HomeMy WebLinkAbout2001-04-24 - Orange Coast Pilot..
I
SERVING THE NEWPORT -MESA CO!v4MUNmES SINCE 1907 ON THE WEB: ~.DAILYPILOT.COM NESDAY, APRIL 24, 2001
Mormons rejoice oye r., .. ptoposed teµiple
.
• There is little concern
Newport Beach's slow-growth
law will hold up construction.
NEWPORT BEACH -The
announcement came Friday.
All that's left for members of the
Newport Beach Stake of the Church
of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints to
do is obtain the right permits from the
city, announce a site, detennine a
SMASHING DEBUT
groundbreaking date and Conn com-
mittees to spread the word that the
first Mormon temple in Orange Coun-
ty will be built in the city.
In other words, they have a lot to
do, said Robert Wynn, the city's for-
mer city manager and a member of
the NewpoJt Beach stake.
A site has been bought for the tem-
ple from the Irvine Co., but me mbers
of the church are not authorized to
discuss the building plans, site or cost
yet, said Joseph Bentley, a spokesman
for the Orange County branch of the
church.
Bentley did acknowledge that the
church owns six acres next to one of
its churches on Bonita Canyon Road
in Newport Beach. Members a re
speculating and hoping that this will
be the site the church decides to use.
Bentley said be hopes to publicly
announce the site in the next two
weeks.
Bentley also said that unttl the
church receives word from the
church's main offices in Salt Lake City
on how large and what exactly the
temple will look like, they cannot go
to the city to get the necessary per-
mits.
He added, however, that he does
not think that the process -even
with last year's passage of the slow-
growth Greenlight measure -will be
a problem.
•Any time you build something 111
the Newport Beach or lrvine areas, it's
not known for be111g easy: Bentley
said. ~once we know what the tem-
ple lS going to look Wee, then we can
put something together and go before
the Plcmning Commission. And I don't
think Greenlight will be a problem
because the sites we have ~ought
about die public and serrupublic."
SEE TEMPLE PAGE 5
QUESTION
A BLESSING?
How would a new
Mormon temple affect
Newport Beach? Call our
Readers Hotline at (949)
642-6086 or send e-mail
to dailypilotOlatimes.com.
Please spell your name a nd
include your hometown
and phone number, for
verification purposes only.
City Counc;il
leaning
away from
bluffs plan
• Review system to
protect Corona del Mar
was suggested by the
Newport Beach Planning
Commission.
Mathis Winkler
DAILY PILOT
NEWPORT BEACH -Property
owners on Corona del Mdl'lt bluJb
are bound to breathe a sigh of rebef
tonight.
City Counal members are saymg
they don't feel comfortable WJth d
Planning CommisSJon proposcil to
create an extra reVJew layer for new
homes in the area The propoSdJ
was made
after several
people had
come before
the panel with
plans for hous-
es covenng
most or the
bluff on their
property.
"We need
to create a
balance
SEAN HIUER/OAllV PILOT
Sarah Thomas of Newport Beach chrlstem her father-in-law's boat. Supertor, as it ls lifted into Newport Harbor on Thunday.
But council
members said
Monday that
while their own
policy calls for
protection of
between that
policy and
upholding
people's
property
rights."
Newport· takes a step toward affordable housing
• The City Council tonight is expected to begin the
process, which could last years, to get senior homes built.
Mathis Winkler for low-income seniors. Have $2
DAILY PILOT million to help if need be.
That's a so-called •request for
NEWPORT BEACH -Want· proposals" City Council members
ed: Affordable housing developer are expected to approve at their
to build at least 100 apartments meeting tonight.
"We're trying to let the world
know tha t we have money to sub-
sidize a project,• said Councilman
Tod Ridgeway, who chair's the
city's affordable housing task
force.
But while he agreed with his
colleagues that the move would
hopefully bring the city a step
closer to getting much-needed
affordable home for 1ls seruor
population. a lack of adequate
land nught tum out to be the real
problem.
"It isn't for a lack of trying.·
Ridgeway said. "Somebody's
golng to have to find a site.·
H e added that not many were
J
SEE HOUSING PAGE 5
The hard part is done For the commodore of the Newport to Ensenada International
Yacht Race, the final week has everything behind him
T be toughest part of Jeny
Sbandera'a job ii tinlshed.
As commodore for the
54th annual Newport to Emenada
International Yacht Race, Shan·
dera hu been In high gear for
neuty a year.
It takel a yeoman'a effort to pull
together an event u mustve u
tbll -the wortd'I largest lntema-
t6onal yacbt na. With .uo boats r.mg In 21 dUMI along the 125-
ildle coune. a lat can go wrong.
.... • beg undlnt1dr'9,. Shan·
... Nkt. ·.Plaantag ad work Oil ====·too lolag after Of caune, .._ ..... .,_.t ......... .._ __ ___ ... _....,. ............. ...
FUI FACT
Whether the 400-plus boats partic-
ipating In the race will fly their Mils
In Newport Harbor will be up to the
Winds. But many ski~ will defl·
nttely hofst their bMtle fS., whkh
usually haw some connectlon to the
name of the boet.
Roy E. Disney's record-Mttlng
•Py9weck.t, • for example, Is named after a
certain fellne Disney cheracter. So ~ watch out for the
big black c.at on the lhlp'I fteg on Friday.
~llnceUM8 .
At ....... t. ..... ....
..... md ... .,... ..... dlalr •
.. w111a .......... ...,. ..,.,,. .......... ..... ... .......... -....
manager for a series of ceremonial
gatherings that lead up to the
send~ff.
The 47-yMI-old Shandera hrst
became mvolved in the event m
1990, when a sailing friend sug-
gested he chip m aome tree time to
help organizers. At the bme, he
bad a 14-foot Milboet anchored at
Udo Isle.
"That's where everybody
•tarts.• Shandere Mid ol has days
u a volunteer on the front llMa.
In 1998, Shandera. who lvw ta
Orange. lerwd • ,.. cbmrmM.
The marathon rta ii tDugla cm
~but ....... .
... wbo bNft tbi ...... .... =. waMn for men -~ -.. . ,,.~ ............ ........................
IMI
the bluffs, a Tod Ridgeway
mandatory site councilman
plan revtew
suggested by
planning comrruss1oners was not
the way to go about 1t
·w e need to create a balance
between that pohcy and upholchng
people's property nghts, • Counal-
man Tod Ridgeway said.
He added that under the current
proposal, it would be up to the ch.s-
cretion of planrung comnuss1oners
to approve or deny a project.
"What's nussing in Uus current
proposal ts adequate tandard.s, •
Ridgeway said. ·u it's vague and
ambiguous. it's not enforceable.•
Tonight's vote comei. as oty oCfl·
daJs have been working on a set or
guidelines for reviewtng new hous-
ing projects. Becau tJu.s will take
moJ'e time than expected, city staff
me mbers have recom mended
SEE BLUFFS PAGE 5
11111
QAWflDS 10
cmnmm,.. ' .. , .. 2
RIS • lll¥1mef _ 3
•
2 Tuesday, April 24, 2001
Kids Talk
BACK . Students
..
~J~ EDIJCATION
Host families needed for
international students
American lntercultural Student
Exchange, • nonprofit educational foun-
dation, Is seeking host f•milles for Inter-
national high school students for the
2001-02 school year.
Host families provide a room and
IN THE CLASSROOM
food for a foreign student and a sup-
portive atmosphere in which the stu-
dent may discover AtneriQn traditions '
and experience the culture.
Students will arrive In August speak
English, attend the neighbof'hood high
school and each have their own medical
insurance and spending money.
Information: (800) SIBLING.
Daily Pilot
Showing off at Davis
Education
The Daily Pilot asked
students at Newport Harbor
High School: What do you
think about game shows such
as "The Weakest Unk·
and reality shows such as
"Survivor•?
"I don't like
The Weak-
est Link.' I
think it's
negative
program-
ming. She
(the h0st[ is
so mean to
the contes-
tants and puts them down. If I
went on it, I would make fun
of her and then win money.
But 'Temptation Island.' well, I
didn't miss a week."
MfTot GRAY, 18
Senior
"I like how
· the host (of
'The Weak-
est l..Jnk' [ IS
so mean to
the people.
I saw her
on Conan
O'Brien the
other night,
too, and it looked like she's a
lot of fun and so is the show.
And I like the old 'Survivor,'
not the new ones.•
MADDI COHEN, 18
Senior
HDude, they
[reality and
game
shows[ are
cool. They
make fun of
everyone. I
like 'Wm
Ben Stein's
Money,' and
everyone likes ('Who Wants lo
be a[ Millionaire?' But I think
'Family Feud' was really cool
when that old guy was on it.
These other shows are just
about people bcmg greedy.·
PETER BELDEN, 18
Senior
"I liked
'Boot
Camp.' It '
was all
about 'BoQt
Camp' for
me. And I
also liked
'Double
Dare.·
COLIN HARRIGAN, 17
Senior
"I think
those shows
are all a
waste of
time. They
are just
retarded. I
really only
watch
'Wheel of
Fortune.' It just seems like
there is better stuff on lV. And
'Temptation Island,' what's
that all about? All they are
doing is pulling people apart.•
TARA SIMMONS, 16
Sophomore
-Photos and Int.Mews by
Stet..,._ Frith
Dai¥l!ilot
VOL 95, NO. 109
THOMAS H. J0tM0N.
P\lbliih«
TONYDODaO.
Editor
s..J. CN4N,
Oty Editor
~--A11i1tM1t City Editor
--DKMAHAI..
Futures Editor
1110GD aw'°"
5porU Editor
DUMllA GllOW.
Newsfdltof
AMMAMM•AA ... ~
111¥1 MCCJtANK.
l'tlCltlo Editor
Nl1Y Oln9IG.
~onctor
LAIMIOIMON,
fliromotlOl'll
Center
get an
eyeful
and
earful
during a
dance
assembly
PHOTOS BY GREG FRY I DAILY PILOT
Aziz Faye, center, and Jason Hann keep the beat as Nikola Clay moves to the rhythm at Davis Education Center.
Danette Goulet
DAILY PILOT
Dancers' limbs and torsos twisted and
writhed in ever-changing, fluid motions as
the lightning fast beat of African drums
filled the air.
Liquid rhythm and grace is bow I would
desoibe the dancing of Abdoulaye Ounara, a
dance master from Guinea, Afnca, and his once-
pupil Nikola Clay.
The dancers performed for students at Davis
Education Center in Costa Mesa on Monday to the
amazing percussion sounds of three other mem-
bers of their troupe -Aziz Faye, Jason Hann and
Bill Meinerding.
Faye also doubled as a dancer, making impres-
sive leaps into the air.
The Allatanous Dance group, an ever·changing
collective of people, has come together to perlorm
at various venues during Camara's three-month
visit to the United States, during wruch he per-
forms and promotes his African dance and percus-
sion workshop held in Guinea each winter.
In three back-to-back performances, the troupe
began with an energetic dance that immediately
engaged the attention of its young audience.
School Lunch
MENU
The Newport-Mesa Unified School District often menu
choke NCh my at elementafy IChools. 5t\ldents m.y
choose a vegetMian entrM If desired. The selection varies
and may be ent. a sat.Id, sandwich or hot entree. School lvnches .,.. S 1.75 Heh; the distric:1 does not accept thecks
for less than s 17.50. Here's wNt"s being SllfWd this week:
TODAY
Munchable Lunch Salad with Cruit yogurt or
Rib-B-Que on a bun with barbecue sauce,
baby carrots with dip, strawberries; choice
READERS HOTUN£ Copyright No -stories. illus-
tratloni. editorial matter or~-(949) 642-6086 titemenb herein c.n be repr~ Record yoor comments 1bout duced without written permlulon the Daily Pilot or news tlps. of copvrlght owner.
AQDRESS tfOW JO BEACH US Our eddreu is 330 W. Bay St.,
Costa Mesa, CA 92627. ClmMdon
CORRE.CDONS The Times Orange County
It Is the Pilot's polky to prompt-(IOO) 252-9141
Adwr1hlng ly correct 111 errors of subst.lnce. Oaulfled (949) 642-5678 Pleaie all (949) 57~3. Dlspl4ly (949) 642 ... 321
fcltofW m News (949) 642·5680 The N9wport ~ Me5I Spor1s (949) 574--4223 Diiiy Pilot (IJSPS-144-IOO) k ~
News, Sports Fax (949) 646-4170 llshed dtlly. In H9wpott Be.ch and
CostAI ~==wall-£-tNil: <Mllypllot011t1mes.com
Ible only ~ IUbscribl MM)Offka 11mes Or.nge County • Butlnet1 Offtc:. (949) 642-4321
9141. In ... outside of~ lutlnetl fp (949) 631-7126 a,.cti and CostAI MIN.
tionl to the Delly l'llot .,.. ev.it-NllltMlll by nn. ~""""' Ible Of'tty ~ !Mii for S20 per ......... of .. Lat,_,.... llrNL month. Second de. poNge peld
9t ColtAI Mel, CA. (PTkel Include _,_(JI,.,......._
.. .,,Pk.Ible state end loc.i .....
•) P'OSlMASTilt _,.. eddretl 11111 cNf'lllll to The Hewpon
~~~Not. PO. _a_.._....., laa 15t0. CCllta-.._ CA t2Gt.
Filth-graders Tung 'lian, center, and Rachel
Rogers Joln their classmates ln singing
along with vislttng performers Monday. •
Students, teachers and parents alike appeared
enthralled by the bold movements and incredibly
quick drum beat. .
Children's response to Camara was immediate
and loud.
of milk
WEDNESDAY
Muncbable Lunch Salad or sourdough French
bread pizza, crisp green salad with low fat dress-
ing, fresh buit. choice of milk
THURSDAY
Munchable Lunch Salad or turkey and gravy
with mashed potatoes and fresh baked roll.
peach cup, choice of milk
FRIDAY
Munchable Lunch Salad or fish stl.cks with tartar
sauce, com on the cob, rosy applesauce, school
WEATHER AND SURF
1"UIWIOAlURES TIDES
Balboa TODAY
78157 First low
CorONI del Mar 4:38 a.m .................... -0.3'
78157 First high
Costa Mesa 10:50 a.m ................... 4.1'
78157 5e<ond low
Newport Beach ~13 p.m ..................... 1.2'
781Ji7 Second high Newport Coast 10:26 p.m ................... 5.7' 78157
WFOMCAST MDNUOAY
First low Ankle--to knee-high 5:09 a.m ..................... -o.s· wtws and fair First high conditions at the 11:27 e.m ................... 3.7' Newport pier.
S.Cond low
LOCATION llZI 4:31p.m ..................... 1.4'
Wtdge H ' s.cond high
Newport 1·2' 10:51 p.m ................... 5.6'
llidcle's 1-2·
RIWf '-tty 1-2' ...
Coronl .. Mllr 1·2' ~ 56
He asked them to repeat alter bun the lines he
sang. And did they ever.
His shouts in a language they didn't know -
and had most likely never heard -echoed back to
him more loudly than I've ever heard students
respond in an assembly of its kind.
No other type or music could possibly elicit such
a reaction .
Their favorite line ended with a loud and whiny
"Nab" sound and a finger pointed at one's neigh-
bor.
Hann explained the various instruments and
demonstrated the sounds they created.
He told students where they were from and
what they were called in different countries m
Africa.
What really got the crowd roaring, however,
was getting students up there to play five-gallon
water c:Ooler bottles while their teachers danced to
an ever-increasing tempo played by the students.
It was an energizing assembly for students back
fresh from spring break. And those children were
darn good on those water bottles.
• IN ntE OASSROOM is a weekly feature in which Daily
Pilot education writer Danette Goulet visits a campus within
the Newport·Mesa Unified School District and writes about
her experieoce.
cookie, choice of milk
MONDAY
Muncbable Lunch Salad or turkey nuggets with
dipping sauce, baby carrots with low-fat dip,
choice of fruit, choice of milk
•The Muncbable Lunch Salad contains tossed
greens, cheny tomatoes, crackers and protein
sources such as cheese, sunflower seedJ, fruit
yogurt, honey-roasted peanuts and dreeslng.
No child Is dlscrimlnat~ •galnst ~us. of race, .wx,
color. natlonlll origin, • or disability. If If is t»llwed •
child has bHn discriminated against, ~ lmm«lt.Nly
to m. .secretary of Agriculture, W•shlngtOn. DC 20150.
POLICE FILES
COSTA MESA
• Anton 8oulevarct Vandalism was reported In the 600
bk>dt at 12:40 a.m. Sunday.
• Fair Drtve: An automobile theft was reported In the
first block at 1:18 p.m. Sunday
• Keny Une: A home burglary was reported In the
3100 block at 5:23 p.m. Sunday.
• KftOll StNet: An assault was reported In the 200 block
at 9 a.m. Sunday.
NEWPO«T BEACH
• ._. CoM ........... A. wallet was reported stolen
from an ~ In the 3500 bloctc at noon s.turct.y.
• .Jeces•w o.11: Property WOf1h about S 10,000 w•
report.cf stolen from a home In the 100 blOCll M J:J7
p.m.~ . . .
......... ~ rtpolt9C#y cut the top off of CllC"
tul trWl In the 2100 blodt • ):4J p.m. ...,.
' '
Doily Pilot Tuesday, April 24, 2001 3
U7ho said size
doesn 't matter?
NEWPORT·MESA UNIFIED SCHOOL DISTRICT
W hen I was young, I
w~ a skinny,
scrawny kid. Now
that I am an adult, a very old
adult, I am a skinny, ~awny
ancient. So much for the pas-
sage or time.
Because I was so under-
sized, skirtny and scrawny, I
had great admiration, alil'lost
awe, for larg~ men:
Hal Pangle was my first ·
idol. Hal was about the size of
a small buck. Wr: both worked
at the Rendezvolls Ballroorfl
taking tickets. In those days it
was a nickel a dance, and after
each number it was our ticket
takers' job to clear the Door by
taking long ropes and herding
the dancers off the Door so
they could put in another tick-
et for the new dance. Some
people took offense at being
herded off the floor like a
bunch of cattle, and they
would take it out on the boy
with the rope -skinny,
scrawny me. About the time
some oversized slob was going
to remove my head from my
shoulders, I would scream,
"Pangle!· and Hal would trot
over. The irate patron would
take one look at Hal and
become very, very docile.
And then there were the
two constables, "Tiny•
Vaughn and Big Bill Ponting,
each well over 6 112 feet, and
when Bill Ponting put on his
cowboy boots and cowboy
hat, he looked about 8 feet
tall. Both liny and Bill were
from Costa Mesa. and after
seeing them, I became con-
vinced at a very early age thdt
Costa Mesa was a land of
Robert Gardner
THE VERDICT
giants. Their size allowed
them to simply show up and
calm down potential trouble.
No force needed.
Later in life, when Don
Vaughn, Tmy's son, and I
became close friends, I saw
once again how being a man
of size had certain advan-
tages. A group of us were
going to Mexico. On the first
night out, the group leader
got drunk and lost all of our
tickets. Not to worry. We
would walk into a hotel with-
out any tickets, reservations or
whatever one is supposed to
have. U the desk clerk started
to demur, Don would simply
reach over his head, grab a
bunch of keys and di'>tributc
them. Very simple if you are
6-foot-8 and an ex-pro footban
player.
All I can say is that it must
be a lot more fun being big
and strong than being small,
scrawny and weak. l'U never
know.
• R08ERT GARDNER is a Corona del
Mar resident and a former judge. His
column runs Tuesdays.
s&~
Mattress Outlet Store
3165 Harbor Blvd.
Costa Mesa
One Baodt South of 405 ~
545-71 68
On the
AGENDA
STUDENTS TO
SPEAK, AGAIN
The student political
action committee from
Newport Harbor High
School, which was sched-
uled to give a presentation
to the school board at the
last meeting on traffic '
safety Issues at the school,
is expected to speak
tonight. Group members~
asked for the delay so they
would have more time to
prepare.
What to expect: Stu-
dents from the organiza-
tion will present concerns
and suggestions regarding
pedestrian traffic and the
limited school parking
based on surveys they have
done.
MEASURE A UPDATE
As plans progress to
begin the refurbishment of
28 distritt scho'ols with
funds from the $110-mil-
lion school bond passed by
voters in June, a couple
more pieces still must be
put in place. The oversight
committee is up and run-
ning. A project manage-
THE TOLL ROADS
WILL GET YOU
TH ERE FASTER .
SO WHAT'S
STO .PPING YOU?
Con9estlon-frH, uninterrupted drives where you can actually
drive the speed llmlt. GM, what a concept.
ftf llltft i•ftrNtiott:
nw.tMtlflr1Ms.c•
1-t00-311-fW (171,,
FYI
• Who: Newport-Mesa
Unified School 01str1ct
Board of Education
• When: 7 p.m. today
• Where: District Education
Center, 2985-A Bear St ..
Costa Mesa
~ .
ment firm has been chosen
and hired. Now the school
boa1.(j muSit appoint an
"9\Nner's representative,"
which will provide addi-
•. tional project management
services·and serve as the
"eyes and ears" o f the
owner -the Newport-
Mesa Unified School Dis-
trict.
What to expect: The
school board will consider
hiring Tom Holtom for the
position. Holtom was one
of three f inal candidates
interviewed by staff and
oversight committee mem-
bers. He was also appoint-
ed as an at-large member
of the citizem oversight
committee member on
Jan. 31 . On March 6, he
resigned from the commit-
tee to apply for the posi-
tion of ow.ner's representa·
tive. District staff members
have asked the board to
approve Holtom for the
position and to waive the
conflict-of-interest issue
because of his short stint
on tHe committee.
DAY AND WEEK
OF THE TEACHER
California has observed
the Day of the Teacher
since 1982. It was decided
in 1985 that the second
Wednesday of May would
.be the Day of the Teacher.
In recent years, the whole
first week in May ha~ also
been devoted as Week of
the Teacher. ·
What to expect: The
school board is expected to
pass a resolution to pro-
claim May 9 as Day of the
Teacher and May 7
through May 11 as Week
of the Teacher.
CLASSIFIED SCHOOL
EMPLOYEE \OIEEK
Four years after teach-
ers were given a day of
observance, classified
employees were given the
third full week in May as a .
week in their honor.
What to expect: The
school board will proclaim
the week of May 21
through May 25 as Classi-
fied School Employees
Week.
011 THI
SCHOOL IOAID
Dana
Black
Judy
Pruco
Jim Martha
Ferryman Fluor
Wendy
Leec:e
David
Brooks
Serene
Stokes
MBA
• i\11 C\('lllnl!
pr11grJm ll>r
""rl.1ni: .1J11h,
Intro to Summer Fall Proy111m
(:onco,.dia CUAcu/erate l . 11 i \' e r s i t \' • "!t"W an.clcmcd • f • -dcgrtt t.omplcuon
• l•mrq'rlncurul
cmph.1'''
• l'rnln\1011.11
hU\lllC\\ 11H:l11Ur.
& ).:UC\I 'lll.'Jker\
(949) 854-8002
ext.17 10
mba@cui.edu
rvlf)(" program
• L'n1quc cour~
"ombine~ live and
on-line 1mtruc11on
only one weekend
;i n;un1h
(949) 854-8002
cn.1341
adc@cui.edu
RE.SERYATIONS PLEASE
1530 Concordia West, Irvine
A be1111tifol. guard-gated ca mpm at the top ofltmle Roclt
"1fi£B£n(h; of
ifr£ ~arhnr J\r£a"
•
Thursday, April 26, 2001 at 6 p.m.
Costa Mesa Neighborhood Community Center
1845 Park Aven ue, Costa Mesa
Youth
Employment
S ervice ~f the Harbor Area, Inc.
Honoring the Beeks, the Tellers and the Tozers
Tom Johnson of the Daily Pilot and Jim Dale of
Hoag Memorial Hospital Presbyterian will be
Masters of Ceremonies.
To become a sponsor/underwriter,
donate a silent auction item or secure a reservation
for the evening's festivities, call
Youth Employment Service of the Harbor Area, Inc.
at (949) 642-0474
-
4 Tuesday, April 2.4, 2001 Daily Pilot
Costa Mesa officials to tour Home Ranch
• As proposed, the 93-acre project will include an
Ikea, offices, homes and industrial businesses.
.lennit.r Kho
DAILY Pu.or
COSTA MESA -City
Council members and resi-
dents looking for a better
understanding of the proposed
Home Ranch project will get
the chance to see the site Fri-
day.
"It's always good to eyeball
things,• said Paul Freeman,
spokesman for C.J.
Segerstrom & Sons, owner of
the property. "It's always good
to see things firsthand and to
understand what the physical
constraints are, what the line-
of-sight issues are and just
what some of the possibilities
are. I think it will be useful."
Home Ranch, a 93-acrepro-
ject originally scheduled for
Planning Commission review
last year, was redesigned to
add housing, as well as reduce
building heights and the
squa.re~foot density of the pro-
posed office space.
The modified proposal for
the site -a lima bean farm
bordered by the San Diego
Freeway, Fairview Road, Har-
bor Boulevard and Sunflower
Avenue -calls for a 308,000-
square-foot Ikea furniture
store, 791,050 square feet of
office space, 252,648 square
feet of industrial business and
464 homes.
Despite the redesign, the
project has remained contro-
versial.
Three homeowners associ-
ations -Mesa North Commu-
nity Assn., Halescrest/Hall of
Pame Homeowners Assn. and
Mesa Del Mar Homeowners
Assn. -have opposed the
project because of worries that
the project could strain police
and fire services, as well as
increase traffic and urban
~Off. I •
The organizations also
expressed ooncem about the
density of the proposed hous-
ing and the aesthetics. 1 of 'the
Ikea.
Robin Leffler, a Mesa Verde
resident, said she opposes
parts of the project that are
expected to significantly
exceed the general plan
requirements for the site. such
as traffic generation and the
density of the indusbial park.
"I think the citizens tend to
think of the general plan as a
limit to the city, but it looks like
it iB not being looked at as a
limit but as a jumping-off point
or a starting point.· she said.
•0verdevelopment affects our
quality of life ln a lot of ways. It
puts pressure on our housing,
degrades our air quality and
affects traffic. As far as Home
Ranch and the Ikea are con-
cerned, there are aesthetic
considerations. There could be
a big parking lot and a big
to be preserved, such as the
farmhouse, and where the
Ikea and lndusbial park will
go.· she said. "R's a large pnt-
ject, 93 acres, and one or the
largest pieces of undeveloped
property in the city. There's a
lot of conununity interest in the
development, and we want to
make sure that whatever goes
out there is the best for the ,
community. We want to evalu-
ate Segerstrom 's pefflpective
blue box at the entrance to our· from the field. sOmetirnes, it's ·
city."
Th i h ch dOl d · easier to see when you're th~re
e c ty as s e e than when you're looking dt three bus tours of the Home Jans •
Ranch property. p Th. will tr 3 t General infonnation about e to~ run om o
the project and a discussion 5 p.m. Fnday, 9 to 11 a.m.
will also be included in the Monday and from 9:30 to 11 :30
tour, said Kimberly Brandt, a.m. May 12 ..
associate planner for the city, The deadline for tour reser-
on Monday. vations is W~esday ..
"We're going to go out and For more information, caU
look at it, look at what is going (714) 754-5610.
Resitlents' group takes Westside efforts public
Jennifer Kho
0AJLV PILOT
COSTA MESA -Citizens
for the improvement of Costa
Mesa is scheduled to hold its
first open meeting this
evening.
uw e've h ad lots of little
meetings, but this is our first
big one,• Chairwoman Jan-
ice Davidson said Monday.
HThe meeting is about get-
ting things done in the city,
and doing it better and faster.
Whether we have 25 people
show up or 100, I'll be
pleased. It'll be a fast and
Bra &· Pant11
Sak
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Monday -Saturday 10-6
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presents -.__..
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CLEAN HARBOR ·DAY
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ottd the
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Endo1ed Is my contribution for cNt lmponant communky ewm.
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quick meeting."
The group, which sup-
ported Councilman Chris
Steel's election and contin-
ues to support many or his
plaUorm ideas, is dedicated
to improving rundown areas
in the city.
Members favor ideas such
as using eminent domain to
create more expensive hous-
ing on the Westside and
cracking down on illegal
immigrants, efforts which they
say would improve property
values, schools and the overall
quality of life in the city.
Davidson said she hopes
the open call for helpers will
result in residents forming
groups to work on issues that
interest them.
"If somebody's interested
in rezoning the bluffs, we'll
put a party together .to work
on that,~ s he said. "If another
is interested in underground-
ing utilities, we will work on
bow to get it done in a faster
time than it would take the
city alone. We might look at
how to stop some of the traf-
fic congestion, on getting
Home Ranch single-family
houses instead of a higher
density and on improving
the Westside.•
Aside from those long-term
issues, the group also will
search for "the little things• it
can do to improve the city,
Davidson said.
"There are a lot of litU •
things we can do without
waiting for the city to do
them." she said. ·we could
watch out for kids coming
home from school and make
sure they get picked up or get
safely home if they are walk-
ing. An easy little thing that
makes your whole street look
better is just to ask our neigh-
bors lo sweep in front of their
houses. There are a Jot of
things we could 'do on our
own, lhmgs that are easy and
visible, to make this a better
city."
According lo a flier, some ol
the issues that may be dis-
cussed include the possibility
of rezoning property on the
bluffs from industrial to resi-
dential uses, a plan to widen
East 17th Street. crime and
overcrowding.
The meeting will start at
6:30 p.m. at the Neighborhood
Community Center. 1845 Park
Ave .
For more informdllon, e·
mail janbat.s4u2@aol.com.
LOSE 20 POUNDS
IN TWO WEEKS!
Famo11s U.S. Wommi Alpine Siu 7(11m Diet
During the non-snow off season the U.S. Women 's Alpine Ski
Team members used the "Ski Team" die1 10 loi.c 20 pounds in 2 weeks.
That's righ•-20 pound:. in 14 days! The hlbi' or lhe die• is chemical
food ac1ion and was devised by a famous Colorado physician
e~pccially for the U.S. Ski Team. Normal energy is maintained (very
imponan1 ) while reducing. You keep "full" no -<1u1rv11tion -because
the diet is designed tha1 way. l .. s a diet that i\ easy 10 follow, whether
you work. travel or stay at home Cfor men, 100!).
Thi:. is, honc~tly, a fan1as1icaJly ~UCCe,sful diet. If II weren'I.
the U.S. Women 's Alpine Ski Team wouldn't be pcnnilled to use 11!
Righi? So. give yourself lhe same break the U.S. Ski Team gets. Lose
weight the scientific, proven way. Even if you 've tried all 1he other
diets, you owe it to yourse lf 10 try lhe U.S. Women's Alpine Ski Team
Diet. That i', if you really do Wllllt to lose 20 pound.\ in 1wo ~eek:..
Order 1oday! Tear this ou1 as a reminder.
Send only S9.95 -add .5~ RUSH !>ervice to: ~HDWEST
ASSOCIATBS, 3318 S. Glenstone, Suite 308. Springfield. MO 65804.
Don't order unle you expect 10 lose 20 pounds in two weeks!
Bccaui.c that's wha1 lhe S.k.i Team Diet will do.
C2000
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Doily Pilot
TEMPLE
CONTINUED FROM 1
Patricia Te mple , the city's
planning director, agreed
that Greenlight will not be a
problem, as th"ere is no Umlt
on how big the te mple can
be. · ,'
Bentley a lso said the
Irvine Co. has told the
church that they can build a
temple as large as the
60,000-square-foot temple in
San Diego.
However, he said the
temple they are considerin9 •
is smalle,r than the Bonita'
Canyon· Road church, wpf&
is 30,000 square feet. The
new temple is expecte d ~o
take one or two years to
build.
HOUSING
CONTINUED FROM 1
available, apart from a
few places around Hoag
Hospital and some along
West Coast Highway in
West ~ewport Beach.
While Newport Beach
doesn't actually have to
build affordable housing
units, state law requires
the city lo have programs
in place that encourage
such developments.
The housing element
in the city's general plan
requires developers to set
aside a certain percent-
age of apartments for
affordable housing.
The $2 million that is
up for grabs came from
the One Ford Road pro-
ject. where the developer
opted lo hand over a
check ra ther than build•
affordable apartments.
The Irvine Co. also still
has an obligation to build
172 affordable-housing
units in return for con-
structing more than 650
market-rate homes in
areas such as the Upper
Castaways, Harbor Cove
and a stretch of land east
of MacArthur Boulevard.
City and company offi-
cials have be~ working
on a project for Bayview
Landing at the comer of
East Coast Highway and
Jamboree Road.
While Ridgeway said
he had hoped to see that
complex compl~ted with-
in two ye ars, negotiations
were moving "very, very
slow:
One of the main issues
that's still being debated
is the mix of apartments
fo r people with low
income and those with
moderate income. Com-
pany officials want to
build more moderate
income units, which
bring in more rent,
Ridgeway said, adding
that task force members
were not in agreement
with that.
Ric.h Elbaum. a com-
pany spokesman, said he
wasn't aware of any dis-
agreements as a result of
the ongoing discussions
with city officials. He
added that he didn't
know the specifics of the
negotiations.
As far as the request
for proposals is con-
cerned, city officials bave
set June 1 as the deadline
for submissions from
developers. But even if
someone comes back
with a workable idea. it
would still take years
before seniors could
move into their new
homes, Ridgeway said.
RACE
CONTINUED FROM 1
"It's the distance and the
ability to ra~e against the best
boaters in the world,• Shan·
dera said. Hlbere's just a spe·
dal camaraderie that attracts
those that are interested in
sailing!
lbe event bas certainly
captivated Newport Beach
and attracted a bevy of famil·
iar names over the yea.rs -
from Humphrey Bogart to
Water Cronkite. This yeor,
America'• Cup legend Dennis
Connor and Roy Disney will
pilot lblps ln the regatta.
•tt'• been an extremely
auccenf uJ event,• Newport
IMech CoundlUlan Dennis
O'Neil said . •1t•1 great for
Newport Beach. and tt'I greet
for OW' N1ling t'OllUll\.DUty .•
Temples are consid ered to
be •houses of the Lord,"
whe re Christ's teachings are
reaffirmed through mar·
riag e. baptism a nd othe r
sacred ordinances that unite
families for eternity. r
Wynn sa1d the next step·
tor members is to form a
temple coounittee of about
five or six m embers to han-
dle such details as obtaining
the necessary permits from
the city. There also will be
members assigned to ensur-
ing the community knows
the temple is being built, he
said.
"We will have a n out-
reach program so neighbors
will know that it is our desir.e
to come into the area and
that it is a positive thing,"
Wynn said . "We will b e
there to answer q1,1estions.
BLUFFS
CONTINUED FROM 1
sending the matter back to
planning commissioners
before pushing ahead.
During an April 5 public
hearing before the Planning
Commission, several property
owners complained that the
new rule would jeopardize
homes they were planning to
build.
Some said they had alfeady
submitted plans to the city's
building de partment and felt
that a change in the process
midway was unfair.
Mayor Gary Adams, who
agreed that planning commis-
sioners needed to spend more
time fine-tuning the proposal,
said people with projects
already before the city should
be exempt from the changes.
Those projects, however,
were the reason why comm.is-
Any time you build some-
thing in Ne wport Be ach,
the re is concern for ahy
growth or traffic. There are
always those that raise ques-
tions.•
The p~oposal is part of an
effort to buHd three ne w
temples in California, a:tfd
the Newport Beach temple
will serve 44,100 me mbe rs
in the re giQn. Anothe r tern·
pie will be built near Sacra-
mento, and the third one will
be near Redlands. The exist-
ing temples are in West Los
Angeles, Oakland, San
Diego and Fresno.
Weatherford· Clayton1
leader of the"Ne wport Beach
sta ke, said the Newport
Beach temple continues a
tre nd of building a new gen ·
eration of smaller facilities to
accommodate the needs of
FYI
Newport Beach City
Council members will
meet ~t 7 p.m. today at
City Hall, 3300 Newport
Blvd.
sioners had pushed fo r a
speedy adoption of the new
rule.
"If they are going to send it
back to us -the longer that
we review (the proposal), the
more time elapses for more
development,• said Ed Selicb,
who chairs the Planning Com-
mission. "You wait long
enough and there won't be a
bluff left to worry about. 1
guess we could always do
that.•
Selich added that it was up
to the city's elected leaders to
make the final decision.
"It's really up to the coun-
cil,• he said, adding that the
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the rapidly growing church
community.
Clayton adde d that
before the Newport Be6ch
dedication, the public will
be able lo tour the facility.
For now, though, m em-
bers of the Newport Beach
stake say they are thrilled
that tlley will have a temple
in their own backyard. They
now commute to West Los
Angeles.
"On e issue is that right
now we drive such a long
distance to go to the temple.
It's almost a two-hour drive.
So we ar~ just delight~d that
there ~ going to be one that
is clo!Ter. Everyone is excit-
e d. We had always hoped
that there would be one in
Orange County,• said Doug
Owen, bishop of the Corona
del Mar ward.
commission simply served as
an advisory board. "They are
the policy makers.'
Councilman Steve
Bromberg agreed.
"If we pass this ordinance,
we would give non-elected
officials the authority to basi-
cally create and conduct a
design review, which has nev-
er been a healthy proposition
in Newport Beach,• Bromberg
said. "I'm not a believer in
design review. I'm not con-
vinced that telling people how
they should build their homes
is the way to do it.•
Other council members
said they'd like to explore oth-
er ways to protect the bluffs.
The pending general plan
update would probably be an
appropriate forum to address
the issue, said Councilman
Dennis O'Neil, who represents
Corona del Mar.
Jill Money said that when
she read the news in the
paper Saturday morning,
she was ecstatic.
"We don't get to go very
ofte n jto the temple), only
maybe two limes a year,.
Mon ey said Sunday after
church. "Now I can go quite
a few times. There is an
organist I was telling my
husband about ... who said
he was going to go to te mple
88 times in a year, one for
every key on tl'~e organ.
Maybe J can go 88 times too.
"We're just very excited.
It's something we have
heard about,fo r years, that
they wQuld eventually build
more . temples. And in the
last year or two, they (the
Church of Jesus Christ of
Latter-day Saints) have been
building more temples. And
He added that his distnct
shouldn't be the only area in
town affected.
"I'd like to look at it more
. ,
Tvesdoy, April 24, 2001 5
now, just think, th ere's going
to be one he re,· she added.
Benjamin Graff sa1d he,
like the rest of the Newport
Beach stake, feels blessed
that a new temple will be
built m Orange County.
•The temple is more than
a meeting house. it provides
families the opportunity to
prepare themselves for the
eternity,• Graff said. "It is
truly a house of institution
where those who are most
worthy can go. Only in the
temple can Jamilie~ be
sealed together. It is a great
blessing for the people here.
Any community where there
1s a temple· means that com-
munity is blessed · and
enriched."
-Pilot reporter
Mathis Winkler
contributed to this story
globally: he said. "We should
be looking at all of our coastal
bluffs, not Just the bluffs in
Corona del Mar.·
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. 5TH ANNuAL VOLVO LEUKEMIA CUP REGATIA
Schedule of Events: Newport Beach
May 2-6, 2001: Newport Dunes Boac Show
May 19, 2001: Elecuic Boat Poker Run at Bahia Corinthian Yacht Club (BCYC)
Sunday, May 20, 2001: The Junior Volvo Leukemia Cup Regarta
Hosred By the BCYC Junior Board
Race in Sabocs, Lasers. CFJS And Lido l 4s & any class with 4 boats
Ounior and Adult Sailors.Welcome)
May 30, 2001; Gary Jobson Presentation at BCYC
May 3 1, 2001: Live and Silent Auction & Dinner at BCYC
June 1-3, 2001: Newport to Dana Point
The Volvo Leukemia Cup R.cgam Championship Racing
The 2001 Volvo Leukemia Cup Regatta hoSTed by Dana West Yacht Club, Bahia
Corinthian Yacht Club and Seal Beach Yacht Club
2001 Event Sponsors
Major Local Sponsors include; Renzi Clothiers. Newport Harbor Shi pyard. Sourh Coast
Shipyard, Dana Point Ship}'.2t'd. Buena Park Plaque~ & Trophies. MTS, Inc .. The Amorde
Corp .. The Stitcheree. Double Tree Guest Suites, Marriott Laguna Oiffs Resort, Coors
Light Beer, first Care Benefits. Volvo Irv ine, 303 Aerospace: Protcctant and The lnsunt
Printery.
NatioMI Spo.uors include: Volvo, Mount Gay Rum, The Moorin~. West Marine, No rth
8&nb SW. & Ken Gardi~r (yacht modd maker), John Mccray (marine artist) and S.Jini
World.
Eftnt Information
The Sth Aa.auJ Vol.., Uuknni• Cap Regatta
O.US Jue 1-3, 2001
Co-sponsored by Bahia Corindtia.n Yacht Oub (BCYC), Dana West Yacht Club (DWYC),
and Seal Beach Yacht Club (SIBYC).
Two st.an lines (Long Beach and Newport each) on Friday, M:iy l
and at the Dana Point fin ish.
The: DWYC will host two buoy races on Saturday, a r.a.ndom leg r.acic: on unday. IU'.ld a
cruise division race: on both days.
• T10phy pracntations at DWYC on Sunday evening, June 3
FundiaU1ng at all chrtt dubs will ~ acc::ompUsbcd thro1Agh racin1 ip01UOrsh1p, aponsorl•dvcnixn,
member doNrioN. auctioa/banqU<t. clothlng and nfflc tic.hrs.
Whik ~eid .,..ca· with dw MIOC'ilftd mnlls and cnjoym<nt ~(~ widun the ...a.
coaununicy, all ~ u.ndcntand 1 pnmary ob;ccmc 11 fundniliftlo
,
COMMUNITY lilD IT
"It's quite a spectacle to see that
mariy boats."
How To GET,._
The O..ily Piiot welcomeS letters on issues concerning
Newport 8Nch and Costa Mesa.
6 Tuesday, April 24, 2001
Randoin acts
of violence
are despicable
I 'm mad as hell, and 1 don't want
to take it anymore. We are bend-
ing to the biggest buUying tactics
at school, and we are letting it
affect our
Lives and our
children's
Lives. What
does a bully
want? Power.
Power that he
may not oth·
erwise have
or deserve,
but wh.ich he
takes through
improper
means. He
gains lus pow-
er by not
playmg by the
rules.
The bully·
iny that has
Gay Geiser-
Sandoval
EDUCATIONALLY
SPEAKING
been going on at two locaJ campus-
es in recent weeks rises to the level
of terronsm. which is the uJtirnate in
bullying.
Terronsls use tactics outside of
the rules to get power that they
would not otherwise have. They
have made the threat of terror the
ulllmate hot button, as a not-so-
secret weapon to bend the masses
away from their daily routine. They
wield th ei r power not so much from
thP cclSUdlties that some tactics
cduse. The real power comes from
our response lo terrorists.
Unlike pohllcal terrorists, I'm not
sure that those that terrorized New·
port-Mesa Unified School Qislrict
campuses hdd dny plan in mind.
One could have been a prank gone
awry, dnd the other couJd have
been from self-induced terror.
In one mstance, a young girl
using an (>lemen tary school bath-
room was kept in her st:lU by a
man. I le could have had the inten-
tion of committing a bad act. or he
couJd hdve been 1n there and pan-
icked when she came in, and kept
her m d sta ll while he thought
about whdl to do. Whether done on
purpo~l' or not, the ultimate resolu-
tion 1s that kids will only have one
l)dlhroom avdilable before school.
So, the whole school population suf-
fers and changes its habits because
of this one act.
The second act of terrorism was
a homl> thredl set for Fnday the
13th, Lhe day before spring break
was to begin . (A similar threat
caused kids lo stay away from a
high school in Santa Barbara Coun·
ty that same day). Educdtional dol·
lars we re used lo hire a security
firm to check out the sewer pipes
and lockers for bombs. The police
were stationed around campus that
day. Instead of tedchers being able
to focu s on llps !or taking lhe Stan-
ford 9 tests coming up al the end of
the week, they were told to look for
suspicious items and to keep kids
calm. The staff aJJ showed up that
day, bomb threat or not.
Even wilh all of the extra securi-
ty and precautions, about a third of
the students took the day off. Many
of lhe kids went to the mall or the
beach, where their chance of hav·
ing something bad happen to them
was much higher, statistically, than
it was at school that day. Most of
the students will tell you that they
weren't afraid of a bomb going off.
They just wanted an extra day of
vacation. So, the terrorists got their
way. They probably never thought
about a bomb, except to use it as a
way to shut down the school.
I am tired of being a victim of the
terrorists. Life isn't safety-free. AU
of us are willing to get into a car,
where statistically, the most random
acts of decimation take place on an
hourly basis. Yet, we go through
metal detectors at airports, court·
houses and schools, where the
chances of someone bringing a
weapon and using it are minimal. It
costs all of us time and money.
Anti-gun control forces assure
me that guns don't kill people, peo·
ple do. U guns don't kill people,
then why not take the same attitudP
about doors, school grounds and
bathrooms? Why do we limit our
ingress and egress Lo p\,lblic build-
ings and bathrooms? Let's not give
up our freedom or chang our way
of We to those who threaten terror-
ism.
• GAY GllHll SAlllXIVM. is. Costa Mes.
rtsfdent. Her column runs T~ SM
mll'j t. tt«htd bV ..m.lll It GGSfJQre
aol.com.
"'
"
'
-Jeny Shandera. commodore of this week's
Newport to Ensenada International Yacht R~ce,
., ;)
':)
I•
Of:'! the beginning of the race
• LEnlRS -Mall to Editorial P~ EditOf'
James Me'-at the Dally Pilot 330 W. Bay St.,
COO. Mesa, CA 92627
• READERS HOYUNl -call (949) 642·6086
• FAX -Send to (949) 646-4170
• E-MAIL -Send to dallypilotOlatimes.com
All correspondence must Include full name, home·
town and phone number (for verification purposes).
The Pilot reseNeS the right to edit all submissions for
clarity and length.
. Daily Pilot
DON LEACH I DAllY PllOT
Many residents who live along the Newport Harbor Christmas Boat Parade route are urging event organizers not to change iL
Boat parade needs to
continue its Lido course
Regarding "Changes may be
afloat for boat parade" (April 12),
we that live on the south side of
Lido Island hope and want the
Newport Harbor Christmas Boat
Parade to continue coming
through on that channel there
that goes along the south side of
the island and m~es a tum and
then goes back out to the main
bay.
The rea~on for that is is
there's a great many residences
along ther~. Including us, there
must be at least 300 or 400 peo-
ple that watch it there, or more.
So please continue to run the
boat pa·rade on the south side of
Lido Island.
RAYMOND VINCENTI
Lido Island
New harbor co lumnist
is the right choice
Refreshing and enlightening to
readtlhe new harbor column that
actuaJJy is written by someone
who knows and cares about the
water.
Almost evetyone in the harbor
knows Mike Whitehead and the
amount of time he spends not
only volunteering on many. many
committees to help the harbor
and boaters, but he ls one of the
most experienced and profession-
al captains on the West Coast.
Thank you. Daily Pilot.
JOLENE EDMUNDS
Costa Mesa
Restricting access wiU.
improve Little Corona
This is in regards lo "Testing
the waters• on April 18. There
was a time long ago when I
could walk on tb'e rocks in LitUe
Corona and marvel not only at
the beauty of the area, but the
abundance of marine life. I sup-
port and thank those who wish
to make it a better place than it
is toda.y.
But difficult choices need to
be made in regards to access.
Yes, I would like everyone to
enjoy this beautiful part of
Newport Beach, but it is the
tremendous amount Of people
trampling and taking the natur-
al habitat that must be
addressed if we ever wish to
restore, at least partially, the
beauty that was once Little
Corona. Busloads of school-
children running amok unsu·
pervised, as well as tourists fill-
ing their bags with the few
shells and marine life that
remain in the tide pools, must
be dealt with.
I believe the city should moni-
tor and patrol the beach every
day, all day. I know some might •
find this a bit draconian, but
does someone else have a better
idea?
PAUL JAMES BALDWIN
Newport Beach
Costa Mesa residents
should take pride in city
Bravo to Byron de Arakal for
his column on April 18, "Time is
pecking at two traditions.• What
are we going to do about these
great traditions -the Fish Fry
and Newport Harbor Christmas
Boat Parade?
Please,)et's hope that some·
thing is done in time to keep the
Lions Club Fish Fry event from
frying. I have great memories of
taking my grandkids there and
for one am really tired of what
Costa Mesa residents are having
taken away from them. Where is
our sense of community? Where is
our pride? And what happened to
just plain fun?
CINDY BRENNEMAN
Costa Mesa
Reader unhappy with
councilman's remarks
rn the Daily Pilot on April 3
("Share Our Selves to renovate its
facilities"), Costa·Mesa Council-
man Chris Steel's comments
about charities not being helpful
and bringing down areas by
bringing in the wrong crowd is
definitely not right.
r think he needs to go check
his trash a nd see if he recycles.
I'm going lo go clean WaJJace
Street today and maybe people
will go with me. I will show
everybody that there's trash
everywhere that needs to be
cleaned up, and Steel needs to
bus his own table.
LAURA BREIDENBACH
Costa Mesa
Some applause not
included in recent story
First; r would like to thank the
Daily Pilot for its continued cover-
age of the Costa Mesa City Coun-
cil meetings. It is because of this
coverage and my strong concerns
regarding the expressed opinions
of Councilman Chris Steel at a
recent meeting that I now attend
these meetings personally.
During a recent meeting's pub·
lie hearing, severaJ community
members came lo the podium to
express support of the proposed
block grant. Thankfully, only one
person, Martin Millard, had nega-
tive and derngatory statements
about the charities and the people
they serve. The Pilot reported that
~some attendees applauded after
Millard's comments."
Fortunately for our community,
the applause was small. There
was greater applause for someone
else, however. I know this
because I am the attendee who
initiated the applause, and I did
so during the speaker's presenta·
lion, in which he stated, m
essence, ·u 1 wanted to live
around people exactly like myself,
r would have mov~ my family to
lrvine."
r was truJy inspired by his com·
ments and everyone's thereafter.
The overwhelming support by
volunteers, homeowners and
business owners in our commum·
ty renewed my faith in Costa
Mesa and iLS residents. I think the
Pilot article could have done a
better job at showing the true
spirit of our community as
expressed at the meeting. Thank
you.
JACQUELINE KELLY
Costa Mesa
Newport Beach police
offi cers doing a fine job
Rece ntly, l witnessed a ,young
man running down the street.
He was assaulting people as he
ran down the street. It took five
police officers to stop him and
bold him down. He later yelled
to them that he was on mush·
rooms.
As the offi cers were trying to
calm him and keep him down
while they awaited a stretcher,
he was out of control. They
helped the paramedics get him
on the stretcher and I heard one
oHicer say, •ts that a little better
bu.Jdy?" in a truJy sympathetic
way. I have to tell you, as the
mother of two older children, it
touched my heart. Here this boy
was terrorizing the street, but
the officer was trul y sympathe t-
ic.
I am very happy to Live in
Newport with officers like that.
PATTY BRANDENBURGER
Newport Beach
Now a politician,· Councilrna,n Steel rtef!ds to talk like one
Gil Ferguson
COMMUNITY COMMENTARY
Poor Councilman Chris
Steel: he was just elected
to thP Costa Mesa City
Council and he has not yet
learned to speak like a politi-
cian. This has caused him to end
up in a heap of trouble.
The City CouhcU was djs-
cusstng the subject of houslng.
for the poor ond homeless whoo
Steel spok<' up and said he
didn't think it was the rerponsl-
bllity ol the city to provide hous·
lng for the homele11 or try to
subsidize hiOh·cost houslng so
poor people could Uve ln Costa
. I 1
Mesa. He expressed concern
about upgrading bousing rather
than seeking ways to attract
more poor people. Well, you
would ~ave thought he was
advocaHng a holocaust.
Th~ Daily Pilot took up the
story and folks wrote in and
called in showing their <jisplea-
sure over his insenaUivity to U;le
plight of the poor. Their letters to
the editor expreaed dildein for
his attempt to keep poor folks out
of their city.
Hod Steel watched the New-
pon Beach City Council and the
ctty'1 telf·styled leaders and
much of ill voters, he would
have learned how to keep
unwanted folb out of hit dty.
When he learns how to do it, the
local paper will laud him, and
the good folks of Costa Mesa
will probably name a street after
blrn.
Some advice for Steel: You've
got to encourage some anti-
growth wackos in your town to
join you In worrying about lraffiC'
and the harm being done to the
city's chann. The council needs
Jt> telk about the environment.
Yeah, thal's a word you've got to
toy a whole lot. You'll soon team
you can keep out •those" kind of
people and deny landowners
Ujetr property rtgbts but you
must UM the right, poUUcally
t'Ouect lenguoge; you've got to
talk -_bout ta.. •uwlronmmt, traf-
fie and maintaining the city's
charm,
I was golng to suggest you
call yow g roup CreenUght or
Redllght and and put your onti-
growth -sorry, l meant your
envtronmental. traffic, save the
ambience -initiative, on the
ballot. When you do, the good
folks of Costa Mesa can feel
good about v<Jting for It, just like
our good people did.
Steel's a politichm now. That
means you've got to learn to talk
llke one. U you get caught once
more talking the straight talk,
you'll soon be a former politi-
cian .
.......... '°"'* ... ...,..
blvmln who lhe In NM:uport lelch.
)
. .
When something fishy happens in town, the Daily Pilot uncovers it.
And that's why I read the paper -for its coverage of city hall, the school board
and local business. Plus it makes a pretty good fish wrap.
Got -the Pilot?
Cel 1 (800) LATIMES to N>ea1Mt • C8I (949) 642-a21 to~
,. t.
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. .
8 Tuesday. April 24. 2001 • Sports Editot Roger Cortson • 949-5744223 •Sports Fax: 949-6.SOQ170
GOLF
Playoff
bound
• Former Newport Beach
Country Club assistant pro,
Fergin, wins Newport Beach
Open on third extra hole.
Richard Dunn
DAILY PILOT
NEWPORT BEACH -As 43-year-
old golf professional Fred Stamey
retrieved the flag on the second play-
off hole Monday and secured it
upnght on the green, he turned
toward his cart and said, ·I guess this
golf course 1s known for long play-
offs.·
That was alter Stamey sank a
pressure-packed 3 112-foot par putt
to exte nd the playoff with Mike Fer-
gin, the former Newport Beach
Country Club assistant pro woo .
remembered these greens well, while
playing in the event for the first time.
Fergin, 35, drained a 10-foot birdie
HllH SCHOOL SWIMMING
'
.. ....,, 'OI, l's CMr i... Llt's nae go ,.,, fmk
(ii .. pllyaff) _, •
~,.....,Newport Beadl Open~
".Aprt30hanorle
IYIOIWl
f I -
Doily Pilot
OON lfACH I OAlY PllOT
Newport
Harbor
High
sophomore
Hayley
Pelnol
stretches
1n the last
. few yards
on her way
towlnnlng
the 500 ..
yard
freestyle In
5:07,
almost 10
seconds
faster than
the runner-
up from
Laguna
Hills ln the
Sailors' 87-
83 Sea
View
League
dual-meet
victory
Monday.
The Tars
pulled It
out follow-
ing a scor-
ing error.
,.
-.
-• • -
--
"putt on the third playoff hole to defeat
Stamey and WUl the seventh annual
$10,000 Tommy Bahama Newport
Beach Open at Newport Beach
Country Club
Fergin, who won $2,000 and a
watch, shot 33-34-67 during his
morrung round in the one-day mini·
tour event hosted by the Newport
Harbor Area Chamber of Commerce.
He made five birdies and one bogey
in chamber of commerce weather.
Newport wins on 11th-hour reversal
Stamey, of Boise, Idaho and Palm
Desert (in the winter), also carded a
67 to force the first playoff in Newport
Beach Open history.
Both players made bogey at No. 1,
the first playoff hole, including a
missed 2-foot putt for par and the win
by Fergin. Stamey's second shot from
the left rough grazed a thick pine
tree. keeping him m jail.
"I missed that one on the first
hole." Fergin said. "Maybe I wanted
it too bad."
On the second playoff hole on the
par-4 No. 2, Fergin barely missed a
14-foot birdie putt for the victory. It
stopped a hall inch from the edge of
the cup. But Fergm's par created a
knee-knoclung 3 112-footer for
Stamey, whose putt trickJed around
before dropping in the hole.
That's when Stamey began talking
about past Senior PGA Tour events
on this golf course for the Toshiba
Senior Classic, which has featured
two nine-hole playoffs and a five-hole
playoff m five years.
On the third playoff hole, the 549-
yard par-5 No. 3, Fergin played from
the fairway, using a lay-up shot well
out of reach of the water hazard on
the left. On his third shot, he stuck an
SEE GOLF PAGE 9
•Scoring error negates Laguna Hills' apparent upset
win over Sailors Monday in Sea View League dual meet.
&any Fadkner
DAILY PILOT
NEWPORT BEACH -Even
Newport Harbor Hlgh girls swim-
ming coach Ken LaMont didn't
know bow prophetic he was
when he said there were a couple
races that could have gone either
way in the Sailors' Sea View
League meet against visiting
Laguna Hills Monday.
LaMont's comments came
about 10 minutes after the final
event, after which the computer
scoring system, and both coaches,
bad Laguna Hills, ranked No. 6 in
Orange County, upsetting the No.
3-ranked Tars, 87-83.
Both coaches spoke with
reporters in attendance, LaMont
expressing bis disappointment
and Laguna Hills' Carrie Pardoe
her satisfaction.
But, at some point after
reporters had left the scene, the
score was reversed, alter a review
of the computer results, giving
Newport Harbor the victory.
LaMont was unavailable to dis-
cuss the scoring change, but the
reversal of an 87-83 loss into an
87-83 victory was apparently
made official before the Laguna
Hills bus left the Sailors' campus.
LaMont said he expected the
Sailors to come out on top and,
before the reversal, said his ath-
letes would share the disappoint-
ment. He also said be would use
the defeat to •get them going." as
they approach league preliminar-
ies and finals next week.
LaMont said Monday's meet,
coming on the first day after a
week off for spring recess, was
somewhat hard to gauge, because
not all bis swimmers attended
workouts last week.
But he said he used his ·A line-
up• against the Hawks, who may
now find some unexpected moti-
vation for the postseason.
The Sailors. wbo host Aliso
Niguel Wednesday to complete
the league dual-meet season,
improved to 6-1, 2· 1 in league.
Laguna Hills fell to 1-2 in
league, having lost previously to
league leading Irvine.
Whatever computer machina-
tions allowed the Sailors to claim
victory. those most responsible
were trusted standouts Carly
Geebr, Nicole Mackey, Hayley
Peirsol, Mai Tajima and Jennifer
Arrow.
Geetu-, a junior and the defend·
ihg league champion in the 200-
yard freestyle and the 100 back-
stroke, won the fonner in a sea-
son-best 1:51.55. She also won the
100 breaststroke ( 1 :06.97) and
anchored the victorious 200 med-
ley and 400 free relays. As it turns
out, her come-from-behind
anchor leg on the 400 free relay,
helped the Sailors hold off the
Hawks.
Mackey, a sophomore and the
defending league champion in
the 200 individual medley and the
100 butterfly, won both events.
Her time in the fly (56.65) was a
season-best and she also chipped
in on both winning relays. Mack-
ey inherited more than a body
length deficit on the third leg of
the 400 free relay and sliced the
margin to mere inches, before
Geetu-made up the difference
and touched first.
Pelrsol, another sophomore
and the reigning Sea View 500
free champion. won her featured
event in a season-best 5:07 flat.
She swam backstroke on the
medley relay and led off the 400
relay victory.
Tajima was second in the 100
backstroke and the 100 freestyle, •
the latter a quality time of 55.86,
to earn praise from LaMont. Taji·
ma was also on the winning free
relay.
Arrow, a senior, clocked a sea·
son-best 1:04.87 to finish seconct
in the 100 breaststroke, and swam
the breaststroke leg of the medley
relay.
The Sailors overcame a disap-,
pointing second-place hnish in
the 200 free relay. when a sltp at
the start put the Tars behind by
almost a body length and they
could not make it up. Laguna '
Hills touched out in 1:46.39, just
ahead of Harbor's 1 :46.90 in that
event, one LaMont cited as criti-
cal, whe n he thought the Hawks
had won the meet.
Newport sophomore Jenna
Murphy added a second-place
finish in the 50 free to round out
the Sailors' top-three finishers.
Laguna Hills was paced by
winners Amanda Luciano (both .
freestyle sprints) and Lindsey
Buck (100 backstroke).
(CMsillS ORANGE COAST COLLEGE
ATHLETES OF THE WEEK Cd.M edges University on games ~
I
I
J
• Sea Kings remain perfect
after slipping past lrojans,
79-73, in league showdown.
IRVINE -In a showdown for the
Pad.fie Coo.st League boys tennis cham-
pionship, it came down to counting
games Monday as undefeated Corona
del Mar High edged host University
after a 9-9 standoff in sets.
Coach Tim Mang's Sea Kings,
ranked No. 1 in Orange County, beat
the 'Jrojans in games, 79-73, to remain
perfect in PCL play (9-0), while improv·
ing to 17-0. Uni fell to 13-5, 7-2.
When the Sea Kings defeated the
'll'ojans earlier this season in the fim
round, 12-6, Uni was playing without its
top two players, Henry Malt and Aaron
Yovan.
But Yovan played No. t singles for
TENNIS
University and swept aJJ three sets,
including a 7-5 win over Cd.M's Brian
Morton. Mak. who bas been sick this
year. played No. 1 doubles with Jeff
Lawrence.
"They knew this was a big one,•
Mang said of the 'Jrojans, •so they put
(Mak) in there."
For Corona del Mar, whkb all but
clincbed the league title while dethron-
ing the 'Jrojans from their defending
PCL perch, it came down to solid dou-
bles play from sophomore Garrett Sny-
der and senior Randy Myers. Snyder
and Myers swept at No. 3 doubles for
Cd.M. "They were the heroes,• Mang
said.
1be match was tied, 3-3, after the
first round of play, and deadlocked, 6-6,
after the second.
"It's bard to keep that undefeated
record going,· Mang sa.td, "because
everybody's out to get you:
With the match still undecided.
Cd.M's Cameron Ball and Ryan Stock-
well won their final set at No. 1 doubles.
Peter Kulrnaticki and Michael Bean, the
defending PCL doubles champions,
won two of three sets at No. 2 doubles
for the Sea Kings.
Eagles edge Indians
PALM SPRINGS -Estancia High's
Jason Cassity earned medalist honors
with a 2-over-par 37 Moil.-GOLF day to help the visiting
Eagles earn a 201-2Q3
nonleague nine-hole boys goU victory
over Palm Springs at Canyon Country
Oub. ,
Aaron Frankel (39), Pete Baker (4't),
Ryan Brown (40) and Joey Mueller (•3)
also scored for the Eagles, wbo
improved to H>-4.
Down the stretch for Sea Kings
•Locals begin final sprint
in respective league races.
lwry Feulkner
0MY Pit.or
Spring vacation annually sig-
nals the top of the stretch for
high school baseball teams and
four Newport-Mesa achoola will
be trying to summon a finishing
kick. beglnning today.
While Corona del Mat tries to
polish off what appean to be a
gallop to the Pacific Coaat
League title and Newport Hat·
bor tries to stave ofl pl4yoff ,
elimination In the Sea View
League, Costa Mesa and
Estancia pursue playoff berths
in the PCL.
Costa Mesa, one game
behind second-place Univenity
and a half game ahead of
fourth-place Laguna Beach,
begins a home·and-hoJlle aeries
with Northwood today at 3: 1 S
p.m. on the Ttmberwolve1'
Irvine campus. Coach Kirk
Bauermei1ter'1 Mustangs, who
won their final th.Ne games of
the Pride of the Coaat Touma·
ment over the bl'Mk, then ·host
the T-wolvea Frtday at 7 p.m. at
PUP llSllALL
TeWinkle Park.
CdM, unbeaten ln nine
league games and owning a 3
112-game c:u.ahJon over Uni, bat·
Ues Estanda thiJ week.
Tbe See Kings could cllnc:h
the title outright wttb o sweep of
the Eaglet, wbo are 2 112 games
out of the league's third guaran-
teed playoff berth with tlx
garnet to play. The aer1es beglnt
today at Estanda, before abUtiDg
to CdM Priday. 8otb gemes are
ICheduled for 3:15.
'
Meanwhile, Newport Harbor,
coming off two straight Wins in
the Pride of the Coast, does not
pJay a league game until Friday,
when it hosts Aliso Niguel at
3:15.
The Sallon, however, will
bost Tu.IUn lbundoy at 3: t5 In
their remaining game of the
PoothUl·Costa Meae Touma·
ment.
The, Tan treU thlrd·plac:e
Laguna HWa by five games wttb
ftve to play, to one more leegue
la. woWd eHmtnete them from
• q>-tlne ftnleb.
-...a-
Gm•I a ...... JD•WWWJd ~-~llld\
ti'C e-_. .. a.
.......... Glllli .... WMMl,._7 &...-.... _.._
PHOTOS BY DON LfACH I OAl.Y Pl.OT
Newport Harbor's Nicole Mackey drives in the butterfly portion of the girls 200-yard lndl-
vtdual medley, which she won in 2:08.11. Teammate HayleyPelisol was second in 2:15.11.
Tars divide and conquer
:in Sea View Le~gue win
• Newport Harbor
coach splits top
swimmers to sweep
crucial relay in Sea
View League triumph • over Laguna Hills,~-76.
a.rry h ulkner
DAILY PILOT
NEWPORT REACH -
Like a letter grade, ~warn
coaches typacdlly chfferenta -
ate their Nos. 1 and 2 relay
teams as A and B. But New-
port Harbor I hgh hoyi. coach
Brian Kreutzkamp went walh
more an A-minus Monday to
help the Sailors defeat Sea
View League v1s1 tor Laguna
Hills, 94-76.
For wh.ile the ho~ts won 7
of 11 events, • "Codch K. • dS
his swimmers call him, cited
a one-two placement an the
200-yard freestyle relay as,
perhaps, the turning pomt of
the meet.
• •fuus hmg h~t and sec-
ond m that relay was a bag
key,• said Krcutzkamp, who
divided the four swunmers
that would typically make
up his A relay, to rorm a pair
of foursomes that proved too
strong for the I lawks .
Top seruor spnnters Peter
Belde n and Joey Snelgrove
combined with 1unaor Rydn
Lean and sophomore
Michael Vandenburg to win
the 200 free relay in 1 :32.65.
The second-place group-
mg, spearheaded by senjor
Steven Jendrusina and
Newport Harbor senior Peter Beld en sh ows his pow erful
stroke In the 100 freestyle, which he won In 51.37 .
1.0phomore Andrew Cole,
clocked a l :33.27, rounded ·
out by senior Ryan Cook and
1.ophomore Nathan Weaner.
Ledn and Be lden both
won a pair or individual
events, while Cole and Snel-
grove added individual tri-
umphs to he lp the Tars
improve to 5-2, 2-1 m
league.
The absence of Olympian
Aaron Peusol, working out
this week at the Olympic
Training Center m Colorado
Spnngs. was hardly notice-
able for lbe wmners, despite
a lack of eye-popping times,
dCcording to Kreutzkamp.
One exceptional event for
the Sailors was the 50 free,
an wh1cb Belden and Snel-
grove both touched out m
23.93 to share the victory.
Cole was third in 22.96 to
cap the only top-three
sweep for the hosts
Lean, the defe nding Sea
View champion in the 500
tree, dorrunated that event.
His 4:50.20 clocking was
more than 35 seconds faster
than the runner up from
Laguna Hills. Lean also won
the 200 free in 1 :46.58 and
swam the breaststroke leg
on the wmrung 200 medley
relay.
Belden added a victory m
the 100 free (51.37) and was
also on the wiruung medley
re lay.
Snelgrove was also on the
wmrung medley relay, wtule
juruor Brad Dillman ctupped
in a second-place perfor-
mance in the 100 breast-
stroke.
The Sailors host Aliso
Niguel Wednesday to finish
out the league dual-mee t
campaign, before competing
in league preliminanes
Tuesday at Heritage Park in
Irvine .
GOLF
CONTINUED FROM 8
8-lroo from l 12 J:::5 out to
10 feet from the •
·Earlier in the round (on
No. 3), 1 went driver 8-iron to
three feet (for birdie),• Fergtn
said. "so I figured I'd do the
same thing in the playotJ."
Fergtn. a Canadian Tour
regular wbo never played in
the Newport Beach Open
before because the event
was previously held in May.
ended the suspense with bis
1()-footer, which broke slight-
ly right to left. '
Stamey, who pocketed
$1,300 for second place, had
a 24-foot birdie attempt on
the third playoff bole, but it
lipped out. giving Fergin a
free run.
"1 thought, 'OK. it's over
here. Let's not go any farther
(in the playoff),'• Fergin
said.
Fergin, an assistant pro at
Newport Beach from 1993 to
'96, when he decided to play
professionally on a full-time
basis, played in the PGA
Tour's Buick Invitational at
Torrey Pines this year alter
shooting a jaw-dropping 62
in a Monday qualifier at El
Gamino Country O ub . Fer-
gin shot a course record that
day in February al El
Camino, snapping the 64 set
by Jim Myers.
A Tustin resident who
recently started to train in
Newport Beach with Bodies
by Carrido, Fergin still bas a
passion to crack the PGA
Tour one day.
HAPPY BIRTHDAY
r--------------------, I I
I I
I I
I I I I
I I
I I
I I L--------------------~ l'o8y
Kvu MAsSFf ii
~UAGUi '96
BAsaMI.
RANA DUSZYNSKI
.A.llom: Big Pioe, c.lii. c 1!J Height: 5-foot-2
...ylsL 130
Spmt: ~lnton
...... IC Singles .net doubles
-.: Fresh~n
...... ldlool: Beatty. Nev.
c.a.dt: hfba<a Bond
Mlfor: Accounting ,..., ....... food: Sal.ld and pizza
fftartte mcMr. •RorMncing the
Stone"
9est athletic moment: Beating
an Irvine Valley player in the sec-
ond round. after losing to her in
the first round.
AthMtle of the Week XVI:
Showing great improvement.
T~, April 2~, 200 l 9
•
DON UACH I DAllY PILOT
Costa Mesa pro Darren Ernst bits out of a bunk.er in the
Newport Beach Open at Newport Beach Counb'y O ub.
"That's my goal. to play
with the big boys,• he said
•Everyone who plays in
these mini-tour events, that's
their passion. aJ\d these small
ones always help."
Last year's champion, Dar-
ren Ernst of Costa Mesa, shot
3-under 68 and tied for third
with Rob Kdas and former
Costa Mesa city champion
Bryan Saltus. Ernst, Kaas and
Saltus earned ~83.
Since the event became a
mini-tour for pros in 1998, it
has had four different cham-
pions: Fergin. J;mst. Peny
Parker (1999) and Enc Woods
('98).
Woods, a Corona del Mar
High product and longtime
standout on the Canadian
TODAY'S SCHEDULE
• Bnebilll
High school -Corona del Mar at
Estancia, 3 15 p m., Costa Mesa at
Northwood. 3.15 p m
Community college • Orange
C0.tst at Golden West, 2 p.m
College • Vanguard Un1vers1ty at
Concordia, 3 p m
• Softball
High school · Corona del Mar at
Costa Mesa. at TeWinkle Park, 3· 1 S
p.m .. University at Estanoa, 3:15
p.m., Aliw Niguel at Newpon Har-
bor, 315 pm
• Tennis
High school boys ·Costa Mesa at
Tour, now owns the Swing
Lab in Costa Mesa.
Firushing ued for S1.Xth
Monday (and ta.lo.ng home
$.575 each) were Justm Boat-
man, Dan Buchner, Gary
Sowinski and Bob Jacobson.
Scott Mallory and Steve
Woods tied for 10th ($425
each), wtule Lairy Barber
and Gregory Bustamente
tied for 12th ($.125 each).
Ray Carrasco, a longtime
Toshiba Senior CldSSic partic-
ipant. and rourother pros ued
for 14th.
On the amateur side,
Chns Veitch of Santa Ana
Country Club won low-gross
honors at par 71, wtuJe New-
port Beach's Mike Giddings
won low net (69) .
Corona del Mar, 3 15 p m
• Volleyball
High school boys Newpon Har
bor at Laguna Hills, 6 p m
• Gotf
High school Corona del Mar at
Unive~•ty. 2 30 pm , Palm Desert at
Newport Harbor at Big Canyon
Country Club, 2 30 p m . North
wood at Estancia at Mesa Verde
Country Club, 2.30 pm
• Track
Community college Orange
Coast men and women at UC San
Diego ln111tat1onal, all day
SOEREN SOtNEIDER
£9om:April29, t9n c l!J tWght: 6-foot-6
W.lghL 235 pounds
Sport Volleyball
DEEP SEA
M ONDAY"S COUNTS
Newport Landing
-1 boat. 12
anglers. 25 rockfish,
5 sculpin, 3 wh1te-
f1sh
Yur: Freshman
High ldtool! Nordhausen,
Germany
co.ch: Chudt Cutenese
Mllfor; Buslne-ss
Favcwtt. food: Mom's
Ltnsensuppe (soup) .
Fwont. movie: "Tex.as• by
Helge Sch~der
F.vortte athletic rnomef It
Winning state in high school and
being selected MVP.
AtfWM of dw .._XVI:
Rodceted in 7 of 8 kill attem~ in
a match against San Diego.
Daily Pill
Cofl«tor sports cMd Jerie$ O 1-S
Flctltlou1 Bu1lneu
NelM Statement
The lollowlng l*IOOS
.,. 00ing bullnesS as
RNs 4 CPR 27451
Cena,o. M4sl00 '"'• CA 92691
Dianne Lynn n-n
27451 c-to. M'SSl()n
VlllQ. CA 92691
PMCilll M Aooieoal• 33 T1mti.rilnd · Ahso
Vleto. CA 92656 This IMlslness 11 con-
~ by c:o-pet1nefs
H•~ you 1t1r1ed
doing ~ yet? No
Pnlcill M ~
This Stlltmenl WIS
filed with the Couoty
Cleril of OrlflOI County
on 03l'05l2001
2001A57064 ~ PlloC A'1f( 3, 10, 17,
4 1 !3?9
Davey's locker -
2 boats, 34 anglers
28 bonito, 21 calico
bass, 4 sand bass,
31 rockfish, 6
sheephead, 20
Spanish Jack, 4
whitefish, 3 sculpin,
1 sole, 57 blue
perch.
•
10 Doily Pilot
' I -... -... -If ---II ---11•--t .STARTING ActWoue Buainen
NMMI Stlltement
The lollowjng l*IOM -tiig~ ... FtMCt Legend&. 38 t '/
E. Coal Highway,
Corona del Mar CA 92825
COM Travel S.MC:e, (CA), 3817 E Coast
Highway. C0<ona 0.1
Miit, CA 92825
Thia bulinell IS COO-
duct.td by • corp0<8110n
Have you llerted
doing bullnHI yet?
YM, 1855
COM Travel Selvlce
Alain 8efnard, Prl8ldelll
Thie 1tatemen1 was
flied with the County
Clef1( ol Orange Cou™Y
on 03/30J2001
20018HCMMO
Dally Pilot~ 17, 24, May 1, 8. T395
Fictitious BualMH
Name Statement
The follow1n9 pe1S011$
Ml doing business 11
Pecdic L~. 3617
E Coast Highway.
Corona del Mar CA 92625
COM Travel Service
(CA), 3617 E Coast
Highway, Corona del
Mal, CA 92625
Th11 bUSlll8S5 IS con·
dueled by a corpora11on
Have you started
doing bustness yet?
Yes, 1955
COM Travel Service
Alain Bernard President
This statement was
flled with the County
Cletlt ol Orange County
on 04/06/200 I
20016860797
Dally P110t~ 17, 24.
M@y 1, 8, I T396
NEWPORT BEACH crrv COUNCIL
AO ENDA
SU'MMAftY
AdJCM.lf'ft4MI AeguW Mfftlng
St~S.Ulon
A,!il 2f.~1
PU8LIC HEARINGS
2000 UPDATE TO
THE CITY OF NEW·
PORT BEACH URBAN
WATER MANAGE·
MENT Pl.AN
AMENDMENT NO 908 • SITE PLAN RE·
VIEW OVERLAY FOR CO~STAL BLUFF
PROPERTIES IN CO-
RONA DEL MAR
AMENDMENT TO
ZO,NE DISTRICTING
MAPS •16, •17, #1A TO
COMBINE THE SITE
PLAN REVIEW
OVERLAY (SOR) DES·
IGNATION TO THE EX·
!STING ZONING DES·
IGNATION OF
COASTAL BLUFF
PROPERTIES LO· CATEO WITHIN CO·
RONA DEL MAR
Publ11hed Newpor1
Beach· Costa Mesa
Dady Pilot Aplll 24 2001 T399
NOTICE TO
CREDITORS OF
BULK SALE
(Sec•. 6101 ·
6111 U.C.C.)
Notice is ttereby giveo
to creditors of the within
named seller(s) that a
bulk sale •S about 10 be
made on personal prop-
e rty hereinafter de-
PoU«.-y
IC 11 11•, Hiid ....... 11 ....... H tt• ....... , •.• t It•
t tt,lll"I \\ lflittlll tll ltll I 1 lh J'llltlt•lit I
,, .... ,I \t .. 1111 lt"ltl f t• 1 • lt .... tit n t l.1--.f\
, .. , f"'I tfl ft 11·t. t tlt\ I ,,, .......... .f
n•h• tf1 .. 1 1111 t1t l'I• ., .. , t• t••11f ·"" ,.,, •• ,
f ltut 1u,1 \ I u If t '• •ttt t I , .... ,f 1t·1 I 1• I
llfll1t•·d111lt 1... I It• I >.t1h P1l11t .•• I ......
Utt l101 l1tlit\ f111 Ut\ • Httf 111 •lit
ttd\1 111"'• lfl• tit fl it \' 1111 It tf IUH\ fu
...... , ......... t.1 •• ,. f I'' , ... tit• I .. .._, .,1 tlt1
"'""' t 1tl tl1.1ll\ Ht I t1ptt .I It\ tit• ft t t1I
t tt du•"" 1u1h 111 1111 .. ,, • .J '"' 1l1e
, ...... 111--••t lll•ll
ICl\bed
The nemt(I) end bust-,_ edr>'9le al ... In-
tended Mlef(•l are
Jlnl( Piek. Olai Yacht
cn.rt1n. U.C, end W•
terlTont v actll Manage-
ment, u.c. 2901 w .. 1
Pac:ilic Coal HklhWay
t220. Newpof1 Saach.
CA 92680 The rwne(I) end busi-
ness llddreu ol the In·
tended buyer(•) are
Robin Adair. 3321
Admiralty Drive, Hunt· lngton Beach, CA
92a.9.
The Pfoperty pertl,,.nl
hereto 11 oe~nbed In
general aa· matenaf1.
supplies, machinery.
pattS, equipment and In·
ventoty and Is located
2901 West PacfflC Coelll
tilgt\way. •220. Newport
8each. CA 92660
The buSlness name
used by the said
seller(s) et S8lCI locatJon
IS Orea Y8Cl1t Chal1M
lnternatJonal
Sul bull sale Wt! be
QOl'lsummated on °' al· ter May 11, 2001 Bl the
otflCeS ol S\#lbett Busl·
ness Brokers at
6 Venture, Suite 225,
trwie, Calilomia 92618
Th•s l>IAlt sale is sut>,ect
to Sec:tlof1 6106 2 ol tne
Cahlorn1a Commercial
Code Claims ol any
cred1l0< ot said sen.r
may be hied with said
buyer at the address set
IOl1h abolle IOf buyer. Al·
tentoon Robtn Adair
The last day '°' l1hng
daln\S IS May 10, 2001.
Wl'tlCh Is the last bUSI·
ness day before the con· summation date spec1-
vlSA
'*' abo¥e So lit .. • knoWn to
said ln'*1ded buyer(1),
l8ld Intended Mllef(I)
UMd .. k>lloMlg lldcl-
iional busineu name•
and addffflff within
!he lhfM )WI lasl pul
(ii • 'OOM" IO lllC.)
nont
0.i.d Apnl 20 2001 Jal Robin ,...
Publtlhtd Newport
Beach·Co111 Mt11
Daily Pilot Apnl 24, 200 I HOO
BAYLESS
Mary Connell Bayleai;
"Sandy", Pl•Md away April 19, 2001 In
Orange County, CA.
5"' ... tht ~
of Mr. encl Ml"L MlchMI
J. Connell ol Loa
A,.._, CA.. She was
a voluntMt for the Red Crou, a member ol
tht lady Angler• ot
B1lboa, tht Junior League ol Paaadent,
the N1utlcal MuMum
of Newport Belch and
St Andren PrHbr.· tlritln Church. Born n
San Franc:ltco In 1916.
Sandy realded In Co-rona def Mar With her
huaband Shipley A.
B1yl1u . Sht la
1urvlvtd by her two
daughters, Victoria
Nelson Ellot ol Norlh
-
Caroflne. Sunn M.
·~ of Seng AM enc1 au 9"Snd-chlldnln. Setvlc:ft will ...
PlllCI IM11BS
IEU. IMADWAY
Mortuary • Chapel
Cremation
/110 Broadway J Costa Mesa 042·9150 1
'f/ft .lJ/tNl'(fJ l';;alJf
.C//t"" '.<fix'U!I/
.. (lJi/o.
Sening Or91ft County
949.551 .4262
800.266.1112
OVERSTOCKED
A call to
clas•'llfled
wUJ he lp!
(949) 642-567
ANE~
BUSINESS?r
• • • • • • • • • •
The l egal Dept1rtmmt nt the Daily Pi/Qr is pl.eased to annotmre a !lt"W service
now available to new businesses.
....
. ! .,,. .
.. t
~will now SEARCH the name for you at no extra charge. and save yovthe
time IT'fld the trip to the Court House in Santa Ana. Thm, of co11rse, after the
search is completed we will file yo11r fictitious business name sUtlemmt with the
Co1111ty Clerk, publish once n wult for four weeks a.s required by law and thm file
your proof of.publication with the County Clerk.
Pkau stop by to file your fictitious bus!nm statemmt at the Daily />ilot. 330 W. oJ•
Bay St, Costa Mesa. !fyou cannot stop by. pl.etUe call us at (949) 642-4321 and we
will make arrangements far you to handle this PtlJ'Udure by mail. If you should have any further questions, pktUe call us and we will be more than
glad to tUsist you. Good luck in your new business!
MundH) .............. 1-'1111 .. , !;;(1Clp111
Tut"-.cl11, ............ \1n11d1" !';:OOp111
o,·Fa~
{'HIJ, c..11 ... -,q-t
B,·Phone
(q-t11) ll-t:l· )11..,H
B y Mall/In PerNOD:
:s;w \\c•-.1 Bu, S11-.·1·t
<:11-.w \11· .. 11. <:" \ 1>:!c1:2"?
,, , ..... , .... ' llh" ~ 11 .. , "r 1•1. ·•-u11 l1t•I• \•••tt 11.tttu uitl r-l1ut1• 111uul • 1
.Uhl\\' If t tll \ntl l1,u·L. \\ttlt • f•I H t •IU"h
Tt'lt•phc.HH' H::{Oui 11-.>:00p111
Monda, -Fricl11v . -
Dou.rs
Index
\Vulk-ln 8:30 mn -.):00pm
Monduy-Friclay
Flidu~ ............ 1'11111~tl." :>:OCl p m
~ut111dtt\ ............. F 1111,1) :\:fHll'm
Su111lt1) ................ Fnd.t) :):OOp1u
'.as 420
Gl
fOUAl i.otJSl~C
OPPOHIUNllY
All rNI rsw11 adverusmo
In thlS MWSp.Jl>fll I~ SUbj6CI
10 tilt federal fau llous1no
Act ot 1968 as amendPd
which makes 1t 1lleg~1 to
adverhse any prelerenu
hmllahon or dtsc11mina11on
NstCI on lilC~ COIOI rtllQ·
ton SflA ll.lnd1up lam111.11
sutu! or nauonal 011g1n °'
in 1n1en1ion to make ~ny
such preference 11m11~11un
()( dl!lallThl\ilUOn Tllls n~per wrll not
knowingly uctpt an~
1C1ve11isemen1 101 iut
estate wf11Ch IS 1n Y•ollhOll
ol the liw Ou• re.tders are
htreby 1nto1mtd l~at 111
dwefWngs il!Wl11sed 111 th~
~ are 1Ya•l.lblt on
.vi eqi"1ll opporlun.ty t>JS"
To compUon ot d~r11m
natlOfl uh HUD loll lrct •• I 800424 M90
1 HOOIEM:Oll)OS FOR SALE GENERAL
-OF 111 WEEK ........ ..... ,. .... .. _ .. ..... ....
'Iii'
111• I .. ......
Awl
IOI • 216
400 -412
1 HOUSESICONDOS FOA SAU GENERAL
RENTERS
Stop paying your
LandtO•d• mongage
FrH Rtporlreveats
hOw Easy ~ 1s to buy
your OW!l hOme
Free •ecoided mess
I ·866·223-8612
ID 11001
ED VAN Del BOSSCHE
REAL ESTATE BROKER
LOCAL SINCE 1970
949-65~3
www.n1wportme11
home1.co111
4 HOUSESICONDOS FOR SAU 8ALIOA ISUND
OPE'H SAT 1-4
200 I 2Q2 RUBY AVE
l8r 38a fonnal din nn OI
O"<t nt• c:erpeL lloonng SI 150000 Lora Vence
RNltor !M9 673 4062
15":!1!1
ASSOCIATED REALTY SeMCe ()I Newport 8eecll
Salts' Rtntats, ln-..sttnents
Propelblt Slnol I 970
Jim Jacobi, Selte Mngr MM 73·3"3
24 HOUSES,tOONOOS
FOR SALE
LAGUNA BEACH
2br 1bl hou... M35K
tnltll IMlng ocn & vlllty
vlewel Prof remod, new
kltch c1bln1ta/grani11
1kyllght1. l•c tub, lg l500s1 eloped lot whm lo
build ltolclf 714-754-2480
1 32~1
WATERFRONT
FIXER
Brand New Liiting
Agent 949-723-1120
WATERFRONT
RX OR RE8Ull.D
AQ!!I! Mt-nl-1120
ASSOCIATED REALTY
SeMce ()I Newpon Beecfl
5Hs Renta!s lrl'm1mllU
Propet11eS S111C:t 1970
Jim JacoOa. Sllel Mngr t4M73-3H 3
PRIME ESTATES
Ll>U & Ooun Vlewll
Call Pltricll Tenort
A nl 94H56-9705
OHE FORD ROAO
By OWrltr 48r 481 t
dowl\Slaln dtnlofc. llelu
llPIPded gourmet kit.. A ; • Loe. Sl.aet.000
By -Mt-212-1013
BAYVIEW DUPLEX
3Br ~ l#W. SOii ~ bob'lp OIW t.follWJ
8Ndl Pnot '**.ad "' $1,025,000.
Auoci.tH lfH/ty
HH73-3"3
•~o-....
470. 478
OPEN SUN 1-4
95 OCEAN VISTA
SEA ISLAND
Thd ~ llome nas
bHtl ONU11lully IXJMnded
and remodel«I TlvH or
locJf Dedloom$ EttMStvt
upgrldl$ .. on OM ~el
OINI Floor PWn
$792,000 SIJ/lef tllily IM5'1 opll(!tl OI
hot> hnaflOf Oloner AOfl'I ~g 8'rtlar• t221·22'2J
AUoMi S..t NHfpon
VIII# Modtl t»ri«I 3&
2 58' 2, "°'' """" .., g.lltd MN lt'COIMllJ(!lly
pool ' "" ne.Jf tne Illy $539 000 1(11. Pllrid
Tlf!Oft J49858 9705
EXECUTIVE NEEDS
'-lo ..... With option
10 buy. l ocel ., ..
Mt-315-1433
l".:nl
OP£N SAT .suN l..S
10 SAl. VISTA PELICAN CREST
Sptct Oen, C11111ne,
IUnllt vim. 8tlnd MW
dream llome, ~ "'"' • dlc«"9cl. tOOO If cuttom
..111e 5br u wlown Ila.
Gow .. lllCd. Poolo'lpl. > Cit .. Gutrdlcl comm. $5,"51~ Mt-MS-0444
"•2tt-S3M ... 71.1431
C111n'111n9 Studio SOIAtl ol hwy ~~ wall! to belt ShopS
rest $ 79~ mo utls fllCld
!MH23'5024, nHOS1
110 APTS
COSTA MESA·
FIND
an apartment
through classified
110 APTS
COSTA MESA
COST A MESA I SOOTH COAST METRO
C"""""ll .I.nor 1 ~ and 2 Bedroom I 81111,
lalrTWldld by i.MS pool. '" 93l8d IXlllWTUllly
Large Luaury 28f 281
FAIJ, Fi'pfc, 1¥111 now,
I I U$00/lllO. Flr1t a Liit,
122 IR~ Mt-370-'°11
... ------~-FOR LUSE In CdM 3& 2Ba, l\Jty hmltl9d AA 3 uwu Oct 21 2000
'49·380-9492
480-486
...... ........... I 1••--
Reach 80,000 H <>mH Each W ffl.;
For Only $28 pet' wee-I< (4 wk, min.)
c.11 Len•I-.t 6•2-5678 x2•
l1"a:AI l*::Jtil , ... TO~,, .. ~I
WHOl£SALE FLOflM.
?Br 281 + offict, 1c get, 38r 281 ~ Ptnln MIDWAY CfTY ManutlC'lurtt CINranb
W/O l*-upa. Hew c.'pel 6 h9'ltf l(Jglacfed. qlJlel IOC. Large 48' hOuM 1 room Sa•• on sa~ 5lt!fllS
paint $1150/'Mo, Call ~ wld hll·up& evlil. 114 IC loC. SSOO IUlll)lies nllC>on$ & Platler
Mt-7t0-3101 • w-4044 mo 949-293-4632 S200 d!p 71Wtl-4795 Umt Huge Oitcountt
N1weort Helg hll
1114' 1 lta, MW pelnlkarpet.
carttlng. over 1111199.
1100lmo. MM73-7IOO
11•J!il
UnollllNcted <>c.etl &
Canyon v11ws Oce111
Ridge 1um 3Br 3 sea. 3000
sl prl'f&te, pool & 191
SllOOO;Mo IQl Prud Cald
RM!!Y 949·233-6146
l111 :.-a 1
FIND .........
l!!!Uf! del 1'1d
ANAHEIM HILLS
6Br hllte. Priv1t1 Br a
balh, gatad, HIS, NIO,
Pool, lmtftltlH. SIOO.'mo.
714-211·2105
HPBIFASHION ISLAND
Bue1 unlurn cabt• plV\.
malt pret "°'pet" srm.
5460 • u11s ••••t now
9'9-64s-9515
HMl9nlll to 1111re llr,
Udo P9IWn. bly ..... P'tl
beldl, 1750. utlle.
Cal 14H1!: 1377
Shr lfflll1tully Oecoraled
T""11111 fl N8 ~ Ul'lllllld
mlSlef 111141. MQll1'y gale.
pool J11C IVlil now SI 000m ~ Ind !Mtt4C):SS47
COM l.AAGE FUflN 2Br home w/ocaell ...,, ......, rm • 1n uCillllll
MM44-2"1
Hours 1~
3Q £. 17th SL 110
Mt-64M745
FOf S..PTtsllglOUS ~ Bttcll y~ CU> Memcltrall>p S.N50 Con·
&aCI Undl ?4?:§75-280 I
WOLFF T AHHlfO BEDS
TAN AT HOME
BOY DIRECT AHO SAVEi
C<Wt.4ERCIA~E
1#1111 fiom s 1119 Cl)
low Morefy
FREE Colo!
Ca• ' '800-711-0
"°" °""' ...,en.,
Ce1111111•••11 '32 C*tlD ......_CM 111119. -....~ t:" COlnl.i.;:r a:'t:
WtllMl lDUINDta ·~~ ! Oll9' 1t .. ~ ..... ~.
I ....._ Its 1lll1n
............... oond
1111*11 ,.._ llO cNclla lttftl•,,
1~-=1
•••••••••• li..-d 1 -homel F1111ily ~ and I c:ani go. ll!tll large Lib, (collie 11111). male. neutend. I
... Cltl encl t\'ll'YtlOdY .... tooll Mt-646-7926 ............
r~1
Soflnllr I Co Console
$plNllC Pt.no EleOlnf 30's
French design, walnut With
IVOfY keyi , beau~fut hnes ncn Milll 94~78
1-~1
COAST COIN HEEDS OLD COINS! Gold s1ve1
je..-y w*"91. en'llqUIS
col!c;!!!I!! lMH'2·94'7
1°' WMEOOROS!
Jazz. R & 8. So.-Roel.
Ill: SO'• & lilt•
MIKE 949-64S.TS05
ASSEM8LY AT HOME
Ans Ct11!s Jtwllly Also
ellcltona .... Ill\) !ypltlQ
in )'Olll 19111 1.me Greil
P1Y No·~ No Fee Will 1111n Call 800· 795·0380 ••• 2
12..nn l (CAL 'SCAN)
BOAT DOCK CREW person, boating H~r
helpful. A1>9ly In '*'°" 1~ Wtd ltvv 5'ln,
1I01 BIY!id! Or. COM
OAIVER • II PAYS 10 SIMI
Wl1tl us C.• SRT today
1·877·20·7293 01
1-an.SKlPAYOAY "Greil pay "Paw:! """IV 'Elcellenl
be11thls ·s 1 2SO sign-on
bonus • Orr11ng S1uoen1
giaGua1e$ wtlcome South-
ern Rtlngerated T11nspo11
(CAL'SCANI
DRIVER • OWNERIOPER·
ATOAS 6 ComolnY Dnv-
lf'I · CAU. ~ GtU! PIY & Ilene! 1S1 Htgh "~ly
moles West Coas1 la!IH
11\.().$ gowrned 11 68 llPH'
VOi.if CllOICe -tt••moc»I
Pt1er1>u1s-F19>0nt •lltrs.l(en
WOl1h$1 Cell Tod1y•
800-528-367S JoM CIYl$l •
ne< T l\JCKJng' EOE (CAL'SCAN)
DRIVERS ~•n"lj On•ers "Free lr&'"'"ll Cius A COL
·20 d.lys on, 10 O•ys olf "Tulllon~t ·~
mtOlale t>eoef IS MUSI t>e age 21 EOE Call
1·888·810-2778 CAST
(CAL' SCAN!
&crow Aeclptlonla1 lor
""" dla n Flshotl lwnd eotty ~ .., 1ct.ancemen1
opportunoty lull l•ml
CDmPIAel lnendly .... lrWI
on tserow SOl!'orart Send
resume to 949-640-361 o
illll K!ly NeoQ!!
FNENO. Y TOYS I GIFTS
has openings lar l*1Y plwl
IOVlsors Ind 1111111gt1$
Home dlcOf. l1lls toys, ~ Eamcash, .... I~ FtH ~log,
lnform 1 11on
1 ·800·48 8·487 S
(CAL'SCAH)
FflOHT 0£Sk
RECEPTIONIST
Shifts IVllllbll
OOAYll.AH'S Mt • Newpot1 Beldl $10r'hr
IO SUit. WI ll'WI ~
peltOI\. F1.1 ,..-10
9'M73-2101 °' c:afl DIYld Ill 949-673-2100
FT/PT s.i.a Poalllona
AYall. Upseale Newpon
Beach custom lurnoure saore Musi /lave an eye lor OtS91 illlO cak>t. and some
sates t5> 94~1233
GENERAL
Temp. FT I PT, Tlcbt T.._., ma(llenatQ Must
be II INsl 18 & ~ I 'llild
Cald Covets Ucense Cd
949-757·5959 exl 214 M-f
bllYoeen 1 :Som
HOMEOWNERS WITH
CREDIT womes may now qulddy quakfy 101 IOI/ls
Stonecasde 5 a dlll!la lendtr
lhal can tel you over Ille
plione and Wl1'IOuf
OllllQBllOl1 SCHL. IS locetlMd
by Caldomia [)epanme!1I ol
Corpo1a11ons Call
1..8()0.700.1242 ert 306
(CAL'SCANI
Own A Compu\tf?
Put ii IO warlll
Up IO S2W75Mr Plf ~
...... 7-21)4
""" 111•emec1Shncl'lo com
Wanted person to drive
l<det1y ~ IO IPPCS 9'IOPS Good iob lor 51\lOenl. I.Mt
have OWl'I car 2tm.day. 3
day w1!, $9!V 949-S48·3181
RECEPT!OfflST.fl Exp'd,
r.ll1blt person needed
suppott sales Slaff M-F
C.• Jeff)' •ll
UU66(714·751 ·232'
Aetall s.i.a ~
l*les rd casher open &
dOM SIOlt SIOCI!. ITlll1IU1
Sl<><e appeetata PT unrA
1U1TV1W lhen FT EV91W9
and wMkenos S111ry
$7-$1 °"" 114-37 4-G277
Wot.FF TANNING BE.OS
Tan 11 hOme' Buy CMect
Ind S.vtl Commere>.i.'
Home UNU lrom S 199 00
Low motlll\ly payme11ts
Free cak>t catalog C<ll
today 1-800-M2·1310
{CAL·SCAN)
,..... lie -lblll the llatln9a In tNt ~ ftWy f9CIUk'9 yov lo call e 900
nu111ber In which
thll9 le • dW9I I*
minute.
.,.... lie wwy of cM
oC -eotnpenleL CNdl wtlrl ltw local
Better Bual-Bu--'*°" you ..... any money or "" lor NrVicu. Read
and undeRWld any
contncU b9lore you
sign.
A KODAK/GREE"TING CARO ROUTE do yo.i earn
$200.000? yo.J could so
foul Sitts tree samples
1-88&-64!-8016 Eit 4
A ~rtlo AolM local Acea 21< M'ly FIM no Fin 1VU eoo.869-\140
OVERSTOCKED
AcaU to
classtfkd
will help!
(949) 642·.S67
Have bad credit?
Need Loan?
Call toll free
... Zl ..
1Cll( ..... 2.&Jr.
(4JEY331} 127.115
CREV1£R BMW
714-135-3171
8MW ,, ....
Auto,~ CO (K274'7) $21,"6
CREVIER BMW
714·135-3171
BMW 52llT '99
MIC mllM. 5-tpMd (4FYV424) $37,995
CREVIER BMW
714435.3171 1 ·888·440-8408
Fast Easy~
Mo yP!!on! r... 5211 ...
I ., flOWER I ~~ "-"-" '= ... ----'°-•-"-c:14~~~3~~~
20ft Dufllelcl Ellc1ric Bly Bolt perlec1 cond ,_
bat1111es cover wind cush
ASll $13.900 949-510-494-4
BMW 52tl '99 AUllO, Whilll, 141( Mt1M
(4ACF065) $33.196.
CREVIER BMW
714-835-3171
BMW 5281 '91
t 7l( Mi. Premium Pecbge
(4KB8144) $36,995.
CREVIER BMW
714-835·3171
BMW 7'111 'te
SiMr wlBladi
(157tn) SlS.115
CREVIER BMW
714·835-3171
Buldt Gnlnd SpM Rtvlln Holldl Twlnatw ~ '80 V-8. auio llllr int. 1111 powe1
gtNI Staner bokt . ltmalf !>rakes. windows SIMMO
owned lo mi. -dropped am/Im siereo. 1110y wills SSSG'obo 949-645-9498 $7500 949-280-4'02
1986 HONDA GYRO Bulcll A1911 LS
3 WHEEL, STREET 400 VS '17
SCOOTER. XLNT COHO. AC. auto, full pow, $500 t4W7~ ~ eUoyl.
(415711) $10,995 1-~ I -c:.-.c-Soulll...;7..;..14-,;..;!::;.;..,..;...;,;2SOO;;;.:;:;._-..,-
Acur'I ---~ .. 68k '"' ong -tloo's ·-· rtaJnis. co red ... "" ~ .. • ~ ong conQ. $1 2 995 ~ COlll ~ Wlf871278 oc AAllo S>.rs
714-tft.2500 ~1 ...
Tv.fdoy, Ap-il 2A, 2001 11
.Have A
Garage Sale!
Call the Pilat
Classifieds
at C949J 642-5678
ta Place Your
Garage Sale Ad!
·~ HOME, HEAL.TH AND 8uSINEss ~
I 1 POLICY ,
II\ In tllol1 IO otfe< tile tJesf
--pouille lo OUt fUd. M and lldYlt1lser$ ....... ... -_,.._A_IN_~_E_N_AN_c_e ... I 21' == 11 •
~;11 Conl!IClors WhO ~ '" Ille StMOe ..lmetoly IO lnClllde llMM
o.n11ac1ors License
lllMnOe! Ill tl!ett acMn.s.
Niil Your oo-optrltion IS
Qr!!l!y !pO!ICltlld "°'* a..Nfto s.w. G!Mt ratts & rtler~s l I Upenenoed F1'91 Esomile -ACC:CQITING Violell 1144SMU7
1 .-~1
JAMI'\ MAHAi f-')o'
l tcenwJ Ph. ,...rc-t
• " .. '"""' .... "'I'-'""' .... " •1.t (1tird ~ IM'~ ftl..'.
•"'YTcrm1n11I "•> •:! .. '\ C'~•• 'h·u 949 54tkl32Q
··~ '.' ..
_,.CMA1M 1U
• P I I .. ...... C9ll'lllC. ............... ....... 11ff!Mll
. NEED SPACI! 11 2001?
CloMls • Doon • Windows M-flS • M:tllS • ,...,. l ~tm!!!!!!71~
PUf AFEW
WORD TO
WORK FOR YO (949 642-S678
r-..... .._....,. .. -·1
I ... :···· '.-
COMPlJTER HELP! ......... a-..,... ... ,.. ........
•PC•k
~ -~9in'll• Ill -ta.cm. loGllll
Qb~ Dglll Ibo. PIWI, .._.,
~~~HID
UC .._....~. "'"C.....-l.l!J. 14-612-2 6
•• GAADEHER •• Formally lflln4d VIII
~. 11111 hows tWIS ml Jn! 71W71-1W
YARD CUAN-UP T~ & Remowed,
Spnnldera Atpia/9d, "" '""" Oii 114-711¥1'1
Ylr'd Clllft up. 1Nta1
Spnnklen, ~.
Trtm T,... 24 Yrs EICI
fl'!! Ell. --..n1
SkillNI C11ppnlrr
flf'C1'1r1.Hl Plurnl>t r
I'll help you resolve
those nagging home
repair arid remodel
issues
Keith 949-574-1748
... TO n4l OUlll'!ll
11 ...... 1.a
AVAll.Akl TOOAYl
MH7WIM
• ViAgra IUC:CCSI ls
depc~lon
propul&le
Get ......... ._ .,.,..... ... ... , . •'-" D;' rt • ._ ,. ....... _,~ ,,...a.w .....
C.lw
II II , ......
~ .. .......
ror., .your needs .•.
\(~'I''' I Ht \h)'l.f \'f
'l.'lt\f)\'t U\\•"
.(.,_.,,,or u "'rl "'""· ..... -~ CtiUHG'S PAIHTIHG
' 27 Ywt EJcp Gtat Pnce' Gui,..,. WM F,_ &t.
1.1375602 714 53&-153'
PAINT YOUR CASTU ~hzong on l'HIOlnh&
"°"* '""'°bl, "9e -il320881 Ttd 714-371~·
:m.11 ...... .,*' .........
... LOCATNO
II.kW MM UM lllTICnC* ....., ........
PUBLIC
NOTICE
The Clld. Nlllc·
UlthliH Com·
ft\ll10I REQUIRES '* .. ..., i.... hold goodl lllO¥lfS
pctnl "* p u c t:ll T l'Alll'lber: lmol Ille!~~ ,_TCP,...,
II\ II MM'8i11MI
Wyoutwwa~ lion lbcU ....... ty". ~. "'° or~.c.a PU8UC UTUTIES COIMSION
71 ....... ISI
675-9304
~
Roonng
Specl•lb rs , .. '---"-'',. ..
949-722-8846
7 14--751-8846
WATERPROOF
ROOFING
"--roof9 • ....,..,..
F.--EstlmftM
All ~ of Roofs
Al Woftl OurW'ltllMd
"-'-
(949) 631 -1 085
Im •••••1 -IJlllT COima. -
GOOD
ADI
12 Tuesday, April 24, 200 l
TODAY'S
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
DOWN
10. ...... 2 Netgllbor upon
3 On:hanl l!'M
4 EnjOy
5 Stream IOl1h
• ~ '9lldenta
7 c.r.inin't roed
11 Stiil• lull
8 flecll1c -
I 0 Flt/I W!ltl a
•Mrvbel1Y 1 I Keep flllllt llom
12~11*11a1 13~n
21 Encln:Je 22 Ch.,_ bold«
Commitment tO my
clients needs is No. I.
Work with chc Best!
SpcciaJi:z.ing in single
family & rcsidcncAal
income properties.
2J C«pmlr Plaza. SUlte 123
Nrwport ~ CA 92660
(949)721-6444 X221
r~~~.'!'.'!'J! Q&<]MY:>!'.~
UW/?lirk f;feaky
c;K~~~hler ~
for your "Nt'W\
arounJ 1h<
n<1ghhorhood. •
"Covtrmg Bal~
P<nmsula Ile
Ncwp<ln lk.K:h.
Bu1. (949) 673-3m Pgr. (949) 651-4610
Hm. Off. (Me) 673-89 Fax. (949) 673-e805
Cannery VIiiage Realty Inc.
Gisela Burmeister
.,..,. ....... " Mw-1
(~9) 718-15'9
(949) 470.7670, 24-ht
. .
Bridge
By CHARLES GOREN
wtth OMAR SHARIF
and TANNAH HIRSCH
LONG LI.Vt: THE QUEEN!
North-South vulnerable. Soulh deals.
NORTH
• A74J '1
Wt:Sf
•KJ8
0 Q 103
•A 1098
t:AST
•961 r:; AKJ 1095
<> 9 s
•J7 SOUTH
'J 0 J 842
• 643 2
of cards in the suit, and cleverly shift-
ed to the eight of spades. Doclaler
couJd noc alfont IO NII thll 10 the queen, siilcc dw wouJd have been
Wunl death had East held the kin
when. conceivably, the minon wou~
prodoc-e enoua,h cricks for the con-
tnct. so the ece of spades was caken.
There ~ere seven (ast tricts and. co
Caler to a doubleWI diamond jlCk in
either hand. declarer first cashed the
~ ... ~ •• ' ..._."?-·. ' _, ' 'l~-~" • .,,o.:.i
.. .. ......,,, ~' . -~
. I
~~~·-. ~·
·:: . ~ _. --.· . -. ' ~ -.. _ _.....,,
, .. FIND
..
Doily Pilot
GOOD JOBS.
Rll1ABLE
Sl!llVICP.S.
NTERBSl'lNG
THINGS
TO BUY.
~~fl EVER~AY
';IN
·'OWSIFBll
• Q 105
Q87
AK 76
queen of diamonds. then led 10 the Jlfllll' XJe 11 Ylnden kin&. When declater continued with ....., a Iii, melalc blle,
the ace of diamonds, Wcsi' hcan dis-011mN1 llhr, dvOllll wNs,
can! shattered the hope of a fourlh glrlgld. ~ .. rww
' I ~ CuttaN ~ • 1 an apartment
,,,::;, ~ ~ \ through classified
(949) 642-567B
bid m that suit J10,D95 OC AUIO 8k11
Soulfl COM! AcUl'I • -----------.-----, / Nein came the .king and queen of 949.586-1888
cluba, and prospect' brightened con-• KQ S •
The bidding; .. ~idmibly when WeSI followed wilh Jlttl Ol • 714-17•2500 /
SOlTTH WE.ST NOR11f F.A.'il' INT 2;'1 j M Pau
JNT h'i.\ "-Pa.u
the jack on the littond round. The 44~ lllOOIWOOf llop.
two winning clubs were ca hcd, 11,_,,1 ..... • r,92,115
declarer discarding the dirunond to Sollltl COM! Acura
Old9Moble ~ • GLS, 1!e9, llln 9w. CO.
(2420801 s1e.w
Opening lead: King of J come down ro Q I 0 of'~ and Q 714-17•2500 8 of hearts, wnh West s11ll to dhcard
Crom K J of spades and A J 10 of
hearts. If West discarded a heart.
dccllll'Cr could lead cuhcr m11j0t from
dummy. West could win 1wo 1ticks in
that su11 and cash the master card in
the other major, bur then would have
IO yield a trick to declarer"~ queen.
And if Wes• blanked the kinJ or
spadel;. declarer would exit with a ~padc: and 5'lOl'e bolh q~ fllf an
ovcrtr1c:lr..
NABERS
(714)$40::9100
Declartt 'lpllmed a play 11 tnck
two which would have landed lhc
OOOllllCI. However. the trick came
baelr. later in lhe play.
Nonh's lhn:c hearts was. m effect.
Stayman. look.mg for a 4-4 ~pil(le fit.
Tilcrc w.s none. 'IO three no tromp
became the final COfllnlCL Wc~t led the kmg of !lean~. on
which East dropped the ~ix. the ~Ulrl
of an echo ro shOw an even number
~ C2IO Sedll't '95
5411 ml. wt.It. ltll eoncftlon. loaded. $21.000 (or trlde
lor C320l 00 1494'1W100
Ponclle C4 Tlptronlc
Coupe/Aeto '01 io.ded. ~~Must~~ ioiced lo .... $99.000 orig
l13tll MMQ.1'95
POftSCHE CARRERA 't7
911 Couiie. Tlplronlc auto
llant, rear whl dlivt, AC, al
powtf, CC. am-Im &1e1ao
cas!CO. premium eound,
lillfcedll El20 Wagon '95 Pf*!ll,rTI 18" wNs. 2911 ni, -~ 11-~ 11-c=: I =-:=..r:o ::;.:~
' C8Clllc s.vlle 'tl lil«QlfY T,_ LS 't7 ~ :v~ $~ CADIUAC adorado '17 Cadlllac S.. STS W Sedln. 4-0', II powtr, "'1f mt266241 OC AU1o ~ =9e~lar. ~ 182~:" V8. ~~ (f1)82~· laalhef. a.:.988 ~· ~~ ~ _ __,,94""9--"58.-..:6:....;·1~883""'--
NABERS NABERS NABERS Sl.218. •Tax & ic Tomato Toyola Cellca UllDecll
!71C)$40:!100 (71C)$40:!100 (71C)540:t100 Auto 714-437-1931 GT 't3
CAOll.UC Eldofldo 19
Whlle peal1. tan tttv. 51 k mi
(602576) $21,988 NABERS
(71C)$40.8100
Cedlllec Sevllle STS 'ti low ,.,....., polo. tan leather
(90'1255) $24,988
NABERS
!71C)$40:! 100
Ctle¥y l.umlnl '95
... Mo, •• Sllwr
(10879) M,495.
Soulfl CoMI ~
714-17 .. 2500
llx s.dlll OtYllte '93 Cadllllc S.Yllll ,95 Low mi. Ice blue. leather ._,, • ... mi , __ ...... ~ ..
233192) $10 988 .,., """ . -·-· "'""'"' NABERS (8200'3) St4.98B NABERS (71C)54o-9100 (7lC)540-tlOO
Specializing in
Sea Faire,
Villa Balboa &
Versailles,
Newport Beach.
PrudenriaJ
California Realcy
23 Corpome rt~,,..
UH< 190
Nev.pcm Beach
CA 92('60
Dlllun 280 z 75 57k ml ...
009-M>. AC, gllaOICI, II
recotdl txctpbOnll S4aoo
oC>o MHIMA2.
FIND
an apartment
through classified
949-717-5111
2101 E. Coa.s1 Hwy., 250
Corona dd Mar, CA 92625
Bim r1astings DI
Iii•/ hlMI l11wstMn11
MERCURY VUAGER 't3
llllller, co. reer tit
(Jl3571) 17.988
..... -roof, llloy (C4961) 17'"4
ScMl1ll eo..1 Acura
71 C-97 .. 2500 NABERS
(714)$40:!100 Toyau PINO ConY. 't7
Blad! lie, 35k ITV. power
Mercwy V11101' V1n 15 ~. eCD chllngef.
7 peM, MO, llr, II.Ill pwr aw bigs, reg pd, Jdl1t cond.
(02599) .... $12)00/obo. 949-646·5850
South eo.t Acuf•
714-17•2500
Oldll'lloOile BraYtdll '00
Low 7,500 ml. White. CO.
OVERSTOCKED
A call to
classlfled
w Whclpl (125400) $19,91!8
NABERS
(714)$40:1100 (949) 642-S67
EMAIL:
st.e) rultdaol.C'OID
WEB:
www. '"yMtCuJJougb.com
T~ummif
~eol f 1fofe G_,p
Prudential
California
Realty
WELCOMES
Mary A. Wood
Newport ~\t lalboo lslond, Corona dtl Mar,
Emefald loy, IGIDOCI P~ ~ Heights,
0cmr Shores. Udo, tast aw
Office (949) 723-8120
Run your ad In the Newport Beach-Costa
Mesa Delly PllOt and 1he Huntington
Beach-f'ounteln Valley Independent to
reach ewer 100,000 hOmes. Fax us this
form wrth your credit card # or mall with a
Check today!
Run tor a week! If your car dOes not sell.
we'll run It for another w~ek PWDI
All for just S16'.
-----~ ------ ----- -----1 : 0 TD. MU. MY CM ': ' ., :-.. '
I -.-·-----------• Cit : r.=------------
: -~-------I : I --O • CJ .. •• d :
:1;; (;;g;: '~ j . ~==--I==. I.:-==: ::--.
---I : -::.::::::::::,-:?r .. ~~~ww, , ~---------------------'
--7Jenine
J(erns
"c5pec1a/, zin<J
in XeOJporl Jleiy!Jls & C!if1£auen"
1e RUMBOLD
1eREALTY
' SINCF 1965
DoNALD l. ABRAMS
owner · Broker
302 Marine AV'c.
P.O. Box 6
Balboa Island,
CA 92662
949-675-4822
94 9-67 3-4 848
II . }I, .. , I
1 ', I ·. I I "-
(~9)922-0965
gu1n1hcr~ma~.m.111 tom Jackie Gillis, Realtor
.. ~ ., ' ... .., ..
(714) 404-5678
2600 Eo,1 PC H ,
Suite 150 Newport 8eoch
2700 ~t Coast Hwy •Suite B
Coron3 del Mar • CA 92625
Lora Vance Realtor Ei14~/9U
Speci4/izing in:
Sales~ Rentals
throughout Newport Harbor
Lora Vance Mar1ys Vasterllng
949) 67.3-4062 (949) 55 1-6789
fcu (949) 675--.3.3.31
~'24 Manne Ave., 6alboa Island. Ca. 92662
/Judy .
'Davis
?M~ s~
'!4rea Sptdalist''
&ut SUit Cott4 MtSA
For all your real estate llllvertising,
call our experts!
I. D!.--,asa .&'4 Ya.Cl.
(949) 57 4-4252
Ann Willey
(949) 574-4249