HomeMy WebLinkAbout2001-07-10 - Orange Coast Pilot..
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SERVING THE NEWPORT -ME.SA COMMUNmES SINCE 1907 ON 1HE WEB: WWW.DAILYPILOT.COM lOESDAY,JULY 10, 2001
Council be~ study Of crime eviction program
• Proposal would require landlords
to evict tenants arrested for drug-or
gang-related actiVities.
Jennifer Kho
DAlt.Y Pilar
COSTA ~ -There was a hint of the
debate to come u the City Council on Monday
discussed its concerns about a proposal to
require landlords to evict tenants who commit
I
drug-or gang-related aimes.
Costa Mesa Police Department staff recom-
JDellded an ordll)ance establishing a crime evic-
tion program in May, but the coundl denied the
proposal and asked the staff to revise it.
The revised proposal addf requirements that
an arrest occur before landlords llf8 required to
evict a tenant, that the city attorney's office
review the matter before a violation notice is
sent to a landlord and that a landlord be grant-
ed 30 days to evict a tenant or file an appeal to
the city, instead of the 15 days previously pro-
posed.
At the study session, Councilmen Chris St~
and Gary Monahan said the revised proposal
might not be strong enough.
•0ne concern I have is when someone man-
ufactures drugs, that would qualify as a drug-
related nuisance,· Monahan said. ·we would
no longer have that ability to go alter meth-lab
types of situations.·
QUEmON
READYTOG07
What do you thk* of the
Lt. Tom Curtis said he does not think the
revision has watered down the ordinance and
only excludes very rare exceptions.
revised wnion of the dty'l pOJp Deed
aime eviction &awl Call our Readets
Hotline at (949) 642-6086 or send e-mail to
dailypilotO/atimes.com. Please spell your .
name and indude yos hometown and phone
number. for verification purposes only.
SEE STUDY PAGE 4
Offic~als weigh
Conexant loss
• Most of the 450
layoffs announced
Monday will be at
the Newp~rt Beach
peadquarters.
MethisWi'*ler
DAILY PILOT
NEWPORT BEACH -
Chip maker Conexant Sys-
tems Inc. announced Mon-
day that it will lay off about
450 employees worldwide.
A majority of the cuts -
about 325 people -will
occur at the company's
Newport Beach beatlquar-
ters and production facility,
leaving Conexant with
about 2,000 employees in
the.city.
·Taking actions that
affect Conexant's talented
and dedicated work force
are extremely difficult,"
Dwight W. Decker, the com-
pany's chairman and chief
executive said in a prepared
statement. "But these mea-
sures are absolutely neces-
sary in order to position
Conexant for a return to
profitability.•
The layoffs are the com-
pany's second this year. In
March, Conexant fired
1,500 worldwide, including
450 in Newport Beach.
Another 650 employees
in Newport Beach were
temporarily laid off during
production shutdowns for
two weeks in April. Conex-
ant repeated the plant clo-
sures last week and plans
another shutdown from
Sept. 3 to Sept. 10.
While calling the layoffs
unfortunate, Richard Luehrs,
the president and chief exec-
utive of the Newport Harbor
Area Chamber of Com-
merce, saJd the city's busi-
nesses would probably not
be too bard hit by Conex-
ant's latest cuts.
SEE CONEXANT PAGE 4
PHOTOS BY SEAN Hll£R I DALY PLOT
Da\'ld James says concert Oien look great as a window coverlllg at h11 Independent music store In Costa Mesa.
'
A of the
TIMES
While Costa Mesa businesses
were once allowed to cover
their windows with advertising,
prioriUeshavechanged
~Kho
DAILY PllOT
W hile the bulk of
Costa Mesa's code
enforcement efforts
has been directed at
keeping homes maintained. offl-
cen have allo been methodically
iDlpectlng the dty'1 businesses.
In response to new property
maintenance codes in August,
code eaforoement officers began
~the Westllde in
Seven full.time officeiV have
WGi'luid to emure tbat home1 are
~with tbe codes while
tb.r9e put-time omcen have
Q)ist.al Q>ve takes on · a new
purpose under contr61
focused on businesses, said San-
di Benson. chief of code enforce-
ment for the dty.
Most businesses have been
voluntarily working to meet the
city's property maintenance
codes, "She said. but a few have
taken a st.and against one code
that prohibits signs from cover-
ing more th.an 10% of a business'
windoW1. •
•A lot of people aren't i,pter-
ested in removing the signs
because they feel they give them
expoture, but most people coop-
erate, • Benson Mkl.
The nctet Sback, a Newport
Beach warnings
go up in Newport
•High bacteria was
discovered over the
weekend near 38th
Street after routine
testing.
NEWPORT BEACH
The Orange County Health
Care Agency bes tacked up
warnings on tbe beach near
38th Street after high.levels
of bacteria were detected.
The ligm walt up short-
ly before 2 p.m. Sunday
along the beech for 150 feet
up the cout and 150 feet
down the cout from 38th
stl9et. . 'lb8 agency put up the
signs after higher than per-
mitted levels of enterococ-
cus bacteria were discov-
ered during routine testing.
Samples showed a 350-
count reading, more than
three times the permitted
level. The state standard is
104 per sample.
The bacteria is suspected
to have come from animal
waste that washes into the
ocean from stomi dra.tm.
The wane -along with
oils, trash and olbei' muck
-is thought to bil ~t
in urban nuloff.
The test resUlta come In
2-' hours attar the umpi.
are taken. IO they may not
renect the current ClODdi-•
tionl, agency apollelwolUn
MOnica Mazur Mid.
SEE WARNINGS MCil I
11111 .. UCI
4th .of
JUiy fun
The Dally P1lot aaked
vacationing ldda at the
.Balboa Pun Zone-how they
spent the Fourth of July.
·we bad a
barbecue
and
watched
fireworks."
CANDICE
HARTMAN.
12
Ontario
•1wenttoa
friends'
house to
watch the
fireworks
and have a
berbec:ue."
BRITTANY
WATI:'2
Ontario
.. . .
.. '\ ·Daily Pilot
Pt40TOS IY GREG FRY I DAl.Y Pt..OT
It'• easy to see bow the stomp rocket got Ua -• Med Sdmot Camp .,..,. Blake Bell, 1, goes a1rbome to 1nncb an
air-driven mlalle. Watddng Blake are, boa lllt. tellow rampen lod Jalall. I, bis brotber Sam. 7, and Derek Sderfteld. 8.
•Visited my
grandma on
Balboa
IsJandand
went to the
beach."
~
YALE. 10
OF SUBLIMATiON AND
Yorba Unda ....___..___ EXPE NTATION
•Swimming
in a lagoon
and banging
out at the
Newport
Dunes.·
KATHRYN
CARrMEt..
·10
Santa
Carlta
•tpaddled
ona boat in
the ocean
near New-
port during
the day and
then
watched
fireworks .•
KATUINA
YALE. 12
YmbaUnda
......................... ..,
..,._Mlt111lal•
Ill for
ITHUllCS
co111 •s1
Blake Walcbll, 10, NIDpi• a
mixture of soap and dry Ice •
17. The cost js $6.5 per camper and
hdldes a T-lbirt. OunpEn must bdng
their own ball tocamp. lbe August..,.
8an will nm eoaduga frcm 6 to 8 p.m.
Information: (9'9) -492~89'3.
GYMNASTICS, DANCE
YOUTH SOCaR CAMPS Gymnastics and youth dance
Soa:m armp1 mxtudled by Van.-cluses wtll be offered th1I month
gumd UDiwnlly IOCXll!I' ootdw are and in August at Downtown Recre-
bmg held at tbe annpw tlJil •lllllDK ation Center.
1bemmcampwlD.nmbmAug.13to ~ Boys, girls and coed daste11 are
•
Dwt~Goulet
DALYPl.Or
L ike brew from a witch .. cal-
dron. smoke and bubbles bil·
lowed from the mad ldentilt'1
bucket into the eagerly waiting
bands of children.
1be 11 mad sdent1st apprentices,
who rf.lged in age from 5 to 10,
couldn t get enough of the mioke-
filled bubbles that evaporated with
a poof in their small bands.
Tb1s first experiment of the day
at the Mad Sdence Camp at the
West Newport <:ommunlty Center
used dry Ice to teach ch11d.ren about
sublimation, the proce11 in which a
solid goes straight to a gas without
bec:omlng a liquid ftrlt.
After studying the dry lee on a tin
pie plate, they rut it in a bucket,
added a lot o liquid soap and
. poured hot water over il
Al the mixture began to overflow
the bucket. cblldren played the role
of mad ld.entilt, lifting the frothy
available for students ages 2 to 18.
The instruction will focus on
physical strength, fiuibillty, bal-
ance and control
Information: (11-') 327-7525.
FLAG F001IALL
An eigbt·week recnMltional Oag
food>al1 program for c:bOdND 3 to 8 wm be oftered at Bu.de Ccwnmimtty
Centlir.
Tbe program wm f'!llNme run.
smoking mixture with glee.
Of course, in the udtement,
they had trouble recatung the name
of the prooess they were watching
whenuked.
•Setamotphosis, • guessed James
Pulm1zl, 8. •No, no, that's metamor-
phom.•
They may have bad trouble with
the word •111btimatim, • but they sure
kDew what they were dealing with.
•They use dry lee to aeate a fog
so thk:k you can cut it with a knife,•
said Rod Jalall, 8, the only boy not
grabbing handfuls Of the gaseous
1<>a_p. .
Knowing that it was not safe to
touch dry lee, Rod WU DOt interest-
ed in t9\)Cbing the product aeated
by combining dry lee, hot water and
1<>ap suds either. .
When the smoke and suds sub-
sided, campen beaded in for the
next lesson -air pressure .
To see air pressure in action,
the head mad scientist, Laurie
Simbro, pulled out a couple of
participation. teamwork. sportlman-
lbip and f<WbeD lkiDI.
The l8llOO will begin in late Sep-
tembs. with games played Clll Satur-
days.
Registration will begin Aug. 18
and dole after the l8COIJd game ol
the IMIClll.
Infmmetlon: (71-') 75'~158.
POWT'AILE SKAn MK .
Skatel-. can lbow oil their tdcb
Campgoe~ don their
mad scientist caps to
learn how to transform
solids into gases
t I
stomp rockets.
The boys formed two teams and
started stomping.
It was slow going at first as there
were many kinb in the hoses, ~mt
after quite a bit of tinkering and
some monumental leaps, the rock·
ets started to fly.
1be fint camper to really see
results WU the youngest and small·
est. 5-year-old Chase Rosten. whose
technique sent tba plastic yellow
rocket leaping skyward.
•Chase does it OD his tippy toes,•
James observed.
He was SOOD surpuaed by Keith
Coulter, wbo sent a rocket soaring
above the rool and treetops.
•That was sweet. baby,· he
exdalmed.
• IOIOOI. 'S OUT Is • weekly 1-ture In
which Diiiy Plot edumtton writer~
GcMM Wits • """"* cwnp whNn the
Newport-Mu ... end ..... ~ her ...,.... ...
this IUIDlDer at tbe dty'I new Mobile
Skate Park.
The new prograQl, to be offered
in dltterant loc4tiom around. Col·
ta M ... throughout tbe IUlllDler,
will pnwid8 mwbouden aDd tn·
U.De skaters a portable skate park
that hU ramps, raill and fun
t>Ozel.
Cd for a c:nnpln ICbedule of
days, tlmil ad .....
lnlonnatbl! ('114' 754-5158 .
Daily Pilot
.. '
Tueldoy, July 10, 2001 3
lllSIDI NEWPORT BEACH CIR Hill A peak childhood experienc.e carries on today
On the
AGENDA
I OLL EIPAllSIOll
For the second time, Oty Council members
will discuss a 250,000-squate-foat expansion
project for Koll c.enter.•The proposal Includes a
10-stofy tower bulldlng and two parking struc-
tures and wowld be at the cent-en southern tip,
near the intersection of MacArthur BQulevard
and Jamboree Road. Council members already
tentatively appl-oyed the expansion at their
June 26 nleeting. If 1t>ey vote In favor of the
project again tonight. Koll C.entl!r offtdals will
have to bring their proposal before the city's
voten. The expansion Is large enough to trigger
Greenllght, ~ Beach's slow-growth law,
which r:equires a citywide e4ection on certain
general plan amendments. City offidals have
said the project will deate •significant and
unavoidable• traffic ptoblems. As a result. Koll
?ffidals have agreed to pay S2 million in traffic
improvement fees on top of about $1.16 ml~
lion they are already required to pay.
WHAT TO EXPECT
Council members can either approve or
deny the expansion.
TUFFIC SIGNAL llRERY llCllUP
Council members will discuss setting aside
up to $338,000 to Install battery backup S'js.-
tems in the city's traffic signals. These systems
would keep signals flashing or In full opera-
tion during blackouts and help to prevent
accidents. City offkials have set up five priori-
ty levels for installing the systems. Lights at
Coast Highway and along Jamboree Road
and MacArthur Boulevard would be first in
line, followed by Irvine Avenue, Newport
Boulevard and the intersection of Avocado
Avenue and San Miguel Drive. Flashing red
light operations are proposed for intersec-
tions along San Joaquin Hills Road, Hospital
Road, Superior Avenue and MacArthur Boule-
vard at Birch Street and Von Karman Avenue.
wAAT TO EXPECT
Council members are expected to ask city
offtdals to solicit bids for installing the sys-
tem$ at key lr)tersections. They will also
dedde .which of the priority groups should
get backups right away.
HIUOR POLICY ....
Council members will take a look at their
harbor polky during today's study session.
Councilman Steve Bromberg asked for the
review after a Balboa Island property owner's
plan to park a 55-foot yacht at his pier faced
aiticism from neighbors. While the current
policy only looks at piel'l, city officials have
drafted changes that would also take boat
sizes under consideration when determining
what's allowed around Newport Harbor.
WHAT TO EXPECT
Council members won't take any action on
the matter but could schedule a hearing for a
future meeting.
CITY Hill SPICE
Council members will discuss space prob-
lems at City Hall during their study session.
City officials say many areas are overcrowd-
ed and additional space of 4,340 square feet
is needed to deal with the problem. They
suggest adding a second story over the city's
revenue offices or setting up temporary
office buildings to quickly deal with the
problem. The latter option would cost about
$90,000.
WHAT TO EXPECT
Council members will discuss the is.sue and
are expected to ask fOf a publk hearing on the
matter in the near future to make a decision.
I am an omnivorous read-
er. That means that I am
not very selective in my
reading habits. I hate
Shakespeare, love Heming-
way. But mostly, 1 will read
almost anything on any sub-
ject if either the subject or
the writing style attracts me.
My father worked on rail-
roads, and so it w~ that I
was.reading a book titled
•Nothing Llke It in the
World,• the story of the
bUildlng of the transconti-
nental railroads.
I bad reached a section of
photoQraphs and was idly
scanning them when I came
upon it·-a picture of a rock
I once climbed. The caption
says it is known as Citadel
Roe.It. I beg to differ. It's true
name is Castle Rock,
although it bears no possible
resemblance to a castle.
Actually, it looks like it
should be in Monument Val-
ley with John Wayne and a
bunch of Indians circling
around it.·
Be that as it may, when I
was 8, I chose to climb that
rock, whatever its name
might be. It was a memo-
rable experience.
I was living with my par-
ents in Green River, Wyo.,
where my father worked for
the Union Pacific. Outside
of town loomed Castle
Rock. Unlike today, there
were no organized activities
for kids. We ran around
quite independently, mak-
ing up our own games and
exploring the country
around us. As a result,
when I decided to climb
Castle Rock, it didn't occur
··~ MEXICAN RESTAURANT Mattress Outlet Store
.
"AN ''IENING OF .HOPE"
PRESENTING
T~E' ·~IRO ANNUAL
'RI~ MARIENTHAL
ANO FRIENt>S CONCERT
FEATURlNG
.fESTA WIWAMS
PHIL . PERRY
TALAYA FROM 1NE WA'/£
~NOAY l'ULY 15, 200i
b:OO P.M. AT THE
HYAlT tfEWPORlER
3165 11.-bor Blvd.
Costa Mesa
O. lllock s.u. ol 405 ""
(7llf.) 545-7168
Robert Gardner
THE VERDIO
to me to ask my mother if
she thought I should. I just
went off and did it.
Castle Rock bas a sloping
base and, at first, my climb
was easy. Then, as the slope
steepened and the going
became more difficult, I
changed my mind about the
project. Too late. Going
down seemed even more
perilous, and I realized one
does not change one's mind
in rock climbing. And so I
kept climbing, higher and
higher. It got scarier and
scarier. But there was no way
to climb down. so I just kept
climbing up.
Finally, I came to an over-
hang. No way over that
UJ)less I had vacuum cups on
both hands and feet. So I just
hung there. wishing I was
somewhere else, anywhere. I
felt very sorry for myself and
blubbered a bit, neither of
which did do me a bit ol
good.
Then I heard the sound of
voices. Men were on the top
of the rock (u I later
leame(l, it was 411 easy
climb to the top from the
back, rather th.an the front I
tackled). Rescue was at
hand. I could bear them dis-
cussing how they were
going to save me. One sug-
gested they put a rope down
for me. Another thought it
better to let a man down on
the rope to help me. Either
was fine with me. Then I
heard another voice, my
father's.' He said, •No, be
got himself into this mess.
let him get himself out.•
I knew my father, and I
knew that was the end of the
rescue attempt. Since it was
obvious that I was going to
get no help, I just climbed
sideways until I found a .way
to the ~op. When I finally got
there, all my father said was,
·Let that be a lesson. It's
always easier going up th.an
down."
That may seem a little
harsh, but the message
stuck. From that moment on,
I never climbed anything
without figuring out in
advance an easy way to
climb down.
• ROllEKT GAJltDNER is a Corona
del Mar resident and a former
judge. His column runs Tuesdays.
.
CONEXANT
CONTINUED FROM 1
But •tbe(e'i a ~ con•
oem about the economy for
Newport Beech.. Luebn said.
adding that sales were down
in general.
Assistant City Manager
Sharon Wood also saJd s~ was
concerned about long-tenn
· effects the company& ailing
health may have on the dty.
•1 tbinlt filne will tell what
kind of impact it has on us,•
Wood said. adding that the
dty would probably end up
receiving less sales tax from
COVE , .
CONTINUED FROM 1
leaking sewer systems.
With the residents now
gone, the agency has begun
instituting a plan to spend
about $1 million to repair leak-
ing roofs, install weatherproof-
ing and fix other parts of the
dwellings.
A new era for Crystal Cove
began Monday, as state work-
ers hauled off dirt-streaked
sofas, weather-beaten mat-
tresses and other trash from
the cottages.
Laura Davick, who lived in
one of t,he 46 cottages, accom-
panied state rangers and other
officials on a tour of the empty
cabins. Davick founded the
Alliance to Rescue Crystal
Cove to lobby the state to pre-
serve the dwellings.
Davick. 42, walked through
the cottage she spent all but
two years of her life living in,
accepting .compliments from
Steams and others about how
neat she left it.
-------&liiE ~STUDY
CONTINUED FROM 1
Steel and Monahan support-
ed the ordinance in general. •nus ordinance, as I see it,
is to go after slumlords and not
to go after landlords who are
responsible,· Steel said. "We
can nit-pick this thing to death,
but I think we need to keep
our eye on the ball here.•
The rest of the council had
conennt
•1'be'Yre bu~ fewer ~ ti they're producing
)ea, She said. Wood added that fewer
emp)Oy981 buying lunch 8nd
mopping jn the dty might also
affect IOID8 businesses.
But again. Jong-term effects
oould be tar more significant,
she said. Conexant officials might
decide to leitve their head-
quarters and factory in the
dty's airport area •and then
we have a vacant tacility on
our hands,• Wood said.
Gwen Carlson. a Conexanl
spokeswOl'.DAJl, said leaving
town was not an option under
consideration.
1be same could not be said
for others on tht! tour. Many
looked freshly abandoned -
with empty champagne and
beer bottles left over from the
farewell festivities. In one cab-
in, books and magazines sat on boo~elves. Yellowed copies
of newspapers announcing the
Moon landing, in July of 1969,
sat on a ratty couch.
In another cottage, the car-
pet reeked of urine. The weath-
ered wood-paneled walls
breathed mildew into the air.
•we're finding quite a bit
more deterioration than we
thought,• Stearns said. •Tuere
are some places that are going
to need some work.•
Stearns said the state is
commilted to protecting and
preserving each ¢ the
dwellings. But the future of the
district will be decided via a
public review process that
kicked off with a meeting on
April 26. Another meeting is
set for August. though no date
bas been set.
The cottages are consid-
ered one of the few remaining
examples of ·vernacular"
other concerns.
Councilwoman Karen
Robinson said the draft is
unclear and inconsistent.
•we need to tell people
what is going to happen if they
violate this ordinance,• she
said. •1 think it can be spelled
out a lot clearer so everyone
understands what is expected
of them and wharthey will be
held accountable for .... I think
there is a way to word this that
. would give the council the
safeguards we want and still
• Verticals • Shutters • ~apreads
Compli.n""1 Cnndllltio• ;,, Yo11r Hnu
......, ( ) ( , -'.
t >I I
~~ .
. . DESIGN~
Factory & Showroom 1998 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa
:;w..~ . (949)642-8400 ~==
•we're here in Newpon
Beedl and hllve no plans to
Jiaw.•alaid.
AaDI for a 566,000-tqUa.re.
foot ~rwim protect tn the
city have biNll dalayed indefi-
nitely. CQrM!runt offlctels have
said they would not revive the
plans until the company's
. financial lituation improves.
M a 191Ult ol Greenligbt, the
citYs new slow-growth law,
voters would also have to
approve the project
Conexant's stock has dwin-
dled from more than $120 per
share in early 2000 to around
$8 Qll Monday. Prices rose by
about 12%, or 90 cents, after
the layoffs were announced.
beachfront architecture along
the California coastline. They were placed on the National
Register of Historic Places m
1979.
Some of tho9e in the environ-
mental oonummuy have urged
the state to reconsider its pledge
to save every last a>ttage.
Nancy Garoner, president
of the Newport Beach chapter
of Surfrider, has said the cove
should be used as a low-cost
campground with only a few of
the cottages preserved to
remind" the public about the
cove's history.
Gardner· was also a vocal
opponent of the state allowing
the residents to stay until the
state crafted a plan for the his-
toric district
1be Crystal Cove Commu-
nity nust, led by Bruce Hostet-
ter, filed a lawsuit July 3 that
seeks to return the residents to
their cottages.
·1 am sympathetic to them,·
Gardner said about the vacat-
ed residents. •1 just feel very
strongly that it is inappropriate
to ha~! private leases in a state
park.·
gives this ordinance teeth.·
Councilwoman Linda
Dixon took iswe with proposal
because tenants would be
evicted for being arrested but
not necessarily convicted.
"What this says to me is
that, instead of being innocent
until proven guilty, these peo-
ple will be guilty until proven
innocent,. she said.
Heather Iker, deputy city
attorney, sald the dty is legally
safe U it adopts the ordinance .
Tenants could sue landlords
in dvil court jf they think the
eviction is unfair and would
also still go through due process
in any aiminal case. she said.
Mayoc Ubby Cowan. who
does not favor the proposal.
asked that more information
be provided.
"What is the extent ol the
problem?" she said. "Is there
anything that prevents us from
communicating with landlords
nowf I have a real problem
with this .... I think this opens
us up to harassment and a sit-
uation where you rat on your
neighbor. I don't understand
· what this ordinance has that
we don't already have.•
The council will consider
the proposal at a future, but as
yet unscheduled. meeting.
~ily Pilot
'They've llu"nlced the test and
we will be at the July 10 council
meeting to represent the wishes
of the city.'
-Greenlight sookesman PHIL ARST on the
Newport Beach City Council's approval of •
Koll Center expansion project. which, because
of its size, will now be put before the voters
MAILIA-
An ounce of prevention equals
a pound of ... sparklers?
T bis is in regards to •i.et there be me.
works on the Fourth of July• by John
Moorlach (Sounding Board, July 8).
Thanks to my good friend, the honorable
co~ty The4surer John M. W. Moorlach, for
hi& illuminating, enlightening and sparkling
comments on the fireworks issue, which
~ have been accidentally ignited in my
brief commetlW)' on July 3 in the Daily
Pilot. It is nice to have some nonexplosive
banter {or a cJiange.
Now if the truth be known, dearest John,
I enjoy fireworks displays as much as you.
But sometimes a head.$ up alert is helpful
before -not after -injuries bccur. nus is
called preventive medicine.
A Pilot article on July 5 and an editorial
on July 8 extended kudos to the city and ·
retiidents of Costa Mesa and Newport
Beach for a safe and sane holiday with •no
1 1ll4jor incidents reported.• Much of the
··; qedit should go to the editors of the Pilot
for allowing courteous and proper debate
on this issue.
, In closing, since he controls the big
bucia; how about Moorlach -the county's
treasurer -itemize and allot some extra
taxpayer cash for bigger and better fire-
works displays in Costa Mesa and Newport
Beach next year?
GREG FRY I OAl.Y Pl.OT
Newport Harbor roller hockey dub hosted a Blodd>uster fireworks stand ln Costa Mesa
MICHAEL GWEOC
Newport Beach
tools,• June 30). Just when you enjoy hating
these big oil companies for price gouging over
all these years, then they go and do some-
thing like this. You know, go figure.
·would you prefer that new, large Newport
development occur closer to John Wayne
Airport than elsewhere in the city?"
I am opposed to our Newport Beach city
government allowing large developments
around the airport, as well as elsewhere in
the city. This kind of a project only encour-
ages more expansion of the airport, which
all of us, in this city at least, want to curtail.
Gasoline company pays off
with public relations cash
GEORGE LAMPINEN
Newport Beach
Large developments could
This has to do with the Mobil gas station lead to a larger ~ irnort giving the money to the Estancia girls' basket-........ l' "'11 team (•'D'adlng picket signs for gardening This is in response to your question:
• ....
...
.:
Anti-El Toro groups
trying to con everyone
f ete Rabbitt wrote a telling
note regarding the Great
Palk plan being. transpar·
eat subterfuge b permitting
1Jlibridled develctpnent at the
dOMd m Toro Marine Corp AJr ~ bue jf South County Ott• the needed CO@iiliedal
oJlport (•Development more lik.e-11 than a Great Patt." July 3).
"~nfortunately, the pro-airport
fglltl were listed u the imtiga· us of ttlil attempt.ed bait and
switch IC8lll. The realityfls that
*8 oon folkl are the oompirators
oCtbil South County con. job. .!. 'lbe pro-airport folks want
~Orange County
Atr park. where the for-m. Bl Thro Merine Co1J>9 Air
S&atioD ii and will be protected
~ U.O.•nd• ol aaaa of perma-
~ pUkllmd. ·'lb~ out tbe difference
~po aDd con: U pro is
tbe f4JPG11te of con -what ii tit. oppolilll ol prvg1esal Coo·
91P.'. ~ of coune, the South
~~ hi ~
. Newport Beech
AIRPORT DEBATE
SEAN Hl1£R I OAA.Y PLOT
Trytng to be the flnt out. planes a wait for 7 am to roll around.
llgMllng them to take to the aides above Newport-Mesa.
overwhelming cause of why
people voted for El Toro aitport
twice with Measure A and
MeMure S, but now have sud-
denly twned against it
Hoipefully, the response was
not tbe only ooe you received
because asking that question
lbould cause a deep burning
8111dfwm within every Newport
BMcb .-.klent.
Wbm I realize that South
County NIMBY1 might IUCceed
ID tbar eflads to rob Orange
CouDtj of an ID 1bn> .trport. I
baw a deep pt tn my stiomech
~ by.JW tbat without 1-we wlB ._a major
Jabil W.J: :r.""""' anger tbat,.. ~ aiatMD 1bro
dtm .......... miDIPU-.
.. pallllc ct•·• ...... the ........... :mt· mmt Gaal our city were
pel•••re.d and....,_ by ... ,.... ........ ~
lhat IDDll Newport IMdi *1·
dents have remained rather
apathetic and mostly unin·
volved in this ft!Jht
When we all wake up to the
sound of screaming jets over
our homes and snarling traffic
jams in and out of the city, the
questions and accusations over
how it all happened will be fiy-
ing right along with those
planes.
a.AUDIA DOWNS
Newport Beach
Flight may soar
over South County
As I undetlt8lid it, tbe Bl
10ro runway Y·pllm would
launch~ 8lgbla over
the cout betw111a:c.0na cW
Mai and 1:aguDA l9ida.
Can't yc>u JUlt lmagliM IM
rilidenia ol hllcan ~ .NeW-
port eo-. MmioU vm.. ay.
tal Cow and IMni Con IMDg
JOHN SWAIN
Balboa Island
with the constant roar of com-
mercial jet engines? We could
call it El Segundo South.
AHN MER.Rm
Corona del Mar
Great Park much too
expensive an option
I do not like the fact there's a
chance of a 16% increase in
annual padenger limit at John
Wayne Airport. I think that we
should keep the restrictions
exactly as they are. I think we
have a beautiful city here and
by exp&iding the John Wayne
Airport capacity any degree, it
would just make this city less
than what it should be.
I don't know whether we
necessarily need to do El Toro
as an airport if we could con-
vince the public to use Ontario
International Airport. That
would make sense, but if the
public's not going to use
Ontario, then I think we in the
southern part of Orange County
need to step up to the plate.
That is, to open up El Toro as an
airport.
I'm totally against the Great
Park. I think the park is going to
be expensive and is going to
cost us money. J think that's
ever so true, and I said that
from day one. People have sold
that you cannot do a park
museum unless you have the
land and the art that IOID.ebody
II dcmliting.1 don't think tbei'e's
IOID80De out there to do that.
Allyway, the Great Perk. to m..
Is jUlt IOIDetbing that's far·
fekbed, out ol this wwtd. ·
DUCmAHWGO
Newport Beicb
..
....
mllmlaB
Tuesday, July 10, 2001 5
Gay Geiser-Sandoval
EDUCATIONALLY SPEAKING
Penmanship
set:s some apart
from the rest
S tate Sen. Ross Johnson recently
proposed legislation to promote
perfect perunansbip. He wants
schools to put an emphasis on making
sure we can decipher each other's writ-
ten commwlication. I thought of this
when we viewed 1he special exhibition
at the Guggenheim Museum in New
York. If the drawings were presented in
any type of Rorschach test, an observer
would never guess that they were sup-
posed to be buildings.
The Guggenheim is shaped in a spiral
fashion inside, so that we were able to
witness the growth of Santa Monica
architect Frank Gehry from the 1970s to
the present as we rose to higher eleva-
tions. Each project contained the first
earl~ sketch, models at various stages,
blueprints and videos of the finished
product. I heard a visitor remark that no
young architect would ever design the
same after seeing this exhibition .
Heck, I could be Frank Gehry. I could
draw a bunch of squiggles on a piece of
paper that looked like the first sketch of
each project. I would just need the right
assistants to tum it into a building that
wouldn't fall down and would put its
mark on the city and the world.
The first time I met Frank Gehry, be
wasn't world-renowned. I was part of the
1978 Student Bar Assn. at Loyola Law
School. and Loyola was splitting at the
seams. A committee of students, faculty
and administration was formed to work
with the architect. and I ended up on the
committee. (1 was in training for the
PTA.)
I figured students were just on the
committee for show, and no one would
really care what they had to say. I'm not
sure U Frank started joining my law
school friends and I every Thursday for
our lunch bunch just as a respite from
the office or to really find out what was
wrong with the buildings from a stu-
dent's perspective, but we had a lot of
fun. None of us students had much con-
cept of what an architect did, and cer-
tainly, we didn't know the guy was
famous.
One day, we got to go to bis office in
Santa Monica. The students would have
gone anywhere for a free lunch. but it
was also the unveiling of the model for
the committee. Some ol the faculty
almost fainted when they saw some of
the less than traditional ideas scheduled
fOI' the campus. The students were
thrilled they would have a place to slt out
of the rain. If you get a chance, go visit
Loyola Law School or Disney Hall ID
LA, and know that at least one guy with
po« penmanship has IMde bis mart.
• • •
8 T_.,, July 10, 2001
SIGN
CONTINUED FROM 1
BoWevard shop tbat Mlll
concert tk:btl, and Noile
NoiM NoiM, an iildepen· .
Clent NCOl'd lhop on MeH
V.U DrtYe But. are two
bUlin ..... that have not
cleared their Windows. -
At a City CoUndl meet·
ing 1ut Week, Ken Oberlin,
owner of The :rlcket Shack,
Mid hil b1W0 ea woWd
dote 1f the ~ come
down.
•1get80% of my bu.at·
n811 from people who eee
tboee ligm, • be tald. •1
can't put my mercbandiM
on dilplay like the Gap can.
It'• th• only way to let peo-
ple know what I'm sel11.ng:
Nolle Nolle Nolle took
doWn itl poeten when lt
r8celved a W>Jatlon uotice
t -aw~-onPeb. 26,
b\lt two WMlm ago teplaced
the~ wttb old punk
flien, Mid David James,
owner ot the ltOre. •ne ordmance doel not
include bandbllll, and we
figure punk man are band·
bW., • be Mid. •we alto
could aay they are an art
form becau.ae they are all 10
to 15 years old. They are
not current shows. 1bil ii
like a mU1eum exhibit.•
Among the punk flien
are pages of a bigblight.d
copy of the lign ordinance
and, together, the 8.5-by·
11-lnch sheets of paper
cOIQpletely cover the west
window.
Benson said she bu
asked for an attorney'•
opinion on whether the
Donate
your ~hide.
1-888-308-6483
Set hope in motion
to improve local lives.
• RVs • Boats • Real Estate • Tax Deductible
fUen ln the window are
acceptable.
Jamea Mid hil Window
rigm were great advertll·
ing, pa.rt of the Character of
the store and~ the
recordl trom IUD damage.
•we've bad poatep up
for 10 yean, and we think
we 1hould be grandfathered
tn,• he laid. •But I think
allowing oQly a percentage
of window• to be covered ts
lame. In Wahoo'• [Pilh •
Tacoa), for lnltance, the
1ttcken are part of the char·
acter. 11 lt really going to
ruin Cotta Mesa to let peo-
ple have cbaracterf
•we bad pollen that
were tasteful, fit the 1tyle of
our store and didn't offend the neigbbon. When we
took everything down
becaUle we didn't want to
get a ticket, people thought
we were out of b\1.llneu.
1bil ii what you want an
independent record store to
look like: individual, not
like a Wherehouse or a
BlockbU1ter."
But not everyone agrees
withJunet.
WUOO'• P1lh 1acm OD
BdltOl Avaue bu taUn 'otf
ttl tUcken Uid scr~ Ja.W
ones off every two maatbl, r
laid Ed Lee, dtNc:tor of kw·
ward plaDning for l•mkone
Restaurantl Inc., owner of
the restaurant.
•1 undentand what
theyire trying to do becaute
they don't want city win·
dows covered with aa1es
1lgm," he laid. •1t does
bum out a lot of bU11ne11,
but lt matntainl a nice vilu·
al for people drlvtng by lf
there lln't '30% off' and
'50% off' ligm taking up
big window space. Wahoo'•
ii different becaUM CUI•
tomen put up the 1ticken
and lt ii not advertlling, so
it ii not attecting b1,llill ...
But the ltidten did make lt
fun and give it a cuual feel,
which ii bow Wahoo'• got
its reputation."
The slgn ordinance, .
adopted ln 1995 and lalt ·
reviled in 1999, ii not one
of the property maintenance
codes, but Bemon laid the
VISIT OUR NEW SIII FLORAL W AREBOUSE
Trees, Palms, Bushes & Floral.s
Mon-Fri 10-6~ Sat 10-5, Sun 10-4
369 E. 17th Street, Costa Mesa, CA (across from Ralphs)
(949) 646-6745
~t included win·
doW = .. JNu1 ol tta ~ beca\.189 ol e
cbang9 ln the dtf'I PioP· u.. .
• •wtpdow atgnage wu
not one of the hifbelt prtor·
iti• at the time (the ordl·
naDCe) WU adopted,• the
laid. •Now our priorities
have changed. 'lberft has
been concem about how
the community looks, and
we have tried to follow
through with the council'•
desire to make the dty as
clean and nice looking as
W$Can."
A new revllion to the
lign ordinance allowing up
to 20% of window• to be
covered hu been proposed,
but the City Council isn't
scheduled to review it for
another m months.
ln the meantime, the
code enforcement depart-
ment bu no choice but to
continue to enforce the 10%
ordinance, Benson said. BW Turpit, secretary for
the Latino Business Council,
laid he has seen improve-
ment alotG 19th su.t u a
~ o1 wa....., comp!i· •
8D"9 wtth the cDdel. ~
•ft ... 1111 that the itorlr' . .
that are the mGlt vilual1 ·
unappealing )Ian very :;~
high percentape of their
windows covered, but I
have driven by The nc1t.-:
Shack for yean and neve1'
thought lt wa1 a problem, I he said. •1t seems like on4'
rule to apply to everyone1'
going to be very difficult
bec;ause there are 10 many
different type• of bu1i·
ne11."
Bd Fawcett, Chamber of
Commerce prelident and
chief executive, laid the -
10% limit aeates a bard-•
ship for some small bU1i·
nessea that have no other
meam of advertiling.
. "It will be interesting to
see what aolutions we can
come up with in the next lfr.
monthl, • he aald. •rm , , , ,
hopeful that we will be able
to come up with aolutions''"
that will help thoae with sit~
uations like The ncket
Shack.•
No.1 ... .... £ ::: or
·Tars
•Newport Harbor
product still has ,
s&nething to prove
in.Orange County
All-Star Football GaIDe.
a.rry F•ulkner
DAILY PILOT
A Chris Manderino
run from scrimmage
usually lasts longer
than the answers
he gives to interview
questions. And, for anyone
Who has seen him play, it's
not difficult to guess which
situation more frequently
ends in an exclamation
p&t.
=ut the Newport Harbor
l b graduate, lured to UC
keley with an invitation
a1.k on after all but a fe1V
•ner schools failed to
dlw interest, hopes to have
19ity to talk about Friday
*'1t. ~l's when the 6-foot-1,
4pounder will represent
tlZ South in the Orange
Cll'lnty..AB-Star Football mne at Orange Coast
allege. Kickoff is 7:30 p.m.
:=tegardless of bis
•onnance against the top
-douts from the North,
9ple will talk about
landerino's multifaceted
•trtbutions to Newport
Sbor for years to come. =" a junior, he started 12
tl9les at quarterback and all
&at outside linebacker. The llDon won every game with D triggering the offense,
~the CIP Southern lmtiOJl I?Msk>n VI title
E which gave the
am its second section
E year, after starting
season under center,
erino WU shifted to
ck at halftime of a 8ak 2 loss to Marina.
in Week 3, the
won 10 of their next
earn a return visit to
CIP Division VI
-Yd -r (dn Mai._) i Wt a poll's '-1 and ammtn..__.
Dllw Whltie.
South Al~Star football coach ---
Spam Editor Roger Carlson• 949-5744223 • Fax: 949-650-0170 •Tuesday, July 10, 2001 7
DON LEACH I DAl.Y Pl.OT
Newport Harbor High offensive linemen Jlm Erickson (left) and Robert Chai (right), aiong with fullback Travis Trimble (behind Chai), clear
the way for tailback Chris Manderlno In the Tars' 35-16 CIP Southern Section Division VI semifinal victory over top-seeded La Mi.rada last fall.
championship game.
During that stretch,
Manderlno's punishing
running style produced 11
straight 100-yard games, .
including a season-high 271
in a 35-16 semifinal upset of
top-seeded and previously
unbeaten La Mirada.
He finished with 2,141
rushing yards on 353 carries
and h1s 31 touchdowns set a
Newport-Mesa District
single-season record.
In addition to his offensive
production, he was the
team's second-leading
tackler with 75. He also
had three sacks and two
interceptions ..
For his ~fforts, he was
named Offensive Player of
the Year in Division VI, as
well as the Sea View
League, and was also
selected Newport-Mesa
District Most Valuable Player.
His performance also led
to a two-year varsity record
of 24-3-1, the most victories
Chrls Mandert.no
in back-to-back seasons in
the program's 70-year varsity
history.
South Coach Dave White
from Edison Hlgb knew of
Manderino's talents, having
seen him on videotape
against future Charger
opponents.
•I knew he was a stud,•
White said. "What surprised
me a little was bow quiet he
"I want to show people I'm one of the
top players in the county. It's hard not
to be excited about this game.•
is. I'd say he's both a parent's
dream and a coach's dream.
He's a complete gentleman
off the field, but be can be a
little surly on the field. Some
guys can't balance those two
very well."
Balance is the essence of
Manderino's game, whether
he's trudging through
tacklers or bouncing
between blockers en route
to the ball carrier.
Despite less-than imposing
size, White bas witnessed
during South practices how
formidable Manderino can
be on the field.
"He doesn't send shivers
down your spine looking at
him." White said. "But when
be runs the ball, he drives
hard and has very good
balance. Whether he's
blocking, running or
tackling, be gets bis pads
underneath the other guy
and he sinks his hips really
well.•
White said he plans to use
Manderino on both sides of
the ball, but he is 1ikely to
see more time at tailback.
That's the initial plan at
Cal. according to Manderino,
though defense, either out-
side 'backer or safety, would
be another option if bis
supposed lack of speed proves
problematic on offense.
Manderino said he is
working out with fitness
guru Marv Marinovich to
improve that speed, but be is
willing to play offense or
defense in order to work bis
way up the Golden Bear
depth charts.
White, who played
quarterback at Oregon State
after leading OCC to a
national championship in
1975, is certain Manderino
will be heard from at Cal.
"There's no doubt he'll
earn a scholarship and I'd
be surprised if he wasn't
starting by the time he was
a senior,· White said.
Manderlno, who admits
the lack of Division I
recruiting interest has
motivated him to work
toward a productive
collegiate career, realizes
some doubters may be in
the stands Friday.
•I want to show people
I'm one of the top players in
the county,• he said. "It's
hard not to be excited about
this game.·
Soaring .into history ..
he'd done something he
Would always remember.
Before stepping to tbe
he-throw line he took a
brief trot out put b&lfeourt.
Obvlously .. varing the
moment.
•vou don't even imow. •
be .-id more tbaD U boWs
laller. •t wanted ID lmllrilw ... ,.....1n ........... ,..
• •• • lllW w. Yldio
cmMm. I IC29W u..d ..
dMll cllllillt M U ID
~ ........ Iba ...
• --.s "''*'••ems ·------·~ ~ .. _..._ ..... .
Flctltloua BuelnMa ...,.,.. ...... nt
The foltoWI~ ~ Maodat:.: 3
Cull Drive, CorOllll def Mat, CA 92&25
William Eugene
WyTlci(. Jr., 3 Cun Ollve,
Corona def Mar, CA
92826 Carol Suzanne
WyTlci(. 3 gyrt Ollve, eo. rona del Mir, CA 92825
Thl1 bullneu II con-ducted by: • general
partnaralllp
Have you 1tarted
~I~~.~
Wvriclc. Jr. Th11 statement wu
flied with the County Cleltc ol Orange County on 08/11/2001
2001 ... 7HO
Delly Plot June t9, 28,
Jy!y 3. 10, 20Qt !450
F1ctltk>u9 ButlMH
tUime Swtement
The f~rl0!18 ao.. '**Jeet>1e1 c=.1
Clelnlng, 21 'ST # 1 Elden
Ave .• Co.ta Me11, CA
92627
DelmOlld E. Peeblel,
2137 It Elden Ave ..
Coela Mela. CA 92827
Thll bullnell la con-
ducted by. an lndMduel
Have you started doing buelneu yet?
Yea, 'Z/76 Deemond E. PNbMe
Thlt ltattment WU
filed with Iha County Cleltc ol Oninge County on 06/15/2001
2001 .... 114
Ody Plot June 19. 26,
Jyly 3. 10. 2001 li4§
Flctttlou• Butlneu
Nwne StMement
The followtng pel'tonl
are doing ~ aa: Wind ln The Pinet.
2569 Santa Ana ft.
Coela Meea. CA 9l2e27 Nanci KNN«. 2569
Santa Ana,J1, Cotta Mela. CA 92e21
Thia buelnMI la oon-
duelild by: an lndMdull Have you 1t1rttd dOlno buelne11 yet? v-. 11194
Nanci l<athlef Thia ltatemenl WU
fll41d With the Qoun1y ~oet~Jl':r Ccultt
2001 .... tlf ~ Plot .iu... t8 :; JuN 3. 10. 2001 1
George Fedorovta~
minors FOR CHANG~
Of NAME
ORDEA TO SttOW
CAUll! FOR CHA.NOE OF NAiii
CAIE NUllHR: A20Ul2
TO All INTERESTED PERSONS:
1. Petitioner: Uta , Holl· man on behalf ol Olga
FedorovtHva and
George Fedofovtaev,
mlnore fll41d a petition
with this court for a
dectee chloglng namee ae follow1: e. Olga
Fedofovtseva to Olga
Hoffman b. George
FedoroYlaev to George Hoffman
2. THE COURT
ORDERS ltlet all per· ~ interested In Ihle matter 1hall appHr
belor9 1hil court at the hearlng lnckated below
to lhow cauee, II any, Why the palltlon for
chenge ol name lhould
not be granted.
NOTICt Of HEARING Date: 8f7i'01
Tlme: 2:00, Dept: L73
The addreat ol the court
le same ea noted above 3. A copy of INs Onler
to Show CaUM lhall be
pubhhed at lent once
each week for tour lllC>
ceuiv• Wffkll prior to
the date eat for heartnQ on the petition In Iha fof:. lowtng newepaper of
general clrculalion,
~ed In~· county: DAT~ 11, 2001 JUDQI! RICHARD O.
FRAZEE. IA. JUDGE OF THE SUPE..
RtOR COURT
U.. Hoffman on behalf
of . Olga FedorOYIMYI
and George
Fedorovtaev, minor•
t 80 Cabrlllo S1reet, •88, Coela Meea. CA 92627 Publl1hed Newport Beach·Coeta MeH
Daly Pict June 26, July
3, (Q, ]7, 2001
!45§
hammering Northwood..
12·51, ln Sunday's
third-place g~. SPEEDWAY
CONTINUED FROM 7 ~or ~t guard Greg
Perrine paced the Sailors
with 23 points, including 18
ln the second half, while
Melum and sophomore
Jamie Diefenbach scored 18
api~. t
25-LAP CLASSIC
1. Josh ~ (MonrcMa); 2.
Gary Hides (Corona); 3. DukJe
&mole lko (Cypres); 4. Ovts Man-
chester~~ 5. Shawn
McC.onnell (8tea); 6. Randy Qi
Fnla:ta> (llaic.sfteldk 7 • .....,
5cht ata (('.-.Mia).
ever need to go to the
videotape.
Meluin's mom, Barbara.
was also still bursting with
pride Sunday over her son's
sensational slam.
•1 got so excited, I did his
~." she said.
· With Melum, the 6-7
Diefenbach and 6-8 junior
Nedim Pajevic all perform·
ing well in starting roles,
Northwood Coach Tun
O'Brien quipped at
halftime: •we're m over
our heads, literally.•
DIEP SEA
MONDAY"$ COUNTS
Newport Harbor, by the
way, \>OUD.ced back from its
1oa to Wla Park by
NIMport UNlna . 6 boats. ,41
anglers. 9 albacore. 2o ~ 2
.c.alico bass. 993 sand-.. 113 sculPln. ~ Lodmr -911 boats. ?86
anglers. 129 alblalte. 1;m sand bk
7 b8mlcuda, 1 \'\Ma sea ba. 1 tOte.
WORK: Bid Boncfetlll be, on 1tw t1oN11111 !*"*to llloW AVENUE TO BAY AVE· ol a.Id dllty J:=.., eoon No bidder may
The propoeed project Bid Deadline, lilted In 1 mlctobl'ewwy rMUlu-NUE AND WESt BAY 11 pOlltie 11 wlltlchw hl9 bid for a I»'
II a 1tn11'11 lmprowment the let .. t published rant In the former AVENUE FROM IS· 19 reuonable pr1c· ~ of FORTY-FIVE
for approximately Sta.ti ol Callfomla, De-Bertollnl'a reataur1nt LANO AVENUE TO 711 tlcllble) In the Boetd ol ('6) dlyt after the date
18,045 1.f. The entire crtment ol 1~1 with an outdo« dlnloa STREET IN THE Dholot9 m1M1no room 111 for the opening lloor wlll be gutted with ol 1.-..urert ___, pllllo wlllltn a oortiofl cj BALBOA PENINSUl.A) at the DiM1tat. If 15'00 thefeof.
filed with the
Clll1t ol Onlnll9 CcultY on 07~1 •
200111141>12
Daly Piiot '"" 1 o.. 17. 24. 31. 2901 1470 the exception of the to Tranuct 9ufetv IMlr· the required 1tr11t CONTINUED Sand c_.nye>n Avenue, The 8oerd ol Educe·
lobby, llevator, elevator ance In Thia Slldl. Nbclt 111M, locel9d .. BUSINESS ll'llne, CA la the time lion of the Newport· Flctftloul ~
IMChanlcal room, alee-The ~ Bidder 801 "A" Soulh Cout APPOINTMENTS TO ~j*Molce ~~ thefor Mau Unlfl9d Sdlool ....... ltltllm.t U1c:al room and exilllng and ltl &lboontnlctora Oltve In a POC zone. BOARDS AND CQM. ..._v .,,........,. Olltr1ct r111rv11 the The following Pllii.
stair wel and exit OOf· wll be ~to foll>w Environmental de· MISSIONS. llelMg and COlllldefa· rtdlt lo rtjec:t tnt or II are doing bullnMt · =. u:::.::. ~ ~Ir;;:::-~':; t~ci.:·;r-FOL. ATI~~FE:a°M AO ~:-ore::.:.-: ~and:=·~ ~g .. ~~rv:
new apace wlll be the Bidding Documents ·LOWING ACTIONS HOC COMMITTEE TO Int !O_~ rtpOrt. _.., and to waive any In-Huntington a.di,• CA divided Into olllce epaoe I/Id to pay prevailing ARE CHALLENGED IN REVIEW EDC AND Ill ..-... lonk..---lonnllly 0t lnwglMilly In 92840 andB~~QUALI· ='8o1'::'w~the loce· ~'ThJ: MAY BE ~1{~ "°"' =-i .... Randi ~~ UNI-Ray David ~ ••
FICATIONS: Prime Bid-The IUCCeaful Bidder LIMITED TO ONLY CURRENr BUSINESS Dlltr1ct FllD ICHOOL Dis-~~. ~A
dare who do not meet wlll be r9QUftd lo hive 1WOSE ISSUES $OME-CIOSA SPECIAL IM· Published Newport TRICT of Orange 92840 •
the quellflc:8llone In the the folloWlnQ Slate ol ONE RAISES AT THE PROVEMENT DIS· Beach-Cotta M11a County Thia bua1nea1 11 i:o<t-
Contract Document• Callfomla Contractor'1 PUBLIC HEARING DE· TRICT DEBT RE· DaMy Piiot Jlll/ 10, 11, Ill IMron L Ching, ~ by: ., 1ncMai11 may not be ellglble for tic.nae CUfTent at the SCRIBED IN 11ilS NO-FUNDNO. 2001 DINalat, of PuroMllnl Have you ttMted =d~m:.r~ ::.of IUbmlMlon ol the ~R:~~ ~~F~c~:: !4§2 :;:..mwarellou1lng ~ng7~f""' rel?
llcatlonl on the lonn o-aJ Bullclng OEUVERED TO THE NALS. LEGAL NOTICE Publl1h1d Newport ~ David ~
provided by the Unlvef· Contractor PLANNING COM· Publlthed Newport NOTICE IS HERESY Beach-Cotta MeH Thia atatement ·w11 lily, •an al!llctlmelt to (~nee Ctaulflcatlon) MISSION AT.L OR B11ch·Coata M11a OIVEN lhll the 8oltd ol Olly Piiot July tO, 17, ~ wfth the ~
the Bid Form. No Gen-, B PRIOR TO, TH~ PUB-Daly Plot "°J 10, 2001 Education ol the Nft· 2001 · o1 OrM.f111 C4i'ltY
eral Contractor Ouall· (UC.. Code) UC HEARING. 1487 port·M•H Unified 14§4 01J09t'200; 1 flcatlon Stat9menl dear THE REGENTS Of FOR FURTHER IN• Sdlool Oietrtd of Or· ...___ ol 200111'1'1SM
menta will be llCOIPted THE UNIVERSITY Of FORMATION ON THE IRVINE RANCH 11"'8 Colny wlll l9C:eM ~ of Oe11v Plot .Mt 10,! t7,
after 2:00 P.M .. T'UH-CALIFORNIA ABOVE APPLICA· WATER DISTRICT aNled bide up IO 8:00 Pe .. ~a .. I~ 24. !ll. 2901 J171 dey. "°I 24, 200t. How-July, 2001 TIONS, TELEPHONE NOTICE OF AL.ING 1.m. on Ile 251'1 dly of , .. _ .. ,
ever, the University re-'Publl1hed N1wport (714) 754·6245, O~ OF REPORT AND July, 2001, at the Public noloe II
Mrvff the right to re-Beach·Co1ta M11a CALL AT THE OFFICE OF A TIE AND Purc:tlaelng Office o1 given that Greoor; LM <lASiSll'IED .. ' ~. receive, and eval-Dally Ptlot July 3, 10. ~ .. ~E ~~NINO PlACI! OF A Mid SchoOI Dielrlc:t. ~ l<oppe, and -Jam11 lt'I the= uate auppleml(ltal In· 2001 71.,, .. F_.......,.,.. 'J..~COST~ H•a-NO cated at 2985-B Bear ~._._!1..~•t.~ formation after the 1481 ... " Ul'WVC. .. '"""' StrNt. Cotta Mell. CA .....--.,.,_. you•re
above time and date et NOTICE OF MESA, CALIFORNIA. THIR!OH 92926, 11 whldl time firm name for.wbdbef' lt9 IOle determination. Publlahed Newport RELATIVE TO lllld bide w11 be l"Allicly and l(Y'e ol EllPf9ll Of.
CONSTRUCTION PUBUC SALE OF 811ch•Co1t1 Me11 HAVING SEWER opened and read tor: flee Envlronmenta at yva're K •h.-1
COST ESTIMATE: ABANDONED Olly Plot'"" 10, 2001 CHARQU FOR CHARTU aus 1800 E. 9anY Ave., bome, .,.nmepc, Sl~1':ci1:''°8ocument1 ~R~P= ,.;wr. Th• Coeta .!!: ,...=r:NLANO Al ~_:v::. tn ao-t:' ~~°&:':. petoroew :
wtll be available to Bfd. lhll the uodertl1111ed Ill-Zoning Adriill1rator wll COLLECTED ON OOfdanoe with Concl-State of Cdtomll, C1ld · OCll• .. l>lll~
dare on Tu.div, JUiy ~ ~~l:; render 1 declalon on THE •av ROLL tlone, lllltnJcdone. and ·on the 8 day ol .My, .. ----·• '· 2001. and wfl be .. ....,_ n...-... ~ .. 19 2001 ·-Specillcdol• whklh .,. 2001, by mutual oon-eued et below to 1 llen "-·-1• ~, • ' AND NOTICE OF on tie tn the olllce ol ._ Mnt. ~ the Mid CONSOLIDATED lmpoMd on aald ~on 11~ PUBLIC HEARING P\lrd\ulng Director ol paltnenltllp and terml-
REPROORAPHICI 1fty under the ~ inll llama: NOTICE le hereby Mid Scfiool Dlstl1ct. nate thelf ralatlona u
3112 Pulllftln Street Self.SeMce .. r:.. l Zoning Appllcatl«t given lhll a l'IPOft hll 2985-B Bear Street, Pll1l*'I therein. coau :-:. CA ... g:r. Ad fBua· I Prof. ZA:.01-14 for Rodney 6een llled wllh the Sec> Coela Mell. CA 8292e. DATED AT Coeta A~: tu!t~ 112 700-21118). Malater, authorized l9tlry of lrvlne Ranch W: :.~In~ f:Y~ ~. 2001W. ell The ~ wlll agent for H1ft>or C.. W'*' Djaerk:t ralalM 10 .._...., u.. -1 or Sal D1l .. dll., Mil at .public Mia by Partners, f« 1 minor hiving ......, c:Nigee form of • Ctf'tltled or Gteaorv lee l(Qppe
NOTE: rf 19 THI compet1tfY9 . bidding on ooudlooll 1111 .pennlt to for ceftaln P11f011t Clf Ceahler'1 Chtc:lc. or I PUbllllied NftP()rt CONTRACTORS' RE· the 7125/2001, 1t 2:30 allow oulllde dllplly ol land within the dletrlct Bond equal to one Beach·Co1ta Meaa
IPONllllLITY TO p.m. on the premllas menlhlldee, loc&t9d at colllded on the tax t01. ~ percenl (100%) Diiiy Plot Mt 10, 2001 REQllT!R WITH THE ~ lllld PfCP1ftY hll 2300 Hnor Boulevw'd. Said report OOftalnl a Clf the amount of the'*'-l4ff
UHIVIA81TY OR CON-been atcnd and Whlcll IH In 1 C1-2 zone. deecrlptlon of ••ell l'lllde ~ to the • 80UOATID REPRO-ar• located at 17th Envlronmtntal de· l*Cll n ._ lf!IOl.llt Cf dlr Cf .. ~ F1ctttloul luellw
8RAf'HICI TO AC-~ Sell ~c:.: "-rm·.._· ~ the ~-t« MC11 ~..... Dlltrtd ...... llallmne KNOWLEDGE H• W. 1111 St c.-4; a . .,z:;;; .... 'lion parce1-bf'ltcal YMf and --be M .wt The lolowll'la pano111
CEIPT OF THI Meea, eou'nty of Or-ZM>1-27 fOt Blm. 2001.'02. Slid ~ II tin (tO) dlyl at nollol-.,. dolr1Q bu1i11i1t 11:
HRl(ILIY ltLACI 11"'9, ... at' CelWornll. aultlclltr.d .,. tor .. on ... with .. Secrllllfy lkln ~ awwd of Con-M a T Uion ~
NORTH AMT fll.OOR Unlll and ..,.. llelld Hllton Hotel, for a of .. '*""' It .. Dllt-net. The bond WI: 8020 Ednatr Av.nut, llUl.DOUT II> DOal-beloW. COntenel Inell* PlaMed tNgn1nQ Pro-trlcl Olllct. 15'00 Sand ~ approwd ~ h Fountain Valley, CA
MINTI. UMvaMrTY Pll'IOf1al lllml. hollle-IJll'll to 11cM ..... y Canyon A¥911Ut, ll'llne, .• It ....._ ca...-. t2708
WIU NOftlY COM-·hold goodl. machine e toot """' 11¥ IQ ,.. CA lftd II ~ tor • '""" a ~--.... A. IO!oufy, TRACTOH WHO toc11 & Mlle.. llme. ~ _,,...,. lrom JUN OUb11o llllptOllon be--~-~',! 1•1· ....... Lw,
ttAV• RllCMITaMD 125 DWI L91tn 21 ttwoug1t ~ lwMlt .. houri of MO fie ... ol c.lbnlt.. HunlinglDl1 IMdl. C.. WITll~...... AND 1108, Dlldt LOQ1t1 2001 tor a ilU ' A.M. to 1:00 P.M .. Min-C ,.__,, of ....... ..._ tlM7 L.andlont ~ .. ~ It 8060 *t "'°""' Fftdlr. 1NI • .._ ... ....... Thie ~ • ---COit-~tobld11t1tw ..... 9trMtlftaPOOiont ~11-.0~tD ..... londlatitllt ---~ • ...,., W'"9CI. ~': ~ nll.llll be pild Envlronment1I de: &eollorl 1473 Of h ._, •..:,.:a .., ........,.,.. 11M naf "'9
DINDA WHICtt AM for 1t the dma of terrnnillCM~ ~ ....... and ·~= =-= ~ OOll ~ ID .,._.-=,
AYAl!MU AT .,._ ~ In C::. ~ '-l.ofllnO 1 ol ~~ °'ie turthaf flurk, h Dlllrtr;t ,.. ::::.-fie
81GN AND CON· ._~~ii. ,.. ZMU.fl lor De ai.t 1111 ~ .. ~ .. !Wt 10 _.. ebow. ,.,,.., ._. =UCTIOflt 8HV· mowd .... time Of ~ ==r.~ '°! l:lrd dly Of ~..1....Dt, ~ ~ ,...._ MkMe1 A io.., A MMaATORY ,._ ...._ ... ...... to Planned .... ll .. ,_., of All lt.M. Thie ... ....,. ..
ltD CC>NnRIMC• Eti~ir:..~ ":..= re..'°.;*-.,~ AND llANOATOftY Md ~ toflg ...... .._ ,Mf
......, JOll WAI.IC llflW, It-.-~ 111111 ~ ...... ~ lal!ow:11 • 0'8rltn'• Auction 2001b"l'• ' till -......... ......,, ...... 1 .. 113 1ooeeM" t1s1 ~...,!i. 19!' M Ml· 1.... .... In I C·1 &OM ~ cemla.~ ...... ._. ~ EnvlrOt11ttent•I d•; ,.....,,., ' -o..t• flf"•M ...... llllOO: ~., Aootn 510, llvlnt, Mf iO, 17, W .. .._. ~ ift..:z ,_.. .....:: :i:;'"5f.:: ,._ wu•HaDS'f·THI --=Ill~
AU • 009TA MllA fl\.Mo .,.,.~Ji ~.!I ::: = ~111~ =:. .._ .. ..
Ylla.fl:Tilll•-.: f= P.Jr&~ ~:, ... II
iT A& M • .. = '"9ft: n ·-.;;'ii
-i.=-y -~ --
...
, .. ~ . __ ,,,.... ... ~
.. ! • . '(" I l• e .. \ I l . .... . i~· .:...... ..
a_,\Wl~~ looi. Ae.i E!li!lt l.o.n
Fe~Fft't
tJd Al!$m. ~ GM
tepo List VA & ~
'<'tkomt! NI arms
:rc1ded. (.al Tcx2iJ,'
HfS...-24111
"'=-'-'=·~
. . .
PRiii ESTATH
LoCI ' Oolml Vllwll Cll P*tct Tenon
A@ t••ll?OI
.. ....,..,,...., .. ~ .. "'
,·'·..,•· ' !·
• 'f ,..,A~~.JllllM'.:'F--t.#1
, . ~. -.. -.
. . '
I ......
~-=. 8700 Wtmtf AVe (BHch/Magnolla)
41711. 800ll, IOOOlf,
187511. 189911,
2021•1. ~ ' 3e82lf avail now,
ctMfble, flH '*"19,
OSL & pll tysWn ~~~F
714-142"'872
ma 1ULD1N01 Sale:
40aSOal 4, $10, 712;
50•7511', $13.179; l!Ol100.te.. S20.241. MH-
llortge. 40xl90, 32 I.Wiiia, $17.228. F,_ blodlur-. WWW .aentiMlbulldlng.OOlll
Santln•I Bull ding•.
800-327-0790, Ellenllon ?!· ICM.=tCM)
. .
.,. ..... Pa ••
3.10 ,.~ "-> ~'1:<'1
C.ti.t11 MtM. CA 9"l627 ------···M!li ------\1 .................... .. Monday ........... Sriday 5.-00pm Friday .......... Thunday S:OOpm Rema
fr~1IH11v 8;:l0.arn-.'; OOpm
\4. .. ~4""" Welk-In 8 ,I0.10-.;:-0Qiuu
~-trt.t..
Tueeday ........• Monday S:OOpm s.tmday .......... .Friday 3:00pm
Wednellday .... Tueiiday S:OOpm Sunday ............. friday 5:00pm
Thunday .• \Vedneiday S:OOpm
Oki« Style Fumlture P\ANC>St.~
·~·~ •S--• ...... ·Oflce~
.. CAIHPAIDM ....... -..........
WE&UYUTATU
• ~ friwdy--4ce
c-orJSIGNMHJTS l
I
COf'llOl/llf U.... Wam.cl
Atxille .... ~ pey ====~==
TatllMISucc.N.-,.._ lie -11111
LEADERS WANTED Ille lidnfl fft tNe CADIJ.AC Bdcndo •
G1ob11 communice110n1 co. ~ -.Y ..... TIC, Blac*. lllOOIVOOI
•xoandlnQ In CA ••1t. you to ctll a IOO (90049") $24 988 8"klng lhoae with ... nu111ber In wtllctl NABERS '
IMCl*lg or but1nat1 own-._. II I cNrwa par (714)14HIOO
erahlp a~n.nc. Call mlnvte. , aaa..~ ut. S<M8. '-------~ CADILLAC Bdorldo • (CAL'BCANI TIC Polo green lloyl,
l!OICA.L EOUIPlllENT , ._., (me) NAIEAI. szi.'88 co ..... honelt,...... (714)11M100
lndMdllll '°' lnlwwlce -·~ _.ic. ,..,. c.-Sadlll Dlw9t 'la Sltlf FT t lull blMllll.. Biige, *' llllflll c.... ~··•lfll aper ......... _,.,... ~) ··-• +. ,.._ _.. -d ... ca-.•llla. NAIEAI
tD 711 w 1711 ..... -a.. ... loOll (71C}MH100 Colll 11111 Clll. aa7 • .... ...... ... --
ctll ........,,. '°' -..., .... yau .... ., ..., ....
NlWPORT IEACtt COUNTRY CLU8 .... irnmeclele open-
ing for !iHk•nd Rtceptlonlal (aomt
wt1kdlly evanlnge
~call ut 1()4
for ..... "-cl
end ........... lllJ
conhdl bltol'I you
'''"·
BALBOA ISLAND
Own 1 bu1lnu1 In
Pll'ldlM. W. rtpl'9Mlll _.. °"'*' ol .. lilNd dol*'ll Ind home
IDCl90IY .... ""° .... to ..... bl.--,.
-...... Cll Doll *-• ...... ~
ADVIRTlll ITATEWIDE. 183~.~ WOid-~ "" Clllotl'1ll ,... _..
.,.., Ctl .. ~ ,.......... dlllltd
.or (1181 281·9018.
WWW Cl -•can COlll ·~A&,"ICM!l
ACftC)M
1Fal~ "4W...U..,_
9 ..,,. .. Md
1"4 8Prtng mo.
15 M.tlril •lClra~
1e "Pal .kwf' autl'lor 17 Audi TT Coupe.
10 ~.i.rlowl 20 Meke '-PPY
21 fWlecllon
23 Laoollte, ot
tennle
24 Propeller .,,.,,
27 Band!Mder Artie
30 a.tden toole
32 Bultl'taht c:Mer 33 Prehiatortc tJme
37 Rlc::h Clik•
38 Refreehlna drink 40 Moved aWlftly
42 sc.ae •warde 43 8hMered J*ce for cl~,,_.
44 Bn>'s alb
4S Avlldrtx Amelia .a Meta fastener
!50 Deaden• 51 Puff of wind
55 Actr ... Dunne
57 Phi a.ta -
58 Whe• product eo l<Jtchen ~enelt
54 Hamilton or Hunt
1---1
QUICt<SOOKI SIT\JP
Training end Support. ~.=IYlll.
.. ., .. ,
•
esJc*'l(a~) -r.~ e1~
OTemponwy
hllkn 8" Earty.Uo
DOWN
1 ~beam
2 Cider eource 3 Re.ct to a pun
4 OvenSo the TLC
5 Un-.r and Got9 ~ :=,,
I ~funot , 9 Soft drink
1 o R4Jf'llans
11 o.rt>y 9nlry
12 lnchna Jonee
13 !\::the West 0 2001, Urtled l'..allW ~
-Won" 3"4 8hinbo"8 f51 Jatl•
18 MA eug~ 35 Nealeeted 52 Kind ot berth 22 Actor Glb9on tub !53 Trunk tn
24 /ID.or Pitt 3e Once named 5"4 ·Scent of a
25 1'heamr MCtlon 38 Ann. Wcman• dance
28 Stun 40 S.alOOd ctlo!Oe !5e Tim• peltode
28 Do tallorlng 41 Rowtlom needs 57 Todcler's perch
29 Overgrown, Ilk• 43 Electrlcal 58 Hop ajtlt
lawn• mae8Yf9 59 P•rjure 30 Mode playfully 46 Actr9a 61 Genetic Info
31 Trick Sothem 62 ~
33 Wade through a 47 Remorseful 63 Poaealw
~pudd-e-•-.'!""'"'--.i--~49--Qood~ y-goody ~n
~~
Af Rme ddila
~
WWmlDoon
P..,,.WOlt
PC SERUICES -----
--I
... _ ... mmmm M• .. .. _ .. __ _ ---,__ ... --...,..,
2
TIJO RR014£RS
MOVltlG ..,, STQPGvE
WIST •KU 0 1042 O A,2
•JH3
SOUl'll • 011097 o l'tU o K97 •15
The biddint: . -NORTH EAB1' SOUTH WESI' INT ,_ J • ,_ .. ... ......
Oponina leed: Four o( •
A ftncae lhal ain be lakcn bod!
ways is I double pain. 8\lt somcOllXI you Qll enlist the lid o( IOIDC 1111"•
prisina friends -your opponeou!
The auc:0oo ii routn f~ !hole
who do DOC play tnmsfer bids.. 5ouitJ '1
9 ~ points Ind rapeaable
suir ue enough to give NOrthaO
opdon of which pme llO play, Ind
North's decision in favor of four
splldes Is clar cut.. Wilh a choice ol awlt ward leads,
\Year elected to Aart the four of
lpldes, taken in the clOled hand wllh
.., ...... .,.. _C)llOml "' ....... nm Md; wbat EMc dilClrded •club,
.... drew ..... CNmp. Since tbc CCldlr9Ct ... cold If Welt llcld the
.:ie ol ch1b., or II dlt'IMr eould find
lhe JilCk of ctilmondl. Soudl cuhcd
dvea roundl of lllDlrtl, e:ndina In
""""' llld led I Club towlild the iJna. Weta careftilly 11..ted die nlm lnCI
!he ~ bit lo S..'1 ece. Now
declMr • Cate lo playina oQ' I.be tan& earned Its jlllt rcwna. Since a hNrt would prac:nt a ruff·
lhd'f llld I dilmond woUJd be inlo lbe
llble'a Q 10 llCUCe, Eul'• only ufe
eJdt W1ll I low CJlab. But dlll only
delayed aw1m for a llitt. West was ll>le to win the club wldt die j8ck. bur now tlm ddeodcrwa-.w•.-On
die fon:ed diamond ~&darer
pl9yed low frwt ~ mt, no
IDl&ler how die defcodai wrt,aJed.
Ibey could not llllb men dllil ane
dilmond trict to &O widl the two
dubl llready bmkcd. Tbac ll'C IWO monb to thla cbl.
Pini. Mule" 1n1mp lelds. 11 Welt'•
salvo -here, more oflen INn not
prclClll declam' with I crudaJ ~
rather Ihm ICCC¥tlpl.i.lh $0mdhing
positive for the defente. As unappe· iizina 11 a club lad might have been.
lhlll would have Laid declarer to guesa diamonds to come to I 0 uiclu.
Secondly, eliminating a side suil
befcn llCkJing odier suill is • sound
principle of dccl.wer pley.
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