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HomeMy WebLinkAbout2001-05-17 - Orange Coast Pilot. ' ' . .. " ... SERVING THE NEWPORT -MESA COMMUNmES SINCE 1907 ' ON ntE WEB: WWW.DAILYPILOT.COM 1HURSDAY, MAY 17, 2001 ·D.A. charges ·Steel· with fraud· Costa Mesa councilman pleads not guilty to incidents in 1998 and 2000 elections. Steel legal woes send tremors through town SANTA ANA -Outspoken Costa Mesa Councilman Chris Steel, who only six months ago won a stunning upset at the polls, found his fledgling political career shaken Wednesday as he was char~ed with two counts of election fraud for allegedly forging signatures during the last two City Council elections. • Supporters stlmd behind councilman while accuser is glad he stepped forward. Jennifer Kho D AILY PILOT COSTA MESA -Councilman Chris Steel's legal.problems stem- ming from charges filed Wednesday that h e falsified election pape rs ~ DON UACH I OMV I'll.OT The charges mark the condusion of the Orange County district attorney's office's six-month-long investigation resulting from Costa Mesa police re ports and a complaint filed by resi- dent Michael Szkaradek. lion by fraudulent means, said he looks forward to "complete vindication through the justice system.· Chris Steel, right. confers with bis lawyer. Ron Cordova, ln the rour1room cha1ng bis arratgmnent al Central JustkE Center In Santa Ana. Steel, who denied he won the elec-"I've conducted my life and my SEJtH HU.Ell / DAILY Pl.OT Bob Wilson. one of Costa Mesa's original planning commissioners and a f~rmer mayor, toun the Preedom Homes trad on tbe Westside. ~.!W.--··w~~ m NITTllH cm Of A FOUi-NiT SUllS " ewayit.was Costa MesaN Westside ha$ quite the history, including the countyN fiist tract housing I • Jennifer Kho DAILY PtlOT I drew reactions that vaned from furi- ous to Vlctorious. Councilman Gary Monahan said he hopes Steel is able to get the allegations settled and put behind him. · "I've gotten to work with him for six months now, and I've found him to be hard-working and honest,• h.e said. "He was clearly elected by SEE TREMORS PAGE A6 campaigns within the law,· he said. His attorney, Ron Cordova, called SEE STEEL PAGE A6 Funds secured for bay dredging • State l>udget cutbacks also should not affect Newport Beach's desire to buy land from Caltrans for a park. Paul Clinton DAILY PILOT NEWPORT-r..i:ESA-Gov. Gray Davis slashed $3.18 billion in spend- ing from the state budget Tuesday, but projects in Newport Beach and Costa Mesa are not expected to be affected. Davis, in his revision of a 2001-02 budget first released in January, didn't cut funding for a major dredg- ing project in Upper Newport Bay that is scheduled to begin after 2003. State and local officials repre- senting Newport Beach have tenta- tively secured $13 million of park SEE BAY PAGE A12 SPOITS Cost.I Mei's toftbal11Hfn c.N up shon In 10 Innings. .... ., 111 IBL CllVI OWunriltblpt'IN.NI , ............ ..... Of ..... W. •. ...... ------..-GILLI ...... -.--------- ., ... - .. lmlfLY II IUSllESS Hyatt NeW1>9rter upgrading rooms The Hy.U Newporter fs undergoing a $4.S-milllon renovation • deslgMd to give the luxury hotef a classic elegance, company off 1- ci•ls uld. Once com~eted, guest rooms will have new bathrooms wit~ ~I si'*-' sleek ch'9f'ne fixtures anti colored granite flooring. Evety guest room also will have Internet access. 'The renov•tlon Is slated for completion July 1. Doily Pilot Take advantage of furniture deals at Urban Rejurban U dNm Refurban Vin- t..,. Metal Furniture carries mid<entury metal furniture, home acces- sortes and one-of-a-kind items. The Costa Mesa show- room restores and customizes all of the pieces. Office furni- ture available includes lawyer cabinets, bookcases, vertical files, and desks. The pieces are available in natural met.al finishes and in any of the hundreds of custom paint and powder-coat finishes. There are also dintng tables, coffee tables, night stands, table fans, vintage typewriters, signs and whimsical clocks. The latest selection of mer- chandise may be seen in the showroom or on its Web site at http://www.urbanrefur- ban.com. It's at 1661 Superior Ave., Costa Mesa. Infonna- tioD (949) 631-4637. Greer Wylder · BEST BUYS istrationfee.Scorel c1a.bns that with the help of the aca- demic coaches. a typical child will advance a full grade level in five months. It's at 2300 Harbor Blvd., Suite N-6, Costa Mesa. lnfor· mation: (949) 515-8428. Jose Orihuela After 30 yearS·in business, Tbe Sport Nook is closing on June 1. There's a big blowout liquidation sale going _on, with drastic savings on women's clothing. It's at 270 E. 17th St., Costa Mesa. ltlformation: (949) 646-5255. Wllllams-Sonoma offers summer cooking classes with well-known chefs visiting for the series. Williams-Sonoma is on the second level of South Coast Pla.7.a, in the Saks Fifth Avenue wing. Classes are offered ~ 6 to 8 p.m. Mon- day through Friday. Infonna- tioD: (714) 751-1166. A fine jewelry trunk show by designer Eddie Le Vian HE IS Taking people for a ride • INTHE ZONE Jose Orihuela loves children. The ~-year-old Costa Mesa resident likes everything about them -their happy faces, excited shrieks and cute antics. That's why he enjoys his job as a ride operator at the Ferris Wheel in the Balboa Fun Zone. He appreciates the family atmos- phere at the Fun Zone, Orihuela said. "I like it when I see parents bring- ing toddlers and little children and 4 having a good time,• he said. "I see them sharing happy and special moments with their kids. It's heart- wanniflg. • APR GUY His job is much more than operat- ing and maintaining the rides. It also Often smiling, he's also wheeling and dealing involves a lot of public relations. While Orihuela says he enjoys interacting with people, that part of his job description could be a chal· lenge as well. ·Most of the time people are nice,• he said. "But sometimes they're rude when they don't understand height requirements to be OD the ride.· He knows bow to deal with those tough situations. •1 just try to be polite,• Orihuela said. ·1 try to tell them rules are rules and their kid must be at lease 48 inch· es tall to go on the ride .• A MAN WITH ING Pt.ANS . OrihueIA has been doing this for the last two years. Before that he had been~ wait-. caipenter, busboy ~d a~g coach at Save Our Youth, a nonprofit organization m COsta Mesa. He has big plans for the future. Although he enjoys his present job, he intends to join the Army and later try to become a police officer. •1 was once robbed at gunpoint in my own home," he recalled. •1 felt helpless then, and I want ti> protect other people who seem the same way.• But for now, Orihuela says he is happy. •1t•s a happy place,• he said •trs close to the beach. What more could I want?" -Story by °"= Bh8mh, photo Grwg Fry Tbe gang~ all here in Newport Beach 'LITTLE RASCALS.' ANYONE? Though Alfalfa, Buckwheat and Spanky aren't roaming the streets of Newport Beach, a few other rapscal- lions might be. According to Phyllis Henson, of the Newport Beach- based talent agency The Kids Holly- wood Connection, •business is booming.• It seems the entertainment indus- try loves dedicated parents and, as a result, 1s starting "to see Orange Countian.s as a new resource of untapped talent• About 85% of the youngsters Herul'On represents are working, whether in commerdals, films, sit- coms or soap operas. Some are doing RETAIL ROUNDUP so well, they're raking in enough bucks to pay for their college tuitions. Uthe past is any c.-onsolatioD, oth- ers may skip college, become big, rich stars, have huge fallouts, live OD the streets and become rich again thanks to the "Behind the Scenes• documentaries. Need a.ny older aspiring actors currently earning their income via joumallsmi GOT PERFUME, WHERE'S MY TOWEL? Some things just don't sound too eye-catching. Robinsons·May is featwing a deal in which those who buy $49 of Gior- gio Red or G fragrance collection merchandise wW receive a •gener- ously-sized beach towel.• Now, that's all fine and dandy, espedally in our coastal communities. Who doesn't want a •generously-sized" towel for going to the beach? What caught our attention more was the fact that the towel would feature the •signature yellow and white stripes of Giorgio Beverly Hills.• Is that much of a selling factor? Oh well, we'll stick to our Scooby Doo towels, thank you very much. DaiJ¥1Pilot READERS HOTUN£ ~No newsstoftM,; .-.. WUllll 111 •If (949)642~ tratlonl, edltotlal ~Of ... ~ herelrl CM\ be '9'I"> Record 'f04JI comments ebcxlt ~ ~ wrtttln permllllon ........._ ~ the O.lly P\lot 0t news tips.. "'~ CJ'tlll'W, 1-'boe TODAY VOL 95, NO. 132 ADDRESS 70r'St AntlOw Another store that's clos- ing soon is the Home ar Gar- den Vintage Purntture store on East 17th Street in Costa Mesa. The oWller, Robert ~. says he's giving things away durtng these last days tll business. The stole is filled to the brim with vintage wrought-iron dining sets, art, collectibles and more. Miller delaibes the store as a big collage of items, and every- thing is different. It also has enough merchandise to fill up 10 stores.. but because of the recent rent inaeases, he feels it's time to close up. HOJne & Garden Vintage Fur- niture is at 369 E. 17th St., Costa Mesa. Information: (949) 650-6357. Neiman Mamu is having a sale through the end of the month. There are mark- downs throughout the store. On sale are women's design- er sportJwear reduced 40%, fashion accessories reduced 40%, selected designer shoes and baDdbags reduced 33%, chlldren's merchandise reduced 25%, and men's sportswear reduced 25%. Neiman Marcus is at Fashion Island in Newport Bea.ch. Information: (949) 759-1900. Costa Mesa's newly remodeled Harbor Center bu opened a Scorer Educa- Ucmal Center for kids ages 4 up to ninth grad,e. The Score! fadlity was designed to help ldds improve learning skills in math, reading and spelling, and to inaease their preparedness for state assessment tests. It's offeling a special through the end of the month: If you sign up, you'll ~e SSO off the reg- will happen from 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. today at Robinsons.May in South Coast Plaza. The LeV18n Spring 2001 cbllection features multicolored gem- stone$ set alone and with dia· monds in platinum. 14-ka.rat and 18-karat white or yellow • gold. The gemstones featured are yellow. pink and orange sapphires from Madagascar; cornflower blue sapphires from Ceylon, and deep royal blue sapphires from the famous Kanchanaburi mine: green garnets from the 1Savo National Park in Kenyan; rubies from Burma, Thailand and Kenya; emeralds from Columbia, Brazil, Zambia and India; and diamonds from india, Israel. Belgium, Russia and the United States. Eddie Le Vian designs include ear- rings, rings, bracelet's. pins, necklaces and pendants. The gift shop at the New- port Harbor Nauttcal Muse. um is showing local art from Heather Niblo and Gary Mil- timore. Gary's Catalina nos- talgia series fits right in with the exhibit OD the Channel · Islands going on through June. Admission to the muse- um is free, and if you become a member, you'll get a 10% discount in the gift shop Newport Harbor Nautical Museum is aboard the Pride of Newport between Bayside and Dover drives at the Back Bay bridge . It's open 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.., seven days a week. Infonnation: (949) 673-1863. • IEST 8UYS appears Thursdays and Satur~ys. Send Information to Greer Wytder at 330 W. Bay St., C05- ta Mesa, CA 92627, or via fax at (949) 6*-4170. POLICE FIUS . =MESA • • :Ad11M A,,....: A commercial burglary Our ..... Is))() w. ~St.. ttQW m REACH US ~dllMlr t2:S2 ....................... 2.1' was r9pOrted In the 1600 block at 2:28 p.m. 6MO ~· . 1'HOMAS ... JOl•a.e, c:osta Meu.-CA 92627. Orallll1n ,.,.~ "'** The Tinw Orange County C...Mlll TOlfY DODaO, COlllECDONS (IDO) 252-9141 7WSI 1:1J a.m. , • ., ... , .... M•-J.7' • ....._ lout1werd: A vehlde w.s reported tt Is the flMot'S poffcy to PfOmPl-='°"leech 5-'tdlow Edlelor ....... stolen In the 2100 bkx:k at 4:53 p m ~ LI.CAHN, ly O>mlCt all errors of~. Ollltfttd (Mt) MM671 f2:J7 pJI\. -··-..-m· 0.7' / ... CltyEdltor ...... c..tl (949) 57~. ~(Mt) 6U-4121 =Ofteo.t Seciondhlth • "' a111k ~ The suspected sate of ........ 71 Mlm~ m Nlwt ""9> 642-5llO WMIUCMf 7:11p.nt.. .. Hol Alll ...... S' lltegll ~reported In the 1700 bkxk at MllUlt~ Editor Thl~~MIM 4:57 p.m. . ••••MMW. ~ PUot (WIS-1......, .. P'A> $pOftl CMI) $74-WJ ==-· ... ... ,....Editor IW* cW!y. ~ Nlwpoft...., Md ....... Sports, .. (MJ) 646-4170 -. •tnrdhllh -c.----. C....MIM.~ .. ~ I-milt~ uf, -=· ........ ~llACM Spcw11 ldltior ... _,..,=::.,.,. ... OllD ··---.... 1:21 .......... " ... " ....... 11 • C.. 1a1dl lllM: A ~I burg&lry l"'* °' ... Counly m-...... Ofllcll CM) IOG21 .............. .... -. ., .. ,,~ ......... °'~ IUllMll r.t., Q1-712t ........... .......... w NpOl19d lri the 1000 block at 11·19 • m .... EIMof' ...., and c.Oll9 MIM. ..... ..... .......... .,.., .... ·······----· 11' Molld9y. . .. ,..,. ...... .,...,,....,.,. ........ =w,.....ow:as....,...., .... ...., ...... :...": __ y ·~ 111119°""11J 11111 W $30 ~ fll .. IM,.....,.._ • -c..a ·=:: paty tt'9ft w MIWIMK .._ "'°""" ..... dim::::: ..... •C:O.Mm. CA. ..... ..... ....... lnttie .t I a.m. ~ ,... ... -.-.o...-..--,,..,_. .,,.,--. ·-···------....... -~········· .... -.>flalfl., na ... ....._ ·~,_lli&lllApalmnew.a= ~.Dir.-----~ w LMA&•l•D l ~ ...... fllaC. '° ==-eel llll:alin tt.Sm~ PNPlitr In h IOO ...... ~ ..... CA--. a Ml:1ta.lft. Daity Pilot Thursday, May i 7, 2001 A3 . Navy trainer in better shape than World War II µtot -COSTA MESA PLAlllllllG CO-ISSIOll WRAP·UP · W orld War II haS been getting a lot of atten- tion lately, what with the upcoming movie "Pearl Harbor" and the recent visit of 1940s-era bombers to John Wayne Airport. A couple of my undercover agents called to tell me the airport exhibit not only included a 8·17 and B-24 but also a North American SNJ Navy trainer, in which I spent more thal) 1,000 pours a few centurtes ago. I managed to come back from the war without a single photograph of any kind and only a handful of artifacts to show people whose eyes become glazed when I tell my war stories. The most impressive thing I have to offer is my copy of "Slipstream," a kind of high school yearbook f.fl which each graduating Navy flight class is pictured, and I'm on a facing page with a 19-year-old named George (not W.) Bush. I've long wanted a picture of the SNJ, which the Army Air Force called the AT-6, so I called my oldest daughter, Patt, who lives nearby, and asked if she would go along and take a pictme of me with the plane. She seemed pleased,at the idea. I asked her to bring the one article of clothing I brought home from the war: my leather flight jacket, which she admired and which I was pleased to · give her. It was appropriately well- wom and scarred, and the chest patch with the gold . Joseph N. Bell THE BELL CURVE wings still read #Ensign" because I never bothered to upgrade. Patt'wasn't able to wear the jacket, though, because the leather had hardened and stiffened rather badly. We got to the ~rt just as the B-24 was taxiing for its last· flight of the day. Patt said she would sure like to take a ride in it, and I told her I'd pop for one until I found out it cost$350. So we turned our attention to the SNJ , which was gussied up with fres~ paint and Navy markings. This was the durable, effi- cient, versatile and under-rec- ognized plane among World War Il aircraft. It served as an advanced trainer for Army and Navy single-engine pilots and was great fun to fly. I've never had any great affection for anything mechanical as long as it got me where 1 was going, but the SNJ was different. It was my pal, and I actually felt a kind of bond as 1 stood there looking at it with my white hair and fat belly, remember- ing when I was slim and sleek and could climb '1P on the wing without a derrick. We asked a guy with a t>apge if we could go behind the restraining ropes long enough to take a picture. I told him I had 1,000 hours in the SNJ and got that sure- Mac-that's-what-they-all-say look. but he said, #Don't ask, just do it" -and we did. There was a moment of considerable emba.rrassment when 1, tried to put on the flight jacket for the picture. I not only couldn't get it around my belly, but barely could get it around my hips. Surely it must have shrunk - the jacket, I meant-over the years. But my daughter took the pictures, and then a kind man watching the process took a shot of the two of us in front of the plane. When we rejoiJl.ed the spectators, I was still wearing the flight jacket and must have looked pretty racy because a young man, per- haps 13 or 14, came up to me carrying a note pad and pen, waved a hand at the B-24 waiting to take off and said, a little breathlessly, "Did you fly that plane?" I told him, #Not the B-24, but I've got 1,000 hours in that one," pointing to tlle · SNJ. He looked, put his note pad away, said #OK" and walked off to ask his question of another old guy in a Oight jacket. If I'd had my "Slip- stream" h<Utdy, I would have shown it to him. I did have my flight log- book, which I'd brought' along in case I needed to establisl:} credibility, but he got away before I could pro- duce it. The kid probably didn't understand that those bomber jockeys just flew straight and level while the single-engine pilots bad to fly their planes. We went over, then, to loo~ at a 1940s British prima- ry trainer,:& fat biplane that looked' remarkably like the "Yellow Peril~ in which I had first soloed. · I looked around for the kid to show himlhis one but he had disappeared. He proba- bly found somebody who claimed to have pilo~ a B-17. When my daughter dropped me off, I took the flight jacket with me. There must be an artisan some- where around here who can soften that leather and make it wearable for her. I gave a passing thought to slimming down a bit scfl could wear it myself, but I've decided against that. I tried it on again when I got home and realized that I was under- weight. almost emaciated, when I wore that jacket, and it wouldn't be healthy to get into that state again. It also occurred to me that this visiting aircraft exhibit saved you from another col- umn about what I was doing when the attack on Pearl Harbor took place. 1'11 save that for the first week in December. • JOSEPH N. BEU. is a resident of Santa Ana Heights. His column is • published Thursdays. Inside CITY HILL WHIT HAPPENED: The commis- sion denied an application to legalize an existing ~foot-. high blod< wall located 2 feet from the front property line of a single-fami- ly home at 2097 5anta Ana Ave. Mmia Elena Olivera, the property owner. did not get a city permit for the wall, which encloses the side and front yards. Olivera said the wall acts as a buffer for traffic noise along Santa Ana Avenue and creates a protected play area for her children, according to the staff report. ' WHAi IT MEANS: City code requires the wall to be set back 10 feet from the property line. The commission decided it did not have sufficient reason to grant a variance from the code. According to the staff report. the wall could be rebuilt 10 feet behind the property line and still provide a noise buffer and an ade- quate play area. WHIT HAPPENED: The commission approved 10 goals for the 20<>'-02 fiscal year. The goals are to:- • dellelop ~ program to regu- late MUl'e growth and encour- age energy comefVatioO; • aeate a rental rehabilitation program to encourage property maintenance and beautification; •develop an O',dinance requir- ing new~tolndude public art or to contribute to a fund for public art; • establish an annual planning division open hOuse and tour; • hold a series of quarterly, . one-hour seminars to educate the public on basic planning topics; • notify the public that plan-• ning commissioners are available to speak at homeownen a550Cia- tion meetings. service organiza- tions, civk:s classes, college plan- ning courses, etc.; • establish a semiannual award program to recognize excellence in community planning and deslgn· • ~elop guidelines for responding to public comments at commission hearings; •incorporate financial-effect assessments into the review of planning applications. WHAi II MEANS: The commission recom- mended those goals for ~If to the City Council, which will vote ?" therp at a future meeting. NEXT MEEJllG: WHA't. Costa Mesa Planning Commission WHERE: Costa Mesa <'.:ity · Hall, n Fair Drive wtEN: 6:30 p.m. May 28 INFO: (714) 754-5245 C· I Ai.swtf', IT'S TIME FOR ... [M.t8 ifotAt r 'I(°' MI CASA 1&~ MEXICAN RESTAURANT Mattress Outlet Store 296 E. 17TH ST. COSTA MESA · 949·64S·7626 Shopping at its Best Summer Edition Friday, June 29, 2001 Be a part of our special section devoted to REGIONAL SHOPPING CENTERS• NEIGHBORHOOD MALLS RETAIL STORES• RESTAURANTS & FOOD• FURNITURE in Costa Mesa, Newport Beach aQd the surrounding communities. This section, as part of households with buying customers from Gen .3165 Harbor Blvd • . . Costal'lesa One Block Soutb "' 405 hwy 545-7168 NEWPORT DESIGN CENTER presents A No Minimum Bid Public AUCTION . • AT Newport Design Center 353 E. Coast Hwy/BaysiJe Dr., Newptwt &.cl, ONE DAY ONLY • SAT., MAY 19TH • Preview 12 noon, Auction 1 PM MILLIONS OF DOLLARS OF DESIGNER MERCHANDISE!! . BELOW IS A SMALL SAMPLING OF ITEMS TO BE AUCTIONED 10ctScilaieC&rmi•1Ro1ax~·1 ct. S<ilaife acmm • 3.02 ct~ ru DiEmn1Qded•3>c.t.F\bf~Bnmet•10ct. Dianmi Tms Bnmet •Vcm.s ••• Crystal~. bit ErnwlY Mh~ CalvedCti. ~ .• g Sdd ~ Aarnl1 Ccbm1 • ~ ~ & CMa'l LOO a&s • ttaian s¥e 6 peoo lM'-g Fron Set v.ll ~ T~· ~Wea FS. 8"n.&:..,_m snlal t> itesaa, ntmJ Pa1i~~ E)(. Deer, 1-bses, Go1el$, Gilles.• Alt. Deoo & nm•~ Gemstne C1c>bes • W8Jpl 'Ml89I Bed• B.19'1111 fNnda FWll••. ~ Ftriti~ ·~ ~. &"'*9. lallrt llllllllClrda& Cllid I '11S... •Him Ettai t.ttaS • ~ 9noses• eeaAJ ~ <1 NII•• Maun Fnrned u..ct fdlon MD sun•~ a.ga1, k3t, Pk 111 D & RD8. 6 l QisaC Blalze Fc:uiail. Ham Pai'Ed i.q•AdR. cm. 00..•Mllllll~cn.-• Dlllll • Patelai'\ Oemlli'18 lams•lage Pala "8as• ---U..·lallnr...,.•Qft>CDm•M11¥tedlatePli••"-' ...... &~~krn11bir,l1fatwn~Kda\~ Teattlftit·llim l'at"* · 'fll11•1at n Haa lllpit#IM<*tnt-. al9ia AND ~MANYMOREDDG100~10MtNl10NIJOIN l5 IOIA OM' OF RJN AND IJUllNG AOClllN ACl10NI OONT M& m Mlrnsdld''>d8a .Ctl111d1lliaet11•11s,ad\cfacradaD. Alrflllt~ • • • • t v l A4 ~Mar17, 2001 Doily Pilot I Putting the safe in summer State urged to reinforce cottage preservation •Pupils at the Woodland •and Kaiser elementary learn dangers of guns, the sun, bike riding and going in the water. Danette Goulet DAILY PILOT COSTA MESA -It was their passport for a trip through a safe summer. Students from WO'Odland and Kaiser elementary schools learned how to have a safe summer this year, whether they a,re on the beach, at t.ne skate park or at home. As an alternative to the annual bike rodeo, the schools' parent-faculty orga- nizdllons held a "Safety Sur- •Laguna Beach City Coun~ unanimously approves resolution requesting the Crystal Cove bungalows be occupfed after tenants' eviction. Paul Cllnton DAILY PILOT CRYSTAL COVE -The Laguna Beach City. Council has sent its preserve-and- protect message to Calif omia State Parks officials about the short-term future of the his- toric district at Crystal Cove. As expected, the council unanimously approved a res- olution supporting Council- woman Toni Iseman 's bid to keep 46 beachfront cottages occupied. while officials decide how to fully restore the buildings. • "'We 're planning on spending' $Ome money. We're going to have a crew in ther e pretty quick to start rehabilitation efforts." -Mike Tope Orange Coast District's superintendent of state parks . fari " at Kaiser Elementary School on Wednesday. "IL started as a bike rodeo, dnd we needed a change," said Marie Hanna, a Kaiser parent. "Summer was com- ing, and we needed to broad- en children's awareness." GREG FRY I OMV PILOT From left. Dale Hull, 12; Cameron Newett. 11; and Jovannl Luna, 11, enjoy the view In the front seat of a police car during Wednesday's summer safety fair at Kaiser Elementary. Iseman has said she hopes state parks officials will reconsider their pla.J} to fill only four of thE! cottages after the current residents leave July 8. As a result of the resolution, Laguna Beach will write a let- ter to state parks asking them to keep •the historic cottages occupied so they do not dete- riorate until the state initiates reuse of those buildings." Other historic preservd- tionists have entered the debate to urge the state not to leave the cottages vacant The cottages, built in the 1920s and 1930s, were pldced on the NationaJ Register of Historic Places in 1979. In a letter to activist and cottage resident Laura Davick, Pasadena Heritdge Executive Director Sue Mossman said she supported the effort to keep the cot-· tages tilled. Mossman said historic homes in Pasadend and South Pasadena have deteriorated during Ole state Department of Transportd- tion's imbroglio with South Pasadena over the 710 Free- way extension. She began by calling Capt. John Blauer,· with the New-· port Beach Fire and Marine Department and asking for life guards to come to talk about safety on the beach and in the water this summer. And she asked some fire- fighters to come to talk about fire safety too. - Once she got started, Han- na decided to go all out. She cdlled in the Costa Mesa Poltce Department to talk about gun safety, Hoag I lospital Cancer Cen.te r to Briefly!n THE NEWS State librarian to speak at library State Librarian Kevin Starr will be the featured speaker at the Newport Beach Friends of the Library lnstal- leach children about the dan- gers of skin cancer from the sun, and representatives from the Children's Hospital of Orange County to talk about pool safety and how ,to save someone from drowning. ·we are learning how to sldy away from cancer and not swim alone,• said Tanner Prairie, 11. ·And how to save people with a garden hose if they're drowning in a pool.· Hanna had a group called High Hopes there to talk about head trauma and the importance of helmets when riding bikes and skateboards. But the parents had to find a lation on June 5. The public is invited to meet new officers of the orga- nization and learn about the group's activities al this annu- al meeting. A free brunch is also included in the program. Starr is lhe seventh state librarian of California since 1900. He has a doctorate in American Literature from Harvard University and a !:»~"E. u~ 30'Y'o on your Home & ~uto lnsuranee SA~co· M Call Today for -'::"l.. A FREE PHONE QUOTE Cr1lg Brown Insurance (949) 760-1255 l·."h"!" hl.md Nt·"' 1n lk:.tl 1 • Lll • Cl'i'\OZ90 The Original MIKE'I CAIPETI OVER 25 YEARS IN COSTA MESA •Now Owned & Operated by Mesa Upholstery• Cot1lesee ()\lt~~ CARPETS ~ rea ~u~ PLUSH • TEXTURE '"' . ns BERBER se\ed\~~s • 13~ ~ ~-........ ---,.,.,,, ~s ~·~ way to make learning the safe- ty tips ln.teresting to children. So each child was given a passport to be stamped at various locations on their "surlari. • uwe really wanted (stu- dents! to walk away knowing something,• Hanna said. "After three I stamps), they can have a Popsicle, and after five a raffle ticket.• A wide range of prizes, from Hurley and Quiksilver clothes to bodyboards and bike helmets, could be won with the raffle tickets. At the vanous stops on the children's safety trip, adults master's degree in library sci- ence from UC Berkeley. Starr ls a l>rofessor at the use. a contributing editor to the Los Angeles Times' opinion sec- tion and the author of nine books. The meeting will take place from 10:30 a.rp. to noon in the library's Friends-Meet- ing Room at 1000 Avocado Ave. Information and reserva- l{ldll<ld I,, I "\1 1d .. f.!l'. ( di \111 ' '1.l '"'' • Vinyls • Ceramics Wood • Laminates CALL NOW 642-8400 FREE IN-HOME ESTIMATES DESIGN CENTER ''For All Your Decorating Needs!'' .c FURNITURE RE UPHOLSTERY • Custom-Made Furniture • Slip Covers • • • Patio Furniture • Draperies. Shades. & Bedspreads were making sure the chil- dren learned a thing or two along the way. "Talk to me about the bud- dy system. Why do you never go in the water alone?" asked Josh Van Edmond, a Newport Beach lifeguard. Students eagerly parroted back the safety tips as they stuffed pamphlets into the while goody bags they toted. ·we lea.med how not to get sun cancer and to wear a hel- met,• said Weston Dunlap, 11 . "We learned to have sun- screen on or we'll get all old and wrinkled,· said Scott Kindgren, 12. lions: (949) 675-3563 or (949) 673-8079. Balboa Theater recepti.on toriight The divas of Ute Balboa Theater, a guild dedicated to supporting the performing arts through the theater, will host their second annual membership reception tonight. The guild will present Uus year's fund-raising check Lo the Balboa Performing Arts Theater Foundation an~ award the inaugural Dayna MBA •An evening program for worl<ing adults • Entrepreneurial emphasis • Professional business mentors & guest speakers The state will spend ·close to $1 million· to repair roofs, install weatherproofing and fix other parts of the weather-beaten shacks, said Mike Tope, superintendent of state parks' Orange Coast District. ·we're planning on spending some money," Tope said. "We're going to have a crew in there pretty quick to start rehabilitabon efforts.• Award, n8.IJ\ed after founda- tion president Dayna Pettit, to the group's most outstanding volunteer. The theater's ground- breaking ceremony, set to take place Tuesday at 1 p.m., will be discussed dur- ing the meeting, which takes place at the home of foundation s upporter Ron Sechrist. Hors d'oeuvres and wine will be offered during the event. The meeting is open to the public and will take place tonight at 5:30 p.m . at 2112 E. Balboa Blvd. Information: (949) 673-0895. CU Accelerate • New accelerated degree completion program • Unique course combines live and on-line instruction only one weekend a month "It's always hard to watch over vacant buildings,· Mossman said. "They dre just a magnet for vandalism and transients to move in and do damage.· ·Qiallenge Day for high ~choolers Challenge Day, a c>n<>-day leadership retreat tor high school students, will take p lace at the Oasis Senior Center on Saturday. Organized by the city ol Newport Beach Youth Coun- cil and the Orange County Human Relations Anh- Defamation League. the event's goal is to break down the walls of separation that divide youth, and to inspue participants to live, study and work in an enVU'Onment of compassion, acceptance and respect. Hundreds of thousands of teenagers have participated in the nationwide program. Challenge Day lasts from 10 a.m. to 4 p.rn. The Oasii. Senior Center is at 800 Mar- guerite Ave., Corona del Mar. Information: (949) 642-0634 or (949) 644-3151. • Fully Accredited (949) 854-8002 ext. 1710 mba@cui.edu 1530 Concordia Wat, lrvine (949) 854-8002 ext. 1341 adc@cui.edu No matter what you're doif!9. your hometown newspaper A ~""t:' ~ ptnl-i111nl """''"' 111 "'1 ofT11nk &rlt FITS IN ••• Inily Pfk>t Beacon Bay Auto Wuh 481 E. 17th Street • Costa Mesa 645-2022 00 Birch St. (at Dove)• Newiort Beach 833-066u . . Daily Pilot • Send AROUND TOWN Items to the Daily Piiot, 330 W. hy St., Cos- ta Mesa, CA 92627; by fax to (949) 646-4170; or by c.lllng (949) 574- 4298. Include the time date and location of the event. ~ well as • contact phone number. A complete listing is •vallable at http:llwww.<hllypllot.com. TODAY The Divas of the Balboa The- ater will host a new member- ship reception from 5:30 to 8 p.m. at the bay-front home of member Ron Sechrist, 2112 E. Balboa Blvd., Balboa Penin- sula. Pree. {949) 673-0895. · Hoag Hospital wUl present "l'Vfaybe a Babyt• at 6 p.m. at Hoag Health Center, 1190 >- Baker St., Costa Mesa. Free. (800) 514-4624. Mother's Market wt11 host a seminar on the best nub'ition for your pet at 6:30 p.m. at the market, 225 E. 17th St., Costa Mesa. Free. (800) 595- MOMS. • AROUND TOWN ' - SWELL RIDING Orange Coast College will host its 31st annual Student Film and Video Festival at the Robert B. Moore Theatre. The three-hour festival is rated PG-13 and will be9iD at 7 p.m. in the college theater, 2701 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa. $5 donation. (714) 432- 5180. DON LEACH I DAILY PILOl A bodyboarder drops down the face of a peak at the Wedge, enjoying the south swell that rolled in on Wednesday. The Newport Beach Central Library will present the work- shop •Finding Meaning in Works of Art,• presented by Newport Beach Arts Com- missioner Wa C respin, at 7 p.m. in the 1ibrary's Friends Meeting Room. 1000 Avoca- do Ave. Free. (949) 717-3801. FRIDAY The Costa Mesa Chamber of Commerce will host the Les Miller Scholarslup Recogni- tion Breakfast dt 7:15 a.m. at the Hilton Hotel, 3050 Bristol St., Costa Mesa. $18. (714) 885-9090. The Coastal County Regional One-Stop Center will host a job fair from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. in Building 10 of the Orange County Fairgrounds, 88 Fair Drive, Costa Mesa. Free. (71 4) 241 -498L St. Joachim Catholic church, 1964 Orange· Ave., Costa Mesa. Free. (949) 574- 7400. "An Evening on Broadway," a black-tie gala benefiting the Orange County Child Abuse Prevent.Jon Center, will include dinner, a silent and live auction and danang, and will be held from 6:30 to 11 :30 p.m. al the Hyatt New- porter, 1107 Jambor~ Road. $150, with tables of 10 start- ing at $1,500. Mickey Shaw, (71 4) KID-4333, Ext. 17. The Orange County C hild Abuse Prevention Center will host its annual Black-Tie Gala 2001 fund-raiser, set to the theme •An Evening on Broadway,• to benefit its countywide abuse prevention programs at the Hyatt New- porter, starting at 6:30 p.m., 1107 Jamboree Road, New- port Beach. $150 per person, with tables of 10 set al $1,500. (714) KID-4333. SATURDAY A workshop for those who want to start their own busi- ness will be offered from 8:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. at National Uni- versity. 3390 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa. $40. (714) 550- 7369. The Costa Mesa Senior Cen- ter will join 600 senior centers across California in a •Step out for Senior Centers" cele- bration at 9 a.m. Call for the location of the walk. (949) 645-2356. A program on the flowers at Sherman Library & Gardens Church's annual community . spring fair will be hosted from 5 to 10 p.m. Friday, 3 to 10 p.m. May 19 and from 11 a.m. to 9 p.m. May 20 at the "One Of The Leading Causes Of Carpal Tunnel Syndrome Isn't Your Wrist After All!'' San Francisco. CA -A re<lClllly rclea'ied rree repor1 rr1·eols a leading cause of carpal tunnel ~yndrome has nothing to do with your hand or ~mt Rt aJI! ~th is, this some cause IS mtsstd b\ Ol'tr 95~ of dcx:/Orl ·whm they diagnose and trra1 corpol tunnel sw1drome. If you arc currently <1CC10g a doctor about carpal tunnel syndrome or arc thinking about 11. then ~ need this frtt repor1 which m·eals cyceythm& your doctor may no1 know. To order your copy for Lhis controv,,sial repon call toll-free 888-255-8036 FREE 24-HR RECORDED MESSAGE SALOMONSMITH&\RNm' Amembef"of~ CONSIDERING A CHANGE IN ' YOUR FINANCIAL ADVISORS? LOOKING FORA FRESH START WI1H NEW IDEAS? WE ARE CURRENTIY ACCEYfING PRIVATEAPPOINIMENTS FOR I COMPLIMENTARY PORTFOLIO EVALUATIONS We Will Discuss: ART ltESTORA TION Wl rrJNlir um11gtd: • PORCELAIN • CRYSTAL •PAINTINGS •CHINA•~• GWHIO • fWaS AND 0THu Air COlUCTllUS ~fO-oF"FErfi:~l L!.~ <?!." .21!!.'!l.°.!.~ ~ ~.J Pk:kU:ptlJllCJ)ileos.com -Iowa· FoacWoY. .. P r1 WCrn ' • • Your StOCk portfolio, Managed Accounts, Mutual Funds and Annuities • Your portfolio's risk profile and asset allocation • Developing a comprehensive financial plan Serving investors fOr more than 23 years To qualify you must currently have a portfolio in excesa of $100,000 will take place at 9:30 a.m. at the gardens, 2647 E. Coast Highway, Corona del Mar Free. (949) 673-2261. Adams Elementary School will host its fourth annual Country Fru.r from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. at th~ school, 2850 Club- house Road, Costa Mesd. Games, a 30-foot mfldtable slide, prizes, pie-eating con- test, face pai.ntmg and more will be featured. Free. (714) 557-4312. Exhibits and demonstrations Will highlight the Newport Beach Public Works Depart- ment's open house from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. at the Newport Beach Utilities Yard, 949 W. 16th St. Free. (949) 644-33 l l. The Fairview Park Friend- Fund-raistng Comnuttee will be among many orgaruza- tions partmpatlng in Leader- shlp Tomorrow's Community Celebrat.Jon at the park from 10 a.m to 2 pm The park is at Placentia Avenue. near Eslc;tnc1a I Ligh School, in Cos~ ta Mesa Free (7141 754- 5688. Marriage and family therapist Maxine Cohen will host the workshop ·Divorce: A New Begmning" for men and women at 10 a.m. at 180 New- port Center Dnve, Newport Bedch $40 (949) 644-6435. Author frank Pangborn will . sign his new Vietnam poetry book at 2 p.m. at Borders Books, Music & Cafe, 3333 Thursday, fokJy 17, 2001 A5 Bear St.. Cost.a Mesa Pree (714) 432-7854. The Co•ta Mesa-Orange Coast Breakfast I.Jons Club will host a spaghetti dinner fund-raiser for local charities at the Costa Mesa Women's Club. 'The dinner will include a green salad, bread, dessert and beverages. Raffles and door pnzes will be awarded, with bingo available at $1 per card. The dinner will start at 5 p.m. and bingo will start at 7:15 p.m. at the club, fJ)tersec- tion of 18th Street-and Ana- heim Avenue, Costa Mesa. Dinner $7, bingo $1 per card. {714) 546-6276. The Centeanlal F-ann Hoe- down 2001, a fund-raiser ben- efiting the Centenrual Farm and other agncultural and youth-related educallonal programs and exhibits of the Orange C<>unty Fairgrounds will begm at 6:30 p.m in the Millennium Barn, Bwlcling 12, courtyard of the faugrounds, 88 Fau Dnve, Costa Mesa. $75 (714) 708-1680. SUNDAY The Newport Harbor High School class of 1941 Gota reuruon will take place at the Balboa Bay Club. (949) 760- 9524. The American Cancer Soci- ~ty Shop of Corona Del Mar will be open noon to 4 p.m. The shop will hold Martha Stewart-IJke drt.s and crafts sessions. 2600 E. Coast High- way, Corona Del Mar. (949) 640-4743. TUESDAY A marketing and promotion workshop will b'e offered from 9 a.m to noon at Nation- al Umvers1ty 3390 Harbor Blvd .. Costd Mesd $25 (7 14) 550-7369 An SAT/PSAT/ACT prepara- 1.Jon co~ will be ottered from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. until May 31 at Orange Coast Col- lege, 2701 Fairview Road, Costa Mesd Cdll for more times and ddle., $130 (714) 432-5880. 11:•·1iiii·• $ 700• Wwrny . FAOM • • ft Junckers Solid Hardwood i!Jii.jiH•i $ 799• ~ FROM sq.ft 11PERGo .li.$¥. _. Oller l1111 ..... . ONMU Starting • 1 •• from &Up .......... _. 1W.• .. Leek Sb1ing *1" from &Up Limit.d seoct ~ Slarting .... fram , .. A6 Thurldoy, Mar 17, 2001 f " . STEEL CONTINUED FROM A 1 the charges • diminimouS, • or with- out merit. He declined further com- ment. Turning himself in Wednesday afternoon, Steel appeared before Superior Court Judge James A. Stotler and pleaded not guilty to . botll charges. He was arraigned and released on his own recognizance. H convicted, the councilman faces a maximum of three years and eight months in prison and wW be forced to give up his coundl seat, district attorney officials said. Officials. said investigations revealed that Steel, who was col- lecting nomination signatures on Aug. 16 -minutes before the offi- cial deadline -allowed a voter to sign for his wife who was not presenL The law requires each voter to sign the papers themselves. Steel was the top. vote getto/ in that elec- tion -his 10th-winning by a com- fortable margin. The second charge alleges that Steel also signed a nomination paper in 1998 •on behalf of a female .voter.• Steel lost that election. Nomination petipons also require candidates to sign under penalty of perjwy that each voter signed his or her own name. The main evidence in the case mcludes taped phone conversations in which Steel admitted to the ai.mes, said Tori Richards, spokes· woman for the district attorney's office. She said investigators also received positive results from a hand- writing analysb. There have been only a few times that ah elected official has been indicted in Orange County. In 1996, a grand jwy indicted Assemblyman Scott Baugh (R-Huntington Beach) on 22 counts of misreporting cam- paign contributions. However, Baugh was cleared of those charges three years later. Also last year, Santa Ana Councilman Ted Moreno was con- victed on charges of corruption. He is now serving time in prison. Costa Mesa poli~e reports released Wednesday sh owed an · investigation conducted by the department on Nov. 11. The report, labeled as a miscellaneous felony,. describes an interview officers had with a citizen who told police he signed for himself and his wife at Steel's request. Police are not releasing the name of the citizen, who also told office.rs that Steel was not present when he signed his wife's name on the nom- ination papers. Late Wednesday, Stotler sealed all interview transaipts, including those of the telephone conversations between Steel and the district attor- ney's investigator, making it unavail- able to the press and public. A preliminary hearing has been scheduled for June 28. • DON LEACH I DAILY PtlOT RIGHT: Chris Steel, left, stands with lawyer Ron Cordova before being arraigned at Central J ustice Center in Santa Ana. TREMORS CONTINUED FROM A 1 d vote of the people, and 1 don't be!Jeve he had criminal intent here. :rhis JUSt goes to show that in this business, you've got to be very careful and that it's very difficult for an every- day citizen to get involved because if you make one slip- up, your polttlcal opponents or enemies will go after you.• Mayor Libby Cowan, and Councilwomen Linda Dixon and Karen Robinson could not be reached for comment. But M.tchael Szkaradek, the Costa Mesa resident who filed the allegations against Steel, said he is glad his many hours of work have paid off. "I don't know what retribu- tion I face from !us supporters, but I did what I thought was nght, and 1 think the very fact that the (dJSt.rict attorney! pro- ceeded on the matter proves I was nght," he said. "I think if Steel is considering the best 10terest of Costa Mesa, he would think seriously about Floral Wreath pr:esentation commemorating those who served in •WWI •WWII • Korea • • Vietnam • Persian Gu If • Featuring Musical Selections By: THE ALL AMERICAN BOYS CHORUS Complimentary Hot Dogs and Sodas ~ Harbor Lawn -Mount Olive Mortuary & Memorial Park 1625 Gisler Avcaue • Cosca Mesa stepping down." His supporters, however, were quick to dismiss the charges. "I'm outraged," said Jaruce Davidson, a longtime Steel supporter. ·He IS being perse- cuted, and everybody knows 1t. He has a record of being a good, kind and honest man, and this is just not right. All he wants to do is help the Westside. "I cannot believe people actually want to go after him and take three years of his We for a simple rrustake on a piece of paper that he did not even intend, if he even did any- thing,· she continued. ·Whether he made the mts- take or not, it would not be fair to take him out of office when he bowled over the voters." But Szkaradek -who ran against Steel m the 1986 coun- cil election -said Steel should never have been allowed to run for office in the first place. Steel had exactly the num- ber of nomination signatures required. and Szkaradek'" alleges thal one of them should have been disquahhed. "He should never have been on the ballot,· he sa1d. •He changed the results of the election, and you never know how the votes would have fall- en tf he had been dJSquahl1ed. If he is found guilty, 1 would think his removal from office would be automabc ll the (dls- trict attorney I dtdn'\ indict bun, everybody would say, 'It's OK to sign your own petition or to have someone sign for some- body else.'" If the chdrges stick and Steel must vacate his seat, the council has the option of appointing a member to hll m for the remainder of. the term or of holding a special electJon at least 114 days afte nt calls for . the election, City Mandger Allan Roeder said. Former Councilwoman Heather Somers, who lost her seat by 34 vote!> in last year's election. said she has not yet fonned an opiruon dbout the matter ·11 he IS found guilty of the (714)540 .. 5554 Ue#f.O/J'1 Ful Service~ .. ,,,,,,,,.,, , ... ,.,..,, ,,_,.,,, Handmade Tortillas Marganta & C.rveza Bar Ord•r by th• OoHn /.1 • Ch1ngol1ngas Endirledas \.f, • Fa11tas Bumtos & Tacos \ Guacamole Chips & Salsa ~ . COMPLETE PARTY PACK FOR 101 .. • -t » Call your nearest location! ·'K~ .............. lfli!..~e W 10 to 150 people. V .. Full Service Catering •• • (949) 645-0209 . =-= ~=" Daily Pilot charges, I think it would absolutely be appropriate for him to step down from ofhc<' but that is up to a court at th1'> point." she said. Hlaws are st.>t up for a reason and if a public officid.I can't follow the rules, h(• or she has no business being in office. But I think it would be• premature to speculate, d" (Steel! IS only being arraign(.'(! today.· lf Steel is found guilt) Somers said she would hope to be considered for appomtment to the position. Joel Fans, a candidate who came in fifth in last year's coun· al race for three seats and wd~ supported by many or the Sdllll' people who backed Steel. s.i1<l he doesn't think the counnl· man should be removed I rorn office, even 1f he is p ro' l'd guilty. ·we can't take the Id\\ lightly. but I 1ust don't think that this is a big deal, as fdT de; the spirit of the law goes." ht• said. Steel •got 10,000 votl'' wh1ch shows he could hd\I' easily received enough s1g"t1- tures. a nd the no mindtwn papers are 1ust a formality to distinguish whether candidates are senous. Perhaps this would warrant a fine. but if you remove him from office, you're telling ihe citizens or Costa Mesa that their vote didn't count. I debnilely think that ti (Steel) made a mistake, it wc1 ... without malice. Whether I agreed with him or not, hl' struck me as being honest about his opinions.• HEMPHJLL'S · auas & CARPETS NAYAnMll Fadoty ,.,. Alwa"9 230.East 17th St.• Costa Mesa (949) 722-7224 www ru9sandc1rpeu.com Mon-Fri 10-6 Sat 10-5 .~est rup of Penia {lra.o) from Tabriz, Nian, bfahan, Silk Qum, Hera, Ant.iqua &. .. • ~est rup of China. Pakistan, India, Nepal 8c Mott! CITY ~NEWPORT •EACH PUauc WORKS OPEN HOUSE ~ugc edection of fine ~le 4ye antique wash rugt ~~dllne-made and modem rup in all shapes and colon available FRIE FOOD un~ RAFFLI PRIUS SCAVINGIR HUNT . 9ALLOON CLOWM FACILITllS TOUR IGUIPMINT ON DISPLAY .., P4S> WIST 1CS"' ITllBT SATURDAY -MAY 1S>'" 10 A.M. TO I P.M. CALL C94t) "4•1111llGlt1N110 Doily Pilot George and Judy Leeper of Newport Beach at the Great The Learned Ladies Book Club from Costa Mesa and Wall in Badaling, China. Newport Beach took a recent trip to London and Oxford. Julie and Jennifer Ward; JennUer, Barry, Paula and Josh Griffen! and Terry Ward of Costa Mesa visited the South Rim of the Grand Canyon. 1':1::11:1:1:i:~:ciliil:liil:il:I Tht Llrttst 0-Fnust &nJy S"pply & F.111 Smtitt s.Jon Our Second to Die Policy can help ensure an orderly transfer of your wealth. And it's backed by a company with the top ratings for financial strength I claims paying ability &om five independent rating services. See me, your 11ood neighbor a11ent, for detal& on covera11~, cost, restrictions and renewablllry. Senta HiU, Apt Lie.I OC806ll J50 Eut 1711. Stmc Seice 21 t Cotta~.r.A '49-646-9}9) In this picture, they are at the Old Parsonage in Oxford, where the women discussed Jane Austen's "Persuasion." • ••••••• FotoART~ Unique Personalized Gifts for every occasion VISlt our Web Site at www loloart com Choose from - Personalized Mugs Laser Engraved Frames Photo Sculptures Sports Awards and much much more! Thursday,~ 17, 2001 A7 Alyssa Homby of Newport Beach traveled to Maui. LAGUNADESIGNCENTER 23811 ALISO CREEK ROAD, LAGUNA NIGUEL (949)843 -7147 FOR INFORMATION Dally Pilot 2 ool x 5 creen SV.S!m! 1B~~Sale Orchids$ I 000 to $2500 MAY 19ne .... Opell t .................. , ..... UTUWoOo~ IN l'OCK mnMii.ill!MPM•@U.1441 ••t•tt•11 a'& 11 1nr11• ttt• t JV A8 Thut!doy, Mery 17, 2001 DATEBOOK .. Doily Pilot A taste of Switzerland comes to the island Dlnln1. REV11W By Stephen S•ntaaoce B alboa Island bas always held a special charm for me. The quaint cottages, narrqw streets and summer tourists remind me of Nantucket or Martha's Vineyard. Several good restaurants are mixed in among the bou- tiques that line Marine Avenue, the island's main drag. Giorgio's, The Village Inn and Shanghai Pine Gar- den have been pleasing locals and tourists for years. Tucked in among these stalwarts is a relative new- comer, Basilic, where chef- owner Bernard Althaus serves up Swiss-French cuisine in a channing Alpine setting. Basilic is a tiny restaurant; the banquet-style tables.thav line each wall can accommo- date maybe 25 dine!"$. SEAN Hll.LER I OAll.Y Pit.OT quickly sauteed in a sauoe d musbroomS and brandy with just a touch of aeam. 1be aeam binds the sauoe togeth .. er without it becoming heavy, and the cognac imparts a mel- low atterta.ste. Ftlet mignon ($24.50), usually listed as a special. came recently with a shallot and port wine reduction studded with wild mush- rooms. The fork tender meat was cooked perfectly, and the rosemary-scented wine sauce enhanced the meat's natural flavors. Basilic offers a small but wP.11-chosen selection of French and California wines 'v\lood-panelceilings, flo- ral upholstery and f.ake case- ment windows looking out over Swiss panoramas create a chalet-like atmosphere, and despite the close quar- ters, one feels qwte intimate at the elegant tables dressed with crisp linens. Be rnard Althaus, chef and owner at BasWc displays some items at his Balboa Island Restaurant at reasonable prices. There are a few Swiss wines here too, including Fendant, a light, fra- grant white wine traditionally served with the raclette. Corkage ls $12, if you'd The menu at Basilic shows otl Althaus' classical French training (he worked at Pascal before ventunng out on his own), as well as the influ- ences of lus nabve Switzer- land. Fresh herbs play a pre- dominant role, and the sauces feature more reductions and fewer cream-based sauces. Dinner usually starts with a simple amuse bouche, a treat from the.kitchen to stir the palate, such as a baguette toast with goat cheese and olive tapenade. It pairs well with a glass of champagne. or aperitif, but don't expect hard cocktails; Basilic has a beer RosEY's AUIOBODY You have the right to choose your repair facility Insist on the Best LIFETIME WARRANTY Full S.tvke Collision Center Insurance Approved Shop 949) 642-4522 On the Mainstage Did Shakespeare really write all those plays? Here's a capdvalif1& ruponse to the cemuria-old question. theatrically ~by PuUtter Prlte finalist Arrry Freed. The sagescruck young WillWn Shakespeare journeys from Stntford-Upon..Avon to London. SffkloS fame and fon.une u an actor. As luck would have It. another areer aw.alts him In this wiay and boisterous comedy about an. lift and the NG.Ire of &eniUS. • WORLD PREMIERE byAmyPned dlrectt!d by David Emmes Low-priced Previews May 25 -31. JUNE 1 -JULY 1 and wine license only. The featured appetizer has to be the traditional Swiss radette ($6.50), sort of a fon- due without the pol Raclette is both the name of the dish. and the cheese of which it's made. A half wheel of cheese is held near an open flame, and as the cheese melts, it's scraped onto a plate and served with boiled fingerling potatoes, gherkins and pickled onions. The Swiss will serve this with cold, cured meats and make it a meal, and Basilic does the same every first and third Tuesday of the month, when for $14.95 diners <;an partake in this traditional dish as their main meal. The cheese is salty and tastes wonderful smeared on some fresh bread; the sour- pickled vegetables counter the oils in the cheese nicely. Another starter that stands out is the raw Atlantic salmon ($8). The salmon is sliced and dressed in a iemon fennel vinagrette that cooks the fish, similar to a ceviche. Fresh sour cream adds just the right counterpoint to the rich dish. Soups include a Swiss onion soup ($6.50) that, unlike its French cousin, is made with a vegetable broth. The onions are simmered in the broth but are not as caramelized as in the more traditional version, creating a lighter, more delicate flavor with just a. hint of rosemary. I was less impressed with the spinach and asparagus soup ($6.50) that was s.erved as a special one evening. The fla- vors of the two vegetables seemed to cancel each other out, and the resulting pu'tee lacked any distinct flavor. Do, however, treaf yourself to the fois gras salad ($14). Mixed greens are tossed in a sherry vinagrette and topped with a slice or two of seared duck fois gras. Thin slices of warm, caramelized apples add a sweet note to the add of the dressing and the rich- ness of the liver. Our waiter thoughtfully offered a glass of Sauteme, the sweet desert wine is the perfect foil for fois gras in any form. '-like to bring your own. ' Entree selections on the Cheese plates are becom- srnall menu usually feature ing more common as an five or so selections of fish after-dinner offering, and I and the same number of meat was glad to see one offered dishes. Althaus shows a deft · here as a special. U your hand with seafood, perfectly preference is to move right to demonstrated in the halibut the sweets, I'd suggest the ($23.50) offered as a special apple tart ($6.50), one evening. The perfectly caramelized apple slices lay- seared fish, served on a bed ered with crisp puff pastry. of spinach, had a brpwn. The profiteroles ($6.50) crispy crust but was still moist (cream puffs) filled with in the center. A pungent pars-coconut ice cream and driz- ley sauce finished the dish zled with Swiss chocolate with a fresh herbal.note. Just sauce were a hit as well. as good is the sea bass ($21), Basilic is an intimate hide- stearned and served on a bed away offering excellent of braised fennel with a light French-Swiss cuisine and a tarragon au jus. romantic setting. The moist fisti practically The service was impecca: melts on the fork, and the ble, and Bernard shows true licorice flavor of the fennel enthusiasm as he visits each adds a unique element. table to interact with his Uke many of the new gen-guests. I've become an eration of French chefs, · instant fan and can't wait to Bernard. demonstrates a go back on a Tuesday for the restraint in bis saucing stfle, radette and some Swiss preferring simple reductions wine. that accent but don't over--.--5TEPHE--N--SAln--A.-atOCE--.-5 whelm the dish. A good exam-restaurant reviews appear every pie is the veal Zurich Style other Thunday. Send him yoor com- ($24 .50). Slices ot veal loin are ments at rdsantaOoc-dining.com.. BUDDHA'S FAVORITE --JAPANESE CUISINE ~ l1!J $!XI G l:.\ fR'J@@[Q) IL lE ~ 10% OFF ALL SUSHI ORDERED BEFORE 8:30PM Waterfront Dining Open 7 Days, Lunch & Dinner 134 Udo Pait Dr., Nut to Blue Wltw Grtl Newport 8MCh Mle723•4203 You 'U foul delicioiu itenu •uch aa: • File t Mignon wi th Portobello Mushrooms • Butternut Squash Ravioli • Chicken Florentine • Grilled Calamari Steak • Fresh Fish of the Day an<l inuch more! DATmooK Thursday, May 17, 2001 A9 ~ Knight's Tale' proVes galant effort; 'Nora' offers glimpse of Joyce . Old English spoof is a 'Knight' of fun REEL 'CRITICS film (2 hours and 12 minutes Jong). The film gets a huge energy boost from all at the classic rock hits in the soundtrack. Starting with Queen's ·we Will Rock You· as an anthem at a jousting match, great songs are used cleverly throughout the Jilm to enhance several scenes. alcohol paranoia, scribble, torment, writing, egocentricity and pervemon. full of worldly experiences, not so out of place as today's nonns go. On the other band. Joyce is afraid of cows. terrified of lhu.oder. full of sexual inlub1bons, intrigued by jealousy and excited by "off-color" wntings. The focus on Nora's hfe concentrates on her bouts with depression and dis- taste for a man whom she also loves whom she bares two children with. Watching •A Knight's Tu.le" is a lot like attending the Renaissance Faire. Critics considered William Shakespeare his only rival as a All the buildings, costumes and activities seem to be from medieval While working with the same medieval material, the film never ris- es to the lofty heights of "Monty Python and the Holy Grail" or E\lrope, but the people make wry references to cur- rent American pop• culture and have obviously had the benefit of modem dentistry. As with the Renaissance Faire, if you sus- pend disbelief over the contradictions, · •Shakespeare In Love," but it does provide enough laughs and silliness to keep an audience amused. .. A · Knight's Tale" is a shut-off-your-brain, sit-back-and-enjoy summer film . master of the English lan- guage -if this bad not been so, this movie proba- bly would have ended up on the cutting-room noor. GAY WASSAU.-4WY We antiopa,ted director/co~ writer Pat Murphy would have delved more mto Joyce's historical literary trad1bons of realism end symbolism Also. Joyce suffered a pam1u1 eye disease for most of his adult We, weanng dO eye patch and becorrung almost blind. Heath Ledger stars as William Thatcher in .. A Knight's Tale." • TRIOA aatLE, 31, lives in Newport Beach and works as a software validator. We enter & Bill KEUY Joyce's We in •A Knight's Tale" can be-great fun. once again does a great job playing the affable sidekick to a leading man. Paul Bettany practically steals the film as Geoffrey Chaucer ln his days as a struggling writer before he wrote "The Canterbury Tules. • Rounding out the group are Alan Tudyk as Wat and Laura Fraser as Kate. 'Nora' provides look into the life of James Joyce 1904, when he was working on an unpublished autob1ograptucal nov- el, •Dub liners," a collectlon of sto- ries that reflects his concern with life among the frish lower nuddle class. Most of his works were about the people of Dublin, though at times he lived and wrote m Pans, Rome and Zurich. But all is not lost, we want you to know Nora and James eventual- ly got mamed and lived as happily as ever after dS they could . Lowly peasant William Thatcher (Heath Ledger) pretends to be a knight so he can compete in the exclusive sport of jousting. Along U1e way, he also falls for and pur- sues the noble lady Jocelyn (Shan- nyn Sossamon), and trades angry words with bad guy Count Adhe- Whenever the story leaves.the friends and moves to the romantic subplot or to flashbacks of William with his father, the film begins to drag. Some of this could.have been edited out to eliminate some awk- ward dialogue and to shorten the James Joyce was one of Bill's preferred authors (Irish descent) in college, and Gay studied his fic- tional writings in high school -so "Nora• was their pick for a movie to review. Out on a cobblestone street. We sdy pdy the price. Step into Literary bmes gone by. Next time you read d ftrst-cldS!> book, you may appreoatP the author's poignant methods And d!> he said "Once events are complete, they like hlstory 1tseU, will begm agdm " mar (Rufus Sewell). .. The best scenes in ·A Knight's Tu1e • all involve William and his group of friends. Mark Addy (the big guy in "The Full Monty•) as Roland To focus an entire movie on a writer's life is openly a difficult sub- ject, especially James Joyce (Ewan McGregor), who was consumed in Nora Barnacle (Susan Lynch) catches Joyce's eye. With concen- tration on their relabonshlp, we are led through thell' lusty, dismdl sexu- al propensity -we grasped the point after the third sexual rumpus! Nora's life as a barmaid has been •GAY WASSAU.-KEUY, 61, ~the edrtOf of a Balboa newspaper and 1s active m the community BIU KEUY, 59, 1s an 1ndustr1al en9111eer. Exciting venture 'Into the Woods'' closes Costa Mesa playhouse season By Tom Titus I n the realm of musical the- ater there are simple shows, there are difficult shows and there are Sond· helm shows. The Stephen Sondheim songbook is rec- ommended for the more advanced musical comparues. Apiong the many musicals fashioned by America's pre- mier composer/lyriost. "Into the Woods" ranks among b.ls finest -and most difficult. The path th.rough the woods of fairy tale legend is cir- cuitous, with characters criss· crossing one another and interacting in ways therr original creators never con- ceived, and vocal excellence IS demanded on many fronts. The Costa Mesa Civic Playhouse, winding up its all· musical season, has saved •Into the Woods• for last. much as one withholds a cherished dessert. And its production of the imaginative Sondheim fantasy is indeed a dessert, both tunefully ta.sty and intellectually filling. Director Damien Lorton hl:\S assembled a prenuer cpmpany of mostly supenor talent for this musically and visually exciting production. Superb individual performers blend into a marvelously eclectic ensemble, tackling a challenging libretto, to offer fresh takes on familiar char- acters from childhood story- books -"Cinderella," "Little Red Riding Hood,· ·Jack and the Beanstalk.· etc. -and FYI •WHAT: "Into the Woods" • WHERE: Costa Mesa Civlc: Playhouse, 611 Hamilton St., Costa Mesa • WHEN: Thursdays through Saturdays at 8 p.m., Sundays at 2 p.m. until June 10 •COST~ S15 • TICXETS: (949) 6~5269 adding ironic observabons on life experiences-which place the show far beyond the "children's theater• milieu. The nng mistress in Uus sparkling th.ree·ring arcus 1s the gnarly old witch, who needs a magic potion to regain her former beauty - dfld who better for tlus ass1grunent than the exabng actress who had unpress1vely headlined three of the the- ater's previous four musicals. Adriana Sanchez delivers a marvelously malevolent performance as the cunning sorceress, topped by a dell- aously avaricious rend.loon of her final number, "The Last Mid.night.· Kyle Myers and Kelly Kenny excel in the central roles of the baker and his WJ.fe on a quest for the witch's ingredients so that they may conceive a child. Myers conveys his frustration splendidly, highlighted by his fervent appeal, "No More,• while Kenny enriches her performance with finely etched coJTUc skills, particu- larly while bemg seduced by the self-centered prince. One of the show's fmest mterpretations comes from Nickl Peek as Red Ridll1g Hood, played as a pudgy. grasping urchin with ample street smarts and pugndc1ous attitude. Her post-wolf expe- rience solo, "I Know Things Now,• is a highhght of the first act. Equally impressive IS Deb- orah Bushman as Cinderella. who learns that the instant elevation from scullery maid to princess misses an impor- tant •happy medium· ele- ment. Her voice is beautifully modulated, particuldily whe n comically describing the events that transpired "On the Steps of the Palace.· Billy Szeto is properly vacant as the lad Jack, who's perhaps overfond of the fam- ily cow, and Sherry Domera- go sparkles as his more real- istic mother. Kenny Jagosz slyly enacts the show's narra- tor, though his clanty could be improved. The princes' duets. both titled •Agony,· are conuc dellgbts from Mark Philhps and Brandon Ibanez, the lat- : AN''l"'I(~t_j 1~~ l~<)W & (;Altl>l~:N (;A1~.,1~: ' t • , 1 o I" I t,' ••• j ' I I•• • 't '•J •• '', Fi1t1 HollU F.,,,.UltiJW• Allti4•n & Coll«tillln Tr•"tio,..l to Cott.,- Ci/tt & Ctmlnt D«or With Litt & D~li•ny Cafe Holrs: Tues..fn., 9am--4pm; Sat, Sam--411'\ : Stn Omelette. 9am-2pm c-"" to c11-i1~tins U11tl & R11tt Boob c ... ,°"' Pidwrt FNMilfl F1m1itvn Rnt0Ntio1t •"' ""''" MOrt/ 949 722-1177 UO EllA 1111t Slrm Costa Mn.., CA ,.,.,"' ,,.,, '""' ter doubting hildilously as the sexually predatory wolf. Megan Encllcott dl.spldys a fine vocal presence as Rapun- zel, as does Sara Lyone as the s pirit of Cindere lld's mother C inderella's snappish stepmother. 1s nicely done by Carne Hacker, while Sharu Barrett and Angel Batsel are beautifully bratllsh as the steps1Sters R J D1clunson unpresses as the pnnce's ofh- c10us steward and Karen Sdluld voices the menaong giant effecbvely. The playhouse's sldge has been wondrously transformed into a woodsy setting by set designers Angelique Batsel and Kathy Endicott. Cos- tumes, designed by Deborah BushmdD and Karen Saluta, are equally unpressive, but the lighting designs of Ryan Hood OCCdSJOnally disappoint when they fdtl lo follow the actors on penod.lc forays into the aisle!> of the aucllence. DLTector Lorton does tnple d uty with customary gusto as mus1cdl duector <ind choreo- grapher •Into the Woods" ts among Sondheun's most accompllshed musical aduevements, and the Costa Mesa productJon is an excel- lent mterpretallon, as well as a supenor clunax of its all- mus1cal season. • TOM TITUS reviews local theater for the Daily Pilot His reviews appear Thursdays and Saturdays ATH-SMA"S ~ ~ GREEK & MEDITERRANEAN CUISINE e 3 e ~ / ·c~ FHt THE WARMTH or THE MEDITCRRANE~N \ ~ ~ ~R IEAlTTIFUL PATIO OVlRLOOl<ING TH( LA'l ~ ~ seo ANTON BLVD'. COSTA MESA €i (BEHIND 0 C PlRfORMING ARTS CENTEIO ~ LUNCH (71 4) 556-6555 Saturday, May 19, 1 Oam-4pm .Sunday, May 20, 10am·3pm 3 Spectacular Events! • Spring Perennial "5ale SOOnsoietl by tlte UC Atborefum Unusual perennials for sole. View a display garden. Arboretum tours. • Orchid Show Soon.,,./ &y Ntrwporl Hath« . 6rdtiJ Society Orchid vendors, orchid lectures and a judged orchid s~ow . • Wilclltoww & lutteifly Show ~~.:.·Nm•""" Sodllf Educational di~ and nature groups. ButtetflY attracting Plants for sale. Aj usl1ll• to• 3., .... ..., w AIO Thursday, Mar 11, 2001 Venezia teams with Roseanne, Tenuta to form dynamite triq T elevision star Roseanne was spotted at a recreational vehi- cle show this weekend at Newport Dunes, checking out the equipment, or so said the press releases. _ ~ In fact, the queen of · 1 v • comedy was in Newport Beach visiting with friend Barbara Venezia, co-host of the Cdble TV cooking show with John Crean, H Al Home on the Range.• Barbara and Roseanne, along with another talented conuc, Judy "It's like butta • Tenuta, have been paling around of late in search of the pedect TV concept for three "bad girls" with "good ideds." THE CROWD ored two distinguished sden- tl$ts, Xiaodan Leng and Frances Rauscher, for their research into the relationship between music training and brain functions. .SbcIEIY Daily Pilot Insiders report that the three are like sticks of dyna- mite m a room. •oon't dare light d match or the entire Bdck Bay will go up,• said one confidant demanding dnonymity. The Texaco Foundation, represented by Anne Dowl- ing, joined representatives of the Gerard Family nu.st and local donor Marjorie Rawl- ins for an afternoon re~p­ tion thrown at the University Club at UC Irvine. Local pow~r brokers, including Henry Samuell, are involved in this organization. Cham- berlin will keep us posted on developments. From left, Becky Pentland, Roseanne, .. At Home on the llange" co-host Barbara Venezia and Judy Tenuta gather at the recreattonal vehicle show this weekend at Newport Dunes In Ne'Wport Beach. Veneria reports that the threesome is having fun together, and "Who knows, maybe we'll come up with something interesting,• says the redhead who knows all too well the real undercur- rent of show biz ... ·Hurry up dnd wait." .... • • • Newport Beach's Margo Chamberlin is ~king with the MIND lnsbtute, Music Intelligence Neural Develop- ments, a nonprofit scientific research institute exploring relationships between music dnd reasoning as they relate to the ~ducation process. It's a lofty and intellectual pursuit attracting some of the more.interesting minds in the community. A recent gathering of said mind!? hon- The romantic dance ensemble Paris Opera Ballet opened at the Orange Coun- ty Performing Arts Center last week with an elegant late-night premiere party held at Scott's in Costa Mesa. The consul gen~ral of France, Jossellne de Clau- sade, came into town from her Los Angeles home and was joined by the U.S. cul- tural counselor from Wash- ington, D.C., Pierre Buhler. Also on band for the Paris Opera Ballet opening at the Center and the premiere party was Laurent Deveze, the French attacbe. Center President J erry Mandel was From left. Xlaodan Leng, Texaco Foundation President Anne Dowling, Gordon Shaw, Marjorie Rawlins and Frances Rauscher pose with their recognltton awards from the MIND Institute for their contribution to sdenWic research explo~g relationships between music training and the bratn. all smiles as be joined Center . Terry and George Schrey- Vice President Judy Morr to er, major Center donors greet patrons at Scott's after making the dance series pos- lhe performance. sible, were in the crowd, as r------------~--, 150°/o OFFI I . I I •UY OHS INntSC. UT ntl SICOHD cw I .., IOUAL. CMt LltSSllt VALUa '°"' MF I ore .,roo So.rcl'1""' llu\doy a'ff orit ~ii-.. '"....,_ I -IWCU'CI or t.tldl t. dl'lnlr 1p1<W1 (Ql4IOn qooc1 nv ~ 7 200 I L----~~':!:'-~.=L---~ COSTA MESA ~60 Bristol Street (714) 444-4652 Mo In hint, ~~.xii. Long ~.xi\ Lae Fort'5t Cyims CaJJ.°tiest.totm +Ji' L 0 WE ~ .p NewMShip~ Jfottrm for JO"' wrJJi"f-' 9CJ¢ erdJand'""'-,,.,, ""'1.,.. ,_ Swdimr V: r~..._ ~II clJOia for &WS, '-Nl-K'I alt ""T'ifor":' flonJs "'°"' Mother's Day ~'°"'Jlrim. Tile First, The Original, The Best MerdlanchandMore. Orange County Performing Arts Center President Jerry Mandel, left. celebrates w:f th French Cqnsul General Jossellne de Clausade, French Consulate Attacbe Laurent Deveze, Center Executive Vice President Judy Morr and French Consulate Cultural Counselor Pierre Buhler at the Paris Opera Ballet company party May 8. was patron Alison Cottrell and her husband, Lang. Alison manages Hermes at South Coast Plaza and provided opening-night guests with complimentary Hermes gifts as recognition for their support. Shari and Harry Esayian, Judy Fluor Runels, Jane • Lawson, Pascal and MJm.I Olhats, Ellen Olivier de Vezln, lllch and Elaine Steinhoff, Susan and Tim Strader, and Jovle and Stan Rosenblatt were all in atten- dance to welcome the Paris Opera Ballet and support the incredible dance program offered by the Center. • TtE CROWD appears Thursdays ~nd Saturdays. 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C.-Anlhrlftlffil.,...._C.W IMl.oplAve. 8ICHIAL NILL "600A 1.-..n le, f710 '' 14() B. La ....... Ave .• Keflaa Ou.1'1 8t o.o...d (C:-A.lfM a.......... IO'fi1'1l1urllt ...... .,._ ... _, CIM* 5f,• .......... .....,.., 1138 Willow 91..,..... HUI (949) A1-1166 (714) 779-1166 (714) 141-4110 (162) 426-1016 -...: ... ,...,. ...... ·.f~ ,,,,.., ........ ,,,,~ """""' · Friendly Caring People. From$1~. 2283 Fairview at Wilson Co.ta Mesa Minimum age 58 1 For more information pleuetcall1 ~ 9~9/646-&100 or Pax ~~a.... • Daily Pilot WESTSIDE CONTINUED FROM A 1 Co1t4 Mesa airport.• Then, in 1951, the airport was shut down to make way for the Freedom Home devel- opment in what 1s now con- sidered the Westside of Costa Mesa. The 900 three-and four. bedroom homes cost between $8,995-and $9,995, which, at that time, was a good price for a house, Wilson said. Freedom Homes, the first modem tract housing devel- opment in Orange County, was an example of the kind of housing that see.med to be the answer to a countrywide hous- ing shortage, said Mitch Bartie, a Costa Mesa Historical Society member. The homes were new, inex- pensive and in high demand. New houses had not been built during World War 11 because everything was being put into the war effort and some fami- lies were still suffering from the effects of the Great Depression, society member Mary Ellen Goddard added. But while Freedom Homes provided low-cost housing for veterans and others at the time, the development seems to be a S¥IJ1bolic precursor to the problems that besiege the Westside today. Wilson said the homes sold rapidly, and more tract housmg developments sprang up all ove.r Orange County. On the Westside. high-density hous- ing also became the norm. •The Freedom Homes tract brought high-density, and then we just continued it because 1t was so successful,• he said. •It wasn't until probably 1900 that we began to notice prob- lems with high density and began changing ord.mances to make it tougher for high den- sity projects. We allowed entirely too much density. We wanted to be a big city, so we built a lot of cracker boxes, things I'm ashamed of today.· The Westside hasn't always been associated with high density, however. Until the 1950s, the Westside w~ by far the part of the city with the most open space. It kept its farms until the 1950s and '60s, while housing developments had been pop- ping up on the Eastside smce 1923. WESISIDE·EASTSIDE DIFFERENCE The reason for the dispari- ty in the housing ages is not entirely clear. Bob Shaw, an Eastside res- ident for 52 years, said he thinks the difference had to do with the apple blight, which wiped out many of the city's apple groves. •All the Eastside had in the early '20s and before were apples,· he said. ·each person bad their five acres of apple farms until the apple blight bit in the '20s. Over on the Westside, there were little fanns with goats and stuff like that. You bad some of that on the Eastside, too. but it was .. :fb-. Thondoy. ~ 17, 2001 All WINDOWS to wWES'fSIDE COURTESY Of GOSTA MESA HISTOIUCAL SOCtfT'f Intersection of ff.arbor and Newport boulevards, with Costa Mesa's Westside in the bad<ground ln 1946. mostly apples.· Though the '20s were before Shaw's time, he thinks ' the more dive~ crops on the Westside protectetl the farms from the apple blight, while Eastside farmers may have been more willing to sell. Although apples are nor- mally grown in cool weather, farmers managed to grow them successfully in Costa Mesa until· after 1923, Barrie said. Donald Dodge, a forme r apple farmer and justice of the peace who became Costa Mesa's first judge, described the farming in a living history he wrote in 1948 for the Globe- Herald, the Costa Mesa news- paper that became the Daily Pilot. ·Before the development of the water systems. dry farmed barley and beans bad been the principal crops, with some sheep pasturing,· he handwrote in a document pre- served in the Historical Society office. "However, under irri- gation, fniit trees were plant- ed in considerable numbers and truck crops and poultry raising became popular. Apples became the principal, orchard trees with citrus fruits, mainly lemons, ranking sec- ond. Peaches, plums and pears were favorites in home gar- dens. The apples proved to be of exceptionally fine flavor and were in gn:tat demand throughout Orange County.• After a bumper apple crop in 1922 and another good year of growing in 1923, apple growing took a downturn. ·A series of warm winters and every pest known to hor- bculture had made the locali- ty unswtable for raising decid- uous fruits, so the commercial growing of apples was given up,• Dodge continued. ·Many people with interests other than agnculture came to live in Costa Mesa and much of the small farm acreage was re- subdivided into small parcels and building lots. The Huntington Beach o~ field and the booming building industry · here in the '20S provided prof- itable employment for many Coiota Mesa residents.· The blight may have given the Holstein family the right opportunity to build houses on the Eastside. The Holsteins, who bwlt many of the homes in Lido Isle and Newport Beach, also built many of the first housing pro- jects on the Eastside. The pro- jects were considered expen- SJVe, although they were not as expensive as the Lido Isle homes, Wilson said. Wilson has a different the- 'Ory about why the Westside was developed later than the Easts1de. He said he remembers see- ing remnants of orange orchards when he moved to Costa Mesa and thinks farm- ers did not give up their fanns because of the blight, but instead began growing oranges. ·1 think the Holsteins chose the Eastside because it has the best weather, 12 months of the year,· Wilson said. ·vou don't have a cold breeze like you do on the Westside, and you have sandy soil that you can just reach into the ground and dig with your hand. I think the weather brought the expen- sive homes to the Eastside, and they went really fast. It wasn't blight !that changed the Eastsidej, 11 was houses.• THE BEGINNING The northwest side of the city. technically west of the Costa Mesa Freeway but con- sidered Mesa Verde instead of the Westside, was the first part of town to be developed. The Westside is loosely bor- dered by Joann Street, Harbor Boulevara, Superior Avenue, Talbert Nature Preserve and the Newport Beach and coun- ty borders. •Some people consider this to be the oldest part of town,• Barrie said. •The town of Fairview, at the corner of Harbor Boulevard and Adams Avenue, was a boomtown that lasted from 1887 to 1889. So as far as a contiguous settlement. Costa Mesa really started this century.· Damage to important rail- road tracks, as well as the Southern California land boom that ended up drastically reducing land values, turned Fairview into a ghost town, according to •A Slice of Orange: The History of Costa Mesa,· by 'l:drick Miller. A big drought, from 1900 to 1903. drove most remaining families off. As a contiguous city. Costa Mesa began on the Eastside in 1906, the same year the first oil wells were drilled on the mesa, south of the present location of Newport Harbor High School, according to a chronology by Barrie. The Easts1de -then called Newport Heights -was the f1ISt to be subdiVJded into Cive- acre farms, Newport Mesa - now the Westside -followed. and Fairview Farms was sub- divided soon after that. Regardless of the reason for the time gap between the Easts1de and Westside hous- ing, the gap had a big ef:fect on the Westside's development. When the city, at only about 3.5 square miles. was incor- porated in 1953, it was con- cerned about revenue and wanted to be sell-sustam.ing. Barrie said. The Easts1de was already establlshed with houses. and the city turned to the Westside to meet its business and tndus- tnal needs. ·1t didn't want property taxes, so 1t relied on business and industry,• he said. ·It was a self-contained city, isolated with no freeways. People wanted the town to have a complete base where they could live, shop and work, so part of the town was industri- al. Now. things are more spread out because of the free.. ways. But then, the Eastside bad already been developed with houses -aJthough there were some blank spaces on the Eastside as late as 1955- and there were oil wells on the Westside, so they wouldn't have wanted to develop 1t for 1 nice residences.· Industrial businesses were movmg m by 1965, Bame said. Wllson, who sat on the city's first Plaruung Commission, said SEE HISTORY PAGE A12 THE WISTSIDE IN THEIR OWN WORDS 1Wo longtime locals remember simpler times on the Westside 'B ase. ball was a big thing. Costa Mesa had a large Little League that came together at Lions Park. Every summer, Luke Davis, one of the coaches. would have watermelon for all the kids. In those days, that was really a treat. "As kids in the early '60s, 10 of us kids had shotguns, and we hunted rabbit for food in the canyon down at the bottom of Victoria Street and by the riverbed. "We used to play in a barn set back from 19th Street. where Burger King is. There was a tree we used to climb and vines with blackbemes we used to eat. "In school, we used to take field tnps. We went to Olvera Street and the cannery 1n Newport. where they used to can fish for cats. The Mello Boy was the fishing boat there at the time. In those days, Monty Montana used to come to school and do rope trtcks with his horse. Those were the cowboy and Indian days, and life wa1> a lot easier then. "You knew everyone in town those days, and 1f people saw you walking, they always offered you a nde. You knew all the neighbors. The town has really grown since then. It's amazing.· -Rene Scharte, Westside resident since 19S4 W henlfim started to work at Narmco in 1956, I could stand up on top of the building and see the tops of all the houses in Santa Ana. Now, of COUrle, that space is all filled In with houses and everything. But then, from work. you could see the water spouts from the cxean, although it was too far away , to hear them. I planted a tree March 17, 1950 -my wife's birthday-and it was only a 3-foot-tall tree in a five-gallon buck.et. Now it's huge: 60 to 70 feet tall, with a circumference around the trunk of almost 10 feet.· -aob st..w. an E.stside rndent sine~ 1949 who worked .t Narmco ManufKtwmg. one of the Westside's Nrllest ~ne.s Readers peer into 'Wmdows to the Westside' Readers RESPOND this Earth, from upper middle class to the poverty level. I can tell you that all races have nasty habits. One cannot classify a '1ngle aimi- nal act as strictly ~onnect by one race. Whites litter, whites tum their radios too loud, white people drive too ~through reaidenti&l streets, and there are eveo some illegal wb1'8 ~ living here in this counuy . .,..._., W8ltllde actMsts, keep 1n mind that we owe tt to our cbil- dnlll •Dd grmldc:hildren to ftgbt radlln at all'"*· M Martin H. MIDmd woUld be b9ppy to .... you, the white papuladoa wtU vwy IOOI\ be tba mmartty, Ud It c:wki be ~ that the Ndtm .. db«ted at. Mam.SCOTT MeMVsde society and do nothing to Improve conditions. SANDRA KASZYNSKI Santa Ana Heights Council to take the reins and act. They should hre the dty manager aod all of the staff members respoNible for UtJ.s debacle and hire individuals who can actually do their job without alienating large segments of the population. JAYMMTIN CoNMesa r • •A • 111• .. .. •• A12 Thundoy, Mar 11, 2001 Daily Pilot HISTORY CONTINUED FROM A 11 the industrial part of the Westside, including the blutts that some residents now hope to convert to high-end hous- ing, was badly zoned by the county be fore the city was incorporated. income,• Wllson said. •A lot of resident WUlWn 'Bill' St. Clair, people used the homes as who was a studentthere at the starter homes, and it was also a time, 'We c:.alled the kids from havenfor illegal• activity. . Newport Beach 'Mackerel One indicator of the Flatters' and they said we were Westslde's relative poverty was from 'Goat Hill.•• Miller wrote. the goats people raised instead "So the name stuck.,. of cows, which need more BaniesaidtbeWestsidewas • room, Banie said. also the part of the city with AccQrding to Miller's book, the mo$t Latino residents, Costa Mesa's nickname, •Goat largely of Mai.can descent. sign th.at radal tensions existed Sant.a Ana River, and then all 1980, when she moved here. in the dty even though Costa the kids got into surfing. We "When I came here, we Mesa Grammar School had parties as young tee.ns in werepeoplewhowexeafraidto Prindpal Dale Evans "was con-groups of 200 to 300 kids with walk on the streets," she said. vinced that the district's live bands in different homes. ~People didn't appreciate see- Mexican students-the lDlljor-Tue police alwaf$ eame by and ing us and didn't like for ipe to tty of whom were having lan-told us to keep it down a{ter speak Spanish. Some people guage difficulties -would 10 p.m., but we were never stillgtvemedirtylooksbecause learn more at their own really rowdy. There were they think f'm saying bad school," according to Miller's Hispanics, Japanese and all ctif-things about them, I guess, We book. ferent races, and there was no were still struggling to get a •South of Freedom Homes, there was~ awful lot of il).dus- trial," he said. "The first Planning Co~ssion was called the Salvage Commission because the COWlty didn't have good planning sense." Requests to the county to provide information on the rea- sons behind the zoning were unsuccessful. Hill," began about 1930. . Many of the Latinos living in •As the story goes, the land the city were fa.rm workers who northwest of the Harbor and live,d on the Westside, where Newport boulevards intersecr the farms were, Barrie said, · tion was offered for sale at rel-"Mexicans have always atively low prices in the mid-been here," he said. "This was 1920s," Miller ·Wrote. "These Mexico, of course, and some of low values attracted a number them stayed after California of poorer families who then bad was annexed. In the class pic- old houses moved in from the tures ot schools on the Sant.a Ana area. Initially, they Westside, you always find had tried.to raise cows for their Mexican children and also children's milk needs. But, some Japanese children. The when the land failed to sup-[Latinos) are never identified port cattle, the people turned in the pictures, though, so peo- instead to raising goats:" ple prQbably didn't mingle The Idea would probably such thing as mdal prob1ems in Spanish Mass at St. Joachim not be greeted with much those days, I don't think. But I Church. By 1986, we bad two enthusiasm today. And Brown think tbatpeop!E) became more or three of ~em. The Latino vs. Board of Education, the aware of different races after populationgraduallyincrea.sed SupI'emeCourt'sdecisionover-a while and everybody' got and ~ptance came'gradu- tuming the notton of •separate stereotyped.• ally ¥well. Now it's much bet- bllt equal" fadliti.esfordifterent Wilson said be thinks race ter. It is much d.ifferen\ from ethnic groups, would not takG "relatiOns only began to improve that time. Costa Niesa is a dif. place until .1954. · in the last four or five years. ferent city, a friend.lier city." THE CHANGES Longtime residents agree Different races •didn't kill She still runs into problems that rac~ relations have each other in Costa Mesa, but sometimes, however. changed in the city, although they ignored each other," he "Once in a while, you find they disagree about what some said. ~People aced Latinos out people who are so lost you can of the changes are. of good jobs and made slaves of see the black cloud on top of In some ways. little has changed on the Westside. For one thing, the Westside was regarded as the poorer part of town as far back as most· longtime residents can remem· ber. The name became popular much. Many were laborers aftt:?r Newport Harbor High who worked on farms and School, which included stu· didn't make much money, so dents from both Costa Mesa they weren't able to live in the Shaw said he remembers them. They weren't really their bead, but most people having friends of different races accep~ in society. I think it's nowadays are friendly," she irrthe early '60s. changing right now. It's new, · said. #I used to get calls from ·us kids were always run-but I think that, especially in people saying, 'Go back to ning around together having Southern California, we are working in the kitchen ani:'.I fun," he said. •we weren't more tolerant of differences. having babies.' Nowadays, it's gangs. There were no shoot-We disagree but let each other 'Get out of town and go back IDgs.or stabbings, but it seemed go our own ways.# to your country.' It used to like just about everyone got P.aty Madueno said she bas intimidate me, but it doesn't along. We went fishing in the noticed a positive change from anymore.# and Newport Beach, opened good parts of town." · "It was always the part of town with cheaper homes for people who had a lower in 1930 and a rivalry evolved, In 1930, the Monte Vista according to the book. School opened for Mexicans •According to Costa Mesa only, which Banie believes is a BAY CONTINUED FROM A1 bond money to help fund the project. The 2001-02 state budget includes $7 .52 million for the project from the $1 .25 billion available via Proposition 12, approved by voters in March 2000. #We're optimistic that since it's in the governor's budget now, it'll stay there,# said Dave Kiff, Newport Beach's assistant city manager. •it's bond money.• · Bond funding is-usually on more solid footing than money from the general fund -which absorbed all the cuts -because it is earmarked for specific projects. But state belt-tightening has jeop· ard.ized other pots of money city offi- cials had hoped to tap. One of those is a reduction from $100 million to $10 million in Davis' plan to fund projects that reduce beach closures. "Like many of the one-time pro- jects, it was reduced," said Hilary McLean, a spokeswoman for the gov- ernor. "This is part of a federal effort toward a balanced budget due to the fact that the economy has slowed down.• Kiff said Newport Beach hopes to secure a portion of the beach-closure money to fund projects that would remedy the growing problem in the city of beach closures and postings resulting from sewage spills into Upper Newport Bay and the harbor. The budget cutbacks also aren't expected to hamper the city's effort to buy land from the state's Department of nansportation for a park at Coast Highway and Superior Avenue. State Sen. Ross Johnson (R-Irvine) has floated a bill that would transfer the land to the city at the reduced price of $1.13 million. Caltrans wants a market rate, about $4 million, The stalemate, expected to be resolved later this month, ts' more a result of a difference of opinion on the land's value, Kiff said. •They don't want to take the write-down,• Kitt said. •u this bill doesn't pass this year, we're back to our stalemate. We can't go any higher.• The city.bas. earmarked an addi- tional S5 mi1UIQft to develop a park at the area, known·as $unset Ridge. Brief Ir Jn THE NEWS Public Works open house set for Saturday I~s the things people usually don't think about: Where does the water go when you flush your toilet and where does it come from when you open a faucet? How do storm drains work? How big is a traffic signal? Newport Beach residents will have a chance to find out the answers to all of those questions at an open house put on by the city's Public Works 1'epartment on Saturday. From a motor home equipped with the latest energy-conservation devices to computers with mapping software .that allows people to pull up footprints of their individual homes, department officials will share their equipment and knowl- edge. ·we're trying to increase peo- ple's awareness of what we do," sa1tl Don Webb, the city's public worb director. He added that the event Our family serving your family LIFETIME GUARANTEE CARPET $199 ~, .. INSTALLED for 47 years ORANGE COUITY EXCLUSIVE DISTRIBUTOR OF LIFETIME GUARANTEE CARPET-1-0-01 -81-18-11- Lifetlme Stain Warranty CARPET Lifetime Wear Warranty $249 - L • I C h W •na •• i11t me rut arranty Llf1t~m1 Fa~• Warranty 4000 ITORI IUYI N.8 POWIR C1r~!t Ce-~ The Wtrl4'1 L1r1••t C1r~t R1t1ll1r IF YOU'RE NOT BUY NG FROM US YOU'RE PAYlftG TOO MUCH •••• Llfttt• Wern1ty ·~ ...... , ,,.,.. '"" ... , .. f1nlt8n IMl11 Pi._, Costa Mesa ' (949)650-7676 14 E 17 t~ It - ' ' IRUCI 1001 $2'Ww: ' I ·-,r. OIUllC *1'•8w: ' . Irvine (949)838-0141 was the first open house in four years. · Some of the bigger items on dis- play include machines such as street sweepers, beach cleaning machines and dump trucks -•the kind of things little boys just love,• said Shari Rooks, a department official who organized the open house. She added that there will also be a public works-themed scavenger hunt, a balloon-shaping cloWlHllld & free raffle with prizes such as a police ride-along. And guests both young and old can feast on free hot dogs and soft drinks to keep energy levels up. · The open house takes places Saturday from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. at the city's utilities yard, 949 W. 16th St. Information: (949) 644-3311. 2 students recognized for volWlteer efforts A Prudential Spirit of Community Awards celebration honoring 141 students will be held from 6:30 to 8;30 p.m. Friday at the Westin South CQul Plaza. The students are local. honorees in the nation's largest youth recognition program based solely ~m volunteerism. - The youth honored at uie event will receive "star treatment • in acknowledgment of the time they have spent in service to their com- munities. 1Wo local students being honored are Anh Do and Vanessa Hemande-z, both of Estancia High School. Anh is the president of the Key Club and spent time at Project Cuddle working with foster children. Vanessa spent six months in the Republic of M,alawi on the Afrtcan continent. ~here she taught i;ngµsb to chlldren twice weekly. She also spent most of her time at the Open Arms Infant Home. . Surf Day to be held for Whittier third-graders On June 2, the first-ever Surf Day will be held for the graduating third· grade class of Whittier Elementary School of the Newport-Mesa Unified School District. About 95% of the students from the school aJe from low-income families and rarely have the· chance to go to the beach. Information: (949) 515-6990. ... ' ' Quot• Of MDAY .,,_.has~'-"-.. bee or hu swinl1.-s ii h hisDy af hiF sdm -. ..... who,* hy're rlllly to samt a ram, Mryant a1 '9 meet ;.st ..... hy'rt dailg and ... (laan '9inG) is Cini af '-n _. BrlM l<reut.:lkamp, Newport boys swim coach _May21-.. GAIYCASR Sports Editor Roger Cor1500 • 949-5744223 • Sports Fox: 949-650..0170 •Thursday, May 17~ 2001 Bl PACIFIC COAST LEAGUE BOYS VOLLEYBALL CO·CHAMPIONS . DON LEACH I OAllY PILOT Coach Steve Contt's Corona del Mar Hlgh's boys volleyball team Is seeded No. 4 ln the CIF Dtyision IV Playoffs after grabbing a share of the Pad.fie Coast League championship. Front row, from left: Miles Yourman, Greg Gabriel, Evan Burden, Bart Welch, Brian Gallagher, John Grod and Danny Degblrt. Back row, from le~ Garrett Mack.l.ln. Brian Moore, Pat Flynn, Forrest Mack, Erle Jones, Ryan Inman, Pat Ubuda, Brandon Sharick-Odom and Charlie Alshuler. • Mustangs. lose a 'wild' one~ 5-2 • Bishop Montgomery pulls it out in 10 innings in a CIF Divisiml IV wild-card game. Stfte Virgen DAILY PILoT COSTA lv1ESA -After 10 innings of exciting softball and after be spoke of a bumpy-road season, Costa Mesa High Coach Rick Buonarigo stressed the importance of the Mustangs' program with one statement ·1 hope this group of young girls stays together,• said Buona.rigo, who noted he served as the school's interim coach for the season because former coach Sharon Ubl left for personal reasons. Mesa's names of tomorrow, Ann· Marte Topps, Cassie John, Alejan- dra Gallardo, Katy Renish and Tess Un.dsa~felljustshortofexpand.ing on the program's hope for the future. The Mustangs (12-11-1) ended their season with a thrilling 10- inning battle and lost, 5-2, in 10 innings to visiting Bishop Mont- gomery in a CIP Division IV wild- card game at TeWinkle Park Wednesday. Costa Mesa, the Pacific Coast League's third-place representa- tive, surrendered all the runs on errors. •When we bad one run,• Buonarigo said. •That probably should've been enough to wtn.• After scoring one run in the sec- ond inning, the Mustangs allowed an unearned run in the fourth and another in the ninth. But, Mesa fought back in the bottom of the µ.inth to send the game into another extra bming, only to allow three more Unearned runs. In the 10th, with the bases DON LEACH I OAllY Pl.OT Costa Mesa High freshman Yuen Mla (right) slides Into second base safely when the ball gets away. loaded and two outs, the Knights (11-17) put the game out of reach on a series of errors after designat- ed hitter Danielle Mol'Vice smashed a sharp grounder. Bishop Mont- gomery entered the playoffs as the third-place representative of the Del Rey League. •There wasn't a girl ln this dugout that thought we were going to lose,• Buonartgo said of his Mus- tangs' mentallty in the bottom of the ninth. •Tuey fought back. They've done that all year! Down 2-1, and with the sea.son on the line, sophomore Topps SOFTBALL scored the tying run. She reached on a fielder's choice, advanced to second on a wild pitch and moved to third when senior Ola Wallace slapped a bunt. The Knights' short- stop then caught Sarah Watkins' Oy ball and tried to pick off Wallace at first. J'opps, \vbo slammed a triple in the first, sprinted home and slid to beat the throw from first. John, who went 2 for 4, also blasted a triple when she sent a shot over third base and along the left field line in the second inning. The Mesa freshman then scored on Renish's RBI bunt. Renish, a sopho- more, laid a hard bunt to the pitch· er, who threw the ball to the catch- er,and John slid under the tag for a 1-0 lead. •This was one of ow best games,• said John, who began the season on junior varsity and was promoted before league play start- ed. •(1bis game) was really fun. We played so hard. I've learned a lot.• Bishop Montgomery pitcher Jill' Gooman certa.lnly delivered a les- son. After allowing three hits and SEE SOFTBALL PAGE 82 Mesa Verde CC will host Gir"(s Junior Americas Cup Ti e equity-owned private dub in Cost.a Mesa, which will undergo a $7-rnillion clubhouse remodeling pro1ect beginrung m the fall, will provide tough cond.ltions for some of the best Junior guls m the world. Mesa Verde and the Southern Califorrua PGA Foundation will host the 23rd annual Girls Juruor America's Cup Team Matches Aug. 6-9. The event brings together players representing 18 junior goll assooauons from the U.S , Canada and Mexico. The fonnat will have four players competing for each team but only the three lowest scores count ·nus IS a great opporturuty for the Juniors to test themselves agamst the golf course and history,• Sa.Jd Mesa Verde head pro Tom Sargent, the 1998 PGA of America Golf Professional of the Year. "Mesd Verde Country Club has hosted (soc) LPGA Tour events, as well as the USGA Junior GU'ls Championship (m 1993), and 1t IS a true champions golf course. It will be very surular to what the competitors will face m college.• Mesa Verde hosted the LPGA Kemper Open from 1979-81 ahd the LPGA U~en Invi- tational from 1984- 86. ln 1995, the dub hosted the inaugwal Toshiba Senior Classic. Rich Saul, the fonner All-Pro center for the Richo· d O Rams, served as a r unn great celebnty host GOLF Wednesday at the . 19th annual Childhelp USA Celebrity Goll Classic at Pelican Hill Goll Club. The Orange County Chapter of Child.help USA, based m Newport Beach, en1oyed a full held of golfers as proceeds netted approx:irnately $150,000. Ctuldhelp USA was founded m 1959 and is dedJcated to the treabnent, prevention and research of child abuse and neglect. Sponsorships and playing spots are available in the eighth annual C.J . Segerstrom & Sons Golf ClaSStc June 18 at Mesa Verde Country Club. The events benefits the Central Orange Coast YMCA, which serves Newport Beach, Costa Mesa. Tustin, Santa Ana and Irvine. Proceeds from the event go to help kids attend camps and participate Ul the vanous community programs. nus year's goal is to raise $80 ,000, said Ed Halverson. Chairman of the Board of Martagers. Details: (949) 642-9990. The sixth annual We Care Gou Tournament, hosted by the Tax & Financial Group, is Monday at Pelican Hill to benefit the Make-A-Wish Foundation of Orange County, which grants wishes to children who suffer from life-threatening illnesses. The Tax & Financial Group SEE GOLF PAGE 13 IAILY PllOI 1111 SCIOOL AllLEIE OF Ill Wiii Show stopper . .. SailiJrs, Aa~On Peirsol . -. •Newport Hai'bor Olympian is a sight to 0e seen and spectators aren't the (Xlly ooes wbO ~te the view. , . . .~. If . ' • I . 82 Thur1doy, May 17, 2001 Doily Pilot SPORTS Red Sox put away Cardinals, Mariners ;:ach • Narrow decisions keep Sox on the winning path in Majors. The Red Sox posted wins by the · skin of their teeth last week in Newport Bt!ach Little League Majors Division action. Strong pitching and timely hitting gave the Red Sox a 3·2 win over the Cardinals and a 5·3 win over the Mariners. . In the win over the Cardinals, J.R. Dion pitched four string innings and struck out eight. Kevtn Holland and ~cbael Ford pitched the final two innings and allowed only one hit. The Red Sox defense was led by Jacob Goulding, Tim Leber, KaJ Youngman and Reagan Riley, while Grant Gerdau and Goulding each had key hits. Wlillam O'Brien pitched four innings for the Cardinals and also had two triples and two runs scored. Aaron Northcraft. John Yesh, Ryan Telles, Sam Stafford, Tyler Brady and James Petnllll also made ·contributions for the Cardinals. In the win over the Mariners, Ford, Holland and Dion combined to strike out 10, while Goulding. Gerday, Riley, Lever, Drew Brabs and Youngman each played solid, all-around games. The Mariners were led by Kevin Rask, Tom Sollis, Nick Freeman, Wlll Harrison, Devon Kelly, Bobby Manning and Tommy Thomas. In other Majors Division action: •BRAVES 7, ~JCEES 6 -Jake Rangall, who sp lit his lip open when he collided with a teammate, stayed in the game and corralled a long fly ball with runners on second and third to preserve the win for the Braves. Had Rangall left the game following his injfuy in the tourth inning, the Braves would have had to folfeit due to a lack of players. Jordan Taonnlna hit a towering · home run, while David Wheatley, Tom Koss, Austin Hanni, Mitch Williams and Alex Ray each had key hits for the Braves. The Yank~s were led by Patrick Martn-Ftnn, Vinnie Saint John and . Kyle Legrand. . • ANGELS 15, GIANTS 4 -After falling behind 4-0, the Angels exploded for 15 unanswered rul'l.s to pull out the victory. Ryan Hultan led the Angels' comeback with a double, single and four RBJs, while Shane Boras added a double and three RBis. Geoffrey Grant contributed to the Angels' offense with three hits. For the Giants, Pbilllp Bannan pitched two scoreless innings, while Danny Moskovits and Mark Kanow each came through with key hits. • ANGElS 11, BRAVES 8 -Michael Page went 3 for 4 with four runs scored and two RBis to lead the Angels over the Braves. Jordan Kurtz added a two-run single, while Geoffrey Grant went 2 for 4 and pitched three-plus innings to secure the win. The Braves were led by Thomas Koss. who went 3 for 4 and Jordan Taormhia, who went 3 for 3, including two doubles. • REl>s 15, CA.RDINAI.S'"3 -Bryan Burke sparked a 16-hit attack with a three-run double to lead the Reds. Blaine Nielsen had a two-run home run for the Reds. while Jake COSTA MESA NATIONAL unLE LEAGUE Cardinals take care of Tigers· •Arnold, Van Geem lead the way in 7·4 Majors victory. COSTA MESA -The pitching ot Starnes Arnold plus the hitting of Evan Van Geem led to a 7-4 win for the Cardinals over the Tigers in Costa Mesa National Little League Majors D1VlS1on action. Arnold pitched four m.nings of one-hit ball, while Van Geem went 4 for 4 with two runs scored for the Cardinals. - Arnold, Tim Morley and Garrick Williams each singled and scored a run, while Eddie Tomasek, Daniel Freeman, Steve Shelton and Matt Biagi each contributed to the Cards' offense. In other Majors Division action: • MAlwNs 20, WHITE Sox 2 -A nine-run first inning was just the beginning for the Marlins in tbeir win over the White Sox. P.J. Errington led the way, pitching all four innings and contributed at the plate with a grand 'slam. • MAauNs 2, CARDINALS 0 -Vlnnte Valdez pitched a complete-game, one-hitter with rune stnkeouts to lead the Marlins over the Cards. Cardinal Daniel Freeman broke up Valdez's no-hitter in the sixth inning with a double, while teammate Tlm Morley strick out five in four innings. Evan Van Geem struck out the side In one inning of relief for the Cards. · • MAauNs 14, DEVIL RAYs 4 - Daniel carter, James Wanbaugh, Bryan Guzman and Joshua Emo each scored twice to lead the Marlins past the Devil Rays, while Joseph Eggen, Pablo Galvan, Javier Rivera, Jacob Wach.man and Josh Ryding each scored one run. Pitchers Johnny Valdez and .Wanbaugh combined for nine strikeouts for the Marlins. • DoDG.l!.IS 21, Rm> SOX 4 -The Dodger offense blasted out 18 hits en route to the victory. Cory Weikel had four hits and four runs scored. while Parker Roth went 4 for 4 and Brian Sankey added a grand llam for the Dodgers. Mlke Md>Dlm homered and doubled, while Matt Jeruko, I.an A.t>eruthy, Bryan 8eD,Detl. Bran.don Grtamett and st.veD Dean also collected hits and RBis. • Asnos 13, ltJ!D Sox 8 • Pttchets Drew llertoGl, Matt~ and caJeb lhiif'• combined for 11 strikeouts to Jeld the A.trot to Victory. eertoni added a home run, while Joida Alc:mt ripped a two.run doUble tor the Altrol. Other cilf ... CODtributon tnduded ••• 1••~' tMllll .... "°'Y 1DM 91' • ~, t ,.._ ..... ..., R •• ....,C flad .... ~· •u'.1m1ox2-..., .. "'° bllli to IMd the 1>M•e•1• ........ A 'r• _ . ....._ • wlll ....... -two lllllJWbOe Trevor McDonald. Ryan Redding and Allan Kincaide also contributed to the D-Badcs' offense. Austin Elliott and Taylor McClanahao each made sparkling plays on defense, while Redding made a snow-cone catch at second base. • DIAMONDBACKS 13, RED Sox 2 - Austin Elliott smacked his first Majors home run and added a triple and four RBis to lead the Diamondbacks over the Red Sox. Andrew Ayala bad two hits and three RBls. Milch Friedmann added a double and an RBI for the D-Backs, while Ryan Redding chipped in three hits, including a double and two RBis. Other quality Diamondback offensive.outbursts came from Trevor McDonald. Riley Hart and Brandon Maurer. Allan Kincaide and Taylor McClanban combined to strike out four for the D-Backs. • DIAMONDBACKS 3, YANKEES 0 - Pitchers Brandon Maurer and Austin Elliott combined lo strike out nine to lead the D-Backs over the Yankees. Offensive contributors included Trevor. McDonald, Ryan Redding, Allan Kincaide and Riley Hart, while Andrew Ayala and Taylor McCJanaban were the defensive stars for the Diamondbacks. in Minor A Division action: • DIAMONDBACKS 12, ATRUmCS 8 - Eric Mickelson pitched five strong innings as the D-Back:s held off the Jls. Carlos Guzman, Jimmy Hammond, Jeffrey Schoettler, Gilbert Beas, Gene Garda, Gavin Montague, Sean Ulrich and Courtney Ulrlcb sparked the !?-Backs' offense, while Mu Frted.aum, Jonathan Jones and Cody Woodl anchored the defense. in Minor B Division action: • DJAMONDJAOS 13, ROCKIES 11 -• Despite the loss, solid, all-.oround play for the Rockies was turned in by Jamey Pond, Brtan Bray, ~lck Pederkonl, Mlcb.Ml DeJUey, Blake Youngqullt. Koh.I Jones. Sean Andenollf ~ Cbumey and Spencer Roberti. • Doool!lts 15, D!VIL hvs 8 -The Dodgen jumped out to a 1 ·O first-lnn.lng lead and held o(f a late charge by the D-Rays. Josh Goc1lcb. A.ndreW lotb, Adam MWer, Marc Defnna. Ryu Molalky and Tony Caapo each had key bits foT the DodJC:i. while Ryan Botelo end Lake I led lhe pltching and defense. In T-&11 ~ DtVlilon action: • POI' llM A.iti'oe, t.n their contelt with the Cardinali, st.J:Ong. all~ plal WU dilJ)layed by &oM fr Mair Ala o.s-. Z-* llill 1111**....,. Grw Ollir,_ and JW ........ , , NEWPORT BEACH LlnLE LEAGUE Lemmerman. Tyler EWs. Ryan Lanni, J.P. Gormly, Brett BartleU and Ryan Kent each contributed with key hits. The Cardinals were led by Ryan Telles, Sam Stafford, Aaron Northcraft and ~ Stafford. • GIANTs 8, MAlltNERs 7 -Late inning offensive heroics by PbUlp Bannan, Mark Kanow and Kevin Dearen sparked a comeback by the Giants in their win over the Mariners. Bannan ended the game with a single, double, triple and two RBis, while Mark Kaoow added a single , two triples and three RBis. Jafler Kattan and Mu lolllns contributed to the Giants' offense with key bits, while Danny Moskovita and Bannan each pitched well. Giants' reliever Nick Taylor shut down the M's offense in the final inning to preserve the win. In AAA Division action: • MAllINBRs 9, ANGEU 7 -Hunter Alder, Michelle Zucker, Ryan Gladycb, Zak Maure .... J;rtckaon, Tommy Collpn and Sean To"'1yama each delivered key hits to lead the Mariners over the Angels. Jon Kl.ant made a big defensive play in left field to preserve the win for the Mariners, while Randall Nelson, Anna Palchlkoff and Kirk MacDonald also came through with big hits. For the Angels, Connor Bannan, Parker Stone, Andrew Mason. Otts Mitchell Colfax Selby and Eric Mutzke each made offensive and defensive contributions. • MAluNEJls 9, CARDlNALS 8.-Anna Palcblkoff'1 fine defensive play at s~nd ~se helped preserve the win for the Mariners. Sffil Tolnlyama, H~r Alder, Zak Mau~Ertckson, Tummy Colton, Kirk MacDonald and Cory ~nald each had key bits for the M's, while Michelle Zucker p1tch0d two solid innings with five strikeouts. The Cardinals were Led by Brett Weinberger, MlcbMI Epstein, Kevin nou and Grant Kellgtan. in AA Division action: • DoOOl!ltS 8, MARINElts 6 -xUl Fletcher, Kyle Denese. Carter Taylor and Da~d Welland each came through with key bits to lead the Dodgers over the Mariners. . Pitchers Nick Flam.son. Jarrett Logan and Kyle Danese combined for eight strikeouts for the Dodgers, while Chris Bmke, Chase Nugent and Gustaf Hellmer anchored the defense. • DoOOBS 10, DIAMONDBACKS 3 - Pitchers Kyle Danese and Nick Flamson combined to strike out 12 to lead the Dodgers over the D-Backs in the first round of the playoffs. Gustaf Hellmer, Chris Burke, David Welland and Carter Taylor combined to score six runs. while Jarrett Logan, Chase Nugent. Karl Pletcher and Francesco l.mpagllazzo were solid on defense. The Diamondbacks were led by the all-around play of Matttas Russo-Larson. Peter Weidner, Benny To~nd and Brooks Brad)'.. Bruisers win .bronze • Corona del Mar girls under-10 team closes out big year at tourney. The Corona del Mar ·Beach Bruisers, an AYSO Girls under-to soccer team, completed a successful spring season with a bronze medal performance in the AYSO Area Q Tournament with a 3· 1 victory over S4n Juan Capistrano. The Bruisers opened the scoring early when Jackie Dion scored the game's first goal. Minutes later, Rebecca Beyer scor~ off a pass from Sydney Sweeney for a 2-0 Bruisers' advantage. Early in the fourth quarter, Claire Badington connected with teammate Sarah Mull . for the Bruisers' final goal. . Stellar defense was enforced by Laura Bilder, Alexa Rome, Kelli Feeley and Shay Whitaker, while goalkeeper Taylor Rhodes came up with six saves. The Bruisers compiled a 4-1 record and outscored their opponents, 16-6. Melissa Hancock 'and Dion led the tea.m with four playoff goals, while Sweeney held high honors with five assists. TlleDodl!!n' Jasttn COthain makes sure be'I found bomeplate . UbelCOret to the delight ot hlt rans tn Newport Harbor BUeball Mlociadon ~play. At left ta Cubs' atcber Gabriel Gomez. Mets put away the Braves • Kroophf's two home .runs help Mets, 8-5. Jonathan Kroophf hit two solo PONY IASEIALL home runs to lead the Corona del Mar Mets over the CdM Braves, 8-5. in Newport- Mesa Pony Conference (ages 13-14) action Saturday. Steven Hinton. Roger Hamilton and Tom Money each had key hits for the Mets, while Johnny Legan scored two runs. On the mound for the Mets, Blake Matthews and Blake Allred pitched five strong innings, while Wes Presson struck out six in the final two innings. Red Sox edge the Devil Rays, 8-6 NEWPORT BEACH -Alex Rios went 3 for NHIA 3 with five RBis to lead the Red Sox past the Devil Rays, 8-6, in Newport Harbor Baseball Association Mustang Division (ages 11-12) Moo.day afternoon. . Ryan Albert went 2 for 2 with three RBis for the Red Sox, while Bobby Okvtst. llandall Hause, Max Royer and Jeff Hamilton each added key hits. Albert, Rios and Eric Holland led the Red Sox pitching staff, while Luke Fl.scher, Jesse Hickey and Sean Magnano added stellar all·around play. The Devil Rays were led offensively by PeteT Kenney, Michael Helb1ch and Chrls Gowdy. In Pinto Division (ages 7-8) action: • The Cardinals and Giants put on quite a show for the fans Thursday. The Cardinals were led by solid pitching from Matt Bancroft. Nellon Simons and Jed Gentry, who combined for nine strikeouts. On offense, Nelson. Simons, CbarUe Massingill and David MarUnez each had three hits for the Cardinals, while Sean Richards, Paul Newmen and Craig Plc::etU each added two hits. FireBalls sweep twinbm SOFTBALL CONTINUED FROM B 1 • Girls 15-and-under squad improves to 12 .. 3.1 with sweep. The PireBolls, a girls SOFUILL Mycorn and Elena ltedelshelmer 15-and-under softball allowed only two earned runs to lead team from the Patific Coast Bobby the Rage (1•-1). Sox, swept a doubleheader from Mycom'1 10lo home run tn the - Tustin South last weekend to improve foWtb lnnlDg brokd the 2-2 tie, whlle to 12-3-1. Adele Debala, La.._ Tolta, AlliDUel In the opener, Sasha Gna•man, ....._,Brook......._. D1 a• Aahley Gleuon and Hilary Ockey Doulo and AU A..-Jed the Rage each had two hits to lead the PheBaU. defemively. • toa 10..C win. Gleaaon and Grumman each bed two RBI, while GleasOn also pitched a complete-game, thtee-hitter. In the nightcap, Jnl.__ Bw bad two Ii.ogles, two doublet and four RBll, while Ockey added a 1tngle and three RBll. . l \ IC8te JOllya, l!ll4lil • .,.. and Ali Hm.y-Gmt eeCh had multiple-bit gema1 tor the Pttdelll. Grumman pitcMd a coiDplete..game, WbUe H..cber Lolll = made. MDar catch In ceDWllild. DMlaall..., 1J<.P""-s. UmAMlna 2 -.... • one run in the first two innings she settled down and retired the side over the next four innings with seven strtkeouts. She completed another per- fect inning In the 10th with two strikeouts. Undsay, Cotta Mesa'• Jumor pitcher, came · ~h With. a IOlld p8tformance ln the Joa. She ltruc:k out four and tnduced ""n ground- outl. Aho, the Mu~ caught 13 tnneld ftY belll ar lin. drives. M... MCOnd hftemen C4r1 Motter, 1 aenb, mugbt ftva. • wanao.; at first bue. ~four. ..:r-".~"11:.a ....... ,.. . ....... , . .,. OlllliMm --·-·I I 'I -----CllcM~­........... ,... ~~-~,~'tt..,_ ........ ) Daily Pilot .. SPORTS · lhut?doy, May 17, 2001 8.1 Remembering one fair Sailor, David Patterson PEIRSOL CONTINUED FROM 81 regular workout the morning before the meet, won the 100-yard backstroke for the third year in a row in 48.12. He also topped the field in the 200 freestyle ( 1 :38.62) and bel~d the Tars erase a defiot and, along with teammates Andrew Cole, Peter Belden and Ryan Lean, slash nearly two seconds off the 20-year-old school record, winning in 3:09.97 . and owns the second·fa.iest • time tn history m the event. behind Olymp\~ champion Lenny Krayzelburg's 1:55.87), Pei.r&ol said be eDJOVS swunming other strokes "My focus is back.stroke right now, but, maybe come the fall or spring, things might change a little,• sa..ld Peirsol. who is also ranked second nationally in the 100-meter backstroke. ~1 definitely don't want my other; strokes to just sit there and J enjoy the challenge of swimming other strokes in high school. • H e was never fat, but his good friends always called him, •Fat Pat.~ A native Newpqrter, his real name was David Patterson. He was also a 6-foot-2, 200-pound bruising tackle at Harbor High in 1947 and at Orange Coast College in 1949-50. His friends were mourning his loss after he passed away Saturday morning. He had been on a trip with his wile to the Morro Bay country. Unfortunately, he had long suffered from a diabetic condition. From one angle, he was an histoncal figure at Harbor High in 1930. His yoWlg mother was pregnant. Hence, he went to school Wlth her every day. He later had a sister named Diane, who became a student body officer in 1949-50. Patterson always performed well for Codch Ray Rosso at OCC, but his finest night came m 194 7 as a star tackle for the late Coach Wendell Pickens at Harbor High. That particular night found the Sailors ratUmg an invadtng Fullerton team, which was headed for the championship. There was so much excitement that night the Harbor students once busted the wooden bleachers on one side. The police had to rush and rescue many students after the collapse. , The forward wall was laced with Patterson, center Pete Nourse, guard Bill Clark, end Ralph Ronck and tackle Bill Kille fer. The offensive thunder came from rock-nbbed fullback Bob Berry and fleet-footed halfback JlfD Ashen. Berry scored on a four-yard plunge up the middle. The Tars won 7-0 and Fullerton Coach Dick Spaulding called Berry the greatest sophomore back he had ever witnessed. A long-time resident of Bakersfield, Patterson had spent earlier years operating a small cafe in Capistrano Beach. He used lo be amused by old teammates who remained close fnends. One was the fullback Berry. who once told him that he once lucked a football 80 yards, 40 yards straight up and it would plunge straight down another 40 yards. The Berry brothers were not in the habit of boasb.ng about gnd talents. However, it is fair to say his young brother, Charley, would not only punt well, b\,lt oould kick an extra-point conversion with finesse in 1955. One of Lois Irwin's favorite stories dates back to 1947 when her husband; Al, was directing football at Valencia High. Sh"'e said her husband relied heavily on a star back named Don Angel to pull the Tigers through week after week. She said Angel was alweys at his beckon call. He never failed to respond. However, there was one night when no response on the sideline came and the coach was becoming a bit upset. Blessed by some alert members on the sidelines, Irwin finally observed them crying out to inform that Angel had been tied up at the game. .. Ed Mayer, Class of ·so at Harbor, recalls amusement when he first joined up with the Navy. Submarine Corps in San Diego in the mid '50s. Mayer was no longer anxious lo play football after his days at San Jose State when . he played and roomed with future San Francisco 49ers football coach Bill Walsh. The knee injuries had caught up with him. Still, he was open to hearing kind words from the San Diego Navy grid coach, who was aware of Mayer's talents. After bis offer, he told Mayer that a choice of football could lead to some easy work in some Navy facilities which featured lots of lovely girls. Mayer then asked, "What is your fust game?" wUCLA." said the coach. Mayer finally nodded and replled, "No thanks.• Out of amusement, Mayer said he pulled out a dime the folloWlilg day to buy a newspaper out of the rack. There, m black and white. was the result: UCLA, 67-0. Former Newport Beach ~eguard and CIF diver Jack Bell still recalls some amusing days working with actor Clint Eastwood at the Fort Ord swimming pool in 1952-53. Bell said they both got in~o pulling pranks against each other. Bell's favorite was hiding Eastwood's little bottle of lanolin, the one he used to keep his big mop of hair in place. PeirsQI. teamed with Belden, Joey Snelgrove and Steven Jendrusma to win the 200 free relay m d school-record t :26.09, en route to 08.lly Ptlot Athlete of the Week honors "The (CIF) meet wds d little more low key, mentally. than some other meets J compete at. but 1t was a lot of fun,· sa.td Peirsol, who is training hard for the world champlonslups. July 16-29 ill Japan "I'm m the middle of training, I'm in pretty good shape and 1 wanted to swim fast. Being an underdog m tbe relays (to lrvme. wluch is loaded with club swunmers) also made it an easy meet to get pumped \lp for.· Peirsol ·needs no molivaUon other than competition to perform superior feats, accorciing to Kreutzkamp, who morvels at Peirsol's umque blend of humility and confidence. "Here's a l<Jd who haS" traveled the world and is holding a silver medal. But you'd never know it by how he mteracts with his teammates," Kreutzkamp said. "But the main reason he is so good is that he's 1ust so competitive. Aaron told me before the meet that tl the relay was close, I didn't have to wony about 1t. He just wasn't going to lose " Though dominant tn the backstroke (he set the U S. open record with a winrung 200-meter time or 1 :56 5b at the U.S. nationals tn March Peirsol said be may eventually pursue the challenge of the individual medley Kreutzkamp belleves Peirsol's versatility may be not be fully appreciated "I was looking up at the record board at our pool the other day and, ID 11 events. Aaron is involved 10 seven of our school records.· Kreutzkamp said. ·And he'U get three more next year. The only one he won•t touch is (former Olymp1an) John Moffet's breaststroke record "His 200 free (at ClF Ftnals) was close to a nationaJ Jugh school record and he pulled way way up at the end And. even though they don't count, because they came in relays, tus splits the other njght (44 6 m the 400 relay and 20.32 tn the 200 relay were both close to CIF D1vis1on I records." PelI'Sol said he also enjoys the camaradene he expenences with his Harbor teammates And Kreutzkamp believes the expenence ts mutuaJ. "There are three seruor water polo players on our 200 free relay and they're not going to swun ill co!Jege, • Kreutzkamp said • 1 think one of the big reasons they stuck around and swam for us theu seruor year was because of (Peusol). Like 1t was an honor to swun wtth tum." GOLF HAPPY BIRTHDAY Tars win flip CONTINUED FROM B 1 adopted Make-A-Wish as its main chanty after being moved by heartwamung stories from children. All proceeds of the tournament go directly to the fulfillment of granting wishes. In the past five years. the tournament has raised nearly $330,000 to grant 80 wishes. Details: (949) 223-8100 . r--------------------, : j I I J : I I I I I I I I I I I I ~-------------------J CERRITOS -There was a com flip, afteraU, and top- seeded Newport Harbor High was the winner and will host Dos Pueblos at Newport m the quarterfinals of the CrF DlVlSlOn Jil Boys Volleyball Championships Fnday nigbl Also, as previously deter- mined. Corona del Mar will host Bishop Montgomery in Division IV quarterfinals play. Both matches are at 7 p.m. . , ML£~1( ~NOTmll w ... 11 . W**"l I MUCIDTDll I w*>lm) I MUCWJTaS} I NIJCmTUSI I wml l111 mrnwm I O!l/1M>1 STATEMENT OF ABANDONMENT OF USE OF RCTIT10US BUSINESS NAME Tha lollowlng perwon( 1) hu (have) abandoMd Iha UM of Iha flctllloul business name USA Loan, 17320 Redhlll Ave , ltvina, CA 952C>e Occidental Mortgega Corp (CA). 17320 Raclhlll Ava , lrvlne, CA 952C>e The Fic1il10U1 Bull· nau name ttfarted 10 above ..,.. nlad In Or· ange Counly an oe/01(1999, FILE NO 19996794839 Thit butlnne It con· cM;ted by a COIJ)Cntlon Occldanlal Mortgtgt Kan Utbanut. l>rlal- danl This ata1a1Mn1 wu !'Nd with Iha County Cl8ltl ol Orwlgt Colny an 05/11/2001 2001HMH1 Deily Piiot May 17. 24, 31. Junt z. 2001 Th040 FlctlUOUll Bu•lnM• Nvne Sm.ment Thi I~ paraone .,. doing bulliwla u: C.t e Communlca· tk>nl, 8079 8'111•~ lent, Anah4!lm Hilt, CA 92807 Tro~ S. Ktrchaval, 5753 Santa Al1' Cenyon Rd • AnaMlm Hiiie, CA 92807 Thi• bualntM It con-ducted by: an lndMdl..i Heve you etar1td doing butlntu yat? Y .. , 5114'.ZOOI Troy S KMMYll Thie atlllemant ... ftled Wlttl "" Qounty ~OGl~~r Cou'lt'f to01 ...... 1t Olly Piiat ~ l'T, 14, 31. Jig t ~1 D!05t ITATIMlffT Of AIANDOfmBIT ()(II .. Of Ht ihiOUI MlllllDNAMI 'nit talollllng penon(e) Ml (N¥1) ...... .. __ ._~ ..,..,..,..., Die TMno f'!lf'!l•t fMlllllllllltolllW. mw.·,,.,......, ... FlctltJous Buslneaa Name Statement Tht lollowlno partOnS. .,. doing~ .. Pac WHt C1p111I Otoup, 2176 Pacific Ava . D-6. Co.ta Mesa, CA 92627 S11nley Rosenthel, 2175 Paalic Ave , D-6, eo.ta Mata. CA 112627 Thtt bUlilness 11 con- ~ by an lrdvldual Have you 111119<1 doing bullnete yet? No Stanley Roeanthal Thi• 11a1aman1 wu Iliad with the Couflty Cltrtc ol Orange Councy on 04/2M001 20018882263 OtHy Piiot AfJf 26, May 3. 10. 17, 2001 Tll951 Fictitious BuslnHs ·Name Statement The following peraona are doing l>ulinMs ... A.) Kldara Bl l<adlra Muelc, 3 Starburst Court. Nawpon Beach. CA 92663 Kadare Import Export. Inc • (CA). 3 Slart>urst Coort, Na.port Beach, CA 92663 This bUlinalt 11 con· IM:ted by a eotpOl'lliol t Have you 11a11ad doing business yet? v ... 1~1'2001 Kedlra Import Export, Inc Liu Zahanan. Vice Prelldanl This atatamtnt was flied wllti 1M County Clertc ol °'9nge County on 04nonoo1 2001&M22&2 ~ Pllo4 Ap. 2en= Fldltious Buslneaa Nam• Statement The lolk>llW1ng persoos are doing t>uSinMS as SalH LHdS Un· lll'lllted 1527 Oral\Qe Ava., Costa Mesa CA 92627 Michael Raymond Marowslo. 1527 Otanga Ava Costa Mesa CA 92627 Thts buSlnHS II COO ducted by an llldMdUll Have you started doing buA1a$5 yat? No Michael Raymond Marowak1 This 1tateman1 w11 filed W11h Iha Coonty Clef1I ol Orange County on 04/2MOO 1 20016H22'5 Daily Pilot AfJf 26 May 31 10, 17, ?001 Th961 danl Thlt stattmant was filed WTth Iha County Cttnt ol Orwiga COi.Wiiy on 04l20l200 I 20011M2259 Dllly Piiot Afll 2&, May 3. 10, 17. 2Q01 Th9&4 SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA, COUNTY Of ORANGE 341 The Coty [)rfva PO Boll 14170 Orange CA 92863-1571 Lamoraeux Justtea Canter PETITION Of Jennifer Michelle Jimenez FOR CHANGE OF NAME ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE FOff CHAHOE Fictitious Bualntaa o, NAME Name Statemtnt CAS! NUM8ER: T,._ loll -• A207H7 ar~'dc,mg 0~0.:":1' TO AU. INTERESTED A.) NS-KPC Ltquldl· PERSONS llOn, B l NS-Caremartc 1 Peuhoner Jennifer Liquidation; C ) Nawpoll Midlalla knanez tw.d e Equipment Sties, o ) petition wllh !NI CIOUl1 tor Newpon Liquidation, a dacrae changing 2600 Nawp<>rt Blvd , nemat N ~ Sia 152, Nawport ,!:'.,.: Beach, CA 92M3 Newport Surgical, Jlmenai LLC, (CA), 2600 New-Pr:f:4. Hema port 81vd . Sta 152, M ... ma:* ~:c'1 Baacn, CA 2 THE COURT This bullnaaa IS con-ORDERS that a• pet· =ad eoby lmltad ua· =-t'-::r ~': Have you 1tar1ad ~ ~ OOU11 Ill Iha dOlng b1111n .. a yat? htettng lnCkated below v ... 3/'l5t'2001 10 ""°"" «**. " tny. Newport Sulgicel, LLC why the pa4rhon lor Jamal Ooug.I, Pr• ~ Of nAIM elQjjd dent noc bt orW'ltad This atelt!Mnt WH NOTICE'" °' HEARING Flctttloua Bualneu filed witti Iha County 0.... MAY It, I001 ~ se.tement Citric ol Orwiga COl#lly nm. 2 00, °""'" 1..73 3, 10, 17, 2001 Thi I~ on 04/20l2001 The add!.-el fie COill1 a:: Meat ~et Delly Pilol ~~~2= 11 3 T' ex::== lndutttlea, 2142 Wetl· % JO, 17, 2()()1 Tll9§2 to sno.·c.w allel bl min.tar Av•.. Costa publiel'\ad •t llut onct ~~~l2 Wast• F=:u~i:= ::.v. WMlc we:.~ mlnttal' Avenue, Coeta Tht followlna "''°"' lht • MC IOI' llMl1llo MMa. CA 92627 ~,...... on lht ~ ~tit for. Jordan Wetaon, 1941 ~c l J:i,,. low!ng ~ ol P~n Place. Cotta Co , .. ,.... w gener11 cltculMion, Mite, CA t282e lenance . ' """ Pflnttd In ltlie counly' 1'hlt ~ ta con-=fr~t·~·~ The 0.lly f'hl; • S*> ~ a CJ91'fral Tl'ttrtH Almt1a w .. ~ ...... CoMI Have you etant<t ..wm. HIOe W. OoMno ~~ ,,_., ._. doing l>WinM• yet? ~~awpon 8ttdl, JUDU iiCiaRD 0 , v-. 9el22IM n.. bullnMI .. con-llRAnl. .. . JMtitn Watton duCltd by: an ~ :='~,.. ...._ ';. ~ltlntnl •N Have you ttantd Jtllfllttr Mlchellt tied ..., fie <;ounty ~~ No JilMnilL Cl-" Clf 0..-Coun1Y Thie ••"*11 WM 42lt ~ It. Urll E on 04120f210C>f ~ lltla: CA _., .,..,.. ll9d Wlfl Iha c;ounty ~ Olly "°" ,., •. ....., ~~~ ~ •••Oft· ..... .\ IA. tt #llU fbMt 1111-. Dlllv ..... ..., -Piiat '-'· .. ..., a. 1b ''· ..~··· ....... 11(1., 11.JAQ1 ,,_ '------·-..... •11 •~ n a Robert l Slodd&rd Jr This statamam was hied witll Int Coonty Clarll ol Ofange County on OUl 1/2001 2001&8&1274 Delly Pllol ""' 26. May 3. 10, 17, 2091 Jh968 Fictitious Business Name Statement The following parsons .,. doing business ... Allrio Gtoup. LLC. 500 Newport Center Onva Sulla 680, Newport Baacn, CA 92660 Telnet, LLC. (Del) S00 Newpott Center Orlve Suitt 680, Newport Be.en, CA 92660 Thia buslne» ts con· ducted by l.lm1led Lia· blllty Co Heva you llarted doing bualneu ye1? Yea, 111/2001 Telnet, LLC Cindi Granl, Elite Vice Pm Th11 1ta1amant w11 flied with Iha County Clartc ol Orange County on 04124l2001 200118&2550 OUy Ptlol AfJf 26. May 3. 10. 17. 2001 Th969 Fictitious BuslnMa Name StaWment The lollow111Q paf'ION ara doing~• Ven Buran Vantur9, a CaklOITVa Limited Part· narehlp. 3835 Birch StrMI. ~ Baach, CA 92660 J Soolt F1wcet1. 8738 Hudson River Cttda, Fountain Veney CA 92708 Donald I( Banad!ct, 119 ()Mato Newport Beec111. CA 92663 Thia bullna• It con- OU*d by a lrnlted pert• narsNp Have you started clOlng bualna11 yat? v ... 3131188 J Soolt F IWC*I. Gtnafal Partner Tl111 1tatamen1 WU fllad wrtn the County Clertc of Ortngt COUnly on 04/2AJ20Q1 I001 ... 255t ~ Piiat ~· 29~ s. 1A. 17.1 KOLL Albert J. Koll, 75, of L8gunl Woodl PM8td -rr May 14, 20o1. He It auM¥ed by hie wife, Blanche lColl; eon, Sltven A. Koll (llllchtla ), Stsp- daughtera, Barbare Slitter.. Brtndl Ra. Beverly Schoborg (OMn); lt91MOft, Aon l»lerce (Patrlcle); 11rend1on, Kremer koll. Funeral MMcee wlll bt S:OO p.m., TIIUrt· dly, May 1'7, 2001 It Paclflc View llletftoNI Chapel, 3!00 Pac:Ulo View Dr., Newport Btlct\, CA. tn lltu of now... the fMllly ttqueatl ~ done be llltdl to AU A .. oclltlon Otwl,& ~.Jeon~' k"9 !50, ntnea CA 12112. F1cttUoul ....._. Have you ttarttd Have you 11arttd FlcllllcM'9 ...,_. IN llldllptlldlnl ~ Thie~ i. con-DINI Colllll........, VP talntt ~ :::-l•k::. ~r:--~ No dcil~~~ ~~::--~~-= ~ l>y I Joint tltdTIM.:";:ntc:ci:; tltdlNI;~~ .. ~i:~=: .,.. ~ • Thie ltattlMnl ... I~. 819 doltWI M: !tit ~ ,._,c. Halle you •lafttd Clwt of <>r.,. COunly Cleltl.,. ..... ..,. ...,.. .. , ~flt ca,.... It Arntncltll NtlWOft Fl-~ :"'ei:;. = ~·~·=e, Emerllng FIMnc:tel .. IO .. '"""f IC> ~l>ullnW ~No on ()M)Vl001 on ~11MM112 ;";awtut IO nwtc on nll'ClllS ........ ~; 23"2F Oil ~I Thia tldmtlll WN Ofoup, 404 S2rld SU-Ml tiCX'9 wllhout 111 *:"~II> ,.. ............ ......':: Youngqu611 2001 .. 3197 f:'S ... _, 1;_, _ 1 • .:.,i.7 ~-~'!!". ,~ . ..,, .,,1¥9, l..U.e or-I001tllnM lltd with ,..~....., Newport Beach CA COUf1 llPPl'O'I -· ....... _ .... _..,, Inc. ~ .... -IG.17. -· TillTlll W'-'-·-9V"" "*· Cellfoml• 92e30 o.llv ,..._. the ~'"' t2ee3 • taking ~ very im. SIOfl&l~tt I ~ .. Mll....lt.!1.1.. AJ200111LL.1 --~.i.::111a 4 1. 2091 • ......_ -~ on 11 Md Jutttn -.c1o11u1 2'joe),.....,. tMy 3, 10, 17, Cltttt of OIWIQt ~ Old Nt~ Cll>ltll port.m actk>M, how-r•llon •-· ,..,...., C~in, 23992 SW•n ...!.__1 11!189 on 04/21/2001 Inc., (CA) '404 32nd ewr, the peillonlll .... MdrtW L. y~ lrWtHA.-Buel.... Fl~.~m= :.n~al:rt1 •• ~:t O!Mi, Ub Fowl. C.-. 1'1Ctftlout ~ I001MNOS1 Street, NtWport Beach. Ml1'IM wW be~ Inc~ ,P,..._,. • ~..,~ ,,_.._ .. ,.. cNt ~ '°"* 02e30 ...__ 818"' nt ~ Pt1ot May 3, 10, 17, CA 92ee3 to give notte. lo In-'""' df6ment wu Heme ........,. The followtna ptftOfl9 dllerll or Frank TorrM Mouto. ~......._, "* ~l TIM ......... ..__, ____ ... ttrttted l*I009 ~ llltd Wlltt IN c:;ountv The followlna pereona .,. doing buMlNI u: IO t1'111 ooruMrl 23992 s..t DIM. t.ke .. ~.......wtng PtflOnt r11~.~ •·-•........... ~ '=°;-~ ~ he._.. WllfVtd ,_,. C*tt d Or1nOt Cow11y n doing bueNM at: ~Up Sllkl Cale, bt ftPC'19d IO the ~ c...... Qillomla 82930 .,. ......,.., ~ • r~ --..., ----· or OClf1NMtCI lo the on 06l04/2001 lnk>mltrlx. 329 Old 2101 E. COltl Hwv .. ~ trlct lmmadlately, ·~ Fawn Plc:lor 21 OQeanfront, 2100 Name ~ Haw you atu1ed ec:tton.) The Newport aw.~ IOl'll dll Mir, CA 92&50 8tcrtlon 3. That 23S9'l s-i °""'· La1c9 w. ~ Newport The 1o11ow1no pereone ~ngoJ;:1oneM yet? rn:=.m admlnlt-~ Plol ~~ ~2. Newport CA ~AON Bumi. 78 StdlOll 10.01.oeo ol ll'llt For• c.lbnll 82930 8w:tl. CA 112983 are doing bueNee u· ~ Newpof1 Cepltal tnlion authority wll be ~!. 2091 Th019 ~ MHdowt>rook, Alleo OperatloM C* I• Jtfff~O.~ S.lly 21 Octwifronl Aettau-Searchleo, 34 t 2 lne • IJfented ,l.lf1leM an Ill-Vldd L Taylor 1607 ~ CA ~ amended lo r11d: .......... ........_ .... :. ,..,. Inc (CA) 2100 w Oeran•·-St .......... . ·~ -....... Aft 0 -Orllle, .;___. ·' ... ~ ............ COC'I-"Section 10.01 .oeo ......,., ""'"'• .._.. • ., • • """ ., ""'"'' Linda A. JenMn, Pr-~,.....to_...._··~ FlcttUoUe IU4Nne.a ..... _ ,.........,, ...,..,_ C Forest, C91lfomll m30 Oc:eanfronl, Newport ~ CA 92928 Id t ....,........,, v .. ..,.,_, ~ CA 112eeo dUdad by: an lncNdl.lll Pl1cement of on· Thia buelntA 11 con-&..cti. CA 92ee3 Abdallah MorelW, 34t2 '~ ltalement wis and llloWI gooct caUH NelM •~ Thia bullneae II con-Have you etarttd t1ln•"· Truh con· ducted by: a general Thlt bullntM la oon-Geranium St., Cotl1 flled with the County why the ooun ~ not Tht followlno ptrwone ducted by: .,, lndMdllll dOlng butlne.. · yt!? t1lnere lhlll be placed partneretilp ducted by: a OOfPOl'8lion ~ CA 92928 ·CIM cf Orange County gran1 11'11 a~ ,,. dona buliW .. : Have yo~1 etarttd YN. Oct. 3, 2000 on tt1t a.wt>. net In the Have you atarted Have you •tarted Thil bulineM la oon-on 04l'Z7/200! A HEARING on the Snug flafbof. 254 HI doing bualneaa yet? A/f'W ROM ~ street. The trash con- doing ~ yet? No' doing bualnHa yet? clJCltd by: ..,.. lndMcMI zooteee3007 peWoll w11 be held on Pleet, Colltl ..._, CA Y•. 11/10r'OO Thil 1111tmen1 was lllntn lhlll be ptaced Juelln MlchHI Y-. 6/11ll1 . Have you 11alted Olly Pilol May 3. IO 17 JUM 7, 2001 •I 1:30 92e27 ·Vk*I L T1ylor llled Wl1h Int County "'*9 Ille umt ii .o- COOQhlln 21 ac..ntront RtMli-dolno bu11ne11 yet? 24. 2001 :ft.aoc! p.m. 1n Deot. L73 to-HB Snua fWbor, 1nc. Thie et.tement was a.it! o1 ~ CcudV CMlllle 10 be ooltc*d Thla etalement wu IWll. Inc Y-. 1984 --~ cated at 341 The Oily ~ 254 Hiii Pltot, filed' wilh lht County on ~1 and an11n119(1 In I men- filed wttn the County Levon Gugaalan, Abdellah Morelli STATEMENT OF ~~· Orange, ......._ ~-~ ~ CIM ol Orange County 2001NM151 ntr ao 11 to**"* thl CtM of Orwige County Prealdenl This at1temtn1 w .. "B"NDONMENT OF .,,. .,........ .,,.. .....__ ,. """r on 05'04l2001 Ot1y Pilot May 10, 17, loadlng on thl ~ on 05/01/2001 Thia statement waa filed with the County "' "' IF YOU. OBJECT lo ducUd by: a oorporallon 200198H1t1 21, 31. 20()1 ThQ3+ truclt. E.iicept Where 20019H3404 llled with the County Clerk cA CQnge County USE OF FICTITIOUS Int granting °' the petl-Have you etarted Daily Pilot May 10, 11. practical dlfficultlea ex- Dally P11ct May 3, 1o, 17, Cieri< ot CQnge County on 04l'Z7/2001 BUSINESS NAME t1on you ellOOld eppear doing but1nett yet? No 24, 31. 2001 Th014 Flctltloue Buafneea ltt. all traeh contalnere 24. 2001 Jl!984 on 05/01/2001 20019N30t4 The following pereon(a) at tilt hNtlng and *9 HB Snug Halt>Or, Inc. Name Stat.ment lhaM be p4aoed on lhe 20019ff334t Delly Piiot May 9, 10, 17, ha• (have) INndoned your objeollon• or tilt Tim Murman •. Pree!-The following peraons cut> of !ht peittway or In Flctlt1oua Butlnffa ~Piiot May 3, fo, 17, 24. 20()1 It!Q05 Ille ·uea d the llctitiout written objec:tlonl with dent .aTATEMEHT OF are doing bueiMa as: lht alley io 11 lo not Name 818tement ~1 Th979 butlllMa name. the court before the Thil statement wu AIANDONMEHT OF SulwhN Gear 19021 creatt ~ prob- Tht fol~ ""--•-·-8 1 Rc:tltlou9 Buatneu Emerling Flnanclal hearing. Your ap· liled with the County USE OF FICTrnOUS Wreallh Pl .. T~. CA "'"' with the guttere . .,. doing u: .-. .. -vuvu• ua neu Name St9tement Group. 404 32nd StrMt, pt11111'a may be In I*· C*tt °' Orange County BUSINESS NAME 92780 Pla<llmellt of ~ o.tgaao Land9c9pe, Name Statement The followlna '*'°"9 Newport Beach. CA &On or by your attorney. on 05/04l2001 The followlng perton{•) Kalrloe Tumey, 19021 is Mio ltlbltd Jo oom- 619 Hamilton St., •B. The f~ persone .,. doing bu.m.iia u: 92663 IF YOU ARE A CR£0: 2001 ... 3797 ha• (have) abwldonecl Wrealth Pl .. Tustin, CA pllal'CI wfth City or Colltl Meea. CA 92627 are doing butlneR u : Morlgage11 com Linda Jensen ITOR or cootingenl c:red-Dally Piot Mey 10, 17, IN UM d the ftctitloua 92780 County ordlnancea. Gabino Delgado, 616 Ooryman'• Inn, 2102 3700 s. su.an s.:. Ste'. Enterpr1sea, Inc. (CA), llor of the dtcHMd, you 24, 31. 2001 Th020 bullnea n11me: Thie buelnesa 111 con· Ste1lon 4. That Hamlllon Ave.. #B, W. Oceanfront, Newport #250 Santa Ana CA 404 32nd Streat, New-must Ille your dllm with tnfomalrlx, 326 North dUCltd by. an lndMdull Section 10.01.070 of the Cotta Meu, CA 92627 Bead\, CA 926e3 92704 ' port Beadl. CA 92683 tile court and mall a Fictitious Bualneaa Nawport Boulevard, Have you started Oper1llon1 Code 11 Thie bullneu la con-Dorym1n'a Inn, (CA), Key Mortgage Cori» The Fictitious Busl· copy to Ille pereonaJ rep-Name Statement Newport Beach, CA dolnQ ~ yet? No 1mendtd 10 read: due1ed by: .,, lndMdual 2102 W Ooeanfrorit, ration. (AZ) 3416 w n .. s name referred to r-Ulivt IPO()lnted by The follow! 92683 Kefrlna Tumey "Seeticn 10.01.070 Per· Have you •tarted Newport B11ch, CA e>r.ngewood, Pho.nix. above WH tiled In Or· lht court Within loor doircl ~ Bui1 C. o.uon. :m>2 Thia ltlltmerll wu mlt1td TralM'rotllbiled doing bualn"' yet? 926e3 AZ. 85051 ange County on monir. from Ille date o1 "t> American as: Valle Road, 1140, San filed with the County Mtt"'8ll (e) The folow- Yea, 04f20.'2001 Thia bualnnl II con-Thll busloen la con-09/06/2000, Ille firll laluanoe ol let· Oil SY*nW Marine Ju.,, Capiatr•no. CA Clel1I °' Orange County Ing ... ptmlltted 10 be Gabino Delgado dueled by a corporation clic:ttd by· e oorponitlon FILE NO 20006839826 tere u Pf(Mdld In ~ Ca Mall • B.!,. MM·A-92875 on 05l04/2001 o1a* In lhl c:onlalnarl This stalemenl wu Heve you alerted Have you alarted Thi• bullne11 la eon· ball Code Mdior1 9100. " 111 Mees, Vlcltl L. Taylor, 1607 20019M3'79 tor colleetiorr filed with the County doing bu1ln111 yet? doing bualr-. y_., No dUCled by: an lndMclJal Tiil time !of filing c::lalml ~507 W. ~•t ~-· Santlago Oriw, Newpoi1 Delly PlloC May 10 17 1 Tmh not ~td Clerk al Or•nna eoun1v Yea, 5'1/2001 Key Mortn.oon1 C"""'-Linde Jensen will not expire before ewport Heh, A Betdl, ,.. .. .....,.,,.. 24 31 2001 Th037' • In 8'.ilttdlon ) hMlal on 04/27rz00l ., Oolvman'e Inn, Inc. ration .-.. ~·..-Enterpriees, Inc four month• from the 92663 ~Ind• Lee~"'ffi West ' ' mey be placed In, the 2001eeeso21 Levon Gugaaian, Pamela Stewart, Aasl. Linda Jensen, Presl-hHrlng date noticed A~aluba, Inc .. (CA), 15th Street, Newport FlctlUoua eualneaa container. Dally Piiot M•Y 3, 10, l7, Preaklent Secretary dent above. ~~wpo':t· ~·~ Hwy~ Bead\, CA 92663 Name Shlwment Loo11 1r11h shall be 24, 2001 Th994 This etatement wae Thit atalement was Thia statement was YOU MAY EXAMINE 92683 ac · c,.. The AC11tlou• Bual· The lol~aons pllctd In a MCUre wrap- liled with the County filed with th• County filed wrth the County Int Ne kept by tht COUit. Thia buellllll 11 con-ne11 name referred to ,,. doing u · oln!I. Included but not FlctlUoua Buatneaa Cieri< of Orange County Cleftt o1 Orange County C1etk ol Oranoe County If you are a person ~ ducted by e -11on above wu filed In Or· G.rvnnet Ente-i...... limited to 1wetp111gS er Name Stat.ment on 05/01/2001 on 04/27/2001 ori 04/27/2001 terested In the eetatt. -..... -ange County on ,.., __ , eaht1 The f 10019M3345 20019H 3011 20019993009 you may lilt With the Have you •tarted 11/10/2000, FILE NO. 1133 E Maplewood Pl · 2 Tree trimmings are~~· Ody Piiot Mey 3. 10, 17, Daily PlloC May 3, 10, 17, Inly P11oC May 3. 10, 17, ooutt a RtqUNI !of Spe-~~".°1~U9ineu yet? 20006846370 ~· ~~IUMCll, grass, ~~~r 111..r_: Soundscape Studlci.. 24. 2001 Th9eO 24, 2001 ThOQ4 24, 20()1 ThOOO ~) ~~ ~ .,,o~ Aqualubt, Inc. d:~ bub~'."8: ~:.i 1133 E Maplewood Pl., = ~"';;~ 6 See leiand Drive, New-Fictitious Bu11,,... Flctltloua Bualneaa Flctltloua BualM•• veot""' and ~'-a' cf Harry E. West, Vice rt hlo Orange, CA 92866 ,.._,. ... .. port Beech, CA 92660 Name Shltement N Na Statement _, .....,._ Prealdenl pa nera 'T Thie business la con-prov"""' uoe .. ems art Brian MoKlnley, 2939 The follow! ame Statement · me estate •SHts er of eny Thia stalement wu V1cld L aytor ducted by: an 1~ out '° lhlll they '!t easily Perla. Newport Belch, ng pereons The followlfl$1 persons T!ie followlng pereons petltlon or 1cooun1 es filed 1 This stetement was Hive you started within IN container for CA 92660 are doing buelneu "· are doing butinesll 11: are doing bulklMI es: provided In Probate w th the County filed with the County removal purpoees Daniel Ekyan SullMln, Greg Pllene Yacht Mortga11 .. 1 com. Multl·Llnt Mark•ltng Code aectlon 1250. A ~~~°"?' County Clel1' ol Orange County ~~~ 411~1•iness yet? (b) The to11ow1,,g are 6 See leland onv.. Ntw· Servlet, 80 Huntington 3700 s. suun SI.. lnsuranca Brokere and Reque.i for Sc>edal No-on ~I Lr.di Ellen Grunnel prohibited lrom being port 8eadl. CA 92el!O St, 1471, Huntington #250, Santa ~. CA A111oelal11. 730 El lice form Is available 200'9N3107 20019"3799 Thie statement was plaC*S In Ille corulnen Thie bullnea la con-eeagi. CA 92648G 92704 Camino Way, 1st Floor, from Ille court deftc. ~1'.1C:o1May 1M7; Ody Piiot May 10. 17, filed with Ule County lcr ooledlon ducted by. 1 genentl regory eorge 111 Pref1<tne1 Mort· Tustin, CA 92760 Altomey fOf P9Wol111 -24. 31. 20()1 Th015 Cletll ol ~ County 1 Hazardous meteriala partnerehlp Pilette, 80 Hunllogton gage Corporation, (MD~. Ryan Robert Mertin. Tlmothy J. Kay, Eeq. on 04/l ll200l lncludlnQ paint, motor Have you llarted ~~6l· ~lington 9309 Belair Aoed. BaJti. 1789 Pomona, Unit C, SSH 132312 Fictitious Business Flctltloua BuaJneaa .. 2001ne1279 ~.!:. ~ batterle•, doing bu1in111 yet? This bualne11 Is eon· more. MD 21236-1608 Costa Me;ta. CA 92627 Olbeon, Dunn & Name St9tement ""--s•-t---t Diiiy Pilot May 10 17 ..... .......,....... •. Yes, 4/27/200l This bullne11 It con-This business Is ex». Crvtcnw, U.P The totlowlng peniona ...,.,_ .. ........ 200 Jho38 2 Liquid w1111 Brian McKinley ducted by~ an Individual ducted by: 8 oorpon1tion dueled by: an lndividull 4 Plftt fltazl, at.. 1400 1,.. doing bulirl8llS aa: The following pertons 24, 31, l 3: Medical Wiiie inolud- Thls statement was Have you 11erted Have you elarted Have you •tarted lrvlne, CA 92914 The Evergreen Group, are doing builMsa as: Ing ayiingel filed with the County doing buslntea yet? doing bullneM yee7 No doing tx.lneSI yet? No Published Newport 500 Old ~ Blvd. Newport Cout Poet and ORDINANCE NO. 37 4 ConstruCtlon debrie. Clertt cf Orange County Yes, 19n 1st Preference Mort· ~an Robert Martin Beach-Coeta Mesa Sulle 202, Newport Spa. 21e 22nd Streat, AN ORDtHANCE OF llOd, concrete, roctts, cin 04l'JCY200l P 1 ~regory George gage Corporation his 11atement was Dally Piiot M•y 10, 16, 8eadl. CA 921563 Costa Meu. CA 92627 THE COSTA MESA dirt, m1n11r• or klmber. 2001ne3251 1 e e Robert J Herrera EVP filed WTlh the County 17, 2001 George Major Carnie, ~ JamM Patbr, SANITARY 5 "E-w..-· lo 1ncbit Diiiy Pilot May 3, 10, 11, f~!_.his etat~en!._~11 Thia etalamenl w11 Cletlt of Orange County 500 Old Newport etvd., 218 StrMt, Costa DISTRICT ~ ..., and oom-24, 2001 Th987 ...... With t... vvvnty filed With lhe County on 04/27/2001 Acttlloua Buslneaa Suitt 202. Newport Meu, CA 92627 AMENDtNG THE Pl'* monlllorl and 9lmj.. ~ ~,~"f' County C1et1t o1 Orange CounlY 2001eeuo2a Name Slat9ment Beec:h. CA 92663 This bueiMP le con-DISTRICT'S TRASH llr deVI089 wNch eon· Flctltloua Bualneaa Name Statement Thefol~s are doing 11: Skyline Printing, 1007 W. Grove, Unit G, Or· 11'198. CA 92885 JOMPh Paul PiocQla, 1515 Shldow Lalfi. Fulefton. CA 92831 Janet JHn Plooola, 151!l Shado~ Lene, FUlenon, CA 92831 This bullne.. la oon- <l>Cted by: husband and wife Hive you slarted doing bulln111 yet? v-. llOS/99 Jolepl'I Peul Plocola Thie statement waa filed with lhe County Clerk °' Orange County on 05/01/2001 20019813338 Dally PiloC May 3, 10, 17, 2A, 20Qf Tll983 Flctltlou. Buatneu Name Stalem.nt Thefol~s .,. doing u · Alllorme Expre11, 3629 W. MacArthur Blvd., '205, S.rU Ma. Callfomil 92704 Brent Ellle Mtlvllle, 2e200 Loyola. MINlon Vleio. c.tifornla 92892 Thia bueinMI i9 con-cM:t9d by .,, Individual Have you started doing bu1lne11 yet? YM. 01119195 Brent Mttville Thie atalement was llled with the County Oelt of Orange County on 04/Z7/2001 2001 ... 3051 ~Pllol May 3. 10, 17, 4 1 IlJ9§8 Flctltlou8 lkl.tneaa Name StMement The lcllowlng Ptf800I .,. doing bulilNa ... ~ G111phica, m 19th Slrttl. Coate Meu. CA 92927 Sheryl Ann Rtuch. n 1 I 9111 Streat, Coata Meu. CA D2'7 Thie bualnell le con- duded by: an lndMcMll 20019 .. 3344 on 04/27/2001 Dally Piiot May 3, to. 17, The lollowlno perwon1 This busineu te· con-due.tad by: an ~ REGULATIONS tatn calhodt ray tut>ee Diiiy Pilot May 3, 10, 17, 2Q019993012 24. 2001 Th998 are doing ~ a : dueled by. an lndMcMI Have you llarted FOR THE ~lh -~er or other ha/Tn- 24, 2001 Th981 Daily Piiot May 3, 10, 17, Fictitious Bual ..... aa Drywall Services. Hevt you •tarted doing bu1lnea1 yet? '"' "'"'" -· --24. 2001 Th003 ,,. 10251 Cuttyeark Or., doing bu1ln111 yet? Y11, 4-1-00 STANDARDIZED (c) Large items may be f1ctltloua BuaJnen Name Statement Hunllngtori Beach, CA Y ... 04/01/2001 Colby Jamea ParklK CONTAINER colleeled a1 'Olf1aln times ..,_ 6 Flclllloua Bu1lnea1 The loflowl~s 92648 George M Camie Thia atalement was PROGRAM eedl y111 through ~ ... me tatem.nt Name Statement are ~ u : T1molhy Clar!< Mellon, Thia at•lemtnl WU flied wtlh Ille County WHEREAS, pursuant dal coltdlon ~ ~~~ ~wtnp per90ne -~201At~~ Re-10251 CuttyNrt< Or., filed with the County Clerk°' Orange County to Health and Saftty Tht11 ittma would ln- Fa('flut Olegnoltica. ere """'"' buainM1 u -"'-"" ._, Ave., Huodnglon Beach. CA CIM ol Oninae County on 05.'0&'2001 Code Stdlon M21, lhl elude furniture, ap- 17771 .. ..... .. 1_....... A Canter FOf Pt!IOI & Newport Beach, CA 9264e on 05f04l200f 20019M4147 Olalrlel has enaeced e planoea end cfllf N:h CA nn~..,, 1"· ,.,,..,, Healing, 28891 Mo6-92662 This bu11""9 11 con-20011'63909 ~ PlloC May 10, 17, llandardlzed container lerge Items. 01tre< ~ Tnicy La Pierre. 2640 jeska canyon Ad., Mod-Jennifer C. Noonan, dueled by. an lndMOJal Delly ptot May 10, 17, _!_ i. 2001 Th0?9 program !of lhl llOrage c1a1 ptOgl1ltnl may COi* Catalpa. Newport jesll.a, CA 92676 207 &bv Ave., Newport Have you 11artad 24, 31. 2001 Th022 and removal of trash Christrn41• trffl, uHd .. _...... C. .,,,660 Martina Constantino Bead!, CA 92662 doing bullnals Y.lt? No FlctltJoua Bual_.• from residences Within 011, used ayrlnges and """""'• "' "" ~ Geeta Sacred Thia bullne11 Is con· TlmOthy Clalk Mellon ...... I " This buslne11 la eon-), 2869, u-..."-6.. ducted by an Individual Thi• .. 1temenl was Flctttloua Bual,,... Name Statement Ille Olsttlct; and t ~'!:...... .. Vi ........ duoted by: an lndMdual ' '"""fV-.. •• N•me Slat9ment The following '*'°"' WHEREAS, the Oii-.,..._,., ... icQ,.,, .. ~ of Htvt yow etarted Canyon Rd., Modjnkl, Have you •tarted filed with the County are dolnQ ~ ea: lrfet eneded uld pro-tN. ordiNnct lhlll be ~::., ~~ No c~:~!n. .. II con-~~~ No ~ ~°"?' County ~~~r:;" &~RJIOO·CHARLES ~wnti!tt~~~ min= ~·oro~ Tiiis atatement _, ducted :1· an unln-This ateternent WU 20(l1"'37M Rainbow Systems. TATCH ~NORMAN aathellee of the com-the Operallonl Code ~ ~h()rangethe CouCol.Wltynty :':':!an 8 auoclaPll~ ~"' :'1 ....... ~ ~~ ~1~1Mav 1%,o1 1 7 2• ~ C~=ll Blvd.. ESTATE EQUITIES. munlty end reduce -~ 9 ~ ~ .__ .. UI ........ .,, ..,._.,,.. ~ .. , -• -·· --1223 B•vr.:nl• Or., worker lnjur1•• Ind _ ...... UM or _....., UI '"'"' Heve you lllrttd on 04f271'>tV\1 ~ W. Wad9Wor1h, l.._......, I ffi t ... , "'-"----... "'-on v .... vl/2001 '•"" Newport tech, CA ,....,_, ncrease e • '" ..,,.,,....,,...., ""' .,.... 2001 ........ 334 doing butlntss yet? 20019883014 Flctltloua Bualneaa 415 . Balboe Blvd., .........., .............. ~ ......,_ dertd by ~ o1 ........ Yes. 12114t.2000 Dally Pilot May 3, 10. 17. Bal>o9, CA 92681 926eo _,.., ...... -· ........ Dally ~ u .y 3 "' 17 Name Stat.ment u..---I Tatch, 1223 anoe oct111 whk:tl will '*-oompttent to 24 200r""'1 ..,. • ~ .. .; Martina Constantino 24, 2001 Th997 Thie buall'leM la eon-.. ·:::.::..,-t• Dr N tfma+.1u rffUlt In aavtnoe be invllkl. lhe rtrNWng · "~ (a~~) Geel• Sacred ar~~lo:~=s dUcted by: an ~ .,.,...,.n • · ewport 10 hduzeoe of the 1)19. proW!ont of thi• Or· FlctJtloua BuaJneaa $o Thi Actltloua Bualneaa The Oolphln Group, Hevt you 1llH•d ~· ~~ con-1r1ct; and dinance ahaH never· Name Statement s statement wH Name Statem.nt 500 Old Newport Blvd., doing bullne11 yet? dueled by an lndMduel WHEREAS, the Dia-lhelMt be Ind remain In The f<!'lowlng ptf9(lna ~ :lhn...~ ~~ n.. following peraons l202, Newport Bead!, Y~J..~~ldlYrontl Have you started bict hu now aUlhor\z.ed lull torct end eftiect and are doing bue1iM11 as; ..,._.,,.. """'"' art doing bUllilMa u: CA 92863 ·--1 dot b el t? Iha purc:hue of 1tan-lhl 8oetd ol ~of ~ '= 1991 on 04/27/2001 To Ott For, n5 W. Linda J Martin, 600 Thia llatement was ng u MN ye dardlzed cootalnere In the Colla MMe Senltary ' 2001•••3010 .,.., S St ,..~ 01 filed wrth the Cou-. YM, May !, 2001 DI I j t f 0 Pert Tr1nrty Cl . New-......, 1 • m I., • J, ..,..... d Newport Blvd.. ..., NolTntn 1. Tl1ch dllltrent Ill• lof eYtry • r c o range port e..cft, CA 92eeo Diiiy Pilot May 3, 10. 17, Mesa, CA 92927 '202, Newport Beach, Claf1t of Orange Counly Thie llalement wa• f9lidlnce 1n lhl Dlatricl County, Calilornfa, Patrtcla Sletlt, 1991 24, 2001 Th002 Soot! Brady Wtlstlar, CA 92663 on 05'04l2001 flted with Cou and the Dlatricl will own hereby declares that Port Trinity Circle, New-Fictitious Bual-• 22245 Latlc St .. Grend This bullnea1 i• con-20019M37H Cleft( of ~ ~ the contalnere but lht Mch and every Mellon. port Baadl, CA 92860 H S ,.,.. f8ff8Ct, CA 92313 dueled by: an lndMdual Dilly Pilol May lO, l7, on 05'06l200l rMldente will have the oleuM, provielon er pert Thia buelneM 11 eon-•me tatement Thi• bllllnesa la eon-Have you 111rtad 24, 3l, 200! Th025 200, ..... 151 UM thereof; Ind ol this Ordinance WOUid ducted by: .,, lnclYldual The lolloWlng ptf900I ducted by· an ~ doing bu1ln111 yet? De"" Piiot u-7 WHEREAS, aald Pf<>-hive been adopted end Have you 1t1rttd are ~ 11· Have you llarted Ya, 4/llOI Flctltlou1 Bualneaa 24 "31 2001 ..... , 'Mi gram hat been coonl-midi 1 pert ol lt1il Or· doing bualnMt yet? No The Liquor, doing bu1lne11 yet? lhil J Martin Name ~·· nated With the Dlltrid'a dlnanoe without lhl Palrlela SI.... 6110 w t Hwy., Y•. 12124199 Thia statement WU The ~ franchlsld trlel'I eolac-adoption ol lt'ff pottion Thia etatemtnl "'" Newport Beaeh, CA Scott Br'""" Welsher filed with the r~.-. ptf'IOl'\ll Flctltlou. BualnMa tor, Coeta Miu CM-ltltt90I end 1tml h lo-92663 Tk1--· """''"' -ti'!! u: ·-'""· ,J filed with the County ZJJ ~· 6110 ..... , etatemenl was Claf1t of Orange Colny MUlll Color Klan. 8411 Name Stali9ment poeal, and inpltmenla· ~alldlty (,, lt'ff Pf'!._~ Cletlc of Orange ~ filed With the County on 05l04f.l001 Dallu Clrel'..i. Hunt-The following per90nl lion le to take pl9c:ie -,...ovlllon '*'°' .. _ on CM/27/2001 W. Cout .. Newport Clel1' ol. Orange County 200teM3711 ingtcrl 8eactl 1.;A 92649 .,. doing buM*' .. : a one v-plllOd; and not In arry -r dect lht 20019M3029 ~· ~nt .. le con-on 04/2712QQ1 Dally Pilot May 10, 17, ""Mathen s' Schwab Newman Properties WHEREAS, tht Bo.id velldlty or •nfofoemenl belly Piiot May 3. 10. 17, ducted "": an .......,.,., ... , n.."" Piiot ~!019N3027 24, 3L 2001 Il!Q13 6411 Oinia Clrcle'. u.c, 3501 MM:UI Av. ol ~ doM lhtre-of Ill• remaining 24 2001 Th990 vr· • ...,._ -r may 3, 10, 17, Huntl""'~ Bet.... CA nut, Newport BNch, CA lore dNlr9 to reptll Its pr~ ol llU Or• ' Hevt you ttarted 2i, 2001 Jb995 Flctltloua Bualneu 9264a-v·~· "''· 926&3 lnconelltent regulationl dnanoe that may l&8nd flctJtioua eualneaa doing bu1lne11 yet? Name Statem.nt R-.. -P Apon Newr111n Propertlea Ind to adopt new regu. on their own Na!M Stat.ment Yes, Jen. 29, 2001 Fictitious Bualne.. Thll followtng perlOl\I 541 lianei Clrcl:; LLC. (CA), 3601 Man::w ldont and lhet w4I fm. Section 7. Punuant to The lollo'tlt1ng pe-s ~~t~ WU Name Statement -doing bUllMaa ... Hunti""'on ........ CA Avenue, NH•POrl plement and regulate HMlth and &iN4Y Code ere ~ ~·;;: ,,_ ... .,,....,,. n.. tollowinQ pereons The Nall Salon at F0ur 926-4G.... .....,.,, Beach. CA 9'2963 the llandardlzed con-SKtlona &490 and C.pltel Llmouelne, filed wl\tl the .County .,. doing bueWlele aa; S.MON, 990 Newpof1 Thll ~ 11 con-Thia bullntA II con-fainer program; 6491 3, the Cleflt ftll 3617 Weit McArthur ~~~ County SNp to Shore RM!ty, Cerlter Drive, Newport clic:ted by: ~ cluQed by. Umi1ed IJa. NOW, THEREfORE. ca.. tt1lt onirwa er Blvd., 1505, Santa NII, 200letelOOI 6800 Wimer Ave., 8each, CA 92fi60 Hive you etarted l>lli1y Co. the eo.rd of Dlrecmr'I of 1 eummary flereof '° bt CA 92704 t229. Huntington Magdalene Saade, ~butlnttt ......., No Hive you alerted IN Colltl Mela SlnltalY published In a ,,._. C•""tel lnlemallonal, Delly Piiot May 3• IO, 171 BNch, CA 92647 13208 Myford Ad •"""' ......... , .. ' .w.v. buMltM ......, No Olettlct 00.. hereby OAl Pl!* ol gtntr1ll drclAa· lnc.(Oelawert), 16027 24 2001 ThOO! KathlHn McGraw T~.bu CA~,..'!?. 9:8{ con~.. This ,t;;;;;!n1 wH N':wman-Pt= DAlsN,0u110to11owsn 1.: Thal ~P:".!4! ~ Brookhurst St .. #0·121 , Negret:L 605 Maltby ..... --.. flied With the County LLC • .::::; 0 . u.. --Fountain Valley, CA Cell lt491'4t·S61I etvd., Diil Bear City, CA cllJcttd by: an lndMcl.ltl CtM cf Orange eoi.ny • Pr Sec:!llcl1 10.01.040 ol lhl cording lo law Md h 92708 92314 Have you atarttd on 05l04f'l001 nit. llaltlMnl wu <>s>-ratlont Code I• llhaM tax• eneet upon Thia bu.in.. Is °°"" ''' • ,.., _,, Thia butlnell la oon-dolr1g butlnelt yet? No 2001...,191 flNd wltl'I the County •rNnded to read: the •KP!rallon of one duded...,. a nrvnnratJon t• .,.,. '•~ f"· duded i...; an lndlvtdUll ~ Sea~ ~-... ....... CtM of n.-,.._...., "6tc:ldl'I 1001.040 ~ WMk after . Pllblica ljon. vr· -..-Hev•v'.you •••rt·.. ·•· .._ ~, to, 17, ~r --~, taint!•· #f PASSED AND ... -ement -s _!_!. 2001 TbOie on 2001At414t (a) CotUlnerl Ultd tor ADOPTED by .. Boent OMHCt COUNTY TAX COt.L.ECTOtlt ..... ,. doing ~ ywt? No filed whh the County ~Pict u .... 1~ reeldenlial cotltctlon ol ~ ol lhe CoMa ~~.::::· w .. ~ ~arwr County F1ctJtloua 1ua1neu ~'· 2001~' ™ .. be flOtl PtOYided ._. Sanllary ~ • filed with the Counly 2001 ... n 11 Name s~ by the DIMi1ct hough Ill a "~' m .. 1~ 01tc11 cf Orange County ~ P11oC May 10. 17, The followtna 1*10t11 Flct .. '-·-8,_1.,.... .~~'~.:. •• Said con-~.. !!!, the 1 HOTU OI PWIJC AUC'TIOM ON JUME $, 2'11 OI fAll OUAUl TlD PWOTY '°" OllJMQUDlf f AJCD Ori .lm 6. 2Q11 I Jdrtt "'W ~ Olwlgt Ccu11y ~ 191 COlllclDf, .. dll'ICIM 10 condUtt •MIC MllOll '* "1 .. tlclWd d .....-.111~~~1111 i. ........ ~lllld ...... -....-111 r. Cclllle*'l llo.wof ... lMl lllllMc ........ ,,.,_wlbelllld • lw IUdlan •UO .-. o.,iw. SI '"TN Oft-!.1111~•U0p.11.~-·--·-'•11 n.~ .. CltllllfOll lll..,..Ol!Ylflool hM11t•'9cionMllil•1,_..MtolllO .. _.._.., •ba11h..-.mlnJal .. Uftlled .................. bllll ........ _._ '*'•.,_on"' nolDa. ~...,. .......... ll*dl lrl"' w -• pt.....,,. '-00 p.111. ~ ..... TNwl nat 111 ldd. Thi• of,..._,•-M ... .._ • ...,._,. ......... -. ..................... o1 ............... ~----T.-C.- lldllll 4'71.~e •ID•a -.-N~b .. --,._.. ..... .... ·e...,.._. .... _..o1 ............. ., ........ Cllllilll d .. . ................. Nob .. 111.;.to _.. ............. . ....... ...-....... ................... -.c.... 12 0.-~"--"-"<MISlrtllM •al(1'4)1M-6l'Otb .. ~ ........ .-iuclan. ""'~ ........... (.W). ............... ~ti ........... .. ,,..... .......... ,.. .............................. .... ·-:i .... :· ................................... ... ... _.. ...... ............... ,. ................. .... ................................ .-........ tt°"'c.. ..... -. Mt:.... .. ,. .................. -..... "'°"""~.~ .. .. ............ -. Ulll - pi ml, .Za m-..... ...,.-. ............. ,,,..., ............ ... ........ .. ,, ........ ............... --.a.-...... , P I I .............. ----- on 2001see3037 ~i. 2901 , TbOJZ are doing butlntia 11: •uuvw -,,... a • ..,, .... " be atao-a1y "' ... .., .. ....,1, 2001 ... 3037 Pro PT • Phyalc.J Name ,.......,. dardlzed to allow for le/ Arttnt lcf\af~. n.-.. Pb May .. 10 17 rt~-1 ·-•...... Therapy • PtttOnal The followlna W--Mml .. utomattd co11eOo '....went ii."2oo1 "' ni99;j ":N;;'i~ Tr::t. 27725 s.nta .,. ~ ~·--1loo M dttlmllntd Md IW Miu I\ Pwry, ISC 10UO The~ ~~~~ =~~~ ~: ':r:: ~ NOTICe OF ~~ Pt .... :,_ 92891 Avenue, Com MIN , ~ no Pl'IOn fMX ~HIA) PETmOH 111r1ea, 30100 Town Wllltlfl'ont AlnMt and CA ~ UM t/l'f °"* !ype cii Of TO AOfMiltSTER Center Dr , 1348, N\Mtlon (CA), m25 UM Tuan t..a, 8'11 ~ ~~ IQn.lft ~ SS l. NI I C Santa Mara:~:~ N9tomtl A~. Wttt• ,_....,_ ---• ,,.,, • vr EltATI OF: guna gue . A PIUl<My, 1210, l'nlrllWl ~ _92183 prov~. COSTA MESA) RICHARD 8. • 92 R~t1 A Peecoe Vlelo, CA 92et1 Thie OU8lfllM la con. (b) The oomblntd ~ I. JOAN REVAK, Clelit HUMllRT 30100 Town Cent•; Th19 bU~ 11 ~ du'1ld by: an ~ d lht oonalntr n con-ct the Cotta MMe S.. CASE NO, A201MI Drive, •340. ugune duded by: e OCMporab Hive you 1l1rtfd "'* tor oaltCtlon .,.. l•ry __ Oletr1ct, htftby To ·" htlia, .. _ __.._ NIGi* ,. • .....-Heve you 1tar1ed doing ~tint" ... ,? not tllCMd 160 poundl. *lllY INt the aboV9 da~·ettdltort. ~ Thla·~'I. con-dotng butlntta yet? Y• 6-1-01 ~) M lnllh (• dllr'9d •nd fore90ln11 Or· lngtl'lt Cltdltore, and ~ 11'1' en~ Y• 5/tA>I lWt La .. Code *18 _. dlntllOt ..,, '7, wu ptf1ICllW '1lf10 nwy "'*' Have you •tarted W*"">nl F1r"'9 and Thie .,...,,_. wae l&I eAdullOM) lllUlt tit duly •l'ICI -E .... bt ~In .. ~bultrlw ~ No ~ =-wtltl the ~ =='to"=' ...... c: ::,··:o:: of by ~....,. or bo4h, '*' -....... A. PMOOt ,,."/t" San!Of. Prtll-on ~T ~ ftA IO ...., IM fllte w at • r-ouW rneetirlD ' ,,.. ... l.mtnl WM Thia lt01~1IO oltltf ,..-T~ lflliotof, t..-1 enfll10lfi HUMBERT Ned Wiii tnt County flltcl Wlttl.....,... WU ~lPlct, """IMIY 1~ m111t bl Call ao fllt "9Y !19Y cf Mly 2001, by h A PETITION FOR Qeltl d °'9l1CM ~ Qtlt of n.!!!. ~ ~--!!:!!!. ~ Ill OGmfil-..V ""*". H ~ ~ PROBATE! hu been on OMWZOOf ~j""' -•1 00111a1ntf and IO f11t ttlt Aftli ............ ~ '\i'":'~ Delw ~ '::~ on IOt1..,_ "'**'-lulln•• oonllilw Id .. .,.._ • ~ Wu••"•• Art ~ ~ W)L 20Q! J)Qtj :'51~Mir 1~ .... lllll ...e ::="' ~1 ._ :::•w::1 ,_,ULUJ, THE PETl'TION FOA fl•u• .... -TM ~ ....... oi.tct~ MOia: .. PAOBATI ~ ..._ • I I• fllll*9 9u1ll•1 ~=n ~ ::.: ,.l:-.::r: = ~ W, TM ...... 1*101W ..._ 1•11 ... .-111t1> lllldl a .... tOI, to .... • ,.._.... IN MTMSS be ~~ aa pet· .. ~ bulilta9p,...-.. ~ TM '°'""" ,........,. ""'9tt IMch, CA m 'II .. _...,, WHINOF, I,_. ..... eon111 ,.,, ... UIYe '°' --· -....... .. dolilll IMt-. ... tlttO .._.. 11 °' flt .,,. ... mr ..,., .,.. ,,. ....,, IN ...... Of ~ Md Con-SuMllellOI "8oNlt-W•ttn ~ttlt!O not W. w11i11n I'll ._. "8 NII .e h l'la~ITION ,.. lliUcillon. 175 L ._ ~ OrouD1 ..c>' ..._.. ~ ICA). "20 ......, on M ooc. F-5.._ ~ ._.. fll ................. .,... A. COiia N , ttf ... o.w c111 ...-~ ......... 106. ...., ..... ......,,._ ... ._.ti Wlln-1-. -..CAL-Y ~-CA --~ ._. CA ............ _. MIW. -_,., """'" UllW Cdlll ...... ""° ............. bt "" ........... ... bt ...... ID ~-Coe• •!'\. Inc. , .01 ~ Ad , tt14, INI ...._. a. ...,. ...... ,_ 18 .. -. .... Oallll ... ._ lhlWl•MJ _... 211 l. .._ CM1M dlf .... CA .... ..,. •• F..._ ~~ ... !'ft.--~=.: === ...... CA '=',......It OClfto .J;"'~-= ~ I T1'lt ;:... ·-=-= '¥ ~ °'=•nlON ,.. mlDrl (NV). = ~.W ::.11$ y'•=~ Mwl • I t::.:.-'1 :.:' ': ==-r ~ . =--=--~ -=-...r-= ...z;r-:;.. ~luatMU Name 11Nment TM tollowlna · '*'°"' t1reti'IJ ........ u : Hom -0oa Cl&r1neta and Woodwli'idt, 18171 EUCiid Aw.. Fountelo V~1 CA 92708. ~ Nell Swtcic.ard, 835 Arnlgol Way, 19, NewpOl't Beach, CA 929&0 Thia bulinMI le oon-dUdld by: 1n lndMdual Have you •tarted doing bu*lllta y.rl .No Jae« Ntll SW!c*aro Thia ataltrMnl waa flltd With the County CIM of 0rwige ~ on 05f 11 l'2001 2001 ..... 548 Dally Pb May 17, 24, 31 Jynt 7, 2001 Th0o42 Fktttlou• Bualneaa Name Statement Thll followlna persons .,. doing ~ as: Venguard Cara As· 1ea1mtnt, 2868 S.ylhore Or.. IA2, Newport 811ch. CA 92663 Deborah Hunlet, 2688 Beyehort Or.. •A2. Newport Btach, CA 92683 Dody Blebelberg 2888 Ba';lhor• Dr .. •81, Newport Beach, -CA 92583 Thie bualness Is con· dueled by I general partntr•hrp Have you slar1ed doing bUllnt9ll yet? No O.Oo<ah Hunter Thia at1tement was tiled with the County Cieri< of Orange County on 05(11/2001 20019994550 lWy Piiot May 17. 24. 31, Jynt 7, 2001 Th0o43 FlctltJoua Bu.Ines• Name Statement The following persona are doing buafness as· Wtaltrn Alliance 1001 W 17th Street. Ste 5, Celta M98, CA 92627 Stephen a..-. VS7 Foreman. Long Be1eh. CA 90815 This businMS IS COO· cNe1ed by: .,, lndMdual Have you elarted doing buelrll9a yet? No Steve Btfena Thia 1ta1eman1 was filed With 1M County Clettl °' Orange County on 05f11/200t 20019M4551 Dilly Piiot May 17' 24 31, Jyot .7· 20()1 T!lO« Flctl11oua BualneH Name Statement The lellowlng persons .,. doing bUlfrltlS ts Talking Ball. 11562 Knoll St., &Ate 17, Gar· din Gtvve, CA 92641 8redl9y Sneed, 11562 Knoll St., &Ile 17. Gar· den Oro\11, CA 92&41 T1mcttly Otu. 11582 Knoll St.. Suite 17. Gar- den Grove, CA 92841 Fu-Mel Tai, 11562 Knott St , Suite 17. Gar- den Grove. CA 92&41 Thia bUal""9 is con· dueled by: C01Jlfhr's Have you 111ned doing ~ yfl(? No Tlmottly Olaa Thia atatament was filed with l"8 County Cieri< °' Orange County on 06/15l2001 2001e9&4819 o.lly PlloC May 17, 24. 31, Jy!lt 7, 2001 ThQ51 Flcttlloua Bualnesa Name Statement The lolow4np penons -doing bUlinlll IS. Fan Alhenc., 2291 Elden Ave., Cotta Mesi, CA m27 Julie Holland, 2291 Elden Ave . Coeta Mesa. CA m27 Thia busitltll is eon- duc*<I by an ~ Hava you etarted ~~yfl(? No Thie ll&temenl WIS !tied with the County CIM of er.,. County on 05f1!/2001 2001"'4553 Diiiy Ptot May t7, 24, 31, Jy!lt 7, 2091 TI!04S Flctttloue eu.lneu Name ltlit.menl The ~ pereons .,. doing~ ... Unlveni.I [)iglWJ and Satalllte, 3503 W ~rook Or . ' CA 8'2804 M•ry K. Kovalcin, 33C) w. ~ Or,. Mlhelln, CA 92804 Thia bulll-.M .. con. cb:ted by' en ~ Have you al•rttd doing IMlnta ~ No ~Kovalcin Thl9 ... ,.,,,.,,. was llltd whh the County Cltltc of Or~ County on 0611,/200f .......... D9llY Plot Mly 17 24. 31, N!! Z, 2001 ibo40 ActtUcMae ........ .... l•h!MM TM folowtnQ ptl'IOnt .,.~~-Crown MIUwork, 1811-A ~ Avt., COltil M1M. CA 92«l1' 8111 VOIMllt. 234 E. 1lltl .. • COiia ..... CA _., Thia ...... Ill con-~ llVl "' lnllvkMil He~. Y9U . •llrttd "°*"9 ~ yet? v ... 3'tml01 •v~ ,... llilllllNrt. . .. tied 11111· .. CoUntJ a. fl °"'* CWllY °" Gift lt'aOO'f" ........ Dillr .... ..., ,., ... 11. -,,.,, i»tt DOily Pilot ~ .·, ~r, . 1 ( F1callout lu.lneu flied Wfth the qounty ...... 818'9ment Qeitt of ()rMgl Cow"llY The followlnCI penone on 0!5115'2001 .,. tiig ~ w 2001ueq)t USA 1.oan, 410 3111 [)Uy Piiot May 17, 24, St., Hewpol1 8-ch. CA 31. J\IQ! Z. 2901 Th063 .... ~bur11 Mortgige, FlctJttou1 au.ineu (CA). 410 3111 St,,.._.: Name StMe!Mnt port EIMd\. CA 112983 The followil:lll ptttona Thi. buainell Is con-Ill doklo ~ ... dueled !JV. 1 COIPO'alJOn ScotT J. C1rty H•ve you 1t•rt1d Ent~. 2039 Irvine doing b4J1ln111 y11? Ave., Cotti MIN, CA v ... 11188 92827 Sullbol'lt Mortgeg1 Scott J C111y, 2039 John A. Gllchrlll, Irvine Ave • Irvine, CA Pr11ldent 92627 This etatlmlflt wH This business Is COO· filed with the County <kldld by: an lndMdull Cltt1t of Orange County Have you 1tart1d on 05/11/2001 dc!lnll buslOtae yet? No • 200111164859 Soc:iC1 J. Carey Dally Piiot M1y 17 24 This statement was 31. Jynt 7 .. ?001 009 ~:'r1t ~t~:;. = Flctftloua Bu1lneu on 05115/2001 NenM Statement 20016H4837 The following peraoni Daily Piiot May 17, 24, .,. doing bulinlM u : 31. June 7. 200 I Th054 Premiere Ent1rt1ln· mint, 14 Hugh11, tB206, Irvine, CA 926t8 IOlaltach Consulting, Inc.; 14 Huclhtl. t8208, IMne, CA §2618 Thll butlnest .. 000· dUctld by: • corporetlon HIVI you lllrted doing bus1neu yel7 Yes. 1/01 IDlg1tech Consulting Inc. Robert Fnu, Pres1· dent This statement was lllld with the County Cletk ol Orange County on 05/t 5/2001 20018H4839 Dally Piloe May 17, 24, 31. June 7. 2001 !hQ52 Flctltlou1 Bu1lne11 Name Statement The following person• are doing buslnets as. Grendma's Cott1ge Helrtoont Antiques. 670 West 17th Street, Costa Mesa. CA 92627 Glorta Gent Loudon, 430 Bolero Way, New· poll Qtach. CA 92663 This buslneu IS con- ducted by an ~ H1v1 you started doing bu1lne11 yet? Yes, Apr1I 1, t998 Gloria Gene Loudon Thia statement w11 Fictitious Bu1lnaas Name Statement The f otlowing peraons 111 doing business u · Consumer Benefits Association West. 5282 Cornell Ave West· minster. CA 92683 Corey M Lyon. 16521 South Peeific, Sunset Beach. CA 90742 Thie buSIM5S ls con- ducted by an Individual Heve you started doing business ye1? No Corey M Lyon Th11 statement was llled wllh Iha County Cieri\ of Orange County on 05115/200 t 20016864836 Daily Piiot May 17, 24, 31, June 7. 2001 Th055 Flctltloua Buslne1s Name Statement The folloW1ng persons are dOJng busfness as· Cu Recovery, 3413 W. Fordham Ave , Santa Ana, CA 92704 Gardner Systems, Inc. (CA), 34t3 W Fordham Ave , Senta Ana. CA 92704 This business is con· ducted by a corporahon Have you sta'1ed doing business yet? No Gardener Systems, Inc. Joe Oardnlt, Pflli. dent Thie Slllllment WIS filed llWith the County ~05/~~ CounlY 2001~1 Daly Pilot May 1~ 31. J\!!! 7. 2001 ~ Fictitious BualMll Nmne Statement The followino persons .,. doing bueWllia u : Wik'• Team, 22992 Tlegua, Mission Vi.jo, CA 92692 Claudette Bianchi, 22992 Tlagua, Mlellon Vi.to, CA 92692 Thia bull~sa Is· con· ducted by: an lndlvldual Have you started dOing buSlnea yet? No Claudette Bianchi This statement w11 flied with the <::®nty Cle!tl ol Orange Coonfy on OS/151200I 200188'4832 Deily Pilot May 17, 24, 31, June 7, 2001 ThQ58 Flctltlou1 Bualnau Name Statement The following plfSOllS are doing business as· W. Morrison & Co .. 21946 Montagu, Mi5llOl1 Viejo, CA 92692 William Morrison Yates, 111, 2 1946 Montagu, MISSIOn V11to. CA 92692 This business is con- ducted. by. an ~ Ha~e you started dotng business yet? No W~llam M. Vales. Ill This statement was filed wtlh the County Olert< ol Orange County on 051 t 5/2001 20018864840 Oa1ty Pilot May 17, 24, 31. June 7, ?Q01 Th059 Fictitious BualneH Name Statement The lollowlnp persons are doing buSIOISS 11; George Sc oil Enterprises, 3350 Nevada, Costa Mesa CA 92626 George Ellis Scott, 3350 Nevada, Costa Mesa. CA 92626 This business IS con- ducted by: an lndMdUal Have you started Index Ill -·-r:.I -.... . t:l g .... fl ,, •• s .. -·- SEllVICE DIRECTORY -fof' .U Your H~ and 8uliM9 NHdl -.................. ____ _ FlctttJou1 Buatneu Heme Stat.ment The foltowlng peraone .,. doing bu.in.. u : Michelle Mo11rot, 111489 Vie Del Cabello, Yortla Linda, CA 9288e Mlohelle Lynn Cravens. 19469 Via Del Caballo, Yorba Lindi, CA 9288e Thia b11t1ne11 le con· ducted by: an lndMdu1I Hive you started doing b111lnesa ,yet? Yes, Af>rll 19, 2001 Mlchelle Lynn Crt\111\1 Th11 llal1men1 wu filed with the County Clettc ol Orange County on 05115/2001 20018884131 Dilly Pllol May 17. 24. 31. Jun! 7. 2001 !h061 FlctltJou1 Buslna11 Name Statement The lollowlng per90n1 are doing bulineee as 0 C. Hardwood, 2402 Delaware, 1101, Hunt· logton Beach, CA 92648 Chrlelopher Alan Jones, 2402 Oelawe11 Sr.. •101, Huntfngton Beach, CA 92648 This bullness is con- ducted by. an indMdual Have you alerted doing buelness yet? Yes, 511/2001 Chr111opher Alan Jones Thia atalement w11 filed with the County Cieri< ol Orange County on 05115.'2001 20018884&24 Deity Pilol May 17. 24, 31, June 7, 200t IhQ62 Fictitious Bualna11 Name SUitemant The lollow'"SI persona are doing business 1s Stephanie Stylos, 484 Gavlola, Newport Beach, CA 92660 Stephallll Ann Gnttin. 464 Gaviola, Newport • -·-liiil ··-&i 8Mch. CA 92000 prO«KUon, you 111 Ttiil bu.,_ II con-encounlgld 10 tile your ~ by an lndilllcMI Clllm by Clftllled melt, Have you etlr1~ refum rec:elpt r• doing buei1-Yfl(I No quelled. Slaotlenll AM OateO: Aoltl 30, 2001 Thie ltli.mtnt ISi WAJ. 'tER PETER· filed With the SON, TRUSTEE Of Cllltl ot 0ranoe THE JANICE KRISTINE on 5116'2001 ..,. Mc MILLAN 19H 2001 ...... 27 TRUST, dated l>ec:.m- Dally Pilot May 17, 24, blf 21, 1999 31. June 7. 2901 Th003 GEORGE L ROGERS, Allomey Bar 143905, SUPERIOR COURT ROGERS & M1c1.EITH OF THE STATE OF U.P, 10061 T~ Ave. CALIFORNIA IN nue, Suite 300, Fountain AND FOR THE Valley, CA 92708 COUNTY OF {714) 847-6041 OR .. NGE (714) 868·3372 (Fee-.. 1imlt1} IN THE ~TT'ER OF: Attomey tor Petitioner JANICE KRISTINE and 5uceeMOf Truatee McMILLAN, TRUST• Published . Newport CASE NO. A207AO Btacti·Costa Meea NOTICE TO Dally Pllol May 11, 18, CREDrTORS OF 2!· 2001 TRUS"f 2 9581 · Thf069 ADMINISTRA>TION FlctlUou1 Bu1lnea1 OF JANICE Name Statement KRISTINE The following PlllOll• McMIU.AN are doing bu&1n11ss as NOTICE IS HEREBY S & A Properties, GIVEN to the cndilora Falnberg Family Trust and ~ c:rtdltora Dated April 19, 1982 of the abolle-named ~ 129 West Wilson Street. c.defll that .. perwons '100, Cos14 Mesa. CA having' ctalme agelnsl 92627 the decedent ITI r• Allan Fasnbe19 & Sara, quited to file them Wiit! Fainberg·lnd1v1dually 1ht OfW9I County Su-and Co-Trust-of The perior C'ourt, Probate Fa.inberg Family Trust Pl/Ill at 341 The City Did 4119182. 129 We&I Onve' South, Ofange, Wilson Street, •100 Cehfomla 92668, and ~ Mesa. CA 2627 ma• • copy IO WALTER This business IS con· PETERSON. c/o ROG· ducted by· Family Trust ERS & MacLErTH LLP, .Have you started 10061 Talbert Avenue, doing business ye1? Suitt 300, Fountain VeJ.. Yes, :Yl/1974 ley, California 92708. 89 Allan Feinberg. Trustee ol the JANICE Trustee KRISTINE McMILLAN This statement was 1999 TRUST, dated De-filed with the County cember 21. t 999, Cler11 of Orange County wherein the decedent on 05/1512001 w11 the Setttor, within . 2001686481 0 the later of four (4) Daily Pilot May 17, 24. months after May 11, 31. June 7. 2001 ThQ64 2001 (date of first pobll-catJOn of nolioe to oredi-Fictitious Bu1lne11 1or1) or. If notice is Name Statement maired or pertonelly de-The tallowing persons ~verld to you. alX1y (60) are doing busmess as days alter the date this J N S Olstribut1ng, Inc notice 11 mailed or per· 1725 MonrCMa Ave llOll81y dellvefld to you A~. Cosla Mesa. CA A claim loon may be ot>-92627 talned from the <lOUrt J N S °'5111butlng Inc olellt !'<If '/04/I (CA). 1725 Monrovia Ave., A-4, Cost.I MIM, CA 82627 Thll buainea " oon-duc*I by' • CQlpOtalion Have you atarlff ~~1:: Chtl1 ~. Corp Ste Thia llatement WU filed with the County Cleitc ot On1nge County on 05.' 151200 I 20016H4114 0.ily PilOC May 17, 24, 31. Jyne 7. 20Q1 Th065 Flctltlou1 Bu1lne11 Name Statement The totlow1np perlO(ll are doing bullnHI a1 Guild Games, LlC, 4621 Campus Orl111, #600. Irvine, CA 92612 Qulld Gamea, LLC (CA), 4521 Campus Drive, •500. Irvine, CA 92612 This bustne11 la con· ducted by Limtled Lia· blllty Co Have you started doing buslnesa yet? No Gulld Games. LLC Thi• statement w11 hied with the County Ctent ol Orange County on 05115l2001 2001H84115 Daily Pllol May t 7, 24 31, June 7, 200 I ThQ66 Fictitious Business Name Statement The lollow1ng PlflOOS are doing bualneu as Mor1g1ge11 com, 3700 S Suaar> St •250 Santa Ana CA 92704 Key West Group (AZ}. 3418 W Orangewood, Phoenix. AZ. 85051 Th11 bus1ne11 is con· ducted by a corporation Have you started domg buslneas yet? No Key West Group Pamela Stewart. Asst Secretary This statement wu Med wtth the County Cler11 ol Orange County on 05115/2001 2001H64818 Daily Pilot May 17 24, 31 June 7, ?901 ThQ67 SELL yout unwanted 1tem1 through c:lusllled Byf'ax By .... , (l>i O) tri2-:1t1-ll ByMaMa~ ('"4'1) 11 11-11 ·,•1 .. ....... .................. ___ I ,\;Ill \\,.1 ll,I\ lo-tr." I C11·11• \I,..,, < \ 11:!•1.!~ \1 "·1-~ .,., .•• tl,. .... I ..... _ ..... _ •••• ,..,t .... 1 ..................... ) Roan lrlo t•l1<•11<• II I0~111-·, IHll'lll \l·,.•lili• f n•&.\ FJctJtlou9 8'*'1eaa Name Stat.ment ,,,. jollowlng ptnOIW •• dc*"G ~ .... C111 Tltmpo, 8912 Hell Ava., Wlltmfnllef, CA 92tl83 T urntr Really lnveel· menl EnlltpltMI, (~). 43 I A1111111d1 Ave., Newport Baeeh, CA 92683 Thl9 busll'IHI is con- ducted by e h!Med 1*1- nermlp Have you at1'11d doing bu1lne11 yet? Y11, 01/011911 Turnef R111ty Invest· ment EnttrprlMS Mary Kathleen Turner, Truetee ot the Mary Kathleen Turner Trust Otd 1217/87, General Partner of Turner Realty lnv11tment Enterpnses, 1 l.lmfted Part~ Thie statement wu hied with the County Cletk of Orange County on 05115/2001 20018884817 Deity Pllol Mey 17, 24, 31. Jun! 7, 2001 Th068 Fictitious Bualnus N•me Statement The following persons are doing business as Notary Express. 2368 LI-Way Tusl.n. CA 92782 Herry Myron Couyoum11an. 2368 Laaaen Way, TustJn. CA 92782 Th11 bus1nes& Is con· ducted by a 1nc!Mdual Have you started doing business yet? No lierry Myron Couyoum1len This statement was hied with the County Cler11 ol Orange County on 5116/2001 20018864970 Dally P1lol May 17. 24. 31. JUrlil 7, ?Q01 Th070 SUMMONS (CITACION JUDICIAL) NOTICE TO DEFEN· DANT (Av1so a Acuado) STRATEGIC RESOUACES GROUP INC. a Delaware COIPO- r1t1on dba BLACK GOLD RESOURCES. EDWARD J ARUOA.. en 1ncMOu11. and DOES I tWOldl 100, ll1Clullw YOU ARE BEING SUEO BY PlAJNTIFF (A Ud.. le-.~ dando)1 SOUTHERN CAJ.IFORNtA SUHBEl T DEVELOPERS INC , a Cllifo(r1jl ooiporation You have 30 CAL.EN· OAR DAYS afttf thlt aummone It lllVld on you to file a typlWl'iClen fllPOfWI at Ihle OOUl1 A ltCW or phone call Wlff not protect you, your typewritten response must be 111 proper legal form 11 you want Ille OOIJl1 to hear your CUI. tt you do not Ille your response on time, you may lo6e the cue. and tJOUr ~. money and property may be liken wllhout further warning from 1t1e court • There are other legal requirements You may want to caft an anomey right away II you do not know an attorney. you may caU an anorney r• 18fT81 Slfw:e or a leoal aid office (listed 1n the phone book) Oespues de que le entreguen esta crtac100 JUdlClal usted t11ne un plazo de 30 DIAS CALENDARIOS para presen1ar una respuesta escnta a maqu1na en esta corte Una carta o una llamada teteloooca no le ofrecera protecc1on su respuesta escnta a ma· qu1na uene que c:umplir con las formalldades le· gales aprop1ades s1 usted quiere que la c0!1e escuche su caso S1 usted no presenta su respuesta a ttempa, puede perder el caso y le pueden qultar su salano su dmero y otra& cosas de su propledad sin av1so adicional por parte de la cone Ex1sten otros requ1s1- tos legales Pueda QUI usted QU'8ra llamar a un abogado 1nmed1atamente S1 no conoce a un at>ogado puede llamar 1 un S8MCIO de relerencla de abogadqs o a une 85 otidna de •V'Jda legal i:::or c9fec:lOOO tile• CAH NU918ER: ~ .. Caao) OOCC15024 JUUf ftOINNION, COMM.. DEPT. CA The name and ad- chll of Ill court i.· (8 nombre y ~ec:aon de la OOfte 11) 6upertor ~ 700 CtYIC Centlf Dl'1W Wtet, Santa Ana Call· fornla 92702, c.ntrll Jultice Ceni. The name, addreu. and telephone number of p111rltd1'1 attorney. 0t p1arn1ttt Without an II· ,lOrney II (El nomb<e. la dlrtoCtOll y el m,mero cle lsleiooo det abOglldo def ci.manc:tante. o del de· m1ndan11 que no tiene abogedo, M) c Mlotlaet Chipman. !9411) 385-7098 Fu 949) 365-7097 Attorney at Law. 28202 Cabot Roed Sult• 300. Laguna N.g<iel Calllor n11 926n DA TE DEC t 4 2000 AU N SLATER, Ctent, by CYNTHIA lildlUR· RAN, Deputy Publisfiecf Newpon B11ch·Cost1 M111 Deily P1ioc May 17 24 31 June 7, 2001 238496 ThQ:! 1 What happens if you don't advertise? NOTHING. Call the Classifieds (949) 642·5678 Daily Pilot Polley ll.1ttf'• 111111 1ltntllnlt'A b~ Mthjf't'I II•• lm11,:r "nh .. 111 """' r 111" puJ•lt~J.rr.l"f"'"rn,., thf' rijtftt lo 1 t"1t~u rt"d,. ..... ,(, ,,~, 1-.r 01 ~tr..e utt\ dno-1f1,.rl 1uhPrt1'f'rn,.111 l'lr;•·~ 1r1Hu1 "'" '""r 111.11 """ lw 111 '"'" 'l:1-.1fu .. l 11d """'"'""'d~ n ... 0 .11)\ l'ilnt ....... I'""" 1 ... 1 .. r.1\ rou '"" ,., f'\•r "' Hll '"h ~ni ... ••turnt for wl1u f1 u nut\ t •• ,, ... ,._,, .... 1'11.-'"'"' ,.,,, f11r 1h1· "'"'' ul 11"• 'l"h.c' 11r11wlh ,,.....,,,,1~t1 I•\ 1h .. , 11or f ,,.,111 '''"""I' 1 ... alluv. ,.,1 for 11,,. fn•.,.1 i11...-rn0:1 ......-----Deadlines ------ Mbtftill.~···· ....... , .. J.nJ_,..5:00p111 Fridu) .......... l11uNl..,1 'l OOl'rn ~ Tur..•lu' ....... '1"111111~ 5:00prn 5.ttunlu~ ....... ~ n.l.1\ :u 10pm -w ..... -. .................... .... -u ,.1 .. -1 .. 11 m ..... ·, 11111 ... , ~h•"" ...... . '\\r.l11.-... ln1 .. Tu""'41a'.I' 5:00pm !--11ml1,n..... f'n•lu' 'l-tlllp111 TiiurNla) .. \\n.lnt"Mla !l:OOpm ~ EOUAl HOUSlllG OPPORTUHITY All ,.., IS1atll ad\llrtJSlnll In tlllS ~Is SUbjlc:I to tilt Fedef1l f l lf Housing Att ol 1968 as amended which mate• 11 Illegal to ldVertise 'any prtftrtnce, NmltatlOll or dfscrim111.1t1on b8Sed on race, COior, rsllO· Ion, m. llanOICIP. famllfat SIJtus °' n.atlonal or1g1n. or an lntent10n to make "1Y such Pftftrenct, rlmltatiOn Of discrtmlnabon • This newspaper will not knowingly ucept any advertisement for rtal ettate Which 11 1n violation of Ille laW Our rllder1 111 hereby informed IJ\al 1111 11w1111nos ldVlr1lsed 1n thlS newspaper .,. IVlllable Oii 11111qUll= OJMy basis ·To com OI drtcrn'lli· ralion. tol Ir• al 1-1100·424-8590 AFFORDABLE Fret compldlrtz.d Ult of ...... Pl"optl1lea In your Spedllc ~ .... Fret rteOfdld me11age 1-IM-m-N12 ID 11040 '·----·-- ' "-. J • • II ., ' ,, . . ..,,. ... E'lldt Value tp 48' 381. 2ICOf( hcrM ~,, tam rm, R.V -on ff ,OOOI/ Jot II ldnt -$419,IOO. agt Ptltlek TltlOfl ~9105 E'llde 481 38&. lronl OIUl)1IRI. ...,., bdl room ...,_ 2 ary. 2800 II. 11 Jl'I MW ea.. nul .. 14751< Ow!w OM ~ 1870 Tutlln Aw.~ JBt at family room, apecblS yMt. ,.. ClrP'I a .. 2c gR9I. ~ 481 E. Ult1 PD. Auoclat•d Rtelty 949-§73-3663 11llNGf ro lllY. trJAU -IFml.MF Ill OCEANFRONT DUPLEX Loc:allld '9C on aand' No boardwalk. ci.... ....... nwnodeled • ~~ melerillll. Very ~ un1S wlh unmtr inconit $2,125,000 AS~TED REALTY t4H7!MM3 CUSTOM BAYFRONT HOME with DOOK BIWld MW custcrn home on the wa1tr 48r'1 lnCI 4 581'• Comer locltion, 2 '*>dis lg ttte belctl. ~ root tcp deck w.'plnmmic vu'• ol oceen, bey lnCI ~ ~ Ooc:ll lol 14> ~ 30ll pc*W boet $1,595,000 ASsoaATED RE.ALTY MM7We'3 110 APT8 COSTA MESA ~ 2Brl28a Fum'd UOO ISLE Alt new 38t S2500 unhlm'd $2200 den 28a 2 5 car gerage pool. spe tndOOI geragt patio SJ t 00,,,.10 -yrly Avail J'JO* l4t-7fN 117 949-6 73· 7390 1110 Al'll I FOR LEASE In CdM COIT A .U · 3Bt 28a. 1u1y lumlthed • .... ..... °"" "" 949-JBQ.9492 SPACIOUS UPPER UNIT 2flt 2BI Ntwpoft. i.i-,y $1100 MM13-7IOO COSTA MESA I SOUTH COAST METRO Chamwlg Jlnol. I Blctoom IOd 2 8tdroom 1 Bdl. UTOUndtd by ltnnll, pool, II glfed CXllMU1ily Call 714-557-0075 EUGANT SENIOR LMNO Ervay a ~ _,. ·~" crml!r. lun ... ~mot91 COSTA NEUPORTE' HN4HJOO ,,...,..,. !p! 58 c.M. .....,.. 3115 'La Plflt Pl a 2.581 a 2llf 2Ba. Fp, pao 2o gll. dlln, QIMt '-------"1 nof!ll!lp!!• P49-87H'm CRYSTA&. COVE ......... ,,,.,, '"' ~ Ol'EN ""' , .. ., -=="11.a.':.:. ol ... ~ ....... ~---: •• I 86 Motel MANAGERS • SPECIALt $175.00+ tax Wkly (!Mt prlMli .. ~ Z1S 11111 & klc:hlnlCls. SllU8lld on bllullMly lalldlcapld groundl FEATURES 24-Hour Lobby/Dtre<:t dl1f ptionet/FrH HBO. ESPN & Diec/Pool & Jacuw. GUISI llun· dly CloM to 405 & S5 Fwys .., •• llOm o.c. Faltgrds, colllgl and bells Wallung di•· tance to sllopt and res11uraot.1. COSTA MESA MOTOR INN rm Hllbof 8IVd Phone 14~ CM roonunate MIF PIOI. no dnlgs/smkg. ahr lg $& hM rpi coune view ~ + ·112 '* & d!e 714-44W875 RltalllllfVletltllop apece NB SublelM $1,250/mo SOOSf. Dlllllbll loc:allon. 949·631·22'5 FOUND COCKATIEL Cotti ........ 14M41-S042 * lllnuflCllnr ClolMut Slltll fabrlot, cnfta, over: nn-Up 10 llO% OFA Ftldly & Sal 325 ~. Cll RUMMAGE SALE F lllldtUlf tor Newport Hlttlor ~ School'• Soft. ball Teem, Sil, Mly 18th 1:00am to 2.00pm. eoo IM'll Ave., Nppo!! 8-:tl SUPfA OARAOERI SAT t-1 14 ARIES COURT, Newport Cl'lll !no !!!!r bl!d! pl!!!!) ··,2 \ .,,·"'' . ·- MOVINO 1AL! All gifts, YIHI, lurnlturt, 1llk1. 30-50% oft Urd 5131 120 Tudn Ave. ~ A. ~ Bllcl1 ,_STEEL IUILOIHGS 24x28 WU $7,990, sejj $3,475, 30x45, was SI0.880, 9911 5.800, 50xl 15 WU $20,900 Mii $12.500 Can D1livert Wall (I00)3t2-7I03 [C~~S!~~~:~:'.:1 ' ' l : ' Portable Dl1hw1thtr Frig- ldalare 1 &n. greal lor epb. Attn: Wort! FfOlll Homl ca.i be bull In, plenty IX ce-Up to '2W7S/Hr. Pff.f/T p!Ci!y, $200 !MM45.3757 lllMlr.2114 www .tX1r!!!!!C!tllnow.com -· I . I ~ .. ~. '.t ....... 3 ·~ Refri9ln1or $110, I WHl!lf/Oryef, $1'5/ea. BOOTH RENTAL Newport GM Stove, $145. Xlnt Bllcl1 Sllon & $p1 in~ Cond. t4M4&-5848 loc l#ldw new ownentiip. For inlo !!I 940-422·2A66 MARINE llETAll SALES "· llOn·Frl, CHlllel nffcled 10 Invoice, llllrC"8ndlM end clrM. Some J~ulnd. C1111949)642-S611 ,,, • , .. lfltlt• • ... ,. ,., f"· Wlllhtf 8mo old Kenmore heavy duty, Super Capac· ity 1 •·SO'temp setting. sac $275 949·6:'5·3757 . •DOG & PUPPV. Obledence ctasaea. We teaetl them wllove Starts May 23 SMa 714-557·7095 Loc1I kltttna, eei., dogl lot lldofltlOt1 _, Sit & SUn llOOIMfllll F1slllon llllnd AHIMAL H~K Info t4M44-22'71 www.anlm1tnetwork.ora 2 Yt11 old purebred Goldel'I Rttrielltr, neutered, great w!\tds. Illness f0toes sale ~ holJM & lravet ttouse 94~551·5124 THI GALLUP OROANIZATION REPORT SPECIAUST Irvine, CA • Are you proficient in Miuosoft Word, Excel and/or Power Point7 • Do you build mutually supportive friendships with co-workers? •Do you take responslblllty for client satisfaction? •Are you a high energy person who makes things happen? • Do you take pride in your high quality. picture-perfect final product? •Are you a perfectionist? 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F~~1!:~ H GARDENER H Form1Jty trelned, vHI apelWICI. !lex houri. nils IYll .... 114-371-11311 ~ Svc, 19yrs EllP Lawn wen. yard cleln 14>, "" trimming, planting, !prinl!l!!! 714-436-1518 YARD CLEAN-UP Witter The Handyman Ma&1tr Carpenter 2!> V ears Elq>I Portlolio 0oots & Wrtrdo#S Fenon & Decks c-Molding l'!lolll 94H1 o-5365 Pager 7 I 4·298-5400 • T rttl-f'n.rlld & RemcMd. JUNK TO nt1! OUMPlll SpMk.ltra Rtolllwd new 114·Ml-1A2 llwna. Cell '114-7514471 , AVAILAILE TOOAYI Yerd CINll Up, lnslall Spmklt11. M11nttn1ra. Tnrn Trtta. 24 Yra EJql Frtt E:ll t4M5CM711 t4M'TS-55" Attention c.nc.t Plllenu Can now 11&.QOT-CUREI e-m1K www.elltneeencer pr1ventlon.C0111 1· ·=I I"--== I FREE VIAGRA You've heard 1117 • • about Viagra ... ~·Kitchen but ltave you .. ______ .. Bathroom• Repairs tried it? Call the leader In So. Caaf omlo m. &119 Uc# smn am1. t4N37•5642 ,. I 1 1'f" 1'• I I I ' IJI t!l1!'1 I I'll help you resotv• thole n1gglng home repair and rimodel lsaUM. ~IMl-574-1741 A IO 1 HoMt ''~'" Attlllra, Eleclrteal and PUttllnD. ~. Cell '1'4·2 ... 7111 •r .... ,"'' • Viagra success is dependent on INTERIOR RE·OESIGN a ARRANGEMENT m Nit hi, 1,.foiltMI •t.1A1UNC ntr ~Of WIW~ 1v.w• ~us.. •• o., ... ... c ...........,, .......... . s.stdl Dlllgl\ ..... 1U9-670·19W 0 AYAHS EXPRESS Clean Hltdwoltlng l'lo's SEASIDE PET.amtNO CllllUI I courteouel Frtt CMip & A11i11t* Ell T1!7221 !41121 • ~ Of .,.,., ~ C..Jf!la " 71~ PUBLIC NOTICE The Calif. Publle· Utllltltt Com· mlasion REQUIRES lhll .. used houle- hold goods moYtfl 1)11nt thtlr P U.C. Cal T numbtr: limol and chlutters pMt their T.C.P. nuni>er In •• IC!Ytrtiaments. If you hlYt I ques. lion about the ~ lty d • mcMll', limo Of chauhr, call: PUBUC UTILITIES COMMISION 714-558-4151 ~:"'~···~ ........ '. '• .~ . ~~ ./;. ~ .. ; ........ ., ......... ... LOCAnNG lllCTllOHIC llAa UM DmK.l10H ......., .... 675·9304 Doily Pilot [L. . . •I . . . . ........ INSIDE SALES REP: Monuftlduret's Representative firm on h bolder of Orange County/Los~ **s professional Spanish arid English speaking Inside Salesperson . Responsibilities include managing and developing existing customers and servicing our dislribotor partners to generate repeat boslnen, quoting ~ ~nities, quolifying leOds, closing bUsiness over lhe Dhc>ne, and inside sole$ support for field soles engineers. Requiremenh ore excelletnt communication and follow·up skills, history of persistence and succe'ss, effective time monageme!:\t. good orgonizotion1 ar1d knowledge of Windows-based computing is a must. Experience in passive electromechonlcol prOducts is desirable. This is an excellent opportunity for someone interested In pursuing a soles caredr. A typical 1 st year inside Soles Rep eoms $3SK-$40K based on experience. We compensate with a base 9Cilory plus commissions and bonuses. We offer medical insurance, 401 (KJ and paid holidays. FAX resume wilh salary history. 562/ 4246622 ~~1,,-=1 latk & be delal onented w/ .-------. ldnl '#1111en & vtlbll stalls Slits Ind computef Skills nee Pr9V ofta up a tTllll Please lu resume to !MM-45-4251 •71 !WLOYMENT SERVICES ,..... be ...,. !hit lllt U.!11191 In tfll• ~ may require you lo cell 1 900 number In wlllch tlltl9 It I C'*Ve pit' minute. ....... be .., of out of .,.. compenln. CNdl with "" IOCll Sitter Buslneel Bu- rttu btfoft you .rid 1ny 1110r1ty or fMe lor ttrvlca. Rlld ind unclerttand any contrK1S belorw you 1lgn. =I 150 HEW 6 USED BOATS Dine Point IJOAT SHOW Mey 31.Jun 3 t4t-4M-10t4 I -OPP()~ I 21· Dully El9ctrtc Bolt 1998 lolded, clNn. Ill# bo11om ~ S19.SOO 714- 532· 183~. !M9-72:M131 FIND en lj>llrlment • lflrougn cluailled -=1 • TREES 'IWMMIAf, RnwNI & Y•" C1H111,. 714.435.17 Slate Lie 624 °" ..... ~ .. ,,..... Ml. St. Diie. Aeeoodlllo~ tWt 112:5 00. Zt+g.M or 33tM . •.' ·'f"-.. ~ • -•' . .. I .. •.' ,· . ... . . , .. -==1 WE GALS lllould hang togellllr Slop, lnSlall, inl/ txl pmt, ed\lice to the crazy U735171 IMMS1.at11 1· c=:I •I Oo WllMklwl I ~ Oual4y WOlll, ~ rat11, IPl'1dina rtUls Cit lor lrtt Ill fl+23M0211 A GOOD ADI Daily Pilot ' ... -~ # -· ·~·:, ...... ~ ~ ".. . '•t ·llillii· -·-·~ ... Bridge 8Y CHARLES OOREN w1th OMAR SHARIF end TANNAH HIRSCH I I THE MASTER HINF.S CAD l£VLU ITS 'II ~ ..... '17 North-South vulnerable. South dea.b. PMrl Whltelllltr, orig ~ OotteOW11._ in each of p111tner'1 111it, Szw11te boldly pu>hed on to It>w-heath koowuta fulJ weU that ht'> p;umer held onfy IWO card' U1 the UIL owntt, '--c, clvolli -..... Mly lolded, ,, "°'* ...,_. NORTH !12.!IO MH1Wt7t *'f2t1402 • A J 9 7 WFSI' •Ql32 "'97 53 o Kl • 1042 O lOI 0 91 •KJ175 SOUl'H 6 K It EAST • 654 o Al o AJ 1043 •Q'6 ti KQJ64 o QHS ' •Al West led the lung of d~. llnd the aonn signal were qwee evldmc.. 'There were three &ure loseni In the red ~uits and, In odd1tlon. declarer had lO WC!fry aOOul IMtng a~ (IUmp :ind dL>j>O\Ul£ of lus dwnond\ We'll coounucd wuh .i diamond 10 the llCC, and the diamond 1ad. wa\ rctumcd. DeclMjr played low trom hand, West d1sc11nk:d u club und dummy ruffed whh the eill,ht. The bidd.ing; _ SOUTH WF.S'l' NORTH 1• ~th could not affonf to ~ 11 trump now. b«:a~ West "'oukl then KCI I diamond r1lff lo lid the t'Ol\ll'ICI Even if declarer toil.es the )plide EAST fines~ and d1'1Catd~ • d1.unond on the 20 third spade, &,t tan win th¢ finu "-1Q. trump and l'C\<en to d1amooch. pm- l tl • ,_ .... ,_ 3• l o ,_ 4C IW 3<:> .... ,_ , motUI& a trump tnck for We>1 "-Srwan:, as usual. found an elegant Opening lead: King or o Henri Szwarc made his first inter- national appcarancc for F~ in 1954. Al the recent European Brid$e CllarnpioNhips. he showed he IS ~Ill a force to be rec:(c:oned with. S.i:watc and his partner. World Brid$e Federation President Jose Damllllli. reached four hearts on the allCUOI\ shown. By liJ'iClllClll. thtcc clubs on !his sequence showed longer clubs than pldes. With a lujb honor w lu11on. He cuhcd the ling of spallcs. cro;,,..cd 10 1hc ace and ruffed a spade. nie BC\' u11d kmg of clu&i were cashed and the uablc ·~ la.\t ~pade wa.~ led. and Ea\I had no counter. If the defender rum h1~h. decl;in:r das- can.t.s lhc queen ol d1amonch and make\ the rest; 1f We\1 ruff~ low or disc.1rd~. declarer ruffs wuh the rem.tining low trump, then ruffs the queen of diamonth wuh !he ten of hean) Either "'ii)'. dc:idouer lo\C) only 1"'0 diamond tnd' and the'. JC.:e of trumps. I I • Thursday, NvJy 17, 200 l •BT • TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE Have A lnflnltl M30 '91 Conv 7811 ml, books. an l9CIOIOI, ....... tin. lt1r. co. chlOme ..... hke new cond1b0n $8.11195 vinl 597218 1-~1 1-~ 1 ... 695--CA_r_AN_SIS_u~_\_, • • Garage Sale! OC AUIO 8rolllrl 149-516-\811 LMd "-DleccMry LE .. 3511 "'· "' llciOly wair, white/Ian llhr. dual dune mnrl. ~· nollmk lb new S 9 Wlf81!7 421. fi. ailtlUbllhl Montlto '95 PORSCt4E 111 TARGA 2.7 Mo, YI, AC, Pl 1974 CllHIC, new p1lnt. (2100IA) SI0,950 20k ml. on complete Soult! Cont Acur1 engine ntbulld. w/S cama. 714-17t-2500 S15,000 94~n52 Call the Pilot Claaalflede .., XJfl '95 54k mi. boOks rtcords, blVcrtllll lrw. co. Olllll9d noMmk. ~ke ,_,-~3.995. Yin• 461255, fin Wlllf. avaM. Oc NM 8IU1 949-586-1888 JegliW JUS Con¥ .. 8 cyl. 3611 111. ...,,._ co. chrome wllll. .. new. Wlt252641 $26.995 flNwlc:ing Wlll1' Ml oc ~ Blct 9'9-586-1888 ..... XJI. 47\"'"' lad wan. 8nMh racing gteen. glrf llht, chroml ""*· Jik• new m 23n41 $26,995 fill ~... oc AlkJ Biers 949-586-1888 lllflClllg Ml. oc MrtJ 8IU1 ~1111 llEACEDES C230 "il7 N1vy, 11"&, 11hr lnllr, ~ s pllyw, only -cond.~~ t4Ml4-t007 MERCEDES 190E '15 Dark blue, chlome ¥iheell, new hi. ':.:r: $3950 Mt-7 or IMM40-1770 Uk lot ~ ..... 310E wrn '94 7 IHttr, CO nglll, lolded with •0 '= op-bOnl. ln'wnaQAele • Cll P8ll II 714-420-7156 -• ...,_.. 5IOSl • Red beNy. Ct*"8 .,, .... lltlubilt'll Mon9lro SR '95 ve 360 eng. 4X4, 99k mi. orig owntf, blaclVlan ltlv, mnlr, CO. chrome fully I01ded. beaut1tul cond. S10,995, financ1ng warr Mil. Wll6777291 oc Auto Blct 949-686-1888 NMln Alllml ... 1U1o. AC, Pl. CD (Pl 595) S1 D.950 South Cont Acura 714-179-2500 SAAB 900S '17 G'"n, 1u10, lllOOllfOOI, 41 kml, I01ded, amog;ed, mutt Miii $8800. 714·~197 SUC230 Aoldltlf ... co. Chr-. SIMlf (1193391 $31,980 Aetchtr Jones Motorcera ;,;:...,: 1·~11·~,11 815 ~1 v=! $3S,990 Toyoll Ctmty 'II Toyotll ecw. 'II Toyota Echo '00 .. t'-62•1~0~ ore1tt ve. auto,•. lul pwr, alloys. Ai.MJ. 111. 1u1 power Auto. 111. 'powllf steeong. ...... ... .. .. (2327611306501) $12.901 (22870075865) $10.~1 co player Ilia) alt bigs South Coat Toyot.I South Coat Toyota j2293Ml05689) S11.~1 149-722-2000 949-722·2000 South Coat Toyotl 149-722-2000 T oyotl Corollll '00 et t949J B42-t5S7B to Place Your Garage Bale Ad! lut years model. chrome. new soft~. Ml.~ f17.§!!Q A10 714-751·2464 ~ VfU.AGER '93 .co. !Wiit (J13571) $7,988 ......, OvMt '93 IUtD, YI, AC, Pl (21115A) Sl,'50. Soult! Cont Acura 714-17t-2500 T oyoCll Celica' 93 auto, AC. rnoonroof (P1578) Sl,950. • Soult! Cont Acura 714-179-2500 C1rt1hed. auto, air, lul r------.. (231~)' CS:-1.901 1696 VEHICLES I South Cont Toyota WANTED 149-722·2000 - F1mlly Opera• Dlellr Wl1\. ~tr ~ yell Pl> .. pay • very lat pooe lot 'f0'.6 ca• Van oi l1Udl paid tor 0t not eau Od Rey • o 714-437-1931 Of 328-3228 '-113 FORD 1117 ISUZll at:OllTWU HOllMlll6 PU AT, AC. clean. Auto, AC, clean (123417) (658352) •5976 •B976 "•THOllDA 'llllFORD CIVICLX UCOllT$E- Su{J6r clean, must AT. AC, f/pwr. SH. (559362) (195753) 1 10,976 1 10,976 "1111 :sATUll# '1111 n1YOTA llC•Jl t:AMllY AT, AC. cln. Flpwr.. Vry CltJan. (272754) (872199) 1 12,916 '18,9111 ·•w _,,_ ~..., • 11Alf&4- F/pwr., CIMn. Xcab, XLT, (895223) loadtJd. (835247) 1 14.1171 114,916 ----... . ..., Convt.,...,,. /oMled. (17mn) '17.'11 .,.. .. ,. ... ,. .. ,. ·-· ··-4 •• . .. ~. quad .. tlno. AT. root. alloys. llMd«I. (A 1 '888) (056517) •n,1111 '21,17B NABERS (!1•~1100 lllWcury .,...,., '95 . No.111:• (111511) "'950 Sollll Co.I AQn. 714-fJt.2500 Toyca ecw. 'II Alm. • . full pcl'Alet (228700751165) $10.~I South Colllt Toyota 14t-n.2·2000 . To Place an Ad In C lasslfled Call (949) 542-5678 •REPOSSESSION • TAX UE#S •LATE PAY •BANKRUPTCY • JUDSMEllTS . THIS WEEK ,S SPECIALS 1 f1BFOllD 'lltll'OllO 'llll FORD '114 JEEP '95 VOLKS 11MFOllO 'lltSJEEP llAWll l'ICltlll' ,_,,,,,,. llT 1MJllOEMlllD WllAllllLER JETTA BL EXPLOll*R JaT CHEROKEE AT, AC. clean. 5-SPO., nhr.. AT, AC, f/pwr. Clean, Summer Auto, clean. T, f/pwr., alloys AT. AC. cln. (895304) loaded. (113109) (106315) Fun. (412036) (007040) (A42254) (529797) •B976 •B976 •B976 •B976 •B976 •B976 •9976 "llllFORO '•FORD "117 VOIXS '1111 IWAZOA '117FORD 100FORD 11111 TOYOTA ESCORTLX E1llO JETTA PROTEBE ,.,,,.....LX FOCUSLX COROLLA AT, AC. cln. Club chateau, Black Beauty! I AT, AC, loade<I. AT, AC, alloys. Lo. lo ml. AT. AC, f/pwr (215651) loadtJd. (A63856) (006343) (179671) flpwr. (127112) (123498) (254664) 1 10,916 110,916 1 10,916 111,976 1 11,916 '12,976 112,916 "00 1'111111 "•Mn#f# 4111S*DDIE •ool'Olfll "ftFOllO 100 lllSSA# Ut:Ollr llW-~ MUM Ul'l.OllEll COllTOUll a TAURUll•E Al.1'1MA AT. f/pwr., AT, AC. sharp. Lthr, loadtJd, cln. A.IT. AIC, f/pwr. Fully loaded, Low miles, very alloys. (187806) (165802) (818845) (109025) alloys.(171011) CltJan. (183243) 1 13,976 '13,916 1 13,916 113,916 1 14,9111 '14,916 'OOFOllll YJOllMCUflY .,OllO w__,.r .... IWll -OOMIJ(llA ... ,.,.,,, ,__ __ ~ --T~ M•EUW MAXIMA At:COllll~ .,.,.....T AT. AC, loadt1<1. V6, AT, f/pwr. A/T; f/pwr., CD. AT. AC, f/pwr. F/pwr.. xtra clnn. ~ F/pwr., VS, IOMJfJd. (239552) (634619) (298004) (611560) (810947) ( ~ (128330) 1 15,916 1 15,1116 1 15,976 1 15.916 1 16,911 1111. 116,91B ...... ._,. uurr ...... ... "',,.,,. ,,., ...... 1411 ._....,. .... AT,'AC,~ LNth•r. roof, Convt., ,.,_,., F/pwr., rtNlr (M7. 'T} llllojiS. (IJ03722) k»d«I (2174M) AO. (132204) '11,BB •1s.97B 'f8 'f9,97B .. . B8 Thuf.day, % 17, 200, . . · Doify Pilot