HomeMy WebLinkAbout2001-03-25 - Orange Coast PilotI
I ..
•
l 2 SERVING THE NEWPORT -MESA COVMUNmES SINCE 1907 •
• •
• Inside
LIFE & LEISURE
Kim Almquist. 23, of Irvine is
one of many people choos-
ing to sweat through their
yoga classes in Newport-
Mesa. Almquist and others
are following a new trend -
hot yoga, a yoga class that
takes place in a room heated
to between 90 and 100
degrees.
Sff Page 5
Inside
SPORTS
SUN DAY •
•
SUNDAY STORY
Orange Coast 'College men'$
varsity crew team throws
their coxswain, Sam Yost in
the water after the team
won its race Saturday morning.
See Page 10
llUY FOi TIE 111 "8""= Noelle Allen, 18, shows the dress she will be wearing today to the Academy Awards ceremony. Noelle is the
granddaughter of past Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences president Gene Allen. ·
.. • .. . ..
lnskle
COMMUNITT ...
FORUM
Gregg Schwenk, executive
director of the Newport
Beach Film Festival, talks with
Features Editor Jennifer K
Mahal about the festival's
plan for
upcoming
years and
what
makes it
so
unique.
SH
Page9
UU"IMATE CALENDAR:
What's going on In Newport
Beach and Costa Mesa this
week? Check out our Ultimate
Calendar and find out.
SHP-e-4
TOP STORY
Eastbluff
teenager
Noelle
Allen will
get to do
something
tonight that
many only
dream
about -
go to the
Academy
Awards
~Feline fanciers flock . ao the fajrgrounds
•• Around 500 people are expected to attend Top
Cats & Thils Cat Show in Costa Mesa this weekend.
SUlal\ Levine ts addicted to
cats.
So adclicted, in fact, that
•she Mlpecl to ltUt the DOW
: four-year-old 'Thp Cati & ~.
8ll Orange County-baed dub
that bolts cet abowl once a
year ill Orange County. 'lbll ,...,.. lbaw. taking.-. tldl
WI g>ewJ al .. Orange Caun·
ty~.Sbow~-
en upec:t around 500 atten-
dees.
Wearing cat earrings. her
aJ"Q eaaped by cat clawl and
her pink top covered with cat
fur, the AuhM!n relident lakl
IM just ami get enough cat
lbowl uoder .. belt.
·1r1 )ull IO much run to go
to tMm.. Levine NkS. .. -cat WUU. purred bGPOY oat to ber. •You get all kinda Of
SH~TSMGll
\
M•thls Winkler
DAILY PILOT
T here's a scene in
"My Fair Lady"
when Eliza
Doolittle, the
scruffy flower
girl, turns into a stunning
beauty and descends a
staircase in a <liamond-
studded white ball gown.
•Miss Doolittle, you look
beautiful.• says a stunned
Col. Hugh Pickering.
"Don't you think so, Mr.
Higgins?"
And oelle's
Oscar pick.c; are ...
• Best picture: "Gladiator•
• Best actor:
Tom Hanks. •cast Away"
•Best actress: Juha Roberts.
·erm Brockovich"
• Best supporting llCtor:
Ben1c10 Del Toro, •Traffk•
• Best supporting ectr9u:
Kate Hudson. "Almost
•Not bad." comes her
grumpy language teachers
response. •Not bad at all."
It seems certain that
Noelle Allen, 18, will get a
more enthusiastic response
PHOTOS BY STEVE MCCAANIC I DAl.Y Pl.OT
A QUICI 'IOICl-UPI Marla Demoles puts the finishing
touch. Up gloss, onto Noelle Allen's Ups during a
make-over at Salon DeNour ln Laguna Beach.
• Best director: Steven
Soderbergh ·erin Brockow:n·
• Best doa.wnentlwy
feata.re: "Long Night•s
Journey mto Day•
• Best doa.wnentlwy st.art
·0o1ph1ns"
tonight from her grandfather, Gene Allen,
when he takes her to the 73rd annual
Academy Awards.
Last w eek, the Eastbluff teenager made
several trips to a Laguna Beach salon,
where stylists helped transform her from a
Catholic schoolgirl to a belle ready for the
red carpet at the Shrine Au<litorium in Los
Angeles.
There, she ls bound to cause double
takes, just as Audrey Hepburn's Ehza dtd
while stepping down the stairs created by
Noelle's grandfather, who won the 1964
Academy Award for art dtrecbon on "My
Fair Lady.•
SEE OSCAR PAGE 7
• Best foreign AM•, ...
film: •u6uch1ng Tlger, Htdden
Dragon•
• Best lldlipted ~
"Chocolat•
• a.st origiNI 9C1Wipi.ey:
"Erin Brodcovlch" \
Drum roll, please: 'Buff a Picks Oscar Pix'
D on't just 5it there, for heav-
en'• sake, keep reading! So
much to tell you. so little
time. Tonight ls, of COW'Se,
Hollywood's night of nights.
More than 1.5 billion people will
tune their tubes to watch the pomp.
the pegeantry and the puffery ol
the quest for Otca.r -the little gold
guy who ii 73 years old and still
doesn't have any pants.
And that means it's time for the
ftlth annual "Buffa Pleb Oscar
Pb'..• to borrow a heedllne from
Van.ty.
\ But tint, t promlled you a full
r'9pCllt GD my aalDent Sl Patrick's
o.~ ... gu.t bartender at Moaeben'I.
Could lt have ~ men f'wlf I
tbink DOt. OoU arw lmportut.
MmewwelDCMllllDmi~
mytbmg, ad daai.,..... .. ,...
l Md ... good--· oddty
,.... ...
~11 mcz
Cbdnda -were real·We, top--notch
bartenders and far more pebent
with me than I d Ned.
Lesson No. 1 was beers, ales and
wines. Lesson No. 2 wu mmed
drinks. After my hrst attempt at a
martmi. Lesson 2 was canceled and
we returned to Lesson 1.
Drawing 0 beer from the klDg
line of tapa as very cool. You puD the
big lever, chat noncbelantly u tbe
glul ftlls. then top at on with tbe
perfect heed. Tbat'I once you giM
the bang of it, ot coune. ,
ll'I amazing how much foem a
tap can produce ti you do it WIGIO·
It waa like the wubiDg "W'Nne
epilode from •t LoYe ~ •• 1be
foam jUlt Hepa cOadDg,
The on)y NYIDg grM» II ... you'N= away fNnia ...... rd prw ....... Cl •1ta . ... •
r
,
I' IUTING STEREOTYPES
"'Overweight women are still sitting
in the back of the bus. In the arts
especially, they're really treated as
second rate ... Why? Because it's an
acceptable prejudice -it hasn't
been covered by the non-PC police."
-.. Ann Mifl..t.n.
author, on why she choM make the rMin (h¥acter
of h« first published mystery novel, "Too Big To Miss," an
OWtWelght paralegal.
2 Sunday, March 25, 2001 Doily Pilot
,
LIGHTS OUT IN
NEWPORT·MESA·
The big word in police and
fire departments last week was
"blackouts.•
Cops & The rolling black-
outs h.it parts of COURTS Newport Beach on
Monday and Costa
Mesa on Tuesday. Blackouts
generally lasted about an hour
in each affected area, but people
were not really prepared.
In Fashion Island, Macy's was
using impromptu solutions such
as green glow sticks to guide
customers. Smaller stores simply
shut their doors and lost bus i-
ness fearing shoplifters.
In Costa Mesa, Fairview Road
saw two injury c rashes as a
result of dead traffic lights at
some major intersections and
freeway offramps. In both cities,
people were re ported stuck in
elevators.
ln Santa Ana, the Orange
County Human Relations Com-
mission, released hate crime
numbe rs for the county. Those
incidents are down by 11 % in
2000 compa red with the previ-.
ous year, officials said.
.
PHOTO OF THE WEEK
'PSYtHEDELIC SILHOUETTES' Notable
QUOTABLES
"Because of its locaUon, it
just can't succeed. It's
become a hangout for all
kinds of crime elements. We
want to be lair, but we just
want I.his to be a place where
we can feel sale.•
-Mk:hMI Dllslsian,
a Mesa Del Mar homeowner, on why
he thinks El c.amino Shopping Center
in Costa Mesa should be rezoned into
a residential area, allowing develop-
ers to build homes on the site.
"The shopping.center is fully
past its prime."'
-Ubby Cowan,
Costa Mesa mayor. on why she voted
on Monday to approve rezoning the
El c.amino Shopping Center from
commercial to residential use. The
council approved the plan.
But the good news came with
a warning that several incidents
go unreported to the police in
Costa Mesa and Newport Beach
and that the changing demo-
graphics of these communtties,
'
coupled with a plunging econo-
my, could cause a potential
increase in hate crimes.
-Deepa aharath covers cops and courts.
11IOUM1S FIOm M SCIM: Photos involving art
exhibits can be some of the most diffJcult to shoot
because the subject matter is so staUc. That was not
the case when photographer Sean Hiller went to take
some pictures of Christopher Miles, curator of the
"One Wall: A Video Serles• exhibit at the Orange
County Museum of Art last week. Hiller found Miles
awash in color in front of the interactive artwork "X-
Ray Eyes" by Jennifer Steinkamp and Jimmy Johnson. NATURE'S CHALllOARD
She may be reached at (949) 574-4226 or
by e-mail at dHpa.bharathO/atimes.com.
AN END TO THE CRYSTAL
COVE DEVELOPMENT
California State parks last
week pulled the curtain on
Michael Freed, the San Frdnc1sco
developer laboring to build a lux-
CRYSTAL ury resort at Crystal
Cove under the hot
COVE lamp of public out-.
rage.
The state coastal conservancy
approved a $2-mtlhon payout lo
Freed on Thursday, money state
parks brass said they would use
to buy back development rights
handed away in a 1997 conce!>-
siona1re's contract.
TEACHERS HONORED
IN NEWPORT·MESA
Newport-Mesa honored
its top teachers last week,
surprising the best of the
best with EDUCATION nowers and
balloons.
Actually. Bob Kelly, a
sucth-grade teacher at New-
port Heights and the eJe-
mentary school teacher of
the year, rmssed that portion
of the surprise. District offi-
cials were so tricky hiding
out of Ke lly's sight in the
prindpaJ's office that the
committee members with
balloons and flowers could-
n't find them.
Kelly did eventually get
-Photo by s..n Hiiier
"Sure, we've got a Jot
of sand. We should be
taking advantage of it. "
-John Heffemain.
Newport Beach councilman, on a
proposal to bring a sand-st.amping
machine into use on city beaches.
The machine would stamp an anti·
litter message.
"It's really dark back in the
bathrooms. We didn't know
the lights were going to go
out. Then, poof, they did.·
-OwistJN eutro,
sales associate at Macy's in Fashion
Island, on the rolling blackoot that hit
Newport-Mesa on Monday after soar-
ing temperatures and the loss of two
Southern c.alifomla genera~ con-
tributed to the state's power crisis.
State Parks also tentdllvely set
April 26 as the ddle for the first
public meeting to decide how the
cove's historic district should be
restored. The 46 cottages dotting
3.5 acr~s of slate -owned coastline
we re placed on the National
Register of Historic Places in
1979.
all of the trimmings. SEAN HILLER I DAILY PILOT
"I want to attract people who
can really afford to live here.
It would improve our proper-
ty values, improve our
schools. That's been my goal
from day one. I'm not in
favor of subsldized housing
or affordable housing. We 've
got to get serious about the
people we're letUng live
here."
Then, as the congratulatory
-Paul Clinton covers the environment
and John Wayne Airport. He may be
reached at (949) 764-4330 or by e-mail at
paul clintonOlatimes.com.
party headed to Costa Mesa High School for the next two awards, they bumped into Jon Lindfors,
named the middle school teacher of the year and his class in the parking lot.
Then comes the report regarding the whereabouts of honoree No. 3. Shannon Brewer (pictured with
Linda Mook}, high school teacher of the year, had a tree period and was wandering around campus.
She too met the party in the parking lot.
SCREENING, NOT
SURFING, THE NET
-D.nett:e Gouhrt COYef'S educ.atlon. She INY be reached at (949) 574-4221 Of by e-mail at daMtte.gouletO/atJmes.com.
Surfmg the Internet last week,
Newport Beach NEWPORT public library
BEACH trustees didn't at au
Like what they saw.
And after discovering how
easy a search for innocent things
such as vegetable pictures and
Barbie doll sites can lead to
pornographic images, board
members unanimously decided
to set up Internet filters on 14
computers for children through
sixth g rad e at the city's four
libranes.
The filters will not affect a bout
60 other computers with internet
access for older users.
And trustees said parents will
still have the uJllmate responsi-
bility, because even the best fil.
tees don't detect 100% or porno-
graphic Web sites.
Unlike other screening pro-
grams, such as the one that's in
use in Newport-Mesa Unified
schools, the filter library officials
will purchase redirects children
to an education-oriented search
engine that let's them safely surf
for their favorite Barbie doll.
-Mathis Winkler covers Newport Beech.
He may be reached at (949) 5744232 or by
e-mail at mathls.winklerOlatlm~.com.
FINDING THE
IMPORTANCE OF ART
It was a week of meetings in
Costa Mesa.
COSTA
MESA
The Costa Mesa
City Council mem-
bers Monday
decided to require
that Commonwealth Partners
LLC, one of three groups collabo-
ra&.ng on the Town Center pro-
ject, maintain the lsamu Noguchi
Calilomia Scenario sculpture gar-
den •in perpetuity" instead of for
25 years.
Orange County Fairgrounds
officials met Tuesday to discuss
the fair's future plan. But most
Costa Mesa residents who
attended said they are concerned
that the Pacific Amphitheatre
might reopen, bringing in
unwanted traffic and noise.
And the Mesa Verde Commu-
nity Inc. on Wednesday had a
community meeting to allow resi-
dents to ask new council me m-
bers Chris Steel and Karen
Robinson questions about pro-
posed projects, eminent domain
and charities.
-JefWfer Kho covers Costa Mesa. She
may be reached at (949) 574-4275 or bye-
mail atfennlfer.lchoO/atlmes.com.
-Ovts StlMI.
Costa Mesa councilman, addressing a
community meeting held by Mesa
Verde Community Inc. The Thursday
meeting w~ the first of thrH set
up to give residents an opportunity
to ask city offkials questions.
"This looks like the final
chapter ln the ongoing resort
saga."
-Laur• D•vk:lc.
founder of Alliance to Rescue Crystal
Cove, on news that the callfornia
Coastal Conservancy OK'd $2 mlllion
f0< Callfomla State Parks to buy out
the contract of developer Michael
Freed, ending plans for • luxury
resort at Crystal Cove State Park.
.Daily.!ilot READERS ttOTLINE Copyright: No news stories, Illus-WIATHEI AND SURF POLICE TIPS
(949) 642-6086
Record your comments about
the Dally Pilot or news tips.
VOL 95, NO. 79 APPRESS
Our address Is 330 W. Bay St.,
ntOMASH.~ Costa Mesa, CA 92627.
Pl.tillhef CORBEOJONS TONY DODUIO,
Editor It Is the Pilot's polky to prompt-
..,.~ ly conect all errors of subst.ance.
Qty Editor Please call (949) 574-4233. uwas-. rn AIAmrlt City Editor The Newport~ Mell
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HOW JO BEACH us
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The llmes Orange County
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11111 _ .. ____
TE..uAl\MES
Balboa
68156
Corona del Mar
68156
Cort• Mesa
69155
Newport Beach
69155
Newport Coast
72152
MMFPOMCAST
Fair conditions expected
today wtth knee-to
wM\-Ngh ~In most
spou. West swell builds
slowly In the att.noon.
LOCATION _.
~ l ·l '
fM':::port 2·)'
ltadtln 2·)'
..... Jefty 2-J'
Corona dll Mar 2·,.
TIDU
TOOAV
F1rst low
3:05 a.m ...................... 0.5'
First high
9'09 a.m ...................... 4.9'
Second low
3:20 p.m ...................... 0.2'
Second high
9:32 p.m ...................... 4.91
MONDAY
Flllt low
3:39 a .m ...................... O.l·
Flrtth'9f'\
9~" 1.m ...................... 4.s·
Seeondlow
):Q p.m ......... ".......... OA'
t:S7 p.m ...... '"""'"'""' 5 O'
• Require salespeople or repair people to show
Identification.
• The No. 1 killer of teenagen. before they go to colt.ge.
Is akohol-related highway accldenu.
• About one-third of locAI arrests Involve alcohol. Ak:O-
hol abuse lmpalr5 Judgment. u~ Injuries and kllls.
• Pay attention to your Intuition and Instinct. If some-
thing Just •fffk wrong,• It usu.fly Is.
• Keep emergency phone numbers handy or memol'lze
them.
• Dkcun safety plans with family, friends, neighbors.
c.tllkhn and blby-tltten.
• Use • put'M with • shoulder strap. CMry It wtth the tide
that opens towtrd you. Hold your pune Maftfy.
• 'llftt .ww; from vans ot CMS wtth IOf'MOf .. •Mlttng erounct.·
. .
Doily Pilot . . . . Sunday, Morch 25. 2001 3 ·
Costa Mesa S .first police chief left his mark on department OllGOlllG
EVENTS .
Younteh.ng
DAILY PILOT
BY the time Arthur Ray
McKenzie got to the
Costa Mesa Police
Department in the early ·sos.
he was on his second round
looki~s BACK
of We as a
cop.
The very
first police
chief of Cos-
ta Mesa had
retired from the Los Angeles
Police Department after con-
tracting polio on the job. The
ailment left him with a dis-
abled leg on wluch he wore
a brace. Eventually. he
recovered enough to get
hired as the local police
chief in 1953, when the city
was mcorporated.
Brieflt!n
THE NEWS
Neighborly clean-up
to be held in April
The city of Costa Mesa and
the Volunteer Center of
Orange County will t~ up
to kick off the 16th bf-annual
Neighbors for Neighbors
community clean-up event
from 8:30 a.m. to noon Apnl
28.
This sp ring event will
focus on low-income, single-
family h omes and Canyon
Park in West Costa Mesa. The
city is seeking donations for
this homeowner assistance
program and is also recruiting
volunteers for the Canyon
Park clean-up.
The Neighbors for Neigh-
bors· program is now in its
runth year and was created
by the city of Costa Mesa as a
way lo help low-mcome resi-
dents with the beautification
llE\11,1111 .1.'S --1< t ( I ~ s.. ( . \I{ p I I ~
''Why Wool?"
HSale on all wool carpet''
"rml Weelc'' .
';'1 ' .. 1 72?l
•Believe it or not, hls
recovery was never totally
complete, but he got better
and (didn't) have to wear his
leg brace permanently.• said
Roger Neth, who succeeded
the la te McKenzie as pobce
chief in 1964 and 1s rellred
now. "If fabgue set m , he
wore the brace. But you did-
n't notice it 'cause it was one
of those u"nder his trousers."
Neth was one of the
department's first three offi-
cers. He, McKenzie, David
Gregg and Lee La~ter han-
dled a city of about 16,000
residents where the crone
rate was about average.
"It was Art's job to bulld a
pobce department," Neth
said. "I like to put it this
way: Art laid the foundation
for a very professional and
of their homes and to assist in
local community clean-up
and the improvement of local
parks.
Information: (714) 754-
4892
High school seniors
to take over OCC
More than 3,500 Orange
County high school seruors
dre expected to attend
Orange Coast College's 18th
annual High School Senior
Day from noon to 3 p.m Tu~
dcly on campus, 2701
Fdt!Vlew Road, Costa Mesa.
High school juniors dre
dlso invited to attend the
event, which wiU include
Cdmpus and department
tours. early registration mate-
na ls and student panel!>.
There will also be musical
entertaitunent. ,
English and math place-
ment tests will be adrnm1s-
tcred lrom 3 to 6 p m for
inte rested students.
Arthur Ray McKenzie
innovative police depart-
ment."
Clirrent chief, Dave
Snowden said he still feeJs
Admission is free. Lunch
and t-shirts are provided.
Information: (71 4) 432-5725.
Music students to
play Carnegie Hall
The Vanguard University
of Southe rn Callfomia Con-
cert Choir and Orchestra has
been given an invitation to
perform at Carnegie Hall in
New York City on May 21.
The choir is composed of 105
students from 17 states and
two foreign countries who
perform across the nation as
musical ambassadors for the
uruversity.
The choir will join students
from several universities in
performing John Rutter's Cdn-
tata. "Magnificat. • Vanguard
will also perform a solo choral
sPctlon. ---
The students a re currently
in the process of raising
hnanc1al support to cover the
costs of the tnp to New York
Anyone mterested m malung
Come ser our pring Collection
of \ int age fJ"aster Decor
SJ!ri11K Flom/ R"skets
Tt>piories. Ord1ids &
..
Custom A rro llJ.!<'nll'nfs
Mon-Fri 10-6. Sat 10-5. Sun 10-4
369 E. l 71h ~treet. Costa Mesa, CA
Phone (949) 646-6-45
Loca1cJ 1n \1:01pon ~um'. .1cro)s from Ralph, J:::i .•
ART RESTORATION
~"Pair damagul:
• PORCELAIN •·CRYSTAL
•PAINTINGS
• CHINA • Gws • GRAPHICS
• fRAMIS AND OniER An
Coll.ECTlBW
~fO-OFF~~l
L!~ ~ ~11!,L~ ~ 2! !!."!.I
www. lcltu ~ leccs.com
Plug onto YoUt community Fond ovt wh.tt~ qom9 on tn YoUt c:11y, Daily Pilot p;11rks. churches. schoOls. entf'f1.l1nmt:nt cind \POf'1~ Re<Kl t~
t 4 , , .'\. I , , , , , f, , , ~ , 11 I I, , I • , , ! \. f' ' I , t 1 • 1 ' 1 I } 1
PATIO
tbe marks McKenzie left.
The two men became
friends after meeting at a
Chamber of Commerce
fwictlon after the fust chiefs
retirement.
"He was commuruty-on-
ented, very pollte and cour-
teous, and h eaded a group
of officers with the same
qualities," Snowden said .
Neth also remembers
McKenzie being gregarious.
His wife was a dancer who
co-ran a local ciance studio.
They threw fun parties and,
of course, attended the
department's annual Chnsl·
mas galas.
"He's the kind or guy you
like to have standing beside
you when you run into a real
rough, tough situation Ul
police work," Neth said.
a donation can call (714) 556-
3610. Ext. 214 .
Newport Beach is
a tree city again
The National Arbor Day
Foundation has awarded an
11th consecutive Tree City
USA award to Newport
Be<lch for excellence in the
management of the city's
urban forest.
The city also received a
sixth Growth Award m a row.
which honors Newport
Beach 's aggressive tree
planting program as part of
the Urban Forestry program.
Last year, the oty planted
254 trees, most of lhetn m the
city's parkways.
OCC stud~nts to
help clean Catalina
1\velve Orange Coast Col-
lege students and two advi-
sors will spend thetr spnng
break volunteenng LO isolat-
ed areas of Catalina Island.
"But he was not a hard -lrner.
He was is believer in second
chances.•
McKenzie was promoted
to <Urector of pubbc safety
afte'f serving 11 years as the
chief, and later became the
city manager. He rellred
from work-We m 1970 dnd
died in 1988.
"He was JUSt a wonderful
person who understood peo-
ple's pcoblems/ Neth said.
uHis men thought the world
of him."
• Do you know of a person, place
or event that deserves a h1stoncal
LOOK BACIO Let us know
Contact Young Chang by fax
at (949) 646-4170, e-mail at
young.changOlat1mes.com; or mail
her at do Daily Ptlot. 330 W. Bay
St., Costa Mesa, CA 92627.
Orange Coast College's
spnng break runs from Apnl
8 to 15 The students and
advisors will leave Apnl 9
and return Apnl 12.
1lus is the second year that
students have partlc1paled m
this program. They will be
housed at the Catdltnd Island
Conservancy Volunteer
Camp and wiU work LO native
plant research They also will
remove non-ndllve plants
and do trc:UI mdllltenance and
fence construcllon.
• Send ONCi09tG IVINl'I
items to the o.ity Pilot, lJO W.
8~ St.. ea.a Mesa. CA tl627;
by fax to (949) 646--4170; or~
Qlllng (949) 574-4291. Ntude
the time, date ~ location of
the event. as well as a contact
phone number. A complete
listing Is av•11abk! at
http:llwww ddilypilotcom.
A Dealing wttb Divorce
support group is offered
by Jewish Pamlly Service
of Orange County. The
group is led by an experi-
enced counselor an4
meets at 6 p.m. Tuef(lays
at the JewtSh Fedetf tion
Campus, 250 E. 8alCer
St .. Suite G, Costa Mesa.
(714) 445-4950.
An lnlerf~tb couples
support group is ottered
by Jewish Family Service
of Orange County. The
group addresses tssues
faced by couples m which
one partner is Jewish and
lbe other is not. including
raJ.Sing children, observ-
ing holidays, displaying
symbols in lhe home and
relationships with extend-
ed families. The group
meets for three weekly
sessions Wednesday
evenings at Jewish Fami-
ly Service, 250 E. Baker
St., Suite G, Costa Mesa.
(714) 445-4950.
C· f /r.Kgw'-1', IT'S TIME .FOR ...
[M.t 8 ~OIJf ( tKO. Ml CASA
MEXICAN RESTAURANT
296 E. 17TH ST. COSTA MESA · 949·64S·7626
f Unl-' Inc .
Arts& C~afts
Festival
The frill&, the flower&, the scent&! mheU, Gifts and decorations, ~uaint country decor
The heart!, the n.rffle5. ril7bons and bou~uet5 Baked goods, dif15. jam5 and candy galore
Bunnie& and ducb, ~ukete with 5prinqilme delight Won't you plea5e join us, bring a friend or two
Raye of sunbeams with rainbows 5hine bright The5e are !hopping ~re& that win def~ht you
/If; ORANGE COVN1Y
F~IR & EXPO CENTER
88 Fait Dt1ve Building #10 Costa Mesa
2.-_~~ March 29-31 ~'s~'>s Thurs Fti Sat
10am-8pm 10am-8pm 8am-4pm
Convenient P~tkJng Atl1n9ton Dn~ ,.
H
I M•r Pl•u
..
t ·
Cotta,(e Corona de/ Mar
2001 Crolis Series
( ""'" 10 /,, "'"' i/., "'" '"'""" u/ nvry mo111h j"1m 7 9 pm
I,,, """ J,µnd1nx on"''"''?
,'fdt"n"J tYlnt'illtDflJ Tr'f#lrtd
MAR C H 27
Natural Hand-Made
Papers can rah· on:a
va ricl y qf .111 form~.
Mc..·c..·1 M:1r ... h !'!<:rm,
lflcal .1111 ... t. l() learn
till" many ,w.1y ... to
in1rodl1tc..· n.1tur.ll
produu ........ home..·
.1u enh for .1 conagc..·
cir 111.m ... u >n
Lall For Reservatlon
949/566-9339
24 11 E. Co~t Hwy
Suite 200
Corona del Mar
Special
Event
Advertise on the
Ultimate Calen dar
page. a feature of
our new
Sunday edition.
$20 per inch,
3 inch minimum.
Call
(949) 574-4230
Today!
ULTIMATE
.
CONTACT USI
Do you have an upcoming
event? The Dally Pilot wel-~
comes submiBlons to 1H1
UIJWTE c.ALIMWl
• UTIBIS -Mail to the
Daily Pilot. 330 W. Bay Sl,
Costa Mesa 92627
• MX -Send to (949)
646-4170
• E-MAIL -Send to daltypllotOlati~com
4 ,01 THI WllK 01 IU"CH 25·3 r, 200 r Doily Pilot
TODAY
TWO ING IAM>S
IN CONCERT
Sponsored by.
Orange Coast
25
College's Monday and Tuesday
Big Bands
~ Robert B. Moore Theatre,
2701 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa
When:2p.m.
Cost: SS or S7
Cont.Kt (714) 432-5880
• 'llARllER AM> BAUCXHEA'
Sponsored by. Padfte Chorale
~Orange County
Performing Am Center. 600 Town
Center Drive, Costa Mesa
When:2p.m.
Colt: s 15-S49
Cont.Kt (714) 662-234S
MONDAY
PAGEANT GUEST
SERVERS
Sponsored by:
Women in Need
26
Foundation and the upcoming
Mr\. Globe Pageant
WheN: Nello Cucina, lobby level of
South Coast Plaza, 3333 Bear St.,
Costa Mesa
When: 6 to 7:30 p.m.
Cost: Varies. Mrs. Globe contes-
tants will wan tables to benefit the
Women in Need Foundation
Cont.Kt (714) 540-3365.
TUESDAY 27 Roll out the red carpet
HIGHSOtOOl
SENIOR DAY
Sponsored by.
Orange Coast College
NEWPORT BUCH FILM FESTIVAL
Where: OCC. 2701 Fa1rv1ew Road,
Costa Mesa
WIMn: Noon to 3 p.m.
Cost Free
Contact: (7 14) 432-S72S
WEDNESDAY
'Kill.ER ALGAE'
LECTURE
Sponsored by.
28
Orange County CoastKeeper
Where: Newport Dunes. Wind
and Sea Room, 1131 Back Bay
Drive, Newport Beach
When:7pm
Cost: Free
Contact (949) 723-5424
THURSDAY
WlLDAND
C1CAZY TACO
NIGHT
29
Sponsored by: Share Our Selves
Where: SOS, 1SSO Superior Ave ,
Costa Mesa
WIMn:6p.m.
Cost: S30, benefits SOS, which pro
vides food and assistance to the
needy 1n Orange County.
Cont.Kt (949) 642·34S1
ARTIST SUONG YANGCHEREON
Sponsored by: The Visionaries of
the Orange County Museum of Art
When: The museum, 850 San
Oemente Dnve, Newport Beach
WIMn: 1 p.m.
Cost S20
Contact (949) 759-1121
Newport Beach will goes
HoUywood Uus week with
the return of the Newport
Beach Film Festival on
Thursday. The festival ,
which showcases mdepen-
dent and foreign films, aJong
wilh more than 100 of short
movies, will close April 5.
The opening gala will
honor ·The Sllng, • the 1973
Academy Award-winrung
I tlm starring Robert Redford
dnd Paul Newman (pictured)
m a story of two confidence
arusts who swindle a racke-
teer. Stars Sally Kirkland.
Charles Durrung and Jack
Kehoe are scheduled lo
dppear aJong with screen-
writer 0dVld S. Ward. pro-
ducer Tony Bill and other
I lelping children
and adults to dream
FASHION FOR A GOOD CAUSE
The Special Children's
League of Orange County
wiU hold #Passports to
Dreams," a luncheon fash-
ion show to benefit children
and aduJts with dlsahilities,
from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. today.
FYI
WheN: Sutton Place Hotel. 4500
MacArthur Blvd , Newport Beach
When: 11 a m. to 3 p.m today
Colt: SSS. wncheon fashion show
benefits children and adults with d1s-
abthtles.
Cont.Kt {714) 544-8n 1
members of lhc cast dnd
production crew. The gdld
screening will be h<'ld at
Edwdrds 819 Nc>wport, with
a post-party pldnned for the
Newport Bedch Marnott. f or
in!ormalion on lhc rum resti-
vcil, cd lJ (949) 253-2881 or go
to lhe Web site> dt
htlp:l/www.newportbeach
filmle.91.com.
FYI
What Newport Beach Film Festival
opening night gala honoring "The
Sting'
Whef9: Movie Wtll be at Edwards Big
Newport, 300 Newport Center Drive.
Newport Beach Gala will be at
Newport Beach Mamon. 900
Newport Center Drive, Newport
Beach.
When: Movie will be at 7 p m. Gala
will start at 9 pm
Cost S7S Black-tte opttonal
Call: (949) 2SJ.:2881
PLANNING AHEAD
SLEIGHT OF HAND
Magician Jeff Martin will
present a free magic show to
celebrate National Library
Week at the Newport Bea<.h
Central Library.
wednesdlly, April 4
40TH ANNUAL
BREAKFAST
The c:omn\odores of the
Newport Harbor Area ~m
ber of Commerce will hold
their 40th Annual S<holM-
ship Awards Breakfast at the
Bahia Corinthian Yacht Club.
Wed11esdalf, April 11
'
FRIDAY
JOSHUA REDMAN
Sponlored by: Orange County
Performing Arts Center's J.P. 30 SATURDAY
'FRENCH
CONNECTION'
JOTH
31
Morgan Jau Club Series
wt.. The <:enter. 600 Town Center Drive. Co!1a Mesa
When: 7:30 and 9:30 p.m. Friday and Saturday
c.o.t: S42 or S46
Contact (714) 74().7878.
'ZOOf surr 201lt AHNfVEMAllY GA&.A
Spol11CHd by. Newport Beach Fiim Festlval and
the Hispanic Ch<tmber of Commerce
Whwe: Movie will be •t Edwards Island Cinema,
999 Newport <Mlter Drive. Gala will ~ at El Tonto
Grill, 951 Newport Center Drive
Wh9n: Mo\Ae ls at 7 p.m. Gala Is at 9 p.m.
Cmt: S40 c.ontact:: (949) 253-2880
ANNIVEASARY GALA
5pontoNd by: Newport Beach
Film Festival and its Premiere
Cinema Guild
~: Movie will be at Edwards
Island Cinema, 999 Newport Center
Drive, Newport Beach. Gala will be
at Atrium Court. 401 Newport
Center Drive, Newport Beach.
When: Movie Is at 7 p.m. Gala Is at
9pm
Cost: S50
Contact:(949)2S3-2880
MARCH
s M T W T • •
1 2 l
4. s 6 1 • t IO •
1! 12 1) 14 1S 16 17
11 19 20 21 22 21 2A
1s z ft :fl fl Ji! ~"
MA111K VC>Ult
CALENDAltS
.Auo .. MMc:H:
29: Newport Beach
Fiim Festival
APRIL
SMTWTFS
12)456 0
a 9 10 11 \2 13 14
" 16 f1 • 19 20 2f
22 0)2'4 2S :zr;G 2a
29 30
MARK YOUR
CALENDARS
Al.so .. APM:
7: Passover begins
15: Easter
11: #foR# at the c.enter
23: Seventh annual
Tommy Bahama's
Newport Beach Open
Golf Tournament
27: Newport to
Ensenada Race
MAY
S MTWT F S
I 2 l 4 5
6789!011\2
G)t4 fi 16 17 . 19
20 21 22 21 2'I 4' 2fi
n ~ 29 JO 11
MAM YOUR
CALENDARS
Al.So IN MAr.
13~ Mother's Day
25: Peter, Paul & Mary
at the Center
21: Memorial Day
JUNE
S MTWTFS
1 2
) 4 s 6 7 • 9
IO 11 12 ll 14 15 16
G) II 19 20 21 22 21
24 25 .llfi T1 28 29 lO
MARK YOUR
CALENDARS
Al.so .. JuNE;
17: Father's Day
TISA: Irrelevant Week
JULY
s M T w l F s
I 2 1 0 5 6 1 • 9 IO 11 12 G> 14
'15 16 f1 11 19 20 21
22 2l 2'4 2S 26 . 28
2' 30 )1
MAM YOUR
CALENOAltS
4: Fourth of July
13: Orange County
Fair begins
27: The Jones Cup
AUGUST
s M T W T ,
1 2 )
s 6 7 • 9 10
ll ll 14 fi 16 f1
s
4
11 • 19 20 21 22 21 ~ 2S
.llfi l1 28 29 lO )1
MAM YOUlt
CAUNOAltS
Al.so .. AuGusr.
TaA: Summer Concert
Series at f:ashlon Island
The number@ of postures ~~k:!t~ 26
yoga, one ofthe~ftl
fitness trends to hit the
Newport-Mesa llfH,
··~egenha of
tlte ~nrbor ~ren ..
Thursday, April Z6, :
2001 ac 6em Costa
N(esa Neignborhood
Community Center
1) ·1845 Park,Avcnue, :VI:: Cost"/Mcsa
E~' s ol the tt.bcw "'-· Inc.
H onoring che Beeks,
chc Tellers and
che Tozers
To become a sponsor/
underwriter, donate a
silent auction item or
secure a reservation for
the evenings fescivicies,
call Youch
Employment Servi~e
of the Harbor Area, Inc.
at (949) 642-0474
by David Uncluy Ablll~
Kimberly has
problems.
She's 16 going on
80, her parents
can't seem to grow
up, and her jailbird
aunt is heading
their way.
PREVIEWS:
April 6-April 12, 2001
REGULAR RUN:
April 13 -May 13.2001
PERFORMANCE TIMES:
Tuesday -Friday, 8 p.m.
Saturday, 2:30 and 8 pj}}<
Sunday, 2:30 and 7:3op.m.
II
South Coast Repertory
655 Town Center Drive,
Costa Mesa, CA 92626
For Tickets, call
(714) 708-5555
!1··""''// .1/1,,,ef,_,~~,,___:r NEWPORT BEACH OPEN GOLF CHAMPIONSHIPS
1'1<1 \1.N I\ 111 f 7TH ANNUAL
I f , -\ l I
G STERLING BMW
NEWPORT BEACH
TMAQITH)N~L
FOR J>LAYl R OR SPONSORmrr INFO, CALL
(949) 729-4400
GOLF TOURNAMENT MONDAY. APRll 2.1. 2001 CASINO NIGHT NL W f 'l > f~ l I) I f\ C I l ( 1 > 1 I I,, 1 1,~ r 1 I I 11 .
9:00 am 1boqp.m 2100 p.m. abotpn
rmfr~donals • Ama1cur1 Wtlh Amaicur. (alJ handicaix)
I 2 or under SCGA indCll Corpumr Fou™1met
f'rofw1on.1IJ cnmpcic r $IOOOO • h •· &th r<>unds limittd UJ J()()go/fonw:h 1nr ewer , in ca.. ox pr11.a
• Optn dnv1n1rangt4' courx l>rwfr.tgtJ
• Round of p>I( with an
• Ttt bis wnh pm mcrdundtM
A1J Pku<TI T«tiVt
• A drlioow butrn llllKh
• Hl)tted 1watdt ic«p1iot1
I rwu ~lli ll(km 10 IM Nighl
('"1th ho.led coc•wt. tic hon d OQlvn:t)
• fRH. rnrry in tht \cttl1nt BMW dt1•1nt •
·~RH <01rr1n1hd10.000runi111co111 1'
((.(Mint c<>nrto11 (le pt1111ng conrat opt1110
•ni.ttr11r1 nnl1 w 011"11.ial Nlct fot dtf1'1t)
Cuin0Ni1ht
Sunday. April 22 • 6:30 p.m.
Scallns BMW Ncwpor1 lkkh
Casino Games • Cocktails • Auction-
$10,000 Puning Concat
New BMW 1-ycar lease giveaway
Additional ticw • uo each
(Opal co the public)
aren Wight
0 PLACE LIKE HOME
• ' i In this home,
~ man :S-castle ! is his garage
know there are a few
women out there that
consult their husbands on
the design of their home.
'ust don't happen to be one
t them. Not that I'm a total
ntrol freak, reaUy I'm not.
J ut my husband could care
t ss, and that is a truthful
f atement.
• In fact, I think he'd be just '6 happy if ,e had
t ayed in
~Ju~;rst
tead of
e house-
ppmg we
ve done
~r the past
8 years.
ure, we'd
~ve to
~ack the
ds one on
p of the
bthcr. there
~ouJd be
po place to
move,
inuch less
l htnk, but
fley. some-
tidy the
k ids will
IJrow up
~nd ledve
The garage
is a bastion
of male
energy.
The only I
thing I
care about
is the extra
fridge to
keep the
overflow of
drinks
cold. The
rest is for
hubbie.
, yeah, in about 20 years -
nncl who needs extra space
Jmywdy?
: On top of thdt great
tilream of redsorung, add to
the ffilXture thcit he is color-
b lind, a complete lefty who
Jnstalls knobs to open the
"'wrong" way -at least in a
h ouse lull of righties -and
how you know why he isn't
t oni.uJted on most design
}lec1i.1ons.
' Except for the garage.
; The garage 1s a bastion of
)nclle energy. The only I thing f care about is the extra
f_ndge to keep the overflow
Df dnnks cold. The rest IS for
ttubb1e.
: We have tools of au kinds,
oolers of aU sizes. Tents, ~eeping bags. ma1or beach
rapbemalia, sports eqwp-
ent to till a Big 5, enough
Fhristmas lights to send
~chool districts all over
;tunerica into a Seizure and
,,ardware in the big medium
nd small varlebes. There
e boxes of receipts, back
SEE HOME PAGE 7
A MODERN APPROACH
TO THE MINO-BODY
EXERCISE BASED ON THE
PILATES METHOD
~ .
T 949.673.4304 f 949.673.4306
dlw ... anur• II .caa
I
TIP OF THE WIEIC • • • • • • • •.
What's left behind • • ·15 · •. . 0 . In -<.OUOtriet, suc:h 9' Franc.e °' ~ • :
grl'turues •• induded 1n the restaurtnt °' : • ~ bill tut If you're reeding thft, you're • % • pr<JbM>lv In Atnefb, end tNt IS not the CUJ. • e
tom hefe. A up is expect«j, elmost dernend • • • •
ed. ewty tlme you go out to @at ttwe -• • • _._.tipplng.~d1111--15'4ofth@ ••••••
pr•w to1al is the stMld.Wd tip S.les w ii 7 s~ in Orenge County. so de»
bl1ng the WI Ol'I the bdl Wiii gNe you the low encJ of the Upping SUie If
the leMCe IS~~~ lip 20% Of mote
Sunday, Morch 25, 2001 5
"The body is like a piece of m etal -to shape the m etal
you need heat to bend and become pl iable, and h eat is a great way to accomplish that, H
Kim Schreiber Morrison, co-owner of Yoga Studio in Costa Mesa
'I
SEAi~ HI lf I! I DAil Y PILOT
In front, Karena Rumbaugh, 25, of La Mirada holds her position during a hot yoga session at TUF Productions in Newport Beach.
With H OT YOGA, l ocals a r e exe r cis ing
Young Chang
DAILY PILOT
Y ou know thdl ruce cool feeling you
get walkmg into d gym? The
cnsp, almoc,t chilly dtr thdt
f'nvelops you both before dnd after
you SWCd t?
Forget thdt.
With hot yogd it'i. dll dbout hedt Enter a
room bldstrng out about 90 to 100 degrees
Fahrenheit of stuffy, hot alt d!ld sunmer m 1t
Stretch dnd do yogd for more thdn dn hour
dnd swedt like it's summer m a cldsi. of about
a dozen others also rdtrung per..p1rdl.Jon
Thdt'S nght -d cld!>S
Domg yoga m hedt has, over the yed.rS,
become dn orgdruzed dCllvtty with dn 1J1Struc-
tor di the front dnd c,tudents s1ttinq on mats m
Ln r ooms h ea t e d to b e tw ee n 90 and 7 00 d egr ees SEE YOGA PAGE 6
TRAVEL TALES
Taking a kids'-eye view of the Big Apple
[!
o ..........
New YOft.
NlwYotlt
Dunltloft:
OneWffk
Young Ch•ng
DAILY PtlOT
For Dan and Ann DameU,
the ided of subway-rid-
ing, cab-taking and
shoulder-bumping on 5th
Avenue doesn't yet shine With
the ironic urban glitz that the
Big Apple is known for.
They loved visiting New
York -the hot dogs bought
from street vendor; were tasty,
the Statue of Liberty stood tdll
and thcLr table at Wmdows on
the World in the World Trddc
Center gave them d hedvenly
VlCW But the N ewport Beach
chtldren a.re happy to be back
on the Balboa PerunsuJd, away
from the cold, the bustle, the
impersonal proxirruty of
,,__. ,._•Gllll.P-•~ • ....,,..a....• ...... T_,..., •TNOt• ..... --·~•~W-·f'IAll•._.,__ ~
• _.. ...... ~, ~ltl.taMOUl•l'*JIC-
strangers thdt, for some. mdke
NYC speetdl
Dan, 12, and Ann, 11, dgree
that while the city grew on
them during thelI' seven-day
tnp last month, they wouldn't
live there for very long.
·1 don't thln.k I really like
being really crowded,· Ann
said. •And I never really qot
used to the coldness.·
The chtldren stdyed with
thelI' porents, Mdrgaret and
Hank DameU. dl the Double-
tree Hotel an Tunes Square.
ABC studlos Wds adjacent to
them The studios where
rvITV'-; "TotaJ Reque t l...lve• IS
taped were across the treet.
They spent time Wllh 1Ster
SEE TRAVEL PAGE 7
Treatment center
AMC, Inc.
Certified'" Foto F1Uialr"'
to tl"ninau or rrd11u
• ~t pots, C•p1/111nt1, !'om
• H111r, ,..,,., Hfn,.Aolrs, Rnl{ffY I: ts
• S/1111/0111 Scars, Ttnnn,IJ, Rru1sr1
• FllU/11".8, Roseau•
Also offtri "!J
• Rt#Ul,•I of Tatoos,
H••r, 81rth,,111rAos,
Sp1)tr/Vanto1t Vmu
• &t.ox t!f-Coll4.11en r,. jcc t1.,,s
• M~rwllf'MWllJSOH
(949) 644-1422
for &cc comuJtadoo
JOHN T. CHIU, M.
......,A..,.._S.-.,
IJllllW "'-""• ~
TIJt No
Downtime
, pccialist
----------4
•
,
6 Sunday, Mo;ch 25, 2001
BUFFA
CONTINUED FROM 1
hide what was happening,
desperately shoving one glass
after another under the tap Unb.I I got something that
looked more like a beer than
a Slurpee.
Finally, the big day arrived.
It was time. Gary could tell l
was a little tense and tried to
bolster my confidence. He
thought about it for a moment,
lhen said I got ice from the
kitchen better than any bar-
tender he knew. l was so
proud.
Chanda and I handled the
main bar while Deb ran a sec-
ond bar up front. For a while,
it was nothing but green
lights and blue skies.
I hand.led the bar cus-
tomers while Chanda took
drink orders Crom lhe wait-
resses, led by the "M&M"
girls, Marti and MicheUe.
At first, I'd give everyone a
big "hello" and wish lhem a
happy St. Paddy's Day. But
before long, lhe orders started
corning fast and thick.
By 7 o'clock, I was po111ting
at people and shouting,
"What'll it be?" By 8 o'clock,
my biggest problem was that I
couldn't hear anything above
the mw;ic and the crowd.
One woman asked me for
a "YeUow Cab" three times
before I could make out what
she wac; saying. "Whdt's a
'YeUow Cab?'" I shouted to
Chanda.
"It's a car that gives you C!
ride If you pay them," she
shouted back. "She wants you
to call her one."
"I knew lhat," I smd, pick-
. in~p the phone.
By 9 o'clock, the whole
scene was stuck on fast-for-
ward, and it was full-Wt boo-
gie lor the rest of the night. It
was a lot like another "Lucy"
episode -Lucy and Ethel in
the chocolate factory. But all
in all, it was a blast.
I met some nice people,
and a lot of friends came by to
say heJJo. We had council
memhers past and present.
two former mayors, a newspa·
per editor who sctld I made
the best Lnsh coffee he'd c•ver
tasted, and d woman named
Carolyn who Selic.I she really
appreciated the fact that I dld-
n't rush her dnd took the tune
to let her wine brectlhe. I did-
n't know whul 1t meclnl, but I
was afraid to clSk anyonf,! after
the lax! fiasco
Let's see, what else did I
learn? I learned that peoplP
will teU a bartender they've
known for five minutes lhmgs
they wouldn't teU their best
fnend in a hundred years.
I learned that il some peo-
ple saw how they look and
sound dfter a few drinks, they
would never touch the stuff
again. It was fascinating. And
next year, I'll do better. I've
already bought a book on
martinis.
Now then, everybody sing:
"Hooray toi: Hollywood, that
screwy, ballyhooey Holly·
wood. Where any office boy
or young mechanic, can cause
a panic .. ."
Yikes. Stop. Thar~~
awful. May we have the
envelopes, please?
For best supporting actor,
the winner is Willem Dafoe for
"Shadow of a Vampire." And
yes, that is how he spells his
first name.
There was a late buzz for
Benicio Del Toro in ·naffic, • •
but Dafoe's reinvention of the
horrific vampire from F.W.
Mumau's 1922 horror classic
"Nosferatu" is a knockout.
For best supporting actress,
the winner is Kate Hudson for
·Almost Famous.•
Good thing I didn't have to
vote on this one because it
includes two of my favorite
actresses -Frances McDor·
mand and Marcia Gay Hard·
en. But Kate -daughter of
Goldie Hawn -Hudson it is.
For best actor, the winner is
Tom Hanks for "Cast Away."
The best actor category is
especially strong this year,
with Russell Crowe, Ed Harris
and Geoffrey Rush. But Holly·
wood loves H~, as it
should, and also loves block·
buster films. Hanks+ block-
buster = Oscar.
For best actress, the winner
is Julia Roberts for "Erin
Brockovich."
Forget it. It's over. It's Julia
Roberts. End o{ story. Fade
out. Between her popularity,
her performance and~ber
neck.lines in "E~ Brock· ,
ovich," she cant be stopped.
For best director, the win-
ner is Ang Lee for "Crouching
Tiger, Hidden Dragon."
Steven Soderbergh's dual
nomination for "Traffic" and
·Erin Brockovicb" cancel
each other out. which means
Lee wins it walking away.
Besides, il they don't give it to
him, he'U really be Ang Lee.
Sorry. I couldn't help it.
And the Oscar for the best
lilm of 2000 goes to (drum roll,
please) "Traffic."
It's really a toss-up with
"Crouching Tiger," but Holly-
wood's power brokers will not
be amused if the best picture
nod goes to a foreign film. Art
1s wonderful, but business is
business.
Whew! Did we get 1t all in?
Have fun, enjoy lhe Oscars,
and the nexl time you order a
drink, remember lo thank lhe
bartender for not being me. l
gotta go.
• PETER BUFFA is a former Costa
Mesa mayor. His column is pµb-
lished Sundays. He may be reached
by e-mail at ptrb4@aol.com.
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CATS
CONTINUED FROM 1
people here. 'Jl'ailer trash to
Pb.Os. It's a nice way to meet
new people who share a
common interest."
More than 175 ca.ts will
be judged'-by 12 people
during the weekend in cat·
ego..-s like longhair, short·
hair, best kitten and alters
-meaning they are pet,
not show.quality, cats. The
show is recognized by the
International Cat Assn.
Fate Mays, a Texas
parole officer who also
judges cat shows, said that
for him, picking the win·
ning kitty is not as difficlllt
as one fl)ay think.
Daily Pilot
"There's a written stan·
dard on what the cat should
look like," he said as be
prepared to judge shorthair
cats. "What's hard is that
each cat is somebody's best
cat. But there is beauty in
every breed. And for me, it's
relaxing. It relieves stress to
be around and pet the
cats."
Danette Rudden of Hes·
peria agreed that attending
the cat shows is relaxing,
though hard on the pocket·
book. Her brown tabby,
Bouncer, would cost $2,000
if she sold him. Bouncer
won the "Supreme• title
Saturday, the highest title
available for his class.
PHOTOS BY STEVE MC CRANK I DAILY PILOT
ABOVE: Shirley Piper of Riverside holds her Bengal cats, Elton, left, and Shangri·La.
Of the Uttermates, Shangri-La won first place in her division at the cat show.
BELOW: Lucky Jan, back, and Starlight. a Scottish fold kitten, gaze curiously upon
the passing crowds Saturday at the Orange County Fairgrounds. .
#People ask me all the
time how I can pay so much·
for my cats or how they are
worth so much," Rudden
said, picking cat fur off her
blouse. #But hey, people go
out and spend that . much
money on a round of golf,
and here I am with new
friends and cats."
· Rudden said that in order
to keep her six cats in per·
feet show condition , she is
required to groom them
every night. It takes her
three hours to groom all six.
"But it's very relaxing for
me to come home and brush
YOGA
CONTINUED FROM 5
rows. And the heat wavers
caught international as well
as local momentum.
"This hot yoga is definite·
ly gainip.g popularity
because it works," said Kim
Schreiber Morrison, co-own·
e r of Yoga Studio in Costa
Mesa, which has offered hot
yoga classes for about 8
years. "If you really give it
that honest chance, ten
classes a month, it works.
You start to feel differently
about your life, your body,
your soul, your spirit. You
become happy."
Hot yoga is a concept that
was culled together by
Bikram Choudhury, who
created a 26·posture routine
about 30 years ago. The
them. They are very relaxed
cats, and when I am all
done, I feel so much better,•
she said.
Most of exhibitor Dianna
Clark's cats are of the short-
hair American curl variety,
and although she doesn't
have to spend time groom-
ing long fur, she did say that
attending cat shows can be
a costly hobby.
"We travel all over Cali-
fornia and [my husband and
IJ have put 80,000 miles on
OUI car just from driving to
the shows," said the Hay-
ward resident as she
stroked Peter Pan, her sev-
en·month-old American
curl kitten. "(Peter] just
loves coming to the shows.
He loves life in the hotels.·
yogi was once known as the
"Guru to the Stars," with a
clientele that included JeH
Bridges and Raquel Welch,
Morrison said.
Choudhury has been
churning out about 400 cer·
tified yoga teachers trained
in hot yoga annually from
his Los Angeles base, and
studios offering the fitness
regimen have sprouted
everywhere from Japan to
good ole Costa Mesa,
according to Morrison.
The effect is part science,
part spiritual.
Heat warms up the mus·
des and helps the body
sweat out toxins, stretch bet-
ter, lower blood pressure,
metabolize body fat, realign
posture and strengthen the
spine, said Llsamarie Llvig·
ni-Myers, an instructor at
TUF Productions in Newport
Beach. The studio offers a
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form of hot hatha yoga dif.
ferent from "Bikram·style."
"The eyes start to clear,
due to detoxificauon," Mor-
rison said. "The body is like
a piece of metal -to shape
Lhe metal you need heat to
bend and be.come pliable,
and heat is a great way to
accomplish that."
In Llvigni·Myers' opiruon,
it's the best and most univer-
sal form of fitness.
"No-one's too young or
too old or too fat or too thin.
More people are getting into
hot yoga," she said.
Karena Rumbaugh, a hot
yoga student at TUF Produc-
tions, says the environment
may have something to do
with this.
"Yoga's been here for
centuries," she said. #It's just
never been brought into the
gym environment."
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Livigni-Myers, 33, added:
·And there's no longer relJ-
gion brought in."
But it contains a spintual-
ity of its own. Hot yoga calh
for quiet concentration,
whlch often results not only
in clearer skin ~d eyes, bu~
in a peaceful mind.
For Livigni-Myers, it's
what brought her life back •
together after undergoing a •
tuJJ mastectomy four years ~
ago. Llvigni·Myers said her ·
cancer was in part caused ~
by leaking breast implants. •
She had horrible posture •
due to the size of her "
implants and walked aroun<)
hunched over. After the
mastectomy, the instructor
started doing bot yoga.
Today she has a perfectly •
straight back and the Cd.fleet
is gone. :
"Yoga has pieced my life•
back together,• she said. :
"Yoga has brought back mV:
posture." :
Sharon Fairborn, a first-~
grade teacher at N~wport
Elementary School in New-:
port Beach, understands !
how goOd it feels lo straight&
en up. She says she's
hµnched over little children~
all .day, whlch can be strain-1
ing after awhile. :
So Fairborn, 57, started ~
practicing horfoga about
two weeks ago. She said
that so far it bas strength-
ened her muscles and
improved her sense of bal· ~
ance. :
·1 feel like I'm taltef,'\ sh~
said. ,, i
Put a few words
to work for you.
Call the
Daily Pilot
Doily Pilot
'TRAVEL
CONTINUED FROM 5
Katie Darnell, a graduate ltU·
dent at Columbia University,
and hit all the lights.
"(New York) la so famous
and stuff, but it seemed better
than I thought it would aeem. • Dan said.
They visited the Statue of
Liberty, the World nade Cen-
ter, the Empire State Building,
~adison Square Garden,
Grand Central Station, the
J.ietropolitan fyiuseum of Art,
~e New York Stock
pxcbange, the Frick Museum
~. of course, PAO Schwartz.
• They watched "The Uon ~· at the New Amsterdam Jnd "Kiss Me Kate" in a
tfenue they can't quite
1eJ11ember.
. They even ate venison for
Jbe first time and conduded it
'wasn't that bad.•
, "My favorite was the Stat-
Le of Liberty,• said Ann, who
tecently studied the history of
Ellis Island in school.
"Because you never really get
to go to a Statue of Liberty.
here.•
Dan recognized the
obelisks in Central Park. He
had learned about Egyptian
history in class and knew the
significance behind the four·
sJded granite pillars.
Both said they loved the
zoo. Glass windows separated
• the animals from visitors, and
Dan and Ann got to lean up
as dose as they wanted. The
polar bears were cute and
HOME
CONTINUED FROM 5
taxes to choke Uncle Sam and
white elephants left over from
dead relatives. Oh yeah, we
have paint cans, lots of them,
filled with noxious colors.
I don't argue with the
placement of anything, as
long as it has place. I drive up
and down the street and
peruse the neighbors'
garages. So far, my neighbor
Dick wins the award for the
best garage. It may be cleaner
From left, Ann and Dan Darnell of Newport Beach stand
outside of FAO Schwartz In New York City.
swam with buckets they used
as toys.
"It's really different there,"
Ann said. "Here it's not as
crowded. It's colder there.
Here it's les~expensive. •
Dan offered a sharp obser-
vation of his own.
"In movies, it seemed like
they only bad cabs in New
than my kitchen on any given
day. This is a man after my
heart.
It took a long time to con·
vince my husband that we
needed a lot of built-in cab1·
nets for the garage. This
would actually make his
domain more enjoyable. Give
him a place to display manly
tools, organize manly nails.
and have his own manly tele-
vision to watch manly sports
events.
He could hang his stuffed
fish in this testosterone palace.
He could have a swivel chair
at the workbench. Oh, baby.
York, but I saw a lot more cars
that I thought there'd be.•
• Have you, or someone you know,
gone on an Interesting vacation
recently? Tell us your adventures.
Drop us a line to TRAVEL TALES,
330 W. Bay St., Costa Mesa, CA
92627; e-mail young.changO
lat/mes.com; or fax to (949) 646-
41 70.
So my man has hl.s own
domain. And as long as I don't
have to look at it. step over it
or otherwise be bothered by
his collection of important giz-
mos. he can do with them
what he wants.
My guy is master of his
own destiny. supreme com·
martder of his surroundings,
king of his castle. And, hey,
don't forget to take your shoes
off when you come Ill the
house.
• KAREN WIGHT Is a Newport
Beach resident. Her column runs
Sundays.
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OSCAR
CONTINUED FROM 1
Mind you, the senior at
all-girls Catholic Rosary
High School in Fullerton is
far from t?eing in need of a y
make-over. Th.is will be hei:
fourth time at the Oscars. / ·
"She's always looked, I
nice,• saJd her grandfatti~r.
who was president ot ~e
Academy of Motion Picture
Arts and Sciences \A :i964
and 1985 and hA:$1 'fake n
.Noelle, her si.c;tei, Claire, 15,
and their parents, Michael
and Tessa, to the awards
ceremony every other year
since 1995.
Although Noelle has
made do with "dresses I
had fo r school dances• in
the past, she wanted some -
thing more spedal for he r
first trip to the Academy
Awards since becoming an
adult in December.
·It's the first year where
I've gotten to watch most of
the movies,· she said . "It's
the first time I understand
bow special it is to go.•
GOLDEN MOMENTS ARE
11 TOUGH ON THE NERVES
Not that the grandeur of
the occasion -after the
ceremony, the Aliens go to
the Governors Ball, where
Noelle says "the food is
always really good· -has-
n't rubbed off on her before.
"I remember sitting
down (in 1999) and feeling
nervous,• she said. •And
then I realized that I should-
n;t feel nervous because I
had nothing to be nervous
about . ."
Noelle's grandfather d.td,
however. Three times, to be
exact.
Before winning the gold-
en statuette for his work on
"My Fair Lady,· he was
nominated for production
design on •A Star is Born•
and "Les Girls."
"When you don't hear
your name, you immediate-
ly start applauding the win-
ner,· Gene Allen said,
adding that he missed his
first ceremony as a nominee
while working on location
in India for another movie
But winning is another
story.
"First, you're kind of
startled," said Allen, who
started working as a blue·
pnnt boy in 1936.
"You walk up and won·
der, 'What arp I going to
say?' But words come out if
you're an Irishman. I said it
was unfaj.r to the other art
directors up far an award
because they dldn 't have an
Audrey Hepburn to work
with."
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"It's the first year
where I 've gotten
to watch most of the
movies. It's the first
tlrne I understand
how special it
ls to go.,.
Noelle AU•n
Sunday, Morch 25, 2001 7
for the real thing.
Her friends, Heather
Deyden and Lauren Pu.luki,
both 17-year-old seniors at
Newport Harbor High
School, said they were hap·
py rather than jealous about
Noelle's big night.
·Everybody wants to go
to the Oscars,• said
Heather, adding that she
and Lauren would try to
spot their friend on televi·
sion . •But I think I just said,
' 'Look your best and try to
W)lile Noelle has seen 19et your face on camera.' "
her·grandfather's films and <' ) •Are you excited for
bas borrowed his trophy for :>Sunday?" asked Maria
Oscar parties in the past, Demoles, the salon!s slyll.st
she is more interested in the and co-owner. who helped
contemporary sta.rs. Noelle pick out a gray,
As far as the Oscars are black and white snake-skin
concerned, .the gymna_sli:c, gown a few days earlier. chalr-~bi_ng .act by Life "Yeah, I'm getting really
is Beautiful clirec~or ~d excited.• Noelle responded. a~or Roberto Beru~ after "We're going to keep a
winning two Oscars 18 real clean red.I smooth something that's stuck in • • her mind, Noelle said. look. Demoles ~aid as sh~
But Tom Hanks is clearly ~a~ blow-drying Noelle s
her favorite actor. No ques-hair~ Slick from head to
lion about it. That worked toe.
out nicely, since Hanks won Once l.tt~e waves ~ere
a best actor award for "For-flattened wtth a hair iron
rest Gump" the first time and Demoles seemed
Noelle attended the Oscars. pleased with the state of
This year, she is keeping things, the s!Ylist's eyes
h er fingers crossed again for started to bnghten as she
Hanks, who is nominated as grabbed a tube of silver hair
best actor fo r his perfor-· mascara from the table.
mance in "Cast Away.• But "OK, now we get to
trying to lobby her grandfa· play.• she said. "If I can't
ther for a vote in Hanks' playf with real !hair] color,
favor is out of the question. I'm 'gomg to play wtth
"She'd know better than something •
that,• Gene Allen said, Covenng several strands
adding that even his Wlfe, of Noelle's hai.r wtth the
Iris, never knows how he glim.mering substance,
votes. Demoles wrapped up that
•As president !of the part of her work.
academy,) I never knew Next came Noelle's face,
who won until the wtuch would remain subtle
envelopes were opened.· in color.
he said. "We're doing very 1.tght
FolloWIJ\g her grandfa· eyes and strong 1.tps. •
ther into the world of Dernoles said. "We're stay·
movies could happen, mg more Ill your 1.tght vto-~oelle sai~. But she ~oul~-let. pinky tones.·
n t bet on it, and she ll deh-A few minutes later and
nitely not stand in front of a still seeming a little ner·
c~era. . vous, Noelle dlsappeared
. If l ever w~s gomg to and returned dressed m her
wm an Oscar. it w~~d be gown and.rea~Jfor Oscar behind the scenes, she night.
said. or mil f al Although Noelle doesn't 10 5 es 0 approv
know what she wants to ~rom her fnends and others
study in college, she is m the salon. the soft-spoken
interested m English and Noelle beg~n to ca~ her art new look wtth confidence
· The change m clothing
A SLICI LOOK FROM
HEAD TO HER TOES
On Thursday afternoon,
1t was dress rehearsal time.
Wearing a dark blue,
spaghetti-strapped top.
beige pants and fup flops,
Noelle dropped by Salon
DeNour Wlth two of her
friends for an hour of
grooming and styling to
make sure she has the right
look for the big event. She
will return at 9 a.m. today
DON'T JUST CONSOLIDATE
ELIMINATE ell your debta,
lncidng 'f(AJI ~In lbolA &-12 years.
wfllle ll*'dnQ lbolll lhl -amount ol ~ .. )'Oil.,. onwtlf ependlng!
1 .,.. ... .All .... ~ .............. ~.~
.111 • ·-·.~ .
begat a change m attitude.
·I feel ready more than
any of the other past years,·
she said. "It's exotmg not to
have to worry about what
I'm going to look W<e •
And then. when asked
whether she'd make tl to
school Monday, her eyes
s&ne wtth a faint touch of
miscluef. ~
"I'll probably try to go,·
the honor student said.
smiling. "But maybe 1ust a
little late •
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8 Sunday, Morch 25, 2001
EDITORIALS I
Lexus stopped
at Greenlight in
Newport Beach
I n theory, Greenlighl is a
great idea. Slow growth to
preserve the quality of life
in Newport Beach.
But the initiative would
have been an even bette r idea,
perhaps. hdd it arisen 10 years
ago, long before the community
was nearing build-out.
Now, with less land left to
work with, city officials have
implemented G reenlight. And
with tha t comes consequences,
some of w hich are by design.
When 63'% of the city's voters
approved the measure in
Nove mber, most knew develop-
ers would have difficulty gain-
ing approval for bigge r projects.
That way. those bigger projects
would b e weeded out -often
without a citywide vote.
Last week, one of those pro-
jects came and went.
Not a vote was needed
because David Wilson, owner of
the very successful Toyota of
Orange, retreated.
It appeared to him that his
plan to bnng a Lexus dealership
-and its bountiful revenue -
to Newport Beach would be too
much of a hassle, largely
because of Greenhght.
Wt.Ison pointed out that he
was not "a big developer like
the Irvine Co. with years and
years to wait." Even without
Greenlight, he said his project
would take about five years and
$15 million to $20 million to
build.
Re ality has set in.
Grcenlight will discourage
good businessmen like Wilson
from building in Newport
Beach. There was no guarantee
that his project would even go
to a citywide vote, but he with-
drew an yway.
Were his pro1ect to have
gone lo a vote, Wilson would
have to invest even more time
and money to campaign for its
approval. And even the n,
he would not be guaranteed
victory.
This reality will scare off
developers w ho don't have the
time or money to waste. And
they will set up sh op in other
cities.
That's G reenlight, folks.
If it's everything the approv-
ing voters of Newport Beach
want, then more power to them.
If not, the detriment of the mea-
sure is becoming clear.
Without a doubt, car dealers
bring in revenue. On the city's
Web site, it proudly boasts that
uFletcher Jones (isJ one of the
highest-selling Mercedes Benz
dealerships in the United
States." What was to prevent
Wilson's Lexus dealership from
putting up some great numbers
as well, especially given his
success in Orange?
Urt.less someone can talk Wil-
son into giving the city another
whirl, his Lexus agency is out.
With that said, next up are
larger proposals, such as Ban-
ning Ranch Center, expansion
of Conexant Systems Inc., the
Koll Center office building and
expansion of Newport Dunes
Resort.
There are ways around fac-
ing Greenlighl -i.e., downsiz-
ing projects -but those devel-
opers who refuse to do so
will simply take their business
elsewhere.
And for those residents seek-
ing a shiny, new Lexus, just
know you won 'l get a lemon al
Lexus of Newport Beach ..
You won't even be able to
get a new car because there
won't be a dealership.
State capable of
maintaining cottages J
Stale officials took an
important step in the
preservaU!>n of Crystal
Cove by agreeing last
week to buy out developer
Michael Freed, e nding any cur-
rent plans for a resort at the his-
toric beachfront community.
The $2-million deal comes on
the heels of an agreement
between the state and cove resi-
dents for them to ·vacate the area
by July 8.
With the tenants gone, the
state can begin a more intensive
study of whether cottage septic
tanks are leaking in the area,
which has been hit by a number
of spills and continuing, myateri-
oua leaks.
The tenants are unhappy
about being rem oved before a
clear plan for the cove ls in
place. But the cauae of the pollu·
tion needs to be discovered
before it pennanenUy damagea
the fragile area, a known
birthing place for dolphinl.
State ottldala have mandat.ci 1 ,.
the residents' departme, and lt
clearly is the right thing to do. A t
the same, the state parks d epart-
ment should not hesitate in con-
tinuing open and public discus-
sions about the cove's future .
The residents also are con-
cerned that after they are gone
the cottages will fall into disre-
pair. The state, they say, has
made no effort to maintain the
buildings.
But the parks department
does keep up a number of
notable hlltortc places, including
the famed Donner Ca.mp, Heant
Castle and Old Town San Diego.
In all, the department oversees
21 national hiltorical lan arkl,
of which Crystal Cove 11 o .
Is the cove ln the p111sa.q-.
state of Heam CUtlef Of CO\lll'le
not. But ttl cb4'111111 d ue ln part
to the Nltic, 19208 feel
Could 10me of the path.I and
walkwaya be Nier and more
MCU1'81 Y•. And tt ta up to the
atate, which owm the land. to
make lute they .,..,
'' Howlo · · · · GDP18111B
#We barely get llve minutes
notice. We 're pr~tty much ln the
dark here WI something actually
happens."
The Dale wekomel letters on Issues concemlng ~ end Costa Mesa. • -Mall to Edlto<l•I Ptge EdltOf'
,,_ Meler tt the D•llY Piiot. 330 W. Bty St.,
Ce>N Mesi, CA 92627 • M.AD1RS HONNI-C.11 (Mt) 642-6086
• MX -Send to (949) 646-4170 • a.MAI. -Send to d•l/ypl/otel•tlmn.com
-c.a.te ..... ,...... u. "°" ......... on the recent and forthcoming electrklty
blackouts In the area.
All correspondence must Include full name. t\Ome-
toWl"I tnd phone number (fOf \ef lflcatlon purposes).
The Piiot merws the right to edit •II submissions for
dtrlty •nd length.
BOLTON '
~
5f°OD9'Nf~,
P&.-MSe. llHS~i'
WI f tt V$ ~Olf,
Doily Pilot,
NEWS ITEM: A seventh-grader in an art class at Co<ona del Mar High School this month was suspended fOf'
drawing a picture of a teacher with an arrrm through his head. Fellrm studenu saw the drawing and reported It.
Counseling could help prevent school tragedy
' H urting people hurt people.· .
In these few words is
the essence of why most young
people act as the young man in
Santee did earlier this month.
The rate of depression among
youngsters is up significantly,
according to a study by pediatri-
cians. In 1979, the rate was 1 %
versus a rate of 7.5% in 1996.
Usten to words from the U.S.
Surgeon General's Report (pages
126-27): -To be healthy, children
must form relationships not ort.ly
with their parents, but also with
siblings and with peers.•
In my bumble opinion, if the
Newport-Mesa school board
members' desire is lo do what is
best for the children's safety, they
will institute a carefully con-
ceived social skills program for
our schools with behavioral
Laura Bekeort Dietz
SOUNDING BOARD
experts.
And, even more unportantly,
as the students themselves have
indicated by a clear majority,
they want more counseling for
social and personal needs.
I appreciate how difficult it
must be for school board mem-
bers who sincerely have the chil-
dren's best interests for sa!ety
and security as their motive.
However, the response drafted
by some well-meaning parents
created the pressure to "do
something,· even if that some-
thing will, I predict, create many
problems while the bullying stu-
dents will continue lo bully
because they are emotionally
hurting.
Al a recent school board
meebng, I made several recom-
mendatJons:
1. That we establish a partner-
ship with UC! in addressing the
causes.
2. That we provide a "hothne"
for students to call in safety-relat-
ed concerns
3. That we reevaluate the
counseling system at our school,
with male counselors for male
students and female counselors
for female students and promote
"safe disclosure."
4. That counseling be expand-
ed to meet the needs of students
dunng and after school.
II we spent more rune listen-
ing carefully to students and less
time trymg to control them,
answers to these difficult behav-
ioral problems will result.
• LAURA llKEAJn' DIETZ Is a COt'ona
del Mar resident.
Church expansion would create bigger mess
A s longtime residents of
Newport Beach, my wile
and I are vehemently
opposed to the proposed expan-
LEnER TO
THE EDITOR
sion of Our
Lady Queen
of Angell
School and
Church for
the following reasons:
l . Having owned and resided
in our present home for more than
25 years, we have only seen the
traffic congestion wonen apedti·
cally II.nee the dty wrongly
restricted the traffic now through
Butbluff and Bison Road. That
act. in and of itlell, only further
exacerbated an already out of con-
trol trattk: nightmare.
2. Corone ct.I Mar High School
now Ml'V1Cel more ltudentl and
gracMa than it WU orlgtnally
a..sgn.d and built for. Bech and
flVW'( weekday, tt ii oat to lmpc'9·
able to go frMlY to and from
our own boml between 7:30 and
8:30a.m.
It'• becwM ot tm ~.
U WtlJ 81 DO Wt tum llpl, that
requires us to travel miles out of
our way to have legal access to
our own home. Furthermore, the
ingress and egress is seriously
JeopardJ..z:lng every school day at 3
p.m., as well as both Saturday and
Sunday for regularly scheduled
church services and such affairs as
weddings and funerals.
3. Residents should be allowed
to have fUll and complete access to
their own homM because they pay
the very taxes that pay for the
installation and meintenance of
the very ltreeta that they are
denied acce11 to because of the
obvf.oul overcrowding of both the
high IChool and the growing 1tu-
dent body at the church'• IChoot U
Newport Beech feels it ii necea-
NIY to Nltrk:t trafftc, then fllltlict
the IChool trattk:.,and not the rMi-
dentl who pay Ula taxee that built
the ICbool in tM tint place.
L M the dty hes expended the
puldng lot for both the ICboo1 and
the church to tnclude Mar Vllta,
W9 .,. :::::: both sbactenll and~ Oftbe cburc:h an
rMdtntlal ltl'Mtl. nm d.muxll
tbat tbn JI an~ need for ..
restricted parking to protect our
rights as residents and homeown-
ers. Because of the failW'E! of the
dty to protect our rights, our
streets are overrun with both stu-
dents' and church members' cars.
5. While the d ty of Newport
Beach has continually allowed the
growth of new apartment com-
plexes within a two-mile tadlUI,
they grossly neglec:ted to consider
the need.I of thote who call New·
port Beach their home. And while
we do not ne<:elMl'ily object to
caretully inc:reutng the population
of the d ty, it would be wiH and
prudent to inunediately add.rela
the cwnmt and worMnt.ng prob· lems pnor to allowing the church
(one of the ~or oontrtbutlng fac·
tori in thil problematic equadOll)
any and all upe.nllon.
In other worda, ta.a • good
Jook uound and .. for yOunell
the IDW that l\ICh npmnon bat
alrMdy Cll\IMd tbe l'elldmtl
ot ~ dty, putk:ulMy ttdl MdgbborhoOd.
WIWAM DOUMUS
N9wpGlt 8-dl
If
Daily Pilot
...
' I I
I
WHYNEWPOm
"I think N ewport
is a very charming
and sophisticated
loaation. We have
one of the largest
moviegoing
populations in the
United States, and
we also have
some of the most
outstanding
facilities for
viewing film.
Edwards is really
the premiere
theater chain in
the United )•
States. H
MAKING THE
PASSIVE ACTIVE
H Film viewing
tends to be a
very passive
experience, and
one of the critical
goals of the
I estival is to
make that pas-
sive experience
become active.
For me, the
natural evolution
of that conce pt i s
the seminar
program. It
allows you
firsthand to talk
one on on e with
people who have
won an A cademy
Award for their
cinematography
or have crafted
an award-win-
ning screenplay
or have been on
the leading edge
of digital or
special effects. H
DIFFEIENT l nRUDE
#Several
filmmakers have
commented to
me that when
they do a
screening In L.A.
the audience
of ten has the
attitude of,
'Oh yeah, anoth-
•' er 1creenlng.'
They're not exclt·
ed about Jt,
where here, peo-
ple are really
excited about
10methlng that
maybe they'll
never have a
chance to••
agaln."
...
· CoMMuNnY FORUM Sunday, Morch 25, 2001 9
SEAN HUER I OAA. V PllOT
Putting Newport in the. spotlight
Gregg Schwenk, executive director of the Newport. Beach Film Festival, talks about the event's present and future
L 'ttst ye ar, the Newport
Beach Film Festival
almost didn't ha ppen .
When the organizer of
the festival, Jeffrey Conne r,
declared bankruptcy in the fall
of 1999, it seeme d as if the
screenings would cease.
Then Gregg Schwenk
stepped in and, with a group of
others in the community,
he lped make the 2000 festival a
reality. This year, the festival is
back with a new support guild
and Schwenk as executive
director. It ope ns Thursday with
a gala screening of "The
Sting," and will run through
April 5 with screenings of
almost 200 films an d a free
two-day seminar series.
Schwenk sat down with
Daily Pilot Features Editor
Jennifer K Mahal last week to
talk a bout the future of the f es-
tival, how the films are chosen
and why the festival belongs in
Newport Beach.
What kind of challenges does
the Newport Beach Film Festival
face this year ln terms of logisUcsf
When you're dealing with nearly
200 films from over 20 countries,
you run Into not only cultural an<J
critical issues, but you also have
ways of doing business that are
dramatically different than how we
do things here -from how they're
shipping their films to us, to how
their governments may interplay
with the films that will be shipped
to us.
Case ln point, we've got one film
that's coming in via the Austrian
government, and that bas been
extremely challenging to make sure
we can take care of all of the neces-
sary protocols to get the film from
Aust:rla over here.
On a purely pragmatic level,
we've got probably about 100 film.
makers coming out for the festival
-that's not including different
celebrities and VIPs for tribute
acrffningt -and we have to work
out the housing, some of the trant-
portation ilsun.
We're al.so very excited that tb1t
year we're going to be offering
•bott a filmmaker.• 1bat11 going to
be a project where tndividuall from
the commUnlty will be pertnered
with c:elebrltiel and fUmmekert and
taking the time to show on th• dty
and tts different unenlU.. We've
got peop• that are going to be tak·
tng tome tt1mma1e.,. out to lunch •..
alf tbe way to around the gulf to a
harbor cndiie later on tn the
e.entng. 1be ftlmmak .. .,. "'Y
adt9d abOUt lt becaUM Ibey get to
... 8ntbaDd what the dty iDd tbe
'
community are all about. And the
community members are excited
about it because they get to partici·
pate one on one with these film-
makers, the creative force behind
many of the films we have at the
festival.
Then there's the bottom line of
trying to get the fesllval finished.
We've got 200 films, a two-day
seminar series, three major tribute
films. With all of that, it's logistically
a huge challenge.
How do you choose the Hims
that get Into the festival?
There's two dtlferent, distinct
paths. One IS a pdss1ve and one 1s
an active !path). On the passive
side, we receive nearly 400 to 450
different submissions for the festi-
val. On the active side, we attend
different festivals, are called in to
view dilferent screenings, and those
are then selected on the basis of
merit without having to go through
the formal process of application.
We have a mix of different films
come m through those two means.
Of the films ln the festival,
which ones do you personally
enjoy?
Never ask an executive director
his favonle one.
Well, obv1ously I'm pretty partial
to the tribute fllms because those
are the ones we've worked the
longest on, the ones that I personal-
ly en1oy and feel reflect some of the
best h.lmmakmg ever.
What's also enjoyable ts that we
get to celebrate with some of the
people who were able to create and
craft those films. Case ln point
wouJd be opening night. We're very
excited about a brand new print (of
"The Sting" J that hds been struck
off of the vault master from
Universal.
And It's just not that, it's being
able to sit down with many of the
cast and crew members that
evening and see a film and be a ble
to interact with them and ask them
questions and learn fftilsthand what
it was like to work on that particu·
lar movie.
What ts your goal for the leaU·
valf What would you Uke It to
achieve thl• year, next year, the
yMr att.rf
Our goal for th.ls year, we've
often stated, ll evolution not revolu·
tton. We had a very successful 2000,
our very ttnt f"tival, and we're
excited about the response from
that.
We are looking et the 2001 festi·
val u a year for growth, but very
moderate 'and controlled growth. ,
We're addina another IC'lMJ\ at th•
[Bdwudl) laland (7 Cinemas), few·
er bµt better quality trtbutM. We
are really working on promotlDG
tbe feettval both here and outside of onng. CO\lllty. So we're rM1ly Juat
fOC\lllng on the very controUed
gaowtb ot the f•tival.
We'd Uh to'" maybe a 10 to4
15% increase in attendance over
the 15,000 to 17 ,000 we had last
year. We are excited to see the
response for our seminar series.
And we also want to work on
expanding the coverage of the festi-
val. We're very excited and we're
very pleased as to how things are
going, but we want to make sure
that others know that thls JS out
there and 1t happens every year.
Five years from now, where do
you see the festival golngf Do you
see it like a Sundance or a Palm
Beach International Film FesUvan
Our long tenn vtsion for the festi -
val mcludes utillzmg other locauons
throughout the city. It also mciudes
bringing ln different organizauons
from throughout the county
Examples of that for Uus year: for
the 20th anruversary of "Zoot Suit,·
we're workmg ln conjunction with
the Orange County HJspanic
Chamber of Commerce; th e Chi-
nese evenmg, we're working with
the Orange County Chinese Ameri-
can Chamber of Commerce; and for
the Bnllsh evening, we worked
with the Briush American Busmess
Council of Orange County.
These orgaruzabons have a built-
m network of individuals who are
interested in these particular types
of fllms, but it also gets them mte-
grated more closely with the enter-
tainment side of their busmess
and bnngs them to a wonderful
locallon
What is lt about this Ulm festival
that make s It so suited to Newport
Beachf ln other words, why beret
l think Newport is a very charm-
ing and sophisticated location. We
have one of the largest moviegomg
populations in the United States,
and we also have some of the most
outstanding facilities for viewing
film. Edwards is really the premiere
theater chain in the United Sta tes.
And it ls only logical that we're
able to screen at one of the most
beautiful locations anywhere.
What mak .. lh11 fe1Uval unlquel
First and foremost is location. I
don't think you could find a bette r
conununity to host th.is film festival
than Newport Beach. Its proximity
to Hollywood it an added bonus.
Another distinction we have ls
that we really try to cater to the
filmmaker. We want them to feel at
home. That'• wby for ut the •hott a
fUnunaker• project ll very lmpor·
tant. We want the screening and
their stay in Newport Beech to be
an extremely polltiv. one. And
we've tried very hard to coordinate
with the Newport Beech Marriott,
which ha1 been a.n outstanding
partner in all thil.
I think another unique upect of theNewportlMcbPUmPMUval~
th• van.ct events tbat we bne. U
you look at tbe events that are
pluMd bY tbe Sundanoa PUm Pel·
tival or by tbe ~ (lmer· ·
national) l'Um tMy're \11\1-
ally fewer in number I know Palm
Springs Uus. year had two mdJOr
events -theu opening night and a
special tnbute gala. Whereds, we
really have an openmg night and
then we have special events for the
majonty of the evenmgs during the
festival We 1ust fmd Uus to be a
great way to show off the city and
its busmesses, the uruque diversity
of our restdurants
What about the educational
components to the film fesUvalf
That's a fdcet of the fesllvdl thdt
IS very near and dear to me I've
always been d strong proponent of
the seaunar progrdm We're
extremely pleased Wlth this year's
lineup
Fllm vtewmg tends to be d very
passive expenence. and one of the
cntlcal goals of the fest1vdl 1s to
make that passive experience
become active. For me. the ndtural
evolutton of that concept 1s lhe
seminar program. It allows you
h.rsthand to talk one on one with
people who have won dn Academy
Award for their cinematography or
have crafted an award-wmnmg
screenplay or hdve been on the
leadmg edge of digital or spec1dl
effects
And that's really what we try and
do wtth the semman. 1s bnng those
people to Newport Bedch We're
extremely excited that we've part-
nered wtth the llbrdry dnd lhe cul-
tural arts corruruss1on for the city of
Newport Bedch And we've put
together one of the best seminar
series of any fesbval m the slate, il
not the nation.
What does a film festival like
thls do for a Wmmaker and a Him
that's ln m
1 think your average fllnirnaker 1s
going to get expo ed to a market
that is not overexposed. U you look
at festivals in Los Angeles or even
New York, you see a film-going
audience that might be considered
by some to be jaded. Newport,
while it ls a fairly sophisticated and
movie-going audle nce, tt's an audi-
ence that welcomes different films,
a different film experience
Several filmmakers have com-
mented to me that when they do a
screening in L.A the audience
often has the attitude of, •ob yeah,
another screening." They're not
excited about it, where here, people
are really excited about eomething
that maybe they'll never have a
chance to '" ag&ln.
Also, lest year we had a few
ftlma that w•re plcktd up for diltrl·
bution at th• Newport Beech PUm
Peltival, moet notably wu •starry
Ntgbt. • And Paul O.Wtl bU attllb-
ut.d bll 1CrMDin9-. at Newpon
Beach u the ftnal cetaiywt fof bealO
picUd up by UnSwrm. w. ... ""um to paa, tbat ro11 a.s
we're bap6119to,..,...a.a1111
year ud ID yean to come.
.. -....
.. •• Of --"We've i. nlnlng far tifwt or'*" monlhs now,
so you .... hM to hM ......... to st.ow for ....... •
Dave GrMt. OCC men's crew coach
10 Sunday, Morch 25, 2001 • Sports Editor Roger Carlson • 949..S7 44223 • Sports Fox: 949~50..0170 Daily Pilot
-·
--.. --
\
...
STEVE MC CRANK I DAILY PILOT
Orange Coast College coxswain Sam Yost gets the winner's reward Saturday morning with a toss In the drink by bis teammates after the Pirates swept to victory.
OCC men's ~ea1ns sweep
•Pirates' women's varsity
crew rows to a third-place
finish to open the season.
Steve Virgen
DAILY PILOT
LIDO CHANNEL -Amazing
what a loud cheering section can
do
Saturday morning in Lido Chan-
nel. lhe encourdging yells from
Orange Coast College crew mem-
bers and fans gave that extra push
for the men's varsity crew when
the Pirates won their season-open-
ing 2000-meter rdce in 6:07.1, 6.1
seconds over second-place San
Diego State.
"We know that nght when we
get to the boathouse, everyone is
cheenng." OCC coxswain Sam
Yost said. "That's when we pick
(the pace) up And we conbnue to
push that all the way to the finish.•
W1lh about 600 meters remain-
ing after passing the boathouse,
the Pirates mru.ntamed their slight
lead, rowing to victory as members
of the women's teams and men's
novice teams shouted, "Go, Coast,
go!"
Those same cheers also helped
the OCC women's varsity crew as
it finished thtrd to Berg Cup cham-
pion University of San Diego. The
Berg Cup, the biggest race of the
day, included two UC Irvine crews,
UCLA, USO, San Diego State and
Chapman. The Pirates only race
against four-year schools, because
Coast ls the only community col-
lege In the nation with rowing
teams.
"Everyone Is walking away
feeling good about the race,• Bucs
Coach Linda Moeller said of her
varsity crew.
In the Berg Cup, OCC finished
just three-quarters of a boat length
behind UCJ to earn 7:03.4 time.
USO took an early one-boat length
lead over UCI. Coast trailed the
Anteaten by a half-length early
and thOle three crews held thelr
potittoru over the courae of the
race, gradually adding space
between the other three aews.
In another women'• race, the
Pirates' Novice pair took an early
lead, but fell behind to USO Ju1t
before th• midway point and
dropped into third by 1,500 meten
H UCI surged into HCOnd place. ucr, however, struggled down the
1tretch and OCC recovered to fin·
llh second behind the Anteaten.
•1b11 wu perfect w..thar for
rowing,• Cout DOYtoe coach Us
•
COLLEGE CREW
STEVE MC CRANK I DAILY PILOT
Pirates' women were all smiles
after a standout performance.
Hubbard said of the cool, cloudy
day.
In the second women's novice
eight race, the Pirates steadily built
a sizable lead eventually stretching
their advantage to five boat
lengths and finishing in 7:35.2.
Aside from the men's varsity
crew victory, the Novice eight •A•
and ·a· along with the Junlor Var-
sity. eight grabbed first-place fin·
ishes.
•All the crews dld well,• OCC
men's Coach Dave Grant said.
·we've been training for eight or
nine months now, so you better
have to have something to show for
that.•
As the Pirates hosted their first
regatta of the season, Grant noted
OCC's varsity crew could still
improve.
"Crews are never perfect until
the end of the season,• he said.
•And they better be (perfect).•
Said Yost, "We always need to
get better, but we're not that far
from where we need to be.•
Notes: Crew memberl tossed
each coxswain into the water.
Among the drenched, Kriltal Maw,
the only female on the men'• crew.
She helped the novice eight B to ill
victory In 6:40.9.
The Berg Cup is named after
Richard Berg, a r .. ident of New·
port Beach, who "heJ been a major
1upporter of (th• OCC women'•
crews),• Moeller Mid. •tn recogni·
lion, we 1tarted the Berg Cup and
award the trophy to the cbampi·
on,• lhe Mid.
SUMMAAIES SEE PAGE U
)
DAILY PILOT PHOTOS BY STM McCRANK
Orange Coast College's men's vanity (dark shirts, above) begin to pull away from the field, tncludlng
Chapman University (in the foreground) en route to victory. Below, the Pirate•' Junior varsity and
novice A teams cheer them on. All three teams won tbelr dlvl1lon1 Saturday at the Udo Channel.
/ I
Doily Pilot SPORTS Sunday, Morch 25, 2001 11
(ATCHING UP
WITH •••
e
l
REYNOLDS WRAP
. '
TRACK & FIELD
Steen sets
national
Illark
•She sizzles in 1,600
with a time of 4:50.2.
AZUSA -Newport I ldrbor
High semor 'ildndout Amb<~t
Steen d1d more thdn JUSt
.break her school rPrord m the
1,600-metcr run ut Sdturdayrs
AdJdas MP.et of Chdmp1on1>
Steen's t1rn(• of 4 50 2, ht>r
persondl lw'>I by d tc•nth of d
second 1<, the new top mark 1n
the country. dCCording lo
meet ofhndb dnd N(•wport
Coach Enc TwMI
Nddld Topdlov1c-pld<t•d
fourth m lhl• 40011 01 11, whil~
freshman Ldunm Pdul hcJd her
best-ever ttm<• m thl' l ,hOO
(5:31 bJ dnd 3,200I11 5:! 01
On the boy'> '>1'h John
Peschelt ( 1 57 fi rn tt ... 800),
Jesus Sdnldnc1 111 42 O m the
3,200J. Chm, Mc l\ lillt•n 1'1 ~U I
m th£' lLOOJ. \IN Urtu
(4:59 o. 111 thl' ·uoo1. Nick
M1llN 14.47 'l in llw 1 hOO)
dnd Ju<1n Rio'> (5 08 an lhl•
1,600) C't1< h put to<JPlhc•r pf'r·
SOndl-IH''tl 1 ITTlt'" 111 thl'lf
event'>
I lurdh•1 Di1n f\1oy1 •1 <JdVC'
Newport Cor1c h B1111 Bc1rrv
dOOthf'r poll•nt1crl \H•11pon in
the 800 In h1., ltr.,l·P\ Pr rc1c c•
hf' won h1., lwc1(''"th c1 t111w of
2 014
(
SOFTBALL
Tars advance l o 1
~second-seclion'
title matchup
GARDEN GROVE ThP
Newport l ldrbor H1qh .,oflhctll
team '>plat 1h two £Jc1rnc•., m ttw
Gdrden GrovC' Tournonwnt
Sdturddy, hut st1U ridVdnc (>(I to
the second-st•ct1011 < hc1mp1-
onsrup CJdm<' b) Wd)' of lhl'
tourndm<'nl\ l1t•hrt1kc•r ruh•
ThC' Sdtlor'> lh·4-21 clPl1 •c1t
cd Cdlvc1ry C'hc11wl. ">·.!.
befurP lo<,inq to · Whtllwr
Chnst1rin. l.-1 111 Ptqhl
tnmng~
• His impact on local hoops continues
to grow, even after his retirement.
Tony Altobelli
DAILY PILOT
Cumtnt coaches who p layed or
coached under Bill Reynolds
with my wife, kids and grdnclk1ds,'' Reynolds
sa1d. "I've got thrPe ddughter'> tlnd l!ve
grandchildren dnd they're dll with an hour of
where I hve, so 1 cdn see them aJJ the tune."
Reynolds spent 31 seasons dS d coach for
VangucHd Umverc;,ity. Bolsd Grdnde and La
Qumtd. At VU. Reynolds complied a 354-184
record with three Golden Stdle AthJebc
ConJerence titles dnd one D1stnct 3 ttUc In his
17 sedsons at VU, hi-; tcdm'> reached the
poslseason each ycdr
Amandd < "d111plwll hdcl
two RBI'>, w hill• Kun \ lcx>n•
came throu~Jh \\Ith dn RHI hit
to spdrk N<>wport.,. four-ni11
first mm.nq Bill Reynolds stressed d "family" type of
abnosphere when coaching men's
basketball at Southern Cahforrua College,
now known as Vanguard Uruversity.
Larry Hirst -Newport Harbor
Elbert Davis -Corona del Mar
Todd Dixon -El Toro
Andre Smith -La Sierra
Mike Murphy -Sonora
Sdbnnd Couch w .. nt th••
distance in hPr lar.,t p1t<hmq
perfonndnCt> of lht• "<'c1'>on
She gan• up lour hth, .. , ctlkl'd
two dncl ... truck out two \."..llll•·
allowmq on!; mw t•t1mt·d run
Now, Reynolds sits m the stands like a proud
papa watching 10 former players and assistant
coaches carry the reins for various schools
throughout Southern CaWorn1a.
"It is, without a doubl, the biggest reward any
coach can receive, watching your players
become coaches.• Reynolds said. "lt shows
everyone 1ust what type of people they are. They
were mature, professional kids at sec and that
carried over to now.•
Randy McAllister -Rancho Verde
Mike West -Fallbrook
"Starting off. I went to JUSt about every
coaches chmc and camp I could Uunk of.·
Reynolds '>did "I dcqwwd a lot of mfonnat.10n,
but I WdS Lrymg to c0<1ch like someone else. My
advice to dny new c0c1ch 1s to be yourseU Coach
to your persondhty dnd th<> pldycrs will respond
and reldte better "
In thl' ni~1ht< np <.;helh~
Cnsp clrmt' an \thl'tld
Vd'>qUE'Z lo <JI\ I' 'JP\\-port ct I ·
0 lead, but Wh1lt1pr Chmttnn
rallied with d run u1 tht> fourth
and a run 1n tlw PJQhlh to pull
out the wm \ct.,<.jU1'7 Wll'>
strong c1t '>hori...top. mdktnq
severdl kc•y plc1 y., lo kPPp th1•
gamt' clo.,t•
Ollie Martin -Mater Dei
Barry Silvers -Morro Bay
Mike Roberts -Tarbut V'Torah
One guy who Reynolds redlly reldted to Wds
Hirst. "Appdrently, he didn't rip on me too bad,
because I becdme his dssisldnt coach and I
named a toumdmcnl clitt•r hun. • Hirst sd1d.
"H e's dO unbelH.•vable guy. I wotlldn't be where
I am today tf 1t wasn't for rum"
Among those on the coaching roster include
N ewport Harbor boys basketball coach Larry
Hirst. who htls nothing but fond. if.not
humorously-dltered, flashbacks from his tenure
with Reynolds, both as a player and assistant
coach.
"I was his whipping boy as a player,• Hirst
srud, almost with a straight face. "Sure, some
other player's guy scored 15 strrught points on
him, but he always npped on me because he
knew I could take 1t. •
I !arbor, with lhe championship played at
Vanguard.
•1t•s great because I'm still Mound.to see 1t,"
Reynolds sa1d with a laugh. •Fortunately, it's not
lhe Bill Reynolds MemonaJ Classic 1ust yet. I
was1toored when they told me about the
tournament. What an honor.•
Making his coaches' SoCal tour helps leed his
love for the game and perhdps a return to the
tx>nch ts m Reynolds' future
·After I retue and some program wants to
bnng a gnzzl ed vcterdn codch m at some
cd pacity. whether it's as a hedd coach or
assistant or whatC'ver. I'd consider 1t, • Reynolds
said "Gomg to the qames fills my basketball
void. It helps mE' '>IC'C'p better at rught I sbll have
that fire m me dnd 1f thdt's still m me when I
rebre from Bol'>a Grande, who knows?"
Smee NC'wpnrt ... rort·d llw
most run., <1ncl dllowt'Cl tht•
fewest, tht')' will pld\ Tu.,tm
Monday di Ldkl' ...,< hnol
beginning di 3 ·m p m
GAAD£N GllOVI: TOUllHAMENT
s.cond Mrtlon ~h ..._, HMIOll 5, (M.vltll'f C--2
On a much more senous note, Hirst has since
organized a tournament with some teams
coached by former Reynolds players for the Bill
Reynolds Classic. Games dfe played at Newport
Far from the fourth quarter of We, Reynolds
has stepped down from coaching to dedicate
more time to his family and hts • reaJ • 1ob of
counselmg at Bolsa Grande High.
"I'm trying to make up some of the lost time
Cl.~,.,,,,..,. 001 "' ' • ' ~H-~ '<ltJ IUO• ~ •
w """ •nd ''""''"'• (OUC.Pl ,,., Cl""Pbril w Col..-• 0 w -ll
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,..,_, 000 00 00 ' Whon• .. Ch< ooo •ooo• 2 \ h
Moor• .tnd C....pC)lpl ~· •"Cl z-...o W ....... !Ck'z l M.»• 2 l l
21 Romoo<o rwc.
Mesafalls twice at
Rialto Inc itational ~~:::;~~ Pirates edge Rustlers in 11
catcher BnaA Murphy. RIALTO The <."o.,tc1 MP~d LA MIRADA -The Van-
guard UnJverslty baseball team
split its doubleheader with
national powerhouse Biota, los-
ing the first game. 10-4, before
pulling out a 14-8 thriller in the
nightcap.
In Game 2, Wlth the score
tied, 1-1, both teams scored a
combined 20 runs In last two
innings. Fortunately for the
Lions (19-11, 8·6 In confer-
ence), they scored 13 of those
runs lo prev811.
Chad Chop went 2 for 5 with
two home runs and three RBis,
while Mike Bair and Timolhy
Jara also drove in three runs.
The Eagles, ranked No. 8 in
the NAlA national polls, drops
lo 22-4, t 2-3. ........ ,....es :a IDA10.Y,.._4 """"*" 100 001 200 .. • 2 "* 1200U 1h· 101J J WllM!; Wlllleml (t), ,,_o Cit 8fld Gemet: °"· RJn (7). ...,_, (I) 8fld ... w Orf, S.1, L · w.lltat, S.J. lt ~ (\l\J), Orr
(I). --(I).~ Cll ,. • Munor (I). °" (l) "" . lltMrwood MJ), .._. Cl) l. .~(I)
• McCanne, Erickson
the h eroes as Coast
tops Golden West, 6-4.
Tony Altobelli
DAILY PILOT
HUNTINGTON BEACH -
Al last, a new hero for the
Orange Coast College base-
ball team.
Josh M cCanne's two·out,
RBJ single in the top of the
11th inning helped lift the
Pirates to a 6-4 Orange
Empire Conference win over
rival Golden West Saturday
afternoon.
•1t was a great team win
for us,• OCC Coach John
Altobelli said. •t.ately, Scott
Beerer has been tbe guy
pitching the big game or drt·
ving ln the big run for us, but
today we had other people
atep up and get the job done,
whicb was nice to see.•
Beerer, a Newport Harbor
Highproduct,ltartedonthe
mound for OCC (l?-6, 7·4 in
conference) but was reduced
to a designated bitter after
feeling aome tlghtneu in bis
COMMUNITY COLLEGE BASEBALL
right biceps. He allowed
three runs in two-plus
innings.
"It was a pain he hasn't
experienced before, so we
took him out,• Altobelli said.
•1t will be a week-to-week
thing a.s far as p1tchmg goes,
but he'll still hit and play right
field for us.•
'n'a.illng, 2-1, OCC reliever
Brent Erickson took the ball
from Beerer and pitched six·
plus solid innings. He kept
the Rustlers ln check and
allowed the Pirates' offense to
grab the lead in the eventh.
•tte's been doing that a lot
lately,· AltobeW satd of Erick-
son's strong relief work. •tte
comes in, keeps the ball
down and throws strikes,
which ls very 1mp6rta.nt in
this confer nee.~
OCC jumped out to a l ·O
)ead in the ftnt 1nn.lng wben
Glenn Hedgepath reached
bue and advanced to l8COOd
on a Rustler error He ecored on
a two-out single by Mt<:a.nne. owe quickly answered
with three ruris in the next
two innings. but was stopped
cold by Erickson.
Rustler left-hander Phil
Tripoli used smart locat10n
and an assortment of break·
ing balls to keep the Pirates m
check for six mrungs.
OCC finally responded in
the seventh with three runs
and look a 4-3 lead with
McCanne leadJng the rally
with a key RBI rut.
The Rustlers lled the game
m the runth and had the win-
ning run on second with one
out in the 10th, but
Hedgepath (5-0), who
relieved Erickson in the ninth
inning, retired the next two
batters to gel out of the jam.
In the 1 llh, Jake Garcia was
hit by a pitch and was 5acrlficcd
to second before McCann
drove him home with a line-
shot single up the middle.
McCanne, who finish ed
with four hits and improved
his team·I adlng batting
overage to .4 71, scored on a
double to right-cent r by
In the bottom of the I 1th, High softball tt'cllll dropped
the Rustlers (10-15, 2-9) had two game" at Uw Rit\lto Tour-
thc leadoff hitter reach base, nament on Sdtmday in pool
but reliever Mark Courvo1s1er play actJon
struck out the next batter and The l\..fustdng'> (5-~-11 lo!tt
induced a 5-4-3 double play ' to Pan.he. 7 -1, ·lJCfore faJhng
to end the game. to the ho t Kmqht!t, 5-4, m
The wm keeps the Pirates eight mrung.,
bed for third place with Sad-In the opener, Ann Mc1ne
dleback. a hall-game behind Topps scored the Mustangs'
sec-ond-place Riverside (22-3-lone run m the ~:xth mrung on
1. 7-3-1) and two game the front end of a ftn.t-and-
belund ftrSt-place Santa Ana tht.rd double steal.
(19:4, 9;2) In the rughtcap, the Mu •
We re m a good position tangs tnuled 4-1 and had
right now,• Altobelli sa1d . nobody on with two out
"ObVlously, we've got a long before rallyinq for thr rum
way to go and we've got ~e B ck-to-back walk , fol-
b1g boys (Santa Ana) coming lowed by hits from Olli Wal-
up, but our guys are startmg Jaco, Jade M (3 tor 4) and
to beheve we can play well Topps (2 for 4) brought the Wl~=::,;.. an •••ca Mustangs vcn before th
OCC I. CiolDM wnt 4 Krughts won th gam m th
OCC 100 000 JOO 02 · 6 13 2 eighth.
GWC 20100000100·4144 MMJO~
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end Muri~ 1l'jpofl ~~ (7) llecrflc UO!llO. 7 t 1
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21 ·SW-(OCQ, ~ (OCO. COllil ..._ 1• • •· • • '
ll --a-.(~ "-........... tllllto --". s •• .,..,_,"!"'1 "'~~--~~~~~--(GWC). o.utl W •c:-to 1..•l ..... ~
1·
12 Sunday, Morch 25, 2001 SPORI'S
Diamondbacks·· ,rule, 4-0
Primetime PLAYERS
COSTA ..sA NATIONAL
U1'1L11.4AGUI
YllllkMI Majan DMslon
14 Mike Armour
1 Skyfer Crane
31 Andy OaWS9f't
13 Colin Jacob$
7 Jordan Lounsbury
25 Andrew Niles
2 Jordan Palmer
21 Elliott .Patton
33 Justin Reyes
12 Skyler TwQhig
11 Isaiah Werdel
30 Mike Willson
~Jerry Dawson
eo.ch: Scott Willson
COSTA MESA NATIONAL
LITTLE LEAGUE
DiamonclMdc Maajors
Division
15 Andrew Ayala
23 Austin Elliott
16 Mitch Friedman
12 Riley Hart ·
20 Allan Kincaid
18 Brandon Maurer
22 Taylor McC.lanahan
19 Trevor McDonald
14 Kyle Miller
11 Aaron Quella
13 Ryan Redding
21 Matt Redding
Mllnllger: Bill Redding
eo.ches: Gary McOanahan
and Mark Miller
'\
MAJORS
Diamondbacks
pitcher AiisUn
Elliott delivers
a fastball en
route to a ·
stx-lnntng,
4-0 victory
over the
Yankees tn
Costa Mesa
National Utoe
League Majors
competition.
He struck out
e ight and
accounted for
six outs with
his defense.
Below, left.
'Jievor
McDonald
gets a high
five after a
solid triple,
and right,
Brandon
Mauer is out
at the plate
as Yankees
catcher Colin
Jacobs applies
the tag.
•Diamondbacks pitchers
goes the distance to finish
with a shutout.
Steve Virgen
DAILY PILOT
COSTA MESA -While many
were expecting Oscar De La Hoya's
comeback later Saturday. evening,
the Diamondbacks' Austin Elliott
provided some knockout blows of his
own for the afternoon crowd at
TeWIJlk.le Intermediate School.
The Majors' division pitcher threw
a shutout as he went the full six
innings, struck out eight, scattered
six and accounted for six more outs,
leading the Diamondbacks to a 4-0
victory over the Yankees, in a Costa
Mesa NationaJ League game.
#He pitched an awesome game,"
Diamondbacks Coach Gary
McClanahan said.
Jerry Dawson, the Yankees' man-
ager, also enjoyed Elliott's perfor-
mance which included 72 pitches.
He took pleasure in the dean game
as well.
#We just didn't hit the ball well as
a team," Dawson said. "But. it was a
pretty error-free game."
Manager Bill Redding's Diamond-
backs gave the cushion Elliott need-
ed by gaining the 4-0 lead. Trevor
McDonald and Brandon Maurer
scored two runs each to help in the
win.
McDonald went 2 for 3, including
a triple and Maurer also finished
with two hits.
Allan Kincaid chipped in with a
single and Andrew AyaJa smacked a
double to add on to the Diamond-
backs' seven hi ts.
• For the Yankees, Mike Armour
pounded two hits, while Isaiah
Werdel and Mike Willson popped
one hit each.
Werdel also made tumself known
on defense. When playing at short-
stop, he dropped to hls knees and
made like a football wide receiver
when he grabbed a blooper that
sailed over his shoulders and into his
glove.
"He made such d gredt play,"
Dawson said. "But, the diHerence in
the game was they hit the ball and
we didn't." ·
Primetime PLAYERS
COSTA MESA NATIONAL
LITTLE LEAGUE
~Minor•
7 Justin Bosecker
13 Daniel Derieg
6 Corey Dryden
1 Kurtis Dryden
12 Jesse Fox
10 Chase Harrison
3 Anthony l5raelson
8 Jeremy Jeranko
5 Victor Lozoya
11 M ike Pierce
4 Austin Rice
9 Chris Shelton
~Andy Pierce
eo.ches: Ed Harrison
and Jim Rice
M9rtina Minor 8
2 Daniel carter
3 Joseph Eggers
5 Josh Emo
9 Pablo Galvan
6 Bryan Guzman
7 Javier Rivera
8 Pedro Rivera
13 Joshua Rydlng
10 Johnny Valdez
12 Julian Velasque
11 Jacob Wachman
4 James Wanbaugh
OAllY PILOT PHOTOS BY STEVE McCRANIC
Diamondbacks' Anthony Israelson barges through the plate to score as Marlins' pi~er James Wanbaugh defends.
'\
~Julian Valdez · Mike Carter
and Paul Ryding
I
DIAMONDBACKS VERY SHARP IN 19-1 WIN
• With rhythm and baJance,
Diamondbacks have one of
those days we'd all enjoy.
Steve Virgen
DAILY PILOT
COSTA MESA -There 1s much
knowledge to attain m Little League.
Fundamentals are essential for the
future, thus the reasons Marlins'
Coach Julian Valdez wanted his
players to continue to play when the
game could have been called at
Te Winkle Intermediate School
Costa Mesa National Little
League's Minor B division doesn't
have the mercy rule, but the Marlins
could have ended the game anyway
because of the time limit.
The Diamondbacks, tho home
team, wa.s ahead, 11 -t. and Valdez
gave the go-ahead as hJs quad
went on to lose, 19-1. But, believe It
or not, that was beside the point.
•(The decision wu) for th k:Jds to
gel more practice," Valdez said. •A
),
MINOR B
lot of them did learn from it. We
showed improvement and that's
what we look for.•
In the bottom of the lifth and final
inning, Jesse Fox, of the Diamond-
backs, took off for home on a passed
ball, Marlins catcher Daniel Carter
retrieved the ball and ran al Fox.
The two collided, leaving Carter on
the ground.
The Marlins catcher sat the rest of
the game, but he displayed tough-
ness and a strong des11e by trying to
tag out Fox. Carter also made a sen-
sational catch when he slid to his
knees and extended his glove to
snag a pop fly in tho fourth inning.
Manager Andy Pierce's Dia-
mondbacks had a few highlights of
their own.
The Dlam.ondbacks went through
the maximum 10 batters ln the third
inning, scoring seven runs.
Chase Ham.on. who was walked
to get at>Oard, stole second before
Jeremy Jeranko singled him in to
begin the seven-run spree. Anthony
Israelson smacked a single to left
field which brought in Chris Shelton
and Pox.
Costa Mesa National provides a
rule of a maximum 10 batters in
innings 1 through 3 for the Minor B
dJvislon.
Bryan Guzman scored the Mar-
lins' lone run in the fourth inning
and the Marlins held the Diamond-
backs scoreless in their next at-bat.
Diamondbacks Fox, Daniel
Derteg and Kurtis Dryden scored
three runs each, while Jeranko, Har-
rison, Shelton and Justin Bosecker
tallied two each. Harrison, Shelton
and Fox finished with one RB) each,
while Mike Pierce banged two hits
and scored once.
Pierce pitched two innings, strik-
ing out two. Harrison also went two
lnrung and struck out four, while
Fox fanned three batten 1n his one
inrung of work. ·
DtmaondNcb' pltdaer ...... fin
dellven In • big vtctory s.tanlay.
Doily Pilot
PONY BASEBALL
Dodgers
collect
twice ·
•Following 7-4 win on
March 17 , Dodgers
defeat Orioles, 14-2.
NEWPORT MUSTANG
BEACH-The
Dodgers pulled out two
impressive wins in Newport
}-(arbor Baseball Association
Mustang Division action.
On March 17, the Dodgers
took care of the Cubs, 7-4.
Jeff Prum and Victor Doan
each had two hits and three
RBis, while Chris Griffin
pitched three scorel.~s
innings with seven
strikeouts.
Daniel Norris, Garrett
McRoberts and Max Jollffe
each played solid, all-around
games, while Jett Allee
added an RBI double for the
Dodgers. The Cubs were led
by Ronnie Dunore, who had
two hits and two RBis.
The Dodgers needed only
four innings to defeat the
Orioles, 14-2 on Saturday.
Griffin went 3 for 3 with
five RBls, while Peter
Thom.sen added a double
and three RBls.
Allee, Joliffe, Justin
Cotham and Daniel Norris
each made contributions,
while Frum and McRoberts
each added two hits apiece:.
Calvary Eagles
blank Cd.M Mets
The Corona del
Mar Mets battled PONY
hard, but fell to the Calvary
Eagles. 6-0, Wednesday in
Newport Harbor Baseball
Association Pony Division
action.
Geoff Brand smacked a
three-run double to lead the
Eagles' offense.
The Mets tned to battle
back with key hits Crom
Blake Allred, Blaine Grib-
ble, Steven Hinton, Braden
Ross and Blake Mathews,
but still fell a little short.
NEWPORT BEACH ll
Mariners take
care of Yankees
NEWPORT BEACH -The
Mariners' offense slammed
three home runs to pace a
7·2 win over the Yankees,
Thursday in Newport Beach
Little League AA Division
action.
John Christian had two
home runs and Matt RuJz
added another for the
Mariners, while Alex
MaJnthrow chipped in a
triple.
Ma.mlhrow, Christian and
Doug Watt each pitched well
for the M's, wh.a.le Zac Cabin
and Dylan Salisbury sparked
the defense.
The Yankees were led by
strong hitting and defense
from Max Colvin, Pat
Schoenburg,ChrtsAlvarez
and Cahill Mattel.
NJB HOOPS
Sixth graders reach
the Sweet 16 level
The Newport-Mesa
Nat-Iona! Junior Basketball
sixth grade team posted a
46· 18 win over Irvine,
followed by a 47.39 triumph
over Moren o Valley last
weekend. Newport-Mesa,
14-2 overall and 2-0 in the
playolfs, was led by the
strong offense of Chad
Stassel, Matt Hel.b1cb, Tony
Jones, Westin Dunlap and
Robbie Lusk.
On defense, the locals
were sparked by Nick Jones,
David Holmes and Taylor
Lobdell.
ROUER HOCKEY
Newport wjns
The Newport Harbor club
roller hockey team posted a ,
6-5 win over Mission Vie,o
Wednesday.
Juon Spencer scored
three goal.a to lead Newport, ·
while Guy Vidler, LJ. ·
Rutter and Jeremy Truelove
each added single goal.I.
Newport's defenae wu
anchored by the strong play
ol a-. "-Uy, ... •
aoblMoll,. Ala WI tld• '
andVl...t M..... ' • ..!
I
-
Doily Pilot SPORTS Sunday, Morch 25. 2001 13
COLLEGE SOFTBALL DEEP SEA CREW SUMMARIES
Vanguard drops twinbill with Azusa Pacific SATUltDAY'S
COOHT5 ~UdoCuft<>MNwMI Clifford, Lucas R1d 1nger, Brian Scheele, Bren
W 1nf1eld, Aaron Oousing, Dan Toth, Ryan
COSTA M ESA -Azusa Pao.fie
used nine hits and three Vanguard
University errors to steal Gdme 2
and sweep a doublehedder on the
loser's diamond.
After putting VdnguMd dWdY in
the first gamer, 3-0, on lhe strength
of Rachel Potucek's five-hitter.
Azusa Paciric completed the
shutout day with a 4-0 victory, with
Mandy Dorow spinning a lhree-
hitter.
Gina Llebengood took the las!>
in the opener despite striking out
10 Cougars and allowing bu t three
hits.
G0l.0£fl STATE ArHUnC COHfU£HCI
Game1
AzUSA PAOFIC J, VANGUARD 0
Azusa Pacif ic 010 002 O • 3 3 O
Vanguard 000 000 O O 5 2
Po tucek and Salazar: Ltebengood
and Rolle. W • Potucek, 8-8.
L • Liebengood, 9·6. 3B • Lyttle (AP),
W aleazonia (AP).
Ga111e 2
AzuSA PAOFIC 4, VANGUARD 0
Azusa Pacific 001 020 1 • 4 9 O
Vanguard • 000 000 0 • 0 3 3
Dorow and Salazar; Atchley,
Liebengood (3), Camarillo (7) and Rolle
W -Dorow , 9-3. L ·A tch ley, 4-3
2B -Lyttle.
I
NeWP.Ort Uncling
• 48 ang"ren. 3 boau.
26 c.alko bass, 7 sand
bass, 1 halibut, 47
rodcfish, 20 sculp in,
6 sheephead, 65
whitefish, 48 blue
perch, 22 red snapper,
4 sole.
Davey's Locker •
70 anglers, 2 boats.
175 bonito, 16 sand
_,, bass, 7 calico bass.
22 rockflsh, 24
sculpln, 105 Spanish
jade, 140 whitefish,
7 sheephead, 6 blue
perch.
I
Women's varsity eight A 1. USO, 6:56 6,
2. UCI, 7:02.6; 3 OCC. 7:03A (Meg.an Nichols, Sarah
Daum. Jesska Griffin, Christina Kou. M alin
Gustavsson, Nikki Koning, Brooke Alb1st on, Lot
Keijzer, Jenna Du Bois)
Women's novice eight A · 1, UCI. 7:08 6, 2. OCC
(Jennifer Vigneault, Candice Collings, Tawny Hams,
Amber Excell, Eve Van der Tak, Kathleen M achado,
Joanna Scavo, M ichele Hensley, Colby Dyer) 7 10.7,
3. USO. 7:12.7.
Women's novice eight 8 · 1. OCC (M arfoes Van
der M~r. Marla Tjellesen, Colleen Purdy, Emily
Whit comb, Nicole Swaggerty, Kristen Steven, Jenny
Hasty, Jessica Mc~onnell, Maalke Zeguers). 7:35.2.
2. UCI, 7:50.1; 3. UCI, 7:58.4. • •
Men's varsity eight · 1. OCC (Chris Kolstad, Btll
David son. Sam Yost), 6:07. l; 2 SOSU, 6·13 2, 3. USO.
6 18.0
Men's junior vanity eight • 1 OCC (Joseph
Thomas, Leo Shook, Seth Scartacc1nl, Matt
Htetbnnk, Ethan Zot ov1ch, G1nts Salaks, Sutn
Hoppe, Alan Twigg, Todd Sakarla, David Tso),
6 24.5, 2. SDSU, 6:34.4; 3 UCI, 6:S6.2
Men's novic. eight A • 1. OCC (M ichael Hard,
James Holmstrom, Joey Flndmore, Steve W ukawitz.
Chris Pope, Brian Sweet. Oscar Correa. Stuart Blair,
Raylan W iiiis), 6:19.9; 2. USO, 6:30.9; 3. Chapman.
6:35.7.
Men's novice eight 8 · 1. QCC (Ala~ Lovegreen,
Ph1ll1p Gerk, M ike Krueger, Frank Brannen, .Louis
Van der Westhvlten, Garet Lar:iingham, Chris
Bonnaud. M icah Ro-usset. Kristal Maw), 6·40.9;
2 UCLA, 7:14.2.
"
Index
•'=· -·----How to Plaee 1'
~D'IEIA.D
Polley
I< •h • .,11,f .t.1.1dl11u .... 111 •1tl•1n t I••• ll•up,. .. 1tl11u1f ltttll• • I h"
puhlhJ..-1 t .._,,, tl1 .. lt~ftl 1•1 tf""lf<oOf ,-,., ,_.,..,," f.,..\~fi' 1•1 ,,.,,,....., flll\
• Lt••ill• .t uh' t ft"' uwtlt 1•i.-., .... lf"I"•" •HI\ •·rrut tl1ttt JtLt\ 11• 111 \ lflll
I w~ll ~NOTUSll ~"°~l
Fictitious Bu1lne11
Name Statement
The following persons
are doing business as
a) MlMIA. b) Mufti level
Mat1tet1no tn1ernat10nal
As110C1ati00, 119 Stan·
IOfd Ct Irvine CA
92612 Dons Wood. 119 Stan
lord Ct. Irvine. CA
9261 2
This business 1s con
duc:tld by an 1nd1111dual
Have you started
doing business ye!?
Yes. 1985
Doris Wood
Th11 statement was
hied with the County
Clerlt ot Orange County
on 02/0912001 20018854924
Daily Pilot Mar 11. t 8,
25. AD'· t, 2001 SuQQt
PUBLIC NOTICE
CITY OF
COSTA MESA
PUBLIC HEARING
AND
COMMENCEMENT
OF 30-0AY FOR
PUBLIC COMMENT
PERIOD
SUBMISSION OF
2001·2002 ACTION
PLAN ANO
AMENDMENT TO
2000-2001 ACTION
PLAN
Nolice IS hefeby given
that the City of Cos1a
Men Cny Council will
hold pubhc hearings lo
discuse two documenll
related 10 the 2000-2005
Consohdatoo Plan The
Consolidated Plan ts a
tlve·year atra1egic plan
lhat 1den1thes housing
and communuy needs,
atrateglu to address
needs, and programs/re·
sources to address
lhese needs. The two
documents subject lo
this nohce are 1) Thi!
City'• proposed Con·
lolidalud Plan One· Y ea1
A ell on Pla n tor
2001·2002, 2) Subs1an· hat amendment to lhe
~ 2000·2001 Con· led Plan One-Year
Acuon Plan The draft
2001·2002 Ac11on P(an
delineates propostd
1e11vttlH to be funded
under the U.S Depan·
men1 ol Houulg and Ur
ban Devetopm1nt's
(HUD) Communoy De·
velopment Block Gran1 (C09G), and HOME 1n-
1111tment Pann91sh1p1
Ad (HOME) programs
The 2000·200\ Action
Ptan1 wes &ddpled by lhe Costa Mesa City
Council on Apnl 11
lunds trom HUD As re-
quired by lederal re9u·
lahol'lS. a 30-day pubhc
comment per.O<I w~I be
on•hateo to receive wtol·
Ian commen~ regard.ng
1he proposed use ol
lh&se lund$ as outlme<I
tn the Action Plan Proposed uses ot
200 I ·2002 CDBG and
HOME Funds include
Ille toUowmg
• Special h0us1ng coe1e
entoicomen1 act1>11hes to
ensure the maintenance of deceni !Mlle and :.ano-
tary housmg S 172 550
• public services tor
lower income youths
•emors, pe11ons aH11k
of becoming homeless,
"bersons already home·
lass and tow-income
persons 1n general
$214 050 • Pubhc fae1tny improve
ments (various slreeli
bus slO!J improvements
and Joann1M1ner at
leyways) $1 280.010
• Prog<om odmm•strahon
(CDeG and HOME Pro-
grams 1ndud1ng Fe11
Housing Counsehngl
$352 600
• Attordabte housing
pro1ec1 1tnctud1ng funds tor Community Hous•ng
Developmenl Orgamza·
lion pro1ecbl $413.040 • Neighbors FOf Neogh-
bc>n Progiam $94 340
• Smgle tam11y hOuStng
11hab1t11a11on loans·
granlJ 1nclud1ng pro·
gr em aam1nis1retoon
(loanSIGrants tunded
w11h pnor year tun0s1
$191 760
Add•honally 1he Coty ot
Cos1a Mesa end 01 the
Costa Mesa Reoevelop-
me n1 Agency will
pro111de ra&aurces for
the following programs
In support of the 2001 ·
2002 Action Plan. • Rehabd1tal10n of ren1al
properties to expand tno
supply of atlordabte
housing
• Aehab1111a1ton/Con·
structlon ot new own-
8flh1p housing w11h Hab-
1181 FOf Humanoty
• FirSI lime nomebuyer
down payment as
Slstance t01 low· and
'"odera1e·11)(ome per·
1on5
Mor1g1ge credit
certohcete program to
HSISI moderate·1ncome
forSI lime homebuyers
Substantial Amend·
ment 2000-200 I Act1011
Plan
As required by ledelal
program regutauons and
Ille C1ty·s Citizen Part1C1-
pa11on Plan a 30·day
commen1 period wilt be
held to obtain public
Plan tor comments for tha j)roposed rev!Slon to the
2000
Action
2001 ·2002 City's 2000·2001 Action The City ot Coata Plan Tha Ct1y wlll
Men Is eligible to re· amtnd us 2000·2001
ct lve $1,427,000 In ,ActlOll Plan to reallocate
COBO lunds and 'HOME funds trom Muh1·
$672,000 In HOME Family Housing Do·
vetopmenl I Aeh1blllta·
f'JJ}J. •• , J,11, nii tton actMllH to Single "H(luuvt~1CIW' Family Homeowner1fllp
•••hi•,,/. Acqulalllon I Rahablhta· II/) 1(1Uf{41r• 1 lion A tOlel of $625,000
lll«e~Jlowa1.
CONROY'S
fl OWERS
2983 Hubor Blvd.
lliot....o1Hlltlor t ... 1 4.540.3115
LOCAL
PIERCE .....
IEUIMADWAY
Mortuary * Chapel
Cremation
110 Broadway
Costa Mesa 2·9
, .. "••I
A mcmmiol ~1vlcc will be
held on March 10 ot
Oranec Co;1 .. 1 College.
Capuln's toble 111 3:00 pm
for Joyce Kai Mott, age 49,
who pa,lK'd oway January
"· 2001 Remembrances
c.n be made to the Joyce
Kai Mou Sc~h1p Fund •Oran• Couc ColleJc,
2701 Fai~ICW Rd. C06tl
Mela. CA 92626
1n HOME lundS will be
u11hzed 10 support the
ilCQulS•llon and re
halltHtation projeCI 10 be
ul'ldertal<en by Humanity
Housing a d1vrs1on of
Hab11a1 For Humanay
Orange County
30-0ay Pubhc Com
men1 Penod
A 30·day publ•c com
ment pe11od for bolh
these achons will com·
mence March 26 2001
and will end Apnl 25
2001 Tne draft
2001 ·2002 Aclron Plan
os curren1ly evaolable !or
public review at tho Costa Mesa Housing
and Community De·
velopment Department,
77 Feor Duve. Cos1a
Mesa · CA Fiflh FIOOf
lntormation regarding
the proposed amend·
menl to tne 2000·2001
Action Plan 1s available
at the same location
Wnnen commenls for
bolh acllons mus1 be
submitted to the Hous·
ing and Commonoiy De·
velopmenl Department
no laler than 5 00 PM
Apnl 25. 2001 Wnnen
comments should be ad·
dressed 10 Mike l.lnares
COBO HOME Coordt·
na101 at n Fa•r Orrve
COSla Mesa CA 92628
Pubhc Heanngs
Pubhc 11eanngs 10 re·
view 1hese sepora1e ac·
loons w.tl be hekl ill 6 30
PM or ~ thereaher
Apnl 16 200 I on the
Cny Council Chambe1s
al Costa Mesa C11y Hall
77 Faor Drrve, Cos1a
Mesa CA At this ttme
and place any and all
persons 1nteres1ed may
appear and be heard
lhereon
For run11er inlorma·
1oon. con1act Muriel Ult·
man. Neighborhood Im-
provement Manager.
(7 t4) 754·5635
Published Newport
Beach·Cos1a Mesa
Dally Polo! March 25
2001
Su002
Gt EOIJ•l KCI.• NG
OPPORTUNllY
All ml estate lldVUl•SllJO
in tills ~ts subject
lo tht itc1eral fair llOU\lng
Ac1 or 1968 H amended
whoch mattes 11 111~1 to advertise •.ny p11fa11nc:1
111111utoon or d1scnm1na11on b;astd on rxa color rthO·
ion Ht tunchcap l.lm11ia1
statin 01 ~llONI oog1n or
an 1ntent1on lo make any
auch prelettnce hm11.lt1on
or dlSCOmllli bon • lhls newspaper Wiii not
kno11r1ngty accept any
adver11sement tor rul
estate which IS 1n lllOl.llton
of the law Our reade1~ are
hereby Informed lllat all
dwtlilnos advertlsell 1n this
ntwSpaptr are available on
an equal CJl)portunity ~
To comr1laln ol d1striml·
NIJOl'f, cal HUD loft ftff al
1aoo ... m8590
ON£ STOP HOMf. BUYI ·c
SlJPrRSTORE
!l-¥WOl~~
IOOi'.i ~ ~ lp.n
Frr:e~Fltt
C1'dl ~ Fttt ~ ~epo list VA I. FK-\
14tlCOmt NI lit~
f'dm! Cit kx"1
fJ 141 SMIOO 24 lrs
~~It
EMAIL w~com
By _........ Ry Malllln t•••rMtnu
ft, .. t,, h .. L .... 1(.1-H ,\ tO \\;•,.t It." ~ttt·t·I
• 1,, ... ,1, •I ·••I urnu•··l.~1 ... h ff,,. I )011, P1l11t 11~ i .,.,,,~ uu l1olul1f\ f111 uU\
• I t•1t UI ,10 11 hf i ta •I HI• itl l1rr YI. fll• fl 1t UUI\ lw I t""•j~~1•1l1lt• I \1 t pl f._t
th• • ••"'' •t 1111 'I"'', It• 111.1lh '"", u111~d l·1io tlu·-• 1 n11 { r,.f11t '011 HT'h f •r
.Iii." •·•I '"' ti•' 1r-·• ... ,... 111 .. u
1•11,1 11 .. t11• .. \Utfl IUllll> •11tl '.ll•llf \I, .. ,. ( \ llJ112-
\1 '' ,,, ,,, tu .. 1" H"....,
...-----Deadlines -----..
... ~oijil Hlllllllo I Jllll •I U • olll \tlll
.,. .. ~ •lllt ft'''" .. , ....... 1\1•11111,., •.. I 11d1n -d•Opru h i•!," . 11111,....111~ :l:OOp111
.. ~ nolu) '\:llOpro
..... .F~uln, :>:OOp111
lu•·"'d"' \l.,111LH :-~·OOp111 !'°"ultudu, ••r•• 1, l..-pl1·••11 U $01110-·, uOp111
\l,.,.,i,.,, lu.t-n
\\,,fL. lo H \U1111t , tll~l''u
\t ...-l..e. I rnt.1
\\, d1u· ... d.11io l'th· ... d1t\ ~l lHfptn .._.uudu,
111111 .. 1." \\o .. lro•·~d," 1:1l0pr11
HOUSESICONOOS FOR SALE GENERAL
HOMES OF
THE WEEK
Showca11
HomH
For Sitt
In our Sat
A.a Eatate
SUppllment I
Dtlplly Adi
Stitt It $85.
Deadline
Tutldly 5PM
Alto ...
Open tfouM
Ulttngl Avt.
Dtadllnt
Wtdntlday
5PM It,.,.'° AdvtrtlM
In the a.t LOCAL
111111 E-. .......
Cll T~ II LISA
RIVERA
949-574-4252 ANNE
WILLEY
949-57~U9
SPECIAL FREE REPORT
How lo buy your llrat
homt ... Tht Euy W1yt
AllOld 1118 10 mc»t oorrrnon.
paontUI, lrustraono m1$1llkts
ot the fl11t 11m1 horn•
buyers• Stop paying rent
toiever get ywr lree report
sent to you today' Catt 1 800-213-5914 Ex1 781
anytime 24 holJl1 a day
CaM "°"' and get ywr FREE copy' This tt a ncH:lbltganon
commun.ty 541MC8
1·::MI
OPEN SUN 1~
100 l 202 RUBY Avt
38t • lom'rll din rm or
olhc• ne" carpe~'!looring
$1150.000 Lora Vence
R&1!tot 949~73-4()62
OPEN SUN
12-4
325 POPPY
•Br 3 5Ba. family nn.
1 112 '*>cks to
ll!de Colone 8eacl1
$1 565 000
Jtm & Pally McDonald
COM Homts
949-759·9070
1 02~1
ONE FORO ROAD
By Owner 48r 481 downstairs denlolc. BHU
upgrldtd gourmet kit.,
A· • Loe. S 1,389,000
By !fll)t: tt•212·10t3
BIG CANYON Open Sa1/Sun 1 ...
4 HtnMage Lani.
5Br/4.58a. I.Story on ove1
t 3.000SI l ot.
Huge txpaMion poltnllal
SI ,375.000.
102 APTS 102 APTS 1102 Alma~ 11102 ~~1 ALISO VIEJO ALISO VIEJO
Very Best Value . Aliso Vieio 1n
f7he
co'"', ... ·ee uJhat,9ot1 tJe 6ee,1 nu;ttwtif9· ..
JASMINE CREEK Lighl & By Owner 94•371>-mg bnghl end 111111 2Br 288 • Coultny to Brolttr
Choose from 3 beautiful locations including St. Moritz, Barcelona
and Innsbruck. Largest square footage in Aliso Viejo. Spacious one
bdrms, two and three bdrm twnhomes w/attached garages. den. $610,000 C<Hisllld by ---=-U.=tad~ln"-M""l::.:::S'----
81111 Shan Ten Eye' ED VAN OEN BOSSCHE
949·380·9492 & M1ury REAL ESTATE BROKER
Stat1lf11r 949-613·5354 LOCAL SINCE 1970 • Gated Communities I "~I
f rom '2&9,900. Pnvate
Enclave ol 17 Homes Only
7 leh' Two-Sty 3-Brs 2 •l ea 2c '" gat Up to 1 505 Sq Fl ~ to Newpolt
Beach & T Nngle Square
949·J~14AO
NEW HOMES
From $269,900
Adjac.nt to Newport
Beach & Triangle
Square. 949-650-1440
PRIME ESTATES
Lots I Ocean Views!
C.11 Patrick Tenor•
Agent 949-85&-9705
38r dtN41h 81, 2111
Fp Pergo hardwood lloo.'s
ceramtc Ille In k1!Chen
dining & blths new tllllnot
& 1n1eroor paint 2car 981
$469.000 Ron Bayshore
Eatates 9•9-548-2445
PRIME ESTATES
Lot• & Ocean Viewsl
Call Patrick Tenore
Agent 949-856·9705
OPEN SUN 12-4
457 C:O.ta ..... St
5 br, 4b&. study, ltmrm, 2
lrplca, lg 1111tr sultt, tac
lllb. By Olo!ntf sns.ooo 14~24141
OPEN EVERYOAY 11>-3
411 E11TH ST
E Ude lbf, 2be, nr IChll.
t*I B';"Jwl~
949·650·0943 www.newportmeaa
homes.com
* LIDO SANOS * 2Bt 2Ba, Fp ~g baQt:yald
A cllatmlng prl\lall beaCll
c:omlTUllty Sleps 10 the
ocean pvt streel parl11ng
•Full Size Washer/Dryer Hook Ups
• Wood Burning Fireplaces
• Over 100,000 Square Feet of Fitness Facilities
• On-Site Fitness Director and Activities Director
comm ~ pool. play area
landscaped Es11 ada
Ollwed It 525,000. Owrrlf/
Ap t 141-63 H 038
~ ., $159,tOD
ac-i Vilw C«ldo. ~
lo SMt6New U.till{I 2·5/y
2Br 2''2 Ba plts lul o/fa
Call Now St. M oritz
Barcelo na
Innsbruck
949-362-6000
949-362-7000
949-362-7600
~ 'Wi"»d '"" -lllfWS lrom Liv Rm D«AJ
~ ollls • IT8ll bNdr
retrearr Real Esllle
Brobt!!Qe 714-412·8955
155 HOUSESICOHOOS FOA RENT BALBOA PEHH
lmm1cul1t1 2Br 2.5Bt Condo upgraded k11chen
CQIT1Jle1e wfneN cabol'lelS &
Flllf"Ch IJmeslone counters Fp c;i111 ceils 111 IMlg rm
Otrllng 2Br 1 B• upp< r
ne"1y remodeled dee~ Ing 4Br 2Ma """' custom ~
W D utls paid S 1700 Mo ,reps to SJnd fJC " d ~P
949-644·6996 or 602·5605 2 pvt patios " "' 3c ga1
Rtductd lo $345,000
Coastltne ANlly
949·759·0177
38tdroom 28alh S732,000 ~ Harbor Vtew Home
wtll ma1n1ained 1 s1ory
agts Shan Ten Eyck 0
949·380·9492 or
949-887·0512 & Maury
Stauher 949-673·5354
18r IBt Ocunsldt of
PCH w d 1l Ulll. pard incl$
cable. cute pa100 oar11ge
$1425/Mo 949·650-6502
110 APTS COSTA MESA
$3200 xttt 949-642-0668
Call Classified Today
(949) 642·5678
110 APTS
COSTA MESA
OPEN SAT·SUH 1.S COSTA MESA I SOUTH COAST METRO
:IG~N
fapanded Slllll ~ ~
4ba lg tanvm gout lulctle<1
3 car !Iii''? S1375 000 Elhe4 Kta...u 949-6"~321
Charmong J"11111 1 Bedroom and 2 Bedroom , Bal!l
~ by tennos pool n Qa!ud ~v
Call 714-557-0075
949«451·1207
E Slclt Blct1 Bly LIV 28'
upper •nc:lla bale ~Piii
S9S~mo 329 un. ... rs.1y
Uni E Cal 949 S74-203 I
ELEGANT SENIOR UVWO
Efl/OY a sp«:IOUI IUlll
eroert1111m111/ cralf1 lun
ITp /l'll1ISPOfl,IOOll, "'°"' COSTA NEUPORTE'
949-646-6300
mnmum !SI! 58
•BAYRIOGE BEAUTY•
2br 2ba, '-· 1tt. gar,
tlOOf tllowance , 1111td
comm, pool, 19H-S374K °"'1 Sii.sun 1-4 E'Slde-Baclt B1y 1Br w1
Ag1 ,.11-m-m s gar gated ciomm. POOi spa
Ull nTl "'1 mt IO 9adt Bay
S2&o,000 LH no pets, S925-$965 CaM
S.yfront Condo 2Br 7f4·54&-9860
281. welt llet boat dock EASTSIOE BACK 8A Y
Spectacular Vltw. Pepperwood Apt• 28drm
BRAND NEW E Side,
3br 2.Sba home,
b1cky1rd, encl o•r
$2800 MM73·5535
Apt Mt-723-8120 IBa, f)ll10/ylfd. new carpi( WID Ilk.. $995/Mo P11mt Mobile Home Plfk
OCEANFRONT HO PETS ...... H31-7113 Cozy 2811 trlWI trtlltf na
CNnNng c., Cod on 3 trs lol 1'°11118 & patl\rng
LOIL 4Car gar, $3,195.000 I I $ S mo 949·619-4~ AQ!!!! M11-m=t120 1• APTI
Cha Prlvat•Old~~wpo11 •WORT IUCtt I 1U • ..,,._I n w.'JM btKf\ l ido lalt Q\li8I tBt ~ .. "*' _ QQQ__ 9411-723=f12Q ttmOdlltd. garage no I*' s 1 ~'mo IJlrllllll lndudld
• 1UMY PATIO • l.8'11 I -...11111 ..... ::.....,,...
GHAT lOCATtOtl =''' .... , .... 11--~
11•-m -1212
3Br 2B1 1824 Vllt llt
pel1ll' hoftrt; upgraded (llHI
IOC 2 car 981 WO hlc·up
52400 Ag! 949-293-4632
VERSAILLES PenlhollM
1Br S1,29S. lllnl Ocetn
View. MuyAnn McGulr1
94WHno Prud Ca Ritt
Gorgeous Custom home
on Sant• Ana strMt In
Newport H.lglrts, 4br 31111,
$4&0Q.lmo. 94H40-3635
Nlwport Sholes 3Br 281
remod ne.., carpel MJl>lr
cfe;in. comm pool tenn.s
malt>le en1ry Fp $2600'Mo 7 t 4-630-t 000 fi06.2927
1202
llottl
MANAGERS
• SPECIALt
$t54 00. tax Wktv l~t prwen1 ll'd Ad) 235 rms & lulcfllfllfts
Stiuatad on beaiJ1Mv F~o:
Lobby/Olltel dial
ph4nes/FrM HBO
ESPN & OlltJPool &
J&OllUI. Guhl llun-
dry CloM IO 405 I SS
FW)'f Min's trom 0 C
Fa1<0fd*, c:o11gt Ind
bdls Wilt.IOI! <Iii
i.nct to sllOpl and
rtstaur anti
COSTA MESA MOTOR INN 2277 ..... ..
l'tlOftol ....... ..
l·-·.3
HP8 shtle 2br 2bl houM. WM Yitiw, ICQllll to pool
2 Pltloe, W/Ol no ~ ilOOlmo Ui-723-1220 ,..
N.BJsllr ga!ed 1>11tAlh.4 IQ
hOnll w prof fem DYi bl(j·
bll w dtO. pool j1C WI{)
p!!Q $750 .. 941-644~7?
N.B.hOorn eYI °'9 Canyon
golf COUfst 3Br TwnNM
located on pool ltlllllS
court. luly 111'!1 8¥111 411
$50C¥mo 71'"'412·1!)!3
FV Oii tJldQ for let 5Q0.1196
st X/t.411e SQ11B11 I 084-0
W1rn11 Al/It 8llOl'1 HI SpMc! tnttmtt 71 4-751-1787
Sub IM 2 l g offlcff. 4
cubcala tnd ~tlll
DSl hi ~ CCJPilf, fp. pooom 949-47•1'137
2 Miii Ollol ....
1063IQ II t 223lq II $2 08 FSG ,_ NNpOfl C..
Alllll !IOI! 1t>t1MI!!
•••••••**************** : SHORES INTERIORS : * •
: LIQUIDA T10N SALE : * • : ~---: ! a: Aftle llllll, :
• 41•0IT IUCll • : CALL ••Bii : ••••••••••••••••••••••• ,
·14 Sunday, Morch ·2s •· 2001 ·
1-: •I
~ 1..a Otlhlle
Mull-Femily SM•
E\lll)ttlg MUii Gol Home
11.m, cl!!!!g. IOO!!!· lllcill
........ ,.
ARE YOU A
ANIMAL LOVER?
Ht<e's 1 Jlfnl ••y to IX·
Pl'" ft! Spcnllor • pet on ~-~' • our Jpeelal "Luv·n-Pett Savt 1 Ltte" !!'~ OI).
Matd1 28. 2001 'OrllY $19
Moving We s.t.. Yl4 SOUTH cgAsT' This tpeCial pege has Nved
153 aur.1 Bly Ln C:0.11 AUCTJ N hundfeds of kves afl OYtr
Miu. Mpm, nw Miii & 2202 le. .._ It. !ht stale. lhril IO people
c...... e~ must 00, like youl For dNAs call ~· ..,,um.. a....A...CU20701 Mena O MM74 .. 271
I -Al -c..o .'M ••••••••••••
1·-=11--1 r--r-=I
WOlR' TAHNHO HOS Refrlterltor $115 • •
TAN AT HOME I WllhlflDryw, S1.W..
PJ.ff DIRECT ANO SAVEi EXCELUHT COMOITJONI
~Free Into CO>ST COIN HEEDS Earn Ontfoe Income! OLD COIHSJ Gold lllYer, $2000-$5000 month •
jewelry. watches, M(jquet www.MCrell2tblt.com COMMERCIAUHOME .. ._..6-5841
Intl '"'"' $199 00 Low Monhy P1ymen1
FREE Colet C.lllOO
Cel 1·800-711-0158
WWW np elSlln com
SELL
your home
through ciass1tied
colle4*>les 949-642·944 7
Clll Clmlflld Todly
949) 642-5871
Avlll't El Rtnchlto H.I .
.... Sllwn & Blrwders
experience pre(d Cal Mw Toby 11 71 .......
Reliable ' -getic ..... person needed lot "°"""" boullqUe N1 Fu/11on llland Pleea• can or ru reeumt
949-640-7300 9(64().7383
DEMONSTRATORS PIT 111
groctl)' slOret in your area,
1111ek·end days, $7 50 per hour to stall 7t4-nt.6577 ~.;..:+~.;;::.Jl!!I -~:+.;;;.+:::-fl ()( 949-642-4283
FROHT DESK PT/FT
Will trllin TRAVEL LOQGE
1951 NtwpOll Blvd. Coeta
Mesa, "'*t In p!!!O!I
Front Office A11l111nt
Wed·Sun dly5 lvellillQI and holodays Must hive
~~ Fl.lretumt to Ctlns 949-673-8937 Of
call 949-673·35t5
..
PERll.Pfr RECE~ST
Mon·Wfd.Fn , aa.ep, entry
tevel l)Ollllon, wih lralo,
mull be rtlilbte and have 1
protesslonal appterarice.
C.M 714-979-1811
PT SECRETARY ntedl<I
lot H hout1 per week,
~ e..y wont r•l1 pey Call Mt 1•0431
Slloe WMfANt .... ~ Slloe Store N1_wport BHCll, FT.
Sllaly ntgOdable Fu
,_ lo M•240-682t
The """°" 9Nc:h Co11ntry Cl11b 11
ICC9PIWl!I '"""* lor • BatlQUll ~/Clellcal support 1ts1111nl IO
Food and Stvtrage
Olrector Candidate
mus1 have r~ltd ticp
preferably In hoe!il· 1alityfcoun1ry club• Computer ftteracy tn
MtCrOeOlt Office '17 lllj)
req'd. Pltue lax resumo. IM9-&42-0205
PINN be -11111 ttlt llatlnge In tlll1
C*legOly !Illy require
y~ 10 cell 1 900
number In which
there II 1 dluve 1111 mlnu11.
Helllttl Care • Front Office FT/PT: Ellltlustas!IC
aetl-moliValed & well groomed person who lhl!Yet on
!flt challenge oi being pall of a rllldr exP<tnelino
lnn0va1MI health care olfooe Must have greal P90l>lt
1k1Us, ens111er phones, type, schedule appointments
end be t 00% prolesslOMI Compe11ttv1 wage DOE
Call 949·S00-5139. Of 18ll resume 949-673-6937
STEADY: WORK ·
CLOSE -10. HOME
CNA's, CHHA, Homemakers to
assist elderly in their homes. As
much or as l ittle w ork as you
prefer. Car a plus. Weekly pay.
Call AHHNA
562·437·5773
PINN be wtty of out of .,.. COlllpMlee.
Checa with .. local
8ttltr ButlMM Bu-
,_, belote l'O'I Mnd
any m_., Of feel
for Mrvlces. RNCI
end undtrettncl eny
contnlcta belote you
1lgn.
c:>oily Pilot
TtSTVOUR PLAY
North·Soulh vulnmlble. North du1s.
WF...'>'T
• 873
':J 9541
NORTH
• K4l
Q QJ 10
o AK62
•965
0 Q J 10 9
•JJ
EAST
•Vold .,K8763
0 8754
• K Q 101 SOUTH
•AQJ I0965
?A
I) .l
• A874
Opcrung lead· Queen of o
Study all four hands carefully.
How would you go abool dcclanng ~ix sp!ldcs after the lead of the queen
of diamonds?
In the modem style. Sooth's Jump to rwo spades ,howcd ellher a long,
-.c:lf-surr'icicnt ~ult or a strOlli Iii for
pnnncr's \Uit -the fact thal Soulh
held a second suit is no dctcrrcnl to
jwnp shining with such a good suiL
After North raised. South ~tlcd in
·~ ~ Oil leamlJl& I kJn& Wiii m1 ma West made the oorrnlll Iced o( the
queen of dJamonda, ~rtlOVIJll 1 key
enll)' before 11 could be put to u'IC.
After any other lelld, dcdan:r could
win, cash the ace of hcalU and then
draw three rounds of uumps, ending
in dummy. A ~ucccssful l'\lffing
finesse for the lung of hearts pc""lt~
declarer 10 discard rwo clubll on a
hi&h hcan and a high diamond, usina
a nigh diamond u an cnuy. llnd so
IO$ina only one club trick.
Unforturullely, lhe spade spo15 an: su~'h tl'lal !hey do not fumhh an cxlla
cnuy 10 lhe table. Can declarer recov·
er from lhiB iniual blow? Unless lhe distribullon ls really
unlond. the contract 1 si ill assured.
After winning lhc fin;t tric~ with the
king of dwnonds. declarer must con·
linue wilh the tee of diarnoods and
jcruson lhe ace of hcaru frun hand. Now decl111!1' can take adv111111ae of
being on the bollrd 10 le.ii lhc queen
of hearts for • ruff1111 finesse. SUICe
dcclllm" can continue with the jack if
Eas1 does not cover. East rrughl a
wcU put up the kin&. Declarer ruffs,
draws trumps 1n thRlC round\ ending
in dummy. !hen discatdi two clubs on
the jack and ien of hcans. Oeclllm"
then happily concedes a club to rack
up a vulnerable small ~lam.
Noce that, if the ruffing fincs-;e m
hcans l~s. the slam 1s lillll secure. Declarer lose~ a hc:al1 tnc:k. bul no
club.
We'll help you write
· a good ad!
just call us and we'll make it easy for you!
D
Qassified
(949) 642-5678
~HOME, HEALTH AND BuSINESS -¥
tor all xour needs.... ~
1:.-~l l210===l l214 =ml IT.==11·· ·=I Im =.: 11•~11 ... • __ 1GUTT1D_.,_-_
0
... __ I
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IAMES MAllAI rv
f k:cn~ Preraru
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',£ RVE ', ;<Ju Rlf,HT
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Cl EArlltiG
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f ~ W I ,
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Truck MolJnteo Equ•pmenl
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Strvrnq OC lo1 I 0 Y1111
Pl.Ill FREE
Du9oln Tm.Oii WWI GUAN>
• W:18tlftJ. I DllRI== 11 _ • __ C!RAMtC __ TI_LE_I
FARTHING IHTERIORS CUSTOM CREATIVE TILE
Kllct*1 I Baltt I Ramodtl lnstalatlons alalt. ceramc. ~ Room ~ matblt stone Etttb 111s
ll560875 94~S.9325 11120t4 Jeff 714-412-9911
/~.It BLAIN , r '. 1 j; 1 c 11\r1 < 1 • • , r-krUMJlll c.-,..
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STAil LIClN$Ell 1$1 I J1f
71 8 2-22
COM PUTER
HELP!
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UC e.rtaley G ...... lt 11 Y11 ~ltt (llJ
t 4-61 -6
COMPUTER 4SSISTANCE 0 y<xK pace 6 your homt
or ole lncllvOJal Coaching •
ln11m11, Praor1m tllllalll·
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IT SHOULD BE FUN
DRYWALL SERVICES
WITTHOEFT DRYWALL
All i>/llaelfsmallf\.rg jobl
CLEAN! 2<¥s. tail free 111 Lt400030 714-Qt-1447
Drywell, Ha ng, Tapt
THU<e, Pttcllff, Small
Job ~ltlllt. NNt •
aetnl 11111.t MMSl-6573
YARD Cl.fAH.UP
T rt1 trimm•ne hedges
pelmlr ... ~.~. °'* lawn 71...,..1130
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Bathroom • Repairs
Call the leader
in So. California
k• Estmal• lid 577911
Cl COITllC1IOl IO.
949•137•5642
AHO PAIR
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• Restoration • Bodv
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~11-~1 SEMI RETIRED
CONTRACTOR
2046 Puw:ENTlA Aw., (949) 548-0670
Bridl Blodl Stone T1le
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tl!!) Teny 714-557-7594
IATIW 1 .. 1 _-__ CEAAllC __ TIL_E~I ~F=ll~~
--epoxy ftoort by P9rme-fleJ HQMEflair LEAKY St!owe Repaired WlletJHoollng Sy1tem1
' ~ g lflllallllion .. 9-723-1174
&uhNtb &,.luin1, OUN Till 94H7HOS5,
Regla1e/ReTurb"h 714-841-8$28 LEWIS COHSTAUCTION
Remodeltno * Hencttmen Porcelain • Flbt.>tl!ld~\
Sinks • Shower\
CouniNi
949-645-7723 I I Uc>t 704773 LOClll Reel<*! 2:AI~ 114·557-5925
SMALL J08 EXPER'Tl
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LOCll/Ouiclc rtll>OflM
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L'V5870 94~7042
REPAIRS • PAINT LICENSED COHTRACTOR 1iotM tmprovemeflls end
No jOb too am ~ ltlVlcell mor• Small jobe ok 2<¥s :::"~~ txp G!!(Y !MH4S.52n
CHARTER ELECTRICAL ~ • Rtmodt4a • New Conttructlon • Slnae 1987
Uc #51629! 714:!0W91
A to Z Home l~ementa Repetre. Electrlctl and PUnblnD Ucfl650524. Cell 114·289·7115 or
H t 241-801 I. • • T. W. WllldNp COllor'ttl
... -----. ....,_ ~ .,. L Oualky Coocrtle Wollt 1-11!!1 QQ••-1 .. BJm' ~ .. -;_--~,::. ~t4-~23 Eitp -.-.> iiii :~:~SllA,;, 12 Y11rt E1p. Olficee ~ -~-.......-......... ---=--.r ., ______ ,._ rM YOUR HAHOYMANI
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1
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~ .......... ....,...,,,... I YllllJ _1 .. _-_._ .. _1
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Formally lralntd, vu l
~ ... lloln. , ...
fl!! Jpt ZtHrt1HO
MIC TO 11tl DUMPlll 714-.... 1112
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Fding Sy11em Sit Up? Oo ii nowt 94H§l=3310
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1-=ti
PUBLIC
NOTICE
The Cahl PvbltC·
Utlht1es Com·
mission REQUIRES
that a• used house-hold goods movers
pnnt their P.U.C
Cal T numbef. hmos
and chautters pnot
ttielr T.C.P number
1n an advertlsments.
If you have a ques·
1ion about the 18j181·
ity of a m6vef. hmo
Of chautter. call:
PUBLIC UTILITIES
COMMISION
71<1·558·4151
PW I
C-(JAST l'AINTIN(,
........ ., ... ~ ..
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18 Yra Expenenc;e, Ouelly U687398 714-9fi.1090
~
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714-751-8846 .... .,,_ ._...
WATF.RPROOF
ROOf'ING
EXPERT T\ITOAIHQ
Or1d11 a.12, Coll•v•.
Home Sdlool. The Ltlllli1g Curve MM7'-1111
1--·1
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714-M4-3509 Pool .... WMIOy ..,.. t· _____ ... • TOP QUALITY * & tepliltM! flllela, VtfY Comptllltve helllfl, & tltclllc
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CHUNG'S PAINTIMO
27 v .... ~. 01111 Ptlot!
GulrllQe WOik • Free Ell
l•37§e()2 71 ... 538::1534
IKE'8 CUITOll PAINTINQ
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NOTHING •
Clll the
Cllulfledl
(949)
842-5878
~
Doily Pilot
Have A
Gara_ge Sale!
Call the Pilat
Classifieds
at C949J 642·5678
ta Place Your
Garage Sale Ad!
1"-=1
LOANS LOAHI LOANS NMd Monty lo 8on'ow?1
GoocWadlNo Ctd Weloomed Cd Toi FrM 88Hft8408
1 -~1
8llW ml ...
w,.-••. --(22165/Al1204) $21,ICll
South Coast Toyoll
949-722·2000
8ulcll P"1I Avt '95 Whit•. tan ltllhtf. Idol (646485) $9. 988
NABERS
(714)540·9100
CADILLAC CATERA 'ti
LO# nl, bladt Ian leather
(000823) $14,988
NABERS (714)540·9100
C.cfllllc Concoura 95
Glay. ltalhet tW c:ond (298450) s 14,988
NABERS (714)5-40-9100
CADILLAC O£VlUE '97
wt.ie. Ian ""'" V8. (~ $21,988 NABERS
(714)540·9100
CADILLAC Eldondo '95
Low lri, alloys. moonrool
(61"82) St9.988
NABERS
(7141M0-9100
CADIUAC Eldoreclo '95 Tour. low ml, moonrool.
(&1"82) $19,988
NABERS
(714)54H100
CADU.AC Eldondo 't7
Biie*. '°"' Nolhlar. mnrl (607596) $24.988
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Cadllllc Stvltlt STS 't5
low !Nies V8 Narlh5l.lr
(824649) 516,988
NABERS (714)M0•9100
TODAY'S SUNDAY PUZZLE
ACROSS
1 Quick summary
6 Small QIJatrel
11 Bubbly beverage
15Keeps
20 Love alfwr
21 Uoonce-l1ke
navoong
22 L•ke cll11dren·s
notebooks
23 Frsh basket
24 Beatie Starr
25 Retaliate tr\ k1ncj
28 North Woods
animal
29 Dull photo finish
31 -Seas
32 Exc8SS1vely
33 Casserole cover
34 T aJ\e a break
36Swerves
38Hawks
40 Mrxea a salad
42 Scen1s
44 Docks
46 Florida town
48 North Stai
51 Fangued
52 Manhandle
53 Butte s cousin
57 Entertained
58 Me>OCan )umping -
59Force
61 Humorist
62Trouse<s
63Takes lull
advantage of
&4 Fence opening
65 Dunne or Castle
67 Director Lee
68Reeka
70Heeped
71 Actof Clooney
72 In -of repl1e1ng
74 Night bm1s
75Roams
76Cooect n -ones time warts
79 Diamond comers
'
80 Wagon pert
81 Made up (for)
83Rouled
84Coves
85 Con.wet a cobweb
89Waehes
90 an. -panlal
91 Btzet opera
93 Make a ~-ooe
94 Vanegated stone
95Spen1
96 Augusta's atala
97 Davl8 of "Oo the
Right Thing•
99 EX181ed
100 Molded
103 Couner and
Palauno
104 Sulked
105Sow
t07 Ftnlthed
108 Tiny amounts
109 Woodwortere
deVices
110 Nobelist Sadat
112 Thm porridge
113 Maeay placee
114 Did studio work
117Gnll
119 lronflsted
121 Big Foot's OOU9ll"I
125 Mldw~ ld'I
126"My Ger-·
128 Church aectJon1
130 Exclusive bunch
132 Popular vehicle
133 Oppoeite of
25 Acroea
137 Bak91Y lure
139 Aclor Flym
140 Sign of the Ram
141 l.Jquld meaeura
142 Occupied
143 Fem reproduc11ve
body
144 Needy
145Exama
146 Stockholm
natrve
DOWN
1 More unusual
2 "South P9clftc" name
3 Fails, with "out"
4Leomo
5 School dance
6RoofbMm1
7 Joins fore ..
fl Afncan nver
9 •Son Of' IUftlX
10Gams
11 Tornado warnings
12 For days --
lntermlnably
13 Flower dfoplet
14 Colliery exit
15 Pupil's place
16 canine comment
17Conceals
18Uncanny
19 Snow vehicles
22 Footman's attJre
26 Ctt••s· companlOl'l9
27 Adds up
30 Stay away from
35 ·cheeflr, e g.
37 Makea a atalement
39Took wing
41 Spade °' Snead
43 Boutique buy
45 McKellen and
AS1bury
47 Btl iard 81de
480f pontiffs
49 Muecat citizen
50 Fenc:ing move
51 Sol.WQM of ....
52 Mufllee eounds
54 Still-lite IUbf ecta
55Chw
58Fltal0 - -
581nvoice9
59Valleys
60Straln«
63 Orlad like a kitten
&4Beteowed ee Mudd ... the wa1ara
&gStytea
70 Sat tor an artist
71 Btrds that ho~
73 ·oaa eoo1· er.I\'!
75 Gathered (!Mves)'
76Poem
78 Whodunit author
Michael
79 Preaaged
80 Alerts
81 Seaweeds
82 Malce fun or
83 More sensible
84 Lures
86 K1ndefganen
staple
87 Less cordial
88 Requires
89 Crow sounds
90 Deluxe
91 ·streets 1n Venice
92Nol a soul
96 Tiny particle
98Frothy
101 Elephant seat
102 Ms Gardner
103 More revolting
104 Emuta1e Seurat
106 Paton
108 Showy flowara
109 Hrts
111 Cuddle
112 Minnesotan
Informally
113 Pick out
114 Indulges, wltli •on·
115 Seize powe1 from
116 Donkey
118 Proportion
120 Adoleecents
122Summon
(memones)
123 Made less wild
124Abaurd
127 Big Jump
129 Highlander
131 Tastee
134 Eur nauon
135Gold, lfl Mexico
138 Shade
138 Ctlllfy and damp
1 -~1
C'llevr* CIV..., II
Miio, pwr etMMa. AM/FM (229281241715) $8501. South COltt Toyoll
949-722·2000
ci.vro... Mello '91 ~·AM/FM (22127 9) $7901.
South COltt Toyoll
949·722·2000
CffEVY Monte c.tto '80 Orifnll Owner, xlnt cond, 40 ml, Prlv1te Party
'2500 14•737-2144
CHEVY vtNTUAE VT STD PASSENGER VAH,
1uto, AC, PO, PS, Intl lock
brlkH, 1111-fm ceaHllt,
tlnled wlndon, 56K ml,
$10,797 Mf.57._.244
t\'tt/wkndt 512-49' 1485
CLK320 '98
Ptlont. co Slec:ktr
(043462) $35,990 F,Jttchtr Jontt Moton:1t1
W.f24-1401
CUC430 Ctbtloltt 'Ot ~ $81,990 Jontt MotofQf't
IN-t24-t40t
CLK55 AMO '01
8lldllBlk, Lux tu & lie Pd V&m.Sl m .990 lttdler Jontt MotorCllS
888424-1401
CLKSS AMG '01
BllCIV'Blk. LUI tu & lie Pd ~ $73,990 Jontt Molorc¥1
811-624·1401
C220 Stdl!I '95
Chr-. Bllcll Btauty ~10285l $19,990
letchtf Jof1M Motoruta
111-624·1401
0111un 280 Z '75 57k mi, aJ ong auto. AC, garaged al
rlCOfdl~ $4800 obo 94
°°": Oolloll Sport '99
• em/Im, elloya
(22.308l2388071) S890t.
South COltt Toyota
949·722·2000
E320 Stdln '97
381< MllN, S4lPlf Cltlnl
~ $29,990 JcHltl MotDfC«I
llH24-1401
E320 Stdln '98
Suptr cleln, fully lotded
~651760) $3&,990
letdler Jontt Motorc.tt
884-1124·t40t
Ford E1 plorer Sport
4•4 '98 vs, 1U10, 8ir, run pwr (22757/A 19642) $16,90t
South Coast Toyota
949-722·2000
Fonl T -Bini V8 LX 94
Nt-N 111/16 w·wau blk. grtv
1n1. lult loaded t>eau11tu1
cond. ,995 v1n 695618
0C AU10 Siu 9'49 586· 1888
Ford ThundWblfCI lX '94
euto, ec • .c:. r· .cru!tt (Pt572A/1 257 l:S&,995
South Coast Acura
714·979·2500
Sonday, Morch 25, 2001 15
1 -~11 -~1 1-~11 -cmr.1
Harley Davidson '97
Dyna Wrdt Ghdt Bliek otW 3200 ml, atortd, loildtd
$16,500/0bo 949~73-4399
Milda .._ MX-6 Com
•• p/ltlellng. co "41Y9t (227S9t'100184) $13,901.
South Coltt To)'l>ll
949-722·2000
Hondl Civic EX ._
lull pwr, lllOOfllOOf ABS
(221t2l507•74) I S11,901 South Coast Toyo11
949·722·2000
Jeguw XJS V12 Coupe 10 4~ ong IN rnttall!c blue/ , .. ,h.,, chrome whla,
g1raged 11on/1mo~er
hlWcu body & rnec:hlnall ~ond superb value Vint 17251 a 51.995 firm oc
MIO Bkr 9'49-586-IMa
MIHrltl Chrysler Conv.
'It y"""1 & belgt. ... 1111
powtr 2 lopt str\'lct ,..
COids, l!Wlt condl SOOMFG $4500 714-73 t ·3323
MERCEDES 300TE 't2
Wegon, lm1111C, whlltll1n
1 OWntr, tll rlCOfdl,
4 metic, 3'd Met, IUMIOI,
10aK ml, SlS,500
94H5M15&
MERCEDES 420SE1. '19 Fully to.did, 210K ml,
black, • ,.., Gtm! $10.500
949-759-4842
Mtrctdll SllO SL ·ea
$hoN1oom cond thromc
tJ~ 2 tops U1 nu l!!\I
local $15 750 714-751·246.4
Mtrcury VIiiager GS '95
luto, pa. ec, fem vehlclt
(20780AIJ02S99) $7,550
South Coast Acura
714·979·2500
Mit1ubl1hl Mlf999 2000
luto, air, lull powtr
(22S42J052561) S9901
South Coast Toyota
949·722·2000
ML320 SUV '98
Low Mi, FuHy lolldldl
(028385) $29.990 Attchtr Jolltt Moeorcera
au-624-1401
Nl ... n Altlme
GXE Stden, 97
IUIO, IC, jll. pw.
(P1533IC20S227) $7,950.
South Coast Acura
714·979·2500
NISSAN PULSAR 87
Coupe aui ~grey ,,,.
1ef ~ smog luly IOed.d
good mecoonocally & body
cond Von 291461 $1895 oc Aolo 81<1 9'49' 586-18811
NISSAN 300ZX 91
2 2 T lop iUIO It/II 88lt mo Loaded, alarm m1n1
~ 760-~M9
OldlmObtlt Cutlass 98
V6 LON m es ea•r.t1
13151091 $14 !611
NABERS
(714)54o.9100
POUC! IMPOUHOS Toyo11 ~ LE .. Cart/Trucks/Su~·· IUtO, w 3e pow. 1952 FERRARI From S500l (227171'l457 I s 11.401. For Utt. cell Sooth COltt Toyota 2t2 El(llOlt V'~ I00-31t-3323 949·722·2000 8tMtlla ComptllllOn ___ Ert. 2726 l&e El(llOlt a-
POLICE IMPOUNDS Toyoll Ctllca GT t3 OrglMI 3 c.tuml
Cart/TruckllSuv 1 tc:, pw, pl, crulM. -.1 ~Body Ea
From $5001 (P1571/0t«e&9) 17,960. F1oll1n Gontzlltz
For Utt. cell South Coast Acura SOLO IO CUITll'll -
I00-'19-3323 714·979-2500 FuO~ ~tel by
Erl 2726 Toyote Corob ox. t1 t.;to,y = wotlt ~ 1952
PontllC Fiero GT 88 IUIO, llr, power 11Mrin9 Full 111torat1on
29k aclUll 1111 11ick wMe (2284&'251507) , 14901. $335 000 Cs lllv moonrool bOoks South Coast• Toyota Cell lor lfl F a I ICIMnl
& ilne s ntw ., 94t·7~·2000 ~ .. ~ flW'Clltt S69'3S OC Aulo Blira M•5"-1W Toyota ~· SLE ve '91 coupt. e While 1111 111Y
Salum SL2 Stden 'tll Int. p1em 1tt1eo sun-root 2 PORSCHES, 1 PNCE Miio, • • powtf •lllring I~ lllM. IC. 25k ""
(2213W224M2) S9901 S20 750 948-Z23-573S 'f7112 & -~
, Souttl Coett T oyoll T 01011 T 1COtN 412 '91
~ $15,000. 14M42""44 949-722·2000 Ctftiflt<I, htrd -· • (226681551131) l8801. SLK Ao.ostw '00
CO Stxbr. SlllltrK Phn South Coast T oyoll
~ $34,990 949·722·2000 MA.FEW JoMI Molorc.tt VolklWl9tf'I Jtt11 111-624·1401 Stdlr1 2000
Sl500 ROl<ltttf 97 Cfllllt, cettttt., lllo~ WO~TO "-lop Xenon, CO (22f7tl201579) $15, 1. v 47111) ' Sett, 990 South Coast ~
letc:htr Jont• Motorcen 949·722·2
818-624·140t Volkaw191" P1111t WORK FOR SL500 ROldai.r 00 OLS 98
Sptdll Edition. Chi-lif, tu:r, ABS
~90499) $69,990 (227S41383 ) $14,401. YOU etcher Jon•• Motcwc1ra Sollth Coast Toyota
&al·&a4-140l .•·· 949·722·2000
T·BIRO 94 illOE 93 2.6 l ~~~@.;b 8 Ja n;,.., 1'""" lllad<.grev ' Pbontl, CO low MllH
lef "" f iOdded tab c;ond (093551) $15,990
y,,, 'li.i925 I 53995 0C Auto Flttcti.r Jonis Motor~•
Bkr 949 586· 1888 888-624-1401 I
wnat na~~ns if ~OU Oon't
a0vertise1
~a I tne t lassifieOs (~~~) M~·~~1~
J!J!.~ot
Per/Mo. -42 Mo. Lease
+ 99c + tax closed end lease 42 mo. 12k m1. per year, .20c per mile
thereafter. $4,995 total to start. Residual $13,353 Total p•yments: $13,439 +
tax. Subject to prior s.ale and credit 1pproval. e,iQr rental. Pric;e good thru
3/31/01. (YA283519) (#3361) ~
•
I I • •
16 Sunday, Morch 25, 2001
'' Daily Pilot
C O .L DWELL BANKER
F R 0 M S 0 U T H E R N C·~A L I F 0 R N I A ' S L E A D I N G R E A L E S T A T E C 0 M P A N Y
MONARCH BEACH $2,975,000
Ocean view 4 Bd. custom in gate guarded
community. 4 car garage. Access to beach.
Nancy Lavigne 949n18-1553
LAGUNA BEACH $2,250,000
Fabulous views from 3 units. Less than one
mile to downtown Laguna. Extra parking.
Linda Deamos 949/574-3503
i '
EMERALD BAY $1,595,000
Ocean and Catalina views, with 3 Bd. 2 Ba.
private patio, large decks, and storage.
Carol Menconi 949/464-3011
MONARCH BEACH $1,350,000
Dazzling single level home with panoramic
ocean views. High style remodel.
Vivian Girot 949/631 -9355
NEWPORT BEACH $819,000
Two story 4 Bd. 3.5 Ba. home with 2 car
garage In Harbor View Homes.
Gerry Long 949/&40-5664
' ,,
LAGUNA NIGUEL $2;699,000
5 Bd. 4.5 Ba. with panoramic ocean views.
Large lot and highly upgraded.
Shau.na Covington 949/499-8944
CORONA DEL MAR $1,950,000
Spyglass panoramic ocean view home with
5 Bd. 3 Ba. 3 car garage. Custom upgrades!
Trisha Marshall 714/296-2038
LAGUNA BEACH $1,495,000
Stunning coastline views from this remodeled
3 Bd. 3 Ba. Lush spacious yard and patios.
Galen Colwell 949/464-3036
MONARCH BEACH $1 , 175,000
Beautiful 3 Bd. 2.5 Ba. ocean view home in
Emerald Ridge. Overtooks park. Turn-key.
Blossom/Sennet 949/499-8708
SAN CLEMENTE $480,000
Upgraded with French doors, profe88lonally
landscaped, palm trees and beautttul brick.
EMra Evanoff 949/661·9355
SUNSET BEACH $2,500,000
6 Bd. 5 Ba. multi-family oceanfront home with
separate living quarters. Views everywhere.
Asemo Sr,niley 949/499-8913
LAGUNA BEACH $1,900,000
Beautiful 4 Bd. 3.5 Ba. contemporary home
in a private, gated community. Ocean views.
Judy Blossom 949/499-8708
LIDO ISLE $1 ,395,000
Mediterranean home only 100 yards to the
water. Private patios. Community amenities.
Steve Sutherlan 949/631·1400
NEWPORT BEACH $1 ,149,990
Big Canyon Versailles Plan. 4 Bd. 4.5 Ba.
and den. Private location.
Carol Allison 9491574-3537
NEWPORT BEACH $410,000
2 Bd. 2.5 Ba. condo. Great location on the
Peninsula. Steps to the Bay. 2 car garage.
Aeemo Smiley 9491499--8913
SUNSET BEACH $2,450,000
Perfect beach house! 3 Bd. 2.5 Ba. Elegant
and charming with lots of renovations.
Asemo Smiley 949/499-891 3
CORONA DEL M.AR $1 ,895,000
Nearly half acre flat lot. 180 degree ocean
and golf course views. Cul-de-sac location.
Tom Thomson 949/718-1547
BALBOA ISLAND $1 ,350,000
2 year new custom home. Every possible
amenity included. Live the Island lifestyle!
Chuck Allen 949/718-7744
NEWPORT BEACH $895,000
Remodeled single level Country French
home. Great neighborhood, private gardens.
Carol Allison 949/57 4·3537
$369,000
2 Bet 2 Ba. over1ooktng golf course. Totally
renovated end unit wtth hardwood floor&.
Car1a Broffman 9491718·1570
COLDWeLL
BAN~eR Ll
I
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· .. ,.,. .. . .. . . -. ...
.. .
FREE DELIVERY
THIS WEEKEND
(within 50 mile radius)
xceptional Savings
40% off all European &
mestic Home Furnishings!
on Hemert Interiors is
celebrating their 81 st Anniversary
by uffmng exceptional savings of
20 to 40% off aU European
and Domestic home famisfnngs.
Large shipments of
un «Jue reproductions just arrived
from Italy!
he heritage of von Hemert Interiors began
81 years ago with the remarkable vision of an
entrepreneur, Anna Martin..-von Hemert.
Those who knew Anna said she was as passionate
about tksign as she was about lifo.
What began as a custom drapery ant! upholstery
work shop evolved into a fourth-generation family
owned furniture a11d i11terior design shotlH'Hm.
For the past 81 years von Hemert Interiors has
continued offering their clients only the best in
customer service, vnlue nnd unique handcrafted
Imported and Domestic reproductions .
•
lt is through the von Hemert family's relentless
passion and tkvotion towards the success of the
family business that the tradition is sure to
continue for generations to co'lrU!
-._ ·-"' IJ domestic '1ome
furnishings from lines such 111:
Henredon, Baker, Century, Jeffeo,
Maitland Smith, Swaim and. """'Y
others 11ow reduced up to 40% off!
Bring in this aJ for your chance
to win a $1000 shoppillf spr«
at von Hnnm Interiors!
(one entry valid per hou#ho/J)
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