HomeMy WebLinkAbout2000-07-17 - Orange Coast Pilot' ..
SERVING THE NEWPORT -Wf.SA COM>AUNmES SINCE 1907 ON ntE WEB: WWW.DAILYPILOT.COM
·The best~laid plans
•Developers push the
.. ..,,. boundaries of Newport
Beach's city plan, making
the future look dense.
Alex Coolman
DAILY PILOT
l . NEWPORT BEACH -The' t'• amber taillights line up in the
evening gloom like a string of
rubies, a pair of brake signals for
each commuter sitting in the <X>n·
The DALY PILOT
r@eXamlnes a stoty that has
mack hffdflnes
even more traffic to congested
areas such as Coast Highw(\y,
they say. The string of rubies
will grow until it twists itself into
glistening knots of gridlock.
allowed in the city's general
plan, a document that spells out
Newport's vision for future
growth and development.
Although the developments
wW bring additional traffic to
the area, they won't bring any
trips that weren't agreed upon
in that document, adopted
almost 12 years ago.
That simple fact that the
develop~ent has been antici-
pated for years by the city's
planners should, they contend,
be enough to persuade resi-
dents that everything will even-.
tually work out for tlle best.
It sounds ptetty reasonable and
straightforward. But whether or
not it so\Ulds like an intelligent
response to the problem of growth
. .
•
...
NliC::»tDAY,JULY17,2000
I
gestion of West Coast Highway.
It's not an encouraging sight,
'('especially if you happen to be
sitting in the middle of it. And
it's scenes like this, day after
day, that have some critics. of
new development in the city
saying enough is enough. l More building will bring
But developers such as the
Evans H~tels company, which
wants to build a resort hotel at
Newport Dunes, coilnter with a
simple, powetful ieply: The pro-
jects they hope to build are
CONRAD LAU I DALY Pl.OT
SEE CLOSER PAGE 7 Twilight traffic grinds to a halt on West Coast Highway and Bayside Drive.
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CONRAD lAU I DALY Pl.OT
Psychic Dlane Stevens, who owns a shop ln Costa Mesa. gives a palm readlng under a tent at the Orange County Fair on Sunday.
·Outrageous fortune '
The hustle and bustle of the fair
faded and disappeared behind
me as psychic Diane Stevens
clutched the fingerttpe of my inaeas-
Fair psychics are part of the fun Smyth does not rely solely on
Stevens and her daughters, who own
a shop in Costa Mesa. She goes to
several psychics and compares the
ingly sweaty. rlgbt band. .
Her eyes bore into mine as she conveyed
her message.
I don't know what I expected to think or
bear as I took a seat in the small white tent
at the Orange County Pair, but I rellnquilh8d
my band fearlessly and with a fairly open
mind.
Although I have never been one to
. . .
Danette Goulet
REPORTER'S
llOIEIOOI
denounce psychk:s as a
whole, it'• difficult to put a
lot of stock-in one at a fair.
So before I stepped up
to the psychic plate, I
cliatted with a few of the
other patrons.
•1 come every year -Just to get a path to
follow and to see U I'm on track.• Mid Sandy
SZnyth ol Newport Beach.
readings. ·
j{rista Austin of Harbor Oty was waiting to
have her palm read for the first t:UM. Austin's
take on the craft was not quite u ierioUs as
Smyth'si she just wanted to try IOIDethiDg new.
Rer boyhiend, David Deringer ol Harbor
City, came out smiling.
..
College
workers
may get
pay hike
• An increase in
enrollment has brought
$1.9 million to the
Coast Community
College Disbict.
Amyll.~
DAILY PILOT
COSTA l'v1ESA -Tbank:s
to a boost in full. time student
enrollment. Coast Community
College District employees are
scheduled to get their secaod
pay hike in a month. boosting
their pay by more than 10%
this year, offidals said .
State education offic::l.als
have granted the district $1.9
million in what's known as a
growth fund because of a
j ump in enrollment during the
1999-2000 school year.
As a result, trustees are
expected to approve a 6.5%
across-the-board salary
increase for employees at
Wednesday's board meeting,
· said board President Jerry
Patterson .
Included in the raise wm
be educators, admmistraton,
supervisory management.
maintenance and operations
workers and employees of
KOCE-TY. the district-nm
public television station ln
Huntingtoo Beach. •
The district 8DCOIDpull8I occ, Coastline CGUege aDd
Golden West College.
Not included m tbe growth
fund will be ChaN""h
Wi11i4m Vega. wbOle ~
omits him from tbe --•1t11 a good pay ....... ra
YaWI Saiitan8
'J. ' ' , . 8lllAN "°8uoA I DAl.Y Pl.OT
SaWnv instructor Tara Povah, center, launches. a boat from a unique dock created to give tnexpertenced sallon easy access to water
with wide w~ys and pmh.!butfon ramps. The dock Is designed by Carter Ford anct ls located on Udo Island at Via Udo Soud. '
Built . to scale., bUilt , to ; last ·-
AlexCOolman
DAILY PILOT
LIDO ISLE -On a recent
mo:rning, a.year-old Emily
Hu\chins launched a little red
sabot sailboat called Sun Bum
from the dock at Genoa East.
Emily eased the boat into the
cool water and pulled it alongside
the dock with a thin rope. A few
minutes later, she was cruising
away through the bay.
It was not a moment of higb-
drama. Yet a small group of sailing
enthusiasts on the dock looked
quite pleased by what had just
taken place: A child had taken to
the water about as easily and nat-
urally u a duck.
The people looked happy
..
Lido Isle residents wanted a dock
that children could easily use. .
because it was their creation, th&-
lnconspicuous dock under EmilYs
feet, that had made the process of
getting in the water so simple.
For Carter Ford, the energetic
leader of the group, it was the
realization of a dream that was
long in ~oming. The dock was fin-
j.sbed about three years ago, but
it's only as time has gone· by that
the success of its design has been
demonstrated.
Ford, along with island resi-
dents Derek Niblo and Kris Mun-
go, approached building the dock
with an open mind. What they
were interested in doing, Ford
~andllia.all..,.c:m
enjoy SatUrday aDd Sunday cham-
pagne brunch aw.. wUb food
from the Canileiy. CnllMI nm
from 10 a.m. to noon and fnlllD 1:30
to 3:30 p.m. Cost 1t $31 P!ll' ~
The Cannery alto often a dlaDs
auise for groups ol 30 to 80. Celt
is 563.50 per pemon. PW -
information, call (9'9) ffl~.
Hid, was l~ ~'9J dupHcating
other approaches around Newport ·
Beach than drawing from a wide
range of-inspirations to produce
the best possible result
They wanted a dock that was
user-friendly, safe and inconspicu·
ous -something that would bal-
tmce Lido Isle $tandards of good taste with need to get kids into the
water.
"We went far beyond our local
limitations,• Ford said, to draw on
design elements from around the
world. . .
What they c.ame up with was a
dock whose ramps can be lowered
into the wab¥" with the push ol a
button, a feafure that means kids
can get into and out of the bay by
themselves. ,
The dock incoU>Orates many
other subtle featnres as well, from
a wide w~y to tie-up facilities
that won't trip small feet. ·
They're small details, but Phil
Gautschi, vice commodore of the.
Lido Isle Yacht Oub, said they
make a difference. They con-
tribute to an atmosphere about the
dock that's very community-ori-
ented and friendly.
•At most places, the boats get
in the water and that's lt, •
Gautschl said. "Here, that's just
the beginning.· It's a meeting
place. It's a social place.·
ftEADEJI$ HOTUNE
(949) 642-6086
WU'fllll All SUlf
VOLM,~.10
WIDP'll 11. •IM*
Nlllt.-
l'-<O(d your ""'COl-m.-met-nts-~
the o.tlly Piiot or news tlpJ.
ADQMU
0ur .tctr.. •now. a-v St..
eo.t. ~ CA 92627. . . .......
,...
MDAY
ftntloW
4:57 ......... ~ ..... -...... ..()A
fllnt high
11:21 a.m. ..... _ ............ 3.I
4.'05 p.tf\--"--2.3
Secorid """ 10:1J p.m. ..... "_,._,_ .. s.1
I
Daily Pilot
Terronee Phlps
THE HARIOR COLUMN
Do some work
before getting
your boal fixed
uying a boat is quite easy.
Brokers and dealers have a
variety of sizes, colors, options
an ample supply that is readily
available. •
•
It is much more difficult to find a
place to dock and a reputable
mobile marine repair company to
service your purchase. · ·
When you have a problem with
your car, the repairman "gives you a
reasonable understanding of what it
will take to fix the problem. You are .•
required to sign a document that
states the repair will not exceed a
set amount However, when your
dreamboat needs repairs, you some-
times experience a nighbnare.
. · An oil filter for a Toyota will cost
you about $8 et an auto parts store,
but a filter for a Men:edes, ~proxi
mately the same size, shape cme:t
made from the same materials, will
cost $25. When it comes to boat fil-
ters, the cost escalates even more.
The filter is constructed of a little
metal can and some folded paper.
, Perhaps the cost difference is in the
folding pt papet, I don't get tL
• •The best way for a boat owner
to save thouseDds of dollars is to
contract with a prolesskmal service
tedmidan and p1aoe the boat on a
biweekly or even a monthly mainte-
nance program,• Said Gaty Jones,
owner of Mr. Marine, a professlol'llll
marine medumical and eledrlcal
selVices company in Newport
Beach. •aoat 6Wneis are much less
familiar with the equipment on a
boat than on their car. They believe
whatever ls told them. but they
oftentimes end up dealing with a
'parts changer' rather than a quali-
fied and certified technician •
Jones suggests that anyone in
need of martne repairs do some dig-
ging on the person or company
offering to repair the vessel Does
the mechanic hold a city and st.ate
liceme? Are they factory-trained by
the manufacturer of your partirular
engine or electronics? And are they
a graduate of a U.S. Army, Navy,
Coast Guard or Merchant Marine
academy?
Jones bas attendeQ each of the
above schools and ainged when
asked about the quality of repair
service he has seen in ow area.
One thing that will save boat
owners a lot of expense is to install a
Ilusb value on the saltwater inlet
side of the engine in front of the
strainer. Jones suggests tbe installa-
tion of a Perea or J>io..Flush Value
will double the life of the exhaust
manifolds. They normally need
replacing every three to four years.
A twin engine installation will run
less than S2SO and could save you
thousands .
• 'llRll+Ma ....... Is the Dally Piiot's
bolting wrttier. )'ou Qn ...,,. • = for him at (949) 642-6086 or via at
dallypllo,.,.tlmacom..
POUCI LOI ""
Daily Pilot
Gommuflify
le~der backs~
Brom60rg
NollkJ Schwartz
DAILY PILOT
BALBOA ISLAND -In a political
twist, community leader Jack Callahan
bas announced he will not run for the dis-
trict's City Council seat
and will put his weight
behind candidate Steve
Bromberg.
Shortly after Mayor
John Noyes' declared
that he would not be in
the running, both
Bromberg and Callahan
were heavily lobbied by
local residents to run for
Jack Callahan the soon -to-be-vacated
seat. The two, who are
good friends, alternately encouraged
each other to step up.
Until recently, however, neither was
very committal.
Then Bromberg cleared the air by
announcing that he would run. This
p,rompted Callahan to think seriously
~out his own position, finally deciding to
~e a step back.
Jack and I-discussed my running, and I
told him this is something I was going to
do." Bromberg said. ·Hew~ not going to
run agaiAst me and said he was loo.king for-
ward to joining my campaign. committee.•
Both men have at one time or another
held nearly every leadership position on
Balboa Island.
So far, the only other candidate tp
announce intentions to~run has been Big
Canyon resident Robert Schoonmaker,
who also ran against Noyes four years a'go.
• wash Saturday, 8llegedly
struck two customers with a
.. . car, pinning one agatmt a wan.
Police search for
car wash worker
NEWPORT BEACH
Police are searching for ~ Cos-
ta Mesa man who, while work-
ing at a Newport Beach car.
Silvestre Lopez Hemarida,
2-4, was moving a 199' Mer-
cedes-Benz when be lost con-
trol of the car, which struck a
1996 Toyota pickup Jnd then
plowed into two c:Uttomen,
police said.
Police said the veb1de hit
Tom Casulu, St, of Hunting-
Welcome to One
M..fiW ~ M'?w~ ~~ f ·
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Mattress Outlet Sto "Your So~~em California Mobiliry Specialiau" · BRAND NEW · COSMETICALLY IMPEltFECT
Get the Best for. Leal ·
ton Beach and then Sharon
Marshall, <47, of Santa Ana,
who was pinned ega•mt the
building.
Police said Henumdez fled '
on foot f(om the Car Spa on
West Coast .Highway .,Jollow-
ing the incident just alter -4
p .m. Saturday.
Marshall suffered• multiple
factures in her legs, but Cuu-
laa escaped with only cutt and
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711 W. 17th Sr. Suite A-5
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~.July 17, 2000 3
Wllll
IOYSa
A paddle
co ... ta
badyfor
M'(:hM)
Bear, 9, of
Balboa
blandu
bemestt
to get
home
after
drtftlng
along ,
Newport
Harbor
wUhhll
buddy
Reed
Williams,
8.
DON LEACH /
DAl.Y Pf-OT
bruises. Both were ta.ken to
Western Medical Center ba
Santa Ana, said Sgt. ltae
Rodgen of the Newport BeKti
Police Department.
Hernandez faces felony bit-
and-run ch'1ge1, wbidl could
iueen a minimum of one year
in county jail ox state pri8on,
.Rodgers said. •
1111110f
111 llY
. lllS Niil
Chl~Sffm
to be flocking to
the lOdlPMl.
n..t's wtw. you can
find the Oown Pl1ttol. The
aeltlw crlft booth fHtures hands-on sctence projects ind
glint 1lr bubbles to keep kids enterulned. It continues .,, •r 1nd Is ,.... O'aflwl VII .....
4 Monday, July 17, 2000 DAY 3
Diii Of
111 llY
•n fOl A , .. _ ..
lllMIHU 1111 ._
Daily Pilot
Go West, young dog
QUOTE .
Of THE DAY
Gary Noel ·and his famous doggies arnize audiences time and agam
D•nette Goulet
OAJLY PILOT
I n three mighty leaps, Pistol
Peanuts the plump Chihuahua
soared ov~ hurdles that tow-
ered above his head.
His co-star Paco, a black-and-
white rat terrier, climbed a 10-foot
ladder and leaped into the waiting
arms of his master, Marshal Rowdy
Yo, known to his parents as Gary
Noel.
Children's squeals of delight
joined the familiar strands of •Tue
Magnificent Seven• at the Doggies
of the Wild West show at the
Orange County Fair on Sunday.
The rapt audience watched as
an tiny toy Chihuahua by the
name of Miss Prissy balanced on
one paw on Noel's thumb. They
giggled uncontrollably at the
vaudeville antics of Noel and his
sidekick, Calamity Jo.
•1 like him,• snickered 6-year-
old Justin Richards. •He was here
last year. I like the part where the
guy is dancing around.•
The slapstick comedy and
adorable animal tricks appealed to
more than just the children, how-
ever. Adults were waiting in line
after the show to have their pie-·
tures taken with the courageous
canines.
·we try to catch them every-
where we see them,• said Al •
Tetreault and bis wife, Pam. •Wbar·
they do, how they get the dogs,
where they donate money, and
plus you see bow be treats the
dogs -that's what makes it great.•
Noel bas been doing bis west-
ern dog show for 18 years, he said,
but he was born and raised in the
business by his father and grandfa-
ther. He did the show solo until be·
met bis fiancee, Giovanna Cardel-
la, two years ago. She has been his
faithful sidekick ever since.
Proceeds from the sale of post-
cards of the duo and their dogs go
to shelters for rescued and unwant-
ed dogs aaoss the country.
As for the performing pets, Noel
said, •Tuey get the best of every-
thing.•
I •
My family '~ visits the fair
each year for tl].e
enjoyment. It doesn't
have the husUe
and busUe of the
L.A. County Fair.
Plus, we like the
pig races.,,
-Rob Penman
Anaheim
BARGAIN
OF THE DAY
CUTEilUT CAI TlllY DOT ICIS? .
CONRAD lAU I DALY Pl.OT
Paco, a black-and-white rat terrier, leaps !nto the arms of Marshal Rowdy Yo, otberwt.se known u
Gary Noel. du.ring a performance of Doggies of the Wild West at the Orange County Falr on Sunday.
They don't re1lly do 1nythlng
useful, but the kids seem to like
them. You can spot children walk·
Ing a •monter on a .._... 111
over the f1lrgrounds. The f1ke pets
go for bet.Hen $4 _,... SS. The
monkeys ire mlde of Styrofolm -
flexible and dur1ble. Choose from
two color combos: yellow 1nd
brown or pink 1nd purple. They
can be purchas.d It the ~
Conceulons Stllnd.
FORTUNE
CONTINUED FROM 1
· •she said I've been blessed, that I was
close to death at one time,• Deringer said.
•veah, I've been close to death a couple
times, actually. It all sounded pretty good
though -positive and fairly accurate.•
All right, enough lta.lllng, I figured. Bring
it on; tell me what you see. I was ready.
Wbllt I didn't bargain for was her eerie
accuracy. As I tried diligently to remember all
that sbe told me. I round Dl)"l8lf forgetting my
pwpol8.
Sb8 dkhl't ~any~. either.
•vou have been Jn limbo lh1I po.st year,•
ibe tOld me. •Not~.·
Sbe told me that I am an atremely
ltrobg·Wllled .-.on but bllW lolt some of
CONMD I.NJ I DMY l'l.OT
.. ~.Dlw ••••• ._. apallllm lier ._. .... OrlDl8 ,ec ... , ......
my direction and Z8$'t in this past year.
Although many who know me now might
not believe it possible, it ts, sadzy, tn.le.
She said l was going to take a trip and
that it would help me regain focus. Before I
headed out to the fair, I bought an airline
ticket to see my family, my tint real visit in
many years.
Now I'm not.teWng you what to think. I'm
just presenting facts.
There was one freaky part for me, though.
As I.sat in my overalls looking like an
overgrown kid, she told me that l bad an
•old soul,• that I have alway. related well to
all ages but as a child I wu beyond my
years, thot I had wisdom. Tbat ii her Word.
notmine. •
What makes it 10 strange ii thet when I
was a cbild, my motbei' Uled to t.ill me the
same thing.
Oh yeah -I'm allo ga6ng ti, liVe a lollg
life and have two cbildrai. Ugb.
...
SCHEDULE
.OF EVENTS
TODAY
,... '*-"': noon to midnight ...._ !?; Youth ages 13 to 17 ere ~ for S4 •II day. ~ .... o.y. Pur<Nse e
$20 wristband and receive unllmlt·
ed rides from noon to midnight In
the major and kiddie midways.
Good for all ages. Wristbands are
not transferable and do not
Include gate admission.
ALL DAY
• ~ 8-n-Uvestock
Maternity Bam •
•SIMllMllMlaon~
Small Animal Tent
, MMllet • .,... on dkpley-
1.ivestodt Area
, ..., Hollow -Llvestodt
Area
• Felr 9uttDn Scavenger Hw1t -
Youth Building
• Wa odwoftlng ~lft•tiorts -Visual Arts
,ullding
·a.-.~
clemonstaelions -Visual Arts
~uilding
~ El1tbl<*l11W1' Gulld
~America -Home and Hobbles
DUiJdlng ; 0r.,.. County Woodtumen
!.-Home and Hobbles Building "0r.,.. County Polym9r Clay
Guild -Home and Hobbles
Building
• --Weter District clenta1 ... •tlon -Centennial
Famv'Mlllennlum Bam
• Sdencl Adwntwes -
Kids Park
NOON
• •ttot, HOt. Hot" dendng -
KJds Park Stage
• FelltU'e lxhlbftot. until 6
p.m.-Youth Building
12:30 P.M. ·
• Owfie Keeling. gfDCsblouc•
-Near Buffalo Bend Stage
• ., ...... C.Mt)WllgOfo;
until S:JO p.m. -Grounds
1 P.M.
• C.-, Apple <Joggers -Her-
itage Stage
..... Moon~ n..tre-
callfomla Pati9 6 Spa Centennial
Stage
• ~ nMk-Spot-
light StageN'isual Ar1s
• tlot'9r n.. Hot ...... Hoop
eone.t-Kids Perk Stage
• ~ .. PlllCI Art c.m.r-
Kids Parlt
•-..fw~o.c. Wo a....,,_. Home and
Hobbles Stage Building 14
• llled Hot 9lly .......... -
Grand P«ffic Resorts Meadows
Stage
• a.llchn ..... Spkle Metl-
.,.. with ...... 1hwatol\-
Bijou Magic Theatre
• All~ Radl'fl,.. _
Newport Arena
• Mau'w\ w. Pupp9t;
wwtll I p.m. -Groonds
1:30 , ...
• ...., Mcbof .. UDWttry
~-Buffalo Bef'd ...
DUMBO, EAT YOUR HEART otm ...
CONRAD LAU I DAILY PILOT
Kaitlyn Pujll, 15 months, delighted In the pink elephant ride with Stephanie Gurrero at the fair on Sunday.
Stage c:alifomia Patio 6 Spa Centennial p.m. -Courtyard Stage 5:30 P.M.
• ninldM Stlel Dntrn a..'Mi -Stage • Ml•ing demotwtratkM
Street Scene • CJrcus fw'I Revue -Kids Park • Weigh-In mwtret goats -Live-Centennial Farm/Millennium Bam
• llwMll •oth ... s Circus -Stage Milking Parlor stodt Arena
Green Gate • lWNll Md M.llko Juggling • 9'*t Hot •Illy PIPIMf'S -Grand
• SNron Halllngdal: 1he LMng TMm -Grand PadfK Resorts 4:30 P.M. Pacific Resorts Meadows Stage
Doll; until &JO p.m. -Grounds Meadows Stage • Billy~ mw1try
• CNldren .. Megk Splm • W1lgb1n mwtret sheep -....,..!Urist -Buffalo Bend
2 P.M. Mlrtlnel with Gus Flamingo -Livestock Arena Stage
• Buddy Md LMaie Schwimmer
Bijou Magic Theatre • Cooking With a.t ...., • Doggies of the Wiid Wist -
• 1\'inidMI Stlel Drum 11..t -Moog.fl -Home and Hobbies D.nmn -Heritage Stage Street Scene Stage Building 14
Newport Arena
• IUtmo Latino -califomia Patio • All "'-kM being Pigs -• lWNll and 'nlbko Juggling
• Mllgk of Fnnk 1hurston -
& Spa Centennial Stage Street Scene
• a...tino-Andls musk -
Newport Arena Te.n -Grand Pacific Resorts
Spotlight StageNlsual Arts 3:30 P.M.
Meadows Stage 6 P.M
• W.lgtHn mnet calves -• Billy Erkbon. COWTtry
Uvestodt Arena • CNrtle Keeling. glassblower slngertguturist -Buffalo Bend • Spltt Image -Herttage Stage
• Uniwnlty of ~ -Kids Park -Near Buffalo Bend Stage Stage • Jlmi Mlle Shein Md ...
• CNna mouk fnmes -Home • Magk of Fnnk 11Mnton -• Mllgk of ft'llnk lhwston -Attttudls a..'Mi -c:anfornia
and Hobbies Building 14 Street Scene • Bijou Magic Promenade Patio 6 Spa Centennial Stage
• Slantboerd ~ -Youth • Doggle9 of ... Wiid Wist -• Part City Juz a..'Mi -Street • Mouth Wllbii ... M&alcal
Building Newport Arena " xene 0..... -Kids Park Stage
• Magic of Fnnk lhurston -• <:nrfty IOtdMn: Pastry • ara. of~ Revue -Youth
dlcot•tll• klNs -Home and Grand Pacific RelOl'tS Meadows Hobbles Building 14 5 P.M. Building ~
Stage • lluddy Md Uuril Schwfmmer • Jun9thM Wiid,
• lWNll ... Mao Juggling 4P.M. o.nc.s -Heritage Stage ~-Buffalo Bend
~ -Street Scene Stage
·Dennls~Mdhls~ • ...... o.tell Studio -• Jiml Mlle 5hMr'I ...... •Gus~ Megk-Bijou
~ig; until 7 p.m. -Grounds Heritage Stage Attitu41s .... -(alifomia
• IUtmo Latino -califomia Patio PatJo 6 Spa Centennial Stage Promenade
2:30 , ... 6 Spa Centennial Stage • Ciraa ~ Revue -Kids Park • lWNll Md Miika Juggling
·~muek-Stage ~ -Street Scene
........... ~beef -Llw-Spotlight StageNlsual Arts • Gus Flamingo Mllgk -Grand • a.k cak• dlcotatll• with
stodtAreM • Story 11me wtth Cnfts -Pacific Resorts Meadows Stage Cyndr Wirth -Horne and Hob-
• allly Ericbon. UDWttry Kids Park •Stew Lord.~-bies Building 14
~-Buffalo Bend • Hypnotist ..... Y\auik -
Stage • Unhrenlty of fun: Buffalo Bend Stage
Oownology -Youth Building Grandstand Arena
• 9'*t Hot BHly PIPIMf'S -Street
• Mllglcal Spkle with Erikb
• Gui ...,.IF Mllgk -Grand O.lu, 19rry Ciodfnlr. Dllvkl ZJr. • Mlldng demonstration
Scene Padflc Resorts Meadows !:s bit. Goldftl ....... Dove -Centennial Famv'Millennium Barn
• 1\'inidMI StMI Drum -Bijou Magic Theatre Milking Parlor
3 , ... Street Scene • Tl1nldlld Stlel Drum Band -
• Clll.ty Apple 0uggers -Her· • lbwll •ott.-s ara. -Street Scene 6:30 , ...
It.age Stage Green Gate • All AlalkM being ,.. -• W11gtHn mliltl.t sWlnl -
• New Moon Ml.al 1beetre -• Wlltt.r c.oMn. p&Ml9t: until 9 Newport Arena Uvestodt Arena
~.July 17, 2000 s
•a....&111,., .. 'laeu•
-,_.,Butt.lo Bend Stage
~ ..... , .. ~ ........
DMu, ....,Ga Wac,. Dcwld ZllW. G:al&tftll ... Md Dow-, .
Bijou Magic ThNtr1 •
• 1Hnkled ftlll Dr'unt ..... -
Street Scene
7P.M.
• Jad Vcl•quca Arlington
Theater
• UrWcnlty of fun: Attlologr
101 -Kids Park Stage
• s.lla dm"9 ...... -
Heritage Stage
• llln'lll --Miika Juggling --.n -Grand Paciflc Resorts
Meadows Stage
• Port Qty Juz a..'Mi -Street '
Scene
• All Alalbn Radl'fl .... -
Newport Arena
......... •others Orcul -
Green Gate
7:30 P.M.
• SalM ~ -Heritage Stage
•St.we Lqrd, ~ -
Buffalo Bend Stage
• Red Hot Billy ........ -Street
Scene
• Doggies of the Wiid Wist -
Newport Arena Jr • c.um.dlwi Herb Dixon -
Grandstand Arena
8 P.M •
•Duo w.t'I Riden-Grand Pacif-
ic Resorts Meadows Stage
• JunatNr\ Wild,
slngerlgu!Urist-Buffalo Bend
Stage
• M9gieal Splm with Er8tb
o.tu. Twry Godfw'cy, Dllvkl w GoldfL .... Md Dove -
Bijou Magic ThNtre
• HypltOtist Mmtl VUla6 -
Grandstand Arena
• Milling ..; .... tr•tkwt -
Centennial Famv'Millennium Barn
Milking Parlor
8:30 P.M.
• 0.... night until 10 p.m. -
The Lab Antlmall Anti-Stage
• Mlft w.n.t. mime -
Arlington Theater
• Slldl FX -Heritage Stage
•Stew Lord.~ -
Buffalo Bend Stage
9 P.M.
• Jad VltMquu -Arlington
Theater
• Jun9thM Wiid,
lingerlguttarts -Buff a lo Bend
Stage
9:30 , ...
• s.lla a..'Mi -Heritage Stage
• Com• dlln Herb Dixon -
Grand Padfic Resorts Meadows
Stage
•St.we Lord.~
Buffalo Bend St.age
10 P.M.
• Duo w.t'l IUdln -Grand
Pacific Resorts Meadows Stage
10'30 p.m.
• Slldl FX -Hertt.ge Stage
I MDI.,, July 17, 2000
b* and Julee Morton will
bolt •'Jales of Thies,• 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
1be Millionaire'• Club wtll
discuss making money by
inaeasing profits at 7 p.m. at
Borders Books, Music and
Cafe at South Coast Plaza,
3333 Bear St., Costa Mesa.
Pree. Information: (714) 432-
7854.
Private Investigator Jim Har-
riger will discuss. how p~lic
records at Newport Harbor
Area Chamber of Com-
merce's business referral
breakfast at 7:30 a.m. at The
Pacific Club, 4110 MacArthur
Blvd., Newport Bea.ch. The
event is $20. Information:
(949) 729-4400. •
WIDllESDAY
A public meeting 1n support
of blocking development of
the Banning Ranch area east
of the Santa Ana River will
begin at 7:15 p.m. at 230 E.
17th St., Suite 206, Costa
Mesa. Information: (949) 548-
5636.
Tbe Orange County Web-
Girls will discuss new media
and technology networking
at 7 p.m. at Borders Books,
Muslc and Cafe at South
Coast Plaza, 3333 Bear St.,
Costa Mesa. Free. Informa-
tion: (714) 432-7854.
THURSDAY
Attorney Jerry O'Brien, a
former professional chef, will
host a free discussion called
•nie Laws of Cooking" at 7
p.m. at Borders Books, Music
. .
&Dd Cafe at South Cout
Pina. 3333 Bear St., COit.a
Mesa. Tbe group will dilc:uls
the art, ldence and tech-
DiqUel ol food PJ'8p&ration ana . redpeS. Information:
(714) 432-7854.
Tbe COiia MM. a....ber of
Commen:e wW host a •90
Minute Breakfast 9oo1t• at
7:15 a.m. at the Co.ta M8l4
Country Club, 1701 Golf
Course Drive, ~ta Mesa.
Breakfast Is $12 iJi advance
and $17 at the door. Reserva-
tions: (714) 885-9090.
Mother's Market wtll preMDt
a free lecture called "Opti-
mizing Health with MSM• at
6:'30 p.m. at 225 E, 17th St,
Costa Mesa. Information:
(949) 631-4741.
FRIDAY
A free "Feng Shut Your Way•
lecture will be presented at
6:30 p.m. at Mother's Market,
225 E. 17th St., Costa Mesa.
Information: (949) 631-4741.
JULY 22
CrlsUn Fusano wtll host a
free lecture on cooking with
lavender at 8:30 a .m. at
Roger's Gardens, 2301 San
J<>.aquin Hills Road, Corona
del Mar. Information: (949)
640-5800.
Steven Henlln wtll discuss
his book, "The Disciplined
Online Investor: A Guide for
Day naders and Short-Term
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 rangers 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 VJ.Sitars Center. Pree,
but parking is $6. Reserva-
tions: (949) 497-7647.
Three Dog Bakery wtll host a
"Barkday Pool Party• at 12:30
p.m. at Corona del Mar Plaza,
924 Avocado Ave., Newport
-. . -
.
S11neD ffeiMllln wm .._
onliDe lnveldng at 2 p.m. at
Borden Book.a, Music and
Cafe at South Coast Plaza.
3333 Beat St., Costa Mela.
Pree. Information: (714) 432-
7854.
IULY 24
Plycbologllt Joan ADdrewl
will hOlt •Mattng and Rel.at-'
tng• from 1 to 9 p.m. at the
Coutline Counseling Center,
1200 Quall St., Suite 105,
Newport Beach. Pree. Iilfor-
mation: (949) 476-0991.
1be Co.ta Mesa CommdDtty
Golf Classic, sponsored by
the Costa Mesa Chamber of
Commerce, wW begin with a
noon shotgun start at Mesa
Verde Country Club, 3000
Club House Road, Costa
Mesa. Cost is $225. Informa-
tion: (714) 885-9090.
Stanley Bassin, UC lrvtne
School.of Medicine professor
of physical education, will
discuss health and fitness at
,,_ .... of ....... hmlJY
Senice of Orange County wm dilam Ulluel, concerm
and relpODlibilitiel ot adult
children wbo are c:aru;.g for
their'8lderfy parents. 1be ....
lion will be bald at 7 :30 p.m.
at 250 B. Baker St, Suite G.
The ditcusllon will t'Olltlnue
Aug. 2. COit ls $20 per penon
for both dlsculsiom. lnfonna-
tion: (11-4) 445-4950.
David Engstrom wtll bOlt a
free fibromyalgia seminar at
7:30 p.m. at the Hoag Hospi-
tal Cancer Center auditori-um. One Hoag Drive, New-
port Beach. Registration:
(714) 840-8038.
Plychologtst Craig Wagner
will host "Escaping LUe's
Vicious Circles: a free per-
sonal growth discussion, at
7:30 p.m. at Borders Books,
Music and Cafe at South
Coast Plaza, 3333 Bear St.,
Costa Mesa. Information:
(714) 432-7854.
Paine Webber wtll host a free
seminar on "How to Handle a
Divorce Settlement: Investing
Your Settlement Wisely" at 6
. p.m. at 888 San Clemente
Drive, Newport Beach. Infor-
matlt>n: (949) 717-5600.
11 a.m., as part of the Jewish lbe rosta Mesa Chamber of Community Center of ,,.. • . Orange County's three-part Commerce will hos~ B.us1-.
es, "Heart Smart Q~s After· Hours ~er at
s ... It's at the cen-5:30 ,p.m. at El Tonto Grill,
Baker St., Costa . 633 ~ton ~lvd., Costa Mesa.
Mesa. Free. Information: ·Admission 15 free for mem-
(714) 755-0340 Ext. 133. bers1 $1~ for nonmembers. ' Information: (714) 855-9090.
JULY 25
Merrill Lynch wtll host a free
seminar on how to control
taxation on retirement plan
distributions. The lecture will
be from noon to 6 p.m. at The
Clubhouse, 3333 Bristol St.
Costa Mesa. Reservations:
(714) 429-3092.
JULY 26
Borden Books, Music and
Cate's mystery book discus-
sion group will discuss
Sharon McCrumb's "The Bal-
lad of Frankie Silver• at 7
p.m. at Borders South Coast
Plaza, 3333 Bear St., Costa
Mesa. Information: (714) 432-
7854.
• "!• -_,. -:" . -
Ftnandal advisors lrom
Edwards-Jones will discuss
•How to Pick Stocks" at 1
p.m. at Borders Books. Music
and Cafe at South Coast
Plaza, 3333 Bear St., Costa
Mesa. Pree. Information:
(714) 432-7854.
Psychologist Craig Wagner
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-?854.
JULY 27
Borders Business Connec-
tions, a business networking
and referral group, will meet
' I
from 12:15 to 1:15 p.m. OD tbe
fourth Thursday t;r each
month at Borders Boob.
Music and cate at South
Cooft Plaza, 3333 Bear Sl,
Costa Mesa. Information:
(714) 256-0353' .
Tiie Orange County daapter
of the Single Gourmet, a fine
dining club for singles, will
meet at 6:30 p.m. at 'Iroquet
at South Coast Plaza, 3333
. Bear St.. Costa Mesa. The
restaurant is located on the
third noor. The cost ts $'12.
· Information: (949) 854-6552.
Daily Pilot
JILY 21
0......-coaaay INll tpedalbt
Stepbanie Remington wU1
lead a one-mile walk in
teareh of bats at 7 p.m. at
Crystal Cove State Park, . at
Pelican Point on Coast High-
way. Attendees abould meet
at the Bl Moro V\sitors Cen-
ter. Pree, but parking is $6.
Re1e1Vations: (949) 497-7647.
JULY 30 .
Park rangers will host a
"back-country hike" at 9 a.m.
at Crystal Cove State Park, at
Pelican Point on Pad.fie Coast
Highway, between Corona
Author David Gabbe will del Mar and Laguna Beach.
host a cooking class called Hikers should meet at the El
"Exploring Soy" from 6 to 9 Moro Visiton Center. Free,
p.m. at the Costa Mesa but parking is $6. Reserva-
Neigbborhood Community tions: (949) 497-7647.
Center, 1845 Park Ave., Costa .
Mesa. The class will also be JULY 31 ' offered Aug. 3 from 6 to 9
p.m. The cost ls $30 plus a
$10 materials fee. Informa-
tion: (714) 327-7525.
Newport Harbor Area Cham·
ber of Commerce will host a
sunset after-hours mixer at 5
p.m. at Din Din at the Bamboo
T&race, 1773 Newport Blvd.,
Costa Mesa. Mixe{ is free for
members, $10 for potential
members. Information: (949)
729-4400.
Jacque Daniel wtll 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.
Fidelity Federal Bank wtll
present a free seminar for
home buyetS 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 29
"Total Ute Empowerment"
lecture series creator Morgan
Rogers will host a free semi-
nar on health and stress man-
agement at 3 p.m. at Borders
Books, Music and Cafe at
South Coast Plaza. 3333 Bear
St., Costa Mesa. Information:
(714) 432-7854.
lbe Newport Beach Public
Library will host "Medicine
Wagon Variety Show,• a free
program for children in first
through sixth grades, at 10:30
a .m. at 1000 Avocado Ave.,
Newport Beach. The program
will · be repeated at 3 p.m.
Aug. 2 at · the Mariners
branch library at 2005 Dover
Drive, Newport Beach. Infor-
mation: (949) 717-3801. ·
AUG. 2
Memben of Jewish Family
Service of Orange County
will discuss issues, concerns
and responsibilities of adult
children who are caqng for
their elderly parents. 'nle dis-
cussion will be at 7:30 p.m. at
250 E. Baker St., Ste. G. The
program is $20. Information:
(714) 445-4950.
AUG. 12
Vlrgtnla Carlson wtll host a
free lecture on summer care
for roses at 9:30 a.m. at the
Sherman Library & Gardens,
2647 E. Coast Highway,
Corona del Mar. Information:
(949) 673-2261.
AUG. 19
• ~ It •l ! I i i i i% j I i I_ I
Newport Harbor High
School's class of 1970 will cel-
ebrate its 30th reunion with a
buffet dinner and no-host bar
at 6:30 p.m. at the Newport
Marriott Hotel, 900 Newport
Center Drive, Newport
Beach. The cost is $55 per
person. Information: (949)
548-1823.
OllGOlllG
SUMMER SALES EVENT A women'• therapy support
'gIOUp meets to discuss rela·
tionship issues at 6:30 p.m.
Tuesdays at 1151 Dove St.
No. 105, Newport Beach
lnfonnatioa: call Barbara at
(949) 261-8003.
·ReadyFor ·
AB~This Surmner?
~~AtrJ. Cerone del Mer Plaza
832 Avocado St. CPCH & MacArthur)
Auto Acdcleftt Reeefttl11l
friends of the Newport Beach
Public Ubrary Used Book
Store needs to replenish its
book stock. Patrons are urged
to bring ln unwanted books.
With the exception of law
books or magazines, all dona·
tions -hardcover and paper·
beck -are welcome and are
tax-deductible. Books may be
left at any of the three branch
libraries -Balboa, Mariners
or Corona del Mar. They aiso
can be left in the special book
cla&et next to the store at 1000 ·
Avocado Ave. Information:
(949) 759-9667.
FREE REPORT Reveals The 9
•~tDeaGyMwtakeaYouCan
Make If You Rave Been ~ured Or
Ill An Accident ••• How Simple
Auto Accident• Can Turn Into
Llfeloq Pain And SufTerlJlll
~--!......· " --~--
lbe Newport Beach New-
comers Club meets at 10 a.m.
the thlrd Wednesday oJ..each
month at different homes.
The group of about 100
women go on the l"08_d and
play goU, tennis, bridge and
more. The group alJo holds
several evening parties. Infor-
mation: (949) 854°"'501.
Jewish fmlly Sentce of
Orange County spomon a
discustion group focusing on
lauea, a>DC9IDI and l'8lpOll-
libilitlel ot adult Children car-
ing for their~ puw:lts at 1~3o p.m. 'Ibiedayw at 250 E.
Baker St, COiia Mele. 1be
~ ol tbe1 group ii to
belp Cbildrm and Olber" COO·
,..ce1-mec1..-nilatlfte ktenWy
protMms Uld mu. pd de'9lol> . apprapnate IOlu-
lkm. 11'be cmt ... l30. lrifor· matkJn: (714) 4'Ml5().
Daily Pilot
CLOSER
CONTINUED FROM 1
in NeWport Beach depends on
one's level of confid~ that
foUowing the dty's plan will
make for a pleasant future.
To SOllle aitics, the notion
that the general plan will pro-
tect the dty from overdevelop-
ment sounds more than a little
naive .. You only need to watch
the flashing taillights, they say,
tQ get a different picture of
where the dty is heading.
A SIMPLE Pl.AN Sus8n Caustin, co-founder
of the group Stop the Dunes
Hotel, which intends to support
a referendum against the 470-
room hotel and 31,000-square-
foot conference'tenter pfoject if
it is approved by the City
Coundl, said a major problem
with the plan is it seems to get
reworded to accommodate the
demands of big developments.
·we don't seem to stick with
the general plan that much,·
she said ·1rs more of a guide-
line.'
'Phe proposed DU!les pro-
ject, Caustin says, is a case in
point. It's taller than the version
of the development permitted
in the planning guidelines.
And its conference center was
never mentioned in the original
specifications for the project.
But the Dunes is hardly the
only development that pushes
the boundaries of the plan. Qty
records show that entitlement
for Fashion Island expansion
was increased by 266,000
square feet in 1994; the Four
Seasons Hotel room was
allowed in 1998 to add 100
rooms more than the plan
RAISE
GONTINUED FROM.1
r8aDy pleased," Patterson
Saic1 •But I think we'd still
Uke to go higher. OUr tar-
get is to be· comj>etitive
with other rommunity col-
lege diltlidl in the munty .•
The latest increase is
·combined with Gov. Gray
Davis' 4.17% rost-of-liv-
ing increase approved
earlier this month.
~ Pan .. time faculty mmn-
bers are not included in
the latest pey boost but
moet likely will beoome
eligible when negotiations
for tbe&r 2000-01 contract
begins, Patterson said .
. i 'If~ tbeina'eae
goal .. eaect this fall.
•The teeCben have
worked really bard to cm-
trlbute to the growth ol this . district.· Mid nna BrUn-
tng, teec:bers union preli-
dent ·nus illustrates our
banl work.• 1be cUstrict.
wbkb this year had 30,396
full-time students -thole
· ~ at least 15 units -
bU not paitldpated in the
g"1Wtb fund silM:.'8 1994.
1be diltl1ct bad 28.846
full-Ume lttidents durtng
1998-99.
allowed, and Corona del Mar
Plaza tn 1995 boosted both its
square footage entitlement and
managed to change its land
usage designation from a gov-
ernmental/educational dassifi-
cation to ooe for retail and com-
merd.al space.
. .
"' Some of~ projects from
tM last decade that have
obtained ge~ral plan
amendments:
• Newport Beach Library,
1992, entitlement
Increased by 15,000 square
feet
•Pascal Restaurant. 1993,
entJtlement Increased by
1,$)80 square feet
• Fashion Island, 1994, entl--
tlement Increased by
· 266,000 square feet
• PacTel, 1994, entitle-
ment increased by 90,600
..
. "
square feet; land use
redeslgnated
• Temple Bat Vahm,J996,
entitlement increased by
40,000 square feet
•Four Seasons Hotel. 1998,
100 rooms added to entitle-
ment
•vou only have to look as far
as Westwood or Century aty to
see what happens when a gen-
eral plan ls altered and altere<t
and altered,• Caustin said.
"You end uP losing all of your
open space, and the only place
to go is up.' Totlll trips generlrted per My ~In the city of ,Newport Beac:h
BEST-CASE SCENARIO
On the other band, the fact
that a development is some-
what different from what is
specified in the city's plan does
not necessarily make it a bad
thing for the city. ·
Planning Commission
Chairman Ed Sellch has
argued that the Dunes project,
as it now stands, is superior to
that specified in the general
plan. If it weren't, he said, he
wouldn't support il
For one thing, the project
should theoretically ~enerate
fewer traffic trips than the one
originally proposed. Instead of
3,989 daily trips p.roduCed in
the old plan, the center would
add only 3,600 to the flow at
Coast Highway, said Rich
Edmonston, the city's traffic
engineer.
"That [old) project doesn't
meet the needs of the city, the
needs of the community or the
needs of Newport Dunes,• said
RoPert Gleason, a spokesman
for Evans Hotels.
Development is also impor-
tant from the perspective of
revenue, and though it might
be easy to dismiss a project
because it doesn't follow guide-
lines sbictly, it's not so easy to
dismiss the tax money the pro-
ject might generate.
·Revenue shouldn't be the
first thing on the list of criteria"
used to evaluate a develop-
ment, said Councilwoman Nor-
ma Glover, •but it should be
high on the list. ·r would love to sit down
(with development critics! and
say, 'You tell me what kind of
city you want, and I'll tell you
what kind of revenue we need
to run this city, and I'll tell you
where we Jo.llleet.' And that
should be ofu plan.•
STICKING TO THE Pl.AN
A more challenging issue
has to do with the way New-
port eea·ch will look -even if
no alterations are made to the
planning guidelines -when it
reaches its projected maximum
density.
Although all of the available
land is allocated for one use or
another, not all of it is as dense
as could be.
DIVORCE WIZARDS ~
• Mec:IJation Scrvioes
• Paralegal Services
• California Oilld/Spousal Support
Guidelines <t>JSSOMASIBlO~
I 1 ,• 'I h22 1-.:;o
li,26 2010 Cprojectedl
803,498 972,049
Total increase in trips: 21%
..
·111e general plan is going
to allow another 20% for what's
already there,• Caustin said.
•for every person [in Newport
Beach today), you can add
another one.•
Patricia Temple, the city's
planning director, said she
could not confirm the 20% fig-
ure cited by Caustin, but she
noted there is still plenty of
room to grow.
"The existing development
on the ground is not not gener-
ally maximized. based on what
the general plan allows: she
said. ·we have intensification
potential in most of otu older
on-street ~mmercial districts.·
Areas that could become
more dense, Temple said,
include Corona del Mar,
Mariners· Mile, Old Newport
Boulevard, Campus Drive near
the airport and regions on the
Balboa Peninsula.
What that mea.n,s in terms of
specific traffic levels is hard to
predict. · By 2010, the city
expects to see 972,049 daily
5ouftl9:
city of Newport Beach
trips generated from within
the city, a figure about 21 %
higher than the 1996 level. But
these numbers do not include
traffic originating outside of
the city.
THE CRYSTAL BAU. Of TRAFFIC
How precise these numbers
are is tough to say. Planning
models in general are only
somewhat accurate, and Tem-
ple said traffic planning is par-
ticularly complex.
"They are not absolutely
guaranteed, rock-solid predic-
tors of what's going to happen
in the future,• she said. "It's all
based on a very long chain of
estimates and assumptions
about what's going to happen.•
Add to that built-in vagueness
and the additional modifica-
tions that tweak the limitations
of the general plan, and only
one thing seems absolutely cer-
tain: The Newport Beach of the
future will be bigger, denser
and triclder to get aroWld.
You can plan on il
Now 1 n Prolf'_ess
Stit1ings from 30% to 70%
~.July 17, 2000 7
CELEBRATING THE MILLENNIUM
JOHN
AIR
Corona del Mar
• One of the original cross country gurus, he formed
the foundation for Corona del Mar High's success.
Richard Dunn
DAILY PILOT
A walking, talking • history book of
Or,ange County
cross country ano track and field,
veteran coach John Blair is a
pioneer of sorts and also the first
to carry the victory torch for
Corona del Mar High. Once
known as ·smokey the Blair•.
during his athletic days at BYU
in the 1950s, the longtime area
guru was ahead of his time in a
runner's world and, in addition,
helped pole vaulters make huge
strides in the early 1960s.
Blair, who implemented ideas
for road running event$ before
the term 10K or SK rare became
specialty sport took off at Kaiser.
A year later, Blair made a
foam-rubber landing pit for the
pole vaulters, but got a letter in
the· mail demanding that he
•cease and dismiss• the use of it,
because it was •infringing upon
patent rights" from an individual
who supposedly invented the
Port-a-Pit
That man, named Wally
Gordon, just happened to be the
same guy who attended BYU
with Blair and wore a costume
while serving as the Cougars'
mascot.
•I called lUm up and asked,
•Are you Cosmo the Cougar?'
And sure enough it was ... and I
said, ·wen, I'm Smokey the
Blair,• ' said Blair, common, started the
famous Corona del Mar PUn Run that served as
the, origin of the
Orange County
running boom in the
1970s, then later
launched other events,
ruch as the Around the
Back Bay in May Race.
r3'::l~~~I who soon became reacquainted with his
old college classmate
and was given the
green light to use the
foam rubber landing
pits.
·111e long-distance
running scene in the
'60s was almost
nonexistent,. said
Blair, who org~
JobnBlatr
Blair and his wife
also started a race
T-shirt business out of
their garage, which is
still in operation today.
·we make all the race
designs,• said Blair, the
some of the county's first road
races when UCI opened its doors
in the mid-60s, a set of runs
called, simply, the UCI Road
Races. Blair, who retired from
teaching Jn 1995 following a
series of heart surgeries but
remains at Corona del Mar as an
assistant track coach, was the
first to create age-group divisions
in five-ye8.I' increments at road
races and the first ta include a
di\rision for 200-pound runners.
·1 was always over 200 ·
pounds,• said Blair, who also
formed the Newport Beach
Runners Association in the late
'10s, which, at times, had over
400 members.
A former baseball pitcher with
a nasty curveball, Blair
graduated from BYU in 1958,
managed a retail store for two
yean, then began his teaching
and coaching career at Upcoln
Junior High in Bakersfield,
where he stayed for one year.
HiS track teams won everything ln sight, but his wife, Colleen,
bad a hard time living in the ;warm, dry climat01
• So Blair moved his family to Costa Mesa in 1961 41;1d took aver the Physicel Education
J>epartment at Ka.iser School,
~ a junior high, and remained
there for four years, building a
'track and tleld super power.
, · ln the spring of '62, Blair
dllcovered that the father of one
of bis students made fishing
polM out of fiberglass at hil shop m Colta Mesa. Soon thereafter,
~poles for pole vaulting :.wse being made and the
latest honoree in the
Daily Pilot Sports Hall of Fame.
Blair's biggest impact on the
track world might have come at
Corona del Mar, where he
became the school's cross
country and track coach in 1965
-following his stint at Kaiser.
For 18 years, CdM produced .
dominant track and cross country
teams under Blair, who was
assisted by Jim Tomlin, who later
became head coach and was , •
assisted by Blair.
•we had a lot of success, but I
never really paid much attention
(to statistics and wins and
losses),• he said.
ln 1990, Blair began a
four-year tenn on the board of
the National Rules Committee
for high school aoss country and
track and field, and in '93 served
on the U.S. men's national track
team at the World University
Games.
Blair, also a longtime track
and football official and
basketball refeiee, graduated
from Glendale Hoover High in
1952 and played baseball for one
year at USC under Rod
Dedeaux. but was forced to
transfer to Pasadena City
College for academic reason,..
Blair toiled Jn semipro
baseball for a couple of yean,
then eventually landed at BYU,
where he played ba.leball for
three yea.rs .•
Blair and his wife have been
married for 43 years. They have
six children (five deugbten and
one son) and 21 ~
•we're a good o1 Mormon • family,. he said.
Stuart-Collins fall in semiftnals
at USTA National Hard COUrts ·n••
Daily Pilot
Newport Harbor High'• dumaplon Sanon cel~ate with tbe Tower of London in the background after
sweeping tbe competltlon tn Europe to a>mplete their grand slaJn of high school d ub saWng. Prom left:
Amy Halvorsen, Meredith Potter, Paige Thompson. 'fyler Haskell; Gary Grimes and Coa.ch BWy Uniack.
Not pictured 11 ScOtt Hogan. who had departed for another champlonsblp regatta ln France.
TRIPLE C:RO • N
The Saildrs travel to
England and win the
International High School
Team Racing Regatta
Championship.
Who better than a school
nicknamed the •Sailors" tQ win
an international sailing event in
Oxford, England?
Newport Harbor High, fresh off
the U.S. High School Team Racing
Nationals May 20-21 in Norlolk,
Va., went to England and won the
International High School Racing
Championship Regatta July 4-5.
"It was a lot of fwramtl was
glad to be a part of it.• Coach Billy
Uniack said. "The English people
loved us". They were actually very
happy that we were victorious."
Sixteen tea.ms sailed the two-day
regatta in Laser Ils, a two-person
boat, on the Parmoor Reseivoir.
The Newport club. team was
comprised of three skipper-aew
combinations: team captain senior
tYler Haskell, seniors Paige
Thompson and Scott Hogan, junior
Amy Halvorsen and sophomores
Meredith Potter and Gery Grimes.
Playing in someone else's
SAILING
backyard, Newport bad to play
under some different rules, which
took some time to get used to.
In international competition,
the skipper and crew positions are
rotated between the pairs after
each race, unlike back in µie states,
where skippers and crew stay the
saJile.
Also, the British's starting
sequence was tougti to get used to,
but one Newport figured it out, the
Sailors aced the last nine races and
qualified for the semiflnals.
•1t took a while to get our heads
on straight,• Uniack said. •But
once we did, we were fine."
In the semlflnaJs, Newport took
on the defending champions and
heavy favorites, Sevenoaks, from
southeast London.
With three boats on each side,
points are awarded for how each
boat fi.nlsbes. The school with the
lowest score is the winner.
In the best-of-two race
competition. both Newport and
/ Se'O'enoab were tied in points.
Newport advanoed on the
tiebreaker ~e by winning the
final race.
• "That was our toughest
challenge by far,• Uniack said.
•Once we got past them, we knew
we would win.•
And win they did, easily
handling the Irish championship
team from Scull, Ireland. In both
races, Newport finished 1-2-3.
According to Uniac:k. the win
sealed the Sailolj' varsity record as
the best for any"filgh school in
history. They won every competition
they entered, except one.
The winning races include the
Anteater Regatta, Rose Bowl
Regatta, Gaucho Regatta, Pacific
Coast Championships, West Coost Baker Qualifier, Mallory National
CMmpionsbip 1\'ophy and the
Baker National Team Racing
Championship. They were
runner-up in the cardinal Regatta.
Following the competition. the
team toured London !or three days,
before beading beck to America,
where they were greeted with a
tremendous ovation at LAX.
"If they wanted to, anyone in
this group can go very far in this
sport',• Uniaclc said. •Whether it's
college, or Olympics or even the
America's Cup. Anything'• possible
with this group .•
-by Toay Altobelll .
,,
sectionaJs next for Newport
• NHBA Bronco just misses
against potent FounWD V(llley.
but 12-1 victory over Anaheim
'B'·assures berth at section.all.
. ' ~0a~;-~_Pi_~----~----------------__.;..----~.~p{)llfS~--------------------~-Mondo)t---,-Ju~~-'1-.2000~_9
BASEBALL Newport Jumped out to a 3-0
first-inning lead. Alec MuUriez
hit ao RBI ling)e. Dustin SdwJer
and H\int also bad RBll lD that
Inning.
I
b&Mman miued, and Pruter Newport
llOOled. Schuler later came home Buda
Oil • wild pUch. Coantry
With fountain Valley stag-Chab'1 Uh!a
loored twice in the bottom of the Newport scored four tim• in
the seventh inning to put an
"clamatioo polnt OQ the win.
Yacko led ol1 with a single, fol·
lowed by a double by tleenan.
After Billy .Munce walked, a
ground ball by Martinez brought
Yacko home. ScbuleT later blt a
two-run double, and be aoor9d
on anenor.
gered. Newport k8j1t its oppo-hole aflef'
nent's powertul hitters lo check.
MftDth to esc.ape. 7-6. . Fountain Valley did chip away at tome maJo.r
the detidl u ICOJ'ed Uuee times duUlgel. If Newport held on to that
game, it would have guaranteed
at least a No. l seed tn the Sec-
~. It also would have faced
Los Alamitos, a team u beat once
before ln the Flab Pry Tourna-
ment, In the final game for the
right tb skip the sectionals and
move on to the Zone Touma-
in the ftnt. end once in the third 1be Jones
ol1 three enon. Newport put up Cup fteld
two NDI in the thlrd to take a 6-wW be one
3 lead. as Hunt and Davis Pem-of ..__ .,.__. stein ling)ed and llCOJ'ed. .... ... _
•we feel that we could play to try tt ouL
with anybody 11 we get good
pitcbing and play good defense,•
Manager Heenan said. •1 was
actually worried about O\ll'
ol1enae, but we bit weU. We Just
made some defensive mistakes.·
ment .
Despite the near-miss, New-
port got what it wanted. a road
trtp to Moreno Valley. It's S«-
tiooal opener is on Friday, 5:15
p.m. against a Riverside repre-
sentative. Newport will make it's
first trtp ever to the Sectionals as
Orange County's No. 3 team.
"This is a l)ig deal, more so for
our kids.• Newport Manager
Kevin Heenan said. "They've
uver made U this Car before.
They made U to the Regionals,
but they never went to the sec-
tionals. They really worked bard
for tbia, and I can't think of any
team that deserves it more. I
tbJnk we'll be a team to contend
with in the tournament•
Newport took any drama
about whether it would qualify
for the Sectionals by hammering
Anaheim "B. • Newport's potent
offense put up the runs, but it
was starting pitche r Dennis
Heenan who took away any
chance Anaheim had.
He pitched a no-bitter for 5113
innings before he gave up a sin-
gle in the si:xtb. It was the only hit
be gave up in sbc iruungs of work.
He was helped by a solid
defense, especially tro'm infield-
ers Kurt Yacko, Donny Hunt and
Blake Pogg. Heenan only
allowed three balls out of the
Lofield.
In the game, Heenan went 3
for 4 at the plate with two dou·
blee. Schuler went 3 for 5 with
three RBis. H\Dlt also had three
bits. Yacko, Martinez, Schuler,
Pemstein, Nick Frazier and nm
Cramer all had a bit. · ·
Newport was forced to play
for survival on Sunday morning
because of a.a agonizing loss to
Fountain Valley the previous day.
Newport led unW the winning
run aossed the plate in the bot·
tom of the seventh.
Fountain Valley, wbicb some
observers' peg as the favorite to
win the Pony League World
Championship, looked like any-
thing but a contender as It shock ..
ingly committed five errors in the
first mning.
Tb.at helped Newport put up
four runs in the first inning, all
with two outs. Munce got New-
port's rally started when be
reached on an enor. Martinez
then followed with a single. lbat
moved Munce to third and fie
scored on a pas~ ball.
The next Newport batter, Fra-
zier. was aided by two errors by
the tbJ.rd baseman. He bit a high
chopper which the thud base-
man erroneously deterred to the
pitcher, who didn't make the
play.
That put runners on first and
third. Schuler then singled in a
run. The next batter, Hunt, bit a
sharp gp>under that the third
Once fountain Valley put its
ace pitcher, Jeff Hann, in, it abut
Newport down. fountain Valley
scored OJ)Ce in the sixth to cut
Newport's lead to 6-5, and It did·
n't waste any time loading the
bases in the seventh.
With the bases loaded, Bran-
den Lawsoo was walked, and
that brought home the tying run.
Hann then bit a chopper that got
through the infield, and that
scored the winning run.
Though the loss stung imme-
diately afterward, Newport
immediately came back and
qualified for the Secbonals the
next morning.
"Our kids came back very
well fTom that loss,· Heenan
said. "lbat was a very tough loss,
but they didn't dwell on It, and
they played well (Sunday) morn-
ing.•
In the Regional third-place
game on Sunday afternoon,
Newport lost to Garden Grove, 9-
4. Newport had an early 3-0 lead
before Gatden Grove put up stx
runs lo three innings.
Heenan went 3 for 4 in the
game, and Pemstein was 2 for 3.
With both teams guaranteed a
spot in the Sectionals, that game
was for seeding purposes only.
.,_ .... -• o"L ""'-! .. ~ .. ,., ,., ___ , t~ ... :~,1~ .... ,.~ ,!..P
. I! ,f~ .. .-~~·\,t.f_
from the COU(t clertt.
~for"" P9tm-:
C. TUCKER CHEADU,
E.lq.. a-.. G8nwtt 6 Helton, UP,
4°'1 MecAttNlr llVd.,
Ste. HO, Newport
leedl, CA t2'IO
Publlahed Ntwpor1
Beach-Co1t1 M111
Delly PiloC July 17. 21,
24, 2000
MF897
ferH, u required by
Sec. 24073 of the eu.i-
ntll and ProlMllona
code. "" lhe OOl llidel. lion for the traNter of
the buslr-. and ....
It lo be paid arty "'* tM trantfef hU been ~bythe~ ment of Alcohollc
Bel/wage Control.
Dattd: .My 7, 2000
ANDACOA
INTERNATIONAL. INC., A CA. CORP
ly: fl/ DAVID CHtU, p,..ldent
fl/ OUADIV SINGH 1ANDHU Demencl Note to be
cancMd and~
by a Not. and Secul1ly ~and DMd of
T Nit at tilt cioff of escrow provided 111 c:r.-or clailrnl of ~
or equal swtorttY l\aYe been Atlsfled In llC>
cordenct with Section 2407'4 of IN bullnMI
and Ptof 11'c 11 code. LA 044ae8
Publ heel
8HCh· It
Delly Piiot
tefelt which hU bffn
IXl9led '° fie tax rol for lhe cumnt fllc9I year1 ~ ur1*d balanot OI pg lhe ap-
pl le redemption
prnum,~~:w dent .~
duded penaltltl, In·
..,... and ooeta. (d) the
Mlmlted COii of celllng
bonde. (•) lntef9ll kl the dtt• of ed. uni.a In·
dUded In (1) llbo¥e and
m • Wllblt '" for tie OClll d ........ Ill
the~ and lhe ~ ldYance r•
tlrlment d bondl. In addition to tile ••
eMllT\tnl to pey !tie
ooata of lxpenNI of lhe ~to be llO-• owrllr9 ol rMI
property within lhe M· 1.-nent Distrtct .,.
~ to • eeperal• end llddltional .....
menl to be leYled -rlUllly to pey for oo.ia noc otherwlH relm-bur.t whlctl wll reeull from lhe edmlnlltrltlon
and coltc:tion of ...... rnent1 or from the ad-ministration or regis-
tration d wr, · we cillled
bonds. DATED: .Mf 12. 2000.
~cw ITMITS crTY CW NEWPORT HACH
STAU CW CALWOR-NIA Published Newport
Be1ch-Co1t1 Meu
Olly Piiot .My 17, 24,
2000
M901
. ' ~; .... · ...... ...... • L. i ,. tJTf I ...
BRW4P08UOA
/DALY PLOT
GOLF champion was taken, instead. The p.ro-am is
designed for one staff member and one )nale
amateur. CONTINUED FROM 8
over SSOO forfeits his amateur status. The
prizes for an ace on the othe.r par-3 holes at
Newport Beach Country Club are less than
$500 -a set of Ping irons, a Titanium driver
and $250 pro shop gift certificate.
"I think 7-or 8-under will win it,•
predicted Hahn, who is nursing a sore lower
back, but is still planning to tee it up with
Kraft.
"You're going to force me out of
retirement,• Manos said of the event, created
by the Daily Pilot to promote golf in the area
and bring the golf community closer together
for a day of fun, while crowning a club team
With the reallty of the Jones Cup, it
completes a three-year-old dream of
organizing a men's club golf championship
within the Daily Pilot's readership.
champion. •
Furthermore, Newport Beach Country
Club, liost of the Toshiba Senior Classic on
the Senior PGA Tour in late winter, also
hosted.the inaugural Tea Cup Classic in
1997.
The Jones Cup will also be the first
tournament outside of the Newport Beach
Co\intry Club auspices to play the remodeled
18th green, which reopens Tuesday.
"The clubs have been able to grow closer
together because of (the Tea Cup Classic},•
Anderson said.
"I'm glad you're doing (the Jones Cup)
now." said the 60-year-old Daley, "because
we've got some new players there (at Mesa
Verde), and !,.don't know if I can three-peal
There's increased competition.·
•Any ti.me the clubs can get together for
a nice little outing is great. We don't do that
enough."
At Newport Beach, 82 members carry a
handicap index of 9 or lower, Anderson said,
and there were early discussions at the club
about an in-house qualifying tournament for
Jones Cup representation. But the men's club
The first Jones Cup will take place two
weeks prior to the fourth annual Tea Cup
Classic, hosted by Big Canyon Country Club
on Aug. 11.
A perpetual Jones Cup trophy will be
presented to the winning club and displayed
throughout the year. A sizable gallery is
foreseen. Ad.mission is free.
'~ .-~-,,;..~ ~.~. • '-'"'J' ~ 1 ~ . ~; .. ,, J l ~ • •. .I
N011C& or Taus. NOTICE OF • PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE
Tll'S SAi.£ nu. 0... PUBLIC HEARING NOTICE OF SALE NOTICE OF SALE Ne •• 2UJm21 'n-NOTICE IS HEREBY Notice 11 hereby given Notice 11 htftby QIWll ia:. 5* Ne. · 76-111'76-GIVEN that e publlc pursuant to sections pursuant to HC1lon1 l "-No .. 212l0'2-17-'-amg wil be held by 3071 ·and 3072 ol tilt 3071 end 3072 ot the
917179 IMPOll'TANT 1M Co.ta Meta City CM1 Code ol lht Stale ol CMI Code ol the State ol
N011C& TO ,.OP-Cooocll on Monday. AAJ-Califomit the under-Califomla the under-
D'IY OWND: YOU g·_. 7 2000 et &·30 ~· ed. SANTA ANA s~. SANTA ANA ... ., IN DEFAULT -t:IN· -· ' ' . ,._ p.m. or u eoon ther• NG wil ... 11 put>. T NG will Mii at put>.
OEJl A DEED Of 11ter u poeelble, In \tie lie auction, ti 1022 E. he suction, al 1022 E.
T1tUST, DATED Apnl Council Ctiam1>111 of Cl\estnut, Santi Ana, Chestnut. Sant• Ana,
26. 19'J. UNLESS YOU ,. .... Hall n Ftlr Dttve Cal. 92701 It 9:00 am Cal. 92701 at 9:00 am TAK£ ACTION 10 PR(). ""'' ' ' _,,... YOUR PROP· Com~ Mnalt-·.· on the fol. on Jdy 28, 2000, the lot-on J\Jy 28. 2000, the fol-, .,._ • .,., lowing dt9ctlbed prop. lowing deacnbtd prop.
£.lTY. IT MAY BE NNING APPUCA-erty to wit. efty to wl1
SOU> AT A PUBLIC TION PA·99-40A and Yea1 2000, Make Year: 1997 Make:
SALE. IF YOU NEED TENTATIVE TRACT DODGE. license r: FORD, llcenH t AN EXPLANATION OF MAP T-15882. Roltnd 4JFJ278, State· CUf 5L83S41, State. Caltf
ntE NAT\Jll£ OF ntE Phillipp, Standtrd Pt· VINI VINt PlOCEEDING AGAJNST cilic HomH 1532& 2&4GP44R5YR813790 1FTOFt7W8VNC13899 YOU, YOU SHOULD Alton Paricway. ltvlne, Said Ille It for the Said tale 11 for the
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POAA TION • u daly Coeta Mesa, tor 1 IMS· geclltf w1tt1 C091a ol ed-gether with com ol ed-...-..S i.-er llnllc1 ter plan to oonllruc1 69 Yel'lislng and e~ vtftiaing and txPt,_
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Tn111 ~ May 7 • toorn. on a _. Ille Dated this 7111 day of Oai.d he 71tt day ol
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t).OJ067'2. u Offical proximately 12 acrN. ISi Jaen M Noutaty ISi .Jten M Noulary ~c ... .!. ~~~ 00~ with an admlnlttretlve Published Newport Published Newport -~, ......,,_ adju___. to .... _ a 8HCh·Co1t1 M•H 811ch-Co11a Meu NIA c-,. SCIR or ......... • ........ California. CAecuced by bus bey IO enc:roech 7 Deily Piiot Jdy 17, 2000 Dally Pio( Jlity 11, 2000
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PUKIGBHUESTC AB~CTIONODEl ~ Negative Dederatlon. &.Ye F. Sharpe, 2040 CA 92653
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...... Mii odlll:r COi111110G It* Newport Mon Pamfay, IN!nt, .... -· if~= BHch-Cotla Meu CA 11i909 ,.._ 1601 Daly Plot ~ 17, 2000 Ben tMI. 18509 Myra
sir.. c-Maa, CA I Mi02 Ln., Cemloa. CA 90703 92626 Seid .... wtll lie .....___ •• _.____ Th9 bullr'.MI la oon-...... IM ..,..,. ciove-.-. .. u._ -~ by: en lndMcLlll -or wunElf, upias ......... ,,...,. Havt YoU started
flt .......... ,....,...,.... The ~ ~ b&lllr'-Y9C7 No C:: • ,.," .. .--~A~NO ve-:o. 8:. ":,..,..,. ... ~=-~-= 18800 MeoAltlUr IM1. !lad .... .. Coul'lty "'-'""' ..I ----• 300, IMne, Clilfor· a.. of ar..... ~ -... ,,_.... nlll llC!812 on rtflOllt/lf/lf .. ....... .... • ..... ~ ·431 lllllllMll
....... la .. llMIU). Hallcftope /we., Caw ~ Plot -10, 17, .. .-.. 'ii ..Y .,..._ del M.,, CaHtomla MJJ. 2QllQ Wt4 ................. 92925
.... ....... .. •• 8111 °"'1elt. 5411 ,_. ol .. ,.._ liK Rincon 1MOt1 PaB
• --_.... •el Ill D!Ma, Venua, Cellor-._ " ....... ,. nlll lil001
Flc:tltloue Bualneu Name Statement .
The following l**)nl
.,. doing~ -CaliforniaTru111 com.
2660 E Coal Hlghw9y. .Coront Del Mar, CA
92525 eotoma emi. Plan-
ning LLC, (CA). 2660 E .
Coast Highway, Coront
Del Mat. CA 92825
This butlntll .. 000-
dUcted by .• Umlttd u.
blllty Co
Have you tterted
~~~
ning LLC. Michtel S.
Harrn1, Prtttdtnt
This 1\attrnent WU
flied with tht County
C1e1tc o1 cnnoe County
on 06f30f2000
2000613320t
Dally Pilot Jdy 1 o. 17,
24. 31. 2000 M896
F1cOOou8 BuslMSa tum. Stmtement
The followlng pef'IOnl are doing~• Budazzled. 31 2
l.IJgonia St.. Newport
Beac:tl, CA 92893
Dena Joy Polloc:lc. 31 :loo
lugonia St. Newport
Beecti. CA 92983 This bulinMI It 000-
ctlded by an lndMdual
Have you 1tarted
doing bullrlelll ~ No Dane Joy Polocit This 1tatement wu
filed with the County
Clertt ol Oninge Colny on~ 2000MS07st
Oaify PiloC JIN 29, .My
3. 10. 17. 2000 M872
......, . --• .. ,,. ......,... .. oon-
..... 01. ~Illy:·~ Dm; ,_ 27 • .0 lri penlel ... :.I D. ~ Hewe you ..._. ~~~.--=.~-...... =, ••
.. 111 ••... ,, ,. AS SAID ftUS-TNe 11111 ,.,. w I' cc.olAft ell'-... ..., .. Qlwl1W
191 DMI l'OIDIA. :-o:~ QMllf == CA........... 1111111•1 Frr:::. t:-.. 'i.Mn",±11-..::::===:::::...!
Rain 1iud ilHdli~ are •ubjfrt to eh•u~
wi1hou1 notict-. Tht llUblillhtt ~the rWit •W cen1i<>r, m-lu.tily. l"\M.'!fl or n'jcct
11ny du.~lfll'd athf'ft~~ut. Plea~ report
any emw tlmL uwr. l>f' in your c!M&ifird 11d
immt'(lhtrl'ly. Tier Daily Pilot ACC't{>fS no
UahiliLy for any rnw in ln at,lv~ntnt
for whu·h iJ m11y lie ~bwlr CJCt"t'f>t for
tht' t'Oiil of the ~(' awaallv occllf)ieJ b)
tlw emir. Grffiit r.an ouly he llllowetl ror the
flni1 in.11tnion.
• I •II •• ••• • 21• ----
* NEW HOllES * ONLY 3 LEFT II OUallly bl.ill dltlc:hed
*IOlt lllmtf homes In E.atlllde. Gl'MI Floor Plen '= 211().2220 Sf IMH45-6345,
* NEW HOMES * ONLY 3 LEFT II au..y tdl dlllcllld
£=~'=~ 1::!~
('Side DupMx. 1141.000
Oood cond., ic... price in
C.MJ Cal lot more i'llo; Eal1
Ta)b, 9= MH42_.722
... , ~ -
...
ByPlr•e
(949) M2·M7R
By.MaMllPen•••
:}:10 Wt"SC a.,, Street
Cmta ~esa, CA 9'.l627
At Nnport Dini " e.,. 1!1
. . .,_ ..
•V.A.• l."·:D W"' "DI ·-··IMll nll ~UNG
FMI UST~ HOMES
HUONAREPOS
7f 4-IJ4.llOO
·.1 111 ;,q11 .. ; I .hll
,----~~ .. -.-; I . .
Udo .... Qw"*'ll 21W -furn home, to. Piilo. 2c o.!i ~(11mo~• On!Jdy. !QI. 94 I fl
ILUffl CONDO 38r
UBI. 2c trldoltcl gnga. 1350tl, complataly ,..
bbilhtd. It 80Mieo. t yeer ,...,, f4H1tOm
1·.:111
[~~ ~· -. I
•• ---+
130 East 17th St Suite ·c
Costa Mesa
N Ntwport & 17Jh
behind Hllp Inn
(949) 722-8586
Oldtt Stwlt ,.....
ftlANOSt.~ ·~·........._ ....... _.Ola,_
.. CAlftPQ) .. _,.... ..... ._
WI 9UY ISTATU
·~~-'
COtJSIGWHrJTS
Monday ................. Friday 5:00pm
Tue&day .............. Monday S:OOpm ·,
Wedn~y ......... Tuetiday 5:00pm
Bame
'lrltµhoJ1e 8:30um-S:OOpm
Mowia~·~
Walk-In 8::JOam~:OOpm ~loud.,-t'ridiiy
Thunday .. : .... Wednesday S:OOpm
Friday ............... Thursday S:OOptn
•
.-..~pupe,4
mei.. 5 ""' 531Xk4>. View companyonthewtbb.com/d OQt/mltltf.html Cal 9'!=951·2119
EARN Legal College
Otgru QUICKL YI
Bachelor'• Maatar'•
Oocloratt by cor·
raepondlnct butcl upon
Pl1or ~don. •i!ptMnct and~· FIN catalog. Std Unl¥=-rr HI. 24 . 'ICAHI
Saturday ............... Friday S:OOpm
IOOt(KEEPER: Needed
lftwMcllatly '°' Alditectln llrm In Lagooa Beldl, FIT.
~~~· Sri Aec9. Ell!> WNIQ:IQ Pro,, ~
nee. Phone 949-497-7297 Fu , ... IMM97-n74
I . .
..,, "
DOT OONSOUDATIONI ~=~~ Same d1y approvel
t.f7M8M181 XfOO or
vltll our wtbalte e
www.~com
(CAl:ICANl
HOMEOWNERS WITH ~DfT wotrlte mey now LlolMtd °' not ... ,. ~ CIUtlllY lot lolnl. llOWI EAA ~ & Stonee11ll11'i a dfrtct
ol Hlnlngton Bead! "'* tNt can 1111 Yoll pty lot yoJI .... • Ml .. lltlCnl Ind ..-m QIVtyou lrM ~ obllg1tlon. Call ~5381 !!t 119 1-100~100-1242 •xt. * ICAl'ICANI
iii
... ... 7
IMW Z3 .•
2.8 Ur, 1711 I.Ilea, co
(W'.)(297} $29.995 CAtVIER BMW .. 714=!!t-S171
OOMihi ... tt ......... .. Gr . ---· ......... 14'!..~ sw1 za .,,,,..-.=., IUClt ......
..
..
•
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,
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. •
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JAOUNt XJI ... IEDAN 40 lA DISCOVERY 'W aa.-....,.. All tha '°"' ready '° go! BAUER JAGUAR ts.34~ 119,}50
71WSMIOO LANO ROVER
NEWPORT BEACH
, JAGUAR XJI W H~S
8EDNC 40
~UEA JAGU~ LA DISCOVERY '99 71~--.. _,,"""' 141( ""· power11 ---~ $31,850
JEEP CHEROKEE 't3 LAHO ROVER COUNTirf Fronc end tow ·NEWPORT BEACH
pkg w.'low bar lor UM w/ -~t4_..M40-l44'-'~'-'-"'$--
moiof home. PIW P/locb, LA DISCOVERY '97 PIS, P/8, NC, ~ CIM, 8 cyl, x1n1 cond, 1111 w!I, f~, MK ml,
4WO, ntw llm, l>fak... H527 t s11,tso
nU11er 1Y1Wn, Ind ca1a1y1ic LANO ROVER
Mefcldu hll ML.320 'M
l11lher/SWma11t
(004200) $33,990 FlE'rCHEA JONES
IOH274571
.... 9d11 a.ii E320 'IS
Whlt~tarmal1t (215588) $25,990
A.ETCHER JONES
IOM27457t conw, ftmpg B1ac1t oYlf NEWPORT BEACH
wi. m "*' *' & rwn !IOI( ---=H..:.::M4M4:..;:;;.;:;::..=::::::45:.....__ Mel c9d11 Benz E.ao. w
Iii. 351( li:IWld beth! "'*' Bladl/Slarmaltl hOmt p ,500 94t71t2330 lA DISCOVERY "17 (829194) $47,990 ~ _.._ ........... FlE'rCHEA JOH£S
--·' I00-927-3571 Tell Us About
YOUR
GARAGE
SALE!
In
CIASSIFIEDS
s:M,eeo ---==-=:.:..:=--LANO ROVER NEWPORT BEACH 94H4M445
lA ,..,.. Ao¥w ..
~·~
I.AHO ROVE.A
NEWPORT BEACH
94~5
r--.-.------~
1· •.•
~" ":. .. '
Mlrcedn ltnz lllLUO
4IO~
{Oee$48, 075387, 0624113,
~~-IOM27457t
_....._"1'1
IUnr, "'°• 1Hdld1 ...... ~!.·... 71t !!U•
lllroadae MO IL .. lklrglncly, ladllf, origlNI owner, 'Ale. low rnlea(jt.
121.900 94t7i3-ffl5
llllrc:uy ....... OS W
Auto, floor 111111, 13"
E Mlctl Aloyl. e<W40 .., ....
) 113.975
Kell Oroci, ~
llOUNTAINEEJI 41(4 ...
Sida lir blgl, rMM1Q1
Olnllr, co, IWYtrM pal1tllg lid. IOw l)lcg (XDJ34ef2f 124,1175
KM Oroci,
Uncoln-lhrcUfY
71'"6214110
llOUNTAMEA 4X4 '00 Pwr moonrool, eldt llr
begs. CO, Midi Aoclo, tow,
IMther. Homelink {YUJ00949) $31 ,545
Kan Grody
llneofn.MerclHJ 71W21·'110
Oldlmoblll eu.... ... GLS, 8 eyt., lllw, low dea, CD & moft, bllance 11'
WWI'.,~ rental! (340717) 114,988
NABERS
(714)540=t100
SATUftN SU 't3 40R. ..,, rnnrf & tnOl9I
(149840) $5,988
'4A8EAS (714)540:1100
*TOYOTA COAOUA 'M Mini condition, white,
4-«>or, 29,000 dis. 11111
under~()()()/ cbo.CAI~
..
TOP IN THI BIDDING
WF.ST
• AI0 6 o O IOI oKU • J963' SOUTH
•J7543 o A532 o A'964
•Vold
The bidctin : EAST ~WEST 10 ,_ JNr
i. :Z• 2NT ,_ ... Dbl .......
Openina lead: Three of•
hi rubber bridge. if you go down in a doubled contract. you lolt coin Of
the realm. hi duplicace peirs. 1 minus
acore could easily be iop on lhe
boerd. Consider this deal from an
UP'tlte New York loomamcnL
Nonh-South stole lhe hand' in the
auction. Once South could enter lhe biddina. even going two down dou-
bled in 1 sJ*1e contrac1 woold be an
eJ1cellen1 result since East· West ll"C
cold fot ~ DO enatlp, llCOrinJ M
least plus 600 iastield of ooJ y pkll •
500.
Welt'a dr-.dc underbid of ODO DO
lnlmp WU die root of Ibo debde. The sood blCennediaila and fit «< pmw.r'a IUit .. eaally wonh a point
0t two. makinJ even • forclna JWDP
IO two llO tnlmp,a IUlldoul. If Wat IS
awne to jumpDa lo • 1nm1p with onty 11 poiltl, ai ~ aJtau-
tive II ODe best oo die CtJreo.card ~L Ei~ actice would have
kept South from mterina the auc.tlon.
Al chi biddina ~seed. it was clear to Soulh thai~ held length in spades and IOIDe value&, IO enier •
ing the auction with two lplde$ ran
Yinually DO risk.
11 worbd out bea« lhan Soulh. Oerald Fried of Buffalo, N. Y., ever
expected. Weit led a club llJain'.st
three spadu doubled, ruffed 1n the
closed hand. 1be ace and king of hearu wen cashed and another club
Nft'ed. Aller cubina the ace of dia-
monds and ndfinJ I diamond in dummy, dec1-" ll'Umped I thud club
in hand and anocher diamond on lhe
!able.
• A fourth club ruff provided the
entry for declllrer lO lead another dia-
mond. When West ruffed wilh the ace. declarer bad 11 tneks and a
resuh to be proud of.
1-rm=11 -w=.11 -~1
~ 125 Sl ''7 SMr, VW llEEn.E W VW JETTA Gl 'ti rnr ~<!:.'~ bw $4~ ~ VOU<J'A~ Cc~A VOLKJ=
949-&4&-65681675-8092 .... 357.0118 ,., 357-0111
T~ 4 AllMlr '95 SAS VW CA8AIOLET •91 VW JmA K2 '18 ~1i.~::"· .!:: ~i Convt white, mull -1 (1113311 S10.9IO
949·37().711!5 Wottstr,~ l2500 MCKENNA VOLKSWAGEN l•l 357-0111
The Calif. Public·
Utllltlp-Com-
mtsslOn REQUIRES
that .. t.9ed l°IOUI&' hold goods mcMltS print their P.U.C.
Cll T runblr; lmol
and c:hau11era print
1helr T.C.P. runber
i'lll~ • you 111"9 • qull-ton .... Ill ...
ily d 1 mowr. lino
Of challllr. eel:
PU8UC UTIUTIES
COMMISION
714-558-4151
.--------...___.,,
'
. Monday, July 17, · 2000 11
TODAY'S I ~C~R~O~s~s;.&,;w~o~RDilD~P..aU~Z .. z .. L..,E_
~I
' .
. .
NOT 'SO .MUCH PRE~OWNED AS ><----~ . . .
PREVIOU ~SLY A ·DORED. . /
Aher reviewing 21 pre-owned vehicle programs, IntelliChoice• named Jaguar Select Edition the
co untry's Best Certified Pre-Owned Program and Best Pre-Owned Warranty.•
• 6-year/100,000-mile
· warranty
• 120-point cosmetic &
mechanical inspection
• 24-hour roadside
assistance
• Financing and leasing
option
• Available at
authorizedJaguar ~ .
dealers only . ~ ~
JAGUAR ·
SELECT EDITION
PRE-OWNED AUTOMOBILBS
Bauer · Jaguar
1455 South Auto Mall Ori
Santa Ana • 55 Fr w y
7144'953·4800 • www.
\
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