HomeMy WebLinkAbout2000-05-02 - Orange Coast Pilot1
It's ollldal. 1be alxtb
annual TOlblba Senior
a..k:wattbe
111'111-ever Senior PGA
Tour event to break
tbe St-mWlon plateau
in cbutty eamlng'I.
See Sports, Page 7.
SERVING THE NEWPORT -MESA ~OMMUNmES SINCE 1907 ON TH' ~B: WWW.DAILYPILOT.COM TUESDAY, tM.fi, 2000
. .
. NeWPort Eleni¢ntary ·
students -get new. look
• New b'lue, white and . kh.aki "pants, shorts, s kirts and on the guidelines for the •
khaki dress standard shirts; One style ~ves Q:le option of and the waiver process to distrib-• · weanng a Hawauan pnnt. ute before the close of the school
approved by parents. ·1-think a lot of the parents ·year, Knutsen said. ·
showed a concern because of our Just as parents' .feelings are
location on the beach,• said Vu-mixed on the issue, so are the
ginia Osadche, the parent vo1un-pupils'. Even among the 10 chil-
teer who organized the uniform dren who have been modeling the
vote. ~our kids are mixed with the possible outfits for students and
public with our playground on the parents the re. is disagre~ment.
Danette Goulet·
DAILY PILOT '
. NEWPORT BEACH -Parents
voted last week that students at
Newport Elementary School
• · should sport new uniforms when
th~y return to campus in the fall.
beach. So to be able to clearly see . ~!don't like them. I hate them, I
them is important.· hate them , I hale them,~ said Tay-·
· With. a 74 % turnout or parent lor Stevenson, 10 ..
voters, 7 1 % of those parents . "How .. are we going to p1<!Y socc:er
favored the dress code, said Prine!-1!1 these? asked Spencer Barratto.
pal Denise ~utsen. Several of 1:J1e girls, however,
• BRIAN POBUDA I OAJLY PILOT
An overwhelming majority of
parents belie~ed the new dress stan-
dard dictating the color and style of
students' clothes was for the best.
· For the next school year, the
students will have the option of
wearing various blue, white or
Parents still have the option of thought the uniforms were a mar-
waiving the uniform policy for velous Idea
their children. A team of parents,
students ai:id staff will Qe working SEE DRESS PAGE 5.
Newport Elementary School stude nts, from left, Rebec.ca Slater, Kather-
ine Sanders and Zack ~sandche, model outfits from the school's n~wly
approved dress standar~. · ·
• " DON LEACH I DAILY PILOT
A bodysurfer rides the foam at The Wedge on ~first day of Black Ball season, in which all fioatation devices are
banned from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. , ..
.·
Snperviso
discuss
El Tor~ ,plan
..,..,_ . l ...
• i ne county co'fld move forward with
plans for airp?rt or pursue another project.
Noaki Sc.hwartz
DAILY PILOT
Nf WPORT BEACH -Heanng the increa mgly
loud \ 01c;c .of opposition to an airport al the former
El Toro ~anne Corps air base, the Ordngc> County
Board of SuperviSors on Wednesday will rons1der
other u¥es for the site.
•At present, there sPertrlo be threc> Q<1s1c alter-
nabves faongthe board (regarding the s1tet. • said
county spokeswoman Diane Thomas. adding that
. the bodrd could continue pursumg the airport,
. \ choose an enb.rely cWferent use. or change its std·
tus as the Local Redevelopment Agency. · •
Those possibilibes wtll be expdndPd mto seven
detdiJed opbons by presenters, 10clud111g county
CEO ~dfl Mi ttermeier, who will walk th£• bodrd
through t'!ach avenue.
J SEE EL TORO PAGE 5 ·
It's that time of year again when board riders gel
. the heave-ho from 10 a .in. to 5 p.m. at The Wedge ·-.Waving
, AlexCoolm•n them· off
Police searching
for suspects, motive
· in bird killings
•Two geese and three ducks were
shot and killed in a pellet gun attack
at TeWinkle Memorial Park. DAILY PILOT
L ucPeeney
and Chris Bonna were scampering happily toward the
water at The Wedge on Monday, bodyboards shoved
under their arms.
But the Huntington Beach residents hadn't even reached
the water's ,!?dge before the bopmlng voice of a bodysurfer
arrested their progress.
_ •Hey,";yelled the man in the water. "Black BallJ"
The bodysurfer pointed an authoritative Unger dq,wn the ~
' 'beach, directing Peeney ar'Rt Bonna to pumre-theil-bOdy-
boarding elsewhe re.
Welcome to summer in Balboa.
The Black Ball fiag, wluch prolub1ts the .. ·
use of flotation devices from 10 a.m. to 5
p.m., officially returned to The Wedge on Monday and will
stay in effect through Oct. 31, delighting the hard-core
bodysurfers who frequent the crunching shorebreak.
Peeney was somewhat less enthusiastic. ·
•1 don't think it's fair,# he said. He was concerned that !he ..
fair-shaped, 2-to 4-foot surf might not t;>e quite as tempting
later in the altemoon, after the changes or tide and wind.
SEE WEDGE PAGE 5
Sue Doyle
DAILY PILOT
COSTA J\.1ESA -Slugs from d p<>llet gun we;c>
de tected M9nday in X-rayc; ol d cluck that was
killed atTeWink.Je Memonal Pdrk
The duck survived the hoollrtq for a bnt•f time.
but died Sunday night at All Cr£>dlurc Care Cot·
tage, an animal hospital m Costa Me~. Four olher
birds were found dead at the park.
SEE BIRDS PAGE 5
Choosing iS a challeilge llDll
ClGIDS -·---····--.. ·---' .
• High school senior:_Nik.ko Gallardo must
decide between going out of state.for college
or staying close to home. ,,
~U.Goul•t
MY PILOT
COSTA MESA With
lea than a week to make up
her mind, high ICbool Mllior
Nikko Gallardo hu yet to
choolle a collage.
lt'smmc:blimetarwdor'I
wbo are maldng tbe huge
life ded8on of ~ to, p
to M:liiOOl. ud 11-jMr-old
Gdll'do ti DO nc .... ........... a..
port Harbor High School"
that tbe community has
watched for the past four
yeen. Now, as she prepares
to gr4duate, the question on
everyone'• mind -includ-
ing her'• -it where will she
gonutyeer.
Wbile IDOlt univentties
need • dedDon by the ftnt
wMk ol May, Gallardo Al IUll
ad8dr •=.;.1he prOI .... '*II ;;1 •• y of
~.ad cal State ..,.. .
•J have to decide m the
next week,• Gallardo said.
·1 think I'm lMJling more
toward Long Beach because
It .would be cheaper and
more realistic."
Although her mother,
StJ!phanie Bland. is leaving
the choice eQtirely up to her
daughter, abe bope1 Gallar:.
do (ollowl that instinct.
•I let her make her own
dedllon -I stayed out of
It," Bland Mkl. • Penonally, L
prefer .... etay tn the state of
Callfomia."
She Would ... ...,
da\llh• terribly, but
........ l8glcal mind fu·
.._.oetllewoba•de
MMC MMTlt 10..V N.OT a-at ....... Nlldat Giii ............. .
lawy9I' llliMI II c:M a•1 a llillwww•t to ... ._--. .
....
1111 ... u , •111msut
••dtaagbM'•. 158.000 or •M1111-..:·~•-f-.·•MMir•-~-·1 muldD'........ ...... ·Not ...... waiuld... • ... ;1 ............ ..., tD ..... -0*'*""1 . __. .. _... • ......,,....
out ...... .,..,. -Sii ca.LIGIM91 I
·.
•
J
·.
...
lt'I olftdal. The sixth.
annual Toshiba Senior
Clauic was the
. lint-ever Senior PGA
· ........-'J'oor event.to break.·.
the St-mllllon ~lateau
In cbartty earnings.
See ~ports, Page 7.
SERVING THE NEWPORT -ME.SA co1'AMuNmEs SINCE 1907 ON 1HE WEB: WWW.DAILYPILOT.COM TUESDAY, />MY, 2, 2000
)_
. ..
Ne.wP.Ort ~1em.eritaiy ..
stlidents get ·new look
• New blue , white arid
khaki clress standard
approved by parents.
'· ltl1aki pants, shorts, skirts and·
Dal')ett• Goulet
DAILY PILOT .
NEWPORT BEACH -Parents
voted last week that students at
Newport Elementary School
should sport new uniforins when
they return to campus in the fall.
An overw.llelming majority of
parents believed the 'hew dress stan-
dard dictating the color and styl.e of
students' clothes was fo r the best.
For the next school· year, the .
students will have the option -0f
wearing various blue, white or
· shirts. One style gives the option of
wearing a I-fawailan print.
"l think a lot of the parents
showed a concern because of our
location on the t?each," said Vrr-
ginia Osadche, the parent volun-
teer who organized the uniform
vote. •Our kids are mixed with the
public with our playground on tb.e·
beach. So to be able to clearly see
them is important."
With a 74% turnout of parent
voter)), 71 % of those parents
favored the dress code, said Princi-
pal Denise Knutsen.
Parents still have the option of
waiving the .uniform policy for
their children. A team of parents,
students and staff will be working
on the guid'elines for the uniforms
and the waiver process to distrib-
ute before the close of the school
year, Knutsen said.
Just as parents' feelings are
mixed on the issue, so are the
pupils'. Even among the 10 chil-
dren who have been modeling the
possible outfits for students and·
parents there is disagreement.
"l don't like them. I hate them, I
hate them, I hate the.m," said Tay-
lor Steyenson, 10.
. "How are we going to play soccer
in these?" asked Spencer Barratto.
,. Several of the gfrls, however,
thought t'he unifonns wete a mar-
velous idea. • .r
SEE DRESS PAGE 5·
BRIAN POSUDA I DAILY PILOT
Newport Eleme ntary School students, fr.om left, Rebecca Slater, Kather-
ine Sanders an(l Zack Osandche, model outfits from the school's newly
approved dres~ standard.
Supervisors
____,_tQ discuss _____ ___
El Toro pla1f
•The county could move forward with
. plans for airport o~ pursue another project.
Noaki Schwartz
b AILV PtLOT
,,
Nf~PORT BEACH -Hearing, the increasmgly
loud \Oi a of opposition· to an 'ai.rpatt al' the former
El Toro Mctrine Corps air base, the Orange Cotinty
Board of Supervisors on Wednesday Will consider
other uses for the site.
"Af present, tl)ere seem to be !hree basic alter-
ndtives facing the board lreg(J.rding the sHe)." srud
county spokesw-0man Diane Thomas. addi.J'Jg that
the bo<Hd could continue pursuing the airport,
choose an entirely different use, or change its sta-
tus as the Local Redevelopment Agency.
Those possibilities will be expanded .into seven
detailed opllons by presenter§. iyduding county
CEO Jan Mitterrneier, who will walk the board
through each av~nue.
SE'E EL TORO PAGE 5
DON LEACH I DAILY PIL()T"--
A bodysurfer rides the foam at The Wedge on the first d,ay of Black Ball season, in which all floatation devices are
banned from 10 ~.m. to 5 p.m. -'I-
boarding elsewhere. ..__
Welcome to summer in Balboa.
The Black Ball Oa.g,, which prohibil:s the
T It. la Vl. ·n· g .. -It's that time of year again Wh?n board riders get JI J' { · th e. heave-ho from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. at The Wedge
~!;,~~hn·n · them 0 ff
Luc Peeney · · use of flotation devices from 1Q a.m. t9 5
and Chris Bonna were scam~g happily toward the p.m., oft:icially returned to The Wedge on Monday and wUl
·Water at The Wedge on Monday, bodyboardS shoved stay in effect through Oct. 31, delighting the ~ard-core .
under their arms. . . bodysuners who frequent the crunchir).g shorebreak.
I' •• I .
Police searching
'(or suSpects; motive
in bird killings
• T~ qeese and three ducks were ·
shot and killed in a pellet gun attack
. at TeWi.rik.le· Memoridl Park. . ·
)
Sue Doyle
DAILY PILOT
COSTA MESA -Slugs from a pellet gun were
detected Monday in X-rays of a duck that was
killed at TeW.i.nkle Memorial Park. But the Huntington Beach resideflts hadn't even reached Peeney was s9mewhat Jess enthusiastic.
the water's edge before the booming voJce of a ~odysurfer "I don't t1fink it's fair," he said. He was concerned that the
arrested their progress. faiJ:-shaped, 2-td 4-foot surf might not l5e quite as tempting
The duck survived the shooting for a brief time,
but dled Sundcw nigtit at All Creatures Care Cot-
tage, an animal hospital in Costa Mesa. Four other
bird~ were fqund dead at the park. "Hey," yelled the man in the water. •stack Ball!" , .. later in the afternoon, after the changes of tide and wind.
The bodysu.rler pointed an authoritative finger down the '
beach, directing Peeney and Bonna to pursue their body-/i.
l
. )
Choosing is a :challenge
I ·I l
1 • High school senior Nikko Gallardo must "I have to decide in the
next week,• Gallardo said.
"I think I'm leaning more
toward Long Beach because
decide between going out of sta,te for college
or staying close to home. it · woulCI be cheaper and
DwU.Goulet
OMV Pll.OT
COSTA MESA -Wlth
1-tban a week to make up
bar mind. high 1Chool 18Dior
Nikko Gallardo hu yet to
cbooee • college.
It's aundl time for l8lllon
wbo are melrtng tbe huge
llfect.c:l8aaofW-.togo
to.moaltmdl~
Gdlldo • -aceptloa ............ Qui
of 2000 .. , .. flmi MMr·
port Harbor High School · more realistic.• .
that • the community bas Although her mother,
watched for the past four •Stephanie Blend, is leaving
yeaJl ... Now, as she greperes the choice enti.rely up to her
to graduate, the quettion on daughter, she hopes Gallar-
everyone's mind -lncl\lfi· do follows that instinct.
iDg her's -is where will she • 1 let her make her own
go next year. • dedslon -I stayed out of
While IDOlt univenities it,• Bland Mid. ~Penonally, I
need a decilion ~ the fint prefer 1be lf.ay in the state of
w98k of May, Gallardo ii still califomia. • · .
almly weighing the pro1 She wouid lnlla her
ad CODI of tbe'Unlventty of daughter terttbly, but
Mlcblga Del Cal State Blad'I loglcal mind .. fu-
Laag IMdL ..... OD the ..... oblt8de
SEE WEDGE PAGE 5
• MMC ,_.,..111M.Y flOf a-ol 2118 lllilloir Nlldso Gldllldo ......... . ...,..~ .............. , ......... '
..
..
l50,QOO or ••· • llkl. ·Not--lt ........
•Gl.l.laM9'1
SEE BIRDS PAGE 5
llDEI
~ ........ -................ -..... .
CDMMIMTY FOIUM •...• ---.. --.. 6
P\ll.IC llJ11CES ........ ---.. ·--··
SPOl1S ··---.. ·-···--......... _ .. _, ....
. .
~ma mt IN tum rtdl •• ..........
.. . ..
2 Tuesday, /.Aoy 2, 2000
Kids Talk
BACK. • Would you like
your teacher
to tutor you
·at home?
We asked fourth-and fi/tll-
graders at Rea Elementary
School in Costa Mesa what
lhey thought about a pro-
posed after-school program
that would allow their teacher
to tutor them at home.
"It would be
good
because you
feel better
at home .
And mdybe
yQur parents
would be
able to help, ____ ___._
loo. 1 think
my tcdcher could help me bet-
ter WJth long division. My par-
ents went to school in Mexico
and I think they do long divi-
slon clilferently there."
'LAU~JERRJQUEZ. 10
urth-grader
· Mesa
"I would
like it
because
you would
be more
comfort-
able with
your. teach-
ers and
your par-
ents. Spelling is my toughest
subject. It would be good if
my teacher could be there to
help me after school."
ALFREDO SORIANO, 11
Fifth-grader
Costa Mesa
"I would
like the pro·
gram
because 1t
sounds
interesting.
My parents
are from El
Salvador. I
think a
teacher could help me with
word problems in math. l
think that-I would do better.
But 1 don't know if it would be
OK with my .ef:Uents:~
WALTER CARCAMO, 10
Fourth-grader
Costa Mesa
·1 think it's
a good idea
because
your
teacher can
learn more
about your
family and
yourself.
They would
also be able to help you with
your h~work so that you
don't have to come to class the
next day and be bored because
, you don't know what's going
on. My hardest subject ls find-
, ing the percentage and drcwn·
• ference of circles." -
NIKKI VEGA, 1-1
Fifth-grader
Costa Mesa
VOL 94, N0.104
B . :; •••
Looking through
luggage may help
Newport-Mesa
seventh-graders write
creatively
Danette Goulet
DAILY PILOT
S tudents rwnmaged through
mysterious bags of luggage,
scrutinizing the contents and
concocting wild stories abeut who
the owner might be.
It sounds reminiscent of my child-
hood secret agent adventures, except
these youngsters did not have to fear
being caught
They were
doing a charac-
ter sketch
assignment in
Sean Boulton's
seventh-grade
English class,
learning to write
creative essays
off the.cuff.
It is a skill
students will
need for a test
they'll take
Thursday, when
they will be giv-
en a writing
prompt of some
kind and expect-
ed to create an.
essay. Boulton
used props dur-
FYI
•Who:
Seventh-grade .
students •
• Where: Sean
Boulton's
English class
at Ensign
Intermediate
School
• wtu.t:
Writing an
impromptu
character
sketch
• l..eslon: How
to take a writ-'
ing prompt and
run with it
ing the exercise to stimulate the stu·
dents' interest and creative ideas.
•There's so many visual things to
~out there,· he said
·And these test books -they bate.•
In conqast. the students happily
delved into the suit~ filled w\th
strange objects.
The assignment: Pretend Boulton
stole the baggage off a carousel at
John Wayne Airport -which be did
mention would have been illegal.
Each of the five rows of boys and
girls bad its o~ case to examine.
•
,
Whlafif · ·~n Le • C 1e -111 WEEK Bn\46e armng en r
• Orpn'11tlon: Bridge L.Hmlng
Center for Homelell Children. IC-12, at
the Or1nge COlst lnterl1ith Shetter in
COltl Mesi
• CGllt8d: t-tow.rd Levin, executive
director. (949) 4~1
• N11•: Children's story books of all
ages
• Wllh: Volunteer mentors, as.slgned to
.IN ·THE CLASSROOM
l(hlldren In vansitlonal living center.
Volunteers spend time with children
~lking about self-esteem and social
Issues. how to get along with other
people in school. how to handle ~unt
ing, and leam 1bout living wfth the
stigma of being homeless. Volunteers
needed weekends, nights and week-
days after school
Daily Pilot
• \ : : I
··g , ~haracter§
The five bags contained totally
different objects -cowboy boots,
Ping-Pong paddies, suitcoats,
books -intended to make stu-
dents wonder.
-.._ ME01HA FEJlAGIC DIMARTINO I DAll'il Pit.OT
Ensign Intermediate School teacher Sean Boulton, center, leads his seventh-grade dass through an
assignment intended tQ teach students about creattve wrlUng.
Since I had plopped down in Row
2, I joined the students as they
peered .into a ratty, gi:ay duffel bag.
· out came a nurse's uniform, a dress,
a Walkman, a ~sport -that was a
big due. Nexf came a couple of
bookS ahd a Nurse Week newsletter ,
-which was a tad obvious.
ied the types of bookS that our
"nurse• read.
before her-hlggage was stolen, they
concludect because as a missionary
rrurse wno travels all over the
They looked for clues about the
owner: a physical description, per-
sonality traits, occupation, where
this person may have been going or
coming from, even thoughts and
emotions. / ,...
There was no makeup~
was a self-confident woiiian. Thomas-.
concluded.
-world, she rarely got the chance to
see her family.
From these items, the group
began drawi,ng conclusions.
Student Thra Gallegos tr~bed
information from the passport while
her classmate Thomas Folsom stud-
And on it went for baU an hour,
until the students returned to their
seats, ready to slw'e their characters
with jhe cla.SS.
,
• 1111 THE a.A55ROOM is a WMkly fMture In
whidr Daily pijot education writer.Denette
Goulet visits a campus within the Newport-
Mesa Unified School District and writes
about her experience. As four sets of bands reached' m, Our traveler was sad even
~ entrW Nd> tMy ff
*'"d. ,,,. ~ •'9d.Pl ..... Md,,..,,..,,., • ..-:( _.,..,,"'hot.,,.,.,
lODAY
ribO-que on • tul; OoW'I ~
poUeDe wtth ~ d10klt of
fruit; dtoiot of ....
THURSDAY
~--~Ott ..,.. ..., dlJpert; allp ~
ulad wftt'l iow-fat dlllllll9 ......
• 0-*s .. not .. wpllld fbr
Im .,..,, $71.50
~ Lunch 511.t wl'lh ~ fruit yogurt 01 -plu.a
blgll; o1lp ~ Miid wtth low
flt dlalng; choice --et fruit;
chalmofmllt
beUd dims roll; '°'"' fiult Julm bw; d10klt of... •
WB*UDAY ..... ltally lundm .. $f.7J FRIDAY
• ~ .. ,,,,.. """" dtolaa ~ ..... ,,.... .... Muncheb6e Lunch SllMI or
Munchlble Lund'I .... (II _, ,..... with ftiddld ...
. .
Of~ herein c.n be
reproduc9d wtthout writtef'I J*· ml.ion of copyright owner.
HOW to REACH us
CJrmMdon
The Times Orenge County
(IOO) 252-fU 1 .-. .....
a..tfted ("'9) 642-5671 =.r-642-4121
News (Ml) 642-5680
Spofts (949) 574-4223
News. Spor1I , .. (Ml) 64M170
E-mell:~com
Mllftotlb ·--<>Mm (le> 642--021 IUllMll 'u (Ml) IJ1·71H
~ .,,.,..~ .....
• ....., of .. Loi ..... ""--
•
WEATHER IND SUlf
JEMIEMT\MES
B•lboa
74152
Corona de4 Mat
75153
Costa Mesa
76154
Newport 8ffCh
7515)
Newport Coast
75153
._.POMCAST
A nonhwest sw.tl will
delMr Mii In the knM-
to walst-hl9h i...t
toct.y.
LOCATION Im
Vlllldge .................. .l-J """
""'1port ..... ._ ........ 2· J ""'
lledde's. ...... ~ ...... ..2·J nw
NW9f Jlfty. ........... .2-J nw
~··-··--·-...... -~) l'WI
l1DIS
TODAY
first low
2;52 a.m ....................... 0.0
flmhi9h
1:54•.m ...................... A.4
Second low •
2:44 p.m ....................... 0.5
Stcond hi9h
·a:57 p.m ....................... 5.~.
WBWDAY
flnt low
J:ll a.m ...................... .0.5
Flnt Ngh
9:42 •.m ...................... A.5
Second low
1:11 p.m ....................... 0.7
S«ondhigh
t:JO p.m ....................... 6.0 -,........ .u.
-In the oplf'llUol1 of cNldt.d-
lng P'Qgl .... nocNld_. .. ..,.
atl'*11911id ........... of ....... ~ ....... ---. age or heldclp. If,._, bllM
JiO'I ._. belft A»IMIR•d ........... ~---51c:NWy of ~ ..
lngeon, D.C. _.
POLICE FILES
COSTA MESA
• .,..... Slr9et: Vandalism WM reported In the JOO()
block ft 5:50 p.m. Sunday.
• s.nta Ana Avenue: A prowter was reported In the
2000 block at 2:05 a.m. Sunday.
• V".dofte 111'..e: A disturbance was reported In the
500 block • 3:45 p:m. Sunday.
• ....._ .-. • .-. A disturbanca w• reported In the
iO(IO blodt ft 8 p.m. Sunday.
NEWPORT IEAOt
• D_. .. Drtve: A rnour1ialn bike velued n S 100 ;:r In the 700 block betWeen 10 •.m. •nd J p.m.
... 'lrtc.lllr ...... A_,..phone..._.M
$200 Ml**' In the 1«>0 ~ M 2 A'"-.._, • ... ..,••-A~ .net toft'9 bGCtill of lko-
hol .., .. Mlln .... ..._ -. .. ,n 7 lftd to p.M. ,...,,. .
Daily Pilot Tuesday,· f.iay 2, 2000
J
Sometimes, there:S no
end to. a whak of a tak
Tie recent picture of
couple of dead
whales being burled
• Three men are sUSpected in an extortion
~eme against a Pittsburgli-based company.
into custody in Lake Havasu,
Ariz., and is scheduled to
appear in court today.
Accordmg to court docu-.
ments, Delong, P~zzuoll and
Mad began meeting with an
ATM representative in
DecembeT. They allegedly
received a check for
$11,45 1.20 from ATM -sup-
posedly ,the first mo nthly
installm'ent -on April 20.
in the sand at Seal Beach
reminded me of Bob
Reed's whale.
Many years ago. a
dead whale wasbed.
ashore next to the New, /·
port Pier. Tuts was a big
whale, Moby Dick's big
brother. It made those
two dead wha"les at Seal '
Beach look like minnows.
, Well, while the rest of
Robert Gordner
THE VERDIO
" us just looked at the big
dead whale and the city The mora) of this story
Sue Doyle
DAILY PILOT
COSTA MESA -Three
employees of an Internet mort-
gage lender were arrested by
FBI agents Monday on suspi-
cion of Hextorting kickbacks"
from a Pit1sb~gh-based com.-
pany. said otficials from t11e
U.S. Attorney General's office.
1'wo Newport· Beach rest.
dents, Gregory Kenneth
.I
The three men are etnploy-Belong, 41, an.d Vincent r D. h John Pozzuoli, 36, were ees o itec .com, according to court documents. indicted by a federal grand · The thrf)'e men allegedly
Jury in PittsburQh on charges of ciiminal conspiracy. • demanded monthly pay-
Bail was set for $25 000 ments from executives of
each but Thom Mro~ek ATM Corp. or America in spok~sman for the U.S. Attor: ~ or~er for Ditech to ~ontinue
ney, said Del..ong and Poz-us~g the company s mort-
zuoli were expected. tQ M ga~e-reJated services. '.fhe
released late Monday. Di(!lth account represented
J Jay David Marx. 36. of San about 20% or. ATM's total
Juan Capistrano, was tak£:n • monthly sales.
II convicted, each man
faces up to 26 years in prison,
a fine or $510.ooo. or both.
D1tech management did
no)' return calls for comment.
The defendants could not be
redched for comment.
began to figure just how is that if you see a dead
to get rid of it, Bob Reed, whale on the beach just
a local businessman, got a wal15 away. Don't gel any
bright idea. The dead cr&Zy ideas of going into Ocean turns red in Sfudjr jo( currents
whale was just rolling business with the carcass.
around in the surf, so Bob Dead whales do pre-
. reeeived permission from sent a problem.
the city to get rid of it. When we we were in
Ffrst, he hired a big American Samoa, a d ead ·
tractor and pulled the whale washed onto the
whale up on the sand all reef near a village. Now
"' the way to the boardwalk. in American Samoa, there
Then he rented a huge isn't epough sand to cov-
circus. tent, put it over the er a dead dog let alone a ·.
whale and.charged dead whale. So the vil-
admission to look at the lage hired a local fisher-
monster -50 cents for man to tow the animal
adults and 25 cents for o~t to sea. Unfortunately,
children. . . it just washed ashore
None of the locals again, ,
went inside the tent. We The villagers tried to
had already seen the burn the whale, but while
whale. However, people whale oil is flammable.
fjom out of town flocked plain old dead whale ls
to ~ee-the "monster of the not. So they hired, the
a eep,' as Bob's sign fisherman to take h.i.miifar-
described the whale. ther out to sea. No soap. ·
Alex Coolm•n
DAILY f'LOT
NEWPORT BEACH -The
surf turned red Monday at the
mouth of the Santa Ana River
as a group of researchers and
municipal authorities cameo
our'a test to study w&ter cur·
rents in the area.
OHidals from the cify of
Huntington Beach, the
Orange County Sanitation
District and the County of
Oran_ge gathered to dump
into the water about 22 gal-
loQs of florescent magenta
dye at lhe river's mouth and
at the mouth oi Talbert Marsh
in Huntington Beach.
As the dye from the Santa -Theo the whale began The carcass just washed
to stink, and people who ashore at the same place. BRIEf (V
bad paid money to go Apparently dead whales 1 I
inside wanted their mon· have favorite places to go.
ey back whe n they began · When we iett the · Man stabbed in ear
lo gag. So the city told islands, the villagers were with screwdriver
Bob to get rid of his still holding their respec-
whale. Easier said than tive noses. and the whale at Canyon Park
r---:-"'En~e~. ;et:recl1Jiie1:an1e--~w:..:a~sdishtill~th;ier~eh.. -£eiffl:if\Gs-----l.-""'*";,c;o~s:T~A MESA -A Santa I ,, Bob e e same was-arnisted $110-
tractor'tbat had pulled the me of the lady in Ameri-day on suspicion of using a
whale up on the sand to can Samoa who tried to screwdriver to stab a 38-year-
pull it out into the ocean. have her husband buried old man in the ear at Canyon
No way. The whale had at sea, only to have him Park. authorities said.
decomposed to tl}e e)!:tent wash ashore. But that's Gilberto Gonzalei-Soto,
that it fell apart-with another story. 52, will face charges of
every tug. Finally, Bob attempted murder. He sits
spent many times more • ROBERT GAltDNER is a behind bars a t Costa Mesa
than he made from sell-Corona del Mar resident and a jail in lieu or $50,000 bail.
ing tickets to have the former judge. His column runs Gonzalez-Soto followed
monster cu~ up into Tuesdays. his ex-wife, AJej_anrina Soto,
chunks and taken sosne
place where they charged
Bob even more to ,get rid
of them.
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Ana River spread out mto the
ocean, it quickly moved
so1J.th, adding a pink tint to
the waves s;:rashing on the
shores of Newport Beach.
Gathering information
about the motion of the riv~r's
flow, said organtzers of the
study, was exactly the point.
Burt Jones, a professor of
biological sciences at use.
ssi.id the release of the dye was
one of two tests planned for
the weeks ahea'1 and is being
performed in conjunction with
extensive testing for bacteria ..
Tracking the flow of the
dye, as well as-monitoring the
motion or oranges that were
released into the current.
could help researchers under-
32, of Santa Ana. lo the park
in the 900 block of Arbor
Street, autht>nties said.
· The woman apparently sdt
on a park bench Mound 5:30 ~.nr. with the victun, Ramiro
Valencia. 38, of Sa"'8 Ana,
said Lt. Ron Smith of the Co:;-
ta Mesa Police Depdrtment.
.. stand more about the ways
that runoff from the water-
shed tnteracts with the ocean
currents.
Tlus knowledge. Jones
said, rrughl be useful in pre-
venting another summer of
beach closures of the sort tha'
plagued Huntington Beach
last year.
"We're hoptng that we've
gotten a handle on what the
source of the problem is," he
smd. ·
Although the origin of the
contamination that forced last
sumnier's coastal closures has
never been dehnitively deter-'
mmed. Huntington Beach
spokesman Richard Barnard
said the qty now believes
VaJenc1a was treated and
reledsed at a nearby hospital.
Alejannna Soto suffered ~
Gonzfilez-Soto pttlle&-h"HS. ,_,f-_ _...__
·T-shirt over his fa:ce as a d1s·
guise and came up oehind
the pair on the bench, when he is believed to have
stabbed .._. Valencia. then
threatened to kill him ahd hls
ex-wife, Smith said.
.. . urban runoff was the culpnt.
And If that hypothesis is
rorrect, said Nancy Gardner,•
co-founder of the Newport
Beach chapter ot the Surfrid-
er Foundation, the streak of.
red dye drifllrtg southward is
·soinething beachgoers here
should be concerned about.
Hlt makes you realize that
there's not some magic dam
between us land Huntington
Seach)," she said.
Though last year's currents
may have swept river pollu-
tion north to Huntington,
Gardner said she doesn't
believe Newport 1s immune
to the problems of runoff.
"I Uunk we were lucky lasr
year." she said ·very lucky."
j
cut on her arm from· the
screwdnver, Smith said.
-Sue Doyle
20o/oOff
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4 T~ Moy 2, 2000
SchoOl fire third
.-in two months at
• •
Corona del Mar
•Police suspect that "'
teenage boys set fire
school's baseball Held housed
student desks, basketball uni·
forms and some lockers. The
contents burned, but the bulld·
, •
• Wednesday meeting will feature presentation tbll lld • fD ... ..-...
by group campaigning for the pa1$89e of the --w.,. .fl! ~ t11e
· $110-~onschoolbond.11..-:c;::::JtD:l:h
Daily Pilot
A
m
~~Up . " to a storage building on
the high school campus. . ing itsetr ,didn't sustairi much
dama~e, Cunard saJd.
De&wtw ~ "We're just going to be · dtlmnl ~ • D••lllee,
DALY PLoT ~ :~ = ::!i:-1ot ¥l:e talk~
;-.=-A~ Utian~,.....n~Of Citizens to RebUlld Our
.~
Sue Doyle
DAILY PILOT
NEWPORT BEACH
Newport Beach police are
' searching for two juvenile boys
suspected of touching off .a
blaze that scorched a storage
building Iii Corona del Mar
I High School.
The fire, which started
around 6:30 p:m. Sunday, con-
sumed school equipment esti-
mated to be worth nearly
· $1,000. Witnesses reported see-
• ing two teenage boys running
: from the school.
Most of the equipment was
out of date and school officials
had planned to throw it away,
' said Assistant Principal ~obert
, Cunard.
"It w.ould be fair to charac-
• teri.ze this as a trash fire, unfor-
. tunateJy," Cunard said.
' The storage area behind the
AUt.!)Orities extinguished the
fire around 8:30 p.m. and then
turned the investigation over to
P@ce, said Lt. John Blauer of
the. Newport Beach Fire and
M~e Department.
Sunday's was the third sus-
pected arson fire at the high
school in the last two months.
Scliool officials do not believe
the fires are linked, Cunard
said.
In mid-April, school officials
reported two separate fires that
started inside boys' bathrooms.
Those blazes were started by
someone who set fire to toilet
paper, which ignited the plastic
dispenser, Cunard said.· Off!·
dais have since replaced the
plastic dispensers with metal
ones to prevent futUre fires.
Authorities interviewed a
few suspects in both bathroom'
fires, but still do not know who
was responsible for eitlft!r,
Cunard said.
.MUNICIPAL BONDS
NEwPoRT BEACH -said bond proponent Rush Schultbeil Mid.
Seeking suPPdrt for the $110-Hill. 1be campaign cancmHtee
mllllon school bond that will The school bond, lf has been woddng to gamer
be put before voter:s next approved by voten in a J\Ule community support lince the
month, . Measure A propo-6 special election, would fUDd ICbool board announced hi
nents will appeal to commu-repairs for all 29 aging schools decision to move forward
nity members Wednesday at in the Newport-Mesa Unified with a school bond.
Speak Up Newport's monthly School District · Speak Up Newport is a
meeting. . -H passed, property owners nooproftt, nonpartisan group
During a public forum would pay an additional that was developed 20 years
hosted by the s:ommwlity $22.35 per $100,000 of ago to provide a forum for
group, several key members assessed value at tax time. iilues facing Newport Beech.
of Citizens to Rebuild Our Hill, along with Mark ·we rped.fically do not
Schools will offer infonnation Schultheis -one of the front-take •stands. We're not an
about Measure A and answer runners in the bond cam-advocacy group,• said.
questions. paign, will discuss the process George Schroeder, the cnga-
Schools
• WI--= 5:30 to 7 v.m. w.dnesdey ·---The Rhterbomt Restau-
r.nt. 151 E. Coast
H~Newpart
Be8ch
nizatian's vice·president
Wednesday'• meeting is
open to all residents and will
be held at the Riverboat
ReSta~t from 5:30 to 7 p.m.
. .
Mussels at local beaches off-limits
• Shellfish could be . They can kill you. of the water and it's a poiso-he said, when nutrient-rich
filled with. toxins that Monday marked the nous species." upwelling tends to otc\lr in
beginning of a statewide The toxins, when ingested coastal waters, which can stim-
car:i be fatal to humans; quarantine on sport harvest-by humans, can have very seri-ulate dinoflagellate production.
consumption ban to ing of mussels for hwnan con-ous effects -leading to a con-Monica Mazur of the
sumption, a restriction that ditioo called paralytic shellfish Orange County Health Care
nln through Oct. 31. will last through Oct. 31. . poisoning, which causes numb-Agency said the county will .
r
rr The quarantine is an annu-ness, respiratory paralysis and, post warnings on local piers
ONE OF Alex Coolm•n al rite because of the concern in some cases, death. and jetties and in bait and
D AILY PILOT that the-mussels may have tu-Cooking mussels will not tackle shops informing fisher.: • calif ornia 's leading underwriters tered high levels of toxic necessartly destroy the toxins. men about the dangers of the
NEWPORT BEACH material from the water. Summer is a particularly shellfish.
• New offerings available ~U:ier~~~rn in th~10~~rs bJ:~ qu::!~~!!s 01ta~~o;rag~~~1: ~:ii~~~~~ ~~t:i~~ sh~ ~~~~s s;;::o~Y ;~ • AAA Bonds jetties, looking very much plankton, said Oral')ge Coast the longer days and brighter coast Monday failed to turn
like something tJ:lat might be College marine biology pro-light make better growing coo-up any waining notices. . • Non Rated Bonds good to eat for dinner. fessoT Dennis Kelly. ditions for the potentially toxic It did, however, tum up ----------tt--:-:·::.BsuTt=C:ra~llf~o~r:!.!ni!:la~m~u;.;ss;:e:;.::ls'..........=.,,;"S;::o;;m~e~s:;t· ~a;::· es~o:;f~din;;' ;;:o7:fl~ar-~;;lankt~~o~ni-:. Th~e~".;:red=-:ti~· d7.e:;:• con:T.:~di~· -_:o~o~e~.:::t=:e::n~tia~ll_y_ useful jpct:
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FYI
• --OrMge County • Bollrd of SupeMsors study
sesion
•--.: 8 a:m. Wed,_.
~ Board Hearing R~ the Hau ot
Administration, 10 Civic
Center Plaza, Santa Ana
EL TOllP OPTIONS
• Pursue the airport In · •
,accordance with Measure A.
• Pursue the airport, but
suspend plahnlng pending
a final court decision on
the validity of Measure F.
we take some action to extend WEDGE the settlement agreement (dl
John Wayne Airport! and that
would .be through some type CONTINUED FROM 1.-
of formal request to the Board
CONTINUED FROM 1
The Wednesday study ses-of Supervisors,• O'Neil said,
sion will cover the different citing Mayor Jobn Noyes'
options for Rl Toro, as well as recent announcement resldl-
the implications and costs for ing the city's ~h for extend-
each. ed flight and noise limits at
Presenters will summarize John.Wayne.
the history of the base since 1Wo weeks ago, when the
1993 and look at the path board decided to hold this
supervisors have taken toward study session, North County
building an airport -a-project reactlon.ranged from shocltto
that has $0 far cost more than support. Some, like' Costa Mesa City Councilwoman
$27 million. • Heathe r S'omers, we)'e fell
But for a bdrrel-chested,
long-hanf>d bodysurter who
was drying h1msell off QY the
jelly and. identified hunself
only as SmokN, the commg of.
Black Bdll season was a rea-
son lo be glad.
"It's the only wa~ lo keep 1l
somewhat decent,• he. said.'
"ff you don't do lhat, you
have all. the· s kimboardt)rs
and the kneeboarders and
the people who want l~ ride
sutfbodJ"ds. This way it gives
every.body a chdnco. n
nders affected by it. Smoker
said it was actually something
they should be grateful for .
Back in the old pre-Black Ball
ddys, be said, the ones decid-
ing who got to stay in the
water were the biggest, mean-
e t locaJs.
"This way's a little more
peaceable.· he said with a
chuckle.
. Checkmg the surf during a
bredk from his job at Mother's
Market, bodyboarder Czar
DanUco said he could under-
stand the logic behim:I the
daytlr]le restrictions. •
· • Putsue the airport, but
suspend further planning
activity subject to a vote.
• Pursue the airport, but
expand the Local Redevel-
The prese'lters will also nearly speechless ·by the
review previous board deci-move. But Noyes supported' s~ons and summarize the two the session , saying it wets
airport-related initiatives -healthy.
Measure A and Measure F. Still others from the old air-
And ii the measure seemed
a litUe draconian to the board
Measure A, approved by port guard, ~dueling former
voters in 1994, amended the Newport Beach mayor Tom DRESS -
county's general plan •to Edwards -who helped
~u gets dangerous,• wtien
it's crowded, he said. "Th.is
place is dangerous enough
· 1ust lo surf by yourself.•
even the playing field.
•1 Uun.k they'll make a big
dlff~rence in the school
because everyone will be
lredted the same,• said 11-
yedr-old Britt-any S1tzer.
"Sometimes people here
don't have the cool stuff, li ke
Roxy, and they're not treated
the same.·
. opment Authority beyond
the members of the Board
of Supervisors.
• Pursue an alternative
with the Board of Supervi-
sors continuing as the
Local Redevelopment
Authority.
· • Pursue an alternative and
expand the Local Redevel-
opment ;Authority beyond
the members of the Board
of Supervisors. .
• The Board Of Supervisors
withdraws as the Local
Redevelopment Authority.
COLLEGE
CONTINUED FROM 1
next lo nothing to go he re.•
But considering he r desire
to be a lawyer one day, Gallar-
do wonders if Michigan might
not be U1e better choice.
BIRDS
CONTINUED FROM 1
Authorities will use the X-
rays in their investigation of the
crime. One dead bird was a
mallard, a nugratory species,
allow El Toro to be used as an author the 1985 John Wayne
airport. Airport settlement agreement CONTINUED FROM 1
Measure F, which enjoyed a -said it was a sign of the dis-
landslide vic:tory in March. sipation of the current El Toro HJ hke the color, H c:lass-
gives residents the final.say on process. · _ mate Madison Rictgwdy satd.
certain county projects, indud-• At the tune, some South Some of the older students
ing coJIUDercial airports. The ~aunty representa.live~ co~-I thought. they were. a good
measure is being contested in s1dered the supeMSors deo-idea bccd'u!>e they would
court, but bas already halted sion to exploro non-airport
furjher EJ Toro spencling until options a major victory.·
a decision is made on its status. Others, however, such as
Newport Beach Council-anti-airport activist Leont1rd
man Dennis O'Neil ~d he Kr~er. were suspicious dboul
hopes the supervisors' review getting fai r consideraµon.
will lead to greater coromuni-The sluqy session Wednes-
cation in the split county. day will be folJowed by a pub-
• 1 think it's important that lie hearing al 4 p.m. May 16.
•I've never been there, but
my alµlt recommended it,•
Gallardo said. ~she's a pro-
fessor at Indiana and she said
that they have a really gQOd
program.· .
As she continues to vacil-
late over the subject, the
draws and the drawbacks of
each college are often one
what happened here,• Smith
said. •
Unfortunately, much of the
fowl residing at TeWmkle Park
e already sl:lffeFed some.sort
of injury, crippling their ability
to leave the park. Many are
unable to fly and become full-
time citizens of the pond there.
and the same.
The distance to Michigan is
both a positive and d negdllve
for Gallardo, as is the clo e
proXlJTUty of Long Beach.
"I'd nuss my mom and
friends, but I can't mdke d
decision because or them,. she_
said. "I think I need lo make
out a list of pros dild cons.·
bodies for weeks dnd cit{' d
slow death, Hickman said.
Other times, the animals sur-
vive, he said.
• Full Service Catering
Banquet Rooms • Partr Trays
CaJI (949 262-5256
-which makes its killin9 a viola-
tion of slate and federal laws,
punishable by up to six monttis
in jail and a $50,000 fine.
Sometimes, wounded ani-
ma.IS carry pellets in.side their
f.:rh.Q...SDOGliRq...ii~rm-.dU-1~
f amlli ar ring for some. In two
separate attacks in 1997, seven
of the park's birds were shot
and killed and lhree others
wounded by d . pellet gun
attack.
Sunday morning, park;goers
were getting ready to feed the.
fowl at TeWinkle Partc when
they found the dead birds.
"I am outraged People must.
be accountable and responsible
for their actions,• said Greg
Hickman, hospital .idministrator
at All Creatures Care Cottage.
Costa Mesa Police·l.t. Ron
Smith said they do not have any
suspects and are still searching
for a motive.
"ln the past, it's for hunting
-not for food, but to be mall-
. cious and cruel. I think that's
• .
.\ I I I ~ I ) I I~ l f
ESTATE
PLANNING -DAY
May 16, 2000
8 a.m. -2 p.m.
DoubleTree Hotel
3050 Bristol Street
Costa Mesa, ·CA 9262~
The Arthritis Foundation's Estate Planning Day provides
medic:il, legal and financial experts to discuss issues
important 10 your future. Speak with physicians, physical
therapists and a faculty of estate and financial planning
professionals who will apply their expertise to your
personal questions. learn how to save on taxes, simplify
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1 Tuesday, 1-hly 2, 2000 5
Irvine TerrCtce
,4 . ' .
•I '. • • •
Mari?n Ph1ll1pp1 · S 1 3 75 000
•
, .._ ..
·coMMUNITY lheySaldlt
"HonesUy, I don't exactly
know how. As we get our ·
nose in the ten t and start
dealing with county staff and ihe supervisors, we'll stari to
figure it out. ..
The O.lly Piiot ~ i.tters on lt5UeS
concemlng Newport INCh Md c~ Mesa.
There •• four wevs to send In your (Om·
6 Tuesday, Moy 2, 2000 •
. .
Gay Geiser-Son~ovol
EDUCATIONALLY SPEAKING
~tudents put .f hings
into perspective
W hen I yot a-phone call
asking if I would like to
wnte a column aboCJl
· educallonal issues. I said I would
try wri ting six. This column 1s
No. 100.
Sometlmes. I get crazy with.-alJ of
the 15.sues that aJfect the education
of our chtldren: whdt should the
school calendar look like, what do
we do tf the !>Choo! fdctl1ties get any
worse, whdl new mandates will be
foisted on us from a pohticidll who
has never been in a classroom?
Last week. th.ree events brought
things back into locus. Ftrsl, I
spent d morrung mterv1ewing
seniors for their certificate of
emphasis. These kids got dressed
for surcc•!i'> dnd orcilly presented · ..
themselves. and samples of their
work, 111cluding their 5.eruor exit
project. Th<' projects ranged from
e xtracting DNA to movie making
with 3-D computer effects.
Thetr notebooks contame'1
resumes reference Jetlers, 'sam ___ pl~e-s -
of their work and awards and
achievements. They are motivated,
well organized, technolog1calJy
skilled dtW articulate. I clffi sure our
future economy is in good hands.
Thdt night, I attended a school
board meeung and saw members of
our distnct's Academic Pentathlon
teams. The kids convinced all of us
. that learning is downright fun. Why
else would they have spent an
enb.re Saturday in academic com-
petitions? Some kids had Lots of
medals, but they were all winners
for having committed to the teams.
Later, I round out Lhal democra-
cy will continue, with the help of
the membE>rs of the Student Politi-
cal Action Comrru.ttee at Newport
Harbor I ugh School. The group
came i.n shirts that read, "Never
doubt that a small group of
thoughtful committed citize ns can
change lhe world."
The students have been study-
mg the distnct's zero tolerance pol-
icy, and came to present a synopsis
of their town hall meeting and stu-
dent concerns.
A clistnct re pre!>entabve at the
town hall meetmg said that zero
tolerance U. work.mg because there
are about 60 to 70 flJ'St offense
transfer!> a year out of the 20,000
students The second offense le.ads
to expul!>1on, d!ld there have only
been three of those One of the stu-
dents' concerns was about selecbve
enforcement, where only the stu-
dent that dclually passes out at the
school dance gets caught. The low
numbers support that concern. lf
the coach or teacher doesn't want
to disrupt a student's We. they ~
a blind eye lo the problem.
A second concern was that there
was no mandatory counseling or
other help; just a transfer of the stu-
dent from one school to another.
While the district cannot mandate
counseling, they could allow stu-
dents to propose a plan or action for
the offense, and alJow that plan to
be instituted, staying the transfer, to
see if the plan was completed.
This would satisfy a third con-
cern. which was that alJ offenses
received the same consequence, so
that it lost its sense of proportional-
ity. The student who is in a car on
the way home from a game not
knowing a fellow passenger pos-
sesses alcohol has the same trans-
fer consequences as the kid who
smokes pot in class.
As a student put it, the policy
would benefit from putting the con -
sequences in the hands of a human
being: •I understand this policy's
role as a deterrent ts to gtve it teeth,
but it is time to give it eyes as well.•
A board member said her con-
cern was. •why do kids think they
have to be under the influence to
have a good ttmei•
I suspect that the members of
the Student Polittcal Actlon Com-
mittee aren't under the lnfluence
because they are having a gooCi
time changing the world.
-NeWport Beach Mayor a. JlllOYES,
on a plan to extend flight end noise re,trlctlons
at John Wayne Airport-beyohd 2~5.
.-.
menu: .
• wnatS :__ Mall to the Daily Piiot. 330 W.
~t .. CCKta Mesa 92627 • ~ HO'l'LMWI -C.11 (949) 642..fi086
• MX -Send to (949) 646-4170 • I-MAIL -Send to daifypl/otOlatimes.com
All correspondence roust Include 'JOU'. f\111
name, hometown and phone number (fOf
veriflcation p1.trposes only).
Doily Pilot
I
DOn!t be.fooled by 'Redlight'
• • ..
T raffle, traffic, traffic. What ts
going on? Excess traffic is
created by excess develop-
ment. beyo~d Newport's original
growth plal\t That is why the
Greenlight fnitiative provides that
any major change in the growth
plan (properly calJed the General
Plan) must be submitted to a vo.te
of the people.
Tuere is good news. A survey
has shown that this common-
sense idea is so popular that the
pro-traffic forces have no hope or
defeating it on Nov. 7. So the
Chamber of Commerce is using
the only tactic left to thertl: They
are launching a • Redlight •
counter-initiative that will cancel
Greenlight if it gets more votes. ·
nance. Red.light
• declares tliat
three little
details of '11.at · ·
Ordinance C8I) rt
be amended
without a vote
of the people.
Th.is is amus-
ing, because
the chamber Allon Beek · has just fin-·
COMMUNITY ished wa.ging a .
two-year war
COMMENtARY . agajnst the . :
natric Phasing
Ordinance.
nance, and what you think of itS
details. That is part of the campaign
to build support for "RedUght" and
hide its true
.pUip<>Se. •
The three To hide its
tru details that e purpose, ·Red.Ught" will
the-chamber protect have
is claiJizing
"R~dlight"
supportS the
Traffic
Phasing
-Ordinanae. ~
stood •(or over
20 years, and
survived last
year's detailed,
scrutiny by the
Plailning Com-
mission and
Qty Council.
So they are in
no danger of
being changed.
same ltaffic Phasing-Ord.Qlance
we have, anyway.
. Greenlighl, on the other band,
does sometping. Without tftking
a~~roperty dghts, t;1or
Changingihe 1Taffic Phasing
'Ordinance, nor any othe r law or
procedure. it giv~ the v9ters the
right to d ecide whe ther or not
proposed chang~ in the character
·or Newport Beach shoqld be
accepted.• · ·
The Chamber of Conunerce
doesn't want you to hQve that
right. To protect your rights, don't
sign the "Newport Beach name
Planning and Improvemen ts; Traf-
fic Phasing Ordinance" petition
when you see it.
Just say no. ,
To hide its true purpose, the
chamber is claiming "Redlight"
supports the Traffic Phasing Ordi-
Now suddenly
they claim )t is th~ key to salva-
tion.This explains the puzzling,
questionnaire the c}lambe r mailed
out r~cently, ~sking if you know
about the 'fraffic Phasing Ordi-
• Aside from canceling Greenlight,
"Red.light" wouldn't realJy do any-
1.lµng iJt all :_just leave us with the ·
. .
• AUAN BE.EK is a longtime Newport
Beach residents and proponent of the
Greenligbt initiative.
OCC jazz teacher has
reader's support
I would like to add my words of
support to Charles Rutherford and
the jazz program he has created at
Orange Coast College ("So where
is alJ thatljazz?" March 18).
As a past student of these class-
es, which have mduded the Mon-
day, Tuesday. Friday and Saturday
Big Bands as well as the Tuesday
and Thursday improviSation class-
COMMUNITY COMMENTARY .
' eel qualified to,.,..,,. _ ...... m----+--~'----=---....i...a;.__,,.
infonned opinion from my direct
observation and involvement and
personal benefit. Additionally. I
have perfonned in countless per-
formarices with Rutherford's big
bands aI\P improvisation groups
both on and off campus over the
years. I also played trumpet on the
first compact disc produced by
Rutherford involying the students
of the Saturday band.
I can st.ate without hesitation or
reservation that Rutherford.is a
world-class educator in the finest
tradition of the only art form fully
originating in the United St.ates. As
a jazz educator, be has brought a
unique arid thoroughly profession-
al approach to every aspect of his
position. One could search long
arid hard to find anyone of his cal-
iber in the field, not to mention
that he has dedicated his life for
more than 30.,years to this endeav-
or. He almost single-handedly has
raised the stangards of jazz instruc-
tion and directly influenced scores
of musicians who are now at the
zenith of the.ir respective fields of
musical activity. Orange Coast Col-
lege should be very proud indeed
or his accomplishments and contri-
butions for this school.
Now, you can imagine my
extreme disappointment that
many, if not all or his progra.ais/
are being canceled. Notwithstand-
ing any other contributive ele-
ments that may be effecting this
decision, I urge the "powers that
be" to step back and take a
30,000-fool view of what is going
on here .
If the charter of OCC or the
community college program in
gene ral is designed to offer indi-
ERIC SANT\JCCI I OAllY PlOT
~C adjunct music professor Charles Rutherford says budget cuts
at the college forced him to cancel concerts, creating division
• within th~ school's music department
'.¥idu_cµs in the community .a--way to
learn or enhance musical skills
that can be put to use either pro-
fessionally or for personal enjoy-
ment, then the jazz program is
one or the most effective I know
ol Further, if that is in fact the
purpose of the school, then I'm at
a loss to understand the value of
cutting back or eliminating this
valuable asset to the school and
community. I don't pretend to
have all the relevant information
and indeed would welcome some
enlightenment on this matter. But
from my point of view, something
just doesn't make sense.
Thank you for taking the •ionc
to allow me to air my point of
view and for your efforts in sup-
porting the general goals and pur-
poses of OCC. Overall J applaud
Smith frn:8trates bond supporters . D edicated groups of com-
munity leaders, parents
and students are working
very hard to assure that the
Newport-Mesa Unified School
District's Facilities Master Plan
will be implemented.
These groups have spent sev-
eral years assessing the condi-
tion of ow local schools and in
the process have id~ntified spe·
cific projects to bring e&ch
school up to a basic standard of
a safe. Readers healthy
RESPOND =i me nt.
These projeas will happen only
if voters approve Measure A on
the June 6 bollot, which will
raise up to $110 million to be
spent on UJ>Wad.ing, safety, mod-
ernization and rebuilding 29
public schools in Newport Beach
and Costa Mesa.
U approved, the state could
provide S53 million in matching
funds. To assure that the money
railed from the school ·bond ii
well spent, an independent CitH
zem Overttght Committee will
ensure that every dollar goes
only to the specific repain and
renovations ide ntified in the
plan. •
It is insulting to all community
members involved to continu-
ously read Steve Smith's articles
where his distortions and bias
appear as ofact (•Do your home-
work on bond issue,• April 25.}
For example, he defines
"implementation" as •bow
much it will cost to spend y0ur
money.• In reality, implementa-
tion includes architects' and con-
tractors' fees, since projects must
be designed. and built. It
includes temporary housing of
students, since some projects
cannot be completed over the
summer months, and a 10% con·
tingency, which will only be
used if needed. However, any-
one who has built or remodeled
a home realizes the necessity of
a contingency budget.
Smith also lambutes funding
for lunch shade coven, which
are included in the plan for sev-
eral school lites. He namea three
schools and correctly remarkl
that •they all alnMdy have lunch
shade coven." 1llele lunch
shades are in pl.tee becaUM they
were leJ>U•te.ly funded .,_. the master plan WU writtan. ffow.
ever, bonds will not be sold for
previously funded projects.
Smith ridicules money aUoJ.
cated to the Loats Performing
Arts Facility at Newport Harbor
High School. This Cadlity waJt
last renovated in 1977 and is
used by every high school and
many of the elementary schools
in our district. Smith speculates
about an imaginary school board
study claim ing the Loats renova-
tion ... wW be directly responsible
for an increase in test scores."
Ignoring bill sarcasm, we do feel
that a renovated facility will
benefit an enormous number of
students through performing
arts, concerts, lecturel and
forums.
We 1n this community should
strive to make our schools the
best they can be. Good schools
help maintain property values
and provide a ~ 1en1e of
.community. We don t think that
the Dally Pilot should provide a
forum fOr Smith'• cantinuous
umubttantleted and mWeadlng
ICbool bubing. . SUSAN ICMMl1l
KAllN YILSIY
Co-Pr..admll. CGrOna dal
Mar HAgb Sc:baallMdcDI ~ -~----="'-----...-'---------~...i...~.-.-~ A,-~:
yoU.r work. Your attention to Olis
matter would be very g reaUy
appreciated .
-DANIEL W. JACOBS, PHO
• .Toluca Ldkt•
American family ·
already destroyed
What is the •traditional Ameri-
can family" you allege Piecemakers
have shed? (•No decisiop in Piccc-
makers case,• April 27). ls lt one
(\ivorced; fiv6cloned kids who are
all submitted; one where all mem-
bers go to church on Sunday: one
whose dad brings home a middle-
class income? If that is your idea of •
• a traditional family, America has
shed that image decades ago. :
When all scapegoats are gone,
(Tom Halliburton) (like the rest or :
US) will have to take a good look
et ~~· The Halliburton family.
~ved long before Piece-· ii8kers exfued.. .
KATIE NEEDHAM
C(>Sta Mescl ..
• • EDITOR'S NOTE:,Qtle Nffdham is a •
member of the ~ers..
Local poets have
a lot to off er
• " .. • •
Thanks for your coverage on
the poetry event at the Newport •
Beach Public Library ("Writers
share their rhyme and rea~on, • •
April 25). Any notice of poetry in ~
Newport-M esa is appreciate d. •
However, although I participat-:
ed in the reading for two years :
running, I chose not to this year for!
the following reason: the focus or •
the event is not to celebrate OUT :
own local poetry talent but merPly :
asks our local wrlters to present th«!
work or other, more •established"
poets. That makes us simply "talk-
ing heads" on others' works.
Meanwhile, the re is enonnous
poetic talent throughout Orange
County. Why not let the locals
present their own writings?
In short, the focus for this event
. is all wrong.
• LEE MALLORY
Newp6rt Beach
HOW TO COlllCI
YOUI llPllSlllAnns
art Of COSTA MESA
Costa Mesa O ty Hall, 77 Fair
Drive, 92626, (7 1~) ?S.-5223
Mayon Gery Monahan
Cotmdl: Joe Ericbon, Heethcr
Som8n, Ubby Cowan and Unda F
Dbon \
CJTV OP Nl\WORT llAOt
Newpolt Beech City Hall, 3300
Newport BIYd.., 92663, (949) 644-
3308
Mayorz John Noyes •
Col I di~ Gary Adams, J40
Debay, Nonna Glover, Tud Ridge-
way, DemW O'Neil ind Tom
'lbomlol1
• I
..
~
• t
•
•
.. . ~----.-;4@ ,,.,..-;.. • --.h Wll5't ,... ..,,
which is .. you -in .. pnRs .... . ... ..., .....
Blm a.ny, Newport boys track coach M llUll(ll __ ... __
,
Spons Edilor Roger Carlson • 949..57 44223 • Tuesday, May 2, 2000 7 --""'f
Jones, boys teamma~es ill -prim~ position -
• Newport track star, and rest of Sailors, clear
qualifying hurdles at Sea View Lea~e prelims.
Berry Faulkner
DAILY PILOT
IRVINE -By being true to form LD
at Monday's Sea View League TRACK & FIE
track and field preliminaries, th~
Newport Harbor High boys team positioned it.sell to' win its
first league championship since 1979.
But the central figure behind that positioning, senior ltevor
Jones, may be on the verge of matching a league finals feal
which has bad an even longer shelf life. . _
The UCLA-bound Jones, reigning league champion in 1he
110-meter high hur<!l~s !lnd 300 intermediate hurdles, quail-·
tied first in both h ufdles races Monday. He also posted the top
qualifying time in the 100 and will anchor the Tars' 1,600 relay
qi+artet, which qas .the fastest time on Orange County this
spring.
Should Jones, who was second in the 200 at last year's Sea , DAILY PILOT PHOTOS BY.DON LEACH
View finals, pull off .the four victories, be ~ould be the first Newport Harbor's Trevor Jones {left) qualifies 1n the 100 meters. Right, Newport's Amber Steen qualiHes in the 800.
Sailor s1:°ce Brian Theriot in. 1974 to do.so. day, qualified first in the 800 with a time of 1:58.99. He will also 3,200 as a sophomore, qua.iilied in the 800 Monday. She is also
· Tbenot, who. Qlso went 0~ to run ,at UCLA, W?n ~e l~O-. attempt to defend his league title in the high jump. scheduled to run the 1,600, 3,200 and the long relay Thursday.
yard dash, the ~20, .the 440 and ~chored the ·wmrung mile Junior Chris McMillen qualified third in the 800 (1:59.47), Nadja TopaJovic, Natalie Standre and Lauren Hanson q ual-rel~y at the 1974 .sunset ~eague _Fmals. . . where senior teammate Doug Dukes qualified fifth (2:02.64). ifled sixth, seventh and eighth, respectively, in the 400, while
. I~, was a ro':1tine day, wi:u~ 15 what you ':V~t.m ~e pre-Jones will have two teammates in each hurdles final. Moy-Heather McKibbin and Lynn Rinek ·will join Steen in the 800 ~· B~rry said after qu~g was held for five events at er, Sean Tuppy and Brad Rothwell qualified third, fourth and final. •
lf\!:!lle High. \he Tars went 4-0 m league dual meets. , sixth respectively i.n the 1 lOs while Moyer and· Tupy quail-Times and places were not available for most girls events
The Newport Harbor girls also performed to expectations in fied fifth and sixth in the 300s.' Monday, due to computer problems.
six events and Coach Eric 1Weit saiq his SEJUad is ready to Barry termed Rothwell achiancing. in the 110s a nice sur-· Field-event competitors do not con)pete in the preliminaries
make a run at Woodbridge and Laguna Hills for the l~ague prise. . and it may be difficult for the rest of the league to compete
crown. · "Anything can happen in the hurdles, so it's nice to have with Newport senior Krista Dill in the shot put and discus. The
·we'll take a shot at them,• 1Weit said. another body out there,· Barry said. · • reigning league champion in each event, Dill has thrown 23
Jones went 14.85 in the 110-meter hurdle~, 11.13 in the 100 Freshman sprinter Arruf Burlingham qualified in the 100 feet farther than her closest discus rival and more than three
and 38.46 in the 300 hurdles Monday. and 200, while teammates Valerie Day .and Breonna ntfany feet better than the next-best mark in the shot put held .
..Harbor junior John Peschelt, who along with Richard qualified in both hurdles races. Field events begin at 2:30 p .m. Thursday. Ruruting events
Weber and Dan Moyer will join Jones on the long relay Thurs-Junior Amber Steen, who won league titles in the 1,600 and start at 4 p.m.
DAILY PILOT COLLEGE ATHLETE OF THE MONTH
•Former Costa Mesa High standout brings
serious vertical to Pirates' volleyball fortunes.
said. "He's got a ton of
TOily Altobelli natural ability and with bis
DAILY Pk.OT leaping ability, he's going to
O range Coast Collede get better and better as he
men's volleyball continues to mature as a
player B.J. Ughtvoet player··
just wrapped up his For Ug , comparing
freshman season with 351 Mesa th
kills, fifth-most for one Cutenese can still bring out
season in Pirates' school some humorously heated
history. discussions. ·
And it translates into "Him and I are always
Dally Pilot College Athlete of talking about who was the
the Month honors for the best Costa Mesa grad to
month of April. play for OCC, • Ugbtvoet
Not too shabby for a laughed. "Unfortunately, he
freebmen who wu happy wu a setter, 10 we really
just eo put on the OCC can't compare numben too
uniform. much.• I
•ttonestty, all \wanted to One thing Ughtvoet bu
do wu make &be teem and over CUt8"818, belid•
produce in some way,• about lflV8D lDcbee of he6gbt,
Ughtvoet Mid. "I'm very ii a high ICbool victory q.ver
happy I WU able to be a blg . Laguna Beach. M ..... at
pirt oe our oaame this year Mela. Ugbtwet helped
and I hope to contribute gulde the MultAmgl over the
nm more nat year,• Artlltl for the ftnt time tn
Por PlraWI Coach and • ICbool hiRary. . a.er COit& Mma HIP -n..t WM IO·~··
--Clwck cu...... be md .• ,,_WM. wttbout ..mg tbe farmer MultaO a doubt, tile belt atblMk
• ratbar imall height in the
world of commul)ity college
outside bitters.
•J try to be quicker than
the bRR.'bn, • Lightvoet Mid.
•Quic:k in ~ air and quick
with my arm IWIDg. If I cen · a-t up before the 61ocken, hn I cm be iuccellful. •
Par Cutia .. , he'a been
malt ........ with otbef ,...... ol bll game, belldel
tmWlbl.
defense."
Llghtvoet led or shared
the Pirates' lead in kills 12
times over the course of 23
matches. Being able to
jump 11-foot-6 sure helps.
·1 was able to dunk a
basketball when I was a
sophomore in high school,"
Ughtvoet said. "I was never
good enough to play
basketball, however. I
played soccer growing up,
but I got hurt, so I got into
volleyball."
With his ability and
physical gifts, Cutenese
sees a bright future for
l.Jgbtvoet. •u this kid doesn't play
at the Division I level, I'd
be extremely surpriMd,.
Cutene9e said. •tte'I got to
do the work on the court u
weU·u in the dulroom and
with bll tools,~
else will fall into place .•
Wben he's not rocking the
volleyball workt, Ugbtvoet la
rocking tbe home •• bul
=~.rock band DUMd
•we're have a
pop-punk·rock kinda IOWld.. Ugbtvoet ii6d .. ...
a lull bobby, tbat41 lar ..... 4
GOLF .
•It's o'tficial -· Toshiba Senior Classic sets
Senior To'rir record for o~eTyear donation .
Richard Dunn
0 AJLV PILOT
...
NEWPORT BEACfl In ·the final
accounting released Monday, the ·sucth
annual Toshiba Senior Classic offi cially
donated $1,001,000 to charity in 2000, .
becoming the first Senior PGA Tour event (o -.
raise $1 million in net proceeds from touma-TOSHIBA
. ment operations in one year. .
"From the moment Hoag Hospital got involved with this
tournament, we've had our sights set on ~oming llle most
philanthropic event on the Senior Tour.· said Hank Adler,
tournament co-chairman with Jake Rohrer.
The proceeds this year surpassed the Senior PGA Tour's
previous record of $938,000, established last year by the
Coldwell Banker Burnet Classic at B\lnker Hills Golf Club
in Coon Rapids, Minn., near MinneapolJs.
Said PGA Tour Commissioner Tim Finchem:' "Our
heartiest congratulations to the staff and hWldreds of vol-
unteers who helped-the Toshiba Senior Classic reach this
year's historic milestone. While the dollar amount itself is
very impressive, the benefits and semces that this money
will provide to the people of Orange County am;l surround-
ing areas are even more significant.·
In three years since Hoag took over as managing opera·
tor of the event, it has raised more than $2.5 million for
charity. or this year's proceeds, $900,000 will be distributed to
the Hoag Cancer Center. Hoag Heart -Institute, Hoag
Orthopedic Services arid Hoag Women's Health Services.
Several oth·er charities also mceived funds. The Toshiba
Senior Classic is hosted by Newport Beach. Country Club
Fainiliar tune
•Eagles drop 6-5 nonleague baseball d~cision.
Roger c.rtson ~ Eagles took a 3-1 lead
DAILY PILOT in the first inning when Ortiz
COSTA MESA -Anyone opened with a "fall-down•
with kin kn led f triple, C.K. Green walked,
a .wor . 9 ow ge ? D,6vi~ A.kiva singled to right
Estanoa ~gh baseball will • and Brent Davis slapped a
readily confirm the Eagles are double over the bag and far better than recent years, . . but they still haven't turned down the nght-field line.
the comer and first-year Brawley (10-10) did ~ot
Coach Doug Deats bas a hard have a smgle .Player with
time finding satisfaction with more than . a ~~le, but a
•improvement.• ~~run 1;hird uuung proved
His idea of tmprovement is deas1ve with four Singles and
victory, and that didn't halt an outfield error doing the
pen Monday u lus Eagles feb damage. .
to visiting 'Brawley in non-Green led off the third wttb
league play, ~. · a single a,.d 9l'Ol'9d. but tine
While the Jo9 WU the 12th stranded nmnen duDed tbe
in 20 games lhil year, it wu moment, and anotbM' tingle
ai.o pretty typca1 in that the tally caJM m the Mb Wtam
Baglal bad a VictOIY witb1n Matt Mueller singled.
tbeU' grup, OD1y to eee it fade achuced to third on wOd
on tbe ftnal blow, a liD8 drive ~ and K'Ol'8d on • .,._
wttb .,. ,. tbe .. '*>p bit by AJ. Pfirtdnll.
wttb two bD uad two out. So It came down to the
l\rinando Ortiz, who flMl mommt and Juttin Lund
r.tncl tbe final 12 batten ripped the llall (-Vain), but ..
aftm givt6g up m nm on IMt Vo' lar 'lt' was an uncte-
..,_ ........ dtdla't gM a lot MIWd C!Dlllr.
of Mlp -.......... lkle 1111 .... Ugbm.t acm tbe...,.. ID mommt rw W eo far.•
... ~ .. 8llCI Wll• wllw NoW at CoMI, Ugbtvoet .. ...Jldl 4CMprll twtk:lil..., ~=--· ..... -.. .., be
... alHround ~ii
=~;=~.;.._
ol tta. )iidgll a, ,,,.di was '" ~,~•:::•: ~. 1 2
..., .... c--•·••• ·•--••lWdliDn" ..,. .... ,... .... , lftaaotbe ......... : ............ .....
-*tDay-.•Cµ LL 1 1:aabllagMDa1-l,a
-~muda.,...,• _... ... •fblV uad ....
.... ct-... = ODeda...... ..,. ... ..... <Mii ......... •
"MD'l"I . ........
0....
..
..
' I . ~-~·,.·~~ ~~---~-~SOO~-------.----~
r
IOYS GOLF
MQlllC mAIT UACM• na.u·•tt .. El ........ Gino o..k. .... 12 ..... ~ ........ • 71 · Mat.o(;; • CdM.
• 12 • Sinay, Un!Ventty. Miller, univemM -
• 7J • Carrasco, Costa Mesa • 1• -John Kwon, Corona del
Mar_ .
• 7' ~ Kenihan, Unfllef'Slty
• 77 • Montoya, Costa Mesa. Boonaplalynun, Uni~ity. • 1• -Frana, Corona del Mar.
Kim. UnlVeriity, )oe Kwon,
Corona del Mar. Fernandt~
Cot,ona del Mar ·
NIST llOUND arr
• 79 • 1\ao, Corona del Mar ·
• 80 • Rausch, E$tancia, Mueller, '
Estancia. ·
• 81 • Sheridan. Costa Mesa
• 82 • Cas5idy, E$tancia.
SELL -
your home
through classified
J)j\lOlllll ( .l\f,t.·t
. ' '
t I I \ 1 I ' \ I i I • I
' I' I
Newport Harbor f8.Ils, 5-1
• Sailors only muster McCarthy walked, went to
three bits in 5-1 defeat. third when Miguel Sandoval was hit by a pitch and st'ored
lRVJNE • . WE••• L on a sactifice Oy by Nick
The good news ..u. Langsdorf.
for Newport Langsdorf, .lones ·and
Harbor High's baseball team Cody Forsythe bad the three
is that Woodbridge pitcher 'ts for tlie Sailors (5-15, 2-12
Erik Flagel is a senior. in league).
Aagel threw a complet~· Sando~al threw three
game three b.itf er with 12 ~trong innings of relief, all?w-
gmkeouts as the Warriors mg only one run on one bit. ~ocked off the Sailors, 5-1. llA~T~~tobeW
Monday ~ght, in Sea View wa w • s, NlwPoflT 1
League action. Newport Harbor ooo 010 O. 1 3 s
. Newport's lone run came Woodbridge 004 100 x • s 8 3
in the fifth inning when McCarthy, sandoval (4)-and
sophomore Mike Jones ~~n~~ ~~Inez: '
re~ched on an error, went to 28 • e~~rtinez (W). 3Ei ··Beck
second when senior Justin (W), Cummings (W), Davison (W).
,
KIEDQU
'
~muem DEEP SEA; ---~-. , ....... ~ . 21 .~f_......,12' <allco...... • 1tl-..... J~l...cktw..2~· •
1---1-• • __.. ........ ,-.~~112~. 2---.22-.......21w.o-. • •."1'!4-.IO~S~I~ 1~·~2~ •
Flctltloue au.rnna
....... Stetement
TM folloWing J*IOlll .,. doing bulinNI .. ~
MY .Life F~. 3078 ~.
pfnewoo<f St., Ora~,
California 92865 Matt W. Stockatlfl,
3018 N. Pinewood S~.
Orange, Callfornla
92865 Natalie 0. Sauer,
4780 Blue . Mountafn
Drive, YO!ba Uoda, Cai· fomla 92887 . Thi• buslneaa Is con• ducted by: oo-pattnera Hava you atar19"
doing butif:leu yet? No Matt w. Stockltlff •
Thie 11ate1"11ent was filed with the County
Cleft( of Ofllnge Countf on 03-27·2000 2000ll24031
Daily Plloc Apr. 25. May
2. 9. 18. 2000 T834
I
Cl«k d Orange County' on 4-27 ·2000 2000ll271'9
Daily Pilot May 2. 9, 18, 23. 2000 !836
Flcftoue BwlMM Name..........,.:
The ~~-'l~~;m'N.:~
Way, Cotta M.... CA 92827 . EuHblo Mendoza. 1801 WNttler Ave. ,2,
COlta Meea. CA 82&27 This bulfneu la con·
dUc:ted~ ~ Have you atartad
doing ~ vet? No EUMblo Mendoza Thta Ntement was filed with the County Cleitt of Orange County bn 4·28-2000
2000M272t4
Dally PiloC May 2, 9, 16,
23, 2000 Ie+r!
Havel
Garage Sale!
Cell the Piiot
Cl•aln.da
et EIMBJ 8411·1!1878
to Plw Yaw
G•l'ltll9 a.ta"Adl
..._ All rel! •tltll ldYtrti9Jn11
'" this newti>llltf II SUbjeet ID the ftclllll Fat-Housing Act of 11168 as am.,.ded Wlllctl maket 11 illtQll to JllMl1lle •atr/ Ptff mnce. ~mltltlon or dilcrimlnadon NSecJ on ract, color, Illig·
Ion, .... lllndlcap, flmllial
St.llUI Of natlonll ongin, or
kn Intent.Ion 10 make lllY
ludl pr"'11nce, Pmlt&lion or dlscr1rnlnltlon. •
Tiiis 11t1¥Spaptr wfll not knowingly 1cc1pt any
advertlnm1nt for real -tStlte which Is In vtolatlon 101 the llw1 Our readers are hereby Informed lhlt all OW.Inga 1Mf1istd In t1111 ·~are IYlllable on
¥111 equll= C)'1uNty basis. To com ot disctlml-~11111on, HOO IOll-lree at
1-800-424-859o ~
•V.A.•
........ lllmll
Fiii COUNSELING
Fiii UST OF HOMES
HUONAREPOS
7H-IM•OO
.1············· .i HOMES OF
·1 Showcase l Homes
• For Sele . • ': In Our Sat •
: RMI Eatate i 1 Supplement I • ·i Dlspllly Ads :
: Start It $85. i
.. : 0.1dllne •
I Tuadly 5PM :
Also... :
Open House :
Llltfnga Avl. :
0.1dllne : • • Thursday •
• 5PM • I tt P1y1 to
: Advertise I In the Best . I LOCAL
: RMI Eatlte
;. Section : i Call Today II . • :. LISA • : i RIVERA i I. 949·57A·4252 • ii ANNE ! :1 WILLEY !
: • 949-574-4249 : '• . ~·············· •
: L..::;:..:.-=.::~~..;..:.--1
IALIOA ,._, ll.OCK
TO l(AQtl 21t ... -. =.-J.,~
• I Cmt °""'....., 1M : ., lmllMY AD.
• a8R Home w/2 Matter ... SUllle. Pvt 9CC9A '° 3
• bHCllH By Owner
: It 1!50.00Q !C)t787-o3112 • I OPfN fRl.8UH 12-5
' 121 NARCISSUS : =..ooo '4 IE .5 BATH
: MHOHIU
I • •
'
SELL
PMlE EAST1IOE lOC.
2 Specious 18'/1 Be unita
plus ltldo Cov9rtd ~-1ng & stOftOI. E1d11tlve
Udng $415,000. Cd Bob Coluc:Clo, Prud Ct Atty.
9-49·83H13t
~ Eattaldt 381' 2Ba family room, dini11g room,
living room, 2c ger, trtsll
pN1, clean, priced IO ....
$398.500. Donald Pltft
Coldwell Btnlter
Mt-7SW074
Charming 3Bdrm 2B1 hardwood, Clrptl. trench doot1. newety peinl9d, em
large R·2 lot/lruil trees,
AQent. 949-718-2721
ABANDONED BEACH
GIANf UTORY UNOER
$500,000
AGT. Mt-72U120
8tlgllt Open 2Br 1 Be, 50
llepl to sand, llrve deck. ~· 617 w. Ballot. 1750/mo. . 562-426-4&60
FIND
an a p a.rtaient
t.hroup
claaslfliedl
II -·-;; ...
Ii
Molel
MANAGERS
• SPECIAL•
$154.00 + tax WJdy
(t.Mt prtetnl tNa ;.d) 235 ,,,.. & klcheneaa.
Sbltd on btdUl'f
landlcaptd ~ FEATURES: 24-Hour
Lobby/Direct dlal
phoflts/Frff HBO,
ESPN & Disc/Pool &
Jacuzzi, Guest laun-
dly Clc>M Ill 405 & 55 Fwys. Mln'a from O.C. '
F1frgrds, college and bells. Walking dls-
lt[IQ8 to shops and
rtstaurants.
COSTA MESA
MOTOR ll'fol %m Hltbor Blvd
~ Mt4454140
----.,Pelley .
ByPIM•!
(1149) 642-56-:'H ByMIAt.Per••• a30 ~·r.1 &v S1rtt1
Co;ua ~lr611. C.~A •J2o27 ,,....,....., ... J Ii< 111.,~
R.i.1ti end Jl.adlJ.nM an-hllltt<""f 111 rluu1)!1' • 1dwu1 001irt 1lw -
11ul1l1.lw-r n'"'"''N thr "'1d1i 111 l'Nl..o(. ~la~if\, "'"i.1-or rrjff1
.1111' rla"51ftrd ad•rni'>Mlll'nt Plt11 .... n'Jtlln am ttl'Ot' 1"81 ma~· lw
ill }'<111r r!ilkirM-d nt! 111111ied14wh. TIM' Dllilj fJ,1o4 •• r..-pt> no
liohilil\ for Ut) rrmt in au 11<h rfii..tmN11for111hirl1ii 111&t hr
""'Jkltu.ihl•· l'Xl'C'J•• f1l<' 1hc-aN of 1IH" •fttlfl' m·11111ll) ore .111111-.l h.)
1hr ~·nvr. (.n•1lit nm 11111) I.If' ullo•l'<l fill' 1111· r.,.., l11"t'rt1ou.
______ . DeadllnfJ8 ------.
WOLFF TANNN1 BEDS
TAN AT HOME
BUY OIRECT AND SAVEi
COMMERCIAl/HOME Iris llOm $199.00 1-::e~C:~·
Call 1~711-0156
[ .. -=I
Older Style Furniture
fl'tANOS ' Coli.ctlbltt ·~·~ ·-·-·Colar........, $$CASHPAID $$ _,...,_ .......
lftBUYISTATD ·~~-. .
COtJSIGNMENTS
-·-· Ttlrphone 8:.~0am-.):00rm
'lluoo!l..•4 ...... U°•llc-111 8:Jl>11~:00pm
"-ln-lrillo)
FREE Cat(•) need ming
• MW lioftlt(t ). Indoor, female, sp1ytt1. front
deolawtd • M .. 51Ml33
Mondaty •..• : ......• Friday S:OOpm .'01unMl1ty •.• Wl'dnesday $:()()pm
Tu~ .. y ......... Monc:fuy 5:00pH> Fricluy ......... :n1un.rlay S:OOpm
WNlnell<ia) .... Tuesday 5:00pm turtla~ .......... .fririu) 5:00pm
Salee
Before Need
Cemete~ .Sales 1~1
CLERICAL PIT
Part·llmt approx 25-30/hn
per weelc, Monday·Friday. aul1tlng in legal depart·
mtn1 •• loc9I newspaper.
Appbnt mUSI-be able 10 type 50-55 wpn, wor1t 8C·
antely. llld be good ~
cuatomer 1trW:e. Stnd
rMWM to. (949)631~94.
llln. Ju6f DnlQ screenir'l1 phpicll !!Q'd EOE. $Mv
AUTOMOBILE
CLUB OF
SOUTHERN
CALIFORNIA
HOUSEKEEPER CorOlll del Mar senior
coupl8 "1ll8ks houetkeeper,
caretaker, ive In prefd Nict sepelllt qual\ell M4lll be
good Amerleln cooll. No cNldren, pets, amoldng or
lqlOf Musi be deerl, 11111
and QOld dnYtr Our car Action, Adv1nt1gH, Cal .Mr. Ttylor
Full Treinlng, Flexible
Hoyrs, Benefltl.
HlghHt
Comml11lon1
In the lndustrtl
EXPERIMENTAL
RHODES
ELECTRIC PIANO .... °""' 714-645-7557
GUITAR LESSONS!
One on One II lgl!S.
beginner-advanced. . da:fl
eve Ol*Mnvs· affOtda~. M)I cal nowl 714-825-4415
1·--ranl
COAST COIN NEEDS
OL.O COINS! Gold, silver,
jewelry, Wllehes, lllllquet,
collecd>les 949-642-9"7
TOP U$/RECOADSt
Jan, R & B, Soul. Roell.
Mc. SO's & 60's
MIKE ll49-&45-7505
Adv1ncementl div Mt-l4oMt10 . ewnlna ,14H75-7t57 11 you -.oy lht lldlon of a
CO. PAID COL training & blst-pectd tl'MIOMllf'i lie
111 year income $3Sk· tdvanttges ol 1'IOfklno tor
Sttv1n1 T rensport·OTR Ill lncUtly leader, and the 1ruc11 dnvtf1 · wanted! Non-superior advancement Cl>"
uperlenced or o· ponlJMlea tNs entails, 1118
perienced-888-279-4058 or AU\OmObilt Club ot South-
1·800-333-8595. EOE " tm Caidornle Is the. obvious (CAL 'SCAN) career choloel Wllh paid
LANDSTAR RANGER
AGENT. LoolW1g lor <ilVM
with a COL end Hazmat eodorsemeot Olle< • COll1PI•
rable P"'I. Ind good 9qUll)' menl. Call. S\Jn City
800-672·5422
ICAL'SCANI
-trairung and a great team
•~•. the Aulo Cllb Ucenltd or not we·re can http you build *" lllilng llO'#I ERA Ralferly & excl1ing Custome< SeMce Uoyd ol ~ Beadl
C8tter The 1o1oM1g 1~ w'ill PIJ la-'fQJI larlM &
hr M . poeitions are now give you free tr11no11g
8W11111J1t 11 OU1 Colla Mesa0 8()0.40().5391 1111 119
olfioe
Cutt-Servtc.
P\.AY PLAY PlAY
Rapidly gtowing Co. Is
looking lor 12 people who
"' only StnOUS about hlwig 11#1, mablg s. I/Id
goofing olll Wt pey well ll1d
reprtWll ~ 500 eo·s
No exp nee Wil tram
lntlfH1ed? Ct• Jacquelyn
714-37.5--049f Sorry no
1tltmatlteters needed.
• Entry·ltYl4 Travel/
Automot1vt lCodt SES MSC1)
• En11y-1tvt1 Insurance &
Claim•
MANAGERS
Ptelflc View
Mtmorill Park
Newport Beech
Clll 'rom Poston
949-644·2700 ...
l . 1 ' •
QtJLLMMme 1474 .• A. I
SOAUTRuHC8ASN T !=:=:=:=:;:
DRIVERS·COM BINED
TRANSPORT needs com·
peny ftailecl drivels. Up lo
39 CPM We are experdng our ftMI. Nttd dnvers to
haul ~genetaf com·
mqdltf 'ouallly home tme ·lfecJinl or 48 states '3 Y'S OTI\11 yr fbltbed 'Owrrer/
n.-..ton "'81oome' Cd Mb• Combined T rar11P011
(Code SES MSC1)
• E.xperwad Reservation
Agenta (Code SES/RES)
• Experienced Travel Agtnta (Code SES/TA)
PT Sell • storage
nttdS IWO IHISI
rrgs, !WO IC 5 dayS
per week Of&• WOl1I and Ille maont
CtJI 949-644·2747
SALES Community n•wsp1per
ll'Ol4> loolt1ng Jor OU1$1dt
salts rep Siioclld posSMS
lllOng salts li:My be
organized & hive e.cc:eltril
customer service sk•lls Sal t ccrnm 8ene6t pl(g rel
401 k. J1!lrl Drug saetlW9' • phy1fCll req d EOE Send
~ IO Mary Camon II
330 West Bay SI Costa Mesa CA 92627 or Fax
ResOOll Ill (~9) 631·5902
TEACHERS Eapand1ng Childcare Ctr NB, seeking
Qlllllfled teac::her$ lor ages
12mo lhni klndergaroent
Great ~ enw w1llnt
medocal den1.il & edllca·
liOnal benefits. lnQWltS
!M9·955·2672
rn HOUSEMAN 2202 ........
.. AM.CA"1tl
-•i.c-CAt*
MANAGER
W1nt'1 to 1n1n1g1
l1rge e111te or home.~
In multiple dutln,
1nlmal I aw C81'9.
Excellent Refel 94~
ClASS1F1ED
It's the 110ludoo
you're 9elU'C.hlna
for-whether
you're &eekina a
home, aput.ment,
pet or new .
ocxu nl
1 ·800·290·2327 CAL'SCAH
DAfYERs-SOlO (6 mondlr
1X1>9rienee) & Teems
'OTR/Regiorial 'Excelltflt
Pay 'Great Miles 'Assiooed
Equipment 'Horne Week·
tnds 'Immediate Benellts
'EOE. Call Bob
1·800-553-2na X2839 '\,. (CAL'SCANI
Driven W1nted FIT l
Ht4ptr. Mortuary Transport
Co. Mtlcs raspon peclllfe wl
vrrvn•-•-Females encourage to
·MefctlendlMr Sung•I""
To IUOOMd, you1 bring n · IMie lo H B 20l'tVs '#Mii. celltnt customtr MMCt Rellable ear we1kd1y
tluls Ind bl 1 euperior momonga, exp pr91trrtd
communator wilh temfic Eu !Mllmt IOS-523-71199.
pllooe ellqlltltt end a ltrong vocabulary vou·• ..... cnamv Co. loc*lng
11so be ~ hive !or.tor.Lg~ w ~ .:.!. SALES ASSOC'$ accurate dl1a entry and ,,., .... """',.. • • _.-
wpm YOlil 9f'40'I great in-
cel1llYll incluclllg $11/hf Ill
at1rt, wee«lv end holiday
pay on ACSC recognized
ilolidaya. payioll direc1
dtpoch, and an employee
Cfecil 111'°'1
Applicant 1es1ing is con·
dueled lrom 9 1 m IO ~
p m.. Mondly • Fnday lrd
rrwy ... SMral hours No
=-~~~3a Faimaw AO.d Human
Rtsources Depenmen1
Colta Mell, CA 92626.
Fu (714~. Phone (714)850·5870, 11k for
Shtrl EJen Sohwartz E~
persoonel10 aaa·calil corn. Let .. know where you aaw
lht ed Wt condud appll-
canl dNO 1e$ting EOE
Stal! Cell (310)326-3422 Cl fu resune !3101326§694
OWNER OPERATORS. Relngerated Ctmer Ctli-
lorma·Arlzona. Competh1v1
percentages Trailer leases
avdable Late model 53
Refers Wetlf)y ~ Lo en advencts
1·800-284-9122
(CAL'SCAN)
Pert·Umt
NlwapeP'f R.acll RMI
1 am-4am Eacelltn1 ,,.y
pdl~ Cl van 111'~
nee. Prefer Coeta Mesa
r1ISldeR. Call M9-72Z.aa3
aeeks OOIQOIOll. mot1Va1td Illes assoc1a1e lor Full & PT
pottUorlS Ideal candidatei Will PC1S1ess pr8'11QUS exper
'" 8 lades boutlqUe. Mnilar have excellent customer
MMCt slcills Ind a de&Ke 10
llJCCt8d. ~-comm DOE Qua ts pl!!s! Call -8689
Wlcltes Furniture
In Cosla Mesa • now lwrlQ WAREHOUSE WORKERS
CLERICAL.ICUST SVC
CONCIERGES
C«pOf'ltil btnefl1 l*l·
... lnctudtd. Full and
Pert time poeltlont evtll.
Rttlll hocn. ,.... tpply
In penon. Ealy ecetal '° .
.t05 FWY. 3200 H11t>or
Blvd, Costa .....
NlwP«t Ctttt townhomt . 3br ~ ~ eod Int Mlrtlle, 3br 3bl condo
I --1 dean OMV, to lilt 761>&, live ~.::= local, n11t appearance
VACATION RENTALS 111111n LtelNr sofa & 1cwe-g!y C!1! MM75-1731
o« <>c.i Ftonl 3 lo 4BI"• Miii. new .. :'r'~ •~--------------.. www.eat-e1llf.cof1!
EXECllTIVE ASST tOf RE
Bia. Personable, reliable,
Hll-staner wr.Jn1 computer
(Wperf), web. & orgamu·
tlOflli skills Xln1 p!lOnt
tlque11e Sal • boru Pt'lll
(n/1) oil RE k a plus
bl!btr iww kllch, poc1 Pm: Brend New 2 atory,
only $2951( 94H31·2111 422 ~ ~~=:~:~" ~-SYJ=~-~[U_~ ,. ................... •-~ IO eurround ~ound, lthr, ~ W. NEWPORT OUfllEX
Prized 48' 2Be o1ua 48'
281, $540,000. Bil GMOy
RMlllll1 94H75-8Ul1
CLOSE TO BEACH Park
Udo Townhomt 38r 2.5Ba,
pocl, t'Wlt#d ""· $255,000 Id Vtn din lloMcht, Bllr
Mt·tSO-OtU
28f 18a Condo Hc.lltnt
condition, tre•t tree,
ultlng only 11"1000. Pftnc Otlty. Earl I .Jv6'I
T!!Vlot. -MH42_.m
WESTCUff NP8 *' 2IA hcMt. --pewn, nllt to llattnere
Ele111, Htrbor high.
By owner 113D.OOO .......
VIU.A BALBOA Condo,
1br 1bl lrplc Pool, ~
oYm, Ocn'SINtt VII. l24VI\ -Owrrer 949:$1}8&33
IACK IA Y BEAUTY 38r
291 + .. tam rm.~ lot
wipool & loll ol "" CNW. Super lod ,000
Joe lri!Q, Ad 718 t }2225
CMTA 'ANTAITIC OPIN IAT 1 .. ...... eo..
OCIAN YllWI ar aaa, .. " 11.--°""" 1111 Ct!!I MMIM11I
'
~ ---..-~----~ • ... :.....--·' . . '
I I
"""lUliJ ,_, '"''.. ~ ' twin bedl " I ... 0 • I • I • c. .. e A I I r 0 ..... 1• ..... beh. 2c gar. 949-675-130 ~£ Ot ~~~·
•• 1 • °'' •• I Emp!Ovment apportunities .. ISIT LIW PltlolPool Furnltute
EASTSID£ C.M. 2Bf t Be Brown Jordan labltlcllalrs, wiltl rd & ilteri!Jf rellnishtd. Stnp style $525. , ya · garage 50080 FT OfflCE w• dtllv11 114-§39-0811 leundly, new paint. Clrptl newly dtcoreted, heating. ftoora & landtcape. Avail A/C, ,,..r Holg Hospl1al lmmedatly. 326 E. 16th Pl.
S1.37S(Mo. Agent 94~ 1111 lor Jay.
949· 759.3797
'"' EASTSIPE DUPLEX Specious 28tdroom, Frplc.
~~~9$1~
EASTSIOE l+OUSE
Channing 2Br. G1rage
Laive ~ Kids petl .... come ~s 949-548·3959
I ~· =-1
OuHntlit pillow top
boxtprlng I llllttfMI,
nntr uetd. w/30 yr wurenty 1215/obo.
ctltrTy Riot Potter 7 pc
brdlll .... l 111GtoOo Ctn
dlllwtf. MWD7-7Dl5
0
~··,.._: ••••• rt ..... ·--reel 11S1hdla.yDt. •••PGrt••--M•-729-SMS 1.0.1.
••••••••••••••• • • • IANIOUll • * GM.OM * : .,. .... , :
: COITA mlA I : . -AMAi 111 : NI IALll lfMR. : * 9oml 1111t tlP• FT*
• 1~ ""'141. : (0.0.E. .. 1*11 : • A9lllW • • .............
: 2'00 .__ MIH: • co. ..... : ~......,: • • •••••••••••••••
.. FOOD SERVERS ..
FulWT ~I Gfu1
Bentftts, tip nec:eeewy FM CrVWM IWs1aUrtnt
3'01 E. Co.t Hwy.
Aeply llonoSet ""' 12:00
GOV'T POSTAL JOBS. Up 10 St 8.35 hr FIA bene-
fill lndudlng l)lfltlcn Free eppllcatlon/lntormallon
1-881-m..9083 Ext 1000
7am-7pm CST
(CAL'SCAN)
MMlDIATE HRNO FOA
MtitN If, SommtlitflWint s.-d. CApain. HotU-.
Co<*tlll 5-mra ONl Y
THOSE WITH FINE
OMNO EXP. Will BE
CONSIDERED. Apply in
ptrtol\ 1-4pm, loton-Slt al
2100 w. <>c.nfront
Ctl 949-261-6122 or Fu r9ll 261-9061
ttRECEPTIONISTtt Full/PT po1ltlon1I
Graat bentfltl. Rellablt, frltndly, proleutonl.
FIVt Crownt Retteur1nt
3801 E. Cont Hwy. Apply
Mon-Sat ""'-• do em.
RECEPTIONIST
S8/Hr. Mon<Uy·frlday
8t"9al llWlt ~ -llrpofl Cal! lmmed lor
lnletVllW M9-25CM52S
•STOCK CLERK PT ~RS Plf'T
lmlMd IMOC dlecount.
1l'llldy tlwlr, flll\ plact to won. lhntflte. Hra e.ra
T.-lt111-12plft lftCf Frt· .,, • ._.,. Call Jofin
Of Mlctltlt ~1711
WOLFF TANNING BEDS
Tan al llOme1 Buy Direct
and Sa~•! CommtfQll Horne un11S trom S 199 DO
Low monthly payments
Frtt cclGf ca1alog Cal ~
dly 1·800-842·1310
(CAL-SCAN)
l ~"-==1
...... be --the littlnge In t1M
cmgory _, '*'*' Y9U to ~ I IOD
nu111ber In which
._,. II t dltrVI per
mli\1111.
. ' · Daily Pitot
TODAY'S I Brlcla• .....aC.a1RlliillllOll:liliS~S;.a,;W1.;:iO~RUlp....,P_,.LJMIZ•Z•l•E-~~
· 9nd TANNAH HIRSCH
!""' ~T,-.--'."II.-.:~-~
J ~\.._ • "
~ ...... ,, LllUllC••
........... -Ollt. ~ ~ TA1~ ~8,185 ~-=~
STUMPED? caJJ for Answers • r....,._"'"-""'-
• 96c.,.. -1-900-370-9900 ext. code 500
ag,POR~=. I ag,POA== 1 .... 1 • __ .. _r_IC_._'i .... I
THE f'INUSE SP\IRNED •WPOlll' II.ACM HtMl llJ1 .........
LIXUS IC 400 W · oi-.... llllllW 111111 W
Neither vulnerable. NOfth deals. con11act than four spedcs, bul It iJ
niah i"'(JOIWble lO i« lhcna whon lhe
pllUIOrlblp 11111 an eiahl-clld major·
5'1il lit Md ono hllld rt u11ti.1111cei:I.
~~p~ ~..."'::~i:= ~.«f147k=-~-::&~~
NORTH
•A().7
O AJI o AJl5 • 1831
.,, CO, Wd ';,r. VA1m11 "'iiii'i .... VIEJO (3!8909) ,'89 LAND ROV1R • 11•3M-OIM -NAllftl (803229) NAllftl 12<','89 NIWPORT llACM (7t41140=tlOO
~H)l4H1M tit Ill 11!f ..z Ml.Ull ._ ---~ Oldllllllllllt ........
WEST EAST
PrOftl declarer's poi111 of vlc:w, West found die awkward lead of a
lrUmp -with uy Olllef lead decllwer miaht hne lbc tlJllO 10 .-i club& and rulf die fourth d ub in dummy. if llCIC· essary. That fofced South 10 chlllp
hQrse1.
DOOQI DUMNQO 'II , LMlll Rower VI • ~~ loWM.:ti 1 I*'· IUI door, rw llr,
Uedld, 111ue, 1 GI 1 IMdl Alllll Rower U loedld .....,....LMo AOVER CO & moll! BlllflCe d Wll'· ' •IS • J09l ...m 111.-YAA13 111,111 NEWPORT BEACH rtnty, Pl""°"' ,__ o 6431 0 10 15 ..:.r"':c:H ..:.r-::c.. 14tllOM'5 Jl7~78) NAIERI $18,988 o 10 73 o K9'42
•AJ87 · •K4 .1hc opening load was won in die
closed hand whh the j.ck and die queen of. diampndll w1.1 led in 111
attempt to COllJ(>--I cover from We14
WiouJa that <1c:r~ hold lbc kiria.
wtie;n West folloWlld low, declarer
rose with d11mmy'a ace and ruffed a
·diamond. I\ trump 10 dvmmy's queen
provided the entry for aoolhcr dia.
mood ruff, and all WL\ well whe11
both defenders followed. A heart to the jack was used lo ruff 11 third dia·
mond with the lcina of In.Im~ and declarer croued to the iable wilh tlie
llCC of hearts IO draw lllc'IUt lrump.
The klifg of hcans could then lie CllShud to fulftll lhe C()n1J'11Cl. Thaiiks
io the . dummy reversal, all the
defendt.rs could collec1 were tine
club \ricks.
"1 l!O IUI 111 llOM• Melcldli llelll e290w, W 17141M0-!100 SOUTH
• KJ643 o KQ9
o Q •Q96S
The bidding: NORTH V.ST SOlTl'H WEST INT Pam 3• ,_ ... .... ,_ ....
Opening lead: Eight or . . .
The opening leud can de&ennine
how you play a oonrract. Herc is a
typical example.
The auctioo is textbook for !!_pair
.not employing lnlnsfer bids. Ol)vi·
ously, three no trump is a sounder
SltNElO A LOAN?
Consolidete debt.st Sime
day approY8I. Cul ~ up to 60%11 No application
feHll 1·800·863·9006
ext 949. www.~·pay· bills.com !CAL 'SC
=I
ELECTRIC IR>AT
211t DUfF't' &.II* Clean
1 Owner, $17,000/080.
714-967·2902. lv M!Q
'tO Bolton Whaler Center Conlolt less lhan 250
ho\llS on engine. re~ lo rtSI\ Of bay cruise. soooo.
949-675·' 185
llMW MZ ·91
13k miles, loaded
(CG0059) $36,995 CAEYIER BMW
714-135·3171 •
e.-w 3111 .,,
lllacll. co, loeded
(3WUV763)) .r. $22,995 CREVlt:R BMW •
714-835-3171
BMW 3181 ·97
Cuwrt. eutc>, Black w/Black
(3PTE384) S24,995
CR£YIER BMW
714-135-3171 '
BMW 31m 'f7
191< Mi, White w/Blk, Sp P1(g
(3XNV768) $19,995
CREVIER BMW 714-135-3171
BMW 318T1 '91 Loeded, bltc:k, mutt ... 1
T A5t5140 113.995
LAND ROYER
NEWPORT BEACH
MH4M445 .
• BMW 3231 '118 Conver1lble, red, cle111I
WEM21547 $27,915
LAHD ROVER
NEWPORT BEACH
949-840 .... 5
l.11111 ~ fl : BllclVBlack TOYOTA· C11JCA GT 'ti · QOOGE INTMTI> u ... ...... Rower to loldld, (~~ • $23,990 CClflvt, 011lltandlng oonct. While, 4 door, 8.8 Al, ...,. .... cert. • FLETCHER JOHES onty 30K ... eu1o, WW, Pl 59IC a!:.., IUto. /!/.), CllllO, YAmtt?t · 135,115 I00-92?-1571 L, CC, lllt, M, ,....-
f tn<1 714-9&H2!0 LAND AOYEft • entry, 11111111 .,...... Mt-
' NIWPOAT BUCH lillfotda1 leftl. EUOW VT Fiil upgraded llel'to, == '-!C .~. 111Fuly 11~5 Grey/Grey SU,000. ltl IU 1241 "' ....... -(239834) • $29,990 ll cond. '5®'obo. LDUS ES 300 '00 FU'rCHEft JONES ToYOtl Landcnlller ..
TOOLS and ALLI ~ orty <lie miles ICJ0.117·3571 FUUY LOADED cd pleyef,
714-301-3:423. (= $30987 moon roof, towing pecMQe ..s8ION .:.0. •*11 Billi Ml.320 ... $27.000, 949-729-1019
FORD F-1IO '17 M•,........ Emerald/Parchment lkllllf Cit>, 11111. ~ ~ (010529) '$29.990
Vl'C7f1M -LEXUS ES300 't3 FlE'TCHER JONES LAND AOVER 71K nil, I dl10 CD I00-927-3571
NEWPORT .. ~~45CH ~Llttlr Inter, MW • -----~ chempenge Melced11 Benz C2llOw '91 coior, •Int c:ond, tinted While/Parchment Font ,..,._ Super CID f7
~ ~ loW ml.
YP8111M $15,"5
wlndowt. 114,500 (531505) . $32.990
MMll-8133 FlE'TCHER JONES
BUICK ROADMASTER '13
L T01 . tow 58k mlfei, beiQe,
tan ieathlr, reer-wlleel drfve
(42!451) S11,988
NABERS
(714)540-1100
LAND ROYER NEWPORT BEACH
MM4CM445 ·
Honda Accord LX 't1
White, 4dr, auto, .... stereo,
cd changer. 1-owner, lady
ctiven, 170k mi, deen, nut
see, $4995 lirm, pp.
Ml-720-0521-
LEXUS ES 300 'ti Wt'IMfrvory, flAI Ollllon. 5 to
chooel "°"" (03'7310) Slllrts II $25,987
LEXUS lllSSION VIEJO
Ml-3M~
LEXUS ,LS 400 '98 White/Grey, lu!I opdon, low
milel (040738)" S34,687
C.AD EIC8lldl 'ti LEXUS MIS9IOH VIEJO
loeded, whl1e, II-' ... 1 HONDA PIMl)Ol't te Ml-384-0IM
XR400l:.o ROVE:-,185 ~:~::.. white, 11~~~ LEXUS UI 400 '94:
NEWPORT BEACH LANO ROYEA Jade/lwry, flil oplloo, ,_
MM40-M45 NEWPORT BEACH lexus tnlCle • MM404445 (000740) 123,117
Cedllllc Dwt11t 'M LEXUS MISSION VIE.JO
low mites, lealhef, air bag, 1SUZU TROOPER '93 M!-3!4:0084
ABS & ITIOlef Whitt, loaded. 5lpd man. (211927) $13,988 4WO Good oond, 1 owner, u:xus· LX450 'f7
. NABERS .. reooros. New til'M. 88k l.olldtd, wllltl, muat _,
(714)540-1100 ml. $91! obo (!49)720-9434 ¥015'438 $39,9115 I.ANO ROYER
Cldllllc Eldorado '115 JEEP GRAHi> CHEROKEE NEWPORT BEAc.I low miles, V8 Nol1hstar, Ill· LAREDO 'ti WWAel'¥rt int, MM-4H445 :i~· . $19,988 luly loaded. VS. Al!S. ,_ LEXUS LX 450 'M
NABERS =·~a;:·.:==-Jaden'o'Ol'f, lul option
(714!540-1100 $8900 obo 949-721-M72. (1~ ~ ~:1
~ Eldorado 't7 Ml-314-0IM Touring,' low miles, V8 Jeep Grind wf::d*" 't5
Northstar, many extras, Umltld red ~ rr trim. V8, LEXUS LX470 '98
balal1ce o1 W8ITlmy ~:o:"· ~i=r Loedld, dllmp, mutt -l (6042'43) $25,988 -. W0074417 $51,996
NABERS LANO ROVER (714)540-9100 JEEP LAREDO .. NEWPORT BEACH
800-927-3571
Men::ec111 Benz ML320 '911
Ruby/Parchment (067985) $33,990
FlelCHEA JONES
800-927-3576
Mercedll-Beni E320w 't7
White/Grey
(324519) $35.990
FLETCHER JONES
8()0.927-3578.
Mifc.des.a.nz 6eow '95
Blacl< PeaM!ladt
(141152) $22,990
FLETCHER JONES
800-927-3578
Mercedtt.aenz C220 .,.
Black/Parchmeol
(456608) $23.990 FLETCHER JONES
&00·927 ·3578
Mlrcedff.Blnz C2.30 '97
Silver/Perchmel\I
(544423) $23,990
fLE'TCljER JONES
&00·927·3578
Mercedla C230Ml '99
Black/Parchment •
(680112) $29,990
FLETCHER JONES . 80().127·3576
TOYOTA Lind Cnllaer VT
l.olldtd, Whllt, lllUll -1
¥0113315 SM.• LANO ROYER
NlWP<>f'T BEACH
Ml-f40.l445
ToycCI Lind crUtw II Loeded, gr1y, mutt _,
X002tl11 . 145,915
LAND ROYER
NEWPORT BEACH
Ml-f40.l445
VolkeWlgetl #ttl OLX
'97. 6-cyl, blk w/giey lthr int, rear spoiler, newiy tinted
'Aindows, new tirH, '41( mi,
Bose Case/Stereo/Speak· era. $14,900. 714-834-1005
Ext 219.
VW BUG '68
Need• engln• work
$700 or belt offer
949-282-3452
VW JETTA GLS 'II
Red, bltek Inter, loedld,
.... cond. $15,500
Ml-70M627 or 131-4827
VW RABBIT '81
Convt, green, vtfJ c:ttenl Am·lm CetHttt, ISOO.
Ml-733·2831
GOOD JOBS.
RELIABLE
SERVICES.
BMW 3281 ·91 - -llltdt, low mllM, MM40-8445
BEHIND ON BLLS? .BMW Z3 ·97 Black w/sarld, loaded • Cldlllec EJdorldo 'II WC217240 111,115
MEDICAL BILLING Consolidate them. Avoid 2.8l, 5-tpeed, low miles! (V38371) $23,995 Touriog, 290 HP, ~.< NEW~ROBY!!'cH LEXUS SC 300 't7
.... MERCEDES E320 '97
white, Parchment, chrome wheels, 5 stack CD Player,
lo mtles, Ult cond, By Ownr
$37,900 714436-6161 Of
NTERESTING
THINGS
TO BUY. Pleue be wery of OU1 Unlimited Income potential. bankruptcy. Stop CflldltOf (30NE627) $26,995 CREVJER BMW lo ml, moontool, CO & morel ...,.r-;:;;,.M'";'5 Btl<ll'o'Oly, full optloo. new
of ar11 companl11. Free info & CD·ROM. In· calls. lleduce i{lterest. Cut CREVIER BMW 714435-3171 (6f4180) $24,988 .. .....,_..,..... ~US038408) ~.~7
Check wMtl Ille local veslment S-4.995/$9,995. peymeot& up to 50"4. Ce1r 71 ... 35·3171 NABERS L£J( IM$SIOH ·~ --~~-1-__,~'-ivlllll41a-1J~~.~l'llllb.Jilal:ld-Al.llOllWlll90-l-now1~~189'4~.:...::::~ ....... ..;.:;.;~~:.,.._-+~-uWT<iillL'§5~t::=t!'.ii~i!!!==~"""'~-~~.~~~~t::::::~~~C:::t~~~!:::::==~tt---:H-.h'l:-f;J;-~-.--~
rMU befOft you Hiid Medical Services. Inc (CAL'SCAN) • BMW Z3 ·ee Low riiles, green wtten .. ,_, ceftlflecl, HE'RE any money or ffft 800·322·1139 ext.2101 ..:.:::::..:=:L----l!lk fTi, 5-Sj)d, loaded (lt3488Sl S34,99S Cadillac: Eldorado B11rrttz VA7043ll $11,485 , LEXUS SC 300 '96 * MERCEDES 300CE '88
for atrvlcH. Read , wwwbuslness-startup.oom I .. TO .... LBDW= I (4AN87621 $22,99S CREVIER BMW ·92 53k on re-blilt erigine, LANO ROVER White/Ivory, tun option, low taupe, gold package, mmDfD'"f and un<Mratand any (CAL'SCAN) ._. CREVIER BMW 71._.354171.,. new Mich tlres, shocks, NEWPORT BEACH mles(030336l $26.212 sheepskins, mint cond, LrLA ~
contracts btforw you 714 .. 3,.3171 cunent r*l«d$, oolfectora MM40-8445 LEXUS MISSION VIEJO $11,900. 949-673·1943 JN
afgn. M11lne Bu•lneu on high dream $9500 949-673-3009 Mt-314-oel4 ' ·
vlsabill1y street Pnce lncids BUICK LE SA.BAE '89 Lind Rolltf 17 Men:tdlJ 580 SEC '89
• trailerable boat tnventOly, Netd '200.000 will pay 9% BMW 3111 'II SOI< orig. mnes, leather, CHEVY CAMERO RS '92 Dlflnder 90, hd top, blue, LEXUS SC 300 ·-7 White/Pa1omlllo hhr, = C'' "SS1'J:'ED! MAKE GOOD SS in hOme used boat n,lnofservlce. lnteresl fQf 5 yeers Stcored Blade CO & more • many extras, super value! V·6, 25th anniversary YA103531 $43,915 Clusic !lfeelY'NoiY ~ op-cond. new ~m. hJlly , ~ · c .
trom ~S:teFfP · computenzed I nance and by First TO on N8 home. {C51304) $19,995 (5'47953) $5.988 model, auto, air. new plates. LANO ROYER lion (Q01S16) ·' $32,987 sunroot 121k rr.4, $20,000 (949 \ 642-5678
earning mQ. T inventOly system, Internet ~ L.oen to vlllue CREVIER 8llW NABERS new smda cert, reel shlrp. NEWPORT BEACH LEXUS lllSSIOH VIEJO wOlll 149-64<>-5032 J
www.makeQOOdmoney.ne1 .site Brolcer, 949-646·2011 MH17.S71, M40.ot2I 714435-3171 (714)540-9100 $4950/0lfO. 949-723-150.t MM40-8445 Ml-364-Gll4 hOIM 14M40-1029
POLICY
In an effort to offer lhe best
seMC8 po6Sible \o O\lf read-
ers and adve1116ers. we will
reoulre Contraclors whO
adverllse in lhe SeMCe
Dtrec1ory lo include thetr
Coniractors License
number 1n ttielr adver11Se·
meot. Your co-operatJoo 1s
weauy appreciated
224 ADDmONS
/REMODELING
2M CIEAMNG . /llAIMTENANCE
Houle Cleaning By Lucy
Local refs. reasonable. ra1ea
12 Y 1trt Exp. Offices too!
949-246-1942, 91631-4980
VICKY'S CLEANING
We otter TME BEST
Hou$e & Window Cleaning
i O'f.rs ~nenoe. Kint ref's!
Vlclty • 714-868-0395
25 Yeart ol ProfHtlonll Svc we·n clean 'f04JI '1omel
offtee Reasonable weelcly & moothl't rates 714-141-3114
in the convenience ol ~r home or office.
l'rogrfl> & """""' Sol-up Trail>ing lor Al Ages
Compule< Repair &
IS ,_s 11p. Pollen!.
JodyMorri1
Mf.541-1"7
FARTHING INTERIORS I I
l(Achen I Bath I Remodel 270 /ll~IO~!l'y DllAPPlillNS Room Addilions. U560875 "' n ICUIMI 94 ... H5·9325 for Doors, Frenc:tt
Doors & Windows.
tnvfaible when no1 In
use. High Quality
European Design.
Free Estimate.
221 /HAJAEACONOTINQ Concrete, Patio, Driveway, I I Brick Bloctt Stone Tile
F1replc, B80's, Ref's. 25yrs
...._ _____ __, e91 Teny 714-557-7594
Add Of Replace Central A/C
(fumece. OOll. condenser)
3 ton-$3295 3th ton-$3449
4 ton-$3549 5 ton;S3749 Ud744440 . 714-536-7325
AUTO SERVICES
AMERICAN DETAIL
Mob41e Svc/MaJnl Program. Overspray At your home Of
olflC8 Call 7f4·969·3n6
I • BATHROOMS I
HOME flair
&1h111b Rfflain1.
Reg I m~JReTurb1 ~h
P0<relarn • FoberglJ\S
Sinks • Showers ,.
Fl10tout.Com
Tiie ,...,. ' ""* ... (114) 2$4-f171 Li22'443
'
* BRICK WORK • Small jobs & repair WOik.
C1ll DOUG HARLINE
949-645-4762
BUILD YOUR
DREAM HOME
K.K. WHt Contractors
can help! Cuttom
homes, room edQtione,
remodel s, custom
doc1ct We take your
dleame fTOm · Concept
to ~1lon". 10<.
West.:1... design/build.
1..w-500-1150
CAH415n
,
Sped9lty Sc'""9
94f..&4&.7418
-~-.c:om Llel~
Orywlll/Pllint Elpena
2Qrr. Elp. Hang, taping, teXllHing. acou11io removal,
petchWOlit lnVe.i ptlnlfng
No job too lmlll
71 .. 348-4404. 7/$43-1410
WITTHOEFT DRYWALL Alt l)/laltl/small/ltg jobt.
Cl.EANI 2<>/11. fllr, free Ml
LM00030 11.-.1447
LICENSED CONTRACTOR
No job too sm. Alt seMcesl
Aeptir, remodel. Jans, t(le.
new leMces MIW 3151
ACTIOl llOMI
l9IOVUllll
&
llUITllllllCI .. ~;:., Alfitk
(714f 17 .. 1171
Drywall Rtp•lr/Pafnllng
Carpentry/Strip Wallpaper
Small jobs old Call Bob
• '714-973-7533 *
QUAUTY CRAFTSMAN
20.Yeet1 ~. Aers
I'll! YOUR H.AHDYM~I
MARK 949-650-9525
Semi Ret"9d Conlrtc1or
Ree>aksllr11>rovements. Sm. Jobs. Ouatlty/lntegnty.
I c-, Ken Mt-642·1nO
W1Jter
The Handyman
Maste< Carpenter
25 v 88111 Expl Portfolio
No job too &mal.
Phone 949-510.S385
Pager 714-298-5400
Complimentary
ConaultatlOO
~ Pasteur Heallh
Newport Bead!
(949)6'5-7490
EXPERT CLEAN.UP
Treet·Pruned/Rtmoved Non-licenaed contractor
714-751-3471
•Lou Tame IMldiclP'* SeMng 1ialbor . ., .. b 25
yra. Weekly maintenance,
"" & lrllgllion wertc. ,_ inlldttlon MM41-77U.
[•mal
PRECISE PLUMBIN.G CHUNG'S PAINTING AepaR & Remodels
24 y_.. Exp · Great Price! FREE ESTIMATES
Guar8lltle Wort. · Free Est. U687398 -114·969-1090 U375602 714-536-1534
All T~ ol l\oo& &'. • Raiclaifial • c--a.J
(949) 548-0769
www.Whitn .com
C•llltfon Rooflnt Senior
ci9ooult 20yrs experienoll
Al C.meron 714429-0969
818-353-1067 lJ734769
Finl UM CuSIOrn Pailting
Interior/Ext realdential I
oommerclal. Exper1 on
texture. Quality WOlit, rea·
aonable price. ~
l l 755003 714·265·9787
I I 0 & 0 UPHOLSTERY -SER'= =.i~. ~ ..... --------'· tiQU! repeir 714§42-4112
1· .... PAINTl5 1-~1 SO. COAIT MOYES BEST
CartlUI, ~ FUii HouM or 1 111m. FREE ESTIMATE ll<E'S CUSTOM PAINTING
T1•11a ,....7711 ProlMlional, clean. q1111i!y wolk. lnVext & docu.
FARTH-.0 INTERIORS
lnltllalion • RernoYll Olscoun1 Wllfcovt'
LJ560875 :::.:L
PUBLIC
NOTICE
The Calif. Public· UtilltlH . Com·
million REQUIRES
thll .. UMd h<iuee-
hold goodl lllOY8fl print their P.U.C.
Cll T runber; limol and dlauflers print
!heir T.C.P. number
In .. ICMl1llmer*.
If you tllVI • quit• ton ......
ily of I mover, ho
Ot "'*"". 'Cit. PUalC UTlUTIES COMMISION
7t .. &58-4t51
Ll703468 949-631-4610
..
Califomll aate Lie No. C39-610549
An types of roofing
end repairs
Lieb~ end Worker's Qimpensation Jnsurance
Member National
Roofing Contractors
Assn.
Since 1987
IMIJ l!SNl91 .corn
THE STRIPPER! Spec:iallzing in wallpaper removal.
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