HomeMy WebLinkAbout2001-06-10 - Orange Coast Pilot·SUN DAY
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SERVING THE NEWPORT -Ni.SA COMMUNffiES SINCE 1907 •.
......
LIFE & LEISURE
Karen Wight takes readers
Inside a luxurious Irvine
Terrace home for a personal
tour. Features include a red
powder room with an
antique chandelier, above.
SM P1199 5
Inside
COMMUNITY
FORUM
Lance
Thompson-
Hailstone,
president of
the Mesa
. . ..
•
SUNDAY STORY
Del Mar
Homeowners
Assn., talks • PHOTOS BY GREG FRY I DAllY Pl.OT
with Assistant City Editor
James Meier about the
El Camino shopping center,
parking and more.
SMP-.,.11
Coast Guard Lt. John Kidwell, front, and Executive Petty Officer Chuck Undsey will pilot the newly-built cutter Narwhal from Us current
location In a New Orleans shipyard lo its new home In Newport Beach. The ship will replace the Port Stewart, which was retired April 26.
. Lt. John Kidwell and his crew plan to bring the Narwhal,
an 87-foot Coast Guard cutter, through the Panama Canal to ~ts new home, Newport Beach
.....
SPORTS
Pitcher Eric Paine helped
lead the Dodgers to victory
over the Red Sox on Saturday
in youth baseball action.
SM P119912
CEUIUTllG DADS:
They pitched cu first baseball.
showed us how to surf and let
us drive the car when mom was-
n't looking. They're our fathers.
Help the Dally Pilot celebrate
r.ther's o.y by sending In pic-
tures and stories In t\onor of
your d4ld by Tuesday. You can
fax to (949) 646-4170, e-mail to
jM~tNl'YJOQtknl!S.com or
send It by regular mail to
Father's Day, Daily Pilot, 330 W.
Bay St.. Costa Mesa, CA 92627.
Paul Clinton
DAILY PILOT
I t feels like Christmas
for Lt. John Kidwell, a
newly appointed U.S.
Coast Guard comman-
der who has a big present
waiting for him under the
tree.
Come July 11, Kidwell
plans to be standing in a
Louisiana shipyard waiting
to sign for the new cutter he
will sail back to Newport
Beach, where it -and he -
will be stationed.
"The ship (will be) fresh
out of the wrapper," Kidwell
said.
A little more than a month
after he takes control of the 87-
foot boat, valued at $3.5 million,
Kidwell and his crew of 10 men
will embark on their 35-day trip.
Already named the Narwhal, '
TOP STOIY
aeo
Coast Guard Executive Petty Officer Chuck Undsey cllsplaya a pldure
of an 87-foot cutter afmllu to the Narwhal.
·~~feet
• w.lght ..... u lmd: 100.15 tons ........................ "
92A4tons
• MIDdnun .-ct 25.62 knots
• Rm~ 1.,660 gellons • Ell..,_ 1Wo t\.rbochlrgf.d diesels
• Call: $3.5 million
filter the arctic wba.le, the ship
will replace the Coast Guard's
Port Stewart at home base in
Newport Beach. The Port Stew-
art was retired April 26.
With its two turbo diesel
engines and increased length.
the Narwhal is a higher-tech step
up from the Port Stewart. Kid-
well said. Its duties, which
include search and rescue, drug
interdiction and environmental
protection. won't change much.
•The only difference between
this one and the last one is this
ship is a lot faster, more up to
date,• Kidwell said.
The Narwhal was built at
Bollinger Shipyard in New
Orleans, La. Prior to kicking off
the Narwba.l's maiden voyage on
July 27, Kidwell and bis aew
will be busy preparing for the
trip. .
1be ship will take a familiar
route south from New Orleans to
the Panama Canal and oo to
Costa Rica, El Salvador,
Guatemala and Mexico before
reaching Newport Beach.
SEE SHIP MGE 4
Emergency drill tests fJtefighters' mettle
Time stopped at Crystal Cote
' •Nearly 100 take part in multi-city exercise,
which featured a fake blaze on the 11th
floor of a building near Fashion Islaiid.
NBWPORT CEKIER-
Barly Saturday molliing
~at PaibiOn llland
IJlUlt have WODdirid 8bcilbl
the tnveik>n ol more lban
two~ nr. trudm -~·• with no fire Ila
Butllmguptbllr-. dll-•l....., ... , .............. .. a a:*'lem. ......
100 fireflgbten from
Newport Beach, Costa
Mela, Huntington Bei1Cb
and otMr pmU Cl Oftmge
County bad not come to
put out an w.mo.
lrim1d..., priil1Dd9d '° pUt out .... blm '° J11'P1'9btllill99ll*g ....... _ ........
IJP ..... t.dlll macw_._., 521
............... 1ar_
•
KOLL 1111 111111111111'
FOi llllNUlllT VOR
Koll Center offi~ are probably
lt6rt1ng to think about a date for their sped.al election by now. After
the dty's planning commfnionen
approved a 250,000·square-foot
expansion project for the center last week. the devaJopen are but one
step away from taking their plans
to Newport Beach's voters.
All that's left is for NEWPORT City Council mem-IEACH bers to approve the pro)ect.
'That's because Greenlight. the
city's new slow-growth law,
requires voter approval for projects
that exceed the general plan
allowance by 40,000 square feet or
100 peak-hour trips or dwelling
units.
The Koll project, which includes
a 10-story office tower and two
parking structures, would sit near
the comer of Jamboree Road and
MacArthur Boulevard. Concern
about increased traffic as a result of
the expansion had delayed
approval by planning commission-
ers last week.
Council members could take up
the matter as early as their June 26
meeting. A special election ls likely
to take place in the fall if council
members approve the expansion.
-MlltNI Wlr** COiien Newport Beach.
He ~ be relChed at (949) 574-4232 "' by e-mail at tNthis.winlc~tlmes..cnm.
IOMI DPLODIS OUTSIDE
LOCAL WORSHIP HIU.
Costa Mesa Police arrested a 17-
year-old girl last Tuesday night
after she allegedly threw Jl bomb
into a Jehovah Witnesses hall on
Canyon Drive. The bomb blew up
outside the church close to the
street and no one was hurt, but the
girl could get three to seven years
in prison or more because she
bombed a place of worship.
Officials are hesitat-COPS & ing to treat the inci-COUITS dent as a hate crime
because they say Qiey
are not sure if she intended to tar-
lret the church or the neighboring ~j:>artment complex. The girl,
whose name was not released
because she is a minor, ls being
held in juvenile hall and will be
tried in juvenile court, officials said.
ln Costa Mesa, police also arrest-
ed William Hackerd, a 57-year-old
Fullerton man who they say stole
from the lockers in a 24 Hour Fit-
ness gym on Adams Avenue. Police
said the gym ~d complained of
several locker thefts over the last
year.
In other news Mike Kelso, a 25-
year-old Irvine man, filed a lawsuit
against former NBA star Dennis
Rodman and Josh Slocum's Restau-
rant on West Coast Highway for
negligence. Kelso says he was bad-
ly injured on St. Patrick's Day when
a bouncer at the restaurant hit him
in the eye.
-Deepe ....... COiien cops and courts.
She~ be rNChed et (949) 574-4226"' bye-
mail at -,,..bharathOl.time.com.
COUNCIL CAii 1111 Tllll
$15,000 AllD •••
The Airport Working Group
turned away a $15,000 grant from
El TOIO Costa Mesa last week after
complaining
about the strings attached to the
money.
In a letter to Mayor Ubby Cow-
an, group president T<?m
Naughton said the group would
retwn the funds because the city
would not allow the group to sup·
port an airport at the closed m
Toro Marine Corps Air Station at
WILL TO SUCClll
•I feel free. It's a great
leeUng of accompllahment.
It'a been one of the blggest
challenge• of my llle. •
-~~ 44. Oft NCeMng hll blCNb"I ~In h
-from (.II Sutt Long IMCh. Queer\; I ......... WMl!pof-'" lwt\ llny peg1, W ~
Ible 10tlkeone•twodlMa•1N" becMllt of I brlin lnJUtY.
PHOTO OF THE WEii
TllOUlll'IS flOll Tll semi Itta not every day you
get to meet celebrities. In light ot the recent con-
frontations between Dennis Rodman and the dty o/
Newport Beach, the Dally Pllot was able to get an
interview with him. With all the tenslon c.lrcllng hJs
40th birthday party, I was surprised that he would
agree to meet. I really didn't know what to expect.
going to be an lntervtew only, no photos. Alter the
Interview began. Rodman aald Jt was cool to take
aome plctures. Juat alttlng there, llstenlng to his
side ot the iStory, I began to reallze that he ls just
Wee any other guy In t.hla town. He loves lMng at
the beach and just Wee many ot those who live in
West Newport1 he loves to party.
At first Rodman said he thought there was -S..nHlller
public forums in the city.
The council approved the fund-
ing at its May 7 meeting.
Coundlman Gary Monahan
saiq be understood the group's
decision, while calling his col-
leagues naive for attempting to
keep El Toro out of the discussion.
-PU Clinton roven the environment Ind
John WlfYM Ait'J)Oft. He ~ be rNChed et
(949) 764-4330 or by Hnlll at
,,.uf.di~tlnws.com.
GElTING CLOSER TO I
NOT-SCMECRD llRDEN
After at least 10 months of
-intense negotiations, Common-
wealth Partners U.C requested
that the City Council postpone a
decision on its part of the Town
Center project for 18
months.
On Monday,
the developer with-
drew its request, saying that a
long-anticipated agreement is only
a month away.
COSTA
MESA
The Town Center project seeks
to transform South Coast Metro
into a pedestrian-oriented cultural
arts district bordered by Bristol
Street, Sunflower Avenue, Avenue
of the Arts and the San Diego free-
way.
Unt11 last month, the biggest
disagreement had been the length
of time Commonwealth Partners
should be~ to maintain
lsamu Noguchi's California Sce-
nario sculpture garden.
The issue" was resolved when
the City Council and developer
both agreed on a term of 50 years,
but issues about how much park-
ing ~d money the developer will
have to provide for the Theater
Arts District have now become
obstacles.
-Jernfw Kho covers Costa Mesa. She mey
be reached at (949) 574-4275 or by .-mall alt
}ennlfer.khoOlatlmacom.
EDUCATION ........
HISTORY
USSOIS
A1IVI
History
came alive for
many students
last week in
Newport-
Mesa. ln a
Harbor View
Elementaiy
classroom, the
Revolutionary
War was
brought to life
for fifth.
graders in
Penny Nor-
ton's class as
they dressed
the part and
reenacted
town hall
meetings and
battle scenes.
What a con-
cept.
The very GREG FRY I DM.Y Pl.OT
next day,
fourth-graders from Newport Coast were given as much of a taste
of what Cesar Chavez and migrant workers endwed in the fields
as the law wo~d allow.
After some lessons on Chavez, students went out to pick beans
in a field in Irvine for an hour.
But what was really fascinating was finding out why Second
I'tarvest Food Bank of Orange is called Second Harvest. Volun-
teers glean produce from already harvested fields to feed the
hungry.
And it seems A. G. Kawamura, whose field the children were
in, started the program himself before banding it over to the cur-
rent group. .
-D9Mttle Goulet cowrs education. She mey be rMChed a1t (M9) 574-4221 "'by
' Hnlll et ~.QOCJ~rtma.com.
1tEAD£8$ HOJUNE
(949) 642-6086
Record yoix comments about
the O.lly Piiot or news tips.
~NoMWSitori..~
!rations, edltonll INttllf Of _,,,_..
tlMrnents herein CAin be~
duc.t withOut wrm.n ... m9llon
of~owner.
WIATlll MID SUlf
.. # --.,..., COSTA MESA
Notti Ille QUOTll,LES
"My mom love• the part
where I write booka. The part
where I have sex with
people, &he~ not ao happy
about.• _ ........ _ ...
of Cost.I Mesa. on her flmlly's
rMCtJon to her caNef' .. I fonner
SU~· Now I ... therepist
and profetlOt at Cal SWtll Ntwton,
IC..dlng Is the IUthot of "The Good
Glft's Gulde to lad Girt Su.•
.. We have meata. We have
cheean. Theae need
relrtgeraUon ..•. Bacteria
developa very qulcJcly. • -Winnie .....
of GI* Dellatessen In Costa Mesi,
on why she epplled to tt\e state's
P\.lbllc Utllltles Commission for •
~out exemption for her
sandwich shop. The 1ppllcatlon
dHdllne WIS Monday.
.. It would get real Urlng tor a
whole day. And I don't think
{mlgrant workers/ could
afford sunacreen every day."
_,..,~ ......
10, on spending Vfldnesday
morning pktlng green bffns In
Irvine with the rest of his fourth.
grlde Newport co.st Eternent.ry
dasl • pelt of I learning project.
"I 'OOlleve the city
needs to show that we
care about housing for
everyone. "
-LMr~
mayor of Costa MeA, on why she
pattidp.ted In '" affordable hous-
ing forum June 3 put on by the
Orange County Congregltlon Com-
munity Org.anlution. About 200
people came to the seulon held at
St. Joachim c.tholk Church.
"The carnival people joke
that they hope there ls Q
power lnterrupUon becauae
there wU1 be nothing left for
people to go to except tor the
carnival.•
-..., 1•119)'.,....,,
general manager and cNef euc:utM
for the Orenge County Fairgrounds,
convnentlng tNt the (;range
County Fair wnfvll ls run on
generators not connected to the
powoer grid. thus leaving It eqmpt
from possible summer bladcouts.
"I don't undeTBtand. I 'm not
hurting anybody, I'm not
jeopardizing anybody.
They're just giving me grief
tor no reaaon . ., _.,... .........
fonner NBA supem,r, on the trouble
he's run Into lltely with dty and 1M
enforcement officials tegll'dfng
parties at his Newport hlch home.
POUCI flUS
VOL IS. N0.156
'**Al ... JOl•C*.
PUblltW
ADORE SS
Our~ is 330 W. Bay St..
CosU Mesi. CA 92627.
• HOW m BEACH us
~
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"*" DGCl90,
Editor
u.~
Sen1ora.r111110r ,..-.-,
~Otyldttor
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(800) 252-9141
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•
Deity Pilot Sundcr)i Jvne 10, 2001 3
Playi,ng the postmaster boogie
Younga..ng
DAILY PILOT
We started with a shn·
ple question -who
was Newport
Beach's first postmaster? But
what we found was that in
lookl~J BACK
this city, trs
even unclear
which post
office was
the first
main one. (We did find Costa
Mesa's first postmistress
though ... a subject we'll
bring you next week.)
So instead, we've decided
to take a trip through the
annals of post office past,
highlighting some of the post-
masters of yesteryear who
helped deliver mail in our dty
by the sea. .
Payne Thayer served as
postmaster at the Riverside
Avenue office in 1955. He
supervised Don Crocker, who
is still an employee at that
office today. He wore suits to
work and wasn't very strict
nor quite laid back.
He lived on Balboa
Peninsula.
BRIEFLY IN
THE NEWS
Family flicks to show
at Newport Dunes
• 102 Dalmatians, •• 1be Kid"
and •Air Bud• have already
come and gone. But movie fans
still have a chance to catch fam-
ily films on a 9 foot by 12 foot
open air screen right on the
beach at the Newport Dunes
Resort unW the end of June.
Screenings will take place
Fridays and Saturdays and
begin at dusk. •Man of the
House• will appear Friday, fol-
lowed by •Field of Dreams"
on Saturday, "The Borrowers•
on June 22, •Remember the
Titans• on June 23, "The
Adventures of Rocky &
•He just cared that you did
the jpb, • Crocker said.
Rewind to 1948, enter Herb
Kenny. He worked,at the Bal·
boa Station on BalDoa Penin-
sula and was known as a pret-
ty atrld, pretty tight sort of guy.
His wife was a special postal
messenger during that time.
navel even further back
and meet Bill Adams. The
ultimate old-timer, the one
who was around in the 1930s
at the main Newport Beach
Post Office located then on
McFadden Place. He wasn't
the dty's first postmaster, but
locals confirm be was one of
the best liked.
The position was a politi-
cally appointed one at the
time. Adams received his job
through the Democratic Party,
according to Vance Roberts, a
retired assistant postmaster.
"Originally he was a red-
head, but then he turned
white-haired,• Roberts said.
•He was very abrupt, but
pleasing.•
The two became good
friends working together, and
Adams would take Roberts
Bullwinkle" on June 29 and
"Rudy" on JWle 30.
The screenings are free, but
parking costs $7 per car. The
resort is located at 1131 Back
Bay Drive. information: (800)
765-7661.
Night racing series
at Nautical Museum
The Lyle Galloway Tuesday
Night Salling series will hold its
second event on Tuesday.
Traditional wooden sail-
boats and pre-1970 classic
design fiberglass sailboats will
compete in the harbor. The
hour-long race will start and
finish at the Newport Harbor
Nautical Museum. which spon-
sors the event.
The public is invited to par-
ticipate in the festivities, which
"The Ultimate Mono
.,-. .. &Iii· ... Ga for Friada. r..a,
·~Gilthml IW BIWa, ~ ...... Home&c. .Yoei On ltms Moaopammcd OaJy ti
Sun-Moo. l~S pm
Tues-Sat lOam • Spm
Mole Ordas Completed ia (8 11.n.
..
226 MJllr'ilu Aff-
(llCCI"' s..rhch)
&JlxM bl.tu/ unocunr (949)723-5988.
\ H IH · 11 \ '\ I PO\\ I· I{ PORI I· 01 10
The Market Outlook
Flnt Ullk>tt Stic11rltl11 IHJ/na du follltWl111 /acton
tin c•'"1fl/y ll,/f tt1i111 tlr~ atngy UU/ustr)':
SWria'": Capacity shof11acs hive begun to 1tfec1 millions.
Calitonua • recent rollina blackouts served u 1 catalyst for 6latu 10
m~ lbcir cne11Y racrvcs and dcresulltion policici.
c .. petttioa/Derepllltloll: The eoerJY ICCtor ia ~ movina
toward an cnvironmmt marted by liahcer rqulatioo and crater com-
petition from and 11110nJ non-utifity power producm.
Tcd1totoa: Tcchnolosical improYC~ will alsa conun111t to
atTect the l'Dll'kct. Fot txample. pa turbines have chanpl the eco-
nomics of power pnidoc:tion.
l11ertasf•i De .. ad: Tho pro,tettionl in the Enc11Y lnfonnllion Association• Annual EIH'f'J)• 0111/ook !DOI forecast that a projected
1,110 new plants will be ntedcd to meet anricipaled future deo'8nd.
c..u.udadoe: Men:hlnt Power compentci have~ to mqe and
acquire ~bud pa oompmies. atio..ins dml IO hcncfit m the
~ demlnd f« mtwal pt u •ft.el w die ...,.eion of ekcvic-
1ty. In ow otinion. lftCllF!' ectMty wil COlllS • ~ look for ~ Wl)'l IO unprow11itir pro&~
SICUllTllS
C11/ THll)' It> Fl"' O•t Mon!
T09 P. S.........._ Ar•cM/~
(800)-300-6021or("'9)476-5115
first Union Securities
620 Newport Center Dr., Sui~ 1300 ·
Newport Baich, CA 92660
Lie ICAOCI0622
up to Los Angeles to inaugu·
rations of highway post
offices and other happenings.
The late postmaster lived
in Newport Beach -on Cliff
Drive -and everyone \mew
hirp.. He was friendly, kept
himself in excellent shape
and oversaw the post office's
every operation, from the hir-
ing and firing to Window-box
services.
"And he was in the cham·
ber and other things,"
Roberts said.
Adams died in 1952 in a
traffic accident According to
Roberts, he bad gone to the
dentist, been injected with
too much Novocain and then
drove into a tree.
"He lived right down here
on Cliff Drive, at the comer of
Cliff and Aliso, H Roberts said.
·People knew him.•
• Do you k{low of a person,
place or event that deserves a
historical LOOK llACX? Let us
know. Contact Young Chang by
fax at (949) 646-4170; e-mail at
young.changOlatlmes.com; or mail
her at clo Daily Pilot, 330 W. Bay
St., Costa Mesa, CA 92627.
Posbnaster Herb Kenny, at center holding a hat, and postal workers gather at the Bal-
boa Station on the Balboa Peninsula in the late 1940s.
indude a pre-race happy hour,
available crew positions, an
awards ceremony and a post-
race barbecue, where a video of
the night's racing will be shown.
The series runs every
Tuesday t~rough Aug. 28.
Happy hour begins at 5 p.m.
The museum is located at
151 East Coast Highway on
the Pride of Newport riverboat.
Information: (949) 675-8915.
Unnp/eu Pttiu Fikt Mignon Dinner SJ '11° per person
lwhuJa: MlAJ.1'"" tboia of twiu hdlJ poutou or rin
0-p:rl#""" 0-Ja.rt
Steaks • Seafood • Cocktails
Quality Service • Nightly Entertainment
lb').:, 11\illl \,,, ( {}, ... \),,,,
1')1()) hth ~l)11
Reyn Spooner Fathers Day Trunk Show
Saturday June 9th, l lAM -4PM
Father's Day
June 17th
of 7iewport 'Beacli
~1°'19.tfaatl• (N9) 1"9-n19
•
. .
4 Sunday, :June 10, 2001
DRILL
CONTINUED FROM 1
dty to fight alone.
Six of Newport Beach's seven fire
engines left their stations to partidpate m ~ drill. While engines tnm other fire
aepartments also came to help out at the
scene, fireflgbters from Huntington
Beach, Costa Mesa and Santa Ana were
covering Newport Beach's fire stations in
case of an emergency.
•A lot of fire equ!pment gets moved
around the county," said Capt. John
Blauer, the spokesman for Newport
Beach's fire department. •1rs good prac-
tice, because we don't necessarily get all 1he units we want"
..
Ha~·'IJLmide,
left.
checks
Rand
Gregory'•
vital signs
upartof
procedure
following
a
drill
Saturday
momlng.
SEAN HIUER/
DAILY Pl.-OT , Speaking the same language ranks
big't:i on the list of priorities, said Randy
Scheerer, a division chief with Newport
Beach's fire department, who oversaw the
drill.
had broken out on the b~s 11th
Ooor and the men in yellow 6'a.d to carry
equipment up the stairs.
•Are you guys ready?· he asked
before climbing another flight of SJairs.
Shortly after, firefighter Michael
Wright's air supply malfunctioned and he
frantically pulled the mask from his face.
But Wright managed to fix the problem
and continued along.
Firefighters from different depart-
ments need to know what otHers are talk-
ing about, he said. A •medical unit,• for
example, takes care of fire1igbter's
injuries on the job. A •medical group" on
the dther hand cares for members of the
public hurt in a fire.
The quarterly drills help to improve
the way firefighters work together, he
said. It also forces fire department to fig-
ure out what to do in case of a massive
fire.
Carrying so pounds in clothing and air
Oasks, adding another 40 pounds of tools
such as axes and fire hoses made the
ascent a grueling task.
•Some of the guys will do this at work
to stay in shape,• said-Olpt Dave Cisar of
the Orange County Fire Authority, beads
of sweat collecting on his forehead
When his team reached the 5th floor,
gas masks had to be put on because of
smoke in the stairwell. Hissing and puff-
ing, his votce distorted by a loudspeaker
on his mask, Cisar turned to his team.
Down on the ground again, where fire-
fighters took each other's blood pressure
and pulse to determine levels of'exhaus-
tion. Marc Walker, a paramedic working
at the Corona del Mar fire station, said the
event required strength.
•yeah. it's hard.• he said. •we bate it,
but it's pa.rt of the job. We can't play
checkers and watch TV all the time." ln Saturday's fictitious scenario, a fire
BUFFA
CONTINUED FROM 1
Smith and the National Water
Research Institute. The Cali-
fornia Department of Parks
and Recreation and the State
Office of Historic Preservation
have been very helpful
with both interviews and
infonnation.
As you probably know, the
state is in the process or
studying the options and
developing a vision for what
happens to Crystal Cove from
this point forward. But what-
ever the future may hold, it's
been a blast of a past.
Crystal Cove is a place
where time has stopped.
Exactly when it stopped
depends on your mind's eye
and the calendar of your own
life. But 1 think most people
-would say sometime in the
1940s. Most of what you see
today was built in the '20s
and '30s, then expanded,
improved and tinkered with
over the years. But there's
very little of it that taps you on
the shoulder and says, •Hi.
I'm 1955• or •rm 1969. Peace,
dude."
To me, the whole place
drips 1938 Ford Woodies, can-
vas beach chairs and clunky
Schwinn bicycles with fat tires
and wire baskets on the han-
dlebars. Being from the Right
Coast. the closest parallel for
me is a classic summer camp
on a lake in New Hampshire
or Maine: small cabins
arranged neatly around a
main building with a pitched
roof and three steps up to the
porch. And, of course, a sign
with an Indian chief and some
impossibly long name, Camp
Runamukawowpow.
But if there are any volun-
teers for hiking about 3,000
miles west, you'll eventually
end up in the California
equivalent -Crystal Cove.
Except here, the Indians were
real. California coastal bibes
like the Chumash lived in set-
tlements in places like today's
Crystal Cove and Fairview
Park and lived off the sea.
Ironically, the first modern
day white visitors to Crystal
Cove were cameramen, not
fishermen. The first structures
in the current •Historic Dis-
bict" were built by silent film
crews from Hollywood in the
•teens." Thatched roofs made
of fronds from nearby pahn
trees turned the picture per-
fect beach into everything
from Bora Bora to Robinson
Crusoe's island.
In Newport or Laguna, the
locals were stunned to find
the likes of Ronald Colman or
Pola Negrt or Alla Nazimova
strolling by during a break or
a day off. The Cove has been . ,
JOHN BLOESER
'CARPET ONE Shi#,.,,,
2927 S. Briatol Street
CoataMaa
<~1?~!~~4 ~
AlJO lit U., '-" {JQ) 4J0.7'01.I IM~ (lJJ) 014111
host to hordes of Hollywood
crews ever since and was as
much a part of the cast of
·aeaches• as Bette Mkller was.
By the 1920s, Hollywood
bad to share the beach with a
growing number or visitors
who would bump and clatter
along Pacific Coast Highway
from far and wide to spend a
day, or a summer, at the Cove.
At first, they'd pitch a tent or
two. But over time, the tents
were replaced by a few rustic
huts and cabins that might. or
might not, be there for your
next visit
In fact, according to long-
time •Crystallite• Laura
Davick. the unwritten rule
was that anything built bad to
have a thatched roof to make
it look like one more set piece
for the next film. By.the 1930s,
most of what you see in the
Cove today was alive and
well and from Jwie to Sep-
tember, the joint was jumpin'.
But set that history book
aside and dig out that biology
text :V~ rem~~ biology
-mitosis, metOSlS. I could-
CON11NUED FRdM 1
I
1be trtp cMltl out at
more a.. 5,000 mutkll'
..... ud l:nd\lcllfl two
dallll pOm. Tbit NmWbal ~ errtYit tn ~
Beecb bi e8df ()dober.
A bolt ol governmental
offtdal• will be there to
greet the Narwhal upon
arrival, Kidwell said.
Th• 31-yee.r-old Kid .. wen .e.m. like a kid at
CbristmAs because be ii
llvtng his dream. As a boy
growing up i.h. tiny
KetclWn. Okla., Kldwell
fantasized about piloting
a Coast Guard cutter.
In February 1991, be
en.listed in the Coast
Guard, working bis way
up the ranks. One of more
than 300 applicants com-
peting for seven open-
ings, KidWell successfully
passed a rigorous saeen-
ing process to gain com-
mand of the Narwhal
Kidwell hopes the trip
will interest the Newport
never remember which was
which. Anyway, according to
Dennis Kelly, professor of
martne science at Orange
Coast College and one of thP.
most respected voices in the
field, Crystal Cove is a natural
laboratory for marine science
unlike almost any other in the
world. lt is a favorite birthing
area for bottlenose dolphins,
and the only known area
wbere certain dolphin
birthing behaviors have been
clearly documented.
The full histoty and her-
itage of Crystal Cove is a
much, much bigger picture
th.an we can paint here, but as
painting goes, Thursday was
a red letter day (what does
that mean anyway?) at Crystal
Cove. "Images of Crystal
Cove• was the kickoff event
of a new "Arts in the Parks"
series sponsored by the State
Parks Department and the
California Arts Council.
Thursday's event, which
was underwritten by Mrs.
Smith, was a •pa.tnt-ott•
among some of the top plein
Daily Pilot
••En--ty,.... ..,. ....
mb'lllltd CO.. Qilllle n rAu .,.... ~down
........... Dlw.o
............ l)dW
caJcia, •• ,..,,. -..
dodll, ..., ~ "'md waft, ...... ,. an bel9
all tbe ..... .., b(,•
One ~ who
1pendl more tbaD • few
palling ........ tbe
Cout auatd bUe II Kant
Burton. wbc> vorunteers
more thali 20 boun a
Week "8dtng a band.
Burton, wbo ltVed iii eowan Helghtl, wm be
sailiDg from Louisiana
with the relt Of the
Narwhal crew. Burton,
who ~t two years 1il
the U.S. Army, ii a mem-
ber Of tbe Cout Guard
AUxi&,ry.
• qoing through the
Panama Cami ta a naval
tradition,• Burton said. •aemg able to ~te
is a fabuloUI thing . . .
That's the way I look at it,
like an actventure. •
air arti$ts in the area. It was
called a "quick paint"
because each artist has exact-
ly two hours to choose a sub-
ject and complete a watercol-
or from start to finish.
The public was not only
welcome but stood right at the
artists' sides as they worked.
It was a rare oppornm.ity to
see the creative process
unfold before your eyes and,
more importantly, through the
eyes of a top-tier artist The
artists were very accommo-
dating, even with one of those
obnoxious video crews hover-
ing around them.
I tell you, those television
peopJe are an annoying lot So
there you have it. The smallest
taste of Crystal Cove and how
it has evolved over the years.
It's still a work in progress,
and no one is entirely sure
bow story will end. But stay
tuned. More later. I gotta go.
• PETER ~ Is a former Cost.a
Mesa INYO'· His cok.lmn runs Sun-
ct.ys. He may be rMChed via ~II
at~.com.
Father's Day Brunch
Sunday, June 17
10:00 am· 3:00 pm
Give good or Old Ilk two fMrht ~ on his
~ dly. ~food lnCI time on 1111 golf coune.
On our IMti ~ lhl wtlOle family wlll find
~~sud!• our.,.-°"*
s..ion ..... omelets.,. midi ............. ,
., • ~ Stltlon ~ ,... • tnd
Glrtlc "°"' loin. -.oilll fruit Ind ..... -zing ....,of ...,,_,Ind...,...~.,.,
......... .,..., goodl Ind ..... -,.... ~ Mtr'MI Include °""" HCIMllllllll
Sllnloll. ICarNn llQ 1-t '---..... f'wtlWo MWwoom RMlll, ...... Oldilll
wtlkfl .... kn .......... "-" ""'°
---In .. ..,.,.. la ow ..... ,...... wllldl
incw. hind raW S4llN, se.ti.,. c.. &...,.
.._.•~ror .. -...111.......,
.... o..a.rts.... ................ ...... """ • ...w lli6t ........ , Ml .,.,
b9't '° --Old 111 ilt Nll'I c...a
~C....tt•-··-.. ........... -....... .... u.. ................... .... .... u ..... ..
....... __., ...... , 82'
Cn;' 11ij'1111M ........
l•Mlll ... ....,,. t1 Pill ,.,.,...Cd, ....
{M)~ ...
.. TIP Of IHI WEIK
Coollg off, mttllg costs 78° When the June gloom tNt .. settled Oii« the
Southl.nd finally wears off, residents m-v find ttlem-
sefves dipping deeper Into their P<>C*ets to P1Y fot w
conditioning In these eledridty-ttri!pped times. Hef• .,.. • couple of
tlps to help you save • little ettetgt . • ... row~ -to 18 ..... when you're at
home and 80 degfMS when you're Wfllff· Yes, It's • little warmer -
your nose may not feel chiJly -but It'll probably save you enough
dough to buy an ke aom cone ot two.
• U.. t.w to moYe the already-cooled air around a bit bett•.
Sonday, June 10, 2001 5
TRAVEL TALES
. Illness didn't
stop couple
from eJ1joying
Europe
Young Chang
0 AllY PILOT
R ichard Krenz fell ill
dunng a recent tnp to
Spain, Portugdl and
England.
A slight hedrt condlbon
even sent him to the emer-
gency room at one pomt.
where
Krenz says
he had an
"experi-
ence" Wllh
the British
medical
system.
"Six and
a half
hours of
people hover-
ing over me,
and I ctidn't
have to pay
anything," he
said. "I asked them how
much I owed them, and they
laughed."
PHOTOS BY DON l.£ACH I DAILY PILOT
Above; Fashion Institute of Design and Merchandising graduate Marlena Rice looks at the portfolio of soon-to-be graduate Vy Dao in the
school's design room. Below: Rice drapes doth on a model. The institute ls now displaying a 21-volwne set of work by Hiroakl Obya.
Despite the untunely bout
with sickness, Rlcnard Krenz
and hls wile, Estelle, say they
had a good vacation. The
Newport Beach couple were
able to see their daughter,
who recently took a JOb in
England .
Boo • glT
Students at the Fashion Institute of Design and Merchandising
in Costa Mesa find inspiration in the volumes of work
by Hiroaki Ohya on display there
v--.Chan9
0AU.Y Ptto"r
I n a world where almost noth-
ing ls as it seems, fashion
designer Hiroaki Obya's 2000
collection ls more disguised
th8n even fashion maven Marlo
Fortuny's twisted, tied and box-
able apparel.
They're books. 1\venty-one
volumes of dresses, shirts, pants
and skirts in fabrics ranging from
denim to tedmo-fibers for a series
SEE FASHION PAGE 7
A European farmhouse in InAne Terrace
Karen W'19ht
NO Pl.la LIKE HOME
??ltu4
• EDITOR'S N01"E: Every other week,
No Place Like Home will take readers
on a tour of a local residence.
Simple, bold and distin-
guished are the adjectives
Kim Woods uses to describe
this custom home in Irvine Ter-
race. Woods,oV1DerofKim
Woods Interior Design in New-
port Beach, worked with the
homeowners for almost two
years to achieve the perfect bal-
ance of comfort and style for this
DESIGN CENTER
"For All Your Decorating Needs!"
fUR"ITURE Rl!UPBOLSTERY
·Custom-Made Furniture
·Slip Covers
•Patio Furniture
•Draperies. Shades. & Bedspreads
stunning family abode.
Influenced by the wife's sab-
batical in Aorence, where she
studied art history, the home-
owners (who asked not to be
named) sought a blend of
French and Italian styles to cre-
ate a home with a warm and
informal feel. .,
The design team included
architect John McNeeley. The
SEE HOME PAGE 9
•
The family took drives out
to the countryside and took
pictures outside of the castle
of Anne Boleyn's parents,
called Hever Castle . They
watched a Spnng festival
unfolding with folk dancers
in costume and Jubilant
singers.
"It was JUSt very fesbve. It
was a lovely outing," said
Estelle, 76.
Before amvmg m Eng-
land, the couple VlSlted Spam
and Portugal in late Apnl
with a group tour aboard the
Clipper CfU.lSe Line. Their
stops mcluded Barcelona and
SEE TRAVEL PAGE 9
OrdwflydleDHIA
~ Enctl1 .. F.,._ .,._.TM:09
~ O,.,.aw.
The cobalt-
blue tiles ln
the master
bathroom
are from
Walker
Zanger.
The master
retreat
lndudes a
sleam &bower,
a separate
tub aru and
his-and-hen
vanlUes.
~Hll.ER
I OAl.Y Pl.OT
.·· . . ... ·
~ ' '· . . .
•• 3 8th an~ual
Public Safety
Awards Luncheon
••
Friday,
June 22, 200 I
I I :45 a.m. to I :30 p.m.
!JC Luncfi program
fiono'ring tlie
2 ooz Offic~rs
and ~mplayees of
tfie Y ear for tfie
Costa :Jvf.esa
'Police, 'Fire and
Communications
'Departments
Location: Westin
South Coast Plaza
Cost: $30
per person
For reservations.
call the Costa Mesa
Chamber of
Commerce
714/885-9090 •• ••
Sat., ... 23,2001
A bmeDt for the
Boy Scout Sea Base
Newport Beach
Wlxn:
Saruiday, jwle 23, ll)l
When:
rufy~and
~ Scrur Sea &cie
2001 We;c Gm Hijtw.iy
<hdHiatmoo
~~atWOp.m.,
Ralyau at 1 p.µi. •
Prim aOO aqliisMl bcawadrl b-
~ OU~OOmaOOCJM,
~~~wllw.is<i ~Rally.
Aftrr ~ &llyY.C Ml baYc
Im d'OMll5, liYc cmmainnYm
and a silent UJin
IXmcnmwm bcJimmi.
&ly~zmmmmdirl
Ac.e qn1d by )me 15, 2n>l.
&bdaam..m,pc.ca1
Ccilii Axla@(714) m(JO'J8
. . .. .. . . .
ULTIMATE COITICT USI
~.,.::.:~ comes _.....,.,. w THI
UUW1I c.MmmM
~!!WOODS' 10 SponwMby.
Costa Mesa Civic ptayt;ouse
~ C'.osta Mesa Civic Playhouse,
, 611 Hamilton St.
WIMn:2p.m.
eo.t:S15
eo.act: (949) 650-5269
MOZART'S MQUB•
Spoll90Nd by. The Chancel Choirs
of Newport Harbor Lutheran Church
and Tustin Presbyterien Church
Where: Newport Harbor l.uther1n
Church, 798 Dover Drive, Newport
Beach
WIMn:5p.m.
CoR S10 donation suggested ·
Contact:(949)548-8004
MONDAY 11 '1HEWIZARD °'llNlr Spot.,,. by. The
Fashion lnstJtute of Design end
Merchandising presems the work of
Hlroeltl Ohya
Where: The Institute, 3420 S. Bristol
St., fourth floor, Costa Mese ·
When: 7:30 a.m. to 6 p.m. Monday
through Friday
tlllAug.27
Co.t:Free
Contact:
(714) 565-2800
'TUESDAY
·~ MOODN' 12
SP.O'..-cl by. The Orange County
Museum of Art presents a traveling
exhibit from the Metropolitan '•• ~=~=the John c.
Where: Orange County Museum of
Art. 850 San Oemente Drive,
Newport Beach
When: 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesdays
through Sundays till Aug. 19
Colt: SS for adults. S4 senior5 and students. and free for membet's and
children 16 and younger
eo.act: (949) 7S~ 1122
a:~AY ·13
. 5ponlor9CI by.
Newport-Mesa Irvine Interfaith Council .
Where: United Churdl of Christ, 4915
Alton Partcway, Irvine
When: 11:45 e.m.
CoR $7.50-$10
Contolld: (949) 66(}.8665, Ext. 3
POIETllY A1i1D MUSIC
SpolllCINd by. Alta Coffee House hosts a reading by poets from
Fema.rfire Press and musk from
Superman Loses the Gir1
Wlwe: Alta Coffee House, 506 31st
St, Newport Beech
When:8p.m.
Colt: ff'ff .
Cont8c:t:(949)67S.0233
• L.11191-...,, w the
o.ay Piiot, llO W. hY St.
Costa Mesi 12627
• MX -Send to (949)
646-4170 • MllAll.-Send to
dal/ypllotOJatJmes.com
,,. 111 ••• tw ,,., ro-r4 HOr
SPOTLIGHT
C is for Center
'U1'S IE FllEllDS' lllHS ELMO 10 COSTA MESA
•sunny day, sweepin' the
clouds away. On my way to
where the air is sweet ... •
We cai>. tell you how to
get, how to get to •Sesame
Street.• Just take a drive to
the Orange County Perform-
ing Arts Center on Thursday
and catch Elmo, Big Bird,
Cookie Monster and more in
•Let's Be Friends.•
The travelin-g musical,
which will be staged in Cos-
ta Mesa through June 17,
has Elmo and Zoe starting
an exclusive Friendship
Group. Eventually, the two
round-nosed muppets learn
that sometimes letting peo-
ple in is more fun than keep-
ing them out.
Though the show is
catered toward kids, parents
should have fun strolling
down memory lane as the
characters they grew up
with -Bert, Ernie, Oscar
the Grouch, Grover _. mix
with the ones from their ·
kids' time -Elmo and Zoe.
·come and play, every-
thing's A-OK. Friendly
neighbors there, that's
where we meet .... "
FYI
--.: Orange County Perlonnlng
Arts Center, 600 Town Center Drive,
C'.osta Mesa WhM: 7 p.m. Thursday; 10:30 a.m. and 7 p.m. Friday; 10-.30 a.m., 2 and
S:30 p.m. June 16; and 1 and 430
p.m.June 17
Cost: S 15 or $20
Clill: (714) 556-2787
Jazzing up the summer
at the Hyatt Newporter PWlllM
11111
SUM"D Jill SHIU
The Hyatt Newporter Summer
Jazz Series will open Friday with
Strunz & Farah performing in the
hotel's outdoor amphitheater. The
Friday evening concert series
through Oct. 12 will feature future
perforI:\lijlD.ces by Acoustic Alchemy
with Paul Taylor, Bobby Caldwell,
Peabo Bryson and Poncho Sanchez.
FYI
--.: Hy.tt Newporter. 1107 Jamboree
ROid, Newport Beach
When: 8 p.m. Friday
CGllt: .$2S-$3S
Cell: (949) 729-1234.
FRIDAY
fATHElt"S DAY
Oon"l fOrget 10 honor
deilrolddld.
. Doily Pilot
JUNE
SMTWTFI
1 2
34~6789
110 t1 u u . 11 15 » I • e 19 JO 21 n 21
:MZ5l6Z72129~
MARKYOUlt CALENDARS
Auo•.Mll:
17: Father's Day
11: Irrelevant Week
begins
JULY
IMTWTFI
12J C)5 6 7
• 9 10 " 12 • 14
15 16 f7 • 19 '11) 21
l2 ZJ :M Z5 l6$21
~ JO )1
MNtKYOUR
CALEM>ARS
4: Fourth of July
1J: Orange County
Fair begins
27: The Jones Cup .
AUGUST
IMTWT•S
1 2 3 4
567891011
12U1415 l6T7 W
19 lO 21 22 23 2' Z5
26 11 28 29 JO 31
MARK YOUlt
CALENDARS
Auo .. Auausr.
1M: Summer Concert
Series at Fashion Island
SEPTEMBER
IMTWT•I
1
2 0 1 5 678
9 10 11 12 ll • 15
" G 11 " 20 21 22
f»:M Z5 fl172829
)()
J: LaborDay
14-11: Taste of Newport
17: Rash Hashanah begins
2l: Race for the Cure a Yorn tapp.-begins
OCTOBER
IMTWTl'I
1 2 3 456
7191011120
14 15 16 T7 18 19 '11)
21 22 ZJ )ii 25 llli 11
28 29 JO )1
NOVEMBER
lllTWTl'S
1 2 )
456 7 1910
1112 0 14151617
•19'11>2122ZJ:M
25lfi l7 282'JO
DECEMBER
IMTWTFI
1
2 ) 4 5 ' 7 •
910 11 12131415
16f7•19»2122
23:MZ5J5l72129
:JO 31
Costa Me
Community
I ---Golf Cl
._. ~ AJtiltic Dlrel:tor
21st t.Anmuil Season
11-24 June 2001
lllAllc oft'-llaroque played
ht a dilfiltctive 1t1Wde 1etti118
St. Mkbd le All Aa&tls Clurcb
and Sllmmn l.iwary It Gudtn1
C«oa1 dcl Mai
BAJlOQUB CONCER.TOS
Sunday, June 17, 4:00 p.m. an.mw bl/ ffvaldi ~ Foult!llC
1"1fi1rm«I ""pll"fod instruments
ORGAN RECITAL
MandaJ, June 18, 8 ioo p.m.
ANDUW AltTll11K, organ
111/r'ot/udng a /Jrilliant
ll""1fl A>wlil/t organist
FESTIVAL PINALB
Sunclay, June-.., 4100 p.m.
i:!toraJ mtlll/O'llXril ~ .
J.S. 6odt mwl ,,,.,,..Jlaptisi. Lu/Iv
'l'ldtlt..<Jartktu, 130(~)
St. Midt'111's, las (IYJ7 ~~) &-
$10 (6/18). Studmn witlt ID:
Organ bt:iJol IS al COnon'f time
Baroque Mule Fathal, CdM
P.O. lbc¥,Otd.°'-~
RI iP•>DfiA. IJtel: <M9)'60?8!t1
Spe·cial
Event
Advertise on the
Ultimate Calendar
Page, a feature \
of our new Sunday
Edition. $20 per ·
inch, 3 inch .. m1nunum.
Call
(949) 642-43~i
Today!
..
mte college purchased this collection specifically so it can travel to its four locations to inspire students ln the realm of creativity.'
FASHION
CONTINUED FROM S
called "The Wizard of Jeanz. •
Volume 19 is a bright red
dress made of non-rlppable
nylon with three sections of
poofy red ruffles. It folds up
into its denim book jacket -
they're all denim -and you
wear the cover on your back.
Volume 2 contains four dif-
ferent sleeveless shirts. You
wear one and le!ve the rest
hanging on your back, along
with the book covers of cowse.
•If you get bored durin9 the
day, you can change tops,
laughed Shirley Wllson, public
relations representative for the
Fashion Institute of Design and
Merchandising, standing in its
Costa Mesa school. "The book
never comes off of the particu-
lar piece:
The collection, which is a
limited edition or 50 sets,
opened at the Bristol Street
branch Thursday and will
remain through Aug. 27.
"The college purchased this
collection specifically so it can
travel to its four locations to
inspire students in the realm of
creativity,• Wilson said.
The deSigns accommodate
the modem, cramped-apart-
ment lifestyle with little closet
space (all you need is a
bookcase), a way of life that
doesn't include ironing and a
career that involves efficient
traveling.
"We're all living faster lives
in smaller spaces,· Wilson
said. "And (OhyaJ th.inks
that clothes should be
P>mfortable. •
L The covers can look like a
iarge sailor's collar on the ~per back or a random fash-
'on statement flapping around
fear the waist.
1 What happens if yo\l get a
lwJinkle? Ohya, a protege of
lfss@Y Miyake, would suggest
!YOU wear it. Wilson said I" For the institute's students,
!the collection is also a lesson in
!innovation. I "While It's not an idea that lwill make millions in retail. it's
rctone in such good taste, and
it.l's so creative,• said Barbara
!Bundy, vice president of edu-1
11
•
Sl*tey Wlllon. 'f)Ubllc relations representative f« the Fashion Institute of Design and Men:handlsing
.
DI
WHAT; Ohya's •The
Wizard of Jeanz"
WHEN: 7:30 a.m. to 6
p.m. Monday through
Friday through Aug. 27
WHERE: The Fashion
Institute of Design and
Merchandising, 3420 S.
Bristol St., fourth floor,
Costa Mesa
COST; Free
CAU: (714) 565-2800
cation at the institute.
More than 4,000 students fill
the school's four campuses,
scattered in Costa Mesa, Los
Angeles, San Francisco and
San Diego. Some of them are
high school graduates, others
are out of college. A small per-
centage of the graduates go on
to be fashion designers, others
wotk in the film costume
industry, and many enter the
field of product development,
which includes designing and
marketing for existiiig labels.
Famed alumni include Ran-
dolph Duke, Karen Kane and
David Cardona.
Marlena Rice, who graduat-
ed from the Costa Mesa school
this year and majored in fash-
ion design, works as an assis-
tant designer to Jonathan Mar-
tin in toS Angeles.
•This is exactly what I want
to be doing now,• said the 22-
year-old.
Rice was always interested
in designing, but doubted the
career course at times because
it seemed too good to be true.
"I was a little wary on
whether I wanted to make my
hobby my job,• she said. ·1
just love mr hobby so much,
how could do it as a job? And
if I do it as a job, am I going to
still love it? Finally I just went
for it.•
Ohya's design concepts,
some of which have contained
clothes in Cup O'Noodle-style
pots, conlirm that a job in fash-
ion cal) and should be fun.
•He j\1st exudes creativity,•
Bundy said. •aut in simplistic
terms. Everything doesn't have
to be shot in the fanny with
uon
1bls 'dress designed by
Hiroald Ohya Js part of a
21-volume collectlon on
display at the Fashion
Institute of Design and
Merchandising.
llGIT
Institute graduate
Marlena Rice looks at a
display of work by Ohya
at the Costa Mesa school.
The clothes are designed
to fold up into '"books."
PHOTOS BY OClN UACH I OAA.Y Pl.OT
rhinestones.•
Wilson agreed.
"This collection d~tely
encourages anyone to think
out of the box," she said.
It's tht pcmct home in tht pttftct ~cting. a cdtbnt1on of
all that's best about ltving in Southtrn California. Tht
warm sun, the fabulow vatw, tht cool stabrttZes ... thty
arc all as much a pan of the btauty of du~ pl.act as tht
gractful lma and comfortable spa~ ettattd bv cm
inspin-d archittcturr. You'U fall t!l low with n.ny asixct of
1t, lih du"ct .icccs' to tht btad1. 1uu seeps .iway.
Watmnark at Crysa.1 Cove. It addrns..:s "'~ry wuh }'OU1ft
wishtd for m a home, ~ dream )'OU'ft dttamt. Ic's what
you've always wanted, whtte ~·ve always wanted it to ht,
and~ you'll ncvtt ~ satisfitd with an>'tlung ku. ln evuy
semt, ic's perttct. In cm'f way, it's you. •
WATERMA RK
At C':J"•I C•u
' I
I
I I I I I I Daily Pitot
11\1\1,Jt~
''• ' I I
•lf•l.'\11r1.H 11m
•Daily Pilot
ROME
• CONTINUED FROM 5
contractor was Doug Root of
Premiere Woodwork. Pre-
construction and construction
filled almost two calendar
yea.rs. The attention to detail
and special features m thts
home is extfdordmary.
The house has custom
walnut floors, urched win-
dows and doorwdys, and
stacking French doors lhdt
allow a free-flow from inten-
or to extenor. Woods and the
homeowners chose a bold
color palette that includes
deep red, spruce green and
cobalt blue, 10 dddilton to the
soothing cream tones ol the
Limestone used throughout
the house.
The rusted uon hardware
is from J . Nicolas French
Imported Hardware m Coro-
na del Mar, the Wes dre from
• Send ONGOING EVENTS items
to the Daily Pilot. 330 W Bay St ,
Costa Mesa. CA 92627; by fax to
(949) 646-4170; or by calling (949)
574-4298. Include the time, date
and location of the event. as well
as a contact phone number A
complete listing is available at
http:/lwww.da1/ypilot.com.
Scrabble Club 350 meets the
first Sunday of every month
for a seven-game, lull-day
tournament, with cash and
pnzes, at the Newport Dune~
RV Resort, 1131 8dck Bay
Dnve, Newport BeclCh $35
(949) 206-9822
Orange County Sierra Sin-
gles meets at 6 p m. on the
second Monday of every
month at the C ostd Mesa
Community Center, 1845
Park Ave., Costa M esd. Free.
(714) 847-4330
A series of kids' and teens'
online classes will be offered
this summer by Orange I
Coast College's Commuruty
Education Office. Each
course is $49. Subject to be
taught will include reading
and wnting, history, ~acnce,
math, animals, ~tamp collect-
ing, astronomy and native
plants of Cahforn1tt Reg1strd-
bon 1s underway m OC'C" .. s
Educallon O ffice OrdngP
Coast College, 2701 Fd1n.·1f'w
Road. (714) 432-5880
The Costa Mesa MOMS Club
-Moms Oflenng Moim
Support -mecLc; di 10 d rn
Fndays dt d dtfferent pdrk
every week 10 Costa Mesd
$30 for memben.tup, which
mcludes more thdn JUSt mePt-
ings. Call for each week's
locabon. (7 14) 549-4504.
Comfort Zone, a support
group for people livmg with
a mental illness, meets at
7:30 p.m. Thursdays at the
275 Medical Bwldmg, l irst-
floor conference room, 275
Victona St., Costa Mesa
Free. (949) 548-7274.
The Costa Mesa Senior Cen-
ter hosts ballroom dancing
Walker Zanger in Costa
Mesa and the fixtures are
from Eurobath in the Ston e-
mill Design Center, Costa
Mesa S&K Painters complet-
ed the home's finishing
touches, which includes a
variety of faux finishes and
glazes.
Woods bas a special affiru-
ty for light fixtures. The
house is filled with one-of-d-
lund sconces, chandeliers
dnd lamps, in addition to the
overhead lighting. Both
charming and sophisticated
in style and placement. the
lighting adds a speaal
nuance to the home.
One of the first purchases
for the house was a pair of
iron and crystal sconces from
Nobili Antiques on New-
port's 31st Street. The
sconces helped set the
design tone for the entire
place.
The kitchen IS a stnlung
blend of new conveniences
with live music from the
Peter Vdn Orschott Trio from
7:30 to 10:30 p.m. Tuesdays
at the center, 695 W. 19th St.,
Costa Mesa. $4. (949) 548-
3884.
The breakfast referral net-
working group WLll meet
every Wednesday lrom 7:15
to 8:30 d.m. dt Mun.i's Cafe.
Call Angie Stafford for
reservdlions and mlormallon,
(949) 474-2225.
Hoag Hospital bolds support
meeltngs called ·Naturally
Sweet" for sufferers of dta-
betes every Wednesday of
every month from 7 to 8 p m
Free and no reservallon are
required He1d1 Woodnng,
(949} 760-2065.
and old style. Viking appli-
ances and a sub-zero refrig-
erator-freezer are combined
with honed limestone court-
ters, Quimper-1.nfluenced
tiles and brushed ruckel
hardware.
An ample desk/work sta·
tion off the kitchen overlook-
ing the backyard allows the
homeowners to keep an eye
on their three children while
taking care of business.
One of the homeowners'
favorite fedtures are the slid-
ing pocket French doors,
which allow the grea~ room
to open up to a backyard
that includes a pool, spa,
bwlt-m barbecue a.Qd firep1t.
The cozy dnd comfortable
green study ranks a close
second.
• KAREN WIGHT is a Newport
Beach resident. Her column, which
was contributed to by MIOtElE
Mll.l.EJt this week, runs Sundays.
The Newport-Mesa cribbage
club meets on the second
and fourth Wednesdays ol
the month at 6:45 p.m. at the
Oasis Senior Center, Room 6,
800 Marguerite Ave., Corona
de! Mar. $2. (949) 646-5293.
The Paclfic Business
Xchange has weekJy break-
fast meellngs at 7 a.m. Tues-
day!. at the Pacific C lub,
4 110 MacArthur Blvd., New-
port ~each Free for the iru-
llal meeting (949) 640-0588.
The Costa Mesa Senior Cen-
ter ollers a W1dows-W1dow-
er.. Support Group from 1 to
3 pm Wednesdays at 695 W.
19th St , Costa Mesa (949)
b45-2356.
Silk florals, Topiaries, Orchid:-., Palm~ & Tret>~
Mon-Fri 10-6, ·sat 10-5, Sun 10-4 ..
369 £. 17th Street, Costa M esa, CA
1-1-~J
(949) 646-6745
Donate
your vehicle.
1-888-308-6483
Set hope in motion
to improve loca l lives.
• RVs • Boats • Real Estate • Tax Deductible
ART REsTORATION ~ rtf"lir Jaultetl:
• PORCELAIN • CRYSTAL
• PA1NI1NGS
• CKlNA. Gus's • GlArKlcs
• FIAMES AND OntEl An
CouE1JllS '1 ____ _, ____ n
1 lOOFF~~1
I Je.. OFF F.NTtU IOI fi'S oa LESS I .. ____ . .._, ___ ...
. .
Richard and Estelle Krenz of Newport Beach enjoy a carriage ride while visiting Spain.
TRAVEL
CONTINUED FROM 5
Malaga in Spain dnd Lisbon
tn Portugal. It was a lour of
the art and architecture, but
Estelle says they didn't makt•
it on land too often.
"I saw it from a boat most-
ly," said the retired school-
teacher. ·Unfortunately,
we're just too old."
In Malaga, the s1tualton
didn't get much better. Thl'
couple disembarked m hopes
of shopping for souverur~.
but that day turned out to be
Support Our
Schools
Shop ·Harbor
Blvd. of Cars ··
the Spdmsh eqwvaJent to
Labor Day.
•But we took a horse car-
ndge nde around town,
which WdS very nice,• she
'>aid. "The dnver was driving
h11:> horse, dnd 1t was the kind
of carnage you see in New
Orledns."
Richard, a 78-year-old
retired employee of Pacific
Mutual Lite, enjoyed seeing
the Sdcred Familia cathedral
A MODERN APPROACH TO
THE MINO-BOOY EXERCISE
BASED ON THE PILATES
METHOD
in Spain
"My husband likes to take
tnps." Estelle said. ·1 have
trouble keeping him ho~e. •
• Have you, or someone you
know, gone on an interesting
vacation recently? Tell us your
adventures. Drop us a line to
TRAVEL TALES. 330 W. Say St.,
Costa Mesa, CA 92627; e-mail
young.changOlatimes.com; or fax
to (949) 646-4170.
F atber's Da~ .
Buff et Brunch & Poolsiile Barbecue
HYAIT REGENCY IRVINE
Sunday, June 18th .. 10:30am, 2:~
Traditional Breakfast Items
Omeletes Made to Order
Grilled Mahi Mahi
lndud ~
Draft }leet Station,
NY Strip Loin
and BBQ Centercut Pork Chops
Haagen Daz lee Cream Sundaes
Bloody
Li Coun
And much nior".,.,.i.to. ..
Complimentary Self a.--~
Adults-$44.00, Childre (5#
(Children under 5 eat
I I I \ I
Reservations (949) 22
1 7900 Jamboree 8J:ta.,
&
's
and
.
I
C .·. . . OMM
10 Sunday, June 10, 2001
EDITORIALS
WillmOney
~etheday?
T he conjecture, the
guessing and the
fighting will be over
soon enough.
Developers for the
Koll Center announced this
month that they are ready to
take their proposed expansion
-250,000 square feet, includ-
ing a new 10-story office tower
and two parking garages -to
Newport Beach's voters this fall
as the first Greenlight test in the
city.
Under Greenlight, the slow-
growth law that voters
approved last December, devel-
opments that add more than
40,000 square feet, 100 peak-
, hour ca.r trips or dwelling units
over what's allowed in the city's
general plan must be approved
by residents.
During that election, there
was endless talk about what the
law would mean for Newport
Beach. In the simplest terms,'
supporters saw it only as
restraining runaway develop-
ment; opponents painted dire
pictures of the city losing b~i
nesses and the much-needed
taxes they produce.
The latter .scenario seemed to
play out in March when the
owner of Toyota of Orange said
he was scuttling plans to build a
Lexus dealership in Newport
Beach in part because of the
obstacles created by Greenllght.
The time and money involved
were just too much for him to
bear.
It was a financial loss for the
city. But many residents said
that businesses such as a car
dealership were exactly what
they had in mind when they
voted for the measure.
The Lexus decision, however,
was not a true test of Green-
light. which will come only with
a vote of the people. And the
questions surrounding the law
are not the broad ones bandied
about during last fall's election.
They are specific:
Will residents honestly and
carefully weigh the pros and
cons of individual develop-
ments, or will Greenlight
become a blanket method to
stop all major development in
Newport Beach?
Will the forced elections
become money-laden battles for
public support, much as the
Greenlight election was? Will
money rule the day?
And perhaps most important-
ly of all, what will come after a
· project is approved or denied?
Everyone in Newpo~Beach
should be anxious to learn the
answers.
Good fo r those who are
protecting our parks I ndividuals can make a dif-dents near Heller Park began
ference. The Lions Park collecting money to set up a
Assn. knows this and, as a reward to catch the culprit or
result, recently set up a culprits.
group to patrol the park to Now, more residents in the
make it safer. form of the Uons Park Assn.
Lions Park is one of many have volunteered their efforts to
assure their park stays sate by parks in Costa Mesa and New-
port Beach where razor bhtdes patrolling it randomly.
If there's anything that can intentionally placed on play-
ground equipment have turned prevent the further placing of
razor blades and glass shards in up. neighborhood playgrounds, It's It all started in March, when
blades were found in Marina teamwork. If the guilty party
Park in Newport Beach. About thinks there's a possibility the
playground is being watched by a week later, they popped up in anyone, the park will more than Heller Park. By late April, the likely be avoided and remain razors were replaced with glass safe. shards that began appearing in We applaud and thank those
Newport Beach parks. who have volunteered their Since the Costa Mesa Police time to ensure that the children
Department has its hands full who use these parks can do IO
with other crimes, in addition to without having to worry about
those in the parks, others have being cut or otherwise injured.
pitched in. The dty's Parks We also hope that othen will
Department also now patrols follow suit until the cow~
Heller, Pinkley and Uons parks acts cease.
three times daily. ThaDks to thOM who are
Also in April, a group of rest· leading the ~e.
#
,,,
••• ' I ' . 'Id ' . . . ' a; ....
'Even if I know one of them survived,
l'H know my dad didn't die in vain.' _,. ..... a...,..,.
~of the Southern~°"'*' of
Sons end ~In Toud\ a Ndonal otglftlutJon
for cNldren of..,, Vletrwn Ww soldiers.
on getting In touch With one of sbt IOld6en her father
saved upon his dMth In the war.
UoUSIN<i
'' NECK AHO NEC~ ''
MAILBAG
City officials must get is correct.
I hope the voters on the refer-their priorities right endum approve the project. I
· Regarding Rick Rogers' ·eom-believe the thrust of Greenlight is
munity commentary -Council to maintain the quality of life in
losing touch on affordable housing and near residential areas, and
in Costa Mesa• (June 5), I am also maintain reasonable traffic flows
a. resident of Costa Mesa. everywhere.
I oontinue to reside here Koll's project will benefit New-
because it satisfies my needs, or port Beach and is located in the
~ I am just a creature of appropriate location.
bi The thing we must face is PAUL JAMES BAU>WIN
this is still Goat Hill and will be Newport Beach
until we put in place some dty
leDders who are dedicated enough Koll project would to do the job they were put there make traffic worse to do.
As an example, the taxes I pay I am vehemently against Koll r=,e for a bark park. but when Center's proposed 250,~ inquire about repairing the foot expansion near MaCArthur streets and potholes. which of Boulevard and Jamboree Road course are hazards, there's not It will make traffic, which is always a response. My impression now bad enough, even worse. ls that this is the ~ty of And the impact will not be •very our dty fathers, who should little,• but very big. usume the faull EVASAotS Am I correct? The leaders Newport Beach should be made aware: first things
New home5 should be first. Pix the streets, then spend
~frtvolous items.
.
on much bigger lots
Costa Mesa This II regarding Costa Mesa
home Jot sizes ( •etty upholds Koll Center will make a plant to replace cent.er with
.good test of GreenQght bomal, • June 6) .
The minimum lot size ii 3,000
Koll Development'• plan to test square feet, with an average lot
GreenMght tn its effort to build out liz&ot 3,500 equare feet. tbroUgb·
Koll Center ii • step in tbe rlgbt out the El Camino homes project
dbedloll (.Koll~ 1o bio ••ie by El Qtmlno Partnen. I think
flnt Gnlenligbt ..... June 1). that's borilble.
Tb8 Newport Beech dty I live In Mela Verde, where lot
plann8n' approval Of the project llzel are 8,000to10,000 lqUal'e
Daily Pilot
feet. which is deceol
What we really need is larger,
not smaller, lots on which our kids
can run around. We have a young
family, and if anyone ever wanted
to have a pool. the lot wouldn't be
large enough to build one.
I think smaller lots, which
result in people living so dole
together that your neighbon could
reach out and borrow cereal in the
morning if they lleeded to at the
kitcben window, are really too
tight for residences.
The new deve)opment OD
Adams Avenue at Harbor Boule-
vard. across the street from the
post otfice, is {built) too dole and
there's no lot. Tbare are no yards.
front or back. I've been in tboee
models. So I think smaller ii not
better.
DOMU.SWIFT
eo.taMele
Thanks for an the
wonderful coverage
I want to tell you. you guys
have done such a marvelous job
atyourC.
The 9ICllde -:r-I could put it to musk: -allo tblt PUot CUp leriel that we jUlt bad 1
for all the chOdren w• a great
SU008ll. My grandloD played In it andlWUIO~, You folb dOlle a gNat
job. I jUlt want 1o 0"&--.d:O
C.-.Maa • IDnm"S NOl'I: Gino'°"° .....
lrl ~ N.taport ~Ind c:.. .... Wa19l7.
Uiill TO Ill 01
Clty-~nsored mobile skate park a welCome addition in Costa M
n ·~·Moblle us ,,.,_ s-.rk debutl in
CcMI ,._. (May 29). I've
........... ongoing Rory ..... .,.., .... M..... « J9Cl"D"ed by
.. CGlill .... Oly C.oUDdl'I I,
Not .. cm. .... .......... , ..
11 'w-.. m. .. 111111
¥1d1Dg 1m11•..a lldll•• .. ~ ..
.,
I I
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I I I I ' I
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I 110 t l Name: Lance l Thompson-Hailstone
I Age: 60 I Occupnlon: Customer
1 service specialist at
1 Best Buy in Metro I Pointe for five years
1 Education: Associate's l degree in industrial l psychology from j College of San Mateo
I F..,,lly: Wife of I 25 years, ~ean, a
1 curriculum specialist
: for Anaheim Unified
: School District; and I three daughters,
' Kristin, 33, Rachel, 23,
and Jemma, 21
Residence: Mesa Del
Mar, Costa Mesa, for
21 years
Hobbles: Music and
gardening
Groups: Blue Grass
Gospel Group,
president of Mesa Del
Mar Homeowners
Assn. and Our Saviors
Lutheran Church in
Orange
WHY HOMES?
I
I I
I
'Th e place has
deteriorated to the I I
• point where
El Camino l
I I Partners can't, I economically, do
L.anything more to
it. Its just kiJld of
lost its usefulness.
Its useiulness has
been served,
r~conomically
:(Ind for the
·neighborhood.
And I really think
that, by having
~omes in there, it
will not only be an
asset to the
n eighborhood and
to the city, but to
Us as homeowners.'
"
JJ
, , , CoMMUNrrY FORuM , " ,. ,. , ,. ,. I" ,.
STM MC CRANK I OAl.Y Pit.OT
Chipping in when he ·-can
Lance Thompson-Hailstone discusses the issues residents of Mesa Del Mar are facing
The Mesa Del Mar area has
been quite the focus of
Costa Mesa City Council
decisions lately.
At the last meeting, the council
amended the home lot sizes to
accommodate a project that will
replace the El Camino shopping
center with homes and opted not to
enforce additional parking restric-
tions in the Mesa Del tvfar residen-
tial tract during street sweeping.
On Thursday, Daily Pilot
Assistant City Editor James Meier
sat down with Lance Thompson-
Ha.ilstone, the president of the
Mesa Del Mcu. ~Qmeowners Assn.,
at his home to discuss the issues
affecting these residents.
Which do you find more satisfy-
ing -the home-lot dedsion allow-
ing the El Cam.lno project or the
street-sweeping dedsionf
I would have to say the El
Camino shopping center. We've
been trying to get spmething done
with that project for as long as I've
lived here. There are two reasons I
became involved with the homeown-
ers association. One was traffic on El
'Camino Drive. And the fight to get
speed bumps.
When I moved in here, the traffic,
on average. was around 45 mph in a
residential zone here. And there
were times, especially if they were
doing work at Baker and Fairview,
and people knew we were a cut-
through, you·could not get out of
your driveway on El Camino. I sat,
time a.ft.er time, for 45 minutes, and
that sounds ridiculous, but people
would not let you out.
So we and a lot of the neighbors
on the street fought long and hard
and got these speed bumps in, and
then the shopping center began to
deteriorate.
1be market there was called
Country Cousins, and people came
from Los Angeles to buy meat at this
place became it WU choice. It WU
beautiful. Tb8lr wgetablel were
great. And woadlltul prims. John
Wayne \lied to axae ~ here and
, ' buy biJ stuff. The DUD. lt was a nice
shopping center. :fbere was a Mexi-
can restaurant there that we went to
almost every week.
But then they started changing
bands. As can happen in real estate
when people are buying a shopping
center, they're looking for it as a tax
loss. They buy it, they're getting rent,
but it's a nice little write-off. They
don't have to do much, and they
didn't. And we would talk to them,
and we would invite them to come
talk to us. and they would just think,
"Who are you people? We don't need
to talk to you."
But now, the place has deteriorat-
ed to the point where El Camino
Partners can't, economically, do any-
thing more to it. Its just kind of lost
its usefulness. Its usefulness has been
served, economically and for the
neighborhood. And I really think
that. by having homes in there, it will
not only be an asset to the neighbor-
hood and to the city, but to us as
homeowners. I think it's going
to help our property values and
everytbmg.
In your optnJon, bow long bas
the El camtno shopping center been
past Its prtmer
A good 10 years, easily. And I
continued to shop there for as long as
I could because it's convenient. It's
nice to have a little marke t that I can
walk to, but I can walk to Stater
Bros. It's not a problem, but I'm just
more comfortable walking down
there because it was really nice.
But going there at night, I would-
n't chance it. I went there one night
and there were 20 of the toughest
guys I'd ever seen banging a.round
l}le parking lot. And I have seen
drug deals going down in that park-
ing lot. I mean, little envelopes being
banded into a car and cash corning
out of the car, I don't think they're
handing out samples of Cheerios or
anything. It's tough.
So that's one of the beauties about
this, if Jelf Pratt is allowed to proceed,
is having a police substation there.
That ts -wowl When they told us
about that, people were rea.lly excit-
ed about that. And I have friends
over on the WestsJde, and having
that police substation there near
Uons Park made a big difference to
them. They really noticed a lessening
in gang activity and of other prob-
temi tbeyre having there. A.op I'm
sure it'll do the same thing here.
I think Chief Dave Snowden and
his crew do a great JOb for this city. I
really do. They're always polite.
They really work hard.
The nearby apartment complexes
have wanted the shopping center to
remain at the site, while the home-
owners association has favored the
home project. How's the associa-
tion's relationship with the nearb'y
apartment complexes these daysf
For the owners who live within
our tract, like Joan Ting (who owns
one apartment complex in Mesa Qel
Mar) and some other folks, it's excel-
lent. As a matter of fact. Joan tried to
create an assooabon of apartment
owners down there a number of
y~ ago. She'd Jove to see the other
places cleaned up because that can
only help her too. And I tell you,
when she has a vacancy, 1t gets filled
almost instantly because her places
really look ruce
The response she got was Just a
big, resounding •no• from all the
absentee landlords But all the peo-
ple fairly local were all very enthusi-
astic about it. So that was really frus-
trating for her.
So, we really don't have a rela-
tionship with those others.
Were the park.tng restrictions
going to be that much of a hassle for
Mesa Del Marl
All of us want clean streets. We
really do That wasn't the thing we
were upset about, at least most of us.
Reading the thing that Peter Naghavi
(transportation services manager for
the oty) put out was they weren't just
tallang about two signs per street. I
mean. I have two or four signs on El
Canuno Drive ngbt now because we
get ticketed il we park, and they
don't do alternate sweepmg.
But lbe big th.tng was closing
down the whole tract, utitially. And
then. when we went there the other
night, they had revtSed it and done
alternate sides. And I can live with
41temate side parking. but it was the
ticketing thet really got to me. You
have to have some enforcement.
Othetwise, people are not going to
move. Some people couldn't care
less.
But there are times wbed it's diffi-
cult to -get put and move your eat:
For example, J.f you're ill or il my
daughters are home from college and
their CSlJ'S are in the garage and m
the driveway, where am I going to
put mine? Luckily I have a neighbor
who lets me share her dnveway. Or
if you have guests, where are they
going to go? Or if they had done the
whole tracts, where were we going
to go?
And this tract has notonously
small driveways. Fortunately I don't,
but in some of these cul-de-sacs, you
cannot get a full-siZed car LO. So I
thought that was really unfair. I
mean, I would Wee to see the street
sweeping continue but without the
ticketing, if at all possible.
Are there any other issues that
we should expect to pop lip ln Mesa
Del Mar any time SOOD'
Yeah, I think the same things that
concern the rest of the aty. Counal-
woman Linda Dixon made a com-
ment that I really support that we
really need to be concerned about
our water quality, not in the city, but
in the oceans as well. I am a tree
hugger, I admit it, and that's one of
the reasons I want street sweeping to
continue. Water quality IS something
we all need to be concerned with.
lraffic will continue to be a big •
issue and, of course, the airport. U
they expand John Wayne Airport.
that is really going to get to us.
We do need an El Toro airport.
What do you thJ.nk of the current
state of the City Coundn
The Chinese have a curse, and it
says, •May you live m wteresting
times.· And I think the City Council
is a very interesbng City Council. We
have some very diverse Vlews there,
but I get a kick out of it.
I like the amounts of discussion
that go on, and I thmk it's very well
balanced. The opinions of everybody
are really diverse, and yet it's otm-
ous that everybody really cares. And
that's a tough Job. I wouldn't want to
do it. And J admire what they do and
have gotten done.
I like the meetings and, if I can't
be there, I have them recorded
because my Blue Grass Gospel
Group rehearses Monday nights. ·
And I love the fact that they do that.
I think the City Council does a good
job. ~· • "
. .
t;i~ officials must preserve beaUtifulficus' trees on C/a,y Street
JmlD.,_...11 soua•••IDllD
1
I I ' • t • • • ' ' •••
'111.t's 1 lat ... ··-· &r.;e ...... u.I S8alls. Hn, yau'rt ~ .... ,,,. ~ ... •
Kelly Colllnl. race car driver
12 Sunday, June 10, 2001 • Spona Editor RogerCariion • 949..57"'4223 •Sports Fax: 949-6500170 Doily Pilot
• CdM High product has been spraying a lot
of champagne lately with the pit crews as he
prepares for upcoming 24 Hours at Le Mans.
RJchardDuM
DAILY PILOT
W1th his white cowboy hat and racetrack gear
featuring GM Good.wrench, you'd never guess that
Kelly Collins grew up in Corona del Mar.
But Collins, one of six factory drivers for Corvette, is' not
only living a childhood dream of racing the world's fastest
cars, he's rapidly becoming a star.
Not here, pf course, in the )4nd of Land Cruisers and
"Beemers, •but across the Atlantic.
"There's a lot more superstardom in Europe than the
United States,* he said. "Here, you're just another guy at
Starbucks.• .
Around Newport Beach, Collins stays "low and avoids
the radar,* but in his weekend asphalt accelerations in the
American Le Mans Series, he's pushing record speed.
Collins, 36, will race in what he calls •the biggest race in
the world• next weekend in France, "the 24 Hours at Le
Mans, in which he recorded a podium finish last year in his
debut in a Corvette C5-R by taking third place.
A decade ago, Collins made the transition from off-road
racing to road racing, and, for the last five years, has raced
sports cars.
·1 had the competitive edge, and I knew how to race
whatever it was, but the hardest part was that I had to learn
how to control race cars on asphalt and slow down my
aggressiveness and anxieties,• said Collins, who went from
racing Ultimate Buggies in the Nevada desert to Formula
One cars.
Collins, who has been with his current employer,
General Motors, for two years, following a three-year run
with Porsche, was Dale Eamhardt's teammate in the racing
legend's second-to-last race in February at the R<>lex 24 at
Daytona, along with Dale Earnhardt Jr. and Collins' regular
Corvette teammate, Andy Pilgrim.
The team placed fourth as the late Earnhardt, who died
in a NASCAR crash later that month, made what would
tum out to be his final podium finish.
Collins, who has sprayed champagne with many a pit
crew, joined Team Corvette in 1999 at the Petit Le Mans, a
race he won in 2000 in the GTS Class as part of a banner
year, after winning the Rolex 24 at Daytona and the 24
Hours at Sebring inJhe'GT Class in 1999.
ln 1998, Collins scored his first GT Series win in the
September Sebring event and finished second in the
Watkins Glen 6 Hours the same year, racing for Porsche.
Collins emerged on the racing scene in the 1990 Barber
Saab Pro Series, then moved on to sedan competition. In
1993, he finished fifth in the Sports Car sedan division
points standings with a victory at Road America, followed
in 1994 with a sixth-place point ranking with a win at Road
Atlanta and a third-place ranking in 1995 with a win at
Phoenix.
•Most people in the United States, they know about
NASCAR and Indy cars and drag racing, but not too much
about sports cars,• said Collins, who has also raced for
BMW, Toyota and Honda.
Collins, who lives in Corona del Mar, grew up riding
motorcycles in the dirt, mostly in •drainage ditches• and in
Yucca Valley, where his mother lived.
•I was jumping bicycles and crashing as a kid,• Collins
said.
"I still like dirt,* added Collins, who learned over the
years that motocross and off-road racing didn't pay as well
as road racing.
Collins, who graduated from CdM High in 1983, started
GAEG FRY I OAlY PlOT
Corona del Mar's Kelly Colllns, with his favorite
subject. and perhaps (below), bis favorite photo from
home wtth the late, and legendary, Dale Earnhardt
racing when he was 7, after watching his father, Joe, and
his father's friends tackle the desert stretches on two
wheels.
"They were my idols,• said Collins, who began racing
off-road vehicles at age 17.
Collins, who is single, had endured his share of bumps
and bruises, especially in dirt bike crashes, but said he
figures to have another four or five years on the Le Mans
circuit, "then you never know, maybe I'll become a 1V
personality.•
Day
Mr. Irrelevant•
Week XXVI,
Tevtta
Ofahengaue, •
seen here
wtth his four
favorite
subjects, ls the
focal PQlnt of
Irrelevant
WeekXXVI.
He arrives
June 18 amid
a fanfare at
the Newport
Dunes for the
Arrival Party.
• Serious complications for irrelevant Week
are survived, thanks to some quick thinking.
NEWPORT BEACH -Thanks to some quick thinking by
Irrelevant Week authorities, a potential disaster for Survival
Day, the final day of Irrelevant Week X:XVI's five-day salute to
Mr. Irrelevant, Tevita Otahengaue, has been avoided.
Because of the site of the event. the Palace Park in Irvine,
which will feature wacky golf, bumper boat relays, go-cart
races, laser tag, and other virtual reality games, fears that com-
petitors would be bringing bumper stickers for the bumper
cars, promoting an international airport on the site of the aban-
doned Marine Corps Air Station in nearb~ El Toro, sparked
rumors of a possible cancellation of the event.
The area, which' had been the home of MCAS for some 50
or 60 years, has been deemed unfit for airplaries by local resj-
dents since.the facility was shut down, citing various dangers
to 'sOc:iety, such as noise and pollution.
And, with John Wayne Airport in nearby Newport Beach
available, with room to expand to the S<?~~ a~. ~ta An.a
Heights, lhe Back Bay and on ~to Newport Bay itself, what
possible reason would anyone want to bring Irvine, Lake Fod
est, Laguna Hills and other various structures within earshot of
noisy airplanes? 1
The rumor of potential bumper stickers being smuggled
into the Irvine area by Newport Beach citizens, raised som4f
serious questions, il not terror, into some South County parti•
sans bent on preserving MCAS as a 7-million acre park. •
However, it has been confirmed that no plans are beind
made for bumper stickers for the bumper cars, according to a
blue-ribbon committe of Irrelevant Week revelers. ,
•0ur stickers are strictly Irrelevant Week XXVI stickers,~
said a prominent Lldo Isle resident.
Meanwhile, the countdown has reached Day 8 for Irrele-
vant Week XXVI with Ofahengaue, a 6-foot-3, 255-pound
tight end out of Brigham Young University, the focal point. •
He was chosen last in the college draft by the Arizona Car•
dinals and has been working out in training camp the past
week.
He's due to arrive in Newport Beach June 18 and will be
wined anc\ <lined that evening at the Arrival Party, celebrated
at the Newport Dunes, starting at 5:30 p.m .
Ofahengaue, too, has tacitly vowed that he'll bring no
bumper stickers promoting an El Toro airport. . • ·Dodgers reign su}>reme in Bronco play, 12-2! . ' · Prime time : •Too many weapons on 'Big Blue's' side as they
take the championship over surprising Red Sox
in Newport Harbor Baseball Association action.
Tony Altobelli
DAILY PILOT
NEWPORT. BEACH -J'be
Dodgers showed just how
powerful a combination qual-
ity pitching, stellar defense
and powerful offense is with a
12-2 mercy-rule win over the
Red Sox in Saturday's New-
port Harbor Baseball Assoda-
. tion Bronco Division (ages 11-
12) cbampiorisbip game, held
at Mariners Park.
The 10-run win is the third
straight mercy-rule win by
the Dodgers in the playoffs.
•it's been an awesome sea-
ton, • a drenched but happy
Dodgers Coach Ran D'Cruz
said, shortly after getting
doUMd by a healthy portion
of Ice water. "We've got three
awe10me pltchert and our
offense bu been really bit-
ting the b81l hard all seuon
long.•
Por the Reei Sox. their
~ble nm from worst to
tint came • gmme lhort. After ClnilldDd Jalt tn the reguW ......... s. CllDI alive In
the playa& and ct.Wed the
way to lbi .. Sfllm· . -:AQ ,.r. ... WMn ..
w..Jalml, ...... ...,
gmne, • Coeda JGilm ...._.
'
llOICO
sald~yv'e got hot at just the
righrume, but today, we siln-
ply tali out Qf gas. I'm so
proud of th~~layers. They
never stop~· belie\fing in
themselves.•
But it was the Dodgen
who found the scoreboard 1n
the first inning, jumping out
to a 3-0 advantage. Jan Good-
win. Dan Winkle and Jerry
Whitney each bad RBI hits,
while Eric Paine, R.J. D'Cruz
and Wmkle scored the runs.
After a scoreless second
inning, the Dodgen went
back to work in the thlld
inning. Paine singled and
ICOred on a triple by Good·
win.
Two batten later, Janett
t>enlel, upon request from an
exdted parent, 14\ibched a
tw~run bome nm over the KAN HWR/DMY "°' ::.:1'1W::'! ;:8 ::1ci Dadl111'COdMaD'Qa._..JmnllO.-..._belbigg9datwo-nmbomena.
ecored Oil enotber RBI bitnten. The Mid batter, .......... ~ bti MC• tblld bit. e liDgle tc; Wt.
Whitney, makb19 the ICOIW, = smltb. ..... ID ODii claable~ .....-cSoWD 11ae DOdgin c:loMcl out 7~ wWa n DI tm llft4IM JIM ad Woukl Mr lt'Ortno. tn the bOC1iDi1a Of The R.ed Sos tried ....,, aittiDg ... lmd ID =::. • a .. bf ~ tbe Mb. WlnkJe *9e11 and
mount • comebeck m 7-a. .... ,_. :~ Wiiia llole--.. ad tblld. Wldt-
rowtb. Matt fWflkb WM lilt ..... Da_ .. ii:-:-..: .: ~ ~-lNb!----teaDDd. by•~andtc:aredODA ......... 41 ID-lll!.IDgup~~ ..... W·boP triple by INlt .............. ••1 ._ bf AIM ONil-
PLAYERS .
-liiiii
D bur
co.
Winkle Md tbrei bMI
three rum iicXnct ~
two bltl uad ......
IClrido bOoctwtu w ............. :..-a.....-Mll
'
Doily Pilot SPORTS SUndoy, June 10, 2001 13
Pacific Coast League edges Sea View
•Locals shine on both sides
during 6·4 victory the Pacific
Coast League in All·Star
duel at Windrow Park.
Tony Altobefll
DAILY Plwr
IRVINE-In a g_a.me saturated with N~rt-Mesa high school baseball
standouts, the Pacific Coast League
AD-Stars edged the Sea View League
AD-Stars, 6-4, at Saturday's fifth annu-
al South County Showcase, held at
Windrow Park.
With 12 PCL standouts from Coro-
na del Mar, Costa Mesa and Estancia
high schools as well as four Newport
Harbor standouts on Sea View's side
of the field, there were plenty of
heroes on both sides of the field.
It was the Sea Kings who got the
PCL's offense going early. ln the top of
the first inning, Dave Knecht led off
with a double to right-center and Wes
Hockinson followed by taking a slow
curv~ ball off the side of bis helmet,
puttihg runners on first and second
with nobody out.
After University's Jay ~ichols
moved the runners up with a
grounder, CdM's Eric Snell drove a
triple in to the right-center. field gap,
scoring bis CdM teammates.
Another Sea King, Andrew Johns,
brought in Snell with a sacrifice fly to
center and the PCL led, 3-0.
•The CdM kids had prom to go to,
so we stuffed all of them in the begin-
ning of the game,· CdM Coach John
Emme said of his coaching strategy.
After a shaky first inning, Newport
Harbor's Joel Brown worked a 1-2-3
second inning and was relieved by
Sailor teammate Chris Ward, who
pitched two scoreless innings with
three strikeouts.
The Sea View League cut the lead
to 3-2 in the third inning. After Irvine's
Chad Hazlett singled to right, New-
port's Alan Lane fQllowed up with a
single of bis owrf. TWo batters later,
"fravis Otott of Irvine ripped a double
to score two runs.
It was a matter of missed opportu-
nities for the Sea View League, which
left 14 runners on base in the nine·
inning contest.
The game remained 3-2 before the
Sea View League tied the score in the
seventh. Laguna Hills standout Brian
Anderson reached on a fielder's
choice, advanced two bases on a wild
pitch and scored on a passed ball.
That momentum was short-lived,
however as the PCL answered right
back in the top of the eighth.
Costa Mesa's Daniel Hunter (1 for
2) reached base on an infield single
and advanced to third on a double by
Estanda's Armando Ortiz. The local
duo came around to score on a triple
by Nichols, who would eventually
score on an RBI grounder by Laguna
••
Beach's John Verdugo.
•1 was a genius for letting Nichols
swing with a 3-0 count, huh?• Emme
said jokingly. •That's just more bril-
liant coaching on my part.•
. Despite giving up a ninth-inning
run, Costa Mesa's Carlos Franco man-
aged to close out the ninth inning
after playing all nine positions during
the game.
Other locals who took part in the
all-star gathering include Newport's
Garrett Brant (0 for 2), Costa Mesa's
Josh Feldman (0 for 1) and Steven
Shores (0 for 2, two putouts at third
HIGH SCHOOL
lll·STIRS BASEBALL
Sea View League starter Erle Snell
of Corona del Mar cuts lo~se with
a pitch in the early going of Satur-
day's duel. At left, Coron a del Mar
infielder Wes Hocldnson throws to
first after getting a sliding Alan
Lane of Newport Harbor.
base), Estanda's Brent Davis (0 for 2,
four inrungs at catcher) and Cd.M's
Rory McKeever (0 for 1). CdM's
Cavan Cuyler was named to the
team, but did not play.
SOUTH COUNTY SHOWCASE
PAORC CoAsT 6, Su VIEW 4
Pacific Coast 300 000 030 -6 8 4
Sea View 002 000 101 -4 12 1
Snell, Stoneking (3), Verdugo (5), Homer
(7). Oy-Buncio (8), Franco (9) and McKeever,
Davis (3), Hunter (5). Davis (7), Franco (8),
Davis (9); Brown, Ward (3), Oifley (5), Smith
(7), M iller (8), Hazlett (9) and Brant. DeVries
(5). W -Horner. L -Miller. 5v -Franco. 28 ·
Knecht (PCL.), Ortiz (PCL), Otott (SVL.), de
Vries (SVL). 38 -Snell (PCL.), Nichols (PCL).
Seeking
out the
Sailors
• Class of '73 Jamie
Holmes would like to
start up annual tourna-
ment, similar to Corona
del Mar's alumni bas-
ketball get-together.
NEWPORT BEACH -
Newport Harbor High 1973
graduate Jamie Holmes is
looking to start an annual
alumni basketball tourna-
ment and former Sailor play-
ers are needed.
The tournament would
take place July 28 and the
eight-team tournament would
consist of two teams from the
1970s, three from the '80s and
three from the '90s.
The tournament would be
sinular to Corona del Mar's
annual Jack Enion Memorial
Basketball Tournament, now
entering its 13th .year of exis-
tence.
For information, call
Holmes at (949) 642-7913.
GRAD
Let them know how proud you are!
IRRELEVANT WEEK XXVI
ALL-SPORTS LOWSMAN TROPHY. BANQUET
HONORING
A special page will publish in the Daily Pilot on Wednesday,
June 20th to honor our graduates. For your daughter, son, friend or
special someone be a part of this tribute for only $19.00. Fill in the
form below and mail it to us with their photo. Be sure to put the name
and address on the back of the photo and we'll return it to you.
THE LAST DRAFT CHOICE OF THE NFL
Tuesday, June 19, 2001
Six o'clock reception
Seven o'clock dinner and program
The Newport Marriott
900 Newport Center Drlv~, Newport Beach
Yes, I will attend ...
Please reserve All-Pro tables of ten @$1500.
(Includes premiere seating and gift pack)
Please reserve All-League tables of ten @ $1000.
Please reserve ____ tickets@$100 per person.
Total$ ___ _
Please make cheek payable to: IRRELEVANT WEEK
No, I cannot attend ...
I've enclosed a tax-deductible contribution. $ ____ ,
Name _____ __..,;,,....__~--------:--------:---~---:-
Address __________________ ~_------~-----~--
C~ISale/Zlp __ _._~~~,.__..:__--.---_._____,~---~~
~ml Telephone ( ) _______ ............ ~ ______ ........, __
E-nllil . _________________ -... ___ .........,........._ ___ ~_
Pm. eraa. flll'llS' rmnas on a~ pm of paps.
GRADUATE'S INFORMATION
Graduate's Namt: _________ _
'School Namt: _________ _
About the graduatt: Hobbits, inttrtsts or fature plans
(Limittd fQ 40 word mtSS1Zge}
Submitttd by: _______ _
Atldrtss: ____ ....;,_ ____ _
Crttlit urJ No.:. ____ . Exp.:_
Sip.411m for crtdit cm/:'----------
(If JOG~ 1" mymdc. Sl9c~hi.dt~.,iWyNOt.1
, '2 '!I I 3 IM
...
•
ONE FOR Tiii IOOK
TP•UA
•Six-year-old Jacob Knapp comes through
with rare baseball feat in a Costa Mesa
American Little League contest.
Six-year-old Jacob Knapp was minding his own busi-
ness at shortstop during a recent Costa Mesa American
Uttle League Machine Pitch Division game wben a line
drive came screaming toward him.
The bases were loaded and there were no outs. Not
even rattled by the situation, Knapp snagged the line shot,
tagged out the runner heading to third and alertly ran over
and stepped on third base for an unassisted µiple play.
•The really cool thing about all ol it was that be knew
what he was doing,• Jacob's mother, Jennifer, said.
•After he stepped on the bag, he rolled the ball back to
the pitcher's mound and jogged Qff the field as cool as can
be.·
Just how rare is an unassisted triple play? In the history
organized Major League Baseball, there have been only
12 unassisted triple plays, the most recent coming May 29,
2000 by Randy Velarde of the Oakland A's against the
New York Yankees.
-by Tony Altobelli
Looking back on Red Sox turnaround
NEWPORT BEACH -'ralk about a YOUTH llSEIALL
twnaround.
The Red Sox, mired in last place during the regular
season, advanced to the Newport Harbor Baseball
Association Bronco Division title game with a 6-1 semifinals
win over the Cardinals.
The pitching trio of Brock Schuler, Spencer Smith and
Brett Houten combined to face only four batters above the
minimum and allowed three hits.
Stephen Keitzer made two sparkling catches in center
field, while Matt Helfrich came through with strong play at
first base.
Seven different Red Sox players combined for 11 hits,
while strong, all-around play was displayed by Kyle Kula,
Michel Thagard, Matt Kretchmar and Cody McDonald.
. .
Race for Cure Team Captain Kickoff June 26
The Susan G. Komen Breast Cancer Founda-IUlllllllG
tion's Race for the CW'e will hold its Team Captain
Kickoff June 26 at 16 Corporate Plaza in Newport Beach ...
Hosted by Northern lhlst, the Kickoff will take place from
noon to 2 p.m. and again from 6-8 p.m. .
Among the topics discussed will be how to start and grow
and team, goal setting, timelines, pledge prizes, registration
information, awards, photos, tailgate parties and competition
categories.
The 10th Anniversary Komen Orange County Race for the
Cure, which raises money to fight breast cancer, is being held
Sept. 23 at Fashion Island.
For information, call (714) 957-0165, followed by option #2.
Index
II .....
!I .......
SERVICE DIREcroRY
-For Al Your Heme lftd luMMll Netck -............ Iii ....... .
$J1 ..... "'_, .................... ,.
A .11~·1111 EOUAI. llOUSlllO ._ ____ _.
Of'PORTUNITY ONE p
1n ~"~ ac::= HOME BUYING
10 the ftderal Fw Housing SUPERSTORE
AC1 ol 1968 H 'mended ri. u 'Mtl M-trtr.n °""'1 whiCh maQI rt •"Oii lo .,.,, · -• ~
llMc1ile •any prrftrtnct, I 00!6 ~ Eszat t.cms
llmltltion Of dlsa1minatlon fft ~ ""'
blsed on race. color, l"lllfl· ~ ~ ""' GM. Ion, MX. handlc.lp, tainlllal o-. Usl VA E. FKl. Nus or national ongin. or "'""' 1n lflft11tion 10 mau eny '-'tlcome f..11 areas
auc:ll Ptlfertnce, limi\111on nlml C.-. ~ or chcrimlnltion •
l 1111 ntWq)lplf W1n not 1114J SJ4.llOO 24 rrs knowingly accept any adverllument tor rul ataet wllltll It In vlolltlon
ol lht law. Our radtta .,,
hereby lnlormtd that '" OWtlllngs IOVeltlMd In tllll ~art Mila* on ..,..,=°'l>Uls. To com n of dltertmt. nation, HOO loll Ir• al 1-800-424-4590.
r71ll ' . ..
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181111,_AY
Moftu.y .. Chapel
Ctwnetlon
Vtttralf Real &tate Sor!1f ~Wt
EMAIL:VI'~
", "T -.. _.,,_ .,. ..
t.. Ci._ .. ,,,·..1. ,. ~ ' .. '
,
Front Row YR of Bey,
ac.i ' c..... OPEN SAT.suN 14
1019 Dolphlft Tln9CI
front l'OW .. of a.,,
oc:.1 I clllllNi
48r 38r 3 C# gnge.
on a ovtrllzed lot
$2,500,000
Mt.378-0813
•
. . _,
• . . .
SPORI'S
Dodgers
rule, 10-3
• NHBA Mustang I
division team in charge
from start to finish.
Stew Vlr9'ft
DAILY PILoT
NEWPORT BEACH -The
team concept was on full dis-
play in the Newport Harbor
Baseball Association's Mus-
tang (ages 9-10) Division title
game between the Dodgers
and the Mariners at Kaiser
Elementary Saturday.
The Dodgers (18-3) used a
combined effort that led them
to a 10-3 victory for the cham-
pionship.
The Mariners (16-7), how-
ever, would not have reached
the title game without team-
work. After finishing fourth
during the regular season,
they earned a shot at the
championship by taking the
long route in the playoffs,
overcoming two losses with
five wins.
Meanwhile, the Dodgers
remained in first from start to
finish. They were always the
team to beat.
After the championshj.p
victory, Dodgers Manager
Mike Griffin distrlbuted tro-
phies to his players and hand-
ed out the game ball.
He told his team: •This
game ball goes to the team
because this was a team
effort.•
The Dodgers scored five
runs in the bottom of the first
inning. The five runs is the
maximum allowed in the
Mustang division and the
Dodgers gave up their at-bat
with only one out. Garrett
McRoberts started things off
with a huge triple and would
score after an error, for the
Dodgers' first run.
Daniel Norris, Jeff Frum,
Brendan Cluck and VictoT
Done also scored as Done laid
a sweet bunt to get on base,
earning an RBI.
Prt ......
PllYllS
The Mariners held the
Dodgers in check until the
fifth inning when the
Dodgers reached the maxi-
m\Jm five runs again.
This time, Frum stepped
up with a bases-clearing dou-
ble, whiCh scored Norris,
McRoberts and David Panas.
Peter Thomsen also scored in
that inning and Chris Griffin's
RBI scored Frum.
The Mariners scored oae
run in the second inning and
two more in the fifth. Short-
stop Adrian Rodriguez, who
led off with a single, scored
Macky Gaulschi's RBI. Then,
in the fifth, Garrett Morgan
used some savvy base-run-
ning after an error in the out-
field and rounded the bases
after his fly ball. Keegan
Ju.kosky also scored. He sin-
gled, stole two bases and
Zachary Cbocek's RBI single
brought him in.
Chris Griffin pitched the
first three innings for the
Dodgers, allowing just two
hits as he struck out four.
Bow to Plaee A
OASSmoAD
0
Daily Pild . I
Dodgers clJWn AA ·
title with hot bats ·
•The NBLL team
thrives on momentum
to defeat Sox, 13-4.
Stew Virgen
DAILY PllDT
NEWPORT BEACH -Tbe
Newport Beach Uttle
League's Dodgers broke
away from a 2-2 tie to claim a
13-4 victory over the Red Sox
in the AA Division champi-
onship game at Lincoln Ele-
mentary Saturday.
In the top of the third
inning, the Dodgers' David
Weiland broke the tie when
he smashed a two-run triple.
An error allowed him to cross
the plate after he brought in
Nick Flam.son and Francesco
lmpagliazzo.
Welland's huge bit seemed
to enliven his teammates as
they used the momentum to
score three runs in the fifth
and five more in the sixth.
•They just hit great today,•
Manager George Lo9an said
of his Dodgers. •Their atti-
tude has been great all sea-
son. Whenever there was a
pressure situation, they
always came through."
Pitcher Kyle Danese, who
is better known as "Iceman·
because Logan says he's so
cool under pressure, relieved
the Dodgers of a pressure sit-
uation in the fifth inning.
He struck out a Red Sox
batter with two outs and the
bases loaded.
Manager Bart Thomsen 's
Red Sox scored one run in the
inning when Parker Werline
thumped an RBI single to
bring in Joshua Harrison.
The Red Sox (11-2-3) took
a 1-0 lead after the first
inning. Will Morrow led off
with a double and scored
after Werline earned his first
RBI.
The Dodgers (18-6), how-
ever, answered with two runs
in the second. Danese and
Chris Burke scored as Burke
Pi'l111etl111e PLIYERS -:-=-= ...... ~~ ~(£.
J ~ , ....... ~
Se~DO .Geotg9Logln ~0.-.Rob
~end Mk:hMI Ran.a
laNS.
' Wll Moti'Oilt 2S,.,.. V'tWtN . s 119blhomM!n
15Wlllon~
• 11..nn.n Andenon
24 J.I. s.lem
ll~HM!son , , JldlJe Andinon
2 Andttw conger
7 ,...Merttil =:== ~StewKwong
and Karl Aetcher picked uP
an RBI ·each.
Flamson tied the score
after Harrison's RBI and then
the Dodgers' bats came alivf
Danese, Chase Nuge14t
and Pletcher scored a run
each in the fifth and t?te
Dodgers put the game out of
reach when Flamson, Jarrett
Logan, Weiland, Danese and
Burke tallied one run each \fl
the sixth. 1
Danese showed son¥!
more coolness in the clutcli.
taking down the Red ~9x
with the bases loaded and no
outs in the sixth. He led one
batter to an infield fly ball f6r
the first out. He then scooped
a ball from a burit and tossed
it home for the force-out. He
ended the game . when be
induced a groundout and the
Dodgers celebrated near th~it
dugout.
Ralf' aMl 11f'adlinM al'f' 11uli~ • Hhout llClllN' TI1r •
publa•litt rr~nr~ c.hr rip11 10 t'f'tl."(tl', ,,...io••ir)·· "'' iJw or l'f'IH I 1111\
f'W•irlf'd •1h't'rti"f'1JIMI. Pl~ n-pon IUl\' rm>r I.lull IUll) l:M' UI ~111.~ rl~-irlf'd ail linnwdia11'1~. TI"' Oi1lh· Pilm ar.'f'!•• 11<> IJ1ibili1~ for 1\11
rrror in ru1 Mh1'rliM'nW'nl for •birb h 11111~ hr l'l''11C>11'lhltt urf'f•I for"
tltr rost ol 11~ 11pM'f' ar1will) ~UJ•ifd by 1lw rm>r. (;fl'(lit r.an 0111\ '
llyft••~
(~Q) M2-5b78
9y M.atll Pet--111lo~r1l for tl1r fl~I iwttlion. ·
-
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. ...
:~.'\() \t r•I &, Stn"f'I
<A..111 \1,...,,, C'.A U'.lo27
\1\foopun111«1 • lo) " .......
Trl111ll(;11f' 8:30•m..,;,:00p111 , .............. .
\11'11fk .. fo K 30111,....."i:()("'"' '!>,....,...,-....,.
------Deadllae8 -----....
M<>nday ............ FriJay S:OOpm Friday .......... ThuMay 5:00pnt
Tursduy ......... Monday S:OOpm S4tunlay ........... Friday :s:00pnt
WeJnt:1Kfay .... TuCMl.ay 5:00pm Sunday ............. Friday 5~
Thul'IM.lay .• Wcdnet!day S:OOpm
l .
1-:.-..1
lelbol ..._, i-. v~
IWlllMBt 2S. Fum 2 ~ llom ...., S1750wl
Aon~9
...... llr .. Fp,2-91f, ~. 1 'I' lelet or ~ Ot'iy. 708.5 Illa. on-.. mt. then cal PMrlc* enm. l!ll. MN5&j705
1
1·=0 1
•Cute Cottage 28t 1 a..
1-c; r,'' patio, wd l*-upt, avl 7 1, no pe11. lie S 1895m
rid II !All 949-~ 1565
38r 211 ~wall ID
vlage, Frplc, WIO ~. ~·~"*" • 9-&40-5324
Open Svn 2-'. 281 1a. Fron! hell.-w/yld. lrg pdO,
1C gw = remodlled, no ~$1 ~= Cl Ally 94 s-
430 lt!lotrop!
Open Svn 2-4, 28r 1Ba
Fron"'°'*~· tcgw,= no ~SI ~= Cl Ally IM 75-
430 llllioVoo9
l1'°d!.l l
38r 2h "°'* !!pl, lg yd.
rid m A'IM r'O# S14SO 7 Rola St Mlly 0
T ortll A!y 7 I 4-540-1'355
E lie» 2tlf 2 5b1 TwnlV!l nr 8ldt Bly & oc laltp.rlCll WIO ,...,.,, pool. tpa. frpl
QI! $1$50 71~
..... 38r ue. llWCIO,
OIW. WIO hk'\.1111. clJI car all rn· no IVC Avl//A June 20 80MAo Cd tor ~ lo viiw 2110 Thunn Ave
jVICtOntMv) 949-63' ~
11k o.e.dled c::r Wlltl pno. ' ,,.. lo c.d1 cer1,s frig. llOYe McJve.ln IPIClllt S840 t dip 12 mo 1tue (No P•) 133 E. ,. .. MN41-2U1
Have A
Call the Piiat
Cla•elfled• ·
at EB4BJ B4 ·15B7B
t:a Place Vaur
•
Garage B le Adi
~ .........
lleedl bloC:t • lbr, .. 1115·1/1 • 120,000
• ?!M9N11f * .. .
• -• I ..
:'"'.. ,..J
j .. 1 • .. ;: ." -..._ ...:
Older Stwt. Furniture
PIANOS l eon.ctiblft . .....,_._
• --.,.,.. • OMc.,........
$$ CA91t PAID $$ .................
WE llUY E9TAT£8
• tnwnediMa lriondly-.ic.
. corJSIGfJM.ErJ.TSl
. . .. I
. ,. " j
1-=-1
R>R SALE II
2 ~Color rv. wJAemcM. 13in. s11xv ...
RCA llh $50.
3 VCR's .. tor $100.
Cll Richl!d, 949-57~
TOP S$1/RECOROSI Jazz. R & 8, SolA, Rock, * 50's & 80'• MllC£ ~7505
~.,....--··· ~ -. .
(. ,,_u.. -T~ cot
NANNY/HOUSEICEEPER
NPB. Uv•ln, 2 young
dtien ~ tpNlcrlg. refs~4
RECEPTIONIST
Ptrt·lime p11manen1
~~=:::.:.: ci;;.~ul and positive
..... J*'IOll tor Ql6 lnll'll
olfict Good Clilncej ....
bl Ible IO ll'iMlllCI wel Wllh
IM public T 11dtOon11
1w1tchboard upenenc.
....... ...
>~
........ .., ....
of -DD11b$l lat a.a .... ._.
8ee.r ...... .. ,_, .,..,. you .....
111y __,or.._
tor ~ ~
llld 111••oc1.., OOllhctl ...... you
1lgn .
CANOY ROUTE
$3,000IMO. ll"lllldc:)
20 IO"..AL Vlrldng .....
no CC1't•14lllrWlllO ..... Cllll,.....
1.-...-i1 (241nl
AISOlun CASH GOLD
MINDI SO Downl N.t
$481( • WOlll etn. Clndr
VENOING 1W In (Orlngl
County) Toll FrH
1~72-6195 24M
ALL CASH VENOINO
ROUT£ 20 • loc't GI.-
Income' S3K • '5K. Milll
... ~ &'30. 1-t00-371Ml15 2Alwt Mlplul Drug ICrMninc>'
physlc:et required EOE I .. ----.--... 1=91 Ruume 10 •
949-&31-7246 or Miid IO ---V*"t Slerlz 0 Olly Pb.
330 West Bly StrMt.
Colle Mesi, CA 92G27
~IJllEI)
1t·s the ·toludoo
yOu'tt 9Clltthln& for-whether
you'tt seeking a
home, apartment.
pct or new
occupat1onl
FIND
TODAY'S SUNDAY PU·ZZLE
ACROSS
1 Payout
8Guy
10 Walk In a parade
15Men
20Soonder
21 Gllatened .Z/~ct.y
23ResidMce
24~'1ane?
25Nota IOUI
28 Type ot boom
27&dmat9
28 ~IQ lnMc:t
301<Mn
32 Egypt!M god
33SurpriMI
35Frost
38V«Ve
38 Adi« Howard
40 On Soc. Sec.
41 -down roota:
Mctle
43 H.H. Mooto'a
pen name
47 Golf ltandard
"8 Buebell'I WlMiaml .a Fllhlng boet
62 Turtdlh dignllaty
54Y~
55 Reftaetiol 11
57 Ollello'• toe
158Bobieaa eo CNnga .n. co1or ot llglln
S28Wngrope
e3SUNd
94 c..i ot aong
85 Arctc .,... •• 91 88Ae!Mae
81GcMltr\
• Olat ot h mebr 70 ldltalod ..,.,....
73 v ...... ,...,.
70 bltedd
TT,__Miol
• 1 io. "" grtta• ._.,
S28t*9eoAQNen
83 Paid alhlet9
84 Aatonlehed
86 RllW metal
87 Church oftical
89Aloof
93 Klde' card game
94 Type of matMt
95 u..u Slringl
96 Singer Diamond
97 Type of number
100 Not•
100None
104 Off in a oorrw
105 AnlmaJ ~?
109 Shade ot )'9low
110 Bridge authottly
111 Not • WOfUhollc
112Alet
113 "Eutekal"
114 Meeger
118 B&a>ble
117-and tonic
118 Spec
119Pula on
121 Vital tta1istlc
122~ ••. g.
124 Uncle s.m·.
aharw
125S1*:t!M
126 Cootcbook amt.
1280odge
130 High-9itched
132 spc.111Ck Item
1 :rt lmeglnary
142 CelM1lal hun*
143 Mine depoeitl
144r:....
146 P\"Oft
14CS Bllllroom d9nce
147 Opeme a car
14'8 -down: got
quiet 1.a TNnk you. In
MonlrMI
160 Aun, • cok>t9
151 8llMI' or Scout
162t..ughs
153ae.dl-ir*
"""
DOWN
1 Thick carpet
2 Two ot a kind
3 Host ... Maxwell
4 W....uing hold
5 8outlque buy
6 CompoMr Fredenc
·7 &im, -mnos
8 Actr.aa Meata
9Equm.
10 Mu-'ifn temple
11 Sum
12 Hindu pMcesMI
13 Stytllh
14 Taxic8b
15 Houdini'. forte
16Lla up
170el
18 ".legged -·
19 Gardenet• 'Cui
21 "Sawed logS"
29 Long walks
31 "Gone -the Wtnd'
34EndMYof
38Hef0ic
:rt LhUa monk
38 HulNln, for one
41 -the Wlty: ...
42 And • job for
44 ActlOI Ray
45 Bout'• vlc:loty
44' Fateful day
"8~1Ndent .a Ondot'a IPOt
!50 CUtWd moldlng9
51 Wrttw Seftlng
52Snoope
53 Bickered
5'P.-
57Pr...ed
SI~
cell
58 Nowlllt a.tdner
81 ......, new Corsica
83Victu.ll
85 Youig doctor S'THIMne ....... eeu.t.n··~
70 Can. P'QY.
71 a,.., for ManolMI
72 Kiwra ext1net couaan
75Cholce
76Sleazy
78 Coeta def -
79 Belor9, poetically
80 Neptune'• kingdom 82-cardl • •'•time
88 Adoratlte
90 Lethargic
91 Arid
92~bW1ilb•
94Blundef
98H41dde
~ Yemeni city
100~
101 CWlyot'I tound
102 Better lat• -M¥9f
100 s.c10I'
104-Babe
106 Secr9t writing
107 Recognize
106~gemab-
110.JoQ
112TM-cnlcb
11 s Dogpatcti cartoonil1
116 Shon-Wed fashion
117Cloehed
120~1ligf'll
122 Gennent part
123 Puc:tc.-.d
124~
125~otple
127 Church council
128 Comee Murphy
129 Unocct !Ped
130 Smelly Cf1Gtf
131 Pa anrn.I
132 Stylllf 1 tool
133 -Alwf In Alie
, 34 -rM-of the
Ancient Mattnef'"
135 Ea1'y uomai.t 131S..lnh~
131 BeMelel°I F9lpe
1380oof9
140Typeot~
1410lange~
l
J,
'16 'su.idayi June_ 1_0, 2001 ·
Run your ad in the Newport Beach-Costa
Mesa Daily Pilot and the Huntington
Beach-Fountain Valley Independent to
reach over 100,000 homes. Fax.us this
form with your credit card # or mail with a
check today!
Run for a week! If your car does not sell,
we'll run it for another week FREEi
All for just $16'.
D YES, SELL MY CAR
t City
D MC o .... 0.1111•
..., __ Mika ----I.bill----
g~~ g :::=. 8~":... Fra ----a--a-·-o-c-. O•-o-,,.. Oi...-'°" Ot-O_,,_ a--OIW~ 0 0.-C..-o--o~-Cc-Oc.--
'$18b ·-•1--... Q,..._ a--a-.--
11811 to: Olllly Piiot 330 W Bay St. Costa Mesa, CA 92627
,..._, (949) 642·5678. l'u:: (949) 631~94
~ot
POLICY
tn lfl eflol1 IO olttr flt bell
l4IMce poalbll IO cu ~
IQ and ~. WI Wll reqwe Conlract~ #ho
edvertJse 111 lhe StMOt
OlractOl'f to lnClude lhelr
Contractors LlctnH
number Ill thetr ldYtf1lM.
ment Your co-optrltion le
greatly app!eclaltd
f220 ~,
OUICKBOOKS SETUP T ralnlng I Support
Boollkeeping seMces •vail MMK-75117
1-CARPENTRY I
A TO Z HAHOYMAN
tnstah. reface ctblnets
kilchtnlbllh/doot1/wllldows
Doug 714-546-7258
Gtnml ColltndiDg
ADAdditiom
AU Rmodeliag
KltcbtmlBatllrooms
WmdowrJDoors ,....,..wort
25 Yn. • ta:p..RISlllll
01t1 Ctll IJott It AU!
PC REPAIR Expert
mobile Mrvioe. Conlact
your friendly llCMlclan
Chris Vasi 0 949-642-0883
Cuetom Door Hanolno,
CUiiom modng. 9'*11 .....
cases 25Yrs ~rtr• U767020 <• I
Daily Pilot
I
ridge
a.. u a..., o.ao ..... ... .. • • .. .., ~ Lowmlet........ ..... .... (ll'tRI) IA• &.ft ~11) $12 ... (_,.., ..... ._.C......_ NAllM ..._..._.,
............. AT,AC,._...
(174111) 11',11'1 ,,...,.. ......
11411HHt (mff.f100 ~ M<MHl!I WHO NEF.DS ACF.Sf
.. ., u ·-CIClllo ..... ... .... ............... a... a.. Ollt lciil ... Low ......... ..
11111 ni. ... 00, lire lllW (1248111) $t2,MI FOflD T.-W In !!00 MHl!·mf NA.BERS AT, II;. Ml ,,.,
.. -,.. (7J4)11H10CI (~ ,,,,.,.,. ...
~ ,... od1 Cdllc .... .. .... .... 1a
sell: ml, Ol'e -· load. a.Nit ~ .... $20.00Q d>o t!W5!-0711 (833148) $15.888 · Ford TMI*'*" ..
NAHftS AT/AC, P/pwf, M11oon Orly
lllW alC9I '" SI-. (!U)640:!10CI (P182e) ~
blllt, .. powtr, 00, amt Scll#I COllll Aa.n ........ .c '11 ... condition, 125k rrillH. CHEVY COAVETTE '84 800·H-ACURA • suoo 94H1'3= t!!5 WNta, m 1111, N.7a1obo. • a cyt, .:;.:i jlOWtf wtn·
CADUAC CATERA 'II !!tMTl!O Hondil :r-J If '00 ~=, = .=:
While, 1111 ""*· tldlll CHEVY CORVE1TE '95 (OOMMJ 111,m ..... _ ............ __.,,........_ __ _
Bad'I wlnmble. West deals.
NORTH •. uo o '31
WEST
•917 <:1 7
o AKO • 65431
EAST
0 9832
•AKJ'7
• KJ654l <:1 9854
0 l04
•8
(054840) fle,988 Triple blectl, .... 7811 T'**"9 Aot11ne
HAIERS Mti.; 115,710/0bo. lll·ffHl!Z
SOlTf H
•Q3 <:1 AKOJ10
...,... S201 weeon,.. o J76!
7 ... ,.,, CO Cllanger, • Q It (114)540-ttOO 94~1180 _C.-.C--. ...... ..-o.vtle---...._'01_ HONDA ACCORD 'fl
Low 12K .... Whllt, CO ~L~ '15 = ~:::,., 4:;l ~~'::I 8:i The bidding: ,,_ 11 71~7158. WP.ST NORTH
(114230) 129,988 (P1452A) W -OWW, rul\t •• MAIERS Soui1 COMt Acw1 U70CVo41o. MMlt~ (714) 14H100 ec»-M-ACURA
CADILLAC Eldondo '17 INFllTY 04S '12
T .,........ CO ....,. Clvy* 8ebl1ng Conv 'II 4-dr, Sllwr, Mo, AC OIK, ,_.,.\It, , """' YCAJI IUllll'lltr II.WI lnh 9'I\. (2t195A) -._
(807Sl8) 117,eea Chlmp1gMl\an letther. Soulh COMt Acur11
HA.HRS AC, pcl, pe, pO, pw, tilt. IOMl-ACURA (7H)MO:t100 11«80 CW, MW brakes,
Cailllc Sedlrl o.v-. '12 pcl, .... cond, $14,500 obo Mt-72S-140I btlge. 1111 lelhf, ct.I
(20e884) se.eea cno llltrCldla l!Jeftz ..,
HAIEllS Whl1e/'Belge (714)540:!100 (73Mll) $28,995
C.-.0 Sedlrl o.v-. .., Mercedtl Binz of
Low ml, "It tu, 11'1 ~-"=
(233192) $8,988 www.mb1dlrtct.com HAIERS ' (714)540-1100 EICOft Wegon LX '93
Low llOk mllla, very deen, wt 949-721-2'415 $3100
D20 Mercedtl Benz '97
Jaguar XJA .. 5411 ml, ..._, v...., ..
books, ~. blk/CfNll'I Allio. pe, •
lh. CO, onD9d ncWln*. (P1f•) Ml50. lika new,-~.995, vlnl Soulll COMt Acurl
461255, tn warr. tVll Oe !OMf.ACURA
M11J Bkrs 949-586-1 aaa
lillNllltll Montero ..
Jeguer XJA 't5 5411 ml, ,..,,_~) W, AC,11~...,.
books, reoordl, blk/cream ~·-..,_
... .. .... 2<:1. ... ...
Opening lead: King of•
The wofid's grcatCSI delectivc and
the dlronicler of his adventures were
sitting in their sc~y. · · 81 two cupt OC hoc t.ea or !hem by
Mrs. Hudson. S oclc Holmc5
sccmcd in a reverie while Dr. Wa130n was going over the soomcard of their
bridge pine earlier tb8I day 81 the
clob. MBle.u me, Holmes, .. the good doc·
tor rernal'bd. '1bal play on board
four was cmainly spectacular, but
you were lucky that it 5\ICCCCdcd! ..
It was obvious this rcmarlc arllcd Holmes. "Don't be silly, Walson." he
responded tatily. "11 was elemen·
tary."
The auction WM fairly routine if
you are Pf'Cl)l:l'ed co llCOepC Wauoo '•
r.iJe of Aoline$ '• major-suit respcne wilh only thrco<ard JUPpOrt. llO(t low
onea • lhllt. Whb mostlj prime cudl cooceoll1led In two auus Ind a ruff·
in& value, we favor that w:tlon.
South's raiae IO Jame was routine.
West led lbe kma of clubs and con-
tinued with lbe ace and jack, declam-
rutrma. The ace Ind klna of hearu were cashed, and Wc~1·s splde dis-
card slowed Holmes, but only for a
moment. From that point on, play
~ apiice and declarer raked
111 10 tricks. Holmes drew two~
rounds of trumps dbcardlng the ace
of spades from dummy on I.he lull
Dummy's thrtle high diamonch were
cleared, and a spade was led from the
table. East l'O!ie with the king. but
then had to resu.11eitate decfater's
lwld. allowing South to ICOf'C the
queen o"f spades and ,ack of dia-
monds.
MHad trumps not broken 4-1,
Wauon, I could have claimed the
contract. Now. I bad to find an entry
bldt IO hand after drawing trumps IO
cash the Jllcic of diamonds. Wcsi, a
pa.ucd hand. had already shown up
with length Ind 8 points Ill clubs and
a sangleton heart. Witb a giwded
king of spades as welt West would
swc.ly have opened the biddin&!
1bat made It easy IO 9CC tliat the
queen of spades had to be an entry to
hand as long I jcnisoned the ace from
dummy. lbere wu no way East
could avoid giving me the lead, since
the defender was known to be down
to nothing but ~ ...
GrMn/Parchment
(~ s.ni~·-:-=.:.=
llhr. co. garaged llOIVllTlk. Soulh CoMt Aewl
Ake · new,-$23,995, vinl 800-fl..ACURA I
11
I ::55ek!'-~';a Oe -MUZO_...,MtrClldll......_. ............ llnz----.. -• cm -~
JEEP aiEROKEE 'Ill Sllvtr/Or•r • -• -
GOOD JO&
RELIABLE
SERVICES.
Cadllllc Sevllt '11
Siwr, llllls, dNn
(806273) $5.1188
HAB!RS
(714)540:1100
Cacllllc St¥llt • Low ml, wt1I pelll, lh,
('"UM) StS.988 HABEAS
(714)540:1100
Cacllllc s.¥99 ST'S '15
Low ml, bl9dt dtttry. llo¥s
(1121!674) StS.968
NABERS
(714)540:1100
CtleroUe Umlted YI 'II
~ h , MD, 11.t pwr,
CO, IC. am..fm ti. rool, warr pp $24.995 714-3q-078S
' k I It I ( "l ' ,,,, I
f :, 111, 1 I • •
I'll help you retolw those naaotng home repair and remodel
lasuet .
www.mbzdlrtct.com
E320 ~ Benz 'M
Sliver/Gray
(1t7CM2) $19,995 ..._..Benz of
=-~ www.11111zdlrtct.com
D20 Mercedn Benz '99
Bl~archlMf'lt (129122) $35,995
Mlfcedll Benz of =-~ www.•bzdlrect.com
f-erd ller1c.el '86
Auna Grtltl $2000.
141·294-1221
(049112) 127,9116 AT, AC, a..i Mercedtl Binz of Pl.VMOU11t FURY '98 Toyota c.llce 't3
(529797) Stt78 1.aaun1 H1gue1 383 Engine. Nttdl btlka&. Auto, AC, ~
Theoclott Roblnt 1.eo-2'0-floo held guktlS and minot (P1571) $8950.
111-SSJ.1512 www.mbzdlrtct.com body repair. Cell Sollll Coelt Acurl
JEEP WRANGLER '14 562·863·3587 IOO-t6-ACURA """" ..... .. Clelrl. -fUft, Wo, AC, pe, CO (" 2038) 1187' (Pl 515) 1111,MO. Theoclott Roblllt Soulh COMt Acurl ~3-15lZ !00-•ACUftA
~ Ol..t..,
Wo, W. AC, pl (2111 IA) "'50. Sollil COMt Acur1I
.,....A CURA
lMld "-Range Aowr 4.0SE ·oo Loadtd, com-
plete wood plcg, brush
guards. rool i.ck. CO ~. Clv'Oml ...,.., od1 5500 mi, pd $71k. ucnb $58.SOO 6tk 949-~ HISSAM SEHTRA ._
Lt1u1 LX 450 'ti Clllll l E*-J Cit
Excelenl condition, T 1111 (m157) *11
Ten lellhef. luly IOlded l'lleodcwe AoOlna $25.000. ~19511 111453-1512
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Slgnetul't s.tea 383 Engine. Hiedi bllbl. ,.,,.,, Very dl9'I
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O'RYAHS MOVERS
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Lt375802 714-538-1534
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(949) 642-5678
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liJo Isle $7,200,000
Exquisite boyfront with dock.
Breathtaking views of harbor and city lights.
Marilyn .Read 718-2733
·Corona Jel Mar . $2, 7 5.0,000
Beautiful single story home in Irvine Terrace.
Stunning view.
Beverly Morphy & Minda Bush.Stroner
759-3731 "1 759-3782
(' .
4 Civic Plaza', Ste. 260
Newport Beach , CA 92660 ·
(949) 644-1600'
-Iurlle Rock $1,395,000
Spectacular city lights views.
5 Bd. 4 Ba. office. 3 car garage.
Chris VaMi 759-3738
...
-. . • '
Pelican Poinl $6,350,000
Fabulous 6 Bd. 7.5 Ba . custom home with ocean view.
library, exercise room and elevator.
Sara Hinman & Brad Hinman
759-3705 -759-3732
Dover Shores $2, 150,000
This home is a treasure! Completely remodeled with
European decor. Available furnished or unfurnished .
Beverly Morphy & Minda Bush-Stroner
759-3731 -759-3782
COLD·Weu
BAN~e.R ~
Rivage $1,320,000
City lights and mountain views.
Upgrades tbroughout. Private spa.
Gigi Thomas 759-3784
• • Daily Pib
llarbor lslanJ $5,237,000
Incredible opportunity to build your dream home
on the areas most exclusive island.
Georgina Smith 759-3710
· W-ynJover Ray $1.800,000
Must see to believe. 4 Bd. 5.5 Ba.
5 car garage, pool and spa. Upgrades galore.·
Gigi Thomas & Rick Langevin
759-3784 -759-3759 ,
3377 Via Lido
Newport Beach , CA 92663
(949) 723-88.00
Rayshores $1,100,000 ·
4 Bd. sunny, open home across from pork.
lovely garden and charming used bride..
Beverly Morphy & Minda Bush-Stroner
759-3731 -759-3782