HomeMy WebLinkAbout2000-07-13 - Orange Coast Pilot..
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SERVING 11-iE NEWPORT -MESA COMMUNmES SINCE 1907 ON 1HE WEB: WWW.DAILYPILOT.COM ntURSDAY, JULY 13 I 2000
Bqdy of Costa Mesa man pulle~ from .ocean ·
•Authorities unsure what caused the death of 70-year-old.
man who washed up on shore near a mobile home park.
Orange County Coroner's office
said the man was from Costa Mesa,
but that no other information was
available late Wednesday.
\
determined, said M1chdel Eaton, a
supervising state park rdnger. An
autopsy is scheduJed to be conduct-
ed today. .
not be revived.
The man's death follows a senes
of gruesome incidents at local
beaches. This summer has already
seen two· drownings off Newport
Beach and a number of close calls
for swimmers cdught in rip cur-
rents.
• Alex Coolman
DAILY PILOT
CRYSTAL COVE STATE PARK
-The body of a 70-year-old Costa
Mesa man washed up on the shore
in front of the El Morro Village
mobile home park Wednesday
afternoon, tunµng a beautiful day
at the beach Into something more
maca~re and mysterious.
Deputy Joseph Luckey of the
Authorities have not released the
identity of the man pending noWi-
cation of family members. He was
found wearing shorts, a T-shirt and
socks, but no ~10es.
The cause of death has not been
Beachgoers noticed the body of
the man floating in the water at
about 12:15 p.m., Edton said. State
park lifeguards and paramedics
pulled the man from the ocean
and performed CPR, but he could SEE DEATH PAGE AB
DON LEACH I DAl.Y I'll.OT
Joe SIMd, rtgbt, and Carl Will stand In tbelt garden. where they grow the spldest of peppers. Stead holds what
he bope1 I.I the i>erted Peruvian pepper, which they call Inca gold. The friends have created a Oavorful salsa
intended to be enjoyed and not feared for its ~any degrees of spiciness. They will enter their peppers and pep-
per-related Items jlt the Orange ·County Fair.
ff(:)t enough?
The prize peppers
that Joe Stead and
~tf"_l Will...!Jrow in their
COsta Mesa garden can
make mouths water -
and bum -at the
Orange County Fair.
~Gluw
DMYfll.oT
COSTA MESA-The pair picked a
perfect Peruvian pepper. They'll pit
tqia ~ect Penivian pepper against
pfdded ·peppers, purple peppers and
probably piquant Pequin peppers.
Perhaps they'll prevail.
•1b19 year we have the yearn to
barn.• Mid the ruddy-faced Carl Will, 49. wbo deims to eat roughly two
pounds ot chlli peppers a month. •vou
can't beet our beat.•
Will, a carpenter who lives in Hunt-
ington Beach. and his partner Joe
Stead, .ca. an OCC h9rticulturistJrom
Tustin, will enter their golden Aji pep.
pers and Inca gold Nuce in several
pepper-related contests at the Orange
County Pair, underway through July
30.
Serendipitously, the theme of th.is
year'.s fair is •ttotl Holl Holl, a Salute
to the Pepper Industry.• And the part-
ners' pepper patch is less than a mile
from the fairgrounds.
Unlike dozens of other people
entering items 1n the lair's ~
contests -which in years past focused
on cakes, cookies and strawberries -
these two are not bandwagon pepper
people. They have shared a passion for
peppers sin~ they met more than 10
years ago, when Stead, then a hard-
ware distributor, sold tools to Will.
·we knew we'd have a long-term
friendship,• Stead said. "And our
mutual love of peppers changed it for-
ever." .. ,
Both swear by .the heCll.ing power or
peppers, espeoally theft ' pepper
ranked "seven out bf 10" on the bot
scale: Ajis.
Will said he hasn't caught a cold,
Ou or even the sniffles since he !:>egan
gnawing on the Ajis, Thais, jalapelios
and babaii.eros.
Capsaicin -the oil that gives pep.
pefS their spicin~s -helps lower
cholesterol, prevent blood clots from
forming, act as natural painkillers and
clear stuffed sinuses, according to
•Healing Poods and Juices,• a book
SEE PEPPERS PAGE A 1J
·Rea may be µew home for alitllt ed
Newport library
foundation loses
350members
•Officials with the
fund-raising group
say drop was result of
a public spat with the
board of trustees.
Noaki Schwartz
DAILY PILOT
by mdny nonprofits, Tra<ry
Key s, the foundalton's
adrtunistrative director, said
the recent loss IS signifi-
cant
·we can assume it has d
lot to do with what when
on,• Keys Sdld.
What happened is that
last October the trustees
sent a strongly worded let-
NEWPORT BEACH ter to the foundation accus-
Pollowing a yearlong pub-ing the group of financial
lie brawl between members mismanagement and
of the Newport Beach pub-threatening to dissolve the
Uc llbrary foundation and cruoal relabonslup. While
trustees, memberslup in the the foundation raises mon-
fund-ra1Slng group has ey, the trustees deode how
dropped nearly one-third, it's spent Although an
reports show. . independent . audit found
Although the founda-notlung arruss , it took some
lion's name has been-tune before the two grou~
deared since the dispute fonnally made up earlier
unfolded last fall, support this year by signing a mem-
dropped from 1.200 mem- orandum of cooperation.
bers to 850, according to a Despite the daunting task
July 5 foundation report of recovering from the blow.
obtained by the Dally Pilot. Larry Spitz, the foundabon's
Wlule membership attn-
bon IS a typical battle faced SEE LIBRARY PAGE A13
Greenlight alternative
qualifies for fall ballot
• City clerk's office
approves required
signatures, qualifying
traffic relief Jl)easure
for November election.
Noakl Schwlll'tl
DAILY P1LOT
NEWPORT BEACH
An alternative to the so-
called Greenlight initiative
bas quaWied for the
November ballot, setting
the stage for a political
showdown over traffic and
development rights this fall.
The city clerk's office
announced \Vednesday
that of the 9,212 lilgnatures
gathered in support ot the
naffic Phasing Ordinance
measure dunng a slJt-week
campaign, 7.064 were
deemed valid. The signa-
ture count was just 300
more than what was need-
ed to place the Il\easure on
the ballot.
"We'll be battling it out
with the Greenlight peo-
ple,• said fonner mayor
Clarence 1\.uner, a coauthor
or the measure.
U the competing mea-
sure is VJctorious, it would
not only make Newport's
traffic law part of the C1ty
Charter, but it would also
nullify the Greenlight mea-
sure if it were also to pass.
Touted by proponents as
the toughest traffic ordi-
nance in the county, the
SEE TRAFFIC MGE A 13
-........ --... ----M ...
IN .
..
llilfLY • lilslllSS ~ ~ ..
fotal ~ popUlai" ~nfnsula nightclub
~ ICJrlcup, of Nl\'\IP()rt musk on the peninsula. The reno-
Blue, Inc.. NCantJy pun:t.ld:t· vatlons will lnclude new llghtlng,
dk> c.te on a.lboa PenlNUll sound system and stage.
p11n1 to ,..,,,..,1ze the popuJar r Klrkup recently hired Tricia
at 100 ~ St., ne1r the Balboa• Freeman to book entertainment
• Pier. for •Thursday Night Blues,• which KJrtup, who ._ beiln a Bal~ features local and touring. bloes
~owner for sewral years,. acts. Freeman Is also planning
plans to sp9nd SJOO 000 to remddel "Women of Rock• for Tuesday
the 25-year~ cate' to keep ft nights. showcasing femal~ blues
among the top nlghtdubs for bl
Doily Pilot
Summertime rheans hot
deals on garden supplies
Greer Wylder
BEST BUYS
neyland Hotel, Disneyland
Paclfic J{oiel, Anaheim
Hilton and Anaheim Mar-
riott to South Coast Plaz9.
The free daily service
begins Monday.
Johri Wald
I f you haye a green
thumb, mark Aug. 9 on
your calendar, That's .
when the Orange County
chapter of the CaWorn:la
Alm. of Nurserymen will
be holding an auction on
plants and garde~ supplies
at the Orange County Fair-
grounds. All proceeds will
go to various local charities
and organizations, includ-
ing Sherman Libro.ry &
Gardens and the Centenni-
al Parm Foundation. Last
year, the event raised
$11,000. The evening
begins at 6 p .m . with a .
chill cook-off, and the auc-
tion gets underway at 7
p.m. The plants and gar-
den supplies will be sup·
plied by dozen of retail
nurseries, wholesale plant
growen and garden sup-
pliers. Admission is free for
the auction, and a $2 dona-
tion will let you taste as
much chili' as you want.
Information: (949) 721 -
2100, Ext. 505.
Uttle People and Me and
Shoe Story in Westcliff
Court is holding a summer
sale, offering savings trOm
20% to 70% off its entire
stock through Sunday. Pop-
ular apparel name brands
on sale include Kid Tails,
Roxy, Quiksilver, Billabong,
Lucky Brand, Baby Lulu,
Biscotti and Metropolitan
Prairie. Shoe brands on sale
include Elefantan, Valencia,
Sam & Ubby and Skechers.
Ladies apparel and shoes
are also on sale. Westcliff
Swim instructor makes a splash with kids Another fun charity
event: an outdoors blues
concert and food festival to
benefit the Orange County
Pedormlng Arts Center
will take place from 5 to 9
p.m . July 27 at South Coast
Plaza Village. The eighth
annual Hot Blues on a Cool
Summer Night features
food from South Cout
Plua restaurants Arman1
Cue, Antonello Rb-
torute, Blrraporett1'1,
Blaewaw Grllt 11ae Club-
home, Oarya Penlan Cut-
slae, ~0'1 UtUe
Italy, Morton'• of Chicago,
Rainforest Cafe, Royal
ICbyber Indian Culllne,
Trattorla Splga, Vle de
Prance and The Wlage
Farmer. The headliner will
be The Bernie Pearl Blues
Band. Bernie Pearl has
played with Papa John
Creach, Harmonica Fats,
B.B. King, Stevie Ray
Vaughn and Doctor John.
Advance ticket prices are
$35 for Center Stage mem-
bers, $40 for nonmembers
and $50 at the door. Infor-
mation: (114) 284-5464 or
on the Web at
http://www.center-
tttage.org.
HEIS
Teaching your toddler pillow
floats, big arms and some serious
kicks this summer.
NOT A 9-T0-5 JOB
Sure, the water is cold at 8 a.m. But
it's better than being stuck in an office
behind a desk all day -at least for
John Wald, a. swimming instructor for
the city of Costa Mesa.
Wald, 19, is a recent Costa Mesa
High School graduate and lifeguard
who gives swim lessons at Costa
Mesa's Downtown Community Cen-
ter. He has been working there for
four years, but recently decided to
trade in his whistle for a foam kick
board this year.
Teaching kids to swim five days a
week is Wald's ideal summer job. He
will attend Chapman University in
Orange this fall.
·it's challenging,• the tan and freck-
led Wald said after lessons, his brown
hair still matted to his head. "You really
get to make a difference in these kids'
lives. It builds their self-confidence. And
it's the highlight of their day.•
And forget abOut the slacks, sJli,rt
and tie. At the pool, it's all about sun-
g.lasses, swim trunks, water-resistant
watches and sunscreen.
ONE, TWO, THREE
Wald teaches basic swim skills to
small groups of children -from age 3
and up -every half-hour from 8:45
a.m. to 3 p.m.
•All right. let's get going," Wald
shouted. "Kick, kick, kick. Blow your
bubbles. Are you ready to practice
your big arms?"
The shivering children clutching
the wall with their tiny hands
responded on cue.
"Down, back and around. Down,
back and around,• Wald demonstrat-
ed, moving from child to child for
individual instruction. "Eve rybody
say it. OK, now try it on your own
with kickers.•
Next were "jump-ins." Then pil-
low floats. And more kicks.
The 30-minute lesson aulminated
with the youngsters fetching a plastic
ring and competing in an airplane
race across the pool
5AF£TY IS SPEUED M--0-M
One of Wald's students, a pint-size
4-year-old named Laura Berry, gave a
big hug to a sibling following the les-
son. SWl dripping, she acknowledged
that going under the water was her
favorite part.
"Good job, Laura,• cheered her
mother, Kellie.
Meanwhile, Wald bad made his
way into bis office to towel off and
prepare for lunch.
•Tue job pays $8.91 an hour. It's
not bad,• Wald said. "But it's not
about the money. I love getting up
and going to work.•
-Story bJ Amy R. 5Pw'tleon; photobJ-··~
. Court is on Westcliff Drive
near Dover Drive and Irvine
Avenue. Information: (949)
645-1355.
Early Years Toys, also in
Westcliff Court, is holding
a going-out-of-business liq·
uidation sale. Most items
are at least 25%.off with
some toys 50% off. Infor-
mation: (949) 642-4212.
Miner Mistakes Design·
er Outlet is' holding a
designer bed sale, offering
15% oCf its already low
prices. The designer show·
room featwes bedroom
accessories, recliners, On·
ental screens, lamps, coffee
tables, upholstery, and mir·
rors. The store is at 2925
Airway Ave., Suite A, Cos·
ta Mesa. Information: (714)
979-6679.
Trying to make up for a lack of hilarity
More bedroom be'st
buys: A summer sale is
going on at Newport Bed-
ding, where good prices
can be found on name
brand mattresses, includ-
ing Posturematic,
Orthopoise, Princess and
Sleepy Haven. The store
also has a sale on
adjustable electric bed s
and is offering 30% to 50%
discounts on its 100
wrought iron beds. New-
port Bedding, at 1534
Newport Blvd. in Costa.
Mesa, offers free delivery,
setup and disposal o( your
old mattress. Information~
(949) 656-3991.
HELPING OTHERS.COM
We're feBing a little under the
weather this week -is it all the hot
dogs we've been eating for National
Hot Dog month? -so you'll exCUSt!
us if our hilarity quotient isn't quite
what it ought to be.
Consider, for example, our desire
to talk about an event called "Dot-
Coms for a Cause,• which is spon-
sored by the Newport Beach IPNet
Solutions Inc. 1bis is something
that's going to happen tonight in
Atlanta and it will raise money for
breast cancer prevention.
.. Sounds good.
Butisitfunny?Notreall~
SW1MMIN' IN LINEN
And then, on the other band, we
RETAIL ROUNDUP
' want to mention that Frette, a linen
house from Ital\', is opening a loca-
tion in South Coast Plaza.
Now, we when think about linen,
we think about wrinkles. And wrin-
kles are not funny. Unless they're on
that one kind ol dog that's really
wrinkly, and that's not what we're
talking about here.
Prette M)'l it't going to bring •fine
design and beautiful materials• to its
new location. It aays it's going to .
wow us with the quality and sheer
luxury ol the fabrics produced by its
famous Jacquard looms.
This makel ua feel a little better.
It's not very funny, but reading about
it is starting to make us imagine that
we're rich.
ADtOS FREODYI
And just when we thought there
was Ito more mirth, Frederick's of
Hollywood filed for Chapter 11
bankruptcy.
This actually seems like it's
worth a chuckle. Not because we
like laughing at other people's mis-
fortune -we don't. No, really.
Perhaps the lingerie chain
should have opened shop ln South
Coast Plaza. Or maybe Prederick'•
financial state ju.st says something
about the underwear market.
Apparently it's not what it used to
be.
And neither are we. But we'll be
better next week.
Wllllll All ....
,......_ ....,. 1mB
RMY
.... low
You can celebrate Bastille
Day at Mlttra1 with a three·
course meal for $16. The
night begins with compli-
mentary hors d'oeuvres, and
then an appetizer, entree
and dessert. You'll also be
serenaded by live accordion
music. Mistral is at 440
Heliotrope Ave., Corona del
Mar. Information: (949) 723-
9685.
U you have friends, rela-
tives or business associates
staying near Disneyland,
you can tell them about the
new South Coast Plaza
Motor Coach, which will
take touri.lt.s from the Dlt-
• 9IST IUYS ~ on Thurs.
days and saturdays. Send infom\1-
tk>n to Greer Wyldet It 330 W. a.y
St.,~ MeY 92627, or"'-fax It
(949) 646-4170.
POUCI FIUS
COSTA MESA
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. ' Daily Pilot .
" Thursday, July 13, 2000 A3
Here's to keepi,ng that competitive spirit·alive Meeting draws
unexpected crowd S ome years ago, my
grandson came visiting
Crom Colorado and want-~ to ~how me his high-jump-
ing skill. So I built some
makeshift standards and put a
bar across them, which he
promptly jumped. Then he
said, "Now you do tt. •
He had heard my tales -
mostly true -of once holding
the f;'ort Wayne, Indiana,
record in the 120-yard higti
hurdles and wanted a demon-
stration.' The bar was about as
high as our family dachshund.
Piece of cake. I could have
stepped over it, but I jumped
instead. And fell fiat on my
face. What I projected was not
what happened.
I thought of that incident
last Saturday as I bobbled off
the tennis court. My game
doesn't exactly match that of
Pete Sampras, but I've always
had two strengths that kept
me reasonably competitive in
good company: a strong fore-
hand and speed. Saturday I
just had the strong forehand.
Lobs and drop shots that I
used to run down routinely
were out of my reach, even
though I strove mightily to get
to them.
I've been weighing this per-
formance ever since while I
nursed the aches and pains in
its aftermath. of could scale
down my expectations, look
for a slower game or tum to
some other form of exercise.
None of these options have
any appeal to me. The first two
tum a form of intense competi-
tion into exercise -a change
of which I suspect I'm inca-
pable. The third is a kind of
discipline I've always rejected
and have no stomach for now.
I
Joseph N. Btll
THE BEU CURVE
Maybe this dilemma grows
out of my Midwestern
upbringing. From the time I
was a scrawny kid in elemen-
tary school, I've hung out with
friends who were highly com-
petitive in a social environ-
ment rewarding to that frame
of mind.
I knew the pain of reading
a list outside the coach's office
that told me I had been cut
from the basketball team -
and the joy of seeing my name
there another tim~. My high
school friends and I played
poker for pennies and nickels
that didn't come easy and ·
competed fiercely for prom
dates with the beauty queen.
There was a strong bond
between us, but we only
played kee~. No soft touch-
es. We neither gave nor asked
concessions.
It was a lesson that helped
me through four years of mili-
.tary service in World War It
Navy Preflight, designed by
Gene Tunney to make super-
men out of soft college kids,
was a case in point.
This was accomplished by
playing highly physical games
with a kind of competitive
intensicy that sometimes
taJ•~
Mattress Outlet Stor
BRAND NEW· COSMETICALLY IMPERFECT
Get the Best for Less!
lllMWOOD •ICML • Fl t ·==··
approached life and death. U
we lost that competitive edge,
we rilight find ourselves in
some other branch of service -
a specter that hung over us con-
stantly.
Maybe surviving that expe-
rience conditioned me to
regard exercise simply for the
sake of exercise as an enor-
mous waste of time. The idea
of j~ging or lifting weights or
runrung on a treadmill bored
me. When I walked, it was to
get somewhere. r got away with this·
because I continued to be
(lctive in competitive sports -
especially tennis and basket-
ball. Now I'm looking at the
possibility of concessions. And
I'm not ready.
The people in my life most-
ly make (ew concessions for
my age -which is just the ·
way I want it. Or if they do, it
is usually subtle enough that it
can be overlooked.
I have a fonner student, fo r
example, who is now a fine
novelist and college professor.
He comes over periodically to
shoot baskets. We play for mon-
ey, and when it gets to $10, the
loser buys lunch. He's good,
and he never tanks it when we
play. He wouldn't do that. But
when a ball bounces off the
court and has to be run·down,
he does it with such casual cer-
tainty that it's a natural act and
not a concession to me.
My neighbors who take
care of the heavy-duty mainte-
nance that comes up around
my house pass it off on my
ineptness with such practical
matters as tools rather than my
age. Since they're absolutely
right about my ineptness, I
accept the help gratefully.
rm sure all this is made
easieir by the fact that I'm
mentally as competitive as
ever -with one important
change. I don't tilt nearly as
many windmills as I once did.
I'm selective now, which I sup-
pose is a concession to con-
serving energy -or maybe
just good sense.
So where do these refiec·
tions leave me -and how, if
at all, do they apply to some of
the broader lessons of life?
Uke most useful reflections,
they raise more questions than •
they answer, at least for me.
H I accept limitations
because of my age, is it setting
a precedent that will only
make it easier to accept more
and more? And is this true at
every stage of life, whatever
the difficulty being encoun-
tered? And where is the line
between good sense and
.throwing in the towel?
Between discipline and bull-._.,
headedness? Between compet-
itive intensity and pleasure at
being in the game?
At this moment, I'm not sure.
Meanwhile, I have a new .
situation to ponder. While
checking _out at a supermarket
yesterday, I dropped a box of
cereal on the floor. While I
cranked down to pick it up,
the lady behind me -who
must have been at least 90 -
• did it for me. Five years ago, I
would have fought her all the
way down to the floor. But yes-
terday she got the drop on me.
I thanked her, but she'd better
not try that again.
• JOSEPH N. BEU is a resident of
Santa Ana Heights. His column
appears Thursdays. '
•Homeowners pack discussion on the
f\lture of East 17th Street.
Andrew Glazer
DAILY PILOT
COSTA MESA
City officials got a sur-
prise this week when
more than 60 homeown-
ers stuffed a tiny meeting
room to discuss city plans
for widening East 17th
Street.
The monthly meet-
ings have drawn fewer
than 10 people since they
began in January.
·I wish I bad known
there would be so many
people,• said Mayor
Gary Monahan, who ran
Tuesday's meeting. "I
would have moved it to
the Council Chambers.·
The meetings began
after the · city formed a
comniittee of merchants
and homeowners in Jan-
uary to discuss its plans
for widening East 17th
Street from four to six
~es.
But in a string of con-
tentious meetings with
city transportation offi-
cials, the committee
ove rwh elmingly
opposed the plan. The
group instead has
pushed for bus turnouts
and new landscaping.
But the city could
potentially lose $4.5 mil-
lion in federal grants if it
does not widen the road,
Peter Naghavi, the city's
director of transportation
services, has said.
Naghavt predicts
even more traffic will
Oood the area in the next
20 years.
Since the initial dis-
cussions began, Naghavi
and transportation staff
have created a compro-
mised plan -one they
say would not necessan-
ly preclude the grants.
The • hybnd • pldn
calls for six lanes on East
17th Street from Orange
Avenue to Santa Ana
Avenue only
Monahan on Wednes-
day S8ld the hybnd plan
shows transportdllon
staff and the comnuttee
are moving doser to a.n
agreement.
"It solves the trafflc
flow problem dnd would
have much less of an
unpact on merchants
and busrnesses there,·
he said.
But Odn Pe rlmutter,
who owns the shopping
center that includes
Mother's Market, said
the compromise still
doesn't work for busmess
owners
·11 would create more
problems,• said J1ertmut-
ter, who S8ld he is afraid
a sue-lane thoroughfare
would destroy the street's
"mom-and-pop" feel. "It
destroys something
beauWul, a.nd that's not
going to fly.·
Come in and visit our NEW saSHI DEPT. where you can choose from a large variety of prepared
Sushl Spicy Tuna Rolls. California Rolls, Fresh Sashlnii and.Steamed Soybeans.
On Special This Week Aoocado Crab Roll
$3.99 • 8 pcs.
Chicken
·English Bangers Sausage
$19!
A4 l!mday. Mr 13, 2000
. Balboa Island .
firially going
underground
• Utility wiring issue )las been
brewing in the community for 12
years.
Noak.I Schwartz
DA1t.Y Pit.or '
BALBOA ISLAND -After a dozen long
years, the little island community under
threat by towering utility poles will finally
have its wires and cables moved under-
ground.
"It really shouldn't have taken so long,"
said community leader Steve Bromberg,
who's participated in the effort as the Uttle
Balboa Island Property Assn's president until
he recently stepped down.
He added that the delay was partly
because they had t<f gather petitions and
study the project, then faced the recession,
followed by some lagging organization.
After counting ballots from a community-
wide vote, the city clerk on Tuesday
announced 147 residents in favor and only 33
against placing the utilities underground.
Some of those against the effort said they
are worried about the cost of moving the lines
underground. One family worried that the
underground construction would damage the
foundation of their home.
Still, out of 231 lots, 180 Balboa Island
community members voted and showed
overwhelming support for the project.
. "We started 12 years ago when El Nifto
caused a telephone pole to catch on fire,"
Bromberg said.
Recalling that the flaming wires were not
more than 10 feel from his home, he worried
about the community's safety. The dense, lit-
tle community could go up in flames if one
house caught fire, Bromberg said.
"It's scary stuff," he said. "It's a good thing
for the community, people and property val-
ues."
Construction should begin in a couple
months and the poles will come down in
about another year.
..
TAYA ICASHUBA I DAJLY PILOT
Alfonzo Rodriquez of Santa Ana shows daughter Ullbeth, 5, the bait he was using while
fishing off Newport Pier on Wednesday.
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Daily Pilot
Developer
appeals·
judgement
5ue Doyle
DAILY PILOT
NEWPORT BEACH -
Lawyers for William Lyon
Co. on Wednesday asked a
judge to overturn a $54.4-
mlllion verdict again.st the
developer for allegedly fir.
ing a one-time partner who
would not tiilandally sup-
port the company during a
real estate slump.
William Lyon Co. is ask-
ing Superior Court Judge
Raymond J . lkola to consider
a new trial. A hearing will
continue today in Santa Ana
Superior Court.
Attorneys for both the
developer and John
Markley, the former employ-
ee, could not be reach for
comment on Wednesday.
The court hearing was the
latest move in a seven-year
legal battle between the
powerful Newport Beach·
based development compa-
ny and Markley.
Markley was hired by the
company in 1983 to develop
apartment complexes and, in
1993, he was fired. The com-
pany sued its former
employee for $19 million
after he refused to pledge
some of his ownership inter-
ests to help William Lyon Co .
pay off some bank loans.
Markley the n filed a
cross-claim and sued the
developer, which offered a
$4.1-million settlement and
agreed to return Markley to
partnership.
Markley refused the set-
tlement and took the compa-
ny back to court for breach
of contract.
In March, a jury awarded
$54.4 million to Markley after
two days of deliberation.
The award represented
the estimated ownership
share of the developer's
apartment business owed to
Markley.
I " ( '" I . \' \ I ' '
I ) I ' I I • I I I ~
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IN BRIEF
Motorcyclist
hit by car, not
seriously hurt
A 29-year-old man on a
~?lorcycle escaped major
m1ury Wednesday when he
was struck by a Volvo station
wagQn on Superior Avenue in
Costa Mesa.
David Polosky, o! Hunting-
ton Beach, was taken to Hoag
Hospital for minor abrasions,
said Costa Mesa Police Offi-
cer Jeff Mccann. Polosky
was wearing a helmet, which
prevented furth<?r injuries, he
BRIEFLY
IN EDUCATION
Course to focus on
Eastern religions
This fall, the religious
studies department at OCC
will offer a three-unit course
on Eastern religions. Two
sections of this class, Reli-
gious Studies t 50, will be
offered starting the week of
Aug. 28.
One section is scheduled
to meet from 6:50 to 10 p.m.
Tuesday evenings, and the
second secllon will meet from
8 to 1 t :35 a.m. Friday morn-
ings.
Course studies will focus
on the history and current
affairs of Buddhism, Taotsm,
Confucianism and Hindwsm.
The units are transferable for
both Uruversity of California
The.Jilogree detail along
with thew~
panels adds charaaer
to this lantern
Available In Copper Sronz.c. Olde Iron, or Sienna
Hodson
Lighting
QioalilJ' upd-. Sena r.., 30 Yean
O~n Tuts.· Fri. 9-~.
Sai. 9-~
1510 Nnrpon Blvd,
Co111 Mru
(949) 548-9341
said.
Police cited Nancy Davi-
son, 31, for failure to yield
while exiting a driveway.
Joseph Portillo, of Costa
Mesa, who witnessed the
accident as· he was walking
home from a local restaurant,
said he was surprised to see
Polosky up and around.
•He new over the hood,•
Portillo said. •Then he
crawled on his own "to the
curb. He's lucky.•
Water district:
tap water is OK
The Irvine Ranch Water
Disbict's annual water quality
and Cal State systems.
Fall enrollment fees are
$11 per unit. Registration is
by appointment at OCC's
admissions office. The office
is open from 8 a.m. to 6:30
p.m. Monday through Thurs-
day, and from 8 a.m. to 1:30
p.m Friday.
OCC is located a t 2701
Fairview Road, Costa Mesa.
Information: (714) 432-5072
or visit the OCC Web site at
http://www.orangecoastcol-
lege.com.
OCC offers 1nedical
terminology class
Orange Coast College will
offer a three-unit medical ter-
minology course this fall. The
t 6-week class, listed in the
course schedule as •Allied
Health 111, • will help stu·
dents develop their medical
vocabulary.
report renects that its drink-
ing water is good.
The recently released
report details the quality and
safety of the district's tap
water and gives information
on the testing results for 1999.
The district serves much of
southern central Orange
County, including parts of
Costa Mesa and Newport
Beach.
NEWPORT·MESI SCHOOL BOARD WIAP·UP .
According to the report,
the water ls of high quality
and meets all state and feder-
al standards.
Customers have already
received the report in the
mail. ll is also available on the
district's Web site at
http://www.lrwd.com.
During the semester, stu-
dents will learn the spelling
and definition of therapeutic,
diagnostic, operative and
symptomatic terms.
The course will be offered
in two sections. One will be
held from 1 to 2:30 p.m. Mon-
days and Wednesdays and
the second will take place
from 3:30 to 6:45 p.m. Mon-
days. Both sessions begin the
week of Aug. 28.
Enrollment fees are $11
per unit. To register, make an
appointme nt with OCC's
admissions ·office. Office
hours are from 8 a.m. to 6:30
p.m. Monday through Thurs-
day and from 8 a.m. to 1 :30
. p.m. Friday. OCC is located at
2701 Fairview Road, Costa
Mesa. Information: (714) 432-
5072 or visit OCC's Web site
at hltp:l/www.orangecoast·
colJege.com.
Inside
EDUCATION
WHAT HAPPENED:
Elementary education
staff presented a new proto-
type for a kindergarten
report card that matches
state standards. The
progress report card was
developed by N~port·
Mesa Unified School District
officials and a team of
kindergarten teachers. It
was field-tested this year in
various classrooms through-
out the district. School \
board members had reserva-
tions about the first section
of the progress report.
which is an area for the
teacher to indicate if the
child is an English-language
learner, in a special day class,
or has speech, language or
instructional support.
WHAT IT MEANS:
With the new progress
reports, parents will have a
much clearer picture of
how their children a re
doing in school. Bonnie
Swann, director of elemen·
tary education for the dis·
trict, said she would review
the school board's concerns
about the first section of
~he report card.
WHAT THEY SAID:
"I'm just not comfort·
On the web:
I WWW.DAllYPILOT.COM
able with the indicator of
special day class right at
the top," said trustee
Serene Stokes. "How can
we diagnose these kids as
such in their first semester
of kindergarten 7•
WHAT HAPPENED:
The
~vc:'/t!'fi~~~
approval to
a tentative
agreement
between the
school district and the Oas-
sified School Employees
Assn.
WHAT IT MEANS:
Classified employees -
district workers who are
not teachers or administra-
tors -will see a positive
change on their paychecks.
WHAT THEY SAID:
"Congratulations. We
know it's been long·await-
ed," said school board pres-
ident Dana Black. r
WHAT HAPPENED:
The
~~~~I
approved
the agree-
ment with
the state
Department of Education
to provide child care and
development services to
children in Newport·
Mesa.
WHAT IT MEANS:
The agreement contin-
ues the grant that funds
preschool child care at
Whittier Elementary
School.
WHAT HAPPENED:
The
school board
set a special
meeting at 7
p.m. Sept. 5
for a public
hearing on
the district's proposed
2000-01 budget.
WHAT IT MEANS:
The hearing will give
residents a chance to voice
any objections to the bud-
get. The board is expected
to discuss and approve the
final budget. The board
will have its own study ses-
sion to review the final
budge~ pi;ior'to,tbe public
hearing.
NEXT MEETING:
The school board
will meet at 7 p.m.
Aug. 22 at the
District Education
Center, 2895-A Bear
St., Costa Mesa.
·'
Annual
I s:
Starts Friday, July 11
SAVINGS · OF
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• Reyn Spooner froln '29"
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Sports Coats from '99"
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--
Henhey,a
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Hlsownen,
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KENT TREPTOW I
OAA.Y PllOT
.·.Crystal Cove ·Spm .disrupts movie shoot
• Irvine Co. says water
discharge was minor,
butenvironmentalis~
are concerned about
i~ similarity to
j)revious runoff.
Alex Coolman
DAILY PILOT
A discharge of water from
a hillside development onto
the sands of Crystal Cove
State Park disrupted produc-
tion of a movie Wednesday
morning and renewed con-
cerns among the environ-
mentalists who work to pro-
tect the area.
Just before 8 a .m ., an
undetermined amount of
water flooded onto the beach
from a culvert just south of
the Los nancos Canyon out-
let, said Rich Elbaum, a
~kesman for the Irvine Co.
The water was runoff from
street cleaning at one of the
Crystal Cove home develop-
ments · being created by an
Irvine Co. subcontractor.
Mi!=hael Eaton, supervis-
ing ranger with California
State Parks, Mid the water
had come from a develop-
ment created· by Standard
Pacific Homes, the same com-
pany that released a large
amount of water into the
ocean off Crystal Cove in
June.
The water that spilled
Wednesday quickly pooled
under a platform on the
beach used by a camera crew
lo shoot a movie about actor
James Dean, disrupting pro-
duction. Within a few hours,
the· contractor had sent trucks
to the beach lo pump the
water into a truck for disposal
elsewhere.
Elbaum said the discharge
occurred because barriers
intended to keep the water
from entering storm drains
had failed.
He &tressed, however, that
construction permits allowed
the water to be dumped at
the beach.
·we're still well within the
regulations and construction
permits with the project,# he
said.
Mark Adelson, a
spokesman for the surveil-
lance and enforcement sec-
tion of the Santa Ana Region-
al Water Quality Control
Board, said the board regard-
ed the water spill a minor
event.
·we don't believe this is a
significant water quality
issue, but we are continuing
to follow up with the Irvine
Co.,• he said.
The spill concerned some
environmentalists because it
appeared to parallel the
dumping practices of Pelican
Hill Golf Club, which repeat-
edly sent reclaimed water
into Crystal Cove and was
slapped with fines for the
practice in May.
"This is the second ti.me
this ha.s happened In a rela-
tively short amount of ti.me,•
said Laura Davick of the
Alliance to Rescue Crystal
Cove.
This year, the Newport-
Mesa Unified School Ois-
bict lost 38 employees lo
the lure of late momings,
golf, fishing_ and quality
time with their families and
loved ones. Although the
number may seem high.
district officials said the
amount of retirees this year
is lower than the nonn.
The following are the
men and women who .
retired after years of ser-
vice lo Newport-Mesa's
children and families:
•David AdMns, senior rn;ainte-
nance wortcer, 26 years
• a.yt Arp, library media de~ Adams Elementary School.
21 years
•Annen ...........
grounds wortcer. 6 years • eo...._acie e..n, teacher,
Mariners Elementary School, 31
years
• Lynne lloombet'g. safe and
drug free schools coordinator,
secondary education depart-
ment. 10 year5
• Robert Boles, principal, New-
port Harbor High School. 3 years • a......,, maintenance
welder, 5 years
.... Cowie, special educa-
tion instructional aide, Newport
Heights Elementary School. 21
years
•~Dun. office man-
ager, Adams Elementary School.
23 years
• Vktaria Dendlnger, psychol-
ogist. Corona del Mar High
School. 28 years ·
. • ........ Foley, nurse's
aide, heatth services depart-
ment. 21 years
• 9ever1y Folledal, library
media de~ Paularino Elemeh-
tary School, 21 year5
• Hwley Ghere, science teacher,
Corona del Mar High School, 31
years
• o.le tt.gey, English teacher,
Newport Harbor High School, 32
years
• .._. Hrgett. senior cafeteria
worker, food service depart-
ment. 13 years
• CWofrn Hastings, special
Doily Pilot
education Instructional aide, 12
years
• "-t Hooper, tNchef, New-
port Harbor High School, 31
years • o.ws tuwtta, math
tHCher, Corona-def Mar High
School, 31 years
• DJ. Kertns. business teacher,
Costa Mesa High School, 30
ye¥S
• Don Klmble, tHcher, Davis
Education Ceftter, lO years
• PMrida l..ultwtdc. ICCOUnts
r>atablMecelv~ supervisor,
fiscal ~rtment. 22 years
• ...,.._ Mmn, teacher, New-
port Elementary 5dlool. 5 year5
• NmKy Otis, kindergarten
teacher; Paularlno Elementary
School, 16 years
• Eugenia hndo,. special edu-
cation Instructional aide, 23
years
• Gall Pertcer, special education
instructional aide, 13 years
• MllfY '9ny, principal account
derk. maintenance operations,
10 years
• leryt Piper, spec.la! education
instructional aide, Kaiser Ele-
mentary School, 20 yean
• llaftNwa Pliha, special educa·
tlon teacher, 11 yean
• c:.olyn ,..,.,..._, inter-
mediate cookA>aker, Estancia
High School. 26 years
• C.-ol 11ey, offlc;e manager,
College Parle Elementary School,
24years
...... Robll---. teacher,
TeWinkle Intermediate School,
43 years
• a...tott. "'-'P. office man-
ager. Rea Elementary School, 21
years
• .aJndli Volpone, r~arch plan-
• nlng assistant. assessment
department. 11 ye~n
• lmoget• ......... dent typ-
ist. <:allfomia Elementary School,
16 years
• Jenice Webb, teacher, Harbor
View Elementary School 32 years
• JullMn Wiidermuth. teacher,
College Park Elementary School
37 years
• o.leen Ycwtl, manager,
Whittier Elementary School, 13
years
• Shlrtey Zlve. cafeteria worker,
Newport Harbor High School, 14
yeers
Mon-Fri: 10am • 9pm/ Sat: 10-7/Sun: 11-6:30
f]il Holton& Sou1h Coast Plaza
(litJ lD.IM.fte Level 2, Sess Wing
llMl'CmlKI• 714 444=1a>()
t
' . . . ' ..
THE CLUBHOUSE • SOUTH COAST PLAZA
(NEXT TO ROBINSONS MAY ON BRISTOL ST.)
714-708-CLUB(2582)
. . .
FOR INFORMATION ABOUT PRIVATE PARTIES.
AND SPECIAL EVENTS CALL 714-957-8308
(. LUNCH ENT REE
CHICKEN PICCATA $9.45 $14.45
-
VODKA PASTA $8.45 $13.95
MEATLOAF & MAsHED POTATO $8.95 $12.95
SUNDAE
CHICKEN POT PIE $8.95 $13.45
LAKE SUPERIOR WHITEFISH $10.95 $17.95 . .
HONEY PEPPERCORN SALMON $12.95 $20~95
f-'IU "'II 11"'11 "Pl< I \I.'-'\\ \II \HI .I . l>\11."
Thunday,· July 13, '2<XXJ A 7
•
OUR MENU REFLECTS MODERATELY PRICED, TRADITIONAL FOOD
THAT WILL TEMPT EVERYONE IN YOUR. FAMILY, ESPECIALLY THE KIDS!
OUR JR. :MEMBER MENu WILL EXCITE KIDS OF ALL AGES AND TO TOP OFF . .
THEIR EXPERIENCE, THEY WILL RECEIVE A GREAT GiFT! RESERVATIONS ~
ACCEPl'ED SEVEN DAYS A WEEK, HOWEVER WALK-INS ARE ALWAYS WELCOME.
THB CLUBHolJl8 •SOUTH CoAST PLAZA
3311
... Daily Pilot
MOtben Market. 225 E . 17th event ii l20. lnlonnatlon: lecture will be ~ at
St, ea.ta Mesa. Information: (9'9} 72IM400. 6:30 p.m. at Mod>er'I Market.
,,.. c..ea ..... C-untty
Golf Clallic, lpGQIOled by
the a.ta M.-Chamber of
Commerce. will ~ with a noon ihOlgUD start at Mesa
Verde Country Club, 3000
Club House Road, Costa
Mesa. Cost ts S22S. lnforina-
tion: (114) 885-9090.
(9-49) 631-.. 1 .. 1. 225 E. 17th' Sl, COila Mesa. WlllmAY Information; (949) 631-4741.
TOllY
Patldmoo'I 11.oun:e Organi·
zation is sponsoring a free sup-
port QIO\!P Cor caregtvers and
adult c:bfidren of loved ones
with Parkinson's disease. The
group will meet at 1 p.m. at
Oasis' Senior Center, 800 Mar-
guerite Ave., Corona del Mar.
lnfonnation: (949) 645-3352.
The Susan G. Komen Breast
Cancer Foundation is recruit-
ing team captains for its
•Race for the Cure• event.
The sessions will be from
noon to 2 p.m . or 6 to 8 p.m. at
3191-A Airport Loop Dnve,
Costa Mesa. Information:
(949) 957-9165.
FRIDAY
lnventon Forum will host a
seminar on how to be an
independent inventor at 7:30
p .m. at Orange Coast Col-
lege's Science Lecture Hall,
2701 Fairview Road, Costa
Mesa. The cost is $15. Infor-
mation: (714) 540-2491.
SATURDAY
Naturallsts will give a free
guided tour of Upper New-
port Bay at 9 a.m. at Shell-
maker Island at Upper New-
"'Tooli Ir 'McU: ~
Intemet; • an Internet pro-
gram for begtnnetl, starta at
10 a.m. at the NeWport Beach
Central Ubrary, 1000 Avoca-
do Ave., Newport Beach.
Information: (949) 717-3801.
Elder law attorney Fay Bllx
will be a guest speaker at the
Alzheimer's Assn. financial
seintnar ort long-tenn care
and life insbrance. The free
session will run from 9 to 11
'a.m. at Edwllfds Big Newport
Theatre at Fashion Island,
300 Newport Center Dr.,
Newport Beach. Reserva-
tions: (800) 660-1993.
Moine B. Cohen will host a
workshop titled •Divorce: A
New Beginning• at 10 a.m . at
180 Newport Center Drive,
Newport Beach. The $40
workshop is for men and
women recently divorced or
in the process of divorcing.
Information: (949) 644-6435.
Orange County CoastKeeper
will host a fund-raising event
at 5 p .m. at the Newport
Dunes, 1131 Back Bay Drive,
NeWJ>:Ort Beach. Tickets are
$100 i>er person. Information:
(949) 723-5424.
SUUIY
Park~WWWe ·back~~blke· at9a.m.
at C~ Cove State Park. at
Pelican Point on Pacific Coast
Highway, between Corona.
del Mar and Laguna Beach.
Hikers should meet at the El
Moro Visitors Center. Free,
but parking is $6. Reserva-
tions: (949) 497-7647.
·aollDAY
Jllck and Julee Morton will
host •Tales of ntles, • a free
puppet show for children in
first through sixth grades, at
10:30 a.m. at the Newport
·Beach Central Ubrary, 1000
Avocado Ave., Newport
Beach. Information: (949)
717-3801.
TUESDAY
The Mllllonalre's Club 'Ylll
discuss making money "by
increasing profits at 7 p.m. at
Borders Books, Music and
Cafe at South Coast Plaza,
3333 Bear· St., Costa Mesa. ·
Free. Information: (714) 432-
7854. .
Private Investigator Jlm Har-
riger will discuss how public
records at Newport Harbor
Area Chamber of Com-
merce's business referral
A free lecture titled "How to . breakfast at 7 :30 a.m. at The
Raise a Healthy Child• will Pad.fie Club, 4110 MacArthur
be presented at 6:30 p.m. at Blvd., Newport Beach. The
'Ille Qr-... Co.., Web-
Gilk Wll. 6aill ,.,, media
aDd tedmalogy .petworkjng
at 1 p.m._et BOrden ~
Music and Cafe at South
Coast Plue, 3333 Bear Sl,
Costa Mesa. Pree. Informa-
tion: (714) 432-7854.
JULY 20
Attorney Jerry O'Brien, a
former professional chef, will
host a free discussion called
•Tue Laws of Cooking• at 7
p.m. at Borders Books, Music
and Cafe at South Coast Plaza.
3333 Bear SL, Costa Mesa.
The group will discuss the art.
science and techniques of food
preparation and recipes. Infor-
mation; (114) 432-7854.
The Costa Mesa Chamber of
Commerce will host a • 90
Minute ·Breakfast Boost• at
7:15 a.m. at the Costa Mesa
Country Club, 1701 Golf
Course Drive, Costa Mesa.
Breakfast is $12 in advance
and $17 at the door. Reserva-
tions: (714) 885-9090.
Mother's Markel wtll present
a tree lecture called #Opti-
mizing Health with MSM" at
6:30 p.m. at 225 E. 17th St.,
Costa. Mesa. Information:
(949) 631-4141.
JULY 21
A free "Feng Shut Your Way"
Jllfal
...... ....... wtll .......
his book, •'Jbe Dildptined
Online Inves1«: A Guide for
~Y ltaders and Short-'Ierm
Speculators,• at 2 p.m. at Bor-
ders BookS, Music and Cafe
at South Coast Plaza, 3333
Bear Street, Costa Mesa.
Free. Information: (714) 432-
7854.
Park rangen will host a
•back-country bike• at 9 a.m.
at Crystal Cove State Park, at
Pelican Point on Pacific Coast
Highway, between Corona
del Mar and Laguna Beach.
Hikers should meet at the El
Moro Visitors Center. Free,
but parking is $6. Reserva'-
tions: (949) 497-7647.
Three Dog Bakery wt1l host a
•aarlcday Pool Party• at 12:30
p.m. at Corona del Mar Plaza,
924 Avocado Ave., Newport
Beach. The event will feature
lee cream, cake and games for
your canine, including a bikini
and swimsuit contest. free.
Information: (949) 160-3647.
JULY 24.
Psychologist Joan Andrews
will host ·Mating and Relat-
ing" from 7 to 9 pm. at the
Coastline Counseling Center,
1200 Quail SL, Suite 105, New-
port Beach. Free. Information:
(949) 476-0991.
Stanley Bauln, UC lrvtne
School of Medicine professor
of· physical education, will
discuss health and fitness at
11 a.m., as part of the Jewish
Community Center of
Orange County's three-part
health series, "Heart Smart
and Choices.• It's at the cen-
ter, 250 E. Baker St., Costa
Mesa. Free. Information:
(114) 755-0~0. Ext. 133.
JULY 26
Memben of Jewish Family
Service of Orange County
will discuss issues, concerns
and responsibilities of adult
children who are caring for
their elderly parents. The ses-
sion will be held at 7:30 p.m.
at 250 E. Baker St., Suite G.
The discussion will continue
Aug. 2. Cost is $20 per person
for both discussions. Informa-
tion: (714) 445-4950.
Davtd Engstrom will host a
free fibromyalgia seminar at
7:30 p.m. at the Hoag Hosp;-
tal Cancer Center. auditori-
um, One Hoag Drive, N ew-
port Beach. Registration.
(114) 840-8038.
SEE TOWN PAGE A9
tLUTHERAN CHURCH OF~ MA.sn:R CRYSTAL .CAVt I I
MORNING PRE-ScHOOL PROGRAM I I • Metaphyslcal Books canw, A--•• Enrolling Now • Ortglnal Jewelry HeaJJng with Oemltones ~ I I • Olfts, Artwork • . Minerals with Pam 20-At.off • MlneraJs ~ Oemstones Ha~eny ~ Un Cyman I I •Christian Instruction • Hand C8rved Crystal Quan Wednesday !venlnp
• Dcvdopmencal Program Yin~ 6uddha July 19, ~ 26 -7-9pm I I • Herbs, r.&senttal Olis. TMOTCL.ue
• Hands on Craft Activities Incense Sat., July 22 • I 0 :.50-5:30 I MOlll·Fai 9.7 S.u 9·6 . I -~~ •Phonics -SPECIAL EVENT -Psychic Readings I ThE Bod Buury Supply 6 SALON I • Compu1er lnsrrucrion Past Life Workshop (Call store for appointment) I J69 E. 17Tlt ST. ~· • Before/ After School Care 8:30 AM to 11130 AM With ·Tarot 'COSTA MESA
Ava.ii able Ages 3 to 5 years Charles Price • Script Channeling I Acaoss faoM fhlphs I
2900 Pacific View Drive Sunday. July l 6th -2-4::50pm • Mtrology I (949) 642 .. 8910 I can ror Details • Handwriting Analysis Corona del Mar, California 92625 I n.ia CoupcMI may not be aanilaiMd ~ oet.. .._,.. _. .... price. I (949) 759-1146 891 Ba~~~~~~~a Mesa 714e754ei 151 Ditcountl do not~ to , ,_., .. ., ...... &. 07/31/2000
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R
ONAL BANK
ANNOUNCES
THE OPENING OF THE
NEWPORT BEl\CH OFFICE
President David Blankenhoro invites you to come in
and meet our banl{ing team headed by Al De Grassi
and Bill Huntsberler who, together, ha•e over 45
years experience In Orange County bahking.
Our goal is to prc#lde quality financial products and
. services with a pe~sonal touch •
~
''SE
(949) 221-8080
895 Dove Street
Suite 100
NtWJ*1Bed ,..
Daily Pilot
TOWN
CONTINUED FROM A8
J'SYdlologllt Craig Wagner
wW host •Escaping Llfe's •
VidoWi Circles,• a free per-
sonal growth discussion, at
7:30 p.m. at t)orders Books,
Music and Cafe at South
Coast Plaza, 3333 Bear St.,
Costa Mesa. Information:
(714) 432-7854.
Paine Webber will host a free
seminar on •How to Handle a
Divorce Settlement: Investing
Your Settlement Wisety• at 6
p.m. at 888 San Clemente
Drive, Newport Beach. lnfor-
.. mation: (949) 717-5600.
The Costa Mesa Chamber
of Commerce will host
•Business After Hours Mix-
er" at 5:30 p.m. at El Torito
Grill, 633 Anton Blvd., Costa
Mesa. Admission is free for
members, $10 for nonmem-
bers. Information: (714) 855-
9090.
Financial advisors from
Edwards-Jones will discuss
•How to Pick Stocks" at .7
p.m. at Borders Books, Music
and Cafe at South Coast •
Plaza, 3333 Bear St., Costa
Mesa. Free. Information:
(714) 432-7854.
Psychologist Craig Wagne r
will discuss personal growth
at 7:30 p.m. at Borders Books,
Music and Cafe at South
Coast Plaza, 3333 Bear St.,
Costa Mesa. Information:
(714) 432-7854.
JULY 27
' The Orange County chapter
of the Single Gourmet, a fine
dining club for singles, will
meet at 6:30 p.m. at 1Toquet
at South Coast Plaza, 3333
Bear St., Costa Mesa. The
restaurant is located on the
third floor. The cost is $72.
Information: (949) 854-6552.
Author David Gabbe ,will
host a cooking class called
•Exploring Soy" from 6 to 9
p.m. at the Costa Mesa
Neighborhood Community
WHY PAY
DEPT Sr-ORE
PRICES?
Vuicour
AREA RUG STUDIO
Rugs & Runners on
Sale
I I I
llST 111'
Hott Hott Hott The Orange County Fair ls celebrating its 108th year with a salute to
chW peppers. Entertafnment ls free with actmtuton. Houn are noon to midnight Mon-
day through Wednesday, 10 a.m. to midnight 1bunday through Sunday unW July 30,
at the Fairgrounds, 88 Fair Drive, Costa Mesa. Wristbands for rides and attracttons are
$10, $18 and $20. General admllSton Is $6 for adults, $5 for sertlors and $2 for cblldren
ctges 6 through 12. Parking Is $5 per vehicle or $3 pervehlcle with four or more pas-
sengers. Information: (714) 708""3247. ·
Center, 1845 Park Ave., Costa
Mesa. The class will al.so be
offer;J Aug. 3 from 6 to 9
p.m. The cost is $30 plus a
$10 materials fee. Informa-
tion: (714) 327-7525.
Newport Harbor Area
Chamber of Commerce will
host a sunset after-hours·mix-
er at 5 p.m. at Din Din at the
Bamboo Terrace, 1773 New-
port Blvd., Costa Mesa. Mixer
is free for members, $10 for
potential membets. Informa-
tion: (949) 729-4400.
Jacque Daniel wU1 offer Ups
on public speaking at 12:15
p.m. at Borders Books, Music
and Cafe at South Coast
Plaza, 3333 Bear St.. Costa
Mesa. Free. Information:
(714) 432-7854.
Fide lity Federal Bank will
present a free seuunar for
home buyers at 6 p.m. at 1515
Westcliff Drive, Newport
Beach. The program is
geared toward first-time buy-
ers and current homeowners.
Information: (949) 629-7540.
. .
JULY 21
Orange County bat sped•llst
Stephanie Remington will
lead a one-mile walk in·
search of bats at 7 p.m. at
Crystal Cove State Park, at
Pelican Point on Coast High-
way. Attendees should meet
at the El Moro Visitors Cen-
ter. Free, but parking is $6.
Reservations: (949) 497-7647.
JULY 30
Park rangers wm host a
•back-country hike" at 9 a.rn.
at Crystal Cove State Park, at
Pelican Point on Pacific Coast
Highway, between Corona
del Mar and Laguna Beach.
Hikers should meet at the El
Moro Visitors Center. Free,
but parking is $6. Reserva-
tions: (949) 497-7647.
AUG.2
..
Thursday, July 13, 2000 A9
tionship issues at 6:30 p.m.
Tuesdays at 1151 Dove St
No. 105, Newport Beach.
Information: call Barbera at
(949) 261-8003.
frien ds" of the Newport
Beach Public Ubrary Used
Book Store heeds to replenish
its book stock. Patro.os are
urged to bring in unwanted
books. With the exception of
law books or magazines, all
donations -hardcoVer and
paperback -are welcome
and are tax-deductible.
Books may be left at any of
the three branch libraries -
Balboa, Mariners OT Corona del Mar. They also can be left
in the special book closet next
to the store at 1000 Avocado
Ave. Information: (949) 759-
9667.
The Newport Beacb New-.
comers Club meets at 10 a.m.
Members of Jewish Family the third Wednesday of each
Service of Orange County month at different homes.
will discuss issues, concerns The group of about 100
and responsibilities of adult women go on the road and
children who are caring for play goll, tennis, bridge and
their elderly parents. The dis-J more. 'fhe group also holds
cussion will be at 7:30 p.m . at several evening parties. lnfor-
250 E. Baker St., Suite G. The mation: (949) 854-4501.
program is $20. lnformation:
(714) 445-4950.
AUG. 12
VlrginJa Carlson will host a
free lecture on summer care
for roses at 9:30 a.m. at the
Shennan Library & Gardens,
2647 E. Coast Highway,
Corona del Mar. Information:
(949) 673-2261.
ONGOING
A women's therapy support
vroup meets to discuss rela-
Jewish Family Service of
Orange County sponsors a
discussion group focusing on
issues, concerns and respon-
sibilities of adult children car-
ing for their elderly parents at
7:30 p.m. Tuesdays at 250 E.
Baker St., Costa Mesa. The
purpose of the group is to
help children and other con-
cerned relatives identify
problems and issues and
de velop appropriate solu-
tions. The cost is $30. Infor-
mation; (7 14) 445-4950.
•
'
l
1lor the beSt health care in Orange Count;y,
the choice is clear.
...
AIO lhlrsc!oy, July 13, 2000
t
What'• ·aFLOIT
• WHAl"S AR.OAT runs periodic.al-
ly In the Dally Piiot on a rotating
basis. If you know of an event or
activity that could appear In this
column. please mail the lnforma.
tlon to Dally Piiot. 330 w. Say St .•
Costa Mesa 92627; fax it to (949)
646--4170; or e-mail it to dailypl-
lotOfatl~s.com.
SAILING CWSES
Orange Coast College's sailing
program this summer will offer
noncredit women's keelboat
classes, designed for women
who have been on boats but
are beginning sailors. Class
sections will be taught by
Coast Guard-licensed female
sailors. Classes get underway
July 22 at OC<:;'s Sailing Cen-
ter, 1801 W. Coast Highway,
Newport Beach. Registration
fee is $215. Information: (949)
645-9412.
' .. .. .. . . .. .. ... ..
is $95. For more tntonnation.
call (949) 645-9412.
Orange Coast College's
School of Sailing and Sea-
manship will offer a. non-
credit class that teaches inter-
mediate· level sailors skills
necessary to operate a mid·
size auxiliary cruising boat
beginning July 23. The class
will be taught aboard the
Islander 36, • AndJamo,.. 8hd
is limited to six students. lbe
Salling Center is at 1801 W.
Paci.fie Cqast Highway, New-
port Beach. Registration is
$215. For more information,
call (949) 645-9412.
Learn to sail or windsurf at
Resort Water sports. You can
also rent windsurfeJS and 14-
foot sailboats at $15 per hour.
(949) 729-1150.
Sailboat rentals and private
lessons are available at Mari-
na Sailing in the Balboa Fun
Zone. Advanced classes
include navigation, big boat,
power boat, introduction to
heavy weather and first-matEt
instruction. For more informa-
tion, call (949) 673-7763, the
Blue Dolphin Sailing Club at
(949) 644-2525 or the Lido
Sailing Club at (949) 675-
0827 for rentals.
A PIRATE'S UFE FOR ME
•• 1i ..... .. .. .. •' .. .. .. ., ..
Doily Pilot
Spectacular Puget Sound
educational cruises have
been scheduled for this sum-
mer aboard OCC's Norwest·
er, a classic 7 5-foot wooden
motor yacht that introduced
actor John Wayne toJUlchting
five decades ago. It Will mark
the third summer that Nor-
wester has taken students
and community members on
cruises through Puget Sound.
Excursions are set to run Sun-
day through July 22, July 28-
Aug. 3, Aug. 5-11, Aug. 14-
19, Aug. 25-31, Sept. 2-8;
Sept. 12-20 and Sept. 23-0ct.
1. Reservations and costs:
(949) 645-9412.
BOAT RENTALS
Balboa Boat Rentals can put
you on the water in so"IIlany
ways. Single and double
kayaks, elec,tric boats, 14
holder sailboats, pedal boats
and runabouts Cor offshore or
to cruise the Qay. Have a par-
ty? On the Wa ter Scavenger
Hunts are a bit aboard the
ever-popular electric boats.
For more informatiort, call
(949) 673-7200.
Cub Scout Webelo David Crosser;tO, center, and his brother, TIJD Crosser, 9, sport pirate gear Wednesday at
the Boy Scout Sea Base in Newport Beach, where they listened to a camp leader's Instructions for a treasure-
hunting canoe trip to Newport Dunes.
Orange Coast College's
School of Sailing and Sea-
manship has scheduled six
noncredit intermediate Lidos
sailing classes beginning .July
22. Classes will me'et from
1:15 to 5:15 p.m. at the Sailing
Center, 1801 W. Pacific Coast
Highway,· Newport Beach.
Evening classes will run from
5:15 to 7:45 p.m. Registration
Sail airborne outside the har-
bor, pulled by a motorboat,
courtesy of Balboa Para-sail-
ing near the Balboa Fun Zone.
A 90-minute trip costs $45.
InCormation: (949) 673-1693. Above, hidden dues lead Cub Scout Webelos to
burled 'treasure at Newport Dunes. At left, from
front. Zack Neilson, 10, John Meyen, 9, and
Steven A.skar, 10, all Cub Scout Webelos from
MJssion Viejo, maneuver their canoe to shore at
Newport Dunes to search for burled treasure.
We Rent Horses
•. Gentle rental horses for trail ridea & ~ lessons.
• Year-round after-school programs le summer clinics.
• Kids 8 8c up, adulb, families, puties, etc.
• ~ & ~in a..lJ WC3tcm &~ sty1C3.
714•848•9695
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Doily Pilot ON VACATION Thursday, Juty 13, 2000 Al I
Richard and Susan Ruffalo, David and Barbara Cline and their familles took the Daily In May, a group of 52 people -mainly from SL Andrew's Presbyterian Church in
Pilot with them on their vacation In Costa Rica. They are pictured on the Oso Peninsula. Newport Beach -spent time in the Alpine countries of Europe.
Dave and Phyllis Ryan c;>f Corona del Mar celebrated their 40th wedding anniversary at Phoebe Pierce took daughter Kalla to Hawaii for her birthday with close friend Kelly
the Manela Bay Hotel on the Hawaiian island of Lanai. Hodges of Corona del Mar. They took this picture at the Mauna Loa macadarilia._nut
factory.
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Newport Beach resident Patrttk Wynn. gralidson of Bob Wynn, at a San Francisco
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Rev. George R. Crisp of NeWPOrt Beach. on vacation 1n Cleveland. Crisp, the pastor of
Christ Church by the Sea 1n Ne· vport Beach, took time out from a church meettng to
visit the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and Museum.
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C... Busineu c-er Ambelm HW. ~ Celller llOI Lopn Ave. SIQM•• HILL 22600A 1...1mbert Si. f'l I 0 .5140 E.. La Nim Ave. • IC.elloa Doe 't Be Detoured. _.,
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'ARM•I RE .
Mid-Sum ~ale
'O <Jff
· erchandi~e
SEAN HILLER I DAll.Y PILOT
e body of a 70-year-old Costa Mesa man pulled from
ocean Wednesday is moved from Crystal Cove State
k by Fernando Ramos, left, and Greg Rodriguez, of
Orange County Coroner's office.
Eleven-year-old Hunter
oman, who was visiting
ta1 Cove with his family
m Oregon on Wednesday,
w the latest victim pulled in
the water.
It appeared, the youngstet
'd , that the man had been
ting in the shallow sl.lrf for
· ·ve. It will start a whole
pter for us. We'll be able to
just as successful il not
ore so."
While the new lwo-story
rtable buildings are little
n; than an architect's ren-
. g. school board members
Jlo have been pleading with
tied adult education
chers to have patience are
tatic at I.he notion of solving
some time.
It was undear Wednesday
where or when the victim
enterM I.he ocean. No witness-
es saw him enter the water,
and Vroman thought he might
have floated to I.he beach from
some other location.
Eaton noted I.hat the waves
and currents at the beach did
not appear td be threatening.
"There's no sl.lrf to speak
of." he said. "No riptides
observed."
the problem.
"We're just thrilled -I am
personally thrilled,• said
trustee Martha Fluor. •1t•s in a
location that can accommo-
date I.he parents most in need
of the program and it's so cen-
tral that most can walk.•
The reality of I.he new cen-
ter is still a long way off, Fine
said. Demolition is not likely to
,begin until winter and the dis-
trict has yet to bring the project
before tbe state for approval.
. "The big unknowns are
scheduling demolition work
and state approval," Fine said.
PEPPERS
CONTINUED FROM A 1
published in 1999.
And for those brave
enough to eat them, spide.r
peppers also provide a
healthy rush of endorphins
high-producing chemical
released by the brain.
·we have a salsa break at
work every day," Will said.
Gett•-~ 111¥01.VED
·we all eat a whole jar of it.
Afterward, everyone's faster
talking, faster thinking. lt
jump-starts the whole
process and keeps you
awake.•
Stead said it's common to
see a half<homped pepper
on his partner's tool box, lay-
ing next to bis hammer and
screwdrivers. •
The two warn, though, that
peppers can be dangerous.
Stead's wife, a nurse, said
skills are needed for offke
volunteen and for media-
ton. For more information,
call (949) 250·0488.
• CMl IW IWG&JllD nn peri·
odically In the DMly Piiot on e
rotating bmk. If you'd lb Infor-
mation on edding JO"' orgenlu-
tion to this list. Cllff (949) 57 4-
4228.
WTIRSIAU
Easter Seals needs volun-
teers for ongoing clerical
work and to help in pro-
grams for children with dis-
abilities and in spedal
events. For more informa-
tion, call (714) 834-1111.
DISPUTE
RESOLmo• SERVICES
Volunteer mediators, case
specialists and outreach
assistants needed to help in
a variety of mediation cas-
es. Bilingual language
EllYIROllMEllTll
llATUIE CENTER
Volunteer trail guides
needed to help visitors
LIBRARY
' CONTIN UED FROM A 1
new president says he's up to
the task. It's unclear how
much the financial Joss will
be, Spitz said, because the fig-
ures aren't out yet.
•It's going to show a fairly
substantial loss in revenue,
although we did give the
.. And that's assuming every-
thing else works out.•
But Fine's warning not to
get too excited is falling on
deal ears in a community that
has long Eiwaited the new cen-
ter.
•it seems like a win-win sit-
uation for everybody,• said
Wendy Leece, I.he biggest sup-
porter of the cause on the
school board. "It's an easy,
centralized location. It's a cre-
ative, low-cost solution to a
problem, and in the long run
it's just going to help kids do
better.•
library $125,000 in March,·
he said. ·sure we lost I.he
members -in my opinion
· because people are con-
fused.•
The foundation's main
goal now will be to end any
confusion and let the com-
munity know that the library
is a worthy cause for dona-
tion.
·we're going to begm a
direct-mail campaign and'
TRAFFIC
CO~TINUED FROM A 1
existing traffic law requires
developers to pay for road
improvements to prevent
added traffic congestion cre-
ated by that developer's pro-
1ect. Adding the Thaffic Phas-
ing Ordinance to the charter
would guarantee it could be
changed only with a vote of
the people.
But Greenlight proponents
contend the ordinance,
Presentina h
she's treated several Latina
women -who frequently
use peppers ln their cooking
-for first-degree bums on
their hands from handling
the hot stuff.
•vou should really wear
rubber gloves,• Stead
advised.
And of course, there's also
the more common threat of
minor intestinal distress.
·vou build a tolerance,
the more you eat,• said Will's
learn about their environ-
ment. For more informa-tion, call (949) S.5-8489.
EICllUGE CLUI
ClllLD lllSI
PIMITIOI CllYER
Donate new school supplies
or become a volunteer to
help children victimized by
child abuse. Volunteers
work with county referrals
to assist high-risk victims of
parental drug addiction.
Drop oft supplies ot the
Child Abuse Center Office
in Costa Mesa at 2482
Newport Blvd.. No. 7; or
resell the foundation lo those
people interested in keeping
the library as great as it is,"
he said. •This library has
been selected for all sorts of
honors for a library of its
size.·
In addition to the mail
campaign, b9ard members
are currently brainstorming
to come up with other ideas
of how to renew the commu-
nity'~ trust and increase
implemented more than 20
years ago, was "gutted" last
year when the Newport
Beach City Council amended
it to ensure it would stand up
to legal challenges. ·
The revised ordinance was
what drove a group of com-
munity activists to join forces
and draft the Greenlight ini-
tiative. The mea.Sure proposes
to gwe voters the final say on
certain major developments,
even if the Planning Commis-
sion and City Council voted
in favor of the development.
However, some current
Thursday, Juty t 3, 2000 Al3
pepper-loving son, Adam,
28.
Wjth a stronger comtitu-
tioo, Adam WW has in fact
made his pepper-tasting ser-
vices available to his father
and Stead.
•we use my son as a
barometer,• Carl Will said.
•wtien the sweat beads up
on t?ie side of his bead, we
know we're doing something
right. It's a tough business, so
we reserve lt for the youth.•
oj,I
Union Bank in Newport
Beach at 1090 Bayside Dri-
ve. Call (949) '122-1107 for
more infonnAtion. ·
FISH -
MOllLI MllU
Call 642-6060 to help
FrieJldS in Service to
Humanity (FISH) assist
with the Mobile Meals pro-
gram and provide ongoing
emergency assistance to
th~ in need. Both 8.lways
seek volunteer assistance in
a variety of areas. For more
infonnation, call (949) 645-
8050.
membership.
The foundabon will also
refocus its efforts to raise a
$2.5-nullion endowment
fLLDd to weal.her tough finan-
cial times. While I.he dispute
was still brewing, the foun-
dation put these efforts on
hold.
"It isn't as though we're
destitute,· Spitz said.
•There's about $1.5 million
in I.he endowment fund.·
and past city officials -
including Turner and former
mayor Tom Edwards -say
Greenlight is poorly designed
and will halt developmept in
the city.
Greenlight proponents say
they aren't womed about the
competing measure. Phil
Arst. a spokesman for the
group and a former council
candidate, said Greenltght
advocates have assumed the
Traffic Phasing Ordinance
measure would appear on the
ballot.
Dr.Ovalle ~c Marienthal and friendSt
featurina
David Benoit.
Grant Geissman.
Physicians "'ho specialize in in1emal medicine care for the
comprehensive, often complex healthcare needs of adults, including
seniors. Board-certified internist Wernl. Ovalle, .MJ). has
Carl ·Anderson
Sunday. JulY 16. 2000 h
_ ~~ljBfP~ ~ 6:00Pm at the ·1 ~ _: f H!latt NewPorter \
A Great Concert for a good cause.
This night benefits Hlih HoPes
Head lnJUI'>' Proaram featuring
Eric~s Incredible Music and guest
appearances of other jazz artists.
There will be a no host bar,
hors d'oeuvre, a dessert buffet,
a gourmet coffee bar and a
.tempting silent auction. • 24-hour o~ pbpici.n
• 2.f-boor .Jvice ~
joined the Edinger
Medical Group internal
medicine department:
Stanley Amokl, M.D • Mattbew Boone, M.D
FlaiDe Grodin. M.D • hmar. ~ M.D
Kueo Doa. MJ) • &try Xi, M.n
Doug McConuuP,. M.D •
Dr. Ovalle and all the physicians a1 £NC.are
Proceeds from the eveni ng
benefit Hlth HoPes, a
non-profit organiution
• ~l/ffXXnttndboun
also members of the physician staff a1 fuuntasn ~lley
&gional H~ital and Medical Cen1er. Togdher with
the eftli~ in1tmal medicine staff at Edinger Medal
Group. tLfy are dediclled t> ~ing comptt~ dedicated to hdping
individuals recover
• ~ .. ,w.DJ
J,dil!ay .,,o·eneno
• M.;rUucnoo!pa~ mre bo yout' individual t.hh needs.
" ........ ., 5 tr .,...e.a
{114)11N1
. . .
At 4 nu.dar. July 13, 2000 Daily PilOt
. Hoa,g Hospital supporlers ride out '1be Perff!ct Storm'
" N early $60,000 WU
raiMd foe Hoeg Hos·
pltal recently by the
dedicated Hoag 552 Club.
Unfortunately, a whole
bunch of folks were lost at
sea in the process -on fibn,
·that is.
It was the local premiere
of the much-talked-about
film, •The Perfect Stonn. •
based on the true story of
fishermen aboard the ship
Andrea Gail who. were
caught in the horrific
Atlantic Storm of 1991, off
the coast of New England.
The adaptation of writer
Sebutlan Junger's best-sell·
ing novel into the movie star-
ring George Cooney
attracted a sold-out theater
of Newport-Mesa dtizens
anxious to see the thriller
and do some good for Hoag.
The annual movie event
has become a much-antici-
pated summer evening on
the Orange Coast, under-
written by the theater-own-
ing Edwards family and
screened at their premier
film house. The largest sin~
gle saeen on the West Coast
is known as the Big Edwards
Theater, Fashion Island.
Surely, when it comes to
visualizing high seas, the big
screen is the only way to go.
Audience members were lit-
erally ducking the waves
seeming to come at them on
film. "It was, frankly, almost
3-D.
Event chairman and the-
ater magnate Jim Edwards m, who has championed the
event for the last nine years,
still claims to be an avid
sailor and yachtsman, even
after witnessing ttie M perfect
storm• on film. Edwards,
who grew up involved in all
kinds of water sportS in the
greater Newport area, can't
be swayed by a little mar-
itime disaster. •
He did. however, wonder
if the popcorn and soda sales
had dropped, given the vio-
lent water scenes. In the
crowd with Edwards were
his wife, Patti, and a host of
Hoag 552 screening commit·
tee members, including
evening co-cba.irman Dave
Snowden, yachtsman and
sport fisherman IUchud
Berg of Bayshores, Jo AQ
8oz:za, Teny C•••bn, Lynn
Oltbcart, Jim Dale, Warren
Fong, Jean Galloway and
Faith George.
Also working the theater
were Sally HW, Arlene
Howard, James Job.Dion,
Karen Joyce, ROMIDM
Levan, Shut Lordi, Joce-
lyn Lutter, Jacquellne Mer-
cer, Gregory Miles, Bette
Moses, Ro..Ue Puleo, Lan-
da RaJ&nayagam, Heather
Somen and Gamet
Thompson.
Prior to the screening, the
1,000 guests sampled the
food of local eateries, such as
Bluewater Grill, Bristol
Farms, Clayton $burley's
Tex.as BBQ, The Clubhouse,
Coco's, Cop-ado Ristorante,
El Torito Grill, Fannie's .
Yogurt, Ferdussi, Pour Sea-
sons Hotel, Ho Sum Bistro,
Above, longtbDe Hoag
supporten James and
Jora Johnson JolneCl
more than 1,000 guests
at tbe 552 Club's 2000
benefit screenlng of
•'Jbe Perfect Storm."
Right are Pattt and Jim
Edward.I, owners of
Edwards Theaters.
Hyatt Newporter, JACK-
ShrimP., Margaritaville, MuJ-
doons Irish Pub, Newport
Beach Brewing Company,
Newport Beach Marriott,
· Newport Landing Restau-
rant, Newport Rib Company,
The Raft, Royal Thai Cuisine,
PUBLIC HEARING
• UPPER NEWl'ORJ' IAY ECOSYST!M
IESTOUTION f'EASIBWlY ST\JDY
DaAFT fNVl80NMENTA1 IMPACT
STATEMEN'Tla.EPOIT
J.tr 18,.2000 AT 7;00 ~M.
NEWPORT l!Aat CITY HAU. 3300 NEWPORT BLVD.
NEWPORT RACH. CAUFOaNlA
5""~ A plu ID~ md ,._.e _,.. Wiilmt-la lhc Uppo' ~
Illy ~ aaa.c a. beat prqued.. 1k rec1M ""la tied al-.tw plall lftcll*da:
"119~ Md deqalllla ~......, ....... t.lnr. IUW>rirW ... ct.n~ls ..-nd
~ ~ dccJllded-IO ..... tllllrdlW lllbUau; rdoadn& 8 a.. 1etn lodand;
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prc,,_t 10 ildd.-bc:aeflu .S ,_.al -'--' llllpecll of the plan.
PUl.POS!: TM public harhlt .... opponully IDr.,.,. IO leanl -.i-1 the pla.n. Tiit
IDraMll ~ dMe period IDr die dnlt "'°'1 .... ca jllllC lO, 2000 and mck oa Aap
.... lOOO. All WTlaal al •• wlll be ......... dlit .... rqlOn.
1.!ADTif!JtDOn kpont _ _... ... ~._,.P\&Wk Ubnry ltd~
Dc:tk. 1000Moc.to*"-~)1l1·ll00;. u.c. '"'-Ullnry. Untwtllcy Dl't"C
("9) 12+.7)61; .S '1M ....._ lr..-:ll l*-J • ., Dotolr Drlwt ("9) 717-3800
QU!.S~ l'Of-lnfor..-.._ CIOftUICl:
,,_ H1lldllloe. U.S. A1W11 <Alp ol &p.a. 2u,..e,l-Jt26
to. loa »Ull L08 ~CA ~im
P-=(2U)4Sl-4204 ...a:~! to'......,.0
PRIORITY PROGf-?/\M Now AV/\IL/\OLE'.
Tutto Mare, Villa Nova,
What's Cooking and Yankee
Tavern.
It's important to list them
all because every proprietor
w.orks very hard for Hoag,
and generously donates the
food and time to make the
event a succea. 1bey surely
deserve community ~tron
age in return.
Hoag 552 committee
members also aecured mem-
orabilia, including signed
•stonn• posters from
Clooney and Junger and
even a stay at the Hilton
Hotel at Boston's Logan Air-
port, about a 20-minute drive
from Gloucester, the setting
for the movie.
More funds for Hoag were
raised as bidders went wild
to share in the fun. The sup-
port club is composed of
2,600 members, and they
have raised in excess of $14
million over the la.st 31 years
for the hospital.
Local citizens supporting
the film premiere were New-
port's Albert Auer, Barbara
Aune, BW Biava, Debbie
Bibb, Walt Havekont. Gary
Keuler, Pab1da Lane, Joel
Manchester, Toni Oliphant,
Jack Sanden, Sandy Sewell,
Delane Thyen and Mark
Weston, who were among a
large and enthusiastic cr~wd
of local film lovers.
• •.w. COOK'S column appears
every Thursday and Saturday.
GOING OUT OF BUSINESS ,
TOTAL .uQUIDAnON SALE
~'1E. 25° c STORE\lvlDE .
S "" t 0 50'1
o on RED TAGGED
CLEARANCE MERCHANDISE
EARLY YEARS ·TOYS
1827 Westcliff Drive, Newport Beach
(between Irvine Ave. & Dover)
(949) 642-4212
STORE HOURS:
Mon.·Fri. 1 Oam·5:30pm
Sot. 9om·4pm. sun 10om·2pm
CLASSIC RETIREMENT LIVING
for th~ Future •ocx;g
fl.wUC
THE COVINGTON
_A.The Covington, you'll have an epicurean decision to make: induJge your
joy of cooking in the gourmet kitchens of the cottages and apartments,
or If you'd rather, enjoy fine ~inlng prepareq by the master chefs of
the Mountainview ~taurant. But for now, visit our model cottage and see a
retirement hom~d a kitchen-designed for the future, here today.
Touring our model, it's easy to see the tangible benefits for members of
The Covington Priority Program. Like being able to choose the wocxl cabinets in
kitchen and bath. The color of the counters. Floor covering. Wall covering. It's a
great opportunity to learn about this attractive program and compare The
Covington's classic retirement lifestyle-updated for the future-with other
retirement communities.
At The Covington, you'll see the fine attention to detail that dJ.stingulshes
this retirement community. Designed for those who expect the best. In
·accommodations, in services and in value. Choose from a dozen apanment and
cottage floor plans. AU large, all designed to meet your needs with a !pec-
tnun of services that will free you to follow your own pursuJts. Consider, too,
the advantage of our unusual 90% resale benefit which benefits you or your
estate. •
The intangible benefits? Security and ~ comp1nlonship and gradoUs
Uving. And the peace of mind from knowlpg there's health care available
when and If you need it. Ufe at The Covifl8lon will be uuty rewardljl&.
Consider the benefits of retirement UVing and the Priority Proaram at
the c:ovtnsu>O· can tOday for more lnfonnadon or an aJ)pottitment or to sec
iedrement li~ for the future. (949) 362-9662 or !911&ec1-6'l'7·22~
THE COVINGTON
May Oim, a Foothill High School
(JllMnunan oftb.r ~ mathematia ma;or.
·1 aumded ua
found it wmn't lk ,_... me. f d
bani a lot lbcJUt <>era~~
IDd ... top .... ,.. to f0ur·1'™ ldM>ola.
10 I enrolled iD 1999. My 0CC .,...,...
haw bftll OUllCandin&-ancl GbUDtly
helpful-and my pkt haw been
nallmc
•e>rantt COMt Col .. hM prowkted
me with a wondaful apaiawx. My pl
.. to tnndtr in tht fall ol 2001 10 UC
lall!llq. I tvaUUaDy plan 10 al1a)d law
tcbool.·
1\lidOn for c.atlfomll raklmll ii
~ s 11 pa' unit Arilndll aid ..
aftlllbk Many tbort-tmn and
apwmmita aRo&nd. occ ......
Dumber OM OUI Of $outhtm Clllloe'•'• '51 ~ calra t
In 111111f11tbii -.dz• to UC -S c.a St111e ~ • ocr. iJO
CMllf Pf'OIA• ltt IK'OCMko-
MJDtf
OCC's Fall Sanater
BealnaAil8"'l14
New 16-Week Cl1ua
GetUndeJW.,
~,.. •• 28
~
DATEBOOK
.. ,
. • Thurldar, Juty 1 J, 2000 AIS
Weak screenplajrs tame potentially entertajnillg-films
Carrey's antics save
'Me, Myself, Irene'
I n "Me, Myself and
Irene," Jim Caney plays a
Rhode Island state trooper
named Charlie who has a
split personality. He is other-
wise mild-mannered and
nonconfrontational until
somebody or something
pushes him a little too far.
Tbars when his maniacal
alter ego, Hanle, takes over.
Charlie is assigned to a
routine mission to return
alleged fugitive Irene back to
• I Upstate ff New York, CRITICS ~~~on.
the run
from corrupt police officers.
And their escape would be a
lot simpler for everyone il
Hank didn't keep stepping in
at the most inopportune times.
Also, after Charlie loses his
medication, both personalities
fall in love with Irene.
I consider Bobby and
Peter Parrelly's movies to be
a 9'111ty pleasure, the kind of
thing you don't want to
admit enjoying. The brothers
d o have a way, though, of
amusing small minds like
mine, and "Me, Myself, and
Irene" was no different
While the politically cor-
rect commandos will no
doubt be out in force (Yeah, I
know, multiple personality
disorder is not schizophrenia
-gi'~e it a rest already,
wWyai), you can find plf}Ilty
to enjoy in this movie il you
just relax and put your brain
on pause for a couple hours.
Qmey's contortions are
amazing and almost painful to
watch-:!'&;
doesn't
spend most
of the
movie just
mugging
for the
camera.
His routine Michelle when the twoperson-Hancock allttes are
bl»tlinq it
oUtis great
Carrey's co-star Renee
Zellweger is charming and
attractive, in an unconven-
tional way, and the rest of
the cast is effective.
However, the actors play-
ing Charlie's •sons" stole the
show with their obscenely
hilarious Chris Rock/Stephen
Hawking vibe. And I also
loved the sports-star cameos
by Detroit winger Brendan
Shanahan, former Boston
Bruin Cam Neely and tennis
player Anna Kournikova.
Unfortunately, none of the
characters are well-devel-
oped, and the "Dukes of Haz-
zard• -esque narration is
annoying. Part of the problem
is that the usually reliable
Caney spends half the movie
playing a character who siln-
ply isn't funny -not because
of anything so whiny as
insensitivity to mental illness,
but because it's nothing more
than an over-the-top imitation
of "Dirty Harry."
While this might have
worked for about 10 minutes,
it gets old very fast at feature
length. The other problem,
• curiously, is that the directors
famous for going too far
seem to take their usual tac-
tic in hitting taboo targets,
but they do so rather tamely.
If they'd pushed some of this
stuff as far as •There's Some-
For quotes, research and
trading discipline, call
DOUG MITTELMAN
(949) 862-1234 or (800) 876--0353
19800 M.cMhur Blvd., Suite 1400 • kvlne Ca 92912
....... °' tlle llew '*'Stoel fsllqe aid Ill Pf111dp&l __.., ........ .....,.t!Ma S50 .._ utlonwlde.
·-~G. W.W.. SoM. IM..,...,.., SIP'C
I I
Jim Caney and his three .. sons .. ln .. M e, Myself and Irene ...
thing About Mary" did with
handicap jokes, for instance,
they might have pulled it off.
But really, albino jokes? How
many people out there are
sensitive about albino refer-
ences?
Neverthless, racial stereo·
types, sexual innuendos and
a well-placed chicken all
keep the loose yet wacky.
plot on course. The movie
was a hoot, but no stretch for
Carrey, whose physical
antics support the dull scnpt.
The bottom line is this: If
you're conservative, you won't
like'lhis movie. If you aren't
really uptight you should like
it -or find parts of it funny.
• MKHEUE HANCOCK. 27, lives in
Newport 8eactl with her husband
and works for a Costa Mesa law firm.
Best to wait for
video of 'Trixie,
l T rixie" is about an aspinng gumshoe
who can't get her
boss to take her seriously. In
frustration, she leaves the
agency and finds employ-
ment in a nearby casino. Her
assignment is to put the ann
on pickpockets.
Emily Watson, as the title
character, has the wide-eyed
look of Meg Ryan combined
Vfith the fumbling and bum-
blµlg of Columbo, all the
while chewing serious
amounts of gum.
The humor in this movie is
based on the malaprops that
Trixie employs unknowingly
in her everyday language.
For instance, she might say
wllh your next
dinner.
Mouth-watertN eotrflel, a
relUed cllntni ~
and patio aeauaa wltb '
d ~--ol .....
ea, .... tor a rllr11?' 'I ..... ,.. •.
"a stitch in
time is a
horse or a
different
color· or
say she's
"ravish-
ing " when
she means
"farn·
ished .•
EJaine England :m:i.
bers con-
tributing in worthwhile ways
are Leslie Ann Warren as an
entertainer who has been mis·
used by men; Nick Nolte, who
does a credible raWlchy politi·
dan; and Nathan Lane, a
shining light as a caring misfit
Untortunat.ely, the plot is
feeble and disjointed.
FilmJng was d one in Van-
couver, so the scenery is
beautiful. The humor is there
but not much else of sub-
stance. You might want to
wait for the video.
• ELAINE E.NGLAND, 65, lives in
Newport Beach and owns a gift-
basket business she operates out
of her home.
We want you
in the balcony
Forget the big quota-
tions in the paper, the star
rating system. that guy
with the thumb -the Dai-
ly Pilot wants to know your
opinion of cummt fihm.
We're looking for local
folks to serve on our Reel
Critics movie review panel.
Your job: view a cur-
rent film and write up
your assessment of it. We
run the critiques -along
with a photo and some
biographical information.
The reward: we pick
up the tab for the ticket
and, of course, make you
famous.
If you're interested,
send a movie review sampl~. 500 words or leSs,
to Daily Pilot. 330 W. Bay
St., Costa Mesa 92627
attn: Nancy Cheever; via
fax at (949) 646-4170; or
through e-mail at
nancy.cheever@laUmes.
com . Please include your
name and phone number.
Your appetite
won't stand
a chance.
$14.95 om. Special
H'8dll 9-lk, Clicbn & ~
C.lt ......... ~la ....... .................................
.......... s. .............. ...
Al8 Thondoy, Ju.,. 13, 2000 DATEBOOK Doi~ Pilot'
.
Trilogy changes fall lineup
ly tom Titus
T heatergoers who
were anticipating the
chance to renew
acquaintances th.is fall with
Blanche DuBois, Stanley
Kowalski and Rhoda Pen-
mark at Costa Mesa's 1iilo-
gy Playhouse instead will
encounter a scarecrow, a tin
woodsman, a cow~rdly lion
and a really hungry plant.
The Trifogy, which
moved early this year into
the space vacated by the
In The-
ater THEATER District at the
Lab
Anti-Mall on Bristol Street,
initially announced an
alternating mixture of plays
for mature audiences and
children's favorites. Now
the focus seems to be more
on family fare.
Gone are "A Streetcar
Named Desi.Te,• scheduled
for September, and "The
Bad Seed," earmarked for
November. ln their place
are "The Wizard of Oz" and
•Little Shop of Horrors,•
the latter filling the adult
slot and being presented in
full, rather than encapsulat-
ed such as the Trilogy's ear-
lier version of "Into the
Woods."
Apparently, family-ori-
ented shows, such as that
Stephen Sondheim produc-
tion and "Charlie and the
Chocolate Factory,• which
was extended an extra
week, proved more popular
than the adult offerings of
Ira Levin's "Deathtrap" and
Neil Simon's "Fools.• ·
So, the nilogy will place
its emphasis on productions
by, and for, younger people.
Artistic director Alida
Butler will hold auditions at
6:30 p.m. Tuesday for a cast
of eight boys, eight girls, six
men and eight women for
"Wt.zard, • which will open
SeRt. 8 for three weekends.
There also are roles for six
jazz dancers in the 15-25
age range.
All roles are open, and
auditioners should prepare
a two-minute monologue, a
one-minute vocal selection
and be prepared to dance
with the choreographer.
Auditioners should also
bring photographs and
resumes.
0 On July 22, the Tulogy
will hold tryouts for its
Summer Showcase, a series
of comedy, variety and
music presentations. The
shows will include a yqulh
variety night Aug. 5, an
adult comedy and improv
ni~ht Aug. 12, an adult
music and magic night Aug.
'19 and an encore night
Aug. 26, featuring selected
Whatever you
Landscape or
Maintenance
needs, Lloyd's
can do it ~IL..
THINllNC. ilOUT LANDSCAPIHC. o• r.uo MAIHTEHANU1
CAU FOa A FRH ESTIMATE TOOAYI
~LLD~n·s ~ LANDSCAPE I MAINmM~
(94 ) .
Lloyd's Nuraery a landscape Co., Inc.
2183 Fairview Rd. SUJte 216, Costa Mela, CA 92627
URAi LDWWWJWWWIRIJWWWIWWWl VllfT OUR WEHITI:; WWW.U.OYDSLAlllD~.COM ..... L ............. .
artists from the previous
programs.
Following •wizard• and
rounding out the theater's
first year in Costa Mesa
(after five years in Laguna
Niguel) will be •Little Shop
of Horrors," opening Oct.
13, and "A Winnie-the-
Pooh Christmas Tail,• a
children's musical, opening
Dec. 8.
Infonnbtion: (714) 957,.
3347, Ext. 1.
• ~
Another production for
children, *The Little
Prince,• openect Wednes-
day for a two--:veek run in
Osange Coast College's
Robert B. Moore Theatre.
Rick Golson is directing
the 'play, which focuses on a
stranded aviator in the
Sahara Desert and a myste~
rious and regal little boy
who changes the pilot's life.
P~rformances are at 1_0
a .m. Wednesdays and
Thursdays, 10 a.m. and 7
p.m. Fridays, and 2 and 7
p.m. Saturdays. Tickets are
$5 in advance, $7 at the
door.
Information: OCC Com-
munity Education Office at
(714) 432-5880.
• TOM Tl1\JS reviews local the-
ater for the Daily Pilot. His
columns appear Thursdays and
Saturday.
-a.BIS
.Pasblolt llland .. Summer
.Concert Serl8i WW colitinue
itl MUOD With AJilbroila'1
J>OP. rOck bmel at' p.~
WedDeiday. sa: PeUI 'nlylor WUl YJ4ZZ
rb~ JµJy. Diane
Schuur will~~
~Aug. 2; Don Md..eeri
Wll.I play folk bmei Aug. 9;
and The Young Dublinen will perform Celtic IOCk
Aug. 16 to end the .eri81.
AD shows are parfc?nned in
the mall, outside BlOoming-
<iale's, at 701 Newport Cen-
ter DriVe, Newport Beech.
Pree adJni.aiol:l; preferred
seating is $15. (9'9) 721-
2000.
'UTILE PRINCE'
Orange Coast College con-
tinues perfonnances of
"The Uttle Prince,• a clas-
sic tale by Antoine de Saint-
Exupery, at 10 a.m. today in
the college's Robert B.
Moore Theatre, 2701
Fairview Road, Costa Mesa.
Sbowtimes are 10 a.m.
·Wednesdays and Thurs-
days, 10 a.m. and 7 p.m.
Fridays, and 2 and 7 p.m.
Saturdays. Tickets are SS in
advance, $1 at the door.
The show ends July 22.
(714) 432-5880.
MONOLOGUES.
MONOORAMAS
Orange Coast CoDege's
Repertory Theatre Compa-
ny will present a •one-On-
One Festival• from July 26
through Aug. 6 in the Dra-
ma Lab Studio, 2701
Fairview Road. Costa Mesa.
Showtimes are 8 p.m.
Wednesdays through Satur-
days and 2 and 1 p.m. Sun-
days. nckets are $5 in
advance and $6 at the door.
(11-4) 432-5640.
WELCOME TO •CABARET"
The Orange County Per-
fonning Arts Center will
present "Cebaret" at 7:30
p.m. Aug. 8 through 13.
nck.ets are $28.50 to SS7 .50
Tuesday through Thursday
and $33.50 to $62.50 Friday
through Sunday. The Cen-
ter is at 600 Town Center
Drlve, Costa Mesa. (714)
556-2746.
ABRACADABRA! IT'S
COPPERAELD
The Orange County Per-
fonning Arts Center' will
present "David Copper-
field• at 6 and 9 p.m. Nov.
30 and Dec. 2. The Center
is at 600 Town Center Dri-
ve, Costa Mesa. (714) 556-
2122. Tickets are $30 to
$50. (714) 755-0236.
HEMPHILL'S RUGS & CARPETS ..
230 East 17th St • Costa Mesa
(949) 722-7224
www.rugsandcarpets com
Mon-Fri 10-6 Sat 10-S
Page
Private School
92 Years of Quality Education
School Begins August 7, 2000
OPEN HOUSE
Affordable Tuition
With Before & After Care
At No Additional Cost
For~SchoolStudents
Saturday, July 15th
10:00 a.m. Until 12:00 Noon
Come Join The Fun! Brina The Family!
Tour our friendly up to date carnpuaea.
• Refreshments • Balloons •
Garden Grove
Aae 2 tbna pc1e 6 Ase 2 tbru &ride 6.
657 Vi~ Street 12111 Buaro Streec
6:30 a.Ii\. -6:30 p.m. 6:30 a.m. -6:30 p.m.
(949) 642-0411 (714) 971-SS33
TROPICAL CAFE
Thundoy, Juty 13, 2000 A17
rench restaurants dish up Bastille Dcly in style
n July 14, 1789,
French citizens,
protestinii the
bsolute rule of 'ng Louis
VI, st~ed the Bastille, a
tate p • n that symbolized
e autocratic and arbitrary
ovemment, marking the
begin.l)ing of the French
Revolution.
Today, Bastille Day is a
national holi<my in France,
celebrated with parades,
parties and large fireworks
dis-
Dini~ plays,
not
PR IEW unlike
our
own
Independence Day. ln New-
port-Mesa, several French
restaurants are preparing
special menus for the holi-
day, allowing us to share in
Friday's festivities.
Bistro Le Crtllon (2523 E.
Bluff Drive in Eastbluff Cen-
ter, Newport Beach, (949)
640-8181) prepares a three-
course, fixed~price menu that
features some of chef Chan-
tal's favorite dishes. The
feast will start with a compli-
mentary glass of French
champagne, a perfect com-
plement to either of the hors
d'oeuvres.
DOG DAV AFTERNOON
Three Dog Bakery wlU host a
•Barkday Pool Party" at
12:30 p.m. July 22 at Corona
de\ Mar Aaz.a, 924 Avocado
Ave., Newpqrt Beach. The
event will offer ice aeam, . cake, games for your dog,
Celebrants may choose· is available Friday only, will
between country pates start with a selection of served over baby greens country pates and French with comkhons, small vine-dry sausage or a baby-gary pickles, or fresh goose-greens salad dressed with a
liver tole gras served with mustard-vinaigrette and toast points. The foie gras capped with baked brie carries an additional charge cheese in puff pastry. of $18 (it serves two), but is Entrees include a grilled well worth it. It's perhaps the
best I've had anywhere. ribeye steak topped with
Entree selections a.re a shallots and garlic butter. Irs
rack of lamb roasted in the served with pommes trites
wood-burning oven and (French fries) and ha.ricots
served with haricots vert vert. The other entree choice
(green beans) or breast of is chicken cordon bleu, a
chicken with a morel mush-breaded breast of chicken
room sauce. stuffed with smokecl ham
Vive la difJerencel and cheese, on a bed of
Finally, dessert will be stewed tomatoes.
fresh fruit tartlets with lemon A car~elized apple ta.rt
custard. with vanilla ice cream will
Dinner will be served in top off the meal.
two seatings on Friday and The dinner is priced at
Saturday, and will cost $16 per person without wine,
$39.50 per person. or $29 per person with a
Mistral (440 Heliotrope glass of wine selected for
Ave., Corona del Mar, (949) eatjl course.
723-9685) is using the Pascal (1000 N. Bristol
Bastille Day holiday to kick Street, Newport Beach, (949)
off its summerlong Tour de 752-0107) has had a special
France celebration, which Bastille Day dinner for the
will offer various fixed-price last 10 years. I was at the
menus throughout the sea-first one, and the menu has
son. The menus will carry remained the same since.
two prices, the higher will But I'm not complaining -
include a glass of wine espe-it's as good now as it was
cially paired with each then.
course by owner Ed Waters. Dinner starts with a small
The holiday menu, which tomato ta.rtlet to stir the taste
and a bikini and swimsuit Voodoo. The hotel is at 4500
contest Free. (949) 7~647. MacArthur Blvd., Newport
CAJUN SHRJMP FESTIVAL
Beach. Cost is $45 per per-
son. (949) 476-2001.
Sutton Place Hotel's Calyp-
so Cafe will host a •Cajun BALBOA WEEKEND FUN
Shrimp Festival" from 4 to The Balboa
7:30 p.m. Aug. 6 with tradi-Merchants/Owners Assn.
tional Big Easy dishes-will host free entertainment
including shrimp, okra gum-from 12:30 to 3:30 p .m. Sat-
bo, red-skin potatoes, com urdays and Sundays
on the cob and pecan pie. A through Labor Day. The
variety of New Orleans weekend events will include
~ will be available, .. mimes, clowns, balloon
including Dixie, Black.end sculptors, stieet musicia.ns
• Voodoo and Crimson and free taffy for kids. The
I Elegant Dining • Complete Bar • Sushi To Go I
Lunch M-F. 11 :30 -2 p.m. •Dinner M·S, 5 • 10 p.m. •Closed Sunday
2675 Irvine Ave. • Costa Mesa
949 645-55 8 • 645-5519
buds, followed by a raw veg-cake,. upon learning or the which have a short season
etable crudites basket peasants' complalnt that they and are hard to come by -
accompanied by a mustard-had no bread. Before you are prepared in a Provencal
vinaigrette and anchoyy applaud her generosity, ~ bouillabaisse with a fennel
saucefordipping.1\"adition-aware that this was consi -confit. As the name implies. ally, the next offering ls an ered a sarcastic insult. they a.re hand-picked by
array of delicious country "Cake" was the name of divers, rather than commer-P.a!es and rustic sausages. dough scraps that were dally farmed. I've bad them ' biners will have their ·caked· on the wall of the in different dishes previously choice of four entrees: a clas-oven and given out to beg-here, and they have always sic cassoulet of duck conllt, gars, as opposed to the been superb. lamb and sausage; chicken baked delicacies en1oyed by The other entree, roasted fricassee with a tomato tar-the upper classes. She wasn't duck breast with a truffle ragon vinaigrette; or rabbit using her head when she and roasted shallot au jus, cooked Provencal style with said it, and she certainly sounds just as good. herbs, tomatoes and olives. wasn't using it later when it Dessert on the Bastille . Fish lovers will be pleased was lopped off in the guillo-Day menu is a strawberry with the salmon, which is tine. mille-leuille, a cream-filled served in a puff pastry crust Luckily we live in kindler, layered pastry seJVed with with salmon mousse. genUer times where havmg Chambord ice cream. Dinner will be wrapped someone's bead on a plate is Sorry, Marie, no cake. up with a cheese course and JUSt a figure of speech. By now you're probably a setection of desserts. At PlnotProvence(686 bumming •La Marseillaise" Expect the owners, Pascal Anton Blvd., Costa Mesa. as you ponder where to go to and Mimi Ohlats, to decorate (714) 444-5900) the on,ly celebrate. Bastille Day has a the restaurant for the occa-thing you'll find on your f amilia.r feel for us Ameri-sion, and an accordion play-plate are delicious treats cans, coming so quickly after er will be on hand to play cooked up by head chef Flo-our own Fourth of July. Even French favorites all evening. rent Mameau. the colors are the ~e: red, The meal, including wine, The holiday menu, a white and blue. is $59 per person, and will three-course affair priced at So go out and celebrate be served Friday and Satur-$39.95 per person, will be and don't forget to say thank day~. with an early served today through Sun-you to your host for the Stat-seating at 6 and another at day, along with the restau-ue of Liberty. 8:30. rant's regular menu.
At the time of the French A nuxed hors d'oeuvre • STEPHEN SANTACROCE's dining uprising, Queen Marie platter will start the meal, reviews appear every other Thurs-
Antoinette, is purported to followed by an option of two day. He may be reached via e-mail
have said "let them eat entrees. Diver scallops -at food_criticOhotmail.com.
festivities take place at the pagne. The hotel is at 4500 featuring dishes such as
Balboa Fun Zone, at Bay MacArthur Blvd., Newport chicken parmigiana and
Street and Edgewater. (949) Beach. (949) 476-2001. calamari picante at reduced
673-9575. prices -from 5 to 6 p.m. BRUNCH AT LA GRANJA weekdays and 4 to 6 p.m.
DINING La Granja Mediterranean Sundays. The restawantll
Grill serves a champagne at 3131 W. Coast Highway,·
SUNDAY BRUNCH brunch from 11 a.m. to 3 Newport Beach. (949) 642-
The Sutton Place Hotel p.m. Sundays. La Granja is 7880.
hosts a Sunday brunch from in Newport Plaza Center at
10:30 a.m. to 2 p.m. featur-1000 Bristol St., Newport WINE TASTINGS
ing international seafood Beach. (949) 252-9396. Hi-Time Wme CeI1arS fea-
and salad buffets, roasts tures wine tastings from 4:30
carved to order, breakfast lWIUGHT DlNING to 8 p.m. Fridays and 1:30 to
favorites and more. The Villa Nova Restaurant offers 8 p.m. Saturdays. (949) 65().;
meal is $30, $40 with cham-a twilight dining menu--8463.
,AJ8 Thursday, July 13, 2000
um.mer wouldn't be same with-
out a good ol' county fair.
But thankfully we won't
have to worry about the alter-
native as the Orange County Fair offi-
cially ldcu off Friday with a salute to
peppers that promises to spice up what's
been a somewhat gloomy summer.
Frid4y•s opening day begins a 17-day
extravaganza that is expected to lure
about three quarters of a million people
through thafair's gates when it's all said
and done.
Celebrating its 108th year in the coun-
ty, and 51st in Costa Mesa, the fair is a
throwback to a simpler era.
where else can you watch pig races,
view row upon row of knickknacks and
other collections, steal a kiss atop the . .
Ferris wheel, taste the best strawberry
jam, gorge yourself in a pie-eating con-
test. listen to an old-time banjo band,
munch on barbecue com and Australian
batter-fried potatoes and· catch an aging
version of your favorite 1970s rock band
all ~ one day?
-Costa Mesa pollce 11 llON SMl1lt. on the
ectMties of carnival WOt1cets during previous
Orange County Fairs.
Yes, as you can tell, we look forward to
the fair jUst as much as the next person.
Sure, the fair has had its share of prob-
lems over the years with dubious carnival
workers, malfunctioning rides and protest
by animal rights groups, but pound for
MEOtHA F£JZAGIC OIMAATN> I DALY Pl.OT
Rainbow River day campers, from left, Austin Wilson, Mlcklde Tun and Heather Naylor
etamlne the baby chicks at the 1999 Orange County. Falr.
pound it's· one of the best sources of fun make some plans to attend the 108th
for young and old. annual Orange Count¥ Fair.
So if you haven't already done so, You won't be disappointed.
Re~ders divided on Smith's aiq>Qnt .s~an.ce
AT ISSUE: Columnist Steve
Smith supports ending the
battle against anti-airJ)ort
South County residents" and
focusing on fighting expan-
sion at John Wayne Airport.
Steve Smith's article in the Dally
Pilot (•1t•s time to-ditch El Toro and
fight to save John Wayne,• July 1)
is a good example of the bias
which the Daily Pilot shows toward
the South County anti-airport
group. For a newspaper which pur-
ports to Reatlerl serve New-
RESPOND !:~ ~~ c , Mesa, the
Pilot bas
consistently favored the anti-airport
forces 1n Irvine and other South
County dttes.
Smith's premise is that if we in
C°"4 Mesa and Newport Beech me
ooly reasonable and let Irvine have
its way, that somehow or other we can._.,. .. John Wayne Airport.
Such a specious argument must
have been designed. to lull local res-
idents into a false sense of security.
The truth is that airlines are
clamoring to get more flights in.to
John Wayne. Orange County is
such a lucrative market that air-
lines can look forward to greater
profits whenever the cap is lifted.
I believe we residents of New-
port Beach and Costa Mesa can
Jook forward to a doubling of the
OTY Of COSTA MESA
Costa Mesa City Hall, 77 Fair
Drtve, Costa Mesa, CA 92626; {714)
154~223
Mayor. Gary Monahan
Coandl· Ubby Cowan, l.bida
• Dbr.oin, Joe Erlckloll and Heather
Somers
OTY OP NE\WIOn llAOf
Newport Be.da ay Hall. 3300
Newport Blvd.,~ Beecb. CA 9'28831 (949) V'llCa.4-3300~~~ ..
~ JobD NOJll!I J
C1 tGil:Y~-pebay.
Norma Glovs, °'** cnMI. 1bd ~., ...... ,...
number of Oights out of John
Wayne and, shortly thereafter,
tripling the number of Oigbts.
Such an increase in flights and
ground traffic would destroy resi-
dential neighborhoods, thriving
commercial areas, Newport Bay
itself, and negatively affect Costa
Mesa and Newport Beach.
. In my view, there is no way that
the pumber of flights out of John
Wayne can be contained without
having a second commercial air-
port at El Toro.
The demand is too great. Any
promises to the contrary are wish-
ful thinking or, more probably, an
attempt to covertly support anti~air
port forces. Without El Toro, John
Wayne must expand.
There are other onerous results
from refusing to accept the gW,of
El Toro airport from the federal
government, which Smith and sev-
eral other colwnnists in the Pilot
have chosen to ignore.
ll a nonavi6tion plan is adopted.
Orange County taxpayers will have
to pay for the cleanup at El Toro.
'Ille Navy will clean up El Toro
to meet airport or industrial stan-
dards, but will not and cannot pay
for a cleanup to comply with resi-
dential or park standards.
If we are seduced into embrac-
ing the idea of a •great park" as
promoted by Irvine, Orange Coun-
ty taxpayers will pay for it. Irvine
will get the park. and we taxpayers
will get the bW.
Other expenses that Ora.DQ!
County resklentt will have to pay
for are higher ticket prices at John
Wayne (without the competition of
a second aiiport) and greater street
traffic to John Wayne, Los Angeles
International and Optario airports.
If Los Angeles County is success-
ful. we inay have to pay a sur-
charge on tickets purchased there.
If the Pilot is a responsible, non-
biased Joumal. as it claims to be, it
will publish a complete analysis of.
the pro-airport stand, includfng the
alternate F and alternate G plans
contained in the county's environ-
mental report, plus the tax implica-
tions of rejecting an El Thro airport.
SHIRLEY A. CONGER
Corona del Mar
It's too bad more fol.ks in New-
port-Mesa, particularly the local
municipal leadership, haven't tuned
into what Steve Smith is saying.
People 1n Newport-Mesa are
watching a golden window of oppor-
tunity slip through their fingen.
Right now, they could combine
forces with South County, El Toro
Reuse Planning Authority and
county Supervisor Tom Wilson to
ensure that expansion of John
Wayne Airport would not happen.
Right now they could decide to
support Measure P folks in oppos-
ing an airport at El Toro. Right
now,· they could help ensure there
would be no new, polluting, noisy,
damaging flights at either John
Wayne or El Toro.
But •rtght now• doesn't last for-
, f!lllS.
Tbe dock is ticking toward
2005, wben Newport-Mesa will
need support to keep the CUJTent
limits on Jobn Wayne.
South County has held out the
olive branch to Newport-Mesa for
months now, in a vain effort to pro-
mote a common solution to a com-
mon problem. But South County
doesn't really need Newport-Mesa
to prevent an unwanted, unneed-
ed, environmentally disastrous air-
port at El Toro. We, have the mus-
cle we need to do the job without
help from Newport-Mesa.
The feeling is growing in South
County that we are tired of being
snubbed, and that perhaps, against
our best instincts, we should just
shrug our shoulders and walk
away from our willingness to also
oppose added Oigbts at John
Wayne Airpert.
MICHAEL SMITH
Missi~ Viejo
In Steve Smith's column, he
states that El Toro proponents
should give up on plans for the air-
port because of the Measure F vote
in favor of the anti-airport activists.
But be forgets (or ignores) the fact
that twice Orange County voted for
the El Thro airport.
The anti-airport people did not
accept those two votes, kept fight-
ing against it and won the vote in
favor of Measure P.
U they did not give up after two
votes for the airport, why do they
resist so strongly against propo-
nents fighting again fQr the airport?
What's fair ts fair!
ELEANORE lltlGHER
Costa Mesa
HOW TO COITICT YOUI IEPllSllTITIYIS
Irvine, CA 927151 (949) 833-0180 or
fu (949) 833-06961 Pre9I Secretary
Pat Joyce (916) 323-1200.
STATE ASSB•Y
• MuUyn 91www· (R), 10th Dtatrict.
18852 MKAltlmr ems .. SUite 220.
JMne, CA mu~ (9G) m-1010.
B·maD a?O••emblf.aLP
STATI CDAS1M CXl•IHION 45 ..,_,St. ... 2000, San
l'lmCllCo. CA 9U06s (415) 90C-=. .. .=,r Lang
acw-.~ .. °""-i::~ 121tt. .,..,._ ......
UMGU•
.....
lllMlllll
Daily Pilot
Students
need more
than good
test scores
¥ our~dal regud-
lDg test results
(•Recent test-score
·~· lbow9 promile," Juty 8) dkt llot ~ to scratch
tM irmface qt the problems
With °" ~rt-Mesa Uni-
fied Scbt>al .Dfltrict.
Pint, ~ect of an edu-
cation 11 not M score well on
a~ test. The stan-.
-dardized t9lt scores lhould
be prtntecl oe toilet paper, so
at leut ~would be Ul8fµl.
One major reason there ls
such a big dllcrepa.ncy in the
scores of the
lllUftll ::r:..
Mela por-
tiom of the d11trict 11 that the
Newport students more
clOlelf reMm.ble the norm
grQup. which mcluded only
4 % English language lea.m-
en. And the Newport scores
would not be that great if the
schools did not have Englbh-
speaking students.
lnsUuction in the clus-
roolD9 has DOI changed from
the days of former cllstrkt
Supt. John Nicholl. It wos
outdated then, and it is worse
now. Tut matenall a.re old;
~ iDetbOdS are Old;
and, Wt.th few~. the
board JeechGlilp Is st4le.
Quite~. lt seems as
U the board -and the Deily
Pilot -... ~ only bi
the athledc eC:b.ievements of
tbe ltudeell. Jdo.-..ea.llia.-.wilh
cohmmllt ... Smltht be
wu way off biUi on the
boDd ~But wben be
po1nt8tf·'0Ut'&w little we
have to ~about, particu-
larly for the ~t Side
ldiooll, be wu right on tar-,
get. Tbose ltudents and their
parents a.re pen sbOi't shrttt
by the boird and the district.
Th• bOa.Jap WO~~ uch
as the nm entl
b4'1D9 • place In ,.. mu-
room. the Bl~-and voucberi -ud eDClOUragmg Ul6
• ~~ of metlaod91Dd the
b9lt matertall available to
teech all ltUdentl. u twben tMcb to tbe
ltandardl, DOt .... test. and
include ~-.olviAg and
attk:al tbhl1rtbg, ltUdents
won't haw~ wllb _ ......... ,,..,~
dM1 Wiiii it edd ~ Otbef
bloekadls to Daelr·~
..,.. ..... ~\IP by lbe
bOucl.
MCICMCI
Nit'f;poat Bwll
or fax (949) 251-93091 ,
E-mail:
cluUtopher.c:oxema.11.houae.gov
• Dua~. (R), 45th
District(~ Costa Mela and west NeWPClrtT01 Mam St., Suite
3C, ~ 8wb. CA 926Ur (714) w
2331 ~ BuBdina, Wash·
tngtaa. DC 2051~) i25-2'15 or lU ('114) llO-JIOli !~~home.gov
'• .. ., .
Chuck .au.sen wheels his vintage bicycle Into his shop after a day of cutting
hair. He used to ride the bike to work. but now he keeps It out front for looks.
' ... ...
Thursday, July 13, 2000 AJ9
"He's the best
barber in the ·
world. I used to
have a full heod
of hairl"
B.B. Yarborough
longtime customer at
Chuck's Barber Shop
Russell shares a laugh with one of his regular customen. lbe longUme barber keeps both the haircuts and the prices -only $12 a cut -simple.
"Certain people
you con OISCUSS
.. with; cer1oin
peOple you all
msam•.
And cert(m peaP.e
~ don't touch
eilhsdjld,
becmll)Wliijly
Ill
His shop constantly buzzing with conversaUon,
longtime barber Chuck Russell has provided customers
with close cuts and a sharp wit for 21 years.
STORY BY ALEX COOLMAN + PHOTOGRAPHS BY MARIANNA DAY MASSEY
te in the morning at a barber shop on
Street. and the talk is of Korea.
e man having bis hair cut. Huntington
resident B.B. Yarborough. served in
Charlie Company, 1st Battalion. Another cus-
tomer, ~g contentedly for bis tum under
the shears, ~t some of the war.working at
the Marine Corps cold weather training facility
at Pickle Meadows.
And the barber, 69-year-old Newport Beach
resident Cluck RimeD. did a tum in the
Marines as well: Item Company, 5th Regiment
•we were on the same bill together in
Korea," Russell tells Yarborough. "Most of the
Ume, you guys were on our right
flank. weren't you?"
"We were clean1ng up your
mess,• Yarborough says.
Neither Yarborough nor the other
customer. Newport Beach resident
Bob Knox. actually baa a great deal
ol hair to cut. 1be topl of thEir beads
are proud. empty summitl -pink
domm rimmed With a delialte frlnge
olllh*. •
But getting a trtDi ii olilyJlllU1 of
the pamt at Rmlell .. lbop. ~
• the talk wbll9 ....... mlp away
ii Biii dleltotbe......,. ~ abDut ..... afMM·wmnm.
abcd~dlllclrm.~
abed .. ~ dlltalll tMt
makaup•-'I• am.a to Qmc:b .... .., 11 ...... ...., .... u•'u ~:t:r-yaurms.,. ,t:• ............ • ,,,,.. --·-:•tM1~ .... _ ......
,
But it's the presence of Russell. as multi-
purpose confessor, counselor and consul-
tant, that elevates the shop above the mere-
ly quainl
Russell knows bow to talk to bis cus-
tomers, and he knows bow to listen.
"Certain people, you can tell what you
can get away with,• in conversation, he
says. "Some of them, you just barely skim
the surface. •
"Certain people you can discuss poli-
tics with; certain people you can discuss
religion. And certain people you don't
touch either subject, because you really
The sign on the door reads •<>pen. mme ta•
atChuck'I Barber Shop on 32nd Street Ill
Newport Beach. ,
.. .. ..
d 1hundcrf, July 13, 2000
1005 Bonnie Doone
Large 4 BO, 3 BA
family home with bay
and ocean views.
Spacious living room
with high ceilings, 3 car
garage and large back
patio. Please call
Marian Phillippi at
(949) 717-5111 .
Spectacular ocean and
Catalina views from this
4 BO, 3.5 BA home.
Gourmet kitchen,
3 decks, wine stortge
and lovely landscaptng.
Please call Rick and
Paula Cosenza at
(949) 495-0707.
Belcourt townhome
with parquet floors
and spiral staircase.
Living room with
2-atory ceiling and
French doors leading
to patio. Pleue call Mari.In Phiftippj at
(M9) 717-8111.
Just steps to the
beach, this duple>C has
2 units with 2 BO, 1 BA
each and pa~ing for
3 cars. Great Income
inYHtmenl Furnished
witb washer/dryer In
each unit. Please call
John and caro1 Jacobs
at (949) 717-5111.
Upgraded, one level
Sandcastle condo with
2 BO, 2 BA. Delightful,
large patio/balcony and
private 2 car garage.
Walking distance to
Fashion Island and
beaches. Pleue caw
Marian Phillippi at
(949) ?17-5111.
Fabulous MQntsemlt
Plan 0 . Customized
home with 5 BO, 3 BA.
1 BO and 1 BA on
main 1loor. Amenities
Include large gourmet
kitchen, built-in BBQ
and fountain. Please
call Sharon SWanson
at (949) 717-5111.
Ftbulous bay and city
light views from this
2 BO. 2 BA coodo.
Bayfront end unit with aepa. dining .,..,
:::: In liYing IOOfTI ~-Dock for 48'
boat. Please call John
and Carol Jacobs at
(949) 717-5111.
Recently remodeled,
this single fllmlly
residence includes
new brick dedting,
walkways and parldng
area. Oodt will
aocommodate up to a
35' bQft. ~ call
John and Carol Jaciobe
Ill (949) 717-5111 .
Magnificent Newport
Heights dollhouse with
2 BO, 1 BA, plantation
shutters throughout and
large country kitchen
with bay window.
Overstzed comer lot
close to great achooll.
Please call J.B. Griffin
at (949) 717-5111 .
Well-melntained 3 BO,
2.5 BA townhome on
the Interior of a super
comple>C. V.ulted
ceilings, tile ftoora In
kitchen and entry,
tkytightj and beautiful
ptltio. PleMe cd John
end Carol Jacobe at
(949) 717-5111 .
4 P9nlnsula
Custom bultt home in
Ooean Ridge designed
by Todd Schooler with
ocean and city light
views. 4 BO, 4.5 BA
with spacious master
auite. Please caJI
Duncan Forgey at
(949) 717-5111.
Brand new custom
built home with
European navor.
Gorgeous kitchen with
granite counters and
cuatom cabin~try.
Beautiful master suite
with view. Please call
Marian Phillippi at
(949) 717-5111.
21412 La Falda
Fabulous 4 BO, 3 BA
home with new ca.rpet,
wood ftoors, security
ayatem, wet bar and air
condttlonlng.Loc:atedin
a great o81ghbortlood.
PteaML. ~ Rick and
Paula • Cosenza at
(949) 4~5-0707.
Well maintained one
atory home located on
prime street with
be8Ches at both ends.
Specious Interior patio
and ovettlzed 2 car
garage wtth extra
atorage area. Please
call Bim Hastings at
(949) 717-5111.
Ab9olutely the lowest
price In 0ceen Ridge.
Gorgeous, almost new
home with vaulted
celling• In entry and
lwge wln®wl. 4 BO,
2.5 BA with extra large
bKkyard. Please call
Marian Phllllppl at
(049) 717-5111.
'
' ' .. .
..
..
J' gm. Of j -~
·-., fti!t ~-'wow.' I was~-.. beiig aWe
to CGnll*l Clflilst these guys, w "°", .. , ... _.
Kyle W.tiiilln. South All-Star
' .
_Jil,17 ..... .. ...
Sports Editor Roger Carlson• 949~744223 • Thursday, July 13, 2000 BJ
We stmaµ ufilquely suited for the trenches
•Estancia High product's
focus has allowed him to
achieve All-Star status.
Bany Faul""9r
DAILY PILOT
Tz-~1~ :i~~ 1)111 ~mhisfoot-
ball uniform like
popcorn in a
microwave. Mus-
cle, flesh and understated attitude
all burst from his tattered practice
jersey. under which shoulder pads
appear to be more accessory than
necessity.
The mere act of slipping his
buzzed blond head into ;his gold
Estancia High headgear seems to
transfonn the 6-foot-2, 295-pound
lineman from a docile, soft-spoken
teddy bear into a hulking, helmeted
rogue.
Already glistening with sweat
A
ftnishinfi
touch at
NBCC
•New 18th green at
Newport Beach Country
Club will open Tuesday.
Richard Dunn
GOLF
A r Newport
Beach
Country
Club to totally
remodel its
finishing hole lS
bold and daring,
but takirtg risks
are part of golf.
In this case,
the brand new
18th hole, from
100 yards in, is
nothing short of
spectacular.
The green is
elevated and undulated, mounds
have been added behind it and
bunkers have been built.
A flower planter behind the
green on the side of a large mound
proudly displays the letters NBCC
as players and viiitors walk in from
the parking lot. The risk/reward
factor of the project is clearly an
ace.
Construction was started on the
hole aftet the 2000 Toshiba Senior
Classic in March, and it will reopen
to Its members Tuesday. The
opening round of the club's annual
regatta will follow Wedne9day to
christen the new green, which will
change the pa.r-5 bole dramatically
for Senior PGA Tour players in the
Toshiba Classic.
What was once a birdie hole for
the seniors is now a tough finishing
bole. For Newport Beach members,
the clubhouse is no longer in the
backdrop of the 18th green.
Instead, a premium on placement is
required.
•From 10-to-12 yards off the
green, (the fairway) is obout seven
feet lower than the (putting)
surface," Newport Beach Country
Club President Jerry Anderson said
Wednesday during a private tour.
The distance is the same, 510
yards from the blue tees, but the
green at 18, raised about four feet
in the back. now features mounds
behind it. The highest point is
about 14 feet, Anderson tald.
There bu been mticb b.ls_tory on
the old 18th green. including the
Wlforgettable 1999 Toshiba Cluslc
' playoff between eventual winner
Gary McCord and John Jacobi, woo \lied the bole as a televislon
It.age.
Gallen now have an uphill
a~= a attiml third lhottoM :nc>~WW
•the bo1li Mt 1ls an ·~
bU'dlll." BetiiDii the ur. ani:I Wt ll a
llos*I ~ wbkb. AlidellOD -. . ·~ to.,. cantu1 you
don't OltM •
to .. ~
f OOTIALL 1'wo plays later, I knocked a
guy out.• ·
Despite his strong senior
season, which included
being named Pacific Coast
League Co-Defensive Play-
er of the Year by the Daily
Pilot, the All-Newport-
Mesa District selection was
himself staggered by the
brothers to play at The bigger, stronger, faster
Estancia, he made bis foot· mantra, accompanied by the Met.al-
ball debut as a freshman, lica heavy metal blaring through the
having been too big to weight-room stereo (his favorite
compete in youth leagues. song, aptly titled for any linema.n,
Pudgy, unproven and •Disposable Heroes"), helped West-
unfairly compared to his man drown out the doubters as he
elder siblings, Westman pumped iron and inflated bis confi-
found refuge in the school's · dence. · .
behind his facemask, mere
moments into a recent South All-
St.a.r practice at Da.M Hills High, the
All-CIF Southern Section Division
IX performer embodies the creature
he says craves the savage sanctity of
midfield heaps of humanity, as
much as he relishes releasing
enough raw power to create them.
·1 like to be in piles,• said the
recent Estancia graduate, asked by
an Eagle assistant coach last fall to
tone down his practice-field intensi-
ty, because he was. scaring his
younger teammates.
invitation to play in the Westman
Orange County All-Star
weight room. Straining an "Maxing out• with a 380-pound
average of 10 hours a week bench press, a 540-pound squat and
against cylindrical steel a dean of 270, Westrnan's three-lift
resistance, he chisel'ed bis total (1,190) destroyed his brother's
Westman begrudgingly honored
the request, but, after a less than
dominant performance later that
week in the Eagles' first loss in four
games, be was granted a reprieve.
· •1 told my coach that he messed
me up and I didn't have a good
game, so be said, 'OK, forget (his
ovennatched practice opponents).'
Football Game, Friday at
7:15 p.m. at Orange Coast College.
·My first thought was 'Wow!,' •
Westman recalled. • 1 was skeptical
about being able to compete against
these guys, but now I know I
belong.•
Wesbnan, a three-year varsity
starter who starred at offensive
guard, offensive tackle and·defense
end as a senior, was not earmarked
for greatness u~n arriving from
junior high. .
The youngest of four Wesbnan
chunky physique and silently railed 11-year-old school record.
against bis critics. Bigger, stronger and faster,
"I love lifting, because I can just indeed -he shaved his time in the
lose myself in it,· he said. •(Then· 40-yard dash from 5.8 to 5.0
varsity coach John) Uebengood told between his junior and senior sea-
me I'd never break my brother sons -Wesbnan seldom left the
Mark's record (a combined 875 field last fall.
pounds in the bench press, squat "Coach (Dave) Pe rkins told me in
and power dean). 1 tried to lift every spring practice, l was going lo go •
minute I could. My goal was to be both ways,· he said. "I'd never
bigger, stronger and faster. There played much defense before that.
were days I spent six hours in the
weight room.• SEE FOOTBALL PAGE 82
Newport runs out of ·miracles, 1'2 -7
•Their arms just feJ,l off in the final, frustrating inning and
Newport 'B' entry sees its Dream Season come to an end.
Tony AhobefH ashamed of. They went farther than
DAILY Pit.OT any Newport AAA All-Star team
MISSION VIEJO _ The late-has ever gone. They can hold their heads up high." inning rally giveth and the late-It looked like Newport was
inning rally taketh away for the beading to the semifinals after scor-Newport Beach UtUe League AAA Division •a• All-Stars. Ing six runs in the top of the second
Two days after a six-run sixth inning.
inning helped spark a 10-9 With a run already in courtesy ol
10-lnning win, Newport saw San a Parker Rhodes RBI single, Nick
Clemente acore 12 times in tbe fifth Freeman's two-out, bases-loaded
inning en route to a 12-1 win at double scored Rhodes and Devin
Wagon Wheel Sports Park. K8lly, giving Newport1a 3-0 lead.
•we limply ran out of pltcbing/ Danny Moskovits followed with a
Manager 8dan Freeman lllkl. •But single to center field, scoring Aaron
~. our 1ddt have ~ to be Northcraft and Freeman for a S-0
• HuntlDgton Beadi team
bas (way) too mudi; 10.0.
.
unu LUGUI AU
Newport lead.
Andrew Silva capped the scoring
with an RBI single, scoring
Moskovits.
Austin Hanns bad a single and
double to add to Newport's offense,
while Freeman chipped in with
three hits.
Kelly, making his first All-Star
appearance on the ~ tbrew
four shutout innings, befon ~
into trouble in the fifth.
•DeviJl lhleW ~ fcJr UI, • PJee.
man said.
•He held a g:rMt team lib Su
Clemente sCorelest for '°'If ......
He did a great job.•
• In Wednesday's game at the
same site: Aliso Niguel was the vic·
tim by a 10-6 margin.Thomas Koss,
in his first appearance on the
mound for Newport in All~Star com-
petition, threw a complete game
and struck out five to earn the victo-
ry.
Despite bis i~. Koss
battled out of three bases-loaded
jams and kept Newport in the
game.
Freeman leid Newport's ofteme
with three bits. wb11e SUYa • aDd
Colton each bad two bits.
Atisthl ~ Aa""1 Nodbawft
Md Denny MotU. MC:b ca.
~h with dutch bits for .....
port.
• : I
0..-Mw'aMlml.tll' M • 1ar
the .... ~~"' ~,.........151MlWak'lllb8
SCGA Mt~ Qub at R...-0
~IDMumilta,
LM. an BltmtM HIOb prOdud and
f<>nW' mm .. dub cluimpm at Co.ta
Mesa Golf & Country Cllib, wW ~in
the SOUtbern CdfOmia Mid-Amati!ur
Aug. 28-29 at Vlrgin1a ~Cub m
LOng Beacll.
In the qualiti8r, Les ftnlSbed behind
medalist Clark Rbeney of La Quint.a. wtiO
shot 1-Wlder 71, and two players at 1-over
73. There were 80 planus ~for 13
spots iii tb,8,mJd..aQl.
For Les, it is his second trjp to the
Southern California Mkl-.Affl.
FOOTBALL scholarship remains his primary motivation.
•Kyle is an animal out here,• said South
fullback Jimmy Herzog, who .played against
Westman at aoss-town rival Costa Mesa,
before transferring to Santa Margarita. for his
senior sea.son. •tte seems like a quiet. polite
kid, until he's on the field.•
CONTINUED FROM 81
because (coaches) thought I didn't have the
stamina.•
though more experienced and more com-
fortable on offense, Westman quickly asserted
himself as a defender. Combining strength..
rapidly imptoving technicfUe, newfound
quickness and relentless competitiveJ?.ess, he
became the bane of offensive coordinators
everywhere. He also became a respected
team leader.
Said South Coach Scott Orloff: •Kyte's been
QJ96l We'll use him on both sides of the ball
(offensive and defensive tackle). He goes hard
on e-.:ery play.• .
Westman, who passed on baseball and
wrestling at Estancia, as not to deter his foot-
ball focus, remains driven. · :
•utting and football are my passions,• he
said. ·u a job-application asks about any skills
I have which will help me do that job, I put
. down football and weightlifting.•
The same skills, which have impressed
South players and coaches, caught the atten-
tion of recruiters at Oregon State, UNLV and
Fresno State. And while his immediate future
lies at Orange Coast College, Westman's
dream of playing at a four-year school on
Westma.n's job Friday -to help lift the
South to victory -appears one for which he's
dearly qualified.
YOUTH SOCCER
Rich Reilly joins Slammers program
Rieb Reilly, who was president and director of coaching
development at Mission Viejo Soccer Club when national-
team midfielder Julie Foudy was a dub player there, is return-
ing to work with a new generation of Sou.them California's
best young players.
Reilly, who has been coaching high sehool-age girls with
West Coast Futbol Qub for the past two years, has been
named to coach the Slammers' under-10 girls' gold team. The
Newport Beach-based team practices near UC Irvine.
A holder of a United States Soccer Federation national
license, Reilly has been coaching for more than 20 years. After
13 years with the Mission Viejo club, Reilly spent three years
coaching his daughter's AYSO-Plus team in Rancho Santa
Margarita, where he was also a coaching instructor.
Dm'tM 6 .... 1 ,... CIDUntll
Dlfwlr'tl &AOer • a t>oau. m ~ 6 yellowt.i~ 3 white seabas5, 1,J~ sand ba, 205 berr«Uda,
104 c.alko ba, 2 hlHbut. $ sculpln,
23 blue !Nr1t (relNMd).
Assisting Reilly with the Slammers will be trainer Ron
Downer, who led the Slammers' under-10 girls' team to a State
Cup title last'season. ... ... art Un6tg -5 boats,
158 anglers. 4 yellowtall, 97 b«TllCUda,
75 calico bass, 1,044 und bass. The Slammers are looking for a few skilled field players and
a goalie born after Aug. 1, 1990 who have a passion for the
game. For more infonnation, call Reilly at (949) 888-0170.
1 halibut. 1 sculpln, 10 whitefish,
48 blue perch. 3 tole, 29 white seabass.
~~--.
MONTGOMERY
Clalte Montgomery,
IS, pMMd 1W11Y II her
home In Bl1hop,
c.llfomla on July 11,
2000. She leaVM her ~ Roblft. I ton
011ry 1nd thr1t ::;:g:;ra. Connle1 . ' Jennifer MCI flv. ar.ndchlldrln.
Shi .... rMidlnt o4
HuntJngton 8Mc:h for
25 yetrt enloYtnl the bitch and ~ • uglf'
Sheck with her many
friend•.
Stfva. wlll be • St.
Boneventure Church
In Huntinaeon a.di It 10:00 A.M. on Frtct.y,
JUiy 14, 2000.
ln•nient to be • follOftd ... , Holy
~ c.m.e.y In Orange.
~
·-·-·-J.--J
__ ._-
. . ' .. , -f:.•
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McMulltl (PS). 42.00; l. Slcoct '""'Y (HV). 47 M.
IH2 90 beet · I. TOm Money OM. ll.16; 2. ~ T-(PS). J'-04; l. MM\ Manri OM.
41.7S. 1).14 so bedt: 1 ... ~ Cr-'ofd
(HV). ~ 2. .... -· (HV). lS.Q; l. ,.
Mi.nay (PS). -.n. 1 .. " 50 bedt • '. °'"' Md7.olmldt (HY), J1 .12; 2. J-' hldll (HI/).
ll.J8; J. ""4nW ScMtldtr {115). Jt.a 1 .. so
ftw. I. John DMd M9rdn {115). JS.11; 2. 8Nn
~(P'S>, 40.57: ). ~ ...... (HV).
9-10 100 IM • I. IU. leldonl (HV), t:J0.51; 2. ,....., McMullln (P'S). 1 :JJ.116; ). ~ HMy (HV).
l141AJ6. 11-12 100 IM · 1. Adlm Goodmlin (I'S),
1:,,.19; 2. Tom Mon.y (HV), 1:24.21; J, llymn ~ (HV). 1:25M. I t-14 100 IM • t. lr)'llft
8uheglar (HV). 1~1o.21; 2. RY«> rr-"'51.
1:11.Al; l. Wlilt.M ~ (HV), 1:2U,, IS.ti
100 IM • I. Ja.on ~ (HV), 1:01.79: 2. Jimmy
S(redt (HV). l:OU7; ). Conly flettwood (PS). 1:06.23.
Pirates' Tomlinson
signs pact with UCI
COSTA MESA -HOOPS Orange Coast. Col-
lege women's basketball
player Erin Tomlinson has
earned a scholarship and will
continue her basketball
career at UCI, according to
Pirates Coach Mike Thornton.
The 5-foot-10 sophomore
guard/forward was a first-
team, All-Orange Empire
Conference as a freshman
and was second on the Pirates
in rebounds (6.5 per game)
and assists (3.2), while aver-
aging 10 points' per game.
Last season, OCC finished
27-6 overall. 10-4 in confer-
ence.
STATEMENT Of
WITHDRAWAL
FROM
PARTNERSHIP
OPERATING
UNDER
FICTITIOUS
BUSINESS NAME
The followlog pe,.,,.
hM wllldlllWn •• ~
tfal !*tr* from the pllltnerthlp operating iM*fla~~ naaa name of SPENCER AND
SPENCER. at 852
Production ~. New-
port 9aadl, CA 82913
The Flctlttoul Bull·
""' Name referred to
lboYe W• flied In Or· ange County on 2/17/te,
Fl\..E NO. 1~48118 Full Name and Ad·
df... of the Penon Wilhdrblng: Judy
(JeMnatlt) Mtu1 "'' Cabrlllo 81.. Coate
DIANE BERRY PHOTO
Harbor View 's 6-year-old
Jake Bandaruk swims the
backstroke.
6 & under 100 fr" ret.y • 1. H.t>c>r View
(Chip Zucker, Connor c:.nai.. Oeniel Hoh~ ~ti
lt<Ty), 1:24.02; 2, H~ VI-: 1:42.73; l Hat·
bor \lleow, 2: 18.00. 7.a 100 he rNy • I. Hwbor
View (Plllbr St-. Alec Wikon, Kyi. Canale,
MlchMI Ueo), 1:07.91; 2. Herbor V1tw. Ul.Ol.
), Herbor vi.w. 1:23.1 s. ,. 10 200 1 .... ,.i.y • 1
PKlflc ~ (SIWIM Gardn«-Oerosa. David
Jol1ruon, lt«iny Mill«, Lance LMoche). 2:22_11;
2 Hatbot VI-. 2:24. ll; 3. Pacific Sands,
2:A6.6l. I 1·I2 200 "'" rttey • 1. Harbor View (Adrien ........... hW1hlli Tuttor\ Erk Coll.
~ !Cent). 2:11 .1 t; 2. IWtlor vi-. 2:2554, )
Plldflc _. 2'.l2. 78. 13-14 200 fTee relay • 1
hdftc Sel-.dl (SMrl C.onon. Lee Vftlu. K~ w.ld\ ht Mi.rr1¥1, "l:.Cf1 00. 1 s. ,. 200 ....
.-y . '· Hertoor View ()olv\ ~ Jimmy Stndl. (tw1J Hinger, Chm~ 1:4&.'6;
2. PMMI:~ 2:10.11.
··~HfNe • I. Hlldl.111OM.20.ti, 2
--ColV-9 ... u.01: J. ~Good ,,_ '5). UAO 1• 2S fnle • 1. IClllll F..i.rttM. IS~ J K.-IMyfN). 1M7; J. ~ ~
CHV), 11 ~. t-10 50 fnlt. 1 lttlN Conrld trs>. )1.oc>; 2. IC* Wlildl ~ JS I I; ). Micht4le ZUcbr IHV). JUO. I MUO fnle • I . ...We Con. Qndnou OM. Jt.14; 2. CMnlle ~ (HV),
ltM; 1 ~ DudllfM "·)J.M. 1).14 100
fnle . 1. ""'4911 Ullo (Hll), St.OS/ 2. ltlQ Jot. ~ "' 1-.J41 ). Sta ~ (PS), t:o7.15. 11-11 100 he . '· ~ ~ OM. 1 02.Gl; 2. UndMlr °"9y (HV), 1 :05.59. J .,... lnoli' (Hll). 1:0UJ.
6 I \#Ider 25 br..c • I, Hild Zak (HV), 28 OJ,
2. o.lanty ltouch (HV), 21. 19; l. JerlN Cont ad
(P'S). 29.6$. , .. 2S tn.t . I. ~· ltfTy (HV),
2Uli 2. IC-.V ....,_ (HV), 22.JI; J kathf't'l
CoM4lf (HV), ll.70. .. ,o 50 br-.t • 1. Mell\\.!
MllMI (HV). 46.17) 2. Cldty LewlJ (HV), 47,47, l
SherlllOft ~('SJ, 51.59. I 1·12 50 brurt. I l.M.W9 ......_, Cl'Sl. 41.&t 2. Kalie Kw.s (HV). 42. 12: J C8l'I LMw (HI/). 0.62. 1).14 50 bfust
• '· ICAlde ~ OM. 37.&l; 2 lf'91d 1urnt.m (HI/), JU7: ). Kelli Kline IHVl. l9 38
15-11 50 bnM • l. ~ Hepen\Mi (WJ) n.n : 2. llm:tWI c:oig.t• (HV). Jt.01. 1. ~ ~(115),40..53
6 I "'*' 25 lly • I. Alallndre Goodm4ln (PS)
JO.SJ; 2. ~ ~ (HV). JI 7l; l M«11
111n fugl O'S), J2M. 7 .. 25 lly • I Ma'g.<ei
Money (HV), '1.1~ 2. ICalll F..elty (HV). 11 27 l
.....,_ Yin Hlel (HI/). II.JS 9-10 2S fly • I
1Cr1sU ConrM I"). 15.M: 2. Mictlelle Zutkft
(HV), 17.t~ 3. '-'-SIMly <rs>. 11.77 11 11
50 lly • 1. ICM)'ll Sheh OM. J7.llt 2. Amt Zud
.. (HV). ,, • 7J: J. Kadi ltub91 (HV). l9 71 1) 14
50 lly. I. ~Miller "5l. Jl Sl,; 2. (r,y JO<~ O'S), UM: l. Meggie Nekon (H\I)
J l9.7S. 15-11 50 lly • 1 ~ 'Coigat• (Hl/l.
ll..OJ: 2. UndMy 0.1.-y OM. 32.91. l RMld1
Heynel (P'S). 33.0J.
6 6 under bide · I.~ Pouch (HI/).
27.51; 2. St~ ~ CPS). 29 86; 1 Jot.-
Pouch (HV). 32.49. 7.a 2S beck • I Pet..-We10 ner HV). 21A9: 2. Alet Wilson (Hll), 22.)0; 3 Brt
en Hemmond (I'S), 22.17. 9-10 50 b.lck I
JohQfw\e Sheldon (I'S), 4).67; 2. Vetonka Luc~
~ (PS), A9.21: ). Annie ltlng (HV), SO. 14 I I 12
50 ~·I. Alhlty a-diet (HV), l2.16; l . Ktt
ley McCOf'll'Wldl (P'S). )7,07; ). Clmllle ~"
(HV), JI.OS. 1'.H• 50 beclt • I. Rechel Arnold
(PS), 3).17, 2. ltfttJl"Newman (I'S). 38 78. J
~ Neltoo'I (HV). 40.• 15-18 50 NU I Chrlstlna Hfttoto OM. JO 4J; 2. Amend<! Alfi
(PS). JU5; l. lllnca ANlla (HV). l818
7 .. 50 tr .. · I. HNthef Vin Hie! (HV), l6 §1
l . NNnde Hide-' (HV). 41-) KMtM Hodg
mM (rS), 4J.M. 9' 10 100 1M • 1. ICrllt.a Con< ad
(I'S), ':21.6,: 2. Clalte ScHoerner (HV). 1 :l2 81
l. M9lllla Manri (WV). l:Ao.97. I M2 100 IM 1
AJtrW/ Chendler (HI/). 1: 14. 7S. 2. lteel9y McC.ot ,,.. (PS). 1.21 .-7; l. t.urwl ,._,,..., ~)
1:22A7. 1).14 100 IM • I \/Man LillO (HVl.
1·10_40; 2. ~ Arnold "5). 1:11 .... l Mid-48 Moller (l'Sj, I :2A.CM. 15-18 100 IM • I
Owtftlna Hfttoto (HV). 11ll.1S. 2 "-'di ~
(~. 1.15.42.
CdM third in Albuquerque
ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. -Corona del Mar's SOCCER
AYSO Region 57 Under 14 girls soccer team fin-
ished third in the 2000 National Games at Albuquerque, N.M
after a 2-1 sudden-death victory over Woodland Hills.
CdM's Samantha Bums tied the game at 1-1 in the first hal1.
After a scoreless second half, both Woodland Hills and CdM
converted three of five kicks. Michelle Queyrel converted the
first goal in the second sudden death, and goalie Sara Draffin
stopped Woodland Hill's shot to give CdM third place.
CdM defeated Hermosa Beach in the quarterfinals, 1-0.
with a goal by Elizabeth Almaraz. CdM lost in the semifinals
to Fontana, 1-0.
CdM won its first pool game, 1-0, over Tuscon, with a goal
by Almarez. The defense of Britta Nielsen and Mallory
Reynolds protected the lead.
CdM easily won its second game over Palos Verdes, 2-0,
with goals from Queyrel and Brooke Burger. Cd.M's final two
games were a 0-0 tie with Chicago and a 1-1 tie with Arroyo
Grande.
.. "· _,
~~. . '
Doily Piiot lhuradoy. July 13, 2000 m
. •.•·.·~I!"
!,. I • t'
I • ...... •t.< ~-Jli"'.• •.• :..,.. . .. ... :
F1ctiUoue ...... ........ ...... ........ ......... file••• ......... :~ =~
NlfN ........... ...._ Cc tr-It ...... I' I m• ...... I' 11-11 ......... ,,... ..... 11111"*" 1EtzU9'l SEIZURE
The followlna '*-"' The ~ PMOftl Tiie .....,,. .,.,_. The IOIOwWIO ,.,._. The ::=:::• The ~ PURSUANT TO PURSUANT TO
"'dolrlll ~ • .,. dcq ~ • .. tiW·...._. a .,. dairll..,... • 0.~ ._,in-r:J:i.= 1625 HIALnt AHO H!ALTH AND Qlympic Dfeeme, 21M 6el'dcMlt TOW91 Com-Lal It Roi .. ""°· ~ ~~: ... WI AMearcm ...... Vlfde e.-°'·· IARTY CODE IARTY COOE ~-Of . E-413, l*!Y. 229 Mlttne Ave , 1130 W ...,_ IW .• .a ,. . ...,. u-.. 'CA C... A Medlclll °'°'4'• 1115, CON Mtea CA •• ,_.,..., 114711 8ECTIOM 11471/ Com...._ CA 92e29 !•lbo2• l1land, CA NewDoft heah, CA :;:Meo. -. '120 w LIVtta Ave., 12t2t
11
4i1'AHi> NOT1CE
11
w AHO NOTlCE zJ:'~ ~~·:: ·~ J 8ot11141t -=-PMOn LM:tt-Patl'lcQ L. HeyH, SU.. 430, Orange, CA 8-t Mmlln..:.. ~ Of1 INTEHDED OF INTENDED
'418. Cotta Mna. CA 3535 E. c0..t Hwv.: "*'• ttO ttnd 81reet, 2165 PIM«Mil Df .• E-~Ml c Cobb Mo ~~ ' 'ORF!ITURI! FORFEITURE 9~_9 bu-·~-,_ -#340, Coron. dtl Mir, Newport Beach, CA. =~~329eo.. ~ .... CA .r~ HIH•. RcMid'. Thaddau• Farrell, PURIUANT TO PURSUANT TO .,,.. .,, __ • -.-CA 82924 92963 le er.,. CA 92889 2182 B11caone SoMae. H!ALTH AND HIALTH AND
ducted by: .,, lndlv!cWI This bullnaM .. con-Thie buall'IHI Is con-... ....._. ~-lrlcllv:: 0oni1d J, M,hon, COltl Meal. CA ~7 SAFETY CODE IA,ETY coot Have you •t•rt•d duded by: an lncMdull ~ by. ... ~ v.........i VJ• .,, d M 0 13 Hldlloo IMne, Ray Green 17300 ... SECTM>N 11418.4
doing buslMtt y9I? No Hive you •tarted Hav.• you 1tart1d ~Hav~-•~ ..!}:~ ci 'jm15 ' Flame Tree ' Clrc:i.. HOn~ 1!
1
~2 On
7
1
1
4/00
11
220 34lt't p~~ L. HaYtt <k>llll ~ y«? No dOlng bualneN yet? p "-t-~· Jalro J. Matin M.O. FounUiln Velley. CA s N 8eech ,,., 11atemtnt waa 8tionen J, SChulze Y ... 61111100 ·-1-12056 OWmlll •Drive 92708 Na~ BIVd.. Coate CttHtina ~openy dt Hiid with the County Thi• ltattment WU Dol,ig PaytOn l..ldvMn Thi• W:-';:en&;,: 8ltlla Are CA 92705 • Gely HI'. 22.3l PICiflc Miu, CA, tile r,r.~ ~ pr $5,380 •
Cltf1I of Orange CountY filed Whh tile County Thlt Mlletnanl WU !!.'.!<!. _. n...~ r-.-;.,. Llwrenoe J Santora fCo4 Costa MNa, CA ~ .... a~a: 1 ' I Hlzed 11pur1u1nl w: on 06l20.'2000 Clel1c of 0ranoe Counfy llled whh the County '''""' "' ...,."'"' """'"1 up 1332° Ap1ltl ,....,2'7 WM ........... o u._ .... and a ....... ,._._ 2oooeasuoe on 09l20l2ooc5" Olene cl no..-... Counay on oel2CWOOO ,.. . .. """ ... con-Haelltt end "Y Code .-ui __ , ..........
Daily Pilot June 22 29 2000tQmt on 07111~ 2000M32204 Road, Santa Anl, C Thia ~ ,. II Sedlol'I 11471111488 by Section 11471f11488~ M 6. 13, 2000 Jimj Ody Pilot .b1e 22, 28, 2000MHffS Dally P1lol Junt 22, 29, 82~~~dy S. Sl>lvack, ~~ a ~ tile kvlrll Pollet Depatf-lt}I Newport 8-:tl
Fictttloua Bual ....... , .MY o, 13. 2090 Tb901 Deily Plot ~ 1~ M 9. 13, 2000 Th892 M.D. 10952 ~Uftong. Hive you •t•rt•d "";~ p1optrly w11 kieT~ny waa
,_. 27. Aug. 3. _ _ Santa Ana. CA 82705 doing bU9'naN yet? Mind v.«h rll!*ll 10 •I-Mlzed Wl1tl rMpec:t to al-
Name Stat9ment FlctJtlou1 llualneu F1ctltlou1 Bu1lneu l<AllY J . Tucker. M.D.. Y... ~ teged vlol•Uon(•) of leged vlolatlon(•l ot
Thi 1o11owmg l*IOO• Name Statement FfcttUoul BuelM11 tume Sa.t.c:ment 1oeei I/Ida Sire«. VIia Sean Martin 99ellon(a) 11351 °' .lhe ~•) 11351 °' 1t1e ate doing ~ 11. Tht followlnd penona Name StatlfMnt The folloWlnQ '*'°"' PM. CA 92881 Thia ltatemen1 WU ......, and Safety Code HMllh and Safety Code. 1) All OCCASION are ~ bulillita u: The followlna petlOnl ara ~ ~ u: J1ck S. Vang1ow, flied With the County Sadlon You are hereby You are hereby noldled GIFT BASKETS, bl FAX IDYSVS, 900 City -doing ~ u: lnnovaCentro, 29012 M 0 , 1015 While Selle CIM of ().nge ~ llOlllled that tile Oi1tric1 that the °'511ld A11omey
& MAIL BUSINESS P111!way, Wtst #110. Groovy F'oc)ds Co. 181 M11guerlte Perl<way Way, Corona clal Mar. on OISl20r.!OOO Attorniy of Oflnga of Orange County hi•
CENTER, 4533 er.r.. CA 928e8 Cedl Plac:e tA. Colta 1138. MINlon Viejo, CA 92625 2000A32178 County hat inltJ111d lt111ialed pr~ lo Mac:Arthur Blvd , Nsw-0SCREAC, Inc., (CA), Mela., CA 92827 Cahnle 92992 Mil! E Wltfln M.D.. Oily Pllol June 22. 29, OCMClngt to fotfei1 1t11 forfeit the above-41·
llOl'I Beac:tt, CA 92960 800 Qty Pat1cway Waet Erin R. Cleland. 181 Maggie Marron. 29012 1232 PMCOC:ll Hill 0.W., .11.fv 6. Ji\ 2000 !h900 ~•-described p10p-ICflbed propef1Y pu1· Muy Elfin W•ll•. 1110, 011nge, CA Cecil Place •A. Costa Margu111te Pa11<w1y Santa Mii, CA 92706 etty pullUIOI to Health IYa1't to HNlth and
3309 ladnllo Al•I•. 928&8 Mela. CA 92827 1134, Ml11ion Viejo, GIOf'lll W. WMlay, F1ct1Uou1 Bualneu and Saflly Code S1fety Code Section tl'Wle. CA 92806 Thia butlMll II con-PIUllM A. Oougtu, Cellfomla 92992 M.O .. 233 PoinMtlla Av-Name 11nement Section 11488 4 11488 4
Thts bul!Mss II con-ducted by a ~· 181 Cecil Place IA. Thie bualneaa la con-enue. C«OM def Mar. The following penona vou 11e tnllN<:ted !hit You art Ww1Nc:ted !hit duded by. an WldMdual Have you •tarted Colla Mesa. CA.. 92927 dud9d by. an lndMdl.ml CA 112625 .,. doing Mine. u · II you dNire to conteat If you dMir• to conteet
Have you started doing bu1ln111 yet? Thie butlnea It con-tt•v• you tlarted Thie buslnetl le con-J.C. ART & DESIGN: the lorlellurs of lhla the lorleiture of Ihle
doing bu.in111 y11? Vu, 5-31·2000 doaed by. C01*1nl<'I doing bullnell yet? No ducted by. • general 520 W. 19th Street. property, pursuint 10 property, purauam to Yes. 1988 OSCREAC, Inc . Hive you 111rted Maoota Marron p1rtnt11hlp Colla Mesa. CA 92627 Health and Safety Code HNllh and Safety Code
Mary Ellen Wei• lomy Blank VP doing bu8ll"9a yet? No Thli 1ta11ment Wit Have you atarttd Christopher Cheo·Kal Sec:tJon I 1488.5, you Section 11488.S, you This 11atem1nt w11 This et1tement waa Erin A. Cleland flied with the County doing bualneu y1t? Chjlng. 520 W. 19Ch St, muet file a vlflfied clalm l'llU9t me a venrMld clalm
filed with the Count'( flied w1lh the County P1ullne A. ~ Cleltt of Orange County VN, &-HM Colla Maa. CA 92627 stating your 1n1eru1 In staling your lntere11 In
Cte111 of Orange County Clellt of Orange CountY Thia statement Wit on 06I08l2000 Lawrenc:. J Santora. Thie bulilnua ii con· the property You must the property. You mual
on 06/23/2000 on 06/2312000 hied with the County 2oootl31192 M.O duded by. an lndMduaJ file Ihle dalm 1n lh• Su· file ttlls cta11n 11'1 the Su-
2000H32H5 20009832859 Clellt of Orange County Deily Piiot July 6. 13, 20, Thi• alatement was Have you 1tar11d perlor coun of lh• pedor Coun of th• Daily Ptlot June 29,J\dy Dally Piiot June 29~ on 06/27/2000 27. 2000 Th931 fifed with the County doing buelneu y•t? County of Orange within County of Orange Within
6. 13. 20. 2000 ~ 8. 13, 20. 2000 ~ 2000M32l00 Cieri( of Orange County Yes 5124/00 thirty (30) daye ol the thirty (30) daya of the
-Deily Pi1o1 June 29, July on 06/27/2000 CM11ophe1 Chio-Kai 11 Ion f hi first publtc1tJon ol this Flctltlou1 8u1lneaa Fictitious Buelneu 8, 13. 20. 2000 007 FlctttlouaStaBualneeta 2000N327ff Cheng ~::tc::.ub~~~'u /'ou 1re~ Notk:I, unless you re· Na~ Statement Name Statement Name temen Dally Pilot June 29~ Thia statement wa1 cetvi icrual notice celve actual no!lca. The foo~owlraon• The following peraons Flctltloua Bu1lnee1 The followlng per90n9 6, 13. 20, 2000 -flied with the County (Please use 00-079) (PleaM use
doinO 11 are dojng bU"'-11: u. ... .... ·-nt "' doing bulinell •· CIM of n...-County 1 an 9oF08067) You must :K:A PAODUCTS c6. Joel'• l.andtuoe Setv· Th:":1o;;;~ Ou1llly TrH CUI FlctttJoua Bualnn• on O(!IZ7~-~::· co:;IV~ the 1etve an endonled ~
333 MeriM Ave . •6, left, 2067 Wallace Av•. are doing bulinlSI a1; ~. ~':..~~: Name Statement 2000el32797 claim on the IMtr1c1 Al· of Iha delm on the Balboa laland, CA •D. Costa Mesa, CA a) tntrlpld Communlc:a· nil 92626 The folio~• ~Pilot June 29, Jiiiy tomey °' Orange County llid At10mey of Oranoe
92662 92627 t•--b) lntr.....,. Com· ,. .. _ .. __ , ...... _ ar1 doing ar. ~. ?O, 2000 Th929 (AltJl. "-'•"'·1"1..Chatge, County (Attn" Depucy-in-l S •• Jr Jotl Oulnone1. 2067 ~~:.....tlon, -;:;;;; Con-Aic:tlald ..,. __ ~...-·~ Hollid8y'• Couture. NE T ,VTt'' 401 CMc Charge, NET ) "'401 9WIS .... erman, ., waa-Ave., tO, Colla """-aon, 11188 Elbl Cn....,, b ........ ____ .... ,, 3131 flct... B I I CMc CAnllf Dllve West. 333 Menna Av1., •6, ,. • ...,,.,,... 911VC1ion, 3175 Sic:ily Av-Cotta Mesa, Cahtomla .....,.,,..,...,.. mOUI ua nna C1nler Driv• WH
9270 Balbo1 l•l•nd, CA M-. "" "CN.' '°"'· Colt• Mesa, CA 92626 Cort• Marin, Newport Name Statement Sama Ana. CA 92701 Santa Ana, CA I
92862 Thtt bualnetl II con-92626 bu·' BMd\. CA 92660 The following person• Within thirty (30) Gays of WllHn lhlrty (30) dlys of T ... _ bu••ne11 II con ducted by: an lnclMclial Ronald V1nd1rwal. Tht1 .. .,... 11 con· ..,...., L Chui, 3131
1
~ the f;I....., ol ltll c:talm 1n lhe fihn9 of the claim In
·-~ . H1v1 you •t•rled duded by. an Individual ,.'..."::",' Marlo. Ne........ -doing IS "~"' c rt/Cl I th• Supenor Cour!/CMI dUaed by 111 ~ bull 17 3175 Sicily Avenue. Have you 11u11d ''"" -,....... Hoc:lley Monlcey com. the Supanor ou VI ""vision H1v1 you 111r11d doing ntu Y• Colee ~ CA 92828 doing bualneH yet? BNdl. CA 92660 1525 Mesa Verde Or E Olvllion "'
OOilg ~ yel? No Y•.
4
+2000 This bUll.ned ia con-V•. l2191'98 This bullneu es con-ll 18, Costa Meea. CA ni. f1llur1 to tJrnety The f11lura to hmely LIWll S. Alcelman. Jt • Joel Oul~ dueled by. an lndMduel Rlchard Chel1H John. ducted by· an lndMdual 92626 fllt end eecur1 a ~ lite and MCUte • venfied Thts ttatement · wu Thie ltllemenl wH Have you 1l1rt1d aon Have you •tarted Hawtl Hockey. Inc , cfatm fltlbng an llllerall clalm mting an interell
flied with Iha County hied wloltt\ the ~~ doing busir-. y.rl No Thll 1t1temen1 WH ~bl--. ye(? No (Cafffomll), 1525 Mesa In lhe Pfoplf'ty In lhe Su-In ltll properly :1 ::::u-Cleftc of n...-,..._ ..... Clellt Ofange _,__~, Ronald Vlllldefwal fl'·-' ... ,..._ Couty L Chlae V11de 01 E, 11 18, petior Coult Ml reailt tn perior Court WI 1 in
on ~ ~n, on 07/11/2000 This llatement wae ""' Whu ""' n This ltltement wu Coeta Mesa. CA 92626 the propefty t*ng de-the property be~ de-
2000MUM1 2oootUH0
7
flied with the County ~7~ County ftled wllh lhe County Thie business ts con-dued °' ordered !Of· dared Of Older for·
Deity Piiot Junl 29, JUv Dally Pllol Jiiiy l3,
20
• a..tt of ~ CouncY 2oooel33H3 Clef1c <1' ()qnge County ducted by. , CX>fl)Olabon leiled to rtie Stat• of Cal-felted to the Slate of Cel-
6 13 20 2000 Thm 27. Aug 3, 2000 Th956 on 07/03/2000 ily Pllol July 8 13 20 on 06l30r'2000 Hive you started lfomla and dtatnbuted ifo<nla and distribu!ed .,, 1 8 1 2000tl332t7 ~ 2000 ' ni930 20008833119 doing business yet? purauanl 10 lhl pur1uan1 to the Actltloua Bu1lneH Flctlt oua u1 ,,... Daly Pilot July 8, 13, 20, v. Oal~Pllol JUv 6, ~ v ... 01/01/2000 provlllons of HMllll and pl'OVllions of Health and
u.,_,,, s•-·ment Heme Statement 27. 2000 !h933 27,~ ~ Hawtc Hootcey, Inc .. S1l•ty Code Section Safety Code Section
,_,,... .... The followlno peraons Fictitious Bualneea John Naiman. Prest· 11489 without turther 11489 withou1 further The lot~rsona 111 dolno buelileu 11: Fictitious BuaJne.a Name Statement Fictitious Bualneu dent notice °' hearioa. nOll08 or hea"'i :~a~'2 CRUl;~s Flral Mua Phyalcal Name Sbltement The following persona N•me Statement This statement wu Publlahed f.lewport Publlahed ewport
•No TOURS, 2758 De Th111py, 120 181h The following paf90nl are ~bu.in.M u . The IOl~pellON filed with the County B11ch·Co111 Mtu B1ach·Co1la ~jslya " St1HI, Costa M111, ~ ~ u · Jewelry JulN, 3125 ~ 11• Clel1I of Ore""" County 0e11u Pilot June 211. July Dally Pilot June . u Solo Avenu1, Coile Calif. 92627 are -"' · """"4 ere · . ..,_ '' 2000 6, 13 2000 Mell CA 92926 E K , COAST HANDYMAN, Cort• Marin, N1-,....... Direct er Dool Co.. on 06l30r'2000 6, 13, T'19le4
' Suean ae "· 124 Eaat 17th Street, Beech, CA 92G80 2220 Elden Ave .. #1 , 2000f833164 Ih9!5 ---------'-""--Aysun KurulH , 2
7
58 20432 Santa AN Ave· ,..,.._._ u--. CA 92627 Julie Ellzabett\ Whlt1, C ta M C1llf0fnl1 Dally PiloC """ 6, 13, 20, CNS1787602 De Soto Av• Colla nu• •9. Santa Ane ,,,..... ..._ ••-· °' esa, ~-, 92628 John C. Kemper, 3126 Corti MaM . ._... 82927-1700 27. 2000 !h936 CNS1787587 CE OF ~ ~-11 oon· ~ta. Calif. 92707 13066 L1rrera Sr .. pc>11 .Beectt. CA ll2eeo t11ry Andr1w John· NOTICE OF NOT1
Thie busineu
11
oon-Etiwancsa, CA. 91739 Thll bueinff• la oon son 2220 Elden Ave., Fictitious Bualneae SEIZURE
dueled by. an ~ dudld by an lndMduat Thia butlna11 It con-duded by: en ~ ti, 'eo.ta Miia, CalHOf· Name StaWment SEIZURE PURSUANT TO H1v1 you 111r11d Hiv1 you a11rted dl.lcted by: an ~ tiav• you 111rted nil 92927-1700 The tollowtng peraon1 PURSUANT TO HEALTH A.ND ~ ~J't? No doinll bullnelsi<.J!l'I No Heve you 1t•rted doing bullrlMI y«? No Thi• butinffa ii con--doing bua1nea u HEALTH AND SAFETY CODE
nq ltatement was Susan E If doing bu9lt1lle v.rt No Julle Whit• duded by. an lndivlduel Henning Way, LLC, SAFETY CODE SECTION 11471/ ,I,_ .. with the County Th11 alatament was John C. Ketl1* This atatlm4H11 w11 Hevf you 1tar11d 1124 Main Street. Suitt SECTION 11471/ 11488 A.ND NOTICE c;. of Orange County filed w11h the County Thil ttatamen1 wa1 llled wllh tile County ddno bull!-. yei? No o. IMnl. c.. 92614 11488 AND NOTICE OF INTENDED
Olene of Orange County hied With the County Clel1I of Orange COlny Terry Johneon LI Outnta Dewtop-OF INTENDED T RE on 08l30l2000 on 07/11/'2000 Clertl ol n...-COlny on 09l30l2000 Thi• atal"1\lnt wu (CA 1124 FOAFEI U 20001133159 20009'33809 00 ~ 2000AS3112 led with !he County ment, Inc.. /, FORFErTURE PURSUANT TO ~ Jli.J 6.
13
•
20
• Ody pjot JUv 13. 20, 200011n1u OelvPllot .My a. 13, 20, ~ of ~ C01ny =· ~"ks~t• o. PURSUANT TO HEAL TH AND ~ Th939 27, Auel 3, 2000 Th957 o.ly Plot JUiy 9, 13, 20, ~ Th937 on 06l20l2000 This bullness • con-HEALTH AND SAFETY CODE rt-..t~~ Bualn..e ZZ, 2000 Th943 2000IU2.295 ~by a OOfPOlabon SAFETY CODE SECTION 11488.4 r"'uuvu• Flctlttoua BUllneu Flctltloua Buslnesa Deily Piiot .Aloe 22, 29. Have you st1rt1d SECTION 11418.4 On 4128100 11 W.,_. ~~ ~f~~ Flctltloua Bu1lnesa Heme Sb119ment Nt 9, 13. 2900 Il@ doing bu1inMe ~ On 6117/00 11 m and 19ltt Str .. 1 and 724 ""' ""' ,......_,_ .,_ Statement --folowlng Pl'-" La Quinta PoweH StrMI Cost• Shalimar. •B Coste 1111 doing
11
• 1111 dolnll aa: ,_,,. ""' llO ~·--Flctttlous Bualneu menl Inc: .. Thomu . Mesa, CA. the P'oplf1Y the ClPlf1Y
Maw Produc:done. Elec1ronrc Mutlc: In-~~ .,. doing G ~ Heme Stat.ment Fllcon. CEO described u $1,1~ ~Au r,S,597 510 112 38th StrHt. •1itute. t•5 E. 19th ~' nnc:1pe1. 1880 Suus'l cTn9 iarc-n111 Thi folowlnQ Plf90n8 Thll ltatemerrt w11 _, Nized pul'ltllnl '° waa Mlled purauant to
Newport Beach. CA SttMI. CoMa MIM, CA M,.,,. . ..-, Onv1, Co-CA .,, doing ~ es: flied wttti the County HN11t1 and Safety Code Health and Safety Code
82963 92927 ~"'d;j"Mar. CA 92625 Ave· Costa MIM, American Home Floan-Olene o1 Orange County Sadlon 11471111488 by Section 11471/t 1488 by Miik we111. 510 112 · 01vtd Chla·Chla Nen Filahy,, 1680 92927 • n 9 ctal. 2364 112 Elden Ave. on O«ll30nOOO tile Newport 8Mctl Poi-the NlwpOtt 8Mctl Pof.
381h Sttffl. Newport Liang. 33-42 8redbury M11guarit• Drive, Co-Terral" Colline. 1 Slt. 8, Collla Meal. CA 2000A31147 Ice Depertment Ice Oepet1JMllt
Beech, CA 92683 Ad . #15, Loa Alamlloe. IOfll de! Mat, CA 82625 ::"~A ~7 Collla 92627 Dally Piiot JUy 6, 13, 20. Th1 property wH Th• property wH
Thll bullfleta ~ C~,!J720bu""-• II con-Thie butllllSI ii con-Thia butlnHI It con· Dentel l Ball11ga1, 27. 200Q Th!M§ Hlzed w1il1 <aepect to II· 11121d With respect to al-
duded b'f:
111
,.,.. ...... ducted by. .,, lndMdual .... lodMdual 2364 112 Elden Aw. &e. toged vlolallon(•) of leged vlolallon(a) ol
.. , .. . ·-.... ~ -···~ --
\
llOTICITO
WOUO.M.I
IALI wee S«. 8109
800NM>. 2!!27.V ...a • ~
GIW9I tna a II* U6t IS D:U I> bl na
The ~ Ind
bU5iless ~ "' n seww tstn: MJlt
SUBS, INC.. A C/.
CORP. MD ~l
D. ICAHELL N#D JEAN!
C. l<ANELL. 488 EAST
17TH STREET, IMOS.
COSTA MESA, CA
'¥$11 oong IJBleSl a.
SUBWAY 13321 -EAST 17TH STREET,
IA-105, COSTA MESA,
CA '¥WZ1 ,, Ohr tlJ5ilesS
nrne(s) ..,
dreSS4e'SI used b¥ h
selfr1S) wttl h -...... vea"S. ilS salld by
h selll'tSl. lsln: NONE
The txaJ"I h ~
"' ine Olllf EleQ8.e Offtce r:I h ... Is.
2168 NORTH
GRANDVIEW ROAD.
OIANGE, CA 9'2867 The Nml!(S) ..,
tunss acllhSS r:I the
tv,llrtsl ~
.JASMINOEll l<AUR
AHO AJIT CHANDHOK,
10091 CONSTITUTION
DRIVE, HUNTINGTON BEAOl,CABl646
nie assets, t>M'lQ SOie!
n ~ deSCJtled as: ALL FURNITURE,
FIXTURES.
EQUIPMENT AND
FRANCHISE RIGKTS .., ;n IOCal Z:
SUBWAY #l321 488
EAST 17TH STREET.
IA·105. COSTA MESA
CA 92627
The buk sale ts
ran:1eO to DY
<DlSITTl1ill!!O z t7le
drar:I
DISCOVERY ESCROW
COMPANY 7777
CENTER AVE . STE
440. HUNTINGTON
BEACH, CA 92647 ano
lt1e a'llcQled sale <la
IS JULY 31, 2cm
The tuc sale ts S1l:)feC1
ID <:alfcma U'lfOm
ca11rem COde
5ectt:rl 6106.2
The nane m ~s ct t7le person v.tr'l WUT'l
datl'lS ~ De flied Is:
DISCOVERY ESCROW
COMPANY, 7777
CENTER AVE., STE
440. HUNTINGTON
BEACH, CA 92647 a'10
lt1e last <»-I fer flrlg csams ov lffl O"l!dlD'
shall be JULY 28, 2(D). ""*" Is h bU5heSS C1af beb"e h
aCUJ;ad sale OD
siieclleCI ax..
081JUNE26, 2(D)
MJK SUBS, INC., A CA
CORP, BY: MICHAEL
O KANELL. PRES .
MICHAEL O. KANELL
ANO JEN41 C. ICAHELL,
SELLERS; JASMINOER
KAUR AHP AJfT
CHAHOHOIC
8U'y«tS)
PCTS
NEWPORT
BEACH/COSTA MESA
DAIL V PILOT JULY 13, H1v1 vou •l•rt•d duded by: "' lndlvlcbll Have you started ducted UJ': '" B, Coeta Meta, CA Fictitious Bullneu Section(•) 11351 of lhe Section(•) 11351 of the doing bu1lne11 y11? Hav1 you •tarted doing butlneu yet? Have you •l•rt•d 92927 Name Statement Heallh I/Id Sattey Code HelJtt1 and Safely Code
v-.M J~1111 doioa~•~ng y«? No Y•. 5l'30IOO ~.~~.r.'7 No Thia bulinffl ~~ The following per11on1 Section.!_'!" !'! ~.'.'J1 Section You are ~~ ••~ '"' Neil Felahy Thi• tlatemenl waa duClted by: an """......., .,. dolllll bu9'ilMs 11: notified .... 1 .... ..,....,,... noClfleci lhll the ...,,,..,..,. NOTICE Of PUBLIC Thia 11a11n11nt wu Thi• lta1ement wu Thie 111tement waa flied wtth the County Have you •l•rt•d a) Para lect11olo11iff. b) Attorney ol Orange Attorney ol 011nge SALE
fMed with the County flied with the County flied whh tile County Cieri( of Orange County doing bUlll-. y«? No UfHlrldH P\lbTi5h1ng, County hH lnlll•l•d County hH lnili111d ~_, calbnla
Cleltl of Orange CounlY Clert of Orange CountY Clelll c:A 0nioge County on OCll20l2000 Dtl'Wll L e.negu 3273 lndlaN Avenue. 1>4oc•ediog1 10 t°"9ll tile procMdlrlgl 10 fOff9it the rw_ fJ-
2CXXl
on 07111/2000 on 09/19/2000 on 06l30r'2000 20001_,2112 Thlt etatement w11 c:o.ta Meta. CA 92629 aboYl-deac:nbed prop-abovl-ducribed prap-· Ad ( Codi
200081Sst09 2000IN20ll 2000NUt4S flied with the County Al1hur Satmnan, 3273 •rty pum11n1 to H11hh etty pu~ to Health et . ~ ~ ~ 'fi.ll ~ L"'l';. t;Oj, ~ ~ ..... 8, ~ t:\'1;, t;Oj, ~ :;'.°"' ...:= ......, ="'CA ",';t. CM" ~ ·.~~. Codo ;:..,.. ·.~~. Codo =. °' ll. lilm:
2000A32227 Alice Sattvnan, 3273 You 1111 lnltrucled thlt You .,. lrwtruded thal Ill .,. Flctltloua lullnMS Flctltloua lluaJMM Flctttloua BUe.IMM F1etttloua llualneN Dllft Plot Junt 22. 29. Indiana Ave., Co11a it you delire to oontelt II you dMwe to cone.et to
The I~ -~,,. -The ~ The tollc>~ ~u...,_ --Tiia butlnMI It con-=~~~eo: ~ ... ..--.. Heme Statement -~~-....._ Stat.ment N11rne Sbtt9ment ~.-~ ~_,~ Mela. CA 92626 the lorleiture of thll ~alt~~.~~ ~· ~ ~County P~i.. Go f::: t006'4 Adlml, ~ .. "' ,_.., E:W ~0:19 Mova(n)l.-;~1 Name ltalel'Mnt ~by. t'Ulbend and Section 114865. you Section ~1:1. ~ 20 18
ture Cleanlnll SeMct, 1120, Huntlngto11 Group, 13 ~. &Mvner Wind voun. The ~ '*'°"' Have you alerted l'nl.9l Ill• Wl"9d daitn ~Ill• verltlecf dlim ~ .
400 Soult\ FbMr tte3. Baadl, Ce. 9'2648 .......,. ,... 112812 ~11 Beach, CA ,,.. ~es: d...i.... bualneN yet? llllbng your lnler•t in 14111ng your lnttraai In • \6. ,.. .. 928S8 Jemie Wf/fll#I/ ~ ........ ...... 82863 & "*"' ""'"' .......... ... propett; You ""* 1tMt propett; You mull am. Dy Otqe. "" 19031 Wood#a!d L.n.. RlcNtd MictlMI KM. E Manley J & A Yae, 7''-Jf"" ... ._ cWn In the Su-fie._ clam in the~ pel10nS. Eugene Orozoo, 400 H·..,.,_on ............. CA 13 ........ !Mne, CA CMltJan Wind ,._.... ance Strv1~. Inc., Ar1tluf ~ ~ Court of the ......._ C of the ift ~ Sou1h flower "3, Or· ,..,_.,,. _,, 92912• 11 8unwner """"'" 17872 t.llchall. S... 100, Thia llatement -• ~·~ .,..,..,. our! ~ ~. -~ -• ---• -=" lloooh, CA ._ CA "'" ~ ::r o.!;_ = :i::"C:1 ':'.:' .. -::.: ~ ':;:° .. "": ~ by. an lndMcMif du*d by an lncMdulf ~.by. y':u ~ Tiia MlnMI II oon-1ci1• ~872~ OVlOf2000 Int publlcatlon of lhl9 flfst lion of tNI Have you •tarted Have you started dohl bulltiaaa y.r1 No dUcled by: an lnlMduel S\a 100, """'a. CA on 20001132117 Nollet, unlela you re-Nobel, in-yG'I re-
doing ~ 'tfl(I No doll,g bu11r1181 Yfff1 No Rldiird Mdl9lf K*1t Have you 111rted 9291,. ~ Piiot ~ 22. 29
1
ctlve actual not.ice ctlV9 actual notice.
Eugena Ofozco Jamel ~ ~ Tiia 11.atement ..,. doing bullneea yet? This ~ la con-MY §. l3, 2000 ThM {Pleua u" OOF05483) (PINM UM OOFOSsee) Thie ltllemlnl Wll Thll ttai.menteo::; flied wlltl the Coun'Y y-, tlf1r.l000 dUcled by. • OOfPCllliloh You muat NfVI an You mini MfVI In
flied WWI the CountyCounty ~ ~~ r,.,._,, a..tt rA er._. County Ctwtaden E Manley Have you etat1ed Actlloue Buelw endofMd copy ol ~ ancbllld OOC>Y ol '!'! ,.._ ... n.-,,_." "' ...... _ ...-.,7 ,..,...._ Thie 11atement wea ......_ .................. .-No ...__ ...... m..... daim on the oi.rtcc • claim an the o.rtct _..
on 00rl0&'200C>2000lllt040 on 200011121• ,.... _... JuN 22, 29• OIMI at ~ County Jun6m Hott. Pr..ictan ,,_ tolOwlna PMOne <Attn· DIClllCY-il-Chlrve. (Ann· •
._. .. "' ...... ,,.. 06'2<WOOO on ........... ~mt filed wMh IN eouncy 'J.,,.;;'C'o..p;iaon, _... --...... , tan-v o1 Orani:ae County eomey ~CouNy
t3 20 na-.. Pllol .Aloe 22 tt ,,,_, ...._ 07111/2000 .. ~ buti*I ea: N.E.t.) at '401 CMc N E.T.) 11 o40t C ~ »f
6
• niHj :;!b' t. 1s. 2009 ihi'i July e. 13. 2000 Jb!IQii on IOOONIM10 ~'* W:--::-"'~ ,,.,..,CoMI~ Center Ortv• w .. 1. centet Drive Wt11.
-~ Plot M'i 13. 20, Cteltl ol 0iwg eoiny ~-........ Mir oA 8e1Wa Ma, CA t2701 Santa """-· CA 82101
STARTING
ANEW
BUSINESS?.
• • • • • • • • • • •
21. A1A 3. JQQo Jlft2 on 07111/'lOOCf .....,_ _., • w11tw1 ri1y (!C!l = of ~ ri1y \:' = ut
.._Ml4 '"t11
11tlttoplle1 E !.'! ~-~~ !'..'! ~ ~ Actldoue .,..,_ ~ Piiot <MY IS. 20, HoMon 2.48t Meta ,..,. """ ..... ......... :n, AyQ, 1.jOC!O DM om.. ~ BNc:.11, ~e.w. to 1i1M1v ~~ to ttmetY
The laloWlng, ~ ~ ............... _. ..__. • and llCU't • Wl1llld .. and ~ • _... .. ~ tMlnlill II: ,..,....... .. IMll ---... -. '9llnl 11111"8 en ....._. dlll'fl ~ WI lnlillWI
., • ~. 11) ,.._ I' P 1111 I' &..ullerlO•~ oa 1n"' ~ 1n 111 ar 1n"' ~ 1n "'s.... "'" ...... ~ 1119 ....,. .,.... 'l!!;; ~-.. -..... Coult .. _. In .... Cowr1 .. ,... In .. A'"""" a, -.. «*W ...._ • ,,.. ---r fie ~ llell!o de-h ~ .llelnll ._ lllilld\ CA 80740 Rllllllll~OOl'I. - W. =.::.:: • .,._., ..., ot OntMd' b· ~ or ~ fot-
.,._ ...,... -... 1• It.. 0.. ...... --........ ...... tD"' .... ol Cel-..... ., ...... (If eat. -JL· IMl9wt\, CA CAICMI~ '00. t• c":::.? .;;;-; ..,.... and ... It_, lbftt and ,........., 'tr:-~ ---... ~ .. -ii~~ ;g:.:::.:~
:!=--==--=-=;Ft .. ~ :s; #= --~ VIS-.... :~;i:-:-= • .... -·"= =PA~ =. .. -1M1I ... -'Diil "' ::.itAD .---c..::i...
..... _. __ , . -
.z-... ~ .. ~ ';
•V.A.• ..........
Fiii COUNSELING
FMI UST Of to.IES
tUWAREPOS
'7t4-IS41100
':• 111;,:,1.1 :. ! ,J/.JI
* HEW HOllES • ONLY 3 LEFT II
Oulily bljl dllll:hed
... lamly homel In
Eastl1cle. Greet Aoor """ '=~~
•NEW HOMES* ONLY 3 LEFT II
Ouely "'* dlllched *""' lll'nly homel In
Elilbldl. GrNt Floor """ = 2111)-2220 Sf 1MIM45-6345
, Ha r Center
Here we grow again.
We need "Sup1r Stat1" for a brand new 24hr digital
copying center. Fast paced, high-tech, flexible hrs and benefits,
growth potential, working with Fortune 500 companies.
Seeking professionals for:
•Custom er Service: FT/PT, weekends, day/eve/graveyard.
• Field Salespersons: Experienced in corporate copying and
Imaging Sales.
•Desktop/Graphic Artist: Knowledge of design applications,
MAC & PC
• Manager of Operations: Experienced in operating high-tech
digital imaging equipment, plus managing the team.
·----·-1
.... ,,
'
Doily Pilot
' -.,
--~
lllW 74Dll. • f7
• AIAallMic, co. Sculd .
!01115'~ ~.'85
7t'"'3Wt71
llllW 740 ll ..
.. MW! Al"°"" .umcnc. S35.l60
LAND ROVER NEWPOffT BEACH
14~5
llltJICt( LE SABRE 'ti.
Low milel, wlilt, 3 8 V-6, ~. 91.ipet ~ (~ • S7.988 NABEllS
(714)540-9100
CADIUAC Concourt '95
Only 38k rrnlesl Shale. ... mh CXJndillon!
(307263) $19,988 NABERS
{714)540:9100
CAOM..LAC DEVILLE '98
VB No1111stat, CO, lealher
llllllnce ol wwrancy
(773519) $19.988 NABERS
(714 )$40=!100
What
happens H
you don't
advertise?
Call the
C~ssifieds
(949)
642-5678
l\i&t'm~. !!.'!fr-[111'
p -· . 1!'" \. ,~
~-.• _:_' ::~
CHEVRol.n II.AZER 'ti llltd!, V-t, ...,_, CO &
incw.i Stc>er Slwpl (151371> 111.• NABERS
l714l!42-t100
CHEVROLET LUMINA 't2 Stdan, v.a. m1ny •Xlrle.
-Cit ndHI 124911881 $4.8118 NABERS
m4)54H1oo
CHEVROLET XCAB '00
112 IOn. Silvelldo. V-8,
lllll'ly IM' -..., 1181, OI wan PIWIOUI rllllall
(142683) $20,9118 NABERS
(714!540-9100
CHEV Suburben 19
lit( 1111, loedtd, 4WD ,, 2M91fl048 S3t .15Ci
LAND ROVEJI
NEWPORT BEACH
Ht-1540-f.«5
Chevy K·5 SpOll Blazer '93
loob 4 l\.fl6 pal IOwrlg
plrg am-Im cas.i, 4'11d. two
lone pa n1 will.ti! 111oy
wheels S 14,995 obo
714·378-9111
Clwvy Suburban 'f7 Ad
Tan lollhet n, MW bre1, LT piOage 11W11 cordlon
$23,000/olio 949-933-2408
Chrysler LtB1ron GT
Conv '90 ~ llhr Wit.
6cy1, near perfect 63lt ml,
aUlo. AiC pw, ps, recent
trans. water P\lfDP. ~mong
bell lire& etc $5900
949-675·9791
CORVETTE '84
21k mites, Ilk• -· .. optionl s 10.500
t4HS0-7160
COUGAR '00
3·0oor, V
Convenience GrOUj>. Au!o,
CO, pwr driver s
S I I 1
(Y5605588) $t6,98S
Ken Otody Llncoli.-w.tcury
DODGE DURANGO 'II
Mu1t Stlll 14K ml,
tl00753l29l2 S2t,l50 UHD ROVER NEWPORT BEACH HM40'6445
Ford Exploret XL T '13
duel pwr seats. lealhtr,
CO.nins and drives great, au tvc re<:ords $7500
949-541M841 Leavt mtg •
Of cal 949-S48-3900.
FORD mo 'f7
4WD, nlng. blkl 171(,
tC73724l2l7I $1 l,ISO LAND ROVEii NEWPORT BEACH
. '4~5
FonlW 1917
88 m, IQ new, orignl Wllh
parade horns, 4spd. myl rool $ t 4 ,500 714Q&.fl 12
QllC .MIY ..
4WD, 29t(, SE£ m
1521001/3007 $18,950
LAND ROVER
NEWPORT BEACH
14N4CM445
JAGUAR XJI 'f7 SEDAN 40
$35,9'5 t7.f101 BAUER JAGUAR
714-853-4800
VICKY'S Cl.EAJING
We olllr nE IDT
Hcuit ' Window Cllalwla 1~~.xlnl .... • 714188 0395
.. ~ --"':. ,, .
.1
. . f .. ~----
' L......___
JAGUAR XJI 'ti SlOAH 40 M2,"5 8N044 BAUEA JAGUAR
714-953-4800
JAGUAR XJI ..
SEDAN 40 $42,995 .... BAUER JAGUAR 714-MMIOO
JAGUAR XJI ..
SEDAN 40 $42,195 ...... BAU£A JAGUAR
714-MMIOO
JAGUAR XJI 'ti
SEDAN 40 $43,415 ...,.
BAU£A JAGUAR
714-MMIOO
JAGUAR XJI W SEDAN 40 $44,995 IN151 BAUER JAGUAR
714-tlMIOO
JW CHEROKEE 't3 COUNTRY Front end tow
pkg wf10'# bar lot use w/ motor l10ll1I Ptw PAodls,
PIS. p,g AJC, lllTl-lm ca11.
6 cyt xlnt cond, till wfl,
4WO, ,_ llrts. brakes.
rriufftef system, ind calalytic
convtr, 19mpg Blacie over
tan, lira IPlf• in & Ml 80K
m. 35K towed bahild mcu
home $9.500 ~719-2.330
Jffp Grend Cher<*N
Limited "'· v.a, leather, 4-wheel dr, IOw pclcg, ori\j-
Dll owner. perlld condition. $11.000. 94M45-6755 .
.... GrWld aw.. ..
Lando xlnl cond. 29k "' CID. new tlrM & b<takl
2wd, Chetgold $18,000 obo
Mt-711-2111
LEXUS EWOO .. 811ct.
tin .. n. gold pdig. 11.n-
rool, 1 -... ..w:. lllCOl'ds, ptlftcl. $20,500.
Arm. 949-719-Qm
Uncoln Mart VI '92 blldl,
tarVINther lnlenor. loedtd,
.., rool, 10 co. Clll phone
$5,000. Cd 714-963--4808
evening, 714·754·5183
claxs.
UNOOUf TOWN· CAA '00
Sianetln T Stclln-A merie 1 n ouni.uxury".
Plriln Ollll. moorwol ~1) -136,745 ken Grocly Uncol~Mtrcury
714-521-3110
LA DISC:OY£AY .. ::=1*'= LANO ROVER NEWPORT BEACH 14tf404W
Q~-
~ ' .
'·~· .
~---·.· .
..
'"' · .
LA RANGE AOV£R ..
Alii-.-111 l33l3Wa2I) .,..,
LANO ROVER
NEWPORT BEACH
Ht-e.4M445
MAZDA 121 ES 'ti Lo rri, v .f;, ltalhtf, moon-
rool & morel ea o1 wan.
(7441 llO) $15,988 NABERS (714)540:!100
J
WHAT IS TUB JllGBT PLAYT
Opening lead: Five of •
D'cclaring six no trump, how would you tackle the diamond suh on
this deal? The answer is lhat you do
not know I Fini, you llave to find out
by~ to four no 1n1111p. Wllh no suit chis ..,.. not llkiq for -. . Alta Ibo lad of • low ll)lde, ~ hll nine r.st tricb. 11 di> moods~ 2-2 ar lhe queen It aiOJle·
lOn. that luk will produce the &6r-eo
HU11 tricb ~ However, decJlt.
er milbt not Deed five lricb from
dilmoadL lf lhc '-t kins IS with S-. only four diamond lricb ere needed and a ~ play Is availabk:
to procect apinst a 4-0 spilt In that llJit. 10 acbomplish lhll, however,
declan:r must mab mWmUlll U1C of
lhe dummy caaie&.
'Ibo key IO lhe band IS IO WU1 the
lint Irick with the ace of apmies and
immcdiale.ly lull the queen of healu.
Jfthis IOlel IO lhc king, you will llavc
to fell lhe diamond queen to get
home.
• bow many diamond uicks you oeod.
South's fmt two bids showed a
balanced hand of 22-24 poinl!.
Switch one of the black queens for
lhc queen or diamonds, however, and
the tnck-laking power of the five-
card suit would make three no uump
the value bid. Since sill hearts could easily be the superior slam. North's
three clubs was a Stayman inquiry
and, when South denied a four-card
major, North issued a slam ioviwion
When the !lueeo or hcans wins, dec:llJer ai11 like uafety play in dia-
monds. A low diamood £1 led from
dummy. Jf East shows OUI. declllnll' rises with the ICC and leads IO lhc Jack to ISSW'C four lric:b. Jr East fol-
lowi low, declwer inserts the eight and again there arc four tnclts
wbethct West wins or shows out.
llercedn llnz Sl.500 • Sl!Ytt/Stannark
(161190) $82,980 FLE'TCHEA JONES
I00-927 ·3571
llll'cedu lanr C2IO 'II Sedlll 40
$37,111 IN151 IAU!Jt JAGUAR
714-tlMIOO
If ~ puts t lhc nine or ien, declarer's Toresi 1 in pn:sc:rving a
dummy entry wi reap rich rewards.
Declarer WUIS with lhc long and.
whcft Well shows out. conllnues with
a low dwoond lO the ,ack. Now
declarer can wm any re.tum, cross to
the IJlblc with the king of clubs and
lllke the marted diamond finesse for
12 lricb.
Mlrctdll suoo Spt ..
5k rtllJ5lannal1I
(150277) S73,990 FLE'TCHEA JONES
I00-127 -3576
MERCEDES 210E 79
Sllvtr, IUIO, loaded,
..... lllm!Gf, .. MW! $2500 714-45t 54U
Mlrctdll 580 Sl ..
Bbrgandy, leather, original
ownef, AJC. low mile~.
$21.000 949-723-4445
...,_, My.uq... GS ...
Auto, floor mats. 13"
OldlmoOlle cun-...
Gl.S. 6 cyt., *"· low mies,
co & '"°''· balance ol WM' .. Pf8YIOUll ,.....
(340717) '14.988 NABERS
(714)540-9100
SATURN SU 't3 40R. II*>. mnlf & mote'
1149640) SS,988 NABERS
{714 )540-9100
~ 125 SL '17 SllYer,
grwy llhr. Bul1 rt low ~.
Jltnl cond1hon $4150
949-646·65681875-8092 = Mach Aloys, 60/40
raar) IMI. S * TOYOTA COROLLA '98 (Xl<634530 13·975 Mint condll1on, white. Ken Cirody Uncoln-Mercvry 4-door. 26,000 lnlies, sti1
714-521-3110 -under wanal!ly $12.(JO(I/
_ _..,:;..;...-;;;.;;;.;.~'-=----::::obo:;:;-'-'Cll=...:.7..:...14-966-5832:...:.::::~=--
MOUNTAINEER 4M ... Side .. bags. .,_.. '**'· co. -perMlg lid. tow pllg
{XOJ341l12) $24,975
""' Cirody Llncoln-Mercury
714-f214110
TOYOTA 4 RUNNER '116
SR5, f cyl, 2 WD, wtllllllln
.... -.t, ..,. '*" a>
-. .......... pfl. roof *'-,_ tit-. orgln
-· llnt caid.. $20,()0Qf obo 14t-711-0511
VIUAGEA WAGON 'ti
~ cass/CO. tr* IOW,
lbT1 wl1ls. 7 pm, c*iil ~ i1Q doors, ..,
(XOJ51670) St8.675
Kan Grocly Uncoln-Mercury
714-42t~110
PUBLIC
NOTICE
The Calif. Pubhc·
Utilities Com· mission REQUIRES
llal .. l*d hola-
hold goods mcMll'S
· Jl(lnt lheif P.U.C.
Cal T oomber, limos
end dleUffm print
lhlir T.C.P. runber
Ind~
If you hew • ques-
tion abouC the legal-
ity of • R'IOYtf, limo or c:bauftw, Cll:
PUBl.IC UTILITIES
COMMISION
714-658-.4151
~ • .My 13, 2000 -•
TODAY'S
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
VOLVO 740 ..
Low m nies . .-o. "'*· ~r:' condl1lon! $8,988
NABERS (714)54M100
VW .!UTA Gl .. VW JUTA K2 ..
(038175) $9,990 (111331) $'1G,llO MCKENNA VOLKSWAGEN MCKENNA VOLKSWAGEN (!!!) 15'7'°111 ~. ,.., 357'°111
vw JETTA GI.._ VW JETTA '92 (068085) $9,990
MCKENNA VOLKSWAGEN Aid. AIC. 5 lllMd. ....._ l•l 357..0111 Mt-721-6426
VW JmA GL 'W VW JETTA 'M
(113792) $10,990 (o!i3958) $10,480
Mcl<ENNA VOLKSWAGEN MCKENNA VOLKSWAGEN '
1•> 357"°111 -357'°111
SELL
your home
through classified
iZ~.-~-'
13, 2000
•
• Northstar V·8 Enst
• Wood Trim Packap
• FactOf'Y Chronte WbettJ • ~otsk CD Chan1er
• Heated Front I. Rear Seats
• Garap Door Opener
$51 ,992.00 List Price~
$ 8 ,500.00 Nabers Ol
$44,492.00 SALE PRI
193 SATURN SL2
..wR, auto, moonroof & morel Ideal tronspor1otion earl (149840)
1 89 VOLVO 740
low 77k miles, ou1o, white, very good condition! (343976)
191 BUICK LE SABRE
Low miles, white, 3.8 V-6, ~ super ..duel (.429625)
1 93 CHRYSLER IMPERIAL
low miles, leather, V-6, many metros, new car trode·in l ( 100593)
'95 MAZDA VAN MPV
Low miles, V-6, vwy dean in & out, ideal fa.nily value! (708713)
195 INFINm J·30
low miles, beige, Ian leather, excellenl condition. (208325)
195 GMC JIMMY. ~X4. .
SlT, red, lealher, CD, aloYs & morel New car trode-inl (~93)
195 BUICK PARK AVENUE
-'Ak miles, beige, tan leahr; non·amobr, immaculate! (636680)
1 98 MAZDA 62615
Low mil., V-6, lealw, moo1wocl & moref Bal. cfwarr. (7"4160t
LEASE FOR $465/MO
' '
2000 MODEL .
SUMMER
5.AL-5 SrtERT
l
.2o·bo Catera
,
3 EASY WAYS . · ~
To DRIVE
PURCHASE FOR ONLY $28 993~W!~oo . ~ Prlce
f -$ 3,651.03 .. Nabers Discount
OR ~EASE FOR 5299~ ~~r 36 month tease. $3-410.00cash ~wnortrade equity, plus
Inception tees, tax on decap & rebate• $4202.48. 1 only 4493.
OR 1 PAYM~~T LEASE Sn86436 . . 7 For 24 months+ tax & license.
2000 Deville
LEASE FOR ·s554/MO
.+ tax tor 36 mon1h -.. $5000.00 casb down or trldt ~ • $6494.0;h~= ~;~n· 1 ~14547,
$46,925.00 Ust Price 4 ,995 $ 3,930.00 Nabers Discount
All New 2001 Aurora 2000 Alt:~ro
............. Clllld ....... Oll ...... Cl'llll.11-..S ............. ...... ......,._AO._.,,. ~17,1'1 ...... '~S1-
0r PurchaH For Only ~15,5 11
198 CHEVROLET BLAZER
Block, V-6, leaeher, CO & morel Super shorpl (151378)
198 CADILLAC DMW
V-8 North.tar, CO, hhr; bol. of warr. (n3519) ,
517,9~8
518,988
100 CHEVROLET EXTRA CAB $ 88 SiN.rodo, 1/2 ton, 3 door, many~ f.oturw, prev. rental (1426&3) 2 0 t 9
198 CADILLAC DMW " S 88
D'Elegauc:e, ~ ~ modll, ~metros, bal. of worr. (754105) 24,9
~H.~~~~:r=~ & morel (261282) $2~,988
1 93 CADILLAC Au:AN1I S 88 low mil., V-8 Nonhstar, '9d, tan l.:ihr, '!f1lY rarel (127362) 25,9
'98 CADILLAC SIVIW . S 8 88 l.owmil.,CD,~,bal.ofWU1tGil'f(914127) · 2 t9
100 CADILLAC DIVIW S 6 88 ,_.~ low,lk .,. whili peart, tan lealher, bal. of WOif. f>'W· rental. (204'226) 3 t 9
~:~~~~.._, (15A015)
540,988
0
,,,..,..,, )uly I l, 2000
Thul'Qy, fuly IJ, 2000
..
as Your Town's
only .DuPonf FIQor~ng Center
we·vc cransformcd our store into the 1lltlmate carpet
shopping experience ... a DuPont Flooring Center, the
only place in yow town where you•ll find
• The widest selection of DuPont Sf AINMASfER
carpets in ow area. .
• Your exclusive source in ow town for DuPont
STAINMASrER Ultralifc carpet-the premier
for luxury. stflc and performance! .
• ALL the decorator colors 211d ALL the hot new styles
and tenures that you•ve been looking for!
• The latest in [}ul>ont STAlNMASTER technology
revolutionary new DuPOnt ~Teflon Repel
Sysrcm-repcls dirt to keep your carpet 40% cleaner!
• Comprehensive warranty package on stain & wil
protection, abrasive wear and lifetime anti-static.
come sec fOi' Yourself!
All the stylaL all the colors, all the
Now at YoUr ~torc,·your DuPorit
Check out the Grand RC-QPcnl119
Daily Piloc • Orange County Fair •
Spectruni of fUJV
What has magicians, racing pigs. a hypnotist,
funnel cakes, great art. a class in Oowook>gy.
headline cntettaincrs for 17 straight nigbcs, buffalo
and llamas. great batbc:cue. free salsa dance
lessons. big bands, new inveoticos and the only
horizontal bungee jump io Orange County?
Orange County Fair 2000 -and that's just a
smanering of the family fun that awaits you.
Saluting peppers with a theme of "Hot! Hot!
Hoc! We're Spicin' It Up!," Fair 2000 is turning up
the temperature on the eottrtainment, the food and
•C..U-•~•TlllllSI •~
• k11oN6 TO« Le • tea Mia
•NOG, ~.).fa~.--. kn
• 24 1-ba ltfG9s 11>0 1BMS • OSOM flllNl5 • co. ken W8Cl:M
1714 ................... 77,.
the rides from July 14 through 30.
Opening cemnooies at 10 a.m. on July 14 will
set the.~ tone 'for Fair 2000. Hvayooe entaing
the Main Gare can join a conga line that will dance
and k.ick its way IO Heritage Stage where one of the
first ISO failgoers wiU win a vacation getaway IO
Miami, Florida, compl.iments of Grand Pacific
Resorts.
Spccia.1 days will offer discoonled admission
prioes, and there will be free admission te the Fair
for everyone between 2 and 3 p.m. oo July 18 -
AFTER THE FAIR
CONTINUE THE FUN AT ... . .
Ml CASA
MEXICAN RESTAURANT
OUR MEALS ARE A TRIP TO MEXICO
ALSO ON
OUR MENU:
"FISH TACOS"
TORTILLA SOUP
CHILI SIZE
CHILI CHEESE
OMELITTE
HERE, WE
MAKE DINING
MORE THAN
AMEAL!
Beat the Heat Day, spon5Cnd by AT&T
Wireless Services. Olildren 12 years of
age and under will be admiacd free on
Fridays. oounesy of Orange County's
NeM'Channel
Free admission will also be offered on
July 18 from 9-.30 Lm. to noon for~
registered guests who are physicaJJy or
mentally challenged; JuJy .19 for Farm
BWCIU and Fann &. Garden members;
on July 2S from noon to S p.m. for Fair
patrons who bring canned or boxed ·
items for the ~ County Rescue
Mission; and on Juiy 26 for4-H andFFA featured at the Collectors Corner building.
members. Failgoen may bring family treasures and
Discounled admission will be offered on July 17 beirtOOl'llJ on specified days to get estimate' hy
and 24 for youths 13 through 17. and on July 20 professional~
and 27 to seniors SS and older. Hot new flowers for the garden from
Once inside the Fairgrounds. visiton will have a California's top gtowers will be shown an the
sizzling smorgasbord of attractions and Floral Pavilion. C'.ompeOtjoo will focus on red
en!er1ainmeat to choose from. nurty all o( it flowers in llllalCUr and pro(usiona1 amngtmcnl\
without additional admission charge. ' and in 1he ewail)g the pavilioo will come alive
Stan with Cauennial Furn and see an amy of with pro&aional landsclpe ligbting.
inimaJs from giant draft horses and Olen IO llamas. Visit the Home .t. Hobbies building ~re )OU
goats, sheep and donkeys. You may catch the bbth an 1eie displays o( bandcnfts sod! as needlepoint.
of ooe of the two liam of piaJets expected during knitting. crocbedna. weaving, oenmia, model'
the FU. The Farm abo bas a variety o( plants. and ltather and quilling. to name but a ftw TIJ(
including a 9Clection of~ peppers that you can pies. Cites, cookies. brailh, jellies and pmcr.c'
grow aa home to spice up your salsa. dial competitor1 have cntm:d will surely whet the
On July 13, 19 and 25, ribbons will be awarded appetite.
in the Farm .t. Garden Competilion. Panicipalu In the Fane Arts Building. Orange Count}\
may enter their homegown fruits and veaeut>les pro(essional and lllllleUr aniSlS CIOCllpete for po zc,
in CllqOries r1J1gina from apples to zucchini, in painting. paaels. gnphics, sculplUJC, chinJ
which ~udes the largest and most unusual Wpe. painting, woodWorting and phocography .
Memorabilia. antiques and collections are '°"tilfWfi on f"lt< I!
. '
\1riu l'l,\; \\ llh "l'•\l ::·>'. 1\1. ill'/J IJ/ J \{ // ,' / \( f
S1"k
•Rib Eye
• Ddmonioo
• Porterhouse
• Steak Diane
(h:pered Table Side)
•Rack of Lamb
•Veal Chops
•Prime Rib
• Filct Mignon
• Steak r anar (f'locpftd Tlbk ~)
•Frog Legs
The Premier Steak 8c Seafood Home
Seafood
•Swordfish
•Salmon
• Halibut
(lldmcd.~
GriW cw s.-..d)
• Austtalian
Lobltec Tail
•Abalone
• Stone Crab Oaws
•Alubn King
Crab Legs
• Crabeakes
• Marylana
•Cane:J Tab&e.Side ~~ Sofabell Crab ,......,,.~ ...... D' .... • GMJ~•o...o...w-.
WEEla>AYWNOllON 8WE PIATB SPfJCW.S
OFFEIUNG OVEJt 5011l!MS PU YEE.IC AU. UNDll •10.00
lbunday, luly I l, .2000
Newport-Beach's
Laraest & Finest Selection Of Silk
Flor&l ~ments & Loose Stems
New Arrivals Of Containers, Acceaories,
Home Decor & Gmdles
• • • ~R SPECIAL• FAIR SPECIAL • • •. ~-20°/o OFF ; 0 ~
• ·Any Hoine Decor I
a: Includes FurnitQ.l'e; Fumisbinp & · ~ Acceuories. &dudes ~ orders.
• &pil'l9 7121/00 ~
• • • FAIR SPECIAL.• FAIR SPECIAL • • •
Enenme Selection of Nautical Theme Gifts;
c.anb, Station~ & ~ PrOcl.ucts ----\1~ ~ 'f>~,.,.
<91> 723-5158
. ---
• • •
· I •ill .._t
O.Uy Piloc • Orqoe c-nty Flir •
. . . . . ~· ·l. ·:-..... • ..
Ready For A Break This Summer?
•What a lnMJ ~ -..ah•m, any
Sbuwdw l\Wii"' ...... for $10 for
tilt 8nt 3 m•M, ·AND, a 1fot1
~ c6r to Kw*Ja so.• Oly U.sA.l
@om cast
1-88&--COMCAST
l-88S:266-2278
.,
Agademics
Quick now ... How many agricuh:unl The pis of Apdcmia arc: Foundation and che Orange C.owny Fann
prochac:a come &om Califumia? How • 1b ceadl JOUth about the origin of dieir 8wau.
much time docs it aJtc lD shear I fuod. And DOW, fur che lftlWal tO che qusiom It
lheep? How loog docs it altc llO chum • To create an undenca.od.ing of difle.eru che ~nning ol dUa artide:
cream 1nro buam animal tpeCia u toWca of fuod. • Califum.ia lw more chan 2SO agricultun1
The 900' fuurth ud fifth paclcn. who • To caic:b aboui che catt of fum arumalt. • produca and is che narioo's lading agriaalnanl
graduated fiom ~ 'Faduow'• Apdcmia • To provide an out-of~m agriculrurc producer.
dasa ai che OflDF County Fair's C.c;rumnial cmirorunc:nc fur wban youths. • A sheep can be shea.rul in about fu.e
Fann can probebly lftlWU without milling a • To teimu.la~ ian inmar in swtlng a gardCn minutes.
beat. )"be four-hour incenaive cducationaJI at panic:ipatiog schools. • To rum aeam iruo butter depends on how
aperiaM:e imolwd che )'OUDpCCll in plant and The Apdcmia program wu dcvdoped wic:h much rime and vigor you puc inro chc churning.
animal dcnoe u 1hey lamed bow agriculc:utt the •mnce of Davis Elemenwy School (in
afficu all upeca· of cbeir IMs. &om baic needs Com Mesa) teachcn to complement c:hc
Ndl U food. ... and c:lochinc DO ~ c:wricu1um dw WU being uaed U che IChool.
needs such• mrdic:ioet ud lifHmJig dnap.. Widuow wrote che Apdcmia cwriculum and
Jc.>n plans. A pi.loc program bepn lase JQt
under c:he dircaion of Shannon Dougbcny, a
Fullcnon .... School agria&1nm tad.er.
lmide che du.room and ourdooa 00 c:he
~ Fann. c:he )"OWll ag m.idma Learned
abouc bahhy diea. bow co plan and n~ a
home prdcn. and ~ our food and doching ~&om. .
Support fur c:he Apdcmia program in c:hc
&>cm of grana and ~ rc.>un:a is pcoridcd
by che Centennial Farm Foundation,
C.en~ Farm, Orange County Fair, Orange
~ 4-H Council, Univcnity of California
Cooperative Encmion, Pacific Life Foundation,
the <;:apiral Group Companies Charitable
The • FU.est Beauty Supply and
Full Service Salon in Orange County
For All of Your Beauty ~s
Visit Us At
"l1u9*y. July I l . 2000
LIFESTYLE CLOTHING FOi WOMIN AND CHILDllN
209 ~,..., .............. (M9) 6n-S542
Gff FREE INTERNET AGCESS BY
Visifing OUr Wei> Sile
Going away? AT
Weekend?
--. Vaoa.t1on? BOMB
Business? .
WJUL9 YOU'D AJ/fAY
TOO& C&ft CAlr PLAY
BUPr•u.n
CAT
C&B..-
Peace of Mind• Expert Care • Bonded
Insured• Licensed• References
Lee •onk Prof888ion&l cat care til Your Home
(NI) llT~ CHft CMifttflod• &ftllallle
(8t8) U'r-mY 0 owu• 1-II ... Oii a..
. .
+ i
. TiiandilJ. ""' ll. 2000
Centennial
Farm
Foundation
Orangc Couniy fum1and d.isappcan under cbc bWldoun
dcYdopm. cbc Centennial Fann Foundation is bdping co
chat children a.nd chcir pemllS learn the important
role chat agriculnuc plays in lhcir cvayday liva.
The Foundarion. hcadc:d by <l&l'f Einsmann of rmnc. is chc
principal support group fur chc 3.s.acre C.aucnnial Fann loc:attd OD
the Orange County Fairgrounds.
Al. chc Moo-Ucnnium Hoedown OD June 3, ICOIU of Foundatioo
members and chcir friends dined, danoed and &olicbd a> raise
funds co any on chc Farm's work. A band prvridcd musk for I.inc
da.nc:ing. and thcrt was a-siJcm auaipn. For ridt-mkas, thcrt was a
$U$pcnscful pme of row chip bingo. And to leave everyone wim a
good wu: in their mouc:hs. an old-fuhioncd bubecuc dinner
topped off chc feltivitics.
Ccolcnnial Fann Foundation works wim community ~untecrs,
plus chc managcmcnr and naff of chc Orange County Fair co plan
and operate chc Farm. The Foundarion was orpnQcd in 199 I to
raise funds for eduarion prognms olfucd • the Fann. The
Foundarion tolicia and disbuna funds to opaue Cearmnial Fann
and omer agiculruraJ and roum-rdaad ed.ucarional programs and
cxhibia at the Fair.
Wrth a wide array of aop1. nuncry Aock and
fuoamck. Fann cxh.ibia offer many visicon dicir first
ha.ads-on, multi-IXeted agricultunl cxpaicaa. For
otben, chc Fann pnwida an oppoctunity io raninixc
about dx days when fuming -chc munry'. cop
indusay.
The f.oundatioo aUo mUa ed•iaDoaal grams and
sut.;diia bus m.nsponation of dUldrca to chc Farm.
More chan 65.000 midcnrs tout Ccotcnrual Farm cam
Jal·
To ~ a tour or schedule a 6dd uip.. call (714')
7()8..1618. .
VILLANOVA
Award Winning Italian Cuisine Since 1933
On the Water In Newport Beach
Complimentary Valet & Boat Docks
Live Music
Every Night 9pm·
Join Us/or
Twilight Dining
Entrees Starting at $6. 9 5
Sundlly thru Friday
LATE NIGHT
DINING
'ti/ la.m,
Fridays & Saturdays .
3131 Wut CODlt Highway, Newport Beach, CA
www.vll"'1iovtlrataurant.com
.....
•
>
,
w •l I
• Deily Pilot • Orqe c.ounty Fair
Cooking with hot! hot! hot! celebrity chefs •
('""'ookiag .,ta dw range from Asian to Amc:rican will be karuttd in
\...Ahc ~ Chef Series at Onngc County Fair 2000.
Mamr Chcf Manin Yan, of "Yan Can Cook" &me, wifl •
inaugurate the xrics " 5:30 p.m. on Thuaday, July 20 at
Hcricagc Stage. Yao will lbix bwnor and air in some timdy
suggestions u be prqieres .pc, Alian ditbcs.
Dynamic duo Mary Sue Millilim and Susan FcrUga,
authors of •Cooking W'db Too Hoc Tamales• will dMllWC1llC
authentic foods and Sawn from their Border Grill rmauraiua.
They Will appear on Heritage Scigc at 5:30 p.m. on Th~
July 27.
Adrniaion to both pracnutions is free with Fair admission.
REGAL · BEAUTY
Suppllts I Sllon a
• Fiii ..-11111 ........
,.i:. ....
Mon -Sat 9-.30 to 7:00, Sun. 12·5
269 E. 171h St., Costa Mela
(949) 642-4482 ...
~ ~ I l
. 1bunday. July ''· 2000
orange County Fair info
om:
July 14-30, 200)
Ltaldea:
88 Flir Dri~ 0. Mesa
Milllllol Prta.:
Gaiall (I}· S4 )al'I) S6
Scliars (SS +) SS
C1ildla (6-12 yan) S2
Kids (S llld 9*) flee
Vdlide~ SS
c.pool (4 ~ -per \ldlicle) $3
Bas P.tilgfiee
8-'I:
hbday drolP ~: DOClll to mQ\lgbt. l'hntly-... Smday: 10 UL IO mmgbt.
""-:
(714) D-FAIR (32.47)
MiM.W..
www.oc:fair.QlllL
Spedli Days ' Pi'OIDOtiCm:
• Opening Ceremonies
P1llrOOS will be a part of !he Fa11's opening
c:emnonics by plltictpaltng 111 a Cooga hnt
beginning II the Fair's Mal!1 Enrrw:c, July 14
a I 0 &.111. Gucsu •ill dance, wtmg !Mu
complimeolary maracas 1n a hvcly "Hoc! HOI'
Hot!" procession to !he main stJge. One lucky
fair patrOn will w111 a "hoc" Vaca!IOll getaway to
Miami. Ronda. compluncnl.S of Grand Pacific
JteQU.
• OCN Kids Days
Fridays, July 14.21and28. Childrco age 12 and
under "' admiued free (reg11W1y S2J. Hands·
oo actJvtllCS and spcml ~ vc planned an
Kids Put and many Olhcr "bot" ~s
throughout the Fairgrounds. Sponsored by
Orange County's NewsOlannel.
• Tmi Days
Mondays. July 17 and 24 Youth 1!CS 13-17 art
admitted for S4 (regularly S6) Specul ~~1t1c!
are planned for rtenS.
• Bat dlt Heat
Tiadiy, July 18 (2 · J p.m.) me patting and
ldruission for all iges. Sponscml by AT&T
Wmlcss Services.
·f-Bwa1Day
Wednesday. July 19. F~ dnl5S.IOO with Farm
l o.den or Farm Bureau cri
• Seaiors Days
Tbundays. July 20 and 27. Seruors ages SS+ arc
ldminrd for SJ (regularty SS). Spmoral by
WWIC&a ~ l..,.. LOTS SeaR Hori7.oos.. Semon 11t 111vilt:d IO enjoy a
I =--:"... M ::::.-r.filled day o( sp:cial ~and ICUvJbes, : -·-:.-.;~~' -: -= inclllding free mmy-go-round llld ferris wtieel : :t.:.i:•-•·""' ~ :::::...-. rides. Pre-regjstered senior convalescent : =:."...... facilities ft inviml 10 etJJO)' axnplimelUry ............. ._ .. _
40Shwy. .. A ' I
Fair dnlUIOll.
• Hot & Spicy Food Drive
Tuesday, July 2S (DOOD to S p.m.) Free
admission for those who brine IMe camied or
bagged food ltCmS. Food IO be domlcd to the
Orange Uiunty Rescue MisslOll for disln1'ulion
to local needy families. Sponsored by
Ralphs1Food4Lei.s.
• 4-HIFFA 0.7
Wednesday, July 26. F~ 1dn11.ss100 for
members displaying mcmbmlup card.
Carnival Promotions:
• Ullimlttd Rldt MoadaJS
Moodays. Jiily 17 llld 24. Unlimillcd amival
nde wriSlbnls availabie for S20. Vllid from
0000 to mdi1ght. This r:ftr IS good oo map
and kiddie midways and is IVaillble for all qes.
17 Nights of Headline
Entertainment at
Arlington Theater
A ztS(}' amy of acu will spier up !ht
.l\JieMilinc C.Onccn Series a1 7 ind 9 p.m.
niglidy in Arlington Theater. Shows ~ free
with Fair ad.mimon.
Ooc of the gianu of popular mu.sic, j01e
Fdiciuo, swa !ht lineup on opening
nigb1. July 14, with the Ekaric Lighc
Orchcsm Pm II. His latm album, "Senor
Bolero." already is No. I in New York and
througbouc Larin America.
The 10..mcmbcr World a-K
~ faruring Randy Md.mer and Ron
Wibo, will fill the sugt with unforgmahk
Daily Piloc • Orange County Flir •
hiu on Sanmby. July 15, induding ·.bet
CalifomiJ" and "Take it Easy." No.c2lgia
ukcs om on July 16 v.hal Raia, a T~
to the Bcada. ~ musical memories
from !ht Fab-fuur Looblikes who ~
the weal and musial Kyla dw changed
!ht ~ of popular music.
J.O"Vduqoa will bring inspir.arional
music to h.cr July 17 audiences with soogt
wch as "On M Knees" ind •God So ~-ed.· She a';{oded into the Ouistian
music scene in 1996 a.s a 16 year old with
her debut album "Heavenly Place.•
Vnm.ns of the Grand OI' Opry, tht
&aty Bnldaen ("Wake Up Lln:k Susie"
and "Walk Righc Back") will headline on
Tuesday. July 18. . . _, continVL"a on f"'Kt JO
• "Hot" Wtdday
Wristhud Spedlls
TllCSdiys • Frnbys.
10 rides for SIO on
sale ootil 8 p.m • ride
llDlll midnight. Good
for map .t kiddie
midways. for all age&.
~~===================================================;~ ~~ Discreet Legal Representation 1="'
• Weekend Warrior
Wristbad
Saturdays l SundayL
Buy 111 S 18 wnsdmld
to eipcnencc the
. thrill oT si~ "bot"
camival rides. Tbri11
men meeting the
dlalJellge will receive
a themed T-s.hirt.
I~
I --
DUI• DRUGS
DOMESTIC VIOLENCE
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3355 Via Lido, Suite 2 l 5B
Newport Beach, CA 92663
(949) 675-4973
ale Toll Free 888-909.-4LAW
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• Deily Piloc • 0ranp Councy Fair
3000 Sq. Ft. Showroom
Offiring Unique Designs To Enhance Any Decor.
Enjoy reftalnnmts while shoppinx in " ~ e/,eg111U lllmOIJ>hwe.
Chi/Jrm 11n wektnn1.
COMPLETE DESIGN SERVICE
Custom Upholstery
Qtuzlity Home Fumi.sbings
Bali Imports
Custom Window Treatments
Hand-Painted Omvas Murah
I~nlmports
Hand Wrapped Si/It F/Drllh tf Trees
Custom Bet/Jinx 0-Tllb/.e unms
Fine Chi1Ul tf FIAtwart
Custom Ami IWis
kcasorks ,
Hunter IJo"K4U 0-(;wJ,W BlinJs
Patio FU,.,,/,,,,.,
949 • SIS • 182S
WESTCUFF PLAZA • J<>U 1"1illl Aw .• NftllJH'rt &llC/J
Mon-S.t 10-G • S..1#-5
""""'"~-·· ... , n.n
Thundmy, July I J, 2000
OC Fair Gold Medal Wines~
••••4-Star Gold Medal Winners••••
•Seven Peaks 1997 Syrah (Shiraz) .......... $10.99
•Rosenblum 1997 "Sauret" Zinfandel .... $14.98
•Rosenblum 1997 "Late Harvest" Zinfandel
(375 ml) .......................................... ·-········· $13.95
•McHenry 1997 "Massaro" Pinot Noir .. $16.95
•Forest Glen 1999 White Merlot ............... $5.99
•Thornton 1m GretUtche Rose ................ $6.99
•Hanna 1998 Sauvignon Blanc ................. $8.99
•Kenwood 1999 Sauvignon Blanc ............ $6.~
•Korbel Extra Dry ~arlding Wine .......... $8.99
750 ml unJest noted. While t upplln lut.
Try the
wines at the
Hi-TimeWine
Bar: Ju~y 6, 7,
21or22!
•
'
..
Orange County Fair salutes You an cheer on your hometown
favorites in chc 5-Akrm Chili Cook-off
from 10 a.m. to I p.m. on July 21, as .re9
ho1 chi.Ii chefs from Orange County's lire
pepper industry with special contests
No oac will be able co forget that
the tbanc of~ County Fair
2000 is •Hoc! Hod Hod We're
spci.n' le Up" beamr dim 11' plenty o(
ranindcn MOUDd the Fairgrounds in the
fonn a( special a>Otaa Ind amaaions.
f.or
cumple.
mU a look II
JOll)( o( the
coorau that
will be bad
II Kids flartt
and att opm
ro. CYCryone.
in four age
a.qorics
1\c
Great Chile HWlt conrcst will uk
cootaQDU co bum fut cbi.le pq>per"S in a
vat of time. Whoc¥a-finds thc ITlOlt
pcppen wioa (July 22 If 5 p.m.).
• In the Whipped Cream Pcppct Pie
CODlat. CIOCDpWtOO wilJ try to find
hiddto "pcppcn" in a whipped cream pie
(July 23 • 3 p.m.).
• ConlaaiDis iD me Too Hot co Hanclk
jcll-0 T• -Sip tqUlftl of Jdl-0 IO
cadt oc11tt. nr i. CQlll still roaing
.quara wins OWr 15 ll s p.m.).
•ANTIQUES
• Col.LECTIBLES
•SILVER
• LJNEN
• The FuU of Hui Air Bubble Cum departments pit their culinary dolls
Blowing Contest. The: biggcs1 huhhlc: 1ha1 ~nst each ocher trying to produce the
u blown wins (July 30 a1 3 p.m.). honest chili.
For tho~ who like C'-Cn more spKe, On Sunthy. July 23, the rich cultural
cheer u the "Some Lile h Hot" Manh n hc:niage of Maico wiU be saluted on fiesta
Monroe look·A·Ukc contC\t a1 '' p.m on dd Mariachi 02y wilh a host of nuNchi
July 19 a1 b.tnd.s. dancers. a ~ado, games and
Herua~ ~tai;c. givaway"
The con1c:s1 u The Rtd·Hot Billy Peppers. a br.w
open 10 band of 18 schoolteachers, will bring
everyone, wi1h fairgom a repertoire of zesty music at
compe1111on 111 several loca1ions throughout the
.., four 2!\e grouJ» F..irground.s.
for prizes in
four categories.
Honest Manlyn
Monroe Siru1
and Pose; Mos1
Dmling Oucfit; Best Hour and Makeup:
and Most Au1bcn11dBcst Ovcnll.
Rtd-hot salsa dancing wiU be righ1 m
the mood of me Fair 2000 theme. Couples
arc asked to d~ in oudiu 1ha1 fit the hir
theme and g;ilhcr ~t 7 p.m. nightly at
Hcrit2gt ~ for a half-hour or dance
instrucoon from ~ Scnguon Enclu
Blackmuo and a live ~ band. A houot
couple will be chosc:n each night, and
thosor winnm will oom pm against each
orha on the final night of me Fair. July .30.
•JEWELRY
•CRYSTAL
•CHINA
•FU RNITURE
cotutainmcoL
TheTC ii plenty Of d 1 It I I
ciucminmcnt, too: Ta.II W
Takako Juggling Team. die W .Has
Billy Peppas bn11 t.Dd, dwT .....
Sud Orum Bend. ibr Maia Sllllli
Juz Band, die Majic ol ....
Tbunton, the Pon Cily )Iii ...
magician Gus fWruoeo ind die~
Al.rm Chili Cook-off:
The city pricle CIOlnpailian .. die
Ara Around the C.oancy .......
will be judpt at 5 p.a. oa,.., JO•
1\.e Mc.lows~
• Behind • ('(}1111 of ... claiOa ii
The Grar lmmtion ~ a
~rive eidUbit of mm--~~'
lpCCilky and incbcriil ••61111111 ......
~ by ATkT Y.-.
SemCa. in ~ wida
Immeon Fonun; The Sailit Sc:inc
WiJI t)e opm d~ ..-Pait
i.oun,;
Stop in for a taste of our authentic Baja specialities, available for eat·in or take-out. Whether you try our
mYinated, ctwgnlled chicken and came osada (steak),
or cu world famous BajHtyle fish tacos, 'NC'll take you
to Baja with just~ bite. r-----------::1 FREE FISI-I TACO I With Purchasr Of A Drinlt I
I lbJ>u/1 &i• Grill. !>19-261-1016 I
Valid only at Irvine location ......... _,....NM ..w • ......_ ............ ....,... .__ o..--.
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~-= _ ..... ~ ~~--~-• ----~--------==--==----·-=---
•
• Daily Pilot • Orange Col!nty Fair
Sp«trum of Fun, crmtimlal from JHlt6 4
On display this year for the fiist time will be the
Orange County Fair's pennanent collectioo of
work by Orange County anists. Ans Art>und the
County Day will be observed July 20 with a juried
competition among artists from 34 cities in the
county. Perfonnances . wiU be given by
professional arts troupes representing some of the
county's ethnic heritages. S~g· of cultural diversity. the Fair's aJI day
salute to the rich heritage and culture of Mexico
will be observed on Sunday, July 23, sponsored by
Ralphs and Food 4 Less markets. There will be
mariachi bands, a mercado and lots of activities.
Peppery theme-related events should draw the
attention of audiences. On Friday. July 21.
culinary artists from Orange County fire
departments will compete in the 5-Alann Chili
Cook-Off. Wmners of the Spicy Salsa Contest will
be announced by II a.m. on July 19. Entrjes
should be delivered to the Fann & Garden booth at
Centennial Fann between 7 and 9 a.m.
Celebrity chef Martin Yan will appear on
Heriiage Stage on July 20 al 5:30 p.m. And on July
27, the authors of "Cooking
With Too HOl Tamales," ~usan Fcniger and Mary
Sue Milliken, will visit at 5:30 p.m. ·
The temperapire wilJ soar witli the "Some Like
It Hot" Mariiyn Monroe Look-A-Like cOntest on
Heritage Stage on July 19 at 6 p.m. Open to men
and women in four different age categories, the
contest has prizes for the hottest Marilyn Monroe
strut and pose, the most daziJing outfit, the best
hair and makeup, and the most authentic/best
overall.
Salsa dance lc:ssOos will be given every evening
at 7 p.m. on Heritage Stage. Couples are asked to
dress in outfits incorporating the "Hot! Hot! Hot!"
Fair theme. The nightly winners will compete to
choose the hottest dance couple on the last night of
the Fair. July 30.
And, there are plenty of activities for the
youngsters. The University of Fun at Kids Pait
will have clowns, magicians and other entertainers
three times daily teaching courses such as
Clownology, Magicology. Circusology, Tossology
(juggling) and Ansology. ln addition, there are
contests for youth every day, free crafts.,
singalongs and special en1.enainment.
For the more 'adventurous. the Fair's carnival,
operated by Ray Cammack Shows (RCS). one of
the nation's premier carnival finns. celebrates its
sixth year of providing exciting rides, games and
concession stands. Several special promotions
offer discounted pric.c.s on carnival rides.
The Street Scene, jUSl inside the Malo Gate,
attemplS to capture the electricity and CJlCrBY of an
urban neighborhood with special entcnainment,
innovative displays and two exhilarating new
rides. Part of The Street Scene is the Great
Invention Show, featurin1 a competitive exhibit of
consumer, specialty and industrial inventions that
have never been publicly seen. ·
In the Speed Track. two-passenger cars sizzle
side-by-side down a 20S-foot track, attaining a
speed of 60 mpJl ,in only! second in what has been
described as "a horizontal bungee jump."
Another Street Scene attraction, the Sky Diver,
suspends its riders 1n a sling suspended from a
giant crane l!efore sending them as high as 100
feel and to within five feet of the ground. An
additional admission charge applies for bolh these
rides. •
No couoty fjlir would be complete wilhout the
livestock raised by members 0£ 4-H and Future
Farmers of America. The best of the livestock will
be sold in the annual Junior Livestock. Auctioo oo
Saturday, July 22, beginning at 9:30 a.m.
A different way to view livestock happens in
the Barnyard Fashion Parade when the
fashionably attired animals with their cos~med
owners will march through 1he Livestock Area on
Thursday, Iuly 27 It 6 p.m.
Youths with intercsrs other than livestock will
exhibit their entries at the Youth Building in
categories that range from fine art and desktop
pub1ishing to handcrafts, community service
pro,Fcls. food. photography, woodworting and
more.
Approximately 250 commercial exhibitors will
fill two buildings with everything from bats u>
home improvements and products that clean or
cook. Around the F~ 75 booths offer a
Age 2 thni grjlde 6
657: Viotoria Street
6:30 a.m. -6:3Q p.m.
(714) 642-0411
Thunday, July 13. 2000
Ya5' variety of foods ~ web to please every
ethnic palato: <: •
The 17-night Headline Concert Series at
Arlington Theater kicks off its opening night with
the Eleetric Light Orchestra Part 0. with sptcial
guest star Jose FelicianQ. Oo succeeding nights,
Pairgom will see World Cassie Rockers, Rain.
Jad Velasquez, the Everly Brothers, John Kay and
Steppcnwolf, Isaac Hayes. Paul Rodgers, Taylor
Dayne, Freddy Fender. Weird Al Yankovic, Rick
Springfield. Poco, Firefall, Ty Herndon, Doug
Kershaw and the Bellamy Brothers.
Headline Concerts are al 7 p.m. and 9 p.m.
nightly; your Fair admission admits you to the
concens.
In the Grandstand A~na, for no additionaJ
charge, the offerings include motor sports, rodeo
and hypnotist Mark Yuzoil.
There are plenty of shaded areas for rest. aod
entenainment at stages thrOughout the grounds
and in the ellhibit buildings.
With so much to choose from, it might be a
good idea IO enlist the assistance of the Fair
Concierge, a Fair 2000
iMOVation that can help you plan
your day or days a1 the Fair.