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HomeMy WebLinkAbout2000-06-02 - Orange Coast Pilot- I . , . . . Costa Mesa, _, never lacking: ' le. soup'ttrhen _..,.1en-., ldaool . ~ •9r1-by-.. lilmsaJf, •••• ,.bit~tbestu- denNM"lb'iiaalles to achieve it 1*• the many obstacles standing in 1ler way. Every year around this time, the Pilot ts flooded with very qualified nominees for the section, and this year was no exception. It was easy to find more than 100 remarkable kids in our two cities. '.(he sununaries appearing on Pages 8-15 are on.ly thumbnail lketdaes of these kids' looglllta of . _, ..,.allhments, achiev...-n11 .._,llld'ng qualities. 90 tllm a look at our~ '-lllly'l latunt. It certainly appeen to be in good hands. Enjoy. -n. fdllals 111•mTOUt I Rolling on · ton rCMdl could 9ft '""prldlr .. ... ...,. ....... •••1&mn ....... bondoppo-........ CCIII' lllft ftlll'I. .......... . . Corona del Mar ior is one of the taekwondo stu- hool -and in faced his difficulties he achieved things no one dru he could. Jeremy successfully that rt in regular third-and de classes for science, physical education ELL PAGE 16 INSIDE nll IMY PILOT ... mclll,NL Former Orange County ao ct.tms ...... l8y Oub owners blcled out o1 • sn.1-m.111on .... for flMndll Min; dub CMMn ~ fie triiid • 9dlDft ..... ... ...,, ...... • .. . . . . FRl~AY, JUNE 2, 2000 DIANA LOllSI MORELLI At 17, Diana MoreHi's drums tWte already been~ 1911 .-... -·-·---.1' ••• • • a IS&~__J ..... t ..... " -" 2 Fr~doy, June 2, 2000 - FYI • WHAn 'Cantor's Take 4: A Musical Montage' • WHIN: 7 p.m. Sunday • WHIM: Temple Bat Yahm. 1011 Camelback St., Newport&~ , . • TICKETS: $36 for reserved seating, $18 for general seating and $12 for full-time students and seniors • CAU: (949) 644 -1999 Cantor Jonathan Grant wtll partidpate in Temple~t Yahni's Musical Montage show this S~day. PHOTO BY SEANHlu.ER /DAILY ~OT canto ts expand . repertoire Claudia Figueroa DAILY PILOT I n Judaism, the cantor leads the con- gregation in singing or chanting prayers from the Torah. It i~ a presti- gious position that has-been part of the religion for hundreds of years-a highly respected role that almo!lt always fol- lows tradition. But things will be very different at 7 p.m. Sunday at Temple Bat Yah.m in Newport Beach, when Cantor Jonathan Grant will add show, tunes and jazz standards to the mix. "Cantors Take 4: A Musical Mon- tage,• also will include cantors Mark Childs, Stephen Dubov and Evan Kent contributing an even blend of liturgical classics and Broadway showstoppers. Liturgical songs will be mixed with jazz and Broadway classics in Sunday program at Temple Bat Yahm · College-Jewish Institute or Religion. Grant said his training at He brew Union College-where he met·Dubov. Kent and Childs-involved the Reform movement. the most liberal or the three major branches of Judaism. which include Conservative and Orthodox practices. · The Reform branch allow!i Grant to explore other avenues of music-and keep a clean conscience. between t.iaditional cantonal music and trying to perform music with a modem edge,• he explained. Grant believes some of the greatest performers in history have been Ameri- can Jews: Irving Berlin, Eddie Cantor, Benny Goodman and Jerry Lewis are just a few who, Grant said, laid the· groundwork for hundreds of kids with stars in their eyes. · · •Tue approach from a musical stand- point is almost identical,• he said. •Tue main difference in cantorial music is it comes from a place of faith and it comes from a desire to inspire the congrega- tion to pray. In that sense it's on a deep- er level 4 than secular entertainment. •Our performance will definitely be a departure from traditional style,• • Childs said. "Every cantor has a bit of the show biz bug. We're all performers, basically.• Daily Pilot CHECK IT OUT Add library books, videos to your fitness regimen . I f June gloom is here, summer can't be far behind -time to get fit, fight fat and figure out how to look good on a beach, with help from library resources. "Forget diet books,• advises "lbe Skl.nny," a hilarious profile of dieting women's outlooks that includes some savvy seaets from those who have successfully mastered the art of staying slim. From oddball tips like brushing your teeth early at night to salting your dessert, this book is so funny it may help you drop pounds, because you can't eat while you're on the floor laughing. OK, time to get serious about getting a grip on girth. While you may not lo& like a supermodel overnight with "bdu's Simply Ht." you can train like one with this ex~ program put together by the trainer who created Cindy Crawford's 10-million- copy "Shape Your Body Work.out." -the ~-sell- ing fitness video of all time. . If you p~f~ your instruction on videotape, find inspiration from another supennodel on "Kathy Ire- land's Body Spedftcs." The 50-minute tape features three 12-minute routines for abs, buns and thighs, pedormed by a cover girl who is also a certified fitness instructor. There are more than 100 inno- vative ways to lose weight and feel great in "Ftt Happens" by fit~ ness guru Joanie Greggains. Along with strategies for fighting fat and beating food cravings, the TV host of "Morning Stretch" weaves personal anecdotes, easy- to-read charts and odd tidbits (did you know salt can alleviate back pain and that pep- pemrint is an appetite suppressant?) into this plan for lifetime fitness. --- Oprah Winfrey trainer Bob Greene takes an equally holistic approach in "Keep the Connection ," the sequel to "Make the Connec:Uon." in which Wm- Crey and Greene introduced the sensible diet and exercise program that helped Wanfrey change her perspective on permanent weight loss. Greene ~es fitness to the next level with this guide to keeping the momentum going, which includes a section of healthful recipes with detailed nutritional breakdowns. For teens just learning about the benefits of good nutrition The program will substitute for "First Sunday in June,• an annual music event that Grant started six years ago- soon after being appointed cantor- with the temple's pianist Thomas Mac- farlane, who will perform with a trio Sunday. "I wanted to do something broad- based and different than previous years,· said Grant, whose regular duties ·include leading songs at temple services and preparing boys.and girls to sing and chant from the Torah at their bar and bat mitzvahs. *Many (Orthodox members) would contend that the role of cantor is to lead worship services and anything beyond that would counter the vocation of the cantor,• said Rabbi Mark Miller, who practices Conservative/Reform Judaism at the Newport synagog\ie. •For a long time, many of the great cantors J?Crformed in front of general audiences in nonreligious venues,.. he said. "This is an extension of that tradi- tion of the prayerful and liturgical in a variety of mediums. During the program's first half, the quartet will sing 20th centwy Hebrew' prayers set to music, followed by Aaron Copeland's "Zion's Walls.• The carltors will also perform two Yiddish songs. Jn the second half, they will show their multifaceted backgrounds by per- forming selections from Broadway and film soundtracks. and regular exercise, "The Right Moves" encourages girls to real-,. • ,ize their full potential by devel- oping a solid self-image, eating right and becoming physically fit. There are quizzes, quotes, Grant comes from a musical back· ground that includes appearances with Opera Pacific, Los Angeles Music Cen- ter Opera and Lake George Opera Fes- tival The 41-year-old baritone has received vocal prizes from the Music Teachers Assn. of California and Per- forming Arts Foundation of Santa Bar- bara. *l always wanted to be a cantor." said Grant, who onJy recently decided to pursue the career at Hebrew Union "I don't believe a cantor has to restrict himself to sacred music,· Miller added. •u he or she is blessed by God with a beautiful instrument, then it can legitimately be applied to other musical expressions.• In previous years. Grant has present- ed a number of liturgical classics in his concerts. This year, he put together a program that will spotlight Broadway melodies ranging from "I Can See It" from *The Fantasticks" to a cantor's spoof set to •Anything You Can Do" from •Annie Get Your Gun.• ·1 always try to find a baldnce Childs said the cantors will cut loose and •do stuff we don't normally do on the pulpit H Taking bis act one step further, the program will include an unusual selec- tion of jazz standards, such as •Night and Day• and *I've Got You Under My Skin." Grant, who lived in New Orleans for /\. a few years and devoted most of that time to listening to Artie Shaw and Stan Getz, said this will be the first time jazz music has been played at the temple. Hit will be interesting to see what will happen,• be mused. BRIEFLY II 11111001 The Temptations to appear at Perfonning Arts center The Temptations will be featured in the second half of the show. Founder Otn Williams will slog with the current incarnation of the Temptations, which includes first tenor Ron Tyson. bari- tone Barrington Henderson, firstlsecond tenor .and baritone Terry Weeks and bass (714) 755-S199; ~ ~ 11d•lll1ldlll lit (714) 740-7878i 01 bvvllillngtlle•mn box office, fiOO Town~.,.._ '72 Deirees and SUnnf at SCR this weekend fun activities and common sense advice in this upbeat guide to physical and mental well-being. No matter where you sit on the diet roller coaster, you're bound to find inspiration in "You Don't Have to Be 1b1n to Win," the account of a 330-pound sedentary woman who shed 130 pounds and got fit enough to compete in the Ironman Championship Triathlon in Hawaii. While Judy Molnar may not be a con~n­ tional fitness expert, she shares a •journey from the couch to the course" that is so motivating, you might want to read it on the treadmill. • CJllCX rr our is written by the staff of the Newport Beach Public Ubrary. This week's column is by Melissa Adams, in col· laboratlon with Andrea Jason. junior high students to see their peers in a rww~ The Temptations, whose Motown har- monies and fluid dance mcM!S spawned hits such as "Just My Imagination," •My Glr1" and "The Way You Do the Things You Do," will be at the Orange County Performing Arts Center today and Saturday. The group will appear with the Padfic Symphony Pops. The first part of the ~ gram will feature the symphony's salute to the otympks and music from "'The Oder House Rules.,. among other pieces. The shows will begin at 8 p.m. llckets are tory'I Young C.0.• bl~ ... HarryMcGilbeny. ' . TheJr.TMn ..... of=Nlll ..... S2l to S54; studenthenior rush tickets are progrwn wll 1t9 '!72 :•• """" $14 and may be pu~ at the cent~s at the thMtllt thS wut-nlt The c:mt m1111bets: LMnn lawiett, ..... c.llloultlll. ~ ChJng. Jemi o.NMlt. ~ Erwin. Comar Acodellti, Nlmle c;,. --~Megan Gust-a-. 0.. Hal ..... Ala .... c.tt ............. Migdal. 1Nvir1 Miller and. ....... ~ -no ..... SWlny" wll be pet· farmed• 1 ... 5 p.m. __ .,..Sun- VOL M, NO. 131 box office at 6:30 p.m. the night of the per--The pW/-Wle:::• rl·-····· fonNnce only. Tickets may be purchased dirlctea ~..., ..... ,..,. •• ., on h SICIDllCI "-' E 'blw\<lnlllr Olh9. a.. Miia. 1ldrm .. $5. for men l11bn11tlo1t, ail (714) 10l-5555. through the Pacific Symphony Ticket Office, on a ntament.....,. lft tllM Of edYet1lsemenU hefe n <Ml be reproducad without written pef· mission of copyright Olll/l'lel', ttOW JO REACH us ClraMtlon The Times Orange County (800) 252-9141 Adwtthlno Classifl9d (949) 642-5678 Display (949) 642-4321 EdftoNI Hews (949) 642·5680 SpoftJ (949) 574-4223 New,, Sports Fax (949) 6*-4170 E-mail: ~lypllotef.iimacom MelnO..... IUll .... OffQ (M9) 642-021 lulfniltl , .. (949) 611-7126 ~r.,onr-~--. • dlwllloll of.,_~.,... lllNI. WEATHll AID SUlf TEM'IRAl'\MU Balboa 72161 Cofona del Mar 73162 ~Mes. 7'4163 Newport h acti 73162 Newport COMt 73162 WPOMCAIT w. hlM • westerly IWlltl toct.ydethler'rilg ...,\, the wMt-to <Nit~ level. LOCATIOlll -~ ....... " ........... .l-4w Nlwport. ...... -....... ..2-4 w lledtW'I.. ................ .l-4 w ..... ~ ........... -... ~. CAMil ...... - .......... -".l-4 w TIDIES 10DAY Flnt low 4:06 a.m ...................... -13 Flnt h6gh 10:21 •.m. ................ " .. 4.0 Second low ... 1:25 p.m .................... -.1.5 Second high 9:41 PJn. ...................... 6.5 MftlmAY ""'low • t:H a.m.. .................... -1.6 ,.,. high , 11:3' a,m. __ " ........ -A.1 Semndlow ~12 PJft.--·-· .. ·-··'" s-tdhlgh t0:2'7 p.m._., ......• .&.1 -. ·-. COSTA MESA •......,'°""'"'*Loud musk was reported In tM 1IOO blodt at 1:35 a.m. ~· • • ......., Lane: A petty theft was r.,,orted In tM 3100 blodt at 7:45 a.m. MondaY. . . NIWPOllT IEACH tM G btodl M ~ SundeJ. • ...... ..,_ A put-. w ltolln from lft unlDcUd C8r ....... M ft lllbol ,.., Mtt•n I MIL end .· Daily Pilot .. Friday, June 2, 2000 3 Goodbye, Tex... it won't be the same without you I H i there, Tex, whad-da ya say?" U you're a swing fan, that line needs no explanation. U you're not. it's the opening line from Glenn Miller's "Chattanooga Choo-choo" - and the "Tex• iQ question is Tex Beneke, who passed • away Tuesday in Costa Mesa at the age of 86, Beneke was a legendary figure in the Big Band era and a truly nice guy whom I . bad the pleasure of meeting..a ·few times. He was born in ' Fort Worth, Tex., and was · instantly popular with every- oqe he met. His soft, Texas drawl put everyone at ease. Like swing itself, it was the vocal equiva- lent of a mischievous wink that said, "Let's hav~ some fun." Add the silky harmony of the Modemaires vocal group to the mix, and you can be assured that people will still be listening, and smiling, 100 years from ·now. "Pardon me boys, is that the Chattanooga Choo-choo? Yaz, yaz, track 291 Boy, you can give me a shine. You leave the Pennsylvania sta- tion 'bout a quarter to four ... read a magazine and then you're in Baltimore. Dinner in tbe diner, nothing could ~ finer ... than to have your ham and eggs in Carolina.• It was Miller himself who dubbed Gordon Beneke "Tex." Although he's most often remembered for his vocals, Beneke was a top- notch saxophone player. Bandleader and drummer king Gene Krupa auditioned . when Miller dJscovered that urb of Los Angeles." 1be ties. Andy only accomplished Beneke could sing. idea being, isn't it odd that one tlung in all hiS years in Even though "Chat-someone who played world-Congress, but it was a lulu. It tanooga Choo-cboo" and famous venues like the Para-was called the' "Vdlstead Act" "(I've Got a Girl In} Kalama-moWlt, the Palladium and the -better known as "Prohibi- zoo" were the two biggest Avalon should end up in that • tion. • As of Jan, 16, 1919, in 'hits in history at the time, sleepy, buttoned-down "sub-these United States, it was no Beneke was never entirely urb of Los Angeles~ called booze, no way, no how -but comfortable witb 'the spotlight • Orange County? lots of fedoras and overcoats. that came with singing. In my Hmm. It could only be Development and tu-tech opinion, be never got the full called "ironic" if you didn't in Orange County were very respect he deserved as a sax know much about Ule history slow in the 1920s and early 'OMMENTS & CURIOSITIES player, especially compared of a city called Newport 1930s, but bootlegging was ~ to hiS contemporartes·Cole-Beach. · quite robust. There were two · · man Hawkins and Johnny " No question, today's New-ways for a.Qever~ge entrepr~- Beneke and was blown away, Desmond. port Beach is a sophisticated, neur to get inventory: Make . but his sax sec;tlon was full. One measure of his real stylish lady of impeccable • the stuff or smuggle it in. He recommended him to value, though, was that of all breeding and substantial lf your marketing plan Miller, who was putting the world-class players, means. But in the 1930s and called for smuggling from together a new band in New Miller's wife ~ked Beneke to 1940s? Wow. And that's an Mexico, the Orange CoWlty York at tbe time. Beneke take over the band after understatement. coast was the first stop on the picked up· the phone one Miller's plane vanished over Balboa's Rendezvous Ball-distilled superhighway. Ships night in Detroit and heard a· the English Channel in • room was a mecca for the Big from Mexico would transfer voice as distinctive as his own December 1944. Bands, and the fans that wor-the hooch to high-powered on the other end. After the war, B.eneke shiped them -hundreds of launches, which would race "ls this Gordon Beneke?" expanded the band to 36 fans on any given night, up the coast Ulen slip into the caller asked. "My name is pieces with strings (a change shrieking, whistling, dancing coves along the Laguna and Newport shorelines. Glenn Miller. I'm starting a Miller had planned before his until they were forced out the Large, unpleasant-looking band in New York, and you ~eath) and thrilled audiences door in the wee, small hours. men would load the stuff onto come highly recommended for another four decades with But the Big Band era was-trucks and, in no bme at all, by a gentleman named Gene the unmistakable Glenn n't the first chapter in New-people in speak-easies and Krupa.· . Miller sound. At the end of the port's "wild child• past. It was hidden dubs far and wide Beneke set out for the Big day, Beneke was a ~e gen-~me of the last. The book would be slurring thelI words Apple immediately, at the Ueman, a great musioan and ttself could have been and knocking things over. height of a fierce wmter a Big Band institution, despite penned by detective writer By the early 1930s, charac- storrn. When he finally his unrelenting modesty. DashJ-lammett. Lt all started ters like Tony "The Admiral· • arrived, Miller shook his A funny thing happened, with an obscure congressman Comero were operating hand and said, "Hi there, though, on Beneke's journey from Minnesota named "floating casinos• from Santa Texas, what do you say?" home. At least two reports in Andrew Volstead. Monica to Newport Beach. As Thus was born Beneke's the national press coverage of Volstead was a dre8fY. · Jong as the ships stayed at nickname, and what would his death implied it was a bit humorless, generally least three miles offshore, become the opening line of ironic that he passed away unpleasant man ~ho never, what ..yas called the "Dolls, "Chattanooga Choo-choo," • ... in Orange County, a sub-ever got invited to any par-Drinks and Dice" fleet was as good as a license to print mon- ey signed by the president Handbills and posters that read "Let's Go Nowhere Torught! • werEf tacked up everywhere and everyone knew what they meant. The police? Please. Jbe county sheriff m Santa Ana was the top cop, and you'd be better off calling Comero fU'St. In fact, Com~ro·s budget j for "salaries: law enforce~ ment .. was probably twice t9~ size of the stieriffs. So by the bJne the Ren- .dezvous and the Big Bands . came along in the '30s, New- port was already where it was all happening. In 1933, Prohibition was repealed and the rumrunners faded away. But the floating casinos bung on un~ World Warn. It was "jump, jive and wail" at the Rendezvous until the Big Bands started to shy away from dance dates after the war. So, goodbye, Tex -and you couldn't have picked a better place to cross over. Around here, upscale retail · and tu-tech may be the order of the day, but that eight-to- the-bar tempo and the beat of the tom-toms are Just below the surface. I gotta go. • PETER BUFFA is a fOfmer Costa Mesa mayor. His column runs Fn· days. He can be reached via e-mail at Ptr840ao/.com. Craig Brown Insurance "For life's little Accidents!" J C Jll toe.Li~ tor .Hilo & home ) 0\\ ncr' ln-.urann·' . (949) 760-1255 • ---. GET cnETED_ 10 @omcast DIGITAL CABLE 5 A R A II I l S S I C A r A R K C R ... .ey .... ... , m ~:·:t~'EES\jE~ff~j~{y~1~9~~E;;i ...... INl O ar "''""' Tll~OA\ ..... 10 ( ~ • r t ~:: ::-••• •" ·: :: ..... ~ .: •••• ! I •• ·~· '-' -rrs...,, TV"' HllQ----...-.~--......................................... _....., _____ ~---·· $4.95--Connection · (Save over $3000) Why pay more for a million dollar look? . Plus, order now and -receive 1 /2 off your 1 st month of any HBO or Cinemax ~kage! · Call today and ask for the Digital Gold Package and enjoy 12 channels of HBO and 8 channels of Clnemaxl "Known for furniture and accessories • at a fraction of the cost ... ,, .. Daily Pilot . ·MUS•• 1: • 11n 11111 111 nn Anti-Measure A fliers show up in mailboxes DMette Goulet DAILY PILOT NEWPORT-MESA -One of numerous Measure A campaign fliers arriving at homes is not like the others. ON THE WEI To access an archive of news articles, eqitorials end a list of f requently asked questions about Measure A. log on to the Daily Pilot at www.dailypllot.com and click on t he icon labeled ·bond debates .• The mailer -sent by a group calling itself the Citizens for Equi- table Taxation -urged the .C,000 residen,.ts who received it to vote •no" on ·the proposed $110-mil;-( lion school bond. er pays 1 % of the assessed value Popejoy, Bay Qub in legal dispute The small group of Newport of their home, those in Mello-Roos Coast residents are contacting districts pay about 60% more in only voters in Newport-Mesa's real estate taxes. The literature five Mello-Roos districts: Newport also highlights Capistrano Valley Coast, Newport Ridge, Bonita Unified.School District's decision Canyon, Castaways and Harbor not to include the residents of Cove. Mello-Roos districts in its school •Former Orange County CEO claims the club's own- ers backed out of a $73.5-million sale for finan- cial gain; owners say he tried to extort them. Noaki Schwartz OAA.Y PILOT NEWPORT BEACH Both claiming to be victims of high-stakes hnancial deception, a prominent banker and the owner of the Balboa Bay Club have exchanged lawsuits as well as bitter accusations over a failed purchase of the club. Banker William J. Popejoy, who became the chief executive of Orange CoWlty after its 1994 bank- ruptcy, filed a lawsuit against club owner Beverly Ray, claiming that she backed out of a deal to let him pur- chase the $73.5-million landmark for her own financial gain. Ray, however, claims that it was Popejoy who couldn't come up with the money and continually tried to renegotiate the terms and lower the asking price. The club's sale, which has been kept tightly under wraps for the past six months, began simply enough. ln October, Ray -whos& family has owned the club for nearly three decades -recruited Popejoy lo find investors for the club. With his finan- cial background, 12-year member- ship at the club and position as one of the gove.m.ing board members, be seemed a good match, she said. · "I caµed him because I thought he'd be able to put together a group of local investors,• she said. "And he ¢<1, "In fact. maytie I want to be the investo'r.' I was surprised, but pleased.· Precisely what went wrong after that is in serious dispute. The club, once an exclusive spot for millionaires and Holl}'Wood types in the 1950s, is in dire need of reno- vation. The city-OWned site houses a hotel, meeting rooms, apartments, a beach club and yacht marina. Completing that renovation is a condition in the Bay Club's 50-year lease extension with the city, as is making portions of the exclusive f~cility open lo the public because it sits on publicly owned tidelands. The large-scale redevelopment project requires financing, which Ray, and International Bay Oubs, lnc. Chief Executive David C . Wooten, say they were actively pursuing par- allel to their discussions with Popejoy. But Popejoy's attorney, I.rvine- based Ron Rus, claims it was Popejoy who was securing the desperately needed financing. Ray claims Popejoy couldn't come up with his share of the agreed price, which was $60 million, and pushed the escrow date back from Oct. 26 to March 31. But Popejoy's attorney said it was Ray who kept trying to renegotiate the'terrns, finally walking out on the -deal once Ray had secured Popejoy's financial expertise in getting banks to. back the renovation project. When the deal fell out of escrow, Popejoy demanded a $4-million pay- ment for his help and threatened to ' Fri. 6/2 sue her, according to the lawsuit filed by Ray's attorney, Chris Dubia. Part of the club's deal with the city calls for ~y to pay 20% of any profits from a sale made within two years of completing the renovation. Rus claims that av,oiding this pay- ment was a factor in Ray's decision to pull out of the deal with Popejoy. "She renegotiated (the deal) to make it appear lower for her tax reason5 and to avoid paying Ole city what they would be due,# Rtls alleged. Wooten, however, said that claim was ridiculous and said Popejoy is trying to extort the company. "The city has to approve the transaction and. we have to live with them fo~ 50 years,• he said. "It nev- er crossed our minds to cheat the city.• When Popejoy's $4-million fee was turned down, he slapped Ray and Wooten with a lawsuit demand- ing that either she sell him the club ·or pay him $50 million in damages. Ray, Wooten and International Bay Clubs, lnc. then filed a lawsuit against Popejoy, seeking a ruling that Ray performed her contractual obligations and that Popejoy is owed nothing. · • While the lawsuits slowly find their way through Orange County Superior Court in Santa Ana -a process that could take up to a year -Ray and Wooten vow they will start the club's renovations in mid- July. "I hope it doesn't delay the com- mencement of construction,• said Dubia, Ray's attorney. "If it does, it will lead to additional lawsuits.• ln Mello-Roos districts, resi-bond tax. dents pay a special tax to pay off Next, the llier mentions the $50 bonds that fund public improve-million the Newport-Mesa Uni- ments, such as roads, post offices tied School District would spend and schools. > , in implementation -planning, "We're just trying to get 'the inspection, interim housing and word across to the voters that will other services. The filer alleges be most impacted what will hap-that $.50 million is twice as much pen,• said Al Willinger, the New-as other districts would spend on port Coast resident spearhe&ding such costs. the opposition group, District officials, however, have ewport:Mesa voters on Tues-· said those costs are in line 9i'ith day will decide whether public those in other districts. schools will receive $110 million In the Santa ·Ana Unified to repair aging facilities. School District, where voters Citizens for Equitable Taxation approved a $147-million school formed a month Bgo and immedi-bond in November 1999, $43 mll- ately began to fight the school · lion had already been set aside for bond, claiming it would be an similar implementation costs, said unfair layer of additional taxes for Don Stabler, an assistant superln- residents in Mello-Roos districts. tendent for Santa Ana Unified. Because the group formed recent-•ow s is $147 million and ly, it did not submit a statement for we're talking a minimum of $43 the ballot. , million !in implementation However, on the single-page costs I,• Stabler said. filer sent to every home in the five Although bond supporters Mello-Roos neighborhoods, the said tbf,!y recognize the difficulty group outlined several major of getting the required two- points of argument against the thirds voter approval, they said bond. the new anti-Measure A group First, the mailer tells residents does not pose a threat to their that. while the average homeown-campaign. FOR THE RECORD The article •Grass-roots group rips 17th Street plan• in the June 1 edition of the Daily Pilot should have stat- ed that the East Side Com- munity and Merchants Assn. was meeting for the third time; not the first. The article, "Community cheers new bishop" in the June 1 edition of the Daily Pilot should have stated that Msgr. Jaime Soto bad been appointed auxiliary bishop for th~ Diocese of Orange. Cpffq:, & lnfol'ft\lhO.Q. w1di l.Ansume.r ~red.It 4-6 pm Welcome to C) o - M.d;W ~ Mobai~~u~ .f ne ENTERTAINMENT EvERY SATURDAY REGGAE M USIC EvERY SUNDAY JAZZ M USIC "Your Southern Califomia Mobility Specialists" • Representing the full line of Pride Mobility Products Fri. 6/2 Sat. 6/3 Order by the Dozen Sun. 6/4 Chingolingas Enchiladas • Fajitas Burritos & Tacos Guacamole Chips & Salsa & COMPLETE PARTY PACK FOR 101 ~ Call your nearest location! • Fu1s1m.c ... •• \ ....... ~ .. ,,..,., ' ~ Sizzling Fa11tas Handmade Tortillas Wed. 6/6 Thurs. 6/8 Fri. 6/9 Sa.t-6/10 Sun. 6/11 • ~ Catering ~~ . tr•, (949) 645-0209 41f 4t l•t••••··· •• ~ 10to 150people. • Newpoft IMdl c.-..... C...dll Mar ~ IMdt l'M9)67s.6855 ~"'2·11'2 6'4-8226 14 ~ Over Reactors King Arthur Alicia Grant Kerry Gett Yvonne Perea & Band Sebastian Sedi Rob EJJer IGo.g Arthur Roots Foundation Yvonne Perea & Band Hippies O o Jazz n TRIANGLE SQUARE 6-10 pm 2:30-6:30 pm 7-10 pm · 5-9 pm 5-8 pm 5-8 pm 6-10 pm 2:30-6:30 pm 7-10 pm 2:30-5:30 pm 6-9pm JllC • 11ccepka Showroom Hours Mon-Fri 9am-4:30pm 7 11 W. 17ch St. Suite A-5 Cosca Mesa 949-642-2010 Toll Free (888) 447-9056 • Service & Repair • Insurance Reimbursement Specialist Pride Scootcn from $149S WHIRi THI SS FWY INDS ·COSTA MESA I , ,, ' I I), I ' Any Fathcf.s Day or Graduation Gift Withed, excludes cards. Expires 6115/00 , / Daily Pilot In this cqse, invading Privacy is a gray matter ~., Hot on the trail I ~ad just finished teach- ing a seminar ai the UCl Academy for Lifelong Learning when the John. Noyes story broke. My semi- nar subject was •The Amer- ican News Media -Why Kill the Messenger~· l bad a lively and oulspo- ken group of participants who gave me a lot of rea- sons for -ii not killing - at least rapping the messen- ger sharply on the side of the head: Since one of their major criticisms was what they considered an outrageous invasion of personal privacy by the press, I bate to think where they would have gone with the Noyes affair. And I'm not sure how stout- ly I would have performed my seminar role as defender of the press because I see more gray than black or white in the exposure of Noyes' past problems. I believe strongly, along with Tom Jefferson, that an unfettered, aggressive press in this country has done more to protect our free- doms and shape up our public officials than any other element in our society. But I also believe that there has been a steadily growing intrusion into the private affairs of people in public life by the press in recent years. Sometimes the intrusions have weighed directly on their public performance. Sometimes they haven't. And sometimes it's hard to make a distinction. Compli- cating the problem 1s the fact that we tend to approve intrusions in the lives of people we don't llke and deplore ~em when the vie- SALE PRICED . CculOn eos lANIL ·~•--.............. •f.nt ........ ....... •c..'s .......... .... Joseph N. Bel THE BEU CURVE tirn t.runb the way we do. My own background.in journalism has some bear- ing on these feelings. I grew up with a president who suffered from a polio so crippling that he couldn't stand unaided. Yet -and this is incredible to me now -I wasn't aware of his i.nfirmity, largely because it was never mentioned in the press and he was never photographed with his braces showing. President Warren Hard- ing's peccadilloes, Dwight Eisenhower's relationship with his female driver dur- ing World War ll, FDR's estrangement froro his wife and long affair with Lucy Mercer, even John Kennedy's extramarital adventures were not spread across the media at the time they happened -partly out of ethical restraint and largely because they were deemed to have little or no bearing on public perfor- mance. r made more than a few similar choices in five decades as a working jour- nalist that probably would be regarded as foolishly sentimental today. Now the press almost universally goes for the jugular, a much tougher place from which to weigh the two critical questions posed tn the Noyes affair: is the revelation of deeply dis- turbing events that took • place in Noyes' life one to two decades ago in the pub- lic interest? ls it justified because it raises serious questions about Noyes' qualifications for ni,abtic office and his abilify to per- form those duties ef(ecp,.ve- ly? Those questions .seem aln1ost quaint today, when anyone running for public office in this country can tie certain that hls or her past is going to be exhumed, whether or not it has any- thing to do with now well they can perform their pub- lic duties. And the resultant judgments will too often grow out of limited in{orma- tion, fear, hostility or an overpowering sense of seU- righteousness by those doing the judging. The excessive nature of the Noyes case makes these ethical questions easier to n:solve. Alleged child abduction and falsifying a Social Security card , both clearly ·suggested by docu- ments in the case, can't be shru g ed off in a public . offi al, no matter how long ag they took place and at extenuating circum- tances might have existed. Still -desp ite the solid investigative reporting - there is much we don't know, espeoally about his motives in this matter. ln this ethical dilemma, two other components that weigh heavily against • 3S..140CJ5111'ieric zoom • <Mm dalie • Focused Fbsh ., S229 /'v1/\XXUM ~ •3&9 95 With Minolta AF2&-80 Lens COMPLETE KITI ... . .... -::. S219• Noyes are betrayal and hypocrisy. Many of the peo- ple who supported Noyes feel betrayed by his failwe to' deal honestly with his own past. And even more seem k> be angry at th~ hypo<;rtsy lmpUdt in his crit- icism of colleagues for what he regarded as unethical behavior. •Tony DiLorerizo enters the Mojave Desert, hits the 500-mile mark as he nears the gateway to the High Sierras. ln light of his past, his credibility in taking ethical stands now would seem lo be close to zero -which is not an effective place from which to govern. I realize that decisions have to be made and acted on in such matters, and I'm glad I didn't have to decide whether to publish the arti- cle in this instance. I'm not at all sure r would have arrived at the same place. Although I understand that gray is an indulgence decision-makers finally don't enjoy, it is also a legit- imate place from which oth- ers· can usefully evaluate the decision and its impact on the larger issues involved. The Noyes case provides a test-tube model of the complexi4es that arise in meeting the media's enor- mous responsibility to weigh carefully the public interest before upending the life ·at an individual and those close to him or her. And becduse few people have lived spotless lives, not the least of those considera- tions is the impact such exposure will have in con- vmcing good candidates not to run for public office. • JOSEPH N. BEU 1s a resident of Santa Ana Heights. His column usu· ally appears Thursdays. pa= AndNwGluer DAILY PILOT • EDITOR'S NOn: The Daily Pilot is tracking the progress of Costa • Mesa resident Tony Dilorenzo, who making a 2,600- mile hike up the Padfic Crest Trail to raise awareness about his brother Paul's rare and poten- tially fatal blood disease, tha- lassemla The following is an update, as told to repo~r Andrew Glazer. Somewhere betw~n Agu• Dulce, Calif., and the st.rt of the Mojave Desert 11 •.m. June 2-Day 34 We're about ready to work our way through the Mojave Desert. • Pennsyl- vania" Jeff (a co-hike r) was be hind us, and we didn't even know. In fact. we thought he was far ahead. ·Amigo" (another trav- eling companion) caught up with us dt i1 campsite and said he had d surpnse. I said, "C'mon, man, we don't bdve lime for ttus l've got to catch up Wllh Jeff.• It tum~ out he was coming up behrnd us. So 1t wasn't much of d surpnse after all. That night, we stayed at a hostel caUed the Road House, a converted green- house. We got sodas and beer and steak and pota- toes. Pure heaven. The last two days have F100 • 3 34 mlion pin! • 3~ 12 S ~ ZOOlll •1 21ia:ie~nidt • lugged metal cons1rudlon • lfigh Speed focus~ Wi1ll lock-on"' • U lps film odwnce www.niltonuso com ............ ~ • .,.,.., ILlt IN STOCK • USI llcclo!Qlll(ttfldo.#1 ~ Capture Everything. Surlflce nothing. been rolling hills. You climb 1,000 feet and then descend 1,000 feet. You get into the groove. We're almost at the gateway to the High Sier- ras. l'm so excited. The snow will be melting. There have been certain gOdls in my bead and this is one o( them: to g et here. You've got to sit down a nd regroup now that you're leaving the desert. It's flat in the desert. If you slip, you're not going to fall down a cliff. But in the high passes, there's going to be snow. Some chutes drop 2,000 feet. Yo u have to tum on your motor and be attentive at all times ... which reminds me: Penn- sylvania Jeff stepped over a baby rattler the other day And he saw a bear, but when he called me over. it took off. Two weeks ago, my feet were m so much pain, I almost called [my wife! Alisa over to pick me up for a few days. The ball of my foot !was hutting] and I favored it, so I gar a blis- ter on my other heel. After a nigtit hike, we stumbled to a country store and ran into the owner at 6 a.m. He said, "Hey. you want a beer?" So we did. I cut the toes off my ~hoes and fell much better. NIKON ZOOM BOOQD OLYMPUS ooSt\.jlus Epic ZOOM 80 ID EXTEND YOUR CREATIVE LIMITS NIKONN60 ~ --~" L : • ~ ... plllll gncjshool .. • 30 ..... Mllllilv . """""-• ......... ........... ........ '399 Wiii ... AF2HO ln I SALE PRICED ) ) PHOTOS BY DON LEACH I DAILY PILOT Costa Mesa IIlgh School asmtant principal Steve Pavich, right. shows a teacher his.rifle before a mock CIVi.l War battle for eighth-graders on campus Thursday. · Keith Cunningham, left, and Jeff Profeta battl~ with other men acUng as Confederate soldiers. _.,.,,,,,. .. An in-your-face hist.ory_ l~sson Costa Mesa eighth-graders witness reenactments of Civil War battles to better understand what they read in textbooks. Danette Goulet DAILY PILOT Guns and cannon erupted in sight and sound Thurs- day, a startling experience for eighth-grade students at Costa Mesa High School. It was a reenactment of a Civil Wax battle put on by four members of the Second Kentucky Dismounted Cav- alry, a group of Orange County Civil War buffs and · history teachers. The group, which is a part of the American Civil War Society, travels to schools for assemblies and ·lectures. "We try to learn as much as possible to make it as authentic as possible,• said Jeff Profeta. a private with the cavalry. For students, it was an extra-special performance because one of the soldiers wearing a heavy wool uni- form and toting a rifle was none other than their assis- tant principal, Steve Pavich, a new member of the group. And if you were to ask 14-year-old Marc Daniels why the duo manning the cannon was defeated, he'd say "because our principal is on the other team.• Each time the cannon "fired,• the more than 100 students gathered would shriek and jump. "Man, I felt that one," said 14-year-old Michael Torrenueva. Following the "battle" was a brief narrative by the soldiers, who offered a broad overview of the war. "The Civil War was fought for one purpose and one purpose only,• boomed the voice of Scott Peca, a second lieutenant. "It was not for slavery. That purpose was states' rights.• As cool as this battle was for students, it was just the precursor to the real event 7 today's picnic, water bal- loon battle, formal ball and sleepover. ' PRIORITY PROGRAM No ·..v UNDER W/\Y ! At lunchtime, about • 80 students in Tracey Olguin's advanced history classes will bead over lo TeWinkle Park. There they will reen- act three battles using bal- loons filled with colored water and eat a Southem- style picnic lunch. Then they'll need to hurry home to clean up and don the Civil War uniforms and ballroom gowns that they have been working on for months. After playing some Civil War trivia games, they will hit the sack so they can wake. up early for their sausage and biscuit breakfast. "The best part will proba- bly be when we get to dress up and look like and act like we're in the Civil War,· said 13-year-old Josb Aden. •And the water/ balloon. fight.. . , Dally Pilot .. Ra.isirig fees . may take its toll • PropoSal to .do~ble toll fee on Newport ~oast Drive raises fears of added traffic congestion. Noelcl Schwartz D AILY PILOT NEWPORT BEACH - A proposal to double Newport Coast Drive's toll fee to $1 has some city officials fearinQ that the rate hike could lead to ' ·E?XtreJDe traffic congestion. . •1 think there will be some riders that will elect not to use Newport Coast Drive because of the increase in the toll,• said Coundhnan Den- nis O'Neil. "My plain con- cern is through Corona del Mar, because there's a lot of traffic congestion.• Orange County nans- portation Corridor Agencies officials claim that this and other toll increases are neces- sary to pay their investors, who came up with nearly all. of the funds to build the roads. Business has been run- ning at only 82% of what was expected, said transportation corridor spokesman Mike Stockstill. And with the lack of paying customers, officials say they have no choice but to increase the fees. •Nobody likes to raise prices and we anticipate there will be some people who stop using it temporari- ly," Stockstill said. "We have an obligation to pay (our investors] and run the road like a business." But former mayor Evelyn Hart -who remembers the council's objection to the ini- tial 50-cent charge -said "perhaps it's time to straight- en this out." "I would have to say, it m PROPOSED TOLL INCREASES • '°"It.a c.nyon Road: 25 (ents to 50 cents • NMdpOrt Cwt Drtve: 50 cents to $1 . · • II Toro Roecl: S 1 to $1.50 . • All9o Creek RGM: 75 cents to S 1.25 • a.. Pu Roed: 50 cents to 75 cents sounds like bad business practices -an increase of 100%," said Hart. "Perhaps it's time we had a really good look at this.• The road was originally created as a link to relieve congestion between MacArthur Boulevard and Coast Highway in Corona del Mar. As predicted, it was heavily used by drivers trying to avoid traffic. However, in the ear\y .J 990s, a toll road was built charging drivers 50 cents to hook up to Newport Coast Drive. Public outay at the time was fierce and the issue became a political hot potato. "It was very, very con- tentious," O'Neil recalled. "There was even litigation over it.• Anticipating the public outcry but claiming that it's a "business decision," the Transportation Board will consider this and other rec- ommendations Thursday. U approved, the new toll will take effect in July. Defensf(attoniey suggests motive for ex-husband Sue Doyle DAILY PlloT COSTA MESA -The attorney for May Kwan Turek, on trial for ..the 1994 murder of a 30-year-old Cos- ta Mesa woman, pointed a finger at the defendant's ex- husband Thursday, implying that he, too, had a motive in the slaying. Turek's lawyer, Jennifer Keller, said Timothy Turek could have shot Roxanne Michelle Martin in a botched attempt to kill his ex-wife's lover. Keller also argued that her client had no knowledge of firearms, but that her ex- husband, a Henwa Beach police detective, bad exper- tise and access to guns. ho~~~~=~ ~t!~ I RETIREMENT LIVING for Tomorrow Sold 7~ 'P'-(i.6 ~ guns was you," Keller said to 1\mothy Turek, who was on the witness stand Thursday in the Santa Ana Superior Court room. The trial of the love trian- gle murder case began Wednesday, six years after Martin was shot and killed. Prosecutors have accused / Turek, 42, of killing Martin in as Cl ose as T HE COVING TON · B egin a new adventure in retirement living at The Covington without losing the carefree lifestyle you've trea ured. Great accommodations. Great Amenities. Great Services. That's what you can expect at South Orange County's newest continuing care retirement community. Planned with the latest in technology coupled with ideas from future resi- dents and 77 years of expertise from 1 he non-profit sponsor, The Covington will provide innovative retirement living for tomorrow. Visit our model cottage and see the fine design and li vability of this spacious floor plan and you'll see the kind of close anention to details that • cu, this community apart from others. But that's onJy the beginning. just a hint of amenities to come; indoor lap pool and jacuzzi, fitness equipment, massage salo n, classrooms, card rooms, library, art studio, resident's business ccnccr, Great Hall for dinner dances, theater and tournaments, a cocktail lounge, restaurant and underground parking. And every residence wired for Internet, fax, telephone and digital cable TV. Join the Priority Program in progress and, you'll have singular benefits. Choose from 12 floor plans-large single or duplex cottages and a variety of large apartmenc at a prc·construction cntruncc fee and the opportunity to pcrsonaJize your residence. Call today for more information or to make an appointment to tour the cottage (949) 362·9662 or toll free 1-877·22,-4444. THE A Planned Rettrmuml ~ • MINER MISTAKES DESIGNER OurLET • Teak is now Affordable! MAKING ROOM FOR NEW ARRIVALS! Furniture & Accessory Outlet 'I a jealous rage because she believed the victim was a rival for the affection of her then-lover, Anthony Kubis Jr. Martin was shot once in the back of the bead and four times in the chest before she bled to death at Kubis' Costa Mesa home on Victoria Street. Kubis was out of town at the time of the shooting, according to police reports. Authorities anested Turek four years after Martin's death. Until then, the murder remained unsolved. But in • 1998, DNA technology helped police link Turek to the murder, determining that two blood smears found in the defendant's car belonged to Martin. During aoss-examir>ation, Keller asked Tunothy Turek about a conversation he had with Costa Mesa police, who in the course of. the mwder investigation suggested that the finger of guDt could ulti- mately point to him. a jilted husband. The Tu.reb, who were marrted at the time ol the shooting, began divorce pro- cedures three weeks after the murder. ·u they do, they're point- ing lt In the wrong direction.. 1lmotby Turek llid. Keller brought up ctatmll d the Turekl' stmmy relation· lbip and allo qUestlaned 11motb( Turek about bll mectiaL blstuy. 11motby Turek Mid be WU dlagnoeed witb ..... ~in 1988. The a. didon forced him to tall8 I medk::al leave of ~ from the polk:e bm blhu ... June 1881 and.July llK Became be Wli ~ ~ml mdtnrtf ll M •11pt. ~ . . IM:K a..., Is a unique dlnlnc experience. If you want authentic Louisiana cuisine In an upscale, casual atmosphere, IACKahrtmp Is your answer. Traditional favorites such as fumbaia,., Cumbo and of course, the house specialty, IACKshrtmp are Included on the menu. Also featured are ve&etarian dishes, pata. •lmon and other non-spicy dishes. Easy self-parkltli is 1Vallable, as ~II as patio dlnlnc. Dlnner Is served Monday throuih SMuldey llartlnc at 5:l0pm and on Sunday startlni at 3-3~. L.unch ii served Fridays only I l~JOlm -2:30pm. /'/' 2400 w. c.-...,. ••lllCNt a.cit (MtMi,._,'77 AMllllCAN l>UMY..,_n '2916 Aedtll ,,.,. Cmto~ OJ-4> 967·1961 IRISH 1HI .. ~IM a GllU. 26.'3 w. COCllt Hwy Newport lleoc:tl <9'9> 63' .56SJ ITAllAN ~-O'I 3520 E. COClll tMv coiono dll Mew (IM9) 67~ 1922. c:omADO 1000...,. ll!Mt Nol#\ Newport lleoc:t\ <9'9>~ PMAn 901 9oUltl COCJlt DIM COlllD~ 014> ~ 1-3000 MMWA~'S 251 E. COCJlt Hloly. Newport leoch (M9)67Me00 NICn 8l10ltANll 2300 Harbor 8llld COiia~ <9'9> nJ. 7566 JAPANESE =,,.,. COlllDMela (Mii) 666618 ••weA G50 llld'I 91 Newpat leQct\ lMl'> 9lllMm2 --·IMllOCD llOMIOr\~ ec.o...., (7)C>GM010 M1•1< AN ' . Dine In A Romantic Setting A Dining Experience to Remember! 1976 Newport Blvd. • Costa Mesa (949) 645-8384 FATHER'S DAY BUFFET BRUNCH & POOLSIDE BBQ Sunday, June 18 th 10:30am , 2:30pm • Selection of Appetizers (;ounnet Salads & f re h Fruit °"9e)ette Station & Breakfast Entrees Seafood Selection Carving Station Barbecued Ribs & Chicken Dessert Display Draft Beer Station Live Entertainment O utdoor Seating Available Complimentary Self Parking • Adults-$35.00, c 'hildren (5,12 _$ (Children under 5 eat f~) Reservations (949) 225-6§50~ f I 'i--\-1 I MOHDAY HIGHT SUNDAY FAMILY SPECIAL BREAKFAST LMgc Combination Country-Style a ,.ID Of lroeltcd •South of tbs lanle(' Chicken Dinner s49s 5141~srs I I ~ l I .. 2530 W. Coost Hwy, N9111WDGn IM<Y>'* a M le O<-IOI& o.,.j 2 _,, ,J W-Bay Cl oC1i 949 650-0101 ~II You Can Eat Scat·ood &. Sushi But~fct 20°/o-Off Dinner S:J0..10:00 pm All You Can Eat Snow. Crab Legs I TE:N Dine at Oranqe County's favOfite Seafood & Sushi Buftet Present this coupon to receive 20~ off your entire dinner bill s .S.EAFO<.:>O & ,'.';fjSl"-41 9\JFFt:'r -r-0 PEN - 580 Anton Blvd., Costa Mesa 714·424·9010 7 Days i------... --.... A Week ~----- SABATINO'S kt ,f,111r.1111 ,\ I ul11 ''"P' .1r1I '·"''·'~' I " •Dinner • Sunday Brunch 251 Shipyard Way • Newport Bea~ -~ ;<! 'JI v ), J' '''°' & • ' • • •. (949) 723-0621 • ~~ ~ ~ ' ~ Tamm~ Bahama'~ Tropical Cafe & Maxamar Cigars Cordialh In\ ite \Ou for an e\'erung o f fine cigars. di'iti mt i\ e food & cocktail., Wedne.,d a E\('llinq Jun<' 7. 2000 F eatured C iqar~ _j Punch Punchito H o yo De ~tontc•re~ Go' e rnor Punch Grand Cru #2 <Torpl'dO) R eception 6 :30 p .m . • Dinner 7 p .m . $99. 00 ppr per on R C'ser vtlllo ns rt•qulred Please respond prio r to June 4 . 2000 Cor ona Oel M ar Plaza 854 Avocado Av<". • C\.'\ port BPaC'h .. DILllHDll CWll Ulll.YIJ. ... . POii ... CODY lllCI ..... AllllOI Fifth.grader, Eastbluff llOISOll 1i4111m Sixth-grader, Lincoln Sixth-grader, Newport Elementary School, 10 . Senior, Orange Coast · ... scored 100% on Senior, torona del Eighth-grader, TeWin-Senior, Estancia High Eighth-grader, Harbor Elementary School, 12 Heights Elementary Middle Coffege High spelling tests for entire ~r High School, 18 ... kle Middle School, 14 . School, 18 ... vanity Day SChool, 14 ... ... exceeds at academic School, 11 ... consls- School, 18 ... enrolled year ... straight-A stu-Young Republicans . ... 4.0 GP/.\ ... honor cross-country, track ..• made honor roll every challenges in -all tently a top student, in O<;C psychology dent ... Involved in Girl Club, president ... var-roll ... ~otary student . French Club, Girl Scout quarter ... National aspects of curriculum recipient of Super Stu-. -, classes ... active stu-sity football, soccer . of the year; Student of Gold Award ... lifetime tatin Exam gold ... teachers say he dent Award and a his- dent ... tutors teens Scouts, Corona del and sailing ... commu-the Month ... active in men)ber, California medalist ... reading takes charge of his tory award ... helps in Mar's swim team and and elementary school Boys & Girls Club's bas-nity basketball coach Save Our Youth and its .. Scholastic Federation . comprehension first own learning ... part cleaning up neighbor- children every week-" ketball team. ... AYSO soccer coach scholarship program, ... reading tutor at place at 1999 Latin of a family of commu-hoods, donates to day after school ... ... California Scholastic Boys and Glrls Club ... Wilson Elementary Convention ... Johns nity activists who woric Goodwill and particl- dances ... active school Federation ... Golden Fish Fry volunteer ... School ... Key Club ... Hopkins University toward school and pates in re<yding dri· . PTSA ... Catholic New-State Exam, high hon-on state soccer team '. .. Habi1at for Humanity State Award ... volun-civic Improvement ... ves ... on swim team man Club member ... ors in geometry ... plays club soccer, track ... helped renovate teer for Second Har-participates in Student for six years. plays soc- is chaperon on little Academic Excellence and field, basketball children's library at vest Food Bank ... Council, Little League, cer, softball and track brother's school field Honor Roll ... Who's Early Childhood Learn-school record-holder GATE program, school and field. trips Who in American High ing Center in Costa for shot put. 100. and play ... technology School Students Mesa 200-meter dashes peer tutor RAUL BUD QUINN BIGGIO llOIGIN HARRISON JAMIE llWE IYONNE . lllMI BUSTOS Senior, Estancia High Sixth-grader, Davis· TlftOR BROWN BROWNELL BROWNELL IUICllGI Fifth-grader, Wilson School, 18 ... played Education Center, 12 IOMIOY football. junior varsity ... honor roll member Sixth grader, Kaiser Senior; Corona del Mar Freshman, Newport Sixth-grader, Rea Ele-Elementary School, 1 O soccer ... California ... recipient of Reading Fifth-grader, Killy-Elementary School, 11 High School, 18 ... Harbor High School, 15 mentary School, 12 ... ... 3.8 GPA ... Principal's Scholastic Felieration Award ... PAL volun-brooke Elementary •.. GATE program holds a 425 GPA ... an ... 4.0 GPA ... taking excels in all~· Otizenship Award ... ... Neighbors for teer ... active in St. School, 11 ... citizen of member ... earned first academic letter and on seven high school class-top student i ... active in Girl Scouts ... Neighbors volunteer ... John the Baptist the month every year place in Orange Coun-the academic excel-es and three at OCC ... reading at a 10th-plays tennis, AYSO SOC· community cleanup Church, donating food ... 3.3 GPA ... collects ty Scholastic Founda-lence honor roll during participant in Newport grade level ... critical cer and swims ... par- volunteer ... mentor to for homeless ... Stu-phone books for tion Academic Compe-her entire tenure at Beach Harbor and thinker who quickly ticipates in Peer Assis- 11-year-old boy for dent Council member school and participates tition for math and CdM ... recipient of the beach cleanups, CHOC picks up new concepts tanc.e Leadership club four months ... plans ... plays flag football, in other recycling pro-U.S. History ... active in Scholar Athlete Award Walk for Diabetes ... ... involved in Mothers to attend Cal Poly basketball for Costa grams ... enjoys swim-Boy Scouts ... partici· ... will graduate in the founded Entrepreneurs of Costa Mesa Talent pates in student plays, Pomona, majoring in Mesa ming Student Council ... vol-top 15 of her class ... Club, on-campus book-Showcase 2000 and electrical engineering unteered to paint inyolved in Friends in stt>re, Dead Poets Soci-Girls Inc., AYSO, school ... plays AYSO Service to Humanity ety ... active in Model Cheers of America ... (... soccer ... Newport and the Environmental United Nations and two-time winner of Beach junior lifeguard Nature Center ... has school newspaper ... Anaheim Angels two years ... competed coached volleyball plays field hockey, Youth Mural Contest in Pacific Coast teams ... a member of track ... ASB student ... member of Peer · Triathlon and Newport the girls' varsity volley-relations representa-Assistance leadership Harbor Heritage Run ball team tive for two years HARBOR CENTER 2300 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa 1011' f 03 I j I ' I I Daity Pilot JASOll CAIKO Senior, Costa Mesa High School, 18 ... • ranked first in gradu· ating class ... Principaf's Honor Roll all through high school ... National Hispanic Scholar, acad- emic medallion winner ... active in Key Club, Costa Mesa Advisory Committee of Teens. St. John the Baptist Catholic Church Youth Group ... water polo and swimming letter· man ... French Club president ... active in AS8 ... plays bass for Madrigal Choir SA..•.All COTTON Senior, Costa Mesa High School, 18 ... yearbook committee, editor in chief ... ASB secretary ... Math Oub, California Scholastic Federation ... varsity cross-country, varsity trade and field, water polo ... Girls State Alternate ... Mathe- matic:s Medallion, Toshiba scholarship, Foot Action scholar· ship, Regent's Scholar ... tutors math, Chil- dren's Ministry leader ... attending MIT in fall - llllBllll Cllllll Fifth.gr~ Wtlson Elementary School. 11 ... Wilson's PAWS • Award, Principal's Fine Arts Award ... active in Girl Scouts, Science Club, campus Peer Assistance Leadership dub OUCIOWELL Senior, Orange Coast Middl~ College High School, 18 ... enrolled in OCC photography. music and art classes ... started Midnight Marauders, a Costa Mesa-based scooter dub ... life-rank Boy Scout ... works full· time at Mother's Mar- ket & Kitchen ... year· book staff member ... good attendance ... positive role model for other students ,• llOIAll Clll Fourth-grader, Adarm . Elementary Sdlool, 10. . ' ... outstanding student and role model who teachers say always P,oduces quality work ... performed in Estancia High School's "Wizard of Oz" pro- duct-ion ... volunteer at Fairview Hosi>ital ... member of Drama Club and basketball and baseball teams ... hobbies include dance, karate and kayaking .CYllllllA . CUEVAS Senior, Estancia High School, AGE ... 4.24 GPA ... Fren<b. Ch.lb, Mecha Club, Spanish Club, Key Club, Cali· fornia Scholastic Fed- eration ... cross-coun· try, track and field ... plans to attend Har· vard University to ulti· mately obtain a doc- torate and become a pediat rician llCOl.E cunn Senior, Corona del . Mar High Schoof. 1s: .. pl'yed varsity ten.nis for three years ... French Oub president. Key Club, Assistance league (sophomore dass chairman, vice president) ... writes children's literature ... National English Merit Scholarship Award ... Golden State Exam honors, Scholar Ath· lete Award ... Academ- k Excellence Award ... California Scholastic Federation ... USC Book Award MAGGIE DOlllELLY Sixth-grader, Lincoln Elementary School, 12 ... a poet, short-story writer and GATE stu- dent ... active member of Our Lady Queen of Angels church, Spirit Run volunteer ... par· ticipates in local musi· cal theater ... Student Council secretary, peer tutor ... plays soccer and sings in Honor Chorus •aona••• • •llY ClAYTOll Senior. Newport Har· bor High School. 18 ... Harvard Book Award for exceltence in schol- arstlip and high charac· tef' ... National Honor . Society charter member ... Scholar Athlete Recognition by Nation- al Football Coffege Hall of Fame, Orange Coun- Senior, NeWport Har- bor High School, 18 ... co-founder, Student • Politi(al Action Club ... wrestlirlQI etOss-couO: try ... U.S. National Canoe Team member ... placed fourth at Junior World Champi- onships in Croatia ... Christian Oub, Young Architect's Club ... lec- tor at St. Joachim Catholic Church ... vol· unteers at the Inter· faith Shelter ... part- time pianist at Fashion Island Atrium Court • ty Oiapter ... . .. Ntmed Sea Vte!W League Ath- lete of the Year, AJKJF Defensive Bade ... mem- ber of OF Champions Division-I volleyball, OF Champions Division-Vt football teams ... AS8 vice president. Senior Oass representative NKOU DOl'E 11111111 EllDO Senior, Newport t:far-Third-grader, Killy· bor High School, 18 ... brooke Elementary field hockey, golf ... School, 8 ... a hard· ASB sophomore repre-woricing student .... sentative, Key Club ... eams high marks and Hoag Hospitatlunior has outstanding citi· Auxiliary, Board of zenship ... very popu· Directors for FISH lar among her peers at (Friends in Service to school, teachers say Humanity), Our Lady of Mt. Carmel Catholic Church youth group ... Student of Semester finalist in English, Stu· dent of Semester .. nomi{iee in math ... named most improved and most spirited in field hockey -lrCOU 5en10r, Newport Har, bor High School, 18 ... Junior-Class president. California Scholastic Federation president., ASB commissioner ,~ varsity football captain ... Academic Decathlon team member ... vol· unteer at Fairview . Development Center ... Boys State delegate ... USC Book Award ... Toshiba Scholarship. Winner ... Golden State Exam honors in chemistry, U.S. history and English ... Nation- al Honor Society .... ·YuUYA I. EllTlllA Senior, Estancia High School, 17 ... plays water polo ... member of Key crub ... Golden Stat e Exam honors in composition writing and U.S. government ... high honors in chemistry ... volunteer translator, Russian to English ... personal quote: "Education is more than gaining knowledge, it's a way of life" Friday, June 2, 2000 I IAlmCoft Senior, Estancia Hf9h School, 17 ... Golden State Merit diplof:na ,., .. Honor Roll through-" out high school ... founded and directed Estancia Volunteer Bureau ... organized Interfaith Shelter's crafts for homeless kids ... E.I. Memorial Award winner ... start- ed and ran interactive preschool story time ... helped organize school's Adopt-A-Fami- ly project ... girls' vars~· ty g"lf 11111 EllCISOll Eighth-grader, Ensign Intermediate School, 14 ... on honor roll for three quarters in a rovv this year ... Stu- dent of the Month ... Scott Paulsen Award winner ... participated in Costa Mesa's "Neighbors to Neigh· bors" street cleanup ... school track team ... Newport Youth Wate,.... Polo team ... will visit the Olympic Training Center in Colorado ... ASB president ... Bible study youth group member Con9 ratV\I atio ~s To All of Our Tet4rific Kids ~r I Senior, esta~ia High School, 17 .::'student government ... 1tudent school board repr~n­ tative ... plays varsity soccer, Club soccer,'Var- sity track and field ... ASB president ... active in Girl Scouts, Camp- fire Boyt ar\d Girls ... helped pass anti- tobacco ordinance ... received public com- mendation from the Orange County Sher- iff's Department JOE GOODSTEIN Senior, Corona del Mar High School, 18 ... enjoys acting ... mock trial team captain ... Junior State of Ameri- ca secretary ... active in Latin Club ... volunteer for peer t~oring, legal Aide Society, Hoag Hospital candy- striping ... athl~tics organizer ... received E.I. Moore Memorial, Rennselaer Medal awards ... National Merit Commended Scholar Senior, Corona def Mar High School, 18 .. : holds a. 4.13 GPA "' an academic letter for . seven semesters, she I\ a philanthropy/inspira- tion officer with the National Charity League and member of the Grace F.~llow-· ship youth ministry ... graduating in the top 15 of her class, she is on the academic; excel- lence honor roll ... recipient of the Seek- ing Pride Award ... member of the JV track 'and cross-coun- try teams ... she enjoys art and painting EILENE HAO Senior, Corona del Mar High Sdlool, 18 ... jazz band, choir ... bad- minton ... Investment Club president ... Youth Against Hunger presi- dent ... school newspa- per ... Key Club, Red Cross Club, Club Fish, Music Club, Hoag Hos- pital candy-striping ... E.I. Moore Award, Bausch & Lomb Science Award, Harvard Book Award ... National Merit Commended Scholar, AP Scholar with honors ... Speak- ing Pride Award ... National Poetry Socie_w, honorable mention •Ill S. Fm1L Fllll Senior, Estaritia High : DOUlllS Fiim : ~ 18 ... funior ., Senior, &.ck aey ~lgh varsity soccer ··· ~ar-. School,· 1 s .... on the book ~ff ··· California honor roll ; .. in accel- Scholastic ~ration erated and special ... production dram~ ... classes ... was involved Key Club ... Zonta Gtrf.. in Cisco Networ1cjng of the Month ... volun· doing Web site devel-t~r ~t Wetlands and opment in the fall of Wtl~hfe Care Cente~ 1999 ... was involved Amigos de Bolsa Ch1&1 in Partnering Educa- and ~olsa Chica L;and" tion and Community Trust'. . ._ Human Rights ... plays violin, piano Ca~pa1gn .. ._ dpes can-and guitar ... Web vass1ng for Sierra Club page designer and National Parks and Conservation Assn. CLAYTON USUE HOlMES HEISER Senior, Corona def Sixth-grader. Mariners Mar High .School, 18 ... Elementary School, 12. swims ... Club Fish ... volunteers at retire-... 4.0 GPA ... enrolled ment homes ... won in GATE program for Golden State Exam three years ... partici-honors in geometry ... pates in Senior Care Facility holiday pro-received academic let- ter for continuing grams, delivering excellence ... high hon-cookies and flowers ... ors on AP history president of Student Council ... stellar ath-exam lete ... active in basket- ball and Junior life- guards Sixth"9f"ader, ~ Heights ElementMy - School, t2 ... straight-' A .studerit .... recipient of annual Super Stu- dent Awards, Eminent • Author Award ... par- ticipated in fuhd-rais- ers for cancer, multiple sclerosis and AIDS ·research·~ member of local soccer, baseball and roller hockey teams ,. \ HAYDEN THERESE HUTCHISON Eighth-grader, HarbOr Day School, 13 ... achieved high honors since fourth grade ... citizenship award recipient from Oaugh- ter of the American Revolution ... involved in Our Lady Queen of Angels church, Nation- al Charity league ... Aquazot Swim Club competitive swimmer, played on seventh-• and eighth-grade bas- ketball teams C111m11 ROBS · JI• lllCI Senior, Newport Har- bor High Schoel, 17 .... honor roll ... accepted to several UC schools. will attend UC Irvine with psych~logy major ' ... Roy Alvarado Achievement Award ... active in Save Our Y<>Hth and its scholar- shfP program ... Camp-· fire Boys and Girls. Costa Mesa Neighbors for Neighbors ... Fish Fry volunteer ... active in Da Vinci Academy, Newport Harbor Build- ing Bridges Program, Ambassadors llUlllML INOUYE Senior, Estancia High School .. 3.82 grade- point average ... varsi- ty cross-country ... edi- tor in chief of school newspaper ... Estancia Choir, Newport Beach Youth Hand bell Choir ... Eagle Scout rank by Boy Scouts of America ... delegate, 1999 Cali- fomia G61den Boys State ... plans to attend UCLA before going on two-year mission for Church of Jesus Christ of Latter- day Saints Senior, Back Bay High. Scheof. 17 ... vars;ty soccer capgin ... secre- tary of photo club ... . MVP of varsity sOftball team for twO years ... assistant manager in charge of sales, inven- tory and shipping at Herbalife ... plans to go to the Art Institute of Los Angeles. ASHLEY JICOISOll Senior, Corona del Mar High School, 17 ... varsity tennis, OF semifinalist ... Youth and Government pres- ident ... Girls league, Spirit Club, Assistance league ... volunteers for Orangewood Abused Children's Home Thrift Shop, Taste of Newport. , Environmental Nature Center, Make-A-Wish Foundation ... AP Scholar ... CIF champi- onship, tennis Th~Kilty. brooke Etementary School, 8 : .. maintains above-average·grades. even though she's a second-language learner ... actively "volved in her church ... played Mary in a church 'play ... partici- pated in a dance pro- gram ... plays guitar ... active in soccer, ice skating · EllZlllTll JlmU Senior, Newport Har- bor High School, 18 ... varsity track and field, junior varsity field hockey ... church youth group ... tutor, teacher's assistant at Whittier Elementary ... creator of journal bud- dy program at Whftti- er ..• camp counselor at Adventure Unlimit- ed ranch ... English Student of Semester, Social Science.Student of Semester, GSE Aca- demic Excellence Award ... Academic Excellence Award, AP Scholar Award J Co ng~atulatio ns 'tO the Junior Top 103·! B alboa.Instruments is committed to the _ education of Costa Mesa's high school students. As a charter member of PEAC, "Partnering Education and Community," we are proud of.the effort you have made to achieve this honor. The PEAC program mtroduces students to a w,orking business environment and gives them a view of life after graduation. This unique experience . motivates stud~nts to finish high school and .. gain a college degree. There is no better way to ensure the success of our community than to invest in the future of our youth. Our future rests in the hands of today's high school students. Our future rests with you. • 1 1· I • r I I I ' . i I I I I j. Daily Pilot . . .. . • . . ... PE a .c Partnering Education ~e~~--· .Jand Communi9J · . . ~()/}1?/)(Q~datvt1f! tlw~~i ~og · a11ul cf/afutvJ1? al/ C2Afewjum-~ 6f7tu,dgn,U; GWvffR·G ·cavtvaa "(.,_ cf'-J1rw" 1700 Adams, Suite 101 • Costa Mesa • (71 4) 885-9090 Looking PorNew Paces We're look ing for teen m od els . Male and Fem'ale for prin t, fashion shows and comm ercials. No Fees! No Schools! Call our direetor of MODELS <949)5~979 . 1038 Irvine Ave., Newport Beach, . (949) 631 ·2996 At Westcliff Plaza. . . . . . . Fridaf, June 2, 2000 11 .. (~() N (• llA1'1Jl~l~l'I ()NS ·At .. I .. \; J \ 2(MM) . \, .JtJNlftll '1'()11 · I ()!I . \. & NEWl1f)ll'I'-Ml~SA S'l1l JJ)EN'fS GP CWBTBJ 10 @omcast DIGITAL CABLE $4.95 Connection (Save over $3000) Plus, order now and receive 1 /2 off your 1st month of any HBO or Cinemax package! Call today and ask for the Digital Gold Package and 8110Y .12 chlMell of HBO and 8 chMnels of ChllMlCl . . l .. lllllt JlllTI Senior, Orange Coast ' MTddre College Righ Schoof, 18 ... enrolled in OCC leadership, art and English classes ... writing a comic book .. involved in ~raight-edge• scene, which advocates no drinking, drugs or promiscuity ... active in animal rights issues ... yearbook staff mem- ber ... great atten- dance and good grades, exudes a posi- tive attitude '· .. . f •· I r ( J. ROllll lETOSTAK Senior, Estancia High School ... Drama Club, Key Club, CSF ... cap- tain, junior varsity swim team ... Student Ven- ture (Christian Club), publishing Christian Teens Newsletter ... out- standing female mono- logue at Chapman Shakespeare Festival ... Student of the Year for geometry and Spanish ... E.I. Moore Memorial Award, first place, Eng- lish--speaking Union Essay Contest ... wants to become a writer and an English teacher JOEL TYUI JOILUISlll • Senior, Estancia High School ... basketball, golf, california Scholastic Federation ... honor roll member ... Orange County Community Orchestra, Boy Scouts ... member of Sage Bluegrass Band, Bluegrass Brethren and Christ Lutheran Contempo- rary Praise Service ... assistant editor of Har- bor Soaring Society Newsletter ... world- class model aviation pilot KATY LEWIS Senior, Corona del Mar High School, 18 ... involved in Orchesis I'\ Dance Troupe, Young Republicans Club, Spir- it Club, Children's Home Society, charity for single mothers ... MS Walk, Pediatric Aids Foundation ... Make-A-Wish Founda- tion ... California Scholastic Federation ... academic letter ... Golden State Award for geometry ... New- port Beach Youth Council • j • FllSHID UZI lllCI IOlllllT Senior; Costa Mesa • Eighth-grader, TeWin- . High School, 18 .•. All-. kle Middle Sthool, 14 Around StUdent SChol-... two-time Student of arship ... voted Most the Month ..• enrolled Likely to Succeed ... in UCl's Saturday Math. Honor Wall, academic Academy ... Outstand- letter ... 4.0 GPA ... ing Student of the active in Advisory Year in 1998 and 1999 Committee of Teens, ... participated in Bengali Youth Assri., canyon Park cleanup Speak Out ... helped in •.. attends church two Hurricane Mitch relief nights.a week ... assists effort ... volunteer at children's pastor and Hoag Memorial Hospi-teaches monthly tal, Charity Marathon, prekindergarten and Neighbors for Neigh-kindergarten classes ... bors ... ASB president active in track, basket- ... Rotary Youth Lead-ball, flag foott>all ership Conference, stu- dent school board rep- resentative DINNY SUSAN LU UVINGSTON Senior, Corona del Mar Eighth-grader, Harbor High School, 17 ... holds Day School, 13 ... all As a 4.21 GPA ... a Nation- and Bs ... attained al Merit Commended Eagle rank in-Boy Scholar, she is on the Scouts by helping principal's honor roll ... assemble and paint an AJ> Schofar and Environmental Nature holder of a Certificate Center benches ... Stu-of Merit Branch Honors dent Council treasurer and Golden State Exam ... member of volley-High Honors ... volun- ball and track teams ... teers are Fountain Val- piano student for sev-ley Regional Hospital en years ... participat-and the Make-A-Wish ed in All-American Foundation ... Red Boys Chorus and Cross dub president ... Opera Pacific member of the key dub, youth against hunger club and French club historian IOllll lllllUJL . . Fifth.grader, Davi:; , • Educatiol'l Center, 11 ~· Prin,ipal's Honor Roll ... GATE student ... scholar in every sub- ject ... sings and tours · with All-American Boy's Choir ... plays clarinet in school band ·HEIDI MICHA Fourth-grader, Dallis Education Center, 10 ... Honor Roll ... high reading achievement ... classroom leader ... active Student Council member ... attends St. Andrew's Presbyterian Church ... involved in Back Bay cleanup and recycling ... very active in dance, gymnastics and swimming JOI LIVllS Sixth-grader, Newe<>ft Heights Elementary School, 12 ... poetry contest winner, Super Student Award recipi· ent ~ .. heips dean up Back Bay ... volunteers for Friends In Service to Humanity ... active in Boy Scouts, Teen Talk, Cotillion ... plays soccer ... participates in recyding projects ... participated in AIDS Walk OC for nine years CHRIS •CORMICK Senior, Corona del Mar High School, 18 ... holds a 4.3 GPA ... a UCLA Regents Scholar. he is involved in the Environmental Nature Center and Surfrider Foundation beach cleanups ... AJ> Scholar with honors, advanced placement ... ~cademic letter, continuing excel- lence ... won high hon- ors in algebra and geometry in the Gold- en State Examination ... on the varsity water polo team, varsity swim team Senior, Cost;s Mesa High-School, 19 ... 4.13 GPA ... Madrigal Choir .... staff member, School Literary Maga- zine· ... varsity tennis ... senior class secretary ... volunteer at the Orange County Public Library ... coaches lit- tle League baseball for children with disabili- ties ,/ UE MEREDITH Senior, Newport Har- bor High School, 18 ... ASB Community and Philanthropic Activities commissioner ... year- book photographer ... National Honor Society ... volunteer with church group and Orangewood Chil- dren's Home ... WOf\ first place for drawing and second place for tollage at Orange County Fair ... OaVinci Ac.ademy Student of Semester in honors geometry, honors Algebra II, honors . che~istry ' Daily Pilot • ~t;!lor, E$tancla tjigh Schoof, 17 ... varsity volleyball, basketball ... three yeflrs honor roll ... sailing instructor ... assistant secretary, International Sabot Assn .... assistant bas- ketball coach ... plans to attend San Diego State in the fall Clllll MalDA Fifth-grader, Adams Elementary School, 10 ... strives for excellence and is diligent in her studies, teachers say ... outstanding leader- ship skills make her a role model .. , caring person with a big heart ... effective "team player" ..• par- ticipates in drama, soc- cer and Science Explor- ers ... Cll~TIGll TD ILL or YOU II TBI JR. TOP 103 Plan to attend our OPEt)I HOUSE on Sunday, June 25th, from 2:00 p.m. to 4:30 p.m. Refreshments , raffles and e,ats to love! 1 ~ i I l National Cat Prot~tion Society Most Unique Cat Shelter (949) 650-1232 KltfWI ..eon I• h#e/ And w. .,.. rec.lvlng many lldol'ab# ltlttlH that nNd lovfng, rnpoMi"'-homn. our adoption hou,.. .,.. Noon to 4:30 p.m., Tw«lay throU(lh s.turday. NATCAT 6904 W. Coast Highway, Newport Beach, CA 92663 ~The Boys & Girls Olu b of the Harbor Arca, and Boys & Girls Members, salute the Junior Top 103 Most Influential for 2000. Sponsored by: ~..-e, '°r I...., I I ... Dally Pilot MMlllY . Flfth"'.9'ader, Adams Elementary School, 11 ... Student Councit·vice president ... strdng student leader ... involved in Boy Scouts, food drives and recy- ding projects ... tutors first-graders ... plays baseball for the Cardi- nals ... helps collect food donations for Share Our Selves in Costa Mesa WEIDY PADILLA Senior, Estancia High School, 17 ... varsity wrestling, softball ... Senior Class treasurer ... Zonta Girl for Janu- ary ... National Hispan- ic Merit Scholar ... vol- unteer, Fairview Devel- opmental Center, St. Joachim Catholic Church, Speak Out for Youth, Re-Leaf Costa Mesa ... plans to major in psychology at a UC school . . J ILIZllllll ... , ·-MURILLO Senior, Corona del Mar · Freshman, Esul'l(fa High School,· 18 ... var: High Sc:hool, 15 ,., • sity cross-country cap-honor roll, 4.0 GPA ... tain, varSity track cap-· President's Awara win-tain, varsity soccer ... ner, Student of the French Club ... volun-Year, Student of the teers to raise funds for Month ... finalist for the school's new track Deacon Jones Founda- ... motivational speak-tion ... active in Save er for Spirit Run ... Our Youth and its Mammoth Running scholarship program ... Camp-... National Mer-community cleanup it finalist ... CIF Cham-volunteer ... Boys and pion -800 meters, Girls Club member ... Master's Champion -plays softball, soccer 800 meters ... Dennis L Evans Award for Excel- lence in AP U.S. History ... E.I. Moore Award · =:n JESSICA ISON PIZAIEK Senior, Newport Harbor Fifth-grader, Victoria High School, 18 ... ASB Elementary School, 11 vice president ... Calitor-... 3.78 GPA ... Presi- nia Scholastic Federation dent's Academic Excel- vice president ... varsity Jenee Award ... first football, varsity baseball place in DARE essay .. member of Grace Fel-contest ... GATE pro- lowship Church ... volun-gram member ... par- teered as Little League ticipated in Race for baseball coach at winter the Cure, Canyon Park baseball camp and on cleanup ... active in athletic field renovation church Sunday School at Newport Harbor ... as student and Boys' State 1999, All Sea teacher's aide ... men- View League honorable tor to handicapped mention ... EJ. Moore children ... State Dis- Award for citizenship ... tinguished School visi- National Merit qualifier, tation team student /:>P Scholar ambassador • Custom Gift Wrapping -.. ~~""~ • Invitations • Helium Tank Rentals •Balloons • Party Goods "Let our trained staff capture that spec/al moment" .. · •USSA MEUll -Junior; Estancia High School, 16 ... Bausch and Lomb S<;ience Award ... honor roll ... top GPA in her dass ... E.I. Moore Mem81'ial Award winner ... Key Club vice president ... Volunteer Intern Pro- gram, including help- ing kids at Wilson Ele- mentary ... member of German and Spanish clubs, California Scholastic Federation ... enjoys horseback riding JElllFER POml Senior, Newport Har- bor High School, 18 ... field hockey, sailing ... publicist for the DaVinci Academy ... Newport Harbor Yacht Oub traveling team ... National Charity L~ague ... planted trees for Fairview Park ... principal's honor roll ... Certificate of Acade- 'mic Excellence, Golden State Exam academic excellence awards in geometry ... California Scholarship Federation .. . selected as one of the top 15 skippers in Southern California . . I · • Friday, June 2, 2000 IJ .. Dllll lllUYll .llClll PllWP -·· Eighth-grader, Ensign lllUYll ~ lllUYll OWLA Jntermediate School, Senior, Costa Mesa Fifth-grader, Killy· Sen~· ~ n ... orange Coun:/ High School, AGE ... brooke Elementary School, 18 ... varsity Spelling Bee secon 4.17 GPA ... honor roll School, 11 ... Citizen of baSketball ... membef . round ... honors Eng-every year ... varsity the Year for sec.ond, of school band and, lish and Algebra stu· cross-<ountry ... presl· third, fourth and fifth named Best Musician dent ... Student of the dent. Spanish Oub ... grades ... 3.6 GPA ... two years ... volunteer, Month and Perfect publicity coordinator 2000 Youth Expo sec-Habitat for Humanity, Attendance awards ... and vice president. ond·plac.e in General Interfaith Shelter, Har-delivers food to needy Key Club ... treasurer, Craft category bor Trinity Preschool ... through Friends In Ser-Vietnamese Student organizes and runs vice to Humanity ... Assn .... volunteer for Girf Scout camp-outs ... member of marching AIDS Walk, Neighbors plans to attend Cal band and instrumental for Neighbors, Re-Leaf Poly Pomona, major· music program. Sci-Costa Mesa ing in chemical engt-ence Club, Jazz Ensem· . • ! ble neenng LAURYN GIEGUUKH COUITllEY MIGDIUll RANDAll Junior; Estancia High 1om11 SANDOVAL Third-grader, Sonora School, 17 ... talifornia Senior. Newport Har-Senior. Costa Mesa Elementary School, 9 Scholastic Federation bor High School, 18 ... High School, 18 ... ... four-time Student member ... recognized member of Latin Club Honor Wall through of the Month winner on Golden State Exam all four years ... Stu-high school ... ranks in ... Author of the in algebra and biology dent Political Action top 2% of graduating Month in third grade ... participated in Committee ... Califor-class ... winnei of Per· ... member of Math canned-food drives, nia Scholastic Federa· forming Arts Medal- Club and Book Club Adopt-A-Family and tion ... DaVinci Acade-lion, Irvine Co. leader· literacy group ... par-Share Our Selves ... my ... candy striper at ship Scholarship ... ticipant in church choir varsity golf team cap-Hoag Hospital ... vol-writes monthly "Teen ... member of Student tain unteer at West Side Scene" column in Cos- Council, gymnastics, Boys and Girls Club ... ta Mesa Breeze ... AWANA Christian Club tutors elementary active in Pacific Youth school children ... Chorale, Madrigal National Merit finalist. Choir; caroling quar- AP Scholar with Hon-tet. musicals ... girts' ors, E.I. Moore Award varsity golf ... ASB winner assistant activities commi.ssioner .. .. ' .. .. MDIII SCHUTZ Senior,· Newpc)rt Har- bor High SchoOI, 18, .. .badminton and volley- ball ... Social Science Club ... California Scholastic Federation ... DaVinci Academy ... National Charity league ... St. Andrew's Youth Group ... mem- ber of state volleyball champions. CIF Divi- sion I champions ... Golden State Exam honors in chemistry, geometry. trigonorn~ try and writt~n com- position Senior, Newport. Har· bor High School, 18 ... editor of campus news- paper ... Key Club pres- ident ... Academic Decathlon participant ... swim and bad- minton teams ... Girts League ... speech and debate secretary ... vol- unteer for March of Dimes Birth Defects Foundation, Susan G. Kornen Breast Cancer Foundation ... Daugh- ters of tf'\e American Revolution Good Citi- zen, National Forensic League honoree ... Irvine Co, scholarship recipient Senior, Newport tiarbor High 'School, 18 ... stu:- dent Political Action Committee co-founder and co-president ... Newport Aquatic Cen- ter junior canoe kayak team ... U.S. national canoe team ...... partici- pated at Freedom Foundation in Valley Forge, Pa .... volunteer assistant in Orange Coast College's adap- tive physical education program ... UCJ Pro- gram for High School Scholars, Regents Schol- arship Award for UCI EDDIE TOMASEK Fourth-grader, Victoria Elementary School, 10 ... outstanding student in all subjects ... GATE program member ... active in church ... helped raise money for outdoor science school students' fees ... involved in after- school sports, includ· ing baseball and soc· cer ... Costa Mesa All· Star Soccer Team memt?er • Personal Training •Group Exercise •Yoga • Strength Classes •Spinning •Tanning • Steam Rooms •Massage • Weight Watchers Eighth-grader, Ensign Intermediate School, '14 ... routinely earns highest grade in her class ... says her science book isn't in-depth enough ... earned three out of four pos- sible academic medal- lions and Rotary Club _Award ... considering lntemship at Hoag Hospital ... member of Ensign Nature Acade- my ... school yearbook computer manager ERIN TOOU Senior, Newport Har- bor High School, 18 ... National .Honor Society president and treasur-er, ASB commissioner ... school board stv- dent representative ... Social Science Club ... frosh-soph soccer team captain, active in swimming and volley- ball ... Helping One Student to Succeed (HOSTS) program ... mentor at Whittier Ele- mentary School ... AYSO referee-... ,Stu· dent of Semester in sci· ence ... Golden State Exam high honors in English , Senlor, Costa Mesa High School, 18 ... 4.26 GPA ... vice president Speech Team ... Mode Trial ... Mesa Oub, fr.eshman class vice president ... first place, Rotary Speech Touma- ment ... Kiwanis Club ... AIDS Foundation ... fig12re skater, tap, jazz and ballet dancer ... peer tutor LEVINA TUN Senior, Costa Mesa High School, 18 ... Mesa Club, Speech Team, Mock Trial ... California Scholastic Federation ... Junior Class Secretary ... ASB vice president ... ten- nis, water polo ... received letter of Commendation from National Merit Schol- arshlp Program ... Women and Mathe- matics Award ... recipi· ent of AP Scholar Award ... volunteer, Someone Cares Soup Kitchen. WESTCLIFF PLAZA Irvine Ave & 17th St. S'4ff-1{; CORONA DEL MAR PCH & Avocado Ave (949) 689-0042 (949) 689-0042 (Opening April 2ooo, Newport Beach (949) 631-3623 FITNESS CENTER (949) 631 -3623 www.1hape-up.com 1 Senk>r, Estancia H~ Schoof. 17 ... actiw In stUdent government ... California Scholastic Federation .::-varsity girts' soccer, trade and field ... Campfire Boys · and Girts, Speakoutl program ... helped pass anti-tobacco ordi- nance ... service activi- ties through church ... goal is to become a travel joumalist TRICIA TRUCCO Sixth-grader, Newport Elementary School, 11 ... a straight-A student ... principal's Honor Roll for fall quarter ... writer for Balboa Bea- con ... participated in Back Bay cleanup events with Girl Scouts ... active in Student Council, yearbook committee and school's lntemet Cyber Safari team Eighth-gr~ TeWin- kle Middle School, 13 ... Student of the Year . two years ... Math Hall of Fame ... GATE pro- gram member ... per- . feet attendance in 1998 ... active in church youth group, campus beautification pro- gram, peer tutoring, Respect Club ... school's House of Representa- tives member ... ASB secretary ... active on · volleyball, softball and track teams ... e>lays piano and violin ... Pacific Chorale Chi•· dren's Group member CAii VIUNmlN Senior, Newport Harbor High School, 18 ... New- port Aquatic Center Junior Crew ... plays volleyball ... National Honor Society, Califor· · nia Scholastic Federa-' tion ... Newport Beach Public Library Young Adult Advisory Council ... Helping..One Student to Succeed (HOSTS) program ... Hoag Memorial Hospital Aux- iliary ... National Merit Commended Scholar. AP Scholar, Newport Harbor High SchDol Academk Excellence JOlls--.r Serlior. ~liar- . bor High.School. 18 ... St\Jdent Political Action Committee founding member ... cross<oun- try, golf and soccer ... National Honor Society ... AYSO assistant coach . .. plays piano for senior citizens ... assis- tant at Newport Har- bor Yacht Club ... E.I. Moore Award winner ... perfect score on SAT math section ... second place in high school photovoltaic design project competition ... Outstanding Student Of Quarter in science Fifth-grader, Rea Ele- mentary School, 11 ... won Daughters of the American Revolution award ... classroom award for outstanding student ... GATE partic· ipant for two years ... · member of Rock Har- bor Church ... helps clean up Lions Park ... participates in recy- cling program ... mem- ber of PALS, Childs Pace and DARE ... tutors younger chil- dren in reading ... vol- unt~to pick up trash at school OINER'S FEE •YOUTH SPoRrs • BMl<E'rlwl. Save up to $100 •CAMPs •AooBIO Dally Piiat JUUi-- Fifth.grader, Wiison ' Elementat'y Schoot, 10 ... Daughters of the ArnerK.n RevolutJon history award ... Princi- pal's Fine Arts Awards ... an A student ... plays piano ... acted in children's theater "Bye-Bye, Birdie," "Music Man• and "Fiddler on the Roof" productions ... active in chess arld running dubs, AYSO socc~r lllllUIL VIWQUEZ Fourth-grader, Rea Elementary School, 10 ... student of the month ... graduate of after-school academy ... won •most pages read" in Govemon Reading Program ... involved in Girts Inc. and Sunday school ... on the soccer team ... "police officer# in classroom ·~ •YOGA ' I ' t ' 1' ' Dlecover the YMCA• 2300. ~ Drtw, Newport ...... 949-642-9990 DISPOSAL CO., INC. • lnduMrtel • A11ldenllal • Oonwn'erclal • Aecycllng 8er¥1cM •Mini .... Congratulations ToAll 2000]unior Top, 103 most influential • J =.. . W!'!!!:.~ Sixth-grader, Lincoln Elementary School, 8 Elementary School. 11 ··· volunteer !or school ... 3.95 GPA · ... an ~nd campaign, excellent writer ... including phone can- named Student of the vassing and precinct Month and most walking ... involved in improved student ... soccer, ice skating, helps with Lincoln dance, gymnastics and fund-raisers and horseback riding ... school musical .. Junior platform diver ... Lifeguards participant ~ember of novice ... plays footbaH and dive team Little League ... takes Spanish and French classes after school Sixth~rader, Lincoln Elementary School, 12 ... consistently at top of class, meets and excee,_ds any academic, challenge ... member of GATE program ... active in Temple Bat Yahm, club soccer, _ Honor Chorus ... Stu- dent Council president ... a Lincoln ambas- sador in community ~ICASA N\EXICAN RESTAURANT OUR MEALS ARE A TRIP TO MEXICO ALSO ON OUR MENU: .. FISH TACOS" TORTILLA SOUP CHIU SIZE CHIU CH.EESE OMELETTE HERE, WE MAKE DINING.MORE THAN AMEAU ROSEY'S AUTO.BODY 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 121 Industrial Way ·· Costa Mesa (' ftl 'f c· ftl\f\llf 11 ft('U • 00. • M • T~ •FOOT l1! • K11t6 Too LC• fQMNl. ~L J tlWYHHI ~ • • --.»c1H1N1nNfNll.9CO •24~1E-s•l9w A ~&,....., ,-ii 4#N • CllT1* f""'5 • CIW AIXTS. WllCllll 1714 NIWPORT llOULEVMD • MM41-7714 • ThMb to ... the administrators and tuchen in the Newport-Miu Uni- fied School Dlltrk.1 who provided the information on the young people fu- tured in this special section upon our request. Daily Pilot staffers who con- tributed to the sec- tion are: Deanna George, Danette Goulet, Donna Johnson, Don Leach, Jasmine ~ee, Timothy Lemm, Anthony Peck, Bri- an Pobuda, Jenifer Ragland, Jose San- tos, luladey 8. Tadesse and Sher- man Turntine. I • LEE CONTINUED FROM 1 At 5 foot 10, Jennifer towers over some of the -students in the taekwondo class she helps i.nsti'uct in Irvine. Part of her responsibili- ty as a higher-ranking student is to help instructors teach younger pupUs the martial arts basics. And when the little ones don't pay attention and act cilsruptive- ly; she keeps them iilline.'Among her pet peeves ls when students - who are used to male instructors --call her "sir.• •It you call me sir, you get 10 · push-upS, • she said. But 1ust as she can be stem wit.H the youngsters, she can be sensitive. ·u the little kids get hurt, I feel like crying. That is why I don't want to be a pediatrician,• she said . But Lee's ambitions are not hm- ited to her skills in martial arts. An honor student with a resume filled with academic and commu- nity service awards, Jenrufer is Misbehavin' Th11rsday-Sa1urday . . Friday, June 2, 2000 JS DON LEACH /OAl.V PILOT heading in the faU to Yale University in Connecticut, where she plans to major Ul molecular biophysics and biochemistry. • J want to be a doctor,• Jennifer said. It's more practical than want· ing to be Bruce Lee. wh.ach was her dream as a child, she added. -Luladey B. Tadesse Caffe Panini Panini Sandwiches, Pastas, Salads And Gourmet Pizzas Loac~ in the hcarr of .\farmer~ .\i 1le. ~-nu an cn1oy dining in the airy. c.omfunablc dining room or rclu outdoors in P;uun\·, ~rden patio. l:.:u\ '.>Cit p;irlong bcfond the rcsmuam Childrms ~lenu ~nibble. F~rcsso bar. Mcnuon this ad for a complun.,nrary a ppucmo with your f brc:akf.u1 or lun(h purcha<e Monday thru Friday L_ Offer good 1hru July I ,~· _ __,, For reservations, call (949)660-0101 2530 W. Coast B , N'e ort Beach Make Those Patios '1 Entries Beautiful River Rocle goes Well witk Boquet Sttme Let Jim Jennings install your complete yard hardscape. •Expert brick, tone, tile & slate work. •Can recommend quality designer & land capers. •Expert ma onry repair . •Drainage problems? We o lve them. Why take a chance and be disappointed? CaU the compin, that has $0tisfied l OOO's of CMStomen for CM.leT 3 l 1C4T'S • I \ 16 F . , June 2, 2000 ...... ·TO• • Sfnd ~.., -Items to 1tM o.11y Pilot. no w. aay ~ Cos· tA ~ CA 92627; fu to (949) 646- '110« c.111 (949) 57'-4268. A com- plete fisting Is available at http:lltlt(ww.dallypllot.com. TODAY The flnt seulod of the tbree- day Costa · Mesa-Newport Harbor Ll_on's Club "Fish Fry and Carnival• will be cooked up from 5 to 11 p,m. today at 2?01 Fairview Road. C9Sta Mesa. The SSth annual com- munity event includes food and entertainment. It contin- ues from 10:30 a.m. to 11 p.m. Saturday and noon to 11 p.m. Sunday. Admission is free. lnfpnnation: (949) 548-3094. J The )'oung ExecuUves of America will host a breakfast reception with Rep. James Rogan (R-Pasadena) from 7:15 to 8:45 a .m. at Pacific Club, 4110 MacArthw Blvd., Newport Beach. n ckets are $15 for members, $25 for non- members. Information and reservations: (949) 759-5456. The Rotary Club of Newp0rt- Balboa will meet at 11 a.m. for a light lunch and presen- tation on ~Reading by 9, • a program for local school libraries. The free event will be at Whittier Elementary School, 1800 N. Whittier Ave., Costa Mesa. RSVP: (949) 660- 8665, Ext. 2. SATURDAY The Patty and George Hoag Cancer Center will host its 12th annual "Celebration of w e· festival from 2 to 3:30 p.m. at 4000 W. Coast High- way, Newport Beach. High- lights of the afternoon will include live entertainment, face painting for kids and free drawings. Information: (949) 642-7787. The Sherman Ubrary & Gar- dens will present "Coloring ' c 11n1n . . ~ . Tbe Newport Harbor Lawn Bowling Club will host a Visitor's Day at 10 a.m. Saturday at 1550 Crown Drive North in Newport Beach. Refreshments will be served. No fee ls requ1red. Information: (~9) 759-1179. the Garden With Vibrant Blooms• at 9:30 a.m . at 2647 E. Coast Highway, Corona del Mar. The program is free. Information: (949) 673-2261. The Newport Harbor Lawn Bowling Club will host a Visi- tor's Day at 10 a .m. al 1550 Crown Drive North in New- port Beach. Refreshments will be seJVed. No fee is required. Information: (949) 759-1179. Candace Cha mbers-Bellda, author of "The Secret COdes of Conduct for Marriage," will sign copies of her boo'k at 2 p.m. at Borders Books, Music and Cafe, 3333 Bear St., Costa Mesa. Information: (949) 646-9925. SUNDAY Newport Coast Elementary School will celebrate its near completion With a family pic- nic from noon to 3 p.m. at Newport Ridge Park, on the comer of Newport Coast Dri- ve and San Joaquin Hills Road. Boxed lunches will be provided by Sweet Life and are being presold for $10 for adults, $8 for children. Reser- vations are required. Informa- tion: (949) 515-6975. .. People & Paws -Walle for the Cause,• a three-mile walk and fund-raiser to support research to find treatments and cures for retinal degener- ative diseases, will begin reg- istration at 9 a .m.; the walk begins at 10 a.m. Registration will be at the Newport Dunes Resort. The walk will begin at 1131 Back Bay Drive, Upper Newport Bay. Registration or information: (310) 445-8863 or the walk hotline at (714) 517- 8840. The Balboa Island Bustness Assn. will celebrate "Trea· sure Island: Jewel or the Bay,• its seve nth Balboa Island Parade, at 11 a.m . with a procession along Balboa Island's Main Street. Informa- tion: (949) 673-2130. MONDAY A caregivers support group will meet at 7 p.m. at Our Lady Queen or Angels Church, 2046 Mar VtSta Dri- ve, Newport Beach. Free. Information: (949} 640-1750. ' . MORELLI CONTINUED FROM 1 Her lint major role WU Belle in •Beauty and the Beut.. Since then, lbe bu appeUed in every 1pring musical at a.ta Mesa High School and three of the fall dramas. She also has been active in student government, the Madrigal Choir and the city's Advisory Council for Teens. · She loves to sing, reveal- ing that when she was 3, she'd ~erenade the family dog outdoors. Although humbly declining to evaluate her voice, Diana confidently conceded she has the drive to make it in musical theater. "It's more than just some- thing I want to pursue as a career -it's a passion,• she said. Diana plans to enroll at UC STOWELL CONTINUED FROM 1 her son had too much neuro- logical damage to ever be able to read and write. "Now h e reads and writes at about a first-grade level," she said. "But he told me that he would read all the books in his closet -so I knew he eventually would.• In school Jeremy excels at history and science, while at home he creates whole new worlds. •He's so artistic it's . unbe- lievable,• Dawn Stowell said. "He uses anything he can mold. He uses a lot of alu- minum foil and newspaper, tape and glue. He made a King Tut and the sarc-0phagus for it, and it looked just like one." Aside from playing his new "Star Wars" video game, his favorite pastime is making Godzilla movies with his video camera, Jeremy said. . . Irvine in the fall, majpling in backstage is now ln drama with an empbasi• on ICbool'• cborul and active mUlical theater. Her ultimate drama, tbaDb to Diana dream ts, of coune, to be on mentoring. Tbe kid Iba Broadway, but it doeln't stop Vlnced to jo1D student_,...,, .... there. She wants to build her ment is now ASB prea6dm career and influence to a And the student who wu lpi point where she could help raling into a life ot drugs improve people's lives. clean and back on bis f •I tb1nk fame is something after being in a clan wt people take for granted, and I Diana. know 1 would want to st.art •1 want to be there for charities· -somehow better ple, •she said matter-of-factly the world,• she said. "ln high school, people ofte And that side of Diana is don't think there is anyon what makes her one of the there. That's why wbe campus' most popular stu-someone's having a bad day, dents. She is proud to have ·always try to talk tq them.• friend$ in every grade level . Perhaps her mom said i and from every school ·best: "She just enjoys Ute an "clique.• Sbe ~her natur-she sees the good in people.• al charisma to meet new peo-As· for her 'future, D' ple, talk to them about their Morelli is clearly not stoppin problems and help them until she gets what she wants through the real-life drama •Tuere are a lot of ~ 'that is higb' school. out ijlere, and you just bav The boy who was too sby to take advantage of th to try out for the school pro-and seize the opPQrtunities. • duction and instead worked -Jenifer bgla •r have a big, plastic Godzilla and little guys and then J destroy them,• be said. His plan is to be the next Steven Spielberg. When asJied why his school nominated him as one of the most influential stµ- dents he said, "Probably because I'm a really good kid. I'm nice to my friends, and · I'm giving.• Those who know him couldn't agree more. •He's a good leader and role model for kids in the spe- cial day and regul,ar class,• said Sandee Gordon, his spe- cial day teacher. ·fie bas a way about him that draws people to him.• Scofield agreed. •His positive attitude and genuineness make it impossi· ble to be down around Jere- my," she said. "If I'm a little bit down or tired I go visit him . -be brightens my day. "I don't even think he real- izes it.• -Danette Goulet ,,., COIOUDIL ... SClllC 51 FR FACT GHrlng up for the annual Corcnt t»I MM -Scenic SK. which tMes places.~ .............. (949) 644-3151 Race org.mz.n expect about 4,000 ~ pie to partJdplte In this year's run. in some capacity. Am>rdl19 to salespeople -Nb-town. the .wrage . weight of a running shoe Is about 12 ounca. Doing the math. that means roughly 3,000 pounds of st)Oe IMther anc:t plastic w1n h1t the streets of Corona def ~r on s.turdlly. JOINER'S FEE . Save up to $100 • 2 POOLS • SwlM ~NS • AEROBI~ • BASKETBALL •YOGA • SWIM TEAMS • Yourn SPORTS • RACQUETBALL. CAMPs 1" ~ bui/J strong kids, strong families, • strong communiries. DilcMr the YMCA 2300 lMlwnilr DrM Nlwpolt .... 949-642-9990 Tlte ..,, Jt»quln Wlldllte S.ncfualy . ltWlll • you and yow,.,,,_ to ,,. "Welcome to the Wild'' Community Celebration Sunday June 4, 2000 -noon to 4 p.m • . Slln J011quln Wlldllte Sllnct&Mry MfRWl'rflmDIM(.-111,...,.,, ~). INIM .,,,. .............. ,,.,,, hMt»«t dllfchn~ ...... /Ne bltd al,,,. and .,.,,. ..,..., ~---blld....., .... and .. ..,.,.,,.~ and dllp1l)'I by er..,. Qulfy~ and .... ~ Came Md .. ,.,...,..,,,,. ...... ..,...,,. and,..,,.,, ol ltll,,,.. ..... Friday, JuM 2, 2ooo J7 . ALL HOME FURNISHINGS! Sale ends June 4th. * Huge shipments of European and factory showroom specials now on Sale at all 3 locations! * 20%-75°1'. off selected manufacturers in stock (Jncluding special order!) * Our TENTED PARKING LOT at our ·Costa Mesa Store is showcasing t~e best .. bargains on all home furnishings! * ·Choose from: Henredon • Baker • Century •.Jeff co ~ Maitland~Smith • Hickory White • and many others! * Huge Savings on HUN.DREDS of new & antique hand_made P~rsian , Indian and Tibetan rugs. * Delivery can be arranged. All ..... are FIMI Hcl .. "• ... COIMlllioll • ... lailM ••• ~ -..... (Landmark I.oration t 345 North P.C.H. • (949) 49+6551 • \. \ -z . .,.,...i ............... . .. W,.kllil ............... _ .. Jeff 9rlnldey, Newport Harbor football coach 4 .,,,,,..... _-.s-.. ....SHMLW... JOlll ...., Friday, Junt 2, 2000 • Sports Editor Roger Corfson • 949..57 44223 Daily Pi"j' LIKE . - FINE .WINE Reigning Santa Ana Country Club and Tea Cup C lassic champion Marianne Towersey is hea_ting up with the weather and 'beating the clock. we enter golf's summer eason, Marianne Towersey f Santa Ana Country Oub is already sizzling. Shattering the accepted country club theory that amateurs reach their playing peak between ages 25 and 35, Towersey's game has not only steadily improved, but her scores are lower than ever as she approaches her 50th birthday in January. "I am playing better than ever before, no doubt about it ... knock Richard Dunn GOLF on wood,· said Towersey, whose recent hot streak includes winning the Women's California State Championship for private dubs at Alta Sierra Country Club in Grass Valley near ·Sacramento. Towersey, the two-time defending Tea Cup Classic champion and widely considered the top female amateur m the area, won the•same state championship in 1961 when she was pregnant with her son, Patrick, •who's going off to college (in the fall),• she told the awards/dinner crowd during her acceptance sJ>E1ch two weeks Jgo. I · At Alta Sierra, Towersey defeated Corey Weworski (Shadowridge) in the 36-hole finals, 1 up. In the semifinals. Towersey beat Candy Meyers (Glendora). who knocked off Towersey in the finals of the Southern California Championships last summer at Mission Viejo Country Club -the same day Towersey turned into a golf fitness queen and won Tea Cup Classic ill at Mesa Verde Country Club. Further, Towersey won that warm August day in the Fletcher Jones Motorcars/Daily Pilot Club Championship Series for women without her putter. It is the same long, Langer putter that has helped propel Towersey to the top of her game -though club golf lore would say otherwise. ·1 attribute a lot of (my success) to going to the long putter,· said Towersey, who will try to qualify this year for the U.S. Amateur and U.S. Mid-amateur, the latter to be held at Big Canyon Country Oub Oct. 3-6. "If you can't putt, you're never going to be a great golfer. The long putter has given me more confidence. If I start out (a round) poorly, I just know 1 tan come back by sinking a couple of putts." • -Towersey, a first-year assistant boys goU c~ch this season for Newpol1 Harbor High as the Sailors captured a CIF Southern Section title, started with the long putter 2'h years ago. •1 never had that (confidence) before, when my putting was inferior,• she said. •CalJ tt psychological or call it a putting cure, but I definitely attribute (recent success) to tha Jong putter.• U Towersey qualifies for the U.S. Amateur Aug. 7-12 in Portland. Ore., and goes beyond the quarterfinals, she would begrudgingly forego her spot in the fourth annual Tua Cup Classic Aug. t 1 at BJg Canyon. When you're a real good goUer, you have those kind of problems. Incle••t weedier lon:ed tbe postponement of the women's dub champion.ship at Santa Ana unW late August, when reigning champion Toweney wW try to wtn her 16th dub title in 19 yean. Tuweney euned an automatic berth Into the 2000 'JM Cup Mohs matches on tap tonight at EdiSon ~ • Orange County All-Star son High, the 24th aJUlual in this series of All-Star matches. du~ls feat\U'e several CdM, Division I boys champion Corona Newport Harbo standouts del Mar will send Stanford-bound · ~. · . setter Kevin Hansen and outside hit- HUNTINGTON BEACH -Wlth ter Greg S~pley, a walk-on caridi- , both the boys and girls CIF Southern · date at USC, to the boys South team. Section Division I champions com- CdM Coach Steve Conti will join Bl ing from the· Newp0rt Beach area, Toro's Michelle Kyman and Irvine's it's only natural for Corona del Mar Mark Mednick on the South coach- and Newport Harbor High to send a ing staff. sizable contingent to the Dave Mohs NeWport Harbor's Billy Clayton Orange County High School Volley-and Kent Turner' will get another ball All-Star matches tonight at Edi· chance to beat the Sea Kings after HIGH SCHOOL FOOTllll ' .... Ill OL Eyllll Sailors to a Division I section and •STIR V l . state title, is one of three Sailors on, ·losing to them in the DiviSM>n 1 the girls North team. Duke-bound1, middle blocker Krist.a Dill and UCI-,, championship m!ltch. Clayton, a bound outside hitter Brenda Water-. Stanford-bound opposite hitter,' and Turner a setter headed to USC next inan are the other Sailors on the year, ~e on the boys North team. . North squad, coached• by Cypress'' that Will be coached by Tom Costan-Heathe,r Dillard and Calvacy. zo of Mater Del and Darrick Lucero Chapels. Jim Downey. , of Marina For Dill, it could be a pretty busy, Newport Harbor's April Ross, the ~a}'. for. her. She ~ at the State '!'re·• USC-bound Gatorade National liminanes at Cerntos College with. Player of the Year who led the SEE VOLLEYBALL PAGE 19' • SAILORS TRUDGE ONWARD Still dealing with Andre Stewart's tragic death, . , Newport Harbor opens spring football practice. 8wry F.ulkner DAH.Y PILOT NEWPQRT BEACH -While •dealing with adversity~ is COHIW> lMJ I DAl.Y Pl.OT a time-honored coaching cliche, it seldom takes on tbe meaning it held recently for the Newport Harbor High foot· ball program. • Strength c:OKh Mike 8argM dlreda......, drtlll (~Below, the SaOon keep tbetr mlDdl OD receMllg wf Wlrllng M+ "''-IW .... Mr lpl'IDg lootbell drtlls. Mitch Gny latcbel on tom wtaa. md Md Cwerty drtw. lldo baDamier Dane Barto1l. Tbe Sanon wW be •l It tour dllyl a week~ wrapphag It up June 16. In the aftermath of the May 14 auto accident which claimed the life of senior All·CIF running back Andre Stew- art, however, the Sailors banded together to cope with tbeJr collective loss, as well..a.s to help Celebrate the impact their former tailback had on so many. .... Ollf HAMOR POOTW.L mmxu llOM..UGm Fri,, Sept. I • Onft9e l.uttterlln, home, 7p.m. Thul\., Sept. ,.. • ........... home, 7 p.m. • Fri., Sept. 22 • C.orane del Mer. home, 7p.m. Thuts., Sept. 28 • 0.. ....... home. 7p.m. Fri., Oct. 6 • a..TtOnt. at Bonita. 7:30p.m. MA VllW LIAGUE Fri .. Oct. 13 • at INIM. 7 p.m. Fri .. Oct. 20. &....-...... home, 7p.m. SM., Oct. 28 • Waa ...... at Irvine, 7 f .m. Fri., Nov. ·at~ ae. (nonlHgue) , 7:30 p.m. Fri., Nolt. 10 . Aleo ....... home. 7p.m. •Pilot Cup begins today. The Pilot Cup 2000, featuring boys and girls soccer standouts tn grades 3, 4, 5 end 6 from throughout the Newport-Mesa area, gets under way today at four sites, with all eyes pointed toward Sunday's finals at Harper and Kaiser schools in Costa Mesa. Here's the complete schedule for the Pilot Cup 2000: 8CJYS~M Pool A · Kaiser, OM 2, = HeiOhts; Pool I • RM 1, hltbluff, . J; Pool C • Davis 1, Mariners, i... 2 ~.tlelertc 4 p.m. • KaiMr VI. OM 2; Plff 1 vs. Emt· bluff; S p.m. OM 1 vs. Mariners. l9eA ... .t lelertc ~ ta.m. • "-82w.DM 1; Davlslvs.. Ma 1; 10:15 • Newport He6ghtl vs. Kalw; 12'.JO . Elld*lff w.. .,.,.. t MarirW'I WI. .. 2; 2:.JO p.m. • Dlwte 2 vs. ...... Of1 ""9htl-..... ,, .. ....,. Beginning Tuesday, with heavy hearts, Coach Jeff Brink- ley, his staff and his players, began diverting their focus, if only for a few hours each day, to -------- spring practice. #We're a very "Our program is based on things • th(\t. hopefully, will help our kids get tight.knit football through times like these,• said family and we're Brinkley, who acknowledges that a 11 practice routine will provide a posi· a still leaning on tive.focal point toward the future. each other ... " "We'1' a very tigbtknit football family and we're all still leaning on Jeff Brink:to, each other," Brinkley said. ~!:ch On the Mid. the Sailors plan to ~ddress sevf!ral issues this spring I including sorting out.a ooDec:tioo o1 talent at the um poattiolw, Chris Manderino, who started 12 games at quarterback as a junior and earned '1>aily Pilot See Vlew League MVP honors while helping lead the Tars to a 13-0-t record and the CIP Southern Section o;vwon VI title, could be part ol that sorting process. Though Brinkley loves Q.is leadership ability and athleti- cism under center, Mandertno may be shifted to tailback. allowing Morgan Craig, who Will be a junior, to amune the QB role. •we have a lot of guys competing for the tailback spot. '° we'll have to see how things pan ou~ • said Brtnkley, who mentioned Ryan Ortega. Matt Casserly and Dennis Thorton u potential successors to Stewart. "If one of them emerges, we can leave Chris at quarterback.• Former quarterback Brian Gaeta, who will be a junior, will begin the transition to wide receiver, while e.llo work- ing at defensive back. Joe Foley, a linebacker last season u a aopbomont, wm be tried at noseguard. while former junior vanity linebacker David Marshall will shift to cornerbeck, Brinkley Mid. • In addition to getting the retumen tp fit in. the ~ wW also be aMfmilattng two former Santa Margarita llnemen Into the program. Scott Lopez and Ian Banigan, both of whom wW be seniors, will get to see what f411 practk:el are like, mnce Brinklt!y and his staff n1n the same practice format in tbe ~e transfers) have seen the work ethic In the weight room and the coadilioning, but they'll need to undentand the practice procedW81, • Brinkley Mid. · . While playe.n will learn the entire olfemive and defeD. · live systems, Brinkley beli8V81 the spring mo ba1p1 mm· tally energize his players for the upcom1no -.m. .Sometimes it's bard in January and Mruary to COD• Yilx'e the kids tbat the ll8UOD la right around the cormr, • Brtnldey laid. "But once you get into spring ball. tbat ~ ty ltarta lettinq in." 1be 'Im will typkaJ1y practice tour daYI a wMk. tlirouab June 16, wttb a bOoetei barbecue ICbeduled to follow IM lllW~kout. D-v vs. Newport Heights; 2:30 p.m. • Kaiser vs. Eastbluff. Champion and second place determined by points. llOYS c.ADIS M Pool A • Kaiser, Eastbluff, Mariners; Pool B • RN. Paularlno, HMbor Day; Pool C • O~s, Andenon, Uncoln. -..,,.ec.elfomle 4 p.m. • KaMt vs. Eastbfuff; RN vs. Paolar· lno; 5: 15 • DaYts w.. And9non. ...... ... .t c..ltforr.a. 9 a.m. • Harbor D.iy vs. Plff; Uncotn YS. Davit; 10:15 • hstbluff \II,~ 12:30 p.,m, • P.ulMlno w. Harbor 0-,. Andenon YS, Uncoln; 2;30 • KaiMr \II. Mal1ntn. ...., 9 a.m. • Pool A wtnner vs. Pool c Winner, at l<Mer; Pool • winner vs. wtld CMCt• at lack hy; 1 p.m. • champlontNp, at Kalw. SR GOLF MGI ti · t a.m. • P'oof A No. 1w.P'oofCNo.1; Pool .. . . ------------------~~~SPORrS ~------~~~~~~Fridoy~.~~-2~.2000----•• DllFLY Red Sox advance to the title game • Nichols.on steals home in the sixth inning for a dramatic 9-8 victory·and a berth in AAA final. NEWPORT BEACH -The Red Sox llnU lUGUE scored two runs in the bottom of the sixth inning to defeat the Cardinals, 9·8, in the semifinals of the New- port Beech. Uttle League AAA Division playoffs Wednesday. In the sixth, trailing, 8-7, Camden Nicholson drove in the tying run with a trtple and later stole home to Win the game lor the Red Sox. " l ~ Rollins and Curtis Conver!Je each had two hits and scored two runs, while Garrett Amoroso had two hits, a run scored and one RBI. Alex Ray and Brett Bartlett each scored three runs off of three walks for the Red Sox. For the Cardinals, AusUn Hearns scored three runs, JUley Sullivan scQred two runs and David Wheatley, Thomas Koss and Tom Thomas each added single rurts. • With the win, the Red Sox Will face the Dodgers in the AAA championship game Saturday at noon at Lincoln Elementary. Jack Errion hoops tourney approaching I . CORONA DEL MAR -Corona del Mar BISKEOAU High will be hosting its annual Jack Errion tyfemorial Basketball Tournament July 29, beginning at 8 a.m. in the Sea Kings' gym. Alumni teams from each year are asked to put together teams for the upcoming tournament. Approximately 150 for- mer CdM players Will be in attendance for the event, with pro- ~s going to the Sea Kings' program. For infonnatioo, John Upham at (714) 429-5774, or Robert Hess at (949) 757-2800. I €osta Mesa National winter registration • COSTA MESA :...... The Costa Mesa unu LEAGUE ~ational Little League will be holding a . ~tration day for the upcoming winter baseball season Sat- qrday from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. at TeWinkle School's snack bar area. The cost is $45 per player and new players must bring a birth certificate and utility bj.U. For infonnation, (714) 374-1563. ' M>rams named tO collegiate national team Stanford University senior Geoff Abrams, for· TENNIS rherly of Newport Harbor High, has been named to . the USA Tennis Collegiate Team, an elite training program for the country's top collegiate players. Abra.ms, one of three Stanford players on the six-player team, closed out 2000 with a 45-7 singles record and earned tJ'le Pacific 10 Conference's co-Player of the Year honor (with- teammate Alex Kirn). Abrams, 22, played on three NCAA title teams at Stanford, including this year, and capped his collegiate career by mak· ing the Intercollegiate Tennis Association's All-American team in singJes illld doubles. Coaches needed for upcoming season NE~RT-MESA -!he Newport· JR ALL·AMERICAN Mesa Juruor All·Amencan Football • Program is in need of volunteer head and assistant coaches for the upcoming 2000 season. J For those interested in such positions, please call (949) 640· Q500 or (949) 640-8505. · HAPPY BIRTHDAY GOLF · CONTINUED FROM 18 N ewport Harbor Hlgb's super trio -distance standout Amber Steen (above), hurdler Trevor Jones (at right), and Krista Dill (below) in the discus. Steen ls seeking glory in the 1,600 and 3,2QO. Jones eyes the 110 and 300 hurdles crowns. SEAN Hlu.ER I OAll.Y PltOT J . CountJy Club. Taonnina will make her Tea Cup debut. . Towersey, ironically, set the Big Canyon course record with a 69 on April 25. , aassic -held at Big Canvon for the first time. Towersey ls among the featured golfers at the 2000 George Yardley Celebrity Goll Classic June 26 at Newport Beach Golf Course to benefit I DEEP SEA j ..• ··;;J : . -. 4. . --. .. Tea Cup Classic IV will complete the first cycle of the four-year, four~club rotation for host site in the event created to promote women's golf and bring the Newport-Mesa goU community closer together. The four women's club champions m the Daily Pilot's circulation are invited to play in the Tea Cup Classic, which, in past years, bas attracted a sizable gallery. Tea Cup Classic rv is scheduled to feature Towersey, Debbie Albright (Newport Beach Country Club), Denise Woodard of Mesa Verde Country Oub and Colette Taonnina of Big Canyon · Newport Harbor's golf program. The event, a .k .a. Yardley VII, raised over $40,000 last year. Event chairman Buck Johns said Wednesday that former Rams quarterback Vince Ferragamo is also expected to play this year. Several golf pros from the area, political figures and former athletes will also tee it.up. The tournament is hosted by the Naismith Basketball Hall of Farner and Newport Harbor graduate (Class of '46) who became the first NBA player to NOTICE OP PUBLIC HEARING . NOTICE JS HEREBY GIVEN dm a public.hearing will be he.Id by the Com Mesa Ciry Council on Monday, June 19, 2000. :u 6:30 p.m .• or at J06n thereafter as possible in the Council Ch.'mben of C1ry Hall, 77 Fair Ori,vc. Cosca Mesa. on the fullowing item: ~ 2000-2001 PrcUnunvy Bu•t fur the Ciry of Com Mesa wiU be conAdcrcd for adoption 11 dUs mttting. The fol.lowing is the propoecd allocation of~ in summary fur the 2000-200 I fuc:i.I year. PUBLIC HEARINGS WILL BE HELD BY THE COSTA MESA PLAN· NINO COMMISSION AT THE CITY HALL, n FAIR DRIVE, COSTA MESA, CALIFORNIA, AT 11.30 P.M. OR AS SOON AS POSSIBLE THEREAFTER ON MONDAY, JUNE 12, 2000 REGAAOING THE FOlLOWING APPLICA· TIONS. FUND General Fund C..TuFund Propoeition 172 • Public SafQy AQMO . AB 27<i6 HOMEProgram . Community ()(vdupmcnt Block Cran1 Pvk~rfltcs Supplanmtal Uw ~I NllCOrica Forfcinue Fulld 1974 Opm Spice Bond Od>t Sct\'l()t M.Nft •M• Co~on c.pital Oudey £.qllipmenr ~r Fu.nd Sell llllUROC:C Fund TOTAL 2000-2001 PR.EUMINARY BUDCBT 2000-200 I Pmiminary 8udp $68,683.990 2,.w;,00 sn.oo 71.040 605.000 1.Jn.000 179.020 123,520 306.900 2S7.530 J.7)(),790 l.141.000 2.395.100 3.79J.S20 85.619.670 ni. ........ _, ... ...._. duriftt--~ Mltn (MO t.M • • .. ~p.a.) ... a.,. a.ti\ 09cll ioc-.t • .,, ,. on.. .... ....... ca.. M9a .• . U«>1"1C2 IS F\JlmiD. GIVEN .._ • llid lilM Md pllar all l"'liliiiilllillJ ..... .., .............. ., .. q.,e.ow1-. d ....... . ......t llAIOR .,...a.,a.11 ................ t<-i .... Dilr~& .. If N4Y OF THE FOL· LOWING ACTIONS ARE CHALLENGED IN COURT THE CHAlLENGE MAY BE LIMITED TO ONLY THOSE ISSUES SOME· ONE RAISES AT THE PU8l1C HEARING DE· ~18ED IN THIS NO-TICE OR IN WRITTEN CORRESPONDENCE DELIVEAED TO THE PLANNING COM· MISSION AT, OR ~~THE PUB- 1. Pl.ANNING AP· PLICATION PA·et-07 fOA NEWPORT-MESA CALVA"Y CHU .. CH FOR A COfC>ITIONAL UBE PERMIT TO OQN. ITFIUCT A lt,931 IQ.FT. CHUACH AHO A .... IQ.FT. FACI.· rTY P0R M\N Di\Y CAN ON AV~. . TUCI lllD FIELD .DO U·BLE DUTY Jones and Steen from Division II ~ewport Harbor ·will both run two races at State. NORWALK -Why settle for one race when you can run two? That's exactly what Newport Harbor High · senior 1Tevor Jones and juruor Amber · Steen from Southern Section Divi- sion .Il circles plan to do in the CIF State Meet this weekend at Cerritos College. The preliminaries are today, with nine quali- fiers for the finals going on Saturday. Jones is one of the few athletes to have a solid chance at two state crowns. He is the defini- 3 p,m. • gk'k Discus · ICrtllla -Newport Hatbof 4 p.m ·girts High Jump· ....... o.y,C~Mesa 5:24 ·girts 1,600 meten • Aftlber 5'Mn. Newport Harbor 6:10 ·boys 11G-meter high hurdles · hvor Jan-. Newport Harbor 7:12 • gir1s 800 meters • Ua ....,_ Corona del Mar 7:55 ·Boys 300-met« intenuediate hurdles • 1Nwr Jan-. Ne<Nport Harbor STATE FINALS SOtEDUU s.turdey, .. c.ntw Cal111. 2 p.m. -girls high jump 2 p.m. • girls discus 4:19 • s:rls 1.600 meters 4:54 · 11~HH 5:34 • gir 800 meters 6:00 boys' ~en intennedlate hurdles 6:25 • girls 3,200 meters • Ambet' Steen. Newport Harbor tive favorite in the boys 300-meter intermediate hurdles and he has the only sub-37 second time in the state, a 36.89 when he won the Southern Section Masters. His biggest threat, future UCLA teammate Tony Golston of Point Loma, is not running at state. Jones also won the Masters' 110 hlgh hurdles with a 14.22.Even though Qolston, Littlerock's Marcus Rames and Katella's Kenny Vinh are not in the 110, Jones will have stiff competition from Taft's Chris Morgan, who ha~ the top qual- ifying time of 14.07, Rancho Bernardo's Bobby Salirru and Oeveland's Kenan Jackson. Steen is the only Masters qualifier runrung both the girls 1,600 and 3,200. Steen's school record or 4:50.75 is the third· fastest qualifying time in the 1,600 behind Mira Costa's out- standing freshman Lynn Dixon and San Lorenzo Valley's Alejandra Barrient~. the defending state champion Steen, who placed 10th in the 3,200 last year, ts JllSt one of the big names in arguably the> mee1'4' toughest rac1" Sdt· urday's 3,200 girls finals. The held indudC'~ Bdmento .... who has the nation's fastest time m lhls event, two-lllne DtVls1on I champ Anita Siraki of Hoover (Glenddle). Montgomery junior Sara Bei, who was second last year, Ukidh's Amber 1Totter and Fountain Valley's Julte Allen, the D1vis1on r run- ner-up. Newport senior Krista Dill surpnsed everyone by almost winning the girls discus at the Masters. Her personal record of 137-4 led the meet until the last round. Dill finished third and she has the ninth-best qualifylng throw going in. score 2,000 points in a season. Since last year, the Yardley event has included an essay contest for students and a community outreach for Olive Crest, which includes a portable driving range for a golf clinic. The C>utreach, which will start again in September, enjoyed success in the first year as a six-month pilot program headed by USC-bound Mitch Johns. Yardley, a former Stanford All-American, scored an NBA-leading 2.001 points for the Detroit Pistons in 1957-58 during his Hall of Fame career. Pelican Hlll Golf Club has named Ken Graves as Director of Agronomy and Paul Cunningham (Ocean South course) and Paul Taylor (Ocean North course) as new golf course superintendents. • IUCKARD DUNN's golf column usoatly appears ~ry Thursday. VOLLEYBALL CONTINUED FROM 18 the ,discus, which begins at 3 p.m. CdM outside hitters Dilni· tra Havriluk and Jamie BroWnell were named to the South team that will be coached by St. Margaret's Susie Maga and Santa Mar· ganta's Eddie Rapp. Havriluk, who led the Sea Kings IJl kills, committed to West Virginia. Brownell IS headed to Stan· lord. The girls match starts at 6 p.m. and the boys match has a 7 p.m. start time. Admission is $5 for adults and $3 for stu- dents and duldren. doing butlnftS yet? v... Aprl 27, 2000 El Caprt•n lncru.tnu LLC. BHlllo Nunez. M•n.oer/Membtr This st•tement WU hied wtth the County Clefk " °'8nge County on Os.wl2000 2000M2._. Dally Pllol Mey 12, 19, 20. W 2 .. 2000 F394 e.11 IH•l•o-Mn , ............. .. -""·-· ,..,. --~ ~-~ ~ '·. '1l"r' -~ -&• ~ ,._, .. PUBUC HEANNOS ,:::fl.:. WILL BE HELD BY THE -... ....., -.__. -...... ~-COSTA MESA Pl.AN· ,,,.. ...., ---,,.. ---HING~ AT lly, accorcllria to .. ti1f llllli • THE CITY HAU., 17 pftMliol• al Dhlilarl I El ~ Qlrue, FAIR OAl'IE, COSTA of !he llUllMle and HIOO MacAltV IMS., MESA. CALIFORNIA, fltofHalone Coda, l&llel llO, INIM; CA AT 8;30 P.M. 0A AS ~' J_l!i __ ~~ t21El1'-.-..A , ..... ......__, SOON AS POSSIBlE 21101(~ ~ -....,._, ,, __ THEREAFTER ON 8efvloe J::!!f! .F~ LLC, (CAJw 111900 ~Dtlo.Jti{~ ~ =nc.~PUMJC ="=· CA a9::9 .__......,._~ 1t FOLLOWING APPLICA-I ALa. Thia buelrl9l8 la con-.. ,...._...a 1"' 1.......,. TIONS. AIRPORT SELF duc9lcl by: Umlled Ua· _....,,..,..,. ....,.,"~)' IF ANY OF THE FOL· STORAGE Wiii conduct billy Co. """'•+• _,........,.... LOWING ACTIONS PROBATE hal been • piAllo .... of Iha con-Have you t larted ~"'-~""'""' ARE CHALLE~GEO IN flled by ROSEMARY c.nta of IN alorege doing . bUllMH yel? ._..,, 1,..141,_.~l!:;llil g~tfe~E MAV BE ~E~~v&:°: ~ =. ~ v:,-~· .~. ::.=°!!.~ .. _,,_ L1MITEO TO O.NLY CaJlfomla, County of IOld to .Iha tlW..e LLC, 8uillo Nunez, ..._.__,., ..... 11 .. ,..., .,....,.. ...... 3:)() 1eM Bin Stm'f (:o,,tJ ~ke. f!i\ 1.l'l6:!7 At._....., ...... i. ... iii. Thi.-nday ....... \:tdlltlfda)' 5:00pm ~lf~~sAme ORANGE. • =· t:::':::': ~-~ -....,...._,_ ....... ""'"'tllr PUBLIC HEARING OE· THE PETITION . FQR America t':,>· °"'* flied wtd\ die ~ ,._.,, .. 11y ... ~1i, '"""'°"' ••&& • SCRIBED IN THIS N(). ~~:"'=,..~ ~ .... ~· Clalll °' Oninae CounlY (~C...ailybtfllio...,.roti:M 1<"'e-1..~ ... s·')l\......._5:00pm Uf-1L.tn8·.""-m-5~. ~·ridl.t ...... -. .'1111inde1 S;<,iop. TICE OR IN WRITTEN STEVENSON .. _ ,,,. II hald on 05IOllr'2000' , llN'-rdt-. ~ I""""' ;,.J\llt .. ~ wt11a .JVa "'"I"" CORRESPONDENCE • · .,. af>-to utllly a I JOIOIUNM ' U --·1-f 'd M-e..I-F 'da DELIVERED TO THE = :i::: lien Md .. be hald at o.lly Piiot ~12, 19, '""---..-_ ...... __ _, ITIWKlllY· n ay UOUil)'• n y PLANNING COM· the HCate d lhe 'ctec:.-AtRPORT SELF 20. Jig 2.~ FM ,.-------.,..------:-.,..---------,_.SJ( MISSION AT, OR dent. ~mPu-3~ FlctlUoue luelneu -•"-----------------------. rl~O~J~NJ,HE PUB-THE PETITION r~ N~ Beach, Ca'. Na1M ~ 1. PLANNING AP· ~ueltl the decedent 8 92980 on Apttl 5fl 2000, The fo11ow1ng P«9on8 PLICATION PA·00·05 Ill and codicill, If """· at 9;()() a.m. .,. doing builNea ... FOR J~RY CLARKE, ~hi '=r~ :v~ ~Pl~ ~ ~ •slf.!!~T~~s • 1'lJTHORIZEO AGElll[. are available tor eJC· .,,..,ly ... · ..._, ,_._, ,.. • , 752 FOA VANGUARD UN • on . Notll'I Avenue VERSITY/SOUTHERN ~a:u~ lhe ftle kapt A general ~ Pla"otla, Calllornli CALIFORNIA COL· THE PCTITION r• ~the • ....:~ ~ 9~~ Osu ........... LEGE, FOR AN ....., Wllh h ,_.,. ...,.,...,., __,, ~"" AMENDMENT TO THE quest• aulhority to •d· Illy °' the Occuoant rent• 752 Notll'I AnoallNi AW:. MASTER PLAN TO mlnlaler the Mlale undaf Ing the epeoe le aa fol. oue Placentia. Calif CONSTRUCT A FOUR· :..~::...~ Iowa: n1a 1 92870 ' or· STORY. 44,170 SQ.FT. (Thia A•...._, will allow OCSPACECUP .. NONT., Thia bUaineM II con-STUDENT lh WW-;J Mnl .. • ducted br. .,, lndMcUll DORMITORY AT VAN· e persona repre • PROPERTY Have you alerted GUARD UNIVERSITY, allve to lake many ac> DESCRIPTION doir'l1 bua1naea y«'1 No LOCATED AT 55 FAIR tlona without obtaining 2070 l9Qal Colleo-Kenneth Sean Caahln DRIVE IN AN l&R court approval. Before Ilona, Inc., File boxM, Thi• statement wu -zoNE. cNVIRONMEN· _takJ®-c.edaln _yeey Im· Pmter, Monitor, Bag. filed with the-County TAL DETERMINATION: portent actions, how· 2118, Jim Jaggers, Cieri< of Orange County NEGATIVE DECLARA· •V8f.a.l: ~ repre-: Several boXH cone.m. on ()4121/2000 TtON (AVAILABLE aen requnct unkoown 200011287H FOR .REVll:W AT THE to give notice lo In· 2153, Mlc:hael Sutton, Deily Piiot May 19, 26, PLANNING DIVISION ~haed ~ ~ BoxH Cnta un· Junt 2. 9, 2QOO F.415 FROM JUNE 6 TO u-1 ve we,,...., ,..,._ known), , Paper, JUNE 26. 2000). or conaeoted . lo the Bega, (con1anta un· PUBLIC NOTICE FOR FURTHER IN· r,ropoaed actlonJ The known), SpHkere, ANNUAL REVIEW f:ORMATlpN ON THE ndependent a mlnla· Buket henw In beck d OF THE CITYWIDE ABOVE APPLICA· tratlon authority Will be unil la lull TR TIONS TELEPHONE granted unlasa an In· 2l97 Dennla AFFIC IMPACT (71 4) '754·5245 OR tereeted pereon filel an DI. ~o. R"tau· FEE PROGRAM CALL AT THE OFFICE objection to the petition ra.nt •uoollea, Tray•, The Coeta Meaa Ctly OF THE PLANNING and etiow. good cauM Cupa, Ofahee, Silver· Courd will hold a public DIVISION, ROOM 200, wily the cour{ ahoold not ware, BoxM (contenta hearing for the annual n FAIR DRIVE COSTA grant the authorlly. unknown) Cuti ~ review o( the Citywide MESA. CALIFORNIA. A HEARING on the Pol1/pan1, Cooker: Trafllc Impact Fff Pro- Publlshel! Newport petition will be held on Signe gram on Monday, June Beach-Costa Mesa JUNE 22, 2000 at l:45 2328. Robin Gal... 5, 2000, at 6:30 p.m .. In Oa1ty P110t June 2 20()0 p.IJl. In Dept. L73 lo-Fryer Ovan Boxu the.Council Chambel1I of ' F427 ca!ed at 3-41 The City (conlenla unkoown), City Hall, 77 Fair Qr1ve, ~-----"-== Dnve Soulh, Orange, Dog house TeleYlaion eo.ta Meaa. CA. , CA 92868. Microwave ' & Stand' The Traffic Impact Fee NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN lhal a public hearing wiU be held by lhe Costa Mesa City Council on Monday, June 19. 2000 al 6:30 p.m., 01 as soon thefe- after as possible. In the Council Chambers of City Hall, n Fair Drive, Costa Mesa. on the fol· lowing hem: PURSUANT lo Artlcle Xlll·B of Proposition 4, as amended by Proposl- 1loo 111 and Senate Bill 66, the appropriations limit lor ttie City of Coate Mesa 10< the 2000-2001 fiscal year has been cal· Ciliated to be $1 09,393,421.00. IF YOU OBJECT t.o Step a1oo1a, Cooler. ' Pro.oram haa been ea· the granting of the pet!-POt 5, Larry Ballard, tablilt'8d IO finance the 1loo, -you ihould appear 1970 Ov.mMct camper Improvement• nee ... at the hearing and state ehell·Model 11540 Mry lo addreM the your objections or Ille 0.A.1268948 cumulative Impact• of written objections with Publlahed Newport developmanl wllhln the court before the BHch·Coala MeH Coate MeM and to hearing. Your •P· DaMv Pilot Mey 29 June eneure !hat Iha llandald pearance may be In per· 2. 2000 ' ltwl d M!vlee la maln- 900 « by your attomey. • F416 talned on the Traffic IF YO\f ARE A CREO. Circulation Syat'"1. ITOR « oontlngent Cl'ed-.,._.ltlo a·~• An auclt d 1he Tratllc hOI of the deoMeed, you .-... -. ua -neea 1~ F" Program 11 must ftle your claim with Name Statement available for reVltw by lhe court and mall a The folloWlna J*90'18 the Pldc al lhe Coate copy to the penonal rep-are dolr'l1 bueillila u : Meea City Cleft<'• Otllce, resental!Ve li4)pOlnted by a) Pine MoulUln Wa· n Fair Drive, Coate the court wllhln four ter. b) The Waterboy, Meu. months from the date of 1800 E. Peere Ave., Public Commenta In the fil'll laluanoe of let• Senla AN., CA 92706 eilher oral or written teni as provided In Pro-Pine Mounlaln Capital fOfm may be preeenled bet• Code Mdlorl 9100. 90tl>.. (CA), 1800 E. durmo lhe public hea,.. The time tor filng clalma Deere Ave., Senla AN., Ing. ~or ful1t-..r lnfomla· will not expire bet«• CThA 1921058 bu-•-aa .... ,.....c lion, telephone (71 4) lour month• from lhe ....... ,. """r. 754·5336 or vlelt lhe hearing dale nollced dUded by: • corpo1do11 TrafllPC)ftatlon SeMcet above. Have' you alerted OMalolt al City Hall, YOU MAY EXAMINE doing bu1lneM yel? n Fair Ortve, Cotta ,1 1il.·•!t t·I ;•.l t 1: .. 1; THE DOCUMENTA· TlON used In delermin- lng tl1e City of Costa Mese'a caloulatlon of the appropriations llmlt for the 2000-2001 fiscal year la available for pub-lic Inspection on week· days in the Office of lhe DlrectOl ol Finance, n Fair Drive, 1st Floor, Costa Mesa, between Ille hours of 8:00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m .. except on holidays. the Ille kept by the court. Y .. Pln'e5'22JOOM-.... ·lns: Melli. CA. If you ere a pe19on In-....,.,,. MARY T. EUJOTT, tereated In lhe ealale, Co!J>., John E. , ~ ~ a.tt ••••••••••••••• you may ftle with lhe V.P. Publlehed Newport •.• HOMES Of :. MARY T. EllK>TT, Deputy City Clerk Published Newport Beach·Coala Men Dally Pilot June 2, 2000 F426 oourt a ~ for Soe-Thia llatement waa BHch·Coata Mu• cial Notlc. (form OE· filed wtth lhe County Delly Piiot May 22. 23 :. THE WEEK :. 154) of the ftling ohn In-Clalll of OrarGe County u . 25, 29, 29, 30, 31: veotory and appraiNI of on 0512~211-Jl#l8 1,· 2, 2000 : Showcase : eatate e8Ntl or of elT'f •• M~3 • • petlllon or account •• Diiiy Pilot May 29. Nie • Homes • 1>rovlded In Probate 2, 9. 16, 2000 F419 Flctttlout ButlnHa : For Sale : Code aectlon 12so. A ,...... 8tlltefMnt .• In Our ~-t .• RequMt I« Special No-Flctltlou9 lualneu The lollowlna peraon1 .ga lice form 11 available NelM htiement .,. doing ~ u : I Riii Estate : from the court citric. The following J*90'18 ezambonl, Inc .. , 29787 • Su •--I • Attorney for the are doing bueillila M : Niguel Road Unit E. • pp..., ... nt • PetltlOMt': •l NEWPORT LAW Laguna Niguel, Cal~Of· ! Dlaplay Adi ! FRANCIS E. swrH, OFFICE, b) THE NEW• nla 92677 • Start at $85. e ESO •• S8N 25711, PORT BEACH LAW OF· ezamborll, Inc .• (CA), • e N<JrtCi TO 9020 RESEDA BLVD., FICE. C) A MA PAO-'N1fJ7 Hlgliel Roed Urill : Deadline : CRIDrTORS OF BULK ~OR~~{ooe, "CA BATE LAW CENTER, E. Laguna Niguel, Call-• Tuelday SPM • 2500 Anniversary Ln.. 1om1a mn • Al • SALi 91324 Newport Beach, CA Thia bualneae la con-• 10... • {UCC Sec. 610l) Publl1hed Ne~ort 92660·3314 dUcted by: a COf"POrlltlon : Optn House : Ucl'O'llt No. 421J.1. Beach·Coata •H Peter John Linden, Have you 11aned •.• Llatlngl 'Avl. .: NOTICE IS HERHY Dally Piiot May 2S, June 2500 Anniversary Ln.. doing bualn.. yet. No GIVEN ai..a • t.lik .. ii 1• 2, 2000 Newport Beaeh, CA aumbonl. loc .. Brent • Deadline • .... ., .,. .-.. n. fTM17 92660·3314 c. Nlctlolu. Chief 0per. i Th.uraday :. Thia bullneae la con-atlonl Otllcer --<•> Md ...._ FlctltJout ButlnHa dueled by: an lndMcLtal Thia ata1emen1 wu • 5PM : Mdrwlll(•> °' ti.11111(1) Name Stll'9ment Have you, alerted llled with the County •. It Pmvs to •. w ... : ICYUHO BUM The following ~raona doing bu1lneM yet? Clafll ct Orallge Counfy _, LEE m KALMUS Dlt. are dclna buelnMe u : Y... 10-05-99, on 05I08l2000 ; Advertlae : #M.a, COSTA MESA, OynamTc Real Eatete. Yea, 1965 2000112Mt7 ; In the Beat : CA92626 30612 l=lenn Or., P*' John Linden Delly Piiot Mey 12, 19, • LOCAL Doiaa .,..._ -. LEE'S Ste. 170, Nlguel, Thi• atatemenl wu 26, Junt 2. 2000 H02 i : &ADELS A DElJ California. n flt.cl ·with lhe County Flctltloua Real Eltate • AD ota. ..._ ---"•) Earl Brown, 30012 l"Y Clerkon 05/of1J::l' CountY ...__ , .. !'!. .. m~nt' : Section : -.. Glenn Dr .. Ste. 170, ,_.,.. --.... ,._II Todl • -S eddiwil(•) lllld by Laguna Niguel, Callfor· 2000IUM40 The lollowlna P«9on8 I -Y II : .. lllllf(•> ......... n1a mn Ody Piiot May 29. Junt .,. '**Ill ~ u : : LIS• .• ._ ,_.. • _., by Thia bullneaa la COfl. U 1§. 2000 f42Q Baaaili4Jeeua Muaic, " .. AN()-"'<•). w-HAN ~.by: y: ~d NOTICE OF =-·~~ Coal• : RIVERA i y ORIENTAL doing bualnMa yet? No APPLICATION TO Roea J. Elbllng, 322§ 949·574-4252 I MAR.KET. SALT LAJt£ Earl Brown SELL ALCOHOLIC Idaho Pt, eo.ta Meaa, ANNE I ~~•)Md--. fil~l1wi1~1~.:en&:n~ BEYl!AAOH ~~la con-WILLEY i ....._ of .. ~·> Clerk of Orange County • ~:.f:J1 ducl9cl by: an lndMdual I -...: YONCJMAN JCJM on 05124/2000 ..,...... Have you atarted 2000942"44 May 11• 2000 doing bu1inMa ....., No Mt.57•-4249 AND KUmXJCX PARK Dal"' Pilot May 20, Junt .!mo .Whom It Mey Cot.. Roaa J. c..a-!-' ' "\. ,.... £. Uft .. u.-. .... ., -_,_ ........... • •••••••••••• ~-c;:"m;~ 2. 9. 16. 2000 F422 .. !.!1!..,!!•me(a) of the ,._ aterMnt WU n. ._.. • Ctlib1lia Flctltloua Bualneu ·NiOr'Ri~~hlilfare: ~ :""~ = of tllie dtittl --.... .... s._._ on OM>W2000 ..-...... ,,.me 48WnMHlt ENTERPRISES INC. ......-...... 11 -o( .. 111111(1) • The lollowlng J*90'18 The ~ lilted --SAME AS ABOVE ere doing ~ u : abo\te ara aooMrlQ to Dally Pltot ~12.11. -~ ~ :'.. Dynamic RHltora, ~ Dep•••-11 ~~ ~:~~ __ , _ _ 30012 ivy ..,..o~ Dr., ,.._: Bawtege .........,.,. .---__ E1a1,t1ona1 Ootellftollt JllX'TURE. FURNITURE ~if~ ili'n Niguel. ~ eau at al~ol'lollc Nw 1.........,. ~ 8t: '°'~ AHO EQUJPMl!)n'S r..-The to11ow1nD J*90'18 Jana ling, CB 1gant. _. -.._. 11: 151 Earl Brown, 30012 1W !l80 ANTON Bl.VO .,. ~IMNM aa: HM32-5Ht Glenn Dr., Ste. 170, STE 201, .. _.. ,.,.nr ICALNW DR.. lw.&, Laguna Niguel, Callfor· COSTA ME~ CA ........., .....,.,.. OOITA MF.SA. CA n1a mn ezeze SERVlCE, 2019 w. Or· ITEPI~ ~ 11 TWNtms • FIRST TIE OFFEAEDI II LE1Tl M 3Br 2.se.. $217,000-$226,000. 2191 ~ Or •• llodll Open • Alf 94H42-9699 * NEW HOME.S * OIJllily bUll detached ~ fwrily "°"* In Eastslda. GIMt Aoor Plan = 211().2220 SF 949-645-6345 l8r UBa tto.e. E'alde, pvt aA-<IHeo, large patio, 2clr g11r & more. Pnrq,u Only. $329,000. CaU Bob, IQl!ll 949-23U335 E'Sldl Pool Hoftlt In 400 8locll 38f 2Ba, l.¢ated & upgradld lilt. hMlwd lloots, f1>.. 2c giw, lltga yatd, Prh: Orly. ~ Mll.nen Oownly 949·509•5902, 644·9060 Exl 116 92636 Thia bullneea la con-I of bnee~ Ion Aw .. 8arM Ma. CA ~ 1 ScptiWcllad ................ _,_ • ~ dueled by' an ................. 1or; 47 • 92704 · ,. ........,. ~ ........ •-- -• -Have . you "";i.rt;d NER.AL EATINO Wlllfn G!tl.t . ~19 W. -..,,... ID lliy ___ ... , •.. doing bullr-. ytt? No PLACE Orlon Aw., _. AN., All M!lm~14 ._. ....,. ... ., ... of Earl BrOWtl Publlahed Newport CA 112704 18H Vlw 1111,900 INDU'ENDENC£ Thi• lltatement WU Beacl'l·Co•t• M•M Thll buail'IMe II oon-.... V..eloll ucaow. INC~ 1110 thed with the ~ = l*':a,.,., ";:..'fi Tave by: y':u ~ 2::'J. ~~ PIONl!EI BLVD~ 001, Clerk of Orallge CounlY -- - - -dolnll bu1inMa Yfl(1 No ar .. ~ AR'IUIA.CAPCnOI on 05l2~ Wiiiem Grllf el!!!! •72HlaD _. .. t JI , _.. [,)elly Piiot ~ 29. June Flcldoul ... ,._ Thie ...,,._,. ... Wt!, *' ~ From --'"'""'iol.:..ol=..::.a.um_~ ... iilJUMUO.JOOO 21 9. 10, 200Q Fqt ...... 1'111Ptl1t ~ :"'O.::. ~ Aol#I Wiii to P11'<W btldl. UDO at h"1 Ntw 3Br ,,.... ........... Tll9 ...... ,.,.,.. ;:""~ _ .. , ..... ~ oomnvilly • .a.. llPIClolll 3rd lloor ~ twlill'8 Actltloul lutlMM .,. -. llUlhill t1: lttOlllttn Ctll OM ·c., ca ,_. <>ceeneHert>or *-c11c11, Cu 1im1 C-...... ...... " Pndl!jm ,.,.,,., Dllw Pilot._ b dlllla. •711·150S. Of"'9d • 11,4&0,000. •106·.2. The ~ti=-=-~a, ~~J.; U JI, IPAQ 21, t:a; dMffOFl!!.com r~~.7~~tW R•alt«I 1'1111 _ _. ..._of are dolnQ ~ .. : JHat , .. Via • Ellgin T,_. ~ ~MJ~ •> '*'1cl 8lrWlt <:en-Ol'lrletopfler Jat IOnll HolN • ....,. MID OME llOllD RD --1 ---'9f, b) Cllfeot 8'lllPfY Vllertllrle ltOO Ntwfty ilarlllll ~llwy 0,. ..... 1 .. IMlllPINDINC& c.n.tt, 1Mtl-A Melli ~=., OOIMi ...... 18r 11 4o II': .. "• 1fl 11 .... I acmw. INC.. 111a "'"' 'r.fla !::"= ... ,ooo. 11r ., 4.aa ....,.. ... a1 PUGI &YD. •a. '=f• m (CA'.._, J:r"--:!. :=· llarl fen Eyok o":l:".- 'AITW.C.A""I ltletOI ltrMt ., Me C:O. .... ~ ::11M411 & Miuty ~ -~ .-.. 11at .., llr... ,203, 001Mi Mliaa, c.1-t1t1t -'t IMHZHll4 {.._ "1 _, ..... tome -1'NI ....._ ta eon-'"1111 T ..... Pf.-... VILLA M.IOA Lit • ............ Thie~ ta ....... by:...... W.LM9.._111'1,...._ ...... _ • ....,, ........... .,.., lly:. OCllllClf9IOI• ,...,....... "" ........ .a.ii ......... ""'.,,,,,,., .. , •1 1.. Have you etattecl Ha¥e you etartecl F!l * a.ll9 .._ • ~·-clol!W ...... "" No ........ Wit ,.. 1••· COol.lllld .., ~ ~ ~Y~ Ml.. l!to .. ltiaratl I . Ctlrtttoptier JH llarl hn Eyok _ _.. --lenlo.,,........ V.... !!.!!Mii & Miiiy .. M M YOMONAlt w Ne ,.,.. ..... .,,. ... n.. ....... -MflHltl ......... "· mmuatPMK = 'J" .. = &':et 'J" .. = -= :o.: c _. =r ............ =~;:r .. C.VllWHOm --.. ~ I ,a-11111 -~·r· -.... al'..n::1n --~~ ,..,..2... ___ ~!l a a IM!Hffl ----~--o&Ao:o- ~. • • Bnl'ld New Blufta Homea Cullom . 3Br 2.58a, tNtl 1780 "· 2~. gouimet ldl. IOp of ... line emdlel, fantastic location, Agent Tl!!!. 714-506-8116. 2 ..,,_ on 1 Bia lotl 'J&/ 3Ba + 1 Br/1 Ba. Cul-de-sac a best ac:Ns! Qcullr driYe, RV accasa, Md room IO ex· par\d up Of ~ S639k Mike olltrl Aqt 949-642-3850 .. LOMST PRICED SING4.f STORY " HOME OH ntE P£NNSUl.A Aat. .... 72H12' Eat 101 WATERFRONT STULi $795.000 Prtrq>els OoiY1 lmmecille S... Wltlllel ExclUlive Bia 949-650-8357 1Ji> WALK TO BEACH $pacblS 29drm In peeceflA Mtling $1200/Mo. Save ~. Oii 1 yr lease! 714-960-2468. NEWPORT HEIGHTS Prtdgioul Newport Beech Apartment HomH 2Brl28a & 28r T OWl1homes Avliltlle $pacblS lloor plans. Reeol1 llyta pool & epa. CI05e IO shopping, 8dloct. beaches. 1"21t -28a Allartmenll *1lna It t152Mlo 14~2 Elln"' 11f .. Howe lowly courtyard. Fp. 2c ~ hlry, .. utll. $1800/ mo. Awl 6(1. 94!r300-2326 CANNERY VILLAGE 28r 2&, 2c 9111. SI.WI ded(, unique oppty S3000/Mo. AQ!nt 949.21s-2ns Eaqulalte 21rl28a 1111918 1tory lvml1htcl Baytront home This home ex· emp4illea bffU1y with tts IJlled eotrance surrounded by I llontl eouf1YMI and lo- credible view of bay. tn· Cluclad with this l'IOln8 ~ ~ cllltge is tile use ct I n eloetric boat. provided renter hes proper insurwlce. In addition, docll can be rtnled tor • ... lllong wlll'I bQat and lllbillty in5ur9nCle Thia home Is •Vlllable .Ant 1, 2000 10< up to t year. The renl btQll1' II 5'000 I month. If rented leee than 6 months, rent Is 5'500 a month. The perftct resi- dence !Of I bl*-trav- eler °' 1no1Hme visitor. No llllOUlg. No pail, Cll VIII ........... Inc. at I00441 ... 12 Of amall "' at Vlllamtlafaol,COlll. BLUFFS: 38r TOWl'lholnal Bay View Court 2Br 2& gat, pool. ISOOsf, block lfom Back Bay. no peta, lease $1400lmo 949-64+6030 NB GrMI Neighbol1lood Private bath. poet, )acuul, washel/drytr. lemele pief'd $650(mo Jell 949-574-4013 NB Ocnfront no boalctwll! $950Wlc going fut Garlge. spol1S tel®. 880. wld. lnotuded 116-M+cml. VACATIOH RENTAL 2 & 38r 2Ba 191CiOtJS dt!Uxe, Condo, Uy tum. ~ 10 bttl, 2c Q!!· ~M7~ 30 S1995-$210Mlo, no pets. IALBOA PENN OCflhnt EASTBLUff: 48r1Vlew 28f 1Ba, lll#ldry, ~ . D. BUiey, Bia 949-720-1704 Weell.fy/mo. 32~. 323-394-4394 New Office, Retall & Restaurant S"ce 250 · 25 ,000 sq. ft. ~ -----PCI & •I•- ------~ . CONSIGN~~1.ENTS I I .:~ SOUTHC8AST AUCTI N IAVINE TERRACE 15TH ANNUAL COMMUNITT GARAGE SALE SAT JUNE 3RO 7:IOMI 1:00pm o.. • h111am •• • 22ale. ... k .1111 ..... ID.bll-1-.._AM.CAl2707 11111'11 of INllurtt II this _, u.-c.< f2'< """"" ..,. .... in Colone dll Met. You wra RARE COINS find 1nliquea, fumltllre, Orlglnel United Sl1IH b1by 1tem1, d11lgner Morgen Sllv1r Doll1r ..-.w. ....._. •-uncilcutattd $25.00 lldl. .... ~i::: ~ Orlgl111I United St1tH '"* equipment. Cllptl ,.,_ Dolllrs tn:waAllld ~ clMnlt, tint c1w11. Sl800Nch"800-21HSS3 CUllOm wall units. eslala ~:58~~~ I• ARIW I end l'llOftl ~ 10 PCH Bedroom Set DfMW ,,.,. rd lrvlne TtrrlCe Drive ..-(ecrou from Ne_wport 2 llde llbles, . old ~ &Ndl Ccur-.y CUI) Pidl rUSlic knolly ptnt, '350. up • "'IP .ith • list ot 949-fY=i697 ldlt-::.. ~ by ARMOIRES, BOOKCASES 0V-l ~ . TABLE, CHAIRS, TEAK M!-717-MM P= .!t1 ~8=' ._. VenWCoeta MtN c_.., [ -.. -I I I . . , .,-,. I_ . r Help WllltH. PrOOUce Dei>I l s-c. Kildlen 51111 '-*' Pnda up r!Q!.hd 94H!3:4442 Hotlllllotll Front DMll Clelb, ••. lhiflt. All9'Y Ill '*'°" • Thi Im Ii ·co. M•P15! H!bor M CM JOel MED OflDltGI COSTA llUA EiC ........,, proftcllnl lfl eng MCI Miii, IMdwll- Cll aUHIMy. weldlf, 4 PHONE REPS =-=-· ~ ~~ 8ALE8 ASSOC'S -D •• ......... --w.. .-.... 2.8 li .. co. I.Ow...., -· ....-y -(12327) ...!f'•'lll//5 ..... Ugalng, maliYlled CMVlllt -..... _... lar FUI l PT ~-111111 candldllt• _ __:.1_:;:1!:fH.l:;zz:i~m..,___ .. polll9 ~ ..,. .. 11• .• 1n 1111111..._.,...,, ~ ... co -~ '-" ..... ~ _.,.., ·-- ........ end. dlli'e to (~ .. - llllXllld. ._ • + -11HIH111 D.O E. Qulllled 1POb1* _ _:...:.;:;.;::::o~'---- pl!p Cll ~-.. •1• ... 3eK Mi, Flily l.llldldl WOM FROM HOME (502451 _..!)8.995 International company CMYIEI -.. ~ ~ Plfl-tlrnl _ _..:.7.:;:14...,..a&-=...J..,_17'-'1-- S600-'S2000fmo Ful-llml 12500-$7000/mo. Mlny IMW 111TI .. l!C!!i!icJnll ..,,.,,.7 -........ '1', .. .......... _ .. Ille n.tlngt In Ullt OlllfOl'Y """ ,.... you to cell t IOO numw In which ..... dwp per llll!Mlte. LAND ROVlll ' NEWPORT ~ctl .......... ! ••• -••• ~ .. ... ' - t: ! --._ -. CHIVROllT ~ .. RS OQ1411, low 18k llt, "*>, nm & 11101t1 Bil d -(814928) 18.881 NABERS (714)640:1100 CHEYROlET TIMI LT 't7 4Jt4, IMtht!, 111111Y IJCnl, tlCOllenl concillol1 I (3116888) $21,888 MAIERS 1714lf4M100 CHEVY CAMERO '92 v~. auto, air, 85k ml, real sharp. S4,9SOlobo 949-723-1504 OOOQl DURANGO .. ........ 1. blue. Ft007U *27,185 lAHD ROVER NEWPORT BEACM M~S Fill-lime El'llfOtlic people Miid ,.._ 714GM1DO lor Morlgage Co Elm IO arP'UepecW.net s1~ WMk+ comm+ -=--=~==- BMW ml 'f7 Coovri>lt, Spolta Pkg. co (99933) $32,995 CREVIER BMW 71WU·3171 beMfits. Salle lxp piefd_ l.bllMd Of not ... ,. ...._ _____ ........ Cal Melissa 949-250-5719 ~nowt ERA IWle!1y l BMW 3291 '17 FORD ASPR 't3 Good cond, _. _, ACCOUNTING ';'2'pe~ ~~~ I • POWER I Low Miies. ~. ms Pckg'g/printtng broker give you lrH training. BOA Tl lBV~JvlER BM:f • 8"kt reep retilblt Md ::::800-400-=::<..::::539=.:..1 ~•Xl:::.-~lc.:..:19'--,__ _____ __,_ 714-135-3171 Am-Im .-rto, AC, """9, ' !fl. $3000 M!=t!6=ll20 FORD &pew. s,oit t7 Low mllM, llnt cond, llaf1lf FIT, ~ lllk po9-,.~ -... =... OUffY , .. 18FT lion Req'd AJP. AIR. Gil ...., """ "' ~ ELEC. LIKE NEW. and C\1$1 tvC PMchlrM, licll I plul, .... Ex<*I, MS Wool 1 must l'lllrQling re ~ OAHWTAN XlHT COHO. Sm o1fice w"1tllth btnefita, 1ngm!!6!ga. 714-429-2300. f7!00• Ml-7~1741 BMW 5211 'f7 loldtd. wl utlfldtd _.,_ Low MilM, CD, laadtd! S15,t75 14•29Ml65 j3l1TS85 I I $32,995 CR£VIER BMW FOAO f.150 'W rtti""*1I plan_ Slllry neg. Fu resume. 71~-893-7922 NORDSTROM CAFE South Coast Plaza is IMk· Ing FT/PT Clshiers end servett. Atll hotn, great WOl1ong enwonment rd exctllent btnefits Cell Chne 714-54~ lt 1819 ,,,...,..., 1...,7 21FT 714-835·3171 4 X 4 lotdtdl Super ell> .,.,,...., .., KC72n4 $21,915 ADVERTISING START YOUR OWN BUS!NESS NOWll We are looking for lnnovl1ed people ¥ltlo have • t>uslness mind. We are one al ltlt largesl propel1ies In OC with approx 1500 epartment home• We're otfenrog commera.i space for • dell ~t. 5pa service l llaJr salon C.ll lor an tpp04n1ment. The Coronedo It Ntwpor1 llllO IMne Ave. Ntwpor1 BlllCll, CA 92M3 949-722-4532 AU for J-w Only uMd I tlmet, llkt BMW 740ll 'ts LAND ROVER ""'· fllly lotdtd $11,500. Lo .._, ~ Concltlon' NEWPORT BEACH MM73-7215 (34886) $33,995 M~ CREVIER BMW _ __,,:;::...:=.=:;._- Gndy • Wllhl 241 'ti 71W3W171 FORD F100 'SS .. Jdnt oond. QW!MW moWlg up, BUICK SPECIAL 1951. ci-lc. R-good. GPS, fish lndr, trailef, low __ .._ ~..... mutt Mii, a..t Oflef. In $51K MM73-t015 et-4-«, '""u IC!>. ong, 949.f31.f532 ' ready for restoration, PROPERTY MOMT CO needl PT pel"IOll for pn- ttll dulllt. llour9 t:OOlm-1 :00pM. OC Alfport A1t1. KEYWEST 't7, 17 1/2 fl. IN Fu -Mt-l»-1219 XLNT CONOmON. $4,500. 714·557·2859 GMC JIMMY 'II COLLECTORS GrMn. loldtdl Prr GEN OFC Old Ne'flOllOll TraYel Ah IQn, Mon-fn, PflCt REDUCED TO $10,DOO MM4Nln QOOd PhOne. $8/hr. Cd 11M DUFFY t9c boet lift Joan 949-631-0300 for lflPI F1nt1ttlc cond. Ready now tor ._ cnilelnt 113.500 941-722-1575 Cedlll1c Bl1rrlu ·e2 K521001 117,985 ALI LANO ROVER 54k, GREAT CvnOITlON NEWPORT BEACH $7500 t4H73-3009 94M4H445 Cdlac Eldofldo '95 GMC S08UR8AN '911 Low milts. V8 Northstar. Sii-""--Yef, lealller SLT 2500, 4X4, Wht, nrv, (619359) $17,988 Wlfl', 454 cl, ,_ AC, lllC, Friday, June 2, 2000 21 f . ; . ~~ • -_,,. I ~ • r .-~ t I I . •; ,_ --• 4 I ---• UHCOlH CONT '96 Mtlud11 Binz MU20 •• 40r Sedln, BtiQe Leath11/St1rmark Al Powtr. Chrome Wheels (010529) $29,990 CeM'llaoe. New Tnc FLETCHER JONES Oni °""* SI 4 500 800-921-3571 ~9-644-7733 Clll Ctaulfllcl Tod1y (949) M2·5178 ..., c9du Benz E320 'f7 Wllile/Starmark (324519) $35.990 FLETCHER JO..ES I00-927·35711 STARTING ANEW BUSINESS?fi • • • • • • • • • • • 1' _,,,.. ... ; . -kA•"-"J ...._... Sll(230 .. White/Starmatlt (086513) $38.990 FLETCHER JOHlS IOM27·S571 r1x Uf.tlJ lk,.m .. c'lt Ill '"' v,,,1y p,~, tJ "''-" ... """""""" ""'' ,,.,.._,,, '""" '""""'"" ,. '""' t1<J1MSJn W, 1uU """' ~r.ARC H 111< -'"' f.• ,. .. "' "" arni riv~ •"" wu J'"" ,;., "''"vu/ IN mi I• 1/v C...11rt ff...,,"' 'i.111u Aiw. 7ht-n •f••t1rw .juT 11¥ 1r.nr/J U twm,UUI/ .... ti 1// fi/, 'IOI" /ittttt4'"1 '1tt."11nl IW#ff JWlnrtNtl I< IM tJ,, C.unry Cltrlt. 111'1/uh 1111u 1t .._ft for fa11r wtt"1111 Mf'"""., "'" 11,../ tNff jik 1""' f>rtH>f•fpulllwmott ~,,;, tlv C.111tr, Cid Hu,. ... lthbortlood Ml t 6 ~1~": = 0.. .. ..,,.,,.., by ,. _ _, ART GALLERY nHds T~ ~ witi Ol'8t 200 ~·r Fran:h Clllltt llblt Illes pnon 3 lo 4 days/wk ~ Slit., .bll' Sid from $250 Ml-751-3529 Cdll Grtlt ..._ Balbol i.nd. Prr W 5'orlp A'*'"' .._..,, 2 Dlys per week. office work end liOlll mmc...a 949-644-2147 'H Tiara 2711 new MtrtniMr 454 7 4EA. ,_ vinll, c:anY3S, elec:trONCS $451< Perfect 949-72<>-2028 PIT Word Procenlng Stcreterl1I In CdM Relleble, orga1112td, 1111· stal\11 20-26 flex hrs week M·F, 1orl9-term Sll'ong PC & won! processing sJUlls, ~gilt bookk11p1ng F Ill 19511111 (rd toltware lkill) NABERS lnwnaculattll S23,500. (714)540-1100 94t-4K-2125 CffEVROlE'r CATERA 'VI HONDA ACCORD XL 'tO 25k mi, *' ltlv, mnr1, CD. Wll11t. Stcltn, 4dr, AC, chrome wheels. btl al W8JI All POWER. ce, tm·fm PkaJc 11op bJ "' fik ,.,., fimnu11J '"""'"' swtr,,.ml 111 1/., /).-,1Jy '"'°'· JJO Ir' &y S.. C•sw Mn.;. If JIO" ri1nno111tp b,, p/.t,,,, uU,., 111 f949J 6-IJ~J11 •"" ,.., wJI ,,.,,}.., """"XV"'"" far,.., t• r.,,.J/, thu pr.<tJ.,,., "1 ,,..,[ . If!°" skt1/J ""'" ""l fortlwr ,,..,., •• ,... '""" ,...u"' """ '"' ,. ,u IN -rr ""'" tlJul"' ltJ.(IJI ,... (;..,/ ,,. * ,,, ,.,,,. .. , ....... lfm. • 8am-3pm,. MIQt IVlillblel 11111i.n IAlthtf SQla & love-Up!! pref 949-673-0939 714-540·7355 11111, new Iii~, very BUSSERS Mollloelc> c-. Gal1l9' toft. IOp quality. .. $2000 , .. Sltl'Slll. Sam-? 0-11CJ890 949-261-9933 ~fian ~-~ "' a CondDa. Somtlt*1g tor MURPHY BED So11c1 Olk. ptlSM' Wed-Sit . 4 ~5-30 !'!!l"t!!odW· Al Ftltff-. ...W. l lidt cabintta, Villl Nova Rtt1a1nnt I ;., _MmlMBll I -(1-43404--A.!)..!.;N:.CA:;:::BE:..;R:..:.S:::S~19_.988 __ ·r-o_11ffy--"·~~~c:ond<..::.pp;:.:::' 1_:_650_"" . . (714)540:9100 949-723·5543 .... ltHt Bulldlngt 40dO ... 17,212, now 1 a,llO llUlt IJquldml 1:f00.2t2-0111' ,...,.. control r-..d 3131 W. Co.t Hwy, NJ'-t4M75-2235 JET Sl<l TRAIUR. ZJtman lg tingle. Ltrp 1torege bo1 chrome wlleelt, Incl 111trt tire IW!I! $1150 -841-725-0452 Queenelze plllow. top boHpring & mlltrffl, MVtr llHd. w/30 yr wu,.nty S2t5/obo. Ctltrry Alce Poller 7 pc brdlll .... 11•o0o Can ........ 94W07·7095 7ft llofl Ian & denm Wl1tl leattier lrlm. decor111ve throw pillow, 2 yem old. $:400 149-63 I· 77'l6 OVERSTOCKED A call to classl.flcd wWbclpl (949) 642-567 CLERICAL Ptr Pan-bme appro~ 25-30/hrs per week, Monday·Fnday. llaisbng ill legal dtpert· ment at local newapeper Applicant rnusl be able to type 50-55 wplll. work ac-curately. ane1 be good ,.,Ill customer HMc:e Send reaume to. (~9)631·65~. ann· Judy Orua 1C1te009' phx!9l reg'd. EOE, SMv CounW Paf'IOn PIT & FIT lllo T lilor or Selmstnss. Al Phl«.p 1111 ci.aners MIU U41 CdM • DISHWASHER •PREP COOK ENGLISH A MUST. ···~· RECEPTIONIST $400/obo 714-540-5"$ VO.. HEMEAT INTERIORS prr weel<deys & weekends ~-·~:-'.;:.:::19'~9.~4::""'can'-~-w-1=_c.m._i1 1 • ~ I ~HtM.f551. . ,. __ ,,. _ Aettaurtnt Sumllltf Help, LAND ROVER '95 Wanted Food Stivers, Bar· Dl1covery ~SE7 wllllt, tenders Cooks, Hosl(eu)s & SupeM8ol1 PT /FT t.U1 s.p, bt able IO WOl1t 7/1 • 911 TA194... S1Ut5 LANO ROVER Tlvoll Terreca on tilt NEWPOffT BEACH olOUOdl ot Ille Fes\JYll d tM~ Ms 650 Laguna Canyon --'---------~~­Rd., lB ....... ll50 BMW Z3 •91 TUTOR PT 10 letch MS I 8 LI*. 5-Speed, Lo W WORD '17. Mu11 IM {68511 I S2 I ,995 uperienoe 1t our lrtlnt CREVIER BMW olllce. cal .... 752.75e0 714-135-3171 Wedding Experts :?ubfishes June U, 2000 WJe w1ff be showcasiny lie experls in each field of !he weddiny spec/rum. !J/you offer any fype of service for weddinys-lhis is /he place lo aduerlise. You wifl reach an alf luen/ audience and wiff love /his sec/ion. 7Jon 'I miss ou/. 7Jeadhne is June 2/s/. 7o aduer/ise, calf 7/nnie al A (949) 574 .. 4249 ,, ' -.WHATEVER Y• Throw an lb• ar .. d Is PAClnC OCIAll Bmlnd.· GROUNDWATER POLLUTION WATER-LOG "As a nation, we consume 450 billion gallons of water every day. Ninety-seven percent of the Earth's supply is contained in our oceans, and 2% is frozen. We get our water from the I% that is leti. which comes from one of rwo places: T he Earth's surf.ice (rivers, lakes and streams) or from. --groundwater." -The National Coalicion Against Pesticide Use PRECIOUS RESOURCE .. Today nearly 11 7 million citiu:n -over one-half of the U.S. population-rely on groundwater for their source of drinl<lng wacer ... It is no wonder chat the di covery of groundwater contaminacion in every state across the country has generated grcac .. concern. -Velma Smich. Environmental Accion WHERE DOF.S IT COME FROM? sediments beneath the surface of chc earth. Most groundwater is narurally pure .. , Jn many cases, groundwarer remains u~ rbcd for years. even centuries bcfi it is used .. -More than 90% of c world's coral supply of drinkable warcr i~ groundwarcr ... THE PROBLEM -The Water Pollution Control Federation • "Because we have nor understood ... groundwater-or how vulnerable it is-- we have been careless. Gasoline or other harmfuJ liquids have been allowed to leak from underground storage tanks into the groundw:ner supply.-Pollucants ~p .. , 6vm poorly construetcd landfills or septic system . Groundw.uer [is) polluted by runoff from fertilized fidds [and] industrial arc.LS. Homeowners contribute to groundwater contunination by dumping household chcmials down the dra.in or ... on the ground." -The w~cer Pollution Control Federation • 22 Friday, June 2, 200()' I ....aC ... Ru011111S1111i1S.._~1.1o'-ll31&.1,1a1A p111y._.·~~u~z11111z111111L .. E.._ I :.;,:..:=" ' · and TANNAH HIRSCH . . I • ACCCUnllG 11260 CER~m I POLICY ....._ _____ _, In an effolt to oiler the bes1 CUSTOM CREATIVE TILE service possll>le to our read-lllStaltabOnS. slate. C81llmoc. en; and advertisers, we wilt matble. stone. Eatab 1975 require Contrac1M who 1612044 Jeff 714-612·9961 advertise in the Service OireclOl'f to include 1heir Contreelors License number in their advertise- ment Your co-operation is greatly app!!Clated. FlxGrout.Com Tli. Repair 6 Restcntlon (71 4) 2S..-8178 Lt223443 LEAKY Sho-• Repaired I I Aeorootlng & 1nstailall0fl -IH-E .. CONTINGD DEAN TILE 949-673-8055, .. 714-846·8526 ...._ _____ _, Add or Replace CenlraJ AJC 266 CLEANING 3('=9s oo113~9 /MAINTENANCE 4 100-$3549 5 ton-$3749 Ucl7"440 714-538-7325 HouM Cleaning By Lucy -=I SMOG CHECK $39.95 Mo81 Cats NEWPORTAUTOTECH 728 Wtll 16111, Colla Mesa '*-",,...,.. & Supenot MN4M730 Ii• IAnR>OMS I .. HOME flair ' .&"1"'11 ~Ilg Reglaze/Re urbisf'I P<><relain • Fibergla~s Sinks • Showers Counters 949-645-7723 SELL your home ttlro~gh claaalfled local refs. reasonable rates 12 Years hp. Offices too! 949·246·1942, 91631·4980 Housecleaning • Exp'd Wkly/Bl·Wkly/Monthlv/Week ends Great ra1esl 949· 246-6504 or 949·548-4285 VICKY'S l:LEANING We offer THE BEST Hoose & Window Cleaning 10vls expenence, xtnl refs! 'Vlclly'a 714-668-0395 ~70 CONCRETE /MASONRY Brick Block Stone Tiit Concrele, Palk>, OriVtway, F11eplc, BBO's. Refs 25yrs exp Te"Y 714-557·7594 * BRICK WORK * Small jobs & repair work. Call DOUG HARLINE 949-645-4762 Garege Floor Specilll111 Chemical resistent hi~ epoxy floors by Pwma.flt1 W11tfproollng Syl1tflll 949-723·1974 272 CONSTAUCT10N /CONTRACTORS 274 COii~ SERVICES 1n !he COfMlnience oi your home 0( oU!co. Progrm & lnle<net Seto~ Tro1ni~ let All Ages Compuler Repair & IS ,...., up. Potien~ JodyMomi 949·S41·1H7. 284 DRYWALL SERVICES DrywalllPilnt Experts 20yra Exp. Hang, ta1>1ng, lextunng, aooos1lc removal, patchworl< Int/ext painting, No job too small! 714-348·4404 .,WITTHOEFT DRYWALL AU phases/smaltll.rg fObs. CLEAN! 20yrs, fair, free esl l#400030 71+.639-1447 286 EL&CTRICAL SERVICES SMALL JOB EXPERT! DUNCAN ELECTRIC LocaVOolck response Service/Remodels 20 years expenence Li275870 949-650-7042 . A MATl'D OfTIMING Nonb.-South vulnonble. South dcala. . lhe MClifitc COil Olll~ 300, dccJ.er Notl111 •43 ~ 9H32 0 732 •AQ4 Opening lead: Thn of • =~j(IO=~ :=~ MR llilJ I J.to-1 favorile IO will die nibber! &st WOii the openillg lead with the IR:c c1 ~ and, ootina dect.rer's kiag. lhifted IO I diamond. Dciclaru ·woo with die Uig IDd culled lbe ace of 1n1mp1 aod, when bocb defenders followed. ~lam''s aac_ption was focused oa avoiding a di~ loser. 'lbll could be aocmtplished if lhc defender wi&h , the remaining high lnll'Op also held no more lhan two diamoads. If possible, choose to lose your tricks 8l an oepc>rWne time. It can be crucial lO land111g or losing your con- tract The king, aq and queen of clubs· were cubed, declarer d~ing a diamond from hand. Next. a sP8dC:.. was ruffed in the closed hand and the aco of diamonds was played off to reveal the 4-1 ~iL WI chose not to ruff the high diamond. but that only postponed the inevitable by a trick when declarer then exited with a, tiump. East won, but had only bluck cards remaining. No matter which suit East returned, declarer would ruff in hand while slufling dummy's losing diamood. Since dummy now held nothing but trum~ declarer claimed the rest of the tnck.s. A competitive auction ended when South bid five hearts. There is an old precept that the five-level belongs to the enemy, but East-West were wise 1.0 sell out for an~r reason. Bvcn if MERCEDES 250 '72 4-0-, origlnal owner. .. Little old l.ady from Pasadena". xlnt condiboo. 72k ml, $4,500. Can Tom 94~ Oldlmoblle CuUIM '99 GLS, 6 cyt., ltht, low miles, CO & more, balance of warr.. previous rentall (340717) $14,988 NABERS (714)5!0-9100 Okllmobilt Aterm .... Low 75k mi, auto, AC, rrint condition, new car trad&-ill! (382039) $2,495 NAB~RS '!714)540-9100 WINDSOR GARDENCARE ~ £>es91, lflSlalla. lion, Maintenance. Al wOltl Guaranteed 949-300·6740 Ylll'd Ctetn-41p, Trim Trtts, Hedges. Stump Removal. Aolo-111. Ha~ Lawn Cal1~114 amOtl HOME IMPIOVUUllT & MAlllTEIWICI J:t~! (714) 37 .. 1171 HOME IMPROVDIENTSll Pai~~ eai::r Sm. !ob! alt. Gart 94WS.5.m A 1o Z Home Wproutllllnl 1,...n.Do-all lNrn - fast reliable, quality. Rtl'a 714-269-7 I 85, 91933-1296 HOME RESTORATION "9modlllng • Frw Ell. Reald/Comm/Otclct/Fences Carptntry/E lectrlc/Tlle Olywal, SnVLta job alt. Loe rel'a, Clwte 7f+-M QUALITY CRAFTlllAN 20 'YMls Experitnoe. Rtl'• I'll YOUR HANDYJllANI MARK. 9'4H50o9525 Ol°dlmobllt ln1rlguie ·oo 0ttt 38 mil Liiv. Cl>, alloys. (207482) $21,988 . NABERS (714)$40.t 100 Oldlmoblll Sllhouetle '99 Low miles, dual alidlng dools, 1881 u. CO & morel Previous rental. (328439) $18.968 NABERS (714)540:9100 TOYOTA COROLLA 'ti Mint cond. whitet 4-door, 26.000 miles, sUll under warianty. $12,000/obo. CaM 949-574-4291 -kdays, amOllHOMI lllPIOVUllllT & IUlllTEIWICI Mo jo!I too ~~1 • Al-.- (714) 37 .. 1171 JUNK TO nte DUMPlll 714-Ml-1182 AVAIUILE TODAY! MM7WSll ~-- TOYOTA Land ClulMr '97 loldld, while, must ... t 183315 $33,995 LAND ROVER NEWPORT BEACH MM40-e445 TOYOTA MR·2 '93 Clean C4f, Red OVll< blacl(, many new parts, recenuy reWft . • dealer seMced~OOO/obo. Call 949-574-4234 Toyota 4-Runner '93 V-6, 4x4. auto trans. moon-roof. running boatcls, ao, all ~· paint & lnterior xlnt cordtlon SU.950. 94~-4697 Resist sigllS ol Aging Human Growth • Hormone Thefapy Complimen1ary Consultation Martin PaslN Health Newport Btach (949)645-7490 l•u.w I AL'S LAWN SEIMC£ CLEAN·UPSL SPRINl<LER REPAIR, TRtE TRIMMING FREE EST. J 14-396-2M2 EXPERT CLEAN·UP Tret1·Pruned/Rtmowd Nofl.lictnMd Q0111raclor 714·7514471 1--..1 ttllll Alllt9d c.... RtofmilmptO~. Sm. LICENSED CONTRACTOR Jolla. Ouatittflntegrlty • No job too Ml Al ltMcMI I Cl!!, Kiii ~070 Repair, remodel, ,.,.,., .. new MNlces ••••~ ...... ................ ................ SOUTH COAST MOVESUIEST Car.Jul. Quick, Ful Houle flt 1 lllm. .. ,,., TM HMdymM Miiier Calptnltr 25 y ... &pf Pol1lolo No job too ..,.., Phone 949-510-5315 Pll09t 714·298-5400 949·642·1610 SELL ... . . • • • Daily Pilot .... Run your ad in the Newport Beach- Costa Mesa Daily Pilot and the Hunting Beach- Fountafn Valley lndepend~nt to reach over 100,000 homes. Fax us this form with your credit card # or mail with I a check today! Run for a week! If your car does not Name City -·L .-0 YES, SEU. MY CAR \) \; Credtt Cat!I Nbl!lber Em Dale Please Check Perlk>ent Boxes .. -·; Year:~~ Mak~ Model-~~- g~~ g :::::=. 8=..."':.. Price----· 0 ..... 11_ o --a-eo.... O•-· a --.o O t.or-.top o a-a...,,.,._ a_~ OIW~O c..-~ O N>t;r-'S101or4 a ....--o c-.. oeu.om.-.._,,,...,,, O NI-a.,.,.,._ a~--addillonalh -tr. Daily Plio< 300 W S.y 61. eo.1a MeN, CA 92927 sell, we'll run it for L __ ~·,!."9>~·56,!!·i:= ~~~-__ anqther week FREE! • All for just $10'. ~pilot ~d£p.£1!.d.£.JIJ PUBLIC NOTICE The Calif. ·Public· Utlllties Com· mission REQUIRES that au used house- hold goods movers print their P.U.C. Cal T number, limos and chaulfers print their T.C.P. numbet in al advertlsments. If you have a qoes· lion about the l~I· ity of a mover, limo or ctlauffer, call; PUBLIC UTILITIES COMMISION 714-558·4151 Al Trr.-on.-a: ' •lteliolntW·~ (949) 548-0769 RAltllOW CtflCLE MAM EXPE.RT Orlin Cteenlng Painling-lnl/txt. House/Apt Plumbing repairs, 20y!S quallty job! Free estimate exp. AM wOf1I guaranteed L#569897 714-636-8888 STEVE 714-545-8298 www.Whlr roof.com 1-.....-1 1·"•31 Plalitr/Stucco Pitch SeMng Southern Oalifomia 'for 2S yeers. Lt326864 24 hours! 714-564-7831 PRECISE PLUMBING Repairs & Atmodefe FREE ESTIMATES U68739! 714-969-1090 G I G IJPHOl.ST(RY Stice '68! Cllltom 1Umitu19, upholstery, llip 00'191S, .,,. !lgue r!f!!lr 71"642-4112 .~1[-~l CN*Oll Roofing Senior dllCOUnt. 20yyt ·~ Al Cameron 714-429-0969 818-353-1067 Lf73'788 Can't 9Mfn to gettoallthoee repair jobs around the house? ·Everyday~ ·a great day " in Cl~ffied! ·Be a part of tt, place your ad toda~ (949) 642·5678 •' . ' ' . ' PER MONTH -~-:..---=-~..J!--· , .. _,.... ,,,,.._r-· . . . . . • • I 1 t • l ' • ' , . ' I I I 0 0 I I .> CALIFORNIA ~·s· NUMBER ONE: . . JAGUAR .DEALER ;. F .URTHER -EVIDENCE THAT BEAUTY IS HE ·REDITARY. - -THE JAG ·AR~ -TYPE STARTING AT $43,095 THE JAGUAR ~ SERIES · · STARTING AT $56,245 ' JAG~ THE JAG AR XK CO VERtlBLE STARTING AT $71,795 THE ART 0 f PERFORMANCE I ·- 1 f 5 S. S u t)l Auto tt a I D iv. . Santa ncl • 55 Freeway at Edinger 7: ~ 4 • 9 5 3 ~ ~ 8 O O • w w w. b au e .r j a;g u a r. com ' I ' 2000 S.. TYPE A.]-V6 MSRP s.43,095; AS SHOWN, 2000 S.. TYPE AJ-V8 MSRP S48,S9S; TAX. 1111.E. UCENSE·ac f.MISSION FEP.S EXTRA. 2000 XKI CONVIRl1ll.I MSIP . . $71 ,795; 2000 XJ8 MSRP S56.2"4,.; TAX. mu, LICENSE ac EMISSION PEES EXTRA.