HomeMy WebLinkAbout2001-07-06 - Orange Coast Pilot. . .
SERVING THE NEWPORT -·MF.SA COMMUNmES SINCE 1907 ON 1HE WEB: WWW.DAILYPILOT.COM FRl>AY,JULY 6, 2001
The party's .over, now Newport picks up
•After more than 170 arrests on one of the busiest Fourth of
Julys on record, the city begins job of clearing tons of trash.
Dffpll Bh.rath
DAILY PILOT
NEWPORT BEACH -The
morning after the Fourth of July is
never a pleasant one for West New-
port residents, especially when
record crowds throng at the beach.
The drunken revelry, the fright-
eningly large crowds that pack nar-
row beachfront streets, and noise
from boisterous parties and illegal
fireworks almost a lways leave
these homeowners with a nonalco-
holic hangover and a throbbing
headache.
Most of the arrests were alcohol-
related, he said.
Hundreds of people were
slapped with citations for l.tghting
fireworks while several hundred
others were given warrungs, Shul-
man said.
"We did arrest at least two men
for lighting bigger explosive fire-
works,• he said.
Shulman said that while there
were no major incidents or injuries,
the crowds seemed larger than pre-
vious years. In some stray crowd·
control incidents, officers suffered
minor injuries, but none of them
were serious, he said. ·
he added.
Residents who live near the
beach saiQ they felt the effect of the
sheer number of visitors. Early
Thursday morning, many of them
said they spent hours picking up
trash -broken beer h9ttles, burned
out firecrackers an<t"'paper. Some
said they hosed off urine in front of
their homes.
Not a pleasant task, said Kathy
Cooper.
"It was a very difficult (July 31
and [July 4) for us,• she said. "The
drinking and fireworks went on day
and night. People were urinating on
the street.•
Her neighbor, Nancy Abrams,
said she saw 44th Street loaded with
people.
Newport Beach police reported
more than 170 arrests this year, a
number only "slightly higher• than
last year, said Sgt. Steve Shulman.
"There was a lot of Cjirinking.
more than usual And the crowds
stayed later than they normally do,.
"The police did what they could
but they couldn't control the qowds
SEE PARTY PAGE 4
SEAN Hl.LER I OAJLY "-OT
Police make an alcohol-related arrest in West Newport Beach on
the Fourth of July. Residents say this holiday was one of the buslesL
PHOTOS BY SEAN HU.ER I OAllY PILOT
Dana Roblnlon, along with her father, Frank, and brother, Jay, share a laugh during memorial services for the late
envtronmentallst Prances Robinson. The ceremony was held at the Back Bay lnterprettve Center. on Thursday.
Pictures
giving
trtbufe to
Roblmont
who cited
Saturday,
were on
cJbplay
~ ..me..
.
Saver of the Back Bay
meinorialized
Nearly 200 come out to morning service at Interpretive
Center in Upper Newport Bay to pay tribute to Frances Robinson
Peul Olnton
DAll.Y PILOT
F riendl and relatives remembered
Prances Robinson as a warm, feisty
c:rusader for the Back Bay at a
morning memorial service for the
environmenfallst. who, along with be bus·
baM, Js largely credited with saving the
wetland area that bas become Newport
Beach's prlde and Joy.
Held at the Peter a.od Mary Muth Inter-
pretive Center, at the northern edge ol the
Upper Newport Bay l'ele1"Ye Robimon helped
make possible, the service drew nearly 200
~ IOU1I on a drizzly ThWlday.
New wave
of progress
for marine
complex
• Sponsored by several
agencies, the Shellmaker
Island project will soon get
underway.
Paul Clinton
DAILY PILOT
UPPER NEWPORT BAY -Plans
for a new marine research center on
Shellmaker Island have come into
sharper focus as ottioals prepare to
begin the project \n the coming weeks.
In August, the Newport Beach
City Counol is expected to begin
environmental review of the mstalla-
tion of trailers to house Orange
County's waler-quality lab until more
permanent buildings are built. '
The marine complex -which
would indude water-quality testing,
an education center, a working sci-
ence lab and a new rowing center -
would help answer nagging ques-
tions about the impalfed Back Bay,
center director John Scholl said.
Testing efforts are continuing at a
2-year-old temporary trailer on Shell-
maker. But samples must now be tak-
en to the county's Santa Ana lab to be
analyud.
•They're trying to d.tscover the
mystery of pollution and to bnng the
watershed to an improved cond.t-
tion, • Scholl said about testing
efforts. "It's paying attention to what
marine life still nests here.•
Shell.maker, a 1..S-mile·long isl4nd
at the edge ol the bay, ii a natural
place to test and analyze water in the
estuary, Scholl Mid.
The new lab will be built in two ·
stages. By Oct. 1, county officials
hope to tmtall a second trailer to
house the lab, wh1ch w1l1 ~ be
·relocated from Santa Ana. s~ two
ts expected to .begin in summer of
SEE ftESEAACH MGE '
Portraiture
eXhlbit
at the
Orange
County
Museum of
Art's
satellite
gallery
shows how
artists
think of
themselves
Youngatang
DAILY PILOT
T hey make
you wonder,
these por-
traits of artists at
the Orange County
Museum of Art's
South Coast Plaza
location.
Daily Pilot
~ CHICI IT OUT I . . '
-Books are-bits .
with star Angels
W onder what your
favorite AMheim
Angell stars do when
they're-not on the playing
field? Many of them make
time.for reading.
Asked about their favorite
literary bits, players and
coaches delivered an eclectic
\>ag of dassic and contempo-
rary
selec-
tions.
While·
some of
the
picks
center
on
sports,
others
are adventure stories, biogra-
phies and timeless tales.
-Mllcldol( who nmied •PWan
of tbe Earth" as a favortte:In
this ~tour de force; Ken ·Fo1Je1t delivers a stunning
chronicle centered on the
bulid.ing of a cathedral in 12th
amtury England.
lbe setting is more con·
temporary in the John
Grlsbam novels named 'by
newly retired infielder Wally
Joyner, who recommends .. A
11me to IOll." and by catcher
Shawn Wooten. who lauds
"TbePlrm."
Modern classics are popu-
lar with infielder Scott
Spie'zio, who picked Willi.am
Goldlng'• ·1.orc1 of the Files"
as a favorite, and with coocb
Mickey Ha&cber, who singled
out Fred Gibson'• •01d
Yeller." For pitcher Scott
Schoeuwels, Jotepb Conrad'•
metaphoric41 adventure
•ffeut of Dark:neu" tops a
list of favorites.
Players' picks are featured
on •Jlead-
· Could Chema
Cobo, with his
thought-provoking
self-portrait show-
ing a Jllask and a
distorted dancing
figure, be shy?
A detail of David Hodmey'• • Artbt aad Model.• which depicts tJle artlat being drawa
by Ptcuso, Is on display u part ol tlae •Portrait of the Artist" ablblt at tbe Orallge
County Museum of Art'• sateWte gallery at South Cout Plua.
For infielder David Edl-stem. career motivation comes
from °'Tbe Nmlun1.. Bernard
MUmaod'I masterpiece about
tbe my.thie world of baseball.
Inspiring for both sports fans
and reeded drawn to larger-
ttwi-life heroes, the story stars
gifted athlete ltoy Hobbl.
whole prnmiltng career is
derailed by a youthful indis-
cntion. When Roy makes a
cunebe.dt in middle age. his
struggle fm greatness spawns
an epic about Amertcan
champions.
IDgwttb
lbe
Angels."
~free
bookmark
available
atNew-c:ch Might Joseph
Kleitscb, whose
traditional self-portrait of a face
and upper torso that is set against
a countryside scene, have been as
approachable as the guy next
door?
Would David Hockney be the
way he is bad Picasso not come
before him?
Hockney's portrait, •Artist and
Model,• suggests not. In this 1974
piece, the artist sits across from
Picasso, who is drawing him in the
nude.
•it's an interesting and witty
play on who the artist is and who
the model is,· said Sarah Vure,
curator at the Orange County
Museum of Art. •we're looking at
Hockney as Picasso's model, but
in fact Picasso is the model that
Hockney is emulating.•
The current exhibit at the
museum's South Coast Plaza
gallery offers a study, almost, on
identity in 20th century art. nued
•Portrait of the Artist,• the more
than 25 pieces from the museum's
permanent collection includes
self-portraits; as well as portraits
done by one artist of another.
· Vure curated the exhibit, which
will come down Oct. 7, out of a
fascination with the portraiture
genre. .
•1 think we all have a deep
human need for connection,• she
said. •Therefore I fina images of
·~·· 11n1001
Local artist in '12 Hours'
at gallery in Santa Ana
Dave Wirkkala ol Cost.a Miila ti
one ol five 81'tistl with p6jc:9 In
• 12 Haun,• a July 14 aldblt at
m
WHA't. •portrait of the Artist•
WHEN: Through 8ct. 7
WHERE: The museum's satellite
gallery In South Coast Plaza.
3333 Bristol St.,
Costa Mesa
~Free
CALL: (949) 759-1122
people very compelling. I think
different artists are trying to say
different things in their self-J><?r-traits.. .
Brian Langston, spokesman at
the museum, agreed.
•These really involve looking
beneath the skin, U you will, and
projecting something of the psy-
chology and the inner nature as
opposed to the outer appearance
of the sitter,• he said.
Arnold Mesches' acrylic portrait
of John Baldessari shows the mid-
section of the pop artist's face,
every wrinkle, every strand of
facial hair clear and separate.
Why Mesches chose to make the
details 10 obvious, and why the
emphasis on each mustache hair,
probably only Baldessari's •ucces-
son know.
•He was looking to investigate
how (Baldessari) felt,• Vure said,
·And the emotion• of hil sitten
through the vigor of his brush·
work. He was creating a tension
between the abstract, formal qual-
ities of art and the expressive,
emotional aspect of depicting a
human being.•
Blythe Bohnen'• self-portraits
are tricky. You think you're seeing
one thing and then you think
you're seeing another. They look
alive, both made to look as though
they are moving verttca.Uy in the
medium of gelatin silver prints.
They resemble a scene pho-
tographed in motion, the camera
possibly out of focus.
The question, how did Bohnen
see henelf, calls for a guessing
game of the most psychological
kind.
•1 just think that portraiture is
really the most intimate and
telling form of the visual,•
Langston said.
For the painter, as well as the
sitter. Langston recently sat for a
portrait himself. Por two houn he
sat dead still while an artist drew
him. Then be went back and sat
for another two houn while the
artist painted him. '
•1t was an old-fashioned experi-
ence for me,• Langston said. •1t
was exciting yet calming. And then
the experience ot seeing what"be
saw was just so fascinating.•
/ A mont personal edge
.( dlives ·~ Se•on: A
Cwta'I Stmf of ......... B•...--.. Son." lbe
favortte ol announoer Ra
. , Hu •n ii foothll ~Gene
S«el ..... chronicle of acb.leve-
mentl bath on the g(k.ti.ron
and u the father of a c.bild
with Down syndrome. The
story about railing a 10D who
was not
mpected
to live
put the
ageot 1
into
adult·
~
bdlm
with
leleonl
about
beating
the odds.
There'• escapist fare among
the playen' favorites, includ-
ing -n. DH a cr.iloa." •Tbe
Mam· and other volumes in
11m Leffaye'I •J..ell BeMDd"
series. Along with outfWder
11a Sabaon. legkm ot read· en have been hln9d by the
blend ot apoca1ypic suspense,
oompJracy and rmwnce
served up in~ Mgal.
Another muts of intrigue
ii popular with cX>ilcb Joe
.
Schneider Studios.
The artist. whole large paint-
ings bUe sbown in the Art Rental
and Sales GaDery ol the Loi Ange-
Athnlnion ti free. Information:
(114) 569--0121.
South Coast Plaza PnmCh goods
retail ltorel or eat a spedal dinner
In hen« ol Baltil1e Dey (~ t,).
-County Mmeum ol Art. joins
artiltl Ski Benbun, Deolle Marie
Moritz, Pia 8nd Paul Schnelder,
1be 12-bOur art lbOw wOl be
blld from DOOD to m'dnlght-at tbe
gdlry, toeo B. tit St; Santa Ana. .
QUe Pascal breaks bread
to celebrate B~e Day
Cafe Pacal will glw! campli·
mmtarY PftlDdl ~
Wednelday tbrougb July 1' to
CUftcal«s wbo lbap at HI I c'8d
~----.... .....,....,..._.,...,: ................... .,.....,. ...... ,. l:ilo .... ...,. __ m B&ll 4'
Cultomen wbo m.aP any pur-
cbue at CbrtltiaD Dior, tien18,
Llllque or AgD8I b. will reeeive a •
mrtmca•, wbicb may be pn11Dl·
.. at~ Paticll ID SoUtb COlit
Plaa ID _,.,,,,,. fOr • compll-
IM' MJ Prw:b ~.
-... ==-.......
ll:it1 .... __ .•..• 17' .......
public
libraries.
AJso on
band are
scmes of the reamtly pub-
lished volumes on America's
favorite pastime •
.Amoog the newest is an
updated edition ot Leonard
~ -n. TldDldng
RD'a Gakle to l•eball." an
exploration ot·tbe game's evo-
lution over Ul8 put 150 yea.rs.
Bquaily cunprebemtve in
focus is •America's Gome,• a
visual and tactOe bit with fas-
cinating faaimlJes of docu-
menls from the National Base-
ball Hall ot fame.
•Whoever wants to know
tbe heart and mind of Ameri-
ca bad better ia.mi baseball.·
obeeeyed philoeopher Jacques
Damm. But if it's just the
locals you want to ltudy,
check out "Tbe Aniihefm
Angels." Roa Newbm's
cbrooide ot a team that's still
stitving to make it to the
World Series, that ts sure to
score with die-hard fans.
..
'.
1
l
1
,. ' . ,
Daily Pilot
.
ConfesSiotz$ of an urbanite
T hank you, Starbucks. 1baDk you,
Chevron. lb.an.kl to all the mini-
malls and franchises that make
up the trimmings of my life.
Without all of you, I am lost.
I drove out to Chino Hills on Thurs-
day morning.
I took a route called carbon Canyon
Road from my La Habra home and ven-
tured for miles and about 30 minutes
down a snaking. sloped path sand-
wiched between monster mountains
that shaded the road an Alask8.n gray.
The greenery was really green, the
horses chewed weeds.
For stretches of barren land -not a
construction crew in sight and not one
development in the works -my shoul-
ders tellSEd as I rounded the infinite
turns and hoped to no avail that a Star-
bucks or a McDonald's or even a gas
station would assure me that I hadn't
wandered too far.
I was terrified. Lonely, suddenly. and
craving the city sights that bombard my
senses every day. Arn I really this wban?
Am I really just a sneeze away from
allergic reactions to the world's natural
beauties tninus my daily luxuries?
I'm neither proud nor ashamed to
;
Young Chang
REPORTER'S NOTEBOOK
admit it, but I think I am.
I began to wonder if I was lost.
Chances were, I wasn't. But I stopped
at the only sign of life on this deserted,
pastoral road - a liquor store -for a
fleeting moment of human contact. It
was open. It was 7:50 a.m.
The man behind the wooden counter
was sympathetic. I made no sense,
expla.iri.ing bpw I thought I might be
lost but wasn't swe but could be point
me the right way anyway. He took out a
map, wrote in all caps where I should
make my lefts and rights and repeated
everytbing twice.
I thanked him profusely before I left,
happy just to see another soul and
relieved, pathetically, to see the same
peanut butter Reese's sticks and fun.
size Butterfingers I see every day in my
urban 7-Elevens.
I arrived at my destination, did what
I went there to do and rushed back to
my car. I thought for a second about
how I should bead to the office, to Cos-
ta Mesa. .
Do I whip-out the Thomas Guide and
continue to sit in the mountains of Cb.l-
oo Hills while I try to figwe the most
practical path south?
Or do I just get the M ck out?
My shoulders were still tense. My
music was even off. I had nervously
eaten my way through a handful of
chips and my fingers were cold.
I U-turned and headed back the way
I came.
Back to streets lined with coffee
shops, back to a world of honking cars,
back to the desensitizing, bittersweet
wban scene I call home.
• YOUNG CHANG covers entertainment for the
Dally Pilot.
Summer showers dampen .post-holiday scene
• Monsoonal flow
brings in moisture
from Mexico, weather
forecasters say.
Deepll Bhareth ,.
DAILY PILOT
NEWPORT-MESA -A
day after the holiday that
epitonuzes summer fun, the
area was struck with rain,
lightning flashes and overcast
conditions that swept through
the area.
Although John Wayne Air-
port reported only a trace of
rainfall during the day Thurs-
day, forecasters said more
showers are on the way for
today and even Satwday.
"The monsoonal flow is
coming from the moist air
moving in from Mexico,· said
Miguel Miller, a meteorolo-
gist for the National Weathe r
Service in San Diego.
During the day Thursday,
the Newport-Mesa area
recorded about 0.03 inches
of rainfall, Miller said. He
said the muggy. cloudy and
humid conditions will con-
tinue into the weekend and
that things will probably
start to dear up late Satur-
day.
Miller said while it is not
unusual to have moist,
humid or hot weather this
time of year, . showers are
unusual. He attributed the
rain to unstable air over the
ocean.
Harbor Pa~l officials said
the weather conditions were
similar to what they bad been
the last two days -mild but
sticky.
Isolated flashes of light-
ning were also reported
Thursday morning. said
Newport Beach Lifeguard
Capt. Jim Turner.
·1 didn't see strikes, but I
definitely saw flashes this
morning,• be said. '-....,
Turner added that the
weather, however, calmed
the big surf that ha,d kept life-
guards busy over the week-
end and on the holiday.
On the Fourth of July, life-
guards were busy between 3
and 6 p.m . and totaled 55 res-
cues for the day, he said.
·we had 18 rescues from
Tow"er 56, most of them to do
with rip currents.• he said.
As beachgoers take shelter
under umbrellas from
Thursday's rain. a sea gull
rests above Its reflection hi
a puddle on the basketball
courts behind Newport
Elementary School.
GREG FRY I DAILY Pll.OT
Put a few words to
work for you. Call the
Daily Pilot
CLASSIFIEDS 642-5678
C· IA1.iw"1 IT'S TIME FOR ... ~t't qw r '"4 Ml CASA
M [ x I (AN ru s TA u fl ANT
AddiUolial r&id
. information given
Inveltigaton found 2
grams of metbampheta·
mine, illegal fireworks and
)lundredt of rounds of
ammunltfon after a Tues-
day afternoon raid of a
home on Costa Meso's
Wesmde, oftida]I said.
Six people who were in
the house in the 2000 block
of President Place were also
arrested on drug-related
charges.
Those arrested were
Robie Robetsen, 39; Joel
Kontngisor, 45; and Crystal
Deanne Ltnnery, 30 -all of
Costa ,Mesa -as well as
Erle Faubion Fling, 39, of
Huntington Beach, Steve
Alan Johnson, 42, of Irvine
and Jon Scott Weir, 45, a
transient.
Roberson and Koningisor
wera charged with felonies
on suspidon of d~oying
evidence and resisting
arrest. Both men were
reportedly seen -trying to
throw methamphetamine
into the backyard when the
investigators arrived.
Other, were charged
with various misde-
meanors.
Costa Mesa investiga-
tors have been looking into
the house tor some time,
said Costa Mesa Police LL
Dale Birney.
"This. was the result of
'the investigative work they
were doing,• he said.
Birney said the SWAT
team was used to gain
entry into the house Tues-
day because detectives had
found explosives in the
house on a different occa-
sion.
Officials, as well as
neighbors, said the house
has gained notoriety over
the years because of fre-
quent police visits, noisy
parties and loud fighting.
Search continues
for missing man
A search in the sea is still
on for a 33-year-old man
who was reported missing
Wednesday afternoon, offi-
cials said.
Donald Jason Huntress
was swimming in Emerald
Friday, July 6, 2001 3
Bay DeU' ~ 8Mdl
when he wu wt M9D
about 3:15 p.m. ~
and IOIDe al 1161 frtendl Md
anChOred lbeir ~I-foot
BOltcll WUllr ebOUt -yardl otf the ibonline, •·
dall Ntd.
Orange County Sberitf'•
Harbor Patrol diven, two
state lifeguard divers and a
helicopter ~arched the
area Wednesday till darlt.
The search resumed~
day morning abOut 10 a.m:,
said Jon Pleilcbmali,
spokesman tor tbe Orange '
County Sheriff's Depart-
ment.
Harbor Patrol deputies
searched with a fire boat. a
patrol boat and two depart-
ment watercraft, as well as
a dive team.
The crew stopped about
3 p.m. Thursday, but Pleil·
chman said Harbor Patrol
deputies on patrol at nigbt
will keep the search allve
till the divers return at 8
a.m. Friday.
\
Grand jury indicts
2 in Newport-Mesa
A Costa Mesa man and a
Newport Beach man were
among 11 individuals who
were indicted by a Los
Angeles grand jury Thurs--
day in relation to a St-mil-
lion counterfeiting scheme,
officials said.
· Among those charged
are Stanley Eugene Martz,
58, of Newport Beach and
his firm. Balport Image Ink,
and George Noee Kent. 58,
of nabuco Canyon and bis
firm. Coast Business Sys-
tems, also known as Sea
Coast Copiers Inc. of Costa
Mesa.
According to the indict-
ment. the alleged crlmes
occurred in 1999 and 2000
and involved the resale of
used Xerox copier car-
. tridges that were packaged
and sealed into a counter-
feit Xerox box and sold as
new.
Arraignment for all
defendants was postponed
until Aug. 13. Los Angeles
Superior Court Judge
Stephen O'Neil allowed
them to remain free on their
own recognizance but said
the issue of the recom-
mended $200,000 bail for
each will be addressed at
the next hearing.
Donate
your vehicle.
1-888-308-6483
Set hope in motion
to improve local lives.
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·On .a que~t for m9:re gold
•A 59-year-old swimmer from Newport
Beach YMCA with transplanted heart plans
trip to World 'Il'ansplant games in Japan.
Danette Goulet
DAILY PILOT
NEWPORT BBACH
Just four years ago, Inger
Jessen couldn't walk from
the car into her Huntington
Beach home.
Now, a gold and brome
breaststroke medalist, Jessen
is raising money to go bad(
for another gold in the tjth
World Transplant gam~
which will be held in Kobe,
Japan, this summer. .
Jessen, 59, traded in ,her
failing heart four years ago
for one from a 19-year-old
who died tragically in a car
accident. In appretjation of
that gilt and her renewed
health, Jessen competed in
the last World Transpl&nt
RESEAR~H
CONTINUED FROM 1 _
2002, when the permanent
structures are built. They
should be completed in mid·
2004.
The project has also
brought together a blend of
five agencies _and ·groups.
Because Shellmaker is
owned by the California
Department of Fish and
Game, the state will manage
the center. In addition to the
county, the city, UC Irvine
and the California Coastal
Commission are also
involved.
Those involved in the pro-
ject must still raise the bulk
of the money needed to pay
for the cent.et.
games two years ago in
BudApest, Hungary.
"It's showing the world
what you can do-to thank
the family just getting in
there,• she said.
Determined to see Jessen
compete aga.J.n, the women .
at th.e Newport Bea~h
'fl'1CA. where Jessen trains
three times a week, are
·throwing a luncheon for her
today to raise money for her
trip to Japan.
"She has been in my class,
we know her story, we know
lier son, it's really what the
[YMCA) is all about,· said
Pepa Dodge, Jessen's water
aerobics . instructor. The
YMCA "is about helping
each other, loving each other,
being there for each other
and supporting each other.·
At a COit of $3",000, Jessen
was not sure &be would com-
pete thJI year.
•At the YMCA. all the
ladies said~e made up your
mind for you,'" she said. •Jt's ·
not only about me, it's abbut
donor awareness because
we're really short of donors.•
There are 77,330 people in
the United States alone w~t
lng for a transplant of some
kind, according to the United
Network for Organ Sharing.
More than 4,000 of those
patienta are waiting for a
heart, and more than 49,000
need a kidney transplant.
· The World Transplant
games, sponsored by the
National Kidney Foundation,
are not only a celebration of
life but also a call for help,
Jessen said.
This year, 64 transplant
recipients from califomia to
New Jersey, Minnesota to
Texas will travel to Kobe to
compete in myriad games,
including golf, tennis, "\folley-
ball, cycling and bowfing.
There will be parUdpanta
from more than -40 different
countries. By competing,
these fighters will raise
awareness about what being
an organ donor can mean.
Jessen bas survived the
same coronary IJJ'lery disease,
which took her son at the age
of 3() and lier father also. ~e lives llf e with a
renewed energy. She suffered
her first heart attack 20 Years
ago and now is able to train at
the YMCA three mornings a
week and at the pool at Coro-
na del Mar High School three
evenings a week.
The luncheon supporting
Jessen will be held from 11
a.m. to 3 p.m. today at the
YMCA at 2300 University
Ave., Newport Beach. For $7
for an adult and $3 per child,
there will be a homemade
international buffet and hot
dogs for children.
• SEAN HUER I OAl.Y Pl.OT
The county is kicking in
$1.23 million from the tobac-
co settlement for the project.
Newport Beach and Fish and
Game have agreed to donate
their shares -$500,000 and
$250,000, respectively -
from the attorney general's
settlement with Pacific Trad-
er, which stems from an oil
spill off the Huntington
Beach coastline in the early
John Scholl gives an update on the status o f the marine testing lab on Sbellmaker
Island. The complex's permanent buildings are expected to be completed In 2004.
1990s.
UC Irvine has also agreed
· to give $500,000 to the pro-
ject.
The project has additional
benefits to Newport Beach. It
would shift educational
efforts away from the heavily
trafficked tide pools of Little
Corona.
·we're trying to create the
equal experience of Little
Corona at the marine studies
c;enter, • said Assistant City
Manager Dave Kill. ·we
want to enhance the experi-
ence by showing the kids an
operational lab.·
SABATINO'S
Lundi • Dinner • S1:1nday Brunch
251 Shipyard Way• Newport Beach
Aease call for hours. directions a reservations.
: (949) 723-0621 :
Classifted ~ work for
YOU!
. Doily Pilot
.
• day. be Mid.
"We received record lev-
ell ol trash in all o.reu of the
dty thll year,· Niederhaus
said. •usually when the bol-
teaY falll midweek, it's not tf>.11 busy. But this year has
been rea1fy very busy.•
CONTINVED FROM 1
•
because they were in huge
. nwnbets, • she said. •People
were ;. throwing fireworks
from side to sid.e on my
street. •A lot ot us felt like we
were a captive audience for
these out-of.control people.
We were like prisoners in
our own home.•
Abram.5 said she could
not step out of her house fer
fear of facing the mob nor
could she entertain guests.
Resident Margie Dorney,
who beads a West Newport
task force that has been
working with police to make
Fourth of July more tolerable
for the beach neighborhood,
said it was better than last
year in some areas but worse
in others.
"I think the cleanup effort
has been better this year,·
she said.
About 33 city employees
used 20 city utility vehicles
Wednesday and picked up
about 10 tons of trash from
Corona del Mar beach and
about 25 tons from city
streets, said General ~rvices
Director David Niederhaus.
And they continued plug-
ging away inlo the wee
hours of the morning Thurs·
SAVER
CONTINUED FROM 1
The upbeat service fol-
lowed Robinson's death ear-
ly Saturday rooming of con-
gestive heart failure. She
was 82.
"She was a crusader for
some,• fellow activist Judith
Ros~ner said. "She was also
a wife, a mother and a
friend .... It's very hard to
say goodbye to Fran
because she encouraged us
to do better things for our
community.•
Robinson, along with her
husband, Frank, took on the
Irvine Co. in 1969 by suing to
stop a complex land transfer
from Orange County that
would have resulted in the
development of the Back
Bay into condominiums and
a marina.
The Westcliff residents
were labeled •radical
kooks,• but eventually pre-
vailed over politicians who
un~llnkingly supported
handing over the land.
After years of litigation, a
judge agreed with the
Robinsons that the Back Bay
was part of a tidelands pub-
lic trust. On Nov. 1, 1975, the
741-acre estuary was
deemed an ecological
reserve.
"She dedicated a tremen-
dous amount of her We to the
public benefit,• Defend the
Bay founder Bob Caustin
said, as he gestured behind
Around
TOWN
• Send AROUND TOWN Items to the Daily Pflot, 330 w. ~ St.. C.os-bl ~ CA 92627; by fU to (949)
646-4170; OI by a iling (949) 574-
4298. Include the time, date and
location of the ewnt. as well as 1
contact ~ number. A com-plete listJng Is avallable at
http:Jlwww.dallypllotcom.
DINING ROOMS
•
LIGHTING
•
Fortunately, people
behaved themselves this
year, and there were no
reporta o£t vandalism at the
beaches or parks, he said.
Residents said although
they feel fortunate there
were no serious inddents,
they still feel overwhelmed
by the enonnity of the occa-
sion.
•Asking the city to
impose a curfew is an idea
that's <>D the back of our
minds,• Dorney said.
But police seem less
enthusiastic: about the issue.
•A (curfew) requires
tremendous resources for us
to be· able to enforce it,•
SbulmAn said. •What is the
sense in enacting a law if
you can't enforce it?"
Residents, however,
acknowledged that the
police did do the best they
could.
·we're going to continue
to work with [the police) in
the yea.rs to come." Dorney
said. "We want to keep the
dialogue and the planning
going. We want.to be proac-
tive about it."
him toward the bay. "This
would have been a housing
tract. And out there. that
would have been the equiv-
alent of Marina del Rey.•
Supervisor Tom Wilson,
whose district includes New-
port Bea~ also made an
appearance to praise Robm-
son for her efforts.
·1 had the extreme plea-
sure of meeting these two
people who were dedicated
to what you see behind
you,• Wilson said. "This was
one of their dreams.•
Born to hunlble begin-
nings on July 20, 1918,
Robinson attended Los
Angeles City College and
UC Berkeley. Her activism
took root in the 1960s when
she and her husband took
their son, Jay, to Malibu,
where they saw signs warn-
ing them to stay off the
beach.
In an extended tribute to
his mother at the service, Jay
Robinson, wearing sunglass-
es to conceal the tears, said it
saddened him to see her
health deteriorate over the
~t four yea.rs.
Jay Robinson, seated next
to his father and his sister,
Dana, said his mother had
lost much of her memory
after a heart attack four
yea.rs ago.
•She often asked if she
bad any friends or made a
difference,• Jay Robinson
said. "Looking at you today
and the Back Bay, I think her
questions in that regard
have been answered."
SITUIDIY
Software ma.D1lfacturer
Casady & Greene will show-
case Grammarian X. a
spelling and grammar check
p rogram for ute on both
MACs and PCs, as part of
Orange Apple Computer
Club's monthly meeting
from 8 o.m. to 1 :30 p.m. in
the Orange Coast College
Chemistry Building, 2701
Fairview Road, Cotta Mesa.
Pree admtnk>n to ftnt time
visitors. (949) 770-1865.
RISIAY
Daity Pilot
At right.
Oteekout
these low
stretdl jeans
bye.rt
($106), worn
with • Petite Bate.u
cap-sleeve
tank top
($28). Below,
Gowan
models this
Helen Wang
floral p(int
dress ($298)
with flutter
steeves. Her •
shoes ere
Patrk:X Cox
brown slides
($398), and
she carries a
crescent-
shaped
Prada mini-
~
Photos by Greg Fry Above, TSE makes this cashmere V-neck sweater ($198) worn with
a 5eW!f'I crease-front jean ($100). At right. a vetwt stretch cotton tank top
($48) Is shown with a Trina Turtc flared pant (S 158).
The
Costa Mesa
Community
Golf Classic r------------------------, E NTRY FORM
Company~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Add.rfsi~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Oty~~~~~~~~~~~~
Stale~~~~~~~.-..7.ip~·,__~~~~~~~~
Telepbone~~--~~~~~~Home
Founomes are encouraged .•. ~are welcome
~ Handicap•
1-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
'~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
3-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
'
Golt Lunch a Dinner s2so 5mg1e
Ge.. ....... Dlaner $900 FOlnCllll8 (Sa'9 $100)
i.SpamurSlOOeldl fl*al*'••Mldctwl .. l>..._.
...... Drmlier'. Aucdon Only $39 per~
------~ ----~ --
Above,
Trina Turk
designs
this batik
print capri
pants
(S 158)
worn with
a stretch
cotton
T-shirt
(S64). The
hat is also
by Trina
Turk (S70),
and
Gowan
wears
platforms
($30) by
Yellow
Box
Friday, July 6, 2001 5
l yB.W. Cook
ARA Boutique cele-
brated a grand open-
ing at Fashion Island
last week, benefiting
the Susan G. Komen
Foundation for breast
cancer research and treat-
ment.
The store represents the
third outlet for the SARA
label, ttie other two being in
Malibu and Santa Monica.
Co-owner Nicole Wachs
reports that SARA "is an
ultra chic and sassy boutique
with an impressive roster of
celeb clients."
Nicole owns and runs her
15-year-old business with
husband Bob. The couple of
fashion mavens are quite
fond of designers Rebecca
Taylor, Carrie Forbes and
Nanette Lepore. You will also
find items by Gucci, Prada
and Fendi in the store, along
with the work of TSE, Earl
Jones and Michael Stars.
To complete the outfrt.
shoes designed by Anna Sui,
Isaac Mizrahi, Rene Caovilla
and Emma Hope are at your
call.
Our model is Jenn~r
Gowan, a former profession-
al dan<er who now works in
the fashion industry.
•
CJwl9 lellel, Little l4'ague fflanager .
6 Friday, Jul>f 6, 2001 • Spo1t1 Editor Roger Corison • 949~74-4223 • Spam Fax: 9.49-65().0170
... . Doily Pilot
••scHOOL•lli ; Tars'-l.npez added to· South roster Steen Tars
Athlete of
the Year
• Running sensation amassed
dozens of medals in cross
counby and track and field.
Barry faulk1*'
DAll..Y PllOT
...
NEWPORT-BEACH -While the
impact of some high school athletic
careers can be measured by varsity let-
ters, recent Newport Harbor High
graduate Amber Steen's contributions
are quantified by a much higher stan-
dard.
• Newport Harbor tackle and future Colorado walk-on
becomes fourth local named to the Rebel All-Star squad.
Rkt.-dDunn
DAILY PILOT
HUNTINGTON . BEACH -Newpof\
Harbor High offen-
sive lineman Scott
Lopez, a 6.foot-2, 285-pound tack-
le, was added to the South All-Star
footbaH r0$ter Thwsday morning
and worked out with the squad for
the first time in the afternoon at
Edison High. '
Lopez, a Daily Pilot All-New-
port-Mesa District Dream Teamer
last fall for Uie Sailors, t?e<x>mes the
fourth local product -selected to play
in the Orange County All-Star
Football Game July 13 at Orange
Coast College.
He joins Harbor. teammates
Chris Manderino and Alan Saenz.
as well as Corona del Mar's Charlie
Alsliuler, on Edison Coach Dave
White's Rebel squad for the 42nd
North-South summer showcase.
•1rs pretty short notice, but I'm
excited to be here,• Lopez said
Thwsday as he arrived at Edison.
"I'm glad to be participating.•
Lopez, who will be a walk-on
player at the University of Colorado
in the fall, transferred his 8ellior
year from Santa Margarita, filling
in nicely in Newport Coach Jeff
Brinkley's regime and. helping to
plug the vacancies left by the grad-
uation of the entire 1999 front wall.
•(Dana Hills offensive lineman)
Walt Frazee (6-5, 235) said he
couldn't commit to the team (and
quit),• White said, "but that's all
right. I'm sure Scott's excited.•
Lopez, a first-team All-Sea View
Leagve and second-team All-
Orange County tackle in 2000, par-
tidpated' Thwsday in the South's
fourth of 10 practices in a two-week
span.
"We're going every day
(almost),• White said. ·we prac-
ticed July 4 early and we're going
this Saturday. (The North is) prac-
ticing 12 times in three weeks."
Lopez said he was surprised
with bis Thursday morning wake-
up call, albeit a pl~t one. He's
also ·playing in the new .Orange
County-Los Angeles County All·
Star Game later this summer.
The North, which won last year's
game, 13-7, leads the series, 21-17-
3. South All-Star Scott Lopez
In four varsity seasons of cross coun-
try and track and field, the University of
Arizona-bound pbenom won 18 Sea
View League and CIF Southern Section
gold medals, while virtually rewriting
the distance record book at a school
renowned for producing distance run-
ners.
----~----------~~----~-------~----~~.llUSlllllDlllSIOI
Steen, pegged early as a tenacioU.S
competitor by Sailors girls cross coun-
try and track coach Eric 1\veit, built a
reputation as a dominator of distance
running. All the while, however, she
endeared herself to rival athletes and
coaches with her amiable attitude and
supreme sportsmanship.
She was also selected the school's
Girls Athlete of the Year.
On the cross country trail, she won
two Sea View
League and two CIF
Division n individual
titles and twice fin-
ished fifth at the CIF
State meet in Fresno.
As a sophomore,
she was seventh at
league finals and
10th at CIF Division
II Finals and was
third and seventh,
Amber Steen respectively, at the
same two meets as a .
freshman.
She was just as impressive, if not
more 5o, dwing the spring.
She dominated the 1,600 meters at
Sea View League Finals, winning all
four seasons. She also added a trio of
lea~e 3,200 titles and two 800 crowns,
while helping the Sailors' 1,600 relay
finish third and second, respectively,
the last two years.
But that was just the start of things
for Steen. ·
Her senior postseason included titles
in the 1,600 and 3,200 at CIF Division II
Finals, as well as a 1,600 crown at the
CIP Southern Section Masters Meet (all
divisions).
Her 4:43.75 clocking in the 1,600 at
Masters was the best in the nation this
season among high school girls and
trimmed alp:aost four seconds off the
school rerord she established at the
section fin.alt.
She was second ib the 3,200 at Mas-
ters, docking a penonal-best 10:26.'5,
which is also a IChool record. ·
A strained .foot muscle sabotaged
her hopes at the CIF State Finals. Obvi-
ously slowed by the injury, she flnished
third in the 1,600 (4:51.73) and was·
forced to scratch in the 3,200.
AB a junior, she won the 1,600, 3,200
and 800 at league finals, won the 1,600
at the CIP Division D Finals and was
second in the 3,200 at the same meet.
She then finished third and fourth in
the 1,600 and 3,200,' respectively, at
Masters, and was third and 15th,
respectively, ln the same events at CJP
State Fina.J.s.
AB a sophomore, she swept the
league 1,600 and 3,200, was second tn
both at CIP Dtvilion n Pinall and WOD
the 1,600 at Masten, where she wu
fitt.b in the 3,200. She was 10th at state
6na1I tn the 3,200.
~ a treshman, she won th• ~
1,&oo aown. wu fourth at CIP DMllOn
U Ana1s Arid MVentb at MalWa. .
DALY Pl.OT PHOTOS BY DON LEACH
Viejo All-Star Marco Reyes ls ruled safe at third as Newport Beach'• Sam Stafford applies the tag.
•Too many unearned
runs to overcome in 6-3
loss to Viejo Little League
at District 55 Tournament.
Tony Altobelli
DAILY PILOT
MISSION VIEJO -· Th.e New-
port Beach Uttle League Major
Division National All-Stars
dodged numerous bullets from the
Viejo All-Stars before a three-run
Qc:>mb destroyed the locals' village.
Thanks to a three-run home
run by Viejo's Cory Goodchild,
Newport saw its stay in the District
55 Tournament come to a disap-
pointing end with a 6-3 loss
Thursday afternoon at the Mission
Viejo Youth Sports Park.
Goodchild's blast, combined
with six Newport errors were just
too much to overcome, according
to Manager Chris Telles.
•That's Uttle League baseball
for you,• Telles said. •we didn't
get the big hits when we needed
them and we didn't make the
plays we needed to make.•
Early in the game, it was the
Viejo squad which couldn't come
up with the big hit. In innilxJ• two
through four, Viejo left the bases
loaded .U three times and had only
one W1eU'D8d. run to show for it.
Newport starting pitcher Scott
ColtoQ gave up seven bita in the
tint four lmdngs, but managed to
come _up with the big pitch when it
counted·IDOlt.
•ScottJ pitched great for us.•
ThU. said. •He Ill4Q89ed to pitch
In aDd out to tbe bitten and bad a
NEWPORT IUCI umE ''HMll IWOIS
nice assortment of fastballs and
breaking stuff. He managed to
keep them off-balance for the first
part of the game."
Unfortunately, for Newport,
Viejo learned, from the first four
. innings and managed to extend its
lead in the fifth. After two walks,
Goodchild hit the first pitch
thrown at him and sent it over the
center-field fence, giving\Viejo a
4-0 lead.
"You could tell the other team
was making adjustments from'
their first couple of at-bats,• Telles
said.
'1\vo Newport em>rs extended
the frame for Nick Covyeau, who
smacked a two-run double for a 6-
0 Viejo advantage. •we bad
burned three pitcherv in our .first
game, so we stuck with Scott,"
Telles said. "Our defense didn't
make the plays for him."
After five innings of quiet b&ts,
Newport finally came to life in the
sixth. Sam Stafford doubled to
center and Colton moved Stattoid
Newport Beach's
Kelsey Chase
(15) Ignites the
Newport Beach
U Ule League
squad with a
three-run homer
. In the slith
Inning, but It
WU the last
hurrah In a 6-3
loss Tbunday.
to third with a single, bringing up
Kelsey Chase.
With a 1-2 count, Chase found
a pitch to his liking and launched
a three-run home run far beyond
the fence in center field, giving •
Newport some hope. ·
•He's one of our best bitters
and after we took him out early, I
wanted to make sure he would be
put in a position to help our team.·
Telles said. •He's a real strong kid
and that home run proved il •
But Viejo pitcher 1}'ler Gruden
regrouped and retired the side
with no further damage. He scat-
tered eight hita over six innings
and struck out four, while walking
two. "We ran out of innings,•
Telles said.
Stafford had two bits, while
William O'Brien, Nlck Pike, Ryan
Tellell and 'JYler Brady also added
key hits for Newport. •1\'Jer ii a gem.• Chris Telles
Mid. •He'I one of the best defen·
itve ftrit bUemeD in the league, U . nOt tM dlltrid..
Toft: ·hoSts have a -bd
r..,•1111•
n.uNm
1.111110···
NHBA ,
goes down
_sWinging
• Mustang Division
All-Star team scores five
runs in the last inning,
but it wasn't enough.
Steve Virgen
OMV PILOT
DANA POINT -The sixth
inning came and the Newport
Harbor Baseball Association's
Mustang Division All-Stars had
zero runs to show for themselves.
That's when pride kicked in.
That's when NHBA Manager Chris Hone said, •Don't give up.·
Down 9-0, the NHBA All-Stars
scored five runs, putting a scare
into Fountain Valley, but the
deficit proved to be too much and
Fountain Valley won in the Dana
Point Tournament at Del Obispo
Park Thwsday night.
"We didn't want to get mercied
by them again,• Hone said, recall-
ing Fountain Valley's 13-3 victory
over NHBA two weeks ago in the
Los Alamitos Tournament. ·we
just wanted to win that inning. We
did. And now the kids can go
home feeling good about them-
selves. We bad the tying run at
the plate.•
The NHBA All-Sta.rs (ages
9-10) left tbe bases loaded in the
sixth, and the score remained, 9-5.
Fountain Valley built a 9-0 lead
with seven stolen bases that led to
runs, timely bits and a solo home
run in the fifth inning.
However, the NHBA All-Stars
rallied in the lixth inning. They
went through the batting onler as
starting third baseman Ronnie
Dunmore led off with a atngle.
NHBA catcher Gamrtt Ge.Uegos,
who also made a spectacular
catch in left field in the foilrth
inning, reacbed on a tblrd·stlik.e
passed ball. which scored Jeff
Frum.
Fl.rtt baseman and pitcher
Chris Gr:iftln later came up with
an RBI llngle and ltarting pitcher
Nick SVendleo followed wttb the
iden.dc.al effort, wbicb ICDl8d Grif-
fin. Svendlen ICXlnd on a pureed
ball with two outs and tbe bues
loaded.
•w e just didn't want to get
blanbd." Hone Mid. •t tiOld the
kids, •we bave ICIOied 10 rum (tn
one lnlllng) before. We Cotild do lt
again.' •
1be NHBA AD-Stew calettad
sewn btta ad Wt ..._ lllUd-
ed, two In .. bllla ........ wben• =:=~-=it.=: ble.lll*Y Uo......... ., NHIA.io:•--•llli9e-lfe . 81 ~ .. :s ... nmn~
fin. Is ..... ," 'S Wm• .. i. ....
=-~··~···
..
r.armen Clminl
Blake Fogg
'fyler Parker
. .
SPORTS Friday, * 6, 2001 7
_Climbing the· Hill
M ark IBll must have finally
exhaled when Orange Coast
College reopened the head
men's basketball coaching position on
May 11.
Hill, last season's OCC coach who
had initially said he would not apply,
put hiS name back in the mix, after be
realized the emptiness he would have
received if coaching was out of bis life.
said as another reason be
applied for the job. •rve
enjoyed IllY relationship with
everyone I've worked with. My
heart ls set on getting the job atocc.·
HW said be would tum h1J
focils to Esperanza High, to
teach if be is not hired. If OCC
does hire IBU, he would have
to resign from 15 years of
teaching at Esperanza as his
new job will be full-time. Steve Ysrgen
COASTERS
Tarkani4n made the final
interviews, which are taking
place in two weeks. Fresno
City College and COS violf ted
recruiting rules last season
and were suspended from
postseason play.
Because of the unknown
coaching situation at Coast,
recruiting might seem to be a
problem. But, Hill said that has
not been the case.
NHBA Bronco Red sparkles
•1t was something that I knew I was
going to end up missing,• said Hill,
who is a full-time physical education
teacher at Esperanza High. •1 have
another 20-sometlung years before I
retire.·
When Coast announced the
new opening the first time, the
full -tin)e aspect attracted many
applicants.
"We may have lost a kld
here or there because of that,"
Hill said "But for the most
part, I'm happy with what
DANA POINT -Newport Harbor Baseball BRONCO Association 's Red team in the Bronco Division
Hill is currently the interim COdCh as
he is still recn.uting and teaching a
swnmer school basketball class at
Coast.
Yet, there weren't enough hna.IJ.sts to
conduct a proper set of inteMews,
OCC Athletics Otrector Fred Hokanson
said.
we've done with the recnuting. We
have 30 players in the basketball class.•
It would be silly if OCC dldn't hire
Hill. Unless the school discovers a
big-name coach, Hill would be best for
the job since he's established and he's
willing to take the pay cut, the reason
he didn't apply in the first place.
(11-12) sparkled in the first game of a
pre-district tournament, finishing 4-4 alter. eight innings with
the host Dana Point team Saturday. Preparing for what might be his fifth
year, Hill CQnllJlues to build next year's
team Wllhout concern for his future.
Irvine Valley's Jerry Hernandez said
he almost applied for the OCC job, but
he enjoys the contentment he has at
IVC, where he's in the midst of build.mg
his type of team.
RJ. D'Cn12 struck out three and retired nine of 10 batters
ill a three-inning stint. John Swtlt followed that with two · •
strong innings, allowing one hit and one run. How will he react if he's not hired?
"l don't know,• Hill said before
1\lesday's bai.ketball class. "That's just
something I'm not thinking about. I've
put four yedrs in and l have a sense of
loyalty to (OCC). I don't want to leave
them hanging out in the dark.·
Hill served as an assistant for two •
years with Tun O'Bnen before taklng
the head-coaching Job for another two.
He guided the' Pirates mto the
postseason in both of tus seasons dS
head coach and finished last season
16-14, Coast's best record since
1997-98. The Puates won 11 games
during a 13-game stretch in the rrudd.Je
of the season and spent most of the
year ranked m the top 20 in the state.
Peter Hapke singled in the fourth inning and scored on
the first of two singles by D'Cruz. Jonathan Herdman
followed with an RBI single.
Former OCC Coach Tandy Gillis,
who is also at IVC as an assistant, said
he received a coaching offer. But, Gillis
said he's finished with head coachmg.
Jn the sixth, Ben Frazier drove in Andrew Kaban, and in
the eighth, ~yle Rohan scored on a tapper to short by Brock
Schuler. If Hill is not hired, it seems as if the
program would have to start over rather
than pick up where it left off -an
up-and-coming team which had
problems with effort and finishing
games last year, but showed promise
with a 5-0 start 111 conference play.
While he has a strong love for Coast.
Dan Winkle stood out defensively with a couple of dutch
catches in the outfield, and Troy Seeber, Erik Bonn and
Garrett Gordon each contributed with defensive gems.
Gillis remains soured because of the
way he was treated when his coaching
days ended at the school despite the
fact none of personalities involved
have been in the framework of the
administration for some time now.
Kaban walked and scored on an infield squibber by
Schul& in the ninth, but the game was called before the
bottom of the ninth could be completed due to time. Congratulations to OCC Sports
LnJonnatioo Duector Sam Felsenfeld
and his wife, Tlffany, who delivered
•Little· Benjamin Patnck on June 27 .
"Moose,· as Sam llkes to call tum,
weighed in at nine pounds, seven
ounces and was 21 mches long.
Newport B All-Stars win second straight However, Hill believes the program
will be fine with or without him, thus
the reason he is still at work today so
that he proves that bebef.
The applicants for the OCC job also
included College of Sequoias Coach
. George Tarkanian, son of Fresno State
Coach Jerry Tarkaruan. With the
suspension levied on Sequoias last
season, it's hard to believe George
MISSION VIEJO ~ The Newport Beach LlWe League AAA
Division B All-Star team won its second straight in the ltlistrict
55 All-Star Tournament with a 12-0 win over lrabuco Hills at
G illeran Park. "(OCC) 1s a great place to be," Hill
James Peb1lll and Jett Jones each had two hits, while
Kyle mu, Hunter Alder and Merritt Scott e~ch scored twice
for ,Newport.
Fletcher Della G~tta also came through with a key
double for Newport, which will play Saturday at 10 a.m. at
Gilleran Park.
CdM 14s pull_ out 5-1 win over Whittier II N baseball opening
COSTA MESA -Costa
Mesa High has an operung
for a 1uruor varsity baseball
coach and interested appli-
cants may contact Kirk Bauer-
meister, the Mustangs' varsity
coach and boys atheltic direc-
tor, at (714) 424-8763. A
teaching position may be
available, according to Bauer-
melSter.
DEEP SEA
THUllSDAY'S COUNTS
• Newport Harbor Baseball
Association Pony All-Stars action.
Matt Bush.
Lance was also strong on the mound. He
pitched a complete game dJld allowed one
unearned run. (
With a runner on iYst base and two outs in
the fifth inning, Lance lined an RBI-double
o.v.y's Locker· 7 boats, 237 anglers. 42 <&lbacon~. 1,273 sand bass,
41 barracuda, 73 calico bass, 1 halibut, 2 sheephead.
Newport LMdlng -5 boats, 246 anglers. 3 white seabass, ·3 haObut.
89 barracuda, 90 calTco bass, 1 sheephead, 1,439 sand bass.
CYPRESS -The Newport Harbor Baseball
Association Corona del Mar 14-year-old Pony
All-Star team pulled out a 5-1 win over· Whit·
tier LI at the Cypress Invitational Tournament
at Oak Knoll PMk Thursday night.
to right and scored on an error by the
right-fielder. · ·
r .x. -.?fO.-.~ ' .. ~ ..... -
CdM 1umped out to a 3-1 lead, thanks to
key hits from Wess Presson, Tyler Lance and
Lance finished the night with three RBis
and two runs scored.
f w .... 11 ~~,~~JI WtDlml I NlJc..,.;.11 MUCllJlall l '--11 w--] I wmra1} (•---3
&c:rowNo.Ot-7...S SHIGEO TAJAA. ()t( Cleric °' Onlnge County Monahan, Roblneon, doing bu11ne11 yet? STATEMENT OF STATEMENT OF REVIEA NOTICETO ~ CHONG on 06f25l2001 Steel. NOES: None. Y•. ett&'Cl1 ABANDONMENT OF ABANDONMENT OF C~OflUU( ~ • Oeiy P1lol ~·=11~ A~~utt-r€xr °' Mortgage Protect USE OF FICTITIOUS ·use OF RC1TTIOUS
ANDOFINlEN110NTO SANG HO 0UtG. 8. 13, 20. 2901 FW$ the ofdioance may be ~·c!nc M Dennis. BUS1NESS NAME BUSINESS NAME TRAMllER HYUN SO()( Sf(), read il the ~ Cleltc'• PrHldent The following pel'IOn(s) The followlng peflOll(•)
AL.COHOUC ~·-~ ,._ SUMMARY OF Office, n Fair Dnve. Thia ltalemenl WH hu (have) abandoned has (have) abandoned ~ ~ p OPOSED Coeta Mesa ,.._. lhe UM °' Iha ficlltJous ht UM of the ~ llEVERAGE ua!NIE ..... Olly R MARY T. ELLIOTT, filed with lhe .......,nty ~ rwna. A.) Con-busineA ,_"'ti Fu &
(UCCSec.110llteeq. a.817121101·7~.JtA ORDINANCE ~City~ ~1~"r County aumer lnformetlon Mall BuSIMSS c.nte~
a•" .. ~-= IL 2001 CfTY OF Published Newport on 20011170003 Group, B ) CfG. 10 All Occu1on Gift • _,.... COSTA MESA Beach-Costa Meu Deily Piiot July 8 13 20 Nantucltet. AlllO v..,o, Bukets '!533
1122, NOTICE IS Y flcttttoua Bullnffl A PROPOSED OA· Daly P1oC July 6. 2001 "'7 2001 ' Foo6 CA m6e MacArthur Blvd . N_. GIVEN lllU Wk 111t d Nw Statement Of NANCE la scheduled F002 c· Don Spencer. 213 N port 8eac:h, CA 92e60
UMfl end e nn.flr d The f~reons lot adoption at Iha regu-------'-"""""" FlctftJou• Bualneu Harwood St . Otenge, Mery E Wela. 3309 LA llcddc ~ · lar Clty Council mHClng Heme' Stat.ment CA 828e6 Orillo AISI•. lrvme, CA ..,_ 11 1t1o1.c 9D be are doklg u . of July 16, 2001 , being F1ctltlou1 Bu1lnest The Fictitious Busi· 92606
_..... Envlalon aBuifnHa Ordinance OHi. .,_,_ Name Statement • .!.~~ peraons••· nMI name referred 10 The Fictitious Bu11· 11-Servlce,s, 21'0 lrt1 ..,....-. -· llO butlileila _, The Nml(a). Sodll ~. eo.ta ,,.._, CaW· Ing the O.velopmen1 The following pertOnS Ba..ao Medle, 550 N. above wu flleO in Ot-MSS name r.,.erred IO
.,_....., or Fedlrll Ta ...._._ """""7 Agreemem between the are doing bullillill u; T·--a "-~-Ana ange County on above wu filed In OJ. _., end bullr.a ,.,.,_ •"""' City ol Costa Mesa and Prlmadonna Tutus, ..... , ,...,,.,, ...,_ • oe/13/01, ange County on
NurrQn Robeft Artnur Well, Two Town Center and 159' Monrovia Ave.. CA 92705 FILE NO. 200t6869982 06/23'2000, ldcH9ll d h 2l-40 Irle Place. Coste F1f1h Street Propel'tin. Newport Beach, CA Michael Sandera, Thia business Is con· FILE NO 200!6870005 Miiar~ n: MMa, Cakfomla 92827 THE MOTION to give 92683 2913 El Cemlno Rd .. ducted by: an indMdulf This business Is con-
SHIGEO TAIRA end OK Thie buslne11 11 con· modified Ordenance 61-8 Elizabeth A. Craig. Tuslln, CA 92782 Don Spencer ducted by: Ill lndMdllal ~_,~· 1~ ~aueby:ylllou lncMluasta .. edl Its third first reading c.r· 12' Baywood Or., New-.,:!u,.ll•aueDot:,~~--111 .. 8 This statement WH ~ E w ... ,.,.y... ....... ........ ,., • " l1ed by the follow!oa IOI port e..cn. CA 92660 ..__ .... ·• ... ""'"' fffed with tne County ThlS stetement wu IMnl~ ~ II: ~:i..ng ~=~· yel? call vote: COUNCIL Thia bu8ine11 It con· ~ ~ It con· Clerlt of Or11101 County flied with !he County
MUGEN JAPAHESE Aobelt A. Wei MHIHAS: AYES: duded by 111 lndMdllal dllCMd by: a general on 07/03/2001 Claftt of~ County
Thia statement WH Cowan. Mon1tlan, Have you staned partnership 2001Ht7 ... on 07l03/2001 CUISINE • Ii'--' ..... ..._ ,..__ St .. I. NOES: Ohron, ~ ~ y9f? No ... 1 rt-.. Deily Pilot July 8, 13, 20, 2001M7000I M °'* llullrllU ..., .... h .,,. ''"""ty Roblnaon. ABSENT: Elizabelh A. Craig ,.,ava you 1 • ..., 27. 20Q! EOOe Ody Pilot .Mly 8, 13. 20,
'*"8(1) Ind lddlwl(•) Clei1I of Orange County None. Thi• statement wu ~-~~? No 27. 2001 F909
ul9d !Ir 'h on 05117/200l THE FULL TEXT °' riled llflttt the County ~~..,... n.tJme~ -"'1•~ .... 2001UIS1H the «dlnanc:e m1y be Cleric ol Onlnge County ...,_ ..........,, vu;.n.n~ Flctttloul Bt.lllneu
111 pelt 1we ,.... • Ody Pb June 15· 22· reed in h City Clartc'1 on 07/03l2001 Thll statement wu A call to Heme Stll...,_.t
IWd !Ir h 21 • .Mi 8· 200' F9e5 Offlc.. n Faff Drive. 2001n .. tt5 ~ :"~ = duslfied T]'e tollowwig .,.,_ -"'1•~· .. (W COiia Me9a Oely Pilo4 July 8, 13. 20, on 07J031200I m bd I .,. doing blm.-....
nbnt. IO ..... ): NalWI flcddoua au.IMSI MARY T. EUJOTT, 27. 2001 fW3 2001M7Mlt W p ~~ ~·
The nllne(I). Sodll .... lta'91Mnt ~I~ ~ewpon o.1yP1ot July I, IS, 20, (9'9) 64~56 Millbl vi.tjo, CA astt ==-~~-; .:-=~· BHch·Coata MH• F1ctltJoua Bualnea ~1 8!07 lM1dl J er.dy, Zl8l2 h bii7¥••• n: F PNlantttroplc: Daly Pb July II, 2001 Name Stat.ment ~ ~l Mtnton ~~~ ~~8 tndlgo, FP99 ~~':'9 CLASSIFIED TtM ~ 11 con-
Dlnlllfl. n.1n. CA AlnarQ J. Fenal1, !5 SUMMARY OF CBtYd~ ~o;;, Pr~ l~'S the solution ~ve b1 ::U ~
Thi .... ._ R. 6'laldon. Jr ORDINANCE 92827........, -. 1 ~ -•&&11•~ ~ .. '1l>1 Q2f80 ~ lndfOo, IMne, CA 928111 PROPOSED ,..~. M-• CA -v:ou're ----.l'-2.:...-a ............ ~ et?
ao111 • ,..... "' :29~· trvtne, CA cm OF Mictlael s. Bacf'rer, for-~hether v~i~ 1Bnldy :'*'~ .:;;..., · TNa "'*'"' 11 con-A c~~::OSA<>R-~ .r:.,onCAA=· you're seeking a fi6ed,,.wttt1~eo:; ,. .. ~= ~eby:y: ~ OINANCE It IChedllled Thia bullr-. la con-home, apartmen~ Oii\,..,!,~ .. ~
doing bue11lM9~ No for edoptlon .. fie "91-~ by:•an lndlvidUel .__.. or 0 __, on Yfr\NICVV1
_.,.. &.....;........ R .. 1111 Qty Councl meeang Hevt you alerted r-• _..,..... -~ .,,..--•lllC 'n;-1t81emen1 w;, ~8·0ffl~·!::. ~~...=No · occu dOnt ~,-.Mty'-'}o~
llld -...... It Ned wlltl fie Counly ding Ordlnenoa Ho. 95-9 Thia ltatetnenl WU ............ ...__..__....,. ___ .._ _______ _..._..._ ______ .,.._ ___ ~~
11'9 ..... ,,,..., ~ ~~ CoutllY to ~ .. ,,.,,. ol tlled """ the ~
f4Q, II-.; CA •t4 HOt ... M10 the Bullneu ·1~ Cllltt ol OflnOt Cour1'Y ---.. .._ ment Ar .. tor Olltlln on 07~1 ... ,._ .. Dllv Plot June 29, J4h ,..~ • .._.. .......... ...... ..,.-. -., tit ...... II: CN Id). 20. 2001 FIMM .,._ -·-.,.., --WE •IUND WM. - - -mot... ~PllOI .Mr 8. 13~ IAT»IG PW:1. ,........ 1ue1n• ~~,r r: .. _ .............. , ____ _
ua:r::..~ ............. nt ,...... cenltd lllr h ,..., .. ..... The foloWlna ....-IOllOwlna rOll Oii .. ~ ...... a .,. dollla .......... -COU11C11 ·er• J-: !!!!!!'-II I want _.... __. a..t .Hue _, At-AYB: ~ ..... ,,.,. ......,.. ,.._.. ~ JIA .. '!!..:.: ...... '"'" ..... .......... ... ....... -.:::. ....... ~ ---'°" ---.... Ii ...... ....at-. "' ........ . ::r ":" .: Tlllift. CA limlo-t711 .-r: -. ~CMI.::: •.::-
.II 121 f • .. ... Hele, 1t Wld THE A.Ill TIXT .!!,. ""•a:""' & I ... ec-t. Nftport .. ~---r. .. ..._ '°"' ... tllll_ ~ '-' CA _, • ,_ Ill .. '*" t1llll't ~ ..,.,.. A... II "* ............ °"°'· 7f ,. 0... a:.: ..... ................ 0..-...... , -&--......... ....,. ,.., ... "" ...... . -· ..
'
...... "" No ........ -a. .... .,. •• , .... ~ ..... .Mt"' ..... ,.. .......
1111 I 1111 w ...... Co-=-=~~~,..c? • :" .. = ._ ....... ~ . ..... ~ I
STARTING
ANEW
BUSINESSt
Ratca and Je.dUna am ubjcc-t co
<'NJWI wittiout 11'>ritt. The pul>li.wr
n:stn~ the riPit to ceruor, reda11&ify.
l't'viM or ttjttt any d&Mifted •
advcrtilH'meut. ~aae repon any error
tJm1 mny fM" in your clM.qftNf 11J
imnwtliatt'I)'. The Daily Pilot acc.'tptll
110 'li1thili1y for nny trror lu ftJI
utlverti'W'mC'nt for wh.kh it may be
• • By Fax
(9•9r6.31-6594
(Pkue bldudc your namr and phonr,uumhrr
And wt1'U l'411 ycm hark with a pria-quofr.) •
By.....,
(949) 642-5678
By Mllllllll Pa 11111
330 West &j' Street
Costa Me88, CA 92627
At Nn.'J>Of'I Blvd. 6t Bay St.
M--
Monday ............... Friday S:OOpm
Tuesday ............. Monday 5:00pm'
Wednesday ..... ·-Tuesday S:()()pm-
Thunday ...... Wednesday 5:00pm,:, ..
Friday ............. Thunday 5:00pm
., 11 ..
Saturday .............. Friday 3:00pm ,
rt'"f W>ll~ihlr r.sct'11t (or ti~ t"o.il of 1ht-
j(jllt<'f ortually 01'Cupie1I by 1hf. error.
Cmli1 c-ru1 onl~ lM-aJJowffi for the
6n1t i1111erti<>11. Telephone 8:30am-5:00pm Walle-In 8 :30am-5:00pm
Monday-Friday
.
Sunday ................ Friday 5:00pm', 14
t5l' EOOAL !f()USING
OPPORTUNITY
All rul ""'' ldYlrtJslnO In ttlls newspaper Is Sllbtltt
to thl f'edlfal Fw Housino Acl of 1968 as amended wtl~h maktS It il1etll to adYertiM •any Pfrflltnct. ~mbllon Of discrlmNllon
bisld on llC9. color. rtlg-
ion. sex. hlndleap, tamlllal status « llltional origin, «
111 lntelltioq to mab any
sucll preferenc;e, Mmitltlon or cllscrlmlnlllon •
Tiiis lllWlpapet' wilt not knowingly accept any advertiument for rut
allle which 11 in ¥IOlllloft
of the llW. 0.. reldn we
htrelly lnfonntd 11\al all dWlllnos llMltlslCI In this
118WSP1411f 111 available on
. Ill equal= Ol:nilY blsls. To com n of illlcrimi-
flltion. HUD toll-fret al
1-aoo-424-8590
·II
1 •••
II
,., • 21• -=--FJ
WATERFRONT FlXER PRIME ESTATES
Hot Fot The Feint Lota I ac.. Vlewal
of "-t Cll Patricti Tenont
Ap!t M•12H120 AA!f!! MMaM705
Monday-Friday f ., Index
4H a
,..,..,.._ -.. -.. ~ . . ~. ... ' . . ~
.~ • ,.J
-...
·' . ,.
Motel
MANAGERS
• SPECIAL• $175.00+ lax wtdy ~ s--11 .. Ad) ~""'·~ Sliumd on bellAUy
111 ldlc:..,.c:I glOllldt FEATURES: 24-How LobbylDlr1ct dial
phonll/Fr,. HBO, ESPN & DledPool &
Jlcuzzl. GllMt ~ cty Cloll IO 405 & 55
Fwyt ...,.. "°"' o.c. F~ ccltgl Md bctll Wtlklng ltt-
lltlCt IO ttiopt end ,......,.
COSTA MESA MOTOR~
UT! ..... llWd
PtlOftl ...... •to
. ~
.......
,~··""I"~.'
'• I • ~.~: .. 1-;.,
SELL
yoorhome
through classified
-
Reach 80,000 Homes Eadl Week
for Only $28 per weft (4 ~ min.) c.m Len 1 I 1 • MS.5671 1124
: .•• ·,1 '. . • • , rt .. -, T!•;.-r-_ .. _
......._..,_ .... -.. ;--,.-~ r. .. . ~1· .. ···1 f.... . . •':J· ·.,.~~··-A~
,.., .... ··-.-:-<· '""'~
_1~.·.
corJSIGW.lWTS
C.111949)642-5671
, .. • f• wwa .. .. ,. ,., ,...
r.-I I• -..--l . . . '''·' . ~ ~··: _ ....... _, .. -.,.,: ..
WtlRLPOOL 1r
Cubic II. white rtfl'lg, ~ tor Ice mtlMr,
ldnt cand. $200
~Iller 5pr4
. SELL~~~ • your home • through classffied.! .
.. -
.-._ ------- -D YD, EL llY CAii
Run your ad In the
Newport Beach--
COsta Mesa Dally
AJolaaJ
EARN EXIRA MONEY
17 days only
FrickJ. Jah U • Suncla,. July 29
Earn $6.75 ·SI I/hr.
Selling Exotic Hawaiian Plants at ·
The Orange Counry Fair.
No apcriencc necessary.
Enthwiasm a Plus!
-f'"' ... , .· . .
BALBOA ISLAND
Own 1 bu1fne11 In
PatadlM We rept'eaent _.. --ol ..iab-
lillltd cloOlrlg and home
acoeuory *"' who llltnt '° ..... ~ ..
IUIMltf PlaM c.et Don
Atnma • Rwnbotd
Aellty tor Info
t4H7Hl22
-..,.,-; -~rr:-r: -.
, , 1 : · , • • ~I ·; , ..-·J • ~. ·I. ' . 1 r ~ . 1.J J ~ •
a;-Now Accepting Applications for Irvine:
• MCllMp o11n............:.. • ..:nn Ll--1-I ,_ .,,..,._, .. ., • ._,,.lOfie nfW ll'iewers
• Altninldotiw A.uoOolin • Soles
To review, apply and take your first inter.riew
please follow these instructions.
........ ~. !~~.~ ... ~l!uP:~'?!'!!/~~rs .
Tlte Oes;retl Position For
11te Irvine, CA t.occmon ........ SELECT
. . . .. .. . . . . . .. . .. . . . . ....... '. . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..... ~ ................ .
The Ful Descripfion ol Tlte Posmon -
1' •Apply For This Position'
'leaviler" As 'What Originally
Brought You 1' This Sile'
1' Your 35·40 Minutes -lilfl On·Une SlrengthJ Fmcler lnleMeW
~·,-· --~
·: ;•. '
Friday, My 6, 2001 9
Bridge TODAY'S
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
RUIBER 8llll>OE OR DUPLICATE?
NORnt
•A4
<:i 60J o AQ.U •Kit WEST
•JU61 ~ Kl5
EAST
rwe wilh the .ce of Jl*b. Since
&hcR -five fua tncka availabk UI
spadet. hearta llfld dwnonds. declar.
er needed only (Out cJub trickl IO
land the pme. That allowed the lux-ury of losing a Irick to the l.1f e hand.
if necessary. At 1nck two the kin& of clubl was culled in c.ue the queen
was $tn41eton, then the )ICk was NII
IO Wtt1 s queen. Wilh the queen of
spade• procectcd from llWICk. declar.
er wu able to win any ocher return
and cash the wa~ for nine tncU.
• K 107 '1 QJ10 7
0 7 5
•Qll
o f!09 J
•7J SOUl'H
'05J
1;1 A9 · o KU
•AHU4
The biddin . soum \EST N<>lt1ll £AST
Obviously, the game was rubber
bridge. s.mce Sou1h Ji<iwcd no llller·
esi 111 o\'Cftric:b, lhc lifeblood of
duplicaie and, insaead. concmtraled
on fu~filhn the contract. • In a du pairs conle!l, dee tar.
er play a low •PMk from ,. .... ,,. ..... dummy 10 •he: fin.1 mck 'niere •~ a
50-ptl\:enl chance lhc: opening lead
was away from the: k111g Even 1f lhc:
lung 1s wnh Ea!t. there Ill no guaran·
lee that the: def ender WI II sw11Ch lO ll
heart. And even ·if lhc:n: h a hc:an
switch. declater can soll 141ld the: con-
1111C1. and as ITllUIY '' 12 mdti.. by gues\ing which defender holds the
queen or clubs. AJI in all. the odds of
pursuing as many ovcnncks a.o. ma)'
be available by playing low to the
firs& tnck arc too good to ii(nore.
lNT ,_ .lNT Pti'I .... ,_
Opening lead: Sb of •
CADIUAC CATEAA ... VHI. 11111 ...... alrM
Follow the: play of this de.al, lhen
decide. Wu 11 from a rubber bndgc game or dupllcaie?
(054840) $17,11118
NAllRI
(714)!!M100
The allCtlOO waJ rouurie. Soulh showed a ba1anccd. minimum open·
ing bid and, with a Wtc·band. North
bounced into the obv~ garne.
Cadlao c-. .. Low 291( ml. black. llhr.
WC5l led a low $Dllde. Afraid oflO'I··
in& a tr'ICk IO the: k.ln& of SJ*lc~ and
having a hcan come back. declarer
{793822) uoea
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'75 1-owntr, garage kepi. "ur"" ..A... --• •• 12211 mi. $10.500 ......... ~ ..
NH7HJ21 4WD. 454• CuA:mzed &(/ -Cenepa.coivtne SllO wli,
CADIUC Elcbwdo ... front apoiler. cutlOm f."·
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Green/Java Ford F·150 ~ '01
...._.. S2Gl • ...., ...
JAGUAR llJ8 '91 7 ... ter, CD c:hangef.
Tunium, llllfl1. 21k mi, loaded with al lacby op-1.-. undel warranty "11 '""'*'-cond. Cal CMlllc .... ...
SLS lo 1811 ni, tan llw.
(904873t-$25,988
NABER I
(714)540:1100
C8dllllc 9ft1lle .. STS Blacl. .,_, CO.
(910035) $27,988
MAIERS
C!14)!!M100
e1111ac Sl¥9e m '01
Low 131t ml, co. lloVI
(112S33) $.'M.988
NABERS
(714f40:1100
CAD SEVIUE ...
1 °"'*• lmmlcuMlllll 17 ,200 1111, llOCIQll)bo.
MM45tll0
(WA002146) $27.995
Menledll Benz ol
1'::9280~ www mbzdlltctcom
C230 .. ~ S4v«
(WA5eo752) $17.995
Mercedel Binz ol
1~~
www mbzditeet com
4-doof, XL • lo.tld (088157) 123,976
Theodore Robina
888-35S-15H....
Ford F-350 XL T 't9 ~ duty, Xcab, Dsl ( 13) 131.t71
Theodof9 Aotllna
181-35).1512
• Ford llllualanga ...
CCMWt, ~. lo9ded
(217 .. ) $11,171
Theodore Robina
.... SU-1512
Ford JIUNI Sedln '91 ~,eloys.clelrl (1 I) 11o.m
Tileodan RolllM
.... 353-1512
Ford Thundeltllrd 't4
...... cordlion. cl.i • beOS ~co~
ps,ooo 94~l8 P• ll 714-421>71511
Jeep Grand CheroMe LTD
15 Oltl ~ n. 3 co
di9c c:hlngtr. MW llrel, 95lt
m.. xlnl oond. $11,500 94!>-
640-5032 or 949-64G-1029
LMd Ro...... Dilco¥ery '95
V8, full power, A/C, cc.
8111-lm casMC1t. wH covecs.
$93S5 Call MHl7-.s32
LEXUS ES 300'94
Xlnt cond. -, -tlrH, 11111 Mata, CD,
regulat gaa, 27 • 111p9,
tOk ml, 112,000
M•7I0-1ut
PUBLIC
NOTICE
The Calif Public·
Utilities Com·
mission REQUIRES
that aH used tioos.
hold~ moYtrS
pnnt lhtir P.U.C.
Cal T ntrnber; limos
and chautfers pnot
their T.CP ~
In al acMN1isrnenls.
If you hlVe a quee.
lion abOIA lie leoll-
ity " I mcJYer, ino or c:haufter call:
PUBUC U'ritmes
COMMISION
714-558r' 151
~s~
AT, AC, F/llOWW
(t11 MO) S15,171
"'**"' "°'*" .. 35HS12
am• WhMIGrey
(XA101502) 129.995
MerCldle Binz ol
1'r280-~ www.mbzdi!!¢! com
SELL
IOOSl. T MVParchl'Mnl (NF063478) $29,995
..... Benz ol 1~i:= www mbzdirect com
EGO YI
~LEA (VA121631 $31.995
~Binz ol
1'::.'928G-~
www.mtmlrect com
Oa.uil'ltd Is
CONVENIENT
wl:IC'thcr "°" '"' buying.~ or,_
loc*Jnjt. cbMllk.d bu
what you need] •
Cl.A.S.5IFIED.
(949) 642-5678
~1
GOOD JOBS.
REUABLE
SERVIUS.
INTERBmNG
ffilNGS
TO BUY.
ITS ALL
HERE
EVERYDAY
IN
CLASSIFBll
(949) 641-5678
'nt.•fflf. RnNNI
&Var4~
714.435. I 'I
Sldtt Lr: (Ila
111-r .. ._..
Trw 1!11twiq, llftMll.
~.:: .. :
l•·ua•I
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~ .. 4 ... , ..... c
3 Al"* Price
(fll220ffl, ·~ fll2f8'UJ
2 At "* Price :: (2A1 .... .2AS8130J : -.
THIS WEEK 'S SPECIALS
•
· '11:1 FORD "• lllllllAN ... l'ORD "111!1 FORD • .,. FORO "111!1 ACURA ,, .. FORD ·-FORD "•FORD , 1 at:OllT WU ·.,,,-,u PROBE llT THllllDEUIRO EXPLORER Xl.T lllTEllRA 118 CONTOUR LX TAI/Ill# 6EIJAll E6t:IJRT $E IN# ~ :
AT, AC. clean. Clean & Economy 5-SPO., lthr., . AT, AC, f/pwr. AT, f/pwr., alloys Super clean, must Auto, AC, Clean/ Full Power. Alloys, AT, AC, f/pwr.
(123417) Car(763757) loaded. (113109) (1063~5) (A42254) see. (025934) (126902) clean (155718) (195753) ' t $5976 $8976 $8976 $8976 $8976 $9976 '9976 '10,916 1 10,976 : :
"llllMAZDA
PROTltllE
AT, AC, loaded.
(174567)
1 11,976
"1111 1'11YOTA W lflJIClt llEllAI. "00 l'ORD
COllOU.A MAii #'OllT FOCUS ZTll
AT, AC, f/pwr. Luthfr, full power, AC, alloys, loaded
(254664) chromsalloys (456244) (123498)
1 12,976 1 12,976 1 13,916
"•7 FORD '00 l'OllD "1111 WJIOW~
,_all Xt:Aa IJOllJOIM W llEETU ..
Auto, V-8, Full Auto, AC, full Moonroof, alloys. Clean scono
Power (C02717) pwr (109025) leather (146687) car (402526)
1 14?976 1 14,976 1 141976 1 15,976
·-C_,,,, 1 ·-l'OllO ... l'OllO Xt:Aa 1'1-.,1111 XCAll Dtft/MBI Jtl.T
F/pwr., alloys. Clean, low mllss AT, f/pwr.. alloys.
(137799) . (840207) (A14944)
'16,976 1 16,976 1 11,976 •
·-~ ·-l'OllO "00 l'Ollll "00 llOllOA //117Wi U ...... CMr. ...,.... •T ,.,,.LUOE
AT, AC, f/pwr., Full pwr; CD. LMth11r, alloys, AT, alloys, loadtld.
alloys. (009213) alloys (213009) loaddd (279749) (002565)
1 19,976 120,976 1201916 '20,916
"llllllATURll
BW-2
AT, AC, sharp.
(165802)
113,976
"111!1 EDDIE
MUEii EXl'l.IJllEll
Lthr, loaded, cln.
(818845)
'13,976
,, .. FOllD '00 IWERCUR
MUnA#e COllllAll
Auto, full pwr, V6, auto,
CD (133038) loadsd(634619
'131976 1 14,916
"1111 HONDA
CIVICLX ' . . ' AT, AC, f/pwr. : :
(558819) : :
1 14,916 ! :
4
"00 OODllE ·-CHEVY '• llBICUllY ." .. FORD •
llAllOTAXCAa aAZEll M•E,,. -IEXl'UJllBI XLT I
Auto, Full Power, Full Pow11r, AT, AC, f/pwr. Full power,
Alloys (559364) 4 Ooor (180191) (611560) alloys (851072)
115,976 1 ~5,976 1 15,976 1 161976 .
"•l'OllO
MllllTA#e BT
Convt., leather,
loaded (217484) . ,
, . •
1 18,916 ;:
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12DC2/2112MI 12J.4631l181341
S6SOI '8901
2000 i OYOTA
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116,701
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2WD SPOITAGI TAlaUS LX UV4 Mo.cs.~NMM Vb cUo oir ~ ~. camlle lwio. • W s--~CD ~llftlconii ~ '°"''*g--mlll-I ~I ~nm.i .. 3371ft'01'2 .... 21
113901 •13901 •13,901
JAGUAR CREDIT'S LEASE
. . \ '-
0 FA LIFETIME CELEBRATION
HIGHEST RANKED IN SATISFACTION WITH INITIAL CONSUMER
LEASES, ACCORDING TO J.0. POWER AND ASSOCIATES.
· We've gone t6 great lengths to make leasing a Jaguar as enjoyable as driving one.
A tall order, you say? You obviously haven't met the great people from Jaguar Credit
~ -IC:~. So why not take this opportunity to get acquainted with them and their lease options?
I