HomeMy WebLinkAbout2000-03-04 - Orange Coast Pilot)
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SERVING THE NEWPORT -MESA COMMUNITIES SINCE 1907
Debate gr9Wffig over Dunes· .size . ' .
• Some residents 5ay resort prQject will wipe o~t vie·ws ,' but
proponents provide computer-enhanced images to the contrary.
NollkJ Schwartz come close to the height of the near-
DAILY PILOT by 85-fool Castaways bluff, will
NEWPORT BEACH -As the
$100-million Dunes resort inches
closer to a Planning Commission
decision, the debate over the rpas-
siveness or the proposed 370-room
project has intensified.
Supporters have dazzled the com-
affect their views.
The ·controversial project, which
was recently downsized, includes a
full-service hotel with 370 rooms and
75 time-share units. There will also
be 46,000 square feet or conference
space, swimming pools, a health spa
and restaurants. 'The revision has
significantly reduced traffic, a major
point of contention.
riott, which has 250 ro6ms. The
Hyatt Newporter, with 405 rooms, is
one of the few hotels that comes
close to the proposed µro1ect.
If approved, the hotel, estilnated
to bring $1.3 million in annual city
revenue, is scheduJed to open wiltun
the next three to hve years. •
The problem is that both the Plan-
ning Commission and residents are
wrestling with the question of how
the 68-foot hotel (at 10 feet above sea
level) will affect the surrounding
community.
Dover Shores resident Bert Oh119
has been bombarding the commis-
sion with pictures of his version of
"'9Mlt 111
•ll 111111
. ..
, EANHll £ t (A d'UOT
• munity with colorfuJ drawings of a
coey Italian-style resort and comp4t-
er images showing how the resort
will look when built. But some resi-
dents remain suspicious of how the
project, which at its 78-foot peak will
Despite the cuts m size, however,
the resort wouJd still dwarf other
local hotels ~~ the Four Seasons,
which has 285 rooms, and the Mar-SEE DUNES PAGE A12
Despite the windy weather conditions, balloons fly above
Newport Dunes to gauge the height of the proposed resort
...
TOSHIBA SENIOR CLASSIC
MARC MARTIN I DAll.Y PILOT
Amie's Army was ln force Friday, following legendary golfer Arnold Palmer from hole to hole. Here, they surround the No. 5 green
as Pal~er, center, slzes up his putt.
Tom Johnson
NOTDOOI
On the _march with Arnie's Army
As the editorial staff met this past
. week and discussed our
planned coverage for the Toshi-
ba Senior Classic, I made sure I was
on hand.
As publisher, I thought:·-maybe I
couJd cherry-pick a great assignment.
Who wants to Write on some of the
volunteers? We need someone to write
about where the proceeds are going.
Maybe some close-ups or people
involved in the operabon of the tour-
nament. Blah, blah, blah.
Then it came ... we need someone
to walk with Arnold Palmer for 18
holes.
Bingo! And s9 1t was.
I hrsl spolted Amie on the near s1de
or the drlvmg range hitting balls. The.
crowd surrounding hlm was bigger
than that on the hrsljee sendmg off
the other players.
People or all ag<>s waited w ith goU
balls, pictures, goU cap and boxes or
Wheaties adorned Wlth Mthe Kmg's ~
Wceness -wa1ung and praymg for
that el usive autograph
SEE ARMY PAGE A13
...
Number .
crunching
here is par
for the course
• Pilot reporter tri es his
hand as an unofficidl scorer
al the Toshiba Senior Cldssic.
Greg Risling
D AILY PILOT
Rub. Scrdtch. Rub
The number'> vamshcd and retlp-
peared.
I haven't u ed an <>ra er m years,
but 1t sure Cdme m htlndy Fndi.1~
morrung as I scored a round or !JOU
at the Toshiba ·enior Clt1~..,1c-,
Whal was once d rnooth nuh
turned into a leveled ruhb<-r pad bi
day's end. An Naser ·~ a pc•nc1h 1-w.,1
tnend It was a pal of mm<>, too
Keeping score isn't hard m goU.
How hard is 1t to chstmgu1 ·h d lmd1e
from a bogey or an edgle Imm even
par?
The d.lfftcU.lt pdrl lb kt>1.•pmg lrdtk
of the score for the nyht pt•r...on At
Toshiba. scorCrl:l follO\\ a thr(>(' ... Olll(>
of seruor gollers, one fewer lhdn the
reguJar profess1onul c1rcu11 The
challenge IS remcrnbcnng the nght
names with the nght ldC<'S
Little did I know IX'fon.• our tee lline that' I would b(' ·pluccd tn d
prestigious group
There wa~ Tomm~ At1ron, the
1973 Masters Winner, dnd lit•ne Lit·
Uer, who won the U S Open in 1961
- and graduated from the dme
school I did, San Diego Stute Go
Aztecs!
There was no pre ure about my
one-day 1ob because I wa. n't dn oth-
cial scorer My colledgue d1dn t
Uunk·I couJd handle the> re pon 1btl·
SEE SCORE PAGE A 13
llD OI Tiii Bl
TODAY
lllSIDI SPOITS after slipping into the tournament by
way of "default" P-ee 81 lllfOUIATIOI
Call tournament headquarter$ at
(949) 515-4840, °'log on at
www. Tash1b.JSenior<1,ss1c com
SUNDAY
1bllllae s.nial' Clllllk. leCDnd rcu1d
Tee times start at 8:30 a.m.; ESPN
coverage from 3 to 4:30 p.m.· ;.
1blttlbe Senior a..k. flNI row.t
Tee ticnes start at about 7:30 a.m.;
ESPN coverage from'2:30 to 4 p.m.
TOSHIBA
..
Cash pours in as Measure F looms
• Both sides of the El Toro battle
have amassed large war chests_
over the last three months,
reports show. .......
DMyPILoT
'IWo groups oppoling a ballot meut&re
that U approved could bait a commerdal
airport at lll 1bro have seen an 1nlulion of '
neu9y 1450,000 over the last three
mm•M. eccordlng to ftnandal reports
recmlly flled wttb tbe county'I regtmar of
YGWI.
lllL ... pn>Gpart camp bu -to .......... -..... Comly ~Uli-alrport
~#1= llaat er 1911 tD flaul ID .... ... h .... ,. ........ p C81D·
IF
paign m that same bme
period
Most of the money for
pro-airport proponents,
about $425,000, has been
funneled to Citizens for
Jobs and the Economy, an
organization• led by New-
port Beach real estate
developer George Argyrol
and consultant Bruce Nes-
tende.
Argyroe ii by far the
blggest contributor to the anti-Meuure P
campaign, gtvtng more than 14 IS,000
since January.
Combme that figure wtth that of the
p1evtou1 nine monthl and ~ bas
o.ve Ekhelbwger and Roy \IUdrWctt share the lead after Friday's
first round at the Toshiba Senic>I' Clas-
sic. but 10 others are within two
strokes of the lead. ,.._. c.onn.r.
meanllllhile, is just enjoying the ride
llllllD Ill SCENES
Today, the Pilot profiles o..n Gaa.,
credential wrlflcation chairman.
P ... A1J
INSIDE
SUICI fOISUH
Some hlt>o. Peninsui.
~nts. say they have yet
to see fiMI ~Its of •
bHutific~ion umpaign. ,.....,.,... ..
. lllllOOI
..
•
•
A2 SoMday, March ... 2000
Ondy Trone Christeson
MORAL OF THE STORY
No language barriers
when it comes to
Communion
•communion Is a wonderfuJ.Ume
when we come together and we remem-
ber what's really important.•
-Kenton Beshore'
D ue to aI) unusual schedule, I had the
privilege of ta.king Communion in
three different countries in less than
two weeks. Each circumstance was totally
unique and the locations and languages
were different, but the meaning was clear-
ly the same.
The first in the two-week period was at
the church we worked.with in Cairo called
Kasr el Dobara. My husband, Jon, spoke to
150 children in one room while another of
ow pastors, named Jim, preached to 1,500
people in the sanctuary for the Sunday
night service.
Both Jon's cqid Jim's sermons were
translated into Arabic and were received
with great appr~ation. Then we partook
of Communion together, which was some-
thing that needed no translation and th.at
was definitely received with deep appreci-
ation.
As the pastors and elders brought the
plate of bread, and later the juice, fo each
of us, we stood to receive it as if out of rev-
erence for the value of the gift. Then each
person sat down and waited for everybody
to be served until we all took the elements
together.
People prayed while waiting. I prayed
too, but since I was unswe about the tim-
ing, l admit that I glanced around occa-
sionally. I couldn't help but notice that
everybody seemed to bow their heads as
low as they possibly could, as if to demon-
strate how hwnble tJ:ley felt to receive such
a saaificial gift.
As I looked back, I saw that the people
rose, then sat, and then bowed their beads
almost in unison as a sort of a wave silently
moving to the back and the balcony of the
church. It seemed that each person was
quietly remembering and thanking God for
his love, saaifice and forgiveness.
The second time we celebrated the
Lord's supper was at the Garden Tomb in
Jerusalem. We had a guide who did a
great job swruning up the significance of
the sites.
"We're pretty sure that this is one of the
two possible Sites where Jesus was
buried,· he said. •And if it wasn't this one,
it would have been very similar. But what
matters most is the fact that Christ was cru-
cified, buried, and he rose, and he lives
today. And He lives in my heart.· His
words were reinforced by the sign on the
Garden Tomb which said, •He is not here
-for he is risen.•
We bad Communion in a garden near-
by. It was a profound experience and it
seemed that each ene of us quietly remem-
bered and thanked God for his love, saai-
fice and forgiveness.
The week after we were home in Cali-
fornia, we had communion at ow home
church in ow own language. Owing the
service I realized that it doesn't matter
where I am or what language I speak. In
fact. it's not about me at all.
It's about God. It's about God's love, sac-
rifice and forgiveness. It's about what God
did for me. It's about what God did for you.
It's also about what he wants to do with us,
through us and for us. ~d you can quote me on that.
• CN>Y T1lANE CHNSlBON Is a Newport
Beach resident who speaks frequently to parent-
ing groups, She can be reached via e-mail at
dndyOon~row.com or through the mall at
P.O. Box 6140-No. SOS, Newport Beach 92658. . ,
VOLK N0.55
·~ .. Famr ·
St. John the Baptist
Catholic Church
St. Joho the ~ c.holk Church ii
dedbted to embracing the dlvenity
of the community 1twough the unity
of our worship. The congnlglltion Is
ethnlcalty dlwrse, .net spam all •
groups. Mmes are Saturday at a
a.m .. 5:)0 (Vigil ~ .net 7 p.m.
~); Sur1dly .t .. t:lO .net
11 a.m.. 12:15. 5:JO .net 7 p.m. ~
lsh); Md~ .. 6:10 Md 8:)0
a.m .. .net 5;l0 p.m. ~ lndude
pr~ hymns. ,...... from the Old
T.stament. the PYltnl, the New Tes-
ument Md the Galpet$,. • ~
Md Yer~ Conwnunlon. Child
CM9 Is provided fof Infants Md tod-
Daily Pilot
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I I .I
I
IN THE SPIRIT
I I I Prange Coast Unitarian U:piversalist Church .
" .. . . .. \
.AcldNu: 1259 Victoria St., CQS-'
ta M~ ' Telephone: (949) 646-
4652 Denomination: A member
congregation of the Unitarian
Universalist Assn.
v .. c;:ha"ch EsUblished: 1953
Service Tlmes: Sunday at 10:30
a .m. Religious education for
preschool through high school
. meets conCWTently.
: Pastor. Karen · Stoyanoff
1 Chw ch Staff: Betty Skwarek, I , director of religious education; I Ryan Heller, choir director; I Sarah Jones, office manager.
I I I
I • I I •
Sin of Congreptlon: 100
adults ..
Makeup of~: A
broad range of 1;tges, professions
and cultwal backgrounds are
represenle<;I. Members reside
primarily in Costa Mesa, Hunt-
. ington Beach and Newport
Beach, but some come from
through out Orange and Los
Angeles counties.
Child Cln: Nursery care is pro-
vided for most activities, unless
the event includes children.
Older children attend religious
education activities.
• DON LEACH I OAa.Y Pl.OT
Pastor Karen Stoyanoff of Orange Coast Ullitarian Univena.list Church in Costa Mesa.
TYPe of Worship: Services are
a time for members to come
together to celebrate life. The
celebration integrates music and
the spoken word, including
readings from spiritual texts
and/or other literatwe and a
message.
ratic process by voting and
speaking out on issues that
relate to Unitatian Universalist
prjnciples. Unitarian Universa.l-
ists have· a principle that states,
•we affirm and support the
rights of conscience and the use
of the democratic process in our
congregations and in society at
large.• On March 12, the service 1YPe of Sermon:· Most mes-will feature a speaker from the
sages are. focused on issues of Orangewood Children's Home,
bow to live in community. and on March 19, Stoyanoff will
speak on "Responsible Con-
Recent Topics: Last Sunday, .. sumption. • a national initiative
Stoyanoff spoke on "How Do for Unitarian Universa.lists.
We Know What We Know: ·
Metaphorical Theology.• She Welcome Wagon: Newcomers
explored various ways by which .a.re greeted before the Supday-
we understand the great mys-morning service and are
tery of finding meaning in life. encowaged to join others dw-
Sbe examined the use of story. ing the coffee bow that f~llows.
myth and metaphor in our Members enthusiastically par-
attempts to understand the ticipate in this time of communi-
un.known. She looked at bow ty. Members warmly welcome
these stories enrich ow lives and anyone to join them "without
help us understand great ques-regard to race, color. sex, dis-
tions such as •What is the mean-ability. alfectional or sexual ori-
ing of life?" •What is good and entation, age, or national Origin
what is evil?" and "Is there a .and without requiring adher·
God?" ence to any particular interpre-
Upcoming Topics: The Sunday
service will center on the obliga-
~on to participate in the democ-
tation of religion or to any par-
tiau.lar religious belief or creed.•
Outntach Programs: The con-
gregation bas a Social Justice
Outreach Committee. 1Wo of its
major p rojects are the AIDS
Team Ministry Project and Cir-
culo de Amigas. The AIDS te~
provides microwaveable meals
to homebound people with
AIDS who live in Orange Coun-
ty. Meals are cooked, packaged,
frozen and delivered weekly by
members of the congregation.
Circulo de Amigas sends direct
support to people in Nicaragua
and also provides assistance to
at-risk children in Orange
County schools. Last Christmas,
the congregation also •adopt-
ed· and provided food and gifts
for 21 families through the out-
reach of S.0 .S. in Costa Mesa.
Dress: Casual
Church Design: Large and
contemporary, with a beautiful
location and view overlooking
Huntington Beach from the ·
Costa Mesa bluffs. -
Mission Statement: The pur-
pose of the Ora.nge'Coast Uni-
tarian Ur\iversalist Cb wch is to
create and nurture a place in
Orange County that welcomes
all persons into a diverse,
empowertng and caring spiritu-
al community that exemplifies
and . promotes our Unitarian
Universalist values. We do this
by: ottering programs for wor-
ship, religious education and
fellowship for all ages; pro'tid-
irtg opportunities for spiritual,
irttellectual and leadership
growth; by supporting and par-
ticipating in the wider Unitarian
Universalist community. We
covenant to act among our-
selves and in the larger commu-
nity in a way that affirms Uni-
tarian Universalist principles.
ll1teresting Note: The church
just completed a weekend
workshop, "Creating a Jubilee
World,• which focused on anti-
racism. The church is planning
further work to promote anti-
racism within the community in
the coming months. The chwch
conducts a weekly 9 a.m. Sun-
day seminar/discussion group
that considers various social
issues. It is open to anyone w ho
is interested. Topics are chosen
by the participants. For more'
information on any of these
events, call the chwch offic.e.
-Compiled by
M ichele M . Marr
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('
Faltll .
CILEllDIR
SPECIAL EYllU
« ~ hef9fn Qt'I be
1'9proc1Umd wtthout written ,_.
million of copyright owner.
HOW TO IEAOt US
Oaallldon
The Times Orange Coynty
(IOO) 252·9141
M<reillllll• o..tflld (949) 642·5671
~('Mt) 642""4121
&lat.I
.... ""9) 642-580
Sports (Ml) 57~
N9WI. Sports,. ~ 64M170
f.mel: ~al(ft
... OMm
lusina Offtce (Mt) 642-4)21
• ....,.. ,. (Mt) 6)1-71~
__ .......,
Nlor .......... :::::..w.
DftmrofptaU ...... ............ ......... c..,, ... _____ ,... ___
ASH WEDNESDAY
Presbytedan · Church ol the Covenant will
begin the annual celebralicn ol ~ at· 7:30
p.m. OD Ash Wecinelday (March 8) Ol the
.
Fairview Road, Costa Meso. 1lckets, which
include lunch, are ~.so. Por n.ervations and
mme Information. call (949) 66o-86651 P.Jt, 3.
church, 2858 Fotrview Road. Costa Mesa. For · MARY IMER EDDY
more informatioa, call (714) 557~0. Devid Stevens will speak on the Ille of Mary
llNr SCMEDUl.E Beker Eddy, founder ol Ouistian Sdeln!, at 2
St. Michael aod AU Angels Episcopol Porilb p.m. March 11 at BordeB Books, Music & Cafe
will ceJebnde Ash WedrMmay at 7 e.m.., noon at South Coast Plaza. For more infonnatimi
and 7:30 p.m. Wedxadey. From lbunday mil (714) 432-7854.
through April 22, evening prayer will be bald
at 5:30 p.m. 1be church II at 3233 Padfic View
Olive, Corona del mar. For mare infarmatkJn.
call (9'9) 673-0464.
NEW INSIGHrS ON JESUS
Tbe Newpolt M9me ........... Comldl pl"I l l D'l:I
•New higt* on .-., 8ndudlng tMgtD
b'CllJl r.tam• ltmtlng at 11:'5 a.m. Wedmlday
at PNmbytmten Oiurcb of ... c.ovm.nt. ~
WllTHll lllD SUIF
~l'UES
S.lboa
4Mi3
COfON def Mar
47163
cosu~
46466
Newport 8Hch
47164
Newport Coast
4M4
WNIMCASY
A powlfful noe1hwet
IMll wil .... tod9y
Md provide CMfNed
uf through Sundey.
CoocltlcH wta be poor
due to the~.
I
LOCMIOll -Wldge ...
Nw:1port 1-10
......, 1-10 ..., ...
QIM ...
T1DB tboAY
Fimlow
1:51 a.m. ...................... 1.5
Rm high
7:55 a.m. ................ ·-·· 5.6
S.Cond low
2:p p.m ...................... -0.5
Second high
9:01 p..m.._. .• ., ............. 0
sumAY
First low
2:24 •.m. ..................... t.2
Fir,t high
1:21•.m. ...................... 5.i
Second low
J:Olp.m. ...................... ,
Second hlgl'I
t'.24 p.m. .......... -........... 4.S , ----5$
.. L01HAM GiEEN
As put of Mesa Verde United Methodist
CWn:b's 40-year celebration, B. Lotb8ir Green
wOl speak at 8:30 and 10 a.m. Mudl tQ. Green
WU illltnunental in shaping U.. Mrly dayl of
the cburc:b's development. The cbUrda ls at
1701 Bak.er St., Costa Meta. Por more Infor-
mation, call (714) 556-7529.
. , POLICE FILIS
COSTA MESA
• ,_..,..., s.r.t: aw JMlt'tS worth s1eo wer• stolen
from a car f*ked In the 2700 btodc bdween 12~5 p.m.
and 1·50 p.m. ~-
• 1.-t 111h llNC A video camera, flt.tySt.tion. video
PM system, CDs and two c.aa. bollleS wor1h S 1 ,450
were reported stolen from a home In the 100 blodt •
10'.30 a.m. Mond.IV·
• ._ .._ lelwt: A pune, CMt'I .net penonal bms
-..ct • s 125 wtf'e **" from • dMroom .t. tChool
In tt. 400 blodt at 4 p.m. fflb. 2S.
• Vlolll .... Coinl Md j9welry wor1h M70 W9fe
~ stolen from • home In the 1800 bkd -1: 15 p.m. fflb. 25. •
. ,
Doily Pilot Sotvrdoy, Morch 4, 2000 A3
.
Board: accept responsibility before we accept hf<11d
· p erhaps w~t the New-Black on her reaction to the 7-want to hear anyone say •rm It is contrary to that of Uus . the m<Wltcnance of our
port-Mesa Unified Board 0 vote to authorize the bond. sony,• although that would be newspaper and will cause schools Cay an<) I hdvc ""o
of Education needs is a Was BJack at an $0ny that the ruce. I simply wa.nt this board some to belleve that I care kids attendmg Newport-Mesa
gadfly-someone to tell them boa.rd had to ask taxpayers for held accountable more about chasbsmg Uus schools ~d there Le; noUung
what the cunnudgeon crowd a loan? No. Did she acknowl-The larger of the two points bOard than I do about improv· more I'd Wee to ..ee thtl!l
is thin.king. Sid Soffer did that edge the board's ~nsibillty will not be as ea.sy to accom-ing oar schools. improved facilibe5 An<.11 tlon't
with the Costa Mesa City · for having held off the bond modate. This school board nei-But I refuse to lay down m believe that kids hould suffer
Council. but I doubt he'd be for so long while our kids went ther deserves to, nor is capable front of the moving truck that for the nustake. of c1dults
willing to cross the state line to to schools with leaky ro6fs and of admirustratmg $163 mtlhon is this bond because the board We're properry owne~. too,
t..,llc to our local board. unusable bathrooms? No. m public money wants everyone to belleve dlld I know lhdt the value of
So, in lieu of Sid. I am com-Instead, Black proudly pro-In order for th.ts tax to work they are so concerned about our home will be mctmtJmed
pelled to play the pd.rt. I'll even claimed last Tuesday's vote as as planned, it ism the best our kids. Real concern would With the pdSSclgE> or th1• tnx
give you the bottom line right a cause for celebration. "I'm. interests of both the, board cU)d have had a bQnd floated y~ars ,But-I dlwdys go bclck to the
here at the lop: At~ time, 1 WHAT'S UP?· just thrilled for our kidS, our the taxpayers to establish a . ago when repairs cost a frac-lessons we adult<: IPu('h our .
cannot support the boards teachers and our community.' body not to oversee the tion of what they are now lads by our art.Ion'> Until t1us
request for $163 million. $110 she said. spend.mg but to make the 1 am not a l.Jbertanan tw1th board Cdn how l'1XPd\t>r-; the
./ of which will come in the fonn Proposition 13. Thrilled? Thrilled about spending deos1ons and cbs-or without the capital •L·) I • soW\d hndllnaJ m.ondgem1:mt •
of a tax on local property own-· This is no small point what? lbrilled about having to burse the payments. Why? pay truces and expect certru.n tustol) thdt \\ arrdnt .. 1t.-.
•
ers (the remaining $53 million Accepting responsibility for tax constituents? Thril.led Because the fiscal manage-services m return. I don't have acl.m.lrustrdtion ot $1 h:i million
will co"me from Sacramento as . our choices and expressing about exposing the board's ment track record of this board a problem wtth that. -wtthoul tellinq u., • 11\ for
matching funds.) some measure of remorse is Jack of financial acumen? is not ooe that enbtles them to I do have a problem wtth the kids' -dnd cdn .,how at
My objections are few, but nothing less than what we ask Instead of insight or reflection, hc:mclJe such a large.sum of politioans who neglect their least a c;hred of accountabilit)
they rest on weighty issues: of our children when they lie, taxpayers got a spin move that money. duties. allow publJc faahbes to for ~ ctetldr IP lh" only les-
Before I can vote in favor of get into a fight or come home makes Shaquille O'Neal look The tax will produce a swn fall tnto a state of extreme cbs-son ledml'<l ~ tlldt tho.,~ who
this tax. I want to hear some wi»1 a bad grade. like a high school hacker. that is best left in the hands of repair, pldce the blame else-own propt>rt\ c1n• t1h\t1\°"
acceptance of the responsibili-Don't expect to hear one Listening to Black, we are people with business and where, then ask taxpayers for available to rf'\\ttrcl lldd
ty for allowing our schools to word of remorse or a syllable supposed lo believe that th.ts is fmanoaJ savvy. who have d loan lo lxul them out wiihoul behavi<Jr
fall into such disrepair. I want of ac:cOuntability. ln fact. true-a "win-win° for everyone. It is dealt with construction matter.. one word ol accovntabtllty or
to hear it without the finger-payers can expect just the not. or this size and who will spend remorse, whtle gustung about
"pointing that will place the opposfle. A"Ccounting for the state of tht.s money as though it were how thrill.tng 1t aJ1 IS
• STEVE SMITii is a Costa Ml'Scl
resident and freelance writer blame on the bankruptcy, the · . In last Wednesday's Dally the schools is not too much to their own. I do not trust Uus Yes, I hdve a problem wtth He can be reached via e-mail at
dailypi/ot@lat1mes.com, or call our
Readers Hotline at (949) 642 6086
embezzlement, the economy Pilot, reporter Danette Goulet ask. I'm not asking for resigna-board w;ith this much money. that.
or the now 20-year-old quoted board member Dana tions and I don't necessarily M y position L!> not popular l have a vested interest Ill
KASHI
Ban
Slim Down
For Spring!
YOU SAVl S 10 001
Mai'
()Nier
1.(&DO)
S9S' c::Js1
r~~I Self-'IMh•Kitsl
SUGG. '58.99
• Female Check .,,...,.,_ .. .,.
• Perf...,,.nce Check r ...,,...JllllMO.u •• "'• ' • Strea Check
Moe•a SIN# et & n art ..........
FARM FRFSH PRODUCE
7~ e~1
Drew's
All Natural GriO
Sauces&
Marinades
• Chipolle • AsUm
• Caribbean Sra? • AflerGriO
REG. '3.99 8 oz.
Pasta~uces
• Green OliYe • Mushroom ~briNra
• Fat-~ Carlie SJ!? • Fat-~ Tuoiato Bull •
REG. '3.99 32 oz.
Fresh Milk Taste!
• Original
•Vanilla ~
•Coroa ~oz. REG. t-i.99 • 32 oz.
Guatvnla!d Polmcy
Yobimbe Fuel
Quick Ading ~·les
Yohimbe Bark ilDoo
~t-i2.!ill ,...g;~.
•
(Mothers ]
w~ ~
Baltetl Fresh 92' "Dally! ' s
REG. 43.25 32 oz .
(Mothers)
Orgaiiic Whole
Wheat Pasta
IMAGINE FOODS
AO Natural low-Fat w.= • Olocol.ate == S•I9 • &tterscolch .& 4. 3.75
REG. t-i . oz. cups
Wild~ide
Siberian Ginseng
:: .. Sft!!. 100
7)~ {A') "/ 7)~ • ..._~~~it.
L~.~, "I \<1,~ .... t.~1
Rocky
Uncured
Chicken Hot Dogs
Fat-Frf.e Naturally!
~les
.System • Six
&In 1
IMWUlced Diet Formula
Controh ~lite
Bums Fat
SOOG. t-J6.7S
March 18-Saturday
1:00 to 4.-00 pm
NA'1URAL APf'R(JACHES
TO MDVOPAUSE
By Dr. Elizabeth Suth01and
&Emmta ( 'ewland Barn.
in Huntington Beach)
F , .. t ... , ~ 1 .. -0 )'
./l ' '(0
., 1 ~ .. f ... < ,·
' . .,.. r..
1 I ~ . I ' f '
, .
I
..
A4 Soturdoy, Morch 4, 2000
• HAAIOA CHRISTIAN CHURCH .l (DlaclplH of Christ) -----------.
Cost11 Meu'I
Prabyterilln Church
of the Covenant
2401 lrvln1 Ave. at lam. taalt1I
N1wpor1 l11ct1
Sunday Wo,.tllp • 10:00AM
Or. 01nnl1 W. Sllor1 Minister (949) 845-5781
m COMMUNITY CHURCH
CONGREGATIONAL
UNITED CHURCH OF . CHRIST
To Stllrit ls to C..; To C.. ls to DO.
Bruce Yan Blair, Minister
Worship Services
·a:OOam
9:00am Adult Church School
'1 O:OOam -Sunday School
•Child Care Provided
611 Heliotrope Avt., CoroN del MM
(949) 644-7400 •
'\.I \\ I I I 1 ll 1 • I I I
< 111 l\1 I I
NEW T !IOUGlfT Cit URCH
Srima uf Mind Outer
..... "•"" hit. M Ml'JIOUl(.Y
Re""\ h.•·Ul•t"''
,1111 '°414H t1 f11J.
""""''"' ..... MiHlm. Kn t •• .olMnlr•
Su111h1v lw·""'" IU '10
'""''·•\ "tu.ii IO.~I
~l.lt(hhuth•H\il;l ( AllllllU1111t~ ( l'lllf"l1 •
lll·I'• 1'.1rl.. AH , ( ... i.. ~1r ...
W.-rl I tuhnl( "'"'<<" to 'Ill .1111.
lh:l'I f1t•ton A"·, Co•t.1 Mr"'
"'' \\,.1 l..•h»p • 1(),.12 """" Donauon
Call (9-19) 64Ml99
for information
il "JF.SUS in His Own Words"
I Vi eo-aruoa will be tuwd
I Ash Wedaeaday Won.hip (7p.m.)
The Covenant Choir wiU si~
Panor lim Mc Cslmont Preaching
Programs for kids and adults
2850 Fairview Road @Adams ,
714-557-3340
ST. MARK PRESBYTERIAN
CHURCH
"Open Arms and Open Minds"
~orship 9:30
(949) 644-1341
ll 11111\\',
Newport HarbOr
Luth•l'.•n Church
798 Dover Dr. NeWport lleech
Tr•dltlon•I Lutheren
Worship a.vice with
Holy Communion
isundeytts1Sam
SUncley School tk1S am
March 12
b-8 p.m.
"A God-centered parish community, instructed bt the Word of God
and ruicwtd by the Sacraments
Our Lady Queen of Angels
2046 Mar. Vista D rive
Newport Beach, California 92660
(949)644-0220 Pax (949)644-1349 .
Rev. Monsignor William P. Mcl..aughlin, Panor
LITURCIES:Sarurday. 5 p.m. (Cantor).
Sunday, 7:00 (Quicc), 8:30 (C:Ontcmporary), 10:00 (Choir),
l l:jO a.m. (Cantor) and 5:00 p.m. (COntcmporary)
First United Methodist Church . or Costa Mesa
429 Wes119th Street, Costa Mesa
Festival or Worship lO:OOam
Richard L. Ewln1, Putor
Church School 9:00.m & IO:ISam
949-548-7727
Christ Church by the Sea
Uniccd Mcthodin
1400 W. 8;ilboa Blvd., Ncwpon 8cacb
9:00 a.m. -Sun<hy School for all ages
10:00 a.m. -Worship (wilh dlikl can')
The !Uv. OT. George R. Critp, Pa.tor
(9"9) 67H805
Costa Mesa
MISA VIRDI
UNmD MITHODIST CHURCA
1701 !laker, C.M.
Worship & Church Jchoot
• 8130 and 1 OzOO a .m.
Dr. Richord ' e (71.4) 979·823.4
NEWPORT CENTER
UNITID METHODIST CHURCH
160 I Margue-lle A~. Corona de! Mar
f949) 644-0745
'Norshlp at B:OOAM & 1 O:OOAM
Children Sunday School I O:OOAM
Jr. & Sr. High S:OOPM
the
..,,
rch , ..... --
:J
I JQl
~
("t
~ Q, .,
" ::r
SAINT JAMES CHURCH IPISCOPAL
~=:::::fl:'-=~ The Very Rev. Canon Daoiid Andenon.
Reder
3209 Vio lido
Newport Beach
.. 949/675-0210
9 am r .........._,,,,.,
•
7:30 om Troditionol
9oma;;;;h~
10:'5 am Charismatic
and Noon
Owr P'll'PM' u # h.w Chrin liw ;,, Ml;,,
ortln 1""1 '" Chrut "" ""'} liw failhfol
11..J Jrwlwriw Chris1W. lii.on.
The Rcv'J Pcm D. Haynes, Rector
~-mdiiyduring lml
&imimg Pn,a--SdO .-
Holy F.adint MO-. Sun
Oiani~IO.OO-. Sun
"The Bible, Homosexuality,
and Proposition 22"
(Romans 1:18-32) STAN~
PaunnM.uo Otullcll
Suwday; March <I, 2000, S:JO P.M. Sunday. Matdl S. 2000, l:JO &c 10:15 A.M.
(1erws from Newpon Harbor Hlsh School at lrvlne and 15th)
600 St. Andrews Ro.d. Newport 8ach. California 92663·532.S (~9) 631-2880
' ~ '' --( i I I\ I ' I I \ '·. '-. ( I I • ' ( '
..-.--......
FIRST CHURCH OF
CHRIST, SCIENTIST
3303ViaWo
Newport Bea:h
673-1340 or 673-6150
Olwch 10 am & 5 pm. Suooay School 10 am
~ Meellngl8 pm
SECOND CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST
3100 Poofic V'tew Dr • Newport Bea:h
644-2617 or 675-4661
Olwch lOam
Sundav School 10 am WeClnlaClay Meellr1QI a pm
tl•~l2noon
... r .. 11H _,, 11H '"''"'•""'ti# Ufa1 ,.,, ,,..,, c.-m
111110 tlw IWtlwr, /nu '1y 11tc.
John 14:6 I am
~of 1\t Motlier Ori• 1\t fnt Ori of C.risl, Sdmllst • ~ ~
Bethel Baptist
Adult and Chlldren's Sunday School Hour · 9:45 a.m.
Worship Service • 1 I :00 a.m.
Sunday Evening • 6:00 p.m.
Thursday Bible Study • 6:40 p.m.
~ lnlllte you ID WOfShlp the Lord with us. Come ll1ld learn powerful
princfples ll1ld 1tull1J from God's word that f101J can build your Ufc upon.
Come as wcjoln our ht.tJrtJ IDgdher In lldontUon o( the Lord JesUJ Christ.•
901 So. Euclid Santa Ana CA 92704
. 714 839-3600
Renew Your Faith
at the
Parish Mission
"Catholic Faith:
A Timeless Story. Ever New"
With 'Fr. Richard Sparks, C.S.P.
March 11 -12 at Weekend Masses
March 13, 14, 15 at 9am and 7:30pm
Our Lady Queen of Angels
2046 Mar Vasta Drive, Newpon Beach
(949)644 0200
Daily Pilot
WHY PAY
DEPT STORE
PRICES?
Visic our
AREA RUG STUDIO
Rugs & Runners on
Sale
Handmade wools, synthetic, sum
A ALDEN'S
1663 Plac~ntia St., Costa Mesa
(~~38
JEFF & LYLEEN
EWING
COMPLETING
INSPECOON REPAIRS
\.Vhen you $ell a house, the
buyers "ill probably hive 1 home
inspec1ion before they are
contnctua.lly obligated to purchase
the home. The inspector may tum
up something that needs attention
or repair, and after the inspection,
the buyers may produce a tin of
items they want repaired as •
condition for moving forwanl on
the sale.
When you get the buyer\ list,
remember that 90me of the imns
may be negotiable. Sales cootnea
1HU11Jy require that all the syteam
be in working condition. Some
~n may meb requau duit So
beyond the nonnal obltpdont ol
thc teller. 11lC)' m1y .. ror • new
roof or cauin RnlCl\lr'll rqllin IMt
you m.y not want to rmill. Yo. ·
cigent am help you to._. the rim
ol Jlllt "Yin( -no" to bural who lft
....... clan.ndl Y'JU Ollllidlr. be
11111'~. You ""Y i-llf decline
the requqt. but the bu)ws.., bd
Gal of tM dal .. I l'fllUk. \Ym )'111111
~ to ma,b repMn. hft ......
~""°will i.t., .. ~ind,;~~ copies of the .....
to the ~n.. Al:'iille 10 .......
repein .... lheid " ... ..,Mold
lat-m.imata coaq>lac.dotla ~
oouldaw+ • diiia I
L,leea _. Jelf ._. 21
ClllllWudw ,... al ... -f I ...... N.pan ..... ,,.., .. c ............ ...
I*' I • .._ ..... _ . .-n
~---...........
. . ., .
Daily Pilot
·Proposing a. healthy solution.
•Prop. 28, which
would repeal the
tobacco tax, could take
away services from
Costa Mesa family,
many others.
helped arrange her doctors'
appointments.
In Spanish, the nurse
explained what and when
Rico should feed Ellis, who
weighs a healthy t4 pounds
seven months after entering the world .
. , "She helped calm me
Andrew Glazer down very muc~" Rico said.
DAILY PILOT • • • Hawthorne tasr week
COSTA MESA After partnered with Families-
giving birth to her first child, Costa Mesa -a local orga-
a girl, Andrea Rico was terri-nization providing free par-
fied. enting classes, counseling
Little EWs was born two and public assistance refer-
months premature, weighed rals. She will refer her
only four pounds and had to clients, including. Rico, to
stay in a closely watched Families' small offices,
hospital crib for four weeks. where they can exchange
·1 didn't know what was information and emotional
going to happe'n," said Rico, support with other parents.
30, in her native Spanish. • 1 Counselors will guide those
was very nervous." who need public assistance
She didn't know much through the labyrinth of
about babies, certainly not forms and applications.
premature ones. The partnership, along
Rico's doctor referred her with 20 other programs
to a county public. h~alth offered by the Costa Mesa
nurse, Verlil Hawthorne. outreach or~anization, is
Since then, a few times each funded through state money
month, Hawthorne has visit-collected from a 50-cents-
ed ·Rico and Ellis at the Col-per-pack tobacco tax.
lege Park home that the California voters passed a
mother, father J uan, and ballot measure in 1998 for
child sha re with another the tax, which the state allo-
famlly. . cates to organizations pro-
During a visit Wednesday, viding health services for
Hawthorne -with a soft infants to 5-yearrolds.
voice, wide eyes a nd a warm Families-Costa Mesa,
smile -measured squirmy which was given $80,000,
Ellis with a tape measure, was one of five Orange
tested her reflexes with rat-County organization~ which
tles and porn-porns and received state tobacco mon-
ey earlie r this month.
The st~te funding for
Families-Costa Mesa will
end if voters approve Propo-
sition 28 on March 7. The
measure would repeal the
tobacco tax.
• "If people believe fund--
ing more programs will 'be
good for our· children,
they're smoking something
other than cigarettes" said
Ned Roscoe, leader of the
' pro-Prop. 28 group, Ciga-
rettes Cheaper!
"If parents have more
money, they'll spend it on
their children ... The tax is a
socialist paradise myth,· he
said.
But Leda Albright, Fami-
lies-Costa Mesa's program
director, said programs like
hers will in the long run save
Californians money. Many
new immigrants -who
make up a large portion of
Costa Mesa's population -
don't apply for insurance for
their children, Albright said.
Some don't know how.
Others a re worried doing so
would jeopardize their
immigration status. ·Their
children don't receive regu-
lar checkups and immuniza-
tio ns. These children some-
times wind up in expensive
emergency rooms -paid for
by taxpayers in the form or
state-provided medical
insurance -for asthma
attacks and other pre-
ventable emergencies.
"What better j.nvestmeot
is there than in our chil-
dren?" she said.
Mike Ruane, directpr. of a
state-formed, county-
appointed commission
charged with distributing
tobacco lax money, said only
organizatlcms with a proven
track record will rece~ve
tobacco tax money. ·
•Families-Costa Mesa
was immediately ready to
expand their services and
reach more people," he said.
But with or without stale
money, Albright said she's
committed to expanding the
services the organization
offers to patents and chil-
dren. While Families-Costa
Mesa has already served
thousands . or families,
Albright said the demand for
its programs continues to
grow.
She hopes to hire more
outreach workers, move to a
bigger office and offer more
frequent immunization clin-
ics.
• U the state money goes,·
she said. "We'll just have to
sit down and write more
grants. Just like we've
always done."
With elections just a wee.k
away, teary-eyed Ellis only
cared that her physical exam
would end soon.
And Andrea Rico, who
doesn't know much abo\.ll
Prop. 28, was only con-
cerned that her baby C?ntin·-
ues to grow.
Saturday, Morch 4, 2000 AS
fOI Tll UCOll
In h Feb. 21 ttcwy. "Streligthet1 ~ commitment.• fof!Nr
..,_.. Prime Mlnistef Benjamin ~u w~ misquoted. The
ltat9lne11t should~ rNd, •If lsr<lel Md not come into existenc9
-"-Wortd W• II. ttlln I .;. certain the ~ p,eople wouldn't
.Niie survived .•
Volunteer
DIRECTORY
VOLUNTEER DIRECTORY runs
periodically in tile Daily Pilot on a
rotating basis: ff you'd like infor·
mation on adding your organiza·
lion to this list, call (949) 5744228.
AlS ASSOOATION,
ORANGE COUNlY CHAPTER
The Arnyotrophic Lateral
Sclerosis Assn., Orange
County Chapter, needs many
volunteers. For infolTftCltion,
call the chapter office at (714 J 375-1922.
ALZHEIMER'S ASSN.
OF ORANGE coum:v
Support group leaders, VI.Sit-
ing Volunteers, family
resource consultants and
office volunteers are needed.
Volunteers can work on one-
time projects or ongoiJ)g pr()-
grams. Thaining Sessions are
available. For more informa-
tion, call (800) 660-1993.
AMERICAN CANCER SOCIETY
The Orange Coun ty Region of
the American Cancer Society
.
seeks office volunteers. 1be
soo is also Sf>ekmg volun-
+eers to answer calls for the
unit's Helpline lnfoCenter. For
more inlomtabon, call (949)
,261~9446.
•AMERICAN CANCER
SOOETY DISCOVERY SHOP \ The American Cancer Society
Discovery Shop needs volun-
teers from I 0 a.m.. to 5 p.m.
Monday...ruough Saturday at
2600 E. Coast Highway, Coro-
na del MM For more informa-
tion, call (949) 640-4777.
AMERICAN CANCER SOOETY
ROAD TO RECOVERY
Th.Ls transportabon program
needs volunteers to dnve can-
cer pabents to and from med-
ical treatments free of charge.
The reqwrE'd comrrutment is a
few hours edch week or
month. Drivers need a vdl.id
driver's license d.Qd 111Surance,
and must be at Jea~t 25 year.;
old. Volunteers mdy use either
thel! own vehlcles or Ameri-
can Cdflror Sooety vdflS. For
more tnlonndbon, cd.11 (949)
261-9446 or send e-md.11 to
scomer@cancer.org.
SABATINO'S
tunch • Dinf)er • Sund_ayjrunch
251 Shipyard Way• Newport Beach
Please call for hours. d1rect1ons & reservauons. -. --(949) 723-0621 •
,,.
.. . .
A6 Saturday, Morch ~. 2000
Barking up the wrong tree?
' I •
• Some residents say
beautification project
has taken too long,
leaving b~en pits in
frontyards.
Noakl Schwartz
DAJLY PILOT
BALBOA PENINSULA -
Nile Bloom became so fed
up waiting for the palm
trees that were supposed to
be planted in front of his
house that he made his own
out of a broom handle , duct
tape and flopping leaves.
He finished off the land-
scaping with some tra~h
scattered at the base of a
cardboard sign reading:
•Balboa Peninsula Be~utifi
calion Association."
The Balboa Boulevard
Beautification Project
began more than a year
ago, through the efforts of
both residents and the city.
Since then, the curbs and
gutters have been rebuilt,
the streets repaved and
c rs and trucks rerouted. After workers removed
The palm trees were. to chunks of the sldewalk,·the
be orie <?f the finishing city learned the utility 11.oes
touches. were simply too close to the
•Last June or July, they ground and would get
were going to re.do the caught in the roots if palm
streets, and left places to · trees were plantfd.
plant trees," Bloom recalled •Righ t where the g as
. recently. · line"runs, it's very shallow,'"
He added that bis neigh-· said Bill PataJ>off, the city
bors are particularly upset engineer. "They found out
that their treeless sand pit they couldn't plant there.
has been turned into a They tl\ought the gas line
canine commode. would be three-to four-feet
But Kay Mortenson, a deep.•
spokeswoman for the Bal-Councilman Tod Ridge-
boa Peninsula Point Assn. way, who lives in the a rea,
homeowners group, said agreed that the palm trees
they've worked very bard just would not work in cer-
to try to move forward with tain areas.
their joint beautification "The utilities were a
effort with the city. nightmare," Ridgeway
"There are more than said.
100 people on (Balboa) The homeowners associ-
Boulevard behind this pro-ation came up with. some
ject," Mortenson said. landscaping options for the
·There are three to four areas where trees were not
people who have [plots) possible, such as planting
waiting for trees. They r~p-bushes or putting the trees
resent a very small minori-in pots. Eventually, they
ty." settled on bushes, and less
The problem is this than two. weeks ago
"small minority" got caught received the necessary
in the middle of the effort. approval of every resident.
fHi•~
Mattress Outlet Sto
BRAND NEW · COSMETICALLY IMPERFECT
Get the Best tor Less!
3 165 Harbor Blvd.
Costa Mesa
Oae IAock ao.tll "' .-05 ,..,., (7 t4) 545-7168
F•bric S.lel
95.,. off
AllV•rd•s•
lip OJ/31100
Fabrics, Table Linens,
Home Accessories, ·
Pottery, Fragrance & ,
gifts Imported from
Provence
111 Mari ne Ave.
BALBOA ISLAND
(949) 6 73-0719
Open 7Days
10:30 ~:OOpm
"There are more than
100 people on
[Balboa] Boulevard
behind this project:
There are three to four ~
people who have '
[plots} waiting for
trees. Th ey represent
a veiy small minority."
Kay Mortenson
A spokeswoman for the
Balboa Peninsula Point Assn.
homeowners group
Although there are no spe-
cific plans in place, the
group hopes to begin plant-
ing by spring.
Still, .for Bloom, the
eight-month lag bas been
too much.
•This isn't Tijuana,. for.·
God's sake. This is New-
port!• Bloom exclairiled. ·u
this dirt was in front of [a
city official's] house -this
would be fixed tomorrow."
ZAHER FALLAHI, CPA
28 yrs. exp. ·
Acccg., Audi ts, Taxes
15% discount co CM Residents
(714) 546-4272 .
An American J'amtJy Operated Bualneaa
Since 1983 .
Th•J'loor Guys
Our famtJy ~yourfamU7
' tor 47 years
LIFETIME 01Wt6E COUITY EXCLUSIVE DISTRIBUTI
GUARANTEE CARPET OF LIFETIME GUARDTEE CARPET $1 '' ~=:: ~:: ::::.," . SQ.
FT. Lffttl•t Cnt~ l1tn•ty
INSTALLED Llfetl•• •••• ,.,,. • .,
woot BERBER
CARPET
~24'~:·
4000 STORE BUYllll POWER
C1r~!t c.-; T•• W1rl•'• L1r1••f Clr~t R1t1H1r IF YOU' E NOT BUY NG FROM US
YOU'RE ·PAYING. TOO MUCH
FREE
-' Daily Pilot
CONAAD LAU I DALY Pit.OT
A homemade tree stands In front of 927 E. Balboa Blvd.
In defiance to the dty, which promised real trees about a
year ago. The Olp side of the sign reads, "Balboa
Peninsula Beautification Association."
.
NOTICE OF UNSCHEDULED VACANCY .
The City of Ncwpon Beach is currcndy accepting applications ro
fill the following unscheduled vacancy:
Planning Commission (one scar)
The newly appointed member will serve until rhe expiration of rhe
currenr term Uune 30, 2003).
The deadline for filing applicati6ns is 3:00 p.m. on Thursday.
March 16. '2000. The appointmcnr is Sc:hcduled co be made on
Tuesday, April 25, 2000. Applicarion blank.~ and additional
information about the Planning Commission can be obtained from
the C ity Clerk's office, 3300 Newport Boulevard, or will be m:ulcd
to you by calling 644-3005.
For mon: information eontaet the City Clerk's Office at 6«-3005.
WESTCUFF PlAzA
Irvine Ave & 17th St.
Newport Beactl
( Slnoe 1962)
5'de-1't CORONA DEL MAR
FITNESS CENTER PCH&AYOClldo Ave Corona Del Mar
(949) 631-3623 (Openlno Apr#~
6&. ..
:'
Daily Pilot _ Saturday, Morch 4, 2000 A7
. \ . .
&:lucational pklytime is offered at Zany Brainy toy store
Zany Brainy, one of the
bes.t toy stores around,
is having all kinds of
playshops this inoQth for
preschool children up to 7
years old.
On Mondays, preschool-
ers· can have craft time with
different projects, including
dough projects, arts and
crafts, .kJ.te making and dot
pictures. · •
On Tuesdays, there are
board book tiuddy playshops:
Kids can dev~op vocabulary,
improve their language skills
and learn that reading is fun.
On Wednesdays. it's activity
ti.me. Kids can learn basic
concepts like sorting, orga-
nizing, catching and more.
Preschool events are all at
10:30 a .m . ·
On Thursdays at 4 p.m.,
the playsbop will feature fun
and games ideal for kids
ages. 4 to 6. On Fridays at 7
p.m., there will be more fun
and games for kids, includ-
ing Dr. Seuss classics, game
math club, ·a viewing of Bar-
ney's .. new video, poetry
readers club meeting, Poke-
mon Jr. Concentration and
other games.
Zany Brainy is filled with
more than ·15,000 items of chil-
dren's merchandise, including .
Greer Wylder
BEST' BUYS
educational toys; electronic
learning games; software and
CD-ROMs; thousands of book
titles; video tapes; audio tapes
and CDs; craft kits; supplies
and Ceacher's resources .. Zany
Brainy is in the Corona del
Mar Plaza in Newport Beach.
Call (949) 640-5131.
South ...C:oas fun has
added a new tenant: Bruno
Magll, the famous Bologna
shoe company, on the sec-
ond level near Versace.
Under the creative direction
of Rita Magli, Bruno Magli
has become as well-known
for its recent cutting edge
style as for jts old-world
quali~
The Lido Consignment
Gallery has opened a sec-
ond location at 3636 Central
•p. .. •5t. otric~'s l)lv•
Bai
friJh Cream 750 ml ••.•••••••••.• * 1 4"
Louis Roederer
Brvt Premier Chomp ••••••••••••• *29" ...ill~ac
'Glen Ellen 1.5L
Chord·Cob-Merlot •.•.•••••••••••••• • 7"
B.V. Reserve Chord
Comef"OJ '97 •••..••••.•••••.••.•.. *20"
Jekel 750 ml
Chardonnay •••••••••••••••••••••••••• • 8 ••
Plu1 connoi11eur coll«tiW. hm•
l'nc .. '"""""'°quot!~--n uocl
''' 673·9254
NOW
OPINI
nllLOCAl
DIUVaY
(min. $30 order)
2937 L COAST ltwY
ColouonMAI
Ave. in Newport Beach. Coast Plaza store is having a
The store is filled with art-bridal gift registry event..
work, collectibles, mirrors, There will be product
traditional antiques and con-experts on hand to help you
temporary furniture. The create ~a gift registry that's
stores receive new merchan-ideal ro'r you and for later
dise daily. The original Lido anniversaries. The event
Consignment Gallery is at begins at 6:30 p.m. Reserva-
3439 Via Oporto in Newport • tions are recommended. Call
Beach. Call (949) 723-6480. 888-92-BRIDES for reserva-'
It's the last weekend of • tlons.
the Toshiba Senior Classic If you"re looking for gdoa
at Newport Beach Country deals on furniture and home
Club. accf!ssories, stop by Furntsh -
Some of the greatest lngs Direcl
names in goll are participat-The warehouse show-
ing, including Lee Trevino, room carries discontinued
C::hi C hi Rodriguez, Hale and overstocked items, from
Irwin, Tom Kite, Gary popular national stores, such
McCord and Arnold Palmer. as Z-Gallerie and Restora-·
Tickets · to the tourname nt tion Hardware. Available
are available at Roger Dunn are sofas, chairs, sleepers
Golf Shops. and leather sofas.
Tickets start at $14. For
more information. please
call (~49) 515-4840. PET OF THE WEEK
There are also armoires,
beds, handmade rugs,
·desks, lamps and entertain-
ment centers. The store is
open Thursdays through
Mondays from 10 &.m. to 6
p.m .
~umishings Direct is at
2035 Placentia Ave. ln Costa
Mesa. Call (949) 515-4450.
The best meat setecHon
can be found at CelesUno's
Quality Meats.
It's been in Costa Mesa
for the last 30 years. Current
specials are Southern slab
bacon al $3.99 per pound,
b oneless skinless lemon
chicken breast at $4.99 and
Italian stuffed chicken
breast al $5.99. Celestino's
makes cooking easier.
The oven temperature
I
and time to' cook the meats
are wntten on the pdckages.
If you don't have llrne to
cook, there are pre-made
dtnners avatldble. Ulcluding
crab cakes, beef meatballs,
enchiladas, ctucken fingers
and more
ThP delt &lso cdrries top-
of-the-hne IJOclfd head
meats and hom9fnade beef
or turkey je.rky:z.1'::elesllno's !S
at 270 E 17ttv ~treet m Co!>~
ta Mesa C all (949) 642-
7191.
• • BEST BUYS appears on Thurs-
days and Saturdays. Send informa-
tion to Greer ~Ider at 330 W.
Bay St., Costa Mesa 92627, or via'
fax at (949) 646-4170.
Future brides can gel
good ideas on dresses for
their bridesmaids at Macy's,
located at Fashion Island
and at South Coast Plaza.
Each store has a full-service
shop for bridesmaids.
SUll at the Newport Beach Arumal Sheller locat-
A comp\ete collection of
spring dresses can be found
in the special occasions
department.
On Tuesday, the South
BUBBLE LAMPS
by
GEORGE NELSON
Avoiloble in Small,
Medium & Lorge
Hodson
Lighting
Quality Li1h1inc Service
for30 Yun
Open Tues.-Fri. 9-5, Sat. Q.4
1510 Ntwport Blvd., Costa Mua
(949) 548-9341
. .. ed within the Dover Shores Pel Care Cen-
Suki, a miniature p~er, was terribly ter, 2075 Newport Blvd .. Costa Mesa. For
frightened when she arrived at the New-more information, call (949) 722-8301. port Beach Animal Shelter. She needs the
familiarity of home in order to feel sale
again.
Also, Be>!iCO, the lab-~xer mix previous-
ly feahfred in this space, still needs a home.
See Suki, Bosco and other available pets
Animals sponsored by.
The Community Animal Network
P.O. Box 8662 Newport Beach 92658
www.animalrtetwork.org
(949) 759-3646
Fn.ch W.lriut Bed with Gold Accents by Hennedon
Baker • Henredon • Century • Jeffco • Swaim •
• 1dickQcy White to name a few.
e of our certified interior designers
tQu.
..
.. . . . .. . '
A8 Saturday, Morch 4, 2000 Daily Pilot
#
Turn a house into horne ·with your.oum personal style
A home is not just about style.
Even tpough we all have per-
sonal preferences, I appreciate
any style -or n9n-style for that mat-
ter -done well.
It's not about Mediterranean. tradi-
tional, contemporary or aaftsman. It's
about the combination of furniture,
art, colors and a~spries that give
the home its mood o'i personality.
Have you ever walked into Ji •
home and il just felt g~You could-_
n't put your finger on that
pushed it into the home ea of the
house category, but there was some-
thing about the general feel \hat
made you want to stay, put your feet
up, refreshed you. gave you a good
feeling. .
Some of this ppsitive emotion is
just a matter of the thought you put
into it. How does a room work best?
Anticipate your needs and the needs
of your guests.
Do you often entertain eight peo-
ple in your living room? Think about
the placement of your sofa, a pair of
chairs' and movable pieces of furni-
ture like ottomans on casters.
Does everyone have a place to set
a drink or plate? Be sure there are
enough coffee or.side tables to
accommodate the needs of the room.
• Common sense is the best tool you
can use in your home. When you
organiz.e your kitchen, pretend you
are fixing Thanksgiving dinner. Most
families don't have the luxury of
building a kitchen from the ground
up, but it's very important to organize
your kitchen the way that your mind
works.
Ko(en W"1ght
NO PlAa LIKE.HOME
been lost without it They got the best
toaster oven I could find.
Consider another factor when you
do your kitchen layout -are you
right-or left-ban~? It dictates appli-
ance placement and the way you
. organize your cutlery, spices and flat-
ware. Do you like to load the dish-
washer from the right or left side of
the sink? When you unload the dish-
washer, where is the most convenient
place for plates, glasses and utensils?
Do you need two ovens, or does one
with a microwave fit your lifestyle
better?
Reevaluate the features in your
bedroom. Tue placement of the bed is
important. Can you get fresh air from
an open window? U you watch televi-
sion in bed, do you have room to hi4}e
it in an armoire or built-in cabinet?
Provide a chair or ottoman to sit on
while you put on your shoes. Have a
full-length mirror available so you
can get the big picture of how you
pull yourself together.
Colors. Colors can soothe or stimu-
late and add volumes of personality
to a room. Most people find color
selection the hardest part of design-
ing a room. .
When you get all four walls of a room
painted. tbe color tends to intensify.
How ii the lighting in your nxm' A
dark room will echo a color more
YMdly.
Variety. Every room and every
bmne needs a varlety of pieces to
give it belance and comfort.
lf you have .hardwood floors and
furniture with exposed wood frames,
be sure to add an area rug or ,a fabric
b'e4tment to the windows. TOQ much
wood will leave your ·roam feeling, lit-
erally, hard.
Everything soft and puffy? Include
a metal side table with a glass top to
bring yourself back down to earth. ls
your color scheme heavy on the mod-
el-home beige? Add a few black
pieces, like a picture frame or black
lampshade, to give the room contrast
What about plants and flowers?
Uving things give a room a friendly
feel. Even if you are don't-clutter-my·
house contemporary, a single orchid
will provide life in the room.
I'm not a big fan of fake plants, but
if they fit your needs, be sure you
keep them dusted.
One of my biggest pet peeves is a
dirty or d uttered kid's room. Chaos in
their room deesn't help them with the
business of life. Kids can't possibly
pull themselves together mentally if
they can't find a pair of clean pants to
wear.
Help them get organized and then
encourage -or require -that they
keep some semblance of .order in
their rooms. This is not about control;
this is about teaching ~em that order
is important and cleanliness coWlts.
Make your h<?~ the best place it
can be: a place where you can retreat
from the craziness that life doles out.
Your home should be your castle; not ·
only in its physical beauty, but also
This is dictated by a huge combi-
nation of factors. Tue largest influ-
ence is family habits. Once I worked
on i! kitchen design for a family that
considered their toaster oven the
most important tool in the kitchen. I
have never owned a toaster oven, so I
would have never included this as an
under-the-counter appliance. It
worked for them; they would have
Somehow, those small swatches
don't quite translate into a room full.·
of color. Most colors will appear dark-
er than the color on the swatch.
for the beauty it creates within you. PHOTO COURTESY Of TRAO I.AASEN INTERJORS •. ,
1bis room balances its elemenm using wood. fabric, metal. natural
ANTIQUE ROW & GARDEN CAFE
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B~asl, brtdt, Tu & Espresso Bllr -C.ft Houn: Mon-Sat W
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Shopping tnd Dining adVJJnture"
GLENN DECK
GOLF ACADEMY
AT PELICAN HILL
Golf
Instruction
ona
HigherUvel
lfftb )M¥lfrJ lffnning ~ Slaff
949-759-5102
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U"tl & R11tt look•
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fibers and living plants.
>YOGA > 50DY CONDmONING
>STRETCH
LEARN TECHNIQUES TO HELP YOU RELEASE STRESS
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lwtORNING AND EVENING CLASSES AND SATURDAY WORKSHOPS
204 WASHINGTON STREEi
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(949) 723-3367
•eRtNG THIS IN FOR ONE F.REE CLASS -1 _..,--SJ\JDENT---S-ONC_':l_I
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·STRAWBERRIES .
Fresh Picked Dail~ ·
We are not fancy but we are FRESH
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' -
-,.. -. ,·
Daily Pilot Saturday, Morch .4, 2000 A9
· Pomona Elementary Sch ool branches out on Arbor Dqy
77,000 TREES AND
GROWING
Members of the Newport
Balboa Rotary Club, joined
by members of the South
Coast Metro Rotary Club,
will continue a 32-year-old
community tradition as they
disbjbute 2,200 Aleppo pine
saplings to third-graders of
public' and private schools
in Costa Mesa and Newport
Beach on Monday in cele-
bration of Arbor Day, an
American tradition since -
1884.
The Aleppo pine, native
to the Mediterranean, is a
drought-resistant and fast-
growing tree, which will top
out at 60 feet.
According to club presi-
dent Jim Slrldn, more than
91,300 trees have.been dis·
tributed to third-graders
over. the past 32 years.
Club members will spend
today at Hines Nursery titi-
vating -that is, cutting tbe
excess roots that creep out
or the plastic containers the
trees come in.
Monday, club members
will go to 29 schools and
visit third-grade classtooms,
leaving a tree for each stu-·
dent and disc\lssing how to
plant and nurture it, said .
Rotarian Allan Tingey, who
Jim de Boom'
COMMUNITY & CLUiS
chairs the Arbbr Day pro-
gram.
•Just about all the trees
will be planted at the stu-
dents' homes, in the ground
· or in containers,• said
Tingey.
· A special 15-gallon ljquid
amber tree, donated by
Armstrong Nursery, will be
planted by the Rotary Club
at Pomona Elementary
School, 2051 Pomona, Costa
Mesa at 8:30 a.m. Monday.
Newport-Mesa Unified
School District Supt. Robert
Barbot will be in atten-
dance.
MONITORING AND
MENTORING
The Newport Beach Sun-
rise Rotary Club hosted
Carol Castaldo, principal of
~ ........ Tak
THE
939 Paularino Ave., Costa Mesa
(South of Brls1ol)
Open 7 days IH 111m .15pm Set -S1.111o.n-epm
www.leakhome.com 14 546-0670
rtllE NEW
.'
UNIVERSITY
ATHLETIC
CLUB -one of
Monte Vista/Back Bay High
School, several staff mem-
bers and students at its
weekly (Jleeting this past
· Tuesday, where the club
continued its support of the
tutoring program.
Joining Castaldo :.vere
instructors Carol Curtis and
Sandy Kipfltubl, students
Frank Titus and Samantha
Tierno, ooth wh0-will
attend the R~tary Youth
Leadership conference '
(RYLA), and volunteer
tutors Bob Solmor and Joe
Edberg of Oasis Senior
Center.
"lf you nee d something
done, ask a Rotarian,• said
Castaldo, who added •Syd
THE MAYOR IS COMING
Newport Beach Mayor
John Noyes will·address the
Newport ~alboa Rotary
Club at 6 p.m. Wednesday
at the Bahia Corinthian
Yacht Club.
That's the day topowing
our primary election and it
will be interesting to hear
his take on Measure F vot-'
ing results and the Novem-
ber Gree~gbt initiative.
If you a.re interested in
attending the dinner, reser-
vations are required and
$17 per person can be paid
at the goor.
For more information,
call (949) 660-8665 ,
Lucas bas· been running CLUB NEWS
· rapid through the coun.ty for The Costa Mesa Kiwanis
Monitoring and Mentor-Club honored its Athletes of
ing." . the Month: Candace
The highlight of the Nicholson and Julie Kroen-
meeting was a proposed Ing, Costa Mesa girls soc-
computer-based reading cer; Jose Perez, Costa Mesa
program for which half of boys soccer; Htlarta Arren-
the $7 ,500 needed has been ga, Estancia girls soccer;
raised. · And Zuyln Barrera, Estancia
The Rotary Club is help· basketball.
ing to complete the funding ...
To become a volunteer SERVICE CLUB
tutor or to help with the MEETINGS THIS WE~K
funding of the program, Want to get more
contact Syd Lucas, Newport involved in yow community,
Beach Sunrise Rotary Club. make new friends, network,
at (949) 718-0168. or to give something back
bringing
a whole
new look to
our state-of-
Orange Councy:s premier the-art. facilities. With only
private athletic fraternities -a handful of memberships ...... available, be sure to call for proudly announces new
owne~hi~ and management! a complimentary tour and
We're l:Suilding on UAC's guest pass.
winning history as the Otherwise, you might
exclusive gentlemen's athletic have to join the crowd at . , ..
one of those other places. club in Newport Beach,
RACQUETBAU • SQuASH • J-IANDBAU • BASKiTBAU • )l. OLYMPIC SWIMMING Poot•
lllSTMJIANT • louNG£ • BWJ.WJS • DAm· • l.A111T IN WllGHT TlADaNG AND
CAlDIO frrNm EQlJIPWDlT • ~MY PnNls1 Coo'NsluHG • MAllAGI •
5'o1r11 ll.IHAlan'ATION THllAP'Y • hPff WOHOOT CLO'naNG Pl<MDll> l>AD.Y •
CoN1D1Nc1 IOOMS • CotauMINT~ SHol 5HDm • CouolAn lA'lll AVAi.AU
UNIVERSITY
ATHLETIC CLUB
1701 QUAIL STRUT
NtWPOPJ IUCH
(fM9) 7S>7903
to your community? Try a
service club! · ,
You are invited to attend
a club meeting this coming
week. .
Many clubs will buy your
first guest meal for you.
MONDAY: 6:30 p.m. -
The Newport Harbor-Costa
Mesa Lions Club will meet
at the Co'Sta Mesa Country
Club to heAr Tom Bay of the'·
"Make A Wish Founda-
tion.•
TUESDAY: 7:30 a.m. -
The Newport Beach Sunrise
Rotary Club meets at the
Balboa Bay Club.
6:30 p.m. -The Costa
Mesa-Newport Harbor
Lions Club will rcteet at the
Costa Mesa Gou and Coon,
try Club.
WEDNESDAY: 7:15 a.m.
-The South Coast Metro
Rotary Club will meet at the
Center Club. •
Newport Harbor Kiwanis
Club meets at the Universi-
ty Athletic Club.
Noon -The Exchange
Club of Orange Coast meets
at the Bahia Corinthian
Yacht Club.
6 p.m. -The Rotary
Club of Newport Harbor
meets at the Bah1a Corinthi-
an Yacht to hear Newport
Beach Mayor John Noyes
speak.
THUJlSDA.Y: The Costa
Mesa Orange Coast Break-
fast Lions Club meets at
·Mimi's Cafe for a program
on the Philmont nainlng
Center.
Noon -Kiwanis Club of
Newport Beach:Corona del
Mar meets at the Bahia
Corinthian. ·
The Costa Mesa Kiwanis ·
Club meets at the Holiday
Inn for a program on the ~
Salvation Army.
The Exchange Ciub of
1'!ewport Harbor meets at
the Riverboat Restaurant to
hear Ron Wildermuth dis-
cuss "Ground Water
Replacement.•
The Newport-Irvine
Rotary Club meets at the
lrvme Marriott to hear Dr.
Marlene Hyuss speak on
medical donor programs.
• COMMUNITY & auas IS pub-
lished every Saturday in the Daily
Pilot. Send your serv1ee club's
meeting Information by fax to
(949) 660-8667, e-mail to
jdeboomOaol.com or by mail to
2082 S.E. 'eristol St., Suite 201,
Newport Beach 92660-1740.
Relocated ... Sti ll In
Fashion island
\ I
•
•
..
AIO Saturday, Morch 4, 2000
• Send AROUND TOWN items to
the Daily Pilot, 330 W. Bay St., Cos-
ta Mesa 92627; fax to (949) 646-
4110 or call .(949) 764-4330. A
complete listing may be found at
dallypilot.com.
TODAY
Roger's Gardens will present
a seminar on rose care with
Stu Span. Roger's rosarlan, at
8:30 a.m. The seminar will
cover choosing roses for
appropriate areas, eliminat-
ing diseases and destructive
insects. and keeping rQses
hedllhy through the seasons.
The nursPry is at 2301 San
Joaquin 1 ltlls Road, Coro'na
del Mdr. For more informa-
lion, tdll (949) 721-2100, Ext.
569.
The Latest Thing Metaphysi-
cal Bookstore w11J hold a
~rrund, body and soul" fair
lrom 10 d m to 6 p.m. The
event wtll fedture free face-
pamtmg for klds, food and
supplement sens1tavily test-
ing, Chc;ikrd, aura and goal
baJancmg, dnd much more.
The store 1s di 270 East t 7th
St., Costa f\1C'sd . For more
10fom1allon, call (949) 645-
621 t .
E.J. Graff, author of "What ls
Marriage For?" will speak at
Od mes & Noble Metro Pointe
at 2 p.m. Graff will discuss
cbaqging notions of ma.rrtage
through bistory and give her
views on Proposition 22, the
Knight Initiative. The book-
store is at 901-B South Coast
Drive, Suite 150, Costa Mesa.
For more information, call
(714) 444-0226.
The Council on American-
Islamic Relations will present
an Arab and Muslim Ameri-
can Forum from 6 to 8 p .m.
The forum will feature Jim
Zogby, president of the Arab
American Institute, and other
speakers 'who will discuss
issues such as discriminatory
profiling and the use of eco-
nomic sanctions. The event is
free and refreshments will be
served at the Westin South
Coast Plaza Hotel, 686 Anton
Blvd., Costa Mesa. For more
information, call (714) 776-
1847.
'" T ,,.\ IY{OUND OWN
Night• at 6:30 p.m. at The
Clubhouse, a new restaurant
in South Coast Plaza, Costa
Mesa. The fund-raising
event, which benefits clill-
dren's programs, will feature
casino-style gambling, a
silent auction and a band.
Tickets are $50. For more
information, call (949) 263-
3785.
affordable ultrasound testing
for stroke, vascular disease
and osteoporosis, by appoint-
ment starting at 9 a.m. at
Newport-Mesa Christian
C~ter. 2599 Newport Blvd.,
Costa Mesa. For more infor-
mation, call (800) 795-1743.
SUNDAY
Cfr.e Counseling ~nter of ewpqrt Beach will .!i<:>ld a ff~~ lecture on r ADD
· :"\1)~e'rv1ew" at 7&.ln, The ~ h~ ~~nt will give cipants Lifeline . Chlr~practtc WUV-'.~~nerfll inform tion about
h?st a health f~ and COJlUJlJt• /~.:mptoms, d(S°gnosis and
ruty appreciatio~ day fro~,Ap> treatment ·o~ttention Deficit
a.m. to 1 P..m. with osteoppi<J-Disorder. e center is at
sis screerung, blood-pressure 1200 Quail~ uite 105, ~ew
checks, mass~ge~ and much port Beach'. For more infor-
more. The office is at 3010-B mation, 'call (949) 476-0991.
. . -
I
..
Mother's Market wW present
a free seminar, •Why We Get
Sick, and What We Can Do to
Stay Well,• from 6:30 to 7:30
p.m. iri Its patio caf e. The
market is at 225 East 17th St.,
Costa Mesa. For more infor-
mation, call (800) -595-
MOMS. (595-6067)
The Jewish F&cteration
YQW\g=· ess & Pr. ofession-
als grouP, wj.ll hold an after-
work · er for singles and
marri~' couples ages ~5 to 45 at 6:3 p,m . a t Classic Q, 4250
Mar gale Way, Newport
'Be~ . The cost is $10 in
a<j\rance or $15 at t.He door.
jlbr tnore information, call
'(714) 755-5555. Ext. 225.
Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa.
For more informatiQn, call
(714) 662-2142.
A Great Dectslons discussion The Center for Leaming and
of •The Euro's Challenge to Behavioral Solutions will pre-
the Dollar" will be led by·Stan sent a four-week course, Unlvers~ty Synagogue wt~ Evans from 7:30 to 9 p.m. at starting Tuesday with Dr. pr~sent Art and Chocolate, St. Mark Presbyterian Shlrin Ansari, on "Tools and
· a hne art and crafl show and Church, 2100 Mar Vista, Strategie$ for parents of chil-~~~~~~ ~~ ~arhol~Yt~ sale, troi;n 10 a .m. t~ 4 p.m. at Newport-Beach. The series of ~e~~ C1~sses~~~~~~ the JeW1Sh Federation Cam-discussions is based on arti-"Grad Night 2000 Parent Par-pus, 250 E. Baker ~t.. Costa des ln the Foreign Policy 6:30 to 8 p.m. through March
ty• from 6 to 9 p.m. at Glab-~esa. The ev~nt will feature Assn. study materials, which 28. The-fee is $15 per session.
man's Furniture & Interior Jewelry, ceramics, glass, fiber, are available at the church for The center is at 1501 Superior
Design, 3089 Brist61 St., Costa sculpture, painting and more. $l2 F inf . Ave., Suite 202, Newport
Mesa. Tickets are $25. (949) For more information, call · or more ormation, Beach. For more information, 515-~_ooo. (949) 631-32~8.. call (949) 760-l691. ... call (949) 548-0885, Ext. 6.
The Junior i.eague o f MONDAY TUESDAY
Orange County 'will hold its The Newport Hills Garden
sixth annual "Monte · Carlo Pre vention )>lus will offer Club will celebrate Arbor
Day at the Environmental
ROMANTIC LOVE SUPPLIES
Nature Center, 1601 16th St.,
Newport Beach. Bring a
brown bag lunch for a picnic
under the trees. For more
information, call (949) 830-
The National Association of
Women Business Owners-QC
will hold its March meeting
from 6 to 9 p.m. at the Wynd-
ham Garden Hotel, 3350
Avenue of the Arts'; Costa
Mesa. Debbie Gilster will
spe~ on taming the ·#paper
tiger" through good organiza-
tion. The event, which • Cute or Sexy Lingerie • Bachelor(ette) Supplies
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O~r New. FREE Catalog is In!!
Lotions & Lace
7130.
www.-1s 1nassoc10 es.com
,
Doily Pilot
includes dinner, ii $34 for for
nonmembers, SJ• for first-
time guests. For more 'infor-
mation, call (714) 832-57•1.
WIDllUDAY .,
Mother'• Marke presents a
frt!e semina~r·' traditional
Chinese medi e from 6:30
to 8 p.m. f-#r · t Mark Kay-
lor will s~a,~ The market is
at 225 ~. ~· /t7th St., Costar' Mesa. Por · ore infonnatio ,
call (8QP)11S 5-MOMS. 1
> ,, (
Sbenn1tja'\U brary & Qardens
will, pt.fisent a proqr';iln titled ~.Ptission for P~reil.nials,' at
" 9:30 a.m. with Mary Lou
Heard, owner of Herd's Nurs-
ery. The event is free and
open to the public. Sherm.an
Library is at 2647 East Coast
Highway, .Corona del Mar.
For more information, all
(949) 673-2261.
The Newport-Mesa C rib--
bage Club meets at 6:45 p.m.
at the Oasis Senior Center,
5th and Marguerite, Corona
del Mar. For more informa-
tion, call (949J 646-5293.
THURSDAY
The Newport Beach Public
Ll!:>rary wi,1! host •A Vutual
Journey to Japan• at 7 p.m. in
its Friends Meeting Room: A
representative of the Japan
navel Bureau will present
the program. The library is at
1000 Avocado Ave., Newport
Beach. For more information,
call (949) 717-3801.
SEE TOWN PAGE A 11
Nam e Brand
Factory Seconds
Different
Sizes & Styles
Call for mo're infonl*ion and
manufactwn1 name
WE QUIT!
11'--JI'-OFF
T e Orange County Business Journ
and dining critic Fifi Chao
name Chef Jean-Pierre Eigen.heer of
~~..&e~~ ~&( as
'·'Chef of ~e Year 2000" ..
Fine Jining llt ill Bat ..•
Only at The Balboa Bay Club, N~rt Beach
Membership Definitely H u lu Rewuda ...
For mtmbmhip infomuztion, call tht &lbOll &iy Club
949 6'5-5000 at 538
I y
FINAL LIQUIDATION DAYS
Saturday, Sunday, Monday
1.01 Pri8CW C. Dhn rd •
Sil, PColor
1.00 Manpaile c. ~
VSl,GC.W
.ss ._.c.~
Sil, G e.a.
.lS Aaud~
S37ll
"" . VS1. Hc..ler ~~~--~..;......-...J.~~~--.....J
.40 Round Diamond Platinum
Ba.d Set Pmdeat
-60o/o
OFF
Daily Pilot
TOWN
CONTINUED FROM A 1 O
Tbe Thursday Morning
Women's Club will hold a St.
Patrick's Day-themed show
and lunch at noon at the Bal-
boa Bay Club, 1221 West
' Coast Highw~y. Newport
Beach.'fheeventwillfeature
stag~ and screen actor Bar-
bara Leigh ahd costs $22. For reservati.91)~. call (714) 546-.
2.244\V,~ v
QNGOING
A•women's therapy support
group meets to discuss rela-
• tionship issues at 6:30 p.m. on
Tuesdays. a t 1151 Dove St ..
No. 105, Newport Beach. For
more information, call Bar-
bara at (949) 261-8003.
..
The Newport Beach New-
comers Club meets at 10 a.m.
the third Wednesday of each
month at different homes.
The group of about 100
women go on the road, play
golf. tennis, bridge anq more.
The group also holds-several
eveni.og parties. For more
information, call (949) 854-
4501.
Sl Mark Health Ministries
presents Love Without Honor
support groups for women
coping with dqmestlc vio-
lence at 10 a.m. and 7 p.m.
Mondays ~ougb December.
The groups will meet for two
hours at St. Mark Presbyter-
ian Church, 2100 Mar Vista
Ave., Newport. Beach. For
more information, caJI (949)
721-8079, •
The Jewish Family Service of
· Orange County sponsors a The Friends. of the Newport discussion group focusing on
Beach Public Library U~ed issues, concerns and respon-
Book Store needs to replemsh sibilities of adult children car-
its book stock. Patrons are ing for their elderly parents at
urged to bring in unwanted 7:30 p.m. Tuesdays af 250 E.
. AROUND TOWN
BEST BET .
. The Divas of Balboa Theater will hold "Swing Fling, a Celebration of Spring,"
opening with a cocktail reception and silent auction at 6 p.m. today at the Ba l-
boa Pavilion. Tickets are $75 for the e vent, which will feature dinner at 7, a Jive
auction and dancing to the band Swingtown, shown he re. For more information,
call (949) 673-0895.
Sotvrdoy, Morch 4, 2000 Al1
which meets from 7:30 to 9
p.m. Thursdays at the Light-
house Coastal <:ommunity
Ct\urch, 301 Magnolia St.,
Costa Mesa. For more infor-
mation, call (949) 548-7274.
Jewish Family Service of
Orange County sponsors an
ongoing healing s upport
group for people expenenc·
mg chronic illness. The pur-
pose is to provide parocipants
with <;imotionaJ and spiritual,
support to manage Ulness and
its consequences. The group
meets at 7 p.m. Thursdays at
Jewish Family SeJ'Yice, 250 E.
Baker St., Costa Mesa. Atten-
dance is free, but regislrdbon
1S required. To regis•er or for
more information, call (714}
445-4950.
Scrabble Club No. 350 meets
from 6 to 10 p.m. Thursdays
al Borders Books, Music and
Care on 19tb Street and New-
port Boulevard,. Costa Mesa.
The cost is $3. New players
a re welcome. For more mfor-
mauon, call (949) 7 59-4871. . books. With the exception of Baker St., Costa Mesa. The
Jaw b_ooks or magazines, all purpose of the group is to
donations -hardcover and help children and other con-
paperba~k -are welcome cemed relatives to identify
and are tax-deductible. problems and lSSUeS a nd
Books _may be left al any of develop appropriate solu-, the three branch libraries -lions. The cost is $30. For ...__ ____________________________ _._ _ ____,
The Coin and Stamp Club
meets from 1 to 3 p.m Mon-
days at the Oasis Se ruor Cen·
ter New members who are
interested in trading, buying
and selling stamps and coms
are bemg sought to JOtn these
tnfonnal meetings. There dte
no lees required For more
mformatlon. call (949) 644·
3244.
Balboa, Mariners or Corona more information, call (714}
del M&r. They can also' be left 445·4~50. · -
in the special book closet next
to the store at 1000 Avocado
Ave. For more information,
call (949) 759-9667.
The Costa Mesa Chamber of
Commerce holds networking
luncheon meetings from 11 :45
~ -
dandelion h~old goods
432 E. 17th St., Cosca Mesa, Tues.-Fri. 10 .im -6 pm
rwo doors Ea.st of Ruby's ac. 10 am-4 pm
949-548-7286
a.m. to 1 p.m. at the Costd
Mesa Country Club, 170 l
Golf Course Drive, Costa
Mesa. Visitors are welcome.
Cost is $12. For more mforma-
uori, call (714)885-9090.
The Lido Isle Toastmasters
Club meets at 6:30 p.m. Mon-
ciays dt the Oakwood Apart-
ments, 1700 16th St., in the
clubhouse on-the main level,
in Newport Beach. For more
ROSEY'S AUTOBODY
.,.Jllll._ml!! ... L~._ You Have the Right
to Choose Your
Repair Facility
Insist on the Best
Lifetime Warranty
Full Service Collision Center
· Insurance Approved Shop ~-...,.
(949) 642-4522 .
121 Industrial Way • Costa Mesa
NEWPORT • MESA RESIDENTS
IF YOU WANT EL TORO AIRPORT. ..
VOTE -NO ON MEASURE F·
Measure F was drafted by South County citie trying to kill El Toro Airport.
Irvine Mayor Christina Shea revealed South County's agenda when he aid,
" ... What we ought to be doing is expa11d Joh Ii Wayne
· Airport because it would have the least impact on the f ewes/
residents aJ the lowest cost." (LA Times, April 26, 1998)
Read the fine print of Measure F. ll says that a court can require a imple
majority vote to expand John Wayne.
Do you think South County will hcfp Newport Beach and Costa Mesa
residents when the pressure to expand JWA grows?
MEASURE FIS DANGEROUS,
· EXPENSIVE & FLAWED
Read the fine print. Measure F does not apply to jails bu ilt in cities. lt forces
jails to be built in cities near our schools and churches -without a vote of
the people. That's why the Sheriff, District Attorney, Deputy Sheriffs' As n ..
crime victims and police chiefs oppose Measure F.
information, caJl (949) 515-
9470.
The J ohn Henry Fo undation
sponsors the Comfort Zone, a
mental illness support group,
• Airport Working Groiip or Orange County. Inc.
• Newport Beach City Council
• Com Mesa City Council
•Newport-Mesa Unified School Districl
• Newport Harbor Area Cblin.ber of c~
• Costa Mesa Chamber of Colimelte
• Rep. Dana RolnbaCher
• Orange County ~Mite C...
• Om.llC County District /tlJalay Tolly. 'Ddt ..
• 14 Onnge County ~Biid GlirJs
• Associllioft of Orange r., ~ •• ,,.
• Mike~ Audlor,,3 sert.-V.'110. Law
•.QimaCc-.J-.-IMilllliiDC ..
' ' , ' . . • • ..
Al2 Saturday, Morch 4, 2000
Cox logs on to stump for Georg~ W. Bush · ~~~~~ROM A,
• Supporters of the Texas governor are making Ste. 220, in Newport Beach.
campaign stops at computer-related businesses. ~ ~· ~~ ~
.. guest.
O.wle Ag&w FUeNet specializes in Web Instead ot political postur·
• DAILY Pl.or management and ~nic ing, PUeNET employee& most·
business applications that help ly wanted to know where Bush
corporations, as well as gov-stood on topics such as the
emment otgan.izations. World Trade Organiza.iion,
In an effort to g<Un high-
tech SUJ?port for Texas Gov.
George W. Bush, Rep. Chris·
Cox (R-Newport Beach) on
Friday visited the offices of an
.Internet eompany to discuss
· technology's future In politics.
Forty employees at PileNET
Corp. listened intently as Cox
praised Bush's stand on techni-
cal education and Internet
policies. Cox said the presi·
dential hopeful is more savvy
about the World Wide Web
than his opponents.
Cox was accompanied by
Rep. James Rogan (R-Pasade-
na) and Gary Mend<YZa, state
campaign co-chairman for
Bush.
MEASURE
CONTINUED FROM A 1
pledged about $590,000 to the
group through loans or out-of.
pocket expenditures over the
last year.
A political· action commit·
tee within the Airport Work-
ing Group, a Newport Beach-
base<J. nonprofit opposed to
Measure F, hasn't shared in
the same weaJth as Citizens
for Jobs and the Economy bas,
however. The group has only
1be · co~ys chalrma.n: inteDectual perty (protect Ted Smith. was enthusiastic pro •
about<their visit, inentiooing to :~~~o~ts~~=ti=
the group that lt was the first level) and government policies
time PileNet has ever hosted involving electronic trade. '
politicians. · •The governor wants to talk
· Their visit was one of a few about as much as he can from
last-minute campaign stops at common ground," said Men-
lnfemet-related busin~ to doza, who assured the group
promote Bush. that--ftush's interest in high
Cox. along with Rep. Ed technology would be
Royce (R-Fullerton), will host a addressed.
Bush appreciation rally at 11 However, a few employees
a .m. Saturday, with a voter seemed skeptical about Bush's
education drive from 1 to 6 Internet IQ. One woman said
p.m. The events will take place· she didn't think Bush had a
· at the Bush Orange County position · on these issues
Headquarters, 3400 Irvine, because she has not heaxd him
received about $19,000 since
the beginning of the year.
Voters will decide Tuesday
whether Measure F should
move fotward. If passed, the ·
initiative would require two-
thirds voter approval before
i'lllY airport, hazardous waste
landfill or jail could be built
near residential areas.
Both anti-F .organizations
support an airport at the
dosed U.S. Marine Corps base
at El Toro. .
Initiative critics say without
a commercial aiJport at El
Toro, Orange County's only
other airport -John Wayne
Airport -will inevitably be
expanded.
Most of \}le money in the
campaign bas been used for
commercial advertising or
glossy mailers that have been
sent to Orange County house-
holds.
There are three groups that
support Measure F and
oppose an airport at El 'toro
that have also been busy solic-
iting residents for funds.
Citizens for ·Safe and
Healthy Communities, run by
a Laguna Hills attorney. has
......... _.199
.......... $99
..._Dr..-.-$211
Mlnw---·-·99
'-k---.. -·--$2A9 ...,.. _______ ._$149
•
Solid Birch Twin
lunk Bed1
address them in previous
debates. Another aqreed, say-the completed resort. Oblig's
ing ''high technology has images -in which he's become a •siJent ........ t.;• in the "'t--scanned two-dimensional aunpaign. · "'-ff th ~·--1 .. -., •ii\JSh·s focus shouldn't just wcawings o e uuuqo PM¥"'
be on Internet access in public and placed them into three:
schools,., said anofller employ-dimensional photograp~ -
ee. "He should educate chil· show tl)at the proposed resort
dren in technical ~. • is actually taller than the
aut the trio ot Bush support·• Dunes' images show. .
ers said he bas already made •Tue original settlement
great strides for the Internet in agreement w~ for. 35 feet
bis home state -and would with capped noise and traf·
continue the work throughout fit," Obllg, pointed out. •Now
the nation. they're going for twice the
Rogan said Bush would be height, occupancy and 20
a big player in the partnership decibels higher in noise.
between technology and poll-There are rnore residents, traf·
tics. fie -it's incomp~ensible
"I want to tell you bow they would make it bigger
excited I am about Bush," he since conditions are much
said. "For me to drive down
here and go right ha.Ck on a
Friday in rush-hour traffic
means I'm on fire for this
guy."
collected the most: $654,900.
At the last filing date, Peb. 19,
the group bad about $590,000
left to spend. ·
The Safe and Healthy
Communities Fund, operated
by an Irvine resident, reported
$232,000 in contributions but
only had $48,000 remaining to
'spend.·
The last group -Conunit-
tee of 2000, Keeping Commu-
niti~ Safe and Healthy -has
raised $6,400, most of·which
was left in its coffers as of the
last filing date. _.. •
worse."
However. planning com-
missioners say Obli~s pictures
are completely inaccurate.
"He's just ta.ken pictures
and is approximating with bis
eye and cutting and pasting,"
Selich said. ·1 don't doubt b.iS
sincerity and what he's trying
to do, but unfortunately, he's
talcing an amateur approach.
It would be more credible if be
got someone to go and do
computer modeling.•
In order to help. clarify just
how tall and big the resort will
be. on Friday proponents
began putting up 23 balloons
at strategic points on the
Dunes site. r
But even here, hotel propo-
nents ran into problems
Ra~ J. Pierce, CPA
C*tiAed Pubic .c;count•nt
tu plannlna. pre.,....don " advice
free Initial consulwioo and pr1cc quoce
free clecll'Onic fil in&
no hidden ctwses
evenina a: weekend lf>POinuncn;u
II your home Of olricc
ttnlor dJKOUOlS
honest. hudwc:rting and affordable
949-653-1040
AS SEEN ON T.V.'S
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BESt BUYS
500/o-90~-off
Dep•rtmn.t Stm Prices
Men's and 'M>mens Designer
Clothing, Shoes & Accessories
We carry: Calvin Kline, Donna Karan,
Ferragamo, Gucci, Prada, Versace,
Moschlno, Bally and More!
New Spring Atrlval Sale!
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$1999• Retall $99-
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~Mela D~igner Outlet
5941 & Bristol• 714/825-0202
~ti .... and Sunllowtt, bdund ~wa &nk)
• Sun., Nooo • 6
•
Daily Pilot
because the winds would not
· · CQPperate.
Commwlity, activist Susan
CaUJtin came out in the cold
morning hours to look at the
effort and immediak\ly P¥ot~
ed out that they w~
able. Blowing in the wind, the
4-foot-diameter balloons
appeared lower than they
should, she said.
"It's not an accurate assess·
ment," Caustin said. "If there
was no wind whatsoever, it
would be accurate, but there's
usually wind: This is a ~roj~ .
that ls siroply too big f<?r its
britches."
Project Manager nm Quinn
was also a little disappointed
·by the winds, but pointed out
the balloons, whitlf cost $1,500
a day, were merely to give peo-
ple some understanding of the
resort's size.
·we're just trying to give
the Planning Commission
some perspective,• he said.
Still, Ohlig remains suspi-
cious. From bis home across
the bay at Dover Shores, he
said he could see the balloons
rising above the surrounding
area. ~
Planning commissioners
will look at the balloons this
weekend to determine
whether they give an accurate
picture of the project's size,
and give their assessment at
the next meeting.
For more infonnation on
the balloons , call (949) 729-
DUNE (3863) or visit the Web
-site at:
www.newportdunes.com or
NDRHOTEL@aol.com.
I)()\ I I \: : I I \ ' \I 11
' I ' ' '
Rabbitt Insurance Agency
AlTfO • HOMEOWNl!JtS • HfAllli
40 M-ars In Business
~~~ ........... ..._ ... -~ ./ S" #~
. 949-631-77 40
441 Old Newpon Bhd. • Nrwpon Bach
(Na.r Hotg J;lotpiial)
CONTINUED FROM A 1
Shortly before his sched-
uled 9:40 a.m. t~ time, he
headed under tbe ropes and
back up the first fairway.
And from the crowd came
the calls -"Go get 'em
Amie.·
"We love you, Arnie.• _
' "Hey Amie, it's great to
have you in Newport
Beach." ·
Former Newport Beach
Mayor Tom Edwards had the
honor of announcing the
players to the first tee.
The crowd swelled.
"Ladies and gentlemen,
playing out of Bay Hill. Aori-
da, Arnold Palmer.•
The crowd cheered loudly.
Palmer didn't disappoint:
His drive split the first fall:·
way. A wedge and a couple
putts later, and he was .on his
way.
You knew. however, that
this round of golf was differ-
ent. .
And it had nothing ~o do
with his playing partn~rs.
Lanny W.adkins and LarrY
Nelson.
No, this was about Arnold
Palmer.
On the second bole,
cheers came from several .
lloors up the Marriott Hotel
tower as Palmer passed.
"There he is, Moml" a
....
youngster yelled tq his moth-
er.
On No. 3, you could see
people looking over the
fences or through an open-
.ing in the ivy. Business peo-
ple -blue-and white-collar,
young and old.
On No. 5, parents lifted
young children to their
shoulders and whispered
"There he is.•
On the seventh hole. as
Amie blasted from a green-
side trap, one lady yelled "In
the cup• almost simultane-
ously to his club hitting the
sand. The ball nestled up to
some 15 lnChes from the
hole.
On hil; way from the sev-
enth green to the eighth tee,
the crowd engulfed Palmer.
•Played )o'lith you at the
Vmtage, • on~ man yelled.
"I remember," Pal.mer
answered and smi1ed.
"Do you remember me?"
a women asked. "I bqught a
new car at your dealership
back East and drove it all the
way home here to the We5t
Coast."
"Surme, • Palmer
responded and winke<:l.
Everybody knew him or
wanted to.
As he approached the
ninth hole, the crowd .
cheered.
On No. 10, Palmer tapped
in for double-bogey and the
crowd still chee.red. ._
On No. 17, three garden-
out of a
trap on
the 16th
hole
during
the
openmg
towfd
of the
Toshiba
Senior
Classic.
MARC
MARTIN /
DAILY PILOT
ers took a break from their
daily chores and came to the
fence for.a glimpse.
One lady held up a sign
that said "We love you
Amie."
Palmer played 17 li.ke.
many of us before. His tee
shot found the water short of
the green. His next shot
went left of the green.
This was a day that wasn't
about great goU. Sure,
Palmer stj].l hits the golf ball
better than ·most. And his
playing partner Larry Nelson
fired an impressive 67.
Palmer himsell even
knocked in a four-footer on
18 for birdie:
No, today was about see-
ing a legend.
During a Thursday outing.
I played with Senior Tour
professional Bob Charles. He
told me about the three times
he had played with Ben
Hogan. He told me about his
greatness.
· Hogan is gone now, but it
made me th.ink about Arnold
Palmer.
Hopefully, .Amie will be
back for years to come.
But why wait. The man •
whQ made golf what it is
today is in Newport Beach
· for two more days. Get the
kids, get the walking shoes
and give yo~~U a treat.
• ToM JOHNSON is publisher of
the Daily Pilot..
Vou HAYI NOIAILY HIAltD WHAT 1 Ontllt "OPLI HAYI lllN IAYING
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Unique sandwiches, toups. prq>arcd meals,
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BEHIND THE
SCENES
H.e's got
the ticket
• WHO: Dean Gale
•AGE: 46
• JOB TITLE: Credential
verification chairma n
•HE IS: In charge of the
volunteers who checlc specta-
tors' tickets at the entrance
to all the hospitality tents at
the Toshiba Senior Classic.
• DAILY DUTIES: Coordi-
nates credential verification
staff.
''It's a tough job because
people show up and they
don't have their stickers," he
said, adding that sometimes
it's a tricky balancing act in
denying access to important
SCORE
CONTINUED FROM A 1
ity.
"Whet! 1f ~OU gel it
wTOog/H c1sked one staffer.
l ldrdly a vote of confi-
dence.
Two \Oluntcers wecmng
bright rod swedter.. acludUy
handled the olf1c1al scoring.
I went d.long for the nde.
We were Q'l\'en. sheets
with d bunch of 'iymbol'> dnd
numbei:.s, dO utterly confus-
ing bst 11 you hdve never
scored There were seven
categoucs·for edch hole and
. each golfe1., I hdd dn eusier
time doll'lg my taxPs
So began the process of
puttinCJ the nght fdce \Vllh
the tight score.
Rub Scratch Rub
It took a few holes to get
tl right. Thank God, the real
scoring wds left to the v~1:.
unteers.
Once the golfers finished
Saturday, Morch"· 2000 Al3
MARC MARTIN I DAILY' Pit.OT
Dean Gale works as part of the credential verlHcation
committee.
yet forgetful people without
offending them. "If the host
says it's OK, then we let
them in."
Once Gale has all his peo-
ple In place, he spends the
rest of his time trouble-
shooting , he said.
"Sometimes we get a call
that someone needs more ice
or this or that," Gale said.
a hole, the scorers ripped off
a corresponding sheet of
paper and handed it to
another volunteer. That per-
son operated a· computer
lbat kept tabs of the golfers'
scores, which would . be
, relayed to thE\ tote board
displaying the leaders and
pairings.
I got to keep my sheets.
The only real impact I
had was telling the stan-
dard-bearer -the person
who carries around the sign
with names and current
relation to par -what each
golfer had done that hole.
One of the guys in my
group was Hal Barham of
San Clemente. Both Barham
and his wife, Marcia, signed
up for Toshiba duty. Jbey
wanted to score because it
would be good exercise.
Besides. they could walk
side by side Y{itb their
favonte golfers.
"l didn't know any of the
guys I was with," said Mar-
cia. "I was sort of disap-
• DID YOU KNOW: Some-
times the crowds inside the
tents are more interested in
socializing than watching the
tournament. •
ult's like they're at a cock-
tail party." Gail said. "The
golfers on the green are try-
ing to golf and we've got to
get them to quiet down."
-Noaki Schwartz
pointed." .
No matter. Our tno was
sizzling through ihe fust
three holes, led by Aaron at
two-under par. Aaron
caught fire in the middle of
the round, taking the lead
on the 12th hole at four-~
under. But our threesome
took a turn for the worse
during the stretch run
Aaron, at even par, finished
with the group's !>est score.
The volunteers turned in
their final scorecards while
my sheets looked like the
scribblings of a 4-year-old.
The players signed a few
golf balls and gave them to
the scorers. 1 declined. Not
right to accept freebies on
the ]Ob.
Four hours later. my
knees were a little still, my
feel a bit tired. but at least I
came out with the same
score the officials had.
I'm just glad they didn't
give me a pen.
• I
A14 SOtvrdoy, Morch 4, 2000
The revived
Newport Beach Film
Festival w~ll feature
world-premiere
international films,
local works and a trio
of tributes
Alex Coolman
DAILY PtL6T
I t's back.
Like a sequel whose characters
seem smarter, tougher and better
looking than they were the first time
around, the Newport Beach Film Fes-
tival is shining its way back into the-
aters. ·
The eight-day event, which kicks off
with a gala recep-
tion March 30,
will feature full.
length, short and
animated films
from around the
world, a variety of
seminars and a
trio of\lleavy-Hit-
tlng ti1'l1 tributes.
Some of the
new films sched-
uled for screening
were. plucked
from the top ranks
of recent festivals
at Palm Springs,
Amsterdam, the
Sundance festival
in Utah, and else-
where. Others,
such as a trio of
Chinese films, are
world or U.S. pre-
mieres.
Still otPers are
works by local
filmmakers or
FYI
• WHA~ The Newport
Beach f ilm Festival
• WHERE: Feature films
at Edwards Island Cine-
ma, 999 Newport Cen·
ter Drive, Newport
Beach. Shorts at
Orange County Muse-
um of Art, 850 San
Clemente Drive, New-
port Beach. Opening-
night screening is at the
Big Edwards, 300 New·
port Center Drive, New-
port Seach. Seminars
will be held -at the
Newport Beach Public
Library, 1000 Avocado
Ave., Newport Beach
• F£511VAL START:
-sunset Boulevard"
tribute, 7:30 p.m.
March 30
• F£STIVAL FINISH:
Awards, HJ p.m. April 6
• TELEPHONE: (949)
253-~880
films that c~pture a slice of Southern Cali-
fornia life.
·we really tried to program to reflect
the diversity of Orange County,• said
Gregg Schwenk, the event's..,executive
SEE FILM PAGE A18
..
Next WE El
Driw by the Newport Beach home of
artist Eel twt and It's impossible to miss
his yard full of colorful, whimsical sculp-
tures. Next week. we ~with the artist
about his work ~Od his art-filled life.
. A cinematic
• I
" .
IT THE FESTIVAL
fllms to be featured in the
Newport Beach Film Festival
include, clockwise from left.
.. Amerlcanos: Latino life in
the United States," .. Love
Happens," ·six Days tn
Roswell" and •Long Night's
Journey h;lto Day."
-.
• l
J. I .
'
r Thank God,
he's .·a cou~try boy
Alex Coolman
DAILY PILOT
D ean Me,rtin wanted him in the
morning. Jan and Dean
needed hhn in the afternoon.
It was 1961 in Los Angel~.
and Glen Campbell was in demand.
The Arkansas-born crooner -who
went on to gamer international fain~
with such hits u •Rhinestone Cow-
boy• and •Gentle on My Mind• only a
few years later -spent much of the
early '60s as a studio musician. His dis·
tinctly de4r guitar tone made him
such a sought-after player that be
sometimes found himself juggling
frantically to accommodate all the big
.
Studio musician turned
'Rhinestone Cowboyl
turned gospel singer
Glen Campbell
performs with Pacific
Symphony Pops
names who wanted bis sound on their
records.
•1 was living in Hollywood, in a lit-
tle apartment on Franklin," Campbell
recalled. •vou oould do as many as
five sessions a day.•
Today, Campbell's schedule is less
hectic.
He appears tonight with the Padflc
Sympb<>ny Pops at the Orange County
Performing Arts Center, in the kind of
mellow gig a rocker gets to play oaly
after years and yean of boundag
around the arenas.
<::ampbell ii scheduled to kick beck
during the first half of tomiJM"l lbow,
while conductor Richard Kaufman
takes the orcbe1tra through t\11111
including •Hoedown from •1oc1eo••
and •Horse and Buggy.•
SEE CAMPIEU MGI A11
,.
·.
Daily Pilot Sotvrdoy, Marth 4, 2000 AIS
Netanyahu makes impassipned call Jo~ peace
'Nations will behave wisely once they
have exhausted au
other alternatives,• said Rab-
bi Mark Mlller, leader or .
Ne wport's Temple Bat Yahm.
Miller stood on the sanc-
tuary bema {pulpit) Sunday
evening addressing some
1,0(>0 locals who bad come to
bear the words of former
Israeli Prinie Minister
Blnyamln (often spelled and
prQnoUhced Benjamin) •
Netanyahu. Miller and the
congregation or Bat Yahm
invited Netanyabu to appear
in Newport Beach as part or
the temple's distinguished
scholar lecture series named
in honor of Norman Sch1ff.
The lecture series has
hosted Shimon Peres,
Yltzbak Rabin, Abba Eban,
Henry Klsalnger, Elie
Wiesel, Herman Wouk and
Leon Urts in past years.
•Tue choices for peace
(in.thei'V1idd.le East) often
seem like a choice between
bad and worse rather than
good and bad,• Miller said,
prior to introducing the for-
mer prune minister, known
for his right-of-center conser-
vative politics and hawkish
stance against the enemies
of Israel.
Delivering a similar hard-
line approach, Miller added,
"Momentum for peace
should not be a euphemism
for further concessions by
Israel."
Specifically, Miller was
referring to concessions of
land that diminish the pro-
tectability of Israel from
attack by hostile neighbors,
Syria in particular. It was a
•· ~
' . lt. , .. ~.~· .. ~ ·. ,,,
.;-.
.B.W. CrJ<
THE CROWD
theme further emphasized
by Netanyabu.
The arrival of Netanyahu
in Newi)ort Beach created
considerable excitement in
the community. Temple Bat
Yahrn was filled to capacity .
with both local Jews and
Gentiles interested in meet-
ing the controversial leader.
Receptions were orga-
nized in his honor, including
a $300 per-person dinner at
The Ritz Restaurant in New·
port Beach: generously
underwritten by Hans and
Charlene Prager, owners of
the establishment.
The funds collected were
used to cover the cost or
Netanyahu's visit, reported to
be $75,000. To meet the
expense, critical· fund-raising
was led by Ted Greenzang,
ch!lirman of Ule Netanyahu
event. His committee includ-
ed dedicated locals Rosella
Bernstein, Ada Gilbert,
Karen Green·, Chunky
. Greenzang, R~th Harrell,
Marton Jacobson, Leslea
Miller, Marton Robboy,
Be rnie and Joan Rome,
Winne Ross, Beth Slavin,
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Some of the patrons 'Sup-
porting the event and
attending the Ritz dinner
were the Steven Edwards,
the IUcbanl Gooclman1, the
King Buntelm, the ICettb
Burnetb, the WUl1am Klelns,
the Bryan Murpbys, the
Edward Mlllen, the Elliot
Mercen, the Malcolm Pauls,
the Ygal Sonemblnes, and
the James Wanaws. Follow-
ing the addre5s, a private
dessert reception was held to
afford locals the opportunity
to shake bands with
Netanyahu.
The world leader fulfilled
the meet-and-greet expecta-
tion with generous personal
charm. Netanyahu is not
known for his warmth and .
grace. He is known for his
strong nationalistic stance.
As the leader of the conserv-
ative Lllrud Party, Netanyahu
was elected to the Israeli
high office in 1996, defeating
Prime Minister Shimon
Peres. The election was
based on a carnpai9J! that
focused attention on the
peace agreements between
Israel and the Palestine Lib·
eration Organization (PLO).
PHOTO CQ11f1TESY Of ~ BM>LE
Former Israeli Prime Mlnlster Benjamin Netanyabu greets Rabbi Mark MiUer ln hls
study at Temple Bat Yahm. .,_
bema, the crowd stood,
appla\iding the world leader.
Ironically, Netanyahu had
been a major instrument in
the creation of the agree-
ments in the earlier part or
the decade. Palestinian self-
rule, occupi°ed land in the
Gaza Strip and West Bank
exchanged for peace, were
the tools of negotiation that
struck Israel dunng his elec-
tion campaign. As
Netanyahu, 50, walked up
the steps or Bat Yahm's
Surrounded by Israeli and
U.S. Secret Servic~ agents.,
the·Mrr and Harvard edu-
cated statesman shook the
hand or Rabbi Miller and·
welcomed the crowd that
included his bride, Sara.
Political sources have report·
ed that former Israeli prune
rruruster's personal life has
contributed to his political
tumult. Sara is Netanyahu's
third wife, and in a nation
with a strong conservative
[Orthodox) religious influ-
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not lookl!d upon with gener·
ous understanding.
Per..onal batkgroung
aslde, Netanyahu IS respected
as a world lectder, dlld as dJl
expert on terrorism. A combat
hero, he was wounded dl
Israel's Ben Gurion A.uport
attempbng to Cree hostdges
on a htJdCked Sobena Airltne.
His brother was lost m the
rdid on cntebbe
He hds served his country
in many cdpaobcs, from sol·
dter to dIIlbassddor to foreign
mirubter to prune rruruster. In
so domg, the mdII has influ-
enced the path of hts own
people as well dS others 111 •
the ?\-1.Jddle Edst, and surely
the rest of the world, mdud·
mg the Urulf'd Sldtes.
There wa'i a sense of histo·
ry in the Newport Beach
sdnctudry as 'leldnyabu
bcgdn to talk There was also
sLlence. a sense of awe, for
<,,Orne 1,000 guests sharing a
momt>nl with d man who has
influ<>nred world relations.
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...
Al6 Saturday, March "· ·2000 Doily Pilot Soofily
·coOK·
CQNTINUED .FROM A 15
•polJs are not the stuff of
Jeedenhip, • Netanyahu said.
1rue leadership is about val-
ues and the willingness to
stand for, and, U necessary,
fight for, values. It may be a
successful fight or a failed
' fight, but a fight just the
same,• he said.
Sharing the experience of a
' recentdiploniatic journey to
China, Netanyabu brought
the audience inside bis per-
sonal dialogue with Chinese
Presiaent JaJng ZeJDln. The
Chinese leader was compar-
ing the long history of Jewish
and Chinese people, and
Netanyahu '8.sked Zemin a
question: ·How many Chi-
nese people are there?• The
leader answered, 1.2 billion
people. "How many Jews are
there?" continued Net.anyabu,
answering his own question
with the figure of 12 million.
Not until the aeation of Israel
following the end of World warn.
~Had there been an Israel
prior to World War D, there
would not have been a Holo-
caUlt, • shared Netanyahu,
continuing, •And had there
not been a Holocaust. there
might not be a state of Israel
today .•
The cruel irony of his state-
ment was not lost on the
crowd that included Ken
Grody, Ruth Hurell, MlcbaeJ
. Luna. Cathy Kroopf, Gall
Mol.k, Sberrt M~rr, . _ Slavtn, Robert Warsaw. and Madeline
Mark Razln and Lane Sher-
man. .
•Jerusalem will never be
divided again,· added the
man who was born in the holy
city in 1949. The crowd
applauded "The J~ peo-
ple have come back from the
valley of death in just 50
years. I am proud and r am
full of hope," Netanyabu said:
"The odyssey continues
with great hope and with
· ·great eJan. because we have a
hometand. The diaspora is
bver.•
• • PHOTO COURTESY Of YANA BRIOLE
"What happened to the
Jewish people, who began
some 5,000 years ago, repre-
senting a population. base of
approximately 10% of the
Roman Empire?" Netanyahu
extrapolated his figures and
added, "Based on these popu-
lation estimates, the Jewish
people should number a quar-
ter billion today .• • ~t happened was dias-
pora. The dispersion of the
Jews outside of Palestine;
scattered, brok~ apart from
the homeland. Centuries of
wandering,.culminating in the
ultimate atrocity, the Holo-
caust.
Netanyahu went beyond
the emotional platitudes of the
all import.ant issue of a Jewish
state and homeland and
became very specific on politi-
cal and economic issues fac-
ing Israel and the world.
·Ninety-nine percent of
Palestinians are self-ruling
today. This is no longer an
issue. The open lands, the
buffer zone of th~ Jordan Val-
ley that serves as a defense
from the east, these are still
very cucial issues," he said.
Rabbi Mark MW~r. Wendy Muter, Sara ~etanyahu and former lsraeiIJ>rime MJnister Benjamln Netanyahu:
lt is a central theme of·
Jewish life. A theme that
often brings criticism, even
ridicule from outsiders. Never-
theless, it is a very real part of
the history of the people.
Net.anyabu then brought
home his point with the Chi-
nese president. The difference
is the land. The Chinese have
had a homeland for their long
history. 1be Jews have not
Netanyahu went on say
that peace depends on free-
dom and that controlled eco-
nomics do not benefit Israel or
any state that claims to be
democratic. •tsrael was born
on a socialist model. There
was no money for anything. It
was a necessary system. How-
ever, by 1960, the economic
model should have evolved to
I can't believe ..... .
a free market ~em. yet the
bureaucracy wants to live for-
ever," said Netanyahu, diving
into the heart of the political
divide in Israel today.
"We have a very high-tech
based economy. But without
freedom, it is meaningless,•
he said, inviting businessmen
and women in the crowd to
go to Russia today and raid
the towns of their brilliant sci-
entists and thinkers who have
no outlet for theU-brainpower
in a system that is bogged
down in bureaucracy.
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·Get a plane and bring
them to America," he said
only half-jokingly. Drawing
laughter, he compared the
plight of Moses cro5sing the
Red Sea in bibliCal times to
'!"hat might happen today if
God was speaking to Moses.
"Moses, I have good news ·
and I have bad news. The
good news is that the Red Sea
will open so that you may
take your people across to
freedom. The bad news is you
Will have to file an environ-
mental impact form when you
get to Israel."
Netanyahu added that his
basis premise for prosperity
and freedom contained five ·
points: "Cut the deficit, cut.
inflation, privatize industry,
re!llove regulations, and free
the currency.· The Llkud Par-
ty official sounded more like a
Reagan Republican than·the
former prime minister of
Israel.
"Remember that most
modem wars have begun
from peace treaties,· cau-
tioned Net.anyahu. "Israel is
the only democracy in the
Middle East, and we can have
peace with democracyi When
our neighbor5, who five under
various forms of dictatorship,
are allowed freedom of the
press, when they have satel-
lite dishes that bring them
world news ar(d viewpoint,
when they havelnternet
access and cell phones, then
peace will be more possible.•
Peace from cell phones. An
amazing concept.
Net.anyahu left Newport
Beach admonishing the crowd
to be cognizant that evil exists
in the world. Even in the per-
fect American haven in
Southem Calilomia that we
call home.
"Evil exists in the darkest
corner of the human psyche.
We must fight evil wherever
and whenever it exists,• the
statesman concluded, encour-
aging all in attendance to
becqme active participants in
the process for peace.
Peace in the Middle East,
. peace in the world. lf is, after
all, the holiest possible state of
life on, earth.
• B.W. COQK's column appears
Thursdays and saturdays.
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DATEBOOK Saturday, March 4, 2000 AJ7
SCR stages stfuming production of 'All My $ons'
T be year was 1947. Americans
were still in a euphoric, self-
congratulatoty mood follow-
ing victories on two fronts in World -
War ll. Jben a budding young
playwright named Arthur Miller
threw a monkey wrench into the
works with his first Broastway play, .
"All My Sons.•
Miller's postwar counterpunch
was a body blow that still packs a
wallop, particularly when present-
ed with such uncompromising
power as South Coast Repertory
Theater
~REVIEW
offers in its
revival, the lat-
est in the com-
pany's Amert-·
can Classics
series.
It is a superlative and unsettling
depiction of the disintegration of
an American family.
.
FYI
• What: "All M y s<>ns•
•When: 8 p.m. Tuesdays
through Fridays, 2:30 and 8
p.m. Satur~ays and Sundays
through April 1
• Where: South.f oast
Repertory, 655 Town Center
Drive, Costa ~esa
• Tickets: $118 to S4'7
• CAii: C?1\4) 708-5555
the young woman who has shifted
her love from one brother to the
other, unhampered by the fact that
her own father is in prison for
Keller's crime. Bell and Billig excel
in the difficult and tentative
sequence cementing their new-
found relationship.
As her troubled brother, whose
unsettling news ignites the
already-flammable situation, Dar-
rin Singleton skillfully resists.dis-
arming offers of friendship to com-
plete his mission. Tony Pasqualini
breathes a fine air of cordiality into
the mixture as the idealistic doctor
next door, while Sarah Brooks has
some more divisive moments as his
unhappy wife.
As he would in later plays with
such tragic figures as Wµty Loman
and Eddie Carbone, Miller centers
his story around a strong. patriar-
chal figure, Joe Keller, an industri-
alist who provided armaments for
the government dwing the war -
some of which were flawed, result-
ing in a number of American
deaths. Joe was Imprisoned briefly,
then exonerated, but his partner
remains incarcerated .
·lb.is is not the extent of the ten-
sion surrounding the Keller family.
One of Joe'~ sons. Larry, was killed
in combat. Now Larry's fiancee is
poised to marry the other son,
Chris, over the fervent objections of
his mother, Kate, who clings almost
rabidly to the hope that Larry still
lives.
Simon Billig as Chris Keller, seated, confronts his father, played by Peter Michael Goetz, while Chris'
girlfriend (Nancy Bell, left) and mother (Unda Gehringer) look on in "All My Sons" at South Coast
~epertoi:y.
Neighborly atmosphere is
believably provided by James Nar-
dini and Laura Hinsberger, while
Gabe Wolpa and Mitchell Hutchin-
son alternate in the role of a young
boy fascinated with Keller's brush
with law enforcement.
Under the painstaking direction
of Martin Benson, ·All My Sons"
unfolds with disantting ease and
naturalness in the backyard of the
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Keller home, splendidly recreated
by scenic designer Tony Fanning.
Neighbors file in and out, joking
and building an atmosphere or
normalcy and content, but the
emotional cancer continues to
spread.
Superiorperlonnancesabound,
headed by Peter Michael Goetz's
riveting interpretation of Joe.
defending his role in the tragedies
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to his family from a ferv~nt eco-
nomic position: ·I did it for you."
Goetz paints himself into an emo-
tional corner with alternating
bravado and desperation.
meates the production and
enhances its necessarily unsettling
atmosphere. •All My Sons• introduced main-
stream theate r audiences to a play-
wright who would become one of
America's greatest. SCR's stunning
production provides some insight
into that period, more than a half-
century ago, when Miller made a
powerful case for morality and ·
social responsibility.
Linda Gfhringer as his wife,
who shares her husband's terrible
secret, is an even more desperate
figure, fanatically clinging to the
possibility her missing son is alive.
Her eerie single-mindedness per-
The key portrayal, of the surviv-
ing son whose elevated moral posi-
tion intimidates those around him,
is delivered with bullet force by
Simon Billig. His ulb.mate con-
frontation with his father resonates
with a powerlul ferocity.
Nancy Bell beautifully interprets.
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AJ8 Saturday, Morch 4, 2000
CAMPBELL
CONTINUED._ FROM A 14
Only then, when the
audience's mood for west-
ern-tinged melodies has
been properly whetted, will
the rhinestone cowboy take
center stage.
What will emerge when
the 63-year-old begins to cept for studio executives to
play is a musical style born understand. The divenjty of
of an unusually wide pool of the performers who graced
inlluerices. Though . he's ' its stage, they feared, would
• thought or as a.pop country be too much for the tender
player, Qimpbell's days of audience to comprehend.
recording with musicians "I bad guys complaininy,
from Frank Sinatra to Brian saying, •vou're having too
Wt.lson of The Beach Boys much country on the
leftbim with a sophisticated show,•• Campbell recalled.
ear. ·1 said, 'li it wasn't rated
Campbell cites Ray No. 1 last week, I could
Charles, along with Sinatra, understand it.'•
as a major influence. But in The show helped launch
the next breath, he's full of the careers or a number of
praise for jazz guitarist performers, including Neu.
Django Reinhardt. Diamond and Linda Ron-
lt's the kind of musically stadt. and its audience nev-
ornnivorous sensibility that er seemed to have a prob-
Campbell forged into No. 1 lem with the mix of country
hits in the late '60s and then . and rock 'n' roll styles.
unleashed on the world in "It wasn't any pretense, H
the form of "The Glen Campbell said. "We just did
Campbell Goodtime Hour,• straight~ahead serious stuff,
his musical variety televi-really.•
sion show. . He blames the program's
"I had Buck Owens and eventual demise on eco-
Jobnny Cash and Merle nomics.
Haggard on," Campbell "They got Sonny and
said of the TV program, Cher for $144,000. •They
which aired from 1968 to would have had to pay the
'72. At times; the high-cal-'Goodtime HQµr' $285,000, •
iber · programming Camp-he said.
bell put together landed the But as Campbell drifted
show in the top-ratings slot. toward the mid-'70s, more
But it was a tricky con-than his television show
WU falling apul 'Jbe .,....
former Went lbrouP tbe
kind ot axutaedMI dawnldD
llide that l88ID8 to be• ..c-
oQd mreer for many sock·
... That .. •DICP"' ID
recover rather duiD aama
tbe way ot Joplin and}im:
drix ii a feet Camobidl
credits to God. And ·be
gives aedit in tbe way be II
best able to: through lllUllc.
He recoJded a number of
g011pel tongs during the
'90s and says he'• conlld•-
ing putting together anoth-
er one at the end of tbil
year.
• J enjoy singing about
the Lord because I got
delivered tram all that: tbs
drugs, the alcohol and the
cigarettes/ he said,
These l;lays, it's not only
Campbell's performances
that are mellow; the rest of
his time 1S pretty low-key, as .
well. When he's not head-
ing off to the links for a
round of golf, a sport he
says he plays almost daily.
Or he might be jamming
with his musician son or
having a quiet Saturday
morning Bible study.
"I could retire," Camp-
bell admitted, but others
object. "My manager says
'Nol You can't do that:·
After all these years, he's
still in demand; and Camp-
bell' has mixed feelings
about the life.
"I don't like the traveling
end of it that much,• he
said. "But the music I really
enjoy.•
----... --•n•" -~ ... ""llrT"'" .... ··:.:.--... ....
CJasmOed ads work for
YOU!
·FILM
CONTINUED FROM A 14
• director. "We had people out
at the Toronto Film Festival,
at Sundance, at Savannah, at
Berlin. We're really trying to
bring in the best. •
Last• fall, the festival
looked like it might not make
it to the screen. Founder Jef-
• trey S. Conner, who kept the
enterprise afloat for (our
yefilS, declared bankruptcy in
September, leaving fans and
.auteurs alilce wondering if
the pieces of what was then a
sprawling, two-week affair
could possibly be reassem-
bled.
The program for the
revamped fest.'-shorter, but
dense with high-quality films
-emphatically answers that
question.
•Any past apprehension
about Newport Beach as a
festival will be washed away
after t.nis year," Schwenk
said.
scieenings for the fest are,
with one exception, confined
to two theaters: the Edwards
Island Cinemas and the
Orange County Museum of
Art.
Broadly speaking. the divi-
sion corresponds to a split
between full-l~ngth works,
which will be shown at
Edwards, and shorter films,
some of which are a ·tittle
more challenging in terms of
their content.
But there will be some
exciting prospects in both
theaters.
Some of the highest-profile
events are _likely to be trib-
utes, three of which are slated
for the first few days of the
fest.
Opening night features a
50th-anniversary screening of
a remastered print of "Sunset
Boulevard," the 1950 Billy
Wilder film that is synony-
mollS with film noir. ·
Other classics include a
showing of David Lean's 1946
film "Great Expectations,•
and a screening of the 1957
movie "Sweet Smell of Suc-
cess,· which co-star Tony
Curtis is expected to attend.
•Any film festival would
love to have even one of our
tributes, where we have three
of them, and they're all very
LOCAL FILMS
• WHAP. "Long Night's Journey
Into Dey,• a documentary that
discusses the stoty of Amy Biehl,
by ff•nces Reid and Deborah
Hoffmlnn
• ..-: Edw•ds Island
Onema. 999 Newport Center
Drive
• • WHIN: 8 p.m., April 5
• WHA~ "Drunk In Public." a
documentary by Davkt Sperling
about Mark Davkt Allen
•._:Orange C~ty
M~m of Art, 850 San
Clemente Drive, Newport Beach
• WMIN: 1 p.m., April 3
~eenlr'lg time may change)
strOl}{lr" Schwenk said.
I( Slrong lineup of interna-
tional films deserves attention
as well.
In addition to showcasing
works from Mexico, Vietnam.
Brazil and the Philippines, the
festival is hosting the world
premiere of the Chinese films
"Ice on Fire," "Tutor (Fly high
with your and "Once Upon a
T~e in Shanghai." The
debut of these films will be
accompanied by a party held
by the Chinese Consul Gen-
eral on Aprll 4.
And in local-interest work,
the festival bas several offer-
ings.
"Long Night's Journey Into
Day,• . the documentary that
just won the Grand Prize Jury
Award at Sundance, looks
interesting. The film, a por-
trait of race relations in South
Afrtca, deals with the case of
Amy Biehl, the young New-
port Beach woman who trav-
eled to South Africa to help
with voter registration and
was killed by mob violence in
1994.
David Sperling's "Drunk in
Public, N.B." a movie that
detailed Newport Beach resi-
dent Mark David Allan's
numerous run-ins with the
law due to public intoxica-
tion, had its original debut in
the 1998 festival. An updated
version of the film, capturing
still more of the man's curious
saga, screens at the Orange
County Museum of Art on
April 3.
. Scott Forrest, who has pro-
grammed ~any of the short
films that will be showing at
the museum, said be. is
pleased with how the sched-
ule of events has shaped up.
"lt's going to be a roller
MARCH 10 -
APRIL9
Low-priced prevtews
March 7-9
A domestic brew spiked
with Irish humor and
scar-gripping suspense,
this flrst play by a
phenomenal young writer
brought audicnca to
their feet from Galway
to Broadway.
by Martin McDonagb
Daily Pilot
coaster of rocking emotion,"
Forrest said. "You're going to
be exhausted afterward. It's
phenomenal programming.
1l1is is the way I've always
wanted to see it happen." . •
· The lineup of shorts
includes some blocks of the-
matically linked works,
i{\clt1d1ng1 "Women in Film," a
program that ·celebrates
women filmmakers, "Super,
Supet 8, • which focuses on
the Super 8 film, and the
"Dances With Films Festi-
val," works from a series of
young and unknown direc-
tors. •
The offerings are more
impressive than those at
many ·festivals, Forrest said,
because he and his fellow
programmers have been
quite aggressive in tracking
down interesting work from
distant sources:.
"Most film festivals, they
just accept what comes in,
and they go through that,•
Forrest said. "We're going
through all festivals. 1 don't
know of any other festivals
that do that.•
When attendees have tak-
en in all the visual stim~ation
they can handle, the series of
seminars and lectures at the
Newport Beach Public
Library should offer some
engrossing alternatives.
Talks on the art of jilm-
making will feature appear-
ances by industry profession-
als. Seminars on directing,
cinematography and special
effects will dissect the com-
plex elements that go info a
single frame of a Hollywood
picture. Other talks will look
at the future of the motion
picture and ·the changes that
Internet technology medns
for the movies.
If all the options seem a bit
overwhelming for the poten-
tial viewer, they seemed no
less so to the people who
were putting the whole pro-
duction together. Schwenk.
calls coordinating the com-
plex elements of the festival
"the smgle most dtfficult pro-
ject I've worked on ifl my
entire life. ·
But it's a project that looks
to be counting down to a
strong opening.
"This bas been a chal-
lenge," Schwenk said: ·But
what's wonderful about it is
that so many facets of the
community have come
together to make one of the
best fe$tivals I've ever seen.·
NEARLY NATURAL
o.Ral implanCs have receNed wide atlentiol'I
because lhey have several advwltages OYlf
the other dental prosltleMs. Mud1 of 11.r
advanllgl ~1tn1s from 1111 tact lhll an
.,..,. larty rtsemtJlel • "*" !di IOGl
The .,, Is IUfgicaly lnMf1ed lnlo 1111
JDbont, Which thin ceues to resofb
(1hr1nlt). An 1rtmclal toolh ls lhen
pemw .. uly llbed to "' in,11111 10 M I
rl6es OUI cl ... Olllll .. 1 .... IDOll. M
I rid of lhe fact hf 1111 ~ 'held
firmly In pllct by "" ~ bone,
patitntl Will\ llllplants rlp(Ht dwlng
.a.ncy 11111 comes V11Y doel IO 1111
prMMd by llllUfll """· 6peedi Ind
COlllidlllOt .. allo It hip .. "" .. ._of llllll*IO or ioo.-
t>.MI lmpllra Cln ghe JOii I lftOll '*" IDaldnO Ind lllq 1111111. WI ...... tW ..... ,..,..., .... u. .................. ,....
ii can111n11r dllnglng. WI _, ...,...
lbolll "" -~ Ind .... .... In....., Wl'lt ......
Nlllpor1C...OIM,W.Mll. ..... ................ ..,
quHltonl lllout MW """""* W ,..._.Ow....,..llan,.......
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,,...,.... clllllll 1111111 Cll't. Cll .. II .................... ,
,.a. ............. -..... .........................
. COMM
Daily Pilot
·Changing
·west Side Will
take more
than trees·
I t's easy to get peace in the Middle
East. It's easy to get Protestants and
Catholics to unite in Northern Ire-
land. It's easy to get the Balkans to
unite harmoniously. ·
I'll tell you what's going to be hard:
making a harmonious community out
of West Side Costa Mesa (•How will
West Side story end?" Feb. 26). Look
at the foot-dragging so far. The mem-
bers of the business subgroup didn't
get involved until they got their own
special meeting to advocate their posi-
tions. The Latino subgroup didn't get :
involved until they got their own spe-
cial meeting to advocate their posi-
tions.
LetterOf
THE WEEK
Secondly,
look at the
plan itself.
On the one
hand, the
suggestions
for physical changes are so modest
that they seem to be motivated by no
more than the least common denomi-
nator, ("Hey, we all agree this place is .
the dumps; so let's fix some potholes
and plant some trees").
On the other h$lnd.-the plan is per-
haps too revolutionary for Costa Mesa,
suggesting that the West Side should
plan to become a community .. This flies
in the face of tradition, which is more
comfortable with just drifting along as
balkanized islands of special interests.
Finally, there's Plato. True, Plato's
not in the same league with Yogi
Berra as a philosopher, but he WTote
something 2,400 years ago in The
Republic that is eerily appropriate to
Costa Mesa.
For indeed any city, however small,
is in fact divided into two, one the city
of the poor, the other of the rich; these
are at war with one another; and in
both there are many smaller divisions,
~d you would be altogether beside
the mark if you treated them all as a
single state.
Nonetheless, I couldn't help but get
excited as I read the West Side plan,
thinking that it could be a catalyst to
bring all the warring parties together
to battle the common enemy: the
dumps. I could see that stak.eholders.
working together, might forge rela-
tionships that could lead to a strong.
healthy community. (You are a stake-
holder if you are interested enough to
have read this far.)
If, to change a city. it tcpc:es leaders
and followers who are committed to a
common goal, then we have a start,
since the plan seems to have identified
some common goals.
All we need to do is find leaders
and followers in Costa Mesa who will
work devotedly to reach the goals.
Or should we just take the easier
route and get the Serbs, Croats, Bosni·
ans and Kosovo residents to kiss and
make up?
IOW YO COll1'1CY
TOM EGAN
Costa Mesa
YOll llPllSllllllVll
. ..
Chlot•Of --"This ls absolutely a
civil war."
1 The o.Jly Pilot wekomes tetten on ksues
cone.ming Newport Beach #Id ~ Meta.
There are lour ways to send in 'PX com-
ments: •
-Political consultant
JEFFADLB.
on'the fight over the proposed
International airport at El Toro.
• unas -~I to the Daily Pilot. now.
hy St., Costa Mesa 92627
• M.ADW ~ -call (949) 642-6916
• MX -~to (949) 646-4170
• I-MAL-Send to iHllypilotelatlmft.com
All cormpondence must Include your full
n1me, hometown and phone number (for
verification purposes only). . .
Saturday, Morch 4, 2.000 Al9
EDITORIAL
' . . .
Spend some tilne m a voting bOoth I
u . -sually, around, election time,
people are pummeled with
a barrage of information
coming from all sides -
commercials on television, signs on the
· roadway, fliers in the mailbox -all
telling them how to vote.
While we are yet another source of
data, our message is a· little different.
We're not telling you how to·cast your
ballots. ·
We're just telling)rou to vote. Period.
It is argu?bly the most precious right
in a democratic society,, but all too often
people take it for granted. In the last
general election primary, voter turnout
in Newport-Mesa was 44 % in Newport
Beach and 38.5% in Costa Mesa.
Definitely room for improvement.
And if ever there were· an election
for which voters should come out, this
is probably it.
There are se~ crucial issues to be
decided, som,rof wruch could have
dramatic effects on our community.
First, there's Measure F -the hotly
contested Safe and Healthy Communi-
ties Initiative, sponsored by South
County residents opposed to Orange
County's plans for a $2.9-billion inter-
national airport at the closed El Toro
Marine Corps base. Newport Beacb-
based groups in favor of a second
county airport have scrambled to
defeat the measure, saying its passage
could· lead to a massive expansion of
John Wayne Airport. And that is some-
thing Newport Beach and Costa Mesa
residents should be concerned about.
Then there is Proposition 12 -the
largest-ever proposed bond measure to
preserve open space and improve
parks. Newport Beach stands to get up
to $13 million from the initiative for
Upper Newport Bay restoration pro-
jects, and Costa Mesa could get about
$1.3 million for Fairview Park improve:
MARC MARTIN I DAlY Pl.Ol
And, of course, there is the presiden-
. tial-pii.ntary election to decide who will
duke it out in November for the coun-
try's top spot. Don't forget: This year, if
you cross party lines when voting, your
<.:hoice won't count toward who gets
the nomination.
So before Tuesday, pick up that sam-
ple ballot that's been si!.fulg in your
mail pile for a few weeks.and flip
through it. Carefully read the pro and
con arguments for each issue or candi-
date, make your decisions and have
your marked-up sample ready to take
to the polls.
Leave Fairview Park
the way God intended .
W as I reading correctly the
article about Fairview
Park ("City hustling to
develop plan for Fairview Park."
Feb. 17) once again being victim-
ized by the Costa Mesa park
planners? What is there about the
word "no" that these impostors
don't understand? The Nor the
O?
(Costa Mesa parks Supt.
Dave) Alkema is a double talker.
He says he intends to make the ·
park natural and then calls
•weeds" all the beautiful, natur-
al wildflowers planted by God.
We, some homeowners
around the park, just happen to
like the way God has planned
the park. I remember when
sheep grazed on the hills, a
serene scene for bustling Costa
Mesa.
· The park planners have
already ruined a goodly amount
of the park's acreage with a
fenced-in bathroom facility that
· -nobody uses and that cost the
taxpayers millions of dollars.
Please cut off the state and
federal fat so we can once more
become a free nation.
Let's begin by getting rid of
surplus planners, inspectors and
all other busy bOOies who take up
the working people'• Ume. We
have to attend meetings, write
letters and constantly be on the
watch to protect ounelvel against
the imposers on our freedom.
MARIE KOl.ASINSKI
Costa Mesa
• Wl'm'I ~ Kol8nlltl ls tt.
..... of ... ~end~
gcMINMf 11 group ttwt runs • cnfts
lhop In (Oita Mele.
Resident objects
to Dunes applause
t,
r ments.
There is also Proposition 26, which
would reduce the required two-thirds
majority approval for school bond mea-.
sures to a simple majority. If passed,
Proposition 26 would make it much
easier for the Newport-Mesa district to
get its $110-million bond passed in
June.· ·
While voting is your right, it is also,
in many ways, your duty.
MAILBAG
TAYA KASHUBA I DAILY Pl.Ol
Cost. Mesa Parks Department project manager David Alkema hopes that with the passage of
Proposition 12, Falrvtew Park may receive money from the state for improvements.
a half-dozen neighboring com-
munities. There is no way mib-
gation is possible to solve this
enormous problem as stated in
Newport Beach's Planning
Department reports.
The wont case in this point is
the imposition of the proposed
35-foot-blgh parking garage
and the service roadway
planned to face the patios,
decks, windows and doors of
Mayflower Street homes in Bay-
side VWage.
The quality of life these resi-
dents en;oy wiD be destroyed as
tbe 45,000 IQU8A! feet of meeting
speat II let up and lllled with
1bnJagl o1..-emrtng tbratagh
tlw adddl9 of tldl CXlllllDUlllty.
~ b.mg ..... lotbe
a.dlofa= IMbalilld
4-n• aur pupw1Ji ftlma.
ID lgbl.GI tbe aboN. I beutily
~wllla821taty'lltat9-
............. tMt ... llcon·
........ GI .. 0.-' cmnmM· ................ __
ip?ftr ........... pwt lw.'b. ... ,.. ............. .
••Jmtar?I .... L_.•
No more traffic in
NeWJ>ort Beach, please
• IDITOR'S NOTE: The following Is ~
~ letter to Newport Mayor John
Noyes.
My husband, Brad, grew up
on Bayside Drtve overloolang
Promontory Bay. I lived on Balboa
Island wiW the age of 7, when
traffic drove my parents up the
bill to Irvine Terrace.
When we married in 1991,
there was no doubt that we want•
ed to live and raile a family in
our home CCJIDIDunity. We have
~ ftnandally lo stay bme
and have loYed being DMr our
famllM.
W. bave owmd • cOndo In
V\Da Pamt llDce 1981 and IMlft lllfoT9d our Newpmt Bwta ....,..._wddag.,.....
Iliad, 8-c:k.., ... ......,. ....... w.-.. ....... tD
crossing the intersections of Back
Bay and Jamboree roads and
East Coast Highway and Jam-
boree.
We have seen accidents at
these intersections increase at an
alanning rate in the past few
years. And many times we heard
lots of screec.bing and near cras!f-
es.
We have put up with the noi9e
from the Hyatt Newporter and
the increue in traffic during the
summer and on weekends in
order to live in Newport Beach.
However, I can't imagme the
negative effect tbe new neon
will have on the quality Of life,
Nfety and property vah.Mil of my
CXJlllDNDity.
I epp.M to you• a IQ! ~·-..... lt and cxmc.....s ..... to
u.pour~dtY .... _. "
umpailld
Plellledan't ........ tD
bllDdyoutDlilit ......... ..
.a-o1auu a• n.wr ...., .. , ............
o1--.az '? n •-*
adlHllL IJ $ ·-......., ••
,·
. . •
Sunroof
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Heated Seats
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Loaded Luxury
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97BMW
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,.
Daily Pilot
Quote Of --, hMn't put it al..... "="
but this Wiiie's going to be ........
Dave Elc:helberger, co-leader __ ... _ ... Msdt ' honoree
CUFF UVllGSTOI
Spom Editor Roger Corf son • 949-57 44223 • Saturday, Morch 4, 2000 81
GOLF ·rHE UNIVERSAL LANG.UAGE
•In the right place at the right time as an alternate,
Conner also could've used an interpreter Friqay morning.
_ flld:\ard Dunn
DAILY PILOT • .
N1WPORT
BEACH-
As the first
player on the tee
box Friday and the
only golfer in his
group with the 8 -
Englisb language TOSHI A
as his1>rimary
form of communication, play was
sometimes lonely for Frank Conner
in the opening round of the Toshiba
Senior Classic at Newport Beach
Country Club.
Conner, though, was just glad to
be there. After all, he started the
week as the second alternate, and
eventually got into the field
becau~ another player, Ste~art
Ginn-of Malaysia, missed his tee
time in the Thursday pro-am.
•1t was Unfortunate for (Ginn),
but fortunate for me," said Conner,
after shooting a two-over-par 73 in
the first round.
Conner, a veteran ol the Toshiba
Classic who was in town for his
standby status as an alternate,
said it was the first time in his
professional golf career tbat he has
"gotten in that way.•
All players on the Senior PGA
Tour are required to play in their
pro-am rounds, or they're
disqualified.
"Stewart didn't realize he was in
the Thursday pro-am, and he ju.st
slept in," Conner said. "He played
in the Wednesday pro-am, but
•• •
-T arry Nelson
~above)
watches the
flight of his ball
·off the sixth tee
en route to a
four-unde,r 67,
one stroke off
th.e pace of the
leaders. A t left.
'99 champion
Gary Mc:Cord
lines up a putt
on the fifth
green. At right,
the legendary
Arnold Palmer
blasts from a
trap on the
second hole.
DAILY PILOT PHOTOS
BY MARC MAATIN
.
didn't realize be was in didn't have anybody to
both-pro-ains. When be "'We were O!Jl talk to," <tanner said with
surprlsed anybody was out here."
~dn't sbow up,! was the there speaking a.laugh. "But it was fun hrst aj.ternafe. It happens , to play with them. J ose's
Conner, though, enjoyetl the
rou,nd, because .as the first group
off, there are no previous marks on
the greens or divots in the fairways. very infrequently." • Japahese, a ni<:e guy and I've
Earlier in the week, Spanish and played with him a lot.
Charles Coody dropped I've played with him so
from ,the tournament and Texan ... " much, in fact, that I'm
"The golf course was in perfect
condition," said Conner, one of
only two men in history to have
played in the U.S. Open in both
golf and tennis (the late Ellsworth
Vmes was the other).
the original first alternate, starting to understand
David Lundstrom, took Fra~k Conner Spanish.
bis spot. pushing Conner Senior Tour player •we were out there
up the ladder. speaking Japanese,
"I was here waiting," --------Spanish and Texan.•
"The golf course was in
said Conner. who lives in Conner, playing in bis
excellent shape and the greens
were perfect. The fauways were
probably in the best condltlon I've
ever seen at this golf course, and
I've been coming here since the
Little Crosby. I en1oyed the golf
course, though the weather was not
exactly what it normally ts.
San Antonio, Texas. •u I hadn't fifth Toshiba Senior Classic, is a
been here, I would've been veteran of the Newport Beach
eliminated, also.• course, having played here in the
With clubs ready, Conner teed it old Crosby Southern Pro-Am (later
up in the first group Friday. Jose the Newport Classic Pro-Am) five
Ma.ria Canizares of Spain was the times (1978, '81, '88, '89 and '93).
first player t9 tee off, followed by "There were som~ople out
Conner, then Kikuo Arai of Japan. here to watch us tee_o!f (at 8 a.m.),
·Arai speaks no English and ':but not too many." Conner said. "It
•We can set our own pace when
teeing off first, and I like that. The
Jose speaks very little English, so I was so cold (Friday) •morning, I'm SEE CONNER PAGE 85
•They're an unlikely duo, but
it's a typical fi nish . Eichelberger
and Vucinich tied for top spot.
Richard Dunn
DAILY PILOT
NEWPORT BEACH -It
wouldn't be the Toshiba
Seruor Classic if only one
player was atop the leader-
board after the first round.
And, in typical heroic
. . style for this Senior PGA
Tour event at Newport Beach Country Club,
there were last·hole dramatics Friday from
the final group. .
While Dave Eichelberger feels desbned to
win the sixth annual Toshiba Classic, his co-
leader. come-out-of-nowhere Roy Vucmich.
is surpnsed to Pe mentioned in the same
breath with the elite five-under-par 66 shoot-
ers.
"I was w
hoping to just AFTER 18 HOLES have a decent
round, but
five-under is
as low as I've
been this
year.· said
• 66: Dave Eichelberger
• 66: Roy Vucinich
• 67: Larry Nelson
• 67: Howard Twitty
• 69: Jose Maria Canizares
• 69: Hubert Green
• 69: Gary McCord
• 69: Tom Jenkins
• 69: lsao Aoki
• 69: Ge0rge Archer
• 69: Allen Doyle
Vucinich. a
former club
professional
for 27 years,
who, unlike
most of his
brethren on
the ~nior • 69: Joe Inman
tour, lov the
poa annua eens at Newport Beach.
Eichelberger, the easygoing veteran With
the strong Texas accent, is no stranger to
Route 66 on a golf course: He shot 66 last
week in the second round of the Uquid-
GoU.com Invitational at Sarasota. Fla., and
bas had other impressive early rounds this
season.
"I've put myself in pos1bon to wm Uus
year, but I haven't played well on Sunday.•
Eichelberger said. ·1 haven't put it all togeth·
er, but this week's going to be different.·
That's as strong a statement as Eichel·
berger will make, but don't count on any
deep insights into his game.
·1 really don't ever have a strategy or goal
each day. I just start on the hrst tee and try to
bit it as far as I can and try to knock it in the
hole and shoot as low as l can.• he said. ·1
really don't have a plan. so to speak.·
SEE CLASSIC PAGE 85
•Slight freshman uses mind over matter to become the
heavyweight for Corona del :Mar High girls water polo team.
IMyF.,.._
DMLY PILOT
F reshman Danielle Carlson plays
drtver for the Corona del Mar
HJgb girll water polo team.
More specifically, she plays the
percentages.
Whether it be deceiving goalies
with milleeding glances in the =direction lbe plem to aboot.
when to gamble for one ol
her many ln-=.ancl ...... a..Ylna IOCCel' for water polo,
Wbldl 1--ICholulldp ==·:-.a-c_1.'-m:. .....
... drwn ldaaal. cl. ..... -1111-cmcblDtbllllDdl.C.... ma -..ay be couMICI i.-tD...._
the smart play.
•rve never gotten a Bin my life,•
Kid the articulate and athletic
t. who helped the Pedfic
Coast League trt-dMlmpiam reach
the CIP DMDon IV chempiamhlp
game. a 7-4 le. to top..teeded Seta
Margarita Wednmday.
Carllon. wbo emerged slowly m
her ftnt prep campeigD.. wwn(I up
Jeecting the 9ee Kings in goall (S9),
..... ('3) and ...... (151).
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-~_ily_Pi_la ______ ~n~~~~~~~-SPORTS -~~~~~~~~~~~-'-~ r Solvrday, March 4, 2000 83
Sea Kings· drop oPen0r, 7-2
• Christensen, and a
controversial, call puts
Corona del Mar away.
HIGH SCHOOL BASEBALL and three strikeouts. At the
plate, he went 2 for 3 with
two RBis. CdM took a 2-0 lead in the
top of the first when its pitch-
er J.D. Martinez doubled in
Alex Swanson and Billy
Eagle.·
· ferent ballgame.• •He pitched pretty good,•
Emme said. "But his control
wasn't where it normally is.• Joseph Boo
DAILY PILOT
COSTA MESA -It was a
good looking tnatchup.
Defending CIF Southern Sec-
tion Divisicm TV champion
C~rona de! Mar High's base-
ball team going against
reigning Division V champ
Calvary Chapel of Santa An.a.
But the result was less then
id eal for the Sea Kings. They
dropped their season opener
against the Eagles, 7-2, at
Vanguard University Friday
in the first round of the New-
port El.ks Tournament. CdM
(0-1) continues tournament
play Tuesday.
But Calvary Chapel (1-0)
scored four runs in its ball of
the first, albeit four controver-
sial runs. With one out and
runners on first and second,
Martinez seemingly picked
off the Eagles' Richard Max-
son at first, but the umpire
ruled otherwise.
•we jumped out on (Cal-
vary Chapel pitcher Kyle
Christensen) for two in the
first," CdM Coach John
Emme said, "but the umpire
blew that call in the first. If we
picked him off, it would have
been 2-0 after one and a dif-
Martine.z ended up walk-
ing the hitter and striking out
th~ next one who would have
been the third out. The
Eagles then got a two-run
single from 'fyler Ohanian.
l\vo hitters later, one Calvary
Chapel ;un came in on a
CdM pitch that bounced in
front of the plate and got past
the catcher. On the same
play, another run for the
Eagles came in on a bad
throw to l\ome plate.
After the first inning,
Christensen settled down. 1n
six inning~ he gave up two
runs, one earned, and struck
out five. For Corona del Mar,
Martinez gave up six runs m 4~/3 innings with five walks
Derek Loe and Wes Hock-
inson hit doubles for CdM
and Emme had praise for
catcher Rory McKeever, wh,o
had two pµtouts.
"Rory was phenomenal
behind th~ plate,• Emme
said.'
NEWPORT El.KS TOURNAMENT
C/u.V/111('( OtANL 7,
CottoNA DE1. l\llAll 2
Corona del Mar 200 000 0 • 2 4 3
Calvary Chapel 400 111 x • 7 9 1
Martinez, Cuyler (S) and
McKeever; Christensen, Carrier (7)
and Graves. W -Christensen, 1-0;
L -Martinez, 0-1. 2B • Martinez
(CdM), Loe (CdM), Hockinson
(CdM), Carrier (CC), Christensen
(CC). HR • West (CC).
'· LESSON 1 ·
•Temecula Valley rallies for ·
8-3 win in the season opener
over Newport's h ost Sailors.
Barry Faulkner
D~llY PILOT
NEWPORT BEACH -Hlgh school
baseb~ teams don't get the benefit of
spring training. So, Newport Harbor
High Coach Jim Kiefer will be patient
while half his starting lineup learns on
the job in the early gomg.
The first lesson of this education came
Friday, when visiting Temecula Valley
rallied for an 8·3 win in the first round of
the North Orange County Classic.
MWe were successful in some areas
and not successful in others. but overall, I
thought tOday wa5 a posltive, • sald Kiefer
of his fifth season opener at Harbor.
As expected, returning All-Sea View
League and All-Newport-Mesa District
seniors Scott Bee rer and Nick Langsdorf
keyed an offense which posted two runs
in its first crack at junior right-hander
Ronnie Hill. ·
After senior Miguel Sdndoval smgled
with one out and stole second, Langsdorf
ripped a triple past a diving left fielder to
put the Sailors on top. Beerer followed
with an RBI single, but Hill settled down,
allowing just three hits the rest of the way.
Alter senior left-hander starter JusUn
McCarthy held the Bears sco~less in his
two innings. the visitors tied it with two
runs in the third and scored in each of
their final four at-bats to send the Sdilors
into today's 11 a.m. consolation-bracket
game against the Inglewood-Paramount
loser at a site to be determined.
ERIC SANTUCCVOAll.Y PILOT
Newport Harbor's Garrett Brant (28) slides in safely wlth a stolen base.
praise for Forsythe's varsity debut. not pitch unUJ the Sea View Ledgue sea-
son opens. .
Newport had three hit batters and
·three walks, but strdnded rune.
Langsdon and·Beerer each went 2 for
2 and reached base four times. Beerer's
RBI single in the third gave Harbor Its
final rw;i. Langsdorf also dived to stab a
soft line drive to help limit one Temecula
rally, and made a nice backhand scoop
on a low throw to end the Bears' seventh.
"I thought he competed well. "He gave
us i:I strong (o ne-two-three) third inning
and held his own in the (two-run) fourth,
when the game could have gotten away
from us·
Junior catcher Garrett Brant, stepping
in lor gcaduated four-year varsity starter
Churlie Waite (now at Mississippi), also
impressed. He picked a runner off sec-
ond bdse and consistently blocked pitch·
es m the dirt.
Hill threw 115 pitches, before losing
control in the seventh, when he. was pulled
just one out away from a complete game.
Sue of Temecula' eight hits were dou-
bles. including two apiece by Luke Wat-
son and Derek Merrell.
NOlnlf ORANGE COUNTY CLASS!C
Temecula Valley 000 231 2 · 8 8 0
Newport Harbor 200 010 0 • 3 6 1 Alan Lane started singled to round out
the Tars' six-hit attack.
Sophomore lefty Cody Forsythe, Lane
and Sandoval followed McCarthy to the
mound for the hosts and Kiefer had
Beerer, expected to be the Tars' top
pitcher, would have started , according to
Kiefer. But Beerer has been nursing· a
sore back and Kiefer said he won't rush
him the mound. Kiefer said Beerer ma.y
Hill, Garcia (7) and Watson; McCarthy,
Forsythe (3), Lane (S), Sandoval (6) and Brant.
W • Hiii, 1·0. L ·Lane, 0-1 2B· Watson (TV) 2,
Pyles (TV), Locklin (TV), Merrell (TV) 2
3B • Langsdorf (NH).
Mesa falls jn eight, 3-2
• Garden Grov~ rallies
to take opening verdict.
GARDEN GROVE -
Costa Mesa High sopho-
more Billy Halverson sin-
gled in the go-ahead run in
the top ol the eighth inning,
but host Garden Grove ral-
lied for a pair to claim a 3-2
baseball victory Friday in
the Costa Mesa Tourna-
ment'~ pool-play opener.
Josh Uttle, who relieved
starter Jeremiah Haubrick in
the sixth, led the Mustangs'
11-hit attack with a single,
double and triple in four offi-
cial at-bats. .
Halverson , as well as
juniors Carlos Franco and
Steven Shores had two hits
for the Mustangs, who con-
tinue pool play Tuesday at
home against Brentwood.
The game featured only
two walks (both by Mesa
pitchers) and one error (by
Pirates win, 11-3
C OST'A IC sonuu
MESA -
Monica Ortega used her arm
and her bat to help the
Orange Coe.st College soft-
ball team to a 11 ·3 win over
visiting Irvine Valley in
Orange EmpiN Conference
action Pnday.
Ortege threw a complete-
game two-bitter, allowing no
eumd nms. She allo went l
for 2 wUh tbree RBis for OCC
(12-8, 1-3 in conference).
Renee Snyder went l for 3
wttb two IUDI ICOred and two
RBll, wblJe Krtldn Dearee
bad two -llt'Ol'9d tiree 1\1111 mid ... tbrM beMI.
....:..a::w='• ... ii:. .,,. , '. °"'111 ., •• ,, .. J
...., •1111111-..io..w ==·~tJ:tN
the Mustangs), prompting
Mesa Coach Kirk Bauer-
meister to praise his team's
2000 debut.
"You always walk away
from an extra-inning loss
disappointed, but, looking
back, I thought we played •
really well, especially for an
opener,• Bauermeister said.
Shores made a sterling
defensive play at third base
and Mesa senfor catcher
Galel Fajardo threw out two
would-be base stealers.
Joe Harkey· (nine strike-
outs) went the distance for
the Argonauts, who return
seven starters from last
year's CIF playoff team.
COSTA MESA TOURNl'MlNT
6--GRova J. CostA MBA 2
Costa Mesa 100 000 01 • 2 11 1
Garden Grove 000 100 02 -3 6 0
Haubrick, Little (6) and Fajardo;
Harkey and Cepeda. 28 • Little
(CM), Franco (CM), Hatvenon
(CM), Harkey (GG), Carreira (GG).
38 · Little (CM).
JC BASKETBALL
Cerritos eliminates
OrarW' raa lWIDell
•Falcons take 84-80
decision in the SoCal
Regional Finals.
CERRITOS -The Orange
Coast College women's bas-
ketball teem NW its IMSOn
come to an end with an 8'-80
loss to bolt Cerrltos ln the
Southern Ca1Uom1e Regional
P1nall Prtday ni9ht.
The Plratn (27-6)
advanced to the ftnall with a
82-68 wln over Bakenfield,
The 27 ,vim till tbe 1992·
93 equad ,., .... --wlm tn
OCC'1 :!::"'' tb9 9gbth ltNlabt :l ... .....
for 6*:b T'bamlon.
Eagles' rally denied
•Estancia spots host Bolsa Grande six
runs in first two innings in 13-11 setback.
COSTA MESA
Estancia High's baseball
team simply ran out of
innings Friday's 13-11
season-opeaing loss lo
Bolla Grande in day one
of pool play at the Costa
Mesa Tournament.
After falling behind,
11-2, the Eagles scored
nine rum in the final three
innings, but Bolsa
answered with a run in
the Mb and mth innings
to P.ul1 out the win.
Brent Davis went 4 for
4 including a home nm,
three runs scored and
three RBis to lead Iha
Beglel' comebllck .
C.K. Green went 3 for
JC VO~LEYBALl
Pirates slammed
by Irvine Valley
• Moser's 22 kills not
enough to ove~come
Lasers' attack.
IRVINE -The Orange
Coast College men's volley·
ball team lost a grueling,
five-Mt match to host Irvine
Valley, 10-15, U -8, 15-17,
l&.14, 12-15, Prtday night in
Orange Bmplre Conference
action.
Daw ~ tiid 22 ld1AI to
met tlie PAraa. (8-2, 2-l in c:om ....... , •
Tb• Ptnt .. ' next match
com• aga!Dit rival Golden
Welt Widnetclay night at
7.
5 with two runs and two
RBis and David Akiva
had two bits, including a
home rum and three
RBis.
The Eagles resume
Costa Mesa Tourney
action Tuesday at home
against Rancho Alamitos·
at 3:15 p.m.· cm.-.--··" .......... ,1 ....... ,,
Eltlnm cm os1 3 -11 n 1
~Qlndl240511 x -11 14 1
Cire9\ Hirt (4) ~ o.11;
L8or\ *" Hom (5). Cobenulolul (5) .m .........
W -LMlft, 1-0. L -Gretn, 0-1. •• ...., (IG), ...... (IG).
•·JahlAWw(IG). .. • llldlr (IG). OM (I).
... (1).
Ferrera sparkles
w AL -JC SWIMMlllG
NUT
Orange Coast College swim-
mer Gerardo Ferrera firushed
fourth in the men's 100-yard
freestyle for the only top·hve
finJsh by a Pirate Ptiday in the
Mt. San Antonio College lnvi-
tatiooel.
The Pirates had only four
additional top-10 finishes
from individuals.
OCC't 'nacy Maddox wu
eighth in the women's 1,650
freestyle (19:•0.10), while
teemmates Gtne Mansfield
(1:10.50) and Heether Lemke
(1 :11 .62) were ninth and lOtb.
~· in UM! 100 but·
OCC'1 St9ve Dubber w•
lOtb Ill ...... JOO '-4·
... (2:12.52).
COLLEGE WOMEN'S BASKETBALL
Lions finals bound
• Vanguard edges .Point Loma Nazarene, 7 5-68.
Tony Altobetll
DAILY PtlOT •
COSTA MESA Van-
g uard University women's
basketball coach Russ Davis
summed up the play of 5-foot-
6 {at best) point•guard Becki
Huddle in two words follow-
ing frlday's Golden State
A~tic ·Confere nce semifi-
nals conte5t with Point Loma
Na2arene. •Not normal.•
Huddle scored 16 points,
grabbed a team-high 12
rebounds and dished out sev-
en assists, leading the Lions
to a 75-68 win oyer the Cru-
saders.
"She's 5-5 or something
and she leads our team with 12
rebounds,• Davis satd: "She
just finds a way to get it done.•
With the win, the Uons
will take on Azusa Pacific in
the GSAC Finals Tuesday
night at 5 p.m. at Whitber
College.
Kelly Boeke led U:ie Uons
(28·5) with 20 points and nine
rebounds, while Marisa
Emde added 14 points,
including four three-pointers.
The • Crusaders· ( 17-6},
which defeated Vanguard on
Jan. 11, gave Davis and Lions
fits for most of the game.
·w e have a matchup prob-
lem with them,· Davis said.
·we start three guards, whtle
they start three big forwards.
We didn't shoot the ball very
well, but we bailed our!.Plves
out with offensive rebounds "
The Lions oulrebounded
the Crusaders, 5 J .32, wtuch
led lo a 25-7 sconng edge ·r from Ute free-throw lme , ~
Erin Kellar led the Cru-,\
saders with 29 poinu.. 20 in 1,1~ J
the second-half. . , · .i·
The Lion led by·hve at thf) 1 J
half, but Point Loma would
not go away Pomt Loma
grabbed d 48-47 ledd \.\'lth
14:30 remdmmg. bui an 11-4
VangUdrd run gdve the Lion.
the lead for good.
Paulette ea.mdn tut two
big three-poi.liters down the
stretch to keep the lead -on ~
the side of the Llonc; •
Point Lomd rut the lead to
two with 52 .,econd ... r'·mam-
ing before Ldurc1 . Ll!e drovf'
the Lane and scored two of her
12 points, putung the ndtl in
the Crusaders' colftn
GOU>EN STATI; An.L£TIC
CONFERENCE TOURNAMENT
Semifinals
VANGUARD UNIVERSITY 75,
PolNT l.oMA NAZARENE 68
Point Loma • Kellar 29,
Savage 12, Becker ~. Rumpel 7.
Cunis 6, Harris 4.
3 pt. goals Becker 2, Curt1~ 2.
Savage 2, Rumpel r
Fouled out • Harris. Rumpel
Vanguard · Boeke 20,
Huddle 16, Emde 14, Lee 12,
Seaman 7, F1kse 3. M cKinney 2.
Weidler 1
3 pt goals · Emde 4 Seaman 2.
Fouled out None
Halftime -Vanguard, 38 33
Lions honored by GSAC
ii Four Vanguard Uni~ersity player are named to
all-conference teams in men's and women's hoops.
C O S T A BASKETBALL
MESA -
Four Vanguard University
basketball players were
selected to the All-Golden
State Athletic Conferen'ce
men's and women's teams.
Freshmen Kelly Boeke and
Laura Lee along Wlth junior
Becki Huddle were All·
GSAC women's selections,
while Junior Denms Keane
was the lone Lion picked for
the All·GSAC men's team.
Boeke dveraged 15.7
points and 10.2 rebounds per
game m .coorerenc e Lee
averaged 12 9 point dnd 4 b
rebounds. wh1le I luddle
scored 13.l points. g rdbbed
5.4 rebound~ and d1<,hed out
6 7 ass1.,t!:> per game
Keane led the Lion men
with a 15 5 pomL-;-per-game
dverage
Huddle, dlong w1th Kdth'r
Hernando Rachel F1k..,e and
Marisa Emde were also
named dS !:>omc of the
GSAC's top scholar dthlcto<;
All four have d grade pomt
average of 3 5 or bettC'r
COLLEGE WOMEN'S TENNIS
Vanguard University drops 6-3 decision
COSTA MESA -Van-
guard University's women's
tennis team got doubled up
by visiting Western New
Mexico, 6-3, Fnday m a non-
conference match.
Vanguard's Lindsay Doyal
and Megan Godfrey won
their , singles matches in
straight sets. They then
teamed up and won the ir
doubles set, 8-6 The Uons
drop to 0-7 for the season.
NONCONRRENCE
W ESTERN NEW M EXICO 6
VANGUARD U NIVUSITY 3
Singles · Doyal (VU) def
M Martinez. 6-1. 6--2. Godfrey (VU)
def. Folst<ld. 6-4 6-4; T Martinez
(VU) lost to Gomez, 2-6, 3-6,
Speer-Pardee (VU) lost to Sanchez.
0-6, o-6, Boyd (VU) lost to Heck. 1-6, •
Hi. ~rree (VU) lost to Sloboden. 2-6
1-6.
Doubfes • Doyal-Godfrey (VU) def
Gomez-Heck. 8-6, T Martinez Ferree
(VU) lost to Sancnez-Folstad, 1-8.
Speer·Pardee·Boyd (VU) ltW
to M Mart1nez·Sloboden. 0.8
Pirates sweep triangular
•Women's team remains unbeaten, while men's
crew tops Riverside for the first time in four yedrs.
C 0 S T A JC TRACK Newport Harbor, Ill the 400
MESA -It was mtermed1ale hurdles !56 81;
a clean sweep ror both the Troy Becker in the pof P Vdult
Orange· Coast College men's (1 4·01, Johnrue Peeplp-; 10 the
and women's track and fleld long Jump 121·-5). dncl Costa
teams ln Friday's Orange l\lesa product Ri chard Pnce
Empire Conference matchup m the JdVehn ( 161 -111
with Riverside and Saddle-~c.::-;~•f16•
back. S•-.al'OI n
Th • t 100 I Z>rlgn<>n (1'), 10A l 000!1.1' II), e womens earn came 1o1.1 1<u~~1oco.109 200 1 11119"0f'\111
in with 134 points, while 21 2. z Jonn'°" <oco 211 • ~ong 1oco
Ri 'd h d 124 d Sad 12 2 'OCI ~(Ill."" 1 "onsl IOCC vers1 e 4 an -sol 1 Engn <~ u ~ eoo , M.,._ 1lll dleback 71. 2 01 .. 2 Otw«> IOCQ l OU ] •<'brt {
2 OJ • 1,9CIO I S."-Mi !OCO ' 02 A l Sopbomore Nicole Hansen Morino 1111 , O'l 1 1 a-u.t m. , , ' , >.ooo
surpassed the Pirates' school 1 s.nct>tz <OCC). • n 9. 2 t.V•no 111>. "1• 1. 3 ~ (OCQ. t 210 110 HM I OIWVI record in the pole vault with a 1oco. 1s •.2 aw.-1111, ·~ 1 1 "'"•1oco. mark of 10-feet-7, u.rpassing 160 ..... 'LoolOCO.S6,.2 w ·-1111 ~e old mMk of 10-6, set last ~r!!., ~ g>...:,.os~~J";'i ~
Year by Hanson and Michelle ~•so ,, ... ....., · 1 •~ 1 ••' , 2 ~ llH. 3 o..,. Co.Kl. J •l(a McCaslin. "' 1 Mill•,_ ("I ...._, -..u1ttwoot (Sl M.
Zoila Go d Laut l lM1ford «XO. 6-<> u • 1 ~ IOCO. 21 mez an en \ l OtM«i<OC0.2H>J;4; 1 Dfilf<iu..zo.1ot.. Mc Darnel e1ch won two " 1 "'*"en Al' 1a. 1 i.rt...., <Ill. 42 s 1.
ts f th Pir t (8-0) ) lleflda (O<:O. 41 •• u, '111 • I a.6Pt (OCO. even or e a es . 144 2 ,._, C5I u-6. 3 OY-.n (()CO. 12 o
Gomez, a Costa Mesa •. 1 Ooh (II), u 10. 2 "'"""°" 1oco. lU. 1
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3,000 (11:09.2), whtle '....,.rC!Q. U)ll
McDen.lel ca~ the shot o:=,'j':'.,_~
put (38-6'12) and the javehn ,._..,."
(120-10). ,.. 1 ,., (IU, 12'.: l '°""'91(IO,11' >
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(7-1) prevailed wUb 139 :.1:.~o!:.'-Jc~~~
potnll, -'-' .. n Rlvenide's IOOJ." iu, •....-~•HO••·' ....,,.... ... Oil Ml l kWwW \Ill. U.S. • .._... 136. Saddlebeck came ln ioco. ''' .. • 1 --. 11a., ,.,., J. third wlth 13. .......40CQ,, ,,.l ..... R. l:JJ•-...... , ....,,,.-a o..ec.....•a
Juan Sancbea. out of i ' rr ""DO \.91....,. • ...... ., ... _-_.ol_ t:t.; .._ . ....._ .,...., me....·•· ---~ wua~ __ , ... ,_,...,.toCQ.
winner, tbe 1,50() ~· .l -M U • t ... a ....
(4:02.4) Md 3,000•metilr J;MtOCQ. .._,.._ • ._.ii ..... W• ''--' .... ,,_,__ .. ..
ewmtl (9:13.lt. .....,{f""'"·' ,.._ ~ 00.---c.d· ~! -"•l.'.'tl'i.=:i JobaD CJlllOD .. tbe 110 ..... -11.~ \~ I dlll (IS.4)1 Cbudt Loo, llom ,. u--~ ,..0 .........
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_B4 __ Sotu_rdo);---.,~ __ ~h_4~,2_ooo ________________________ ~P()JlTS__;.. _______________________ ~_. ____ Da_i~---Pil_a
TOSHIBA
NOTHING
BUT ACES ·
T arry Nelson
· .A..(above} signs
autographs after his
11.nt-round tour of
Newport Beach
Country Club Friday.
At left. he llzes up
hll putt OD No. 18,
which he lank for a
blrdle. At right, 1996
champion Jim
Colbert finds his
way out of the trap
near No. 5.
Below, left. Dav~
Eichelberger, who
shares tbe lead with
Roy VuciDJch after a
five-under 66 , tees
off. Below, right,
the one and only
Lee Trevino bas a
laugh with fans
at tbe TosbJba
Senior Classic.
DAILY PILOT PHOTOS BY
.MARC MARTIN
\
-~_ily_Pilo_t ______ ~~~~~~_;__·SPORTS -~~~~~~~~~-----~-De Saturday, Morch 4, 2000 IW
CLASSIC
CONTINUED FROM B 1
Eichelberger,
still the Toshiba
Classic record
holder for a first.
round score (63)1
accomplished dur-
ing the inaugural
event at Mesa
Verde Country
Club in' 1995, was
alone atop the
leaderboard for Eiche~berger
lnost of the after-
noon, unW
Vucinich sank a
thrilling 30-foot
birdie putt on 18 to
tie Eichelberger,
after most of the
estimated 12,500
fans had gone
home.
"I'll keep trying
. ,.
~·ta :~·;·-~~~.
I ~·It
-· ,.. ~ .,... ' I'
to shoot low
(scores),• Eichel-Vuctnich
berger said. • 1
•Ever since the first of the year, my
putter has been going very well,• said
Eichelberger, who bas already fired
five rounds under 70 this sea.son.
Eichelberger, 56, enjoyed his finest
seaso1LQ.n the senior totir last year,
winning two titles -tbe U.S. senior
Open and the Novell Utah Show-
down -and finishing 17th on the
money list at $882,532.
So much for the proverbial window
of opportunity for seniors to cash in
between ages ;50-55.
"I'm not sure.exactly why,• Eichel-
berger said, when asked why he's
getting better with age. "Last year
was ID}'!, best year ever. I'm always
working on my swing, working on my
griP, and working on ,my stance, and I
try to play a lot in tbe winter. That's
the key for me, to just play a lot of
golf.•
With six birdies and one bogey,
Eichelberger has put himself in a
position to win again. He two-putted
and birdied the par-five hole No. 3,
then made the tum at two-under.
when he birdied No. 9, hitting a pitch-
ing wedge to 35 feet, then knocking
in the long putt.
MARIANNA DAY MASSEY I OAll.Y PILOT
Tom Kite reacts to a n ice putt.
hope to shoot 62 (today) and 61 on
Sunday.•
On the back nine, Eichelberger
opened with a birdie on the par-four
No. 10, using a sand wedge to get
within 10 feet of the jar.
the Toshiba scoreboard with a sand
wedge from .40 yards· out, then
drained an eight-foot birdie putt to go
to five-under.
"I was trying to hit the driver on my
second shot (at 18) and I got all tan-
gled up. I was lucky it didn't go out of
bounds,• Eichelberger said. • 1 just hit
a loft over the scoreboard (onto the
green). l could've taken a drop iJ I
wanted to, but my ball was in the
grass and the drop (area) was almost
in bare dirt. The scoreboard didn't
hurt much . I could see the flag well. It
was just set over the scoreboard and a
Each year, it seems, there's a log-
jam after the first round. There were
three leaders in 1997 and four leaders
in each of the last two years.
Eichelberger was first up in this
one. ln the seventh group to tee off
Friday morning, he made only 23
putts with his new stance and putter,
an Odyssey 550.
Eichelberger made a 20-foot putt
to save par at 12, then bogeyed No.
13, when he missed the green and
failed to get up and down.
FIRST ROUND
RESULTS
TOSHIBA
Dave Eichelberger 33-33-66
Roy Vucinich 33·33-66
Larry Nelson 32-35-67
Howard Twitty 34-33-67
Jose Maria Canizares 34-35-69
Hubert Green 33·36-69
Gary McCord 35-34-69
Tom Jenkins 33-36-69
lsao Aoki 35-34-69
George Archer 36-33-69
Allen Doyle 35·34-69
1oe Inman 35-34-69
John D. Morgan
Dana Quigley
Graham Marsh
Jim Ahern
Tom McGinnis
Hugh Baiocchi
Jim Thorpe
Bill Brask
Tommy Aaron
John Jacobs
Lee Trevino
Bruce "eisher
Al Geiberger
Bob Charles
Jim Albus
Terry Dill
Dean Overturf
Bob Dickson
Bob Eastwood
Hale Irwin
Walter Morgan
Fred Gibson
Kermit Zarley
Tom Kite
Walter Zembriski
Walter Hall
34-36-70 .
36-34-70
34·36-70
35-35-70
35·3S-70
35·36-70
35-35-70
37-33-70
34-37-71
35-36-71
36-35-71
34-71-71
35-36-71
37-34-71
36-35-71
35-36-71
33-39-72
34-38-72
36-36-72
35-37-72
37-35-72
36-36-72
36-36-72
36-36-72
35-37-72
36-36-72
He rebounded, however, by mak-
ing back-to-back birdies on 14 and 15
to climb atop the leaderboard.
On 18, Eichelberger was in trouble
in the pght rough, but chipped over
NOTES
lVIChedule
E5l'N s.turdllr -3-4:30 p.m. Sund9J • 2:3CM p.m.
Note: Schedule subject
to change at ESPN's
descmion.
Pain
in the
neck
NEWPORT BEACH -
For Larry Nelson to play in
a golf tournament is a pain
10 the neck, let alone try-
lng to finish one, or (gasp!)
win one.
Last year, because of
Dare-ups with a herniated
disc in his neck, Nelson
withdrew from two of the
three Senior PGA Tour
events in California,
induding the Toshiba
Senior Classic at Newport
Beach Country Club.
•1 told Jeff Purser, the
(Toshiba) tournament
director, that my main goal
was to make it through the
whole tournament,• Nel-
son said Friday, after
shooting an opening-
round four-under-par 67,
~ne stroke off the lead.
•It has a tendency to
get cool here at night, or
damp, and, maybe it's just
a coincidence (it Dares up
in California). I love the
weather out here.•
TODAY'S
SCHEDULE
•• TOSHIBA
7:40 a.m. -Jimmy Powell,
Jay Sigel, Dave Hill.
7:50 -Arnold Palmer,
Don Bies, Bob Lendzion.
8 a.m. · Lanny Wa.dkins,
Jim Dent; Bob Duval.
8:10 -Tom Warga, Dave
Stockton, Ray Carrasco.
8:20 • Orville Moody,
Buu Thomas, Gene Littler.
8:JO -David Lundstrom.
Chi Chi Rodriguez.
M iller Barber.
8:40 -Dale Douglass,
Larry Ziegler,
Bruce Summerhays.
8:50 · Rocky Thompson,
Mark Hayes, Jerry McGee.
9 a.m. -Steve Veriato,
Kikuo Arai. Tom Shaw.
9:10 -Harold Henning,
J.C. Snead, Leonard Thompson.
9:20 -Dave Graham,
John Mahaffey.
DeWitt Weaver.
9:JO -Calvin Peete,
John Bland, Jim Colbert.
9-AO -M ike McCullough,
Ed Dougherty, Butch Baird.
tree. I was really a simple shot. CQ N NE R
"Yeah, I guess it looked good' on
lV.·
In the final group, vucinich played CONTINUED FROM 81
a bogey-t'ree round, malting bitdies at
4, 8, 12, 15 and 18, to tie Eichelberger greens were ju.st beautify.1. so
for the lead. it wasn't tbe goll course that
•obviously I played well witb a was a problem today. It was
five-under 66, and that's (better) than , just me.•
I expected, .. Vucinich said. ·1 strug-In 1~. the Ironman
gled on two holes, five and six, but I Conner
saved par on both. I missed only three played in
greens all day. I put the ball in the more
fairway a lot and'put the ball on the than 30
green a lot." . ' 1 tpuma-
On 18, Vucinlch got stuck off the ments for
. tee in the ,right rpugh near. a ""thick the !Ourth
pine tree .. but cut a four-iron out of straight
trouble and left it 71 yards to the hole. year. He
From there, Vucinich hit a lob wedge struggled
30 feet past the pin, but still on the • With his
green. game
"I knew (the putt) was to tie for the early in
lead," said Vucinich, who calmly sank Conner the ye'a.r,
the long birdie putt for a share of the but was
top spot. "With my career being as on the teaderboard ror the
young as it is, it was a thrill playing final three days of the Las
with Jack Nicklaus and Arnold Vegas Seruor Classic and
Palmer (during the Florida swing) in tied for fourth at The ~layers'
front of those crowds. But (today) will Championstup of Summerlin.
be different. I've never led or been Conner became fully
tied for the lead before in a touma-exe mpt on the Seruor PGA
ment of this size.• Tour m 1.995, after tus
A former club pro at Allegheny fourth-place finish dl the
Country Club outside 'of Pittsburgh, National QualifY1Jlg
Vucinich finished eighth at the 1999 Tournament. He played on
Senior PGA Tour National Qualifying the Nike Tour mtemuttently
Tournament to earn his exempt status between 1990 and '95
this year. Born 'in Vienna, Austria,
"These are beautiful greens here ,• Conner still loves to play
Vucinlch said. "That poa annua is tenrus and considers Rod
good s tuff. Thdt's the kind of grass we Laver as one or his heroes,
have in Pittsburgh.• along with Arnold Palme r.
We have just made a special purcha e of extra 199 and 1999
inventory from ocher Mercedes-Benz Cence~ aero chc U ..
some centers were affected by ood weather. Other were imply
overstocked. The e are brand new vehicles chat we were able to
purchase at tremendou aving . And while they la t, we'll pass
chose saving on to you.
Frank Conner
Mike McCullough
Ed Dougherty
Butch Baird
Calvin Peete
John Bland
Jim Colbert
David Graham
John Mahaffey
DeWrt:t Weaver
Harold Henning
38-35-73
36-37-73
37-36-73
35-38-73
35-38-73
36-37-73
37-36-73
35-38-73
37-36-73
36-37-73
38-35-73
Nelson, who won three
major championships in
his PGA Tour career.
induding the 1983 U.S.
Open, started having trou-
ble with bis neck in 1998,
his first year on the senior
tour.
"Every once in awhile
my neck hurts and I just
don't have the strength in
my right arm,• said Nel-
son, who also withdrew
from the U.S. Senior Open
at Riviera. •it first started
happening 1 'h years ago.
My right arm just
flopped."
9:50 -.Walt er Zembriski,
Walter Hall, Frank Conner.
10 a.m. -Fred Gibson,
Kermit Zarley, Tom Kite.
We have a good selection of models and colors ·· with exceptional valu ·in
M.Class SUVs, C.Class dans, SL Road cers and LK Road cers.
J.C. Snead 36-38-74
Leonard Thompson 37-37-74
Steve Veriato 38-36-74
l<ikuo Arai
Tom Shaw
Rocky Thomps<:>n
Mark Hayes
Jerry McGee
Dale Douglass
Larry Ziegler
Bruce SUmmethays
David Lundstrom
Chi Chi Rodriguez
Miller Barber
Orville Moody
Buzz Thomas
Gene Littler
Tom Wargo
Dave StocktOfl
Ray C.rrasco
Lanny Wadkins
Jim Dent
BobOuYal Arnold ,.trner
Donliel
lob l.tndzlon
J~POMll
:.~
37-38-75
36-39-75
37-38-75
37-38-75
35-40-75
37-38-75
36-39-75
37-38-75
38-37-75
38-38-76
39-37-76
38-38-76
37-~76
37-40-77
38-~77
38-~77
38-~77
37-4,-78
39-~7'
42-37-79
38-41-79
·~79 JM0-79
.. 1.Jt..-«>
42.,,_;a1
4Mt-t1
Nelson took 10 weeks
off in his rookie year on the
senior tour because of the
pain, but said there's no
01re. He has good days
and bad days. •1 never
know if I'm going to make
It through,• be ~.
Nelson was up and
down in the first round,
making six birdies and an
eagle on the par-five No. 3,
but also bad four bogeys.
At 67, he's tied with
How~ 1'witty for second
place, but, truly, "I just
want to try to finlsh the
whole tournament lhil
year.•
Defending champlon
Guy McCord ~ot two-
under 69 and .. tied f«
ftfth, ·The~ here will
spook you. McCord IMUd.
•You've got to get the ball
under tbe bole. Have you
evs putted on top al broc:·
C'Ollf TbM'• whet l'I lb.
ft'1WMCl,notgr811.·
-'J ..... 0-
. ,
10:10 -Bob Eastwood,
Hale Irwin, Walter M0<gan.
10'.20 -Terry Dill, Dean
Overturf, Bob Dickson.
10:JO -Al Geiberger,
Bob Charles. Jim Albus.
1..0 -Biil Brask, John
Jacobs, Bruce Fleisher.
1ct50 • Tom McGinnis.
Hugh Baiocxhl, Jim Thorpe.
11 ...... ·DaN~
GreNm M.lnh. Jim Ahem.
11:10 -Allen Dovie.
Joe Inman, John 0. Morgen.
11:20 -~ Ardw,
Tommy Aaron. ~ Trfttno.
'
,,. -Gery MtCord.
1bm ...... Mo Aoki.
11• -Hocd91'd 1Wttty. JOllM9rtli~
. ...... &.\. ,,..Dllwij .......... -\\ldnktt. YnJ ........
We can't advertise the price of these vehicle , h1)wever we can ccll you chi -·
whether you want to lea e or buy, you can drive home in a new Merccdco;-Benz for
far less than you e\ter dreamed po ible ..
..., I . I ' ~ 1 , I ' I • 4
3300~ree bl • 800 CJ27-3576
Open Mon-Fri S.m-9Pm • Sit iam-7pm • Sun 10am-6pm • www.(Jmtrcedea.cOll
-v.l161J7S,-._11laM11 11 ;W c .... ,.....
..
I
~ -
,
'•
~----------~--~~~~~SPORTS ---~-------~-----~----~-i~~P_i~ Saturday, Morch ~. 2000
HIGH stHooL s199'1NG sPOm ,~EW . . · _ S8.ilors
JUGG,ERNAUT .tliun1p E~tancia splits
HIGH SCflOOL SWIMMING
Everybody from last
year's squad is back,
including a sophomore
named Peirsol.
Joseph Boo
DAILY PILOT ,
NEWPORT BEACH -Of
all the high schools in all the
cowities in all of the world,
Aaron Peirsol has to attend
Newport Harbor High.
Newport Harbor's boys
swim coach Brian
Kreutzka.mp is certainly hap-
py about this match. The
sophomore Peirsol bas the
third fastest American time in
the 200-meter backstroke,
CIF Southern Section titles in
the 100-yard backstroke and
500 freestyle, a silver medal
in the Pan-American Games
and a good chance to be the
second high school swimmer
in the last 25 years to qualify
for the U.S. Olympic team.
But Kreutzkamp also
knows this affair is fleeting.
Peirsol will not join the Sailors
until the end of March as he
swims in senior club team
meets. After that, he is plan-
ning to train with his club,
I.Mne Novaquatics, for most
of the season. Peirsol will only
swim in one or two dual
meets for Newport to qualify
for ClF.r where he will be
favored whatever events he
cbooses.
·Whenever we can get
him is fine with me,·
Kreutzkamp said.
With Peirsol's selective
contribution, sophomore
'Ryan Lean could be New-
port's most valuable swim-
mer. Lean finished 10th in
CIF in the 500 freestyle as a
freshman. Like Peirsol, Lean
Bo.e..1Wln1 " OUTLOOK .
THE sAJLOIS
Kyle Bean • Jr.
Peter Belden Jr.
Ryan Cook Jr.
Ryan Gough Sr,
Brendon Hansen Sr.
Steven Jendrusina Jr.
Shaun Johnson Jr.
Paul Kepner Sr.
Ryan ~ean So.
caine Littrell Jr.
Sean Marks Jr.
Brandon McC.lain Jr.
Aaron Peirsol So.
Brian Pence Jr.
Mitch Probert Sr.
Joey Snelgrove Jr.
Kurt Thayer Sr.
Robert Weiner Sr.
Greg Worthing Jr.
eo.ch: Brian Kreutzkamp
is a club swimmer who will be
out until late March because
of senior meets. But he will be
with the Sailors for the rest of
the season.
MLean and Peirsol give us
two club swimmers who
placed in CIF and can win
CIF. • Kreutzkamp said.
The rest of Newport's
swimmers should be familiar
to most ol the Tars' rivals in'
the Sea View League. The
Sailors are returning most of
last year's team and also wel-
come Stanford-bound water
polo standout Brendon
Hansen, who had played vol-
leyball his first three years.
Returning juniors Peter
Belden and Joey Snelgrove
were CIF qualifiers last year.
Along with Peirsol, they a.re
returning from last year's 200
free relay team that set a
schoolr~
Senior Kurt lbayer, junior
Ryan Cook and Hamon ue
freestyle sprinten who rose
out of some !Ough competi-
tion within the team.
•1 have too many sprint
freestylerl. • Kreutzbmp
said .. "l'm trying to turn some
of them into long-distance
swinunen and make them
better in other strokes.''
Senior Robert Weiner, a
CIF qualifier, and junior Kyle
Bean are the 100 butterfly
swimmers. Senior Mitch
Probert and juniors Sean
Marks, Brandon McClain and
Shaun Johnson swim the 100
breaststroke.
Juniors Steven Jendrusina,
Caine Llttrell and Greg Wor-
thing join. Peirsol in the 100
backstroke. Llttrell and Wor-
thing will also swim the 200
individual medley.
Paul Kepner was a CIF
qualifier in the 200 individual
medley and 'he will also com-
pete in the 500 freestyle.
Junior Brian Pence is
another 500 freestyle and 200
IM swimmer.
With a wealth of experi-
ence, Newport has a good
chance to be the second-best
team in the Sea View League,
behind powerful Irvine. <i
·we baye a lot of depth,•
Kreutzkamp said. ·we have a
very good team, one of New-
aort's best ever. We have a lot
ol guys who qualified for CIF
last year.•
Kreutzkarnp is hoping to
send enough of his swimmers
to CIF to make the trip a
eemorable one. And with
Peirsol expected to be the
favorite in two events, one
thing is clear for him and
Newport: They'll always have
CIF.
·onersc:--with Savanna
•.Corona del Mar is an
easY winner, as well, in
season. openers. ' .. 'IN= 1'0LLEYBILL
BEACH
-Newport Harbor High, the
reigning CIF Southern Sec-
tion Division I boys volleyball
champion, picked up where it
left off last sea.son, opening its
season with a 15-3, 15-11, 15-
10 sweep of nonleague host
Huntington Beach Friday.
Sophomore setter Lloyd
Wright,. a Santa Margarita
transfer, made bis varsity
debut with 60 assists, as Billy
Clayton (15 kills), Kent Tuck-
er (13), Brad Craig (12) and
Blake Tippett (10) paced a
balanced hitting attack.
Huntington Beach was
without its top player, San
Diego State-bound Matt
Wynn, who was serving a
one-game suspension after
being ejected from the Oilers
previous match. •
CdM sweeps FV
F<?.UNTAIN VALl.tV -
The Cotona del Mar High
boys ·volleyball team opened
its season with a 15-10, 15-12,
15-4 nonleague sweep of host
Fountain Valley Friday night.
sellor outside hitter Greg
Stampley paced the winners
with 26 kills and 14 digs,
while junior Evan Buider:i
contributed 58 assists.
• Strong efforts by Collier, Westphal, Cassity. ..
COSTA J\llBSA -David Collier was a double-winner for
Estanda Wgh's boys swim team in Friday's 88-61 nonleague
win over visiting Savanna. · · _ .J
Cqllier took first place in the 200-yard freestyle at 2:09.63,
as wtllJ as the~5oo freestyle (6:01 .00).
Phil Westphal prevailed in the 100.butterfly-(1:19.39) and
came in second in the 200 individual medley (2:42.0).
Other solo winners for the Eagles include Frank Gamboa in
the 200 individual medley (2:37 .21) and Matt Thorpe in the 50
freestyle (25.53). •
Westphal, Collier, Gamboa and John Reddoch also teamed
up to win in both the 200 medley (2:05) and 400 freestyle
(4:14.46) relays for the Eagles.
On the girls' side, the Eagles lost to Savanna, 80-61.
Lauren Cassity was the only Eagles' swimmer to post victo-
ries, winning the 50 freestyle (26.47) and the 100 freestyle
(1:01.69). .
Somer Flaherty came in second in both the 100 butterfly
(1:21.5) and the 500 freestyle (6:38.34) for Estancia.
Estancia will travel to Santiago Tuesday at 3 p.m. to take on
the Cavaliers.
YOUTH SOCCER
Ameba playing in
Sectionals at UCI
•Under 14 club set for
weekend tournament.
IRVINE -The Ameba, an
AYSO Region 97 boys under
14 soccer team from Newport
Beach will compete in the
eight-team Southern Califor-
nia AYSO Section 11 Champi-
onship this weekend at UCI.
TeaID$ from Santa Barbara
to Imperial Beach will be on
band for the two-day event
HAPPY IDIDAY
Cl ........ = ...... ......t# .. ....
r------·-------------~ : i 11 1 1 r r 1 I I
I I I I I I I : ~--------------~ ...., :.--· flD09ll1L
JamillaY.--.~ 0...••CGur .. vauauu
Eagles fall, 16-2
ORANGE -TENNIS
HIGH SCHOOL SPRING SPORTS PREVIEW
Chris Shepardson (14 kills
and 13 digs), Forrest Mack
(12 kills} Brian Gallagher (10
kills), and .Garrett Macklin
(seven kills) sparkled offen-
sively, while John Grod and
Cedric Chun ea.med praise
from Coach Steve Conti for
their back-row defense.
The Ameba, currently rid-
ing a l6·game winning
streak, will take on Fountiµn
Valley today at 10:45 a.ni. and
San Marcos. at 3:30 p.m.
On Sunday, the Arneba
will battle San Juan Capistra-
no at 10:45 a.m. and if they
reach the championship
game, starts at 2 p .m.
Estancia High's
boys tennis team opened the
2000 sea.son with a 16-2 loss
against host El Modena
Thursday.
•Sea Kings will rely
on their seniors and
freshmen for success.
Joseph Boo
DAILY PILOT
CORONA DEL MAR -
Nine seniors are returning to
Corona del M!'lf High's boy
swim team this year, which is
unusual for the Sea Kings, or
for that matter, any high
school swim team.
•Unlike most years, the
seniors are corning back,•
CdM Coach Jon Moore said.
"Most senior water polo play-
ers don't come back after the
water polo season, so this is
encouraging. They all feel
they can improve on last sea-
son."
Despite the nine CdM
swimmers fighting senioriti.s
this year, the Sea Kings will
be considered a young team.
That's because they will have
a staggering 19 freshmen on
the squad.
·1 have so many freshmen
on the team,• Moore said.
·1·m still learning their
names."
A lot of swimmers staying
and coming in just means th.at
CdM bas an ample talent
pool to draw from.
The Sea Kings are return-
ing seven of their eight swim-
mers who qualified for the
CIF Southern Section Divi-
sion I finals. Seniors Garrett
Gentry qualified in the 100-
y ard freestyle last year.
Seniors John Graass and
Omar Kattan also quaj!fied in
freestyle events. Blt\terfly
swimmers David Fabian and
Chriss Street both qualified in
the 100 butterfly, ~d breast-
strokers Mo1gen Johnston
and Sherwin Kim made CIP.
CdM is loaded with
freestyle swimmers with
Doug Jackson, Ryan Jetton.
Garrett Bowlus, Chase
Emery, Ron Hasso, Adam
Padilla, Chris Hinger and
Mike March. And Moore con-
siders sophomore Matt Mey-
er Cd.M's best long-distance
freestyle swimmer.
Senior Alex Niebenke and
junior 1Tevor Arnold will
swim the breaststroke for
CdM. Senior Chris
McCormick is the Sea Kings'
primary backstroker. Sopho-
more Brandon Powers can
also swim the back stroke,
and he will also do some
freestyle. Sophomore Bobby
Messenger joins Fabian and
Street in butterfly races.
Marc Pantuliano accompa-
nies fellow sopbomore Kim as
Cd.M's two individual medley
racers. Moore feels Pantu-'
liano should join Kim in the
CIF prelims.
And then there are the 19
Cd.M freshmen. Moore has
yet to sort through all of them
and figure out who will swim
what, but be has been initial-
ly impressed by Artie Dorr,
John Money and James
Strack.
Kevin Amendt, brothers
Brenton and Graydon Beller,
and David and Jason DiRoc-
co, Brett Brewer, Chase Dori-
an, John Edgett, Jonathan
Preiboft, Raymond· Harper,
Ali Kattan, John Mann, Ryan
Moore, Ryan Mullin, navis
Pirdy and Giancarlo Rivera
are the rest of the freshmen
on CdM's squad.
The freshmen will help,
but the Sea Kings' fortunes
eventually coJl)e along to the
returners. It also helps CdM
that it moved to Division D
and the Pacific Coast League.
•with all the talent we
have retwning,• Moore said,
•we're looking forward to
winning league, putting 1 O·
YOUTH SOCCER
CdM hosts Capistrano Val-
Jey Wednesday. DJ. Glacy won the Eagles'
two sets, winning, 7-6, 6-3,
after dropping the first set, 0-6.
Bo.11 swim , iii. OuTLOOK .fii}
YOUTH BASEBALL
Mustang Easter Camp on the horizon
• All skills covered in the three-day format.
Estancia will travel to Tra-
buco Hills to take on the Mus-
tangs Tuesday at 3 p.m.
THE SU KINGS
Kevin Amendt
Trevor Arnold
Brenton Beller
Graydon Beller
Garrett Bowlus
Brett Brewer
David DIRocco
Jason DIRocco •
Chase Dorian
Artie Dorr
John Edgett
Chase Emery
David Fabian
Jonathan Frelbott
Garrett Gentry
John Graass
Raymond Harper
Ron Hasso ·
Chris Hinger
Doug Jackson
Ryan Jetton
MOt"gen Johnston
Ali Kattan
Omar Kattan
Sherwin Kim
John Mann
Mike March
Chris McCormick
Bobby Messenger
Matt Meyer
John Money
Ryan Moore
Ryan Mullin
Alex Nlehenke
Adam P•dllla
Mart Pantullano
Travis Pirdy
Brandon Powers
Gl•ncario Rivera
James Stradt
Chriss Street
eo.dl: Jon Moore
COSTA MESA -Costa Mesa High's baseball coach Kirk
Bauermeister, his staff and current and former players will con-
Fr. duct a Mustang Easter Camp April 20-22 from 9 a.m. to noon.
So. The cost is $60 per player and it's for youngsters ages 8-13.
fr. The camp will focus on throwing, outfield/infield play,
Fr. pitching, catching, hitting, bunting baserunning and sliding.
Jr. For information, call (714) 432-1989 or (714) 424-8763.
Fr.
Fr.
Fr.
Fr.
Fr.
Fr.
Jr.
Sr.
Fr.
Sr.
Sr.
Fr.
Jr.
So.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
DANIELLE
CONTINUED FROM B 1
then scored two goals in a
5-4 semifinal win Feb. 25
over Santa Monica to wrap
up Daily Pilot Athlete of the
Week rec~on.
·she's a heady,
intelligent pJayer, • said
Cd.M Coach John Vargas,
whom Carlson regards as
both a ~ole model and
mento(. ·she's able to read
Fr. situations, which puts her in
Sr. position to score. She's a
So. real good defensive player,
Fr. who watches the ball and
So. anticipates. She bas a knack
Sr. for the game and she also
So. listens well to instruction
So. and·€811 apply what she's being told.•
NOM.IAGUI
El MoolNA 16, EsTMOA 2
~ -Glacy (E) lost to Toper,
0-6, def. Omeste, 7-6, def. Elsner,
f>.3; Trujillo (E) lost. 0-6, 1-6, 3-6;
Leones (E) lost. 0-6, 1-6, 2-6.
Doubles -Perez-Chun (E) lost to
Gulledge-Clavijo, 1-6, lost to
Olen-Trinh, 3-6; lost to Whizz-l.e,
Q.6; Duch-Atvergue (E) lost. ().6,
0-6, 1-6; Mumtaz-Valdez (E) lost.
0-6. 0-6, 0-6.
·There are so many
people playing S<><:cer, I
thought I'd have a better
future ~ water pdlo, • she
said. •And I found I liked
water polo much better
than soccer. I'm loving
water polo."
She was .first-team
All-American at the
14-and-under Junior
Olympics last summer in
San Jose, but didn't
become a prolific scorer
until this season.
•J'd always been a
defensive player," she said.
•The beginning of this
season. I was happy to get
my one goal a game. Then,
I realized I could be just ~
good as anyone else and I
needed to pick lt up. As a
team, I thihk we all picked
Fr. Carlson 's impressive numbers do not it up."
Fr. include her 5-foot-8, 108-pound frame, which Though she does not play the two-meter
Fr. prompted Vargas to nickname her •sticks.• . position, which typically produces the most
Sr. •rm relatively small for a water polo goals, Carlson uses her accurate outside shot,
Jr. player,• Carlson said. "I've always been a her quick driviog ability, and the transition
So. physical person, but I don't have enough game, to produce scoring opportunities.
Fr. body to throw around. I have to use my Though her shot is not overpowering,
So. speed and be smarf to have success. it's usually well.placed.
Fr. "I really trust what (Vargas, a former U.S. ·1 like to fake out the goalie by using my
fr. national team player who now coaches Team eyes a lot (which goalies focus on to try to
Jr. USJ\) says, because he isn't the biggest guy anticipate a shooter's aim). 1 do that to
either and he wound up playing for the compensate for not be1nq able to throw the
national team. 1 like the way he explains ball hard. But I'm working on (her velocity)."
12 guys in CIF, and pJacing
our team somewhere in the
top five in CIP. •
things and he knows how to be intense. He Carlson said she bas begun weight
takes an interest in yow questions and he traininq to add upper-body strength and she
inspires you to play harder and better.• noted Vargas bas indicatesf she may be
Carlson bas always enjoyed aquatics. She utilized at two meten as soon u next 118a10J1,
began 1Wimm1ng at age 5 lot the Newport Though she's excited about tbe CdM
Hills team and allO wu a Junior Weguard. . program's future, she is also already
She also competed in IOftbalJ, roller receivtog interest from collegiate suitors.
Ensign edges Stacy, 3-2 hockey and volleyball, but 90CCer was her •A coecb from Michigan State introduced Mesa edged by NOJ:tb lrvlne pession for nine )'Mn. himseJI alter a game and J got a reauiUng
1n seventh grade, however, abe gave letter from UCLA.• Mid Carbon, who upires NEWPORT BEACH -Blllign Junior
High'• eigbth·grade girls soccer team
defeated Stacy Junior High, 3-2 Wednesday
otternoon. • U.. l!val, Xen1• ~and J&. · ~ ·
McJC.ama lach scored goals for an.ign. with
offensive belp from mu... A.ma.. Kia I
Hanley, v ............ Ally Sloltll. aobln
S-0., Hon.ad ONddM and DeM Ow9CL
'Jbe defenle WU Jed by s.lly loler, ii••• AnlOld. Hayl9y Mlk, Mlgm Dlal. Noll 0-and C.., M1tlaa.
Pl'eMMDg tbe wtn wwe goa1keepel'I
•in 1WlddleldandAwn d1W1• w
f
Th;~~ =AAll· AYIO BllOI 120 water polo a try with the Corolla dal Mar to ooe day play for tbe pattonal teem.
Star under 14 boys IOCCer team from AYSO junior program, then sb1fted to the SoCal •rve been saying my wbole life, I want to
Region 120 wu edged by North Irvine, 2·1, ., dub program. hued at Pootbil1 High, as an be a doctor. But tint, J want to tee how lat
in J1Mtar action Saturday. eighth.grader. (water polo) takes me.•
....... 8el-, wltb belp from ..... lfel•ldl
and CONJ Polld. ICOred Costa MeN'I kme
goal early Ill the fourth quarter.
Strong def~= WU tulnad in by Orta~ Tonlel. .,.....
Cooper, Miiie GNem, Joli Bea-........_
M.91a~ WI W..._ and IM9o.m,
while l!rtc Sd'11llr and Nick'•*•• Mlped pulbtbean....
··IECIUllOUL AllDlllS
t -
_Do_i~~-Pi_~-----.--------------_:_ ______ /-.::_~~P()llfS ________________ · ______ ___;SoM~doy~,Ma--~_4~,2-000 __ 87_
M .I s s ING SHOOTING FOR THE MOON .
Top-seeded
Bishop .
Montgomery
(21-2-3). the
designated home
team in today's •
ClF,Southem
Section Division rv boys soccer
title game against
No. 2-seeded
Estancia (19-1-1},
is riding a 21-
garne 'unbeaten ·
streak (1.9·0·2).
PIECES
The CdM boys open
shorthanded, but could
wind up in fourth
straight CIF :final.
&any Faulkner
OMV Plt.oT
CORONA DEL MAR -
Think of Bob Villa without his
tools, Branford Marsalis with-
out his horn, or Robert DeNiro
without a script.
These hypothetical scenar-
ios should help one under-
stand the deprivation Corona
del Mar High boys volleyball
coach Steve Conti is experi-
encing, having to begin the
season without his full comple-
ment of players.
Returning starters Kevin
Hansen, an All-CIF Southern
Section senior setter bound for
Stanford, and senior outside
hitter Alec Hanson, as well as
expected contributors Charlie
Alshuler and Ryan Inman,
spent the week preparing for
the state basketball playoffs,
instead of Fridiiy's volleyball
opener at Fountain Valley. The
soonest they'll be available is
Wednesday.
Besides missing the baskel·
ball foursome's obvious talent,
Conti has been forced to aJ1
but postpone the experiment-
ing he believes will 6e
required to arrange the pieces
of the personnel puzzle for
optimum results.
"The frustrating thing is, l
can't tinker now," said Conti,
who has guided the Sea Kmgs
to three" Straight section title
matches, including last year's
Division 1 final won by Back
· Bay rival Newport Harbor.
•without our basketb&ll guys,
there's less room to work on
things."
·The quartet's delayed
arrival will, at least, create
opportunities for the live new-
comers currently competing to
gain valuable varsity experi-
. ence.
But, as has been the case in
previous years, Conti believes
the Sea Kings won't be close to
their potential until late in the
campaign.
Hansen, who helped CdM
win the section Division Ill
championship as a sophomore,
will be the figurehead in !tis
final prep campaign.
"He's proven, so I'm not
worried about him,• Conti
said.
Conti also Likes the idea of
· utilizing the 6-foot-4 stand-
out's hitting ability, which
could lead to more frequent
use of a 6-2 scheme.
'
"We ran Ule 6-2 (two set-
ters) about 15% of the time last
year,· Conti said. • u gives
teams a different look and it
allows Kevin to !tit. And he hits
pretty well."
Junior Evan Burden, who
will handle setting chores until
Hansen arrives. will be the
second setter in such a sce-
nario.
· Whoever is triggering the
attack, senior outside hitter
Greg Stampley, a se~ond-team
All-Sea View selection last
year, will be getting a fair por-
tion ot the sets. ' '
"Both Kevin anci Greg are
three-year varsity players who
have also played club,· Conti
SCHEDULE
1 Alec Hanson
2 Charlie Alshuler
4 Kevin Hansen
5 Evan Burden
6 Chris Shepardson
7 Garrett Macklin
8 Cedric Chun
9 Ryan Inman
10 Brian Gallagher
11 Greg St ampley
13 John Grod
16 Forrest Mack
Coach: Steve Conti
Sr.
Jr.
Sr.
Jr.
Sr.
Jr.
Sr.
So.
Jr.
Sr.
So.
Jr.
said. "We expect big things
from both of them.
Joining Stampley as valu-
able hitters will be the 6-0
Hanson, as well as 5-to senior
Chris Shepardson.
"Chris and Alec both start-
ed at various times last year,
but Alec had the edge at the
end of the season," Conti said.
"We need t o find a way to
get all three on the court this
year, because they all provide
good ball control.•
Forrest Mack, a 6-6 junior,
and Garrett Macklin, a 6-3
junior, are up from the junior
varsity to compete for time at
middle blocker.
Inman, a 6-3 sophomore
and the MVP on the frosh-
~oph last spring, is another
candidate in the middle, an
area Conti considers his
biggest question mark head-
ing In ..
"We've been spoiled by
having what I think was the
best one-two punch in Orange
County at that position the last
two seasons,• Conti said.
Dennis Alshuler, a three-
time All-t:IF honoree, was part
of both the aforementioned
middle tandems, but he's play-
ing for Princeton this season.
Charlie Alshuler, a 6-1
junior and Denn.is' brother, has
expressed a desire to pJay in
the middle this season, though
Conti said his future is outside.
Senior Estancia transfer
Cedric Chun, who began his
prep career in Hawaii, will
help out in the bqck row,
where sophomore John Grod,
the No. 3 option al setter,
should also contribute. Grod, a
left-hander, can also play
opposite the setter.
Brian Gallagher, a 6-2
junior, has also shown promise
outside, Conti said.
Several coaches project
CdM as one of the top teams in
the COWlty, but Conti predicts
they won't look like it early.
Entering the Pacific Coast
League for the first time, CdM
is the consensus favorite to
handle perennial PCL power
Laguna Beach.
Conti said lack of strong
teams in the PCL, caused him
to adjust his schedule.
~Five-of the top 10 teams in
the county were in our league
last year,· Conti said. "With-
out that kind of competition
·this year, we'll go to the Santa
Barbara Tournament the last
week in April. And we're play-
ing Newport Harbor twice late
in the season-.•
'
~ The Knights •
are paced by
senior midfielder
Stephan Pettit
DON LEACH I DAIL PILOT
Estancia High's Fernando Medina, shown stealing the ball away
from a St. Francis defender, along with his teammates, will
fie for the CIF Division IV boys soccer crown today at 10 a .m.
against top-seeded Bishop Montgomery at La Mirada High:
(15 goals and 12
assists) and senior
sweeper Freddie
Tartaglia (being
recruited by Cal
State Dominguez
Hills), according
to fifth-year coach
Kevin Clarke, a
former Bishop
Montgomery
player.
'The Del Rey
League
champions start
Tony Guzman in
goal.
Tales and tribulations
•Looking back, there's no question,
Carleton Mean~. hpd the right attitude.
. o ut of World War II; ,
two of the biggest .
days that sparked
energized good cheer was
Victory in Europe (VE Day)
and Victory over Japan (VJ
Pamer, Rollo
McClellan, Class of
'38, always enjoyed
the humor that
followed himall the
way through school
.d<JyS .
Jim Douglas;
class president, iS
prepared to answer
any questions from
classmates at (949)
240-0372 or writing
to 3244 Paseo
Gallita, San
Clemente,
92672. . Day). After alrt~ost four years,
war-weary people were
ready for a sensational
celebration.
No one knew that better
than Pilot Sports Hall o,l..
Farner Carleton Mears who
sensed thdt he had the
unquestionable power in
spring of '45 to act as
preside nt of the Newport
Elementary School and make
things right for the student
One that still
stands out was a
Costa Mesa
Elementary School
episode on the
playground one (lay.
Oon Contrell
SIDELINES
Douglas, a tackle
on the '44 football
team and an old
back all~y
basketball buddy of
body. .
To him, the end of the war
in Europe· definitely meant
all the kJds deserved the day
off to celebrate.
Hence, he wasted little
time extencbng words to all
the kids to boll their classes
and head for lbe beach.
While he may have
thought that the story would
disappear over the years, be
was a bit astonished at the
last Class of '49 reunion at
the Balboa Pavilion to fipd
mate Don Jones addressing
the crowd and repeoting the
famous story.
M ears would have a price
to pay later when
principal Horace Ensign
harked him into his office
the next morning. He was
quickly swept out of his
student office. •
He failed to und.erstand
what the school teachers,
bus drivers, cafeteria
workers and janitors would
do the rest of that day. His
classmates still draw smiles
and Jaughs out of the rare
event.
However, it lT,lake good
sense in looking back,
especially to the young at
heart.
Another Pilot Hall of
McClellan was often
irritated by a new kid in
school named Glenn 0 .
Thompson. who developed
a habit while playground
football was underway of
creating constant tension.
.It was readily apparent
that the new kid didn't like
McClellan. but he never
knew why for a long time.
Henc~. he chose a ·shocking
way to end the nonsense by
leaping on his back when he
had the ball and ripping his
shirt time and again.
And when Thompson
found that McClellan as
faster and would outrun him
in track, he changed his
...attitude. McClellan laughs
over the reason Thompson
turned on him. It was
jealousy. McClellan had a
pet pony and he didn't.
The outcome found the
two fellows becoming
life-long friends in sports and
social life. Thompson also
became a rear admiral in the
Coast Guard years later.
f A rare and special event
has been mapped out by the
Class of '45 -a 55-year
reunion and it has been
scheduled for 11 a.m.
to 4 p.rn. on Sept. 21 at
the Balboa Bay Club's
Governor's Room.
The main attraction will
be a superb luncheon, but
the price of the event will
include, if desired, guest
rooms for out-of-town
visitors.
NBA Hall of Farner
George Yardley, has released
his tribute to classmates of
'45 who have passed on.
The list includes Don
Vaughn, Harpld Van de
Walker, Merlin Gage,
Dorothy Dodd, Virgie
Dubois, Bob Dunlap, Bob •
J;:Ienley, Genevive Holbrook,
William Kauffeld, Evelyn
Rea, Setty Wright, William
Pollard, Darrell Turner.-
Majorie Jones, Jean
Alexander, Wally Belau,
Ruth Miyada, Bob Stanley,
Duane Thornton and
Norma 'Ilipp.
· D ouglas said the class iS
still looking for Dent
Robinson, a fine varsity
gridder and basketballer
during his time. The last
word was that he had joined
the Merchant Marines.
Ralph Freitag, Class of '46
and a Pilot Hall of Famer,
once laughed over grid
teammate Jim Douglas who
used to buy and sell used
autos.
"There was a service
station iri Balboa that sold
used cars and it was owned
by the cheapest and most
scurrilous man we knew,'•
Freitag said.
·Jim sold this guy a fine
looking car. The fellow drove
it around the block and quite
thoroughly checked it out.
As we were going back on
the ferry, Jim told us that
lhere was just one little thing
wrong with the car. It had no
reverse gear.•
Shaun FefTYman
David Van tigo
Rick Hatsushi
Nate Jones
Gary Bogert
Carlos Jaime )
Chai Hunter
Ian Nouget I
Huy Tran
COMh: Jon Carlew
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
Jr.
So.
• Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
LEARNING
• Carlew returns to
finish what he started
with his senior-laden
Mesa volleyball team.
COSTA MESA -The sev-
en seniors who comprise this
year's nine-player Costa
Mesa High boys roster can
credit much of their volleyball
education to Jon Carlew.
Now, Carlew, who spent
the last two years away from
the program while finishing
work on his own college
degree. is back to oiler a little
postgraduate guidance.
· ·1 coached this group of
seniors when they were in the
seventh, eighth and ninth
grade~.• Carlew said. "I'm
their third coach in three
years, but it's a little different,
because they know what to
expect from me.•
Due in·no small part to the
foundation of knowledge
imparted by Carlew, who
oversaw tbe program from
1995-97, these seniors helped
the last two teams reach the C.fF playoffs, ending what
had been a 14-year postsea-
son drought.
Carlew, who also played at
Costa Mesa, hopes to keep
the streak alive and there is
ample talent to foster such
optimism.
"We have a real good set-
ter and two real good outside
hitters,• Carlew said. •And
these guys want to win and
are working hard in practice.•
Seniors Shaun Ferryman
and David Van Ngo, both of
wbom were second-team All-
Pacific Coast League per-
formers last spnng, are the
outside hitters of whom Car-
lew speaks.
The aforementioned setter
is 5-8 junior Calvary Chapel
transfer Gary Bogert, who
started for the Eagles as a
freshman, -then sat out his
sophomore campaign. He
triggered the Calvary attack
in the 1998 second-round
playoff match won by Mesa.
The 6-foot-3 Ferryman is a
strong leaper in his third var-
sity season. He may help to
lessen the void created by the
graduation of two-time All-
CIF outside hitte r B.J .
Llghtvoet.
Van Ngo is 6-1, while the
middle will be patrolled by 6-
3 senior Nate Jones and 6-0
sophomore Carlos Jaime.
Carlew likes the athleti-
cism of both bis middles.
Rick Hatsushi, a 5-10
senior who, Uke Perryman
and Jones, helped the basket-
ball team to its first playoff
berth since 1992, will start
opposite tbe setter. ·
Seniors Chaz Hunter, Huy
lran and fan Nouget provide
depth.
"l like our potential, but
the first actual scrimmaging
we did was (fuesday), • Car-
lew said. "There's a lot of new
~we have to learn and we
have to learn how to play
together."
The revised PCL, which
adds Corona del Mar to
perennial league champion
Laguna Beach. could, Carlew
believes, aeate e three-team
race for third-place a.lid the
final guaranteed playoff -
berth.
But wbile the Mustangs
defeated Laguna Beech l.ut
spring for the first ~ in bis-
tory, Carlew e•pects bls
tquad to join UniversHy and
Estancia in the cbate pKk ·
behind CdM and Laguna.
Carlew. who will enMlt for.
mer Mesa pleyer Tbm
Ughtvoet to coech tbie junior
vanity and frolh-.,pb. UC> ii
pleued about en lnfUll6oo al
~ taMnt Into ........ .... ·w.-..30..,_ ...
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., .............................. 'i,llU4 ........ _., ....... u ....... .... -....... ,... ........... ...,.... ' .... ..,_ .. "*"' ./ ................ s.r-.-1ce
'(Long Beach) • 7JC • ........................ '4,Jlt..._'t...., ..... 1'C _ ... ...,.
_ , .... ,.,... ................... ' ............. Tll717>4
./ ~ Custalller
QUALITY PRE-OWNED VEHICLES AT GREAT PRICES
'93 CADILLAC Sedan DeVllle Wllll'T LAITI '91 HONDA Accord EX 11D Cllll 11 LAITI '93 CADILLAC Seville · WGWI
l.Mlw. ABS, Aql. Only ~,214 Ce'1lld ...... HuryYI (3EG8385) ,,... C..., ,._~TC. OIM. I.ow MilMI C2JCQB132l l.edw, CMlml '\Iii-*, be ~ Gold f'ldrage, 'Ill, C11AM. ABS (119114e)
'98 CADIUAC Sedan DeVllle 17 ,502 •ES '00 CADILLAC Escalade $41,141 '97 CADILLAC SlS WDWI
Clwofne WNell. IMllllt, ABS (3XOT003) IMllN<, Onallr, Clwofne Wheell. C.V0 Daora 17, 280 C..S .._, Clwofne WhMll. lellhlr OnSw. Don1 Mo-. TNI CN (3UUM585)
'98 CADILLAC nc WOWll '98 CHEVROLET Tahoe LT $21,171 '99 BUICK •• , LS . $11,111
-·
Whit DIMaldFtlllh, BoM, COSlecMr. Clwoml. WhMll, ~ ln/CMpuTA113) Wowt 14,316c.tled .... l..elllel. CO, Aidt~ Seel.~ (4APYllO). ~. l..elllel.c:oic...e.. PcMrWlndowl, Lodca, 1111,3.1\16, ~ Alr'tlll(4ElH417) _,
'98 CADILLAC Catera WOWll '92 PONTIAC SUnblrd . WOl'T IASTI '98 CADILLAC Eldorado GREAT VILUEI
6,437 c.tllllld Mlle, aw-WhMll, be c:-ico, IMll1et. Spa4lela Ctlnbtny Anllh (3XHH571) ; ~, Wowt 29, \14 Cer-.i ,._, 3.1 Ye, Alo>j8, Pwr Wlr-.t.odla, 1111, CMN, 0-(2ZUM70) Clwomt WhMll. ........ A8S, C:..... 11 Mort EldlndD'I To 0-Fft)m (3XENS08)
'99 OLDSMOBILE Aurora SM,m '99 CADILLAC Catera WOWI '95 CADILLAC Sedan DtVllle WOWI
LMlltlef, aw-Whlell, c-<:o, Dull Powlt &Mia,~~. PIMM Renlll (10G990) 8.894 c.rtllld ..... 0-WhMll. be co.ic-. l..Mlher. &..... Thawwtcll Fft)m N1w (091151) Plddld 1fl Tap, 0.-'l'il-*, Oc*I Pl!Q, IAlllet, C-. Celt T1* C1M11 St1 QJicldJ (214571)
'97 GMC Extended Cab SLE $11,-'98 CADILLAC Catera $11,-'99 OLDSMOBILE Alero's $12,771
Aql. Bdnef. CO, Pww ~'Ill. CNIN. S.7, VI(~) 0-~. C-. l.ellllr. 1>1111 Pww .._ABS. V6 (4AYH154) 8'>0llM In I <>i.e. Your CllOlce Prior,_,.... (40VN242/4006683)
'99 CADILLAC $TS --116 CADIUAC Sedan DeVllle SAVEi lf.t CADIUAC Alltwood Brougham WOWI
Wllwl 11.225 Cel*d ...... IAlht, 8-c-<co. 0-Whelll. Mlnlaly P110 (828803) Sim Top, CU111or!! Gille, Only 118.2113 ....... Nol Mwiy I.lie Thll ~ (2Ct040) VOgll9 l1rM, ClwUM Whee9. Gold ~. i..-ltlet, V«y ""-And (3PH0805)
'94 CADILLAC Eldorado $17.-a '00 CADILLAC SLS '99 CAOILI.AC Sedan DeVIHe $27, -
8lm Top. 0-Whlell, a-C--..C0 ,..._, IAelher. Gold l'9dalQI (3TCM711) ~ .._ Anlltl, 0-W..., i..-ltlet, c...e.. Prior,_.. (400V441)
'98 CADILLAC ETC $27,97 '99 CADILLAC nc '97 CADILLAC ITS SZ7PJ
~0-'\Iii-*, be C0811cUr. IAelher, Moonloal. 511111111-* Fhlll. (tOO(*>) 8111:* hMy! Only8,1U ..... ec. CO. 0-WllNll, .......,(1113310) WhltOIMland Arllll\ ._, ....,, 0-.. Wh9lll. ......,,MIS (4R>U417)
'98 CADILLAC Concours s2e,w '97 CADILLAC Catera LOW 1aa1 '91 CHIVROLIT llazer 4x4 LS llMl IUllYI
Mil Ollllland Arllll\ 0-wtr"'-COSlllcMr, LMlw (3XV0930) t.loomlcl, 0.-Whtlll. be. ......... P11o1w (083888) CO, ,._~ta, CNle, Aloy9. ,..._ All8 (123412)
COAST CADILLAC CELEBRATES OVER 402 YEARS OF EXPERIENCE
-.... 'L .
'
·1
, ,,,
·) 1 ·l · ' ' } ' ·~ 'i ·)' . l 1 ~ I~-I ~ . I I ,, ~ ' . ~ 1 f ... ~\ :. '•
.. , f
DOn Plrtctl ... $. Nltltr ~·'°" F. Jolcelrn •
6-wil MllllO" Glnlf1I 81111 Mii... 51111 ......
32V... 20V.. ...
::
m ....
rJ ,., ....
........ ....,t
Thi lolowlng penons are ~ bullneU I I: pf9dlion Door Ind Wln-
dOW, 790 N. Main Unit
M, Or8nge, c.lllomla
92887 Soon EdWlrd Bounds,
780 N. Mlk'I Unit M, Or· enge, Cllltomil 92867
Thil bullne-• II oon-duc:led by: Ill lndlYldUll
Hive you 111rted
dOlng bulinel& yet? No
SclOlt E. 8oundl Thia IUllement was
nled with the County
Cllfl( of Onlnoe County onOH3·2000 2000ll11194 0111v Piiot Feb, 12, 19,
26, Mir. 4, 2000 S.308
F1Ctltl0ua lualMii ...,,., St8ttment
Thi following Pll"IOOS ire dolna bullneN as: • Don F._,. Mexlcln
R11t1ur1nt, 12465
8e1ct1 BM!., Stanton,
CUlomil 80880
FelOe Gomez a.rc11. 11731 OoYer Lane. Oat·
den Grove, Cllffomla 112841 Thia bullnels II con-
ducted by: Ill lndlvldual Hive you 111r1ed
doing business yet? Yes, 10,.<nm .
Felipe Gomez Gartla
This IUl11tnenl WU llled with the County
OM of Onlnoe County
on 01 ·20-2000' 2000ll17'12
Dally Piiot Feb. 19, 26,
Mir. 4, 11, 2000 S.309 .. ...,.,:l -~'
' '' .. .·,
JARA
•
' .~... ' . " . ,, 4
J
Salur~. March 4, 2000 SI
II -·-rill
411 .r; llyl'u llyPllene By M.Mia Penom
H.ttC'" aml cl1•a1Uu11·· art• ·UhJ•'fl IO 1·lia112r "11ho111 uuhrr Thr
p11hL·hrr rr..-nl'• thl' nl!ht hi ~·C'n·•ir m·lu··lf~. fl'\'"'' ur rl'J'' I
1111~ du.-1fircl a1h 1·m,rn.wlll Plr.t•f' l'l:'~n am rm1r 1h111 rua~ hr
iu \our 1•la--1fi1•1I ad 111wieilia1rl~ ni .. Oath Pilot Ol"t"t'Jlh no
li1J1U11\ ror /1111 rrrtlr Ill a11 u1htnt-f'lllflll r.ir •hll'h II nl8\ I>!" n·-pon~ihl~ ,.,; ... pt f11r tlw •'•M of 1lw •p11>'C' u• 11mlh 1~·cuplrt! It~
1111· 1•rr11r. ( rc>llir c·w1 m1h tw 11llo111t1cl for thr fiN 111-rrtwu
(•11•111.:ll·h:,•11 .
fP"°"' .... m1 fw~•\1tf1t11,1111 1J1ttl
\Ji•il" HHH~,.i r 111 .. l •1 If, otll \011 , ....... "" . , .. ., .. , ....
(•11•J) h1:! . .-1ff'X .\:10 \\1·-1oh.11 "•n···•
( c"tu \li··u ( '\ 11:.!h:!.., ------Deadlhies ---=-----..
t;. . . .;..;.. • \' ~"' . f'' . . . . \ -~·~·· .,...)
LOWEST P
IN PHASE. I OR I HARBOR VIEW HQllEMBR-2.5 BA TitS
UPGRADED KITCHEN, BATHS ETC.
EXTRA LAA.GE LOT
OPEN SUN 1 :30·5
1607 PORT CHARLES
OEAAY LONG
COLDWELL BANK.EA
M•71•2366
Gl EQUAl. HOUSING OPEN SAT a SUH
OPPORTUNITY E.lclutivel Mesa Ven!e No 4111 281. IClPIOX 2000 sl,
All inl .... ""flllllt 1111111 1-M, ltm rm, lrgkit, ru.I Fp.
_...,.. le ....... It .. fM· pool. $297 500. Af#, Bet1y
ltllfelllllnlflt-.tllt"'" Parker. can for appl
.....-............... 71'-564·1403 J
te Mffttlt• ... , ,..._._,. (•Sidi Flur 38129i 800ll
ll•lltlftl ti ftlll .. IHllH $tolagl, 1afve ylfd. '2+ 1C
.._. " '"'· 111"· , ....... QlflOI. Pro6eli. $299,000. ........................... AgellC 94~1 .....,, .,..._, "" ........ i> OPEN FWIOW:SOA 1' -'' "' -• "'*-'· SS7 20"nt ST 31481 281111 ........ "._ .. ,....... .
'"' ... .,,,., •nt "' ~~RV ~=r:.
::,:::: .::: $475,000. ~ Mell
................. , ... ,....,. PropelM. 949-~2221
"' ....., ...., ... 11111 Ill OHN UT. ION ,.,..... .,.tttt11e 11 1111t 1 llO OHIO PUCE
........,.,. ............. V•NnMellVerot
..... ......, .... Te-huge lol ¥1!1138r 281 home .......... ,, ........ ~::~ .... "" .. ,.....,...., '" _ __.;..;.;;....;;.;...;;...;__.;. __ ........... DC_,._. lil:;Mli:M::;;l ......... at-...
•V.A.• .........
FMI COUNSEUNG
na UST~ Hot.ES
HUM'AREPOS
7f4-134 HOO
-, .&on> ' ~..1
, I ,_, , I '·i . _ .. , ..
• .. \ j
' . . ·~ •'..!
•• -.J., Tf,.
• Lkio l1i1nd le1uty Sllt,000 • 38dl'm 28h. new IPPll. overli.ted 2Cll
ger. -RNIEsttters 1111 '714-241-4532'
.CAMEO BIGlllANDS
4607 DOICllDTll IOAD
1891.008. 1935,000 ...
Some Yiew, pool, roomy ._
3 bedroom•, 2 112 b.da.
Ol'IN SATISUN I 14
HARBOR VIEW 811.1.s
New• Market, 10,550 1.I.
CGnii' .... eolW ............
2112 Mlla, •per t.milY room, a.cu ...... Oialy·IU9,000.
' AIPt OlfU. '
2lr .. l.o'lely remodeled
Cando In I llfllt toe. s 184K.
Huny wontlasl1 Elll & J1RJ
Teyler. Af 94M42-4l22
OCEAH FR0HT Custom
3tw 3.5ba. lj)IOll 3 t OOll
.f'iclc your own rftshes, AvrM
May 2000. L & C Dev. UC
$2.950.000 949-631·2933
000 ISL£ 8ranc1 N8W COO:
s1NCtltln. 38r 481. ~
3td tloot Ocean-Hatbof ~ ~ OllereC111 $1,450.000
811T. Grundy AHllOll M9-67s.6161 klftif vliW Hille new on
the ITlllMI. 10,350 n comer
lol, IOlid 3& 2.581. super
lamilV rm. $839,000 . .,.
94H73-8494
NEW
CUSTOM
HOME
$1,395,000
Principel• Only
8lrlOwner
8()().6.4M661
•••••••••••• Short term
Cotponltl .........
SWtlne8t· l10MIMC>.
Fumlllhed ...=: 11¥111 ••
from the beMh.
••u•11
\1 ''"I"~' Hh·I & II." •1 ./ u.n Monday ............ Friday 5:00pm Thursday .. \'\ednesda~ S:UOpm
l1·l1·11ftu111• /L IOa111-·1 11111'111
\~••L11 ·I t•t..• • Tue:..day ......... Monda) 5:00pm Fnda) .......... Thun,day S:OOpm
\\;1IL-l11 ILI011111-.·1 fMlp111
,~ ... 1.. •• 1, ... ,
Wednesday .... Tuesday 5:00pm aturday ........... Fnday S:OOpm
On the move?
Sell your extra
household ·
items
in Classified
• Boat slips available •
Sorry No Peu
NOW LEASING 2BRl2BA
and 2BR/2BA with den
$1995-$2800
FAIRWAY APARTMENTS
AT BIG CANYON
GATED COMMUNm BY F~HION ISLAND
Beautiful tree-liled strHts end golf course
views. Enjoy carefrff living In your lafVI
2 SR epartmenl home!
• Two-car g8lllge
• WasttW/dly« hl2<*ups
• Fife~• (wood & gel)
• Ilk eoncMkJnlng
•Wet bar
• $2,280 to $2,600 ~
· Plca.sc call .(949) 760-0919 Pie-. call (949) 8«..(15()11-1.!!.L
Another Eaex --
•Luxury & Convenience Group • Leather
•AM/FM Cass. & CD •Trailer Tow
• 5.0L VS • Mach Audio
• Homelink • Moonroof
s299/mo.
_.,...,,. ....... llilliil
... .......... 11t.Dl. 11111111 ti
8'U77.11 a-. ..._
. . -. .
'. j -· .. . , . ' -
:'l.-_ • • • I • . > •
. ~
' -• • • i .. ~
2·5'y TWM, 11t dbl cw ger. wld ,. ... 1300lf. 11700/Mo 211 O Th\I rln Ave. (Vlctorlll~wporr 87* MM..11-482 I ilW t"'° front Ind
• One Year's f r•t' Rent! •Apartment full otlllrnlturt of Your Choice! 1ld1 ~::rage. ~Br , S140Mno. j;.nj • Frtt Groceries for Ont Year! • • Two Month's Frei Rent! -• Fret Utilities for Ont Year! • Two Beach Cr)llstrs or Mountain Bikes!
• Ont 'Month's Fr11 Rent! • Frtt Wttkly Maid Se~lct for One Year!
e A M•• R1frt11rator and Microwave! e Ont Year Passes to Edwards •ml Dlsntyl1nd! 38r 21• LlnclNr1I Adul. HfW Cllpel, Pline. W/d, 510ve, dNi & Ille. S\800t'mo.
!TUii be SS + 949-759-1910 Every v1s1tor to Corona do at Newport plays ANO w1ns 1 •
lllW StJJdlo, 0111 ind Dual Mlst1r Two Bedroom Aplrtmtnts Ill trtndy lltwpOrt Hllfftti.
Tiie countertops, hardwood-style floors, mirrored closet doors.
Glass shower enclosures, cellln1 fans, new appliances.
Turtlefoclt 28t t
home. 2 car gar, no ~1 S 185Mno ,locross lrom urw-
versily H~ !M9-675-6374. Gated community w/resort pools, spas, tennis, volleyball, ~asketball, fitness.
Walk to Newport Beach shopping' dining, leave your car at home! l*::al From $700 to $1250
Irvine Avenue at 16th, Newport Beach
(888) 719-1988
0 Pl11ts lrt rtdtemlblt upon move.on Up.res 4/lt'OO,
mO'tt onby 4/l)/O() Ho01tie•d1Scounts1pply Oo\C
7h~f.9.£#
Living In Luxury
~
· ~i~estvle ...
unparalleled In
Orange County
From 'I. 795lo 1~100
1-877-681-7387
• 24 Hour Gated
• Full-time concierge S81VIC8
• Elegonl one 01
two bedroom ptons
• GOlgeous clubnouse
• Lov1Sl'I pool, spo
• F11T1ess foclhties
A1
Santo Barbara at Son Otmente
NewporrBm
• Steps to Foshion Island,
wonderful restouronts,
shopping, ond enterto1nmen1
IA Y CAHT 381 + llrge
't>onoslolllce. 2.SSa. srw;;.
• ~. llc/$DI, 7500sl lot $:!600.'mo: Avail 311. lnclds
gatdener and spe carel!
Open Sit/Sun 11-3. 1911
LMwerd Ln Mt-574-5552
8uH Lye~ 4bi 401 home, 2 c• !JI'. glled, comm. 2 prv bdl'a. Ho
!Mt•. 1 yr 1 ... $4750 avail
... 28r W/pYI gar. WfO, Fp. May or June MMSt-6375
Perteet Newpoit Coast Loe Gfiit SunMI• & Bey vi-ews f~~c: ~ = 381 ~ ~ydf-~ls AilpOll/kvwle Spectrum at 111eeno111. ·-· --· • 73 fwy, f'rom Sl490. S2800t'mo. 9'9-641>-1?17
Hl88-27&-<44S1. 8~~= 4~•·=
1
19'3:1° l =':89.trs~~ 2br 2be; VfllY ciHlii'cute , veulted c.lla, W/O hkup.
-------12 Clllf p , Wllltt to lllldl ... Sir 311 fem rm, belc, ' $1475/mo. MMn-7IOO oaraoe. wtd hlrupe, ~ Iii cyn 36i 2.st>e Dian roe, I blk to ~shop g, Tlllrhne, guild ga1ed tum,
$2195/Mo 9'9-67S-0&72 3 car p , exc ~ s.c2so app1 Mt-na~
Hli'bOf wOOCis 2&, 261
lm1111c townhm, W/D
hltup, frplc, lttlC 2 cer 111":111
$25 • 28r I Ba Ocnlrnl
hse. tum. lndry, gar t sp, nu ~. · iooo-shOl1 temi.neg.~
l1"=airl
p . $1550 MM73-7IOO
sp..:lou1 5bJ 3611 Condo
l/p, pool. very private &
quet. Pll1I Ike lellllg.
$1495/mo 909-24,·stS7
38i 2.581 lUKury uni! with
bay.WW, boal dock. galed COll'4Jfex, 2ctr gar $280CY
Mo 8rolt81. 949-642·3850
a•C' Spic:l°'-11 Clun 38' 281, __ _,,_ "°" hOuse, 2 Qf gar. flOll
VEASAILES executive
11udlo condo, 1 et llOot,
pool, 1p1, clubhouse. walk to bch, 1teul'9CI, l .:::::::::::::::·:··=··:":'':"":'': .... :'·=··=-==·=··:·:~:::::::::::::.1 p~. ~~ ~1 .$2500/mo Cootac1 949-675-2562. S~o. Nt-122-0100
• • .... c , ......
' . ·-· .: , ,
,,,. . -· . . . I
# I . .._
---.r l t .......... ~ 1 ,
. '
............
I ITEM TO
HOUSOIOLD
AHnQlO
8ooU
COUE.cTmu:s
PAINtlNCS 1b1 twlltwll, Wei, ll'lt. Hit 81yvlew Ttrraet .-.. .-.. Pdic VleW """'°"91 Piii! -... tn--Diec 20% off 702-914-4457 ... 71CM041 P011'fJIV
tA~I~~$
•liMJQ MARCH s ',ITH t:'°""'°' 9'9.67!U223 ~k)i*Up~= .. ~=rc~~
$2650 Af 949-673-7800 AnllqllH, CGWt'a, o6d ··,--.... mi~' ........ ~ ... ~ .. ,·
Olll trtlst •111. -· Ot'Mll ... -O'P.P p.nm!t
Uy llmpl, 3 COllllTlodH. I'--•* ----~· dry 1lnk, turn, Aoyll HARIOR IUDGE "ESTATt -......
MANAGERS
•SPECIAL~
$154.00+ taxW1dy
(Must plnent .. Ad)
23$ rms I kitcllenetls.
Silulled on bealAJully
llndecloed orouncss FEATU~S: 24-Houf
Lobby/Olrec1 dl1I phones/Free HBO,
ESPN & Oise/Pool &
Jeruul, Guea1 llun-
dry Close to 405 & 65
Fwys. Min's from O.C. Falrgrdl, college Ind
bchs. Walleiog ch·
lllQ 10 Shop$ Ind
restauranlS
COSTA MESA
MOTOR INN
22n IWtlor 1111e1 Phone MM4MMO
DcKifton 111up. COlllbo 1ALF D£llONER
,,..,,_, W/O, foumlln, CUSTOM MADE FUANI
tooll, drill .,,.... 111111 GrMt prlcnl MoVlng ~ uw, bbq. mudl lllOl'91 of 1111e. Mt-121..ol77 ~ "CiilLii 11..sp rum. liillen ..... IOl1 i toV;: 'IVs aome dlques & moiel sell, new sll wrlQOed; vwy
1102 El c.mino Dr. soil. 10P QUlllly. Wis $2000
llHt dll Mir. SIC $890 9'9-291·9933
LCiil a. Lm4P"' Sil 2 ltlller Couche&, cherry
wood citing 681, chairs.
desk, limps, TV's. tables,
plc1ur1s. glass wares. 22072 Roc:ilpol1 H8 nelf
8rOOldll6$1 & Bamlng.
811 Much '· •·noon HouUhold Items. lumllllre.
cloflts, kids stuff & lllOle!
1200 Berbhlrt Ln. N8
W..tcllft/Oovtf Short•
MOVING Sllt l.Oather scb. llbles, challs .
lamps, StOlasi' rllCl(S, l>eO,
81C ... and mijdl morel II
s.turclly 7:001m<f'loen
1110 Por1 Provence NB
NPB SAT·SUN a.?
. ATTENTIOH YOUNG CHANG 'Baby Wort At Home
Grand Piln<!· Beau11ful HI-Up to l2IN ..,. to $75hr lt'I QlolS black linllh, ICi'C tone ,,.. 8ooldltt
$4,!IOOCCC 714·527.o900 • 1.-.211-4Zt5
AUTO TECHNICIANS
I : .Mo..!. I Auto Repllr Shop needs 411 ....,... ..... (Four Elp'd Tedwllcllne) WAlft'ID 10 pellorm mllnlJrtp11f '-!-!'!!!"'!!"!!'!!!-~~! wOlk on 9MW, Melcedes COAST COIN NEEDS Benz, POISChe and Ftn'alf5
OlO COINS! Gold. dYef, 949-65().22n Of Fu A.-
jeweky, watchas. ~. Slml to !149-650-6563,
coted1bles 1M9-642·9447 iattl«&ytlit IO( uplCall
TOP USlflECOflOSI cientle,. great Income 11
Daily Pilot
•Coob
·~· .... ,. • Gro111Mllkup1r1
Hiring now kw FT l
PT poeitiona. ~ In
penonet
Newpott Owlet ..........
flm11 ee1 o.,t.
1131 lldl.., Dr.
Ntwpoft.._CA
Mf.753113
EOE 415 ONOA (E 81Ulfs area)
Nelghbomood Estate Ille Jill, A a e. Soul. Rock. btlsy w B.stiop Must be
e4C 50'5 & 60's ll\ICIAl!e. 949-852·82Zt ........ .
MIKE' 949-&45-7505 I I lots of treasures, dshes. 204 RENTALS CIY'ta1. ~. ~able
to 8HARI beds. tum •• hOusewares, 8IC I I Inside Sales
Ptnttlou• Condo Fum'd 472 DOlll8TIC R •
pvt master IUlle, ocellM>ly 1-"'t1WNEOllt I ICHILD CARI epresentative
view. secured llldg, no P8t¥ ~fOR ULl . • Monufocturer's RtprtHnlolive firm on the
smkg, prol'l prel'd, Sl1l~ OC Tnc:h Protltltklnll border of Orong• Countv/los Angeles mo IAll Ind 9o4H7S. 7858 • • T\llors Avall. K-12. South : 1 Nti}P;orl F.em to Sfin; lrg JIMMY oc. -L S40hr seeh professional Inside Salesperson.
tum Twnl'ililectstofash Is/ BUFFET.T Cell 909-317.o929 Respansibilillts include managing ond
Fwys. IYsmkg. pYt beO'belh. April, Thur. 27nd & Sat. 29tll developi~ existing customers ond servicing
l)lkg, declcl, pool, j1e, IOfflSI t.eoo-tts-89n our dislribulor partners to general• repeol
like SU!IOUndllgs S750ttno Siee1Bulldlng1 40X34 was buslneu, quoting new oppor1Unil1es,
•utlliles 949-644-6572 S7660. Now $3890. SOX60 qualifying leOds, clOsing buslntss over the 'NP litfiln' lhll't klich; Was $11,830, Wil IJQuidate phone, ond Inside soles support for (1eld
ba, W11her/O,,.r. 3rd 11 $6490 S00.292-0111 sole. enain .. rs. Requiremenls ore excellent
hou• from und, Utll lnct WOLFf TAttttiNO BEDS commun "1cotion ond .follow.up skill•, history S650t'mo t4M73-7900 TAN AT HOME HOUSEMAN • N8 Sfuft ibf "-· oce111 BUY DIRECT AND SAVEi of p1rsist1nce and succeu, effective tlme ~. upsialts, S57SmoAvt4/5 COMMEACIAUHOME MANAGER management, good organization, and
4700 Selshore Ave P1e111y unils lrom S19900 knowledge of Window:r.-bOi.tcl compuling ls ot prlCng 94~2·5&.38. Low Monll1y Payment M1n1ge luge o must. Experience . in pouive
CM '"MEDllTE liOVE-4H RIEE Color ca~ ••U.1• or home. electromechonicol products u desirable.
RoomlonlnlSSOOmoSIOO Call t-80().7!1-0I Exj)erieneed In This 11 on excellent opportunity for someone
sec Mell Verde Vll119 ttlpl d ti d i I A can 71•+4l·3283. mu • u "· inlereste n pursing o so es career.
I I cooking ind typical hi yeor Inside Soles Repreitntolivt
441 AN'flQUEllAllT MfVfng, 1nlrnal earns $35K-$40K bosed on txperience. I --111c•1T I ~ and ctr care. W. compensol• wilh o bose salary s>lus _,-. HCellent Ref, commissions ond bonuses. We offer
HERBALIFE Ell A~S 4-U 94M31-4934 medico I insurance, 401 (k), and poid
Jll Kerry-714-536-0152 3o.7c:r epllt. W~ -''°pager holidays. FAX resvmt:
www succesa·herballte h1111 CH' houMhold. i4M53-3650 562/ 424-662·2
comfikerry/ NM44123 llll:iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiililll "ii;;m------------"'
HOME, HEA£TH AMJ SUSWEss
~ .....
POLICY
to 111 eft011 to oll11 Ille bes1 seNtoe po5S1ble lo OU! r~ ers and advenJse,,, we wiM
require COlllrlctors wno
ldlleltcse " 1l1e SeMOe Directory lo inctude ttletl
Conlractors License number Ill their adllentse-menc YOIJI co-openibon Is
2~ --~ I HO CEWIC I I 220 ACCOUNTING I LEAKY Sh-. =ed.
TAXES
TAX et ACCOUNTING
Plloft.SSJONALS
fREE Eleruonk fill
widt w prqwation
Munda ., I to I dm .,ci. RAI.
Cd NOW! 949-tS l-9'76
HOME flair .... ~ Reglaz~utbt1~
Porceltln • Fiberglm
Sinks • Showefs
Counters
949-645-7723
Aegrou11nQ & lnstaKallon,
DEAN TILE NM73-t0eS,
714-f4MS2t
ERVICE
The'*-1 ..... ...................
... LOCA11Ne um:r==UM r .......,, .....
675·9304 ... ,.,.., ..._....
Celrlom,. State
L.11: No C.39-610549
All types of roofing end repan
Liability and Worker's
Compensation ln&l.W'ence
~Nltlofwl
Roofing ConCNc:tors • Since 1987
(71•J lll-11IO -
---
'(HI I' l>llHlt
11111 I c 11:
WindowSe~n
Screen Doors etc ...
Flff Estimate
We m11lce houte c.111
714.841.3119
v~ f/dp-
~MI/£·
A
GOOD
ADI
Call
642-5678
Doily Pilot
TUI
nlUCllL
DIRECTORY .
. .
PBX
• • • .. .
Saturday. Morch 4, 2000 BJ J
_11_•_"1_1 _________ ,._...,. ........ T ... O ....... D .. A,.Y .... 'S ...... _...,_ . CROSSWORP PUZZLE
WEEKLY BRJDCE QUI~
Q t • A5 South, vulnerable, )'OU hold:
•A Q KQ9532 o 965 • 171
The biddin1_ his _Jlf'QCeeded: NORTH EAST SOUTH WEST
I• PMa I Q r.. 3• ..... 'l What do you bid now?
Q 2 -A5 South, -vulnelllble, you
hold:
•AKIOl5 QA o KU •AIHS
The biddin1_has ~ SOUTH WEST fll(11tTH EAST •• JQ .......
' Whal ICtlOl'I do yoll llk.e?
Q 5 • B<Mh Vlllnerable, as ~ you
hold:
• KIU o Q9'5l o 7 • K65 ,
hnrwr opens ~ biddins whh one
110 11\Smp. Wl'lll 1Cti<MI do you take? -AeauirH tXperlllQ fn P8lt, llolpltll PNltnld
... bl~ ... IRI hlrdl 1-..vy phonl
.-~~~~!!!l!!~~ ..... 11VOllllll· GIT THI PEACE Of MIND
•KQ7 QKI04 OAQI • AQ5'
Yoor right·hand opponent opens die
bidding with one heart. What ection
do you take?
Q J • Eal· Wetl vulnerable. as Soodl
you hold:
Q 6 • lu Soutb, vulrwrablc, you
bold:
CAFETERIA HonMt au.. ONLY A CPA CAN GM YOUI
kt you gelttng Ill the deductions you n enlllled
to? HM yow reti.n done by a tile
WORK£RS/ '°' 2000. Sltm :J::a con
FOOD S~RVICE or'.:: LOCi1 .:..
Requites 11a1tr11 com-IWlll. ""' ....., 1n row munleatlon •klll•. food ... f.lm S100I( 1st .,,, MMcl aptritla llllpM. .-. lmrMl. ..., llK ~ ol "'**'1 ltld llMl1·YIND (all) Mw
•AKQ916J2 Q4 OAIO.. •10
The biddi Illa riroceeded: WF.sT ll>RTH EAST SOUTH
•KQI05 QKQJ652 o KIOll • \t*I
The blddini . has proceeded: soum WEST NORTH EAST I Q Pass l • ,_ ~II •A£AIOMll8Ulllal
·~TuRlllrna •FM~ Filing
I• r.. IO ? T
What do you biJ now? WhM do you bid now?
•Gel your,.,_, Ill 1 to 3 dlys'
• Get a line ol CllCi1 lo P1Y your taxes <*It' lood S*Y "'*'*' c'Odiwe.~Mis
NUTAmON 30+ H Trllllc 1oc'11Yli
Q • -A£ South. vulnerable. you
hold: look/or onswus °''Monday.
lodlnhoefer & .... ~ Satwdl~ lox & Accounting SS 96 )400 INint An .. Sit 116, ~}:
N rt lk<Kh. CA \ll 6<.0 ·••llN1..0C,.. ... e>o
(949) 646-8803
ASS.ST ANTS IHmled Pf«* Polln4lal Musi havt ftClltenl com-Flnlnclna. FREE Ykleo
muricalion skllS wtlh 1he 80().33f.1375, 24.t&IS
div 10 tunciion 1n a 1as1 VENDING
plC8d IWIYironment. Food $651(/yf Unique 6'lncorTl8I
"rvlce exptrlence New Loclllonsl ' BUICK COUPE •77
preierJ9d 1.fn.CS·VEHO $500. 714-432-<1338
SERVICE CARE All~~~ 8UCt( ROADMASTER ... TECHNICIANS ~.Cd FOf Oetala Low 51k miles. belot,
Re I I BIOller ~2011 lellher. rare model1 MtNTI 11equ1rea s rong com. n.9 .,6,,.8911 (411348) ~11,988 ~ skills, customer "" .._,. NABERS ALL TAX Fon HNice ebll"les. Musi be -------(71•)64o-t100 .. Ms -ALL STATES t1exible and •team peayer. 11.a.. ~· I ""c""'A""'DilD~""c'""c;...lft....,RX,....,..·ii--
1NDIV ·CORPORATIONS ~ FIDUCIARY ._. Low3kmles red 1Nlher &
PARTNERSHIP. LLC • ESTATES • HOUSE KEEPER TO more!(1~~1 . S2t,98a
Reqlim previous house '-------...... ,_..m c-lteepi'lg expetlence holpl-At1 you drownlnt In (714)5404100 350 ,., 17111 -TE l IJ lal prelerrtd FTIEWnngs owrclw bill? , ....... -Ci~bill.:.,,..,,.:,.c-c-ltt~RX~ ... -
lnd Per llemlVlrlabte Agency Cll'I http you flt Low 7300 rriles, bllck,
COSTA ME A, .CA 92627 11ec1r on 1°Ji """ "'' lelther, lllllfY tuxury "'" CLERICAL fln1ncf1I lfflcultlH, IUresl Bal. ol Wiii
30 YEAHS EXPERIENCE Variety ol cl11k toles =~=:1c!r:'!:d (021296} $23,988
1._ ____________ __,111rQidino PT
11
regtstratlon, ptn0nll. en·S3'-1454 (71~15100
2~ Yun 111 Buanao
FlSI rd'undi, tkcm11uc filing Pact of nund cumn•tt.
~ ~y pmoilua ~nJ in1nn1 1f "' ~ i misukt.
Tethnology hu cnabltd us 10 olTtr ftts 1hu m
compctllivt with 1ust ibo111 anyont and your lt'lutn wiU
bt prtFtd by ont of our 3 CPAs. We mJOY mlling 1ht
w laws WUlit for YOU1 Optn year round. Convt'nicnt
loatiott. Aslc for Jin ind mmnon !his ad whm alhnc-
Uaioe Baalt Baildi•g II Waadiff lie 0-1
1501 Waadill'Dmt. s.icc lSO, ~ ~
949.S48.~94
lfll;:==I 1-~
COMMUNICA TOR4>fT FM Ctownt ,..._1111
T ete-marktt lrom your •lCOlllMO IC>Pielbonl from home, no ales or IA* alftef orilnlecl inclYlllllls
Well spoken SIO/p•r 101 kllchen produclfoN
IV4bcnus 94~~1 supervisory poslllon
DBIOHSTRATOi4S Aflfly in pelSOll 0 380 I E
We need help now! PT lood Coast Hwy. Corene del MM
demos needed from COM lo front Dttk • Child C...
San Clernenle and Irvine. posftlon1 eveltllDll. PfT
We C1t1 WOl1!, good pay,~ worll II Prlvll• Tennie
& own applial1oes a .,. Club. Clll Mt-7M-3000
TN 949-8118-1357 tal 2 LlctnMd or N°' Wt'rt DENTAL Hlrin~ Nowl ERA Ralleity eu~ ~ Pr.eta 1n & L d of Hu:ngton NP NI• 1 lull 1lm1 Beach wl ply ~ o.m.I ANlllll'll. PIMM bf\M~l:"""~ c .. tff.'40..1122 i1g I» I Ill! 119
EAAH i530. WEEKLY NANNY NEEDED Oltllrllutlng ptlOftl Clrdt. Uve-Out In Allao Viejo. no •qi nte., FIT. Prr. C•lf C.t for twtM. 1-IOIM» 75U. MonlTutlWed. , .... senior SffiJng 7:30am-t:=' someone tor~. CINn-(949) 574--42 • ~~.:..~ 8111.1.. ""111 118f(ll rlUllC.'1.11 & ,....... own cat, MGUI nJMNOll~U
94M46-2959 eYelllllgS ff>4"'194f HTI
scheduling, 111ing, data .. ,.,_..
•ntry. phones, clalms .. ,------... , clbiil.AC CAftAA ... pcdoesslng Must bl Ible lo llO POWER Chrome whHls, cus.
type 35 wpm, Prefer aome IOATI ledler. pwr suts, ABS. V6. mowtedge ol mecbl temj. (4AVH754) $19.995
rdogf. '"DONZJ--1-l_ft_'ll_Whrl_e_wfr"""edJ COAST CAOtUAC ~ 0.-:: also IY~tll :; =~~Pp't,'1=· ~1= 'ii JoO (Ml)7t0-573t 949-645-1196 Wtitt cllrnond finish, ltlr,
~ ofltra ucet1en1 OWN ti or 20ii ELECTRIC chrome Wheels, CCI lllCIUtrl
BOAT. FAEE DOCK (3XV0930) $27,957
PTO ~2:n~ ~ 401(1() plan, onsil• CMc11:atw Cllllel n1 paid
tNCLUOEO. Cal tor detais COASl CADILLAC M89fle MM73·7200 1.-.~0AST
'*"' beneliU
Apply•:
i IMll7 JOiWi90il OUtt101ni Cibi:Uc c_.. '17
225HP molOf Good cond. 295 HP., Nolhllr, low On bclll 19111y lor ltSl. mies, SN Miit. llY & mc111. smo 94g.e1s.1001 1212804) $24.118
Human Anourcee One~~6100,
Newpon Beach, CA
92658-6100
23ft _ _;__SOUil~-C'OMi-_;_19S7~ 1 mr:=oo
ctassc piCric: boll ~ik.14 -c-AOIU.AC~.-..-DMll-..,;.;.__,'°_
cond, 350 crullder, fr$/\ Wb Midnight blu•. IHlher. cooled, blmlnl, tul mooring alrbaO Ind morel
E.O.E. cover. GPS, deplh sounder. 12615321 S8 988 $12,500 714-271-1215 NABERS '
•1 :~ ~...& White. 4«~ -..to. NC,
... ,.., 1uc•. ca lltlr, IUI pwr, Pl. pb, pw, CNlse comot, MHm casa.
137k ml. sM, 1~. mini HOT£L cond S8,IOO t4t-723-1MS Portofino Be1eh Hotel 8ilW illi '11
l.oedtd (E 11356)-$37,600
STERLING BMW
MM4S-SIOO
8llW b 't7
low mle, blactt w/Sn!
(882747) $2\,995
CREVIER IMW
714-135-3171
Biiwfi ·11 Low Mies •
(8780231 $25,995
ST'l'RLINO BMW
MM45-5t00
BiiWB 'ii
6 Cylindel
(F79530) $32.995
PARKING LOT STERLING BMW
ATTENDANT MM45-SIOO
MM!oring ol l>ll1dna BMW 311 fCA '17
lot & ligl1 jinilotlli Convetllble cMles for Newpoll Bell (Y11600) S27.995
shoPPinCI center. FfT & STE:RUNG BMW PfT' . sdltGM IYlil. MM4S-SIOO
mist bl l"l>Ollllble & 8iiW '1i ...
speak lk*1I Engbtl Cd, S.spted. bile* wlslnd.
w/ucelltnl com· (C51304) $21,995
munlclllOn sdll C.. CRE'llEA BMW
(949)723·7100 tor 71U3S.3171
appofnlmenl (1her liiiW 311 TIA 'it 1 :00) or FAX tesumt Sunroof
lo (949)723-1141 (C81Wt9l,.IJNO .JJ,8,995
PAM~ DfW MM4MIOO
tor ..-cat1111n pro-lilW ;, m it
.,-. Non-Ai 10:30 I.II\, Aiao low m.. loldldl
lo 12:30 p.m. Mutt heft (U39°6s9) ' $18,195
C114)54M100
CADIUAC Sevlllt St1 'II
low nm. 290 HP.~
stir. co, lloys • """ (803910) $14,188
NAHM
frl.-..100
clDiu:Ac sff ·w
$pollesa wNI• dllmolld llo-lsh, dltomt ""'811, 8oM
CO,leeflet.Notltlltll
{31(M6845) s 19 .898
COAST CADLLAC
1.-.n.a>AST
CICllllec c.... Sdfi '17
$21,115 17-4111
BAU9JAOUM
71W6$o4IOO
CiEVftOlft ce¥lilli ~
lOW mies, blllf'lce of Wlr•
rancy. new car trlde-lnl
(87 f 304) $6,988
NAHRS (7't4)MM100
•CiiEW•
CORY£TTE '" 20I< mMH, N• MW!
MMS0.71IO
CiiEVY GaO: v. fCSH W
VERSION VAN '111. loldld.
Viper Alarm. 1ntl·loclt brlllS, 1lnt condition.
$7000. fim 773-251·1498
CtJEiN TAH0£ CT 't7
Two tone finish, lllll, 4l4,
ABS, ctwome whllll, ed.
(300678) S24,M5 ~ST C"*-1.AC
1.-.1M:OA1T
CiilW flt& LT 'ii
14.315 c.i rNlel, .......
CCI t1dl. llWf Nil. llllovS.
,..... est..._ Ind CRevm. 1MW --H----,---------...,11n1-. ~tor • 11wsw111 ERE S A GREAT =:'!rnm."m Lowu:!~~f 71......nl for Info EOE (V44642l $29,995
(4APV890l $21,945 COAS'r CAOIUAC
1.-.7f.COAST
DAAiN ave vlii Fi/iY ICJliPPld '92 A«ollll In
tliailltnt cond. S500CWoOo.
TOOLS tnd ALLI
714-301-3423. WAY To GET PIT AdllllrWiiilllhe Aulll ST'fRUNOIMW lof bloker1gt Inn r1"dld MM45-5IOO
ASAP Ruponafbll' iUW iii COfWl 'if
CLIENTS COllNf TO ::=:·~ ~C~·995
YOUR DOOR :,;;;:.-:-~ 1~. .;=mo ...
wticll tor local Minlla 281( miles spoil ~
I ------ ----- -.
I "
I
l -- --
rne Dally Piiot w111 pu~usn •
Tax I Ftn1nc111 Directory to
uslst our reaoers 1n flno1ng a
tax proress1on11. Reacn1ng ov~r
•o.ooo nomes in a n1on -eno
market. you are sure to find
many wno nHCl vour neto.
A smart move on your part
would be to tau 1av1nt1oe of
our tncredlblY tow rates 1no
p11ce your 10 wltn us. on1y tss
per weef( If you sign up tor tne
entire 11 wteH. or 1 minimum •·
.... run 1fttnMr week.
TAX TIMI
IS COMING
ize of
Ad
111111 In O.C. Ind LA...... (3TCJ1&0j S30 995 Clll KINft 71Mlf.1llO CMVIBt llllW .
MW• .... Aililillli 11WH-,111 ....... 2om,tperwelk.
otflc• WOl'lc encl ltQht ~ '17
...... .,. MH44·2f47 (T$2503) Pl 115 WWWPIRWIWY STEN.ING ... •
PT ..... In tor lloor 1• HI 1100 =:u -;,~~.ai:: iii Bl u 'If ~~~iiiiiiil~~~.915 MTAIL HAI 1 "AN( _ ..
ITOM In .... "°" .. HI llOO ..-.-........ iliMIX'W -.. ....... m ...._ ... ..ni... ~ .,,. 11111•1111----.. . .... =-•••• ~--.-... ...... (Vt~.,..
nMll-ft7'
. ttle t1f
llelJ
tfoa
u;,,,/te
A
GOOD
ADI
Call
642·
Ford FlllNne '13 JAGUAR IJI '17
Cte.\, NC, No, 1511 111~ SEDAN 40 ~~ .. oe1nt Jobi. mso fM,115 17-41A -.-..rn. BAUER JAGUAR Font iUrus 'i3 OllUX1 714-IU-4IOO
model, .t111 w9ev 11tw 1n1. JAGUM ltJi '17 lutf folded, new tngioe, SEDAN 40
MW tlres, sun-tool, keyless · 136,115 17-44111
entry, $6600/obo . BAUERJAOUM 714·903-5262 71~
FORD TAURUS '15 JAGUAR ltJi 'i7
low 46K mies, V6, whrle, SEDAN 40
llCIMlllOlulr, squMky dun! $35,115 17~7
(325315) $7,988 BAUER JAOUM HAIOS n~
{714)54M100
GiiC EiilnCiid c111 'i1 E, alloys, becllner, cd,
pwr s11Vwln/1ocks, Uh,
cruise, 5 7 V8 (SL969951 Sl9,995
COA$T CAOIU.AC 1-te»-11-COAST
JAGUAA lCls COUP£ ·ts
$21,115 IM92I
8AUE1' JAOUM 7t4-H341GO
JAGUAA 'ltJi ( 117
SEDAN 40
SM,115 17-4111 IAUfJI JAGUAR
714-llMIOO
Jeep a.oi.e Undo ...
fic)'r, auto. NC, IUI pwr, pb,
pw, pa. am-Im Cl. linl. lloys
$4500 obo 71 W40-1031.
... JMp&;iMLTO'l7.
4-WO, lrMm clsk. pwr, snrl.
llhr lnl. $31( below ball book
$4995/oOo 94!HS0.2614
JEEP GRANO CittliOKH
LAREDO '93 WhlWlnY lnl. F'*f lolded. V6, AIS, -,,...
linlS, orig owner. II rlCOldl. BeaulillA. MllSI Ml SI0,590
080 Mt-721"'72
... UNO ROVER 'M. v .. While/T 111 lnC. 4 wN clrivt. 2 moon rods. hAI i-. lmrnlCI $17,500 94~94~120
llltlUtlllfll Montero ..
Nlvy tulgley IUv lutf lolded, co. 8511 ml. musl set $16,000 714-396-0159
AOOU iJi L '17 IEDAH40 .... 17-4902 LEXUS LS «IO '12 MS$AH llAXlllA 'ti
51 It ml. wtllllr\an, lotdld, Woonrool. 11oys c:d dllCk BAUERJAGUM 71....,...
JAGUM. xJi L ·it
SEDM40
$35,115 17-4111
BAUER JAGUAR 714-1$34100
JAGUAR iJi L 117
SEOAH40
6 co, 1 -· 11.... wing. p0wer S.aistww MMIMl27, Mn.atl todll. Pll'lbll ter'Cll.
(2102(!1) $19.995 ....... -a• COAST CAOIUAC ~ P'lftlal 1.-.n-cOAST
~Vl.2tapl,
Pio pb, pw. llnofm cm,
""" .... '" "'*Ill
Plymouth Coll S1•1on W•
gon '88 White, OllQ owner • oood eond, ps 11dlo, NC.
$1900 obo 714-54S-0068
TOYOTA AVALOtl XLS '116
SEDAH40
521,995 tMl2S
8AUERJAOUM
714-t53-41GO
Toyota C.ilce 'IO 2df
halctOack. 4cyl. IUIO, runs
oood. ps, pb, NC stereo USO obo 949-631·3852 •
VW EUROVAM · ·u . Nec>tune llllie 6811 mi, $35,115 11-4134
• BAUER JAGUAR
714 .. MIOO
bllt. ... "" 111.450 obo ..W.lWT
SELL YOUR USED VEHICLE
THROUGH CIASSIFIED
(949) 642-5678 . excellanl cond111on
$12.500 949'856-99C3
~-------~----~
=Certified .Pre-Owned = --------·MW-------For ultimate peace of mind, tvery Certif ted Pre-Owned BMW is backed by The Certified Pn-Owned BMW
Protection Plan, llc>vtring the vthidt for up 10 2 yean or 50,000 miles (whichever come) fim) form 1hr d~re of
apiration of ihe 4-yC21/50,000.mile BMW N~ Vehicle Li.mired Warn.my." The Pro1mt0n Pbn induJn ~o k"
dcmcnu:
Catified Pre-Owned BMW Limited Warranty .. &eked by BMW of North Amrnca. In' .ind 111
na1ionwide netWOrk of BMW ccntcn, covcml rcpain art made only by BMW-train~ te~hnimns using only grnu1ne
BMW replacement parts. ·
BMW Roadsick Aaistance .. Peace of mind follows you anywhere in the USA, 24 hours ~ cby. 365 J~ys a year
1997BMW
328i
Low Miles, Loaded, IOK mil)'?.
Tomi To Sa.rt $2995. '
Toa.I l'aymcncs •SI 1.853 •Tu (V53738)
1997BMW
S28i
Low Mtlc:s. Whitt w/Sand, I OK mi/yr.
Toa.I To Swt $3995.
Total Paymu1a. $17.-464 t Tax (3UPB9<4n.
96318i co. s-spc.ed. 8bc:k w/5.ind CCSlJ<M) ... $2JJ195
96 318i C...n. co & Mort! C'4tos~) ........................... mm
~140iL . .
Sikr w/GKy, CD. Mofc! (H3S917) ....... "1,m
,131111
Auw. Low Mdu, Loaded! (U3'6S~) ....... $1&"'1 ,.,ZJ
Aaato. 26K Miles. l.A Lu, Loedodl ........... ~
(()W04) (IS odlCf ;l.)I t0 ctio.r} ,,,,.
Sp .... Whnir w/s...d, low Milel .............. St.Vla
(ll odie .U• .o ~)
•
,.,sa;
low Mb CD 8c Mcm! (3"T~8'ill .... SJJJ'9S
( l8 ocher Ss to~)
Y?540I
Low Miles, CD.,S1tvu w /(.';ff:y ...... ,. ___ .. 5.4VE1
Y?140i
Low Mila. CD, Blue w/\l_nJ _, ........ .,
(l20dlehto~
•ZJ .
1.9 Lu .• Sitftr w/Bladt l4AN87"2) .... _.s.u,m
,l.w;s
CD. a.-a, lOK Milo <•FOXI 17>-.. sXm
.
(C.dW to IOOKmi)
BMW
..
, ....
812 ~rday,0~rch 4,' 2o0o.
'95 FORD TAURUS
low 46K miles, V6, white, non·MTIOker, ~ky deonl (325315)
'90 CADILLAC SEVIW
Midnight blue, low miles, ltflr, xlnt oondl (811575)
'91 CADILLAC FLEETWOOD
Frost beige, Ion hhr, xlnt cond., rore model! (226957)
'95 CADILLAC SEVIW STS
Polo green, Ion hhr, 290 H.P. Norihstor, CO & morel (82"595)
'99 BUICK CENTURY
low 5930 miles, beige, mint c:ond., bal orworr. ( .. 26312)
'98 CADILLAC CATER.A
low 3k miles, red, lthr, & morel ( 190825)
'99 OLDSMOBILE INTRIGUE GLS
Only 930 miles! CO, moonroof, oftoys, bol. of wan'. (373046)
'97 CADILLAC ELDORADO
I • Daily. Pilot
. .
. .
SALE PRICE
2000 Escalade 2000 Seville STS
$46,87S.OO Utt Pr1ce
S4.88Q.OO · Nabers Plscount
$41,995.00 SALE PRICE
LEASE FOR
s45
.
+ tax lor 38 month lase. SS000.00cashdownortrade1qulty. plus fnctptiOn tees • 16745.75. + tax tor 36 month leaSe. $4950.00 cash down or trade 1qutcy,
plus inceptlon lees• $7092.96. 1 only 4213.
Or Purchase For Only$ 41 ,995~ Or Purchase For Only S 47 ,800
EASE FOR s339J MO
+ ID lor 38 ll10lft. Cloeed---Oll ~ma '49l50 llCMll llld ........ ..,..._
oil. FllllHOll. 172. TOlll Of P1Y1M!* $11,886 + lllL I only 708Sll
Or Purchase for Only S2 ,8 245
'7,988 ·.
ss,988
58,988
516,988
518,988
521,98~ ,
523,988
197 CADILLAC CONCOURS
295 H.P. Norlhstor, low miles, Seo Mist, lthr & fn91'9l l212804)
524,98·8
'96 CADILLAC SMW STS S 88
Low miles, 290 H.P. Not1h1tor, CO, Alloys & mon1l (803910) , 24, 9
1 99 OLDSMOBILE BRAVADA $ 988
Only 5'20 miles! Whilll, lthr, moonroof, CO, bol. ol worr. (723936) 2 4 t
'97 CADILLAC SMW $ 6 88 low Zl k miles, Ole. cherry, leather, V·8 Norlhsior, bol. of worr. (817 ~) 2 t 9
'98 CADILLAC ELDORADO · $ 6 . 88
low miles, V8 NorthSear, ~, many ulral, bol. ol worr. (6127 «>) 2 f 9
'99 CADILLAC DMW S 6 88 law miles, silwr, 'lot llhr, V8 Nolha, bal. of warr., P""'· rental (802657) 2 t 9
1 99 CADIUAC CONCOURS . ~ 88 ~pearl, low '520 milla, 300 H.P. Norblar, bal. of war'(.; immac.I (735418) . , 5 t 9
low 38k miles, white pearl, Ion lthr, super dean, bol. ol worr. (602339)
524,988' 1 2000 CADILLAC SMW ~ 88 ~beige, lciw llOO-C.D., alo,I, bal. ol warr., fl"W· trill! (1~ '"' 7, 9