HomeMy WebLinkAbout2001-07-08 - Orange Coast Pilot.. . . .. " .
SERVING THE NEWPORT -MESA c~mes SINCE 1907
.....
SPOll'S
A big win
It was a big day in a big way
for the Costa Mesa National
Little League Majors
All-Stars as the 11 -and
12-year-olds played home
run derby In recording the
division's first-ever victOf)'
in the District 62 All-Star
Tournament. .the first step on
the r~ to Williamsport, Pa.
S..Page11
.......
UFE & UISURE
Reporter Danette Goulet
checks out the attractions of
the Balboa Fun Zone -
indudlng the Rock 'n
Bungee. s.e,._.,
.......
COMMUlm
POIUM
Crystal Cove activist
Laura Davick talks with
Assistant City Editor
James Meler about having to
leave her cottage by the sea
by 5 p.m. today.
See, ....
.......
CllllDAI
Want to know what's going
on In Ntwport-MeM this
week? This month 1
Next month? Check out our
Ultlmate Calendar.
... , ... 4
SUNDAY STORY
Phys1cal therapist Brian Wong works with Newport Coast
resident Mervin Goldltein to stretch out hiJ ri9ht hand.
With a stroke
of the
Art has opened up a
new world for Mervin Goldstein.
who-suffered a stroke four years ago
PHOTOS IV GREG FRY I OM.Y Pl.OT
After a stroke left b1I right side parUally para1)'7.ed, artist Mervin Goldstein, above in bll studio, bad to learn to work wttb hi.I left hand. Below,
with the bright reel color of an exercise mat reftectlng on their faces, Brian Wong works with Goldstein on ltretddng and movement exerdleL
YoungCMng
DAILY PILOT
M ervin Goldstein
says ·good· and
"nice" like
they're the two
best words ln the
English language.
Denzel Washington ls nice.
Vacationing with family ls
good.
Friends are nice, the view
from bis hllltop home ii nice,
painUng 11 good.
The aphaslc Newport Coost
.... artist never says something ls ·bad.·
Ethan Goldstein guesses
that hil SS-year-old father may
be happier now than when be
wu a fully-mobile plastic sur·
geon who loved to Speed ln
.
IOPllOIY
his little black Porsche -a
luxury from his childhood
dreams -before suffering a
stroke four years ago.
Carol Goldstein says she
can barely get her husband to
s1t stW nowadays, with all the
dinners, movies, sbowi and
basketball games that book
most their nights .
And Goldstein, though
mostly paralyzed on his light
side and struggling with bis
speech. smllel generously and
uses a medley of •good• and
"nice" to comm~te that he
11 happy.
He's got family and friends
who Jove him.
He's got one good arm -
the left one -with which he'•
SEE P.ENCIL MGE 10
Crevv getting themselves in ship shape
M<XJtdnll ~the FOuttb <{JuJy
·w· . . ~ . . . EEK IN
2 Sunday, July 8, 200 l
1011 ISSUI mll AfLOAT
Some n1lght say it's just a boat.
But for weeks, Lodwrick M.
Cook's plan to dock his 55-foot
yacht off Balboa Island has irked
residents and brought city officials
to scrutinize the proposal. '
1\vo attempts by NEWPORT the Soµth Bay Front IEACH property owner to
park the boat parai-
1e1 to the beach have failed
already. At first, a third option to
berth it perpendicular to the shore
seemed to get initial approval
from folks down at City Hall.
But after ta.king a clo'Ser look
last week, Councilman Steve
Bromberg, who represents the
island, said Cook's latest proposal
might involve a city review as
well.
The boat is so wide that it
crosses over the pro~rty line
between 1106 and 1108 South
Bay Front and that's not allowed.
Cook would have to trim back his
pier to move the boat over by sev-
eral feet. And such remodeling
work requires a city permit.
Cook's lawyer argues that his
client owns both properties and a
January covenant recorded them
as •a single parcel and building
site." That might be true for
Cook's property, city officials
responded, but the covenant h8$
no effect on what happens out on
the water.
Council members will spend
some time talking about the issue
as they ta.ke a look at their pier
policy during a study session on
Tuesday afternoon.
-...... WWcJer COYef'S Newport Bead\.
He !NY be reached at (949) 574-4232 or by
e-mail at rnathis.wfnkl•rOl•tltnti.com.
SAYING GOODBYE
TO CRYSTAL COVE
It was a bash to end all bashes.
The residents of Crystal Cove
celebrated their final Fourth of
July holiday Wednesday.
The cottage CRYSTAL COVE dwellers must I be out of their
:homes by 5 p.m. today, after cau-
'fbmia State Parks finally negotiat-
ed their evictions. The residents in
March ended a 20-year court bat-
tle to stay on the beach front.
While they celebrated the
nation's 225th birthday, the resi-
dents also mourned the loss of
their own homes, which were built
on Irvine Co. land in the 1920s
and 1930s.
The state bought the property
from the Irvine Co. for $32.6 mil-lioo in 1979.
Virginia Mergell Smolich, a 73-
year-old woman who bas spent
most of her adult life in Crystal
Cove, vowed never to return to
the place.
•1t would be too sad,• Smolich
said. •1t was a wonderful place to •
grow up. It was ow little world,
our little Shangri-La."
_,.... ~ cowrs the environment and
John W'ff'le Airport. He may be reached at
(949) 764-030 or by e-mail et
l»CJ/.d/nfonelatlmn.tom.
Ill JOYS OF RUDIN&
School may be out, but reading
ii tn full swing at Whittier Ble-
inenta.ry School Students began
Camp Read-a-lot Monday at the
Westside school. •
Studeiltl wme IDUCITIOI ottered a tun envt-
ronment tbilt
encourages them to keep reading
through the summer so they don't
forget the predoUI skills, whlch
they are still struggling to learn.
IMllin RIOll M tama The Fourth of July iB
always a fun holiday for a photographer to shoot.
The possibilities are endless. It turned out to be
pretty peaceful, except for the many alcohol-relat-
ed arrests, Wce the one Jn the photo above, that
were made Jn Newport Beach.
The sltuaUon with police and people partying
always make for Interesting photos. Juat going
down to West Newport to check out the scene was
fun. Everyone wanta you to take their picture. The
camera strapped to your shoulder makes you an
instant celebrity. Alter awhDe, I found the pictures
I needed and headed to my next CJIJtllgnment at
Crystal Cove for their laat Fourth of July celebra-
tion. Alter that, I topped the day off with f ireworka
at the Dunes.
NEWPORT POUCI un
A IUSY FOUITH Of JULY
Newport Beach Police arrested
more than 170 revelers who came
to the beach to celebrate Powth of
July. Most of the arrests were alco-
COPS & bol-related, police
said. Hundreds of COURTS people were also ctt-
ed or warned for · ·
lighting fireworks and a host of
other violations. ·
West Newport residents, who
have been gearing up to face the
invasion of the party aowd on the
Fowth, said the day went well for
some streets, but was problemat-
ic for others.
-Seen Hiiier
Although there were no major incidents or rtotous conditions, neighbors said they were still over-· ·
whelmed by the huge aowds, which officials say bit record numbers this year. Residents and city
employees collected tons of trash following the two-day celebration.
On Tuesday, Costa Mesa Police seized 2 grams of metbamphetamine, illegal fireworks and hundreds
of rounds of ammunition from a Westside home. Following the raid, which lasted seveml hours, stx peo-
. ple were arrested on drug-related charges at the home in the 2000 block of President Place.
Also, as of Friday, Sheriff's .Harbor Patrol deputies were still looking for a Costa Mesa man who ~
reported mJl&lng at sea Wednesday afternoon. Jason Huntress, 33, was last seen swimming in Emetiid
Bay near Laguna Beach.
-0...-._. COY8fS (lOPJand ~She !NY be ruched at (949) 57<M226 or by HNll et dflep&t"'-rathelatlmacom.
On the other side of Newport-
Mesa, the Newport Beach Llbrary
also kicked its summer reading
programs into gear during the last
week in June. All those programs
revolve around a space thesne and
feetwe a c:bance to win T-stm1s,
fut food c::oupom and other prizes
for~ time spent i'ea4lng
boob.
Du ....... ~ ldlation. She
may be...,..• (t4lt 574-4221 or~• INllt~com.
......... Liii
After months ol tnteme negoti-
ation, the Colt.a Mesa City Coun-
cil on Monday gave preUmin4ry
approval to a development agree-
COSTA
MISI
ment for Common-
wealth Partne15' por-
tion of the Town
Center project.
1be agreement requires the
developer to provide $200,000 for
Theater Arts Distric:t Improve-
ments and to make excess parking
available to the public.
Disagreement about the length
of time the developer must main·
tain the ll8.lllu Noguchi California
Scenarlo sculpture garden was the
major stumbling block to the
development agreement. but the
dispute was resolved in May
when the coundl and devaloper
agreed to 50 years. ·
The council also voted to bold a
~Nonl'M ...... ................... °' ....
......... hlr'elft (Ml .. ,.......
.-wWlout WfMln ,.n IRI un cl....,...,. owrw.
public forum on proposed changes
to the city's sign ordinance before
lt votes on them.
The changes would prohibit
signs with animated or moving
messages, require street addresses
to be polled on free-standing
signs or on the building, limit the
number of lignl allowed on busi-
neMel and prohibit permanent
bannen.
Proponents soy the changes •
will help clean up the city, While
opponents say they wW place
unfair restJ1dionl on bow bust-
ne11e1 UM be.Jmert. 'l
• ---· ... QMf'l(Clta Miu. She~ be f'MdlllCf. ~ 574-4275 Of~
.m.11.tJerw*-*'1oellrll7•mm.
A!!JMSS
Our ....... UOW.~St.,
C.. ...... CAtm7.
•one ot the thlng• 1 Ulce
about UU. aport JI that you
have U.... kJtU on the water
lour hocl1I a day. AD that
tJme,. every declalon ls In
theJr own handa. •
-lllnrlcl-.•
• <Nlrmen of the a.~ NMk>nal
Pram (Nmpionthlp. which w.s held
June 30 In Newport Hwbor. The
champlonshl.p Is for Yilors bftwMf'I
the ages of 11 •nd 15.
•There is nothJng that can
compare with the undying
frlenclahip of one 11enlor for
another.•
-Avtva Ga •lrNln.
director of the Costa ~ Senior
Center, on senlon mlklng rom.ntlc
attachmlnts -' the center. At least
sewn cooples htve bier\ formed
there this year.
A Rll lllO
"Every time I bicycle around
the Back Bay, I say Thank
God for the RoblnloM,'
becau.ae they saved one oJ
the greatest arecis oJ open
space .... lt'a Wce aavlng
Central Park for the dty of
New York• _,.. .... ..
Newport Be«h .wo. ... a11st.
on feflow tffltf oi m. it*ts Frw.es
~ kn Robinson.
Frances~ died Mw 30 of
hNft t.lkn. She w.s 12.
•Every cottage dweller I've
talked to iB con$ced that
the state iB go1ng to let them
rot. These thJngs are JJ;vlng
organl.sms .... They're bulld-
1ngs that act and react to the
environment.•
-lruCle ..........
exerutiYe director of the Crylt.lll CAM
c.c:inm.nty 1Mt. on ¥IYf the "8t
filed suit T\...t.y 10 k-.p c.llfom'-
State Plfb from Mtlng COYe
residents from their cotages today
•ThJ.s la another delay In the
proceaa that open.a thJ.s
(beach/ up to publk UM.
We're aurprlaed by Jt, but we
don't think It ha.a any merJt. • _..,_. ...
.. ..,,... for Clllfomll St.-.
Parb,. on 1hil Ct)llt.ll QM
~ lNlt i.wsutt
•we certaJnly appredal• the
Ume we hod here. We wUJ
m.fa lt ••
POUCI flUI •
. . .. ~,~a.2oo1 3 ·
·Former Armj Air Fofce building strategic to fair planning
Young °'ant
DAILY PILOT
Plain walls, hollow Doors and
heavy wooden doors with the
ridges clearly marked are some
of the dead giveaways that the
administration building of the
Orange County Fair is more than
just a makeshift looki!J headquarters for the BACK ~~ o{ tradition and
Once part of an
Anny Air ,Foree base
during World War Il, it i$ a game of
guessing and folklore as to what
the building was used for. Some
say it was an infirmary. Others
maintain the structure was a recre-
ational headquarters.
'\ eral manager of tbJ falr.
Today, the facility ii where the
17-day county fair ii planned and
tealized every year to give kids the
thrill of pony rides and adµlts the
indulgence of Uddog their fingers
after a sinfully satisfying funnel cake.
Th.is is Beazley's 26th fair. The
general manager's tie to the annual
Orange County tradition dates
back to when his grandmother, Bil-
lie Green, was the assistant manag-
er 1n 1952. The title was different
back then because the permanent
· staff only included two people, but
Green and Beazley's jobs were
essentially the same, he said.
the now-maroon structure remind-
ed hJm of an army barrack-type
building when he first walked in 42
years ago.
1be space bas grown to
accommodate the number of staff
housed there through renovations,
he said, but it remains the same in
mood and personality.' ·
"It's an exciting building that
brings back memories of the past
and bow you can move from the
past and move forward in a very
positive way," he said. •1t has
charm, it has history, it's got
character. And I think you need
all of those to work. in a positive
environment.•
"But the old plumbing fixtures,
some of the cabinetry that's been
done, really have that old feel,•
said Steve Beazley, the deputy gen-
•While it used to be a very big
building, now there are trailers on
both sides Oanking the buildings,•
Beazley said, of how the staff has
grown to more than 30 employees
today.
Jim Bailey, Centennial Farm and
livestock director for the fair, says
• Do you know of a person, place or event
that desefves a historic.al LOOK 8ACX7
Let us know. Contact Young Chang by fax
at (949) 6464170; e-mail at young.dtangO
!•times.com; or mall her at rJo Dally-Pilot,
330 W. Bay St .• Costa Mesa, CA 92627.
FROM THE COUECTION Of Tl-IF COSTA MESA HISTOfllCAL SOC:IElY
No one is sure what the Army Air Force ~ this building for during
World War D, but now it is the headquarters for the Orange County Fall'.
City Council orders builders to lower the roof
•Members vote 3-2 to have 17th Street retail
property limit the height of its design to 18 feet.
Jennifer Kho
DAILY PILOT
COSTA MESA -A retail
building on East 17th Street that
would have soared to 25 feet in
spots will be built lower than
originally proposed after coun-
cil members reversed an earlier
approval by the Planning
Commission. ..
ln response to Costa Mesa
community members who said
they thought the building on
the southwest comer of East
17th Street and Santa Ana
Avenue didn't fit in with the rest
or the street, the Qty Council on
Monday voted 3-2 to limit the
height to 18 feet. The building
was designed to be 20 feet tall
with a round tower 25 feet high.
"There wasn't a lot we could
do,• said City Councilman Chris
Steel. "We aren't allowed to spot
zone and people want us to spot
beautify. We can't decide what
is beautiful. As far as the design,
I don't like it personally, but
there wasn't anything we could
do legally to do deny [property
owner Scott Burnham) his right
to build. We got it down to 18
feet and the height was a major
concern.·
Steel. Qty Coundhnan Gary
Monahan and Mayor Libby
Cowan voted for the 18-foot
limit, while Councilwomen
Linda Dixon and Karen
Robinson dissented.
Dixon was in favor of deny-
ing the project, saying it is
incompatible with the sur-
rounding area.
Monahan said the final deci-
sion was a compromise.
"They were allowed to go
30 feet and I'm really disap-
pointed that we even had a
motion to kill the project on the
table,• be said. "I'm glci'd
(Bum.ham) can go forward with
that project. It is very small and
I think it will be good for that
comer.•
City code permits a maxi-
mum height of 30 feet for the
building and the Planning
Commission, on May 29, bad
voted to allow the 25-foot height
Dan Perlmutter, who owns
the shopping center next to the
site, appealed the decision to
the council, saying that the
building would obstruct views of
his property.
Perbnutter said if the building
had been was approved with
the maximum height of 25 feet,
it would have "stuck out like a
lighthouse.•
•It would have been the
laughingstock of the whole oom-
munity/ he said. "Itllink over-
all the Gity Council did the right
thing. I wish they had lowered
it a little bit more, ideally to 13
feet. but I appreciate that they
overturned the decision of the
Planning Commission, which
was definitely.off the wall JI it
had been built as 25-feet high,
it would have been a unique
white elephant for the commu-
nity. Protoool is you put the high-
Donate
yourvehicle. ·
1-888-308-6483
Set hope in motion
to improve local lives.
~ • RVs • Boats • Real Estate • Tax Deductible
er buildings in the back and the
lower ones in front.•
Planning Commissioner
Bruce Garlich said he thinks the
architect will have to redesign
the project to bring the height
down to 18 feet
"When we looked at this pro-
ject, there was considerable
inquiry from us about the height
of the building,• he said. "As I
recall the discussion, we could-
n't lower the height below 20
feet without having to go back
and redo eveiything so I think,
in effect. the architect is going to
have to look at a different design
for the building. The building
matched all the code require-
ments and development stan-
dards, so I didn't think 41ere
was a strong reason from a plan-
ning standpoint to (deny) it. But
the City Council has the right to
apply different points of view
than we do, and I'm comfort-
able with (the City Council)
decision.•
Burnham was not avdilable
for comment by press mne
~£~~
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r----Established In 1962 ----
Mo~ Night Special
Unnp/ete Pnite Fi/et Mignon Dinner SJ 'JX' per pelwn
lru:ltuln: s.ltul, 1°"' cboia of tll1iu /MMtl po1At«1 or rice
ff fllrUc ""'"" ff Ml#J't
Steaks • Seaf06d • Cocktails
Quality Service • Nightly Entertainment
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"For All Your Decorating Needs!"
FURNITURE REUPHOLSTERY
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,..
"' ....
~/l*~r•'
~ ~
SAturJAy,
Septnnber 29, 200.J
6p.m.
Wine
Cr
Ho'rs d'oeuvres
Reception
7p.m.
Ope,,ing Rnnarlu
7:30p.m.
Dinner
at
Robert Mondavi
Wine and Food
Cmur
1570 Scmic Ave:,
Costa Mesa
(714) 979-4510
Tickets:
$150 per person
Salucing a team of 10
outstanding chefs
who will prepare an
exquisite
five-course dinner.
Robert Mondavi
Wine & Food Center
will pair each course
with its specialty wines.
;r Evening highJights
include a live auction,
silent auction and
complimentary
2002 Calendars
fearuring our Celebrity
C hefs.
Proceeds from this
event built SOS's
lcitchen.
bought two vans to
pick-up food which
orherwisc would have
been thrown out, and
fed more than
200 families every day,
every week.
And now,
thanks in large pan to
these chefs and our
sponsors, SOS has
broken growid
co build
a new industrial
coolcing kitchen.
Share Our Selves (SOS)
is a Costa Mcaa-bued
non-profit organization ·
that provides food,
medic.al. dental and
financial aid to those
most in need.
'
8
MoNDAY 9
TllSDAY 10
11
,. ,.. .... ., ,., ,.,., .. ,
Get ready to
twist and shout
OU1111 coum Mii 2001
tive art).
Did we mention the
nightly con~ featuring
pedonnan from Big Bad
Voodoo Dad , 18.nya Tuck·
Pig races1 They've got
'em, Pie-eating contest?
Check. Pony rides? ~te
ly. From the scary Lemon
Drop:and a 15-story tall Fer-
ris w~ to agriculture
exhibits, pedorming pups
and a display of m1ni.ature
houses, the Orange County
Pair bas something for
everyone.
' er, Billy Ray Cyrus, Hall and
Oates, R.E.O. Speedwagon
and more?
The fair, which opens Fri-
day, is a 17-day extravagan-
za with the theme •'IWist
and Shout -Celebrate Cit-na and Sun.• There will be
contests ol every sort -from
the nightly 1Wilter competi-
tions to~ grapefruit
bowling. The exhibits run
from the mundafta (goats
and .bamsters) to the exotic
(rare fruits and bees, interac·
Ladyfingers and lady's
fashion for charity
-IUll9 ---~--
m
~ Orange County Fairgrounds.
18 Felt OriYe, COit.i ~
~Opens Fridlly. Houri.,. noon
to midnight~ through
~!Ind to a.m. to midnight Thurid¥ through~ LW'ltll July
29
C.-1: $7 for ... 1310 54. $6 for
..... !15 lndoldlrlnd $) -~ 6 to 12. ChlktrW\ s Ind~ get
In free.~~dc:Mts ~before~ .... ssfor
... t J to St, S4 for Mnlon 5S !Ind
older, !Ind S2 for cNkhn 6 to 12.
Qi9: (714> 708-1928 or
http;Jlwwwomll:com
The American Cancel Society
Discovery Shop will bold a trunk
show featuring international and
local designers. Besides the
yummy tee and aumpets, there
will be dresses and clothing
galore to feast the eyes upon.
And it's all for a good cause.
m
--.: Amerialn ~ SocMty
Ohc:overy Shop, 2600 E. Coest H~
CofonldlfMw --= 2 to 5 p.m.
C.-1: Ft9e. but RSVP Is remmmended c..m: (949) 64CM777
fmAY
Daily Pilot
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STEVE MCCRANIC I OAl..Y Pf.OT
Brandon Yamawaki U1e1 bis body Weight to propel Camrynn Norrll, e, of Dana Point. blgher Into the air on the Rock 'n Bungee ride. ,
' So what is th.er~ today
for vacaUoners and
boredlocallarnillesto
do this summer?
Qui te a bit. actually. '
0.llettle Gout.t
OMV PllOT
W hen you
· wander among the
white clapb?ard build-
ings with green-teal , trtm.t;;. may think. •the Balboa
Pun bas teen U1 heyday -
and it'• gone.•
But when you stt atop a cariJuie1
bane u 1t pltcmt fonrard before
~you beck up~ ud look
out over the oace-pjckti bdck
boardwalk nat ID tbe bay, it is
.
A tale of two kitchens ·
easy to feel nostalgia for a scene
you never even saw.
At least that's what I thought
when I went for my first Pun Zone
experience. •
·From the outside, the Fun Zone
just seems old. But once you get
into the spirit of things -ride the
rides, watch the children -you
realize there is still life in the place
that entrepreneur Al Anderson cre-
ated in the middle of Wuh.lngton.
Palm and Bay avenue1 in 1936.
SEE ZONE PAGE 7
•
Sunday, July 8, 2001 5
TUYEL TAUS
Savoring ·
the culture
in Vienna,
Prague and
Budapest ,
Y0&mg0w'9
0Nt.Y Purr
For the equivalent of
three U.S. dollars,
Corona del Mar couple
Tamar and Martin
Brower enjoyed what they
considered a wonderful din-
ner in Budapest, Hungary.
Throughout their late May,
early-June trip, which oovered
Budapest. the Czechoslova-
kian Republic (Prague) and
two dties in Austria, they U.
tened to
concerts
in ornate
churChes
and
walked
through
art muse-
ums in
structures that
were once
bigger-than-
life castles.
The culture
is different over there, the
couple said, with art and
music pri7.ed like royal jewels.
People on the streets even
handed out brochures and
filers about upcoming
concerts.
"Vienna is loaded with
museums and concert baDs, •
Tamar Brower said "It's IOIDe-
thing that we don't see in
dties in the U.S."
Her husband added: "You
walk around Las Vegas, and
people are distributing hand-
bills about girlie shows.•
Tamar Brower remembers
the acoustics of the syna-
gogues. Most ot them were
beautifully gilded in gold with
tiered bakx>nies and high ceil-
ings. lbe sound rose up and ..-.....
echoed through the entire """
sanctuary, she said.
"Many buildings are~·
the 69-year-<>ld added •1bJe
facades are beautiful and it's
like those old movies we me
to see [cl life) in the 1700.,
1600s and 1800s. You're IMng
it again.• '
The castles and museums
dripped with crystal chande-
liers. The floors were lakl
with marble, and even the
buildings that ha.d been
SEE TRAVEL MGE 1
I I \ i .' l)' I~
•o1·~,, •. ,.,
Doily Pilot
It's a family aff ajr
More than 70 members of the Smith
family meet in Costa Mesa for '2001:
A Smith Oddity,' their five year reunion
Deepa Bh9rath
DAILY PILOT
W hen Llz Sullivan
sees her brothers
and sisters, the
floodgates swing open
and she gets caught in a
pleasant maelstrom of
memories and emotions.
Sullivan, her three sis-
ters and two brothers form
the core group or the
Smith family reunion com-
mittee, which has been
successful in getting the
whole family together
every five years since
1991.
This Feunion, the family
decided to meet in Costa
Mesa, bome to one of the
sisters, Margaret Dailey,
who at 75 is the oldest of
them all.
The respoflSe was
amazing. More than 70
members -sons, daugh-
ters, grandchildren,
nieces, nephews, m-laws,
girlfriends - showed up
at the Holiday lnn this
weekend for the family
celebration they call
"2001: A Smith Odctity,"
which will last the whole
weekend.
"We're here because
we love each other,• said
Dailey, throwing an affec-
tionate glance at her sis-
ters Helen Olsen and
Eleanor Howard. "It's
emotional. When we're
together we laugh and
cry.·
They qune from all
over the country and from
abroad to share their sto-
ries with one another this
weekend. Dailey's
nephew, Michael Smith,
flew in for the reunion
from Frankfurt, Germany,
oh Friday night Wlth lus
girlfriend, lna Briller.
•I missed the one five
years ago, and I feel bad
about that,· he said. •I
think the unique thing
about our family is that
we're spread all over the
world, but we sWl main-
tain the sense of family
over the miles and over
the years.·
Sullivan, who lives 111
South Dakota, says she
eagerly awaits these
reunions.
•A lot of lhmgs change
in five years,• she said.
"People get engaged, peo-
ple get married, babies
are born. It's wonderful to
find out what family mem-
bers are up to:
They were still missing
a few people, one of them
Sullivan's grandson.
"He's a biologist and
he's studying worms in the
Philippines.· she said with
a laugh. "My brothers
were joking about it -
that it's the best excuse
they've heard so far -
studying worms.•
Her brothers -David
and Arthur -are the onJy
Smiths in the core group,
with all the daughters
having taken their resi>ec-
tive husbands' family
names.
David Smith said he
enjoys remembering child-
hood the most. For 16 years,
the family lived in Bunna,
where their father, Joe
Srruth, was a missionary.
"We've JUSt been
around for so long,· he
said. "So many things ·
have happened.·
The younger genera-
bon is as enthusiastic
about the reunion , if not
more so, said Sullivan's
newlywed granddaughter
Julie Schultz, who came
from South Dakota with
her husband Brian.
·Not many families
have this." she said. "It's
really special. I've really
come to know my cousirlS
and had the opportunity to
bond with them. Yeah, I
thirlk we can continue this
tradition. We should.•
Educating the younger
members of the family is a
significant aspect of the
reunion said Dailey's
daughter, Kate Rahm. ·n gives them a sense
ol where they're from and
where they're-going,· she
said. •1t tells them we're
all living out own little
lives, but we're part of
something bigger.•
Tamar and Martin Brower of Col'Olla del Mar went to
Hungary, the former Czechoslovakian Republic and Aus-
trta during a trip In late May and early June.
TRAVEL
CONTINUED FROM 5
newsletter.
Locals also didn't seem to
care much· for recreational
luxuries. Patrons would sit
for hours with a pastry and
coffee or bottled water while
chatting and listening, of
course, to whatever music
would be playing.
•And pieyre very proud
to tell you thb is Mozart's
birthplaoe and where Strauss
ployed end where th,ey did
the flnt opera by th.ls or that
c:om~r. • 'nu'a&r Brower
Mid.
• Send OHGa.a IVINTS It.ml
to the o.lly Pltot. 130 w. ~ St.,
C.osta Mesa. CA 92627; by tu to
(949) 64M1~ or by calling Cl49)
57~ Include the time. date
and locatlon of the event. as well
as a com..ct phone number. A com-
plete listing Is available at
http:llwww.t:Mllypllotcom.
The Newport Beach Tennll
Oub, which meets from 9 to
10 a.m. Tuesdays, is accept-
ing new intermediate mem-
ZONE
CONTINUED FROM 5
Anderson brought
amusement park-style
attracbons and with them
the young crowds of the
springtime Bal Week cele-
bratioflS. But the area
became rather rundown
over the yea.rs and, follow-
il;lg the 1970s and the rising
popularity of Disneyland
and Knoll's Berry Farm, was
at one point slated for
demolition. But the land-
mark Fun Zone was saved,
renovated and remodeled.
New shops and eateries,
along with the carousel and
Ferris wheel, were added,
and it was reopened in
1986.
So what is there today for
vacationers and bored local
families to do this summer?
Quite a bit, actually.
Opening at 11 a.m .. it
doesn't take the bayfront
block long to start bustling.
There are five amusement
HOME
CONTINUED FROM 5
cottage, the neighbors
across the street had another
plan in mind.
Diane and Bob Edmon-
ston used unusual elements
in their kitchen design, like
stainless steel tiles and a
crackle-gla2ed brick back-
splash. They incorporated
maple cabinets with a dark
st.a!ned finish, a wraparound
granite seating area and
brushed nickel hardware for
a dramatic and sleek fin-
ished look.
Diane worked on the
kitchen plan for years.
There is a place for every-
thing and everything is in its
place. A cutlery drawer with
a hidden cutting board, a
ben for free. Playen meet at
the iDtenedion "SUperior
Avenue and Hosp6al Road
Free. (949) 650-1332.
Gnma S,.....~
bolts an «ebki sale OD f6e
tint Saturday of eadl moo.th
from 9 a.m. to .. p.m.. with
Oower seminars at 10 a.m.
and 2 p.m. at the group's
nursery, 20362 Birch St.,
Newport beach. Pree. (949)
756-1211.
The lnllle lmtttute Is otter-
ing free one-on-one classes
park rides without the out-
rageous admission fee of a
park.
I bied the Scary Dark
Ride fun house first. It's not
high-tech, with its iridescent
paint warnings on the walls,
glow-in-the-dark skeletons
and canned screams and
cackles, but it did make me
scream once.
The carousel was first
class all the way, thanks to
the view and my silver
steed, which was in top con-
dition.
Next I tried the Little
Drummer Boy ride. which is
a close relative to the spin-
ning teacups. Not knowing
my own strength, I cranked
the center wheel until I
feared the loss of my eggs
Benedict. But the two llttle
girls in the drutn next to me,
Ashley Mcintyre, 8, and her
sister Devon, 5, touted the
ride as very fun.
I passed up the bumper
cars, fearing I'd look like a
bully because the other dri-
vers at the time were all
younger than 10. So instead
special nook in the pantry
for the microwave, lots of
deep drawers to ma.tjmize
storage space and a double
pantry with pullout shelves
completed her wish list.
"I waited 14 years for a
new kitchen, so 1 had plenty
of time to work out the
details," says Diane,. "And
originally I thought I wanted
a white kitchen, look what
happened!"
Diane researched her
project well in advance and
foand anusual it~ .. a
Mllne dishwasher with a
pullout silverware shelf. • 1rs
the little things that make a
big difference,• she says.
Diane says her husband
had plenty of input into the
design.
"He's around model
homes all the time at work
and had seen several things
CONFUSED BY THE MARKET?
~
• customized Income &. Growth Po.rtfollos
• Quarterly Performance review
•Fee Based-No Load
for people with low vision
who are inlen!lstad in learn-
ing the computer text
enlargement program 2.oom·
~A minimum of m 186-
llons ere~ at the a.sis
Senior Center, 800 Maguerite
Ave .. Corona del Mar. Fn!e.
blformation: (714) 821-5000.
Scrabble O ub 350 meets the
first Sunday of every month
for a seven.game, full-day
tournament, with cash and
prizes, at the Newport Dunes
RV Resort, 1131 Back Bay
Drive, Newport Beach. $35.
(949) 206-9822.
I went to watch a small
child Oy through the air on
the Rock 'n Bungee.
This thing is great.
You put on a harness
with a bungee at ea~ hip
and bounce on a trampoline
-except their feet never
touched the trampoline.
Besides seeing to your safe-
ty. attendants also bounce
children higher and urge
them to flip and roll.
This comes more readily
to some than others. For
Lynsey McEwan, 12, doing
a dozen consecutive front
and back rolls was a grand
time. For her brother Ian,
11, merely bouncing too
high was cause for a
scream.
"It's too scary,· he said
immectiately after his dis-
mount.
lf you want action that
keeps your feet on the
ground, or at least doser to
it, the arcade boasts many
of the old favontes.
Remember Whack a
Mole? That's right -they
have two of them.
he wanted to incorporate
into our project,· she says.
Bob, director of opera-
tioris for Creative Design
Consultarits. "loved the
stainless steel tiles from
Walker Zanger and the
hand-cut crackled bricks
from Waterworks.•
Those two details com-
bined with an embossed
metal trim give the kitchen
it's old-with-a-new-twist
feeling. The kitchen gets
plenty of use at the Edmon-
Sunday, Jufy 8, 2001 7
Tbe ~wilaeoClllle
1bunday MamiDG w~,.
Club, which IDieb Tueld9y
mmnings in the Newport
Beach area. is~ far new
membeR. (71.C) $46-~
St. Andrew't ..._.,,..._
Church sponsors a monthly
Career Networking R~
for unemp!oyed individuals
on the last Thwsday of the
month in the church at 600
St. Andrews Road, NeWJ)ort
Beach. Pree. (949) 574-2239
or (949) 631-2880.
Pmball, Daytona driving
games, Motorcade Man.xTI
super bike, skee ball all the
games you remember and a
few more fW the arcade.
I do not recommend the
roller coaster simulator, which
seemed to take the most jar-
ring part of a roller coaster
ride, i.e. when you whack
your head. and charge you
$2 for it. I'd stick to the air
hockey and Foosball tables or
the various shooting games,
induding my personal
favorite, Area 51.
A nice, long spin on the
classic Ferris wheel com-
pleted my morning at the
Fun Zone, but while up
there, I saw all that I was
missing -from the ice
cream, pizza and snack
shops to boats taking
groups out on para-sailing
trips
Because it's free to wan-
der around, the Fun Zone
can be a qwck hit or an all-
day affair.
• DANETIE GOULET is the ed~
tion reportet' for the Daily Pilot.
ston home with the,ir three
children -Chelsea, 16. Brit-
tany, 13 and Keiffer, 9.
"We love the way the.
kitchen reflects the person-
ality of our family,· says
Diane, as she looks around
the house. "Now on to the
next project.•
• KAREN WIGHT IS a Newport
Beadl resident. Her cofumn runs
Sundays.
)
EDITORIALS ,
like bay's ~ilt,
• •• moneycommg
slow but sure
.
I t may just be a drop in a
huge, muck-filled bucket.
Or it could cause enough
ripples to ~elp clean the
Upper Newport Bay.
What effect $600,000 in fed-
eral funds will have on the
major restoration of the Back
Bay is anybody's guess.
The money, promised for the
job last month as part of the
House of Representative's 2002
energy and water buctget, is a .
very small portion of the $35
million ne.eded to complete the
work, $21 million of which is
now set to be paid for by
Washington.
It was not even half of the
$1.75 million Newport Beach
officials were hoping to receive.
But it is still a step in the right
direction.
And it is a step that n eeded
to be taken. The Back Bay, as
bas been well documented,
desperately needs routine
dredging to keep from clogging
up because of all the sediment
that flows into the basin from •JI I inland.
And the cost isn't cheap. The
dredging of the late 1990s cost
nearly $7 .5 million, in part
because heavy El Nino rains in
1997 and 1998 brought more silt
than normal flowing into the
bay.
The latest, ambitious $35-
million project, which is sched-
uled for 2003, would involve
more than just dredging. The
plans call for moving an island
in the bay and adding new Wet-
lands in an attempt to sl~w the
constant filling. It is no small
undertaking, but it is one that
could improve the h~th of the
bay for years.
The good news is that ever
so slowly, the pot of money
needed to rejuvenate the area is
filling up -in much the same
way that the bay, itself, gets
loaded to dangerous overflow.
Some $8 million in state money
has been tentatively set aside,
as well, leaving about S5 mil-
lion more for local agencies to
amass.
lhle, there is a huge amount
of money still needed. But the
bay's future seems only to be
getting brighter.
With a couple exceptions,
Fourth was safe and sane
Thus, kudos should
be extended to the
city and police . .
officials who worked
with residents,
especially in the
West Newport
area, to organize
what turned out
to be a very well-run
.. Fourth ol July.
• 1 reciµy, ref.Jlfy Wee the
ones that make you Wee blind
alter you light them.•
-W Al., Ill tO. of COdl Meli. Who shopplldof ~
Mr mottW 0.-. Md pldc9d out_,,. boms .. .iu ......_ Md smoke lomlll fot Fourth of IV'I'
•
....... • . .
Doily Pilot
WHEltf..'S A1'J
lCf&~~G WHEN You
NE.it> ONE?.
FEEDBACK
Columnist's views provoke 2 readers
AT ISSUE: Byron de Arakal
calls for Costa Mesa Council-
man Chris Steel to resign.
Those inaimlnating statements
were recorded with their knowl-
edge and consent Both initially
attempted to put forth public posi-
tions that were contrary to the fads
I do not believe that 10,664 ol their respective cases to general-
COlta Mesa voters Will be .dis--ly fool the public and to sped6cally
eofranChlled• by ContviJxnan fool their own supporters. ams Steel's eYentual removal or Both attackecf the booesty,
relignation from ot6ce foe at least integrlty and motives ol the mes-
two l8lllOOI c·Bettar for Steel to sengers-Le. their accusen,
r8lign with banor than be hanged adverse witnesses and news media.
byit,. July4): And =:ted to bide behind 1. I smpect that thousands ol legal to thwart. sub-
the people who originally voted for vert and/or otherwise delay the
Steel ~Oukl nOt do lo today (i.e. · lawful aimina1 and civil legal
given t& alleged false and/or mis-processes instituted against them.
leading statements that~ bas MICHAEL W. SZKMAOEK
made to date, and bis coottnuJng Costa Mesa
failure to accept full respoos1bUity
for what be~ did.
2. If the next nmner-up eventu-
ally takes ottla!, the 9, 192 people
who voted for Heather Somen will
be •re-enfnndUlecL•
In my opb:Uon. th.ii ii an appro-
priate r8IUk given that Steel
lhould never have bean on the
ballot in tbie fJnt ple6e became
two ol tb8 i9quired le> apettns
on bis nornmadng .~ tor
wbatavw ...... limply dk1 not
metcb tbt nilevant WW reallh-
lioll mnl 81id *"aid...,,.~ ......... ........., .... ~ .
tbeely dllt'tl alb. ADd bi
tboukf IMIW ftlclffed. ftJUllDa ·o.ram.· i...,... tbt city
=:=i=:-~.;.
........ DP' •*11 ••aa.. Wiil NlpKt '° .. AMgl.9/ ................ _ ........ .. .
..... ""' a.a ......
Dally Pilot
..
110
Name: Laura Davick
Age: 42
alrthplace: Anaheim
Community Involve-
ment: Founder of the
nonprofit Alliance to
Rescue Crystal Cove.
y..,. of ,..1c1ence at
OysUI Cove: 40
A PINAL FOUITH
'Everyone was
having a really
good time.
It was kind of
bittersweet.
It was just
wonder/ ul being
with all of our
friends and more
like family we've
developed over
the years here.
It was an
incredible
gathering of
family of the
people who have
been here for
generations.'
'WINNING
THE LOnERY'
'Growing up here,
it has been an
absolute perfect
environment.
I compare
growing up here
to winning
the lottery.
It's had such a
tremendous
impact ~n my JiJe
and it continues
to. That's why I've
dedicated my 11/e
to preserving Jt.
I don't know how
my 11/e could
have been without
Crystal Cove.
An I can say is
that I'm so
grateful for what
I've had here.'
..
CoMMuNtrv FORUM
STM MCCRANIC I OAl.Y Pl.OT
Protecting what was once hers
Laura Davick speaks up about l eaving her Crystal Cove cottage
As of 5 p.m. today, the resi-
dents of Crystal Cove
must evacuate their cot-
tages and move else-
where. At that. the State Parks
Department will take over to pre-
serve the 46 cottages, many of
which are about 80 years old.
One of the departing residents is
Crystal Cove activist Laura Davick,
who has spent 40 of her 42 years
living in what is now recognized as
a historic district. Her late parents
actually met at the Cove long
before they were able to 1~ one
of the cottages, labeled No. 2
because it was only the second one
to gain access to electriaty.
Dally Pllot Asmtant City Editor
James Meter sat down with Davick
on Thursday at her cottage -built
in the late 1920s -to discuss her
history at the cottages and her con-
tinuing efforts to ensure their
ptesel'vation.
So, you have to be out by 5 p.m.
Sunday. Are you going lo be readyf
Almost. I started moving out the
first of June with the idea in mind
that I wanted to get moved and set-
tled i:n my new place and spend my
last week here just kind of relaxing
and enjoying Crystal Cove. That has-
n't happened, though. I've been so
busy with work and so we're still
moving.
Is anybody gotng to put up much
of a flght belon lemng Suadmyf
I don't get a sense that any of the
residents are putting up a fight. I
think that everyone realizes that ~
need to be out by Sunday. No, I don t
foresee any fights by the residents.
How did tbe Founb of July ceJie-.
brMloD go OD Wedneldmyf
I con only desaibe it u an
Jnaedible gathering of both resi-
dents, past residents and a lot of peo..
pJe from the community wbo wanted
to lee what was going an down here.
But it was a lot ol tun;-md I think
everyone bu a great feeling about
the last bwTah here at Crystal Cove.
Actually I videotaped it and, after
we came beck to the house last night
at about 11 p.m., we watched part of
the video and we jllfi laughed" real
bard. Everyaoe WU bntng a really
good time. It was kind of~
ft WU just wonderful being with all
ol our friends and 1DOl9 llk8 family
we've developed OYar ~ yean here.
It WU an iDcredibae galberlDg of
family of tbe ~ Wbo beve been i.etor~
It wa IDllDlrible. I think ot all ::.::::. ~'!r'o1 ~be~ molt
What do you think of (executive
director of the Crystal Cove Com-
munity 'lhlst) Bruce Hostetter's law-
suit against the statef
I really don't know enough about
it to comment, however I think it's
admirable that people in the com-
munity are so passionate about try-
ing to protect and preserve Crystal
Cove. I admire all of them and their
dedication.
Do you think the state will be
able to p"'5el'Ve the cottages well
enoughf
I have some concerns, and the rea-
son I do is because I've been told the
state does not have funds for the
restoration of the cottages at this time.
However one of the things I'm
doing through the Alliance to Rescue
Crystal Cove is I'm implementing a
monitoring program for the cottages
upon the residents departing from
here. So it'll begin Monday. This will
be a monitoring program to determine
what condition the cottages are in
now, and I will photograph, videotape,
docwnent and survey each cottage.
And the reason I'm doing this is
because, one, someone needs to be a
watchdog down here and, two, due
to my experience with my work and
familiarity with all of the cottages, I'm
very familiar with the interiors and
exteriors and I'D be able to identify
any vandalism. breakage, break-ins,
deterioration, etc.
So I met with State Parks on Tues-day and proposed to them my moni-
tonng program and they embraced it
So I will begin docwnenting on Mon-
day. So, I'D come down on a routine
basis -probably twice a week ._
walk through the historic district cot-
tage by cottage and look for signs or
break-ins, gtaffiti. any type of deteri-
oration that's occwrtng. And I'll be
forwarding this information to the
State Historic Preservation office as
well as State Parks.
But the real purpose of this is to
determine what the condition is, so
that if the cottages are not cared for,
we will be able to tell what the oondi-
tion was upon the tenants' departure.
I'm also ltArting a historic arcbhte
of the historic district. I've put togeth-
er about 300 slides so far.
Where me you S:Z' I'm moving to Cameo hlands,
wbic:h is just a mile and a from
here. lbe 19llSOll it was so important
for me to stay eo doee to Crystal
Cove is beceUl8 I wanted to be ab1e
to be dOle e"C)l9' tO conduct my
mon1toring pn>gram liDd to be able to
<JOme down here~ to keep en
eye Oil tbingl.
beach. I remember at age 6 or 7, we
would set the alarm for whatever
time the minus tide was, whether it
was 3 or 4 in the morning, and we
would get our flashlights and walk
down the beach to the tide pools and
collect shells. And that's when shells
were very plentiful down here.
Also, I had a horse at the llvine
Equestrian Center that was up on the
bluffs. When I was 13, I would ride
my horse down here bareback down
the entire stretch of Crystal Cove
State Park. which is 3.2 miles. And 1
would take him into the ocean with a
halter around his neck.
Growing up here, it has been an
absolute perfect environment. I com-
pare growing up here to winning the
lottery. It's had such a tremendous
impact on my life.and it continues to.
That's why I've dedicated my life to
preserving it. I don't know how my
life could have been without Ctystal
Cove. All I can say is that I'm so
grateful for what I've had here.
Fowth of July were also fond
memories down here. All the families
would go on the beach at night. We'd
all have fireworks and we'd take
turns lighting them and we'd have to
wait for everything to do them.
Last night (July 4 f, we actually
had fireworks on the beach, and I
think it was the first time that we've
actually been able to shoot oU fire-
works in several years. And I think
the rangers just kind of decided to let
us go ahead and do that
Every Thanksgiving, we would
barbecue turkeys on the barbecue.
My niece, Crystal, was born here and
was obviously named after Crystal
Cove. She's the fowth generation of
our family to be here.
Is there anything else you want to
addf
I think it's important. now that the
residents are packing up and leav-
ing, that everyone who holds Crystal
Cove near and dear to their hearts do
their best to try to come down and
get involved in the public review
process that bas already beg\1n and
try to play a part in the future of
Crystal Cove. I think that in the next
couple of years -through this plan·
ning process -Crystal Cove Is going
to need all the help lt can gel I just
encourage people in the community
to come down here and keep an eye
on things, something we need to play
a role in protectinq.
It's special foe many reasons. Not
only is it a beautiful plaCe. but it's
also one ot the 34 Arau ol Speda1
Biological Significanat in the lta'8 of
California. It's also a pert of the Irvine
CoastNatine Preserve. It's a19o obis--
toric d\strict and is tislad cm the
Natiooal Register of Hlltolk: ~
u well u one m tb8 two lmiown dol-
pbin birttdng looltiom. .
~ dMnpd here.,,_. are very few .--you can My tbit
ebouttbele days..
let there befi'Feworlis on Fourth <i>fjuly
llllllll
Yacht infringing on
other reside~ts' rights
Owen Minney is missing the
point. In his commentary on June
28 (•u Cook wants to block
views, that's his right,•) Minney
suggests that Lodwrick Coo~ bu
the right to block his own view in
front of his own house. Minney
seems to think that Cook's actiom
don't affect anyone else but
Cook.
However, in front of Cook's
two homes is a public boardwalk
and a public beach. He does not
have the right to take away the
public's use of the beach and
access to the harbor from the
beach. His boat is sitting on water
tha\ is public property. It is not sit-
ting on his private property.
In addifion, I have a personal
problem with his boat being
parked in front of his house even
though it is now perpendicular to
the bay front. His boat is now sit-
ting about two to three feet away
from my boat that is on the shore
mooring for which I have had a
pennit for almost 20 years.
U I move the mooring closer to
the beach, it would have to be
extremely close to the sea wall in
order to have clearance from bis
boat. That would make the moor-
ing useless much of the time due
to the tides. It would also make
my boat more vulnerable to van-
dalism. U I move the mooring
sideways, my boat will be m dan-
ger of hitting the boat on the
mooring next to it. What if 1 want
to put a catamaran on the moor-
ing -which I may legally do as
long as it is no longer than 18
feet?
My point is that Minney is so
concerned about Cook's nghts
that he hasn't thought about other
people's rights that have been
infringed upon by Cook's actions.
SHEUY TAYLOR
Balboa Island
Beek wasn't alone
in drafting initiative
In a recent article, the Pilot
called Allan Beek the •author of
the Greenlight Initiative.• While
Beek was a principal contributor,
it was actually a group of Green-
llght steering committee mem-
bers who authored the inibative
to create its final version.
The drafting committee's
efforts may be likened to the wnt-
ing of the Constitution. James
Madison helped drive it, but it
was the delegates from the states
who actually authored it and pro-
duced this complete and lasting
document. In addition to Beek,
the members of the initiative
drafting committee were Jean
Watt, Phil Arst, Evelyn Hart, Tom
Hyans, Claudia Owen and Bob
Caustin.
While Beek and the Greenlight
attorney did the initial draft. the
committee made wholesale revi-
sions. As committee members
were from different parts of the
city, they were able to craft an
initiative that would serve all All
deserve the title of •author• also.
PAUL RENE GERST
Newport Beach
19th Street extension
not going anywhere
ln the year 1975, I resided in a
condo in Newport Thn'ace on
19th Street baSed 1<>lely upon the
intentions of the dty to extend
19th to Beach Boulevard with
euy access to Huntington Beach.
I have since moved away from
tbeftt, u nothing teemed to be
happening. Pu.nny, im't itf
,'JOday, tbeie is IUD talk. yet
nothing Ji bapPeliing. Ob well.
Rome zuy oot have been built in
a day, but ~ were a lot doles'
tbm we ce on this 11 ! cingty .. _. •projliCt.. Doill ~
an at llil Pomtf I IDMA. .,_.
.... ,.... .... and tbe edao ....,,,,,,
II SUndari Mt a, 2ocn'
Pbysiall therapist Bl'Wl Wong helps Mervtn Goldstein
Into a spedally molded br.ce designed to keep hla
band open and hla flngen outstretchf!CL
PENCIL
CONTINUED FROM 1
learned to draw, eat. dress and
even open doors for Jadies in
front of him.
And he now has the time to
sit in an upstairs drawing room
where a window Jets the S\lll in
while he sketches with a
newly-trained hand, oblivious
to the houn; circling past until,
of course, Carol Goldstein
reminds him that irs time for
lunch.
in a way, Goldstein is living
his dream.
"He always said to me that
when we retired, he'd love to
have a house in Sedona (Ariz.)
and draw all day and grow his
hair, whatever hair he's got left.
and tie it back,• Carol
Goldstein Jaughed.
Though the hair isn't very
Jong today, and though home is
still Newport Coast, what was
once just a bobby of sketching
his patient's noses in the blank.
white comers of his medical
papers has become a, healthy
obsession, his son says.
The family will hold a pri-
vate art showing Saturday for
seven of bis pieces at their
home.
"There was a..question of
whether or not he was going to
I live," said Ethan Go\dStein. a
medkal student in Michigan. of
when the stroke happened.
•But he bas definitelY. come a
long way. He bas tbai sort of
glimmer in bis eye that never
left, and he bas his own agen-
da in bis mind -when he's
going to make bis next move
forward.•
Immediately after bis stroke,
doctors bad determined that
~·s brain was severely
swollen. It was a wait-and-see
deal. his son remembers, but
slowly Goldstein regained
consciousness.
He progressed from sitting
in a wheelchair to using a cane
to walking 00 his feel 'Ibday, he
climbs 38 Oights of stairs in 15
minutes oo the Stainnaster dur-
ing regular session$ with bis
physic.al therapist. Brian Wong.
With WOO/js help, C~stein
bas also learned to move his
right band 30 degrees up. It
took two years, but bis recovery
has been constant and still con-
tinues, the therapist said.
Just last week. Go1dStein got
himself up from the ftoor with-
out Wong's help. It took about
ten seconds. It bad taken a
Iil.inute before.
He climbs onto the
Stairmaster without help and
climbs off too.
"He even turns off the
machine himself," Wong
smiled.
Goldstein began drawing
soon after the stroke, after
meeting an artist named
Brigitte Crosson at the Festival
of Arts in Laguna Beach. carol
Goldstein remembers taking
her card. When her husband
bad recovered enough, she
called Crosson and arranged
one-pn-one lessons to get
Goldstein drawing with bis left band .
·1 felt he needed a life out-
side of therapy," Carol
Goldstein said. #His confi-
dence, of COW'Se, and his con-
celtration are much better now.
And I so is) his ability to use his
left band.
Which is as steady as one
would expect a former sur-
geon's hand to be. Goldstein
usually draws with classical
music playing in the back-
ground, .wftb his left hand
lDg the. area, Mid $gt. Roil Peoples.
•1r1 not anytb!DQ unusual.• he Nkl.
·we'" bed drowning victims awface
u euty u 24 boura bl ICD8 CU81, and
in other cues it even took up to a
week;•
PHOTOS 8Y GREG FRY I DAl.Y PLOT
Mervin Goldstein works on a drawing ln the comer of
the room. while a fresbly'rttcked pool table and some of
his other sketches rest In the room's center.
angled up to the desk easel on
which bis paper is propped.
In a set of drawers nearby,
he keeps eight small sketch
books from when he drew with
his right hand. The smudged
images are of passersby at bus
stops and train stops, his
patients, bis family, randml sets
d legs and even the doorway d
his son's college dormitory.
They are done just in pencil
and announce that Goldstein
likes playing with lines.
His reoont drawings, much
bigg~ in size and color~
inchlae portraits of Barbara
BuSh, Denzel Washington, a
model in his art class and one
-in the works -of bis wife
during her hipster days.
They are drawn by
Goldstein's left band, but are
as dexterous as the ones done
long ago by his righl
•He's an inspiration to a loL
of people,• Ethan Goldstein
said •And sometimes I wonder
if I was in the same situation, 1
don't know if I could be the
same.•
Goldstein is wholly content,
the son continues, Never
depressed.
•He always says, 'that was
then, this is now.' He enjoys
everything about life"." Ethan
Goldstein said.
1be younger Goldstein still
takes bis father out for fast dri-
ves in the black Porsche. They
still mlly at UC Irvine """etball games and they still slt on their
patio where the view seems to
stretch almost to the curve of
the earth.
Sure, Goldstein's game of
pool isn't what it use to be, but
he's using a bridge pod on
which he lays his cue.
•This was another one of
bis childhood dreams," Ethan
Goldstein said. patting the pool
table. •So we just look at it now.
But we'll be playing again."
. .
BUFFA
CONTINUED FROM 1
WednMd«y bOllday1 Hmm.
lt't bard tD ...... tbat twinge
of, ~ guilt Jt'I elways
lb..; lmldng ~w!DF ~:-.,.ddn't
be~ ttm. You're a bad
~n. M fol' UI, this yeen Happy
BU:tbday America party was a
Fourth of July~wedding
party/harbor aulae (lfl com-
plicated, OKl) f« Cyndi
kichmda and Alex Kuffel-
two abeoluteiy woocledu1
young i>eOllle who tied the
knot, did t6e deed. said thole
magic words, etc .• this very
weekend.
'nl1k about a peifed
evening on the water. Not one
degree too hot or cold. a light
bl'ee'Ze, notbiDg but deep blue
sky and puffy white' clouds in
every cUxection.
OK. that's not true. There
was DO sky If you looked
down. Just water. But the oth-
er diredioDs, very blue. Just
before the SUD disappeared.
the fullest full moon you've
ever seen slipped out from
behind the.towers at Fashion
Island. If you've seen •Moulin
Rouge," it was just as big and
golden as the cartoonmoon
that i>opped up over Parls
night after night.
It was poised just over the
harbor entrance directly
ahead of us and looked as if it
were floating 20 feet above
tl\e water. Which renUnds me,
do you know where •harvest
moon• comes from? (You may
as .well say •yes,• because
you know I'm going to tell
you anyway.) The moon is
closest to the earth in late
September and early October.
The full moon in that cycle is
so bright, farmers who were
rushing to get their crops in
could work long into the night
-i.e., a harvest moon.
Get it? Crops -harvest
moon? Irs a farming thing.
Can you find this kind of
information anywhere else?
Nowhere I know of. What
were we ta.lldng about? Oh
yeah, Fourth of July.
Then, when the clock
struck nine (a euphemism,
there was no actual dock) it
was the rocket's red glare.
Now, you can always see the
lea-boom boom at the Dunes
fJ(JUl just about anywhere. I •
don't~ if it was mer-or the
condit10m or solar flares, but I
thought you~ see a k>t
more fireworks this year than
usual. 'Ibel9 was some major
ka·booming gWig on in
Irvine, and you could see the
whole show, almost, in Hunt-
ington Beach.
There was a big. big show
going on way down south
9CllDeWbere. My best guess
was Dana Podnt. but that's just
a guess. At one point. a volley
of shells went up, exploded in
..
·~fJ!ilb_ad~ out •No ABpa1t1 • rm lying.
Adually, it .. •SMnwler
Oolodlyl. Sd IPJCJ.
I alio found out What big>;
pem to Ill die •ewab tllit
tolbm =Beacb bur in a.ta Mela tbm ...
bclne (not ) i=::.
llllJl4«hl1"' W9ld ~ tD 't the dty bollJ'dadM 24 •
boWI Oil July •tb. n.. mmt
be IOID8 subtle lbtft in tba teC-
too.lc platel tbet rewnes 1tlelt
by the ~July 5th. : Holy moly. other ' deck~tk> boatllip was and mapping,
twtrtiDg and m:nokfng.-Amaz-
ing. It was ltralgh& out Cf
• Apocalyple Now! lt was
like being co Martin Sbean'I
patrol boat as be glided past
Madon Brando's bl9e camp.
And God b'8SI thole D\1ffy
boats. I give the people in the
Du.ffyl tile Spirl1 Award every
time rm out there.
They are laughing and
saatching a,nd waving and
having a blast no matter wbal
ParadS d Lights, Fourth ol
July, Groundhog Day, William
Penn's birthday, doesn't mat-
ter. It's just another party to
them.
l~s easy to pick out the
people who have been over-
served. though. DO matter
what they're in. They're
alwayt hoisting a drink and
shouting something really
loud but totally~
as they pasa, ~I
Youwa»Mchavouladora1"
I always wave and mlile or
give them a thumbs~up to be
polite. God only knows what
I've agreed to over the years.
One sight was notable even to
me, a-pathetically ignorant
landlubber. Before dark, I
noticed a young guy, with his
presumed girlfriend beside
him. in a tiny sailboat about
half the size of my car. Appar-
enUy, be bad come aacss
some sp<iled beer, whk:h was
mak1Dq him dart between the
larger &oats, which included
us.
The catoHM Flyer WAS
about 100 yards behind us,
gliding along like a teal blue
behemoth, and the miao-boat
with Captain lnebrio at the
helm was beading straight for
il At that poiDt. the spoiled
beer must have really kicked
in, because it looked like be
was actually cnmidertng
shooting the cavernous gap
beneath the Flyer, until bis
girtfriend grabbed bis arm
and almost pulled him over-
board.
One can only imagine the
storiel the Harbor Patrol bas
to tell. wen. OK then. Done
with the Fourth. On to Labor
Day. And DO, no one knows
what it means. but "at least it's
a Monday. That'll do just fine.
I gotta go.
'1
I
, It was one momeat of success after another
for Costa Mesa
Nattonal Majon
AD-Stan Saturday.
'
Above, Vlnnle Valdez gets
the welcome committee after
slugging a solo homer to up
the lead to 7-1. At right.
Trevor McDonald appears to
be beat on his attempt to
steal second base, but be slid
around the tag and wu safe.
At far right. above, Austin
Elliott. on his way tO
reconllng the victory,
strlld.ng out two, walldng
one ln three-plus lmd.ngs.
DAILY PILOT PHOTOS BY SEAN HIUER
-Sailors are
·villa-fled in ..
59-51 • serm,
.... •Villa Park closes strongly to defeat Newport .. Harbor in George Yardley Summer Classic.
9ll'ry F.ullcner
DALY PILoT
..
.,, ..... ,..,,,. ... to be II.ill fnn .... ct.le ti._•• ••nllf.,. sCliial t.al -·
1111 Redding, Costa Mesa National Manager
' Sports Editor Roger Carlson • 9.49-57 44223 • Fax: 949-650-0170 • Sunday,Juty 8, 2001 11 .,
•
• Michael M cDaniels' three home runs, six
RBis helps Nationals win firs t-ever District 62
All-Star game, 8-5. Seaview awaits Wednesday.
Tony Altobelli
D AILY Pit.OT
HUNTIN G-
TON BEACH -
There's a first time
for everything,
right? Just ask the
Costa Mesa
National Little
League Major
D1vtSion All-Stars.
For the first
time ever, the
Costa Mesa
Nationals victori-
ously advanced to
the second round
of the olstrict 62
All-Star Tourna-
ment with an 8-5
win over host
Robin wood.
For Mesa LIME LEAGUE MAJORS standout slugger
Michael .
McDaniels, there was a first time, a second time and a third
time to be the offensive hero. clubbing three home runs and
chiving in six.
"This kid is a karate champion, a basketball all-star and
a baseball all-star, so obviously, he's a very good athlete,·
Manager Bill Redding said. "But the best thing about
Michael is that he's very coachable. Some kids who are that
talented aren't coachable. He's a joy to have on the team.·
The first four hitters in Mesa's lineup. Trevor McDonald,
Evan Van Geem, McDaniels and Vinnie Valdez went a com-
bined 12 for 15 with eight runs scored and eight RBis.
After losing the coin flip, Costa Mesa made the best of the
situation and jumped out to a 3-0 lead. McDonald and Van
Geem singled before McDaniels' launched a drive over the
right-field fence.
"Sometimes it's a good thing to get the first at-bat.• Red-
cting said. ·u you can Jump out to an early lead, it puts the
other team on its heels and I think we did that to Rohm-·
wood."
After Robinwood answered with a run in the bottom of
the first, Costa Mesa flexed its muscles in the second. With
two outs and nobody on, McDonald singled, stole second
and sco:ed on a single by Van Geem. making it 4-1.
McDaniels followed with a two-run home run to nght for
a 6-1 Mesa advaritage and Valdez answered with solo blast
SEE COSTA MESA NATIONAL PAGE 12
Sea Kings curry
favor with coach
give first-year head man
his first win at the school.
Bany FM.llkner
~DLEYSUMER
CAGE CLASSIC
DAILY PILoT
NEWPORT BEACH -Months
from now. Ryan Curry won't look
back upon bis Corona del Mar
High boys basketball team's victory
over Estancia Saturday in the.
George Yardley Summer Cage
Classic and think of bis first win at
the Sea Kings' helm.
Insteed. the ftnt-yMr coacb from
Grass Valley, for whom beating
Elta.nda bu no more DgniftCence.
at this point than beating Bltooia,
will recall July 7, 2001 as the day
bis vision of the future began to
merge with reality.
•The biggest tbiDg fOt me was, 1
thought we starled to IOOk like tbe
way I tb.lnk the geme lbOald be
played.. Curry IUd iftir CdM'i
M-41 tdUmph et Newport Hmbor High~ the co~~ Of
the~~
CONTINUED FROM '1
of bil own. tbil .. tD ...
ftek1. me1rtng tt 1·1.
\Wb tM ...... apio. moa. .RectdlDQ Wat quick tD pomt out the real l'MIOll for
the victory. ·we m.-mi dae
pl.lys W9 needed to llMdlit ad
the endre team CDDtdbU!ed+"
he said. •Home rum are
grMt, but it took mGN than
that for UI to wtD. •
Mesa IWUng p6tcher
AUltin BWott pitched tbiee
strong 1mdngl before getting
into a 11ttle trouble in the
fourth. He allowed ODly two
IUD.I OD four h1tl in the ftnt
.thrM lnDlngl with two ltdke-
outl 'and DO Walka.
Tblngl did get. Htde lplcy
for the locaJI 1n the bOCliola of
the fburth u R.obtnwood
fought back. An RBI double
by Kevan Gray and a two-nm
linQle by K.P. Pow9lw mt the • In 9-10 adion, the Colla
leaa to 1·5, but McDuiWe Mela National Utt1e League
came in relief to prevent fur. = ttl first game in the
ther damage. 62 All-Star Town.a-
1bat would be. daM.. ment.12--0, to Sea View, Sat-
Roblnwood would get u Ulday altemoon.
McDanials c1oeed the door, •There weren't too ·many
retiring the next m batters he hlgbllgbta today,• Manager
faced over the ftn-1 two Bob ICD.app said. •But we've
lnningl. got another game on Tuesday
McDanielt' berdcs cxmdn· to play better.•
ued in the li1th iDn1Da wben 1\'oy McClanahan had
he mackad bis tbild home Mela's lone hit add ltarting
run of the game, a IOlo lbot to ~ Ryan Knapp pitched
, right, to dole out tbe,scortng .. lour solid innings for the
•Thil 11 a very ltroag locals. . ' Costa Me8a American drops openers
WESTMINSTER -The final score was of little cxmcem for
C~ta MeM American Uttle League's 9-and 10-yea.r-old All-
Stars Manager Charlie Chriltiamen Saturday at Johnson Mid-
dle School lie knows what bis players are capable of and the
result -Westminlter won. 12-0, in five innings in the Dlstr1d 62
All-Stan Tournament -hardly reflected that
Westminster scored two rum in the first, one in each of the
third and fourth lnningl, and then came up big wtth'an eight-
run fifth, including four uneamed rum.
Elliott Patton COllect.ed the team's lone hit with a single to
right field in the fiftb.
Costa Mela will play Fountain Valley, Tuesday at 5 p.m. at
Johnson Middle School, in the loser's bracket
• In Majors play, there were not much one could say after the
Costa Mesa American 1Jtt1e League All-Stars lost, 11-1, in four
innings to Fountain Valley in the District 62 Majors Tourna-
ment Saturday at Johmon Middle School Simply put. Foun-
tain Valley played defame, and Costa Mesa didn't, MeM'I
Man.ager Ted Spoulol said.
AJJ if three erron and two wild pitches weren't enough of an
advantage for Fountain Valley, its All-Stars comlsted of some
of the best players in D1ltrict 62.
·nere were a couple of cells that didn't go om way,• Spou-
los said. •But that ii no acuse. That didn't matter in the game.
The m1ltakel -that's what it comes down to.•
The CMNU. All-Stars scored one run in the second. Cody
Waldron Jed off with a single and Kyie Thorsness later brought
him in with a base hit to right lleJd.
, . ~
•Former Estancia football
ooach and AD remains young
at heart as a CdM assistant. ..., .......
DMYPloT
Eel Blanton bu the mind-set of
• drill inltructor, but the
pertODallty of a camp counselor.
Comider bbn old school with a smile.
So, perbapl it t.not lurpdllng that
dae majority of bis two decedel
coertnng football have been spent 1n
the .. of um.tant.
•Tbe belt put about c:oachtng II ·
gmng out fJW1rf day and being with
ibe Jdda, • aaJd Blanton. a farmer
Eltanda High bead coach (197~)
entering bis fourth MUOn as an
undrtant at Corona de1 Mar. •'Ibey
think fOUJMJ, IO it keeps me young.
rm 58, but I feel like I'm about '1:1.
•And it'• much easier as an·
Uliltant to befriend tbs kids and get
along with them. Al a bead coach,
you have to be tougher on them and
demand mote. When I wu a head
coach. I always told my ua.tants to
nev.-let a kid walk off the field not
thtnktnq they cared about him. There
W'ere lddl who didn't like me (u head
ooech), but I alwayl thought they
abould like my anlltants. •
With a quick wit, an inf~
llDlle and a passion for the game he
rt.amMl tn at HuntiDgtoo Park High.
Blenkm ii, u thole who know him
ooalell, tbugb not to like.
CdM Head Coach Dick Preemao.
wbo worked akmglkle Blanloli on
tben-cdM Coach Dave Holland's staff
btll<n Blantm became bead coecb at
Estancia. appreciates Blanton's
appto6Ch to the game. And vice versa.
•Dick's a really good guy, a good
football coach, and a good friend to
me,• Blanton said. •Jfe asked· me to
come over and help him and it has
been a really good change for me."
Blant.on, who earned a scholarship
to play outside linebacker at UCLA,
lbftted toward eoacbing when a
shoulder injury ended his collegiate
career after only one sea.son.
He began coaching at Cerritos
College, then moved to Long Beach
State, where he worked with the
leOODdary and the special teams.
Prem there, he Joined Holland's staff
ea.defensive coordlnator, trying all the
while to obtain a bead-coaching job.
•1 applied for eveiy head-coaching
job I oould and EstaDda finally gave
me my chance,• Blanton said.
His ftntEstanda team went 2-7,
but the next two were 9-3 and 7-5,
respectively. The 9-3 squad won the
1979 Sea \\ew League title and
DOH 1.iACH I OMV PLOT
Ed Blanton and Ids cammt habltld. the hortlon of Corona del Mar Hlgh.
advanced to the second round of the
CIP Southern. Section playoffs, before
being eliminated by Esperanza.
1118 nut year1 the Eagles also
made 1t to the second round and that
first-round playoff victory remains the
school's most recent postseason
football triumph.
After an 8-2-1 record in 1981,
Estanda went 16-22-2 the next four
seasons as numbers clwtDdled.
demographicl changed, and the
selllibWtiel ot a.thletel evolved. .
some say for the wone. 1be ~
led Blanton to make a difftcuJt dloice.
"My last couple yean, we only bad
about 19 to 23 kids,• Blanton re<:alled.
•1 refused to lower my standards ol
what I expected from my football ·
players. I wanted my kids to be the
belt they could be, which meant
sacrificing time and commitment.
Some kids didn't want to do that
anymore and I refused to
compromise. I like the fact that I
didn't compromise what I thought it
took to be a competitor and a
champion.•
After stepping aside as football
coach, Blanton became athletic
director at the school, a job he
relished for eight years.
•Being AD really kept me involved
in athletics and it kept my mind
active,• Blanton said. •Jt was a
challenge and it let me be involved
with kids.·
ThiDgl changed, however, in the
mid 1990s and Blanton elected to
focus on bis role as a math teacher.
Freeman, however, talked biJn out
of bis football exile and Blanton came
to CdM as a teacher and coach before :
the 1998 season.
•1 was ill a little rut at Estanda and .,
I was siertmg to beoome negative,• •
Blanton said. "I've always thought
change ltimulates you.• ,.
Blanton teaches math and p_bysical
education and tuton the Sea Kingl'
second.uy and tight ends.
·1Jike to keep it loote," he Mid.
•There's a time to be loose and a time
to bea.r down, concentrate and go to
work. It takei a speda1 type of kid to
come out for football and run Into
somebody full speed. A lot ot people
don't like that and we elk them to do
it for •s minutes. But lt'• not Ufa or
death.·
With Blanton on board, CdM bas
made the playoffs all three seasons.
"We've done all right,• he said. ·we won the (Pacific Coast League)
once (sharing the crown with Costa
Mesa in '99) and we played for a
league championship last year."
Blanton, a Laguna Niguel tesldent,
said retirement ls approaching, but he
is in no hurry to walk away from the
game.
. •0nce you've played it and
coached it. it gets in your blood,• he
said. •I really enjoy the chess match.
"My wife, Lynn, ii retiring next
year and I'll probably retire from
teaching in a couple years. We'll
probably move to wherever our two
(grown daughters Jennifer and
lUfany) a.re living and maybe I'll
coach at a school near wherever we
live."
.-------Bra •• M ------.
Mooday._ •. _..-friday S:OOpm Friday •. " ... -Thunday 5:00pm :
'lbmd.y ..... -.Mooday S:OOpm s..u.day ........... Friday S:t()pm :
Wedneeday .... 'lbeeday S:00s>m Suftday ............. Friday S:OOpm '
'""'1wday .. ~&()()pm
FIND
"", 4 • •I .I . ···•· .. 'h&.A.~
-··-rr .. ,' 1
~ . .J... ... J
Have A
Garage Sale!
== l7'00 Wtlft« f#e (lt1ch/M1gnoll1) 411-. IOOll, tOOOll,
tl7Stl, l&ela~ 202f If, 2MOaf •
lll2'f IVll ""· ..............
08l & .Jh .. <>=:.. o.uy • ..,. n..:i-:n•
. . r • r • ... . ---
r---1
IALE ... MIW HOllH
ltOITUUtf In 0.... Pl
Fn-&.rl. WI nn, s.illy-+
COllll'll, 94H!ltllll0 Ip(,
W.U~flf«r lor...,~ ... 111
CM ltoufty • COIMI. Nit.
lor --• MM31-2* Of 82&-4151.q? p!p
WORK t .. lllOI!
En«ttt!c ~
-tlltionllC -.did tor buly .. offtoe. Man-fli, FTf>"'l~llllll !!p!rLll ~
....... .. -... IM ...... 1111111 ~ .., .....
you to c.il I ..
nu111btf In wlllctl
...... dwp,,.,
"""'*·
,.._. bl w.y of OUI
of -co .... ... a.. ..... locel .... ....._.,. ,_,.....,.J'Dll...,
lllY _, OI ...
fOt llfVlc-. AMiii
llld lllldel Mid 111Y
con"1lctl .,.,. J'Dll
•Ion.
TODAY'S SUNDAY PUZZLE
ACROSS
1 lntonr•11on
5Alnalecl
8Clolhborder
12~11(
18Panl
20Unlfonn
21 Helper
22 'Is h boy - -
gk1T
23 ~ entrance
2• -In e l'>lue moon
25 Extending Into the
future
'ZT "S"P on rtr
30 Bomb.ay locale
31 Irene of 'Fllme
330ude
3'4 Types
35S-dudc
37Croc't kin
38Balkan
41 Pal In h hood
..... Guitarist Paul
'46Pep up ..e Nm.I natiw
41 OIA c:A control
52 Aoc:k pin
!54 Packliged ootb'l
SSVOlcebOX
57 Ywtt• .. boytrtena
'51 Madi • dec:lsiof'I se 06lt corr1J01 ient eo D11com1on
91 Utenlly t)1)t9
• 83 BllancHhMt
guru.
... Thal .. newmor
85 Ull8 tome oMrrlel
•MTl«ltnd
Am•llOllQ ., a.mi. .. b .. u .,,...,.. ....
70~ no...r ,..,_ 1ni11n
73*'°' 75°'**~ T7Alt ... ,..,.,.
IOMlllllW_,..,..
821nttrudorl
85Coud'I
88 Nest-egg lnb
89 l<lchen 100la
91 Undmapllned
94Sl'loWup
96 Contradtcled
98 Mongol !Uert
100 Pool hall tt1m
102 RU'dorest 1111W
103Confred
104Speaker1 p&IASes
106 ~ wortlp&aces
100S~'wHI
108 P..cti p1!19
109 Manifest
112 Rtle8 re pldty
113 Antique
114~
116Bouldef
117 Summ81 tower
118 Role for Sta<*
120 Kennel eoundl
121 Get9an"P
122 Macnlne tootn
12!SpeU
12" Compa111on word
126Center
1 v Sandal part
129 WOflhlp
132Cotred
134 p.,..sy of
~ 138E* ....
1o40X...SM
144Good..-fon
cl9tef to haw
148 F9mlly ~ .
147 Kllll of the
oomlcl
148 Grazl~.,...
1"8SIMtD--
150 Gravy hOIC:llt'
151~
152W."WI
153 8onlooOoom
IOUfC8
DOWN 72 EJ!l)l' .. ions al py
1 Putr1tn1 ... ,_ 7 4 Erucates
2 Bird's river 7& Flot
3 Take care ol 78 Frustratm
• Geerlll Ori!• ilm 81 Sea•
5 Motorilt'1 org 83 Ouedon
6 Reacts 10 pain 84 HMO starters
7 Floe'• first name 85 Srnoleed hat
8 Venleon 88 Bnghl-c::olored bird
9 Self!Sh one 87 Pretenders
1 o constructed 90 On soc sec
1 1 Prtsof' WOttler 92 Arctic and 1,.._n
12 Sigh• Of relle! 93 Coypu
13 Maren oate es Roost 1 1ir
t 4 Diamond -91 s~
15 CMorizied M lie 99 'Present
16 C8ndy maker 101 ~ 118ignment
17 a.tore long 106 MarN ._ boy
18 Type of rmsile 107 'Orinoco Row'
19 Furry corns-niont ling•
26 Carped 100 Otoe tp01
28 Aced coaling 109 EleYalor guy
29 "wanted" 1etw1 110 E~ units
32 Ufle 111 Md ra1*
38 Piece to hibernate 112 Ervol
38 Decllre 115 Get tome tun
39 Cunng 118 Riders' Nets
40 Relpira1ofy organ t 17 Chimp's name
41 Chlld'I toy 119 Lee111e heeple9S
«2 Tom 121 lmponllnt exmm
43 FW1 rdng 122 s ... home
45 ChlrTRl's pi.c. 125 e.tn)Wd ltmete
• ~n caun'Y 126 Se&. 10 ...._..
47 CcJnee mater 1'0 S'9le
4liJ Ysht baln 128 ~
506'1Ddlltt ~
51 Henhey n.a 129 Q-de.,.,.
53 Felowt 130 Dlllrtbutll
154 lJtl .. 131 s.ud Mltllll ..
55 Wllh ne6ghbor
51 l\' wlfrlor s-inc:.. 132 Tep end qi . 5e.......... 193 Pott at lamb eo NfMd 1915 Net tt flofN
12 MOii up.ll>dala 1 S1 Lew c.111
M 0C0 1111 131 Bltoo 11 a crop
•Heelll hewn 138 ~
-~"" 1410.. ~ ........ 142~tuc&
70 oa.. 10 l'wClt*
15' 8a Foot I COUWI
1 aa Cllef\ a ..,_.of 71 Wl!Wmo 1.-&...u ... ,..._,......,......,
............ _ ........... P'P""I ....
... -.. ~ $oultl cbll.
NOllTH
•JllU O A o AHO • 1172 wur EABT •H •AKQUU
o KIH176U o §l 0 '7 0 43 2
•KJ • SOt1l1t •Vold
ti JJ
OK Ill· •AQUUH
~~ NOrJ1I E.UT S• ,_ ~ ,_ ,_ ....
Openina ie.d: 5eYCa of •
The only lhin1 WOf1IC thin hlvi.Da
ID rdy on I fuale (Ot yow conll'llCt
11 havlnJ IO (UCU which wty IO We a ~way flDC:IK. To avoid thiJ
llO"Y· QpeN will delay CCJllllDitting
lfiemlelva unciJ the r..t moment. while Ibey cry IO am • mucb lboul lhe dilUifiutlOn • poolbk. Ccmider
this dell played aome yan aao by
SaJly Horton Brock. .Wwan of EnS1and'1 lntemlllonal women's
team.
ldellly. Soulh would have liked •
slighdy better Mlil for lhe five-level
J>f'lC"lpc. However. at favorable vul·
nenbllity thett WU much IO gain
from a rutl-blooded bena&e. North,
with a fair amount of lrlc~a to con-
uibuce IO lhe caUN u Jong u 1*1ncr
hdd JIOrTle Jena1h in heatU, declded IO pmb&e on there not being two fut
Ceclllc c-. .. 1.ow 21t< ni. black. 11w. Cec111c ...,.. m ..,
FIND
an apartment
throUgh daaalfled
[-··· ~ ,,....,, .. ~~ .. ~ ' .. ll
' 14•, ··~ 1'711'1~
(793822) 124,988 low ni, CO, P<*I
MAIERS (841087) s1uee
(71C) MM100 MAIERS
(7t4)54Mt00
CecMac o.tlle .. Cecllac ......
-ml, Vltllle ~. ct.I 8LS Lo 1811 "' Ian ""'· (72Mea) S1U88 (904873) 126,1188
MAIERS MAIERS
'1141M!HtOO Vt4)54Mtoo
~A~
AIRmrf ..
~
WWtwllDton ,..,,.w ...
nv ... ~._.
0.Clll °"1 llAI!
PC SERI/ICES .... _ --
-· 7 '; ---...
llmBlltm M• .. --.:::.-::-• ,__ ----...,..,
FREEVJM;RA
You 've lteard
about Viagra ...
but have you
tried it?
• ~gra IUCUll is
dependent on
properux.
Gee IDbmldoo from
~,.,.... ..
......... 5-111 °" ............. pwflaw40ftttl
Vilpa CMclll s...
CllfDr
. ST~TING
ANEW
BUSINESS?P.
• • • • • • • • •
The Legal Department at the Daily Pilot is pleased to announce a new iervice
now available to new businesses.
wt wit/ now SEARCH the name for you at no extra clJ...arge,__and sav1 you the
time and the trip to the Court House in Santa Ana. Thm, of course, afar the
Jearch is computed we wil/ file your fictitious business name statement with the
County Ckrlt, publish once a wtelt for four weeks as required by law and thm file
your proof of pu,blication with the County Cink.
Please stop by to fik your fictitious business statement at the Daily Pilot, 330 W
Bay St, Costa Mesa. If you cannot stop by, please cal/ us at (949) 642-4321 and we
will make a"angemmts for you tiJ handk this procedure by mail
If you should have'any farther questions, please ca/I us and we will be more than
glad to assist you. Good luclt in your new business!
PUBLIC
NOTICE
The Calif. Public· UtlllllH Com· mliMlof1 REQUIRES lhll 11 UMd ~
hold goocll mcMltl print their P.U.C.
CllT ~ llmol
end chaufftrt print N1r T.C.P. IUl1ber Intl~
lyouhlwl~
*in mcu .. 11a11-
11y " • ,,.,.., "'° Of~ ....... CI!. flU8UC u I u 11E8
COMMISIOH
714-SSM\51
•,r·-91· .. r-.....-.~
~1"~ ... ~
,.l'OllO _,, .. IX
AT, AC, c/t111n.
(123417)
•11976 ........
,,,.qm
AT, AC, loadMJ.
(174567)
1 11,976
3Al1'1111 l'rfoa
(1ll2201fl, 1nana, •• ,..,,
THIS WEEK ~S SPECIALS
2At71*Prlce
taA 1CJN5, 2A38130I
·-·-l'OllO ... l'OllO • ..,. l'OllO ... ACORA 1118 FORD 1118 FOllD 1118 FORD ,_.. ,,.,,... •r ~WR Xl.T /#TEW /111 CONTOUR LX TAllllUB 6EDAll UCOllT 6E -
C/Mn & Economy 5-SPO., lthr., AT, AC, f/pwr. AT, f/pwr., •lloys Su~rclean, must Auto, AC, Clean/ FuH Power. Alloys. AT, AC. f/pwr.
C.r (783757) loMl«I. (113109) (106315) (A4225") SH. {025934) (126902) clsan (155718) (195753)
•B97B •BB76 •8976 •8976 •9976 '9976 '10,911 1 10,916
._,..,,,.,,. wanwi 6001'111111 ... aw . .,w16 wm• 4 Wll .,.., l'OCUll ns .w-6 u,.. IXl'l.MIEll
AT, AC, f/pwr. IMllW. tulfl'l'l'lr. AC, alloys, loadtHI AT, AC, sharp. Lthr, load11d, cln.
(264SIU) chron»llloyl(4flf244J (123498) (165802) (818845)
1 12,918 '12,1116 113,976 113,976 1 13,976
... ,,..,,,. ... CllllEVY
WllTA Jtt:Aa ..,_
Auto. Full Power, Full Power,
Alloys (5593tU) "Door (1801g1)
'15,916 '15,971
·• l'OllO · ._ l'OllD ·• l'Ollll '""'..:;;.:-;;a::•;;.,..,,~;;-r--:: ... •"°"°.aiM-i-.::,..;;;:;ru:Mu.:'ll;;:•;;;, n;:;r;-t~ •• -"'••=-;;-1
l'-1•Xt:Aa ~111.r ,_,.... ...,...Jx1 ,,..._ . 1-ao Ml6'1Ul9er
F/pwr.. •lloya. CltMn, low mlln AT, flpwr., alloys. XLT, 4x4, sttlp Loadlld, low, low Convt., /eilNr, 15 Pass. V-10, L1111ther, roof, Convt, IMther,
(137799) (IU0207) (A14H4) side (815800) mlltls (871258) IOMJ«J. (270373) Loaded (A41730) •lloya. (603722) IOlld«I (2174/U)
1 11,176 '16,916 111,116 '11,91B '17,11-· 1 17,916 '18,97B '11,17B 1 18,1171
Logunilo oceanfront dramatic 4 Bd.
Newly remodeled home.
Vicki lee 71 S..2722
Pelican lldf $3,67 5,000
Custom 6 Bd. 6.5 Ba. home.
large lot, pool, newly decorated .
Betty Comegys & Nancy Peterson
717-4750 -717-4749
.....
'
4 Civic Plaza, Ste. 260
Newport Beach, CA 92660
(949) 644-1600
Ralboa IslanJ $1,599,000
Gorgeous, completely remodeled duplex with views.
Upstairs·and downstairs both 3 Bd. 2 Bo.
Roteonne Levan 717..4710
·Prestigious Pelicqn Hill Estate.
Beautifully designed, Impeccable.
Ro$e0nne Levan 717-4710
Rig Canyon $1,985,000
Incredible views of the 14th and 17th faiMOyS.
lovely sought aker 5 Bd . 4.5 Ba. single story home.
Georgina Smith & Stello Worden
759-3710 -759-3729
COLDWeLL
BAN~eR L 1
Spectacular city lights views.
5 Bd. 4 Ba. office. 3 car ~roge.
Chris Valli 759-3738
Norlli Uaguna $4,995,000
Mognificen~ new 4 Bd. custom .
on Shaw's Cove, steps to sand.
Sara Hinman & Rob Giem
759-3705 -759-3797
liJo Isle $1,795.000
Mediterranean style 4 Bd. 4.5 Ba.
Lorge lot. Built in 1992.
·Beverly Cleveland 71S..2742
3377 Via Lido
Newport Beach, CA 92663
(949~~23-8800