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HomeMy WebLinkAbout2001-04-28 - Orange Coast PilotSERVING THE NEWPORT -MESA COMMUNmES SINCE 1907 an d a sail 54th annual regatta from Newport to Ensenada shoves off with no major snafus. CARL HIOAl(j() I OM. Y Pll.OT Harley Greenberg climbs up the mast to l ubricate the pulleys before the race. Danette Gou let DAILY PILOT Enseoada. leek vessels Jockeyed for posillon Friday to be among the first to pass between one or three sets of orange buoys that sig- naled the start of the 126 nautical mile journey to In contrast to the events or last year. when trouble With the buoys delayed the race by more than an ,hour, the 54th annual Newport to Ensenada lntemabonal Yacht Race went off With out a hitch. When the fust gun ftred at noon the largest of the sailing vessels cru1 ed past the startmg line to begm its 1oumey ....... --..... arrud cheers and shouts -some friendly and some not-so- friendly, whJch were accompa- nied by a shak- en fist or obscene gestures. ·Tue objective of tbe race is fun, but it's very compell- tive, • said Reg Hasbach, the co-skip- per of the ires Gordo; a 30-foot cal2- 30, which he owns with Dave Price of Corona del Mar. This was the 37th year that Price has sailed the race, having taken hrst place with two boats in separate dass- es one year and taking brst overall m 1990 with the ires Gordo. So, although the biggest and the fastest set sail first, they don't always take the bJggest trophy. Skippers and crews of 438 yachts in 27 different classes are vying for 144 trophies, which will be handed out in Ensenada Sunday. But many did not wait for the festiv- ities in Mexico and began thelr party on the docks of the Bahia Corlrlthian Yacht Club Friday morning with spreads of cheese and crackers, lush ftuits and bl~y marys. Even the overcast and ominous SEE RACE PAGE A 11 ON THE WEB: ·WWW.DAILYPILOT.COM GREG FRY /OAtY PILOT Newport Beach resident Rink Kofford gets a better view of the action during the start of the race. GREG FRY I DAI' Y Pit 0 l ABOVE: Spectators at the start of Friday's Newport to Ensenada International Yacht Race gathered along the bluffs at Corona del Mar. Some found more isolated vantage points than others. LEFT! More than 400 boats came out on race were entered ln the Newport to Ensenada International CAAL HIDALGO I OAl.Y PILOT Yacht Race. .. .... Iii ••••• . . SAnJRDAY, APRIL 28, 2001 El Toro b<ickers attack Agran •Airport Work mg Group brings up 12-yedr-old agreement Irvine moyor had signed to work towdrd getting a second airport for Orange County residents. Paul Clinton D AILY PILOT NE\\. PORT BEACH -Memtwrs ol the Airport Worlung Group dtldcke>d lrvme Mdvor Larry Agran on Fnddy over hi!> oppos11.1on to d proposed dlf· port at the closed El Toro Mdnne bdse In d letter to Agran, the group-. president. Tom Nduyhton dccu-.e>d the !J'VUle mayor of baclung off tu!. prorruse to 5.upport a sPc-ond auport in Orange County Naughton dnd group spoke mdn Odve Ellis citf'd d 1989 ·1010t pohcy memorandum.· 10 \vh1ch Agrdn dnd former Newport Bedch t-.1dyor DondJd Strauss acknowledqed d growing demdOd for flights and pledged to find "a second commerC1dl dlrport ~It· uated such thdt tt 1s convenient to Orange County re~1dent'> " Naughton added that whdt '>t'em~ to have chd.nged smcf' th<' dgr<•em<•nt was signed l'> thdt the • tonve>nwnl • dirport IS m Agrdll's bdckyttrd The 1989 memorandum do~sn't menbon El Toro SEE El TORO PAGE A10 Thousands of kids pack into Youth Expo •Science projects, pet contests, talent searches and more beckoned 8,000 people to attend the free event's first day at the fairgrounds Jennifer Kho DAILY PILOT COSTA MESA -Thousands of children hdve ovenun the Orange County r atrground for th1s week- end's Youth Expo "1b.ls l5 our favonte weekend,· Becky Bailey-Fmdley, general man- ager of the Fairgrounds. said Friday. "TI:l.is is what the fair is all about. You won't see a child without a smile They are learning new thing , trymg SEE EXPO PAGE A 10 living on a corner not fit for a king AIOtMO lOWll -·- ET IUYS - • Eighth accident outside Newport woman's home is no cause for alarm, but reason enough for a game of cards. ,......,. .. DAILY PILOT NEWPORT BEACH -When Mary Loulle Phillips heard the crash right uound 2:28 p.m. Priday. she went out· lide Mr Heetber Lane home to tee wbilt WU Nppening, Wblt .,.......,. fOUDd WU a brown liaUI tbat !Mid craibed tbrougb the wall that protects her garden on the comer of Heather Lane and lrvine Avenue. A large plne tree had stopped the vehide on its path to the house, but only the trunk remained on the sidewalk. The rest of the car now rest· ed lnlide the garden. While some might have suffered a shock from the scenario, Phlllips was able to shrug it off. Friday's ac:ddent marked the eighth time her wall had been crashed into since PbiWps moved into her home in 1960. While it hasn't alweyt been the euct NIM spot, the comer ii espe. dally prone to brMklhrOugbl, she Mid. •we relll.forced it, but it' not a very easy lhlDg to do," she said. add.mg that her previous mswa.nce company had canceled her pohcy after the sixth crash. The driver did not have any visible lnjurtes except for a cut to hil nght hand, pollibly inflicted by the deploy· ment of an air beg. Before paramedics transported the unidentified man to Hoag H01pital for further eumlnation. he told Dave White, en officer with the Newport Beech police department, what had happened. Orlvlng southbound on Jrvlne SH CO«NO MGI AU They give us life, they btnd our wounds. Ind the)"W even t>Hn known to sneak us • cookie twrt once in • while. They're our mothers. Help the O.lly Pilot cetebrate MCm• I DAY tJv . tending In picturel ~ stories in honor of your mom bv May I. 'f'ou c.n tu to (Mt) .._.,70, ..meM to~,,..,..,. leflfMl.com or llnd It t,, "*'to Molhrl ~ ~N-UOWa.,Sl. C..Mm-.CAm17. QAWflDS -·-.. CS.Im & OJIS. ----"--- DAJllOOl -·----"""' fAl11t _ _.. .............. __ POOCl fl.15---·-·---.. SOCl1l J l2 VQm ______ .. --__JJ ... _-.....,: ______ _ " A2 Saturday, April 28, 2001 Questions find ·answers in lov.!) • 'f and.patience"· "A child is an island of curiosity surrounded by a sea of question marks." -Anonymous ' M om.my, where does God sleep?" asked a cute little girl with a cute lit- tle voice. I couldn't hear the mother's answer, but she couldn't have said much before the next question came. •How does God know what time it is?• the girl asked, playing with her braid. Her mother sat up straighter. nus time I could hear the reply. •Well, I think that since God knows everything, He knows what time it is too,• the mother answered. "Does God know that chocolate is my favorite?" the little girl asked with a grin. "I'm sure God knows that too, honey, and speak- ing of time, it's time for you to give me a hug.• Gndy Trane Christeson THE MORAL OF THE STORY Without a moment's hesitation, the little girl threw her anns around her mother. Then she wiggled out from the hug, down off the couch and started skipping my way. I was in the waiting room at a doctor's office. I was seated next to a big rock fountain that wasn't on. The little girl looked al it, studied it from every side and put her ear out as if trying to hear something. "I guess it's not working." I said. "Well, maybe nobody tried yet,· she said confidently. She clapped her hands three times. She must have thought it operated like the lights that respond to clapping, but nothing happened. Then she stomped her feet, apparently hop- ing for the same results. She cocked her head back and forth, then bent down and knocked on it, like it was a front door. Still nothing. "Thank you for trying." l said. "You're welcome,• she answered. "Honey, don't bother the nice lady,• her mother said. "She's no bother at all. She's just precious,· I said. "She asks good questions too.• "Thank you, she does keep me on my toes,• the mother answered, and then the little girl stood on her toes and twirled around. "What's your name?" the little girl asked me. I told her mine and asked hers. "It's Autumn." she answered proudly. I complimented her on her beautiful name. Autumn had bright blue eyes and a little button nose dotted with freckles. She clapped for the fountain again, shrugged h er shoulders and skipped back to her mother. "Why doesn't the fountain work?" asked the beautiful little bundle of energy. "I don't know sweetheart, but let's talk about the next few days,· her mom said. "I'm sure going to miss you when I'm gone.· Autumn thought a moment and then said, "I'm going to miss you more than a rainbow. I'm going lo miss you more than. more than Chee- rios. Why do they call them Cheerios, Mom?" Just then Autumn started hiccuping. "Do you think God ever hiccups?" Autumn asked mid· hiccup. I was almost sad when my name was called. I said goodbye to mother and daughter. I'd enjoyed the interchanges and was touched by the mother's obvious love and patience. I thought of how obviously loving and patient God is with me. It's coJn!orting to know that God listens to every one of my questions. But I'm especially thankful that He actually knows all the answers. And you can quote me on that. • ONOY TRANI CNUSlESON is a Newport Beach resi· dent who speaks frequently to parenting groups. She may be reached via e-mail at dndyOonthegrow.com or through the mail at P.O. Box 6140-No. 505, Newport Beach, CA 92658. Dai)¥>Blot READERS HQIU~E (949) 642-6086 Record your comments about the Dally Pilot <>< news t ips. VOL 95. NO. 113 ADDRESS Our addrttl ls 330 W. Bay St .. lMOMAS K. IOl•ISON. Costa Mesa. CA 92627. Publlrhef CORREOJOHS TONYOODaO, Editor It Is the Pilot's policy to prompt· LlCNlll, ly correct all erron of subsunce. dtyEdltof Please call (949) 574-4233. JAml~ m ~~Editor The Newport leldVColta Mesa l"•LUKMNW.. Dtlfy Piiot (lJSPS..144-900) Is PIA> ~Editor lllhed dilly, In N9wport hlctl Md -aw~ Cost.I Mell. d>Jalptlonl ., • .Viii- Sports Editor ... «tty by subtcrltJlng to The 11fNs Ofllllge CouMy c-. 2S2• MIA. MITOMTZ, 9141. In .,.. outlide of Hlwpott Newsfdltof hed'I Md Cole.a Mell. dllf.:r1po ,..'-....,.. tJon5 to tN Delly Not.,...,...,. ... Dellgrw Ible ontt ~ mell for '20.,., l1WI MCDM9C, month. Second ct..~ peld • eo.t. Mell. "' (Mcm Include • ,...,Editor' ............. locllta· Nl¥'t OIT1Wll, &)~Send---Ad\<Mtllll 19 Olr«10t cNrlfll to The NiMpaft LNMMJll•Oll ~a-. Delly Not. '-0 ~-tow 1MO. C-. ._.,CA NQt, . .. • Our Lady of Mount Carmel Our Lady of Mount Carmel celebrates Mass at 5 p .m. Saturday; 8 and 10 a.m., noon and 5 p.m . Sunday and 8 a.m. weekdays. Daniel J. Murray is senior pastor. The parish is at 1441 W. Balboa Blvd., Ne'Wport Beach. Information: (949) 673-3775. Doily Pilot \ GREG FRY I DAILY PILOT Newport Mesa Christian Center interim pastor Don Baldwin will be leading a prayer meeting for the National Day of Prayer on Thursday. Congregants will pray for children in countries served by the church's missionaries. Praying for the world Area churches plan to hold special prayer me<:tings and breakfasts Thursday, the National Day of Prayer FYI WHAT: Prayer meeting at the Newport Mesa Christian Center YC>Un9 Chang DAILY PILOT T he nation, the poor, the suffering, global injustice. With praye.r topics as heavy as these, it makes sense to pray in numbers, local religious leaders say. That's why next Thursday, people in Newport Beach and Costa Mesa will gather and pray with fellow congregants and even people of different religions, for the National Day of Prayer. Don Baldwin, interim pastor at Newport Mesa Christian Center in Costa Mesa, said his congregation will join the center's Spanish-speaking community to pray in Spanish. There will be some translation but everyone will pray for one thing. One big thing, actually: the world. "It's important to pray together because Christianity is not a Lone Ranger reli- gion,• he said. "It is a corporate religion and we are all the body of Christ, and so we're linked to every other Christian in the world, and so we need corporate prayers rather than individual prayers on a day like that.# At 5:30 a.m., about 15or16 early~ -though Baldwin hopes for more -will enter a sanctuary that currently displays pictures of the center's 102 missionaries working around the world. Congregants will pray for these missionaries as they seive the poor in areas including Mexico, El Salvador, Argentina and South Africa. .The Newport Mesa Irvine Interlaith Coundl will also pray early in the morning on Thursday. Their National Day of Prayer interfaith Breakfast will start at 7:15 a .m. with a medley of religions represented. "The mayors are coming to pray together, and people from all different reli· gions are gonna be there,· said Dennis Short, a pastor at Harbor Christian Church in Newport.Beach. James L. Doti, the president of Ctiap- man University, will be the breakfast's keynote speaker. Newport Beach Mayor Gary Adams, Costa Mesa Mayor Libby Cowan, pastors, rabbis, representatives from the Islamic Society of Orange Coun- ty and other speakers will also lead prayers or read scripture from their respective books. ·we all pray for similar things." said Jim de Boom, a secretary and executive director for the Interfaith Coundl and a Daily Pilot colwnnist. "We all want peace and hannony and the best for ourselves and for each other.· In Costa Mesa, the Presbyterian Church of the Covenant will hold an evening prayer service with four or five other area churches. The choirs of the different con- gregations will also come together, and prayer topics will include the nation, its WHEN: 5:30 to 6:30 a.m. Thursday WHERE: 2599 Newport Blvd., Costa Mesa COST: Free CAU: (714) 966-0454 WHA~ National Oay of Prayer Inter- faith Breakfast WHEN: 7:15 to 8:45 a.m. Thursday WHERE: Hilton Hotel, 18800 MacArthur Blvd., Irvine cos~ $15 CALL: (949) 660-8665 WHAT: Communal prayer at Presbyterian Church of the Covenant WHEN: 7 p.m. Thursday WHERE: 2850 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa. COST: Free CALL: (714) 557-3340. leaders and its people. Elected officials from Costa Mesa, Huntington Beach and Fountain Valley will be invited. "I think prayer is important any time, whether it's with one individual or if it's a group,• said Laurann Cook, councilwoman for Fountain Valley and a member of the church. "But by praying in nwn~ and together, you have a concentrated focus .• Faith CALENDAR DtNNERMRTY A "rotatiooaJ• dinner party fat catholic singles in Orange County will take place at 7 p.m today at the Newport Beach Golf Course, 3100 Irvine Ave., Newport Beach. The four- course, semifonnal dinner, host- ed by the Catholic Singles Net- wark of Orange Coonty, is open to linglee agaa 21 to 45 and is deeigned to have diners rotate to a dHfenmt table f« each course to maximire mingling. Call for'prtces. (800) 514-9090. WAL.IC FOR ISRAEL The Jewish National Fund of Costa Mesa will host a Walk for Israel, a SK run and walk, at 9 a.m. Sunday at UC Irvine, Pereira Drive, near West Peltuon Drive. $20 for adults, S12.50 for children. Cost includes admission to the Orange County Jewish Festival. {714) 957-4540. PRAYER ANO GRAllTUOE A meeting of prayer and grati· tude for God's guidance and Jove will take place at noon Wednesday at the Second Church of Oui1t. $dentitt, 3100 Padfk: Vlew Dme, Corona del Mar. Free. (949) 6"-2617. Copyright: No ntWJ stories, Illus. WEATHER AND SURF POLICE FILES tmion1. e<fltOO.I mattlf or adYef • titements herein can be rf9«>' ductd wl1hout written pennlulon TEMPEMTURES TIDES COSTA MESA of copyright own«. Balboa TODAY • ~ Strwt: A c.ar was reported stolen In the 1800 HOW JO RWlf US 67/57 First low block at 8:58 a.m. Wednesday. Corona def Mar 12:20 a.m. •¥ ............... 5.4 • ...._ ser.t: All intoxicated person was repor1ed in CWc:ul8don 67157 First high the 1900 bloc:t It 9:10 p.m. Wtdneday. The Times Or.nge County Costa Mesa 8:07 p.m .................. -0.24, •Or-..,..._ All lntoxlam!d person was reported In (800) 252-9141 Ad&dlih4 67156 Second tow the 2400 bloc:t at 11: 10 p.m. Wednesday. C1.wlfled (949) 642-5678 Newport BHC:h 3:25 p.m ...................... 3.1 o~ (949) 642-4321 67157 Second high NEWPORT IEAOi fdttoNI Newpon Coast 6:46 ............................. 2.8 • ,,..,... ... hlne,..._AINlnwm~on News (949) 642·5680 68155 JUtpiclon of potle9ing a C011UOlled ~et 2:)0 a.m. Sports (9119) 574-4223 • ~ Sports Fax (949) JM110 IUJC)AY Thundly ..... Ml Mt It s 10.000. WPOMCAST First low . '"" ............ --'"'* ~-Ullid E-m.11:~ w~ wilt be w.ht· Mlill\Oflb to shouldet-hlgh wtth 1:21 a.m ..................... 5.1 c:harcoal 1o Plint gr.tfttl on t.ttwoom wells, 1he iidt w.lt ..,.,.. Of'fa (949) 64.2-4321 Ffrsthlgh and.~ Ml at 10:JOp.m. ~ ~Fu (949) 6)1-7126 ~ 6-foot-tMlts. Cot ldldonl will be fair. 9:~ p.m .................... .0.2 •231'!1' ........ WlltO...flNM:Am1nW9S.,.. ~ .. ""* COIMluNty""""' Second low ed on IUllS*ton of 1* ldlw lttflcllac»i1 tD • pelClt ofllcj' • • ~,,, ....... Mflllll nn.. LOCAftOllt .... 5:05 p.m. .................... l .J 6:15 p.m. Wldrt..cleJ. ... -.11t • S!GO. Wldge 3-4' S«ondhlgh ....... Somlol.~Mloltert---~ .... ""'"'a."",..._ ~ 3-4' 1:)7 ........................... 2.3 sa.OGOhm I 91'919ln .. Gblodc•1:JOp.m. ~ ...................... A,..._ Ill lteckWI 3-4' 1Uv9'Jltty 3-4' ... ...., anupldandctMng...,._.,.. • ., ...... andct'9•1UDp.m.~ ... --··-- _ .. _ ............... CoronldefMlr 3-4' ,.......... 55 Doily Pilot Saturday, April 28, 2001 A3 Instead of El Toro) Newport-Mesa should foc111) on real pending crisis ~, . S o now, a contingent including Costa Mesa City Councilman Chris Steel is spending money to go to Washington to lobby for an airport in El Toro. Fun- ny, I thought that's why we had local representation. The timing of the county delegation is poor, for ulti- mately it may not be political ~onnections, developer clout or infrastructure needs that dictate whether another air· port is built In the end. it may be whether we'll be able to afford to Dy on the planes that El Toro is sup- posed to support. Al the gas station where I regularly pump my dead dinosaurs, I paid $1.78 per gallon three days ago and that was cheap compared to other stations I've seen. Now we're being told that gas will "definitely" be at $2.00 by. summer and perhaps even $2.50. One analyst stated that $3 per gallon within the next year 15 likely. The higher price of fuel l!> Steve Smith WHAT'S UP ,) I dlready ha\fing an effect on the Smiths~ In the nuddle of planning a Hawati va cauon, we had to punt due to thE' dramatically higher fares Yes, I know, We ts tough I suspect that there are many more families like ours who are having second thought!> ttboul their flying vacations due to the higher fares. Edch traveler has a point dl which they will seek altematJvc• methods of adueving the same goal, whether tl 1s d vacallon or a sales call There was another tune when higher air fares provid- ed a selective reduction in flyers ond air travel was ·d luxury for most Americans. As the fares go yp. look for less business travel and less air cargo, too. Tiili> energy shortage is . not yet a crisis, but it's close. Only six months ago the extent of our energy woes rut the front pages and now we discover that oil profiL<> have surged while companies such as United Parcel Ser- vice tack a fuel surcharge onto all of its shipments to help pay for its higher ener- gy costs. Once again, Mr. And Mrs. John Doe are pay- ing for all of it. Here in Costa Mesa, Vice Mayor Linda Dixon revedJed the city's single largest pow- Pr consumer. "The traffic IJghts and street Lights use the most energy,• said Dixon, •And there's noth.Jng we can do about thdl. When you stop and think about 1t. that's frightening.· That is frightening. Those traffic lights must be on 24n/365, and the street light.s must come on at dusk and go off at ddwn. So, I have a plan I'd l.lke to see the city councils of Newport Beach and Costa Mesa formally request -not demand -that locdl busi- nesses tum off lhetr exlenor sign lights when the opera- tion is closed for business. When I flodted the idea to Dixon, she sajd: "I think 1t would be a great program. I have notJced many business- es are currently doing thdt .on their own Stdter Brothers and Sav-On are domg 1t. I even went pdst a McDon- ald's and they were doing 1t.. I called the Sdv-On drug- store at Baker and Fdll"View to whkh Dixon referred me and was told thdl, yes, their exterior sign was ddrk after closing. Frdnk B1dnchiru, owner of Metro C' ar Wash, 1s turrung off h1s signs dl rught and is acbvely encourdgmg . other busmess owners to do the same. Ed Fawcett, the president of the Costa Mesa Chamber ol Commerce also likes the idea. ·I would embrace any kind of conservation,• he said. On June 7, the chamber and Southern Cdhlomia Ed1- son are hosting a breakfast t9 show busmess~s how they <;an reduce theLt power con- sumption. For more mforma- tion, caJI (7 14 ) 885-9090. The idea is to encourage husinesses to conserve ener- gy. not JUSl dunng this short- age but always, even 1f we bel..teve that th.is •cns1s" 15 no more real than past energy cnses. or than a coffee short- age or a medt shortage (com- ing soon to a mdrket near you). I'd likf' to !>ee Newport- Mesa become the first ener- gy-wise community in the state by aggressively encour- aging businesses to turn off their extenor s1gndge when they dose for the evening. Costa M esa and Newport Beach should lead the state WEsrBRAE NATURAL. Organic Beans (Mothers )) ' • Black • Red • Soup • Soy Bean Sunflower Seed in th.is voluntc:1ry compliance program. For reducing con- sumptJon, the two cities should ~ last on the list of rolling blackout canclidates should the need dnse this summer It's not rocket science. Busmesse!>, tum oU your signs when you dose up for the night Power supp!Jers, reward us for our conserva- 1.Jon effort!. by reducing or ehrmndtmg our IJkelihood of cl blc1ckoul • Whdtl:'vcr thc:ll conUngent hopes to dccomplish won't matter d wh1t dS long as gas pncE>'> climb, dnd they surely wtll And 1t w<>ms to me that compcired to the threat of blackout-. m d mdtter of wet>ks, llyinq f>,000 miles to lobby for dn dtrport that JS year-. dWdY 1., not dn mtell1- genl uw of people or TP.SOUff(•<, • STEVE SMITH IS a Costa Mesa resident and freelance writer. Readers may leave a message for him on the Daily Pilot hothne at (949) 642 6086 RFTERTHEf RU.e Juices Mail Older 1.(800) • Chill • Great Northern • Salad • Pinto Bread • Cape Cod Cranbeny Back to Nature Cereals Low Sodhtm -Hialb Fiber ~-~-~SZ~ ~ fJ6fl'1 ()IO•l r PACIFIC FOODS ~ °'P* Enriched RiceMilk • Plain ~·~~" Sii!, YOIJ SAVI SH 9fJ1 ANl'IOXIDANT POWER With COQIO, Upole Add. Grape Seed ~ · Lutein, Ginlqfo, Olive Leaf and Much More. A Blend of Antimddanta and Ph)to-Antioxidanta 1 ao~~Jsest I SJ.692.. SUGG.'25.95 ._ FARM FRESH PRODUCE • Kidney • Garl>amo REG. '1 .49 GARDENTIME Organic Pasta • Fancy Ribbons •Penne ~ REG.~.29 77lzoz. Spectrum Naturals ~ • Canola • Ute Canola ~93~ BaltedFrah ~' .. ~ Pasta Sauces • Tomato Basil • Marinara Reg.S.59 '3.99 ~ ~ 26 oz. • Garlic Mushroom ~93?! \\b a 11ngton v.....-.. Brealcfalt ...,., & Quin Pto/Btl • .._..Patlits ~·· · ·=1!, .... l&.UI :=~ SJl! • 24 KalTOt Orange REG. '3.39 32 oz. ~ Juices • Just 8oysenbeny =~;~4~ IAVWN LongLJk Deodorant Days of pro/l!dion with one application REG. '15.00 COCONUT GROOVE Coconut Oil SanJm coconuJ oil for moisturizing, for alter sun. fun.JJodg fr_ugranaJ $ 79 Rm.'7.• SUGG. •.50 • • . . I' A4 Saturday, April 2e, 2001 Hundreds expected for Costa Mesa cleanup • Morning event will help low-income residents beautify their homes. Jennifer Kho DAILY PILOT COSTA MESA -Hun- ·'dreds of volunteers are ' expected to turn out for the city's Neighbors for Neigh- bors community cleanup today. "I Uunk it's good 'to par- ticipate,• said Katie Erick- son, a 14 -year-old Costa Mesa resident who plans to do some work this year. Erickson is the daughter of former Mayor Joe Erickson and his wife, Alesia. TEMPLE ISAIAH OF NEWPORT BEACH (Co"strvallvt) Oranjlt' Cuunt)'s F'~I~ Syndl<ll!~ "YOU ARE A STltAHGOt tltllE ONU' ONCE" Slllbblt Worship Hebrew School Ad11t £.ducatlo11 Colnteliq Sodll E.e11ts $RABBI MARC S. RUBENSTEIN 2401 lrvlne Ave Ne'MpOn Beach (949) 548-6900 New Tricks HARBOR CHRISTIAN CHURCH (Dlaclplea ot Christ) 24411 lnln• Ave. Mewpo" leatll, CA (U9) 845-5781 ..... Dr. O.ls Sllort Science of Mind Communiry Center IU5 p.,j hr.. C.. M'*' ~....,._..J Stnitw IO&JO,,,. TOPIC C::t!1~ Rich ~eyer S.uuday Wodabop I 0.12 1111 r_. Airr.. r.... Mm C'Al.L ('Hj) "'-Jiii ... iw.-. "It helps people in neighborhoods that need help,• she said. "I've only done it twice and it's fun. I painted a house once and planted trees. I think it's effective in getting neigh- borhoods cleaned up.• The event includes two parts -the neighborhood cleanup and the park cleanup. Volunteers who are already signed up will help low-income · residents beautify their homes and others will help clean Canyon Park and plant 500 one-gallon native shrubs. Patricia Derby, a resi- dent of one of five homes that will be included in the neighborhood cleanup, said she' is looking forward Newport r Lutheran Church CLLC.A., 791 Dover Dr. Newport -..Ch Tradltlonal Lutbenn P•etor Dftkl Monge Worahlp s.rvtc. with Moir Communion 8undllJ9:18•m CHILD CAA• AVAILAaL• (Ml) 541 H3i New.,on Center United Methodist Church Rtv. Cachlccn C.OOU. Panor 1601 Marguerite Avt. comer of Margucrice and San J~uin Hills Rd (949) "4-0745 Sam Quiet Wonhip Snv1Cr /Oam Wonhip anJ Childrtns Suntl4y Sch'1ol Youth mttting Wttk/y Costa Mesa MUAVIRDI UNllD Ml1HODllT ~ 1701 lalmr,C.M. *1ol llhlp a Church lchoef ... .Ml 10.00 ...... Or. Ridod (71 A) 979-823" ST. Mm PIEsmuIAN Ceulce Worship 9:30 to the 19th biannual event, scheduled from 8:30 a.m. to noon. •I thought it would be a good idea," she said. "They are going to be painting my house." Although the city has enough volunteers to get everyUUng done, Kimberly Thomas, management iUla- lyst for the city, said it could use more. Volunteers can .come to Canyon Park this morning to sign up, she said, adding that early arrival is encour- aged because of parking constraints. "One of the main goals of this event is to instill the volunteer spirit in our youth,• Thomas said. "Rarely do volunteer - opportunities aUow both the elderly and the youth to participate. Usually it's one or the other. This way, par- ents or grandparents" can go out with the youth and help instill in them that vol- unteering is a positive and beneficial activity.• Council member Gary Monahan said h e thinks the program ~s good 'for the city. "It brings the communi- ty together and gets some decent work done tha't probably wouldn't be done otherwise," he said, adding that he would not be able to participate this year because of s'eduling con- flicts. Information: (714) 754- 4870. I I . ! '-I ( 11 I \ I The ~'d Pttcr 0. Haynes, Rector SUNDAY SCttEDUJ..E 8 am • Holy Euchari.n 9 am • Adult Bible Study 10 am -Choral Euchariat "A God-c:cn1ercd parish community. inscruacd by me Word of God and rmcwed by me SacnmcnlS· Our Lady Queen of Angels 2046 Mar VIStll Drive Newport Beach, California 92660 (949)644-0200 Fax (949)644-1349 ~. Monsignor William P. McLaughlin, Pastor LITURGIES: Sarurcby. 5 p.m. [Camor). Sunday. 7:00 (QuiC't). 8:30 (Conrcmpor.uy). 10:00 (Choir), 11:30 a.m. (Can1or) and 5:00 p.m. (Conrcmpor.uy) "------__.; .... FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST.SCIENTIST 3303 VlaUdo Newport Becx:h 673-1340ot 673-6150 Olurd\ 10 am 6 5 pn. S\lnday School t O am w.a ..... ,~.pJI SECOND CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST 3100 PocWc V»W' Dr. Newport Becl::h 644-2617 or 675-4661 Chwch toam SUnday School t 0 am wa.do, ....... pm •t•~i}noan ................................... ., ......... ........... o.-w•.-• ......... ,.. ....Qlrd•'ftl"'8Qmtl .. Tared Faith• (I Kini' 19:1·18) Doily Pilot A day to clean the harbor and more I •The organize.rs of today's;event not only target garbage, they hope to educate people about the hazards of urban runoff. Paul Clinton . D AILY PILOT NEWPORT HARBOR They're just hoping to make a dent in the trash. An army of concerned resi- dents will fan out across New- port Harbor today as partici- pants in the 21st annual Clean Harbor Day. Those who have volun- teered for the event, number- ing more than 200, said they hope to clean up some of the Styrofoam cups, tennis balls, plastic bags and other garbage that bas washed down San Diego Creek icto the bay. Organizers always sched- ule the event in the spring, following rains that have washed a fresh load of refuse into the bay. "Every time we get a good rain, the San Diego Creek flushes like a toilet.• event participant Dennis Baker said. "It all settles fin the bay)." Baker will lead a group in kayaks into the Back Bay to a salt dyke, about a half-mile south of the Jamboree Bridge. wbere large piles of garbage collects as a result of urban runoff from a handful of upstream cities. The Newport Harbor Nau- tical Musewn organizes the massive trash pickup effort. which runs from 8 to 11 a.m. After the work ls done, the trash collectors are scheduled to gather at Malarlcy's Irish Pub in Newport Beach. Marshall Steele, chainnan of the event, has assigned dif- ferent parts of the harbor to the groups and individuals who signed up. "We've taken a map of the area and marked it into zones,· Steele said. "People come in and clean their area.• Steele said he hopes groups adopt specific areas on a year-round basis to con- tinue cleanup efforts. For many of those who will give up their Saturday, the event is a wake-up call. Pick- ing up trash caused by every- day actions -tossing out fast food containers, emptying an ashtray or dumping out car fluids -teaches them to pick up after themselves. •All of this is about educa- tion,• said Stephanie Barger, the executive director of Cos- ta Mesa-based Earth Resource Foundation. •For the participants, they realize how dirty the beaches are.• The LArgtst & Finest Bt•uty Supply tf FuO Strvict S.lon in Or•nge County Cash for Your Old Jewelry ... . It may be worlh more than you trunk! Chances are you have "buried treasure" in your jewelry or safe deposit box. What's collecting dust could be collecting cash for you! For two days only, Charles H. Barr Jewelers will have as our guest Mr. Mark Ebert, an international buyer of antique, estate and "previously owned" jewelry. Mr. Elbert is a former instructor of the Gemological Institute of America. He is also an author and lecturer to the trade on antique and collectible period jewelry. He will be available this Friday and Saturday to consult with you on the discreet disposition of your jewelry for the highest possible cash market price. Dispose of a single ring or an entire collection . Two Days Only Friday, April 27 ........................................ 10 am to 6 pm Saturday, April 28 ..................................... 9 am to 4 pm or by appoint~fll upon rtq~t CHARLES H. BARR (M9) 642-3.110 Daily Pilot Saturday, April 28, 2001 AS . Senior center yolunteers get special honor . with special projects •Costa Mesa officials induct 12 community members into Volunteer Hall of Fame. Jennifer Kho DAILY PILOT COSTA MESA -A dozen Costa M esa Senior Center volunteers were inducted into the Volun.teer Hall of Fame on Friday. The 12 top volunteers this year were Mary Anne Bane, Gene Graham, Lee Hanson, Bob Jones. Andy Lepay, Marge Miller. Dona Parker, Ron Perkins, Peg Rin~hart, Lou Stead, Bill Sussman and Bob Watts. is such a dear. When people come in they aren't happy, but when they leave they're smiling. J like working the front desk, too. The people here are so real.• The vol unteers were picked because they did the most during the year anc:J have not re'"eived the award in previous years, Aviva Goelma"n, the centet's execu- tive director, said. ing for the cenler is its own reward. • 1 just like doing things,· said Graham, a senior adviso· ry council member who has volunteered at the front desk and the center's newsletter, the Chronicle, for four years. •You get more out of the things that you contribul~ to. I get a lot out of helpmg and I've always done that.• Hanson and Jones provide tax assJStance, Lepay picks up and distributes donated bread daily, Miller serves senior meals, Parker assists with memberships and spe- cial events and Perkins instructs a computer Class at the center. leers, the center r~ed more than 60 community members who were its biggest supporters last year. The cel'Mer decided to extend the awards to commu- nity members m honor of 2001, the Umted Nations l,ntemallonal Year of Volun- teers, Goelman said. •Volunteers ar~ · the lifeblood of an organization,· Volunteer Coordinator Diane Swarts said . •And these are just the creme of our crop. We're lucky that every year there are people we can sin- gle out and honor· •1 didn't expect this,• said Rinehart, -who has assisted the center's elder care nurse, Cheryl Lowes, worked al the front desk and helped the center hold special events for more than three years. • 1 enjoy working here. Cheryl Swarts said the senior cen- ter in 2000 had more than 200 volunteers who con- tributed a total of 26.151 hours. The HaU of Fame volun- teers are involved in . many different activities at the cen- ter. Stead 1b d nurse's assistant who also helps with special events, Suc;smdn is the build- ing ~andyman dnd artis\ who donates his proceeds to lhe center dnd Wdtts. another advisory council member, assists with transportat1or\ cln.d spec1dl projects "We would like to thank all of our volunteers for their lime and efforts in supporting our family here at the center,• Swarts said at the event Fri- day. ·without our volunteers and theu total dedlcatlon, we wouJd not be able to proVIde the many programs, events and services we all enjoy • Volunteers who were rec- ognized .said that volunteer· Bane, also an advisory council member, volunteers for the center's outreach clnd meals programs dnd assists In add1bon to the volun- Briefly_ IN TllE NEWS Fashion show sched- uled to benefit SPIN 1987, also runs a food bank that provides meals to the homeless. The benefit event will include raffles, opportunity drawings and a silent auction with prizes such as fine wines, facials and clothes. The grand prize is a one-week stay at a country club 1n Florida. The 100-mile bike-a-thon, now in its seventh year, benefits Roydl Family Kids' Camp. a nonprofit organization that organizes camps for abused and neglected children Serving People in Need (SPIN) will hold a fashion show May 4 at the Four Seasons H otel to raise money for its program. Tickets for the event, which includes lunch. cost $85. The ben- efit begins al 11 a.m. at the Four Seasons Hotel's Palm Garden, 690 Newport Center Drive: Newport Beach. The money raised dunng the event will help to send 100 kids to camp, said Dave Brooks, a New- port M esa Unified School Distnct . trustee who helped organize the event. The nonprohl orgdnization helps Orange County's working poor and single mothers achieve independence by helping them to find housing, by offcnng JOb train- ing and educational support as well as substance abuse recovery and crisis mlervcnlton. The Costa Mesd-based orgam- zation. which was founded 10 Information: (949) 751-1 101 Group getting legs ready for fund -r a iser "Gearin' Up" for a good cause, about 70 bicyclists will head to San Diego's Mission Bay today. The two-day event will take the group from Costa Mesa to San Clemente via Irvine and Laguna Niguel Regional Park Salurddy. O n Sunday, bikers will pass Carls- bad and Torrey Pines Hill before reaching their goal. Down there. the group will feel like they haven't left home. with a lunch of Wahoo's fish tacos r.eady to be con- sumed. • Or»-on-one Penonol T roining • Nulrifionol & Exercise Plans • Lifestyle Coaching • 8ocly Fat Testing & Goo/ Setting • Our S#uclio, Yow Home or OffKe • Gilt Cerlilkoles Available NEWPORT DESIGN CENTER presents A No Minimum Bid Public AUCTION AT Newport Design Center 353 E. Coast Hwy/BaysiJe Dr., Newport Beach TODAY ONLY SAT. APRIL 28th Preview 12 noon, Auction 1 PM Sharp MILLIONS OF DOLLARS OF DESIGNER MERCHANDISE!! BELOW IS A SMALL SAMPLING OF ITEMS TO BE· AUCTIONED ll cl~ Brcmet • 11 RolexW*hes •al cl Alb/ & Diamm ~ • 7 cl MalQU0 Clarrood Sofitaire . Gnni Entrywrj ~ ~ CarvOO [lj, Oro' . • g Solid MOOagany Roman Columns. • 61 King & OJeer1 l.ioo Chak's • ltaian style 6 pioce LM~ Roan Set with marble tables• socti1g Wclter ~•Bronze~ frcm smal to life size, irducilg, Remngtons, El<, Deer, Horses, Golfers, Giraffes, • M Deoo & more• lroecb Gemsb1e Globes• Wa<pl Wheel Bed • EJegari F19t1Ch F\.lnlshilgs. ~ Furnist'n}s. ~I P.cxxxx>. 8rPe. llalill't Mll1lle Clocb & C.ldelabra Sets• Hand Ettied Mirrors•~ ~ • 8ealW ~ OI Pai 11i9 • M.eselJn Framed l.inftad Edllon Pri1ll Sldl m Dai, Chagal, lcart, Pka110 & nm• 6 ft. OassC Brooze Fa.nail •Haro PaiEd Lq• F""*'9 ·Comer cam· Mat1:J1e ~ OO'lSdes • Dllkl Port8ail DecxnLYe w • Latge ~Vases • Tllllrf Slyle l.a11J8 • naBl T~ •Ml CDlets mclTf hard-naje Pnllt rugs,~ & aiEnal ~ AND MANY, MANY MORE ITFMS 1po NUMFJlOUS ID MFNllONJ JOIN US FORA DAY OF FUN AND FXC111NG AUCOON AC110NJ DON'T Mm m Al~ Sl.qed" chrlge, catered refrestlnents, <2tl, died< or ad cam. /4 rn.a ~ . . NEWPORT DESIGN CENTER 353 E. Coast Hwy, Newport Beach, CA PC.H./Bayside Or. 949.723.6100 ·' - Br.ooks. who hcls pdrlletpdted m the event for the pdst two years, Sd1d he's been lrdmrng his muscles smce Apnl But while most of the pdrt1c1pants hc1vc. done so ds well, he Sd1d dnyone's welcome to show up toddy dnd come along The b1kc-d-lhon lakes oil from Newport Mesc1 Christian Center. 2599 Newport Blvd., C'ostct Mesa, ctl 8 d.m. Check in lime 1s t1l 7 c1.m. c1nd the rcgistr<llion fN· 1s $h0 For 1nformdt1on on Roydl Fdml· ly Kids' C't1mp. cctll t714J 418 -05 10. Man hurt at Newpor t Harbor Yac h t Club . The bodl!> mc1y hdVP CJOlten off to a good start 1n th1<. yt>dr'!> New- port to Ensenddc1 lnt(>rnat1onal Yacht Rdce, but the lest1v1ltes did- n't go quite d smoothly for at least one spectator walchtng from the shore. · Around 1.30 p.m Fnday, lhe city's hrehghters responded to an accident call from Newport Har- bor Ydcht Club. When they arrived on the scene, they ~:hscov­ ered thdt c1 man hdd m1ured his left wrist and nght ankle after shpptng dnd falling while movtng a three-fool by three-foot gnU lop, said Cdpt John Blduer, d spokesman with the fire depart-,. ment. Blduer sdtd the mdn was taken to Hoag Hospital dnd added that it was unclear whether he'd broken either his wnsl or his ankre. Club offtc1al declined to com- ment on the incident. • • .. , A6 Saturday, April 2a, 2001 Daily Pilot Fund-raiser .will provide vision . ....... , llVOlVED , . T he Orange County Chapter of Women of Vlslon is having its biggest annual fund-raising luncheon ~t 11 :30 a.m. Satur- day, May 19. This year's guest speaker is Angela Mason, a World Vision executive direc- tor and an advocate for the world's sufferin9 children, especially exploited girls'. . "She is a dynamic lady who has. traveled extensively in Third World Countrie~ devot- ing much of her life to the issues of the girl child and has witnessed things that most of us cannot even imagine," says Susan S. Champion, of Women of Vision-Orange County chair. The luncheon will be held dt The Atrium at Bistango Restaurant. The cost of the luncheon is $100. There will be a silent auction, an oppor- tunity drawing and the oppor- tunity to purchase special pho- tographs, which will be on exhibit the day of the event. for reservations or more infor- mation, can call Bobbi Dauder- man at (949) 720-3853. Newport Mesa Travel has put together an education tour of the Provence and Paris that starts on June 8 and runs to June 17. Inge Rudman of Nevtport Mesa navel a nd a professional tour director host the tour. Rudman feels that that the tour, with its emphasis on history, art and culture, is a great buy. The daily tours Greer Wylder BEST BUYS include the following sites: The valleys of Provence that Van Gogh loved to paint; medieval Provence with its abbeys and a palace in Avi- gnon once inhabited by Popes; Aries, a Greek trading post founded in the 6th Century B.C.E., with its arena and the tree-lined streets of Abc-en- Provence complete with design- er shops; and Les Baux-de- Provence, a medieval village with many Renaissance houses leading up to the ruins of a 13th century chateau. There's also a · cruise to St. Tropez and a visit to St. Remy; a drive that goes through the marshy Carmau- gue delta where bulls, horses and flamingos roam wild; and wine tasting in Chateauneuf du Pape. In Paris the tour will see the beautiful historic buildings, museums and experience the world-famous night-life and restaurants. The cost is $1,820 per person, double occupancy, including air from Los Angeles, hotels, TGV express train. deluxe motor coach transporta- tion, eight breakfasts, three three-course dinners and a cruise from St. Maxim to St. 1Topez. For more information, con- tact Inge Rudman at Newport Mesa AX Travel Connection in Newport Beach, (714) 378- 91.57, (714) 968-0245 or (800) 223-0915. It's located at 2043 Weslcliff Drive, Suite 110 in Newport Be ach. king sets at $39.99 and $49.99. Tuesday Morning carries a gift selection, gounnet foods and Red Dot items that are reduced an additional 25% off. Tuesday Morning is located at 230 E. 17th St. in Costa Mesa. Infor- mation: (949) 650-0455. Wedding photography is · discounted for a limited> time at Yuen Lui at South Coast Plaza. For $695 you'll get four contin- uos hours of photography. You· also will get 20 .8x10-color por- . tra,its and one leather wedding Glabman's offers some of altbwn. Yuen tui is located in the best in furniture and interi-the Crate & Barrel/Macy's or design. The Costa Mesa Home Store wing of South showroom features furniture Coast Plaza. Information: (714) collections from Baker, E.J. 545-8845. Victor, Hancock & Moore, Karges, Kindel, Morris James and John Widdicomb. There is a lso a whole team of interior designers available for assis- tance. Glabman's is located at 3089 Bristol St. in Costa Mesa. Information: (714) 540-3822. Tuesday Morning, the sea- sonal store, is open through June 30 with savings on close- out items reduced 50% to 80% oCf regular retail prices. Cur- rently there are specials on Adirondack chairs at $49.99 with a matching ottoman or square table for $29.99: resin g arden angels at $9.99; English floral comforter sets for queen and kirlg size beds at $79.99; and 200 to 310 thread count luxury sheet sets for queen or An art exhibit called "Girl Talk• will be shown from 4 p.m. to 6 p.m. on Sunday at Haute Cakes Caffe. It will be an exhibition of new work cel- ebrat:i.Ilg women and benefit- ing Hoag Cancer Center's Brighter Image Program. The paintings will be on display through May at Haute Cakes and at the Carole Akins Studio. Haute Cakes Caffe is located at 1807 Westcliff Drive in New- port Beach, and the Carole Akins Studio is located at 418 31st St. in Newport Beach. • BEST BUYS appears Thursdays and Saturdays. Send information to Greer Wylder at 330 W. ·eay St., Costa Mesa, CA 92627, or via fax at (949) 646-4170. • •• ,_ ....,., runs periQdically In 0. Olily Piiot on a fOtiltjng ..._ tf you'd like lnfonrl9ticn ~ dlr'8 JQll ~ niDlticwt to d"5 list. ull (949) 574-G98. ALS ASSN.. ORANGE COUNTY OWTER . The Amyotrophic Lateral Sderolil Am\., whiCh help indMduals who have the disorder that is eJso known as Lou Gehrig's disease. needs volunteers. (714) 375-1922. AMERICAN HEART ASSN. The Americon Heart Assn. is looking for voluntee~ to per{onn various general of!ice duties tn the ~ . office and implement educati<>nal and fund·nusmg /events through Orange County. No experienCe nee- , essary. 1iaining will be provided. (949) 856--~5. ASSN. RENAISSANCE CREATORS The Costa Mesa group sponsors and supports out- reach community service programs, such as the homel~ sanctuary. Volunteers are needed. (714) 540-5803. ' BIG BROTHERS, BIG SISTERS -; The local chapter is looking for men and women older than 20 who have lived in Orange ~ for at least six months and have been OD the job for at least three months to serve as big brothers or big sis- ters tor children ages 6 to 16 from single-parent homes. (714) 544-7773. BOY SCOOTS Of AMERICA INC. Volunteer opportunities for the Orange County Council include fund-raising, program development and training to existing troops and packs. (714) 546- 4990. BOYS & GIRLS O.UBS OF NEWPORT--MESA The three area dubs need volunteer coaches and arts and crafts workshop teachers. Call for locations. (949) 642-2245. COSTA MESA OVIC PLAYHOUSE The playhouse needs volunteers for ushertng, back- stage work. mailings, typing, controlling lights and many other duties. (949) 650-5269. ' Extra Anniversary Savings On Bernhardt ' Extra25% OFF g:~a1~ces E. t l')ftO/ OFF Our Sale Prices On All Wall Units, x ra Mftl /0 Desb & Occasional Pieces E 1~0/ OFF Our Sale Prices On All Upholstery & Leather X/rQ J /0 Living Rooms ... Including Special Orders Save ~40%on Over $1 ,000,000 Of Special Anniversary Items From MARGE CARSON fl ....,_ .ICN1IDGlll (Ml) 727·1212•101 Technok>gy Drive (Eatoll-.50/fMonPemwly) • UN 0.00 IHOMIOOM: (8t58) 588-1900 • 731 o Mnnw Rold (ltt T1tl /1'yrlmld M T1tl .,,,,,, Mltn/tlllX) flUMr1"UM OU'n.IT: (858) 588-151 O • 7 480 Mlrlmer Rold (Dlffcf/Y Acto# Pltfdn(J Lot From T1tl /lyrlmld) ~HOCJRS:Mm.·Ffl., 10A.M.:,PM,&tl. 10AM.4PM,b ltAM-f/01 VISIT US ON THE WEB: www.tre .. ureafumlture.n.t J&t =· JWAIU U.f. 80 OAY8 MME A8 CA8H • • ~$5,000 VacatWn To CABO SAN LUCAS' ONLY 5 -STAR LUXURY RESORT ••• LAS V ENTANAS Reglater fO wir1 ,,,,... dayt and two nighta In ,,,. wof1d.clau l'NOlf. Prize lncludetl al,,.,., llCOOmmOdlltlontl end one day of dffp-,.. ~· ThM "8kend one vacation will be awarded •t boflt of our .iotwil. No~ MONMty. ~of n-te llllll lllllr--MO """'*"'of IN lllldll wt_., not ...... for ... 111p .... Doily Pilot · Costa Mesa -Orange Coast Lions T he Costa Mesa-Orange Coast Breakfast Lions Oub celebrated its 40th Anniversary with Dis· trlct Governor Danny Mayer and his wife, Lori; Vice Gov· emor David Stewart and wife, Eunice; Central Orange Region Chair Jim North; and Past District Governor Mike Schaefer and his wife, Sandi, all in attendance at a dinner meeting at Mimi's Cafe in Costa Mesa. Mlt was a full house,• said club president Ron DeGeare. Past club presidents in attendance were called upon to share club projects and services during their year in office. Ray Ott was officially inducted into club membership by Stewart and Mayer. He was presented a congratulatory letter from the international preside nt and a 40-year patch to be sewn on the club's banner. Congratulations on 40 years of service to the Newport- Mesa community! SCHOOLS FOUNDATION GRANTS: More than 150 local ·11 teachers and principals will be honored on Thursday at the Hyatt Newporter for par- t!cularly innovative dass- HEMPHILL'S RUGS & CARPETS COMPARE OUR SERVICE I PRICEI SELECTION I 230 East 17th St. • Costa Mesa (949) 722-7224 www rugsandcarpets.com Mon-Fri 10·6 Sat 10·5 Jim de Boom COMMUNITY & CLUBS room pro1ects. The grants will be ~ward· ed by the Newport-Mesa Schools Foundation, a pri- vate organization estabbshed in 1981 to enhance educa- lion in the Newport-Mesa School District. This year, with the help of many gen· erous local donors, the foun - dation will award more than $400,000 in grants. These will go to teachers from each of the 29 schools in the dis- tnct and will fund programs in numerous areas, mcludmg the arts, science, math, spe· c1al education and social studies. The all-volunteer board has worked hard thiio year to raise the funds and organize the grant readings and awards dinner. The community has been exceedingly generous. In GUY BUFFET PERSONAL APPEARANCE & SIGNING THIS FRIDAY & SATURDAY AP RI L ~7T H & 28TH · NOON -5 PM FEATURING EXCLUSIVE SERIGRAPHS FOR GARYS ISLAND addition to many kind and loyal personal donors, such companies and organizations as the Boeing Charitable Foundation, Flour Founda· tion. Hoag Hospital and Pacific Llfe Foundation have added a great deal to the pot. This year three particular donors are participating in a new MSpecial Projects Pro· gram• for the foundation. Harbor Boulevard of Cars has donated $50 for every car sold. This money is for the purpose of constructing an Olympic-sized pool at Costa Mesa High School and a stadium at Estancia High School. A portion of it will pay for teacher grants. Always a generous support- er of local arts. C.J. Segerstrom and Sons has donated $25,000 specifically for arts related grants in Cos· ta Mesa High Schools. The Irvine Co. will fund 27 Teacher of Excellence Awards at $7 ,500 each and three Teacher of the Year Awards at $10,000 each. Candidates for these awards were screened and selected by representatives of the Newport Mesa Federation of Teachers. The Donald Bren Foundation will award a $15,000 Educational Ennch- ment Grant to each of the rune schools in the distncl GUY WILL ALSO INTRODUCE HIS NEW HONOLULU ZOO PRINT SHIRT ~ ------- •PRINT SERIES IN 14.lS· X 1T FRAMES ' I SoMdoy, April 2e, 2001 A7 • club celebrate 40th anniversary that educate students who Robert Burns, Bob Golding business meeting. 6 p .m.: live in Irvine Ranch com.mu· and Art Gronsky who The Rotary Club of Newport nities. Each school principal, joined the Exchange Club Balboa will meet at the in consultation with the of Newport Harbor. Bahia Connlhian Yacht school's teachers and pat· Club to hear MA Story of ents, will be able to Identify SERVICE CLUB MEETINGS Heahng• by Dr. Bums and the school's priorities for THtS COMING WEEK: Dr. Nichter of the Plasticos using these educational Want to get more involved Foundation. They will pre- enrichment grants. in your commuruty, make sent their video that won an new friends, network or give Academy Award for Best NEED A VOLUNTEER? something back to your com-Documentary (httpll:www U yow group or organi-munity? 1Ty a service dub. .newportbalboo.org). zation is looking for volun-You are invited to attend a teers to staff an event or club meeting this coming THURSDAY -7:30 a.m.: work on a community ser-week. Many clubs will buy The Costa Mesa-Orange vice project this summ~r. your first guest meal for you. Coast Breakfast Lions club call Missy Mittman at New· . will meet at Mimi's to hear port Harbor Higl\ School. TIJESDAY -7:30 a.m.: from new member Ray Ott. SM is putting together a The Newp()rt Beach Sunrise Noon: The Klwanls Club of directory of volunteer Rotary Club will meet at Five Costa Mesa will meet at the opportunities that will be Crowns Restaurant for a pro-· Holiday Inn. the Newport Beach-Corona del Mar Kiwa-distributed to au 9th and gram by Donnie Dawson of 10th graders. It will be the Jamaica Tounst Board. rus Club will meet at the included in every PTA's 6:30 p.m.: The Costa Mesa-Balua Connthlan Yacht Club, newsletter in June. Today's Newport Harbor Lions Club the Exchange Club of New- students need to complete will meet at the Costa Mesa port Harbor wtlJ meet at the 40 hours of community ser-Goll ancJ Country Club. Riverboat Restaurant for a vie~ as part of their gradua-business meebng and the tion requirements. You can WEDNESDAY -7:15 Newport lrvtne Rotary Club list your needs by calling a.m.: The South Coast Metro will meet at the lrvtne Mar- Mittman at (949) 515-6385. Rotary Club will meet at the riott for Student of the Year Center Club, the Newport Awa.rds (http//·www niro- WELCOME TO THE WORLD Harbor Kiwarus Club will tary.org) OF SERVICE CLUBS: meet at the Uruvers1ty Alb- Chad Brown, sponsored letic Club and the Costa • COMMONfTY .. a.UBS IS pub- by Andy Campbell, who Mesa Orange Coast Break-hshed every Saturday in the Daily joined the Rotary Club of fa st Lions Club wtll meet at Pilot Send your ~rvice club's meeting information by Fax to Newport-Balboa; Ray Ott, Mimi's Cafe. Noon: The (949) 660-8667, e·mail to who joined the Costa Orange Coast Exchange jdeboomOaol.com or by mail to Mesa-Orange Coast Club will meet at the Bahia 2082 SE. Bristol, SU1te 201, New- Breakfast Lions Club; and Corinthian Yacht Club for a port Beach, CA 92660-1740. ' ----=---=-1 AN'"I.,I<~U~: Jl,()"1 ... ~ <;AJl,l>~:N C~Al~""J~: I • • • • • • ' • • • • , • • • • I ' : ) • • . ' f • • • ' • • " , # ' • ' •• ~ Fine Homt F11mi1ltirtg1 All tiq11t1 (:/'Colltt ti&I n Tr•ilitio11al to Colt•gt Giffl & Gardnt Dttor Wisli Li1t & Dd ir1ny G~C~ Cimini P•lio Dining Brakf•sl, U.rtdt, Tu lit EsprnJO S.r Cafe Hours: Tues.-Fri., 9am-4pm; Sat., 8am-4pm ; Slll. Omelette, 9am-2pm The 12th A nnual Southern Cal1tornla Spring Ga rden Ji, CHdtu to Cl11111ilflins Uud & R"'t Boob Cautom Pichln Fr111r1i11g Famtit'llrt Rntoratiort •114 '"'"" mon! 949 722-1177 130 £ast J 7tlt Sired <:oft• Mnll, CA (&lurvl 11•'1' In") Hours: Tues.-Sat., 10am-5pm O ne of the nabon's top garden shows, e .Southem Cal1fom1a Spnng Garden Show 1s a must amJ garden enthusiast. Stroll b~ spectacular competition gardens designed bq leading landscape professionals and learn new landscaping ideas. Shop 100 unKiue exhibitors and en10.Y fun and informabve seminars from national garden experts. We'll even sharpen tfour garden shears!* Kids will love vie;wing the miniature children's gardens, creatmgspeoal craft pro1ects and partic1pahn~ 1n ::,pe- c1al events desiYled fur them. Parking and adm1ss1on are free. Preview Gala Thursda!J evening, Ma~~. t.o beneht rnends of the Mission, M1SSion San Juan CaptStrano. E:n~ live music. sample hne cuisine and be the hrst t.o preview the Garden ~how. To purchase bckcts fur the Gala call (949) 2>1"-17)()() o.t. a,2~. SHOW HOURS Preview Gala Ma3 ~. 2001 6:~ p.m. -q p.m. f'>enchbng rnencb of the MIM'6n. ~pcc1JI C,uest -Karen ~dg('!\, r>irec.tor of Horticulture & R.c6oft C:.nhanc.cment, Dtsfle:Yland Resort RIDAY Ma_y +, 2001 10 a .m. -9 p.m. !>ArURDAY Ma_y5,2001 10a.m.-7p.m. SUNDAY Ma_y 6, 2001 II a.m. -o :}O p .m. . . .. . . . . . . . ... • -- w.snN ................ 19"°'AMTlltA_. • South Coaet Plai.a, Crate and ~n-el/~ • Home .store wing )})) r>c.ar Sttct-t, Ci»u Mcaa fl.626 (aOO) 781..-NM • WllW.IOUthc~ta wm COAST '(a ti -::.•t*•'lafonepeaf.....,,.._,_,...,...., .. ~.~ ... .. .. .. A8 Saturday, April 20, 2001 wnner-Fribe rg Laurence and Carolyn Sumner of Santa Ana have announced the engagement of U1e1t daughter, Brenda Joy Sum- ner of Newport Beach to Josiah Chnsllan Fn berg of Costa Mesa. The bnde-to- h<• 1s a graduate of Sdddleback I hgh School and 010Ja University. The groom-to- h<> I'> the son of N ormtin and • Jd<·quelyn Friberg of Squantum, Mass. He graduated from Commuruty School in Tehran, Iran as well as Gordon College 1n l\lt1ssdchusetts, UCLA and Sprit Life Bible College in Irvine• I\ June wedding is planned in Needham Chapel on the c <1mpui:. of Vanguard University in Costa M esa. Sch wary-Johnson DPnnts dn<I .Jodnne SC'hwary of NPwport B<•<lr h c1nnounce lh<> l'ngdge- nl<'nt of their d clUCJ hlC'r, Nirnl<• MichE•lf> "ichwdry of Nl•wport B1·c1Ch to Dc1mon IJdvtcl John- <,on of Costa 1\1<'!.d. The bnde- to-be attend- 1•d Sdnta Mr11CJarita 111uh School oncl the University of Arlzona. She is an associate portfolio tnt1M9er at Smith Barney in Newport Beach. The groom-to-be is the son of David and Emily Johnson of Whither, Ca . and attended La Serena High School and the Un1vers1ty of Southern CaliJornia. He is a portfolio manager <1t Smith Barney in Whittler. An October Wedding 1s planned at the Ritz-Carlton m Rc1ncho Mirage. Ca. THE Daily Pilot Classified Community Marketplace A. Stark-Bloomberg Mr. Donald G. ...----------...,....----..---, Stark and Mrs. Susan E. Stark of Windham, N ew Hampshire, announce the engagement of their daughter, Tamara Meredith Stark to Philip Brant Bloomberg. The bride-to- be graduated from Pinkerton Academy and New Hampshire College. The groom-lo- be is the son of Dr. David and Lynne Bloomberg of Newport Beach and graduated from Newport Harbor High School and the University of Oregon. A June wedding is planned in Cape Cod, Massachusetts. The couple will reside in Concord, Ca. Alonso-Kraft Robin Marie Alon- so of New- port Beach and Dr. Michael Edward Kraft of Ft. Wayne, In. exchanged vows recent- ly in St. Tim- othy's Catholic Church in Los Angeles. The bride is the daugh- ter of Karen Haas-Alonso of Newport Beach and Richard J Alonso of Pacific Palisades. The maid of iionor was Caroline U'u and the bridesmaids were Angie Patterson, Beth Cunningham, Crystal Fuhrman, Danille Kraft, KathJ Sapp, Kelly Sexton and Shannon Richter. The bride's dress was designed by Lazaro. The groom is the son of Dan and Sharon Kraft of Ft. Wayne, In. The best man was Tom Mollica, and the best men were Alistair Wallbaurn, Dan Glass, Darren Kraft, Doug Kraft, Kurt Patterson, Richard Alonso, Steve Kepler and Tim Isaacs. The reception was held at the Regency Club and was attended by 100 guests. The bride is employed by Lotus and the groom works for Gomez Advisors. The couple, who met on a blind date, intend to live in Newton, M ass. An American Family Operated Business Since 1983 The LIFETIME CUARANTEE CARPET $199 ~?: INSTALLED Lifetime Stain Warranty Lifetime Wear Warranty Lifetime Cru1h Warranty Lifetime Fa3e Warranty WOOL BERBER CARPET $249 ~?: JN STALLED 4000 STORE BUYING POWER Gu~ Carpet Co-Op The World'• L1r911t Cirttt R1t1il1r IF YOU'RE NOT BUYING FROM US YOU'RE PAYING TOO MUCH FREE Ltfttl• • .,,. • ., .,.. ..... ., Trlplt lp1n•t4 Pt4 ARllTROIO ,.,.,,.,. MMl•t 10·1 I VllYL Ol4 Carptt 11""11 ........ ---..0Jy __ 0: .... 'FREE IRICE woo• lo $ 'W 2 IQ. "· CERAllC $t'~V~: - Momma Costa Mesa (949)650 -7676 124 E 17 th st FULL SERVICE iM4-l11 & lfA1l1•l19 Ctnal .. l•n & C1•len Palltlet-ftttrier & EMt Cltttt~ & lpWlfltf IOI-FRI t:OO•• • S:ll•• Irvine (949)838-0141 17777 Main St HB" IAT tO:Oh• .. 4zH • • OllN4 I_..• ... ... Daily Pilot Pells-Rosing ~~----........-..,,._,..~-:-~----:---, Mr. and Mrs. Michael Pelis of Newport Beach announce the engagement of their daughter, nffani Marie Pells of Newport Beach to David Keith Rosing of Newport Beach. The bride-to- be graduated from Corona del MarHl~h School and the University of Southem Cali- fornia School of Education. She also has a mas- ters in educa- tion from Pepperdine University. . . The groom-to-be is the son of Dr. and Mrs. Keith Rosing of Newport Beach and graduated from Coror;ia d~l Mar !"figh School and the University of Southern Califon:ua. J:le ~ cur- rently attending medical school at Temple Umverstty m Philadelphia. H e will graduate in June of 2003. A June wedding is planned at Our Lady Queen of Angels in Newport Beach. Thompson-Jean Criztina Thompson and Captain Robert F. Jean, both of Arlington, TX exchanged vows in a full military cere- mony at St. Vincent de Paul Catholic Church in Arlington. The bride IS the daughter of Becky Fann and Larry Wesson of Irving, TX. The bride's long, white sleeveless satin gown was designed by L'Amour. It had a fitted bodice covered with white sequins and pearl beads and featured a square neckline. The lllus10n veil was beaded with pearls. She carried a bouquet of red, pink, purple and white roses. Her matron of honor was Laura Goodwin and the brides- maids were April Gregorsole and Thonn Jean. The bndal party wore pale green chiffon m honor or St. Patrick's Day. The groom is the son of Dorothy and Jean-Paul Jean of Costa M esa. His best man w as Chnstopher Jean. The ushers were Rob Wright and Michael Kulpa. The Saber Arch was made up of Captain Bruce .IGmery, Capt. Kenn White, Major Cliff Thurman, Major Enc Schwegler, Lt. Colonel M ark Martin and retired Colonel Joel Ward. The reception took place at St. Vincent de Paul Parish Hall and was attended by 100 guests. The couple plans to live in Arlington following a trip up thP Pacific Coast ~ summer. The bride IS a freelance journalist who IS working on her masters degree in journalism at the Uruversity of North Texa!. The groom IS an assistant professor of military sdence and ROTC instructor at the University of Texas He is also an asw.- tant operations officer in the Nationd.1 Guard . C!l•l!l ~ ATH•NA"S ~ ~ GREEK£. MEDITERRANEAN CUISINE ~ ~ ~ ~ J .,~ HH THE WARMTH or TH E MEDITERRANE~N \ ~ ~ ~R 6[AUTlrUl PATIO OVERLOOKING THE LA~ ~ ~ seo ANTON BLVD. COSTA MESA ~ ~ (BEHIND O.C.PERFORMING ARTS CENTER) ~ re) LUNCH (714) 5 5 6-6 5 5 5 EASY pl [ffi DINNER www.athen11sgreakculs1ne com PARl<ING S Celestino's._ qualit y M EATS 19flJ Tiii' /·UJ<''il .\11'UI Cl/I</ S<WWC' At1u/1<1/J/t• &rving Costa Meu for owr 30 ytars ~Pork ROMT Grtal In oven or on Grill s4~: PORK TENDERLOIN Oellclous on Grill Try Our Old FaWoned CRAB CAKES New Orleans Style Delicious $61hcbce LAMBK-BOBS In Wine and Mint auce $599 lb Ask About Our ''FAMILY PAK FREEZER PAK" Doily Pilot •Send AAOUNO TOWN Items to the Dally Pilot., 330 W. Bay St,. Cos· ta Mesa. CA 92627; by fax to (949) 646-4170: or by calling (949) 574- 4291. Include the time, date and loeatlon of the event. as well as a contact phone number. A complete listing is available at http://Www.dalfypllotcom. . . ' 'I cheon and fashion show at i 1 a.m. at the Hilton Hotel, 3050 Bristol St .. Costa Mesa. $40. (714) 828-5541. Linda Joy Rose wtll sign her book, "Your Mind: The Own- ers Manual,• at 2 p.m. at Barnes & Noble Booksellers ~~t:ashion Island, 953 New-TODAY ear Center Drive, Newport s outhern qlJlfomJa Edison Beach. Free. (949) 759-0982 will host a .~+-day workshop to enroll ~',¢ome-elig1ble cusJ A. black-tte dinner saluting tomers ·1{(,r the Califonµ~ Rjtz Restaurant /owner Ha ns Altetn~W Rates for Energy Prager for his two decad es of discount program. Th~ work-service t~ th' ~range County shop will take plac~ trdm 8:30 • commuruty/Will take place at a.m. to noon at Canyon Park, 5 p.m. at the Ritz Restaurant, t 065 Sea Bluff Drive, Costa 880 Newport Center Dnve, Mesa. (714) 973-5548. Newport Beach. $250. Pro- ceeds will benefit Someone Cares Soup Kitchen in Costa Mesa. (949) 437-5748. A free two-hour CPR class will be offered at Orange Coast College in the Students Center a t 9 a .m. Orange Coast College is at 2701 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa.(888) 4-HEARTS. The 16th biannual Neighbors (or Neighbors co'{llmunity cleanup project will take place from 8:30 a.m. to noon at Canyon Park and at low- income, single-family homes in Costa Mesa. Call for addresses and more informa- tion. Free. (714) 754-4892. A lelevtslon taping fo r a new Fox TV commercial for the Fox Family Cable TV Net- work will take place as part of Fox Kids Day at noon at 1ii- angle Square, 1870 Harbor Blvd .. Costa Mesa. Arts and crafts and television charac- ters will be on hand. Free. (949) 722-1660. Cynthia Muc.hnick wtJI· sign her book, "The Ull1mate Wedding ldeaBook, • at 3 p.m. at Barnes & Noble Book- sellers at Fashion Island, 953 Newport Center Drive, New- port Beach. Free (94 9) 7 59- 0982. SUNDAY The O range County Bloomers, the local affiliate of Y-ME National Breast Cancer Organization, will host a lun- MONDAY A lecture on the Vietnamese language and cuJture will take place at 1 :30 p.m. at Orange Coast College, 2701 Fairview Road. Costa Mesa. Free. (714) 432-5725. The fifth annual poetry festi- val will take place at 7 p.m. al the Newport Beach Central Library, 1000 Avocado Ave. Participants have been drawn from UC Irvine and the local poetry scene. Free. (949) 717- 3890. TUESDAY Human OpUons, a nonprofit agency dedicated to prevent- ing family violence, will host a 40-hour mandated work- shop for anyone wishing to work Wlth victims of domestic violence, startmg May 1. Call for pnces and times and address. (949) 737-5242, Ext. 23. The "Business Plan Develop- ment • workshop, offered by Orange Coast College's Com- munity Education Office, will be held from 9 a.m. to noon at National University, 3390 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa. $25, or $20 in advance. (714) 432-5880 or (888) 622-5376. ARoUNi> ToWN WEDNESDAY Be tested for anxiety or dep ressive illnesses by Susen Kay, a licensed health-care provider, as part of National Anxiety Disorders Screening Day. Call for a free appo,\nl- me nt. (949) 250-4755. ·\ The Newport In-Wale r Boat Show will take place Jitarting May 2-6 al Newport. Dunes Resort. Hours are 11.-it.m. to 7 p.m. weekdays, Hl &.m. to 7 p.m. Saturday an<;J-~to a.m. to 6 p.m. Sunday, ~O for adult'>, and children \Z and younger are free. (94~) 75775959. \ . A rep resentaUve_ from Cal Poly Pomona's Admissions Office will visit Orange'Coast College from 1 to 4 p.m. on campus, 2701 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa. Free. (71 4) 432- 5894. Speak Up Newport will meet at 5:30 p.m. al The Riverboat Restaurant, 151 E. Pacific Coast Highway, Newport Beach. Bring money for din- ner. (949) 224-2266. A class on eUective pare nting will be offered at 7 p.m. at the Neighborhood Center. 1845 Park Ave .. Costa Mesd. $40. (71 4) 754-5028. A lecture about traveling to Ethlopia w1U take place at 7:30 p.m. at Orange Coast College, 2701 Fairview Rodd, Costa Mesa. $5. (714) 432- 5087. MAY 3 The 12th annual Southern Californid Spnng Garden Show, will feature 100 spe- cialty booths, nallonal garden experts and exfobits for chil- dren from May 3-6 at South Coast Plaza in Costa Mesa. (1 4) 435-2000. Associate J ustice Eilee n C. Moore will celebrate her appomlment to D1vtS1on Ill of the 4th District Court of Appeal ell 5:30 p.m. at the Westin South Coast Plazc1, 686 Anton Blvd., Costc1 Mes.i. The event will be hosted by the Orange County Bar Assn $35, or $25 for members. (949) 440-67 10. MIY4 Mother's Market wtll host a taste demo from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. at the market, 225 E. 17th St .. Costa Mesa. Free. (800) 595-MOMS. m Room 202 of OCC's Lewis Center for Applied Sciences Bwlding. Registration is $59, plus $5 material fee. OCC IS at 2701 Pairview Road, Costa Mesa. (71 4) 432-5880 A three-hour "Landlord Sur- vival 'Jl-aini.ng" workshop will take place at Orange Coast College in the Commuruty Education Office. The work-Orange Coast College will shop will run from 9:30 a.m. pres.enl MEnchanting Hol-to 12:30 p.m. in Room 202 of Ian(!." by cinematographer the college's LeWis Center tor JilJl McDongld., al 7 p.m. in AppJied Sciences. OCC is at 9CC's Robert B. Moore The-,2701 Fairview Road, Costa ~tre, 2701 Pairview Roa?,)\ Mesa. (714) 432-5880. Costa mesa. $9, or $7 in advance. (714) 432-588$). •' MAY 5 The Costa Mesa Bark Park Foundation will host a rum- mage sale from 8 d.m. to 3 p.m. at Bark Pdik, at lhe cor- ner of Arlington and Newport Avenues in TeWinkle Park in Costa Mesa. Free. (949) 548- 8521. A workshop on body lan- guage will be offered at 9 a.m. at Orange Codsl. Col- lege. 2701 Fa1rv1ew Road. Costa Mesd. $45 tor registra- tion, $20 for mc1teridls. (714) 432-5880. Orange Coast CoUege's Com- m unity Education Office will present a work!-ihop tilled *Tactics to Mc1ke E-com- merce Successful for Small Business" from 9 c1 .m. to noon at National University, 3390 I lctrbor Blvd .. C'ostd Mesa. $25, or $20 in advc1nce. (7 14) 432-5880. The Lincoln Elementary Sto- rytellers, a group of about 50 students, will appear at 11 a.m. at the Newport Beach Central Librdry, 1000 Avoca- do Ave. Free. (949) 515-6955. "Finding a Thom Among the Roses.* a three-nour work- !>hop designed to show reha- b1litatipn opportunities, will be offered by Orange Coast CoUege's Commurnty Educa- tion Office. The workshop will run from 1.30 to 4:30 p.m. Dr. Peter KuzmJc, chairman of the Theological Corrurussion of Evangelkal Fellowship and supe_rintendent of the Evangelical Ch urch of Croat- ia, will speak at Vcinguard Uruversity's commencement at 10 a.m. on campus, 55 Fair Dnve. Costa Mesa Call for tickets. (714) 556-3610 Orange Coast College will host cheerleading tryouts from 3 to 6 p.m. on campus, 2701 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa. Free. (7.14 ) 848-7223 MAY 6 Orange County Market Place will kick off the Slrdwberry Sunddy Fest from 7 a .m. to 4 p.m at the Ornnge County Fairgrounds in Costa Mesa. $2. Enk Lackey. (949) 723- 6663. A garden tour will be hosted by the Volunteer Assn. of Sherman Library & Gardens from 11 a.m. To 4 p.m at sue cWferenl homes in Corona del Mdr $25, $30 on the day of the event. (949) 673-2261. MAY 8 A workshop on flnancing your busmess will take place dt 9 d.m at National Uruvers1- ty, 3390 Harbor Blvd .. Costa Me!>d. $20 m advance, $25 at the door. (714) 432-5880. Mother's Market wtll host a seminar about vitamins al ESTABLISHED 1922 Our 79th Year ---- Soturdoy, April 28, 2001 A9 6:30 p.m. at the market. 225 E. 17th St., Costa Mesa. Pree. (800) 595-MOMS. A .. Meet Your City Leaders" event will take place at 7 p.m at the Neighborhood Com- munity Center. 1845 Park Ave .. Costa Mesa. Free. (949) 225-4296 MAY 9 Hoag Hospl1al will present a class on kyphoplasty. a tech- ruque to help straighten the spine dnd reduce back pa.in, at 1 1 a m. at Hoag Health Center. 1190 Baker St., Costa Mesa Free (800) 514-4624 . All Calilomla retired teachers are invited to jom a luncheon at noon dt the Newport Beach Goll Club Tee Room. 3100 lrvme Ave., Newport Beach $1 6 (714) 549-0229 Hoag Hospital wtll present a class on "Herbal Overview on Menopd use" at 6 pm. dl Hoag Hedllh Center. 1190 Baker St . Costd ME''>d Free (800) 514-4624 MAY 10 The Lincoln Elementary Sto- ryteUers. d group of about 50 students, will host d parent fesuvdl dt Lincoln Elementdry School, 3101 Pacific View Dnve, Corond del Mdr Ccill for limes dnd pnces. (949) 515-6455 Mo ther's Market will host a semmar on positive parenting solutions dl 6:30 pm dt the mdiket 225 E 17th St .. Co td Mesd Free. (800) 595- MOMS A workshop for anyone inter- ested m learning how lo enhdnce tus or her apprec1a- t1on of credbve expression will be offered at 7 p m dt the Newport Beach Centrdl Library, 1000 Avocado Ave 'Free (~W)) 717-3801. SEE TOWN PAGE A10 \inu: JlHU \\'in l· \pn t .tto r : .-1\\.IR/J 01 IX< I I I I\( I teak Prime Rib Rib Eye Delmonico Porterhouse New York Steak T artare (Prepared Table-Side) Steak Diane (Prepared Table-Side) New York Pepper Steak (Prepared Table-Side) Beef Stroganoff Fil et of Beef O scar Filet Mignon * BeefWell ington The Premier Steak & Seafood House * C hateaubriand Bouquetiere * Rack of Lamb Lamb C hops Veal Chops • Carved Table-Silk Pictured Abofti Award W'm.ning Maicre D' of the Yeat Gibby .Fernanda end Owner Daa Marc.Mano WEEKDAY L UNCHEON BLUE PLATE SPECIALS OFFERI NG OVER 30 ITEMS PER W EEK ALL UNDER $10.00 eafood Swordfish, Salmon, Or Halibut (Blackened, Poached , Grilled, Or Sauteed) Baked Shrimp Scampi Deep Fried Jumbo Sh rimp Calamari Steaks Scallops Belle Meun ie re Fried Deep Sea Scall ops Australian Lobster Tail Lobster T hermado r Abalone Stone Crab C laws from Florida Maryland Soft Shell C rab Crab Cakes Alaskan King Crab Legs Bouillabaisse SUNDAY AND MONDAY NIGHT DINNER SPECIALS $15. 95 OFFERED AU EVENING ENTREliS SERVED WITH YOUR CHOICE OF SOUP OR SALAD. L UMPY MASHED POTATOE OR RICE PILAF • OVER 30 ENTREES TO CHOOSE FROM INCLtJDING LI1TLE Brr OF ITALY: . BRBAST OF CHICKEN PARMIGIANA • CHICKEN CACCIATORE • VP.AL. PICCATA CALAMARI OVER ANG~UWR PASTA• CHICKHN PICATIA •VEAL PARMIGIANA• RAVlOU GNOCCHI OR TORTELLINI• SCAMPI OVER ANGHUWR PASTA LINGUINI & Cl.AM SAUCE • AND MANY MORE ' • • I t l • t f I t .-. -: I I -: ~· ' ...-.·.··~~~~rT;:~I··~~~ .-..-.----.-·-···-" .... ..... --............. ' ' AIO Saturday. April 2a, 2001 TOWN CONTINUED FROM A 1 MIY12 A pucake brNkfast wW be h06ted by the Oasis Senior Center from 7:30 to 10 a.m. at the center, 800 Marguerite Ave., Corona del Mar. $2. (949) 644-3244. MAY 13 The Balboa bland Artwalk will take place from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. along the Soqth Bay- side prom~nade, between Marine Avenue and Ferry Landing at Agate Avenue in Newport Beach. Free. (949) 830-8098. MAY 14 May t 4 ls the last day to see "Impressions,• an exhibition and sale of more than 90 paintings by Southern Cali- fornia artist Val Carson at the Robert Mondavi Wm~ & Food Center, 1570 Scenic Ave., Costa Mesa. Open from 9 a .m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. Free. (714) 979-4510. "Dr. Seuss on the Loose," a special children's pajama sto- ry time and show, will take place at 7 p.m. at the Newport Beach Central Library, 1000 Avocado Ave. Free. (949) 717- 3801. MAY 16 lbe clty of Costa Mesa Hwnan Relations Con'llnittee will hold an essay contest for Costa Mesa High and Estancia High school stu- dents. Essays are due at 8 a.m. in the school's Associat- ed Student Body office. Prizes range from $50 to $250. John Rule, (949) 548-0244. The Orange County Chapter of Childhelp USA will hold its annual Celebrity Golf Classic at 11 a.m. at Pelican Hill Golf Club, Newport Beach. Greens fee sponsorships range from $400 to $10,000. (949) 589- 2770. EXPO CONTINUED FROM A 1 new thlngs and seeing what ribbons they won. There is a lot of excitement, a lot of energy.• Children wandered around the free expo in groups with their parents, their schools or youth orga- nizations on Friday, petting animals, admiring the sci- ence projects and listening to the jazz bands. "It's tun going places and talking to people,• said Emi- ly Premo, a 9-year-old at Panorama Elementary School in Santa Ana. •we see what we can do, and it's also exercise because we have to walk so much.• More than 7 ,000 school projects are on display at the expo, along with science projects and exhlbits by the Orange County Girl Scouts and 4-H clubs. The expo will contirlue from 9 a .m. to 4 p.m. today and Sunday, and will include a science fair, talent search, jazz festival, pampered pets contest and a petting zoo. The Orange County Fair- grounds estimated that approximately 8,000 atten- dees visited the expo on Fri- day. ~Seeing the art has been the most fun thing so far," said Christina Machuca, a 10-year-old at Panorama Elementary School in Santa Ana, who was waiting in line BRIEFLY IN THE NEWS Llbrary Internet workshop set Newcomers to cyber- space are invited to •Tools & Tricks,• a free Internet work.shop at the Newport Beach CeDtral Library's Friends Meeting Room. YOUTll llPO SClllDUU The Youth El(po, which is , free, Is being held this week· end at the Orange County Fairgrounds, 88 Fair Drive, Costa Mesa. Information: (714) 708-3247. SATURDAY t e.m.: Poultry, cavy and swine showmanship, knowl- edge and games In the live- stock area and the show ring; 4-H club dog show In the live- stock area •.JO e.m.: Newport Harbor High Schoof Jazz Band at Heritage Stage 10 a.m.: San Clemente High School Jazz Band at Heritage Stage; 4-H show and judging contest in Buil~ing No. 17 10:JO a.m.: Esperanza High School Jazz Band at Heritage Stage 11 a.m.: Edison High School to get her face painted Fri- day morning. "I'm looking forward to seeing the 4-H thing next, with the ani- mals.• Several students said that the science fair was their favorite part of of the expo. They had different opin- ions about which of the pro- jects, ranging from research on which fruits produce the most energy (apples) to what substances best removes oil from water (hair,) were the best, however. "1bis one is the coolest so The wor+op will cover search engines, bookmarks, key words and other ways to navi- gate through the digital universe. The program takes place at 10 a.m. on May 19. The library is located at 1000 Avocado Avenue. Information: (949) 717- 3801 FREE reyn spooner. T-Shirt (Value 20"') · with the p1rchase of any Rey1 Spooner Short & Shirt ( .......... at-ea!le Newport&Mh Rulnn blMtil (!N!J) 7J!J-'!9'!9 Jazz Band at Heritage Stage 11=-a.m. Valencia High School Jazz Band at the Her- itage Stage Noon: Juz band awards at the Hef'ltage Stage; beef progress and showmanship at the show ring 1 p.m.: Mater Del High School Jazz Band at Heritage Stage; rabbit knowledge, egg fudging and chidcen races In the livest.ode area 1=-p.m. Woodbridge High School Jazz Band at Heritage Stage 2 p.m.: Poultry evaluation at the livestodc area 2:JO p.m. 'Noodbridge High School Jazz 'Band at Heritage Stage J p.m.: Valencia High School Jazz Band at Heritage Stage; adult large animal round robin at the show rlhg J:JO p.m. La Habr.a High School Jazz Band at Heritage Stage far," said Gerald Dalisay, pointing at a project study- ing whether the speed of a roller coaster is affected by its slope. The researcher, 10th- grader Nathan Goodrich of Estancia High School, tested differently sloped roller coasters using Roller coaster Tycoon. a computer game. Dalisay, a 12-year-old stu- dent at St. John Baptist Roman Catholic Elementary School in Costa Mesa, said he was surprised by the results of the experiment. EL TORO CONTINUED FROM A1 The letter was also sent to Allan Songstad, the chairman of the El Toro Reuse Planning Authority, the group of nine South County cities that have fought the county's plan to build an airport at El Toro. •From my view, the reason cynicism toward politicians is so high is because of politi- 4 p.m.: Jazz band awards at Heritage Stage SUNDAY • a.m.: Rabbit shoW at the livestock area and goat show- manship at the show ring 9'.30 a.m.: Scavenger hunt at Centerinlal Farm 10 a.m.: Pampered pet con- test at Centennial Farm; 4-H club judging contests in Building No. 17 1' a.m.: Progress shepherd showmanship at the show ring 1 p.m.: 4-H kite making in Building No. 17; master showmanship at the show ring 2 p.m.: Small pet show and games on the Arena Lawn; school project awards cere- mony at Heritage Stage J :JO p.m.: Science fair · awards ceremony at the Are- na Lawn • 1 thought the speed would be affected by the slope,• be said. The experi- ment showed that the speed at the bottom of the drop was not affected by the steepness of the slope. "I've never seen anything like it before.• said Michael Mendez, another 12-year- old from St. John Baptist. "It's a roller coaster game used for a science project.• Christine Lehart, an 8- year-old who attended the expo with the Covenant Christian Academy. said her cians that sign documents, then renege on their word,• Naughton wrote in the letter. . Agran called Naughton's letter •quite a stretch• when contacted Friday. •rt reflects the desperation coming from the pro-airport crowd, that they would dredge up a document that is totally irrelevant,• Agran said. "There is no hypocrisy." Agran disputed the work- ing group's claim that his Doily Pilot .. favorite project was one about ocean pollution. __ ;.; •1 like this one,• abe sa(J\ pointing to the project ~ Max Suann, a 7th1J111der al Bernice Ayer Intermediate School. •He tested tM amount. of pollution in UW ocean and I think that's interesting.• Some of the adults said they were having cs.s mum fun as the children. '"' "I'm really enjoying this,. Deah.na Moeller, a parent volunteer at Woodsboro Ele-~entaiy School in Anahetrrt Hills who was watching t'1~ navts Ranch Middle Schog) band from Yorba Llnda, sala: 'a' •1 haven't seen a lot of xru • dle school bands. but they are very impressive. It's a really good band.• ..... Jeanne McMahan, on Estancia High School spec.yu education teacher. said she appreciates having a fun\ safe place to take children. "It's absolutely wonder.:. tul, • she said. "There are ~ many tblngs for kids to do. It's really exciting. We s<l,\f the police dog already and went into the DARE CM,. where some of the ki.Qi locked the.m.selves in tM back seat. They're getti; their faces painted and we going to see the art that otll: er children painted. I get JD see people I don't get to sea at other times and this is:zl place where kids can WaJP der around and you doi'I have to worry about them!: -------position has changed. "f9 Irvine mayor said he has neMo er supported using El To.Z: even before it was placed aD the base closure list by .. Department of Defense • 1993. = At the time, some in NeC port Beach bad suggestCO jointly operating the base u. military and commercial fadt · ity. But that plan was rejectGD by the U.S. Marine Corps. : -- SliP~ Mattress Outlet Store 8RAlf) fEW • COSME11CALLY lffRFECT Get the Best for LtaJ 3165 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa o.e Block S.tll ol ~5 hy 545·7168 r ' . • CONTINUED FROM A 1 JI) • ~eather did little to dampen spirits, although it had a few siippers concerned. -' "We'd like a little more wind,• said a grinning Price, ttad in a cheery Hawaiian shirt and sporting his boats' name and the race she was competing in. "It's pretty g\oomy as is." •O thers. remained uncon- cerned with the less-than- ~te.11~ weather conditions. :«W.ch included winds out of tP,e south at the start of the race -not the ideal direction lot a race with a southern tdurse. " "It's the calm before the storm,• said Joe Degena- ftirdt, skipper of the Lick.ity Split, a Catalina 38, that he would be making the 126- mile tre k in for the 30th time. "'The big race is the prep for 1lte race -more than 100 man }Aours.• : Sponsored by the Newport C>cean Sailing Assn. Since .1948, the race boasts vessels up to 100 feet long and others that are just 25 feet. The Ensenada race tradi- tion began back in 1947, when members of the New- port Ocean Sailing Assn. decided to organize a small, "just-for-fun" event for sailors, who had re turned from World War II. They'd expected about 30 skippers to show up. But when the race got underway on April 23, 1948, 117 boats lined up behind the starting title. In its most crowded year, in 1983 the race saw 675 ships set sail out of Newport Harbor. The quickest a boat has reached its Mexican destina- tion was the Steve Fossett's Stars and Stripes catamaran m 1998, which made it in six hours, 46 minutes and 40 sec- onds. The catamaran is racing again this year, as is the ship with the record time for a mono-hull, Roy Disney's Pyewacket, a so-called turbo- sled that made the journey in 11 hours and 54 minutes in 1998. Saturday. April 2a, 2001 Al I CORNER CONT.INUED FROM A1 Ave~ue, he hit the curb, White recounted. and then cl.Jpped a oty light pole on the northern comer of Heather and Irvine. The front tire blew, the Lexus became dUbome and crashed through the wall on the other side of the street. While the car's e ngine got completely smashed by the impact and parts of the waU broke the windshield, the glass chdn't shatter. The passenger compartment seemed to have almost no damage at cill Back m her hvmg room, Ptullips srud she hadn't yet called dJlyone to come fix the wall Instead, she'd invited her neighbor, Vic Berry, over for a game of King's Comer. After all, she'd not been hurt dnd the comer outside could Wdtl d while GREG FRY I DAii. Y PILOT Dave Thurston, left, and Walt McCoy check out the start of Friday's N ewport to Ensenada Intemattonal Yacht Race from the bluffs at Corona del Mar . 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I 0 to 6, Sun. 12 to 5 Q uality Service Value Famous Parking Lot Party This Sunday, April 28th Drawing For $100 In Merchandise at 2:30! 9AM • 4PM -~ • m 273 1 East Coast Highway Corona del Mar, CA 92625 949/675-5553 www.recyclcdrags.com s.n 25%-18% on RNH ~--.-I Wiie• YM D•I Direct ": .-:1?.f,.. : wltll U. Futery I 11.evu I ________ ._. ...... c.n,: •191111 •c..IAlu•I• • ...... • Alt•'••• -------------------s100 OFF I 2 I .-1111'111111 ... lilllllll ' I I I I Al2 Saturday. April 20. 2001 "SocIEIY Daily Pilot Newport-Mesa socU?ty we~omes Hadassah Lie!Jerm£ln unth open .e1:rms ' o ur d.lstinguished guest speaker this evening might have had her name right along side some or the fonni· dable women or American history. The re was Bess, Nancy, Jackie and Tess, Bar- bara ... Lady Bird and ... Hadassah, • said Rabbi Mark Mille r, spiritual leader or Temple Bat Yahm, Newport Beach. The crowd roared, then applauded as Mille r intro- duced Hadassah Lieberman to an audience or some 500 guests who had come to Temple Bat Ya hm on Sunday evening to witness an address by the wife or former vice-presidential candiddte Joseph Lieberman. The can- didate's wife has joined the ranks of the nationaJ speak- ers orcuit since the Democ- ratic defeat last fall . Lieberman bnngs a most unique insider's perspective on the woman's role in the campaign trail. That per- spective is further"defined by the fact that Llebcrmdn is the first Je Wish woman (Ortho- dox Jewish woman to be B.W. Cook THE CROWD e xact) to travel the 50 states in support of her husband and a national ticket. Wearing a tailored navy blue silk suit with a scoop· neck collar, a triple strand of pearls and a sldrt hemmed above the knee, the blond and personable Lieberman, whose cultural, ethnic and religious background is steeped in antiquity, was very d early a modem person who bas managed to stick with her Orthodox principles in a contemporary world that does not, in large part, take time off for the Sabbath. Hadassah and Joey - that's how she refers to h er ' From left, Hadassah Lieberman, Carol Warsaw and Bob Warsaw stand together after Lieberman's speaking engagement. RosEY's AUIOBODY You have the right to choose your repair facility Insist on the Best LIFETIME WARRANTY Full Service Collision Center Insurance Approved Shop (949) 642-4522 ...... -·-· -·-·-· ---·-H •-•-·•n husband Joe, a Democrat who is presently serving as a Connecticut serilltor -and their family managed to respect the Sabbath for months on the campaign trail to the White HoU$e, even surrounded by Secret Service in the synagogue. nus, however, was the not the message of this immigrant woman, whose parents were Holocaust sur- vivors. , "Yes, we did open doors all across America where people had either no contact or no understanding of the Jewish religion,· said Lieber- man. "Our purpose on the Democratic ticket was not to teach the nation about Judaism, but rather to repre· sent a broad spectrum of val- ues meant to enhance the collective lile of the Ameri- can people.• • •Joe and I come from a state with less than 3% Jews in the population. Our Jew- ishness makes us who we are,· she said, "and from this perspective comes a range of Jewish experience, with per- haps the most significant ele- ment being a real grasp of the idea and the practice of tolerance.· Hada.ssah Lieberman, left, was Introduced by Rabbi Mark Miller of Temple Bat Yahm at the April 22 function. • It was from this platform of teaching and living toler- ance that Liebennan made her most passionate point, referring to the Jewish con- cept of 0 tikun olam." which translated from t!ie Hebrew means "heal the world." "It is our belief that we act on principles of tikun olam. Simply stated. we ask our- selves if the Ctions we take will help to heal the world,· Lieberman said. The lofty stance has brought both tremendous praise and criticism to Joe Lieberman and hls wife. •People would tell me on the campaign trail to ask my husband to stop talking about God." said Lieberman. "The n they would say 'God · Bless You.'" She went on to say tha t the toughest questions concerning the ir religious convictions came from Jewish journalists. "It is our heritage toques- tion and question and ques- tion some more,• she said responding to an inquiry from Rabbi Miller, who was moderating the speech and discussion. Miller's most poirlted question concerned the Jew- ish vote. Quoting election statistics, Miller quantilied the fact tha t a la rge portion of the national Jewish vote went to George W. Bush. Lieberman responded with dignity. •Al Gore and Joe Lieber· man won the popular vote in America. They won the vote based on the principles they stood for and the plans they had for America. This is what matte rs, and frankly, this is what makes America great," she said. "So many people would come to us on the campaign trail and share with us their religion. Some would say, 'We're Catholic and we're voting for you.' Others would say, 'We're this and we're that and we're voting for you.' And many , S1zzl1ng Fajitas Stri lling Mariachis Handmade Tortillas Margarita & Cerveza Bar Pw ., Trays. Go Order by the Dozen Chingolingas Fa11tas Enchiladas Bumtos & Tacos COMPLETE PARTY PACK FOR 101 ( t ~ Call your nearest location! ~ . _,. •·,~!':~!:-s 'f G ~. Full Service Catering • • (949) 645-0209 •• =·-= ~ .,,._ • °"°" !lmlcM • YOOA • tnuGnl O~ • .....-i • T.....u •Tllll'lt•.,._~. *-• WJQfl'W-•l'llAa ·~--­•*--•,.........HIMJMCU• • l'MUIC:. 4 ____ ....._ . CORONA OIL MM 2101 E. P.-c Cllllll..., PCH & -.-,_ (141) 7INlll Jews voted for Gore and Lieberman too. People that didn't vote for Gore/Lieber- man voted for Bush/Cheney because that's where their political ideology took them, whether they were Jewish or not.• Following the address at the sanctuary, underwriting patrons of Lieberman's appearance in Newport Beach were irlvited to a reception held at the elegant Belcourt residence of Charles and Diane Karp. A late evening coflee and dessert was se rved for some 100 guests who were seated in the bwnt olive-green, two- story Karp living room. Surrounded by the mag- nificent conte mporary art of the Karp collection, guests socialized until Rabbi Miller escorted Hadassah Lleber- man into the living room, sit· ting with her in front of the fireplace at the center of the room. The large and formal address suddenly became intimate, with questions of all varieties directed at the candidate's wife. Of the more pressing topJ: ics discussed: health care reform, education, military expenditure, bi-partisan poli! tics in the Bush While • House, tax reform and inter"' national relations with Chi-' na, as well as the the crisis iJi the Middle East. Also on the' minds of Newport-Mesa citi- zens was the topic of Lleber· man's campaign seeking media reform. The event was produced · by Marion Jacobson, attend- ing with her husband, John Jacobson. In the crowd were Edward and Leslea Miller, Elliot and Joanne Mercer, Jonathan and Sharyn Grant, Lee and Kathy Berma n, Jeff and Heidi Berkley, William and Michelle Klein, Richard and Lauren Packard, Jerry and Merry Neitlich, Stan an4 Marion Robboy, Bob and Carol Warsaw, Karen Green, Broin and Bonnie Jeannette, Cathy Kroopf, Patty Boyle, Lane Sbennan and Yana Brlddle. • 1ME CROWD appears Thursdays and Saturdays. Invest in Tax-Free State of California General Obligation Various Purpose FGIC-Insured Coupon Taxablf EqulYlknt Ykld Rated Aaa/AAA, Priced@ Pa r, 5.125% yield to maturity, maturing: 3/01/31. Callable 03/01/11 at par. For more information, call Tom Sniechowski, Financial Advisor at (949) 476-5 115 or 1-866-577-8833. 620 Newport Center Drive, Suite 1300 Newport Beach, CA 92660 SECURITI ES ,.,,,,.,, Cllt•I c, •• , l,,..,,.,.~ uMn M.....,. ol prw.opol mil --.,...., dw It cl.on nuc •rr't rn tNr\rt ••I..,."' ,..IJ y,, '"'"•ndvllrrtht<.I:. """''"~tt•\p<IOf...itlllld llw>ll'lllPf"t•411 7~1 1N1u1itlj1on l/01111 ln.i.t. • .....,..,.. ~,.Id i.JtJ on JQ "" comi.ntd l<d<nol ond ub~.n .. on.....,. ... l>r•ktt ~nl k·r -'wtun• r.dtnol d..11•<1•'11 8(.>J. .... , br """"'bi o.n Of\C>l\"l •""4 11 .. .w t:i.k ......... ,,., ,...~ ""'*'' "'•""4· m111111..iw tonc\n""'""-""'it"lnc mrmbrrNY~lanJ~IPC.. 02001f1111ln..'ll'°""nlln116711 'Long Beac V"et:erans Sradium LAKEWOOD & CONANT ST. \ I ', I I I ' 1 ' ' ',I 1· 1 I • ) I \ ' ' I ADMISSION CMIU>UM UNOll 11 Pall VAUD~ f1 Carmen at THE CENTER Jazz vocalist Carmen 8radf0<d will make her Orange County Performing Arts Center debut Friday and May 5 at Founders Hall, 600 Town Center Drive, Costa Mesa. Shows will be 1t 7:30 and 9:30 p.m. S44 or S38. (714) 740-7878. Doily Pilot Saturday, April 2a, 2001 A13 ·From stages to u: stooges · Music to. vv~tch movies .by 18y Tom Titus .. .. ' 'L ocal community theater • partisans who've been plying their craft for &0me three decades 'undoubtedly were startled · Monday ,~ -THEATER morning when they picked up their Los Angeles Times and found a familiar. but long-absent, face staring at them in living color at the bottom of Page One. There, at the center of a sto~ involving, would you believe, the Three Stooges, was artist Gary Saderup, a former Costa Mesa resident ,who is catching heat from the Stooges' heirs for using their likenesses on T-shirts without consent from the comics' estates. Now, Gary Saderup always has been a gifted artist, but back in the early '70s, he was one of the most dynamic actors in local com- munity theat'er. I can tesllfy to that firsthand, smce I worked on several shows with him. I first heard from him late in 1970 when I announced auditions for a show I was directing in Huntington Beach at a downtown store- front theater, which has long since faded into history. The play was William Inge's ·A Loss of Roses• -you might remember it as the movie "The Stripper• with Joanne Woodward and Richard Be~er -and it focused on a teenage(s crush on a visit- ing showgirl who, as things turned out, showed plenty. Gary, at that time, was about 21 and getting ready to play the stem, moralisbc Reverend Davidson in Gold- en West College's production of "Rain," which conflicted with the audition date. So he called me and asked lf he could arrange a private audi- tion. When I heard him read in my kitchen, 1 knew I'd found the right Kenny to play opposite my then-wife. Beth, in the Inge drama. He was te rrific, and we collaborated on several other shows for the Irvine Conunu- nity Theater. acting together SEE TITUS PAGE A17 Young a-.ng DAILY PILOT I t's people like Brian Tyler who make you cry. He makes your heart beat faster when the protagonist is in danger. He tells stories and shows emotions, but without using words. Tyler, the film composer for "Panic" and a Newport Beach native, knows he's done his job right when directors tell him he's made a movie better -that his music has made the funny parts funnier and the sad parts more sad. While some see in color and others in shapes. Tyler sees in song. Sit the 28-year-old down in front of a movie scene and within seconds he's scoring a piece in his head. Eating dinner, driving to the studio, going about his average day -any and all of this inspires in him the original music that has shown up recently in such movies as "Panic,• which stars William H. Macy and Neve Campbell, • Undead, • "The Fast --.. ~ -I • '. I' ' I~ I I ... '-I and Funous" and "Plan B." "I Uunk, as Alfred Hitchcock said, it's 50% of the movie,• said Tyler, who is JUSt finishing up composing for "Frailty,• a movie stamng Bill Paxton and Matthew McConaughey due out in September. "The heart of the emotion is in the music." Tyler learned this early on. Growing up, he spent entire days at his grandparents' house in Newport Beach. Ruth Tyler would give him piano lessons and Walter Tyler, an Academy- Award winning art director for "Samson and Delilah," would show him designs for sets and other models he had built. By the age of eight, Bn- an Tyler was composing music, playing the drums and learning to play the piano. He attended many a concert at the Orange County Perform- ing Arts Center -he remembers Dvorjak and Rachmaninoff, though there were many, many more -and the first record he ever bought was the soundtrack to •Jaws." At Corona del Mar High School, Tyler led sev- eral rock bands. One of them -Synesthes1a - played on the campus quad. "We'd get up there and rock the house for lunch period and go back to class deaf,• he laughed. Tyler also played gigs at the Four Seasons Hotel and clubs on Balboa Peninsula. All the wtule, his love for film never dwindled. "Whe n I was five, I re membe r telling everyone on the block that they'd have a part in the movie I was gonna direct,• he said. SEE TYLER PAGE A 17 Newport native Brian Tyler knows the score for the film 'Panic.' He composed it. ·Speaking words of wisdom Freedom is the theme for eight writers who will read works by poets they find inspirational at Newport Beach's 5th Annual Poetry Festival. Younga-.ng DAILY Pit.OT Sylvia Plath's poem "Black Rook in Rainy • Weather" is, literally, about a forest and all the things in a forest and how when you look at a tree, you can see creativity. w "Everything is an inspiration. everything • 4ouches you,• interpreted Carlye Archibeque, • writer in Los Angeles who will be reading : •BJack Rook" on Monday at Newport Beach's :f'llth Annual Poetry Festival. "The poem is : :about poettc freedom.• • Arcbibeque's take on the piece is in sync : ~th the festival's theme -the first in its five- : year existence -which is freedom. Put on by : the Newport Beach Public Ubrary Foundation •as a free "gift" to the publlc, the event cele- : brates National Poetry Month. ,, Eight wrlterl from Orange County and Los : Angeles will read pieces by poets that have • inspired them and whose work fits into this i year'• theme. • Speeken include Gordon McAlpine, a writer and teacher of writing at Chapman • Univenity1 Muter of Pine Arts students from : UC Irvine and a freelance writer for publica· : t1ons such a.a OC Weekly and the American D • FYI • wtwt: The Fifth Annual Poetry Festival • When: 7 p.m. Monday • WheN: Newport Beach Public Library, 1000 Avocado Ave., Newport Beach •Cost Free •can: (949) 717-3890 '' "Usually you get invited to places to read your '' own poetry. I liked the idea of a reading that was all about other poets who have inspired us." -c.rtye Archibeque, a writer in Los Angeles. Journalism Review. Poems include excerpts from Shake- SJM'are'1 •Ricba.rd n .• Yehuda Amichl's "My Mother on Her Sickbed" and works by Anne Carson, all of which will reflect the theme of freedom -in speech, faith. bearing cblldren, writing and any and every area of We, said Jacquelyn Beauregard Dillman, a founding organizer of the festival. "It's to honor poets who can no longer speak for themselves,• she said. •And l ask each speaker to be sure to make a comment on lhe We of the poet and the poet's body ol work and why they chose this poem to read.· 1n addition to Plath, Arclubeque will read Dorothy Parker's •The Red Dress". and "Afternoon." "She's kmda UlSpll'ed me all along the way I've been wnllng,· she said. ·1 adrrured her sarcasm and her wttbness when I was younger.· Now, as an adult, Arclubeque said she is fascinated by how the poet ended up bvmg unbl the age of 73 after several attempts at suicide. Another poem the writer will read, Ted Hughes' •Tue Jaguar,· also ties mto the idea of freedom. "The panther everyone is loolong at tS free even though he's in a cage because he has an internal life,· she said. "He imagines himseU being in a forest, paong back and forth. instead of inside a cage." Victor D. Infante, a freelance 1ownalist. will read WOTks by Roger Bonair-Agard. "He just has an amazing ability to pull images from everyday happenstance,• he said. •And just really elevate those items.• Archibeque shared her mam reason for participating in the festival. •Usually you get inVlted to places,.tio read your own poetry,• she said. "I liked the idea of a read.mg that was all about other poets wllo have l.nsptred us." · ,, I ' ' ' I A14 So1urdoy, April 2a, 2001 After HOURS • Send AFTER HOURS items to the D•ily Pilot 330 w. Bay St .. Costa Mesa, CA 92627; fax to (949) 646- 4170 or call (949) 574-4268. A complete llstlng may be found at http://www.dallypllot.com. SPECIAL SPRING BLOOMS The 12th A'nnual Southern California Spring GC)rden ·Show will be held from 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. Friday, 10 d.m. to 7 p.m. May 5 and 1 f a.m. to 6:30 p.m. May 6 on au three levels of the C rate & Barrel/Macy's Home Wing at South Coast Plaza, 3333 Bear St .. Costa Mesa. A preview gala will be held from 6:30 to 9 p .m. May 3. Free. (7 14) 435-2 160. FASHION SPIN Serving People in Need (SPIN) will hold d fdsh1on show from 11 a .m. to 3 p.m. Friday a t in the new Palm Garden at the Four Sedsons Hotel, 690 Newport Center Drive, Newport Bedch. $85. Proceeds will benefit low- income dnd single moms. (714) 751-1101 . GARDEN TOUR The Volunteer Association of : Sherman Library and Gar- • dens will hold its Fifth Annu- al Garden Tour from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. May 6. The fund- • raising event will feature : tours of six residentidl gar- dens in Corona de! Mar. • Sherma n Library and Gar- dens is at 2647 E. Coast High- way. $25-$30. (949) 673-2261 . : SYMPHONY FUND-RAISER ••The Pacifi c Symphony ::orchestra will present its 'annual gala fund-ra iser, themed this year afte r a Vene tia n carnival ball, at 6 : p.m. May 12 at the Hyatt • Regency Irvine, 17900 Jam- boree Road, Irvine. $500. . (714) 755-5788. hold its 31st Annual Student Film and Video Festival at 7 p.m. May 17 in the Robert B. Moore Theatre, 2701 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa. Sponsored by the college's film/video department, the three-hour festival is rated PG-13. $5. (714) 432-5180. MARKET PLACE The Orange County Market Place is held from 7 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturdays and Sundays in the Orange County Fair- grounds' main parking lot, 88 Fair Drive, Costa Mesa'. $2 for adulis, children' age 12 and younger are admitted free. (949) 723·6'616. I MUSIC- WEBBER CONCERT A spring concert titled "The Wonderful World of Web- ber," with Orange Coast College's Wind Ensemble, will be held at 3 p.m. Sunday at the Robert B. Moore The- atre, 2701 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa. $5 or $7. (714) 432-5985. VOICES OF REMEMBRANCE Pacifi c Symphony Orches- tra will play a celebration of music from Mozart to Leonard Bernstein at 8 p.m . Wednesday and Thursday in the Orange County Per- forming Arts Center. 600 Town Center Drive, Costa Mesa. The Pacific Chorale will join in for Mozart's unfinished Mass in C Minor. The concert also includes the West Coast premiere of "Voices of Re membrance" by Richard Danie lpour. $19-$52. (714) 755-5799. PIANO RECITAL DATEBOOK SHE ISWWll Pop sensation Helen Reddy will perform 8 p.m. Friday and May 5 with the Padtic Symphony Orchestra Pops. Reddy ls best known for her many hits, lndud.lng "You and Me Against the World" and "I Am Woman." The concert will be held ln the Orange County Performing Arts Center, 600 Town Center Drive, Costa Mesa. $23-$72. {714) 755-5799. SOUL AND JAZZ Jazz vocalist Carmen Brad- ford will make her Orange County Performing Arts Center de but Friday and May 5 at Founders Hall, 600 Town Centes. Drive, Costa Mesa . Shows'\viU be at 7:30 and 9:30 p.m. $44 or $38. (714) 740-7878. HELEN REDDY concert Mill be held in the Orange County Performing Arts Center, 600 Town Cen- ter Drive, Costa Mesa. $23- $72. (714) 755-5799. SOUNDS OF WOODY HERMAN The Woody Herman Orches- tra with tenor saxophonist and arranger Frank Tiben wiU perform at 8 p.m. May 5 at Orange Coast College's Robert B. Moore Theatre, 2701 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa. $20-$25. (714) 432- 5880. and Friends• at 4 p.m. May 6 in St. Andrew's Presbyterian Church, 600 St. Andrews Road, Newport Beach. $20. (714) 997-6504. CLASSICAL FINALE Orange Coast College 's Symphony Orchestra will conclude its 40th season at 7:30 p.m. May 6 with a con- cert featuring works by Rachmaninoff, Johannes Brahms and Aaron Copland. The concert will be held in OCC's Robert B. Moore The- atte, 2701 Patrview Road, Costa Mesa1 $6 or $10, (71 4) 432-5880. ROONEY AND FRIENDS Mickey Rooney will hold a "Command Performance" with Jan Chamberlain, Pete Barbutti, the Drifters, and Henry Cuesta and his band at 8 p.m. May 12 at Orange Coast College's Robert B. Moore Theatre, 2701 Fairview Road, Costa tv:tesa . $25-$33. (7 14) 432-5880. GUITAR ENSEMBLE Orange Coast College's Gui- tar Ensemble will bold its annual spring concert 8 p.m . May 12 in OCC's Fine Arts Recital Hall, 2701 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa. The ensemble, under the direc- tion of John McEnary, will perform works by major composers. $5. (714) 432- 5880. BOBBY MCFERRIN Vocalist Bobby McFerrin, best known for the song "Don't Worry, Be Happy," will join the Pacific Chorale and membe rs of the Pacific Symphony Orchestra at 8 p.m. May 19 for a perfor- mance of Faure's "Requiem" at the Orange County Per- forming Ar-ts Center, 600 Town Center Drive, Costa Mesa. Conducted by McFer- rin, the program will also feature improvisations, spiri- tuals and jazz arrangements. $15-$49. (714) 662-2345. Daily Pilot p.m. June 2 in a show featur, ing songs from Broadway's current hil$, as well as clas-' sics. The Center is at 60Q Town Center Drive, Cost~ Mesa. $39.50-$59.50. (7141 740-7878 .• BAROQUE FEST The Baroque Muslc Pesu. val's 21st season will begin at 4 p.m . June 17 at St. Michael & All AogeH C hurch , 3233 Pacific Vlev.( Drive, Newport Beach. ThE; fe11tivaJ wU1 last throug~ June 24 at various l~tio~ and will include music frqm the 17th and \8th centuries. The four-concert subscrlp. tion price is $85. Single tick1 et prices are $30, $25 or $10~ (949) 673-4299. DRUM SPECTACLE Three world-champion drum and bugle corps will perform in "Champions at The Center" at 7:30 p.m . July 16 at the Orange Coun- ty Performing Arts Cente(, 600 Town Center Drive, Cos- ta Mesa. $12. (~00) 495- 7469. JAZZ ON SUNDAYS Orange County saxophonist Norm Douglas brings his own brand of jazz lo Roy's al Newport Beach from 5 to 8 p.m. Sundays. Roy's is is a,t 453 Newport Center Drive, New.port Beach. (949) 640- 7697. POP/ROCK & FLAMENtO Tate 5 -a funk, roc k and Motown act -performs at 9 p.m. Saturdays at Carmelo's Ristorante, 3520 E. Coast Highway, Corona del Mar. Solo guitarist Ken Sande rs performs classical flamenco tunes at 7:30 p.m. Tuesdays and Sundays. The shows are free. (949) 675-1922. . . Piano student Jennifer Saile r will perform her sophomore recital noon Thursday in Orange Coast College's Music Room 101, 2701 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa. Saifer plans to perform works by Mozart and Brahms, among others. Free. (714) 432-5985. Pop sensation Helen Reddy will perform 8 p .m. Friday and May 5 with the Pacific Symphony Orchestra Pops. Reddy is best known for her many hHs, including "You and Me Against the World" and "l Am Woman." The WILLIAMS HALL MASTER CHORALE A NIGHT WITH DONNY Donny Osmond will perform at the Orange County Per- forming Arts Center at 8 SATURDAY NIGHT R&B Gerald Ishibashi and the Stone Bridge Band plays rock and R&B at 9 p.m. Sat- urdays at Sutton Place Hotel's Trianon Lounge, 4500 MacArthur Blvd .. New- port Beach. Free. (949) 476- 2001. : FILM AND VIDEO FEST Orange Coast College will .. . . ... .. .. .. .. • -I • .. .. I Ho do you want to get around town today, and ZS years from now? Orange County will experience steady growth in the next 25 years. To meet these challenges, the Orange County Transportation Authority (OCTA) wants your opinion on needed traffic Improvements-for today and in the future. Tell us at a community meeting I It's your opportunity to become part of the solution. Irvine 1'hundly. May ), 6 10 7:30 pm 1..-..w Senior Ctnter-Oining Aoom 20 Ulat Ao.Id. IMnt Brea ~May'· 6 to 7:30 pm CommuMy CtnW 695 E. Mldlson Way. ltM \ Garden Grove 1hundlJt M1Y 10, 6to1:10 pm ~MleclngC.. 11JOO SCWlbd Avenue. ~ Grow Mission Viejo T ....... 15, 610 7:JO pm Miiiion *to ..._. SdloDI. "°°"' 223 2S02S a..... DIM. ....... Refreshments I Prizes I GIYMWays ............. 111. Me• I l 'nrl1k._ .... "-""' The Williams Hall Master Chorale will present •Verdi Support Our Schools Shop Harbor B'vd. of Cars --Did You Know? 11That you can have bea~tiful color in your garden all year long ? ';~ 6 friendly and knowledgeable sales staff can show you how planting with our quality products can help you make it happen! ~~-® NURSERIES, INC.--• COSTA MESA SANTA ANA 2700 Bristol St. (71'4) 75 .. -6661 2800 N. Tustin Ave. (714) 633·9200 COMPlffi LANDSCAPINC • 45 YEARS EXPERIENCE LICENSE I 308553 CASSANDRA STEFFEN, C.C.N.PRO Aulttant Mlnlpr ~ Nunety ·Calta Mesa Master Nursery Professional NOTICE OF VACANCIES The City of Newport Beach is currently accepting applications to fill the following vacancie (4-year terms): Board of Library Trustees (one seat) Arts Commission (three seats) Parks, Beaches & Recreation Commission (two seats) Plannin g Commission (two seats) The seats will become vacant when the existing terms expire on June 30, 200 l. The deadline for filing applications is 4:00 p.m. on Wqlnesclay. May 16. 2()()1. Application blanb and additional information about the boards and commi11ions can be obtained from the City Clerk's Office, 3300 Newport Boulevard, or will be mailed or faxed to you by calling 949-644-3005. The application and information about the boards and commissions can also be accessed tbrouab the city's web site at: http://www.city.newport-belch.ca.ua L ... _. .................. ._._._ ................ .. For more information, conblet the City Clerk'• Office II 949-644 30m. ( Dolly Pilot SfNIOll aNTER AFTnHOOH . . A seven-piece, live band per- forms big band t\mes from t GO to 3:30 p.m. Fridays at the Oasis Senior Center, 800 Mar· guerite Ave., Corona del Mar. $4. (949) 644-3244. STAGE ICIMAKIMBO "Kimberly Akimbo," a darkly funny stqry of a girl whose body .ages almost five times faster than' nonnal, Will play through May 13 on South Coast Repertory's Mllinstage, 655 To\vn center Qrive, Cost.a Mesa. Show times will be 8 p.m. Tuesday through Friday, 2:30 and 8 p.m. Saturday and 2:30 and 7:30 p.m. Sunday. $18-$49. (714) 708-5555 FOSSE . . DATEBOOK "Fosse,• the Tony Award-win- ning musical, will be staged at the Orange County Perfonn· ing Arts Center through Sun- day with 16 performances in Segerstrom Hall, 600 Town Center Drive, Costa Mesa. The show will highlight the work of legendary choreographer and director Bob Fosse. Perfor- mance times vary. $29.75- $63.75. (714) 740-7878. The Woody Herman Orches1ra with tenor saxophonist and ahanger Frank Tlbert will perform at 8 p.m. May 5 at Orange Coast College's Robert B. Moore Theatre, 2701 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa. $20-$25. (714) 432-5880. Pt.AV FESTIVAL A dozen one-act plays will be performed through Sunday during Orange Coast College's annual Spring One-Act Play Festival at the Drama Lab Stu- clio, 2701 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa. Curtain time will be at 8 p.m. Friday and Saturday, and 2 and 7 p.m . Sunday. SS. (714) 432-5640, Ext. 1. TOM WALKER "Tom Walker" will play through May 27 on South Coast Repertory's Second Stage, 655 Town Center Drive, Costa Mesa. Show times will be 7:45 p .m. Tuesday through Sunday and 2 p.m. Saturddy and Sunday. $18-$47. (714) 708-5555. THE TEMPEST Orange Coast College's The- ater Department will present Shakespeare's "The Tem- pest• from May 16-20 at 10 a.m . Wednesday through Fn- (~wnl'lly .Ynn §~{5~ {ro~e and have Breakfast in Tt1e Garden ... Sunc.lays -Omclcr Bar Open 9am-I pm 1 : JI'; a .kvw·I lu'denwa // n('rtftl on IH1Jl/ 17//, Jh~cl /" ef' O.fm"y $111 .t/a-,qtw h,jb 1111 1111' Allll'lll<' Hou 'I uo I: 17/h Strl'<'I. (.0$1<1 .\11'.S(I 94 The Original MIKE'I C'RPET$ OVER 25 YEARS IN COSTA MESA •Now Owned & Operated by Mesa Upholstery• day, 8 p.m. Friday and Satur- day, and 2 p.m. Sunday. The play will be staged at the Robert B. Moore Theater, 2701 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa. $6-$9. (714) 432-5640. • Au. SALES PEOPt..E AREUCEHSED HAIRDRESSERS .., ""'.,,,.., ... ,,,.., &t,,,., .... ,...,,..,.. W. .. Ill CJ" Jflflr'lJ ~ &Jftt"*' Moll· Sat 9'.30lo1'/XJ, Sun. IM 269 E. 17, St., Costa Mao (949) 642-4482 KINDERTRANSPORT "Kindertransport," Didne Samuel's play about the rescue mission that saved 10,000 chil- dren during the .Holocdust. will be presented by Redders Repertory 11\eater at 7 p.m. May 17 in the Newport Beach Central Library's Friends Meeting Room. 1000 Avocado Ave. Free. (949) 717-3801. SESAME STREET Sesame Street Uve's •Let's Be Friends" will be staged June 14· 17 at the Orange County Per- forming Arts Center, 600 Town Center Drive, Costa Mesa. limes are 7 p.m. June 14; 10:30 a.m. and 7 p.m. June 15; 10:30 a.m., 2 p.m. and 5:30 p.m. June 16; and 1 and 4:30 p.m. JWle 17. $15 or $20. (714) 556-2787. ART L. CALIFORNIA ART "California: Through the Artist's Eye,• an exhibit of oil paintings by Steve Simon, will · be on display in the Newport Beach Central Library foyer from Tuesday through May 30. Free. (949) 717-3801 CRYSTAL COVE Watercolors of Crystal Cove by Corona del Mar artist Beatrice Anderson titled "Once Upon a Tune, Crystal Cove• will be on di.splay through Wednesday at the Newport Beach Central Library. 1000 Avocado Ave. (949) 717-3801. GOOD AS NEW Barbara Bashlow Gross' "New . Work" collection will be exhib- ·cARPETS PLUSH • TEXTURE BERBER Vinyls • Ceramics Wood • Laminates I?.( family I I I I I • •13~ ·cALL NOW 642-8400 FREE IN-HOME ESTIMATES • • • ''For All Your Decorating Needs!'' ! • • • • ; ' . .-...- 1 ~ I ) FURNITURE Rl!QPHOLITERY • Custom-Made furniture • Slip Covers • Patio furniture • Dr8perles. Shades, & 6edspreads Saturday, April 2a, 2001 AIS ited through Friday at djr International Art at 2431 W. Coast Highway, Swte 204, Newport Beach. (949) 548- 6249. BAl80A ARTWALK The Balboa Island Artwalk will take place from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. May 13 along the South Bay- side promenade, between / ) Marine Avenue and Ferry ' Landing at Ag~U <4.venue in Newport Bea~;.\ Free. (949) • 830-8098. \ ,> • {~' J HOSPfT~.fkpTOGRAPHY An e~bj~tuon of phoj tograP,h.~j taken at the He~tt lnstl~t~ of Children's ~pi­ ta!, Los Angeles by commer- cial photographer Walter Urie will be on d1splay through May 22 at Orange Coast College's Photo Gallery, 2701 Fauvtew Road, Costa Mesa. The gallery is open 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Mon- day through Fnday. Free. (714) 432-5520 IMPRESSIONS The Robert Monda VJ Wtfie and Food Center presents an exhi- bition titled "lmpressions· by Southern Cdhlonua artist Val carson through May 14 at 1570 Scenic Ave., Costa Mesa. Center hours are 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. Free. (714) 979-4510. SEE HOURS PAG~ A16 Al6 Saturday, April 2e, 2001 HOURS CONTINUED FROM A15 CATAUNAART An e xhibitton showcasing "Catalina and the Channel Islands, Newport's Offshore Neighbors" will run through June 30 at the Newport Har- bor Naubcal Muse um. The exhibit focuses on the nautical history or Santa Catalina and other offshore sentinels. The museum is open from 10 a .m. to 5 p.m . Tuesday through Sunday at 151 E. Coast High- • way, Newport Beach. Free. (949) 673-7863. PICTURE STORIES • Amencan Stories: From the Personal to the Political,• a col- lection of art prints by artists including Vito Acconci and Hans Burkhardt. will be exhib- ited lhrough July 1 at the Ordnge County M~wn or Art, 850 San Clemente Drive. Newport Bedch. Hours are 11 d.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesday lhrough Sunddy. Museum entrance is $5 lor ddults, $4 seniors and ~tudenl!. dnd lree for members and duldren 16 and younger. (949) 759-1 122 VIDEO FOCUS The Orange County Museum or Art will present "One Wall: A Video Series• lhrough Sept. 9 at 850 San Clemente Drive, . . Newport Beach. The series will introduce audiences to six Southern California artists who incorporate video into their work. Museum entrance is $5 for adults, S4 seniors and students, and free for members and children 16 and younger. (949) 759-1122. DANCE AESTA LATINA Orange Coast College will present its second annual Fies- ta Latina celebration at8 p.m. Th~ay and 10 a .m. and noon Friday at the Robert B. Moore Theatre, 2701 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa. The group also does dance and heritage outreach programs for county elementary and high schools. Free. ('114) 432-5506, Ext. 4. LA BAYAOERE The Paris Opera Ballet will perform "La Bayadere• at 8 p .m. May 8, 9, 11 and 12 and 2 p.m . May 12 and 13 at Segerstrom Hall, 600 Town Center Drive, Costa Mesa. $20-$85. (714) 740-7878. 'BAUROOM FRIDAYS The DeFore Foundation for the Arts hosts ballroom dancing from 8 to 11 p.m. Fridays at the DeFore Dance Center. 151 Kalmus Drive, Suite G-3, Cos- ta Mesa . $11 admission includes a free dance lesson. (714) 241-9908. SABATINO'S Lunch • Dinner • Sunday Brunch 251 Shipyard Way• Ne wport Beach Please call for hours, directions & reservations. : (949) 723-0621 ' : ... DA'i'EBOOK DANCE 20t Dance 2<M otters private and gi:oup lnltructlon in beginning and advanced ballroom, Latin • and mode(n dancing at 204 ~asbington St., Newport Beach. (949) 675-9082. SENK>R 8AUJtOOM The Costa Mesa Senior Center offers ballroom dancing to tlje music of the Ray Robbl.Jts Combo for adults from 7 :30 to 10:30 p.m. Tuesdays. Singles and couples are welcome. $3. The center is at 695 W. 19th St. (949) 645-2356. ' . OANSC.ENE STUDK> Danscene Studio offers ball· room dancing at 8 p.m. on the first Friday of each month. $10. The studio is at 2980 McClln- tock Way, CoSta Mesa. (714) 641-8688. BIG BAND OANONG The Oasis senior Center holds an afternoon of dancing to big band music from 1 :30 to 3:30 p .m. Fridays. Coffee and refreshments Me seJVed. The center is at 800 MMguerlte Ave., Corona del Mar. (949) 644-3244. ARGENTINE TANGO Danscene Studio offers tango dancing from 8 p.m. to 12:30 a.m. the first Saturday of each month. Danscene is at 2980 McClintock Way, Costa Mesa. (714) 641-8688. •••••••• IOOIS Sil.ENT JOE Mystery writer T. Jeffenon Parker will siQll his latest book. "Silent Joe,• at 5 p.m. May 5 at Borden Books & Music, 3333 Bear St., Costa Mesa. The book is a murder mystery set in the thick of Orange County politics. Free. (714) 432-7854. HEYMACI William McCurdie will sign copies of "Hey Macl This is Sertous Business. A Guy Could Gel .Killed0 at 1 p.m. May 6 at Borders Boqks & Music, 3333 Bear St., Costa Mesa. Before his career as a minister, the Orange County resident spent three years in the Army during World WM Il. Free. (714) 432-7854. ROMANCE IN ALM Robert Badal will sign copies of "Romance in Film. Vol. 1· at 2 p.m. May 12 in Borders Books & Music, 3333 Bear St, Costa Mesa. Free. (714) 432-7854. THE BAmE'S OVER Vietnam veteran Frank Pang- born will sign copies of his book, "The Battle's Over: A Vietnam Soldier's Poetry,• at 2 p .m. May 19 in Borders Books & Music. 3333 Bear St., Costa Mesa. Free. (714) 432-7854. OPRAH BOOK O.UB The Oprah Book Club meets FotoART W •••••••• h-A-Qll-~ Unique Personalized Gifts for every occasion Visit our Web Site at www lotoart.oom Choose from - Personalized Mugs Laser Engraved Frames Photo Sculptures Sports Awards and much much more! at 7 p.m. on the third Thursday of each month lo discuss Oprah Wm.trey's most recent selections at Barnes & Noble Bookseller& fashion Island. The store is at 953 Newport Center Drive, Newport 8eoch. (949) 759-0982. IUDS YOUTH EXPO The 22nd Annual Youth Expo, themed "Citrus, Sun & Sports are Pun,• will take place Satµr- day and Sunday at the Orange Cowtty Fairgrounds, 88 Fair Oriv~, Costa Mesa. The three- day event will showcase the positive accomplishments of Orange County youth. Hours for the event will be 9 a.m to 4 p .m . Saturday and Sunday. Free. (714) 708-3247. STARLIGHT STORIES Children age 3 to 7 may partic- ipate in songs and finger pup- pet plays at 7 p.m. Mondays at the Costa Mesa Llbraiy, 1855 Park Ave. (949) 646-8845. PJS AND BOOKS Newport Beach Central Library offers story time at 7 p.m Mon- days and 10:30 a.m. Saturdays. The library is at 1000 Avocado Ave. Children may wear paja- mas to the evening sessions. Free. (949) 717-3801. WEEKLY STORYTEu.ER Barnes & Noble Booksellers .. Doily Pilot~ Metro Pointe hosts story time at 10:45 a .m. Wedneldays tot children of all ages at the 5tor8, 901-B South Coast Drive, Cos- ta Mesa. (714) 444-0226. ' POE1RY I POETRY FES11VAL • The Fifth Annual Poetry Festi· val will be hel9 at 7 p.m. Mon-' day at the Newport Beach Pub•: lie Ubrary, 1000 Avocado Ave., Newport Beach. The theme• will be freedom. Participants. come from Orange County and. represent the Masters of Fine Arts Writing Program at the UC Irvine and local poets. Free. (949) 717-3801. THEE WORD THIN~ 'I "Thee Word Thing" perfor- mance poetry night begins at 9' p.m . Wednesdays at Club' Mesa, 843 W. 19th St., Costa Mesa. Free. (949) 642-8448. DINING/TASTING WINE DINNER Vintner Walter Raymond', owner of Raymond Vmeyards of Napa Valley, will make a guest appearance 6:30 p.m. Tuesday at a special win4 dinner hosted by Fleming's Prime Steakhouse & Wine Bar, 455 Newport Center Dri-' ve, N ewport Beach. $75,,. excluding tax or gratuity., (949) 720-9633. SEE HOURS PAGE A17 BUDDHA'S FAVORITE JAPANESE CUISINE 5 UE.>HJ & J'JIJO!>.L~f> 10% OFF ALL SUSHI ORDERED BEFORE 6:30PM Waterfront Dining Open 7 Days, Lunch & Dinner 634 Lido Park Dr., Next to Blue Water Grill Newport Beach 949•723•4203 B~ssi~e-+s & BI &Ae-be-.... i e-s Enjoy a Spacious Suite, Sumptuous Dining, Entertainment, Bingo, Crafts, Billiards, Beauty Salon, Transportation to Doctor, Shopping, Fun Trips, Friendly Caring People. From $1,545/Mo. 2283 Fairview at Wilson Costa Mesa Minimum age 58 For more information please call: 949/646-6300 or Fax 949/646-7428 • • arkln Don't Miss out on Incredible Savings! This Saturday & Sunday, April 28th & 29th 9 • 5 P.M. 369 E. 17th st. ColtaMeea (949) 6&0-?344 Monday C Tuesday r.m:JlAM M.:rmh vm 9'.»-l!>ll AM Al!gloum ~ 10-l). I I :30 AM lain Rh}1'vn ~ 12.ro-IOOPM Yq;i Nfat 2A03 ~eda Blvd. rafi leach (310) I02-G412 1"17:_~~ ectnesdi~Thu y Friday turday 7:00-8.30 AM @7:30AM 7:00-3:30 AM 800-9-JOAM ~~ PWia ~= MmrSaadi ~Cimiit Alexis 1ppi Alexis Vila« 800-10:00 AM 9-l).10-JOAM 8:30-10:00 M1 ~.» l!>ll AM ~a:: AlcgioMi ~~ 11mMa -Krili Susan IW I Oi00-11 :00 AM I 0:00-11 :00 AM J Jm.Jl<XI PM Piiltt l'iLia Cc:n Ibid ~Gttwt ~ ow t ' Doily Pilot DATEBOOK .. Saturday, April 20, 2001 Al7 TYL&R CONTINUED FROM A 13 And when TYier and his frlendJ we ren't hanging out by watchtower No. 5 at Newport Beach, they'd catch flicks at Edwards Big New- port in Fashion Island. "But after all of that kind of duality, it became one thing,• TYler said or blending films and music. And he's limitless in his i'ange of musical genres and instruments: Jazz, ,Bi!f Band, classical,.techno, rock -he composes it all. He plays the drums, piano, acoustic guitar, banjo, electric guitar, bass, timpani, orchestral percus- sion, the marimba and he sings. Brian Tyler conducts an orchestra during a recording of his score for the film "Panic," starring Wlfilam H. Macy and Neve Campbell. As a conductor, he plays one primary instrument. •The orchestra becomes my instrument," be said. •1t becomes the sound or the HOURS CONTINUED FROM A 16 ) TWILIGHT DINING Villa Nova Re~taurant offers a twilight dining menu - featuring dishes such as chicken parmigiana and calamari picante at reduced prices -from 5 to 6 p.m. 1.veekdays and 4 to 6 p.m. :>undays. The restaurant is tll 3131 W. Coast Highway, J'1ewport Beach. (949) 642- f880. • WINE TASTINGS Hi-Time Wine Cellars fea- Wr"es wine tastings from 4:30 Jo 8 p .m. Fndays and 1 :30 to f3 p .m. Saturdays. (949) 650- !J463. • ~UNDAY BRUNCH :rhe Sutton Place Hotel hosts Sunday brunch from 10:30 )i.m. to 2 p.m. each week, 'ncluding international ~eafood and salad buffets, ~oasts carved to order, .Greakfast favontes and Jnore. The meal is $30, $40 3vith champagne. The hotel score, and I'm basically play- ing the orchestra." DlfectOT Greg YaitaneS', who worked with TYier on •Ptan B." starring Diane Keaton, Paui Sorvino and is at 4500 MacArthur Blvd .. Newport Beach. (949) 476- 2001. CLUBS ALTA COFFEE The Alta Coffee House pre- sents musical acts at 8:30 p.m. Thursdays through Sat- urdays at 506 31st St., New- port Beach . (949) 675-0233. ATRIUM MARQUIS The Atrium offers a variety or live music daily at its Afr. porter Club, 18700 MacArthur Blvd., Irvine . (949) 833-2770. BIRRAPORETil'S Birraporetti's offers swing music by the 12-piece Don Miller Orchestra at 8 p.m . Mondays at South Coast Plaza, 3333 Bristol St., Costa Mesa. (714) 850-9090. BISTRO 201 Bistro 201 offers jazz pe rfor- mances at 8 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays and 11 a .m. Sundays at 3333 W. Coast Highway. Newport Beach. (949) 631-1551. · Already Reduced Warehouse Prices Great Savings Showroom Furniture &.Accessories Outlet New and Discontinued Items, One of a #(jnd Come Early For Best Selection Mon-Sat 10:00.m -4:30pm 2925 Airway, Suite A Costa Mesa, CA (714) 979-6679 Why not return tht lovt with tht gift of life? Stace Farm Life lnsuranc.c may be the perfect gift ro give your grandchildren for any occasion. S.. /W1'1 u tMw far lift .• ... ,.... Liii ---eon.-.. .... a.a.: llUOlllll .. 11. .... ................ ,Natasha Lyonne, noticed TYier's schooling m yester- day's musicians. •Brian was really respect- fuJ of the old-school way or doing things,• Yaitanes said. CLUB MESA Shows begin a t 9 p.m. The club is at 643 W. 19th St.. Costa Mesa. Admission is $5-$10. (949) 642-6634. DIN DIN AT THE BAMBOO TERRACE Din Din at the Bamboo Ter- race presents instrumental music after 9 p.m. Thursdays and pop and rock after 9 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays at 1773 Newport Blvd., Cos- ta Mesa. (949) 645-5550. DURTY NELLY'S Nelly's offers live music at 9 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays at 2915 Red Hill Ave., Costa Mesa. (714) 957-1951. FOUR SEASONS HOTEL The Four Seasons offers live music Mondays through Sat- urdays al 690 Newport Cen- ter Drive, Newport Beach . (949) 759-0808. HARD ROCK CAFE The Hard Rock offe rs li ve music Sundays at 451 New- port Center Drive, Newport Beach. (949) 640-8844. ( I 111 \ i:' "' I \\ • ' I 'I .1. I 1 'I 1< , j I Ii, 1 11,t I ,,1.,,, .. , ,, \\ "' ( I 11' '" ',,, I \I \ I II"' ' • AUTO • HOM.EOWNERS ·= .wlnb17 S1nu 195'7. &. ~ . .: ... _. ....... s > ~ 949-631-7740 +41 Old Newport 8hd. • Newport 8eadt (Near Hoag Hotpital) KITCHEN IMPROVEMENTS The kitchen i u ually very important to prospective buyers. Your kitchen doe n't have to be new and state-of- the·art. but it should look its best. Your kitchen should be spotless clean and well oraanized while your home is o n the market. The counter top should be clean and free of clutter, and the noor hould shine. Appliance should be clean and in sood workina order. You may want to add a few decorator touches or replace cabinet • Ooorina. and even appliances for a small investment. Dollau spent on kitchen Improvements usually pay map dividend• when you aell your home. We will be happy to di11euu your options wllh you. if you are plunlna to 1ell your home and Med tome ldvice in Ibis Ila. ~leen lftd Jeff have 29 cum:ld" ,.... ot,... ...... ....... .. NeWpOft .... ...,,,,_,.t tl..t...aorllllYice ... ,.. ............. ... .. ........ c.... ... .,.. .. ......... c ...... ..... .....,.,.,.,. •t think the great jazz musi· clans of their day would be proud to work with him." As was be. The director calls TYler's score for "Plan B" the real "star" of the movie, along- side talents like Keaton. He doubted he'd ever find a composer who wouJd meet his expectations. Then he 'did. "I could only des¢be it as · genius, what he does, his ' attention to detail. And h,e's got a great way «;if seaqi.lessly !>lending [tlie mll$iC) 1n ~th the film," Yaitanes said. •it's bard to find s0meone with as much heart and dedication as you have." TYler has a little some- thing that keeps him going. His grandfather's Oscar -a reminder of all the stories that inspired him to do what he does -looks over him at his West Los Angeles studio. ·oefinitely something to aim for,• TYier said. THE HARP INN The inn offers live music Thursdays through Satur- days at 130 E. 17th St., Cos- ta Mesa. (949) 646-8855. HOGUE BARMICHAEL'S Barmichael's offers live music Wednesdays through Saturdays at 3950 Campus D rive, Newport Beach. (949) 261-6270. UDO CIGAR ROOM The cigar room is a place to enjoy a smoke with your drink. The bar is at 3441 Via Lido, Suite D, Newport Beach. (949) 723-0595. MARGARITAVILLE Margaritaville offers live music and is at 2332 W. Coast Highway, Newport Beach. (949) 631-8220. MARRAKESH Marrakesh offers authentic Moroccan cuisine and belly dancing daily, starting at 5 p.m. The restaurant is at 1976 Newport Blvd., Costa Mesa. (949) 645-8384. Gary Saderup, far left, played escaped convict Glen ln a 1973 production of "The Desperate Hours ... TITUS CONTINUED FROM A 13 in •Arsenic and Old Lace" and resuming an actor-director re lation- ship m ·Dear Friends." where he •aged up" suc- cessfully to play the hus- band of an actress about 20 years his senior. The then-Costa Mesa resi- d ent also impressed Irvine audie nces as the younger immigrant brothe r tn •A Vie w From the Bndge" But the show that redl- ly displayed Gary's acting range and power was ·The Desperate Hours,· which r directed in 1973 for the lrvme Community Theater. Gary played the Bogart role as the leader of three escaped convicts, a nd virtually mesmerized his audaencPs. We all fig- ured Broadwdy or Holly- wood soon would be beckoning. Gary, however, had other tale nts, dnd m the end his skills as an artist overruled his acting prowess. Nearl y 30 ye ars after he tore up the stage in "Desperate Hours." he made the front page of the Times -as the sub- ject of a news story A battle for the nght to d epict hkenesses of the Three Stooges may even wind up tn the Supre me Court If he possesses the same dynaITUc force m presenbng has case that he did as an actor three decades ago, he should emerge ln umphant • TOM TITUS writes about and reviews local theater for the Daily Pilot. His stones appear Thursdays and Saturdays 30-50-70% OFF Furniture, Accessories, Rugs, Silk Plants, Art Work, Mirrors, And Much More ... . . . . . . '. . f t • • • f Al8 Sorurdo , Apnl 28, 2001 '\). Doil)' Pilot . . . . Quote Of 1111 DAY •._ I don't ... w1 hcM prolilems wieh ~ '8 next two Ms. If .. do, .. have .... Dies hit , ...,. _ .. John Emme, CdM baseball coach Sports Editor Roger Corlson • 949...5744223 • Sports Fox: 949-650-0170 •Saturday, April 28, 2001 81 <9Jfange County All-Stars cOllj.de at Orange Coast • Hatsushi should start for South girls; Serven-coached Reb~l boys include Whittaker. Tickets, good for both games, are $10 for adults and $6 for stu- dents under 18. Hatsushi, who shared New- port-Mesa District Player of the captain, who scored 1,008 points in four seasons and was all-district and all-league three times. ·she pushes the ball very well, which is the style I like my teams to play and she. has had practices where she hasn't missed a three-point shot Barry Faulkner Year laurels this season, also DAllY PILOT capped her four-year varsity COSTA MESA -The 36th career by being named second- Orange County All-Star Bas-team All-CIF Southern Section ketball boys game, as well as Division Ul. •She loves to pass and she seems to enjoy making other people look good. She's good at setting things up for us Some- times it's the first pass she makes, but there are times the 24th edition of the girls The 5-foot-4 standout .aver- showcase, will have a distinct aged 13.7 points, 7.3 assists, 4.1 Costa Mesa flavor tonight at Orange steals and 3.6 rebounds for Bob Serven Coast College. Coach Jim Weeks' Mustangs 'Mustangs Coach Bob Serven will lead Uus season, while committing a the South boys squad which indudes mere 42 turnovers. Mesa sharpshooting ~ard Steve Wlut-( Her passings~ and unselfishness, ~er, against the top seniors from the as well as her ability ~o score and ener- North, while Mesa senior point guard getic defense, have unpressed Rebels Nancy Hatsushi is slated to start for the Coach Nicole Quinn (Santa Ana Valley). South girls team. They have also helped endear Hatsushi when you don't see what she's done until the second or third pass.· Quinn said Hatsushi fills a need for a backcourt presence for the South, which is loaded Wlth frontcourt players. "She's very quick and very smart, but she 1s also very strong for her size. We Steve WbJttaker The girls game tips off at 5 p.m. with to h er teammates. the boys game scheduled for a' p.m. •I'love her," Quinn said of the Mesa Tars remain confident despite loss • After a 12-1 loss, Newport Harbor prepares to make the most of next week's games. Steve Virgen DAILY PILOT NEWPORT BEACH -U a team's per- sona is, in fact. a reflection of its coach's personality, it could be plenty interesting how Jlm Kiefer's Newport Harbor High baseball team will perfonn in 1ts final four Sea View League games. Afte r the Sailors (7-13-1, 2-10 in league) lost. 12-1. in six innings to visit- ing Aliso Niguel Friday, Kiefer didn't ' offer wisecracks or cliche$ about four errors or s.. View....... another bad- w L break loss. He, Wlth little regret of the past, ------........ ~· focused on the possible opportu- nities or next week. "Every game next week has meaning for us.· Kiefer said. ·we have a chance to decide ,_dpCllt at Laguna Hilts who's going to be Aliso N;,,. ...i at IMrle ~· the league cham- pion. You have three teams that are battling it out, (Irvine, Laguna Hills and Aliso Niguel), and we have a say in that. We have a chance to split with Irvine (Monday at home), which would be a good accom- plishment. We really want to beat Lagu- na Hills (on the road Wednesday) and we want to finish ahead of Woodbridge (they host the Warriors, 3-9 in league, Friday:• The Tars dug an early 4-0 hole and never recovered as the Aliso Niguel Wolverines (17-4, 9-3), ranked No. 7 In Orange County, took advantage or New- port's mistakes and made the most of their eight hits. Aliso Niguel senior Todd Dilley, a left- handed pitcher, tamed the Tars as he thrived on bis team's lead. His 75-pltch SEE NEWPORT PAGE 84 SEE HOOPS PAGE BS Nancy HatsushJ har1gs on, 6-4 Cabico delivers, 1-0 WJW'iior right-hander strikes out nine, survives seventh-inning for Shutout victory over Northwood. Ton, MDbell OAl.Y~ COSTA MESA -Amazing what a little pep talk tram Kirk Bauermeister can do. 1-·'lbe C.osta M9M High bateball coach uled bis waidi ol w:Wdom to lnlplre Mus- tangl' ~ pitcher Nick C4bico and the junkJr foBaWed his instructions to the Jetter. Cablco p6acbed a complete-game gem ao rou1e to a 1~ Padk Cout LeegUe wtn over Wiillag Northwood Priday night at TeWin- kle Part. •Jtald blm blfore the ~t and dowl• .... ttdl ........ Mid. ·Mm bM hem good all~ but be bun't W daat unbelievable performance yet. I told him not to treat these guys like the 1927 Yankees. •Respect the hitters, but trust your stuff.' II Mission accompllshed. C4bico struck out nine and allowed only six hits to improve his record to 3-1. Cabico's brilliant performance nearly went by the boards in a wacky top of the seventh inning. Northwood's leadoff hitter Lee Watanabe hit a slow roller and appeared to beet tbe throw to Ont. but was ruled out for 1owertng his shoulder into Mesa's first bueman Car- los Franco. "You don't tee that call very olten, bUt it was pretty obvious," Bauermetstar said. 1be call proved coStly ior the Timbet- Mike Delong rt a double ID Wt flekt wolv• {3-9 in~). 1be oat betlar, but got a little and WU thrown out at third oa a nice from laft 8elder Mike SEE MESA Ma IJ • Firs·t-place Sea Kings get another scare from fifth-place Estancia. Barry Faulkner DAILY PILOT CORONA DEL • MAR -Corona del "'Eh school Mar High baseball B SEBALL coach John Emme isn't. as concerned about his Pacific Coast League-leading team's magic number as, perhaps, where the magic has gone. The Sea Kings rallied, then held on for a 6- 4 PCL win over vis1tmg Estano a Friday to remain comfortably atop the league race Wlth just four PCL contests remaming. But, with his team having splJt its last SlX games, Wlth two of those wins by a combllled three runs. comfort is a ' . . ti;... • -- concept with wtucb Emme is increasingly unfamiliar. "We were at an all-Pacific c.o.st l..Mgue bme low (after Tues-W L T day's 5-2 upset loss to the Eagles) and now we're crawling out of that hole,• Emme Sdld followmg Fnday's win, l]iiiiliiiliil~ wtuch improved the Sea Kings, ranked No. 9 in Orange County and CIF Southern Sec-&:idb:'.l IWDI tion DivtSion TV, to 15-CdM 6. Eltlnda 4 6, 10-1 in league. Mmll 1. lllortttv.ood o The Sea Kings hold llnM!rslty 1 s. Lag. Beach o a 2112-game lead over second-place Univer- sity, which they visit Tuesday, then host Fri- day, needing just one victory to clinch their first PCL crown. 'Dmdln llllMI CdM at lkwersrty Not1hv.ood at l':lllnd9 a.ta Mlall at l.arp\a Beadi "During the whole Easter (Pnde of the Coast) tournament, 1t was Wee we didn't want to be out there," Emme said. "But 1 don't ttunk we'll have problems with motivation the next two weeks (a two-game Costa Mesa senes follows Uni). If we do, we have deeper issues than I thought.• Estancia (6-14, 3-8) forced the lSSUe Fnday, outtutbng the Sea Kings, 10-7. and at least matching their pitching prohoency. But. 1t was defense that let the Eagles down. ·we came in with a plan to make (the Sea Kings) bitoff·speed;>itcbes and 1t was worlo.ng, • SEE COM PAGE 84 DAILY PILOT HIGH SCHOOL ATHLETE OF THE WEEK Eagles' roadrunner Estancia S Liz Huipe • Estancia High distance standout looking to peak just in time for the Pacific Coast League finals and onto CIF. Tony AhlDbell · 'Ibat method bu proved to be DMY Pilar rather succeatul for Hwpe, the Deily ucb a mean game Estancia PUot Athlete ol the Week. h track and Held standout Uz HUipe sparkled at the Cerritos pe plays on the rest of the Invitational April 18, WUlnillg the pettton dunng a track meet, 1,600-(5:28) ad 3,200-meten (11:52) ..,.ctally the 3,200-meter run. ln the 111ded dMl:loll. Hulplt 1ikee to bang out in the ·1 jUlt try to ltay with the peck middle ol the pack. trying to plCk Just =tic:':.~-=~:Dy. the right time to make her move and I J\1111 go around the nck,and try to = bopea out o1 the Nit ol tbe u. a 1ia19 blnl to tM ebeild GI ·Same people go out w.., .... end eY•tOD9 ... . .,, ........ mDe -p1111d, tbey Hulpe. ... I p t d MCJ!ll,., ID .... ... already 11ow1ng doWn.. Hutpe 1,eoo ad 3» 11 lillll ,..._ P9dllc ll6d. 91 lib to tab tt kind Olwy ID ==-~.:..:: ........... p6ck at up In tbe.... "~ ...... . .... ' Doily Pilot SPORTS Sotvrdoy, April 28, 2001 &'J PREP VOLLEYBALL Sailors split at Toft: • Newport Harbor's best hope today is fifth place at Santa Barbara. SANTA BARBARA -The Newport Harbor boys volley- ball team finished with a 1·1 record after one day of action in the 16-team Santa Barbara Tournament of C hampions Friday. The Sailors (8-6) began the day with a 15-5, 15·3, 15-13 victory over h<>St Santa Bar- bara. Newport Harbor later lost to 29-0 Bear River or Sacramento, 15·12, 14-16, 18- 16, 15·7. STEVE MCCRANK /OAllY PILOT M esa's Nick Cabico tires away en route to shutout victory. Tars seruor Blake Tippett had 32 kills against Bear Riv· er. while 1uruor Erik Peterson hrnshed Wl th 17 kills on the day, 10 against Santa Bar- bara. Greg Perrine con- tnbuted 10 kills agamst Bear River and Loyd Wright had 63 assists H unter. MESA CO NTINUED FROM 1 f\ lcGu1re tu !ohortl>lop Billy HdJVC'Tson to thml bac;eman Br<>nt SlC'V<'n" In d rrurror image of Tues- day's 6· 1 loss to the Tunber- wolves. the M ustangs (5-5-1 in league) managed to get nme hits, but stranded 10 runners on base. Newport Harbor will play today at 9 a.m. as the Sailors best result would be a ft.fth· plclce hmsh. Alter lhns<.' two "routine" outs, Andrc•w f\lornson • npped d doubh.• down lhe left·held hnP but \\d'> strand· f'd at second when the next hatter ground('d out to end the mnmg "We're not getting chedted di the plate." Bauerme1Ster sd1d ·Northwood managed to make some big plays to hdlt our rallies Some luck here and there and we've got four or five more runs torught. • "I don't think I made good enough adjustments," Coach Dan Glenn said of the loss ·we have to get better ar ad1ustmg before the play· offs· Costa Mesa swept by Timberwolves "It got d httle exciung, that's for sure,· Bdll('rmcister said "But we found c1 way to get the job done • l\tesd's lonP run Cdme m the second mmng Ddn HuntN was hit by a pitch and wtlh two outs, dtlPmpted to steal second bdl>e The theft was successful and when shortstop Ryan Mt.lier fell on top of Hunter attempting to corral a low throw, the umpire dWdrded HuntPr third bdse for obstruction Josh Feldman and Steven Shores each had two Juts for the Mustangs, who remain in thtrd place in the PCL, one game behind second-place Uruversity lRVlNE -The Costa Mesa H igh boys volleyball team lost, 15-6, 15·5, 15-1, at Northwood, which has a share of the Pacific Coast League lead. Costa M esa will play at Lagund Beach on Tuesday at 3:15 p.m. before hosting the Artists at TeWmkle Park Fri- day rug ht at 7. Eli Solis led Costa Mesa with SlX kills, w hlle semor Mike Payne and Junior Carlos Jaune had fwe each. MOAC COAST LEAGUE CoslA M£sA 1, NomfWOOO 0 Northwood 000 000 0 • 0 6 1 Mesa (2-10, 1·7 m league) plays Tuesday at Laguna Beach at 4 p .m . Costa M~ 010 000 0 ·090 Brent Stevens then came through With d tWO·OUt single to center field, sconng Kuykendal and Gragnano. Cabico and Hunter. W • Cab1co. 3· 1. L Kuykendal. 28 • Delong (N), Morrison (N), Shores (CM) 2 Northwood improved to 7- 1 in league. Meek signs with Hoosiers • Newport fo rward will continue soccer career al lndiana Uni versity. Barry Faulkner DAILY PILOT NEWPORT BEACH -Newport Harbor H19h senior Trey f\leek, a two·llme AlJ-Sea View LeaguP boys soccer perfonner. said Fnddy he ha., accepted a full athlettc schol- drc;h1p to rnntmur t11s cdCeer at Ind1and Uru· V('f'>ll\' f\teek i.1yned his letter of intent to become a l loos1er Fnday, alter heldmg c1dd1tiondl !>C'hOldrsh!p offers from UCLA, San D1P90 State and Oregon State. Indiana coc1ches believe Meek, an explo· s1ve forward. is the f10al piece to the peren· mal NCAA powPrhouse's recrwting puzzle for next season, according to Howard Meek, Trey's father Meek. a hrsl·tedm All-Sea View pick as a Juruor and a second-team honoree -as a seruor, dmc1ssed eigh t goals and three assists in nine recent tournament games for the American Global Soccer. School's under- BOYS SOCCER 14 prenuer club team. He helped Burbank· based AGSS WUl the College Showc~e tournament. M arch 23· 25, and also impressed ru coaches m the Dallas Cup. held ApnJ 8-14 m Texas Meek took a recrwtm g vtSit to lndtand March 30-April 1. then visited the UCLA campus April 21-22. • t had rruxed emouons, but I really liked • the fanuly atmosphere at Indiana.· Meek said. •11ust thought the whole environment was ftrst class.· Meek will ma1or 10 sports management at JU, which has a stoned soccer history under 28-year head coach Jerry Yeagley. The Hoosiers have won five national championships, including back-to-back crowns 10 1998-99. and have been to the last lour College Cup events, the sport's final four Indiana has been to the College Cup 14 lllnes and made 25 NCAA Tournament appearances in Yeagley's tenure. The H ooSters lost in the semifinals to Creighton, 2-1 l.n overtime. last season. Orange County Championships today • Newport the lone local entry. · Tony Altobelli DAILY PILOT MISSION VIEJO -After ram postponed the first attempt, the Orange Coun ty Championships will get a second chance to show~se the area's top talent today <1t 8 30 a.m. at 'fiabuco Hills High. Unfortunately lor those associated with the event, a strong portion of the schools will not be coming with a full arsenal, if they come at all. Three of the four Newport-Mesa high schools, Estancia, Costa M esa and Corona del Mar will not be i.n attendance because of Monday's Padf· le Coost League prellmln4r\es. ·once I found out when the n w date for lb.is meet was, I decided we were not going to par- ticipate,• CdM Coach Bill Sumner .a.Id. • J didn't reel that this m t would help our tewn as a whole. We hav some runners who ~ on the bubble for CIF and I dldn't want to auss an opportunJty tog t a full day of tralnlng tn: Wilh Sea V!ew League prellms t for 1\JeS .. day, however. Newport Hatbor wW be 10 atten• dance and the Sailora are looking forward to the festivities. •The people we hove compeUng at thJt event hould not ha¥ a prob!em getting reedy for te.gue prelbns,. Newport Coech £ric 1'Weit Mid. •'J'M ftnall are on Prtd8y, to that wtll gift tbia nanMn lb deyt. wbkb II plenty oC time. They ... going to have a pretty strong woQout fti!ilit) ., .. .,.. . OM d Newpo«t top runnen competing on PREP TRACK AND FIELD the girls ide will be senior Amber Steen. Steen, who recently set her own personaJ- best time of 4:47.6 1 '° the t,600 meters at the Arc.l<IJa Invitational two weeks ago, won last yea( race with a time of 4:58.77. She also placed fourth In the 3,200 (t 1 :04.93). Nadja Topalovic (300 hurdles, 1,600 relay), Evita Castillo (long jump, triple jump). Valerie Day (100 hurdles, 300 hurdles), Patty Vasquez (400) and Lauren Hansen ("400) will also compete for the Sailors. On the boys side, John Peschelt. Dan Moyer and JUch&n:l Weber, three·fourths of last year' victorious 1,600 relay squad will be lo atten· ~today. Tilat threesome, along with Dede Joh.moo, will look to improve on thf'ir 3:20.72 from last yeanevent. PetebeJt wW also take part 1n the 800 and the high jump. He ftnilbed MCOod and third. r911>«· bvely, lo lhOle events lat yeu. Moyn will U.O compete in the 110 l'Ugh hur· dies and 300 lntermedAele burdlel, wbiae Weber wUJ t.-t out b1I speed ID tile 100 and 200. Senior Cbrtl McMIDln (800, 3,200), SMll ~ (l 10 HH. 300 Iii), MolglD c....-= )ump), o.wt SsaT..,:" ·jamp. long 400 ~~vld .... pUt. ....... ltm (tbotpul. .... ) • .-. ....... (1,800, ~-,. Adam IC.ms (1oog ........ 400 ....,) wtl Uo 01Mlpel9 for tbe s.lolS. who ... ..... llllld ............ ,..,,. ~ .. 411hpailala. JC MEN'S VOLLEYBALL I Orange Coast advances to state title match tonight • With a three-game sweep, the · ates set themselves up for atchup with rival L.A, e state title game. LONG BE CH -The Orange Coast Col· lege men's eyball team went old school before talung on El Canuno in the senufi.n~ of the Caltforrud Community CoUege Men's Volleyball Chdmp1onsh1ps Friday. The P1Idles' throwback methods proved instrumental in a 25· l 7, 25-22. 25-22 victory over the Wamor!>. For the Sues' final practtce or the season. Coast Codch Chuck Cutene!>e Sd1d his team followed OC'I trad1llon clnd wore 1970:. attire -ttny short!>, tdnk tops. hedd bands and k.nee-tuqh o;ocks. Cutenese said th<' tight mood dllowed his P1rdtes to dodge pressure, giving way to the semifinal win OCC will plr1} in tomght'i. chdmp1onsh1p game agd11l'.t defendmq chdmp1on LA Pierce at 7 "That \'\-dS d redl 1ce-hredker • CutenP'>t' Sclld of Thurddy '<, prdCllC'C It wdsn't tht• practice I hdcl m rmncl. hut sometimes you need that <,ort of Ke·hredker to get you ready for c1 tl1q mdtch " OCC sophomore outside hitter B.J. L1ghtvoet, a Costd Mesa High product, sldlll.ffied a team-tugh 12 kills. Cutenese saJd Llg~tvoet chd not experience paln in his nghl hafld that had been causing hJ.m prob- lems previously. Pirates freshman Soren Schneider recorded rune kills. wtule sopbo-- more Dave Engle hdd eight. Sophomore set- ter N1c-k Ptsactunslo served up 35 asslSts and sophomore libero Ed Chun had 12 d.tgs to set a single-i.eason OCC record with 223. The Pirate!> (21·1) coasted to an easy wm m Gt1me 1 d11d in Game 2 they overcame a 17 · 14 defiot, outsconng the Wamors ( 12-6), 11·'> down the stretch In Game 3. OCC eaml:!d its hrst lead ell 22-21 and Llghtvoet Idler pounded his 12th kill to close out the mdlCh Bf'n Napoleon posted eight kills for the Wdrnors and Stewttrt Solomon recorded .,even Ryan Stuntz and George each hdd six d1q .. • 11 Wdl> mce for Ul> to be pushed at the tind • Cutenese <,aid of the Carne 3 battle. Thc1t'c, 1mportclnt for when WP play IPIPffP) .• L \ Pwrce defedted the Buc., m hve q.mwc, on March 23 and also ousted them from lc1~t yedC's pldyoffs 1993 or Newer Starmark Vehicles Qualify for New Car Lease Rates All chese Mercet.b,Benz are Swnnark ccrofied for up w one year or I 00, lW mrle' m adJmon w !he ongnu:rl faccar)' warranty . ~!.S~s~.~~~~n ... 11> $2 I, 990 ~U~AlS£i~!h44'"> s35 .990 'Q7 C2JO Sedan s 19, 990 1rK\/11Kk: Fully lqlliptid (SI 07") '98 C230 Sedan Gorpou1. Law Milts (61lS6S) '97 C282.J3dan $24,990 Zlk Milts, W Special (SI I IS6) •99 ~230 Sedan kit ThlSI Gofreous. ( 7114 7l) 'QC} C230 Sedan lficl luuty, Law Ml~ (71S2"4) 'QA MlllO SUV c6~.~~02S61l) ~5,990 $26 ,990 si1,990 '9Q ~LK 230 Ro•dster SJl,990 c6 ft.c'lW, ~~(I lf)Jt) 'QA El20 Sedan s33 ft90 Wlli.IGlty. tl.w C. T""'8 ('47>6)) ,7 '99 MUJO SUV s34 ,ft90 c6 ..,~ (tf1'74) ,7 ;i·~~~'l, ...• , ~!~1!~) $35,990 SJ6,990 196 Sll20 Roadster Hurry Oft Thi; luuty ( llSOU) 'Q9 CLK Cabriolet S.f.m lulld, G'9lt Price (0 I' 65l4) '98 (A20 Vllan s45 .990 ~~'."'cl>:-. Wi1IMr (ltl67') 'Q8 SLSOO Roadster Q',_, CD~PioM (IHm) $54,990 '98 SLSOO Soort $54.990 ,.._.... Aoof, x.M., Loe4iM. (1$790 I) '99 SSOO ~1n s54,990 WM4 u .. Mwt 1".-"-'Y! (41t44*) '00 Cl.k430 C.hrinlet s59,990 s--r a-a. ... ~feis1t1) '01 C1.K430 Clbriolet $59,990 I ... MJ.i:: Sit¥w .... ( 161M1) ~~L~cta, ~9.990 ~.£.l1.!.~ SS9,990 '69S90 ' 84 Saturday, April 28, 2001 COM CONTINUED FROM B 1 Estancia Coach Doug Deats said. ·1starter Brent DaVl.5) pitched well and I thought we hit pretty well. But we sure didn't play well defensively.• The Eagles commltted five of their six errors m the first two mrungs, mcluding three m CdM's hve-run second( dunng which the hosts erased d 1-0 lf-~d. Only hall of CdM's runs were earned. SPORTS Estancia also left 10 runpbrs on base, ' jnciuding the bases loaded in the first, to help CdM win the season stjfies, 2· I ' "That's a far diJrerent l~cllh that ,the one we saw the Jirst ~e around," • Emme said of Est~~\na: which Cdtv:l hdllUllered, 10-0, ctlloWing JUSl one hit, in d hve-inrung, mercy-rule affair March 23. "Doug has done d gredt JOb with those guys." Jordan Hart, who went 3 for 4 With two RBis, smgled in the hrst run for the Edgles, but dn error allowed CdM to be 1t up m the second. , Danny Wlutaker's RBI smgle gave CdM the lead for good d.fld seruor leadoff man Billy Eagle belled a two-run homer over the high fence in stra1ghtawdy cen- ter to make 1t 4-1. Keith Long, who redched on an infield bobble, stole sec- ond and went to third on a wild pitch H e then scored on d balk to (Tlake it 5-1. Estanc1d rallied for three an the fourth on RBI singles by J.B. Goff dnd Hdft, as weU as a bases-loaded waJk to Armando Ortiz. The Eagles received hits from eight spots an their lineup anti were given five walks. But, CdM's defense mdde the plctys GREG FRY I DAlY I'll.OT Corona del Mar pitcher Cavan Cuyler delivers a pitch ln Sea Kings' 6-4 Pacific Coast League victory over vtslttng Estancia Friday afternoon. when 1t needed lo. Eagle, an All-CIF center fielder, illustrated this point, charging a single and throwing lo catch- er Rory McKec>ver, who made d coura- geous tdg to natl the would-be tymg run trying lo score lrom second to end the Estanciu fourth. Wh1tak<>r, 10 nght, and Jason Savopo- los, in lelt, dlso made fine catches to rob potenltal Estdncia hits. Long, the short· stop, as Wf'll as first bcJscmdn Andrew Johns, added hne defensive plays. CdM '>L•n10r n ght-hander Cavan Cuyler cc1rnN I his sixth win in eighl pitching dec:1s10ns, but not without three shutoul rL•IJcf mnrngs from senior Eric Snell, who l~dmed his first save. "Eric has been phenomenal all year on the mound (now a 1.19 ERA ln 172/3 innings) and he really closed the doot today," Emme said. Eagle went 3 for 4 with two RBis, while Whitaker went 2 for 3 with an RBI, start- ing in place of senior Dave Knecht, who is out indefinitely with mononucleosis. "It seems like every time we put Dan- ny in there, he gets a hit or two," Emme said. PAOFIC COAST LEAGUE CoRONA DE1. MAR 6, ESTANCIA 4 Estancia 100 300 0 -4 10 6 Corona del Mar 050 001 x -6 7 1 Davis, Hart (6) and Lund, Davis (6); Cuyler, Snell (5) and McKeever. W • Cuyler, 6-2 . L -Davis, 3-4. Sv -Snell (1). HR · Eagle (CdM). NEWPORT CONTINUED FROM 81 six-inning performdnce in- cl uded h ve stnkeouts, two Wdlks. one run and three hits they scored rune runs but . I felt he was competittve dnd he kept us in the game unltl he bred d bit. Other than that, we dtdn't get much g01ng offensively.· nght field in the fourth. Tars JUntor nght fielder Jon Van- der<,loot earned Newport's lone RBI in the third, when his sdcnhce Oy scored Jones. ·1 don't think what hap- pened yesterday had any- thing to do with today, "said Kiefer, penshing thoughts that his Satlors were tired from the ddy before. "We just don't match up very well with Aliso. They're pretty solid up and down. They ex:ploited our weaknesses today.· ously, the postseason is out of the question, but we want to get to 10 wins. U we play well we can gel to that. ... Some years you're going to have great players, other years you're going to have not-so- greal players, that shouldn't matter. You still have to play the game the right way." A day after thl' Sdilors rdl- IJed for an 11-11 lie with vis1t- mg Tustin Ill a make-up tour- nament game, they cd.ITle up With three hits against the Wolvennes. SEA VIEW UAGUE Auso NIGUli 12 NEWPORT HM80lt 1 Aliso Niguel 130 206 -12 8 2 Newport Harbor 001 000 -1 3 4 Regardless, Kiefer said he wds able to take some pos1 - 11ves from the game Senior right-hdnded pitcher Joel Brown definitely bdtUed, he '>d id Brown went 5 1/3 inmngs, throwing qa pitches ct'> he struck out live bdlters. Newport JUntor shortstop Mike Jones and senior Cdtch· er Gdrret Brant smacked bdse hits in the third mning, whsle senior third baseman Chns Ward blasted a double to "It's tough,• Kiefer sa~d. Difley and Serocke; Brown, Tor- rey (6) and Brant. W -Dlfley, 7-1. L -Brown, 4-4. 2B -Pitchford (AN) 2, Ward (NH), HR -Fielder (AN). "He gave us 1:1 quality start, "Kiefer said. "I know HOOPS CONTI NUED FROM B 1 rdn some dnlls thal promote aggressive- ness and she matched up with a couple 6-2 pldyers one lune. And she JUst bat- tled with lhf'm She's one of lhose guts who snlJ IPs dll the lune when she's off the court, but she's a dtfferent person on the court And the change is instant.· The 6-0 Wluttaker, who netted 80 three-pointers wh1le leading Mesa to a shdre of its first ledgue chdmpionshlp in 1ls 41-season history, could provide instant offense for the Rebels. Whittaker. who shot nearly 35% from bPhind the arc, lied the Newport-Mesa [J1stnct single-game record with rune threes ma tournament gctme last season. H e averaued 12.3 points and 5.6 rebounds, tm route to first-team All-PCL dnd aU-d1stnct laurels. HWhen you're 2-10, you're looking for small goals. Obvi- "Steve has done very weU in prac- tice." Serven reports. "1 le's htl some three-pointers in our scnmmages agrunst community college teams and he has played real solid basketball.• Serven, who has coached m this game before as an ass1stant to Santa Margaritd Coach Jerry DeBusk , will have DeBusk. as weU as former Foothill coach Jun Reames, now a Santa Mar- garita assistant, on the South bench with him . "Those dre two of my mentors, so it's great to have them involved," said Ser- ven, the Newport-Mesa District Coach of the Year who plans to alter his intense sideline sty le tonight. "It's a less stressful environment (than the reguldr season) and I'm looking at it as a reward for havmg a pretty good sea- son," Serven said. "Believe me, I'm going. lo en1oy 1t. I won't lake too much time to put together a game plan. The main thing I want to do is make sure all my players get playing time. Then, if it gets down to the end and we're close, we'll play the guys who are most com- petitive." The South boys roster includes UCI· bound Jeff Gloger (Capistrano Valley) and Ocean View's Torin Beeler, who will play collegiately at Liberty University. Other South standouts figure to include El Taro's Ashkan Nazeri, Sea View League MVP Danny Lambert, Santa Margarita's RJ. Socci, and Paci11c Coast League MVP Jason Garey (Uni- versity). The South leads the boys senes, 21- 14. The South girls. whose original 12- player roster has been pared to 10, are expected to be led by Foothill star Kris- ten Mann. The North girls figure lo be keyed by Troy standout Veronica Johns-Richard- son. The South has won 16 of 23 girls games, including the last eight. Doily Pilot HIGH SCHOOL 'OYS TENNIS Moi;ton-Snyde:r; advance to the semjs at Ojai •A victory * morning pu ts CdM doubles team · in champio~hip final at 3 at Libbey Park. I OJAI ""' Corona del Mar Hlgh'S' doubles combi-' • nation of senior Brian Morton and sophomore R Garrett Snyder advance.ct. to today's s.e~inals ~ ) 1 ~ in 18-and-under competition at the Ojai Valley j~ · I Tennis Tournament "with two convincing victo-~ ~ . F 'd i01• nes n ay. The Sea Kings' pair pushed aside Santa Barbara's Chase Muller and Kevin Yardie, 6-2, 6-1, then in the quarterfi- nals, dealt Coronado High's brothers combination of Jonathon and Thomas Hopkins a 6-2, 6-3 defeat. They continue today at Thatcher High with. a 9:3~ a.m. date, and if successful, will play for the championship at Libbey Pdfk in Ojai at 3 p.m. Singles standout Cameron Ball of Corona del Ma~ ~as not as fortunate Friday. falling in the Round of 16 to Pacific Codsl League rival Aaron Yovan of University High, 6-4, 6-1 JC TRACK AND FIELD Coast men lead; women in second SANTA ANA -The Orange Coast College men's track dnd field team holds a 22-point lead heading into today's hnaJ ddy of the Orange Empire Conference Championships at Santct Ana College. The OCC women's team is in scond place, 37 points behind Fullerton. Pirates sophomore Steven Taeleman won the decathaJon with 5,245 points, while freshman Robert Hulliger, a Cosld Mesa High product, grabbed the shot put title with a 44 -91/4 mark. Coast Creshman Donnie Deschenes became the OEC champion in the javelin throw with a 173-3 mark. Sophomore Heather Shurtleff won the 10,000-meter run Litle, finishing in 40: t 7 .0. The teams finish the three-day OEC Champ1onsh1ps today with action beginning at 11 a.m. JC MEN'S AND WOMEN'S SWIMMING OCC's Kopp~naal grabs second in 100 butterfly • Orange Empire Conference Finals. MJSSION VIEJO -Orange Coast College freshman T1arco Koppenaal finished second in the 100-yard butterfly (51.22) as the Pirates are in seventh place With one day remaining in the Orange Empire Conference Championships at SaddJeback. Sophomore LaureUe Rzeszewski swam to a thud-place fm- ish m the 200 freestyle (1:59.01), leading the OCC women's team to sixth-place before today's hnal events Coast freshman Katie Sackett finished seventh, also in the 200 free (2:05.36), while freshman Heather Pappas had a ninth-place finish in the 200 individuaJ medley (2:34 .08) and freshman 11a Montalvo came in 10th in the 50 breaststroke (34 .67). Pirate freshman Jack Yarbrough took fourth in the 200 free (1 :46.39), while freshman Jeff Sample firushed fifth in the 100 backstroke (58.36). Freshman Jason AJgner came m filth tn the 200 IM (4:30.75) and Jeif Pratt took sixth in the 100 breast- stroke (1 :02.09). Golden West leads in the men's field with 523 points and the Rustlers' women are ahead with 553 points in the lhree- day meet. BAUME & MERCIER ------GENEVE · 1 830------ HF.AD COACH.ES I ASSISTANT COACH.ES CHEERLEADER COACHES Wapted Volunteers • Youth Football Newport-Mesa Jr. All-Ameri can POP WARNER Registration May 5-6 Registration for the upcom- ing Costa Mesa/Newport Beach Pop Warner footbaJJ season will take place May 5 from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. at Cos- ta Mesa Hlg'h's Farm Com- plex parking lot and May 6 from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. at TeWinkle Park. For mort- information, (949) 440-9970. v I . I HAMPTON'" MILLE1s• I lhc vrLLOW °" WHITI GOLD AVAILA•LE WITH Oii WITHOUT DIAMOHOI • QUAllT'l MOYIMIH'I', WAU:"·"l81ITAHT fO ~0 Ml:Tl"I· Auchorfled Je-1.r ... , •Full Contact Prognun/6 Teams •Ages 7 to 14 . Costa Mesa -Newport Beach -Santa Ana Por in.format.ion WI Jim McGu Work (949) ~soo c.-........_ Home (949) 640-SSOS ._..,..._ First Cl• .. F.clllty Provldl"fl Profea•/on•I CERTIFIED & TRAINED RN'S PERSONAL CARE & CONCERN LEADING TECHNOLOGY EQUIPMENT . ~· Specl•I Pt oer•m• For: POLICE OFFICERS • FIRE FIGHTERS PARAMEDICS • MILITARY PEffSONNEL F 111.111( llHJ . l ovv Mo11 th /~1 f>.1ym1·11 r ... FREE CONSULTATION ' Doily Pilot SPORTS Saturday, Ap!il 28, 2001 85 HUIPE CONTINUED FROM 81 it won't be edSy •There's so many good nmners in Uus league, especially in those two races,• Huipe said. "The Corona del Mar girls and University girls arc all so strong. All I can do Is run lhe best lhat I can and post my fastest time. Whatever place that lands me, so be it.· ·Jn her \tlitd yedr on the varsity track tet1m, Huipc can also be seen running an occas1onaJ 800 or a middle leg of the Eagles' 1,600 relay team. "I used to run the anchor leg, but I didn't Like that too ... Auglat s. ttll I' I ll .. UdR: C.0SU Mell Heltiht S-foot·S Wlllht: 115 5"rt: Gir1s tradt Mld f..ad • ~ 1,600~ 3,200 metirs . Coeda; kNln CMH* ,., ... ...-:,-. ........... : "IW>V'$ O.y Out" ........ _It: ·~ng for the OF Masters MeeJ • a sophomore In the 3,200. • ~ ol the WMll XVII: Hulpe ~-fl~ pl«e In the UOO-{5:26) and 3,200-meters (11:52) at last week's Cerri1os lmrltatlc>NI. top-1 O Jinlsh at the legendary Mt. San Antoruo College course . "I just love that course,• Huipe said. "It has a lot of hills and J love hills." Huipe has her dance card pretty full this year. On top of her track time. she is also finishing up her senior project, which involved a lot of community service at South Coast Pediatrics. "My times this year haven't been as good as I'd like." Huipe said. "I haven't been practicing too well, but with my senior project winding down, I can work even harder on my running. I feel if I can get my 1,600 lime under much,· Huipe sdid. ·I'm also not a big fan of running first. I'm picky, I guess.· Of all her events, Huipe is the bigger fan of the 1,600, but believes she IS better in the 3,200 "The 1,600 1s my favorite ·because it's over qwcker. • she srud with a laugh. 5:15 and my 3,200 under 11:13. I'll be m good shdpe.• After her career al Estanc1a wraps up. Huipe won't have fM to go to kick off her coUeijiate career. In adclition to her track and field accolades, I lu1pe currently holds the school's cross country record, which she set at last year's PCL Finals (17:57). Tlus year, the All-PCL selection hrushed stXlh m CJF Division IV Finalswith a 19:08, her second "I'm going to go to Vanguard University next year.· Hwpe sdid. • J wanted to stay m the area and the school IS right by my house. which appealed lo me. f'll run tor them next year." Vanguard 1i. dlso close by to her favorite training grounds. South Coast Plaza. • 1 just love to shop.• Hu1pe said. SCHEDULE TODAY • hsJl•tb•ll Hogh school Orange County All-Stars Games at Orange Coast College Girls at S p m Boys at 8 p m • au.ball Colleqe Vanguard at Azusa Pi>C1f1C, doubleheader, I p m Community college Orange Empire Conference Placement Game Cypress at Orange Co.Mt, noon • Swinv"l11"9 YOUTH SPORTS CHOC to host 'Kids and Sports 2001' • All-day e vent to he lp youngsters. parents and coaches prevent youth injuries during competition . IRVINE -The Ctuldren's Hosp1tdl ol Ornnge County will hos t "Kids and Sports 2001 " Tuesday from 8 am. to 5 p.m. at the lrvine Marriott. The all-day event will help educdte more than 250 coaches, parents and commuruty members not only about preventing YOUTH TENNIS CHAMPS Coach Jon Flagg and his Lido Isle Tennis Club champions. From left: Connor Curry, Cole Hatton, Ian Connolly, John Hutchinson, Daron Arnold a nd Wade Hatton. Southern Calif omia r egional title to Lido Isle •Boys 12-and-undcrs sparkle. NEWPORT BEACI I Th{• Lido Isle Ten· nis Club boys 12-dnd·uncler trdm captured lhe Southern Cahfom1d Rc•<11ondJ championshlp of lhe USA Pc•nn Junior Team TeMTh Ledgue ld'il w1•ekend dl UCLA. Under the direction ot codch Jon Fldgg. head pro at Lido lsll!, th<> tec1m d<•fed ted Rancho Berndrdo Tt•nni., < ·1ub. 3-1, m the finals Sunday. Lido Isle knuckPd oil Pc1nhc Tennis Club of We!.Uukc V1ll<1<Jl', 2-2 (35-32 on YOUTH BASEBALL games}. m the serruh.nals. Ian Connolly played No I singlf''> for Lido Isle. while John Hutchinson pldyt•d No 2 and Daron Arnold No 3 Connor Curry and Wade Hatton played doubles "I'm blessed Wlth a few good dthlPtes. said Fldgg. whose squad won the ldU dlVlS1on Orange County chdmp1onshlp to redch the Southern Ccihlomld regwndls Lido Isle will play the spnng dlVls1on winner m June for lhe nght to pldy ind <>late championship against the Penn Lec1gue Northern Callforrud chdmp1on, in July. HAPPY BIRTHDAY NHBA to host a uction, dinner •Newport Sports Coll('ction Fou ndation to host inaugural e.vent with proce0ds going to NHBA. r--------------------, I I I I I I I I I I High school bo~ and girl~ N~rt Harbof at Palm Springs lnv1tatoonal. all day • Tl'ack •.nd ti.Id Community college men and women Orange Empire Conference Finals at Santa Ana College First field event at 11 a m, l1m runninq event at noon High \Choo! boys and girls Newport Harbor at Orange County Champ1on\h1ps at Trabuco Hills, 8 am m1unes on and off the field. but about mdny health-reldted NEWPORT BEACI r Th,. N(>wport Hdrbor BdsebaU Asso· components of youth athletics. ~on will host its hr.t t1nnuul dUC uon dnd dinner celebrnllon Topics include youth athlete phycology. physical de. velop-ght dt the Newport Sport-. Coll(•( uon Foundallon, begin· ment, strength trrurung, chronic illness, proper nutntJon dnd g at 6 30 drug a?use, am.ong others. • Tickets will be sold di the• door tor $25 dnd proceeds \.\T\ll go For information, call Susan Thomds m CI IOC public reld· 0 the NHBA llons at (714) 289-4183. The cuisine <10d cocktdtl'> df<' compliments of El Cholo I I I I I I L--------------------~ • Vofleyball Community colleqe men Oraiioe Coast at State Champ1onsll1ps Flnal, at long Bea<h State, vs l A Pierce, 7 pm High Khoo! bo~ Corona del Mar, Newport Harbor at Tournament of Champions. at Santa Barbara High .c,_ Community college men · Orange Coast at Western lntercolleg1a1e Rowing Champlon\hlps, at Sacramento, 8 a m SOCCER TRYOUTS Pacific Soccer Club tryouts Open tryouts for Pacific Soccer Club's gtrls under-1 Bs and boys under-16s will be at the Cost~ Mesa Farm Complex, adja- cent lo Costa Mesa High, May 15 and 22. from 6:30·8:15 p.m The girls' contact is Chris Sarris at (714) 557-3939. The boys' contact is Mark Cody al (714) 540-9202. restaurant dnd fe<,llvf' dlllfl' ,., ll•qum•d On Sunddy, the NI IBA will ho-;t d ldnuly fun day at Mariners Pdrk from 11 d m to l p m Some of the dCllv1t1P'> incluclP d home run derby. a pop fly contest. carnival-style gcJmP'> dnd <1 ·• mdnager's game," Outback Steakhouse Wlll prov1ch· lunch !or $7 at the door. The family fun ddy Wd'> dcsi9ned to replclce this year's Opening Day festiVllJCs, whic:h were tdmed out. For informdbon, ct11l D1dnc• Nebon at {949) 642-4704. DEEP SEA FRIDAY'S COUNTS Newpott unding 5 boau 40 anglers 1 S white sea ban, 119 tahco bass, 1 barracuda, 1 sand bass. 10 rockf1sh, SO sculp1n. 27 sheephead. 12 blue perch, 20 whitefish, 3 sole, 1 cabezon Polley II.Ill'• 111111 1ll':11l1111r• .1n--ub("'' tu rhdJU!• .. 11h11111 11c•l1• • I h• 1•11lil1·hr1 ,..~n ,.. 1h1 riel11 lo •'t"lhl1r rr1 t,,,,,f\, 1r11..-"' t1·1r• I·'"' 1 l.1.-1r1r1l .Hhl'n1~111,.111 Plo·H"'f' rrpon 1111\ "'"'" 111111 111.11 1 ... 11110111 I la.-1fwd IHI lllllfl,.Cljjllf•h 11i.• Oo1ih 1'11111 ii• I l'Jll• 1111 li,1l11lil\ 1111 •Ill\ By tu ByPllolw R Y ltlalliln PH'MtW • :1. HI \\ ••• , ll.11 """I • 111tr 111 ,,,. ;cchl'r11..-mr111 fur v.l11rl111 lllil\ l1,. rr•1••ll•1l•lr· r\•'I'' 1111 tli• , ,.., ,,r tlir •pm-.. .w111all~ '"' "i''"1 I Ii~ ilu an11 I .11·1111 • .111 •mh 11• .• 11.,11,..I fur tlif' fir·I Ul'-#r1fhC1 SERVICE DmECTOIZY -for Al Your H~ and~~ -....................... Flctltlou1 Bu1lnq1 Name Statement The tollowcng per1IOnl .,. doing blJsineN .. A.) EduEJtec;ullvea, B) K12 Handhelds, 176$ Senle Ana Ave . 111103, Colt• Mau. CA 92627 Karen Melle Fulm· paur, 1765 Sant• Ane Ave., Calta Mtu, CA 92627 Thie bullnesa le con· dUded by en 1nd1vidual Have you 1tart1d doing bu1ln111 yel7 v ... 411/2001 Karen Marie F11lm· p1ur Thtt etatement w11 hied with the County Clertl ol Qfange County on 04/11/2001 2001111'295 O.ity Piiot ~ 14, 21, 28. Mty 5, ~! St489 ORDINANCE NO. 2001-3 AN ORDINANCE Of THE CITY COUNCIL Of THE CITY Of NEW· PORT BEACH AP· PROVINO AMEND· MENT NO 909 TO AMEND THE ZONING DISTRICT MAP TO ES-TA8llSH A '4·FOOT, FRONT YARD SETBACK FOR THE BAYSIDE DRIVE FRONTAGE THE PROPEA'TY LOCATED AT 2720 & 2730 BAYSIDE DAIVE &lbiect ordlnanoe WM Int~ on the tOlfl day rm· 2001. Ind wa. on flt ~411 dlly ol 2001 AVll II. MIMiU.I: HIP· 'IRNAN. O'Nlll, MDOIW:.:O OLOVIR, ..... ;.::.a. ~ TQA, *""" ~ :a:.e: '=-. .... 14 .... -.1.w....._.,.a.,.,,. ..... MEM8EA: NOHE MAYOR: Gery Adame CfTY CLERK: LeVonne lot, Har1de9I The entire lllCI le avail· Ible for relllew In Iha Ccty c1er1c·1 oltloe ol the City ol Nlwpolt Btach. Published Newport Buch· COiia M•H Dally Pllol ~ 28, 2001 Sa4p4 110 Broadway Costa Mesa • 1 ti? fOUA• llOllS HG OPPOOTUNITY All rut estMt adYert!Slng In INS ~IS subject 10 Ille ftdefal Fak Housing Act Of 1961 IS 1""'1dtcl w111eh malles 11 illtfll 10 ad'llrtiw •any prefecenct. liml1ltlOll or d1tcr11111nallon bl5td on rac., colOr, llllO· loft, MIC, IWldleap, tamu1a1 stalus or n.IJOllal origin, or en in1enhon lo ma~e anr such preference. llmitatlon or OISCMlirlallon. • T Ills ntWIOlptt Wiit llOt knowingly accept an~ aoverllument for rul estate which it in viOlttlon of the law Our reade!a ate lltrtl>Y informed tillt 111 CIWllllnos ICIYtrttstcl 1n t111s MWSpapet are MllaClte on an lqlqf= °' '*" To com · ol dlscnmt- natlon, HUD tol 11• at 1.-....2 .. .eseo. IOYMC8f~ MM. aTATI lflOICa LOCAL 111:1 tml Mt•OOMI www.newpot;m 111 hOIHt.CCMll (~J .. C)) f)'.1 1 ·h ·1ll.f l'h ... 111tid•'4) '""'• ... •• ., .. , l~"ltl" ... 111tl•T 111111 •• H -.1U \uo l..rl .,ih •I""' 1,.•r 111,.11, 11-t:?-:111-n • SEll .. ' "''" ,,, '·' ( \ ll:!tt . .!"' \1 \ •1••1 IA•·I ~ llo ' llouni I .Jq1l11.111 ll I0.1111 ·, 111111111 \~ '"' 1 •• i. • "11ll -l11 II m.1111 ·, 11(~1111 \I I.• I ,.i., ----, : l ~ I ~,,. -. ' ----Deadlines ---- \l1111clu} ........... Fncla~ 5:<X>pm Friclu) ......... TI1uNl,I\ .iOC~1111 Tu1•Mlu1 ......... Momla} :>:OOprn '. 1unl11} ........ Frula1 \ OOp111 \\r1l1w~IJ\ .... Tut>"'lu} 5:00pm un(la1 .......... F'rnl111 ):Ot~im TI111r.-4IJ~ •• \'\1ilm·"4la~ !;:OOpm IUIFfl TOWMIOMll I llOfy IJ!panded &If CUlllJm. $565.000 =: ::..:.! '8r 3 mlglr ,....,-..._ dbl -~ .......... -··-- WATERFRONT FlXEA Noc Fet The Feint of Hllrt M•12W120 .. r.--·--1 J ; .. ~ • ' . . . . .... Sotvrdoy.Apn128, 2001 CRYSTAL COVE ,,,,. .. Piii! ' ln .._,, OlalUll 14 ...... .,~. .., ..... ,,,....,.. Ill ......... "tf!.~! ......... 1 tit I ldnd .. Ulm • ua.11.m.• Fred Serldt ~ 75 '4f.7'7·71N .,.,... ......, ~1 UOO ISl.E quill I Br nNly remodeled, ulllltlH Included. 0"9, no ,,..._ $1.so.'mo. 714-Tn-t212 144 APT8 SOUTH COAST METRO • HUGE E'SIOE e TOWNHOME 3Br 2 sea. Ml!! room. lerrly room. Frplc, l.W'idld Wltr\ 2alr gar. ccmm poo1 a 1tmS S2000f Mo Agent 949-733-«>74 ICOllE PROPERTY UNITSISAJ.E 38r 281 ~ glf. Fp, Piii patlO, yard. Olive by ady. .._ _____ _. Do not di.turb llnlnta. For S..Urge Lot In Wondet'ful Eestaldt Loe. 332·336 East 20!ti St Costa Mesa (umncorporallldl 19 uMS good tnc0me Stl.00 Ono ano Two Bt U'111$ 13 ~ and COWHll> p<oduce ecW1 inoome S2 475.000 OI ol11H (wllf coopefllt ""'11 twok8'1 Do not Olstutt> Tenenla!I Can tor turther details Owner Aoent 949-767-6623 t • t 0 So 8aytrorrt. ytelty JOOO st unlum 28' 381 'len. tam rm pit.r.g ~ mo• ulls !M!H~ 288t ILta~I SpKloue Condo !Br new paint caipet new appl'1 pool spa gym &m pet ol( $950/mo 714·546-4639 2718 Potlola. Avad May 15 S 1750/mo. 714-662·3 t 11 or 714·540-3666 Sunny 28r 1 e. So ol Hwy Fp W O d!ShwiWler new up1 rite h•owd $185()1"10 Avail May 1 949·723-5135 Octtn Fron! 2Br 1B• ~y ~~!led. tau~ 1174 HOIWDIDOl I ~920 or :t::/-4394 -J a . 110 APTS 1110 APTS I . OCEAN VIEW • COSTA MESA COSTA MESA 2Bf 181 houM1 2 car giar, ______ _. _ • w1lk to belen l town. COSTA MESA I SOUTH COAST METRO CMrmng J\nOI 1 Blldroom end 2 Bedroom 1 Blfl. SIJIT<JOOded by leMIS pool In gated CX>ml'IUlty Call 714-557-0075 Hftport Acron 1t1t StrNt 281 I 58&. F~ no pell, S1 t951Mo 1 IM>t Ave •7 949-720-9422 Eit 203 ELEGANT SENIOR LMHO fftfOY , JPJIC'OU• wi:. e11t.11•onment a alts lllrl lnpl ltltllpOtt.tlOO. man' COSTA NEU PORTE' 949·6'6·6300 -!II!!~ 18r :r"' 11'1' wd ,.._.,. Fp ~all! l\Wk~pets close to rt·SQr S8 SIMo 949 378 7637 or 646 1 tOS CM !Mighll. 365 Le Petit Pl 2br 2ba Jbt 2 •lioa SXl00·3000 Fp pato0 2c S230Mno •• Alto 18' 181 911111 unit. $1000/mo. Rpb!!t .... 780-1750 VERSAILLES ~!Br Mini Oceen View S1,195 MalyAM McGulrt •.. ._.....no Prvd Cl AMl!y 1Br new intenor $1150/Mo Includes Ulla 1 c llll80I Studio new Interior, N81Sun •1 Moving Slltl many items. lum. pllnta, books, poftely, toolt, ~ a morel 210 ·Vil L«ca. COfJSIGf Jr.1E rJTS NOW OP£Hl Trteeun Hur"9r Cal ett l Con1l1111m1nt 1 132 Cablillo Snet, C.M. Slq & wt..q Polllly- Vlntlge Jewtlry·AntlQul Ooh ~ 111\d See 0.1 W1have11cltol,_..,., at very ,_.,.. price&! OP£H 11:GIM:OO, Ti.Ill MM4MOSI. VISA/lllC. Refrlg, runs good, $125. NP8 SAT -SUH M 1 • Mojo Coull MHU-7292 I --1 X 11. Superior l --"'= Tlchondero111 Ou1llly l r ------rvn ......,., good1, furn, clothing, 412 mcYCLl!I ) --"hou=llhold=:=....::"-='---- Motel MANAGERS • SPECIAL• $17500+ tax Wkly (Mull ~ llW Ad) 235 ,.,.. a kitcflllllCls 5'tllllld °" ~ i.ndtclCltd ~ FEATURES 24·Hout Lo0by/011tct d11I phonu/Frtt HBO. RUMMAGE SALE Aprll 28, 8e-1p AU ST. CHURCH 18082 Bulhlrd, Fount.In valley Spring a.. Out Wiii Fri & Sat Wht F rendl doors 511. '*""' "*' bb, .._, mltrored Windows IOyS lumturt. Ylntlgl •t-. CXJllcb'S Lp's a 1o11 Mort1 1108 Pam Ave ~ 8Mch 714-M 0580 •BICYCLES. • Mine '· 10, 12 epeed ~glrtl 20'' end 2•" pp 714QM543 8.tllnl Crib, changing table cir-. lhell, .. wl1l1I W"f good condillon C.I 949-646-5646 ESPN a Dwc:IPool a Jacum Guest laun- dry 0oM IO 40!> I 56 Fwys Mins horn OC Store Fl1turel£qulp. Fllrgrdl. co11tgt Ind UOUIOATIOHI 100'1 of bcN Walking dct· l1et111: Med11 Shetmg tance 10 ihopt end Beier Phone Sy1t1m restaurenu Shoppmg C.ru Show-.. ------COST A MESA caaes. MOREi S.. Id Ill , .... MOTOR INN "Mlle. '°' 5*" - Z2T7 liltbor Blvd .. ------ Phollt ,.._..s-414() 1430 GENERAL 1-------' FOR SALE • AWESOME OCICAT . spoiled CFA ~ pllytU I I ~---'· a loYillO 100% domeslic 204 TORI!!~ WHOLESALE FlORAL f3001:!SO 949-64&-&473 ...---ManuflCIUrlf C1Mr1nce Save on ~. stenw, Local ~. ctt., doge ANAHEIM HILLS IBr Eat.te. Privett Br l beth, g1t~1 NIS, NIO, Pool, 111111111111. SIOO/lllO. 71 .. 211-2to5 R00111 In -.,.clout C.M. llolfte, Huge pi. lndry. rel Sift'~ S450m ' U!, d!p l!Q Ml ... MIO MIDWAY CITY lM9e .. holm 1 -mil 1H ee lot, S500 ~ poo d!p 71~ FV Of! bldg lor liM 50CH 19& st X/Mdt Squire 10840 W"'* Mil. ~ HI Sc>eed Internet 714-751·2767 IUl)llfiea, rllbonl & Plaster. for ldopllon ...y Sit l Ume Huge CllsocM1ts. Sun noon""4pf!I Fllfllon HoYr9 1CM llland ~ NETWORK 3le E. 17lh St. t10 Info ........ 2279 M._..MH5 www.1nl111alnetwork.ora WOLFF TAINNG BEDS • TAH AT HOME IUY DIRECT AM> SAVEi COMMERCIAUHOME ... from $19900 Low MonlNy Peymenll FREE Color Cllllog Cal 1=800=711-0151 YAM YAD TO YAM FIFTHI Room Full of Surpt!Me. F IND •••••••••••• 1 ............ ,..., ................. ...-..u..c .... ...,, tllfli....,.. I .......... ____ .. ...,I ........ 1'11 •••••••••••• ....... :_; :.J ·~ •• .J USl!llVATIOJ AGl'.ft8 Fu.ll·Umc o.,. & ~ !lhlfta 812.815 Top-Producers Higher • lklllL Dr:.ial I • .01,ft PIM •Paldaailb •laitttta~ f.Mal>llMrd ID 1!8> In C...lof .... ud,,.,..... c .. n "°'"''• -888-311-4744 FRONT DESK RECEPTIONIST ahlfta rillllblt OORYMAN'S IHN Newi>ort Beech s' M1I 1o alart. w• trMI ~ ptr100 Fu l'llUfllt to 949-673-2101 or cell DtWI at 949-673-2100 NOW HfRIHG Phone~ FUii CK PT, $1-IMr, no t*og. C!I! 1.-.U1-t717 OwnA~ PuU to wort! Up to $2M1M1r Pff~IT ...... H1M WWW tllrtrntCHMoW com The Newpol1 BNcf1 Country Club 11 ICClpllng resumes lof • Bltlqi'8t Mgr/Clencal ' 1upport us1s11n1 to Food and Beverage Director C1ndidatt must hive rtlaled exp r.tftrlbly in hotl>l- •llty/country clubs Computtr literacy In ~Olla 97 tip • req'd. PIHlt lax ,..._.. 949-642-0205 FTM S•lll Position• Avlll. Upsule Newport Beech custom lurn1lur• ADrl Mull lllve en aye lor dll9' end ootor. end tolnt .__ _____ _,, ..... pp !!M40=1233 1988 HONDA GYRO 3 WHEEL, STREET SCOOTER. XI.NT c~o. f500 MH74.o506 . 1 -~1 PUf AFEW WORD~TO WORK FOR YOU (~~~ M2·;~78 Have A Garage Sale! Call the Piiot Claulfieds at [949J 842-5878 ta Piece Your Garage Sale Ad! ~__._quiet 949 675-3773 Htwty Remodeled 2Br 281, Frplc, IYlll now. $2200fmo. Flrat & List, Call Mt-370-3011 kltclleMtle. $700/Mo B1lbol Nlwpoft Realty M$-m...... lit 1e EYWJ'hin9 Goeel Cell tor Appointment MM75-40H °'°" wflll -...,.,_ Min 12 ECE unb tor FT lnfanl I Toddef !Itching p Full bentllta. N694~~~n ._ _____ _,, ..................................... ...... Belt E'Sldt 1oc wlhiltd 10 hnd 2Br 2Bll lrlllr ""'"· walk to 111-tqr J:r r\lpetl s 1 mmo '9e 9 640-9408 EASTSIOE 2 S~ Twnflte ltylt IPl 2tx P ~ 2 CM pallling ~ plus ,.ora99 94~·1073 leave !!!!!I 111aoAHA =I Newly ~ Oujllea f IOOI upper unit .. 'bltoony 2tx It,. $12~mo lean Ava4 5>'1• ...... 7'73 119 APTt HUNTINGTON BEACH 2br 21>a. doN 1o 1110P1 a beKh. ac:llol*, lrwy Ip, llld ~~· S1200mo 1va• 8/1 fl· 20 2~21 Chllfful 2Br 2B1, quiet CdM toe. no pe1$ $1 acx!lmo Hprt Hta lm1111Cut1t1t Sbf le11e SOI Polnnttla 2ba. geiaot. S2200m Opeo 90·75t-12•3 Hol.ee Sooday !Mp 3t1·A LI Perte Ln.. .. N3MI0'7 38r 281 Mtwd llrs nu ctpc. gtlfllle oounter IOpl wld !IV OtCI( ~ remodtted 2c g!lf. ~ 949-C!M-2991 l>Mlgntrt 2Bd29t Fum'd 12500 unfurn'd S2200 poo4 1P1 Indoor garege A\111 now ... 7'041f1 FOR LEASE In CdM 3& 281 ~ flmlllld Jun 3 lllru OCI 21 2000 949-380-9'92 CAMEO Hl<»ILAHDS llO -... 38r 2Sa, open floor plen, meny VoQCt;,~~~ an apartment through c lasalf lad II= 11 •n = 1 ... 11 _ 22 ___ _.. ..._ __ ....... ..-. ( .L <...--l'I l • 'l: Vt. . ~~ .. ..i ' 'W hat have we done for you late ly? · · .J We're waiting to give you "~ $300 off you r move in, $200 off your security deposit PLUS .. Save up to $1200. Ca ll Rob, Corin a, Ryan or Lisa for detai Is 888.641.7632 .., STARTING ANEW BUSINESS?r • • • • • • • • • • .. • The Legal Department at the Daily Pilot is pleased to announce a new service now available to new businesses. ~ will now SEARCH the name for you at no extra charge, and save you the time and the trip to the Court House in Santa Ana. Then, of course, after the search is completed we will fik )Our fictitious business name statement with the County Clerk, publish once a wtelt for four wee/ts as required by I.aw and then file your proof of publication with the County Clerk. Pkase stop by to file your fictitious business statement at the Daily Pilot, 330 W. Bay St, Costa Mesa. If you cannot stop by, pkase ca/J us at (949) 642-4321 and we _ will make a"angemmts for you to handle this procedure by mail If you should have any farther questions, pkase ca./J us and we wi/J be mort than glad to assist you. Good /uclt in your new business! • JAM!;S MAHAFFY Uc<c_......,.,..., • k efUNI anOdpedon Lu.n •la ... fllod by IRS o file 629 Termll\AI Way •25 C"°"la M ua 949 548-3329 OUICKIOOKS SETUP Tr1l11ing & S11ppor1. BooliM::1... ...... IYll 7517 HOME flair • &lbtw/J~nt Reglaze.IR urb1sfi POfccla1n • Fiberglass Sinki • Showro Counters 949-645-7723 , ...... , A TO Z HANDYMAN lns1al, refllCI ~ ~lttlllol1)ettVdoo111window Ooua 714-547258 . . 2001 LINCOLN LS • w. 36 IDOi. doled cnd 1c.. moo c1awn 11, ~QI, Wt fu. lie ftt and cu. S67'6.93 dut ll 2:. ion. Toal peymm1 o( $I I ,S7 I .48. Lcaac end oprioas $17,331.00 lar« is IUpONibk. end rot mileage °"" I 2000 milca per year at 20 ~. JI!! milt. Subjca IO atdlt ipprowal and ialunbilicy. (693600) <,~ dl1 '( l { ti I H'!ll• I E 11·{ lfll I Ill J'ltllllll('f I'll help you resolve those nagging home repair and remodel Issues. Keith IMN74-1741 You 've htard about Viagra ... but have you tried it? • Viagra success is dependent on proper use. Get iolonnadon from a pbywkYa who tpedalizH in Snual OyNuoa:ioa an.d bu paformed owr tl Viap Qia.IQ1 Stu.diq t ~ &Dd6-...,.,o1 (9-49;-::.-7200 hisandhertiealth.com ' ' ·-----· INTERIOR RE-DESIGN & ARRANGEMENT ,.. '"' hi?,-.},,_,,,,/ 0 \1.U.I'<<, 1Hl MO!>"T 01 \t'HAf YOl: HA\"l." ..1.,,....,.., 1u .....,.-:. 11,tJ.tD.r, .. R- I Sa1vrdoy, April 28, 2001 B'1 rr.e Ntig#)borltood Plum&.rl DUIN I S«Wlll ... • CLW191G Sl'lCIAUST TWEEDY PLUMBING 949-645-2352 -.. -=1 .C. TREES TrilHtlNf, R~1HNI :1 & 'lard CluH,. 714.435.17 'ale LIC 62• 1 351 POOL I 819 MIQI T,.. Setvlol SERVICE TrH 1nmming removal --------~ ~ Y"" ~ up Frte .. ltlU515M Pf'wµ:-''.lrt d'J ri l c.:..rn 2001 LINCOLN NAVIGATOR + tu. 36 l'llOlo c.lc.d end lc:ut. moo down plus $430 fxtory tdmc, ht payment, rd. Sec. [)q>ol1r. riit fee. lie liic and w. $7412.71 plus s.430 6iaory rtbut due 11 illcqition. Total pymcnt o( SI S.478.S6. Leuc end ~options S2.MS6.3S. Lessct is rapc>N1lik fur m end fOr m~ O'ltt 12.()00 miles per )Uf II 20 ocot pa mtlc. SUbjcct ro aatic appl'Ol'll and ~(114113) 1996 Lincoln Mark VIII BIKWr.,, Lath«. CD, Moonroof, l.oadcd $13,950 1993 Mercury Grand Marquis t..o.ckd, Gr,.t Buy! .. ,, ....... , ... .11.._......_ ••• - IKE'S CUSTOM PAINTlMG Prolwaona! ei.tn quellty WM lllt.otrl & doQ.s Lf703ot68 949-631-*10 CHUNG S PAINTING Z7 Yews E.p • Greal Pnce' GuenlntM WOii( • Frte Est I Lt375602 714-Sl&-1534 PRECISE PLUMBIHG ~·~ FAEE ESTIMATES L'687398 714-969-1090 ~ R ooflng S p eclalis t<i ,.. .............. ,, "'" WATERPROOF ROOFING Re·roots • Repelra Free Eatlmat.M All iypes of Roofa All Woril OurwttMd .__7_ (949) 631-1085 FIND an apartment throogh ciassrtted -WALL f:OVERQtQS THE STRIPPER! ~if\ ... a11p1pe1 removal LIS88241 714-963-5037 WE GALS shOuld hang togtlt-.i Stnp ~ 11111 ext pen llMCe IO 1'11 crazy ll735976 949-131·2111 1382 WINDOW I CLEANING •I Oo Windon & Sci-. Ouahtf ~. r~ l&le$ ~ ,.. c.ii lot tree tit f14-514-Ul. ON THE MOVE? Sell your extn homehold items in CL\SSIFIFD! (949) 642-5678 II 2001 MERCURY SABLE 2001 MERCURY VILLAGER • w. 36 mos. dosed md last. s.4500 ®*n pl11$ $1 000 rd.ct, la pmc. n~ ftt, IK ftt and w. S6467.4J..Sl.OOO 00 ~tc. Tool ~ymcn1 of snot.48. Lwc end purc:haK opuon Sll.887.SO. lest« is l't'Sponsihlt ll lease end for m• om 12.000 miles pa yar u 15 «nu per mtk Suh)<O co crtdit approval and intunbtficy. (616705) 88 ~April 28, 2001 • TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE 411~­!50 Hel.- competitOf 51 "Gl.-d ltllf'I ooner 52 Buddt\ISI monk 53 In the _,. 54 Q.C.Oldel !le Ot:ttlc:tlMke btrel 58 FMl-ry !59 ·Ate )'OU 1 man -mou•.,. llO fll·up ,..., Look for answers on Monday. BMW Z3 'ff 1 OK Milea, 2.lllr. I 4JEY331) S27 ,1196 CREVIER BMW 714-835·3171 BMW 3111 'Ill Aulo, BIA CD (K27 447) $21,995 CREVIER BMW 714-835·3171 SELL your unwanted 11emt ltlrough claS$lhed BMW 3211 '98 (4A~1;9°" ~995 CREVIER BMW 714-835·3171 BMW S281T '99 26K m11M. ~ (4FYV42C) S37,t95 CREVIER BMW 714-835-3171 S2tl ... ~o. PT9rnlum Pecbol (W•2:S97) m .il5 CREVIER BMW 714·835-3171 aau. YOUlt C AR ,., cL.Aaa1P-111to BMW 5211 111 Auto. WNW, 141( Mn.t ( 4FKF0&5) $33,tM. CREVIER BMW 714·835-3171 BMW 5281 111 17K II. PrwNurn PKbgl (CKll8144} 131,915. CREVIER BMW 714-835·3171 Ctdllllc O.Vlle Concoun '95 &Oil • IN Nolthstar melallc grMft. 1MI ~ prem .......... ~non 1mkr, hk1 new cond 111.995 OC Auto Blu1 141-SM-1111 Bridge By CHAALES GOREN wtth OMAR $f.ARIF and TANNAH HIRSCH WEEKLV IRIOOE QUIZ Q I -Boch vulnerable, u South yoo bold: •l KQI OK6 •AQJ16Jl The bidding his~: Q •-Neilher vulnerable, u South you hold: NORTH EAS'I' SOllrtt WEST l• ,_ ' The biddm& has orocceded: · SOlflll WES1' NORTH .... .... .. !AST •• ' Whal ICtiC?f' do you ,c? Q 2-At South, VUli\mble, you hQld; Wh8I do you bid ~ ( The biddma bas Dl'llCttded: •AKQI 1:7 QUJ O AJ.U •K NORTH EAS'I' sovrn WlST I• ,_ l~ ,._ . J'• Pua 1 The bidda~ has orocceded: ). NORTH bST" SOU11l WEST Whoa action do you take'l l• JO ' Whal ICllOn do you take? Q J -Neither vulncrab'e • .., South you hold: Q 6 -Boch vulnerable. ~ou hold. •AQI0754Jl/ ~ "107it • 9113 • 1092 '\.I A 7 0 84J •AQ 1162 The biddina has l>f'OCCIC';dcd: Pu1ner opens lhe bidding wilh one NORTH '£AST' SOU11f WEST spade. Whal do you respond? I• l • T •prcempuvc Loolc for answl'rs on Mt>nday. Whal action do you lllke1f BMW 740! .. ~ wlWlec* (157173) $35,"5 CREVIER BMW 714·835·3171 CADILLAC DEVlllE 13 low "' IC8 bkle. th (2331921 St0,988 NABERS (71 C)540-t100 c..-.c Sev1lt "t1 $Mr, ....... dMtl (8062731 17,998 NABERS (71 41540-9100 c.-.c !Wt9e • ~mill ... poww, origrlll -suoo 949-875-189' CADILLAC OEV1..LE 't7 Holldl Prelude 511111 'tO low 25kma, llhr, xlrC cond 1oecied II moontool, /Mo (2590041 S21.988 ~ periect. $47111 NABERS FUii prlct plus tu & lie. (71')540-9100 Tomato AUIO 714-437-1931 CAOll.LAC OEVl..LE '99 low "'· Baleta ol WMll'ICy ( 7256681 $21.988 NABERS (714 )540·9100 CADIUAC EJdorlclo '17 Blacll. w . Norll'eUr. mnr1 (6075961 S19 988 NABERS (714)540-9100 CADILLAC Eldorado 'ti Whale peM. llh th. 51k ml (602578) $20,988 NABERS 1714 }540:t100 CADIU.AC Eldcndo .. lnllni1I M30 '91 Com 7811 "' books, teCOl'ds .... "" llhr. CO, ctuome wllMle, lolte new condillon 17.995 ml 597218 oc AIJlo Bltrl 94~S86-t888 Mudl Mteu 't2 70k mi, auto. wNle. fully loaded. CC.. lb ,_ cond. SS.995 Wlll71241, oc Auto Bltrl t4t-SN-1NI Mercedle Binz '20 ... .., White, HCellent condi- tion, 110ll mllet, $9,750. 714-142-3203 DeOble. ...._.. .... Red~. cnme H. lilt yMf model, c:twoo., MW soll top, mt throughout $17,500 714-751·2414 Mercury Trteef LS '17 Sedln. ~ ... poww, *'t wtlll, lolded. cute """"* "" runs S1rong. 6511 ml $6.216 •Tax & lie, TOl!llto Auto 714--437-1931 Oldllnobltt ~ '98 GLS, Beige, an ledler, CO (242C*I) 111,tll NABERS {11')54ft100 Poreclle C4 Tlpllonlc Colipe/Mro '01 lolded, gps, iooo riWt Orly one 1n OCUfY4 "'* .. ONorced. b'C9d IO Ml $'99 000 orig l13tll tct-443-1395 1985 TOYOTA PU Tour. 300 HP low "' (6000681 S2 I .988 NABERS 1714)5'0:!100 KING CAB, 1 owner, MERCEDES BENZ D20 1lnt cond., 128K ml, 'M 731( ""'· 1 ownef. ·~· $3500 949-574-0505 CeclMlc s.w.. ... Low "' V8 NOOhmr (824619) $12,988 NABERS (714)540-1100 cellenl condatJon. s 16.000 714-54$-1757, &1 211 Daily Pilot ·1 · Run your ad in the Newport Beach-Costa Mesa Daily Pilot and the Huntington Beach-Fountain Valley Independent to reach over 100,000 homes. Fax us this form with your credit card # or mail with a check today! ,Run for a week! If your car does not sell, we'll run it for another week FREE! All for just $16 •. D YES, SEU. MY CAR Name Address City Zip Y•---o eeyw,.. ov .. 0-T;-o~....., 0&~ CJ Alt Condit- 0 l-ln<•Jot o~ ... ,.- D WC D ~ D NIX Please ChecJc Pertment Boxes Make Model ------a --. a...,_ ......... CJ-·-Olw.ct-,.., ..... o--o-~ 0. -~ Dl.lfdluTop O NM'M -nw .. ~ 0 c ..... Canlnll CJ Nlf:#(- 0 ~· Ocin•om~ 0 ""'¥ -0 ~ ._ W)nrlow Man to: Dally PDot 330 w. Bay St. 'Cosut ¥~ C.-1'~ Ph....: (94sa) &42·5678 •Paa: (Q4Qf631-~ ___ ,,__ 2000 DISCOVERY =:Certified Pre-Owned = bir BMW --------· For ultimate peace of mind, every Cmaftcd Pre-Owned BMW u backed by The Cat.if1ed Pte-Owncd BMW Protection Plan, coH·rang 1hc 'chide for up 10 2 yea" or 50.000 miles (wh1chC'<cr comes firs1) form 1hc dace of c~pirmon ol [he •l·\m /"i0.000-male BMW New Vchidc l 1m11ed Wmanry." The Pro1cction Pl.i.n indudcs rv.o key dcmcm1 Certified Pre-Owned BMW Limited Warranty .. Backed by BMW of North America. Inc., .md its n.11ionw1dc ncrv.or~ of RMW ccmm. covered rtpairs arc made only by BMW-trained tcchnicuns wing only gcnuint BMW replacement p~m. BMW Roadside Assistance .. P~;Kc of mind follows you uiywhcrc in the USA. 24 hows a day. 365 days a year. 1998BMW M3 ~ l).111( Auau. Vt>r) 1'1<.c' $499~ (X) IOCal 10 ~Ill /,cro '>C'•Urll~ OeJl<NI, Hl.OIXI m1 ~)(at kLw, :?fl\' prr c\<c" mak CF n 111!1> 11 '98 318i I Auao. '•l"tf w/Bl.a.k W1 \')(){,) '98Z3 2111 rr < ll ~ \pttd 14AQlJ716l I '98M3 I Amo. ( n. Wh11t (11 })88) '98 J28i Conwrtibu \pon c I> ff8A040 '9832JiS I !lpou Wh11c wl\i.nJ rH600721 '98528i Auro. CD. ac M~ 14AYIC62JI 27KMILESI 19KMIL£SJ ·-.. IBKMILESI 27KMILES! 25KMILESI _JOKMJLESJ '98 540i Au10, 81uc w/Grry (W681.f~I... "'" ..... J7K MILES/ '98 740iL CO.Ovoma. Wh11c Ml866JI. -22K MILES! '99 323; Co•wrti/M, Cr5. liid(6S253l .. ........ .. .. 18X MlLESJ '99328i Au • WluW w'811d HFZHOH>-24K MILESI l!. ~IBbdi ll~S77) ........... _.... JOK M&# '99 540i Loadtd w11h Opuom (4DK5626) '97ZJ I.ow Miln. ~luac .,flll .. ad, OXlTOHJ LOW MILES! 11 .. _$21.995 '98ZJ Low MJcs. l 8l1r OXln42l ·---·-... -.... $26.995 '"ZJ LoW Mlln.1 Jlu Cf:'97UJ -.. ·-$23,995 '98 323; ConHrtihu Au10, LoW Mila tt.mm> ··-·-.. --.S28.995 '98 528i Auto. Bluc ,.,~ (W W7JI ... --.. " ... $29.995 '98 J281 eo,,.,,.,;i,11 Low Mila. Bid (48XXll~l ----SJ.3.995 '99528i Allio, l~K MJcs. CO (4FKF06~) ... ,_ .. __ ." ...... '"3,J>.95 '995281 Auto. 16K Mila.. Nic.C4Kll11+4) ___ $36,995 4.9.9 528i T-W1t10• 24K MUn (4FYVU4r ____ $37,995 '911 7. Oi.L '98 740i 8-cy, ac Mon (H6?tlll--28K MlL£Sl CD. Low Mila flSJ7461"- •Rates u low u 5.'9°/o APR on approwd credit •AIL c.att&cd to JOOK Mi • Maay More Certified •~Hr, Roedlidc ~ Pro.Oneel BMW'a to °**1 • AU VclUdel s.bject t.o Prior Sek, Plaa ta, • Offu U,... S 0.,. Alta r.bUabott LJcaaw, Doc &a a Apprcmd Creclic ,,._...... ............. . CREVIER BMW Suta ADa Ailto Mall, SS Freeway at EcH"P" • . . . . . . . . Doi!y Pilot NEW 2002 lACUI IA TL--S · _ ... • New alloy wheel design • New ta1lltgtlt lens design • Type S emblem (Type S models) • 260-np 3.2 hter SOHC 24 valve VTEC'"' v~ engine (Type S) • LEV emission rating for Type S • Sport Tuned suspension (Type S) • TorQue-seflSitive, variabl&-assist rack and-pinion power steering (Type S) • Vehicle Stab11tty Assist (Type SJ • 17-tnch alloy wheels with unique design (Type S) • In dash 6<.11sc CD Changer . . . 1 YEAR 12,000 MILE UMmD FAaORY WARRANTY '97ACURA '97ACURA '97ACURA '97 ACURA '98ACURA 3.2n 3.5RL 3.0CL 3.5RL 2.5n Certified Cenified Certified Certified Certified (Pl624) (Pl609) (Pl621) (P1 6l5) (Pl618) 5.9% OR6.9% 5.9% OR6.9% 5.9 % OR 6.9911 5.9~o OR 6.9% 5.9% OR6.9% '99ACURA '98ACURA '95CHEVY '95MERCURY '96FORD 3.2 llNAVI GSR LUM/NA VILLAGER TAURUS Certified Certified Auco, ps. AC Auco, ps. air Auco, AC. ps. moonroof (Pl 547) (Pl620) (Pl 452A) (Pl 566) (21110A) 5.9% OR6.9% 5.9% OR6.9% $6,950 $7,950 $7,950 '93 TOYOTA '97BUICK '95 MITSUBISHI '98NISSAN '97 MITSUBISHI CELI CA REGAL MONTERO ALTIMA 3000GTSL Auco. AC, moonroof V6,Auro,AC Auto, VG, AC, ps Auro, AC, ps, CD 5-S~.AC, PS (Pt578) (21122A) (21008A) (Pl 595) (Pl 566) $8,950 $10,950 $10,950 $10,950 $13,950 '99 MITSUBISHI '99NISSAN '96LEXUS '98ACURA '99HONDA ECUPSE MAXIMA SC300 TYPER ODYSSEY Nice car Loaded Loaded Low MiJcs Auco, leather, AC (Pl 597) (20748A) (Pl606) (P1616) (Pl 592) $15,950 $16,950 $20,950 $22,500 $23,950 .. ._· .. ~ ........... ~ . . . . . ' Saturday, April 28, 2001 89 . . . "97 ACURA 2.2CL Certi fied (P1581 ) 5.9% OR6.9% '93NISSAN QUEST Auco, V6, AC. ps (211 I SA) $8,950 '98/NFINITI 130 Auco, p ,AC (Pl 559) $14,950 '97LEXUS LS400 low ~tiles (P1623) $36,950 . . . Devilles • Sevilles • DHS • DTS • SLS • STS One 2002 Escalade Left! . 2000--CADILLAC STS 11NEW2000 0LDSMOBILES $54192.00 -8197.00 List Price SAVE $45995.00 SALE PRICE '93 FORD THUNDERBIRD low miles, ovto, V·6, new ca trode·inl (l 14177) '93 CHRYSLER TOWN & COUNTRY 7 pos~. i.m+-, excell.nt condition! (592323) '93 MERCURY VILLAGER IAolh«, CD, rear oir ond mo<wl (Jl 3571) '91 CADILLAC SEVILLE s.i-, i.othe<, squeaky deont (806273) '93 CADILLAC DEVILLE low miles, ice blue, leolh.r, greot •tylet (233192) '95 CADILLAC SEVILLE low 551( mtles, I.other, moonroof, alloy> & montl (820043) '98 OLDSMOBILE SILHOUmE GLS Beoge, Ian leolt.r, CD, duol doon, reor oor (242080) '96 CADILLAC SEVILLE s.om.11 ~. l.ollw, Wf* d.onl (833148) '97 CADILLAC ELDORADO Tow, 300 H P ~secw. bloQ. i.o.t., moontOOI, CD and ,_.., (607596) '99 CADILLAC ELDORADO . Whitt j)90li, 1an leaf., many eadrm, s1• miles 16025761 '98 CADILLAC ELDORADO lour, 300 H P ~. loW mile., many ulrml (600066) s5,988 '99 CADILLAC DEVIW low miles, white, j)90li, Ion l.atlw & bolonce ol wom:inty. (725668) 56,988 '00 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE Only 1,710 miles, Beige, Ian I.other, moonroof, CD and morel Mint1 (243969) 57,988 '97 CADILLAC DEVIW I.Ow 25IC miles, b&ocl!, I.other, bolonc:e of waminly, --'lent condition! (259004) 57,988 '98 CADILLAC SEVILLE SLS Whitt f)9Qrl, Ian l.olher, Wf* deon, bolonce ol WQrl'Onfy. (925493) 510,988 . '98 CADILLAC CONCOURS · low ma.. whitit '*"4. Ian l.olher. bob-ol warranly. (7.t0264l $14,988 '99 CADILLAC ELDORADO low 141< mil., leolh.r, ~ ol worronty, pr9¥lous ,...,, (600769) 516,988 '00 OLDSMOBILE SILHOUmE Prwnier, ¥ideo .a.n, reor air, CD, cluol doon and montl (3'8569) 517,988 '98 CADILLAC SEVIW SYS low 21111n11e, ~.,...,,CD, olays and mont1 (906887) $19,988 1 99 CADILLAC SEVILLE low mil., V-8 ~.-. many lldrcnl (904367) 520,988 '99 CADILLAC CONCOURS low 20IC miles, polo, tan lealh., CD and mont1 (705523) 5 21,988 '01 CADILLAC DEVIW low 12k rnilea, .+wt., tan lealh.. CD, 'o..-Sa', bd. ol _.... fn"'. IWl4al. (I 1'230I 2600 HARBOR BOULEVARD COSTA MESA 1:11111 s21,988 521,988 521,988 523,988 524,988 526,988 5 26,988 527,988 529,988r 531,988 531,988