HomeMy WebLinkAbout2001-03-03 - Orange Coast PilotON ntE WEB: WWW.pAILYPILOT.COM SERVING THE NEWPORT -MESA CO~UNmES SINCE 1907 . ·A· SATURDAY, MARCH 3, 2001
) f ·"'' . , I , ..
, N 9netrf~rgency calls tying · up 9·1.1 lines
-J ~ .... • "'' r~ .. • ..
NONEMERGENCY 91 .1-
• What 's haPP4t!'ing on the freew ay?
Has there be~~ an accident?
•Residents facing real emergencies
risk not getting through because
system is misused, police say.
• Can I have the number f or Domino's?
• What was that noise?
Jenn ifer Kho
D AILY PILOT -~ ...
CALLS
(Referring to when the space shuttle reentered
the atmosphere and there was a sonic boom.} NEWPORT-MESA -The telephone nngs
It's one of the 911 lines
Here are some of the
things callers have said
to dispatchers
• There's a b ig spider in m y h o use. Police ctispatchers are quick to dm.WN
because it could be a heart dltack,....s;l...!,w' or d
gunshot wound. Can you send someone to get rid of it? It could be a chance to sdve someone\ hfe
or an opportunity to stop d cnme in progr<'""
But it prob~bly isn't. • What tim e is i t? -
"There's a big spider m my hou~e. • lhP
TOSHIBA SENIOR CLASSIC
PHOTOS BY SEAN H ,.01
Tom Watson drives It up the green Friday ln first-round action at the ToshJba Sel\iOr C lassic at Newport Beach Country C lub.
.tie
Newport Beach event is also
providing some of the toughest
conditions on Senior PGA Tour.
Rlch•rd Dunn
DAILY PILOT
NEWPORT BEACH-In typical Toshiba Senior Cassie
style, the Ieaderboard Friday was jammed after the first round
of the Senior PG.A Tour stop at Newport Beach Country Club.
Five players, led by former Senior Tour Players of the Yea r
Dave Stockton and Bruce Fleisher, shot 6-under-par 65 to be
for the lead in some or the toughest golf course conditions on
the seruor tour.
For more on
the Toshi~
Senlot' Classic.
See Sports, ,_.,
The tournament will continue with
second-round action today, beginning
at 8 a.m., then fmal-round play Sunday. ·u was real difficult to hit long uons
out or these conditions,• said Stockton.
the fourth 65 shooter to enter the club-
house, precedlllg Bob Glider and fol-
lowing Jose Maria Caruures, Bruce
Fleisher and Dana Qwg}ey.
•This 1S as severe a rough as we're
going to see all year,• Stockton added,
,referrlng to the extremely Uuck rough,
which didn't get a chance to be mowed
lh1I week because of steady rain.
Stock.ton, a two·tlme PGA Cha.mp.I·
onship winner who has pra.lled the golf course at Newport
Beach Country Club 1n the past, said the 6,584:yard layout is
"in great condition• considering the large amount of rain it
absorbed earlier in the week.
•1 think everybody enJoys conung here,• Stockton Said.
•tt'• a great golf course lor the players and, es far as the
SEE GOlf M GE At •
Behind the
SCE NES
A look at a man
who keeps the
peace and takes the
heat from golfers
and spectators
• NAME: Dick Clark
• HOME: Yorba Linda
• JOll TITU: Chairman of
marshals Dlck Clark
• HE IS: In charge of keep-
ing the noise down on the greens
• DAILY DUTIES: Clark overSttS about
310 volunteers. At any given time, about
200 marshals place themselves all over
the course to create • quiet environment
so that players can concentrate on their
game
·we WOfk from o• dark thirty to o•
dark thirty,• Clark M11d, eiq>~1mng tNt
his crew keeps things under control from
sunrise to sunset.
He walks the coune and checks that
the ropes are put In pl Ke.
"We do a variety of jobs,• Clarlt said. ·w. help In many w¥.,.
When 11'1 time for • ~ to Nt the
bell. Clarie r•ises hh hand to signll to the
spectators bi they're elqM(t9d to kMP
stlll. At tOfN ~t1, the menhMs UM
quiet ~ but the tenior tour pros
looll down:f the ~ ,.,tng \ttey
dtttr.ct during the pme. .
And ~ .,..,.,.. .... bed
~ ~ .. "*"*'who git to ...., .
the brunt. Clark said
"The first thing they do is. Where's
the marshal m.t I can blamer Clark
said, laugh1~ ·we get chewed oot by
the c4tddie or the golfer we·re his scape-
goat It's not the most plffwnt part of
the job. but it's ell right.•
Clarlt, who began volunteering at
tournaments some 20 ~·rs ago, has
done some lelsure-t1m« golfing himself.
Unfortunately, there's no one to ~II at
wh«I things go wrono, he said
•1 have to worry about that mywlf, •
he said
• DID YOU KNOW: ~ally spe.tl1ng.
the f.m on the 9'"° t~ to be thoM
·of the calmer kind, Claft s.ld. But when
the O«Mion.11, hecklef 5tMts ~Ing out
of Nnd, the rMnheh poltt.fy try to
l'fttOf• IOfM Ofdef. " tNt doesn't Wof"\, tftM"S • t9llm of M<Urtty ~ on
· hri who will •• over 4lnd ete0rt the
noiMrnlker off the coune.
~ ................. ..
cdller says "CouJd you .. end some(Jnf> to gc>t
nd of 1t?"
The call is one of the memordble 911 C"dll!.
that Cos£d Mesa Pobce Lt Odil• R1mP} '>did
d1spd'ichers get every day
-Bumper lo bumper cdUs dbout power
outages. bark.mg dogs dnd lhP '>Wdp meE>t
dCross the street are dmong th<> rndnv cdlls
creaung telephone trdfhc Jdms in th(• city..,
t>mergency 911 lines he '>did
City residents have been Cdlltng • dn u1or-
cl1ndte number of tlJnes tor nonemerg('nClf''
Blilley '>dld
-V\'hen the power went out thl' board llt up
w1th people calling to ask \vhy tht'1r !Jght"
went out," he said • PeoplP cdll ,., onclr>rinq 11
SEE 911 PAGE A 10
$5 million
may go to
pro-El Toro
• campaign
•To combat anti-a11rport
group's spending, supervisors
will consider bankrolling
public inforrnat10n effort.
Paul Clinton
D AILY PLOT
~\\'PORT-\1ES.\ "uppurt·
er of an dltpOrl for the cfo.,, <l El
Toro ~tanne bdse prciJ<.E'd d po .. ...i-
ble move bv the Ordngc• Count\
Board ol Supel"\,'>Or" tu lund d
pub!Jr mfonndtloo Cdmpd1qn
At Its Tue dd\ met•Ung. th••
board 1s schedult>d-4+1 con!>1clPr d
S5-null1on OUUd\ tu tht• ( >rctrlllt'
Countv Regiondl .\.u"port .\11th1 n-
t\' a 100 ... e-krut codhlmn 11 ' •rth
Count) aue ... lobbytnH tor dt cl.
Toro dlrport
SEE EL TORO PAGE A 10
Newport
wary over
Centerline
Paul Clinton
DAJ\.Y PILOT •
t'.'E\\'PORT BEACH _._ They're
not sold on llqht rdtl
Womed about thP potc>nUdl for
mcredsed possenger !Odd di John
Wayne Alrport al\ ofhndh hd\'e
questioned the t'm'1ronmentdl
reVJew on the $2 3-bilhon CentN·
Llne project
The oty's concerns about the
pro1ect come on the ew of the
Orange County Transportation
Authority's expected dec~1on to
choose a route for tht> nM s1vc>
publ.tc works prOJE'<"t
SEE RAIL PAGE A9
AFTB HOUIS .A 13
AIOUMO TDWM .Al
IEST MM ---~.Al
QASSHDS - --" ~ &QUIS ____ ...
DAl900l -. ---· 12
fAmt .A2
: P<lJC1 R1S----=---··--~--·"" mTY ~ All "
Wlll'S~ .AJ
'
A2 Saturday, Morch 3; 2001
Finding peace
in the 'prettiful.' . . '
"moUniains
"If you have never heard the mountains
singing, or seen the trees of the field clap-
ping their hands, do not think because of
that that they don't. Ask God to open-your '
ears so you may hear it and your eyes so you
may see it, because though few men ever
knQw it, they do, my friend, they do.•
-M<Candllsh PhllllpS
1 D addy, Daddy. look al the snow. It's
so, it's so. it's so prettiful, • squealed
a cute little girl
all bundled up in a
pink snowsuit.
I could barely see
her round race peeking
out underneath a ruzzy
hat and goggles that
seemed two sizes too
big. There was no mis-
taking the ear-to-ear
smile though. and if
she hadn't been so well
secured to the ground
by her boots and skis, I
think she would have
been dancing.
Gndy Trone
Christeson
r
lA VINA DE NEWPORT MESA
La Vina de Newport Mesa was established ln January 1998 to serve the community,· lo make il a better,
safer place to live by providing the g05pel to the community. Services are in Spanish and include praJse
and worship with a strong emphasis oa teaching the word of God. The focus of J~. R. C?ronado s
teaching is how the word of God is a message of hope and can transform each indiv:idual s life. People
can come in whatever they are comfortable wearing. Child care is provided for se~ces. Services are •
held at 1:30 p.m. Sunday. Sunday school for clilld.ren of all ages meets during .the servtce. The Swillght
Club, for children younger than 12, meets at 6 p.m. Sunday. Home Bible Studies m~t throughout the
week. Coronado is senior pastor. La Vina ls al 102 E. Baker Sl, Costn Mesa. In!onnatiOn: (714) 556-8463.
Doily Pilot
• f fHOTOS SY SEAN Ht.Wt I OAl.Y PILOT Her voice and words
were doing the danc-
ing for her 1I1Slead. I
loved her f1ade up
MORAL OF
THE STORY Wendy McCracken and son Bobby, 2, receive ash from Msgr. Daniel J. Murray during services at Our Lady of Mount Plrmel.
word. because dearly the words ·pretty"
and "beautiful" didn't do JUSllce to the
beauty that was gently falling on and
around au of us.
r I I ~SEASON OF SPIRITUAL
"You're right,'sweetheart. You are so
nght,• answered the proud papa next to his
little wonder. He obviously didn't want lo
correct her English, he just wanted to echo
her excitement.
Then she sloppe!i and stared at the sky
with s uch rapt attention, I had to stop and
look up too. The longer I looked, the more
1 saw. The more I saw, the more amazed I
became at the delicate intricacies and
endless beauty everywhere I looked.
SACRIFICE
·1 was in the mountains two weeks ago
on a ski trip, and though I've been to the
same place In the past, the beauty over-
whelmed me more than ever before. l
think 1t was because of something that
happened our hrst night.
Christians around Newport-Mesa
start gtving up things for Lent Bobby McCracken at Ash Wednesday servt~
I was tired after a busy ddy and a big
meal. but I couldn't fall asleep. 1 assumed
1t was the d.ltitude. But after tossing and
turning for too long. I sensed God gently
saying. "Cindy. it's not the altitude, it's
your altitude. We need to talk.·
I wrapped a warm blanket around me.
walked out to the quiet living room. stood
at the wmdow and stared out into the
darkness.
The ljtars were bnghter than neon.
raithrully twinkling in all their glory. They
didn't arrange themselves in letters. but
after awhile I sensed a message from God
that sajd, "I'm in charge of all this and
more, Cindy. Don't you think I can handle
what's on your mind?"
I sat down on the couch and told God
what was in my heart. The light from the
fullness of the moon spilled into the dark
room and God's peace started filling my
heart. As the rrunutes melted away. so did
my worries.
I walked silently back to bed and slept
like a baby. The rest of the week I enjoyed
the intensity of the beauty around me. I'm
back home now, and though I'm not sur-
rounded by majestic mountains, I am still
surrounded b y God's creative touches
everywhere I look.
If we take the time to stop and look. we
will see just how amazingly "prettifuJ"
God's creation really is.
And you can quote me on that.
Y°"ng Ch•nv
DAILY PILOT
S tephanle Hanger is giving
up watching television for
the next 36 days. The Our
Lady of Mount Carmel church
attendee tunes in about two hours
a night. But as of Ash Wednesday.
the first day of Lent, the tube has
gone dark.
"This would allow me more
time to read and meditate on the
gospel of the Lord,• Hanger said.
•And (sacrifices) just kind of
remind me of my sins. It keeps me
humble."
For the next month or so, local
Christians will by to conquer per-
sonal missions. They started on
Ash Wednesday, which marks the
beginning of the 40-day period of
Lent, attending services and get-
ting their roreheads marked with
ash in the shape of a cross. The
ashes are made from the palms
blessed on Palm Sunday the pre-
vious year.
The sigruficance or Lent 1s
related to the Bible story or Jesus'
fasting in the desert for 40 days. ln
the Bible, Satan tempts Jesus in
order to find out if he is the son of
God, but he resists.
FAITH CALENDAR
SPICW IRllTS
A SUNDAY MUNCH
Purim to ·begin Thursday
Local Jewish temples
observe their period of reflec-
tion during High Holy Days.
between Yom Kippur and
Rosh Hashana. During the
spring. they celebrate Purim, a
holiday that commemorates
the courage of Queen Esther
in defeating Haman, who tried
to annihilate the Jews in Per-
sia more than 23 centunes
ago.
Purim will start Thursday
evening and will continue
through Friday.
"It's a time of merrymaking
and costumes and reading the
Observing Lent involves pray-
ing. doing works of charity and
fasting -be it from food, televi-
sion, cigarettes or alcohol.
"The whole point of il is to gain
mastery of themselves to over-
come any sinful tendencies they
have, to give up things they oth-
erwise feel they can't control,·
said Msgr. Daniel J. Murray, pas-
tor at Mount Carmel in Newport
Book of Esther, thinking about
survival and giving gratitude
to God for his deliverance of
our people.· said Rabbi Mark
S. Miller of Newport Beach!s
Temple Bat Yahm.
While Lent is a serious peri-
od of thinking and preparing
for Easter, Purim is festive.
"It's a time for satires.·
Miller said. "It's not a serious
time. it's a fun time."
Temple Bat Yahm will hold
a Purim carnival from 11 a .rn .
to 3 p.m. March 11 at the tem-
ple, 1011 Camelback St.,
Newport Beach.
Beach.
The ashes serve as a symbol of
penance. he added. The tradition
has spiritual significance.
In the Bible, a mark on the
forehead symbolizes ownership.
A cross signifies ownership by
Jesus Christ, who died on a cross.
Ashes also remind people of
their mortality.
"We'll go back to God's ere-
ation.· Murray said. "Dust lo dust,
ashes to ashes.•
Msgr. Bill Mcl..aughlm, pastor
at Our Lady Queen of Angels
Catholic C hurch in Newport
Beach. said tus mission for Lent is
to remember that he IS a creaboo of
God's put on Earth to serve.
"Thal I'm just an instrument."
Mcl..aughlln said. "Because I get
worked up and wonicd some-
bmes. I have Lent every day of my
life as far as that's concerned.·
The Presbytenan Church of
the Covenant m Costa Mesa held
Ash Wednesday services this
week, something they have done
for the past five years. More and
more Presbyterian churches are
doing that, said Pastor Tim
McCalmont. as a time lo focus on
what Lent is about.
McCalmont said Lent is used
as a time to refiect on one's rela-
tionship with God and lo offer
things in sacrifice while reflecting.
"That's why there's this tradi-
tion of giving things up.• he said.
"To represent our commitment lo
the Lord."
He will give up his time.
McCalmont plans to wake up 30
minutes earber every morrung
and spend time with God
• ONOY TRANE otlUSTESON is a Newport Beach
resident who speaks frequently to parenting
groups. She may be reached via e-mail at
htfpll:www.clndyOonthegrow.com or through the
mail at P.O. BoK 6140-No. 505, Newport Beach, CA
92658.
:tbe Geliill't Sodety ol the Young Business
and Pn:ll8'1ionAls Dtvisioo of the Jewish
Pederetion ot Orange County will host a
lox. bagel and cream cheese brunch Sun-
day at a private home in ~rt Beach.
Couples and 11.nglel 25 to 45 are invited. A
minimum gift of S12 to the Jewish federa-
tion Annual Campaign li requested. Call
for address and time. (714) 7"·5555.
THE RED TENT
Anita Diamant, author of •lbe Red Tunt, •
will be the featured speaker at 10:30 a.m.
March 12 at the Women's Voices luncheon,
sponsored by the Women's Division of the
Jewish Federation of Orange Cotmty,
headquartered in Costa M8N. 1be lun-
cheon will take place at the Hyatt Regency
Irvine, 17900 Jamboree Btvd., lrvtne. SSO ln
advance, S60 after Friday. (71') 755-5555.
VOL 95, NO. 57
Editor
s.J.CN-.
OtyEdltot ••&•t•MNW.
feeturet Editor
.,_~
$p>f11 ldltor ' DUl8M--.
NewsEdlcot
,..J.MNTOI. ,.o.1grw
mMllllKDN8f..
flt*'> Editor
.., GR"9lll.
~ .. onctor
..w•··~ ... ~.
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_ .. _......, __
'
WEATHER lllD SURF
~TURES
Balboa
5815()
Corona del Mar
5815()
Costa Mesa
5815()
Newpot"t 8ffdl
S8l50
Newport Coast
5815()
SUN' POMCAST
Ankt.-l9 knee-high
W8\ltS With oor.aslonal
l·footetl at the ••
LOCAnoN
Wedge
~
llAO:le"s
..
1-2·
1·2'
1-2'
l1DU
TODAY
First low
10:49 a.m ................... 44'
First high
2:40 a.m .... "'""'"""" 4.7'
Second low
9:11 p.m ..................... 2.7'
S«ond high
6.'()2 p.m ..................... 2.g-
MN>AY
First low
11:51 a.m .................. -0.2'
Fl'1thigh
):51 •.m. ..................... 5#
Second low '
10:53 p.m ................... 2.5'
Second high .
6:45 p.m ............. -... l .S'-
"""'~ Cofone del Ms 2~ -1<2' ~
\ Pf ICE FILES
COSTA MESA
• ~ Avenue: V•ndallsm wn reported at l a .m.
ThlJf'ld.y in the 1200 block.
• Aw clldo· A 24-yur-old woman was arr.sted at 5~
p.m. Thursday in the 800 block on suspicion of commit-
ting a grand theft. The wom<in is suspected of stMling
an acc.ess card.
• 1Mt 11'tt 5'r9et: A robbery wn reported In the 100
b6octc at 2:02 a.m. Wldnesdly.
• lldM Awlllle: A residential burglary WM reported at
6'41 p.m. In the 2600 b6octc. ~
NEWPORT IEAOt ............. .., ..... SfW"'9,,..,,..... Polka
afTftted • woman on suspicion of drMng ~ the
Influence of alcohol and drugs at 5;4' p.m. ~. w w• wt at s10.ooo.
• ,... ............. '"" ...... Pollot errWlted.
nwn on suspk6on of polMtSlng ~ fot' .-at 4:10
p.m. ~ .... wm • llt s10.ooo. ....... ....... __ .._, .... , ...
P'ola ...ad a "*'on iulpldon of~ uNllr the
lnftuence of MCotlOI end ... ):2S l.lft.. ~ ...
wm19t•U.500.
e -..... ,.,.. N,..,._,,. .... ld 0wt tomeOilt .......
wttt. U10 from the ba of• ber aot •a,...... In
the nao 111oc1t .t 1:4' a.m. ,,_.
•
Doily Pilot So1urday, Morch 3, 2001 A3
·school board trustee Leece is not always alq'!'W in ·he,. vjews •
For those of you wlio •
believed that Newport-
Mesa school board
!Jlember Wendy Leece's
recent attempt to keep two
books out of the hands of
high schoolers was a failed
censorship try, for those of
you who could only answer
her request with name-calling
and for lho5e of you whose
replies were just plain juve-
nile and conveniently avoid-
ed the substanc~ of the issue,
Steve Smith
WHAT'S UP?
I have some startling informa-June 9, 1998. Here is an
lion. excerpt from the transcript of
1Wo and a half years ago, that meeting:
a teacher at Costa Mesa High "Mrs. (Judy) Franco
School submitted a secondary moved adoption of the sec-
reading list to the board of ondary textbooks, as listed,
trustees in the same way a except for 'At Last We Enter
Newport Harbor High School Paradise.' Mrs. (Dana) Black
teacher did a few weeks ago, seconded the motion and it
causing Leece lo make her carried by majority vote, with
objections. Mrs. Leece still-expressing
In the earlier case. Leece opposition to the textbook. 'A
objected to two books, ·At Perfect 1ime.' •
Last We Enter Paradise" and -'\' 'Itanslatioi'l: Every schpol
•A Perfect nme. • both poetry board member who was pre-
books by Richard Jones. The sent at the meeting objected
recommendation or rejection to the inclusion of •At Last
of tbe book list appeared on We Enter Paradise• to tbe
the school board agenda for reading list. The book was
.
d.enied. The vote would have
been unanimous except for
Leece, who also wanted • A1.,
Perfect Tune" kept off the list.
No outcry, no screams of
censorship. No one called
Franco a "religious conserva-
tive• for moving to ban •At
Last We Enter Paradise" and
no one suggested that Black
appoint a "values czar,·
whatever that is, for se.cond-
. ing the motion.
As hard as it may be for
many readers to believe.
Leece's school board col-
leagues agreed with her that
a book was-ouTOTbounds for
high school students. Accord-
ingly, they did what they are
supposed to do as trustees
and sent the message that the
book exceeded the limits of
their standards.
There are, in fact, two
standards. One applies when
Leece is on the losing end of
a 6-1 vote. At that time, it's
OK to call her names and dis-~ort her i.dtentions. The other
~tanda'rd is when school
board members act to do the
very same thing. Then, they
are acting in the best interests
of our children.
Since I first wrote about
my support of Leece's propos-
al, I have read the two books
and still a~ with her.
"Of Love and Shadows" is,
in my opinion, a glorified
romance novel with the
steam turned up. The book is
supposed to be the story of a
noble fight against a military
dictatorship by two joumal-
ists, but it is really little more
. than a silly love story. with '
adults living their sexual lives
without responsibility.
One of the main charac-
ters, Irene, is engaged to an
Army captain. He is frequent-
ly unfaithful to her but does
not love his other lovers, so
it's OK to cheat. Irene then
falls in love with her col-
league, Francisco, and has an
aft air with him.
Irene's mother travels
tv.1'ee a year for trysts with
Michel. a man young enough
to be her son. After each trip,
she dOl!S not feel any shame
or remorse; she feels young
and alive.
So people Jlfe cheating on
loved ones and having lots of
casual sex. There is no conse-
quence to all this -no
shame, no sexually transmit-
ted diseases and no pregnan-
cy. It's all neat and tidy and
trite.
In the book, there are
manygrapruc passages,the
most disturbing or wtuch is
the description of a soldier's
ravaging of a nearly dead 15-
year-old girl who dies dunng
the rape. According to six of \
the seven members of our
school board, all Uus is per-
fectly suitable for children to
read.
If you need further proof
that this book is less a literary
masterpiece than a novel of
no consequence. read the
second half of a review
excerpt by the New York
Times that appears on the
back cover of my paperback
copy:
·She (author Isabelle
Allende} can Just as deftly
depict lO'Vlng tenderness as
convey the lugh fire of eroti-
cism. And when you success-
fully merge sex and politics
with a noble cause, how can
you go wrong?•
Did this review praise the
research conducted by the
author or come near to calling
this a classic? No, 1t focused
on sex.
The Orange County Public
Library must agree with
Leece too, because m the
entire system there is only
one .copy of Uus monumental
i;tovel available anywhere.
I don't expect those who
called Leece a censor or other
names to wnte or phone this
paper and say they were
wrong 1 can onJy hope that
these people now understand
that our school board has a
history of reJecb.ng mappro-
priate books and that it has
nothing whatsoever tQ do
with censorslup It's strictly a
matter or declirung standar.ds.
• ~ SMITH 1s a CoSta Mesa
resident and freelance writer.
Readers may leave a message fOf
him on the Daily Pilot hotline at
(949) 642-6086.
HONEY OF KRITI
Monastiri
11IYME HONEY
From the leland of Crete
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I
A.f Souday, Morch 3, 2001
·OlllUIRY
Lawrence E.
Cairns
Longume Newport
Beach and Costa Mesa res-
ident Lawrence E. Cairns
died Thursday from com-
plicauons with pneumonia.
He was 91.
Mr. Cairns and his wife.
Vi. had just celebrated
their 70th wedding
anniversary earlier this
week, surrounded by
grandchildren and great-
grandchildren.
The couple tirst setUed
m Newport Beach in 1938,
when they bought one of
the onginal waterfront
bungalows at the old
Bayshore Trailer Park.
Mr Cairns was born in
Rouleau, Sdskatchewan, on
Faith's a
Celebcatlool
Sun: Worship
10:00 am
HARBOR CHRISTIAN CHURCH
(Dlaclples of Christ)
2401 lrvln• Ave. Newport IHCh, CA
(949) 645-5781
Mlflllllr: Dr. Dlmlla Short
&int' of Mhul Cnur
~
CornnullCy Cer1W ......., _ _, 11145 Part A\IL, Coltl Mm
Rev. Ken C..r~y '
Service: 10:30 am
Topic
"The Presence•
The Church of
Yahweh
www.yhwh.com
Pastor Ahyh
Wek:ometo
TM Church ol Yahweh.
1hc church on the web.
~ arw alwoyt open.
AND wa don't po11 iM plo~ .
. .
Nov. 6,
1909, to
Church
of Cana-
da minis-
ter Hugh
and Eliza
Calms.
A
veteran
of World
Lawre~e E. War JI,
Cairns Mr.
cairns
got hls
start in "1e grocery business
when lle opened the first
SaleWay' market in Canada
wheh be.was 21. A 19-year-
old redhead named Viola
Nesbitt worked at the bak-
ery across the street. It
didn't take long for Mr.
Cairns to propose, and the
newlyweds later headed for
sunny Pasadena in 1937.
Worship .. rvlce with
Holy Communion
Sunday 9115 em
CHILD CAR•
AVAILAaL•
(Ml) 541 3131
N~rt Ceotu
United MetbodiJt Church
Rev. Caihlccn Cooa. P»cor
I (,() I Matgutritc Ave.
corner of M2rgucricc and
San Joaquin Hilb Rd
(9-49) 6#-074S
&Im Quin Wqnhip Smtict
/Oam Wonhip 11nd Chi/Jmii
Sunt/47 Sth901
~uth '1kttint wttltl]
C....Me..
MUAVRDI
UNITID Ml'IHODllT CHUKH
1701 ....... ,C.M. w.. lhlp a Church 1cheel
........ 10.00 ··"'· Dr Ridlard (714'1 979·123"
ST. MARK ~IYTERIAN
CHUICH
Worship 9:30
•
After a series of business
ventures, Mr. OWns decid-
ed to get back into the gro-
cery business and opened
bis own market called
Model Grocery on Mission
Street in Pasadena. He sold
that market to his partner
and opened a second
called Shopping nme. also
in Pasadena. ln 1957, Mr.
Calms retired from the gro-
cery business and opened a
State Fann Insurance·
Agency · on 19th Street,
where ntangle Square
now stands.
The couple moved to ·
20th Street and later to a
J larger property at 1880
Orange Ave. to accommo-
date weekend visits from
their increasing number of
grandchildren who lived in
town. Mr. Cairns was
active at Ch(i.st Lutheran
< < 1 \ I l '\. I I 'i
< I 11 I\< I I
@COMMUNITY CHURCH
CONGREGATIONAL
UNITED CHURCH Of CHRIST
To a.lltw Is to C..: To Cn Is to DO.
Bruce Ven Blair, Minister
Chip Fisher, Pastor
Worship Service
8:00 & 10:00 am
9:00.m Adult Church School
10:00.m-Sund.y School
•Child Care Provided
611 Heliotrope Ave .. Corona def Mar
19•91644-7~
Church in Costa Mesa,
where he taught a Bible
class and served as an
elder.·
Affectionately called
Papa by his daughter and
grandchildren, he is warm-
ly remembered as a very
active and loving grand-
parent. There were lots of
family trips to Palm Springs
in the' 1960s and Sunday
drives after .chwch for hlk-
ing adventures in the
Clev~land National Forest.
·There were also a number
of sleepovers at their home
on Orange Avenue with its
towering avocado trees
and beautiful grounds.
In 1978, Mr. Cainls and
his wife retired to Honolulu,
where they enjoyed 20
wonderful years on the
shores of Waikiki before
moving back to Newport
ll\\l'>ll ...,'i'\.\1.<H,I I
TEMPLE ISAIAH
Of NEWPORT BEACH
(Omservalive)
OrOllil\' Coumy~ F'nendllest Syna&041u~
"YOU ARE A STRANGER HW ONLY ONCE"
Shlbbet Worthlp
Hebttw Sdiool
Adult f.ducatlon
Countelt1&
SodalEwltl
* RA811 MARC S. RUB£HSTEIN
2401 Irvine~ Newpon Beac:h
(949)548~
I I' I ' ( ( 1 I'\ I
'rsaint Michael & All Angels
P...r.. V,,... at Mui"':"":
Co, ..... dcl Mu • 644-0463
BlllWINC ()(JR EVl1h £OV1NC OOUST
AND SEllVTJVG OUR <»MMl.JNJTr
The ~·d rc1cr D. H~ynes, R.cc1or
SUNPAX SCHEQULE
8 am -Holy Eucharitt
9 am • Adu.It Bible Stu.dy
I 0 am -Choral Eucharut
SAINT JAMES CHURCH EPISCOPAL·
~.'111:::11:,;
The Vwy ~. ea.., !mid Andenan,
RldDt
3209 Vlo Lido
Ntwpott 8eod\
949/675-0210
•
7:30 am Traditional
9om~ory
9 om Chuteh Sc:hocil
11 om Charismatic
ondW Noon
•A God-ccntcrtd puilh community, irutruacd b~ lhe Word of God
and renewed by the Sacnmcna .
Our Lady Queen of An gels
2046 Mar Vista Drive
Newport Beach, CaJifomia 92660
(949)644--0200 Fax (949)644-1349
Rn. Monsignor William P. Mclaughlin, Pas1or
LITURGIES: Saturday, 5 p.m. [Cancor),
Sund.iy, 7:00 (Quiet), 8:30 (Conccmporuy). 10:00 (Choir),
11 :30 a.m. (Canror) and 5: p.m. (Contemporary) ...._ ______ .....
FIRST CHURCH OF
CHRIST.SCIENTIST
3303 Vla!Jdo
Newport Beach
673-1340 or 673-6150
Qlwch 10 am 6 5 pn.
SUnday School 10 am
~ • ....,..pro
"Mustard Seed Faith "
(Matthew 17:1-44 21)
Beacll in 1998 to be near the
grandchildren once again.
Mr. cairns ls survived by
his wife, Vi1 sister Shelia
Fraser; brother Robert
Cairn$; daughter Chris
Kays; grandsons Dr,w and
Michael Lawler; grand-
daughters Melissa (Lawler)
McLeod and Dana Stewart;
. and great-grandchildren
Kellie, Scott, Brian, Ryan,
and Katie Lawler, Hannah
McLeod, and George Stew-
art-Walkling.
Doily Pilot
lllEFLY
Man, 36, dies after
falling from hotel
A 36-year-old man died of
his injuries Friday after
plunging from the seventh
floor of the Radisson Hotel in
Newport Beach, authorities
said.
The unidentified man was
seen falling by someone on
the fourth floor of the hotel,
4545 MacArthur Blvd., said
Capt. John Blouer of the
.Newport Beach Fire and
Marine Department, A memortal service for
the family is planned at the
home of Drew Lawler,
where retired Christ
Lutheran Pastor Lother
Tornow will preside. Flow·
ers or cards may be sept to
Vi Cairns at Orange Coast
Villa, 2619 Orange Ave ..
Costa Mesa, CA 92727.
The victim hit tl)e meua. .
nine r09f and landed on tbe .
concrete near the.pool area at '
10:14 p.m. Thursday, Blauer
said.
JEFF & LYLEEN
, EWING
'COMMON NEW
CONSTRUCTI ON
MISTAKES
Over a million new homes are
i.old in the U.S. every year.
Buying a new home can be an
cxciung experience. Home-buying
expem offer the folJowing tips on
things )'OU hould look for when
you arc building a new home:
l ) Fixture allowances that are too
low. Sometimes these aJJowances
arc ~ low that they wdl only buy
"Junk". Shop for your ciwn
fixtures, then negotiate with the
conlnlClor. 2) Serious con.struction
defecti.. Nearly a third of new
homei. have !ierious defects. Stay
actively involved as an observer
during construction. particularly at
key stages, such as during the
foundation. and sealing of the
plumbing joint~. J) Look: into
alternative~ to builder financing.
There arc many different mongage
programs available. 4) The model
home switch. Model home~
feature top-of-the-line fixtures.
appliance • and matcnah . If you
hkc what you sec 111 the model,
make sure it rs what you get in
your home.
Lylcen and Jeff have 29
consecuti ve years of real ci.tatc
expencnce in Ncwpon Beach.
For professional service or advice
with all your real estate needs call
the Ewings al (949) 759-3796.
1\venty minutes later, a
helicopter flew the man, then
in critical condition. to West·
em Medical Center in Ana·
heim, where he died at 6 a.m
Friday.
· Newport Beach Police Lt
Doug Fletcher said investigat-
ing officers found no evidence
of foul play.
FOR THE IECOID
In Wednesday's issue
of the Daily Pilot, an item
in Neighbors should
have reported that
Courtenay Lauer, a
junior a t Saint Mary's
College in Indiana, was
named to the dean's list
for the 2000 fall semester.
Lauer is the daughter of
Richard and Mary Lauer
of Corona del Mar.
@dee of mind
~·s a good reason
for State Farm's
Final Expense PoUcy.
If you are age 50 10 80
and qualify, lh1s $7,500 whole
life insurance policy can help
ease your loved ones' financial
decisions at your death.
RJr drunlJ °" NJ\Yro(r. tt1st1 l'l'J/n<lll"U
-1 ,.,.,.,..ab;Jm. '" Stau Fa"" A1r111
Steven Hill, A1ent
Lie.# OC806 I 8
350 East 17th S treet, Ste 21 I
Costa Mesa. CA
949-646-9393
ITAU •AIM
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Doily Pilot
Using books as building blocks
•Thanks to volunteers,
Dr. Sel.lSs lands in a Costa
Mesa school as part of
Read Across America Day.
Young Chang
DAILY PILOT •
Read Across America Day hap-
pens every year, aha D11: Se uss gets
older each time around.
But for Principal Karen Kendall
and her students at Harbor View
Eleme ntary School .in Corona del
Mar, eve ry day is like Read Across
America Day, which marks author
Theodor Geisel's birthday -
a.k.a. Dr. Seuss -and celebrates
reading.
This made Friday even more
special for the children. Students
updated teachers on the number of
books they'd read throughout the
year. They turned in the ir Ringo
cards -like a Bingo chart but
marked with different genres of
books that ge t checked off once
they're read -to get stickers.
And they promised to re ad
every day and night.
CAAL HIDALGO I DAILY PlOT
Cpl Jerry Strom of the Newport Beach Fire and Marine Department reads Dr. Seuss to Patti Clark's
•Lite racy is the founda tional
framework on which all other skills
build,· Ke ndall said. "Reading is
intrinsically institutionalized in oUI
school.·
thfrd-grade class at Harbor Vl~w Elementary School Ip Corona Del Mar. ·
Since the start of the acad emic
school year, Harbor View's stu-
dents have read 59,219 books.
Their goal is· to read 90,000
between 5 10 children , Ke ndall
said.
For Read Across America Day,
visiting and on-campus adults read
aloud in classes. Students enjoyed
books by Dr. Seuss. some partici-
pated in a ·cat in the Hat• project,
others r~ctted a pledge to make
reading a lifelong commitment.
Most turned in their Ringo cards:
C apt. Je rry Strom, from the
Newport Beach Fire and Marine
Department, read Dr. Seuss' ·oh
The Places You'll Go" to Patti
Clark's third-grade class. One stu-
dent complimented him for read-
ing the words right and ta king his
time.
"Vlhen you have a book read
aloud, you hear the vocabulary and
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you connect with the text,•
Kendall said. ·And the childre n
remember all the books.•
Haylie Roberts, 9, enjoys hear-
ing others read to her.
·whe n people read to you. you
can learn new words 'cause they
know the words you don't.• she
said.
Ryan Rolfes, 9, promised to read
eve ry day.
"I think it's a great thing to do,
and it'll probably help m e to grad-
uate college.· he saJd .
"Literacy is the
foundational framework on
which all other skills build.
Reading is intrinsically
institutionalized in our
school."
Karen Kendall
HarbO r View Elementary School
principal
Saturday, March 3, 2001 AS
BRIEFLY IN
THE NEWS
Rain calls off youth
league's opening day
Jun Abbott. the baseball
star and Anaheim Angel who
inspired fans by making it to
the major league d espite hav-
ing only one hand, was sup-
posed to speak today to hun-
dreds of eager kids.
But continuing rain in the
area forced board members of
the Ne wport Harbor Baseball
Assn. to tone do,wn their usu-
al openfng day ceremonies ..
Along with Abbott, a
parade of the association's
650 players around Manners
Field <t.nd a picruc have been
canceled, said Kun Chris-
tensen, the assooabon's pres-
ident.
"There are sea gulls out
there,· she said, addmg that
the ground is too wet for kids
to enJoy the festiviues.
Whtle a silent auctJon will
be rescheduled for a later
date, Chnstensen said the
kids will probably have to
wait for another parade next
year.
Starting at 7 30 a m . the
photo sessions for each of the
62 te<&.ms will still happen
inside Manners School.
Chnstensen said, addmg that
drinks and doughnuts will be
provtded.
While most games have
been called off for toddy, the
players -ranging in age
from 5 to t 4 -will soon get
batting. Playoffs are sched-
uled for ufe end of May
Information: 1949) 451-
2228 or hllp:llwww.newport
basebaJl.org .
• Volwne Sel.crlon
• Outstcmcling
Cllllomer Senice
Now theN's No llxcusel
149-fS42-S8H NOXCUZFJ™ESS.COM
• Great l'rice Guoran,..
44 '800 · www.tustinleleus com ...,_; ............
296 E 17TH ST. COSTA MESA · 949·645·7616
Arrivederci ''EcoBarca''
. The EcoBarca is a zero-pollution water taxi designed for operation in
Venic~ Italy featuring the low-wake patented M Hull design and a Duffy
Electric propulsion system. The
design 'Mangia Onda means W ave
Eate,.... in Italian. The many water taxi~
plying the waters of Venice are called
Moto Ondoso (wave-making boats)
The designers, Charfes Robinson
and Bill Burns of Mangia Onda Co.
approached our company in January
2000, to discuss their revolutionary
design. W e saw an instant flt fa
electric power.· noted DlAl'y ~ng
Director. Jack Heiser. ·Chuck and SHI are a
tremendous team to wort wtth .. Just
phenomenal vision.· Outry added, '"We
~ ttriled to be chosen as the builder
and propulsion experts.· The entire
process of design to construction. utilized
the most advanced boat making processes. ~ reguJar meetings with Chuck. Bill and '10.~ rpm·~ unique
boat was completed. launched and~ to~ 'In~
The first EcoBarca will ~ in \A!nice Italy as a I~ water'
taxi to provide shuttle ahd tow 59Mce fat~ hoa!ls ~ the canlls.
Thfs craft is seen as a ~ soludon to ttw serious polkJCk>n problem
ttveatentng to destroy me~ trangu11 ~ ~
Venice. a.. on the lagoor-is Oft"11fwww •
~was once ktlOWi1 as the slerlt ""._,
lheqmeansd~--~
gondola. TC>day. Che c.anllS are dtQllled W-. "°"' __ .,,,..,. ..
\JC t lJM,.._ ...
and--f-l'he~ ..... nctfr:111---•
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•
A6 Saturday, Morch 3, 2001 Doily Pilot
Bonjour and
abon voyage
Mentors and tutors needed for Westside students
• Afte r a two-week
stay, French exchange
students leave Newport
while students here
get ready for France.
Da nette Goulet
DAILY PILOT
NEWPORT BEACH
Until they spoke, there was
no wuy to tell which students
would hop on a pldne to
hedd home tu France dDd
whJCh wuuJd stay here.
Fnddy, students and fami·
lies ydlhered outside the
Newport Bea ch library to bid
farewell to their house
guc ... ts of two weeks. It
mdrked lhe end of the fust
leg ol the inaugurdl student
e xchunyc program with
Newport Beach's sister city
of Anllbe!>, France.
"Whdt I ltke are llhej very
interesting schools [herej
dnd !that they are! very di1 ·
ferent from French· schools,
, said ( ·1d1re Massimi, a 15·
yedr·old student who
attend!> Audiberli High
School in Anllbes. "They are
a lot fnendlier here.•
While the crowd of
teenagers -Amencan and
French -looked the same.
they are accu!>tomed to sig·
ruf1Cdntly different Lives.
Frcn(h students expound·
ed on the many differences
they noticed on their two·
week stay in Newport Beach.
The greatest variations in
lifestyle, they said, were in
the spacious roads and the
atmosphere at Newport Har-
bor and Corona del Mar
hig h schools.
•At schools, it is more
strict in France,· Massimi
said "It's mce here. (There's)
a lot of space. Th e streets are
big. Classes are different. ln
France, we cannot talk or
stand up.. Here it is very
noisy.·
Jordann Benbamouda,
15, said he enjoyed how
friendly everyone was here,
but he added that he's not
quite ready to leave the
wonderful French food
behind.
His classmate, Polo Sat·
tezzi, on the other band, was
nearly ready to abandon his
home country for the big
stores here, such as Best Buy
and Jack's Surf Shop.
Even more excited than
the French exchange stu-
de nts were the five sopho-
mores from Newport Beach
who will depart for their
two-week stay in Antibes on
April 7.
"It's been awesome,• said
Amanda Rubenstein, 14, a
student at Corona del Mar
High.
Rubenstein said she was
excited but a little worried
about her ability to speak
French.
"Ten minutes an hour we
spoke French,• she said of
the past two weeks. "Their
grasp of English is a little
better than our grasp of
French, and they've been
struggling.•
But that worry could not
dampen her excitement.
"They eat shark, frogs
and snails there,· she said.
•Also, the schools, they said,
were a lot different. And 1
know we have Disneyland
and amusement parks here,
and 1 wonder what they do
to pass the time there.•
It is the city's first
exchange program in a 13·
year relationship with the
French city and one they
hope to continue, program
coordinators said.
Banker, police, doctor,
lawyer, minister,
executive, secretary,
clerk, reporter, college or
hlgh school student, retiree,
service club member,
church member, or any
other interested resident
who reads the Daily Pilot:
We need you! Can you
spare on~ hour a w~ek to
help a child with literacy?
The Daily Pilot, the
Rotary Clubs of Newport
Balboa, Newport Irvine and
Newport Sunrise, as well as
the Newport-Mesa Irvine
' interfaith Council, are sup-
porting the Los Angeles.
Times' Reading by 9 pro-
gram. They are seeking
2,001 volunteers to work
with 2,001 students in
kindergarten through lhird-
grade at Pomona, Whittier
and Wilson elementary
schools 1.0 Costa Mesa.
The three schools have
limited-English students
who need help in reading,
writing and English.
Mentor sessions may be
scheduled from 8:30 to
11:30 a.m. and after school
from 3 to 6 p.m. Monday
through Friday. New men-
tor orientation will be held
this week at each school.
To attend an orientation
session or to volunteer, call
a campus of your choice:
• Pomona Elementary
School -2051 Pomona
Ave., Costa Mesa -Jill
McWbertor, literacy leader,
at (949) 515-6980;
• Whituer Elementary
School -1800 N. Whittier
Ave., Costa Mesa -Sarah
Markel, HOSTS program
director, at (949) 515·6898;
• WUson Elementary
School -801 Wilson Ave.,
Costa Mesa -Pam
Eastman, literacy leader, at
(949) 515-6995;
• Shalimar Learning
Center at the Soup Kitchen,
at (949) 646.0396.
lf you belong to a church
or temple service club, or
work at a business,
ON ALL KARASTAN WOOL AND NEW
INTRODUCTION PURCHASES THRU MARCH 31
Come see our superb '1!ew wool introducti.ons for
2001 and visit our showroom and
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save during our March Madness Sale!
Come visit the oldest
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Family owned and opetated
since 1879
JOHN BLOESER CARPET ONE
2927 S. Bristol Street • Costa Mesa
(714) 751-2324 ~
www.bloesercarpetone.com . ~CA.Ur•,...
11w a.c ~ The a.t w.n.-. 11w lllt S1h tti'ln The ... .....w..
The lllt No Sbiin Plan The ... INtaa.elon by Our own O.W.
Jim de B(>orn
COMMUNITY,& CLUBS
challenge your fellow
employees to volunteer as a
mentor. One hour a week
for the next 14 weeks .. use
your lunch hour. Go before
or alter work.
The need is urgent, the
time is now. I am not asking
you to do anything that I
am not doing. You can
make a life-changing differ-
ence for a child.
MILLION CHALLENGE:
For the fourth year, Rhode
Island philanthropist Alan
Shawn Feinstein is offering
$1 million this spring to
nonprofit, anti-hunger
agencies throughout the
country. He will divide $1
million among all those
agencies using his of fer to
help them raise funds
tJirough April 30. Each
agency will get that propor-
tion of his $1 million repre·
senting their proportion
of the total raised and
reported to him in response
to this offer.
This challenge is an
opportunity to incredse the
value of your donation to
the Share Our Selves food
bank and help alleviate
hunger in Orange County.
Share Our Selves' volun-
teers distribute more than
200 bags of groceries each
day to the homeless, unem·
ployed and working poor
families living in Orange
County .. Many local restau-
rants, bakeries, grocery
stores and caterers donate
food thdt would otherwise
be thrown away. Share Our
A ,,,,. t•••• c •• ,.,f\
Undzee Bracho
Kent A. McNaughton
Troy Davis
john Dishon
Gaty Morpn
F1 ri~rTEAM
A'Olan
I I 1•1 I '''II 1r-...1
Judy Upcon
Maraam Robinson
Selves buys fresh produce
from local vendors and sta-
ples from the Second Har-
vest Food Bank and the
Community Development
Corp. The program is
staffed by volunteers who
pick up the food, order the
food, break down large
quantities into family-size
servings 'and bag the gro-
ceries based on each indi:
vidual's or family's needs.
call Karen Hanington,
Share Our Selves' director of
development;crt;949) 642-
3451 for more information.
SEARCH FOR TALENT:
There'll be singin' and
dancin' and playin' of
instruments at the Oasis
Senior Center in Corona del
Mar when the Exchange
Club of Newport Harbor
presents its "Search for
Talent 2001," with the show
starting at 6:30 p.m. The
contest is open to kids 6 to
18, and plaques will· be
awarded to winners in each
of three age groups. These
winners will then be invited
to compete at higher levels
for bigger prizes, and final·
ly for $1,000. Entries must .
be received by Tuesday. For
entry forms or more infor·
mation, call Deane Bottorf
at (949) 673-8701.
WELCOME TO THE
WORLD OF SERVICE
CLUBS -Mark Doyle
joined the Newport Beach·
Corona del Mar Kiwanis
Club.
SERVICE CLUB
MEETINGS THJS WEEK:
Does your New Year's reso·
lution include getting more
involved in your communi-
ty, making new friends, net-
working or giving some-
thing back to your commu·
nity? Tty a service club. You
are invited to attend a club
meeting this week. Many
clubs will buy your first
guest meal.
TUESDAY
7:30 a.m.: The Newport
Beach Sunrise Rotary Club
will meet at the Newport
Harbor Nautical Museum.
Riverboat Restaurant.
6:30 p.m.: The Costa
Mesa-Newport Harbor
Lions Club will meet at the
Costa Mesa GoU CUld Coun.
try Club.
WEDNESDAY
7:15 a.m.: lb~ South
Coast Metro Rotary Club
will meet at the Center
Club, and the Newport
Harbor Kiwanis Club will
meet at the University
Athletic Club.
Noon: The Orange Codst
Exchange Club will meet dt
the Bahia Corinthian
Yacht Club for a busi.nesi.
meeting.
6 p.m.: The Rotary Club
of Newport Balboa will
meet at the Bahia Corinthi-
an Yacht Club to hear Kim
Scheer of Southern Califor·
nia Edison speak on th'e
state's energy crisis
(hltp:l /www.newport
balboa.orgf.
THURSDAY
7:30 a.m.: The Costa
Mesa Orange Coast Break-
fast Lions Club will meet at
Mimi's Cafe to hear Bob
Walker speak on photogrd·
phy and computers.
Noon: The Kiwanis Club
of Costa Mesa will meet at
the Holiday Inn, the New-
port Beach-Corona del Mar
Kiwanis Club will meet at
the Bahia Corinthian Yacht
Club, the Exchange Club of
Newport Harbor will meet ·
at the Riverboat Restaurant
to hear John Crean give a
talk titled "The Bwlding of
Fleetwood Enterprises,•
and the Newport Irvine
Rotary Club will meet at the
Irvine Marriott Hotel for
Craft Talks
(http://www.nlrotary.org).
• COMMUNITY a Cl.UBS Is pub-
lished every Saturday in the Daily
Pilot. Send your service club's
meeting information by fax to
(949) 660-8667, e-mail to
jdeboomOaol.com or by mall to
2082 S.E. Bristol St, Suite 201,
Newport Beach, CA 92660-1740.
~ Prudential
Califoml• Rellty
Mall Gulled~
Reuben Gulkd~
Judy Muncy
Laraine Shaw
Marlene LaGrow
Franftltn
Ftnandol
FRANKLIN R.6ALTY
BODYOES ~N
at-ea•e
..
,.~ . \ \ \~ . . ,~
..
a~ \Vr -THS F OU NTA I NS
l.T IBA ILUPPI
•
. .
Doily Pilot Saturday, Morch 3, 2001 A 7
·.;
~ ....... ~~
~ .... 1'1'86 ,,.., .z:
,...... I\' r'
Wanted: Women I .ni:e ·rested
Physical Transfor-mation
. by Warren Doody ·
• Ill
A re you tired of
the meat mar-
ket-like atmos-
phere that's poisoning
treatments, microderm
abrasion, dance and
yoga classes, all
applied and/ or taught
by a seasoned staff of
trained . and certified
professionals, one that
A specialized form of
Pilotes, the Allegro
Circuit uses the resis-
tance-based exercise
program as a 1umpmg-
off point to create o
newer, more innovative includes a licensed
physical therapist. version . Taught to light
music, Allegro Circuit At the heart of Body · -involves the usage of Design's drawing power,
two, three, and five-however, lies an inti -
mate, "family-like" envi-pound dumbbells to help
ronment that makes strengthen and tone the
commitment to its mem-upper body; the Swiss
bers priority number Ball as an adjunct to
one. Catering specifical-greater abdominal
ly to women of all ages strength .and balance;
and abilities, the profes-the Ballet Bar to assist in
sionally trained staff is · the development of
almost exclusively increased Aexibility in
female. A new client will the hips and lower
be initially assessed for extremities; and a more
her fitness level; and an versatile reformer, the
appropriate program spring-and-pulley-based
wil~ then be "designed." "bed" that serves as the Assisted by a personal
program. The result is a
workout designed to
.increase bone density;
strengthen and elongate
mu.sde structure; and
improve balance and
Aexibility, all leading to
the longer, leaner look
that today's woman
aspires to.
A further distinction
differentiating Allegro
Circuit from the more
generic Pilotes 1s the
group dynamic offered.
Limited to five people
per class to ensure top
quality instruction,
Allegro Circuit allows
women to draw on the
energy of their peers to
better meet their fitness
outcomes. Clients ore
reqvired to first pass
through Body Design's
Pilotes testing as addi-
tional insurance that
each client will receive for a unique workout
the maximum benefit experience. All instruc-
possible. All classes are tors are Core Board cer-
taught by a certified tified, and like Allegro
Pilates instructor. Circuit, class size is lim-
Body Design will also
be introducing the
Reebok Core Board
classes come spring.
Originally designed to
aid in the rehabilitation
of iQthletes, · the classe.s
ore now used by people
of all ages and abilities.
The core board itself is
on adjustable balance
board thaf sits on top of
a set of springs. . This
innovative piece of
equipment serves as a
tool to increase balance,
improve cardiovascular
endurance, and
strengthen the abdomi-
nal region. Coupled
with the dynamism of a
fun, classroom environ-
ment, the classes make
ited.
Finally, Body design
will be presenting o
series of dance classes
targeted specifically for
children. Hip hop, lyrical
-¥>zz, and ballet will be.
taught by a team of
trained instructors, grad-
uates (or near-gradu-
ates) of UCl's highly-
esteemed dance pro-
gram. These hour-long
classes represent a great
way to increase your
children's coordination
and creativity. It also ·
affords busy mothers an
opportunity to sneak in
a workout while their
children try out their
new steps.
today's health club
industry? Sick of the
hord-se!I and neglect
permeating the corpo-
rate-driven fitness busi-
ness? Ready to throw in
the towel on all those
valiant resolutions mode
only two short months
ago? If you answered
yes to any or all of the
above questions, keep
reading, because there
is a health facility near
you that knows exactly
how you feel , one that
promises to not only
know your name, but
your goals, your mea-
surements, and your
resting heart rote, and
considers it their mission
to give you the body
and look you've always
dreamed of.
trainer, this program will mainstay of the Pilotes
---------------------------------------------------------------------------, be continually moni -
tored and adjusted as
the state of fitness
improves, o level of
attention that serves as
yet another reminder
that this is a health focil-
ity that has no peer. The
bottom line is that Body
Design is a gym that
operates under the belief
that its success is depen-
dent upon the satisfac-
tion level of its clients.
located in Newport
Beach's Fashion Island
district, Body Design,
under the direction of
founder Susan
Tobiessen, has rapidly
developed into the
area's most respected
athletic and post-reho-
bi litation. center. The
gym features a wide
range of state-of.the-art
machinery free
weights, cardiovascular
and weight machines, In keeping with its
step aerobics, and the commitment to furn ish its
increasingly popular clients with the newest in
Pilates, (Body Design is ·cutting edge equipment
a certification center for and concepts, Body
Pilates) -that serves as Design is poised to
the Framework upon unleash its latest series
which o client begins the of offerings: Pilates
gradual and inexorable Allegro Circuit classes
ascent towards her ulti-(Body Design is the first
mate fitness goals. fitness studio to offer
Supplementing this foun-these in Orange
dation are a number of County); the Reebok •
Class Schedule
r ~ i • , 11 1 1 " 1 1 , 1 • \/ 1. · 1 , • 1 1 1 , \ ~ , 1 1 • '" 1 , i , 1 1 • • •
7:00-8:30 am 7:30-8:30 am 7:00-8:30 am 6:30-7:30 am 7:00-8:30 am 8:30-9:30 am
Step & Sculpt Master Stretch Step & Sculpt Allegro Circuit Step & Sculpt Master Stretch
Alexis Vi kt or Alexis Plpp1 Alexis Vi kt or
8.30-10:00 am 9:30-10:30 am 8:30-10:00 am 8·30-9·30 am 8:30-10.00 am 9.30-10:30 am
Step & Sculpt Allegro Circuit Step & Sculpt P1lates Mat Step & Sculpt P1lates Mat
Susan Pippi Susan Kristi Susan Pipp1
10:00-11 .00 am 10:30-11 :30 am 10:00-11 :00 am 9:30-10:30 am 10·00-11 :00 am 11:00-12:00 pm 10 00-11 30 am • Allegro Latin Rhythm Allegro Allegro Allegro Jazz Class Step & Sculpt
Darci Mary Darci Kristi Darci Staff AleXIS
12:00-1:00 pm 12:00-1 :00 pm
Yoga Hip Hop
Abby Staff
4:00-5:00 pm 4:00-5:00 pm 4:00-5:00 pm
Sculpt Circuit Chlldrens Ballet Sculpt Circuit
Darci Staff Darci
5:()()..6:00 pm 5 :00-6:00 pm 5:00-S:OO pm
Teen Tap Allegro Cll'cutt Allegro Circuit (age 12+)
Cheryl Spring Spring
6:30-7 ;30 pm 6:30-7:30 pm 6;00-7.00 pm
Plat• Miit Ly'1ca1Jau Muter Stretch
therapies and classes -O>re Board classes; and Lb~~~:b=====!-__;~;;;:::;:.b~~;;;:::;:!::===!:====~!i;!!!!!BJ
massage, facial/body children's dance classes.
Staff Vlldlot'
I • .. ...
100 N wport C r Drive• Aro from F hion I
l
I
-
AS Sotvrdoy, Morch 3, 2001 Doily Pilot
A cool time for a winter sale BRIEFLY
c.ost.a Mesa volllllteer
travels to quake site
mental-health services to
earthquake victims and dls&-
ter workers.
Red Cross spokeswoman
Rebecca Long said Israel is
prepared to help in any way
she can. V on H~mert lnterlon
lS having its winter
sale. Sale merchan-
<lise is reduced 20% to 40%.
Top-quality furniture lines
are available, ind uding Bak-
er, Henredon, Century, Jeff-
cQ, Maitland Smith and
Swaim. There's aiso many
one of a kind items available
from lt.aJy, dS well as hand-
made Persian dJld Indian
rugs. Von Hemert Interiors
hd!i d Costd Mesa showroom
at t 595 Newport Blvd., Costa
Mesa. lhfonnation: (949)
f>.42-2050.
The Newport RJb Co. has
d best buy on tdkeout food
for ldrge groups. It has two
pdrty pc1cks available. The
Pig Pack feeds six to eight
prop IC' for $54 .95, and the
! log Pack feeds nine to 11
prople for $69.95. The pdrty
pdcki. come with baby back
nh!>, bdlbec·ued d ucken,
Lows1ana hot Sdusage. sliced
lms ket, colesldw, barbecued
hcdns, com bredd, honey
huller dnd dll of the utensils
you need. II you need more
nbs, thcr<' is d bucket of ribs
for $28.45. The Newport Rib
C ·o. 15 dl 219b I ldrhor Blvd ..
Cosld Mesd. lnlomldllon:
(!149) 631-21 IO.
rutuw hndes C'dn fill Up
on 1dc<1s di the Bnddl Fdir
hc1ppc•ning dl Crate & Barrel
.11 South Codst Plazd from 9
c1 m to I 1 p.m. Sunddy. The
lime hds hcen mseived for
Greer Wylder
BEST BUYS
brides who want to start a
gift registry or for those who
want to update their list.
Associates will be available
for questiortS. Refreshments
will be provided, and there
will be a raffle held at the
end for prizes. C rate & Barrel
is in the Crate & Barrel/
Macy's Home Store wing of
South Coast Plaza. Infonnd-
tion: (714) 825-0060.
For bargains on spring
flowers. stop by the Flower
Warehouse at 1308 Logan
Ave., Costa Mesa. The
flower shop has weekJy spe-
cials that vary from daffodils
at $2.99 a bunch, irises at 99
cents each, tulips at $7.99 a
bunch, carnatiortS at $5 per
bunch or 25 and imported
roses at 99 cents per stem.
Spring bulb plants are also
available. induding tulips,
narcissus and inses pnced
from $1. The Flower Ware-
house aiso has a floral design
T~E Bod BEAUTY Supply
ANd SALON
20%
ENTIRE PURCHASE
A major fitness company is seeking women and
men in this area who are 33 to 58 years of age
and ore 20 to 60 pounds overweight to try an
exciting, new fitness program! Participants will
receive 4 weeks of professional fitness training,
nutritional counseling, fitness equipment and other
fitness products, and a
chance to appear on ~ \ I I 1
Notional Television, all AT "t
ABSOLUTELY NO COST. If
you would like to toke
advantage of this once-in-
c -lifetime offer, call today.
Only a limited number of
participants will be
accepted, so call today.
We want YOU to be our fitness story!
This could finally be your chance to lose
those extra pounds & get into shape
17 I 41 <> I 2 l O I I • A '.'i I\ H >H !>AV I() " I X I .1
. .
team th.at specializes in wed-
dings and parties. They're
making French rose lQpiaries
at $18.99, as seen on Fox
C hannel 11 News. It's open
from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m . Mon-
day through Thursday, 9
a .m. to 6 p .m. Friday and
8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p .m . Satur-
day. Wormation: (714) 545-
0310.
Newport Carpet& llle is
having a sale on all kinds of
flooring. Items iriclude Italian
ceramic tiles, travertine hard-
woods, Pergo, Stainmaster
carpel, Berber carpet, and all
wool and sisal carpet. The
Stainmaster carpet is priced
as low as $1.59 per square
foot installed, and the hard-
wood flooring ranges from
$3.49 to $5.49 per square
foot. Newport Carpet & lile
also offers free installation,
deluxe padding, furniture
moving and removal of old
carpel. It's open from 9 a.m.
to 7 p.m. Monday through
Friday and 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.
Saturday. It's at 1966 New -
port Blvd .. Costa Mesa. Infor-
mation : (949) 650-0000.
! . LA Gym Equipment IS
having a safe on selected
floor models. Some of the
home gyms and treadmills
are reduced up to 40%. The
one-stop fitness store has
everything you need in exer-
ose equipment. It's in Costa
Mesa at 1880 Newport Blvd.
Information: (949) 631-1381.
Another home gym store,
Busy Body Home Fitness, is
also having a sale. Tue
inventory-reduction sale
includes many of the top
name brands, such as
Schwinn. Precor, Cybe~.
Keys and the Torso 'n'ack 2
and Total Gym 1000 fas seen
on infomercials). Merchan-
dise is marked down Crom
15% to 40%. Busy Body
Home Fitness is in Newport
Beach at 1000 Bristol St.
Information: (949) 833-9830.
The Orange County
. Museum of Art bas art pro-
grams for children called
·Saturdays at South Coast
Plaza." On March 10, there
will be a class on still-We
drawing. Children will take
tissue paper and construct a
still-We object out of it, then
they will be asked to draw
the object using Prlsmacolor
pencils. The classes are ideal
for kids 6 to 10. They are
held from 2 to 4 p.m . Seating
is limited, and registration is
required. The class is $6, or
$4 for members. They are
held at OCMA's Gallery at
South Coast Plaza, near the
Carousel entrance on the
first level. Information: (949)
759-1122.
• BEST BUYS appears Thursdays
and Saturdays. Send information
to Greer Wylder at 330 W. Bay St.,
Costa Mesa, CA 92627, or via fax
at (949) 646-4170.
SS~
Mattress Outlet Store
BRAND NEW· COSMrncALJ.Y IMPERFECT
Get the Best for Less!
3165 Harbor Blvd.
Costa Mesa
OIK Bloc.k South ot •os rwy
545-7168
"Come Join the Party''
Celebrating 1 Year
MINOR MISTAKF.S
DESIGNER OUil.ET
•
Accessories
Artwork
Minon
Lamps
Floral
Rebecca Israel, a 48-year-
old Costa Mesa resident and
American Red Cross volun-
teer, left for Seattle early Fri-
day to volunteer her services1 as a nurse to victims of the
6.8-magnitude earthquake
that shook the city Wednes-
day. --The earthquake· beneath
Pugel Sound resulted in one
death, hundreds of injuries·
and billions of dollars in dam-
age.
Israel, who has been a Red
Cross volunteer for more than
eight years, plans to remain
in Seattle for two weeks to
provide basic first-aid and
·Around
TOWN
• Send AROUND TOWN items to
the Daily Pilot. 330 W. Bay St .. Cos-
ta Mesa, CA 92627; by fax to (949)
646-4170; or by calling (949) 574-
4298. Include the time, date and
location of the event. as well as a
contact phone number. A complete
listing is available at http://WWW.
dallypllot.com.
TODAY
The Junior League of Orange
County, California Inc. will
present a Monte Carlo night,
including gambling tables,
silent auction, fortune tellers
and more, f~m 7:30 p.m. to
mid.night a t The Oubhouse
Resta urant, at South Coast
Plaza in Costp Mesa. $70.
(949) 263-31~ I
Nicole Alooi, a chef, restau-
rateur and catere r, will share
secrets of the trade at 2 p .m .
at Borders Books, M usic &
Cafe , 3333 Bear St., Costa
Mesa. Free. (714).432-7854.
Need an Honest &
Rellable Plumber?
C.11 Steve
(714) 235-9150
UC. 506588
www.Plumbln re air.TV
ere en rvstems ~ •1ntematlona1
MJt'll depend on whatever
the needs are,• she said "It
could be basic nursing or
putting an arm around some-
one and telling them 1t'i.
going to be OK.•
Israel ts one of three
Orange County residents vol::_
unteering in Seattle.
Long' said the Seattle
chapter asked the Orange
County chapter for assis-
tance.
MJt's important to help Vlc-
tims of a disaster put lhetr
lives back tog ethe r," Long
said.
-Jennifer Kho
A workshop on trading stocks
online will take place at 2
p.m. at O range Coast Col-
lege, Le wis Cente r for
Applied Sciences, Room 202
2701 Fairview Road, Costd
Mesa. Call for price. (888)
622-5376.
A workshop lor senior clU-
zens about finances will takl!
place at 9 a.m . a t Oran{Jf'
Coast College, Lewis CentC'r
for Applied Sciences, Room
203, 2701 Fairvie w Road, Cm.-
ta Mesa . $35. (714) 432-5880
A workshop on starting an
event-planning business wLll
talce place a t 10 a .m. di
Orange Coast College, Busi·
ness Divis ion, Room 101
2701 Fairview R9ad, Co-.t<1
Mesa. $85. (888) 622-5370
A beauty workshop for
matunng wome n will tdkt•
place a t 10 a.m. al Ordnql'
Coast CoUeg.e, Art VillagP
Room 10 1, 2701 Fa1rvu .. •y..
Road, Costa Mesd. $39. (7141
432-5880.
The family of the late Jack
Haley, who portrayed the Tin
Man in the "Wizard of Oz."
will speak a t 4 p .m . c1t BordPrs
Books, Music & Cafe, 3333
Bear St., Costa Mesa. Frf'('
(714) 432-7854.
I i1, 1 "' I\, \,, \,I .. 111111,
I >~, 11 r I \ 1 B11\ 111 • I 11,111 111 • l
J. I l , f ",
• cc~ency
AUTO • HOMl;OWNERS; HfilTH
Sul11bty S11rr' I 9S7
~4)J ~· -~, ... .......,,. / ,-.,
949-631-77 40
~I Old Newpon Bhd. • Newpon 8eaA:.h
(NQ.r Ho.g H0tphal)
1DAY OrCllia Sale
Orchids $1000 to $2500
MARCH 3RD
Now Open 1.t SaturdQ .. ch Month
SATURDAY 9·4PM
1 OOO's IN STOCK M:t·ll:t.1!1!1iit•@lf!1IUIJi~1M1
Newport hitch._ on~ com~ Orchid NurHfY
-&CASH
20382 Birch Street • Newport Beach L::==============================:=.1·
II-. Did You Knowl
"That we are a full service nursery with qualified
California Certified Nursery Professionals and landsc.ape
designers. We can meet all of your gardening needs.
Come in today to ';tflMthle Nurseries and let us show
.. you how." .
~ .. ~
---NUMmllD, lllC._.__
tosTA MESA SANTA ~
2100 Bristol St 1800 N. Tustin Aw.
(114) 754~1 (114) m.1200
COMPUTI ~ • 41n.MIDl'l..U
UCNlll~
TOM TANAM, C.C.N.NO
Mr-IF
F1e1t.•n••nt111· .. , ..._~=r Muter Nurtery
• 4 .. \
Daily Pilot
RAIL ·
CONTINUED FROM A 1
•The fact that there's a
µght rail connection may
make Orange County
more attractive• to visitors,
Mayor 9ary Adams said.
"To the extent that it con.
trlbu}es to John Wayne, we
have some concerns long
term,"
• Newport Beach joins a
host of other cities that
have expressed concerns,
or outright opposition, to
Centerline. Orange, Santa
Ana a'nd Anaheim-have
led the charge. On Tues-
day, the Anaheim City
Council voted 3 to 2 -
'With one council member
calling the project ·a
colossal waste of money"
-to back the project.
One day ·before the
agency's deadline for pub-
lic comments, on Feb. 14,
N ewport Beach submitted
a report citing its concerns
with the county's environ-
mental analysis.
Wayne Airport" and "the
jewel of Newport Beach -
San Diego Creek and the
Back Bay:
At its March 12 board
meeting. the transit
agency 1s expected to pick
a section of the 28-mile
route to build.
None of the proposed
sections of the route cut
across any Newport Beach
boundary. OCTA spokesman
George Urch srud. Agency
officials don't agree that the
rail· line will automatically
add passengers at the ai.r-
port, Urch said.
"We don't feel it's going
o aad capacity in any
form," Urch said. •It
sounds hke we need to put
lhem on our radar screen."
Costd Mesa, in contrast,
has backed the rail project,
along with Fullerton and
Irvine.
Newport Beach officials
said they aren't necessanly
against c"enterLine, they
just want their concerns
addressed. Any percepllon
that lhe project wouJd lead
to some form of expansion
al John Wayno sets them
on edge, Vice Mayor Tod
Ridgeway said. ·
. GOLF
CONTINUED FROM A 1
shopping for our wives, I
don't think anybody's going
to miss this tournament.•
Stockton made seven
budies on h1s way to shoot-
ing 65, his lowest round
ever in six ye~rs at Newport
Beach. Stockton cdrded a 64
in the f mal round in 1995,
when the event was played
at Mesa Verde Country
Club and-he finished tied for·
second.
Canizares, a former Euro-
pean tour standout from
Spain, was the hrst player to
tee off in the tournament
and arrived atop the leader-
board before anybody had
lunch.
·1 putted better than nor-
mal," said CanizMes, who
made seven birdies and one
bogey. "Tb~ golf course 1s
sWI w et, but the greens are
an perfect condition.
.They're not so fa st, and the
bdll rolls good. It's not easy
putting on these greens,
because> the ball sometimes
moves." .
tee and from the fairways,
but managed to sink long
putts from the fringe.
"I'd rather have a day
like this than play well and
miss a lot of putts," said
Quigley, who made six
birdies, no bogeys and card-
ed six par-saving shots.
"This was a very surpns-
ing round for me. I think I
had 22 putts !actually 20).
But I did not hit the ball well
at all," he said. •Every
green I missed by 3 inches
to a foot, so it doesn't count
as a putt (in the tour statis-
tics).
"IL was a lot of fun out
there today. You get a lot of
posillve boosts when you
make par and you think
you're going to make
bogey," he srud.
Quigley dad make bogies
on holes 5, 6, 7, 8, 9 and 13.
With five players dead-
locked at lhe top, it ties a
Toshiba Seruor Classic hrsl-
round record.
Three others, Terry
.l ..
Saturday, Morch 3, 2001 A9
Hubert
Green
putts
at the
17th
green
Friday
at the
Toshiba
SenJor
Classic
at the
Newpmt
Beach
Country
Club.
~EAN
Hl\.lE~ I
DAILY PILOT
bmhc-d th(• l1r'>t three hole!>,
lht>n lmch<>d IO 12 and 15
on th" bdc k nin(• for h1'> 65
dnd -.h.HP of th1• ll!dd
The report, prepared by
a city advisory committee.
criticized the transit
agency's environmentdl
review, saying it "fails to
discuss. identify, analyze
and mitigate the project's
impacts of mcreased pas-
senger loads to John
•1t goes to the perceived
fear rather than the reali-
ty," Ridgeway said. "It
demands more study. If
there 1s an impact, you
have to mitigate it."
Lake Stockton, Caruzdrt>S
mdde seven birdies and onP
bogey. while Gilder finished
strong, Fleisher started hot.
and Quigley had the crazi-
est round of all.
Mauney, Jim Colbert and
Hale Irwin, are two strokes
off the pace, while S<'Veral
are tied al 3-undc>r 68,
including,.Jegendary golfer
Lee Trevino and 1995 Toshi-
ba Classic champion
George Archer. Colbert .
(1996) and Irwin (19481 dre
also past Toshiba winners
the• flr'>l round 111 every
To'>habd Senior Cldssic rtl
Newport Beach Country
Club sine<' 1996, when lhf'
t•vent Wd'> moved from Mest1
Vc•rcle
Gil<ll'r''> round Wd~ the--
opµo .. 11!• of n .. 1 ... her's dS he
Car Accident ?
Free Report reveals yo ur rights.
Don't speak with anyone until yo u
call the toll-free 24 hr. Message.
Call Toll-Free 1-888-7 48-43b8
24 Hr. Recorded Message
Car Accide-nt ?
Quigley was wild ofl the
Al least two players hdve
been tied for the ledd dfter
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VISfT ut OH~ WO www.trMeuteetur"""'9.n.. '
I
A I 0 Saturday, Morch 3 I 2001
911·
CONTINUED FROM A 1
their trash wW be picked up
that day, they call to tell us
the crows in their yard are too
noisy or because 'there's a big
spider in my house.' One dis-
patcher got a call (this week)
asking what time it was. You
name it, we get it.•
The number of 911 calls
has been fairly consistent
e very year, said Olivia
Ra(llirez, tlte department's
senior communications
supervisor. Emergency calls
number about a thousand
every quarter and nonemer-
gencies fluctuate between
7,000 and 10,000 each quar-
ter, she said . . or the 7,596 calls police
received on the six 911 phone
lines m the last three months
of 2000, only 1,081 of them
were emergencies.
That means more than
85% of the 911 calls in Octo·
ber, November and Decem-
ber were nonemergencies.
Nonemergency 911 calls
are also frequent in Newport
Beach, said Lt. Doug Pletcher
with the Newport Beach
Police Departme nt. Accord-
mg to the department's esti-
mates, they make up
between 80% and 90% of the
911 calls.
The problem is that people
with real emergencies could
have trouble getting through,
Birney said.
·People are calling in for
all these different reasons.
and we're only dispatching a
handful of total calls on emer-
gency responses," Birney
said. "If someone had an
actual need for an immediate
response, dispatchers could
be tied up answenng ques-
Entire Purchole
The OrglnQI 17tn st.Beauty In 1
Ro. ShoM1n9.C.n1'1f
I
r
tions like, 'What is the bright
light in the sky?' or whatever
else."
Cherie Pittington, Costa
Mesa's dispatch communica-
tions supervisor, said she
could .not recall a ·speci11c
occasion when the nonemer-
gency calls were detrimental
to someone with an emer-
gency.
"It doesn't happen that
often, but it could happen,•
she said. "If all of the lines are
being ca).led by people with
questions about a powe r fail-
ure, the lines would be tied
up for an emergency not
related to the power. That
person might not be able to
get through -momentarily,
of course.·
Pittington said dispatchers
can view the addresses of all
incoming calls and can pick
which ones to answer. That
ability helps because they
can try to give priority to calls
outside of an area where the
power has failed, for exam-
O,ange County "
~7Days
(949) 642· llll
Excludes AvedQ.~Rene Furterer and~ Produc:b.
Noltf good wlfh OllY 01titlOl'l'9f,t~LIOle em. VOid w/c~ly. CJ1P118S 3/31/0Q\
pie.
But even though dispatch-
ers try to educate nonemer-
gency 911 callers by asking
them to use another number
-(71 4) 754-5252 -in the
future, dispatchers don't
refuse to answer nonemer-
gency questions on the 911
lines, she said.
Ramirez said the city is not
trying to discourage anyone
from calling 911.
"What may not be an
emergency to us could be to
someone else,·• she said.
"Somf'times when you're
uwolved in a situation per-
sonally, it is hard for you to
distinguish between what's
an emergency and what's not.
and that's fine. We'll take any
kmd of call." ·
People some times call 911
on purpose because they
think they will get a quicker
response, Pittington said.
"They don't realize we(re
in here answering all t'he
phone calls for all the lines.•
LanJscape Design
Coinstll'1lllctf.ion
Maan(enance
2025 W. Balboa Blvd. Ste D
Newport Beach, Ca 92663
(949) 6 73-5646
H.J. Garrett Furniture
Fine Furniture Since 1960
Full Oaign
ConlUlting
Service
A Family Tradition of Providing Service and Value
2215 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa
'(949) 646.0275
Open Mon. duu Su. 1 o ro 6, Sun. 12 co 5
~Quality
.. S.nlce
Value
'
•
she said.
Lvette Turner
monllon
emergency
caJ.11 for
Costa Mesa
fire and
police
services
About~%
ofthe91{
calls recelved
are not
emerflenctes.
STM MC CRANK I
DAjL'( PILOT
Many people also call the
911 emergency lines by mis-
take when they may have
intended to dial a similar
international phone number
or 411, the information ser-
vice, she ~d.
Birney said people should
call 911 is someone's life or
well-being is in danger, or if
they are witnessing a crime in
progress, Birney said.
People should avoid call-
ing 911 if they are having a
power outage or if they just
felt an earthquake, for exam-
ple, unless they have an
emergency related to those
occurrences, he. said.
"Did we just have an
earthquake?" Pittington said.
·we get that one all the time.
U it's raining, they'll ask if the
swap meet is open. They'll
complain about their neigh-
bor's barking dog. These
questions are really not rela-
tive to an emergency.•
EL TORO
CONTINUED FROM A 1
If apS>roved, the money
would be distributed
between April 1 and June
30, 2002, in $1-million
increments. The authority
would receive quarterly
funding.
The funding appears to
be a sure thing on a board
that has been sharply divid-
ed on the El Toro issue.
SuperVisors James Silya,
whose district includes
Costa Mesa, Chuc)c Smith
and Cynthia Coad have
provided the county with a
pro-El Toro majority.
On Friday, Smith said he
has been frustrated by the
county's inability to get out
its message about the ben-
efits of an airport at El Toro.
"The county has not
been effective at all
because we've spent zero
money on it,• Smith said.
"That's changing.•
Supervisors Tom Wilson,
whose district includes
Newport Beach, and Todd
Spitzer have fought against
an aviation use for the base.
Neither could be reached
for comment.
South County cities have
ponied up ample funding to
hire a slew of public rela-
tions firms to help sink the
county's plan. The El 'iforo
Reuse Planning Authority, a
nine-city public agency,
spent more than $2.87 mil-
lion during the 1999-00 fis-
cal year. Irvine spent $8.1
million in the same period,
records show.
One of those firms,
Waters and Faubel, has
Doily Pilot
served as the mouthpieoe
for the cities, which hafe
said an airport at El 'Ib'ro'
would be unsafe, On Fri-
day, Meg Waters, a spok~
woman for ETRPA, said the
board would be foolish ~
approve the SS million. , ;
"They're going to ~
throwing good money after
bad,• Waters said. "It's u
inappropriate use of ~-
payer money.• ·•
The county approved -a-
$176,000 payment to the
15-city airport authority on
Nov. 23, 1999. Yet th4t
funding waa frozen shortly
after the March 2000 ~" ·
sage of Measure F, which
barred county lobbylrtg
efforts. .. ~
Earlier this year, Gen.
Art Bloomer was chosen as
the new executive director
for the airport authority.
Bloomer, a former comman-
der at El Toro and one-time
Irvine council.man, lias
been given the assignmetlt
of revitalizing the group. "
·we haven't been able
to get our message out
about why an El Toro al!-
port would be good Cor th~
citizens of Orange Count1;"
Bloomer said. "What ltl
Toro offers us is the oppor-
tunity of a lifetime.• '
If given the fundirl~.
Bloomer said he would hire
public relations firms to
mount an information cam -
paign through direct mail-
ing and other channels.
Silva backed Bloomer
with a vote of confidence.
·1 look forward to vecy
honest and accurate infw:-
mation getting out there to
the people of Orange
County,• Silva said. •
HEMPHILL'S RUGS & CARPETS
COMPARE OUR ..
SERVICE I
PRICEI
SELECTION I
230 East 17th St. • Costa Me~
(949) 722-7224
www rugsandcarpets com •
Mon -Fri 10-6 Sat 10-5
Senior Can: Community
3901 E. Coast Highway. Corona tkl Mar; California 92625
C rown Cove is a nationaJ award
winning commurucy OVcrlookin~ the pa.cific
Ocean a.nd a canyon pracrvc in cha.rming
Corona dcl Mar. Crown Cove offers
Independent and assisted Living Programs as
well ~ ou,r unique Jour.ncy C Program for
Alzhclmcr s a.nd dcmenua care where "Lifti
fat4mq llHsn 't mti with Alz.htimrri, • """ dNlpur btiiN ~
CARING is about Respect, Warmth, and
Nurturing ~pathy and lnd.ividualized
~ttmtion; Adi to the naff at Crowa Cow,
caring i.a mucfa more; it it our life foau.
~rown Cove ttands out among other Communities (or nwnerous reuon but we bdint one
our ruadc.no -.nmariud it best in a recent magazjne utick: '
~;,ti# Mt""'"•"-· .n. ~ ""' • fiW!wlJ1, .,_;,~,.,,...,.,,.MA,_. "'I ._..,,.if I--. 1'-JNJ II t#linnl llM ,,,..,,.,,. M..,.,., l#rt l>illl" w"""ftJ llldlt"'6 ".
949-760-2800
Fas 949-76()..2839
ariail eddrm: ~
• Umntt "°' 000117
I
I /
Daily Pilot SocIE'IY ..
Saturday, Morch 3, 200 I A 11
~pinning the wheel for a worthy cause Gettina.
INVOLVED
tJon dDd patient sel'Vlces
programs. The goods may
be dropped off at 2600 E
Coast Highway. Corona deJ
Mar. Volunteers are also
needed from 10 am. to 5
p m Monday through Sat-
urday at the d.Jne locabon
(949/ 640-4777.
_., .
G ambling for charity is
certainly a big draw.
The Orange County
Chapter of the National Mul-tf111e Sclerosis Society took
o"Ver the Robert M ondavi
Food and Wine Center last
week, attracting more than
200 high rollers who dropped
$60,000 on the tables for the
charity.
• The Las Vegas-style casi-
no evening also featured t1
lucrative silent auction dnd·
plenty of laughs provided by
oe.lebrity impersonator David
Giorgi.
H onored guest Dr.
William Hornstein, med1cdl
dilector of Neum Diagnostic
Services at St. Mary's Med-
ical Center IIl Long Beach,
enjoyed the fund-raiser with
his wife, Debbie, and their
fr\.end Dr. Stanley van den
~9ort. professor and chWI·
man of the Depd.rtment of
Neurology at UC Irvine
, Van den Noort dJld ht!>
wj.f e, June, jomed Bill and
Kibtt Bisch, Kimberly and
S\'.eve Roush, Jett and Jlll
EUertson, and Chris and
Joyce Serocke to help fight
multiple sclerosis Vla the
roulette wheel.
, Whatever works is JUSt
fi.qe. F)gtitmg a deddly dis-
ease such d!> Uus ffidy In fdct
justify a little Machtdvellian
behavior. Mulbple sclerosis is
the No. 1 neurolog1cdl <.hs-
ease among young ddults.
This chronic, disabling dis-
ease attacks both the bram
and the nervous system
•111e progress, seventy
attd speafic symptoms of MS.
which range from numbness
lo_paralysis and blindne~i,.
OiiYUlOl be precilcted, • Sdld ._.e MacDonald, repre-
se.ting the Orange County
Ciapter of the Nauonal l\luJ-aile Sclerosis Society.
_:.tvtacDonald dnd he1
media partner, Carolina
G:rmac, added: "More> lhdn
3,DOO people sutfer from MS
~Orange County. Nallon-
• •I
I NOT IF
~~~~~~~~~~
'It's just a matter of time
J.fJhm an earthquake
l tpilJ hit. so:
~
} Prepare a family
.a emergency plan. ..
~·Learn hoe to l!h111 off
..; utilities. --.... pack an emcrgenc~ kit = with AashJighC!>,
" first aid items. and
' nonperishable food.
Su your Slllu Farm "f.'nl far''
foe rarthq1U11rt brorhurr
•Steven Hill
Lkt0C80618
330 &st 17th Smw .\u11r 211
• ust11 Mna. CA
• 949-616-9393 ..
............ .......
B.W .. Cook
THE CROWD
wide the numbers exceeds
400,000. Al this time there is
no known cause, cure or
prevention for multiple scle-
rosis.·
Locals IIlvoJved in plan-
ning dnd supporting the
gambling evening induded
JJm Graves, Nancy Rossi,
Lewis Finkelstein, Rose
Mary Kotank!, Laurel But-
ler, Scott Gregory, Mary Jo
Housman, John Most, Diane
Parker, Betty Belden Palmer,
Carl Karcher and Alice
Zamboni. information: (949)
752-1680.
• • •
A host of very special ~
lc>cdl yachtsmen and women
are preparing for the tilth
annuct.1 Volv9 Leukemia Cup
Regdtta. The presby10~ race
for a very unportant cause is
being co-sponsored by New-
port Bedch's tony Bahia
Connlhian Yacht Club, the
Dana West Yacht Club, and
the Sect.1 Beacli Ydcht Club.
Two startmg lines one
lrom Long Beach dnd the
other from Newport Beach -
will kkk off the Regatld on
June 1, followed by two days
of special races and events
culmmatmg in a hndJ ddy at
Dand Point
Torught, the Seal Bedch
Yacht Club will host the tirst
in a sent! of chanty fund-
rdtSmq parbes to support the
LPukenud Cup Regattd
Comedian Ronn Lucas is set
to entertain the local crowd.
Then. on April 7, a charity
wine dinner produced by
Creative Cuisine and featur-
ing the fine wines of Asb1and
Vineyards will continue the
fund-raising effort. Jerry
WesJdrchtn will host the
charity wine dinner, also to
be h~d at the Seal Beach
Yacht Club.
On May 20. Newport
Beach's Bahia Connthian
Yacht Club will welcome the
community to the third annu-
al Junior Volvo Leukemia
Cup Regatta, sponsored by
dedicated local sailors help-
ing to organize the event,
such as Lido Isle's generous
Nancy and Barry Levy. For
more information, call Pat
Dwight at (949) 622-3927.
• • •
Big time beauty is coming
lo Costa Mesa. Mrs. Globe
20011 an internationally tele-
vised pageant sea.rching for
the most gldmorous and
accomplished mamed
women in the world, is due
lo clITlve March 23 lD Orange-
County.
Tracy Kemble ol Tracy
Kemble Productions, which
produces the show, is bnny-
ing 39 Mrs. Globe titlehold-
ers from countries dfound the
world to Cosl.d Mesa for a
l 0-dqy event that will culrru-
nale in the crowing of Mrs.
Globe 2001.
The delegates will ~ stay-
ing at the Country Inn and
Suites in Costd Mesa. Kemble
also reports that the pageant
is not obly designed lo show-
Cdse inlel"Tldtional beauty and
t<tlent, but operates as a fund-
raiser for the Women in Need
Foundation, a nonprofit out-
reach progrdm for abused
women and children.
lncluded m the 10-day
extravaganzd will be shop-
ping excursions at South
COdst Plaza. cultural out-
ANNulIT 0wNERS
How long has it been since
you have had a comprehensive
review of your annuity?
Questions to consider:
• Are you holding an outdated an nuity?
• Do you have a nursing home waiver?
• Do you haH a stepped-up death benefit ?
• Do you ha"c penalty-f rec cumulative withdrawals?
• Is yo ur performance lagging?
For a FREE Comprebensin Rtview call
Toll-Fru: 1-866· 5 77 -8833
620 Newport ("lier Drive, Suite 1300
Newport Beach. CA 92658-8730 /"WNI# ("l.,.1 ,,~~ .. ,
Celestino's-.-
quality ME A~ S Wiit ·
nw Ftne.s1 Mew und Sen.nee AtlOtlulJ/e
Sn-vi1tt Cos111 Mt111 for owr 30 ytltn
f
AU Natural ~RKTENDERLOIN BEEF TRI-TIPS
Rqular Of' Garik MariMde .... aulS.uce
sst: s7~
Wt carry a ruu llne or Homemade
Lido Veal BROCCOU CHF.JSE
Salopii, Olio Bw.m. SOUP
Ground \'81 de. SJ49 per plnl
'byOurZcst1 Homemade 1imMs
POLISH SAUSAGE Rm-a.ken-Pon
SJ49 lb ss'!... offoar
reach celebrating local His-
panic heritage, coastal Jaunts
to Laguna Beach, visits to the
Children's Hospital of
Orange County, Olivecrest
and other charitable institu-
tions in the community, as
well as stops at Knott's a erry
Farm and other Orange
County ~ttractions.
Mrs. Olobe 2001 will be
brOddca,st on the lnlemQtiondJ
Channel 6.S d M other'!> Day
speaai, dlld satellite-f~ to
more than 30 countrie5 around
the world. lnfoJD'lation. (949)
598-0555.
•••
Hadassah Ue bennan,
wife of Sen Joseph Lteber-
man (D.-Conn.). will be m
Newport Beach on Apnl 22
as a guest i,peaker at Temple
Bat Yahm .
Lieberman, the daughter
of Holocaust survivors, has
lived in the Uruted Slates
since 1950. Graduating from
Boston Uruversity, and U1en
earning cJ master's degree 1n
American government dlld
mter~tio1lt1I relattons from
Northedstem Uruvers1ly,
Lieberman has most recently
worked for the National
Research Counsel linking
Amencdn corporations to
educational reform in the
helds of mdth dtld science
Her address will focu~ on
the campaign journey With
her husband, who was the
2000 Democratic vice presi-
dential candidate, as WPll as
her own pomt of view on
community IJlvolvement anrl
activism. The evening 1s
open to the enlrre communi-
ty, with tJckets to go on salP
March 12, ranging in pnce
from $18 to $100 FuU-tune
students are welcome ell nu
charg e.
lnfonnatJon: (94Y)
644-1999
• THE CROWD appears Thur'>da~
and Saturdays.
------
• GETTING INVOLVED runs pe<1·
odicalty m the Daily Pilot on a
rotating basis. tf you'd hke infor-
matlOC'\ on adding yoor organiza
tion to this hst. call (949) 574-4298.
ALS ASSN., ORANGE
COUNTY CHAPTER
The Amyotroptuc Lateral
Sclerosis Assn .. wtuch helps
md1viducds whelhnve the chs-
/ order that IS dl<;o known ai.
wu Gehng'<J d~f>dS(!, need!>
voklnteer.> {714) 37 5-t 921
ALZHEIMER'S ASSN.
OF ORANGE COUNTY
Support gwup ll'<Hlers. Vis-
1tiny Volunl<'<?ri,, fdm1Jy
rt>sourn• ron<,ultdnl!> and
oll1cP volunt1->N.., <1rr need-
P<I VcJttintecr .. rnd} work on
on<>-tu11e prowch or .or:i90-
mq progt<1Tll'> Tr<1mmg sei,-
suin-. drl' c1vdlldblt:'. 1800)
bbU· 14Y3
AMERICAN RED CROSS
In celebrdllon ol Amenc<1n
Red Cros., \.1onth in t'-. lurc-h
Touml'dU th<' world'.,
ldrg1>st '' dl< h 1 et.Hier.
invilt>'> ru .. 1or111~r ... to dondte
ttw1r ,..,c1trh"" "' lhl• Red
C'ro-.., dncJ pufC'hrl'>(' d OI:'\'\
WdtC h tcJ\ lrt•(' V1~1t
TournC'au di South Code.I
Plt1Zd. 11:u Bn-.tol SI Co<,-
td ~Jv..,d t7141 ))7·Y800
AMERICAN
CANCER SOCIETY
Tiw 0rdI1qt• C <iunty Reg10n
of thl' A.rnc>m t1n Cdncc>r
Socw~ s1 f'k'> .,fhc P volun-
tc·Pr., Th~ '-'K ll't' t'> dl-.o
!>C'l•kmq \ olunh•t>r... lo dl1....,wer
< dll<. h>r thP 111111<. I felphnt·
lnlnCenh ·r 1l14'll :!h l -'1440
AMERICAN CANaR SOOfTY
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A 12 Sotvrdoy, Morch 3, 2001
'Joseph'
amazes at .
Costa .M~sa
playhouse
By Tom Titus
W hen Cecil B.
DeMille was mak-·
ing biblical screen
epics a half-century ago, he
would bill them as boasting a
·cast of thousands.• Scale
that down to community the-
ater proportions and you
THEATER have •Joseph .
11 and the Amazmg
Technicolor
Dreamcoat" at the Costa
Mesa Civic Playhouse.
There are no fewer than
33 characters populating the
medium-sized stage, often
simultaneously, in this revival
of an early work from the
careers of nm Rice and
Andrew Lloyd Webber. It
talces the talents of four
choreographers, along with
director Damien Lorton, but
somehow it works, and often
it works beautifully.
Spectacle is an often-
overused term, but what
transpires on the Costa
Mesa stage is spectacle in
spades. Flash and dash, with
a magnum of splash, punc-
tuate this modem-dress ver-
sion of the Old Testament
story of Joseph and his coat
of many colors, cast out by
his jealous brothers to
become a demigod in Egypt
for his powers of dream
interpretation.
Backed by a driving five-
piece band under Lorton's
baton, •Joseph• truly rocks.
Its production numbers are
mind-boggling in sheer
terms of logistics alone. That
such an overflowing ensem-
ble can mesh into a smoothly
functioning unit while each
member retains a modicum
of individuality is a tribute to
Roberta Kay, Victoria Berrett,
Scott Weber and Shani Bar-
rett, who combined to stage
the intricate numbers.
At the center of this
ancient tale is its ubiquitous
narrator, the superlative
singer-actress Adriana
Sanchez, who weaves the
story together with a twin-
kling eye and a rapturously
melodic voice. Sanchez inter-
acts beautifully with the oth-
er characters and the audi-
ence simultaneously, while -
as so well put in •My Fair
Lady" -oozing charm from
every pore.
Brandon Ibanez scores ·
splendidly in the title role,
enduring his character's
many trials and tribulations
with a humble dignity that
soon replaces bis earlier nar-
cissism. Ibanez projects a
sinewy strength beyond his
muscular physique that sus-
tains his character nobly.
The 11 brothers -only 10
were present for Saturday's
opening night -are given
nominal character traits, but
function best as an ensemble,
and the absence of one due
to a prior commibnent
scarcely marred the overall
effect. The tribe consists of
Edward Gusts, Duane Allen
Thomas, Gary Trinidad,
Mark Velarde, Marc Davila,
Scott Weber, Tyler Schat-
zlein, Darrin Caskey, Ruben
Rodriguez Jr., Ryan Bean and
Robert Argueta, with Kenny
Jagosz offering weepy
moments as the father and
Tanya Gallo as his wife.
The show's only weakness
is in the performance of
Emilio Maximum as the
Pb.araoh, a role written as a
sendup of Elvis Presley but
delivered more as a punk
rocker by the actor who
played the mvts-type charac·
ter in •aye Bye Birdie• last
year. Maximum's contribu-
tion is kept to a m.1nlmum
SEE TITUS PAGE A15
I lot of 'llUllSEllSE'
Newport Harbor High School's talented Shakespeare arts drama students will
present •Nunsense• at 7:30 p.m. Monday through Wednesday at the Costa Mesa
Civic Playhouse, 661 Hamilton St. •Nunsense,• directed by Damien Lorton and ..
produced by Gall Brower-Hedler. is the music.al story of the Little Sisters of Hobotcen's ;
fund-raising efforts. $5 at the door. (949) 515-6~1 . •
Doily Pilot ..
,,,
.. ,
..
.. .
DON LEACH I OAl.Y PILOT
Barton C. Friedberg read.s from Shakespeare's "Much Ado about Nothing .. as part of "Reading Shakespeare,"
a Balboa Reading Arts Theater program in which Joanne Matos, left, and Sandra StangeT are students.
Much
Class run by
Balboa theater's
Arts Education Program
...
• . .
helps people get to know about the Bard works of Shakespeare
a little better
YoungO..ng
DAILY PILOT
B arton C. Friedberg shares an old Shake-
spearean adage.
The saying goes, ·111e function of a
work of art is, as it were, to hold the mirror up
to nature.·
•And I think that's what Shakespeare does,•
Friedberg said. •He holds the mirror up to
nature and be shows. us ourselves as we really
are. And if we read the plays closely, we learn
so much more about the world we inhabit and
even more about ourselves.·
That said, Friedberg, the teacher of a class
unofficially titled "Reading Shakespeare" al the
Balboa Performing Arts Theater,. concludes that
it's never too late to learn about yourseli.
His students -housewives, retirees, busi-
nesswomen -agree.
The newly formed class, which has been
meeting once a week for roughly the past
month to read Shakespeare's works, is part of
the theater's Arts Education Program·and is run
under The Divas of the Balboa Theater fund-
raising group. The theater itself is still being
restored.
The first lesson was ·Romeo and Juliet,"
held in conjunction with the Ahmanson The-
ater's production of the tragedy. The group
will start reading •Much Ado About Noth-
ing" this week, to coincide with South Coast
Repertory's staging of the piece through
April 1.
·0ne of the reasons that we picked those
FYI
WHAT: Reading Shakespeare
WHEN! 10:30 a.m. to 1 p.m.,
usually Tuesdays
WHERE; Locations vary
COST: $25 per session, S20 for Divas members.
CALL: (949) 675-5616
two plays right off the bat is because a lot of
people were asking 'How is the Balboa Theater
gonna fit in with other arts opportunities in the
county?'" said Michele Roberge, executive
director of the theater.
The class is made up of all women, but men
are welcome. The group is expected to grow,
possibly with the addition of evening classes for
those who can't attend the present meetings,
which are usually held at 10:30 a.m. on Tues-
days at a member's home.
Friedberg's students are not professional
actors nor are they pundits. Instead, they are
people who have always wanted to learn the
plays or simply keep their minds active and
fresh, the retired college professor said.
Since the class began, the students have
experienced the thrill and deeper understand-
ing that occurs when you study a Shakespeare-
an play.
·we approach Shakespeare as literature,•
Friedberg said. "We talk about setting and style
and language and themes ... because the lan-
guage is so difficult. "
Student Sandra Stanger, a Newp0rt Beach
resident, is optimistic about watching ·Romeo
and Juliet,• which she has now read.
"With my lack of background, I wouldn't have
had any idea what was going on onstage, • said
the former corporate manager for Honeywell. •J
would never have been able to understand the
language.•
Today, she knows what "zounds• means. It's
an exclamation like "Egadl. or "Drat!" and
derives from the phrase •by God's wounds.~
She and fellow student Joanne Matos, who
works in real estate sales, have also learned that
theatergoers in Shakespeare's time paid 1 cent to
stand in the middle of the audience and watch a
three-hour show. For 2 cents, you got a seat.
•And most people think of him as a poet or
writer, but we learned (Shakespeare) was basi-
cally a businessman,• Matos said.
As a teacher, Friedberg says it's a shame that
those who never understood the plays when
learning them in school •bear the name Shake-
speare and shudder.•
"He understood all of us so well," he said. ·1
don't know bow, I don't know why. Irs called
genius.•
For Friedberg, learning about Shakespeare
and bis works at a late age is, If anything, far
from strange.
"H the aging process isn't about growing wis·
er, then what is its purpose?" he said. •u we
don't learn from our mistakes and all the other
things around us that permit us to learn, then
shame on us.•
Reflecting the world
Local gallery displays work of Mexican artist Alejandro Nava,
who uses objects to make personal statemenls
Youngehan9
DAILY PILOT
Alejandro Nava comes from
Zacatecas, Mexico -a city Ufat
encourages artistic posslbWties, a
place where artists go to inspire
each other.
But the 44-year-old painter's
worlca reflect a broader world.
While Nava's earlier paintings are
abstract depictions of his home-
town. his most recent pieces pay
bomage to Henri Matiae, images ef
phone booths in England, percep-
tions of New York and experiments
with a symbol of an Afrtcan mask.
Zacatecas may have nurtured
the artist, but Nava seems to be
the one placing bis hometown on
the map.
His works, which can be viewed
at the Boudreau-Ruiz Gallery in
Newport Beach through April 29,
aie often shown in Europe but lell
known in America, said Debra
Boudreau, co-owner ol the 5-
month-old gallery. The 20-piece col·
lection is accompanied by sculp.
tures by Perla Sscbwarz of Mexico
City, and jewelry by local Malian
Sanders.
"We've eneountered. a lot of peo-
ple from Orange County that aren't
familiar with Mexican artists at all,"
said Boudreau. who has dedicated
the first year and a ha.11 of her
exhibits exclusively to Mexican art.
"l find that Americans have
quite a skewed idea of what Mexi-
can art la -they thlnk it's always
decorative. But this la very cont.em·
porary-looking work.• lbe added
of Nava'• paintings. •And you
don't have to be a connolaleur or
a.rt scholar to enjoy it.•
His most recent series was
inspired by Matisse's •The Dance,"
which he saw upcloee during a tqp
to Paris. Nava bas call~ this show
a reacUon, homage and visual
poem to the late artlat.
One of J11a pieces is tiUed •The
Dream that Everybody Wants to
Dream About• It is a beige·tone4
painting showing what looks like a
Ooating telephone -jUll tbe
handset part -with 11Dudg91 of
black and red beneath lt It is the
artist's sarcutic re1J1C11*t to the
idea that society la trapped bl a
communication whlrlpoOl.
Doily Pilot
After
HOURS·
rSend AFTER HOURS items
\ft the Daily Pilot, 330 W. Bay
St., Costa Mesa, CA 92627;
fax to (949) 646-4170 or call
(949) 574-4268. A complete
listing may be found at
http://www.dailypilot.com.
SPECIAL
MONTE CARLO NIGHT
The Junior League of
Orange County will bold its
7th Annual Monte Carlo
Night fund-raiser at 7:30
p.m. today in The Clubhouse
Restaurant at South Coast
Plaza, 3333 Bristol St., Costa
Mesa. Proceeds will benefit
the league's new and ongo-
ing community projects
focusing on the prevention of
child abuse and adolescent
pregnancy. $70. (949) 263-
3785.
VIDEO FOCUS
can League will host its
annual Chinese New Year
celebration, •An Evening of
Elegance,• at 6 p.m . March
10 at the Sutton Place Hotel,
4500 MacArthur Blvd., New-
port Beach. The fund-raiser
will include a 45-minute St.
John Boutique fashion show
, highlighting the newest ,
spring and summer fashions,
an exotic menu, a silent auc-
tion and a recital by the win-
ners of the 2000 Chinese-
American League ShoWcase
competition. $100-$200. (714)
755-5788,Ext. 264.
SHAMROCK BENEm
Newport Harbor High
School's Navigators will pre-
sent its seventh annual bene-
fit, "A Shamrock Rock &
Roll," at 6 p.m. March 17 at
the.Sutton Place Hotel, 4500
MacArthur Blvd., Newport
Beach. The event will
include a silent auction, din-
ner, dancing and a live auc-
tion. $75. Proceeds will bene-
fit Newport Harbor High
School's programs. (949) 851-
9230.
VIETNAMESE ANYONE?
Orange Coast College will
present Vietnamese Culture
Night at 5:30 p.m. March 18
at the Robert B. Moore The-
atre, 2701°Fairview Road,
Costa Mesa. The evening
will include music, martial
arts !nd fashions. $7 or $10.
(714) 432-5764.
WACKY FUN
'DATEBooK .
series. $8. (714) 740-7878. at 8 p.m. Wednesday and
MARKET PLACE
Thursday at the Orange
County Performing Arts
The Orange County Market Center, 600 Town Center
Place is held from 7 a.m. to 4 Drive, Costa Mesa. $19-$54.
p.m. Saturdays and Sundays (714) 740-7878.
in the Orange County Fair-
grounds' main parking lot, • HOT UPS ON STAGE
88 Fair Drive, Costa Mesa. A<:tress and singer Sally
$2 for adults, cllildren age 12 Kellerman will perform
and younger are admitted Thursday through March 11
Cree. (949) 723-6616. at the Orange County Per-
forming Arts Center, 600
Town Center Drive, Costa
MUSIC Mesa. The Long Beach
native ls known for her role
FREE BLUES as Colonel Margaret "Hot
A free courtyard concert will Lips • Houlihan in Robert
be performed at 2 p.m. today Altman's "M' A 'S'H." Per-
by legendary blues guitarist formance times are 7:30 p.m .
Roy Rogers and his band, Thursday and Friday, 7:30
The Delta Rhythm Kings. and 9:30 p.m. March 10 and
The concert will take place 1 p.m. March 11. $45 or $49.
at Muldoon's Dublin Pub, (714) 740-7878.
202 NeWport Center Drive, TO RUSSIA N~wport Beach. (949) 640-The Bolshoi Symphony 4110. Orchestra will perform an
SYMPHONY SHOW all-Russian program March
Orange Coast College's Sym-10-11 at the Orange County
phony Orchestra will offer the Performing Arts Center, 600
third concert of its 40tb season Town Center Drive, Costa
Mesa. 1imes are 8 p.m. at 7:30 p.ro. Sunday at the
Robert B. Moore Theatre, March 10 and 3 p.m . March
2701 Fairview Road, Costa 11. $15-$55. (949) 553-2422.
Mesa. The concert will feature
BARBERSHOP ACT works by Johannes Brahms,
Charles Camille Saint-Saens The Masters of ~armony. a
and Milchcµl Mikhaylovich nationally acclaimed, award-
Ippolitov-lvanov. $6 or $10. winning barbershop chorus,
(714) 432-5880. will perf onn at 8 p.m. March
10 at Orange Coast College's
MOZART MANIA Robert B. Moore Theatre, 2701
Pianist Andfeas Haefiiger Fairview Road, Costa Mesa.
and violinist Jean-Jacques $18-$24. (714) 432-5880.
Kantorow will debut with the
Pacific Symphony Orchestra SPANISH TUNES
in a "Mostly Mozart" concert Jordi Savall and Hespenon
. .
Saturday, March J, 2001 Al3
XXJ will make their Orange ing classical flamenco, jazz,
County Pedonning Arts classic pop and Brazilian
Center debut at 8 p.m.. bossa nova at Carmelo's Ris-
March 15 in Founders Hall, torante lta.llano, 3520 E.
600 Town Center Drive, Cos· Coast Highway, Corona del
ta Mesa. The program will Mar. (949) 675-1922.
be titled •Paradise l..osL •
$48. (714) 740-7878. JAZZ. ON SUNDAYS
Orange County saxophonist
ST. PATRICKS TUNES Norm Douglas qrings his
Muldoon's, an Irish pub1 will own brand of jazz to Roy's of
present the Van Diemans Newport Beach from 5 to 8
Band from 10 a.m . to 5 p.m. p.m. Sundays. Roy's is at 453
March 17 for St. Patrick's Newport Center Drive, New-
Day. Kell~ Fitzgerald and ·port Beach. (949) 640-7697.
Vesica Pisces will play con-
temporary and traditional POP/ROCK & FLAMENCO
lrish music as well as some Tate 5 -a funk, rock and
original pieces. Muldoon's is Motown act -performs at
located at 202 Newport Cen-p.m. Saturdays at Carmelo's
ler Drive, Newport Beach. Ristorante, 3520 E. Coasr
(949) 640-4110. Highway, Corona del Mar.
Solo guitarist Ken Sanders
A DIFFERENT performs classical flamenco
SORT Of CABARET tunes at 7:30 p.m. Tuesdays
Dublin's Traditional lrish and Sundays. The shows are
Cab?J'el will perform at 8 free. (949) 675-1922.
p.m. on March 24 at Orange
SATURDAY NIGHT R&B Coast College's Robert B.
Moore Theatre, 2701 Gerald Ishibashi and the
Fairview Road, Costa Mesa. Stone Bridge Band plays
$26-$32. (714) 432-5880. rock and R&B al 9 p.m. Sat-
urdays at the Sutton Place
TWO BANDS Hotel's Thanon Lounge, 4500
A two-band concert featuring MacArthur Blvd., Newport
Orange Coast College's Mon-Beach. Free. (949) 476-2001.
day Big Band and Tuesday SENIOR CENTER AFTERNOON Big Band will be held at 2 A seven-piece, live band p.m. March 25 at the Robert
B. Moore Theatre, 2701 performs big band tunes
Fairview Road, Costa Mesa. from 1 :30 to 3:30 p.m. Fn-
$5 or $7 (714) 432-5880. days at the Oasis Seruor
Center, 800 Marguente Ave ..
FLAMENCO, JAZ2., ETC. Corona de! Mar. $4. (949)
Ken Sanders, a solo guitarist, 644-3244.
appears from 7 to 10 p.m. on
Sundays and Tuesdays, play· SEE AFTER PAGE A14
The Orange County Muse-
um of Art will present "One
Wall: A Video Series• from
March 10 to Sept. 9 at 850'
San Clemente Drive, New-
port Beach. The series intro-
duces audiences to six
Southern California artists
who Incorporate video in
their work. It will debut at 11
a.m. March 10-11, with a
presentation of short clips or
trailers from all the videos. A
panel discussion with the
artists will be held at 3 p.m.
Museum entrance is $5 for
adults, $4 seniors and stu-
dents and free for members
and children 16 and younger.
(949) 7 59-1122.
The Orange County Per-
forming Arts Center will pre-
sent inventor, acrobat, come-
clicvi. musician and juggler
Michel Lauziere at 11 a.m.
and 1 p.m. March 24 at
Founders Hall, 600 Town
Center Drive, Costa Mesa.
The performance is part of
the Saturdays at The Center
---------------------------------------------~
SOME ELEGANT EVENING
The Pacific Symphony
Orchestra's Chinese-Amen-S10FF
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thru April 30,2001 s1 OFF
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trocn 12 noon · &pm • • • • • • ! See Calarnlty The :
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A14 Saturday, Morch 3, 2001
AFTER . reunited for their mother's
funeral, will be staged
CONTINUED FROM A 13 Thursday through Marcil 11
and 15-18 with shows at 8
p .m. Thursdays Uvough Sat-
STAGE urdays and 2 p.m. Sundays
in the Drama Lab Theatre,
2701 Fairview Road, Costa
JOSEPH'S DREAMCOAT Mesa. $6-$9. (714) 432-5880.
•Joseph and the Amazing
Technicolor Drearncoat • will GO WEST nm through March 25 at the Martin McDonagb's "The Costa Mesa Civic Playhouse, Lonesome West.• an Irish
661 Hamilton St. Perfor-comedy about two conniving mances will be at 8 p.m. brothers, will receive its
Thursdays through Satur-West Coast premiere March
days and 2 p.m. Sundays. 16-April 15 on South Coast
$15 (949) 650-5269. Repertory's Second Stage,
UITLESHOP 655 Town Center Drive,
"Little Shop of Horrors· will
Costa Mesa. Showtimes are
be staged at Vanguard Uni-
7:45 p.m. Tuesday through
Sunday, and 2 p.m. Saturday versity through Sunday at 55 and Sunday. $18-$47. (714) Fair Drive, Costa Mesa.
Show times will be 2 and 8 708-5555.
p.m. today, and 2 p.m. Sun-EASTERN STANDARD day. $15. Discounts avail-Orange Coast College's able. (71 4) 668-6145. Repertory Company will
stage Richard Greenberg's SHAKESPEARE AT THE REP "Eastern Standard• March "Much Ado about Nothing# 30-April 1 and April 6-8 in will be staged at South the Drama Lab Studio, 2701 Coast Repertory at 8 p.m. Fairview Road, Costa Mesa. Tuesdays through Fridays, Shows will be held at 8 p .m. 2:30 and 8 p.m. Saturdays, Fridays and Saturdays and and 2jo and 7:30 p.m. Sun-2 and 7 p.m. Sundays. $5 or days until April t . Mark $6. (714) 432-5640, Ext. 1. Rucker directs. The theater
is at 655 Town Center Drive,
Costa Mesa. $28-$49. (714) ART
708-5555.
ALTERNATIVE ART
MEMORY OF WATER Newport Beach City Hall is
"The Memory of Water,# Clisplaying art by students at
playwright Shelagh Steven-Back Bay and Monte VJ.Sta
son's story of three sisters alternative high schools from
DATEBOOK
9 a .m. to 5 p .m. through ter Drive, Costa Mesa. $20-
Tuesday. The exhibit is co-$60. (714) 740-7878.
sponsored by the Newport
Beach Arts Commission and SLEEPING BEAUTY
the Newport Beach Sunrise
Rotary ClutS. (949) 717-3870.
Orange County's Festival
Ballet Theatre will oiler its
full-length Rroduction of FIVE PERSPECTIVES "Sleeping Beauty• at 8 djr Intemation.4} Art in New-
port Beach will present p.m . Match 31 and 2 p .m.
images of Vietnam in an April 1 at Orange Coast
exhibit titled •Five Perspec-College's Robert B. Moore
tives• through fyfarch 10 at Theatre, 2701 Fairview
Road, Costa' Mesa. $15-2431 W. Coast Highway.
Free. (949) 548-6249. $19. (714) 432-5880.
DANCE dALLROOM FRIDAYS
The DePore Foundation for
ONDEREUA ON ICE the Arts hosts ballroom danc-
The world-renowned Russ-ing from 8 to 11 p.m. Fridays
ian skaters of the St. Peters-at the DePore Dance Center,
151 Kalmus Drive, Suite G-3, burg State Ice Ballet will
perform "Cinderella" at 4 Costa Mesa. $11 admission
and 8 p.m. today at Orange includes 8 free dance lesson.
Coast College's Robert B. (714) 241-9908.
Moore Theatre, 2701
Fairview ftoad. $14-$33. DANCE 204
(714) 432-5880. Dance 204 offers private and
group instruction in begin-
EIFMAN BAUET rung and advanced ballroom,
The Orange County Perform-Latin and modem dancing at
ing Arts Center's 2001 Inter-204 Washington St., Newport national Classic Da.pce Beach. (949) 675-9082. Series will open March 16·
18 will\ the Eifman Ballet or SENIOR BALLROOM St. Petersburg's ·Russian i>Tbe Costa Mesa Senior Hamlet: The Son or Cather-
ine the Great.• Perfor-Center offers ballroom
mances 'Will be held at 8 dancing' to the music of the
p.m. Fridays and Saturdays, Ray ~obbins Combo for
with 2 p.m. maanees on adults f{om 7:30 to 10:30
Saturdays and Sundays. A p.m. Tu'sdays. Singles and
preview will be offered one couJlles are welcome. $3.
hour prior to each show. The The center is at 695 W. 19th
Center is at 600 Town Ceo-St. (949) 645-2356.
J •
DaiJy Pl'et
~""~'~""-·-·~·,u -· .u
SI.AH HUM/ OMV f'LOf 1
Kelley Coaowr, 11,cater ... cbeerle•den -lier IO
relMNlne lor an upcoming musical at SL ADdrew'I '.)
Presbyterian Churdl on Wedlle1day.
'Once Upon
a Parable'
•
Musical: ·0nce Upon a
Parable,• by Tom S. Long
and Allen Pote
Group: Produced by the
Chorister and Carol choirs
of St. Andrew's Presbyter-
Uui Church
Story line: A group of
energetic storytellers try to •
capture the humor and
contemporary flavor of
Jesus' parables, using them
to retell Jesus' story. ·
Drama director: VUetta
Skillman
Muk:al dlledon: Lori Lof·~
tus and Carol Conover :-
Produdlon ClOOl'dlMlor m&b
cblldreD'I m1lllc -~ !:.
Martha MCainnis Healey ·z
Mtnltter ol music and ""
wonblp: L8ny K. Ball 1 ~
When: 6 p.m. SUnday ;·
Where: St. Andrew's Pres-,;
bytetian Church, 600 St. '
Andrews Road, Newport :J
Beach o
C•free n
Call: (949) 574-2233 J
Uni.que and exceptional antiqueU.
Asian furniture, collector's rare "'!
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kimonos, unwual brome and ston6
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TETRA
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: March 3rd: • • • from JO am to 3pm • • • • • • • • • •
FREE :
1/2doz.
KrisyKreme
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We Love Your Pets · or Lessr·
(949) 723-5002
Mon.-Sat. lOarn -6 m
EUKANUBA
$3.000FF
401b.t.gsof~ba
dog food.
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y...-....,.yof do9or
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Daily Pilot
DANSCENE STUDIO
Danscene Studio offers ball-
room dand.ng at 8 p.m. on
the first Friday of each
Jl¥>nth. $10. The studio is at
2980 McCllntock Way, Cos-~ Mesa. (714) 641-86e8.
BIG BAND DANONG The Oasis Senior Center
hblds an afternoon of danc-
~ to big band music from
O to 3:30 p.m. Fridays.
ffee and refreshments are served. The center is at 800
?vfarguerite Ave., Corona del
~· (949) 644-3244.
•
ARGENTINE TANGO
[janscene Studio offers tan-
gp dancing from 8 p.m. to
12:30 a.m. the first Saturday
of each month. Danscene is
at 2980 McClintock Way,
Costa Mesa. (714) 641-8688.
BOOKS
' GIRL TALK
The ·women of Mystery•
~ries at the Newport Beach
Central Ubrary will con-
clude with a book discus-
sion about crime fiction by
Sue Grafton, Marcia Muller
and Sara Paretsky at 7 p.m.
March 15 at 1000 Avocado
Ave., Newport Beach. Free.
(949) 717-3801.
EBSEN SIGNS BOOKS
Buddy Ebsen will sign
c9pies of his book •Kelly's
Quest" at 2 p.m. March 31
at Barnes & Noble Book-
sellers, 953 Newport Center
Drive, Newport Beach. Free.
9) 759-0982.
,..~'" BOOK CLUB
e Oprah Book Club
eets at 1 p..m. on the third
ursday of each month to
.. ,~,.,s Oprah Winfrey's
ost recent selections at
Barnes & Noble Booksellers
Fashion Island. The store is
at 953 Newport Center
' Drive, Newport Beach.
(949) 759-0982.
KIDS
ADVENTURES
WITH ARTHUR
•Arthur -A Live Adven-
ture" will play through Sun-
day at the Orange County
Performing Arts Center, 600
Town Center Drive, Costa
Mesa. Show times will be
10:30 a.m., and 2 and 6 p.m.
today; and 2 p.m. Sunday.
$16.50-$29.50. Discounts
available. (714)·740-7878.
STARLIGHT STORIES
Children 3 to 7 may partio-
pate in songs and finger
puppet plays at 7 p.m. Mon-
days at the Costa Mesa
Library, 1855 Park Ave.
(949) 646-8845.
PJS AND BOOKS
Newport Beach Central
Support Our
Schools
. Shop Harbor
Blvd. of Cars
11 . .\!~H 'l Z
I ~ i ' ' ~ \ I I '
•-I•l I lf.~t IY.Wll
Ubrary offers story time at 7
p.m Mondays and 10:30 a.m.
Saturdays. The library is at
lQOO Avocado Ave. Children
may wear pajamas to the
evening sessions. Free.
(949) 117-3801.
WEEKLY STORYTEll.ER
Barnes & Noble Booksellers
Metro Pointe hosts story
time at 10:45 a.m. Wednes-
days for children of all ages
at the store, 901-B South
Coast Drive, Costa Mesa.
(714) 444-0226.
POETRY
FREE POETRY
A poetry performance by
Jake, Spryly & Seeks will be
held at 8 p.m. Tuesday at
the Gypsy Den Cafe and
Reading Room, 2930 Bristol
St., Costa Mesa. Free. (114)
549-7012.
POETRY AND MUSIC
Poets Jane Cassidy, Lori
McGinn and musician Ryan
Strassburg will be featured
at 8 p.m. March 14 at Alta
~oUee House & Roasting
Company, 506 31st St.,
Newport Beach. Free. (949)
675-0233.
THEE WORD THING
"Thee Word Thing" perfor-
mance poetry night begins
at 9 p.m. Wednesdays at
Club Mesa, 843 W. 19th St.,
Costa Mesa. Free. (949)
642-8448.
DINING/TASTING
TREATS FROM TUSCANY
Villa Nova Ristorante in
Newport Beach will present
•A Taste of Tuscany· -an
extravagant dinner with
wines from Tuscany -at 1
p.m. March 13 at 3131 W.
Coast Highway. $120 per
person. (949) 642-1865.
A TASTE OF NEW ZEALAND
Whole Foods Market at ni-
angle square in Costa Mesa
will present "Whole Foods
Market New Zealand Days,·
a celebration including travel
giveaways, from 11 a.m . to 1
p.m. March 17 at 1870 Har-
bor Blvd. The event includes
food demonstrations and cul-
tural performances. Free.
(949) 574-3810.
lWIUGHT DINING
Villa Nova Restaurant
offers a twilight dining
menu -featuring dishes
such as chicken parmigiana
and calamari picante at
reduced prices -from 5 to
6 p.m. weekdays and 4 to 6
p.m. Sundays. The rest.au-
rant is at 3131 W. Coast
Highway, Newport Beach.
(949) 642-7880.
WINE TASTINGS
Hi-TI.me Wine Cellars fea-
tures wine tastings from
4:30 to 8 p.m. Fridays and
1 :30 lo 8 p.m. Saturdays.
(949) 650-8463.
SUNDAY BRUNCH
The Sutton Place Hotel hosts
Sunday brunch from 10:30
a.m. to 2 p.m. each week,
including international
seafood and salad buffets,
roasts carved to order, break-
fast favorites and more. The
meal is $30; $40 with cham-
pagne. The hoteU; at 4500
MacArthur Blvd., Newport
Beach. (949) 476-2001.
CLUBS
ALTA COFFEE
The Alta Coffee House pre-
sents musical acts at 8:30
p.m. Thursdays through Sat-
urdays at 506 31st St., New-
port Beach. (949) 675-0233.
ATRIUM MARQUIS
The Atrium offers a variety
of live music dally at its Air-
porter Club, 18700
MacArthur Blvd., Irvine.
(949) 833-2770.
BIRRAPORETTl'S
Birraporetti's offers SWUlg
music by the 12-piece Don
Miller Orchestra at 8 p.m.
Mondays at South Coast
Plaza, 3333 Bristol St., Costa
Mesa. (714) 850-9090.
BISTRO 201
Bistro 201 offers jazz perfor-
mances at 8 p.m . Fridays
and Saturdays and 11 a .m.
Sundays at 3333 W. Coast
Highway, Newport Beach.
(949) 631-1551.
CLUB MESA
Shows begin at 9 p.m. The
club is at 843 W. 19th St.,
Costa Mesa. Admission is
TliilBt.~UNBELJEVABLE
PRICES
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For more information
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$5-$10. (949) 642-6634.
DIN DIN AT THE
BAMBOO TERRAQ ,.
Din Din at the Bamboo Ter·
race presents instrumental
music after 9 p.m. Thurs-
days and pop and rock after
9 p.m. Fridays and Satur-
days at 1773 Newport Blvd.,
Costa Mesa. (949) 645-5550.
DUR'TY NELLY'S
Nelly's offers live music at 9
p.m. Fridays and Saturdays
at 2915 Red Hill /we., Costa
Mesa. (714) 957-1951.
FOUR SEASONS HOTEL
The Four Seasons offers live
music Mondays through
Saturdays.at 690 Newport
Center Drive, Newport
Beach. (949) 759-0808.
HARD ROCK CAFE
The Ha.rd Rock offers live
music Sundays at 451 New-
port Center Drive, Newport
Beach. (949) 640-8844.
THE HARP INN
The inn offers live music
Thursdays through Satur-
days at 130 E. 17th St., Cos-
ta Mesa. (949) 646-8855.
HOGUE BARMICHAEL'S
Barroichael's offers live
music Wednesdays through
Saturdays at 3950 Campus
Drive, Newport Beach. (949)
261-6270.
UDO CIGAR ROOM
The cigar room is a place to
enjoy a smoke with your
drink. The bar is at 3441 Via
Lido, Suite D, Newport
Beach. (949) 723-0595.
~R~RfTAVILLE f
Margaritaville offers live
music and ts at 2332 W.
Coast Highway. Newport
Beach. (949) 63 t-8220.
'MARRAKESH
Marrakesh offers authentic
Moroccan cuisine and belly
dancing daily, starting at 5
p.m. The restaurant is at
1976 Newport Blvd., Costa
Mesa. (949) 645-8384.
TITUS
CONTINUED FROM A 12
by his soft and inarticulate
vocalizing.
Assisting Sanchez in set-
ting up the story sequences
are the fetching temptress-
es, Deborah Bushman and
Gabrielle Mann. Weber and
Davila double as Joseph's
fellow prisoners pouring out
their dreams, while director
Lorton does a Hitchcockian
turn as Potiphar, Joseph's J
master, under the pseupo-
nym of Michael Banks'-
the "Mary Poppins" charac-
ter that was Lorton's first
role in his youth.
Musically, •Joseph· has
a little bit of everything
from '50s rock 'n' roll, to
Jacques Brei-style mourning
GALLERY
CONTINUED FROM A 12
"The telephone represents
technology.• he said through
Celia Ruiz-Rich, co-owner of
the gallery and interpreter for
the interview. "Everybody
wants to have this dream, but
now technology has taken so
much of our lives.·
"The Telephone Booth in
London• shows sharp lines -
the frame of a phone booth
-against a lightly colored
background, and a phone.
"The person tries to com-
municate, the booth becomes
a more mbrnate place and
there ts an intimacy of the
conversation,· Nava said.
"Lost Shoe m Manhattan"
pictures a brown shoe at the
bottom e nd of a brown-col-
ored canvas.
·nus shows how a person
becomes so mstgnificant in
the magnitude of d big oty."
he said.
Cynthia MacMullin, direc-
tor of LabnA.rt.com and for-
me rly a curator at the Muse-
um of Latin American Art,
said there is a rhythmic sense
Saturday, Morch J , 2001 AIS
m
WHAT: .. Joseph and the
Amazing Technicolor
Dreamcoat•
WHERE: Costa Mesa CMc
Playhouse, 661 Hamilton
St., Costa Mesa
WHEN: 8 p.m. Thursdays
t hrough Sat urdays. 2
p.m. Su ndays until
M arch 25
I TICKETS: S1S
PHONE: (949) 650-5269
to country ahd western ~
• calypso celebration. It's a
prolific potpourri of musical
and visual artistry blended
mto a most enjoyable
ensemble.
• TOM Tll\15 reviews local theater
for the Daily Pilot. His reviews
appear Thursdays and Saturdays.
FYI
WHAT: Works by Alejan-
dro Nava, Perla SschY"arz.
Marian Sanders
WHEN: 11 a.m. to 6 p.m.
M onday through Sunday,
through April 29
WHERE: Boudreau-Ruiz
Gallery, 3000 Newport
Blvd., Newport Beach
COST: Free
CALL: (949) 675-4766
of poetry to Nava's work.
·He uses domestic objects
that are personal,· she said.
·And the unages talk about .
.. the exterior and mterior m
daily observations.·
One of Nava's recurrmg
images ts a black bicycle
seat. It renunds tum of tradi-
bonal Afncan masks, he said.
Like Matisse and Picasso,
who used symbols and icons
from foreign cultures during
a pivotal time of modem
artistic movement, Nava said
be wants to incorporate
images from other cultures
into his work.
•My work is based on my
experiences,• he said. "Which
I'm applying on a dally basis.•
. I
I
Al6 Saturday, Morch 3, 2001
•
I
Doily Pilot
I
TOSHIBA "I've
·played
FIRST ROUN D very
Jose Maria canizares 32-33-65
Bruce Fleisher 32-33-65
steady
each
Dana Quigley 33-32-65
Dave Stockton 33-32-65
Bob Gilder 35-3~5
week. 1
don't
Terry Mauney 34-33-67
Jim Colbert 34-33-67
Hale Irwin 35-32-67
know
why (I haven't won).
But every week I try to
John Schroeder 33-35-68
George Archer 33-35-68
Jim Ahern 35-33-68
Lee Trevino 34-34-68
Bruce Summerhays 34-34-68
John Mahaffey 34-34-68
Allen Doyle 36-32-68
John Bland 35-33-68
win I 've told som~
people that I feel like
I 'm ready to win. I feel
that way each week ...
My second shot at 18
Graham Marsh 37-31-68
Gil Morgan 33-35-68 was difficult. I tried to
hit a low 3-wood
Stewart Ginn 34-35-69
Bobby Walzel 34-35-69 because of the trees
Tommy Aaron 34-35-69
Dale Douglass 35-34-69
Leonard Thompson 34-35-69
(and made birdie to
finish the round)."
Ray Floyd 33-36-69
Tom Kite 34-35-69
J.C. Snead 35-34-69
Jose Maria Canizares
First-round leader
Walter Hall 34-36-70
Quote Of
1llE DAY
-Vedl, I'm a lucky ~-Al my 5fe I've been a kicky boy -~ •
Jose Mart• canlures. who shares the
first round lead with four others.
Sports Editor Roger CorlSOl'I • 949-574-4223 • Sports Fox: 949~50-0170 • Sotvrdoy, Morch 3, 2001 8)
J
"J got off "1,l.<now "You
to a real this golf tend to
good game is focu·s on
start in good your
with you shape own
three should right game
straight shoot low now and when it's /
birdies, rounds, I enjoy close
especially ~ what I but it always seems to playing this golf like this atop the
thought were very get the b est of you at course. You have to leaderboard. It's
difficult conditions. It the end ... I didn't play think out ther:e ... if i t definitely a little
was a wonder! ul st.art. Monday, Tuesday or
had been a dreary tougher, because any Wednesday, and I gave some away,· Thursday was like I ~ay, maybe there bad sh9t is going to
though. All in all, it had to start all over. would not have been knock you d9wn a lot
was a pretty good That's very unusual for such low scores. But farther. Every mistake
round ... The rough me (to go so many with the sunshine and is big. So that wears on
was very difficult out days without playing the course warming you, but that's the fun
here. You really had to golf). I was really rusty ·up, I think it got part of it. You 're out
keep the ball in the out there, but my people loosing up. " there competing. It's a
fairways." putter saved me." competitive game."
Bruce Fleisher Dana Qu~ley Dave Stockton Bob Gilder
, First-round leadeJ First-roun eader First-round leader First-round leader
Steve Veriato 36-34-70
Terry Dill 34-36-70
Charles Coodfu 36-34-70
Hugh Baiocc i 36-34-70
Five _card .stud at ~Toshiba Senior Classic
Bob Eastwood
Dave Eichelberger
Jim Albus
Ed Dougherty
Tom Jenkins
Tom Wargo
Larry Nelson
Jim Dent
Gary McCord
Mike Smith
Ted Goin
Bill Holstead
Dave Lundstrom
Vicente Fernandez
John Jacobs
Mike McCullough
Al Geiberger
Chi Chi Rodriguez
Andy North
DeWitt Weaver
Howard Twitty
Walter Morgan
Bob Charles
Hubert Green
35-35-70
36-34-70
35-35-70
35-35-70
35-35-70
37-33-70
35-35-70
34-36-70
37-33-70
35-35-70
36-34-70
3S-36-71
35-36-71
36-3S-71
34-37-71
34-37-71
34-37-71
36-35-71
35-36-71
34-38-72
34-38-72
35-37-72
35-37-72
36-36-72
•There's nowhere to hide after Friday's first round, which
includes five at the top and three players two strokes behind.
Richard Dunn
DAILY PILOT
N EWPORT BEACH
-No first round in
Tosh1 ba Seruor Classic
history has ever been so
Wlld. ~ -Of the five Senior TOSHIBA
PGA Tour players atop
the opening-round leaderboard in
wet, muddy condibons at Newport
Beach Country Club, there were five
distulctly different approaches.
But, as the SO-and-over golfers
gear up for today's second round and
consider ramwecu for Sunday's final
round, one Uung seems certain
er the11 paths to t>-under-par.
Like Stockton, Cani1drc-, mttde
seven birdies dnd one bogey, pol".tmg
h1s lowest rouncl of the yeM
"Yeah, l"m d lucky boy." C'dOJZdrPS
said, when asked dbout his frequent
smile. ·All my life l 'vf' been a lucky
boy."
Canizares. the first pldyer to tee off
Friday, had plenty of redson lo !.mile
after h.ts best-round ever in thC' Toshi-
ba Classic.
Gilder. a Seruor Tour rookw who
captured his hrc;t tJUe two weeks dgo
at the Venzon Cldss1c m Tdmpa. Fla ,
started slow dnd -hrushed hot whtlf'
Fleisher started hot dnd f1ntsht>cl
slow.
lsao Aoki 36-36-72
Jim Thorpe 37-35-72
Doug Tewell 36-36-72
Rocky Thompson 37-35-72
Jesse Patino 37-35-72
OAl.Y PILOT PHOTOS BY SEAN HILLER
Bob Eastwood (above) searches for his ball, which was lodged in a palm
tree on the 14th green Friday. Belo~ defending champion Allen Doyle hits
from a bunker. Doyle is three strokes off the pace. Eastwood is five down.
No one l!i runrung away from the
held Ul Toshiba Classic VU, which is
nght on schedule for another close
fuush.
•I Uunk the field will be bunched
up (this weekend)." saJd Dave Stock-
ton. one of hve leaders at 6-under-par
65.
· The tournament's fifth ledder
Seruor Tour "lronman• Qwgley, Wd'>
perhaps the embochment of Fnday's
first round. calling his 6-under ·a very
peculiar round for me •
QUJgley wds evE>rywhert" but on
the fairways and greens, but scrdm-
bled well to make up for 1t. recordmg
par-saVlllg shots on st.x holes
Paul Parajeckas 35-37-72
Gibby Gilbert 36-37-73
Tom Watson 37-36-73
Walter Zembriski 36-37-73
Sammy Rachels 37-36-73
Jerry McGee 38-36-74
Tom M cGinnis 37-37-74
Miller Barber 35-40-75
Jimmy Powell 39-36-75
Tom Shaw 38-37-75
Bob Duval 37-39-76
Gene Littler 38-38-76
Don Bies 38-38-76
Harold Henning 38-38-76
Kikuo Arai 38-38-76
Joe Inman 39-38-n
Orville Moody ~78
Billy casper 39-43-82
COMMUNITY COLLEGE TRACK AND ·FIELD
Kroening a wor~Orse
• • She's in the top three in seven
events for OCC at three-way meet
tvilSSION VIEJO -Orange Coast Col-
lege freshman Julie Kroening finished in
the top three ln seven events to help the
Pirates defeat Riverside and Saddleback in,
a three-way Orange Empire Conference
track and field meet Friday at Saddleback.
Kroening, out of Costa Mesa Higbi won
the -400-meter hurdles (1:07.5), wu leCODd
ln the 100 hurdles (17.2), second in the blgb
jump (-4-8), third ln the javelin (81-2112),
third ln the long jump (15-13/4) and compet·
ed on the wtnn1ng -400 relay, as well u the
second-place 1,600 ntlay.
Heather Shurtleff won the 11500 (5:15.6)
and 800 (2:21.3) for OCC.
Carl Olllen won the 110 high hun:Uel
(15.0) and the •OO hunllel (57.1) and WU
MOODd tn the trtple Jump to pace the occ
men, 'Wbo fell to Seddlebeck, 81-81.
Both OCC teum are now 2·1 ln confer· • ..
Hale Irwin, the 1998 Toshiba Clas-
.-Uc champion, said Thursday the
strength of the Tostuba field reminds
him of a major championship, then
Irwin sent out a signal Friday to
remind his peers of his presence with
a 4-under 67, his best opening round
in six Toshiba Classic appearances at
Newport Beach.
1\vo others, inducting 1996 Toshiba
Classic champion Jim Colbert, 1omed
Irwin at two strokes off the pace,
while a l091am was formed al the top.
Aside from Colbert's two-strok e
win. no Toshiba champion has won by
more than one stroke.
And with Stockton, Jose Maria
Canizares, Bruce Fleisher. Bob Gilder
and Dana Quigley all sharing the
first-round lead, 1t could be the most
eclectic group of leaders the tourna-
ment has ever seen when you consid-
"Imagine shootmg 65 and hJtting
only eight greens?" said Quigley, who
actually did ll.
With five players deadlocked for
the lead. it bes a Toshiba Seruor Clds-
sic first-round record. ln 1996. Jun
Colbert, Lee lreVlJlo, Bob Murphy.
Homero Blancas and John Schroeder
shared the opening-round lead at 3-
under 68, the h.rst year of the Seruor
Tour event at Newport Beach Country
Club
"Hey. I'U take any kind of lead."
said Gt.Ider, the last to po t a tourncl-
ment-leadmg 65 m the $1 4 milllon
event, m which the wmncr gets
$210,000.
·when I've ever been in the lead.
SEE TOSHIBA PAGE 83
DAILY PILOT HIGH SCHOOL ATHLETE OF THE WEEK
• CdM defender makes it her mission to render scoring
chances impossable for~ most talented rival forwards.
~ Feulknef scored,• said Janes, who,
OMV PILOT real.lzing the temerity of such a
W en Paige Janes statement. almost wishes she
eceives her defensive co'!1;1Usually put her on the assignment before , ... , .. every Corona del Mar Hi~ other teams strongest .,_yer and sbe bu shut them all girls soccer game, it's as sh down.• said CdM Coedl Ron
is given a new goal in We. "''--~" An<l, at those unfortunate Evans, who 11• lllll_, 4
enough to have been marked frequtnt vtctim of lbni1ar
by the sopbom<n fullback can treetment at Sea Kings '-•-practicel. attest, tbe mere lW1t ol an~ "Sbe'I tenedow and wora =': ~ber very hard.• l!vw coatiDlaed.'
and between the posts, wW •She ll vr:-t in tbe air aDd ca
lilnPlY not be tolerated. -~ be. llhY**. J9t lbe cen be •
•) Can't remember tbe lest teduUceDy luptrk>r, -~·.
time• gist rve ~ egaM sa JANIS Mm•
82 Saturday, March 3, 2001 Daily Pilot
-. .
Daily Pilot SPORTS
Nothing to it, if you're Palmer, or H9g~
•All sorts of disaster awaits
you at the signature hole of
the Toshiba Senior Classic.
Tony Altobelli
DAILY PILOT
N EWPORT
BEACH • Chi '---
Chi Rodriguez
' best explaine.d
the rrund-set
each golfer
needs to be suc-
cessful at the par-3 17th hole at the
Toshiba Seruor Classic.
•You need Arnold Palmer's
swing and Ben I fogan's guts to play
this hole well. H the ever-colorful
Rodnguez said ·I WlSh I those
qualitJes. •
For those not la with the
•v ou've got to get it on the water, allowing lrwm to
the green on 17," NBCC get up and down for a par.
head professional Paul Hahn He then birdied the 18th tq
said in this year's Toshiba give him a one-shot win a.nci
Senior Classic program. the course record. Thi
"The bunke~ is larger than it TOSHIBA Famous Bunker Rake, aut<f·
was two years ago, so it will graphed by Irwin, is on di$-
catch any shots that miss right. The play in the trophy case ln the dull·
worst plac~ to miss is long and left house.
when the pin is on the top tier. From Friday, the hole was relatively
there, you have to hit down to the calm and gentle, playing as the
green and it's as quick as can be.• eighth-toughest hole on the course.
Long ~d left is bad, but for Bob There was 16 birdies, 47 pars, 12 ,
M urphy.short and left worked out bogeys and three double bogey!i.
pretty good at the 1997 Toshiba The pin was seven yards short an
Senior Classic. four yards to the nght of center a.rid
On perhaps the most memorable on the lower tier of the green, a ~1-
putt witnessed on the 17th, Murphy, atively easy pin placement.
Sotvrdoy, Morch 3, 2001 83
their prime
Tom
Watson
chips to
the 17th
green ln
Prlday's
ftrst round
of the
Toshiba
Senior
Classtc,at
·Newport
Beach
Country
Club.
-Newport Beach Cqun Club's sig·
an Irishman playing on the day "It's a ho1e that if you gy'a high
before St. Patrick's Day. used a little score, it will leave y~u t sing and
"Luck O' The Irish " to send an 80-turrung tn your sJeeP, Rodriguez
foot putt up the monster tier and into said. "I wouldn't surprised if
the back edge of the cup to win a Allred Hitchcock hed something to
nine-bole playoff with Jay Sigel. do with the design of it." • ~EAN HLLER I
DAI ,,. P. OT
'· I
l r
' • ..
nature hole, at'c; 185 ards of pure
mental torture and/or exhilarabon,
depend.mg on the outcome.
Not to be outdone the foUoWUlg Friday's hrst-rounQ-leaders, Jose
An elevated tee gives the golfer a
beautiful look dt the hole, wtuch 1s
guarded by bunlsers an the lront and
to the nght. Four pdlm trees are
year was H ale Irwin, w ho ln 1998, Mand Camzares, Sruce Fleisher,
set the course record with a final-Dana Qwgley, D~ve Stockton and
round 62 and won the tournament Bob Glider COJ1lbined to shoot 30
by one stroke, thanks ln part to under pdr foJ"fhe day (-6 each), but
some div4le intervention at the 17th the hvesoms managed onJy one
anyone who mandges to mdke d
hole-in-one
Jim Dent Cdme the closf'st on fn-
day, leaving hai. tee shot dbout a loot
shy or the hole for d gimme bLrdte
It's dl!.o d hol<> thdt bnngi. out thf'
stlhnes!. m '><>me golfers.
to sc.are 1t into th<-hol"'. but hdd to
settle tor d par
Then, there\ Cha C ha t le tut d
low .. tme dnve an to the hunker, mok..
mg hun shnek out dn "Ohhhhh!"
upon its ldndany tnt<J the bunker placed to lh<' left of the two-bered
gre~m. dlong with an embankment
behind th<' qrecn for anyone who
misses long.
hole. b1rd1e dnd four pars on the.17th.
Tied with H ubert Green headmg Gilder walked onto the 17th with From there, d nice up dnd down
not only sctv~<i ht'> pelf, hut sent
Rodngucl into c1 dttnnng frenzy,
bnnying the crowd to 1t<, lc•et Oh yC'c1h, there's c1lso d bag, big
lake thdt hugs · the hole from the
nght uncl !>.wc11low~ <1ny shots less
than 170 ydrds.
to the 17th, Irwin's tee shot came up four straight' birdies to his credit.
short, sending the ball on a one-way The 17th would not allow a filth as
trip to the water before the Famous he Wdlked away with a par.
John Muhc11fey, dft<>.r -;inking u
Lncky '>ix-foot<>r lor pdC, lhre>w hi<:.
ball in the> Wdter OUl or pure rel.Jet
lsao Aoki IC'ft his 20-foot b1rd1e
dllPmpl hdnginq onlo the C'Cigl:l ol
the cup. I It· tnt>d to cldp loudly lo try
Bunker Rake became a part of goU In add1bon to the pressure of wm-"Whdt C'dn I '>dY(" Rodnguez
Sdld. "I get PXCJll'rl wh1·n I mdke a
pdr on d tough h11h· l1k(• thdt •
history. ning a goU toumdffienl. CadiUclc
·The rake stopped the· baU from throws m d $47,000 Deville GTS to
SCHEDULE
TODAY'S
STARTING TIMES
8 30 a.m -Joe Inman, Orville
Moody, Billy Casper
8 40 -Don Bies, Harold Henning,
K1kuo Arai
8'.SO · Tom Shaw. Bob Duval,
Gene Littler
9 a m -To!ll McGinnis. Miller
Barber. Jimmy Powell
9 10 a.m Walter Zembr1sk1,
Samm Rachels, Jerry McGee.
9:20 Paul Para1eckas, Gibby
Gilbert, Tom Watson
9:30 Doug Tewell, Rocky
Thompson, Jesse Patino
9·40 Hubert Green, lsao Aoki,
Jim Thorpe.
9.SO Howard Twitty,
Walter Morgan, Bob Charles.
10 a.m. ·Chi Chi Rodriguez,
Andy North, DeWitt Weaver.
10:10 -John Jacobs, Mike
McCullough, Al Ge1berger
10·20 -Bill Holstead, David
Lundstrom, Vicente Fernandez.
10:30 ·Gary McCord, Mike Smith,
Ted Goin
10:40 -Tom Wargo, Larry Nelson.
Jim Dent
10.SO Jim Albu\, Ed Dougherty,
Tom Jenkins
11 a.m. • Hugh Ba.iocch1,
Bob Eastwood, Dave Eichelberger
11:10 ·Steve Veriato, Terry 0111,
Char~ Coody.
11 ·20 -Torn Kite, J c Snead,
Walter Hall
11.30 Dale Dougla\S, Leonard
Thompson, Ray Floyd
11.40 -Gil Morgan, Stewart Ginn,
Bobby Walzel.
11 SO -Allen Doyle, John Bland,
Graham Marsh
Noon · Jim Ahern, Bruce
Summerhays. John Mahaffey.
12:10 -George Archer, Lee
Trevino, Tommy Aaron.
12:20 Jim Colbert, Hale Irwin,
JohnSchi! 12:30 -tock ton.
Bob Gllde , Terry Mauney.
12:40 -Jose Mana can1zares.
Bruce Fleisher, Dana Quigley.
SUPER SENIORS
Flrst-f'OUnd leact.rs
68 -George Archer, Lee Trevino
69 • Tommy Aaron, Dale Douglass,
J.C. Snead
70 -Terry Dill, Charles Coody,
Jim Albus, Jim Dent
71 • Al Geiberger
72 -DeWitt Weaver, Bob Charles,
Rocky Thompson
7J -Gibby Gilbert. Walter Zembr1ski
75 -Miller Barber, Jimmy Powell,
Tom Shaw
76 • Gene Littler, Don Bies,
Harold Henning
78 -Orville Moody
12 • Billy Casper.
SEAN HILLER I DAILY PILOT
Ray Floyd drives to the green on the second hole.
TOSHIBA
CONTINUED FROM Bl
I'd want to stomp on (the rest
of the field). I'd want to bury
lhem. They feel that way too
when they're up there lead-
mg. It's a very competlbve
game.·
Gilder birdied five of the
ldst SlJC holes to gain part OI
the lead, while Fleisher, the
Seruor Tour's 1999 Player ol
the Year arid Rookie of the
Year, smoked the first three
holes with birdies, then
cooled off unW the back nine.
·1 hope to strike 1t better
over the weekend," said
Fleisher, w ho birdied 10, 12
and 15 to pull into a tie for the
lead. ·1 just try to be very
patient. because I have a very
difficult time with these (poa
annuna) greens, tfting to find
the speed and break. It talces
a very positive rrund-set and I
had a good one today.·
Stockton, a two-time
Senior PGA Tour Player of the
Year, has played in every
Toshiba Cl assic smce the
mauguraJ event in 1995 at
Mesa Verde Country Club
and the 6-under 65 was the
lowest first-round score he
has ever posted.
Stockton has never shot
better dl Newport Beach
When he finished second at
the '95 Toshiba Classic,
Stockton shot a hnal-round o4
at Mesa Verde.
"It was a good day for
budaes for me,• Stockton
said "My goal every tune out
as to make four b1rd1es a
round, and to make seven,
that's grcdt.
"It WdS JUSt a very good
round lor me My pdrtners,
Larry Nelson dnd Doug
Tewell, had trouble makmg
putts all day But I didn't. I
shot 66 an tho pro-dm on
Wednesday and that felt
about the same, except I
en1oyed the sunshine more
(Priddy), H
Qwgley said he •escaped"
and descnbed h1S round dS
"really ugly," but ddded that
he "didn't leave anything out
there today.·
Right on lhe heels of the
five leaders, however, 1s Irwin
and a hungry Colbert
"What I want is to be the
best 59-60-year-old player
that's ever played,· Colbert
said earlier tn the week.
Irwin, the Newport Beach
course-record holder at 9·
under 62, accomplished in
lhe final round of his 1998
Toshiba bUe run, carded a 68
in the first round of the 1999
Classic, his previous best
round in Toshiba lid-lifters.
Trevino loving Newport
• Golf legend shoots 3-under 68 on
the• Newport Beach CC course, his
best round of year; also praises fans.
Richard Dunn
OMV PILOT
NEWPORT BEACH -One of
goU's most popular players, Lee
nevtno, rediscovered his stroke
Friday and enjoyed his best round
of the eason on the Senior PGA TOaHIU
Tour. ..._.
Trevino, on or 10 playen to shoot 3-under-
~ 68 ln the first round of the Tbshiba Senior
-Cassie at Newport Beach Country Club, was
also among the happiest people to see 1un-
1hlne.
•Jt'• been awfuJ,• Trevino Mid of the
weather in Oallat, Texas. where he lives. "It'•
been rain, rain, ra.ln, cold, cold, cold.
·1 came here because I love this golf
coune. I love the people who run it and J love
coming to th1I area, ond th1I crowd hat been
great. It'• the beat crowd l've teen all year on
our tour, eo that's nJce to see. We reelly need
it .• nmno haln't t>Mn playmo penScu1a1ty
Well lhil year on the Seftlor Thur, but he brob .
70 for the first lime in 2001 to put himself in
the Toshiba hunt.
1\'evino changed to an interlock putting
grip before Friday's round, something he has·
n't tried since last year, when he carded a 66
in one round.
•The next day, I went back to an overlap
(grip). I bounce around,• said 1\'evtno, who
recovered at 17 to mak e par. after a "horrible"
tee shot that landed in the bunker.
nevtno, always a crowd favorite at New·
port Beach, said when he plays here be •&eeS
the same faces every year.• •There are a lot of
-great sports fans in SOulbem California, and l
don't thlnk there's a lot of (prOfessional) sports .
that go on here in Newport Beech,• Trevmo
added. •And lt looks like (the local fans) have
been cooped up indoors because o( the rain
too long, too.•
With •on rain In the ~ Sunday,
playen were already tal.ldng about a rain-
sbortened, 36·hole townament like last year.
•Toshiba doesn't deserve another ratnout, • n.vtno said. n.. ........... going 8foand -...
Senior Tour lately end Prtdiy Lanny Wadkins
became a victim. wtthdrawtng from the Tolhl-
N Clauic becaUle of the flu. •
Walter Zembrilki ~IKed h1rD and lhOt 7-over 73.
Our New Car Prices Are So l..Ot.'1, We Gm't ~ Them Because It Would
Disrupt Business Condinons at Our Competitors' Showrooms.
SPECIAL PURCHASE .,,._ ... ___ .. ___...
LOW MILEAGE DEMOS
While the economy has weakened in other mileage veh1des from other out-of-state
parts of the country. our business 1s very Mercedes-Benz Centers Some of these
strong. We are buying up choice, low-vehicles have no mileage at all.
12 ~ r-1ass Sedans 2000 EJ20 Sedans ~ 4 II • Lh<l<l~t'
No Waiting •• Drive O~ Home Today! 2000 SLK230s
5 h' ch110--e
2000 SLSOOs 2(' t<l Z-nt l( hL
2000 ML320 ShUVs
"-111 '-ll<l-.C
2000 Ml.4~0 SUVs
-h I d11 l( I"('
200 I E320 Sedan
· 2000 E320 Wagon
2000 C280 Sedan
200 I SL600 Roadster
1999 E320 AWD Sedan
. . . ' '· I ~ ' . ' . I \ . • . • .
' ' . . .
'21,990
'91 QJO Win '24,990
k.1thtt. CD ScacM-r"*'l•I
'41,..
•99 Cll020 Cab. CD, Lnw Mile\. 111114'1
·01 Cl'e' Cab. Hoc. Hot, . f06M!itl
3300 Jamboree Rmd • 888.624.1401
trJ,ttO
84 Saturday, Morch 3, 2001
Pure
sport
G ordon McNelll,
Corona del Mar -
t-Jigh 's junior varsity
boys basketball coach,
· dlSplays contenbnent. He
teaches seventh grade world
history at CdM and is also
Lhe freshman baseball coach.
I le was a stdr in his hoop
pldying days at UC San
Diego dnd then a
profess1onaJ ballplayer in
Austrdlid. So. some might
think he would aspire to be
a vdrs1ty coach
And, with Sed Kmgs' boys
l>asketbaU coach Paul Orris
stepping down. more
Steve Virgen
LIGHTWEIGHTS
quesbons
started
coming his
way.
Doesn't
he want
to be a
varsity
COdCh?
"Many
people
have
asked me
thdl, • SdJd
McNeill
who also
serves dS
thf' Vdrs1ty dSSlStdnt COdCh
"I don't have the des1re to be
tlw h<'ctd codch. I've been
around 1l ford whtle The
amount of work, the budgets,
the orgdnizmg, the clot.hlng,
th(• summer ledgue, tt'!>
endle!>s. It d oesn't slop
Thdl'!> not whdt 1 want. I
cnioy my rolE' I'm happy
whPre I'm dl."
This sed!>on, McNeill
wc1s satisfied with the Junior
vaNty's Sedson. The Sea
Kings finished 6-14 overdU
dnd 2-8 in the Pactfic Coast
Ledguc, but they lost to PCL
ledders Northwood, by JUSl
two p01nts. dnd University by
four. wh1ch f'ncourdged
Mc Neill.
Sophomore Bretl Matsen
led CclM with 14 points per
game. And. Steve Russell
dveraged e1qht rebounds a
game
As Lh<' SPcJ Kmgs' varsity
team loses 12 players to
grc1dudt1on. the• younger
player!> wUJ hdvc to unprove
qwckly dnd get rec1dy for the
top levC'I , McNe1U said.
SEE LIGHTWEIGHTS PAGE 86
REC STANDINGS
CJTY OF COSTA MESA
Bastcetbalt Standings
As of Feb. 27
Monday HD" League · 1.
Psomas, 3-3; 2. Full Court Mess, 3-2;
3. Sneaker Squeakers, 3·2; 4. Anzdl,
3·2; 5. Carnvirous Apes, 3-2;
6. Rhymes W/ Duck. 2·3; 7. Scultz
Photo. 1-4
Tuesday "C-Minor" League · 1.
Mule Train, 4-1. 2 2·Pump
Chumps, 4 1; 3 Goat Hill, 4-1, 4.
Team Freedom, 2-4, S. Dribblers,
2·3; 6 Seagate Scorpions, 2·3, 7.
WMA.1-4
Wednesday "B" League 1
Soft Tubs, S 0, 2 Beach Bombers,
3·1; 3. Old & Slow, 3 1, 4 Pt<kford,
2·2: S. The Bakers. 1 4, 6 OB. 1·3;
7. Islanders, Q-4
Thwlday "8-Minor" League ·
1. Run & Gun. S-1; 2 Aluminum
Siding, 5-1; 3 The Bo~. 3·3, 4
Merrit Lender, 2-4. S Violators. 2-4;
6. Unexpected Team, 1 ·S
TODAY'S SCHEDULE
• BaMball
College · Westmont at Vanguard
University, 11 a.m., doubleheader.
Comniunity college • Orange
Coast at Irvine Valley, noon.
High school · Foothill/Costa Mesa .
Tournament round robin: Foothill
at Corona del Mar, 10 a.m.
• 1nic:k and fleld
College men • Vanguard
University at NAIA Indoor National
Championships, 10 a .m.
•Swimming
Community college · Orange
Coast at Mt. San Antonio
Invitational. all day.
High school boys and girls
Corona del Mar at uplstrano
Valley Relays Finals, at Saddleback
Coll~. 9a.m • Softball
College • Hope International
at Vanguard University, noon.
High school Costa Mesa
lnvltatlonal
At TeWlnkle Park, Field 1:
Anaheim vs. Saddlebadc. 9 a.m.
Anaheim vs. Costa Mesa, 11 a.m.;
saddleback vs Costa Mesa. 1 p.m.;
Estancia vs. Los Amigos, 3 p.m.
At TeWlnkle Park, Fleld 2:
c.ntury vs. Estancia, 9 a.m.: Century vs. Los Amigos. 11 a.m.:
c.aplstrano V•lley Christian vs.
Laguna Beech. 1 p.m,; Capistrano
Vafley Christlan vs. Newport
H.,-bor, l p.m.
At Costa Mesa H= 3: lAgUM 8N(h vs. Harbor,
9 a.m.; St. Margaret's "" corona def M¥. 11 a .m .. St. Ma~ vs ~Ma, 1 pm:CoronecMIMar
vs.~ Ana, l p.m.
SPORTS
OAJlY PILOT FILE PHOTO BY ERIC SANTUCCI
Multiple Sea View League champion Nicole Mackey is one of the Sailors' major weapons as the swim season unfolds.
ItS the ~in, sport
• Tars look to take advantage
of the recent aquatic trend.
Steve Virgen
DAILY PILOT
NEWPORT BEACH -The swim·
ming boom has definitely arrived in
Orange County, especially al Newport
Harbor High.
Names like Misty Hyman, Amanda
Beard, Kristy Kowal, Amy Van Dyken
and Jenny Thompson have inspired
Sailor girls to make their way to the
swim team, junior varsity and varsity.
And, because Dara Torres graced the
pages of Sports Wustrated last year,
swimming is now a cool sport -Britney
Spears posters are going to the doset.
"Swimming looks like an attractive
place to be (at Harbor),• Tars Coach
Ken LaMont said. "Girls are taking
notice. Last year, with the excitement
of the Olympics, we had a lot of local
heroes and that adds to the excite·
ment."
The trend, combmed with Harbor's
success. has increased the number of
girls in the pool, LaMont said.
Junior Carly Geehr and sophomore
Nicole Mackey actuaUy swam in last
year's Olympic swimming trials, which
display the talent the Sailors feature
this season.
Geehr won the Sea View League
title in the 200-yard freestyle and the
100 backstroke. She also finished sec-
ond in the 200 freestyle in CIF South-
ern Section Division I and third m the
500 freestyle as the Sailors were run-
ner-up to lrvine.
Mackey finished second in the 100
Girli swimming.-OUTLOOK ,
t; •
THE SAILORS
Alex Anderson So.
Jennifer Arrow Sr.
Erin Bal( Sr.
Jessica Ball Fr.
Peggy Beebe So.
Katherine Belden Jr.
Carly Geehr Jr.
Hillary Kar~ So.
Paige Lansing So.
Nicole Mackey So.
Terina Murphy So.
Ashley Parole So.
Hayley Peirsol So.
Mai Tajima So.
Coach: Ken LaMont
butterfly and lhtrd in the 200 individual
medley at the CIF Finals. She is the
defending Sea View League champion
in both events.
Sophomore Hayley Peirsol is quick-
ly making a name for herseU. She won
a Sea View League title in the 500
freestyle last year.
Geehr, Mackey and Peirsol, along
with then-senior Amy Murphy, .were
the Division I champions of the 400
freestyle relay. Murphy is now at Uni-
versity of Nevada-Reno.
LaMont noted the loss of Murphy,
but said senior Jennifer Arrow should
fill in both as a leader and a fast swim·
mer. LaMont is expecting Arrow to
make the most of her final season at
Harbor.
•she's been with (the program)
when we were down,· said LaMonl,
now in his third season. "She's been a
big asset for the improvement. This
season, she is going to help us to rally
to get it going.•
Murphy's sister, sophomore Jenna
Murphy, a standout in water polo,
brings much speed to the quick Sailors.
Junior Katherine Belden, sopho·
more Paige Lansing, senior Erin Ball
and her sister Jessica, a freshman, are
more water polo players who wu· 1-GC1:rn-1
over their competitive spirit, LaMont
said. And sophomore Mai Tajima is
another swimmer to watch for.
Sophomores Hillary Karges. who
swam on varsity Last year, and Peggy
Beebe, a club swimmer. should give
the Sailors a viable chance to repeal as
runner-up in both the Sea View
League and CIF.
LaMont has all but conceded the
championships to lrvine.
•Irvine is untouchable this year,·
LaMont said. "They are gaining swim·
mers that are lop swimmers in any oth·
er high school, but they're lucky if they
make the Junior varsity at Irvine. They
are probably the strongest they've ever
been." ·
The Vaqueros, who are seeking
their fifth straight Division I title, have
reloaded with freshmen who are
nationally and internationally ranked
in Courtney Cashion, Diana Mac-
Manus and Flora Kong.
The Tars will tum their focus to
gaining an edge over San Clemente
and Laguna Hills for the Division I run-
ner-up finish.
"I would love to get second in CIF, •
LaMont said of his goals for this sea-
son.
Costa Mesa looks to regroup
• There are a lot of new players in the
Mustangs' dugout for the 2001 softball season.
Tony Altobelli
DAILY PILOT
The Costa Mesa High soft·
ball team will try. to continue
its current success by bring·
ing back a coach from its
original glory days.
Rick Buonarigo. who guid-
ed the Mustangs from 1990·
95 and led them to their first-
ever ClF Southern Section
playoff appearance~ (1993,
'94 and '95) returns to the
helm, replacing Sharon Uhl.
Uhl, who helped the Mus·
tangs reach the Division IV
playoffs last year, will coach
the junior varsity to allow ber-
seU an opportunity to take
care of some personal busi-
ness, according to Buonarigo.
·I was going to be the
junior varsity coach, but then
Sharon offered me the varsity
spot,• Buonarigo said. "I'm
glad to be back and it should
be pretty exciting this year.•
Returning from last year's
9-12 team (6·4 in league) and
seniors Cara Molter, Erica
Melcer, Jamie Kllmklewicz
and Tess Lindsay.
Kllm~ewio and senior
Sarah Walkins will platoon at
catcher, while Undsay,
sophomore Alejandra Gallar-
do and sophomore Katy Ren-
lsh make up the Mustangs'
pitching rotation.
"Tess has the most control
and experience, while Ale-
jandra and Katy were each
good pitchers on Last year's
PCL champion JV team,•
Buonarlgo said. "The group
isn't what I'd call dominating,
but very consistent.•
Anchoring the Mesa
infield is sophomore shortstop
Ann Marie Topps. •she has
the potential to be an all-
league, even an All-CIF ath·
lete before she's through,•
Buonarigo said. "She's got a
gteat glove and she hits a
too.•
Sophomore Jade Moss will
be called upon to provide not
only a leadoff spark in the
batting order, but someone
who can cover the outfJeld
gaps in center field. U she can
Softball
OUTLOOK@
1 Ola Wall.c.e Sr.
2 Erica Mete.er Sr.
4 Mmle Klimldewlcz Sr.
5 Mete Moss So.
6 C.a Molt9r Sr.
I ~Galardo So.
11 T• LlndYy Jr.
12 Snh Watilns Sr.
1 J Jtnnlf9r JordM So.
21 s.ndra FflnCO So.
22 Am~ Topps So.
24 ec.ty........ So.
c..11 -~ luoNngo
get on, look for Topps, Renish
and Walkins to provide the
long ball and RBI production.
New track at Orange Coast must wait for some fixes
~
COSTA MESA -This was supposed
to be the year for celebration for the
Orange Coast College men's and
women's track teams mostly because of
a new track course at Coast.
Celebration might still be rom.ing for
the Pirates as they are undefeated, but the
track wW have to watt until next seoson.
OCC Interim Athletic Director Fred
Hokanson, who was lut year's trod< and
field coach, said the Pirates wW not host
a meet thl.s season becaUH the coune lJ
nol sufficiently hnished.
The track should be repaired and·
ready in roughly a month, Hokanson
sald, but OCC does not host any other
meets. Ne~t year, the Pirates will host
the Orange Empire. Conference finals.
Hokanson said, the course wos
thought to be completed on time for a
meet Peb. 9, but a surveyor discovered
the course wu approxtmelely one root
too Jong for thP. required 400 meten.
•nie key lJ to fix (the track) so they
don't have to tear U UJ)I" said Hokanson.
Coach Gordie Pitzel explained the
course 15 unsafe because it does not have
ample space between the inside lane
and the edge of the trark leading to the
lnfield.
E1tancia High cross country Coach
Charlle Appell wu aware of the track
condition at Coe1t. He said the Eagles'
Pacific Cout Leegue dUAl meet again.It
COlta Mese wW be at Estancia U the
track ii not reedy. -by Sine vi,..
Daity Pilot
Bo.!!.. voll•t~ll OUTLOO~
THE MUSTANGS'~
1 GMbert Landeros
2 AIWl Le
7 CMtosMtme
8 ~eWl/mef
9 Tom HMlitton
1 O Marco s.ntMlgelo
13 Eduardo Moreno
15 John Santol
16 Jason Hardy
18 Brandon Trejo
21 BradAyen
22 Huy Pham
31 Mike Payne
S-9 So.
S-10 So.
6-0 Jr. s-g So.
5-10 Sr,
5-10 Sr.
5-\1 Jr.
5-7 So.
5-9 So.
) ~ S-11 Jr.
5-8 Jr.
5-5 Fr.
6-7 Sr.
eo.dt: Dave Sorrells
Mustangs
starting
anew
• With only one
varsity returne r and 12
eligible players in the
program, Mesa begins
a re building process.
Barry Faulkner
DAILY PILOT
COSTA MESA -North-
wood High is making 1l!> var·
sity debut in Pactl1c Cod!>t
League boys volleybdll )ius
spring, but, even w1lhout
seniors, the T1mbe rwolve!>{
may be ahead of th~ Co~td
Mesa program.
Arter mass defection!>,
Coach Dave Sorrells dnd /
assistant Darlene Batley hdVl'
12 eligible players in the
entire program, Wlth only om·
returrung varsity player.
But while they are still fdr
from polished, Sorrells SdJd he
is more than pleased with the
work eUuc and attitude dis·
played by his inexpenenced
group.
"Half of these lods hdven'l
played voll~yball, but !?very
one of them is committed to
working hard and trying to
get better,· Sorrells sd1cl.
"These kids are running
through walls tor me dnd J'U
do the same for them. From d
pure coaching standpoint,
this is going to be d gredt
experience. By the end of the
season, these kids are gomg
to learn some lessons they
never learned before, dbout
what it takes lo be a tedm. to
compete and lo really work
hard."
The Mustangs will com·
pete in the Uruvers1ty tournd·
ment, beginning today, beforP
playing their first nonJedgue
match March 12 against Rtln ·
cho Alamitos.
•I'm treating Darlene (d
former collegiate wome n's
coach who guided the Mesa
girls last fall) as basically a co·
coach, so it's really benefiting
the kids to have two coach·
es,· said Sorrells. who has dll
but given up hope on fieldmg ·
a junior varsity team.
Senior Carlos Jaime is the
lone varsity returner, but
Mike Payne, a 6-foot-7 All·
PCL basketball player. ha'>
Joined the program and is
showing great pronuse.
Junior Eduardo Moreno 1s
the starting setter, whtle
senior newcomer Marco San-
tangelo, a standout for the
soccer team, has already
earned a starting spot,
according lo Sorrells.
Battles for the remaining
two starting spots continue
and Sorrells said each kid will
get a chance to make an
impact.
JC SOFTBALL
Pirates drop·3-2
.decision to 1lgers.
Bermudez K's 15
COSTA MESA -Orange
Coast College dropped a 3·2
softball decision to visiting
Riverside Friday as Rachael
Bermudez struck out 15 and
allowed JUst one bit in her
complele·game effort
Despite just one hit,
Orange Coast nearly pulled
out an improbable rally, scor·
lng two runs in the sixth on
three walks and Jennifer
Jensen's single to left. occ falls to 5-4-1, 0·2 in
the Orange Bmpire Confer·
ence, Rlvel'lide improves to 8·
4, 1-0.
OM.W .... caaa••m ......... _. J. 0...-C....2
~ 000 110 0 • J • ,
Orange Coast 000 002 0 • l , 1
hn'nudn Ind a.nt\; Gulhn,
O'H«• (4) end .......
W • lermudel. L • ~. 21 -Cir""9 (IKQ.
..
Doily Pilot SPORTS or: Saturday, Morch 3, 2001 °'1
Sailors pa.int a .. pretty picture in their opener
•Pitching and patience
pay off for Tars in a 6-2
season-opening victory
over Laguna Beach.
and Chris Ward required just BASEBALL 88 combined pitches, •55
strikes, to advance to Tues-
Cherry drawing the throw at
second and Lu Castillo beat-
ing the relay borne.
five ruts, JUSl two off John
Verdugo, who worked the
fmaJ 4 2/3 innings.
bad news, when it w~ dJ.s-
covered 1uruor Etiwanda
transfer Shane Glenn did not
have the proper paperwork to
compete at lhe varsity level
He may play for the Juruor
varsity .
day's championship quarterfi-sive and made them put the ball in play,• Newport Harbor nal, a~ainst Century .. New-Coach Jim ~efer said. ·we
An RBI single by Mike
Jones followed and, two bat-
ters later, senior catcher Gar-
rett Brant doubled in two runs
to make it 5-0. Ward's single
plated Brant with the final
Newport tally and pitching
and defense did the rest.
SenJor second baseman
Alan Lane waJked twice and
scored a Pcllf or runs ad Har-
bor benefited from hve walks,
five hit batten. and three
LagllOd Beach errors.
port will host the 3 p.m. con-got a lol o(' buts early in the
lest., count.• Barry Faulkner
DAJlY PILOT . Brown, ~ho earned the 1 Laguna, plagued by wild-
vict:ory. thre~ three .perfect ness from starter Todd Merz,
innings-and1ust 33p1lches-went down for the count ear-
'before yie~~ two runs ahd ly.
Glenn must successfully
appeal to lhe ClF Southern
Section to re9ain vcll'S1ty eligi·
oillty under transfer ruJes,
Kiefer said .
First bdseman Cody NEWPORT BEACH -
Optimism abounds for the
Newp9it Harbor High base-
ball team this season. But, no
matter how many games the
Sailors wm tlus spring, it's
unlikely any will be more effi-
cient than their 6-2 season-
opening tnumph over visiting
Laguna Beach Friday in the
first round of lhe Foothill-
Costa Mesa Tournament.
three hits in the fourth. A walk, a single and two
He gave way to fellow hit batters put Harbor on the
right-hander Ward, who board in the first inning with
allowed jus.t ~o hits in three Ward earning the RBI by tak-
scoreless mnmgs. Laguna ing one in the back or the leg.
batsmen hit just five balls out. A bases-loaded double play
of the Wield, were issued just helped the Artists avert fur.
one walk, and made Harbor the.r damage.
Brant, expected to be the
key offensive component
after bitting .345 as a junior,
went 3 for 4 with a pdir of
doubles. He served two of hi!.
hits to the opposite field.
Forsythe mdde two back-
handed stops of would-be
drives down the right-field
lme.
~A MESA~
Fintround
NEWPO«T 6, LAGUNA BEAcH 2
Laguna Beach 000 200 O · 2 5 3
Newport Harbor 1 50 000 x -6 5 2
hurlers face just six hitters Newport executed a
more than the minimum. delayed double steal to spark
"(Brant) had a good hitll.ng
plan," Kiefer said. "They
• pitched him away and he did-
n't try to do too much Wlth 1t. •
Newport managed Just
·we took advantage of
their control problems by
be mg pdl1ent di lhe plate.•
Kiefer said "We're JUSl trying
to play the gdllle one inrung
dl d lime. It's a step-by-step Merz, Verdugo (2) and Baumer,
Packer (3); Brown, Ward (5) and
Brant W ·Brown. 1 0 l ·Merz,
0-1. 2B ·Brant (NH) 2 "Both guys were aggres-a five-run second, with Adam
· process ·
The Sdllor'> received so~e Senior pitchers Joel Brown
BASEBALL
Mustangs
bombard
Saddle back-
• Senior Josh Feldman
bashes two home runs as
Mesa earns 11-0 mercy-rule
verdict in five innings. ·
COSTA MESA -Costa Mesa
High seruor Josh Feldman, who sus-
/
tained a season-ending knee injury
days before the 2000 opener, stdrted
making up for lost time Fnday.
The center helder and leadoff
man belted a pdtr of home runs and
collected five RBis to pace lhe host
Mustangs' 11 -0 conquest of Saddle-
back in· the first round of the
Foothill-Costa Mesd Tournam ent.
The win advdnces Mesa into
Tuesday's champ1onsh1p quarterfi-
ncil, when they will hosl the winner
of Fnday's Santidgo-Rancho Alami-
tos game.
Feldman, who flnished 3 for 3 in
his varsity dehut, was not the only
offensive star for the winners.
Senior Steven Shores, who hit
two homers in d standout junior
campaign, nearly matched that total
against the Roadrunners. He went 2
for 3 with one homer, a double and
two RBis, but hJs double was a line
drive oft the top of the fence, accord-
ing lo Mesd Coach Kirk Bauermeis-
ter.
Seruor Antony Grubis1ch went 2
for 2 with an RBI to help back a com-
bl.lled shutout by starter Jeremiah
Haubrick and Nick Cab1co.
Haubrick, a seruor, fanned four,
allowed two ruts, and did not walk a
batter in three inrungs to earn the
. victory.
Cab1co struck out two, yielded
just one hit, and issued no walks to
firush out th<> game, which ehded
after five inmngs due to Lhe 10-run
mercy rule.
Senior catcher Daniel Hunter
doubled, but left the game afte r
being h1t in the fclce with his own
fouJ tip. Bauermeister said the blow
opened a cut nee1r Hunter's eye,
which began swelling immediately.
BauennelSter said Hunter may need
stitches to dose lho wound.
FOOTHtU...COSTA MESA TOURNAMENT
First rowtd
Cos'TA MlsA 11, $ADOLUACJ( 0
Saddleback • 000 00 -O 3 4
Costa M~ 072 2x -tt 11 1
Ramos. Valenzuela (4) and Gonzalez;
Haubrick. cabko (4) and Hunter. carrasco
(4). W ·Haubrick, 1-0. l ·Ramos, 0-1. 2B -
Hunter (CM), Shores (CM ). HR • Feldman
(CM) 2, Shores (CM).
new ground
• Pirates defeat sen
Diego City, t-4-7, for
school's fitst·ever wtn.
SAN 011!00-ft. ddrd tbm
.. tbe cbarm for lbe Onii8a
COlll CoUeoe --... ...... Aftlr.,. .......... .
.... wttb two ...... .. .................
CM;. 1~7 .......... Wla.111'
DIEP SU
RmAY'laMnl
••• 11 11t ...... ·2bolltl 11~
5l KUii*\ JO ructftih. 26 .... trYPP9r.
5 send ..... 4 ....... p.per, ' Clbelon.
·a:=-rLMmr·1bo9C,J ...... '° bm. 1 <*° .._ I t(Ulpln.
..
Sailors ~pen strong
• Girls and boys teams fare well
against Santa Margarita, Mater Dei.
s~: W. TllCI MD FIELD
GARITA -The .
Newport Harbor High boys and· girls track
and field teai:ns opened the 2001 season on
the run. so to speak, battling both Santa Mar-
garita and Mater Dei Friday afternoon.
The team results were not available, but
there were numerous Sailors leading the
paclc in various events.
On the girls' side, sophomore Amy
Burlingham fresh ott her stint with the girls
soccer ~ won both the 100-and ~00-
meter runs. She won the 100 with a time of
12.4 and the 200 with a 25.9.
Sailors' senior standout Amber Steen, last
year's CIF Southern Section Division Il cham-
pion in the 1,600, won both the 800 (2:18.0)
and 1,600 (5:05.1).
Freshman Lauren Paul kicked off her NH
track and field career with a second-place
effort in the 3,200 'with a time of 12:54.
Valerie Day and Evita Castillo each placed
second in two events, while Kristen McClune
and Emily Turner placed second and third,
respectively, in the high jump.
•Today, we showed that we have the mak·
ings of a pretty solid track team,• Newport
girls Coach Eric l\veit said. .
On the boys' side, the Sailors bad multiple
winners.
David Marshall (discus, 137-0) and Mor-
gan CUrtis (trt~ jump, ·U-2112) each won
their ev,ents, w John Peschelt (high jump,
6-4) and David Springer (long jump 20-51/2)
each placed second.
Chris McMillen won both the 1,600
(4:36.0) and the 3,200 (10:10.0), while
Peschelt captured the 800 (1:59.7}.
Dede Johnson wu strong in the 200, win-
ning the event with a time of 23.7. Dan Moy-
er was second in both the 110 high hunlles
and the 300 intermediate hurdles.
"With the weather and ski week, we're
behind from where we usually are this time of
the year,• Newport boys Coach Bim Bany
said. •Today was a great chance to get every-
one on the track and I was happy with the
team's competitiveness.• -.,_, OAllY PILOT FILE PHOTO BY OIANA MUlV1HIU.
Valerie Day and her Newport teammates fared well
in a trt-meet with Santa Margarita and Mater Del.
The Sailors compete at crosstown-rival
Corona del Mar Wednesday at 3 p.m.
Orange Coast hangs on to trim Fuller ton, 8-7
• Coast takes advantage of
Hornets' rajspies and pulls
out the coiif erence victory.
COSTA MESA -Orange Coast
scored five unearned runs, indud-
ing the game-winner, en route to its
11th victory in 14 decisions,
improving to 1-1 in the Orange
Empire Conference with an 8-7 vie-
JC BASEBALL
tory over visiting Fullerton Fnday
Scott Beerer was 3 for 4 for the
Pirates, and Schris Sinner, Jake Gar-
a.a. Josh McCanne and Brian Murphy an went 2 for 4 in the 12-hlt attack.
Fullerton had the tying run on
Uu.rd base in the ninlh inrung.
Fullerton fell to 7-6. 1-1.
o..ANGE EMPIRE CONFERENCE
0.W.C.E CoAsT 8
fou.ERTON 7
Fullerton 003 120 001 7 12 3
Orange Coast 040 021 10x · B 12 1
O'Brien. Brown (6), Schmidt (9) and
Bower; Clanton, Glagel (4), Courvo1s1er (5).
Erickson (9) and Murphy W Courvo1s1er,
1-0 l ·O'Brien Sv ·Erickson (1).
2B • Be1,1tner (F), Mclean (F), Robertson (F),
Brandt (F)~ Gama (OCO. McCanne (OCQ.
3B -Sinner (OCC)
BASEBALL
Estancia
dispatch es
Santa Ana
•Hart flirts with a no-no
and Lund goes deep in
the Eagles' 4-2 victory in
Friday's season opener.
COSTA MESA -fatancid I hgh
Junior Jordan Hart pitched hve no-
hit mrungs before gwrnq Wdy to
rehef and teammate Justin Lund
belted d three-run hrst-inning
homer to key the Eagles' 4-2 base-
ball WUl over Sanl.d Ana Fnddy
The hrst-round gdme of the
Foothill-Costa Mc!.d Toumdmc•nt
was held at Estancia, but Santa Ano
was the d~signated host. EsldnCld
will visit Balsa Grande m Tuesddy's
champ1onshJp quarterhnal al 3 p.m
Hart struck out hve and walked
two, before Codch Doug Deotb
elected to replace h.1m on lhe mound
for the final two innmgs
•He wds cruising through tour,
but he sldrted to struggle a lltUe in
the fiflh, • Deats Sdld. ·He p1thc-Prl
out of a jdffi m the hfth, so I decided
not to let tum stdrt lhe SlXth •
The Saints rdlhed tor dn
unearned run m lhe sixth and odded
another run rn lhe seventh, before
seruor Armando 0rti£ closed Lhe
door to earn the save
Oruz opened lhe sconng. reach·
mg on an error, stealm g second and
corrung home on Brent Daw;' RBI
single.
The{!. dfter Hdrt reached on dJlOth-
er Saint error. Lund went yard for all
the runs lhe Eagles would need
"I was 1ust telLing the guys,
before the game, that I'd never seen
a home run hJt to left held m an
ahemoon gdme at Estancia,• Deats
said. ·so where does Lund hit one?
And in the first lilillng. •
Lund was 2 for 4, while Davis fin·
ished 3 tor 4
The Eagles left the bdses loaded
in lhe first , then stranded eight more
.in the final SLX mmngs to allow Sdn-
ta Ana to stay in lhe game
J .D Goff had Ci double for
Estancia, which doubled Sant<t
Ana's rut total, 6-3 Both teams com-
bined for rune error;
FOOTHtU.<OSTA MESA TOURNAMEHT
Fint round
EsTAHOA 4. SANTA AAA 2
Estanoa 400 000 0 4 6 5
Santa Ana 000 001 1 2 3 4
Han. Flori (6), Ortiz (6) and Oa111s,
Gomez. Garcia (5) and Lopez W -Han.
1-0. l · Gomez.. 0-1 Sv • Ortiz 28 Goff (E).
HR • Lund (E).
Rhodes stars in Corona del Mar~ 6-0 win over Magnolia
' • Sophomore lefty pitches complete-game
three-hitter as Sea Kings blank the Sentinels.
BA$EBAll . Lutton was I for 1 wtth whJch was ong1nally sched·
three stolen bases and three uJed for Tuesday. ~\
runs.
ANAHEIM -Corona del
Mar High sophomore Nick
Rhodes pitched a complete-
game shutout and freshman
Danny Whittaker went 3 for
4 in their varsity debuts to
lead the Sea Kings to a 6-0
win at Magnolia Friday ln
round-robin action of the
Foothill-Costa Mesa Tour-
Rhodes, a left-bander,
fanned four of the first hit-
ters he faced and finished
the three-hitter with nine
strtkeouts. Magnolia got Its
first bit, an infield single,
with one out ln the fourth.
"That was about as good a
first varsity appearance as
you could have.~
Rhodes played for the
freshman team last spnng.
Senior Wes Hockinson
blasted a long solo borne
run to left field during a
three-run second inning.
Senior ace Cavan Cuyler
is today's scheduled starter
FOO'fHIU.<OSTA MESA
~NT
Round robin
~on.MM 6
~o
Corona del Mar030 102 O • 6 9 O
Magnolia 000 000 0 0 3 1
nament.
•He has command or
three pitches, which at this
age, almost isn't fair,• CdM
Coach John Emme said.
Sophomores Keith Long
and Nick Lutton added to
the CdM youth movement.
Long went 2 for 3 Wllh an
RBI and was a part or what
Emme called a terlmg
defensive performance at
shortstop.
Junior star Billy Eagle
(lup pointer} sat out and
seruor Dav~ Knecht (ham-
tring) left the game early.
according 10 Emme.
The Sea Kings will host
Foothill today at 10 a.m. 10
another round-robm game,
Rhodes and McK~ Art>tso,
Baltaar (6), Schmitt (6) 1nd
Tosc.no. W • Rhodes, 1-0
l -Atbiso, 0-1. 28 • lutton (CdM).
38 -McConNUghy (M).
HR -Hockinson (CdM)
Orange Coast roars past Irvine V~lley in key OEC matchup
• OCC remains undefeated with sweep over the Lasers.
Tony AhDb9ftl
0M.Y PllOT
COSTA MESA -Tho Orange
Coast College men's volleyball
teem took the •un• out of unbeaten
1rvtne Valley College Prldoy night.
In • battle of Orange Empire
Conference ldngplm, the Plratel
ea.Uy bowled over the visiting
Luen, 25.20. 25-21, 25-15, .in just
over 60 minutes.
•lbll wu our be9t matcb of tbe
year, by far,• OCC Coecb Cbuck
Cut__. Mid. •1 WU Won1ied
because we hadn't been playing too
well, but we we~ still winning
Sometimes bad habits <:an fonn
from th41t. !Mne Valley ls stW trying
to find tbelt rotation, so tonight, we
were one step abead of him. That
won't be the cue the next time we
play them."
Jen ~ylor led the Piretes t8..0, 3·
0 In conference) with 12 Jd1Ji. while
8.J. Ugbtvoet (COit& Mesa HiQb)
and Sole Schnelder eech added
eigbt. s.u.-Nick Ptucblmkt sperked
tbe on.. with 37 uliltl and NIM
JC VOLLEYBALL
blockS, whilf> llb<>ro Ed Chun <-ame
lhtough wit It e corcf\r•hlqh t 7 d.lgs
•everyone got uwolved tonight
and that's very hard to defend,•
Cutenese said "Nick's setting geve
u• consJStency 1n our offense, while
Ed gave us stability on defense."
OCC Jumped out to a l3-914'ed UJ
Cam t end Mver reUnqWIM<l tts
advant.t~. IVC (5·2, 3·1) got as
doee u 22·10, but three straiQbt
points wrapPed lh4lt game up for ibe Pirates. .
lbe Laen 1lll'QP8d out tn ttoDI ID
Game 2, 16-\3,_bilfcn. ?-4 occ
nm tied the game at 20-20.
From there, Orange C'oost
gained three points off of TVC errors
and scored ft o( the game's hnaJ
Its . ts. l:h tMml trad-1 points early.in
Game 3 before OCC'I Jl.J. King
sparked a 6:-1 run wtth three ldu.
and a bloc:k. •Having It.I. p&ay lbat
we8 oil tbe bench WP a huge tift for
us,• Cute.IMiM Mkt.
1be lAMn c:oWd nevs recowr
.. ()CC\ C(ll4dlw"~ l'Mdwd. --... ...... upno.t ~ .. .ucb.-u-.,..
......... lnlaa .............
•Mlllglll.
f
B6 Saturday, Morch 3, 2001
JANES
CONTINUED FROM B 1
So thorough is Janes' level of domination,
even against the most gifted scorers her peer
group can produce, her criteria for success
does not begin and end with a shutout.
llofn: ""· 2, ll15 ····•·m:~ ~MM =S.foot·7
1;t0 ....,..SO«M
~fullbild¢
Coech; "°" EYllOJ '-fee food: Vtnllle
frozen~
-
SPORTS
lntimidation has become another of
Janes' skills. ··u you can 'be physical with them early in
the game, sometimes they back off a little,•
Janes said. ·1 might even push a girl around
a Uttle when the referee isn't looking."
CONTINUED FROM 84
Doily Pilot
(189-pound weight class)
went back and forth on the
squads. He finished 3-0 and
placed first in the San
Clemente Tournament, a
Juniors Luis Najar and junior varsity or lower level
Patrick Llbuda, who were meet. ·
bumped to varsity with Sophomore Jon Archer
Matsen for the postseasoJ'l, /(140), who moved to Lake
are two more playert who Elsinore, won the El Rancho Zero tolerance is an insufficient phrase to
describe her ob1ectives. She aspires. in fact,
to clllow her rival less ~an zero.
"I'm really self-mqt.ivated and I'm very
hard on mysell." the Daily Pilot Athlete of
the Week explained . "Even if my girl does
not score, I can usually find something to
make me wish I had a better game.•
'-flit-'-: "Filther of the Bride•
._ ~ .-m; •winning the
(undef· 15) State Cup I.st year with the
Slammen (wtio defeated tt1e SoQll
81~ In the c:twnpiomhip gaipe 1n
San aem.,dino). •
With Janes on the back line -along with
senior sweeper Molly O'Meara and seniors
Margit Vogele and Natalia Dorfman ... and
senior Britta Vogele manning the goal,
CdM posted 15 shutouts this sea~on. CdM's
•irst three playoff opponents failed to score .
including a 7-0· win over Martin Luther
King (Feb. 20) and a 3-0 quartE!rfinal
triumph over Valley C hristian (Feb. 22).
And while the season ended in a 2-1
sudden-death overtime defeat against
Harvard-Westlake in the CIF'Division IV
semifinals Tuesday, Janes has already
begun looking forward to next season.
will be counted on fbr the <' Tournament and finished
Sea Kings' success next year. third in San Clemente's
"The kids were tourney. ·
competitive," McNeill said of Kevm Lim (103), finished
his JV squad. "It wasn't like . 11-2 at the lower levels and
we we re being killed, but we had the same tournament
A relentless competitor, Janes doesn 't let a
big lead, which the Sea Kings (26-2-3) had
plenty of this season, distract her from her task.
A~olf tM w.ett IX:...,
custOfl'lf'Y defensllle dQmiaance he!~
the S.a !Clngs post bacl ·to.back
$hcxltouts against CIF Dilllslon IV
plaYoff f~ IC Ing (F•b. 20) and Valley
Chrlstl!ll'l (Feb. 22).
were right there and the honors as Ard'1er. Bulo'ne
games were close.· said Lim scored 20
·r totally feed off competition," she said.
"It doesn't mdtter how good the other team
is. I'm focusing on my assignment and I'm
competing with myself. I want to look my
Dally fib
Colle<tor spwtt card ~rteS Ot·S
She is. in fact, in line for a promotion.
"There's a good chance she'll-end up
sweeping for us next year,• Evans said.
At Newport H arbor,
wrestling coach Dominic
Bulone maae the most of
what he had. With few
people coming out tor the
sport, Bulone ·switched
wrestlers from junior varsity
to varsity, and vice versa, just
so that the Sailors would get
as much experience as
possible.
takedowns while allowing
opponents to shoot for five.
Sophomore Juilo
Villalobos (189), finished
13-3 at the lower levels , first
at Corona del Mar's
tournament, second at the
El Rancho Tournament and
third at San Clemente,
best dfld rise to the occasion. That challenge really brings out
the spark in me. I have to be smarter and quicker than the
girl I'm playing against. l always want to outshine her.•
In the process of eclipsing the talents of her foes, Janes
said she is not afraid to incur a little punishment.
Janes said she will be happy to play
·wherever her team needs her most, but she will miss the
constant challenge of marking one player, should she move
to.sweeper.
"I prefer fullback, because there's more action,• said
Janes. a veteran cl ub pla'fer who helped the Newport
Beach-based Slammers win th~ under-15 State Cup last year. •1 dehrutely take an elbow here and there and r usually
get a few ne w bruises every game," she said. ·"The girls I
play against are used to having the advantage. When that
doesn't happen. they can get a little frustrated ..
•But if they start bwnping on me, I bump on them, too. I
try to give them the message I'm not going to put up with
that stuff."
Janes said Tuesday's loss was a devastating end to a joyful
season, in which she made lasting friendships, particularly
with the set:tiors.
"What hurts most is that I won't be able to play any more
with the people on my team I love so much," she said. "This
year's seniors have been awesome."
#Because of the 20-man
roster they would wrestle at
the lower levels, too,• Bulone
said .
He also recorded the
fastest pin for the junior
varsity wrestlers, completing
a fall in eight seconds.
Freshman Brian Rebard
( 145) finished l 1-7 and
earned second place at the
El Rancho Tournament.
PUBUC NOTICES 11 PU8UC NOTICES I
Donald V. Franklin,
born January 5, 1918
In Nebraska, Don led a
long and colorful tile
that ended on Febru·
ary 25, 2001 . He left
Nebraaka In his early
y11rs and made his
way acroas the West
finally sel111ng In Lo.
Angeles where he met
hi• future wile France1. He was a
World It veteran
Mrvlng In the Pacific
Theater tor 5 years.
Upon hi• discharge he
opened an automotive
garage In LA and In
1953 began a
aucce11ful Real Estate
carHr In Corona del
Mer. He waa a long
time member of the
81lbol Yecht Club,
joining In 1955 and
waa Commodore In
1970. Through out hi•
Cll'Mr he maintained a
strong civic Interest
along with purtulng
hi• love of deep-sea
fishing.
He retired from active
bualne11 In 1978 later
moving to Rancho
Mlrege until 1998 at
which time he a.nd hi•
wife, Frances, returned
to Corona Del Mar.
HI• wife of 59 years,
two 1on1 Mike of
Corona Del Mar, John
of Chico, and two
grendchlldren survive
him.
There wlli be a
celebratlon of his Ille
April 21, 2001 . Place
wlll be announced by
Pf'lv1te Invitation. In
lieu of flowers dona·
tlona may be made to
the Braille lnatltute. at
527 Dale Ave ..
Anlhelm, CA. 92801 .
Tell Us About
YOUR
GARAGE
SALE!
In
CIASSIFIEDS
2· 678
Fictitious Business
Name Statement
The following persons
are domg buSlness as.
"Moon Landscapmg
VTSE". 4921 Birch
Street, S1J1te 110, New·
port Beach. CA 92660
Ysa1as Rodriguez
Luna. 310 V1ctor1a
,102A. Costa Mesa. CA
92627
Th•s business 1s con·
ducted by an 1nd1111dual
Have you started
d~ng business yet? No
Ysa1as Rodriguez Luna
This statement was
hied with the County
Cieri! of Orange County
on 0210712001
20016854543
Daily Pilot Feb 10, 17.
24, Mar. 3, 2001 Sa462
Fictitious Business
Name Statement
The following persons
are d~ng bulliness as·
Mind. Body, Spirol. 9
Baldose. Rancno Santa
Marg811ta. CA 92688
Kathy Ann Diekmann
9 Baldosa, Rancho
Santa Margarota, CA
92668
This business os con·
ducted by an 1nd1Vldual
Have you started
doing business yet? No
Kathy Ann Diekmann
This statement was
filed with the County
Clellt of Orange County
on 02/2612001
20016856304
Dally Pilot Mar 3, 10
17. 24. 2001 Sa472
Fictitious Business
Name Statement
The following persons
are doing busfness as
lmmaculale Home
Care Sarv.ces. 2425 N
Tustin Ave . Ste A.
Santa Ana, Calitornoa
92705·1615
AAA Certlloed Spa·
coalty Services Corp<>-
ralion. (CA). 2425 N
Tustin Ave . Ste A,
Santa Ana. Cahlornoa
92705·16 tS
This business 1s con·
ducted by' a corporat10n
Have you started
doing business yet?
Yes. 02101/01
• AAA Certified Spe·
01a11y Services Corpo·
ration
Charles Askov. Presl·
dent
This statement was
filed with the County
Cieri! of Orange County
on 02105/2001
/'120018854180
Daily 'Plloti Mar. 3, 10.
I 7. 24. 2Q01 58:473
Fictitious Bualnese
Name Statement
The following person•
are doing buslnest 111:
Havana Hut Cele,
2300 Fairview Rd.,
R·204, Costa Mesa. Cal· ~omla 92626
Michael Fernandez,
2300 Fairview Ad ..
R-204, Costa Men,
Califomla 92626
This bus1ne111 ls coo-
docted by an lndMdual
Have you started ~ng buslneae yet? No
Michael Fer,,.nd•l
Th11 atatement was
tiled wilh the County
Clari! o4 Orange CounlY on 02/05'2001
200111154212
Daily Pilot Mar. 3, 10,
I 7. 24. 2QQJ ~74
l>i,lollnt (~a\kct
l 111!11111 1t11I 1;HI I 11 \1 t \ 11
Cm'fl s,,v,r, •"" QJ11tl11y Cukm for l..cs1
Direct Cremation .. $495
Immediate Burial .• $99S
(lntli.411 Oitkll)
Prcarranpenc PrOfV.arru Awilable for funeral SCrvica. C~mariont and Culcru
'I,. 11'\l .'I ".1 ·,\\I
, . , ' · · I • I I
Fictitious Business
Name Statement
The following persons
are doing business as.
Newmark Entertain·
ment, LLC, 453 Giotto,
Irvine. CA 92614
Newmark Entertain·
ment. LLC (CA), 453
GIOllO, Irvine. CA 92614
This business 1s con·
ducted by. Limited Lia·
billty Co.
Have you started
doing business yet?
Yes, 1115/01
Newmarll Enterla•n·
ment, LLC
Allwyn Rameson,
Managing Member
This statement was
filed with the County
Ciellt of Orange County
on 02107/2001
20016854507
Daily Piiot Feb. 17. 24.
Mar. 3, 10, 2001 Sa466
NOTICE
INVmNG BIOS
The Orange County
Sanitation Otstnct, Call·
tomla. will receive bods
until TuHdly, March
27, 2001 11 11:00 11.m.
Bids must be received at
the D1strlc1•s Admmls·
tratove Lobby or
Purchasing Ottiee by lhe
date hereinabo11e set
forth, at which time they
will be open1:d and ex·
ammed at the District
Purchasing Of I Ice,
10844 Ellis Avenue,
Fountain Valley. Calif or·
nia, for the follow!OO
PURCHASE O~
(1) SELF-PROPELLED
INDUSTRIAL CARRY
DECK CRANE
SPECIFICATION NO.
2000/01-20
Sealed bids must be
submitted on the form
supplied by the Dlatnct on accordance with all
provisions of the specif!·
cations Spec1hcatlons.
btd blanks and further In-
formation may be ob·
tamed at the above ad·
dress. telephone
(714) 593·7583.
Published Newport
Beach-Costa Mesa
Daily Piiot March 3,
2001
Sa467
ORDINANCE
NO. 2001-2
AN ORDINANCE OF
THE CITY COUNCIL OF
THE CITY OF NEW·
PORT BEACH AMEND-
ING CHAPTER 10,48
OF TlnE 10 OF THE
NEWPORT BEACH
MUNICIPAL CODE.
PEAT Al NI NG TO
WEED ANO RUBBISH
ABATEMENT.
51,#biect ordinance was
Introduced on the 13th
day ol February, 2001,
and was adootod on the
27th day ol February,
2001.
AYESr.. COUNCIL
MEM"ERS: HEF·
FERNAN, O'NEIL,
RIDGEWAY, GLOVER,
8ROM8ERO, PROC· T0~1 MAYOR ADAMS
NOES COUNCIL
MEMBERS: HONE
ABSENT COUNCIL
MEM8ER8: HONE
ABSTAIN COUNCIL
MEMBER: HONE
MAYOR: Oery
Adam• cm C:LERt<t U.Vonne M. tt.tai.e
The enll'9 leXI 18 1valf.
able for review In Iha
01ty Clerk'• office Of the
Oily Of Newpol1 8"ch. Publl•h•d New~tl
8taCh·Coela Mee1
Dally Pilot Much 3.
2001 Sti08
NOTICE Of
PETITION TO ADMINISTER
ESTATE OF:
CHESTER L. KING CASE NO. A206189
To all heirs, b8neficlerteS. aedltots. conungent
credltor1, and pefSOM wno may otllelwis& be
1nte1asted in the WIU or
estate. Ot both of CHESTER L KING
A PETITION F~
PROBATE has been filed
by CAROLINE K.
GRISWOLD '" the $Uj)8f'IO( Coun of
Cahtom1a. County of
ORANGE. niE PETITION F~ PROBATE requests lhat
CAROLINE K GRISWOLO be
appointed u personal
repmentattve IO
admnist8' 1tie estate ot
the decedent
THE PETITION reciuests
trie Oecedent'r. wil and
a>diclls, of any. be
admllled to probale The
will arid any COOICiis are
avallable f()( ~~am1riabon
in the rile keOt by tl1e
court
THE PETITION r9Q\1asts
aU1tority to adm1nis1or
the estate under the
Independent
AdmintStrauon Of Estates
Act. (This aull\onty WI" allow · the petSOnat
represenllJ~e 10 take
meny aclk>ns without
obtaining couit al>P'OVal
8efonl talUno certain very
lm(>ortanl actions.
tiowever. !he personal
representawe w~I be reQVired to give notice to
Jnt8f8llted persons unie's
they have waived notJGe
Of conMnled 10 tne ~ adlon ) The
independent
ectl'NniattallOn au1110nty
1¥111 be ~nled unleH an
lnteretted pB1tOn mes an
objeCllon to the pel1li0n aoo shows good cause
why the court should not
"90t the llllhority
A HEARING oo the
pelitlon 'NI» be held on 03/ 15.01 at 1 45f>M In Oeol l 73 localad at 341
THE CITY DRIVE ORANGE, CA 92863
IF YOU OBJECT to Ille
granting d the petltJon. ahOuld eppear al Ille
end state 'f<J'J'
Of Ille wnnen
Vl1tn the court beb9 tht helllng YOOI
appeat8MI rntfo/ bl in
person Of by 'f04X attom6y
IF YOU ARE A
CREDITOR et •
cont1nge111 ereddOt rl the
deOffsed. you must rote
'f04X dllll\ Wllh lhe court
end 1\'1111 e COC>Y IO tile ~I l'lptMentallve
eooolnted b'f the court wh four monll'lt ffOm the .,. ot 11111 !uuanot
of 11""1 .. provided 111
Problll Code MC1Jon
9100. The llme fOr tlllng
c:lfiml wlll 001 •MP're
before four monlhl ltom
the hearing dall noGced ..... YOU MAY EXAMINE 1t18
Ne ke$>t by hi COUit If you 119 a '*90!\
intMlled in tile •••
you ln9Y Ille wilt! lhe
ao\111 • ~equett for Soedll Nob (fl'ln1l OE·
164) ot t. Nino d en bwenQy and IPPf'lllMI d
"""' ...... Of of ltly
pelilton "' eccount • MMcled In P!obele Code ~1280.A~ tor $ptclll NOb fOtm le l¥eillble llOm ,. oowt .. ~for Pellicwltf L
AIEANA'n«
GIFFOfm • DEARING 700 8 now£A ST , IT! 11%22
l08 AHGELIS CA
80017 WZM>t. O~t,
OMWOt .,,.,
~NOTICES I
Fictitious Business
Name Statement
The tollow1ng persons
are d~ng business as:
Top Tea Company,
17352 MJJrphy Ave ..
Irvine, CA 92614
Kusha. Incorporated
(CA), 17352 Murphy
Ave .. Irvine, CA 92614
This business Is con·
ducted by . e COfPO!Btion
Have you s1erted
doing business yet? No
Kusha. Incorporated
S1voush Nayyeri,
President
This st111ement wlls
!1led with the County
Cleft! of Orange County
on 02/14/2001 20016855253
Dally Piiot Mar. 3, 10,
17, 24, 200! 58470
NOTICE OF
PUBLIC HEARING
Notice Is hereby given
that the City Council of
the City of Newport
Beach wlH hold a pubyc
hearing on the appeal
liled by the Lind• tale
Community Aaaocla·
!Jon regarding the Ptan·
n1ng Commission's de-
clslOll to extend a tem-
por a ry use permit eu·
thonzing outdoor dining
on the upper deck (bow
and stem) of the New·
port Riverboat Restau·
rant The temporary use
permit was extended to
August 15, 2001 an<I Is
located et 151 Ea1t Coaat Hlvhway.
This prOjecl has been
reviewed. and It has
bean determtned that it
1s categorically •~empt
from the requirements of
t he Calilornla
Environmental Ouahty
Act under Ctass 1 (Exist·
ong Facilities/
Notice s hereby
turthar given lhat said
public hearing Is sched·
uled on the f3th day ol March, 2001, at the hour
of 7:00 PM 1n the Coun·
ell Chambers of the
Newport Beach City
Han, 3300 Newpot1 Bou·
levard, Newport Beach,
Cahlomia. at wnich time
and place any and all
persons interested may
appear end be heard
thereoo. ti you Challenge
this pr0j9Ct In court, you
may be limrted to raising
only thoee issues yOU or
someone else r1isod et
the public hearing
described in this notJCe or 1n wntten cor·
re&pondence delivered
to the Ctty at. or prior to,
the public hearing. For
information call (949)
644-3200
/el uVonna M. Hetk·
teae, City Clerk
City of Newport 8-.ch
'1ubllshed Newport
Beach·Coata Me11
Dally Pilot March 3,
2001
Sa469
Fictitious BuslneH
Name St•tement
The lollowlng peraona
are doing ~""' es: Travel Allalrt. 2900
811110! Street, •B102,
Coela Mesa, CA 926241
Jonn Robel't Miiiet, 11872 Marble .Arch
Drive. Senta An•. CA
92705 •
This bUalMH 11 con·
duQtd by. en lndM<IUll Hive you 1t1rted
doing bualnHI yet?
Vat, 4128/80
John A Mlttef Thia •t11emenl wea fllect Wllh the County
Cle1k Of Ora~ COlll'dY on 02/21/200t 1001tlff'IO
Delly Pilot Mar. 3. 10,
17, ~ ... 2001 St47t
FIND
an apartment
~
Gl
EOUAl 00\ISING
OPPOATUNffV
Alt real estate adVenlsmo
In this newspape1 Is subjeet
to the Federal fair Housing
Act of 1968 as amended
which makl!s It olle-oat to
advertise ·any preference
hmltatton or discrimination
based on race. cotor. rellg·
Ion. se~. hand•ClP tar!'lllial
status or na11onat oriQin. or
an tnte11t1t1h to make any
such preference, hrmtalion
or d1scnm1nat100 •
This newspaper w111 not
knowlngiy ~ccept any adv«tisement for real
eslale which is in violation
of Ille law Our readers are
hereby 111lormed that all
dwalltnos advertised In this newsparer are available on an equ;1 opponunity basls
To com].l!aon ot discnm1·
nation, call HUD toll free aJ
1 ·800-424·8~90
1 HOUSESICONDOS
FOR SALE GENERAL
HOMES OF
THE WEEK
ShOWCllt
HOIMI
For ..
In Our a.
Riii e.....
~I ~::
Deldllne
TUlldly IPll
Aleo .•• :.."°: Dllilllne · Wldnndey .,. .,.,..
Mvdll
In ......
LOCAL ...........
l•llllola CllaliT II
RIVERA ...... AllE LEY .., ...
V.A. SO MOVE-IN
FREI CounMllng
FREE Ult Of HofMe HUIWA AfPOS
714·53"4800 v*"' Allll £ ..... lmell:
vre99lednc.com
MODJESKA CYN
laoep• to oountrr
!Mftt, 1 Am .. '°"' 11'1¥tof, ..,, •• '°"" din. ... ciMoe • din t "'*' .... ...... ;:r..,tOO 71......,
Ml Nol!nl Mr
SELL
your home
through claseifted
Senior Frankie Rodriguez
9~ FOR SALE CORONA DEL MAii
.,. OPEN HOUSE SUN 1-4
Rain or Shln1I JASMINE
CREEK 28r, den, 2&. gate
guarded comm. 2 Fps. great foe, fruit trees in bacl<yard,
$565.000 Exclusive Listing,
Broker 662·945·9555
1t Charming Hewtt Home
3Br 2 sea. grat11te counlelS.
stainless appls. French drs
to French pallO. baG'kyard w/
BB-0, 211 g.vage $795.000
949-300-3229 Of 500-5569
CLASSIC DUPLEX
Large lroot house w/3Brs &
large rear 1& unil This " 111
ercettent condltlOll S825K
Michael Bnnkman, Agent.
eo.111lne RHlty
94t-759..0177
JASMINE CREEK
Ught & brlgttr end u1111.. 2Br 2Ba • den, S610,000
Co-ltsted by a{ll$ Shan T 811
Erck 949..JIK>.9492& Maury
Stavlfer 949.013·5354
10 ltOU8ESICOll>OS FOR SALE ~A MESA
EAST SIDE COSTA MESA
ExciusJve hshng 3Br 28a
+guest quarters, lrg tr, 4
car gar Piime 1oc Manners
sdlOOI <isl Pnnc Only Cal
8ob Coluocio 949-63 H t 31
Prudenttal Ca Really
From $269,900. Private
Enciave of 17 Homes On1v
7 leltl Tv.o-Sty 3-&s, 2 VI
Ba. 2c alt gai. tJp to 1.505
SQ Ft. Adfaeent to Newport
Beach & Triangle Square
949·650-1440
NEW HOMES
From $269,900 Adjacent to Newport
Beach & Triangle
Square. 949-650-1440
From 1289.900. Private
Enclave of 17 Homes Only
7 left' Two-Sty 3-Srs. 2 •h
Ba. 2c an get Up to 1,505
SQ Ft ~ to Newport Seach & T llangll Squate
949·650·f-440
OPEN SUN 1-4
1053 Pll'k Hiii Or
4br, 3bl, 2 atory ho1111.
Pool, new roof, htrdwd
firs, 2000 t af. 8rok1r1
welco1111. M 15,000 949-548-7541
DON'T t.OSE $300
We BEAT any other
homa lender or PAY
You $3001 FTH
Approval In I 5 Miil/
www.1$11/nlo•n.com
114·e58..f601
E'Slde &lcill Bay 8tll W/llf>'
ptOll 2800ll, on 8 8400 If lol, f8r 2.58a. tam nn wlf.p,
tonn.i dining ""· huge jac llA> rn '1.llllt on LQClf, .Mii
alze b11k1lt>aU couf1f
IS88,000. Gina McComb.
IQ! 94}642-$937
1·=-1
CASH OUT '°"'=buy ~CC::::. llr: MMIH200
32~
NEWPORT BEACH
HARBOR VlEW HOMES
OPEN EVERY SUN 1-4
1818 Manlalgh
61>1', or 5 + bonua 3.Sba,
new 1ppll1ncu, pool.
$1,075,000 949-760-0164
Cell 949-413-5474
E11tblulf 58r 1r9 11\Side lot completely updated. new
1ool & kit !lo gar Pnnc ·0nty
Ow~r/Bkr 949· 729-0670
N1wpo1'1 View E1t1te
palallal oon1emporary view
esiate. SBr. pool spa Kor
PQnd. e~erclse rm, approl
'7687 st. St ,395.000 Patnck
T enote, 949-856·9705
ED VAN OEN BOSSCHE
REAL ESTATE &ROKER
LOCAL SINCE 1970
949-650--0943
TRY 5'{. DOWN
HARBOR COVE Stunrung
home 4br 2 Sba walk to
Fash Is not in MLS $889K
AQl/own 949-632·2600
NEW HOMES
Adjacent to, Newpor1
Beach a. Triangle
Square. 949-6S0.1440
THE BLUFFS
$639,500
Upg<aoed 38r 2.58a
"E" p4an 1s per1ect tor
everyone n1's home hes a tamity room. greenbelts, comm pools and Back &y
enjoyment. ottered at
Anchor Propertlea
90-720-3900
BIG CANYON
Open Sit/Sun 1-4
4 Htrmltlgl Line.
58r/4.5BI, 1.slory on OVlt
13,000sf Lot
Huge 1xpenelon potentlll
$1,375,000.
8y Owntf 714-585-8884
CouMly to Broker -llated In MLS
NEW HOMES
OPEN SAT & SUN
Adjacent to Newport
S..Ch a. Trl1ngle
Square. Mt-650-1440
JUST LISTED
$260,000 W1terfront
Aat 949-723-8120
BAYSIDE VILLAGE
~· """"' ... ~·;t~
ICtlllic BM!ll Bay.
W1rflfrotll betdt oonage
with cal/l«hl oetlings, Prf'Ne b#dl MXI to
Fashion llland. IMld Laa#
$250,000.
949·723-4045
* lmfftlClllltt 28r U BI Condo upgl8dld lutchln, ~e ,,,,... new cebinela
& French ~ OC>lrt·
lfl. Frpc. calhedral oeilig
In IMng room Offefld at $350,000. CcWlstb Realty.
949·759-0177
LIDO SANDS
29f 281, ~p. Ilg baclcyarO
A dWmlng pi1Yete l,leldl
oomnuilly ••• lo the oce.n, pvt 11111t petldng. comm patk. pcol, l*Y. 11te. I~ Eltrlda °""9d II tal,000. OW-/ AA!!?! MM3t.aM
MT~-Ollallljll """°' """ Home. ... malrtlllned, 14'ory, muoo. INt1 T111 EYI* • t•t..,lo.t412 or
IMN97.ol12 or Oii ~ ........ Uln...,
1111•111
32 HOUSE!ttONOOS
FOR SALE NEWPORT 8EACM
NEWPORT AT BACKBAY
ViS1t us by boat or car to
Vl8W our oozy. quaint beaCh
bUngalOwS nestled 1n a
VIiiage-iike community With
pijllate boat matins and
beach Walking distance to
Ball>oe Island and Fashion
l$land, '11\een rTll""18$ 10
Jol1n Wayne airport From
$130.000 non-1nctus1ve ol
land lease Pnvtleoed Soho
hvtng Modullt L1f1tlyl1t
Inc. At 81yaldl VlU1ge
949· 723-4045
Hew Uttlng In Thi 8111111
4& 2 58a end unit Is nteety
S11\la1ed on a beautifully
landscaped comer Up·
graded kitchen and IUshly
landscaped patio are bul
few ol this property's speaaJ
qualities Judy ·ueriz &
Julie Sehmillln9. Anchor
Propertlea. 949-720-3900
Open houH M11ch 11-12
Bllllll 1 •tort upended
Townhome, 3Brm 281111,
on PIW•t. grtenbllt. Lota of U1>9rlcJN.' $659.000
94M32-6489
HARBOR COVE Stunnmg
home 4Br 2.5Ba walk to
Fash Is not 1n MLS S889K
Aq!IOwner 949·632·2600
NEW OCEANFRONT Rare Find 58R
Agent 949·723-8120
S33a.OOO Priv1i. Villa
Prime Condltlon. Clole to
8ffch & Shope.
Agt 949-723-8120
1 33~1
PRIME ESTATES
Lots a. Ocean Views! can Patrick Tenore
Agent 949-856-9705
50 HOUSE&'COfl)()S
FOR SALE
WESTlllNSTEA
Oon1 Mlt1 Thie Ontl
38r 2&, single level Move In cond !lgl 949-718-2378,
8tult1 largest model, cus-714--423·1652 tom e~panded townhome "-""'-=~_,_ ___ _
2850 st. •br. 2 famrm. I I
$645,000 949-632·6489 102 ALISO ~
Newut built Bluff• • _
townhonlt, B1y, 1un11t1 & gtllftbtlt vlewa. 3bf 2bl Very 8111 V1iue In Allto $5591000 94M32'6489 ..;..V;.;:;!!!!o;:;o _____ _
THE BLUFFS One story,
end unit expanded 2br
FIXER Angelita Plan 111
great orig area, cul•sac:
locallOn loob W<.e a home
where the BulfalO roamed
preuy QOOd bones. but oh!
that hide $395.000 Appl
oofy throogh B!m Hastings
Aqt. 949·584-5482
SeUyour
unwanted
llems the easy
way/Place a
classified ad
today!
(949) 642-5678
TIX&
FllAICllL
DIREmRY
HERE'S THE
EXPERTS
GIT THI PIACE Of MIND
ONLY A CPA CAN GM YOUI
Ne you gettllg aD the deckJetk>ns you are
entitled to? Have y<'i.119100\ Oon& by a
CM at a REASOHABl.E nllel
• Individual/Business Tax Returns
• Electronlc Filing
• Get yru tefund in 1 to 3 days'
lode theefw l Staltw ~ letwdlp•
T<ut & h:oounting *'-~00 lmnt A\T.1 Sre 116, 949"851·9676 f of81 1115'1
----- ---
I 111 I \I \ .... I I~ I I 1, I I:
(949) 646~803
350 E 17"' -STE 117
CO TA MESA, CA 92627
30+ YEAR EXPERIENCE
Doily Pilot Saturday, Morch 3, 2001 87
1•-·=l l"1
Al90 =I l•mlLllO =I l•mAL90 =I I"'*-•! I• --=11•~ ~11·~ ~11·~ .==11•,. =-1
Very Best Value in Aliso Vieio !r:~~dtnM281~ .. M~NAGeRs ...
..
()77_ _ ~c:e41~=as.~ s,~~:~, SPA E FOR LEASE v n,e 1174 ~I ~iI~ Dt~SIG'.'./SA 11Gt EL PL \ZA . E\\'PORT BEACH
~ _ --... ~-One at 883 sq. ft. and one at 2015 sq. ft .
con1e ,ree toh<t~f!OU be 6ee11 ,n/ssutg .••
Choose from 3 beautiful locations including St. Moritz, Barcelona
and Innsbruck: Largest sq_uore footage in Aliso Viejo. Spacious one
bdrms, two and three bdrm twnhomes w/ottached garages.
48r 281 oc:n w lrg wr~• round elect.. bHcl1 ICCHS
WIO, Ing r\lsml1t S32~mo
Nancy 559-635-9159
r;::~~~!ci 24·~ 2nd Boor/Gorgeous ocean view with Catalina and Balboa
~:~F':C.p::!'~ Island sunset. WaJking distance to Fashion Island.
Jacuw Gue$! taun J st floor 1902 sq. ft. Oceon views 7 offices plus dty Clclle 10 405 & 55
F>NYI M111s from OC 21ui floor 1500 sq. ft. Son Miguel view 6 offices plus recept. oreo
Fai'gnn college ifld (was on executi'Je suite) bchs Wal•tng d<I
tance td ihOps afld 3riljloor 1620 sq.ft. Beautiful offices with tree views, very calm restauran11 • Gated Communities COSTA MESA I st floor 367 sq. fl. Small 3 room office Balcony viev.1.
·MOTOA INN •Full Size Wosher/Dryer Hook Ups
•Wood Burning Fireplaces
112 HOUSESICOHOOS
FOfl ROO NEWPORT BEACH
2211 H.nior Blvd Pl.EASE CAU FOR ADDRESS PhOM 949-64>4640
•Over 100,000 Square Feet of Fitness Facilities
• On-Site Fitness Director and Activities Director
Call Now St. M oritz
Barcelona
Innsbruck
949-362-6000
949-362-7000
949-362-7600
UM APTS
8Al80A ISi.ANO 132 APTS
NEWPORT BEACH
132 APTS
NEWPORT BEACH
2:8f widen 281 MW ~ r---=~~~~~~~~!!!!!!~~-.
r.ior pelnt. carpel, bit. WI BAYFRQNT O hll-ups, frplc, bt1mtd
c•ll• w/1kyllght, Iott In Apartment Homes m1lr br. View of 81y &
P1r11 with private f!r111n11 A Tra ~1quil Experience
159 HOOSESICONOOS FOii REJfT CORONA OEl llAR
8Nutltut 28r 2.58a 2Fps
2c gar & pallO near ~
Gardens Pool $l)a tennis no pets $2375.Mo Pllld Ca Alty Cal BJ 94g.219-2447
* SANCERRE Near new 204 -RENTALS
Plan 3 381 Fp A.C yard TO SHARE
with BBQ W 0 garage
$3275 Mo 9'9-6« -4426 CM '"9r Bid! Bay. lhatt 3b< 2be Ip oar ncwrlll.p~ 4Br 2.5B1 houH. gated piolf fem p<eld S725mo
comm 611la• view o1 F'ash-1 2 t "'" "••2860 '°" Is & Mins $320M.1o ~· s ".........,. ·
Ava l Marth 5 S49-72t·IS40 Newpo11 3Br 3B1 Condo.
Luaury Condo :it>t Jba
ocean v•ew Ip w d Ing
pooC spa teot\1$ full gym
encl parlong S2750 mo
949·640-0746
DSL line ai llt'l'en.:.8' no.
smol<er prOI rTli e S 7!1'
mo . uns 714 292-476'
CM Own Pvt Studio, bu!
Silt latbalh In tlse Proll Ot
student prel S800 I '2 u• 949.5 ,. -0045 9 322--0833
N.BJ1hl ga19d O&llMul 19
home w proi tern pvt btO
ba w deck pool J3C W 0
prkg $750 949·644 6!-72
206
SOME Of THE TENANTS KINKO'S, FIGGE. MULDOONS, SPA
GREGORIES, EDWARDS THEATERS, COAST MAGAZINE. BOMBAY
CO., KMS NOTARIES. THE BRIDE, ELIZABETH BENEFIELDS, EDWARD
JONES, DENNIS JACOBSON P\ASllC SURGERY, AND MANY MORE
210 COMWRETAIL i1NDUSTRIAL FOR RENT/LE.ASE
LARGE UNITS AVAIL
Wide drive up lruc\ doof1,
I 211 high 1ltckin9
cte111nce 2• hour gale llC·
cess. US Slottge Cef'lcers
on NP Blvd 9'~
JOANNA TARPLEY
949-760-9150 exc. 212
Cell phone 949-230-2688
420 GARAGE
SALES
NPB MOVING SALE
SAT 9-3 cell 9'M40-5693
dress~ w/m1"0f chesl of
d11wers. sof1. cotlee 1abl• Iota of everything
elM.Cnh&~
448 AHTIOUESIART
/COLLECTIBLES
WANTED
ANTIQUES
Older Styf' Furniture
PIANOS & Collectibles
1454 FURNmJRE I
~ Dl111ng Tlblt 31 S
Jo ·~ 3 N•eS & 6 ._na,,,
S4'.>0 M11cn.ng BuHtt 6 S300 Maple lung Silt
f250Mno. 94~n -4017 Upgraded 2BR. Den On The Water ~500
2BR. 2BA With Harbor View 2500 =~8;.iu'r'h..~ r.:: I BR, I BA With Harbor View 2000
:Ty ~ .. ~~=mo PrlVllte P1tlos • nltd Elltries • Car~ts • Wood
S..utlful 38r 2.5B1 1911
5 t hOIM .. 180 a...~ Bay ""ws 2 5c gar R'I area Lrg pYI yard p!ol ianoscape
w lto .. 111. gardens Only
s31go mo yearly lea~5
ody "' good eteo• Pets ()I(
reol localion 2323 '"' ne A•e Patnck T eno<e 1pnone
I Oil SIQl1 f()f dppo!!'l/Tlen1.
OCEAN VIEW t..rge 3Br
281. !pie Latve 2-car gar
d1nt11g room <10 ~ts
$2350tmo ~9· 72(). I 565 81y1l6t Village 28r 2B1
2Br 1B1 Oce1n side ot S1600mo ava...i-M Fell 1 PCH Forepltce provalt ~ear tease 949-67" ~~\IS 0<
PlhO open beams sp75 714-953·4610
VACATION /RESORT
____ R_ENTA_L_s_.1400 ANNOUNCEMENT I
Penln V1ctllon Rental 261
& 381 28a SpilCIOUS <lelw•
CundO IU11y lurn S!tps 10
bell 2c gar 9-19-6'5-·1
SO Famdy Rumm1ge S.lt
Marer 2·3 a..rr 3(llTl Ra.n
or S<1.ne Sun~hone Co·op
Pre SChOOI 28$0 Fa,fv.eN
A,e Fa1•, e .. A~ams
P•He,·ena"I t""''' t.I me
SS CASH PAID S$
WE BUY ESTATES
~eaot:ioar1 S50 4 d<a ... er
llaP•4. o.: > 5200 :llesstf
>400 tl''O"Jttrenl Wl't! S5" 2 -Iii ·JI bOOl<cue\
'a • S2'J pt Pl! Eve~ #ee~·End~ 949-642•339~
Movmg Si te .... ~ ne... sota
IO•e ..a• . &"i enttfl41(\.
.....,., '• ~Wile WO
.;cc.-f\ !.4~ J Burnh11 Flttpbces • Private Beach aid Mari11
-Boat Slips Available • Sparidlq swi..i.c Pool I ~" DELAm I Luih Tropical Landtcaplng • Secotlds to
"""""" _,, Bilboa Island & 8.at'llde Shopplnc Center
FMhlot liU1d • Corona del Mar
28r t Ba upp8f I.hi Sou1ll ol Hwy Ill< bkx:ks to beach The Newport ~r1 .. Apt. Hom~
p!! month M9-n~
VILLA POINT 2BR 28A
Immaculate bright upper unit ., d incl S•900mo
a..aA :i.12 949-72. '~SL_
nr ~ & rest s 1n1 oorn-919 Bayside om.. Newpot'C -..da
~ :~~9-~32~; (949) 760-09 t 9
Ne rteWNC.co111
Open Sit/Sun. 811 Cam.
lion 48' 2Ba COiiage hldwd
ftf$ lrllr( llTI hq1 ce.1$. IC
~ klCS ol S10raga grt area Mo 949·230-5537 LID0·3Br Penthou11 on
Old CdM refutt> &hed ll>r Bly! Furn/unfurn. $4,000/
parkcgarden vu pahO pl1 mo. yttrly 949-720-1704
w d fng. Ip. pkng IOf 1 sm Doug Bultty, Bkr
So of Hwy Studio, llnl)hl BACK BAY 2br 2bt. w 1tl
open palJO lulChenett• cts gaiago and Vtew' $1700 mo
to itst ~ach 5775 ut•s p"5 S P:>O <1epo5.1 Pltast
tnCd ca.I DOil 9497~ ca 9()9.493-3130
110 APTS COSTA MESA
WONDERFUL 2BORM
urge, vtrtlcll1, Ian, closjt
to btteh In Co1t1 M11t.
94t-S74-5134
132 APTS
NEWPORT BEACH
142
P1lm Mesi i r Apb w/gar
S925·S96S gated comm
f~ pool SJ>i e•er llTI . mo
10 B.le• Bay 114·5'16·9860
155 HOUSESICOMDOS FOR MXT
BALBOA PENN
cat, $137Sm 949·723-7250
Htrbof Rufge CrHt lg
townhome 3Br 2 581, 2
car IP' new 'gourmet ••'
gre.at hillside v1tw' Gated
'ftry Lease SJSOOmo Lota
Vance RJtr 9'9-673-4062
160 llOUSESICONOOS FOR RENT COSTA ltlESA
Pllms Mobile Home Plfk
281! tra~r.w rote ta<gt
Luaury lbr 2bt laundry IOI SIOtage & pa!\,ng 565(}
patio sun <ltd. 2-c ga1 mo 949"'689-4206
... atk to bch no petStsmk
avt 4 I $2500 310.370.3999 EASTSIDE CONDO 2 1tory
2bt. 2be. den Iv ·llTI din-on
.. d 2-c !jilt w to sto<es/
SChOOls 1st Lisi dep
St •OO iease Con:act Car1
It 949-631 ·3799 leave msg iiiiiiiiiiJ~~s
Per/Mo. -48 Mo. Lease
Oc:Nnlront 2Br tB1 yt1rty
rental. 1 car gar S24SO!Mo
Auodlted Realty Service 9494173-3663.
Ntwpol1 Coasl·Brighl &
fight 3Br 2 SBa T owtlhorne
~ ga•Ad comm 2• g;•a99
IJu'ldry FP vau tlKI ce s
Av~1 Now 52 89'5 pe1 mo
l!)!'!ll 94g.759.3~9·
Newport Cout·Beaohlul
2Br 28a cOlido '" gated
convriun.iy 2 Ur 9111ge
111.f'O't FP POOi & tt'1lll5
Aval lmmed $2554pe1 mo
aQ!!!I 949' 759-3797
+ 99c + tax closed end lease 48 mo. 12k mi. per year, .20c per mile
thereafter. $2,995 down+ 1st payment, ta>t and OMV fees. Residual $14,775.
Total payments: $25,872 + tax. Subject to prior sale and credit approval. Prior
executive demo CNA396'XJ7). Price good thru 03/07 /01.
208 OFACES
FOR REHTWSE
E1tcu1tvt Su1les/l ·Story
'3 A.a .101e "'o"' 5 M>!I<
sl.it·on~ t>uS,lle$S tdonf.ly
Bu•ldtng is T 1 ., red A•• IOI
Bem•ta ~9 260-0791
Hope• Foto Happen1n9s
A".-rj.;e • .;i'l n~ .,,.
nega•rv~ C ',,,. 'Vlf'f'
.... eoong 1t1 •. 1a1.or
__!!!!e• 714-~·5806
402 1 LOST &
FOUND
LOST BEAGLE mi te. 10
month Old. Balboa l1land
needs medlc111on
REWARD ~H7S-8546
420 GARAGE
SALES
Gigantic S1de1111lk Silt Sa! ~~41• ~ Q. 2p-,.....,
Tld(tocaer Thnfl Shoj>
540 W 19th SL CM
* MUL Tl FAMILY *
• GARAGE SALE • FU"' tu<~ "' , 00!>' a ve
CIOl!'llS • ,;s ' ~ a " "'-
f"IOf e i ' I 5.1• Dr!\' ro ea"", btros 1>.1.,1e Ave l\e.,Pot1
Beach 1Sart• Ar a He•Jl!IS
NPB 738 Tustin Ave
SAT &-12 6 househOldl
go to g1119u In 1lley1
To much stuff to mention
Cash only
s;c.ena·i Co&lj Mesa
440 MJSCElLAKEOUS
FOR SALE
t 2 UJ<ER TICKETS t
Very low. mid court,
Includes p1rk.1ng Great
• Gtfl 949·720-f4~
01k wall unit SJ• g
... "" ii:. J#: .. )A • spa .• s • ] end
MOVING 7t"979-6510
WOLFF lANNING BEDS r:;•, AT H'"llJE
' "Pt T .i..•,:J SAVE'
CCtNERC A. " ·\4E
.t\r!S • ;111 St"3 0
L""' 1.10!"1'" 1 P;i~•1 FREE C0t~ Ca1aiog
Ca 1 ., o-·· Hl15&
Vn1 A l"le tU•.tr"J C()f!:
448 ANTIQUES/ART
/COLLECTIBLES
'WE PAY MORE$ fASTtR"
•
Pottery Barn •Itel* aof1
& ch111 S1nd twill 1llp
COYtred 5 mo old. $1800
for tilt M L 94H7S.n18
.;. 649-4922~ 1_4S6 __ L_1vE_srm'_oc_K I
OCTH COA T Al'CTION
2202 So, ._n St.
SuQ AM, CA 92701
1450 APPLIANCES I
Loc11 kltlena. cits, dogs
tor ldojl(lon every Sit &
Sun noon-4pm F11tuon
Island ANIMAL NETWORK
Info 949-644·2279 www.1111malnetwork.org
• Lov1ble Pug PuP«>IH •
" m&IVS 1J wH•S "''l ?aren:s ~ $.It' SOSO ff
s"O!S 94 ... 120-0521
Refrigerator OCICAT LOVERS
& Wuher/Oryer, $150/u. WANTED. unique 1QOntd
EXCELLENT CONDITION' ~ ne~ pta1'111 very lovtng 9•9-64~5&48 SJ(l(j S.CSC 9-'~6=$:!'3
I 4S4 FURNmJRE I
Complttt Furn11h1ngs ,.,
It>• Ap' sofas '4t dt
0..0 ~-la'T'C .. c·~ & re'<J 50s F0t ill!'' •n Of
Sa1 ca ~9--640-SSJS
SELL
· permonth
Plus lox. 48 mol'ltfi lease
()Q oooro-ed credit
bot d"'-e off ssooo
includes $475 seomty dep 2Q¢ per m118
penolty ~ l 2K
m1les/yeof (#025899)
$509
per month
•
88 Satu , March 3, 200 I
TODAY'S
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
PA.li\llOU9 PUZZU 'IOL\1£1>
-
Bridge
BY CHARLES GOREN with OMAR SHARIF
and TANNAH HIRSCH ACAOSS 62 Fle~..0.·-
1 Ple1ln pUZZlll SS Melodlel 8 w.,_.., · se eoov •rmot WEEKLY BRIDGE QUIZ
lhatll 57 f>Jepete tNet 10 ANd QUlcldy 59 Nelghbol on Q I • M South. vulnerable, you !told:
hold: 14 AM IOthe JP 80 PU 16 Ja~ al old 81 Name ..,_ 82 Cama,. Pill •KQt '='f.>ltH o Ait5J •KQ
The biddlrul bas proceeded:
• Jl• 15 J o 6 o H • K Q Ht S
18 LNk(OIA) 83 HGh1CflOOlat 17 Gui 1M 0-oll
18 -on aci llkea DOWN NORTH l!AST' SOtmt WFS1'
~i~~·WFSI'
~,.,.,,.
19 -MountaW. ot 1 Not imagNty •• .... 1 10 ,_ t• ,_
Eura• 2 l\Alpoleon ..... Wlw do you bid now? Jo ,_ '
20 MualalJ notes hete W1W ICtlon do you rake?
21 AooOed 3 Some ce~ 23 Wonderful 4 Bew11>r
24 Caravan arvmat txtt>ns 2e Dreaty ,1 S ~ Birds
Q 2 • Both vulnerable. as Soulh you
hold: Q 5 • f.ul. Wei\ vulnerable, IS Soulh you hold:
27 Made an _.qct S4r~I OOOY 6 TYl>e Of aw.ird
• 65 <:1 K Q J 10 7 3 O A • A 1' l
' • "t5 3 0 J .. 7 5 () u • 10 4
~ TYQt'Jt t>eai 1 ·r'arrous· >w• 0 -· ..._,._.,..._ 31 Boe:>•' ' ~kor
The bidding has~
SOUTH WE.~ NOR111 EAST The biddinJt his proceeded:
32 W4nelere r 8 -arocl kin 32 PBS tellU8 10 ,_ l• ,_ NOllnt IAST' SOUTH WJl...sT
33 Lady Gu1y, 11 g 9 Jose 11 hurtah 33 Wort< lot the ' I• to ?
98 Goum* 10 Moro lemooy Uni~ Natlcni
ap!*iZllf 11 Asian OOUl"Cty ~ 11 Int llruDled What do you bid now? Wha ICtlon do you ~e?
40 "()! OOIJl9D'" 12 Anglet Wllllon in 47!> 8 C
41 Bladt bird 13 Thaw 3!> OueSllOrw
42 ~.:XY 22 Marry 31 Kermitssound
Q J • A.\ Soulh, vulnerable, you
hold:
Q 6 •A. South,·vuJnmbie, you
hold:
43 raid 23 FOAISl clearing 38 Oi!llCUll
44 HNllt>-dub 25 Not "pro 39 Gnld
leatu<es 26 WllhOta OOfll>" 43 SUfl1>tUOU6 48 Walk 2 I Potter's need rlll)astll 48 Cooonut tr-28 Folk wtsoom 44 Sasooall's
• K J7 v A62 , AQJ 10543 • ~
The bidding bas oroceedcd: SOUTH WES1' NORTH EAST
•KQ7 O AH o KJtlJ •'3
The biddiM bas DrOOecded: sovTH-.. ·wm NORTH . EAST
49 Taka ten 29 Loekup Maglae so Holmes' crNtor 30 Shamen·a need 45 Warnings 10 ~ 2• ,_ l o ,_ l <:i P-
1 1 ..,.. ... --.-'"Ir' ..... ~ P-"111"'-il!~ ..... -Whal do you bid now? Wha do you bid now?
Q 4 • Both vulnerable. as South you ~ for answers on Monday.
Look for answers on Monday.
STUMPED? Ce•t0tAn~• ,....,,._ .. ~_
• ~ ,_"'"""" 1 ·900-37().9800 eld. code 500
l••m·•I
COAST COIN NEEDS OLD COltCSI Gold, dvef, Jewtltv. welchet, antiquel,
colec:tibllt IMIMl42-9447.
TOP SSSIRECORDSI
Jazz, R & B. Soul Rock. * 50't & 60's Mll<f 949-645-7505
Bclllt...._F.,.
'n.e....._Pcople
TeW....i
llESDlVA11011
AGtm'S
Full·Umc
flay & n'Olblli iJtlfts
: ·~ . ..
' ' . . ttil...)
,. lleloll in priln .,.. Im
2 1oom1 tor !Wit lldn en,
manlc:uri1t, e~ylia,
massage thellpill, law
half removal etc. Can
Otbotah Ml 1e1 IOOI.
80NAHZA Ulld llclllt ..
l)pgrading 1911111 ""' SIQfts. ~ & power bolll. s. .. 3-17 8*11 Boll
Rtn!N 94M73-7200 or
vilil wwwbollMllrtciom
800IOCElP£R PT In HI
16-24hfl/WMk. PnchlrM, AP, AR. batik reca. Fu resume 10 714-1180-027,
CARE GIVIRS nMdad to
:: '**'Y In .. hernia .,,._ ~· or~-:.i:t
Mvt·lt11 No c:ett req,
714""44-4181
CAOSSING GUARDI PT
•DENTAL ASSISTANT•
Newport l•ach, new hl-tKh Proethodontlc
pnctlc! ..... 71W1 4A
EXECUTIVE SEARCH
Wt ere looldng tor 1 1'91
tMtgy, money moeivattd
petlOf'I lo ioln our ... ro11
lkm. " yolJ It tNa modi. call Jim ROM II 714-748-0700 « send ,...,. lo
IJNISEAACK.7t0 TM City
Or. SW 150, Onngt, C. ...
ON THE
MOVE?
812-815
Top-Producers
Higher °'-* hol#I, no ........ °' NOW HIRING
Wiida. Ttllnlntl pnMdtd Phone ~· FIJI
Sell your extra
household items in
CLASSIFIED!
(949) 642-5678
• Health. Omul 1-~ll •.Ol·KPlu
loll ..._ rrf..,....... 0t PT, ft~. no seling
• l\ld \'ICllJoa
• l.ong-tm11 cmpio)W111
=C e rtified Pre-Owned =
iliiiim ______ by B MW --------
for ultimate peace of mind, every CC'ruficd Prc-Ownc.d BMW is backed by The Certilicd Pre-Owned BMW
Protection Plan, ~ovmng the vch1de for up m 2 years or 50,000 miles (whichever comes fim) form the date of
cxpira11on of thr 4-yw/50.000 mile B\t\X' "iC'"' Vehicle Limited Wa.rrancy:· The Protection Plan includes rwo key
clements
1998BMW
528i
Only 111.IWXI m1 bcau1y' \4'195IWI11~.11111 ''''rt /,cro
1.e<.unly Jql<"''· llHO I m1 p:r ~<.r k~...: 11k' rc:r <"~"
mtfC' Tut.ti ~\nK'nl' \f'J.2~1'1 J<c,tJu.il \IK KW 00
14((C\t1'71
1998BMW
328i
White. automalK. k•.., mile' ~ 1'i'H 1111 tt~~l 10 •lart /.c:"'
!kcunly Dcpo<tl, 10.000 m1k\ fl('' YC'•" lea...: 2C"' pc•
c~CCH mile TulJll pwymcnl•, l'J Ill()() Rc•tJ11af a
SI 5.070 1KI I VMf11•11
'98 528i '97 528i
81.tclt w/bl-.l prrm HA\11.1i111 24K MILES! S.spd. prem pkg. low mi ORYX9S0). ........... $27,.9.95
'99540 SPORT '99328iS ~-Spd. wva (4fKI 01(1) 32K MILES! Ai.10, blad W/Ff (4f.Mr660) .................... $28,.9.95
'.9.9 528iT '98 528i
Wap>n. 14l mt 14 ._ Fiii I 1111 SA VEJ Ai.10. pmn ~ (3XVf2{,6) ................... $2.9,.9.95
'98 528i '99 Z3
Ptan pkg. 161t mt 1<11.11111. 1.. SA VE! UL 1oti 11\J l~JF.AJ)6) ............................. $29 • .9.95
'.9.9 740iL '99 Z3
Stlwr w/bbck, p1tm Ml RllOlol.1 • 2 J K MILES/ 2.? Coupt'. ~mt (E9~ 171) ........................ $2.9 • .9.95
'97 3 J Bi '99 328i
Auto. bllH'lgtey (Kl)02JJ ....................... $18,995 ~-Spcl, apon, low mt (4EBL786) ................... $J0,.9.9j'
'97 Z3 '97 740i
1.9L S-Spd. wflitt 13XI 10~\t ............... $22,.9.95 Sll~aw/Ff C3VAK771) .................. ., ....... $JJ,9.9j'
'98 323iS '98 740lL . ~ ¥d. I""" w/.W I )Xf,Y:' I~'""' .. ""·-· $25,.9.95 81.d -lb&Kk (4A51'7U) ,_, ....................... SJ.9 • .995
'.9.9Z3 ~UOlL .
lJL only 1 lk m1 (F790081 ..... _......... $26.995 Blue •• 17\ m1 (0Mll7al),_ ..................... $42,.995
•Ram u low u 4. 9°/o APR on •perowd credit
• ALL Certified to 1 OOK Mi ' Many More C.ettificd
" 24.Hr, Roadside .A.li1tance! Pre-Owned BMW'1 co Cbooeel
• All Veh.ida Subject to Prior SaJe
CREVIER BMW
SUca Alla Auto Mall, SS Freeway at Ml"P'
714/ 17 1 www.crmabmw.com
Call 1-«IN31.f717
PLUMS CAFE
l CATERJNG
NOW HIRING:
Catering Delivery P~1.
Calering s..wn.
Bll1lnClef'I & t..r. Coob ~II PtllOll 389E."1'1jiSt~ ......
t49·722·75M
. 7.,--rr '. .
. ~"
......... tl10 °"*' oon-... Y...,_ 225 H.P .... ...., "'*•VHF, ()flt,
....... OIAl1GaM, co.
DUii .. ....-Prilelne.
7!tflt1f1!l tmW
.......... -··•'--• -~ .. ...,.... .... ............. ............... ............. " .......
Daily Pilot
\\~ ••• , ••• I .... ,, I ,,, ..• ~l()NI '\'·t
w e are looking for sales R~presentatlves w ho enJov meeting •
and greeting people. work flexible hours: afternoons. evenings
anctweekends. Explore our successfully proven program
tt1roughout t he orange county area. securing new
subscrtptJons for the Los Angeles Times.
$ Flexlbfe Hours: either full· ttme or part-time
$ Average $25·$30 per hour
$ No sales expertence necessary
$ Wiii train the rtght peopte
I F llVTERESTED PLEASE CONTACT1
Robert Brown '714) 587·552!
ANTIQUE a CLASSIC CARS
9 Cars.
2 motorcycles,
all In perfect
condition 100%
restored. Sale
all in one block
or individually.
Private Party
OPEN HOUSE
10am-4pm
Sat March 10
Sun March 11
2001
1229 w Shelly Ct
Orange, Cat" C.11 for listing
949·719-9317
BMW SCO Sedll'I 'II
(3M011) $47,990
CO, 1wo Down. OAC
Flltdlat Jonea Motote.s UM24-1401
BMW ZS 'ti
2.81.11, Sllvtt, 10IC "" (4JEA331) 129,"5
CREVIER BMW
714-835·3171
BMW 3181 '15 Auto, fully
loaded. ledy owned. boob rtCOlda. bllc:lc OltmNI Int,
CO, Wll lboYe average
body & llllChanicll oand,
~ reg. just smoooed $2,250 Yin "657961 O'.C
Auto em 1149-586-1888
BMW 32tlS '19
IUlo, wry ..
(4EMPMO) --CREVIER BMW·
714=135-3171 ---.. ..... lf)Ol'I. co (Ell Tll) S30,tl5
CREVIER BMW
714-135--3171
BMW 52111 'M
1-tod. lo ""· llact (aRYXj&O) 129,115
CREVIER BMW
714-835-3171
BMW 5211 'ti
llllO, daln, 17' "" (T25150) $35,115
CREVIER BMW
714-835-3171
BMW 740ll 'II
.... -..,. lo 1111
(M1zm) a u• CREvtER BMW
714-135-3171
BMW 740! W
.......... lo .....
'~a.:-
71WS5-3171
Brown Enterprises
lkildl Pwti Aw 't5
wtwte, tin leethet. xlnC
(648485) $10,988 NABERS
1714)$40.9100
CAOIU.AC CATtRA 'M
Low ml. black, 1811 lttv,
(000823) $15.988 NABERS
1714)540-1100
Clllllac St¥ltle STS '95
low ml, v.ttl ptart, NotthsLv
{824649) s 16.988 NABERS
1714)$40:t 100
CelMec s.tllle STS '97 Saa milt. ledW, dean
(803921) $16,988 NABERS
1714)$40.! 100
Cadillac~ ..
Low. 57k ""'"· rmll. eloys (805384) $15,988 NABERS
1'1'14 )54()-9100
c.dlllac ST'S 'M 4111 ml,
Factory warranty. candy llPllll matalic red. maldw1g ..... co. phone, ctwoml
whlela ... ntw S22.99S. oc A'*> Btu 9'9-~1888
Ctwtrolet Cotve'1ll '99
5-spd. •• ca.I root ~ IUll*llion olcg ctvm wt*
(2275211028ll7) $41.901
South Coest Toyot.
949-722·2000
Lind Rover DilcoYlfy '17 SD7 S8lc ml, mataJllc
burgl#ldy/9'1y Int 7 pal· Hf1?9r, books rtcordt,
beaut. Olig cond $15,995
financing, w111r evatl 0 C
AU10 8krs 949·588-1888
Laxue LS 400 COlc:h '97
V8, auto, llAI powtr, ltalher.
mooMIOI. CD, cllroml
(22756/095373) $34,701
South Coast Toyota
949-722-2000
Lexua LS 400 COICh '97 va. ..,. lllf. ""'*· rr'IVf, co player ctwomt leafier
~227~73) $32,501 South Cont Toyotl
949-722·2000
MAZDA MIA TA MX-5 ~ CONV '99 air. pwr s1etmg, co player
(22759r'100184) Si4.li01
South Coast Toyota
949-722-2000
lilllaullllhl Galanl LS '!I
MD. air ltalhlr f\AI pwr
(226231117954) St&,401 South Coast Toyota
949-722-2000
Hillin Pathllndlf SE '11
CHEVY Monte Carlo '80 V6, auto mnrf running
OnginaJ Owner, exoatllfll boerds .100k • ml. booka/
condition, 40K mi, pnvete reconls. red, beaut ong
P8l1Y $2500 949-737-2144 cond. $5995 Wlf671291 fl.
nanclng, wtrr avail OC CHEVY MorM Carlo 'IO Auto IJkrl 949·586-1888
OltalMI °"""· lClnl oond, 40IC 1111, Pttni. Party ~ Senn 17 Red. 2
p.500 9&737-21 44 dr. ong -· 14511 mi, 4
.,....... apd. new tu•. btlkts & C11ty1Mr _,,,,"&JXI 'M 11arta1, xlnl trans car, = ~~lS,oOo-:: $1700r'Obo 94HSS-~178
.... CMa MH5C)..5151 01c11mob11t Cutlaea '!I
V6, Low mites, lealhtf
• ~o Dtkp13~~ri:r (315109) s1s.988
(2230el238S07) $9.901. NABERS South Cout Toyot. _ __....C7.._14.._.l54o-9___. .... 100.....__
949·722·2000 Oldlmobllt lnb'IOIM '00
ESSAMG 'It 6 eyl. CO, ~ renlll
(8154n) M2.t90 (107111) NABERS $12,!18
271( ...... GI-* T1m11 (714)540-1100
Altdltr Jonea llotcwclf'I
NM24-1401 OldllllOblll SllhoUtettt .00
ford Umteld E.xClnlon GLS. low 1400 m1 lel'* ~ ... (3100(7) $22,911 ..,..... NABERS 6-lld ciJll • • co. ctwoml (714)540:! 100 "'*· llhr, tow pliQ
(2VSSIA53808) S33,80l Pontiec Filfo GT '88 South Coest Toyot. 949·722-2000 29k ICIUll ml, lllc:ll, whit, gray llhr. moonrool. boolca,
HONDA CIVIC EX ._ loob & amellt new. will ~.... • .. .. appraciala, $6995. oc Auto ........ • "" power, moon-8krl 94t-581-1 ... root, ABS, cnna
(221fnJS07474) $12,901
South Coeat Toyota
949·722·2000
Infinity ll30 Conv. '11 7811 ml, boob, purl wtlt.
CO, ctwome ~ glrlOtd. ~. bMUI. orig OOfld,
$11996 *"2'75871 liwalg
WllT IYlll 0C AUi<> BlcJ1
949·5ff= 'f!8
Salum SU '93
low mitt, IUtO. dMn! (342882) $5,988 NABERS
(714)540-9100
$C30 Sedan '01
(147t09) --l.&d Tu Paid. Huny
Flelelllf Jones Motoreatt
UM24-1401
8500 Stdan ...
(383969) S64rll80
TM Blg ~It Fletcher Jonte Motorcara
818-624-1401
Toyola ~ LE '93
llJIO. lit, Ml power
(227451120978) S7.501 South Coest Toyota
949·722·2000
Toyota C.iica GT Conv, 99
cer1lfred. IA. "" power (226W054A16) $18201
South Cout Toyota
949-722·2000
T oyola Cofolla LE '00
C.r1rfttd. air, full power,
cassette, CD p1aye1.
(2273&'345948 $13.801 South Coast Toyota
949-722·2000
T~ Canvy LE '87
Ill fiAI pwr, moorv1. eloys
(2260&'23329111 $10,901
South Cout Toyota
949-722·2000
FORD ESCORT ._
auto, a1r. lull power,
cassatle, alloys. ,.., 1IQOiltt
(22703/2007972) $1,901
South Coest Toyota
949-722-2000
T oyola C«olll VE '99
oerllfied. 8'*>. air (226()6.12332911) $10,901
South Coest T oyot.
949-722·2000
T oyola Solan SE '00 cer1i6ed llAO, ... QIU co
jlilyer, ABS llo¥S
(2.2e43f.J35601) St&.eo1 South Coast Toyot.1
949·722-2000
Toyoll W Sienna LE 'M
auto, lit. lul pwr, CD pleytt •
ABS, tow pkg, llO!l80t nd
(2272&'046704) --$17,801
South Cout Toyotl
949-722·2000
Toyota 4Aunner SA5 ..
MO. flAI pet CO c:hlnger,
""' boaldl, tow N 111o¥s (226700702213) $18.901
South Coest Toyota
949-722·2000
ToYOla 4Aunner SA5 'tt
V6, Ill power CO, ""'
boaldl. Mio "'*-lloys (227491'12291!0) $21.101
South Coest Toyota
949·722-2000
'M Hondl Acaltd 4dr UI
Auto. 'lfly dean, orlglnll owner, lo9cled, $7900 o0o
714-434-1790
Classified is
CONVF.NIENf
wlxthtr you'rt
buying, sdling. or jUSI
looking.~ has
wtw you oecd•
Cl.Ai5IFIED
(949) 642-5678
itt~uts
~olledi les
A SPECIAL
PUBLICATION
JUST FOR YOU!
PUBLISHES:
· March 28, 2001
SPACE & COPY DEADLINF.:
March 19th • 5pm
..
Doily Pilot
, l..Jcc:o~J *"''""'"'"' •M~lunJ -.nlh.111.11 .. 111 h .. ui
•fa"t .. hkd h' I K' '-tilt.•
62V lcrm1onl Wny ,..,~
<·-.~'" lti.1c"'• . 949 54~<U29
POLICY
ffoME, HEALTH NIJ Busies
~--·
296 Ct.EAHING /MAINTENANCE
Ctrpenlft, Dlckt, Patio
Covers. DlywaH 25 · y11 Chttyl'a Hou-lffnl119
axp SINN JOI> specllllsl Fr" est a~dlpenCLEAHI 949-551-5574 deble rnoYe-ou1S same day
M:, $30 spc 949-399-3666
272 CONCRETE
/MASONRY
Houaeclelnlng • Exp'd D1vld Vtntura Contractor
21e ~ECTIHCAL
SERVICES
SMALL JOB EXPEATl
DUNCAN ELECTRIC
LocaliOuidt responsa
Service/Remodels
20 Years Experience
L1275870 949"'650-7042 252 CARPETS l
CARPET Clw.G WkJy/8'·wkly/MollllllyrWeek A Conct.i. & Masonry Co
ends Great maat lmelcltJ 8lic* Block Slone Wabay LICENSED CONTIIACTOR
949·246-6504 9 5'8-4285 1.1747441 71..._...82 No fOb IOo sm No MMCel'
SERVES YOU RIGHT
CARPET & UPHCLSTERY
CLEANING
HoliM Cltllllng By Lucy Elpert& In am. jobs and l.oc:al ref's, reasonable lllltS rec>allS Reasonably poced
12 YIMI Eqi. Offices todl ~ed. r,r.onleed 949-
949·246·8657, 91631·4980 887-02()3, 14-776·0783
Repp remodel llll1I lpl
new semces '49-645-3656
303 HANDYMAN
JHOllE REPAIR
REPAIRS t PAINT
Home lmprov1men11 ano
mote Small j(ll>I ok ~
eip Gary 949-645-5277
A to Z Home lmprovtments
Repllrs Elec111c11 and
~ Llc'650524
Call 714·2&9·7185 or
949-246-6011.
QUALITY CRAFTSMAN
20 Years E.tp9'1et1Ct Refs
l'M YOUR HANDYMAN!
'308 HOME IMPROVEMENT
"'
330 MOVING l STORA OE
PUBLIC
NOTICE
Sotvrdoy, Morch 3 200 I II}
352 Pt.ASTERING /STUCGO
NEWPORT PLASTERING
• 511.lCCO Repairs
• Room Ad<Mions • Old Fashion ln1e11or
Plas1er Restoration
• No )Ob 100 &mall
FWY IOMDED Nl/J tNSUAED
(949) 859-4601
362 ROOFlHG /GUTTERS
LC.L ........ C.mpaa)'
ll'tl<'m •• Spe0Alll1ng in All lYP" of
lloohng, De<lung, ll~n
949/650-1079 ... ., ,_., _....
P1111«/S1ucco Patch ~
Serving Soutnern Cai.tom.,. ~ i·h c ~ lo< 25 years l•326864
Ill In eflott 10 olf et the be$I ~ PQISlble 10 our read· ers end advtnisers. 11111 w1N
require Conltactors who
advet!Jse In Ille Service
Dorectoly 10 include 11\etr
Conlractors L1cenu
numbet 111 t~r a<Mtn1se-
ment Y OAJt co-operabOl'I is
greatly appreoa11<1
Clean Ail 5 Rooms
$99.00 Love 10 cle1n Free esl
1 ()yrs ·~ boncltd lll&Ul8d. reasonable refs Est1ll11
300 GARDENING
/LANDSCAPING MARK 94~50-9525 Ul-1&.....:.:.:.:...::.::..:;.____J
The Caht Public·
U111111es Com·
m1sst00 REQUIRES
that al used hotJse-
hold goods movers
pnnl their P U C
Cal T number hmos
and chautters pnnt
their T C P number
1n an adve111sments
tt you have a ques· "°" about the legal-
ity of a mover. limo
or chautter. call
PUBLIC UTILITIES
24 hours' 714-554-7831 l{uofin~
-..pcciall'h
224 ADDITIONS
/REMODELING
FARTHING INTERIORS
Kdchell I Balh Remodel
and Room AddohOns
Lt560875 949-645·9325
236 AUTO SERVICES
Fr•• '"" & bath w S re>OIM
Clean Alt Carpets Only
$149.00 (or less)
Up 10 6 rooms 2 balhs
2 1ia111 •MO th hi of lla1rs
Truck Mo~roted Equipment Spc,1 Rtmo .... ng Pre S1>0n1ng
f urr lur• Moving
Sn 111g OC tor 10 Ye.it1
PLusfREE Ouflolt1 TlflON WW! GuA110
9411·581·1457 B00-303-4757 •
236 AUTO
SERVICES
HERB'S AUTO REPAIR
f •lnblrsh"'d 196/
COMPlETE SERVICE AND REPAIR
CUSTOM MUSCLE CARS
TRUCKS CARS & B OATS
• Restoration • Body • Engine • Paint Work
2045 Pl.AclHTIA AVE.,
Cost MESA (949) 548-0670
1238 BATHROOMS I
HOME flair ' &1ht11b R~"'-unK R~l.11 .. ~t-turl11,t
Porcet~on • (1IM ·~ .1" 'i1n~\ • 'lh11v.1"
Counll1'
949-645-7723
GENERAL REPAIRS
AeMa111e -au • .nv Worlr
l<JtdlelVBat.h fieod1r
Colllter Tws • S•n~
WeAM HPatl" ~ • f·•tlift
WolJIJ Sil" IClU'I' A< poi"
C.... ""'....W. IUf t. (949) 189·&124_
248 CABINET
MAKING
Ill> CUSTOM CABINETS <Ill
lll5lal ,.lictn9 ref"'.slwlg
kik:hln exoen L 110 11119 949-645-4907 714-392 3212
1250 CARPENTRY I
A TO Z HAHOYMAN
lnstaU reface Cllbtneli
kltchen.ballvdOors. w•ndo ... s
Ocug 714-5-46 7258
252 CARPETS &
CARPET CLEANING ______ __,
CARPET CARPET Repa.1~ Pale/ling lns1a~ Courttou~ Any size f()bs
Who4!fllt' 949-492-0205
260 CERAMIC TILE
CUSTOM CREATIVE TILE
lnslaJations Slate ceramic
ma~. slone &tab 1975
1&12044 Jtfl 71~12·9911
LEAKY Showers Repaired
Rt91oumg & lnwlallorl DEAN TILE 94M1MOIS.
714-846-8526
266 CLEANING
/MAINTENANCE
Neat Maids
FIND
an apartment lhrough classthed
Hou11clunln9 949·
650-7710. 949-533-8573
M1ril'1 Houledeanl119. IQ LEWIS CONSTRUCTION
clean your house for S50 & Remodeling • Handyman
Yard Clffn·up, llff trim· Surf City Htndyman E.xV mtng lledOes 1111m lrHS Int Home Improve Aepa.rs
ilul'l1> removal main1 714-Stmg JObS Oil Ouildy and
848-U30 or 714-<196-7031 rellallle MIU 714-840-7980
up LicJBonded/Warran1y IJcl 704n3 Local Reslden1
17YIS Up 94H4W()56 714•557-5125
YARD CLEAN·UP
Trees·Prulled & Removed
Spnnklers Repaired new .. _ Call ?14-751.3471 270 CONSTllUCTIOfC
/CONTRACTORS
~ -,-~ ~~ ~ BUILDING J
\
COMPANY <i
General 1
Conlr11ctin1t ~
<.:ustom llontl'\ r--'
All Addition-
• Remodeling "' Kitt-hensfD1l h\ ~
~ \\indo,,.vDoor.1
~ ln\ured
l Lie.# 751730 { ,1 25 \ ~ + F.xp = J Re~ult\ i ~~
CO'liS l'Rt,c-n o:-.
( .cncul ( """"''"' ~i.. '" •"I"="•"'• Joint <jU.Jht) \On\ISUtri:.htln
L n1quc ( u,11>m11cJ
RcmuJch <\. AJc.huon•
l..J.1.'\4.19~ l 1ah1hl\ In\.
71'-29MSZ6 714-ZS7.WI
•
JRG Muotvy-Bloc* • 8lic*
• Slone • Cone. tic Repen
oil' Oualo1y wor11 Lt 730089
Guar rers 714-531-7643
FIND
a n a pa rtme nt thro ugh
cfasslflcdJ
274 COMPUTER
SERVICES
COMPUTER
H ELP! ........ an..r-... • M.,.,, lllllw w dice
• l'Carlllc ·~ •Vtlll>l'llQl!Jlw9•• ·~Mxllrn
·Ob~
• OgalYac.~ -
• )II.WI~ P.lltmtHelp
UC klblty G!Nqll,
11 Y11 com,..., llJ
14-612-2 86
1n 11.e con-en1ence of your
home 0< office
Prog<m & In-Se!·~
fro·rwng lor At Ages Compuoet Repo r &
IS ,_i tap Po1>e<1t
JodyMom1
94M .... lff7
In-Home
COmput.r Doctor
lnlllll. LWDI. Sohn.
..,,..,~
~&T*'J
Ntg_&_
949-711-1445
COMPUTER ASSISTANCE
0 'fOAX pace • your hOme
or ok: lndMcl.lal Coaclwlg
lnttrnel Pr<>gfam lnslllll·
t>OO Dtnntt 949· 723·9372
IT SHOULD BE FUN
Computer ln111llalion,
Rep1if, Setvlct on your
llornt 0itgoos1oc 11<even-
11ve mam1 949-631 -4367
284 DRYWALL
303 HANDYMAN /HOME REPAIR
Additions • Kilchen
Balhroom • Repairs
Call lhe leader
in So. Caliloroia
Ftee Eslinote w S71912
a (OlntlCTIOl IO.
949•837•5642
Christian Handyman
Ft.sh~
'erlc• ~ ... stucco s<Jb l'ioorl
~Ooerl~ filSICa boa-tis & paot111ng
Sen.or d<9count. Free
•tlnllt Call JoM
714-636-8235
SEMI RETIRED
CONTRACTOR
Skilled Carpenter
Electrician/Plumber
SERVICES I'll help you resolve
those naggtng home
WITTHOEFT DRYWALL repair and remodel
All pha-SllllJll.r!I JObS issues.
~~20)'1'1.7~~1=~ Keith 949-574-1748
1304 HAULING I
JUNK TO THE DUMP111
714-968-1882 AVAILABLE TODAY!
94H73-5566
1306 HEALTH I l BEAUTY
\I \\I'll~ I \\ 11 lo.I'-'.
\II I lit \I '"( H 1 'r 1 ...
newportant1a 1n .com
B•<k. Nnk i..ncc
Hip or \houldt"r
•No 'urwt:rv
• No t ltu•1•11altut1on
1-800-700-8774
Free back acrttnlng
a,,.iysls & rehab program
usorig Pl1a1es Gyrolorucs &
Physical Therapy Ins
accepted Rapid Rehab
370 t71h SL 0 Tuttln
949-515-7878
CAREGIVER SERVICES
Appoonlments shopping
~I needs meals lie Can Man!yn MMM-2438
308 HOME
IMPROVEMENT
REACH 80,000 HOMES
EACH WEEK FOR ONLY
$ 32 per week
4•. min.
TIME TO BEGIN
YOUR HOME
IMPROVEMENT
PROJECT? Call a plumber,
painter, handy-
man, or ~ d the
great services
listed here In our
directoryl TI-IESE
LOCAL
SVC PEOPLE
CAN HELP YOU
TODAY!
317 INTERIOR
DESIGN
Ho!M Craatora Reanang·
1ng Rooms Orga111z1ng
Faux Pall!ling Free Est
949-675·9661 9723·S116
·, nw,u.,111~ Jlj \1 .. (1"'.f "' '"' '"'' . ~· ~ .. t
SeaSlde Design
Services
949 6 '5· 1853
328 MISC.
SERVICES
COMMISION
714·558·4151
PLUMBING I
The Local Plumber
a.....,ol#SIJ....,,lr'C
l'IPI LOCATING
WCTIOHIC SL.Aa UAK
DfTKT10N
friendly s..w.
Two Brothers Movln; & 675·9304
Stor.. Same day s.e WW-:-,.... Cornm'Hoosehold Anhquas L-~.u:l!ZL..l!W~!.......J
& Packing 949-645-4545.
PAINTING I
~ 9 ........
-"'; ·-·-... _
,..,..
714·632·5660 t~ ,... :· .. ,~, ... ,
CHUNG S PAINTING
27 Ytara Uj) • Greet Pnt'e'
Guaran1ee woo. F•ee Est
L•375602 714·5;\8·1534
RAINBOW CIRCLE MAINT
P11n11ng-lnl ex1 House Apl
qual11y !(lb' Free es1o1nate
L •569897 714-636-8888
RC Pam1Jng lnterfOffEXt
Pll'l""!I & Sl.a.nt"!j Qua IV
pull quail!) 'Mll'tl' 2yl\ exp
Power waslwlg manne Ion·
1511 714-~13t4 L•581994
• TOP QUAUTY • Very Compehl"'t
Locell$e Bonded 1nsu1eo
'Th•Neighborhood
Plumber I
OAA1HaWNU
CUAHlHG SPKIAUST
TWEEDY PlUMBING
949-645-2352
-JE •
• cml[lf ~fNl'I
•111111 • ·~ • lfll 111B:'111& .. -. ..,..pl'(._
IOI PllMIM
(714) 1148-1847
PRECISE PLUMBING
Repan & R<-ooe< •
FREE es· w.·es
Lr687398 '•4.96q '"•
356 POOL
SERVICE
Pool & Spl ,. ~·, y.r,."
' rep.... ' t ~· ••. hea!u~ piu'r()ollQ & " • t Acoo "Wl I 714-404· 7526
362 ROOFING
/GUTTERS
L.648228 Jay 949-650-5066 --------. CREDIT CARD
PROCESSING Pa.;:;:'.nc~; ~dblJS l 350 v=~ I
MERCHAHT SERVICES 1 . 941).752-4700 Ht. 103 All T1 pa of Roof, & Rqnirt
• R.:lldaiual • lont.aucw
EARTHQUAKE
PROTECTION
SAVE YOUR FAIJIL Y
& PROPERTY
from lelhal EOuakt
gas l1res auto gas
shut-otf 10< peace ol
mond R111Corntne1C11I
949 933-6916 Before
tts too Ille'
(949) 548-0769
.-.-.v.h rrt t•• t
WatlfptOOf Roofing
SELL
your h ome
t hrough c l assifie d
,,. ....... ,, ""
949-7 22-8846
714-75 1-8846
I~
WATERPROOF
ROOFING
Re·rools •Repairs
FrN Estimates
All Types of Roof1
All Work Gurenteed
Lie• 1388M>
{949) 631-1085
388 WALL
COVERINGS
FARTHING INTERIORS
,,. • ;:i "l'KN8
C • • 'Ila ,enr>q
t >t 949-645-9325
THE STRIPPER'
WE GALS s•oo o t~· •
IOQrt •r Slr p Ml• M
••I , n I ao; .e to tne crar,
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392 WINDOW
CLEANING
•I Do Windows & ScrMnl
) '• " " •Pasonablt
,.,. jt\. ~ ,,.. t.:. .....
or •l<e ~· 714-514-4318
GOOD }OBS.
RELJ..tBLE
SERl1CES.
l.VTEREffi.YG
TH/SGS
TO BL'Y.
ITS ALL
HERE
EJIRYDAY
/.\'
CL4SSIFED!
(9-19) 6"'2-56'8
CALL LORRAINE AT •
949 574-4245 I
2001 MERCURY
GRAND
MARQUIS LS
Leather, Dual Power Sears, Anci-
Locking Brakes, Conv. pare lire
& Much More.
2001 MERCURY
MOUNTAINEER
5.0L. \'8. l carhl·r. \tnmal'\ Pk~ ..
Moon Roof .. \uw ltmp l l11Hrul.
Con\cntl'.O(t l1roup. H11md1nk
Travel note. \ IJlh .\ud1n ( [) Pla~w
ON ALL
2001 LINCOLN
NAVIGATORS
2001 LINCOLN
CONTINENTAL
Alpine Audio Sysccm, CD Changer,
Driver Selca System
-----=-' ..
..
405 Fm,,,.,,
F.DtHor6or,
So.th l llllt
...
BJ 0 Saturday, Morch 3, 2001 Daily Pilot
.
~OUth -___ Qast Acura
. . .
2001 ACU 2001 ACUllA .
3.2TL 3.2 CL . . .
• .
2001 ACURA 200 '1
MDX lntegra LS
·Coupe
'97TOYOTA '97MAZDA
COROLLA DX 4DR MIATACONV
Auro, AC. PS, 4DR. good Topless fun chis summer,
rransponation . very low priced low -Affordable!
price! (PI 532/Z6 I 8939) (Pl 499/V0733903)
$6495 $8450
'95ACURA '99SATURN
LEGENDCPE SL24DR
Auto. AC. P , PW, leather, Auco, AC. PS, nice color, come
not many around! and resc dirive this one!
(20632A/C003003 ) (Pl 590/XZ142428 prior renral)
$9550 $9650
'95HONDA '98 TOYOTA
ODYSSEY VAN CAMRYLE4DR
Auro, PS, AC. PW, Auto, AC, PS, PW, Low
family hauler price, Toyoca quaJiry
(P l21 5/C0 1261 8) (Pl452/WOI 13734)
$10,950 $12,450
'98 INFJNITI '96 MERCEDES
130 BENZC220
Auto, AC. PS, PW, Really Auto, AC. PW, PS, your firsc
Priced Right! Mercedes p,riced low!!
(Pl 559ff618657) (Pl 5622/F45205 l)
$14,950 $16,450
ic~,_-,1-:H ~,-,nl
f..+ ----___J
@ -
'95MERCURY '97 VOLKSWAGEN
VILLAGER GS JETTA GLS 4DR
Auro, PS, AC, Auto, AC, PS, 40r, black
family fun vehicle beauty, very nice car!! ·
(20780Af J02599) (Pl 478/M0? 1412)
$8595 $8950
'97~EEP '90LEXUSLS
CHE OKEE 400
Red, 40r, auco AC, check Par! Whire, auco, AC, moonroof.
chis one out!! PW, PS, lLther, hard co bc2c
(Pl 549/L600923) pricd (20619A/0005007)
$9650 $9650
'98FORD '95LEXUS RANGERPIU ES300
Everyone needs a truck, Auto, PS, PW, AC, !cacher,
hurry down and test drive! check this price ouc!
(Pl 560/B10547) (Pl 568Af 0092201)
$12,950 $13,550
'99HONDA '99NISSAN
CRV MAXIMA4DR
Auco ACM PS, PW, 4x4 . -Auto,-AC, PS, PW, leather,
(20799NC073585) lots of pwr
(20748Atr215246
$17,950 $17,950
2925 Harbor .Blvd~ ·
Costa Mesa, CA 92626
'97NISSAN
TI.MA GXESD
Auro, AC, PS, PW, whar can I
say, look ar che price!
(P 1533/C205227)
$8950
'96 CHRYSLER
T&C MINWAN
Summer's coming. Ger ready
with this one!
(20790Af B311820)
$9750
'98 CHEVROLET
ASTROVAN
V6, Auto, AC, PS, PW, 7
passenger, won't lase long,
hu rry! (Pl 419/B213216)
$13,950
'99 A CURA 3.2
IlNAVI
Navi System, leather, AC,
PW, PS, auto
(Pl 547/A014688)
$23,695
AC URA (714) 979-2500
(800) 96ACURA • Fax (714) 435-1511
ALL PRICES PLUS TAX UC. DOC. TIRE FEE AND SMOG FEE. SUBJECT TO PRIOR SALE . . -'-
'95 TOYOTA
CAMRY LE
Auto, AC, PS, PW, will sell
fast at this price!
(Pl 538/0078567)
$8995
:.99NISSAN
AL11MA GXE 4DR
Auto, AC, Full pwr, low low
miles, priced low
(Pl413/242828)
$10,950
'97 MITSUBISHI
3000GT SL CPE
Sporty , whice, fun co drive,
priced to sell!
(P1 566NY00001 3)
$13,~995
'98ACURA
NSXT
Fly Yellow, gorg~w, finest car
in its class, drivea winner, call
for addit. (P1412ff000128)
. $59,995 ·+
...
Daily Pilot
Five Star. ~·
It's Bettert ' /
We'll Prove ti
Saturday, Morch 3, 2001 811
JellP•CllKJSllJl•~•ISUZU
·~
,.. I I
Brand New 2001 Cadillac Catera 2000 Alero Coupe
2000 Escalade
v Llat Price $48 925 ~::~;!;!99° SALE $39,995
~£\!A ~-JC-!•imi.)
'93 SATURN SLI
low mil.,, ovlo, squeolcy deonl (3.428821
36 month lease, 12,000 miles per year. First
monthly payment and license fees due on
delivery date plus a cap reduction of $3000
for a total on delivery of $4057.93 including
truces. Mileage charge after 36,000 miles is
20 cents per mile. Advertised payment does 1
not include sales true.
List Price $17 z..785
SALE $14,8~5
~139 •t!=t!X•»
~o ~o
PAYMENIS
$0
FINANCE CHARGES ..
s5,988 '00 OLDSMOBILE BRAVADA 518,988 Only 51( mil.ii White, l.otl., CD & morel ( 17 4433)
'93 OLDSMOBILE NINETY-EIGHT 7,988 '00 OLDSMOBILE SILHOUETIE 521,988 low miles, leoth., moonroof & morel (30837.41 Gl.S, low 1 AOC> miles, leot+., duol dooo, ,_r oir ond morel (31 OOAn
'89 CADILLAC SEVILLE 58,988 '97 CADILLAC ELDORADO 524,988 Only 251< ong.nol miles, colledor quoli1y, muit _, (8188221 Tour, JOO HP ~. blodt, hhr , tl'IOONool, CD ond morel (607596)
'96 MERCURY GRAND' MARQUIS 510,988 '98 CADILLAC CONCOURS 526,988 Leot+-, low 781( miles, beige, ,_ cor lrode-inl (635961 ) low miles, ...+i .... peori, IOn leolh., bol ol worronly (7 A026A)
'95 BUICK PARK AVE 510,988. '00 CADILLAC DEVILLE 5 28,988 While, IOn leolh., eiteellent condition,,_ cor lrode-1nl (6.46.4851 low 161< miles, lilv.r, I.other, bolonce ol wononty, pr8'110US rentol (2311651
'98 CADILLAC CATERA 514,988 '98 CADILLAC SEVILLE SYS s31,988 low miles, blodt, IOn leather, mony utrosl (000823) low 21 K mil.,1 Blac~. leot+. olloys ond morel Bo&once ol worroniy (90688n
'96 CADILLAC SEVILLE 514,988 '99 CADILLAC ELDORADO 531,988 low 571( mil.s, moonrool, olloys & morel (805384) low 14K mil.s, lealher, bolonce ol worronty, pt'9Yiou1 rental (600769)
'98 OLDSMOBILE CUTLASS 515,9~8. 1 99 CADILLAC ESCALADE s32,988 V6, low miles, leoltier, -*lent condition! (315109) low UK mil.s, ...+iile, CD, alloys, bolonce ol worronty ond morel (A05702)
1 9 7 CADILLAC SEVIW SLS 516,988 '01 CADILLAC DEVIW 534,988 Seo mill, leather, squeaky deon, ,_ CX1l1 trade-in I (803921) low 12K mile., w+iit9, Ion leoth., CD, 'On·Slot', bol of worr , prev renldl ( 11 A230)
'95 CADILLAC SEVILLE SYS 516,988 1 99 CADILLAC SEVIW STS 535,988 low m1l.s, V·8 Norlht1ar, ...+iila pearl, gorgeous! (82'6.49) low miles, block. llhr , moon roof, CO ond IT!Of'91 &olorw:. ol Worronty (909535)
2600 H A RBOR BOULEVARD
COSTA MESA
,_)527·1 ~TH E FUSION OF DESIGN
& TECHNOLOGY