HomeMy WebLinkAbout2001-05-21 - Orange Coast Pilot' I -' ' I I . '
SERVING THE NEWPORT -MESA CO~UNmES SINCE 1907 ON DIE WEB: WWW.DAILYPILOT.COM MONDAY, MAY 21 , 2001
Rodm.an ~ports good and bad boy irriag~
between 1999 and 2000. On more
than 50 occasions, Newport Beach
police sent officers to biS beachfront
It was a party that neighbor
Chris Kyle says was almost surreal.
"Mari! It was like Woodstock out
here,· he satd pointing at the
QUESTION
Tony Dodero
• While N ewport Beach
aims to quiet its noisy resi-
dent, neighbors and friends
view Dennis Rodman as
practically anyone else.
home on Seashore Drive.
And they forced him to
pay $8,500 in fines.
Last weekend, A -~ -beach. "It was JUSt that
. instead of hippies,
there were porn
What. if anything,
should Newport I
1 Beach do to keep
party animals like Dennis '
Rodman in check? Ca ll our
Readers .Hotline at (949) 642·
6086 or send e-mail to
dailypilotO/atimes.com.
FROM THE NEWSROOM
Parents can
prevent others'
suffering
A couple weeks ago, I
was, kind of selfishly
now in hindsight,
recounting how my favorite
month of May was now dark-
ened forever by the horrible
memory of the pseschool
killings.
Then came an e-mail that
made me realize I really had
nothing to complain about.
"May was once a wonder-
ful month for me," wrote
Vickie Bridgman. "Then my
son Donny, age 18 and a
(Newport Harbor High
School[ senior about to grad-
uate with honors and go to
the Uruvers1ty of Colorado for
college was killed in asar
crash. Four years later, the
hrst of the month begins a
process of .reliving .. with even
greater intensity than I do on
a daily basis, the horrors,
sadness and tenor of his
death for my family arid me.•
Some of you may not
remember Vickie Bridgman.
But I certainly do.
It was four years ago this
Wednesday that Vickie's son,
Donny, was involved in the
tragic and now infamous
crash involving 10 teenagers
on Irvine Avenue.
Dffpa Bharath
DAILY PILOT
The City of Newport Beach has
one problem with Dennis Rod.mart
-the former NBA ace rebounder
just can't stop partying.
They wrote him 14 citations
police in riot geat were
virtually in his back-
yard when Rodman
tried to land in a heli·
copter on the public
beach in an attempt to make
a dramatic entrance at his' 40th
birthday party, which was a gala affair
by itself with a flock of 300 people and
several live bands blasting away.
stars."
But, Kyle added,
·it was a lot of tun.•
"Every member of
LIVE was playmg."
he said "It was like
we were getung free
concerts on the beach.·
SEE RODMAN PAGE 5
Please spell your name and
include your hometown
and phone number, for
verificat ion purposes only.
The teens, with dreams of
summer and the future, had
gone through a hefty night of
partying. Some were drunk
and rowdy. Out of the 10 that
crammed into Donny Bridg-
man's Chevy Blazer, only
four would wear seat belts. '
PHOTOS BY DON LEACH I OAllY I'll.OT
Evan Daboub, 6, discovers a botUe tossed from the bluffs into the Newport Beach Back Bay where about 150 father and
son lndJan Guides Joined together to clean op remote areas using kayaks on Sunday.
And as they took a fast
tum on the winding arid
damp Irvine Avenue in the
early morning hours of May
23, the Blazer tumbled and
rolled over, tossing the occu-
pants out like rag dolls.
Picking up the pieces
Donny lost his life that
day. while Dan Townsend
and Amanda Arthur suffer~
bram injuries. Amanda's
injuries left her in a coma for
11 weeks and turned her lat-
er into a cause celebre when
she came out of it. Still, she's
never fully recovered.
Several others in that car
had serious bumps and bruis-
es, and the driver, Jason
Rausch, faced criminal
charges. Even worse, a flurry
of lawsuits followed that
embittered the community.
Po1.;11 years later, these is
one certainty. For every last
person tnvolveCl in that crash.
along with their families, life
will never be the same.
•Losing one's child is the
worst loss,• Vickie continued.
SEE OODERO PAGE 5
Kayab clelcend on remote part of N~rt BMch Back Bay for
tbe deuup. Beer botUes, a 'JV, and garbage were all collected.
Yl\1CA Indian Guide tribes
-comprised off a the rs and sons -
remove rubbish from Newport Beach s Back Bay
Tariq Malik
DAILY PILOT
I t was a good bunt Sunday for the fathers and sons who took kayaks
and canoes out into the Newport Beach Back Bay in search of trash.
About 150 members of Dolphin Nation. a collecbon of the YMCA's 10
Indian Guide tribes across the Newport-Mesa area, helped pick up trash
and other debns as part of the group's third annual deanup.
·we're just glad to be here in on:ter to raise awareness m our kids and
teach them about the importance of keeping the bay clean,• said Dan Hayes,
the nation's Chief of Chiefs. ·we want to show tbat we're a community.•
The YMCA Indian Guide program. which geared to fathers and sons,
promotes community responsibility through activities such as camping.
SEE CL~ANUP PAGE 5
Despite cancer, children enjoy ~ay set aside for them 11111
•About 100 children of all ages swing danlle and
take in fresh air at Newport Dunes Waterfront Resort.
1artq Manll activities induding swing danc-
OM..v PR.or tog, face painting and lliding.
•1 like Minnie MOUN and
NBWPORT BEACH lhe's bare,• Mid 4-year-old
Orange County children Waging v.-. VIDan al COlt4 Meie,
a dally war egamst the C4DC:*' u lbe Mt In 1-motber'I lap
aDdlng them .. aside tbillr aadllng • BartM doll
ldc*nw Sunday for a day al fun. JW .-.. P.,. W1ui, Mid
AboUt 100 cbUdren. r8nglng dOdan bind a CWWOUI himp
from lnfUll to young adultl. . In Viinella.. ltamlCh ·.-uy
and tbeU famHtM pacUd Into 8 der D W bllD, and nCad
teat at lie Newport Dun. U lDIDlml9& ._ 1111 .._In
WUillflca ..._.far a o...dn' rw• 'rnlaa b tbl Ill& two,....
~ ml1lftt&aa spcm· Heall ... llllda aaJnAt
.... .., ........... ~ Celdl Ollll w .......
IOdll)\C-..._~~ -.DMll.&rm•• •
'n..; llllf I., .. ws•tl dll,w-alllJlltM ... -..
l
•tte's as excited. as if he
were in Disneyland,• she said;
adding that the event is the tint
time since the onset of cancer
in ber 90n that he's been able to
go out among people . •And irs
important that be spends time
With people, even U be bu a
medicine tube in his chest..
1be Came Beroft'I i,..gue ii
a loall YOlunMr group wllbbl
tbe Aawtcan c.nc. Sadlty
tbat hai mlMd aboUt 11. t mmm
fer CIDC* NIMldl Uld .,... ..................
~ .... QustDg .... ,..,.
................ '11
~ .. llS.000 :w; I •llf
CIA\Wll5 __ _._ _________ •
"MJ(mllQS 1
SNl5 ' Wlll"5 MOS l
IMvelM
SURFACE
Ga~ Jobson, 1 wortc:ktM.s sailor and ESPN salllng analyst and commentator, wlll deliver
a slide and video presentation on Wed~ May 30, beginning at 6:30 p.m. at the
Bahia Corinthian Yacht club. The presentation will include footage of the Volvo Ocean
Race and the Sydney Ofympks, as well as an America's Cup updat~. (949) 644-9530.
2 Monday, Noy 21 , 2001
A boat's in a name, . . . '
at Irvirie Terrace an.Yway
Corona del Mar subdivision dubbed its
streets after famous Newport Harbor yachts
By John Bleich
STllET W hen the subdivision Irvine
Terrace was created at
Corona Del Mar, the devel-
opers decided to name the new
streets after famous yachts based at
Newport Harbor.
Altura Drtve (48-foot Schoonet')
Aligellt.9 DrM (50-foot S:ioOP)
_.dare 1lllw (51·foot Yawl) ...... DooM,..,... (66-foot SChoorw)
With this column is a list of street
names with the names and and
descriptions of the yachts and their
owners.
0..IHD °"" (67-foot Y.wl)
Dalilhm ....,_. (81~'9er)
Evita DrM (43-foot IC9tcf\f
.., .... ....,_. (68-foot YllWI)
Thus, the present residents of
Irvine Terrace can:learn vthether
they are living on a ~Sailboat" or a
"Power Boat" street.
K·ftlm .. DrM (92-foot °""""
Karu ..... DIM <&foot 9etll ~
.............. (41-foot Sdtoal•)
Mm 11111ta DIM (91.foot set.._,
........ DIM (81..foot Cua.)
GALATEA ....... .,,.. (109-foOt Se.I SChoorw)
St111• ...... (SI-foot YMN0
SWclDU Drlw (SS-foot Yawf)
S.11M11l1flnw
This traditional yaw! was based in
Newport Harbor from 1935 to 1938.
She was owned by the famous vio-
linist Jascha Heifetz, who moored
the yacht fore and a.ft off his leased
home near theHarbor entrance at
212 E. Balboa Blvd. Galatea was also
kept in the mooring area off the
Newport Harbor Yacht Club. Heifetz
sea Ditft DiM (84-foot Steel Sdtoonlt)
S.• ......... (62·faot a.rt
..... ... • ... foot ICMdt)
Zllhnla DIM 94.foot ec.tdt>
was a mem~r of the Newport Har-to Avalon Cat.al.inA. There was a
bor Yacht Club and tl:ie Catalina very larg~ insuranc-e policy on bis
Island Yacht Club n:t Avalon. ,.-ttqg~ that_ did n<>t allow him to pull
Galatea was .designed by A. Nyt-,,,.--oli lines of make them fast. However,
gen and built in Stockholm, Sweden · be frequently and enthusiastically
in 1899. Her dimensions are 68 feet helped with the rigging in a limited
overall, 44 feet length on the water-way.
line, 12 feet, 5 inches in beam with a In 1955, when Irvine Terrace in
draft of 9 feet. She was steered with Corona Del Mar was subdivided, one
a long. beautifully-carved tiller. of the streets was named after
There was also extensive wood carv-Heifetz's yacht.
ing on the teak bulkhead.sbelow. In 1998, an oil painting of Galatea
Heifetz enjoyed the rhythm and was presented to the Newport Har·
quiet of sailing. He frequently sailed bor Nautical Museum and is shown
What's
AFLOAT
•WHATS AR.OAT is published periodically. If
~u are planning a nautical event. submit the
information to the Dally Pilot. 330 W. Bay St.,
Costa Mesa, CA 92627; by fax to (949) 646-
4170; or by e-mail to dailypilotOlatimes.com.
SPECIAL EVENTS
The Bahia Corinthian Yacht Club will
sponsor a youth summer sailing pro-
gram for children ages six to 17.
Classes will take place June, July and
August. The club is located at 1601
Bayside Drive, Corona del Mar. For
more information, call (949) 644-9530.
Orange Coast College's Padftca, a 75-
foot motor vessel, will carry out 11 edu-
cational cruises th.ls summer in Puget
Sound. Excursions are set for June 17
through Sept. 23. Call for prices and
more details. (949) 645-9412.
Pad.flea, Orange Coast College's 75-
foot motor vessel, will carry out 11
educational cruises this summer in
the Puget Sound. Call for ~ules
and prices. (949) 645-9412.
SAILING CLASSES
A four-week cruising coune ts now
being offered by Orange Coast Col-
lege's School of Salling and Seaman-
ship. The course, which began May
12, t.a.lces place from 9 a .m . to 4 p .m .
Saturdays. A second class meets on
Sundays and began May 6 during the
same hours. $225. Salling Center,
1801 W. Coast Highway, Newport
Beach. (949) 645-9412.
A four-week keelboat course for
women being offered by Orange
Coast College's School of Sailing and
Seamanship from 10 a.m . to 4 p.m.
Sundays began May 13. $215. Sailing
Center, 1801 W. Coast Highway,
Newport Beach. (949) 6;45-9412.
Since May 17, the Balboa Power
Squadron of Newport Beach has been
hosting a public boating course at 6:30
p.m. The course will run for six weeks
at the Newport Beach Yacht Cub, 1099
Bayside Drive, Newport Beach. $30.
Orange Coast College's School of
Salling and Seamanship will host 11 dif-
ferent five-week sailing classes at 1 p.m..
starting June 4. 1801 W. Coast Highway,
Newport Beach. $95. (949) 645-9412.
Orange Coast College'• School of
Sailing and Seamanship will host
introduction to shiel~ sailing classes
starting June 16. basses are five
weeks long. Morning classes will t.a.lce
place from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. and
evening classes will meet from 5: 15 to
7:45 p.m. 1801 W. Coast Highway,
Newport Beach. $115. (949) 645-9412,
periodically. The oil painting was cre-
ated by muralist Richard W. DeRosset
of San Diego. He is a very venatile
marine artist and has done many
commissions for private collectors,
museums, and commercial clients.
DeRosset has done three previous
paintings of famous yachts for the
Newport Harbor Nautical Museum.
• IEDllOll'S NOTE: John Blaich Is • Cofona
de! Mar resident who, lbout once • month, will write histories of lnterestfng boats th.t
gr.ced Newport Harbor.
A keelboat class for women wtl1 be
offered by Orange Coast College's
School of Sailing and Seamansttlp start-
ing July 28 from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.. at the
sail.Ing center, 1801 W. Coast Highway.
Newport Beach. $215. (949) 645-9412.
Learn to saU or windsurf at Resort
Water Sports. Wmdsurfers and 14-
foot sailboats may be rented for $15
per hour. (949) 729-1150.
Sailboat rentah and private leuom
are available at Marina Sailing in the
Balboa Fun Zone. Advanced classes
include navigation, big boat, power-
boat, introduction to heavy weather
and first-mate instruction. (9-f9) 673-
77631 the Blue Dolphin Salling Club,
(949) 644-2525: or Lido Sa.i.llng Qub,
(9-f9) 675-0827.
1011 llllTIU
Balboa Boal Reatab can put you on
the water in many ways, with lingle
and double kayak.I, electric boats, 14-
holder sailboats, pedal boats and run-
abouts for offshore use or auislng the
bay. {9-f9) 673-7200.
Electrtc boat rea1all are available by
the hour at Duffy Eledric Boats. 2001 w.
Coast Hlgbway, Newport Beach. AD
boats are equipped with window enclo-
sures and µ> players. Ice and cupe ere
provided. R.eeervations ere suggested.
An~ rental is $60. (9-f9) ~12.
J>ailyl~ READERS HonJfllE ~ No news st.oriel, Miu.. WUTHll lllD SUIF
(949) 642--6086 trltlonl, edkofi.I Mitt. Of lf:Mr.
tlMmtntl htNln <Ml be~ Reconf your c.omments •bout duced without 1IWltt9n pennllllon ~ TIDU the Dally Piiot Of NM tips. of c:ow1ght OWMI. Balboa 'IOOAY
VOL 95, NO. 136 AQOBESS 7MO Atstlow
Doily Pilot
· U.S. Customs at .
Southern ·border
quite a hassle ·
A hoy.
In the middle of this
week, I will be
delivering a new Carver
530 yacht from Ensenada,
Mexico to the Loews Resort
in San Diego Harbor. The
trip usually takes only one
day of travel, however as I
am planning the float plan-
and estimating the ETA for
arriving at the L6ews, once
again I am stuck not being
able to give a very precise
time of arrival due to U.S.
Customs check-in.
Once you leave:µ.~.
waters, you have to go to
the nearest U.S. Customs
dock for check-in inspec-
tion upon returning. In San
Diego, the Customs check-
in for boats under 100 feet
is at the Harbor Police dock
on Shelter Island. This is
where, in the past, I have
had to wait up to three
hours for an inspector, as
the inspectors are not sta·
tioned there and must drive
to the docks.
I have found the inspec-
tors courteous and the actu-
al tn.spections are usually
brief, I theorize, because if I
was smuggling anything
back into the country, I
would not stop in San
Diego for Customs. When I
skippered a yacht last sum-
mer from Canada to Seattle,
I was able to check in to
Customs via cell phone. So
1-only wish San Dieqo Cus·
toms could be more accom-
modating.
• • •
I get a lot of weather:-
related questions such as
bow the sea condition is
today or what do I think the
seas will be like next week.
I wish I could predict the
weather and seas, but every
boater should check the
conditions before venturing
out, and everyone should
check the tides for the har-
bor. To do so, I have found
a great interactive Web site
by the National Weather
Service at
www.nwsla.noaa.gov!/ava.h
tm1 that provides predic·
t1ons and current conditions
at your fingertips.
Plus, if you go to the
marine links page. you can
actually cl1ck on the float-
ing weather buoys located
at various positions out in
the Padfic. These buoys
tra.nmllt back to the Web
1ite1 what ts actually occur-
ring with swells, winds,
temperature, and directions,
. complete with a data histo·
ry that allows you to have a
good educated idea of what
Miki Whtteheod
THE HARBOR COLUMN
the conditions will be like
when you go out.
~ wireless Internet ser-
vices become faster and
less expensive, I see not too
far in the future most boats
being able to access the
Internet to obtain real time
information. Tell me if you
have a great marine weath-
er Web site and I will take a
look at the site for possible
listing in an upcoming col-
umn.
• • •
Last week, I was speak-
ing with Doug Stuckey, the
public affairs director for
the Newport Harbor Area
Chamber of Commerce,
about how the Chamber's
Marine Committee has
been incorporating the
goals and thoughts dis-
cussed at the chamber's
board of directors planning
conlerence. I was able to
attend one day of the two-
day conlerence in Palm
Springs, but it is always
interesting to see how much
Newport Harbor affects the
surrounding area~ in terms
of jobs, property prices, and
economics.
The Newport Beach Har-
bor Committee's thought of
proposing a Harbor Com-
mission shows that even
city officials are starting to
realize how import.ant the
harbor is to this area. Did
you know that Newport
Harbor, with more than
9,000 boats, is estimated to
be the largest small craft or
shallow draft harbor in the
World? Don't get confused
with Marina Del Rey which,
with approximately 6 ,000
boats, is the largest man-
made harbor in California.
Tell me what you think
about Newport Harbor like
adding another launch
ramp to better serve the
public.
Safe Voyages.
• ... ~ Is 1he Pilot's
bolting Ind het'bor columnls1. Send
him your het'bor Ind~
thoughts and ltOfY suggestions via
e-mail to Mlk .. loathous.TY.com
or www.toattious.rv.com.
... .
POUCI FILES
COSTA MESA
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. Daily Pilot ·
COSTA ~ESI CITY COUNCIL PREVIEW
Inside
CITY HALL
CALIFORNIA SCENARIO
The 54-acre South Coast
Plaza Town Center would
have been granted approval
by now were it not for ques-
tions surrounding the Cali·
fornia Scenario garden.
Three partners are trying to
build the Town Center pro-
ject, but one partner is
being held up.
In a months-long debate,
the City Council has
requested that Common-
wealth Partners U.C main-
tain the sculpture garden,
created by lsamu Noguchi
in 1982. The outcome of the
debate lies in the duration
of the upkeep.
The council originally
requested it be kept up for
25 years, but has since asked
it be maintained "in perpe-
tuity. • Commonwealth has
not agreed to do that.
WHAT TO EXPECT
The council has been
recommended to again con-
tinue decisions pertaining to
the Town Center project to a
later meeting.
EAST 17TH STREET
Continued at the coun-
cil's May 7 meeting because
the item was incorrectly
labeled as regular business
on the agenda rather than
as a public hearing, the
council will discuss realign-
ing East 17th Street.
The council has two
options. It can vote for Plan
B. with its narrower turn
lanes and bus bays -
between 10 and 10 1/2 feet
wide -and optiorr for a
pedestrian-oriented shop-
ping area, or Plan E, which
calls for wider turn lanes
and bus bays -betw~n 11
m ·••a. .... ~= ~~~';Jn.
~
• • DNUIJ .._ (714)
754-5245
and 13 feet wide.
WHAT TO EXPECT
The council bas received
varying recoIDJD.endatlons
on the matter.
The East 17th Street Ad
Hoc Committee, which nar-
rowed down the plans to
two, favored a four-lane
street and recommends the
council adopt Plan B
because committee mem-
bers feared Plan E would
pav~ way for the city to lat·
· er add two lanes to the
street.
Meanwhile, Peter
Naghavi, transportation ser-
vices manager, suggests the
council go with Plan E
because he said the street
should be widened to six
lanes.
RESIDENTIAL
DEVELOPMENT
STANDARDS
The council will ponder
approving a second reading
of the city's municipal code
relating to residential devel-
opment standards. At its
May 7 meeting, the council
voted 3-2 with Mayor Ubby
Cowan and Councilman
Gary Monahan dissenting,
on one portion of the stan-
dards that would require
that all home lot sizes be a
minimum 4i000 square feet
and an average 4,500
square feet.
The next day, developer
Jeff Pratt of El Camino Part-
ners U.C said that decision
would kill his project to
replace the rundown Bl
Camino Shopping Center
with 19 to 29 homes. The
Planning ColIUilission bad
n!<lommended the council
adopt standards calling for
mlnimum lot sizes of 3,000
square feet with average lot
sizes of 3,500 square feet.
WHAT TO EXPECT
Councilman Chris Steel,
who voted with the majority
May 7, said May 8 that he
would suggest the council
rectify its decision to ensure
that the El Camino housing
project can occur. So. the
council may hold off on the
second reading of that por-
tion of the standards and
instead call for a new vote
on the matter.
PARKING STUDY
The City Council will
consider approving a pilot
program that would probib·
it parking in the Mesa Del
Mar tract on street-sweep-
ing days. Set up on a si.x-
month trial period, city offi-
cials would study the neigh-
borhood to determine if the
program could work city-
wide.
The city is proposing
Mesa Del Mar for the p}lot
program because it in(:ludes
easy freeway access; dead-
end streets, apartments. sin-
gle-family homes, short and
regular driveways -many
of the variables that could
affect street deaning in the
rest of the city, said Peter
Naghavi, transportation ser-
vice manager.
WHAT TO EXPECT
The city staff recom-
mends the council approve
the program. At the end of
the six months, the staff will
report its findings to the
council.
Libby Cowan Linda Dixon Gary Monahan Karen Robi/lson Chris Steel
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.... i ........... ~ • .... . , ..... _ .............
I SPRING l·FllR
DON L.EM:H I OMV PllC>T
Erika Ramirez, left. and CC\rfDen Conradi serve up some nachos at SL Joachim catholic
Church's Spring Fair on Sunday. Proceeds will go toward a new building for Its school
Gettins..
INVOLVED
•GETTING INVOLVED runs period·
ically in the Dally Pilot on a rotating
basis. If you'd like information on
adding yoi.Jr organization to this
list call (949) 574-4298.
ORTON DYSLEXIA SOOETY
ORANGE COUNTY BRANCH
Volunteers are needed to
teach reading skills work on
mailings and coordinate the
adult group. (714) 999-0118
between 9 a.m. and 3 p.m.
PAOFIC SYMPHONY
ORCHESTRA
The Orange County Paafic
Symphony Orchestra's Vol-
unteers in Education Oppor-
tunities program needs vol-
unteers to assist children in a
variety of hands-on musical
activities. Volunteers spend a
total of six Saturday mornings
with the children. (714) 755·
5788, Ext. 244.
PEDIATRIC CANCER
RESEARCH FOUNDATION
PCRF raises money to support
' the pediatric cancer research
laboratory at the Children's
Hospital of Orange County. It
needs volunteers for a variety
of duties. (714) 532-8692.
once-a-month, 12-hour hot-
PRIME DYNAMICS
line shills, volunteers are
needed for an auxiliary group,
fund-raising committees and
to help distribute stickers to
stop babies from being aban-
doned in trash bins. 1be orga-
nization also needs donated
gift items for mothers and
babies. (71 4) 432-9681.
Prime Dynamics,· a Newport
Beach nonprofit organization
for the 99 and younger set.
needs volunteers for its pro·
grams. (949) 262-7300.
PROJECT CUDDLE
Project Cuddle, a nonprofit
organization, serves the needs
of abused, abandoned and
drug-exposed children. ·In
addition to office help and
REACH OUT FOR SENIORS
Volunteers are needed to pro-
vide comparuonshlp and
friendship to isolated seniors m
Newport Beach and Costa
Mesa. 1Tauung arid support are
offered, and volunteers must
be 18 or older. (949) 442-1000.
C· f A._gv;tf, IT'S TIME FOR ...
f"4t'c qoot r (1(0. MI CASA
MEXICAN RESTAURANT
296 E. 17TH ST. COSTA MESA · 949·645·7626
The
Costa Mesa
Community
Golf Classic r------------------------, I ENTRY FORM
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Foursomes are eocounged -singles are "'eloome
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s Golt LLmch 8r Dinner $2SO smgte
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. .
4 Monday, May 21 , 2001
TUESDAY
A marketing and promoUon
workshop wW be offered
from 9 a.m. to nqon at Nation-
al University, 3390 Harbor
Blvd., Costa Mesa~ $25. (114)
55().1369.
An ~ATIPSAT/ACf prepara-
tion course will be offered
from 9 a.m.. to 1 p.m. until
May 31 at Orange Coast Col-
lege, 2701 Fairview Road,
Costa Mesa. Call for more
times and dates. $130. (714)
432-5880.
WEDNESDAY
Orange Coast College will
stage its 53rd commencement
ceremony today at 6:30 p.m:
in the college's LeBard Stadi-
um. Associate d~es will be
given to 1,761 students, along
with 544 students receiving
certificates. Orange Coast
College, 2701 Fairview Road,
Costa Mesa.
A series of children's and
teens' classes on writing, his-
tory, math, science and more
will be offered at Orange
Coast College, starting·
Wednesday at the college,
2701 Fairview Road, Costa
Mesa. $49. (714) 432-5880.
Learn how to grow a fuchsia
basket at 9:30 a.m. at the
Sherman Library & Gardens,
~647 E. Coast Highway,
Corona del Mar. $40. (949)
673-2261.
The Costa Mesa Chamber of
Commerce will host a busi-
ness after hours mixer at 5:30
p .m . at Birraporetti's Restau-
rant and Bar, 3333 Bristol St.,
Costa Mesa. Free to mem-
bers. $10 for potential mem-
bers. (714) 885-9090.
Learn about marketing and
advertising gimmicks to help
avoid overspending, dwing a
workshop hosted by the Con-
sumer Credit Counseling Ser-
vice of Orange County at 6
p.m. at the Costa Mesa Fed-
eral Credit Union, 2701 Har-
bor Blvd., Costa Mesa. Free.
(714) 547-2227 , Ext. 122.
A workshop on stress and Its
effect on heart disease will be
offered at 6 p.m. at Hoag
Health Center, 1190 Baker
St., Costa Mesa. Free. (800)
514-HOAG.
THURSDAY
The Newport Harbor Area
AROUND TowN'
Chamber of Commerce will
honor the top athletes from
local high schoo1I in its 40tb
annual Athletics Awards
breakfast at 7:30 a.m. at the
Radisson Hotel, •545
MacArthur Blvd., Newport
Beach. $20 per person or 5225
per table of 10. Call for reser-
vations at (949) 129-«00.
SATURDAY
Genealogy counes wW begin
May 26 at Orange Coast Col-
lege,• 2701 Fairview Road,
Costa Mesa. $49. Call for
times and dates. (714) 432-
5880.
Orange County Market PhM:e
will present a salute to war
veterans and American
heroes at 1 a.m. at the Orange
County Fairgrounds, at Del
Mar Avenue and Fair Drive.
$2. (949) 723-6660.
Mother's Market will host a
taste demonstration from 11
a.m. to 3 p.m. at the mark.et,
225 E. 17th St., Costa Mesa.
Free. (800) 595-MOMS.
Ully the Mouse will be at a
special storytime session at
Borders Books, Music and
Cafe at South Coast Plaza,
3333 Bear St., Costa Mesa.
Free. (714) 279-8933.
SUNDAY
Western fans can celebrate
John Wayne's 94th birthday
aboard a four-hour dinner
cruise at 6 p .m. from Newport
Harbor, sponsored by Duke's
Hollywood Cowboys, at 1048
lrvine Ave., Suite 327, New-
port Beach. $150 per person.
(949) 645-9477.
MAY 29
A semlnar titled "Elder Care
and the Law,• presented by
attorney Kathryn Flanigan,
will be held at 2 p.m. in Bor-
ders Books, Music & Cafe,
3333 Bear St., Costa Mesa.
Free. Reservations requested.
(949) 645-8007.
"Full of Beans and Grains'" ls
tM title of a cooking class that
will be taught by David
Gabbe, author of two books on
vegetarian nutrition and cook-
ing. The class will run from 6 to
9 p .m. at the Costa Mesa
Neighborhood Community
Center. The fee is $30 to regis-
ter plus a $10 material fee.
Costa Mesa Neighborhood
Community Center, 1845 Park
Avenue. Please register in
advance. (714) 321-1525.
MAY 31
Rules of the Road-The PTC
and Other Danger Sigm• at
7 :30 a.m. at the firm's olftce, 6
Hutton Centre, Suite 1150,
South Coast Metro. Free.
Reservations requested. (714)
241-1919.
Fllaandal analyst Ro'\ert
Volmer will present the semi-
nar •women: Your Financial
Future,• which focuses on the
fisc4l needs of women during
retirement, at 1 p.m. tn the
Newport Beach Central
Ubrary'.s Friends Meeting
Room, 1000 Avocado Ave.
Free. (949) 117..J801.
Orange Cout College will
host 150 Latino students from
Costa Mesa and Estancia
high schools to expose them
to the college and its educa-
tional opportunities. The visit
runs from 9 a..m. until noon,
-featuring keynote speaker
Consuelo Castillo Kickbush,
at the college, 2701 Fairview
Road, Costa Mesa. Free. (714)
432-5725.
Jiil 16
Tbe •Top Ban•na fat.Mr'•
Day Event.. wbicb will featul8
a dassic car and moUlrCfde
abow, banana ip8dalty foods.
end banana-split-eating-and-
bullding contests, will take pace from 7 a.m. to 4 p.m. at the
Orange County Market Place at
the Orange County Fair-
grounds. at Del Mar Avenue
and Pair Drive exit from the
Costa Mesa Freeway. $2, tree
parking. (949) 7~16.
JUNE 11
Veros Software Is spomortng
the two-day 2001 Probabilis-
tic Methods Conference at
the Sutton Place Hotel. 4500
MacArthur Blvd., Newport
Beach. $325. Information:
(949) 450-3430.
JUNE 27
Leun bow to establlsb good
aedit after a financial aisis
du.ring a workshop hosted by
The Orange County Bar the CoOSlllner Credit Counsel-
Assn. is offering a seminar ing Service of Orange County
entitled •Managing Your at 6 p.m. at the Costa Mesa
Office & nia.l: The Latest & Federal Credit Union, 2701
Greatest Legal Technology• · Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa.
starting at 5:30 p.m. for regis-Free. (714) 547-2227, Ext. 122.
tration, with the program
beginning at 6 p.m. in the
Wyndham Garden Hotel,
3350 Avenue of the Arts, Cos-
ta Mesa.' $85 for association
members, $115 nonmembers,
$70 new member, $50 law
student member. (949) 440-
6700.
JUNE 4
Real estate prlndples classes
will beqin at Orange Coast
College, in four, six and
eight-week blocks. Addition-
al classes over the same time
period will be offered starting
Jwie 25 at the college at 2701
·Fairview · Rd.. Costa Mesa.
$11 a unit (classes are three-
units). (714) 432-5072.
JUNE 5
The "Making Informed· DlA
Beneficiary Distribution Deci-
sions• seminar, hosted by the
Jewish National Fund, will be
presented by Richard Blu-
menthal at noon at the Bay-
side Restaurant, Newport
Beach. (714) 957-4540.
JUNE I
SL John tbe Baptist Cb.urc:b
and School Carnival 2001
opens its doors at 5 p.m., offer-
ing rides, music and pm.es to
those who attend. The carnival
runs until 10 p.m., then opens
from noon to 10 p.m. June 9
The Alaska Eagle, Orange
Coast College's student sailing
vessel, departs on its 12-month
journey from Newport Beach to
Thhiti. South America and
Antarctica. Stops along the way
include Hawaii. the Tuamotos,
Bora Bora. Pitcaim Island. East-
er Island, the coast of Chile and
Ushuaia. The year-long trip is
set to conclude in Hawaii on
June 13, 2002. The boat leaves
from its waterfront college
School of Sailing and Seaman-
ship facility at 1801 W. Pacific
Coast Hi.ghwa~ Newport
Beach. (949) 645-9412. .
ONGOING
Scrabble Club 350 meets the
first Sunday of every month
for a seven-game, full-day
tournament, with cash and
priies, at the Newport Dunes
RV Resort, 1131 Back Bay
Drive, Newport Beach. $35.
(949) 206-9822.
Orange County Sierra Sin·
gles meets at 6 p.m. on the
second Monday of every
month at the Costa Mesa
Community Center, 1845
Park Ave., Costa Mesa. Free.
{714) 847-4330.
The. law ~ Quinlivan and . and June 10 at the church.
Kaniewski Ll.P will present 1015 W. Baker Sl, c.osta Mesa.
the seminar •Marketing Free. (714) 513-8463.
Orange Coast College Is col-
lecting Coast Ca.re Kits for the
needy, containing canned
food, paper, postage stamps,
shampoo and other necessi-
ties, in a Campaign that runs
through Friday. The college is
hoping to collect 1,000 kits for
those in need, and kits may
Check onty ~ R eiVed Aftet 7/1 ldd $10 late Fee• ,.,.._... Make check CK money order to: P8dlc C... TrfelMoce
Mii to ; W8 PROC>UcTlONS 2821 ~ Drfw f'.ilbroak, CA 92028
(•Sprint Race includes: 1/2 ml. swim, 12 ml. blke •nd 3 ml. run) $75.00 O "Youth Triathlon" $45.00
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AteCroup-~/Alhinl__ flra~~Plo/mat T-ShlltSUt SM L Xl PC'T\CanePR.'99 '00 ~undlncand lhlt ~ QMllt .,_, • .._.. UMT UC-• ......... Pllt, 1 • ..-, ... ., .._._ tm11 ~ rt111.oo "uo,..,...,..., =,.:::::::. r...,. n.111 tlln-ttilldrtft "'*Ill 1L ltHZJ 4'P1S4 ............... •alMan w dllala6llOllll _., -
Daily Pilot
be dropped off at the College
Ufe Office on the c.ampus,
2701 Pairvjew Road, Costa
Mesa. Pree. (7~4) 432~7.
A MltM of lddl' md teem•
Online clusea will be Offered
this summer by Orange Coast
College's Community Educa-
tion Office. Each course is
$49. Subject to be taught will
include reeding and wrtting,
history, science, math, ani-
mals, stamp collecting,
astronomy and native plants
of Callfornia. Registration is
underway in OCC'i Educa-
tion Office. Orange Coast
College, 2701 Fairview Road.
(714) 432-5880.
The Costa Mesa MOMS Club
-Moms Offering Moms
Support -meets at 10 a.m.
Prldays at a different park in
Costa Mesa. $30 for member-
ship. Call for each week's
location~ (714) 549-4504.
Comfort Zone, a support
group for people living with a
mental illness, meets at 7:30
p .m. Thursdays at the 275
Medical Building, first-floor
conference room, 27 5 Victoria
St., Costa Mesa. Free. (949)
548-7274.
The Costa Mela Senior Cen-
ter hosts ballroom dancing
with live music from the Peter
Van Orschott 'Ilio from 1 :30 to
10:30 p.m. Tuesdays at the
center, 695 W. 19th St., Costa
Mesa. $4. (949) 548-3884.
The breakfast referral net-
working group will meet
every Wednesday from 7:15
to 8:30 a.m. at Mimi's Cafe
call Angie Stafford for reser-
vations and information, (949)
4 74-"222S.
Hoag Hospital, bolds support
meetings called •Naturally
Sweee for sufferers of dia-
betes every Wednesday of
every month from 7 to 8 p.m.
Free and no reservation are
required. Heidi Woodring,
(949) 760-2065.
The Newport-Mesa a1bbage
club meets on the second and.
fourth Wednesdays of the
month at 6:45 p.m. at the
Oasis Senior Center, Room 6,
800 Marguerite Ave., Corona
del Mar. $2. (949) 646-5293.
The Paclftc Business
Xc:hange bas weekly break-
fast meetings at 1 a .m. Tues-
days at the Pacific Qub. 4110
MacArthur Blvd., Newport
Beach. Free for the initial
meeting. (949) 640--0588.
The Costa Mesa Senior Cen-
ter offers a Widows-Widow.
ers Support Group from 1 to 3
p.m. Wednesdays at 695 W.
19th Sl, Costa Mesa. (949)
·645-2356.
Hoag Cancer Center often ~
free relaxation and imagery
woikshop from 10 to 11:30
a.m. the fourth Wednesday of
each month at 1 Hoag Drive,
Building 41, Newport Beach.
(949) 160-5542.
Jewbh Family Service of
Orange County offers a
divorce support group Tuesday
evenings at 6. The group is at
the Jewish Federation Cam-
pus, 250 E. Baker St., Suite G,
Costa Mesa. (714) "5-4950.
Oult Senior Center bu an
Adventurous Walken Group
that travels to points ol interest
locally and around the county.
1be group1meetsat9 a.m. Fri-
days at the center and walks at
a leisurely pace. The center ls
at 1800 Marguerite Ave., New-
port Beach. (949) 6«~2'4.
Cbaln lMC:tlOD ollen body-
condittoning claaes for all fit-
ness levels at ~:30 a.m. and 4
p.m. Tuetdays and 'Ibun-
daya. Che1n Reaction ts at
3928 Campus Drive, Newport
Beach. $10 each clall. (949)
588-2421.
A wo...'a tlMnpy "4lppOlt
group meet. at 6:30 p.m.
1bundays at t151 Dove St.,
Sutte 105, Newport Beach.
(949) 281-8003.
A coed a +f .. , o1t glOUI>
mem at 8:30 p.m.. Wednel·
days at 1151 oav. St., Suite ,t.05. Newport Beach. (949)
•vl-8003,
.,
Dolly Pilot
RODMAN
CONTINUED FROM 1
The police didn't exactly
share Kyle's excitement. For
the dty, it was the last straw.
The Police Department ls in
the process of filing a com-
plaint to the Orange County
District Attorney, alleging
Rodman •disturbed the
peace~ with his wild party.
Furtlter, the City Council is
scheduled Tuesday to consid-
er changing the dty's noise
ordinance to make it easier
for the police to file criminal
charges against violators.
But that is just one side to
the story. Some of R.odman's .
staunch supporters and neigh-
bors believe the man who has
gained notoriety as the bad
boy of basketball has in fact
been a good neighbor. They
say the city is blowing the
issue way out of proportion.
While police officers say
Rodman just doesn't care
about making a ruckus
because he knows he has
enough money to root the
bill to pay penalties, his
friends say the man cares,
and cares a lot.
According to friends,
while part of Rodman is the
wild party animal, seemingly
uncarip.g and standoffish, his
other side emanates a
humane glow. ln a few days,
he is set to conduct a Soap-
box Derby for kids. Last
week, he took a dozen
employees from Josh
Slocum's Restaurant on a
free trip to Hawaii.
"Dennis is just Dennis,•
says Mike Steppe, Rod.man's
friend and manager of Josh
Slocum's. Recently, Rodman
helped remodel the restau-
rant and has since been
actively invoived in changing
its ambience, said Steppe.
•He made it all really cool
and informal," be said. "He
brought in live bands. He
put a couch here to give it a
more rel~ed look. He set up
a VIP box. It's been good.•
St~ppe said the restaurant
llas done •much, much,
much better" since Rodman
started calling the shots.
There, again, the city has
a different opinion. Officials
say the Jive entertainment
and dancing bas occurred
without a city .permit, and
that several noise comp18.intS
have been filed against the
restaurant in that duration.
The city is also getting
close to seekipg an injunc-
tion against the restaurant,
which, if approved by n
Superior Cotfrt judge, will
force the restaurant to com-
ply with city code or face
fines or criminal charges.
But Steppe said Friday that
the restaurant had shut off live
entertainment a month ago.
Even when there were live
acts, the restaurant sound-
proofed its windows. restrict-
ed amplified music and added
security guards, he said.
The city is being unfair to
Rodman and the restaurant.
said Steppe.
"They say be paid $8,500
in fines,• be said. "But be
spends more than $8,500 a
day helping people uncond.i-
tionall~. He spends a lot of
money to soundproof his
home and for security so
everybody is safe. He's one
of the most generous and
sincere people I know.•
Steppe's point-of-view
seems alien to local officials
who don't care to hide their
r ~
l, ·.A
Dennis
Rodman
Pletcher.
f rus tra ti on
when they
discuss the
issue. Police
officers have
not bied sit-
ting · down
and talking
to Rodman,
said Newport
Beach Police
Lt. Doug
"He hasn't tried contacting
us either,• he said. •He shows ·
no appearance of caring."
The Orange County dis-
trict attorney's office is in the
process of investigating police
complaints against Rodman,
relating to the May 12 birth-
day party. Deputy Dist. Atty.
Mike Fell. who is prosecuting
the case, said he is still wait-
ing for scme information from
Newport Beach police. He
declined further comment
The Federal Aviation
Administration is also look-
ing into the • o~rational
aspects• of the helicopter
that attempted to land on the
beach, said spokesman Jerry
Snyder. He said the heli-
copter did not actually land
on the beach but bad hov-
ered over the sand, and that
if they find a violation, it is
the pilot of the helicopter
who would be held account-
able, not Rodman.
"The focus of our investi-
gation is going to be the pro-
cedures that were followed,•
be said, declining to com-
ment on the_ specifics. Sny-
der said that FAA law does
not require pilots to get per-
mission from any authority
before landing on public
property, but added that city
codes may vary.
Newport Beach police
said city law states that per-
mission is required before
landing a helicopter on a
public beach. They maintain
that Rodman could have
endangered lives by making
an unannounced landing in
a crowded area.
Some of Rodman's neigh-
bors seemed apprehensive
to comment on the issue. But
others said they have ·no
complaints against him. Rod-
man himself was not avail-
able lor comment. ·
Joseph Kidushim, who
lives three doors away from
Rodman, says "bis parties
are fun.•
•It's like any other beach
party,• he said. •1 don't see
anything wildly unusual
about them.•
Kidusbim said be finds
Rodman to be a •very nice
and low-key person.•
"I've never bad one bad
experience with him so far,•
he said.
But as Steppe puts it, "it's
just the way he ts• that trips
· a hostile switch in some peo-
ple.
"That's Dennis,• he said.
•He loves to party, but I
think be knows his limits. He
is not a law breaker. He
doesn't park in handicapped
spots. He doem't want or
mean to disrespect people.•
1\y telling that to Council-
man Gary Proctor, who initi-
ated the amendment to the
city's noise ordinance.
"The city has tried to rea-
son with him more than 50
times,· he said referring to
the number of times officers
knocked on Rodm.an's door
in response to noise com-
plaints.
"Fines have never deterred
him from having hi$ way,• he
said. ·Maybe this wfll.
On the Water In N~rt Beach
Complimentary Valet&: Boat Docb
Live
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Every Night
9pm
join Us for
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. '
DODE RO
CONTINUED FROM 1
"The depth of the pain does not show.
The dangeJS that caused the death of
my son still exist. Moreover, May is a
particularly vulnerable time for teen
drivers: the end of school, prom, the
anticipation of graduation.•
Parents stop and think about that for
a minute.
• The lure of alcohol ts a tough one for
teem to resist. I know from experience. ·
> Heck, if the President of the United
States can't keep his children from
drlnldng a beer, who can, rtghti
. Wrong.
Vickie Bridgman is rig.ht.
The children of this community bad
a tragic reminder of the dangers of the
world, but many, many refuse to heed
the warning.
Monday,~ 21, 2001 5
Talk to your kids, Vickie Brldgman
says. Save them from themselves. Steer
them clear of the excesses and the hor-
rible dangers that drinking and driving
MMC MAR11N I OAl.Y Al.OT
Two b1ends of the Bridgman family place Dowers at the scene where car
acddent claimed We of Donny Bridgman ~d injured several others.
can cause. -
"Parents, make this month a time
for extra safety reminders to our
teens,• she says. •Remind them to
wear their seat belt, to be careful about
who they get into a car with. Is that
friend mature or a bit wacky?·
dally not to drink and drive. Perhaps
most importantly, set a good example
in your own driving habits.• Vitkie
pointed out that car crashes are the No.
1 killer of t~'1s, with 41,000 dying in
them last year alone in the U.S.
Vickie's e-mail, her salutation sad-
dened me and rerrunded me that if
anything'ever happened to my girls. 1t
would break my heart forever.
Three powerful words:
"Still Donny's mom.·
•Enforce the graduated license law
requirements in your family. Do not
speed. A death from a crash related to
irresponsible teen driving is no less
painful than one from any other cause.
Remind them to not drink and espe-
My kids are way too young now for
me to follow Vickie's warnings. But I
know down the road they, too, won't
be immune from the dangers or from
the temptations.
•TONY DOOERO is the editor. His column appears
on Mondays. If you have story ideas or concerns
about news cOllefage, please send messages either
via e-mail to tony.doderoOlatimes.com or by
phone at 949-574-4258. And as I glanced at the ending of of
CLEANUP
CONTINUED ~ROM 1
The cleanup marked the
third year the guides have
swept bay waters clear of
rubbish, and raised money
for the nonprofit Newport
Beach Aquatic Center, where
the guides launched their
kayaks.
"We do a number of
cleanups here with groups,
like the guides and Boy
Scouts, who want to help,•
said Billy Whitford, director of
the aquatic center. "This is
-...
COWPOKES
CONTINUED FROM 1
for Sunday's celebration in
about two minutes.
"This is really a day for
child cancer patients who
have survived to spend a day
of joy, outside the hospital,•
said Newport Beach resident
Sandi Jackson, herself a can-
cer survivor and one of the
event's organizers. ·we're
just so excited that we could
get this together.•
great because the trash is
there and we usually get about
300 pounds of rubbish out of
the bay during big cleanups,
like Oean H~bor Day.•
In teams of two or three,
fathers, sons -as well as one
daughter -slipped into yel·
low kayaks or canoes and
paddled themselves around
the Upper Newport Bay
Nature Preserve to collect
scraps of .paper, beer cans
and bottles and stuff them
into the trash bags in which
they belong.
"He's never really been
kayaking before,· said New·
port Beach resident Bud
brain. Despite losing her hair
repeatedly from chemothera-
py treatments, suffering
hearing loss and going legal-
ly blind, Darnell has become
an inspiration to many par-
l!Dts of cancer-stricken chil-
dren, especially .now as she
once again prepares to face a
fourth bout with the disease.
·we really need events
like this one because kids
miss so much when they get
sick so young,• she said.
"You can't go to school. play
sports and instead of talking
abut style and trends with
your friends, yQu talk about
needles and medicines.·
Though still a teenager,
Haley of his 7-year-old son well, aquauc center offioals
Jack. •And I think it's a good said.
lesson for him to see the envi-Though the SG. or 60
ronment's needs.• pounds or trash fished out of
Dan Hayes' son. Trent, 7, the bay by gwdes may have
spotted the biggest catch of soured the area before 1ts
the day -a discarded 18-removal, ~re was one
inch television tossed to the bright side to 1ts presence.
waterline of a rocky bluff, ·nus was a great opportu-
where it landed in pieces. ........ nity for me as a father to spend
"Maybe we can fix it up 6 time with my children." said
and I can make a fortune,• Noel Fuge, who brought tus
the boy said jokingly after his sons, Colin. 5. and Cameron,
prize was brought ashore. 10, and tus daughter Madison,
Most of the rubbish flows 7, outtocollect refuse from the
into the Back Bay estuary as bay. "I think it's good for any
runoff from inland cities, , child to know that if everyone
though a fair amount of trash gives a little bit, that makes a
does fall from boat traffic as big dlfference."
cancer can get out of the hos-
pital, and play with others
like them. it makes them feel
special,• Darnell added.
•This is something they can
go to that no one else can,
finally something they can
·do.•
Karen Sullivan, president
of the Orange County Feder-
ation for Oncology Children
and Family. lauded the cele-~
bration's emphasis on family
rather than cancer patients
themselves.
"When a child has cancer,
it affects the whole family,
and siblings are sometimes
forgotten,• she said.
Sullivan's 12-year-old
daughter. Mary, . has
leukeIDla and is 10 rerruss1on
and attending a wedding.
but her three older children.
Jamie, 15, Mike, 16, and
Chris, 18, attended Sunday's
event with her
Joyce Weiss, chauwoman
of the Cattle Baron's League.
said the group hopes to make
the children's celebration an
annual event and invite can-
cer patients and their families
year after year.
"This is sometlung they'll
remember forever, and hope-
fully, forever will be a long
time,· she added.
Katie Darnell, a 17-year-
old cancer survivor from
Princeton, Ky., was also exdt·
ed. Darnell said she feels 35, and .... _. ........ ~-,.
said her body, with its loss or
sight and some hearing,
Darnell was diagnosed
with cancer in 1996, and
watched it move from her
pituitary gland to her optic
nerve and ultimately into her
seems 65.
"When you offer a day
and a place where kids with
:s:as~
Mattress Outlet Store
•
iii
3165 n.bor Blvd.
coetal'lesa
Oie llodl .... of 405 ""'
545·7168
I
· QuoteOI --·rmalwts'9 ...... l'm .. ~l*nd-'
ll1becca Gottlieb. .
Maccablah Games participant
... May 21 honrn. :
'\IOOll HllllHIOI
6 Monday, Mey 21, 2001 •Sports Editor Roger Carlson • 949..57 44223 • Sports Fax: 949~5().() 170 DaiJy Pilot
Corona del Mar
•He ranks as one of the school's all-time wrestlers,
and was quite a football player as well in the early '70s.
Richard Dunn
DAILY PILOT
For a real wrestler like
1111
.
Gary Casey, the stage
acts of the World ·
Wrestling Federation are so
repugnant, he can hardly talk
about it.
"It's embarrassing to me,•
said Casey, a former high school
and collegiate standout who
loves wrestling so much, he
competed in the U.S. national
championships five times as an
adult, before retiring at age 40
after a serious knee injury.
"Unlike some other countries,
wrestling isn't appreciated in the
United States. People really don't
know what it is ... it's intense. It's
intense mentally, too. You can't
be lazy in the mind to wrestle.•
Casey, the 1972 CIF Southern
Section champion at
168 pounds for Corona
del Mar High and a
former Sea King Ath-
lete of the Year, never
intended to stop
wrestling. But his last
knee injury, in which
doctors removed a
piece of his right
patella tendon during
ensuing surgery,
required four months
back-to-back league titles in
1971 and '72.
In high school, Casey grew
from a 5-foot-2 freshman
(competing at 115 pounds) to a
6-1 senior, when he posted a
35-1 record, losing only to
. Wesbninster's Andy Lasick at
178 pounds in the finals of the
Five Counties Tournament.
OAA.Y PILOT PHOTOS BY STEVE MCC~K
Rebecca G otuleb (left) knows the ins and o uts of volleyball and wlll use It to her advantage In lsraet.
Casey, who was wrestling up
a weigh~, was also sick that
w~kend and didn't have
enough eQergy in the finals.
But Casey, the Dan Gable of
the Newport-Mesa community
at the time, finished the season
with a CIF title at 168 pounds,
which was as far.as he could go
in the years before the state
meet.
Still in the game
•Newport Beach resident
realized she was no longer an
alternate for Maccabiah Games
less than three weeks ago. Casey wrestled for one year
at Orange Coast College and
placed fourth ·in the state, then Steve VJrgen
attended Cal Poly San DAILY PILOT
Luis Obispo on a
wrestling scholarship I f at first you don't succeed ... be and redshirted his first like Rebecca Gottlieb. The
year ('74). Newport Beach resident, who
In his first year will compete in the Maccabiah
competing at San Luis Games in Israel, July 16-26, has
Obispo, Casey shown no signs of surrender
advanced to the NCAA throughout her volleyball career.
regional finals, after When she tried to walk on to the
._~ tin th t eed UCLA women's volleyball team, she vc:a g e ops . . . But then blew out his ,..__was derued. Gottlieb, who coaches
'
of rehabilitation, which Gary Casey knee. ..,.,for the Orange County Volleyball
# 1 ended up getting Club, tried again her sophomore meant missing four
months of work in the cabinet
business.
"l said, 'I can't afford this
anymore.' I have too many
responsibilities,· said Casey, a
single parent who bas two boys,
one of whom lives with him in
Aptos, an unincorporated area
near Santa Cruz.
Casey, the 1972 Athlete of the
Year at CdM who won the honor
over a highly competitive field of
candidates, grew up in a
wrestling family. His older
brother, Doug, won the 1968 CIF
championship at 178 pounds for
the Sea Kings.
"Since (Doug wrestled), I
didn't really feel the pressure to
do it, I just felt that I should be
doing it,• Casey said. "We
both had judo backgrounds.
We did that for a couple of years
when we were kids. It's another
grappling sport and it gave us
an advantage. Back then, they
didn't have too many kids'
programs in wrestling.•
Casey was a two-year starter
on the varsity football team,
including his senior year on the
Irvine League championship
squad in the fall of 1971 as a
defensive tackle.
But, as a four-year varsity .
wrestler at four different weights,
Casey did the majprity of his
pounding on the mats, winning
some leg surgery, but year. There was no Bruins' uniform
th for her again. at healed and I continued to The third time would have to be wrestle,• said Casey, who placed th B fourth at the l977 U.S. National e charm. ut, luck does not come
Open ·Freestyle Championships too often for 5-foot-5 volleyball players like Gottlieb.
at 180.5 pounds. For the third straight year, she
Casey said wrestling has only went back to the UCLA marching
recentty received #so~e respect• band and played her piccolo.
from the m edia because of the Her senior year, she gave it one
Ultimate Fighting championship, final go. Maintaining her love for the
in which those with a grappling sport, Gottlieb remembered the
prowess would often beat the lessons learned from her aunt,
boxers and kick-boxers. Sharon McAlexander, who played
#Every fight's going to end up for the Bruins and later worked as an
on the ground. We've always assistant coach for the team.
known that,• Casey said. Gottlieb also knew she had
"Anybody who can fight on the improved greatly from her playing
ground is going to win. It days at Carpinteria High. Yet, she
became a popular television would have to prove it. She did. This
show and seeing (the success of time, Rebecca Gottlieb's name.made
wrestlers) was pure vindication the UCLA roster.
for me." Gottlieb didn't mind being used
Be careful when you even mostly for training purposes. She
mention the make-believe WWF. took pride just in being a part of the
"They're just a bunch of team. When she went on to graduate
costumed, steroid-pumped guys school, still at UCLA for electrical
acting," he said. •you have to engineering, she became the
have a Screen A<=tors Guild card volleyball team's manager.
to do tha.t ... it's closer to chess "I'm really short," she said. "I'm
rather than wrestling.,, always the underdog. Basically, I was
Casey, the latest.honorary in · there to practice and support the
the Daily Pilot Sports Hall of team. I'm like this little runt. At a
Fame, was born in Downey, but Division 1 school, there are all these girls that are so tall." .
grew up in Newport Beach. His Gottlieb's relentless, Rudy-like
family moved here when he was pursuit at UCLA is a bit similar to the
3 months old. manner she made the U.S.
Casey's sons are Gunnar, 13, Maccabi4h women's volleyball team.
and Austin, 10. The Maccabtah is a quadrennial
Rebecca Gottlieb spends a lot of time teaching the walk. now she's going
to Israel to walk the walk as U.S. team member at the Maccablab Games.
athletic competition for Jewish
athletes.
Back in January, Gottlieb worked
her way to a spot on the team at the
tryout at her ahna mater. But, she
made it as an alternate. Gottlieb was
regulated to the role of on-call ·
athlete. She would have to stay in
shape just in case a spot would open
up for her.
Gottlieb continued to coach her
OC Volleyball Cub team of
12-year-olds and she trained with the
18s squad just ~o stay in shape.
A little more than two weeks ago,
a member of the U.S. squad failed to
meet eligibility requirements.
Gottlieb would be going back to
Israel, where she and her husband,
Jay, spent their honeymoon, two and
a half years ago.
·1 went to my boss and told hbp
I had to have five weeks off," said
Gottlieb, 261 who works as a
database administrator for a major
cellular phone company. •1 was so
excited.•
lier story of -success bas been a
great example for the volleyball team
she coaches.
•1 love to be around the girls,"·
said Gonlieb, wbo volunteers as a
coach. Her would-be paychecks
assist those who have trouble with
club fees. •niey have so much
energy.~
Fortunately, for Gottlieb and her
girls, she won't niiss any time
coaching.
For the season finale, the team of
12-year-olds will compete in the
Volleyball Festival at UC Davis,
which features 900 teams in various
tournament competition. lWo days
after the team returns from its trip to
Northern California, Gottlieb will
begin to train with the U.S. women's
volleyball team.
On July 2, she will begin
twp-a-days in preparation for the
Maccabiah Games.
Gottlleb's husband will be able to
attend the opening ceremonies in
Israel, but he has to fly back soon
after for finals. He is a graduate
student at USC. Gottlieb also has a
cousin, Nancy IOine, in Israel to keep
her company.
Though she'll miss some
summertime in Newport 8each,
she's willing to take advantage of
the opportunity 1n Israel.
•1.ca.n always come off the bench
and make a positive impact on the
court," Gottlieb said. "And even from
the bench I can be a positive part of
the team.
I'm hoping I get a chance to play,
meet some new faces and meet other
athletes from other countries."
Out of the blue • • • .a.nd orange
I f you visit www.occapom.com,
you will see the work of
Orange Coast College aporta
intonnation director Sam
Pallenfeld. Over the course of
this year, the weblite bu improved
to the point it'• as good as a
DtvilJon-1 weblite.
Now, the lite features meuage
bo8tds for Pitate bkken and
beaben. PeJlenfeld po1e1 a
ciu-don for vlillOll: Which team
bad tbi mo1t'turprlling tUCCe11
durlDg the 2000-01 ~t
~ within tbat tOplc, the
foll .,. m ~ ewaida
for OC IPOR'· ~!iii been • fun year, to .. , tbl .....
By the way, Piii~
question recelved 48 respomes and
baseball led with 16, followed by
footbell at 14 and men's sooce.r in
thifd with eight.
In fact, those three squads are
the finalists for the MOit Swpriling
Tham of the Year Awud.
Coach John AltobeW'• bueball
team overceme g?Mt oddl this
leOIOO. Wbl1e lat ,..,,. aquad
=:~~ and provide<l llllldl hope for OCC
fa.nanat .....
Why were Altobelli'I Plratet IO
1urp.dling ~Tben were three extra· 9k:tlGIM. • goal
reecbed wltb. ~ ~
andwbenOC ~tD•lll· 1
game losing streak, the
Pirates broke out with a •·2 win over Santa Ana,
the Orange Empire
Conference champion.
OCC men'• soccer and
football were very much
alike tbia year With t.bel.r
twnaround lea.JODI for the
age1. Both teems were allO
ldeptlcal became they ctid
not feature an overall molt 511¥1 .__
valuable pla~. lnlte8d, ,._...,
the Pitetel dilPlayed the
team CCJllK»l)t in full .n.ct. COllCh . Mike 'nrylor iaid
hll foc6eU team'• abOlty to aaete
htWMblpe WU~ ta the Bud .ucam, ,,., lftd up.., ,
the the National Soccer Coaches
Association of America.
Before tts run to the state
championsblp game, the Pirates
won a 3·2 thriller over Wiling
Santa Ana in the regular-IMIOll
ftnale, mappµig the Dom' ?()..game
unbeaten 1treak. The Dons
avenged the loa with a 3-0 Vittory
for the at.ate tttle. Nm yeen
meetliigs between the two ahould
bea treat.
Nut week! The Year-ender
MVP awardl. WW tbe IChOol't
cbak:. of Mn ac.nwty IDd ~
1bwDMDd bold t.ipf SeDd your
~www..MY9.~
.·
• .. ...
..
Doily Pilot SPORTS Monday, Moy 21, 200 l
YMth
BASEBALL
Spring
R
I
T
u
A
L
s
At the far left. above,
Reds · Jake Lem.merman
(21) throws to first in a
game against the Red
Sox ln recent Newport
Beach Little League
action, and Red Sox
lnfielder Grant Gerdau
Held.s an infield bopper.
Below, left. Cubs pitcher
Connor Curry fires a
throw to teammate
Brandon Kula at first
base after fielding a
bunt In an NHBA
contest
I "!U ... 11 ..-.-11 ...c--J f ·w ... f .__I _ ___.
NOTICe ~ ~ odMf II.ch flnSt • nwy IMllld °' pet90nally ~ quHl1 1uthorily 10 ad-DAVENPORT eka four months from the PUBLIC NOTICE
-UL.I nuan Sale be ec:clJ!tll* to ttie ""-'*' to you, 30 dllyt minllllf lhl ~ under MARY MARKS he1rlng date not~d ANNUAL REVIEW
Numb1r: 078 Noice INtUe. In lie ...,.,.. "'" the dlltl tt1il notlol the hldepelldent Admirl-GILLEN eke MARY above. OF lltE CITYWIDE YOU Ml! IN DBWJl.T tlndlroawthlnc:Mtllt It mal*S °' 1*1Qnally llUatlon ol EllB1eS AD.. ELIZABETH YOU MAY EXAMINE TRAFFIC IMPACT
UNIB A Df!D °" ~ .. nume dllY9l9d to you, °' you (Thie Aulhorily will alow GILLEN the file kepi by the court FEE PROGRAM ='u:=~~ = ~ ~ ~.~ ~ =-~ ~ CASE NO. A207M2 :~r=.:r~n a ~r.: The Coata Mesa City
FOf further lnforma-
tlon, can Miki Slnacori.
Project M1n1ger at
(940) 844·3342
Published Newport 81ach·Cost1 Mesa Delly Pjot May 2 t, 200 I
M132 ACT1QN TO "'°11:CT ~ Upon 1111 un11 In Section 111100 of lhl tlonl wlthou1 obtaining To •H helrt, benefi· you may file with Iha Council Wll hold • public
YQtM HCOP£RI '(, IT fundt 111com1 ...,...... Pl'Clt*e Codi. A dalm oouft approval Befofa aane1. creditors. cont· court a ~ !of Sc»-ti.anng fOf the annual
MAY llE IOU> AT A 1D the PIY9I or...._ form may be obtained talUog Clll1ain YefY Im-ingant creditors, and caal Notice (form OE-rlYllW of lhl C4tywlde Fictitious BuslneH
P\aJC uu:. F YOU •a INllW at ddlt. Thi lrom fll court cllr1L ~nt aebonl. how· ~ who may <**· 154) of Ile riling of an n. Tralflc lmpect F .. Pro-Heme Statement
Nl!ED Nf EXPUMKnON DfOC*tY Clftllrldlar ... For your protldlon, -· lhl ~ rapre-wise bl ~ In the --*"" and ~ ot ~ on Mondly. Juoe The following persons
CONSULTING
SERVICES CS-2001-40 PIE.ICE IROTHERS 181 IROADWAY
Mortuary * Chapel
CrematlOn
110 Broadway
CostaMesa
842-9150
0/1THRNAT'Ula!~THE Ududll 11 fUndl hllll ~ 111 encouraged to MrllldN9 wll bl requited will or 111at1, or bolh, ol. ISlale _..... °' ot any • 2001, at 630 pm .. N'I .,.. doing buM!eu as
• Pfll10C&lllNO AQMCST on aa:ount tiy thl prq> Illa your claim by lo give nottc. to 1n-MARY GILLEN DAVEN-petition °' account 11 IN Council Chlmblts °' RMS RESIDENTIAL YOU. YOU IHOUU) erty l'ICllwf, r ~ Clrtlllad mal. with r91um terMlld perlOlll un1eaa PORT aka MARY M. provided In Probate City Hell. n Fu Onve, MAINTENANCE COHfN:T A UiWtER. blL Dall: ~t *1, reeept 1'9QUMtld ttwy have welved notice DAVENPORT aka Code section t250 A CON MMI, CA. SERVICE, l7284 New·
RIQUffl fOf Propollll
must bl submitted on
the loon ~ by the Olstrie1 1n aQ()Ordenc:.
With al prO'Alionl of lhl
.specifi<:ahOlll Spegfi·
cabons, ptOPOMI blankt
and further lnformahon may bl oblalnld at lhl
above 1ddr1U, tlll-
phona (714) 982·2411 Published Newport
Baach-Co111 MIH
Daily PiloC May 21, 200 I
M133
CJl~!Mteare
/II) IJ!Otd! ...
On ..11.w '-2IOOt .. 2:00 'Alllncl Tiiie O.tld: Aprll 30, 2001 Of conHnlad to the MARY MARKS GILLEN ~ !of 5paclal No-Thi Tralflc lmpacl F.. hope StrHI, 1100, pm. Ill "9 Nr.¥lh trOnt 1l'U.*I. 1100 M.D. ~. Attomey l>l'OOOMd action.) The aka MARY ELIZABETH tice form II avall1bl1 Program has been ••· Fountain Valley. CA
entnncl to IN county _..., s.t flrlncbco. CA fOf John 0. Oemc>Ny. Independent admlnls· GILLEN from lhe court c11r1t. lablished to finllra Iha 92708 ~ 700 CMc M10I, ,,11) _.., SUCClteOr TruetM of trttlon authority win be A PETITION FOR Attorney tor Pettt1oMr: lmprov1m1n11 necH· Wall-B Aodeckar, o.;w DIM w.a, a.u ly: Janice l6aglar. ttie ~ M. ~y granted unleN an in-PROBATE hu been Donald E. Fwsi-. Jr. aary to addre11 the 17284 Nawhope Street AN. Call'cmla, ,...,_ Aulhol1zld llgNU9, TRiil. lJTD 1217184, .. l«lltld '*'°" fllea an filed by MARY 0 SIN· S8N l73So4 C\JmulaliVI impacts °' •222. Fountain Valley. Tllll Complny. a dA#t ASAll412DI ~4, "21, Amlndld, 1118 Nol1h objedlorl to the petition GLETON In thl Superior Coolltay, Howerd, dev1lopm1n1 within CA 112708 aopolnlld tr'Ullll, w111 IQ!! ' Avalon ~. Suite and at10W9 good cause Court of Caltfomla, M9r11n I Tootan COiia Mesa and to Thil ~ II c:on-
lil, II jU11c audlorl to 3. ~ Cdotn. wt.,., lhl ooulf ahcdd not Cow1CY of ORANGE. 53$ Anton Blvd., lnlUl9 that the standard dUct«S by" en lndMcMI
the w....-. blddel, In Fictitious Buatneu 80744 gm lhl Uhorlly TH£ PETITION FOR 10ltt Aoor .... of Mfvlce .. "*"" H l rt d i.wM-.;;;;.y at the Ne Stnement Publlati.d Newport A HEARING on thl PA08ATE rtqUMIS that eo... ...... CA t:zat talnld on lhl Trafflc: ave you s a 1
~-, 11 P'tllDll The ":.o..t~-8HCll·Colla • Maaa pedllorl .. be held on MARY G SINGLETON Publlati.d Newport Cln:ulatlon System ~ng 411t>,;:'nut yet?
• .. 1me d ...., tt11 are doing ee: Delly Plol Mey 7, t4, 21, JUNE 7, 2001 11 1:30 bl eppotnlld u pet-811ch·Costa MHa An audit al the Trallic wan.c. Aodecklf ~ dlacll)ld Of.nge Cout Aulo 2001 p.m. In Dept. L73 lo-aonal ,....,,..live to Ody Plol May t4, 18, Imped FM Program is Thia statement WU ~ alb.-d In Tradert, 2078 Plaoen-100000 M124 ceted at 341 Thi City ~ lhe .-1e al 21, 2001 avtill!H for revtew by hied With thl County
Or1ng11 OcU1ty, CilfoP cfa, ea.ta Meta, CA r.--..~ ""·-•.-• OftY9 Souch. Orange, theTHdacad1111E PETIT M127 ~ ~ ~ C1e11t ot OrW1ge CoU'lly nil: 2 ~~ "2•27 ,. ... ,,.....,. -·-CA 112888. ION re--1 ...._ .... ..,.,..,., on 05l07/2001 ......_. CA " u • IF YOU 08JECT to queatt Iha decedeol's NOTICE OF """LE 77 F1ir Dove. Colla • ....,...... James Batu, 2224 Name 8t8tement lhl ~the ti-Wil and oocldll If _.. Meu. 20011M4~7 ~ • MIN{t) 117~ Terraza PMlce, FUltfton, The ~par90flt ..__ Pl ._ _.._....._. 10 •_.!If1• In llOCOldllnoe with the p .... n-"-rMnls In O.il'f P1loC Mey 21, 28, 10. The 'TNllel dladllml C'" """""'" ·-""""" ••. ""'" you appear .,. ....,.,.,_, .., ...... · ~ovlalone ot .,_ .... __ ""'"' ""'" June 4 11 2001 M1S1 _,._._.for_,lneor "Son_!......,.,_ 222 -,· -:-... ..: at lhl '-"lg and ltata Thi WM and ll1'f ooclctl 7000 ttvOUl#I 2!718"" o1" either Ofal °' written·· r ;;ct,;;'"'~ b' ..,.i 1 ... tH, 4 a A "'' Attorney for your objedlona °' Ill• era 1va.llable fOf H · CaJtfomJa form may bl presented REQUEST FOR lddf.a Ind a91ar c:omi Tenaza Ptace. Fullel1on, Oeclcatld Felhlfs, Mttten ~Ions with ~~the Illa kept the . eu.ineta ~ the publ~~· PROPOSALS dallgnltian. 1 •Y. ~ b) A Ni Attomey tor the oou1t befOf• the _, ... .,._L end ProteMione Code mg. ~ fllf1hlr • ...,. ..... =., ,.,.. Md uil duc:tld ~ ~ Dade, 3070 8flttOI Sl h11rlng. Your ap· THE PETITION ,.,_ = ~~Mt:' ~ lion. t~ (714) s.!!:.on °b:'Q ~ ~ bl midi ~ wif• ::::; = Meu. c.1-pelf'lllCIOf?mll'f bl~ln Plf· ~ ;:':t. tour.: wt*'1 a... HMiot Sell ~::.:n ~ :Ir CoU'lly, Cdomla. ~ Of ~ Have you started Aooer E. Lehman, aonlf y°' .. Yil:f.. . · -k......._,,.._nt .. _... Stonioe II .-.CS '° a .................. 111 ,....,, ......, n receive Mal~ ..,,_ or ~ ,. ti1Q buat1111 ytC? No 3070 8rlleal St. Slit. 805. """' " ,.,. ~....,......-.....,... left IJWll*'lt to Setton ..,.._..., ...... , ·-~ llnlit T.,..
9lf*lg ... 112 lln 5o111a Bit" ~ Mela, Celkwnla ITOA °' couttugll'tt Cf9Cf. ~ianllon °' e-:: Act. 21702 al Mid codl on ~ ~Com Miii. dlly, June M, 2001 • ------'° -~ _....___.. -... 11·2828 lor al "' dacWed, ~ ~ ~ ...... ~ ..__.__ .. _ • y thrOuQh 11•00 ... -,,._.,.__._ .. -·-=·.-=,..., a-'..!-........ -·=.:,-"c ,._ ........... ~ .. '1fAll dalm wftl • ..,...._" :!~-· anc1·-... -...--Flldly, 8·00 a.m. to S-00 • .... ··-w 4 ,_, '""' u.. ounty ,,_ bullrlw II con-Ill ~ and mail a _...,. '° 1a1c9 many ac-,,_ ...,. no-~ mull bl~ at .. blllncl al .. C111tt of Orwlgl Oounly ~ by. an ~ _...... ...._ ............ .. .-.i..i.w. lcl hlWG bllf'I glYel\ to -.. T. ,.. , .._.. Oittricr1 Adnwllllratlon ...__ ---" .... Ind "·--1 H CClPY '° .. ---res> -· '""""" --"' ,.. .......... .__ ....... .._ "' ........,, ' =., ... ~ ............. --_ ... _ w7 on ..,..,"""""' eve you ttarta~ ~ llOl)Olnlad by coul1 epproval. a.fate ,....,_ ''""""' -........, D9puey City Ctaltl °' r-v•"'-"' ~~'::-_: 20011111111 dolngY-. 1 .. ~.!!.,,... yet? the court Wlthln tour \el<lng oen.1n Yef'J """ t8!'.. ~ace='*-'~ 'Publ1at1ec1 NeWS>ort Office, by the ----Delly Pilot /VJ(, 30, MIY u """ ---,__ ...... ...... ... .......... _ ... Ion. ....... ... ...... "' 8etcll·Cott• MHa di.. end time herein C*tllno.tdlNIUnd 7. 11, .21, &OQ! Mjt& Rooll' E. L.twnen "-•• """' .. ,. -"' """-" """ ' ,..,... IUdl notlca peyment n.. .. Plol ~ 21, 22. ~E""" .... fol1h, 10844 AT 'g Wlililll r:I fWltl, 1'* atetement WM Ill h ~ of llt· ~~ ~let ~ of alClh fMI l'l64rlg IX· .,_, -.. venu., ~ ~ wtlfl rl:EIOCI-SUP•RIOR COURT f'llld wllh ...... "~.-. '91'1 • poYldld In ~ ----... IWqllll'ICI plred wll be ao6d • _...._ 231 24• 25· 2 • 29· 30· v1111y,. Callfornl•, flaitlDlw ... .... "' .... ,,._ •• , bell Codi tedlorl 9100. to give nodoe lo In-lie • .....,. 31, June 1, 2001 112708·7018. ::.'~,_,,. 1 OF THI! ITATe Of C1lltt of ~ CCluntY The time for ting dlllml terMlld per10111 unMI A~~ l<cJ: M130 "lOUUT '°" ..,. • NI _. CALIFORNIA on OMUl200t ........ .. not ... before fllr haW llMlll9CI nob A2221 ., 18"2 H11bor art OF P~AL
Fictitious Business
Name Sutement
The followino perton1
-doing bulW.ea u ACTION PACKAGING,
1835 Newport Blvd.,
St• A109 '312, Costa .,_, CA 92827
Pablo R. Aodtlguez.
1029 Cannonade C# Com ...._; CA 92628
Merq S. Rodnguez
1029 CannoneOa Cir Com MIN, CA 92621 TI*~ .. c:on-~ld by. tuband and
wife
Have you s11rt1d
doing ~::r.No Me:cy s.
Thit IClt WU fled with t"8 County
Qlltt °' Orwlgl Cow1') on 05117l200t 2001 .... 147
Delly Plol '= 21. 28, iNnt 4, 11. 1 MJ3:4
IA~w oujl(){11ro.
CONROY'S
FLOWERS
•-~..f:ti T.Vor ~P1ot=:11.11,21, ::ringinon:."°"'~ ~~ r: Blvd .. Santa An•. NEWPORT BEACH 1•.-ov
:.. ..., ... • lnlM> • In re .. _1 Mlp aboff. t ~ ~ ~ ~ NOTICE ;=:::M::A::N::A::Q::llll=="'::;:::!_..:::::===::::~.!!:=:=======::
_,. ......, -.otmD 111. llC 1._ YOU MAY EXAMINE billion~ .. be dly ct Mey, 2001 •I INVITING ltDS
1-1111111,11'1 .. alliee DD!P9AY TitU9f N011CI ~ Ill .. kept by lhl COUl1 lltanted ~ en In-1CHIO a..m; T'1m11 tar,_ 5..-s bids m1y be :..::..~eo::J CrM4M HTmOH ~:'.cs'"tna&-°'..:.:: =':9:.-*' .... _.C!Mhonty. SIM~-~~
llNUllt fl .. ~ Dece .... 1, 1.... TO AD•9TIR you~ fie .with 1hl ~ lhoWt good"= ~-~··:; Newport Boule~ard,
...._. fl .. :'°h • AMr did by ISTATI ~: court • ....,._. fDr t£: ~., Ill ooulf "'°'* nae r1g11e '> ll6d llllow 11 s Po a.. 1~
1aM .....r W ..._.IL CAROL MN =dal No41ot .. ~ .... ...: err~~ -11t ol '*'*Ind untt ~i:ooCAJm. on.!? '""""-• Ill IOfll .. DetRpMf, UllOeA -· ... -· ·~ ~ ~ be·~";; Mllftbert. ..,_ . • .... =.1'1111111...=-= DM•d•nl • CMOL A. .-. .=. ":1'!:8' ~ JUNE 14, aoo1 • uo ~ ,::w,.:.::: ~311...: w~ 2::a
...,.. .. .,. -flt ~A117111TO UROIA ... ~ °' ecoount • p.m. In Oep4. L13 lo-_,. un1Mi ........... eN1 be °'*'9d Md
...... pits r Id -·-CAROL .... ~ In Probtl• Oli.G .. 311 Thi ci.y -..ct: t»<:ert Wll· ,.... tot •
1111 11 ...... ID ... Nab II hMby .._, CAii .NO. AI01m tar 8Pedll NI> CA .... 311•%.~ 11f11tM1: ITMftUQMT
STARTING
ANEW
BUSINESSl '* Nalal flt ,._.., CllllDITOAI llOftllltLL MClllOl'I 1250. A DltYe 80ultl. OrMge, 1111111:~1¥911 -..; ML.90A P••ll..U
... JIU1. = IO .. ftdlllf9 ... .,.. To e7 ..._ -... 1loe fDrwl II ~ IF YOU O&IECT '° a1&-AW1Hla1111: •MHHl IT'8
IW. ,. __ """"..,,.of .. --.~................. .. ~ .. -17t·• .... •• ....... ~ ... " •..!!... ••••••••••• c:=... .... lb0¥1 ,.,. ...... lngant ........ .. --.. p. IZ. ~ ......., , ... l)M,. fllvttei' ---
.. --... II ,....,. '-""I ..... ""° -CllW--.., T. WALIN. M..,. ............... .,._ _ .. _... ........
-m.M ....... ,_. .... lie...-" ..... -1t91r fa"' oll4111D. Of .. -<aUtONF 8i:at 'e ........ !!._--=., "1.:11: _,. ....... ID ..... or .-J •• Aftall_, AT LAW MtlM :tjt1Ma • will =~· ~~ ...... u ...-.. ._, wlll·h : ....... CMOL ANN ._ J,..DW RD.."' OOUft ...,. .. i' _. Ill._ :t-r:~-=:1 ~ •::::r.,,M1 ~-"-... CND. A. ~"""°"' lte•riftt. YCM ............... ~!! .-. ..... -._._.. --•CND.ANN Cl-,..._~1111n,...-..; ....._
........... '· .. Ml: NawpOrt .. ot w 'ffM!I ...... ~-~ '"= ....... ... =:--=-.-11111 I 11111W '\....~ e. A 'ITITIOM "°" ~~ts MMe I' YOJ· AN A Cl9-_,. _, -• ti
....... ~'y-;; .. ,,.,.,,,,.~, ~ -'" ... :.a:.c:.:::a:..-: -=== =..:;..:.-:.: ........ , .... i.7T&'T.:...: I .. "· 111111 ...... _...... ...... ............. =.-.:s.--·.~ ...... '· "" • : --... ... .. ... • -, .. "' -i'i: --:·==.i -S':! cs -p -~ "'"~~ if'i .. :=1.=== .. ::. _,, , -Ii -.: NhfiOlt !t ~.. _____ .__
~ ,
" . . -
Gl
EQUAL HOUSfNG
qPPORTUNITY
All 1131 estate adVertlslng in tills newspaj)tr Is 1Ubj1Ct to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 as amended wh lch makes it illegal to
advertise •any preference,
hmllllion or dlscrlm111atlon
based on race, color. rello-ion. Wt, handicap. tamUfal
status or national origin. or
an Intention to make any
such preference, limitation
Of discrimination.·
.fhls ntwSj)lper wlll not
knowingly accept any
adverttsement for real
estate which is in VIOiation of 'the law. Our readers are
hereby informed lhal an dwen1nos aovertlsed tn this
newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis. To complain of discriml·
nation. call HUD toll·free 11
1 ·800--424-8590.
AFFORDABLE
Frta c:ompvttriUd
Lilt al IYlilablt
Propertlea In your
Sptoltlo price range
And-Fl'll~
m1u1111
1-te6·223-81, 2
ID ttOtO
3Br 28• famUy room.
apecicxJe yatd, new C8lpel &
paint, 2c garage. $250(VMo.
461 £. 16111 Place. Associated Really
949·673-3663
E'Sidt Back Bay 11811 .;th
llj)PIOX 2800 af Oii 8 8400 al
tot. 48r 2.588, family room
w/Fp, formal dining room,
huge jac:uzzi ttJb kl master,
MW rool, half size baskst-
1>811 court! Gina McComb,
agt 949-642·5937
Of'EN SAT.stJN t2-4 4tt E 11111 St
E'Sldt 38' 28a llcMe, nr
1Ch11, gatld ltl~ Irv
BY=: 7~-15t1
NEW HOllE
Only··~ 3 ~, 2.5.,,,
Act-it T,,,,,,,,,. Squalw
'"'' 650-14'0
ED VAJ4 OEH BOSSCHE REAL ESTATE BAOl(fR
LOCAL SINCE 1970
949.g50-0943
www.newportmeu
homes.com
8'tng "-BOit .... To 1 Charming COlf9 on Back Bey wla WllP IWOl.nl
dtdt. 88drme 2Bath In ..
tllllt of Newport Bttc:tl.
This le Albdlbla
PrMledged U\'lng on tilt
waler for $217,000!
No l8j>llrlle propef1y tax. No ttomeoWnei1 Fee.
Lend ..... 18$2~. Cell Loy ..
M•72M045 ~~·
BUILDERS PALACE
ON THE OCEAN
JUST LISTED
AGT. 949-723:-8120
Vllll Point 29r 2Ba. W'111. to
Btl>oe bl. $338,000.
Ag!. 949-723-8120 1:-==I
Uft NMttlhldl couctl
1150. Reclnef, end llblll,
eto, W1Y good ooncitlon,
mutt go this weekendl IMll-846-2340.
' •DOG l PUPPY•
Obledtnce claa9es. We
teach thtm w/k:Ne. Slarts
May 23 SiMa 714-557-7095
•.• .,,,
t1111e.o •wl 11#.Mllln,.,. ""' ftlbjf'rt tu chlt1...,. "'1dl()u1 notiro. •n1t-pubti her l'f'Mr\'f'• 11~ rl~u in l'f'll!'()r, l'f'i<JAMlfy, "'\iM nf' "ieet •U)'
t l11116.it"'d ad\'f'ltWJl\C'fll. r1H11t1 l'l'tlOt'I Any f'rmt' d1a1 Illa)' .,.. in YOW' c-m.m .. d ad h1llJWl1-1tly. ,, ... 011ily rlk>t •IJOl'VlA no li"'iillty for llny
enw In Ill• 8'1\lert~llll'ttt '°" 11 hfoh h ioay ~ re.po1Mible "x~pl lor
tlar ~~· of d~ f'l••ff 11«u•Uy oc-1·111>1e<I b1 1he error. C~t un ooly ~
110t1-.•erl for 1h.-fiNf hlffl"llot1.
------~ ------
Montlay •.....•.•.•. FriJay S:O()po1 t'riJay .......... ThunMlay 5:00pm
1\H!eday ., •...•.. MtwKlay 5:00pm s.tunlay ...•.•...•• Friday 3:00pm
WodmwJay ..• .'J\aeMJay 5:00pm Sund#.Y-······· .. ··Frit\ay S:OOpm
'fhu,,,,.L.y •• Wtldnei11Lly ~:()()pn1
~-~:~·· -· ~w ~., .... i
. . .i ... ~,,~~
INSIDE SALES .REP:
A NESTLE AOUrE
12,10n0. (rMlatlc) 25,,... .....
no Cl*t'I clllou, 11 hnllllo
.... Cllll ,.......
1-I00-2'M80t (24!!n) •
ACCESSORY ROUTE mfg•
nttda kXlll dsl IDr 20 loo's,
Ind ilwtntoly. S351<·150I<
pol No SelrQ. FIM Sim-
pl!! ~ 12Atnl
OVER YOUR 'HEAD In deCC??? Do you ntld nlOf8
br11thing IOOl'll7?? ~ conaolldltion, no qua~
fylnglll "FREE oonaullatlon.
(800) 556· 154811
www.1n1wllorlzon.or(
UceoseO, bonded. "°""
Manufacturer's Represenlotive firm on the
border of Orange County/Los Angeles
seeks professional Spanish and English
speaking Inside Salesperson.
Responsibilities include managing and
developing existing customers and
servicing our distributor partners to
generate repeat business, quoting new
opportunili8$, qualifying leads, closing
business <:Her the phone, and inside sole$
support for field ·sales engineers.
Requirements are excellent
communication and follow-up skills,
history of persistence and success,
effective time management, good
organization and knowledge of Windows-bas~ computing is a must.
Experi~nce in passive electromechanical
products is desirable. This is an excellent
opportunity for someone interested In
pursuing a soles career. A typical 1st
year inside Soles Rep earns $35K·$40K
based on experience. We compensate
with a base solo~ plus commissions and
bonuses. We offer medical insurance,
I c I ' 2llf Wall Houle lellldrY. LIOO ISl.£ All new 38r. Loat Pertcriptlon Eye amr Gnnd Pllllo lkt new 401 {~ nd 'd hol·~ cAX at 111nmfC.C CRYSTAL COVE ~ S2-400mo, 211r 11Ji din, 281, 2.5 car ganige, 0111-. Gold tramea,. no~lefl~ ~ a poi 1 s. ,-, resume f1111 l1,m1~ ¥ $1400mo 225 Apoltr1I patio, SStOO/mo yrly. vicinity of Balboa Ptnin. ,._, ~-· with so ry his1ory. 562/ 246622
-
nnaf Plan' In wm ....___ 949-67a.7390 Botrdwalk. 949-673=2049 7! t701 « 527-0900 ._ ____________ _
'""' .OPEN SUH 14 __ ,__.... -------::::u~ v,. .. ol bay.,.,~~·°' i··=---·~lltlcony r· aa11~ e=:11~ ~1 =~~:.:.
r ollVNaUonal Co .. CAL.'ICANI • .. 1-
Palo Vetdes & Catafna In ..... ::!1.1 ... -..... · 11700 flOO _ _ _ _ _ _ 'Tllml 83 oenta plus lull
finest ~wpott high riu Fr«J Sltlde ,,,,,,,,_, _ _ -IUltharOI. 'Cout to OOlll
building. 28r 2.SBa, b6au-IUH17·11H •NEWPORT SHORES• Stde, S~ Stde, S"'4. Stde, Stde, ~ S4/.e, nn .,.-..,.. siart 141 to ~ ~~ ;= =. ~ ~.;;~= ~ T Hf B1c 0Nf Is COMINC! ~ ~~
Gorgeous (8dml 4.58ath UMUrpuMd vi.... of Torelli Realty driving student•
ASSOC1ATEO REALTY over 4,000 sf, 3c ,,.,,.,,. .... 181 n..-i.. ...... Point "----l •-48r 48a ~ ~ 1-800-338-M28 SeMc8 Of Newport Beech home w/dreatrrj ~ ~ ~;;:-~ lae. mooimo. i'Y, le•. agi Annual Mesa Verde Garage Sale! (CAL·SCAN) ·::m ~ vamllh~
Sales, Rentals, lnveslments be~~ ~ wtltl Avail JINMI 15. S2.200i'Mo. Prud Cl Ally. 949-21~4 . •1111, Sl 100/obo. ~."s:..19~ ~1n Thee.a-'i~!c,3,;'9·~: Asaoc1at1d Realty. SUlllmlt a 28a lvdwd 11n1 ~ Costa Mesa's biggest & best sale with a .. , ~on~t'" ::::.!, 94H46-0353
14M!H!!3 949-376-3356 949-673-3663 vllAt oeh. lmmac, 2 car prestigious neighborhoods. Saturday, June 16th iij n11d1d lo lnwolct, * Up llO 1W5ft •
NEW LISTING Tu•c•nr styl• VIII• Penl~·Polnt ctlannlr i2'i~~~ from 8:00a.m. to 2:00p.m. Main Cross Streets ~ ~end_,::;: Sall or ·Power-aate ~ Unobslf1>Cttd P1rioramlc 28' 28a. den. 2 QI garage, -wn.o ·~.. Ba tuii c::"~~~.. views Many ~ Jae recen11y ~ec1 S2950IMO. •EXTRAORDINARY• ~ are Adams & Mesa Verde Drive. ~ .. 380 qu~ ~~~1~
IN BELCOURT lllb, ~. Fp and '"""· Ctlt 14-299-9166 Contllnpor home I T R PUBUCATIOM Of P0$-48r '3.58e ·Homt $745,000 38r 2.5&, 2t gtll. QISb7I e!'glcMla ~.tior.t". I ORELLI EALTY TAL.JOIS 148.323 yr. Now ~~2 i:o":.=: ::n~~ixJo':":;. iii".::'! ~ s.ee S4/.e, [$~ Stde, [$~ s.u s~ Stde, ~ ~· ~ -Cell IM•27&-9124 949-21&0066 or 3()()-3911 3 ~ ,_., OOllllll Yrtyf IDr 11111, 7
Mlln oll 71W37-1020 Swnrnlt Condo 2.Sf+ Loft, !!!C!!!1h!Y MM4Mttl I "' ....... 11-~ 1 147' l9Lowmf I daya. 80M29-3660 ext. .._ __ ....,._..,.
OHE FOftO ROAD 38a. 2 car-~ .J!· New dlccn 28rl28a Furn. flQll U&I WAllT!O ~ J100 !CAL-SCAHl 2::"1ow":_ c:.:!t ..
By °""" 48r 481+ By<:':-~-.... moo untum. $2100 I "' nn1• 1 RECEPTIOHIST .. S4IOlf (2tOSA) ... 1!i~~E 4 ~:~1~AvaM ,..,_. ~~:=v~ o&°~~Gold~. ~~~o.c: ~==ri-= ~4-~~:
By ge: ~.t013 I *' MDIII• I NtWly Rtmodlltd 2Br plies. fixturM, tablas etc... jewtlly, watches: antiques, and plOCl9I Ollenttd, WOfd/ 81n1fllt. commlHlon Aan UAl VI 281 Frplc a¥1lll now ~ Cont Baautiful MM3t-2295 c:ollectlbles 949-642·9447. Exoell 1 must $11·15hr 94H60-87&4 Amlncle. fully Lotdld, Aloya_~
BAYVJEW COURT 2Bt 2Ba UI mOcimo. First a Lu~ 2Br 2Ba condo ill gated DOE. Fax to raaumt RECEPTIONIST (ot2248) -~
gated comm ~ & tpa, Clll 14W7W01t cotMNlfllty, 2 car Qlflge, ..,,.YING cuLE TOP $SS/RECORDS! 849·263-1763 Tlllodcn Rollllll ~ ~ .l.Jll»' /fWel. Wlllhff ~. RI, pool & i.nnla. ""' -P1r1·1lm1 permanent -.nws12 ~ • rncsp.. $299K Catrla CtlOlot Locallon, cb1e lo FOR I.EAR-In C411 AVl!llblt lnmed. ~ All gills. vues, Jau. R & B. Soul, Rock. Alln: WOltl Fl'Olft ttomt poa11ion. Loct1 ~Is
AIM.' tf{Jt. 949-718-2378 or =· ~~freewa~ 36r 281, Illy lumiahed mo. Apll 949-759-3191 ~~r~ umti:Mi MIKE 84C. 50's ~7505 Up to as::-=M Pff.fff lookilg for • ... ~ 8llW 11• ..
TIH23·IBS2. d 2Br'a, 2lh Ba,~. ~ 6 1111\1 Ocl 21· 200l lltd. Vlllll w/ocn, Ca111na 120 TUS111 Ave. Ste A. -www.txtremecaahnow.com =~dlor :.•:: ~ 18 Ill, Sep,
WATERFRONT FIXER Co-lil1ed by Shari Ten E)Q 94 380-IM92 ~ view, 4Bc 381. (llMI Newport Beech • ollice. 0ooO clerical skills, AC,.!:!°°'. ft~ 88S.f11490t
949·380·9492 & Maury neg.) S550QIMo. OwnrfAIJI. I I CL1ENT COORDINATOR bl .,.. to l!1l8lad well wilh ~ ... a.it
Not For The Faint Staulltf 94H73-5354 I t• •311 1 94-9-300-3229, 640-9041 m _~ The Gallop Orgtniutlon th• publlo. Traditional 8llW 3251 ... of Heelt WOlFF TAHNNG B!DS ,__ -11911ic9 • poeh IMfn per· swl1chboard experience .~ ,_....,
All8fll Mt-723-8120
1 1 1
rm
1
TAN AT HOME '°" wtlO Cll1 help ohls Oo helpful. Drug scrllfllnW ~~ ,. __ ., "-.,._ .,........ 1M ... BUY DIRECT AHO SAVEi mo<a. Cd Don Duttlko OhYsical required. EOe. ..-~ _, • ...,. ,.. .. ,. --.. RM COMMERCIALJHOME EARN . YOUR C0t.L£GE now to wnnge a lnleMew. Fi k Re 1 um e to llllW 53!1 8edlll 4dr ..
Spanish mansion I/Id com-E'Sldt 2lr '111 MW pain/ lril from $198.00 OeQrta quickly! Blc:nalol'a, 949·474-2710 MHSl-7246 °' Mild 10 Slpd, lolcltd, 120k mt, ::;'1~,.,,6:'°;i";',: 28r tea ea...._. wldlc* carpel. w/d l*lc>. Fp, lllf, ~~ ~ ~~by U:: o.111 Entry Olerll tWCMn Vlmt Stenz 1 08ti Pict. ntedl llll.llltr win. 111-..,.,., -~---,.,.. __ 17000 , .. _.. no pell, $1250r'mo. 2311 A .. ..._. prior _.._......_ ..__..__ ~ ~..... ........ .• , .......... 330 West B~ SllMI, llQld tor put 3YTt $2000
I""" .....,... ... V>9f , ovt11ooks ~. W/O. K1Y1k Carlton Pie. ..._.2809 _,., Cd 1-800-711-<11 .......,...,,,, ......... ~-. ,.._ nuur ,,......,. Coet1 Mesa, ~ 92627 abo ~.-.. ~lot. wUi,.a •rid storage. Nr shopa. New MANAGERS Ind ~-~· Rta 10/plr hr. Call= =-===--=-~;_,, ~-= ~$1850 IMN?§:-0872 28( 2Bt W/O ~ gu, • SPECIAL• ~~ ~'!.OfFn!., ~~i:nv """11eooaooi'IM-; ~~ Mon. 9:»§. 949#4 RECEPTIONIST " llllW za ..
•••1 140 Al>ert. $1475/mo. Pit $17 ()() ~ ....,.., ... _ u SC QA'l'l:K"'"'Pre ., .. ____ Wed-SI!, b-YICtt Clwtlr 11111111, IUllJ loaded, u111qua propetty. Lalldrnt~ do not cllttuftl tantnta. 5. + tax floor, Incl parking. 2...... -,.,.., ~ "'" ..,_,,..,, Co. in NPB. gener11 olllclt cultolll blw tx*lf, l4llllt
loclltlon. lt,549,000 or 8"" 1 t• .rllll I Ctl !.indlaY 94~3632. (Mult P'9Wll 11111 lt200tpl!r .... ~1450 Gardenl CdM, PT. GIMI dutlta. Fax resume to mr-. PP. Mt-715:!19! Offef. s.1,,., lnnttmtnt 235 11111 & ldlchenetls. vlai1M, ct: dlrectlont, IMH73-0807
Co. ~ • 28a Howl gll, Fp, pvt = ~ 1-,_,., , m miLW I ;4'~ri .. ~ or Hiii to Cllllllc c-.. .. Of~ ~X ~n:":i..:V: ~~ FEATURES: 24-Houl ~ ........ FIND jttr:"t-0~ Low 20I< M, Pelo. Tan Lh
......-.. • .,,.. Oii _..., * S1VD10 1125 * 2718 Portola. Avail now Lobby/Direct dlal (706623) NABERS $28,988
No l>oMlwllk. Blllld\jy s.,. to bttdl, 11.mV. btllt St?SOimo. 714-662-3111 (I( phonea/Fret HBO. •Aclmlnl•tnlht ...... H. •SECRETARYe (!tt) MMtDO
remodlltd 'lfrilh lop ~ l!fdg. • lncd. ~ dick. ESPN & Oteo'Pool & WANTED -" :i:· v""' "=:! m. ltp!t!. 1Mt-zeo.ma 714'540-3866 Jlc:uzzl. Guttt laun-ANTIQUES :;:r-~ ~ an apartment =~...-. ~-::': ~~ ~~. io'!.. 12. ~ · dry Clclll to 405 & 56 _ Fu resume ~5 or W IOWpM. Fu ,...,.. "'--· •• '""
ASSOCIATED REAlTY FZmMln'I flonl o.c. or Hiii cfd0ntl·S11r.net through classified • .-.; !'!Q .... 712 .. 11t (7 ) NABERS S24.ael
94H73-3Ma ~. W~ ~ Older Style Fumlt&n (714)MO.ttl0 ' ~'ll PIANOS l ColledibMa STOP COLLECTOR - -- -
CUSTOM BAYFAONT
HOME .ith DOCK
Brand MW WltOm home Oii lhl waler 481'1 end 4.581'•·
Comer kx:alion, 2 blocb to lhl btldl. Speciol.-IOof
lop deck 1Wpi1101111ilc w'•
of octan, bey end dky ~
Dock for 14> to 30lt powtl'
boll $ 1 ,595..1.000. ASSOCIATED "EAL.TY
MH7H!fS
TWO PORT ITMIT
IA"GAIMI
amng o.i.n View
....... fol.~ ~~ llr1I' GUllOlll llOl'llt.
""' oppoitUnlly tor CllleOlll "°"" IMMw ........
u..t Pllced Uoly
In .. d Hllbor """ Holnt•. ,ortlnno Modi!. MowHI ~
dttlOn. clo" to ICll"*9 llld .... ... .....
-=~ -.n..-
r· --~_. ....... ; . .. •~r .. .
. .,.~" ... ,
.. -1 '· ' '
tanot to lhopl Ind ,....,..._._ ilt-ea!ie CALLI! We cen http. 1111auranta. • '4.-• -• OllclO ,_ Lowtt peymll1l9. RtdllCt Cdlao Dlwllt '01 COSTA MESA $$ CA8M PAID$$ lnlnlt. Slop lllt8 IMa. Debt Low 121< ...... Wtlllt, CO MOTOR '"" _,_.,__ oontOlldttlon. FrM debt (114230) "1.988 %m Hlfllo( Blvd NAIERI Phone .... ets 4,40 WI "UY ESTATES w 7 , d h . couna11ing. Nonprolll. C714l MMtDO '" ·~~NNlct womens an omc Store IS Aurllon Soluilonl. --
looking for one Full and one ~,-cS:-=scNQ·eur· ~1ce~11w"'
, COrJSIGtJr.mJTS 1 ~·-· . '• . .
·c:s:
'
Pan-time experienced sales 1233192> sto.-. NAHAS associate to join our ccam! CT11!4tf100
Flexible schedule required CAO&LAC Om.u 'ti
muse have positive attitude ri:Me"f w1111 ~:S
and ability to cliencele and :-:_• :,:=. 171=~00
develop a relationship with = ;:..:.-:: CAO&LAC INoNdo..,
customers. Pleasant working 1'911 ....,. ,... ..., T~~· co. l!flf .., ..., °' .... ,....,,_, 1111.1'9 environment and great benefits. ,_ .,..., "-cl NAKRt' ,
Ind •ldel•lll Mt WA>f!tt100
Please Call Le Ann
(949) 759-7985
at-ea me
in Fashion IswnJ
is seeking an Aaounts
Paf*l!le ~rson. Wall assist
controller in ac.counts
payable and bank
reconciliation, book.keeping .
Must be accurarc.
..,...... ...... Woll •
'''"· CMll.LAC ......... ~ nu. Horhllr, 1aw mi.
(8000ee) NAlllll 12t.-
(?14,.....!0!
I . . .. ·~
~·· ~ !,t,;...,_. • ---~
Ford Thundlrtilrd .. A!: AC, F,,,_. c1oa1~1 ....,..
TheodoN Aobll'9
l!HllH512
IOC>A ACCOfl) LlQ 't1
12311 rnllee, while, 4dr,
$S500, dMll In llld OIL
.. C8I 94f.&45.8210
IOC>A CMC Ll '11 Ollginll owner, Low 5811 mi,
-"" llnO, co. $10.500 M•n.t1'3
. -' t • ~. ~
' . . '... ....,
WWII 11130 't1 Corw
78k mi, boob, all
r900ldl, wilt Wt llhr,
CO. dlrome whee\a,
like new condition
'8,995 Wit 587218 oc ....... MHft.1 ..
Have A
~arage Sale!
C•ll the Piiot
C•••••~••d• •t 1&4&J B4R·!5B7B
to Pl•a• Your 'i:a•r•a• Bale Ad I
1'1 QUICKBOOKS SITVP !'talnlng I Support ~-::IYlil
:,..~.-~ ; " -""~
, ~ . . . .
a
W~~ .
-~-
JMllUNt XICI '17 ~ beeu~ Cl\rolllt .-.. co, -.
ntw .... low "" ldnll, ~IO-Mt•Hlll
~a...· • AC, a-(~ ,.,..,. ..,,.
........ ti
•a...ncta....• ve. 4-4, 11w w. tow pc:to.
Mo, .... oond. .. rr-· 111,860. $4N87.01
-Wflllglef 'M a-lunwiw Fun
{41zcm} ....,..
TheodoN RoOlne
NWS!::f!1i
~
JeaaOL•
Wr, ~=·only
(211~ t1t,IM COlll Acura
11!:11t-H
UM AcMt ~ LI .. 35k ml. kl fldory MIT, ~ ""'· cllll cUlt nvwt.~~ .. new I t w.el7421, • rwd'lg .... oc ~lb ........ , .. ..._..._am ..
Sllw. OoYe lAllfllr a.i
(421882) '38.tee
NABERS
(!1!} 540-tlOO
MERCE.OU C230 '17
Navy, ':2o hlw lllw, ~s·Otttt *COlld.· ~
Ml6HI007
Mln:ildlanorw:; 7 Mlttr, co .
loedld wilh .. ~ op-den. lmmlclAlll Cal
P• 11 714-420-7158.
..._.. -.. Red ~. Ct9l'lll "" Int, 1191 ytllS model, dlrome,
NW IOft ~· Oii ~ 117,500 A 0 714-!§1· ~
Mercury Y1lllgef 15
Mo, pe..
(P1511} ....
South CMll Acura
714-171-2500
ME~ VUAGER 'a
l.adllt, co, -... (J13571)
NABERS S7.t81
(!14~1100
MilMllllilhl MontlNo ..
Mo. VS. AC, ti (2lOOIA) 10,lllO
~ COMI Acura
714-171-2500
tlllNlllhl ~ Sii ..
V6 350 en;. 4X4, -ml, ~ owner. blaclcllan lllv, . co. chrome ::;_ lotdtd, beautrflll •
SIO,ttS, ~ Wltl'
Ml, WIWT77291 N.llJ
Bkr 849-586-] 188
H GARDENER H
Forma.lly trained. v111
~. tip hotn. ,. _. .-. 11wn.1ao
Monday, May 21,· 200 r 9 .
Bridle
:ltt,~ GOREN F
ASCH
TODAY'S
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
end TANNAH HI
AN
Q l • Aa South, vu lnenble, you
SWEJtS TO WEEKLY IRIOOE Qt1lZ
simply lapoad one SJ*lc.
Aa.oe8 51~ ~=Id\. eo Chqeodar er.,,.-... ..-. 11,..,,.. ., ............ IOUnf
14~ '2~ hold:
•6 o KQ9142 O A Q 4 •Boch vulncnble,u South you 11 ~ .. .,., 93 :i-
hokt: 18 l.ooll .,.., &4 ~ .., •
The blddln bas SOU11I NO lo ,_ •• ' What do you bid now?
A • You have a minimu mopening
-card major suit
we. Rebid two
ix cards on banoe,you
amoncb next.
bid with a decent lilt
u the hand's key feat
heana, whic~romisea s this auction. lven the c
can show your di
•Kl3 o AQU o AQJU •I
The biddlna baa DrOCeeded: NORTH EAS1' SOUTH WEST lo ,_, T
Whal do you bid now?
A ·.You have a powerful hand with excellenl suppon for opener's suit.
You can telf liim that immediately by
jumpina to tflree diamonds, then
raising hearta next.
17~...,.,.· 85.....,. .. r-m ~ 11~ MOlrdln~ 111 Potlra,llle•
21 ~med 1 P~annw 23 Ttll bell*1d 2 Dairy-llliy
24 WhMI '*' 3 Goe ltd al Iha 25 !Wort, IO a poet Clfllgan
21 Ol'Mla 4 CMy11
30 l,ang ~ !I Vacc:illt type
32 CollOn bUndlM 8 lMlcelot'• Wt 33 FV·l'Mdllng 7 MlrUd
37 OIMnOel lnliml lrnptOWmenlS
Q 2 • ,., South, vulne:ra ble,you hold:
38W .. lnU. 8:
Q 5 • Both vulnerable, you hold: 311 ~ .,.. 9 1ne11n 1tm
• 40 0-l'IUmbefw 10 PUWy l'l\flllw • Kl3 o I o AQJIS • AQ'5 42 Cut on en angle 11 '**-llllMNI 43 Ool .., Lopez 13 Oomalnt •7 O AJtlU o Q.I 96 •AQ Partner opens the biddina wath one 44 Broedtnt 14 AINX Mcau,. bean. What do you respond? "6 Tree lkAd 20 ScU -The blddin bas 48 A.QNs or 22 Sulan 's c:ouu1 SOUTH NO lo ... •• f
~: Bemedloe • g 24 Old NorM A· This hand is exaclly !he same· in 411 ~and ·-lrwcl1pdoN
high-card strength and distribuuon llO Oo by. • llme 2e ~ on
What do you bid now? and the one above. 11)e difference as 52 From Quebec 27 Badie
A • You have a very sou ndopenin1
hind from have to bid
iamonds,
pin over any
Thatlhows
and a bener·
that betc you have 1 singleton in .,s1_Shr9Wd _____ 21 Addillonlllly
opc:DeT's suaL Since you mi&ht need 1
bid. To distinguish this
the finl ~le, you ditrercnlly. R id 1WO d'
sevcnl rounds of bidding 10 IOClfC
your ideal spot, do not consume your t....-+.---t-+--
own spece by jump-Ahiftingnow.
Bid two diamonds. Ihm bid your beans a
continuation by pennei:
6-4 in YOW' long suits
than-minimum opening.
OU hold: Q J · Not vulnerable. y
• A Q It 6 l o 74 o A IJ •AH
Paniicr opens the blddi
bean. What do you re
ng with one
spood?
A· You have a very g ood hind (ac-
ned the bid.. Ing a ~r who ope dinll· 1 this is not the whtch IO jump to either
or two no trump. To all
hlndwitb
twolpldes
uwyoonelf
explom1ioo, the maximum room for
1-~1
...... AllllM • auto. AC, pe. CO (PtHI) 110,llO
lblfl COl9t Acura
71!:;!71-2500
...... ... '00
Low --.v..,a-
(113W) 114,171
l'lleodof9 AoOllll
.... 3Q.1112
...... a.... '13
auto, VI, AC, 119
(2l115A) ..... ~ COllt Acura
714-171-2500
Nlllln 300ZX '88
Miii• • Miil S3000 v:gr c:i.n, ~ MN624l5
Q' . Vulnerable. you hold
• AQ 1165 lol I Q 10943 • 52
Panncr opens the b1dd1na wath one
spedc. What do you respond?
A· You do not know eJllelly how
many trick.a your side can make. or
even If the hand belon11 10 you.
Jump to four spades! Your dbtribu-
tion should give partner play for the
concract. artd the level C011ld Jl"C·
elude the opponents from enttnna
the auction when they have a mak·
able contnlet !heir way.
T~lllfl09'19
,,,.,,,_,, -· AC (1mlM) $19,171
l'lleodof9 Ralllnt
-.aswe12
SELL
I catl Cl..ined Toay I l•!IU.all
s.ua ICl09 '17
Onen, auto, ---· 41111111, kllded. llft09l'd,
lftUll 1111 MIO. I C•ll Cl•••lfled Today I 714-11Mt!7 .. __ __...<e_•_e ....... > _,e._•...__2._-_.11._e ........ 7_.e;;..._ _ __.
your home
through classified
'-, .. H1 d l 11 I• ,q,,
f I, f,I\ I I I I 1 llfl('f
FREE VIAGRA
You've heard
about Vuigra ...
but have you
tried it?
• Viagra success 1$
de.pendent on
properute.
Get labmatian n.
I pbytidla who
~-Scnal O,llfcwdou and baa
pa{wmed-u
Vilpa Cllabl SIUll.
Calb INTERIOR
RE·OESIGN &
ARRANGEMENT
,..~,...,,__.
°MAICINC THi MOST Of
WHAT YOU HAVE"
~us...
~*LM,""~.V-..
~kle'*9t s.w.
9~9-675-18~
....... tl..u .........
... UXAnNO
IUC11IONIC SlM LIM omtmOH ....., .....
675·9304 O'RYANS MOVERS
An1lquH, pianos and ':~=m=:::J ~ lpc Of ent ,_, L
C!l!I -Mlm ...
F.r=. ~air-Ext
P• loc:ll ~ NB ,,. "°" M ••am
IKl'I CUITOM 'AINTWIG =--=--~= l.!1'0!9 !!H31-4110
ALL ORA!rWS ~CLOGGED ..... ~ ... ·-··-·•w -• ·-"'--~ (714) ... 11C7
1"'• NltCIN>CltftOCllCfl
"""'*'' --·--a....INCWST
lWllD'I'~
949-645--2352 -..
'*' WMM CAlft.I Spidllllla4 lrt ..........
hcNe. ~ ..... w=••••LJ goeet Ted DW!:fO!?
..__. CIQ.I llMlfT .................
r;;;,r ';.. ·-liill
FIND
an apartment
through classlfied
1WM11f.,, ~
& v.n ewo.,.
714.435.17
Slate l
Whit
hlpplnl If
youdoni
ldvMlll?
Cll ..
a.11•1111
A
I I f ' I I I
Jaguar . .-Dealer in California ·
.
For .New & Pr.eowned Vehicles
I
. . .
JAGUAR CREDIT'S ·LEASE
OF 'A LIFETIM·E CEL .EBRATION
HIGHEST RANKED IN SATISFACTION WITH . INITIAL CONSUMER ,
LEASES, ACCORDING TO J.0! POWER-AND ASSOCIATES.
We've gone to great lengths to mak€ leasing a Jaguar as enjoyable as driving one.
A tall order, you say? You obviously haven~t met th~ grea t people from Jaguar Credit.
~~-l!!fi~-So why not take this opportunity to get acquainted with them and their lease options?
'• 1455 South Auto Mall D 'rive .
Santa Ana • 55 Freeway at Eding.er
-
\ \ \ \ \ \ ~ I ) . l l I t \ , . j • l t~ l I ' l I . ( ( ) I l l
714.953 '.4800
•AJ·V6 MSIP $46,250, $499 per month plut tax, 39 month doled ind INle Oii wroved credlL DrM-ofr $Ja.16 .........
fili • l11ldull t~22.SO. 2lf lillli owr 10. (LIJ47J)
I