Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAbout2000-07-22 - Orange Coast PilotSERVING THE NEWPORT -W.SA COMMUNmes SINCE 1907 Woman sought ·!in local . criine spree • Police use bloodhol.inds to try and track her down, but lose scent near the Castaways area. Sue Doyle find the woman, she DAILY PILOT remained at large late Fri- NEWPORT BEACH - Police, with bloodhounds by their side, conducted a man- hunt Friday for a woman who went on a crime spree, allegedly stealing a white BMW in Corona del Mar and stuffing it with items she re portedly· ripped off from unlocked garages that morning. Although authorities pulled out all the stops to • LEISURELY STROll. .. ·, day. The woman was described as being in her early 20s or late teens, about 5 feet, 6 inches tall, weigh- ing about 130 pounds with blond hair. Police believe she may be from the New- port-Mesa area. The incident put a scare into some residents in the Dover Shores neighbort;iood as police scoured the area around Highland Street and Marian Lane on foot, on bicycles, in a helicopter and with bloodhounds, but came up empty-banded. Janet Payne caught a glimpse of the excitement from her window when she saw authorities pointing guns at her neighbor's garage. She was relieved to hear that nobody was hurt dwing the bwglaries. But the rash of thefts . made Payne question her neighborhood's safety. ·w e live at such a com- fort level in this neighbor- SEE SEARCH PAGE A 13 1Wo women stroll along tile lborellne of Newport Beach during low Ude. .. ........... ··-. ' MARC MARTIN I DAl.Y Pl.OT Trace, an Irvine Pollce'"Deparbnent bloodhound, leads Officer Larry Harris, Santa Ana police Officer Terry Zlateff and citizen volunteer Nick Bumip on the scent of a burglary suspect that started ln Dove r Shores and ended up in the Castaways area. Councilman ca.lling for building moratorium • With a vote on Greenlight initiative looming in November, Tod Ridgeway wants to wait on major development decisions. NEWPORT BEACH -City Councilman Tod Ridgeway said be will propose that the counol put a moratorium on major develop- ment decisions until the Greenligbt mea- sure is voted on this fall. • 1 respect the process of the ini- tiative and think it's important that we go ahead and delay any action." Tod Ridgeway Ridgeway said Friday. The controversial slow-growth measure, slated for the November ballot. propqses giving voters the final say on certain major developments even after they've been approved by the Planning Commission and the City Council ·Jumpstart has future kindergartners ready for school Greenligbt supporters could not be reached Friday for comment. Councilwoman Jan Oebay dedined to comment until Ridgeway formally introduces his idee. Other. council members could not be reached for comment •The program mes to deal with potential problems before the students hit first grade. Dm•tl.9 Goulet DMYfillOT COSTA MESA-It wu a groundbreaking program that ii now found ln needy every eJementary ICbool in the district. Eight years ago, ·Kaiser Primary School teacher Kathy Fellows began the Jumpst.art program to help children and their parents p.epare for the many yean of school ahead. Now, Jumpstart is the model for all other pre-and post-kindergarten progrum at New- port-Meea Unified SchOo1 District campuaes. Jumpstart helps kindergarten students who were a little behind their due ~ mentally to prepare for fhit grade. Parents are Cox and other veep contenders await word from George W. Bush ~ •n. NewpGd B11dl t9---w·~ 1n l• .. .,.. ....... IMl ... :.- brought in for a few classes of their own. •Results show that adults wbO attend will start being more active now in site council and the classroorm," fellows Mid. "It's an interlocldng program -the only one of its kind until two yeen ago -that brings fami- lies in and inYolves famlliei." i-- While chlldren sotWllae and 1eain to react iSIEJUMP MGE A14 Should the council agree to Ridgeway's motion, it would directly affect some major development pro, posals going th.rough the p&anning process. including tile Oun.1'81at. nm Qutnri. projed manager o1 ._ ..- SEE RIDGEWAY M8I AM Ondy Trane Christeson MOUL OF THE STORY A tribute, from one brother to another •The most Important slngle Influence in the Ufe ol a peraon ta another person who lB worthy of emulaUon." -Paul D. Shafer G od has blessed IDce with a wonder- ful family and one of my nephews wrote something wonderful that I think will bless you. The author of the following piece, caUed •A Never Ending Influence," is my .. 11-year-old nephew, John Chapman. It is about bis 15-year-old brother, David. I could write many great things about David, but what John wrote stands as a great oolwnn all on its own. And you can quote .pie on that. David, my big brother with Down Syn- drome, is the best brother I could ever have. I could never ask for anything more out of him. My family and l call him "Hug.• I admire David for many reasons. I admire him for always having a dream to be the best he C4ll be. He can make friends quite easily. Whenever 50Dle0ne walks by'who looks nice, he extends bis band and says, "Hi, my name is David. What's your name?" It makes him feel good when they answer. He never worries about what's happen- ing the following day. He is always adven- turous. He also knows when someone is sarcastic, nice, mean, or being helpful. He knows be(:ause so many people make fun of him because be bas Down's syndrome. He is different on the outside, but a regu- lar person on the inside. I love him. David bas a dream Jo be the biggest · and coolest rock star in the world. Every day when I g~t home he is wait-- ing for me. He asks if I will come up with a name and draw a picture for the CD . cover for bis band. I love his enthusiasm in music, but be doesn't have very good hand-eye coordination to play an instru- ment. I don't tell him that; I just always draw things for him so it will make him feel like he is going to have a band and play'. He is always really thankful. David may be the friendliest person you ever meet. He always makes new friends wherever he goes. When we go to the beach and there are some teenage boys or girls he will walk right up to them, introduce himleli and start playing with them. He wants to have friends and make people l1ke him a lot. Whatever he does, he will always make and have a lot of Mends. The coolest thing I think David has is a bappy personality. He is never in a huny, so he never rushes anyone, including him- self. He just takes time to see, read and play with all different kinds of things. David bu a good time with everything. He might be slow, but he can always learn or find something cool to do. I am sur- prised at bow quickly he learns to play video games and win all the levels and challenges. He beatl the game so easily. I think it is amazing. When I ask: him how to do something in the game he instantly tells me what to do. He now knows the secrets to almost all of my video games. David, even with Down Syndrome, has a great head on his shoulders. He ts the coolest big brother in the world! Pastor stresses 'bringing down the level of violence' and respecting each other more. Noekllc:hwertz OMV Plt.aT P astor Gary Barmore still rememben those occ.a- siom when he wu ran- domly attacked wblle growing up in Compton during the 19509. Wb1le IOIDe people fnight have let these leedl develop into prejudices, Barmore .aid, thanks to bis parents he man- aged to grow FYI up without any deep ani- mosities. • WHA?. •Mypar- Serles of ser-ents used to mons on noo-send JDe'to an violence annual . --= 10 na:~-a.m. Sundays ference t through Aug. was inte · - 20 gious and • WHIM: interracial,• Fairview Com-he recalled. ·1 munlty spent a week OlUrcn, 2525 livtng with · Fairview Road, people and Costa Mesa feeling~bat •PHONE: it was · to (714) 545-4610 step in their . lives." 1 In turn, they were able to momentarily view life through bis eyes. The exchange taught Bar- more not to assume anyttµng or judge people's actions. To really make a change and increase recondllation, Bar- more said, people need to'stt down with opeo hearts and open minds and really listen to each other. 1 This is the main tenet ~d Barmore's series of sermons on nonviolence at Fairview Com- munity Church. At the begin- 11blg.of.tta. P'Oftth. Barmore. started his se11en-week series on bow lotxll r-.tents co11Jd4azt-e peaceful revolution in thetr" own lives. •There's a growing concern in society about the escalation St Mary Arllieolan · Apostolic Ciurch TAYA KASHUBA I ~V PllOT Pastor Gary Barmore ls giving a series of ta1ka on nonviolence at Falrvtew Community Church through Aug. 20. of fear and violence,• he said. •1t goes all the way from inter- national violence, to violence in national cities, to country towns, down to families in homes.• While Barmore reali7.es he can't change the world, he said he hopes that through hisser- mons be am at.Jeast~k some hope in bis little ooroer of Orula• P>witr. . 1'6ur purpose is lo serve in such a way that we can be agents of reconc:iltation, • he said. ·ne Bible makes this a ~ .... ""' ConNct.IM. 77/IS c-.a .... .. ... , ....... .. ... ""' ClDall n• major emphasis." However, Barmore added, some Christians might disagree with his perspective on the pur- pose of the church. There are a number of differ- ent perspectives on Cbristi.anity, Barmore said. one is an • apoc- alyptic• atUt\¥le of waiting for the end of the woridJ.;uother is a ~balistic• attitude of converting everyone to Chris- tianity; and the third -which is Barmore'& -is simply to help the world as much as possible. Daily Pilot •1t•1 very clear to me th.at the purpose of the Bible, ~esus and the church are being peace-makers,• be said. •Bringing down the level of violence is not a side tSsue -it's the core pur- pose of why we're here.• Barmore said it's all about communicating more effective- ly, listening and respecting one another. In his most recent ser- mon, Barmore focused on encouraging participants to •do good for someone you don't like, try to feel what it's like to live their We, make win-win scenarios and give your bad feelings over to God,• be said. So far, be said, the feedback has been very good. •After a worship.service we have a talk back,• Barmore said. •People can bring their own illustrations, their own moments of truth.• Rather than suppressing questions or comments, Bar- more encourages people to air out their views, listen to each other1and share ideas. He cited a recent example in the news regarding a hostage situation, in which the sympa- thetic victim talked the aiminal out of committing suicide. The victim's kindness, be said, is an example of precisely the type of behavior he's trying to encour- age. •They started as enemies and became more,• be said. At the end of the series, Barmore said he hopes that participants will sign a "family Pledge of Nonviolence.• It reads: •Making peace must start within ourselves and in ow families.• The pledge goes on to out- line the importance of respect. communication, listening, for- giveness and being courageous enough to challenge violence at every encounter. •The prophet sa.ys God doe54 n't so much like all the woisl>JP, and sin~,• Alannore said. •God really wants for you to do kindness and justice -not be violent or oppressive. I think this is the real Gospel• ii I I I ~' Daily Pilot I I I ' I f I . . . SoMdoy, July 22, 2000 A3 Looking for an economic sign? We 've got plenty Of them T be last thing we need around the twin cities is more signs. We've got signs telling us where to go and what to do and what to buy. Lately, the sign of the times is •now hiring.• Alan G~pan may believe that the economy is cooling off, but one of my barometers has always been •now hir- ing• signs -and from the looks-of it, our area is still sizzling. A few of these signs can be found at Harbor Center, at Wtlson Street and Harbor Boulevard in Costa Mesa. There, a Starbucks, a Togo's and a Panda Express are set to open soon. Competing for Harbor Center job seekers is something called Copy Club, which I asswne is a repro- duction business. That's going to be a tough sell in a hot job market, and I can picture the thought process of the job applicants at Har- . bor Center. Steve Smith WHAT'S UP? •t.et's see,• they'll be thinking, •1 can work at Togo's and eat or I can work at Copy Club and •... • Still, I wish Copy Club luck and hope it succeeds at whatever it is it does. Also in Harbor Cent.er is the operating-hours sign for the Albertson's supermarket. Each day is listed individual- ly, followed by the store hours, which are all the same, 6 a.m. to midnight. Why they didn't shorten this sign to read "Open daily from 6 to uiidmgbt• ii a mystery to me but, bey, maybe that's Why I'm not a slgnmak«. Approaching the fair from the west on Pair Drive, motorllts we~ seeing a temporarily lighted sign . reading •patr parking: Left on Vanguard.• U you're at all familiar with the intersection, you'll recall that there ii no left on Vanguard as the street ends at Pair. Yesteniay moroing, I noticed that the sign was changed to •pair parking,. followed by several arrows pointing left. Thank you. So as much as I don't like signs, there is one you should heed. It's hanging from hooks at 2000 Newport Blvd. The address is that of the former Newport Rib Co., which has relocated to Har- bor Boulevard. After a brief appearance as the Newport Noodle Co., the sign now identifies Skosh Monahan's, the Irish pub and restaurant operated by Cost.a Mesa Mayor Gary Monohan. Skosb Monahan's is new -really new -and although our family was pre- pared to cut the place a little slack until they g~ the bugs out (not literally, you under- stand), they didn't need it. The restaurant is firing on all cylinders. A few days · before our meal, I stopped by with the kids to say hello to Mayor Monahan and check ~ut his new place. Actually, I wanted only to review the kids' menu to make sure ours wouldn't get stuck eating something like blarney pie or shillelagh stew. But I should have known better. The five items on the kids' menu were just right. I think it helped that Monahan is a parent. The kids, however, were greatly disappointed. When I asked them if they wanted to meet the mayor of Costa Mesa, I didn't realize how confused they'd be. Instead of a portly older man wear- ENVIROKIDZ Organic Cereal Grorm Wtlhout GMOs • Anamn F1olW..,.... • Kolla Crill> • GormaMmdi Sr! • Onnaubn-O'• f&.tt.• MIL ing a top bat, tails and red sash across bis chest, the mayor greeted them in jeans and a Skolh polo shirt. lt was a thrill nonetheless. When we finally made it to the restaurant, we were greeted after a wait of about three seconds. And three seconds' after that, Rebecca, our server; came over -not to take our drink order, but to attend to the kids. That's good. But as long as Rebecca was there - what the beck -we ordered an ale and some- thing called a Undeman's Framboise. That drink is a winner. Monahan told us that in between the double fennentation, raspberries are added. All my wife Cay knew was that it was good -very good. Rebecca placed the kids' order ahead of ours -another brilliant move -while Cay and I shared something called Irish Coddle. The menu reads "Grilled sausager bacon and onions,• but that does- n't do it justice. All'l>f the ingredients were cooked to perfection and would make a great entree in a larger portion. ·1t's..our low-cholesterol plate,• Monahan said. From there, we went to the house salad, the stars of which are tbe homemade pickles. The restaurant buys the cucumbers from the ranch market next door and pickles them on site. The lettuce was fresh and the tomato wedges were as big as a leprechaun. Our corned beef and cabbage and lamb stew were also outstandmg. For tlus political Junkie, however, the highlight of the evening was the chance to schmooze uninterrupted Wlth the mayor. Even if he wasn't wearing a sasb. • STEVE SMRM is a Costa Mesa resident and freelance writer. Readers can leave a message fcx him on the Daily Pilot hotline at (949) 642-6086. FatFne Yogurt Cboole From z For ~ s-. (Fat.Fr. ()abr) .-., ~ i.;, . .,_ Soy-Moo Dairy Sog Beoetuge • White Cheddar • Herb • Organic ·~ $4ft9 RES. '1.71 .. -laz. Water PIO Gentle • EtJecthe Ntlbawl s 99 ..... , . A4 SoMday, Jvly 22, 2000 DAY 8 • PHOTOS 8Y MARIANNA DAY MASSEY I OAl.Y i.ot Future Parmen of America member Denovan Espinoza bobs fOl' apples during the Ban)yard Olympics at the Orange County Pair. Fair game The 4-H and Future Farmers of America programs pit teen against teen in heated ·hay-stacking races and egg tosses Andrew Giant" DAILY PILOT FAIRGROUNDS -With bellies banging loose over Rebel Oag belt buckles, the two athletes simulta- neously pulled off their white cow-· boy hats, wiped their brows with the back of their bands and booked their thumbs onto the frmt pocket cl their pressed Wrangler jeans. It was time to compete. ·The secret to the egg toss is soft bands and to take it slow,• said Blake nee, 15, a sophomore par- ticipant in Westminster High School's Future Farmers of America program who looks a decade olde1 than his age. He was one of about 200 Orange County students partidpattng in Friday's Barnyard Olympics between teams representing 4-H and Future Farmers of America chapters. Events included hay-stacking races, bobbing for apples, the egg toss and an obstacle course. The master of ceremonies was John Rafferty, 11, a senior at Sunny Hills High School in Fullerton. His b1eeched hair stood in spkes resem- bling yellow alfalfa sprouts. Rafferty said the events are not intended to be ultra-competitive. •1rs a great way of getting peo- pJe together,• he said. "We just throw a few events I{ Memben ofvarlous 4Hdubs and Future Parmen of America chapten compete ln b.ay- staddng races. together and have fun with it,• said ing slightly less than 100 pounds, to 'lllylor Gcmnon, 16, who W(Xe baggy the other side of an arena. overalls over an orange tank top. •Those things are easy at first.• · Her grandmother Donna Russell. said a lanky Blake Cavalier, 1?, who 64, drove up from Canyon Lake to just graduated from Buena Park watch the games. Russell leaned cm High School's Future Farmers of . theedgeofherbleacberduringthe America pr<>g1am, and was still bay-hauling competition. panting five minutes after his beat Teams of five were timed as they •lbe th1n ropes hurt your fingers, canied six bales of bay, each weigh-~ , though. And my back.is killing.• When eve g ~ld becomes new qgain The 'fair and society mqy change, but Uie HomeiCllld Hobblestentissttnl~ . tradlUonal sell Daily Pilot QUOTE OF THE DAY ~~ Thisismy • • first tiJne visiting the fair. I was mainly looking for sandals and sun- rays. But I'm impressed; there's a lot to seeanddo. ,, --Joycl9 Hollowkh, on vacation from Clifton, N.J. BllGllll OF THE DAY llDI 'IM COWIOY Without a doubt, cowboy hats are one of this ~an hottest trends. At 9IMk St.Ilion w.....-n WMr. choose from a variety of hsts. from leopard print to more traditional styl~. Prices range from $5.95 to $24.95. Bladt Stallion Western Wear is on Country Lane. BY THE NUMB EIS I Fiii COMPAllSOI Here Is a look .t attendance .t the Orange County Fair c.omp«ed to the wme day last ye«: DAY EIGHT, FM>AY (as of 6 p.m.) Doily Pilot SCHEDULE OF EVENTS TODAY '-If hours: 10 a.m. to midnight w..lcend Warrior Wrtstbllnct. Pur~ase an $18 wristband, good for six of the camival's hottest rides, and receive an •1 Survived the Heat at the Orange County Fair• T-shirt as a badge of cour4ge. Limited quantities available. Wrist· bands are not transferable and do not include gate admission. AU DAY • Mlitwnity e.rn -Livestock. Maternity Barn • Small •imltls on display - Small Animal Tent •Market Mtlmals on d...,._y - Livestock Ar~ • 5heepy Hollow -Livestock. Area • Fair Button Scavenger Hunt -Youth Building • Woodworking demofwtr• tions -Visual Arts Building . °'I~ delnotllltr'• tions .-Visual Arts Building • South Coast ... ,,.,..~ Spinners -Home and Hobbies Building • C.llfornla c.rv.rs Guild - Home ~nd Hobbies Building • QuHtwa Gulld -Ffome and Hobbies Building • 5denc. Adventwes -Kids Park • Wax-ancle rolling -Centen· · nial Fann • Mesa c.onsolw.t.d Water Dis- trkt demonstration -Millenni· um Barn • Jwtior llvestodl MKtion - Livestock Arena 9:30A.M. • Uvestock audion -livestock Arena 10A.M. • •ttot. Hot. Hot" o.ndng - Kids Park • 'IUrtle Rodl eo.nm.ntr ,.... until I p.m. -Youth Building 11 A.M. •....._~-Heritage Stage ' • 8oob 'N ...... Square o.nc... -California Patio & Spa Centennfal s~ • Stwa Show Otoll' -Grand Pacific Resorts Meadows Stage • K.C. ..... ~. lftlllk- Celebratlons Stage/Youth Building • arc:.. Fwt llftue -Kids Park • allly Eridcson, ~ ~-Buffalo Bend Stage • 11:30A.M. !I All-AIMlcan Racing Pip - Newport Arena • ., Mtd the canctyw..,.,, untir 4:lO p.m. -Grounds NOON • bren's Kick -'1e'"itage Stage • Rllmbllng Rogues Squwe o.neen -California Patio & Spa Centennial Stage • C.llfornNI Eltt. ltaveflng stats -Grand Pacific Resorts Meadows Stage • M9gk by the Movie St.I - Celebration Stage/Vouth Building • Hotter 1hiln Hot Hula Hoop Cont.st -Kids Park • Don Knipp from PunelllB•y· er: Me an of yow lawn - California Spas Grass Roots Stage- Floral Pavilion • Appr ..... (c:oinl. stllmps. potMry., ,W.llltaty It.ms. gl.s), wrttl 4 pi.m. -Antiques Building 13 , • Quilts for All nnMS: Flying Geese Guild -Home and Hob- bies Stage Building 14 • Billy Erickson. cowttry stngerlguiUrist-Buffalo Bend Stage • Wild Roses. c:ountry musk - Spotlight StageNisual Arts Build- ing 12:30 P.M. • Clwtie Keeling, glnsblower -near Buffalo Bend Stage -~ Mattress Outlet Stor BRAND NEW· COSMETICALLY IMPERFECT Get the 88't for Less! .,.. 3165 Harbor. Blwd. ~~~~ ..... Costa Mesa ~Block :JouUa ol 405 hi} -(714) 545-7l68 umlATI Ol UI • ... -~­lfBGO ~ft'\ I • .. . 0..-.,.... ....... ~ ,.,...., Wltil S:JO p.m. - Grounds 1 P.M. • Onnge lllot9om CJoggen - Heritage Stage • Ballet '-lclorko AJegrWAna- helm -Olltf.OO)~Patio & Spa Centennla! Stage • K.C. Mtd c.omp.ny, n'9flk- Celebration Stage/Youth Building • Clraa Fun llftue -Kids· Park • Bob Wiide from ... Und- saplng: Quality~ - California Spas Grass Roots Stage- Floral Pavilion • Soep carving for Kkll with Robert Morris -Home and Hob- bies Stage Building 14 • lWNll Md Tablco Juggling TeMn -Grand Pacifk Resorts Meadows Stage • °'91dren's Magk MMlnee with frllnlc lhunton -Bijou Theatre ·' • 'Mnlcllld Stffl Drum Band - Street Scene • Pkauo's PIMle Art cam.. untll 7:30 p.m. -Kids Park • Maureen w. Puppet. until 6 p.m. -Grounds 1:30 P.M. •Red Hot Bllly,Peppen-Street Scene • ~ Halllngdal: The Uving Doll, until 6:30 p.m. -Grounds 2 P.M. • Latin Express Big Band -Her- itage Stage • Ko Sue Hee Korean Dane. - California Patio & Spa Centennial Stage • Second Hand Smoke Jug Band -Spotlight StageNisual Arts , • Magk by the Movie Stars - Celebration Stage/Youth Building • Slantboard Races -Youth Building • Annie Hall from Annie Hall 6-'ten Design: QrtUge Gar· denlng -California Spas Grass Roots Stage-Floral Pavilion • Southern ltallllft C'.ooking with Chef John Rodriques. Saturday, Juty 22, 2000 AS Children of all ages can get up d ose and penonal with many animals at the fair. Check out the schedule of events for times and locations. Or ... Cowrty School of CUii- nary Arts -Home and Hobbies Stage Building 14 • Al Am9rfcM Boys OtONS- Grand Pacific Resorts Meadows Stage • Billy Erickson. country singerfguitllrist -Buffalo Bend Stage ' • Gus Flamingo Magk -Street Scene • All-Alasluin ltadng Pigs - Newport Arena • OMlrdonNly with Tony Mari- no -Wine Pavilion • Sciencl9 ~ -Kids Park 2:30 P.M. , • 'Mnidlld St.el Drum Band - Street Scene • Doggies of the Wild West - Newport Arena • ltuuell Blothen Cima - Green Gate • Red ltJwr ltiden. until 7:30 p.m. -Grounds 3 P.M. •Latin Expt9SS Big Band-Her- itage Stage • Georgia'• Good nm. s~ pen -California Patio & Spa Centennial Stage • Wild ltOMS Cowttry Musk - Spotlight StageNisual Arts Build- ing • Coolin' Off Popsicle Eating Contest -Kids Park • Billy Eridcson, c:ountry singer/guitarist -Buffalo Bend Stage • Olildren's Magk MMinee with Frank 1hurSton -Bijou Tl}eatre • Main Street Jazz Band - Street Scene • Gus Flamingo Magk - Country Lane 3:30 P.M. • Vegetable-Clrvi c:one.t- Home and Hobbies Stage Building 14 • Ten-ell and 'Wulko Juggling Team -Grand Pacific Resorts Meadows Stage SEE SCHEDULE PAGE A6 Now OFFERJNG FRESH SaSHI TO GO! Come in and olsi1 our /YEW S{JSH/ DEPT. where you WI chOCllM from a large oarlety of prepared SushL Spicy Tlllll Rolls, CalI{omli Rolls, Fresh Sashlmi 111d Steamed Soybeans. On Special This Week California Roll $3.99 • 8 pcs. c.I /, Yi Ordtrs Lunch Sindlo SMsh . , ~" ' 1 1111 I\ ,, , · · < " < 11 1 1111 '1, 1 r 1 \ 1 ' 1 / r 'w 1 ' <, 1 < 111 ' n ·' / 1 l < 1f..'1 " / • / ' r / /<1f..' I~/ 'II \JI \I 1\ \/\/<HJ/I • FRESH Handmaele Pork Sausages Swed lta1'ari $ 99 Qarlk ,., ... '"'°' lfalUn C¥ln • • ' I FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST SECOND CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST 3303 Vla Lido Newpcxt Beach 673-1340 or 673-6150 Onuch 10 am & 5 JXO. SUnday School 10 am Wlcbi9dDy Meeillngl 8 pm 3100 Pad1lc View Dr. Newpcxt Beach 644-2617 Ot 675-4661 O\urch lOam SUnday School 1 O am ~ MillClrg 8 pn a 111 w.cn.dDy 11 noon 0 ,LMJ. tH. 11rt ..y CiM/ I ,,;// -4 "-. / ,,;/J ,,,_,. ""'_,far dt.tl IMll""-~"""" "1,--" •/-"'-faidlfrJa--''"""" J.ilil?S:ll ... ., • ...,a.dl .. 111e rnta.dltlari8,Sdmlll • ....... -. + A "A God-c.cntcrcd parish c.ommuniry1 insuuetcd ht the Word of God and renewed by the Sacraments Our Lady Queen of Angels 2046 Mar Vista Drive Ncwpon Beach, Califorrua 92660 (949)644-0200 Fax (949)644-1349 Rn>. ~~~or William 2 Md.aughlin, Pastor UTURGlES: Satwday, S p-m. (Cantor}. Sunday, 7:00 (Quiet), 8:30 (Conrempora.ry). 10:00 (Oioir), 11:30 a.m. (Cancor) and S:OO p.m. (Cootemponty) .. NEW THOUGIIT CHURCH Scienu of Mind Center SaL July tt-' ...... ,.., 8lblc Dr. Don Sban,r Sun. July 2,.. WJlle r.--. .r Spiril" Or. Don Sharer Sunday_Suvicr 10:50 Sunday School 10:50 Neighborhood tommunity Crntcr, 1845 Parit Aw:., C:O.ta Mesa Wed. Healing Scnicc 10:50 am, 1929 lUltin Aw:., ea.ta Me1a. S.L Workshop-10.12 noon Donation c.a1I (9't9) ~199 for information ~-lolln'Udoul Hewn-pt~ CfllLD CAii• AYAM•91• ctl.11413131 II Romantic sunset and uplifting Havdalali Service ST. MARK PRF.sBITERIAN CHURCH "Open Arms and Open Minds " Worship 9:30 The Rn'd Peter D. Haynes, Rector M.Y ·AllGW' SOIFDUU Heir P..Ai.-MIO-_.S pm. S- M.asarC..AWIMU SCHEDU~E CONTINUED FROM AS J:JO P.M. • CJwt1e 1C891n1. I' 'I a • -Bufflllo Bend Stage • Mtlll1d RMI PNM -..d- Street Scene 4P.M. •t# ........... flll ........ AIW c.at-Heritage Stage • AnlllM Night,._...,_ ca1i.. fomijii Patio & Spa Centeonial Stage • 5ecDnd ...... 5make ........ -Spotlight stageNtsuaJ Arts • ~.,..., olfiM-Kids Pait Stage • lunlor M9gldw CDnl99t - Youth Stage • Al-AIMl'bn 8oys Chan.-- Grand Pacific Resorts Meadows Stage •Port City aa IMd -Street Scene • M-Al .. mn ltMiltg Pigs- ~ Arena • Mildng .. ,"°'wtaatlcwt-Mil· lennlumBam • Owdol•--.Y with 1tlny M9rtno -Wine PavillOA 4:30 P.M . • St9W Lotd, ~­ Buffalo Bend Stage •Gus~ Mlaglc-Bijou Promenade • 1\inldlid Steel Drum a.nd - Street Scene • Doggies of the Wiid Wist-. Newport Arena • Rlmefl •utt... ara. - Green Gate 5 P.M. • tWM1 KM.I •• O'Ln -Her· it.age Stage • Soul Ludl ... RwMw a.nd -califomia Patio & Spa Centenni- al Stage • "'-nney c.orta. VOQllst - Spotlight StageNisual Alts • tu.t far the Mlllir'I CH'- eontmt -Kids Park Stage • JoMthmn Wiid. ~ -Buffalo Bend St.age • M9cal Spb with Mcb ~ 1WTY ~. DIW'ld ~ ...... Goldftt .... .,.. Dove- Bijou Theatre • lllrrell .,.. 1*l*o Juggling 1INm -Street Sc.ene • Mllgk of FrM* lhnton - Country Lane 5:30 P.M. • R.t Hot Billy ....,._..-Grand Pacific Resorts Meadows Stage • St9W Lord. singerfgulWtst- Buffalo Bend Stage • ~ StrMt aa -street Scene • NLAl .. mn Rlldr'I Plgl- Newport Arena 6 P.M. • ..... City Ooggers-Her- itage Stage • Soul Ludl ...... Re¥tew .... -California Patio & Spa Centenni- al St.age • SNuN, lytbl.,.. jaa .... -Spotlight Stag&'Visual Arts • Gowd Society -Home ilnd Hobbles Stage Building 14 ......... W.•liflcatlol\. wltll t p.m. -Gems/Minerals Building 13 • •Jonllttwn Wiid. ............ -Buffalo Bend Stage •Gus,..,...., Mllgk-Bijou Promenade • ™'llcMd StMI Drum IMd - Street Sc.ene ADDDNG TO YOUR NEIGHBOR'S CURB APPEAL When sellers think about curb appeal, they usually think about their own front yard and the effo" required to keep the house looking good. When prospective buyers look at home, they evaluate the house and 'the neighborhood. If you need to mo•e, th& price that your neighbors get for their house could have an impact on the value of your home. This .knowledge makes ita own case for doing yollt part to mike the neighborhood 1ppealin1. The time to take remedial action is before 70. think 1bout mo.U.g If your houte ia the one with peclliig p.int, 0¥Cf lfOWD bullet, "*J• bicycla, and ended aidewalb. Tiie valM Of ~r boee will be lar1el7 determined by tl.e rece1n acllint pricu for comptrable properdea, and Hlpborbood •eyeso,.• 4o oot IMlp to keep the ftl.e. • '"" if JOU cloD" '"1 daat ,.,. WW nw mote 1,.u.. ,.,. ·wm ...., uwm, 1a •a.-lbet 11 • ,..._.,~ .......... ,.,, ... JI __ ..._ ~ Ol l'ill -.............. 7:30 P.M. . • S.-9Md -Heritage Stage • Matgk of ....... ........., - Country Lane •Red Hot Mly ........ -Street Scene •Aa-AIMbnRMll'IPlgs- Newport Arena ~ • Con11•1n Herb Dixon - Grandstand Arena 8P.M. • ShMnP. lrrbi ....... ~ -Spotlight S~I Arts • Groowe n..pr-Gr.net Pacif- ic Resorts MHdows Stage • S""9 "°"" ~ -Buffalo Bend Si.ge •lltl!glcllllpDwlth ...... • 'llln! Go ... .,. Dllvld ZJr. ..... Goldftl ....... Dove- Bijou ThNtre •• .,,. .... Mllltl l\allt - Granctst.nd Ar..w • ...... 1.utaallcw1 Mil- lennUn Bam 8:30P.M • ........... ....,._Arling- tonThelter • Swif'llhd -Heritage Stage . .-..... ..... ~ -Buffalo Bend Stage 9P.M. • _.. 0.,...-Mlngton TheaW •Slilwt.ar4~­ Buff*> Bend Stage 9"30P.M • • S-...,.. _ Hefbge Stage •Corl .............. -Grand hclflc IWoftl , ... dows Stage ....... w,~ -8uffllo lend Stage •U1llclll ......... ....._ ~Go .. .,. o.wld ~ ..... Goldfti .. and Daw - Bijou Theatre 10P.M. • Groove n..pr-Grand Pacif· le Resof1s MHdows Stage 10'.JORM. • 1w11'8 Pest -Heritage Stage SUNDAY ..... houri: 10 1.m. to midnight W11' end Wllll'rtor ........ ~In $18 wtlstbMd, good for six of the carnMrs hottest rides, and l'9CeM! In ., SuMlled 1tle HNt It the Orange County Fair" T· shirt as 1 badge of murage. l..imit- ed~aw.lllble.~ Ire not tr•llfwlble and do not fndude glte dnillb L Fiesta Del MINcN EMy: The rich and cobf}ll hefttagl of Meldco will mme llhle wtth mwi9cN music. m- tl\oe dlndng, • m.icado and otll« ICtMtils It Mlngton n..w and Meadows Stage. AU.DAY • Ht1!1&111ltJ ~ -Uwstock Manltyllm ............... .....,_ Smlll A1WN1 ~ ....................... ..... ----~ At-. . ....,......,_~ At. ................... Hunt- ~.== •allars -\1alll Arts •CN1u1 t•c• 1.-. --WutlAlll ..... ...... c.... ...... ... ...... Home ... Habbies ... • C'llllss•C.uu1 .... - HClfuw IM ........ luMng •QID ·---NDIMWid ~·=-·-­..... ·• • •c ...... -ca••• .. ,... .... QI ltlil ·--a:- .... J &•II --I ......... Daily Pilot SCHEDULE CONTINUED FROM A6 11:30 A.M. •era. Pun MY&'9 -Kids ht'k !~ Erfcbot\ country ~ -Buff•lo Bend Stage .......... CAalne ... ..,_ Arlington Theater ...... roldorfcD. c.-ol . Armijo-Gtand Pklflc Resorts Meadows Stage . Pk--.,.... Art~ until 1 p.m. -Kids PMt 11:30 A.M. •M-Al ...... RMir'9Plga - Nt'wport Arena •&IMdhC.ldw...--.untlt 4:JO p.m. -Grounds NOON • ar.,.. OMmy Song .... DMca -Heritage St.age • FIQnt ..... Produdlonl- Califomla Patio • Spa Centennial St.age • C'.liltwril• Qwy. VOC9llst - Spotlight Stag&'V'isual Alts • Hoppin' Hot......,....,_ Kids PClfit •Appl I .... (19th Md 20th mn- Uy fumlbn. pottllly ...... colledlbles. pol'ClalM\. docb. Wlltct.t ................... nk ~ Vktioften vtnt..ge dottq .... CI09tunw)- Antlques Building 13 • orw.1n .. KltcNn with M9rton Lopn -Home and Hob- bies Stage Building 14 • Uly Ericbon, CDUntry ~-Buffalo Bend !~ StMl'Drum llMd- Street Scene ...... Foldortclo .. hdftco - Arlington Theater • SdenCle ~-Youth Building 12:30 P.M. •0.-.~gl +lace• -Buffalo Bend Stage • o.nr.-,...... ....... .,,..,. ......... S:JOp.M.-Grounds tP.M. ' ...... ~ ....... ...... -Heritage Stage •DMne ...... -~ Patio .~~ St.age • Wld......,, CIDll .... MUlk-• Spotlights~ Arts • ....,.. ........ Artl. .... -c.elebratlon ~ Buildlng • JI rdgl ., Miiar C'.lih9 -L.111&- stock AteN . •Ora. Pun...._ -tclds PMtc • Quits for Al Tim-= ..... Ge-. &Ai-Home Md Hob- bles Stage Building 14 · •OM•• .. Mllglc ........ wtdl Fr-*.........,_ Bijou ThHtt9 • Tttnldad .... Drum...,_ Street Scene .......... ~wltll' p.m.. -Grounds • MmrillcN CAalne • --.co - Grand Pacific Resorts Meadows Stage • MmrillcN v... An..tai - Arlington Theater 1:30 P.M. • Red Hot Uly ......... -Street Scene • Slw'on tWlngdlil: 1he LMng Doll. until 6:JO p.m. -Grounds 2 P.M. • cruy ...... 0......-Her- itage Stage • Guns .... ca.rws ~ DMMm's -California Patio & Spa Centennial Stage • C..ths:e• a..,. vomllst - Spotlight StageNisual Alts •~of Fwl-Youth Building Stage • 5 .. ntbwd Rw-Youth Building • a....,_ a..nn hstry dec.- ontlng .... -Home and Hob- bles Stage Building 14 • All-An.tc.t.,,. a-w- Grand Pacific Resorts Meadows Stage • 8ily ll:io~.Lldalonr--~ ~-Buffalo Bend Stage . • M-uk of "'-* 1huntDn - Street Scene 1 ' I! ( I I I ~' \ II \' ! ' t I I I I ' I ) ' I i \ I i ~ I I \ I I l I ' ! I ' I l ' { I ~ \ ( ) ' I l I \ II I Rabbitt lnsuranec Agency A1110 •HOMEOWNERS• HEALTH 40 >ears In Business ~~~ -... ---./>.~ 949-631-77 4-0 .. 1 ow ~llhrl.. N&wpon ~ (Nar a-. HMpiul) . ' . •ff-Ab+m ........ - NewpottAtw .................... - Sv.t5c9tw .................... '-~ -.;,,_~ ThMtar • ZlnfMd9i ..... ~ o.wttt- Wlne hlllllon I •W...~-Klds PMtc Stage 2:30 P.M. • 'D1nldlld StlMI Drum .... - Street Scene •Do1gl•ofhWHdw..t- Newport Aren. ........ ud ..... a.a.- GreenGate • Red IUvw Riden. untlt 7:JO p.m. -Grounds 3 P.M • • Won .. ful Wortd of.,._ - Heritage Stage • ~ Drwn-Callfomia Patio & Spa Centennial Stage ·Wlld~~muMc­ Spotllght St.ageNlsual Arts • ~ PwfoiiH•• Artl, violin -Cetebratlon Stageft'outh Building • Qh.So.SWMt Dougtwut btlng ConWt -Kids Park Stage ...... Eridrson, country ~-Buffalo Bend Stage • CNlchn's Megk Mdr'9e with 6'a....,.., _Bijou Theatre • M91n Street Jaz 8Md -Street Scene . ~Sol• MeJCklO - Arllngton Theater 3:30 P.M. • HistDry Md Art of Spinning with Lynn Hughes -Home and Hobbies Stage Building 14 • Owtle ~ gl Mou,,_ -near Buffalo Bend Stage • • 1\inlded s..-°"""' llMd -Street Scene • M-uk of ,,.,. 1huntDn - Country Lane 4P.M • • Step •n Time Ooggen -Her- itage Stage • Hope ...... --no.-· -California Patio & Spa Centennial Stage 4:30P.M. • JoftatNn Wild.~ -Buffalo Bend Stage • M-uk of"'-* 1huntDn - Coun1l'y Lane • 1Hnlct.d s..-Drum llMd - Street Scene • Doggies of ... Wild West - Newport Arena • Ra...a •udoen Orcus - Green Gate • Cooldng with a... Lucy. e.y tD ,,.. Mexican dishes -Home and Hobbies Stage Building 14 5 P.M. ...... Foldoric:o de s.r.. Juiln Cllpiltl•IO -Heritage Stage • llaU9t Foldorico Muk.llno - California Patio & Spa Centennial Stage • ViMney eon.. VOQlist - Spotlight StageNtSUal Alts I • Whipped Own Pepper Pies - Kids Park Stage • Poetry Raiding -Youth Building • St.Ye Lord, singerlguitarist - Buffalo Bend Stage • MllgiQt Spice with Erildc,e .,...., Teny Godfrey. David Zir- bel, Goldflnger Md Dove - Bijou Theatre • liln'ell Md ...uko Juggling 1Nm -Street Scene • Gus R.-ningo Magic -Country Lane 5:30 P.M. • Jondwn Wild. singerlguttlrist -Buffalo Bend Stage • Mlil'l Street Jaz -Street Scene • All-AIMken Radng Pigs - Newport Arena \\ l'IJI .\ \1\lLR .\D\'E'.\TLRES ~ --'--. 180' hJI """"" ~. ~ I-.. lie .. , .......... 1111te SMtl • Sunday Btunch • Corporate Team Building • Sw\let Oinnera • Private Parties I. • Catalina • Camps • Whale Watch (Sea.onal) • Chatten. • School Programs AM. HDITACE MAlllNE INsnnrrE LoNC BEACH, CA ~-Prlik (7H) 970-8800 6P.M. . """*"........ I·-Herit.9 Stage ... ,.... ................ .,..._.._~Patio . Spil ~-. •Jotw., ......... ...,. .... -SpodiWYt ~Arts ............... ~ ...... p.m.. -GemstMlner• 8ullclng 13 .... Loni.---~­ Buff.io Bend Stage •M-ukof~ ........... - Country Lane • 'Mnld9d s...a Drum .... _ Street Scene • HyplOtilt Mwk Vuallr - Grandstand Arena •Red Hot 9llly r..,.,_. Grand Pacific Resorts.MNdows Stage • Ternlt Md llbko""""' -Street Scene • lt/thltto. M.rt.cN IOcll -CeJe- bratlons Stage/Youth Building • Mlldng demoewbwtlun -Mil- lennium Barn • SdenCle ~-Kids Park Stage 6:30 P.M. • Comeda.n Herb Dixon - Arlington Theater • Owtie K..u. ... r clblou,,.. near Buffalo Bend Stage • Megk.al Spice wtth &ti.II Dalu. r.ny Godfrey, Davtcl Zir- bel, Goldfh .... Md Dove - Bijou Theatre • Gus Flamingo Magic -Country Lane 7 P.M. · · • fnlddie Fender -Arlington Theater • ViMney eon.. vocalist - Spotlight Stage/Visual Arts • University of f'WI: Artology 101 -Kids Park • Kids~ -Youth Building • Sats. 0... IAlsonl -Her· Jtage Stage •Port Oty Jaz a.Id -Street Scene • Russell •ud..-s Circus- Green Gate 7:30 P.M. • Salsa a.Id -Heritage Stage • Gus Flamftgo Mllgk-Bijou SoMday, Jut.,, 22, 2000 A7 Promenade .......... p ,,,,_so.t see.. .. ,, .............. _ Newport Atw •Com1itlr.._.._._ Grandstaild ArfJN ....... Md lllllrallD ....... ...... -Gr.nd PKfflc Resorts Meadows Stage 8 P.M. • Johmy Rhot9doc Ma.Ilk ttory.. ..... _Spotlight Stag&Vtsuaf Alts • K.tly .._ .... -Grand P«iflc · Resorts Meadows Stage •Jondwn Wiid. ............... -Buffalo Bend Stage • MllgiClll Spa """' .... .,...., 1lll'ly CiodfNJ. o.wtd ~ bel, Goklfto ...... Dowe - Bijou Theatre • HyplOtilt Mwk ~ - Grandstand Arena • Mildng ...... _, _____ wticw..w.-n -MU.. lenniumBam 8:30 P.M. • Mwk ........ ..,__ Arl"9- ton Theater • Swing felt -Heritage Stage • St.Ye Lord.~­ Buffalo Bend Stage 9 P.M. • Fftlddie ~ -Arhngton Theater • Jonlrthlln Wild.~ -Buffalo Bend Stage 9:30 P.M . • Sahli llMd -Heritage Stage • ComediM Herb Dixon -Grand Pacific Resorts Meadows Stage •St.Ye Lord.~­ Buffalo Bend Stage • M9gicAI Spice with &Ma .,...., Teny God\ .... Devtd ~ bel, Gotdfil ... Md Dowe - Bijou Theatre 10 P.M. • KeHy RM 8Md -Grand Pacific Resorts Meadows Stage 10-.30 P.M. • Swing felt -Heritage Stage Al Sa!urday. July 22, 2000 • . - Daily Pilot Find fun and bargains at the ~ange. County Fair: T be 0.....,. Comity FU is having free coocerts with fair admiMion Digbdy through July 30. Scbeduled foe toolgbt is 'Illy· Jor Dayne; Sunday is Freddy Pender; Monday ts•Wetrd AJ- Yankovic:1 Tuesday is Rick Springfieldi Wednesday is Poco & Ftrefall: Thursday is Charo; Friday is 1Y HemdoflJ • July 29 is Doug Kersbaw1 cmd July 30 is the Bellamy Broth- ers. The concerts will be at 1 and 9 p.m. The fair has other bargains, such as the Week· end Wanior Wristband-for $18, it's good for six of the carnival's most popular rides, plus an • I Swvlved the Heat at the Orange County Pair• T-shirt. The fGir admission is $6 for ages 13 to 54; $5 for seniors 55 and older; $2 for children 6 to 12; and free for tots 5 and younger. Parking is $.5. Some of the best linens and comforters are at Scandia Down, and it's having an 8l1Ilual •cool down sale" through Aug. 13. It's a 25%- off sale on the lightweight comforters, including the Siesta Ultra Ught, Siesta Summer and Gossamer All Season and Versaille Swn- mer. Scandia Down is in the Greer Wyld8r BEST BUYS new Crate & Burel section of South Coast Plaza, on the second level. Infonnation: (71.4) 549-9046. ~pe lovers will appreciate the.sixth annual pipe sale going on at the Tinder Box in the Crate &. Barrel section of South Coast Plaza, on the first iloor of the Macy's side. The pipe sale includes reduc- tions of 20% to 40%. Infor- mation: (714) 540-8262. Porsche-designed golf clubs are on s~ at Cal's Caddysback. e Wmdtun- nel Sole is selling for $399 this month. The regular price is $500. Cal's Caddyshack is a full-service golf store that carri~ top name brands in golf, including Callaway, Ping, Foot-Joy, Titleist, Adami Golf and Taylor Made. 1be entbe f~ can be outftUed for golf= and equipment and are b~ selecticm of c cl for cb1ldren and older. Servicel available include 24- hour~ and custom fit- tings. Its at 1784 Newport Blvd. in Costa Mesa. Infor- matipn: (949) 646-7714'. Armotre is having a mid- summer sale through July 31. The sale includes selected merchandise reduced 30% to 50%. :er name brands on sale in ude Michael Simon, Namba, V.C. Toria, Vivienne 1llm and Misook. Armoire is at 8"0 Avocado Ave., in the Corona del Mar Plaza. Information: (949) 644- 9888. Look for the 15%-off coupon in today's paper for savings on merchandise at Kayaks Surf Shop. There are reductions on Go Barefoot T· shirts, Hawaiian shirts and Aloha shorts. Kayaks is in the Westcliff Shopping Center at 1036 Irvine Ave. in Newport Beach. Ralphs Club cardholders have a chance to win a trip to Hawaii for two every day through Aug. 15 with the Excellence in Photography &nee 1947 Call For Detaila On Our Annual Summer Special I 240 NEWPORT C£ITTEJl DIUVE. sum 1io NEWPOtrr BEACH www.fi11cuud10.com 644-6933 < Ready For ABreakThis Sununer? Ul8 Of their dub cards. 1be .......... Aloha Getaw~ ~-ofter la availa at • ~---Ralpbl locatiool. ~ js in All.,,,,... ...... --~ Costa Mela OD East 7th Street, and in Newport .... 011•=~ .,., ... :r Beach on Irvine Avenue and ~,., ·~8'4.; San Miguel Drive. Conma del Mar ... • heavy .moke Uld faftl8d At-Eale women's and sboppelw a.Mdft. bi~ home stoce is having an All~ eleC'tri- annual summer sale. Select-cal short 11 molt IQrillf 1be A .._ al U-~..olda ed merchandise is reduced C&UM of ' tbe 7:15 .rc·m. trOm tbe New~ Beach 30% to 70%. Collections on ~ Mid Lt. ohli Junior~ captUred sale include Bobby Jones, Blauer of tbe ~ Brit ~ ~ • IWhn Bany Brtcken. Cutter & Beach Pire and Marine felaY race ~ at a Buck., Starlngton and Zanel· Department. Autboritlel r9gkJnal ~In San la. At-Ease is in the Atrium are tnyestigating ·tbe ind-Diego. . Court at Fashion Island. dent witb Southern Califor-One at a time, tbe six Intormatton: (949) 759-7985. nia Ed.ilon. cbildten OD tbe team swam The force of the expk>-so yards into tb8 ocean The new Staples store has sion ripped off a metal plate toward a J>UOf and ~d-opened on East 17th Street in th.at covered the electrica1 died back ao dloN to tag Costa Mesa in the old Albert· equipment and Oung It into the next ~t raring son's grocery store location. the parkirig lot. 1bere were Staples carries }ust about no injuries repOrted. logo. The team iDduded: Max every item you d need for ~e blast created quite a Joeeph, L8aha Robertson, office supplies and equip-commotion for people ment. The store is pack.ed inside the store. in the 1600 Julie Lane, C&mllle with phones, computers, block of San Miguel Drive. Hewko, JJ. Pref and Nick. printers, software, office fur. Firefighters evacuated Jones. • oiture, packaging supplies, the grocery store and Nick captUred another organizers and more. It even traced the smoke to a hot blue ribbon, .ftniibblg first bas a center that's an autho-electrical panel. Authorities in the one-mile bMCh run. rized UPS outlet that offers said the smoke entered the The youngsten ~the shipping, packaging and market through the panel. first local group to win the wrapping. Electricity was cut ot1 to state regional competition, said U Jobn 8lauer of the • IEST IUYS appears on Thurs-the nearby areas at San Newport Beach Fire and days and Satutdays. Send infonna-Miguel and San J~ Marine Department. tion to Greer WVlder.at 330 W. Bay Hills Road while authorities -SueDoyte St.. Costa Mesa 92627, or via fax at checked for the cause of (949) 646-4170. --Did You Know? •That we are a full service nursery with qualified califomia Certified Nursery Professionals and landscape ~· We can meet all of your gardening needs. Come in today to~ Nurseries and let us show you how." - NURSERIES, INC. COSTA MESA SANTA ANA TOM TANAKA, C.C.N.PRO MMl&er 2700 Bristol St. 2800 N. Tustin Ave. (714) 75-4-6661 (71 4) 633-9200 FIOwerdale Nunery • Calta Mesa Master Nursery Professional COMPlElt LANDSCAPING • 45 Yf.AltS EXPERJENa tlCENSE # 308553 May Chen, a Foothill High School graduate, is an Ora• C'.o.t<"°'~.ltudent g~mment officer 3fd mathematics major . • , attended ucr for a ,ar afta' high Khool. but found it wasn't the right environment for me. I'd heard a lot about OCC's outstanding programs, and its top transfer rates to four-year schools, so I enrolled in 1999. My OCC professors have been outstanding-and extremely helpful-and my grades have been excellent •orange Coast College has provided me with a wonderful experience. My goal is to transfer in the fall of 2001 to UC Berkeley. I eventually plan to attend law school." Tuition for California residents is just S 11 per unit. Financial aid is available. Many sho~tam and express W&sa an offettd. OCC ranks . number · one out of Southern California'• 57 community coUega in tnnsfming 1tudmt1 to UC and Cal State campusn. OCC's 130 carttr program• att second-to- nonel OCC's Fall Semester " Begins August 14 New 16-Wetk Clutea Get Under W., Monday, AUauat 28 . 0 .. . . 00.°tY Pilot SaMdoy, Juty 22, 2000 A9 News of animal-care center clostlre prompts donations •The Wetlands and Wildlife Care Center may accept sick animals again thanks to about $20,000 from anonymous donors. Ale• Coolman DAILY h.OT The Wetlands and Wildlife Care Center of Orange County, a Hunt- ington Beach organization, announced Wednesday that It would stop accepting new animals because of severe funding shortages. · generated a significant amount of community concern -and a lot of money. Gorman said a variety of anony- mous sources donated about $20,000 to the center, and many oth- ers pledged to make additional donations. animals a.s early as this weekend, Gorman said. But in the long run, be said he still worries about the center's finan- dal picture and its ability to gener- ate a regular stream of revenue. like it will be such a source. Jamye Rogers, an animal control officer with the Newport Beach Police Department, said the city pays the center for each animal it sends there. But Newport Bea.ch is alone in this respect; no other dty pays for the use of the center. The manager of the county's only center for injured and orphaned wildlife sal.d Friday that a groundswell of community sup- port may allow it to continue to treat animals. The center is virtually the only place where Newport-Mesa animal- care agencies can send rescued wildlife. Without its services, the agencies had planned to euthanize creatures plucked from situations such as fuel spills. But Gary Gonnan, the center's facilities manager, said media cov- erage of the financial troubles had Contractors have volunteered to assist the center with some of the expenstve improvements -such as paving a parking lot and improving handicapped access -that must be made to comply with dty regula- tions. The injection of cash means that the center could resume accepting "What we have is an emotional, lmmediate outpouring of support,• Gorman said. "We're also looking at the long term, to be able to fund this thing annually and keep it going. •The hope is that somebody out there [will milke) a sizable contri- bution or the pledge of an annual contribution.· Funding from the cities that use the center's services does not seem •That will continue,• Rogers said of Newport's funding program. •Any animal that we bring in, we pay to have it rehabbed.• Rogers said she also may try to feature the center on the •Pick a Pet• television show, produced by the city's animal shelter. to bring attention to !ts plight. __, Amelia Mary Lc>Ckiley Servtael were beld Fri- day ID 1\litin 'for Amelia Maiy Lockney, a longtime Udo ll&e resident remem- bered for her warmth, gen- ere;.tty and refiD.ement. Sbewa 86. ;LOdmey had lived on Udo Ille 8'nce the m.id- 1950I, bu t was bom in New Plymouth, Idaho. She died July 14. Darlng her life in Orange County, she devot- ed beneU to a wide range ol cult\iral and charitable cautes .. Lockney served as ~ent of the Udo Isle IN BRIEF Learn to navigate the seas at OCC This summer, Orange Cout College will offer an intermediate coastal naviga- tion class. It's a comprehen- sive, eight-part course designed for navigators who have completed a beginner's cowse. The noncredit class will Women's Club and chaired the Children's Home Soci- ety Debutante Ball. She was an active member of the Philharmonic Society of Orange County, the Friends of the Newport Beach Library and the Orange County Perform- ing Arts Center. Loclmey also devoted a great deal of time to work- ing for Hoag Hospital. Sbe contributed more than 1,000 service hours to the hospital and served as president of its auxiliary for three ye~. Gor~on Bricken, former Santa Ana mayor a.Iid past president of the Sanl4 An.a North Rotary Club, spoke at the service for Lockney, remembering her as a meet from 1 to 9 p.m. Mon- days and Wednesdays begin- ning Aug. 1. The registration fee is $79. Information: (949) 645-9412. Used-book sale to benefit library The Friends of the New- port Beach Library Wm bold a used-book sale to benefit the library. A speci.al "members only" woman with a gentle but powerful personality. •she had a lot of virtues that are not held up as public virtues,• be said. •She didn't hold a public office, she never wrote a book, she never did any of those things. Yet everyone who knows her thinks she's an important per- son.• She is survived by her husband, Martin J. Lock- ney. They were married for 61 years.· Bricken said their mar- riage was one of mu'tual support and affection. •They're just like one person, almoet, in ~e way that they operated,• be sa.id. preview will be beld from 1 to 5 p.m. Aug. 11, with member- ship applications available at the door. The sale will be open to. the public from 9 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Aug. 12 in the meeting room of the Newport Beach Central Library, 1000 Avoca- do Ave. Hardcover books will be $1 and paperbacks will be six for $1. Information: (949) 759~ 9667. NEWPORT BEACH LESTATE . I Works by RiclJard , .... What's AFLOAT • WHAT'S AROAT runs perlodi· cally in the Daily Pilot on a rotat- ing basis. If you know of an event or activity that could appear In this column, please mail the Infor- mation to Dally Pilot. 330 w. Bay St., Costa Mesa 92627; fax it to (949) 646-4170; or e-mail It to dailypllotOlatimes.com. SAILING CLASSES Orange Coast College's sail- ing 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 \.Olderway today at OCC's Sailing Center, 1801 W. Coast Highway, Newport Beach. Registration .f fee is $215. (949) 645-9412. Spectacular Puget Sound educational cruises have been scheduled for this sum- mer aboard OCC's Norwest- er, a classic 75-foot wooden motor yacht that introduced actor John Wayne to yacht- ing five decades ago. It will mark the lh.in1 summer that Norwester has taken stu- -dents and community mem- bers on cruises through Puget Sound. Excursions are set to run Friday to Aug. 3, Aug. 5-11, Aug. 14-19, Aug. 25-31, Sept. 2-8; Sept. 12-20 and Sept. 23-0ct. 1. Reser- vations and costs: (949) 645- 9412. Orange Coast College's School of Sailing and Sea- manship has scheduled six noncredit intermediate Lidos sailing classes begin- ning today. Classes will meet from 1:15 to 5:15 p.m. at the Sailing Center, 1801 W. Pacillc Coast Highway, Newport Beach. Evening classes will run from 5:15 to 7:45 p.m. Registration is $95. (949) 645-9412. Orange Coast College's School of Sailing and Sea- manship will offer a non- credit class that teaches interme diate-level sailors skills necessary to operate a mid-size auxiliary cruising boat beginning Sunday. The class will be taught aboard the Islander 36, Andiamo, and is limited to six students. The Sailing Center is at 1801 W. Pacific Coast Highway, Newport Beach. Registration is $215. (949) 645-9412. Learn to sa.ll or windsurf at Resort Water sports. You can also rent windsurfers and 14-foot sailboats at $15 per hour. (949) 729-1150. Sailboat rentals and private lessons are available at Marina Salling in the Balboa Fun Zone. Advanced classes include navtgation, big boat, power boat, introduc- tion to heavy weather and first·mate instruction. For more information, call (949) 673-7763, the Blue Dolphin Sailing Club at (949) 644- 2525 or the Udo Salling Club at (949) 675-0827 for rentals. BOAT RENTALS Balboa Boat Rentals can put you on the water in so many ways. Single and double kayaks, electric boats, 14 holder sailboats, pedal boats and runabouts for offshore or to cruise the bay. Have a party? On the Water Scav- enger Hunts are a bit aboard the ever-popular electric boats. (949) 673-7200. Sail airborne outside the harbor, pulled by a motor- boat, courtesy of Balboa Para-sailing near the Balboa Fun Zone. A 90-minute trip costs $45. (949} 673-1693. Oh boy, Mom's going to be so excited. TRUE BLUE TRUE BLUE SIDEWALK SALE UP TO Of o All~ July 22, 2000 ' Daily PllOt . : Kids' artwork, fam#y#Jotos can be tu~ into y<;>Ur oum of?jets d'art Nothing penOnallies your house more than ~atmgeie. ments ol your family'f inter· 8ltl into your home design. I'm not talking exclusive- ly about refrigerator art· work. I think a house becomes a home when it is deoorated with memories trom photos, artwork, announcements and accu- mulated treasures. Every family has different talents and memorabilia that reflect its interests. Whether it is sailing, cycllng, swim- ming or skiing, we all accu- mulate things that mirror our personalities. Before you envision my home as a gallery lo the kids' artwork, remember that I'm talking about selected treasures. Too much of a good thing is too much. Or, as Mary Poppins said, •Enough is as good as a feast.• Adding family objets d'art is an art in it-;elf and I have a few tips to share with you. Refrigerator artwork doesn't exist 1n our house, not because I don't like it but because I have a fussy fridge with cabinet panels instead of metal. I spread a smattering of juvenile primi- tives in other places. KorenW1ght NO PlAa UKE HOME Kids love to admire their own work, talk about when and how it was created - the teacher, the friends, the OCC&§ion. Rarely does a child's description go untold without a smile and a lengthy narrative. The kids' rooms display many of their talents: U the drawing or painting makes their heart sing, we treat it as if it were a Picasso. It is framed, matted and hung in a place of honor. Th.is gives the subject credibility and fits into the look of the house. Using a designated space in a child's bedroom, such as a large bulletin board, is a great way to give the kids contained space to show off their latest accomplish- ments. Swimming ribbons, beach photos, "cool" stick- you notes, tucked into a 1wtcue to encourage corre- spondence with tbe parental units (pUt the stamps on before they leave) or just to drop a note to lamily and friends. And it's a great excuse to keep the kids writing over these lazy sum.met months. Let your mini-masters give you a bead start on your CbriJtmas cards by having them do a drawing for the card. Ask your 1ddl to draw a picture of the fam- ily. This is an interesting project. Don't give them direction; let them draw their own view of the family dynamics. This is a great picture to incorporate into scrapbooks. I love to see bow the kids view themselves in the pic- tures, and I particula.rly love that they give me long, skin- BRIAN POeUOA I DALY Pl.OT ny legs in the drawings (this A whimsical ceramic elephant sttl amid the U1Ua1 decoradons ln the ~throom. • usually ensures another year of free room and board). I haven't asked the high schooler to do this lately - I'm afraid of what she might come up with. en, and birthday party invi- tations are great items to creatively display. . In our house, the kitchen table also gets plenty of three-dimensional items. Papi.er-mache pumpkins, egg-carton catarpillars, ceramic vases and pinch pots, and handmade candles -they 1lll take their turn on the table along with the fiowen from the garden. The front door is a prime candidate. The best of the best items get laminated and used as door and holiday decora- tions. We have hearts, East- er eggs, Chriatmu trees and Happy Birthday drawings that ta)ce th~ir turns at cen- ter stage. Laminated artwork also is . Freedom From1. WEIGHT PROBLEMS EATING»ISOIWERS . ADDICTIONS DEPRESSION Affordable, Confidential PrOfeaional Help • Fonner Betty Ford Center Clinician • Director of Drug & Alcohol.Treatment •Author of Glfta of Sobriety & other self help books ._ Call for info: larbara Cole, Mn . (714) 429-Gl88 Sidewalk Sale Sat &Sun July 22nd & 23rd SAVINGS OF 30%-70% lA.NEU..A BOBBYJONF5 STARINGroN CUITEll •BUCK BAR.RY BllCDN CORBIN 2DAYSONL¥ •Blouses Allll11JtJ SIJln • SkirtS bortrJ 5'JIO • Short Sleeve Knits ,....,..,,. • SCaffilBdts A.,,,J""" ,.,,. '1 '7" used for place mats and miniature versions are turned into note cards, jour- nals and mouse pads. Don't laugh. A trip to Photo Express can take oare of a long list of presents •trom the heart" for grandparents to go crazy over. Extra photos and cµ-aw- ings can be made into post- cards (back to Photo Express) and used for thank WESTCUFF PLAZA Irvine Ave & 17th Sl Newport Beach (949)631~ Personality is what makes a house a home, and there is no better way to add that than by using your reper- toire of young artists to cre- ate personal treasures. • KA111EN WIGHT is a Newport BNdl resident. Her column runs Saturdays. Celestino's-.- quality MEATS ',.. The Finest Meat and Service Ava/lable S,.,..0., CMt.I Mn11 for owr 30 JMn LEMON GARLIC TRI-TIPS s599,b . HANDMADE CRAB CAKES s3ooEach IUIOllMOa& s2s' 1b SOCIEIY Saturday, Juty 22, 2000Al1 Beach-and water-themed. events help variety of causes L uau for Ufe will be pre- sented tonight at the Hyatt Newporter. The surf-and sunset-inspired evening will be centered around the hot swf band the Swingtn' llkis, with mai tais Oowing, hula dancers sway- ing and plenty of excitement stirred up by organizers San- dra Weiner, Jayne Lally, 1Uun1 Cluck, Jamie ~P­ pert, Robin Schwartz and Launa Johnson. The Newport Beach women. all surfers, have planned the event around the essenoe of Newport social life-the beach. The fun will benefit cancer research at Hoag Hospital. Actually, the swf party is sponsored by an organization called Paddle for the Cure, with Mike Rogen at the helm. Rogers is a marathon athlete who organized Pad- dle for the Cure five years ago in memory of his father- in-law, who died of cancer. On Aug. 27, Rogers will partid.pate in a race from Catalina Island to Manhattan Beacb--32 miles-as part or bis continuing bibute and to help raise more funds for can- cer research a t Hoag Hospi- tal. Newport Beach. To date, RogeIS bas raised more than $200,000 for the hospital. •The race is a symbolic parallel to the physical strug- gles that a cancer patient must endure,• said Hoag's Mm1a Jtamsay. More than B.W. Cook THE CROWD 500 guests are expected to help that struggle this \ evening. Tickets are available at the door. For more infor- mation or reseivations, call Ramsay at (949) 760-5916. Another major water-ori- ented summer event will take place Friday at the Ritz Carl- ton, Laguna Niguel. The 11th annuaJ Waterman's Ball, sponsored by the Surf Indus- try Manufacturers Assn., will attract d large contingent of the Newport-Mesa sur1 soci- ety to the Dana Point evening tribute, which calls for cre- ative dress/black-tie optional. You know what that means-bow tie on bare chest Wlth paiajey sur1 jams and fins. The event will hon- or Jack O'Neill, with special recognition paid to surf envi- • ronmentalists Susan Crank and Tom Knapp. VSwfing America• awards will go to Keala Kennelly and Shea Lopez. The $175-per- person evening will benefit a variety of water-related needs t OFFICINE Pl\NERAI E LA•ORATORY OP' IDllAS. including the Alaska Wilder-- ness League, American Oceans Campaign. Heal the Bay, Hidden Harbor Marine Environmental Project, Ocean Institute, and the Surfrtder Foundation. Local assodation members participating include Dk:k Baker of Ocean Pacific, Mark Daly of Quiksilver, Rlcbanl Cram of Rip Curl, Joy Horowitz of Sugar and Spice, and Mark TI.nkleu of O'Neill. Peter Townsend of Surf- ing, Surfing Girl, and Bodyboard magazines serves as the president of the association. Also involved are Udo Isle's Tom Holbrook, Bob McNlght. Michael Tomson, Uam Ferguson and Kevin Meehan. For reservations and information, as well as advice on proper surf attire for the evening, call (818) 986-7990. • B.W. COOK'S column appears eve<y Thursday and Saturday. WHY PAY DEPT STORE PRICES? Visit our AREA RUG STUDIO Rugs & Runners on Sale A G~ND OPENING: Cinderella Guild of Newport Beach members, from left. Wanda Evans and Jean Rimpau join Judy Haskin, Gullded Treasures manager, at Children's Hospital of Orange County's grand opening of Gullded Treasures, a CHOC All-Guilds Boutique in Orange. All proceeds bene fit Childre n's Hospital a.rid its outreach programs. · s~ a~ FtoMJ, ~a~ N~ ~ ..:.t;. ~ '°''~''' ~..:JJ.~i~ c. .. ~4f'•t ~ ~ ~ ~ Juo,,. i~$t~fft ···"Annual SAVINGS OF 30%-70% from our collections of. ZANElLA • lKE BEHAR BOBBYJONF.s POW• CUITER & BUCK CORBIN• REYN SPOONER BARRY BRJCKEN •AXIS MONDO• RlSC01TO • BRJONI MEZLAN Sidewalk Sale • A.oried Tta • ~ WOftft ~ Sbtns • H...u.n Prine 5'iort Shau .. ., "'" nu ~ot meo th& tbea• iate in life, at 56, and joined the tro~ u · L lfe, as we constantly are • the •elderly jilror• Mi our produc· reminded, is not fair. But it is tion of •'IWelve Angry Men.• He !DOit equitable wben com-brought an enthusiasm and crack· pared to itl grim alternative. ling sense 0( bumor ~ by sea- Durlng the wt month, I lost two sions ot Thaltmas\ers dUb&; llDd very close friends to cancer. The within two y~ blj'd utumed the first was 11 and ll lifelong smoker, pr~ of the lrviJ1e Comlriuni- whose passing was saddenblg, but . · ty Theater. not really surprising. ... The job might well have been The second-a vivacious 31.. titled "President for Ute,• since year-old woman who never that's how Jong it lasted. Wil touched tobacco but inltead ate jumped in with his typical detenili- bealthy food ond exerdsed regular-nation and steered the group ly-was deeply shodd.Dg. through some choppy waters, act- Wll Thompson and Sheryl Singh ing as point man in our negotia- were theater people, both well tlcms ovet rehearsal space and fees known in the Irvine Conun\Ulity with City Hall. - Theeter, the troupe with which J Along the way, he trod the am involved. boards in numerous productions, And both were unique personal-playing leading roles m •Never ities, the sort you might find in the Too Late,• ·nie Oldest Llving Reader's Digest section on •most Graduate• and "Dapdy's oytn•, unforgettable characters.• · Who's Got the Will?" ~e also was . . game for smaller parts, bis last appearance was o tbree-Une cameo in •The Desperate How.rs• two years ago. For the Irvine Community The- ater, where there was a WU. there was a way. He'd be pleosed to know that he drew a pocked house for his recent memorial service. Sheryl joined our group in 1997, plilying a dual role in "Plaza Suite.• She was half East Indian. ' . I I ball Thxan and all effeivescent per- IOl141ity, a vivacious Cb.atterbOx with a heart u big as her home state. During our second show togeth- er, "Play On,• she melltioned that she needed a new place to live in a hurry. Because my son was moving out of my condo to move in with the lady who's now my daugbter- in-law, I offered his old room. She lived with me for three years, and planned to move to Denmor~ when she morrled her Danish fian~ in July. Sheryl had earned a master's degree in dance at UC hvine and had pelformed in many loc:A! musi- cals. During her last three years, she developed into a skilled char- acter actress, playing the hippie chicit Bobbie in •Last of the Red Hot Lovers• and the spacey Brenda in •An Act of the Imagination.• Most recently, she danced in • I •Oklahoma• and choreograJ>hed the 'Ihlogy PlayhoW18'1 production of "Into the Woods• earlier this year, her la.st theatrical experience. l dropped Sheryl and her fiance, Robert, off at John Wayne Airport . in May, never imagining it would be .the last time I'd see her. After a week in Denmark, she became ill and enteled a hospital for.cancer treatments. She died July 10, three days after her 31st birthday and two weeks after her hospital-bed mentage. Wil Thompson ond Sheryl Singh brought a lot of joy to a lot of peo- ple on and off the stage. Losing them both within a month under- scores the fact that life, indeed, is anything but fair. • TOM TnUS reviews local theater for the Daily Pilot. His reviews appMr Thursdays and Saturdays. ' ,, TH;E UNIVERSilY Ann.Enc CLUB -To stay ahead of the comptticion, jt's. impotta.!1t to be at your peak pptsic~lly and me The Univeriity Athletic Club wicb ourscate'"°f-~e-an: fatilities· Enjoy a Spacious Suite, Sumptuous Dining, Entertainment, Bingo, Crafts, Billiards, Beauty Salon, Transportation to Doctor, _Sh9ppingtFun Tripe, Friendly Caring People. ' . you meet a.bd~ ,~ plls. With 9':l a hand(i.tl Pf memper:ship. be' sure to ,can for a complitnemary .to~ hiJ guC$t ~.' !acquetl>ail • Squash • H_andbQu • BaskttbiU • Jr. Olympic Swi(J'lming Pool • R•tatt · ~ • l.atts{,io Weight~.andCardioFiaitStEquiptfldlt • ComplllQftltaty ~ (.oun$Clif!i .. ~e ~ ~.~ehabilitati,~ Therapy • }:f& W~kp_ut Cl.Qt~ ~T.!ded. Daily • Confr~ Rooms .. ~menwy Stioe Shin~ • Co'rpora.te Ilates Avai"-le . ,. ~ ,.. ~ : It's the ideal way to enjoy the summer season. Join us after work, for a lunch cruise or with someone special for a fabulous sunset cruise! Our pristine fleet of comfortable, quiet Electric Boats awaits you. Take advantage of ttiis s~ial July offer! Everybody leaves the Duffy Docks ~miling We look. forward to seeing you on the water . . From $1,495/Mo. 2283 Fairview at Wdaon Costa Mesa Minimum age 58 Egyptian Cotton Towels · created from die 'world's softest, strongest cotton are on sale NOW at closeout prices. Thick & thirsty, all first quality, no irregulars or seconds. Cotton jacquards and ultra-heavy towels also available. Orii:inally From SALE 2 Days ONLY Mat .................................. $32.00 ........................... $9.99 Bath .................................. 36.00 ............................ 14.99 . l CONTENDER CONTINUED FROM A1 Gov. 'llmRidge. New Y<R Gov. Gearge Pataki end Oklahoma QN. PrankKedng. Late Priday, news repmts DlllD8d fonner u.s. Defelwe secretary Dick Oleoey u the top contender for the job. But there are some factors that could woik in Cox's favor. for one thing, McCain bas repcA1ed1y said be doesn't want tbe~job. Thougb be bas said be ii willing to serve in tbe po&ltioo jf tapped. his feel- lngl about the spot are repqrt- edly oolored by residual bitter- ness tnm the primal)' aunpaign. Though Keating is consid- ered a safe cbok:e because be is an anti-abortion Catholic, Puentes pointed out that Cox bas the same aedentials. Ridge and Pataki are in favor of abor- tion rights .• . . Though Cox ls solid from a reHgk>us standpclmt, be also ii OJlllidered an intellectual, and bas been aitidzet1 foe a lack of clarity 1n presenting his politi-· cal vision. Puentes characterized this ~ ol Cox's publlcpencma as a function of the media's repre- sentation of-him. •This is a world of 30-second sound i:.tes. and ams Is an intel- lectual who always gives depth in bis answers,· Puentes said. •1t he was to enter that (vice- pre$idential) arena, I'm swe the resources of the party would be there to take some c:l that qual- ity thought process and distill it to a media-senSitive style.• Th.is is not the first time Cox's name bas come up in cOOnection with prominent positions. He CX>DSidered taking a run at the J>OQtion of House speaker after the 1998 resignation of Newt Gingrich. And he also was considered as a possible run- ning mate for Bob Dole in the election against Bill Clinton. . . . SEAROI CONTINUED FROM A 1 hood ~:ve the doan unlock sometimel,. lb8 said. .'Ibis you think twice about . • • The Newport Beach Police Department learned of the aim.es at about -':20 a.m., when they received a call about the car stnlaD from Blue Water Drive. A few minutes later, a woman was reportedly 1ee11 at the Baywood Apartments swapping license plates with another BMW in the com- plex, said Newport Beach Police Sgt. Mike McDermott Things remained qulet until 8 a.m., when authorlties said they received a string of complaints about a woman who was entering unlocked garages around Blue Gum Lane and Dover Drive. . ' Sauday, July 22, 2000 Al3 home, but nevwnllumied for them after she realized autborttlel were after her, McDermott said. Autborities k>cated tbe stolen BMW still perked in the oeigbborbood. The a\dQmobOe bad to be dusted for fingerprints befOl'e it could be returned to the owner, police said. MARC~/ OMV Pl.OT MalUple law enforcement agencies de9cendecl on Dover Shores on Friday wttb tncJctng canlftM after a woman reportedly went on a crtme spree In the area. BloodboUnds traced the woman's scent around Polaris Beach, then down toward Coast Highway and Dover Drtve. Dogs pulled autbortties up one side and down the other of the hilly terrain at Castaways Park. Police eventually made the dogs stop the search and said ~ windy oond.itions scattered the woman's scent In one instance, a resident questioned the suspicious woman. who replied that she was only looking for her car, police said. The woman was getting .. into tmlnr.ked cars and tak-arotmd the bluffs, making it ing items, such as cellular difficult to trace. phones and some dothing, Lam Friday, police still McDermott said. were unsure of the She piled up some of her dollar amount of the stolen stolen goods alongside one · Proeertf· Republican wisdom for this election holds that the. party needs to capture substantial segments d the Latino, Roman Catholic and wmidng-dass elec-,. toram,Fuentessaid. ::::~~~~~~------............................................................ ~~ Enroll Now! •Swimming • Petting Z-Oos •Spanish •Dance •Computers •Music and more ... Rewport l}ZU'bor Monla.vi 42S E. llG Sc. • Um Mm •Drama • Jumping Tents • Field Trips BnckBny m~ (949)650-3442 . "'lWimitr Dr.. c-w. (949 548-3771 THERE IS NO FINER WORK DONE .. Shoe & Handbag Repair, Restyling & Dyeing Rdinishin~ Orthopedic ork 517 Newpon _Center Drive Newpon Beach, CA 92660 Tel: (949) 719-17S8 Tel: (949) 719-1752 CHERI SIDEWALK SALE Saturday July22 10·am-7pm Sunday July23 11am-6pm Al4 SaUday. Julr 22, 2000 RIDGEWAY CONTINUED FROM A 1 Dunes, declined to comment until the coUDCil makes its decision. This wouJd not be the first tDne Greenlight has had an effect OD the dty's proposed developments. Developers bad an immediate reaction to the introduction of the measure at the end of last year. In February, the Irvine Co. pulled its expansion plans for Newport Center, saying the mea- sure added too much uncertain- ty to an al.ready time-consuming and expensive city planning process. In the wake of t)te Irvine Co.'s move, officials from insur- ance giant Pacific Life pulled their proposed project as well The proposed 470-room. $100- million Dunes resort was the next major development to feel the measure's effects. After six gru- eling months under the Planning Commission's knife, the council recently postponed further dis- cussion of the project witil] September. Although some council ~em­ bers cited swnmer vacations and the desire for more time to review the proposal, Ridgeway said he believes the delay on the Dunes project is directly related to Greenlightlooming on the horizon. 1·800-428·9110 www.alrcrattcharter.ne.l 18012 COWAN, IAVINE, CA 92614 s JUMP CONTINUED FROM A 1 parents bear from nurses, Cblld psychologists alid educaton. The four-week program oper- ates out of three classrooms at Kaiser Primary. Parents gather in one room and another bu a class· room setting for students who needed help in kindergarten. A third room bolds a prep course for preschoolers. #Children need to learn to play together to get acclimated to the school setting," said Rebecca Olsen, the kindergarten teacher who works with the prekinder- garten students. •we get them comfortable with rudimentary things' -colors, writing their names, lining up and how not to fight but to share." The program is especially use- ful to English-language learners and children with disorders such as separation anxiety, Fellows said. The postkindergarten students brush up on their reading and math skills to avoid becoming #at . rtsk• for problems farther 'down the line. . JuOn Wesb, a lludent IDICaber Primary School'• Jump- start program. pub colored blocks on an over- head projector during Friday's clus. BRIAN POBUOA / OAk.Y PILOT "I learn math and I do a lot of paper sheets and I like to listen to stories on the carpet,• said 6-year- old KelSey Wilder. Students said they have an easier time learning in a low- pressure situation, surrounded by other children who learn a t a similar pace. The pl'Ogfaro, which is mostly funded through anonymous pri- vate donations, costs $10,000 to run each summer, Fellows said. For the discrlmlnaling traveler. . .serving Southern Califomia ~ WORLDWIDE AIRCRAFT CHARTERS •It's easier because most of the kids don't write so fast," said 6- year-old Milan Gray. 1: \ < · 1 < > 1~ ' < > 1 .. r 1. r: · r ----c:'·'llP.:: -" §---- Oisoontinued and overstocked items indudirig_.slipcovered sofas canied by moi9r notional retailers like Z-Gcillerier Resloration Hardware on<f others we can't nome but you wil recognize. You con special ~ from over 200 fabric$. Everything here is new, obtained directly from the fodory ·No U-4 lurniture or cons· nment items. GOING OUT OF BUSINESS TOTAL U UIDATION SALE ~£ 25°(, STOREWIDE . S~ t 0 50°0 on RED TAGGED CLEARANCE MERCHANDISE EARLY YEARS TOYS 1827 Westcliff Drive, Newport Beach (between Irvine Ave. & Dover) (949) 642-4212 STORE HOURS: Mon.-Fri. 10am-5:30pm Sat. 9am-Apm •Sun 10am-2pm " \ ( , l Daily Pilot . . . .. QNteOf ' THE WEEK .. M In Hollywood, they~re generic bad guys like Nazis and drug dealer& But they're real nice pets. w -MT MLt.1.INS, pet rat owner, defending the aeatures' image, at the Orange County Fair's rat exhibit. EDITORIAL Saturday, July 22, 2000 AIS Dear Dennis, yoU're · a fun guy,·but ••• ear Mr Rodnlan: You don't know us, we are just one of your many neigh- bors asking you for a favor. If it takes you awhile to respond, we understand. We know you are a popular fellow around here. Why, there isn't a day that goes by that we don't see peo- ple going in and out of your house. And the parties. Oh, those parties. They Seem to go on and on and on ~on. In fact, that's the reason we're writing you this letter. You see, while we know it might be too much for the bad boy of basketball to suddenly · tum good, we wonder, is it too much to ask him to just turn J>Iease, no more stories on Dennis Rodman I am so tired of reading in the Daily Pilot about Dennis Rodman's latest goings-on. As a lifelong for- mer resident of Newport Beach ~~.mauarot fact. I was raised Ver/ close to where be lives), I Dennis have seen a large Rodman share of celebri- ties through the ye.an: Lucille Ball and Desi Amaz, June Allyson and Dick Powell, Rock Hudson, Claire Trevor and John Wayne -just to name a few. Each and all were lovely neigh- J>ors and frtends to those who lived \n the ar~. And no one bothered them that I know of. My point being: Please give the ~erage of Rodman a rest. Then I think all the hoopla will cease. All Rodman wants is exactly what he's getting: stories by the press. JANIE SHORT Palm Desert ~ k School construction moving at snail's pace For ID4IlY months, the residents or Newport Coast have watched the coostruction of Newport Coast Ele- mentary School limp along at a &il'a pace -months behind 6iChedule because someone forgot to Order windows. By contrast, just a few blocks y, ti the Sage Hill School, which ~-~ completed on time and cer- ~ on bu(t.get. . • .down the volume? On behalf of all your neigh- bors in West Newport, you know, the ones who have to put up with all the other rent- ed party houses, the parking nightmares, the drunken teenagers and the summer crowds, we ask you, Mr. Rod- man, does the music need to be so loud? You see, our neighbors say they are getting tired of hear- ing about your exploits. Tued of reading about you and your wild parties and naked-lady- airbrushed urban assault vehi- cle in the newspaper. Oh we know, we know, you are West Newport's most famous resid~t. You have a reputation to maintain. But do you have to maintain it in a residential community? MAILBAG Would someone at the Newport- Mesa Unified School District please call the construction company build- ing Sage Hill and solicit their advice? OAVIO LEW S NeVfPOrt Coast Activist wants to improve entire city I'd like to correct a couple of mis- perceptions that the article (•New West Side citizens group forms,• July 7) may have left in readers' minds. I left the Westside Improvement Assn. because I felt the group was in good hands and would be able to continue with the minor things that it wanted to accomplish on the West Side, while I wanted to concentrate on larger issues for the West Side and the city as a whole. Where the association bas decid- ed to concentrate on things such as code enforcement and various cos- metic issues on the West Side exclu- sively, I agree with many citizens who believe that the West Side needs not just a minor revitalization but a partial redevelopment, and that problems in other parts of the city also need citizen activism. As far as •five people" showing up at the first Otizens for the Improvement of Costa Mesa meet- ing, tbars the number that was invited. lb.is wasn't a mass meeting. but an oyganizational meeting. The 200-plus people who showed up at the Westside Improvement Assn. 's mass meeting did so because it was, as just mentioned, a mass meeting. Most association meetings are also attended by five or lea people, who are part of the steering committee. atizens for the Improvement of BRIAN P06UOA I DAl.Y PllOT well, it's hard to get a good night's sleep. So we're just asking you to respect our right to peace and quiet. We recently read in the newspapers that when you pleaded ·guilty to those nasty drunken driving charges from earlier this year, that the judge told you to stay out of trouble. And we know you don't want to be in trouble either. Dennla Rodman's beachfront home in Newport It's just that last we counted, the Newport Beach police paid your home a visit more than 100 times, asking you to keep the peace. · Don't get us wrong, Mr. with a Saturday night party Rodman, we like having you that goes on until, let's say, 1 So we just have to ask one more time. here. We like living with a.m. But when the parties go celebrities and we respect on in the middle of the week Can you keep the peace, Mr. Rodman? your right to have a.good time. and end about the time the We don't even have a problem morning paper is delivered, Sincerely, Your neighbors Costa Mesa will tontinue working with citizens from all parts of Costa Mesa, including those on the West Side and will continue to wo.rk -.1th the Westside Improvement Assn. Citizens for Improvement's goal for the West Side is to make it as nice as .adjacent Newport Beach and~ attract a major supennarkeVdru.Ft store shopping center to the area. ln addition to ridding the area of the Youth are getting wrong lesson in sport.S teeming slums. JANICE DAVIDSON Costa Mesa Good luck living with even more resorts I have to laugh at the lines being drawn by concerned Newport resi- dents about the Dunes project and all the Redlight/Greenlight ruckus. Yes. we are feeling the economic growth that this city wants? Grid- lock is good? For who? You want to see if big resort in your backyard? It's called the Marriott Resort in Newport Coast -more than twice the size of the Dunes project. And when it's all said and done, Newport Coast is to have two more resorts and an estimated 10,000 resi- dents when complete. So if the Dunes is such a bot item. why is nothing being said about this giant project? Because it's not officially annexed? Or is it a conflict of inter· est of entitlements? Open your eyes, it's almost fin- ished and so is the quality of our little beach city. U the Dunes resort can operate a •world class" resort under the 1-4 hours of jet noise, less than •world class" water quality, urban runolf and complAining neighbors and unsightly bluff •McMansions, • then good luck to them! RANDY SETON Balboa 1'land I want to compliment Tony Altobelli for his recent articles in the Daily Pilot on the sorry state of affairs pertainin~ spo~hip, etc. in youth baseball. But it's not just baseball that . needs attitudinal adjustments to be made by many parents and coaches; it's youth sports pro- grams in general. I've been an athlete, a coach and employed in municipal recreation for over 25 years. I've seen and beard things screamed at kids from the sidelines by par- ents and coaches that have amazed me. From the youth arena to the world of professioncil sports it is too often LellerOf reinforced THE WEEK ~~~1~at purpose for playing a game or sport is the end result. that is, to win or lose. The outcome has become more important than the playing of the game itself. 1bink I'm wrong? What's the first question usually asked a child upon returning from a sport they've just participated in? I'll bet 10-1 it'~ •Did you win?" rm sure I don't have to tell you the problems with this attitude are too numerous to mention, and the negative by-products of this winlble ment.ality am evident ~in sports. The phrase •1t41 not whelber you win or lo6e. it's boW you ptay the game• bas been,..,..,., 11)' •If you don't win tbe ~ l'I Dot warth playing .• nm winllole mentality com- pletely fdl to take into account one ol tbe ~purposes for playing ~ game or spOrt. We should play simply for the sheer fun ~joy of lt. • Winning -be(.'ome so ~ tMI .. oftan·aoee llglat d eftlflldng ... Just ... •to tbi Malta at any youtb ..-...a an my playground ---~ I'm Often sur-,._. ... lllH mn }ilay et all ..... cnetecl·bf tbe pu-...... .,. ... w .. ... -............... ..., ...... .. ..... ., , ..., ........ :==-.... 411 ..... be the best and to win at all cost. Being the best and winning becomes more important than doing your best. playing fair and having fun. The pressure brought on by the win/lose mentality puts a lot of stress on children and can cre-- . ate intense performance anxiety. Simply put, they're so scared they won't do well. they have no fun whtle actually playing, and ultimately they quit the sport. Frequent studies and Journal articles, indudlng one conducted by tpe California Parks and Recreation Society, identify three of the top-10 reasons children quit sports is because: • It wasn't fun • There was too much pres- sure (worry) • There was an over-emphasis on winning How would 1 address this issue, you might ask? I don't know. In my opinion it's such a societal issue, so deeply rooted in the American psyche, that tt'll be hard to change. But here are a few suggestions: FU'St. make all parents and coaches sign a sportsmanship contract at the beginning of each season. Educating parents, as well as children, on the type of behavior that is acceptable and that which JS unacceptable at youth sporting events should be e priority for all youth sports pro- grams and leagues. Good~ manship, like bed sportsmanship, is taugbt1 it doesn't just happen Second, it seems everyone bas video camcorders et youth sport- ing events these clays.~ your favonte out-of-cmmol .,.r- ent or coech when they'N screaming et the referee tor mliil- ing a call, or 1ambUting dM9'r child for making, _.._ fOltid. an error oo the playing a.Id. Then show the~ .c1u1t th& VideG. >t. pictuN • 'Woltb • tbowand words. My.-• tbey'U baw an~ . eaperience wMri...., ~ .... ... a1lag., loallblJ. ,AJa rec .... ..,._ ... • 'lbdW ............ ,... ............... . ..., d ............. .. O' , ...... ~-- wise• •asw:A .. . Doily Pilot .~sPons Stadw Stttts. In Ne¥1POtt 8eac:t\ for the summer, is No. 3 In the United Stats In the women's 1oo:m.c.r brelst· stroke. She's pointing toward the U.S. Olympk Team triatf. Soturdat. 1u1y 22, 2000 Bl ~Hard to Hold' I Pop star Rick Springfield barely w~thered the '90s. But he's back with a new album and a ~esh take on life fueled by spirituality and his two sons. He plays Tuesday at the Orange County Fair. AndNW Glazer DAILY PlLOT I remember hearing the song spilling from a car radio at the Jersey Shore and singing along with my pal Joey Canuso. It was 1981. Wp were 8 years old and walking to the beach barefoot across the sweltering blacktop. We both sang along. "I wish ijlat I had Jessie'.s Gtmmll" Singer- songwdter/actor/sex sym- bol Rick Springfield, still FYI • WHA~ Ri~k Springfield •WHEN: 7 and 9 p.m. Tuesday •WHERE: The Orange County Fair's Arlington Theater, Orange County Fair- grounlis, Ifs Fair Drive, Costa Mesa • HOW MUOf: Free with fair admission. •NOTE: The Arlington Theater seats roughly 5,000 and offers festival ~t­ ing on a first- come, first- served basis known for howling that ever- so-catchy song, sald he's changed.a lot llnce then. He performs at the Orange County Pairou Tuesday nighl ' •That song was all about sex and women and gui- tar,• he said. "Obvious- ly if l were still writ-· ing that way now it would be kind or sad." He said ·Karma,• his 13th album - the fust he's recorded in 12 years -is much darker, sadder and more introspec- tive. The music is still old- fashioned, guitar-driven rock 'n' roll, only this time spiced with contemporary drum loops. ltlck Sprlngfleld Is back at Dae Orange County Fair, armed '!1th his 13th al~ "The last decade was an interesting one,· he said. •Friends died, the re were marriages, divorces, kids born and spirituality came back into my life.• Springfield said a discov- ery of meditation, Bud- dhism and the birth of his two sons, Llam, 14, and Joshua, 11 -all inspira- tions for his latest album - helped guide him through the tumultuous decade. Suffering a near-fatal motorcycl• Jl(:ddent and periodic bOuts of depression and extreme self-doubt in the 1990s caused Spring- field to dig even deeper ' into his soul. "When J was a kid, they called mt! moody,• he said, his mildly husky voice iAy caramba! Salsa lessons at the fair leave columnist tied in knots Jolt Sett.ft PAllY PILOT I was not about to sign ~p for the contest. Pive·year~. the fuh. ionably frumpy and the femme fatalel were all in line, prepared to return in a week for the Orange County Pair's M1M finals. Por a m«nent, it almmt felt like we were Oil tbe let ol an outdoor •star~" <••0 118'8 wa judgel, a band ad a bait. who lnddelitaDy laoked ...... Cc· men Miranda than Bd McMabOn: Once tbe line dlild down. .. pn!lllUl8 lifted llO '"bit ..a 1 QNld be•on the dance loar ** tialc my~ ill the front row b.., tinged with a bit of self-c:on- scious irony. •Now it's called depression.Befor«!feltlike I was the center of lDy own universe. 'Il)e most depre$5; ing thing is you thUik you're really a jerk. And you say to yourself Wait'll they all find out.' But my kids ~irlr tuality have helped Lie find a balance.• SEE RICK PAGE es Doug Kenbaw wW play his lightning-fast fiddle July 29 at the Orange County Pair. >. Keepin' it real ... 'The Ragin' Cajun' Doug Kershaw stays true to his roots Alex CoolmMt DAILY PILOT Doug Kershaw learned a lesson at an early age: If you want to support your-~ self as a musician, you'd ~tter· put On a pretty good show. Kershaw, who is known as •The Ragin' Cajun• of the violin, started playing the fiddle at age 5. Back then, )le and his family played ~ for $10 a pop to support themselves. •When I was a yqung kid in these nightclubs,· Kershaw said, •the only way we could make mon- ey is if [the.audience) danced.. Today, though the years have rewarded him with fame, he keeps that initial lesson close to his heart. Kershaw will play July 29 at the Orange County Fair, where Newport- Mesa residents will get a chance to feel the South- ern-tinged boogie that's kept the 64-year-old per- former in bows and rosin. The type of music Ker- shaw plays is a mixture of "' • WHA~ Doug Kershaw, '"The Ragin' Cajun• • WHERE: Orange County Fair's Arlington Theater, 88 Fair Drive, Costa Mesa • WHEN: 7 p.m. July 29 • HOW MUOI: Free with fair admission • PHONE: (714) 708- FAIR (3247) white Cajun styles, which emphasize the use of the accordion and violin, and the ~eco syncopation• that emerged from the black culture of Louisiana. • 1rs Cajun songs done by the blacks,• Kershaw said of the zydeco feeling. "It's got a little mo.re rhythm to it, a different rhythm to il • In Kershaw's bands, this style is not only rhythmic, but often per- formed at a breakneck pace. The Ragin' Cajun is famed for wearing out bows at his shows as his furious fiddling frays horsehair into something resembling a snarled mass of split ends. SEE DOUG PAGE es myfdlDdadlgadi 1 ..... .. wtwqal'zr'away ..... _ .. ............ [ ... ... .... ......... . ......... Doily Pilot DATEBOOK Saturday, Jufy 22, 2000 &1 /. Send Ana HOURS Items to the p.m. Saturdays at Carmelo's ~d at 8 p.m. Sept. 16 in Repertory Theatre Company March .C, 2001. Performances show will be at 3300 New-Deity "lot. 330 W. Bay St., Costa Ristorante, 3520 E. Coast Orange Coast College's will present a •0ne-0n-One will be at 7 p.m. Feb. 27 and port Blvd., Newport Beach. Mesi, CA 92627; fax to (949) 646- 4170 °'all (949) 57~268. A com-Highway, Corona del Mar. Robert B. Moore Theater, Festival" from Wednesday 28 and March 1 and 2; 10:30 (9'9) 717-3870. piet. listing may be foond at SoJo guitarist Ken Sanders 2701 FaiJ'view Road, Costa through Aug. 6 in the Drama a.m .. 2 p.m. and 6 p.m. Sat- http:llwww.dallypllot.com. performs classical flamenco Mesa. Tickets are $25. Lab Studio, 2701 Fairview urday, March 3 and 2 p.m. llJESOAY ART LECTURES MUSIC tunes at 7 :30 p.m. Tuesdays Advance-purchase tickets Road , Costa Mesa. Show-March 4. Shows will be per-Artist Mitchell Syrop will dis· and Sundays. Shows are are $22 for adults, $20 for times are 8 p.m. Wednesdays formed in Segerstrom Hall at cuss his work at noon 1\ies- free~9) 675-1922. seniors. (714) 432-5902. through Saturdays and 2 and The Center. 600 Town Ceo· day at the Orange County COFFEE HOUSE BLUES 7 p.m. Sundays. Tickets are ter Drive, Costa Mesa. Ticket Museum of Art, 850 San Will Brady will play blues SATlJRDAY NIGHT JAM STAGE $.5 in advance and $6 at the prices are from $16.50 to Clemente Drive, Newport musi.c at 8 p.m. today at Gerald lshibasPi and The door. (714) 432-5&40. $29.50 and may be pur-Beach. Tuesday noon lee- Diedrich Coffee at 474 E. Stone Bridge Band plays rock l chased at The Center Box tures at the museum are free. 17th St., Costa Mesa. The and R&B from 9 p .m . Satur-'BEAUTY AND THE BEAsr WELCOME TO 'CABARET Office, by phone through (949) 759-1122. show is free. (714) 646-0323. days to 1 a.m. Sundays at Disney's "Beauty and the The Orange County Per-nckebnaster at (714) 740- Sutton Place Hotel's Th.anon Beast" will be performed at 2 forming Arts Center will 7878 or (213) 356-3500 and 'CORRESPONDENas· 'CONCERTS IN THE PARK' Lounge, 4500 MacArthur and 8 p.m. Saturdays and present the musical all ncketmaster outlets. An exhibit of drawings and Costa Mesa's "Concerts in Blvd., Newport Beach. Free Sundays at the Orange "Cabaret" at 7:30 p.m. Aug. sculptures by lsamu Noguchi the Park" admission. (949) 476-2001. County Performing Arts Cen-8-13. nckets are $28.50 to ART and Ellsworth Kelly, •eorre- After series will SUMMER CONcERTS ter, 600 Town Center Drive, $.57 .50 Tuesday through spondences. • will open July feature Costa Mesa. Tickets are $21 Thursday and $33.50 to 29 at the Orange County HOURS Susie Fashion Island's Sununer to $61. The show :uns $62.50 Friday through Sun-BARE ART Museum of Art, 850 San Hansen at 6 Concert Series will continue through Sunday. (714) 556-day. The Center is at 600 A reception for ·Nude for Oemente Drive, Newport p.m. Tues· its season at 6 p.m. Wednes-2787. Town Center Dnve, Costa Summer,· paintings and Beach. Hours are 11 a.m . tci.5 day at V1Sta Park, 1200 Victo-day with Jazz saxophonist Mesa. (714) 556-2746. drawings by Nguyen Thanh p.m. Tuesdays through Sun- na St., Costa Mesa. The show Paul Taylor; Diane Schuur will 'LITTLE PRINCE' Bmh, Raffaele Gerrarcti. Bar-days. Adnussion is $.5 for ts.free. (714) 327-7525. present jazz songs Aug. 2; Orange Coast College will ABRACADABRA I bara B. Gross, Madette Lan-adults; $4 for students and Don McLean will play folk present "The Little Prince." a rrSCOPPER~ don, R. Ross and other seruors; children under 16 are ALTERNATIVE JAMS blues Aug. 9; and The Young classic tale by Antoine de The Orange unty Per-artists, will begin at 6 p.m . free. The exhibit runs through Fear will play punk rock Dubliners will perform Celtic Saint-Exupery. at the col-forming Arts Center will pre-July 29 al DJR International Oct. 15. (949) 759-1122. music with El Centro and rock Aug. 16 to end the series. lege's Robert B. Moore The-sent David Copperfield at 6 Art, 2431 W. Coast Highway, STUDENT ART Unit F at 9 p.m. Friday at All shows are performed in atre, 2701 Fairview Road, and 9 p.m. Nov. 30 and Dec. Newport Beach. The show ·Newport in Focus,• an Club Mesa, 843 W. 19th St., the mall, outside Blooming-Costa Mesa. Showtimes are 2. 1)le Center is at 600 Town runs through Sept. 1. The Gofto..~ •. Vpcoming dale's, at 701 Newport Center 10 a .m. Wednesdays and Center Drive, Costa Mesa. gallery is open by appoint-exhibit of photography from students at OCC, will be on i ; e Condon; and the Drive, Newport Beach. Free Thursdays. 10 a.m ., and 7 (714) 556-2122. Tickets are. ment only.·(949) 548-6249. display at the Newport Har- will play at 8 admission; preferred seating p.m. Fridays, and 2 and 7 $30 to $50. (714) 755-0236. · • ~O; Doom Kounty is $15. (949) 721-2000. p.m. Saturdays. nckets are VILLAGE ART bor Nautical Museum, 151 E. Coast Highway, Newport ectric Chair will play at 9 $5 in advance, $7 at the 'ARTHUR-A The artists at Cannery Vu-Beach. Exhibit hours are 10 p.m. Aug. 1. Admission is $5 GLENN MILLER REPRISE door. The show ends July 22. LIVE ADVENTURE' lage will have their works a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesdays . to $8. (949) 642-6634. The Bill Tole Orchestra, (714) 432-5880. The Orange County Per-displayed outside of the through Sundays through Beryl Davis, the De Marche fonning Arts Center will pre-Newport Beach City Hall the end of August free POP/ROCK & FLAMENCO Sisters and other entertainers MONOLOGU ES, sent •Arthur-A Live Adven-Gallery from 8 a .m. lo 5 p.m. admission. (949) 673-7863. Tate 5-a funk, rock and will celebrate the music of MONODRAMAS ture, • a live children's show, Monday through Friday. July Motown act -performs at 9 Glenn Miller's Air Force Orange Coast College's beginning Feb. 27 through 31 through Sept. 10. The SEE HOURS PAGE 84 Don't EvenThink En=hAnli About Buying s edUgh~ ~IQUE ROW & GARDEN CAFE Available In One-Four •NineiU niq~ ShopJ'(ilLecL wW,, T ~for' )'OW" H~· lights ' FiM Ho#U F•rlfi1llilfll C•11'111 to a...-1an. PolJ$N,d Brtiss, Ouome Antiqt111 ti~olltth.,,ln U"4&R~Boob Or Pewter Finishes Tr•ditionat Cott.,e· C111t°"' Pidwn f ,..,,.ilf6 Without Visiting ... Hodso.n Gtft1 & G ftt Dtc0r F11miturt Rnlordio11 HEMPHILL'S Lighting With Li1t 1' Deliwry o4 ""'""' rttortl RUGS & CARPETS Quality Llgh1io1 Service G~C~ 949 722-1177 for 30 Yurs 230 East 17th St. • Costa Mesa Oprn Tuc,,.Fra. 'l-'i, CArdat P.lio Di1tirtg JJO £csl J 7"1 Slrttt (949) 722-7224 Sa1. 9-4 B~t Lallldl, ·o~ th4' Row, a wonderful C°"4I M1M. CA 1~10 Newport Bhd . ru ts Er&tt (Bcliirttl ,,.,., IMI www.rugsandcarpets com Cona Mesa Cafe Hours: • n-Sat ~s Shoppln9 arid Dining aJwntunr• Row Houn: T\No.Sat l~S THE CLUBHOUSE · SOUTH COAST PLAzA • 714-708-CLUB(2582) FOR INFORMATION ABOUT PRIVATE PARTIES AND SPE CIAL EVENTS CALL 714-957-8308 CHICKEN PICCATA LUNCH $9.45 ENTRBB $14.45 CHICXEN l<>T Pm LUNCH $8.95 $10.95 BNTUE $13.45 $17.95 $20.95 VODKA PASTA $8.45 MBATI.OAP & MAsffED POTATO $8.95 SUNDAS $13.95 $12.95 LAim SUPERIOR WHITBFISH HONEY PEPPERCORN SALMON $U.95 I \ I I .... I I ' I \ I ~ . I \ • ' I \ I OUR MENU RBPLBCTS MODBRATBLY PRICED, TRADmONAL FOOD ntAT WI1J.. 1'BMl"r BVB&YONB IN YOUR FAMILY, BSPBCLU.LY 1118 DDS! O UR Ja. MBMBD MBNU WILL BXCJTB KIDS OP ALL AGES AND TO TOP ()PP nma ~ nmr WILL llBCBIVB A G&BAT G1P'l1 . llBmRVATIONS ARB ACCEPT.ED SBVEN DAYS A WBBK, HOWBVU WAIS-De MB ALWAYS WBLC0MB. J I ·' .. HOURS FROMPAGEB3 AAOtlTECTURE ANO ART • Atcbitecture ln Peapedive t•. • an exhibit ol 60 award- wtnnlng works by intema- tlonal architectural mustra- tors is on display at Newport Beach Central Ubrary, 1000 Avocado Ave. It showcases selections from more than 500 entries representing past and future projects by Bill Evans, WiWam G. Hook, Scott Milhoan. Jerry YlnAnd, Serge Zaleske .and others. Bxhibit hours are 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. Mondays through Thursdays, 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Prid.ays and Saturdays, and noon to 5 p.m. Sundays. The show ends Friday. Free. (949) 717-3801. MEXICAN MASTER WORKS Modem a.rtWorks by Mexi- can artist Vladimir Cora will open July 31 at the Newport Beach Central Ubrary, 1000 Avocado Ave., Newport Beach. The exhibit will fea- ture a mix of Cubism and ' Latin American art. Exhibit hours will be 9 a .m . to 9 p .m. Mondays through Thursdays, 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays, and noon to 5 p.m. Sundays through Aug. 30. Pree admission. (949) 717-3801. 'QllQ.ES OF INFLUENCE' •Circles of Influence: Impres- sionism to Modernism in Southern California Art 1910-1930• is on display at the Orange County Museum of Art, 850 San Clemente Drive, Newport Beach. The show includes work by Mabel Alvarez, Guy Ros~ Donna Schuster and Henriet- ta Shore. Exhibit hours are 11a.m.to5 p.m. Tuesdays through Sundays. Admission is SS for adults; $4 for stu- dents and seniors; children under 16 are free. It ends Sept. 3. (949) 759-1122. . aaillllTY l'HOTOS •Al Belloli: A ~apbic Reverie,• an exhibit featur- ing celebrity pbotograpbs, LS on display at the Orange County Museum of Art's South Coast Plaza GallerY. 3333 Bristol St., Costa Mesa. Exhibit hours are 10 a.m . to 9 p.m. weekdays, 10 a.m . to 7 p .m . Saturdays and 11 a.m. to 6:30 p.m. Sundays through Sept: 24. Pree admission. (714) 662-3366. 'MARINERS, MANDARINS' "Mariners and Mandarins: Seafaring in the China Trade,• an exhibit featuring 18th century Chinese matjne paintings and navigation instruments, is on display through Nov. 10 at the New- port Harbor Nautical Muse- um, 151 E. Coast Highway, Newport Beach. Exhibit hours are 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesdays through Sundays until Nov. 10. Free admis- sion. (949) 673-7863. DANCE 'CHOREOGRAPHIC PROJEcr Ballet Pacifica will open its 10th annual choreographic project #Works in Progress- at 8 p.m . July 29 at South Coast Repertory, 650 Town Center Drive, Costa Mesa. Tickets are $20 general admission and $50 patrons (preferred seating and a donation of $30). (949) 851- 9930. SWING DANONG The Jewish Community Center of Orange ·county offers swing dance lessons from 7:30 to 10 p.m. Mon- days through July 31 at the center, 250 E. Baker St., Cos- ta Mesa. The four-week class is $36 for members, $42 for nonmembers; $65 per couple for members, $75 per couple for nonmembers. (714) 755- 0340. DANa204 Dance 204 offers private and - DATF.BOOK The Bernle Pearl Blues Band will perform at 5 p .m. Thursday at the •Hot Blue on a Cool Summer Night" event at South Coast Village, which benefits pro- grams at the Orange County Performing Arts Center. group instruction in begin-. ning and advanced ballroom, Latin and modem dancing at 204 Wubington St., Balboa. (949) 675-9082. BALLROOM FOR SENIORS The Costa Mesa Senior Cen- ter offers ballroom dancing to the music of the Ray Rob- bins Gombo for adults from 7:30 to 10:30 p .m. Tuesdays. Singles and couples are wel- come. Cost is $3. The center ls at 695 W. 19th St. (949) 645-2356. DANSCENE STUDIO Danscene Studio offers ball- room dancing at 8 p.m. on the first Friday of every~ month. Admission is Stu. The studio is at 2980 McCllntock Way, Costa Mesa. (714) 641-8688. BIG BAND OANQNG The Oasis Senior Center holds an afternoon of danc- ing to Big Band music from 1 :30 to 3:30 p.m. Fridays. Coffee and refreshments are served. The center is at 800 Marguerite Ave., Corona del ... . Mat. (9"9) 6«~324, . IAUAOOM DANCING T'be DePore FOundation for the Arts bolds swing and Latin dance c1alses from 8 to 11 p.m. Fridays and Satur- days. A $10 admtuion covers the hour dance lesson and the open dandng ~on that follows. The class ilheld at 151 Kalmus Drive, Costa Mesa. (949) 241-9908. event will offer lice aeam. cake, games IOI your d()g. and a IXkini and IWimlult oontest. Pree. (9'9) 760-3647. . SUMMER c:AMPARES Park guides wUl bolt a campfire p~ at 7:30 p.m. today at Upper Newport Bay Ecdogical Reserve, 600 SbeJlmaker llland, Newport Beach. (9"9) 6"0-6746. KIDS ARGE~E TANGO. Danscene Studio has tango dandng from 8 p.m. to 12:30 a.m. the first Saturday of every month. Danscene is at 2980 Mc:Ointock Way, Costa Mesa. (714) 641~8688. BOOKS ... FRANKIE SILVER BALLAD Borders Mystery Book Dis- cussion Group will discuss Sharon McCrumb's •The Ballad of Frankie Silver• at 7 p.m. Wednesday at Borders Books, Music & Cafe, 3333 Bear St., Costa Mesa. Free ac:lmimon. (714) 432-7854. BOOK CAMP FOR KIDS Borders' E.xploren Summer Camp series of Thursday: (Uld Saturday activities and litera- ture programs for child.rerl begins at noon today at Bor- " ders Books, Music & Cale, 3333 Bear St., Costa Mesa. The series continues through July 29. Pree admission . SIMPLE ABUNDANCE Based on the books of Sarah Ban Breathnach, the Simple Abundance group focuses discussions on appreciation, expression and gratitude. It is led by Audre de Nard at Borders Books, Music & Cafe at 6:30 p.m. the first Thurs- day of each month. The store is at 1890 Newport Blvd., Costa Mesa. (949) 631-8661. OPRAH BOOK a.ua The Oprah Book Club meets at 1 p.m . the third Thursday of every month to discuss Oprah Wmfrey's most recent selections at Barnes & Noble Booksellers Fashion Island. Tht! store is at 953 Newport Center Drive, Newport Beach. (949)"759-0982. SPECIAL DOG DAY AmRNOON . Three Dog Bakery will host a •&rkday Pool Party• at 12:30 p.m. today at Corona del Mar Plaza, 924 Avocado Ave., Newport Beach. The (714) •32-7854. 'STORJES & CRAFTS' Storyteller Barbara IQein will host a series of •Stories and eratts• programs for children in the first through sixth grades at Newport Beach libraries. The first session is at 10:30 a.m. Monday at the Central Ubrary, 1000 Avoca- do Ave. The program will be repeated at 3 p.m. Tuesday , at Mariners Branch l.ibrary, 2005 Dover Drive; and at 10:30 a.m . Wednesday at Balboa Branch Ubra.ry, 100 E. Balboa Blvd. The events are free. (949) 717-3801. STARUGHT STORIES ' Children ages 3 to 7 may participate in songs and fin· ger puppet plays at 7 p.m. Mondays at Costa Mesa Library, 1855 Park Ave. (949) 646-8845. ~ ~SAND BOOKS Newport Beach Central Llbrary offers·story time at 7 p .m Mondays and 10:30 a.m. Saturdays. The .library is at. 1000 Avocado Ave. Children may wear j>ajamas to the evening sessions. Pree. (949) 717-3801. STORJES ON TUESDAYS Children's story time is from ·10:•5 to tt:30 a.m. Tuesdays at Barnes & Noble BookceDers Fashion Island. 953 Newport Center Drive, Newport Beach. Flee. (9"9) 759-0982. In the garden, Sundays 9am -2pm l\Jso For sale Country Antiques and l\ccessorles "Jh a~~~~°"' 1-.s}I 17d ~I" ~MM Coanby_ ...1,,n Ila~ &r ~ (lri lhe Nltlque Row) • oiS:-~ 130 E. I 71h Slrect. Costa Mesa ~2Jlrll 949 · 722 · I I 77 Daily Pilot RICK FROM PAGE 81 Springfield played almost ail the instru- ments on the album, including Dobro, bass, guitar and keyboards. He even programmed the drum loops. He said the writing and recording process, which took more than a year, wos both painful anti rewarding. •When you write a great song, it's like get- ting a high,• be said. •But when you write a bad one, you say to your- self 'What did I waste my time on?'• Personal and musical growth aside, Springfield said h~ still looks forward to singing to his long- term fans. •Performing is like an instant party,• he said. At his concerts -be bas 150 scheduled this year -fans call out favorite songs. Some even hold up cue cards displaying the lyrics to songs be never per- formed. He tries to indulge them and himself as much as possible. •1t•s boring for the band to perform the same songs over and over again,• he said. •There are people out there who have seen 70, 80 shows. This keeps it fresh." Springfield said be even embraces requests for his old hits, including •Jessie's Girl.• •My shows are like going to a big fan club meeting,• he said. •0n1y everyone's older, the audience has grown up and gotten real jobs. I feel the connection they still have to my old music.• DOUG FROM PAGE 81 The approach to playing, he said, ls something he developed from a combina- tion of early influences and his own sense ot what the music should sound like. As •a child growing up in Tiel Ridge, La., Kershaw beard players such as Harry •The Cajun Piddle King• Choates on jukeboxes. ·1 concentrated on why people liked these people,. Kershaw said. •1 tried to take a little from this person, a little from that person.• But his way of playing bas never become particu- larly clinical. "Mostly it comes from my heart,• he said, "because I don't pay attention to what I do on the fiddle.• One thing th.at bas been deliberate, though, is his effort to keep the music pure. Despite pressure from record companies to move in a more mainstream direc- tion, Kershaw bas stuck to a very traditional sound. ·1 do the Cajun, and I keep it as close to that as I can,• he said. ·1 mean, I do everything, but when I do real Cajun, I do real Cajun.• The result of this effort, over a period of many decades, has been that Ker- llSTR0201 Bistro 201 olfen j~ perfor- mances at 8 p.m. Fridays aDd Satwdays and 11 a.m. Sundays at 3333 W. Cout Highway, ~Beech: (949) 631-1551. a.ulMESA SboW1 begin at 9 p.m.. The club is at 8'3 W. 19th St., Costa Mesa. Mmtsstcw\ Is s.s ' I sbaws style of music, instead or becoming increasingly watered down, has grown increasingly influential. While Kershaw himself is not a mega-seller, he says you can hear his sound swelling in mainstream music today. "Mary Chapin Carpen- ter's song, 'Down at the 1\vist and Shout,·• he said. to $10. (949) 642-6634. DlM'l'Y NEUY'S NeUY• offen be mtisic at 9 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays at 2915 Red HID Ave., Costa Mesa. (714) 957-1951. :ntEHAllP• 1be bm Offen live music 1bundays tbroJJgh Satur- days at 130 J!. 17th Sl, Cos- ta Mesa. (949) 6'6-8855. HOGUE MllMIQtAEL'S BermJchiel'I olfers live . ' ROSEY'S AUTOBODY You Have the Right ~ .... ..__ to Choose Your Repair Facility nslst on the Best Lifetime WarrClnty Full Service Collision Center Insurance Approved Shop~--. (949) 642-4522 121 Industrial Way• Costa Mesa The Origi.nal MIKE'I .CAllPETI OVER 25 YEARS IN COSTA MESA • Now Owned & Operated by Mesa Upholstery • ALL CARPmT a PLOORINQ CURRENTLY MARKED DOWN 30°/ooft Vinyls • Ceramics Wood • Laminates Doug Kenhaw I.I known for breaking his fiddle strings. "That's really Cajun.• And the years of sticking to his musical guns have also meant that Kershaw's style has become distinct. His ragin' sensibility inforins everything he plays. •1t dbesn't matter what l do," he said. •1 could do a Spanish song and it would still come out like Doug Kershaw.• music Wednesdays through Saturdays at 3950 Campus Olive, Newport Beach. (949) 261-621-0. MARGARITAVIUE Margaritaville offers live music and is at 2332 W. Coast Highway, Newport Beach. (949) 631-8220. THE MARRIOTT The Marriott Hotel offers live music Mondays through Saturdays at 900 Newport Center Drive, Newport - .. . . SALSA FROM PAGE 81 Orange Julius later, we returned to the stage fu find" that the same couple who'd caught my eye bad deared the floor of partidpants. In a single gesture, her leg kicked up I watched in to rest on· his chest awe and tried to mentally tackle the dance that completely confused me physically and be flipped her over back- ward, wheresbe recovered with a fierce hair toss and what seemed to be20 turns. Needless to say they won, and man, did they make it all look so easy. I watched in awe and tried to mentally tackle the dance that com- pletely confused me physi- cally: It's a fluid motion that begins at the hips and sends loose rhythms through the entire body. These rhythms, feverishly serenaded by the sound$ of Latin, big-band jazz, excite tl}e right foot to push forward, closer to the Beach. (949) 640-'000. MULDOON"S lltlSH PUI 202 Newport Center Drive, Fashion Island, Newport Beach. Admission js free. (714) 640-' 110. OYSTER BAR LOUNGE Newport Landing'• Oyster Bar Lounge showcaees local pop and light rock acts Fri- days and Saturdays at 503 E. Edgewater Ave. at the Balboa Perry Landing. (949) 675-2373. Saturday, July 22, 2000 BS TAYA ~/ OAILY PlOT Chrlsttan Casteneda of Pullerton watches the instructor during salsa lessons at the fair. music that, like an angry lover. pushes it back to where it began. Before it's aware of what it's doing, the left foot picks up the filrta- tious flow and slides playful- ly behind, only to quickly return to meet its partner, the right. for a repetitive game of hard-to-get. Anns tight, eyes locked, it's sensuous, it's spicy, it's salsa. Be cautious, I think it's addicting. • JOU SE1JDI is the design desk chief of limes Community News. THE TEAROOM Karaoke is offered from 1 to 11 p.m. Thursdays at 3100 Irvine Ave., Newport Beach. (949) 756-012f. VIUANOVA Rich Fauno plays at the piano bar beginning at 9 rP.m. Sundays through Wednesdays. The three-: piece jazz and blues berid Misbehavin' plays at 9 p.m. Thursdays through Satur- days. Villa Nova is at 3131 W. Coast Highway, Newport Beach. (949) 642-7880. ' I Saturday, July 22, 2000 B7 1/ixal Soroptimists get kudos for hard work M'ln1 two four-hour daytime lhitt. per week and would be responsible for answering phones, bicycle registration. fingerprinting, data entry and assisting with other cttywit.ie projects. Bilingual seniors in Spanish and English are a1Jo needed. For an application or more information, c.all Senior Volunteer Fred Gaeckler at (714) 75-4-5208. ' SOROPTIMJSTS WIN TOP HONOU: Presi- dent Dal.la Lugo ot the Soroptimists International of .----~~~=----,........----, Depot, then works with Distdct 4-U Governor Dan Mayer and key members of his ad.ministration. Newport Harbor received two awards on behalf of the d ub at the recent Interna- tional Convention held in Honolulu. The dub received a first- place fund-raising award for its annual •Members of the Heart• event, chaired this past year by Victoria Gray and underwritten by North- ern lhlst. The club also earned a 1 second-place award for International Goodwill and Understanding for the spon- sorship of the 1999 confer- ence on "Issues of Aging" presented for people with developmental disabilities, their families and care givers. The Newport Harbor club was joined by two clubs in Japan to produce the con- ference. For more information on Soroptimists International of Newport Harbor, call Mary Regan at (714) 556-7139. BACK HOME IN MIN- NESOTA: I spent the last seven days in St. Louis Park, Minn., visiting my brother LeRoy and working around the longtime family home. This was the first chance since our father died in April for me to get a few days to help LeRoy straight- en up the family home. Dad was a collector of stuff and he didn't throw much away, especially in the last 10 to 12 years. With the help of our cousin Gary and his wife Suzanne from Ashton, Iowa, and a couple of neighbor- hood teenagers, we filled a 17-yard dumpster with cut lumber, old pipes, broken lawn mowers and a whole bunch of junk. We had two station wag- ons full of reusable items we Jim de Boom · COMMUNITY & CLUBS donated to Goodwill. Dad had been active in the Boy Scouts for 50-plus years and we had a collection of hand- books, Norman Rockwell Boy Scout calendars and merit badge materials for leather crafting we gave to the Boy Scouts. We even had one station wagon full of old paint cans and lawn and bug poisons we took to the county hazardous-waste station. We replaced the old stove and microwave and got bids for painting the house and installing an emergency generator so LeRoy could continue to live ind~pen­ dently. We hired an attorney to get us through probate because Dad didn't want to write up his will, which would have simplified things and saved us six to seven months of time. Since 1952, when LeRoy got polio, Mom and Dad had served as LeRoy's care givers. As they got into their 80s that changed, and an agency provided LeRoy with care givers. . Fortunately he has had two people with him for many years, Lynn and Dave. Lynn's claim to fame is that he was a classmate of Lbs Angeles Lakers Coach Phil Jackson and be and his wife have traveled around the world a couple of times. Dave, who is married and has two teenage sons, works 40 hours a week at Home Sea Scout .Competitive Sailing Clinic ~ July 31 -Sept. 1, 2000 Leam &Rdine Sportsmanship • Water Safety Boat Handling • Rule & Situations Tactics • Rac.c Management Going Fast • Start and Finishes Fun sailing clinic in Flying ]union for buys and girls intn'eS~d in rompetitiw 14iJing. Developed by UC Irvine Varsity Sailing Team For more infumiation contact, or register by mail or &x. Boy Scout .Sea 8a.sc 1931 W. Pacific C.oast Hwy. Newport Bcacli, CA 92663 949 .642.503 t 949.650.5-i07 Fax http:\ \www.~_sc.org LeRoy for 38 hours a week and picks up other clients from the agency as needed. Lynn works with LeRoy in the mornings, Dave in the evenings and weekends. With Minnesota's unemploy- ment rate at a record low of 2.3% and the local BW"ger King offering a Sl,000 start- ing bonus for management trainees, LeRoy is fortunate .to have Lynn and Dave, two -tare givers who really care about thelr clients. Though some 1,500 miles separate LeRoy and I, we remain in contact via tele- phone and e-mail and face- to-face visits several times a year. Ufe could be lonely for LeRoy, but it's not, thanks to Dave, Lynn, dozens of rela- tives and neighbors, and friends from church who show they care. Who have you cared for today? WORTH REPEATING: Prom Reflections at Sunrise, the newsletter of the New- port Beach Sunrise Rotary Club: "Be kinder than nec- essary.• SERVICE CLUB MEET- INGS THIS COMING WEEK: Want to get more involved in your community, make new friends, network or give something back to your community? 1ty a ser- vice club. You are invited to attend a club meeting this coming week. Many clubs will buy your first guest meal for you. TIJESDAY: 7:15 a.m. - The Newport Beach Sunrise Rotary Club will meet at the Balboa Bay Club for a club assembly. 6:30 p.m. -The Costa Mesa Lions Club will meet at Costa Mesa Golf and Country Club to meet WEDNESDAY: 7:15 a.m. -The South Coast Metro Rotary Club will meet at the Center Club. Newport Har- bor Kiwanis Club meets at the University Athletic Club. Noon -:-The Exchange Club of Orange Coast will meet at the Bahia Corinthi- an Yacht Club. Soroptiniists International of Newport Harbor will meet at the San- ta Ana Country Club for a business meeting. 5:45 p .m. -The Newport-Balboa Rotary Club will m~ at Bahia Corinthian Yacht Club to hear Pete McGehee, vol- unteer chaplain with the Orange County Sheriff's Department. THURSDAY: 7:15 a.m. - The Costa Mesa Orange Coast Breakfast Lions Club will meet at Mimi's Cafe for a business meeting. Noon - The Kiwanis Club of Costa Mesa will meet at the Holi- day Inn to hear John Dlgtantomasso of the Civil Air Patrol. Newport Beach- Corona del Mar Kiwanis Club will meet at the Bahia Connthian Yacht Club to hear Clarence Tu.mer, for- mer mayor of Newport Beach, discuss the Traffic Phasing Initiative. the Exchange Club of Newport Harbor will meet at the Riverboat Restaurant. The Newport Irvine Rotary Club will meet at the Irvine Mar- riott for craft talks. • C011•• INITY a a.um Is pub- lished every Saturday In the Daily Pilot. Send your S4!Mce club's meeting Information by fu to (949) 660-8667, by e-mail to jdeboomOaol.com °' by mall to 2082 S.E. Bristol, Suite 201, Newport Beach, CA 92660-1740. 'DJe,~~ T~ttf P..i ~~u-~~ Native American Bakery Hours Tues. Weds, Thurs 7 am-3 pm Mon-Fri 10-6 Sat 10.-5 Open Stmday 10-4 369 E. 17 th Costa Mesa (Aaoa from Ralphs) (949) 646-6745 2834 Newport Blvd. (29th Str9et at the Alley) Balboa Peninsula 9 675~2909 ·so% OFF TOPIARIES AND FLORAL >tmmoemmts Home Decor Specialty Furniture Silk Florals Custom Floral Arrangements .... ,...." ... dinner. • a 1 IWCI IWOUllD runs period- Qlly In the IWy Pilot on • rotating ~If you'd lib lnfonnat.lon on eddlng your Of'Pllutlon to this list. call (949) 574-4228. con1M1s1 CIVIC PllYHOUSI The playhouse needs volun- teers for ushering, backstage, mailings, typing, lights and many other duties. (949) 650- 5269. COSTA MESA . HISTORICAL SOCIETY The society collects informa- tion, photos and artifacts relating to the history of Cos- ta Mesa and the harbor area. Volunteers are needed for clerical tasks, computer input and help in the library. (949) 631-5918. COSTA MESA LRIUCY COUNCIL The Costa Mesa Literacy Center needs volunteer tutors to teach English as a second language. People who want to learn English as a second language are also encour- aged to call. To register, or for more information, call (714) 435-3310 or (714) 545-3445. COSTA MESA SElllOR CENTER The multipwpose senior ser- vices facility at the comer of 19th Street and Pomona Avenue seeks volunteers for a variety of tasks. For more information, call (949) 645- 2356 between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m. COSTA MESI POLICE DEPARTMENT Seniors 55 and older are being sought to help staff the West Side substation. Volun- teers would be asked to work iB)~ ,.. ....... "' •tnam.cJ • COURT•APPOlllJID SPECllL IDYOCATIS Volunteers are needed to serve as advocates for abused, neglected and aban- doned children. Volunteers work one-on-one with a child for three hours a week. (714) 663-9034. CRISIS ASSISTANCE PROGUM INC. 1llis nonprofit organization is seeking volunteers for its expanding trawna response program. Voluntee~ would assist law enforc~ent, fire fighters and emergency-type responders by providing emotional first aid and sup- port to injured or traumatized people. Other volunteers would provide dispatch and office support. No experience is necessary, training will be provided. (949) 588-1414. DISPUTE RESOLUTION SERVICES Volunteer mediators. case specialists and outreach assis- tants needed to help in a vari- ety of mediation cases. Bilin- gual language skills are need- ed for office volunteers and for mediators. (949) 250-0488. EASTER SEIU Easter Seals needs volunteers for ongoing clerical work and to help in programs for chil- dren with disabilities and in special events. (714) 834- 1111. Mon-Fri: 1 oam • 9pm1 Sat: 1 o-7/Sun: 11 ~:30 fJil Horton & South Coast Plaza GitJ T.AifftaSe Level 2, Sears Wmg ..... 9Clll7 714 444 1600 , . -I . '/ • • ' : , .: I ' 19 f t I t t cf I It Randy Daniel and son Jarrett on their annual baseball Kerne and Cbrlsttan Abbott at ,._vem on the Green In "' Steve Rochford at Founder's Plaza In Dallas. trip. They visited Detrolrs Tiger Stadium for the tea.m's New York for brunch. · next-to-last game there before It was tom down. Father and son are in the fifth year of a 30-year plan to visit every major league baseball stadium. SABATINO"S 3000 Sq. Ft. Showroom Offorirrt UrrU,.U Daips To En/Mnu Any Decor. &fay refw:sbmm11 whi# "-llittt;,,,, .... ~ lllml>IJ>bm. CbiJJm, .,.. wJamte. COMPLBTEDFSIGN SERVICE Ciumn Upholstny QuJJty HtnM F#mumnu &Ji_ l"'J>O'° Outom WiUo.v Tre4lmnlt1 'We're Bursti.ng With Quality Furniture at Great Savings! •Model Home Furniture • Antilfues •Art A&cnsoria •Area •u & Mow! Custom Refinishing tf Upholstn-y (949) 646-1822 670W. 17th St., 102 • C:OSta Mesa HOWJ; Mon.-Fri. 1111111 -4 .__....._. __ ...:;:i;_.._. ~ Jerk NEWPORT STONE & DESIGN CENTRE COMPLETE D ES I GNE R SHOWROO M ... tul/UV!/~t&nuuk~ • Marble & Granite -Slab Fal»riaaion • Twnblecl Umatooe - Tl'll'ftl1inC • Slate •GlueBlodu •TUC -H.-SllicdOD of -~ned. nae. • Coria • ICltda• It ... c..biam&~ • 42 y..,.,.,.,.,, PetM-.. ~ • Fou..a.. • Rr1fl1w • WoodFIOOn• ..... How best to take care of a work of art? A Rolcx timepiece is truly a marvel of pcrf onnance and endurance. In five years Qf contlnuo~ timekeeping, its balance travels the equivalent of 23,3333 miles. This kind fA perfonn1nee delerves IJr9Pel' care md ~ mainrenance, and RolU recoinmeiida that lheir .UOS./ Ko °"1rlo. N,.._, ,_,. PZMf • tW41J.flJtl "**_...,,,.., __ ,.,._..._,,. _____ ........ i..r=-~~..:. ........ Oililli ................. . I I ON VACATION , , I ' I I ' ' ; I Saturday, July 22, 2000 89 TM Baugh family of Newport Beach on vacation with the Karen and John Cochran of Balboa Island ln Greenwich, Newport Harbor Hlgb School band and color guard Delly Pilot on Bora Bora, Tahiti. From left, Rachel, Steve, England at the Old Royal Observatory. Holding the Daily members celebrate wlnnlng t 1 awards at competitions Patty, Ian and Warren. Pilot over the meridian for Greenwich mean ttme, Karen held ln San Francisco. At Pier 39 ar~ Ryan Long, Jackie is standing ln the Eastern Hemisphere and John is ln the Fortunko, Amy Barklow and David Morihiro. Western Hemisphere. Botanicare Maintenance 2025 W. Balboa Blvd. Ste D Newport Beach, Ca 92663 (949) 6 73-5646 FURNITURE Please Join us ... 2189 Lakewood BIYd ·Long Beach· California 562.986.5305 llHllHIHllllllllllUU ti lllln ... .frt.tul-·la --·la na.• Aup• 21 • 7:00pm -8:00pm Pl•=-........ ,.......,"'=--~ fi ·=" 1 ...... .. 2 -... , == I l I I We are completely out of room and more cars are arriving every day. Make us an offer, we can't refuse . We'd rather pass the savings to you than pay flooring costs to the bank. t/ At Fletcher Jones Motorcars, we provide Free Sc heduled Service for four years or 50,000 miles on all new vehicles, whether you lease or pur .. chase. t/ With our Guaranteed Buyback Program, we guarantee to buy your car back for a specified amount at lease end. t/ Let us show you how to lower your lease rate be low prime . Starmark Certified Mercedes--Benz . ~~2~f !Ast (0:48li) J 12, '1'10 '9 1 560SEC Jl'l.'/'10 63,000 mb./Wow! (609l63) I '96 C220 118, '1'10 '96 E320 WagonJ~'l'IO White /Swmat\( 415200) Sptcial/Starmark (004200) I '95 E420 11'1,'l'IO '98 ML3 20 $32, 'f '10 Can't Beet ltl (2S8278) Kuny!/Starmark (047048) '97 C230 113,1'10 '99 ML320 136, '1'10 Lo Mis./Sainnlft ( 5Ui040) ~(145249) '98 C230 125,1'10 'R,'1'10 ~ .• ,. '97 C280 '~'lfO ~(512J11) TAYA KASHUBA I DM.Y Pl.OT Stadana SUtts bu her sights set on galnlng a berth at the Olympic Games in Sydney. A permanent edge • Olympic hopeful has overcome an unusual condition, which she hopes will blend into a medal-winning effort. Richard Dunn DAILY Pilar W en you see Stac:iana titts walk confidently alongside a swimming pool. your first reaction is to think about dedication. Here's a swimmer who is completely bald. A female. She bas no body hair. One's athletic instinct is to believe she has shaved to render a hydrodynamic advantage as she prepares for the U.S. Olympic swimming trials. But Stitts, 18, is olways this way. And has been since age 12, when her hair started falling out seventh grader with common peer pressure, try showing up to school the first day. Stilts tried special creams, but refused cortisone injections that were offered to bolster her chances of having hair grow back. •1 dldn.'t want to mess with any more creaips ... and most (doctors) s8id you have to be dependent on the creams U your hair grows in,• she said. •J just decided to deal with (the hair loss). My dad just said to shave (my head}, because it's all falling off, anyway. freshman year at UC Berkeley, is ranked No. 3 in the nation in the women's 100-meter breaststroke and No. 8 in the world., with dreams of making this.year's U.S. Olympic team at the 2000 Sydney Games. Prom a 12-year-old swim teammates has also been good for her social We. But if she makes the Olympic team and perform5 wen in Sydney, imagine the attention Stitts wW draw from her unusual condition. Stitt&, who once had girl who would understandably wear hats and scarfs to hide her Sfadana suns ~~fii:n ~ ~ head to a highly self-confident Olympic hopeful, Stitts has gone to great lengths .in and out of the pool. with her, could put "alopecia universalis• on a world- wide stage. •1 hope so,• she said. '-·1 was just brushing my hair one night,• Stitts said, •and it kept coming out of my brush and hair was on my pillow that night Then I started showing bald spots and a.couple of doctors said, •oh, yeah, you have alopeda. We don't know why it happens or what causes it.' They said you're perfectly healthy and don't have to worry. You're just not going to have any hair.• ·1 would stare in the milTor and just cry. Here I was 12 and had no hair ... I was really confused. I'd never heard of (alopecia) before. "In swimming,• she said, •you couldn't wear wigs ... swimming helped me to learn bow to present myttelf from the inside and not the outside. Swimming helped me get over the trauma of not having hair when I was little.• Stitts won a national title for the first tlnie last year, when she finished first in the 50 freestyle at the spring nationals. In the summer of '99, she set the Pan American Games record in the 100 breaststroke (1:09.16), the seventh-fastest time in the world last year .. "It took IQe a year to realize who 1 was and Eicepted tt. • stitts, who recently had a st:Nllg showing at the Janet Evans Inv!ta.tional, will compete for a spot on the U.S. Olympic team at the swim trials in Indianapolis Aug. 9-16. Jacludea in tba.(teld,.dwmg her victory at the Janet Evans Invitational in 1 :09.49, were Amy Baloerzak., who finished second, .. and 1996 Olympian Amanda Betlrd. &lcerzak won the breaststroke at the 1999 World University games, while Beard ---Easy for them to say. But for a This summer, Stitts is staying in Newport Beach with her good friend and Irvine Novaquatics teammate, Amy Murphy, a former Newport HarbOr High aquatics standout who will be a fresb,man at the University of Nevada Reno in the fall. Stilts, who just completed her Stilts, who also stayed at the Murphy's house last IUDlDler wtllle training with the Novaquatics, said living near her was the silver medalist at the Atlanta. Games. •Al Irwin has been a Newport Beach staple for some 70 years now. -: Tie lofty standards of Al Irwin, former UCI athletic director, have endured since his early days of learning sports at the knees of the late Ralph Reed and the late Amos Alonzo Stagg. Outside prep and college summer years, old friends struggle trying to recall if he ever applied for jobs after his mid-'40s coaching assignments at Antioch and Valencia high schools. Only one recall arose from 1947 as a near \ exception when Irwin considered applying 'r for tbe athletic director's post at Orange Coast :J College. SJnce Irwin has returned from the : • Navy u a night deck officer, was a longtime • local resident and athlete and would carry a strong recommendation from the famed Stagg, he felt lt was worth a try. However, be pondered on the pollibUity that the late Wendell Plclams at Newport Harbor High might be angling for the position. Hence, be phoned Pickens and lea.med that it WU true and that be •wanted the job in the wont way.• :.. IO, llwhi bowed away and let it pus. · PlcUm dJew the OCC offer from Or. 8uil Petenon and took charge in 1948 while Irwin was tbeo approached. by hil alma mater. Harbor •;•High, tlo r9pl.ace Pickens u bead football madl. '°' ~ironic element surf.aced about eight ~ ~later wben the grid post opened at OCC and Peterson called on lrwiJl in 1956. Although Irwin led OCC to a conference championship and a Potato Bowl bid by the fall of '56, sad news came from bis doctor on needed medical attention and so he boiled out of the grid sport after many years. famed Stagg also remained in touch with Irwin until bis dying days. Stagg olways had warm admiration for Irwin's lovely wUe, Lois, and their two daughters. Stagg had sent the girls gUts when they wem young. Showing compassion for Irwin's problem. Petenon disclosed that he would be allowed to continue on as the college's director of water sports. NUDlerous duu!piomhips and honors followed, but after some years he was approached by a distinguished gentleman from the stands at one meet, but had no idea what to expect The Don Cantrel SIDELINES One moM interesting job that Irwin cart1ed out (or Stagg around 60 years ago was scouting a game for College of the Padtlc and winding up side-by-side with a faillOql coach named •Pop• Warner, wbowu also scouting the same game. Stagg appeared one night yean later to show bis support for lrwtn'• man was impreued with bis work and invited him to accept a bid from the Univenlty of Ca11fomla, tmne. Irwin accepted a similar post. Familiar rucce11 continued on a grand scale and Irwin wu eventually named to the'atbletlc director's post where he advanced to serve in an exceptional rDl!DMr, Al the yean puaed, Irwin bad the opportunity to have breakfast once a week with bis prep athletic director Reed. 'Ibey had been dole frieDdl atnce 1930 when Reed would cart him and other grade ltUdents to Harbor High to aplore the atblatic'tadlltlel. · Tragic newt came in 1985 when Reed apparently lolt control of bis QwttOac and crubed into a .-I pole on one tr.way oftramp in Senta Ana. And it ii noteworthy to mention th.at the cbampi<>u OCC team at the Potato Bowl in Bakenneld, but noted that he bad to spend another half aero.ti the field to support bis employer, Stockton College. Stockton won, 21-12. It is always interesting to note that Stagg wu a longtime friend ot the George Yardley, Sr. family via Chicago. Tbe Yardleys eventually moved to Hollywood in the late '30I, then to Newport Beech. Stagg would b.tt.ve been cbeered'?lid be Jived to ... George, Jr. nam8d to the NBA Hall of Pame after his yean of play for the PWtom ol the NBA George YaidJey, Sr. hACl ptayed betlaetbd and buetiall under Stegg at Che Uniwnlty ol auc.go. Some old fliendl ltil1 nall a picture or two of Irwin atteMing daun:b Oil SUndayw With the s~. The~ tnaueaceweamoag. IOU PAULSON REM~INS IN THE HUNT AT ST. ANDREWS Costa Mesa High product shoots 1-under 71 in Friday's (. second round at British Open, where he's tied for 11th on the hallowed course. ST. ANDREWS, Scotland -Den- nis Paulson « Santa Ana Country Club and formerly of Costa Mesa High continued his torrid pace at the 129th· British Open Friday, shooting 1-under-par 71 to finish two rounds at 5-under on the Old Course at St Andrews. Tiger Woods (Big Canyon Country Club) leads the field by three shots at 11-under, followed by David Toms and three players at 7-under. Paulson, who ended the second round tied for 11th, shot 4-under 68 tn the first round. Paulson this year led at the Mas- ters in the first round and later won his first PGA Tour event, the Buick Classic at Harrison, N.Y., in a playoff. A 1980 Costa Mesa graduate who is building a house in Encinitas that is expected to be comJSleted this sum- mer, Paulson is a former national long-drive champion whose golf game is well-suited for St· Andrews' historic linlcs. . With barely a hint of breeze, and sunshirie that made it feel more like Southern California than the edge of the North Sea, players continued their assault at the home of golf, where even 112 deep bunkers didn't disrupt scoring. Gentle winds helped golf's most hallowed course play even easier than the first day, when the stroke average was 72.9. On Friday, the average dropped to 72.1. SAIUIG RESULTS Sir Joseph Porter Regatta NEWPORT BEACH -The New- port Harbor Yacht Club took three of the five sabot classes Wednesday in the Sir Joseph Porter Regatta hO&ted by the Lido Island Yacht Qub. NHYC's Jeff Sloan and Nath.an Deian were 1-2 in the Sabot B class. Hannah Dean of NHYC won the Sabot Ct, and Dan Darnall was victo- rious in Sabot C2. Host UYC took the top two spots in the Sabot C3 class as Brooke Yates and Robin Gautschi finished 1-2, respectively. Balboa Bay Yacht Oub's Freddie Stevens won the Sabot A clan, and BYC's Justin Law was sec- ond. . . . .. ~--------~~----~~---.;_~~SPORIS~~----~~~--~~~~~~·Ju~~2~2,_2ooo~B_ll MEWS aua GOU Don't miss the inaugural Jones 'cup, a better-ball gross Pro-Am featuring two-man entries from Mesa Verde Country Club, Big canyon Country Club, Santa Ana Country Club and the host Newport Beach Country Club on Friday, July 28, 1 p.m. NEWPORT ' BEACH COUNTRY CLUB MEN'S CLUB CHAMPIONS, OVER THE YEARS Cup T H E NEWPORT BEACH CO lJN T KY\; LU 8 N ewport Beach Country Club's familiar layout which bandies the Toshiba Classic annually, 1 is the site of Friday's inaugural Jones Cup, an ultimate Pro-Am showdown on the local! leve · R111r~ 111~l 1!.-1111li11•'' 11n· -11t.j1·1·1 111 l'htt11!{•' "'itlt11111 1101it 1• Tiw 1111hl1-l1n n·"-r' t" ilw ri~t11 10 1'•·11-..11. n·rlo"1r, rn 1-.r 111 "'I"• I am rl11,,1fit•d ucln•r11-..·111r111 Pl1 ll'f rrp11r1 am t'tnir 1h111 nul\ lit· 111\otir1 l11.,1fit ... l ud i111i11Nfi1trt>h I ht• 1>111h P1lo1 111i •1''' Ill• li11!.ili1v for 1111\ rm11 111 uu a1h1·n1"'1111·111 ror v,·l1lc•h II mill lw fl'•fM>ll~ilolP t'\l'l'flf r111 rht 1'fto.I of rlw 'fla' I" 111'111ulh 11t'i'11pw1I "' rhr rmir Ln-.111 r11111111h hr ul~ ....... 1for1h1 finol illM'nlllll. !I I• II • ByPlta•e (9 .. 9) M2-!l67B ..... By MaMll Pet.• :J;}(J Wn t Bu\ Stn·rt Co..,tu ~1r..u. e\ <>'lb'.!7 AJ '""".111 llh,I & Ba, .,, 1954 -Dick Ewert 1976 -Art Daugherty 1955 -ttilliam A. 1977 -Danny Bibb Gothard 1978 -Danny Bibb 1956 -Dick Ewert 1979 -Danny Bibb 1957 -Dick Ewert 1980 -Danny Bibb 1958 -Dick Ewert 1981 -Frank Crinella 1959 -John Robinson 1982 -Danny Bibb 1960 -Lee McColloch 1983 -Paul O'Shea "' 1961 -Ed Goddard 1984 -Dave Coffer 1962 -Jtiilliam A. 1985 -Chris Woo d Gothard 1986 -Chris Wood 1963 -Dr. Michael 198 7 -Chris Wood O'Brien 1964 -Jtiilliam l. 1988 -Jim Amen Hairston 1989 -Daue Coffer 1965 -Cecil Wheat 1990 -Jim Whitaker 1966 -Cecil Wheat 1991 -Dave Coffer 196 7 -Ted 1iberg 1992 -Mickey Boswell 1968 -Cecil Wheat i 993 -Jim Whitaker 1969 -Bill Donovan 1994 -Sean Steele 1970 -Jimmy Jones 1995 -Jim Whitaker 1971 -Bill Donovan 1996 -Sean Steele 1972 -Bill Donovan 1997 -Joe Stafford 19 7 3 -Bill Donovan 1998 -Jim Whitaker 197 4 -Tom Cummings 1999 -Joe Stafford 1975 -Bob Hogeboom 2000 -Bob Kraft • Monday ................. Friday 5:00pm Rous 'ff.lt-f1IHml' U::\Oam-:>·OOpm \lood1n~I oo., \\ ull..-111 8::10u111-.):00p111 \l,,..Ja,-tnoLa' Tuesday .............. ~onday 5:00pm Wednesday ......... Tuesda y S:OOpm . Thursday ....... Wednesda} 5:00pm F'riday ............... Thurii<lay 5:00pm Saturday ............... Frida} 5:00pm ...... , I , 1. ; r, . ~-~·--~~- ~ : , : , . ' ~ ·_ .. !.... ·----~-J I l . ' ' . . . . . --------- ! ' !._ ---- - L _____ _ - -· N~wport BeB-Clt 2000. DISCOVERY SERIES II 'I 4 ')-'1 ( r))'l I .'. • ' ' L .__) L L L :.--.:.:::·..,. .c "11 80XIO .. l'l.'70 wlll tell ttlO IOHtHt!! ,-. 'i I I_----·-- -_ _.}. .,,...... •ClllM • Slalll'I •Aalmsln ·~Jlwtlry •M • (j4fts 130 East 17th St Suitt ·c Costa Mesa /\l~&t71h bd1fnd Hll'p tnn (949) 7!1 .. 8586 Catified Antique & Raidential Con ten cs Appraisals VIVIEN L HFSS (714) 841-0473 &Mail: haid~aol.oom =Certified Pre-OWned = ~ .. ------~ llMW ------. For ultimate peace of mind. every Unified Prc.Qwnecl BMW is baded by The CaU6al Pro-Ow'MICl BMW Procecdon Plu. covering the vchidc for up to 2 ycan or 50,000 miles (whichcvtr comes fim) form the date of cxpir.uion of the ~year/50,000-rnilc BMW New Vchidc Limirrd Wamnry. ••The Protection Plan induda two key demen~ • c.ertified Pre-Owned BMW Limited Wurmj .-Backed by BMW of Nonh America, Inc., and iu nationwide ncrwork of BMW centers, covettd repairs a.rt made only by BMW-mined technicians using only genuine BMW rcpbcemcnt pans. BMW Roadside Aasistance .-Peace of mind follows you anywhere in the USA. 24 hours a day, 365 days a year. 1998BMW Z3 •2.8 Ltr, 17X Mi. CD A Morel $2995.00total to l(Jlc mi per YQf. Toe.al paymcnll $11.597 (4AZX297) 1998BMW 328iS Automallc, Low Milea. Nice! S299S.OO total to 1 l()t mi per yar. Thtal p11ymen1 $13,947.00 (4AN8719) !J7311N S Spoed. CO, to. Miles (£Sn7t) ......... -..... -.. $.24.99.S !J'7Jl81~ Sh/B&adt (02200) ........... _,_ ................... -~ .. $28,!>!Jj 973281~ Whiic w!S.nd (3VKM401) .......... , .................... $.29,!195 !J7"8iS Aacomaic. 22K Mm. While wls..d .......... " ....... NICB! . . ---··i"~ c.... ...... lled Ml 1111. 11 l 1 Oft wool _.,.. l1100. c--............... dllM ........_MOO. ........ Pine Et1teft1ln11ent AnMlr .. ~,:d urge ,,.., llllrron, 11•-.IOllt .... Top .............. Al U!IP !le !!t12H7!I ~·-SJ f, ' r. 1°'~1 Jaa. R & 8, Sc.A. Aoc:t. -50'1 I llO'• MR 1MH46=7S05 WANTED SEWING MA CHING WORKING 11M4M21S ... mJM -...... LtllMl9 ...... 1110. ..... I MIM TH' GALLUP 110LL • Survey Phone Interviewer •No Sales • Paic! Training/Benefits • Pos1!1ve Work Environment • Flexible Scheduling • Full and Part·time for further information: 949 -474-7900 (x710) lrv/M don_dusatko@ .com Hoepltel HOnL .Mt bloc:q from Ill Pde Portoftno 8-11 "*' = '= ~ t ~'~1«1 ~~ wi1ll ~ Elip a + but noc req'd Ile --..... .,_. Front Desk ~"' ~Aldi MEDICAL ASSTS Maintenance FO & ~ MA w111 ~ wtltlln: bllillaull '*PllA. exp. In 2309 · w: Ooe.1frcw1t CPT';" IC!» cocling I plua. Newport 8eecfl ~ In I.() ~ MM73·7030 LIMITED ttoT SU1i111ER JOIS a XRAY TECHS l:~t!ta~5h= Requires MA, Up 1100/d!y 94M74-2111 -------. '"""9d. I.() olllcee ........ w.y °' oul PBX ~ Of not ... ,.. GI -Clllp•-l*lng nowt ERA Rn1y & a.ct _. .. _. Requires experience in Lloyd al Hwlbnglon 8elc:tl ...., ...._ lu- P8X, hoej>ital pttl111ed. wil. pay for '/<U bole & ,_, beb'I you lllld M1..i be computer lilnte give You lrH !reining. lllY -_, or ,._ Ind hlrdt. t.vy phone -~~~S:S39==-1 .,:;exl::::....1:.:;19,,__ IOI' ...... Reid voNmt Ind Ulldlntlnd lllY Meclcll Ftenl Otc ~ 5 llf Fuhlon Ill pqcec.. ~ 1 must, IMm pllyer, llllAtlple lltka. NII llllW. Fa ~ •n1·17IO. CAFETERIA WORKERS/ FOOD SERVICE Req\M• exc.hnt com-mun~tlon akllla, lood MIVice experience helpful ~ol~ll'd NUTRITION ASSISTANTS OFACE ASSISTANT • Pff 20·25hta/wk. Clerlc11. ohorlll&~~ ~rlendly, prol11slo111I •'"'°'91*' In bulintu ~ 24:~ Local8d In ~ MeM. Cal Lyme 11 (7141431-0088 connca ._,,. you elgn. WAFR.E I BAGEL SHOP Bllbol llllnd. Orwt loc Ml.c hive e.IQtllenl com- mt.ncallon ... M1h lhl ~ lo b'dlon " • fall ptOld enwonment Food H t vice upttience prel«rtd "*""" ,..,.. PT, Entllullutlc, INm Mt 144 HM pity. for ... .,,. In' SERVICE CARE TECHNICIANS Requires atrong com- llllri:ab ... CUllOmtl Newport. 2 + dlys I .... VENDING Oeoendlblt, ... & multi tMit oritrtled. Gre1t °"" 1or Financing/locations l[O'l!!h MM44-2741 1·877·823·VEND PT U Boo*:t:f!""*"1cll 1or 1111 a1c rn . to ~. I.IS Wold. Excel, MAS 91J, Fur...ne94~ ..,_ lbilitiee t.41..i be M S... A1111e1n1 kdllt and • llltn pllytl lor brokngl lrm "°'" w. Mlllt be ~ Ind HOUSE KEEPER organized Filenc:ill up. Rtquitw P'9YIOUI hou*9 prelttrtd. Salary DOE. 11..,,.ng experience 1ap1-Fu ,_: •72M104 ... ,-------. 1 :'.ci ~~-.-ga Cll Mlrx • ,...,.... • I ,_ RECEPTIONIST 123-2.K . -IOA'll - CLERICAL =•eoexci~ !*:i V lriety ol clerk rolea Lori Srpr Mi-28G-9400 incMtng PT ~. edltduling. • filing, dll.I entry, phones. cllims procelling. ~ bl lllJle lo type 35 wpm, Piiier -l!r10Wdgl al medal llrri- nology ~,___ Ont '='~ 8100, ~ 8-11. CA 92t.58-8 t 00 E..O.E. I . ,l .-,& ~: '-LJ.AJl., Salts/Advertising CADILLAC C-. '17 300 H.P. HolhUir, wtilt s-1. CO, ~ I mOl9I (291282) $24,9118 NABERS (714)!40:!100 CMllLLAC IEVUI .. Low mile. CO, llgp. bit al WWIWlly (914127) $28.1188 NABERS (714)14N100 OYU,~llYCM · ., Run your ed I~ the Newport Beach- Costa Mesa Dally I ~~~~~~~~~~~.....,..,,......-,-.. I Cl1 Pilot and the I - HuntJFC Beach-I Fountain YllleY I c---Cld-.._Cllll__...C_MC_C_WM_ .... 0.._AM_X~~- ~ to I_ reach <Mr 100,000 I ~!l!"ltiiir""'l'l:f~i~----~ .. :"'lliic=----t homel. faX UI tNI ,_CllllMilf- fomi Wltt'9 ~ ad1 ~lorinlllwllh I .......... I I t ..... ~ ... INFNTJ 045 '97 ~ Jade, WIMKy lel!Mr. F lolded JAGUAR W .. c.w.tlll6t 2f) '57,9115 ~1f1'/ BAUER JAGUArJ 71 .. tu-41GO ( b35) S2U87 LEXUS llllSSIOH VIEJO Jeep Gnnd a.roMe .. M•M4-0M4 I.Medo x1n1 c:ond. 29k ITI, JAGUAR ROA.OSTER '50 C/O, new lirn & breeka XKUO 185,000 080 2wd. Chetgold Sl8.000 obo BAUER JAGUAR ... ?11-2'?11 714-t53=48QO LEXUS Es..300 'ti Bllclt, Jeguer XJe Vllldtn Plat Ian llhr Int, pl pcl(g. ~ s.dln 41lf '91 tOOI. 1 owner. al 5et\b $35,1915 9Ml7& records. perfect $20,500 BAUER JAGUAR F"wm S4i-?19-0n1 714-953-4800 LEXUS ES 300 'ti JAG~~A~C~ '97 =~· Lexi. ~967 S3U95 17-6174 LEXUS MISSION VIEJO BAUER JAGUAR i4H64·~ 714-~ Saturday, My 22, 2000 813 WUI LS a 't4 P11rVGry/Ory. Lthr. Qwome, Ldld, 0r;y flOI( ITI (198833) $21,987 LEXUS 111SS10N VIEJO ..... 364-0eM r~ -r·'..-. . LR RANGE ROYER .. UHCOt.H TOWN CAR '00 AH pow. -Ill $9la.ture TourinQ Sedln· t33l3W2l20 ' "1.llO American luxury LANO AOVSt p,_.,, pkg moonrool NEWPORT BEAat {YY772ti61) S36 745 1 --..!M!!IMO~~l!:!MS:l!...-Ktn Grody llncoln~ury lkzdt lllXI u modll • 11 .. sn:3110 2nc1 -'*· ..-._ poNtlon -· .. ,.,... S2000 Mt-m.4m •tu. ll motllllS, closed llld 11111. S3l50D dowll + Ill pmt • OMV + lie! MC dtflOlll + tu • 115.441.S2. OU. I lnMI l'lttpllon Total fllllCS of SIU!l 12. l.NN end llU'Cllul opllClll 124,a.a. B....i Oii 1- ... peryw. IS. per---....-~. mdil ljlplll'l1I Mil ----~ &alltd~ Reglmo/Rd'url>lsn POf'C'el.t1n • Fibergl.us Stnks • Showers Counren 949-645-7723 ·~·~ I • I •• ~ .... ' GOOD JOBS. RELIABLE SERVICFJ. NG IlllNGS TO BUY. trsAU HERB EVERYDAY IN ClASSIFEil (j4j)6f2·5671 wunv 11.D>C1 QlJIZ Q 1-Bast·Wcst wlnenllle, M · Sooth you hold: •Q10U o AtU,o 1t4 •Altl The biddtnJ has proc:ceded: WP.Sf NORTH BABl' SOlTl1I 10 1• l o 'I Whal do you bid now? Q 1-~·West vulnerable, as SOuth you hold: •141 o ICQ'162 o Q H'1 6 •3 The biddina 'has orocecded: NOR111 tAs1' SOUTH WEST l • l o 1 What do you bid now? Q 3 -Bast-West vulnerable. as South you hold: • A I 5 4 o IC 4 l o A 9 • A 10 7 6 The bidding has~: £AST soum WF.ST NORTH 10 Obi .... • .... .... ? Whal action do you take? Q 4 -Boch vulnerable. as South you hold: Your left.bind opponeot'a one dia- mond openiJll bid .. pwcd lnJUnd to you. Whit ICtion do you talce? Q 5 -Both vublcrlble, as South you ho~: •AKQU o It o JU •.Al .. 6 The bidclina has oroc:eeded: SOUTll WtS1 NOR111 EAS1' t• .r.. l o ,.. ., Whal do yoo bid now? Q 6 -Em· West vulnetablo. a.s Sooth you hold: • 3 o KQltl5 o 53 • AKltU Your right-hand opponent opens the bidding with three spades. What action do you take? Look for answtn on Monday. MOUNTAINEER 4X4 '19 Sidi ., begl, -. C*ller. CO. rtWlll pellWlg I -~-11-~ 11 ••c.m= , _~_·J348_:;....;.~.._,)ln=~--r.-.Cllf'Y"-$2-4,g_'75 . . . . . . 714-521·3"0 Mllced11 Benz MU20 'II llll'otdu Binz E420 'f7 lillf'oedll.etnz C2JO W Oldlllloblt • LS. '12 Wllltt/Grey/Starmarll Black/Stannartc Hunyl/Starmertc 4-<lr. fl.I ~. UHOOI, (004200) $29,790 (404846) $37,790 (5823112) $25,790 .... lllv -. _, ••tuVU""-FU"rCH£A JONES FLE'rCH£R JONES FU'T'CHEA JOMES • .., ' ,_ ""· ..,_,,..,.,.,, 111.124.1401 'Nl.124.1401 UU24.1401 9'49-723-IS04 Clll6lllcd l!J CONVENIENr Wbcthcr you·~ buytna. idlln&. ()( )UM looldna. duelllcd lw what you nccdl Cl.ASSlFIED (949) 642-5678 Mlrcitd11 Binz C220 't5 SWmwk c.tlled (151387). $17,790 FU"rCttEA JONES ... 124.1401 ' ~ • _,,. J..... PUBLIC NOTICE Tiie Celif. Publlc· Utllltlt1 Com· mluioll REQUIRES NtalUMd~ hOld OOodl lnOIMI Drlnt itlelr P.U.C. tel T IU'llblr; lmol and cN\llerl Pflnt their T.C.P. ruNllf In .. ~tl'lllments. If ~ ,..... • quit-"°" ~"' .... lly of 1 mowr, ho OI cflllAllt Cllt PU8UC iJTIUTIES COMMISION 714'55M161 STARTING ANEW BUSINESS?. . •. . . . . . . . . . TIH LLfAI !Apdrtmnil al the Dail] PilDt it pkami to .,,.,,.,,flCt • '""' ""'"' now •wli1"bk Ill nrw bl4irmsn. WI> wiJJ"""' SEARCH 11.t """''for Jiii' •1 no ~ r1'1t1ft. •fli saw,_,, the 1i-11r1J the trip to the <Aim HO*W ;,. Sti11t11 AM. Thm. •f CllllN , afin the Wlrrb is ~"'P/NJ wt 111i/J fik JO"' fa"titio#s blisiMU ,,._ flllln'Mlll wUlJ W C.W.IJ CJnlt, /"b/ish OllU. llAl't. for fo1U twt/a Ill fttf"irttJ"' £,,,, •M tbm fi/, '°"' rwf of l"bluUJ4n with the Cn111J am. Pk-I#/ .._, • fik Jf'I'' fimn-bwsi11n11111-1 •1 rht Ai.ii] PtlM. 3J() W. S., .Y, ~MM. If Jf'I' aJtMt ~1 "' !'-' c.JJ 111., (949) 642../Jl I •fli wt flJiJJ"'"' """1lfmtnll1 for'°" ,. ~ rJns '"""'" ..., -iL If,_,, sr,.,,,JJ "'1w 1117 foniNr ~ ~ aJJ"' .,.J 1r1t ,.,JJ # _,,, ""111 tlad to llJSist }'IL G.tNJ IMck ,,, JOllT -lrtu1NSS! --- I ID ntl.!fft to no1ei1 ID ntl.!5llSI .,,,....., ID Ml(lll]) ~~ APR/ 36 Mns. toMV• W1'le ID MllS711 lfhh to m11oe W1J.fe /IO~ ...,. ell. ntlOIQIJ """' """' . ,...., .,,,.,,, . ,.,..,. .,,,.... .,,.,.. .,.,Ht lllct ..... &It .,..,,, ... .,.... .. .,... lllct ........ OlSut .,,... ... .,,,.,.,, Gold .,.,.., Qr., . .,..,,,,, ~ .,,...,, Orun Ill IWnllO ~ .,..,..... Wiik Whfe Wiiie Whk Factory Rttbate Varies by model See UI for dltlh !Yew 2000 JYarigatar Most Powerlul SUV In Its Class/ • "'5ClQ lJl«Jc -~ Oold •llP1* Wiik • 81141141 Oold jll.ltjBCll) -~ ISDdl jl).JllJT12S Oold aD.11,!MJllll lJlacll ID rt/,,_ Oold • ltJJ1Hll -~ lJlacJc OD. YIP1l11/ Oold (IJ YIJHll~ IJlad< llJ. YIPIHCI Silver Ill f11171Q "'JllJ91J &JC.Jc ID 'fllJ112fl ~ ~ llJZIGCI IVOf1 .,. ,.,,~ • Ol (fta • "''· lJlve -~ Sliver ·~ ALL l'lew 2000 Cirand Marquis' You Get: ,..,._,., OU.. rwr .,_,.. AllMI ........, ,,._.OF •••r. Al'C-.ac. •.a V& ,.,..,.,_ C-. AJr c..d. eo.--~ s,.,.. nre /Yew2000 Cougar 1'·6. 3·Dr·Coupe You Get: V-C. A.a-.uc. AJlf./rllf CD, ~ ~ •• _. .. ..--~ .1Yew2000 Town Car or . · COntlnental .. .. /Yew2CJOO Mercury VHlager You Gett .......... 00-. ..... c...r. 7 l'll'll••·· .... --....... . .. .. ~ ·~=---l/O""flBqSlll. ''""' •'""1~ '''"' llO 1'11¥1 IM.llSllL l 14'11 • All /Yew 2000 Mountaineers You Get: ~·-· 1Jab7 •.. o ...c ., .. AJlf./rllf co. Olllrw ...... o..•...,oay1ol• .. All /Yew 2000 Sable LS PreniiuJJJ You <Jet: ..... "~ ,..... ,. ••• ~ .4.85.• ,... • • Northstar V-8 Engf • Wood Trim Pac.kqe • Factory Chrome Wheels • 6-Dlsk CD Changer • Heated front & Rear Seats • Garage Door Qpener ) $51,992.00 Ult F'rtce 8 500.00 N'abers o $44,492.00 SALE P .-tar 3' lllOl!lha. aa.i .., ..... on llllWMd cndlL St'23.2t Clllt ._. -....... *lwtoll +tllOO ..... ....... $15,741 TOW GI ..... 114,3114 1 ~1n.51. Or Purch 1 89 VOLVO 740 +tax low 77k miles, auto, white, v«y good condition! (343976) 191 BUICK LE SABRE low.-., white, 3.8 V-6, ~, super'wluef (.429625) 193 CHRYSLER IMPERIAL low miles, leather, V·6, many extras,,._, c:or trade-inf (100593) '91 MERCEDES BENZ 190E Whit., auto, ~lent condition, won't lostt (846608) '93 HONDA ACCORD LX low miWI, n.w oar trode-in. {023865) '95 INFINm J-30 low fJ\iles, beige, ton leather, anllent condition. (208325) 195 GMC JIMMY 4X4 . SlT, Nd, lealher, CD, altoys & morel N.w «x trade-in! (5.u693) '98 MAZDA 62615 LOW milla, V~, llaltw, moomxif & mcnt Bal. of won: (7..U 160) 1 98 CHIVROLIT tl&AZER Black, V-6, leathtr, CO & mcnl • lhorJ>I (151378) PURCHASE FOR ONLY s2s 9939ls{~~oo ··~ Prtoe . f -$ 3,651.03 .. Nabers Dl9count o. LEASE FoR s299~ ~<! .. """"" -· "''"·"' .... _,, ....... ,,, .... • • Inception tees, tax on declp & rebate • $4202.48. 1 only 4493. OR 1 PAYMENT LEASE ~3!24 montt1s.+tax&11etnse. + tax f()f 38 month ..... $5000.00 Cllll down Of trldl equtty, plus Inception fees• SM9U7. Pncea reflect rlbltl not Rostn Sylllm. 4547. on... good lhrouotl 7131/00 OAC. Or Purchase For only s42 995 $48,925.00 Ult Pt1ce t . $ 3,930.00 Nabers Discount $~99~.00 SALE PRICE All New 2001 Aurora 2000 Deville LEASE FOR s554/MO • +119e + liX for 38 monltl lease. $3950.00 cash doWn Of trade equity. plus~ fies• $5489.41. 1 only ~85328Y. orPurchaseForo::;av 9 54061 $41,400.00 .... Uat Pm:. ' $ 1,859.39 ..•. Nobws .. $39,540.61 .•.. SALE PRICE 2000 Alero ... ............ CIDmtNll ..... WIMlll ..... lm-56 ___ ___ ....,. ol. llllld9lt '1.137 .40. T<*I ol lllrfllll* '7,111 ....... 1 -31 .. Or Purchase for Only ~15,57711