HomeMy WebLinkAbout2001-06-17 - Orange Coast Pilot'· . ,. • S UNi>Av •
•
SERVING lHE NEWPORT -ME.SA COVMUNffiES SINCE 1907 ON 1HE W1B: WWW.DAILYPILOT.COM
. SUNDAY STORY
Fill11SDAY
Father's Day is here and, boy,
do we have the photos of
dads to prove it. Read what
our readers had to say about
their pops.
S..hgesS-9
.....
SPORTS
u • GREG FRY I DAILY PILOT
12-year-old Tyler Brady isn't
your run-of-the-mill All-Star,
by a longshot. The Balboa
Island resident and member
of the Newport Beach Little
League Is profiled In Sports.
S..Pege12
Bob Stockwell and his son, Ryan, share a laugh while talk:ing about time spent on their 1965 Ford Mustang GT 350 Shelby replica.-.
luhle
LIFE & LEISURE
The ties of family are not
always the ones we expect.
Luis Guerra of Newport
Beach and his two sons are
proof of that.
S..Pege5
.......
COMMUNITY
FORUM
Judith O'Oea Morr has
helped make the Orange
County Performing Arts
Center's dance season
among the best in Southern
callfomla. Morr talks with
Features Editor Jennifer K
Mahal about keeping Center
audiences dancing with
delight.
S-Pege11
For Bob Stockwell and his
son, Ryan, fixing up their
1969 Mustang has driven
them closer .together
IOP STORY
'We,ve always been very close.
And as he got older and certainly
became interested in driving cars,
we thought this would be a great
vehicle, no pun intended I guess, to
work together and have some fan. ,
Bob Stodrwell
Young Chang
DAILY PILOT
he bonds are obvious. Especially after you take a
peek inside the lair.
The little sister's pink bike from when she was even
littler. Ryan Stockwell's first bird -stuffed and mount-
ed and still as colorful as it was five years ago when it
was flying through the Antelope Valley (before it got shot).
Dad's pendl marks celebrating
everybody's height -on May 21 of
1998, now 17-year-old Ryan was 5
foot 7 V2. Old plaques, worn shoes,
even a dusty television probably as
old as Ryan bimSP.lf.
But most telling in this cluttered
Costa Mesa garage is its main
tenant: a 1965 Mustang GT 350
Shelby •R• model replica bought.
fixed-up, painted, shined and
babied by father-son duo Bob and
Ryan Stockwell.
Ryan drives it to school everyday.
On weekends, they both jump in for
quick errands. Stockwell doesn't
like leaving it in just any old public
parking lot too long. Corona del
Mar High School is an exception
because people there are trustwor-
thy, Ryan says.
So nothing's ever happened to it
And if something did?
·rd cry.· said Ryan. a QTaduating
senior headed for University of
Southern California in the fall. •1
th.ink we'd both cry.•
They'll show it off today at the
20th annual Concoun de Nice at
the park mall near the Westin South
Coast Plaza. But mON showy than
their sleek showpiece -wbk:b is ·
SEE CAA MGE 4
Fans kept eyes open for Bliiik-182
Dad is dad backward
• Hundre<ls lined up Satilrday for band
appearance at Costa Mesa store . ...........
0AILY Pll..OT
•
. .
Sunday, June 17, 2001
. cm SAYS Ullll'S OUT
TO llWPOIT PARTIES
Newport Beach's leaders went
•tough on noise• this week and
approved changes to the dty's
noise ordi.Mnce for good.
• While council NEWPORT members were IEACH eager to emphasize
that the revised law
applies to all residents and wiJ.l be
applied throughout the dty, the
move received a lot of attention
since ex-basketball star Dennis
Rod.man's loud parties prompted
it.
After realizing the Orange
County district attorney's office
hesitated to prosecute noise
offenders in the dty because of
Newport Beach's softly-worded
noise ordinance, dty officials
made some additions they hope
will make it easier to press
criminal charges.
The new version states that
anyone can face prosecution after
a police officer has issued a warn-
ing to stop the noise. It also makes
it clear that property owners may
be accountable for noise jhat
occurs at their home.
But even without the revisions,
Rodman. who protested against
the changes at the May 22 council
meeting, is already in trouble. The
district attorney's office has
charged Rodman with three
counts of aiminal misdemeanor,
alleging he used amplifiers ille-
gally during his 40th birthday par-
ty at his West Newport Beach
home. His arraignment is sched-
uled for arraignment at Harbor
: Justice Center on June 20. •
• _..,. Wlr*Mr covers Newport BH<h.
He may be ruc:hed at (949) 574-4232 or by
e-mail at mathls.wlnk~tftlatimes.com.
HARBOR PATROL'S
DRAWi-OUT nllDOFF
Sheriff's Harbor Patrol deputies
• stationed in Newport Beach han-
dled the longest standoff ever in
the harbor in the wee hours of Frt-
1 day after a distraught Costa Mesa '
• man led them on a high-speed =chase.
Deputies bad to COPS & wait until the cra.ck of COURTS dawn to arrest 39-
year-old Philip Fra-
zier, who was allegedly driving his
boat around the harbor without
navigation lights. He was arrested
for driving a boat under the influ-
ence of alcohol or drugs and also
referred to psychi4trlc counseling.
The pursuit, which began
inside the harbor, took the
deputies into the ocean south of
the harbor. Crisis negotiators and
additional deputies from Dana
Point also came in to help.
Police in Costa Mesa, mean-
while, continue to battle the nag-
ging problem of auto thefts in the
dty. Although recently released
FBI statistics showed a decline in
crime in every category, it con-
tained a 21 % increase in auto
thefts. The numbers compare 2000
with 1999.
According to numbers released
by Costa Mesa Police, there was
another 7% increase in 2001 com-
pared with the previous year. Offi-
cials say the best way to counter
the problem is heavy police patrol
in problem areas and residents
exercising more caution. _.,..... _...~copsn~
She may be rU<hed 9t (949) 574-W6 ol by
..mall at c:/Hl».bha,.thOlatimacom.
STllTlll UP
Ill LITllATIOll
Bob C8ustin proved on Monday
• . ..
"Yeah, Jt'8 hard. We hate it,
but it's p<irt ol the job.
We can't play checkers and
watch TV all the time.• --...c-....
Pl'wnedic •the CoroN def Mw .._ltMk>n. on
the lni.nse WortoUt ftreflgtiWI got. June 10
during • drl111hlt t..tuNd • flit• b&eze on the
11th ftoor ol • Newport c;......, building.
TIOllllS flOll M Kim
You could not have uaked
for a Jn.Ore perfect day tor. a
carnival then last Sunday.
The sun was warm, the
breeze cool, and 1 was happy
to be oul of the otlice.
Finding photo~ at the St.
John the Baptist Catholic
Church's carnival was Uke
shooting &It in a barrel. But
I wa.s hoping to get some-
thing a little more spedal.
For nearly an hour I had
been trying to get a photo
from one of the more
thrilling, !oat rldea when
over my shoulder I could
hear the laughter of Jdda on
one of the ldddJe rides.
There, Julle and Gaby Perez
were aH Bmlles as they rode
the Katerplllar KasUe. I
huaUed over to the ride to
try and get them coming
around the tuln, In part
becauae lt made a nice
composit.Ion and also I knew
the ride was almoat over. 1
was only able to shoot two or
three framea, but on the last
shot Gaby threw her anns In
the air. It waa too perfect ..•
unle&S I dJdn't get her In
focus. A knot •tarted to Ught-
en In my stomach as 1
checked the monitor on the
digital camera. Looked
sharp. It was a beautiful day.
-Steve McCl'ank
' A llllSH TOUR
THloulll IWS ISLllD
PHOTO OF THE WEEK
. As the school year draws to a close,
teachers are finding ways to tie up the
ends of lessons that are more fun and
spectacular than ever. EDUCATION Each day we-seem to
be hearing about another
cute thing that students are doing. But
one of the greatest, because of the way it
was carried out, happened last week at
Uncoln Elementary.
Prepared by teachers and executed
mostly by parents, students lived out what
it was like for immigrants coming through
Ellis Island. .
Parents were in top form. They played
their roles to a •T, • being horrid and nasty
to children -just as immigration work-DON LEACH / OAJ.Y Pl.OT ers would have been to immigrants.
-.,.,..... Gcdet covers education. She may be ruched at (949) 574-4221 or by e-m.11 .i t»~.gou~tirnn.com.
the second half of his motto:
•water quality through education
and litigation.•
The Defend EllVllOllMElll the Bay
founder ls
suing the Irvine Co., the Irvine
aty Council and a handful of oth-
er agencies to stop a high-density
industrial center bom being built
off the northern edge of the El
Toro Marine base.
The coundl. on May 8,
approved its own preliminary
environmental report on 10.2 mil-
lion square feet of industrial,
research, medical and scientific
uses. The behemoth project would
add 16,000 new jobs to the county .
But Caustin ii concerned the
complex would lead to dangerous
inaea.ses in air pollution, traffic
and waste. It could also drain
power usage during the state's
power aunch, C8ustin said.
Irvine Cound.lman Greg Smith
said Caustin is •barking up the
wrong tree.•
-fleul CllnlDn CXMn the environment and
John W'(M Airport. He may be reec:hed at
(949) 7~330 or by HNll at
l*J/.dlntonelatJmes.com.
lllDllllG THE
AWYTUPS
Grease and bridges took center
stage last week in Costa Mesa.
COSTA
MISA
The Costa Mesa
Sanitaiy District
approved a letter
stating its intent to
pass an ordinance requiring
restaurants to install grease traps.
The possible future ordinance is
controversial because of the high
cost of the traps -between
$10,000 to $40,000 -and also
because of a dispute about
whether the district or the Qty
Coundl has the authority to pass
such an ordinance.
The Orange County nans-
portation Authority decided to
release the long-awaited Santa
Ana River Crossings study for
public comment Monday, but is
holding it until later this month.
A S\lJllDW)' of the study
released Thursday, however,
found that building bridges aaoss
the riv~ at 19th Street and Gisler
Avenue would inaease noise lev-
els but would reduce the overall
distances drivers would have to
travel.
The authority will be accepting
public comment on the study
starting June 21.
-......... Kho cowt'I Costa MeSa. She
• may be rNChed at (949) 574-<4275 or by
HNll et.}ttnnffw.~times.com.
Notable
QUOTAILES !
' "I really don't know what to
say, but I think lt 1B easier to
excel when you have klds
like this. They make you
want to be with them, work
with them and help them in
any way you can."
-Scott Dubs.
Newport Hatbor High School physics
tHCher, on recefvlng the Excellence
In Science •nd Mathemat.la Award
from the caufoml• Foundet1on for
Commerce and Education.
.,When you are doing some-
thing for your communlty,
you are doing something
good for yourself, and people
should look at it that way. 1
feel that th1a my neighbor-
hood, my park, and I need to
keep an eye on it."
-~~
Lions Partc Assn. member, on why
she is helping to patrol the per1t
to chedc for razor blades and on
gener.t melntenence.
THI llST ·~ Tll nan . '•
"Convlctlng somebody
doesn't bdng the [dead}
person back. But at lea.st It
glvea vkt.Jmt the feeling that
80Dtebody cares. "
_.,......~
en Orange County deputy district ~~why she does
what the does. Lllst week.
Lloyd became the first women In
the state to be nem.d PrOMQltO( of
the YNr by the C..llfomlil Oktrlct
Attorneys Aun.
"We don't llve In a reUre-
ment community. If you want
to tum it into one, you should
pass an age ordinance not a
nolse ordinance."
-ldMd.•llllhlln.
• s..shore Drtlle resident.
edchsslng the Newport lw:h Oty
Council on~ about proposed
changes to tighten the dty'I noise
ord!Nnce. The city UMnlmously
~ed • more stt'" igent ocdlnence
at the lnfttlng.
"Numbers are Jdnd of like
the stock market. You can
never predJct when auto
thefts wl11 rlae or fall. But
right now, it looks like we're
going to do better thl.s year."
-Det. ..... Mll.,
of the Coltl Mele Police on
compertng the first fNe months of
last Yff' to thk 'Ifft for euto thefts.
Numbers show 1t'9l euto thefts t...w
lncJ'MMCI 7,. In thlt period.
Comperlng 1999 to 2000,
auto thefts v.we up 21 ...
BEADEii$ HODM
(949)6U~
CoWlght: No news stories, Nu.
ntklnl,......., mettlr Of~
tllelnlntl herein Qin be ~
dlad Wtthciut Wrttt.n pemi mh1n
of CIDf¥Wlt owner.
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Com~ CA t2127.
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COSTA MESA
• '9dflc ..-. • ._ ~ tt.tt was 1epcw19d In~
blodt at 10-.39 p.m. ~ . ~..,..~It ...............
the 1200 blodt. J:11 p.lft. ~
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. .
Daily Pilot Sunday, Jurw; 17, 2001 3'
More abou t the mail in Newport-Mesa Bri•flt_fn
YOUft9 Chang THE NEWS
were unpounded, Freeman
said.
·uruortunately, the DUis
are responsible for a lot of acci-
dents, so we try to discourage
that by ma.king a lot of traffic
stops and arrestmg people
under the influence,· he said.
bers and 17th Street neigh-
bors are expected to attend.
Beginning last year, busi-
nesses on 17th Street and
neighboring residents rallied
to kill oty plans to widen East
17th Street to six lanes.
DAILY PILOT
I don't believe in keeping
people waiting.
So for you faithful read-
ers who remember our
promise last week -to bring
you Costa Mesa's first post·
mistress whom we found by
accident -her name was
Hazel Gill and :;he made
sure you got your letters
1 looki~9 !BACK
back in the
1950s.
But tying
up some
unfinished
business
first: reader Jean McMillan
I e-mailed us about last
1 week's column -the one
where we led you on a walk
through some or Newport
Beach's earller postmasters
because we couldn't find the
very first one.
McMillan probably chuck·
led reading 1t -she had
what we so wanted right
under her nose -but thanks
to her, we now know that his
name was John McMillan,
he was appointed in 1908
and t\e was Jean McMillan's
husband's grandfather.
He was a Scotland native,
learned the sailrnaker's
trade, first visited Newport
Beach in 1881 and also end-
ed up as superintendent or
the city's water department.
His son, John McMillan, suc-
ceeded him in the latter 1ob.
Most of this information
came from a very rare copy
or "History of Orange Coun-
ty• by Samuel Annor lent to
us by Jean McMillan.
It's so rare -and I.luck
and dusty too, m fact -that
McMillan followed me back
to the Daily Ptlot office
where we photocopied a
page and made sure she
returned home with the
opus.
John McMillan was appointed in 1908 as NeW'port
Beach's first postmaster. He was born in Scotland.
the needy and threw parties
for people who needed them. • Do you know of a person, place
or event that deserves a historical
LOOK BAO<? Let us know. Con-
tact Young Chang by fax at (949)
646-4170; e·ma1I at •
Police arrest 23 in
Friday. DUI sweep
Costa Mesa police arrested
23 drivers during a seven-
hour shift Friday night,
Twenty two drivers were
arrested under suspicion of·
drunk driving and one was
arrested because 9f an out-
standing warrant, sgt. Darell
Freeman said Saturday.
Four officers, Uuee reserve
officers and three cadets
spent the sh,ift making more
than 100 traffic stops and
checking for evidence of
drunk driving.
All the drivers' vehicles
ONGOING EVENTS
• 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 avallable at
http://www.dailypilot.com.
SL Andrew 's Presbyterian
Church sponsors a monthly
Career Networking Resource
for unemployed individuals
on the last Thursday of the
month in the church at 600
St. Andrews Road, Newport
Beach. Free. (949) 574-2239
or (949) 631-2880.
The Southern California l'feln
Air Painters Assn. lS holdihg
its Premier Group Show
through June 23 at Debra tf
Huse Studio Gallery, 229 Bcll-
boa Ave., Suite E, Balboa
Island. (949) 723-6171.
Scrabble Club 350 meets the
first Sunday of every month
for a seven-game, full-day
tournament, with cash and
prizes, at the Newport Dunes
Raising funds to
beautify 17th Street
·To celebrate its 25th
anniversary, Pierce Street
Annex ts having a fund-raiser
for 17th Street on Monday.
For every beverage pur-
chased from 5 to 9 p.m .. the
restaurant is donatmg $1.50
lo beautify 17th Street.
The event will also indude
door prizes and appetizers.
Chamber af Conunerce mem-
RV Resort, 1131 Back Bay
Drive, Newport Beach $35
(949) 206-9822
Orange County Sierra Sin-
gles meets at 6 p.m. on the
second Monday of every
month at the Costa Mesa
Community Center. 1845
Park Ave .. Costa Mesa. Free.
(714) 847-4330.
A series of kids' and teens'
online classes wtll be offered
this summer by Orange
Coast College's Community
Education Olhce Edch
course is $49. Subject to be
taught will tnclude reading
The Costa Mesa City
Council on May 21 approved
a four-lane plan for East 17th
Street that included adding
turn lanes, bus bays and cen-
ter medians to improve traffic
without the widening.
The plan is not backed by
the federal grant money the
city would have received if it
has widened the street, and
the city is now looking for
new ways to pay for the plan.
Pierce Street Annex is at
330 East 17th St., Costa Mesa.
Information: (949) 646-
8500
and wnbng, history, soence,
math, arumals. stamp collect-
ing, astronomy and nabve
plants of CaWorrua. Registra-
tion ts underway in OCC's
Education Office. Orange
Coast College, 2701 Fd.lIVlew
Road. (7 14) 432-5880.
The Costa Mesa MOMS
Club -Moms Offering
lyloms Support -meets at
10 a.m. Fridays at a dJJferent
park every week in Costa
Mesa. $30 for yearty mem-
bership, which includes more
than just meetings. Call for
each week's location. (714)
549-4504.
BUDDHA'S
FAVORITE
JAPANESE CUISINE
S U S }J J !i 1'J D D LJ l. .E fJ
Learning about Hazel Gill
was considerably easier, but
it took a phone call to Mary
Taylor of Washington to get
the dish. Taylor was a class-
mate or Gill's daughter Ethel
"The whole community
knew her very, very well.•
Tay!Or said. "And she was
very interested in the promo-
tion of making Costa Mesa
into a city.·
young.changOlatimes.com; or mail°' 55:====:55!!5!5===:!!!!;!!!!!!!!!!!!!!1!111111!111
her at do Daily Pilot. 330 w. Bay
St., Costa Mesa, CA 92627.
10% OFF ALL SUSHI
ORDERED BEFORE 6:30PM
· ~··at Newport Harbor High
School, where they both
graduated in 1938.
"She was quite a wonder-
ful woman,• Taylo/ said.
"She was very efficient, very
business-like. She was popu-
lar in the community and
well respected and she did a
wonderful job as post-
mistress.·
Yellowed newspaper clip-
pings from the Costa Mesa
Historical Society show that
Gill was civic-IIWlded and
active. The Costci Mesa Busi-
ness and Professional
Women's Club named her
"Business Woman of the
Year" in 1956. She helped
~. '· . .
PROFESSIONAL SERVICE DIRECTORY
Ctt tL&f:A DE&ICN&
DON'T GlT RID Of m u.. ..... ,.. ......
..;.~Ei,;a Ph71~9907
(.di 714-394-0045
To Advertise
C.11 Mendor•
949-574-4t30
c...s17•s
SunclQ
Orange Coast College Presents 1Wo Summer Comedies for the Whole FmnllJ
Waterfront Dining
Open 7 Days, Lunch & Dinner
634 Lido Part Dr., Next to Blue Water Grill
NewportBeach 949•723•4203
. l~T&
SHOUT
Celebrate Citrus & Sun
COSTA MESA • JULY 13-29
Be part of a very special section f~aturi ng
17 days of fun, thrilling rides, headline
entertainmnent, Centennial Farm,
grondstand races, contests
and more!
Publication one: Wcdn&Sdly, July 11, I001
SpKc & Dadllnc: Wcdneidly, June 17 It 5 pa
camera Re-..V Rcle•c DeMllMt
~.June 19 et 5 p.m.
,_ mcn lnlut .. tlori, ContKt ,.._
~ .... ...-.. M
1
. .
I t . .
4 Sunday, June l 7. 2001
BUNK
CONTINUED FROM 1 .
Toward the back ol the
wristbanded line. Evangeli-
na Garibay, a 20·year-old
Santa ~ resident, said she
bas every Bllnk-182 album.
"I'm willing to get sun-
burned from head to toe to
see them,· she said, &quint-
mg in the sun. "They are
awesome, a great band.
They are totally crazy, and I
just love them.'
Markelle Pellet, a 13-
year-old Mission Viejo resi-
dent, arrived at the store at
5 a .fl). to be hrst in line. Pel-
let and her friends also wait·
CAR
CONTINUED FROM 1
ivory, blue-stnped down the
Jlllddle and rerruniscent of
the Greaser days -ts the
relationship 1l took to make
it.
Ryan has blue eyes, a
Matt-Damon smile with even
pearly whiles and hair as
blond as the sun can kiss it.
Stockwell. despite the grayer
head at 57 a nd crow-footed
eyes, bas the same smile.
The same teeth, the same
boyish charm.
They like be mg boyish
together. At any given free
hour. they'll change into old
jeans and old undershirts
and roll under the car lo fix
ed for 18 houn to be the first
to buy the CD on Monday.
"Their style b not too
loud, not too slow,• Pellet
said. •My whole room is
covered with Blink-182
posters.•
Dennis Hicks, district
manager for Wberehouse
Music, said he was not &ur-
pri.sed that so many fans
lined up so early.
"They love this band,· he
said. "They connect on a
personal, emotional level
with the band and they
want' to see them.•
The band -consisting of
gujtarist Tom DeLonge,
bassist Mark Hoppus and
drummer 1i"avis Barker -is
best known for hits like the
up their prized piece juEt
right. They'll paint the out·
side, smooth the angles,
shine the silver and refill
what's empty.
When dad's not listening
to country rock on 93.9, Ryan
will slip in his Weezer or
Alkaline liio CDs. But they'll
never listen to the CD made
by Ryan's own band -
Kaster 1i"oy, named after
Nicholas Cage's character in
the movie "Face/Off.· H's
just too scary, Ryan said.
And they talk. About the
old days when Stockwell use
to race at the. Riverside Race-
way and about the more than
30 high-performance cars
he's owned.
Ryan will talk about
school, his-projects, his
friends and which movie he
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"•''" '''"" \\( ( .. ,1.. \1., .•
' ' ' I'> f ')J h th-,, I f
'
..
Star 98.7-friendly "What's
My Age~·
Ustening to Blink-182
music played on stereos and
showing off their gear,
many fam talked about
what they liked most about
the band.
"They talk about real
We,• said Natalie Bucdaga,
a 1'-year-old Costa Mesa
resident. "They're not like
dumb Britney Spears. And
they're the hottest people
on Earth."
Steven Torices, 15, of
Downey, said the band has
inspired him to take bass
lessons, among other things.
"They are unique and
down to earth and they got
me into punk music,· he
and girltnend Melissa will
see next.
"We've always been very
close,· Bob Stockwell said.
·And as be got older and
certainly became interested
in driving cars, we thought
this would be a great vehicle,
no pun intended I guess, to
work together and have
some fun."
The hobby started with go
carts. Ryan's was red and
black with little fiber glass
side. pods. His number was
15 -also the num~r on the
current Mustang Shelby and
the number on his hockey
jersey. It's his favorite num-
ber for no special reason and
always has been.
Stockwell's go cart was
yellow, black and red and
numbered 10.
·1 always wanted to race
go carts when I was a
younger boy but my folks
couldn't afford it,· he.said.
But the ~ly stopped
racing after dad crashed into
a faulty go-cart at a Riverside
track seven years ago and
broke six nbs, his collar
bone, a shoulder blade and
punctured his lung.
~11tua,
said. •They sing about
teenagers' problems, like
loneliness, fUictde, dating.
being a child With divorced
parents -all kinds of
leena9' mues. •
Jason Uoyd, a 20-year-
old Hacienda Heights resi-
dent. said he rusbed to the
stere from a funeral and had
to find a ride because his car
was wrecked last week.
• 1 couldn't miss it,• he
said. "l like the band's pop-
punk style and the music is
also tunny. I've ll.lced them
for years and years. They
are the first punk band I
liked and, basically, my
sense of humor and sense of
style have evolved from
them.•
·As a result of that crash,
we discussed it as a family
and my wife said it's either
you or the go cart. We sold
the go carts, but I said I'd
really love to have some-
thing we can play with,•
Stockwell said.
He bought an original
1965 Shelby GT 350 -one
of merely 512 made that year
-sold it about fouc years lat-
er because it was more for
looking than for driving,
bought a 1965 Mustang fast·
back two years ago and fixed
it up to mimic the GT 350.
•It's nice to have someone
who actually knows what
they're talk.ing about,• Ryan
said, of working on the car
with ~ dad. "He always
explains. I always come out
with something new.•
For Stockwell, it's the
shared passion that
makes fixing up the car so
meaningful.
"I think the time we spent
was v~ beneficial,· he
said. •And the end result
was (Ryan's! ended up with
an automobile he's proud of.
That both of us are proud
of."
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BUFFA
CONTINUED FROM 1
lbese peciple have so many •
names? -wbo crossed aver tn
Mav ot 1905. ·rs Grab your bags. Edith. l .
back to Spokane. As Sonora
the Smart listened to that
fateful Mother's Day sennon.
she became exceedingly
bummed-and not just
because her mother bad passed away when she was a
little girl. Smarty had been
raised by her father, Henry
Jackson Smart (again with the
name,,) whom she worshiped.
It bothered her that there
was a Day of the Mom, but not
a Day of the Dad. Ergo (Latin
for "therefore•), since Hank's
birthday was in June •. Smarty
organi7.ed a community
"Father's Celebration• on
June 19, 1910.
People liked il They liked
it a lot. It grew like Topsy. In
192', Calvin Coolidge -a
profoundly humorless person
-proclaimed the third
Sunday in June "Father's
Day.· By the way, in those .
days, wearing roses was a big
deal for both men and women
on Father's Day. Red fot living
dads and white for dads who
were, well, not living.
So much for history. On to
reality.
Let's be honest Mothers
are what make the world go
'round and Mother's Day is a
major league big deal, as well
it should be. Father's Day is
very nice, but it's an also-ran.
a runner-up, a familial foot·
note. the Boston Red Sox of
"days.•
Father's Day exists for one
reason and one reason only-
the very same reason that
Sonora Smart Dodd, silly
name and all. started the
whole thing -sheer, unmiti-
gated guilt.
On the Day of the Mom.
everybody goes ga-ga with
Dowers and brunches and
gifts. yadda, yadda, yadda. A
few days litter, they slap their
foreheads and say "Uh oh.
What about the old man? Oh
yeah, there's that thing in
June."
Fme. We can deal with that.
Not a problem. Real men don't
whine. even when something
is totally unfair and hurts our
feelings, especially alter every-
thing we've done and nobody
even says thank you the other
364 days of the year.
Don't give it a second
thought, really.
As a dues-paying member
of the Father's Union for more
than 30 years, I am painfully
aware ol our limitations.
Fathers are like fire extin-
guishers. Most of the time, you
barely know they're around.
But when you n~ one, there
is no substitute.
Fathers are excellent for
high things. U you need a high
thing, they are very handy.
Daify Pilot
Mothers are OK for silverware
and la!. but if you need that
bawl on the top shelf wilh tbe aemner. tbe Jove-bird salt and
pepper set and the gravy boat an jammed inside it. a t atber is
what you need.
Bug cxmt:rol is very lmpor-
tao.t-"Omigod. what Is that?
GetitW -and. of oourse, lec-
tures. I gave my share of the
obligatory father lectures over
the yean. But I oou1d tell no
one took them seriously. Least
of all our kids.
I did tlnd some interesting,
though totally meaningless,
information about this very
sped.al third Sunday ln June.
Someone with way, way, too
much time on their bands did
a study ol who calls, or doesn'\,
call, the fathers of America on)I
their big day. Men and
women are each as likely to ,
call the old man as the other.
The average Father's Day
caller is 33 (that's depressing),
ma.rrled and a high school
graduate.
How on Earth do they
know this stuff? Does some-
one break in on Father's Day
calls and say, "Excuse me,
caller. How old are you?
Thirty-eight? Great, thanks,
sony to interrupt. Go ahead
please.•
Men are more likely to take
the paternal unit out to cele-
brate than women, who are
more likely to visit or give him
a gift. Ah, the Father's Day
gift. Never mind. About a
third of the calls are made lo
people other than the caller's
father -brothers, uncles,
grandfathers, etc. -and
women are more like lo make
quasi-father calls than men
The most likely almost-
father figures are, in descend-
ing order of frequency.
fathers-in-law, brothers,
grandfathers and male fnends
who have been father figures
in one way or another. As for
calling pop the rest of the year,
women are almost three tunes
as likely to make non-Dad
Day calls.
And finally, an encouraging
note for all the psychothera-
pists out there -about 17°1~ of
Americans never call their
father. That's never as in "not
ever.• Oops. Let's move on,
shall we? ·
Personally, what I like best
about "dad" is that it's a pahn-
drome. You know -racecar,
civic, kayak., level. madam,
Words or phrases that spell
exactly the same thing in
either direction. Wait. this one
is great Desserts can cause
stress, but read "stressed
desserts" backward. How cool
is that?
Where were we? Ob yeah.
dad. So show a little respect. go
easy on the ties and if you're m
that 17%, call the old poop.
Life is too short. J gotta go.
• PETEJt IUffA Is a fonner Cost.1
Mesa mayor. His column Nm
Sundays. He m1y be r•ached via
e-mail at PtrlU~.com.
Donate
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(Hg) 1'2D-8l>OJ
Koren W19ht
NO PlACE UK£ HOME
Fulfilling
Fath er's
D ay wish es
An editor at the Daily
Pilot is convinced that
very few men read my
column. I'm not sure if that's
true, but to those of you who
are secure enough with your
manhood to reacl No Place
Like Home: Happy Father's
Day, high fives and go Lakers.
Around here we celebrate
Father's Day with the tradi-
tional
male wish
list -no, The rule is I'm not
ta.lld.ng three meals
about that of his
-I'm
talking
about
food,
favorite
foods,
sports and control of the
meditative
time on
the couch.
You know,
a nap.
Every
year the
television
and time to
himself.
kids and I ask Ben what the
preferred activities are on his
list. and he comes up with
the same three things year
after year.
Although one year, he
said be wanted to slcy dive. I
told ~if be increased the
amount of the life lns'urance,
the sky was his oyster. He
hasn't jumped out of an air-
plane. yet.
An~ther year, he went on
a. Baja fishing trip, but that
was a little anticlimactic for
the kids and for him too,
because we weren't around
to make a fuss over him.
But those are the excep-
tions, not the rule. The rule is
three meals of bis favorite
foods, control of the televi-
sion and time to himself.
Today, this means eggs
enedict for breakfast and
methingi'ed, rare and bar-
ed for dinner. I suggest-
a swordfish salad for din-
tonight and was met with
e that would melt met-
be putting the steaks
on e grill in a few hours.
J t to keep me on the
~ge of my seat, I think he laa.S to put the ladder
\lp d take the kids on the
Joof ump Into the pool It's
ot slcfdiving, but this is as
ose as he's going to get this
ear.
SEE HOME PAGE t
ShopHarbor
BIVd. o1 cars
,,. .
CARl HIDALGO I OAl.V PILOT
Luis Guerra. center, and bis two adopted sons Joseph, left. and Mu gather in their Newport Bea~ living room.
R~sing
the boys
Yo.mg Ch•ng
DAILY PILOT
M ax Russell is trying to stop
· saying "yeah.•
"Do you have a lot of
friends?"
"Yeah. I mean yes.•
"Did your grandpa tell you to say yes
and not ye@h?"
"Yeah. I mean yes.•
The 7-year-old laughs.
And when Max laughs, his whole face
He's an outgoing boy, Luis Guerra sald.
Loves talking to people, very curious, very
funny.
His brother Joseph -he's 13, which
pretty much speaks for itself. He has his
iqterests, skateboarding being one of
them, and is trying out that angst-ridden,
mwky phase we all once knew as being a
teenager. ·
He's n1:>t as talkative as Max and laughs
less, but the three watch basketball
games at night-Guerra's a 76-er fan.
Joseph's all about the Lakers -go out for
breakfast, talk when time perm.its and For Luis Guerra and hi.s sons, Max and
Joseph, family is defined by more than blood
• delights. His strawberry freckles get all up
in a bunch. the eyes squint, the teeth and
gaps show.
TRAVEL TILES
SEE BOYS PAGE 9
·Change in plan lets couple explore Amsterdam . .
YowtgChang
DAILY PILOT
half an how into a Buro-
mlise, the Celebrity
Cruise Une's Galaxy vessel
hit something big -something
metallic, passengers guess -in
the ocean.
The ship limped back to the
Amsterdam shore and Wtlma
"Babe" Bouk and husband Gale's
anticipated boat adventure to Rus-
sia. Norway and Sweden ended
barely before it began.
1be propeller was damaged. the
rudder was too, the whole ship had
to be sent to Germany for repairs
&1¥1 everyone had to camp for a
while in Amsterdam.
But all of the passen-
gers got five free days of
lodging on the anchored
ship, an all-expenses
paid night at a hotel and
a free cruise. 6iilijiiiiiiiiii _ _.
Sights seen included the
Van Gogh museum, a factory
where workers processed
diamonds, another factory
where people made wooden
shoes .and a walk through
the red light district where
prostitutes sat inside win-
dows with a number
announcing their cost.
The Costa Mesa COU·
ple, who have retired
from their plastic manufac-
turing business, said they
ended up having a •won-
derful• time, despite the
change in plans.
·we got to see an awful lot of
Amsterdam,. said Wilma Bouk.
•And we're making reservations
today to go July 6. We'll go to
England instead ol Amstezdam. •
Prostitution being legal
there, she said the display
was anything but d.isO"eet
When asked about his favorite
part of the trip, Gale Bouk said it
was being with his grown daugh-
ters. Unda Anderson lives in
Camarillo and Chris Steward lives
in Costa Mesa. But the Bou.ks said
they still enjoyed taking a family
trip.
The· group even celebrated a
birthday on the ship. Gale Boule
turned 80 on June 5. His wile
turned 77 last week and tl}e family
celebrated her birthday locally.
"There's not much you C'Ould do
In a situation like that.• Gale Bouk
said of the ship staying in port. •we
were there. so we \bought. might as
well enjoy what we have left.•
• Have you, 0< someone you know, gone
on an interesting vac.tton recently? Tell
us you: advtiltures. Drop us • hne to
TRAVEL TALES, 330 W. Bay St.. Costa
~ CA 92627; e-mail )OCJn9.cti.r>ge
latirrgcom; or fax to (949) 646-4170.
All evmts subject
to change
Evening activities:
Arrival Party
Newpon Dunes
5:30 p.m.
(Public e~c_ouraged
to pamc1pate)
' . '" • .Jo .. ·-
Evening activities:
Arrival Party
Evening activities:
All-Star Sports
Banquet
Newpon Beach
Marriott -6 P·!Il·
(Public e~c?uraged
co part1c1pate)
All-Day ~vities: ·
Guest of the
California Adventure
(By invitation only)
,.
Afternoon activities
Lunch .guest of
Fust American Tide
(By invitation only)
Evening activities:
Regatta @ BYC
(By invitation only)
Afternoon activities
Irrelevant
"Survivor" Challenge
Palace Park -Irvine
9:30 a.m. -Check In
2 p.m. -Awards
(Public e~c?uraged
to parnc1pate)
Evening activities:
Taste of Newport by
boat
(By invitation only)
TODAY 17. CONC&i
Spo.IMNd by. 2kt blll---~llMUll Baroque
M\Jlk r-esttval
Where: St. MichMI and All Angels
Church, 3233 Padflc View OfM,
Corona del Mar
When:4p,m.
C.ost: S2S
Canta¢ (949) 761>-7887
CXJHCOURS DE Ma
~---by.The Cotri<>wnen ub of America Orange County and
Megular's Auto Polish and Wax
Where: Pal1c mall In front of Westin
South Coast Plaza, 686 Anton Blvd.,
CostaMesa
When: 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.
o.t:Free
Contact: (714) 546-5670
MONDAY
CENTMl OMlllGE
COAST YMCA Snt
... W.GOlF
QAS5IC
Spo....-by. CJ. Segemom.
Sons. Newport Harbor Elks Lodge
1767, the IMne Co. and UNorl Bank
of C9fffomla
-...: Mesa Verde Country Oub,
3000 Oubhouse ROlld, Costa Mesa
When: can to< times
Cmt: $250 per player
Contact: (949) 642-9990
ORGAN llEOTAL
5poNof'eCI by. 21st annual Bafoque
Music r-esttval
Where: St. Michael and All Angels
Church, 3233 Padfic View Drive,
Corona del Mar
wt.n:Bp.m.
o.t: $10
Contact: (949) 7~7887
TUESDAY
'ntllEARD
CWAVON'
Spo...ared by.
South Coast
19
Repertofy's Padfic Playwrights
FestlVal
..__ SCR. 655 Town Center DrM.
Costl Mesa
When: 8 p.m. Tuesdays through
Fridays, 2:30 and 8 p.m. Slturday5
and 2:30 •nd 7:30 p.m. Sunc:tays
through July t •
o.t: $28-$49
Contact: (714) 708-5555 •
WEDNESDAY
MUL8IEOIT
TALKS RSM Art
Spo...ared by.
Costa Mesa
Hlstorial Society
Where: 1870 Anaheim Ave~
Costa Mesa
When: 7:30 p.m.
o.t: Free c:Ontact (949) 631-5918.
.l (
MUSIC IN THI ~....,.SI
Spot'90NCI by. 21st .nnual BMoque
Music Festival
Where: Sherman Ubr-v I Gardem,
Central Patio Room. 2647 E. Co.st
Highw~ Corona del ~ Wherti: 8 p.m.
o.t: $30 eone.ce: (949) 7fil>.7SO.
.
IOI 1'111WllrOl11•1 17·2J, JOOI
SPOTLIGHT
Start your
'Endless SUIIlliler' now
EIDllSS SUMMll IOCI AID IOU. JAii -
When swf music bit the
airwaves in the 1960s, it
clued the world -or at least
the states -into the joyous
experience of Southern Cali-
. fomia beach life. Hear the
bands that made it all hap-.
pen with their waab-waab
wailing on the guitar this
Saturday when Dick Dale,
the Cbantays, the Bel Airs
and othen perform at the
Endless Summer Rock and
Roll Jam.
Hosted by Premiere
Entertainment, the concert
.will benefit the Huntington
Beach International Swfing
Museum in its efforts ~ pre-
How irrelevant
. •t all ? JS 1 , re y.
llllLIYllll WID 2001
serve the history of this
favored SoCal sport.
The event will include
seven hours of music, vin-
tage woody cars, the muse-
um's mobile exhibit and con-
Cessions. The night will cul-
minate with the All-Star
Jam, which will include
notable surf musicians from
bands such as The Noc-
turnes, The Del Tones, The
Vandells and others.
FYI
Where: Hyatt Newporter, t t 07
Jamboree Road. Newport 8ffctl
When:2p.m.
c..t: $45-$60
c.I: (949) 609-034 t
You've waiting all year for it and
finally, it's here. Irrelevant Week
2001 Icicles off Monday with the
arrival of Tevita •T-Bone•
Ofahengaue, Mr. Irrelevant 2001.
For those not in the know,
Mr. Irrelevant is the last player
, picked in the NFL draft.
Ofahengaue was ~ected 246th
(last) by the Arizona Cardinals.
FYI
Wbn: Arrival Party wt..: Newport Dunes Resort. t t 31 Bick Bay
Drive. Newport Beach
wt.ft: 5:30 p.m. Monday
o.t:S10
cal: (949) 263-0727
Wlwt: All-StM Sports Banquet
..... : Newport 8ffctl M¥riott Hotel •
Tennis Oub, 900 ~Center Drive,
Newport 8eecti
Wh9n: 6 p.rn. Tuesday
o.t: $100
c.I: (949) 263-0727
'11•1,.,.... .. ..........
Mr•
ORANGE
COUNTY FAIR
~ reedy to ·l'Mst
Md Shout· when the
t.lr comes to~
brli'9'19 ,.... ~
conc.rtl,. ...... pig
t'IC9Mdmcn. ,_..,,.,u ........... .,.
FRIDAY 22 SmiRDAY
JUNE
SMTWTfl
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) 4 s ' 1 I t
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• DO 8 ii 21 i1 211
, J4 25 JI 7J 21 21 JO
MAllKYOUR CALEM>ARS
AL.to•~
17: Father's Day
ti: Irrelevant Week
begins
JULY
S MTWTf l
12J 8 S67
I ' 10 11 12 CD 14
15 16 t7 • " » 21
12 n Jie 2S »~21
2' JO )I
MAM YOUR
C'.AllNDNtS
4: Four1h of July
tJ: Orange County
Fair begins
27: The Jones Cup
AUGUST
SMTWTFS
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S671t10n
121ll41516t7•
" » 21 12 2l l4 25
» 71 21 29 JO 31
MAM YOUR
CALENDARS
ALIG•~
1'M: Summer Concert
Series at Fashion Island
SEPTEMBER
SMTW Tfl
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2 04 5671
9 10 II 12 U .15
" G • " » 21 22
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JO
~LaborDay
14-tl: Taste of Newport
t?. Rosh Hllhanah begins
ll: Race for the Cure
-'mm ICippu' begins
O<:TOBER
SMTWTFI
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14 15 • t7 • " »
21 12 n J4 is » 71
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NOVEMBER
S M T WTFS
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• " » 21 12 2l J4
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DECEMBER
SMTWTPS
2 ) 4 s ' 7 •
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160•1'»2122
lll42SJ6172129
JO ll
:;.-....
.. <, .. ,
;r 3 Stli :Annual
l'Ubllc Safety
Awards Luncheon
Friday,
June 22, 200 I
11 :45 a.m. to I :~O p.m.
vr luncli program
lionoring tlie
200 I Officers
and "Employees of
tfie Year for tlie
Costa Mesa
<"Pol ice, <Fire and ·
Communications
'IJepa rtments
Location: Westin
South Coast Plaza
Cost: $30
per person
For reservations.
call the Costa Mesa
Chamber of
Commerce
714/885-9090 .. ..
A bmefit for the
Boy Smut Sea Bue
Newp«t Badi
Wbm:
~)me23,DH
W1m:
rul)r~ni
~&mSraP.
~l ~GmHijway
Chdc-G•nooo
~~•WO p.m., Raly-• i p.m.
Pmrsand uqb:s~ beaw.nmt a
die not cai'tlcbaa aOO aews,
andaul~mm<idie Raf.;
Afa die Ralyvcd baYc
b;acf~hcmm.inmmt
niam.U:im
bamisY.i beiminl.
~ .... -~
l\llt l~JX>
:IWlilllllirJillMlll-.-.
. . . . . . . ' . f • • • ' • '
Sonday, June 17, 2001 1
11 \l~l ~R
. . ' ·:'
Sil"il.il#~
..
..
My dad is the best dad
everl Not only is be
handsome, funny, sweet
and clever, but he is also so kind
and caring. Now that my hus-
band and I have moved to
Sacramento, we don't get to see
our parents as much as we
would both like, and that really
makes it tougher than ever to
leave when we do drive down
for a visit.
However, when we are down,
my dad and I still maintain our
special tradition -roller-blading
up and down the boardwa.llc and
getting a popsicle in mid-roll.
We have been doing that partic-
ular tradition for a couple of
years now, and it has become
something that I really treasure!
We talk and laugh and then
sometimes we have these really
·deep• discussions about all
sorts of things.
I am so proud of my dad. He is
the greatest father that anyone
could ever hope for, and on top of
that, be is an outstanding busi-
nessman. I wish that everyone,
sometime in their lives, could
have an opportunity to meet and
hang out with my dad because
there is no one out there like him
anywhere!
I think my dad is pretty cool,
and above all, I am so happy to
be his daughter and to be the
one to tell him that in January
2001, he is going to be a grand-
pa for the very first time -sur-
prise! I love you, dad!!
CARRIE W. ANDERSON
As a young man, my dad emigrat-
ed from Norway after World War I
with only a fifth-grade education.
However, he always had a good job
and took care of his family even dur-
ing the terrible depression of the '30s.
He taught me many practical lessons,
not the least of which was to protect
and treasure any valuable possessions
you had because they were often
hard to come by.
He lent me his car one evening
when I was in my late teens to go to a
party. On the way home, I took a
curve too fast in the rain. I skidded off
the road and the car rolled down an
embankment. I crawled out OK. but
the car was wrecked.
A passerby drove me home, and I
dreaded telling my dad I'd wrecked
his car. I feared a blistering diatribe
on what I'd done, but his first words
were was I OK. When I said yes, all
he said, with tears in his eyes, was
•Tak Gud, • Norwegian for •Thank
God.• I still gef a lump in my throat
when I think about it and realized
how much he loved me.
What a moment and terrific lesson.
As a consequence, in treasuring my
own kids, I've always cut them slack
-maybe too much at times -but
I'm sure it helped make me a better
father down the line.
KEN KVAMMEN
• IDITOlt"S NOTI: The followlng letters
were submitted by ht McLaughlin's
thlro.gralde class at tMrlner's Eltment.ary
Schoof in Newport 8ffdl.
Serena Rafferty, 10, sent bi a photo of benelf,
her father Jim and her 14-year-old brother,
Neal. "My dad ls the greatest." she said.
Kyle, 2, and Erin, 3, want to wish tbetr dad.
Dan Hatch. a happy Father's Day.
Grandfather BW Storm ls out for a rlde on a
Sunday afternoon with grandchildren
Nicholas and Bridgett Storm.
She~ Dangl wanted to let her
· father, Rldaard .Kettley, know that she
, appredatel bow he hu always been
there for her. "My dad ls the father of
seven cblldren.and bu always been a
wonderful eumple to our family," she
said. Pl In the back row from left
are RI Kettley, Rich Kettley and
Sherry ttley. In the front from left are
the sb ttley sisters: Sherrtlynne,
Juli , Katherine, Chrlstlne, Jen-
nifer m Kimberley.
.,
our daddy and tbJ.nk be ls No.
1," sald lynne Dang!, 5, and her 1-
yea.r-old sister, Raebel. pictured with
their father, Jeff Dangl, and mother,
SherrUynne.
Erika and Robert Palm of Newport
Beach send their best wishes to their
father, Jan-Erik Palm.
Hudson Walker Swanson. 19 months, takes
a swim with hJa father, Roderich Curtt.t
Swanson of Cotta Mesa.
Zachary Granoff, 3, and "Katey Bug,• 1,
spend Ume out on the water with their
dad,'Davtd Gran.off of Newport Beach.
Sean LoftUs of Costa Mesa will celebrate
Father's Day this year with 2-year-old son
Dominic. and brand-new baby David.
Park. we also go go<art r~ I
love my dadll
MORGAN MOODY
to Spell things and teU me words
tMt-t need to know tNt no one
•aught me. For inmnce, my
ded taught me how to spell mess
bY saying "Your room iS a M·E-5-:-
5 meul • My dad taught me
what the Word tomorrow means.
I also like my ct.ct bec:MM he
letS me stay In his bed with him
While he'S wmhlng TV. I think
my dad Ii bitW' thM thi yum-
miest ~ In the world •..
anc:t TV. He Is my herof
M&MDllSON
make the payments arid to bUY
us suPPffes. .
My ct.ct brings us on wvages
and to far, far aw~ p&aces. He
also brings us to optres, tennli
matches and to numbers of oth·
er~ He stays hOme wfth me
wt!in rm sick. He ~ wfth me
when I'm bored. He eY8f'I reads
wfth me and mu• c:i'efts With me. .
...... to fli: thl --iind ........... -.~tltw
~ ...... people to rillW.W
g9twh9tweW911t •••• 1 IOWtnr
dad. He's ~ hen>.
JUUIN'CllOOCITT
the rid, but none of them are
as gOoill as my ded. He Is thete When~m lonely. He comforts me I am ud. My cMd
teaches What II goOd Md
what is bad. When I Im In~
ger, my d.tt Is there to uw me
and cure ell Of tht ~ ttNit
are bad. My ct.ct Is ~ hlio. He
has been ~ng me *D 1 wm zero. TMi'i .,. no""-IM
my dad •
..
Doily Pilot . CEI.EBRATING 'riff: JOYS OF FA1HERHOOD Sunday, Jone 17, 200) 9
Readers tell us why they think their fathers are the greatest
,... We have tbe best dad In
the world because we have
weekly family nlg_ht and
we have fun family acttvt-
Ues Dke rtdl.ng bikes,
•wtmming, boating, etc.,•
said Brtttnle and Kristen
Couzens of their dad.
Grandfather Charles .
Grtffln plays bonie with
bls granddaughter, Bridgett
Storm.
"lbis is my dad, my mentor and my
best friend," said Ethan Goldstein
of his dad, Merv Goldstein of New-
• port~ The photo was taken
d\lrlng a hip to Cabo San Lucas.
• Areli1 we just the cutest,
curls and allf" asks
.Natalee Mallory, wbo
matches her father, local
poet Lee Mallory. "I love
my dad, my bestest friend,
so much."
Tom Mari.deb will
celebrate being a
grandfather to George,
4 months, this
Father's Day.
Hannah and Sophie Solow joined
dad Lee Solow for a trip to lake
Tahoe. The Solows are standing on
their favorite boat dock, where
they always catch a lot of fish.
BW Von Der Abe enjoys the surf and
sand with som Chrlstopher, 6, and
Stephen, 3, wblle vacaUonlng on
Catalina Island. Kelly Couzens wants her dad to
know that he's the .. best in the
'. world." Pictured is the Aarvold
family: Leslie, Jan, Mark, Kelly and
..Jtoxy, with Kristen and BrittnJe
: Couzens.
.. Even though I'm only five weeks
old, I already think that my daddy,
Keith Matsunami, ls the best there
ls," said the letter that accompa-
nied this photo of Matsunami and
daughter, Mia Grace.
"We love our dad because he ls
always there for us," said the
daughten of the Panqu.fjunlly -
Shannon, Michelle anc1Wtily.
Paul Bartlau said that Father's Day ls
hls favorite day of the year. Pictured
with hls "two favorite daugbten,"
Jennifer and Xathryn, Bartlau said "I
am the luckiest man on Earth."
Grandpa Granoff of Newport
Beach plays with Shira.
Ian and Sara Mfsbldn Nfd
they have the "best father
In the whole world."
HOME
CONTINUED FROM 5
"Fatberboocl Is a w.1k in
the park• said the enve-
lope cont.alnlng um photo
of Corona del Mu dad
Royce Sharf wlth daughters
Stena. 4, and Sydney, 1.
nm. Nicholas and
Mackenzie Storm have fun
la the mow at Mammoth.
BOYS
CONTINUED FROM 5
Laurie Keys submitted
tb1s picture of her with
husband Mark Keys and
daughters Paige, 5, and
Megan. 3, at DJ.meyland.
start each day off together.
The Russells call Guena
•gran<1pa• because that's
what they've always called
him. But the 60-~-dd
Newport Beach eledrldan
is legally their month-Oki
dad.
Guerra adoJ*d thml in
May, to make tt Offtde1 ttMlt
the boys are bis No. 1 pn.
lty. TbeU grandmoeber Ud
Gum-a'I twMdMMt Patrl·
da Flynn p....s away ...
yean ago. SM and G....a
Md rillMd .... bop .....
Jcmpl'Wl9 ........ Ma
wmaa1 rd•,... . .... ..,_ ...... = .............
al» " ...... .=, ..
1111 ...
J erry Marroquin is a won-
derful father and delights
daily in our daughter
Amber's accomplishments.
She is too young to ade-
quately express her love for
her daddy, but 1t is ever so
evident when she hears him
walk in in .the door and she
squeals "Daddy's home!
W e want to wish our
dad a happy
Father's Day. We
also want to wish him a
happy birthday for tomor-
row. Our dad is great
because be helps us out
with homework. never
yells at us (too much) and
plays all kinds of sports
with us. He even coaches
our teams.
M y dad's name is Dave
McConnell. I wanted
to give my dad a spe-
cial gift for Father's Day.
Then I thought what better
gift than one from the heart. I
feel so blessed to have such
a wonderful dad. He always
puts his family's needs before
his own.
Growing up, my dad and I
Daddy's home!•
One of the most 1IDportant
things Jerry does as a father
• is he loves and respects me,
his wife, so much. lbrough
this, he is showing his .
daughter what a healthy
marriage is about. He is a
great dad!
lAURA MARROQUIN
.
We love that he helps
tuck us in after be gives us
crazy taxi rides to our beds.
We love our dad most of all
because he loves being
with us as much as we love
being with him.
Our family is going to
have a great Father's Day
as long as we spend il
together.
RJ. AND CASSI£ O'CRUZ
were like best friends. We
would play sports together,
and he would always take
me shopping. I feel like the
most fortunate girl in the
world. even though I am
grown up now and have
responsibilities of my own. I
will always be ·oaddy's llWe
girl.· I love you, dad.
KATIE MCCONNEU
Sam Poxon Is Alll'Ouaded by bis favorite girls -daap-
ten Debbie and Diane, and their mother, smanne.
•
·coMivi · ' '
EDITOlllU
• • Fligµt cap supporte~
-need to By together
ith the h1storic
settlement
agreement that
limited flights
at John Wayne
Airport set to expire in 2005 and .
a commerdal airport at El Thro
far from being realized, Newport
Beach and Costa Mesa officials
are rightly wonying these
days over what future air
traffic growth will mean to their
communities.
And they are taking action.
Newport Beach, in concert with
the Airport Working Group, a cit-
izen coalition originally formed to
fight aiiport expansion at John
Wayne, has embarked on an
effort to extend that settlement
agreement into the year 2026
with minor growth in flights.
And just last month, the dty of
Costa Mesa joined the fray and
handed the Airport Working
Group $15,000 to spend toward
.,. extending those flight restrictions
at John Wayne.
What transpired after that
stunned Costa Mesa officials.
The Airport Working Group this
month gave Costa Mesa.back its
money, saying thanks but no
thanks. The reason for the snub?
Costa Mesa offidals wanted the
money solely spent on John
Wayne issues, not for the promo-
tion ol an aitport at El Thro.
We find the refusal ot the mon-
ey surplising also, especially con-
sidering the Newport Beach-
baled Airport Working Group bas
a 1oog history of fighting the
eq»n>sk>n ot John Wayne Airport.
Reaching its peak in the early
1980s, the group, stocked with
bright minds like Barbara Udl-
man and former mayors
Clarence Turner and Tom
Edwards, was a force to be reck-
oned with on the county scene.
Indeed the historic aiiport settle-
ment agreement in 1985 was
struck between the county, the
FAA. the airlines, the dty of
Newport Beach. the Airport
Working Group and the environ-
mental group, Stop Polluting Our
Newport.
lbe residents of Newport-
Mesa owe a great debt to those
early pioneers. Today, the Airport
Working Group's focus bas
shifted and its leaders believe an
El Toro airport is the answer to
John Wayne woes. In fact. the
group's consultant. Dave Ellis,
recently said the two issues can't
be separated. .
"It's like hot dogs and a base-
ball game, .. Ellis said "You can't
talk about one without the other."
But that is simply not true. In
fact. Newport Beach officials are
do,ing exactly that today, talking
about one without the other.
With the blessings of the very
same Airport Working Group,
the city ol Newport Beach is
holding discussions with county
officials over the new John
Wayne settlement agreement. and the issue of El Toro is not
even on the table.
Having said that. though. we
also wonder what is the harm in
allowing fhe Airport Working
Group to discuss with Costa
Mesa residents why El Thro is a
viable option to the air travel
dilemma.
Surely, the people of Costa
Mesa are capable of hearing all
ihe facts and making up their
own minds on whether or not an
El Toro airport .is an idea that
should be supported.
So we urge the Airport Work-
ing Group and the city of Costa
Mesa to put polit1c.al differences
aside and instead work together
on the airport fighl
Uke those early pioneers in
the airport battle, they too can
achieve the common goal of
keeping John Wayne expansion
at a manageable level and
maybe even come up with solu·
6.ons for the county's future air
travel needs.
Hold the Shakespeare
and pass the mocha
I t's not an entirely new con-
cept. but the Newport Beach
Central Ubrary may be
offering another perk on top
of the joys of reading to attract
customers. Though food and
drinks are currently restrlcted
from entering the library, coffee
may somehow .become the
exception to that rule, at least to
a certain point
Jn coming up with a vls1oo for
the library, ot:fidals broached the
idea ol adding a coffee kiosk to
the mix ol books, magazines,
newspapers and video tapes.
They're ltOl not entirely hip on
allowing people to lip their cD•
fee wbOe ~through their
Grilbllln. 'Iboreau and 1Waln.
ttio..lgh. Could IDludge a little.
8Ut adding coffee to lilnriN
1881111 a Jogk.al move In l'onow~
qi the same trend ocxuntng at
....... boobtore c:balm. Tb8
trwDd .... NIUlted In the Comoll-
ddaa GI meatliig ~ Por em-
tmm, ,.._ bave met owr ta
ml oaBle. ,..,, .. ., pch-
ad II ......... ~ ....
... • J11fec1 a• c1a1a,-.
md81j>tb9 ...... ll'Nlll•
2 2 •
... ..., ... ...., UIJlwMI
.... 119 h ' ... oof. • , a
fee with other amenities. They
add used book stores. They offer
bagels and sandwiches. They
feature gift shops. They bout
fireplaces for fireside reading.
They sell smoothies. Candy,
cookies and pizza would also
make tasty addttionl.
Or perhaps librarlel should
simply be built nm to lhopptng
ma.Ill. That might do the trick In
offering a vut uray ol ameottW
~ aoaftee ldomk-
at the mlninimn -woWd
enhance an already Well-«oc:ked
library. In a WOrtd where there
are many otbs IDedhmil to
dMat ooe'I atl••tkln froin riied-
ing. gOod okl ~ noveo..
it would be wile tD .. a blt
more, w1M1bet ID die bin of a con. ibop ot a bllgeil ltlcn. ewm wllli-WOUld be ...... ~~~
from M!a ......... Ulndll
that allow IUda "'* ..... to
opw• wtam • bUDdtng lbauld ......... cmt.m .,.... .. ...,._ .. ,,.. .......
3%aS-N.•' ... llgl-
NeailltDtll9 ... tw.IULtifmad.
IDgma-,.-ID.....,lit
• pgNdroc• i I • ................
-.-'IADIL,... ... ..,_ ... ...... *"" 1 ....... ......
•
. . llirle .. ·. . .
lll'Pm&IB
,,
• 1 got detained two times for this baby,
then she waa sick and now I lost one of
my [dollar] bJlla. • _ ..........
a ftftl.,,.., It Uncoln Ei.m.Mry ~on the onll9I the
went 1hrough 1n. ~ designed to 1lelid\ studlntl ibout . 1mm9.,.. ....... Unbd,..... ttvough Ella~·
Kletn foriot hw ~ pillPOl't. wtlkh mede fot wne unex·
pectlld ~ lndudlng her ·~lent cMportation.
Doily Pilot
•• ~tf1e.~. 1HAN .A BUMf~f( SilCKER"
I I
FEEDBACK
A yacht to argue about in Balboa
M ISSUE: A Balboa Island
resident wants to move a
pier and park his vessel in
front of his two neighboring ·
homes.
Balboa Island ii a community
for femmes, friends and visiton.
We enjoy a quaint small town
environment ot beaches full of
children. benches for those who
want to stop and smell the roses,
and a boardwalk for every age to
stroll. Large •vessels• docked
within 20 to 40 feet -depending
on the Ude -simply do not
belong in this environment.
They belong in an appropriate
marina. 1be Newport Beach City
Council needs to deal with th1.s
lnue in order to prelel'Ve our
small friendly community.
LAURE HOA<iLNfO
Balboe bland
I'm writing to exprea my con-
cam about the propoled docking
ot Lodwrick Cook's 55-toot yacht
beJe OD Balboa Island.
I've lived OD the illaDd for
over four f1!811 OD Amethyst
Avenue -about one block from
SOuth Bay PnJnt. My Wife and (
Ylltt the beedl bare often. wttb
our 2-yeu-old daught8r. ·
PladDg ... bOat pate1lel to
the beedl would be ftlY UDNI•
bemme 11 would block aD ¥Wwa
ot tbe wellrway aDd tbe •dM
tNllc pa 'Df '"'-
llqudy a my..,._ .......... ......
~ llaat could .. ONr•
aDc:Mra01t11111 Aarm
.. ,.Jmow. ...... c.-...
I 111 leMdu••911Ma.6' ,......... . ., ..... .._ ............... .
.......... mNmm .... .
Mowllll.-I I·=· .... .tll_l!ll .. 111' aJ ...... , ............ ... .......... ..... ............ .,..., lnntr ..... ..., .......
to become an impersonal marina,
open to the highest bidders.
SCOTT & KEWE WILKIE
Balboa Island
One notable matter th.at you
failed to report is that much of
the resistance is to the boat
being moored parallel to the
beach. which is more obstructive
than if it was parked vertically to
the bay front I think that this
should be noted in aubsequent
dJscussions of this situation.
MtaiAEL LONG
Corona del Mar
1b1.s is a response to the arti-
cle about a proposal fo place a
55-foot yacht parallel to the sea
wall aaoss two lots. We are long-
time residents of Balboa Island
and do not wish to see this kind
of pl9C8dent set.
The beaches in front ot these
properties are public beaches
and are packed with children
and families during the summer.
P1adng a boat of tb1I me across
the property linel wW buically
make the bell.ch unusable, u
there will be limited acce11 to the
bay liDce the boat will be block-
ing the way.
Tbe WM of the barb« wW
allo be rettricted for beech goers
and boardwalk stroUen. The
bMc:bel and boerdwalk around
8-lboe JllaDd are pubic and
open for~ to enjoy. We
• want to U.., It tldl way.
..... • SHILLY TAYLOlt
BeJboe llland
I tbllik tbe artld9 fails to men·
don • couple ot ........ By park· mg tbe boat out ...... 11"1 cn.t-
bag ....... ..,., bUard
to .................... boat Rf. le.,,... .. --11m~. dly .... Tblltl• pu*-..-..s
-.. pu111c-.-11M1 ~ w ... ..,,. . ............ -= ....... C".!:n: • -,...,. ....
I wish to register a protest for
the proposal of the 55-foot boat
and the dock be1nq redesigned
on the bay front I think it'• more
than just a matter of view. I think
it's also a safety concern because
little cblld.ren on that beach are
paddling out in rafts and boats. I
think that a boat that l1ze ts so
enormous that it blocb the view
and could create a very severe
safety problem for children WbO
use th.at beach eveiy summer
and during the year as well.
FlORENCE VANDEGRIFT
Balboa Island
I am absolutely opposed to ·
allowing Cook to park h1a 55-foot
boat in front of h1a residences on
Balboa l.sland. I think it would
spoil all the approach to the fad
that Balboa Jlland 11 a beach dty.
It is not just a boating as:ea. It 11 a
family area where people come
from outside of living on the
111.and They've alwavl been wel-
come to come down lor the day,
to swtm and lit on the bMCb. but
a large boat ltich u that would
make that ftll'f dimcult and V'4'f
1moomfort.able.
That put QI tb8 bMc:h woWcl
n0t be Mt OD. PeOple dcift't want
to Ill and IOolf at a gNat b6g 55:.
• foot bOU. It ii Dot safe. It would
be UDMle for 80atm'I, for pMdle
boeta, lor IWtallMn tD go .......
there to try to nrtm. to -tnadl-
lng about tbe may sis ctdc boell
that we b9ft an tM lllmd. ll Ii
not a .... iillwllm. S« ra ~ much~tDIL
SAUM....., ............ .
I ~ tldl. I <*'lillDlf =-~t:.= ...... 11u:w•••• ...
·'
• I ..
Dally Pilot Sunday, June 17, 2001 11
•
Kee_ping the Center on i1S feet
Judith O'Dea Morr talks about putting together a dance season
110 ,...,..:
Judith O'Oea Morr
~:Executive
vice president of the
Orange County
Performing Arts Center
~dualtlon: Bachelors
lrom Illinois College,
master's from Simmons
College in Boston, Mass.
,,...,..~note:
Before jOl;ng the
Center in 1985 as gener-
al manager, Morr was
general manager for the
theaters for the
Kennedy Center
C........,lty
lrwolwtnent: Member
of the boards of St.
Joseph' Ballet and AIDS
Services Foundation of
Orange County
GREil REPUTATION
'You just can talk
to anybody who
has any involvement
in international
travel. and they say
"Oh, Costa M esa.
Yes, Chat's where
they· have that
dance series,"
because a dance
company comes
and really has a
great experience
here and they go
back and say,
"Come fo
Costa Mesa, i t's a
great place." '
I n May, the Los Angeles
Tunes called the Orange
County Performing Arts
Center "the primary des-
tination for dance in Southern
California.• Just take a look
at the slate for this season and
next -the Bolshoi. the Paris
Opera. Ballet, American Ballet
Theater -and trs easy to see
why. In fact. Teatro alla Scala
Ballet Company will have the
American premiere of Sylvie
Guillem's "Giselle" here next
month, a production that is
-only slated to appear in one
other place in the states, the
Lincoln Center in New York.
Some of that. if not most, is
thanks to the work of Judith
O'Dea Morr, executive vice
president of the Center. Morr,
who came to Costa Mesa in
1985 from the Kennedy Cen-
ter, is in dwye ~ dance pro-
gramming at the Costa Mesa
venue. She sat down with
Features Editor Jennlter K
Mahal this week to talk about
putting together one of the
best dance programs around.
Wbat ue your responslbW-
ttes at lbe Centerf
My first title when I came
here was general manager,
which bad been my title at
Kennedy Center, where I did
similar Jdnds <:l things for 15
years. And now my title is
executive vice president. but
my responsibilities are pro-
gramming and theater man-
agement
I have general responsibility
for programmtnq, wbich does
not mean that I am the artistic
person for the opera and the
symphony. But I, specifically, do
the dance programming and, of
COW'Se, with Jerry Mandel
(Center president), work on the
Broadway season. which is our
most popular season.
How do you cboa. wbkh dance
compmlel to llMte year after year1
I have a general knowledge of
the companies in the world. and
what's important to do is keep a good
eye on them so that you know where
they are and when you would want to
bring them and show them to our
audience'.
And when you Would want to bdng
another one, you think about what
programs you would want to have
them show. You think about what
artists yx>U would like to have dance.
And then. in 'COOSU.ltation with the
companies, you make that decision.
1s lbere 1m 8tlll am yoa 1a11w not
been able to bdng ID tlulll yoa would
like to see perform at the Centerl
There's always the challenge of
finding an artist that's new. However, I
think we've been quite successful in
bringing the artists that we want to
have here. When I look back at the
range of companies and the nwp~
of companies that we've bad hete,
we've really bad just an extraordinary
array. I'm happy with what we do.
Whal'• your favorite balletf
1be wonderlul thing about dance
and story ballets is that every choreog-
rapher who decides to change it or put
bis or her stamp on jt is completely dii-
ferent. I would honestly say, I actually,
even though programming doesn't
reflect it, I'm most interested in con-
temporary choreography and where
it's going. But remember when I talk
about doing things for the Center, I'm
worked at Kennedy Center in
Washington D.C. for 15 years.
There we bad five1beaters ... U
was glorious opportunity to
learn and to develop my own
talent
Whal do you .like best about
your Jobf
The constant changing
nature of every day, because we
do some 360 performances
every year, and that means
there's a new artist or a new
company or a new produd:ion
challenge eYery day. Almost. So
no day is quite the same.
I have such respect for all of
the colleagues that I work with
-backstage people, wardrobe
people, ushers .... Everyone
who works in the theater is here
because they really love the
arts, or they wouldn't be hei:e.
It seems like the dance sea-
son sometimes gets less recog-
nltton than the Broadway sea-
son when It comei to awtt-
ences. 1s that truer J
Not in the world. I mean it
really was our dance season
that gave us recognition in the
international world or theate~.
You just can talk to anybody
who has any involvement in
international travel and they say ·oh. Costa Mesa. Yes, that's
where they have that dance series,· because a dance com-
pany comes and really has a
great experien~ here and they
go back and say, "Come to Cos-
ta Mesa, it's a great place.•
We've built a lot of support
CARL Hl>ALGO I DAILY PILOT
• -we've had wonderful board
support, we've had wonderful
audience support. Dance is
always a challenge to presenL
A challenge for many reasons
-audience, expense .... It's
also a challenge to find the nght
opportunity, the right tnne in
our schedule when a company
is able to travel. We very often
have just very tiny windows of
time that have to make a travel
company's schedule fit within
that. It makes it difficulL
looking at what's appropriate for
Segerstrom Hall. And Segerstrom Hall
has 3,000 seats. It is truly an opera
house in all respects. We can take the
biggest and the best And my focus on
working on this series for the Center is
to present the biggest and the best.
Wben1possible, it's important to
present the range of programming
that a company will do so that you
have some of their contemporary work
and some of the traditional classical
dance so you can see the full scope of
what their capabilities aie.
What was your llnt aposure to
dance1
As a child I took dance lessons,
piano lessons, like most young people.
And it was after I began working at
Kennedy Center that I really began to
study and learn more about dance. I
How do you grow support lor the
daDoe series In terms of the local
aucUeocef
We have preview talks before
every performance so inten!sted peo-.
ple can come and listen to a person
who has expertise in that area talk
about the performance they'll see that
night. We make available readmg
mater1al within the program. and most
people who are interested in dance
carefully read the material. We send
out our own pubbcation, called Revue
magazine, and most often have arti-
des about upcoming productions
which give a lot of information.
And word of mouth is always part
of it. I think those who just saw the
Paris Opera Ballet will talk about the
next company we have, which is the
la Scala Opera BalleL And that's all
part of audience building.
'will amended Iloise ordinance do the tric~.in Newport Beach?
AT tSSUE: City officials adopted
a new noise ordinance June 12.
Just wondering about the new
ti= noise ordinances (•Newport
1 officials have last word in noise
"issue,• June 13). I'm more of a
night person. and it seems a little
11 ,arbitrary to me that they can tell
~ebody at 8 or 9 p.m . th.at their
muslc or their radio or something'•
too loud.
• ,, But they'Ve got no problem with
.. \b.• cop helicopter flying over at 3
in the morning waking everybody
up and shinlng their light in the
_ windows, or with constructlon
aews and everybody else sta.rting
, construction at 1 in the momlng.
' What about the people tbat drt·
.,ve taxis, work In restamantl, and
UM that morning ttme to lleepf It
MelDI like tt't putting one c1ul of.
relidents above another, espeda1ly
with the kind of. town that New-
port Beath bu alwayw been and
•. what type ot. revenue uMd to sup-
tt,POlt the City -re1taurant1, ban
and night dube.
I Now tbat evwybody't gotten to
be ovw 45 JMll ol ege, tbl)' want
.U tbld to c:Mngll. lt'I DI *9 8-
polt. 1be alrpOlt .... tba --~ mOv.d In and DOW tMy
hMMl tbe ~ gGGe became ~gotalt_..,,...._..aDd tMr wait a to be,...•..._ ftJmt_...., .... ,to_ ....................
oulto ... '"'""& .. ::: W.Jml
It.. MiwplltleMll
R1•d•n
RESPOND
tion. But to be even more effective,
Newport Beach @ould make sure
th.at residents of the area are clear
about the process in which to
report such c:tiltwbe.ncel and th.at
homeownen and ownen of rental
propertiel understand clearly the
new rules •
I betieft that most ol the *1-
dentl in the Weet N9wpolt area
are reelClDlbly tolerult <:l parties
in the ..... Alts all, it's the good
tilD8I and cUual beech atmc.
pber9 tbat •Uradl IDOll people in
the tint plM». Tbe Jut th1Dg anybody,.... ii more nm. or
. ~nm. piQblml artw
beca\m tbe .. 1111111 ftl'Y" t:ran-a.a. wt.,......... ---....
dmtl to .... talla ~ fililtt••• to-·... ---able Intl. I tbllf .......... mg~'=·-llllm tbldlle ~ ...... , ....,..._._,=wt ...-..-... .,~ .. . iw ........... fu'
p9aple _....,. ... ~,..
PleiD ........... ....
l>.-11% WM•• wlf•be .. 2 ...... ,... .... _.
w' ·-~•.alllft ............ .... ID?'t' --..-alda ....... au•., *"•I m
Newfx)rt ~ice de.fines purpose of new noise ordinance
•
' . I I '
•Jt,o~-Ufm-)wsoptwqile
ofwhatpaltlfn•Wow.lhlpelamlleWeP!I
Ill a.w.c ....... ---"
Klltl ....,,...lster, Costa Mesa High
t • • ;..J . . . • . ' • • •
Ina
. . .
· j• ._., ~1 ·-•on1!.~ .. • SilartllWI ~.-. SC '--"
~ .. -
12 Sunday, June 17, 2001 •Sports Editor Roger Cari.on• 949~7.4.4223 •Sports fax: 949-05~170 Doily Pilot,
'
n
• Llttle League's Tyler Brady has left a lasting impression
in his first season since moving from 1\tlsa, in Oklahoma . .
Barry F1ufkMr
DAILY PILOT LtnLI UAGUE ·
W en Tyler Brady catches
and throws, he reveals
part of what makes him
an All-Star.
the Diamondbacks helped his
Cardinals reach the championship
game with the best record in the
Majors Division.
The Newport Beach Llttle
League All-Star first baseman was
born with about half of his left
arm.
In one fluid motion, the
12-year-old catches the ball with
his right glove and then quickly
takes it off, cupping it on tJ:\e left
arm. His right hand takes the ball
from his glove and he's able to
make the throw.
•(The Diamondbacks' batter)
hit a fly ball deep to left center,•
Brady desaibed. •1 just ran. threw
my hand out there and grabbed it.
And I ran into the fence. I thought
he hit it out of the park.•
The advice he gives to other
first basemen is the same he
displays.
Making big plays has become
customary for Brady. Last year, he
turned heads in Tulsa, Okla.
where he mostly pitched for his
team. He also slammed a home
run in the league championship
game.
"Don't be afraid to block the
ball with your body,• Brady said.
•Go after every ball you can.•
One of the best defensive
players in the NBLL, Brady also
excels in hockey. football and
volleyball. But baseball is his
favorite and playing first base is
his delight.
Brady was born in Orange
County, but was r4ised in Tulsa ·
after bis family moved when his
dad, Steve, bad to relocate the
family because of his job as a
graphic designer.
•1 get more action,• Brady said.
When the Bradys moved back
last year ::-they now live on
Balboa Island -Tyler and bis
8-year-old brother, Brooks,
And that's exactly what he wants.
'Throughout this season, he has
received plenty of action. His
sensational catch in the fifth
inning as a center fielder against
were enrolled in St. Joachim
Elementary in Costa Mesa and
they both made mends quickly.
'JYler played receiver,
s~
Last of a series
SEA KINGS' TOP 10
1. The cross country team, led by ·
senior Katie Quinlan, wins Pacific Coast
League, CIF Southern Section Division rv
and CIF State Division IV championships.
2. The track and field team, led by
junior Julie Allen, defends its CIF Division
Ill and Pacific Coast League titles.
3. The tennis team captures CIF
Division IV and Pacffic Coast League
crowns, while sophomore Anne Yelsey
and the unbeaten doubles duo of Leslie
Damion and Brittany Holland win PCL
singles, doubles titles, respectively.
4. Julie Allen wins the 1,600 meters,
the 3,200 and is second in the 800 at
both CIF Division IV and Pacific Coast
League finals, then goes on to finish
third in the 3,200 at the CIF State meet.
S. The Pacific Coast League champion
soccer team puts together a 261Jame
unbeaten streak and outscores
opponents, 108-19, but is upset
in the CIF Division IV semifinals.
6. Volleyball and water polo each eam
a piece of the Pacific Coast League
championship and both reach the CJF
semifinals in their respective divisions.
7. Senior Kristin McCoy (basketball)
and sophomore Alissa Zoelle ($oftball)
are named District Players of the Year,
whlle McCoy and junior Allison Harvey
(soccer)· are each named Pacific Coast
League Co-Most Valuable Players in
therr respective sports.
I. Senior Jaycee Mahler (two), senior
Jenny Cummins and junior Krisserin
C.na,Y (track and field), as welt as
freShrii1n Kim McKay ($Wlmmlng),
etch 1dd Individual Pacific Coast
league championships.
t. s.tra Deming, Lindsay Anstandlg
and Jacqueline Becker (voll~ll); arm. Vogele, Molly O'Mear1 and Elisha
Morgan_ (soccer); as well a Christin•
H.wko end Danielle C.rlson (w.ter
polo) Hm flrst·team All-CIF recognition.
10. Alla honors •re 1lso bestowed upon Allllon Harvey, Paige Janes and
LIUrtn 5hlDhlrdson (sOccer), 8S well
as Denllla blGleCOmo, Lindsey O.t.y and Miiie Tnyeo (w.ter polo).
,
SEE ALL-STAR PAGE 13
tars tar
STEVE MCCAANK I OAl.Y "-OT
AU-Star Utile Leaguer Tyler Brady, a Balboa Island resident. has a lot of things going for him at age 12.
OAl.Y Pl.OT PHOTO BY DON I.EACH
U e CdM girls aoss country team gm
roughshod over the competition. Below,
ulle Allen led the way ln track and field.
and below, left, Brittany Reitz (above) and
Anne Yelsey formed a sterling 1·2 punch ln
tennis.
r.
OBITUARY
Jim Hagey
loses battle
with cancer
• Longtime fixture with Costa
Mesa High athletics succumbs
to the disease the age of 67.
Tony Altobetli
DAILY PILOT
Jim Hagey, a longtime coach and
athletic director for Costa Mesa High
athletics, passed away Friday night
after a long bout with pancreatic can-
cer. He was 67.
"He's been battling this for the past
61/2 years,· Jim's widow, Jeanne, said.
"He put up a heck of a fight.•
Hagey spent 30 years with Costa
Mesa, coaching the Mustangs' foot-
ball, baseball, softball and golf pro-
grams. During that
span, he was also -----
Mesa's Athletic
Director for 10
years.
"Jim was the
rock of .our school,•
current coach and
Athletic Director
Kirk Bauermeister
said. "He was a
sturdy guy, always
by the books. When Jlm Hagey
our football coach
stepped down. he and John Carney
stepped up and did a tremendous job.
"When we needed a softball coach,
he did it,• Bauermeister continued.
"When we needed a baseball coach,
he did it. When we needed a golf
coach. he did it. He was a great team
player for the program. AJ a young
coach, he was a great example of what
pattern to follow. I hope I can be half as
good an athletic director and coach as hewu:
Services will take place Monday at
11 a.m. at Grace Church, 5100 Cerrttos
Ave. in Cypress.
In lieu of flowers, donations can be
made in Hagey'1 name to the Ameri-
can Cancer Society. Por donation infor-
mation. call (800) 227-2345.
Hagey ii survived by his wile,
Jeenne, and his five grown children,
KAren, Sue. Terri, Jon and Scot.
Day 1 Cl)
Daily Pilot
•After four years, AYSO
Region 97 Comhlissioner
has decided to step down.
Tony Altobelli
OMY Pl&.oT w:en dentist Steve Rausch
began his involvement
with the Amertcan YouUl
Soccer Organization, he couldn't
tell the difference between an
offside and fluoride.
"I grew up with baseball, foot-
ball and basketball,• Rausch said.
•1 bad no soccer experience
whatsoever. I just watched for a
few games and I quickly got
familiar with the sport.•
1Welve years later, Rausch bas
experienced just about every facet
of youth soccer, from coach, to
referee to divisional director to
assistant commissioner to regional
commissioner.
Finally, after four years as the
Region 97 commissioner, Rausch
will step down. Boys Division 3
ditector Tony Anish will replace
Rausch, who will maintain his
involvement with the organization
as a field coordinator.
"When I first became involved
with AYSO Region 97, there were
maybe 700 kids playing,· Rausch
said. "Now, we've got anywhere
from 1,700-1,900. The game has
UP
really become the yeuth sport to ·
be a part of.·
Rausch began his soccer legacy '
when his oldest son, Steven, was a
player. •1 was goin-g to be out
there anyway so I thought if I
could make a difference with the
kids or help the organization out,
I'd volunteer my time,• Rausch
said. "From there, I coached my
younger son, Chris, and my
daughter, Kate, as well.•
In addition to his coaching
effort, Rausch also volunteeted as
a referee. "That was neat for me
because I got to experience the
game from an entirely different
perspective,• he said. "Of course,
my whole point of being involved
was for the kids, but I did it for
me, too. It was a great experi-
ence.•
From there, Rausch served as
a boa.rd director for three seasons.
rThe main responsibility of a
boa.rd director is to put the teams
together,• he said. "I was
primarily in charge of the Division
6 and 7 teams.•
Rausch was then appointed to
assistant commissioner and would
have stayed there if not for tlie
departure of the regional
commissioner.
"I was moved up by
acclamation," Rausch said. "I
received a ton of help from
SPORTS
Steve Rausch
GREG FRY I OAlY PILOT
Steve Rausch Is stepping down as AYSO Region 97 commissioner.
volunteers and parents, which
made my job a heck of a lot
easier.~
Rausch saw the increase of
soccer interest bit around 1984,
during the World Cup. "That year,
we went from 700 kids to 1,300, •
he said. "The World Cup in '84
really turned a lot of families on to
soccer.•
Region 97 has had its ups and
.
downs and with any organizabon,
there's bound to be some
competition to deal with.
·Club soccer and other sports
such as baseball, football,
basketball and hockey have been
our biggest competition,· Rausch
said. ·1n the past, I was pretty
antagonistic about lods going to
club soccer, but now, I've come to
understand and accept kids
Sunda); June 17, 2001 13
choosing that avenue.•
The inspiration of all this hard
work with AYSO came from his
father, wbo was Rausch's No. 1
fan. •1 grew up during a time
when' parents really had a hard
time going to their kids' sporting
events," Rausch said. ·aut my dad
always made sure he was there
and that really meant a lot to me,
so I made sure I would be there for
my kids as well.•
When not in the soccer world,
Rausch runs his own dental
practice, which allows him the
time needed to volunteer at AYSO.
"If you ask my wife, Janet, she
sometimes thin.ks I spent too much
time with soccer and not enough
time as a dentist,• he said with a
laugh.
"Even after my last child plays
AYSO, I'll probably still be
involved with the organization. It's
a great program to be a part of.·
A YSO RegiQn 97 covers west
Newport Beach and parts of Costa
Mesa. "In my opinion, it's the best
youth program around,• Rausch
said. "I've had so much fun and
I've made many friends. Former
kids I've coached come up to me
all the time and that's the best
feeling. I just hope when people
leave AYSO, they leave with a
good taste in their mouth.·
Spoken like a true dentist.
.Harbor 14 rolls, big time, 14-2 Quakes rattle
CdM early, 9-7 • Newport advances NEWPORT·MESA PONY FATHER'S DAY TOURNAMENT to today's Father's Day
Tournament title game.
Tony Altobelli
'DAILY PILOT
CORONA DEL MAR -
Whether it's the numbers on
the backs of their jerseys, or
the numbers put on the score-
board, the Newport Harbor
' 14 All-Stals like those digits
big.
The fact of the scoreboard
can be illustrated in Satur-
day's 14-2 win over Costa
Mesa in the semifinals of the
Newport-Mesa Pony Confer-
ence Father's Day Tourna-
ment, held at Eastblutt Park.
Boasting a lineup with an
average jersey number of 37,
numbers usually reserved for
football running backs and
slo-pitch softball sluggers,
Newport pounded out 14
runs (10 in one inning) on 18
hits in four innings.
•we managed to put it to
them today,• Newport Man-
ager Taras Young said. •we
did a decent job of bitting, a
good job of pitching and a
solid job on defense. We're
going to go a long way this
year.•
Newport was led by the
strong play of Kurt Yacko,
wbo went 3 for 3 with two
runs scored and three RBis
and also pitched 31/3 score-
less innings of relief with four
strikeouts.
Aaron Fitzhugh (2 for 2,
one run, one RBJ) and Kevin
Courvoisier (3 for 3, two runs,
two RBis) each bad home
ALL-STAR
CONTINUED FROM 12
STEVE MCCAANIC I OAl.Y Pl.OT
Newport's Kevln Courvolsler Is congratula ted after slu gging a home run.
runs for Newport. while
Patrick Keehan added a
triple, double and four RBis.
Costa Mesa actually
jumped out to a 2-0 lead in
the first inning ;>Vhen Alex
Pisarski led off with a single,
stole second, stole third and
scored on a wild pitch.
Ryan Gleason followed
with a single, advanced to
third on two wild pitches and
scored on a sacrifice fly by
R.J. Duemberger. Jordan
Kalke also had a hit for Costa
Mesa.
Other offensive stars for
Newport include Taylor
Young (2 for 3, two runs),
Kenny Knight (2 for 31 two
runs, three RBis), Luis
Rodriguez and (2 for 3, two
doubles, two runs).
Newport will play the 13-
1.C Quakes in the final today,
beginning at 4 p.m. at East-
bluff Park.
• And that was all they needed to win.
Steve VinJen
DAILY PILOT
CORONA DEL MAR -
One inning was enough for
the Quakes, a traveling
baseball team of 13-and
14-year-olds based out of
Newport Beach, in the ·
Newport-Mesa Pony Con-
ference Father's bay Tour-
nament Saturday.
U. Quakes scored six
runs in the first inning en
route to a 9-7 victory over
Corona del Mar's All-Star
team. earning a trip to
today's title game against
the Newport Harbor All-
Stars at 4 p.m. at Eastbluff
Park, where the six-team
toumamentinitsthirdyear
is held.
•we did a good job of
getting the hits that we
needed,• said Quakes
Coach John Elliott, who
allO coaches for the Corona
del Ma.r High baseball
team. •we got some walks
and then we came up with
the timely hits.•
Mark Doble, Ryan
Landry and Dennis Heenan
walked to load the buM.
Al Meschi singled to eem
an RBI and then Scott
Denault pounded out a
double to center field for
two more RBis.
Yet another walk came
and Steven Wirsch dou-
bled, scortng two 01ore
runs.
CdM bad opened the
game with a 2-0 lead end
nearly r.ihed to send tbe
game IDto extra ~ In
PONY llSEUll
the top of the first. Blake
Allred smacked a home run
on the game's first pi~ch.
Cd.M . Coach Kevin
Quick said be felt regret
because be experimented
with the pitching rotation,
leading to bis team's mad-
dening first inning. .
Asked if his team gar-
nered confidence from
nearly rallying, Quick,
again, was regretful •u anything, I set them
the wrong way,• Quick
said. • (CdM} was expect-
ing to win. We felt t,tiat we
could beat these guys and it
showed after that first
inning.•
CdM, in fact, outscored
tbe Quakes, S-3 after the
first mning.
In the second inrung,
Cd.M's Wes Presson
smashed a home run deep
over left ceDter field, a two--
run shot scoring Jaik Ball-
back who bad singled. Ball-
back's base hit. scored Matt
Busch, who led off with a
single and later stole sec-
ond.
Presson also gave Coro-
na del Mar some stability
on the mound. He came on
in the first inning after l1
pitching change, to halt the
Quakes' scoring. Pres.son
pitched through the sUth
inning, recording nine
ltrikeouts as be allowed
just three runs, two
unearned.
CdM takes Back Bay duel, 8-4
• Back Bay factor puts
some ooompf into win.
CORONA DBL MAR -n
might as well have been
•father's Weekend" at Bast-
bl\iff Park, where the New-
port-Mese Pony Conferent'e
held tts Father's Day 'lbu!M·
ment Saturday.
A hill day of ba1eball,
which included bubec:oe
hamburgers and bot dogs,
1be Beatles and otber JMiltY
mUlic blaring, and • .....ma
nUach nun than • IOd9l
~palblilWM a
In the an.a ... Of ..
day, two AD.a. ..... d 13-
~ *•=. 111111* udC.....1111 , ••• t
PONY BASEBALL
both teams gave their fathers
an early Father's Day gift with
90IDe great baseball.
ln the firSt inning, CdM's
Shaun Mohler gave bis team
the lead When he pounded a
two-:na.n homer that cleated
tbe fence by more than 10
feet. He scored Matt R.aiger,
whole RBI double scored
Johnny~o. •
Orozco's son, MUte,
cnnk.ed out a tw<>-Nn doubae •
ID tbe third. lt'Ortng b91f,
wbo ieeebtd on an enu, and
Aagllo, wbo Md • giWDd·
Niii dOubae. ·~na•ng.· 8ddMt ~waa,....wo1 ............ ..._.,...,,I
11111 ... ,..,. -we ....,..
==~=c:-···~··, .. ---~·=---Rt.._. --..-...
•
. . .
14 Sunday, June 17, 2001
CRAPIOOK
2000-'01
m .... • .......
~21, 1939 to Jue B, 2001
In loving memory of Lynn Ring
who passed away June 13, 2001
fullowing a long illness with
Ovarian Cancu.
I.rnn w:as born and raised in
Newport Beach having att.endccl
Newport Beach Grammar School,
Harbor High and Orange Coast
C:OUegt<. Her father, Hap Stahler
wu die first dentist in Balboa.
She is deeply missed by her loving
husband, am Ring, and beloved
daughtm, Susan SpcMcr and
Oona Jacbon and gratiddaugbtcrs
Son}* Spc~r and Morgan
)dlon.
In licU Olflowm, the family
H; r w remembrances be made
IDC '
The .... Holpita.I
~nR.i
°'8lilll Claca Fun':f
II 0. Holl Dmt,
P.0 ... ,100,
Newpon a.dat CA '2663
··soom
HIGH SCHOOL GIRLS
DON LEACH I OAl.Y PILOT
Af cing blg moments In sports for Corona del Mar
High's girls were (clockwise, from top left) the
xplolts of water polo standout ChrlsUna Hewko,
soccer star Jaycee Mahler, softball pitcher Alissa Zoelle,
pole vaulter Krlsserln Canary, buketball star Kristin
McCoy and the heralded volleyball team.
Bow t.o Plaee A
OASSD'•&AD
' ...
' • >' . ' .
•
ltS time to stepJ
up . to the plate :.
S ooietimes an objective
view from outside the
battle ~one can bring a
swift air ot reality to the
picture. I'll sure give it a try.
This is in reference to the
rigs on with the Estancia
h football team and the
la of senior participation due
to the transfer of Coach Dave
Perkins from Eagleland to
Costa Mesa.
If I was a senior-to-be and
my coach took off to the
archrival scbool, I'd be pretty
ticked off, too. nu=1~ars of busling my butt, d g with two-a-days,
dealing with playing
at the lower leve1s J
and waiting fof my
shot down th~ road,
only to find out my
coach left me high
and dry when my
opportunity finally
arrives.
Would I be mad?
You betcha. Would I
be upset? Absolutely.
Would I be confused? . L__ ___ •
was decided we were not
going to play the final two
games of the season. That'll
show 'em, right?
Well. the coacblng staff
caught Wind of this little
meeting and basically told· us
if we didn't e;;; we wouldn't
play varsity ball nm yeiu:.
or the year after that and 5o on
because they didn't. want
quitters in the program:
We were so stuok in the
~=r;i:~ :~~er:i:. :1
DeSpite the very real threat, ~
we were sun going to sit out JJ
the last two ~am.es anyway.
We were trying to make a
point and we were
trying to right a
wrong.
It took a number
of long chats with
our parents to finally
convince us to finish ~
out the regular •
season. which we did.:
I learned a
valuable lesson
during all'of this. •
'Most likely. Would 1
want to quit? Not on
your llle.
Here's why.
Tony Altobelli
PREPS
Sometimes life stinks
and it doesn't go the
way you want it to
go. You can either
wash your bands of
the whole situation or By quitting, you've
already admitted
defeat. You've given the
Mustangs the last laugh and
believe me, they're going to
laugh out loud, especially
playing a senior-less Eagles'
squad.
With the addition of
first-year coach Jay Noonan,
perhaps he's a football genius
in the making. He's eager to
make a positive difference to
the program, but you'll never
know thfs ~ause you're not
playing your final season.
Pi~ this scene for a
minute. Your senior season,
playing Perkins and Costa
Mesa for the last tiine. AD your
hard work pays off and you
pull off the win, not only
against your former coach, but
the school you'd most like to
see fall off the face of the
Earth. stranger things have
happened.
But all this is just bot air,
because the seniors are
behaving very unseniorlike.
ln a ~. I was in a similar
situation during my prep career. .
I bad a situation my
sophomore year on the
. Newport Harbor baseball
team. A teammate of mine was
being kicked off of our Junior
varsity baseball team with two
games remaining because he
was nqt respedful to the
coaching staff.
· We players were so ticked
otl at the situation, we bad a
meeting that very night and it
you can suck it up, deal with -
it and make the best of the
situation. _
Hearing this recent 1
Eagle revolt brought that •
not-so-pleasent memory back •
into my brain. I can't begin to ...
tell you how grateful I am that
cooler heads prevailed and
we were talked into playing
again.
I played my junior and
senior years on the varsity
squad, which turned out to be
my final two years of
competitive baseball.
I especially remember my •
senior year, knowing I went .:
from a puny, uncoordinated
little freshtnan to the senior .
captain of the varsity baseball:
team. Like a great majority of
athletes, my senior year was ~
the peak of my playing career
and I'll never forget it ·
Ob yeah, 'fe were 2-23, so
don't even try to explain your
tevolt on account of a
less-than-strong football team.
That's just a cop-out Will they
be a better team without you?
In condusion, to those
seniors still trying to figure o~
what's right or wrotlg in this
situation, the answer is simple.
Stop aying, turn the ~ge, get
back on the field and finish
up your high school career
with pride and a sense of ·
accomplishment
U you don't, you'll regret it
for the rest ot your life. That I •
can guarantee.
....------DeadUam ------
MonJ.y ............ Frida,. 5:00pm Fri.tlay .......... Thuniday S:OOpnt
n-d.y ......... Monday S:OOpm Satunlay_,._ ..... Friday S:OOpm
Wedn-.lay .... Tucwt.y S:OOpm Sunda, ............. Frida1 S:OOpm
ThurtlClay .. Wednt'Jlday S:OOpm
· Dolly Pilot • r I
\ • •
~ '·"
llltioe lelend houM. Vee
rtntai.er 28• Furn 2 ~ from waler $1750wlc
...
~
''U>
E'Slde Coft8gl Ilg 381 1 Be
home, gw, ~. lrg r,e: 278 Mola YID l 949-71~2051 .. Mlwpott--COllt--2&-2&,-... Ilg
18f DNdlld Cottaoe will petlo, glled oomnml1Y,
pllio 1 rN1e 10 beldl, cdl IVllilble lrnmtcillly $21 obi
cell.a Ing, "°"' MoYH1 mo IQ!!! M!-717"'732
Stk 2\'Jlle model l*fect. •1----,-11,.; .• , .... ,
Executive hofM 4llf 4be E'SIOE ou.t, rlmOCllled ~~~~ •
clll IJlll, l«e new,.,.._. ol Twnlvn Ape 2br 11hba, ooY· •-------
SC>IQll! $&40 ~ dep 12 mo
18111 (No Peta) 133 E.
18111 St M9"!Ml-2.421 Ron 94g.S0().3269
~yf~rtyu!' v!: e<ed 2-c..._~;, 1Vpets723~~~22s 38r 381 Splciolll Twmm FOUND CHIHUAHUA COSTA MESA 55+ Reellorl 94M73-4062 mo, "' -.,..... ........., FR. tp, 2c gw, II*! comm. Feltvlew l bllllf tound 8-1 28ft dbl wide, foot· W•d l trig. IOI, 1279Wo June 12tfl i~=E 1 r -155-tlOlmtofllOl----1174 HOI~ I AA' 949-574-5610 14'"631·5545
:...::..=.-.=.:-. --==I.__~": 1-..-.11· dl@I
714·1t1·2gl 8'1mmertwlnter Specloua 1n lhls brand new Lg. Cl)'8lll • - -
........... looldng laf
good ltlm WOIMll, tlP
good blA nol ~ Good wOlk
:":'~.,...~ Ck· 2075 N!wpo!1 8ttd CM
Ann: Wcwtc F.-tto.a u, .., S2K711Hr. '".m ..... 7-21'4
WV(W.axtrtrMCUhnow.com
Ann woftl • ,_ $25.00
.f75 OOlw PT/FT mell OIOlr
1n1eme1 en -296-0953
HappxWO!k!nGAtHome.com
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wl lrlln, Mil kw Juwl or
Mateo ~10
flll'lllelled Townlloule 281 Cove home, beech -.,
Bile. pool .._ Siil dtdl $730Q.mo 714-te.W713 Motel
Ollw9d Aug 11 S675Mlo MANAGERS
PIClllc VW 1in1M Dog 1o¥w rllld9d lor k_...
Cllmlllly plcl. ¥1"'8 $3,800. nel help nMr O.C. Ftlr·
Hklng $3,500 Clll gnll.lldl. PT/FT, f7 IO 11111. ~ ~ I '·:.7.11 ~~:b~ 949-87}7048 .. !I!!. 714-444-3489
<>c.1111 Front 28r 1 Ba ______ _._ &tuated on bealMYtf
niCely tu1nWled, l•um. e BACK BAY e landscaped grounds
prtng (Wltly-M1Ny) 32 3& 38a, Ilse. ~g y!d. ctfllrll FEATURES 24-Hout
Olilm Uir+ 220 II loll. 1 ~ °' 323-394..t39' AChleal pe1s cit. GMlentr lobby/Ol1ec1 dlel ~ t;/O~t~ = r-----.., $2~ lse 94~~ ~es/frH HBO.
-CORATED 29A 18" """ nuu pool end 91'. al ~heal· tty Clole IO 405 & SS
C4*ISat & S4lft ... 2 Mn,
1900'• Parlor roding
dllirl, ll'ltiqute, onetUI
rugs, cohcllblel, •11 ~
pie!, mile, 2990 a.m.w. $1850 yt!y. 94H
7
5-692
1 I 'stCOUIA~oe..-w 1 _39_,_3-"'B.;.;:• -"c'--'ondo~,-"'hee-tld-~I~ ~w:. -...; ing PV1 pabo S1800(mo M.A.. Mil' from OC ~ no~fA ,_ 949·675-8579 c .,. 1 llodl9t ESTATE -.: '#Id, mlao, S160Mno F~. oollgt and = _, --__ _. ..._, '-· FOR ,.., y bcht. Watll""' dis· , ~ 1Z _,..,., ••-= -· l.EA;x; In Cc1o1 Ill.A POINT lleglnt lbr ""' eofe ~ Vuet 381 281. ••· tumshed Iba eotldo, ....... """' "'" canoe to lllopl and • • • ------.. , ·-1 .......,. ., .. , ,,... rtSllUflllll oollec:d>le booka, • few I •-Se!l( 6 lhnl Oct 21 2001 shol1 or lonQ 11111\ tum =· ...... & btd ir-. !!!..... -~= 949-380-9492 unlum 31~5227 COSTA MESA ... • --• MOTOR ~ SA ~ 10All S:t1 Allo,
• ,.._ 38t 28a Fp 2W bay~.~~'!._'..,, ~ ~ oo":rl"~Rl.Y
Studio -1 1oc wa11i to 1111 S22ro'mo 1 YI leaM °' ..--.,, • -• mont rrty 708 s Ins Drive Jono ttnn lease S2200'Mo ::t pw1"':., ":r ~re:; by hrst. 1t1tn ~u Parlld. laaoclated Realty , .. _,,_ ,
CUSTOMER SVC
Mlwpott IMdl Loin Co.
MtkaP/f ...... _1
Emnd pnon Cal Tom 11
94~543-7255 • 125
. . .. 'Sunday, J1Jne f 7, 20C>'1 'J5 '
Have A .
Garage Sale!
at
Call the Pilat
Classifieds
[949J 642-5678
ta Place Your
Garage Sale Ad! plcnQ. $!195 !MH73=0537 Ttn0re, !!JI 949-856-9705 94M73·3H3 I * ro"'f:r.t I .. ~
C1wft11ng 111f Ape. Lowtf LNt In beeu llolN wNle LIDO ISLE lrnmac 381,
,_.. -.-.... h -...-.~ .......... for den, 281. 2.5 -gwage. AU. mn. lllDHG$. PIT 1>2Mn I*_. lor ~-. ..--· --.... W9fY °" ....... "" -. p11lo, S2tSOlmo yrly. So ""--Co ._~ smell, ~. $11()()( I frldlon of nor1NI Nil 14.._,.7 • .......,. M1wpott b11cf1 .... 21r, FldOly Cllerence, Smal ~-"'" mo lnc:ldt ulla Cell Mutt hive nice turn. Ho ,...... .,., nv wlbey view, pvt belcll, DepoliC Wll llOld 401teo, OMV r!C(d, !MHZ
94M7s.3888 or 533:§553 IMtllMllL 714-906-1124 819 Cenyon town home, pool S7SO Ind Id. so.100, eox120. &ox200.
I 1·COlfA =I I 11°oosrA :m I ~~ ;;;;.:: ~ ::::: ... ..: AlCEPTIONIST-P/T
Gnrll d!Alee, phones &
.. typing 949-752-41118
Al/I lor .Mtllir1I or ta..
• • • • Bad! Bey 38t 2~ wl18r 11me NMdld Jtit, CdM TAH AT HOMI 1e.~.1 QUallars Pool eit!d. 94U40-1194 8UY DlflECT NII SAVE WOM e IEACHI C...
RV 2 Iris 4C. ~ COMMERCIAUHOME ~ prop "9'111 co Ra tn.
Lii ?49-720-1565 E SIDE CM Wle 2& ~ lloln $19800 P9Y c11pt11111 l4)0ll exp.
condo lg cloMta ..... bl Low Manby Plymanll sin 1mmld. Summer job
COSTA MESA I SOUTH COAST METRO
~ Jlriiof, 18ectoomWiii2 8eci'oom I Beth ~. S&SO+ 112 ... nci AU Color= cl!. Cllft t!H!H630 .. __________________________ _
Call 714·557 ·0075
,,..., llanrpottalion. rnotltl CCllCllA DEL .. 28dml 181ttl "1new root. •VWl!oft ........... 2 nUEs , Songs Of pralae 17 Got acquainted 1 Hohday event 73 He$ a dolll
COSTA NEUPORTE' WIO cerpe1&pwit onCill &3&2Bl~dlbce !C-7HumlMatt 78Gaveahlghsign 2Teac¥es 74Armymeal '4H414~ NICE COAOHA DEL IWI Or 1 C# ~SI~ ::o~; ~*r,30'° r=::..::.=~~=:;.1 12 e8ars0< RaJderl 83Gene11Cabbr 3 RnaUy 76Nall119melals
/!lnlUll • 58 11o111t 3llr 2111 wldltl WIO 949-673-7900 Oldel-S'tc Fvtllit1n 18 New Eng. staa 84 Type ol shar1c 4 Diamond -n -oe mer
CJl IWifltlt 38$ La P9flt ~ 2 Cit ... S2900flno, eN£WPORT. SHORES• Newport . IMcll Kowt ~ ~ 20 A piece of the -86 Develop 5 Does lawn WOOi 78 Enorele
Pl 2& ~ s11100 & 3bf MH40-7000 U>I a 291 to.. d. 2"' 8Ndl b1oc11 e Jbf, 2bl. ·-·-·Ollot-share 88 Arrived 6 CUts 79 W Coast s.chool
2.5bl S2SOO Fp, pMlo. 2c I 9cLI. You,. CA,. I .,.. WA> Nlllo 1'1IOO &'l>llft e = $2000 .. CASH MID.. 21 T1dlel up 89 Drank like Royer 7 Sllct 80Shore bird$ r I
•• ctl1 QI!!! 94M~3n3 IN Cl.A .. 1 ... ICO t4M73-7ltlo • 1!!M!N1 • • --·--22 Handbag logo &13 Plow .. 8 Head serw.nts 81 OUIZ show host
11
WI llUY EllTATU 23 Dog In •GarfieW ~ S.ves the wine 9 Hearth residue 82 Name In tractota ~ 122 ........... ~-24Copewl1hadwrllty e5Ham...;ng 10Canonlze0Mlle 84Debt9eClle'5
... .._ 27 Jab lil8 Animal•' homeil 11 PsycNc power 85 Anaent
:> .. ..
Weddi~g Expe~fs
SHOWCASE
!](each 42, ()()()
J(eaderJ in 'JGuvpor/ z~ach,
Corona r/J7Jl4r, 'Xt1Vpor/ Goa.sf,
CJo.r/4 !Qr..,a.
'lJon'I miss ou/ on lhi.s chance
lo promole your exRer~i.se in 1/lis field}
Our W«J,J,n, cS.60.au1 • 'Ai6liN!ion "lfM.·-it. 21/li 2()()/
~'l>Ml!tn.: ~1Ni, 20()/ •~· iw# 1"'1 #OJ
corJs1GrJr.mJTs 1
, ... ' \.;. ...
28 s.ma -. CA 97 l.mpraMd, pU 12 Nips and -86 Astror.ut's ·Rne·
29 Harangue 98 -out stretctied 13 Y<>Oeler's answer 87 Feel tarry about
30 warm-water lhark 99 Ahab"• Y9SSel 14 High card 89 BYrro)tltemabYe
31 Ogled 100Aorenoe's11vw 15 Oecerves 90 Prodlioer Spelling
33 Rolltop -101 Middle Eastem g~ 18 C8pl1al o1 Dervnar1' 91 Spotted horW
35 Binge 102 • -got ttr . 17 o~ stimulus 92 Outlawed
37 Condo units 104 Tend 1he garden 18 AeebOk oompetJtor 93 Wool fabric
38 captain -·Luc 105 Comprehend 19 Require 94 EQual
Picard 108 Ntg.h1 insec1 22 Tiny bugS 95 Luster
39 Kefauwr ot 107 Evens the 900re 25 Toppled over 97 ·oooct>ye, Pierre·
Congress 108 Harmful becterlli 26 Game ofticial 99 ·oee whiz!°
41 Hair treatment 111 PHcher 32 Dtne 101 Emt>usy staNMs
42 Aeur~--113 Put oil on 34 l..afge green penot 102 Me)CICln Ill.a.rd
'3 Ught 115 Tl'lt 38 Ostrlc:h's kin 103 Tum aside
47 °"1 pain 116 Roed to Rome 37 Mournful cry 104 Long •ndwlches
'8 SW8'91 • 118 Salamanders 38 Anny vehlCles 109 Pt Of an hour
51 Multlplled 122 Adrnlr9f ~ Qeepy 110 Rose
52 Yves' glrttiend 123 Transmission part 43 Cooks in a sltillet 112Stlmpy1 pat
53 Roe 12.4 Tabc>o9 44 9oX9f Grtmth 114 Teaehers ' org
!58 A9slst 128 Type of tkie 415 Small streams 115 Courage
S7 Manipulate 127 MlrOIOget's topic '6 Br911d nser 117 Sign'°"
158 a.ta 1300PEC member 48 Stashed away 119 Kook
~ -rnonst. 131 Dalry-<:ate buyS 50 Sb<·Shooters 120 Bull 'Hye eo ~ noblenwn 133 E11 ooun•v 51 ·0on .-..n· poet 121 F&SI
62 Poet'• new day 134 Be an aocompllce 53 Signs of the lulure 123 Horse's attendant
MC«p head t3!5Gl's eeparallOn 5-4 Palntet Leonardo 125 Foot ex>wmgs
86 Ch0p9 doWn ~ra da -127 Ctwnnel-surts
87 Admitlanoe 1•1 Skin opening 55Ctudl area 128 Reed Instrument ee MUSlcaf tcundl 1 «2 ONndo tgunst 61 T)'Pe of exam 128 Aaor BNoe
68 c.mtxda'a athctoo 62 Barnyard nol9es 130 Mdel ~
neighbor 1'3 Wor1t•'• 63 ~na.or·s PfOY 132 Clmb (a rope)
70 ~ Hemlogway 1ncen•w e. Domldle a.bbr 138 ·To -ltlelr golden
71 School IPOf1I org. 144 Joked (wound) 65 Sldeldcl1 ..,...
72 UprWnga 1e Dllpetch ee ~ 1'S7 sma• ammo
73Brk*mak•'s 1.ilel.lnecrfdtches 88S~Tumer 138Almolt~ own 147 CINn9d houM •SINCk a maid\ 138Compass dlr
7' Dmy -1e 8\d-4AI) 70 SAlc:Qn ol 140 Hut>W>
•
I I
Bridge
8Y CHARLES GOREN with OMAR SHARIF
Md T~NAH HIRSCH
,.
HEARTS AND DIAMONDS ARE INEXTRICA.BLY LINKED
Neither "ulnmible. South dell.ts.
NORTH
• AK2 o AO 10 764 o 6H
WEST
• 976
<:;> K3
•2
<> K984
• KQ107 SOl!fH
•QJ4 <:1 982
o AQJ
•AJ4J
The bidding: - -SOtJTll WEST lNT Pa.u 2<:" ,_
40 Pam ,_ ....
EAST
• 10853
c:;J S
<> 10 7 2
•9865
Opening lead: King of •
Diamonds and beans arc ricd
together in tales of romance. 'Thal
was also the case on this deal from a
rubber bridge game.
When West led the k.ini of clubs
and dummy~. South n:all.zed
that the parlnCrship bad been in better
slam.a, since tli,ete wen: potential
loseR in both red suits -OCl I bill
day declarer CX>Uld be def~ in the
munp suil alone. How would you
play the heans'/ .
You do not know yet -it depends on whether or not you have 11 dia-
mond loser. South won the first trick
with the !ICC of clubs, ruffed a club l.o
dummy and led a diamond to the
queen, which held, . Bast producing the deuce. Sbould declan:r now takC
the safety play in heans b¥ leading ·a
trump to the ace? Yes, 1f declarer
could be sure that West wu not hold-
ing up Jhe king of diamond.~ -a play
a good ddendu mi.II.ht man, Here,
tbal would result in down one.
Better Is to Cl'OS$ to the ace of
spades and repeat the diamond
fmess,e. When West wins with the
klng, pat yourself oo the back for not
taltmg the initial winning diamond
finesse 111 face value. Now do you
know how to tackle the trumps?
__._..,
~ •• J
I I ~l
DOWNSIZNi SOWT10N! Tlme To OWn Your
OWn BUSinesslfl
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CADILLAC EJdondo '91
TIC, CO, alloya, reduced,
(793622) li4.988 NABERS
1714 )5.!0-!100
Cadlllec Sedln o.vlllt 't2
belae. tan teether, deen
(20!&4) $6,968
NABERS
1714)540:9,100
South·s one no trump showed IS-
17 points and North's two diamonds
was a transfer 10 hearts. The follow-
up of four clubs was a splinter bid,
showing shortness in the suit. Since
the bidding had improved the South
holding, South coopcr.ated by cue-
bidding the ace of diamonds. That
was music to Nonh 's cars, who now
jumped 10 slam in hcans.
Most surely. You cannot afford to
lose a heart aick, and the percentage
play is 10 finesse the queen, succeed-tng wbcncver hearts are 2-2 with the
king onside, or East holds a singleton
jack. Win a.oy n:tum in band (or come
to lla.od if West lllaltes you ruff a club
in dummy). and lead a hean 10 the queen. When that holds, ca.~ the ace
and hope for the best. The gods of
distribotion have been kind -the
outsc.anding ttumps come tumbling
down and 12 tricks are in the bag.
Cedlllac sid.wi DevUle '93 A $105,000+ Per YNI Low ml. Ice blle. ltlv
Established. Vtf'/ p!Olitabll. (23319'l) $9.988
(5) Star BusNsa. Only NABERS S1l895 j~715i (714)$40.1100
CANDY AOllTE Cadlllec Sedl!I Sfttlll '93
S3,000IMO. (reallttlc) 57k ~-while· Ian lthr. ~
1·~11·~==11·~1 20 IOCAL Vending ...... 111\A onv oond. Yi1 t49'l751 no compt1111on, I hnhno $7,995. 949-586-1888 Bkr
$9,800 cull 1'9QU119d 1-80().26H601 C241vs) Cdllc Sevll1e STS 't5 low mi, black cherry, alc1fS
ABSOLUTE CASH GOLD (~4) $15.988 RECEPTIONIST
Part·time permanent 5 . Local newspaper 1$
lor a sell-motivated, c e ul and positive
attiluile J*S011 lor our front
offlce. Good dericaJ slcills.
be able IO Interact wel with the public. T radltional
switchboard experience helpful. Drug screenlnW
physical required. EOE. f'ax Resume to
949-631-7246 or send to v.rna Saenz o Daily Pilol.
330 West Bay Street,
Costa Mesa, c.-. 92627
RECEPTIONIST •
OC't II Real Estate Co. ::s.:,~~
have a 'lf ·~nlat
position avaiable in Corona del Mar. R'qulres
professional lrien<ly at·
tltude. previous experience W/buSy phones. and strong
complAer knowledge. Holn
9;00-6,'()()PM, $9-12/Hr. F'ot
conslclenlllon, tax rewne IO
(714) S40«l88 or call (714)
$57-0nl JI 245.
Rttlll Salt•
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Develop Mar .
MINDI $0 Down! Net NABERS $481<+. Wol1t 6hrs. Candy _ _..(7~14:t:l5~40-:;;;l:..:1::.:00:...__
BAKERY
OUTLET CLERK
VENDING rte ill (Orange Cadllllc Sevllle '14
County) Toll Free SLS Lo mi, leather, aloys 1'877"494-8695 241va (824619) $11,988
NE¥/PORT llEACH CA I w -D I This ls • gfllt part time-_, BOATS opportunity for an
experienced sales
professional. Be tile spark 15" Botton Whlltr 50 Hp
that igollea a prospect'• Yamaha, fish finder, VHS,
interest in a relatloi'lstip With ez Load trailer, tul cover,
aan awan1-wkring adVe!tis· looks like new. $6900.
ing and public relations 949-720-9941 agency! For more lnlorma-:.=...:.=..=..;'-'-----
tlori. vlsil www.pureoctan· 19&6 20' Blf1nun. sm. c:utty
e.jobinlo.com or call cabin lite Ills, '80 Meleruiser 6881430-6175 and reler 10 470 17""" · wea position 7179-0AIP. EOE ma1Main:d.,,e1~-3s41
Take advanlage d WOl1<ing
in a friendly, Independent
atmosphere. Bestfoods Ba~ Company (Enlen-
mann a/Oroweal product)
has an opening for a part·
lime f\akery Outlet c~
Previous relalV11181Chandi1·
Ing eJq>elience anc!lor cus-
tOlner selVioe a pjus. Must
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We offer exc:effent benefil5
and starting wage °' $9 .. 92. progressing to $14.17 per
hour. Interested appllcants -------. should apply in Jl8ISOl'I I I 211t •lectrlc. bolt. 1-. Tuesday, . Wednesday & 47t £WLOY8T Wittie, l'lfl1g, tnlllor. good
Thuniday between 1o:ooam tERYICH con d . s 1o,u 9 · 3:~ ONLY II the _ _ NM.cl-NU lddl.-fisted below: ----"'=-"-"'-'=--
I t11 •i
NABERS
(714)54C.-1100
CICfilllc Sevlllt STS '97
Low ml. CO. alloys (845265) $19.988
NABERS (714 )54()-9100
Cadlllec Sevlllt '97 STS Lo 48k mi. polo, lllv,
(841067) $19,988
NABERS (714)540-9100
C1c1111c sm.. '96 SLS Seamisl green, leather
(833148) $15,988 NABERS
(714 )540:9100
Cdllc Sevllt '19 SLS Lo 1 t!k mi. tan lthl. (904873) _.... '25,988
NAltR$ (714)$40:9100
SELL YOUR USED VEH ICLE THROUGH CLASSIF IED
PIMM bl IWlft lhlt
the llttint' In lhlt
catlgOly ""Y l'9qUll'I
you to cell • 900
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""" .. • charge per minute.
44ft BENETEAU 13' 3 ata111 rooms. queen Ille mstr. to-tal refit '99-'00 wl<K wihllA
Ne.lwpaft • boat «tr St79,Q00~-1170
CHEVY CORVETTE '95
Trlplt bid, Hpd, 761c
Ml, 115,750/0bo.
MMS0-7180
OUICKSOOKS SETUP
Training & Support.
Bookkeeping S8IYlces avai.
MM!lt-7597
1=-~1
fl CARPET fl CARPf'T <I
Repairs, Palching, Install.
Courteoua. Alff size jobs. Who!!!aJel 94~92·0205.
·-a1QIH!:tW
lftlft .. ..... __ _ --.... _ ..... ..... _
M11111.1!11
I Provldt lnWMt
"-rch; E·mtil; Ooc:u-mencs on PC; Pickup and OtliYer ... 1404274
WINDSOR GARDEHCARE
Re&identllll Design • lnslal
Mllnlalnenot. All work
guarenteed. MfM41.4917
YARD CLEAN.uP
Tl'8M·PM18d & Removed,
SpMklers ReQelred, new
lawns, Cell 714-751-3471
Verd CIMn Up, Install
Splfnld1r1.. Memt-nce,
Trim Trees. 24 Yrs Exp.
Free Eal MM5CM7!J
CIMTILl• 11-I PC REPAIR Expert 1-II"= I "'• COiMCM1'I mobile 18Mce. Contact lllAIGllY ~ friendly teohnicl•n MDll!I Alt CUSTOM CREATIVE TILE ._ _____ .. _ Q!!!!! Viii 0 @iH42..Q883
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h!Mndherilealth.com
STARTING
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FIN~
an apartment
through classified
Daily Pilot
GOOD JOBS.
RBUABLB
SBRVICBS.
INTBllBSTING
THINGS
TO BUY.
IrSALL
THl!RB
EVERYDAY
IN
CUSSIPBDI
(949) 642·5678
The Legal Department at the .Daily Pilot is pleased to announce a new service
now avai/,ab/e to new businesses.
ITT-will now SEARCH the name for you at no extra charge, and save you the
time and the trip to the Court House in Santa Ana. Then, of course, after the
search is completed w,e will file your fictitious business nam~ statement with the
County Clerk, publish once a week for four weeks as required by Ut.w and then fi/.e
your proof of publication with the County Clerk.
Please stop by to file your fictitious business statement at the Daily Pilot, 330 W.
Bay St, Costa Mesa. If you cannot stop by, please call us at (949) 642-4321 and we
will make arrangements for you to handle this procedure by mail
If you should have any forthtr questions, please cal/ us and we will be more than
glad to assist you. Good luck in your new business!
1111 w l
·------·
TWO BROTHERS
MOVING & STORAGE
Some Day s.vice
Comm/HouMhold
Antiques & Pocking
949.645.4545
PUBLIC
NOTICE
The Calif. Publlc-Utllllles Com-
mission REQUIRES
t111 an used ~
hold goods movers
print their P.U.C.
Cal T runber; llmoe
and chautll<I print
fleir T.C.P. runber
In al adWrtlsments.
If you have a quee.
lion aboUt the legal-
ity of a mover. '1lO
Of dM8f, cal: PU8UC UTILITIES
COMM IS ION
714-558·4151
a v... Owner ~ °" 1111 Job. ~. OIVWll a N;oJfflJ; Remowil. Aera. ll~•l4flnaured. Call
Gelle MH52·1493
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UC1llOHIC AM UM DlftCnON ........,..,....
675-9304
MlClll PWMllMO
Rlol*I • Aemodlll FREE ESTIMATES L!ff?:39 71tt!lt 1090
t
Trl••lltf, Rt1111ral
& Yo" c.1u,.,,,.
714.435.17 Slate Lie 62007
M'OAI• I SEltVICES _
Can't seem to
get to all those
repair jobs
around the house?
Let the Clanlfled
Service Directory
help you find
rellable help.
I
#'•f" .....
. .
New 2001 Focus LX
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AT, AC, cltJsn. 5-SPD., lthr., AT, AC, f/pwr.
(123417) Car (763757) loaded. (113109) (106315)
•5976 $8976 •B976 •8976 ... ,,.,,,,,, ••J"OYOTA -..aru11.11 .., &471111111
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(123498) (254664) (272754) (165802)
112,916 '12,976 '12,916 118,976
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pwr (109025) IMthsr (146687) (402526) Alloys (559364)
'14,916 1 14,916 '15,916 '15,971
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(A42254)
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(818845)
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. . . Sunday, Ju~ 17, 20()1 '17 .
Eve New 2001 Taurus
'•FORD '1111 FORD '119MAZDA '117FORD ·
at:OllTIEW E1ll0 PROTEBE TllllWlfnWD IX
AT, AC, f/pwr. Club chateau, AT. AC, loaded. AT. AC, alloys,
(195753) loaded. (A63856) (174567) f/pwr. (127112)
'10,976 1 11,976 111,976 1 11,976
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CD (133038) loaded(634619 (558819) Power (C02 717)
'13,976 114,976 114,916 '14,976
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Full Powsr, AT, AC, f/pwr.
4 Door (180191) (611560)
AT, AC. Full powtJr.
(009465) alloys (851072)
'15,916 115,976 116,916 116,976
W t:ll6VY t ._ ·-1'11110 ·-N111D W C.raEll ·-FOllO ._ -•C:TY ·-FtMll Xt:Aa 1'•1/IOXl:Aa E..w.. F·t•Xt:M .... MWJXJ ~JIJ.T 140 MU$TIW911T
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(137799) (840207) LoadtJd (M1730) sldtJ (815800) mlltJs (871256) load«/. (270373) (A14944) alloys. (603722) IOMl«J (217484)
'16,976 116,916 1 17,171 117,171 '11,976 117,916 '11,916 '18,976 '11,111
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. .
· 1a ~Ju~ l7, 2001 · I I ' Doily Pilot
C 0 L D W .E ·L L BANKER
FROM SOUTHERN CA LIFORNIA 'S LEADING REAL ESTATE COMPANY
HARBOR ISLAND $5,237,000
Incredible opportunity to build your dream
home! Expansive views and dock.
Georgina Smith 949/759-3710
HARBOR VIEW HOMES $1 ,549,000
Beautiful custom 5 Bd~ home. Premium
location. Lush yard.
Joyce Clifford 949/717-4792
CORONA DEL MAR $1 , 195,000
4 Bd. 2.5 Ba. Newty remodeled family home
on large comer lot. Just move on lnl
Bob Boyd 9491280-8001
NEWPORT RIDGE VISTAS $849,000
Fabulous Cstallna Island and ocean vfew.
Designer details.
Lynn Noah 9491759-3722
HARBOR RIDGE $2,550,000
Newport Beach custom 4 Bd. 6 Ba. Four
fireplaces. Ocean view estate.
John Hyatt 949/759-37 49
HARBOR VIEW HOMES $1 ,539,000
Exquisite 5 Bd. 4 Ba. traditional family home
on cul-de-sac.
Kline & Harris 949f759-3n1
COSTA MESA $899,000
Gated mini estate on fabulous grounds,
large home with 4 Bd. 3.5 Ba. Pool and spa
Reggie McNemey 949/650-117 4
BAYCREST $764,900
Fabulous remodel. Tum-key condition.
Wonderful open floorplan.
Sally Phillips 949n59.3735
BLUFFS · $534,000
Charmng 3 Bd. plus den 8nd Id town:iome.
Remocteted kitchen.
949/718·1524 John~ 949'759-3749
NEWPORT BEACH $2,495,000
Fabulous Big Canyon home with wonderful
views. 5 Bd. 4 Ba. Beautiful view deck.
Carol Menconi 949/464-3011
CORONA DEL MAR $1,395,000
Custom oontemporary 5 Bd. 3.5 Ba. home.
Just steps to the ocean!
Tammy Connelly 949/246-1819
NEWPORT BEACH $879,000
Panoramic view of mountains and city
lights. 4 Bd. 2.5 Ba. Harbof View Home.
Gerry long 949/640-5664
NEWPORT BEACH $729,000
Large duplex In excellent location close to
Newport Beach pier. 3 Bd. 2 Ba.
Ear1 and Judy Taylor 9491574-3598
NEWPORT BEACH $385,000
Single atory 3 Bd. 2 Ba. In the Bluffs.
P.ao on grMnbell
Devid PMOe 949171 S.1520
CAMEO SHORES $1,895,000
Ne arty half acre flat lot. 180 degree ocean
and golf course views. Cul-de-sac location.•
Tom Thomson 9491718-1547
BALBOAPENINSULAPOINT $1,100,00>
Custom Family home on extra large lot.
4 Bd. 3 Ba. Family room.
Kim Bibb 949n18-2747
BONITA CANYON $874,500
Single level Plan 3. 3 Bd. 2.5 Ba. gourmet
kitchen and 3 car garage.
David McCulloch 9491718-1549
EASTSIDE COSTA MESA $569,CXX>
Newer custom built home. 3 Bd. 3 Ba. wet
bar, French doors, vaulted ceilings and morel
Donna Rudolph . 714/546-8496
A MESA 1289,000
A car . ..ooffa dream! 3 Bd. Two cer dleaohed
garage ptus large WOll<"'1op ~ Audrey Sevoipoloi
_ ........ __ ? ............ '-""' ................. I lS , .............. ~ ............... -...~-..···--•
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