HomeMy WebLinkAbout2000-04-06 - Orange Coast Pilot..
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_seRVl_f'.k3 THE NEWPORT ~flt.E.SA COMMUNmES SINCE 1907 THURSDAY, APRIL 6, 2000
~ · v · j Re~dy :for the final C~aill
Japll N. Bel .......
Does this mean
I can get free
Cubs tickets?
F or the past month, I've
been trying to absorb
the fact that 1 am now
working for the Chicago 'In·
bune. It hasn't been easy. ·
During the 15 years I lived
in a Chicago suburb and for
many years before that, the
nibune was the Little
Orphan Annie of American
journalism. And rightly so.
The strip was created by
the owner and publisher of
the nibune, Col. Robert
McCormick, who saw him·
self and all the tycoons of
that peri·
od affec-tionately What I saw
as Daddy
Wax-
bucks.
was a
newspaper
which at that
time was so
far to the
Annie
was an
adjunct
to her
adopted Daddy, political right
who that it would
have made
today's
Orange
County
Register Jo°Dk
downright
spent
ID09tof
hil time
aulsing
about the
world on
bis yacht,
strong-
anning
incipient sodalists progressive.
andone-
worlders
out to undermine rich Ameri·
cans who deaxly should be in
charge of our destiny.
Col. McCormick under-
stood the power of the
comic page and be used it
with remarkable effective·
ness to market his brand of
capitalism.
To that end, he also creat·
ed Dick nacy (law and
order) and Gasoline Alley
(the sanctity of the All-Amer-
ican family and neighbor·
hood).
As a good Midwestern
boy exposed to the 'Ittbune
comics daily, I grew up con-
vinced that the ultimate sym·
boll of my success would be
apoliDg the nibune's bad
guys in the pages or the Sat·
urday Evening Post and
owning a yacht like that of
Daddy Warbucks.
It WU only after I returned
from World War n and
became tnnataly 1uspldous
• ol anyone who insisted on
being addrested by a mill·
t.ary title in civilian We that I
SEE BELL PAGE At
.......
I l .. • , )
"• Antsy film directors,
eager audiences gear up
for the Newport film
festival's fantastic finish at
tonight's awards ceremony.
Alex Coolman
DAILY PILOT
The end is near.
For bleary-eyed film fans,
crazed directors and connoisseurs
of buzz, tonight will be th~ culmi-
nation of eight extraordinary days.
The Newport Beach Film Festival
For a complete list of today's
screenings. see Page AS
is rumbling to a dose.
An awards ceremony, recogniz·
ing those films that have rocked
the world of Newport Beach more
effectively than the rest, is sched·
uled to kick off at 7:30 p.m. at the
Orange County Museum of Arl
Before that happens, though, a
gang of important types -direc-
tors, festival staff and title sponsors
Leigh and Lucy Steinberg -are
expected to putter around the bay
on John Wayne's yacht, the "Wild
G .~ oose.
The micro-cruise is reportedly a
much sought-after bauble.
"We only have 150 life jackets
and I guess they're really strict
about that, so I actually just gave
up my spot,• lamented festival
PHOTOS SY JEFF CHONG I DAILY f'llOl
Gordon Oliver runs the •Panther Palace, .. a swingen' club, 1n a house 1n Costa Mesa.
The 'Palace' guard
Gordon Oliver ·keeps his late friend's sex club swinging
in a Costa Mesa home dubbed the 'Panther Palace'
Greg Rtsllng
DAILY PILOT
His 'mend and former
boss "Wild• Bill
Goodwin may be
gone, but Gordon
Oliver bas continued his tra·
dition or hosting partner-
swapping parties at a West
Side home.
In the year that has passed
sba the 75-year--Okl Goodwin
died o( a mlll5M! heart attack,
Oliver bas made payments on 11dl blKll panther awaits IWlngen at
the Surf Street home dubbed tlae mlrance of the "Pantbu Palace."
the "Panther' Palace• and kept
the twiorH·week affairs going.
The parties -particularly
on Fridays -have become so
popular that Oliver, 72, decided to
clQ&e the doors for the next two
weeks and will require people to
make reservations.
The club bas also been the sub-
ject of a documentary movie titled
"The Life-Style,• which wu sub-
mitted to organizers of the New·
port Beach Film Festival, but was
not accepted.
The club's mantra has
ne ver faded: freedom to
express one's sexuality with·
out pressure to participate.
"What we try to do here
IS make people feel comfort-
able,• Oliver said. "There is
a sense of security where
people know if they don't
want to do anything, they
don't have to."
ll01111 ••••• , 111111
The Panther Palace is a
simple, single-story home
that looks like it was mod·
eled after the family house
in "The Brady Bunch.• The
couches axe worn and the cabinets
are antiquated.
SEE PALACE PAGE Al
spokesman Todd Quartararo.
A life jacket is not reqwred to
attend the awards ceremony, how-
ever.
At that event, pnzes will be dis·
tributed for a whole range of cate·
gories, from Best Feature and Best
Director to Most Twisted Short and
·a few Aucllence Choice awards.
\
For the hope ful directors
squlfTTlmg m thelf seats, the
awards may mean more than a pat
on the back: m today's moVle
industry, festival recognition can
SEE FILM PAGE AS
Parents ask
for more
control of
state dollars
•PT A leaders launch
letter-writing campaign
to Gov. Davis, asking for
more say of how money
is spent on schools.
Danette Goulet
DAILY PILOT
NEWPORT-MESA
Local parents have jomed a
reg10nal letter-wntrng cam-
paign to implore Callforma
Gov. Gray Davis to give
school dtstncts more control
over how they can spend
state funds.
Newport-Me a Uruf1ed
School D1Stnct's PTA presi-
dents are encouraging the
commuruty to take part m the
effort.
Currently, the state budget
d.Jctates how chool chstncts
use much of thelf money.
"It's ma.inly because the
government IS telling us bow
to spend the money we have,
which· may not be bad m
ttself; but chstricts aero s the
state may not have the same
needs,• said JoAnne Russell.
PTA president at Cahlorrua
Elementary School.
Dunng the last several
years, the amount or sldte
funds earmarked for specilic
educauonal uses has
increased. DaVlS m January
proposed an $88-blllion bud-
get that mduded a $28 3-btl·
lion public schools packdge.
Nearly $1 bill.Jon of that
amount was targeted for edu·
cation trubabve .
Although school offtoals
and parents were glad to see
such a strong empha.slS on
education, they said Uiere is a
great lack of money that ells·
tnct offioals can detemune
how to spend.
PT A leaders hope an
influx of pleas. from parents
will aid m reversing this trend
SEE PTA PAGE At
Local business owner
rereives state honor
DntdCUne ...........
Calllonlla'I
s..119-dn-
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QA\WID5 ------corn• 1m ,..._~14
...._ •11
•David Cline named Small Business
Pm ol the Vear for encouraging high
ICbool ltudents to go on to college.
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Tourism guru appointed to theater board
The Bal~ Performing Arts The-
ater Foundation Ml •pointed Ros-
aMnd W1111ams to Its board.
leach as a tourist destination and
helping to boost the Balboa Theater
are closely related, Williams said.
The pn11ldent and CEO of the
Newport Beach Conference and Visi-
tors Bureau, Williams will join the
00.rd in working to raise communi-
ty awareneu and funds to renovate
and operate the Bait><>. Theater.
•The rebirth of the Balbo. The-
ater will add the cultural component
that is so vital to any city. The activi-
ties on Balboa Peninsula tradltlonal-
ty have been a central focal point
for visitors to our coastline,• she
said. • The dutjes of marketing Newport
·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~..,.....~~~~~~L-~~~......:;,..._~~~~~~~~--'~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ i A2 Thursday, April 6, 2000
•
) .· . ,
Diana Hirst ls a member of the family that operates Hi-nme Wlne Cellars in Costa Mesa, one of tbe largest c:ellan
on the West Coasl
.. In good spirits ..
• • Choosing a fine wine is a work of art for Diana Hirst
SHE IS ...
a lady with good taste.
ALL BOTILED UP
Diana Hirst is better than a walk-
ing wine list.
: , Looking for a Chilean cabemet?
.. How about an Australian chardon-
nay?
Hirst, who with other family mem·
.bers manages the Hi-Time Wine Cel-
lars in Costa Mesa, can make a wine
:recommendation (or all tastes.
From the chilly cellar be low to the
•sales floor. there are vineyards repre-
~!::r~~~ S~~~ ot~~~to~~~sn~~Y~~ !!:
;"traveling to Italy a nd South Africa
'this week. ! "We look for a good vintage and
'
value in our wine,·" Hirst said. "I'd
say we try a couple hundred wines a
week. When you have that much to
select from, it's hard work.•
TASTE TEST
Venturing into a store with a huge
selection . caA be intimidating. And
although Hirst is a qualified connois-
seur, she caQ relate to the first-time
wine taster, too.
•Tuts is " great place to learn if
you are interested,• she said. ·it's
like a free education.•
Located on Ogle Street, the
18,000-square-foot specialty store
has thousands upon thousands of
wine bottles. It seems the store is
stocked to anyone's personal prefer-
ence, but no two sets of taste buds
are the same.
Hirst sltid while wine tasting is a
good way for people to learn about
wines they have never tried, it can be
difficult with all the different selec-
tions available. ·
"There are almost too many choic-
es,• she said.
MIND ON WINE
Hirst is not shy about speaking her
mind on wine. And it may behoove
people to take her advice.
•Purchasing a bottle of wine
requires a lot of thought. We like to
share a piece of mind,• she said.
-Story by Greg Rlsllng;
photo by Jeff Chong
.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ i Gym moves, but is still all women, all the time
•
1 areas are is a luxury.
• s pacious workout
• And to celebrate its
· f large r location. Body
' Design will hold a grand
" opening event at its new ~Fashion Island address
, from 5 to 8:30 p.m. Tues-
• day.
3 The women-only fitness
• center, featuring the oh-
• so-popular Pilates and
J athletic re habilitation, will
• offer tours. health y I refreshments and dance
I demos, which will begin
,. at 6:15 p.m.
I The ne w, 4,200-square-i fool facility now has
~ enough room for a full
' dance floor, where Body
r1 Design will offer classes
: on tap, balle t and salsa.
~ And, of course, what
Jasmine Lee
RETAIL ROUNDUP
would a women's club be
without a spa? Services
include massages and
facials.
But really, the best part:
no men .
·we like to make it a
scife haven for women,"
said co-owner Darci Kin·
ney, who runs the business
with her partner, Susan
Tobiessen. "They don't
have to wear the right out-
fit and they don't have to
worry about who's looking
at them."
Body Design is at 100
Newport Center Drive,
Newport Beach. For more
inforrnatlon,call(9"9)722-
3555.
FOUR SE.ASONS UPGRADES
WITH NINT!NDO
How does it get any bet-
ter? With Nintendo, that's
bow.
Renovations to the Four
Seasons Hotel -a hefty
$10-milllon project that
bas been going on since
early 1999 -is almost
comple te .
The improvements, to
be finished by the end of
the year, have already
swept through the public
areas of the hotel and its
restaurant. A final phase
of the work will see a
face-Wt given to guest
rooms and suites.
Barry Design of Los
Angeles is handling the
renovation and ii likely
the mastermind behind
what could be the hotel's
greatest improvement:
When it is complete, the
rooms will feature 25-inch
televisions and Nintendo
video game systems.
Oh, and don't forget:
larger-size toiletries are
also scheduled to be
installed in the bath-
rooms.
Daily Pilot
Fashion Island to
•
celebrate spring
F ublon llland presents
•The Art of Spring•
extravaganza Friday
through May 14. The event
will feature live entertain-
ment. Doral and art exhibits, a
nine-bole putting green, life-
size board games and week-
end aafts for kids.
Shoppers can also register
to win one of four b'ips to
Maui, which will be given
away each weekend from
April 22 through May 14.
Highlights of upcoming
events include entertainment
provided by students of the
Orange County High School
of the Arts, who will perform
their interpretations of spring
through singing, dancing,
poeby reading and theabical
perlormances. Students will
perform Fridays through Sun-
days, With the exception of
Easter weekend, April 22-23.
The putting green will be
the lite of a hole-in-one tour-
JWDent May 14. The winner
will win a trip to Hawaii.
The exhibits and Doral
displays will also include
local artists, who will be
painting their interpretations
of spring. The arts students
will paint a 100-foot mural
depicting a spring theme.
for kids, the Easter Bun-
ny will be available for pho-
tos Friday through April 22
ln the Bloomingdale's Court-
yard. Children can also have
breakfast with the Easter
Bunny on April 15 for $15
per child. Paid reservations
are required in person at the
Fashion Island concierge.
There will be more fun on
Saturdays, when kids can,
participate in various crafts:
decorating their own Easter
Bunny, a natural colored
beanbag toy on Saturday;
painting a popular Fashion
Island n.le on April 22, with
proceeds benefiting the
Orange County Museum of
Art; decorating a flower pot
on April 291 painting a deco-
rative birdhouse or sun-
flower garden stick on May
61 and designing gardening
gloves for mom on May 13.
Each activity is $6 per
child, while supplies last,
with the exception of the
Fashion Wand nle painting,
which is $100 per tile, and
paid reservations are
required with the Fashion
Island concierge.
For more information, you
can pick up an event pro-
gram at the concierge desk
on the main level of the_
Ab'ium Court, or call (949)
721-2000.
Sarah Peck, a gre~t ladies
clothing store next to Gel-
son 's, is having an exclusive
showing of the Bassler fall
collection. Sarah Peck is the
only store in Newport Beach
that carrtes the line. Sarah .
.Peck ls at 1630 San Miguel
Drive in Newport Beach.
Call (949) 121-0111.
blphl ts maldng holiday
meals ideal for Easter. The
Greer Wylder
BEST BUYS
meal selection includes
prime rib, turkey and ham.
The prime rib serves eight to
10 people and comes with
scalloped potat90s, horserad-
ish, carrot pudding, rolls and
apple pie for $59.99. The
turkey meal serves eight to
10 people, and comes with
stuffing, mashed potatoes,
yam casserole, cranberry
sauce, gravy and rolls for
$39.99. The ham also serves
eight to 10 people and it
comes with scalloped pota-
toes, carrot pudding, gratin.
of vegetables and rice, rolls
and cranbeny sauce for
$45.99. The cost of the meals
is for Ralphs Club card mem-
bers. Ralphs is in Newport
Beach at Irvine Avenue,
Eastbluff Drive and San
Miguel Drive, and in Costa
Mesa at East 17th Street.
Dragonfish Sportswear
has made its debut of
beach-casual clothing for
men and boys at Kayaks in
N'ewport Beach. The new
line joins Kayaks' mix of
trend-conscious apparel and
accessories, including Quik-
silver, Redsand and Bill-
abong. The collection
includes high-quality, ring-
spun 100% cotton T-shirts
and bats, designed for long-
lasting wear and durability
in washing, and with com-
fort in mind. There are sev-
en stylish designs featuring
·the company's logo, the
Dragonfish -which sym-
bolizes the power of the
ocean and the vision of the
company's founder, Newport
Beach resident Dave
Williams. "The inspiration
for Dragonfish comes from
my love for the ocean, water
and board sports,• says
Williams. "I wanted to cre-
ate a line of clothing that
would appeal to all ages,
offering edgy designs in a
classic style.~ The collection
blends Asian influences with
classic surf styles. The prices
are affordable at $19.95 to
$24.95. Williams is a sup-
porter of the Surfrider Foun-
dation and plans to donate a
portion of his profits to the
organization to help pre-
serve California's coast.
Kayaks is at Westcliff Plaza
in Newport Beach. Call
(949) 631-2996.
• 8IST 9UYS appea11 on Thuf'Sd¥
and Saturday$. Send Information to
Greer Wytder at lJO W. Bay St., Cos-
te Mes.\ 92627; or via fax at (949)
646-4170.
;.-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--, r~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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VOL M, N0.-82
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S7
POLICI FILES
COSTA MESA
• Bristol Street: Sewral items of dothing worth MOO
were stolen from • store In it. HOO blodc ~
29.
• Bristol Street: A c.lluW phone WOt1h S100 was
stolen from • c.ar In "'-2900 blodc .,..,., • Ind
I p.m. MoncMy.
• bllt 17th StNet: A purse Ind Its co. 1t1111t1 worth
SJOO ww. stolen from a c.ar In it. 400 blodc s.tur-
~ ~ .
NEWPORT IEACH
• llrch Ser..t A ~ phoh9 wonh USO wes
stolen from a CM In tt'9 4200 blodc et 11 p.m. Set·
~
• Hlrbor llland OJM: A 11t of golf cha wor1h
$2,770 .. ....,, from. hofM In the .. blDdl.
J p.m. Sunder.
• .. .,., ~ Two lflOI --· Ind .. dod*'ll worth $2.JOO _...,, """' • -In the
JIOOblodl ~ ..... ........ .,,.. ............ .... ==-............... ~ .... ....
~ily Pilot
. .
Thursday, Apfll 6, 2000 A3
Hats off to -Newport's top high school students IN BRIEF
Former couple
wages custody
.. battle over dog
•Olamber honors 32 academic " achievers from Newport Harbor
and Corona del Mar high
schools at annual breakfast.
Dwtte Goulet
DAILY PILOT
NEWPORT BEACH -They are
football and volleyball players,
dancers, artists, musicians and vol-
unteers. But above alf, they are the
academic elite of the Newport Beach
area, each with grade point-average
topping 4.0.
Newport Beach's top 32 seniors. -
from Corona del Mar and Newport
Harbor high schools -were honored
Wednesday morning at the 39th annu-
al Scholarship Awards Breakfast.
•1t•s really the only chance people
have to see the academia compared
to athletics -although there are
many athletes here,• said Patrick
Sharma, a recipient of the honor who
will graduate in June from Newport
Harbor High. •1t•s encouraging to
see people perform in the classroom,
whether they do athletics or not.•
The awards, sponsored by the
Newport Harbor area Chamber of
Commerce's Commodores Club,
salute the students for their academ-
ic achievements before they head off
to college.
A custody battle over a
pet Rottweller named
after a popular lnsh beer
h()s pitted a Newport
Beach woman against her
former boyfriend.
Patti Dalby is trying to
keep custody of 4-year-
old Guinness, who was
P,urchased to provide a
playmate for her othe r
Rottweller. Ro>0e.
Dalby's ex-boyfnend,
Brooks Brann, sued her
earlier th.ls year and is
seekmg about $25,000 in
damages. Brann, who
now lives rn Montana,
.daum. he's the nghtful
owner of Gwnness and
would bke the dog back.
He also alleges that Dal-
by purposely hid Gwn-
ness from tum.
Dalby countered that
she paid for most of the
dog's care. including vet-
erinanan bills, and that
Brann WdS l.JVUlg wtth her
when they got the dog
three year ago.
"It's specilically academics, but
these klds do so much," said Karin
Graves, the chamber's special event
coordinator.
Beyond pure academics, each stu-
dent boasts a long list of achieve-
ments: from Corona del Mar senior
Nicole Chamey's success qS the
author of children's literature to
Newport Harbor senior Gregory
Chinn's accomplishment as a United
States junior team canoeist. placing
MARIANNA DAY MASSEY I DAILY PILOT
Judy Dalbert, right, a teacher at Harbor Day School, gives a warm welcome to her foryier student, Ashley
Jacobson. Jacobson was recognized as one of the top 15 students at Corona de l Mar High School during a
breakfast ceremony at the Newport Sheraton.
Under state ldw, pets ,
are considered property
and any disputes over
them can be hdndled in
court. Attorneys for both
partJes dppedred in court
Wednesddy, where they
learned d tnal date was
scheduled for the sum-
mer
IN BRIEF
'Night of
Champions' event
set for Friday
The Fellowship of Christ-
ian Athletes will present its
second annual Orange Coun-
ty Night of Champions at 5
p.m. Friday at St. Andrew's
Presbyterian Church in New-
port Beach. The evening's
theme will be "More Than
Winning.•
Mark Boyer, a former pro-
fessional football player and
director of the fellowship, will
host the event. Athletes,
coaches and students from all
over the county are invited to
attend the dinner.
Speoal guest speakers will
f OR THE RECORD
PetCo's Pet Adoption Day
from noon to 3 p.m. at the
Newport Beach store will
not take place Saturday.
The event occurred last
week.
Put a few words
to work for you.
Call the
DailYPilot
CLASSIFIEDS
fourth at the Junior World Champi-
onships in Zingreh, Croatia.
tutors and Little League coaches. hands.· Pare nts beamed proudly
from the audience, reveling in their
kids' success. In between arguing polibcs, teach-
ing sailing and just being teenagers,
honorees also found tune to serve
their community as candy stripers,
•1 thought it was outstanding to
see the achievements of these klds."
said Jaime Castellanos. assistant
superintendent of secondary educa-
tion. • 1 think our future is m good
•ThJs is so exotmg dnd a great
way to start the spring season.• said
Cher Charney, Nicole's mother.
Neither attorney could
be reached for corrunent.
-Greg Aisling
include football stars Ken
Johnson and Tarik Glenn
from the Indianapolis Colts,
and professional women's
volleyball player Jenny Jor·
dan.
The event will include din-
ner, music, entertainment and
fun. The skatebqard park will
open at 3 p.m. However, per-
mission slips will be required.
Dinner is $3. The church lS
at 600 St. Andrews Road. For
more information, call (949)
574-2222.
BRIEFLY IN
EDUCATION
Silent a uction to
benefit grad night
Costd Mesa High School
is holding a silent auction
and dinner tonight to raise
funds for grad night.
The event provides a safe
and fun environment for stu-
dents to celebrate after their
graduation ceremony.
On Easter
Sunday
In addition
to our
regular
menu •••
MEDrrERRArlEArl CUISmE
Food &om the beautiful Coutal Rivien of Italy
The silent auction will be
held at Thangle Square m
Costa Mesa at 7:30 p.m
Included in the $18 ticket
price will be hve entertain-
me nt and a dinner spon-
sored by the Newport Rib
Company and Newport
Noodle, Quizno·s. Coca·
Cola, Ttader Joe's and
Scampi Trattorid Bar and
Grill.
For ticket information.
caU Karen Ryan at (714) 901·
9974.
.
www. .com
Dr.Ovalle
Physid.:in~ .... ho specialize 1n inlcmal medicine 1.-are for 1hc
comprehensive, of1en romplc\ hcalihcare needs of aduli s. including
seniors. Board-ccrtif1cd 1n1crnis1 Wember Ovalle, M.D. has
• 2"-booron-af/ physician
• 24-bour .Jvice nurse
• ~, appoio1menl boors
iotned 1 he l:..d1 nger
.\\edical Group 1n1£mal
medicine depar1mcn1:
Stanley Aroolcl. MD • .. \fan/id.-Boo~. MD
Elaine Grodin. M.D • Tamara lbgarl)< j\-1.D
Karen Don, M.D • Bert>' 1; M.D
Doug McCollllaUghe"$ M.D
Or. Ovalle and all the ph~sic1an-:. lit L \\(} o~ ·
olso member!> of the phy~ic1an ~aff at ~~unta1n Valley
Regional Hospital and 1\\edical Cenk'r. T~idhcr ~1th
•An Easter Celebration•
• ~~weelrenJ uJ
bohcJ.y ~nflnrnf!
• M.,. UwnacepiMU ~
· tht entire in1enlal medicine staff at Ldin~>er i\\edal
Group. the) a~ dedicaled to pro' id1ng COfnpn'~" c
care for your ind1' idual he.hh ~ .
Sanday, April 23, 2000 • I lam to 3 pm
Al former Eucuu~ Chd' ofTuuo Mare in Newpon Beach.
Chef Comdo Gianoni, invita )'OU IO hia newly OfWMd raw.trant.
Comdo. A ddiciow ~~will M ICIWd on April 23rd.
Routed leg of lamb1 rOuttd leg of w.I, jumbo pnwns. pilled ahrimp.
.afood ..Led.-~c=-.-00 and ocher couca1 Italian ~ll
tutdUUy •«ilff )"OW appedw, .. W. 11 )'OU' &unity & gut(lD. At
c:omdo. r>U're fUnilyi Muhl "a.SO. Children Sl4.9S.
,_ .....adoaia •••• call (9'9) 252-9396
~ ,cl,eJ,J..,, .,.. .... pJ...oall
(714)179-8100
EDINGER
MEDICAL
GROUP, INC.
11180 ~ !Mnvt. Suitn J6l..367 • ~-Val'9y
Lo.:./ on ,,..~ti~ "6,-R.,;-J ~ ,;J Mt.bl~
~ 8-d. Boubwd. s... HS-eS5 . Hu.I ~ Bwlt
.. ..,
A4 Thursday, April 6, 2000
• Runners will jog more than 20
miles Saturday to raise money
for several charities.
Andrew Glazer
DAILY Pt~OT
NEWPORT BEACH -He admits
that running across the Grand Canyon
may have been pointless.
But Bob Hogue said the 43 people
who will each jog 20 miles Satw;day
will be doing "God's work.ff .
Hogue -one in a group of runners
who a few years ago made the cross-
canyon run for fun -decided to raise
money for children's charities with a
long-distance relay each spring.
He scaled down the distance and
difficulty of the run -his group once
ran to Mexico and back -so that
more people could participate.
years ago .
. .
. Participants run four, five-mile
loops over 24 hours, each raising more
than $500 in the process.
".At least that's what we try for,•
HQgUe said. "But we're getting older and
slower. We'll finish when we finish.•
The runners, ranging in age from 18 to
65, will be escorted by mountain bikers.
The moqey raised in past relays bas
been given to two qrpbanages.in Mex-
ico, a program providing food and
clothing to children living in motels,
and the Orange County chapter of
Young Life, a Christian youth group.
~ past three relays raised more than
$50,000.
Barbara Pott, 34, raised more than
$1,000 this year with her running part-
ner, Marissa Wayt. The two knocked
on the doors of Newport Beach homes
along each of the four routes for this
year's ·relay, asking for donations and
permission to post signs advertising
the event on their lawns.
"They were very excited," she said.
. . . .
Daily Pilot
·we decided to make it worth
something," said Hogue, who lives in
Dover Shores. ·And children don't
hav'e a choice about the way they end
up. They're usually the worst victims."
Hogue and his wife, Elaine, started
the Relay Run for Hungry Children six
"Last year, when we ran by, most peo-
ple didn't quite know what they were
doing. This year, I look forward to see-
ing the signs as we run by."
TAYA KASHUBA/ DAILY PILOT
Bob Hogue, chairman of the Relay Run for Hungry Children, made yard signs for the peo-
ple who made pledges. The route of this years relay Will include residential areas.
Finding a fashionable way to fight diabetes m
A FASHION SHOW EVE'NT
Danette Goulet
DAILY PILOT
NEWPORT BEACH
Children with diabetes will
share a runway with Miss
America and a stream of
models at a gala Saturday at
Fashion Island.
After 10 years of holding
a successful luncheon fash-
ion show, organizers al the
Pediatric Adolescent Dia-
betes Research and Educa-
tion (PADRE) Foundation
have decided to step things
up with an exlr!lvaganl
evening event.
"I've bad the vision of a
great nighttime event in
Orange County for years,•
said Jackie Teichmann,
executive director of the
foundation.
The evening will com-
mence with a reception and
dinner sponsored by several
local restaurants before mov-
ing on to the fashion show,
which will be ·held outdoors
in a large band shell reminis-
cent of the Hollywood Bowl;
Teichmann said.
Kicking of! the show will
be a group of four diabetic
girls wearing insulin pumps
at their waists and calling
themselves the "Pump
Girls.• They will sing and
dance for the audience,
demonstrating to other dia-
betic children that life does
not have to be interrupted
by their disease.
"The whole thing with
PADRE is there's no cure for
this, but you can still enjoy a
great future," Teichmann
said. ·we educate and teach
them to manage diabetes
and give them the cama-
raderie to manage their dia-
betes.•
Nicole Johnson, Miss
America 1999 and a diabet-
ic, will address the audience
before 36 children and 18
professional models show-
case the latest fashions.
The luncheon of past
years had an attendance of
800 and raised as much as
$100,000. Organizers expect
this year's event to bring in
more than $150,000.
All proceeds from the
evening will go to the foun-
dation for supporting Chil-
drens Hospital of Orange
County and to provide edu-
cation and research for pedi-
atric and adolescent diabetes
throughout the county.
The programs are avail-
able to all diabetics in
Orange County.
Tickets are $75 per person
or $750 for a table of 10, and
are available by calling the
foundation at (714) 532-8330.
• Why. To benefit the
Pediatrk Adotescent
Oiat>etes Research and
Education (PADRE)
Foundation.
• WllW9: Fashion
Island. Bloomingdales's
courtyard
• WhM: 7 p.m. Saturday
• How Much: Tldcets
are $75 per person or
$750 for a 10-person
table
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Hop Over To... ,
HYATT REGENCY IRVINE
For Easter Brunch,
Sunday, April 23, 2000
~ •+ ~ ' ~;,
We Will Have An
Easter Bunny &. Easter Ea Hunt
Along with live entertainment!
t J~•
Appetizer, Salad & Dessert Buffet
With one plated entrce per person
from a .election of five.
Champagne & fresh orange juice.
'fi}•
Served From 10t30am To 2:30pm
$32.00 Adulta
$16.00 Cbildrm S-12
Children under S at free
frvm cbildren'1 menu.
Cnmplhaeatary eelf puldna.
Daily Pilot
FILM
CONTINUED FROM A 1
be the key to obtaining distri-
bution.
Chi Muoi Lo, the producer,
director and writer of •Catfish
in Blaclcbean Sauce,• a film
that screened here last Sun-
day, carried away Best Fea-
ture Film and Audience
Choice awards at the 1999
Florida and Houston Interna-
tional film festivals.
Since receiving those
. awards, Lo said, the fortunes
for •catfish• are looking up.
·when we won Florida, it
was in 'Variety' and the
'Hollywood Reporter,' • he
said. •we suddenly got a lot
of phone calls from people
who wanted to see the
movie.•
That was a particularly
exciting development for the
film, simply because it's a
quirky movie -one in which
a humorous take on the lives
of its characters was difficult
for progranuners in the art-
bouse film market to under-
stand.
•Sometimes it's harder to
sell• highbrow comedy, Lo
said. •They looked at it and
said, 'No one dies in here,' •
What's
AFLOAT
• WHAM AR.OAT runs periodical·
ly in the Daily Pilot on a rotating
basis. If you know of an event or
activity that could appear In this
column, plNse mall the informa-
tion to Dally Pilot, 330 w. Bay St.,
Costa Mesa 92627; fM it to (949)
~ 170; or e-mail It to
dailypilotOlatimes.rom.
SAILlllG CWSES
A pair of U.S. Coast Guard-
approved courses that train
mariners to take license
exams-in order to operate
commercially and carry pas-
sengers for hire-are being
offered this spring by OCC's
Sailing Center. The non-
aedit. five-week courses run
concurrently, today lhtough
May 16. Classes meet Mon-
day, Wednesday and Friday
from 6 to 10 p.m . and Satur-
days from 8:30 a .m. to 5:30
p.m., at OCC's Sailing Cen-
ter in Newport Beach. The
license final exam will be
administered on May 16
from 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. at
the Salling Center. The
courses include all the train-
ing required for taking either
the Operator Uninspected
Passenger Vessels License
Exam or the Master/Mate
Ucense Exam for inland
waters and near coastal
routes. Registration is $755
and $785 respectively. The
sailing center is lotated at
1801 W. Coast Highway. For
more information, call (9-49) .
645-9-412.
Eleven spectacular Puget
Sound educational cruises
have been scheduled for this
summer aboard OCC's Nor-
wester, a cla11ic 75-foot
wooden motor yacht that
introduced actor John
Wayne to yachting five
decades ego. It will mark the
third IWDDler that Norwester
bat taken students and com-
munity .memben on cnaiMI
through Puget Sound.
l!xc:unlons ere .,set to run
June 11-24, June 30 -July 6,
July 8-14, July 16-22, July
18-Aug.3, Aug. 5-11, Aug.
14-11, Aug. 25-31, Sept. 2-81
Sept. 12-20 and Sept. 23-
0d. I. Por ...,.ationl and
t'Oltl, call (NI) 145-N 12.
1-ID to Mil or wlDdliWf at .__w • .....-.w.cm ............... w.
loal ............... ,. ...... Cal..., 7»WO.
NEwi>oirt BFACH FnM fFsnvAL Thursday, April 6, 2000 AS
The director of the film
•Ave Maria,• Eduardo
Rossoff, took home a Best
Director award at a festival in
Havana.
•u•s another little grain of
salt,• Rossoff said. •Any
recognition from the public
helps. It means that the public
likes the movie, and that's
what the distributors are
looking for.•
Rossoff was confident that
.. Ave Maria• was a powerful
picture, but didn't want to
hazard a guess as to whether
a Best Foreign Film award
from Newport Beach was in
its future.
•There's other good
movies and you don't know
what the public is feeling
when they see it,• he said.
•Maybe they had a bad Hiia-
gen-Dazs experience before
they went to the theater.•
SCIEDUU
TODAY ........
~ ERAJN, SAME LOVE"
Arghlt/na, 1999
Dir.: Juan Jose <:ampanella
Pwod.: Ricardo Frelxa, Jorge Estrada
Mora c.t: Ricardo Darin, Soledad
Villamil
....,... time: 115 minutes
Humor, emotion. hopes and
illusions In romantic comedy with a
touch of Irony
~VIN"'
Unit@d State, 2000
•1.ove Happens'"
West Coast Premiere
Dir.: James Ronald Whitney
Prod.: James Ronald Whitney
CMt Ed McMahon, Soupy Sales,
Tom Kennedy, Abby
Dalton ...._..time: 96 minutes
Screened to much critical ac.dalm at
the recent Sundance Film Festival.
Attended by director
Individual v.lhose path of destruc·
LOCATIONS
•General screentngs are SS.
• Advanced tickets can be
purchased through
tkket:s.com . TKkets on the
day of the show can be pur·
chased at ind1v1dual boll
offices. For more informa-
tion, call (949) 253·2880 or
check the Web site at
newportbeachfilmfert.com .
Edwards Big
Newport
300 Newport
Center Drive
Newport Beach
(949) 644-0760
Edwards Island
7 Cinemas
999 Newport
Center Drive
Newport Beach
(949) 640-1780
Orange Cowwty
Museum of Art
850 san Clemeflte
Ave
Newport Beach
(949) 759-1122
Newporta.Mh
PublkUbrwy
1000 AllOCado Ave.
Newport Beach
(949) 717-3800
tion is so insidious and devastating
It's almost impossible not to feel
sympathy, rage a~ disgust
cast Jenica Bergere, Ken Marino,
Megyn PrKe
Running time: 88 minutes
Attended by d1rector lp.m.
•LOVE HAPPENS'"
United States. 1999
Theatr1Cal release scheduled
kxMay
Dir.: Tony Cookson
Prod.: Bent Morns
Woman constantly switches
boyfriends, becomes obsessed With
their flaws
1Qp.m.
Newport Beach Film Festival's
award winnen
\
If you're a woman contemplating
major surgery for uterine fibroids ...
Hoag has another option.
&:me women with symptomatic fibroid can now opr for .1 'impla trcatmcnt-
a non-surgical procedure called Uterine Arrcry Embolintion (UAF). ft ', one
of the many option offered by the specialist at Hoag H o<tpitJI. Your phy ici.111
can help determine if it's the best choice for you.
UAE treats fibroids without the phy ic.il and emotional imp.ict of a h~·,tcrcctom~.
Instead, fibroid are starved by u ing an c tabli hcd procedure which limib their
blood supply. Most women experience decreased s~ mptomc., within 10 day-.,
including relief from heavy bleeding and abdominal pain.
UAE is offered on an outpatient ha i ·by Womcn'li Health Service~ at H oJg-
the #1 ranked hospital in Orange County. It require' only light ,cJ.uion, and
the quarter-inch incision heals without titchc-;.
Most women can resume normal
activities within a week.
KNOW YOUll OPTIONS
WHSN IT co••• TO UTSlllNK P'l•llOID8.
TALK TO YOUll PHY81CIAN ABOUT
THK •SNSl'IT8 OP' UAI: OR CALL
HOA• WOMSN .. HSALTH SKllYICIES
AT 800/701 •HOAG (4824).
' ' .
A6 lhunday, April 6, 2000
TODAY
The Orange County chapter
of the Single Gourmet will
hold a dinner at Antonello
Ristorant in South Coast
Plaza at 6:30 p.m . The cost is
$68. For reservatiQns and
• more information, call (949)
854-6552.
Tbe Orange County Federa-
tion ot Republican Women
will .hold a luncheon at 10
a.m. at the Costa Mesa Goll
and Country Oub. The exec-
utive director of Casa Youth
Shelter will speak. The cost is
$15. The club is at 1701 Golf
Course Drive, Costa Mesa.
For more information and to
make reservations, call (714)
256-2260.
The Jewish Women's Busi-
ness and Professional Group
of the Jewish Federation will
present Sarah Catz, member
of the Orange County lrans-
portation Authority's Board of
Directors, who will speak on
"lransportation in the New
Century• at 6 p.m. The cost is
$15 for members, $20 for
guests. The Jewish federa.
tioo campus is at 250 B. Bak·
er St., Costa. Mesa. For more
information, call (714) 755-
555, Ext. 222.
lbe Mediation Center will
hold a parenting workshop
titled "No I Won't and "(pu
Can't Make Mel• at 7 p.m. at
Newport Harbor Higb's Sims
Hall, 600 Irvine, Newport
Beach. To RSVP, call (949)
574-5990.
Costa Mesa IDgh School will
hold a silent auction to raise
money for its Gra~ Night
~000. The auction will be
•held ftom 7 to_!O p .m. on the
upper level of Triangle
Square in Costa Mesa. Tick-
ets are $18 in advance or $20
on the day of the event. The
price includes admission to
the auction, dinner, drinks
and live entertainment. For
more information. call (714)
901-9974.
The Newport Beach Central
Library will hold a program
titled •Marketing on the
Web" at 7 p .m. John Eicben-
muller, founder of Innovative
Sales & Marketing, will
speak. The library is at 1000
Avocado Ave., Newport
Beach. For more information,
tLUTHERAN CHURCH OF THE MA.sTER
MORNING P RE-SCHOOL P ROGRAM
Enrolling Now
• Christian Instruction
• Developmental Program
• Hands on Craft Activities
• Phonics ... ,
• Computer Instruction..._ .. ,.
• Before/After School Care
Available
I~
8:30 AM to 1 h30 AM
Ages 3 to 5 years
2900 Pacific View Drive
Corona del Mar, California 92625
(949) 759-1146
call (949) 711-3801.
n. Onage Comaty ~
can Marketing Assn. will
hold a •Marketing Boot eamp· from 1 :30 a.m. to 5
p.m. at the Sheraton Newport
Beach, 45'5 MacArthur Blvd.
The one-day workshop will
feature 13 apeaken, tndud-
ing keynote speaker Duane
Knapp, aathor of •The Brand
Mindset.• For information,
call (800) 992-5755, Ext. 130.
Mother'• Mu'ket wlD hold a t1r seminar, Spring Clearl-
ing: Oeansing and Detoxify-
ing the Body, at 6:30 p.rn. at
its patio cafe. The market is at
225 E. 17th St., Costa Mesa.
For reservations, call (800)
595-MOMS. .
1be Career Network meet-
ing of St. Andrew's Presbyter-
ian Church will feature Don
Lamont of Success Design,
who will speak on ·Three
Steps to Having Your Best
Year Ef&* from 7:30 to 9 p.m.
The meeting is free and
reservations are not neces-
. sary. The church is at 600 St.
Andrews Road, Newport
Beach. For more information,
call (949) 574-2239.
FRIDAY
The OUl1 Senior Center wtll
hol~ a twilight dinner from 4
to 6 p .m . The evening will
feature the comedy and show
tunes of Cindy Benson. nck-
ets are $5. The center is at
800 Marguerite Ave., Corona
del Mar. For more Informa-
tion, call (949) 64.4-3244.
Orange COMt Uni....._ VDl-
versalist Cburdl will feature a
talk. by usodate profwor of
theology, lb1nvteb. She will
givt\ a talk. titled •A Vision for
Our Movttment, • dealing
with the subject of racial dif-
ference. The talk. is at 1:30
p.m. The church ls at 1259
Victoria St., Costa Mesa. For
more information, call (949)
64()-4652.
Body Design will h old a
grand opening at its fashion
Island location from 5 to 8:30
p.m. featuring facility tours,
dance presentations, demon-
strations and refreshments.
The store is at 100 Newport
Center Drive, Newport
Beach. For more information,
call (949) 722-3555.
1be Sbuyokan DoJo will cel-
ebrate its 20th year of serving
the community of Costa Mesa
at a ceremony at 6:30 p.m. at
the Mesa Verde Country
-club, 300 Oub House Road,
Costa Mesa. A live martial
arts self-defense demonstra-
tion will be performed by
Katlyn Cho, Shuyokan's first
female black belt. For infor-
mation, call the Oojo at (714)
557-6372.
SATURDAY
Whittler Law School wW hold
a panel discussion on develop-
,
•
If you live in Orange County5
Second, Third or Founh
Supervisortal Districts, we
invite you to be pan of a truly
moving ~ence.
Upon passage of M~ure M in
November 1990, the Cilium Ovcrstght Committtt
wa.. empowered by the Oran&e County dtttoratt to
act as a watchdog ow:r all bausponalion funds gmcrMCd
by the one-half cmt sales tax.
As a member of the Odzcns Oversight Committee.
you will ensure the transportation projects spect6ed tn
the Traffic lmprovcmml and Growth Managcmmt
Plan att built as promised in MCMUre M.
Any Orange County dtizm living in the Second,
Third or Founh Supervtsorlal Districts may 1pp1y to
save on the Citizens Ovcrstght CommiUtt for a
The Second District in~udes the cities and communities
of Costa Mesa, Huntington Beach, Sunset Beach. Seal
Beach, Rossmoor, Los Alamitos, Cypress, Stanton and
the western ponion of Garden Grove.
The Third District includes the cllies of Brea,
Fullerton, la Habra, lake Forest, Mission Viejo,
Orange, Villa Park and Yorba Unda.
~ Founh Disu1ct includes the cities of Anaheim.
Buena Park, la Palma, Oran&e and Placentia ..
The Grand jurors Aslodation of Orange County
(GJAOC) Odzms Ovcrstght CommiUtt Selection
Panel is conducdng the recruitment program and will
scrttn all applications and recommend qualifled
potmdal candldacrs fol' membership.
For an application or IDOft informadon, please call
(714) 970-9329 betwmi April 1 and May 7.
thlfti-yar tam.• AD .,ptc•d-w • idlii..r
1ts•ot N1S NEEDED FIOM THE SECOND, ''!••o ~ -... ~May,, 1000. . 'Ou,,,, '"''·~· SOllAl DISTllCTS
I I
iDg a tolo practice foe law
llChool students and recent
graduates. 1be _.,tM, rum
&om 9 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. at tbe
law ICbool. 3333 Harbor Blvd.,
COlta Mela. Tbe event ii free.
For Information. call (714) "4·
4141, Ext. 295.
PMbioD illad wlD preMDl
~ 11th annual fubioo lh9w
to benefit the Pediatric Ado-
lescent Diabetes Research
and Education Foundation
(PADRE). The event, to be
held in the courtyard in front
of Bloomingdale's, starts with a· reception at 7 p.m . Admis·
sion ls $75. fashion Island is
on San Joaquin Hill Road
between MacArthur Boule-
vard and Jamboree Road,
Newport Beach. To RSVP, call
(714) 532-8330.
The Newport Beach Cenfral
Ubrary will offer one-on-one
Web-surfing tutorials for
teens in seventh through 12th
grades, from 1 to 3 p .m. The
library is at 1000 Avocado
Ave., Newport Beach. For
more information, call (949)
717-3801.
Newport Harbor High
School's Navigators will pre-
sent a benefit dance at the
Sutton Place Hotel starting at
6:30 p.m. The theme for the
event is "A Night in Rio.•
Tickets are $15. The hotel is at
4500 MacArthur Blvd., New-
port Beach. For more informa-
tion, call (949) 720-1818.
Pat Welsh, author of •pat
Welsh's Southern California
Gardening,· will speak at
. . ..
Daily Pilot
Roger's GanSem at 8:30 a.m .
OD the subject of IUCCellful
flower growing. Roger's Gar-
dens Is at 2301 San Joaquin
HilJI Road, Corona del Mar.
Por more information, call
(949) 6'0-5800.
Wlaaen of tbe Oraage
County Public Ubrary'a writ·
ing competition for children
will sign the results of their
work, a book called • Adven-
tures in Writing,• at 11 a.m. at
Borden Books, Music and
Cafe in SouU. Coast Plaza.
The store is at 3333 Bear St.,.
CoSta Mesa. Por more infor·
matio~,call(714)432-7854.
Whol• Foods Market wW
bold an event to celebrate
French foods starting at noon.
The event will feature a free
sampling of French food and
screenings of the movies •An
~can in Parts• and
*GigL •Whole Foods is in 1\i-
angle Square at the intersec-
tion of Harbor and Newport
Boulevards, Costa Mesa. For
more information, call (949)
574-3800.
Aleundra Stoddard. audior
of the interior design book
•feeling at Home,• will speak
at a brunch event at 10:30 a.m.
at the Newport Beach Marriott
Hotel, 900 Newport Center
Drive, Newport Beach. The
event is $.50 per perion for
brunch or $15 per person for
brunch and a private recep-
tion with Stoddard. The hotel
is at 900 Newport Center Dri·
ve, Newport Beach. For more
information, call (949) 854-
8001, Ext. 1862.
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I · ACRYLIC '1r I I · Actylic wfMl!t TI!> .. I · Pinll & Wllile Powder '29"'
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ACTIVITID m
• Cheefs
• Jumps • Dances
Doity Pilot
Oul1 Senior Center wtll
hold a pancake breakfast
from 7:30 to 10 a .m. The
breakfast includes apple or
regular pancakes, sausage,
coffee and orange juice. The
cost is $2 for adults and $1
for children. The center is at
800 Marguerite, Corona del
Mar. For more information,
call (949) 644-3244.
MOllDIY
Borden Books, MUJJc and
Cafe Will host motivational
speaker Yvonne Bowes,
author of • 100 Ways to
Become a Successful Stu-
dent,• at 7 p.m. The store is
at 3333 Bear St., Costa Mesa.
For more information, call
(714) 432-7854.
TUESDAY
Bloomlngdale's will host a
day featuring the clothing of
Dana Buchman. including
modeling of selected items.
The store is at 701 Newport
Center Drive, Newport
Beach. For more information,
call (949) 729-6600.
The Friends of OCC's Nor-
man E. Watson Library will
conduct its annual spring
book sale from 9 a .m. to 7
p.m . Tuesday and from 9
a.m. to 2 p.m. Wednesday.
Hardcover books will sell for
$1 and $2, and paperbacks
will sell for 50 cents. The sale
will be in the library at OCC,
2701 Fairview Road, Costa
Mesa. For more information,
call (714) 432-5087.
Mother's Market will hold a
free se.rninar titled "Natural
Approaches to Cancer• with
herbalist Mark Kaylor, at
6:30 p .m. on its patio cafe.
The store is at 225 E. 17th
St., Costa Mesa. For more
information, call (949) 631-
470.
WIDllESDIY
Mother's Market wtll hold a
free seminar titled ·con-
quering Chronic Fatigue·
with Judith Todero, at 6:30
p.m. on its patio cafe. The
store is at 225 E. 17th St.,
Costa Mesa. For more infor-
mation, call (949) 631-4741.
Merrill Lynch will hold a
seminar on "Wills, Trust and
Asset Management• from
noon to 1 p.m., and a semi-
nar at 6 p.m. on •Estate Plan-
ning.• at the Clubhouse
restaurant at South Coast
Plaza. 3333 Bear St., Costa
Mesa. For information, call
(714) 429-2814.
The Costa Mesa Historical
Society will host a talk by Bo
Glover, executive director of
the Environmental Center.
The meeting begins at 7:30
p.m. The Historical Society is
at 1870 Anaheim Ave., Costa
Mesa. For more information,
call (949) 646-1274.
Orange Coast College wlll
bold a •Take Back the
Night" candlelight vigil from
7 to 10 p.m. in tfie quad at
the college. The event wUl
feature testimony from abuse
swvivors and a message of
courage and hope from OCC
professor of speech Kat Car-
roll. OCC is at 2701 Fairview
Road, Costa Mesa. For more
information. call (714) 432-
5063.
Hoag Health Center will bolt
a free seminar titled ·wtn-
ning the War Against Can-
cer• at 7 p.m. The health cen-
ter is at 1190 Baker St., Costa
Mesa. For more information,
call (800) 514-HOAG.
APllL 13
A mother-daughter legacy
club designed to strengthen
relationships between moth-
ers and daughters will meet
at 7 p.m. at Borders Books,
Music and Cafe in South
Coast Plaza. The store is at
3333 Bear St., Costa Mesa.
For more information, call
(71-4) 432-7854.
ONGOING
A women's therapy support
group meets to discuss rela-
tionship issues at 6:30 p.m.
Tuesdays at 1151 Dove St.,
#105, Newport . Beach. For
more in(ormation, call Bar-
bara at (949) 261-8Q03.
The Friends of the Newport
Beach Public Library Used
Book Store needs io replen-
ish its book stock. Patrons
are urged to bring in
unwanted books. With the
exception of law books or
magazines, all donations -
hardcover and paperback -
are welcome and are tax-
deductible. Books may be
left at any of the three
branch libraries -Balboa,
Mariners or Corona del Mar.
They. also can be left in the
special book closet next to
the store at 1000 Avocado
Ave. For more information,
call (949) 759-9667.
The Newport Beach New-
comers Club meets at 10 a.m.
the third Wednesday of each
month at different hotnes.
The group of about 100
women go on the road and
• The Oa&I&
Spa Facial
•Wax.Ing
• Mini Facial
•Acne
Tr8atment
•Aroma-
t herapy
Salt Glow
• Customized
Correalw
Facial
•The Oa&I&
Peel
• Eyelaeh ~rm & Tlnt
·.AROUND ToWN Thursday, April 6, 2000 A7
issues, concerns and respon-
sibilities of adult children car-
ing for their elderly parents at
7:30 p.m. Tuesdays at 250 E.
Baker St.. Costa Mesa. The
purpose or the. group is to
belp children and other con-
cerned relatives identify
problems~d issues and develop aR roprlate solu-
tions. The . is $30. For
more info lion, call (714)
445-4950. -
Commuruty Church, 301
Magnolia S.t., Costa Mesa.
For more information. call
(949) 548-7274.
Jewish Family Service of ~
,Orange County sponsors an ~.\
ongoing beahng suppOrt f' group for the chronically ill. , ,'
The purpose is to provide par-I t
ticipa.nts with emotional and J
spiritual SUJ?port to manage ill-t •11 pess and its consequences. •
'The group meets at 7 p.m. I
Thursdays at Jewish Family
Service, 250 E. Baker S~ .. Cflos~ •(' ,
ta Mesa. Attendance is ,
but registration IS required •. ~ o
~ter or for ·more lllfQnna·
tion, call (714) 445-4~~)(
~ Hlltlim Hlgll 81Mi6 Nate&aa wtR JSe11nt a
The Costa Mesa Chamber of/ Co~fce holds networ~g
l~~beon meetings from
~1)45 a.m. to 1 p.m. at the
Costa Mesa Couno/ Club,
1701 Goll Course Dnve, Cos-
ta Mesa. Visitors are wel·
come. Cost is $12. For more
information, call (714) 885-
9090.
Scrabble Club No. 350
meets from 6 to 10 p.m.
Thursdays at Borders Books,
Music and Cafe on 19th ..... -..111 ............ IW ..... lllW p.m. Street and Newport Boule-Pddll\t 1be ..._of ... ....all •A NllMID Rio..• 'l'ldm8 The Udo Isle Toastma.sters
Club meets at 6:30 p .m .
Mondays at the Oakwood
Apartments, 1700 16th St., in
the clubhouse on the main
level, in Newport Beach. For
more information, call (949)
515-9470.
vard, Costa Mesa. The cost is
.. $15. n.· halal .. 111.U. ........ BML. Newport $3. Ne w players are wel·
come. For more mfonnation, Bellda. For-....... t JI\ ail .... 720-1818. call (949) 759-4871.
play golf, tennis, bridge and
more. The g roup also bolds
several evening parties. For
more information, call (949)
854-4501.
St. Mark Health Mlnlstrles
presents Love Without Hon-
or support groups at 10 a.m.
and 7 p.m. Mondays through
December for women coping
with domestic violence. The
e Oaala Salon
Newport. _ ..........
groups will meet for two
hours at St. Mark Presbyter-
ian Church, 2100 Mar Vista
Ave., Newport Beach. For
more information, call (949)
721-8079.
The Jewish Family Service of
Orange County sponsors a
discussion group focusing oo
The John Henry Foundation
sponsors the Comfort Zone,
a mental illness support
group, which meets from
7:30 to 9 p.m. Thursdays at
the Lighthouse Coastal
The Coln and Stamp Club
meets from 1 to 3 p.m. Mon-
days at the Oasrs Senior
Center. New members inter-
ested m tradlng, buying and
selling stamps and coins are
betng sought to JOin these
informal meetings. There are
no fees reqwred . For more
information, call (949) 644-
3244.
Fever, Cough or Wheezing?
Why wait HOURS in
EMERGENCY ROOMS
We are here for you.
After Hours and Weekends.
Same Day Appointments Guaranteed.
• Primary Pediatric Care (0-21 yrs) • Asthma & Pulmonary Care
• Pcdiarric Emergencies & Critical Care • Adolcsefnt Cm & Weight Control
Newport
~M~ Ctlildren's
Zam Relio M.D., WI, R~ ~teven ~. M.D., fW
am~ O'Umel M.D., rw rerm Del ~m ~.o., rw ·
Medical Group (949) 644-0970
1401 AYO<Olio s.r'!', 5-lite 802
• Mewpcw1 w.. lA 92660
(949) 759-1720
360 s. Miguel Orivt, S4lite 407
Mewpcw1 W . CA 92660
Hl)AG CANCFI~ CLNTER OPEN HOUSE
Join Robert 0 . Dillman, M.D.
medical director of Hoag Cancer Center for
"Winnirig Against Cancer"
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
a lecture addressing current cancer statistics,
the importance of early detection, cancer prevention,
and advances In treatment outcomes.
'
• Gllklecl toun, dtspla,. and
refr•hmeats wlll be
pl'Mlded from 6:00-7: 15 pm
..
Tuesday, April 11 from 6 to 9 p ;m.
Hoac Cancer Center, Newport BMch
HCWJ.
CANCER
CENTER ,,.,.."
.
A8 Thundoy, April 6, 2000
PALACE
CONTINUED FROM A 1
The home is o:iore'like a latr
come every Friday night. The
quiet residential street that
bas few street lights turns i.qto
a bustling thoroughfare
around 8 p.m. Parking is ,hard
to find and random loners are
left carrying food for theiclub's
potluck buffet. .
The entry fee. or •,;onlrlbu-
. ti on· as Oliver callJi.it, is a bout
$40. There is a one-time $10
charge for a lifatime member-
ship card. The rest of the mon-
ey covers food, entertainment
(karaoke), and maintenance
costs.
Oliver said club rules man-
date guests pay -although If
someone didn't fork over the
cash, they wouldn't be turned
away.
·No one has ever done
that,• he remarked.
The dub is teeming Wllh
single, able-bodied men on
Friday nights. Some are young
and athletic while others are
old enough to get a senior o t-
izen's discount.
It's waU-to-wall testos-
terone and most of them have
come for ·Bubbles.•
Bubbles is a middle-aged
woman who performs sexudl
acts wtth groups of men.
The activities run trie sex u-
al gamut. There are the
exploratory voyeurs who
watch but don't touch. There
are people who partic1pdte in
group sex in any numbe r of
rooms or poolside Cdbdnd~.
And there are the srngle me n
who come for Bubbles
Oliver maintains that Buh-
bles doesn't receive any of the
money ta.ken at the front door.
While some believe her
actions are another form or
prostitution, Costa Mesa
police have investigated the
club and found no criminal
activity.
"What we are concerned
about is that what's going on is
consensual and limited lo
adults,· said Costa Mesa
Police Lt. Ron Smith. ·we
have not had any complaints
in any of those regards. From
our standpoint, It doesn't
a ppear anything that we can
enforce against.~
Five years ago,. neighbors
complained that loud noise,
excessive traffic and trash
from the gatherings was ·
affecting the area. City offi-
oals reviewed the complaint
but the club was allowed lo
keep its doors open.
Many neighbors have
accepted the fact that twice a
week there will be parties at
the home. But some residents
thought the parties were limit-
ed to swinging and were sur-
prised to learn about Friday
night's event..
"They can do what they
Wdllt over there as long as ti
remd.ins behind their doon;. •
said one neighbor, who asked
to remain anonymous.
The Friday night affairs
were attracting too many peo-
ple, Oliver said. Last week,
there were more than 150
people. forcing Oliver lo
requ1re reservations from that
point forward.
"We've had people come
from dround the country for
th1!.." he said. "It was getting
10 the point wherf!we couldn't
hdndJe dll the foot traffic. We
dre going to continue the par-
tHo>!>, but on d limited bdsis.
• Ro11U111tk Din111r • Tb,111rr1 • Colfcou • WedJi11gi • Alfniwn11ri'1
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The Panther Palace ls
renowned ln the swinging
community. Oliver runs an
advertisement every month in
a Westyle publication.
The documentary film that
was barred from the film festi-
val is being shown at a West
Hollywood theater.
"The Liie-Style• was made
s.everal years ago. when
Goodwin was still alive. He
and his wife, Dotty, started
having couples over about 20
years agQ and the Panther
Palace was bQm.
Oliver said the film festi-
val's decision was probably a
good choice.
"The film wasn't done
properly," he said. •They
should have focused on one
person, but the filmmakers
went all over the place. You
don't get a real sense of what
the lifestyle is really like."
Oliver himseli is not a
swinger. The former U.S.
Marine Corps officer, who is
single, said be can understand
why many people would see
this lifestyle as taboo.
"My morals would proba-
bly say this see.ms wrong," he
said. "But 1 accept it for what It
is and accept people for the
way they are.·
Oliver admitted he runs the
club like a business, but does-
n't hcwe any permits. As long
as people are having consen-
sual sex, the parties will con-
tinue.
"This place is here because
people want it here,• Oliver
added. ·w e are providing an
atmosphere for them that they
enjoy. The people who don't
understand it have no right to
question it.·
0 11 ,11·'· . '
" . Ji • ' • ' \ ••
Rabbin Insurance Agency
AlTTO • HOMEOWNERS• HEALTif
40 Years In Business
/~'. ~ ~ <:,;.-~ ,,.. ...... ....,.....,.,,,.,_." ./ > ,.,~
949-631-7740
441 Old Newport Bhd.. Newpon a-a
(Near H"I Ho.pita!)
NEW&USED
OFFICE FURNITURE
& SERVICES
www.msio.ffice.com
SPRING BLOWOUT THROUGH APRIL 29TH
Mon -Fri: Sam -Spm Sat: 1 Oam -4pm
r-----------, '} Q0k off 1 I wnh this ad I
I All nems ~g;;,~~~·~e~l;/~~ I
L "A5 Is", quanuty limned 1
__________ _.
• Over 500 used
Ergonomic and Sid e Chairs
starting at $25.00 each
• Over 200 Used Desks
starting at $50.00 each
• 8x8 Panel Stations (light grey)
$300.00 each
• Over 300 Used Call Centers,
6x6 with Power
at $475.00 each
• Over 300 Vertical &
Lateral Files
starting at $49.00 each .
IASTll SlllS
Easter Seals needs volun-
teers for ongoing clerical
work and to help in· pro-
grams for children with dis-
abilities and in special
events. For more informa-
tion, call (714) 834-11t1.
EIVllOIMINTAL
NAIUIE CENRI
Volunteer trail guides need-
ed to help visitors learn
·about their environment. For
more information, call (949)
645-8489.
EXCHANGE ClUI
CHILD AIUSE
PIEYEIYION CENTER
Donate new school supplies
or become a volunteer to
help children victimized by
child abuse. Volunteers
work with county referrals to
assist high-risk victims of
parental drug addiction.
Drop off s upplies at the
Child Abuse Center Office
in Costa Mesa at 2482 New-
port Blvd.. No. 7; or Union
Banlc in Newport Beach at
1090 Bayside Drive. Call
(949) 722-1 107 for more
information.
FISH -HARBOR
AIEA tNC. . Call 642-6060 to help
Friends in Service to
Humanity (PISH) assist with
the Mobile Meals program
and provide ongoing emer-
gency assistance to those in
need. Both always seek vol·
unteer assistance in a vari-
ety of areas. For more infor-
mation. call (949) 645-8050.
fllllDS Of IHI
NIWPOIT llACH
LllUIY
Volunteers are n~ed '10
staff the . used book store
located just inside the
entrance of the central
library. Volunteers must be
. members of the Friends. of
the Library and are asked to
work one three-hour shift
per month. For more infor-
mation. call (949) 759-9667.
Giil SCOUTS
Girl Scouts of Orange Coun-
ty needs volunteers to be
trained as troop leaders,
serve on special committees
and give lectures, demon-
strations or classes. For more
infonnation, call (714) 979-
7900.
GIRLS llC. OF
OUNGE COUNTY
Volunteers are needed to
offer educational and enrich-
ment opportunities for girls
and boys. For more informa-
tion, call (949) 646-7181.
HUMAN OPTIONS
The organization shelters,
counsels and educates
abused women and chil-
dren. It is looking for volun-
teers to help run its Classy
Seconds thrift store at 462-B .
E. 17th St., Costa Mesa.
SPRING SALES EVENT
MEN'S & WOMEN'S
All· Terrain Trell Shoe
(001 . 802. 803)
reg '8411
Corona del Mer Plaza
932 Avocado St. CPCH & MacArthrl
~~ C94SJ 7E!D· -W 602
Doily Pilot
Duties include sorting dona-
tions, displaying merchan-
dise and sales assistance.
For more lnfonnation, call
(949) 631-.. 696.
JEWISH flllllY s1mc1 of
OUNllCOUNn
Volunteers are needed for
Project Caring which pro-
vides socialization and cul-
tural experiences and ShCJb·
bat and holiday celebrations
to the Jewish residents and
others at ·Fairview Develop-
mental Center in Costa
Mesa. Volunteers ' ·:will
"adopt· a facility to provide
programming of Jewish con-
tent to the residents on a
monthly basis and will be
required to take a TB test and
fingerprinting background
check. For more infonnation,
call (714) 445-495Q.
JUNIOR LEAGUE OF
ORANGE COUNn
This organization of women
committed to promoting vol-
unta.rism, developing the
pote ntial of women and
improving communities
through the effective action
and leadership of trained
volunteers, is seeking new
members. For more informa-
tion, caU (949) 261-0823.
KAISER PERMANENTE
HOSPICE SERVICES
Volunteers are needed to
proV1de four hours per week
visiting patients or doing
errands for them or their
caregivers in conununities
near volunteers' homes. For
more information, call (562)
622-3805.
ANTIQUE ROW & GARDEN CAFE
"NCnet Un(.q~ SMpS'(ilWL wltl\, r ~e.-for' yotV' Home.1·
Fi.w Homt Ft1ntisltl11g1
Anti911t1 & Colltdi'11n
Tn11litio1111I lo Cott•tt
Ci/ti & C•r"trt Decor
Wi1h Lisi & Dtli11ny
G~den,C~
c;.,dm P•lio Di1ti11g
BrtM;fasl, U."'11,
Tu & £1,,mso S.r
Caf~ Hovrs: ~on.Sat W
•o;ec~r th~ Row, a wonderful
Shopping anti Dining atl~nture"
c;n41t1 to Chnulim
Uud & R•rt Boob
C111tom Pictwn FtMr1i11g
F11milwrt Rnlor•tio11
""''""'"more!
949 722-1177
JJO East 1711t Strttf
Cost• Mn.it, CA ( lklti"' ,,.,, ,,,,.,
How Houra: Tue-Sat l~.S
481 E. 17th Stree
645-2022
200 Birch St. (at Dove) • Newport Buch
833-0660 -----------------, ,... • FwDl•wlceW I
•l•lerWu I
1.------2':1'.:.•:.~--r--------------------
I
I ------I a8Nlr WAlll . "1LWllWS .. ! ,.IP :::=.:--·-
Daily Pilot
CDNTNJED FROM A 1
of ..... CXJatrol of ICbool
fundl.
.... my UDdlntandt~
that Gov. om. wants to
._ flOm 'reel' panmll,.
Mid JUl Money, Harbor
Coundl PTA president.
9Tbat'I why we Jhougbt it
W81 IO important•
School offlda)a laid ll is
a poblem w~ the state
designates funds fqr lpe· #o dfic pwpoees, became tl
assumes that all school
districts have the same
needs.
•They're telling us to,
say, spend it OD textbooks
and maybe we already
bought textbooks out of
the general fund last year
-so we lose out on that
money,• Russell said.
"Some governmental
agencies want to take loo
much control away that
should be local .•
There are aJso initia-
ttves and programs that
are not fuDy funded by the
state, and they must be
~ paid for by what
11 left of the general fund,
Money said.
Oas-size reduction is
a pdme example of that,
she.aid.
•Irvine can't take any-
more encroachment on
their general fund, so
they're bringing class
sizes back up to 30, • Mon-
ey expla.lned. ·we don't
want to see that happen.•
BELL
CONTINUED FROM A 1 .
took a harder look at Col.
McCormick's Tribune.
What I saw was a news-
paper which at that time
was so far to the political
right that it would bave
made today's Orange Coun-'
ty Register look downrlgh~
progressive. I exulted at the
Tribune's legendary · /
"Dewey Wins" headlif\e
that Harry Truman so' loved
to display, and I raUed at
the Tribune's ehtbusiastic ·
support of Sen: Joseph
McCarthy's p6grom of
alleged Communists caught
in his indiscriminate nets.
For the 10 years I com-
muted to Chicago's C.OOp, I
got on my Burlington train
eve ry workday morning fac-
ing a sea of Tribunes while I
cracked out my lonely
tabloid Sun-TI.mes. And I
spent a lot of late afternoons
in bars sharing a beer with
friends who were working
for the Tribune and made a
game out of sticking hidden
and sophisticated pins into
the Colonel's pet biases in
lheir news stories.
It's not hard to hate a
publication that once car-
ried "The World's Greatest
Newspaper" on its mast-
head.
And now that it has mus-
cled into the ranks of the
nation's corporate behe-
moths, I'm working for the
Tribune. Sort of.
The peregrinations or the
Los Angeles TI.mes over the
past few years should have
prepared me. There was,
for example, the distancing
of Otis Chandler frorq the
paper. The importation of
tqp executives with no
background in journalism
on the premise that busi-
nesses are interchangeable
and anyone trained in the
business world can shift
from com flakes to baseball
to newspapering without
missing a beat.
And, 'most recently, the
terribly counterproductive
i~ea that advertising and
editorial can work in tan-
dem to tum out a credible '
newspaper, which culmlnat-
ed in the embdirassing Sta-
ples Center issue of the
Times Magazine .
Even with these hints of
worse things to come, I still
find it hard to be lie ve that
this huge, burgeoning
region is going to be report-
ed a nd renected in our
largest daily newspaper
through the prism of a cor-
porate conglome rate thou-
sands of miles distant.
1 haven't followed the
Tribune much in recent
years. I read it only when I
re turn to the Midwest for a
visit. But I am told by pro-
fessional friends who live
there that it has consider-
ably mod erated both its
political views and journal-
istic objecllvity smce I
moved awdy from Chicago
two years a fter lhe Colonel
died .
But much more impor-
tant, the Thbunc has
become a big player in tele-
vision clnd the Internet
world, known in the biz as
the "new media.· Citing
that as the principal reason,
Otis Chandler is quoted in
the TI.mes as saying that the
Tribune acquisibon is a
"win-win situation." This
comment may also possibly
have bee n influenced by
the fact that in selling out to
the Tribune, the Chandler
family reportedly almost
doubled the value of its
Tunes-Mirror stock.
But all this high-level
stuff leaves me witb a
headache. It. has verv little
to do with the tcoops in the'
trenches, except to leave us
with the vague feeling that
our world is rather rapidly
being taken over by a
handful of conglomerates
who exist on some distant
planet beyond our vision or
control. Daddy WcUbucks 1s
using a spaceship these
days. r •
One redeeming virtue
that keeps recurnng to me
and offering me hope 1s that
the Tribune also recently
purchased the Chicago
C ubs baseball team.
So maybe I can watch d
game from the corporate
box -or at least get a com-
plimentary seat in the
bleachers at Wrigley Field
-the next time I visit
Chicago.
A perk like that would
help ease the trdnsillon
• JOSEPH N. BEU. 1s a Santa Ana
.Heights resident. His column runs
Thursdays.
• Specializing in Quality Apparel & Accessories
• f.xcdlcm Seleccion or Designer Clothing
• New spring scyles, including DKNY. Ellen Tracy,
Escada, St. }oh11 & more
• Evening, cocktail , wedding & proms
333 E. 17th Street, #4 • Cosca Mesa
(Behind lm'l House of Pancakes)
(949) 650-7333
' • Thursday, Friday &
Saturday
April 6, 7 & 8th
]rut in time for your rnnotkling and Spring Mcor11ting projectl
As Low As 70°/o OFF
'CLINE
CONTINUED FROM A1
ly based manufdcturer of a
waterproof, chlorine-safe,
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peratures, 1et now and water-
mdssage speeds.
•He redlly puts h.unself
an d the resou rces of the
en tire compdny into the
community,• Sd1d Ed Faw-
cett, president of the Costa
Mesd Chamber qf Com-
merce, who nominated
Cline.
The progrdln gives stu-
dents from Estanc1d and
Costa Mesd hig h schools
exposure to the ddy-to-ddy
operdtlons of the company,
wh1ch Pmploys more lhdn
200 people
"By g1vmg students an
opportunity to interact with
ind1v1dudls from edcb
department, I thmk they'll
see a redson to go to col-
lege,• Cline sd1d
It begms cdch year w1th
40 students td ktng a tour of
lhu company's sdles. mdnu-
factunng dnd dccounting
deptlrtments Human
resources mdndger Kathleen
Pearson 1ntc rv1ews each of
the students, trea ting them
dS ti they were dpplymg for
d protess1ondl pos1bon.
She selPcts 20 stude nts -
"kids who dre serio usly
interestc•d m business, but
mdybe d ltttlP iffy dbout
completing high school" -
to spend four hours d week
shadowinq employees m the
department
Thursday, Apf1I 6, 2000 A9
"He really puts
himself and the
resources of the
entire company into
the community."
Ed Fawcett
president of the Ccxta M~a
Chamber of Commerce, Who
nominated Cline
Ch.ne gives the students a
complex hypothetical busi-'
ness problem to ~Ive after
they finish sptfoding six
weeks dt the company
. "It's three pages long -
not easy,· sd1cl Ann Pie rcy, a
career counselor dt Estdneta
High School, who oversees
the program •And 1t he lps
them learn tedmwork dnd
problem solving •
Usmg Powerpomt -a
slide display software pro-
gram -the students present
thetr solution to Choe, a
team of compdny execu-
llves, the pnnc1pa.Js p f epch
school a nd thc•1r cldssmdtes
"I ha te talking m front of
people,· sd1d Eh1a beth Ben-
nett, 17, d senior at c stdnc1a
who comple ted the pro·
grcun "But I'm interc led in
overseds sules and this gdve
me a rust look dt whdl I'd be
domg m one of tho~e 'pos1-
lJOns •
Cllne b one of 53 sma.JJ
business owners the U S
Small Business Admin1stra-
t10n will co n'>1dt>r for the
NdlJO nal Bu..,m~ss Per..,on of
the YedI
Pl!u:n~ing
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Choose from quality manufacturers' such as
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I l 00 N cwpon C enter Drive
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230 Newport Center Drive
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For lllOft tnfonutlon, call
'(949) 760-9150
Alk for Joanna 1'lll'pley
..
>'
'
A I 0 Thursday, Aei' 6, 2000
. . 'SoclEfY Doily Pilot
Spring is in the air at fashion shows, luncheons, benefits
T he classy Udo Isle
duo Marlon Palley
and Rhanda Pbatr are
true miracle workers. With
less than 90 days of plan·
ning and preparation, Pal-
ley and Phair, with able
assistance from a dedicated
cre w, will chair the inaugur-
al Newport Beach Spring
Antiques Show and Sale, in
conjunction with the Udo
Isle Women's Club, on May
12 and 13. ·
Elegant invitations were
in the mail last week for not
only the show, which will ·
feature many of the finest
dealers in Southern Callior-
nia, but also for the gala
preview night affair slated
for May 11 to benefit Cbild-
help USA and Second Har-
vest Food Bank of Orange
County. The $100-per-per-
son admission to opening
night will raise money for
charity and set the tone for
the show.
With the first-class taste
level of Palley, Phair and
others including Karen Ut-
tlefair and Sharo n McKin-
non supporting the event, it
promises to be one of the
smash success outings of
late spring.
Besides quality antique
furniture of French, English
and American origin, the
show will feature early Cali-
fornia art, prints, maps,
books, silver, porcelain,
linens and textiles, chande-
liers, lamps, painted pieces,
and even estate jewelry. A
tent will be erected at San
Remo Park on Lido Isle to
house the show, with the
Lido fsle Clubhouse being
turned into a cafe on the
water.
THE CROWD
Tickets to the show are
$12 at the door and $10 in
advance. Special donor
patron packages are also
available. This should be
the start of a major annual
event in Newport Beach.
For more information,
call Karen UtUefa.lr at (949)
675-6838. Tickets may be
reserved by calling (949)
723-4700.
•
Paul Baldwin, another
Lido citizen, has been rec-
ognized by the San Diego
Museum of Art honoring his
late mother, Maruja Bald-
win.
Baldwin attended a
major-league art reception
last week in San Diego
hosted by the museum
board. A recen t $1-million
bequest and a 1988 gift to
the museum of a world-
renowned collection of
works by Toulouse Lautrec
collected by the late Maruja
and Baldwin M. Baldwin,
were the reason for the cel-
ebration and the recogni-
tion.
"My mother, who
wished always to be known
only as Maruja, found San
Diego, the San Diego
Museum of Art, and the
Childrens &~ial
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~~
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wonderful people associat-
ed with the museum to be
some of the most re warding
and fuUWing people and ·
places she eve r encoun-
tered," Paul Baldwin said,
"I hope I can carry on the
tradition and spirit of
Maruja at the Sl\n Diego
~use.um of Art.•
•
The highlight of the
social week in Newport was
surely the appearance of
Julie Nixon El1enhower at
the Diamond Jubilee cele-
bration luncheon of the
Assistance League of New-
port-Mesa.
The very pretty and per-
sonable Eisenhower shared
memories of the White
House with the crowd. She
was neither political nor
issue-oriented in her deliv-
ery, instead focusing on the
lifestyle side of the political
bubble. The crowd adored
her, treating her as if sh e
was one of their own. And,
in some ways she indeed
was.
Kathy Harvey, Jan
Murar, Teresa Pomeroy
and Mary Fox represented
the league in organizing
the sold-out luncheon at
the Newport Beach Mar-
riott Hotel at Fashion
Island.
Underwritten by gener-
ous Assistance League
patrons, including John and
Donna Crean, Bruce and
Jlll Ayres, Jim and Susan
Callas, Jloger and Joycelyn
Gilbert, John and Mary
Lynn Bergman Rallls, and
many more, the afternoon
was a warm, family reunion
of ladies who have served
the league and the county
for many years.
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~ ..
Above, from left.
Kathy Harvey, Teresa
Pomeroy, Julie Nixon
Eisenhower and Jan
Mu.rar at the Assistance
League luncheon at the
·Newport Beach Marriott
Hotel. At right. from left,
Don Badgalupt,
Paul Baldwin and Ann
Davies at the San Diego
Museum of A.rt e vent that
paid tribute to Baldwin's
mother, Maruja, a New-
port Beach resident who
was dedicated to the arts.
One of the most charm-
ing anecdotes shared by
Eisenhower was the story of
first mee ting a young
reporter named Jacqueline
Bouvier . Julie was a young
child of 4 in 1952 when her
father, Richard Nlxoo,
served under Dwight D.
Eisenhower.
The Times Herald sent
Bouvier to do a light story
on the children of Washing-
ton. Julie happened to be
playing in the family yard
in Georgetown when Bouvi-
er walked through the gate.
She introduced herself to
the young child, took her
photo playing, and asked
her one question.
"Do you play with
Democrats?" she asked.
"What's a Democrat?"
the child replied. The pho-
to, and question/answer
ran in the Times Herald
and has become a classic
piece of presidential Amer-•
icana.
Julie Nixon Eisenhower
turned to her captive crowd
and said, "I'm still trying to
answer that question.• The
audience. including Democ-
rats, roared.
• 8.W. COOK's column appears
Thursdays Ind Sclturdays.
LAUGH It FOi
COIBYMONTH
Newport Dun8I d ._a
•Laugh ID .. aJIDedy lll;Ur .
fMtlldngc••~ vm-
lliloqWltl, ~
and others. The event.
whicb ii open for •udi·
tiom, wW nm from noon
to 1 p.m.. Saturday. New-
port Dunes ii at 1131 Back
Bay Drive. For informatlon
r9garding pertonntng, can
(562) "91-1000. Por genel'-
al iafor«Ndno. td (800)
765-7661.
ii0ii1H MCWVI
WINE a FOOD CENJa
1be center features many
sped.al ewnta each
month and ii at 1570
Scenic AM., Ollla ~·
Por more~ Cell
(714) 9'19-4510.
.._TIME WN m IMS
Hi-nme wme cenm •-
tUNS wine tatetnga fnJm
(:30 to 8 p.m. Prtdeya 8Dd
1:30 '° 8 p.m. Satmdays.
Pormoni ilfCNBl)tl'-00, wi
(949)~
-
. .
Daily Pilot Thursday, April 6, 2000 All
'Road' to 'The Skulls' filled with 'High Fidelity'
• mnm·s NOT1: The Reel Ctttia
coUnn '-tures movie critiques
wrttt.n by community l'Mfnben
S9Mng on our panel.
'Road to El Dorado'
is tale that will last
I T be Road to El Dora-do" is about two
people from Spain,
Tulio and Miguel, Who go on
an adventure and try to find
El Dorado, the City Qf Gold.
Once they overcome
obstacles that have been put
in their path, they finally
reach El Dorado. They were
very poor, so as luck would
have it, the citizens of El
Dorado RMI mistake them for CRITICS il~~ ~:
ury, until
one of the citizens finds out
they're not gods. She helps
them with their plan.
Later on in the story, the
priest Tzekel-Kan finds out
that they're not gods by the
blood on Miguel's forehead.
He decides to call on the
forces of the jaguar. He tries
to defeat them. He loses. He
tries again with a Spanish
troop. but the entrance is
blocked, thanks to Tulio and
Miguel.
The tale of El Dorado
comes to We in this animated
film. lt has a lot of comedy
that would be enjoyed by all
people, from young to old.
The characters are fantastic,
especially Tulio and Miguel.
They both have a great
sense of humor, and really
bring out the fun in the story.
Chel, the first citizen to
find out the truth about Tullo
and Miguel; and El Ativa,
the horse, were also a maJor
part of the story.
The music for the film was
written by Elton John. ·1
Believe in Everything" was
one of the songs he wrote.
He really captured the theme
of the story with the harmo-
ny of the music.
1lU.s story is very well-ani-
mated and bas a good sense
of hi.Story. It's an outstanding
movie for
all ages,
and has
the ability
to make
anyone
laugh.
•The Road
to El Dora-
do~ is a 1
tale tha~ /
will last; forevett·
• JARA SAi.AM, 11, is a sixth-
grader at Eastbluff Elementaty In
Newport Beach. She likes soccer.
ballet and writing.
'High Fidelity'
targets youngsters
A s my daughter-in-law
observed, •High
Fidelity' is a male
• movie, mostly for those
between the ages of 13 and
33. • Which is not to say it
doesn't have social as well as
cinematic values.
Our hero is Rob Gordon
(John Cusack), who talks
directly to the audience, a
device that has been used
before and usually with mid-
dling results as here. He
shares his concerns about his
ambivalent and unrealized
ambitions, his not v~ry earth-
shaking dilemmas, bis inse-
curities and his inability to
commit to a stable, long-term
relationship.
The film opens with an
earsplitting blare of music
popular with today's young
adults. Happi\}'. Rob soon
turus the volume down,
though periodically but
briefly there are high-level
bursts of •music.· (If the
reader gets the impression
that the reviewer doesn't
think much of today's music,
you're right.)
We learn that Laura, his
current love, is moving out.
The rest of the story revolves
around Rob's inability to
come to terms with himself
-and Laura. The twists and
turns of the plot. such as they
are, are pretty predictable,
with a leavening of humor
that is gratefully welcomed
by old fogies like me.
Affordable Tuition
With Before & After Care
At No Additional Cost
For Pre-School Students .
Saturday, April 15th
10:00 a.m. Until 12:00 Noon
Come Join The Fun! Bring The Family!
Tour our friendly up to date campuses.
• Refreshments • Balloons •
A,e2dnsrede6
6.S7 Vicu>ria Screet
6:30 a.m. -6:30 p.m.
(949) 642-04 ll
Joshua Jack.Ion. left, Wllllam Petersen, center and Craig
T. Nelson star ln "The Skulls."
Laura (Iben Hjejle), who
hails from Sweden and lives
there most of the time, is· a
piquant and pretty actress,
with character in her face
that is reflected in her perfor-
mance. She also has warmth
of personality that no one
else in the cast really has.
From time to time, howev-
er, Cusack shows a charm,
intelligence and warmth that
could be very beguiling in
another, different theme
movie. He understands the
role he's playing and does it
well, but Rob is a pretty shal-
low, run-of-the-mill guy.
Without exception the cast
is above average, if you don't
count the standard stock
characters who merely serve
to move the story forward
Major ones indutle Todd
Louiso as Dick, a thick-
sk:inned loudmouth, who
shows real musical talent
before the movie ends; Jack
Black as Barry, a nerdy ~fit
in his world of •rup" music -
but likable; Tun Robbins (in a
~eo role) to whose bed
Laura Oees; and Lisa Bonet,
ooc:ie a demure youngster on
•The Cos-
by Show"
and now a
beautiful,
saucy, suc-
cessful
singer
whose path
momentar-
ily crosses
Rob's.
All in
all, this
film is well
done as to
cinematog-
8eonore
Humphrey
raphy, editing, sets (the
record store, focus of the
action, looks like any one of
the semi-successful , some-
what sleazy ones we've all
seen). Costuming has its own
subtle flare here and defi-
nitely contributes to the
overall ambience of the story.
Director Stephen Frears
knew what he was doing
and shows control of a sub-
ject that could have gotten
out of hand.
A sidebar: coarse e pithets
and crude language is the
norm today, exploited in cer-
tain films as Hollywood mon-
Third Annual
Newport Harbor High School
Home & Garden Tour
•Tuesday, May 2, 2000
• 10:00 AM to 3:00 PM
Visit charming and unique homes in the
Newport Beoch and Costa Mesa neighborhood.
You will enjoy lunch catered by PLUM'S of Costa
Mesa with refreshments by C' est Si Bon
of Newport Beoch. Tickets $40 ean Today forT1eke1s1
(949) 262-5290
ey men cater to the young
audience they woo. But
unless it is relevant, a little
goes a long way. •High
Fidelity• delights in these
abuses, which made viewers
of the targeted age howl
with glee and those who are
•wannabes-in-the-groove"
laugh self-consciously. Some
of the cijalpgue did not
enhance the quality of the
picture.
•ELEANORE~. •over
65," lives In Costa Mesa and is a
political junkie Involved with sev-
eral dty committees.
'The Skulls' is
fast-paced action IT he Skulls~ are a secret sooety at an
Ivy League universi-
ty. Don't ask which one, they
can't really tell you. because
everything's a secret, and
must remain that way at all
costs. Only the best of the best
are asked to join, of course.
Melissa
Richardson
It's like
·aear and
Present
Danger• or
·111e
Fum," only
in a new,
younger
location .
The1rilm is
almost an
aerobic
.,workout,
'it'll have
-· your heart
racing and your blood pump.'.
ing.
While an acbon movte of
this sort is not the best to
showcase hls vanety of ta).
ents, Jackson is in top fonn
Hts intenstty level is high and
stays that way through a
tense and drauung plot. He
may be a teen idol, but he
isn't JUSt resllllg on hls charm
and good looks. The boy
actually has actmg talent,
which is an a.mazmg concept
in this tune of pathebc movies
stuffed wtth teens (and those
acting as teenagers).
Walker is a perfect bal·
anceforJackson,subUy
powerful, almost fragile in
appearance, h.tdmg hls
strength behind a mask. He's
a chameleon in people's
dothing. Where Jackson
grabs the attenuon wtth hls
forcefuJ and alluring nature.
Walker coaxes 1t out wtthout
Luke McNamara (Joshua
Jackson) is a townie, the
scholarship student, the cap-
tain of the rowing squad and
all-around good guy. He
wants into "The Skulls"
because they'll ensure a
good futureforturn.Caleb
Mandrake (Paul Walker) is
the weak son of the current
Skulls chauman, Linton
Mandrake (Crrug T. Nelson)
who will do anytiu.ng to
make hls fdther proud. Luke
and Caleb become •soul ,
mates,• two pledges respon-
sible for one another.
_ one hardiy reahzmg 1t
Everyth.ulg comes crasb-
mg down when Luke's friend
Will tS found dead. a murder
planned to look hke a sw-
ede. When Luke finds out
that "The Skulls. are
uwolved, he has to choose
between playing the game
and survival or buck the sys·
tern, avenge his fnend's
death and maybe che trying.
"The Skulls" is an action
suspense mystery whirlwind.
The pace is intense and riv-
eting. At tunes a bit Jumpy,
the overall picture lS so
engrossing that it's easy to
overlook a few slight flaws.
With the two of them
together, notlung 1S imposSl·
ble, and the auchence bene-
fits completely Watdung
"The Skulls~ is llke ndmg
waves m a storm. The highs
are huge. and the lows are
almost nonexistent smce
another wave 1s already
crashing down agatn.
The movte goes on for a
scene or two too long. but
maybe it's needed to let the
heart calm down a bit There
are tiny flaws m the hlm, but
action movies are not really
Oscar matenal. The acbng
and action 1s wondrous and
fun, a quick pick -me-up.
• MELISSA IUCKAltDSON, 19, 1s a
Costa Mesa resident and a junior
at UCI.
I I '4 J I ~.
(949) 848-5430
.. SUPERIOR .... COSTA MESA
-
go~
gJ
Enjoy a Spacioua Suite, Sumptuoua Dining,
Entertainment, Bingo, Cnfta, Billiarda, 8-aty Salon,
'Inmportation to Doctor, Shopping, Fan Tri.-,
FrienclJy C.aring People.
From $1,495/Mo.
2283 Fairview at WUaoa
c.taMNa
Mir*"Umlge~
TROPICAL CAFE
..
..
Al2 Thursday, April 6, 2000 Dally Pilot .
The Bungalow not just for the jet set ·anymore ·
lly Stephen S...t.ecrOat
W hen The Bungalow
opened four years
ago in Corona del
Mar, it qµicldy rose to the
top of the.local social scene,
establishing itself as the lat-
est destination for the trendy
but fickle cocktail set.
On its marquee, the
restaurant bills itself as a
· place for steaks, Chops, fiSh
and martinis, and it was per-
fectly
Dinin9 ~=i~~ REVIEW ~~~of
the
upscale steakhouse and mar-
tini bars. Of course four
years is an eternity when
you're at the top, and the
trendy cocktailers have long
since moved on to the latest
"in" spot.
Don't get me wrong,
based on my recent visits,
The Bungalow is still doing a
lively business. But the
crowd these days seems
more focused on having a
good meal and enjoying
themselves, rather·than on
who's checking them out.
The restaurant lives up to
its name from a decor stand-
point, resembling a 1920s
craftsman bungalow. The
entrance leads directly into
the bar area, which sports 12
or so stools in front of a mas-
culine oak bar. Several
booths and tables are scat-
tered about, providing seat-
ing for small groups ol happy
hour reveJen or casual din-
ers.
The bar and dining room
both feature high, eq>Oled-
beam ceilings and bardWood
floors. Ceiling fans revolve
lazily, adding to the simple,
·relaxed tone. TableS and
chairs are heavy wood
accented in rich leather, in
the mission style, as are\ the
lamps that add a touch'of
sophistication.
A row of deep, red leather
booths lines one wall -pro-
viding a more intimate set-
ting for diners wanting a bit
more privacy.
As is fitting of a restaurant
that emphasizes on its cock-
tails, the menu features a list
of tempting appetizers suit-
able for sharing over an icy
traditional or cosmopolitan .
martini.
Seared rare abi ($10.95) is
a simple way to start the
~vening. Sushi grade tuna is
seared but still raw in the
middle and served chilled
with a ginger soy dipping
sauce. Continue the theme
with an order of oysters on
the half shell ($9.95), which
are always plwnp and fresh.
The variety served changes
with the season.
Grilled artichokes ($7 .50)
are a popular starter at many
dining spots these days and
The· Bungalow's version is as
Conversations
With God
Neale Donald Wllsch
-In a Rare ORANGE COUNTY Appearance -
Neale will be joined by
John Hagelin, Ph.D.,
world renowned
quantum physicist and
Natural Law Party
presidential candidate
TUESDAY
APRa 11 • 7:30 P.M.
Hilton Irvine
Orange
' County Airport
18800 MlcAntu 8Mi. (It Douglas)
TICKETS
$10 ($12 AT THE DOOR)
CALL
800-373-9664, ext. 473
REGISTER ONLINE
www.spiritualityandpolltia.org
Is good for
the so.ul.
And pretty aood
with lunch. too ..
Mouth-watering cntttes, a rdued
dint.lg atmosphere and patio acating with a delightful
view of Ncwpon &y make for a refreshing break in
your day. Open daily from 7;00 A.M. to 3;00 P.M.
A11N1rJ-1Vmni"I &rlfH' 0.-'11 __.,fat"' Mil>
(949) 721·1144
Open HftD da71a1Nell r. .am ........ April 1.
r-~----~---~-~-~-------, 1 Buy one Dinner EntNe and 1 I oet the second one Free• I
I I I I I'" I I I I I
: ·m.-"--"t~ ......... DM ............. I L---~-~--".!!!!L!f::~~---..1
11 JI IM:lt BAY Duva • NIWtOllT IUCll O•• JAMIOU& aOAD. ONa ILOC:a IAlt. fQt
good as they get. The arti-'
choke ii tint .seamed in a
gertic:ky marinade, then
quartered and cooked OD the
wood grill. nte result ii a
slight cbaning of the edges,
which adds a mellow anoky
Oavor, while Oeshy Jeeves
remain moist and tender. My
only compJaint ill that the
garlic soy aioli tasted too
much like plain mayonnaise
without enough of the garlic
or ginger.
Less impressive-are some --
of the salads.
f YI
•WHA?.The
Bungelow
•Wl ... Sto
10p.m. Mon-
day through
Th~Sto
11 p.m •• Friday
and s.turday ··-= 2441 E. Coast
the rib-eye.
Plsb lovers won't go hun-
gry here either.
Grtlled swordfish ($21.95)
is served simply with a tradi-
tional lemon caper butter. Or
try the blackened ah1
($21.50). A coating of Cajun
spice adds a sharp ~t to
the fish, which is served rare
. with a soy-based dipping
sauce. ...
I was disappointed with
the tomato and onion choice
($6.75), particularly because
this used to be a favorite of
mine. In the past the toma-
toes were thick slices of the
freshest beefsteak variety,
layered with paper-thin
~slices of red onion. All
topped with extra-virgin
olive oil and crumbled
Roquefort cheese.
H!gf1My,,eoro-
ni det Mar
•HOWMUOt
Expensive .......
(949) 673-6585
~..UR I DALY Pl.OT
Jim Wlllker I.I tbe owner of 1be
Bmlgalow In Corona del Mar.
Of course a restaurant
featuring1 the quality of
steaks ,that The Bungalow
serves can't skimp on the
wine list, and the one here is
quite comprehensive. Sever-
al pages of domestic and
French reds offer many
excellent pairings, and I was
pleased to see some smaller,
boutique California wineries,
such as Gainey and Presidio
offered.
The salad I was served
recently had tomatoes that
were hard and lacked real
flavor, and the onions were
sliced too thick, overpower-
ing the dish. Gone was the
olive oil. t'eplaced with a thin
blue cheese/ranch-style·
dressing that would seem
more at home at the local
salad bar.
The Caesar salad is better
($5.75): Crisp romaine is
topped with a pungent gar-
licky dressing and shavings
of good Parmesan cheese.
Some anchovies or anchovy
paste in the dressing would
have made it even better.
The Bungalow ~ first and
foremost a steakhouse, and
this is where the kitchen
excels. Owner Jim Walker
proudly told me the restau-
rant recently made American
Airlines list of top 10 inde-
pendent stealchouses in the
country. The menu boasts
that it uses only prime-grade,
comfed , Midwestern beef,
aged a minimum 28 days.
I like leaner cuts and
recently chose the petite fi.let
($21.95). This is an ·a-ounce
cut from the tenderloin,
which comes out fork tender
and moist. It's the leanest
cut, andlbest when served
rare or medium rare.
lo.-10,..&1el
-------jtNOaS -------Aaa: 16 AND UMDD -lllU$l • ACCXlWANll!O I\' AN ADUl T
fas JUMIOIS Fm -AIM.TS s'° !Kl.VOES CAaT
T'-a: ~y TWO 1011t5 Ano 1Wa.JciHT 8K.INs
~ loos9 (1" THI DAY Oii PUY
-------SINIOllS-------Aaa: "AND CMa •MUST~ DmWlS UCEN!I!
fea: $99 INQ&ml CAif n.a: McJNIMy • ,......., 6:JO AM • 8:00 AM
laerwldoM: IDollD CM DAY .. ADVANa
----foa Gall. ~ATIONS ----
ul M 7ff4111 Ml Mill• WS... ,.,.,... C.. CA
Another favolite is the rib-
eye ($23.95), which is more
marbled, resulting in a very
flavorful steak. Bungalow
cuts its rib-eye from the loin
end of the prime rib, so that
it's leaner than those found
elsewhere. But it still one of
the best tasting cuts.
All the steaks are served
with mashed potatoes and
steamed vegetables. For an
extra $2.50, a choice of
crumbled blue cheese,
sauteed mushrooms or fried
onion strings can top the
meat.
If you don't tell my cardi-
ologist I'll give you my
favorite pairings: blue cheese
on the filet mignon, mush-
rooms on the New York sbip
($24.95) and onion strings on
Diners wanting to bring
something spetjal from their
own cellars will be charged a
modest $15 corkage.
The Bungalow, like its
steaks, bas aged well and
continues to be a popular
crowd-pleaser. lt's'Cl comfort-
able spot for a dining experi-
ence that emphasizes the
simpler pleasures: a cold
martini, perfectly cooked
steaks and fine vintage
wines.
• S1DttEN SANTACJIOCE's dining
reviews appear ~ other Thurs-
day. You may reach him via e-mail
at food_aiticOhotmilil.com .
ZAHER FALLAHI, CPA
28 yrs. exp.
Acctg., Audits, Taxes
15% discount co CM Residents
(714) 546-4272
WESTCUFF PlAzA
Irvine Ave & 17th St.
5'ye-1U CORONA DEL MAR
Newport 8"ctl
(Since 1982)
FITNESS CENTER PCH & AVOClldoAve Corona Del Mer
(949) 631-3623 (()penU!g April~ ...
rR1iJ1r10NAL
YOUR OFFICIAL ROLEX JEWELER,
WANTS TO REMIND YOU TO TURN
YOUR TIMEPIECE AHEAD ONE
HOUR ON SUNDAY, APRIL 2ND.
DAYUGHT SAVING 81:GINS AT 2 :00AM
i'
BOLBX
~~-............. ... ................. " .. .
Daily Pilot DATEBOOK Thursday, April 6, 2000 Al3
~rilogy takes audiences ·
part way 'Into the Woods' 'The Heiress' may steal your heart
llJlbm Titus
T o introduce future
actors -and audi-
ences -to the theater,
there are abbreviated
•junior• versions of popular
musicals available, trimmed
and sanitized. The shorter
options do not strain the tal-
ents of the cast nor the
patience of younger theater-
goers.
Costa Mesa's new liilogy
Playhouse is offering one of
these, Stephen Sondheim's
•tnto the Woods,· as its sec-
ond production since mov-
ing into the Bristol Street
theater vacated recently by
the Theater District.
Dubbed "Into the Woods
Jr.," the production includes
only the Theater musical's
RMEW fLJ:st act,
with a few
numbers
trimmed down or excised
completely. It's an effective
mefuod of presenting the
show's comic cuteness with-
out delving into its more
bizarre situations -deaths,
seductions and the like.
Director Alicia Butler,
with significant contribu-
tions {rom musical director
Sharon Schwanz and chore-
ographer Sheryl Singh, has
managed to marupulate a
cast of 16 performers on
and off a stage of limited
dimensions. Unfortunately.
the colorful. inventive cos-
tumes are not credited.
Sondheim's concept of
presenting well-known fairy
tale characters who interact
with one another to pursue
a common goal works well,
evenjn a scaled-down
'junior" version. Occasion-
ally, t}owever, the live voic-
es are no match for the
recorded musical accompa-
niJ:nent, a common occur-
rence even in traditional
productions.
Among those who over-
come this p~tfall are Tom
Moss and Amanda Loomer.
u tbe ~ ud Im wile,
and Jennifer Doering as
Cinderella. Moss and
Loomer excel in th~ recon-
ciliation number ·u Takes
Two,• while Doering shines
in her duet with Loomer, "A
Very Nice Prince.•
Little Hailey Villaire (the
only du.Id in the cast)
makes a particularly cute
Red Riding Hood, minus the
avaricious qualities of her
original character. She sells
ber solo. ·1 Know Things
Now,• after a shaky start in
the opening segment.
Michael Mulligan is a
suitably rustic Jack. reluc-
tantly trading his cow for a
handful of beans and ren-
dering an effective ·rnants
in the Sky" number.
As the grotesquely disfig-
ured wttch (makeup also is
uncredited) seeking to
regain her former beauty,
Karin Lindberg Freda ren-
ders a delicious character -
although her opening-scene
expository number is down-
sized. So. too, is the sala-
cious scene with Little Red
and the wolf (James Mulli·
gan, who also enacts Cin-
derella's prince). out of def-
erence to family audiences.
Dave Schade deftly
switches between hJs narra-
tor's role and that of the
•mysterious man,• though
not always with pinpoint
WHY PAY
DEPT STORE
PRICES?
Vasit our
AREA RUG STUDIO
Rugs & Runners on
Sale
FYI
• WHAT: "Into the
Woods Jr.," abbreviated
ver1ion
• WHEN: 7:30 p.m. Fri-
days, 5 and 7:30 p.m.
Saturdays and 7 p.m.
Sundays through April 9
• WHERE: Trilogy Play-~ house, 2930 Bristol St.,
Costa Mesa
• HOW MUCH: S 10 and
$1 2
• PHONE: (714) 957-3347
tuning. Eileen Conan is a
credible nag as Jack's moth-
er, while Yvonne Marie
Houssels ably projects Cin-
. derella's stepmother, and
Shd.Ton Simonian doubles as
her reaJ motheT'S spirit and
Little Red's granny.
_Kandi Scattolan is effec-
tive as the long-haired
Rapunzel. Rounding out the
large company are Christy
Simonian and Corinne
Kane as Cinderella's step-
sisters, Jack Warner as
Rapunzel's prince and
Bruno Stoecklein as the
princes' steward.
James Mulligan's woodsy
setting works very nicely for
this production, and the
ensemble effort survives the
occasionaJ bumpy roads to
mesh credibly.
The finaJe, with everyone
on stage and moving simul-
taneously, is especially well
done. •1nto the Woods"
may take its audiences only
part way in, but it's an
enjoyable experience nev-
ertheless. And getting there
is more than half the fun.
• TOM TITUS reviews local the-
ater for the Daily Pilot. His
reviews appear Thursdays and
Saturdays.
ByTom Titus
T railsporting a theater
audience back to the
latter 19th century fo r
a period costume produc-
tion is a difficult, demand-
ing task on the pa.rt of aU
conaemed: (lirector, actors,
set designer. .
When all these elements
are fully operational, even
the mustiest old chestnut
can be a Jasty. dramatic
Th morsel. At eafer the New-
REVIEW ~e~ ~-
center.
the aforementioned ingre-
dients are present in abun-
dance, and "The Heiress"
is as fresh and e ngaging as
it must have been more
than a half-century ago.
The adaptation, by Ruth
and Augustus Goetz, of
Henry James' classic novel
"Washington Square"
demands meticulous care.
We must be able to feel
and empathize with the
. inner conflict experienced
by its heroine, but there is
the ever-present danger of
creating understatement,
inducing ennui or slipping
over the edge into histrionic
melodrama.
Director Darlene Hunter-
Cha!fee has achieved the
desired delicate balance in
her superior staging of this
drama of a socially awk-
ward and unlovely young
woman pursued by a dash-
ing young man, who may
be a fortune-hunting cad. U
you are viewing the play
for the first time, you
should not know whether
or not he is sincere -and
the Newport production
deftly guards this informa-
tion until the last possible
_____ ,,. ... ...,c::. ............. ~
,._-.. ...... ~""'"l,f...&J~.cli!:t~..li--Aiiill .......... ~
Curtain~ -Dinner Theam
FULL WAITER SERVICE
RESERVATIONS (714) 838-154.0
690 El. CAMINO REAL, TUSTIN 92680
• •t, r' I ' '1 (f'
'!4 heaJy theatrical brew!"
-A_,,,1,../ Pm1
WEST COAST PREMIERE
APRIL 14 -MAY 14 ·
Low-priad Prniews April 7 -13
FYI
•WHAT:
.. The
Heiress"
~WHEN:
B p.m.
Thursdays
through
Saturdays,
2:30 p.m.
Sundays
until April ·
30
•WHERE:
Newport
Theater Arts
Center, 2501
diff Drive,
Newport
Beach
•HOW
MUCH: S13
•PHONE;
(949) 631-
0288
Glorianne Jackson and Jason Schlatter discover unexpected
romance in "The Heiress" a t the Newport Tbeate'r Arts Center.
moment.
In the criticaJ roles or the
heir~ss, her suitor and her
imposing physician father,
Newport has the stage
equivalent of a pat hand.
Glorianne Jackson enacts
the title role with a breath-
less, deer-in-the-headlights
persona, blossoming mar-
velously at the prospect of
unexpected romance. Her
finaJ transition is under-
scored with a glaciaJ frosti-
ness that will chtll her audi-
ences.
Jack Messenger as her
stern, unyielding father -
still embittered by his
daughter's tragic birth that
took her mother's life and
sorely disappointed at her
absence of social graces -
delivers a .magnificent per-
formance. Messenger pre-
sents a mos~formidable
opponent, all the while
keeping his gnmly intense
mterpretat.Jon within
bounds of credibility.
The brash young beau is
gllbly portrayed by Jason
Schlatter, who endows tus
character with a surfeit of
charm and a surface sincer-
ity that captures the ad.Iru-
rat.Jo n or hot only the
hetress but her aunt as
weU Jeanne Nelson in the
· latter role presents a
stdunch and thoroughly
admirable dlly, radiating a
sunruness rarely glunpsed
m the other characters.
Valene Speaks. in an
extended cameo of the suit-
or's \.Vldowed sister, treads a
careful path under the doc-
tor's mqu1s1bon.
Marie Nussle, Jacob
Galasso and Mana O'Con-
nor add depth as vtsiting
relatives, while Kathy Ash-
worth is an understated
delight as the family maid .
Lending a rich air of
authen'ticity is the superbly
·aged back · setting. crecht-
ed to 16th Street Design
but probably a collabora-
tion between d.trector Chaf ·
fee and producer Terry
f\,filler Schmidt Donna
Fritsche's nchly appomted
19th century costumes also
lend a splendid note of
authenticity.
"The Heiress" is a duh-
cult and demanding penod
play rendered compelling
and immechate by a talent-
ed and dechcated company.
It may steal your heart as
well as its herome's
• TOM Til\JS reviews local the·
ater for the Daily Pilot His
reviews appear Thursdays and
Saturdays.
,._.
'CdMMUNrrv The O.lly Pilot welcomes i.tws on !sues
conceminQ Newport 8MCh and Cost.I Mesa.
Thef'e 1te lour w• to send In your com-menu:
, 'I Al4 Thursday, April 6, ,2~·
I don't know U it is just me
with this thought or not. 10 this Js Just one reader's opinion. I for
one am tired ot reading about the
trials and troublel of one Mark
David Allen. He has bis problems
and needs to get help either on
his own or from other sowces,
but 1 don't need to read about it
on a weekly basis. Ditto for Den-
nis Rodman. He bas his own life
that doesn't need to be reviewed
every other day.
There must be some interest-
ing positive upbeat stories out
there, if only for a change of
pace?
RALPH ROW NS Ill
Costa Mesa
Pilot cartoon
causes confusion
On seeing Erle Hutchison's
political cartoon (•Please, sir.
Just enough for an endowment
plan?• April 1), the thought
struck me: Now where is this
one coming from? Is it an April
Pool's caper?
Yes, the Llbrary Thlstees and
Foundation Directors have had
their differences, but never did
they significantly involve the
endowmP.nt plan. How does the
Daily Pilot arrive at these conclu-
sions? Didn't you just report the
Foundation's generous gift of
over $126,000 to the library? A
reality is the Newport Beach
Public Library -due to the
efforts of its remarkable staff,
nustees and Foundation -has a
past, present and future of posi-
tive and progressive endeavors
and accomplishments. One of
which is the foundation's present
endowment plan of more than Sl
miWon.
April FoolS' joke
is not funny
Peter C. Pallette's (•Lett.er of
the week: Issue like bad April
Fools' joke,• April 1) interpreta-
tion or reality is fundamentally
flawed. He states: •1n short,
South County wants no (>&rt of
El Toro and wants to expend
John Wayne. North County
wants a world..class airport at El
Toro and status quo at John
Wayne.·
Reality is this, 68.3% of New·
pm Beach and 50.7% of Costa
Mesa want a •world c1us· ailport
at El Toro. Th~ are the only two
communities in all of Orange
County favoring this concept.
North Orange County, by a
respectable margin, said no to the
debede that bas become tbe plan-
ning process foe an airport at the
abw>dooed Marine Corp aintrip.
Br Peten ~reality
llip1 even furtber away with hie
.-tion that 10uth Orange
~wants John Wayne
npeDcted. Nothing could be fur-
ther from tbe truth. We too live
under the 01ght patht of John
Wayne and have ablolutely no
~to IN an lnaeue of activ·
.... 1be growth pro-
.... touted by tbe
CaltlomJa Alm: of~
lpUD '°~ram~~ vflomelll9.t
"Ul•atrams ... IJll
\;
.l
"I love you
more, Dad."
-Last words by 10-year-old YVl11E .-V,
who died Sat~rday In a traffk accident.
• LD1Bll -Mall to the o.i1y Pilot. 110 w.
Bay St .• Costa Mesa 92627
• mADBS ~ -Call (949) 642-6086
• • MX -Send to (949) ~170 • ~ -Send to cJ.ll)'pilo~tinws.com
All correspondence must Include your full
name, hometown and phone number (for
verification purposes only).
1 / Daily Pilot .1 ' I
>\ EDITORIAL 111 (·
· All~£tW-s inake corrnnuniey· Proud
T eenage years are difficult. But
throughout their four years of
high school, Newport Beach's
top 32 seniors made it look as if
it was easy to get a 1,400 on the SATs,
play trumpet in the school band and
score that winning touchdown.
Newport Harbor High School students
and 17 Corona del Mar High School stu-
dents as Academic All-Stars.
Much-deserved accolades were
bestowed upon them at the 39th annual
Scholarship Awards Break.fast on
Wednesday.
down -and decided to be leaders and
not followers. They juggled the impor-
tance ol academics with sports, at which
most of them have also excelled. And
they also found time to emerse them-
selves in school spirit. Have fun. Be
kids.
And as if they had any spare time
between studies, sports and a social lite,
many of these ever-active teens also vol-
unteer at local charities, helping under-
privileged children with their homework
and playing piano for senior citizens.
The bunch was impressive, to say the
least. They boast grade point averages
that we didn't even know could get so
high-4.17, 4.24 -have put in their
valuable time at myriad charitable orga-
nizations and are choosing between uni-
versities like Harvard, Yale and Stanford.
They have made their community
proud.
And now, these high school seniors
have reached a precarious transition in
their lives. They hover, clinging to the
securities of childhood while reaching
for the ambitions of adulthood. They have been honored extensively
in the last few months as they prepare to
complete their illustrious high school
careers. And this week, their local com-
mw;llty took part by recognizing 15
As students, they not only survived
the grueling academics, but excelled in
their classes. They faced peer pressure
-looked it in the eye and stared it
Judging from what they have accom-
plished so early on in their lives, we'd
say that their futures look bright.
And because of that, so do ours.
Readers at odds over news coverage of Dunes
AT ISSUE: Opponents of
proposed Dunes resort say
Tim Quinn should not com-
plain about news coverage;
one project supporter says
hotel should be bigger.
This letter is in response to
Tun Quinn's letter ("Community
.Commentary: lt should be no
surprise that Newport Dunes is
on public lal)d," April 1) (even
though Quinn was speaking on
behalf of Evans Hotels and not
Readers
·RESPOND
the com-
munity).
Quinn's
response
and objec-
tions ta 1_h,e y Pi.Jot article on
public tind we Ui inappro-
priate l}Dd p.redictab e.
Tbef were predictable in t
they squgbt to focus attention o
the re"\Ellue-producing aspect of
this project, which is always the
mantra of Evans Hotels.
They were inappropriate
because, like it or not, the vast
majority of the public who will
be affected by this project gain
what knowledge they have about
it through public comments of
elected officials and the media.
Only a small fraction or the
affected public have attended
the presentations or the Planning
Commission meetings.
Elected officials have offered
virtually· no comment on the pub-
lic land aspect of this project.
The only branch of the media
devoting any attention to this
very significant issue is the Daily
Pilot.
The Daily Pilot bas an obliga-
tion to cover all aspects of this
issue regardless of whether some
would prefer they focus only on
certain issues.
The use of public lands is cer-
tainly every bit as deserving of
front page coverage as was the
hoisting of balloons over the pro-
posed site or the architectural
renderings of the proposed hotel
(all of which have also received
f1'Qlll page coverage).
y, Quinn's histrionic
e is just inappropriate.
ii nothing •sudden,• .....
" •specious,• or "irfe.
bte• about publishing tbe
or the quotes or infonna-
tion contained it it. No one ls
attacking Quinn, his family,
employeet or friends in the com-
munity. Thtl la merely 1~
opposition to an ineppropriata
MAAC MARTIN I DAILY PLOT
The site of the proposed Newport Dunes resort h otel.
project pursued by Evans Hotels
for its financiaJ gain. The public
as a right to be informed and to
voice its views.
STEVEN E. BRIGGS
Newport Beach
I have not saved all my past
issues, but I am guessing that previ-
ous letters to the Pilot supported the
Dunes Hotel project on the basis of
private property rights. 1 am guess-
ing that Quinn did not beat down
your door demanding a correction.
Now that you have appropriately
brought this fact (that it is public
property) to the attention of your
readers, Quinn JS outraged. Give
mea break.
CRAIG WRIGHT
Newport Beach
Thank you Daily Pilot for clari-
fying the issue of the location of
the proposed Dunes resort on
public tidelands. My experience is
that it was not widely understood
in the community.
The Dunes area is unique
along the coast. It is a place for
families to enjoy the day at the
beach, for campers to access the
bay and a place for retired people
to visit Newport in their RVs. The
land designated for the proposed
resort was entitled to the Girl
Scouts to enjoy nature and camp
on the beach.
The proposed resort is out of
control' and incompatible with the
designated use of the public tide-
lands. The revised bulging project
displaces RV locations and puts a
road with 24'-hour service and
employee traffic through the
remalning campsites. The marina
ii being overrun with time shares
and the parking lot set aside for
fa.ml.lies becomes overflow park-
ing fOt the convention center.
There are plenty of hotels in the
area already and more are being
built. Why trade this precious
treasure for generic hotel use?
The location or the Dunes is in a
bowl surrounded by residences. The
direct line or sight and the water
provide no alten\l8tion of sound.
The examples that Quinn cited in
his letter are quiet uses of land
remote from residences. Marina Del
Rey is an interesting comparison: do
we want to trade our water views
and gorgeous hillsides for the end-
less stucco of Marina Del Rey?
The bottom line seems always
to return to money. The relative
revenue from the project calculates
to 4 cents per person in Newport
each day. ls this worth sitting in
traffic, trading the bay serenity for
noisy parties, and screening our
Back Bay views with sprawling
stucco? Let's use this land wisely
for the generations to come.
BERTOHUG
Newport Beach
It seems the only people who
didn't realize the planned Dunes
project was on leased land was
Susan Caustin and the Daily Pilot.
Since the Evans family obtained
the property they have enhanced
the beauty of the available beach
area greatly. The Evans family evi-
dently negotiated a leue with the
county for the remainder of the
propeny, which may or may not be
a bargain; there is always econom-
ic risk ln any land deal. The land
they negotiated for was and is a
pile of dredged sand. Not a partic-
ularly pretty site.
for some reason, the Pilot has
chosen to give great credence to
the Caustlnl' •stop everything in
Newport Beach development•
posltion. The fact ls, if the facility
is not built, the dty will lose many
opportunities for revenue, which
by the way, flnan.ces the neces-
sary needs or the citizens, and
may waste an economic enhance·
ment that cannot be replaced.
The no-growth position which
confronts the community is an
impossible position to maintain.
Growth is inevitable. Restric-
tions by the community to limit
that growth cannot be justified.
The community is impacted by
growth around it. Traffic is not
from residents or their demands; it
is from people trying to get from
Irvine to Huntington Beach or from
Costa Mesa to Laguna Beach, and
of course, beach traffic.
We cannot reinvent 1955.
Many of the no-growth propo-
nents have arrived since that
time. Some of the no-growth pro-
ponents made their mark through
the development of the very real
estate they are presently attempt-
ing to limit. The remaining
descendants of flower children
have never really added anything
to community development
except colorful banners and the
wasteful burrung or community
assets. Why are we in this current
position? The Dunes project is
only part of the greater issue.
I personally am in favor of a
larger venue than proposed by
the Planning Commission; it has a
great many advantages for the
community and the planning
commission has not explained the
exact facts as to its current limita-
tions. There is a economic reality
that sets in; at some point we can
have a beautiJul resort on the bay
which generates off peek traffic
and good revenues or a Motel 6.
The Planning Commission is
an advisory panel to the City
Council. The real reason we are
in out current position is the city's
lack of direction. The council, on
a semimonthly basis, listens to
passionate positions from poorly
informed citizens about every-
thing the city ls planning to do.
The Newport Beach City Council
must listen compassionately with-
out a willied response because
they have no vision of where the
city is going. All they do is put out
fires and are vulnerable to every
whim that comes along.
The answer ts to request our
elected officials to create a vision
for this dty. They are elected to be
informed. We need a point on the
horizon to steer to. U we don't, then
every whim will blow us on anoth·
er course and opportunities such u
the Dunes resort will be missed
and the city will languish. A society
that fails to continuously rebuild
itself will soon fall into disrepair
and become old and uselell.
ltOGER A. Al.FOii)
NewportB.a
. . . . AFitR HoURs ..
Daily Pilot " lhursdoy, Af:><il ·6, 2000 AIS .
p .
• s.td APlm tam ~ to Performancea are at 7:30 the Delly Piiot. 330 W. 8aiy St, p.m. today through Saturday (.Oita Mma 92627; fu them to as well u at 9:30 p.m. Satur-_, 646-4170; Of c.all {949) 764-
4DO. A complete listing CM1 be • day ·aoo at t p.m. Sunday.
found .i ~dail)pilotcom. The Center is at 600 Town
Center Drive, Costa Mesa.
•USIC nc~ts are $42. For more
infonnation,call(714)740-
7878.
TOtAIKOVSKY AND
MOZART "'THE TINKER'S OWN'
1be Pacific Symphony The band The Tulker's Own
Orchestra and violinist Dim-will play Irish and other folk
itry Sitkovets~ will perform music from 8:30 to.10:30 a program of wo'rks by p.m. Saturday at Borders
Tchaikovsky and Mozart at Books, Music and Cafe,
the Orange County Perform-3333 Bear St., Costa Mesa.
ing Arts Cent~r at 8 p.m. Admission is free. For more
today. nckets are $18 to information. call (714) 432-~. 1be Center is at 600 7854.
Town Center Drive, Costa
Mesa. For more information, MERVYN'S MUSICAL
call (714) 740-7878. MORNINGS
The Pacific Symphony
SOMETHING'S AFOOT Orchestra will hold a
The Lyceum Theatre of Van-•Mervyn's Musical Mom-
guard University of South-ing" at 10 and 11:30 a.m.
em California will present Saturday at the Orange
the musical comedy "Some-County Performing Arts
thing's Afoot" through Sun-Center. Tbe program will
day. The musical pokes fun include works by Anderson,
at Agatha Christie's myster-Joplin, Stravinsky and
ies and at the form of the Gershwin. The Center is at
musical itsell. Tickets are 600 Town Center Drive,
$15, with discounts avail-Costa Mesa. nckets are $11
able. Vanguar? University is for children, $13 for adults.
at 55 Fair Drive, Costa For more information, call
Mesa. For more information, (7 14) 755-5799
call (714) 668-6145.
NORDIC NOTES
NELL CARTER The Newport Beach Public
The Orange County Per-Library will present •Nordic
forming Arts Center will Notes," a free slide show
host Broadway legend Nell and piano concert of work
Carter today through Sun-by Edvard Grieg, at 3 p.m.
day in Founders Hall. Carter Sunday. Shirley Case will
will sing standards and pop-perform. Tbe librcµy is at
ular tuhes from Broadway. 1000 Avocado Ave., New-
639 Paularino Ave., Costa Mesa
(South of Bristol)
Open 7 days M-F 91111·lpmIll.&fl10ll!Hlpln
www.flneteak.com 14 546-0670
CALL TODAY FOR A
COMPLIMENTARY CONSULTATION
949-721 -1113
WWW.OHLIHESURGERY .COM
·1'
'
port Beach. For more inf or-
mation, call (949) 717-3801.
DAT NGUYEN
Guitarist Oat Nguyen will
perform~ guitar
works at the Pacific Sym-
phony Orchestra Leag\Je's
monthly luncheon at 11 a.m.
Monday at The Center
Club, 225 Town Center Ori-
ve, Costa Mesa. Tickets are
$25. For more information,
call(714)755-5788,Ext. 2~.
BAUIOA VIUAGE AND 'FUN
. ZONE IENEflT
·The "Balboa Village arid
Fun Zone Benefit" at 3 p .m.
Wednesday will feature a
performance by Newport
Elementary students. The
benefit will be held at the
Gazebo in Peninsula Park
at the end of Main Street,
near Balboa Pier. For more
information,call(949)723-
5392.
~ERSON STRING QUARTET
e Emerson String Quartet
will appear at the Orange
County Performing Arts
Center at 8 p.m. April 14,
presenting work by Haydn,
Shostakovich and Debussy.
Tickets are $44. Tbe Center
is at 600 Town Center Drive,
Costa Mesa. For more infor-
mation, call (714) 740-7678.
HOLY WEEK CONCERT
Our I:.ady Queen of Angels
Adult Choir will present a
Holy Week Concert at 6
p.m. April 16. The 40-voice
chQir will perform works by
Byrd, Vittoria, Mozart, Faure
~
!fioldtmtt~
La Jolla is avai"1bk in natural
a"1basur with an iron finish
and gold kaf
30" W x 32" H
Hodson
Lighting
Quality Ljptinc Service
(or~ Yea.rs
Open Tucs.-Fri. 9-5, Sat. 9-4
1510 Nnvport Bl~ Com M~sa
(949) 548-9341
MICHAEL v~
Et.AMu.o.
COSMETIC SURGERY
360 SAN MIGUEL DRIVE, SUITE 207 • NEWPORT BEACH
and others. The church is at infonnation,call(714)432-guard University presents
2046 Mar VlSta Drive, New-5880. •Something's Afoot,• a
port Beach. For more infor-musical c::omedy that pokes • mation, call (949) 644-0200. JCC SPRING CONCERT fun at Agatha Christie mys-
The Jewish Community teries. The show runs
'TALES.OF HOFFMANN' Center of Orange County through Sunday. Ticketl are
Opera Pacific _presents will present a spring concert $15. Vanguard University is
Offenbach's opera #Tales of at 2 p.m . May 21 featuring at 55 Fair Drive, Costa
Hoffmann" at 7:30 p.m~-Prokofiev's •Peter and the Mesa. For more information. April 18, 20, and 22 and at 2 Woli"and•Spring"from call (714) 668-6145.
p.µi. April 23 at the Orange Vivialdi's •Tue Four Sea-
County Performing Arts sons." Tickets are $3 to $25. 1NTO THE WOODS JR.' Center, 600 Town Center The center is at 250 East nilogy Playhouse presents Drive, Costa Mesa. Tickets Baker St., Costa Mesa. For • Stephen Sondheim's •into are $32 to $151. For tick-ets, more information, call (714) ' the Woods Jr.," through call (714) 740-7876. 755-0340. Sii,nda~Perfonnanceswill
• STAGE .. be' at 7:30 p.m. Friday, 5 and GROUND-LEVEL SUNDAYS 1~30 p .m. Saturday and 7 • · The Lab Anti-Mall will have · p:m . Sunday. Tickets are $10 disc jockeys spinning exper-'DRIVING MISS DAISY' ··' to $12. For more informa-imental grooves from 2 to 5 Tbe Costa Mesa Civic Play-tiOR, Call (714) 957-3347. p.m. every Saturday in house will present Alfred April. !)J Suhblymnl and Uhry's play •Driving Miss 'THE PRICE' Area 57 Productions will Daisy" today through April Reader's Repertory Theatre spin Saturday. The Lab is at 30. Curtain is at 8 p.m . will present a reading of 2930 Bristol St., Costa Mesa. Thursdays through Satur-Arthur Miller's •Tue Price• For information, call (714) days and at 2 p.m. Sundays. at 7 p.m. Apcil 20 at the 960-6660. Tickets are $10 to $12. The
playhouse is at 661 Hamil-Newport Beach Central
Hl-WATI WEDNESDAYS ton St .. Costa Mesa. For Library. The event is tree.
The Lab Anti-Mall will host more information, call (949) The Library is at 1000 Avo-
live music performances 650-5269. . cado A'!_e., Newport Beach.
from 6 to 9 p.m. every For "more information, call
Wednesday in April. Fuz-'THE BEAUTY QUEEN OF (949) 717-3601.
zpop is slated for this com-LEENANE' 'THE HEIRESS' ing Wednesday. The Lab is South Coast Repertory will
at 2930 Bristol St., Costa host the Southern California Newport Theatre Arts Cen-
Mesa. For information. call premiere of Martin McDon-ter will present Arthur
(714) 960-6660. agh's acclaimed play •The Miller's drama "The
Beauty Queen of Leenane" Heiress,• through April 30.
'FOREVER AFTIES, VOL 11' through Sunday. Tickets are The show runs at 8 p.m.
OCC will present #Forever $26 to $45. The playhouse is TbursdaysthroughSatur-
Fifties, Vol. Il," a program of at 650 Town·Center Drive, days and 2:30 p.m. Sundays.
'50s music, at 8 p.m. May 20 Costa Mesa. For more infor-Tickets are $13. Newport
in its Robert B. Moore The-matim1, call (114) 708-5555. Theatre Arts Center is at
atre. Tickets are $25 to $29. 2501 Cliff Drive, Newport
OCC is at 2701 Fairview 'SOMETHING'S AFOOT' Beach. For more informa-
Road, Costa Mesa. For more The Lyceum Theatre at Van-tioo, call (949) 631-0288.
• CRYSTAL CAVE
..,.._ me tac rOetr, ol )'Ollr
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7-9p.m.
Psychic· Rea~gs
(Call store for appointment)
·Tarot
• Script Channeling
·Astrology
• Handwriting Analysis
891 Baker Street A 16 • Costa Mesa i l 4' 7 Me I IS I
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307 Placentia, Ste. 207, Newport Beach
949-645-6544 To ltNCll DocltW
Catt : °"
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loaded ,,..,. the bMc:tl
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5
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Please call Duncan at
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Features downstairs muter suite, ftoor to
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call Duncan at
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Enjoy the peaceful
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Features 5 BO plus loft,
3 BA, living room, and
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. .
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Beeuttful hardwood
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windows. Also offers
built-in cabinets end
entertainment center.
Please call Marian at
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Quote Of
1111 DAY
..
·ws going 1o take a lot of herd work and decicalion,
but I'm going lo gob I .. :
Greg Stew.t, Costa Mesa sprinter
Sports Edilof Roger Carlson • 949-57 4-4223 • Thursday, April 6, 2000 81 . .
In the thick, of it
•Sports agent Steinberg, mixing golf and film, is going for
another save, while showing Ne~ort some of the stars.
his wife, Lucy, Steinberg is
trying to not only save
what the city of Newport
Beach almost lost, but
rejuvenate the festival and
have it "become as '
significant as Cannes."
well, seems to always
,bring out the stars ..
As executive prOducer
of the inaugural Celebrity
Golf Tournament to
benefit the two
aforementioned charities,
Steinberg didn't get much
rest from the previous
night, when he hosted the
film festival's
operung-rught gala
time these days to watch
independent movies and play golf/
Saints running back Ricky y
O rµy hours from having Hill Golf Club in 1995 to benefit
hosted the gUtziest, most • Ju~nile Diabetes, has been a
eclectic party in Newport· ~cess, and for years he has been
Beach, Leigh Steinberg swap~ an advocate of sports head injuries,
bats and changed uniforms for a expanding awareness and staging
golf tournament to benefit the symposiums.
United Cerebral Palsy Association Steinberg built an empire with
of Orange County and Derrick quarterback clients like noy
Thomas' Third and Long Aikman and Steve Young, while
Williams, Ctuefs tight end Ton~/
Gonzalez and Steelers quart~clc
Kordetl Stewclrt were also part of
the goU tournament, wtuch raised
between $50,000 and $100,000.
Warrick Dunn and John Lynch of
the Buccaneers were also there.
Foundation. representing hordes of No. 1 draft
Amid his glory and accolades choices.
as a professional sports agent, But, aside from his regular job,
Steinberg sold his business last Steinberg has rallied the public
"It's lime for Orange
County and Newport
Beach to sort of grow up
and Oex its muscles,"
added Steinberg, whose
love for the silver screen
goes back to his childhood
at Hillcrest Country Oub
ln Los Angeles, a haven for
Richard Dunn
GOlf
Many of the same
celebrity golfers who were
expected to tee off the
next morrung at Pelican
·we feel now that we've bwlt a
solld foundation for Uus golf
tournament, to where we expect
large growth next year,• St~mberg
said.
summer to Assante, a Canadian more than once, including a
entertainment conglomerate. and triumphant effort in keeping the
these days devotes more time to Giants in San Francisco and a
"promoting causes that are failed try with the "Save the Rams"
meaningful." group.
Steinberg's Drive for the Cure As host and sponsor of the
golf tournament, s~arted at Pelican Newport Beach Film Festival with
movie stars in the 1950s and '60s.
So, in his effort to rally Orange
County as "the center for the arts"
and the Newport Beach Film
Festival as "an exciting showcase,•
he continues to produce golf
tournaments for worthy causes and,
Hill were on hand for Steinberg's
opening night at the Wm festival,
including Rruders defensive tackle
Darrell Russell and free-agent
shooting guard John Starks, who
asked for his release from the
Chicago Bulls and has a lot more
Stelnberg said Wednesday he
has purchased Mike Gillis &
Associates, a hockey agency. ·nus now moves us tn a cWferent
direcuon and it g1ves us a brand
SEE GOLF PAGE 84
BASEBALL
Tars lose
game of
long ball
• Sailors nearly rally
from a huge deficit, but
Aliso Niguel wins, 14-11 .
Tony Altobelli
D AILY PllOT
NEWPORT BEACH -
Runs in the early innings are
just as important as runs in
the later innings, which New-
port Harbor High's baseball
team found out Wednesday
against visiting Aliso Niguel.
The Sailors missed early
opportunities to score and
t h a t
--~~~~~----. proved
costly
in the.JI
1 4 -1 1
S e a
View
League
loss to
t h e
Wolver-
"'"''~~I ines.
'! • up
to this
point ,
w e've
been a
t ea m
IMrle at N9I pDl1o 3:15 that has
Lag. Hills-Woodb idge. hit well
at Vlflndrow Pari(. 7 pJTI. w i t h
runners
in scoring position,· Coach
Jim Kiefer said. "Today we
weren't able to get the big hit
early when we needed 1t. •
After falling behind, 9-0.
the Sailors ( 1-7, 2-10) stonned
back. thanks to some spotty
Wolverines' pitching and a
grand slam to left field from
Sean Rorden, capping a sev-
en·run fifth inning.
Rorden's blast followed RBJ
singles by Justin Jacobs, Gar-
rett Brant and Chris Ward.
Those three scored ahead of
Rorden on the four-bagger.
•The ball carries well out
here,· Keifer said. •He got
just enough to get it out of
here."
NFL Alumni toasts
FAST COMPANY
NFL ALUMNI
ORDER OF THE LEATHER tELMET
1978 -Prn Romu, GEOftGE HALAS. Aler ROONEY
1979 -PAUL BROINN, R.Eo CiMNGE, BllOHICO NAGUltSKI
1980-0oN SHulA,, WruJNGTON MAM, DoMNcOl.EINICZAA
1981 -l.AMAA HUNT, TOM l.NotY
1982 -WUJAM BDWEU. Aux WOKIEOONtel, Buo GRANT
1983 -f. Wlt..LIAM HARDER, UROY NEIMAN
1985 -GEORGE P. MAASHAU.. WEEB EwlANK
1986 -HOWAAO (OSEU., VINCE loMaAAot, VIC. MAITl.ANO
1987 -RAY Soon, STEVE SABOL. Eo SABOl, BERT BELL
1988 -RAYMOND BERRY 1989 -TEX ScHlt.AMM
1990 -Bill Duol.EY, OWE MATSON, STtVE VAH BUREN
1991 -HUGH McE.l.HENNY
1992 .-CHUCK BmNAReec. ART Moom
1993 -ELROY H~. MNtiON Moruv
199' -Slo l UCXMAH, SAMMY BAUGH
1~· Orro GIWW.4, Cttuacjteu.
1996 -JoHHHv UNrTM. CUltT GOWov
1997 -PAT SuMME:AAU., RALPH W IUOH
1998 -JIM BflowN, AL DAVIS
1999 -LEN DAWSON, DEACON Jam
LIFETIME ACHIEVEMENT AWAlm
1981 -R()CJ(Y BLEIER, R<Xifl' STAUIAOi
1982 -Mw.w OlsoH. OJ. SIMl'sOH
1983 -GEORGE BLAHDA. EAAL Mo«RAu
1985 -fRANtC GIFFORD, JACK KEMP
1986 -DAH f <>IUMANN, RAV NITSOiKE
1987 -W 1WE DAVIS, 0oN HUTSOH
1988 -MT DONovAH
1989 -BAAT STAM •
1990 -Nq 8 UONICONTI
1992 -ICIH fMMGIJT
1993 -GINO M AACHETTI
1994 -~WHITE
1995 'Awe PAGE 1996 • ,.. RE10
'997 -JEMY'.ftJ<::HAAosoN
1998 -D11. Roaoo KHAYAT
1999 -PAUL SALATA
TA
• Lifetime Achievement
Award ceremonies Friday.
LA JOLLA
Newport Beach resi-
dent Paul Salata, an
Orange County
Sports Hall of Farner,
as well as a Daily
Pilot Sports Hall or
Farner. celebrating
the millerulium. will
be honored Friday Paul Salata
night at the Torrey
Pines Hilton by the NFL Alumni Pro
Legends with a Lifetime Achieve-
ment Award.
Salata, a veteran of two Rose
Bowl appearances with USC as a
receiver, went on to play for the San
Franosco 49ers, Baltimore Coils
and Pittsbwgh Steelers in the NFL.
But it has been his endeavors as
the creator of Irrelevant Week, hon-
oring the last player taken in the
annual NFL Draft, which has
endeared himself, not only to the
community, but to the NFL itself,
which has watched the Irrelevant
event become a fixture at the Draft
over the past quarter century
Friday night be joins an illustn-
ous group of NFL types who have
been singled out.
The Alumni group is hononng
Len Dawson and Deacon Jones for
the Order of the Leather Helmet,
and Paul Salata for the Lifetime
Achievement Award.
•What really sets Len, Deacon
and Paul apart is their unwavering
commitment to helping otiJers, •
said NFL Alumni President and
CEO Frank Krauser.
Sea Kings put away the Eagles
• Cd.M boys, girls post
solid times in Pacific
Coast League victories.
COSTA MESA -Corona
del Mar High's boys and girls
swim teams each knocked off
host Estancia Wednesday m
Pacific Coast League action.
On the girls' side. the Sea
Kings defeated Estancia, 131-
43. Hayley Sheetz recorded a
SWIMMING
personal-best tune in the 200-
yard mdlvidual medley Wlth a
2:30.32
Bndgett lngllS' 27 .31 m the
50 freestyle was her best-ever
mark for CdM (5-0, 3-0 in
league), as was Nikola Hen-
dJick.son's 1:07.95 in the 100
butterfly, Kathryn Cole's
6:30.26 in the 500 free and
Jessica Harkins' 1:10.73 m
100 backstroke.
For the Eagles (2-6, 0·3),
Lauren Cassity took ftrst m
the 100 free (1:00.1), while
her sister, Jennifer Cassity,
took third in the 100 breast
(1:29.72).
On the boys' side, sopho-
more Matt Myer was a dou-
ble winner, taking hrst m the
SEE SWIMMING PAGE 83
1Eff (H()ll,G DAll.Y Pll.0'
CDM High's Jaycee Mahler doubled ln the girls hurdles.
rolls
• Four Sea Kings are double winners in Pacific
Coast League duel. Estancia's Chandler impresses.
Joseph Boo
DA11.Y PILOT
CORONA DEL MAR -
Corona del Mar High's Josh
Yelsey, Travis Beardslee.
Sean Fenton and Matt Moore
each won two events
Wednesday in the Sea Kings·
91-35 Pacific Coast League
victory over VLSttlllg Estanoa.
But the Eagles got a Wt, liter-
ally, from seruor TraVlS Chan-
dler who continued hls rapid
ascent m the three jumps
Wlth imprJ?.SS1ve marks.
Alter doing 1t last week
agains_t Laguna Beach, Chan-
dler reached six feet again in
the high jump, matching his
personal record and winning
the event by 10 inches. He
won the long jump with a
mark of 18-5, one inch better
than CdM's Daniel Marshall.
ChandJer was the only com-
petitor m the tnple jump, but
he still turned in a solid leap
of 38..Jl/2.
Chandler just joined
Estaneta's track team two
weeks ago and Wednesday
was the h.rst day he didn't set
new PRs. Nevertheless, hls
progress is creating a stir for
the Eagles.
"Travis lS doing a great job
for us.• Estanoa Coach Steve
Crenshaw said. •He llterally
came out of nowhere. The
first time he did the long
jump, be Jumped 18 feet. He
BOYS T
jUSt conUllues to get better
with every meet.·
Unfortunately for Estanca
(0-4. 0-3 in league). a thm
lineup was depleted even
more by m1unes and bad
luck. lWo Eagle , Alex.is Con-
cepoon and t-..tanny Avalos,
were late scratche for
Wednesday Estanoa opted
not to have varsity runners tn
the 100-meter and 200 races.
and both hurdJ~.
Moore won both of the all-
CdM spnnts. He took the 100
m 11.6. barely past teammate
Adam Hoyt Moore took the
200 in 23.6. CdM's Reed Gly-
er was the be t out of the
three 110 high hurdlers His
teammate, Enc Fransen fm-
ished hrst in the 300 mterrne-
dlate hurdles
The two most exciting
races or the day were both
won by Beardslee ln the 800,
Beardslee was runrung at a
comfortable pace m the lead
for the fll'St 600 meters
Estanc1a's Lw Segovtano
then charged up and bneny
took the lead on the last tum
But Beardslee regClllled the
lead and won Wlth a b.me of
2:04.6 Segovtdllo' econd-
place time was 2:06.6
ln the 3,200, Beardslee and
Estancia' Humberto Ro1as
SEE TRACK PAGE 83
Aliso Niguel (7·6, 4-4) did-
n't fold all the way, however . .J DAllV
The Wolverines added a run •I
in the sixth inning and rour in
the seventh to build a seven-
run cushion.
PILOT HIGH SCHOOL ATHLETE OF THE WEEK
The Sailors made it dose.
Following walks by Rorden
and Miguel Sandoval as well
u a single by Donovan Wong,
Nick Langsdorf clubbed a
two~out grand slam of his
own to center held, cutting
the lead to, 14-11.
Allio, despite allowmg two
grand llama, nine hits and 10
walk.I, ~ to retire the
nat NewpOrt batter and the
game wu over.
It was the Wolverines who
ltarted tbe game with the
Iona ball.
Ouil Aelder hit a solo shot
to left 1n the ftnt lnnlng and
Sean Koc:b follbWed wltb •
two-nan blMt to Wt ID tll9
IKODd. tM11pU1g tbe Wolftr· an. jump out ID a 4.0 md.
~ bad nmDell Oil ...... act tbUd WWl ...
... two aatl tD tbe --.... llllld ...... bUI ... •= .. •••w•
t·
•
•
, I ' .. • 1 I I ' .
_B2_Th_u_rsda):~·~Apr~il~6,_2000 _______________________ ~P()llIS~-------------------------+---Da~i~-P~lb
Niii llOllCO
Rangers win, 12-2
Shuyoka~ Dojo twns 20 as Costa Mesa celebrates lllUSWIMMlllG
NEWPORT BEACH -
Bnmdon sallsbary had four
hits to lead the Rangers to a
12-2 win over the Cubs last
weekend in Newport Harbor
Baseball Association Bronco
Division action.
Billy Munce chipped in with
three bits, including a home
run, while Robby Caugblll and
Andrew Skjonsby each added
key hits to boost the Rangers'
offense.
•Mesa Verde Country Club to
host martj.al arts instruction
Friday, led by retired CMPD
officer, Sensei David Dye.
COSTA MESA .. aawa1 aiMN
-The Shuyokan 11111111.,.. -••
Oojo will celebrate its 20th year of serv-
ing Costa Mesa with. martial arts
~truction at a, c~emony to be held, at
the Mesa Verde Country Club Friday at
6:30p.m. I
walu, founder and headmaster of the
World Professional Martial Arts Black
Belt Organization and Ohole of the Lua
Halau 0 Kaihewalu, will present Sensei
Dye with offid.al documentation naming
him as the Founder of Sbuyokan Ryu.
A live martial arts self defense
demonstration will be performed by
Katlyn Cho, Shuyokan's first female
Black Belt, along with other students
from the Dojo.
Dye WU inducted in the World Mar-
tial Arts Hall of Fame in 1993 and
received the Uve Achievement Award.
He wu appointed the position of Exec-
utive West Coast Regional Director for
the World Martial Arts Hall of Fame in
1995 and hosted the West Coa~t
Regional World Martial Arts Hall of
Fame ceremony in Costa Mesa in 1997.
Mesa
an easy
• wmner
Guests from as far as Mexico, Okla-
homa, Reno, and Sacramento wW be
·attending the ceremony.
Dye joined the CMPD in 1966 and
wu fint introdu~ to ,Aikido by Sensei
Ernie High ol the Westminster Police
Department in 1968. II Bayes and the
Ma.rtinovich strong for
th~ Mustangs in PCL •
win over Northwood.
Salisbury, Drew Han1s and
Nat,han Cramer led the
Rangers' pitching, holding the
Cubs to only three bits.
John Ashen and Dennis
Hee.nan led the Cubs' attack.
The Chief Instructor, Sensel David
Oye, a retired 34-year veteran police
officer of the Costa Mesa Police Depart-
ment, will be celebrating his 38th year
in martial arts training.
Various martial arts film oftebritie5
will be present as well as Chief of Police
I1avid Snowden and Council Member
Heather Somers to pr1!Sent Sensei Dye
with a Proclamation from the City of
Costa Mesa.
hi 1980, Dye established the Aikido
Federation of Califomiil, in Costa Mesa
and trom 1980-84, .tie taught Classes
through the Costa Mesa Parks and
Recreation Department.
Special guest Olobe Solomon Kai.be-For information. call the Shuyokan
Dojo at (714) 551-6312. COSTA MESA -Costa
Mesa High's girls swim team
was a 96-72 winner over visit-
ing No.rthwood Wednesday in
Paci.fie Coast League action.
DON LEACH I DAJL Pl.OT
KACHINA KWSIC CHAMPIONS: Costa Mesa's Under-14 girls team, CM GIRIS, swept to the championship
ln Mesa, Ariz. March 18-19. Standing, from left: Rachel Hughes, Carley Millian. Valerie Gomez, tep
Blackwe ll, Maggie Vlsbeek. Holly Wells, Carly Petrie, Sara Bryant. Rachel Ronquillo and Coach Dave
Gardiner. Kneeling, from left: Vera Gale, Casey Gype, Marilyn Morgan, Brittney Bunnell, Eva Garcia.
The CM GIRLS defeated the Arizona club Buckeye, 3-0, ln the championship game. Offensively, Hughes had
four goals, Morgan three assists and a goal, Bryant scored twice and Millian and Gype each had a solo goal.
Goalkeepers Gomez and Blackwell limited the oppostuon to three goals In all.
Mariners edge Yankees
• Drews keys 4-3 victory.
NEWPORT BEACH -
Andrew Drews threw four AAA
innings of five-hit ball as the Mariners
held off the Yankees, 4-3, in Newport
Beach Little League AAA Division
action last weekend.
Andrew Silva held the Yankees
scoreless the final two innings, allowing
just one hit with five strikeouts.
For the Yankees, Brian Nichols,
Taylor Stone and Nick Taylor
combined to fan 12 Mariners.
Alex Vollalre scored the winning run
for the Mariners, while Jonathan Torres
turned in the defensive play of the
game at third base, ending a Yankees'
rally.
In other AAA action:
•Mariners 19, Yankees 18 -The
Manners rallied from an eight-run
deficit to slip past the Yankees.
Jeremy Hyter's grand slam in the
bottom of the fourth inning sparked the
comeback. Robbie Ogerek scored the
game-winning run following a Yankees'
error in the fifth inning.
Andrew Silva comple ted an
unassisted double play at shortstop,
ending a Yankees' threat in the third.
Nick Taylor led the Yankees'
offense, with a single and three-run
home run.
Yankees' catcher Mitchell WIWams
threw out a runner at third and tagged
put a runner trying to score to lead the
Yanks' defense.
• Tigers 8, Yankees 8 -Brian Nichols
cracked a two-run home run in the
sixth inning, enabling the Yankees to
tie the Tigers.
Cory MacDonald opened the inning
with a single and scored on Nichols'
blast.
Yankees' pitcher Patrlek Martn·Ftnn
struck out the last three batters on nine
pitches to preserve the tie.
NEWPORT BEACH LL
NJck Taylor had a home run and
three RBis, while Williams and Reed
Zacbm.an had one hit apiece. Bradley
Zlpser also scored twice for the Yanks ..
• Mariners 7, Braves 1 -Andrew Silva
threw four innings of one-hit ball as the
Mariners defeated the Braves.
Silva and Noah Molnar each made
solid defensive plays.
Offensively, Jack Lansford bad a
triple, while Michael Page,
Alex Vollalre and Andrew Drews also
added key hits.
John Leonard and Parker Rhodes
each pitched well for the Braves.
•Cardinals 7, Orioles 0 -Riley Sulli-
van and Joey Jones combined for the
first shutout in the NBLL AAA season
as the Cardinals blanked the Orioles.
Trevor Cleary had two bits the three
stolen bases, while David WheaOey,
Austin Harms and Thomas Koss each
made strong plays on defense.
Conner Whalen had two bits and
pitched three' scoreless innings for the
Orioles. '
• Red Sox 10, Angels 5 • Garrett Ama-
razo went 3 for 3 with 3 RBis and two
runs scored as the Red Sox rolled past
the Angels.
Amarazo also pitched four effective
innings, allowing no runs on only three
bits.
• Braves 9, Tlgen 3 -John Uclbard,
struck oot eight batters in. a row over
three innings of work to lead the Braves
to a win over the ngers.
The Braves scored six runs in the
first inning and never looked back.
• Cardinals 7, Martnen 8 -De\'ld
Wheatley pitched three shutout innings
as the Cardinals edged the Mariners.
Rlley Sulllvan stole home in the sixth
inning to break the tie for tba Cards.
Auattn Hanni had three lilts and
four stolen bases, while Tho.., Kou
and Joey Jones each had two hits.
The Marlins were led by pitcher
Merritt Scott.
· • Tlgen 6, Diamondbacks 5 -llicky
Townsend drove in J.P Gormly in the
final inning to win the game for the
Tigers.
Andrew Watt pitched a complete
game for the D-Backs, while Andy
Rovzar pitched the final two innings
to earn the win for the Tigers.
• Yankees 8, Tlgen .f -Nick Taylor and
Mitchell Wllllams combined to throw a
two-hitter as the Yankees doubled-up
theTigers.
• Red Sox 11, Cardtnals 7 -Red Sox
pitchers Camden Nicholson, Blake
Haymond and Brett Bartlett teamed up
to h old down the Cardinals.
Clutch hits by Garrett Amoroso,
Andrew Muon and Patrick Brennan
gave the Red Sox an early lead.
Diamondbacks rally, 15-12
NEWPORT BEACH -The
Diamondbacks scored seven AA
runs with two outs in the top of the
sixth inning to stun the Mets, 15-12,
last weekend in Newport Beach Little
League AA action.
Hunter Adler deUvered the biggest
blow with a game-tying grand slam.
ChJU Burke later followed with a
two-run ~gle to bring in the go-ahead
runs for the Diamondbacks.
Bryan Yuakochl came in the sixth
inning to shut down the Mets for the
save.
The Mets were led by Beau Attyah,
who collected three bits and scored
three runs.
Jab KllUu reached base four times
for the Mets, while Malt Cobell and
Zak ~Ertduon each scored three
runs. Sta.rting pitcher Aadnw Palcber
threw two strong inningt, allowing only
one run ror the Mets.
Outreach: Sphere of iDfluenCe
•Night of Champions returns
to Newport Beach Friday.
Richard Dunn
DAILY PM.OT
NEWPORT 8EACH -The Orange
County Pellowlblp Of Christian Athletes
will host ill 18COod annual Night of
Champions, featuring professlooa.l ath·
letes and a 1kateboerd park. Priday at St.
Andrews Presbyterian Chwdl 1n New·
port Beach.
Many students from around Orange
County, who are lnteNsted or Involved
in aporta, will be buMd into the event,
theJMd •More Thu Wb111tn9. • The pur·
poM of th• 8"Dt tt to prvvid!I • pollttr l----~""'-~---.,...-----~ #
impact, challenging studenVathletes to The event 1s bOlted by Mark Boyer,
be champions in both life and sports. Orange County Director of~ of
The alttteboard park will open at 3 Cbrittian Athletes and a former football
p.m. Prtday, with dinner and entertain-player for Bdiloo High in Huntington
ment at 5 p.m., followed by the main 15eKh, USC and tbe lndianapoUs Colts
program at 1 p.m. and New York J-.
Ken Johmoo and 1Ufk Glenn of the ID 1986, PCA M1rblllbed ill Huddle
IndJanapolil Colts are scheduled to program. tbe ~ ol the group'I
speak, along with prd...,...J women's ICbool-yeu ac:lt.... Scbool Huddlel
volleyboJI player 1-y Joodu. Enter· gift -• Vo -.. l4inment will iDdude music from •AU nurtmw V*owtb ...........
Toaether Separate" and •1\viat of to ilDproN Mr ._and llO
Pafth," u well u drama and com.dy ~-IDdolliilw. p~ from •The Detiwry Bop.• 0 ,.... 11 .a IOO k
COIODI dal Mar and Newport Harbor AaidleB New~ lli!ldl. ...
are two of M¥Wal Orange Ca._mty high Clllt.. lllltw llgll: :=.•1*9d eo .,. • ..,. .... led "' _ I =+-
• . I
NI LIME LEAGUE
Yankees blank
Braves, 12-0
BE~~tt 111.JORS
Hauser had two doubles, two
runs scored and three RBis in
the Yankees' 12-0 rout of the
Braves last weekend in
Newport Beitch Uttle League
Majon Division action.
Mike Orozco struck out the
side to end the game, giving
the Yankees their third shutout
of the season.
ln other Majors Division
action:
• Yankees 4, Angels l -Mike
Orozco hammered a
first-inning two-run home run
to led the Yankees to a victory
over the Angels.
Matt Hauser pitched four
strong innings and also dou-
bled and scored two runs.
Jonallum C.bln and Ryan
Lance led the Angels'
pitching and bitting.
CMLL
Marlins handle
the Tigers, 3-1
COSTA CM llATIOllAL MESA-
Vlctor Valdez hit two home
runs and drove in all three
runs in the Costa Mesa
National Uttle League
Marlins' 3-1 win over the
CMALL's ngers in Majors'
Division interleague action.
Mike Wolfe had a single
and a run scored, while
starting pitcher Ryan
Bagwell pitched four solid
innings, allowing only one
hit, while striking out seven.
Taylor Hlgglnl, Erle
Seagondollar and Alex
Robles led the Marlins'
defense, helping the team
improve to 4-0 for the season.
Rangers o~tlast
Mariners, 16-15
ME~c;.STA Cll AlllllCAll
The Rangers needed some
strong def.ense down the
stretch to hold off the
Mariners, 16-15, in Costa
Mesa Amedcan Uttle
League Majors Division last
weekend.
ChrlltopberBeUda,wbo
was named the Player of the
Game, assisted on two
force-outs at third and made
a solid effort to tag out
another Mariners' runner.
Reme Andrade also
snagged a number of line
drives to anchor the Ranger's
glove work.
Offensively, C.J. Areba.r1
had a late-inning two-run
double down the third-base
lliie for the Rangers.
Can't find your team?
Call(949)574-4223
and find out why.
11111
Erin Bayes and Jody Marti-
novicb were each double-
winners for the Mustangs.
Bayes was No. 1 in the 50-
yard freestyle (25.71) as well
as the 100 free (56.28), while
Martinovich was a winner in
the 200 free (2:05.01) and 500
free (5:33.42).
The Mustangs' duo
teamed up with Wendy Mar-
tinovich and Katie Roche to
win both the 50 free (1 :45.66)
and 400 medley relay teams
(4:02.63).
The Mustangs will swim at
Laguna Beach on Wednesday
at3 p.m.
PMJAC COAST LEAGUE -.S
CosTA MuA 96. rbmtWooD n
200 medley relay -1.
Northwood, 1 :59.66.
200 free -1. J. Martinovich {CM),
2:05.01; 2. Cobb (N), 2:09.47;
3. Nigorizawa (CM), 2:18.11 .
200 IM -1. W. Martinovich (CM),
2:23.68; 2. Mettra (N), 2:33.79;
3. Assal (CM), 2:42.73.
50 free -1. Bayes (CM). 25.n ;
2. Cobb (N), 26.40; 3. Farson (N),
26.4 1.
100 fly -1. Farson (N), 1:00.01;
2. Assal (CM), 1:12.36; 3. Steenhard
(CM). 1:13.35.
100 free -1. Bayes (CM), 56.28;
2. Roche (CM), 1:01.54; 3. Bye (N).
1:02.21.
500 free -1. J. Martinovich (CM),
5:33.42. 2. Farson (N), 5:41.53;
3. Nigo<izawa (CM), 6:23.83.
200 free ...a.y -1. Costa Mesa
(Bayes, Roche, J. Martinovich,
W. MartJnovich), 1:45.66.
100 beck -1. Bye (N), 1:13.06;
2. Chang (N), 1:13.42; 3. Devey
(CM). 1:15.13.
100 brust-1. Cobb (N). 1:11.51;
2. W. Martinovich (CM), 1:11.78;
3. Bien (N), 1:22.2l~
400 mecll9y ,..._, -1. Cotta
Mesa (Bayes. W. Martinovich,
Roche, J. Martlnovlch), 4;02.63.
JC VOLLEYBALL
OCC sweeps at
San Diego Mesa
SAN DIEGO -Nate Hal-
lett had 16 kills to lead the
Orange Coast College men's
volleyball team to a 15-9, 15-
7, 16-14, Orange Empire Con-
ference win over host San
Diego Mesa Wednesday,
night.
Josh Miller clupped in with
12 kills, while Scott Alley had
25 assists for OCC (16:3, 10-3
. in conference).
The Pirates will play at
Palomar Friday night at 7.
HIGH SCHOOL GOLF ·
CdM leads Marina
NEWPORT BEACH -
Corona del Mar High"s boys
gold team took a 193-20-4 lead
over Marina after nine boles
at the Newport Beach Coun-
try 4Club, par 35, Wednesday.
lnnes MacDonald shot a 37
to lead the Sea Kings. CdM's
John Kwon and Chris Franta
both had scores of 38, while
Joe Kwon and Manuel Per-
nanrdez tied with .to. The
match will be completed
April 26 at Meadowlark.
Dodgers put the Mets away, 11-4
NEWPORT BEACH-Stefan Brysba and MUnllll hter ICbmey each had two hits and two runs
scored to lead the Dodgers over the Mets, 11-4, in Newport
Harbor Bueball Alsociation Mustang Division action last
weekend.
C-troa ca... and l.J. D'Cruz. who each pitched two
shutout iDD1ngl for the Dodgen, also bad two bits and had
two rum apiece .
........... IC. pw and lryaa ltbodel edded to the offeme,
while O..W um.. a.lie O'Delky, ldc a.a.a and
Hallltla Gny-Keogla led the Dodgen' defeme.
IV the Meta, ~ c..dea pitched two '::La iJ1ning1 and bed two bill at the plate, while 1'lwy LaG and
..... Dnll Uo pUcbed well.
ID odllr ~ DttlllaD Ktloo:
• AN .. at t. ...._ • • ...._ C-t struck out eight and
..... lcllll• ~time lmdngl ol ICOre)ea relief .. tbe Mblllkl Dodmd olf llae ......
•t:d11t7 , ...... c..,, .... -. .,......,
and Hr S "rlll• .... tbe A'I aftwe wttb key bill,
wbllll Mllill ........... ..,. aDd JCllla C.. a.d tbe A't .,.......,,
• Atlllllm U. Ca. W II•..,... C'll<Crr bid a bmD9 nm_._ .. tar .. Clidlbillllltbllr._tDllilA'& "====-===·~--~ ---wlllllllllll • wla 11111 -.._.. -
--~~ .. ~· .. ······~·~...... ..... .. .............. . ................. ~ ........ .
l
............... .,.. ...
Daily Pilot SPORTS Thunday, Apr;! 6, 2000 83
Sea Kings cruise to 91 ~26 win over Estancia
• Corona del Mar has too many guns for the
Eagles in Pacific Coast Le ague dua l meet.
HIGH SCHOOL GIRU TUCK IND FIELD
Orange County, which she
!iet with a 2:10.09. But Morse
still finished well ahead of
any pursuers.
Estanda's Liz Huipe. Hoss-
feld's time was 5:22.1 while
Huipe, who finished ninth in
the CIF Division JV state meet
in cross country, set a person-
al record with a 5:26.5.
time of 28.2. Her
sister, Hanni Gei-
der. and CdM's
Becky Cummins
tied in 28.5. Both
Geiders set a PR in
" ... It's a
testament to"
our·girls that
they didn't
give up. They
kept lrying ,., H
by reachmg nine
feet m tbe pole
vault. CdM Allison
Brawner won the
hlgfl Jump in 5-2. '
Estancia got two
wms from Violetta
Vega, who had a
big throw in the
shot 'put (27-4 112).
She won the discus
with a throw of 78-
11
CORONA DEL MAR -
Corona del Mar Higb's girls
cross country team keeps
plugging away.
The Sea Kings didn't set
any records, but they were
more than fast enough for an
easy 91-26 triwnph over visit-
ing Estanda in a Pacific Cast
League dual meet Wednesday.
CdM (4-0, '3-0 in league)
was led by a three-time win-
ner ih senior Kelly Halley.
She won the 100-meter with a
time of 13.4, one tenth of a
second better then Estancia's
Jasmine Geider. Halley
SUMMARIES
MOAC COAST UAGUE 90Y'S
COMIMA OIL MM t1, EStMaA 15
100 • 1. Moore (CdM), 11,6; 2. Hoyt
(CdM), 12.0; 3. Shoctwlt (CdM), 13 4.
200. 1. Moore (CdM), 23.6; 2. Vinson
(CdM), 24.8; 3. Barnes (CdM), 25.9.
400 • 1. Yeltey (CdM), 54.7; 2. Vinson
(CdM). 55.6; 3. Barnes (CdM), 59 6.
IOO • 1. Beardslee (CdM), 2:04.6; 2.
Segoviano (E), 2:06.6; 3. Fissel (E), 2: 17 .9.
1,IOO • 1. Yelsey (CdM), 4:29.3; 2. ,Rojas
(E), i1:35.4; 3. Stgoviano (E), 4:45.5.
J,200 • 1. Beardslee (CDM), 10:58.3;
2. Rojas (E), 10:59.B; 3. Casillas (E), •
11 :05.5. 110 ... • Glyer (CdM), 17 .4;
2. Carpenter (CdM), 1B.1; 3. Framsen
(CdM), 19.3. JOO ft · 1. Framsen (CdM),
46.9; 2. CMpenter (Cd~). 48.1; 3. Story
(CdM), 50.1. 400 ,..._, • 1. Corona del
Mar (Glyer, Krarf1«, Hoyt. Moore), 45.8.
HI • 1. Chandler (E). 6-0; 2. Knuppel
(CdM), S.2. u . 1. Chandler (E), 18-5,
2. Manhall (CdM), 1M; 3. Krll!Tlel"
(CdM), 16-9. Tl · Chandler (E), 38-3'h
fl'V • 1 Knuppel (CdM), 12-0; 2. Moore
(CdM), 11-6; 3. Watson (CdM), 11-0.
SP • Feoton (CdM), 52·8. 2. Ctogan (E),
44-4; 3. Johnson (CdM), 42-4'/•. DT • 1.
Feoton (CdM), 164-2; 2. Gran (CdM).
137·3'h; Aguilera (E), 127-8.
MC1AC COAST~ GIMS
COMINA oa. MM 91, EStMaA 26
100 • 1 Halley (CdM). 13.4;
2. J. Geld« (E), 135, 3. Thayef (CdM),
13.6. 200 • 1 J. Gelder (E), 2B.2;
2 B. Cummins (CdM). 28.5; 3. H. Gelder
(E), 28.5. 400 • 1. J. Cummim (CdM),
1:01.8; 2. B. Cummins (CdM), 1!0S.2;
3. Marx (E). 1:05.9. 800 • 1 L. Morse
(CdM), 2:16.4; 2. Hossfeld (CdM), 2:27.5;
3. Younnan (CdM), 2:37.7. 1,IOO . 1.
Hossfeld (CdM), 5:22.1; 2. Hulpe (£),
5:26.5; 3. K. Morse (CdM), 5:31.9. J ,200
• 1. Meefvey (CdM), 11 :49.3; 2. Hulpe
(E), 12:05.9; 3. K. Mone (CdM), 12:30.4;
3. 100 LH • 1. Mahler (CdM), 1B.3;
2. Dorl!Nn (CdM), 19.7: 3. Ramirez (E),
20.7. JOO LH • 1. Mahler (CdM), 50.7;
2. Dorl!Nn (CdM), 54.9. 400 reley • 1.
Corona del Mar (Canary, Thayer, Cum-
mins. L Mofle), 51.6; 2. Estancia, 53.4.
HI · 1. Brawnet (CdM), S-2; 2. lha~
(CdM), 4-8; 3. H. Gelder (E), 4-8
U • 1. Halley (CdM), 1 S-6; 2. J. Gelder
(E), 1W 'h; Brawn« (CdM), 13-5 TJ • 1.
...i1ey (CdM), » 11; 2. Anldo (CdM),
28-7¥._ SP · 1. Ve9a (E), 27-4'h;
2. Olikovani (CdM). 21-8; 3 MirOWltZ
(CdM), 1M'h. DT • 1. Ve9a (E), 78-11,
2. Aldeteu (E). 71-3-'/.; 3. ~le<
(CdM). 66-•1 .. fl'V • 1 Canary (CdM), ~;
2. ~ (CdM), 7-6.
BASEBALL
CONTINUED FROM Bl
early execution," Kiefer said.
Aliso used a walk, a hit batter
and four doubles to score five
runs in the fifth inning, mak-
ing it, 9-0, before Newport's
comeback.
Rorden had a double,
grand slam and two runs
scored to pace the Sailors'
attack. Wong also had two
hits, while Langsdorf, and
Sandoval each scored twice.
Jeremy Burchett had three
hits, including two doubles. a
run scored and five RBls to
lead the Wolverines. Koch
bad three RBis, while Tanos
added two.
YA VllW llMiUI Aulo N9aul&. 14 NIMio«r , ,
Aliso Viejo 130 051 4 . 14 17 1
Newport 000 070 4 . 11 9 0
Diffey, Potter (5), Koch en and
Serodte; Forsythe, Rorden (3),
Wwd (5), Jacobs (6) and Brant.
W • Dlfley. L ·Forsythe.
28 • Pitchford (AN), Burchett (AN)
2, T.nos (AN), Koch (AN), Wyty
WO Rorden (NH). HR -Fielder WO. Koch (AN), Rorden (NH),
IAngJdorf (NH).
defeated Geide~ by a bigger
margin in the long jump, 15-6
to 13-8 112. Halley also took
the triple jump with a mark of
30-11.
•Halley won three events. "Diana has really come on
for us lately,· Sumner said.
that race.
CdM's Jaycee
Mahler was victo-
rious in both · hur-She did a great job today,·
CdM Coach Bill Sumner said.
Three days before the
Arcadia Invitational, where
she will face some of the
nation's best high school run-
ners, CdM's Liz Morse turned
in a comfortable win in the
800. Her time of 2:16.4 was
six seconds short of her mark
of this year's fastest time in
•Liz isn't racing against
people anymore,• Sumner
said. "She's only racing
against times. U she ran a
2:05 but finished second, I'm
'sure she would be happy."
The distance runners did
well for both CdM anp
Estancia (1-3, 1-2). J enny
Cummins, who was 10th in
the ClF Division TV state cross
count..ry meet, took the 400 in
1:01.8. ln the 1,600, CdM's
Diana Hossfeld held off
Huipe also finished second
in the 3,200 with a solid time
of 12:05.9, only to l>e top~ed
by CdM's Season fv1eserrey,
who turned in a blls,W,ing
dles events. She Joan Car1isle
won the 100 low hurdles in 18.3. As Estancia coach
11:49.3. /
The closest race of. the day
came in the 200, where the
top three finishers came in a
virtual tie. Geider won with a
one of only two
competitors. she
won the 300 low
hurdles in 50.7.
In the held events, the Sea
Kings' K.risserin Canary was
first among two competitors
·we had a tough
opponent agamst
CdM today,•
Estc10c1d CO<lch Joan Cailisle
said. ·But it's a testafuent to
our guts that they dJdn't gwe
up. They kf:!pl trymg. •
CdM's Sean Fe nton (above) readies to unload.
Be low, CdM's Scott Baker negotiates high jump.
DAILY PILOT PHOTOS BY JEff Ct-tONG
Josh Yel sey of Corona d~I Mar leads the 1,600-me te r run en route to victory.
TRACK
CONTINUED FROM B 1
were neck and neck for the
lead during the first seven
laps before the held broke
into a near-sprint. Beaidslee
opened up some breathing
space going into the last turn
before Ro1as closed m and
took the lead. But in the final
stretch, Bea1dslee turned on
his afterburners a nd won m
10:58.3. Rojas hnished in
10:59.8.
Yelsey and Fenton had a
much easier ti.me capturing
their two events. Yelsey was
Vlctonous m the 400 (54.7)
and the 1.600 (4:29.3). Fenton
was a double winner in the
shot put (52·8} and the dJscus
(164-2).
·For our high.Ughts, there
. was Fenlon's cliscus, • Corona
del Mar Coach Bill Swnner
said.
•That was a good mark.
Beardslee and Yelsey were
also double WIIlners. They
did a good jOb. •
TAYA KASHUBA I DAILY PILOT
Harbor's Justtn Jacobson awaits the throw u Aliso Nlguel's Sean Koch tries to get back
to second base in Wednesday's Sea View League encounter. Aliso won the slugfest. 14-11.
SWIMMING
CONTINUED FROM 81
200 free (1:59.94) and the 500
free (1:25.32).
Also wilh two firsts was
Marc PantulJano in the 200
IM (2:16.90) and the 100
breast (1 :10.47) as well as
Chriss Street m the I OQ. back
(1:03.44} and 100 fly (Sir.OJ)
For Estanaa, DaYld Collier
took second in the 50 free
(24 .61) and third in the 500
free (5:38.60). while Phtl
Westfall placed third m the
100 back (1 :08.82).
MCIAC COAST LEAGUE eon
COMINA OIL MM 117, IEstANOA 12
no~,..._,. t c°'ona ~
Mar (~ Amotd. Meslinger.
Bowlus), 1 53 22
200 ~ • 1 Myer (CdMI. 1 59 94,
2 Moore (CdM). 2 08 22. 3 Hlflger
(CdM), 2.1>9.25
JOO ... 1 Pantuliano (CdM). 2 16 90.
2 Kamn (CdM), 2 \6 70; 3 Stradt
(GdM), 2 23 59
SO ~ • 1 BoWlus (CdM), 24 25, 2 C~lier (E), 24 61, 3 M.vch (CdM), 25 97
100 ftJ · 1 Street (CdM), 58 OJ,
2 Meulng« (CdM), 1:03.SO;
3. Teixeira (E), 1:17.20
100 ~ • 1 K1ttan (CdM), 53.59;
2. loWius (CdM), 55.55, 3 McCormtek
(CdM), 56.66.
900 ~ 1. Myer (CdM), 1:25.32,
2 Moofe (CdM), 5 37 29, 3 Coll~ (E),
5 38 60
200 free ret.y I CorON del Mar
(Pantuhno MOO!e March, Emery).
1 3866
100 bM:ti 1 Street (CdM). 1 03 .....
2 ~ (CdM), 1 07 75, 3 Westfall (E),
1 08.82
100 brNst 1 Pantuli.lno (CdM),
1 10 47; 2 Arnold (CdM). 1 14 50,
3 Emery (CdM). 1 23 52
MOFIC COAST LIAGUI GlllU COllONA on MN! 111, EnMOA '3
• 200 mecley ret.y I CorON del
Mar (Harkins, J M<Coy, Powel\,
Bowlus), 2~02 20
200 free 1 Fries (CdM). 2 21 34,
2 Strack (CdM). 2 13 12, 3 Oat.y (CdM).
2 1B 57
200 IM • \ Sheeu (CdM) 2"30 32,
2 Edlund (CdM), 2 34 12, 3 Meldebon
(CdM), 2 '7 28
50 ~·I tnglrs (CdM), 27 31. 2 L.
CasSlty (E), 27 72, 3 Mtllef (CdM). 28 52.
100 fty . 1 HefldrlCkton (CdM),
1 07 95, 2 He Hapemin (CdM), 1 12 25.
3 IC McCoy (CdM) 1 22 59
100 ~ • 1. L Cassity (E), I 00 I,
2 J McCoy (CdM), 1 01 82. J Haw!M
(CdM). 1 02 33
500 ft.. 1 Cole (CdM). 6 30.26,
2 Fl.aheny (E). 6 3\ 23 3 Kline (CdM),
6360
200 free ,..._, l COfONI Ml Mir
(He Hapemtl'\ Of'be. Strack, Fries},
1 51 25
100 bM:ti 1 ~1ll;1ns (CdM). 1 10 73.
2 Edlul'ld (CdM), 1 11 23. l I( McCoy
(CdM). 1 15 60
100 bNalt 1 Pow.n (CdM),
1 18 60, 2 Orbe (CdM), 120 23,
3 J Caulty (E), 1 29 72
400 mechy ,..._, · 1 CorON del
Mar (Hape"""· fries, Oat.y, lowl\6),
3-59,70
Corona del Mar sweeps at Estancia !Ji.!!ts
BRIEFLY
• Sea King continue to tune
up for the big one Saturday
night against Newport Harbor.
c 0 s T A YOLLEYllll MESA -Coro-
na del Mer
High'• boys volleyball team bad lit-
tle trouble defeating bolt Estancia,
15-0, 15-5, lS .... , Weclneedey night in
Padftc Coast Le9g\ae actioa.
Greg Stampley bed eight kills to
lead CdM (5·1), while Kevin (m).
Cllil Sbepardlon (five) and Charlie
Althnler (four) alto paced the attack.
Sven &urden aided the ofteme
wltb17Uliatl.
The Sea IOngl. ranked No. 4 1n
CIP Southern SecUoll DMlklD I, atll
trawl to lrvlne to take on Unlvdty
cm Prtday ID P9dlc COMt lAlgue l*J, bib9 tMlr Dtvlllcm I IJDU'
I I Sit wtlb N9wpalt ,__ at ...... ......, ..... ,., ...
mu jw begin at I pa
Sea Kings fall, 15-3
PALOS VERDES -TENNIS Peninsula High's unde-
feated Panthers main-
tained their reputation as the OP
Division l's No. 1 boys tennis team m
convincing fashion Wednesday,
shelling Corona del Mar, 15-3, at the
Jack Kramer Thnnil Oub.
Peter Kubnaticld and Michael
Been were the only CdM players
who could walk away wttb a 1e111e
of accomplllbment, ~ up to
win two ot three doubles 1et1.
The See Kings. swept in linglet,
fell to 15·5 ovenl1. ....... ;-= .... .
...... Murton (C.dM) ... to Klarlln,
).6: IGlt to Rlua, Mt lolt to~~ 0.
I; w.dl'IW9 (CdM) -M, M, '"' ... (CdM)IDlt,4"04.•7. D1mlll11 -~~ ...
D1":rl'•IVI. M def,,,_ .. Olhll-. '"'" .... ""'°' ............ =:.=::=::t::
\
Newport Harbor closes Sailors come up short
it out over Trabuco ~ against Vaqueros, 6-0
SANTA ANA -New-GOLF
port Harbor High's boys
golf teem completed a 412-
437 nonleague victory over Tiebuco
H.illl Wednelday et the Santa Ana
Country Oub, par 36.
1be Sailors' Dan Kush was the
medalist for the match with a score
ol 19. Newport's Kevin OIM>n shot an
82. Jake Allenach and Pete Watlon
both carded 831 for the Sailors (9-1).
NE w p 0 R TSOfTllLL BEACH -Newport
Harbor High'• soft-
ball teem opened Sea View League
competition witb a 6-0 loss to visiting
lrvtne~y.
lbe Sailors (9..S overilll) could
oOJy muster oae hit otf of VUlanova
Unmnity-bound Kart Singley. The
Vaqueros' hurler struck out 12 and
only aUowed a l1ng'8 by Stepharue
Ctralll tn the game. Eagles victorious, 15-3 n •• ls On defenle, Bl'MDM Parmeter
.....,_ threw out an lrvtne numer from right
• .,. 11. a.-Acrua•n I fteld. WbUe Manko MUami played
........ DJ. ., (I)*'· ........ 6-J. IOlkS bl c.wmr. Newpon will play at
... KO. M. d1IUt 1h4llo Cl) WOf\ H. H. IAgUna .. Prtday at 3:30 p.m.
dlfl&lll: u..., WOf\ •1 •1....... --~ DIUlln -~Cl)-to .... ._. -· Ii I -· ·r. 64: ......... •1. ... .. "° 2 -• 10 ' dlf. ~ ._ c. Gllq ..,., •• (I) -··r:;.., --0 . 0 ' l t.f, WOf\ W. •t Ahepc Ml ••CD It. n ~ Onlll n -.1-1,-.M.W. M.a181Un.W01t ....... l ·~N.
Pirates absorb an 8-0
loss to OEC Coe Cyp~
CYPRESS -Too
many errors and
not enough hits
SOFlllll
equall d an 8-0 Orange Empire
Conference loss for the Orange
Coast College Softball teem on
Wednesday agamst bolt Cypress.
A tnpae by 1Uha Thurmond and
lingles by Noelle EspiDOu. Jennifer
Jemen we~ the lone bill~
by Orange Coat ( lS-20, 3· 10 la cana
ference).
The Plralel will tae on Riwnide
In a Friday nlgbt doublehMder,
~at .S. ·-..._ __ ca a1
Cao r & Oil,.. CllMr I
o; ... (Olil -•· 0 3' ., .... ,
1'twunnd Cit. 1¥' • .. ...... w. ........
Lail •1tW·Mll111UtM.l·._ ~··O....Q•· ........
\ •
STEWART
CONTINUED FROM 81
ooe of the best sprinters around.•
Including the aforementioned
events, Stewart ii Mesa'-' opening leg
of the 4()() and 1,600 relay teams as
well as a long jumper.
"He's Just a great kid,• Camey
said. "He works hard tn practice and
is a great example for the younger
sprinters to try to reach his marks.•
The roadwork is paying off for
Stewart. In a dual meet again.st
Univ~jty wt week, Stewart won
the 100 (personal-best 10.88), 200
(22.98) long jump (20-4) and the was
a part of Mesa's winning 400 relay
team.
"The biggest thing I focus on are
my form and my overall concentration,• Stewart said. "Then my goal is
just staying ahead of the opposition, no matter what it takes.•
A Pad.fie Coast League champion in the 100 and 200 laSt year,
Stewart hopes for a return trip to the top of the league charts and even
beyond. He was sixth in the CIF Southern Section Division ID Finals a
year ago.
"I would love to com~te in the CIF Masters Meet and go even
further,• Stewart said.
But with those lofty goals, however comes a ton of work, something
that Stewart, who also started for the Mustangs as a comerback on the
football team, is ready for. "I'm putting in about 15 hours a week,"
Stewart said. "I've just got to stay focused on what I have to do and con-
centrate on staying ahead of the competition.•
Will Stewart continue bis sprinting career after Mesa? "There are a
couple of schools that have contacted me, "Stewart said. "But if I had a
say, I would love to go to Florida State or Arizona State for track.
Stewart bas a rather interesting bobby or second passion. "I like
designing houses,· Stewart said. "I've done a few designs and it's
something I am going to pursue when I get to college."
: . .: . :;.:..,-"..:; .. -:• • , I I ' •
' (I ... • •• \ l.-\ .r'-1
.~ -.Jf i ; I~ -_ .. _ t ')lo1PI
,' I I I / ' i ,· · ..
-'-·~
new sport.• Steinbelg said, referring to hi.s
pertnen, Jeff Moored and David Dunn.
,.. u It llD't .....,. • big llDOG9b week with
the Masten, The Golf Channel features virtual
round-the-clock coverage of the Masters.
' 'The 28Gl annual Newport Cenler Al9oc:YUon'
Golf Toumam.ent will be played April 24 at ''
•Newport Beach Country Club. \ / A nonprofit organization, NCA represents' 1 · '
building owners and businesses in .Pa.shio.,,·'lsl8:fld
and Newport Center. Proceeds from the 1"
tournament will benefit the Newport-M,es
School Disqict, honoring teacher-wQ~Jl grants
for all schools in the district. Details: (9"9) 644-4622.
We're one week from knowtng wbo our flnt
competitor will be in the Tea Cup Classic Aug. 11
a t Big Canyon Country Club (8 a.m.).
The final round of the Big Canyon women's
club championship (won last year by Sally
Holstein) is next Thursday, followed by Mesa
Verde Country Club's final round on April 14.
Newport Beach will decide its 2000 champion on
April 27, and Santa Ana Country Club the
following day.
The event is staged for the four women's club
champions in the Daily Pilot's circulation.
Pelican Hill will bolt lbe Tim Brown Celebrity
Shootout on Sunday from noon to 7 p.m., the first
of two events. A Celebrity-Am Qolf Classic ts
played the following day at Dove Canyon.
Brown (Raiders) will join celebrity friends on
the links to raise money for children. Brown is the
tournament chairman and national spokesman
for Athletes & Entertainers for Kids.
JC MEN'S GOLF
OCC falls to Riverside
MORENO VAllEY -The
Orange Coast College men's
golf team took a step back-
ward as the Pirates fell to
Riverside, 379-392 in Orange
Empire Conference action
Wednesday at Moreno Valley
Ranch Golf Course, par 72.
Eric Hird shot a three-over
75, while Tun Sakkinen (77),
Ken Kate (78), Kyle Wicks
(81) and Erik Hebert (81)
complete the Pirates' top five .
The loss comes following a
win over Cuyamaca on Mon-
day, 378-404 at Singing Hills
Golf Course, par 71. Hird led
the Bucs with a two-over 73.
SC•IUll
l'ODAY ..............
High school boYl Md girts -
WoOdbridge at Newport Harbor,
lp.m. .........
Community college -Cypress at
Orange eo.st. 2 p.m. •SW"'= \ Hioh OI girls -Newport
Harbor at Foothill Swim Ga1ne1
prellms. 3 p.m.
.~.\
Hklh schoOI• • Corona del Mar ~ N'Orthwood.3:15 p.m.; Laguna
$each •.t Estancia, 3: 1 S p.m.;
r Unlverstty vs. Costa Mesa, at
TeWinkle Park, 3:15 p.m.
•Tennis Community col~ men -Fullerton at Orange Coast, 2 p.m.
Community college women-
Orange Coast at FUiierton, 2 p.m.
High school boys • Newport
Hart>or at Irvine, 3 p.m.;
Northwood at COl'ona del Mar,
3:15 p.m.; Costa Mesa at University,
3 p.m.; Estancia at Laguna Beach,
3:15 p.m.
• Golf
High school bo~ · Newport
Harbor at North-South Tournament. Sacramento, 1 p.m.;
Costa Mesa vs. Estancia, at Mesa
Verde CC. 2:15 p.m.; COl'ona del
Mar vs. Laguna Beach, at
Strawbeny Farm GC. 3 p.m.
DEEP SEA
WEDNESDAY'S COUN1S *i::t Landing • 1 boat, 14 angers: 13 sculpln, 1 black
seabass (released), 2 cabezon
(released).
Daily Pilot ' . .
111•••• ........ V11 07'°"" Pl••• llu11rt 111 dlll of .. publOlllDn. _....._ ..___ .!~ Ha~ you etanad IOullOdl. 4IO L8fMOOd 2!44 w.t ~ Hlgl\· ~~a-.a.... unltl ................. M.,;voge1P.T. ...... .... .... Madi~~ _ .. --qua_._ dOlna bl.l•lne•• yet? Clrde, Colta ..... CA -.y,SUll9100.~ ···a1n ·---~ lM fOllowlna ~ Thie .... melll Wiii The ~......... be lldlil I Hid to Ill oon .. '°""4llldldll le-YN, ~ 92921 8Md\, Cllfomil eae63 cent ~. .,. dolrlCI bulititl aa· llad w11t the QOUl1'Y ...._._ AYOlllH Char1tabl1 11te1 aproplada1 11 ==-..i.::~ c. Bald Thia blJelneM la con-..., WlY olllmn wtlO ,., items un1e11 Olherwlle 8TAR -NAILS . Cleitc al Olwlat ~ ~.-;-:; Qo.Oo, i::,, Fol.rlcllillon, GM of~ umd QUiel9 qua la cone ;;:""....,.. wee duca.CI by: 11n 1nc1McM1 Ql...111 w11Nn 180 Clays ataltd: 250-Edle Pam; vcn!"Undll ahod.~8=. on 00..2~-Newport C.n .. r Of., G. Y~rg. CPA, MCUChe IU caeo. llad wllfl tt. Qoun1y Hav• you atarleCI o1 the O&ta ot !hit putlll-279·Rlcky Kennedy;
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talM ,.....,. -· "".J...19• CA 92680 • Scnwwt & POttma, au f9IPUll18 a tlempo, on 03-31•200CJ Y ... 8-t-M &houkl'be 9dCINued to • 8 6 ·LI• e A•• Y ~ Gary A. Schmidt, 8,~2000 n'6'17 Rigardlng RHtau· 224' WMI COMC High.-puade penter .. c:aao, y IOllOllUI.. Beveftay A. 8purloc* Iha WlnMl Foundation, 56MAuhjah RaaMda,
18702 Pamlaw Tar· Ficuuoue IUilMii rants, Inc,, (CA), 401 w.y, ai-. 100. NeWDOtt le puedaft qulW_r •u Deir l'lloe ltfH. 8, 13, 20, Thia ~ _. car• of Coty G. Young· 568.K & M Gutre1Tez, :eevortia LJn;a. CA Name""'9ment NIW""rt Center Or. 8Mch1~9.2e63. Mlario,audlnetoyotru 27,2o00 ~ llad With Iha Couf'lty berg, CPA, L••lty, KlOQChllOers:S&lA.JoM The-.. v (948) ~2771 ooau de.au ~ ACiilOUi lkiilniea Cleft! al ar.noe County Tholnaa Sct\warz & Smfth. 715-Nicol• L.
Klau Q, Schmiot, .,.ooinQ~ ~1~~ Beecll, ltubliah•d N'ewport sin IMIO ~PO< Nw .. -.Wt onOS-2t·200CJ Pottma: 220 Wast Hunter; 8!>4·Mark
19702 Palt!Yfew T•r· STEVEN T'S, 1751 Thia ~ '* oon-Baach·Co11a Meta pe1te dale cr:wta. ...._ ~-2000llHM2 COM1 ~y. Slilla McCarthy =.Vortla ~ CA ... _........ o.ly Plot APffl e Ellla1an CJlfOa NqUlal. .... .....--Delly Plot Met. 23, 30, tOO, NewllOft Beach. Publ•~ Ne~ • ..---Ave .. CON ~ed by.• oorpcwetloll 2000 Th617 toe ~. Puede qua .,. dOlr'D u: Ap. e. 13, 2000 Th542 C8lbM 02663, (9'49) Beach-Costa Mesa Meta, CA 92627 t{iive you 1tarted .. ~~ ......_Ctllc...,Melton -· """= PllOI .. ...,., 6 12 Thia ~· 11 con· SleYen Todd Nenko doing. bua!Mu yet? FkihlOue BUilftiii ......, ._..11amtr 1 .... .....,. .,., • Flc:tllloua 8ualrMu 650-2171. """ '"""" • ·
dllded l;ly: J'Ulbend and •SOS Frankfort Ave.: Y .. , 3-15-1995 Name 8'akment ""tbogadO ~ :!::i. ~~· Name.......-., PubllaheCI Newport W619
w11e ;J;. Hunllnglon Beacn, c~ Regarding Aeatau· The followlr\O pel10N lnmedlatamente. SI no ,....... ~ 803 The lollowlno .~ Beach-Coat a Mesa • ~v• ou at~nN: 92648 111 con..' rant•, .Inc .. c .A. a,.dolngbualneeua: ~ ~la~a~n ~Roao. N8Wpoo .,.doing~ = ~llOt Apll!Th6188 PU:5'T~C~6JlCE
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118tamerlt• WU Have you 1tartee1 fillCI wlUI Iha County #30 HUlldngton BMdl =g.:doe o a una CIU<*tCj by. an~ 1naton Beadl, CA 112M8 Name at.t.fnent ANNUAL RETURN
,. ....... ~ the .~ doing bu11oe11s yet? Qertl of °'9noa County CA t2847 ' c.... 11 ~..=, ~ Hav• you atarleCI ~loc:9 l . Abbaacla, TM followlog per.ons N011c$ It hereby glYen ,,-'" "' Otvae .......,.,1y Vea, 4'3-1981 on 00. 17 ~ Oenlel Swlders 8700 fonlc:o> doing bulitleaa Y"ll1 No 1601 Alabama St. 13, are doirlQ buafness es: pursuant to lntemat llev·
on0$-17·2000' .S\eY~Jt.'Nariko 20GMl2JOM Wam«All'l.,#30'.Hijl'lt· c~iENUMllEtt: ,Mat1onPalarljlall Huotlogtoo Beach, CA Prlnfwell . 350 enue Code Secuoo
2CICIOMU010 Ttiil statement waa Dally Pilot Mar. 23, 30, lnOIOCI Beedl. CA 926-47 (Numero def C-) Thft etai.ment wa.1 92648 Avocado St. •F2, Costa 6104(d) that the Retum Dally Piiot Mar. 2l,., 30, f1lecl with Iha County ~. 6, 13, 2000 Th562 Thia bullnMa II con· ~ flleel with Iha County Thia bolfoeaa II oon-Mesa, CA 92627 of Private Foundation, ~· e. 13, 2000 1 n5411 Clerk of 019nge CountY ~cthlOua Bualniia 0Uct8d by: an lnCIMdual The name anCI ad· Olerll of Of9noe County CludaCI by: an lndMdual Kim J. Hoffman, 350 Form 990-PF. tor the "FfCiiiiOua Bualftii1 on 03·24·2000 Name Stlltement Hava you atarteCI dr ... of the court II: (El on 04-04•2000' Hava you atarteo AllOQldo St .. fF2, Costa Hunsaker Foundailon
Heme at.tement ZOOOll2am The fOllowing per100i doing bullrlMI ye!? No nombre tdb9Cdon de 11 200Clee2"'2 doing buslneta yet? No Mesa, CA 92627 tor the t 999 tax year has The IOllowfflO peraona Oallv Piiot Mar. 30.J. Apr. are doing bustne11 aa· OeOlel 8-ndel'I corte es Oa~ NJr, e. 13, 20. VlrlCa l . Abbucla This busloeas is con· been filed a~ that the
al9 doing bualOen aa: 6, 1!1, 20, 2000 · in5&1 PARADISE PARTY • This 11atameo1 _. ORANG COUNTY 27, Th604 Thil Mternenl was dUcted by. ao lnOMOual same tS available lor In·
LYNX INTERN A . FlctJilOua Bualniie PROPS z,461 Orange· filed with ltle County SUPERIOR COURT FICtlilOUa Bua!Mia filed with lhe Couniy Have you started spectlOO between the
TIONAL. 292.4 CheslnUt Name S1atetnent tnrope it200, FUiierton, Clertt of Orange County HARBOR JUSTICE Name Stlltement Clerk of Ol9nge County Clolog busirleu yet? No hOurs ol 9:00 am. anCI
Ave .. eo.ta Mesa, CA The followloo persons CA 92831 on 04·04-2000 CENTER · CIVIL The t lowln on 00-23-2000 l<Jm J. Hoffman 5:00 p.m. aare of Cory
92626 are e1o1ng buli"'nesa ea: Eric Steven Ranklll, 2000ll24"' 4601 Jamboree Road, ~ ~raons 2000ll241311 Thll statement was o. Youngberg. CPA, at
Don H. Miiihouse, YOOGO FINE ARTS, 283 Ulac Ln., Costa Dal~ NJr. 6, 13, 20, Newport Beach, CA ar;RAVEL PARTN:~~I Dally PllOt Mar. 30, NJr. flied with the County Les I e y , Thorn as. 2924 Chellout Ave., 969 Sonora Rd., Costa Mesa, CA 112627 27, . Th61 t 92660 6, 13. 20, 2000 Th564 Cler1c ol Orange Coomy SGtlwarz & Postma, loc ..
Cotta Mesa, CA 92626 MeH, CA 92626 Thts t>usloess Is con· FICthlOua Buaineia The name, address. ~~~~~~~~ FictJtlOUa BualMia on 0444·2000 2244 West Coast High·
Thil busirless la con· Slegllnda Spyropoutos., ducted by: an lnCllvidual Name Statement and te~ number Or., Urlll f ·3<M, Costa ~.~merit Da.llv Pilot !.,~~ S:!c;,u~l:f~I~~= dud8d by: an llldlYIClual 969 Sonora Rd., Costa Have you started The lollowlng parsons of plain s 1t110mey, or Mesa, CA 92626 ,.,. "'"'-"'.V persons 27, 2000 Th601 by any citizen who re-
Hav• you started Mesa, CA 92626 Clolog buslnesa yet? No are doing business a. a: Plalntlft. Without an al· Yvonne M. Tovar. are doing bualoess as: Fl 1 8 quests" wtthlo 180 days doing bullnelS yet? No This buslne11 Is COil· Enc Steven Rankin Pacific Sales & (811• lomey 11: (El nombre, la 285!> Plnecreek Or., a) America Wesl A · ctlt oua ueln•H of the dale 01 lhls publl·
Don H. Mllhoule Clucled by: 811 lodlvldual This statement was Ing 2036 Harbor Blvd direcclon Y el numero de F-304, Costa Mesa, CA oanclal, b) America Name Statement cation All svcn requesls
Thia ttatement was Have you started flied with the Councy C<>Sta Mesa CA 92627' teletonodel abogado del 92626 West Realty, c) Windsor The folloWlrlg persons should be addressed to
flied with the County doing buarn... yet? No Cieri\ of Orange County Chad o. ware 3419 demalldante, o del de· This buslneu la con· Capital, 3857 Bird\ St. are Cloitlg business as: tile Hunsaker Foullda·
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YOU MAY, EX·
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°"°5, 04/0t, 04112 Clerk of Onange County Sleglirlde Spyropoulos on 03·17·2000 Via Lido 632, N.wport mandante qua no tleoe duded by: an Individual 1233, Newport Beadl, Port Calypso. 2633 w . 1100 care of Cory 0 on00.17·2000 Thia statement was 20008823035 Beacn CA92663 •booad<>.ea) Hava you started CA92660 CoastHwy,Ste E,New· Youngberg CPA 5 2000ll2a028 llled With the County Dally Pilot Mar. 23, 30, Thlt' business 11 COO• HARVEY W. GAZIN. doing butll\8SI yet? No Ke1melh P. Busick, port S.acti, CA 92663 l u I e y Th 0 mas ' CNS1n441
Dally Piiot Mar. 23, 30, Clerk of Orange County NJr. 6, 13, 2000 Th!>!>3 duded by: an ll'ldMdual 43374, (818) 780·5557 Yvonne M. Tovar 901 Sonora Ave.. La James F. Partier. 2440 Schwarz & Postma. Inc : Escrow No.: ~· e. 13, 2000 Th!>50 on 00·2'4-2000 Flctltloua eualnea• Have you 1tarteCI HARVEY W. GAZIN, This statemeot was Habra, CA 92660 North Bay RO .. Laite Ar· 2244 west Coast High· NB20076-E
"Fi"cthlOua Bualn••• 2000M2S7H Name Stat.ment Clolng business yel? ~iev::Ss~~da flied wl1h the County This busloeas ls coo· rowhead, CA 92352 way Suite 100 Newport NOTICE TO NIH'M s .. tement Dally PllOt Mar. 30, Apr. The lollow\og persons Yea, Aug. 1995 V N ·CA :1411• ctem of Orange County ducted by: an lndivlClual This business 1s. COil· Beaen CA 92es3• 19491 CREDITORS OF
The fOl!owlnQ pertoflS 6, 1~. 20, 2000 T. h578 are Clolng buslnesa as: Chad D. Ware 0~~E:~c 230 1999 on 04 . .()4.2000 Have you started ducteCI by: an 1r1dMCluaJ 650.2711 BULK SALE
ere doing bualneas as: Flctltloua Bualniia SummemMI Floral & Thll statement was ALAN SLATER Clerk, 2000ll24118 doing business yet? No Have you started Published Newport AND OF INTENTION BACK SAY BATH N.me Statement Gifts, 369 E. 17th St. flied wtt.h the <;:ounty by L GAActA 0e,,uty Daily Piiot NJr, 6, 13. 20, Kenneth P, Busick doing bus1oe15 yet? Bea¢h·Co sla Mesa TO TRANSFER
COMPANY, 192 Santa The lollowing persons 113, Costa Mesa, CA ~g'.$,. Oranoe County Published 'New~rt 27, 2000 The05 This statement was Yes. l0/80 Dally Pilot April 6, ALCOHOLIC
l&abel, Costa Mesa, Cal· are Clol~buslness as: 92627 ·~-....... Beach· Costa eaa Ft--•-ua Bualneea filed wftt1 the County James F. Parl(er 2000 Th618 BEVER .. GE If la 92627 &--·• "uuv Clerk of Orange County This statement was ,.. om · DRAG COMPUTER Bev a r ~ A""" Dally Pilot NJr 6 13 20 Oahy Pllot Mareh 16, 23, NlllM Statement on 03·23·2000 tiled with the County CHt77»H LICENSE 19~8$In~~be~~ia ~~l~~~c~~· 9•9854
1 ~~cOsta ~~ 27, 2000 . 'Th612 30.3f:6· 2000 lll534' Thedolfol~s 2000'8236118 Clefit of Orange County MUICE OF (U.C.C. 6105 et seq.
Mesa, Ctflfomla S2627 Cypress CA 90630 ' 92627 ' FICtltiOua Buafniii Flctftloua Bualneaa are "O bus u : Dally Pllol Mar. 30, Apr. on 03·3l·2000 PEllllM TO and B & P 24073 ' This bull"811 15 COil-~Iner o. Thomhlll, Thia bualrieu Is coo· Name Statement HMM S1atement CllckllatSold.Com, 6, 13, 20. 2000 Th560 20006824595 AJDlt•HIYI et a.q.)
Ouc;lad by: an Individual 9951 Holder St. 164, dooed by: an lndiv'IClual The followlng persons The fOllowtng peaon& ~~=5del Mar, Flcthloua Bualneaa oan~t At:>r 6• 13• 20• ESTAlE OF: Notlce Is hereby given
Have you a tarted Cypress, CA 90630 Have you started are dolno business as: ar. doing business as: Palrldt J. Bartollc. 620 Name Statement 27• Th602 •mAllET II. that a l>Ulk sale o( assets
doing buslnesl ~t? No This business Is con· Clolng business yet? ELECTRIC DREAMS, Modero Vintage I A Corona del The follow\ng persons Fictitious Bu1lness m£ MA IE1'1m. afld a transfer of alco-
t<eny Aflson Weisel ducted by: an lndlvklual Yes, 8·9·96 3190-H Airport Loop Or.. Furniture, 3807 Allley .:r. c':i'om1e 92625 are dolrlQ bUsloeaa as: Name Statement RQj IET hOIM: beverage hoen.se ls Thia statement was Have you started Bevefley A. Spur1ock Costa Mesa, CA 92626 A.venue, Newport uwreooe M. Sim· PlanvTews, 24272 The following persons ... _. ~ aboUt to 1>e made. The
flied with the County doing boSloess yal? No This sta1emeo1 was Toplloe Rima toe.. BeachJ·"' • CB.A 9W2663 3607 pson, 421 Ealher, Costa Chr1S811ta Or., Mission ere doing bups1"8ss as: CAIE NO. names. Social Security ClerkQfOnlngeCouoty RalnerO.ThomhiU filed wllh the County (CA), 3190·H Airport .... a · nin. Meaa,Calltomla92627 Viejo,CA92691 Marina ropertles, A201M9 or Federa l Tax
on Q3..17·2000 This statement was Clerk ot Ol9nge County Loop Dr .. Costa Mesa, Flnley Acvenue, Newport Mtnony E. Bertollc, Cary O. Brockman, 2633 W. Coast Hwy, Ste To all heira, Numbers, aoo ad·
20008823030 flied with the County on 03-21·2000 CA 92626 Beach, A 92663 1827 Toyon Lane New 24272 Chrlsanta Dr .. E. Newport Beach, CA beneficiariea, credi· dresses of l™9 Seller/ ;~l~.~2?t\~· ~~-~4?::rCouoty Dally p11ot~ d~~~~:'~~~ d~~~~~~dl ~Beach. ca~ ~r~~:;A1:~~ 9~~:esF.Parker,2440 ~~;:itora~0~~g;:r~ ~:"~:'. ~~:~=
2000'8231111 Aj:>r. 6, 13. 2000 Th543 Have you started Have you 1t1rte This bUai"8St la COil-ducted by: an lnClivlduat NoM Bay Ro .. Lake Ar· aona who may other· BIV<I .. Costa Mesa, CA F=us::=• Oallv Pilot Mar. 30~ Apr. 14Ctltloua Bualneii doing business yet? ~ ie5'::0 yet? No ducted by: a limited part· Have you started rowhead, CA 92352 wiae be intereated in 92626
The IOI~ 6, 13, 20, 2000 m576 Name Statement Yes, 3123194 This Statement was ner•hle> doing business yet? No This business ls COO· the will or eatate, or Tu Id •95·3648978
are ~~~r:;is Flctltloua 8ualnMS The follow\og pel"90M. Topllne Rims Inc .. flied with the Courity Have you atar!eCI Cary D. Brockman duoteCI t>y: an lnCIMduat both, of: MARGA· The busmeas Is lulOWn
......... & Su~ Name Statement are dolnn busloess as: PhPre","?£.! ... De Les1>1oay, Clertl ol Ona ,..,........., dolnQ butllllU yet? No This statement was Have you staned RET R. RIFE AKA as: Patrlc!C's Pub -..• p I """"'" Hllnge ~ ... , Anlhony E. Bartollc flied wl1h tl\e County doing business yet? ETHICL UARG .... El The namH, Social Se-Compaoy, 670 W. 171 The following per'IOllS Broadway a nuog, This statement was on 04-04·2000 This statement WU• Clerk ol Orange County Yes, 3192 " ~ "'" cuoty or Federal Tax
St, Ul'lltGS, Costa Mesa, are doing t>uslrless u : 410 S. Broadway, Santa filed with the County 2000el24113 flied With the County on 03-01·2000 James F. Pal1cer RIFE Num1>ers. and ad·
CA 92627 West Coaal Mal1cetlng Arl8, CA 92701 Clefit o1 o,.nge County DallY Piiot NJr. 6, 13, 20, ctel1c of Ofanoe County 20006821255 This statement was A P£TTTION h11 dresses ol 1ha Buyer/
Scott C. Carter, 3t22 2000, 3320 E. Chap· Kendall T. Rogers, °" 04·04-2000 27, 2000 Th608 •2000 · o 11y Pilot Ma 30 AP' filed w1th the County been filed by JULIUS Transleree are:
FrultharlCI Or .. Vista, CA rnao. Suile 146, Orange, 410 S. Broadway, Santa 2000'82.4MS FICthlOUi IUilMH on 00.lO-2000'822208 8,a13. 20. ~ ThssS Clelit ol Orange County AARONS in the Donna.Jean Gamer anCI
92627 CA 92869·3811 Ana.1CA 92701 1 Delly Pilot/lf>r. 6 13 20 NlllM Mltament Daily Pilot Mar. 18, 23, Flctlt!ou• Bualneaa on 3.31.20002,......,.245.... Superior Court of V1ooeot A. Hd<s. 338 ThlS busloeff Is oon· JoaM Bumham 3320 Tl'I s t>ualness s con· 27 2000 ' ni613 n... fol.._._ 2000 ThS33 .,_,,.. .. California, County of Rochester St.. Costa ...... _.by· .• ,, 1 ....... ·ldual E C...,"m&rl, Suite t46, ducted by: an lnCIMClual ' ""' ......... ..., pe"°','s 30·~6• Neme Statement O p •~ '"" 6 13 20 0 'm ••-sa. c • 92627 """'""' -· ,,..,. · -d Flctltl 8 .__ are""""" bullnesa as Fl · a BuaC::aa airy '"" .,..r. · • · ra • ...., " Have you started Orange, CA 92869·3811 Have r,ou start• oua ua,.-• c;;;;,7 For ReGearCh u ,..., TM lollowtng pefSOl\S· 21, 2000 Th603 E P£TfTION As listed by t"8 Sener/ ~~ng3-2~ess yet? d!~ ~~c:i-d~~~r~~ No ~enr~':':"~ & ~I ol Hu· ~.!:o-=s ar~~no~~~~sl~~. Flctltloua BuelneH ruf .. l'A~~S J,u;~ ~:'s:~s°'~~ b':l: sciott c . carter Have you stalled Thia llatemenl was are doing buslneu as: ~P=I· La™:! are CloloO bualnesa as: 1n9 Placentia Ave., Name Statement appointed 88 per•on-dresses used t>y the
Tills statement was doing busloess yel? No filed with the County Newport Beach ...,.,..,. • gu K & R lrMtStrnenls, Cosla Mesa, CA 92627 The tolloWirtg persons al fepretentetiv• to Seller/\JcenHe within
filed 'With the County Joann Burnham Clerk ol Orange County Vineyards & Winery, H~9=k 25-415 7352 Roc:lanont Ave., Terrelea Collll\I, 1n9 are doi11g business as: administer the estate three years betore Iba
,Cleltt ol o,.nge County This statement was on 03·21·2000 LLC, 20362 Birch St, Boone Plaoe Laguoa Waalmlnater. CAL Ptaoelllla Ave .. Costa Omnlllc Advertising of the deoedent dale sudl hsl was sent on 03·2&.2000 flied with Iha County 2000llHS81 Newport Beach, CA Hiiia CA 92653 92883-6125 Mesa. CA 112627 LLC. 18627 BrOOkhurst THE PETITION or delivered to the 2000ll2'1,.. Cler11 of Orange County Daily PilOI Mar. 23, 30, 92660 Thia bulil'8 14 Ronald S. Chocek, This bualneU Is oon· St, •006. Fountain Val·, r 1 q u , 1 t 1 th 8 Bu_yerfTransleree .,.,
Dally Piiot Mar. 30, Apr. °" 03-24-2000 Aj:>r. 6. 13. 2000 Ths-44 Newpon Beach duc:tad by· an~~ 7352 Aoc:kmonl Ave.. Clocted by: an ll'ldlvlaual ley. CA 92708 deoedent'a Will and The assets lo be sold
6, 1~. 20. 2000 Th5e9 2000M217M l!ICthloua Bualftiia Vineyards & Winery, Have you atarted Wutmln11er, CAL Have you Slarled Omnlflc Advertisln~ codicil• if eny be are dffcnbed In general
W-ctltlOua BualMii Daily Piiot Mar. 30, Al)(. Heme Stet9mel.nt LLC. (CA), 20362 Bifdl .....i..,, buslnesa. 1 yet? No 92883-6125 doing t>uslnesa yet? No l • L . C • , 1 8 6 2 adtritted t obete es: Fumlture, fixtures Neme Statement 6, 1$, 20, 2000 Th5'73 The following pe~ St, Newport Beach, CA ~~m Malek Kathleen o ~ Terra.lea Colbrls Brool<hursl St.. •306. 0 pr • ano equipmeot. Onsale
-.,_ toii.-r.u. .... --· t!lctJtlOua BuaNii are........, buslneM .. : 92660Thl• bu·•--·s 11 ~ TNi'-statemeol was 7352 Ao«*mOnt Ave., Thi• statement was Fountain Valley, CA The WIU and. any General Alcoholic ""' --"'V ,......_..... $ ~.,, E • -"'• ..... .-Westminster, CAL liled with the County 92708 cocfiolle •• 9'1!•l~e Beverage License, are doing butineas as: Name ~tement Cal Pacific laciric, 5 ducted by: llmi1ed U.-flied with Iha County 92683-6125 Clertt of Oranae County This business Is COil· fot •xaminetion in lease. feasehold •m· Commul'll~ssocla· The loliowlng pel10N Woodlellf. lrvlne, CA bitlty Co · Cleltc of Oranae CounlY This bulineu 11 ooo-on ()3.31.200CJ ducted by: Limited Lia· the file kept by the provemeots, goodwill
lion Coos • 1508 are Clolllg business aa: 92614 Have· you 11arleCI on 04-04·2000 ducted by: huabelld and 20006824581 blhty Co. court. and tradel'\811'11 and are Eton Pl.. ewport STOCK JOCKEY, 2330 John Cito loc .. (CA~ 5 doing bu1iness yet? No . 2000el2,...1 wife • DllilY Pilot NJr. 6. t3, 20. Have you started THE P£Tl]"ION located al' 2645 Harbor
Beactl. CA 92660 Vanguard, •B102, Costa l/ioodleaf. lrvlne, A NeWport Beach De~ Af>r. 6. 13. 201 Have you started 21. 2oOO Th596 doing business yet? requ•eta authonty to Blvd .. Costa Mesa, CA
1!*..'8E"ton"'"P"i •• ~""w!!!: MeFsaa..,~dA 9026a.~ Jaoll. 92~: business 1s con· LLVioec yaRr~ • .! .~2· 2F7
1·...,..lou• BuaJ!ff9a doing bustoeu yet? Fictttloue eualneas Yes, 4·t 1·98 edmlnieter the eatate 92626 ""'° ''"' ,...... ""' .,.. ""' ,.....,,., """'"'"' "''" "-Ye1. February 14, 2000 N•--s•-te-t Omniflc Advertising under the lndepen-The kolld ol llcense to S.act'I, CA 92660 2330 Vanguard, 18102, ducted by:• corpora\..,,, CEO ' HMM St8tement Kathleen O Ctiocek -·--.,..,, LL C Juhe Glacy d Adml • t d be transferred Is. Oosale
This busllleSS Is COO· Costa Mesa. CA 92626 Have you started This statement was The folloWlng pel'10nS Thia atatemenl was The lol~ persoi:is • ~.4a,;&ger o~~~t•t•• r:..'M~ 0 e ". r a I I 1 c. "s e Clucted by: an lnCIMdual This business is con· doing business yel? tiled with the ~ are dolrig bullnlsa aa· flied with the County arep~~!! as. This .statement was authority wiU allow •48-11~09 now lsaued Have you alerted ducted by: an lrlCllVklual Yes, H ·95 Cler1c of Orange ,..IM......, Allerl L Services 306 Clenc of 0 County '""'""""'' '"'""gage, flied with the County for lhe premises located doing business yet? Have you 11arted John Cito ~~· Brett 00 03•17•2000' ~n, T8'00 w-Senta '1t.na on 03-10.~ 1287 N. Tustin Ave.. Cletll ol Ora County the P!rtonaf repre-64~
Yes, April 1993 doing busloesa yet? No Johnsoo, Pra ....... nt 2000M23011 CA 92703•· • 2000el22118 Anaheim, CA 92807 on 03.31.2'0{;88 nntetlve . •o take ~~a J..~~~9~":i·
Karen Mn Bennett Faitlad Davtd Janll This statement was Dally Piiot Mer. 23, 30, Brett 'Allen Llscum, DI'"' Pilot Ma 16 23 Arst Guaranty Fiflan· 20005824602 meny acnona with-The anticipated date ot
This statement was Tills S1atemeot was flied with Iha CounCou ty ~r. 6, 13, 2000 -"'•7 ..,,., TelOn Way, Santa ~"7 6 2000r. .;..,.~ olal Corporation (CaH· 0 1~ .... "" 6 13 20 out obtainlnQ court 1 " _ .. h ... A "~-1u Cler11 ol Orange oty -''""" ~ 30,. r. • "'""'' l__..l •• s: """" BtlstOI St., • ,..,, .,..r, • Th. • approve!. Before the sale/traosler s filed with the County uled .... • .... VVUJ•,, 2000 ctttlO 8Uilniii Ana CA 92703 Bualne9a ~~Costa Mesa. 27, 595 taking cen.in VflfV 05-01-2000 .. th4 otfa
Clerk ol Ol9noe County Clerk of Orange County on Q3..21· 2000M"3n Name u:tatement Thll t>ualoe•s Is con-Nam. Stlleament CA 92626 Flctltiou• Bu1ln•H lmport9"t eodone, ot BURROW ESCROW on OS-28·2000' on 03·2.4-2000 ••-ducted by· an lndlvldual Sta CO 180 N9WPOl1 Cen-2000'82.4140 2000M2.'79t Dally f>.ilol ..... r. 23, 30. TM foffowlng persona Hav• you started The fOllowirlg persons This business Is con· Name tement however, the ,.,.. ter Or. Suite 265, New·
o.11y PllOI Mar. 30,, Al)(. OallV Pilot Mer. 30, A&>r. Apr. 6, 13, 2000 Th545 are doirlQ business as: doing bualnaaa yet? ,,. doing buslnell as: ducted by: a corporation The lollowing pel'$Ol'IS aonel rspreeem.tive port Beaetl, CA ll26e0
6, 13, 20. 2000 Th565 6, t:J, 20. 2000 Th5'72 'f!cthlou• Bualnea• 18-r:-:7 ~ ~ny, Yea, _..28-99 Z·DIET. 5 Padua Ct., The registrant com· are CIOtng business as· wiH be reQUiM to The tmOUnt ot me
FICdilOua Bualftffi F'-" .. 'ou• Bua'--· Neme Su.merit taln v..n.u caHf"920U11-108 Sr.tt Allan lllcUm Newpon Coast. CA meooedtou.nsaotbusl-TESTACCESS. t533 giw node.• to Int•,.. purct1ase pnoe or coo· n.-uu "--The fol"""""" _, • Thll 1 112657 ness under the Fictitious MonrOVia Ave., Newport Ht8d penone unleal alcleratlon 111 conne<:Uotl
NlllM Statement Name Statement ---..., peraor:is Floorlng Salea In· llatemen wu Rebecca Baker, s Business Name(s) ltSled Beach. CA 92663 c~ hew walwd with -.. transfer °' tl'le The tolbMng parsons -· fOl~persons ere doing bollneu .. , NVftlVllted, (CA), 18167 flleCI with the County p "' Ct N ""rt above on· 3-1-00-S"----'-1~ ~OE) .... • -~~-•~-as: are"~,. bus .. as· Y & L Antique -E ............. ·-SI F--·-o... Val· Cleftt of °'9flQ9 Count)' a .. ua ·• aw.,. · ""'"''"""• ....... • no c• M oone.nted lloeose and buslflesl 11 •• .,........,_ ..., • F It 3305 W ........, • ,,.,.,._, 04-0+2000' Coast, CA 92657 Arsl Guaranty Anan· 1533 Monrovia ve •• to the ptopoaed the sUITI of $239,46000 HASTIN SANOSINGH US.A HOf> WORLD. urn ure, Se · iey, CA 9i708 on This buslne$S 11 oon· clal Corporalloo, Newport Betch, CA ection ll'helnd_...,e"°' vmidlCONislloflhefol· COMPUTERS 2000, 20902 Brool<hurst SL Harvard St., Ota Ana, Thia bUai"8H Is 000· ~-oucted by: an lndlvldual Dar1efle s. Ward, 92663 '_._,n1 .... ti
1106 Eut Walnut, Suite #207, Huntington CA 92704 ducted by: a OOll>O"lllon ~ltfH·6• t3• 20• Have you atarteCI Dll9Clor This business Is 000· =~n_..ty .:Jia : ~SCRIPTION 10, Santa M•. CA Beach, CA 92646 WR=~~v. 3"'8.95~ Have you •tarted 27• ™10 doif\o buelnesl yet? No This ltatement WU ducteCI by: a oorporallon nl AMOUNT
92701 Marl a Chuo lo· c' S .. ' ;, doing business yet? F•--•-&·-'---fleo.cc. Baker filed wtth the Couoly Hive you 11ar1ed grentad U eat en C SH S OOOOOOO Paul Devld Hastings, corporate<! (CA), 212.41 ' , aota ,.na. ,. Yes FEB 15 2000 ... -... ... ue -Thll lta'9merlt wu Qer1c ol Ol9oge County Cloirlg busfoeas yet? No fnterHted • penon A • t • .
704 WMI Palmyr1 Ave-Spumey Lane. Hunl· 92~ buSlMIS Is oon· F10onng Sile1 Inc., Heme ltil'9ment flted With the County on 03"31•2000 Blomer1ca, loc .. Janet fllea an OblffdOn to ~~·~°' ol Seller, 09~~ A. Onlnge, CA lngton Beach •. CA 92646 eluded by· 80 lridlvklual Joaeph M. Nygaard. ~ f()loWlrlG '*'°':" Clerk of Orange County 2000M24SI? Moo«J. Secretary th• petition ind Note 10 laVOf of Seller, ,......, This business Is coo· · Secretary ar. .....Jf1g bullMll u . on 00-10.2000 O.WV Piiot Apr, 6, 13, 20, This statement W'IS ahowa good ceuaa 162 00000 Rlahl Raj Singh 1930 duded by: a corporation Heve you started Thll statement wu •l Be111n EntelpriMc, b) 2!000M'2291 21,2000 . Th597 tiled with the County why ttie court lthas beenagreeclbe·
West eotrege Avenue, Have you starl•d ~ng1.~neu yet? filed with Iha County Myonly~1talo9.com, Daily Piiot Met. 1e, 23, FICitJOua Bua_. Cieri< of Orange County ehould~not grent the tween tha Seller/
Apartment 117. San doing butlnesl yet? No ••· Mora Clerk°' Orange County OlleTaa111olooyOf.18· 30~2000 Th526 St t on 0331·2000 9Utho Licensee ~ the !rt· Bema~1 CA92407 Marla Chuo In· ~statement wu on ()3.11·2000 109, h'vlna, c,('112818 FICihiOu'i 8UilMii .::W:~ . 2000M24604 A ..,JARI~ bon tended 8uye11Traoa-
Thla ~ II oon· C0f1)0(lll8d, Haeng Bok flied With Iha County 2000lln011 ,,._A. Bertin, 111751. Name ltil"""9nt .,. doing bUliMss aa: Dai~ N>r 6. 13, 20. the l)evvon -a feree, as 19Quired by
duc:t8d by. a general Cha. President Cler11 of=-CounlY Dally Piiot Mer. 23. 30, eor.doOr., T19bucoca The--.. -WAVE TOOLS. 1779 27, ThS94 ~ on ~pril 27, Sec. 24073 ot lht Busl· partner'lhlp , This statement was ..... 21• Apr. e. 13, 2000 Th548 nyon, CA 92.879 ~.:l!-'::·--,..~ Fl--lou a I 2000 et 1 45 PM nd P-'essl0n$ Have you started n1ec1 With the County on""" ---C._.,._,.. 'Tilla bulinMI It con-.,. dOlng _,,_ u : Placafllla Ave.. .,._a "'"' a ua MH I Dept 1.7j l~ed ness a "" doltlo bullnelt yel? No Clerk of Onange Coun"' --·· "'"'"-' CIU*d by: an lndMdual •>A+ 5'ofllga, Mesa, CA 92627 Nam. tn.t.ment n J4; The Cl Code. lhal the COO• Paut Devld Hutlngl 03•28•2000 • ., Dally Pilot Mer. 2~ SUMMONS Have you atarteCI b) A Plue. 8'of1lge. c) Terralaa Co11iN 1779 The to11ow1ng pert0ns •t ~ slderatoon for Ille 11'111lS'·
This *'81ement was on 2000ll24146 Af>!. e, 13, 2000 (CITACK>N doing bt11lne11 yet? A+ bM, d) A+ Mall Plaolf"'8 Ave .. 'Costa are dol"O t>uslneSS •s. ~ma Orenee C fer oc the bullneu and
filed with the CoUllty Daily Pilot Mer. 30.L. ~· Flcthloue BualnMa JUDICIAL) Y•, 10'18191 Center. 2451 Newport Meta, CA 112627 GREV WOlF GEAR. IF YOU OBJECT fa~e~ ..'.! ~~t:~ C:~ Clerk ol Orsnoe County e. 13. 20, 2000 1n5'70 Name at.tement NOTICE TO Oi:FE~· Ptlllp Bertin Blvd., Cotta Mesa. CA Thia buSlneSI Is con· 1812 AlasU SI., Costa I\ .... • .... on 03-~ The folloWll'lg pel'IQl'lt D AN T : ( Av •• 0 • This ......,,.,,, .... 92921 CIUded by: an ll'ldlVldUlll ....... CA 92628 TO the ~afldno of been •Pl>f'OVed by the
....... ~30 142 Flctltloue euelnMa a~e ..,......., bul4ness u : Acutadoi MICHAEL ~ ~ the ~ Euoant K. Chin. 1186 Hava you •tarted Gnty WOii Geer, LLC, the petition, vou =:r."men,!~rOIAlool'lohc Deily .. ...,._, Apr """"" .,_,..,.Orange .......... , Calla Ameble, Gllnelale. Clolng bu11ri .. s yet7 (CA), 1812 Al•N SI. •hould ..,.,._at the .....,.,. e. 1~ 20 2000 Tt\568 Name ltatemant For Leu Ne!WOOt.ComJ. DAVID L e PHILLIPS on 03-31.200CJ CA 912Ql.3006 Y•. 1969 Ooac. Mesa, CA 92626 heaMo and •t•t• Da : Marth IS. 2000
• • i The followtng penona 6201'11 Ave., Corona dll ab MICHAEL DAVID ........, Thia buelntll '* con-Terratea Colltrll Thia bValness Is 000> your objectione or Patnck'a PVb IN: Rctldoue 8ue1neee e.r. doing bullnell u ; Mer, Cellfornia 112625 PHILLIPS, JR.. aka Del'tPllotltfH I t3. 20 CIU*d by. an~ Thia IUI""*" ._. dUdeCI t>y: Lilnlted lie· flla writt•n Objec· bJ: fSI Pa rlea T. Heme ltatement Elita Pe~ Va-Patric* J. Genolie, 620 MICHAEL PHILLIPS, 27. 2000 · ' Th5llf .Hive you itarteCI flled wtth the c:ounty ..._. Co. .ione with t"9 COlll't O'DM. Pvaeldant .............. hida'I 3029 EolelPl1M lrl• Ave. CQIOna dal JR. Ciba d ...... b .__ t? "~ ... ol Oninoe "--1y "'"'' .. 'I .. _ __. Pttnde'a Pub. Genartlt The.._._...,~ Costa 'Mea8, CA 82826' Mal, ca1110mia 92925 AUTOMOTIVE BUYING F1ctllloue 1Uein111 .,.,.ng ua .... u ye .,...,. ·2000 """'' Have fOU atarta .. befoN the ._,.. Partner1NP .,.~ ~ '!:.., ~ car Ca,. Lawrence M. Sim· CONSULTANTS: DOES Heme ltllllment Y4:,..!!.,.~ Ch9n °" 03-31• doing bUWla&I '19f? No Your appaar•nce bJi /11 DoMa .._ ~ ~M.M, canter, (CA), 3029 paon. 01 E•lheri.~ 1 to 10 The ~ .,.._,. Ti*.....,__ wa1 !)ally Piiot :U:.•r:.':. ~ WOif Gear. uc, ,.,..., be in peraon or o.w
CA 112t2'1' Ent.l'OIM. eoet• Meta, Meta, CalMomia ""~ vou AA~ BEING .,. dolna buliW •: 111ec1 Wflfl .,. ~ 27. 2000 Th58I oenc PaNMtt. PfMI. bv W'v~°":li A /11 v....... A...._
-. ~302 CA ll2ea.e ~ E. Band.le, SUED BY PLAINTIFF: U SAVE AUTO ~· a9fk Of~ eouncy KCii0u9 ....... Thie acwmanl ._1 c••oiTo• or a PubliaheCI Newpon ~ ........ Thie bullnlMI II con-t827 Toyon ~!~~: {A uo ...... damen-T£f\ 1 ~ -.e.n. on ..... , ..._... ....--,..Ao....., ""' " Be•Ch·Co•t• ..... ~· ..,...,. duded by: a~ POft ~-~ dendO)! ADEUTV AHO DfM TUlln. CA ll9IO .,.,.. IDGMlllOI ....... aament ~ ;'" .,,. ~ condl119tit ONditor Delly Plot .. e, 2000
y.,,... Franco 1110 Have you •t•rt•d aat27 DEPOSIT OOMPANY ... ~ ...... ufllat ..... 11 n The tollowlnO l*'IOM on 04-04~ L~,,,~-~~·~a=D=·~-~1;•~·;!;~-----~1"680~!. ·~-~ bu11r1M1 ,,.c7 No Thia ~ II con-OF MARYLAND Inc .. a CeMoftM CQPOo r:i_,;,. :a..-:.-::. n dolllQ llUai*a •: ..__. ...... Ii. 211t St .. Cotta -OoinplM9 e91 c.te dUC*ld by: e llmlled ,,_,,. You l1eV9 $0 ~lH· 1'911an, (CA), 1 ~ C..-30, ;. .,.,_ 1 nxz PatleCfle=Nlctl---
CA tn27 earnr M,.,,,.., "'"-,.. OAR DAYS ...., we .., ~ Tllllln. CA ~-ll:ilfi•• o111on~. New· ~ • "t3. ~ M • f./l/p-··~ A~A J: Thie ..... .,,.,.· ... H•v• you •t•r1•d """"°"' .. aerved on lllllO ......... I """' "°" . ™1 I (14 ~.,., · "' flllcl w1W1 111 ~ ~yet? Ho ~ to .. a~ Thil 11u11rw 11 ~ The~...,_. t<lm N""10le0n. 38 ~• M ••• • ~:...CA 92927..,... 1.,. 0111tC ot °'8rlGI eoun.y E. Bano11e 19epon11 11 .. ooun. dUdld by. a......,....., .,. ~ 1111: Pa la rr,o. H ••port ""'' _.. -,.._. IC>M.-.=. _:f on Q3.14~ nlla Wll A =a:fi'°'• Giii Ha" you atertecl A18A 00., IMcfl. CA NllO In llCCIOfdllllDI wit\ Jla
MerlneAvie .• -...... IDH-JJ'll flied Mltl Ille ~ ,..,,.,. wou:your ~ IJ!UllnM• yet? 1411 GertMd A.... Thia bullnell 11 oun· ~=2~": 82: bulNll 11 oun• ~Plot...,, 30n:; Cit~~ COUntY type ~n Na': V~Qll1111 TUlln. CAI:" T~ ~ ~ -....d._~ ~· ~
cMlld "1: ~ e. t ' 20, tooo °" . IOOOMl'lat = r ...,:: .. h IN.. .,::0,:::; ~ ""1 G9lllnd dOlrl9 ,.. ' "" .,.., .. ..,..._,.,. """'"'
Haft you •tarted 'lctlUoUe ..,._. ~Plot Mlt. 18 23. court 90 ..,.., yourca19, "-I IMt... lUi9\ CA.,. '°"' .. Nktl.....,IOl90l-n '*9 ~ M en un-='9~u=--yet? Heme......._ ~· &. JOOO i'tiiit II WW do ntll .. your . n. ~ TNI ...._II oan-lNll 1te11"*11 ... =.i ~.: v-..... Franco 'The ,._.. ...,_. N0nCa OF ~ on ""9. '°" 9ad ""'~ ~ --11¥:.,........... 9ad ""' ._ CGlftly 8lorlp 11.,.. IO•
..J!!t 11111~ ... '!! ~~ ~h AVM AalTY °' = ::.:-=---= :-oJ,CM:P ,.!l!!.. & ....... : ~~county llln """'*"' '° ~ A . ~:"'O.::.r=-~ M38tmolleT'IM0Ave; ANNUALMTUM ~ miy tie ....... , n;"i~· ....,. Ill Ill-~10t.;.-...;;-...: °"°''7.200CJ _._ .. , FountMI Yeley, c" 'Mclaell~....,. """"' ....... fj""-'·'H ...,.... _.. Dllf,. .... ,1,llO, ,..,._and._,.
• aaa•110M tmll "'"'*"'°... "°"' .. oaurt. 17 ,_.....,.. 17. llOOO lNOe 11111 '*""''*" .,.,,. GOOD ~ ,_ Mir a, 30, o.ia AdWflllne, LLC. •nu• Code ledon T""9 M Cll\lr ..... Li •ualfteH n••• ot MJI& OI* ..,.. ..,._. '° dlLll'll ,, A 1S -lM9I (CA), ... ~ t~ '044d> ..... """" =:i:r .. ~ • 1 .... ,_ .. .....,-~ AY..,.'" °' ............ ... ....... u; ...... G:•::--' -~~ ... .., .• "". n.~-~ 0 ....,.....,... ..... -c: .. ..... • h••nt nw .....,_ 11 ODtt-vontea Cftarltnl• '"* .,. ~,., ":i M ..... .., .. .. ,~U::,C :-..=. i.:=-:.~ I ~ ._..11¥:umi.tdU. ,........ .... ,.. .._... ... ....._,n =.rd a llCtlOft ...... IMaalltilllM-~-=r. ~:-you atar1H 1:.'T.':."': :a·~·lft .-... "!'L-......_ .. • ;:;. .... .,... =-== '¥ K. I
1 -1"'=1; ~ ,.., ......_.,, ••••n ~~ Ii 't3&l~c. ... 1n !!W~ ... ~!Ir ..i ca~ ...... 'lr'J.a. ,_. VW..Mtu= UC. :=::.::. ::9,.: ¥!JY• -=.: ...... M., "'~ 5'-"=1·~ .. ftMo :. llr ...., ..........
-CA-P1!1!t,D· ,Cleft.-~!~~_. ... • !!r:r'1 ..... WJ-:::!I ::.:=:1m-= &'°-:::la \.": ...... , ,_. .. ~...:.. ..... mJM~DIM= -;;.,~n• ...... -· tetat• ~-::;.,,,
• ...,_, 9&d ..... Co11f11» Wllll -----..... '• '911'7; m!ll I .... ....... t•e-. Cll*al& ._.-. • ~ CA• ......... ---...._ .. _.. ... , • ,,_.... ..... w -• ·~= .,., "' . M • :: wr:r" ':.:I ::., • ..... a ..._... . ' .... . .... ,. ..."
I •
G:t
EQUAL HOVSNi
OPPOftTUNITY ............................ """"" ............. ,... .... ,. ............... , ... .......................
.. . .
~ . I . . r ;
.:. .
llJ.MEYITOHE 3lr .5at,
2-81y lWM, '" dbl Cit Ille ... wJd l*-upt, 1300ll,
11700/MO. 2110 Thulin Av1. (Vletorla/N1wport
lllwd.) 9*431-4122
: .. ~11;•::,!'::.:~ Nice floor plan $15,000 .·
-.. "'"'· "'"· """"· 35R -25A 1967 FUQUA .......................
...._. lf1tll," .. ........,. Reduced $3,000 to $46,900.
It -'• _, -· ,,...._., ......... ....,.,, .... ,. 2-5tory 5ilvercreet F.rom
..,,::_:::: ::..::. $11t>.290 -FREE RENT ~II
.... ..,, ... ...,.......... June 1, 2000.
I, , ... ~· ---
1 PCH. SlloMong 111m, tram Sl200. 582·592-8140
510-84s-6310 .................... ,...... """& ..... ,.., i.1tt ...... '" 9 723-nrr"" ......... ''"'"'" ...... -----~----------.ill! I .,. -• , '"l '~ ,......,., .............. .. .................. ,.,_
.................. HUii , ......... , .... ,..-. .., ............. IC_,.._
ultMltlUI·-·
•V.A.• ·-·lllMll FMI COUNSELING
FRll UST Of Hat.ES
HUCWAACP()S
7t4oH4-llOO
..• r ~ •-l J1
I I .. .
• • ...... ,1
... -,. ,,.:,_ • #
,..,·~
. ~071 ~ . .,,, ..... ·,· .·.,. ..... k'·'-.•.-: .. i
38' 28' Good Sin Loi,
Hnl'Mt Flrt. Clll for lflfll.
114-751-4e02 aon Murrz i.w
• 211 conao aoM 10 ICllOc*, ahopswlg, blld1-
ca• '°' •PP• 10 u1. S 115,000 Agen t
M-23U33S
SELL
your home
through classlfled
-~"'-3 ' . ' r,·.~ l \ ... ' . ·~"I ' I ·-~..J....·. '
' .. t; I I ' .' ' ' ~ .
. I ~... : .. I
'"A~u~ U'cuY,,ur
AparintenLN
~nt corwmunh;y
wtdl .,..._.. beech G marin• Do.tlltpl ,,_..,. LM .. 1.in•I pool
&. lush~ lendsapll\f
W•llt lO Belboa 1.sland &
Bayside Center •hops
•t::=Ai-.i. .. ,, 1811, l9lt and 2811 +den w/11~1~.
,_. Pfllo. deCk G p1111.it 11r,,.e 17,.$1100
FAIRWAY APARI'MENTS AT BIG CANYON c..-.... ...., ...........
FAllWAY AMllMDRI AT Ill: CANYON ......................... ,...
J...._lrJ .............. .
---Wlt·UM. -.-....a..--...... -....... ........ .... __ ... __ .............
...., ............. .... ......... ~ .. ......
.... .. . ~· ,: .. , ., • . I~
:t,_ !.Lo~.-~-
KNEE PAIN ••••• SLOWING YOU DOWN?
Or. 8ohu is curR"ntly conducting a dinial rnearch rri.aJ 10 n.alua1t tht s.afcty
and tif«ti~11C$1 of an inva1ignion.aJ mtdia 1ion n~ 10 '"'"~ thf p.ain and
symptoms of OSTEOARTHRITIS. '
To qu.ali(y. you muse: • & 1Nt11.wn tlx 11~ "O """ 75 ~ • H11w hJ 1rtn11rthritu •ftlx hvt for 111 /ust
fM !'"' • H.w Htn '" inhrinsmrtli<ttti•n for 111 k11!1 J m11111H
Qualir~ J»nicipanu wJI rc«i~ ar no cow
• StwJy rrt.ml CCAMilNti•ns • Rm11rrh mrtli<11ri1nJ
(949)645-7172 . ~
A.6' far s.-.r ~
Or. Aadioay Boheo, M.O.
320 S.pai« A-. Newport Beech
• ·~ Dnlal--'f ·~I Kl'laa .,...,lltll .. • w.mi ,...._.
. r . . . • -.~ .
.. ,~ ..> • ! I I
'1.,14' •' · 1' I . • , .... ·... . -! I , .'I
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I ' ..... , ' ,..,..,, ..
~~I I,, ... ,
Call
642-5678.
Put a few words
to work for you.
Daily Piiot
1Ui8'tt
2 8 I.Ir. 5-tplld, cot
(C02958) 1211.995
CMVIERlllW 1'1waw11'1 IUWl11'11
Low ...... co ' Mole! (CS1~ ,Jf.'ji5
114.aw11'1 lilW 1111 .. ,
Low Ml, co, Blldl Wlt1lllck
!3W\JV 163) S2.2':995
4 Olher 318'1 10 ehooll)
CM:WRIMW 11~111
llllWl11 ...
"9d, I ...... dlln body, U,200 ... nw.t(O
IWl1mt1 Low rri, AIAO, Grllll w/Gwt
(U3865&) S18.~
CMYIOlllW
11waw111
8llW 1211 ... Auto, Low MIM, CO, Bkll! (351..5879) $25,995
CMVIPllMW
714-NW171 lliWUil 'II
S-SoM.11. PremUn Plcg (4FVPS20) S3U95 C~lllW
11~J111
lllW 140l: 'ii
Siver w/G#t. co ' Mori (H35917) S31.99S
CMVIUI lllW
714.aw171
IUW140C'tt
CO,So.m.~ (3U~.:--
71W3W171
. ------------., 0 YD. IBl MY CM
Run your ed 1n the -..
NewJ>Of t eeecn--
costa Mesa Daily
PtlOt and the
HuntinC Beactl-
fountaln valley
Independent to
reec:n ~ 100,000
hornet. f'lll us this
form with your credit
C«d # or mall with I
. a ched( today! I
Run for a wee!(! If I 1 ~ c•, dOel not I -D'1111U!L ..... &-' I 1111, we n ""' It for "' _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ___ _ enouw..-.-
AI tor -.110'.
Daily Pilot '
POUCY
In an tll011 to oflet lfla be&t MNice poesible to our read-
ers end ~enlse<s. we will
requlfe Contractors woo
ICtflSl'llse In 1he Setvlce
Olredorf lo lnc:klde "* Con1r1c1ors License
runbef In llleif ~se,,..., Your co-opel81ion la
r-t IPPf9Clated·
. ,; -. , -
-. :-T.
TAX -Mxx>UNTlNC PlonsslONALS ._. I .,.._,..,..,....
w....k•l•J'-t_..ML
c.1 r«111 96M 1 ""76 -TAXU Oon'1 911 robbld by ===2~= ........ ........m'I
, ' .. f '•J ..... :
p~ . • .
ettnaD 141 W DODGI CWYM W . ., CH.W.IS GOlllN
31iO VI, ...... oonclloll. 1.-.r, UC>, Pl• A/C, wlUt ()IMll SHAlllf' .... .... .... CA> ~. en.ill. IUnl (1'0853) ..... !p!ll MOO ~1454. Md TANNAH HUCSCH u... Dodll liillll WllWlllW v .. (?t.,..... 71 98 uo llMltng. SET UP THE SAFE RUFF CRIWCIW 8 'iZ good p... '/"' .,_, """
2!ill ••..,:t:modll, good, no 11111111 neldlcl. Nci1ticr vulnerable. Nonh dc:al.J. Mc:rely bic.ldina su1 hewts wilh lhe uo, *• rww , 1975 obo 94t-«11·3862 Sou1h hand covld be considen:d an new llllOG c ,... ttwp. NORTH underbid by some -1 club cue-hid
S485C)l()8(). 949-723-1504 OflAIN SVC YAN Flily • AK 10 61 Wll.S lltnlCllVC. Bui even 12 t.rick.s CREW ew .,. tit ::: '92,,.,,.., In Q A K Q were not easy 10 come by after ~ ~ .=, ~ T 0 0 L 8cand.1 n'500(\l0bod A L L j O K ' 4 declarer won !he open1111 diamond ._..., -_,. • Q 9 lead in hand and led 1 trump 1u 1he
cond, ontr ~ .. ""' 71~1-3423. WEST EAST qucc:n, Eas1 discardina a club fuly loeded, ~ • Q. •.J 9 7 J 1i .. ___ -'-I ___ ... _ _. 11...,.._ * FON> IRONCO ... * Q JS J Q Vold o gel ,..,.,, .. ,...,.. 1ter ~ 10 se1 CAIYY.TAAOI Lf W Eildll llllllr Edl ~ 0 Q J 10 8 5 0 1 up a long spade in' dumtny. Bui I.here
5 ,..~ ......._ IDldld, "*" cand. 4M, CO J 8 5 A K 10 7 ' .. 3 2 was a danger lhal Wi:s1 cuuld uverruff 14,31 ...... mlll. --· ~ -•• 111.9111 • • " !he 1hird roun<J or ..... ..t.s and, if Cd ...... -1111 111owS. '_.., ' SOUTH ·' I .. ".!'.:"" f "' (4AP"Vltii 'Rt.97' . 11 ... JM.0131 at Cll dc:clarcr urcw a I hu"" o "ell's
COAIT CADI LAC t§!1t4-t1:MCI01 ~ ~: 9117 6 4 z" 1rumps, an even spade split, against
1"'°°"1M:OMT -•=Ii '11 0 A 9 7 3 lhe odds, would be needed. 1111 C«Whl........,.. ~ ,.._"!f...9t1m. "'°fl, • Vold • O.:Clarc:r·~ M>lu1ion 10 the problem ""' .-. .,_..... was mos1 elegant. Al Irie\ three· orlgln1I, $33,500 obo (V~ sze • The bidding: Soulh led !he queen of clubs from the' ~cord, mlllt Mii cADIIAC NORTH EAS'f SOUTH WEST tahle and, when East covered, dis-7 7t•T.M1001 1....,.n.cc>AIT ' I• ,.. 4Q ,._ carded a spade: (rum hand! As the
DODCll ~ •• FOAD fCtli 'ft SQ ,,_ 6Q Pw cards lay, the defense had no Lo.did, blue. Olll ol ·I Super c., 1111111, ... r-,_ recourse.
ldndl Yin Jlflool'A ..i VKcnnt East returned a tow spade, declarer
127.111 LMD ROYER ~AND llOVlll Opcnina lead: Queen of o c_,,iW'ing West's queen wilh !he kina,. ........ llldl ...,. -A spade was ruffed in lhe closed
•HO IMI · Distribution can wreak havoc wilh hand, 1tumps were drawn. alld lllOlh·
·SILL '°"1liiliiMi LJl .. 1 conlract. A 2-1 1rump split would er spade: was ruffed 10 sci up ~ 5::ga;·r· have made Sill hearts laydown. The 3· dummy's IWO remaining spr.des. The
ttJrougfa cldled 12>'00 1Un1 0 bfeak (orccd declarer 10 find In long of dillmOnds served OS I.he cnlr)I s1550 obo 1 altcmalive line 10 bring home: lhc for dcch1rer 10 discard two dtamun<h
J>LAY & WIN!!
Find Our Hidden
Classified Ads & WIN!
Conust Ruks:
I. Simply find our hidden clusificd ads
somewhere in pur cJusjficd section'.
Cut and paste 1he ads on rhe entry
blank and mail. Newspaper emrics only.
no photo copies will be accepted.
All entrit'S must arrive by 5 p.m., •
the following Tuesday.
Winner will be chosen by random
drawing and winner's name will appear the
following week. One entry per person.
One winner per week.
Contest will run 4/6/00 through 6/29/00.
bacon. on 1he ace or spades and the long card
Nonh's raise over game asked in 1hc suit, and declarer's rrumps 1ook about c:onuol of 1hc: c:nc:my suit. 1hc las1 1wo trumps.
·-. ·~ 'I ! 6
/I I • ~ -. • H·~
• f-. •••
I ' JI I I.,
' ' • f" I
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FORD F..ZSO lid c.11 'II ... Jllp Clwoi.. L TI> '17. LEXUS UUO '17 Super duly, CO, lnef. 11-4·WO,llW!m-pwr,snl1, Loeded, whltl, lftUM ... 1
toys, nnq bolrdl llhr ir., MK below b1Ue book Yin V01514H
(800405) $29,962 $4395/obo. 9'9-760-2614 131~ ROYER
COAST CADIU.AC .,..., &Ind &OiiM 414 lwtl 1-IOO-JM:OAST 'M 6qtl, AT, PS, ABS, A/C, 1'1814M441
FonlMU@9'Clbl7 CO, 10W, lilblg. lllwm. LEXUS [)(470 'ii Loeded, , &4IPlf low aloys, rlCk, 80k ml. Blau-LOlded, Ctlilnpegne muat
mllMI Yin t154 1iful concffon & llllll great ... !Yin W0014417
$15,ttl L»fD ROYEA $13,650 (Mt)l42-2550 $51,"6 LAND ROVER
Ntwport 8wh Land Rowr Dlecovwy 17 ":::ro:' Mt 14"4.U White, certified, '°"' TNCli mo 1iii Yin YA7043n loedld, 1 own«, $4750 obo $1t,4M LAHD ROYEA
phonl714-754-0737 ~~5 call 714-413-0001 --.-
Land RMrl7
MARK 11 COl'lllnental 1 Ml
5811 Ollgir\ll miles, new
plinl, new tim, mint c:ondl
562-989-2997
OMC VAN Con-.lon '15 Dltc~, lllv, red, wt. MBZ Ml430 'ff
38k """' &lbble lop, sofa. Yin TA 111411 Loedlcl, blaell, low m~
.. Thursday, A,,,u 6 , 2oo0 87
TODAY'S
C ROSSWORD PUZZLE
-~-_,_...,_..
32 1CiN1 ecta 50 Ruler ti lhe
33SUdden ~ 34 Oozes 51 MoutUln
3S C&ptuo nympti 11-1 S2 Relinquisn
3CI G11111ts 5o4 NcMct 44 On.u.llng SS FOOll>Ole lbtlt
45 Nef\19 cell !>O Mo<M Code 46 Comc>ialned signal
411 Roc:lc-climbet'a eo -ptWnoOm.
lid tcatll9 49 Wllt>oul help IS I Limb
12 13
rNr air, CllJC. Miii & morel S11,tt5 LAHD ROYER Yin XAOl4757 SQ,195
(515590) $14,988 Htwpor1 Beach LAND ROYER I
MAaE.RS 1 ---.~"!!N4M4~~4~s ,....--Ntwport 8eacfl • (114)54M100 Land RO:;;; t7 Mt44N445 GiliC i1nd Cib Sii 'if Oef9ndrw IO, twd top,
Ntl1fs, CO. Pwr s..tl'NW blue, cert. Vin YA103531 Nlaaan Reel Conwnlble
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Paste Ads Here
Paste! Ads Here
Dinner for 2 Conic.•st
330 W. Bay S1ru1
Cosca Meui CA 92627
PC PllvAn lWOMS
1 focus on 'PX nteds from Yttlrd, lo Wndows,
to Wtt> reelrd\ to 'f04X own on.lint buiness.
lal louluc
949.646.4192 c&CM. ... ,_
-. . '
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M phl_sal/ll!llM..lll jotll.
CLEAN! 20;ll. ~J~ llt. LM00030 11-1447 . ,
r .
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Ot I'' l 11' ll \,IH\I" ... 11(\l(f '
lil"fl'ISLD ('°"'TR\C'IOa
Mcch111k•l/Ek:c1rk11I
Pluntbi111
5"••11 or L•rsc toh
Call (IJ49) ll0-7792
, •• ~if,.,...,,, ... "!"' ......
Loeb. Tlll/ClllM, 5.7 V8 $43,"5 LAND ROVER 240 SX 'IS. good eond. (Sl.969951 $18,888 Ntwport leech MM73-142t
COAST CADUAC Mt 140'445 Nleean Rid converiible
1"'°°"1M:OAST Uncl ,._ 17 240 SX '13. good cond.
D-,._ u loeded, $1,115.MMn.1429 HONDA Paelfl0" 11 ~ ....
Loaded, white, lthr, ~ OLDSACltEYA 'i3
Yin W441541t SS5,• UNO ROYER 4 dr Mdln, 1111 pwl', tlll. Ill $11,115 L»tD ROVER Nlllpoft llllcll ,_ tnt, Lie 1tvu Apt
....,...IMdl ..,........ 2001 . Recant 111109.
Ml 14"441 l8iil llOWW i1 suoo. 71W57·1UI
..... 9'CMr u loedad, Oidli'li6Li NfiiliYOElliii 'iS
Al ~ ~o ~J---'· v.. YAJl4011 wtm, lellhel. matTf extras,
.--. ""' ~-. ··-LMD ROVER lllCC8llent trans. value! llloy ""'" aoUld eytl4am, -9ledt (318908) $6,988 eacl#lty loclt, $43k ml, ,_.,...., • NABERS 115,500. 71'-2tM507 141 l40t44I (714)54o-1100
JEEP LAREDO ... ~':" ::~:nl::i Oii"ftObl• amid .... llaclr, low mllu, V10 107999at300 wtm, 111'1 lealhef. 4•4, Yin WC211240 e COllt....., ....._..Bc:h. excellent condition I ur ' ~ ,_......,., (700985) $8,988 $1l~=.,R. s';',t~;,11~:J.11 NASERS
Ml 140 It.. l!MllfllfUOH (114)540-8100
PUBLIC
NOTICE
The Calif. Public-
Utilities Com·
mission REQUIRES
that aN UMd house·
hold goods movers
print their P.U.C. Cal T numbtr, limos
and cheutt.rs print
~Ir T.C.P. number
lfl '1# advertisments.
If you have I qutS·
lion abolA thl leoll· ityof•~.~ or dlauffer, call:
PUBl.IC UTILmES
COMMISION
714·558-415t
,... ---.. . ·. . .
• ' ~ \. .. ' J J e· , ·-~ -..... _
r 111 .... ~t:'~~I I.~ .. -
The Locol '9u.nber . .... .,.,,, .........
N'ILOCATINO
DJCnOHIC l&M llM
OITICT10f't .......,.s.rw.
6 75-9304
L.17SM97...._...
OldllllOblll Sllhouan• '" ~· dU.r doot, rear air, & morel Blllltlce cl war• ~~evlous l9l1lal ( 8) $20,988 NABERS
(714 )540-tt 00
PontlK Gnncl Prix GT Sedan '88, s,ooo mies,
gold. !r ~ Boal! r8111a 562·5~-6140 61().64 5310.
PONtiAC GAAHO:AM '17
low miles, V6. many extrasl (778610) $10,988 NABERS
(714)540-9100
TOYOTA COROL.L.A '16
1::,1111~1
SllOO MM134009
~ ...
LJC. No C3961Cl549
M types d roofing
end rtlp9l"S
lJabilty end 'Mrtr'fl ~.-ic.·
lnMnnce
Mlmber' ,..,,..
Roofing~ ~
Since 1987
TOYOTA Land Crull« '17 Loaded, wMe, mu1t _,
Vin Y0183315
134,115 LAND ROVER
Ntwport 8Mch
MM40-4«5
Toyota Lind CIUIMr 99
LOlded, gray, mutt ... 1
Yin 10026611 MS,ltS LAND ROVER ~Beach
94M4CMW = 4 Runner ·2000
L ~·one of 1 kind! YOH1116
$21,"5 LAND ROVER
Newpor1 haeh .. ~ .
11VET 11848•
Original, wlllte, auto, p~ on~ 54K ml, obo. ~123-1504
VOlklW89«1 8Mtll 'II
Red With b1ac1t l'llerior, ir\'lmlc:Ulate. 9600 mies. $18.750 MM73"4507
Yollllwagan Jetta Gli
'17. 6-ql, bl( W/grey lltV it.
rear spoil«, newty lilied windows, new dres, 44K mi,
Bose Cass.IS1e1eo(Spe.it.
&IS $14,900 714-1134·1005 Ext 219 .
Volvo 240 Gl 'n 6cyl, auto, ~. IUll pwr, pw
ps, am-1m ste<eo, cassette. sum. S4500 714-164-7665
VW BUG '68
NMdl tnglnt work
$700 or best offer
94~262-3452
FIND ~
Have A
Garag e Sa le !
Con The Pilot Classifieds
at 642·567E
to place yOUf Geroge Sole Ad l
J ...
B8' ~ .Apni 6, 2000 . .
$34,463.00 .. List Price
$2,065.47 .... Nabers Dlscoym
$32,397.53 .. SALE PRICE
. . . . . ' ' Daily Pi1ot
2000 Seville STS
• w fOf 36 month lease. SS000.00 cash down or trade equity, plus inceptlOn fees • $6567 .57. 1 only 4S41.
• w for 36 month lease. $4950.00 cash down or tlldt equlty,
plus Inception fies • $7062.15. 1 only 4522.
. Or Purchase For only s42 47900
$46,925.00 list Prtce t
$4.146.00 Nobefs Dlscouot
$42,479.00 SALE PRJCE
All New 2001 Aurora
Or Purchase For Only s45 15006
$53,542.00 .... Ust Price f
$8,391 .94 ...... Nabers otscoont
45 150.06 .... SALE PRICE
The 2000 Alero Sedan
So SECURITY DEPOSIT So tST PAYMENT
~ + ta lof 38 lllOlllM. Clolld end llMI on -.iprCMCI cndlt. I 1•9& 56 llown 1iM1..,.... *" oll AlllOUll 1037 _, TCIUll of PIJll*l!l 17.111 64 • la I fllltlt 30)457.
Or Purchase For Only $15,5771~
l~. f~~~~.~~~!~~~-~,,~ $6,9.88 ~~1f~l~~.~~fo1. of worr., (817466)
523,988
1 93 CHEVROLET Z-28 I $6,98 8 2000 OLDSMOBILE INTRIGUE GL s23 ,9 88 350 VB, excelleOt cond., above avg. miles! (110653) Only 100 miles, leahr, CD, Bal. t:lwarr., (128201)
1 90 CADILLAC SEVIW $6 88 191 JIEP GRAND CHEROKIE S23 988 4.5L VB, silver, lthr, super shape, won't lost. (80004B) t 9 LTD~, rnoOOroOr: Co, alloys, 4XA,g«geousl (162761) t
~~aB~~~Sr~~(ao313B) 58, 988 ;!~,~~1=!,~co&more1 (6u1ao1 524,988
l~~~·~"~·~o~~?~R;\1A286) 514,988 ~~~e.t~~~emo1worr.,(60A2~3) s26,988
1 99 OLDSMOBILE SILHOUl1TI S 88 199 CADlllAC DEVllll S-6 88 7 poss, dual door, rear air, CD & morel Bm. of woc, prw. rtnlai. (175378) 19 t 9 low 18K~ Sk, WaY 11;, 6al:or ww., prev. rental (768541) · -~ t 9
J!~,,~~~f ex~1~,!vlf3kmi~t(eo1504) 521,98~ ~'61tCft,~~collfnSfa.ofworr.(902s90, 534,988
'96 CADILLAC SEVIW STS S 88 2000 CADILLAC SEVILLE SlS S 6 88 295 HP Northstar, low miles, CD & morel (813374) 22,9 l.Oi¥11,G>,.,,i11lipat,mliCDcmlllRIWJ;x,fftt.~.(13357~ 3 ,9
ER
· r Boulevard • Costa Mesa
r D!~ ·(114) 540•9100,..,.,...___,_
LENDltG. www.nabersauto.c0111
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