wtU be
hosted by Mother's Market at
6:30 p .m. at the market, 225
E. 17th St., Costa Mesa. Free.
(949) 631-4741.
The Orange c;ounty Chapter
of the Servit:e Corps of
Retired Executives Assn. will
host a workshop for small
bu.slllesses on marketing and
promotion from 9 a.m. to
noon at National University,
3390 Harbor Blvd., Costa
Mesa. $25, or $20 in advance.
(714) 550-7369.
"How to Make the Most of
Doctor Visits,· a seminar
sponsored by Elder Care
Consultants, will be held at 2
p.m. at Borders Books, Music
& Cafe at South Coast Plaza,
3333 Bear St., Costa Mesa.
Pree. Reservations are
requested. (949) 645-8007.
WEDNESDAY
Healthy Heart Yoga will be
offered at 11 :30 a.m. at Hoag
Hospital's conference center, 1
Hoag Drive, Newport Beach.
Free. (800) 51 4-HOAG.
"The Fundamentals of Pro-
fessional Money Manage-
ment" will be the subject of a
dinner seminar by Steven
Ferges, a financial advisor in
Morgan Stanley Dean Wit-
ter's Costa Mesa office. The
seminar will start at 6:30 p .m .
at the Wyndam Garden
Hotel, 3350 Avenue of the
Arts, Costa Mesa. Pree. reser-
vation may be made by call·
lng Perges at t71') 2'1-3209.
A MJDtna.r and book·tignlng
of •Nature's ViruS Killers•
will take place at 6:30 p.m. at
Mother'• Market. 225 E. 17th
St., Costa Mesa. Free. (949)
631-4741.
A Costa Mesa Chamber ol
Commerce o.tter-bours mixer
will take place at 5:30 p.m. at
Romano's Macaroni Grill, 595
Anton Blvd.. Costa Mesa.
$10, members are free. (714)
885-9090.
MARCH 2
A motorcycle show will take
place from 5 to t 0 p.m . at the
Orange County Fairgrounds,
88 Fair Drive, Costa Mesa. $7
for adults, children younger
than 12 are free. (949) 582·
2371.
A gem, bead and jewelry
show will take place from
noon to 7 p.m. March 2, 10
a.m. to 7 p.m. March 3, and 10
a.nf. to 5 p.m. March 4 at the
Orange County Fairgrounds,
88 Fair Drive, Costa Mesa. $4
for adults, $3 for seniors and
free for children younger than
12. (760) 747-9215.
MARCH 3
An orchtd potting seminar
will take place at 10 a.m . and
2 p.m. at Green Systems
International Orchid Nursery.
20362 Birch St., Newport
Beach. The nursery will be
open from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.
Free. (949) 756-1211.
A Ubrary Card tor Every Kid
event will take place in cele-
bration of Read Across Amer-
ica fTom noon to 4 p.m. in the
Bloomingdale's Courtyard at
Fashion Island in Newport
Beach. Children 5 and older
may receive a library card,
and there will also be face-
painting and characters from
popular children's books.
Free. (949) 717-3800.
The Court Appointed Spedal
Advocates will hold its eighth
annual fund-raiser at 6:30
p.m. at the Sutton Place
Hotel, 4500 MacArthur Blvd.,
Newport Beach. Rlchard
Gadbois ill, this year's Chil-
dren's Champion, is among
those who will be honored.
$250. (714) 663-8271.
MARCH 7
High School Dance Day, a
day of dance classes, will take
place from 8 a.m. to 1 :30 p.m.
at Orange Coast College,
• <{JuRiiiuMlulJ
floral A: Gifts
50% Off
Topiaries, Potted Ivy~ Orchids,
and all Floral Arrangements
F.ip. 212810 I
Mon-Fri 10-6, Sat 10-5, Sun 10-4
369 E. 17th Street, Cosca.Mesa, CA
Phone (949) 646-6745
Located in Wcstpon Squm ICl'OA ffom Ralphs
Doily Pilot
2701 PaiJ'view Road, Costa
Mesa. Pree. (71•) .t32-5506.
llAICH 11
1be Leigh and Lucy Stetn. betV Spirit Run will begin with
registration at 6:30 a.m. at
Edwards Cinema Theaters at
Fashion Island, 905 Newport
Center Orlve, Newport Beach.
1be nm will include a 1 OK
nm/Walle, a Jamba Juice 5K
8aMDA Man Ch&se, 4 51( fanu.
ly walk, youth races and an
Orange County Family Tuddler
'D'ot. Pees depend on the age of
the participant (9"9) 222-3344.
MARCH 14
A worUbop on pregnancy for
women in their thirties will
take place at 6 p.m. at the
Hoag Health Center, 1 Hoag
Drive, Costa Mesa. Free
(800) 514-HOAG.
MARCH 16
The 12th annWll Am.lab Craft
Show will be held from noon to
8 p.m . March 16 and 10 a.m. to
5 p.m. March 17 at the Orange
County Fairgrounds, Building
14, 88 Pair Drive, Costa Mesa
Free (717) 687-9270.
MARCH 23
Whole Foods Market will host
a two-hour demonstration
cooking class with chefs
Mary Sue Milliken and Susan
Feniger from 7 to 9 p.m. at
The Forum Classroom at
Orange Coast College, 2701
Fairview Road, C0sta ,.:Mesa
(818J so;-8484. Ext. 1jJ.
MARCH 27
Coast College will present Its
18th annual High School
Senior Day from noon to 3
p.m . at the c~pus quad.
2701 Fairview Road, Costa
Mesa. (714) 432-5725.
MARCH 31
The Wanda J. Cobb Breast
Health Sytnposium and Susan
G. Komen Survivors Lun-
cheon will be held from 8 a.m
to 3 p.m . at the Newport
Beach Marriott Hotel and Ten-
nis Club, 900 Newport Center
Drive, Newport Beach. $25
Reservations required. (714 )
957-9157, Ext. 70.
APRIL 18
The 14th annual JfiV/AJDS
on the Front Llne Conference
will be held at 8 a.m. at the
Hilton Hotel, 3050 Bristol St..
Costa Mesa. Tbe event is pre-
sented by the AIDS Education
and 'Il'aining Center, UC Irvine
and the Orange County Health
Care Agency. (714) 456-2249.
APRIL 23
Wbole Foods Marke t will
offer a special market tour
from 5 to 7 p.m. to highlight
new ways to prepare natural
foods. The store is at 1870
Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa.
(949) 574-3800.
APRIL 24
Orange Coast College stu·
dents who are interested in
trying out to be the gradua·
tion speoker may do so at 2
p.m. ln the college's Lltera·
ture and Language Building.
Orange Coast College, 2701
Fairview Road., Costa Mesa,
(714) 432-0202. "\
OllGOlllG
Oub Senior Center II laold-
lng an •Adventurous Walke.rs
Group" that will travel to
points of interest locally and
around the county. The
groups meets at 9 a.m. Fridays
at the center and walks at a
leisurely pace. The center is at
1800 Marguerite Ave., New-
port Beach. (9"9) 6"4-32'.t.
Support Our
Schools
Shop Harbor
Blvd. of ears.
. I
. .
. ,
..
I
I
n
r
..
Doily Pilot Friday, February 23, 200 l BS
\
"11.lws
Anotherspm
doles stmm dr8ln .,.
A win<Wla mtp of
ltonn cbem..J remained
clOled 1bunday became
of a sewage spill.
The Orange County
Health Care Agency
closed the stonn-drain
cbanilel that rum south-
eQt of the Santa Ana.
River on Wednesday
after the apill.
The ~ill occurred
when an Orange COWlty
Sanitation District line
broke between 10 and 11
a.m. Wednesday, send-
ing about 500 gallona of
raw sewage into the
channel
On Thursday, health
officials were awaiting
test results to determine
bacteria levels in the
water, known as the
Newport Slough.
Th~ water was dosed
at 3:30 p.m. Wednesday
and will reopen when
health officials determine
bacteria levels meet state
standards.
The mouth of the San-
ta Ana River also
remained dosed Tbun·
day after a Monday spill
in Costa Mesa. The river
empties into the slough.
-Paul Olnton
HOMES
CONTINUED FROM B 1
"These numbers are
astounding,• High said. •Tue
consumers have a higher
confidence level now, o.nd the
normal home buyer has gone
from being in their 40s to
their late 20s and early 30s,
thanks to the influx of dot-
coms and the strong stock
market. It's just a really
healthy market right now.•
CAPS
CONTINUED FROM B 1
The restrictions limit the
number of annual passen-
gers to 8.4 million and allow
ALOHA
CONTINUED FROM 81
Aloha has lobbied the air-
port for nearly a year to be
added to the list of John
Wayne's commercial airlines.
In June, the airline success-
fully qualified a modified
Boeing 737 with the Federal
Aviation Administration for
use at the airport.
Last year, Aloha flew more
than 5 million passengers.
The airline now offers more
than 1,100 weekly flights to
and from the islands.
Just because a home ts
selling for St million doesn't
mean a buyer can expect to
get an estate with guest
quarters and views of the
ocean, though. Lynch said a
3,500-.quare-foot piece of
property with a 3,000·
square-foot bpme with a par-
tial view of the ocelUl in
Corona del Mar will sell for
Sl million .
•A house like this will be
in good condition, usually an
older home that has been
remodeled,• she said.
no more than 73 daily
departures. Departures are
allowed from 7 a.m . to 10
p .m. Monday through Satw-
day, and 8 a.m. to 10 p.m.
Sunday. Arrivals are
allowed from 7 a.m. to 11
p.m . Monday through Satw-
No matter what you're domg,
your hometown newspaper
I'm not worried,
my agent is
Craig B11>Wn Insurance
Call today for auto & home
owner'i. lnsur.mce!
If a home buyer wants to
spend a lltUe bit more, a
10.000-square-foot property
with a 5,000-square-foot
home in Ocean Ridge in
Newport Coast will sell
anywhere from $2 million to
$2.75 million, with no ocean
views. Other affluent areas,
she said, are Bonita
Canyon, Pelican Hills, Peli-
can Crest and Pelican Point,
as well as the Corona del
Mar Village.
For Wedel, who grew up in
Orange County, the increa~
day, and 8 a.m. to 11 p.m.
Sunday.
The planning authority
has fought an El Toro air-
port on many fronts -most
notably in the courtroom
and at the ballot box. After
a judge tossed out Measure
FITS IN •.• Inily Pilot
ln the number of milllon-dol-
lar homes isn't surprising.
and he said he expects to get
the full $3.999 million that he
is asking for bis Corona del
Mar home.
•People won't be swp1ised
in my area, and I think lt's
being offered at a good
prlce, • be said. • 1 only looked
for the home I bought (on Bal-
boa Island) for a week
because I have been paying
attention to the properties
available. I have seen the
trend in the cost of homes,
F, an initiative requiring
two-thirds county approval
for an airport, the authority
announced it would write a
new measure to be put
before voters in March
2002.
Airport Working Group
and it's nice to take advan-
tage of it.•
Lynch, who ts handhng
both of Wedel'• properties,
said these high pnces would
never have been seen in the
early 1990s.
•ever St million back then
was rare. It used to be that
you could find home& m
Newport for $500,000 to
$700,000, and now you can't
find one for under $1 mil-
lion: she said. ·we just hope
it stays this way.•
spokesman Dave Ellis said
the possible position cho.nge
is a step toward that goal.
•They're gomg lo launch
an initiative in the next few
months,• Ellis satd. "They're
using this to prune that
pump.•
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TWENTY THREE MINUTES AGO
YOU NEEDED A PLUMBER.
INSTEAD OF A SHIPBUILDER. r
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The sooner you know, the sooner
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When you take the Sen Joequln
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more direct, uninterrupted drive
to wherever )IOU're heeded. And
since you'll errtft fe1ter, thett'1
more time to hariclle whainer'a
weJllna (or you when you set
tbere. Re1H.mber, tram~ Isn't
the only thlna we help you
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86 ftidoy, February 23, 2
• Model Darienne
Arnold wears a Dior
ensemble consisting of
distressed leather pants
($2,875), camouflage knit
top ($575), a miniature
kangaroo handbag
($545), aviator sun-
glasses (S210) and dis-
tressed leather "lock
and key" mules ($310).
Entering the
u ~-
ByB.W. Cook
World-renowned couturier
Christian Dior opened
the swank doors of its South
Coast Plaza boutique for local
design lovers to share in a
spring/slJmmer 2001 pret a porte (ready
to wear) show in Costa Mesa last week.
Also on display was Dior's new collection
of fine jewelry, chosen to accessorize the
spring and summer fashions. The House
of Dior, a 20th century hallmark of
international fashion, has an unparal-
leled pedi~ree. South Coast Plaza
store manager Christine Sutton pro-
vided a cross-section of the new Dior
look for the upcoming season.
Our model for this special two-
part series on Dior (the second
segmen' will run in the Da ily '
Pilot next week) is Darienne
Arnold.
• Arnold models this blue and
white silk chiffon evening
gown trimmed in blue snake-
skin from Dior's "Hide and
Seek" collection ($5,505). ·
•Dior has
always been
known for
creating fab-
ulous cloth-
ing in the
color pink.
The Marquis
line includes
this pink
bikini
($350), a
pink print
"diamond"
bag ($545),
and black
patent
leather
"lock and
key" mule
slippers
($315) with
the obliga-
tory aviator
sunglasses
($210).
---~---------------~-------------------------~
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Costa Mesa
2150 Harbor Blvd.
at Victoria
OPEN 24 HOURS
Present this Coupon and We'll
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thru M~ 31, 2001 s1 OFF
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gold camisole trimmed in ivory
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ed with an ivory crepe skirt
($805). The look is complement-
ed with Dior's camouflage "lock
and key" sling-back pumps
($390) and a saddlebag ($855),
also from the camouflage line.
Doily Pilot
•*I iiNG WVOl.VID runs period-~ In tn. Dally Pilot on a rotating
betls. tf you'd Oke lnformatlon on
adding your Ofganlutlon to this
fist. call (949) 574-4298.
I *>tUAL ASSAULT VICTIM
SEfNKES Of ORANGE COUNTY
Volunteers are needed to
provide assistance on the cn-
sis hotline and at the hospital.
There ls a speciaJ need for
bilingual and bicultural vol-
unteers. (949) 756-0677.
SHAREI HIGH SCHOOL
-£><CHANGE PROGRAM
Host families are needed
in the Costa Mesa area to
provide a bed, meals and a
loving home for high school
students from more than 28
countries, including Ger-
many, Japan, Brazil, China
and Poland. The students, all
between 15 and 18, partici-
pate in cross-cultural
exchange to learn about
America and share their own
cultw'e. The students stay for
five to 10 months and are
screened twice for academic
excellence and proficiency 111
English. (888) 533-8514.
SHARE OUR SELVES CONIC
The clinic, which provides
emergency services to the
needy in Orange County, is
looking for volunteers to
deliver and pick up food from
local restaurants and grocery
stores, help with medlcaJ dlld
dental staff. data entry, assist
with food sorting and distrib-
ution, to help at the front desk
and some other duties. They
also need translators. (949)
515-7316.
SHERMAN LIBRARY
&GARDENS
You could assist with the
garden or help in the gtlt and
tea shop of Corona del Mar's
botanical garden and histon-
cal research l.Jbrary. Dorothy
Wood, (949) 673-2261
SMALL BUSINESS
ASSISTANCE CENTER
The Small Busirless Assis-
tance Center of OCC needs
volunteers to advise small
busirless owners irl firlance,
accounting, law, marketing,
sales, human resources and
other areas. (714) 432-5916.
SOMEONE CARES
SOUP kfTCHEN
Someone Ceres Soup
Kitchen needs food servers
and volunteers for kitchen
duties. The organization is at
720 W. 19th St., Costa Mesa.
(949) 548-8861.
SOUTH COAST
UTERACY COUNOL
Volunteer tutors are need-
ed for an irlcreased demand
of literacy and English as a
Second Language classes.
Students are taught English
reading, writirig and speak-
ing skills at their own level irl
small groups or on a one-to-
one baSlS There a.re centers
all over Orange County. Once
tratned, tutors may choose
the center m which they want
to teach Mary Fitzgerald,
(949) 458-8664.
SOUTH COAST
REPERTORY THEATER
The South Coast Repertory
Theater needs volunteers to
help wtlh ushenng (see plays
free) and other functions.
(714) 708-5500.
TEU-A-FRIEND
Orange County cancer
groups seek volunteers to
educdte and encourage
women to have mammo-
grams. Participants will take
part 111 a one-on-one program
of education and encourage-
ment specifically related to
mammograms and early
breast cancer detection. The
Susan G. Komen Breast Can-
cer Foundation, (949) 224-
0292
UNDERGROUND
The Unde rground pro-
gram, d function or Child's
Pace, provides soad.i activi-
ties and mteracbon for ado-
lescents Volunteers are
needed irl many areas. (949)
548-8849.
VANTAGE FOUNDATION
The Vantage Foundation
supports employment and
GEr11NG INVOLVED Fridoy, February 23, 2001 87
comm.unity training for adults
with developmental disabili-
ties. Volunteers are needed.
(949) 645-7833.
VISIONS FOR PRISONS
Visions for Prisons, a non-
profit program that teaches
attitudinal healing and medi-
tation in prison needs typists
to transcribe letters from
i.rimates to at-risk kids. Week-
day hours, Mesa del Mar.
(714) 556-8000.
VOLUNTEER CENTER OF
GREATER ORANGE COUNTY
With more than 1,500 vol-
unteer opportunities, the Vol-
unteer Center will match
people and groups wishing to
volunteer with nonprofit
agencies in their area. Volun-
teer Connection Lule, (714)
953-5757,Ext. 106.
WEUNESS COMMUNITY
OF ORANGE COUNTY
The Wellness Commuruty
needs volunteers to help out
at the reception desk during
the day. (714) 258-1210.
WEST SIDE BOYS
& GIRLS CLUB
Volunteers are needed
from 2:30 to 5:30 p.m. Mon-
days and Thursdays to tutor
students m first through sixth
grades m reacting . (949) 63 1-
7724.
WOMEN HELPING WOMEN
Mentors and donations are
needed to assist victims of
domestic violence. Volunteer
teachers are also needed for
computer dasses. The organi-
zation is at 711 W. 17Ut St.,
Suite A-10, Costa Mesa. The
center also needs volunteers
to help with client intake and
dressmg, donation collecl.Jon,
sorting clothes and general
office work. (714) 631-2333.
WYLAND FOUNDATION
The Wyland Foundation,
which encourages greater
awareness of ocean conserva -
tion, is seeking volun~eers for
derical and computer help
and grant writing. (949) 497-
6723.
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TM(re not lust pit..._, but f1d,...;. -·
Ron Ev--. CdM girls soccer coach
88 Friday, February 23, 2001 • Spom Editor Roger Carlson • 949-57U223 •Spam Fax: 949~170
DAILY PILOT PHOTOS BY GREG FRY
The first goal proved to be the game-winner for Corona del Mar IDgh's girls Thursday and It was Elisha Morgan (center, facing)
who was the one to deliver ll At right, Jaycee Mahler approaches to congratulate as Morgan gets a hug from Lauren Shepherdson.
CdM barges into CIF semis, 3-0
• Sea Kings hammer Valley Christian.
Tony Altobelli
DAILY PILOT
M;fi?R_o~~k a~o~~ GIRLS SOCCER
peaking at just the
right time.
The Corona del Mar High girls soccer
team mowed down yet another opponent
Thursday afternoon with a 3-0 win over visit-
ing Valley Christian of Cerritos in the quar-
terfinals of the CIF Southern Section Division
IV Playoffs.
The final score in no way indicates the
domination of the top-seeded Sea Kings (26-
1-3) over the Crusaders (18-2-5).
Despite a return trip to the semifinals,
CdM Coach Ron Evans is still not comfort-
able ·talking about the future.
"We're just taking it one game at a time,•
the ever-original Evans said. "Each game is
going to be harder and harder so we need to
keep playing at our best.•
CdM received goals from sophomore
Elisha Morgan, senior Margit Vogele and
freshman Kinzie Kramer, while Valley Chris-
tian just tried to hang on for dear life.
With the win, the Sea Kings will play at
fourth-seeded Harvard-Westlake (17-3-4) in
Tuesday's semifinals, beginning at 3 p.m. The
Wolvennes took care of Bishop Montgomery,
2-0, on Thursday.
·1n order for us to win, we're going to
have to play our best game of the year,·
Evans said. ·sut I also feel (the Wolverines)
will need to play their best game in order to
beat us.·
The Sea Kings. despite playing the first
half into a strong head wind, took control ear-
ly. In the ninth minute, sophomore Lauren
Shepherdson sent in a strong comer kick to
the head of senior Molly O'Meara. O'Meara
headed the ball to Morgan, who headed a
shot into the net for a 1-0 CdM advantage.
CdM's J aycee Mahler goes airborne to head the ball o ver VC's Katharine Zymkowitz.
"Obviously, getting the firat ~oal in a playoff
game is very crucial.• Evans said. ·us~l' we
don't get wanned up until the second so if
there Is some type of disadvantage like wind or
sun, I try to get it out of the way early.•
Morgan led CdM on a couple of other
excellent scoring opportunities in the first
half, but Valley Christian withstood the chal-
lenge and trailed only by one goal at the half.
With the wind at the Sea Kings' back,
CdM turned the second half into its own
shooting gallery.
The sea Kings, who outshot Valley Chris-
tian. 25-6, bad a goal disallowed due to a
hand ball infraction, two other shots rang off
of goal posts and another near-goal .was
kicked away at the last second by an alert
Crusaders' defender.
penalty kick. Margit Vogele took advantage
of the ofportunity and found the lower-left
comer o the goal in the 60th minute, giving
the Sea Kings that all-important two-goal
advantage.
In the 80th minute, Hanson ripped a shot
toward the Crusaders' goalie. "'the goalie
could not corral the shot and Kramer shot the
loose ball into the net to wrap up CdM's scor-
ing. The Crusaders bad a couple of mild scor-
ing chances, but they were denied by senior
goalie Britta Vogele (four iaves) and the rest
of the OiM defense. It was the Sea Kings'
fourth shutout in a row and 15th ol the sea-
son.
Finally, junior Kristin Hanson drew a foul
deep in the Crusaders' zone, giving CdM a
"In all my years of coaching, I've never felt
more confident about a group of players as this
group here," Evans said. ·u any team deserves
to go all the way, this one does. 'Jbey're not just
great athletes, but greet people."
CdM hopes third time a charm
•Top-seeded Sea Kings
have lost twice to CIF
Division IV semifinal
opponent Laguna Beach .
a.sy Feulkner
OMYPl.or
LA.KE POREST -Wblle some of
theft classmates have been hitting
the tlopes, riding waves or relax-
lng tn the desert, m mbers of the c.c.ona del Mar High g1rls wa
polo teem ape:nt much or their
mld·wtnler vacation prepo.rtng for todaf"I CIP Southern. Section DM·
Iron IV teDdllnaJ showdown with
Pad&: Cout Lee~ rtval Laguna
811 eta, 2 o'Clock at Bl 'Tbto High
The topw11eded See Kings (19-
U) bi1gaD ltUdYb* Vid~tape of
tbe AJ1i1t1 (22-6) about an how
.... tliUm,Plng l!lrM Olnda. 13-2,
ID 'l\JlldaYI ~· CdM
Coach John Vargas hoped to gain
any advantage be could against a
Laguna Beach squad that has
already defeated the Sea Kings
twice thJs season.
Laguna Beach, wb.lch 8'bared
the PCL aown with CdM and
University, then loft a coin Oip to
become the league's thkd·place
representative, teclmically deny-
ing it a lOJ>-'fOur seed, beat CdM,
3-2, in a Dec. 29 Holiday Cup
tournament game at at the Sea
Kiog1' pool. The Art.lttl then
earned a 9-6 tnumph In the PCL
opener, Jan. 10 at hame.
CdM, however, was withOut
sophomore 1t.andout Cb.ri.stiilo
Hewko lot the league meeting
Md, Vugu balleYel, 1t II p!aytng
lts be8t watel polo ol the INIOD
nghtnaw.
"I think we're pMking at I.be
ngbt time,• aJd Vargu, wbo
commended bis team's focus,
' GIRU WATER POLO
determination and defense after
defeating its first two pJayoff foes
by a combined 29-2.
Vargas said bis squad, which
lost in last year's Dtvision IV tiUe
game, 7-4 to Sant.a Margarita, will
need to reach an even hlgber lev-
el to advance to Monday'• cbom-
pionship game.
•nie first two (Laguna} match·
•· I thought both teams played
well," Vargas d. •1 WU pleued
with the way we were playing at
the time, but Laguna 8eecb just
beat UI, plat.n aOO simple.
•We're Mecled ftrlt by virtue of
8 coin OJp (Laguna Beech WU
tanked No. 1 m the final CJP Dlvl-rv poll), ind they bell UI
twice, Catr end lqUAfe. I us a
a little bit of an Underdog.•
Coach RJck Scon•1 ArUSts
del ted Ke~ 13 .... ID the fttlt
•
round, then got post Peninsula,
7-6, in Tueiday'1 quarterfinals .
They are ~ by twin listen
Teresa and nna Cod.in.l.
CdM is led by sophomoru
Danielle Car~n and Hewko,
both of whom wen. tint.team All·
CIP Division JV cboica a year
ago. Carlson i..dl the teem wtlh
76 goels and bU allo C'OlltltbUtild
80 ltMll. HeWko has 61 goals, •
team-best 100 ltM.ll and alto
leads tbe ;quad wlth 29 Ul:lltl.
Senior co-capta.lD Ltndsey
Deley bu 37 goals, WhUe ICipbo-:
man. Brtttany Bowlus (23) end
Daniela DlGiacomo ( 13) have al.lo
been oftemtve weapons .
Junior JeMka W.U. anc.bori
lh8 CdM defente In g(MaJ. She bM
12 ol ber 148 Mvel ln the plaf6.
Tuda'/W w1AM:t' wm meet either
No. 2 IHded Univtfllty(l&-12)«
m Dorado cts-10) Monday at a
p.m. id BelmOnt PSua.
. ;..
.... -~2'-•t TOii lnCHllS
Daity Pilot
IOYS llSIOIALL . .
Tars ,,ttue1'
No. ·3·seed
VillilPark
• Newport Harbor is seeking
unprecedented semifinals berth at
tonight's CIF 1-A quarterfinal.
Bany Faulkner
DAllY Pl.or
Vll..LA PARK -When your program Is
older than the New Deal. ranking the impor-
tance of a single victory can be problematic.
But should Newport Harbor High upset No.
3-seeded Villa Park in the quarterfinals of
the CIP Southern Section Division I-A boys
basketball playoffs -tonight at 7:30 on the
Spa.rt.ans' Ooor -it's place atop the school's
816 all-time victories would spark little
debate.
The Sailors (21-6) have never won three
playoff games in a season and are playing
th.is late in the postseason for only the third
time in 71 varsity campaigns.
Newport Harbor Coach Larry Hirst said
the Tars' 72-69 second-round overtime tri-
umph over visiting Pacific Tuesday ranked
among the best wins in bis sa-sease)n
tenure. But, beating the Spartans, who have
become a perennial Orange County power,
would put the Sailors into uncharted pJ.a¥off
territory. It would also bolster the status of a
Harbor program making its fifth straight
playoff appearance.
•1 think when we beat Pacific the other
night, it proved Orange County basketball.
especially us little guys, can represent if w e
need to,· Hirst said. "Beating a well-
respected program like Villa Park (23-5)
would put another feather in our cap.•
But while Hirst acknowledged a victory
over the Spartans might be even tougher
than Tuesday's second-round win, he
believes his team will not
be intimidated.
"It may be a coach's
bleak way of looking at
things, .but Villa Park bas
lost to the same teams we
have, like El Toro and
Woodbridge," Hirst said.
"I think thttt puts us in the
same club."
Villa Park's losses have
come against Mater Dei,
Bl Toro, Woodbridge, Tony M ehuii
Westchester and Pal-
isades. Harbor lost twice to Woodbridge,
twice to El Toro and once to Capistrano Val-
ley.
Villa Park, however, has victories over
Capo Valley Woodbridge and Padfic.
Coach Kevin Reynolds' Spartans have
enjoyed an average victory margin of nearly
23 points, but have beaten teams an average
of 30.5 during its current six-game wi.rming
streak, including playoff romps over PAim
Springs, 80-43, and St, John Bosco, 68--0.
"They're really good and they're really
big,• Hirst said. "Though I don't believe
they will be any more physical than Pacific
was and I know they're not as quick. they
will be more structured and disdplinec;t in
their approach.•
Hirst said bis biggest concern wfi1. be
defending the Spartans' collection of mlrp-shooters. _
Matt MacGinnis, a 6·foot-2 senior, ha, 65
three-pointers, after leading the county in
three-point shooting percentage as aJunior.
He averages a team-leading 14.4 pointii>er
game.
Sean Pbaler, a 6-9 sophomore, av~es
12 points and 9.41'ebounds and enteNd the
playoffs as the county's leading free-mtow
shooter (70 of 79 for 89%). He ls aDDlher
three-point threat.
But 90phomore point guard Corey Miller
(8.2 ppg) may be Hint'• primary conau:ii.
•Not to take anything away &ram
MacGinnis or Pbaler, but I think MWerWthe
X-factor, • Hirst said. •He runs their offense
as well as any point guard in the county. He
bad a tr1ple double (19 points, 10 rebcii'nds
and 10 assisb) against SL John Bosco.•
Blice .Prather 10.3 point.I and 8.7
rebounds per cxmtelt u a 6-8 junior, ~d
Kyle Bgkan, 7 .3 rebounds per game u a 6-8
senior,· are other key facton, as it MP.ior
sixth man Tommy Stenk.an (7 .3 poinbl and
S.2 reboundt per outing) .
Tully Melum, a M junior, leec»;. the
Seilon with 18.5 pamts and 12 rebounal per
guie, while MD.lor guard Aaron :Yl)'nal
cbP in 15.8 ppg.
Melum •m«Nad 32 pointt ana 17
.reboUndt 1\aelday. He and Yamal !Miv4ipro-
dueed 8'% of the s.uon· pol.Ills In ttil play·
offs.
Juroon Greg Pemne and Btlk PatlRIOn,
as weU • M aopbomor'e Nedlm Pajeoitj are
allo apec.Wd '° tt.art for tbe ~ ..
N4rwport. wtdch play.cl only 10: E ~=:.==,.,. -
tO their COlidl.
• 1 think our Idell almcilt nnfer p&a7'QD oo
tM roed.. Hint Mid. ·w.'ft-:-~ ...
wUb pr.uy bod9 avwds w1 t .... OW'
~~otrlllat.• Dmglllt~ ...... d ~ to3bill-
day41 -•Ml ........ N0.21•W
C-•nW of C... ,._2) cw ~
Canyan (23-7).
SPoR'JS •
Friday, Februoty 23. 200 l 89 .
Four Pirates AD~OEC
td•~ \ '
•Pirates have two men, two out a team-high 115 assists.
SCHEDULE
TODAY
women recognized. •a.llketbllll
-Orange Coast Col-BASKOIALL en 's basketball
Urban, a sophomore forward and a
product of Newport Harbor High, led
lhe team in scoring (1 4 points a game),
tb.ree-pointers (69 converted) and
blocked shots ( 14).
Community college men -
State Regionals, first round:
Or.ngl Coast at San Diego Ci'>' College, 7 p.m.
looking back 5 years ago t.1118 week ...
Chad Hagedorn and Niclr
have been named first-tea1 1
i range Empire Conferen< .:
s Karyn Fierst and Kri• tf'n
ea.med lhe same honor flit the
n's squad.
OCC blanks Irvine Valley
c o s T A WOMEN'S TENNIS MESA -The
High school boys • Newport
Harbor at Villa Par1(. 7 p.m.
•W.Wpoto
High school girls • OF
Divlslon IV Playo~ semtflnal:
The "'tandll .... gill!
buketbel1 team begiDI its
ettemp..,d qu.t to NKh The
Pyramid with• 6'·52 ~over
~· J~VM aa.t .. 11 htts
eight of bet fJnt Q1ne fiekl1JOO)
attempts en route to a caree.r·bigh
24 points. 1be ~-later De in
the OP Southern Section Division
l·A playoffs to Sen Dimu, 10-5',
~In the MtUid round pl .. Cll
Division m p&ayoffa. w.u.. •
~ cradJM. loW. MipplDg
~ 9bol with 30 .ecilOdl
~to push the,..,. Udo
Hagedorn, a sophomore t."enter/for-wcw:t. was a standout on botb ends of
floQr, belpin9 lead the Pirates to a
off berth (at San Diego City,
o gbt at 7). He reached double fig· ures in points or rebounds in 27 of the
Pirates' 29 regular-season games. He
reveraged 17 points and 10.9 rebou.nds
a game. He also blocked 56 shots.
Burwell, a sophomore guard, led
Coast in scoring with 22.5 pomts per
game and will most likely end with
tbe third-or fourth-best single-season
~ storing average in school lu.story. He
.~ led the Pirates m sconng during
,~nference play (18.6 ppg)
,, Fierst, a sophomore point guard,
,, gWded the Bucs' offense d.Dd also
., .nkorded a team-lugh 75 steals, help·
)ing OCC to a playoff berth (at Bakers-
' :field. Saturday at 7 p .m.). She aver-
-· j aged 11 points per game and dished
t n't
Orange Coast College women's tennis
team made qwck work of visiting
Irvine Valley with a 9-0 Orange
Empire Conference win Thwsday
afternoon.
The Pirates (4-1, 2-0 in conference)
did not lose a set the entire day as
Veronica Sommer and Stephanie
Charig led the charge.
The Pirates will compete at the
Southwestern College tournament
be~t1E~ &:iua.a
Onnge c.o.t '· lrvtne valley 0 Singles · Sommer (OCC) def. Chen, 6-2, 6-
1; Chang (OCC) def. Lff, 6-2, 6·3; Mai (OCC)
def. Pranauskl, 6-0, 6-1; McNamara (OCC)
def. Nakajima, 6-1, 6-0; Lawson (OCC) def
Bast, 6-2, 6-1; Bohm (OCQ def. Marley, 6-0,
6-1 .
Doubles -Sommer-Chang (OCC) def.
Chen-Lee. 6-1, 6-2; l.aW$00·McNamara (OCC)
def. Pranauski·Bast. 6-0. 6-2; Mal-Mazza
(OCC) def. Nakajima-Marley, 6-1, 6-1.
DEEP SEA
Corona del Mar vs. Laguna
Beach, at El Toro High, 2 p.m.
• Softbllll
Community college -
Orange Coast at Golden
West. 3 p.m.
• Voneyb911
Comrminity college men ·
Orange Coast at San Diego
Mesa, 7 p.m.
• Tennis
College men · Vanguard
Uni11e1'1ity at Oklahoma City
Tournament. all day.
Community college
women · Orange Coast at
Southwestern Tournament.
2p.m.
• a.dminton
as Estanda Coad> -Da¥b is ejected after tblM technical fouls.
The Ne>.vport HArbOt girls
basketball team UMS a rut.rocating
defente to choke the We out of
host Sonora for a 51·31 vict01'y in
the first round of the ClP Division
ID·A.A playoffs. Sonora 5cores only
seven points in the first half oo
3-of-U abooting. Colleen Eadie
finishes with 10 points, five assists
and three steals. Bremaa Bacloftk
scores t 1 points. The Sailors•
sea.son ends in the second round
as HCU"bor loses, 81-76, in overtime
to No. 1-seedecl Moorpark. a 23--0
team. M.E. OaytoD leeds the Tars
witb l3 points and 12 rebounds. ··-ncv·s COUNTS ::·' ~ Unclng ·no report.
'' t ~· Locker · 1 boat. 25 anglel'1. 23 sand bass, 6 sculpin, 1 calko bass, 2 blue perch, l spotted bay bass.
Community college · San
Diego Mesa at Orange Coast.
3:30p.m .
Newport Harbor goalie Zach
Wells co.mes up with a big save to
seaae a 1..0 Victory over Riverside
:1 .,,, NOnCe Of'
N'PUCATIOH .. ' ( 1'0-.&. A&.cottouc
., .. ~ .-vaAOll
~ot Fh
" ~: Febfulty I.
._ 11 To WIOITI It Mey '•c.nc.n: I~" The Neme(a) of fie ·~· 111119: , LlC
• The IA*** "'*' ...... ~.,fie °"*''•". Of Ak::oholc .,.._ COntrol ID Mii
• •llelllhallC ~ at M» VIA UDO • ·~T BEACH. CA , . ..,
ot loanM(•)
• lot: 21 • OFF-'~
' -~:c~~lb
-t ,1US,2001
ActlUoua Bualneaa
Name Staiement
The lo/towing persons
are dOlng bveineM u
Hool< Up Marltetlng, 26282 Buecador, Mia·
1100 Vie10, Calllomla
92692
Patrick Newbold.
2e282 Buecador, MIS·
11on Viejo, Calllomia
92692
This bu&1neas 11 oon-
duded by. Ill lndMdual
Have you started
dOlng business yet? No Patridl Newbold
Th11 1ta1ement was l~ed with the County
et.111 of Ormnge Counfy on o 1/30l200 t
20019953818
0.•ly Piiot Feb 2, 9, 16.
23. 2001 Fiii!
Flctttloua Bualneu
N•me Stetement
The following persons
ara dOlng busfnns u :
P"9dlM P~. 884 CottN SI , Co.la Mesa,
CA 92626
Walberg DMlgn In· corporated (CA), 884
eoit.z St., eo.a Mesa.
CA 92626
Thll buslnesa is oon-
ducled by' • ~llOn Have you 1tar1ed
dolno buelnaaa yet?
Vea. 01/20i01
W1rt>erg 0.191 In·
COtp<>tated
T "'Y Thompeon, Pres-
ident
Thie statement was
filed with tM Coonty
OM i:A Orwige Counfy
on 0112912001
20018US47S ~ilol Feb. 2, 9, 16,
1 FB22
Flctltloua BualneM
NatM Stetement
The lollowlng pe'900I are doing buaf,_ u :
3-0 Electllc, 3301 W
Warner Ava . Santi
Ana. CA 92104 Oalyt F. Sc:hete1' 585 1 Abbey, Wes1-
mina1er, CA 92623
Joe H. Wlnnlnghem,
8939 County Road 1 lfl. Bumet. TX 78811
Fictitious Bua!neu Flctltloua Bualneaa lice form la available NOTICe OF ESQ. SBN 140082 SUMMARY OF
Name Stetement Name Statement trom fie coun <*It. AVAILABtUTY OF 714-545-1030. LAW OF· PROPOSED
The lollowitljl pe!"IOl\8 The following P8ftonS AtlOmllf for PWCllloi•. ANNUAL REPORT FICES Of JEFFERY l. ORDINANCE art dOlng bu1i1-as. are doing ~ as Thomae M. OIHer, Purtuanl to Sec:tlon HEATH. BY JEFFERY CITY OF
Soler Tan Tinning Computer Solution• Eaq. S8N 15911, ll104(d) ot the Internal l. HEATH, ESQ .. 2755 COSTA MESA
Soa. 4341 Mac:Mhur U.S A., 307 112 36th, Copel11191gei, A1.aon a ~Code, noclc:e II BRISTOL STREET. A PROPOSED OR·
Blvd . tD, Newport Newport Beach, CA Qle1er, 4 Hutton hereby of'N1 that the ao-SUITE 290, COST A OINANCE 11 echeduled 8each CA 92680 92~3 ~.8111. 720, s.1t8 nual lepOO lo< the cOn-MESA, CALIFORNIA kw edopClotl 11 the r•
0.A L Co , Inc. JNV), Lon Ann Tranter. 307 AM. ~ t2702 dar ynr of 2000 of 92826 lat City Council meetinO
3305 w. Soring oon· 112 36th St., Newi><>n Publl1he<I Newpon HHter Family Founda· DATE. JUL 02 1999 of Maroh 5, 2001 , beit'O tain Rd., 160-24. Lai Beach, CA 92663 Baech·Co1t1 Mau tlon Is eveilable 11 cne ALAN SLATER, Clerk. Qfdioance 01•11, ameo-
V90U, Nevada 89102 Thie bu1lne11 19 con-Dally Pilot Febfuary 16, eddrMI noted below for by LARRY BROWN, clng Section l3-29(d) ot
Thl9 bualOMI " con-ducted by• Ill lndMduel 22, 23, 2001 ~ duMg reglJlet Deputy the eo.a Mesa Muntd-
ducted by • corporation Hav1 you alerted FTh832 busineu hoUta .... :"r. Published Newpon r;' Code retetive to_...._ H t .. d ~ ... ~ • ....., No VJ Baach·Co11a MHa .....,. 1ve you • •• •• .,.,.._ 1~ • cttli:en wt» requnta t ic 001a1 t0< ptanrung doing bu1lnHs yet? Ann Tranter within 1 eo days alter Dally Pllol February 23, eppllcatlona
Yes. 2119/2001 This 1111amenl wae NOTICE OF publk;ation ot 1hla notice. March 2.9, 16. 'l'HE MOTION to Q4ve
DA L • Inc filed wi1h the County P£Tl110N TO Huter F1mlly Foun-2Q()l F6S l Ordloanoe 01·11 li~
Larry Bileteld. Prnl· Clellt al 0rmnge County ADll&lillSTER da11on. 22934 El Toro reading earned by tha denl on 01131/2001 T TE Of Roed, Lake Forast, CA NOTICE TO folowirlQ ro1 cal vote
Thie statement wu 2001"531U CHE L KING 92630. CR.EDITORS~ BULK COUNCIL MEMBERS:
filed with 1he Coonty Dally Pilot Fat>. 23, Mar. CASE NO A2oe1n The prlncipal manager SAU AYES: Cowan, Dixon,
Cieri< of Orange County 2, 9 1!5. 2001 F615 To al hllr'I ~ la NOR Heeter, Preel· (UCC Sec. 9100) Monahan, Robln1on,
00-02/20n001 c:rtdb'I. • conbnQlni dent. StHI.
20018155707 ~ and l)lll10nl Publiehtd Newport &crow No 231HMW NOES: Nona.
Oalty Pilot Feb 23, !,Aat 8SC 10307 who rrsy OlhlrMse be Baach·Co11a Mau NOTia: IS HEREBY ABSENT: Nona.
2, 9. 16, 2001 r&42 NOTICE OF ._....., In .. w.U or Ody Pilot Ftbl\lary 23. GMH ltlet 1 ~Nie THE FULL TEXT ot
PETITION ....... or both of 2001 la about to be tnllde. the Ofdlnance may be Fictitious Bualneu TO ADMINISTER CHESTER L KING. F841 Tha nema(a) and read In 1t1e City Cletl('a Name St.tement A PETITION FOR ) ..1 Olflce, 77 Fair Onve, The tonow1ng PlflOI" ESTATE OF: PROBATE,_ been ftled ~ lddt-.a(• "' Costa Maaa
frt doirG buaW1M1 u : SatONE A.. DAUIET 11¥ CAROLINE I< SUMMONS ltle lelet{a) lalar9: MARY T. ELLIOTT,
A.) g edlcal Blnlng CASE NO. A20571t GAISWOlO In Iha (CITACION JUICE VEHT\IRES, Deputy City Clertt
CoooepCa B.) Ptlyticlana To an helra, benefl. SUl)lltOr Coun of ' JUDICIAL) INC .. 110ll FOOTHIU l>u6Hahed Newport ~IHI~. Sot.~.... £_~) cll rM, cradltora, oonl· ~· County of NOTICE TO OEFEN· BLVD., SUITE 8, Beach-Coat1 Meea
PHylk;ians _. ._.. lngent cradltOf'I, and ....,,.,_ DANT: (Avlao a RANCHO Oalty Pilot Febfuary 23,
Ing SolutloM D.) In· P1f90n8 who may olhar· Tl£ PETITION FOR Aculado~ HEIDI CU""'~""' ,.,. 2001 nov1tlva Medlcel 8illlng w11e ba lntef..-S In Iha PROBATE l'9qlllltl ttwt .._..,,.,......., ...-F846 .,.............., I n.... ,.,...,... ,.....,, I< HANSE , an indMdual, 111'0 -------'-= ..,._..,,..., 31 ron ..... .., wlll or estate. or boll, ot. --'-"'"' WEU.S FAAGO BANK, . F I 8 Allio v'1:. CA 82656 SIMONE A. DAI.MET GRISWOLD ba • corporation and DOES Doing buliness aa: lctlt oua ualneu
Berna ne E. Strong, A PETITION FOR ~ • '*'°"" 1 to 25, lnclumlw JUICE rT UP, 110M Name Statement ~ lr~Bei1c. Aleo Viejo, ~~~ ::=: ..... : sJe?;J ev'Rfut~~~ FOOTHIU. BLVD., ar~~;'°::::"'
Robert E. Orolfo, 31 and IFIENE LAU.Y In thll .. cllc:9dlN. (A Ud. le N1a demao-SUITE 8, RAHCHO T01'181' roa, 20301 SW
Iron Bartl, Alleo Viejo, Superior Coon of Call-THE PETITION raQUM1a dando); JACK J. KAYA· CUCAMONGA, CA Bird! SI , 1018, Newpor1
CA 92656 tomla..i County of OR· .. dlcldlnt'a wtll and JANIAN, an ln<tvtduaJ 11730 Bead'!, CA 92660 This buslnell IS con-ANGt:. aodlclll, f any, ba YOJ t1ayt 30 CAl.EN-AJ1 act... bualMaa Nhln \!uoog, 11712
dUded by a llmi1ed pall-THE PETITION FOR ldnilld to p!'dlelll. Tha DAR DAVS after lhia nema(a) and Lampaon Ave., Garden
ne1ehlp PROBATE requaata that wl and llPf aldicll are aummone Is Mtved on GfOY8 CA 92840 Have you atarted DORIS Cl.AAKE and awllblt for eumlnlliotl you to Ille 1 1'1Pew'111tn lddrau( .. ) UMd by the TIM bull,_. ie con·
dOlng buelneta yet? No IRENE LAU.Y ba ep· In .. Ille ~ by lhl rMpOnM 11 !tie court. Milel1•) wiltin the patt ducted by· an lndMduaJ
Bernadine Strong pointed aa peraonel rap-aut. A lette< or phone call 11vea ~ u a.t9d by Heve you 111rttd
Tllil statement wu reaenlatlVM to ~ Tl£ PET1T10H ~ will no1 prot9d you; your the Mier(•) 1a1-doing ~ yet? No filed with Iha County tef Iha eewa of the 0. IUtlCll'lly to ldminllW typewritten rHponae NOHE ' • Nhan Vuong
Cltfk of °'9llga C«ny Cadent. .. ..... urdlr Iha mull ba In ptq>ei ~ Ths ltllemenl Wll on~Ht557SI qu~~ t~I~;~ =.1ofEatate1 =~=~nt~. ~:-~In= ~r11;"~=
Dally Pilol Feb. 23, Mat. Will and codloill, N en(, Ad. (Thia IUtllorlty wll N you do not Illa your Ofb ot Iha .... 19: on 0211§f2001
2, 9, 16, 2091 F847 ba adrnllleCI to probate. .,.. .. pattonal ~ on lime, you '™ ROCKfJB..D 2001M55531 The Wil and any oodk:ll f'IPW.... ID llM may toae lhe cue, and Delly PloC F«> 23. Mat SUMMARY OF ar• avaHable tor ax· mmiy. .-W Wih:IUI your WIO"· money and BLVD.. .....100, 2. 9, 18. 2901 F85Q
PROPOSED amlnatlon In the file kept oCllt*1G ~ IPPf'D'ill property may be tuen IRVINE. CA m11 Fictitious Bualnen
ORDINANCE by the ooutt. Slb9 lilldllQ cniln 'MY wllhoul flJtttl4tf warning Thi neme<•> and CrTY OF THE PETITION r• :C.". .. ~ from lhl oourt. bullneM ~ of IN Name Statement
COSTA MESA questa lllllhOOty to 9d-..... :.-.;,. There are odl8f i.g.I buy9rt1) 1a1ar9: ERtC The lollowlnQ ~
A PROPOSED OR-mlnleler fie ...... under i1191wwww.. niquirementa. You may ' -dcwl(I ~ aa DINANCE Is actie<IUled lhe h~ Adn» ~to~~2 wn to cal.,, attomey HONG, 3220 ALTI,IAA Solar Tan Tanning
latratlon of Em! .. Ad. ---..---""-riQtll away." you do no1 A.VE., mt, LA Spa, 3'411 N1wpor1 '°'~at fie i.-(Thia Au1hollly wll alow lt"Y hew wtl...o OCllk» know an attorney, you CRUCENTA, CA Blvd .. Newi><>tt BallOh,
the quArterftn.ols. The wtn gt¥9S
H.ubor ts Winningest IUllGll bi
tcbool bl.story, 2()..s-.t. WiSh 15
mlnua rematnThg, Canell J sa·
finishes JasUa 1'en'• pus for wbat
proves to be tbe game-winner.
The Orange Coast College
baseball team begins the leUOD
12.0. The Pirates win two
lot.ll'MJllents as slx starters hit .300
or higher. A.dam CucelHer leeda
the way with a ;422 averaqe and
;"f'nvta Culler bitJ ..C.00. Oertc
Yaniguawa bas 10 RBis and cne
home run.
The Corona del Mar boys
basketball team'• season canes to
an end after a 68-50 loss to !ilitiGG
San Dimas in the quartelfinals of
the CIP Division W-A playoftl.
Brian Colemlm leads tho Sea
Kings with 19 points and ~
ll1nb scores 11. Danen
MacDonald finishes with to~
and 13 rebounds.
-compiled by S.... Vka
SUMMARY OF
PROPOSED
ORDINANCE
CITY OF
COSTA MESA
A PROPOSED OR· DINANCE 11 &eheduled
kw~atlha r• lat City Counol fMetln\)
of Mardi 5. 2001 . bt<ng
Ofdlnance OHO, amen-
ding Title 13 ot lhe Colla
Mesa Munlapat Code to
modify procedU<e5 to ...
tow minor 1ddttiona to
el(]stlno developmen11
with master plans
THE MOTION to give
Ord•nanc. OHO lirst
reading earned by the
lollowlno '°' cd VOit COUNCIL MEMBERS:
AYES: Co-n, Dixon, Monahan, Steel.
NOES: Roblnaon
ABSENT: None.
THE FULl TEXT ol the 01d1nance may be
read In ltle Cily Clerl<'s ()thee 77 F111 Dnve,
Colla Mesa
MARY T. ELLIOTT, DecMftv City Clertl
°f>ubliahed Newpon
Beach-Coate Mau
Daty Plloc Februaly 23.
2001
f838
Flctlllou1 Bualnna
Name Sbltement
The lollowing paraons
are doing~ at
T umhn AVial!On. 1778 Westminster, Apt C.
Cotta Mesa, Cahtornia
92627 Steven Claril Tumlin,
1n11 WNtmtnster. Apt c. Coata Mesa. Cal.tot·
Oii 92627
This bualnesa ,. con-
ducted by an indiMduai Have you atened
d<><OO businen yat7 YM. 316/00
Sieve Clallt Tumlin
This 11atemem w11
hied With the Coonty Clel1c ot Orange ec.ny
on 02/22/200 t 20011155 ...
Dltly Pitot Feb 23, Mar.
2, 9 18 2001 f853
Coll (t491641·f4H
ht ., ..... ,,.
tt .. ~ ,., ,. •.
' . . -. ~ ......
Flctltloua Bualneaa tum. Statement
The folloWlnQ ~ .,. dolrG ~ u
OZONUR'S TOWING,
351 w Bay St. Costa
M..._ CA 92827
Metunet Ozonur. 35 t w. Bay St., ea.ta u....
CA 92627
Thle bu94neaa .. con-
ducted by. an lndMdual
Have you atertad
doing bualr-. yet? No
Mehmet OZonur
Thi• alatement WU
flied with the County
et.tit i:A Orange County
on 02/20l2001
2001N 55775
Dally Plot Feb 23, Mar
2. 9, 1§. 2001 F852
MCNAMARA
Joeit ~ 71, • ~-,....
dent of COltl .....
paMd ..wy f*'-Y 20, 2001
Vlgll Stfvlc. wlll bl held Frkily febr'*Y
23, 11 7:30 Pfll Md Funeral MNI wtll tia
Monday ~ ••
10:00 1111. Both ....
lc:ea ... tllal .. ..
St John IN .....
Chl#d\, Coatl .....
Survived by flu•
b9nd-John, aona lrtln
and P1trict, 2 .,.0.
chlldfln, "°"' lrlland 1l1ter AMle llcOoft.
n•U and brothefa,
5-\ I Liln ltllftlld
Dl1na Ruth Win·
nlngllam. 6939 County
Roed 1 111, Burnet, TX
711811
Thia buelneea la oon-
duc:Md by. ClC>i>IMM Hava you etarted
dOlng bullntu yet? No
Diana Ruth~
IAr City Council mea4lnl) the penone1 rapraMlll· 0t O>t-illld lo lhl may cal an ~,. tU1' CA 92eS3 ~ 5, 2001, being .,_ to !aka mariy ac> = :c*wl) Tha '-al MNlct or a Tha being lotd DAL, Inc. (NV). 3306
.. _ the ~ ~ done without obtAilnlng -~ Ml olllct ~ad In .... w. Scmll Mounlaln Ad . -M"' I I Cod ... b oourt IWf'oV9l. Befora llloit dlOlly phone book). n gll'lltlily dWrtbed '90-24. lu Vegu, NV l)iscou n t ( ~a,kl·t
Thia atalemenl ...
,., with the County
Clelk "' Orqe CQny on o 1/30r200 t
20011HHH ~~ F«> 2. 9f8:j
un c pal • Y \aklng certain veiy Im· wl ba "9illld unllM.,, Deapuee oe que . le aa: ALL FURNIT\JRE, 89102
changing the terma for portent tctlont, how· ~ :'::' ... an anlreguen MUI dt.elon FIXTUMS, Thl9 bullneM is con· ~~to two =..::.~be~ ~-~"= ~ :ed30'*1,1t5 ~· ~eby"y~u~= YM· MOTION lO tiNe qund to ~ ldce to Wt'fl .. out "'°'*' nol CAL.ENDARIOS pe1a __ ..,.._ doing buelneu yal?
Ordinance 0,_,2 lltat lnlereat9d =: "'"'° f'"'~·~ .... preaen111 ""' ,....... INVINTOfff AHO Yea. CW1llt'2001
rMdlng camed by the ::'ice~ 00:.,:~ Olllorl _. tit hlld on :" ~ maqulna an ~=et ~'ai.:i. PMdal1I
lolowlrio lol cal YIM: the propoetd adloi\.) 1>$'1610t • 1'4ef'M Ill Una earta o uni r9 ... -.. Thia llatemenl •• COUHCA.. M!MelRI: Tha ~tdepeildllll ~ 0. L73 lac-.s at 341 lllrnedl ....,._ no It JUICE " .,...., u .... Ned Whtl the County
le ,.._..... AYU: Cowen, DIJ.On, i.atlon dlOl1ty _.be TlE QTY OAIVE. ofr90efa ....-; eu FoantlU. 9L.VD., Clefk ot Onir10i ~ Publ ,_ "oblnton, ltHI. t= unieaa an Jn-ORANGl!.CAt21M$ ,..._.."'~'ma-tuns I, RANCHO on 02/2(y.!()()1
N04ica ~ NOll1 Monehan. '*'°"Illa an I, YOU 09.IECT 10 flt qu1na ._. que cumpllr CUCAMON~ CA 2001""1tl ::' .= • II'* ...;:., ~~utt-" TEXT of otJjdcrl to Iha .,._., .,.,.... ot .. ""*"'· oon 111 lormilld9daa i.. 11no. Daily Plot Feb. 23, Met
' I 1111ti11q, 1 llol , , I "
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(14.t) ~ :::.:. cit, :;:f"• MARCH 1~1 at 1:48 .......... ~ Ila In pye0t panter ti ceao, y ~ •~18. AJ Rodgats, ltu611ehtd Newport pm In -,-..,-L?3 '°' pnon OI 11¥ 'Pl It puecllil qullar 111 ~Nii,' . ,,.,,~ S7:A.RTING
HouMhold 11tn11 8each·Coat• Mell = ~ ~ ~ ARE A =-= :";~ CIN1'IR AW.. IT&.
#20329, AndrM Dally Plcll febMly 23. CA 828e8 • • a.JITOA OI • • aYllo ldldonal pot ... HUN"l'NnOM A ~ rrw ::n1e1. HouNhold 2001 IF~vou' ~OT to ......... CldDr ol .. '*" di It OOltt MACH. CA...., and J.. ,, ,,c;,
U HO, l rldQtll f031 .,. _, ..... ~ ~ .,... ""* • ~ oO'Oa ,...._ • • .. dllll
C_, ... 1,,,. HouN hold Ion. ~ ....--lGIF *"""'.,. '°"' toe ---. Puede ..,. .. *! ... !!!... B US.'LNr:ESS? ... ··•· IUllMARY OF • thlli hllflno and -. ..s iM1 a ~ 10 .. _.., ~ ..,.., 1 la 11 _..._.. , h~ rM8Mt d-4 PA0..0110 yow ~· or flt 1*"1!'1111 ••-• • "" *lldr> n. tuk .. 11 ...... tWll '° bid ....... OWi ORDINANCE Wfllttn ~· wllh :1:: flir .. '°"' ~. SI no IO Ollllll'* ~ ~ .... la .... to ,__ -h COUft y~ IN ...... -... ~~ oonoot a un ibog9do, COIMudlt CO. e e e e e e e e e e . e
cm , Ceo• In .. ftWll cO;;A illSA = ~ o: Ill::;. ..... ~ puedt lltmar • un ldlftt10U.
Of uW• ,...,. ~ OfllOINANCE 01• le '°" or by'°"' tll0m9r, ~ ~ ' ~ • ,...,.,_ • The ,.... Ind ...,._ lllndlOtd~ == ~ to ba In U If" YOU" /illll. A CMD-t100. The ... liar .. tbOOHOI o 1 une d .. ,.._, wlll......,. r=:.. bet and .,._. ., • !TOA Of ......... Cftld.. --... ,. .... ;: .. ·dlt= : ............ llld It; -~ ..__ hm 11 Moolloll on lord .. it ' 111.~ .,.. ......... ....., 1 ~ac-
..... o---h·Cott• --~ '*'::~ fOOt , end nue. .. )ID'lr tlllllft _. .. ,_... ._ ...._. CA19 NllPSft _,,_ _.. ~Nol._....., 11. W by .. lillf. .. GOUrf. and IMI • .-.. IU411 CC.NIY, 7111 1 ·-~,,_ ~I'll Clll -.; C1C1C1¥ ti> .. ,._.,• YOU AMY PWNI h .1U001 CDfTD AVI.. ITt. --.,.CCMIQI___ IM: .............. wc*llld .. -flir...... I DA• T. lllUCtP ... ..rMTOfl
AYU: ~ oe-t, 11¥ .. out "'**' IN ,_ • a .... Oll'T. C11 1aAm, CA ....., .. P1c•1• ltJllW Muir... RIMidlfl, lftOll1'9 ,._ .. .._tit ~ lllt .. ...... Tiie ,_ ... ... h ... .-. tDr --..... llllUISllM ...... .. .. ....,_tit..,.. .,_ 1111W .. w9I .. ._al .. ...,. a C11 ......., ._ -?_, ~
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Ill -'Si .=.. fl ~ -· 11e19·. IJ I ~. ~ '.•.:: . ,., . E~ ,:.: ...... -: _...,..--' .... , .!!!!!!!!!!~P'!!.....-1 .... __________ _..~--------
Gl OPPOflrlJNITY
,. ,., --llMrtlllnO In 1111 lllWfCl&I* II tullflCt to 1111 fedltll ,,. Houling
Act of 1168 et amtfldtd
wlllctl mabt It llle;tl 10 ad¥tfflll "'ll'fY Pf•l•rwnce.
lmlllion Of dbclimlnatton ...., on rx.. colOr rtllO·
Ion, -Mndiup Wll&\I llllul Of lllllonlf OflQln OI an 1ntenll0f1 10 1111ke any IUCfl prtftrtooe, hrnllallon Of cltcrlmination •
TIQ MWSpaplf WUI not
knowingly acup1 any
1d"n1umen1 tor rul llllU wllltll 11 1n ~llOll of the llW Our readela tre lllreby 1nlo1 med I hat all dwltlngs ldvttltwd In lhlS ~Ne J¥allablt on
111 IClllll= OC""Y besis To com al dlsc<11111
fllllon, lol lree 11
' 800-424-8580
V .A. SO MOVE-IN FAU~ FREf Ult Of llol!IM
HUONA REPOS
714-5344800 v•111 Rell &uM ENH:
wrtgg ••dnc.com
'
VIEW 2 STORY QWfT
home 01 duplel, 111411
bNoll. ms.ooo
A!!!N 9*72U120
HEW OCEANFRONT Rn Find 58R
Aatnl 949-7234120
BRANO NEW HOMES
STAA'TllG AT ... ,000
SOME OH ntE WA TEA
AOT. M•n:Mt20
REDUCED TO SEU
$279,000 FIRM
t2 Canyon IMnd
R=r 281, Securt, & Aledyl
0 N SUN , ...
(~ t!d . lllU" ... ~,,.,,
(949) 673-8494
come a.ee '~!/'°"' ~e 6eu1 mis&iltg--•••
Choose from 3 beautiful locations including St. Moritz, Barcelona
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• On-Site Fitness Diredor and Activities Diredor
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Barcelo a
lnnsbruc
949-3 62-6000
949-3 62-7000
949-362-7600
CM~ .... frt•f ..... 1
2921 PtmDa Or, Nilique -......!:!!!:!!'!:!:!:!~~ ~ midi, dlCll> "'°' ooucNe, IUliic .. ------« & 3rTV. 1111 & crelll. Andque Arrrdt, ~ of .,. CenUy ~ Wiii hq-.._ ____ .....
~~'=· ..,..,.Cfllm -~ cit> bidding & ~lhldl.(moon&..,.) &11111 ..... IAT«IN M H5 94i-718-1374 HPI MOI Plnley Aw, --
tllctrlo llft cllalr, elect .. -----.. ~=.=--= 1· ""I ........... ,. ' ,.,... uarGCI
.... do!!P,ect. -----------
Gal'llet .... a.t.. t-1pm
New gcj IC>Plltl. """ Ind WDmlll'• dciilM Ind .,.,..,
iu-. ~ ctn, TV, ""'°· lurnieur1 ~ bib & mort 518 IMbpur CcM, In !1!x MHol().1'3o
MOw.o SAlf S. I-noon ~ clrllng llbll, '"' cerw. 10 ICXl 1*1, ~
ll bid. x ~ dec:or ' kJla morel t0-711·1711 OCICAT LOVERS
IOI lfl Ord!!d, CGlll WANTtO. UnlQUI '90flld. ------•I kfll .... pley!IA, Vlty kMng
l: ~ ..
·~J
NUISllG Staffing
Resaarcea
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Immediate Openings! ~
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..
" ...
If you ore a dedicated n~ professional ~
looldnQ for flexibility, malleilcie, security,
and competitive pay -CdTOdayl ......_1•112mw•••
lrvile Corowa
(IOO) 404·8460 (IOO) 696· 1781 ..
I '40 ~ I p!0-$450 94H48-&473
""' .-a PETTERS I BOTTLE•--------------....... '°' ....... ailll Into ""9W. HfTWOfU(
Info MM44-2271 www.anl11U1IMtwoR.or1
BEHRw ,
91 ltlt ~~OU~~ r.11M,lll<Ali1J'<
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Vwy low, mid -1, Incl
perking. Great Gift 1 1°'~ aj 11:.-r -=111111 "°'2111-'°-=:::' r;..~~ .. 1------ia-,-Lm-1-·-1 ~!~~~==~s~ns ~
---""" ,._ • -Main~ Mechonlca to maintain and ' --1n. 900 .. ·-"-no COM 1111ar1 Cll8lmlng 28r w/drawlnpl, 40ft w 6511. co•-COIN ~.,,_ f h c.., -••, ,..,...,.., ..,., __ • ......__ .._....___. .,,... v llOll w:• -·• IOI ,..., """""" re"'air manu acturing mac 1nery and ~!;a:C:~O:As1~ ~UHT~,r~ =.11111me1~~ ~': n;::.:~"':"'W'Jii.';e;:"" ~ owed c;. o;..,. OLD COINS! Gold, lllVtr. fo~il11ie1. You will h. mpon•ible for •
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pallllll COf)l~lly """'
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and ~Bctnne 111 a pit mo 94 CGlll ~ plot'I lo .,.,. Must 1111 per90NI Ml-related problem• including electncal,
lrlendly ~ 41 ~ 3br home,"" -11i1n1e. Palm V $250. TOP ISSl'AECOROSI plumbing, mechanical, ond carpentry ~~!:' Q: 172 llOl~IJllOI ~-~~~ ..... 59&5 • Molofola SlatTac digital Jazz, !.'Ji~ Rock. problems Eiccell8f'lt h.nefil pocka~ that : pond t•trCIM rm lj)PIOX
7687 st Sl.3115.000 Pairlek
Tenore. 949·856·97~
OPEN °SUN 12-3 ...
14 BAYCREST COURT
BAYVIEW COURT
llMlaCUa1I 28' 28a end
unit Oii Qleerbelt. IOlal ,,...,
lulc11tn. 2car oar Ollefed 81
$339 900 Pally llowan ~9689-4465
NEW HOMES
OPEt4 SAT & SUN
Adiacent to Newport Etuctl 6 Triangle
Squatt. 94M50-1440
PRIME ESTATES
LOii & Ocean Vlewtl
Call Petrick T9110fe
Agent 949-858--9705
•••••
105 Am BALBOA PENINSULA ~In ........ ..._........ ,..-ICUl ............ u..... phone $150, HP Oeticll1 "J".. ...<> .. •• I··-"-l f _ _J I _._ ....... ......,....,..., allot fHinter $100, ~ .., ~ c;rvo..-7505 inc uotu i •. meolco , <Mntol, vision, lTO,
inutes lo 8Hc:h and NB WatltfrOflt Holnl lg dtctahon c.asene $50, --------AOl (It)/ profit •haring. Quarhlrly bo1lu1 ·
Pie.-cal ........ 10 dtdl. NS glll' drlCl ICllC9 ..--mQtl.D-CAMllC program aher •ix month. of Mrvic» • ._ 10 F..,..,,, tttM1cl t..i tum 3 room tulle, ~ ~ Of,_,.,., S25 HP I I
tBr OCEANFRONT _, ,. lit Euc Condo 2flr 28&. ....., $1595 IMM7S.7S70 <JtVMltr S50 TIM -Send/
lrNI vllwl No P'1•. -YQJf MW homel guerd-glled, clubhoull. 11 tor '575 FOi model ... Fox re•ume IO: BEHR Staffing, PO lox
t2t51mo. Ind lltllil'". 111·219-0754 pool, F9. trig. W/O, rlllr UC1 EAST SIDE Cotta .._. call Mlchu l at 1217, Santo Ana, CA 92702, FAX (71 .. )
949·7214196 ' SNA. ""'" plf neo •h•re hou11 w/prol'I 949-636-8217 Of •·11111~ lo I ..... I CA-....... YOU. • 2A 1-9735, or you may ----... In -Oft ... • $1650/Mo 949.300-3229 l1m1l1. 1550 • ullt olomanatetiome.com "..... "'"....,.. ..,.....,. ...---·
I I ..... ·a"" 1111 Appia, shopping. Plf'IORtl "-day, F.ti.n-y 20, "'--1..t P"' at 3.40Q
I 1.... ..-~... .... Nolllle Aidt ...-a1b l'llldl, mulll lk: Cd
1-.. -, -,,.,,. I I ~...--Marilyn MM54-l43I W. Segentrom Aven11e, Santa Ano, CA. ~ 'e_.UR SAHT..Aa~ 11ZMOl-JI!!. =:·~~==::=·=~.--------••-EOE-------------_.
-. '8l'OllT .. ~r~ = ~~ bed. lin1I tikol loddler 12 ., 14.,. BlflLOY8J I Pllm ..... 18' Aolla wl9fl $500 llC 714-5'5-297~ matltlla m 71~9700 OPPOITlllTill AHlluranl Cookl/S.rvera/HoellllJ¥Ne,. •
St2HtM. g111ci comm. Sbr 2be 1 car get upper WOlFF TAHNl«l BEDS • • llMdedl New OOfQC)C in Newpcwl 8-:h. Fu ~
trig. pool, IP' uer 1111, \I'/ m UA11, vault ~. hllgl r111 ltlWpor1 S8r S8a Condo. TAN AT HOME AGonln Met. Growing M8 rlll#Tll to (94t)m.tml °' lpply 111 P"'Oll 4
ID BO Bex 714-546-9860 dtdl. dote ID aulf. oo pM'lll DSL h . II tmtnlilsl-non BUY DIRECT NfJ SAvtl Mir NP PT (JIC* Fl) a.tat 3*1 VII Udo, *"'°" ..... :
C!!pl! $2000 94~73-7800 llllOMf, pron mllt, tr951 CO""EACt•UH""E avcldlta entry, 06 exp a ., ____________ _,
mo• V:I uda 71~292-4767 .;;; tram $199~ ,.,.. Fu ,.. 206-aa&-2180 :
Jbr, 2be, 1824 Vlllllt, E Sidi 2bl tbl hoult. Low MonlVy P.ymenl CAOSS1NO OUMOI PT ..
ptftln. lllghly upgrldtd, ahlf1 bl. PfOf tern. Avd FREE Color CmloQ F!DEAAL DIPLOYllENT GrMt houri. no ....,_ or El RAHCtlTO • = ~ =~ ~15, no rmoka S550 tld Cell 1-8()().71Hl156 111,000 to '71,000 per wMa. Tl'llnlnl piO'tldlcl RHTAURANT -·:
- -Oy IHH31·2820 &31-4e29 www !J! ii.tan com YW. 1 • 121 mi tol he l7f.71H2!1 IWlnQ: --.,,. li9' • &.wt •~ •
OcMn Front 21f 11• CUTE 2llr 1M ,.., -I 11 Hoitt..... • a;;:~ ~~~ -FOR~ -FOR~ 11·~==11 • .. :BI i~5=. ·:
THE BLUFFS Upgtldld
38t 2SBe E plan rs I*· -------' ltci lor everyone Thi•
llome haa a family room,
11ff!'lblftl. comm pool& 81'd
Back Bly ltnfOYmenl Of
lerld al $639 500 Mcttot
Prcpeni. &4~120-3900 •••••
DON'T LOSE $3()()
We BEAT •llY Olh¥
hOtM IMde< or PAY
You nJOI Fr&1
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714-658·4601
So of Hwy Stuclo, bn\ttl.
opl!l1 paliO lu1chtoelle. a.
lo r111/bttch $785/utlt
lllCd call Don 94~72Y.i024
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Ntwport a.di.
4. ,,..-~~ • . .
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JA>WS MAllAf'FY ~...._ ..
• ~ .. l~UO. "-•-" . "'-.filed""·~ •••
6aQ Terminal Way •l..~
CootaMcu
949 548-3329
................. ...... '" .. ""'°"' lllY ,.... you to cell 1 100
"'"""' '" ltfllttl ............ ~.
BOAT SUP Avu for 1111
boat, 65ft or re. Loe next
IO BCYC Op .... 71M405
tv• 14•780-6351
Dodi Avlll lot -11ft Eledltc Dulty S250rno '*-
lagt 8ll>ol llllnd Pml8 locelion !MS-752-2881
Udo Side Tit tor aallboet
14> to 6611 and beam t 21t or
unde!' lldt tnlrlnCe eled/
wai.i W'dd 9"H73' um
* lJ9 to 1&-23ft •
Ideal '°' elec:tnc boa! Bayflsland (C<Ml area)
<tall 949.e73-1943
• r • ,. 11 1
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.. ·t• ., .J 'T'.: ,.,. "J··r·
(949) 548-0670
. -· --1
I
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lllMW '211 .. ...... .-t. co 1•11.m> ao.-
CREVIER BMW
714-835-3171
BMW 52* 'II
IUlo, VI, whlta bMiAy
(4FtcFOl5) 134,915 CREVIER BMW
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( 4dHH02.I) 141,tM
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45k ong ml, Blackitlt Ith!'
booltl/rtc:Ofds, Beaut ong
oond, 1111aged nonlll!W
Vint02t708 $13.995 0 C
AulO llkrl ~1888
CA.OUAC CATERA ..
low "' belgl Ian "" 10121321 m.9118 NABERS
1714 )540-1100
Caclll9c Concowt ..
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12725951 St• 9e8 NABERS
1714)540:1100
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c.-.. ..... m• low 111111 YI, Noft.-r 112*11 NAllM 117 ....
17!41f4M1!!
c.-.ic ..... ... ~~·1= NAI
(!1'154M100
c.-i.c .... Tl
~ ri-· V8. Holt1'llr 180382 I 1111,988 NAIERI 1m~1100
c.-.c m • • 1111. Flldory •arrenty wtdy
lllSJle ""'* Md "*Wiii .... co. phone. ch'OITle
-.. lile MW, S22.995 oc A/Ao Bkt 14~1888
CAD SIVUE 71
1 ()wfll(, pelfld eond, r:!· clependlble. loob ~ petftc:t fuel Wt-
~ '4500 94H46-2256
CHEVY IOllUMAN M XIM oond. new yptlol, tlf•, cuatOlll CO playw,
4X4, '=-" ~ 111.400 .... 5 .. 151
CHEVY V£HTURE Tl
STO PASSENGER VAN, Miio. AC, PO, Pl, 11111 lodl
llnlk•, llll..ftll CMMltt,
tint.cl wlndowa, Mtc ml, 110,717 MM74-4244
tvM/Wkndl 512-61M4t5
ClJ(l20 c.tolll 01
(~ M4.llO 21( , WOll'I I.Mt
~ .ion. MOlorCWI 111-824-1401
ESSAMO '01 (mm..l.. rn .-14 LUI Tu Pt6d
FWdw '°"" ~ lll-t24-1401
ESSAMG 'tt
(115423.J.... 112,ttO 27tc , GrMt Termt
Fi.tdler JollM llotorC8l'I Ul-t24-1401
• • Edcle 8luaf
fOfd ~tlon ... ,,; S24, 2911 IT'ii. pclllll9f
doors, lock1~ndows. al
lealllef, tow , 2Jl4 reer
heat, rid> 949-759-1830
GMC Yul!Oll XL 1500 '01
Bii ~ lltv lnl -rocl. Onsw fully loeded S38, 133 11•-1~1-e100
JAGUAR XJE 't7 ve, ctHalc, white conv,
tnG. body, Ur• · A1.
NMdl minor Cot/Mllca. mi!!!· Mf:m-3371
~C....'18 dnve. ecyt. ~ m
red, orif 1'°"'* 11 t,500
Mt-71•2t0t
. -.... . .. .. : -----·--
Bridge
8Y CHARLES GOREN wtth OMAR SHARIF
and TANNAH HIRSCH
NORTll
• 763
O AKQ4
2
1lfE ICING IS DEAD
•A Q 1097
WEST EAST •J 109 • AK12 5 2 6J " Q J 7 6 4 J ) 10 • 8 5 •16 •KJ4 SOUTH
•Q54 Jlt'87
AK .s:u
Tiie bidding. . NORTH EAST .. ,._
4¢ .... .... ,._
so"rH WKST Iv P-4? ....
Opmina lead. Jad. o1 •
-you often refer IO wated vllluea,-
wnies •reader. "What CUC11y do you
mean?" Cooslder dut deal.
Nonh'a 1wnp 10 four dwnonch
•how1 • hand good enouah to l"llilC 10
game In hcans (ddln11ely a sb'Ctch)
wnh a ~mgleton Of "OKI 1n dtamoncioi
Soulh \ l mg of dillnl<Jnd!. •~ now •
1-~1
.,..., XJS V12 ~ 'tO •9' ong IT'ii, ""4alllc blue/
leather chrome whit,
garaged. non/1moktr
labuloul bod'; & mechenlcal
cond. auperb value Vinf1725t8 $9,995 0 C
AIMJ Bb !MS-SB&-1888
Lind Rover~ RoWt
LWI '13 lllllcMarl 1ttv CO
Ching. ,,.,, whttl, rool rack,
IOW l*a, 71 k 1111, mt coocl-
llon, $l3.950 9"g..()44.2299
LEXUS RX 300 'ti 4x4,
chrm whll rmf, IOW pllg. II
CD ctigr Wlwteltan 11111
$29.995 ot>o !MH73'3588
Muell MPV vt 't3
70k • m, orig OWlllf, whlll.
lully lolld«I, rNr lit, llkt
new eond, Vin-f 651291
0 c Auto BroQr $8250
MMM-1•
MEACE>ES Ml '30 W
tOk m. Bliek~""*
lllltoOf, 137,500 CK lake
ovtr ltalt !M9-574-ot829
OLDS • AOY ALE '12
Auto, lll"9d wlndow9, PS, PB. CC, .,...fllt --U., Mii lodl .,,...., .. pwr,
Ml( 1111, 1 OWNf SS500
..... 574-4244 ..,...,..,. 512:§1M4!$
AdcStions • Kikhen
lcrthroom • lepain
Call the leader
In So. Colifomla
fN E-... 1W S719l2
a-1 MM37•5M2
l·.r&I
POUCE llt1IPOUNOI
C1111Trvck11Suv'1
ffOlll saoot
For ... Cell
loo.31.3323
tlll 2721
SMB CONVT 't1
A.a low ""· loldtd, ml cond $8000 714-832· I 20 t
.... 949-548-0442
s.tum SU '113
Low """'· aAo, c:INnl (342882)
HABEAS
$5,988
1714 l540-t100
SL500 Aoedl'9r ..
(1&4112) --Bladl/Blecl, aw-
F1*tlef "°"" Moeorc8r1 Ul-t24-1401
Sl500 Aoedlllr '01
11:4:l.. rr~ 2tc • aw-, ~Joflel~
Ul-624-1401
SG> Sedll'I '00 (105'11) .. ...,
10K ..... ar...Tenile
FWr:lw "°'* .__. 111-614-1401
... .. ~ ... .. "' -"" ,, .. . '
T oyoe.a Ctlc:I GT '00
All full power cau, CO moorvool. lpCllll', ,,.,,.
(.2:262M)S30n s11,901 South Cout Toyota
949-722·2000
T oyo1a CcN'Oll LE '00
Ctmfi.d, .,.. lull ~.
Cllllllle co pleyer (227'Jal'l4584a . $ 13 80'
South Cout Toyotl
949-722-2000
Toyoll Corolle CE ..
AIMJ lir tul pwr, cml4llt
(22S31/25e293) $10,901
South Cout Toyotl
Mt-722-2000
GENERAL REPAIRS ........ -. .....
~~
C:O.W T~ • Sra w .... ......,...nxun.
Wood SINclln Repel' ........... c.
lMIJllM1M
FfN;tay, F.bruory 23, 2001 811
TODAY'S
CRQSSWORP PUZZLE
Toyota SlllN LE 'ti
AulO,,.. air. hA pw!, ca. CO, A8S. IOW pit;. lug **.
(22~ $11.00t
South Cout Toyota
949-722-2000
PUBLIC
NOTICE
The Calif. Public·
Utllltles Com·
mlalon REOVIRES
that .. used~
hold goods movers ennt their 1> u c
Cll T runber: lmol
and dllufflf1 pnnt
theif T.C.P runber
In .. ICMt1i!lmentl.
" you have • qtm-
tlon ~"' ~
ly cl • "'°""'· "'° OI c:MAllr, Cll
PUBUC UTILmEs
COMMISION
714-558-4151
300.-
;12 ChOcOllW
MbWlule 33 o..aa .. ..,lldrl 3A f11gt11.Qn
:ll HI!
41 Na1M1 OI
OamMCul
~ l~Jlllo9I
1109
4!> Mole • g
47 Do• 5low bulfl
4fl KAlnnildf.
PlaOe
Toyoc. SoWa SE 00
V6 ctttJl.S 1tr lull p .. r
amette CO plrfar 1227~197133 $16.901 South Cont Toyota
949-722·2000
Toyoca 4 Runner W 'tt vs. llAO .... tul ~c.. co. "" b09rdl ,... (27749.'122980 .90 t Le-. the c .... .......
South Cout Toyota
949-722-2000
NEWPORT PLASTERING
• Stucco Repelrt
• Room AddCbOOS
• Old Fut11on lritet10r
Piast8f Aeslor1110n
• No '°° too am.it
fUW .... flll/O...,
~
·-----·-··-·---·---...
.. rvt .. Dec: ..... ., h .. p you find retla_t>•• help.
,... ...... .., •• Mr
949-722~
714-751-1846 .
..
• .. ... ..
• .. ...
r
I I I I I I I . . . .
@12 Friday, February 23, 2001
CALIFORNIA 'S NUMBER ONE
JAGUAR DEALER
FU R T H E R EV C E THAT
AU TY ,IS
Tl IE JAGUARS-TYPE
STARTING AT $+4.250
Tl IE JAC l 1AH XJ SF:RlES
STA RTl'\G AT S:>6.950
JAG~ STARTING AT $74,950
(\ .
THE ART of PERFORMANCE \
(
.
1455 South Auto Mall Drive
Santa Ana • 55 Freew.ay at Edinger .
Doily Pilot •
7 1 4 • 9 5 3 • 4 8 0 0 • w w w . b a u e r j a g u a r . c o m·
2001 S·1YPEAJ·V6 MSRP $4-4,lSO. 2001 S·TYPEAJ-VB MSRP $49,9SO. l001 XK8 CONVERTIBLE MSRP S74',9SO. 2001 XJB MSRP $56.950.
ALL PRICF.5 PLUS if AX. 1111.£. UCENSE & EMISSION FEF.S •
•