HomeMy WebLinkAbout2000-08-11 - Orange Coast Pilot•
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SERVING THE NEWPORT -MF.SA COMMUNmES SINCE 1907 ON 1HE WEB: WWW.DAILYPILOT.COM FRIDAY, AUGUST 11 , 2000
Rupert puts off his swan song • agam
• Harbor bird nearly died this week after he
swam through spilled diesel fuel; be is
recuperating at the Wetlands and Wtldlife
Care Center in Huntington Beach. ·
AlueooknM
DAA.Y PILOT
Rupert the black swan is
doing well after he nearly
died earlier this week from
another run-in with floating
diesel fuel.
He is recovering at the Wet-
lands and Wildlife Care Cen-
ter in Huntington Beach ,
where he has been treated
since Tuesd.ay. The harbor
bird's brush with death came
less than three months aftet he
was injured in a similar inci-
dent in Newport Harbor.
The swan, k:J)own to many
harbor-area residents for his
fearlessness while cruising.
around local waters, was
plucked from the harbor near
the Fun Zone late Tuesday
morning looking like he was
not long for ~ world.
·0ur observation was that
Rupert was definitely dying
when we found him,• said Sgt.
Gary Smith of the Orange
County Sherifrs Department
Harbor Patrol.
The bird was covered with ·
fuel, which Smith said did not
appear to have originated from
a major spill.
Once at the Wetlands and
Wildlife Care Center, he was
washed off and fed a liquid
charcoal solution to soak up
som e of the fuel he had
ingested.
Swimming through fuel is
dangerous for birds, said
center director Gary Gor-
man, because the petroleum
can bum their skin and
digestive systems, and
destroy the waterproofing on
their feathers.
"The ingestion of the
[petroleum) product can be
fatal,· Gorman noted. "Hope-
fully, we got him quick enough
to forestall that.·
The swan is listed in fair
condition and may recuperate
in about a week, Gorman said.
Only a few weeks ago, the
Huntington Beach center near-
ly closed because of funding
difficulties. A swell of donations
kept the facility open, which
has turned out to be fortunate
for Rupert the swan .•
This is the second time in
recent months that Newport's
celebrity bird has had the bad
fortune of swimming into
fouled waters.
At the end of May, a one-
gallon diesel spill injurep
Rupert and several other birds.
In April, more spills sent famil-
iar birds -including the swan
known as Sir Swany, but not
Rupert -to the Huntington
Beach care facility.
PHOTOS BY TAYA KASHUBA I OAlY PllOT
Ger ardo Chavez, 11, tosses a tennis ball du.rlD4f a street game of baseball on Shalimar Drive tn Costa Mesa.
Summertime
on Shalimar
Parents enjoy the revival of Shalimar Drive,
where children play and gang troubles have
vanished - at least until the sun goes down
AndrewGlanr
• D AILY PILOT
I n the blue dusk of a
CQOl Thursday S T 0 R I B S
evening, six girls with
damp, perfumed hair pulled back in ponytails sat on the
pavement between two townhouses on Sbali~ Drive, col·
oring with pastel markers.
1\velve cbildren, ages 4 to 14, played separate baseball
Nelghbo~ood kids bang oot on Shall.mar Drive In
Costa Mesa on a summer evening.
games in the middle of the street, running bases chalked
onto the asphalt.
Five boys and girls perched on a broken wooden fence.
SEE SUMMER PAGE 7
GIT ON 11fB MDIY-00-ROUND ... At the orcus· will be
tht ---of • chikhn's stcwy time at 10 a.m. today at
lclrdlfi looks • ~ .t South Coest l'tau. )))) 8ffr
St.; (.Gita Mela. Ftw. (714) 4J:l·1154.
DON LEACH I OM.Y I'll.OT
Gay Wassail-Kelly cb'ecks in on Rupert. at left. the black
swan who fell ill after swimming through diesel fuel Jn
Newport Harbor. The swan lives near her dock and Is a
popular attraction in the neighborhood.
Peirsol kicks
and scratches to
100-meter finals
•At U.S. Olympic trials, 17-year-old
Newport Harbor backstroker sneaks into
finals after another swimmer scratches.
,Tony Altobelli
D AILY PILOT
Getting his feet wet, so to speak, WclS Just one of the
goals met by Aaron Peirsol on Thursday rught at the
U.S. Olympic swimming trials in lndianapol.Ls.
The Newport Harbor High School Junior, swururung
for Irvine Novaquatics, qualified eighth for today's
finals in the 100-meter backstroke with a bme of 55.97
seconds.
Peirsol, 17, actually finished with the runth-fastest
time, which would have kept him out of the hndls. But
a scratch by qualifier Tommy Hannan allowed him a
trip to the finals.
·1 think if he cleans up tus start a httle bat, I Uunk he'll
SEE FINALS PAGE 7
It's tea time: Who's
the best female golfer
in Newport-Mesa?
• Four area country club champions
will face off today at annual Tea Cup
Classic at Big Canyon Country Club.
Rk:hwd~
DAILY PILOT
NEWPORT BEACH -A four-way battle for the title
or best woman golfer in Newport-Mesa will begin
today when the fourth annual Tea CUp Classic kicks off
at 2 p.m . at Big Canyon Country a ub.
The goHers represent the champions of the four
country clubs in Newport Beach and Costa Mesa.
Making up the founome this year are Debbie Albright
(Newport Beach), Colette Taormina (Big Canyon). two-
time defending champion Marianne Towersey (Santa
Ana) and Denise Woodard (Mesa Verde).
SEE GOlf MGE 7
CIAlla ------11 .
q !&GI M __J
Nll...S " -.
--5
I
Orange County
Mueam of Ai't '
spokesman
BrlAn I.angst.on
takes a dole
look at Chm
Burden's •A Tale
of Two Cities, ..
a miniaturized
version of two
dtystates at
war, OD uhlblt
at the museum:
BRIAN POBOOA I
DAl.YPl.OT
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For armchair travelers interest-
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In 'A Tale of Two Cities' at
Orange County Museum of
Art, UCI grad Chris Burden,
creates his view of a futuristic,
miniaturized world
Am.r• Agull•r
D AILY PILOT
B right red futuristic robots and
tiny army-green toy soldiers
stand ready for battle on a bed
of sand in Chris Burden's •A Tale of
1\vo Cities,• a new installation on
exhibit at the Orange County Muse-
um of Art in Newport Beach.
The installation, which runs
through Feb. 11, features a minia-
ture reconstruction of two cities
using more than 5,000 toys from
America, Europe and Japan.
It depicts the 25th century the
way Burden ~gines it will be -
a world retun1!d to a system of feu-
dal states.
The lines of golden bullets form
walls separating each city. Lego
boats, miniature silver mines and
shorks embedded in the sand dis-
tinguish the watery shores.
Old buildings and factories just a
few inches high, UFOs, rockets, a
space station, baseball field and
even a Pizza Hut are some of the
exhlbit's familiar features.
Lush ferns and other plants sym-
bolize the jungle surrounding the
cities.
FYI
•·WHA~ .. A Tale of Two Cities, ..
an installation by california artist
Chris Burden
• WHEN: 11 a .m. to 5 p.m. Tues-
days through Sundays until Feb. 11
• WHERE: Installation Gallery,
Orange County Museum of Art.
850 San Clemente Drive, Newport
Beach
• HOW MUCH: $5 for adults; $4
for seniors and students; free for
children under 16 and museum
members
•PHONE: (714) 7.59-1122
A mound of earth-tone rocks
divide the two cities.
And fighter planes hang from a.
sky-blue ceiling, darts penetrate
the walls, while tanks and Jeeps
the sizp of a person's thumb are
ca.refuD.y arranged in mini army
camps on the sandy base.
The installation, w hich covers
1,400 square feet, provoked a vari-
ety of emotions from onlookers.
Lisa Khatchadourian of Altadena
had a chance to see the artwork at
Saturday's opening. She said it
reminded her of Legoland Califor-
nia amusement park.
•I wouldn't consider il art. It
looks like my son's toy collection in
a larger scale," she said.
Others, including Jamie McAllister
of Rancho Santa Margarita. thought
the exhibit was very interesting.
•rve never seen anything quite
like it. The intricacies are incredi-
ble," she said. •1t has a Japanese-
comic feel to it. The robots have a
cartoon character feel. It doesn't
feel human to me at all.•
John Fisher of Rancho Santa ·
Margarita viewed the work as a
"very intense social commentary.•
-· "It's exciting because it's multidi-
mensional,• .Fisher said, adding
that the artwork demonstrates war
is "pointless, evil and a waste of
time and energy.•
Burden,no~foraddressing
political, social, environmental and
technological change -and
known for his fascination with col-
lecting war toys -may have been
trying to convey a message along
those tones through the exhibit,
which was first shown in-1981.
The 54-year-old California artist,
who graduated from UC I.nine and
interned at the Orange County
M useum of Art, doesn't like to talk
to the media. But bis exhibit is get-
ting people talking.
•There's no question that Cb.ri.s
Burden is one of the foremost prac-
titioners of this foan of art,• OCMA
marketing di:recJ.OJ Brian Langston
said . •This is a fa§dn.ating work
and some thing that everyone can
e njoy and take different things
away from -and that's one of the
characteristics of great art."
' man's appointment in 1986 to the
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For grittier adventure, check
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mile chal-
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Just as dicey was Beck Weath-
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mountain provide insight into
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This recent a ddition to the
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• OECK rT OUT Is written by the staff of
the Newport Beach Publk Library. This
week's column Is bv Melissa Adams, In
collaboration with d audla Peterman.
SCR's new season offers world premieres by world~clasS pla~gJlts
lly '°"' Titus
S outh Coast Repertory may ·
be getting a bit long in the
tooth (37 years and count-
ing, all but the fiist few in Costa
Mesa or Newport Beach), but the
company'femaim in the forefront
when it comet to the introduction
of new pla~ .•
For SCR'i 2000-01 season, open-
ing early in ~amber, there are ..... ~~
PREVIEW ~~°'
WenCout
premterei, bftlariced by ttire!t'pm.
ductiom enJoytDci_tbelr MCaild·tblie
around oa,tbi·sca ~
•'IbiS II ea UdtlQa. MUOll Of
ambitioUi, new w00lrom foUt
writen with diatlnct, contemporary
voices,• Mid Devld EnimM, Who
VOL Mt NO. 111
1'MOMASH.JOtl•I*.
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its produdng artiltic db:ectGr ...
since. 'Ibis •should be one ol tbe
mosti>(>tent scbedules ol new
work in the country.•
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fimi Oct 20 fo N0v. 19, IO W. C9l
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Doily Pilot ' ' ' ..
Friday, Augulf 11, 2000 3
Take it from me: It's not easy getting rid of fire ants
T hey' re everywhere.
Millions of them. But
. rarely seen. They
have fangs and feelers and
hairy legs. It's horrible.
Telemarketers? Politi-
cians? You're being silly. I'll
give you a hint. What do
you get when you mix a lit-
tle boy, a summer afternoon
and a magnifying glass?
Fire ants!
Anyway, the little beasts
are back. They never left, '
really. They're just multi-
plying. The real action in
the fire ant biz is way down
south, from San Juan
Capistrano inland. But
there have been some
sightings in Newport
Beach, mostly 'near the
Back Bay.
Ever seen a fire ant?
Neither have I. Isn't that
odd? The critters that make
the biggest news -killer
bees and fire ants -are
the hardest to find.
Even warm and fuzzy
things, like the renowned
California gnatcatcher are
etusive. Most of us would-
n't know a gnatcatcher 'if it
flew in the window, landed.
on our nose, leaned for-'
ward and said, "Got
gnats?"
But apparently once you
become a stop on the fire
ant tour, you'll know it. Fire
ants have a distinctive red
color and a nasty sting. In
rare cases, with highly
allergic people, multiple
stings can be deadly. Also.
fire ant mounds are much
bigger and taller then your
Peter Buffo
COMMENTS & CURIOSmEs
basic ant mound.
As reported this week in
the Los Angeles Times, the
Orange County Fire Ant
Authority -yes, there is
one -bas drafted a new
battle plan against the little
bugs. Isn't that weird? The
. only thing that separates
the Orange County Fire
Ant Authority and the
Orange County Fire
Authority is one "ant."
When the problem first
a.rose in 1999, the OCFAA
-not to be confused with
the OCFA -advised fire
ant combatants to spray th'e
mounds with store-bought
pesticides or pour ·boiling
water on them, wtiich
sounds a little medieval to
me. If Torquemada had fire
ants, I suspect that's how
he'd do it, but it's a little
primitive tor Newport
Beach in the year 2000 in
my opinion.
Anyway. after a year or
spraying them with smelly
stuff and boiling the ir little
tushes, the results arc in. It
.
• Mardi GrU Theme
• Decorated Boats
•Costumes . .
• Sc:awnF Hunt • PrDea
•Dinner • P.aatenainment
can now be said, with con -
fidence, that there are a
whole lot more fire ants
now than there were last
year.
According to OCFPA
spokesman Mike Hears\,
"One colony can fragment
into 12, and those colonies
will rebuild very quickly.
Part of rebuilding yourself
is breeding."
Now you see, there's a
real difference between
people and ants. Maybe
having boiling water
poured on you is an a phro-
disiac for ants. But if you're
a person, I think it takes all
the romance out of it. At
any rate, on to Plan 8.
All right. people, settle
down and listen up. These
are your orders and they
come straight from the top.
Effective immediately,
there is to be no more
spraying, stomping or boll-
ing. If you've got ants and
they are fiery, OCFAA will
treat your outdoor areas· a l
no charge and destroy the
beasts with commercial
chemicals.
!f your perimeier has
been 'compromised and the
enemy 1s inside the house,
caU d commercial extermi-
nator. OCFAA doesn't do
windows a nd it doesn't do
interiors. That is all for
now.
OK. fine. But how do
you really know if what
you hdve are fire ants or
just ants? You go to the
offi cial OCFAA Web site,
that's how: I have learned
so much about
ants. I'm telling
you, everything
you have ever
wanted to know
about fire ants,
plus a little bit ...
more, is there for
the taking. My
favorite part, by
far, is the "Fire
Ant Pest Test."
Ready? Here
it is:
-1n order to
know if you
have fire ants,
Orange County
residents can
perform a simple
test. On a warm
day, place a
potato chip (an
ideal bait for fire
ants) at 25 feet
intervals
throughout your
· pr6perty, wait
three to four
If there are
any ants
chomping on
the Doritos, you
zap·them with
the Cascade.
When they
stagger
backward,
grab their little
throats and
keel over, you
carefully pick
up six to 10
ants on a 0 · Tip,
pop the whole
deal in a ~iploc
bag and put it
hours, then look in the freezer.
for any reddish
brown ants feed· Wait 15 min-
ing on the chips.
If you find simi-
lar ants feeding
on the potato
chips, the Fire
Ant Authority
wants you to
send in a sam-
utes, then put
the bag on the
kitchen
counter.
preserves them
for testing.
Place the cot-
ton swab Wlth
the ants (six to
10 ants are
desirable) 10 a
Ziploc bag.
Place the bag
in freezer for 15
minutes to
ensure au ants
a.re dead. Fill
out the Fue Ant
Sample Sub-
mission Form,
place the form
and ant sample
in an e nvelope.
and m all to:
Orange County
Fire Ant
~uthonty, P.O.
Box 59, Santa
Ana, CA 92702 .
You wiJI be
notified of the
ant 1dentJfica-
llon results by
an automated
phone mes-
sage."
Could it be
any simpler? ·1
think not. "He!
... lo. This 1s ..
the . 0-C-F-A·
A a nt 1-den-lJ-
fi-ca-llon u ...
nit. Your test re
... suits are ... ple. Ants found on the
J?Otato chips are easily
removed by dabbing them
with the tip of a cotton
swab saturated with liquid
fabric or dishwashing
detergent. The detergent
q\lick.ly kills the ants and
pos-i-tive. Tha n ... k you.
First, I'm thrilled to learn
that dishwashmg hqwd
kills ants on contact and
preserves them for eternity.
Could someone explain
exactly why that is before I
grab the next clean glass
from the dishwasher?
But let's review. You wait
for a hot day. Then you
sneak out m the yard with a
large bag of Doritos under
one a.rm, some cascade
Liquid under the other, and
a few Q-Tips in your mouth.
You place the chips around
the ya.rd at intervals of 25
feet, go pass out in the
recliner for three to four
hours, then look for any
reddish brown ants feeding
on the chips. U there a.re
any a nts chomping on the
Doritos, you zap them with
the Cascade. When they
stagger backward, gr~b
thelf little throats and keel
over, you carefully pick up
sue to 10 ants on a Q-Tip,
pop the whole deal m a
Ziploc bag and put it in the
freezer. Wail 15 minutes,
then put the bag on the
lotchen counter. Make sure
nobody's moving. Then
head for the post office.
Hmm.
Isn't there a simple r wayv
to do tht57 Couldn't you just
call the OCFAA -it's (800)
491-1899 by the way -and
have them drop by to check
out your ants? I guess not.
Anyway. keep a s harp
eye. They are on the macch.
they are legion, and noth-
ing will stop them. Except a
llttle Cascade Llqwd.
1 gotta go.
• PETER llUffA is a fC>m'lef Costa
Mesa mayor. His ~olumn 1s pub-
hshed Frid<lys. He may be reached
by e-mail at PtrB40aol.com .
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11, 2000
Coastal Commission.
OKs Gcystal Cove project
I
• Despite protests by
environmentalists,
Irvine Co.'s plans for
drainage system above
pristine coastline are
approved. ·
AlexCoolnwn
DAILY PILOT
HUNTINGTON BEACH
-The California Coastal
Commission on Thursday
approved plans for a contro-
versial and extensively modi-
fied drainage system for a
development above Crystal
Cove State Park.
The drainage system for a
635-home Irvine Co. project
was approved after a full day .
of charged debate in which
company representatives
squared off against a host of
environmentalists and com-
munity members.
Andi Culbert"son, an attor-
ney representing the Irvine
Co., said the cp.anges had
made the project one that
would be respectful of the
delicate Crystal Cove envi-
ronment.
"We believe that many of
the concerns (rai~d by
activists] are based on·theory
and conjectwe, • rather than
fact, she said. • ,
The Irvine Co. had been
struggling since January to
get · the commission's
approval an the project,
which spells out the compa-
ny's plans for handling urban
runoff, wetlands mitigation,
beach sand replenishment
and other environmental
details.
The process has involved
Health fair set
for Saturday
The community is invit-
ed to attend a health fair
Saturday at NOXCUZI FIT-
NESS in Newport Beach.
The event, sponsored by
local fitness businesses and
restaurants, will feature
food, entertainment and
WllftUl'l'LAIA ....... , ... ,,., ........ c.-.111.-
extensive revisions, inclUding
tbe removal of a controversial
water detention basin that
would have been located in
Muddy Canyon. Under the
new proposal, the basin will
be eliminated.
But in the days before
Wednesd~y's meeting, the
Irvine Co. and commission
staff also hammered out addi-
tional details on issues such
as storm fiow and erosion
rates. These chAnges were
detailed in SO-plus pages of
staff reports teleased Tuesday
as l)D addendum to the nearly
100 pages of preliminary
reports.
Over the course of
W~esday's meeting, as
commissioners expressed
concerns about issues such as
water treatment and sand
repleniShment, the convolut-
ed document was further
modified.
And though area residents
testified emotionally to their
concern for Crystal Cove,
Culbertson noted that many
of the broaqer environmental
issues raised by project oppo-
nents were not germane to
the limited question before
the commission.
Activists -from groups
such as the Alliance to Rescue
Crystal Cove, the Sierra tlub,
Orange County CoastKeeper
and the Earth Resources Foun-
dation -countered that the
recent history of environmen-
tal degradation in the· area
made this decision of particu-
lar importance.
Mlt's the last part of the 42
miles of Orange County
coastline that we haven't yet
screwed up,• said Garry
Brown, director of Orange
County CoastKeeper.
giveaways -such as chair
massages, spinal screen-
ings and free supplements.
All proceeds will go to the
United Way.
The fitness center is at
1617 Westcliff Drive. The
health fair will be held from
11 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Information: (949) 642-
5866.
Open Mic Nlte
August 17111·& 2+ii
-~ ...... Televlalon Audltlom
Friday A111M 25*
5-lOPM
'. ' '
Doily Pilot
, TAYA KASHUBA I 8AILY PILOT
Cesar CamPQf, 8, watches a garden hose spray water around over bis bead while Jimmy Flores, 8, left. and David
Campos, 6, cool off In a sm'1J pool In front of their house In Costa Mesa.
West Newport niay have another contender
• Newcomer Gary Proctor, an attorney, has
pulled nomination papers for the seat to be
vacated by Jan Dehay; Ste'Ven Rosansky has
also pulled papers.
Noa'I Sc.hwartz
DAILY PILOT
NEWPORT BEACH -In
a surprise move, another can-
didate has pulled nomination
papers for the West Newport
seat on the Newport Beach
City Council.
Local attorney Gary Proc-
tor took an application to run
for Councilwoman Jan
Debay's seat only one day
before the filing deadline.
Proctor did not return calls
for comment Thursday.
So far, there is only one
o=thr c didate in the run-ning f istrict 2 -Steven
R , a real es~te and
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• Mapmi
Showroom Hours
Mon-Fri 9am-4:30pm
711 W. 17th St. Suite A-5
Costa Mesa
949-642-2010
Toll Free (888) 447-90S6
•Representing the full
line of Pride Mobility
Products
• Service & Repair
• Insurance Reimbursement
Specialist
Pride Scootcn from
$1-'9S
mortgage b~oker.
There are three council
seats up for grabs this year.
They are currently held J>y
John Noyes, Tom Thomson
and Dehay, who is termed out
and will not be running for
reelection.
Months before residents
could take applications to run
for City Council, Dehay had
been scouting and talking to
potential candidates with lit-
tle luck. The situation
prompted her to make an
announcement at a recent
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(714) 962-8821
(714) 540-1026
(714) 447-4461
AIMY.
• ALL YOI CAN at: www.goermy.com
council meeting, inviting
political hopefuls to throw
their names in the hat.
Proctor and Rosansky are
newcomers to city politics -
a difficult situation for both,
with the political season
already in full swing and the
community split between
dueling traffic initiatives~set
to appear on the November
ballot.
So far, Rosansky has not
taken a stand on either of the
measur~. saying be needs
more time to study the issue.
The Greenlight initiative
proposes to let voters have
the final say on certain major
developments. It bas suc-
ceeded Jn tum!ng recent
council meetings into forums
pitting council members and
developers against communi-
ty activists and environmen-
talists.
A countermeasure, tbe
Thaffic Phasing initiative, pro-
poses to permanently add the
city's traffic relief law, which
requires developers to pay for
certaln road improvements,
to the city charter. If approved
by voters, the measure would
also nullify the Greenlight
initiative.
$850
TRUST
(9...19) 760 8//"i
No matter what you're
doing, your hometown
newspaper
F I TS
w... Inily Pilot
-,,
Daily Pilot
• Send MOUND TOWN Items to
the D•lly Pilot, 330 W. by St., Cos·
i. Mes., CA 92627; fu to (949) ~170 or ull (94'9) 574-4268.
Please lndude the time, date and
location of the event. ai well as-a
contact phone number. A com-
plete listing Is avallable •t
http:Jlwww.dallypllot.com.
IODAY
Children's story time with
Lauren will be held at 10 a.m.
at Borders Books, Music and
Cafe at the South Coast
Plaza, 3333 ·sear St.,"' Costa
Mesa. The theme #At the Cir-
cu.S• will be featured. The
event is free. (714) 432-7854.
lnventon Forum wtU present
a seminar titled •mventors,
Learn How to Make Effective
Presentations• from 7 to 10
p.m. at OCC's Science Lec-
ture Hall, 2701 Fairview
Road, Costa Mesa. Admission
is $15. (714) 540-2491.
SATURDAY
Looking for world Fear no
more. Target Stores is in
search of fast, fun and friend-
ly team members for its new
store in Costa Mesa. Target
will present a job fair from 9
a.m to 5 p.m. and Sunday to
fill approximately 200 full·
and part-time positions,
including cashiers, floor sales,
store leadership, guest ser-
vice and more. The job fafr
will be held at the Costa
Mesa Neighborhood Com-
munity Center, 1845 Park
Ave. (714) 424-5030.
The Friends of the Newport
Beach Ubrary will hold a used
book sale from 9 a.m. to 4:30
p.m. in the Friends Meeting
Room at the Central Ubrary,
1000 Avocado Ave., Newport
Beach. (949) 759-9667.
The Home Depot in Costa
M.esa will offer free home and
garden clinics from 9 a.m. to 4
•. p.m. Saturdays and Sundays
through August: The clinic
topics are: Indoor and Out-
door Pest Control, How to
Install Ceramic 1Ue, install
Vinyl Flooring. Fencing
Decks and Pool and Spa
Care. The store is at 2300 S.
Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa.
(949) 646-4220.
Vlrg1n1a Carlson will give a
free lecture on summ~ care
for roses at 10:30 a.m. at the
AROUNDToWN
View SO Lamborgb.lnll at '{;45 a.m. Thursday as they prepare to charge up the
Calllornia c9ast to Carmel during the third annual .. Running of the Bulls. The cars
retail at $285,000. The event will be at The Four Seasons Hotel, 690 Newport .
Center Drive, Newport Beach.
Sherman Library & Gardens,
2647 E. Coast Highway, Coro-
na del Mar. (949) 673-2261.
U you like the. desert and
mountains, don't miss a talk
by author Llnda Pyle, who
will discuss •Peaks. Palms &
llepresentattves of The Picnics: Day Journeys in the
Princeton Review publishers • Mountains & Deserts of Palm
will present a free seminar on Springs and the Coachella
standardized testing for col-Valley of Southern Califor-
lege admission with a focus nia, • at 3 p.m. at Borders
on the SAT test at 11 a.m. at Books and Music, 1890 New-
Borders Books, Music and port Blvd .. Costa Mesa. A
Cafe at the South Coast book-signing will follow.
Plaza. 3333 Bear St., Costa (949) 631-8661.
Mesa. (714) 432-7854.
Noxcuzl Fitness will present
an open house from 11 a.m. to
3 p.m. to benefit the Orange
County United Way. The
health fair with local health
and fitness businesses and
restaurants will feature food,
entertainment, giveaways,
chair massages, spinal
screenings, free supplements
and more. A silent auction
with items donated from local
companies will be held. All
proceeds will go to the United
Way. Noxcuzl is at 1617 W.
Cliff Drive, Newport Beach.
(949) 642-5866.
An afternoon of family fun ts
planned for RASL Dazzle, a
free event sponsored by
Newport Beach Community
Services, from noon to 4 p.m.
at Mariners Park and the Vin-
cent Jorgensen Community
Center, 2005 Dover Drive,
Newpc>rt Beach. The event
will showcase programs and
services of the city of New-
port Beach Recreation, Arts &
Cultural, Senior and Library
Services departments. Repre-
sentatives will be on hand to
explain available services
and to register people for fall
programs and events. Crafts
will be available for sale and
live entertainment will be
provided. Free face painting
and a balloon artist will add
to the fun. Food and bever-
ages will be available for sale.
(949) 644-3151.
Author Steve Nakamoto will
discuss relationships and tus
latest' book, "Men Are Like
Fish,• at 2 p.m. at Borders
Books, Music and Cafe, 3333
Bear St., Costa Mesa. (714)
432-7854.
A sunset/full moon beach
walk .will be held at Crystal
Cove State Park, at Pelican
Point on Coast Highway
between Corona del Mar and
Laguna Beach. Reservations
are required. No dogs
allowed. Parking is $6. (9-C9)
497-76'7.
A reunion for Corona del
Mar High School classes
1912-75 will be held at 7 p.m.
at the Newport Bea.ch Golf
Coune. (949) 6«-7422
SUNDAY
A back country hike will
take place at 9 a.m. at Crystal
Cove State Park, at Pelican
Point on Coast Highway
between Corona del Mar and
Laguna Beach. No doys
allowed. Parking is S6.r(949)
497-7647.
Rob Wagner, author of .. Red
Ink, White Lles -The Rise
and Fall of Los Angeles'
Newspapers 1920-1962," will
discuss and sign his book at 2
p.m. at Borders Books, Music
and Cafe at South Coast
Plaza, 3333 Bear St., Costa
Mesa. Wagner began his
journalism career in 1974 and
has worked as a reporter, city
editor, night editor and man-
aging editor for. dailies in Los
Angeles. Riverside, San
Bernardino and San Diego
counties. (714) 432-7854.
The LAB AnU-Mall wj,11 pre-
sent its fourtl} annual Elvis
Festival from noon to 3 p.m.
at 2930 Bristol St., Costa
Mesa. The event will feature
a live ElVlS impersonator and
performance. In adchtion, T JR
and the WildCards will be
playing as the special guest
band. (714) 960-6660.
MONDAY
First-through sixth-graders
who participated in the New-
port Beach Public Library's
Friday, August 11, 2000 5
Summer Reading Program
are invited to •A Fabulous
Finish• at 10:30 a.m. at the
central library, 1000 Avocado
Ave., Newport Beach. The
program will be repeated at 3
p.m. Aug. 16 at the Mariners
branch library, 100 E. Balboa
Blvd. (949) 717-3801.
Open Mic Poetry Night wW
be held at 7 p.m. at Borders,
Books, Music and Cafe at
South Coast Plaza, 3333 Bear
Street, Costa Mesa. The
event gives local poetry
lovers an opportunity to read
their favori~ or the11 own
poetry. Readings are luruted
to 10 minutes. (714) 432-7854.
TUESDAY
The Newport Harbor Area
Chamber of Commerce Busi-
ness Referral Breakfast will
begin at 7:30 a .m. at the
Pacific Oub, 4100 MacArthur
Blvd., Newport Beach Mem-
bers are $15 with a reserva~
tion: walk-ms are $5. {949)
729-4400.
Memory screen1ngs will be
offered at seven Rite Aid
locations throughout Orange
County from 1 to 4 p.m. The
Alzheimer's Assn. of Orange
County will C'oordinate the
free memory screerungs for
individuals concerned about
their memory or that of a
loved one. Newport-Mesa
residents can VlSit Rite A.Id dt
3029 Harbor Blvd.. Costa
Mesa, from 1 to 4 p.m. (714)
434-7485 or (800) 660-1993
A free seminar UUed "The
Real Fat Deal" will be held
from 6:30 to 7:30 pm at the
Patio Cafe at Mother's Market •
and Kitchen, 225 E. 17th St ..
Costa Mesa. Reservations are
requested. (800) 595-6667.
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.. . -. ~ ' . .
11 , 2000
Above: Costa Mesa residents Valerie Schepens and
Katbryn Amburgey vacation in Boston.
.
Right El~anor Todd of Newport Beach and Barbara
Ward of Costa Mesa took the Daily Pilot to St Remy de
Provence, France, where they-Visited the SL Paul de
Mausole asylum for the mentally W, where painter
ytncent van Gogh volun~y committed himself in 1889.
Dine In A Romantic Setting
A Dining Experience to Remember!
1976 Newport Blvd. • Costa Mesa (949) 645-8384
•Dinner
• Sunday Brunch
ONVAcAnoN ,
.SEAFOOD 6. S U S HI
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580 Anton Blvd., Costa Mesa
714-424-9010
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For Reservations: (9'#9) 642-7880
3131 West Coast Highway, N wport Beach, CA
www. villanovaresta ant.com -"9---~ .......
Doily Pilot
SUMMER
CONTINUED FROM 1
Their teeth and tongues
were dyed orange, pink
and blue by the Popsicles
they bought from the ice
cream man who passes
there at roughly 5 o'clock
each evening.
A teenage couple kissed."
Parents -leaning from
the windows of their homes,
sitting on the curb or on
folding beach chairs in their
frontyards -watched their
children and chatted with
one another.
But Shalimar Drive at
night hasn't always been
this way. Windows
remained closed and the
streets were empty of chil-
dren. Residents stayed
inside, chilled by the men-
ace of dri~e-by shootings,
gangs and open-air drug
sales.
But three years ago, the
city closed the street to dri-
ve-through traffic. And
police, with frequent visits,
made their presence known
there.· ·
Since then, the energy of
the shaded street -lined
with townhouses occupied
primarily by first-generation
Mexican immigrants -has
bubbled throughout the
neighborhood, unimpeded
GOLF
CONTINUED FROM 1
The Tea Cup Classic,
which is open to the pubhc,
has drawn galleries of up to
500 people. Most spectators
are from the foµr participat-
ing country clubs, but also
in the crowd are members
of the Victorian Tea. Society, ,
a group of ladies dressed in
1890s costumes, complete
with parasols.
The one-day event Cdll
induce a sense of pressure,
especially since most of the
golfers have never played
· before a gallery.
•You get nervous being
out there playing in front of
all those people,• Albngbt
said.
On the 141-yard hole No.
7, the women will have
added pressure. Any golfer
who makes a hole-in-one
will win a new Mercedes-
Benz ML320 sports u~ty
vehicle.
The Tea Cup Classic •is
fun and I always look for-
ward to it, especially with
the possibility of a hole-in-
one and getting that car,"
said Woodard, the runner-
up last year on her home
course at Mesa Verde. "You
can back the whole golf
course and possibly sWl get
a car. There's always hope."
TAYA KASHUBA I OAllY PILOT
Juan Vasquez, 9, left, and Antonio Cervantes, 10, pause to watch a game of baseball on Shalimar Drive in Costa Mesa.
by the gdtei. enclosing
homes in other Orange
County communities.
Dunng summer, the sun,
still hlgh in the sky through
the early everung, beams
even more activity onto the
block.
MARC MARTIN I o.AJ.Y Pll.OT
During the 1988 Tea Cup Classic, perlsol~g mem-
bers of the Victorian Tea Society followed the action at
the Santa Ana Country Club.
The event is sponsored
by the Daily Pilot and
Fletcher Jones Motorcars.
Since starting the Tea
Cup Classic, the Fletcher
Jones Motorcars/Daily Pilot
Club Championship Series
bas also launched the Jones
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Fasht0n Island
C up, a pro-am for men.
The inaugural event was
played at Newport Beach
last month and won by
Mesa Verde's head profes-
sional, Tom Sargent, and
men's club champion Pete
Daley.
'il
l\t!W n Beach • l.Jc• 0550290 SAFECO
Attonlal.me,. ConficMntial Profeuional Help
• Fonner Betty Ford Center Clinician
• Dtrector of Drug & Alcohol Treatment
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ult's really.wonderful for
the children," said Juana
Arrosco, 35, who has seven
of her own. "They have fun
FINALS
·CONTINUED FROM 1
swim a better race," said
Novaquatics Coach Odve
SaJo. "He wasn't shaved for
this race, and l think he's
more concerned with the
200 backstroke.•
Lenny Krayzelberg, beat-
en by Peirsol in the Janet
Evans Invitational three
weeks ago in the 200-meter
event, was first overall Wlth
pldying dll ddy. And I can
calmly watch them here.·
She stood, arms crossed
across her light pmk blouse,
a tune of 53.67, seven-hun-
dredths of a second off tus
own world-record mark
Peirsol swam in the first
of two semifinal heats. His
55.97 was slightly better
than tus prelurunary time of
56. 15 and about three-
tenlhs of( his personal best.
"This race is a great way
for Adron to get a feel for
what's going on," Salo said.
"Do I think he's at all ner-
vous? I doubt it. He's young
and he knows he's going to
•
Friday, August 11, 2000 7
somehow managing to
keep a vigilant eye on her
small clan.
Piedad Delgado, 27,
stood in !ront of her borne
with four of her neighbors.
Her son Eriberto, 7, whose
mouth bas yet to grow into
his two new front teeth,
pulled at her pant leg.
"It's really much better
living here with all the chil-
dren out," said Delgado,
who moved to Shalimar
three months ago from a
less child-friendly portion of
18th Street. "I don't really
know other neighborhoods,
but I love 1t here."'
Howeve r, the shadow of
the old Shalimar still dark-
ens the block. Shdrds of
glass and tiny plastlc bags
used to hold drugs sparkle
like d1amonds on front
lawns. Resideo~s say gang
members still show up after
dark, learung on cars, glM-
mg.
"It cdll make you very
tired of living here,· said
11 -year-old Mana Cer-
vantes, slurpmg on d rain-
bow-colored Popsicle.
"I make sure my children
are mside be fore 8 o'clock,"
!>aid Arrosco. •Any later
than thdt, no way.•
And as the sun dippe d
below the beige buildmgs,
turning the sky an eggplant
purple, mothers ushered
their childre n mside.
have a ton of opporturulles
ahead of him."
The 100-meter back-
stroke hnals are tonight.
The top two swimmers m
that race will move on to the
Olympics in Sydney, Aus-
tralia.
On Sunaay, Peirsol w1U
compete in the prehrrunar-
ies and semifinals of his
strongest event, the 200-
meter backstroke. The
finals a re scheduled for
Monday.
. .
8 Friday, A&pt 11 t 2000
• •
Byl.W.Cook
E mporlo Armani, South Coast Plaza is the fuh-
io.nable Friday destination of choice u The
Look exomtnes wbat'l in vogue on the Orange Cout. .
General Manager Shaheen Mufti shared the quality
apparel that ls dist1nctly Am:umi with Lido Isle wife
and mother of two young children, Anne Wortmann.
The former Rose Queen actually ran into another
member of the Rose Royal Family while doing the
shoot: Robin Sanders, also of.Newport Beach.
Celeb watchers should also take note that besides
the double d~ of Rose Queens a.t Armani. there was
another genUem.an doing a litUe shopping with his wife
and children.
Andrea Boccelli, the Italian singer who bas stolen
millions of hearts around the world, needed a few
things.
•He's very camera shy,• Mufti said.
Indeed. Well, fortunately Ann~ Wortmann is not
• a.w. COOK's fashion column appearV~ ....
Above, a very simple silk
crepe asymmetric halter
dress sells for $398.
Anne Wortmann has fun with this two-piece
outfit that ls priced reasonably, yet gives the
Impression of expensive Armant black label
eouture. The Merino wool tank ($168) Is
wom with a wool fringe bottomed skirt
{$248 -not plcbired). t
. . ' .
Prom tbe f.all and winter
2000 collection of Emporlo
Armanl, Anne Wortmann
wean a wool attn g~e
vest {$214) with coordlnattng
panel front skirt {$214). The
tailored ensemble Is fash-
ioned In a so~gray color.
This IUit, Inspired .by manly
tailoring concepts, Is anything
),lut manly. The wool crepe
one-button Jacket in charcoal
gray {$538), and the wool
crepe atde-ztp pant {$198) ts
wom with a blouse featuring
a deep-plunging neckline ln a
stretch fabric with an open
collar ($198).
. -..... -
Dally PilOt
..
A black velvet dngle-
strapped shoulder tank
($298) palled with velvet
side-zip pants {$278) ls
perfect for.• cocktail
gatJierlng, dinner party or
even a formal affair
• I
Leather ts very ln for the fall
look. 1b1s leather dress, cut
below the knee with a sill
side, ts a tallored tank dress
to wear day or evening. It
sells for $748.
PHOTOGRAPHS FOR THE DAILY PILOT
~~~~ev ~~~~
KENT TREPTOW
CITY OF
NEWPORT BEACH
COMMUNITY
SERVICES
\
REc1t41ioN* A11s* SENioas* Libuay*dazzle!
Mariners Park ~ Mariners Branch Library
6 Vi11tellf'f JoaqUN11 Co1ueu11hy Calf'fU (VJCC) Oovta Daiva 6 lm111 Awuu1, Ntwpon Bocll
AilGuS1 12, 2000 * Suu1dAy f10M ' No0N-4:00p.M.
I •
Throughout the Afternoon:
·~-,.._ .......... ~
lM;lli ... Ail PAimls Attedariel urim. * ln,.. &ca MA CMWM ... J.liy Alf, .................. ~"· ..,.... ... Mlk~-... ....................... .
..................... ~
Oi\19 .................. MUc ......,,., ... , ........... ..... •C•• J:p.-.lal.
Music, Dance & Storytelling by:
. t Semi• CAW.-Clil ..... 1 Clleil
12: n,. IWl dauJe SrA¥
* hiua~.m ..... Kllil
12:10plll1:~ VJCC * OASIS lWda ...
l:GOp. RAil d.m. ~ ..
·~tlDMu ' ..
1:4.. RAil dmle .....
•o..~.ans.1y....._
2:,.,. RAil .........
...... c..~
IJM;ll VJCC ..,.. ...
,..,. Mil .. ,...
QuOte Of ••• ••h wm , ........ •W lt wm '9,....,.
ii Cllllf•••n (In dub llislery) -·
..
Mike RMhl, on Chris Veitch's 62 carded
at Santa Ana Country Club Wedn~ay.
_ .... _
Spam Edi1or Roger Canson • 9~9~7 44223 • Friday, August ~ 1, 2000 9
Tea · tjme: 2 p.m., at ··Big Canyon
• Towersey going for a three-peat in Tea Cup Classic IV.
NEWPORT
BEACH -When
you take four oth-
erwise ordinary
wome n's club
golf champions
and put them in
one group for a
community show-
They are four club champions,
but four distinctly different back-
grounds· and paths to their respec-
tive titles. They have opened up,
with their lives and golf. careers
chronicled in these pages, for the
sake of summertime community
sports journalism in a special pocket
of Orange County. .
case, you have to CLASSIC
tip your hat to
~ these ladies for. sfepping out ~
stage.
And, today, regardless of their
place on the leaderboard, members
from Big Canyon, Mesa Verde,
Newport ~each and Santa Ana
country clubs will throng to see
them in an easygoing stroke-play
.format that emphasizes a good time
and crowns a Daily Pil6t golf queen
for a day.
Marianne Toweney Debbie ~bright Denise Woodard Colette Taormina
In a summertime celebration of
women's golf, the foursome will get
out today in the fourth annual, local-
ly famous Tea Cup Classic at Big
Canyon Country Club (2 p,m. tee
time).
The eh.~ment of rotating golf
courses each year, in theory, was
supposed to be the great equalizer
in the Tea Cup Classic, launched
through the Fletcher Jones Motor-
cars/Daily Pilot Club Championship has captured 15 of the last 18 club
Series in 1997. (The series this sum-titles, owns the women's course
mer started the Jones Cup, a men's record of 69 at Big Canyon and
best-ball pro-am.) appears ready for a three-peat per-
putter is hot, 1t could be a moot back
nine and an afternoon for the rest in
the field to play for runner-up hon-
ors. .
1\vo-time defending Tea Cup formance. FoUowing her outing Thursday,
champion Marianne Towersey of Towersey has proved in previous
Santa Ana Country Club, where she Tea Cup Classics that if her long SEE TEA CUP PAGE ~O
•Although he's settled down at C!>sta ~sa High, the well-
traveled football coach won't concede he's made his last stop.
a.ny Faulkner compete against neighboring camps,
DMY Pilar said coaching was all be ever wanted
J erry Howell, with a
resume too vast
and varied to
even remember, still
dreams of the brass
ring.
The s.4-year-old
Costa Mesa High football
coach, entering his sixth season with
the Mustangs as the program's career
victory leader (34-21), talks
optimistically of his team's prospects
this fall. He also savors the
gratification that comes from helping
h1I players belong to something
postttve. · ·
But, while he moved to Orange
County after years of professional
wanderlust to • setUe down,• he hopes
for at leUt one more challenge before
retirjng to the simple pleasures of
speinding every fall with bis wUe ,htt; u well as much more ~ty
lime OD bis boal •u ~~·re not hungty, you'19 proba~ not WOrking bard ~h
aDct yoiu're.probebly not 8*Ytnv your
job,• Howell Mid. • 1 ltke what I'm
damg, bUt, in tbe back of my mind. I
......... ,. di that bnll mg out ......
MUlpbon Mlde, How.D .. ==..., camfortable ..... w ••• .,. ...
W11mmmpu9d•bll ..,, ... .
Oil .............. . ~5*P HI'• tadsd1tl11••t. -~,~· ...... ~J. . ..
to do. .
•1 remember saving and saving for
21 cents to buy my first Sport's
illustrated. And I read my first Street
and Smith's, until the ink would come
of the pages.•
After a successful playing career
at Patterson High, the running
back-defensive back played
collegiately at San Jose State.
He wasted UtUe time begbmlng a
diverse coaching career, wh1cb wt11
reach its 35th year this fall.
A volunteer Uliltant for the
freshmen teem at San Joee State after
graduation; be made stops at 01yrtad
high schools, earning b1s 11.rst
bead-coecbino gig at Santa Marta
Highatage29.
His dream of becoming a Dlvllion I
college bMcl coec:h took bim to
Oaremont·MdCenne College u an
awhtant ID 1978-19 uid be followed
that with tw0 WIODI U bMd coach
at Ocddental
Prom o.y, be mo¥9d ti> New
Meidco ......... be ... oCfemMi
WOfdhhiidJOr far two ,..... ..
Nebl'uU. ...... bl ........ lllb •
d'ttlDI. ~·Of ............. .....
.... ......,...,.,... WUll)'lltltay
OUloftbe\llMf.· Hl ....... cDldl...., .....
Ualt..., GI NllW'lalk 8' ey .._.. ...... , ..• ,.. .. .... . .... .....
He taught and coached at Servite
High, spent another stint at Claremont
and took a job as an administrator at
Azusa High, before being hired at
Costa Mesa.
Under his tutelage, Mesa has made
the playoffs four straight seasons,
including a 10-2 campaign in 1997. It
shared the Padflc Coast League title
last fall en route to an 8-3 mark.
With a master's degree in ICieooe
and a doctorate in philosophy,
Howell's intellect immediately
impresses those who have worked
with him. His vast football
background also has allowed him to
catalog reams of grldlron knowledge.
·rve spent time at Air Force
learning the option, I've been to
Washington State to observe Mike
Price and hil staff and I went through
Stanford when BOl Walsh WU there,•
Howell sakt. •Anymore, 1 feel like J
have too much information, becet.11e a
lot of it aliJ>' out. My uliltantl have to
slow me dawn, betau. I start ~
two ltepl ahead ol anything the kids
can procem and unctentanc1. •
Deta1ll about .. ......, ltopt along
tbe way Uio fml him. at .... He
:=:.~.=-Ufedmia........, be Del .... Wife hav. come'° c.11 •e.. Ill.•
llo•.a. wtloi ........ Allo VllJO, oplaly _ ............ ......,tit
toaowl* .............. . ._, ......... 1IWl llllll•
up .................... Md .................. _ medl••--· . .............. . ---
MEN'S GOLF
• Chris Veitch shoots lowest score ever at Santa
Ana Country Club at the Santa Ana Invitational.
Richard Dunn
DAILY PILOT
SANTA ANA HEIGi-ITS -
Santa Ana Country Club's
Chris Veitch, a 46-year-old
Balboa Peninsula resident,
shot the lowest score in club
history, a 10-under-par 62,
dunng match play Wednes-
day in the 52nd annual Santa
Ana Invitational.
Veitch, who played in the
inaugural Jones Cup with
Santa Ana Director of Golf
and head professional Mike
Reehl on July 28, sank five
birdies on the front nine on
boles 1. 2, 3, 5 and 7, then
started the back nine with an
eagle 3 on the par-5 No. 10,
followed by birdies •
at 11 , 14 and 18,
carding a 31 on both
sides.
in noncompetitive pla.)'. But
Couples and Burckle shot
~-under 63 when the course
played to its usual par 72.
For this week's SACC lnVl·
tational, the yardage (6,387),
rating (7 1.0) and slope (126)
are slightly different than the
usual black tees (71.7 rating
and 128 slope).
Veitch and his partner, Bill
Welch, defeated Mesa Verde
Country Club's Pete Daley
and Farrell Hinkle in the tour·
nament. Welch, Hinkle and
Daley, who won the J ones
Cup with Mesa Verde head
pro Tom Sargent, all shot 71
in the championship flight.
Even though the round
was match play, the players
putted e'ierythmg
out, Reeh! said.
Regardless of
what the country
club golf comnuttee
decides, Ve1tch's
score of 62 repre-
sents the lowest lD
the history of the
oldest golf club in
Orange County.
"It was unbeliev-
able ... it was the
greatest round in
competition (in club
history),• Reehl said
of Veitch, who made
a 25-foot birdie putt
at 18 to finish the first
round of match play, Chris Veitch "It's pretty phe-
nomenal,• Reeh! said
of Veitch's round. which is part of the
invitational.
The Santa Ana Country
Club golf committee will
decide next week whether to
consider the 62 a course
record, because the SACC
Invitational is played from
modified tees, between the
black and blue tees. It plays
149 yards shorter than the
regular black tees.
The course record of 63 is
held by three players, all from
.the black tees of 6,536 yards.
But one of the course-
record holders, Jorge Corral,
shot an 8-under 63 in the
third round of the 1994 South-
ern California Amateur at
Santa Ana Country Oub,
when the par...S 18th bole was
changed to a par-4 by SCGA
offidals.
Pred Couples Of the PGA
Tour sbot 63 at Santa Ana in
a private, noncompetitive
round while playing with
a metnber in 1992, aftm Cou-
ples won the Maiten tbet
~~ Bwckle a19o Shot 63
Ve.itch IS a four-time Santa
Ana men's club champion
with three straight titles.
including this year.
·1 don't putt lights out and .
I'm not prone to make a large
number of birdies. "Veitch,
who could not be reached
Thursday, said prior to the
Jones Cup. ·1 guess the best
part of my game is that I try to
make as few mistakes as pos-
sible. I play the golf course.
Par's a good score:
Veitch, a 15-year member
at SACC wbo captured bis
first men's dub champ1onshlp
in 1994. qua.bfied for the CoJ-
Uomla State Amateur at Peb-
ble Beach his first year play-
ing at Santa An4 in 1985.
Since then, Veitch has quali-
fied for the state amab!ur four
Other times.
Veitch won the 1998 o.nd
'99 Newport Beach oty ama-
teur titles at the Newport
8Mcb Open. but djd not play'
In 2000 to defend bis Champi-
onlbtp at Newport BMch
Country Club. ...
10 Friday. Augud 11 , 2000 SPoRrS
CdM .18 bOys win two· to gain round of 16.·
• Sea Kings play today at El Toro
in Junior Olympics title bracket.
have to do likewise t~y.
"I'm sure (Michael) will get here late and
run onto the.deck in the second half, Wee on
Monday,• said Marc Hunt, CdM's interim
coach while John Vargas 1.s with the U.S.
men's national team.
Joseph Boo
DAILY PILOT
V1LLA PARK -Facing elimination, Coro-
na del Mar High's 18-and-under boys water
polo team won twice at Villa Park High
Thursday in the U.S. Water Polo Junior
Olympics to stay alive in the championship
bracket.
March scored four times in Cd.M's second
game to help th~ Sea Kings to an easy victo-
ry. CdM got off to a 3-0 lead, let Michigan
get within one goal, then scored six unan-·
swere<l goals to put the game away.
Garrett Bowlus also scored four goals for
CdM, including its last three, while Artie
Dorr and Marcello Pantuliano bad one each.
Sherwin Kim made nine solid saves to stifle
Michigan's offense.
With victories over Michigan, 9-2, and
Harvard-Westlake, 10-7, CdMplays today at
El Toro High, on 10:15 a .m. A win in the
morning sends the Sea Kings into today's
1:15 p.m quarterfina.ls..__Also at m Toro. •we got everybody involved on offense,•
Hunt said. •our offense went through three
or four guys instead of only one or two, so
we scored more goals than Wedtiesday
(a 14-4 loss to San Diego Shores A).•
But wiruiing all these games provides one
problem for CdM. Today's morning game is
a conflict with summer school finals.
Michael March, one ol Cd.M's top scorers
had to juggle water polo and school on Mon-
. day, and he, Adam Padilla and John Money, In Cd.M's first game on Monday, the Sea
Kings got off to a 3-0 lead against Harvard-
TEA CUP
CONTINUED FROM 9
Towersey is no doubt
primed for a victory.
She lost in match play to
Karen Mahli of Palos Verdes.
1 up in 19 holes, in the semifi-
nals of the Women's Southern
California Golf Association
Championships at Oakmont
Country Club in Glendale.
Last year, Towersey
advanced to the Southern
match-play hnals of 36 holes
at Mission Viejo Country
Club and lost to Candy Mey-
ers of Glendora on the 35th
bole. Then, Towersey drove
to Mesa Verde for Tea Cup
Classic ill and played 18
more holes, before capturing
her second straight Newport-
Mesa community title.
Denise Woodard of Mesa
Verde, Debbie Albright of
Newport Beach and Colette
Thormina of Big Canyon will
try to dethrone Towersey in
the event that has come full
circle in fo''Ur years with each
club getting an opportunity to
host the Tea Cup Classic.
This year's 18-hole
shootout will 'also award for
the first time a perpetual tro-
phy, as the four ladies club
champions in this newspa-
per's circulation battle for
bragging rights, headlines
and fun,
The Tea Cup Classic was
created to promote a day for
women's golf and bring the golf
community closer together.
It started in. 1997 at New-
port Beach Country Club for
the inaugural (won by Big
Canyon's Selby Sclu!ber),
then was played at Santa Ana
Country Club in '98 and
Mesa Verde in '99, both won
by Towersey. Now, it's Big
Canyon's tum for the turn-of-
the-millennium edition.
. .
. , . ·"
NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
CAWNG FOR BIDS
BID DATE: Seplerrtie< 26, 2000 et 2:00 p.m.
BOARD DATE:
State of California haa
determined the gener·
ally prevailing r11tes of
wages In lht locallty In
wt'ich the WO!tl ii to bt
pertormed. Coples ot
these wage rate d•·
terminations, tntltled
PREVAILING WAGE
SCALE, are maintained
at the DISTRICT olfloe
located .at: t370 Adanw Ave .. Costa Mesa, C.(
92626: Physical Facll·
itlee Planning, and are
evalleble to eny In·
t81esled ptrty upon r•
quest Tht ~tractor .,.,.. poet a capy of Ihle
CNS17t4831
NOTICE OF WAREHOUSE
LIEN SALE School 011trlct
COAST COMMUNITY
COLLEGE DISTRICT
· Bid Otedllnt: September 26. 2000 at
2:00 p.m.
Place ot Bid Rec:.lpl
Office of Director • of
Purchulng. Coast COrn-
muMy CoUege Dlatrlct,
Bldg. · D". 1370 Adams
Avenue, Coste Mtaa, CA 92826
October 4, 2000
NOTICE IS HEREBY
GIVEN that tht Pl'Ol*IY deectlbed below ' wlll be
WATER POLO
Westlake a.nd held on for the victory.
Bowlus, Dorr and March scored in the
first quarter to give Cd.Ma 3·0 lead and Har-
vard-Westlake a tongue lashing from its
coach.
The Wolverines came out inspired in the
second quarter and tied the game, but con-
secutive goals from March, Dorr and Bowlus
gave Cd.M a 6-3 halftime lead.
The Sea Kings extended their lead to 8-4
in the third quarter, but Harvard-Westlake
made things interesting in the fowth quar-
ter. It scored three times to dose the score to
8-1. With under two minutes left in the
game, Harvard-Westlake had a potential
game-~g goal clang off the crossbar.
After that scare, Dorr scored 10 seconds
later to give CdM a 9-7 lead. Cd.M's Cavan
Cuyler th~n got an empty-net goal in the
closing seconds. Dorr, Bowlus and March
each had three goals. Kim was solid in goal
for the Sea.Kings with seven saves. .,.
On Wednesday, CdM'1 16·and-under
boys Wflter polo team dropped two games at
El Modena High to wrap up its play in the
Junior Olympics. It lc>St its first game to San
Clemente, 9-3. Kevin Amendt, Matt Meyers
and David DlRocco., scored for the Sea Kings
against a stifling Tritoos' defense that
caused numerous CdM turnovers.
CdM's scoring problems continued
against Windy City on Wednesday afternoon
in a 6-2 loss. Meyers and Tom Harper were
the only two Sea Kings to score. CdM goalie
Beau Stock.still made 10 saves.
Newport Harbor's 16-and·under boys
water polo squad, the last Newport team
remaining in a Junior Olympics champi-
onship bracket, lost to Rose Bowl A on
Thursday. 15-3, in an elimination game.
Nathan Weiner scored two of Newport's
goals, with Ryan Bean getting ~e other one.
Newport goalie Ryan Winthrop made five
saves.
Mackey, Geehr in the top half HAPPY llRTllDAY INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. -Newport 'Har-SWIMMING bor High's girls swimming standouts Carly
Geehr and Nicole Mackey competed in
Day 2 of the U.S. Olympic Swim Tune Thais Thursday morn-
ing and each,finished in the top half of those who participated.
Geehr, a sophomore-to-be for the Sailors, was 44th out of 91
swimmers in the 100-meter breaststroke with a time of 1:13.38.
Mackey, who swam in two events on Wednesday, was 35th
in the 100 backstroke with a 1:05.24.
DEEP SEA
THURSDAY'S COUNTS
Dway's Loc*w • 8 boats, 2S I anglets.54 yeflowalil, 25 dorado, 3 blue sharb. 374
send bis. 10 ~ 139 calla> basl, 10~13 soApir\ 4 pa'd\ 2 ~
Nt pa 1 Lmdn8 · 6 boats. ln anglers. 53 ~lowtai~ 1 dorado, 6 ~ 35
calkx> bim. 356 sancfbal. 1 i,.ritM, 2 rddtflst\ 25 sculpln. 1 ~ l wtilteflst\
115 mackerel.
BSC 1780 NOTICE Of •
PETITION
TO ADMINISTER
ESTATE OF:
HANN VON
OPPENHEIM
CASE NO. A203593
• To all helre, ~cler!M, CfedHora, COOi·
lngent crtdltorw, and
perlOlll Who mey OCher·
.. be "*'-tee! In the .. « ....... « both. at ~N~M
SUPERK>R COURT
Of CAlJFORNIA,
COUNTY Of
ORANGE
341 The City Otlve, Poet Ofl'ica Box 1417 I , Oranae. CA 92el~·l571
IN THE MATTER OF
THE PETITION TO
CHANGE THE NAME OF LINDA SAUNDERS
on Bellalf of SAMUEL
MACKENZIE HART
SAUNDERS, • minor
OROIR TO IHOW CAUM fOR CHANGE P101ect ldenllhcation
Name. Orange Coast
College R~ ol
Htallh Center Air Han·
dling Unit, Bid No 1819
Plaot Sidi art on ftlt
end e111ilable at. Office
ol Iha PhYlical Faolrtltl
Coord1nelor. Ardith
Richy. Coaal Com·
munlly Collage Dlstnc1;
1370 Adami Ave , Bldg
No ptymant &hell be
made fOf woc1I Of mat•
rial under the oontraci
unlals end untll the Reg-
istrar ol Conlract0ta veil-
flee to the DISTRICT
that ·the CONTRACTOR
was properly lioen8ed et
Iha time the contraci
was ewarded. Ar"i CON·
TRACTOR not 10
HcenHd I• aubllct to
peneltJea. undtf the law.
If. tht lic:enae classi-
flcalion lptcllltd hertin-
above la lhll of • .. IP""
cialily CIClf1traQor" .. de-fined In Sedior1 7058 ol
Iha Caltlomie Bullnesl
and Professions Code,
the 8'lldalllY oontnlctor ewardtd Iha· Connet fOf
!NI W<>ltl ah&I iteelf coo-
atruct • majority ot the Wen. In accordance wtth the provialonl of
C.llfomll Buslntu and
Proleuion• Code Section 7059.
document at tech Job
•. Tht ConnciOf and any llUbcontnlctQr under
ltbll~ltelhn ~ .. ol wages~
wOltlers ~ In Iha extcullon of the Con-
eold .. le at l>Ubllo ..
on August 28. 2000 et
the holx ol ·10:00 a.m.,
at Space.. 18 •. El Nido ,. <lilt(. Pelil l<Sc:81ed at
1640 Newport Blvd .. Costa M ... , Calllomla
In Ofder to aatlsfy tht 11111
daimed by tht owner ot
the •bove mentioned
mobllallomt palil fOf
storage Ind other re-
lated cnargee Incurred
by LMlle K. ic..r. The
ult wilt be ''" and c:laar ol .. dalma, .. n A-PETITION FOR
PROBATE llu been
fled by WIWAM JOHN
MINEA In Iha Superior
()II MAME
CASI NUWEA
AIOMOO
PETITIONER(S)
LINDA SAUNDERS on
Btllalt of SAMUEL
MACKENZIE ~RT SAUNDERS. a minor HAVE FILED A PETI·
TION FOR AN ORDER
TO CHANGE NAMES
FROM SAMUEL o·. Costa Mau. CA (7 14) "38·4673
Web Sile· w-cccd edu/11cil1t111 NOTICE IS HEREBY
GIVEN lhal Iha tbove·
named School District ol -Ora~ County. Califor·
ma, acting by end
through Its Govtmlng
Board. haralnaltar re·
larrad lo aa 'DIS·
TRICT'~ will reoelve up
to. but not later than the
ebovt·alatad time,
ae1led bids lor the award ol a contract lor
the Pfojecl detcnbed ••
Replace Air Handler
Unit at Student Ht1tth
Center
There will ba 1 Five
ISS) dollar non-retun·
<!able payment required
f()f Nd1 Ml ol bid docu-
ments Chtci<s lhould
ba made payable lo
Coast Community Col· ~ o::1 be r-.vtd
1n Iha place ldentihtd
above. encl those bids
lhall bl CJ9llltd Ind
publicly read aloud II
the abovt·llaltd llm•
end pt.ca
In tccX>fdanct with Ille
pro1111ion1 of C11if0fnla
Publtc Contract Code
Stc1ion 3300. Iha Dia·
trlcl r.qulrea ttwt Iha bid-der poaMse the loflow·
Ing c:l.-ftcatron ol coo-
t11C1or' 1 llotnat at Iha
lime lhet the contrlCI Is
•warded
Contrector B or C·20
Llcen11
PUBLISH. August 11,
2000 and August 18. 2000
WALK THROUGH.
Welkthrough Is NOT
Mandatory. Date. S.O-
tembar 7, 2000 at 2:00
p.m . Orange Coatt Cot-
teg• Maintenance and
QPeretiont Facellty, lo-cated on Memmac be-
lwtan Fairview Road
and Halbor Boulavlrd
IPI•••• call t14·438-4646 for a map)
tr.ct.
No bidder mey withdraw any bid for a
period of slllty (60) deys
after tht datt ... '°' tht opening ot bids.
and~ of
rtoOfd •Jte9PI tor ~ bl• Ilana ot unpaid mobllehome~Uon
·-and taxel, • any. Tht r9dltof ..
m.ndl tht r9ll'IOV9I ol lllt unit forrll El Nido
Trailer Patil wfthln 24
hours after tht Nia.
Proapective ~ mutt tender a CMhlarw
c:hadc for tht ful amount
of the purchue Im-
A peyment bond lhllll
be required prior to tll·
eeutlon of the oontrac:I
anc:1 w• be 1n tt1t 1orm sec fol1h In the contract dOCt1menta. mediately at the oon-
• Coul1 of C.llfomla, • '° Col.ny " ORANGE. THE: PETTTlON FOR PROBATE~ bl WIWAM JOHN MINER
be eppolnted u pel'·
aonal rapreaentatlw to
....... Iha ..... " the dacldant. THE PETITION ,.
que11a the '*'9denra WI and ClOClc:ll, W trft,
be admlllild to probet9. The Wll and any oodlcl6I
era avalllbla I« ax· amN1lon In Iha fie k.apl
by Iha COUtl.
All WOftc must be com-
pleted within 60 con·
MCIJtlllt deyl. Time " al
Iha MMnCa. Fallura to
complete lht Wortl
within Iha time .. for1h
herein wlll nNMAt In lhe
impoeltlon of liquidated
damages for Nch day of
delay, In the •mount Mt forth In lht ''Information
!or Blddtra".
Pu111uant to Sectior) clUllon ol the eale. Ex· 22300 of lhe Pubic Con-cepl fOf Iha warranty !hat tract Code, the contraot "1hll Nie II authorized by ~._;:r::i':":""·
will contain provlslonl law, abtolu1tly no war-
THE PETmON re-
quest• authority to ad·
mlnleler Iha ealat• under the Independent Admln-lltrrion of EltalM Act.
(Thia Authority wlM allow
the perl0091 repreNnt·
alive to lake "*'Y ac-llonl Without obtjjnlng
COUl1 .,:>prcwal. BelOft
tatdng CtNln very lm-pol1ant lldlonl, how·
..... Iha peraorW ,..,,. Nnlllllw W4I be requlf9d
to ~ notice to In-~ perlOlll uni.ea
lhay have wlMd nodot « QOnHnled to the
prQPOMd action.) The l~nt edmlnl•
ir.tion authodty .. be
gtanled unlNI an ln-
ttfMllld parlOl'I llta an obttdl«I to h pelllioll and lhoM good cei..
wtiy Iha couri "'°'*' nol grlft Iha lltAholfly.
permltllng the euc-rantlM ot Nle ere madt.
C8191UI bidder lo Tht ptrtl rtllrYff lllt
Each bid must oon-
lorm and bt reeponllVe
to tha contract docu· manta. Each bidder lha.Q
aubmlt. on the form
hJm181lad wtth the con-
tract doculnents, a lilt ol
lllt proposed eubcon-
lf11Ct()(I on !hit projact
aa required by the
Sublttllng and SIJbcon. tracting Fair Pracfloel
AC1 Government Code
Section 4100 II Mq.
aubatltute aecurlllH for right lo poatpont and any mon4e1 wtthheld by ruchtdult Iha eala
the District to enaure ~~~ no:-tha
partormence under the property to be ao6ll le: 00e~C1bid IUbmitttd In One (1) 1955 TECRU
rMpOnM 10 1N1 No11ca BTM Slnglt Famlly
lhall contain .. a bid Mobllahomt; Callfomla
item adtquaf. lllltClng. OMV Llctnaa No., lhor1na. and brldng. « BW2921; CCH VIN:
equivalent method, lor 383502
tht prottc*on ot lift and NOTE: Tht cradltof
limb In trenchn and olalmlng Ihle lien will
open txcevation, which :;:-er:. ":":"at CC
Eech 811:1 ftlll be eo-
~ by • C*1ifted
or c:utiier'a chtok « bid
bond lrl an &mol.ri no1 tau than tan Pfn*lt
( 10%) of the IOCal bid
price. payellle IO the Olll-
lrict .. a ~ """ the bidder, If Ila piopoeal
11 accepted, shall
promptly txeouta th•
Agreement. lumlah a
Ntislactory Faithful Per-
ah&ll oontorm to ap-U ,447 59
pbC4a ~ DATEo'. AOau.e 7. 2000 ~ M. Vtg1, /I/ Mlc'hnt W.
Ed. 0 ,...____,.._ Mthellel\, Attomey kw .. .....__, E Nido T,.._ ,..._ =•~ Publllhed Nawpor1 Publlslled Newport B11cll·Co1ta Mtaa
BHCh·Coata MtH Dally Pllol AuglMI 11,
Delly Piiot Auguat "· 18, 2000 18, 2000 ______ F0~2 ... 1
f020
tormance Bond In an F1cttUoua Bualneu
amount not Ilsa tllen NarM SWtilment
one llunctrtd percent Tht followlna peraona
(100%) of the total bid .,. doing bulllMile u: ~ tumien a P1yment a) oo POSTAL, b) 00
late t~na"one~= POSTAL MAILBO)(
peraent (!00%) cl tht ~ CENTER, cl 00 POS-
t.i bid ptloe, and fumleh TAL MAIL ' eox CEN-cartiflcat.. ~~ TER, di GO POSTAL. ··~-'V MAIL' eox CENTERS. 111111 tile required lntur· 1} G o po s T Al
lltlOI II In effect In tht au.tLSOX CENTERS,
9lll0Ul'ltl .. fol1h In lhe ·-l"a _._., ,.,_ I -
B:'!•I oooditlooe: In _,, "'"'"'"'' .,.. """' ---..... f·•~· to Maree, Ma E. Sen ...... "' ..... re Clemente, California enter Into the oontrec:l 92673 and tXIClllt Iha ,._ TWiia Lynna Gorman, ::".'~ ~ ae10 Celle La <M!Ca.
talltd. The FalllM Pet· ~ ~· Cellfof·
fonnanca Bond lf1lll ,. Thl9 ~ 11 con-
main In tul b'OI and flf· Mtld by. an lndhlllUil
feet ~ h ~ H•v• you 111rted
... period -lp8Cllld In dclfl"9 ~' vtl1 'No h Olf*1il CClnlllOn9 Tent. Lynn CJoilnlrl The DISTRICT r• Thia ....,.... ... ::;-:, ~"ti.'°~ IM9d .. .. Cciunly
waJw any~ ~~ ~
or lnfOtlMlllll In .n, 1111111•1 ~ or In IN ''~\., ~ PIClll Mr 21, •. 1773~~ AMA.4,11.IQOO ..
Labor Coda, .. ~ « h Olpe,.,.. d ln-
dl.tltltll ......... d ..
--------.
A
CIOOD
ADI
•
A HEARING on the PtClllon W4I be htld on
SEPTEMBER 7, 2000 a1
1:46 p.m. In Dtot. L73
tocnd 11 341 'The Clly
Oriw South, Onano•. CA 9'28158.
IF YOU OBJECT to lht~lht-
:"-f.l:.""° and"= I Vol" obfecd0n1 Of file on 1 111111 ,. written ot>jeetlont wttl't • ctwlc* the COUl1 btfofe the ~ lldiftj~ llurlng. Your ap·
or 1 ~ cin.n pe1r1nCa l!MIY be In '*' ton or by "1AJI liftOmeY. IP YOO ~ A Cf'EO-
MACKENZIE HART
SAUNDERS TO
SAMUEL MACKENZIE
SAUNOEAS·HART
It II llemby ordtted
ltial all Pll'ION In· teretted In 11111 matter
llPPMI' before INI court In Otpet1manC No. l73
ol tht Oranot County &ptltot Courf at the ad-
drt11 lhown above on
SEP 05, 2000, at 2:00
o'clodl p.m. and tlltn
and there lhow cauM, ii
any ltleY hive wtJY Iha
paUtlon lor ~ of name should not be
grant ad.
It " lur1ha< on:lared
that • oopy " ... Older to ltlOW caUlt be Plb-llthed In Dally Pilot, a ~ of .,I"* ..
d<Q;lltlon put>IWltd In
11111 oounly, ...... -a '#Mic fOf lour oon--MOUCl\'e wtl!a prior IO lht fjey ot Iha hNting.
0-'TI: JUI. 2S 2000
JAMES P. GRAY,
JUDGE/ COMlllSllONIA Of
THI SUPIAIOA COURT
John B. c.ona. LAW OFFICE OF
JOHN B. CASORIA.
20271 SW. Blrdl St.
'1 oo. N"ewpott Beacfi,
CA ~
ATTORNEY BAR I:
110300, ATTORNEY
FOR: Ptdclontr
Publlehed Newport
Beach,Coata MtH
Dally Plot Mt 29, ~
gllll 4, 11, 18. 2000
fl!()§
Ra~ and Jeadli1w11 11rt' i;ultj ... ·1 tu rluml(I'
yid'°'1t notic:c. Tile' 1>uhli.!l11•r l'f'!Sf'r\'t'" tlw
right to ~m<>r, ~la~ ... if~. "'"'~ or l'l'jrct
anv rlru ~if ted ad\'rrt i"f•ment. Plrul!C' rq1ort auy t'rrot th111 0\11\ 1-... i11 ,·om ..tu ... ,iftl'1l 111I
iaauurdiltttly. '11w 'Duil~ 11ilot 111·cc-p1, 110
liaMlily for an~ rrmr in un 111h1·ni-..·1111'111
for wl11cb it nu1,• l1r "''f>tlll•il>lc· r11"'lll for
thl" C'OS1 uf L~ Sfllll'f a1·111ull~ or1·upil'tl I"
the rm1r. (;o.dic 1·1111 11111, '"' 11110 .... 11 for '1tw
(i "' i mrrtioo.
'G)
fOUAI. ltOUSlllO , OPPORTUNITY
'Al mt estlh ICIWl1l$lng In 1lllS ~Is SubllCf 10 tftt federal Fair Housmg
Act of 19ea a amended w111cJ1 lllSH It Illegal to llMrtiel "Jlll"J prtle<tnct, llflllatloll or dlsc:tlmlnalloll
blS9ll on~~· relig· loll. MIX. --..p. f:lm~I
1111111 Of l\lllonll °"°'"· Of 111 Intention to !Nb any Mdl pref~. lrmltatlorl
OI dllcrlmNliOn •
TliS NWIPIPll' wlll not t11owh19ly accept iny 1dvtrtiumtnt lor ru t ..... w11ict1 II in violation ol Ille In. Our radrra .ie
lltfelly illlllfmed lhl l Ill dwlllllOS llMrtiMd In this ._..,.., .. l'llllil>ll on . ..,.,= °' 111&11 Tb com of dilcrimt-
nltion. HUO tol lree II
1-800-42~.
•V.A.• ·-··IMll ... ~
FM1 UST Of IQfES
HOONAREPOS
7U .. a4 llOO
Pl ' ... • ,., ....
Monday ............ w ... friday S:OOpm
Tuesday .............. Monday S:OOpm
Wf"dne~day ......... TuesJay S:OOpm
By Fu
(949) o;~ t -6.51H
ByPhoae By MaMll l"etwa: llour8 Thursday ....... Wt'<l nesday 5:00pm
(l'k.,. i11cludr '""f nauw a11d ,,1.,.... uwulwr a11d '"'II r•R )1111
l1<1elr •1111aV,..,....111•>1• )
(1J4'>) 6+'.!-:)(,78 :':io Wr·• au, Srn-t·1 ·1 dt>pl1011t 11::1011111-:.i.oopm
\luotliio1-hvl.il1
"ulk-111 U::mum-.-1:0011111
~lt1titla 1-~ nda1
Friday ............... Thursday 5:00pm
UO·Be
rJ
~·412
lJoht • A#y 38r, 1 .,..,
houM. New urpej/pelnt.
Vp. dlw. garage $1800/mo
yrly avail now !MWS-3998
( :0111u \fr,,u. (_~.\ '>2t>:27
\1 '"'"'~ ea..1 "' R.1 ~1.
....
·r -
••
'I ••
Cable Box
Descramblers
Call Toll F~ Anytime
1·888-68~779
O'NEIL WETSOfT
women's eae 10. gieat
!hap!. $58 76C). 715-1962
Salurday ............... Friday 5:00pm
~ --
.. '
~-.
cm
470 •• , • . ..
Irvine
Antlqu. Pint •rmo1re :.._Sine(• NMded tor don_dusatko@ Good qlJMly tll.Clllnl coo-Thundly 9 30lfn
Sain Consultants
of Newport e.cn
deon. $800 949-721 -9145 11 30ltn ~ In Sept. -Cll Mrt 949-.Q22 HOTEL Al po5lllOl1' Fred
Biby Unloue 1n ~
Clvldr-~ulTlllUre/Spec:iel
ily .,,. In Newport i.cn.
nMdl " s.... Penon ~ Sia ~ron who 11 hard working,
deslc Mal-. and ~ WI
tnwl fmmed<al• openings
Coc;ta Mesa MolOf IM.
'/277 Hamor Blvd CM
...... ,
5 Lewie On Thi Send Ill
clatl, whit Wltef WI, turn-
key, tum. aVlll &'7·9'30 Siie OI l.elae. S40ro'wlcly.
Aa111ng SI 8M. 8111 Packard t-8()(}270-1007 • 229
Clllropt'llCtlc: olflu needs
Fntnd4y self·slaner PT.
rec;ep1JOn1SVmarllet1ng. wiU
IMln. ~ a • no1 nee \714)662-~118 Iv men
/canovy w/0!1hopedic mat· mollYlted & • tewn player
trtss set New still 111 Salelv • bonus • benefils. plasllC C06I $980 sell --Cell_M_t-7_5_9-4222 __
SIMI ,Bulklnga, never put $330 94H36-5534 up 40X48 was $8080, Now LA Fr™ESS SEEKING
mOllY1ted, IQrtHIVt
indtvldull fOf entry level
..... end ft'lllllOtl'lll
6212 SOX90 was $16.670 CuAom Slc:tlonal Sofe. L
w ii I se 11 $ 9 9 8 0 lhlped, w'12 down thfow
_ _..::;800:=....::·29:.:2:...:·0..;...11;..;.1 __ plllowt, $500. S.v11ff
~ 42" round llblt .,.
d!lir!i $200. Mi-790-0540 STORE FIXTURES
Be1ut1fu1 ~=48' Slatwall fixlurn & penels 2'Yl beth. new GllSS ~ & miscet ~ Ln. 714-Cell Stan *552-72f7
821-8094 OI S62·59S-8558
OCEAN lront lowtr ...,.._
duple~ 2llf .. • leuntlry ,., ..... $1--.. Win-........... ~
OH A OfF THE SAHO
& TffE BAY. 28r 28a'a
from S235Qlplr monlt\.
Brobt Mt-142-3850
I* r.=rl
Co.u ..... ept, room
w/prlvtlt t.. shirt gar.
$450 • dip no smolul/ptls.
AYlll ~ t 949:t't9412
130 East 17th St Suite ·c
Costa Mesa
Al Newport l 17th
behind Harp Inn
ESTATt SALE
lum. dining Ml. 2 bedroon-.
Mii, toll !M~7S.0526
Klno Sia Bed Ulrl '1dt.
otthoptdic pllow loe> mal·
II.a & II* box -Never I.Ml. 11 ong ~. nut ... ! $4:tS !MH3&-SS34
a.-i Sia Whit WffU/i ~BldFrwne.
Ptritc:I Concilion $400lobO 582-597 ·3728
tSID£WAl.K SAL.Et u,.a.. fumllure
Allllqw, Art • "-8CCffeoriH. SAT/SUN
AUG 12'TM I 1ml 1M
M3I VIA OflOfn'O
Udo ..... Ym!G!
Wllill Wldllf 1111 tie. $40,
4 ~ c:fllwt S20. 1/4 ll1lc:ll .a rwi0 • .,, 10p seo Sm. low ~ Iron ....
blM S20 949-6403n
IXI Sectlonlll Sotl. 1 Y 1111
old. dee9* ~. Camel
COior. down filltd. $960 obo
Mt-417-1554
DElllONSTRATORS PT 2 to 3 d9ys _., ....
end. S1arUnQ lnwntdlnly ltlfou9ll u6or Day. Cw nec:1111ry. C 1ll
71 ...... 2-4213
GARYS ISLAND NEW
HOME FURNISHINGS
STORE NOW OPEN
In Fnhlon laiend
11 cumntty looking lof
fut~-tlme Sain ....
IOC I , prtf tvt'a, lint
bentflta. To Ml up
lnttfVltw Call Sttvt
Loucks 94t-640-2371
posidona. Cell lillrti
• 714--912-137 4
Lomn "'--min 2 yr tap. MS I Window•
Amtric:or9 6000 w Pett.
NP8 MM74-7701
MARINE EXP. prwf
bclll IO bclll on flt wllllr,
MECHAMCIS ASSIST
c.ii Oen 9'Hlt-5823
MEDICAL TRANSCAllSEA
P1r1·bn1t tor Newport
8-:tl olfiCle c.ii ~
Mt-121-1113.
PIT Booflkttptf/E1tc.
Sec 'ty P109trty ., Mgrnnl
Otttea. t 6 flt a Ills/wk
Capeblt. OfVll'Utd. ....
--s.. 14? Ne sysi.n. Word Excel. OulCk8ooks
Fax reunt 19491673-8797
PT llktg Aalllt. ~
aldla a roost. rugollg PM·
IOl18itCy. 15-~ S151't
loc 11 CdM Ml-72).2312.
SERVERSIHOST/ESS .,,,,., In ,._ ..
IC.lplMI .......... •
3211 Hlltlor IMS. CJl
WORK FROM HOME
lnternet1onel c:ompeny
='~~ S2500·S7000/mo. M1ny
po!!!JO!!l --~10l7 .. 0.... ~ Privalt bath. pool, jecuui. Wltherldry9t. ,.,,.. pttfd
$660!!!!0 Jell 94H74-4013
N9wpoft Hlrtlor TftflllM
Own room --. & ptllblg AN lllMnlliff 1115/mO
(949) 722-8586 ~1=~::=. • $10·S12/ptr hour Call
i't-642·2010 OI tu
,.._IO ~-3010
~ Pnvalt Ylld1C
& ¥IUndl. up req d OIA>. 32tnlWll ... ~
in per1on T ue-fn
1801 Bayside Or CdM OI
tu-~
SELL
your home
through ctasslfied
Cell ...... 7123
I-QffLCll I ... ,., .... _
Qoyal~nl
APDDAlcWi!
<:cnificd
Antique
&'.
Residential
Contents
Appraisals
VIVIEN L HESSE
(714) 841--0473
E-Mail:
OW.:Stvte~ '1ANOS. Cciledli I 11 . ...,._,,. . ...._ ............ a-.. ........
.. CMMMID .. ---·---8UY..,... ......... .......,_ ~ ;,: . . . . ~ \ "'
SUCCESSFUL?
A great way
to Htoot your horn,,
and tell your friends
and neighbors about
your. success!
Don -i miss this
opportunity -be
a part oftt!!
12 Friday, Augult 1l,
0
2000' ..
c
TODAY'S I Bridge
..;.JC~R1110w.S1.i11S1JWu~0111.11R .. p~r ... uuz .. z1111L111E..._ ~ e:.=-· L-....:... _ _:;_ ______ ...,.. __ ,;..... ____ __,_ end TANNAH HIRSCH ..,,, .. ......... m.
TAU 111.B HIGH ROAD
Nonh.soudl vuJncnblc. s-h deal..
WEST •0194 0 .(15
HORTH
• K63 0" O K,52
•QU72 EA.ST .,,
o OJ IOI •KlOJ
Q 7'32 o Al74
•JU sounr
•AJl72
0 QJ10'4
0 3
•AS
The biddlna:
fiOVrll WF.ST ,. .... NORTH E.A8T l• .... JQ ..... 2• ....
JQ .... ... .... .... ....
Openina lead: Queer! of o
w1 am 1he unluckaesl bridae~yer alive," wrilt:ll I reader. •'fhc on
I ftne:ae succ;eeding Ire $() nt.
. except in my cue. where IS percent
is nearer the mark. On this hand I
would have succeeded 11 four lpedel
If eilher the ace of diamonda OI the queen of spades had been well
placed. But lhc ace was marted off-
side by tbe lead and. when lhe finesse
for the INmp queen f111ed. I went
dowa."
We ewpoct lhtl our C011e1f1Uiidsnt """-*'• ttio. ...,. wtiae lhe
fincae failed and forpll tbe deall
wt:irr. I ~ Clfd WM in tbe 1iotl
Aho, thil diilll lefldl IO "lllCll that
the writer mlpt be lakfal more
flllCllel thin are nllCICllllYI
Nonh p~ tull wel_P.c co the klna
in Soudl I MCOnd IWt In raitin& to four spllb. Wat led lhe queen ot dilmoftdl and, llnce It waa undllat-
lble lhlt Wat Wll leadiq froni the
&le, declanr played low to auard
qaimt EMC Wl"""'I and lhiftin& fl() I
club. Declanir nitred 1he diamond continuation. croucd IO 1he kin& ot
lr\Unpl and continued with a low
lpado to the j11ek and queen. West ~ a trump, mnovina
dummy'a lut fana and. in the fullness
of time, declanr hid to lose I Club
and a heart Irick. Down one.
West'• trump ruum was lboulhtful
play, but the ddenden ahoulil not halie been 1iven the chance. After ruirina the leCOrld diamond. declara-
5hould immediately lead ro the kin& of hearu. If West ducks, the ace of
hearts can be rutred out. so the
defender must win. Best Is to force
declartr to Nff MOChet diamond, but
South count.era by cuhing IJle kin&
and llCe of lpedel and then ruMing
hearts. diacanllna clubl from the table. Oecllrer lo.e. only one Irick in
eaeti smi exc:epc clubs.
1-·~1
llllW 740ll. . f7
31* Mille, CO, AIJlo
(r.r>Oe~ _:2•
71W354171
BMW 740ll. .•
CADll.LAC Eldonldo '95 Lo 4 7ll t.t, Wti19 Peert, fan
IAllllr, v.a Nort!IW.
"13036) Sta.eee NABERS .
(714~1100
CADll.LAC SEVIJ.E 'M
ICtilW>i 11 .. UM> llOVIR •WPOflT llACH .........
QllC..., CX4 .. Sl. T, l9d, ...,_, CO, alcJWI
' mcnl New Cl( ilclHlf (544e83) 111.988
NABERS (714)!AO:t100
* HONDA ACCOAD 'II . 2 doof, auto, air, powtr
atnrl ng, $3060 .
9i9-723·f504.
LEXUS EWOO 'te B1ac*.
1111 *'* interior, gold
l**IQI, arwoof, t -·
.. --teCOldl. '**" S1,0.990 949-719-07'1
LEXUS
ES300 SEDAN 'ti
4-dr, V-6 eng, 2 IOne
whlttlgtty = llhr Int. Fl.itf CO "'° dwlglr, Ml Iii
b9gl. ~ pwr .....
moon· root, 1uto
c:lmm conlrol 34,505
ml S29,500/0BO
Cell 949-278-0353
A MOVING SALE
2000 Toyota Tundra 1>111.
loaded $3500 °" isl CXltl '90 lnlWli 045 blk SI 0.000
Alplll M1lllck. co, Solrld
(Mt t9g/ $43,995 Whl11, tan te1t11er, v:8 LEXUS ES 300 'f7
Norhtar, exoellent condl c~ Le Ctrlifiedl Likl
Cll 9'9-874-7000
BMW Z3 .•
2.8 u-. 5'tpd. ~. 1711 Ml
( 4AZX297) $28,995
CREVIER BMW
714-13$-3171
EVIER BMW
71'"'35-3171
BUICK LE SABRE 't1
low mile&, whb, 3.8 V-6,
non-emiU. 11411' Ylllull
(429825) NABERS $6,9118
(!14)54M100
(837~) $14,988 -· -NABERS New
(714)54M100 . (= lilSSION ~
et.wy &-10 Pldlup .. M~
5lpl. NC. P1MW lnlb l LEXUS ES 300 W
llllring. am-Im cuaea.. ~. Only Ilk mlM. 11·000 11
M2W
1
• r~r ~.787
STUMPED? Cal for...._.. I To.d> _., _.,_
BMW 1111 'f7
Alm. wt1lte wlwlite, lo ml
. cadllllc c.e.. .. Ctwyallf 30QM 111t LEXUS lilSSION VIEJO
Cl!lmptgrle, lfflherlloeded _ ___!M!!t-!::"4=0!!4i!!!::!!!!!L_ 30k ml, $23,500 prtvat1 • eeo..., _ 1-900-37o-9800 ext code 500
478 E»Pt.OYlllENT SERVICES
""'" bl _.,. tMt the lletlngt In Ihle
Clllg(llY m1y 19QUIN
you lo c1ll 1 900
number In which
lhlN Is I ct\argl per
minute.
" 480 8USIB9 OPPORTUllmES
WAFFlE l BAGEL 5"0P
Balbol lll1nd. Gr1tt loc
potlfttlel 1~-..............
1-~1
PltMI bl "rt of out
of ,,.. companlel.
ctieck With "" local s.ttlf ButlntU Bu-,_, blfON you lllMI
111y lllOlllY Of ,_
!Of .. ,.,i-. Ried
llld uftderltlnd any
comncta blfON you
1lgn. ·
ao.t llutl.-. on high vii-
ibllly bolAevard Gross vol-~ II bltWMn 5 l 6 Milon
Call 8roktt for dttalil.
St ,195,000 or offer. IMe-.646-2011
' CARPET ff CARPET u
Repalra, Plldwlg. lnstlll,
Couf1eout Any size jobs
Wholelllll 949-492-0205.
I ORY-STEAM I
8111 IYC & ptlce, dMlwig &
r1PM Sl!koom, Vrm mn
71~ 1/16W71f
22• ADDITIONS · j • ca~ j
/REMODELING .__ ----~-
CUSTOM CREATIVE TU FARTHIHO INTERIORS lnstllabonl, lllte, ClllUllll,
Kitchin I Bath I Remodel mart>ll, atone &lab 1175
Room AdditJona VMIMC .. 12044 Jell 714-f12.a1 L1560875 1149-645-9325
GOOD JOBS.
RBLIABLB
SBRVJCBS.
INTBRBS11N
111/NGS ro BlJY.
/TSAU
THBIUJ
.EVBRJ'JMY
IN
CLASSUBa
(Hf)~,.
(3WPK583) $21.996
CRE'VIER 8llW
I • = I :.ww:1.: ~. Auto, While
~~~~~~ (3WCH66n SV.995
11ft eo.ton Wll« '81 CfltW:R 8llW
OU111g1, twin Mire's, 70'• 714-IU-3171
ob. loaded GPS, Lorin
$10000 obo 949-673-2749
... s-wnll St11pplf
Plllsutllliehino boll. CUiiy Clilln. 20ft. 130 Johnson
OIAboltd mob, por1-e'9CJllY OPS. low Iva, 7mo MW.
Stll,000 NB ~70M728 I.., uuoa11 I
BMW 31111 .f7
Mpd, b4ack w4>11ck. low "1
(E5727t) S22.995
CREVIER BllW
714435-3171
* • FREE U00 14 BMW 5211 '17
Mul1 ramoYI lrom lhor1 ~~ 27k Iii moomg In ,.., '.'JIPI "'" ( $34,9116 11111 and •lt -960•~ • IMW 714--4$7·5457 71'"'35-3171
COMPUTER
HELP! •Mlllll• ... ,.... '*,._ .... ... •PC•-~ Wlll>Algl!lllq ...
......aL<lltJlt lobillll
Ob~ 0.....M!kc>s~
UIS~~Hljp
ui; ...... -.,,.'--.
714-540-6344
r~~,----·-.. 1
L~ ----·-·
AMume lui~ Sllvtf/Blk llhr. moonrool. Stetto,
12 disc C=f, IHI lpOillr, tr , lrm.:!
Al.-Leuel °"'Y $392
per ~ Ml.-~ g-tect c:ndl (!48) 64().607
Ceclllc Coupe O.Ylll ..
Mllll Ill. Good tr.-.p car.
1-owntr, low Iii: S3500 obo
949-nt-1219 7/814-na1
CADl..LAC DEVU.E 't1
low Milll. Bkle. Clofl In-• llriot. LUIUJ(y l Vllll! $8,988 (203888)
NABERS
(714)540:!100
CAOIU.AC OEVIU.E 't7
Lo Ml, Mist Green, V-8
Norhllr, bll. d wart.
(2531177) $18.988 NABERS
(!]4IMM100
A Ill..._ .... " ..... 0o ............... ,.,,......,.,.
MIMMI( .. l&JIUI =--~= Ctl DI! T14Wt!01
QUMIT'f~
toY .. ~ "111
,. '°"" -·-MW •••
p!!!Y. Cll I 78().219-1617 LEXUS ES 300 'f7
COflVEm '14 ei.M!lack. leelllt, MocJo. rod, co. dwomes
2111. ........ ,.., (= $2t,1187 .. ... S10.S00 lilSSION VIEJO ~71IO ~
COUGAR '00 LEXUS GS 300 '00
3-0oor, V6, Sport Group, ~lion. 20" rima. no
Convenience Group. Auto. luxury tlll, no OMV due, co' P'fl' driver'• ... ottf ell mil (Y5606688) $111,985 (096341) $42.787
Kan ~ L.EXUS MISSION VIEJO Uncotn~ 100 tt15311 714-$21-3110
OOOGE OURAHGO W
1111111 Seal 14K .. 1,
lt007W2ll2 --LANO AQYEJI NEWPORT IEACff MM4M445 LEXUS GS 400 .. Nallamlchl Sound. LIXUI
c.rdfildl (003818) $37,11117 I.Out .-ION VII.JC)
IOMIN*
PUBLIC
NOTICE
Tht Calif. Public·
Utllltlte Com· mialon REQUIRES
ht .. UMd holJle.
hold goods moY9fl
print lhelt P.U.C. bl T IVli>ef; lmol
and_ chautfetl pnnt
lhlW T.C.P. runber
In .. ldYetllsl111111l. If you hlW • quat.
lion lbcM .. ---lly of • ITIOYlf, lino
OI chluhr, cal:
PUOLIC UTILITIES
COMMISION 714-558-4151
riv.~---. l .... ,, :'
LA DISCOVERY 'ti
8'ftll I low ml, poww, aunroof ~ $29,195
LANO ROVER NEWPORT BEACH MM4M445
LR DISCOVERY ..
Fiii poww, blac:t i-uty
~ CALL
LAND ROVER NEWPORT HACff
9iM4CH445
LA RANGE AOV'EA .. Full poww, 42K ..._I
133795112134 $29,950 LANO ROVER NEWPORT BEACH
9iM4M445
LA Rallfl Aoww 'II ~·-~ LANO ROVER NEWPORT BEACff MM4M445
MAZDA C9 ES 'te
Lo Ml, V-6. INlhlr, rnocJl'lo
rod & men! Bii °' Wiii. (744180} $14,988
}'AIERS
!ml540-!100
.... 111 llenz C2IO ...
Black/Blac:WSllnnlltt
(71114f1) $27,980
Fl.ETCffER JONES
llU24.140t
.....-SUDO 'f7 1711~
(t533.52) $79,990
FLE'l'CHER JONES
I00-127·U7f
llOUNTAINEE' 4X4 ..
Sidi air begs. n-.
mnllr. co. -perblg aid. tow pllg
(XOJ34e12) 12075
Kan ~
Uncoln-Mlfcury
714-5214110
~~..,
8100 1CU1 -mlMl -wi..
.... ' morel lmtnlc-1 (861809) $17,991
NABERS
(714)540:1100
Oldlmoblll Sillouell '00
low 1211 ...... Whlll. Dull
Doors. ~ NI, CO & Mont! ,,,.._. Rtntlll
(21 IOSS) S2t.1188
NABERS
(719540=!100
A
GOOD
ADI
CUSTOM
SllPCOVE HS
' . . . . . ' '
.
CALIFORNIA'S ' NUMBER ONE · .
. ..--··-JAGUAR DEALER
TEMPTING AT ANY .
· PRICE. IRRESISTIB·LE . ..
. AT THIS ONE.
TllE JAG l 'AR XJ SERIES
STARTl~C AT $56.545
II .
. . ~
.. THE ART of PERFORMANCE
(