HomeMy WebLinkAbout2000-06-13 - Orange Coast Pilot. . . . .
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PHOTOS BY SEAN HUER I OAll.Y Pit.OT
Henry Segerstrom thanks well-wishers after a Monday afternoon funeral for bis ~e, Renee. at Fairhaven Memorial Park ln Santa Ana.
A farewell to Renee Segerstrom ·
Speakers remember generous patron for
her commitment to the arts, love for family
Alex Coolman
DAILY PILOT
SANTA ANA -A column
of black-clad mourners
walked slowly from the chapel
of Waverly Church to its ceme-
tery Wednesday as Renee
Segerstrom, an arts leader and
the wife of developer Henry T.
Segerstrom, was laid to rest.
She died Wednesday at the
age of 72 from complic(ltions
from an extended illness.
small stone chapel and inlo-
rows or Chairs that had been
set u]) on an adjacent lawn.
Flower arrangements were
piled onto every available sur-
face, the orchids and lilies wilt-
ing slightly in the heat of the
afternoon.
Her memorial was heavily
attended, with crowds spilling
out of the Santa Ana church's
Packed into the pews were
represeqtatives of many of the
county's arts organizations.
Roger Kirwan, chairman of the
Orange County Performing
Arts Center, was in atten-
dance, as were South Coast
SEE SERVICE PAGE 5
The funeral procession for Renee Segerstrom makes Its way to the
burial site Monday.
Pesticide ban may help· clean Newport Bay
•After 2001, there will be no more residential use of
chlorpyrif os, which flows into bay through urban runoff.
Alex Coolman
DAILY PILOT
NEWPORT BEACH -A new
federal ban on a common home
and garden pesticide could be
the solution to some of Newport
Bay's contamination concerns,
city officials said.
The Environmental Protection
Agency announced last week
that the over-the-counter sale of
the pesticide chlorpyrif os, which
is known as\Dwsban and Lors-
ban, must terminate by the end of
2001.
The. prohibition will help
Newport Beach because chlor-
pyrifos happens to be a major
problem in Newport Bay, said
Deputy .City Manager Dave Kiff.
That chemical is one of two -the
other being the pesticide diazi-
non -that is present in the bay
in concentrations that are consid-
ered •acutely toxic,• Kiff Said.
The chemical enters Newport
Bay prtmarily thro~-gb nmoff
from commercial and residential
sources. And, like many contam-.
inants that enter the bay through
runoff, it can be difficult to con·
trol simply because its sources
may be far inland.
That's a prOblem for the city
because the level of chlorpyrif os
in the bay will be more strictly
regulated under a new program
developed by the EPA and its
state partners. The program will
attempt to control the levels of
toxic chemicals and sediment in
Seniors wan~~t-=--'-ore con1rol of center
• Some say board's failure to
bear concerns about now-fired
executive director is example
of communication problems.
Al ...... .,
DM.vPIDT
COSTA MISA -A~ num-
ber o1 Colta M9la ._.. c.m.l' mma·
ben-wwt»mlllidlarlll••-Of lbl mat.ft ....., INd dlls•
maatlll • -wmt ..... w6111 d
lllllllr IM:Utly, ltaltlllg wtlla IP 2 I 1 llllpul .... Jddna . .,... ......... •bpawl ... Of .......... ---............ llldSla'1•CDll,•
bodies or water.
However. because of the fed·
eral ban, Newport will be spared
the difficulty of trying to control
chlorpyrif os by persuading
neighboring ciUes to give up
their pesticides.
Kenneth Theisen, sanitary
engineering associate for the
California Regional Water Quall·
ty Control Board, emphasized
that the •acutely toxic" levels of
chlorpyrifos in the bay are not
harmful to adult humans, but
SEE BAY PAGE 5
... ' , .
TUESDAY, JUNE 13, 2000
·Credibility ·
suddenly ..
subject
of forum
• At a meeting to discuss
dueling measures, speakers
instea.d argue about the
integrity of city officials.
Noaki Schwartz
D AILY PILOT
CORONA DEL MAR -The lead-
ers or dueling initiatives raced orr on
Monday but ended up debating the
trustworthiness or city officials instead
or the merits of the measures.
Greenlight proponents instsled that
city officials cannot be trusted to make
decisions for voters, even hmtJ.ng at
the recent revelations that Mayor John
Noyes was on the run lrom the law for
nearly a decade.
"There's been all Uus talk of rep-
resen ta ti ve government,• said
Greenlight supporter Phil Arst. "ln
the words or Mayor Noyes, "trust your
elected offiaals.' •
Arst's statement, expressed at
Monday's Corona del Mar Residents
Assn. forum, was Ul response to a
comment from Noyes, who at a coun-
cil meeting earlier this year pleaded
with residents to trust their elected
officials to make decisions about lhe
city's future.
SEE FORUM PAGE 7
Popejoy alleges
slander, files
new lawsuit
•Financial guru embroiled in
legal baWe with Balboa Bay
Club says executive banned
his reputation in statements
made to newspaper.
Noaki Schwllltz
DAILY PILOT
NEWPORT BEACH -Finanoal
guru William J. Popejoy has filed a
lawsuit against Dave Wooten, a
managing execubve of the Balboa
Bay Club -tbJ.s bJne allegmg slan-
der.
The lawswt was prompted by a
statement made by Wooten m the
June 2 edition of the Dally Pilot.
accusing PopeJOY or • extortlon •
when the banker demanded money
for his help in secwing fmanoal sup-
port for the Bay Club. The complaint
requests punitive damages from
Wooten.
•It was enb.rely designed for a
short-term public relauons pur-
pose,• Popejoy's attorney, Ron Rus,
said of Wooten's statement. "Over
time, the real story will emerge.
Extortion is a crime.•
But Bay Oub owner Beverly Ray,
SEE POPEJOY PAGE 1
••111
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PHOTOS BY SEAN HILLER I DAILY PfLOT
Henry Segerstrom thanks well-Wishers after a Monday, afternoon funeral for his wife, Renee, at Fairhaven M~morial Park in Santa Ana.
~
A farewell to Renee Segerstrom
Speakers remember generous patron for
her commitmen~ to the arts, love for family
Alex Coolman
DAILY PILOT
SANTA ANA -A column
of black-clad mourners
walked slowly from the chapel
of Waverly Church to its ceme-
tery Wednesday as Renee
Segerstrom, an arts leader and
the wife of developer Henry T.
Segerstrolll, was laid to rest.
She died Wednesday at the
age of 72 from complic{ltions
from an extended illness.
small stone chapel and into--
rows of chairs that had been
set up on an adjacent lawn.
Flower arrangements were
piled onto every available sur-
face, the orchids and lilies wilt-
ing slightly in the heat of the
afternoon.
Her ·memorial was heavily
·attended, with crowds spilling
out of the Santa Ana church's
Packed into the pews were
represeqtatives of many of the
county's arts organizations.
Roger Kirwan, chainnan of the
Orange County Performing
Arts Center, was in atten-
dance, as were South Coast
SEE SERVICE PAGE 5
The funeral procession for Renee Segerstrom makes its way to the
burial slle Monday.
·Pesticide ban may help clean Newport Bay
• After 2001, there will be no more residential use of
chlorpyrifos, which1lows into baythrough urbanllIIloff.
Alex Coolm•n
DAILY PILOT
NEWPORT BEACH -A new
federal ban on a common home
and garden pesticide could be
the solution to some of Newport
Bay's contamination concerns,
city officials said.
The Environmental Protection
Agency announced last week
that the over-the-counter sale of
the pesticide chlorpyrtfos, which
is known as Dursban and Lors-
ban, must tenninate by the end of
2001.
The prohibition will help
Newport Beach because chlor-
pyrtfos happens to be a major
problem in Newport Bay, said
Deputy City Manager Dave Kiff.
That chemical is one of two -the
other being the pesticide diazi-
non -that is present in the bay
in concentrations that are consid-
ered •acutely toxic,. Kiff md.
The chemical enters Newport
B~y primarily through IYJlOfJ
from conunercial and residential
sources. And, like many contam-
inants that enter the bay through
runoff, it can be difficult to con-
trol simply because its sources
may be far inland.
That's a prOblem for the city
because the level of chlorpyrifos
in the bay will be more strictly
r09'11ated under a new program
developed by the EPA and its
state partners. The program will
attempt to control the levels of
toxic chemicals and sediment in
Seniors want more control of center
bodies of water.
However, because of the fed-
eral ban, Newport will be spared
the difficulty oJ trying to. control
chlorpyrifos by persuading
neighboring cities to give up
'their pesticides.
Kenneth Theisen. sanitary
engineering associate for the
California Regional Water Quali-
ty Control Board, emphasized
that the •acutely toxic" levels of
chlorpyrif os in the bay are not
harmful to a dult humans, but
SEE BAY PAGE 5
-.. ..-
• Some say board's failure to
bear concerns about now-fired
executive director is example
of communication problems.
AlldlewG..._.
OMV PlloT
COSTA MESA -A growing num-
ber ol COila MeM Senior Center mem·
ben-ICllDe wbo caDecl for tJae CllUltlDg
OI tJae cmtm'I naady fired dlrectar ........... ..__ _ _... age-wet more mellal of
tblir fadllty, ~ wttb vr-tm Input
la ltaff blltDg: •nere'I belD an abylmal a.ct of
~ b9l\li1a UI, tll9 .eatl
.. tbe baud.. Mid Ka*I•• CDlli. •
• I
1UESDAY, JUNE 13 I 2000
Credibility
s~~denly
subject
of·forum
...
• At a meeting to discuss
dueling measures, speakers
instea.d argue about the
integrity of city officials.
Noaki Schwartz
DAILY PILOl"
. CORONA DEL MAR -The lead-
ers of dueling initiatives faced off on
.-. Monday but ended up debating the
trustworthiness of city officials instea<,t
of the merits of the measures.
Greenlight proponents insisted that
city officials cannot be trusted to make
decisions for voters, even hinting at
the recent revelations that Mayor John
Noyes was on the run Crom the law for
nearly a decade.
HThere's been all this talk of rep-
resentative government,• said
Greenlight supporter Phil Arst. "In
the words of Mayor Noyes, "trust your
elected officials.' •
Arst's statement, expressed at
Monday's Corona del Mar Residents
Assn. forum, was in response to a
comment from Noyes, who at a coun-
cil meeting earlier this year pleaded
with residents to trust their elected
officials to make decisions about the
city's future.
SEE FORUM PAGE 7
Popejoy alleges
slander, files
new lawsuit
•Financial guru embroiled in
legal battle with Balboa Bay
Club says executiv~ hanned
his reputatiorrin statements
made to newspaper.
Noaki Schwartz
D AILY PILOT
NEWPORT BEACH -Fmanoal
guru William J . Popejoy has filed a
lawsuit against Dave Wooten, a
managing executive of the Balboa
Bay Club -this time alleging slan-
der.
The lawsuit was prompted by. a
statement made by Wooten in the.
June 2 edition of the Daily Pilot,
accusing Popejoy of -• extorbo~
when the banker demanded money
for his help in securing financial sup-
port for the Bay Club. The complaint
reque$ts punitive damages from
Wooten.
"It was entirely designed for a
short-term public relations pur-
pose,• Popejoy's attorney, Ron Rus,
said of Wooten's statement. "Over
time, the real story will emerge.
Extortion is a crime.·
But Bay Club owner Beverly Ray.
SEE POPEJOY PAGE 7
---•M•_.10
-----~···· . ..J
"
2 Tuesday, June 13, 2000
Kids Talk · BACK
What would
be your ideal
summer job?
With Swnt1er vacation just
weeks away, we asked Ct>sta
Mesa High School students
what their Ideal summer job
would be. ·
•My job
would~
something
that brings in
a lot of mon-
ey, but does-
n't require a
lot of work.
But since we
are moving
this summer, I don't have to
get a job."
STEVEN ERRICO, 15
Freshman, Costa Mesa
·1 already
work for
Whole Foods
Market. I've
been
employed for
the past 11
monthS. l
· really like it.
I get to work
in the dilferent deparbnents.
It's fun. I'm saving my money
for college and a car."
VICTOR GARCIA. 19
Senior, Costa Mesa
"Something
outdoors
that pays a
lot of mon-
ey, but
requires lit-
tle effort. I'd
work five
days a
week. I'd
spend the
money right away, probably
on food, CDs, clothes and
makeup.•
· ICATRYNA ANGLE, 14
Freshman, Costa Mesa
"My ideal
job would
be working
at Ram-
page cloth-
ing store in
South
Coast
Plaza.
They have
the cutest clothes. But legally,
I can't work until I'm 18.
That's why it's my dream job
and not a reality."
ANGELA GRISHAM, 1 S
Freshman, Costa Mesa
"My ideal
job would
be sh.op•
ping for
other peo-
ple. Proba-
bly
wardrobe.
I'd work
five days a
week. What's bad about
shopping five days a week?"
NICOLE AYLWARD, 15
· Freshman, Costa Mesa
-<:.ornpil9d by Amy Spurgeon;
photos ~ Sein Htuer
.. '--='"--•
...... TIE Wiii Newport Elementary School
• Ad• I IT 1327 W. 8atbcM Blvd .. New-
port luch
• C.._ 11 '* Denise KnutMn, prindp9I
• NHS boob of lmer.t for litnfy
\..
IN THE CLASSROOM
Daily Pilot
f YI
• Who.
Students
in Jeanne
Garrison's fifth-
grade class ........ :
Kaiser
Elementary
School
• What:
Several riveting
games of
spelling bingo
• Leuon: To
help students
learn their
·spelling words
Lynelle Johnson
clinches her
fists in anUdpa-
Uon of winning
a game of
spell1ng bingo
in teacher
Jeanne Garri-
son's Uftb-grade
class at Kaller
Elementary
School
MARIANNA DAY MASSEY
I DAILY Pit.OT
Can you spell that, please?
D•nette Goulet
0 AJLY PILOT
• IN THE ClASSROOM is a weekly fea ·
ture In which Daily Pilot education writer
Danette Goulet visits a campus within the
Newport-Mesa Unified School District and
writes about her experience.
Students sat all around me,
anxiously biting lower lips and
concentrating intently.
"What was the last word she
said?" Beau Gallois, 11, asked fret-
fully.
You'd think they were taking
finals, not playing spelling bingo.
But then, all you get from taking a
final is a grade.
If you win spelling bingo, you
get a Jolly Rancher candy.
So in the true spirit of investiga-
tive journalism, I grabbed a card
and jumped in.
lrWl1!~ IDUtaTIOll
District to honor
scholarship winners
The Newport-Mesa Unified
School District Board of Educ:atimi
will boacr this year's student ldiol-
anhip and award winnen clWtDa
itl regular board meeting, Wbk:i
will be held at 7 p.m. today at the
Dlltrtd Education Center.
Recipients of Newport-Mela'w
five major llCbolanhip awmdl wm
be recognized and congratulated
for tbe bonon they reoaived.
The board will COQIAder adoJAl+'i
many new high tcbool. ~
READER$ HOIUNE
(949) 642-6086
"9cxwd your comments about
the Delly Pilot Of news tips.
--Is 330 W. Bay St.. COit.a M9u, CA 92627.
I joined students in Jea.JUle Gar-
rison's fifth-grade class at Kaiser
Elementary School in Costa Mesa
as they carefully copied their
spelling words onto paper bingo
sheets. Students were sure to study
their spelling words because
everyone knows that if the words
are spelled incorrectly, your bingo
doesn't count
These were tough words, too -
sieve, chasm, suspicious, petered,
transfixed. I was impressed.
As I filled out my card, I bad a
little helper by the name of Lynelle
Johnson, who was teaching me the
tricks of the trade. If you put your
free space in the top left comer,
she told me conspiratorially, you
can use it when you play three
types of bingo: regular five in a
row, the X, or the postage stamp,
which goes around the edges of
the board.
and adult education textbooks for
the nat ICbool year.
On tbe lllt are S 1 new books for
the four regular high schools, 'D for
alternative education and seven for
adult education. Board memben
and tbe pubic will have an oppor-
tunity to vaa any objectiom to the
.... ctladl at tbe meeHng.
Diltltct ltaff wQl Uo update ~
baud ml tbe COIDDlUDity on tbe
1tatu of the budget procee1.
~ that update., tbe boud wm ICbedule a public beariDg far
tbe 2000-01 tentative budget. Tbe
elm. coeDWed for that beariDg Is
Jane XI during the board's regµm.
ly ldleduled meeting. .
-0..illltlGoullt
OK. 1 bad my bingo board set
and a pile of construction paper
scraps to use as chips. I was ready
to go.
•Rummaging," Garrison
announced.
Got that one.
"Vouch."
Yes, yes, doing well.
"Impulse."
Oh yeah. I'm on a roll.
It doesn't seem to matter who
you're up against, that competitive
spirit lives on -in some of us,
anyway.
Just as my board started to fill
up and show potential, someone
suddenly yelled, •bingo!"
Just as suddenly, the room was
in chaos. There were 20 groans
and one bellow -•nooooooo. •
Garrison chudcied and advised
the students to keep the pieces on
their boards until she verified the
Teacher to attend
seminar at Harvard
Newport Harbor High School
teacher Suun Band .... ~ llled·
ed to atlmd one olrl annw lbady
op~rtunlties t upP9!\9d "1 the
· NaUonal Endowment for the
fflnnanlffet .
Band,. Newpmta.c:b ,..,.,..,
W8I m..:. frala ..... aatlOaal
pc>Ciol~-11-Nd-Nl........-..farttie .,...,....w • ....,..1Q11eyt1m
Cl8era .-.a-· .........
IDdrwa~d.•c •,_
., Wdlln cma llDdJ Wllb...,...
tilht!!M ............. ' tllled~':s-=-:.-:::
winner's board.
Once it was verified, students
invariably asked •couldn't we just
keep going?"
Each game was the same sce-
nario -so close, yet no dice.
Then, just as we were about to
start the last game, my advisor,
Lynelle, scooted over next to me.
•You're good luck,• she
declared.
Why? I don't know. I hadn't won /
a single game yet.
Then it happened. It was the
very end of the game when every-
one began shouting bingo and I
glanced over at Lynelle's card.
She had only one space left to
fill -•bafflement." Garrison had
just called out "bafflement," Which
I promptly pointed out to Lynelle.
Perhaps I was good luck after
all.
WEATllEI AID SUIF POLICE TIPS
Corona del Mar
91M
CostaMeM
l:WS
NwJpOrta..ch
91'64
.... wportComt
91M
nDIS
TODAY
Ant-e...u.----
2:24 a.m ....................... 0.1
Flnt~
1:29 i m. ...................... 3.6
Second low
1:JI p.m. ................... -1.S
Secondhlgh
7:51 p.m. ...................... 5.7
s •t II f!AY
Plntlow
J.'CJJ e.m. ..................... ~.l
• P.nt .,,wy from vans Of CMS wtth someone "w.ftlng ~."
• Keep. ·c.11 po11ce· sign under the front -of yo4lf car.
• If IOft'MIOlle sigr*5 tNt something • wrong ~ 'I04JI
car, drM to the '*f9St _.. SUtion to check It. Do not
*P _,., get out of your car.
...... i.w.,. ... key under the door .... lbcM
the door. under • flower pot. a "---one with • trUlt9d Mighbol.
Nlllllilll--~""" ......... I.GI ..... ,..,
.. ....cuy
A'°""' Ml rt,IMll
wtl brtrig In .. ~
In the Miit· to c:helt· ...... ....... .
t:11 a.m ....................... J.7
• H-. •light on In U.. room we.. you n and,._.•
light on In• room wher'9 you n not. It glW9the1mpr9-
11on of men then one penon being .t home.
Second low
2rt0 ............................ 1.
l:JD p.m. ..................... S.t
·---...... .J~--.._.._.....__._.M~M J.•••Ma
•
• Ult~ n1m1 on U.. ,,.._and In the phof'9 book
wllh ftnt lnltill Ind .... '*"" °'* . .. ,.. .................... .,...,. .. ,....
-up olf ........... """In,.,, ......
........... llllDW•Oftfw .... uMI,.. .. _. ...... fllln.....,.
'\
j
Daily Pilot
...
Costa Mesa breaks out $85-million budget
• City may hire code
enforcement officers.
Andrew Gluer
DAILY PILOT
bers of the • Westside a way to fund the new (>fficers,
hnprovement Assn., applauded. eve1' though the preliminary
the idea of stepping up code budget document did not
enforcement, saying it would accoont for them.
improve his neighborhood. Mud) of the meeting was
"In essence, they're saying spent flipping though the
that they recognize the prob-reports and discussing· which
come from to fund certain prQ·
grams and how the fj.nance
department calcWated certain
costs.
*I'm glad the council
appears to be carefully rea~
this sleep-provoking docu -
ment,· said Tum Egan, one of a
half-dozen residents who sat
through the nearly three-bour
. COSTA MESA -City offi· lem. • be said "I'm really happy programs -including new
cia1s on Monday proposed hir-about that.• crossing guards, SWAT team
ing three new code enforce-The council is scheduled to vests ahd freeway improve-
ment officers sometime n ext vote on the budget, as it stands ments -the city shoqld fund. year duritig the first meeting to ~ thi-ee-inch•tbick vohml(eS, on The city's director of finance, , meeting I MThey .asked some
discuss the 2000-01 budget. Monday. " Marc R. Puckett, led the dis-· ~ally good questions.•
Tueldoy, June 13, 2000 3
NEWPORT BEACH
CITY COUNC IL PREVIEW
.On the
AGENDA
AIRPORT AREA PLANNING
Staff wants input from
the City Council on how to
proceed with lon9-r.ange
planning for the area sur-
rounding John Wayne Air·
• Wh.t: City Council
study set1lon and
meeting
• When: Study ses-
sion, 3:30 p.m.; coun-
cil meeting, 1 p.ni.
Otherwise, the city's pro-M(\yor Gary Monahan said cussion with slides and an 11-Budget briefings are alfo
posed $85.7!million budget he supported hiring the addi-minute video'. City Council scheduled at 6:30 p.m. today . port and what role. devel· ·
remained similar to last year's. tional officers.' City Manager members asked questions and 3 p.m. Wednesqay at City . opers..should ~ave m that
• Where: Council
cham~rs. 3300
Newport Blvd.
Campbell Davidson, a mem-AllanRoedersaidhecouldfind a bout whe re ·money would Hall, 77 Fair Drive. \ planning. . . ----------------------"----------------...!\_________ The council will consider
PROPOSED ARTS CENTER
Mrs. Harry was proof that Canadians are nicer than Americans
M:• y years ago, back in
e 1950s, Mrs. Harty
oved into Shorediffs.
Although her name was
Dorothy, no one ever called
her by her first name. She was
always Mrs. Harry. She was
that kind of person.
Mrs. Harry was a
Canadian. She was also a
widow and apparently pretty
well-off. Shortly after her
arrival, she bought two lots in
Corona del Mar and gave
them to the city for a new
library.
We certainly needed one.
The Corona del Mar library
was a disgrace -a dinky little
house on the grounds of the
local elementary school
(between Carnation and
Dahlia, now occupied. by
homes).
After school let out, about a
zillion kids jammed them-
selves into that little building,
yelling, shouting, laughing. MJ:s. Frazer, the librarian, was
an angel of patience with-all
that confusion, but we needed
a library and Mrs. Harry saw
I
Mon-Fri 10-6 Sat 10-5
Open Sunday 10-4
369 E. 17th Costa Mesa
(Across from R.alphs)
(949) 646-6745
Robert Gardner
THE VERDIO
to it tbat we got one.
While she is to be saluted
for that, Mrs. Harry is proba·
bly best remembered by those
w.ho knew her not for her,.
municipal munilicence, but for
her life-size Santa Clauses.
· This was something sh e
had done in Canada and she
transferred it to her new
neighborhood. She persuad-
ed almost every woman in
Shorecliffs to make life-size
Santa Clauses. Then all the
women put their Santa
Clauses on their front yards •
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GIVE YOUR DAD
T HE T IME O F DAY.
FAT HER'S DAY IS SUNDAY, JUNE 18.
ISN'T IT T IME
TO REMEMBER DAD?
i'
RO LEX
BLACKMAN LTD. { ili} JEWEURS . . . . •••
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-skiing, surfing, drinking
martinis.
Ours was climbing up the
lamppost on the front lawn, a
toy dog chasing him.
It was quite a community
£lisplay. Word got out, and
pretty sooo we had bumper-
to-bumper traffic every night
as people from as far away as
Azusa and Monrovia drove to
Shorediffs wtth their children
to see our Santa Clauses.
It was quite a sight -all
those cars full of happy people
and ~xdted children driving
through Shorediffs night after
night. It was almost as good as
the Rose Parade.
Unfortunately, after a
while, all those happy people
bringing their children to
Sborecliffs stole all our Santa
Clauses.
I can just imagine some
happy father saying to his
happy son, "Junior, run up
there and grab that there
Santa Claus. He will look
good in our front room next to
the Christmas tree.•
Whoever stole our Santa
Claus also took the toy dog,
then tore off his head and
threw his body on the lawn of
a house down the street.
Mrs. Harry was devastated.
She said that in Canada, the
display lasted for .years and no
one ever stole a single Santa
Claus -which goes to show
that Canadians are nicer peo-
ple than Americarui,
To make this sad story even
sadder, Mrs. Hany met a
handsome, young used car
salesman and marrjed him.
He took all her money and ran
off, and she died Oat broke of
a broken heart.
In the early days in Balboa,
there was a local grump
whose favorite saying was,
"People are no damned
good."
Maybe he was right.
• ROBERT GARDNER is a Corona
del M ar resident and former judge.
His column appears Tuesdays.
two major development
proposals in the airport
area soon: Conexant and
Koll Center. The projects
could present an opportu-
nity for the city to begin a
long-range planning and
transportation improve-
ment program for the
area.
WHAT TO EXPECT:
Discussion in the study
session; no action will be
taken.
Proponents of an arts
and educatron center have
requested that the City
Council reserve a 3.5-acre
site adjacent to the main
library for the facility. The
center would include a
400-seat auditorium, recep-
tion area, art gallery, class-
rooms and parking. r
WHAT TO EXPECT:
City Manager Homer
Bludau has recommended
the council take no action,
saying the issue is worthy
of a study session Aug. 8.
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J .
J
4 Tue.deli June 13, 2000
'
I . . ..
Daily Pilot
Lewises . celebrate Belmont .victory
• Udo Isle couple, whose Triple Crown hopes
have twice come up short in the final leg, won
the race with Commendable.
DMette Goulet
DAILY PILOT
Until this weekend, the
Belmont Stakes brought Lido
Isle couple Bob and Beve rly
Lewi.S nothing but misery.
Twice in the last three
years, the elusive 'ftiple
Crown of hor5e racing has
slipped through their fingers
at that final leg.
But their Belmont bad luck
finally ended Saturday when
their colt, Commendable,
captured the race -and its
$600,000 first-place prize ..
Although the couple did
not have a shot at th~ Tuple
Crown this year, the victory
was still sweet:
"Commendable won, very
commandingly, by a length
anti a half," said Bob Lewis.
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•1t was a very elusive win for
US -one that bu depmed UI
of winning the 'Jttple Crown
twice. We were very tbrWed
to win it OD Saturday.•
Taking first place earned
60% of the Belmont's St-mil-
lion purse. lbat was 5600,ooo
tor the · Lewises before the
jockey and trainers' cuts, and
Commendable's many
expenses, Lewis said. ·
Commendable's wUi came
as a great surprise to many
· after he finished l 7th out of
19 horses in th~Kentucky Derby in May, an then did
not run in the eakness a
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few weeks later.
Seeing one of the Lewises'
horses win the race, however,
WU DOtftrPriling.
Bob Lewis estimates that
in the last 10 years, the cou-
ple has entered horses in 130
to 150 races each year.
•we wiP about 20% of
those, so we've won in the
vicinity of 300 races in the last
10 years," Lewis said.
After this weekend's bi·
urnph, they have won six
Tuple Crown races -twice
~t .. the Kentucky Derby. three
tribes at The Preakness and
now, finally, one at the Bel-
mont Stakes.
Another big winner for the
Lewtses was Tunber Country,
a colt of which they are part
owners, who won the Dubai
World Cup.
•we.have had exceeding
good fortune,• Lewis said.
Wlille their quest for the .
Tuple Crown may be behind
them for this year, there are
many mo'fe million-dollar
races to shoot for.
"Now we have to look for-
ward to the Churchill DoWll.$
Breeders Cup series in
November,• Bob Lewis said.
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Daily Pilot
SENIOR
CONTINUED FROM 1
memben in May.
A.\ltlMldUet alleged Meyara bad lmpanonali9d
doc:ton, skimmed money
from several nonprofit
organizations and served
jail time for choking, a doc-
tor whose identity he
allegedly assumed. The
center is partially funded
bythedty.
Police officials haven't
pressed charges, but are
investigating whether the
board hired Meyers based·
on bogus credentials and
professional degrees, Lt.
Ron Smith of the Costa
Mesa Police Department
said last week.'
Meyers, who has turned
down repeated requests
for comment, has denied
all allegations. On
..
Wednesday, be A8 sc:bed·
uled to 1'b to tdal for
allegedly ltNlinf IDOMY
from a nonprofit group in
Oregon.
Three montbl before
the board fired Mayen,
more thu 100 l8Dion
signed a petltioil question·
ing hil motives and calllng
for him to be replaced.
•1t IOOD became appar-
ent after his appointment
that be had little, if any,
interest in the seniors or
the Senior Center except
to use it as a stepping
stone for his own personal
advancement,• said a let-
ter accompanying the·
seniors' petition, which
was presented to the City
Council in February.
*They completely
ignored us until the poliae
got involved,• said Jack
Hemance, who led·the sig-
nature-gathe~g effort
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and. c:bllrman of .. D8W
c:oaamtu.. •we formed
ddl group ID NlpODl8 to
not Ming beard .•
Tbe onmMM's stated
go.II tndude lobbyiDg for
implovecl builclN mainte-nance, wdling utldis in
th• center's monthly
newsletter and recom-
mending new programs at
the center.
Senior center board
member Jerry Richards,
who is.also o member Qt a
hiring conµntttee for the
new executive director,
agreed that the boar(!
should seriously listen to
what the center's members
have t.o say about each
candidate.
"If he doesn't have an
affinity or affiliation with
seniors, why bother?" be
asked. "We don't need
another senseless bureau-
crat.•
. .
SERVICE .
CONTINU ED FROM 1
Rej>ertory's co-founders David
Emmes and Martin .Benson.
Segerstrom was a major
contributor to the develop-
ment of both organizations.
In their eulogies, speakers
emphasized the grace, good
humor and dedication to the
CONTINUEO FROM 1
pose a threat to tiny marine
organisms, such as water fleas.
A study has also indicated
that the chemical could poten-
tially damage the brain and
nervous system of children,
Theisen said.
"Children are not just small
adults," said Carol Browner, an
acl.qtlnist;rator for ~e EPA, in a
Summer Art Camp
at the
Orange County MUSEUM OF ART
July 10 t o Augus t 25
An array of programs for ages 3 -18
For information, calf (949) 759-1122, ext. 218
life of art for which Segerstrom
was known.
"Renee relished llie,• said
Judith O'Dea Morr, the Cen-
ter's vice president of program-
ming. "She loved her family
and friends and loved Henry
. beyond measure."
Janice Johnson, a mend of
Segerstrom and an arts patron,
recalled her intense conunit-
ment to supporting music, art
and theater.
statement .released last week.
·"Their bodi.es are still d.evelop-
ing · and more, susceptible to
risks from toxic chermcaJs." ,
But the sµecific risks to chil-
dren are associated with much
higher concentrations of the
pesticide than those found in
the bay, Theisen sai.d. At its
worst, there are a few hundred
parts per trillion of chlorpyrif os
in local waters.
Even so, Theisen said, th e
new ban will help Newport
Beach.
Tuesday, June 13, 2000 5
-she would whisper "You
know, the creative arts are the
center of a great civilization,' •
Johnson said.
As mourners gathered at
the grave site, the heat of the
day seemed to break some-
what. A breeze rustled
through the drooping leaves of
the cemetery trees, carrying
the reedy sound of a piper
playing •Amazing Grace" and
the distant chatter of birds.
."We'll be able to see if
(runoff from domestic sources)
was really our source [of conta-
mination)," he said.
If eliminating home use of
the chemical results in lower
levels of chloipyrif os in the bay,
it may point the way toward
solving other che~cal prob-
lems.
"We'll see how effective
that change in use practices
was, and then maybe we can
consider somethin~imilar for
diazinon," Theisen ~q. ·
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When something's brewing in town , we read about it first in the Daily Pilot.
We love to drink in all the local news, high school sports and dining reviews.
The Daily Pilot is the best community newspaper -bar none . ,_ / .
Got the Pilot?
c.111 (800) LATIMES ID ~~Call (948) 842-4321 to adv8ltil8
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Daily Pilot
POPEJOY
CONTINUED FROM 1
. '
negotiating the club's sale. After
fiw mon ths, when the deal fell
'through, Popejoy demanded a
54-miWon payment for his help in
getting the club its desperately
and Wooten's lawyer, Chris needed financial backing to fund
Dubia, said the accusation was renovations.
simply a reiteration of what is out-Completing the renovation
lined in their legal complaint. project is a condition in the Bay
•That's what we sued [Pope-Club's 50-year lease extension
joy) for,• said Dubia, who was in with the city, as is making por-
New York when he heard the tions of the exclusive facility open
news. •He was trying to extort to th~ public because it sits on
money.• . publicly owned tidelands. ·
Eulier this month, Popejoy· -• Popejoy's slander complai.nt
the chief executive of Orange claims his reputation WaS dam-
County following the 1994 bank-' ,aged 'when :Wooten acclised him
ruptc;y-filed a $50-million iaw-of •extortion• in a neW$ article.
suit against Ray, cl~g she had Accordin{I to tQe lawsuit, the
backed out of a de.µ to let him w,0rds were damaging because
purchase the $73.s-·fuuljon Bal-they were disseminated through
J>oa Bay Club for her own finan-the Daily Pilot in the conununity
cial gain. in which Popejoy resides and
Ahnost simultaneously, Ray 'conducts business. ,
and Wooten filed their own law-However, Dubia said the law-
suit ag&µlst Popejoy, seeking a suit was drummed up to create
ruling that Ray performed her more •adverse publicity" about
contractual obligations and owes Wooten and Ray.
the banker nothing. "It's already a public record/
It began last October, when Dubia said. "It's judicial privilege.
the two parties began secretly You can't be sued for that.•
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Former cotmdlwoman Lucille Kuhen
said Arst's comment was a ~low blow."
•1t was below the belt and an urtnec-
essary comment," she said.
Upon later refiection, Arst said his
comment about Noyes was made in ref-
erence to soi:pething else.
The increasingly heated debate
revolving around the Greenlight mea-
sure-which proposes to give voters the
final say on "major• developments -
. has d,ivided the city.
The oommunity acti~ who drafted
the measure say it was bom in response
to an increasinglY. development-happy
city council. City officials countered by
saying the Greenlight initiative undet-
mines rejJresentative government.
Greenlight supporters are now going
head-to-head with the proponents of a
countermeasure, the 'J'rcilfic Phasing
Ordinance Preservation initiative. It pro-
poses to strehgthen the city's existing
law, which is intended to provide some
relief from traffic. The countermeasure,
if it wins over enough voters, would ren-
der the Greenlight initiative ineffective.
' '
The dueling groups have been bat-
tling it out at community forums and
even on the streets. Emotions have
becxme so heated thAt a Greenlight sup-
poner was recently accused of accosting
an advocate of the rival inilicitive.
Monday's forum was no different,
with two community activists pitted
against two former city officials. Phil Arst
and Susan Caustin represented ·
Greenlight and former city officials
Clarence Turner and Tom Edwards pre-
sented the 'li'affic Phasing Ordinance
measure.
"Thing$ are out of control,• said
Caustin. "And that's why a group of re&-
idents came'togetherand said "we need
to gain control.' "· . ·
But co\Jntermeasure proponen~ insist
that city officials deserve the trust of ~ot
ers.
"Somehow, Greenlight wants you to
mistrust your council," said former mayor '
Clarence Turner. •1 earned your trust. I
worked like the devil to get this trust.
Everybody's attacking these mythical
council people."
The debate over city officials' integri-
ty prompted Councilman Dennis O'Neil
-nonnally a spectator at these meetings
-to make a statement.
•People in this town do respect and
. .
Tuesday, June 13, 2000 7
trust elected officials and I'm not sure
that's totally the major issue here,• he
said, adding that coW'lCil members don't
get together and "conspire about how
they will ruin the city.•
Far from gaining supporters, the
debate appeared to baffle residents more
than an~g else.
"I'm more confused now than I was
when I came in,· said Sophie Edberg, a
longtime resident and member of the
League of Women Voters.
Resident Erwin Fox agreed, adding
that he didn't trust either side.
The corrunent about Noyes followed
a well;J>ubllcized May 25 report in the
Los Angeles Tunes, which detailed the
mayor's past history. Noyes campaigned ·
toi: city council on a law and order plat-
form, but had been wanted ·on Criminal
kidnapping charges in Idaho during the
late 1970s and early 1980s. Noyes had
snatched his daughters, then 6 and 7,
from the legal custody of his ex-wife.
In an earlier written statement, Noyes
said he had no choice but "to pursue an
aggressive coW'SE! of action in order to
protect [his) children."
The kidnapping charges. in' effect
from 1976 to 1985, were dismissed in
1986.
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. . GOMM
8 Tuesday, June 13, 2000
Gay Geiser-Sandoval
. EDUCATIONAllY SPEAKING
College admission
process .due for
an overhaul
Red alertl Supai trips -Costa
Mesa High School's senior class
outings, as well as junior high
trips to Washington, D.C., may be a
thing of the past in the Newport-
Mesa Unified School District.
It's unclear whether elementary
school treks to outdoor school or Astro
Camp are affected. When we went to
Washington, D.C., we learned about
law, the judicial system, library sci-
ence, political science, diplomacy, the-
ater, colonial economies, clothing
design, inventions, music, war, weath-
er, physical fitness and heat exhaus-
tion. Outdoor school encompassed
dance, cooperative living, astronomy,
botany, writing, biology, hiking, self-
confidence and more.
Board policy currently requires such
trips to be tied specifically to the cur-
riculum of a course. However, as is
often the case with secondary school. a
trip should encompass learning from
more than one subject area, and the
availability of the trip shouldn't be tied
to taking a specific course. So, if you
participated in such a trip and think
they should continue, ask the School
Board to change this policy. The School
Board meets today and on June 27 at
the Education Center at 7 p.m. Or write
or call them with your concerns. •
My recommendation for your sum-
mer reading list is •And Still We Rise:
The 1nals and 1\iwnphs of 1\velve gjft-
~ Inner-City High School Students,• tt' Miles Corwin: Instead of focusing on
tbe gang kids, Corwin, a Los Angeles
Tunes staff writer, followed those in the
"hood" who were trying to make it out
through their education. The insights
go deeper than the kids' lives, as he fol-
lows teacher and administrative chal-
lenges and conflicts.
Although our school district isn't in
South Central Los Angeles, some of
the human drama is apparent here.
While parents of students should take
more responsibility for their children's
education, l wonder what that means
to the kids who spend their time away
from school in foster homes, with no
parental support. I wonder how we, as
a school community, can help to fill the
void for those students who don't have
parental support. Or should those kids
who have already been abandoned by
their parents suffer the ultimate conse-
quences for their future, too?
Corwin raises the issue of who
should be admitted into good col-
leges because the senior class that he
followed was the last class to benefit
from affirmative action. He points out
that while admission preference for
race was eliminated. it is not elimi-
nated for those witli political connec-
tions. Many schools have a prefer-
ence for children of alumni ot kids
from underrepresented states.
The problem with an admission
process based upon grades and test
scores is that schools and kids' back-
grounds are not equal. So a student
who grows up In a home without books
or newspapers does not have the same
reading and vocabulary skills to score
well in English classes and on college
entrance exams. Some students have
atenstve prep classes for test. while
others have none. Some schools have
enenstve advanced placement cla9ses
and stringent curriculum, while others
do not. Some kids must work long
houri outside of school, while others
._ _ _haye more time to stud .
Thele same ues app y as ear y as
the elementary &ehool level, when oor-
tain tests are used to allow entrance
into the district GATE program. How
does a ICbool determine which Stu·
dent gets into a certain academy or
other program with llmlted space in
junior-bigb or high schooU How often
ii a fll'ant.recalYed for helping the less ~kids, and then Uled for the
.,.. ~' A<fmi-k>n mto ludl pcyemt coUld bllve an effect on •••Won meo adalr dulaa or pro· grmm. ft could ulllmately affect COi• liege•'' ,,,.... WblD do we, as a dls-atct. try ID ..... tllil playing fteld1 If •---we daill\.. w• belp at the
11trMllMY • ~ blgb level, how
cm .. ...,_• dlldtD auellfY for the
lbk Jlr' ···= ...-imen& to get ..... ucz; 11 •
. ' . . ' ' I
I I
I I
I
.... '
lllatll
• 1 want them to go -it's
something you want them to
see.•
-AMON PDllOL. 16. on his hope that
his family c.t\ join him In Indian.polis for the
Olympic trials in two months and perhaps for
the Olympic Games in Australia this summer.
Daily Pilot
(~ox takes issue ~th votiilg record article-
I have always enjoyed reading
the Daily Pilot, and have
always appreciated the willing-
ness of our local paper to cover
issues and candidates in more
depth than the •big• papers.
For that reason, I don't object
to the recent article reporting that
the ·u.s. Public Interest Research
Group" did not give me or my
fellow Republican, U.S. Rep.
Dana Rohrabacher, high ratings.
But I am surprised at the Pilot's
willingness to uncritic;ally parrot
this obscure group's press release r Report: Cox, Rohrabacher have
poor voting habits," June 7).
The article did not describe
who this organization is, or even
what the votes they rated were
actually about. While the group
characterized
its position on
these issues as
the "public
interest," that
description
surely is in the
eye of the
beholder:
•I~as
scored as bav·
ing "poor vot-
ing habits"
(that's what
the Pilot head-
line said)
~ J • 0.isqiaCox
REIUTIAL
because, for example, I voted not
to increase funding for the Nation-
al Endowment for the Arts by $5
million above current levels.
• I supposedly voted "wrong#
because I supported legislation
giving the federal courts jurisdic-
tion over class action lawsuits
when the plaintiffs and defen-
dants reside in different states.
• I was also scored as having
voted "wrong" for supporting the
Small Business Paperwork Reduc-
tion Act.
• And I was •wrong" to vote
for the Financial Services Modern-
ization Act (bipartisan legislation,
supported by President Clinton,
which permits conswriers to buy
stocks and bonds from affiliates of
commercial banks).
It would be in keeping with the
tradition of the Daily Pilot to pro-
vide a more complete picture next
time. Or, at least, to give as much
play to the findings of groups like
' I the U.S. Cbambel.l..Of Commerce,
Consumer Alert, Citizens Again.st
Government,Waste, 60-Plus, the
National Taxpayers Union, and
the American Security Council -
each of which consistently rates
my voting highly.
Finally, for the record, the
"U.S. Public Interest Research
Group• was not labeled as a lib-
eral interest group, but it should
have been. It is opposed to small-
er government, against tort
reform, against restraining
spending, and opposed to free
enterprise and small business.
Since these are all things I sup-
port, it is natural we disagree. •
CHRISTOPHER COX
U.S. Representative,
· Newport Beach· •
Most say 'cookie cutter' homes don't fit in :
AT ISSUE: The council has
passed a temporary ban on
multi-home developments
on single lots, sparked by
concern about their prolifer-
ation on the East Side ("Can
city have growth and keep
its character?" June 12).
Your photo says it all: "Mike
Reehl sitting in his yard,• or
should I refer to that as his •set-
back." The City Council did the
right thing, and I applaud Heather
Somers. Now if only they will
extend it for another few years.
Why would anyone feel it's good
Readers
RESPOND
for our
community
to cram
more peo-
ple into an
already
overcrowded area 1 We have folks
fighting against the widening of
17th Street, yet we're increasing
the density in that same aree. U
the home buyer wants lower-cost
housing and doesn't need back
8:11d front Y,ards, they should be •
looking for a condominium. I'd
rather see buyers who demand
more and are willing to pay for it.
TIM CROMWELL
Costa Mesa
I believe Mayor Gary Monahan
is missing the J>Pinl. The residents
on the East Side aren't saying
they want only large-scale single-
family housing. We're saying we
don't want high density. It should
be about quality, not quantity. I
know from experience because I
have cookie cutter, high-density
homes all around me. It's very sad
lo see small children, too small to
leave their property, playing in the
streets because there are no back-
y~ or personal space to play in.
I talked to some of these develop-
ers that have built in this area -
believe me, these developers
don't care about our area and the
effect the overgrowth has in our
daily lives. These developers
build, cash in and leave. I agree
with councilwoman Somers and
thousands of others who want to
maintain our quality of life.
Believe me, next time we vote for
council members, we definitely
need to ask them their opinion of
growth and density before voting.
I believe this will be<:lome a bigger
issue in the future ..
KAY ANDERSON
Newport Heights
MICHEUf YEE I OAlY Pl.OT
Mike Reehl of Costa Mesa sits In the yard of his "cookie cutter"
home, which ls stmllar to the ones the City Council temporarily
banned from being constructed.
Thank you, City Council. I
applaud your dedSion to deny a
recent building project on Garden
Lane in East Side Costa Mesa. I
am glad your alarm clock finally
went off. Now, don't waver. I
speak for many East Side resi-
dents who would like to see a
moratorium on high-density build-
ing of •cookie cutter• homes.
It's a sad day to wake up on a
weekend morning, sit in your
once-quiet backyard where you'd
bear the birds, or the light breeze
blowing through the trees, only to
be blasted by the sound of hair
dryers, showers running and inti-
mate conversations between
spouses in a bathroom overlook-
ing your yard, Forget reading the
paper -it's not the same.
This high density surrounding
low density doesn't make sense. It
rertainlyis not appealing and def-
initely is out of character with the
charm that once existed here with
picket.fences bordering nice yards
with flowers and trees. Now it's
long concrete driveways heeding
down rows of stucco and tile.
Everything looks the same.
Oh sure, the builders have to
meet all the required regulations
for drainage. They bring in about
four feet of fill dirt, erect a nine·
foot cinder block wall, scatter the
drains where the city says they
must be, and call it •code." What
happens to the poor adjacent
homeowner when the drains get
changed or removed by the new
homeowner, and the Oow of water
~nee Segerstrom-bn>u
inspiration, grace to community
.
takes on a new direction? Sorry, it's •
not the builder's problem anymore . .:
Now it's a ·batUe between the
homeowners. What a nice friendly ~
neighborhood this has become. :
It's got to stop now. You must •
begin to take into consideration
the quality of life affected by •
these projects. Start caring. This is •
your community, too. Does it have .:
to be in your backyard before you
open your eyes? ..
I'm definitely in favor of a ;
moratorium on development on
the East Side, especially this style ~
of high-density, "cookie cutter"
home. It's out of control.
Speak up, homeowners. Go to
the city and tell them you don't
want this in your backyard. They ..
need to hear from us. If we say :
nothing, nothing will ever get :
done. Also, keep an eye on the :
council members who keep
approving these projects.
PATTY HARV£¥:
Costa Mesa:
I would like to wrlte to show ..
another side to the East Side cook-·
le-cutter home issue. I have lived
on Mesa Drive for 15 years in one •
of the old original Costa Mesa •
homes that the council so wants to ;
preserve. It was a very unique •
home built by my husband's •
grandfather in 1950 on a very •
large lot. Last summer we tore the
old house down and put up the ~
dreaded, cookie cutter homes. •
Believe me, we looked into ever('
other possibility before we did that.
The old house had no heating other •
than two fireplaces, the kitchen was ~
the original, termites bad done their ..
share of abuse over the last 50 ~
years, the fO\llldation bad shifted ~
and all the windows and doors ;
needed to be replaced. 1 could go :
on and on, but l think you get the •
picture. It would have cost us a for-~
tune to bring the hduse up to stan-:
dards. It broke my husband's heart •
to tear that house down. but we :
faced 1be econom1c1acts. Jn a :
month we will be moving into a :
new house on our old lot with fow •
other neighbors. It is not what we ..
wanted. but it was the only way we •
could afford to build a house and ·
still have a mortgage we could :
afford. We wanted to put fewer :
homes on the lot, but building and •
remodeling today is so expensive. "
Many people are under the impres-·
sion that we are ID4k:lng a fortune .
by doing this. It Is not true. ~
I understand the moratorium, •
and truly do not want our type of ,
homes to be on every lot, but :
there are two sides to~ :,Jn;
Costa Mesa::
Wirt ..
•(JrMr.., .... ,,, ... liin .. Alm .t hi • .... ,,,.hllll ................. _. _ .... 1.-..
PMAAlll Blm a.Ty, Newport Harbor track and
field coach
Sports Editor Roger Carlton • 949-57~223 • Tuetdoy, June 13, 2000 9
Sailors' ROss Sea View Athlete of the Year
• Volleyball standout also I had notable career iB track and field, basketbhll.
a.rry Faulkner
DAllV PILOT
NEWPORT BEACH -April Ross,
whose superlative volleyball talent
serves to obscure her other notable
conbibuttons in sports like track and
field and basketball, is the Sea View
League Female Athlete of the Year.
Ross. the Gatorade National Player
of the Year in volleyball last fall, will
l}kely focus on that sport next year at
USC.
But h1r athletic focus as a prep
included a strong field-event career
in the spring, as well as several acco-
Presenting
the Daily
Pilot's · 2000
high school
baseball ...
lades in basketball, before giving that
up as a senior.
It is volleyball, however, in which
Ross forged a national rept\tation,
leading the Sailors to three straight
CIF Southern Section Division 1-AA
championships, as well as back-to-
bapt state crowns.
The 6-foot-l stand-
HOllOIS out .dominated pri-
marily from her out-
side hitter spot,
though she diversified as a senior,
also handling duty at setter and mid-
dle blocker for Coach Dan Glenn's
juggernaut.
Before being named the nation's
top high school player, Ross shared
CIF Division I Player of the Year lau-
rels and was also the Newport-Mesa
Disbict and Sea View League MVP.
The Sailors
were. 37-2 and
won their fourth
straight ~ea View
title, all achieved
with Ross' help.
As a junior,
Ross was Co-MVP
in ClF Division I,
the Newport-
Aprll Ross M~sa Disbict and
the Sea View
League after help-
ing the Tars compile a 40-1 record.
As a sophomore, she was first-
team All-CIF Division I and all-league
as the Tars won the section crown.
They were defeated, however, in the
regional semifinals by Marina.
In those three seasons, with Ross in
the starting lineup, Harbor was 98-6.
• Tars' Langsdorf, Cd.M1s Eagle are beyond compare as
Newport-Mesa District Co-Players of the Year.
Kings earn the Jone postseason
berth among Newport-Mesa
schools, i$ comprised of seniors
Alex Swanson and John Dicesare, '
8.-ry Faulkner
DAILY PILOT
Between the two, Newport
Harbor High senior Nick
Langsdorf and Corona del Mar
sophomore Billy Eagle can do just
about everything on a baseball
diamond except pitch.
But as diverse as their skills
may be -Langsdorf is the con-
summate power hitter and Eagle's
game is triggered by speed -
their contribution to their team
was remarkably similar.
So, this Back Bay odd couple
highlights the Dally Pilot'$ All-
Newport-Mesa Disbict Dream
Team as Co-Players of the Year. as well as juniors Andrew Johns,
For Langsdorf, whose seven Dave Knecht, Cavan Cuyler and
home runs and 25 RBis put him Erle Snell.
atop fellow Newport-Mesa bats-Seniors David Akiva and C.K.
f!len in each category, it's his third , Green were chosen to represent
time on the Dream Tea.IJ?-. . Estancia, while Newport Harbor Eag~e, who bit a district-leading senior Justin Jacobs rounds out
.444 ~th 17 RBis ~d 17 s~olen the 14.player unit. ba~, is. the most. distingwsb~d of Doug Deats, who previously ~2 firs~-time all-~trlct selections, worked wonders to establish cred-
mcluding six of bis Sea King ibillty at Costa Mesa High, and
teammates. . did the same in his first season at
Costa Mesa senior Josh Uttle, Estancia this spring is.Coach of
the only other repeat honoree, is the Year '
joined by Mustang teammates Lan~orf also a three-year
Carlos Franco an~ Nick Cabico. starter in football, earning all-dis-
The aforementioned CdM con-trlct and All-Sea View League
tingent, which helped the Sea recognition as a tight end last fall,
As a role player her freshman season,
Harbor went 16-5.
Het freshman season, however,
Wt\S good.to her in track and field, as
she won the section high jwnp title in
Di"vision II. She went on to finish sec-
ond at the Masters Meet, but was
eliminated in the state preliminaries.
As a sophomore, she was second
at Sea View League Finals in the high
jump, long jump and biple jump and
was fourth at section finals in the high
jump and biple jump. She qualified
for Masters (all divisions) in the biple
jump.
Injuries plagued her junior track
season. but she rebounded as a senior.
She won the league high jump crown,
was second in the triple jwnp and
fourth in the long jump.
She was seventh in the Division II
high jump at section finals and eighth
in the triple jump.
Before giving up basketball, inter-
. rupting a grueling athletic 'schedule
complicated by club volleyball work-
O\.lts, she was Newport-MeM District
CO-Player of the Year as a junior.
She averaged 13.3 points and dose
to 10 rebounds that season, earning
first-team' all-league recognition for
the 15-13 Tars.
As a sophomore, Ross, who never
played organized basketball before
joining the va.mty as a freshman. was
also first-team All-Sea View and all-
district, after averaging 8.3 points
and about eight rebounds.
Despite her avid athletic pursuits,
she was never too busy to devote
time to her studies, m wtuch she fash-
ioned a 3.5 GPA.
The 2000
D ream Team;
front row, from
left: Mesa's Carlos
Franco, Cd.M's Alex
Swanson and Mesa's
Josh Uttle. Middle row
· from left. Sea Kings
Cavan Cuyler, Erle Snell,
Dave Knecht and John
DiCesa.re. Back row, from
left Estanda's C.K. Green,
Cd.M's Andrew Johns,
Newport Harbor's Nick
Langsdorf, Cd.M's Billy Eagle and
Estanda's David AkJva. Not pictured:
Mesa's Nick Cabico and Harbor's Justin
Jacobs. •
CONRAD lAU I OAJlV PILOT
provides an equally imposing
presence m the batter's box.
He hit .373 (25 for 67) this sea-
son. adding eight doubles and a
biple to his aforementioned homer
total, despite being singled out by
opposing teams as the one player
they hoped to contain.
quently made diving and sliding
catches, after either retreating,
sprinting to the gap or charging
mwa:n:t the infield. He ha~ one
home run and shared the team
lead with 22 runs in his second
varsity season to help the Sea
Kings advance to the second
round of the Division IV playoffs
and finish 14-12.
Uttle, also a center fielder.
spent three full seasons on the
varsity and also sJ>ent a brief stint
The 6-foot-4, 225-pound first
baseman, who may play football
and baseball al the University of
San Dlego, or just baseball at
Orange Coast College, scored 20
runs and stole two bases. For his
three-year varsity career, he bit
.370 (80 for 216) with 12 homers,
61 RBis and 34 extra-base hits.
• on the varsity as a freshman. He
bit .357 (30 for 34) with two
Eagle, a second-team All-CIF
Southern Section Division IV
selection, was as valuable with the
glove as be was with the bat.
Patrolling center field, he fre-
1 homers, 14 RBis, 17 runs and five
steals to help Mesa remain 10
~n contention until the
final regular-season game.
SEE DREAM MGE 10
Eagle All-CIF
Corona del Mar High sophomore Billy
Eagle is the lone area bueball 1tandout
recognized by coaches as All-ClP
Southern Section.
CdM's Hailsen CIF Div. I MVP Jones adds
hurdles win
Eagle, a lllck·ftekllno center Helder
who bit .444 wttb ~ 17 RBis
and t 7 stolen b9lel for
the Newport-Mesa
Dl8trlct'1 Ion• playoff
teem, WU a 18COftd•team MlectiOD in
DMDonlV.
8agle bed 38 bill In 81 at-ball,~
22.,.. ..... wmt 5 Cor 8 tn two~~ gamee, before tb• Sea Klngl' MUOn
ended wStla • aecond·rouacl lot• to
w.11111.
................ a1 .. -.. ,~ ... =--...... ICiiiji... ar•w~ --
f
..
• CdM setter among five
area stars named All-CIF.
Corona del Mar High senior
Kevin Haman, wbo led the See
K1Dga to Ihm 8ilcand CIP Soudan S«tkm dwPi 1•nbtp In ..... __
--. Im t.m dam CIPDtftllon
I MOit Valuable Player by l8dion
coadMll.
ffaD""'ll; a ftnt•teefn All.cJP Dl¥tllclll I cbDk:e .... ,...., .... lbeS..~lalltDtlaitDlwllkml
.... aaatdl to Newpon Hubol. vr1 .... ..._..,, •
.. ....May2'11
Stampley, a 6-4 oullide bitter,
was the Sea Kings 1DOlt prodoc:11ve
attadler and CdM Coach Steve
Conti called bbn the IDOlt aim-
plete outaide bltter in Orange
County.
Stampley, wbo wtl1 Wik GD at
USC llUt lfflOD, 1hared PCL
MVP bcma11wlla11111-. lied·
Ing ..... Dllll ID• ... .. NC.'MI. -Ja. ..... QD4 W9122rf••••· ~ ............ .
--~-· ?---.... ••• Ila• primary rec\ft .. t of
~lO __ ruetda): __ ~·~June--13~,-2000 ____ ~~---...._.._...""=""'""=""'-=-~~'!"""'ir'~~~~--------------......:...:.-_._~~==-~~~------~~
IUILDlllT Wiii DY COUITDOWI
In 1he spirit of lrrelev~ "'°" Qcu ~ be(I) Almond, ttw fim recipient of the l.OWlman dlngwded. 0ne t.ct for m~ w.t ~ eaugtrt v plSleS tor Cl y.nts 1n his
2000, ~.Is r~ ~ 9\lor~ fotthe Demont, but WM le then
For the fkst time In ttw 25-yNr histoty of 1hrilled ~ hk potltiot\ In the dnrft.
lrretewm Weet<. a ~ hM ~ ..._, "I h9d just~ gMr1 up on being draft· hom•Kllool"'"'hol---• ll ..,._,...onJune>S.1919,"andlhad
Mr. lrrelev~ ~ swtlld Miking pl9r\S to try out with •
Thefe must be something In the water at COU.-of tNrTS ~I hMrd on the r.tlo hi the
Nor1hwestem State (La.), wtlefe the Demons have draft was In the 11th round ...
bred two last pk:kJ In the NFL draft. With free sa~ Taken In the 12th round by the defending Super
Micheel Green Hmlng Mr. lrretevant distinction this 8oWI champion StH!ers. Almond enj<>)'ed an expert-
year after being selected 254th by the Chic.ago Bears. ence of • lifetime at Irrelevant Week rv.
· Of all the players from all the colleges in the coun-So, who would win In a fantasy matchup between
try, what are the odds of two players from an NCAA a 79 Almond and a 2000 Green 1 The answer, of
Division I-AA school getting chosen absolutely dead, coune, is l,.,..teYant.
last In the NFL draft? The silver annlwBlry edition of llTelevant Week
In 1979, Northwestern State wide recel~ Mike star\S June 19 with an Arrival Party at the Newport
Almond was picked 334th by the Pittsburgh Steelers oones. Details: (949) 263-0727.
and honored as Mr. Irrelevant rv. (Since then. the NFL -by Richard Dunn
draft has been shortened to seven rounds.)
DREAM
CONTINUED FROM 9
Snell. wbO played l8YeOl oamer 1nDeld lpoG mid tbe
tionl"aDd wu alllo a de&-Oulfteld while nOt oMcblng, hit
ted bitter, bit .370 (20 for .338 (27 for 80) wttb 10 Rllll •
) wUb two homers, 12 RBis, and eight runs. On tbe
13 rum and six steals. He hlt motmd, he wu 3-0 with live •
Little's ce.reer numbers .435 in Pacific Coast League saves, among counfy leaders : ·
iDdude Dine bomen, 66 RBJs, play and was 4 tor 7 in the in the latter cotegory. He 001D•1
64 runs; 32 extra-bue bits pJayoftB. piled a 3.38 ERA with 37
and a .356 awrage. Johns, a first baseman, hit strikeouts and only six walks -
Akiva. a ~ finst .366 (26 for 71) wUti 17 RBI.$, in 39 1/3 inaiDgs.
baseman, bit .403 (29 for 72) 14 runs and 10 steals. Knee.bl eJso supplemented
with two homers, 24 RBl.s and Green, a big reason the his ottemive c:ootribution with.
15 runs. He plans to walk on Eagles won nine games, hit bis pitching. He hit .324 (23
at Cal State l=ullert.on. .365 (27 for 74) with 16 RBis for 71) with two homers, 13
Swanson, CdM's left field-and 19 runs. While not play-RBis, 15 runs and 16 steals,
er and leadoff man, led ing shortstop, he competed while o.1so posting a 3-2 pitch-
Orange County with 28 stolen doggedly on the mound, ing record and a ~.73 ERA
bases and wu thrown oul Cabico and Franco made DiCesare, a right fielder,
only once. He hit .288 (23 for major pitching contributions. bit .333 (23' for 69) with 11
80), scored 22 tio\es and had Cabico was 2-6, but fash-RBis, 10 steals and t 7 runs.
nine RBis. He'll take a year ioned a 3.02 ERA with 45 Jacobs, also an all-distrtct
ott, then try to make the team strikeouts in 41 2/3 innings. choice as a receiver on the
at Orange Coast College. He also hit .299 with 13 RBls Sailors' CIF champion football
Cuyler, CdM's No. 1 and nine stolen bases, playing team, hit .333 (22 for 66) with
• hurler, finished 6-2 with a 2.87 outfield and second base. two homer.;, 14 RBis and 14 .Astros outlast Cardinals 7-5 _ERA_in_56_innm_'_gs_. ___ Fr_anco_._wh_op_tay_ed_lhe __ runs_for_Coa_ch_J_im_Kie_rer_. -
' VOllEYBAU. Clemente. TRACK
COSTA MESA-The Costa
Mesa National Uttle League
Astros defeated the Cardinals,
1·5, recently.
YOUTH BASEBALL Hanson, a 6-0 outside hitter and walking only one. b
Jordan Salinger replaced CONTINUED FROM 9 who plans to play ror the du CONTINUED FROM 9 Harrison and threw two solid team at Cal next year, worked
innings for the save. through injuries to help the Sea Turner's sets. Clayton and Kings prevail. For the Diamondbacks, Turner, who~ likely not play Hanson. a second-team All-
CdM Dodgers win He was also sixth in the 110
high -hurdles with a time of
14.24, just off his PR o( 13.99.
Pitcher Kane Curran threw
a complete game for the Astros
with seven strikeouts.
Matt Pisarski had a double,
triple and four RBis, while 7.ack
Shockley added a double and
two RBis.
CORONA DEL MAR ~The
Corona del Mar Dodgers
opened the PONY Baseball
interleague playoffs with a 9-3
win over the Costa Mesa
Diamondbacks.
Adam Jorgenson pltched two at his collegiate home, USC, CIF point guard as a senior
scoreless relief innings, fanning helped Coach Dan Glenn's basketball standout, missed
three. Sailors share the Sea View close to a month with a badly
Corona del Mar High senior
Llz Morse. who ran a national-
best 2:08.16 to win the state
title last week, was second in
the 800 Saturday in 2:09.92.
Rangers advance
Astros Mike Fennessey and
Caleb Burgess each had key
singles, while Lawrence
1bunell and Austtn Evett each
made solid defensive plays.
Blaine Gribble and Dan
Marln-Flnn each bad bases-
loaded triples for the Dodgers
and each had two hits.
NEWPORT BEACH -The
Rangers defeated the Angels,
12-4 in Newport Harbor
Baseball Association Bronco
Division (ages 11-12) playoff
action June 5.
League title. The Tars then put sprained ankle early in the sea·
together a string of upsets in son. He also played through a
the playoffs, topping San pulled abdominal muscle in
Clemente, Marina and Mira the playoffs.
Costa, among others, to reach All five All·ClF honorees
the title match and finish 17·6. played in the Orange County
Newport Harbor junior
Amber Steen was fifth in the
mile (5:01.2), beating the current
state 1,600 champion Jenny
Aldridge from Santa Rosa.
Matt Harri.son pitched five
strong innings, striking out eight
Turner had 88 assists against All-Star Match, where Hansen
Marina and 71 against San collected MVP honors.
w .... I ........ ____ __.
PUBLIC NOTICE
CrTY OF
NEWPORT BEACH
City Council
Chamber•
of the City of
Newport Beech -3300 Newport
Boulevard,
Newport BNch
PLANNING
COMMISSION
AGENDA
Regul8r Meeting •
June 22, 2000 -
7:00 p.m.
1. SUBJECT· The Balboa Inn (Michael
Poormuasa, appllcent)
105 Main Street
SUMMARY: The
project conalals ol the
demolition of the existing
retail building and pool
area SOU1h ol Ocean
Front. The applicant propoMS 10 COl\llr\Jd a
two and lhraa·atory
bullding for 11 new guest rooms tor the
Bll>oa Inn. 2060 IQUl(a
laet of rUI apeca and a
part1any open pa rtclng
oar999 with 20 tandem parlQng spaces Tha pr0fec1 exceeds Iha basic aliow.t>le building
hlighl by 5 '"' and tile ellowabla lloor area by
2.205 squera IMt
APPLICATION Use
. Pannll No. 3661
CEOA COMPLIANCE An Initial Study/
Mrtiga1ed Negative Dae·
leratlon hea been
prepared by lhe City of
Newport BNch in con-neenon with lhe appllce·
j Ilona noted above The lnlllal Sludy/Mlllg1lad
Nag1tlve 01cl1retion
stelea that ltle subject
development as
proposed, end with Im·
plemenwtlon of lhe reo-
ommended mitigation
meuurea, wiN not result
In 1 algnlflcant elfeat on
the environment. The In-It 11 I Study/Mltlg1ted
Nagellve Oaclarallon
3<Miay public review pa-
nod WU December 21,
1999 to Januery 20.
2000 Coples ol Iha In·
11111 S1udy/Mltlgatad
N1g11tv1 Oectaratlon
and aupport1ng docu·
meots a.re available lor
publlc review and In· IP8diof'I II the Pl9Mflo
Dapar1mtnl. City Of
Newport Bffch, 3300
Newport Boulaverd.
Newport BMch, Callfor·
nla, 92659-t768
• (949) &44·3210
2 SUBJECT: 8111(1 II
ltla Beacfl Ind Tha
CharthouH RHwurant
(Gordon Barlanbrock.
appllcent)
2?$1 Wut Cou1 Higl)-
way and 2801 WNI Colat Highway SUMMA~Y: A requffl
to crNta a 547 IQUlra
feet outdoor dining arN
and a 220 aquart feat
~~~ .. _..,.~ ...............
Hrvioe arta for an axJst • Ing rtlStaUrlnt. The new
patio dining arae tit·
OHdt the 251'. ol the 1'111
l)UbliC arN; llld lhere-
lor1, requires 3 addi· tlonal parldng epacee.
The proc>oMd patio.
along with a propoeed m 1q1.m19 fMI outdoor
cinlng area tot the ._
cent CharthouM Rat>·
taurant will allmlnate 3
par111ng tpleeS. An of'f·
site paridng agreemeJlt
Is prcpond where a
nearby 24-spaca park·
Ing tot will be midi available tor the UHS.
APPLICATION: U11
Permit No. 3674 CEOA COMPLIANCE:
This l>(Ojeat has beel'I re-
viewed, and it has been
determined I/lit n Is eet· egoricatty exempt under
section t5303, Class 3,
Implementing
GUldelinll ol Ille Califor·
nla Environmental Qual..
hy ~
3. SUBJECT: Part(er
Slal\9bury. LLC.,
appllcent, 1514 West
Balboe Blvd. SUMMARY: A request
10 change lhl General
Plan and Zonmg ~
nation ol the subject prc>party from Govern-
ment. Educetion. and ln-
llltUtional (GEIF) to Two
Famlly Reslden1ial (R·
2) .
APPLICATION. Gen-
eral Plan Amandmlnt
99·2(C) and Amend· mant 904 CEOA COMPLIANCE:
Thia projact hu beel'I re-
vilwed, and It ha• been
determined lhet ~ 11 eet·
egorlcafly tll•ITIPI under
Iha c1 ... 1 (Exlsllng Fa·
cllltlH ) requlremenis ol
ttla C.flfomla
Environmental Ouellty
Act.
Published Newport
Beach·Co1t1 Me11
Deity Piiot June 13. 2000
1888
NEWPORT BEACH
CITY COUNCIL
AGENDA
SUMMARY
SPECIAL MEETING
Study Seaalon •
3:30 p.m.
June 13, 2000
Pr111nt1tlon of
Proclamatlon1
1) ~Marini S.fe«y StlpetYl9or Mlteh
White lof hit hefoic If.
f0f1 In NI/Ing tile llY9S ol
Alu and Vlciky Anaya on
Sunday, May 28. 2000.
2) Recognizing Li11-
gulld °'" 8allfldla for Fila outstanding eft0f1 on
Memorial Oa.y, ~y.
May 29, In making a
NeWpolt Beech llfaguard
r9CO<d ol 80 r~
3) ReoognizlnQ Fite
Captain RICh Tliom ...
Fire Paramedic Ron
Gamble, Flrellghtara M!l(a Multan, Terry Teala
and Brett Suthartan<I,
and Iha crews of Flra
Engine 82, &4, 66. Tl\IQI
82 Ind 83, Madie Unit 82
and Bettalon 8, tor lhefr
heroic lflorta In aavlng the iMa of Slltah Weeki
and CtlrilllN Amold.
MISCELLANEOUS
ACTIONS
PROPOSED CUL· TURAl. ARTS CENTER
:: Ad Hoc eom.
tlon Cenlet'a '*'*' 10 ... •elde 3.6 ... at
Newport Viii: lot "ruBl~INGS
FISCAL YEAR
200CH>1 PROPOSED 8UOOET HEARING.
Action 1) Conduct
~f»NpM~of ==:.. ..
3) Direct the prepatatlon 4) Adopc AeeoMlo!I 8'1-c::H11194111 tion 12&0 of the llmCE OF tllllT&'S SALE BSC 9581
o1 the Budga( Aeeo1ution provtng, ~ Of de-NOTICE Of Celifornia Probate rs llt.: i.-NOTICE OF
tor adoption, lndudlng ~ Traffic Study No. PElllllON TO Code. A Req1.1 .. t fOf MD. 1na RW1M1 Mac PmTION 5 ~at ... _·~ 5) Lt..... Aeeo1ution .,.. ADlllllSTER Speci.i Notice fonn oanret YOU ME 11 TO ADMINISTER
-u ... ........,...., ..._...... .... ESTATE Of 11 available from the OlfN.l.TIMBAlllDOF ESTATE OF: meeting of June 27, prol/lng, modtfyfng, or : cfertt !WED 911"m
2000. ~ ~ ~ SC~.... A~ f~ ~YOU WCE ACTDI H~ ~ ADOPTION OF THE r an or ......,..,.....--...n Pedlhw. 1'0 flll:JTB:T YCJUll ,.._ '
ANNUAL APPROPRtA· n1na Unit 1: CASE NO. ...-<.el M. 1 _ ...,, rr ••IOU> Ar• DEAN DOUGHTY
TlON (GANN) uurr 6) lntrodoc. Ordinance A202'•-.,...... .._.. ""'" C .. .,..,, NO .. -...,
Action: 1) ~uct ~~n:" 8~~ To effheirs, tu:-•...... :.-C~~~ ~all ~~=Ii· ~Adopchla~ de-Planned Community ~:~:~ci~:~tinc~~; ~~~ =-~M~ =· ~~:~ ~d
tarmlning llld ~ Diltrict Plan PC-48 llld creditors, end per-,_ IMDl.lD CXlfTACT I. LM-peraon1 who may Olher·
Ing an app~tlonl :-SJ:. ~2~~ 1on1 who may other· T-*' CA 9Z780-Y8l On ..... • 1tD wlae bl ~ in the
limit ($83,745, 71) for deny Am.ndmant 878 wi11 be intarHted in 8864 PJl. .._ ...... wlll or "'811. or bo4tl. of:
Flacal Year 2000--01 In and Planned c_ommunity the lost or mining 06/01, 08/07, ot/13 ...... u..c., • ~ DEANNIE BEST HUNT.
accordance With Artlcll .......... DI&-..,.. ..... end will or Htate, or _...., Tr---_. aka WILLIA DEAN XlllB of the C.lifornle .._..,... r-• r..--NOTICE OF - - - -DOUGHTY Constllutlon and Gov-7) In~ Ordinance both, of: EDITH M. PUBLIC SALE ...... " 0... of Tlllll A PETITION FOR
C..,,,& S I ~roving or modifying SCHOEFFLER ._.. GWllll • ~ PROB•TE emment """' ecton D I • .. PETITION .. _1 The mini ator-tacll---..__ --• In " haa been 7910. eveopment ,..gree· " ,,. ...,... - -_., .. ""\ fl d b I MAITHEW ment No. 12 and ..... lo b11n filed blr PAUL lly, eccon:tlng lo the -.. -. ~-, "Olldll le Y · VACATION AND ..--C OEFF E i th pl'O\llllons ot OMa1on 8 ... ARKO In the Superior ABANDONMENT OF aecond rN<ing on June S H L n 8 of the Bullneaa and -...... ii " h Coun of CaJlfornls, PORTIONS OF UN· 27, 2000 or deny De· Superior Court of Profaulona Coda, a.ny ,...., " 0... County of ORANGE. USED RIGHT-OF·WAY velopment Agreement California, County of Chapter 10, Section ~ ... of c.Mllnit. THS PCflTION FOR ~~~G S~E w;,~: ~U~~ENT BUSINESS Orawe PETITION ~~rc~a),\>~U~ ::a--n:.--:A.= rR~~eW~O ":
CIFIC DRIVE IN CO-BOARD ANO COM· requa111 the1 PAUL SALE. ...... Mil .... Ill • appointed as peraonal
RONA OEL. MAR. MISSION SCHEDULED SCHOEFFLER b e EXTRA SELF 111111* lllllllml • ..... repra..Ubve to edmln-
Aetlon: 1) Conckict VACANCIES • CON· :rpointed as peraon-STORAGE ..ni conduct llillMlr tw ~ _..,., laler the Hiatt of the de-
pYblic hMrlng: FIRMATION Of NOMI· reprHentative to 1 publiQ Mia ot the con-................. cadent.
2) Adopt RMolulb'I Of· N~; Confirm Iha fol. edrninl1t1rthe11tat1 tenta of Iha atoraga ._.,,.... ....... .,, THE PETITION re-
derlng h V9Cat1on Wld !owing nominations, ap-of the decedent. spece(a) named below, ..... .,...... • -If que111 the d~nt'a abandonm.nt of Iha """'llMn to bl made THE PETITION wi1t1 Ifie contants be1no ... In lllii6il _,of .. Wll and oodlc:ila, If ll'l'f,
strMt rlgtte(Jf;:8t, In ex· """' 11 · r 1qu11t1 th 1 llold to the hlot"" ~ ....,. .... • .. Miiii bl admitted IO probe.le.
oess ol 80 teat width :'a::': 2~f ~ibrary decadent'• LOST OR def, for lawful money of ... .-" .. C..., The Wit and ll'l'f oodlCils
IJong ~ IOUltlll1y Iida Trvst-(t Vac.ncy· MIS.SING . WILL and the United StalM o1 ~ 1W 0. C:... are 1v1ilable fOf Ill· °' Paclflc OfiYe (Vatylng Jim Wood) (2 nomOM) cod1ci11, ,, eny, be America (cuti). DIM .......... CA.M aminalion In the fill kapl
lrom approximately 12.4 Oty Ms Ccimmlaalon (~ admitted to prObete. Thi M1e la bll'1Q htld """ • • II-. -by Iha court. to 19 feet} subject to If>° Vacancies • Atltnt •The LOST OR MISS· to satisfy 1 lancJord'a ... "..i -lllld llJ t THE PETITION ""
proval of Zoning Amend-Canozlan end L{n ING WILL and sny Ian and w4ll bl htld at ..,...,0.-~TMlll .. queltl authority 10 ed-
ment No .. 899 on JUne ..... 1• ..__. d' -11 a 1 .... 1 17692 S.mpaoo Ln .• = ...-.. Ill '* mlnilttr the tltlte undlr 27, 2000, to modify ..... eco .. nom~-• 00 ici re av• .., • Hunti""'on Beach, CA ...... ._... • the lndapaodent Nkrlto-,_.... .-----... ... &.... Clv1' Service Board (2 tor uemmellon 1n • .,.. ~ 111 .... lion .. "°....... • ... "'""""'' ......_._ ..... v&---'-Da p-.. .. f 1 k t b t .. _ 92847 on June 20. 2000, Ill ... ~ -.. _,. "' ~ ........... 3) Direct the City Cleft( _,.....,. • yna .,u, tnl 1 1 •P Y ,.. at 12 p.m.. .... ..... 0... of ~ Au1florlty Wiii alloW
lo .. &~ ..... ~ ............ r• and Clint Hooee, Jr.) court. A....... • N Ti a-•---.. ...... 1 ~---• r1n1e1ent ..... u .. ,......., ..... , 14 ~ • Pollce and THE PETITION ""''°""r 1 ama'. Nil ,...... --,,. .,...._,.... ,.. ·
ootded ~ Iha Ora~ !=ire Auoclatlon r1qu11t1 authority to K.E. Auction StlVlea -.. .._ ..i alls atiw to lalct many ao-~nt~ the eco.;::Waf' of ~=::~~~~01~: ~ =~'t'h!t~t~c:e·~=~ :J'3~~:31 •: (
9
0
9
) :. :l='~ = ~~al~~":~ oning Amendment No. ,_, however dlere a.re dent Administration Addr-: P.O. Box 508. tDk 10f7 taking c1rt1ln very Im· ~MeNi!:M'EN2J· fg'°· ~ti ~) P 1a of Eetatee Act with ::'\:c~:,:,,. ~ _, r.;::,:. ::,nJ.. ~ ~
FRONT YARD mo Y , own, au limited authority. The public la Invited to = r..-...._ -eantallve will be required
SETBACKS ON PA· ~~~~lokH (Thi1 authority wUI attend. Terms are cash w:;•ncll-~ to give notice to In· CIFIC DRIVE CPL.AN· ...._,.a allow the peraonel only. Owner r11ervea .. ... _. .._ tarMted partont unless
NING COMMISSION Planning Commlaalon {l repreuntatlve to the 11gt1t to bid. ~ If i:J they have walVad notice AMENDMENT 899) -Vacanoy • Thomu take many eotions A gentral deac""'tlon ~........... ....... .. or consented to the A"ENO DISTRICTING Aahle"' (2 nomlneu) i .. b i · "" .,_ --_ _.. tlonJ T"-.., Publl~hed Ntwporl w tnout o ta ning of the pr0party being 111..., .............. propoa... ac . ,,. MAP NO. 18 TO ES· Beach-Coita Meaa court approve!. ~-aold, along with !tie Iden-• _.... ....-.. or Independent a minis· TABLISH A LOT·BY· Diiiy Piiot June 13• 2000 fore ~eking certain tity of the Oool4)lnl rent· ................ ,_ tration authority wiN be
LOT FRONT YARD ______ T.uS..,.e"'e very important ac-1ng the ~ .,.. as fol. ......_ • 9'G • 64 to granted unla11 an In· SETBACK FOA 13 dona, however, the Iowa: _ .. ..-..... ~ ttraalld P8'90fl files an
PROPERTIES LO· NOTICE OF pertonal repreHnta· SPACE NO.. ;.., ....... ~ objlc1lon to the petition
CATEO ON THE APPLICATION TO tlve will be required OCCUPANT, •O..."T•wlfl"*" and anowa aood cause SOUTHERl Y SIDE OF to glva notict 10 PROPERTY .. ..._ • ........ ._.., Yltty the ooucf .tlolJld not
PACIFIC..-DRIVE BE· SEU ALCOHOLIC: intereated persona DESCRIPTION ...... ....._. ... ... grant the aulhor1ly. ~~.v:~~~~: BEVERAGES unlH• they heva A-019, Chril Munoz ... .._ofllllitlO...llfT• A HEARING on Iha Dela of F'tllng ~-waived notice or furniture -. -... _....-of pebllon will bl held on ERL Y SIDE OF lion: June 2, 2000 consented . to the A·286, Vincent R ... T,._. _.If .. .._ JULY 6, 2000 al 1:45 ~0~6A TH:v9~~f. To Whom " May Con-propoHd action.I Burg. cloth, vacuum a...i llr '* 0... of r..._ p.m. In Dept. L73 lo-cem: The Independent c:llantr, big ICrMf'I T.V .. n.....,_.., .. ...., cated at 341 The Clty TION Of A PORTION Tha Name(a) of lhl • furniture, 1>ox11. 11f1, ........__ _. .. -.. 0nve South, Orange. OF THE PUBLIC Adcant(I) lsfare edl'Tllnillr1t1on eu· computer -"' __.. CA 92868. RIGHT -0 F -WA Y; Pl:AYERS PIZZA thority will be orant· A=3'0. Ronda Johrr· _. llJ .. ,......" a.. IF YOU 08JECT to
AMEND SECTION INCORPORATED ad unleH anf.1 lr ntar· ton. boxes. clothla, ~~~ the orw"*1ll o1 the pell-
20. t0.030 ANO The applicants listed attedperaon 111en lhoea. ~ ;;;~ .. ~--11on,·you ~ 1WNf SECTION 20.10.040 Of abOY• are applying to objecuon to th• D-270, JOhn Chavez ... ., .. ....._.,59111 at the '-ri'lg and ai.J•
TliE ZOHING CODE TO Iha ~Cf ~ p1t1t1on and shows blcydn, lirH, wheel VOi.if objedionl or tile ADO CLARIFYING LAN-hollc Control good ceu11 why th• barrel, keyt>oard, re-...,(A '111-..., wntten objections wilh
GUAGE FOR DE· to Hll alcoholic court 1hould not cords. luggage, boJr, ...., .... 0... If -.. Iha court before the
TERMINING THE CAL-beveragee at. grant the authority. surfboard ,...... ..... ... haarlng. Your •P·
CULATION OF 612 'N. t9TH ST.. A HEARING on 0·298, Natuha .......... *zlsm• pwance may bl In per-
BUILDASLE AREA FOA COSTA MESA. CA the petition will be Dzura.Jonel, fumltufe, .... Dldllllllll fl Dlllll aon Of !IV~ attomey. THE SUBJECT PROP· !ne27 l\atd on June 29, IMw:I. V.C.A. ... 0.-.. ts 11111, _. 1 IF YOV ARE A ~0-
ERTIES. ~lor:of •• ~7 .'al Ap-2000 et t :45 P.M . E"-037. DeniM Her· .... ....._fl DIM_. rTOA Of 001141191111 Cf9d..
AQtion; 1) Hok:I pubilo ~ I .. 7 • ON-SALE in Dept. L73 loc:etad rera. Ille cablnet8. toola, ..... ti Ill '111 \119-11or of the dacMlad, )'OU
hearing; GENERAL EATING at 341 The City boll.II. T.V., tool boUI, .... _._,....._fl mull Ille yo11r dMn with
2) lntrodUoe Ordlna,_ PLACE Drive Orange CA floor jack a..1• ...... •111" the oour1 and mail a
epprovlng Amendment Publl1h1d Newporl 92888. Puollahed Mewport a.. ._.. Ill .. ..._ wtf'l 10 the PlflOllll rep.
No. 899 and PMS 1o MO-811ch·Co1t1 Meaa IF YOU OBJECT Beach·Coata Mala ...... 11111 ...... Ii ~ ~ by onc:t2nd r~ on June 27. Ody Pf1o1 Jur11 8, 13. TO the mentlng of 2Dlllv PilOI June 8, 13, ....., ,.. -... &-. the 6outt four ooet"" • . 20, 2000 .. t"t;, 000 -~ '-mon1ha flOm the date of NEWPORT DUNES 1884 tna J1 1 ion, you Tff5 .._ ...... U.C.. J the ftnll IMulr1ol of let·
RESORT (NEWPORT thou appear It the ........... = ... -i.r. .. pnwldad In PTO-
DUNES PARTNER· e1-......-•·-•w-heeling end state Flctltloua ......... :. ~1 -beet Code -*t 91<>0. SHIP, ...... .,..~ _ A .---r.our objection• or ..__ --t ..,._--:!. The llml tor -e1a1rr19 ,.,...,........, ..__ 1 .. 11•=n1t 11 · ob" ,_.,,. "'*'*"*' -~ 11111 ~ ·-'V GENERAL LAN --.,.,.r • wntten tee-Thi tollowlfla perlOlll •-• _ wlll not tllPirt bef~
AMENDMENT, LOCAL Thi followillD Pl'IOlll tlon1 with the cou" .,. dolno ~ 11: ......... ,,,. DllK tour months from the
COASTAL PROOAAM -... ~~reR befo,. the heenng. •I JEalSTAR CON· -t.amwt ... f\Nrlng data noticed ~~.~~""EUNTSE ZONPLI~ ACADEMY OF OR· mYo•uv' .. -T~r:!~::~~~ S TRUCTION, b) --~u.c.·• ·~ MAY EXAMINE
COD,_ E""" • ...r .. ru.u:.:::t, • ..,.,..., COUNTY. 2••• """ ,.-JEMSTAR 8UILOERS --.
AND Pl.NM"DCOM. N.;,., BIYd c,, fltl Ci by W'rv~r'rlt A ~ :=-Coet1 ......: i'10 .==.l"Zi :'8 :-::' ~~ ~
MUNITY DISTRICT COiia Mela. 9Mf7 CREDITOR or • ,,.... E. Mattinaon, ----·= '°" ~ 1n ...... 1111--~ nE ..,. The ~ "'9!"' ""*':! _..._rt1_n.. ... Hawn-Oldl .. ,..... _.,. ..._...._., -ACRE NEWPORT Produllloria Inc. I CA f • .._ __.. ._, COiia u-,.. -· OOUlt a tor -
DUNES PROPERTY ~ OOfP ~I: o ..,. -· ~--""' -11!9'7,D clal N*9 (form OE-
AHO A CONCEPTUAL r.-= =:: ~-= ~Ide...::=: =.__of 81\ ft. ~~ :'.: ~E~ ~ J:r, Mw, melt a •oopy to "'9 COiia ...... CA -.... .:. ":'-::-' ~
SHARE COMPLEX Thia .,...,... .. oon-penoNI ,._....... m: ~~ ~ PID.,._ .... ftlll ,...._, 0t "100Uflt •
WITH CONFERENCE. ~ ~ a _,,... ... , l6w ....,,._. by"'9 Mfe ...,_ "811,...lt ~ In Probate ruglNG.,=1=. dolly .. ~~· :I ... ,.::·= ;;'lthl., ~ .'= ..:-•"r.:.=.: :-.-:0=.=: .. __.-:in~-..: RESTAURANTS, A -.... .........__ ~ -· -.-1 ,_ ,_ Ill*' lie ---.. lctloen Pllt>Mafll,, llol llfm le 9¥lllble HEATH C&.U8 AND ,.,. ,__ --· _,.....,_ •.....,,... .,.._ twM(t) llllld 1511 ..... Y8'dl flOflt lie OOUlt d9ft
SPA :fAIL ANO ..,..,..., Inc. In ...... 1100 ef lllbGIW'e on• ~ o-. 111M, C.. M1aa. Clio ..... 8Eal.ICI! ADr&• T,'· ~ . ..,. Cllfemte ,,.. _.H_ (2nd) .,, ..._._ -
ANDv awu{wi'NO Nie Cede. n.. *"' ·~ 0 Mlflnaor! M:t'Fr.,.rinu111, ·"'
POOLI MO LAND-nm 119111 ... ::. -:::..~...:: Tiiie ••l'Wl ... 1111 ..... v.. I. .. ... ~ -~:.::.o GARDIN =_r.=;. = ~' ~ ~ =-~:" .. = = =~ ..... c.t-~.r.-.. o~
Aalelft: 1) Conduct on-· MlllllllH .. ,. ·-·• -Oft '"-" ' ' ..... ttl. Nit,__, ........ *"9. tMI .,._ f .JGllT llMlll, CA
It) Mlle. ~ = rr~,,,,,a......IO~ YOU MAY IX· ~ "'°' ..., a a ll7M. 0-..... C» .... ,.,. lllM" .......... --__ _J_DB M9ll .. .. • .... ' 1LNPJIM ..... -,...llMd Newport NI. ti? .., ... ...,._.. Tilll..._ .. _.. IHolt-Coeta M ... II~==~~-· ........... .... ............ ~ ......... ti. -~: .. ":"~ .. ,_ -~,;g-' -Dml ..... . ....... ..... c ... F.~~-~t~ ~ !~ 5:.:=:..:11.t111.ttam11 • •11••
BSC 9583
NOTICE TO "
CREDITORS
OF JOHN A.
PFEFFER
SUPERIOR COURT
OF CALIFORNIA COUNTY OF
ORANGE
CASE NUMBER
A202590
Nolioa .. hereby gi'Yel1 to the credltota and conl·
lngant creditors of the
above-named decedent. thet an pel'IOfla having
clalrM agelnal the dee.-
dent are re<allred lo:
1) FILE fHE CLAIM
with lhe SUperlof Court. In person at tile Superior
Coun, Probele Clark'•
Office. Ttla Lamoreeu• Justice Center, 7lh
Floor, 34t The City
Orll/1, Or~. Celftor-nill, or by It to Ille
Ptobli. Clettc. .o eo.
14169. Orange. CA
112863-1569.i,_•nd 2) MAIL UH OEUVER
A COPY Of ll-iE CLAIM lo MERRILL LYNCH
TRUST COMPANY OF
CALIFORNIA, TNstH
of the PFEFFER FAM·
ILY TAUST OATED QC.
TOBEA 5, 1969, 4895
Mac:Ar1hur Couft. 5uit1
1420. Newport BNch. C-' 92660 wMrein Iha decedent was the Ml· llof, Within the lattr ol four months alter ~2000 (tile dale of the filll publlcation ol notlCI
to creditors) Of, It nota
Is mailed or parsoriallY
dellvtred to you, 30
deYI after the clete lhll
noilca ia meilad Of per·
sonally dellVered to )'OU.
Of you muat petition to
Ille a Illa claim 11 provided • In Secllon
19103 ol the Probate Code. A cHditora chllm IOflll. Judloial Council
form No. DE·172. may
be Oblafned from ll1Y Ml>
parlor oourt cletlt; For your pn>tee11on, you .,..
enco1.1ra~ to file your
claim by 01111flad ma W. with return recaipt re-
qu11ted
Dele MAY 25, 2000
/SI .JAMES £NSIOH, ADoml¥ .. law,
23041 Avenlde De La
Carlota, Sia. 100, L8aune Hiia, CA nlll
l>ublllhed Newport
Baach·CO"lll MtU Daily Pilot June 8, t2,
f3, 2000
·TM082
Tell Us About
YOUR
GARAGE
SALE!
In .
CLASSIFIEDS
Ftctttiou• Bualnn•
Name Statement
Th• lollowlng peraonl ere doing bulllllle as
Shannon Mlch11ls P1raonal Training, 260
Newport Center Drive,
Nawpof1 Beach, Cahtor·
nla D2658 •
Shannon Lina
Michaels. It 350 Gold· 1n1od Ave.. Foontaln
Vallly, Callomla 92708 Thll bu9ineM la COO· ducted by: an lndMdual Have you atarted
doing ~ yet? No
Shannon Mlchatls
Thia statement was nlld with the County
Clallc of Orange County
on 051t7/2000
ZOOOM2t2.4' Daily Pllol May 23, 30. J\Jnt 6, 13, 2000 T87Q
FlctltJou• BualnMa
Ntlme Statement
Th• lollowing Pl!'IOnl are doing bu8lne$s u :
Mllllnnlum Clothing.
725 James St , IB,
Co.ia Mau, CA 92827 Gllblt1 Navarro. 725
Jam11 St.. 18, eo.ta
Mesa, CA 82627
This bu11ne11 II con-ducted by: an indMdual Have you atar11d dolno bualr*8 )'111 No Gilbert N1v1rro
This lllltmlnl WU
filed wilh the County
Clefll ol Orange County
on 05/t 8/'2000
2.000M2t42t Dally Piiot May 23, 90.
Juoe 8 13, 2000 T87!
Flctltlou• Bualneaa
Ntlme Stmment
Thi following paraon1
.,. doing butlnaa ••: Sou1hwea1 E•preu.
1700 E. Garry Ave .• Suite t02, Santa Ana,
California 92705
W1Hlam LM Wolford,
109 Ave de la Grvlla,
Surte C. Sen Clemenle,
Callfomla 112702
Thia tiu.inlM II oon-
ductld by: an lndtvldual Have you ataned dolno bulnsl y.17 No Willem Lee Wotlc)fd
Thil Mllemenl WU
filed With the County
C1et1( of Orange County on 05/15'2000
2000M21Nf
Dally PlloC May 23, 30. m &, 1s. 2000 D72
Flctttk>ua Bualneu
Name se.tem.nt
The lollowlng l*90nt .,. doing ~ as:
Poll 4 Poeeya, 18'
MltgllOla Sl, •A. COIU Maia. CA. 112927·2823 RoMnM l(enyon, t81 ~St .• IA. COIU MMe, CA G:1927·2823 Thie bullnetle II coo-~ by: an lndMdual
Have you atanad doing bull!'-yet? No Rolanne Kenyon
Thia lllatement wu ~with the~
on ~1~ Counly
2000MICMJ1 ~ p~ June 8, 13. ~7. 2000 IllZ
Have l
&1rag1-S1t1I
ftate11 ltKI dt1cJlj11t'li ltr Mtl.jl'l't 10 d11111~t'
withou1 11ocit>r. ·nar puhlii,llflr n·~·n , thr
~t to r.-u~r. ref'lltllbir). rrviSC' or rtjttl
IU'I)' dashlfied adH~rti~.11e11t. Pita~ n:pon
aoy f'~)I" th11~ 11Ut\ ht in rour d11~!1.ili~1l utl
imlntdiati•ly. fhe 'Oitil Pilot a1•1'('111~ 110
liabUilv for any crntr in u11 u1ln·rtil.l'11wnt
for whk·h it muy !X' n.'b!K>ll:.iltlc Clwcvl fur
t.M l'OSt of I.ht pace ar1uullv ()('''uµi ~1 h)'
die mor. Crrdit cun oulv IW: alJowr•I for thr
.
Byfu By.._•e
.(9'l9)-63 t-6594 (9 .. 9) 642-5678
(i>hM-bicludf \lJUI' 111111t 111111 , 11lt00t u1u1dlu ud u 'U raU ,,,.,
bid 11i1h a 1'"'-'t quotr. )'
ByMllMal'tn••
:1:JO W1·st &, Strcl'I
Cosio ~fo a, CA ')'}.6'!.7
Ar ~ll''" Bh'd. ~ RI,, f:1.
Monday ................. Friday 5:00pm
Tuesday .............. Monday 5:00pm
Wednesday ......... Tuesday 5:00pm
Thursday ....... Wednesday 5:00pm
Friday ............... Thursday 5:00pm
aturday .. : ............ Friday 5:00pm first in:lt'n ioo. ·
All ,.., estm adVtrt1sino
Ill this lllWS4Jll>tf IS ~bjlct
10 111e Ftclerat Fair Houslno Act of 1988 as amended
which makes it llleQJI 10
ICMftlM "1ny Pfefttence. ~mltlbOn or dlscrlmlnatlon
bned on race. color. l'ltlo·
Ion, SU. l'andleap. Wnlllll status or national Oflgin. or
an llllention lo make 111y
suc:h Pflftttnet, lrm1Ub0n or ditcnmlnallon. • Tiiis newspaper will not
knowlngly accept any
1dY1rt1umen1 for 1111
IStlle Wlllch Is in 't!OlatlOll of Ille flw, Out' readefs lfl
herlby lnfo11ned INI all CIMlillOS IO'tll1lstd In this MWSPlf*' .. l'lallablt on
111 lqull opportunity basis. To comoQin ol diw11'M·
nltlon, call HUD IOll·free 11 1-800-424-8680
** JUST LISTED Specl•uler 1emodeltd
dupltit, no expense wu ~J9dl Nolhing comperM
IO Ihle price llf108. 381 plus
28e. S149,000 Belbol New-
potl R!!l!y. 949-723±'94
11 TWtHIS • FIRST lW Off'ERED! 4 LEFTI All 381
2.5Be, $217,000-$226,000.
2111 C8ftYOll Or •• Model Op!!! • AS!! ~-9699
38f 2.S8e "-· E'eidt,
pvl c:ukle-slc. =tio, 2ear gar & men. Orl:<J. $329,000 Cell • !Q!I!!! 949-233-6335
II ..... ---!"J
EMtsldt CtlerM« ...... .....------~
Verdi 38r 2Be, CIOll1'I lcl. I .. :n I nut IO pel1!, RV ecx:ess. Price reduc9d. 5uccep
Prop!l1i!!, 949-37&.o6&4.
*NEW HOMES*
Ol.elly bUll dM:hed
I ·=1--1 .: ~ '; il. .-•. 1C~
Index
421
' .,
r. U.·461
...
-. .
- - - - -
• Cl
., •• 471 ...... ,
--= 11 ---11 ma.:= I I ·"Am I
MOVING GE watller SUS. I ifiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
Fllbuloul Ilg C8ftYOll Golf
COUIW View. 39' 2.5Be
lldUdld 2-Ally w/IOUlhem
upoeure, sec:u1ly gmed
$435,000 Agenl Cliartes !l!t!!li 949-720-9570
• lnncl New 48r 5.5Be Plus libtlly, bonus room.
!amity enlen.inrnenl IOOlll,
5400 rl. QOlllllll :a:~ .,.,.. Wft). IUtf .___.. __________ __,
Gtlald OtPtce, Be8COl1 --------------
:~lY· !715c1~ ~ THE GALLUP POLL 71'·540-0362 •
KREISS 4 post11 wrOU!lhl Iron lung lramt. S7SO,
rna!Chng nogt1I ""1p. SI 00
C•hf R109 bid S450
or bMt ofter 71~1-4210
Pine Enltrtalnmtnl
Armolr S550., larg•
FlllMCI S.'ttltd Mirrors,
1100 .... King Pllow lop Bolt • Illar-. $3915.,
All u. New Mt-72M7'96
• Survey Phone Interviewer
•No Sales
• Paid Training/Benefits
• Positive Work Environment
• Flexible Scheduling
• Full and Part-time
For further information:
949 .-474-7900 (x710)
Irvine
don_dusatko@ II .com
Cool! --.s. Must ~ SALES ASSOC'S
English. txpd rit $&'11 lJptcalt ~ "'*
Contac:I Chnsln II Melts °"going rnolJ'tlled 14M31-5U3 9111 atoaelll fal Fi.t & PT 51.vock 8ar • Grill £~~ I 1·=n I l._· ___ M __ E____.I
AGEtlT, 14•123-1120 2 Wllnut end 11111. Wthl.
2'33 Wiii Coest Hwy, NB r-k!Nl~I• OP£N WED-SUH 12~ * 11m APPROX.""• 1 I
321 NAllCISSUS ':'..'.;..~== • :i:..r
I t lqll• 1-•-BB>AOOW4 .... M ..... • e-__ ,·:o.;;...;• __ s~~!=-=-:"_TH ___ •GENT_:O=M;:..;:;..=~=...;~=1=~-0H-.. · _-___ .. __ .
· · COMING SOON CAMDEN COURT
OHL Y 2 81.1($ TO -ICHI N8 Oenfront no boarOwa1t Collet lablt. 2 UpholslMd
P£NlNSULA lmmac 3Br Huge 4tlr 2be. 'W8f ~ $950wk PlQ 1111. Gtr11gt. Cheirs S75N. !Ant Cedar 2Be home. lllO'le·ln cond. hllbnghl. G1ea1 _, W/O spons equip, 880 w/d. Chest $100 94M73-0563 ~ 11ep1 10 beach. '*15>. $3200 94&-~18 included a.ue-0321.
~·000 AS!! 949-574-2056 I I
I I I
1to ~ 1 ·VACATIONREHTAl.2& 411 ~
• DISHWASHER
• PREP COOK ENGLISH A MUST. ... ~.
in • 1111111 bouelqw, = have ttc.tlent c:utlomtr
Ml"ICt lkis end I dlairt IO
suc:ceed. Hlly rall • QOlllfT1
0 0 E Qu.tlfitd ~IS
DRIVER·HEW PETER· pie!!! Cal 94 -6689
Bil TS! More dldictled s.1ee ~ lot
routesl Expenenc:ed OTR gill & home decor tlqJ Ex·
drivers also 81*1'/ top • peyf ce11tnt mmry l"IOlll>OllUMY
benefits. hloh wttldy ma.. 1or ~. n ' f7f OuaJComm1'm-cab &-md & Ron 01 Mart 94~7373 401 (!() plan Jom Clln5tnlf
•V.A" ::;-;;,~ I "-n I -t:£.·f ..
c1ou1•c1o11ectwti.com MOMAACtt BEACH dwdy ~ = r:f'
T"°'*°'Y Front Unit 38r on the t.itway wllll ocean T nshl Mlllhll 3Be. dining -. Dl9lldall views lrom downstlill Ind 7 I "'296-2038 .,... lam rm, Fp. crown ~ 38r 2.581. lam rm. ______ .,.
mclclnQe. Fr.nch doors, 2e gar. ale. Fp, $629.900
Olk Aoen. CU110r11 ldlft. Diane, IQl PNd Ca Alty
$725,000 Sara Mervin. 94~144 Coul Newport Proptl1ies
949·759-3795 Oas&ficd is
CONVENJENf
•1lctbcr )'OU're
buying. 5Clling. or j\l5l
looking. cbssilicd tw
wba1 yoo occd'
CLASSIFIED
(949) 642·5678
·,:n . A = ~:»::ii;F R-El~~ Yfi~Looklng
'-· -------'-• GREYSTONE 38t 2 5Be. L9opard spot18id CFA ocical
2-&oly lWM. 1300 sf, att 1-OFACES I ~ ~211~~· <lllSl7~"'~. °ii'1owld :~n FOR llllWME Trucking 800·528·367S WORK FROM HOME
EOE.(CAL'SCAHI lnt1rn1tion1I company ""'""' ~ Cat lOftlMShell An . ~orla/Newport c-.... _...... ......_ Blvd.) 1'"'622 rwon . ..,._, 1 cal,......,, -•EXECUTIVE SUITES• ll'idOof rit Smll adollbOtl AVAIL Oclll'I Ind glldtn I• ~9-54!5't28
Upper, ltt 2br 2be, sell wlewa. C.H MtkM It -------
OfllVERS-WHEM IT c:omea
lO benefits ..... ..,. goc .. 1111
bells llld wtllS1lts 'Paid
~ 'Gr• pay ·s1.ooo ~ bcnl$ 'OrMlg Stu-
diillS Writx:Jrre SRT • Cal
I o I I I r I a
i7S:5;i MM44~t2 1 41!.....~ I
11x15tt OFACE . _,"_..., •.
1-Sn.BIG-PAYOAY
11-an.244-72931 (CAL'SCAN) 40~-S~I 1 ·• •amit I .: ~~~ '**' ""· pnvlq, Ind .. -
ll10W1llin -. good --90RT IUOI I I Dri't9fS W111t9d FIT & tJ!r.sc1r=~7~ CANNERY VILLAGE l'tl ="~ WANT TO BUY or set 1 ~ .-SMolt~ T=
K•AlL CONSOLE
PIANO Plap H~leol
11crlflc• SS75.
SIHM-3241
2Sr 281. 2c pw. UI die*, · . QU11M Of ~ I drum Y!lidelfl OMii, ID 1111 75lbl
I -I unique CIJll>4"Y $3000l'Mo Mt. a piano°' orgmn. 1 hom M local. nNt ~a
-
• • -AQ!!!! 9'9-27S.2nS PfoftNionll '"'*' 0t-tliba. anodler instM ~leCals ~~g1~ to 1111cr1g & bllll menl ? Check oul ~ ....... ,,... ·-
* BAYF.RONT * In ctN:.o°"'tiomt 91 www t bay oom/loeal (CAL 'SCA~ RIOHT COUNTER ..-2 ACMS NEAR Oc:un
(Rot! L~. Olegon!,
'tllCllion, retilemtnl dttb-
nMion. &my 1994 a.lllorn
home. 2 mull< bedroom
..... Gftal .... A.....o
$180,000. MAKE OFFER.
1·800-580-3153 ext 00.
ICAL"SCAN)
Beeutlful 28r 28a btach (Newport lot gourmet blMry In ~.~ roj!fF:.:C: 1•maww 1 ~ow~~~ e::':!"...&t: ~ ..._ ____ .. . WAITED . GARYS ISLAND
°' '°"' depending on diltes ...-------IRVINE SPECTRUM Villa Rentlls, Inc. 1 • LOIT 6 I COAST COIN NEEDS loob'lg tot Siies AModllll 949-675-4912 _,,.1,..0 OLD COINS! Gold, lilvtr. 1or Ill SOOW!llf Ind II ye«
rVVft jew9lly • welCtoes, entlques, around. ~ve 11#1 • "°"' IOI
oolltcllblts 949-842·9447 I ~Fi.t & PT Poe ChafTy LaU 3br 2.5ba 'tU ....._ _____ _.
ol llllt ~ huge c1t1*. LOST bllc:k lab nU. 5 Y11 TOP SISIRECOROSI Cal MM~
0111tp l'MOd, llNMc 2 cer old. lg bllc:k apoc on IOngUI. Jazz. A & 8, Soul. Roci,
r1IPct1 t~ Pen41mt S500-S20oo. mo FIA-llmt
S2SOO.S7000lmo Many
po!ll!On!' ... 7'91-1097
1 HOUfl PHOTO ltCH RX cMlll«. AW; 10 Via
Lido DNga 3445 \1e lJdo.
N!wpot! Beech
4 PHONE REPS
Fff Enetg111t people 1or
Mori~ Co Eam IO s 1 SOO.per Mell • comm ·
b9nefita Sllet •JP pier d
Cal ....... ~25C>5711
...... be -lllt Ille lletlng1 In Ihle ~ NY ,..... you IO cell I IOO
number In which
... " • dllrl9 ptf "''""'··
p i-Mt-~ ICllY9d. 70lbs, lul IM ale 50's & 90'1
t.tielorl V..,o llM Rewlld MIKE 94H45-7506 a.-.. omc. Property '°"=====:::::! £'Ilda c:o...y Woods 38r SEA CONDO 1411-%33-0053 .----------.. _... co needs PT pnon .-~dlc*, ~l=:p~ 3.581. ":;'"°......,. v: I I good dlllrlg ......... gen 180 21• St 94H45-777e eek. 2 f91, ild b9y .. _I ______ I ft ICllOCJl,.I dlAlls hi 99-lpm oc ~
-W6<¥Mo 9e9-293-24e7 -~!! MIM!D ... --F_n_res_94_H33-__ 12-19
A1mad1l1d 2llf lie A,t. -. .
w.1*:tt Ytrd. -carpel ...._ 4lr 2lle 2.-Y lie. HELP NEEDED ~. ·llelh PlirC. 't1U1 brila Twnhml. comm pool, I CR.EDENT1AL£1> I
C!1. 11025 11MIM8 ,_ Id* & greenb111. 2 ESTAlt SALE. SAT ... TWHD/COONsn.ol :. p~ :.o:'.: ~· ...... »t 111. ~Mlle) P"9 Q.t w.-.al -~ Mid 30 dlys Get !*I'
SEU
·Wedding Experts
SHOWCASE
9Juhhshes 1une 2<1, 2000
~-~~-.~~------
We llJi/f 6e .sh()(J)Casing I.be e:xper/J in
each fie/ti of lht1 medding spec/rum.
9j you~ an.Y fype of seroice for
weddings-this iJ the place lo
adUt1rli.1c. You will rwacb an
af!luul audNK:. and
,,,;U laa. IAl°J ttelion.
'lJon 'I .W.1 au/. '])..JfiM ,., ~ 2111.
~ .lu.ri1H, oall~ OJ
(HI) .1144241
..
~ 949-673-4~"2 °' ~ enllqUla, col-~. ..... .. _ ....... 100,
lecliblla. you -II. .. ..~ ~ "" ""' -
• ..... PncC Baca Illy r:~~~ CJll g;,,'C~x ~91~~ • :,.~~= PlwrCaD =n-.:-G 1-I (_,_I),.
l _.., __ Jwl
TAN AT HOME BUY DIRECT ~ IAvtl AIPMNnCI AUTO .._.-...... __ _.._ __ _, COMMERCIAUHOME llCMllCWI IO R11 Mii
..... MANAGERS
• SPECW.• StMM+_m-WlllW .......... ~ ·-·~ ...... ...., ·= ..... "" ,....... "*»'°""' dill =11F191 HIO. l IJ!dllot. ....... ... ... ~a.·••• ~~o.c. .-.=:: -·---....... .,.,,,,,,, ..... -
lrillt lrolll 11119 00 "** mtdllnlc AflPX in Low Montily ~ p!l!C!!! • 2090 f'llclltlil
AU CokJr c.-oa
Cal 1071f01$I a--.v AT ltom
Ma. Clllll. JtwtlrY Aleo tltdnlnlcl, -.a. MJitlll
°"'~'··· PWa C1l1 •t ·~·...._. ·-·--~-•CA91MID•
In 'fOAll ..,.,. -Cr..t ..., Ho~ No
FM Wiii train. CaH -~ Elfl 2 12419.1 CCAl1CA!9
:-'...' IC:'n:. '::: ....... Cll~tSor
........ ..,cf.
of .... co ... .... Cl**wllfl .. ..... ............. .......... '°" .... tiff -.. Of ... tor MMca. AIM .......... ~
~ .... Yell 1l9n.
"°"" Blltld ..... W.ninllap~-· Earn~
"/PT, lllGIMiled Ind ... .,
... 11N1Q ___ ,
..
TODAY'S
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
1692 ~1
Wut Newport-Marcus
Channel • • under The
Arches Bn:t:," to 24ft.
S 17 Simo. HSG-8145
50' Mooring with clngy
K·row. new serw:e let
td, •Int toe & vetue
10,900 !M9-260·5A46
SELL
your homo through classified
1 115 ~5 1
BMW l3 98
&Ml w'SIKk. ee..y1
(L015769~ $24,995 CR VIER BMW
714435-3171
BMW 311iS '96
Low Mies CO, Spol1I Pkg'
(T00588) . $23.995
CREVIER BMW
714·835·3171 I C•ll Cl•nlll•d Today I (141) 642·51171
BMW 311i '97
SiYet Yfl1llac:ll. COi
13
(3WM254l $19,995
CREVIER BMW 714-135-3171
BMW 31m '96
8lac:il, gr'Mt buyl
S95640 113,995
LAND ROVER
NEWPORT BEACH
t41-640-U45
. .
Bridge
A MA'ITEll OF'J'IOINIQV'&
Bodi wlncnble-Nonh deals. from a raocnt IUW...-Cat 111 ~UI.
NOlt'l"ll .... o A 7 o Q 7 H
•AJ543
War's dDcilioa IO mate~ ....................... w
J'llllP ii~. Howewir. ii.
£AST
IO flllhom which ICUoa ia .. IUCtioa i.I wone -&It's double of four
chlba or '*'t'a dcicision IO lit'°' IL
The openina 1eac1 of die jack o1 '-ts WM Lakea widl die ace aad 1WO rounds oCINmpl _ dn_, .... •K§6 o K 931 o Al '2 • 10 in dummy. '{be Ollfy psobleal was tt.
poasibility of a 4-t illtmond lf)lit. lllld
declarer had an easy way IO avoid
that. A low diamond ID the king won,
and now declarer clliled wilh a hear1.
The defenders could delay the
moment of truth by winnina the beart and shiftina to~ spade. but dlOftl wu
a simple counter. Decllft:r &imply
rose witb the ace and returned a
$pidc. not carina which defender won the trick.
SOUTII
•A !>
1::1 6 5 o KJ 83 •KQ872
The bidding: ... NORTH EA!ll
... 10
30 Obi ,_ Ohl ....
Opening lead: Jack of O .
Among lhe new UldllCl«S into tbe
Bridet Hall of Fame is Dr. Qeorac ROM:nkrani of Mc:iuco City. Lona
McAico '1 lcad111f playl!r and a SUC:·
ccs ful compcutor on the world
scene. he is also a leading theoreti-
cian and designer of tbe Rome.x sys-
tem. He was declarer on this deal
No manu whkb defender would
now be on lead, any plain suit except
'°'a diamood allows declarer IO iluff
a diamond from one bud whale Nlf .
ina in tbe other. 1bM is wbaa would
have happened h8d West won the
Sf)llde. But when East took the trick. the defender coWd bow the knc6 in a
diffaent way -by ellilina with a
diamond. Declarer nms lhM round to
dummy's queen, then leads 1oward
tbe jack for the f 11lfillin1 Dick..
1 -~11-~1 1-~
BMW S211 '17 c.. '12 Sevtlle tan w/pj OOOGE DURAHGO 'ti
Low Miles. CO, Loedldl ,. 79lc ma.a. 2nd -· llluat _,,blue.
(3UTS85i $32,195 powtr, onginal, s 10,500 Ft00'753 127,915
CR IER &MW 8.aio. MM7Ml563 • LAHD ROVER
714-135-3171 NEWPORT BEACH CHEVROl.ET CATERA '17 M"'4H445 &MW 740IL ·15 OOn1y 8100 mil Red, lthr, Lo Mi. Fully l.oldedl moorvool. bat ol warr. FORD f.150 '17
(~ $31,995 (914236) $20,988 4 x 4 loadedl Super c8ll
REVIEll BMW NABERS KC72724 121,115
714 .. 35-3171 (714)5'°"1100 LANO ROV£R NEWPORT BEACH BUICK SPECIAL 115t. CffEVROlET Cavalier 'ti M"'4H445 Clllalc 4-dr, hatd IOp. orig. RS COl4)t, tow 18k ml, aulo, ready lor restora11on, mM & motel Bal ol warr. FORD RANGER '13
$4,500. 7!4-557·2859 (814928) $9,988 Slakebed truck, needs
NABERS ... 8IV i:· 1st $400 COLLECTORS (714)540-9100 080Tom ~ Cadillac: Blarrltz '12
5411, GREAT CONDITION CttEVAOLET Tahoe LT '97 FORD RANGER '15
$7500 MMJ3.300I 414, ltalher, many extras, W AUTO, bed hr.c::z
eJcellent condilion ' bed, dNn, good Caclllle Eldondo 't5 (366986) $21,988 $2900 714-llWOIS Low miles. V8 Noltlllar. ~ NABERS
¥1r ..... (714)540-9100 GMC .MIY .. (819359) $17,988 ~ loeded1 NABERS CHAVSllll SE8flltG 'ti 1<521001 117,915
(714 )540-1100 ~K lllleel loeded, LAHD AOV£R ' conc1 Whltlllan, NEWPORT BEACH CADl.UC SEVLLE 't5 111 ,ISO Ml-7ao.t319 MM4M445 Low M.lel Shalt Grey, v ..
Nonhllar. very dean• Collectora Car. c.dlllac HONDA CIVIC LX 'ti
(818758) $18,988 FIMtwood Coupe .... 28k Low Miles, 5o-Spaed, r9d, ..
NABERS ml, dalt bllit, leather in1, roys. uCllenl c:ondlllon
(7141540-9100 *'8d 10 yrs~· (007373) $12,1188
FIND $9500 !MM S-3888. NABERS
(!14l6t0-1100
• Call (949)642·S67S 1 FIND an apartment ,,, . , .. .,.,,. ~r1ment throush classified • It •• ,.,.,,... I • th classified --
HoME, HEAL TH lllJ
~--..
1220 AcccumNO 11 252 CARPETS • 11 270 . . . CARPET et.n...a . . POLICY ..._ _____ _,
St11m Ci.anl119 Mttllod
RHSonable r1t11, 20yr1
experience. Call David
949.e40.8841
Garege Floor Sptciallsts
Chemlcal reslStant hl·glo$S
epoxy ftooB by PemlH'lel Weterproofing Syatema
941-723-1974
tn an etbl IO otler tile best
WVICe posllble IO OUf rMd-ers and adYtrllsefs. ~ will
require ContractOll who
advtl1ise In the Service
OirectOf)I to Include their
Contractors L1ctnn
number in lhetr advtrt!M·
manl Your co-ope<abon IS
Q!Ndy appreciated I"° c~l1 m~1
CUSTOM CREATIVE TILE
lrctabaont. *19. Qtr'11111C,
marble, llor\t Eatab 1975 M12044 Jeff 71W12.ftf1 AIR COND I /HEATING
LEWIS CONSTRUCTION
~~~-714-557·5125
Add or ~ c.nir.i NC Fl1Grout.Com
(llm9ct OOll. ~, Tiie Atpelr, Alltoration I 274 ~ I
3 1M-S329S 3\? tort-$3449 (714) 254-1171 -·-4 ion-$3549 5 IM-$3749 Lf223443
Ld74'440 71~7325
SMOG
CHECK
$39.15 Moll c.,.
NEWPORT AlJTOTECH
728 Wat l6rl, Cosll Mell
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MM4H730
I• aw l /llAINTENANCE
VICKY'S CLEANINO
We o11tr TH£ BEST
House & Window Cleanino
10yra ·~· xW rerii 'Vicky • 71 Wll-o3t6
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211 IATHROOlll I • HATE TO CLEAN? • R~21yra0C
rtl'a = WOllt RNton-HQMEflair Ible 949-S4@-7eoo
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FIND
REPAIRS t PAlfT
Homt lrl'll)fovrntnta and
more. Sm8' lcbt ok. 20yls •!I!. Gart ~sm
A to Z Home lmpr0\'-11 • repalra.. Oo • .. taarn •
lul rellable, quality. Ref's
714-269·7185, 91933-1296
HOME RESTORATION
"-odlllng • FrM ht.
RaaldlComm/Oacks/Fencts Carpenlry/El1c:t11c:/Tile
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OUAUTY CRAFTSMAN
20YWI ~Refs 11111 VOUfl HAHOYMAHI 1~r=-~ ~~:grity * GARDENING * I Car!, Ken mo Rllllbla & Oullily Wolk II
RMlolllbll ~ CAI Ed 8!I!'!!! !! !!t643371,
~ Svc, 11Vn E119 Llwn WOllt. ywd cfewl up,
lrH lnmm1n11. pltnllng, ~"" 714-436-1518
Witter
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V.-cl Cllan'4ifl, Trim, Re-'"°""• .--. Hedgea, r,_, ~. Rolo-li, New lawn j';;,;jl ._ • ____ __.
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949·642·1610
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Coneulllbon
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Mlp,outlnd
.... help.
40r Sac*I. Beige ,,, Power. Clwolnt Wtlaele,
c.M'honl, New Tlf9I. One Owlllf $14,500
94M44-7733
Mwctdn Binz C2IO 't5 Blac:tc IStarma!ll .
(183568) $22,990 FLETCHER JONES I00-'27 4579
........ Binz lllU20 ..
L111har/Starm1!11
(003211) $29,990
Flf'rCHER JONES -t00-127-3579
Mlic1d11 Binz U20 't7
Whila/Stannalll
(408422) $36,990
Fl.ETCltER JONES
IOM274571
•.-du Binz lll..430 W
WNta/Starm&rtl
(Oee548) $38,990
FU'rCHEA JONES
!00-127 ·3571
l•u •u ••I
A&. 'I LAWN llJMCl
Ct.EN+-UPS, &PAINKl.ER REP~TREE TRWNl AIE~ 714=39f:M
EXPERT CLEAN.ult
T 1"1·PNnedRlmcwad ~ contnlctor
714-711=!'7!
SOUTH COAST
MOVISUIUT Cai..NI,~ ,.. .... ,.1 ....
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CONVENIENT
whrdlrr you 'It
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(949) 6'2-5678
----------.... 0 YU. SDL MY CAR
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Run your ad In the I ------------Newport Beach-I _AG09 __________ _
Costa Mesa Daily I °'Y
Pilot and the 1 -Z4'------------
Hunting Beach-1 ------------
Fountain Valley ' 1E o..c.a o i.c o ~ o MAX Independent to ' .·1 .~
reach over 100,000
1
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homes. Fax us this ,._~,....,.,,._
form with your credit 1 ..._ 1o11111 lilodll---
card #or mail wittl I 8:!-8=. Br:.."":..~---
a ..... -R--~--a check today! a:= is= ::-..: Run for a week! If a .. -0 -..... --.,, ..... s~ ... s= e=~= ~~ your car does not
Sell, we'll run it for L _ :'~"""'.!=~~=:=.~'=!~.:-'-_
another week FllEEI , •
All for just $10'. ~t lnd~p.£11...d..m!
=.:11 --11-... , OUAUTV CARE ~ 20 VR9 ...._ _____ _
PUBLIC
.NOTICE
The Calif Public·
Utllllles Com·
mission REQUIRES
that al used house-
hold goods movers f)rint their P.U.C.
cal T runber; 1mo6
Ind chaufters pnot
ltllir T.C.P. fU'l1bef
In .. edYef1lsmanls. n you haw a ques..
lion about the ~
lly ol • moYBf. -Of chUter. cat
PU8UC UTIUTIES COMMISION
714-558 .. 151
Fair poces ' 1n111ior • Ex·
terior Pah, local rtlMocll N8 area. Ron ....._7133
RAINBOW CIAClE MAlfT Paln~lnt/elCI Howe/Apt
qoallty job' F rte admale
Use9897 714-a3H888