HomeMy WebLinkAbout2000-04-17 - Orange Coast PilotI
r-·· :... ... ,. . .
SERVING THE NEWPORT -MESA COMMUNmES SINCE 1907 :' ON »E WEB: WWW.DAILYPILOT.COM MONDAY, APRIL 17, 20Q0
Inside
_SCOOP
Her15
--~minutes
of fame
Y ou may have recog-
nized local Newport
Beach resident Lois
Wllson Friday morning dur-
ing breakfast while watching
the ·uve With Regis and
Kathie Lee.•
During her weeklong trip
to the Big Apple she man-
aged to strike up a conversa-
tion with the •Who Wants to
Be a Millionaire• host during
a commercial break while
,taping the show.
Wilson, who biked from
Laguna Beach to New York
15 years ago to raise money
for the renovation of Statue
of Liberty, was on a reunion
)rip back to the city she grew
'SO fond of during her ride.
Regis Philbin was so
impressed with her story that
he gave her some airtime.
And yes, that's the final
answer.
CLEAN STREETS,
Cl.EAN PLATES
. The volunteers who
helped fix fences and paint
six Costa Mesa family's
homes and pull weeds from
Canyon Park Saturday, were
filled with more than pride
for their good work.
Chef George Poston of
Maggiano's Little Italy sw -
r. prised them all with mostac-
doli con came, fresh-baked
garlic bread and drinks.
And yes, they p1cked up
after themselves when they
were done with the. feast.
NO TV IS GOOD TV
With more than 10 items
on the calendar for the New-
port-Mesa Unified School
Board to discuss Tuesday
night, only one topic war-
ranted a short dialogue from
each and every board mem-
ber-national •No lV
Week.•
Apparently, even if they're
against television, people are
still consumed by it.
SWAl.LOW VS. SMELT
San Juan Capistrano cap-
twes all the glory around this
time of year when its famous
swallows come swooping
back home.
But for the naturalist who's
paying attention, Newport
Bay has a creature that's just
as predictable as the swal-
low, and a little less publi-
cized.
It's the top smelt, a small
silver fish that is especially
prolific in the Bay at this time
ol year.
•Jt's a sure sign of spring,•
said Job.la Scboll, who works
for the state Department ol
Pilh and Game on Shellma.k-
er Island.
-Dllily Piiot Nff ,
Mt••lllY
" ·' .A 'day to c~lebrate the
". wonders Of 'our world
•Earth Day festivities at
Shellmak.er Island educate
more than 1,000 people.
Alex Coolman
DAILY PILOT
Like a finicky gourmet adjusting
the level of seasoning in a pot-au-feu,
Nicole Proctor dropped a careful
pinch of sterilized compost into the
dish she was preparmg.
The 10-year-old Newport Beach
resident was creating a delectable
casserole known ~ Back Bay Mud ,
..
~~ In Orange Coun-
ty, there's a chance
to test a film with a
very mainstream
American audience.
Not necesaarl.ly the
very urban audi-
ence you have out
of Boston or the
erudite cin-
emaphiles that
Show up at the Loa
'Angeles (American
PUm lnatltute'8J IUm
leliL In that ..,..,
n~ Invaluable. ,,
an enticing blend of sand, shells,
organic matter and gypswn. Frown-
ing slightly over her creation, she
gave it a careful stir with ·a plastic
spoon and added a little more water.
Mud-making. Proctor said, was a
h.tghlight of her afternoon spent at .
Shellmaker Island, where she
enjoyed Earth Day festivities along
with her mother, Kirsten.
More than 1,000 people attended
the day 9f environmental and educa-
tional activities, Peony Alcha, a volun-
SEE EARTH DAY PAGE 4
DON LEACH I DAILY P'l.OT
Kelsey Chun, 6, holds her curious hands in a mixture of corn-
starch and water.
Newport Beach Film
Festival: Thumbs up
Those who participated in or helped plan
this year's event ~ay format was smashing
success,· looking forward to growth
Alex Cool....., •
DAllY PILOT
I t was the last night of tbe Newport
Beach Film Festival, and A.C. Lyles,
legendary silver-haired Paramount
Pictures producer, was listing the mgre-
dients he considered necessary for cine-
matic success.
•1n our business,• be said, ·u·s obses-
sion, obsession, obsession."
As for the Newport festival, "I've nev-
er seen mor& people obsessed about
being in the picture business than there
are here in this group,• Lyles said, smil-
ing grandly at his pronouncement.
It sounded a bit like booster-speak,
like an auertlon designed to make lis-
tenen feel they were pmtic:ipatlng in
something particularly pleasant, perhaps
even unique.
lbe NDMllkable thing was, it wasn't
an~lion.
'lbe ~ who put together this
year's festWaJ. working long. unpaid
boun aDd llnlggliDg witb seven ltafftng
limit•ta.. ... ob11111d wUb mm.
ADd ..... feltival ...... '° .....
to tbe S I 1 wbo putldpelild ID ti
and Git wbo an-91 lbe
:::IU~_,: .... row•fal a11
MORE THAN A TRIP TO THE MOVIES
Lyles wasn't the only one CODducting
an analysis of the festival at its doling
ceremonies.
Larry and Mary Ann Eisenberg,
whose short film •David Prosbker•
screened at the Orange County MUleum
of Art April 1, explained their theory of
the event as they nibbled on hon d'oeu-
vres.
•Even though it's a big fest. they rMl-
ly try ~o make it very penonal and fami-
ly-like,• Mary Ann explained.
•Scott [Forrest, short program coonli-
nator) and all the people took tbe time to
know who we were,• ·Larry added.
"Clearly. they lo~ films. and IMt ..a,
shows through. It doelll't feel like •
industry thing, it seema to be Aout _..
wne affection.•
One purely physical fector, wbk:ll
contributed to the penaml qUdlrflf dda
year's event wu the cledDma to a.Id._
entire festival in ~ 9-dl lllll11d
o( spreeding it around '° ........ , _ ...
u bas been done in ,_..,..
Both tilmDMken ad &J ' 1 -.
they liked this arnnw; wt
•1t•1 a huge pa..• .... II 11£111
lpOlrePMD Tbdd QulWaQ, ...
WGibd Oil previoUI .... • • .......
...._ .... ""nimaw .._ aaa;l •tr
-...., ....., ....-=11111
A dllfiaalty .......... ~li•l!lt
• oppoMd '°..,...,a
~a,,-~e or b+ d?IR .... •N•
Sa1 ' l&llN
No Doubt ,,.norm Thu~y •t
m.•~·
-~don't know~ 90'ft9
to "-*' but die l'l'lhM rn.r
pholre ~'°",....,,,.to ~
Into .,.,,,.IC)'~-11
11111
,..J:'.:;.~ on ho//111,,. ,._.... ,_,.,.,...
--Job. ..... ~on Wldr' I '1ir
holtofed 111 "' ... ..., -............ ~
... ,...,.. ..... I()'. #orw
onlM ..... M•-• ............. ...,,..,,,. ....
.,,,,. ettd ....... """net ,_.
_ ..._, ClDIB .,,..
........ •:rz1-.r ..... .-... ..... ...... C..__!!I!? -===~
QmRIS -----' .--s... J
PIUml!S I .. '
•.
.
Pioneer
2 Monday, April 17, 2000 Doily Pilot
What'• AFLOAT
• WHAT"S Afl\.OAT runs penodlcally In the
Dally Pilot on a rotating t>Mk. If you know
of an event or actMty that could~ In
this column, please mall the lnfomwtion
to Dally Pilot. 330 W. Bay St, Cos1a Mesa
92627; fax It to (949) 646-4170; or e-mail It -
to t»ilypllotOl•times.com .
CIUISES ..
Fun Zone Boat Co. rum 45-mtnute
cruise (adults $6, children $1) and a
90-minute cruise (adults $8; chil-
dren $1), d eparting the Balboa Pun
Zone every half-hour, 11 a .m . to 7
p.m. A 60-minute showboat sunset
cruise leaves the Fun Zone at 7 p.m. at a cost of $6 per adult and $1
per child. Private charte rs are
available. For more information,
call (949) 673-0240. .
Catalina Passenger Service also
runs 45-minute harbor cruises
(adults $6, children St) and 90-
minute cruises (adults $8, children
$1), departing the Balboa Fun Zone
every half-hour, 11 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.,
and on the h our until 7 p.m. Foi:
information. call (949) 673-5245. -
Cn.abe the harbor •board the Elec-
tra, a 100-foot Classic Fantail ves-
sel. Cha.rters with catering are
available for up to 145 guests. For
more information, call (949) 723-
1069.
PHOTOS 8'1' SEAN Hlt.LEll / OAl.'1' Pl.OT
Memben of .the lmua outrigger canoe rowing club launch their craft lnto the Back Bay at the Newport AquaUcs Center dulng a pnctlce. Enjoy a three-course dinner and
dancing while cruising the harbor.
Friday and Saturday night voyages
depart at 7 p.m .• Hornblower Din-
ing Yachts, 2431 Pacific Coast
Highway. Cost is $56.95 per per-
son . Brunch cruises are also avail-
able. For more information and
.:reservations, call (949) 631-2469.
Paddlers exercise· team spirit
Newport Beach Outrigger
canoe rowing club says
its sense of family helps
when things get personal
in the ocean
Alex Coolman
DAILY PILOT
A wooden paddle weighs
about 23 ounces the first
time it gets dipped in the
water. An ultralight high-tech car-
bon fiber paddle weighs 19.
FYI
• WHO: tmua is a outrig-
ger canoe rowing club
with 80 members
• WHERE: It is based in
Newport Beach
• HOW LONG: The group
has been practicing and
competing for more than
30 years
• PHONE NUMBER: (949)
759-1521
good way to spend time.
The <;:atallna Flyer deputs the 8-1-
boa Pavilion at 9 a.m . and leaves
Catalina Island at 4:30 p.m. Cost is
S33 for an adult round bip and
$16.50 for " child's round trip. For
reservations, call (949) 673-5245.
The Newport Landing Belle ls
available for weddings/receptions,
cocktail/sightseeing cruises and
meetings at a cost of $250 an hour
(minimum two hours) and $150
each additional hour. For charters,
call (949) 361-364,0.
Enjoy a Javbb Sunday brunch
aboard the Pavilion Queen. Harbor
cruise begins at 10:30 a.m. Cost is
$28 per adult, $15 per child. For
more information, call (949) 673-
5245.
But no matter what kind of
paddle you use, a strange thing
happens after you push it
through the water a few thou-
sand times. It stops seeming like
it's made out of an y reasonably
light material, and it starts feeling
like it's constructed from lead; or
maybe cement.
To the ~tiated, that claim
may sound implausible. But lmua
members who reall}"love the sport
say the very challenges of the long·
races help bring the paddlers
together.
•It gets really personal out
there on the ocean,• said Bill Was-
dyke, head coach for the group.
Although an outrigger canoe can weigh up to 400 pounds, It can
easily capsize if the •a.ma .. outrigger comes out ot the water. Individuals and small groups can
enjoy Saturday and Sunday cham-
pagne brunch cruises with food
from the Cannery. Cruises run from
10 a.m. to noon and from 1:30 to
3:30 p .m. Cost is $31 per person.
The Cannery also offers a dinner
cruise for groups of 30 to 60. Cost is
$63.50 per person. For more infor-
mation, call (949) 675-5n7.
1\venty-three ounces? After a
couple hours, It feels more like 23
pounds.
These are the kinds of things
the men and women of lmua, a
Newport Beach outrigger canoe
rowing dub, have to consider.
The group (its name means •go
forward• in Hawa.lian}, which has
been around more than 30 years
and has about 80 members, com-
petes in grueling races across the
open ocean. For 13, 18 or some-
times as much as 31 miles, the
crews paddle away, trying to
avoid capsizing and struggling to
avoid collapsing from exhaustion.
This is, members say, quite a
The experience of sitting for
two-and-a-half or three hours in a
narrow-hulled boat with "five oth-
er guys who are as twisted
upstairs as you• is one that he said
requires tremendous intellectual
as well as physical discipline.
Races, Wasdyke said, are •very
mental,• with the entire group
struggling to maintain focus and
rhythm.
If one rower falls out of form,
said Dave Purcell, who is a steers-
man for one of the canoes, the
e ntire boat "starts jerking
around.•
And if the balance of the boat
on the •ama" outrigger that
extends off the canoe hull like a
wing isn't just right, the boat can
easily flip. That's exactly what
happened to a novice boat during
a recent practice, and all the row-
ers on the crew learned a fast, wet
lesson.
·w e watch the ama,• Purcell
said. •When It pops [out of the
water), you're going over.•
Because the rowers have to
depend on eacil other so much to
stay dry and keep moving, there is
a strong tacit understanding that
nobody gets in a boat without
being fully committed to row their
arms off.
"You're counting on the other
fellow to be in shape,; Purcell
said. •He's got to eat nght and
sleep well the night before the
race:
And the teamwork that's so
essential in the water doesn't stop
when the boats come bade to
shore.
lmua members pride them-
selVes on their sense of • ob.ana, •
or family spirit. •If somebody's
sick or somebody needs help, we
try to be there for each other,•
Wasdyke said.
Por the Hawaiians who origi-
nally brought outrigger canoe-
ing to California, .obana was
inextricable from the paddling
experie nce.
·w e're just trying to keep that
tradition going.• Wasdyke sa.ld.
Willi WllClllG
Bongo's Sportftahlag Cbarten
offers private party whale-watch-
ing excursions daily. The eo1t ii
$125 for one hour, with a lix-pa.s-
senger maximum and a three-hour
minim!$. Bongo's ii at 2130 New-
port Blvd., Newpon Beach. for
more information, call (949) 673-
2810.
POLKI nPS Dan,.IPWt READERS HOTUNE Of'~ herein CMI be WllTilll AID SUlf rtpfOdUc9d without written pet· (949) 642-6086
Record your comments about
the o.ny Pilot or news tiSJI$.
VOL Mt NO. 91 ADDRESS
Our eddrwtl Is 3)0 W. Bay St..
1"DMAI M. J01•t10W. Com ~ CA 92627.
~ CORRKDONS YOWYDODaO,
fdltot It is the Piiot's polky to prompt-
...... MLNll>. ly correct all erron of substance .
Senior City Editor Plffse c.11 (949) 57~1. ··•-'9. m ~City Edll« The Newport 8-:fYCoste ~ 9W!lCY amwR. o.lly Piiot (USPS-144-tCIO) Is pub. ,..._Editor Hhd Mondey ttvol9' ~. .,..a.._ In Newport e..a. Md c-.. Mlle, ==-==:: .. ~only by
to The Time or-. "-Editor ~CICIO) 252-9141. In ... ..... .-~ outside of N9wpof1 hect'I end Nlwlfdleor CON~ albialpdot• to the ,....,.. ~Pilot.,. ........ orlt by =~ .. mel fot S20 ,,., month. Second
<I•~ 9t c.o.t.e M9sl. ~MINglr, CA. (l'riml .............
..,,~ Mte Ind locll..., '°5TMAS-
a.Mid AdwttWiig Ttlt s.tld ...... ::-::. tlD lN u.••• Newpcwt ~ o.lly A•• ado• "'°"' '-0 .. 19IO, c-.. ...... ..,._...,. CAma.~No,.. ..
Olllf ~ OMcltr .............. INllllr
\ '
m&liol'I of copyright CMner.
HOW IO BEAOt U$
Cftullillon
The limes OrMge County
(IOO) 252-9141 ,,. .......
a..Ht.d (Mt) 642-5678
Dtsplay (949) 642~1 .....
N9ws (Mt) 642·5680
Sports (Mt) 574"WJ N9wr. Sports , .. ~ 64M 170
E-f'Mlt:dll~tom
Mllr'I Oflb
Busi,,_ Offlal (Mt) '42 ... 121
'""'-, .. (Ml) 111-7126
"'*l!tl9d .. ,,,.. ~---• dMllloll °' .. Lat~ nrr..
..... LGWll. ..,.
EdMof ........... M
~ oncwof.._ ... ..., -...... ,..., ...... c.,. Dllll --..ca,.,..._..
1
~
8albc»
53170
Corona del Mar
53170
Cost.Mesi
53.45S
Newport lleacn
54165
Newport Coast
54165
WNmCAIY
M Ina.-In IWlll wtft
be '"" In .. , ..,..
southern CalHumie
countill todly.
LOCATION sm
Wadge . • .... tlpOl't • ltdMI • .. Jetty • CdM •
TIDIS
TODAY
First low
3:17 a.m ....................... 0.1
Ftnt high
9:19•.m. ...................... 4.I
Second low
1:20 p.m ....................... 0.2
Second high
t:l1 p.m ....................... S.J
ftllmAY
Ant low
NIA
,Int high
NIA
SlaJnd low
NIA
Second~
NIA --.... •
• tf ..._ .. n .. ,...,_ .. or eonte to ,..-
door, don"t admit your .,. •lone.
• ~ l9t.., atawa11r IMo ,._ .._.. _
no mattw wt\M the rMSOn or how dire the
emergeacy Is supposed to be. MMe the .,...
gin()' phone c.afl whHt tt-r Miit outside.
•• ,... ...... ,. •eas,-.M .....
In the leundry room or ..,. by younilf,
...-&111 mt nwwt. ......... , .............. ,.... ...
IWiifi Gplll ,_.door Wltlaut tno\rArw W9'o II ............ -....., ..... .............................
• ......... rt
.,,.., ........ TU! ....... .....
., ............... iftd ........ ...
hllfU.
. . . .. . . .. ·.
Daily Pilot
Old news has a
fresh 'news hook '
PWmNG FOR THE FUTURE
Like most Daily Pilot read-
ers, I also think it's dis-
tasteful that smack dab in th~ middJe of a C~ Mesa
neighborhood is a home called
the Panther Palace.
A home where adults,
young and old, venture in to
partake in varying sexual
escapades.
But I disagree with and
don't understand some readers
who ~ay'our recent article
about this West Side residence
amounted to promotion of
prostitubon. .
Maybe it will help if I·
explain how the story wound
up on the front pages, two
weeks ago.
Our police reporter
approached me about a tip he
received about the Panther
Palace and some new allega-
tions of prOStltution taking
place there. But when he told
me about the news tip, I
explained to him it was noth-
ing new and there was no sto-
ry to be told.
You see, the existence of
the Panther Palace was first
reported by former Pilot
reporter Tmd Borgatta Hve
years ago this month.
Borgatta, who later became
the paper's assistant managing
editor, also followed a tip that
residents then were concerned
that the home owned by the
late "Wild" Bill Goodwin was
nothing more than a den of
iruquity.
Borgatta investigated, inter-
viewed Goodwin and visited
the house, breaking the Pan;
ther Palace story in April of
1995. And Costa Mesa police
. then, just like today. could not
find evidence of prostitution or
any other wrongdoing.
Predictably, however, the
news of Goodwin, who was 71
at the time, but has since
passed away, and his mini
Playboy mansion spread to ,
major newspapers, tabloids
and television shows. And resi-
dents reacted with an equal
amount of disgust over the
Panther Palace even then.
Yet, like most fiash-in-the-
pan news stories, the Panther
Palace soon became old news
and we went back to ignoring
it. for some five yea.rs.
And we would have contin-
ued to ignore it if it weren't for
a coincidental twist.
Not long after our police
reporter learned about the
news tip, we also learned the
very same Panther Palace
was the subject of an inde-
pendent film that bad been
banned by the Newport
Beach Film Festival.
Suddenly, we had what we
call in this business, •a news
hook."
What followed was our ijlt-
est story on this dubious Costa
Mesa institution that has
become so popular today that
the man who took over for
Goodwin is considering a
reseJVation policy for visitors.
So, ii the stories of the Pan-
ther Palace make you uneasy, I
understand. Even agree. But
the Daily Pilot was just doing
its job.
Newspapers, at least main-
stream ones, are neutral
observers of daily life. And
newspaper editors and
reporters certainly aren't in the
business of promotion as we've
Tony Dodero
EDITOR'S NOTEBOOK
been accused. Our business is
to report the news, the good,
the bad and the ugly. And
sometimes, the news isn't what
we want to hear.
Regardless, as members of
the press, we have a responsi-
bility to let our readers know
what's happening in their
neighborhoods. We would be
derelict not to. Keep in mind,
we didn't create the Panther
Palace, we just shed light on il
.
MARIANNA DAY MASSEY I DAILY PILOT If the Panther Palace is to
go out of business, or at the
very least relocate, it's up to
the residents of Costa Mesa to
step up and demand that hap-
pens.'
Sarah Hattleld, 7, of Girl Scout troop 1736 in Costa Mesa tries hard to shake loose
a small tree before planting It at Canyon Park in C osta Mesa Saturday. Volunteen
from all over the county J.telped rake and plant in the park.
I wish them luck.
• TONY ~ 1s the editor of
the Daily Pilot. He can be reached
at (949) 57~258 or via e-mail at
tony.doderoOlatimes.com .
FOR THE RECORD wan:\ .. mis5tated the charges ~should hwe mt9d 1t\at
The April 12 article, •Piec;e-in the Piecemakers' lawsuit 1he ~ .. suing Hal-
makers' c.me could m<M for-against Tom Haltiburton. The liburton for hlr.-nent.
·Sofd 7~ 'PMio ?~
WESTCUFF PLAZA
Irvine Ave & 17th St.
Newport Beach
(Since 1982)
Teak is now
Affordable!
We Buy Direct,
Eliminate the Middleman! Compare our Prices!
TU~
Costa Mesa Showroom
by a ppointment
1240 Lopn Ave. Unit H
<-• ol McCn-1< A l.Gpll)
(714) 544-7288
www .teakourdoors.com
5'Me-ft; CORONA DEL MAR
FITNESS CENTER PCH &AY0Cad9Ave Corona Del Mar
(949) 631-3623 (Opening April 200<!> ...
Welcome to One SOURCE
"'You.r Southern California Mobility Spttialiau ..
• Representing the full
line of Pride Mobility
Products
• Service 8' Repair
• lmurance Rambunement
Spoiali.tt
~. & A rchitectural Elements .from China
~ ~ ~
'\('vt'houJe 6"0 W. I 7ch St., Cosm Meu
51.itl' #3 (bclw>d Computer Reader}
949·S<l3-1I12, 9'49-929-1102
t\l.\Cl 11 Jrfftties. Ltd.
852 Prod\lcnon PIKc. Ncwpon Belch
'Sailing into the
New Millennium'
Look for special
Newport To EnHMCI•
International Yacht Race
2000 Cov•ntg•
on
Wednesday, April 26
\
Monday, April 17, 20oo 3
... .
. .
4 Monday, April 17, 2000
FESTIVAL
CONTINUED FROM 1
that the people who come to
them don't necessarily inter·
act with or even see each oth·
er while the main event is
going on. Hundreds of people
gather expressly to sit in the
. dark and ignore each other. .
screenwriter and producer of
"Starry Night," the fibn that
won the audience award for
best feature, suggested that
this •sense of place" might be
better served U festival ftbm
were shown in a setting other
than the Edwards lala.nd cine·
mas, where most of the fea·
tures screened.
"It's nice when a festival
uses, for special events, a the·
ater that stands alone,•
Davids said.
reactions in Newport Beach
were more useful to him than
they had been in other dties
where "Starry Night" bad
been shown.
"In Orange County, there's
a chance to test a film with a
very mainstream American
audience,• he said. "Not nee·
euarily the very urban audi·
ence you have out of Boston
or the erudite cinemapbiles
that show up at the Los Ange·
les (American Film Instttute's)
film fest. ·in tha~' sense, it's
invaluable .• '
declared bankruptcy lut beaded by Gregg Schwenk.
September. At the time, Con· did an impressive job of
net's bad fortune might have tesusdtatlng the institution
spelled the end of Newport's from the financial coma in
days as a film town. which Conner left it.
Several people, who par· This year's event, which
tidpeted in the new festival, attracted betwe8D 8,000 and
have suggested that Conner 10,000 attendees, looks like it
deteJVes more credit than be will either break even or tum a
bas received in connection small profit, Schwenk said For
with 1hil year's event. New· a year in wbk:h the goal was
port Beach actor Pepe Serna simply •to have a festival,• it's
singled Conner out in an encouraging outcome.
remarks he delivered at the
closing ceremonies. · WHAT'S TO COME.
"It's becaute I know how In the future, Schwenk
. .. ,,
I
· Doily Pilot
the festival (financially)
through the upcoming year,•
be said.
Some ol that extra money,
in Quartararo'• opinion, Will
need to go toward getting
some paid staff for festivals to
come. The juggliug act that
the board or directors per-
formed this year, splitting
time between their festival
positions and their paying
jobs, is not one that is likely to
be successfully repeated. For that reason, it's partic·
ularly important, as Quar·
tararo said, to give festival
goers •a sense of place.• A
festival, for the viewer, needs
to feel like something more
than a mere trip to .. the
movies.
He also noted that some
short directors were disap·
pointed that"the museum of
art screenings used video
rather than projecting actual
film.
much he put into it,• Serna said, merely balancing the
BEYOND THE SHADOWS , said. "Heart and soul, plus books will no longer be the ·
"We'll be burning people
out quick if we don't get a
full·time managing director,•
he said.
For this year, though, the
improbable came to pass.
Short on time and salaries,
the festival succeeded on an
ample supply of obsession.
Lurking in the background money." goal.
of flus general success story is But if Conner's name bas· "What we're hoping is that
ROOM FOR IMPROVEMENT
Paul Davids, the director,
But Davids S<Ud he was
quite pleased with the overall
feel of the fest. Audience
the tale of Jeltrey Conner, the n't ~n on many lips lately, we reach ,,_ critical mass
man who ran the f~Stival in that.'s undoubtedly because where ticket sales and mer·
previous years ~nd who the new festival organization, chandise allows us to propel
!Ml~ EARTH DAY
CONTINUED FROM 1
Mattress Outlet Sto teer naturalist with the Califor-
nia Department of Fish and
BRAND NEW· COSMETICALLY IMPERFECT
Get the Best for Less!
My Cle•nlng Secret #3
CHOOSE FROM:
• CARPET CLEANING
• ORAPIRY CL£AlllNG
• UfttOl.$1llY Q.Ul9IG
~other di)' my son made such a mess In the IMng room "'-t I
didn't know who to call, but my mother told me about Colet She
told me Colt clNns just about fNef)'thlng; carp@tS, dr~
upholstery, arN rugs, and even air ducts. With theft 100.. a..,
100.. Cott GullntMM you can count on them to do the right job
the first tll'M, or they'll rKINn, correct the problem, or tlw ,_a ..
Nfund. With mfflons of ,.ntls since 1950, Colt Is the most •
~ed specialty donlng company In the W'.Ofld. With thlt kJnd of
~tlon, you an ttUJt them to make your~ look llke new ewry time.
ewn If you~ got a boy llke mine!
COIT : ·~
0 0
Not Just Clean, Colt Clean.*
c..-• ........................................ qss ...... ......
--
• Game, said. The event was
sponsored by Newport Bay
Naturalists & Friends, OC Har·
·bors, Beaches & Parks, Califor·
Dia Department of Fish &
Game and the Cty of Newport
Beach.
Adults were treated to
demonstrations ol .alternate
en~ sources and organic
fertilizer. Younger environ--
mentalists got to make mud
and then play in it.
Nicole said she also had a
pleasant experience at the
face·paintlng booth -her
cheek was decorated with a
colorful butterfly -and had
pee.red through a microscope
at a creature known as a "little
worm thing."
"It was a mini sea worm,·
clarified Nicole's friend Adam
Reebe, 11.
The centerpiece of the day
was a ceremony honoring
Newport Beach residents Jack
and Nancy Skinner for their
commitment to improving the
water quality of Newport
Beach.
"I think the population as a
whole has come around lo rec.
ognize that it's so important to ?
care for our environment,· · ·
Nancy said. •1 don't think
there was the same awareness
many years ago.•
Titi.s year's event stressed
the need to explore alterna-
tives to fossil fuel. The PA sys.
tern, which was used to
announce the Skinners'
award, was powered by solar
electricity. The refrigerator and
the popcorn machine used to
prepare food for the crowds
were also solar powered.
Robert Siebert, a resident of
Orange, whose solar cells
were generating all the power,
said he had been gettlng a few
questions from curious festival
goers about the costs of the
equipment.
But none of the browsers,
even on this Earth·consdous
day, seemed t{uite ready to go
solar.
I •
SPRING BALES EVENT
MEN'S & WOMEN'S & KIDS .
C.orona del Mer Plaza
832 Avocado St. !PCH & MacArttlurl ~f~CB4BJ 7ea.1aae
ever on
Comcast Cab
includina · Free I
anc1 3 months
ot HBO tor I /2 Price!
Cululal a lducalonal
Ml. Et ... '°""* It lM leart'*lg a.... Home a~ TV Ar1rncA Planet ~Channel Food lV ~Channel
n. DINiv Channel Cartoon~
N9w Mortu, OltgllMll ..._a Clanlcll
llll*n9 Nltva¥IOflC lM
laf.ft Cta•• USA~
lVLcMcl 1 ~c.*'11:11
CQftlV Amnu1 --a.c. Oarne~ .... ...
1 -
.
Daily Pilot ........
TOWN
• Send ~ lOWN items to
the Deily Piiot. 330 W. Bay St.. Costa ~ 92627; fu to $49) '46-4170 « call (949) 764-4330. A complete
lktlng may be foond at
allypilotcom.
TllSDAY
Tbe Jewish Community Cen-
ter of Orange County will pre-
sent "Kids: Passover Fun Day
1and Chocolate Seder,· from
10. a.m. to 3 p.m. at 250 E.
Baker St., Costa Mesa
.Kindeigartners through fifth~
graders. can enjoy a day of
Passover activities . .Members
are $20 and norunembers are
$25. For more information, call
(714) 755-0340, Ext. 117.
. Orange Cout College will
celebrate the 30th anniversary
of its Recycling Center arid
Earth Day today and Wednes-
day with a "Green Fair.in the
quad from 11 to 2 p.m. daily.
The fair is open to the public
and free of charge. The event
will include feature speakers,
displays and organically
grown food. The reggae group.
Irie Cafe, will perf onn today at
noon in the quad. The school is
at 2701 Fairview Road in Costa
Mesa. For more information,
. call (714) 432-5131.
1be Corona del Mar Cham-
ber of Commerce will present
its monthly luncheon at noon
at Five Crowns, 3801 E. Coast
. Highway. Social networking
· begins at 11:30 a.m. Cost is
$15 per person. Included is a
glass of wine, lirst course,
. main course, dessert and cof-
fee. Guest speaker Jason
, Hartman will speak on "Per-
; sonal Branding and Relabon-
' ship Marketing.· Reservations
: are required. For more inlor-
1 mation, call (949) 673-4050.
I
I
:THURSDAY
I •The Costa Mesa Chamber of
; Commerce will present a 90-
; minute Breakfast Boost from
17:15 to 8:45 a.m. at the Costa l Mesa Golf and Country Club,
1 1701 Golf Course Drive.
: Rhonda Britten will be the
; guest speaker. Prepaid reser-
• vatio~e $12 or $17 at the
: door. For more infonnation,
. call (7 14) 885-9090.
1be Newport-lrvtne Rotary
Club will present a discussion
titled, "They Closed the
Beaches -Now What?•trom
noon to 1:30 p.m. at the lrvine
Marriott, 1800 Von Karman
Ave., Irvine. The discussion
will focus on beech and har-
bor pollution, urban runoff
and its future impact on
Orange County. Notable
speakers include Carol Hoff-
man of The Irvine Co. and Dr.
Jack Skinner of the environ-
mental group, Stop Polluting
Our Newport. Buffet lunch is
$20, payable at the door. Lim-
ited seating. For more infor-
mation, call (949) 653-9678.
The Jewish Community Cen-
ter of Orange County will
present a singles Seder at
6:30 p.m. at 250 E. Baker St.,
Costa Mesa. The full Kosher
sit-down dinner is especially
for singles and single parents.
nckets are $34 for members
and $39 for nonmembers;
children 10 and under are
$15. Prices increase after
April 7. For more information,
call (714) 755-0340, Ext 115.
Brad Avery, d.lrector of
OCC's Marine Program and
frequent skipper of Alaska
Eagle, will speak about bis
adventures at 7 p.m. at the
Udo Isle \'acht Club, 701 Vta
Udo Soud, Newport Beach.
Admission is $5. Refresh-
ments will be served. For
more information, call (9<&9)
673-3808.
SAllllAY
...... W9bber wW ......... •
_.uur titled •How to Han-
dle a Divorce Settlement -
Investing Your Settlement
W19e1y• at nooo at ii• Newport
8Mch office, 620 Newport
Center Drtve, OD the ninth
Door. Por more information,
cd (9'9) 717-5600.
lllllY
..,.. NewpOIW"t .....
SmMlay bnmcb wll be ...
..._. ln:m 10 a.m. ID 3 p.m. at
l lfJI Jenmlw ltoed. NewpGlt
8-:b. n. ..... Bunny wlll
............ buntat
. u...,12:30..sip.m.~ ..... ...., .. •Jalned by .................
...... 1110 .... Oulllll wll
...... I 1 'lwlbp .. J.R.
1awtl llilMI. • Jaa IPOUP· ,,., I _ _. .. -_...
.............. 12 ....
------· •m. ,. ...
Newport Beach
I
Traffic Phasing
Ordinance . .
S~rvey
The Newport Beach Traffic Phasing Ordinance (TPO) provided funds to help improve both Jamboree
and MacArthur Boulevard in recent years. Is it working to relieve traffic in Newport Beach?
Do you know what the Newport Beach Traffic Phasing Ordinance (TPO) is?
Do yqu know what it covers or how it works? Do you think w~ should change it?
Not too many local residents are aware of the Traffic Phasing Ordinance. Yet traffic fund ing and
improvements are an important issue to every Newport Beach resident .
Please take a moment to read about the major goals of the Traffic Phasing Ordinance.
Then complete and return the survey below and give your views about the TPO to the Newport
Harbor Area Chamber of Commerce.
~ . ------------------------------
OVERALL GOAL
The overall goal of the Traffic Phas ing Ordinance
is to ensure that traffic at major intersections
never exceeds 90 percent of the capacity during
peak traffic hours. The TPO does this by making
all. projects that add one percent or more
new traffic to a major intersection pay for
improvements to reduce traffic below the 90
percent level.
Do you support or oppose the basic goals of
the TPO?
Support __
Oppose __
NINETY PEJlCENT
CAPACITY GOAL
The major goal of the TPO is to ensure that
traffic at 52 major intersections in the city does
not exceed 90 percent of capacity during peak
traffic hours (traffic would be less at
other hours).
Do you support or oppose the ninety percent
"peak hour" goall
Support ,
Oppose __ _
Name:
Address:
Phone: E-mail:
Pleue recum this fonn to:
ONE PERCENT MINIMUM . -
IMPACT GOAL
The TPO says that if a new development increas-
es traffic by one percent at any of the 52 major
intersections in the cit)' then it most pay for
traffic improvements (in addition to normal
project traffic improvements) to keep those
intersections below 90 percent capacity.
Do you support or oppose the one percent
minimum impact standard?
Support __
Oppose __
KEEP OR REPEAL TPO?
The city council revised the TPO last year. During
the revision some people suggested the TPO be
further amended, revised or even repealed. If the
TPO were repealed, would you support the use
of city General Fund revenues to fund traffic
improvements?
Would you support or oppose the repeal of the
Transportation Phasing Ordinance and the use of
General Funds for Traffic Improvements?
Support Repeal/Support Use of
General Fund ---
Oppose Repeal/Oppose Use of
General Fund __ _
Zip:
-
N9wport Harbor kea Chamber of Commerce, Aan: TPO Sur"ftY
1470 jlmbcne Road, N9wport Beach. CA 92660
~
~·
6 Monday, April 17, 2000 • Sports Editoc Roger Carlson • 949'57 442,23 ..,.
Corona del Mar
•A dead-eye shooter horn long range, his hopes were
dashed on a practice floor at the University of Pacific.
Richard Dunn
DAILY PILOT
O nce Markus Muller-Illa
Stach fulfilled his 1111111 dream of an NCAA
D1visjon I basketball scholarship,
a cruel twist of fate forced him to
give 1t back.
One of the greatest scorers in
Corona del Mar High and
Golden West College history,
Muller-Stach came along during
, a significant time in CdM annals,
when Paul Orris replaced Jack
Errion as head coach.
Muller-Stach , Orris' first
varsity star in the 1986-87
campaign, turned down offers
from smaller C<?lleges out of high
school, because his heart and
mind were set on
earning a Division I
scholarship.
Muller-Stach, who waited
patiently, then got his tum the
next season and averaged 23
points per game and about 8.5
rebounds as Corona del Mar
won the Sea View League
championship and reached the
CIF Southern Section semifinals,
finishing 24-7 in Orris' first
varsity season, after several
years as CdM's freshman coach.
In his senior year for the Sea
Kings, Muller-Stach was voted
the Sea View League Player of
the Year and first-team All-CIF,
as the Sea Kings' close-knit
group of former youth all-stars
blended to create a winning
combination.
"It seemed to a lot of outsiders
that we came from
nowhere, because we
bad no returning
starters (from
1985-86),·
Muller-Stach said.
•No one expected us
to .win the league and
get to the semifinals,
except ourselves.
That (1986-87 season)
was pretty awesome.
Growing up, we had
all played together
·1 had to pay my
dues ... and at the
bme I had decided
that I wasn't going to
walk on anywhere,·
said Muller-Stach,
whose dedication pa.id
off alter two seasons
al Golden West.
where he is still the
Rustlers' second
all-ti.me leading scorer
with 1,275 points
Markus .... n_ c..__. and everybody knew '"llUIR2~• their roles on the
(behmd another CdM product,
Chris Thompson).
Muller-Stach accepted a
scholarship to Division I
Uruversity of the Pacific, but
suffered a serious knee injury
and never played for the Tigers,
eventually forfeiting his
basketball scholarship.
"It never got better,• said
Muller-Stach, whose body went
one way dnd his knee another.
during a practice one day before
the 1989-90 Big West
Conference season, when he
redshirted
lWo yean. ago, Muller-Stach
underwent a second surgery on
tus knee, wtuch had tom
cartllage and forced a bone to
rub against the inside of his knee
cap.
·1 was told that cartilage has
very little blood supply to it, and
it was hard for 1t to re-grow,• be
said. "(The tear) was just not in a
very good place. It was just one
of those freak aC'ctdents. •
Muller-Stach, who never
regained his streng th in the
kneQ, tned everything
imaginable in his comeback,
including intense rehabilitation.
but physically wasn't ~e same
player. The long practices took
its toll and Muller-Stach, who
had planned to play for a
professional club team in
Germany following his UOP
career, had to hang up his
high-tops.
A protege of local hoops
coach Tom Maramoto,
Muller-Stach was a talented
6-foot-4 swingman with a great
jump shot.
But, during bis junior year at
CdM, he was stuck behind
standout Jeff Pryer in 1985-86.
lt was Errton's final season and
Fryer, who later starred at Loyola
Marymount and six seuons of
pro basketball in Europe, was
the only firepower necessary.
•They really didn't need two
scoron on the floor," said
TODAY
team. We just had a
phenomenal year.•
NCAA Division ll and III
schools came knocking, along
with NAIA teams. But
Muller-Stach bad ·a dream of a
Division I scholarship" and opted
instead to play at the community
college level.
Muller-Stach's first year at
GWC was also the first season
for the three-point line. "It's so
weird to think back to when they
didn't ha\10 it," be said.
Muller-Staqi also played two
years of football at CdM, but
would come home from practice
and shoot baskets into the night
("That's where my passion was,•
he saidJ.
At Golden West, Muller-Stach
led Coach Jim Greenfield's
Rustlers to a 20-12 record in
1988·89 and third-place finish in
the Orange Empire Conference,
while GWC advanced to the
third round of the Southern
California Regional playoffs.
An All-OEC selection,
All-Southern California and
all-state choice in '89,
Muller-Stach averaged 20.2
points a game in his two-year
Rustler career, the sixth-best
average ln school history.
Muller-Stach still holds the
Golden West career record for
free-throw percentage at 88.5%
(232 of 262).
But, just as bis scholarship
dream came true, It came to a
crashing hjllt shortly thereafter
for the latest honoree in the
Daily Pilot Sports Hall of Fame.
"You have to practice a heck
of a lot more than everybody else
does (to become o top scorer),•
he said, •and thot's something I
can look back on and be proud
of.•
Today, Muller·Stacb, who bu
been a stockbroker for the last
flve years, works for Netsma.rt, a
company based In Burbank. He
ls single and lives 1n Plorol Park
(Santa Ana).
SCllDUU
't
.. 11111 I. lilt Wiik ml• wblf rilly t.d
..... 11'u ... P1•11 ."• \
~Janes, Newport Harbor senior ~!e',,!I .::.::..-::-___
I ,
l " ~Mr. Irrelevant is a Demon,
Mike Green, of Northwe~tem
State' Louisiana fame'.'.:i ..
NEW YORK -It took
a trade by the Cleve-
land Browns to get it
done, but for the sec-
ond straight year the
Chicago Bear.t have
become home to Mr.
0 11 I I\'-
Irrelevant, the last player picked
(254th) in the National Football
League draft.
Newport Beach's Paul Salata
announced via ESPN Sunday the
Bears' choice -Mike Green, a 6-foot,
189-pound safety from Northwestern
State out of Natchitoches, La.
While Newport Beach and the
lrrelevant Week committee admitted-
ly have not heard of Mike Green, the
same can be said from the other view-
point.
•No, I can't say as I have heard of
Irrelevant Week,• said Green from
the home of bis aunt in Louisiana via
telephone Sunday. Mlt'S going to be a
new experience for. me and I hope to
have a. good time.•
The 22-year-old Northwestern
State Demon was the Blue Gray
All-Star Game defensive MVP, and he
projects as a solid threat for a berth on
the Bears' squad as a safety.
He was the All-District Defensive
MVP for bis Ruston High team, and a
track standout, as well, running a 10.5
in the 100 meters.
While he admits he is disappointed
he was not taken earlier, pundits had
him being taken in the fourth round,
he is happy to be in the mix.
MI thought I'd be picked earlier, but
I was drafted and I'll be looked at,"
said Green.
He'll be toasted and ro«!§ted here in
Newport Beaeh June 19-23.
Daily Pilot
~ 0V. 'INI \'IAM I l
2000 ·Mike G..-i. ~n State (lw's)
1999 • Jim Finn, ~Ill (lews)
199CI • Cam Qu.yle. ~ St. (Rawns)
1997 • Ronnie McAdl, /11/mf (l'ICken)
1996 • Sam Manuel, New Muico Stitt (49ers,l
1995 • MicNel Reed, Boston College (Cougln)
1994 • Marty Moen. Kentucky (P~
1993 • Dwan Akom. Akron (8ucunttn)
1992 • Matt Elllot1. Mic:hlgln ~Im.)
1991 • llny Wrie. John CMroll (Giants)
1990 . Demetrius Davis, Nevada (~
1919-Ewfett Rau, Ohio St.tt (Vikings)
1988 ·Jeff 8Nthard, SO. Oregon State (JtMns)
1987 ·Norman Jefferson. LSU (Piek«"$)
1986 • Mike TrllYis, Georgia Tecti (CNfgen)
1985 . Donald Olumley. Georgia (&rt)
1984 • Randy Esslngton, Colorado (Raiden)
1983 . John TIJggte. c.llfomlll (<1..m:s)
1982 ·Tim W.nington, Fresno Stitt (49en)
1981 • Phil Nelson, Delaware (Raiden)
1980 • Kevin Scanlon. Atttansas ~
1979 ·Mike Arnold. NorthMst LSU (Steelers)
1978 • Lee Washbum, MontM\a Stlte (Cowboys)
1977 ·Jim Kelleher, Colorado (Vikings)
1976 • Ke!Vin Kirt<. Dayton (Steelers)
HIGH SCHOOL BOYS IND GIRU TRACK AND FIELD
MARIANNA DAY MASSEY I 0.Al.Y Pl.OT
Corona del Mar Hlgb's Uz Mone, at the front of the pack all day Saturday.
Jones & Co.
•Newport wins 1,600 relay,
Mesa's Hulliger takes shotttitle.
Joseph Boo
DAILY PllOT
MISSION VIEJO -When Newport
Harbor High and Santa Margarita were
stuck in the Sea View League together,
the Sailors' 1,600-meter relay team
couldn't beat the
Eagles.
ln Saturday's
Orange County 'J\'ack
and Field Champi-
onship at 'J\'abuco
Hills it was a different
story.
Newport's 1,600
relay squad of
Richard Weber, John
Pescbelt, Dan Moyer
and Trevor Jones
became the fint
group to beat Santa Margarita this year.
A group that Sailors' Coach Bbn Bar-
ry calls the best relay team in 20 years at
Newport shattered their penonal record
with o 3:20.72 to win the 1,600 relay.
Esperanza became the second teem to
beet Santa Margarita this yeer, Dnllblng
MCOnd. But for Newport. all thole ~
from Sea View League dual meets were
ttill frelb.
•1t•1 been many, many yean liDce we've beeten them.• Jonee, wbo ran a
47.8 u the ancbor, Mkl. ·we Md a bye
week and we worked l'Mlly hard
,.......... Jrt a grMl PR lor UI. •
--mmtmlld '° ...... NNpGlt'w NiCOld -..,. 1'be UCLA .... auad ...
I •
M~ °"y Mi\S5rY I DA1..Y ...or
ne Salton' John Pescbelt ezceh.
h1I fourth school record ln the 100 with a
10.87. He was second by a tenth ol o
second behind Edison'• Oerryl Polton,
and just • hundredth of a second ahead
of Coste Mele'I Greg Stewart.
·rm very•tldied." Jonee Mld, •1 got
to add my fourth IChool record, and I
finally got my sta.rt to be u good u my
IOphomore year .•
Jones allo won the 110 bigb hurdles
(H.44) and the 300 intermediate burdlel
(37.76) to..,. the award 11 the ..ra
top sprtnter/bwdler. Moyer wu ftftb
SlllOVSM87
Morse
code:
W-1-N
• Corona del Mar's Liz
Morse Female Athlete
of the Meet at OC.
Joseph Boo
DAILY f>Jl.oT
MISSION VIEJO -After
winning the 400-and 800-
meter events in Saturday's
Orange County Track and
Field Championship at nabu-
co Jiills High, Corona del
Mar's Uz Morse thought she
could sit down 1or some down
time before the 1.600 relay.
But her coach, Bill Sumner,
bad other ideas.
·An hour alter the 800, •
Morse said, "Coach came up
to me and said, 'you know Liz,
we could use some more team
points.' So I said, "OK, I'll run
the 200.'"
Morse not only ran the 200,
but she surprisingly turned in
the county's best time oC 24 .5
to capture her third individual
event. She also anchored
CdM's 1,600 relay to victory,
and was named the rneet's
top sprinter/hurdler.
Before the 200, Morse won
two the 800 and 400 in work-
man-lilce fashion. She coasted
to the 800 in a 2:14.18, five
seconds slower than her
national best set at the Arca-
dia Invitational. And she ran a
•disappointing• 56.54 in the
400, still giving her an easy
win, but not in the 54 range
that she set out for. •For me
afld Liz, the 200 was a race
we actually got excited
about,• Sumner said. "It got
her adrenaline going. She's a
competitive runner, and she
couldn't get nervous for the
competition in the 800 or 4.00.
She needs that nervousness.
She needs to be chasing
somebody, or have someone
chasing her:
·1 was really scared about
that race because I didn't
have a lot of adrenaline (Sat-
urday),• Mone said. ·1 guess
I need a couple of races to get
megotng:
The tougb4uck runner-up
in the 200 WU Newport Har-
bor freshman Amy Burling·
ham. who turned ln a 25.44.
But sbe wu more than happy
about ber 6n1sb.
•Uz Mone is Uz Morse,•
she said. •t wasn't going to
catch her.•
But she can take IOI.ace in
beeting the rest of a crowded
200 fteld with the C'OUftty'I
aecond fastest time tldl year.
·r·m very happy about mr
time ln tbe 200,. &urtingbaiD
Mid. •l'bat'I a maJor.,........
record for me.•
Both 8urtinabam and
Morie twMd ID 1-1 ..... In
their .. ol .... 1;800 .....
Mone lwdwd .... 11 ~
UWk la beJ l9el!ed e" XJMt
•-.s ,
Daily Pilot SPORTS ~~~...;._~~~~~~~~~~~~Mondoy~........_·Ae..-..i_l1_7~,2000~--7
CdM's Hm.isen, EStallcia's Cantrell $1>arlde
• Hansen, Cantrell make their mark in their prep
finale, though South All-Stars fall victim, 84-76. ORANGE COUNTY ALl·STAR BASKETBALL points, but they just hit their
shots,· said Cantrell, who
netted hi$ trademark three
ball from the left comer with
2:28 left in the first half. He
plans to play at the communi-
ty college level, mdst likely at
Orange Coast.
Arizoqa-bound Travis
Hanour, the Pacific Coast
League Player of the Year
from Laguna Beach, paced
the South with 14 pomts, six
blocks, five assists and ·five
rebounds. •
dominated by transition bas-a..y ~ steals and two blocked shots kets, drives, putbacks and
DALY PlDT and was on the floor down post moves.
COSTA MESA-The two the stretch as the South ral-•1 wasn't able to get many.
Newport-Mesa boys basket-lied, only to lose, 84-76, to the shots ofl, but I tried to play
ball pla in s turd · North. defense and play hard.# yers a ay s Cantrell, who unlike Orange County All-Star Hansen, a Stanfqrd-bound
Game at Orange Coast Col-Hansen will play college bas-volleyball setter' whose cur-
,. lege can save the stat sheet in ketball, chipped in three rent commitment to the CdM points, three rebounds, two volleyball team has dulled
good con.science. asSJS· ts "'?>d a steal. h b le ball h P ""' l e as et s arpness or though Corona del Both connected on a three-which enabled him to twice
Mar High senior Kevin pointer. though they com-earn AJ1:CIF Southern Sec-
Hansen and Estancia senior bined to hit just 3 of 14 field-lion honors and share this
Jon Cantrell have produced goal attempts. year's Newport-Mesa District
more in countless games dur-Still, despite corning up Player of the Year distinction,
ing their standout prep short on the scoreboard, they was scoreless the first 30 min-
• careers, they generated both could smile after receiv-utes.
enough statistics to keep their ing their commemorative But the 6-foot-4 swing man
substantial rooting sections plaques.following the contest. . cashed in a Cantrell assist
entertained. •1t was fun,• said Cantrell. with a 10-foot jumper just
Hansen finished with five who was limited to only four outside the lane with 10:01
points, three rebounds, two field-goal tries in a game left in the second half to
HIGH SCHOOL BASEBALL
KNECHTION!
• Dave Knecht's two-run blast off scoreboard
helps CdM beat rival Newport Harbor, 5-2 ..
Tony Altobelli
• DMY Pl.or
CORONA DEL~ -It's
not often a CdM player, coach
or fan is excited when a Sea
King gets hit hard. But one
such case occured in Satur-
day's baseball game with vis-
iting Newport Harbor.
The bard-hit Sea King in
question ~as the emblem on
the scoreboard in right field,
courtesy of a two-run bqme
run off the bat of Dave
Knecht, which propelled
CdM to a 5-2 win in the first
round of the Pride of the
Coast Tournament.
With the score tied, 2-2. in
the fifth ,. inning, Knecht
smacked the first pibth he
saw right off the scoreboard
logo, giving CdM the lead for
good.
Knecht also pitched the
final two innings, earning his
first save of the season.
"Getting the big hit and
d0$ing the game out on the
mound; a nice way to end the
game,• Sea Kings Coach
John Emme said.
Knecht finished the game
for sta.rfer Cavan Cuyler. who
pitched five strong innings to
improve to .C-1. He allowed
only two hits through the first
four innings before having a
little trouble in the fifth.
•tte came out a little
tired," Emme said. "He usu-
ally throws pretty hard, but I
think that w orked to his
advantage. He really had to
focus on hitting his spots,
which be did.•
CdM took a 1-0 lead in the
second inning when Andrew
Johns drove a shot up the
middle that just eluded diving
shortstop Justin Jacobs. The
single scored Eric Snell, who
opened the inning with a
walk.
Wes Hockinson led off the
third inn1ng with a walk and
later ICXll'ed on a sacrifice fly
by Knecht, making it, 2-0.
Billy Eagle followed
Knecht with a single to cen-
ter, but Newport's Miguel
Sandoval bustled to the ball.
threw a strike to Jacobs, who
then Bred a strike to the
catcher Garrett Brant, nailing
a CdM runner at the plate.
It remained 2-0 until Justin
McCarthy hit a one-out single
and advanced to second on a
CdM error.
Following a Jacobs Oyout
and an Alan Lane walk, Nick •
Langsdorf hit a grollllder to
third. McCarthy, bustling on
the play, avoided a tag by the
CdM third baseman and kept
the inning alive.
Sandoval and Donovan
Wong responded each with
RBI singles, scoring
McCarthy and Lane. tying
the game before Knecht's
blast in the bottom of the
inning.
•Jt was a well-playe d
game by both teams,# New-
port Coach Jim Kiefer said.
"It all came down to the big.
hits, which they bad mo~~of
then we did.·
CdM notched an insur-
ance run in the sixth inning
when Hockinson ripped a
double d own .the left-field
mie, ·lt!>ring ~Dicesare,
who reached on a walk.
Newport (2-8) tried to rally
in the seventh,· but Knecht
was able to come up with the
big pitch when he needed to.
•That extra run was huge
for us,• Emme said. •With
Langsdorf hitting for them in
the seventh, he would have
been the tying run. But since
he wasn't we were able to
pitch to him a little bit differ-
ently.•
Hockinson, Eagle and
Rory McKeever each had two
hits for the Sea Kings (9-7).
"Billy bas been hitting well
for us all year long, but it was
nice to see other people con-
tributing to the offense.•
Emme said.
Corona del Mar returns to
second-round play today at
11 a.m., hosting Orange.
Newport Harbor meets
Bolsa Grande in a 2 p.m.
game at Costa Mesa High.
PM>EOllJ.COAST
~ ......
Ant round Co-au D1L MM 5,
Nuaa111 "-2
Newport HMbor 000 020 0 . 2 6 0
Coron. def Mair 011 021 lt. s B 1
ltorden, Wwd (5) ~ Br~nt.
Cuyter. Knecht (6) ~ Mctceever.
W • CUVI«, 4-1. L -Ronien.
Sv • Knetht, 1. 28 • Eagle (CdM),
Hodtlnson (~. HR -!Cn«ht
(CdM).
SUMMARIES
~COUNTY CHAM'tONSHN'S
(M ......._ Hiiis Hltilh.)
llOYS
l'iMm • 1. Esperanza, 62; 2. Santa
Margarita, 53; 3. Newport Harbor, 49'h;
7. Costa Mesa, 24.
100 • I. Poston (Edi), 10.77; 2. Jones
(NH), 10.87; 3. Stewart (CM), 10.88. 200 •
I. Poston (Edi), 22.04;2. Stewart (CM),
22.24; 3. Pannell (W~. 22.25; 30.
Strldcland (CM), 23.81 <tOO • I. Sardis
(SM), 49.96; 2. Bass¥1i (Irv), 50.25; 3.
Bernard (AN). 50.43;, 12. Weber (NH).
51.86. 100 · I. Smith (TVs), 1 :52.87, 2.
PeKhelt (NH), 1.56 04; 3. Escobar (VP),
1:56 59; 6. Yelsey (CdM), 1:57.69; •
6 Vackar (NH), 2:03.34. 1,600 • 1.
Bousquet (Elp), 4:17.84; 2. Escobar (VP),
4:19 54; 3. Mejia (Kat), 4.20.00; 4. Yehey
(CdM), 4:22.54. 7. Duke (NH), 4.26. 71;
10. Mc:Mtllen (NH). 4:28.72; 22. Beardslee
(CdM). NT, l,2GO • 1. Bousquet (Esp),
9 22.66, 2. Mejia (~. 9:34.64, 3. 5egal
(OH), 9.36.41; 14 Dukt!'.i (NH), 10.03.01
110 ... • 1 Jone (NH), 14.44; 2 V1r1h
(Kat), I 4.60, 3. Colby (TUs), I 5.36, 18.
Moyer (NHJ, 16.27. JOO IH · I Jone$,
17 76, 2 Vinh (~. 38.96; l . I.Imm (Irv),
39 72. 5. Mcyef (NH), 40 11 .eoo rftay .
1. Tustin, 42.A6. 2. Edison. 42 61,
3 Irvine. 42 94; 19. CosU Mesa, 45 85.
1,600 reley • 1. Newport Harbor
(Wfl>ef, ~helt. Moyer, Jone), 3:20.72;
2. Esperanza. 1:22.82; 3. Senta Margarita,
3:2.83; 1B. Costa MeQ, 3:39.97. HI • 1. lunnen (SM), 6-7; 2. Marbley
(TUS), 6-6; 3T Peschelt (NH), 6-0; lT
Chandlef (Est), 6-0. U • 1 Thomas (Cen),
22-0'/•; 2. Czayllowld (EIMo), 21·9 '1.;
l Casul*litS tfUs), 21-6; 19. Qlandler
(Est), 1~10''2. TJ • 1. Czayllowld (EIMo),
44-511., 2. 8riQo5 (Val), 42· 1 I'/.; l . Kelley
(Edi), 42· 10'/~). Chandler (Est), 41-9. SP ·
1 Hull.gef (CM), ~'/.; 2. Jones (Esp),
54-4'/.; 3. Pefei (Va0, 53-3; 8. Fenton
(CdM), 51·1'1'-23. Caldwell (NH), 4.J.4''1.
OT · 1,~"5), 1~2.Manu (MIO),~~ 'ti/, 16S.3; 4.
Fenton (CdM), 164-5; 16. HuHigef (CM),
142· 3; 18. c:.ldwell (NH), 140-2..
GA.$
....._. 1. Mlttl'f Del. 55; 2 Eipe<anu.
54; 3T. Edhon, 52; 3T Corona de! M-.
52; s. Newport ~. 43
100 • 1. Sanford (Wb), 12 343; 2. o.tis
(SA\I), 12.348; 3. Ross (Eip), 12.364; 5.
Burlingnllm (NH), 12 62. 200 • 1. Morw
(CdM), 25.40, l. 8urhngtwlm (NH). 25 44;
3. Atkinson (SM), 25.56; 30. l1buda
(CdM), 28 64. <tOO • 1. Morse (CdM),
56.54; 2. 5tengl4ttn (Mar), 59 n : 3.
Adami (MO), 59 78; 11. 8. Cummins
(CdM), 61.96; 25. K.uth (NH), 64.73; 30.
St. Anch (NH). 65 9S. IOO • 1 Morse
(CdM), 2:14.18; 2. J. Cummins (CdM),
2: 17 .OS; l . Buche (Elp), 2'.1 B 09; 11. Rinek
(NH), 2'.23.89 18. Inoue (NH), 2.29.37.
1,IOO . 1 Steen (NH), 4:58.n ; 2 Allen
(FV). 5:01.97; 3. sean (MD}, 5:07 .44, 5.
Hossfeld (CdM), 5:10.62; 11. Huipe (Est),
5:27; 13. Yourm.n (CdM), 5:13.19. l ,200
• I. Allen (FV). 10:49.56; 2. Sears (MO),
10:59.40; 3. Mann (SM), 11:00.53; 4.
Steen (NH), 11 •04 93, 5. Mewfwy (CdM),
11:29.64; 9 Huipe (Est), 11:53; 10.
Hossfeld (CdM), 11 58.58. JOO H • 1.
Wells (MO), 45.68; 2. Fleskoslu (MV),
~.56. 3. Plrit1nson (StM), ~.60;13.
Mahler (CdM), 49.06; 32. Oorfmao
(CdM), 54.73. 1,IOO re&ey • 1 Corona
det Mar U. Cummins, B. Cummins,
Ubuda. Motw). 3 57 01, 2 ~If Dei.
4 00 71, 3. Esptf"anz1, 4:01 08;
10. Newport ~. 4:14 82.
HI • 1. 8 Ziem.M (Edi), s-6; 2.
R. Ziemann (Edi). s-6, 3. N~ (SH),
5-4; 4T Ross (NH), ~; 9T. Br-
(CdM), S-0 u . 1 1. S..fOfd (Wb),
1Pr2l/.; 2. StMT (SA\I), 17-3; 3 Jennings
(Edi), 17·2¥.; 5 f109 (NH), 16-7; ClnatY
(CdM), 14-9'/ .. TJ • 1. Sanford (Wb),
3a-9'/.; 2. JenNno$ (Edi), -.2 314; 3.
Stafford (ic.t), 31·1; 6. Rou (NH), lS-3'/.,
•. 1. c~ <SA>. 39-7'h; 2 Wffnlg (l.I), ~·ti; l. Quinn (ET), 39-1; 4. Dill (NH), 39-0. f/f/V • 1. Rtbtllo (Mal),
11-8; 2 Vondefahe (SM), 11).6; 3. Pefilins
(Edi), 1().6, 12. c.Nly (CdM), 1-6. DT • 1. Thomflllon (Esp), 142..i; 2. om (NH),
125-6; 3. Martinez (SA\I), 124-5;
18. GeNch (NH), 104-2.
break the ice. He also drained
a three-pointer from the left
comer with 8:08 left, which
capped a 7-0 South run and
pulled the designated hosts to
within 11 points of the North.
The Rebels closed to with-·
in 80-76 with 40 seconds
remairting, but the North
scored the final four points on
layups, the latter a dunk by
Most Valuable Player and
halftime dunk competition
winner Robert Turner, a 6-9
standout from Western H.lgh.
"They surprised me,·
Cantrell said of the Yankees,
who took advantage of a
South field-goal drought or
nearly six minutes in the first
hall to build a 44-36 interrrus-
sion lead.
•we were favored by two
The North, which used
superior size to score most of
its points in the paint, used a
pair of 7-2 runs 'early in the
second 20-minute half to take
command and end a four-
game SoUth winning streak.
The South leads the series:
~1-14 .
• 1 think l had some nerves
10 the first half,· Hansen said.
·1 wish I would have gotten in
a little more, so I could have
gotten warm out there. But I
was glad (South Coach Roger
Holmes of Marina) left me in
at the end.•
MARIANNA OAV ~I DAl.V PILOT
Krista Dill unleashes In the disc us for Uie Sailors.
GIRLS
CONTINUED FROM 6
with a 54.9 as the anchor, and Cd.M's relay learn of Morse,
Becky and Jenny Curruruns, ctnd Karolina Ubuda won.
CdM almost failed to have a team in thls reldy because it
didn't submit a b.me dunng meet registration.
·our main goal for the 1,600 relay was lo be in it,•
Morse joked.
Marina's Dusb.n Kaatz bad
a game-high 17 points for the
Rebels.
HIGH SOtOO&. IOYS
Or~~=.,.GMte
Nor1h • Turner 14, Brown 13,
Grgas 12, Melton 12, Azubullte 9,
Purnell 8, Wilber 6, Raco s. W..id-
on 3, Winter 2. •
)..pt. g6als • Brown 3, Wilber 2.
Fouled out -Purnell.
Technicals • None.
South, Kaatz 17, Hanour 14,
Fields 12, Graham 8, James 7,
Hansen 5, Peterson 4, Manker 4,
Cantrell 3, Lawrence 2.
3-pt. goals · Hanour 2, Cantrell 1,
Hansen 1, Kaatz 1.
Fouled out -None.
Technicals • None.
BOYS
CONTINUED FROM 6
with a PR in the 300 (40.11)
to earn two points for the
Sailors.
Peschelt also had a big
day for the Sailors. He shat-
tered his old PR in the 800
and finished second behind
Tustin's Alonso Smith, who
had a state-best 1:52.87.
Peschelt had a 1 :56.04 .
•Just going out so fast, I
didn't thmk l was going to
keep ii up for the whole
race: he said. "But being
fast really helped me lD the
first Joo.·
CdM's Josh Yelsey was
sl.Xth with a 1 :57 .69. He set a
PR in the l ,600 with a fourth
place time of 4:22.54.
Right after the 800,
Peschelt went over to the
high jump area and finished
tied for third with 6·0. As a
team, Newport, the defend-
10g champion, finished third
with 49 112 points.
Estanda's Travis Chandler
also bed m third place,
Burlingham ran the operung leg for the Sailors in about
59.0, a 2.5 second improvement. Newport's team of
Burlingham, Laura Kauth, Lynn Rinek and Natalie St.
Andre was 10th in the relay.
Despite Morse being cdlled to action, the Sea Kings
--------couldn't overcome Mater Dei and
Esperanza. They fuushed in a third-
place tie wtlh Edison with 52
points just three shy of the second-
place Monarchs. CdM moved into
third after collecting 18 points in
the 800 with Morse winning and
Jenny Cumnuns hrushing second.
_ equaling tus PR. He was sev-
enth in the tnple Jump (41-9)
and 19th in the long jump
(l9-10 1/2)
"She could have
either had two
good Qlnesor
Dfl~g~t time.
We decided to
go for the PR ... " Although Cummins had the
Bill Sumner county's second-fastest time in the
400, she dJd not run 10 that event to
CdM track coach focus on the 800. It pcud off with a
PR that WdS over three seconds bet·
--------ter then her previous best.
·rm glad I didn't run the 400
over the 800, • Cummins said. "I just focused on getting a
great time in the 800. •
·she's only a junior, dnd runrung the 400, 800 and the
t,600 relay, is a heavy load for her,• Swnner said. "She
could have either had two good times or one great time.
We deeded to go for the PR.·
The Sailors finished fifth as a team with 43 points.
Burlingham added a fifth place hnish 10 the 100. Amber
Steen posted her third sub-5:00 tune of her hie with a win-
ning time of 4:58.77 in the 1,600. She is still the only coun-
ty athlete with a sub-5:00 tune Uus year. CdM's Diana
Hossfeld was fifth ·with a PR (5:10 62).
Steen was also fowth in the 3,200 ( 11 :04 93), and
CdM's Season Meservey placed 10 fifth (11 :29.64).
Newport got tnaJOr team pomts from its two held stars,
April Ross and Knsta Dill. Dill was second in the dJscus
with a throw ol 125-b, and fourth m the shot put with a 39-
0, seven inches behind winner Matalia Cuacamaga of
Santa Ana.
Ross earned points in three events. She was tied for
fourth in the high Jump (5·4), finished fifth with a PR m the
long jump (16-7), and sixth 10 the triple jump (35-Jl/4),
•April didn't put up real big numbers, but she got
points for us in three different events.· Newport Harbor
Coach Eric 1\veit said. ·she's Just a real competitor."
Estancia junior Uz Huipe was ninth in the 3, 200 ( 11 .53)
and 11th in the 1,600 (5:27).
Costa Mesa's boys track
and field team finished in a
tie for seventh at a team with
24 points with big perfor-
mances from Stewart and
Robert Hulliger.
Hulllger captured the shot
put title with a PR of 54-6 114,
equaling the county's top
mark. He beat out a crowded ·
field. includl.llg the favorite,
Esperanza's Travis Jones,
and Pacific Coast League
rival Sean Fenton of CdM.
After the shot put, be was
16th in the discus with a 142-
3.
·1•m not surprised I won,•
Hulliger said. • 1 just came
here to win.•
Stewart was .11 seconds
from being the fastest man 10
Orange County. instead. be
was third, couung in a vutual
tie with Newport's Jones and
Poston.
•1 thought it was a be,·
Stewart S8ld.
He almost won the 200,
coaung m second at 22.24.
Nevertheless, be came away
with two PRs alter a disap-
pomtmg dual meet with
Laguna Beach. where Stew-
art aggravated an ankle
lDjwy.
"I'm very happy with my
finishes,• he said. "Tu finish
m the top three in Orange
County is a great feeling.•
Mesa handles. Bolsa Grande
•Seven-run sixth
inning breaks tie for
the M~gs, 9-2. ·
game open.
Josh Uttle's bases-loaded
triple capped the big sixth
inning, but It wu • newcom-
er to the MUltangl' squad
who bed the b6ggielt bit of all.
Pirates tame Tigers
COSTA MESA -Costa
Meu High junior Brent Slin'f.I w.. pnctk:ally guar-
....... complete game by
bil macb. Kirk BaU81'11M61ter,
....... S.tuld8y'I Pride of the
• COMt "lburnammt tint-round
c..~th visiting Bolsa
•• gaw bbn tbe bell and
told b1m. 'Nat lime I talk to
you. rD be-~ bud ....... ~.·.·1 11DMI· .. Mid lallDWIDg the Mus-
... 1-2 wlD ovw the M8ta·
ckn •1 J111t didn't baYe uy-
.. -.. '°·I"'* In 4Dd we ........ big game from ...... .,,_._. .... ..a.
.... ...... ..aldDg tlu'M ........ .. '
Ill 111lel to .... .... ___ ...... .. M ::r=•da..,... .. .. ......
With Mesa leading. 3-2.
Mic:blel Mc:Guire. JJlaying in
bis ftnl 99ID8 at the vanity
lewl. lllMK'lred a two-nm sin-
gle In the mth, gtvlng the
Mustangl 901D8 IDuch·need-
ed breetbing room.
Demel Hunter and Carbl
Pranm eecb went 2 for 3 to
add to M .. 'I •ttac:k.
The Mwtaa9a (7, 10-1) will
boll A.8. Miier IDday .. 11
a.m. lD fw1bet toWne.ment
ect6oD.
,_ __ CMST
_., JI
Ollll..,,.fflf =:' .. +s 'a ............. J .,
CIDlll .._ 010 107 • ·I 10 I &.-.IMl.,lflS...__. .._ •• ..._M.L·LmR.
··~J!P.c ..... r.l:'a • '"" eoe.
• Wiethom, Coleman
break ninth-inning tie
for 7-5 baseball victory.
RIVERSIDE -Corona del
Me.r High product Eric
Wletbom went 3 for S with a
two-run double and a ninth-
inning RBI double to gwe the
Orange Coast College base-
ball team a stunning 7-5
Orange Empire Conference
win O¥eI bollt Riverside Setur·
day.
Wlet.hom's two·be.M hit
brought 1n Cbrtl l.aWI, wbo
lild on the inning with a lin·
gle.
Jobn Colemen gave OCC
(12·20, 6-13 ID ~) a
two-nm IMd wbeD be drove
In 'Wlllebolll ....... double .
Atmatomy_,.IDbll ....................... ............ " ....
................. Dlww ...................
r.:o•····
final two~ to pd up
the win
Laws was l for 3 with three
runs scored. while Waetbom
finished with four RBls.
Despite a rough seeaoo for
the Plretes. they managed to
split their four games with the
1lgen (25-7, 13-6)
OCC will compete an the
College of the Sequoias Tbur-
nament 1\aelday-lbunday
before ~OEC p&ey at Senta Ana. 25 at 2 ~m.
••• • •cm .. mtm:11 GI,-a.-1 Ill I =eo.===~::~ ................ K811r;
MUJl1Rtl ............
~~~~:= ~•-r•~
OCC falls to Rustlers
COSTA MESA ~ Despite
Costa Mesa Hlgb product BJ.
Ligbtvoet's 30 lolls, the host
Orange Coat College men's
volleyball team fell to Orange
Empire Conference nemem
Golden Wmt, 6-15, 1-4-16, 15-
10, 10-15, Friday.
The kJia dropl OCC intb"a
be for tec:ond piece m the
c:ontermce with the Rusd8is.
Both teams are 12...-in tbe
OEC.
• -~~------....;__-SPORTS Daily Pilot
lions take care of
·nope International
•Vanaken sparkles.
COSTA MESA -Val
Vanaken went 2 for 3 with
two RBis to lead the Van-
guard University softball
team to a 4-1 Golden State
Athletic Conference win over
visiting Hope International
University in first game of
Saturday's doubleheader.
Nikki Benning was 2 for 2
with a triple· and two runs
scored to add to the lions'
success.
Alysia Atchley allowed
only one run on five hits for
the Llons (21-27, 8-13 in con-
ference).ln the secontf'game,
Vanguard's Cheri Smith
struck out sixth for a 3-2 com·
SOFTBALL
pleLe-game vi~ory. Andrea
Saucedo drove in two runs.
GOLDIN SfAn AJltU11C
ClGl ... JCR
GM'91 VA#tiA !ARD 4i, HoN 1
Hope 010 000 0 • 1 5 Z
Vanguard 200 020 x · 4 7 0
McMlllian and McDonald;
Atchley .M Devey. W • Atc:tlley,
6-12. L • McMilllan, 11·1 t.
3B · Benning (VU).
Geme 2
VAHGUARD ), HoN 2
Hope 200 000 0 • 2 5 1
vanguard 120 000 x • 3 6 3
Richards, McMillan, (7) and
McDonald; Smith and carver.
W ·Smith. 4-5; L ·Richards, 8-10.
2B • Mye~ (HI).
Point Loma sweeps Vanguard
COSTA MESA -Samuel
Baeder and Adam Steckler
each had three hits in Satur·
day's baseball doubleheader,
but Vanguard Uruversity
couldn't stave off a sweep by
Golden State Athletic Confer·
er'lce visitor Pt. Loma
Nazarene.
Pt. Lomd won the first
game, 9-1. behind d com·
plete-game three-tutter from
Mitch Newell, then took a 6·0
lead en route to a 7-3 second·
game triumph.
Vanguard fell to 6-34. 2-23
in conference, whtle Pt. Loma
improved to 22-17-2, 16-10.
GOlDOI STATE ATM..ETlC
CONffMHCE )
BASEBALL
Glilne 1
PT. l.oMA 9, VANGU•llD 1
Pt. Loma 000 201 204 • 9 12 1
Vanguard 010 000 000 • 1 3 3
Newell and Trelut; Case, Taylor
(8) and <:andelaria, Dodos (3).
W • Newell. L ·case, 1·7.
2B • Vericker (PLN). Santoni (PLN),
Pimentel (PLN), Johnson (PLN).
Glilne 2
PT. l.oMA 7, VANGUARD 3
Pt. Loma 030 030 1 · 7 12 0
Vanguard 000 002 1 • 3 7 2
Leitzke, Van Vessen (7) and
Trelut; Walker, Steele (S) and
Candelaria. W • Leitzke. L • Walker,
2-11 . 2B • Santoni )PLN). Stehle
(PLN), Pimentel (PLN) 2. Johnson
(PLN), Baeder (VU).
USIU blanks Van guard women, 9-0
SAN DLEGO -Vanguard
University women's tennis
player Lindsay Doyal won 6
of 18 singles games to high·
light a 9-0 nonconJerence loss
to bost United States lntema-
tional University Saturday.
NONCONFaE.Na
USIU 9, VANGUARD 0
Sfngles · Maebara def. Doyal,
6-2, 6-4; Toumquist def. Godfrey,
TEN NIS
6-0, 6-0; Whitwell def. Martinez,
6-1, 6-0; Hull def. Speer-Pardee,
6-0, 6-0; Buriu def. Boyd, 6-2. 6-2;
Cohen def. Ferree, 6-2, 6-2.
Doubles · Maebara-Whitwell
def Doyal-Godfrey, 8-2;
Toumquist-Hull def. Martinez·
Ferree, 8-0; Buriu-HamiJton def.
Speer-Pardee-Boyd, 8-2.
Records are· meant to be broken
• • Participants set new bench· YOUTH TUCI lllD FIELD marks at youth track and field
championships at Newport. In Division 90, Michael Andraszecylk
had new re<:ords in the .COO (1 :08.3) and
800 (2:35.7). Carla Valdes, who won the
200, set a new benchmark in the 100
(1.C.04).
In Division 90, Sarah Toberty set a
new mark in the 800 (2:46.4), and Noelle
Esques had an 89-Q in the softball.
Josephloo
DAILY PILOT
Nina Conrad won the Division 89's
400 with a new record time of1:10.2.
NEWPORT BEACH -Several meet
records fell in Friday's Youth 1Tack and
Field Championship at Newport Harbor
High Friday. The meet attracted some of
the top athletes age 7-ts· from Costa
Mesa, Newport Beach and Crvine. ·
In Division 92, Brian Ford had a
record in the 100 (16.6). Andrew Roth
launched a softball 9"-2. Justin Croeson
ran a 42.2 in Divisi9n 91 200, another all-
time high. Nathan Eon also set a new
mark in Division 93 softball (84-0).
Jackie Dion won three Division 92
events, with new re<:ords in the 200 :
(35.56) and long jump (11 ·4). Mikia Nye-:
Bron and Angelique Placas both broke ~
the old Division 93 record in the' long "
jump. Bye-Bron had a big leap of 8-10, ~
and Placas had a 7-9. ' ~ In boys meets, Brian Campgs rewrote
marks in Division 85's 100-meter dash
(12.97) and the softball throw (195-4).
Michael Haddan had two Division 86
records in the 400 (59.5) and 1,600
(5:05.7).
nevor Theriot (33-4 in Division 86)
and Eric Seagandollar (24-8 in Divis1911
87). won the two shot put contests.
In the girls meet, Michelle Allred bad
a pair of records in Division 88 with a
14.6 in the 100 and 31.14 in the 200.
Irvine Cougars dub track squad sent :
a contingent and did well. Orange Coast •
United girls soccer dub had a 1,600 relay :
team in lhe Division 85 400 relay and :
turned in a 59.09. ;
YOUTH TRACK AND FIELD SUMMARIES
Yount TRACK Mm FE.D .-ET
(ft ... wport IWt.or, fftdey)
90YS
Divllionas
100 • 1. campos. 12.97. Soft • 1.
Campos, 195-4.
Dlvtslon8'
100 • 1. Taylor, 13.26; 2. Hanson.
14.56. 400· 1. Haddan, 59.5; 2. Artz.
1:00.4; 3. Hufstader, 1:07.3. 1.600 •
1. Haddan, 5:05.7; 2. Artz, 5:14.0.
Soft • 1. Allred, 168-0; 2. T. The<iot.
140-0. SP • 1. T. Theriot 33·9; 2.
Haddan, 33·3.
DMsionl7
100 • 1. Williams, 14.0; 2. Contr·
eras, 15.3; 3. Laura, 15.6. 200 • 1.
Williams. 29.3. 400 · 1. R. Self,
1:07.7; 2. cantreras, 1:10.0; 3. St.
Andre, 1:10.7. 1,600 • 1. R. Self,
5:43; 2. Par!(. 5:48.33; St. Andre,
6: 18.3. Soft • 1. SP • 1. E. Seagandol·
lar. 24-8; 2. Calcagne, 24-7; 3. Cisft,
24-7. HJ · t. R. Self, 4-8.
Dfvtslonll
100 • 1. Lewis, 13.8; 2. Calcagnlt.
14.6; 3. Manorino, 14.7. 200 • 1.
Lewis. 29.2; 2. Chandy, 29.3; 3.
anorlno. 33.0. 400 • 1. Chandy,
1:14.47; 2. Watson. 1:17.2; Koon,
1:40.3. 800 • 1. Dietrich. 2:46.3; 2.
Turner, 2:57.4; 3. C. Guy. 2:58.2. U •
1. McPherson, 11-10; 2. Buysha, 11·
3; 3. A. Seagandollar, 10-7. Soft · 1.
Koon, 149; 2. Taylor, 147-8; 3. E.
Seagandollar, 129-6. HJ · 1. Watson,
4-6; 2. C,alcagne. 4-3; 3. Dietrich, 4-
3.
DMsion 19
100 • 1. Ford. 15.8; 2. Braga, 16.2;
3. Lusk, 17.0. 200 • 1. Ford. 33.7; 2.
Braga, 34.0; 3. Neger, 39.0. 400 • 1.
R. Guy. 1:24.8; 2. Pavlovich. 1:26.S;
3. Kanan. 1:31 . 800 • 1. Pavlovich,
4:07; 2. Davis. 4~37. 400 relay.· 1.
Davis. 1:17.3. U ·McPherson, 11-10;
Buysha, 11·3; A. Seagandollar. 10-7.
Soft · 1. Williams. 158; 2. A. Se•
gandollar, 130; 3. Nelson. 128-6. HJ
• Guy. 3-6; 2. LMngston. 3-6.
0Msion90
100 -1. Valdes, 14.04; 2. Theriot.
16.2; 3: Relchenstein, 17.5. 200 • 1.
Valdes, 29.9; 2. Watson. 32.8; 3.
Theriot. 37.5. 400 • 1. Andraszecylk.
1:08.3; 2. Watson, 1:17.91; 3. A. Seff,
1:17.94. 800 • 1. Andraszecylk,
2:35.7; 2. A. Self, 2:S0.3; 3. Crosson,
3:21.3. 400 relay -1. Valdez,
Ammerman, Andraszecylk. 59.9; 2.
Sorenson. Lusk, Davis, B. Theriot.
1: 11.4; 3, Jackson, Crosson. Crosson.
Reicheflsteln, 1:17.2. U · 1. B. Theri-
ot. 12-0; 2. A. Self, 11·10; 3. Valdez.
11-8. Soft · 1. ammerman. 133-0; 2.
Davis, 124-8; 3. Lisk. 101-0. HJ • 1.
Rekhenstein, 3-5.
DMsion 91
SO . 1. Scott. 8.9; 2. Netzar, 9.5; 3.
SealS, 9.88. 100 • 1. A. Swigart. 16.7;
2. Yeager, 16.8; 3. Greaney, 18.35.
200 -1. Crosson. 42.2. 400 • 1. Yea·
ger. 1:23.1; 2. Crosson, 1:32.0; 3.
Greaney. 1:34.2. U · 1. Yeager, 11-3;
2. A. Swigart. 10-7; 3. Virgil, 9·11 .
Soft • 1. Hogan. 86-1 O; 2. A.
Swigart. 74-0.
DMsion 92
SO · 1. Watson, 9.03; 2. Roth, 9. 19;
3. Neilson. 9.41. 100 · 1. Ford, 16.6;
2. Watson, 18.9; 3. Roth, 19.22. 200
• 1. Ford, 38.8; 2. Sullivan, 44.0. 400
• 1. Taylor, 1 :49.2; 2. I. Seagandollar,
1:55.07. U • 1. Neilson, 9-3; 2. I. Sea..
gandollar, 8-0; 3. Colvin, 7·2. Soft •
1. Roth, 94-2; 2 Taylor. 93·10; 3.
Neilson, 81-10.
Division 9)
SO • 1. Keysha, 9.8; 2. Potter. NT. 3.
J. Swigart. NT. 100 • 1. J. Swigart,
18.4; 2. Pottenn 19.2; 3. Dean, 19.4.
200 • 1. Ukkti • ..a.o. u -1. Keyhea,
8-3; 2. Potter. 8-1; 3. McGinnis. 8-0.
Soft· 1. Eon, 84-0; 2. Keysha. 75-7.
GIRLS
Division 15
200 • 1. Sharon, 28.0. HJ • 1.
McKenna, 4-4.
Division"
100 • 1. Swigert. 13.9; 2. Oayton.
15.25; 3. Sanengo. 15.26. 200 • 1.
Swigert. 28.6.
Division 17
100 . i. Senarat~. 14.2; 2. Fallon.
14.9; 3. A. Mccarthy. 15.7. 200 . 1.
Senarate, 31.7; 2. Fallon. 31.8; 3.
Porter, 32.3. 400 • 1. Kattan. 1:15.8;
2. A McCarthy, 1:17.1; 3. Tolentino,
2:00.0. 1,600 • 1. Kattan, 6:21.14; 2
Hanson. 6:45.4; 3. Tolentino, 7:46.
400 relay • 1. Mccarthy, McCa.rthy,
Hanson. Kattan. 1 :03.3.
DMllonll
100 • 1. Allred, 14.6; 2. Keyea,
15.5; 3. Mueller. 15.56. 200 · 1.
Allred. 31.19; 2. Nelson, 37.32; 3.
Keyhea. 33.11. 800 • 1. Day, 3:03.8;
2. Sauyerstad. 3:31 .8. 400 relay · 1.
Allred, Lynch, Day, Ervin. 1:10.9. U ·
1. Soft· 1. Allred, 140-6; 2. Day, 110-
6; 3. Nelson, 93-6. HJ • 1. Day, 4-0,
Bisch, 3-6. . Division 19
100 • 1. Conrad, 14.S; 2. Bova$h,
15.1; 3. Harrison, 17.5. 200 • 1. Gan-
er. 34.8; 2. Greaney, 35.28. 400 • 1.
Conrad, 1: 10.2; 2. Van Lauven.
1:16.2; 3. Gayner, 1:22.2. 800 • 1.
Van Leuven, 2:49.7; 2. Turner,
3:42.8. 400 relay· 1. Cunninghmam.
Doi. Triter, Dean, 1:11.5; 2. Clayton,
Toman, Plecas, Scmand. 1:14.9. U •
I. Bourasi, 13-0; 2. Conrad, 12·9: 3.
Harrison. 11·5.Soft· 1. Triter, 101-2;
2. Toman, 87·16; 3. Gayner, 85-0.
. Division 90 '
100 • 1. Ydtlng, 16.9; 2. Duncan, •
17 .3; 3. Dietrich, 17 .4. 400 • 1. :
Toberty, 1:16.3; 2. Dietrich, 1.25.7; •
3. Young. 1:27,62. 800 ··1. Toberty, ;
2:46.4; 2. Urata. 3:47.81; 3. Brown, ·
3:55.5. 400 relay · 1. Yong, 1:22.3.
Soft · 1. Esque. 89-0; 2. V. Pleas, 53· •
8. HJ · 1. Sowers, NT. :
Division 91 "
50 • 1. Theriot. 9.12; 2. J.;
McCarthy, 9.53; 3. Ferguson, 10.06. •
100 • 1. Diesen, 17.8; 2. Theriot.!
17.87; 3. Kring, 17.9. 200 · 1. Diesen,"
17.8; 2. C. Theriot, 17.87; 3. Kring, •
17.9. 400 • 1. O'Campo. 1:19.0; 2.;
Kring, 1 :30.3; 3. Carter, 1 :35 3. 400
relay • 1. Jacob, Murdoch, Diesen,
Caiter. 1:20.19; 2. McGinnis. J.
McCarthy, Fergusen, 8lair, 1.21.69.
U • 1. Kring. 9-7; 2. Thenot, 8-8; 3. J.
McCarthy, 8-4. Soft • 1. Diesen, 7 3-0;
2. Jacobs, 53-<>; 3. Theriot 49-5.
Division 92
50 • 1. Sharp, 9.32; 2. Sorenson,
9.34; 3. Weaver, 9.37. 100 · 1.
Rhodes, 17.4; 2. Weaver. 18.7; 3.
Sharp, 20.8. 200 • 1. Dion, 35.56; 2.
Rhodes, 37 .6. 400 • 1. Dion, 1 :23.2S;
2. Rhodes, 1:27.7; 3. Beech, 1:39.09.
400 relay • 1. Beech, J. McCarthy,
Reagan. Weaver, 1 :20.9. U · 1. Dloo,
11-4; 2. Beech, 7-4; 3. Zom, 4-10.
Soft • 1. Sorenson, 46-1 O; 2 Turner.
28-9; 3. Channing. 21 ·7.
Division 93 \
SO • 1. Nye-Bron, 9.7; 2. Braga,
10.6, 3. A. Plecas 10.7 100 • 1. Nye-
Bron, 18.9; 2. Rose-Wright. 19.8; 3.
Braga. 20.9. U • 1. Nye-Bron, 8-10:
2. A. Plecas, 7-9; 3. Rose-Wnght, 5-
6. Soft · 1. A. Plec.», 51-9; 2. Rose-
Wright 39-0.
~···-'':""''
-~~.. .. . . '
.... ~ -·· . . .. . .
. :-··~1~
' · .. ,
-· ........ 4
Dina Cttmadon .. S49S
launediatc BmiaJ .. $99S
(l1ttlwla eA•11>
Pram"IC"'~nc Proerum Avatl.tble for
FUMnl ~ CmNit0na and CMMcJ
•
' .. .. .. . ~ ,. ,.~ , ..
..
~ ....
!I
........................ _..,.. ............. , ...
.... ,..,......._Adllttun ............. """'"" ' It tfttltlH "HI fltltltlCt.
ll•ll•llH t1 flml111lnllt1
....... IMt.cll ... fdtlM .......................... ...........................
It ..... "' _. ll'fllltlCt. ....... .,,.w1sl llitl"
n11 1t•tftft1 wlll 111
,_....., ecn,i Hf tfttttlff· ...... ,.., .......... " ................ o.. ...... . ... ...,.., , ......... , '"
f wttllstt lfttl11Hf le IMt ........................ ..... ........, ......... _ ,.... ...... , .......... ""' ,.. ..... " , ...... , ...... '" .............. oc ....... ... ............
• HOMES OF • • • • • • THE WEEK • • • • ShowcaM • • • • HomM • • Fors.le • • In Our Sat
RMl&t.M•
Supplement I
lMeplay Adi
SWt llt $85.
o.dllne
TYNdey5PM
AllO-.
Open Hou•
Uatlnp Avl.
OMdllne
T'huradlly
5PM
• P1Y9 to AdWrtf M
In the Beet
LOCAL
• AMI Eatllte
Sectton
Cal Tcmy II
LISA
RIVERA •
MN74-4252 • • ANNE • • WILLEY • • • ~..u· • •
--.. . . . • . I
•. . ' .. ." l '. ;.
--4 •,'ft.., 'I: t. . , .... . .. .-' .. ·.:
. . . ..
. . ..........
I
. . . . .
CMtl plNfllftC
OCON VllWI Jllr sa.,
-If 1.J1 -0.-.., C!r!y MMIM117
I , ...... , ...... ,. ... ;
II ...... r;a ..
,• ' I } ~ • • ••
~ ~-. -· ·-· ·• --_ ... -
~ Byfu By ....._ By MaMn Pff80IU
1J111 IH:!-ih-ll \:Ill \\, .. , H.I\ "'10'! I
1·~ •• ..,.m.t1.,1r-. .. u11..t!I• itftjl
1 h.11 .. n 111.t .. r .0~1 ,. 11, .1H ,,~• 1 ... i -..1h"' ,.,.,, , ......
. ' ( .....
r\. : •. -· ~·"'.> •• ' • • ~ ,., • "-!.. . ... . . ~
r·.1 .. 1· • • • '.. '~ . ~
'. ' . . ...
["~· ..... ,.. . ,,
• I I • ~ '
~f•l ••; : I
~ .. : ' . ~
... ~ .-<rT""
In Wtsdll 1~ 3~ 2Ba. lG tnlSlef wllh ttlfMVdln AJ UWadld
Incl wood 1111. v.-cell •
1119. washer & dryer Incl.
$3100rno MM'74-2t11
NiWPOl1 IWllM• 681 home •IJllled <IM. qiiel. pri\'lle,
huge yard, Qlfdlner. wllk
IO tdlOtlll $270MAo Avrl
S/1 Cll 949-631·2798
Ye11ly Rental Iii VIiia
Balboa I Br• den 1.25 Balh. gllltd, W/O, bltlcony,
Frplc. $1400/Mo. Agent
9'9-67S..912
. . . . ft~~
.. V'eu~orl} //~
~~uclnlUIL.\•
S.yfront community
with pnvate tie.ch.& ma11na
Boat slips 1v11leble Laree lanai pool & lush tropical la ndscapma
Walk to Balboa Island &
Bayside Center shops
'hry 5~Ct~S 1BR 28A wlftrtPlt tf ~~ ~•·o ded & p11•ate 1•11~ $20SG-$2600
~.,.,...
t NEWPORT BEACH t OCEANFRONT
Kllcnen pnv., prof'I only M5CllMo. ........ 1 ...
;-r-'-: • #, ... _. ... -_ . = , ' . . " .. . . ' ' . . \ ; . .
. . .
..... •Tl ,..... t"'• .·.-;
WOlhTWIEDI
TWI II hOmel 8uv OlllQ
and Savel Commeldall
Home ll'ts from S19' 00
Low rr.ontty payments
FIW cdof «*llog. Cal
loda~OO·l-42·1310 (CAL
; I ... , .... 'T -
I U•til ,,, .,, , ., tl.!11:!-
\t \, •1•"' Kt,.I lit A.• •1
lloun
I 1 l1 pl1u111 II I0,1111--, IMll'111
\I 1.,.1 ,.L,
\\ JIL-111 a lfl,1111-·, Ollp111 >
\~ i... '"''"''
;}--:'11.t"'-r.1 -.•• ,
~ ,,,. • ' • 4
~. -.,., .· __ · ... -
...... 3 "" neuter9d{ lhott. IS lbt, WllH
hendl $65 714-MCM415
Frte to good t'IOIM • iro
blHd sm d9g wlfl I very
cute dls~tlon Aban·
doned • boenlrel· ken1ll For more lnlo & to Ml pel
pltMe Cll 714-545-9116
-:--.. · .. , :'1
'. •j ' . . ']
--• J.
' . . I .
• .... JI • .. -nn • ............ .
..-.. ·.: ......
-------
I
I
1:1111·ti01\:
UJ1 & ,,~rung shtft.1,
812-~15
Realistic
• K...a.~ r'-i 1: ~ •
•11'1 ~IV
•l':ialo..i•• . i,"""",,."" •11(11
l:......,}ll, ... :1,11111 l'lk!I U\ ( ·~1• \&t.,,,
&! .. ,t.:"•\l'te:
C:.. I •1~•
1~1 3"-t744
.. mu1a ... ...... -. ............ ............ ............ -
. .
.~
~ -.
Polley
R,u,... 1m1l 1l1·111llult', .ut ~,J,Jl'l"l "' rhaner ,,,~11111 1111111 I' Thf
1'1J1l1-l1rr rt'·r~t· 1hr rirl11111 1' ""''· l"l'l'la.-1.h rt'\I•,. or l"'Jfl"I
.tll\ 1'111--1/wo J1hrniSC"mtn1 Plr11·1· rtpon dn\ rrror 1hu1 11111\ hr
111 ·, •IUI , ld--1fitd uil muuedtutt h Thr O.uh 111lu1 .111·1·r•i-"" •
lwf 11lm for all\ trrnr wan Jth tnt•• 111~111 (i,r t. lu1 h 11 111.t1 IW"
l'l'•f•t1lL·ihlr l'\1 tpl for 1bt' ni-1 uf 1lw j'J' .. 11• tualh '" • up1C'fl h1
1hl' rrr11r ( .n·1h1 1 .in onh l•1 o11f11t. nl for 1b .. £1.r-1 u1"'nt1111
---------Deadlines ------
Monda~ ............ Frida~ 5:00pm Thur-.dJ1 .. ~eJne..da~ S:OOpm
Tue .. da~ ........ \tonda} 5:00pm Fnda~ .. . Thun.da1 S:OOpm
\\t>dnesda~ ... rue,,da~ 5:00pm aturday .......... .Fnda~ 5:00pm
--------
.............. ............ .............. ........ ............. .......... .....
. .
J •
•
I
,
TODAY'S,
CROSS.WORD ~UZZLE
TAXES
TAX le ACCOUl'lTINC
P'loFESSIONALS EJecu..ic •
wldl ra ,....,..,-•
...... ,.,"" ... IW.
<All NOii l·'"'
, . .. ... ......... l ••
.. ~ --. ~
'
I
Everyday is a great day
in Classified!
Be a part of it,
place your ad tod~yt
642·5678
. --
:YT.... .,,. T.·· ..
----
. -.
--.
llli.PPIAUX8
ICUllll
for Doora, French
Doors & Windows.
Invisible when not In
UH. High Quality
European Design.
F!M&timate.
lpedllly~
......7411 __,..._.,_
~
I
I
.. . '
I
I
.......... =..,......, dllOlll 4 ....... ,.. ii!-.!! VlltV~ .a md!CO,. ........ ua""' ... . 11=L.Am~ lolllllll.*'lOOlld.lwOln I001 ............ . _ 13U CIO. 71M3Mtl1 or IQtD. 11MIMlll
r .. ... -· . · l r.l i"' · '"'T • • T;•
ANSWERS TO WEEKLY Bfl!l>Gl QUIZ ~~::== .. ~·:...~ ... .,...,'° ......... ., ...... • • W ClrlM Pl'ta GT
.,......, M, ._. -/ll/lttJdtMl'dl llDOd cond. II Sedll1 ... S,000 1'11111, _.... ........ ,..., ...... -............ -= .... lloc* Q 1 • As Soulh. wlncrable. you bold:
value. 1llc Ian raise is our ck::ar
choece LMID~ nN S4000~1411 ...... 512-6124140
• 73 17 VaW o AJ7 6 •A I. Q J fl l Q 4 • Neither wlncnble, as Soulh -i •EWRIW s1 10 11up1, gold p1C11a91. ttJYOfl &nlil DI '8 v• -,,_ ILi 't7. fqil;-1* """' ..... The biddln1 has orocccded: SOtTl1I WES't NOmt 16 ,_ I•
' Whal do you bid now?
IA · Uyou play lhal 11revcN bid Is
Con:UIJ. you we i• clover. Sllf\ by revena., llMO twq diamoftds. then
jump in .clubs ndt. U YO!J do not. you lf'C UI 11'1 l~wanf situlllOll.
Tlne clubs is) poss undtrt>id, and ~ IUCUOll ~ aet OU( of concrol
1f you Jump to llwec diamonds. We would~ for 6ve clubs -~ mist-be able to judse wtllll 1s nshl.
secure in the knowledge that ll\lmps
an solid.
Q l • Neither vulnerable, as South
you hold:
• 62 o 108'5 o 5 • KQ91ll
TIIC biddin2 has oroccc:ded: NORTH tAS'I' SOUfH WEST
4• so ! Whal actlon do you take?
A • Partner has ~mpccd and you
have very liulc an the way of
defense Indeed. from~ poin1 of
view the opponen!S could even have
a arand slam. For the moment, do
not help them get 10 slam by rai in&
sp;idcs. Pm.
Q J • As South. vulnerable:, you
hold:
• 108 o 1065 o AQJ 4 •AQYS
The bidding has orocecdcd: soum w~-r NORTH
10 r-117 .,
What do you bid now?
A • Only two bids come into consld·
crauon -two clubs or two hearts. The firM !JCS about your d1SU1buuon
and you would like 31104hcr hcan for
the second. However. you do have
three-card support for panner. even
lh<J:U&h not very robu.~1. and 3 ruffing
}'OU hold· .......... 11 ~· mini C411d. ,..,, •• dMfl. l.mdHI
•6 1tlt4 o 6S4 o 7 •Qlll7l ~L~1~.._ I · MHn-ltG. (~~ lto,411 .. .. ..... ,_ Utliili -iJie .... ...,.. VIEJO ,.., IPOler ...... ~ ......,,.. ..... ...
Panntr opens the biddina with one _ • .. ,. ~ 11=1.Ne~ Ml ..... ~· IUn .......
d• __ ., •Lit.-do -i? r::i.i"-...... _.., T ...... Lllld 0.-W ... ~laJlpldl
-.114.IOO. 71 ...... tOOI
Eld 211. wnvnu .... ,.., you ru.,.,.-... llldng 1111,111151 LOldM. ,,.,, .,. ...
1M1 AM; It atio. 14H44-5414 vtn-.-11 A -Slncc: the sinalelon in panner's ...,.. "°"' u ......, fllUN Al1lll Clli Ill ~ llOVIR SUit IS a liability. not .,, asset. a two--.... VIII VA114111 ....... • .....
club responR, followed by l\VO .. ~~~. :OJ::"o!;*',.t ;;:'· t• HO tt•
YOCVd "6 U d W .... ..,
IMB.IAGUM
SJ)ldes, bu1ely oven1a1es the wonh -(11'0nl) -_., of your hand. Simply bKI OM spide L.Dld _.,.. vi:i'C)' ~ = C:W .= n••-VW IUG '18 ............... now. !Ml AM; It ..... *4 VIII W.*8111
Q 5 • Ne1~ vulnerable. as South
you hold.
......... Uloedld, IM-LMID~ Ct.?_ YJVXo .._ CU8811'1SD ....,.,. -.... .. AMM11 ...... .,. • ....... .
S700orlillldllr •m.Ma -=:r P.nncr opens !he bidd1n1 wuh one LdW b i60 '00
club. What do yoo respond? ~.....,
AITENTION!
ALL PET OWNERS!
~. Tius is a mallet of Slyle. If rou pl:iy !hat a jump 10 lhrce clubs 11
forcing. you are lucky -that aeu the
hand OJr your chcsl 111 once. ff you
play inverted minor-suit raises,
where 1wo clubs is forciqJ, that is
equally errecuvc. But if you pLty limn nuses and have no forcing bid
in clubs available, you have ro ~pond one diamond and Jump 1n
club. next -and hope the b1dd1ng
Sta)'1 on tr.1elt.
Q 6 • Bolh vulnerable, as South you
hold.
<c::J....,..~ .........
lD\JI b 166 'W Loedtd. llv, lllVOCll, cd (°'mt) U7,471
Lout --VIEJO ........
Tueld•y, APRIL 28TH
Mi~
WE LOVE OUR PETI Pl\Gll
T1'is page is desipcl to "'
JOU the opportillitr to ..
LbOILld'U
1111 1111,........,.,loedld,
• K Q 10 s 0 AK IU 0 Q 65 • A 9 I CD, ' OWl'!f..i._!1~.J!!I llove my Francia bec:.uae lhe ts 114-tla.....,, .. ,_ vety sweet and gentle
off your pet and tell whJ ther
Partner opens the bidding with one ldUI LXUO 'i1 Md lov.a me too ...
no trump. Wlull do you respond? ~-=-= 11111.__ .. _1_ong_u_1.teec:t.-ii"'her-•on"'""tl,.m.•.I .. IN SO special to JOU!
A. You have the values to jump 10 six no trump. but the hand could
play bcuer an a sun contrlCI should
panncr hold four cards 111 either
maJor. C1ltd. by cmployfng the
'S1.1yman ConvenllOn 'T btd two clubs and then commit to slam 1n
cuber the map or no trump,
depending on wh3l panner responds
to your inquiry.
ae;::~~R ere ow, It works: _, Fiii ou1 the fonn below. EncloM 1 pk;ture of yoor pet (Include
•• leo-1441 name of P91) along with one or two Mll1enc• telling us why you ldUI 0070 'R love them, a $25.00 cn.c:At made payable to the
LoedM. ~· ""* Dai"' Pilot (or credit clld numbef) then m.it to: _, Vin W00744f7 '7
111,• LAND M>VER Classified Depettmen1 •
....... ...., 330 w. Bay St.
ltl llN445 Costa ~ Ca 92627 lDUi iC 4CIO 'ii F~ apec, oriy 4711 mill If It Is more convenient for your feel free to drop by our office. W1
(OGOO) $27.117 will design WI lld as shown above for your pet and publl9tt It
Wld lllllOft VIEJO on our apeclal ~! ' /
... ..._. DEADUNI: APRll. 20TH,lePM UNCOCN TOWN clA 'Ii I
. ~ ·~ . . . . ,'"'' ~· .~:·.··~ ~ ·-. . . . ~ ... ,.... ' '. ' l' I I
Jull tradld-ln, loadtd .,,,
Uluty. Hard 10 Finell
(70S20I) 117,llO
AU. PHOTOS WIU. H RETURNED TO THE ADOAUS YOU PftCMOI HLOW •
• .. .. ·. ,, .. "" , ,,, '.. .
----
• .-• • ' I • ,
.. : . ;
CLA8811'1•D ...... .,.
Interior Deaign
F'" Cottn1/1A1l1,,
IBJ
Dff•ir•th14 s,,., .. ., Pl•nn1111
F •n1t Shu1 C""•"ltant
(9•l9) 759-8118
..:,;_ ... : .. 1 '
"";· ...... : -~
PUBLIC
NOTICE
The c.11. Putllr>
Utlllllu Com-
milllon AEOUIAES "* .. l..cl l'ICU9-hold goodl mcMfl er1n1 tlllr P.U.C.
Cll T IUftber: llmoe Ind er.-. ,,..,.
tlllr T.C.P. fUftlllf
11\llldt ......... . ''°" .... .... Ian ..... ...
lty ol • '"°"'• ho =-~ CO•H ION
71 ..... 111
I
Wld MISllOH VIEJO ........
--------
·-· --
---
,. -..:-
Pet'• Nlime: _____ Tiii UI wtiy YCMI love ttiem·------
Addreff for mum of photo:
sv.ee: __ ~-~~~~~---'t=---~~~-~-
City: _____________ Zip Code----
n you wf•tl to pey by credit card:
(Cttlal QM) • VII.& MASTER CAAO--AMl!AICAN EXPAESS-DISOOVER.__
C.nl Number: __________ Ellplratlon·----
.......,,. of<:enlholdet. ---..---------------------
•.W..".., .........
"" l.OCATINO IUC11tONC llM WU( OIY1CTION
MetMly lervlc•
675·9304
ON THE
MOVEl
Sell your extn
homchokl
items in
~IFIED!
642-~78 -Bb
... , . ·-
.. •• • I •
' • • t