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SERVING THE NEWPORT -Ni.SA CONv'AUNmES SINCE 1907 ON 1HE WEB: WWW.DAILYPILOT.COM MONDAY, JULY 24, 2000
Jnsiders ponder cause and effect of. del~Y
• The City Council postponed a decision
on the proposed Dunes resort, which could put
the project in the middle of a tug ~f war.
NcNlld Schwartz
DAILY PILOT
NEWPORT BEACH
When City Council members
voted last month to postpone
their decision on the Dunes
resort to ,September, the rea-
sons they gave for the sur-
prise delay were vacations
and the desire to further
review the proposed $100
million project.
The move puzzled the
Dunes owners, residents and
former city officials who had
watched as Planning Com-
mission spent six months -
among the longest in any
commissioner's memory -
combing through the proposal
before approving it in April.
"I would not have done
that,• said Clarence Turner, a
former mayor and co-author
of a counter-initiative to the
Topics and trends
that affect your life
Greenlight measure. "It's
hard sometimes to get every-
one there, but they'r~ elected
to be thEVe and you move for-
ward. I don't know what their
thinking was.•
·The first all-women
. mariachi band in the
United States shows
'tnacho' music can have
a feminine side
Many Newport Beach
political wonks say they have
a guess: Greenlight.
"Is everybody going to hide
behind the political reality that
the Dunes has become a huge
influence in that election?"
Tod Ridgeway
councilman
The so-called Greenlight
initiative, if passed in Novem-
ber, would require a citywide
vote on major -and some
minor -projects. The strin-
gent slow-growth measure
would take crucial planning
decisions out of the council's
hands and give it directly to
the residents.
Although most counctl
members are standing by the
justifications they gave for
the Dunes delay, Tod Ridge-
way -the ortly member
absent during the controver-
sial vote -has a different
opinion.
said. "Is everybody going to
hide behind the political real-
ity that the Dunes has
become a huge influence in
"It bad everything to do
with Greenlight, • Ridgeway SEE CLOSER PAGE 6
AndrewGlanr
DAILY PILOT
W ho said mariachis couldn't wear
pink pantsuits?
The nation's first all-women mart-
achi band, the 13-piece Mariachi La
Reyna de Los Angeles, rocked the
Arlington Theater on Sunday. and
everyone ln the audience ~ 6,000
seemed to embrace their feminine
take on a traditionally macho muslc.
•When I was a kid, my mother
used to put Mexican records into the
player,• said Art Ayala, a mariachi
fan from Rialto. •Thday to 1ee
Planners
to · consider
park paths
• Residents near Pai.rview
Park want dirt trails .to
remain unpaved.
Andrew Glazer
DAILY PILOT
COSTA MESA -Tue Planning Com-
mission is scheduled to dedde tonight
whether concrete trails belong in Fairview
Parle.
The city's plans for the park call for sev-
eral of the dirt paths to be paved with
asphalt or concrete. But hundreds of resi-
dents living near the
park signed a petition
started by nm
Cromwell, who owns a
house on the park's
northern boundary,
saying the trails should
remain dirt.
"/guess
the city's
just nervous
the kids ·
are going
to enjoy
themselves
·All the bwnps and
jumps on the hills that
mountain bikers use
would be history,' said
Cromwell. who said he too much."
enjoys running on the Tim Cromwell
dirt paths. '(!bey resident
would tum them all ------
into wide vanilla-type
trails that wouldn't be fun to ride on. I
guess the city's just nervous the kids are
going to enjoy themselves too much.•
Tue city's Fairview Park Otizen's Advi-
sory Committee recommended that tbe
city downgrade one trail used by bicydel
and pede5trlans to a biker-ooly trail. But
the COIDIDittee did not recm>mend requir-
ing the dty use dirt and natural materials
to create all-new paths.
Any decision the Planning Ommksion
makes tonight about Fai?view Park is a
recommendation. The aty Council ulti-
mately will decide what to do with the
park.
Cromwell said be would cmly suppolt
one paved trail from Aeoentia Avmue '°
the Santa Ana River trail.
•1 don't mind ooe road foe stroDen and
blgh-speed bikes foe transportation pur-
poses,. be said. "But dcm't "*"*'MB .......
dirt trails that we're .qoyiPg., DUCb. •
The Planning Ccwnnde!Loa IDllllltl M
6:30 p.m today at Cly Hall. 77 PU' Dd9e.
u•• .... ----• •
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YISBllll Yacht Vida
2 Monday, July 24, 2000
The . mystetjes of the_ Hydro Slide
Even the most experienced
navigators won't know how to
produce or avoid a giant splash
Alex Coolman
DAILY PILOT
I t's one of the fundamental mysteries of ·
the boating life.
For centwies, navigators have attempted
to grapple with the problem. brlngblg the
weight of hard science, elegant reason and
feivid imagination to bear on ~ vexing
conundrum.
Where should you sit in the Hydro Slide?
Front or back?
• Nobody knows.
Certainly it's possible to believe, as you
step through the gates of the Orange Coun-
ty Fair, that you understand the answer.
Certainly it's possible to suppose that the
logic of the Hydro Slide is something that
can be understood through a little careful
thought
But observe the sinuous motion of the
loglike vessels as they navigate the Hydfu
Slide waters. Notice how they weave and
bob in the tossing cunents of the channel,
how their occupants emerge, drenched or
bone-dry. as the case may be.
nus is not predictable boating. nus is not •Sailing for Beginners." nus is the Hydro Slide. And everything
you know about navigation is useless. .
Andrew Quirk. 7, of Costa Mesa took the
only reasonable approach to piloting his log
on a recent evening at the fair: He surren-
dered himself to chaos and yielded to the
whim of NeptUrie, god of the sea.
"I just put my feet on the grips and put
my hands all the way up,• Quirk explained.
He sat in the front of the log.
He got really wet -
But that's not always the way it works.
Sometimes the plastic log, gnarled and
nubby for verisimilitude, comes sluicing
down the track and hits the splash pool in a
way that throws buckets of water at the rear
passenger.
Sometimes it hits the splash pool and
barely a drop of liquid is distW'bed.
There is no way to comprehend the
Hydro Slide. There is no system that can
fully grasp its aquatic majesty.
But this, ultimately, is the lesson that
boating will always impart to those who pay
attention. Prepare bow you will. you are
powerless before 1he fury of the water.
The Hydro Slide teaches this, teaches
not to assume that you can master the chaos
of the sea. Or the chaos of a water-themed
roller coaster, as the case may be.
Simply put your feet on the grips, put
Terrance Phlps
THE HARBOR COLUMN
Governor's Cup
brings the future
to Orange County
I t's been a long tilq.e since
Ronald Reagan held the posi-
tion of governor of this fine
state. Even though he will always
be recognized as a very ~ccessful
Politician; aroun"l:l ttie Balboa
Yacht Club he'll be remembered
for the famous Governor's Cup.
On June 12, 1~7, then-Gov.
Reagan placed bis &tamp of
approval on a trophy that bas
since resided in the lobby of New-
port's second-oldest yacht club.
The Governor's Cup recognizes
the future of S4iling and ts award-
ed to sailors under the age of 20.
In 1989, the race took on an inter-
national flavor u saUon from all '
over the World began to compete
in the prestigious, invitational
event.
In this year's race, 22 boats
were considered for entry in a
race that is open to only 12 teams.
Local teams from the Balboa Yacht
-Carson Reynolds, Kathy Hugh-
es and Ryan Mulvania -and
Newport Harbor -"fyler Haskell.
Gary Grimes and J.M Modeisette
-will compete.
Defending champions from the King Harbor Yadlt Club, as well
as the California Yacht Club,
Coronado Yacht Club, Alamitos
Yacht Club and Mi11ioa Bay Yacht
Clubs also wUl 1epre.ent the
Golden State.
Sailon from Mystic River Sail-
ing Assn. in Connecticut and
Pleon Yacht Club in Marblehead,
Mass .. will round out the pack of
U.S. teams.
The Royal New Zealand Yacht
Squadron from Auckland, New
Zealand. and the Royal Prince
Alfred Yacht Squadron. along with
the Newport Beach New South
Wales Yacht Squadron from Aus-
tralia, also will be present
your bands all the way up, and see what MARWfib.OAYMASSEY/DALY~OT Each three-member team will
race Santana 20s with open tran-
soms. The identically equipped
boats are donated for the event by
happens on the long way down. lbe Hydro Slide Is a great way to .beat the afternoon heat at the Orange County Fair.
•-n llAIMI runs~ in W Dllr Plot on• rOt.-ttng ..._ ., JOU
..._., en twnt or KtMtr ttWt cauld
... In tNI c:clUmf\ ..... mml,..
~ to Datly Piiot.; HO W· lir St. eost. Mesi 9m7; fax It to ..., 146-4170; or .....-1 It to ·
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VOLKN0.17S
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UYAlllG I CAIOllll I
SCllA
Beglnn•ng _. Uyaldng. rOUblg
clinia and private leaool are
offeied. Kayak and sea ski J"8Dtals
are also available. liilormetioli:
(9'9) 675-1215 for Paddle Power,
1500 w. Balboa BM11
'J'wo..boat=loan ......... 10 a.m. frcim Newport
Duna o.t Is per adWt, St5
per child. K4yu reiltall and
dilMI 819 allo available. ID.for·
matkm: (949) 729-1150.
StilllletlllperllOar)illd .....
(It!.,. bour) = rantall ... av.oab1e. the Pan Zam.
Cd ... Boat Relitall, -
WllTllll All Sllf
~
Balboa wn
Corona def Mar
6ll80
Costa Mesi 64191 •
..... uport INd'I
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t:12 a.m ....................... 1.1
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Second loW 11:JS p.m. __ " 1.S s-.t• ., . .,..... .. ... ....... -.......... .. ........ .. .......... -
local owners. ·
What makes racing boats some-
what unusual, as compared to oth-
er sports, is that out-ol-town teams
become guests of their competi-
tors or memben of the host yacht
dub. Several teams and their fam-
Uiel are guests in many Balboa
Yacht Oub member homes.
Tbe top two finishing U.S .
teams will receive invitations to
tbe Royal New Z•lend Yacht
Squadron's Coca..cola ~f!, be held later this y.-. in A d.
Much like a govemoc who
aspires to one day become presi-
dent, tbele young MilOn aspire to
acel In thetr qiMilt for trophies,
cupl, gold meda.11, the thrill of vic-
tory and tbe agony ol tbe fleet.
POUCI nPS
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bedt sett ... b9fOte ..... .,. '°"' c.r. . .,,_ ................... , ......... .
publl( P'ICll or to• polb or.._..,.. ........
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•
Daily Pilot
. . .
Th ey say everyone bas a twi,n somewhere
A nd apparently, the
mirror image of Pilot
Police reporter Sue
Doyle went on a crime spree.
Doyle rushed to Corona del
Mar on Friday morning when
· she heard Police were chasing
a woman suspected of steal-
ing a BMW and burglarizing
garages and cars in the Dover
Shores neighborhood.
She was greeted at the
scene by police who stopped
dead in their tracks when
they spotted her.
Officers on motorcycles
yelled at her across a busy
street. Bicycle cops circled
around her.
At first, Doyle couldn't
understand why she was
attracting so much attention.
Finally, after grilling her
about her whereal:g,ats earli-
er that morning, police told
Doyle that if she put her hair
in a ponytail, she would fit
the description of the sus-
pect.
GETIING
INVOLVED
• GETTING INVOLVED runs period-
ically in the Dally Pilot on a rotating
basli. If you'd like information on
4ng yoor organization to this •
list.. call (949) 574-4228.
COSTA MESA OVIC
PLAYHOUSE
The playhouse needs volun-
teers for ushe nng, backstage,
mailings, typing, lights and
many other duties. For more
information, call (949) 650-
5269. .
COSTA MESA HISTORICAL
SOOETY
The society collects informa-
tion, photos and artifacts relat·
ing to the history of Costa
Mesa and the harbor area. Vol-
unteers are needed for clerical
tasks, computer input and help
in the library. For more infor-
mation, call (949) 631-5918.
COSTA MESA LrnRACY
COUNOL
The Costa Mesa Uteracy
Center needs volunteer tutors
. ......
SCOOP
ACTUALLY, rrs QUITE
RELEVANT .
Newport Beach's Irrele-
vant Week might be no more
relevant that it was 25 years
ago, when retired sewer con-
tractor and onetime NFL
player Paul Salata came up
with the annual ceremony,
but it is a bit more famous.
The current edition of Sports
illustrated devotes the better
part of two pages to the off-
beat (and sometimes off-col-
or) event. Complete with a
photo, even.
' Irrelevant Week cele-
brates the poor b~oke picked
last in the NFL draft. And as
past Irrelevant Week hon-
oree Ron McAda notes in the
SI article, the annual festivity
opens many doors. And in
his case, that's good. He's
now a used-car salesman.
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
SENIOR aNTER
The multipurpose seni~r ser-
vices facility at the comer of
19th Street and Pomona
Avenue s~ks volunteers for a
variety of tasks. For more
information, call (949) · 645-
2356 between 9 a.m. to 5 p .m.
COSTA MESA POUa
DEPARTMENT
Seniors age 55 and up are
being sought to help staff the
West Side substation. Volun-
teers would be asked to work
two four-hour daytime shifts
per week and woukl....,be
responsible for answering
phones, bicycle registration,
fingerprinting, data entry and
assist with other citywide pro-
The article even goes
intellectual. mentioning exis-
tential author Jeu-Paul
Sartre in one sentence.
Sartre? Isn't he a tailback
from upstate New Yodd
SHE WOULD HAVE
WANTED IT THAT WAY
They laughed and they
cried at the annual Newport
Beach Conference and Visi-
tors Bureau dinner held
Thursday, just weeks after
the death of the bureau's
beloved president and chief
executive officer, Jlosallnd
WUUams.
• At one time, the bureau
staff considered canceling the
event but decided Willlams
would want the show to go
on. More than 170 people
packed the Four Seasons
ballroom to hear tributes to
the woman who almost sin-
gle-handedly made a force
out of the bureau. Williams'
husband, Rick John, received
a spedal award. Also in
jects. Seniors who speak
Spanish and English are also
needed. For an application or
more information, contact
Senior Volunteer Fred
Gaeckler at (114) 754-5208.
COURT-APPOINTED SPEOAL
ADVOCATES
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. For
more information, call (714)
663-9034.
attendance were Williams'
two sons and her mother.
The funniest moment of
the evening came·when out-
going chairman of the board,
Iranian-born and heavily
ctccentect Mehdi Eftekarl,
turned the reins over to Ger-
.man-born and also heavily
accented Henry Scblelelo.
"The first order of busi-
ness on the agenda,•
Schielein said, ~is English
lessons for past and current chairman..
WHAT DO YOU CAU A BABY
ENVIRONMENTAUST?
Environmental activists •
Susan and Bob Causttn are
happy to announce they are
expecting another little com-
munity activist in the next
year. The couple said they
are •continuing the dynasty•
started by Susan's parents -
Nancy and Jack Skinner.
-Compiled by
the Daity Pilot staff
CRISIS ASSISTANCE
PROGRAM INC.
This nonprofit organization is
seeking volunteers for its
expanding trauma response
program. Volunteers would
assist law enforcement, fire
fighters and emergency-type
responders by providing
emotional first aid and sup-
port to injured or traumatized
pe0ple. Other volunteers
would provide dispatch and
office support. No experience
is necessary. training will be
provided. For more informa-
tion, call (949) 588-1414.
How best to take care
of a ··work of art?
~ A Rolex timepiece is truly a marvel of performance
and endurance. In five years of continuous timekeeping,
its balance travels the equivalent of 23,3333 miles.
This kind of performance deserves proper care and
periodic maintenance, and Rolex recommends that their
timepieces be cleaned and oiled approximately every
five years. If you've invested in a Rolex you've made an
astute decision. Protect that investment by showing the
same; sound judgment when it comes to the maintenance
of your timepiece. As an Official Rolex Jeweler we are
dedicated to the integrity of genuine Rolcx timepieces.
parts and accessories. Please visit our store
when you.are ready to discuss the care
and service of your Rolex
'i'
RO LEX
BLACKMAN LTD. ~: ili :~ JEWELERS
.....
J408./ Wa Oporto. Nev.port Btt1elt 92663 • 949-67J-9JJ4 _.., __ ;_,_.,,._ ___ . .,. ..... _ . ..,.
row ()JfkW Rolu Jnwln-
AU Work 0-Ort Tlw l'rrtrtiu1
..
CONDmONED RESPONSE
If your vehicle's air cooditioning
unit produces a foul-smelling
odor, the problem may be due to
fungus growth in the under-dash
air-conditioning case that holds
the evaporator (the heat
exchanger that pulls warmth out
of the passenger compartment).
The solution to this problem rests
with having the technician clean
out and disinfect the evaporator.
After 1ha1, vehicle owners can
help prevent a recuJTCnce of the
problem by using the air
recirculation s witch and th~
MAX A/C switch sparingly
(during initial cool down or
sweltering days). The
rccircula1ion i.wi1ch, which is
usually ac1iva1ed on the MAX
NC ~cuing. deprives the humid
air m the evaporator case of
ou1s1dc air. thereby sening the
s1age for fungus growth in the
humid, stagnant environment.
HINT: A check of your vehicle·~
air-conditioning i.ystem also
tnvolve' a look al the evaporator·
tray dram. which. if plugged,
could be blocking moisture from
dramtng to the ground.
SENSING TROUBLE
A' their name implies, the
\Cn\Orl• tn loday·, vehicles
function as i.en\iog device!> thal
provide 1hc computer wi1h
infonna1ion such ru. the chemical
content of exhaust gases and
speed rotation. among other data.
Thus sensors act as input devices
for 1he computer. The coolant
sensor serves a similar function
10 the carburetor choice. II
enriches 1he mixture when cold
and leans 1he mixture when ho1.
ln the event tha1 a coolaQI ~nsor
"'-oe~ bad. 11 can Adve~ly affect
1lte air-fuel ratio· and ignition
11m1ng by not accurate ly
tnfonnmg the computer of the
engme opcrattng temperature.
When performance problem<;
crop up. the coolant ~nsor is one
of the \Cn!>Of'S lbc 1echmcian will
loot ai as lhe possible culpriL
Al C&F (646-6910). 2090
Placentia. our au1omo11vc
technicians a.re known for their
skill at diagn~i ... which means
you don't have 10 was1e rime or
money waiting for someone to
figure out wha1·~ wrong. Trust
your car~ maintenance and
repair 10 expcns who stay current
with the la1eM developments itt
automocive care.
HINT: Today's vehicles . have
computer sy~tems w11h self-
diagnosis capability, meaning
that the computer can scan or
locate problems and tnform the
technician of specific
malfunctions.
Put a few words
to work for you.
Call the
Daily Pilot
ClASSIF1EDS
-y; ~--~I ' .. l
----
Jilt 2~·10
· onl1
Monday, July 24, 2000 3
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1¥1111 Of Ill IAY
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4 MoncJor, July 2.4, 2000 DAY 10
RYAN llAYllURN I DAl.Y PLOT
Anthony Flores, 9, of Aliso Viejo opens his mouth to show judge Brandy Johnson that be ftnlshecl h1I doughnut during the cinnamon
doughnut-eating contest at the Kids Park Stage on Sonday. Anthony's munching skills made hlm champion ':-1 bis age dlvldon.
a
Speed counts when you're in this
eating contest at · the Orange County Fair
Andrew Gluer
0AJLY PILOT
H e sat silently, bead in hands, and
focused before the competition.
·1 must eat through the pain.· said g.
year-old Anthony Aores, who soon became
champion in bis division of the Orange County
Fair's annual cinnamon dougbnut..eating contest.
•Tue secret is to push the doughnut against
yow cheek with yow tongue,• he said after
being congratulated by two very proud par-
ents. "But don't tell anyone. I need to win
again next yea.r. •
Oops.
Sunday's display was one of the fair's half.
dozen focxi-eatl.ng contests, which this year
include pies and chill peppers. It was doughnut-
eating speed, not quantity, that determined the
"There's no losing in these con-
tests. Either you win or you get a
free doughnut."
Marte Kemmer
contestant's father
winner.
Some of the younger participants, including
5-year-old Michael Kemmer, don't necessarily
enter the contest for the gloI)'. For them, it's
much more about the love of the game.
•I already ate one sugar doughnut today,•
Michael said.
"There's no losing in these contests,• said his
father, Mark. "Either you win or you get a free
doughnut.•
SCHEDULE
-OF EYEllTS
TODAY .
tlcMw -Vbual Arts Building ........ ~ Clllfltliet -
Youth 9'.Mlding .................. ,...,..p.m.
'*houri: noon to midnight
11Mn DllJ: Youth~ 13 to 17 are
admitted for S4 .. , day.
• South CoMt ..........
-----Home and Hobbles IUKdlng
• Cllllfol • c.v.s ..... -
Home and HObbMil luflclng
• Q.Jllllu• .... -Home and
Hobbies IUtldlrig • .._,,,. ...... _Kids
!Wt . ·--c.i.·•• • ........ ....................
umlam
-Youth lulldlng
12130 , ...
'•O--.IC11I..... tla••
-IUff.ao lend St9 . .,_.._c.., •11rc...-
lcl9 ~ -GroUnds
I P.&
When it was his tum to compete, Michael sat
aoss-legged on a plastic mat stretched eaoss a
stage, baseball cap pulled over his eyes as he
munched slowly on the fist-med brown ring.
Uke his eight oppooents, be stared somewhat ·
quizzically at the cheering aowd as he ate. He
raised his hand when be was finished, A judge
inspected bis open mouth before pnssing him a
cup of water.
Michael's best friend. 5-year~ nevor Bar-
ron. walked away with the blue ribbon.
•1 did OK." Michael said after the race. "No
tummyacbe."
A not-so-modest Ant.bony raised bis fist in
the air, wiped a few errant aumbs from bis chin .
and celebrated his victory.
. "Going into it, I didn't see any really big
threat,· be said. •Actually, I'd really like to do
that again."
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p.M. -;-Grounds
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. Doily Pilot
QUOTE
OF THE DAY
"The lair is all about
rock 'n' roll with lots of
good music and tasty
grinds."
KEN GENTILE, LONG BEACH
81111111
OF THE DAY
CUFn SHOPPIMG ·
Kmy ICnfll spedafizes In pot·
tef'y, t.apestl les and °"* handmade
aafts from South America. The booth
also offers • wide selection of trendy
""" for men.and WOtr\tf'I -ead'I onty SS. The j9Ytlelry Is avali.ble in
plain stytes or with stones. Kusy Kraft
lslnOaFllw1\llleee.
lllEFLY
Panama's youngest
ambassador stops by
FAIRGROUNDS -The 10-
year-old son of Panamanian
President Mireya MOICOSO slid
down the g1ant slide, petted
kangaroos and rode an ele-
phant Sunday at the Orange
County Pair.
Ricardo Gruber-Moscoso led
four Panamanian children
aro\Dld the grounds as part of
the "Once in a Ufetime Dream
Vacation" program for poor
children. It WU organized by
Ricardo~• mother, the president.
Pana.ma'• Consul-General
Fernando Daly joined Ricardo,
along with bis maternal gtand-
~other, Teresa Perez-Salamero,
at the f a.ir.
-And..w Glazer
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NMportAtw .....
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llrlilS.. • ·---Chat-
Doily Pilot
5 P.IL
• Suunrie .. Dence F~ -
Heritage Stage
•Point llMk a.Ml -ulifomla
Patio & Spa Centeanlal Stage
• Milgkal Woftd of Unde Nldl
-Celebration Stag&'Youth Build·
Ing • era. fwt Revue -Kids Par1<
• JotwithMt Wiid, ~
twtst -Buffalo Bend Stage
• Mllgkal 5pb wtth Erlkb
Dalu. 1lny Godfrey, Devld Zif'. ·
..... Goldflnger and Dove -
Bijou Theatre
• ™"klld St.el Drum Band -
Street Scene
• All AIMbn Racing Pigs -
Newport Arena
5:30 P.M.
• Red Hot Billy ,...,..,.. -
Grand Paciftc Resorts Meadows
Stage
• 9Hly ~country .....,./tUftartst -Buffalo Bend
Stage
• Doggies of ttM Wild West-
Newport Arena
• Megk of Fr ... lhunton -
Street Scene
• Comedlain Hefb Dixon -
Grandstand Arena
6 P.M. ·
• Split lmllge • A aippella -
Heritage Stage
•Point Bland Band -California
Patio & Spa Centennial Stage
• Mouth W~n Musial Owllrs
-Kids Park .,/L • era. FWI ReY\M -)DUU1
Building
• St9Ye Lord singer/guitarist -
Buffalo Bend Stage. ,
• Gus Flamingo Magk -Bijou
Promenade
• lllnel Md~ ·••Ml• 1liNm -Street Scene • "1pimtilt .... .,.... _ •
Gr~AreN • ~a. .... Gets: cafe
Hkl•l1a Home and Hobbles
Stage, Building 14 • Mllllna ...... m-NM-•-btra.ttlon"--Mii-
iennium Barn
• Rwtlng .......... fl"Pll'le•
MUCel and ...... wtth a.
S.Vlo V.qu111 Home and
Hobbies Building
6:30 P.M.
•Marte~ mime -Alling·
ton Theater
• a..rtte K..tlng, gtar Now•
-Buffalo Bend Stage
• Maglal Spb'wtth Erildul
Da"-. 1erry Godfrey, David~
..... Goldflnger and Dove -
Bijou Theatre
• TrinldM Steel Dnirn 8and -
Street Scene
• ~of Fr-* 1hwston -
Country Lane
7 P.M.
• "'Weird Al .. Yar*ovk -Arling-
ton Theater
• Unlvwslty of FWI: Artology
101 -Kids Park
•Salsa Dance~ -Her·
itage Stage
• Terrell and Takako Juggling
Tffm -Grand Pacific R~
Meadows Stage
• Port City Jazz Band -Street
Scene
• All Alaskan Racing Pigs -:-
Newport Arena ·
• Russell Brothen CJfQIS -
Green Gate
7:30 P.M.
• Salsa Band -Heritage Stage
• Jonathan Wild. singerigu ..
tarist -Buffalo Bend Stage
• Magk of Frahk 1hwston -
Country Lane
• Red Hot Billy ,...,..,.. -
.. ~
Mattress Outltt,t Stor
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.....
• Marc Corey lAe -Grand Padf·
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•StllWLonl,~
Buffalo hnd Stage
• M9gk.al Spice with Eltlcb.
Deha.!'"Y GoclfNr, o.vkl ~
..... ~ ... and Dove -
• Bijou Theatre
• HypllOtlst .... Yum• -
Grandstand Arena
• Ml•lng dernon1tratlon -Mii·
lennlumBam
1:30 P.IL
• DmMle Night until 10 p.m. -
The Lab Antlmall Anti-Stage
• Marte w.n.t. mime -Arling-
ton Theater
MARIACHIS
CONTINUED FROM 1
women playing, tbars cool
It's really nice.•
The first documented marl·
achi band made up of women
was a Mexico Qty-based
band called Mariachi Las
Comelas, which formed in the
1940s. '
"Mariachi music is open·
ing up like everything else,•
said Rick Leibert, president
of Events Marketing Inc ..
which booked the act. Mari·
achi La Reyna was one of
five bands performing at the
Orange County Fair's Fiesta
Del Mariachi.
• aoee ....._wr Heritage siage '
"It's about time,· said Nan-
cy Gonzales. who bounced
her foot to the boom of the
bass guitar that was almost
the size of its player. Her
daughter Natalie, 9, rocked
her bead. "It'll give our girls
something to think about.•
• JonetlYn Wiid. ..........
tarist -Buffalo Bend Stage
9P.M.
• "'w.lrd AJ• v.nkovk -Alling·
ton Theater
•Stew Lord.~ -
B\lffalo Bend Stage
9:30 P.M.
• S.tu lland-Heritage Stage
• ComedlM Hefb Dixon -
Grand Pacific Resorts Meadows
Stage
• JoNi1hlln Wild, slngerlgui-
Wfst -Buffalo Bend Stage
10 P.M.
• Marc Corey lAe -Grand Pacif·
ic Resorts Meadows Stage
10:30 P.M.
• OOM Hllnnony -Heritage
Stage
Mariachi music, which
comes from Mexico. was typi·
cally played by roving bands
of men wearing large som·
breros, tight black pants and
waistcoats. Mariachi band
members play tnunpets, gui·
tars and sing at high volwnes,
~ Put a bug in
~ someone's ear. Call the
Daily Pilot
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OOH I.EACH I DAILY I'll.OT
Bass player for Marlachl La Reyna de Los Angeles keeps
the tempo for the crowd of 6,000 at the fair Sunday.
mjecting the occasional coy-
ote·like bowl when the mood
is right
The songs can be about
love, drln.king or in Sunday's
case, the inadequacies of .
men. Wrtb one song, the
group scolded men for paying
more attention to their bottles
of beer than their wives.
Most men in the audience
laughed awkwardly while
their wives and dates cheered
enthusiastically.
"With our next song, we
I'm not worried,
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hope to get forgiveness from
all the men,· said' one band
member through the roar of
applause. ·we better because
we have to go home with
you ·
The band launched into a
crowd-pleasing rendition of
Mary Wells' "My Guy.•
·nus is t amily music.· said
Robert Garcia, 59, a mariachi
fan from Panorama City.
"There's no bad words or vio-
lence. It's all about tradition
and love."
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lliE l>diiy Pilot
I •
6 Monday, July U, 2000
CLOSER
CONTINUED FROM 1 r
that elecdcot•
Ridgeway, Mid be plans to
make a motion to table both
tbe Du.Ml and a proposal to
expand tbe C.Oneunt head-
quarters, t. )Vbich is also going
through Q1e planning process,
until aftel1tbe Greenlight vote.
A cofumon thought among
Newport Insiders is that the
county's biggest developer, the
IJVine Co., has been lobbying
the council not to approve too
many developments this sum-
mer, feoring that it will fuel
~rt for the Greenligbt ini-
tiative.
llvine Co. spokesman Rich
Elbaum declined to comment
·Another theory going
around town is self-preservaT
tion. It goes something like
this: Three council seats will
be up for election this fall, and
council members are con-
cerned that approving the
developments already in the
planning pipelµle -the
Dunes hot.el and the Conexant
and Ko~enter Newport
expansion -wiU propel anti.-
growth candi.dates to vtctoiy.
The Dunes project is sched-
uled to resurface on the coun-
cil agenda shortly after Aug.
11 -the last day political
hopefuls can file their papers.
The controversial Dunes
project has been a light:nlllg
rod for Greenlight proponents,
who point to the large bayside
bot.el as something residents
could vote on if the initiative
were in plaa!. .,-
The COUDdl mamba who
voted for delay flatly deny any
ulterior motives, blltead eay-
ing that the dedlioo WM in the
best interest c1 the oommuaity.
•1rs a very stroog, delibera-
tive council," Mayor John
Noyes said at the time. ·we
are not being 1nfluenoed by
outside political fo~. •
HIGH-STAKES OtESS GAME
A group of slow-growth ·
activists wrote the Greenlight
initiative in response to what
they say was a pro-develQp-
ment council approving too
many developments and
threatening the quality of life
in Newport.
It was time, Greenligbt pro-
ponents said. to take control of
the city's future from the coun-
cil and give it to the voters. The
introduction of the measure
earlier this year sparked fierce
reaction from most of the
council members, many call-
ing it an affront to representa-
tive government
•nust your elected offi-
dals," Noyes pleaded. Other
council members added that
some development was neces-
sary to provide the kind of stel-
lar dty services residents were
accustomed to.
Tom Thomson, who is up
for reelection, was the only
councilman to publicly support
the measure. However, hours
after telling the Daily Pilot in
March that he favored Green-
light. Thomson started to
waver after receiving a call
from Carol Hoffman, an Irvine
Co. vice president
. '
AJtbotlgh lnlm Co. oflldele
haw DDt .... pubic ltaDOe
on ONmMgbt, In ~
they pulled Mr aparwlm
plans at Nftrpart c.m.. ..,.
iog that tb8 a.-Hgbt tmlla-
ttve 9Ckled tDo much UDCer•
ta1Dly to an 8lraady time-cxm-
tuming and upenatve dty •
planning proow.
The meuure hat succeed·
ed in pitting dty oMdelt and
developers Oil OD8 llde c1 the
fence and cmmnmtty adMlts
and enviromnentaJll Oil tbe
other. •
Caught in tbe middle is the
Dun.el development proposal.
THE DUNES TUGOF.wAR
Last month, the council
stunned the community with
its 5-1 dedsinn to delay the
Dunes vote.
Noyes, whose district
includes the propoeed reson.
said it WU important foe the
entire CX>UDdl to be present
during the vote because the
Dunes is a major decision for
the community. During the
summer montbl, at least one
cound1 ·member would be on
vacation during each meeting,
he explained
But Councilman Gary
Adams, who voted against the
delay, said it was unfair to both
fans and attics of the p~
who bad watcbed the proposal
crawl through the Planning
Commitsion at a snail's pace.
Former · Mayor Tom
Edwards agreed.
•Why not call a special
meeting?• be asked. ·nme
and again we voted on major
issues when coundl members
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DOiiy Pilot
.
PWlllll PIPEUIE
HERE ARE sOME OF THE DEVELOPMENT PR0P0W.s NEWPOKT' ~Ot IS CONSIDERING
-·· •WHAT: 470-room hotel and time share · •
• WHEJtE: Approved by the Planning Commission and slated to appear before the Oty
Council in September
CONIUIT
• WHAT: Adding 566,000 square feet of tndusttial and office space
• WHEllE: Going through the Planning Commission
IOU CEllTEl lllWPOIT
• WHAT: Adding 25,000 square feet of office space
• WHERE: About to go through the Qty Council
\..ere absent.
Dunes Chief Pinandal Offi-
cer Robert Gleason said: •Of
.course we're disappointed.
We have spent a lot of time
over the last couple of years
working with this plan and the
commumty and building sup-
port for the project. I think
we're going to have to watt
and see what the council does
and what happens in Septem-
ber.•
Even foes of the Dunes said
the delay was unfair for the
respected Evans family, the
developers of the project.
· •Although I adamantly
oppose the bot.el, I think tbis is
something that was a terrible
blow to (the Dunes develop-
ers ], • said environmental
activist Susan Caustin.
At the meeting without
Ridgeway in attendance, the
council was able to approve a
$130 million budget.
THE INSIDE SCOOP
The Greenlight group,
though initially confused by
the move, was pleased
because it Jl\eant a decision on
the Dunes would be pushed
closer to election time. And
this could potentially increase
support for their measure.
But Greenlight supporter
and former Mayor Evelyn
Hart was suspicious.
Perhaps, she wondered,
there was another motivation
behind the council's decision.
After all, why would a fiercely
anti-Greenlight council make
a decision in Greenligbt's
favor? Still. Hart could offer no
theories for the delay.
All of this is tricky business.
Greenlight could radically
change the way Newport
Beach operates, and a new
wave of slow-growth resi-
dents could be elected to the
council on its coattails.
The slow-growth advo-
cates have never had much
political power tnstde City
Hall, though they made their
presence felt with gra.ss-rQOts
groups such as Stop Polluting
Our Newport and forcing ref.
erendwns on major projects in
the 1980s.
Ridgeway downplayed the
likelihood of the self -preserva-
tion theory, pointing out that
running for office is a major
Wldertaldng, and it's unlikely
that candidates would simply
run in reaction to a council
decision on the Dunes. ·u some Greenlight people
want to run. get out and run,.
~esatd.
I
.·. --. ---~--. -•
Ready For
ABreakThis ~ Surmner?
•
...
..
The Daly Pilot ia great at oocovertng al f'8 wedge lll1u11 8rwid town.
wha"8r "8Y'ra at city hal, the echoOI ban or at'* Ind af N pennula.
And .. nawepllp8I' alllo prlll9' ... hoMltalUt .... cf CU' corftrildy.
And that'I prlly bllcHfi•.
8 Monday, Jufy 24, 2000 • Sporta Editor Roger Carlson • 949-57 44223
ftl .Dai'fJPilo~ ft1
SPORTS HALL OF FAME.
CELEBRATING THE MILI.ENNIUM
Football
I
I
•Captain of 1930 Rose Bowl champion Trojans later
started the Crosby Southern Pro-Am and Clambake.
I
Rldwd Dunn He graduated with hopors
DAILY Pu.or from USC and was nominated
for a Rhodes scholarship, but Before televidon and Ill testing came on the same day as
the Internet, before the Notre Dame game, Dec. 6,
the Lakers and Rams, 1930. •1 couldn't have deserted
Dodgers and Angels, USC the team, even if l'd wanted to,•
football was king iri Southern he said, years later in the LoS ~~rnebo didn't go to the Angeles Tunes, of abandoning his plum academic chance to games would sit by their radio study at Oxford University.
and listen as players like Duffield achieved 12 varsity
Marshall Duffield became t.eJters tn four major sports in
household names and legendary high school and once was given
figures. ; a parade to promote his
USC gridiron standouts were candidacy as the •Southland's
so exalted back.then. their most popular athlete," according
. company was sought by . to the Santa Monica Evening
t-lollywood celebrities Outlook, dated Nov.~. 1925.
-themselves making a •My dad was very modest,•
transition from silent to talking said his son, Duffy.
movies. •He'd tum over in his
On the golf course, grave if he knew I'd
the late Duffield, a sold him out to the
USC teammate and Daily Pilot."
fraternity brother of Duffield, who
John Wayne (formerly originally planned to
Marion Morrison) and attend Stanford, was
later a Newport Beach often called the
neighbor of the silver •tow-headed flash• in
screen icon, teed it up newspapers during his
with folks like Bob celebrated prep career,
Hope, W.C. Fields and a reference often used
Bing Crosby. Manball. Dulleld to desaibe someone
For years, Duffield with blond hair.
urged Crosby during At USC in 1928, sports
19th-hole discussions to bring a · columnist Sid Ziff once wrote:
satellite event to Newport Beach • Jones may find (Du.ffleld) to be
for the pros who didn't make the 8 very marvelous quarterback.
. cut at the old Crosby National He is 8 strapping, big youngster,
Pro-Am at Pebble Beach (now powerful and steady. He of all the AT&T).
One toasty day, Crosby said men should make a great
yes and Newport Beach changed ballcarrier and only a
f with th Cr b Southe sophomore, too." orever e OS Y m Duffield (5-foot-9, 175 pounds)
Pro-Am and Clambake, earned the Th>jan Diamond
presented by Hoag Hospital's Medal. lJSC's highest athletic
552 CluQ, which Duffield helped honor, on June 6, 1931.
start. The golf tournament would After use. he dabbled in
last for 23 years and eventually politics and briefly attended law
merge with the Toshiba Senior school. He worked as an
Classic to become the most assistant movie director and in
philanthropic stop on the Senior 1933 married a starlet. Dorothy .
PGA Tour. Lee lb divorced tw Duffietd and his close friend, · ey 0 yean later. Charley Hester, also a Hoag Before World War n, Duffield
supporter, had only one month founded a dlstrlbuting company,
to put the inaugural pro-am and during the war he served u
together, held in January 1975 commander of the Navy
at Irvine Coast Country Club minesweeper Starling, shipping
(now Newport Beach). The tint out four weeks after his marriage
tournament was a success wtth to Donna Maguire.
72 amateurs and Pred Duffield'• bnmD1'111 became a
MacMurray as ~celebrity player. huge succe. after WWD. then
While Duffield't legacy in he sold it and moved his family
Newport Beach includes in 1959 to Newport Beacht
enormous economic elements, where be apanded his
his status as a Roartng '20s entrepreneurial porUolio and
football hero at Santa MalUca. iemained an avid lpOltlm4n.
High and USC WU D()tbing lbcrt. -pt\JMdJy Ma golfer and
of Ruthian, proYOldog IOIDa. • ~-.. •: • • •
sportswrtten to clu1sten bDn the · Dual8Jd, a ICratcb golfer who
next Red Grange. played with flVe U.S. prMdeil .. ,
A three-year letterman and developed Bayside Wlioe and
two-time All-Pacific Cout Rancbo San Joaquin Goii C.oune
Conference qwu:terback (1929 bi Irvine. He WU OD the ortglna1
and '30) for the Th>Jam, the founding board of Big Canyon
fair-haired All-American boy Country Oub, and Wiii ai.o a
was the USC captain 1D 1930, member <ii Santa Ana Country
when he led the nojant to a. Cub, JMne Coelt Country Club
47-14 vk:tary over un.,.... ud Newpalt Harbor Yacht Cub.
Pittsburgh 1D the R.oee 8dwL ... Allo Down .. •Duft• ad
Outfield'• 'D'OjW Wll'8 •Mania.• .. dl8d ol A ...........
coming off a 21..0 to. to Notnt dil••• oa a gaa coune 1D Palm
Dame in Knute Roclme'1 lalt o..t Gil July 8, 1980.
game and were bMvf TM latllt· banal.. ID tbe
underdogs against PIUI~ l>dy PllGllpadl Hd ol fame
But Outtteld ICOl9d two WM iunlWicl bf 1111 wtr.; a.tty,
toucbdoWm and p-.d fGr a ....... tMa .. MWIMD
Cblrd ID the Roee llowl ,_fabled Jr. COi Dl8i)._. .. ....... uac Coecb • • • -•81111CJ .. ,, "'' ... . ... ":i"J .W •••• , i..... ., ... . • •ii• .~. I • • • '
YOUIH TlllllS
CLUB GOLF
, f
Daily Pilot
T ,eslle Damlo~
.L.ot Corona
delMarWgh
II .one of a horde
of local tenn.11
players set for
the Junior
Tennll Claalc
2000 at Balboa
Bay Club
Racquet Club,
wblchgets
underway
today. Damion
II top-teeded
tn the girls
16-and-under
sllngles
clusUtcaUon.
SeePage9
for the
tournament's
preview.
DON LEACH I DAllY PILOT
Veitch, the maximizer
•Despite limited play and practice, Santa Ana Country
Club's Veitch maintains that championship status.
Richard Dunn ·
DAILY PILOT
SANTAANA
HEIGHTS -
There are
gollers.who
pour their heart
and soul into
the game and
can't play
enough.
Then, there are players like
Chris Veitch, for whom tee-time
frequency is not an issue, but the
manner in which one completes
around.
U there's hardware to be
hoisted after playing the last
hole, who's to criticize the means
to the top? ·u I play golf more than three
days in a row, I get very tired of
it,• said Veitch, who has a
tendency to win wherever soft
spikes are enoouraged these
days. ·ru play maybe three
times a month, mostly at
Santa Ana Country
Club.·
Veitch, who tries to
college golf should not be in my
plans,• said Veitch, who works
in property management, after
majoring ill PR at USC, and lives
on the Balboa Peninsula.
"It's a weird deal. I started
playing when I was 15, and I
was better at age 25 tb4n 15.
Then I was better at age 35 than
25, and I'm probably better at
age (46) than 35."
The youngest amateur in the
Jones Cup, Veitch has never
carried a handicap index of
higher than 3 for the last 20
years.
He'll tee it up with partner
Mike Reehl, Santa Ana's
Director of Golf and head pro, in
the ultimate community pro-am.
The two have played together in
two-man formats before.
Veitch is also familiar with his
amateur competitors, espedally
Mesa Verde Country Club's Pete
Daley and Big Canyon Country
C ub's Steve Collins.
play as many
tournaments as possible,
will be among the Great
Eight in the inaugural
Jones Cup Friday at
Newport Beach Country
Club at 1 p.m. But you'd
never know it if you
watched Veitch
practice.
Chris Veltdl
•1 think the favorites
would have to be Kelly
Manos (Big Canyon
head pro) and Steve,"
Veitch said. •They're
both very strong
players. It should be
fun. Getting (the men's
club cb.ampiDDs
together for a friendly
round of 18 holes) has
actually been something
Steve Collins and I, and aiso Pete Daley, have
That's becaU$0, he doesn't.
•1 practiced a lot until about
age 30, then work and family
took over, but for some reason
I've been able to bold onto (a
consistent game),• he said. "(I've
been able to win tournaments)
even with a minimal a.mount of
practice and minimal amount of
playtng. I don't know why.•
Veitch will gladly take goll's
blessing of making par.
"I'm not terribly long, (but) I'd
say I'm Jdpd ot consistent (off the
tee),• said the four-time Santa
Ana men'• club champion, who
bu won three straight. including
tbe 2000 title on May 6.
•J don't putt lights out and I'm
not prone to make a large
nUmber ol birdiel. I glJ8ll the
belt pert ot my game ii that l try
to make u few mistakes u
poalble ... I play the goU course.
Par's a good score.•
.-Veitch, a 15-yee.r member at
SACC who~ his first
men's dub champkmthtp In
191M, qu•Hfled for the Califomla
State AmMlur at Pebble Be8di
bal ant JllMl piayt.ng at Santa Ana. 1985;. smoe tben. Veltdl
. bu qna"8ed far tbe ltate
......, lour odMir ....
~eltdl won the 1988 and '99
Newport a..m dty amate\lr
........ tbe Newport 8*:b
()pm. bat did QClt play ID 2000
to ~1f11d .......... ~ • ~ .... * ....... .. l:ra •a,......... ~c ............ i... ... :=# .. -=r" ldloal.-ldlll .. ,.., .. Eza=-.rr:.:
kicked around. Pete and I
kicked it around a couple of
years ago.•
Welcome to the new breed of
community newspapering.
Presto. The Jones Cup is here.
(Newport Beach Country
Club's Bob Kraft ii the other
amateur in the field.) • •
The Jones CUp ii a two-man,
better-ball groa championship
involving the four private dubl
in th.II newspaper'• drculation.
At lt4ke are community
bragging dghtl and a
maanl.ficeDt perpetual trophy,
while amateun gain lnltant
:-=~~ Created by the paper'• sportl
department. the JOMI CUp ii
the bnmd new men's
competttklli tn the Pletcbel'
Jonea Motorcan/Deily Piiot Club
OwnPomb1P Seriel, wblch
launched the 1M Cup Clallic
foe womeo In 1997 •
1be JOMI Cup JI named after
t.b8 only~ tbe Mllil
ha bed. and indUdel a~
tllilD frOID .aa dUb . ...,.. ..
Mi.ct.dbytb16r~we dubl. 'A4m•na ~ Joaw
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wbk:ti twO c:lubl will llllaY ID a IDuncJme,-= le.di Coumrr Qubim'Jmy
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•War by the Shore at Balboa Bay Club Racquet Club.
-~~ BEA~~ TENNIS
au, Charlie Alvarado and Cba.rlle
Corum, are in the draw, along with
Newport Beach's Daron Amofd and
Corona del Mar's Parker Rhodes.
Newport Beach's Hayley YoUDg,
Undsay Norman, Dailey Wiese,
Miranda Young. Carly Adams, Brit·
tany auck, Coron.a del Mar's Rachel
Bryan and Cost.a Mesa's Karina Van
Leuven are also ln this age group.
semifinals. Shaun Macgwre a.n Bren·
nan Roberts of Coron.a del Mar ue
also in the semifinals.
38 boyt from reNew-
pOft Beach and Costa Mesa area are
lc:beduled to play in the Junior Tennis
1 Oallic 2000 at Balboa Bay Club Rac-
quet Club. The Tournament, also
knowd as the War by the Shore,
begins today and runs through Friday ana features players trom age 10-18.
Pour Newport Beach singles players
are top.seeded in their respective age
groupt. Hunter Jack, a senior at Coro-
na del Mar High, ls the No. 1 player in
the boys 18 singles tournament and has
a bye in the opening round. Hadley
Ogle, son of tomament director Bob
Ogle, ii also in this draw and could face
Jack in the quarterfinals.
Michael Bean, another senior at
CdM. is the No. 4 seed, and he also has
a first-round bye. U CdM senior Shaan
Wadhwa gets past first-round oppo-
nentJett Malawy of Huntington Beach,
be gets Bean in the Round of 16.
Neeta Lal of Newport Beach is the
top seed in the girls 18 singles divi·
sion. Her opponent in the Round of 16
could be Jaime Feichter of Newport
Beach. Erin Herrel ~d Kristen Griffith
both have byes in the first round. Grlf-
fltll's next opponent IJ alleady detet·
mined as Kelly Faulstich of Encinitas also bad a bye.
There were no byes in the girls 16
singles tournament.
Leslie Damion, a CdM junior, is
top-seeded. She faces Christine
Lalonde of Orange. There are t 1 oth-
er locals in this tournament Ertka
Buder, a Balboa Island resident and
Newport Harbor graduate, Corona del
Mar's Brittany Holland, Newport Har-
bor junior and Costa Mesa resident
Kelly Nelson, Newport Beach's-
Amber Ray and Chrtstin Early are all
In the top hall of the bracket.
Costa Mesa residents Megan
Hawkins, a Newport Harbor junior,
and Krista Mclntosh, a sophomore
with the Sailors, are in the the second
half of lbe girls 16 singles draw. Coro-
na del Mar resident Sara Bryan and
Newport Beach's Emily Boyd and Car-
men Khoury are also in this bracket.
Newport Beach's Ryan Caughren
IS the top seed in the boys 10 singles
and automatically advances to the
Round of 16. Four Costa Mesa resi-
dents, C.J Chomeau, Henri Chome-
Five CdM students are featured in
the boys 16 singles. Senior Peter Kul·
matidd 1s the No. 3 seed and has a
first-round bye. Sometimes CdM dou-
bles partners Ryan Stockwell and
Justin Nlng face each other ln the
Round of 32. CdM's Josh Stuart and
Biyan Warsaw are also in the draw.
Newport Beach's Issei Salda and
Patrick Ahearn are also in the Round
of 32. Costa Mesa's Andrew Hinger
must win a match against Newport
Coast's Erik Frisbie to advance.
There are also four local doubles
teams in the girts 16 group. CJaster
and Katie Tenerelli, who also played
together at CdM, are teamed together.
Buder and Hawkins will face Newport
Beach's Che.fly Dobson and Cammie
Quinn in the first round. Mcintosh and
Nelson are also teamed together.
'JWelve local players are in the girts
12 singles tournament, with Newport
Beach's Sarah Geocaris the No. 6
seed. ln the only first round meeting
between locals, Newport Beach's Jil-
lian Braverman faces Corona del
Mar's Katie McKitterick.
Wiese is also playing doubles with
Newport Beach's Elizabeth Van't Hof
in girls 12. Hayley ancJ Miranda
Young are also teamed togeth-. end
so Is Alex Gurnee and Whitney Wiese.
No. S seed Juliette Mutzlr.e of New-
port Coast leads 11 local girls in the 14
singles tournament. Newport Beach's
Diana Khoury has a tough first-round
opponent against No. 3 seed Amy
Beck of Laguna Niguel.
Other competitors include New-
port Beach's Bonnie Adams, Natalie
Citro, Sarah Grlffith, Adrienne Ollob,
Jamison Steele and Vanessa Dunlap,
and Corona del Mar's Jaclyn Man-
ning, Lauren Pasquarelli and Court·
ney Carnahan.
In girls 14 doubles, ·Adams and
Dunlap are teamed together, and so is
Griffith and Allie Powers. Newport
Beach's Brittany Cluck will compete
with Irvine's Nora Bugescu.
Newport Beach's Charlie Fanner
and Kaes Van't Hof are the top boys
16 doubles seed and have a bye to the
In boys t.4 singles, Jake Fleming ta
the No. 6 seed. Macguire, Roberts.
Farmer and Van't Hof are also in the
draw, along with Newport Beach's
'fyler Deck. Nicholas Gingold and
Newport Coast's Matthew Chou.
Flemlng ls one half of the top dou-
bles team in the boys 12 tournament
along with Irvine's Michael Mt'Clune.
Corum is also in the doubles towna-
ment with Huntington Beach's Gra-
ham Witherby. Newport Beach's lan
Connolly and John Hutdunson are
teamed together.
Seven local boys are m t 2 smgles,
including No. 5 seed Robert Khoury of
Newport Beach. Corona del Mar's
Matthew Walters and Robert Khoury
are in the top half of the draw New-
port Beach have three other represen·
tatives, with Hutchinson, ConnoUy
and Kenneth Wong.
Three local players are m the girls
10 singles tournament. They dte New-
port Beach's Whitney W1e~ Cosld
Mesa's Meghan Chomeau and Coro-
na de! Mar's Alexandria Walter...
-by Joseph Boo
Newport falls short at PONY Bronco Regionals, 10-4
• Uncharacteristic errors end
NHBA's postseason run.
MORENO VALLEY -Newport
Harbor Baseball Association Bronco
(11-12) All-Star Manager Kevin
Heenan realized only one team
would end the PONY League post-
seaaon with a victory.
both our games,• Heenan said,
including Newport's 6-2 loss to
Corona Friday. MWe did not play as
well as we are capable of·playing.
But it doesn't downgrade our season
and what they achieved.·
YOUTH BASEBALL
regionals, and only one team
advances. So seven teams have to
go home unhappy.·
Newport bad its third run in the
fifth . After Blake Fogg was bit by a
pitch, Tun Cramer advanced him to
scoring position with bis second sin·
gle of the game. A sacrifice fly by
Heenan cut North City's lead to 7-3.
Most of them. Yacko. Heenan
Munce, Frazier, Don.rue Hunt DaV1s
Pemstein and Dustin Schuler have
played together since they were
eight years old.
Newport saw its season come to a
halt because of uncharacteristic
fielding errors. A normally solid
squad with the glove, it committed
three errors in a five-run North City
fourth inhing that put Newport in a
7-0 hole it couldn't climb out of.
Newport's chances of extending
its season was slim after it found
itself in a 7-0 deficit. But it did put
together quite a come back attempt,
and Newport cut North City's lead
to 7-3 in,the fifth inning.
But North City quelled any
thoughts of a Newport comeback
with three late runs. Newport got
one more run when Heenan's single
brought Kurt Yacko home in the
seventh.
·A lot of the guys have grown up
together, and thdt's kind of neat.•
Heenan said.
But NHBA's 10-4 loss to North
City ot San Diego in a West Zone
Regional elimination game Satur-
day at Moreno Valley's Sunnymead
Field did not befit a team that went
further than any Newport team 'in
history in these d.rdes.
"I thought we were real Oat in
"Theoretically, there are only 16
teams left in Southern Califonua,
and we were one of them.• Heenan
sd.id. "There were eight teams in the
Newport put its first two runs on
the board in the fourth. Dennis
Heenan and Billy Munce led off~
with singles. An infield hit by Alec
Martinez scored Heenan. and
Munce came home on a passed ball.
Heenan and Cramer both had
two singles for Newport. Munce.
Martinez and Nick Frazier were the
other Newport players with bits.
Saturday's game also marked the
end of a long run for the players.
Yacko, Heenan, Munce, FrdZler,
Hunt, Pemstein. Cramer and Kurt
Gowdy can now say that they took
part in the longest All-Star season in
Newport (PONY) history Schuler
and Brendan Sabsbury couldn't stay
to the end because of pnor comnut-
ments, but they also contnbuted to
Newport's best season yet.
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TS 1.01ft ~~'fl~ 5241 PETITION clal ~ (loon OE· lhe cu'™1! fltc8I yNr. AUGUST 1, 2000. NOllce ~~ doing ~:" The foltowltljl persont The lollowlnp persons
Y. nlstet ESTATE OF: Mlala .-ta Of of any pllc1bla redemption lump SYm eua Bid. ex· AUCTION on AUGUST 108 Unit A 22 Slf'ffl. Campus Of. '107, N_. tale, b) Pacific Cres1 ~Oder ~: 1805) TO ADMINISTER ~~":i~::i~ ~!:.~~.; ~.~ ~: :::11he II UBLIC ::WPOAT 32 FlaYO,., ~f~~oo :iP=~~ ..
N't4 No SeM:e$ INA KAY BARTEU petition or 1ccount 11 PfemlumdJ~~ clucllog allemet11, Iha• 14, 2000 ll 11:00 A.M. Ne;&°r1 Beach, CA po11 BMch, Ca 92660 Mortgage. 5001 Birch
111 ~-aka IHA KAY provided In Probate of l"f . in. 1cc:ompany 11ch Sid. ~'iM~J:ACfvE=. 112Haldi Ttiuong Luu. St8Y9 F Shatpe. 2040 ~""~wix>r1 8eac:t\.
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I -. Nly EASTHAM t1b Code MCtJon 1250 A duded panallies, In· The Surety IMUtng the 8....,1 Gr1_.....,. C+r....... Dal Mer Avenue A ob4.mled IMll INA K. EASTHAM AlqlJMI lor Speclel No-latest and co.ts. (cl} lhe Bid Bond thel bl, on Iha HUNrlNGTON BEACH. "" '"'~ ...,. Lagun1 Buch. Ce Steven K z-1520
DA 7 8'1 1111~ aka INA EAS1ltAM :::n :;:"'co!, =bfe ='f.1 'l:.:! ~ : ~:,~. i:~h~ ~ ~::7of ~~ w~~ .:2: 92J,~.1 bullneN Is 000-~C~926150 Newport
.,...,""_._Y ... I_ " alui KAY EASTHAM· Attomey tor ttie data of call, unle8' In· si.18 of C1Hfom1&, De-lowtL duded by. 111 ~ ducted by en ~I Kalhertna K Z111s.r.
CNS1 aka KAY EASTHAM Petitioner: eluded In (1) lboYe •nd partment of lniurance. E • UNIT • ~tr!:.c. nottiJ: H1va you Sler11d 1520 Highland Dnve BARTELL .U C. TUCKEJI CHIEAOl.E, (f) 1 reeeoneble IM IOI' 1111 of 1'*'*9 Admitted INVENTORY ;;:;"'und« tie lldllbl9 doing bu1mess y11? Newport .Beech CA ~w:~= ,:.A~ys:~ ~. 0.tntt :: ~.:ai;: :J,~s;:.tnsur· -m,~r H~Si~LSD ~ neme(t) fiti.d y~""F°°Shlipe 9~ bvs.nau ~con·
Na. · lllmlJI n--CASE NO. A203151 4041 lllec:Ar1hw Blvd., UllOClaled 1dvence re-A tn1ndl1aty Pre-Bid ITEMS ·~ ....,._ Luu nu 1111amen1 wu dUcled by ~ and
let'• Sek No. · 74-IN74-To all heirs. tien.ll· Ste. HO, Newport lirement of bonds. Conference end man-KURT GOEPPNER. ~ ·~7r°-t WH filed wttn the County w1f1 J Loan No .. llD0.2·11· _.. 11Mct1, CA taeeO In lddlllon to the u -datory Pl'9-81d Job Walk 0080, HOUSEHOLD .. .,. Cleft( of Orange County Hive you started
917119 IMPOttANT cierlt1. cr....,itora, cont· Pubfl1hed Newport "ument to pey the wiM be conducted on ITEMS filed with 1M County on 07t'05/2000 doing ~ Y•I" No
fol011C! TO PltOP· ~ ~:~·:. 8each·Coat1 Me11 coet1 ol ·~of lhe TUESDAY: JULY 25, DOUG BRANT, F073. onCleltl071of1J:::' CCKM1Cy 2000e8'3515 Steven K z:-
DTY OWND.: YOU ,......,--' Olly Pilot .My 17, 21, impfoYemer41 to be IC> 2000, begi nning HOUSEHOLO ITEMS 2000MM04I Deily P1o1 .My 10. 17 This stalamant wu ARE IN DEFAULT UN· will be lnl«MI~ a; 2.4. 2000 quired, 11 ownerw ol rNI promptly 11 t :OO A.Ill. BRIAN MC NARY. 24, 31, 200Q M895 hied with the County DER A DEED OF wtl °' esaate, °' """' · Mf897 property within the Al-Partl<:ipenta thal mMI 0045, HOUSEHOLD ()Uy Piiot J4'y 17. 24, C1e11c o1 Orange COl.W1'y
TRUST. DATED Apnl INA KAY BAATEll Ml -nl Oiltrlcl ere et: ITEMS 31. Aug. 7, 2000 on 06/28/2000
26. 1993. UNLESS YOU INA l<AY EASTHAM eka STATEMENT OF aublect to 1 1ep1r1te DESIGN & MOE SAGHARICHIAN, L.A041801 M900 B II 2000U32914
TAU ACTION lO PR(). :~~ fu~:: ~~ ASSESSMENT end addltlonal ....... CONSTRUCTION G127. HOUSEHOLD F1ctltloua Bu1lneu ':~wt~· Dally Ploe J4iy 3 10 n:cT YOUR PROf'· E•STH•M lkl ''"Y NOTICE OF ment to be levled Ill· SERVICES. ITEMS u-me Stlltement \7. 24, 2000 M879 ERTY. rT MAY IE " " "" nua11y to pey for 00111 UniYerally of Ca11fonU. RHETT JAMES. H023. ,_ The toao-io pel'IOnS SOLD AT A '1JBUC EASTHAM BARTELL RECORDATIOH OF not otherwlH relm· lrYI HOUSEHOLD ITEMS The following l*'IOnl .,. doing bu1i.-u
SALE. IF YOU NEED aka INA K. BARTELL ASSESSMENT AND bufMd wn1ct1 wW reeu11 ~ Pi.ce K.E AUCTION .,. ~~II CHA·CH'ING VENO
AH EXPLANATION OF w KAY ~u. FOR DIAGRAM from lhe edmlnil1retion ~Mne. Calftomla • SERVICE. p 0 BOX ~:;}oen ~·~· 1!MIOO MacArthur EllYd ..
llfE NATUll! OF llfE A PETITI N NOTICE IS HEREBY and co1ection of ---112897·2450 508, PATION, CA Corone. Del Mar. C~ Sle. 300. lrvtne. Catifor· PROCa!DIN<i AGAINST PROBATEBRhl!N' '~Wen GIVEN to .. Ownerl °' m.nll Of from lhe ad· ATTENDANCE AT 1123811 "2~2· nil 92812
YOU. YOU SHOULD filed by " ""' • rHI property .... Med minil1re11on or 1egla· THE PAl-ltlD CON-K.E JACKSON TEL. • ~ Estate Plln-Brent Overfelt. 439
COHTACT A LAWYER. AENCE ., Ihle ~1 1 I to PIY lhl OOlta end~-lrllon GI Inf aaeodlted FE.AEHCI IS MA ... II 0 9 . s e 3 . 1 1 3 1 ....... u.c. ("•), .....,.. E HelloUope A\19., Coronl 0. My ll. 2000. 1t l:OO Cour1 of 1 1 orn I , !*WM o1 1t11 ~ bonds OATOAY FOA AL.L AUCTION BONOt C"c:lt ~. ~ def Mer Caflforn11
p.111 .•• lfOUSEJ(EY COil· County olPETORANGITION EF.OA menl9 lo bl ecqulr9d un-DATED. J4'y 12, 2000. PRIME CONTRAC· 723-41-19 """' ... ,."CA 92925 92625
POIATION, u duly THI<: der prOCffdl=· /SI Don Webb, TOAi; THE MHTINO Published Newport ..,.. ..,., Biii Overfelt, 5488
.,.._ l!Uft Wider PA08ATE ~ lhll ducted by lht ~ SUPEAINTENOENT Of WIU 81 et.OSED AT 8Hch-Co1t1 Me11 Thill bualneu It con· Rlocon BHch Perk
llld p11f1111* 111 O..S of QAIAN LAWRENCE be cl of the C11y Of N4 ITAUTI, CrTY Of l:CIS A.Ill. AMY PA*E Diiiy Plot .My 24. 31. ~Coby. I L.Jmil.cf U.· Drive. Venture, Callfor· Tit=. ~y ... !: ::::.: .:-:::::. BMc:h. Callfomia. pur· NEWPORT HACH CONTRACTORS AA· 2000 ~eve' you eler1ad ~9300~ness 15 con·
9J.OJ06712. .. Oftlall llcer fie....,. of .. <»-:::.:. ~ ~..:: r.:r• °' CALWOA-:ow:rn~ n: "'905 doing ~ Y9'? No <))did by • generel
a-.is m die otru of ~I. ~ ~ Ad of Publlahed Newport EU09e.a TO 'MnlQ. F1c:tttfoul au.tneu ~U.C ~-... fllln.s pertnef'lhlp .. CWMy lllconlcr of THE PETITION ,._ 11113 DMllon 12 8Hch·Co1t1 Mell ,ATE IN THI 110 PRO-tum. 8'8-.nt ·-'V • .......,,... · Hive you 111rt1d
NIA CCllllll). S-of rend~~~~ of Iha and Hlgn-Daily Piiot J4'y 17, 24, CUS Al A PRIME The foliowltlD p1f1011e Ha.f':· :.-:=. wu doing bullneu Y9f7 No Califonla. C..-. llf __,.._. .............. weya Cd of fie State 2000 CONTRACTOR. .,. doing ~ ..: ftlld WMtl lhl County Brent Overfelt
NIA. of Of'llaal ~ be .. ,....., lo ...,~ ol Calltomla, Artlcle M901 Or4y blddel'I who pw· LAST CAU. MAGA· ~ GI Orwlga CCKM1Cy Thll stltement wu
MC..cV.W
•MONA&.MRK
ICemelterv • Mortuary
CNpel • °'*"9loly
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:.=::~:OS: ~ ~'°"''°' ••· XlllO of tie Con11t11A1on ADVERTISEMENT ddpat9 In bolll ._ eo... Zl~J...lle5 ~ on 0&'30r'2000 ~:"er!;.= Euc:uled .... emlnelion In tt. 1111 Mpl of .. S1lile of ea.omil. lerence and IN Job Pl _.,, COiia ...... 2000A»20t on 07/IYlOOO 110 ~ ol Clbfom&a. ., end Iha ~ 218 FOR llOS w• In f1* 91111rMy, .. CA 92083 • Odw Plol Mt 10 17 Costa Mw =-8M~ by~ co;r-ETlTION re-Omnibu1 rmp1ement1· ~to ooodltlo111 bl elowld 1o bid on Iha Edward Don1ld 24.)t, 2QOO Me9i 200CIMS4200 M2·e180 =~tL~ :::,.::,~~ ~~~~ .... ..:;.-:.~ ::=. ':0t~OC: ~~~...:=; 'ktltiOUI 8uelflMt ~Plo;,~17~ ------·
PVIUC AUCTIOM 10 ._ llldlf*deill Adlm-~~:::.:. :5::'~ = ~ "="~ ~ ...._ Sti111ment HIGHEST llDDEJl FOR lltrlllon o4 Ellae Ad. ;;;;J""a:.ict No. 78 (lit· WOfk: W1f11n DMlgr'I & Con-dudld by. ., nMalll Tht IOllOwwlQ I*'°"'
CASHJCA$HIEJl'S ffi* Auflolty .. lllow le B1110e llllnd). LAB MNOVATIONI, 1tructlon S•1Vlee1: Hive you etar1ecl -ti'U ~ 11. CMECX (pey_.. 11 lilM ~-I>!..~ ~· You are hereby INOINHMtQ Shelly Armetrong e ~ bl'9Nel ~ No LMnn ~. 3785
ot lllt ill llwtul :-:1 of ;;;;;: ~ ~ nolllJed that on lhl 12th QATIWAY (1149) 824-3088. idWMJ Mal--. Alton Pat1rny, lrvlne. =-~= S:-_.: oou,, 8PPfOYW 8efatW ~.:,,:X· ::>· !: PAOJICTuuA•rn~ ~ The ~ Blddlt Thll tCetemenl -CA..,~ 18508 ~ 'UR ot .. ..._..Codi ~ oerttln I/fl('/ iftt. • -"''"~'' Incl ... &eool*"*'9 ~ ~ "' ~ I -,........,_ CA 90'1t3 ........ ._ _.., ~ 111 ,.......,. .........._, how-:f"~ram '° ~ ~ ~ CALIFORNIA. IRVINE. _. be ~ '° talow .._... .., Owaa ,,_,., ..,.., ..----,....._., ---"' '"""'' IAVINE, tie noodllC1111'*.-0.1 ,.. on Oll'Z7/20lJIJ Thll bUllnMI II oon-~') It '"* -· ._ l*IOftll,.... eoq were r•· CALIFORNIA 92t97 QU1ten1en11 '* bt\ In lllllllHll ....... by. en lnclhtlcMI =: ~:-C:,~~ :-= 2 ~ ~ ~ Ml ~~ O:C: ::S ~Y °:::.= ~Mt$. 'CZ;jij ca:;v:,..: ;.~"Jed &,.,., ':: ";,: ~ "'9lield '*'°"' unlle9 now due Incl peW9ble ltNCUon ot lmoroYe-.,. ,..... 11 ._ io.:.:. Ben HI.Ill
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Costa Mesa
Al NM'J)Ot't & 17th
bdilnd Harp tnn
(949) 722-8586
Royal Cre.!'Jeenl
APDDAI~~
~ .. .., .... a.:-'I" .... :.....-.: ~i
Monday ................. Friday 5:00pm
Tuesday .............. Monday 5:00pm
Wednesday ......... Tuesday 5:00pm
"' Th~ay ....... Wednesday 5:00pm
Friday ............... Thursday 5:00pm
Saturday ............... Friday 5:00pm
,.
,..,.. . ,, . ., .ra .... ...,
.... MMQO ..
.... .... 141( .... ----...... um ..cwa •WPORT llACff .........
ClllC...., ..
4WD.lllC,IH m 1111oov.r .,...,
LAND AOV111 NEWPORT 11ACH ..... "' ..
* HONDA Ac:c:oAO ..
2 doof, ""°· lir. powtf 1t11rlng, S4t 50/obo
Mt-?23=1504.
JAGUAR AOADITtR '50
XX120 --080 8AUER JAGUAR
714-tSMIOO
JAGUAR XJI L 'f7
SEDAN 40 ..,.. t7~m BAUER JAGUAR
7144MIOO
JAGUAR XJI ...,
IEDAH 40 ..... '7~112
I.AUER JAGUAR
71~
·.~,.~--~
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I. • '--<. .~ ' , • -'• A ~· -•. ~~i
.AAGUAll XU 'M eo.v.w. 2D "7• IM107 IAU!A JAGUAR
714-ISMIOQ
•GrMda..tw
'--do lllri cond. 2911 "' CID, new tirta & brllb
2wd, Char9Qld S18,000 obo
Mt-716-2711
LDUS U-300 'ti B1ac11.
tin .. inl, Pl JdG. ~ rod, 1 owner. 11 MMCe
rteofdt, perltd. $20,500. Firm 949-11 e-om
WUS ES 300 'ti Shedowroee, Fo.Jty l.olded,
New LAlxus T rtdl 11542331 S22.sn
LEXUS 111SS10H VEJO .. .. ~
LEXUS ES 30ll '17 WMllY«Y, Ewry. Posd>le
Option. New LIK~ T rtdl
(021137) $22,987
LEXUS MISSION VIEJO
Mt-3M-OM4
LEXUS ES 400 '18
BlkllYOly, Fully Loaded. ta. Cert. .... Cond
(046699) '31.987 LEXUS MISSION VIEJO .... ~
LEXUS ES 400 't9
BltllYOty, EV81Y Poeaba Oi*ln. New Ltn. Tra
(057626) ~.987 LEXUS MISSION V1EJO
MWM-OM4
LEXUS LS 400 'tt
Pt111/Gry/Gry, L1hr, ChlOmt, l.ded. Only 60K rri
(1118933) S21,987
LEXUS lllSSIOH V1E.10 ..........
LEXUS SC 300 'f7
BladillYOry, Fo.Jty loedad.
Mini Cordlion.
(038Sllel $31,987 LDUS mStC* V1E.10 .........
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LA DISCOVERY TT
Al h loyal Alady '° gol
152478Cn056 111.750 LAND ROVER
NEWPORT BEACH MM40-6445
LA DISCOVERY 't7
Ful poww, MK ml,
IS5m5n05t S1t,l50
I.AHO ROVE.R
NEWPORT BEACH
MM40-M45
LA Ri1191 RoWf 'ti ..... ~.-It! ~ $32,950
LAHO ROVER
NEWPORT BEACH
MM4H445
LA RAHGE ROVEii ._
Full ~. 4.2K Mlllll
133795tms4 flt,950 ~ ROVER NEWPORT BEACti
M98t06U5
LR RANGE ROVER '91
Alt poww, -Ill ~ $31,950 LAND AOVER NEWPORT IEACti
Mt-l404445
Madi MXS LJI model 'ti
2nd owner, grul ~ =-~"°'"'
... ft I 8eflz E.420 w
lllack/Slannatt (~CttER ~790
IU.IH.1to1
l~-;o)~I~'" -..----"' ' • I
lo~ ,_.,... . t .............. ~ .. a. _. -· •111•1 ... cm• ~Cdlld (151~~780 .. , .. ,
• r•111w cm·w Wllll.-r~ (41~~780
....u4.1!0t
llnedle E320 W1g1111 W Low Mla.JSlllTnlnl (335170) $29,790
FU'reti£R JONES
181.124.1401
llnedle U20 ...
WhitelGrey/$1111!1111'
(006539) $29, 790
FlE'rCHER JONES
NUU.1401
MEACE>ES llU» ...
3000 1111, 111 Uz~:O IOM75712M9
LANO ROY!ll NEWPORT BEACti
MH404445
ll£RCEOES 290£ '71
Sllv1r, IUIO, lo1d•d1
lalthlr, aunroof, 11111 -$2500 714-454-5419
~5e0Sl '19
ANSWltU TO WEEKLY HJDGB QUIZ
Q 1-fMt. Wall wlnenible ••
Soudl you hold;
The biddinJ '* aroceoded: Wf'.S1' NOlml" EAST sotmt to l• 20 f
Whit do you bid now?
A -'I'M> lpidel ii a po. llllderbid.
and • jump lO tine Ji*b diae
dayt II coil&ldcnd i:riiemDU~ -
showing • -it baiid lnCl long JPldes. That mans lhal the oii'Jy
way to deecribe a poW'CI' raiJC to
three llJades is with a cue-bid of
c.bree cfilmoods.
Q 2-~-West vullleflblc, IS
South you hold:
•IO o 9'Q7'2 o Qlt7' •3
The biddilll Im oroceedcd: NOllTll IAS1' SOt1l'H ~
l• 20 ' Whit do you bid now?
A -When you have a minimum responsc, make rhe bid Ihle-is most
encourqina to pl!U'Cf· Here. you
have a known C1Jht-ard fit (even if
you play four-ard majors, odds
stronaJy favor~ havina five
cards in the IUrt when he opens one
spade). so do not get Into the compli·
catioos !Mt might ensue from a
rapoo.se or IWO beasts. Raise lO IWO
splldes.
Your kfl·hlnd opponenft one dia.
mond ope:nina bid is paaed around to
you. What action do you take?
A-Your'~ in the maj« suits
maku • takeout double unappetiz,. lnJ. There ii a te•tboot bid available -one no trump. In the ballllCiog
seat. !hat shows a balanced hand of
12-IS points. Wltb 16-18, you would
double flnt then 'bid no llllmp ~
cbeliply as possible.
Q S -Both vulnerable. as Soulh you
hold:
•AKQ" o 10 OJ9J •AIOU
The bidding Im oroceeded·
SOUl'H WES't NORllt EAST •• .._ 20 PaM '1
What do you bid now?
A -You cannoc bid no lnlmp with-
out a diamond stopper, and JOU do
not have the values for a 'high
revcnc:' of thn:e clubs '" ligfo or I.he
poccnuaJ nusfit By a ~' of
ehnunauon. that leaves t\l.O spades
as your only vmble ahemi11Jve.
Q 6 -Ea.~1· West vulncrahlc, as
South you hold:
Burgandy, leather, original Q 3 -Eut·West vulnerable. as owner, AIC. low mileage, South vou hold· $21.000 949-723~5 , •
• J o K Q 10 8 S o SJ • A K 10 112
Your right·hand opponent opc.ns the
bidding wuh three ~pudes What
action do you take'! MerCldl9 MOSEC 'It
63.000 Mis. tUrf
(609163) $29.790 FLETCHER JONES
111.12•.1'01
Mll'cury llyltlqul GS '91
Auto, lloor mats. I 3"
pol&hed Macll ~. 6C)'40 SpliUlold ,.., Mat
(XICS34530) $13.975
Kin Qnldy Uneol~cury
714·521-lltO
MOUNTAINEER •X• '00
Pwr rnoonrool. aide air
begl. co. Macll Aldo. tow, lallher, Hom** (YUJ00949) '31,545
Kin Grody
Unco!!Hhrcury
714-621-3110
llOUNTAINEER 4X4 18 Sidi air bagl. massage
Clal'lllr, co. --patQ1g lid. IOW plr4j
(XOJ34612) S24.t7S
"-Gnldr Uncof~cury
TtW21·3t10
• A 8 5 4 O K 4 J O A 9 • A 10 7 6
The bidding has~: • EAST SOU111 WEST NOll'lli
A -You have a very alltllellve hand
and 1r you knew which ~Ult 10 bid,
you would go ahead and bid ii
Unfortun:ucly, the preemp1 has
reduced your choices ro a pure
KUCSS· so swy fixed and pa~'· After all. p.vtncr still has a chance to bid
10 Dbl .... I• ,_ T
Whal action do you lake?
Ponlllc ...... 'ti
Red. ldnl cand! Sip ••. co.
•• ~ 23Slt ni. $9 u~ .. = saaoo Mt-21
AOUS AOYCE 73
CORNICHE HARDTOP
Wllltllltn, low mlllge, ,_ AC llld CO. AtUng
f'IUOO MHI0-7113
SATUAH SU 't3 40R. IUD, rmr1 & ~
( 149840) $5,988
NABERS
(71')540-9100
*TOYOTA COROLLA 'ti
Mini condi1ion, Whitt,
'-<loor, 28.000 ""'"· 111"1
jlOdlr ~DOOi obo. Clil~
TOYOTA 4 RUNNER 'ti
SAS, 8 cyt, 2 WO, whllWlln
""'· -1, -... co ceM, ~ pf!. rod rlet, new tifM, orQill °"'*• xlnl cond. '2Q,OOOI
obo M•11M59'
TODAY'S
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
Cal for Allswws a T ___ _,_
• t&cpor-1~ -CIOdl 500
'H XJS V·12 COUPE
Whitt, like ,_, al onginel.
we wlwell. pl'.one
$59S(Vobo 94U7s.6128
'91 Olde SMhouat1e VIII
lul pwr, "*'· • oond.
7 "" IMI, 1 -recoldl, vw CA8RtOLET '16 $4, 150/C>bo 949-723-1504
CHAArTY CAM
Oon11a your vahlclt ,
tax decidbll, "" towing. w, pnMdl. ....... to
needy IMliliaa. ~ -on Op1lh Ind PICSlll ....-
mal 1~..-.s1, www ehullycars o rg
!CAL'SCANl eonvt """" ...... -1 I Wolfaburt cond., $2:500 Celt Cl•••lfled Todey I 71~ (949) 942-5978
•11~11-=·•ll-"11mll• ... , ~~~
, .. -.. ,
l·. . .
ACTIOll llOlll ....,....,.
&
llllllllllllCI .. ~;:"' Al-(714) 17 .. 1171
---------..., _,,
. ' •• 1 . .
BEST MOVERS SeMc:wlg
tldllll hl..s.llll ClOUl1IOl.9 & C*tU
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•
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YOU'LL LOVE THE WAR.RANTY
I •
. . AT FIRS .T SIGH.T TOO .
After reviewing 21 pre-owned vehicle programs, lntelliChoice• named Jaguar Select Edition the
country's Best Certified Pre-Owned Pro~am and Best Pre-Owned Warranty.•
• 6-year/100,000-mile
warranty
• 120-point cosmetic &
mechanical inspection
• 24-hour roadside
assistance
• Financing and leasing
option
• Available at
authorized Jaguar ~
dealers only ~
· JAGUAR
SELECT EDITION
PllE-0WNED AUTOMOBILES
Bauer .Ja
14$5 South Auto
Santa Ana • SS Freew
714·953·4800 • www.b
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