HomeMy WebLinkAbout2001-05-16 - Orange Coast Pilot' SERVING THE NEWPORT-ME.SA COtv\MUNmES SINCE 1907 ON 1HE WEB: WWW.DAILYPILOT.COM WEDNESDAY, MAY 16, 2001
"
NeWport-Mesa braces for electricity rate hikes
• City officials say that
conservation is underway
to save money and power.
The commission passed a three-
tiered increase for residential cus-
tomers of Southern California Edi-
son, which includes both Costa
Mesa and Newport Beach.
but they worried that a significant
.hike would take its toll.
Newport Beach Councilman Tod Conservation efforts are under-
•That's a tremendous hit,• Costa
Mesa Mayor Llbby Cowan said
about the new rates. •It will require
major conservation.•
Ridgeway said his phone hasn't way in both aties. City Manager
been burning up with calls from res-Homer Bludau has encouraged city
1dents outraged by the hikes, which department heads to lower their
began in January.. power use by 10°/c,,
Paul Clinton
DAILY PILOT
Starting June 1, Newport-Mesa
residents will pay 6%, 70% or 37 %
more for electricity, depending on
the amount of usage. Basically,
those who use more will pay more.
The co~sion also voted Tues-
day to re troactively apply a rate
increase originally approved
March 27.
"We elected officials are the only, . In Costa Mesa, city lightbulbs
ones talking about it,• Ridgeway were replaced Wlth more efficient
said. "We're not getting a lot of dis-ones.
NEWPORT-MESA -A decision
by the California Public Utilities
Commission to raise electricity rates
Tuesday caused some consternation
among city officials who worried
about what effects the hikes may
have on basic services.
cussion from our citizens. But that Officials from both cities worried
may have to do with us being a they would have to cut other ser-
Others were also hit with increas-
es. Small-and medium-sized busi-
nesses will see a 36% hike. Industri-
al customers will pay 49% more.
Low-income customers, some
medical users and residents who
reduce their power won't be affected
by the rate hikes. To qualify for low-
income status, a family of four could
earn no more than $31,100 annually.
wealthy community.• vices to pay for higher utility bills.
City officials were unsure which
category their cities would fall into,
Newport Beach spends about $2 • U we had o 50% impact, there
million a year to power the city. The would have to be an action plan,•
City Council allocates 50% of that to Accounting Manager Dan Matus1-
pay fo r sewage and water pumps wicz,said. "We wouldn't just be able
and 25% for traffic and street lights. to absorb that."
Laguna may
seek 'TLC'
for cottages
•Councilwoman wants State Parks
officials to preserve Crystal Cove's
historic dwellings via residency.
Paul Clinton
DAILY PILOT
Laguna Beach Councilwoman Toru lse-
m(ln doesn't trust CaWonua State Parks to
protect the historic cottages at Crystal Cove
State Park.
Afraip the state's stewardship of·the 46
cottages will prove madequate. the Laguna
Beach City Council member wants the
dwellings occupied by someone other than
park rangers.
•Tuey need some TI.C, • Iseman said. ·Tue
state has not proven themselves equipped to
do this.·
Iseman floated a resolution at her city's
council meeting Tuesday night to draw
attention to the state's plan to leave most of
SEE COTIAGES PAGE 4
DON l£ACH I OAl.Y Pl.OT
DuChea of York Sarah Ferguson signs a piece of Wedgwood china during a visit to Macy's Home store at South Coast Plaza.
Hundreds of fans came for the presentatton, which induded a demonstratton on bow to create an elegant table setttng.
Fergie holds court
Duchess
of York dishes
chin aware
while inciting
laughs from
hundreds at
South Coast
Plaza
Mathis Wlnkler
DAJLY PILOT
S be probably could promote
Styrofoam cups and the
crowds would come running.
Not that Sereh, Duchess of York,
is likely to do such a thtng any time
soop. On Tuesday, her cause du
jour was •very British" china.
And as she told a mostly female
audience numbering in the bun1
dreds at Macy's South Coast Plaza,
the American habit of •drinking
tea from the Styrofoam cup with
the bag banging out• was
•absolutely disgusting• to her.
Even those words of admonish-
ment only drew laughter and
applause from listeners, who
bunt out in applause when Prince
Andrew's ex·wife thanked the
American people for giving her
daughters their mother back.
After her divorce, ·1 had noth-
ing left,• she sa.id. •I had my two
girls. I didn't know where to tum.
... I was full of self-hatred."
Enter the Americans, who wel-
comed her and also helped her to
pay off her debts.
•I have had a few financial dif-
ficulties,• she said. ·sut don't you
believe it was that big .... I want
to thank you for helping me.•
The duchess then turned her
attention to Wedgwood china which
she bad come to sell, after all.
•1 think that diet food tastes a lot
nicer on a pretty plate," she said,
referring to one of her other roles as
a promoter of diet programs.
Racing across the stage to .
engage those who W.re stuck
with seats on the side, she hand-
ed out vases, plates and •aeam-
ers, • as she called them with a
thick American accent.
Artists get oppo~ty to shine
• Newport Harbor High SChool
students will show off their talents
at Evening of the Arts.
NEWPORT BBACH-Thi aroma Gf ibla· m-ertng:vu.bo. delectable llaleri ... -.ilwaidllti ..... h ~ In mango .......
Wll • tlllt Iii' laDlgbt at ,Newpalt IWblr ....... .
ND. ............ , tml*1'""' ~ .. ,._ ._. l'lrnl '** • llilild -•1•• >snnlelila..1 , ... .._.__
==::.:--~_ ..... .. _ .. ,._.. .... AN.
The event wW feature an array of
ahlbits, tnauding food. clothes, ceramics,
wOodwork and paintings to mention a few. It
WW mo iDdude musk, dan"8 and drama
feeturel by llUdentl. 2"Dina ol the Arts 11 pdmerily a ahoW, •
c.we for the ltudenti' talents, Nid Janet
Dua.. wbO tMcbm cullMry art. •a Mlpl tbe studlatl ... for tbmnMlYel
~ ........ GI dalag and what tlMy •
cma• ~ • lbe lltd.
---,.. tbetdlloOl bll fM· ........... «ii ...... lllil it bill ............ .,.... ..... .....-~ ... •d&Wl -~ ... .. ,. ............................ .
·1 am quite flippant, as you can
see,· said the duchess, more com-
monly known as Fergie.
She talked about breakfast at
home with the girls and a birth-
day party she'd arranged for her
ex-husband, who still lives in the
same home.
·we are the happiest divorced
couple in the world.• she said,
adding that there were no servants
on band to help out in the morning.
•rm a very hands-on mom.•
she said.
Asked when she'd last seen her
daughters just before going on
stage, 'the duchess said that would
have been SU!lday. And with
Mother's Day celebrated lo Eng-
land March 25, the two princesses
had already brought their mother
breakfast lo bed weeks earlier.·
SEE FERGIE PAGE 4
Gas prices have
tourism venues
switching gears
• With fuel jumping to more than
$2 a gallon, visitors who ~ouldn't
have to travel far have become the
target market, officials say.
Mathis Winkler
DAILY PILOT
NEWPORT BEACH -As average gasoline
pria!s in the city crept past the S2 mark this
week, some Newport Beadl tourism venues
are beginning to focus on attracting vmtors bv-
ing within a 100-mile radius rather than pro-
moting themselves to tho&e farther away.
While Newport Dunes Resort promoters
, still advertise their 406 sites for recreational
vehicles on a national and internatio~ lev-
el, more attention has shifted to folks nearby.
SEE GAS PAGE 4
...
... 1111115--3
GAiia --·--1 MllmMl!S _,
.. s
.. ........... ~--' ... __ ....... L,.~ .............. _.. • 'T,
I
. .
SERVlNG THE NEWPORT ..YMESA COMMUNmES SINCE 1907 ON DIE WEB: WWW.DAILYPILOT.COM . WEDNESDAY, MAY 16, 200 l
Newport-Mesa ·braces for eleCtricity ·rate ·hikes
• City officials say that
conservation is underway
to save money and power.
The commission passed a three-
tiered increase for residential cus-
tomers of Southern California Edi-
son, which includes both Costa
Mesa and Newport Beach.
but they worried that a significant
hike would take its toll.
•That's a tremendous hit,· Costa
Mesa Mayor Libby Cowan said
about the new rates. • 1t will require
major conservation."
Newport Beach Councilman Tod
Ridgeway said his phone hasn't
been burning up with calls from res-
idents outraged by the hikes, which
began in January ..
Conservation efforts are under-
way m both cities. City Manager
Homer Bludau has encoura ged city
department heads to lower their
power use by 1 O'Yc,,
Paul Clinton
DAILY PILOT
NEWPORT-MESA -A decision
by the California Public Utilities
Commission to raise electricity rates
Tuesday caused some consternation
among city officials who worried
about what effects the hikes may
have on basic services.
Starting June 1, Newport-Mesa
residents will pay 6%, 20% or 37 %
more for electricity, depending on
the amount of usage. Basically,
those who use more will pay more.
Others were also hit with increas-
es. Small-and medium-sized busi-
nesses will see a 36% hike. Industri-
al customers will pay 49% more. '
The commission also voted Tues-
day to retroactively apply a rate
increase originally approved
March 27.
Low-income customers, some
medical users and residents who
reduce their power won't be affected
by the rate hikes. To qualify for low-
income status, a family of four could
earn no more than $31,100 annually.
"We elected officials are the only
ones talking about it," Ridgeway
said. "We're not getting a lot of dis-
cussion from our citizens. But that
may have to do with us being a
wealthy community.·
In Costa· Mesa, city lightbulbs
were replaced with more efficient
ones.
Offioals from both cities worried
they would have to cut other ser-
vices to pay for htgher utility bills.
City officials were unsure which
category their cities would fall into,
Newport Beach spends about $2
nullion a year to power the city. The
City Council allocates 50% of that to
pay for sewage and water pumps
and 25% for traffic and stree t lights.
• u we had a 50% unpact, there
would have to be an action plan.•
Accounting Manager Dan Matus1-
wicz said. "We wouldn't JUSt be able
to absorb that."
Laguna may
seek 'TLC'
for cottages
•Councilwoman wants State Parks
officials to preserve Crystal Cove's
l historic dwellings via residency.
P•ul Clinton
DAILY PILOT
Laguna Beach Councilwoman Toru Ise-
~ doesn't trust Caillomia State Parks to
protect the historic cottages at Crystal Cove
State Park.
Afraid the state 's stewardship of the 46
cottages will prove inadequate, the Laguna
Beach City Council member wants the
dwellings occupied by someone other than
park rangers.
•They need some TLC," Iseman said. ·The
state has not proven themselves equipped to
do this.·
Iseman floated a resolution al her city's
council meeting Tuesday night to draw
attention to the sta te's plan to leave most of
SEE COTTAGES PAGE 4
DON LEACH I OAl.Y Pt.OT
Duchess of York Sarah Ferguson signs a piece of Wedgwood china during a visit to Macy's Home store at South Coast Plaza.
Hund.reels of fans came for the presentaUon, which included a demonstratton on how to create an elegant table setting.
Fergie holds court
Duchess
of York dishes
chin aware
while inciting
laughs from
hundreds at
South Coast
Plaza
-. -
Mathis Wlnlcl•
OMV Pit.or
S be probably could promote
Styrofoam cups and the
crowds would come running.
Not that Se.rah, Duchess of York,
is likely to do such a thing any time
soon. On Tuesday, her cause du
jour WU •very British. china.
And as she told a mostly female·
audience numbexing in the hun-
dreds at Macy's South Coast Plaza,
the Amerlun habit of •drinking
tea from the Styrofoam cup with
the bag hanging out• was
•absolutely disgustilig" to her.
Even those words of admonish-
ment only drew laughter and
·applause from listeners, who
burst out in applause when Prince
Andrew's ex-wife thanked the
American people for giving her
daughters their mother back.
After her divorce, "I had noth-
ing left: she said. ·1 had my two
girls. I didn't know where to tum.
... I was full of self-hatred.•
Enter the Americans, who wel-
comed her and also helped her to
pay off her debts.
"I have had a few financial dif-
ficulties,• she said. •sut don't you
believe it was that big .... I want
to thank you for helping me."
The duches'S then turned her
attention to Wedgwood cblna which
she had come to sell. aft.er all.
·1 think that diet food tastes a lot
nicer on a pretty plate,• she said,
referring to one ol her other roles as
a promoter of diet programs.
Racing across the stage to
engage those who were stuck
with seats on the side, she hand-
ed out vases, plates and "cream-
ers,• as she called them with a
thick American accent.
Artists get opportunity to shine
• Newp<>rt Harbor High School
students will show off their talents
at Evening of the Arts.
The event wilJ feature an array of
uhlbits, iDcludJng food. dothet, ceramks,
woodwork and peintingl to mention• few. It
will mo lnC:lude musk, dance and drama
featurel by students.
Evening ot the Artl ii pri1berily a lhow-
CMe for 'ihia ltudeliti' ..... ti. said Janet
~ Who tlNCbel cullDuT art.
"ft ...... tbe students ... fol tb8lmelV9I ,...~ ~ble ol ckilAg and what Ibey ma• q nz:• • lbe lidd . ..::-.:. --~n.~ldMMJl..r:':: ..... ._ .. .,..... ..... ... _. --......... , , ..... .. ....... . ................ .
·1 am quite flippant, as you can
see,· said the duchess, more com-
monly known as Fergie. .
She talked about breakfast at
home with the girls and a birth-
day party she'd arranged for her
ex-husband, who still lives in the
same home.
"We are the happiest divorced
couple in the world,• she said,
adding that there were no servants
on band to help out in the morning. ·rm a very hands-on mom.•
she said.
Asked when she'd last seen her
daughters just before going on
stage, the duchess &aid that would
have been Sunday. And with
Mother's Day celebrated in Eng-
land March 25, the two princesses
had already brought their mother
breakfast in bed weeks eltrlier."
SEE FERGIE PAGE 4
Gas prices have
tourism venues
switching gears
• With fuel jumping to more than
$2 a gallon, visitors who wouldn't
have to travel far have become the
target market, officials say.
Mathis Wlnkl•
DAILY PILOT
NEWPORT BEA0-1 -As average gasoline
prices in the city crept past the $2 mark ttus
week. some Newport Beach tourism venues
are beginning to focus on attracting visitors liv-
ing within a 100-mile radius rather than pro-
moting themselves to those farther away.
While Newport Dunes Resort promoters
sWl advertise their 406 sites for recreabonal
vehicles on a national and international lev-
el. more attention has hifted to folks nearby.
SEE GAS PAGE 4
--.... &E ·-' Cl&la 7
MIC.-S. 1 .. s
. .
\
2 Wednesday, f.kJy 16, 2001
.
PE1'0F'THE WEEK
Kittens available
The Newport Beach-based
Community Animal Network has
rescued more ~n 200 kittens
from animal shelters and Is having
them cared for by locaLfamilles
white 1hey awal:t new tlomes.
The grass-roots organization
gives 40 hours of community ser-
vice credit to high school stu-
derrts who care for a cat and her
kittens before adoption. AIJ
expenses are paid by the ~1-
zation.
For a list and pictures of ani·
mals av1llable for adoption, check
http://Www.an/malnetwoflr. org.
Information or donations: (949)
759-3~ or Community Aolmal
~ P.O. Box 8662, Newport
Beach, CA 92658,
Daily Pilot
.Cindy ·Rathbtin
. .
Leaming about the arts
to apprise others
C indy Rathbun was here
when the Orange
County Performing Arts
Center was something people
could only talk about.
For A
GOOD CAUSE
It was in the late 1970s,
before and while Costa Mesa
welcomed what is now the hub
of the arts community. The Bal-
boa Island resident remembers
bearing about the architectural
design of the Center and then
slowly watching the structure
get built. ·
elementary education, the
docent said she enjoys engag-
ing children with the theater.
"It gets the kids thinking
about theater, in general, and
what it has to offer them as
.youngsters," she said.
#I think it was the excite--
ment of seeing a project from
the very beginning." said Rath-
bun, who has been a docent at
the Center for about 15 years.
Rathbun, who is also a
member of the Center's Docent
Program board, also attends
meetings where speakers from
the arts community update the
volunteers on theater news.
Like a parent proud to show
off her child, the volunteer
gives tours to visitors and
scho,olgroups. She teaches
about the Center's history, its
architectural design, acoustical
elements and whatever perlor-
mances are scheduled to go on
stage at that time.
"We learn and then we
teach," ~aid the 54-year-old.
For Rathbun, volunteering
also helps her keep up on the
arts world. She said she enjoys
learning about what happens
backstage and what it means
to produce and direct a show.
Nowadays, a'part orh~r
speech includes the Center's ·
expansion pl~.
Teaching is what attracts
Rathbun to community service.
A former flight attendant who
also has some background in
"When I really started, it
was more to get involved in the
community,• she sa,id. "What I
didn't realize was that it would
be such an education in the arts .•
Gettina. INVOLVED
• GETTING INVOLVED runs periodically in
the Dally Pilot on a rotating basis. If you'd
like informat ion on adding your organiza-
tion to this list. call (949) 574-4298.
AlS ASSN., ORANGE
COUNTY CHAPTER
The Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis
Assn., which helps individuals Y(llo
have the disorder that is also known
as Lou Gehrig's disease, needs vol-
unteers. (714) 375-1922.
ALZHEIMER'S ASSN.
OF ORANGE COUNTY
Support group leaders, V1Siting Vol-
unteers, family resource consultants
and offii:e volunteers are needed.
Volunteers may work on one-time
projects or ongoing programs.
Training sessions are available.
(800) 660-1993.
AMERICAN CANaR SOOETY
The Orange County Region of the
American Cancer Society seeks
office volunteers. The society is also
seeking volunteers to answer calls
for the unit's Helpline lnfoCenter.
(949) 261-9446.
AMERICAN CANCER
SOOETY DtSCOVERY SHOP
The American Cancer Society Dis-
covery Shop needs unwanted
goods, such as clothing, fwniture,
jewelry, accessories, antiques and
collectibles, to fund the society's
research, education and patient ser-
vices programs. The goods may be
dropped ·off at .2~ E. Coast High-
way, Corona del Mar. Volunteers
are also needed from 10 a.m. to 5
p.m. Monday through Sa~day at
-Story by Young Chang;
photo by Sean Hiiier
the same location. (949) 640-4777.
AMERICAN CANaR
SOOETY ROAD TO RECOVERY
The transportation program needs
volunteers to drive cancer patients to
and from medical treatments free of
charge. The required commitment is
a few hours each week or month.
Drivers must have a valid driver's
license and insurance and be at least
25 years old. Volunteers may use
either their own vehides or Ameri-
can Cancer Society vans. (949) 261-
9446 or scomer@concer.org.
AMERICAN HEART ASSN.
The American Heart Assn. is look-
ing for volunteers to perform various
general office duties in the main
office and implement educational
and fund-raising events through
Orange County. No experience nec-
essary. !raining will be provided.
(949) 856-3555.
AMERICAN HOME
HEALTH HOSPla PROGRAM
The American Home Health Hos-
pice Program needs volunteers to
give emotional support to terminally
ill patients and their families in the
greater Orange County area. 'Il'ain-
ing is provided. (114) 550-0800 or
(800) 540-2545.
AMER(CAN RED CROSS,
.ORANGE COUNTY CHAPTER
The Orange County chapter of the ·
American Red Cross needs volun-
teers to address community groups
about Red Cross services 'and to act
as liaisons with the media in disaster
and emergency situations. Judy Ian-
naccone, (714) 835-5381 .
ANIMAL NETWORK
OF ORANGE COUN1Y
Become a bottle-feedei:..()r take in
• pregnant cats at your home. Many
shelters kill pregnant cats upon
arrival. Dogs and cats are also avail-
able ior adoption.(949) 759-3646 or
http://www.animalnetwork.org.
ASSN. RENAJSSANa CREATORS
The Costa Mesa group sponsors and
supports outreach community ser-
vice programs, such as the homeless
sanctuary. Volunteers are needed.
(714) 540-5803. •
BIG BROTHERS, BIG SISTERS
The local chapter is looking for men
and women older than 20 who have
lived in Orange County for at least
six months and have been on the job
for at least three months to serve as _
big brothers or big sisters for chil-
dren ages 6 to 16 from single-parent
homes. (714) 544-7773.
BOY SCOUTS OF AMERICA.INC.
Volunteer opportunities for the
Orange County Council include
fund-raising, program development
and training to existing troops and
packs. (714) 546-4990.
BOYS & GIRLS CLUBS
OF NEWPORT-MESA
The three area dubs need volunteer
coaches and arts and crafts work-
shop teachers. Call for locations.
(949) 642-2245.
COSTA MESA OVIC PLAYHOUSE
The playnouse needs volunteers for
ushering, backstage work, mailings,
typing, controlling lights and many
other duties. (949) 650-5269.
COSTA MESA HISTORICAL SOOETY
The society collects information,
photos and 8:fti1acts relating to the
history of Costa Mesa and the har-
bor area. Volunteers are needed for
• 482 Abbie Way, S99,000
• 400 Elden Ave., $203,000
• 1164 Kingston St., $461,000
• 2216 Raleigh Ave., $290,SQO
• 2800 Shant.ar Drive, $409,000
• 578 Travene Drive, U00,000
• 426 Victoria St., $245,000
• 2136 Wallace Ave., $91,919
• 233 16th Pt~e, $285,000
I DUI ARRESTS
The followihg people have been
arrested on suspicion of driving
under the influence of an intoxi-
cant. "5 with all suspects, they are
considered innocent until proved
clerical tasks, computer input and
help in the library. (949) 631-5918.
COSTA MESA LITERACY COUNOL
The Costa Mesa Literacy Center
needs volunteer tutors to teach Eng-
lish as a second language. People
who want to learn English as a sec-
ond language are also encouraged
to call. Call to register. (714) 435-
3310 or (714) 545-3445.
COSTA MESA MS SELF-HELP GROUP
The Orange County chapter of the
national Multiple Sclerosis Society
has started a new self-help group in
Costa Mesa for people newly diag-
nosed or with minimal symptoms of
multiple sclerosis, or both. The
group will meet at 11 a .m. the first
Tuesday of every month. (949) 650-
7659.
COSTA MESA POLICE DEPARTMENT
Seniors 55 and older are invited to
help staff the Westside substation.
Volunteers are asked to work two
four-hour daytime shifts per week
and are responsible for answering
phones, bicycle registration, finger-
printing, data entry and assisting
with other citywide projects. Seniors
who can speak both Spanish and
English are also needed. Call for an
application. Fred Gaeckler, (714)
754-5208.
COSTA MESA SENIOR aNTER
The multipurpose senior services
facility at the comer of 19th Street
and Pomona Avenue seeks volun-
teers who can greet members and
the public at the front desk and vol-
unteers for the Reso~ Depart-
ment with ~eel computer experi-
ence and sharp telephone skills.
The Senior Meals program also
needs people to deliver meals to
guilty.
llWPOft lllCH
MONDAY: • An"I/ L Pieh, 33, Burlington, Wi5.:
SUNDAY:
• Reyna Moises. 29, Ontario
• Spencer 8. Pete1 32, Newport
k«h
SATURDAY:
• Bridgette Klein, 38, Corona
• Wfiey Clarlc Dwinell, 22, Lake -
Forest •
homes. (949) 645-2356.
COSTA MtSA SENIOR CORP.
The nonprofit organization at the
Costa Mesa Senior Center ts look-
ing for new board mem_bers. The
· fund-raising and policymaking
board needs volunteers who will
participate in monthly meetings,
occasional committee meetings and
special ptojects. Candidates should
have connections in. Costa Mesa
and surrounding communities and
an interest in serving the communi-
ty by helping seniors. (949) 645-
2356, Ext. 16.
-' COURT-APPOINTED
SPEOAL ADVOCATES
Volunteers are needed to serve as
advocates for abused, neglected
and abandoned children. Volun-
teers work one on one with a child
for three hours a week. (714) 663-
9034.
CRISIS ASSISTANCE PROGRAM INC.
Titls nonprofit organization is seek-
ing volunteers for its expanding
trauma response program. Some
volunteers assist law enforcement,
firefighters 1and emergency-type
respondm by providing emotional
first aid and support to injured or
traumatized people. Other volun-
teers provide dispatch and office
support No experience is necessary.
na.1n1ng will be provided. (949) 588-
1414.
·DISPUTE RESOLUTION SERVlaS
Volunteer mediators. case sped.al-
ists and outreach assistants are
needed to help in a variety of medi·
ation cases. Bilingual language
skills are needed for office volun·
tee.rs and for mediators. (949) 250-·
0488.
Cop)'Jlght No news storlel. mu. ·
tmlons. edltoftal man..-or a<tm-
tiwntnts heffln can be NP!'<>-
duc.ed wfthout wrin.n pennis.Ion
at copyright owner.
WUlHER AND SUIF ·POLICE FILES
VOL 95, NO. 131 HOW IO BEACH US
Clralllidoft ,,. Vmes Orlnge County
(IOO) 252-9141
Ad:taM4
Oliilllftld (99) 642..s671
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Balboa
70/61
Corona del Mar
69162
Costa Mesa
70/61
Newport 8w:h
70/61
Newport Coast
70/61 )
Wf!OMCAST
A new Southwest swell
wlll bultd todly bringing
4-to 6-foOt l4lff M many
spots Mld .. up to
I fMt M top bNekl
by the trftilmoon.
Tl>ES
TODAY
FirSt low
f2:04 •• m ................... 2.7'
Fltst high
5:05 •.m .............. , ..... 3.1'
Second low
Noon ......................... 0.1·
Second high
6:51 p.m .................... 4..2'
Arlt~
1:11 &m. '"'"_ .......... J.r
~-12'.J7p.ln. .......... --. 0.7'
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11
COSTA MESA
• HMtaor loulevMd: A vehkle w.s reported
stolen in the 2700 block et 12:45 p.m. Monday.
• Newpott loull'Val'd: A robbety was report·
·ecs In the 2fiOO block at 2:51 a.m. M~. • .._••rtw Awnue: Vandalism was reported
" In the 500 blOck et 2:39 p.m. Monday.
• PIM 1nele ,..,.._ PosMtMon of a danger-
ous wupon was reported in the 2300 block at
10:30 p.m. ~.
• ~ RNd: A hft ... nckun felony lnvotv-
lng an Injury was report9d In the perking lot
of the Ot1nge Coast College parking lot In the
2700 block at 4:20.p.m. ~ •
'
. .
Doily Pilot w.dneldoy, 1My l6, 2001 3
Westside can leverage clout by pla.yi,ng smart politics COSTA MESI PUNNING
COMMISSION WRAP·UP You have been reading
on these poges in
recent w eeks about a
few ragtag platoons of Costa
Me$a residents who are, shall
we say, more than a little put
off by the creeping urban rot
that's feasting on the once pic-
turesque fabric of their
beloved Westside Costa Mesa.
Collectively, these folks
are quirky and colorful, often
controversial and sometimes
quixotic. They claim alle-•
giand? to the nags of various
community factions that are,
if united in purpose, not
always marching to the same
fife and bugle corps.
Now, in recent years, it bas
not been unusual to find polit-
ical operatives in this city dis-
eounting these mercenaries.
That's because th$' message
bas often been unpolished,
disjointed or so far outside the
box that they defy practicality,
if not reason. And up until last
November, when Councilman
Chris Steel swept into office
with more votes than any oth-
er candidate, the Westsiders
were without a bedrock sym-
pathizer behind the dais to
peddle their causes.
But the tide is shifting.
Dramatically, perhaps. And as
I read it, this loose confedera-
tion of Westside residents has
the potential to drive the
debate and shape the political
landscape in this town for the
next couple of election cycles.
Why? Mostly because noth-
ing sparks and fans a political
firestorm more than an angry
mob of voters weary of being
dismissed with bemusement
or disdain, or both, by their
elected leaders. And these
folks are ticked.
Given that, the political
empowerment of the West-
side movement (tead: Steel's
election) virtually guarantees
Briefly Jn
THE NEWS
Empty piiiata panics
police in Costa Mesa
What tu.med out to be an
empty phiata resting beneath
bushes off Newport Boulevard
m Costa Mesa led police offi-
Byron di Arakal
BElWEEN THE UNES
that the marque~ issues in
the 2002 municipal election
will be property values,
crime and schools. They're
the same issues that paved
the way for Steel's victory.
Only now they have teeth in
a growing grass-roots follow-
ing and an unvarnished
council advocate in Steel.
Those behind the West-
side movement know it too.
That's why there's already
chatter going on among the
leaders and infantrymen of
this crusade about consolidat-
ing its political power. Even
with 18 months to go before
the 2002 municipal election
-the political equivalent of
eternity -there's talk of
searching out City Council
candidates to supplement
Steel's vote by two.
Councilman Gary Mona-
han -who technically could
seek a third stint on the
council despite the city's two-
term limit -bas more than
hinted to me and others that
he's not interested in a third
go-round, wanting instead to
devo1!; more time to bis fami-
ly and bis restaurant, Skosh
Monahans. And many in the
Westside movement see
Councilwoman Linda Dixon
as vulnerable because of her
perceived insensitivitf to .
their issues and her single-
cials to call in the Orange Cowt-
ty Sheriff's Department bomb
squad Tuesday afternoon.
About 3: 15 p.m., officials
respond ed to a call from
Bodycentre Spa that reported
that somebody h,ad spotted a
•suspicious object" under the
bushes near the business, at
East 17th Street and Newport
Boulevard, said Costa Mesa
Police Lt. Les Gogerty.
SSB~
Mattress Outlet Store
EJIWI) tEW • COSME7TCALL.Y lffRFECT ~!tie Best for LtaJ 3165 Habor Blvd.
Costal'lesa
Ollie llodl 9elllll "'.05 "" 545-7168
RUFFLES UPHOLSTER
Where Your Dollllir C..... MOt91
WE'vE MoVEI) 1 BLOCK N0Rnt
Sofa $100--OFF
Club Chair MOW OFF
•WJtt'I a purch .. d Fate & Labor ti 05n3/01
1-HAMORIUID.,coela~ (MltM8-11M
St•Ju • ~llfoeil • C•ell14lll
QWif.1-Serftce • ~ Eatirlaluamt
minded focus on the arts.
Now the extent to which
the Westside tour de force is
able to consolidate and lever-
age its influence depends
nearly exclusively on how
smart it plays its politics. Here,
there's room for improvement.
Rather than drawing its
life frorp any one group, the
· Westside imptovement jug-
gema~t is really a phenome-
non fueled by several organi-
zations and individu~:
· There's Citizens for the
Improvement of Costa Mesa.
the largest and most vocal
squad of organized voters.
But their battlefield encom-
passes citywide improvement,
not just on the Westside.
Then there's the Westside
Improvement Assn., a more
sedate and deliberate band of
residents whose mission is to
move Westside redevelop-
ment off the dime. Both the
Latino Business Council and
the Latino Community Net-
work -which are suspicious
of the motives of certain other
city improvement advocates
-are striving to unite the
Latino community with the
rest of the city. Meanwhile,
the Wallace Area Improve-
ment Group - a collection of
44 Westside apartment own-
ers and managers -is pursu-
ing its own strategy for purg-
ing its neighborhoods of gang
activity, graffiti and drug use.·
While all of this activity
buoys one's faith that there
a.re pockets of democratic
activism in an otherwise apa-
thetic society. the political
clout of these maverick causes
isn't nearly as impressive as it
would be if they would simply
fall in behind a unified front:
1bis doesn't mean scuttling
their individual platforms.
Rather, it suggests that
their political muscle becomes
Several police units rushed
to the area. The bomb squad
inspected the object, further
identified as an empty pillat&.
Gogerty said.
• He said Bodycentre
employees were disturbed by
· the object.
' "They've had some inci-
dents near their stores in the
fonnidable -and' nearly
invincible -if they would
simplY. lash their planks
together. They can do that bJ
agreeing to common policy
objectives and by drafting
candidates willing to carry
those objectives into battle.
They would do better, too,
if some in their ranks would
cease bombarding the c;:ity's
charitable organizati,ons as
bait for ill~al immigrants,
the homeless and otherwise
indigent. While Costa Mesa
can't claim that it doesn't
have its share of these folks,
it is not a problem that is
quantifiable to the extent
that it can be pinned with
the Westside's decline.
Booting charitable organi-
zations from the city will not
materially revitalize the West·
side. Worse, it will surely be
seen as mean-spirited, which
is a poison to sustained politi-
cal legitimacy. And persistent-
ly laying the ills of the West-
side at the feet of an undeter-
mined number of illegal
imm1grants (is there or isn't
there a problem?) only serves
to alienate the legitimate Lati-
no community, which repre-
sents a strong and emerging
political force crucial to the
revitalization of the Westside.
The smartest politics
Westside advocates can
engage in is the formation of
an alliance to aggressively
pursue mutually crafted poli-
cies that promote reduced
density, redevelopment and
rezoning. To do that is to
dominate the political land-
scape in Costa Mesa for
some time to come.
• BYRON DE Alt4'KAL is a writer
and communications consultant. He
resides in Costa Mesa. His column
runs Wednesdays. Readers can reach
him with rlelN5 tips and comments
via e-mail at b)T'Oflwri~.com.
past. about a couple of years
ago,• Gogerty said. 'But this
one turned out to be nothing.•
Though traffic was briefly
disrupted by the hoopla,
there were no major road clo-
sures, he said. A few parking
lots were closed, however. to
help police units and the
bomb squad operate.
Inside
CITY HALL
WHIT HAPPENED
The Planning Commis-
sion postponed a decision
Monday on a
proposal to
change the
city's sign
ordinance,
which' was
originally adopted in 1974.
WHAT 17MEANS: Com-
missioners wanted to give
businesses more time to
respond to the proposal and
wanted more information
about window displays.
The commission dis-
cussed the ordinance at a
meeting April 23, when it
directed the city's staff to
determine if the changes
are allowed by California's
business code
The proposed changes
would prohibit new signs
with animation or moving
messages, require street
addresses to be posted on
free-standing signs or on
the building, and limit the
number of signs allowed
on businesses.
The ordinance was last
revised in 1995 after a two-
year process involving a
committee that reviewed
the sign ordinance, the
Planning Comnuss1on. City
Council and aty staff.
WHIT HAPPENED
The commission
approved a proposal to
replace an existing Exxon-
-Mobil service
station with a
new one at
3006 Harbor
Blvd. The
new station
would include a 3,615-
square-foot convenience
store, a 6,544-square-foot
fueling canopy and a
1, 152-square-foot sell-serve
drive-through carwash.
The station now
includes four fuel pump
islands and a small conve-
llEIT MIRING
• WHAT! Costa Mesa
Planning Commission
• WHIM: Costa Mesa City
Hall, 77 fair Drive
• WHEN: 6:30 p.m. M ay 28
•INFO: (714) 754-5245
nience store widemeath an
existing canopy, ~ well as
five parking spaces.
The orlginal proposal.
submitted In Janwuy, was
revised April 30 to provide
more parking. U the project ·
is approved, the gas station
will have 15 parking spaces.
WHAT IT MEANS: The
commission approved the
proposal with the condition
that the architecture of the
new canopy, store and car-
wash is compatible with ,
the adjacent Costa Mesa
Square, which contains
Target Greatlands.
Although she said she is
not against the project,
Commissioner Katrina
Foley opposed the propos-
al because she wants the
station to share a driveway
with Costa Mesa Square.
Other conunissioners,
including Conunissioner
Katie Wllson, said the com-
mission could not make
requirements of the Costa
Mesa Square developer as
part of the gas station pro-
posal because there are sep-
arate developers involved.
"In an ideal world, we
would reqw.re shared access
because that makes the most
sense, but there Is just~
way to do that• Wllson said.
WHAT THEY SAID: ·1 t.b.irlk
it'll be a traffic rughtmare ll
there isn't shared access,·
Foley said. ·u you're on
Balter going toward Harbor
and you drive into the gas
station and then want to go
to Target. you'd have~ go
"back out onto Hcµbor, go
several feet past the credit
union and back into the
Target driveway, which l
think will create unneces-
sary congesbon. It Just
seems silly. 1 th1n.k (a shared
driveway) can be done.•
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<I:OTtAGES
CONTINUED FROM 1
the cottages empty after resi-
. dents move out July 9.
"We spent many, many
weeks negotiating a settle-
ment for July 8 • to be the last
day for residents, State Parks
spokesman Roy Steams said.
•we see no reason now to
CONTINUED .FROM 1 •
"When you're looking at
eight to 10 miles per gallon,•
RV fans might think twice to
take their vehicles on a long
road trip as a result of current
gasoline prices,• said
Andrew·· Theodorou, the
resort's general manager. He
added that resort officials
have bumped up advertise-
ments in brochures and other
publications within a 100-
mile radius and sent out mail-
FERGIE
CONTINUED FROM 1
And while abroad, she's
still following the London
murder trial of Jane Andrews,
who is accused of killing her
lover. Andrews used to work
·~Jn THE·llEWS
Holiday Imi unveils
new renovations
The newly renovated HOi-
iday Inn will host its grand
reopening today with a tour
at 11 a.m . .and a ribbon-cut-
ting ceremony at 11 :30 a.m.
Hanford Hotels, owner of
the propemr, has expanded
the im) to 230 rooms with
I t
overtu.m that date.•
Residents who have fought
for more th~ 20 years to stay
in their beachfront dwellings
agreed to leave so the state
could begin a detailed survey
of their infrastructwes. State
parks officials have said they
need to remove the residents
to replace leaking sewer sys-
tems.
Iseman's resolution, which
would carry the weight of an
ers to people living in the
area as well.
· But the dty's business and
tourlsm leaders said t)ley
didn't expect a huge drop in
long-distance visitors.
•An extra $4 would not be
a deterrent," said Richard
Luehrs, the president and
chief executive of th~ New-
port Harbor Area Chamber of
Commerce, although be
added that the general slow-
down of the economy •had
some people acting in a more
cautious manner."
As of Tuesday, figures
released by the AutomobQe
as the duchess' dresser.
"It's a very sad story for
everybody concerned," she
said.
As the line to get Sarah's
signature on a piece of chi-
naware meandered through
the store and far into the mall,
those who bad come to see the
duchess seemed still in awe.
two executive suites and
9,000 square feet of banquet
and meeting space with
Internet connections, a 24
Hour Fitness center, a new
Hanford Restaurant and a
business center. .
"I think it's definitely con-
tinued to raise the bar as fffr
as the quality of accommo-
dations here locally, and it is
just in keeping with the con-
tinued ilnprovem~nt tn
downtown Costa Mesa and
the South Coast Metro
area,• spokesman Dan
opinion, urges the state to
keep the cottagee occupied
•so they do not deteriorate
until the state tnitiates the
reuse of those buildings.•
The state has begun the
public re{riew process for the
district, placed on the Nation-
41 Register of Hlstorlc Places
in 1979. State parks officials
have pledged to "preserve
and protect• the cottages.
"We understand and
, Club of $outhem California
show the price of gas has
jumped by 40 cents a gallon
over ·the last four months. In
Newport Beach, the average
price was $2.03 for regular
gas and $2.24 for premium.
John Cassady, the execu-
tive direct.or of the Newport
Beach Conference and Visi-
tors Bureau, said company
conferences might slow down
a bit •as we move into an
expensive gas environment•
While the Los Angeles and
San Diego areas remained
target markets for the dty,
Cassady Said he didn't know
•1 just wanted to see her in
person,• said Pam Utheim,
who had jµst moved to Lake-
wood from Washington state
a few days before. "I ad.mire
her very much. She has done
a wonderful job, ahd we can
all do that if we need to.•
Cindy Keens, who had
come down from Simi Valley,
Pittman said . •1t•1 got a
brand new face, a new
facade, as Well u an &Imo.st
total inside reoov&tion..
. Hanford Hotels ~t
about $1 million OD the nm-
ovation. t
The Holiday Inn; 8kmg
with the Hilton Hotel, Will
host the Costa Mesa Orange
'County Jazz Festival . iii August. , ...
. The hptel ii •t 3050 ~ tol St., COsta Mesa. " • .•
Information: (1.l-')· 5-40· 7000 ! . ~ . !, t ~
appreciate their concerns.•
SteatDI Mid about the Lagu-
na Beach resolution. •we will
do our utmost to preserve
those cOttages. •
After the iellden.eave,
Steams said rapgers~ould
occupy a bandfUl of the cab-
ins.
Before the council meet-
ing, Laguna Beach Coundl-
man Wayne Baglin said be
would propose several
whether the incred'se in gas
prices bad affected hotels so
far. '
State tourism officials .$aid
they also didn't expect to see
visitors turn away from Ca.11-
fomia.
"People teadjust their
budgets and continue to trav-
el," said Fred Sater, a
spokesman for the state trade
and commerce agency's divi-
llon of tourism.
Officials for most of the
city's major hotels could not
be reached for comment
Tuesday.
Other Newport Beach
bad already gotten her signa-
ture ..
The duchess, however,
wanted her to stay to get a
picture taken, Keens said,
beaming, adding that she'd
met Sarah before.
"I'll hang out till 5 or 6 or
whenever,• she said.
Back al the end of the line,
ARTISTS
CONTINUED FROM 1
she said. •1t was delicious.•
This year, ~ome students
got the opportunity to learn
fruit carving from the chef at
the Irvine Marriott.
•1t•s been an amazing
experience for them,• she
said. "Being trained by some
of the ·top professionals -you
can't put a P,rice tag on that."
The ~~t has grown and
evolved ovSnhe ~.said dra-
, ma teacher Gail Brower-Nedler. ================:;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii _ _.._ __ IE!!!!!!lii!!!55!!!!!!!55!!!55!iCii5!55!iEa ______ ... _.. ·Mlt started off as a little
11 ci·JA,_gwU", IT'S TIME FOR ...
fM.ts ,oul',. '« MI CASA
MEXICAN RESTAURANT
O.C. Human Relations & Anti-Defamation League
Pres~nts
"An experience of a lifetime"
Challenge Day
A collaboration hetw.een the community and local teens
One day Leadership Retreat for
High School Students
~ Teens are invited to participate in ·a day of youth ~
V empowerment and youth leadership · ~
'An opportunity to celebrate and appreciate who we are!''
May :t 9th 1 O a.m.-4 p.m. ·
At Oa•I• Center (Sth and Ml!lrguerlte)
Corona del Mar
To register: Call 949-842-0834
s)lowoff night,• she said.
"Now it's become a full.
blown community event like
the Taste of Newport."
It is a chance for those quiet
yet talented kids who do not get
to shine otherwise, She said .
"We dm't have a gallery ao
campus that can exbi1Xt their
Daily Pilot
changes to the resolution to
clarify some ambiguity about
who would live in the cabins
if not the residents or rangers.
Baglin said be hoped the
resolution wouldn't send the
message that bis dty wants
the reside11ts to stay.
"It is half the position I
want to take,• Baglln said
about the resolution. "The
other half is that the tenants
will be vacating July 9."
hoteliers said ballooning ener-
gy costs, rather than gasoline
price hik~. might become this
summer's real problem.
While summer reserva-
tions from Nevada and Ari-
zona residents at Balboa
Peninsula's Portofino Beach
Hotel still remained strong so
far, there had been •some
reluctance at the energy
costs,• said Ken Ricamore,
who owns the hotel.
He added that be hadn't
dedded whether to cover his
costs with a special energy
consumption surcharge .or an
increase in room fees.
Nadine Bodner of Fullerton
said she didn't really know
what she was doing here.
But "I don't know of a
duchess or princess ever hav-
ing been around here," she
said. ·1 thought I'd go for it.
She seems to be great fun.
But I don't think I'd want to.
live her life.• .
fYI
Evening of the Arts wiH
~ at 6 p.m. at Ne\\IS)Ort
Hafbor High~ 600
lrvtne Ave., Nl'wport Beach.
Admission .. Me. Food tidc-
etscmt s 1 each. Informa-
tion: (949) 51s.6300.
work,• 8rower-Nedler said.
•And this is so perlect for them.·
Evening of the Arts drew
abo\Jt 2,000 people last year,
and the crowds get bigger
with every ~ssing year with
the school's growing. student
population, she said.
Brower-Nedler ad~ that
involvement in the arts makes
students better human beings.
"It helps them become
higher level thinkers,• she
said. "They have a better
sense of who they are. They
have a connection to life and
their community.•
•Dinner
• SUndly Brunch
,
• •
Quote of
111EDAY
"We've be.t pradlcitg Yfl'f har~
tu you Clll o#:t ...... so null ii pradica ••• •
Dan G~ Newport volleyball coach
Spor1s Editor Roger Canson • 949..574-4223 •Sports Fox: 949-650-0170 • 'Mtdnesday, f.hly 16, 2001 5
Tars brush off foe
· •Newport Harbor gets a
minor scare in Game 2, but
manages to tame Valencia·
High 's Tigers in under an hour.
Tony Altobelli
DAllY PILOT
NEWPORT BEACH -After an 11-
day layoff, the Newport Harbor High
boys volleyball team showed signs of
rust, but still managed to sweep past
visiting Valencia, 15-3, 15-13, 15-4, in
the second round of the CIF Southern
Section Division m playoffs Tuesday
night.
"We made a few too many mis-
takes out there, but considering the
layoff, I was fairly pleased with how
we played tonight,· Newport Coach
Dan Gierut said. "We've been practic-
ing very hard, but you can only simu-
late so much in practice. This match-
PREP TENNIS
Yawn, CdM
dispatches
CIF foe, 18-0
• Corona del Mar opens
CIF Division V Playoffs with
runaway victory over Orange
Lutheran on winner's courts.
CORONA DEL MAR -The
Coron~ del Mar High boys tennis
team stormed to an 18-0 victory
over visiting Orange Lutheran in
the first round of the CIF. Southern
Section Division V playoffs Tuesday ..
The Sea Kings (19-0) nearly shut
out Orange Lutheran in singles play
dropping just four games as junior
Cameron Ball and sophQmore Gar-
rett Sny(ier won all their sets 6-0.
Top-seeded CdM will now play
Webb on Friday at 3: 15 p.m. at a site
to be determined by coin fbp today.
Webb defeated San Jaanto, 17-
1. The second-round match was
originally scheduled for Thursday.
but the Sea Kings agreed to
reschedule because four of Webb's
players have AP exams.
•Jt's just a matter of getting it
over with and ~tting on to the next
match,• CdM Coach Tim Mang
said of his Sea Kings' first-round
match. "It doesn't help us very
much and it doesn't help them very
much."
Orange Lutheran did not have a
th!rd doubles team, automatically
forfeiting 6-0 losses to CdM. The
Sea Kings senior duo of Peter Kul-
maticki and Michael Bean did not
surrender a point in their sets.
The CIF individual tournament is
at Costa Mesa Tennis Center Satur-
day. Ball will play in singles compe-
tition, which begins at 9 a.m . CdM
tandems Kulmaticki and Bean,
along with senior Brian Morton and
Snyder, will compete in doubles,
which begin approximately at 10
a.m.
Cf DfYtSM>N y
CoRoNA ou. MM 11.
OMNGI Lunmwt 0 ~ -Ball (CdM) def. Teet«, 6-0,
def. Bloechle, 6-0, def. Peralas, 6-0; Snyder
(Cc:IM) won, 6-0, 6-0, 6-0; Roberts (CdM)
won. 6-1. 6-0, 6-0. .,...._ -K1,1lmatldcl-han (CdM) def.
Bui-Klitzgene, 6-0, def. Farrel-Heim. 6-0,
default; Myers-Ning (CdM) won, 6-0, 6-1,
default Wadhwa-Stockwell (CdM) won,
6-2. 6-1, default.
BOYS VOLLEYBALL
allowed us to get out there and com-
pete again.•
Senior .Christian Berg-Hansen led
the top-seeded Sailors (12-7) with
eight kills, while junior Morgan Craig
added seven and senior Blake Tippett
chipped. in six. Junior setter Loyd
Wright paced the offense with 36
assists.
Newport put the Orange League
champion Tigers (13-6) on their heels
early with a ferocious onslaught,
jumping out to an 8-0 lead five min-
utes into the contest.
Junior Erik Peterson had two kills
during that run, but it was the Tigers'
unforced errors which di~ the most
damage.
"The only difference between this
match and the others we've played is
that we're on the other side of the 5
freeway,• Valencia Coach ~c
Kramer shouted to his-team during an
early timeout. . ..
Kramer's levity seemed to work as
the ngers scored three of the next
four points, but Berg-Hansen's strong
play, combined' with three additional
Valencia miscues dosed out Game 1.
·we had a great start to the match,
which always helps.• Glenn said.
"We managed to get on a little roll,
but Valencia's a pretty good team and
very well coached.•
Glenn's compliments best
described the Tigers' strong play in
Game 2, jumping out to a 4-0 lead.
than.ks in part to three Newport viola-·
tions. •
Valencia's lead was 6-3 before
Newport regrouped and ran off five
straight points to grab the lead, 8-6.
STM MCCRANIC I DAILY PllOT
SEE NEWPORT PAGE 6 Tars' Blake Tippe tt (right) goes up to block in Tuesday's match.
HIGH SCHOOL BOYS VOLLEYBALL
OAl.Y Pl.OT PHOTOS BY STEVE MC CRANK
Corona del Mat's Ryan Inman (above)
finishes Gabrlellno off with a winnlng tip.
At left. Miles Yourman (14) smashes the ball
over a would-be blocker In the Sea Klngs's
sweep Tuesday n19ht.
"That was Kind ol a litUe test.
IJ thiilk it's good for U&
IJt's going to make us tougher
own the road ... •
Edn •riieri
Corona del Mar senior setter
Sea Kings
sweep the
gym .clean
•Corona del Mar, fueled by visiting fans,
scores three-game win in ~TF first round.
Steve Virgen
DAILY PILOT
CORONA DEL MAR -Gabnelin·o High brought
up to 40 of its students to root for the boys volleyball
team at Corona del Mar Tuesday. In they came with
painted faces, blue-dyed hair and loud cheers. For
the Sea Kings. that was a good thi.\lg.
CdM (13-6). which won the CIF southern Section
Divb'ton I title last year, began this this season's DIVl-
sion V playoffs with some welcome motivation and
claimed a 15-3, 15-10, 15-10 first-round Victory.
The No. 4-seeded Sea Kingsb will play Bishop
Montgomery in the second round, Friday. The Sea
Kings are billed to be the home team.
"It was almost like it was an away match,• Sea
Kings Coach Steve Conti said of the Eagles' spuit.
"They could be down 10-3 and their fans would still
cheer for them as if they had won the Super Bowl.
Even though we played at home, it was as if we had
an away atmosphere.·
CdM used the noise to its advantage as the Sea
Kings grabbed Game 1, using just five different
servers. Protecting a 7-3 lead, Corona made its move
with an Evan Burden-Charlie Alshuler combination.
Burden, the senior setter who finished with 25 assists,
fed his fellow senior for three straight kills, prompting
a Gabrielino timeout. Alshuler led CdM with 13 kills.
The Eagles (10-5) commited an error, but then
earned a sideout on a Calvin Tran kill, and their fans
began to yell wildly. CdM answered right bock as
Burden set up senior Forrest Mack for a kill for a s1de-
out. Sea King sophomore Bart Welch then served for
two straight a<;_es and Gabrielino committed another
error to end the game.
"That was kind of a little test.• Burden said of the
on-the-road-type atmosphere. •1 tbink it's good for
us. It's going to make us tougher down the road.•
Gabrielino, the Rio Hondo League runner-up. fed
off its aowd in Game 3. Down. 9'-2. the Eagles charged
bock with a 7-1 nm, which featured some electrifying
rallies in rhythm with the Gabrielino fans. who came in
a chartered bus. The Pacific Coast League co-champi-
ons, however, quickly quieted the Eagles' aowd Wlth
a 6-t run. highlighted by sophomore Miles Younnan's
dig, which led to a Burden assist and a Pat Flynn kill
for game point The match ended when CdM seniot
Brian Gallagher, Who finished with 11 kills, delivered
a rare assist to junior Ryan Inman.
In Game 2. the Sea Kings broke away from an 8-8
tie to win, 15-10, as Alshuler and junior John Grod
had service aces.
Urban Big-12 Player of Week
. . .. ~6~Wed.:=.::::.;~:sdoy::::z:..~Moy~1~6.~2~00~1~~--~--~~..,:._~~~~~~~=-=f>:.....::O::..::.irrs=.::.-=-------_:_~....-...;,:~---~~...;;;_..;-...~--~~-=--:--0o__;i~~P-i10t~~
PREP TENNIS
f\11-PCL
for eight
Sea Kings
Unbeaten Corona del Mar
High, top-ranked in Orange
County, champion of the
Pacific Coast League .p.nd the
No. 1 seed in the CIF South-
ern Section Division V boys
tennis playoffs, dominates the
coaches' All-PCL selections
with eight honorees.
Cameron Ball, a junior,
was PCL singles runner-up
this year, after winning the
league singles crown as a
sophomore. He ls joined on
the first team by teammates
Brian Morton and Garrett
Snyder (singles). as well as
Peter KuJmatlcki, Michael
Bean and Randy Myers (dou-
bles).
Morton and Snyder, who
played singles most of the
season, combined to win the
PCL doubles crown. defeat-
ing defending champions
Kulmaticki and Bean in the
hlle match.
CdM's doubles standouts
Shaan Wadhwa and Ryan
Stockwell are recognized on
the second team.
CoAOtE.S' Au-PAOAC
CoAST LEAGUE
first·team singles
Cameron Ball, Corona del Mar
Brian Morton, Corona del Mar
Garrett Snyder, Corona del Mar
Aaron Yovan, University
Flnt-team doubles
Peter Kulmatidd, Corona del Mar
Michael Bean, Corona del Mar
Randy Myers, Corona del Mar
Anton Branot. Laguna Beach
Edwin Chen, University
Anson Hsu, University
Kunal Murdia, Northwood
s.conct-tffm singles
Andrew Cho, Northwood
Michael Haier, University
Jeff Lawrence, University
Michael Roguly, Laguna Beach
Theo Pau, Northwood
Second-tHm doubles
Shaan Wadhwa, Corona del Mar
Ryiln Stockwell, Corona del Mar
David Elsner, Northwood
Jeff Ferguson, Laguna Beach
Andy Joe1 University
How to Participate
Golfer
$I 50.00. Includes grec"n fees,
Qrt, box snack, dinner and
prize~.
Dinnn-Only
$30.00. Bring your spouse and
friends ro dinner and
partici pace in rhe Chinese
Raffle and Silent Auction.
Sponsorship
PMkages
PIAtinum: SI500
Company/IndividuaJ
recognition at four tees and
registration, four golfers and
fou r extra dinner tickers.
Gokl: $1000
Company/Individual
recognition at one tee, four
golfers and rwo extra dinner
tickers.
NEWPORT
CONTINUED FROM 5
The ngers refused to go
away. They went on a 7·2 run
and were only two points ·
away from knotting the
match at a game apiece.
Chris Franklin led Valencia
with seven ldlls:
But Newport settled down
and let its CIF experience
take over. Kill$ by Greg Per-
rine and Tippett, a bloc:k by
Peterson and two errant hits
by Valencia helped th':'
Sailors rally for the win and a
.2-0 advantage in games.
·we made way too many
unforced errors in that second
game, so we'll have to make
some corrections,• Glenn
said. "lbis is a game based
on momentum and Valencia
bad it for a while in Game 2. •
There was no momentum
to be had for the ngers in
Game 3, however. Newport
took a 3-2 lead before ripping
off 10 ftraight points, thanks
again to hesitant playing and
errant kill attempts by Valen-
cia.
Despite the huge deficit,
the ngers managed five side-
outs and a couple of points
before the Sailors ended the
STEVE MCCRANK I DAILY PILOT
Tan' Morgan Ct'alg (right)
drives the ball over the neL
contest. A Valencia error fol-
lowed by a kill by Craig end-
ed the 56-minute match.
•Any time you play
against teams you're not
familiar with, it's a priority to
focus on your own team
instead of worrying about the
other team,• Glenn said.
"We've got some things to
improve on in practice and
whoever we play, we're going
to have to play at a higher
level. We're just excited to be
playing playoff volleyball.•
The Sailors will play at Dos
Pueblos in Goleta Friday
night at 7.
COMMUNITY COLLEGE MEN'S GOLF
OCCs Wmston sparkles at State Finals
SACRAMENTO -Orange Coast College men's goller Brian
Winston shot a 4-over-par, 148 in the 36-hole Junior College
State Finals, at North Ridge Country Club, par 72.
_ Winston hit 31 of 36 greens in regulation, but had trouble
with his putting, according to OCC Coach Bany Wallace.
"If he had a better time of it with the putter, be would have
had a shot ·at the whole thing,• Wallace said. ".He really <Jid a
great job this year. We're very proud of what be accomplished
this season.•
HIGH SCHOOL BOYS GOLF
cdM·s Chikovani. Chamberlin tee it up in OF
CORONA -Corona del Mar High freshman Alex Chikovani
shot 82 and sophomore teammate Brad Chamberlin shot 86 in
the CIF Southern Section individual regional championships
Monday at the par-72 Orange Course at Green River Golf
Oub, in the low 30s in a field of 62.
The top 24 and ties advanced to the CIF individual finals.
Monday, June 4, 2001
Rancho San Joaquin Golf Course
I Sandburg Way
Irvine
Evnt Highlight1
12:00 p.m. Check-in,
Registration
1:00 p.m. Shotgun Stan and
Box Snack on
Cou rse
6:00 p.m. Awards Reception.
Dinner, SiJent
Auction and
Chinese Raffle.
SpecUd Thanks
to our Sponsors
• Capi.ttrano Volkswagen
• Dr. Veronica Nice
Nice Touch Chlropractic
• Ms. Roberta Kanter-Scan
• Hoag Memorial
Hospital Presbyterian
Gywn P. Parry, M.D.
Director of
Community Medicine
• Heritage Memorial
Servi ca
• Dolphin Properties,
Realtors
•Wells Fugo
Community Banking
Suvn-: $5()()
Company/Individual
recognition at one tee, rwo
golfers and two extra dinner
tickets.
Bronu:: $1()()
Company/Individual
recognition ac one tee.
The miuion of Women Helping Worncn is to wist needy and
abu.d women in their tramlUoll from dependence to economic
ldf~. Our pis uc t0 break the cycle of p<>¥Crty and
~r aad 10 enable women to 1upporr themselves and lheir
fan\ilia.. AU fundi ~ will go directly to suppor1 th* endca¥OR.
Entry Form
Address. __________________ __
City----------Stare ___ Zip ___ ..;.._
Phone ( >-------------------· ,
Fax (
£.mall ___ ..:.-..:..------------
• Oitioa onJy
• Pladnum Sporu0r
• Cold Sf>oi*>r
• Silver SpoNIOt
• 6rontc SpoMor
l)O
Sl .500
$1,000 1m
SIOO
Id~ 11'°8l.__ __
TOT'Al.AMOUNT OUR I. __ _
OIM-FAlft. .. ~,,...,..,,.
2. '· "· 11.-Uwpmy CJVua ClMC Olid No . ...._ _________ .
~V-------------· SlplJIUl'W.___ __________ --l
Pk:ue make cbttlu peyabk to:
--~ ....... 71l We,,, 17th Satct, Suiie A·IO • CO.U MN. CA 92627
For more uwnriadon c.ont1et ~my Hae at (9'49) 631·.t'll
fa ...,.uon IO ~9) 631"34'9
Albacore on the way" ... ,
G ood fishing conditions kicked in to couple of scoops of live sqUrd to the Pacific • ••
produce a banner week of fishing Star to help anglers 11.m1t out on seabass. ::,P
for the local sport neet running out There are also breezing yellowta.11 """
of Davey's Locker, Newport Landing showing on both the back and front side of ~::
Sportfishing and bay-based six-pack the island and as soon as the water warms "'
sportfishers. up a couple of degrees there should be good·•
There was a wide-open bite on white fishing for.forktalls, barracuda, calico bass ,
seabass this past week as boats limited out and bonito on the ~ side of ~e island. • .
early on seabass ranging in weight from 17 The best yellowtail fishing 1S taking place
to 40 pounds. Most of the action took place at San Clemente Island where there are lots -
on the back side of Catalina Island with the of schooled.up yellows feeding along kelp ~.
bulk of the catch coming on live squid fished beds and off rocky points. According to Dean:
with a sliding sinker rig. Plant, at Angler's Center in.Newport Beach. .
There were also anglel'S hooking big the tails ¥e big fish averaging better than 20
croaker on white jigs tipped with dead squid pounds.
and few fishermen found hungry whites 11\e bite has been on and off depen'":ng ·' •
eager to jump on a white-skirted jlg head on currents, but there are plenty of fish ·~~
and a chunk of squid. around the outer island to produce...
Anglers aboard the PacIJk Star, the some good scores for skippers 1 ~
new ~eluxe sportfisber now operating willing to anchor in tight and ~
·out of Davey's Locker, had full limits wait on the fish to move up a ch~ ..
on Tuesday and were beading back to line. ~~,,
the beach early after topping off the _ Along the coast, sand bass fish ·
catch with some barracuda and calico has been pretty good, with near ....
bass. limits being posted on some :.
One of the happy anglers on board half-day tpps to the shallow water.~
this fast-day boat on a recent trip was reefs off Newport, ~guna and up-;:;
Bob Chapman, of Newport Beach, along the Huntington Beach flats.
who decked a 38-pound seabass. These sandles are legal, but on the
Captain Mike Bullard of Newport will J N. • smaller side of the scale, _with most ..
be running the sport boat out to the Im 1emiec of the fish being sacked weighing 1•
islands and channel water this season OUTDOORS in the 1112 to 3 pound class. Biggeio
and has openings for two-day trips for sand bass should move into ..,
the albacore s~n when heading bard-bottom areas along the coast
out to fish rugh spots in the outer waters. later this month and greatly enhance this
The fast six-pack charter boats Bongos II fishery.
& Ill and Captain Hook also got into the The first sport caught albacore of the 2001
seabass action at Catalina with most trips summer season \;\'as landed this past •
producing limit fishing for all anglers on weekend. It was a fluke catch about 15 miles
board. I was one of the lucky anglers who off the northern coast of Baja by an angler
fished with Captain Richard Ruffini of Costa fishing a kelp patty to~ yellowtail. The· 7c.
Mesa on boa.rd the Bongos II in action this longfin bit a jig that was dropped down
past week. ·-under a school of yellowtail. Water condltioDS'
Captain Ruffini waited for the seabass to below San Diego are good and schools of
get into a biting mood and then moved albies and bluefin tuna could be within one
into four fathoms of water, at a place the · day range before the end of the month.
experienced skipper called the "J.unk Pile,• According to Captain Buzz Brizendine,
and the bite expl<5ded. owner/operator of the newly re-powered
Mike Contino, of Newport Beach, was one sportfisher, Prowler, operating out of
of the first to get hooked up, followed by Fisherman's Landing, this weekend could
second mate Chandler Bell of Newport mark the start of the off sh.ore blue water .
and then came this angler who landed a fishing season. The Prowler wiJ!be heading
20-pounder croaker on 15-pound mono. The out on scouting trips to the outer waters in '
bite was so hot that the captain put a jig out hopes of locating albacore, bluefin tuna or
and got bit on the sink, while Orange County breezing schools of yellowtail.
angler Dennis Tossieng sacked a 22-pounder Locally, fresh water lake fishing is in a
and Mike Shorsbree, on a busman's holiday traDSition from cold water fisheries to warm ..
from dee.king for Bongos Sportfishing, had a water activities. Thout are still very active at
hot stick and ended the trip by catc:hihg a Irvine Lake on Jure$ and Berkley Power Bait,.
25-pound seabass. while Oso Lake bas maintained excellent
When limits were accounted for, two other bass fisrung, the Santa Ana River Lakes will.,..
boats were called into the bite and before we rely on st~channel catfish to keep their-
were beading home after banding off a regulars content: . -
2001
Attention 3rd, 4th, 5th and
6th grade boys and girls
It's time to sign up for the most exciting soccer toumamenc of the year.
The Second Annual Pilot Cup!!!
The Pilot Cup soccer tournament is a one weekend soccer toumamenc
Oune 1-3) to sec which school has the best soccer ce.am in che foUowing
divisions.
3sd and 4th grade boya1 3sd and 4th grade girls
Sth and 6th grade boys; Sth and 6th grade girls
Wmners will receive ci>mmemorarivc awards. Winning schools will ~ve
the right to show off the Pilot Cup Perpetual Trophy Award for one year.
So go to the principal's office or the athlccics office right now and sign , •
up co rcprcscqt your school in the most exciting soccer event of the year -
The Pilot Cup 2001. The deadline to sign up is May 20. . ·
All participants rcc.cive at-shirt. This tournament is '
sponsored by the Daily Pilot and the Youth ·Services
Association. There i..s a $5 conuibucion to
cover the cost of the t-shirt.
Don't miss out on this chance to
play socccr for your School and
win the right co the Pilot Cup Pcrpcrual
Trophy as the best soccer school in town.
Yes, we do need coaches.
r----~---------------Pilii Cu . ·--------1 ~I 2001P I
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Fictitious Bualneaa
Name St.tement
The lol'°'.'MP pereon1
afe doing butir.u u:
Logo4« Holding. 2590
Main Sir.et. lrvlnt, CA
92614
Logotec USA, (CA). 2590 Main Street, ll'Vlne,
CA 92614
Thia business It con-dud9d by. a OOfPO'allon
Hava you llartad
doing business 'jat:I No
Logotac USA
Tim Tyler. CEO &
Pralldant
Thia statemanc wu
filed whh Iha County
Cleltl ol Orange County on 03/27/01
2001HSMM
CWy P1'oC A'1fl 25, ~
2. 9. 1§. 2001 W9f{T
Flctttloua Bualneu
Name Statwnent
The tolloWlng l*10nl
era doing buslnaM a .
Logotac Intl, 2590 Main StrNI, INlna, CA 92§14
Logocac USA. (CA),
2590 ..._, Slraet, lrVlna,
CA 92814
Thll bulfnaa la con-
ducAd by. a oorpoiallol'I
Hava you etutad
doing 111.ullMM yal?
Y-. 3'15/01 logoMc USA Tim Tyler, CEOIPraal·
dent
Thia llatemant WU ni.d wt1tl IN Qounty
CMfll of Ol1lnga Count'/ on ()o41()M001
20011H1ot4
Ody Plot •• 15, May 2. ,, 18. 2001 W986
F1ctltloua BU81nesa
Ntlme Stat.ment
The followlna paraona
ara ti1Q bulilaM a: COMPUTER
NETWORK SUPPORT,
P\O, Boll 3S4, Corona
d.t Mar. Calllornla
92825-035-4
L.onard John PQrto, Ill, P.O. Box 35-4, co-rona del ~. Callloma
92825·035-4 Thia buslneaa It con-
ducted ~ an lndMdual
Have you started
doing ~ yat:I No
l.eonatd John Porto, Ill
Thia etatamant waa
filed with IN County
Cl8ltl of Orenga Coun1Y on 04/17/2001
20011M1"3 ~ Piiot May 2. 9, 16, ~1 W972
SUPERIOR COURT
OF CALIFORNIA,
COUNTY OF
ORANGE
34 1 THE CITY DRIVE.
POST OFFICE BOX
14171, ORANGE,
CA 92863-1571
LAMOREAUX
JUSTICE CENTER
PETITION OF
Mlchatl James Wolle
FOA CHANGE OF
NAME
<>ADER TO SHOW
CAUSE FOA CHANGE OF NAME
CASE NUMBER:
A207471
TO AU. INTERESTED
PERSONS:
I. Palitioner Michael
Jamet Wolle filed a peti-
tion wtltl lhla COUfl for •
dacraa changing oames aa lollows. Michael
James Wolle to Michael
Allen McKanna
2. THE COURT
ORDERS that au per-
IOlll lnleraatad In this
meuar shall apptlfr
bafora this court 01 the
hearing Indicated below
to lhow cal.IH, It any,
why the pa111ton tor
chellga ot name lhol*I
not ba granted
NOTICE OF HEARING
Date· 6-5-01
Timt 2:00 pm, Dept:
L73
Tht addresa ol the ooun 11 same 11 nol&d
above
3. A OOf1'I ol dllt Order
to StlOW c... thall ba
pubW'8d at laul once .-ctl week ·fot foul IUC·
ctUIVe weeks prior to
Iha dala sat tor heating on Iha palltion In Iha fol-
lowing newspaper of
general clrcutatton,
prVQd In lhil county:
Dally Piiot.
DMe: ~~2!1_~1 JUOOI! ~ 0. FRAZll, SR. JUOGE Of THE SUPE-RtOR COURT Mk:hetl Jarna1 Wolle,
2311 Viejo, Laguna BNct\. CA 92651
Published Newport
Btach·Co11a MeH
Deily Pilot May 2, 9, 16, 23. 2901 W974
8SC 10MO
NOTICE Of
PmTION
TO ADMINISTER
ESTATE OF:
RICHARD 8.
HUMBERT
CASE NO. A2075'8
To all Mira, banafi.
clariff, crtdllofl, cont·
f",., ;oo r ·• • 1
... l .... , .M'
' ""' • .• "1,. . . •-; ·~-....... . -. .
.I' -:...... ------' . '. ' •· ;.,
lngent crtdltor1, and PUIUC NOTICE
ptt10n1 wtlO may OltlW· NOTa OF
-. bt ~ In "" PUBUC HURtHQ wlll or tttlllt, °' boCh. at. llE8A m?=l· CONIOLIDATED
A PETITION FOR WAT!R DllTRICT PROeATE hU been 1lM'lld9y, Mey 31,
tiltd by ARTHUR W 20011 7:ocJ p.m. or• SCtiMIJTZ In lht &..,... to0n ~r u ~ Court ot Callfomla, the llCllndl P9nftlts ~ ~ET~FoR Boera Meeting
PROBATE r9QUNll 1tw1 Roocn, ..... con;. ARTHIJA W. SCHMUTZ ~ W..., DI.-
be lppOintad .. ptr· "1c:t, 1115 Plecentla
aonal reprfftntaUve to Avenut, Cotti
lodmlnl8t« lht Mtata ot ...... Cellfomla
Iha dtcedant. Tha ea.rd ol Dltacim
THE PETITION r• of MtS8 Contolldat9d
QUU11 the dec«Jtnfe Waltt< Oi1Uic:t 1nv11ae lht
W11 end codldle, 11 tnf, community to attend a
ba admltttd to probate. public hearing to con-
Tha Wiii and any oodich aldar the following: are available for tll· 200212003 FISCAL
IWIWllllon ..i'I Iha file kept y EAR BU Q GETS •
by Iha court. .l... PROPOSED WATER THE PETITIUN r• RATE INCREASE AND
queat• aU1hortty to ed· SURCHARGE
rMlislar the Mtala under Tha.. Item• Will be
Iha lndapeodent AdrM-dftlcuaaad and com-
lecralion of EllalH Act mtnta will be rtceiVtd
CThll Aulhorily wll doW Attendance is open to ~ pereonal represent· Iha public. For more in-
lllV8 lo. take many ~ fotmatlon, or If you
tlornl without obtaining would like ...i.iance '" oourt approval. Bafoca Pf-ling your com-
taking eartakl vtty Im· meru to tht Board 11
portant actl008, how· the publlc hearing, ever, the peraonaf r~ l)leah contact Colttn
Mntallve wil be required 8cermlnach, Dlatrlct
to glva no&. to In-Secretary, at (9411)
tarMted plll'IOlll un1esa 131-1208. ltltY hlva waived nodce Pubtlshed Newpor1
or consented lo Iha Beach-Costa Mesa
propoetd action.) T!it Daily PQol May 16, 23, lndependenl 1dmirn1-200 1
tratlon autnonty Win be
granted unlHa an in·
terMtad parwon IHts an
objactlon to tilt petition
and shows good cause
why the oourf should not
grant the authol1ty.
A HEARING on the
ptlltlon w1ll be held on
Juna 7, 2001 et 1:30
p m In Oept L73 lo-
cated at 341 The City
Onva South, Orange,
CA 92868.
IF YOU OBJECT to
the granting ol the peti-
tion, you shoofd appear
at tilt i.rtng and state your objactlone Of ftle
wntten obfactlona wilh
lhe court 11tfore the hearing. -Your ap-
pearance may be In par·
eon "' by your attomey. IF YOU ARE A CAEC>-
ITOR Of ~ cred-
ltOf ol tilt deceued, you
muat Ille your daM'n Wbt1
lht court end mall 1
OOf1'I to Iha penonal rep-
reetntallVa appointed by Iha court WllNn four
monthe from Iha date of
the firlt i6sua1'Ce of let· tera u ptaYidad In Pro-
bait Code tedlOl1 9100
Tha lima for lllWlg c:lalfTl9
WtH not e~re t>at0<a
lour mon1h1 from the
hearing date noticed
above
YOU MAY EXAMINE
Iha lilt kepi by Iha court
" you are • pat90n in-tarasted In the tttale,
you ma1 file with Iha
OOUl1 I Rlqueat 1()1' $c>e-
c:iaf Notice (form oe.
154) ol Iha Nng ol an in-
vanloly and appralsll of
tetata useta or ot ally
petlllon or aooount 11
provided In Probate
Codt ~ 1250 A ~ 1()1' ~Noia form i• lvallable
from tilt OOUl1 c:lertl. A~ fOf Petlttooer
Til'l!Othy J . Kay, Esq. S8H 1i2312 Olleon, Dwln •
Cnllc:Mr, U.P • ,..._ Plaza. Ste. 1400
lrvlne, CA 814
Publlshtd Newport
Beach-Cotta MaH Dd1 Pilot May 10. 16,
17, 2001
TbW010
FIND
W986
BSC 10693
NOTICE OF
PETITION
TO ADMINISTER
ESTATE OF:
JAMES LEE
CLINNICK
CASE NO. A207667
To alt helra, beneh·
CMIMI, Cfad1t0fl. OOflt·
lngent cred1to11, and
pet9on11 who may ~·
wise be Interested 1n the
Wiii or eslale, or both. of
JAMES LEE CUNNICK
A PETITION FOR
PROBATE has been
filed by C&!ole Reco<ds·
Clinnk:k IOflTlerly known
11 Carole M Records
al9o known as Carole M ~.Cknn1ek in Iha
Superior Court ol Cali·
fomla, County ol OR· ANGE.
THE PETITION FOR PA08ATE r8QutSlS lhll4
Carole M Raoon»-
Cln{tt be appointed as pereonat rapreaantatlve
to adl'Nnlslar Iha eslate
of tilt dtcedent
THE PETITION r•
Quetla Iha dtcedenl'I
W• and oodiclls. rf any,
be edmitlad to probate. The Wtll and any oodicils
ara available tor ax· amlnahon in the , ... kept
~ Iha COi.Wi
THE PETITION re·
quasta authority to .ad·
"*111tar tilt eetata under
ltla 11ldepelldat11 Admfn.
latralion ol Eetatts Act
(Thit Aulhor1ty Wll llow
the parsonal repr-nt·
ativa to take many eo-
tlons wtthout obtaining
court approval Bef0<a taking l*'tain very im-
portant act1on1, how·
-, Iha pereonal repf8-..itatlve 'NII ba required
to glva notio. to In·
i.Mted l*.onl unless
they have W8IV8d notice
or ConHnted to lhe
ptopOMd llCllonJ The lndtpandenl a mlntt·
!ration aulhorlty wlM be
granted unleu an ln-
*tlltd P8f'IOll Illas an
OOjactior1 IO Iha petition
and thoWI QOOd cause
wtiy ttia coutf lhotJld noc
gran1 Iha authonty.
A HEARING on the
petition will ba hafd on
JUNE 14, 2001 11 1:30
..
Wodnesdoy, M.ay l6, 2001 • 7
."'~·· .. -_.,,.. .. J ' I•• ' -·-... -.
p.m. In 0. L73 lo-PubUlhed ,._wpon
cai.cs et 3'1 The Clly Beach-Cotta Meaa
Dl'M Soult\, e>r.ngt, Daly Plot May 18, 23.
CA 11281S8. 2001
IF YOU OBJECT lo wpez ti.~lht~ FlctttJout Bualneaa
.. Iha ~ tnd ..... ...,,,. SlMement
)'OUf otljtc:flOna ()( lilt Tha lollowl~lt written ol>jtc:tlone with are doing n . Iha court baf<>fl lht f'< Seoond Looi<, 2973
h!lrlng. Your ap· Harbor Blvd . #887, l*fMOa may ba In Pat· Cotta Mela, CA 92.628
IOfl OI ~ Y'J'.JI lftOmty Enc Andaflon, 1 S!IO IF YOU ARE A CREo. Lukup LaM, 1105, ITOA or conllngent crtd-Calta Mia, CA 92.628
110< ol Iha dtc:Mlad, you Thia buainau le con-muat Illa your daim With ducted by: an fndMdual
Iha court Ind mail a Have yqu atarted OOf1'I IO Iha ptr10nll nlC>' doing bullneu yar? r.......aw. appointed by YM, 8f22nOOO
the QOUl1 within lour Eric Andafeon
months from Iha data ol Tl)I• etatement was
tilt 11191 IAuarice d 181· ftltd with tha County
lef'I .. ptaYidad In PTO-Claltl ol Orw.ga County bete Cada aediol't 11100 on 05l09/2001
Tha lime lot tillng c:lalma 20011884312
will not expi(e betOfe Dally PICI Mav_ 16, 2:r,
lour month• trom lht 30, Jun! 6._1221 W985 haarfng data noticed
above.
YOU MAY EXAMINE
Iha lila llept by Iha court.
If you are • pei.on in-
tereeted In the estatt,
you ma1 Ille wittl tha
oourt a RequMI tor Sc>e-
Clal Not-(torm OE·
154) ol Ille llltng ol an In-
ventory and IPl>f•lllll ol
estate asseta Of ot any
petttlon Of account aa
provided In Probeta
COO. section 1250. A ReQ\l&SI tor Spaaal No-
tice form 11 available
from the court clefk.
AborMy for Palltlonw:
JEFFREY LAPOTA,
ESQ., SBN 6'521,
TARA N. MORRIS,
ESQ., SBN 11117111,
COX, CAST\.E 6
NICHOLSON LLP, 2041 CENTURY PARK EAST
28th FLOOR, LOS AK-
OELES, CA tOOf7
Published Newport
Beacl\-Coata Mesa OIJly Pio! May 16, 22,
23 2001
WT989
LEGAL NOTICE
NOTICE OF
PUBLIC SALE OF
ABANDONED
PROPERTY
Fictitious Bualneaa
Name Statement
The followfng persons
81& doing business as
Notary Expr .... 2368
Laaen Way. Tustin, CA
92782
Harry Myron
Couyoumjlan, 2368
Lusen Way, Tus1ln, CA
92782
Craig Pilon. 2368
Lassen Way, Tusun. CA
92782
This business is con·
ducted by: a general
partnership
Have you sterted
doing bualrlM8 yet? No
"Ha Hy Myron
Couyoumjian
This statement wes
ftled with lht County
Cler1t ol Orange County on 5114/2001
20018"48H
Delly Pilot Mi&> 16, 23,
30. June 6. 1 W984
PUf AFEW
WORDS TO
WORK FOR
YOU
~49 642.;678
DAVID "BUCKO"
SHAW
Palled away Sllfldey
night mt the home of
hi• friendt, '*' encl IAutlt K9yl A ,..._
port H8l'bot ft9d of
1175, He attenffd
Menlo and Cal Poly st.O. Ht wu an ......
..,,. fooa.11 coed! for
Mltle Gldclnp .......
port Harbor~I h. Setvlcff.... •
Uay 1 Ith at Ug t
Hou11 Church. In
honor of Bucko,
Hnrallan attire
reque1ttd. For Info
Call !MH31-3010.
Helen
Hlgg1 Mitchell
November 18, 1924
• May a, 2001·
Mitchell, Helen Hlgg.1
(78) ditd Mty ... her
home In Santa An1,
Born In B11rden.
Artlanau. lhl lived In
Orange County for 40
y11re. She wH
pr~ In death by
J1m11 Mitchell, hM
hutband of so yHrt,
In 1993.
She 11 ,JUtvlved by
her slater, Mra. Betty
Gene Cupp of Malvern,
Arkanaaa, her eon
George and htr daugh-ter Robin, both of San
Diego.
Visitation will be from"
4 to 7 p.m. on Wednff.
day, May 16 and
aervlcea will be held
0(1 Thurlday Mey 17, at
1 :00 p.m. Both wlll be
held 11 Pacific View
Mortuary. Arrenge·
ments by Pacific Vltw
Mortu1ry.
{949) 644-2700
Can't seem to
get to all those
repair jobs
around the house?
Let the Cl•ssffted s-vtc• Directory
help you find
reliable help.
NOllCe le hereby !j1V8n
11\at the Ul10ar'llgned d
1811 at publlc luctJon
purauant to SectJon
21700 of tilt Business &
Professional Code, the
following d11cribed
propat1y to wit ERICKS
LOOMIS H_.11 Com-
puter, toys, 2 cha1ra,
dresser mtte. PETER
KAIBNEY K-46. Cfottl81,
luggage, boxn JOHN
AGUERO K-22. Fiia
cab . draSHr coolar
ch11rs, table. boxes,
m11c . JAMES
TRIZINSKY H·39, Bed,
frame, boxtt miee
STARTING
ANEW
BUSINESS?.
• • • • • • • • • • • l
PBCIWTIIEM
IB.l. lllGAIWAY
Mortuary * Chapel Crem~tion
1 10 Broadway
Costa Mesa
842-9150
C)fl/11.11J/1ew tta
llQ /l)(J «IJ ...
tAezeate.JfmllelJ.
CONROY'S
FLOWERS
2983 Harbor Blvd.
k'.•IOTll'< rJ H.r1w & e&ttl 714.540.3135
2275 Newport Blvd.
lex.mt< d Nrwptw1 & f;u ... otwl
949.645.0246
GOOD JOBS.
REUABLE
SERVICES.
INTERESTING
mINGS
TO BUY.
/TSAU
HERE
EVERYDAY
IN
CLASS IF ED!
(949) 642-5678
Sala Wiii be by com-
paltl1V8 bidding (written
h.itd bidt ITllY be
eubmltted 1n advance)
on lht 30th day of May, 2001 al 2 00 P M. at Iha
prem11e1 Whtrl s~11d
propany hit bean
ltOfed and wNcf'I IS lo-
cated 11 AYRES SELF
STORAGE, 7012 Emttt
Ava , Hl.rtlington Beach,
Ca (714) 848-7314
landlord r-rves 1"8
nghl to bk! at Iha eala
Purchases mu11 be
mada by cash and paid
tor at the !Ima of
puldlase. Al purchaMd
goodl art aold as iS and muat be removed II ftla
tlmt ot sale Safa is IUb-
jtct to canoallation In the
tvtnl of settlalnenl bt·
IWttfl lendlord and ob-
ligated party Publlshed
on 05/16/01 and
05123/01
~Wendt NOf·
IOn. Bond • S-400-1684
Ayr• Self Slorage Retidenl Managers
Thr &x•I Dqo.mnn11111 1lv D111lt /11Li1 "~ 11""~~"""11 11r11 ,m u-r
-tn1111J..bk "' ""' bMJ11tnin
Wt U!iU ,.,,., \EAR< II 1~ """"'/or )'<111111narcrr111NfJ.t "'"' "''" ,.,, 11.e
llmt and i}., mp 10 1/,, ( 'o11n Hou.•t in \Jt11J AIW I /.m. nf tTJllT'll', 11fttr thr
~•rch u t'Omplrttd tt't 11 11/ fik ,..,,, fiommn O.,,,IVSJ n.imr ''"~"'' "·11h tlv
c.A11t1ry Uni. p11/M.h .,.,, ., ........ far fat",,..,.,., "If'""' 6, i.,,. .1..J r•><'ljift
.-• f1Hf.,. f"bU(ll.fl*lt 1< llh tht ( Ollflft ( .M ,
f'lt.,.rr nop b, to filt Jiii•" fie11nn1<.• b111111n• 1w1mr,,11 ,,, 1/.f I lJr/1 !'1/,,1 fill ll
&] )I, Ca11J1 Meui If )'1111 «1n1101 ilDf' W., p/tA>r ,.,U u; Jt (91'11 (oil I 12111..d ll r
,,...JI -Kt 11.fN"f,mtnOO jot )011 to /.,,...0, 1/.1, f'ltt.ftJllrt /,, t•1i11/
If!"" Jr.,J,J !MJ., "It>' p.rrJ,,, 'I""''~"' ,1,..,, ,,,u .... '"'" 11 <,. 11/ .. ,.,,,,., 1r..11
11.uJ,,, llSJIJI """ G«N1 '"'It "' """' "'" "1..111a.<'
--.-7-i . -. .
-. . , -JT. .. .._,.,4"......,.
' .,. • 'I -·' .
I
,,
~-·
. .
,~.. .
_, • I •
uoo llLI Alt new 3&,
din, 291, 2 6 CM 911t91,
p1tlo, S3t00fmo yny ltHJH390
SPACIOUS
lH'flfft UNIT
29r a. =-llllcorly $1100 7IOO
'.
FINM. DAVI 6'lwt Fi&UW L_1~=== =="·~unit--==~~= ~ VflWL S2SOOI' l\ICI ..... EJdllWlgl IWOlkl ~ ,MC)Mf,S.. Id ~ lg ~ wide FM lil!1lll PfOl*tY, In "Mlle. tor ...
lll.400, PP 11~2080 RUtlllA~E SALE
•AAftlOT VILLAS FundraiHr lot NtWl)Olt NEWPOffT COAIT 2M8R ~ High Sd!OCl't Soft. fM. Fm-on °*ti v11w1, bll Ttam, Sit, May 1llfl
Gof"gecM 1urni11*1g1. Inc. 7 ;OOlm 10 2 OOpm 800 ~ C...C 8-UflNI fW ., WID, AJ llMflrtlea. INlfle Ave., Newport 8Mcfl
2Br 2e. condo In gel«I Sleept S.8 M1y 26 thN
oomtrMlllY. 2 C¥ fl"•· June I. 12, 100. M McGolre. I I ==:.. FP. pool ' -* O!f!!!!! 94H!ffnO '4CI mcaJ.-~ Aon trrw;:f .,:=i"' Alt WI
Mid. -. wlocn cmn ( • omcu 1------~ ¥\lw, 48t 3e., i.. .. ~ .MOVIHO SALE
neg.) $55QM.lo. ()wfl{fAfl.. All gllte, YHH,
IJIQ CANYON 2Br 2Ba &49-3()0:32211, &40-9041 2 Prime Ofllot ~ furnllur•, silks. f94 f 9 Condo. PrlvM pallo. Fp. 1063IQ fl. 12231q II. $2.08 30-50'4 o11 Un1i 5131 ~~~~="'="~IM==ite~-=G;~::o~~==~ WID, s.tp.r CMP'f. llt;e t • rm I FSG. new NNi>or1 a.. 120 TLH1 AYe. $\le A. • INSIK ~ Arid -Aytj -21!=1__ Newpo11 9Nd1 Now IZ300tno.. Age. Chi ""' •
FOR lllfT FOR B tt M.4ile Scpir• 10840 Pmtl;lout prtvate ctub
,· . .
'~ I t '--....... . .
Old« Style Furn!Mt ~' ColltdilllM .......... ~ .......... ~,..........
.. CASHPAID .. __ ...... _
MaUYQTAllS ·~·~.. MY-MITIR"
naa.. .... lt. .._Mio CA 12101
-&U.-CA-
I •
Doity Pilot'-
' ' '
' . ' 7'' •,.
Mow '*""tor 4 _ ..... •°'9 ~~·~
• HllMft ~ •
•EDI a.r!I
REPORT SPECIALl8T • Productloft lup I t'llor'"' ~a:~ v: =ice lofil ::: :l. tin. In ~ to 11*1 who .,.. ... 'modvated.
I• ma•u• I :C:~~ ~":1 ~ P111 "}.-1ng firm. t.41111 bt a team • growing organlutlon.1 ~ wfa poeitlYe lltlitude. Enfl'lll AlllinM to: 11
151 HOOSEllCOlllOI 1151 NOWDICOllDOl I 9'f.7511-S71p FV 01t ~lilt 1M 500-1198
GE"'ER'L COflONA OEJ. IWI 28r+ Loft, 28a. 2~. Mot.I Wtm111 Alk ~ HI 5oMd membenhlp wflUOClett
" " end ~ condo wt MANAGERS lntemel 714-751·2787 club prMltgH. Fully ,__ _____ _. OcMNlcM d PCH ~ YifiAJ:ll7~~· • SPECIAL• tnnatera111e Tt4-S»5191
LEASES All ;,ees °' OC ICCHI. 4Br 3 S8a. -.. $175.00+ tax ~ • N8 Ole Spc Oilqncbc. WOU'f TAHNNG ll£DS
COAST COIN NEEl>S IMH74:2710. Humanr1101.1rce0~11
.-------. OLD OOINSI Gold, lllYer, CLWn' COOffDINATOR °'la. !hem at 714: _:: OVERSTOCICED jewe4ry. watct.. lflliques. Thi Gdup Orglnlullon " lrom $1800 10 $10.00C!lmo .... ...~ PT ~ rnMl9ll9 T•u •T ..,....,
El•, '-'-., __ ..,., C"-a<>-p!Wllt. Cll1yOl1 "" _,.,,. ~ 2.8r ~ lwdwd h, ("4ull ,_..c tW ~ 11'111 T/TWSal $400ln "" ,. "'-'-' ,..,.,. ........,. ...,. """ llocwa luly equipped lu'.fdt. ~ cel'1, invn.c, 2 Cit 236 ""' & ki1ct1en1t1t a.. loc. .....U~l3 BUY DIRECT AHO SAVEi S3500 age 949-S52..i700 en, Ealy IO o;iew $5,CIOOfptr gw WO ..__ lllllld ....._. SIUled on ...,_...,,A. COMMERCIAUHOME
mon111. EY111 eor.ett 11 $2iOOJMo'.~9-m..&> ~ ;;;;;' OOiil 1rom Sl99 oo
c:olediblee IMt!q-8447. .-. 1 poeflole IMm I*· R!CEPTlOHIST et ~ ct:1'm:. TOP $111RfCOROSJ aon who r.111""' olllls do = i: ~ :~·~~'
wWhelpl Jan. !_'Ji~. Roe*. ::'io ~~:::::. ::=784 ~'!.~'10"
1
155 1tOUSESJCOt100S I 949-640-3685 '?' 1132·5173 FEATURES: 24·Hoor 1210 -~I Low Monlhly Paymenll FOR RENT Slr@da Properties • BACK BAY 1 Lobby/Direct dill FOii II~ ~:E1.~1~-0~
BAJ.80A PEMf 1160 HOUSESJCOlllOl I ~~~= =:~=~1 I I
(949) 642-S67 MIKE 94N45:7505 949-474-2710 "''--· "
Pol C"--· FOR llEJfT cty C1c1M 10 405 & 55 LARGE UNITS AVAA. 440 ~ P1n1n1ul1 nt ·-·-COSTA MESA •EXTRAORDINARY• Fwya Min's lrom O.C IOX28. 12X24 12X28 alart· rvn _.. ~: ~~ ~ ' eont.mpor.-y holM In Fllrgnla, oollege end Ing 0 S35CYmo Approx t2ft
14'0~11 411~11·~11 411~1;
Call ~14-/!89-9166 3Br 281 HollM S1&5Mfo pr .. tlgloue Beyahllre9. bcha Walking dls0 dMllnce. Al LnlS drive-up. IOd gardenef. lg yatd, avai St.I>• from bffchl l.lfge lance to shops Ind 24 hour gale _. Xkll ANAL DAYS: Store Flrturel'Equlp. UQUIOA TIOH1
Maru Shelving. Pale! Racll. Sl1opplng Caits. Showcaset,
MOREi Everything goea ollffp! Make offers 1t these
seleded OfflCEMAX locabenl onty,
B lh alk lmmed, 657 Ross S1 ~ 5BA 4BA • offlc*llbmy. rMIJu<anla. lor oonvnetcial use. lBdrm 1 1 yearly w Tor"' Re~ 714·540. 3-.. _.... -y.tMi . COSTA MESA US Stof9 CenWI to the beac:h. $1175/Mo -~ -"f""• --••n "" u tUnfumtsllld) Asloaated m«ithlY Mt441-1111 MOTOR INN 1SS2 Newpor1 Blvd C.,
R all'i 949-673 3663 28r 281 W/O hk-upa gar, 22n Herbor 81\od Cell S!!!ty! .... 7W300 e · 140 Aa>ert. S 14 7Sfmo l'ls HIWpo!1 Cflll Lua """* Phone M...s 41.0
ANA.HEIM CA 620 N Eld\d SI
714-635--0360 GARDEN GROVE. CA. 12110 HaltJor Bl
c1o not c11a1vrb ••n•nts. 381 2-SBll. 1llOOllW 2Br 181 Penlnaule Polnl Call LlrJdsj!y 949-640-3632 kM>I. melble W/O , <Ill Cottage 2c gar, yearly IM. ~ ....,
Avail June 15 $2200/Mo E Side Twnlvn 2Br 1 58a, gar ~ ... 140
Associated Really gar, laundly hk, OW, 171
94H73·3663 Montt VISla #82 $1350/Mo
No pe!! 949-642-3812
159 HOUSES/CONDOS FOR A8'T
CORONA DEL MAR
38f 281 Hoclle gar Fp. JM pello ylfd Onve by onty
Do not dlatvrt> tenant•.
27111 Ponola. Avail May IS
S1750hno 714-662-3111 Of
714·540·3666 Deslgn«t 2Brl2BI Fllfn'd
$2500 unlurn'd S2200
pool spa 1ndoof gaiage E'Sldl 2Br 1S. new ptitW
Ava.I now MHI0-3187 caipel. w•d llkup Fp gar no pea, $125&mo 2389 A
Carlton Pie. MM50-2809 Htwty Rtm<HMled 2Br
281, Frplc. av1ll now,
52200/mo. Fifat 6 L11t,
Clll 949-370-3019
2Br 1 Bl 1 c gas space 703
Jasn1ne S 1800mo Pie.-
do not disturb lenlnt. Cal
l.Jodsay 949 64,0-3632
FOR LE.ASE In CdM
38r 28a luly l1.1m1sl\ed
Sept 6 thnJ OCI 21 2001
949·380-9492
I tu::w.!I
Aeglltred Nu!M w.'11 yNr
old daU!1lfe< WOllung 11 lo-
cal hosp1al, honest and
depelldab4e. would hke 10
house Sl1/be caretaker of
home IOf room and bolrd eichange 949-858-9801 or
PS!' 949-203-0179 ' 11849
VERSAILLES
S1, 115.
P'""-1 BA
Mll'i ac.i v-SEA FAR
I Pen..:!~ 28A
OUel Greenbelt Area
Pool v-M1ryAnn McGuire
94...wno
PfUdenbll c. A!!!ly
28r 281 Bib' BrMe! Bntl'
Many vteWS, commly pool,
clli>l1otJse & tennis. $ T60tV Mo. All 949'4e6-3161
2Br 281 Newport Heights
locallon. deluxe new unit
Wiil Fp, 2c ~. $1450'Mo.
AvM. JI.Ile 1 949-631-1680
Newpon er.et 3Br 2.SBa,
new carpel. pe1k ooean
YNIW, pool, taonls, 2C gar.
$2275/Mo Owner/agl
94~722·8353
Awox IOOaf "°"' ffont. 7' .. 7Q3.0S37 Excellent lt1"C frontage It's busmess as usual II all olher k>Cltlo'1$
1204 R...,..a.a • 1 loc at 1152 NewpcM1 BMI www nrel.com, 19'. Boyt!! Premium s;n,_ Cit S1500lmo t MCUl'lty _ TO SHARI _ depollt. Cell Sheryl O . M~w:,;i;t ,_ w: ~'°' I '48 ~~~ I I •so APPLIANCES I
~ 114 8C lot, S500 + I I Portable Dil!IWMhlr F111>-$200 d!p 714:281-3073 400 ~ NOW OPENI Trenure id8lale 18in grill for 8'*
--Hunter CollectlblM • can be ~. plenty at ca.
Roome 4 rent CM lg 2400' FJNA\ DAYS:Slore Fixture C o n I I II n m • n t a !)!City. ~94~5-3757 l'oonle, PoOI. 'llfd. Ip, nu ctpl. 132 Cabnllo Stretl, C M resp, dn. Mill now, dou to /Equip LIOUIDATIONI .,..,...,. & .............. .,_~ Refriger1tor $190,
fwys $800m 71....,... Mach SheMng; Shopping v;;;-:0-':i;;';j~.A;'.;q;,'~ I WMher/Dlyw, S1'51eL
FIND
an apartment
through classifted
Cal1a, si--. MOREi Dols Corne Ind See I.II' Gu Sten, $145. X1nt
SM Id In "Wac. lot Sell" We NY9 1 lcl4 at ,_ ~ Cond. M9 6t6 !841
HOAG TllAIFT SHOP
Open Tue, Wed, nu & rll'll
Sii at lhe month UM F·2 comer al 171h & Pamona
l08T • 1 FOUND
Loil P•racrtollon Eye
Gt11111. Gold lr•mes. vicntY of Bal>o8 Penln Boltdwalk. 949-673:2049
11 very rNtOnlble pnces' Wlllher 8mo old. K8IYllOl9 OPEN 11 :Q0.5:00, Tu.Set heavy duty, Super Ctp1e0
94M4W059. VISA/UC, i1y 1 4-dt~ setllng, SIC
$275 949-645-3757
....... ~ . ·-., HOM~, H~TH ANO 8uSINES$
~ ......
THI GALLUP OHAlllZAnGN '
REPORT SPECIALIST
Irvine, CA
• Are you proficient in Mkrosoft Word, Excel and/or Power Point1
• Do you build mutually supportive friendships with co-workers?
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product? _.
•Are you a perfectionist? Is your value system a 107
•Do you care about other people?
• Can you type at least SO wpm to help produce beautiful
technical reports?
•Are you motivated by deadlines, pitching In to get the job
done7
We are not looking for a11era9e. we are looking for excellence.
We offer an opportunity to ioin an internationally respected
worldwide business consulting firm with an office in Irvine near
the John Wayne Airport. Yoo will be responsible for prodU<ing
reports and graphics that will be incorporated in presentation
materials. We seek a creative individual who can produce under
• time deadlines and occasional pressure.
If you are a friendly, loyal team player with a positive attitude,
o.1.1tstandlng computer skills and love to type, CALL NOW to begin
the interviewing process!
(949L~110
THIGAUIUPOROAJllZAftON
EOE
on.fine at www. allu .comfrecruite:dmdusatko
...
for all your needs... ~
POLICY
In an ellor1 to otter the besl
S11V1Ce po&llble 10 OU1 reaO-
m and lldvtmsers. we Wll
require Conlractors wl10
adYefll~ '" the Servtce
Dlrec10f'f lo •nctude lheir
Con1rat101$ License
numller 1n lhe11 advef\JM·
men I Your co-operation ts
!leatty appreoaled
280 °CEAAMIC
TILE
• GROOT ClEANIHG • Stone • Tile • Clnnlng Pofistwlg • SeUng
EDOIECO 949-63 I ·5SOll
286 CLEANING
/MAINTENANCE" I 220 ACCOUNTltG I . HA~ TO CLEAN? •
~olliot. 22y!1 oc
OUICKBOOKS SfTUP =: = =~ Training & Support Booidceepng ser.t. aval Hoclle a-Ing By Lucy
94Mff.7597 Local 191'1 nl8!IOl1ll>le ~ 12 v ... Exp. Olfica ~
949-246-8657, 91631-4W
Hoclle ci-itng S-fcM
Great rates & referencet
Elcpef1enced. Free Estimate
Vlolell 949-278'5649
'Z'/4 COllPU1'EA SERVICES D GARDENtNQ /LANDSCAPING
AL'S LAWN SERVICE
Tr• Trimming. ClelnulJI, • Spmldef Repair •
Fr .. e.t. 714:396-2842
H GARDENER H
Formally 1r11ned, v111 llqlllilla, 11111 holn, ,.
llYll JllllC 71~1130
l.MldlCepe S'IC, 11yrt Exp
Llwn wM. Jtl'd daefl up,
ltff tnmmeng, planbng,
!p!lr*!!!!71~15111
..... _ofyour YARD _ _l'N-UP
1iome0tolli<» T~T~
Progrm & '""""' s...., Spllnldert Rei>alrtd. new l ' I lor Al. lawnl. c.11 )1 .. 7514'71
S"-.ili••tl ( .upPntr-r
l 1•'< Irr,''"' Plum l>t't
I'll help you resolve !hose nagging home repair arid remodel
Issues.
Keith MM74-1748
Co.-~& .._ Cll8nlna ,, y.,. I I AIR COND I Elpt Good Jleltrencee, is,_,,., Polient. Yard CIHn Up, lnllll * HAUUNO /HEATING Reatonlble Pncee C.• Jody Moma r Spriolden, MalnlenlllCe, ... ______ ,._
SIM On Cooing Coelll
PrOf* attic: ventlTalloll wlU
reduce AIC ••penat! Call
lor spring 1pec1ale ~Attic F-
t4M2te1209
www SUO!f!0!1lhcf1ns.com
( 2so CAAP£HTAY I
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CARP£T CARPET " Repelte. P•tchlng lnetall,
Courleooe. Afrt MZe jobs
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Ew & Kil 71 .. 754-4132 '4,_541-1"7 TM! Trell 2-t Yl'I EJp.
Free Ell .. H50=!7!1 .IUNK1~.:w'"
1270 COHmUC'TIOH• -•M'.-.112'4 DMiA&J. I AVAILABLE TOOAYI --·-·-_ -_:=-['-iw:=l 1-"~1
I:!.~· .. ·---~ ""1.,71.:J1447 Repelre, Eltc1ocal and -------~ Uote60624. Attention CtnC* P8dlntl C1ll 114°211·7111 or Call now IM-GON:UREI
Mt-24HOJI. •mall www.allenecenc:« Drywall I Carpenlfy
Woodl l Mell! Fflmlng,
Hlng.T1p1, T mn, Clean, °""811 Repelt f T ublrt ~ NM5l"571 Strip Wallplpef, Palnl
Toudl-up, emll lobe old
7t .. 270-IA4
erutntlofl.e
FREE VIAGRA
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S17 INTERIOR
DESIGN
For ilH ba111ro/fv1or111/
"'1AMM, Tltl '1<"1 \If
't.llAl 'll\., 11~\l -
k~ /U ""'7"J. ,, ""'IM,",_.
The Caflf. Publte-U t 1111 f n Com ~REQUIRES
lhat •• used hOllM-hOld gooda tnOYtrt pnnt their p u.c .
Cel T IU1'1ber. lmoe Ind dlllifftf'I print
I* T.C.P. fUnC>lr
Ind~. n yolJ have a ~
tlCWI ~ Ille legll:
lly ol. mMf,.h)
OI cf*'*,* PU8l.IC UTIUTIES
COMMISION
71 •-658-4151
830 MOVING a STORAGE
* JEEF MOVERS * Slve money LOWMt rate
2~7 dayl I Melt. $llne
day S4IMce licllne T • 159404
714-539-t!!t
ll(FS OUITOM PAINTING
ProleMlonal, deM, CIUdY
•o,._ Int/ext l doc:b. l.IW46f 94tf31-4810
PAINT YOOR CAITlE
~ In rt*ldlnti8!
hOmll ~-f320lll1 Ted 714:§111047
IWN80W C1ACL1 MAlfT Plintlng-lnlful HauWA.,i
quel'ity )obi FrM llti'llllt U~7 71+e3H88§
• TOP OUAUTY • Vft'(~ ~ldldfllWUrtd IJfl8228 Jay ~50ee
1-·-=f
On ...... ~
.. ,,.... $46 elc.. St. Dllo,
Recordlol'I IBM'• 1125 oo .
714:33M945 OI 33HfC5
What
happen• If
you don't
advertise?
·,
CANOY 9'0UTt Up lo C... .... W 15,000imonlh (~) 20 5-nill ~ ..... ~ ..... No ~ (1133148) 117.988 Ian • I ~ IUOO NAIEM Investment requited (?14!5401100 1~29MI01 (2A hlut~ (CAL 'IC4Nl C.-.C a... '11
.. '•
Bridge
SMr, ...... dMll GMET1NG CARO DIS-(a273) 17.9811 1n11111 mo .., c:cww
781C mi. boob, ..
Both vulnerable. North dealt. 5-4· I distribuuon. South had no
problem proceedin& 10 &llllle. ~ 30 q1111-NAIERI
lly le=~ Lo-(!14154t!IOO eel ICllOU'Q No MllinQ. lnYMI Si,550, CecMlc S.V-. 't5 ~~ ~ (828"":841· w.tll pelll,.:-..
l900ldl. ...... 1111'1 ""· co, dltoml .,,..,
like new condition 18,895 Ylnt 597218 OC AIM 8loMrw
Nf..6M.1111 llon firat, then e1tl HABERI
1..S00.818.o&88. (714)540:t100 -------(CAL'SCAN) Cdlc St¥tle 'II ,,.., XJR 'ti 54k mi,
55ll '"'*· good concition ~-recotdt. blll/cream MAKE EASY MONEY. $5700 IMH75:ll94 ltw, w , glo'IQed noMtnk. lMm "*'Y edr1Q wtt IO like new.-~.995, Wit nm money II home Of in CAD 8EVUE ITS '9$ ole1255, fin. WM. Ml Oc your spere tome. Peart whltellthr, orig Auto B1us 949-586-1888 www.apeclallnto corn O'#net, hlMMc, dlr04M ...., XJI ,. __ .,...
1.eocMl2· 1182 ..... fully loedecl, pp 36i "" ....... -v ~,.. ICAL'SCANl 112.B MH?W!?! m. 8MJ1k. CO. chrome w!* ... new.~1
WEST
• K95
I? l
0 985 2
NORTH
•0 43
c:> AQ98J
¢ KQJJ
•K EAST
•17
I? K J lt6 4
0 10 7 • J 10 6 5 2 SOUTH • Al7 J
• AJ 1062
"7 5 o A64
•Q94
Dec~ fintucd the q11ttn of
hu.r1s, losing to the run,. WI
returned a heart for West to ruff, and
club 10 the ace i;ealed declarer'• fate
SUICC lhe king of spades would be lhe secung tnd:. ,
When I defender fcU one of the
uits your side has bid, beware of a
possible defensive ruff. South can
alTord to lose one 1n1mp IJ'ICk. one
heart Ind one club. W1d bhoukl plan a
campa.ijlll IO limit the k>sse!. IO lbolJe
three metes.
-•.-.... NI mi'll oordlloli QC Al*> Bkt ~1!!8 I • "·--1 ~ S.10 l'ldtup .. $28,9115 hndna Wl!T Mil
The biddin&:. --Noa:nl ,EAST S0l11'H WEST le:> ,_ •• ....
St.rp ooe is to rise with the ace of
htlll1S Immediately, ~ Jhe 11CC of
specjes and conlll1UC v. 1th 1 low Ul_lmJ> tO me queen. The ~l West can do IS
win With the king and lead a club IO
Wl's acc. WI Mloold cash the king
of hcaru lll1d conunuc wnh 1 heart,
but declaru can counter by ruffing
tugh, drawing the ouu.tanding trump.
then running diamonds to discard a
club from hand_
NANlllUWI (=2~ Tstzao1 ~ u w 4711 m. kl
Acwa '""9rl W Ml-722-~ llf"ll,"';iy 8i:':' J:::
Ail 11.t co ,...__ k -'*· llM new m 23n41 • pwr, --·r 1500 Step Side 1211"""' In Mil oc Al*> Opening lead: Two of •:i
20 .... 2NT .... l • ,_ ,. .... .... ,_
(22951W1275) s1s.201 414 • Wh1. va. 11, hAy ~9't-516-lll88 South Coest Toyota .ic.dld. w big. *'°"· -. 949·722·2000 new bres, 61/t lift. Clllt JAGUAR w w
stereo. 100 much to llat! Convt beauty. Chrome ~19.300 Call 949-463-9493 whMls, co. wind ICrMll,
C!!y Of 949-65 t-9264 new tirea, low mi xttaa.
,...__ •• -L.. priced 10 .... --·r .....,_ 115 PP 94lM4&-8118 Miio, pa, AC (P1452A) te,415 Jetta GL W
Soulli eo.t ._. 4-dr, IC, --· only
South, declarer al four ~padcs.
failed to bccd the wamlna of the
Ol)eflina lead. As a result, a contract iJlaJ mf.&ht survive a 4-1 trump split
bit the clust.
North bid well IO paint I perfec1
picture of the holding -a bcttcr-
lhan·minimum opening bid with a 3·
What 1f trump1. are 4-1? Sance the
length i) probably with We-.1, declar-
er will have 10 rely on finding Ewlt
with a ~anglclon kmg. or Wc..\I with
the ace of clubs. In the laller case. the
defcndcn will noe have the commu-
nications 10 promo«: a second uump
trick.
714-tr .. 2500 21,000..... ·------...
CW20 ~.. (211~ COllt ~ 1-CMllllU:Off&-••-1
BMW 1191 '85 Bliek, Opll. A Olm 714•17t-2500 • --•• • ~ 120k Ill. 5 ap, ~ .ion. ~ LMd "-.....___ LE ______ _.
AC, aunroof, BBS, 'lll09 llM2.4-l~ ._ 315k ml ui-;;;:;~ ........., MoMllo IR 't5
@50 714-21M117 whilWn '1111r. caal duM V8 360 tllOo 4X4, -ml.
lllllW mi._ cuwo ~ '00 mnrt, oaraoed. nolamk 1111t Ol1Q owncoiet. bleclcllln~llhr, ...... .._ ~ CD X-. new Sf9.805 Wll867421, a. mriff. , dwome iiioecL~ IOS3Hn .__ • .......... ~ IWU19 Ml oc Al*> Bin loaded, beautiful , -Flltchaf -~ MH!t1f!! Sf0,995, ~ wwr
11111W all 9tdlll 4dr '15 18M24-1402 -llEAClOU--............. C2'0........,_T7_ =-·IM:: IUD
Slf>d, loeded, 120k ml, cuwo ~ '00 Ntvy, grey ltltr Int«, ............ lllDnWo 't5 ,... ~ ~ 911-Low ...... LGlldlcl ......... 5 co .,..,.,, .,,, r~S2000 :> ........... ~ D 1111. ~.... ..,w,AC,s;
-----· cond. ·123,IO(iloM. 1IP (21= COllt ~
lllllW ra • 1tklal, fUllJ 101.S.d,
cuRolm blue color' Mini dww, PP . ..,_7154404
llM24-14(!2 .... 5M-e007 714-17•2500
C230 Sedarl TT llEACEDU 110f 'IS
White, Gorgeous Oai1! blue. dwoml wheell,
(5035791 S15,tlO new na. II milelot. $3950 ~ Jonea Motorcara M•75H301 or
CAOIUAC O£VUE 11 NM24-1402 94H40-1n0 Mk tor l!!rt.
Low m. 11n lh, b11 d wan ED Sedarl '00 ...,_.. S2llE w: 'M (725661) $21.988 ........ • ............. NAHAS 1M ...... --. ~ 7 ..,ter, CO nger,
(71 ...... {012117) $42,890 loecled wMh .. faclOfY op--~~·-............. 1 ..... 100"'"--hetctllf Jonea fllotorC81'1 .,,.. lmmaailte ocnd Cal
CAOIUAC DEVLLE '13 ""'24-1402 ,.... 111 71~7156
Low m. a bUI. lh ED WllfOCI W ~ 5eOSl .. (2331~ SIO 988 11oM, ChrolMa, t....u. Red ~. ciwmt lflr 1R.
NABERS (IOIM2) 135,990 !4st yu11 .!JlOdel. c:llrome,
(714)$40:! 100 AetdlW Jonea Motofm -9Clt top, Jdnl ttllOlllilout
CADUAC EJdorldo ... • --"llM24-'"""""'=-. ..... 1402--.__ $17,500 A 10 714-751·2464
Tour, Norhtlf, tow ml. F°"' TM.NI 'II MEllCUAY Vl.UGER '13
(MMMI $211188 llUIO, fl,C, pa. ~ l.eaht, CO, llNIJ llr ~·NABERS ' (21110Al S7,950. (J13571) S7,988
(714"" ....... 00 Sollll COllt Acw1 NABERS ,_...,, 714-f7•2500 (?14)540=!100
HONDA CIVIC UC 'f1 MlrQllJ Yml9lr '15 IUlo, pa. ..
Ol9nll -· Low 58lt 111. (P1. Sl.llO llll4m -.o. co $10.500 ScMlll COllt ._.
M•7SM19' 714=!1!=2500
.
Nissan 300ZX '88
MUii Miii $3000 Very d!!ni I!()!!'! ~1
Beat pl•c• In fh• wor ld
to adv.rtle el
C a ll tocl•Y to _place your ad Claaa Hlecl (949) 042--5978
1-c:=1
flORSCffE 111 TARGA 2.7
1174 a..lc, -petnt. 20ll ml. on COl!lplete
·=~~~
SMll IOOB T7 0.-, euto, ~ool. 41Mll, lolded, llll0f9ld, 1111111 ... , Sll)Q.
714-21M1t7
SLk230 ~ ... co, av-. Sllvw
~ 131.llO .ion.~ 18M2•1402
SLk230 A09CllW '00 Al* Tr-, Loedtd v= S3l.tlO .ion. liloeofC8l'I
..... 24-1402
8L500 Roedlllr ... co, "'*-. llollo ...... vi:: $44,llO .ion. lloeorcer9
111414-1402
S320 Sedarl 'f1 .... ., .... , "$;1 ~ .tlO .ion. MotOIC8ta
m.c4-1~
s.ao Sedli1 '00 co. Phone, SheflBleclt ~ . ...., .ion. MotDran
llt-424-1402
Torote C-., 'II
ve.am.w.klpwr = (2327&'1308501) i 12. 1
SOIMI ca.tr 949-722·
1 -~1
TC¥* Ceb' 13
IMO, AC, lllOOMIOf
(P1578) ....
Sollll COiie Acwa
71~2500
Toyota~AIM>, llf, UI poww
(22870/075865) $10.401
South Cout TC>YOQ
94t-722-2000
T oyoll Corola '00
Cenifild. 1uto. llr, tul
powet' mild a>nd
(231 o:Y343689) $11.901
South Cout ToyWi
949-722·2000
TC¥* Corolle 'II
Al*>. •· UI poww (2287tw75815) 110,401
South Cout TC>YOQ
94t-722·2000
TClfGU Edlo '00 Auto. lllr, poww ,tMnng,
co ~. tl.i • beoa (2293&'006689) $11,1!01
South Coat Toyoa
949-722·2000
1-=m l
VVednesdoy, May l6, 2001
TODAY'S
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
9 ·
.. • .oi ~ -Ur'tllld_.,._
M~•nMO 47,...or_.. 35~AJ 48~~ 3eWlbt~ ,__
37 ScMwMI,.,.., .e ~ ~
.3t e..n. 1nc1 eo """° ~ Aelnkl119 !52 ADbelt ol 40 8u•y .JaM'
4 1 Non Dllme 53 Ana~ llghl 5i5 • Yep,.
43 ~eel ltlilt !5e &Mii ex>mllo 44 Croctieled 57 Big ltland port
lem• 58 Typeol hll '45 Jerked 81 CondenNlllOn
··Have· ·A
Garage Sale!
c:::-1 I ~he S:»llc:»11: c:::•---•fl'•-d--~ c_ .. _> es .. __ es_-:7_
t:c:» -=-•-,c:a-~-..... .-ICill----s.---·-~d I
'I
'
.. · 10 w.Jnesdciy, May 16, 2001 • . "' • • • . . .
•
Jaguar Deale.r in ·Californ _ia ·
FO r ·New ·& P reown ed Veh i ct.es
JAGUAR CREDIT'S . LEASE
OF A LIFETIME CELEBRATION
HIGHEST RANKED IN SATISFACTION WITlil INITIAL CONSUMER
LEASES, ACCORDING TO J.D. Pow~R AND ASSOCIATES.
We've gone to great lengths to make leasing a Jaguar as enjoyable as driving one . .
A tall o'rder, you say? You obviously haven't met the great people from Jaguar Credit.
So why not take this opportunity to get acquainted with them and their lease options?
-
'
1455 South Auto Mall Drive
Santa Ana • 55· Freeway at. Edinger
\ \ \ \ \ \ . I ) . l l 1 l' I j • l :~ l I • l • . . ( . ( ) 11 l
7 · 1 4 • 9 5 .] • 4 8 0 0
•
•AJ-V6 MSRP $46,250, ... ,, ,., ihuillh .... ...., J9 lftOftth daHd end .... on ....,..oved credit.~ $3836 lnc:ludinl
feel • lldw, to .a1 1111._. S22,622.SO. 20f .... ewer 1 Ok • (l.93473)
·~
l