HomeMy WebLinkAbout2001-07-22 - Orange Coast Pilot• . '
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SERVING THE NEWPORT -ME.SA C~NITIES SINCE 1907
-T W IST & S H OUT-
Ceubratlng CTtriu & Sun
At the fair
Don't know your
chardonnays from your
pinot noirs7 Want to get a
fast and cheap education in
fine wines? The Wine
Court at the Orange County
Fair awaits.
S..hge• ......
Ufl & UISUIE
What's It take to make an
award-winning cookie? We
get recipes from the top
cooks at the fair's Blue
Bonnet Margarine Cookie
Contest. indudlng first-place
winner Judy Wheeler of
Costa Mesa.
Seehge7
=.1m
fOIUM
Joseph I. Bentley and
Weatherford Oayton talk
with Pilot Senior City Editor
S.J. Cahn about the Church
of Jesus Christ of latter-day
Saints' efforts to bulld a
temple in Newport Beach.
5"hge10
Newport Harbor High Salton
oPefl the 2001 Viii. Park .
Tournament by swimming
i.ps around El Modena. 13-4. ..........
SUNDAY STORY
PHOTOS BY SEAN HUER I DAlY PILOT
Justin Wilkerson, 7, and sister Amanda, 10, goof around In their trailer at the Orange County Fair while parents Richard and Jennifer take a
break from the family-owned petting zoo. Belo~, Jennifer and Justtn wait for visitors at the All Creatures Great and Small petting zoo.
With the carnival rides and booths come the children of
workers ·who spend summers at the Orange County Fair
YGUn9 Owng
D AILY PILOT
A manda Wilkerson
and her brother
Justin have just dis-
rovered that they for -
got to bring Spiro 3.
What's the use in having
their Playstation with only Spiro
2, Coolboarders 3, A Bug's Life
and a couple demo games?
Forget that they're on the
roed -in a trailer, in the more
hidden comers of the Orange
County Pair, where their living
quarters are bordered by La
Grande Wheel on one aide and
a stable on the other.
Forget that they have horse-
back rldtng lessons in the after-
noon, animals to tend to at the
family's petUng zoo named All
Creatures Great and Sm4ll and
a fair full of rides, 1Uti Chips
and Twister c:.'onteltl to entertain
them instead.
They need Spiro 3. They
want Spiro 3.
Amanda, 10, picks up her
mothe r's cell phone and calls
someone named Sean at their
Riverside home. He's coming to
the fa11 today. He is to bring
Spiro 3 with him.
Jennifer Wilkerson,Ainan-
da's mother, calmly continues
making tuna sandwiches for the
two kids and •pepa, •who's out
working the petting zoo.
Amanda's request isn't a pet-
ty one .
She needs what she needs to
feel at home, and if Spiro 3 will
do that, then Spiro 3 it is.
"We're good at making do
like we're at home,• Wilkerson
said.
Which is exactly how this
year's junior mmies seem to
feel -at home. Although they
know the thrill and the unset-
tledness of living at a fair dur-
ing summer, the Orange County
SEE FAIR MGE 12
2 Sunday, July 22, 2001
AMERICA'S llOST
W .... D Ill IOWll
Police arrested a 26-
year-old Costa Mesa man
Tuesday on suspicion of
murdering at least six
people throughout the
state.
Costa Mesa and New-
port Beach poUce are also
investigating
COPS& u Anh The
COURTS Duong, the
man featured
on· America's Most Want-
ed.• was involved in
recent jewelry store rob-
beries at Fashion Island
and South Coast Plaza.
Officials are trying to
figure out if Duong in fact
had a hand in the Septem-
ber robbery at Tomeau
Watch Co. in South Coast
Plaza and in a January
shooting at naditional
Jewelers at Fashion Island
that left one security
guard wounded.
But, police say,
although the mode of
operation seems similar in
these robberies, there ls
no proof that Duong was
even in the area when
these incidents occurred.
In other news, a Supe-
rior Court Judge threw
out of court a civil lawsuit
ffied against Costa Mesa
Councilman <;hris Steel
by resident Michael
-Sz)caradek.
Judge Thierry Patrick
Colaw said Szkaradek did
not present enough evi-
dence to show that Steel
had fraudulent intent
when he allowed a resi-
dent to sign nomination
papers for his wife during
the 2000 elections.
Also, a court-appointed
arbitrator awarded
$225,000 to actress and
model Tina New based on
her accusation that Rod-
man took her against her
will to his Seashore Drive
home, drugged and raped
her. Rodman is expected to
reject the arbitrator's rul-
ing, which is considered
nonbinding -meaning
either side can reject it and
ask for a court trial.
New was a star witness
in the the trial of Erle
Bechler, the Newport
Coast man accused of
killing his wife at sea and
dumping her body in the
ocean.
-DMpa INrwth (OYefS cops
Ind courts. She ~ be rNChed It
(949) 574-<t.226 or bi/ e-mall It
~.bNrathelltJmucom.
l lllW Sll'llMSOI.
IS TUI SUPll?
The winds of political
change blew from Santa
Ana to NeW'pOrt Beach on
Tuesday as the Boa.rd of
Supervisors
POLITICS tentatively
approved
moving the
city out of Tom Wilson's
1upervisorlal district.
The board bumped
Newport B~ach into
Supervisor Jim Silva's
d.!strtct....Ajl jhe nearly
. PHOTO . OF THE WEEK
'A PICTJJRE PRETTY POSE'
Cruising the beach for photographs ls as easy as
riding a bike. You have the sand castle shots, the
kid splashing through the shore picture a.nd ol
course, the photo ol the person buried in the sand.
But when you come across something d1flerent, lt
A HOUSE
WllllOUI A HOME
The Costa Mesa City Council on
Monday decided to put the Huscroft
House for sale instead of restoring it
and moV1ng it to Fairview Park as
originally planned.
H a buyer can't be found for the
1912 Craftsman-style building, the
oouncil decided it must be COSTA tom down. MESA But two potential buyers
have already expressed
interest in saving the house, includ-
ing Chad Ware, who bought the Old
Pink House last month and is restor-
ing it, and Jane Altman-Dwan, who
said the house could be twned into a
tearoom or bed And breakfast.
City staff members are drafting a
letter asking potential buyers to
submit proposals.
juat popa out at you. Dally PUot photographer Greg
Fry found juat that. Hla ahot of the lady with the
umbrella captures a dllferent senae of being at the
beach. It has kind of a mysterloua element to it.
-Greg Fty
SEAN Hl.LER I DAILY PllOT
On Thursday, Costa Mesa residents also got their first chance to oomment of the Santa Ana River Crossings
Study, which evaluates the potential environmental consequences of removing the highly controversial Gisler
Avenue and 19th Street bridges.
The vast majority of speakers at the meeting were opposed to the bridges, while a few strongly supported it.
year-long process of
redrawing d.iltrict bound-.
arles wrapped up. The
final map ii expected to
be approved Aug. 1.f.
Once a decade, the
board adjusts the bound-
aries, armed wtth the lat·
est U.S. Census numberl,
to reflect population and
growth trends.
Newport Beach ofti-
dals embraced the new
alignment, since Silva
shares the dty's $Upport
for an alrpof1,at the
closed El Toro Marine
Corps Air &tBUon. Wilson
did not
-... °'"'°" c.owrs the ..-Ml CMiment-John Wsyne
AJrport. He~ be r..ai.d It
(949) 764-0lO or by ~I alt
l*Jl.dlnflonel.tlmes.c.om.
Ill 111 llFO
YOU 1111
For now, residents ltill
have to make do with real
Oty Hall employees when
they're looking for
e.mwen.
But within two montha,
that'll change. Qty offidall
are getting· ~dy to aet up a~ liifcirmAtton
pbmM ~that will answer ·fbe qUeltk>ol ol
residents around the clock.
Many other cities, such
as Huntington Beach,
Fullerton, San Diego and
San Cemente already
hav~ such info lines 1n
place.
lllWPOU Since May,
IEACI ~~ho nve
Cemente can liateD to
about 250 messages that
inform about things such
as garage sale lignl,
library ca.rd applicatiolll
and public IWimmlng
pools.
Laura Relnlimar, Who
oversees that city'• Info
line said that about 2,000
residents have already
called. The system has
helped to free up time for
ctty employees, whose
voice malls got clogged
with Inquiries from resi-
dents.
But just like Newport
Beach officials, Reinsimar
said the program's simply
a way to improve services
and residents can ltill talk
to someone if they're more
comfortable with that. _....,.Wlnldw
ClOWf'I Newport leld\. He ~be
r.-Nd alt., 57~ 01 by
9'4Nll at mdllf.Mn*Alr
~com.
Doily Pilot
•He aalcf. 'I don't want to be
In a submarine, Dad.' 'Why
noW 'See the guys on top of
thet~''" -~NewportJed ,..........,.~~onhk w:.=::,':i-1:
museum's new display. which ocuses
on Naval submarines, will be up
through Oct. 28.
"It's pretty sad that it's going
up /or sale, and l/ no one
buys it, it will be demolished.
I would hate to see that
qecause we have so llttle ol
our past."
-........ Dixoft. Costa Mesi
councilwoman, on the Oty Council's
decision Monday to put the Husaoft
Hoose up for sale. The council had
been considering restoring the
1912 CraftsmaMtyte house end
moving It to F•lrview PM1t.
FlllllLY llPAITUll
"I'm not giving up
Newport because
I want to. It's
because I have to ....
We've ttled to
subtract the pollUcs
out of the process. "
-1bm Wlllon, county supeMsot;
on the proposal to redistrict
Newport Beach so that It falls In the
territOfY of SupeMsor Jim Sliva
"I feel very good about It. This
is an very emotional for me." -°"" ...... Costa Mesa councilman, on having the clvll case
against him tossed out of c.ourt
Thursday. Steele still must fKe
felony <Nrges for •lleged perjury
regarding nomination~
Steel's .rr~tment hti been
continued &Mrtll Juty 31.
•ntere'a notplng more Jun
than watching peopJe'a faces
when you do the magic and mu&ona .•
-•• _.. ........ on wMt he likes best ~ perlOf'ming In
tht AUMll lfos. Femlty Fun Cima,
which Is wmntty ..,.,..tng at the
Or.nge C.ounty Fair
"Alter the m1lltary sult, the
mariachi suJt Ill the aecond.
moat lmporlant au.It In
• Mexlco. People Melt and
they feel 80 f:.roud."
---~ 11 L IMdltof MarilJd\f Sol De MmaD; on Y11f1
nwtachl '"'*Is ... '° -HerNndtz Md .. bMd wlll pley
todly at 1he ~ County'"'·
: Doily Pilot
.
:Pink's Drugstore .was the
place to be in Costa Mesa
Young Chang
DAILY Pit.or
G uess where city offi-
cials used to go to
make all the big and
important decisions?
. looklil co~~· not BAC chambers. Not the
Mayor's
office, not elsewhere in City
Hall.
The place to be for kids
and adults and executives
and housewives and anyone
who was anyone was the
soda fountain at Pink's Drug-
store in Costa Mesa.
•1t really was a meeting
place, and there probably
were more deals made at the
soda fountain there than at
.any other place in town, in
regards to the city,• said
Gladys Retakes, a Costa
Mesa resident since 1952.
Alvin and Lucy Pinkley
owned the drugstore, which
was Costa Mesa's only one
OBITUARY
Sharley
Van Natta Davidson
Sharley Van Natta David-
son, a Costa Mesa resident.
mother of four, former member
of the Orange County Soaring
Assn. and avid motor home
traveler, died on July 19 as a
result of a sub dural hematoma.
She was 71 years old.
Born on July 27, 1919, in
Santa Ana, Davidson married
Cecil "Red• Davidson in
1946. The couple had four
children, daughters Sheri
Horvat and Christina and
sons Larry Michael and Gary.
A homemaker, Davidson
enjoyed motor home traveling
to Alaska and other parts of
the country as well as Mexico.
She is survived by her hus-
band and her children as well
as her grandchildren.
Heather, Michelle, Misty,
Melissa, Jessica, Benjamin
and Brandon; her great-
grandchildren, Michaela,
Tanner, Malia and Kieran; her
brother, Richard K. Van Natta.
and her sister, Aleta Denham.
A viewing will be held today
from 2 p.m. to 5 p.m. at Pacific
View Memorial Park, 3500
Pacific View Drive. 1be funeral
will be held at the same loca-
tion on Monday at 1 p.m.
• 10 ~ READIJtS: The Dally
Pilot ~!comes obituaries for resl·
dents or former residents of Costa
Mesa or Newport Bffch. If you
want to hive an obituary printed In
the Pilot. ask your mortuaty to fax
us the lnfonNrtion ~ (949) 646-
4170 or c.11 the newsioom ~ (949)
764-4324.
for awhile, from 1933
through 1979.
The couple moved to Cos-
ta Mesd from San Bernardino
the same year they started
their business. They took a
chance with the-last $500
they had, Retakes said, and
made it for more than 40
as a phannacist, but as a
friend, said Retakes, also a
volunteer at the Costa Mesa
Historical Society.
•Everybody liked them. ·
They were friendly people
and had a great interest in
the community,• she added.
years. •
Alvin Pinkley was a six-
term council member from
1954 to 1978, elected several
times even as mayor, and
served also on the school and
water boards.
The store had a coffee bar.
a soda fountain, a phannacy
and, later, sold a sundry of
everyday necessities that
make up today's drugstores.
Pinkley even sold penny
candy for the kids.
At the onset of the
Depression, he would fill
prescriptions for a dozen
eggs, a sack of potatoes,
stewing chicken or whatever
his customers could offer him
in place of money.
•we used to have candy
that cost a pe(Uly, • Retakes
laughed.
Alvin Pinkley died about
two years ago, and Lucy
Pinkley died five months
later.
He had a rack of maga-
zines and comic books where
kids would hang out for
hours, read and, ultimately,
stay out of trouble.
And he had the kind of
personality that drew the
community to him not only
• Do you know of a person, place
or event that deserves a historical
look llac:k7 Let us know. Contact
Young Chang by fax at (949)
646-4170; e-mail atyoung.changO
lat/mes.com; or mall her at c/o
Dally Pilot. 330 W. Bay St., Costa
Mesa, CA 92627.
BrieflJ_
IN TllE NEWS
Corona del Mar lawyer
sought in murder case
Orange County Sheriff's Depart-
ment officials are still looking for h elp
in finding a Corona del Mar lawyer,
who is wanted for a 1997 murde r of a
Villa Park woman.
Department officials said Saturday
that they had not received any addi-
tional information that could lead to
the arrest of Hugh •Randy" McDon-
ald, who is suspected of killing Janie
Pang. Officials asked the public Fri·
day for help in finding McDonald.
Pang was shot to death at about
12:05 p .m . on May 30, 1997, in her
Villa Park home in the 9600 block of
Crestview Circle. A mothe r of two,
Pang had lived in the city for two
years.
The murder remained a mystery.
officials said, until investigators from
the Sheriff's Countywide 'Law
Enforcement Unsolved Element Team
reviewed the case a nd Jinked
McDonald, 38, to the murder.
McDonald lived in Corona del Mar
at the time of the murder. He disap-
peared shortly afterward, when a
drawing of the murder suspect based
on witnesses' recollections appeared
in local newspapers.
An arrest warrant charging him
with murder has been issued. His
whereabouts are unknown.
Anyone with information on
McDonald's location should contact
the Sheriff's homicide unit at (714)
6-47-7055 during business hours, or
after hours at (714) 628-7170.
Victims of fatal Costa Mesa
crash identified
Orange County Coroner's officials
released the names of a woman and a
boy who died in a Costa Mesa car acci-
dent on Friday.
Deanna Ou, 15, of Lakewood, and
Christopher Chhim, 4, of Bellflower,
were killed when the red Honda sport
utility vehide they were traveling 10
went airborne and slid down an
embankment at the Corona de! Mar
Freeway onramp to the northbound San
Diego Freeway at about 1:15 p.m.
California Highway Patr61 officials
clld not release the names of the car's two
other passengers, who survived the
crash, or identify who was driving.
Campbell awarded high
honor by Republican group
Assemblyman John Campbell (R-
lrvine) has been named as a Freshman
Republican Legislator of the Year by the
National Republican Legislators Assoo-
abon. Campbell is one of three legisla-
tors across the country to be awarded the
honor, which will be presented to him
Aug. 14 at the group's national conven-
tion in San Antonio, Texas.
•1 have to admit, given that there's a
lot of legislators in the country -with 50
states -I'm surprised and honored,•
Campbell said.
The state legislator, who represents
the cities of Costa Mesa and Newport
Beach along with eight other cities in his
10th Assembly District, said the award
will "motivate me to be more effective.•
Campbell was nominated in part for
his leadership on the energy issue and
his community outreach, said Jennifer
Cowen, Campbell's district director.
• tf,o uiiiiwWD
·~-~~~ Restau rant
Establlshed In 1962 -----. ~.tr.. a: Gtft3
50%0ff
Silk Florals, Topiaries, Orchids, Palms & Trees
Mon-frl lM, Sat 10-5, Sun 10-4
• 369 E. 17th Street, Costa Mesa, CA #MM,,_....,
(949~'4' 6745
'
Mon/o Nif/lt $Jl«W
Omlp/ete l.'tli# Fild MjpM]);,,., I J '?'°pet'~
/.JM/,m s.w. ,.,,,. ~ ., ... """"",.,...,.,,.. "',.,..,..,. "'.,_,,
Ste1d11 • Se•food • Cocltt1til1
Quality Service• Nightly Entertaiomcat
POLICE J ILES
COSTA MESA
• Avocado Street: A
home burglary was
reported m the 200
block at 5:47 p.m
Thursday.
• Magnolia Street:
G rand theft was
reported in the 400
block a l 5:57 p.m.
Thursday.
• Plnecreek Drive:
Annoying phone calls
were reported in the
.2800 block at 8:32 a .m.
Thursday.
• Tustin Avenue: Van-
dalism was reported in
the 1600 block at 7:44
p.m . Thursday.
NEWPORT BEACH
• Riverside Drive:
Unlawful talung of a
vehicle was reported in
the 100 block at 3:45
a.m. Thursday.
• Seashore Drive:
Body boards w ere
reported stolen from a
front patio m the 4000
block at 12:40 p .m.
Thursday.
• 34th Street and the
beach: Disorderly con-
duct involving alcohol
was reported at 1 :45
p .m. Thursday.
&,nday, My 22, 2001 3
Alvin Plnklet
was the ownlt
of Pink's
Drugstore,
which operated
1n Costa Mesa
from 1933
through 1979.
Pinkley and bis
wife, Lucy,
moved to Costa
Mesa from San
Bernardino to
open the store,
which also
featured a soda
fountain.
FROM THE COt.LfCTION
OF THE COSTA MESA
HISTORICAL SOCIETY
LOCAL MOl1IMIS
PIERCE BROTHERS
BELL BROADWAY
Mortuary * Chapel
Cremation
11 O Broadway, Costa Mesa
642-9150
~There's a sheep
. ready to pop. ,
-Alu Smith. 17, whOtakes care of
animals In the falr's Maternity Bam.
4 Sunday, July 22, 2001
& SHOUT
. Celebrating Citrus & Sun
DAY 10
1 .
SEAN HUER I OAl.Y PILOT
Nelly Gutterrez, 3, of Inglewood observes chlq 1n the Maternity Barn at the Orange County Fair on Saturday.
Fair-ly cute baby • als
" Tlny goa~, water buffaloes and more enchant visitors to the Maternity Barn
Mathis Winkler
DAILY PILOT
ess than~
week old, Kid
already bas
more admirers
than your
average goat can dream
of in a lifetime.
But the snow white newborn
seemed fairly blase about the
squeaks of excitement coming
from the other side of the fence
Saturday at the Orange County .
Pair's Maternity Barn.
"It looks cute," said Devan
Cazares, 10, adding that she'd
love to take the baby goat home
with her.
Devan's half brother, Chase
Camacho, 8, agreed that Kid was
his favorite animal so far, but
offered a more sober reason.
•1t•s the smallest," he said.
AB part of the fair's livestock
exhibition, visitors can check out
tiny water buffaloes, chicken and
donkeys, all of whom have been
born )Vithin the last couple of
weeks.
Ed Bu~ who helped put
together the exhibition, said the
Maternity Barn is an extension of
the year-round Centennial Parm,
which tries to expose urbanites
to agriculture.
•we have a lot of people who
have never had exposure to a
farm environment," Buck said.
Bill Akers, who brought his 3-
year-old daughter, Nika, and his
6-year-old son, Tommy, to the
barn, said farm animals aren't
too common in the family's
hometown of Seal Beach.
•we don't see many donkeys,"
he said. •Maybe some members
of our City Council."
Usually, piglets get most of the
attention, said Alex Smith, 17,
who monitors, feeds and cleans
the antmalt as a summer job.
But the 465-poun4 pregnant
sow, breathing heavily, is sWl
keeping folks on their toes. She's
not expected to give birth unW
later this week.
•people come and say, •Last
mne Court at the /air features awaril-Wtilning
vintages for tempting tastes
by a ~el of their peers.
Thete two factors are
what make the wine com-
petition at the Otange
County Pair IO ditt1nctive,
AictDeiinii l!aJlnger, pree-:
ldent of the Orange Cowity
Wine~. Whlth co-
~ lbe eftllt, •ft .. QWforide Willet
~ .... Mid. ·W1De1
laaft a.a lli9 made fram .... l'Vft. c.llom6a -tll*l•tMflt .... =::.=L.A.•
year she bad them earlier,"'
Smith said.
When one of the animals in
the barn goes into labor, the area
gets crowded with everyone try-
ing to catch a glimpse of the
birth, Smith said.
He's also helped to deliver
animals himself.
·At first, I was kind of ner-
vous,• Smith said. "It gets hot
and there's lots of blood.•
But he sWl 11.ltes working with
animals and said he's even con-
sidering becoming a veterinarian
when he's done with school.
And piglet fans don't have to
be diaappointed. A sow in the
Centennial Farm's animal comer
gave birth to •ix young ones a
week ago.
IAIGAINo/
theDAY
. .
Daily Pilot
DISH of
theDAY
You might want to think twice
about getting ..,tk cHc:k..,
nuggets at Olkken a.tie's
BroMted Chldcen on Centennial
Way if you're planning a
romantic evening with your loved
one. But othefwise, the nuggets,
whktl cost $4.75 and come with
a garlic and parsley relish. can't
be recommended highly enough.
EVENT of
the DAY
Get down with the farm boys
and watch them mllldng cows
every day at 3 p.m .. 5 p.m. and
7 p.m. In the Miiiennium m.m.
The milking folks suggest getting
there 15 minutes urty to find a
good watching spot. The milking
takes about eight to 10 minutes
and each cow gives between
three and five gallons.
FAIR AnENDANCE
•DAY 9, Saturday: 19,211
• DAY 9, 2000: 23,859
Doily Pilot
OUN'll coum •111
SC IE DULi
Of EYEITS
TODAY
• ,,,,; hours: 10 a.m. to midnight
• ,.., location: Orange County
FWgroundf, 88 Fair Drive, Cost.I Mesi
• ...... SS. Buses !*tt free.
• 11dMll:'$7 for-ves 13 to 54, $6
seniors 55 and older and S3 for ctill-
chn 6 to 12. Children Sand younger
get In free.
• SpedM: Today Is Fiesta Del MaNcN
o.y. the rich and colorlul heritage of
Mexk:o will come alive as Flem Del
M.,-f.c:tll o.y brings mariachi musk,
festive dancing. a men:ado and other
fun actMtles to the Grandstand
Arena and Me.ctows Stage.
• lnfonMtlcw (714) 708-1928 or
http:llwww.ocfair.com
AU. DAY
• Nettlbom enlnwls-livestock
ArMMatemlty Barn
• ~Angora gcMltl. ........
...... lllmnll lndultry..t .....
lndullry-Uvesto<X Area
...... enlnwls-Uvesto<X
ArealSmall Animal Tent
• O'Clp9 Md enlnwls-Centennial
Flf'ITI
• Onnge cnrtle ..... ~ -
Collectlons Building • .,... ....... dt...,..-
Collectlons Building •,._.ta Md crwfts-Kids Par1t
• Qullllr"s ..... tole pe11-.;
.... Md Onnge CoU'wty wood-
WOlbn-Home a Hobbles Stage
•Wao~Mde!*w pell"*• dMtc11abetloi• -Visual
Arts Building
• Ae9t. Del MmiMH -Grandstand
Arena
10 a.a. . °'*' nlabft show judglng-Uvesto<X Arena
• UMe Ught D.nc9 Party-Kids
PnSt.ge • aown,...,,. (until 1 p.m.) -
~In Gate
11 a.a.
..... Lm Acid tmy of
1hJOU.
• Onnge CoU'wty,.., Clraa Fun
llev\le-Kids Pn
·-~CIOl-*Y""'*Sunst9 • Al Allllbn ...... ,..._
Newport Arenl
llOOll
• Apple a.. aow---Heritage
Stage
• Oyst.111 ...... ~.,......
-Me.ctows Stage
• DuldnYnle Gra55 Roots Stage
(Floral Pavilion)
• 08ft del1toiwtlatloi1 Home I
Hobbles Stage
• 0.... tMlft pew1tatlon
Uvestodt Arena
•..._.~Juggler -Sun Stage • ,...,. n..nmn. n.glc&M-
~ • Mllirt Street DbdelMd Ma ....
-Grounds 1~
• OWtle Keeling. gl sbkl ...
Craften Village
• Uly lrtcbon. CIOUntry mwk-
Sun Stage
1 ....
...... ~Al'tt«De
MulclO-~Stage
...... Folldortm~
AnlfMlm -MHdows Stage
• Jotwt ~. m•gldan-
Celebfation Stage (Youth Building)
• Windy NltM -Grass Roots Stage
(Roral Pavilion) .
• LaMon Aide -Kids Par1t Stage
• Flylng GMle ~Guild ........
ltrallan -Home I Hobbles Stage
...... ~Juggler-Sun Stage
• Cirllllt .-. .............. Zoo Md
Mlatlon Show-Green Gate
PwttlngZoo ....................
(until I p.m.)-Grounds
hJOP&
• c.....nk:l del1wwwbatlun
Crafters Village
• 9lly lrtcbol" country muUc -
Sun Stage
• Mllirt Stnet DIJd 1lmnd Jaa ._..
-Groundl
2M;
...... O..GenMn o.nc..-
~~
• flalyn1 dm o..nt -Meadows ·
~ .
• lletty PWfol 11•· Arts Studio.
......... -Celebrftlon Stage (Youth
Building)
• .,..._... Grass~
(Floral PIYllion)
• SUIH>ar bting eone.t-Kids
PartcStage • Cooldi'I with Mn,.....,_
Home I Hobbles Stage
•Wine ••wwwttiitlcM Wine
Courty..-d
........ Wiid. CIOUntry mulk-
Sun Stagel
......... Gmne Show
(""" 7 p.m.) -Grounds • Al Allllbn Reclltg,.. _
Newport Arena -~
21JOP&
·---Lord.~
SunStage •....-.•ad.,. Orcus-Green
~
....... lhurston. lftllglcian -
GroundJ
• Da11l11of1he Wiid Welt-
Newport Arena ,, ...
..... ~DeGlllldelupe
-Heritage Stage
•Divine----~ Stage
• John~ lftllglcian-
~ Stage (Youth Building)
• SI-. .. trW OIHMM•b•tlon
-Centennial Farm
•Miking deliMMlltiWdon-
Miltennlum Barn
• Juigler-Kids Par1t Stage
• JoMthM Wiid. CIOWltry m&.-1<-
Sun SUge
•..._. ...... Juggler-Kids Park
• MMt Street Dbdeland Ma 9and
-Grounds
3:30P&
• 0.-. KMUng. gl'""'kl ••• ,
Craften VIiiage
• lble .................... don
Home & Hobbies Stage
•Stmw Lord.~
Sun Stage
• fnnk lhurston. IMgldM1-
Gt0ond5 --
•MM Science ...... Mad Science
Theatre
SAVE A LIFE
SPONSOR A PET
Fo~ Only $1'9 You Can H"lp ...
Are you an animal lover? Here's a great way to express it.
Sponsor a pet in our special " luv-n-Pets Save a Life" section
in the Daily Pilot on Thursday, August 23, 2001 . This special
section has saved hundreds of lives, thanks to people like
~I Be a par.t Of IGYing a life and feel great about doing it.
MW ,. LIPI SPONSOllSHIP FORM
Christtan pop group ZOEglrl wU1 perform at
8 p.m. Monday wlth Carman at Arlington Theater.
Their name com9' from •zoE, • which according
to them means •ute• ln the New TestamenL The
concert ls free with fair admlsslon.
-Heritage Stage
• lllibyton Mood.,...... -
Meadows Stage
• letty"s ~.Arb~
vloln -Celebfftlon Stage (Youth
Bulldlng)
• Fruity ...... Gum Mowlr'8 -
Kld5 Park Stage
• Wine denMMlltl iltloo't Wine
Courtyard
•WlllWCoMn.~
(und 9 p.m.) -Courtyard Stage
• JonllthM Wiid, country mwk-
Sun Stage
• Gf'Mt ~,,.....Zoo Md
Educ.etlon Show -Green ~
Petting Zoo
• Main Stnlet Dtxle&Md Jaa 8Md
-Grounds
• All AIMlcan being,.. -
Newport Arena
4:30P&
• c.....nk:I OlmoiwbiitlcM -
Crafters Village
•Orange County Woo~
delnOIWbatkM Home I Hobbles
Stage
• StiweLord. ~
Sun Stage •
• llWMfl Btudien Clrcul -Green
Gate
• ,....1hurston. rnagki8n -
Grounds
• Port City 'MllMtlboerd Wbards -
Grounds
• Doggl.-of the Wiid Welt -
Newport Arena ,, ...
• W.ubu•.., ,_'to.nw111 Artl -
Heritage Stage
• Orange CoU'wty Ki..m.n-
Mffdows St.ge
........... Oil .... do.1 -
Millennlum Barn
• JoNlhM Wiid. CIOUntry n.ak -
Sun Stage ·
·v.ng.wd~
(wd I p.m.) -Blues and Brews
5:30P.&
• Orange County flllr Clrcul fut
....,._ -Kids Par1t
• se.w Lord.~
Suns~
• Port City Wllhlbomd Wizards -
Grounds
• All MMbn llladng ,.. -
Newport Arena .....
•lnlltRy ..............
pe-utadan-Centennial Farm
• Gmlftl Md ........ ••11t1nc. tlan"' s..wdligo c.wron College
( ...... 9 p.m.) -Colltdions Building
• Coo1di'9 del1wwwtt8'kw1 Home
~ July 22, 2001 S
• Hobllill 5_t.9ga
•D1-nGfthaW .... -
Newport~
........... -MMf Sdenal
ThmMre
.~ ........ ~--SunSt.age ......
• ...... ~ cione.t-
Hertt..ge SQge
•0--.~lfnn*la •
Cr.tt.rs """• •Port~Wlillll ..,.....,._
Grounds
7PA .....................
Mll~lafn ..... 'MIA,..,.. .....
Me.tdows Stage
• "'-" •cAtWll Clraa -Green
Gate
7aGP&
• c.....nk:I delnoclSbatlon
Crafters Village
• Dave Md(ehly Mo-Heritage
Stage
·Al~RMing,..
Newpott Arena
•MM Sdence -~ Sdence (
Theatre .....
• Mty "8y <:yrw-Arlington
Theatef
•0....-.n~
Uvestock Arena
•llHtymndthe~-~
Stage
• Plort City ..... Cleld ....,._
Grounds
• Swtehlld -Sun Stage
•the Tiny tt.ndl .....
(until 11 p.m.) -Blues and Brews
l:lOP&
• Swing Felt -Heritage Stage ,, ...
• ~ YUzuAc. hypiodst
MffCbM St.age
• Port City w.tlbomd Wlurds-
Grounds
•MM Sdence-~ ~e
Thutre
t:JOP&
• Deft Md(etlty nto -Heritage
Stage
• 5'.ftcNld -Sun Stage
10P&
• !Idly .... the a.ndlts -Mffdows
Stage
10-.JOP&
• Swing Felt -H«rtage Stage
.
I I' i '"'' ' I ' '
•>1•HtW 11••
. • t
i • f
' ' • .. • • . .
~·~~~~~~~~~~~~....:
: Doily Pilot
GREG FRY I OAJtY PllOl
Costa Mesa resident and a.spiring chef Judy Wheeler proudly displays the Ice cream sandwiches that won her the
blue ribbon in this year's Blue Bonnet Margarine Cookie Contest at the Orange County Fair.
•
• re.cz . es
Stories, traditions mark the winners of
the Orange County Fair's cookie contest
Young Chang
DAllY PILOT
T tus is where the memory
of Pam Bartolone and the
culinary flair of Judy
Wheeler meld:
You cool Pam's Choco-
late Chip Walnut Cookies.
You scoop some vanilla bean or
chocolate ice cream (Wheeler's
touch) on one cookie, top the com-
bo with another cookie and trim the
edges. Freeze tlus for two hours.
Melt a favonte chocolate. Roll
the edges of the sandwich in it,
then roll the chocolate-covered rim
in chopped nuts.
The result? A winner at the
Orange County Fair's Blue Bonnet
Margarine Cookie Contest and a
tribute to the late Bartolone, who
died 20 years ago in a car accident.
She loved to cook, she loved to
bake cookies and she loved to eat
all the cookies, Wheeler said.
·we were close,· the Costa
Mesa resident said. •And I have the
recipes that she had wntten down
in her recipe book.·
Laden with as much nch histo-
ry as with the contest's signature
Blue Bonnet Margarine, this
year's three winning cookie
recipes at the Orange County Fair
have stories to tell.
Barbara Belohovek, who won
third place for her "Snow Balls.•
shares a taJe about 30 years old.
She was a young bride -a mom
by age 20 -and wantmg to start
her family's own holiday tradibons.
Belobovek. now 50, pored through
recipes in magazines looking for
ones that might impress the father-
in-law and ttunest of the family. She
found ·snow Balls" in aniss(le of
Christmas Helps from Family Circle.
•And people ask for 'em every
year,• Belohovek said. "The maga-
zine is falling apart now. It's pretty
fragile.• -_ __..
SEE REOPE5'-M6E 8
Shipshape architecture sets house apart
• EDfTOlt'S NOTE: Every other
weelc. No Place Like Home will
take rNders on a tour of a local
residence.
way into his domesbc sur-
roundings.
design. Add lo that a pen-
chant for interesting build-
ing materials and high-cal-
iber workmanship, and you
get a product that is particu-
lar to the Taylor-Ullman
home.
Sunday, July 22, 2001 7
TRAVEL. TILU
Newport
family ·
takes on
Europe
Young Chang
DAILY PILOT
0 ver 34 days. on 22
trams. m 11 hotels, 7
airplanes, using five
different currencies
and 25 rolls of ftlm, Penny
Fleming and her Newport
Beach family toured London,
SWltzerland, Germany and
Denmc:trk for d first-ever
European family vacation.
"I'm trying to encourage
more people _. ,
to bnng theLr IJ ? ~~~~~~-j\ :J:-
mg, whohad ~1U«Oft
been to
Europe
before but
never Wlth
the kids. ·It's
very safe over
there, there
was a lot of
freedom for
the lads to be able to go
down the elevator and meet
us in the lobby.·
Annie and Michael Flem-
ing, ages 6 and 7 respective-
ly, concluded that the citron
ice cream in Munich was the
tastiest. while a swimming
pool with water jets on the
Northern Germany island of
Sylt was the most impressive.
"They graded Europe by
the swunnung pools and the
ice cream,· Penny Fleming
laughed.
For Penny and John, small
mountain towns, splendidly
gaudy casUes and a view of
sailing yachts from the ·
Palace Hotel in Switzerland
qualJ.tied as favorites.
SEE TRAVEL PAGE 8
L mda Taylor and Dave
Ullm4n are like two
ships passing in the
night. This dynamic New-
port Beach couple, married
for 19 years, have high-pow-
ered careers that demand
constant travel for Dave
and long office hours for
Llnda.
Koren Wight
NO PUa UKE HOME
Unda, president of Taylor
& Associates Architects,
makes her living merging
ideas, f\mctioo and practi-
cality with inspired design.
Her firm is working on the
new Women's Pavilion at
Hoag Hospital. Her love of
fine art and intimate living
spaces are showcased in her
professional and domestic
surroundings.
When Linda and Dave
bought their home in 1989,
they immediately started the
transformation. 1he ranch-
style house, built in 1952,
originally had 1900 square
feet with a 400-square-foot
detached garage. Previous
owners had been quite par-
tial to Polynesian-influenced
decor. Unda and Dave
quickly removed several
SEAN Hl.L8 / DM.Y ~OT
Unda Taylor and Dave Ullman's backyard hosts
coUecUons from the family's extensive travels.
Dave, owner of Ullman
Sails, is an internationally
renowned sailor. With three
world championships and
scores of sailing accolades,
it ls easy to undenland bow
saillng-insptred memorabil-
ia and turniture made its
Together, this husband-
and-wife team has created a
unique home environment
that blends a love of the sea
and appreciation of good
tons of lava rock and began a comfortable beach house
making the house their using materials that were
home.
Unda's plan was to m!dte
TRAVEL
C:::ONTINUED FROM 7
•1t wu the epitome of
true luxury,• Penny Flem-
ing aaid. •Being able to
alt on the windowsill and
watch the yachts on Lake
Lucem.•
The castles were also
luxurious. Huge and
adorned, they gave Flem-
ing a taste of fairy-tales
melded with history.
·nere are real castles
in Germany,• Fleming
said. •Things that you
read in books about -
th~y're real.•
In Switzerland, the
family stayed in a small
town in the mountains
where cows wore bells,
buildings looked distinctly
Swiss in their architecture
and restaurants served
fondue.
•1t was everything you
would've thought of
Switzerland,• said Flem-
ing, who owns three
Internet companies.
Her only caveat would
be -watch out for pricey
hotels.
•Tue most expensive
ones are not the best,•
she said.
The Fleming family of Newport Beach toured
Germany, Denmark, Switzerland and England durtng
their European vacatton.
Daughter Annie said
she liked being in the
Swiss mountain towns
because they were at
•tbe top of Europe.·
While a little disap-
pointed that she couldn't
meet the queen in Lon-
don, Annie spent part of
the week wearing a sil-
ver crown with little
pink jewels.
The kids heard con-
certs in Salzburg -the
music of Mozart -and
learned to eat weiner
schnitzel.
One of Annie's trip
highlights was seeing the
cows -for the simple
reason that they looked
pretty. ..
'
•I liked !he cows
because they had bells on
them,• she said .
• Have you, or someone you
know, gone on an Interesting
vacation recently? Tell us your
adventures. Drop us a line to
tr.vel 'hi .... 330 W. Bay St.,
Costa Mesa, CA 92627; e-mail
young.changOlatlmes.com; or
fax to (949) 646-4170.
ART REsTORATION
Wtrep.ir~
• PORCELAIN• CiMTAL
•PAINTINGS
• OilNA • GLW • GlAPHlo • FlAMFS AND On:IEl Mr
COWC'lllLES
rro-ill"F-a~~l
I '°" OFP EN'llU IOU6S oa ~
.., _____ ._ __ ~
www.
If Only Yach ts Could Talk ...
She held the world6 att:ention with the like6 of Marilyn Monroe, Frank Sinatra,
'Nlnaton Churchill, Eli7..al:1eth "(ayior ... and of courae, Jackie 0. Creating hl5tcry
once again, Arl5totle Onae;5i5' fabled yacht Chrle;tlna hae; undergone a
$50 million restoration and ie; available on a limited ba515 to lndividual6
who will become part of her lllustriou5 l~cy. Chri6tlM 0 affome; thoee few
a flret-tlr.ne opportunity to experience the extraordinary lifestyle of the
Onaael6 yean;, replet<; with the modem t.ouche6 of the 216t century.
lnalvlduals can now re5erVe pa~e
wlt'1 Tauck Worta Dleoovery-winner
of Tnwel + Lefsure'6-Worlde Be5t"
Award. Tauck "'111 eall they~ with
SCQllhled with c.8k:ula-
tlona frOm when the Hunt-
ington Beach resident tried
to make multiple times the
~ommended serving, the
recipe is not for the calorie-
comdous.
They're margarine and
butter based cookies rolled
up into balls, baked and
rolled in powdered sugar.
•Tuey look like snow
balls and they're really
flaky, really buttery,• she
•said. "It just seems to be a
cookie that everybody's
attracted to and loves.•
Mary Miller, a Ladera
Ranch resident and the sec-
ond place winner of the
contest, baked Viennesean
Sandwich Cookies with
lemon icing. They're
clipped halfway in choco-
late and rolled partway in
nuts.
She got the recipe from a
cooking class she took
aboµt 10 years ago, but the
famj.ly tradition of baking
cookies around the holidays
started with her grand-
mother, Hildreth Hume.
Miller, Hume and
Miller's mother Yvonne
would stand around Yvonne
Miller's Balboa Island
kitchen where the cup-
boards are painted with
family stories.
They'd make 40 kinds of
cookies -including sugar,
ginger, Chinese puzzles,
brownies, spice, nubneg,
Russian tea cakes, pecan
tortes and, of course, the
Viennesean treats.
Today, it's just Yvonne
'•
SICOlll PUCI:
VIENNESEAN
SANDWICH COOKIES
Yields 24 coolcM
,~ ............
1!.la-. .... , ....... ......
2C..-...
, ...... ---dtlpi
,~ ..... ,_ ........... ..,.........
lemon ldng
and Mary Miller who bake,
but they assume every year
that Hume would've been
proud.
~~and 6table-~Untlt fluffy In a bowl. Stir In flour gr..., th-' PKAIM until well-
blended. Chai ...,.•I hours. or
until flml ~to handle.
IU>ll douth. • teaspoon at a time, tntq 1·tnch size balls
between palms of hands. Place
2 t~ apltt on ungreased
cookie sheets. a.ke In stow
oven (325 dearMS) 20 minutes,
or untJI ltghtfy fOlden. Cool on
cookie sheets 5 min utes.
Remo¥• cerefulty. Roff In sugar In pie plate whtle
stilt werm to mate a generous
white coettng. Coof completely
on wire radcs.
Store with wex paper Of' trans-
parent wrap between layers In a
<On~Mf with • t'9htflttlng
COYer.
MWe have two ovens
going at all times, and it's
quite a production,• Miller
s~d.
SEAN HILER I DAA.Y Pl.OT
The upstairs guest bedroom includes a bunk with a pullout trundle: an eJfldent use of
precious space. The bullt-ln cubbyholes provide a place for everything.
HO.ME
CONTINUED FROM 7
practical and visually inter-
esting. She chose not to
incorporate a Mstyle, • like
Nantucket or Craftsman. but
to use simple, clean details,
and high-quality materials
and workmanship.
Several pbales of remodel-
ing over a number of years
included the addltioo of a
master bedroom and bath ide-
ally located in the back of the
house.
Unda's new kitchen was
carefully designed to be the
cent.er of activity for the fami-
ly. Soapstone counters are set
on aisp white cabinets. Open
shelving displays Linda's pot-
tery; baskets and cookbook
co11ectton. An antique pine
table accommodates family
and gmltl. A large cinder-
bloclt flNpl8clt IMldl texture
and wamath. A~
Dutch door Jeadl to a garden
filled wllb b9rbl and j>otted
citrus trees.
Dave has enjoyed staying
with other sailing families
during his travels, and when
he and Unda remodeled
their home, one of their
great inspirations was the
creation of a space to offer
fellow sailors so they could
return the favor of gracious
hospitality.
Tbe upstairs ot tbe un-
man-lllylor home is devoted
exdustvely to guest accom-
modations. The guest bed-
room and adjacent bath and
living space are steeped in
nautical influence. lbe stairs,
which lead to an observation
deck. were. built to replicate a
boat ladder: polished chrome
handrails and teak steps. At
the top of the ladder is a boat
batch that leads to the rooftop
weather station.
As the house took shape,
the couple began to focus on
the baekyard. lJnda. calls her
landlca~ "a wort in
Jm>gl'ell,. which defiDel
1peces for an outdoor living
room. dining room and ftre..
place.
The flapr dllllnd <MlldOcli .IQOllll. are c:llftdj. eon·
nect8d l?Y wood"~' W~ted 8D Balterii ... t.oudwalk. From
tb8 IMDg' roam. a Dutch
cloai' c.-. Out to Ul alfresCO
dining area, anchored by a
fireplace.
The next area, delineated
by a split-rail fence is the
M beach• area and includes a
rectangular pool (influenced
by a trip to Tonga) and sand
gravel and sea shell borders.
The path frames a vegetable
garden, grape arbor and
berry viries.
Her fa:&~ boys, with their wet · ung gear,
inspired tbe need for practical
outdoor space that includes
an outdOO{ shower with high
hedges for prtvacy.
The materlals for the out-
side of the home include bur-
nished and sandblasted con-
crete block, shing)es to •hide
the seams between old and
new," and copper Oashing
because it holds up to the cor-
rosive marine air.
Leftover boat parts have
been incorporated into the
outdoor scheme, conUnulng
tbe subtle nautical flavor.
The lllylor-Ullman bome-
hold embraoel a 'e lifest)1!e that ....
bolpitaJ1ty to. Wtd8 ol
frieDds, a love ol good dellgn
arid a diMi> ·~for tbeU
natural 1m1"'*11ngs.
SRturt14y,
September 29, 2001
6p.m.
Wine
&
Hors J 'oeuvres
Reception
7p.m.
Opming Rnnarlts
7:30 p.m.
Dinner
Ill
Robert Mondavi
Wine anti Food
Cmur
1570 Scmic Ave.,
Costa Mesa
(714) 979-4510
Ticluts:
$150 per person
Saluting a team of 10
outstanding chefs
who wiU prepare an
exquisite
five-course dinner.
Robert Mondavi
Wine l!ic Food Center
wiU pair each cowsc
with its specialty wines.
Evening highlights
include a live auction,
silent auction and
complimentary
2002 Calendars
featuring our Celebrity
Chefs.
Proceeds from this
event built SOS's
kitchen,
bought two vans to
pick-up food which
otherwise would have
been thrown ouc. and
fed more than
200 families every day,
every week.
And now,
than.ks in large pan to
these chefs and our
sponson, SOS has
broken ground
to build
a ·new industrial '
oooking kitchen.
Sha.re Our Selves {SOS)
is a Costa Mesa-based
non-profit organization
that provides fi>od.
mcdjca), dmtal aDcl
6nanaa1 aid to mo.e
most in need.
ULTIMATE
Daily Pilot
TODAY
'1"HR LAST DAYS'
Spollllaed. The
~ .... end
~OMslon of ~Jewish
F«ter.tlon of Orange County ---=Jewish FederMlon campus. 250 E. e.ker St. Costa Mesa
wt-.: 4:30 p.rn.
CAlllt: Free
C°"'8d: (714) 755--5555. Ext. 224
MoNDAY 23
CX>STA..sA I
cm••INllY GOU ~
Sp a.-"ed by. Mesi Verde
Country Cub ---=Mesa Verde Country Oub,
3000 Clubhouse Road. Costa Mesa wt...: 10 a.m.
CoK $250 indudes golf {limited
SJ*2), awards dinner and auction
with prizes. U9 fOf dinner Ind auction
Contat (714) 885-9090
TUESDAY 24
CJTIZl!N JOE llAND
......... Costa
~ReaNtion
Division wt-.: Wakeham Park at Smalley
Ro.ct Ind Salinas Avenue in Cost.a
~ wt...: 6 to 7:30 p.m.
CAlllt: Free
Contat (714) 327·7525
MOWEWWAGON ft! a WOiecl by. OfAnge County Fair ---= Orange County F.irgrounds. aa Fw ome. eosu Mesi
Wf-.:8p.m.
C.-t: Free with fM ~ ($7 f()(
ages 13 to 54. S6 seniors 55 Ind older
and S3 for children 6 to 12. Children 5
and younger get In fnle). Resefved
tNtlng Is available for S10.
C°"'8d: (714) 708-1928 or
http:Jlwww.ocfair.rom
WEDNESDAY
~ ..... 2
S .. DNOled by. Com
Mes.~ of Commeice ---= Outbadt Stuk House. 1670
Newport BMi.. Costa Mesi
WI-.: 5:30 to 7:30 p.m.
CAlllt: S10, or free fOf members
C°"'8d: (714) 885-9090
~
Sp DMDfed by. Fashion Island's
~Concert Series .._.Fashion
lsl.tnd, 900
Newport Center onw. Newport
8MCh
wt..1:6p.m.
CAlllt: Free,
but
pefwoed
Miits .. ..,.....,..
for S15
CorMd:
(949)
721-2000
THURSDAY
HCJf .... ONA COOl.t11••-M9ff
" ...... by. Onlnge County ~igMsC.,.., ---~C011t,....wi.g.,
3JD .,... St. Colt.I Mell
.._Sp.rn. a.. US.SSS. to beneftt the Center
Clen1 d: (714) 5sg.21i1
-MD ¥Dall DO IMDOY •
1" I •IM llliF <>r.,.. County Fair ..... er.,. c.ounlr Plirgroundl. ... °'"'c.a.. .... --·p.m. c:i.. ,_ .. Wr ....... (S'7 for
... 111D M ti_.., 91 and Oldlr
_,11IOrdM••ItoQ.CNdlw\5
~~=· .... ---.-. .. snrllt flilr Sto."
Q 2 Rcn4M-18or
, .... t iacfl"r.flDrr
IOI 1111 Wll« 01 JU1Y 22•21, 200 f
SPOTLIGHT
Whoa-oo,. here
they come ...
HAll & OATES
They haven't released an
album since 1990, but that
doesn't mean there isn't
music left in Daryl Hall and
John Oates. The dynamic
duo responsible for such tuts
as ·Private Eyes,·
• Maneater, • "I .Can't Go For
That (No Can Do)" and
•Sara Smile" will play the
Orange County Fair on
Wednesday, rocking the
Arlington Theater.
U a kiss is on your list of
things you want from your
sweetheart, then taking him
or her to a romantic night of
Hall & Oates love songs al ·
the fair might be a bright
idea. And of course, if that
doesn't work, there's always
La Grande Wheel.
FY1
wt.re: Orange County Fairgrounds.
88 Fair Ori~. Costa Mesa
~ 8 p.m. Wedne5day
Cost Free with fair admiuion {S7 fOf
ages 13 to 54. S6 seniors 55 Ind older
Ind S3 fOf children 6 to 12. Children
5 and younger get in free). ResefWd
wating Is available fOf S 10.
Cont.Kt: (714) 708-1928 ()(
http:llwww.ocfalr.com
Pacific Coast Triathlon
to take over Crystal Cove PLINllllll
ABUD
NClflC COAST 1'111111LOI
Crystal Cove State Park will be
the site of the Pacific Coast lliathlon
today. About 1,300 people have
entered the main event. which com·
bines bicycling, swimming and run·
ning for a grueling race. No more
applicants are being accepted for
the triathlon. but the relays and
youth triathlon are still open.
FYI
wt..: Ctystal Cove Statt Park, off Coast
Hignw.y between MacArthur lloutevard and
Emtfaldhy wt...: Main triathlon will start at 7 a.rn.
today
CA111t: Varied
CorDct: (949) 7~9229 Of http:Jlwww.
~th/on.com
FRIDAY
""'"°"° TOaDOMDO'
1111 D ........ Newport Dunes "'9orn
femilY tlem-*
.... NewpOrt Dune "8lort. 1131 8edt
-om.. Nlwport IMd'I 9-.:0\llk c.e: ffR. but S7 for Pltt:ine
aw •* (M9) nt-_,
PEA80MYSON
.-.lbo~wll
celebrMle he low of
musk wfd1 Newport·
Mesa. Pl't of the
Hyatt Newpomn
Surrmer Mu Series.
A'tdeJ,-..J
NAl'IONAL
NIGtf1'0UT
Cost. MeM poaice
pt.,, to helP rieigh-
borhoods tae •~
out Of crime during
the1 • ..,...
NMional Night O\lt.
....... Au9-1
.....Hyatt~.1107
Jamb«..~ Newport BMch
. wt.a: 8 p.rn.
CAlllt: SlO
C°"'8d: (949) 729-1234
'
SllUIDAY
W>M»10UU' " _ ....
'Nlwport Dunes .-.n~fitm--
.... Nlwpol't °"'*""""' 11lt8edt-.,onv.,~.-, ... °"* Cl*""' but S7 far "'1di'I Cllt .. l% (l«lt 7&.m1
9
JULY
I M .T • T , I
I 2 ) 4 S 6 7
I ~IO tt Q U t4
15 • 17 • " lO 21 mp,..zsam211
29 )Cl )t
MAMYOUlt
CALENDARS
27: TNCUp Classic
AUGUST
SMTWTfS
I l l •
S678910tt
1213 ~1516t7•
1!l 21> 21 l2 D lot 2S
26 71 21 29 lO )I
MARK YOUR
CALENDARS
14: The Jones Cup
SEPTEMBER
SMTWTfS
1
2 0•5671
9101112u CD !5
16 @ •1!ll021l2
6) :M 2S 4' 71 fD 29
10
MARK YOUR
CALENDARS
]: Labor Day
14-11: Taste of Newport
11: Ro5t'I Ha5hanllh begSls
ll: Race for the Cure
-Yorn~~ 28: Eclectk Of ange
Festival opens
OCTOBER
SMTWTfS
123 •0&
7 1 91011120
141516 17•1920
lt l2 23 ~ 2S 26 71
2129)0 ~
MARK YOUR
CALENDARS
S: Randy Traw with
Pacific Symphony Pops
J1: Halloween
NOVEMBER
SMTWTFS
I 1 l
•S67191>
0 120l4!5 C)t7
• 19 lO 21 • 23 :M
2S 26 fl 21 2' )0
MAM YOUR
CALENDAltS
11: Veterans Day
11: Tree lighting at
Fashion Island
22: Thanksgiving
27: Swing! at the Center
DECEMBER
SMTWTPS
t
l ) 4 5 ' 1 •
''°nl2UM15
•11•1t»l1l2
Dat2SJll7212'
)0 )1
Series
Wednesdays
l July 18 -
Jflugust 22
Visit Fashior't
Island every
Wednesday at
6 p.m. during the
Summer Concert
Series for an
evening of
entertainment in
Bloomingdalc's
Courtyard.
Concerts are
complimentary and
seating is available on
a first come first serve
basis. Preferred
seating is available
and may be
purchasec;t through
the Concierge for
$15 per ticket.
2001 Sumtner
Concert Series
<Petf onners
July 18 {
Christopher Cross
July 25
Starship featuring
Mickey Thomas
Augustl
Scott Wilkie
August8
Royal Crown Revue
Augustl5
The Nelsons
August 22
A Flock of Seagulls
For more
information, call
(949) 721-2000
Special
Advertise on the
Ultimate CaJendu' p111.
a feature ol CM' new
Sunday edltiolL
$20 .,. inCh. J lnc:h mwmum .
c.11
<~:::·
• : I 0 Sunday, July 22, 2001 t • • EDITOlllU
'.District switch . .
!welcome in
:Newport Beach
'
, It was lmown as the
: Fabulous Fifth, a coast-
; . line county supervisorial
: district that stretched • : from Newport Beach to San • •Oemente.
: And politic:ally"since 1971,
: it has been dominatM.by
: Newport Beach interests, -
: namely Gen. Tom Riley and
· : later Marian Bergeson. until
: the ascendancy of Tom Wtl-
: son, who was
: appointed by
·then Gov.
: Pete Wll.son
: . December 7~1~.
With Tom
. WllsOnr it was
never a good
marriage.
Heck. there Tom Wilson
wasn't even a
: honeymoon. Newport Beach
: forces cried foul from the start
: that a South County interlop-
. er who opposed the planned
. El Toro airport was now rep-
resenting them at the county
seat.
With former Mayor John
Hedges leading the charge as
a candidate, they tried hard
to oust him in 1998 but were
unsuccessful
Now, what couldn't be
done at the ballot box has
been accomplished with a
new census report and a new
district map for the Orange
County Board of Supervisors.
For Newport Beach, the
Fabulous Fifth, a term coined
by Gen. Riley, is no more.
Instead 2nd District SupeIVi-
sor Jim Silva is the man in
Santa Ana
It's about time.
With the growth of South
County and the fight over the
proposed· airport at El Toro
growing ever more fierce,
Newport Beach's voice was
scarcely
being heard.
Silva will
change all of
that.
A veteran
county super-
visor and for-
mer Hunting-
ton Beach
-mayor, Silva
will lose Stanton and Garden
Grove from his tenitory and
gain all of Newport Beach
and Costa Mesa, part of
which he has represented
since his election in 1994.
It's a good swap. Silva is
pro-airport and is a popular
figure in Newport political cir-
cles, often taking up the caus-
es of local businesses here.
He will be welcomed with
open arms.
To be fair, if you took the El
Toro fight out of the equation,
the loss of Tom Wilson as
supervisor for Newport Beach
wouldn't sound as great.
Wilson has long fought for
water-quality issues that
affect Newport Harbor,
helped secure millioris of dol-
lars in funds to dredge the
Upper Newport Bay and has
vowed to fight expansion of
John Wayne Airport. Wilson
is a bright and forthright
politician who is tenacious
but easygoing and affable.
But for Newport Beach res-
idents, the former aerospace
executive, who lives 1n South
County and has never made
any apologies for his strident
opposition to an airport at the
closed El Toro Marine base,
was never a good fit.
Silva most certainly will be.
So to the Fabulous Fifth,
we bid a fond adieu.
Instead, we look forward to
the perfect match that Silva
will bring. We know Newport
Beach feels the same.
Good news may be in
Huscroft House's future
_ ...... •sr1ll,, K on hli:ltfelono ~ fOr 1111tformlng at the RUalll 8rcii.
Family Fun 0'°"-whktt he Ind ton Stephen are •
running at the Or~ Cou~ Pair .
P.l.£ASE BE ~~D
THAT ANYM ARRESTED
FOR A DRUG Oil GAM6 -
lt£L~no ell~• '~
. l!2J" WSLCOtAE H&R£ •
WE. •P~Ts:
..
REtfntl6 IN COSfA Mi.SA 60E5 10THE DOGS"
Nothing should be done at Marinapark
P eople around City Hall and
their developer friends are
fond of saying that the beach
in front of Marinapark is underuti-
lized and they conclude that it is
because there is a mob.ile home
park occupying the inJand side of
the property. They take this azgu-
ment one step further and contend
that if they only bad a five-star
hotel there instead, the general
public would come.
Aa;ess to the beach is DOW
available from either Las Arenas
Park walkway -16th Street and
Balboa Boulevard -or the beach
on West Bay Avenue at 18th
Street with a public walkway
spannmg the length ot the mobile
home park.
The propoaal under considera-
tion -as revealed at the public
forum July 9'-is to block off the
existing beech acam by a-eating
two marinal: one at 15th and 16th
streets for the propoeed hotel and
another at 18th Street for the relo-
cated American Legion Poll l91.
They say that the walkway in
front ot what ii DOW the mobOe
home park would remlln CJf>f!lll to
the public. How doeS tbil ~,.
create grealS acceml
Tb8y eaytbatW~. ment wUl iDvtla pUblc lltttl-IMtlel,-
IUCb 81 ~ J VDlll, to lllmu•
-.¥
Betty J. Berkshire
SOUNDING BOARD
14te usage. wen. dUb.. Public sail-
ing les&onl are already conducted
from that beach. And in addition
to current usage, the beach is a
favorite stopping place for the Boy
Smuts and other day-ampers,
kayaken and llDd boaters. There
is an annual Soulbam California
ouz:n1petitioo tbat starts
and from that beach. with
• outrigger dubs lining the shore
from 19th to the existing Ameri-
can Legioo Hall.
Almolt ~evening, young
people ftsh frilln that beach while
their tammes play nearby. Occa-
lkmally, a small church group con-
ducts bapdsms In the sbaJ1ow
waters and enjoys a piaUc with
their familiel 4nd friends after-
ward. 'The beach Is allo used u a
resting place by both resident aod
migratory bbda. Now, envilion a five-star resQrt
hotel occupytng the place ol the
mobOe boin81. lf you Went paying
5'00 to S500 per night for a rocm
at IUdl a boCel with a NDdy beach
out front. wouldn't you apect the
botllll to provide b~ .,..
8nd ca.,.,,_ food and bev.-.get
kw' ~ cDWolt1 DOY°"! 188 lbe
hotel guests willing to compete for
space with the aforementioned
groups? Would you. as John Q.
Public, feel comfortable and wel-
come in such an environment? Do
you see members and~ shar-
ing accommodations with the
public on the beach in front of the
Balboa Bay Oub -which is also
located on city tidelands property?
The major reason th.at the
beach is underutWz.ed Is because
of lack. of convenient parking.
There is a small dty parking lot at
the comer ot Balboa Boulevani at
18th Street. and curbside parking
along 15th and 18th streets.
The hotel proposal eliminates
all existing parking and aeates
only 12 net new parking spaces
for use by employees and guests
of the 156-room reeort, American
Legionnaires, Girl Scouts and the
public. You do the math. We coukl
go on and talk about the probabil-
ity ol the hotel sb.arlug use ot the
tennis courts with the pub1lc. bltt
you get the idea.
What sbouJd be done with
Marinaparkl The better question
would be: What aboWd not be
done with Madnapuk1
We think the nMD1mous
answer would be: a hotel.
t
Daily Pilot
. TUFFIC SHOULDN'T
IE AN ISSUE
'First of all, no
more than 100 ·
people can get in
it at once. If large
groups want to
go, they wouldn't
come here. They
would go to San
Diego or L.A. The
building here is
for small groups
or individuals
who want to go at
their convenience.
Secondly, it's
dispersed during
the day. It's not
like a chapel,
when everybody
comes at once.
Now, parking -
we have over 400
spaces there now.'
-Joseph I. lentte:t
ILESSED TEMPLE
'The decision for
the site isn't ours.
It's done by the
head oft.he
church. We
hoped. But
because they are
a blessfng that
are given from
the head of the
church, it wasn't
something we
were actively
working on. We
were blessed with
having L .A . and
San Diego.
Having the
Newport Beach
temple ls such a
great gilt.'
. I .
CoMMUNrrv· FoRuM
.
Waiting for a bless~g
Joseph I. Bentley and Weatherford Clayton talk about why a Mormon temple is needed in Newport Beach
· t will be innovative. It
will be beautiful. It
will be convenient.
But most of all, say
Orange County mem-
bers of the Church of Jesus
Christ of Latter-day Saints, it
will be holy.
"The temple is the place
that the work of Jesus Christ
is most clearly manifested,"
said Weatherford Clayton,
the leader of the Newport
Beach branch of the church.
A temple planned for
Newport Beach is tentatively
set for a 2003 opening. It
will sit next to the church's
worship place on a seven-
acre site at Prairie and Boni-
ta Canyon roads.
At 17 ,000 square feet, the
proposed temple will be
smaller than the 28,500-
square-foot stake center. It
will be used to unite couples
and families in sealing cere-
monies, as well as introduc-
ing non-Mormon ancestors
to the church. Mormons
believe the latter service is
essential to give the
deceased the chance of an
afterlife.
The temple also is where
much of the church's
teaching takes place, and
the inaccessibility of a
temple hampers that edu-
cation as well as the per-
formance of their most
sacred ceremonies.
Two members of the local
church, Clayton and Joseph
I. Bentley, sat down with
Pilot Senior City Editor
S.J. Cahn to discuss the
plans for the temple and
what it means for the area's
Mormons.
Why ls there a need for the
templet
Clayton: When we travel to
attend the temple, we're traveling
70 miles to San Diego or over 50
miles into LA and there's often
hea\.y traffic. It's five days a week,
starting as early as 5:30 in the morn-
ing. You attend when it's convenient
to your schedule.
BelaUey: It translates what's DOW
a four-to five-hour experience into
what can be less thail two hours,
only if you take out the travel.
Everything we do ln the temple is
ongoing -baptisms, marriages.
Any time a person wanta to go,
they can go to either one of the
temples (in Los Angea. and San
Diego]. (1be pJenned teinple) ls
acceuible. We think tb8 beauty of
the temple is that memben can go
back and review what they've
learned. It's very c:loee to the ceuter
e~ ~ur church g~pbically,
oetWeen the ocea mcl the (San
Diego freeway). Not Only that. but it' a beauUful lite. We were
Unpressed with it.
STM McAANll: I OAl.Y PILOT
Joseph I. BenUey, left, and Weatherford Clayton are involved in the Cburdl of Je5us Christ of LatteJ'-day
Saints' efforts to build a temple on a site at Pra.lrle and Bonita Canyon roa~ in Newport Beach.
Clayton: There are stories of peo-
ple traveling to temple and spend-
ing a year's earnings to go there and
seal their maniages.
Bentley: The president of the
chwch was concerned about getting
more temples to far away places,
and it came to him that you could
have a smaller temple, one-tenth
the size of L.A., with all the essen-
tial functions. '
Clayton: This is the point that
all the saints look to. The more that
the temples are available, they will
be able to receive all the blessings.
BenUey: (Church leadei's)
resolved to have a temple within a
day's drive of everybody in the
world.
Wbat womd ~NJ tD New·
port BMcJa nll• II no .. wor-
ried about .. ···~ ..... to tr diet
than 100 people can get in it at
once. If large groups want to go,
they wouldn't come here. They
would go to San Diego or L.A.
The building here is for small
groups or individuals who want to
go at their convenience. Secondly,
it's dispersed during the day. It's
not like a chapel, when every-
body comes at once. Now, park-
ing -we have over 400 spaces
there now.
Clayton: Jt will be closed Sun-
day, so that wouldn't change any-
thing. This will be Tuesday through
Saturday, so it shouldn't really
affect much of anything. I think
there's a real desire that the com-
munity feel a real pride that this is
their temple because it's •omething
for everyone to enjoy. So to bave
something that's out of place
wouldn't make sense.
BeaUey: 1\'affk is always a con·
cem for the people·of Newport
Bedcll. We hope to show them this
is a perfect solution -the ways to
ow temple are easy and accessible.
How long have you been wait-
ing for a templet
Oayton: The decision for the
site isn't ours. Irs done by the head
of the chwch. We hoped. But
because they are a blessing that
are given from the head of the
church. it wasn't something we
were actively working on. We were
•blessed with having LA. and San
Diego. Haviilg the Newport Beach
temple is such a ~t gift.
What'• the nut dept
Bentley: First comes all the per·
mits. There ~ many requirements,
The city at this point ii the only
agency with jurisdiction. We ran it
by the dty recenUy and they la1d it
was interesting .but nQt vwy com-
plicated. It may take as tittle as a
year to bliild. So it i;nay be ..;tr
2003 (that it ...i.
UPPBR NBWPORT BAY -
TWenty-one firefighters from
Newport Beach, Coata Mesa
ad Orange County battled a
balf ·acre bNlb fire on the bluffs
near tbe lntenectio.n of Irvine
Avenue and Santiago Drive on
Sa\\lrday.
Unlike a December 1998 fire
-Newport Beach's biggest -
ln almost the same location,
wbich spread over 1 O acres
and threatened 20 homes, no
homes along the Back Bay
were ln danger during Satur-
day'• blaze, said Capt. John
Blauer, a spokesman for the
Newport Beach fire Depart·
ment. He added that depart-
ment offidal.s are still Investi-
gating the cause of the fire.
h took six fire engines and two
heltcoptets about 25 minutes to
get the names under control,
Blauer said. He added that resi·
dents had first called about the
fire at 4:23 p.m.
The last flames, $0Jlle of them
fMcl>lng heights of six f~t, were
utingWabed less than aii hour
J!ter, Blauer said. ·
~ engine from Newport
Beach fire station No. 6 arrived
firtt on th~ scene, closely fol-
lowed by flrefighten from fire
station No. 1 ln Santa An.a
Heights, Blauer said.
Firefighters began battling the
r
STATION
CONTINUED FAOM 1
said be was glad the event
turned out to be a success.
•we have a happening going
on here,• he said as about 100
people checked out fire engines
and the station in the back-
ground. •They've turped this
into a neighborhood party.•
Capt. John Blauer, the
department's spokesman,
added that the party also gave
firefighters a chance to learn
about the area's history.
•Normally it takes two or
three years,• be said.
City officials decided to set
up shop at 1.f!nith Avenu and
01chid Streea after the Orege
• County Fire Authority's fire sta-
tion near John Wayne Allport
caught fire last December.
County firefigbten were still
responsible for the area,
although Newport Beach will
likely annex Santa Ana Heights
in the near future.
But noticing a drop · in
response time after county
engines began answering calls
from an Irvine location, city offi-
clals decided to deal with the
FAIR
CONTINUED FROM 1
t\ SEAN Hll.Lfft I DAll.Y Pl.OT
Newport Beach ftrefigbten Alex Amat. ltA and Jtyu Popovich cloUle hot lpOta after crews from
Costa Mesa and Newport Beech pUt out• bnllh fire In the Upper Newpoit Bay on Saturday.
fire with water hoses and later
used shovels and rakes to put out
the flames. The two helicopten
assisted with water drops from
the air.
matter right tJi'f8Y·
In January,'1iey stationed an
engine at a hotel in the airport
area and began serving Santa
Ana Heights as well.
City Council members then
approved funding for a tempo-
rary station for the neighbor-
hood and firefighters moved
into the trailer at the current
location in early April.
City Manager Homer Blu-
dau, who stopped by the festiv-
ities, said b.e believed setting
up the fire station was the right
thing to do.
•1 salute the council to take
that step,• he said, adding tliat
at a cost of about $1 million per
year, the station takes a signifi-
cant sum out of city coffers a
couple of f!!US earlier than
antidp&&ed,.
Santa Ana Heights residents
said they are grateful that New-
port Beach is looking out for
them.
•1t•s great to have that pro-
tection,• said Jean Whitney,
w)).o bas lived in the equestri·
an neigbbQrhood for about 40
years.
Sitting on a vintage' fire
engine, 6-year-old Lotte
Martin said she'd come to
have fun.
Blauer said that the fire had engines respond almost at the
been brought under control same time also helped, he
swiftly because the three agen· added. Fire station No. 7 cele-
ries involved coordinated their brated ita grand opening earli-
effoJts. Having two fire er on Saturday.
SlAH H1.1.n I DALY PlDT
Erin netz. s. reels ID a fire hote on a blltorlcal fire truck during
a grand openJng party for fire station No. 7.
The station ·1ooks like a reg-
ular house,· she said, adding
that she's considering becom-
ing a firefighter, but still favors
a career as a dentist or doctor.
Her dad, Gary, added that
the firefighters have been
great neighbors so far.
•They're very quiet,• be
said, adding that be was con-
cerned at first about possible
siren noise since his family
lives just three houses down
the road.
But •they're pretty good
about not turning (the sirens)
on until the get out of the
area,• he said.
Daif>t Pilot
of tbil, oc am I ~to mywelf heref
Atir*•Y· ts there anjldng more Wild
and woolly than tbe fat Jt's poaiNe.
but l doubt it It 11 a bi9illbtaking kalel· ~ ot lights and IOuiadi, smelll
and tutel that leeD1 to get IDOf8
diwne and lntQ.Se every year. Look
me in the eye and tell me you c.an lead
a fuD life without this stuff, I dare you.
Tbe All-Alaslcan Raclng Pigs, Dog·
gie1 ot the Wild West. sttolllng ele-
phants, bowling grapefruits ~d a pet-
ting zoo bunting with antmal• who will
clean out your pockets quick.er than a
team of Gypsies on the Paris metro.
Add to that, a staggering anay of
exbibtts, stage shows and demoDltra·
tions of everything from glall blowing
to milld.ng a cow. I've trled milking a caw twice, by the way. Nothing, pada,
not a drop. All I did was embarrass
myself and annoy the oow.
By the way, something new this year
that you cannot miss, no way, no how,
11 the •we Love Lucy• ezbibit .. You've
got to see this. And don't tell me yo"'
couldn't find it, you didn't have time,
Y'QU don't like the fair, your sciatica was
acting up or some other wimpy excuse.
Get out there and see it. In fact, go
now. Don't even finish reading this. It's
not that funny anyway.
For a mere $3 ticket, you'll see all
the •1 Love Lucy" sets, along with some
props and a few costumes from classic ·
•Lucy" routines. The.re are TV monitors
playing classic episodes -•Vita-
meatavegamin, • •The Chocolate Facto-
ry,• etc.
But the biggest thrill, assuming
you're not one of those annoying peo·
ple who are too young to wrinkle, is to
stand a few feet from the Ricley and
Lucy sets you've seen a thousand times.
The living room. the kitchen, the Holly-
wood apartment with a view of Grau-
mann's Chinese Theater and the Roo-
sevelt Hotel out the window, and even
Club Babaloo, complete with phony
palm trees, music stands ~d all.
Speaking of history, due to over-
whelming popular demand (OK. two
people asked) here ts, once again, the
complete history of county fairs in the
western world. .. Pair" comes from the
Latin •fertae, • which means •to park
really, really far away: No, it doesn't. I
made that up.
•fert.ae• means •tea.st.• Originally. a
fair meant a •mark.et day." w~en fann-
ers and purveyors of whatever people
purveyed in those days got together to
purvey.
In this country, there have been ref-
erences to •going to the fair" since
• 1638. By 1800, a fair meant a periodic
market and exhibition. If you were to
hop in your time machine and check
one out, things would look fairly (get it
-•tairtyf•) recognizable, except the
people would be wearing really funny
clothes. Of course, they'd take one look
. at you, give you a trial that lasted about
four minutes, then drag you out back
and stone you for being a demon.
The first annual fair in the U.S. was
the Berkshire Cattle Show, which
began in Pittsfield, Mass., in 1810. Peo-
ple came from all over. They looked at
the cows. The cows looked at them.
The people ate pie. The cows ate grass.
It was a simpler time. •
The first state fair was held in Syra-
cuse, N.Y., in 10.U. It didn't take long
for state fairs to take a quantum leap
forward and become world's fairs and
expositions. The first was the 1853 New
York Wodd's Fair, held in what is now
Bryant's Park. next to the Main Ubrary
on 5th Avenue. It cost $640,000. The
World'.s Fair, not the library. It's hard for
us to appreciate what a staggering sum
that was at the time. 'Ibat $640,000 in
1853 could buy a whole lot of bag
balm.
1be wodd'I fair concept grew like
topsy. Philadelphia's 1816 Centeon1al
Exposition introduced Mr. Bell'• tele-
pbooe, a thing called the typewriter,
and an exotic fruit called tbe banarut,
which wu an instant bit, but pricey at
10 centl' each. .
lb8 k>ng lines at Chicago's
Columbian Bxpcwttion in 1893 were for
Mr. W81tlngb.ouse'I electric engine and
1bm Ectilon'a new and improved elec-
tric tight bulb.
The 1939 New York Wcdd'a·Patr,
dubbed tbil •wodd ot Tumotiow, • wu
arguably the 1D01t ~tot an. n reaJIY WM opentng ct.y ID the pme of
modelia '«bnok>gy, ~ televl·
lion, ltObbf. tbe robot and lfutbatk:
flben Ilka nylon met~ WltbOut
~life WOUid be •m~.
But .... flam the..-----
World's fain,---~ ......... .... • munly.felr,... ... 911 icli1 ....
dtk: enlihll .. ,...,_ •1z ._ ..
Wlitiuil)e .. 0 .........
tlleal aMa'"•Slk fa..._ a ................ , .. .... .............. .. ..
pr.--=·iiii!ii:t~=
.
QU01I Of 111 DAY
"People talked about plcldng
high school kids over (Duke's
Shane Battler). Are you kiddlng
me1 That'I amtulng •.. •
~ ..... bask.tball Co.ch
Tony Altobelli
DMY PILOT
Impressive Sailors swim laps around El Modena
at Villa Park Tournament opener, 13-4.
ORANGE -U it wasn't for the 8&<1egree weather..
one would have thougbt the Newport Harbor High
girls water polo team was playing in February
dwing the CIF Southern Section playoffs instead ol
a summer tournament.
The Sailors opened the 2001 Villa Park Tournament
in convincing fashi~. breezing past El Modena, 13-4, Saturday
afternoon.
"These girls are really a lot ot fun to watch.• assistant coach
Autumn Milliken said. "You can tell bow much of an impression
(Coach) Bill Barnett has on this team. They are way ahead ol mDSt
of the competition ln te,nns of practice and an undeDtandmg of
the system.•
While Newport was zig-:zagglng through the pool with relative
ease, the Vanguards were just trying to figure out ways to keep
their heads above the water.
Jenna Mwpby had four goals and an assist to lead the Sailors'
attack. Katherine Belden added three goals and one assist, while
Annie Wight and Paige Lansing each added two goals. Solo
tallies were provided by Jessica Ball and Raylyn Ritc:bie.
"This is an opportunity for the freshmen and sophomores to
get some much-needed experleDo8 against other varsity players,•
Milliken said. "This tournament will help the younger players out
big time.•
Newport took control of the contest early u Mwphy and
Lansing each scored within the fim minute of play. The Sailors
tacked on two more goals and led. 4-0, after the fust quarter.
While Newport was pounding the~ of the net. El Modena
was b:ying to work it. offense to some degree of success. The
Sailors' defense was strong, allowtng only two perimeter shot.
in the quarter. Goalie Leab Grocke was strong when a Vanguard
shot managed to find its way to her.
The key to Newport's success was its transition offense,
repeatedly outswimming the Vanguards for easy breakaway
opportunities. Strong perimeter defense by Wight. Mwpby and
Belden led to those opportunities.
Mwphy scored three of her four goals in the second quarter,
while Ritchie and Wight added single goals. El Modena's Sylvia
Yanez managed to score on a six-on-ftve opportunity, but it was
DALY Pl.OT PHOTOS BY STEVE MCCRANIC
Newport Harbor IUgh's girls fared well in the fint
round of the Villa Park Tounwnent Saturday, shelling
host El Modena. 13-t. Annle Wight (above), who bad
two goab, bas tbfl lhot attempt go awry as a defender
pusbea through to block her band. At right ls Ashley
GnHntkt t.Ulng a lhot. 1be Sallon, as well as Corona
del MU IUgh'I girls, an compeUng In the summer
aflalr u both conUnue preparation for the regular
INIOD tb1I fall In their respective leagues.
the Sailors in command at the ball, 9-1.
The quote of the game came from an anonymous El Modena
player after the first.half born sounded. "Only~ 1 r she said in
amuemeol •That could have been a lot worse.•
Belden showed why she was an AD-CIF Southern Section
sele ct¥x> last year, scoring t>aPt-to-back goals in the third quarter
u Newport maintained an eight-goal advantage. 11-3. Yanez and
Nicole Uliv1 each scored for El Modena.
Belden added her third goal of the game and Ball found the
scoreboard in the fourth quarter to close out Newport's scoring.
Suzie Hartman scored in the fourth for the Vanguards.
Grocke Onisbed with seven saves and helped spark Newport's
fast-break olfense with numerous outlet passes to open swimmers.
"We're a very smart team and there are a ton of offensive
weapons here,• Milli.ken said. "I'm really looking forward to next
year, seeing how far this team can go.•
Last year, Newport was eliminated in the second round of the
C1P Division 1 playoffs after a heartbreaking, 7-6, five-overtime
loss to El Toro on Feb. 20.
In addition to the Sailors, Corona del Mar is also taking part
in this multi-team tournament, hosted by four different high
schools.
CATCHING UP wnH
. . ••
MYD honaNI
JOHN CARRIDO ~.
S4'nday, My 22, 2001 13
There are plenty of locals to keep an eye
on as 'War By The Shore' kicks off at the
Balboa Bay Club Racquet Club Mol)day.
Tony AltobelU
DAILY PllOT
NEWPORT. BBAc,H-There is plenty
of local flavor at this yeats Junior 1ennil
Classic, also known as the "War By The
Shore," which kicks off Monday at the
Balboa Bay Club Racquet Club.
In Monday's action, on the girls side,
Balboa's Bailey Hogan will see action at
5 p.m. in the Ql.rls 10 Division, while
Corona del Mar's Cierra Gayton and
Newport Beach's Melissa Matsuoka each
received first-round byes and will play
Tuesday at 3:30 p.m.
ln Girls 12 singles action, in a baWe of
locals, Kristina Heimstaedt will take on
Alexandra Hsu in first-round action,
beginning at 5 p.m., while Newport's
Michelle Atkins (8 a.m.), Christina
Schwartz (8 a.m.), Brie Whitehead (5
p.m.), Kelly McKitterick (5 p.m.) and
Sasha Dunlap (5 p.m.) will also take to the
court in first-round action. Top seeded
Jill Braverman will compete at 5 p.m. on
Tuesday in second-round action. ·
Eight local girls in the 14 singles
division, Jaclyn Manning, TalAJahangiri..
Karin Hacatoryan, Jill Damion, Carly
Adams, Amy T. Nguyen, Sarah Geocaris
and Jamison Steele have received first.
round byes and will play on Tuesday.
Katie McKitterick will take on nttany
Huang Monday at 8 a.m. In first-round
action.
ln Girls 16 singles, Vanessa Dunlap (8
a.m.), Laura Claster (8 a .m.), Diana
Khoury (2 p.m.), Amandallubenstein (2
p.m.) and Marguerite Suclzd (5 p.m..) will
all be in first-round action, whUe Amber
Ray, Bonnie Adams and Juliette Mutzke
Pl ....
&I .......
Gt EOUAI. HOUllllO Of'POATUHITY
Al "" estm llMl1lllng in Olis nNIPllC*' 11 IUbtld
10 Ille Ftdtral Ftlr .== Act ot 19118 ••
wtllch l'lllllet It lhOll to ld'mtiM •atrt pt~ Mmltatlon or dllcrtmlrlltlOn
based on llCI, OOlo!i_ "90·
loft ..... ha~ 11mMll status or netlonll onoi~ or an lnltnllon to mete 1ny tucll preltrenct, fimllltloil Of dila'lmlNlllon .•
Thlt lllWSPIPI' Wiii llOC 1tnowlno1v accept eny 1dv1rtl1tm1n1 tor rul ..., wlllcll ii In \llollllon
of Olt llw. Our ,..,.,.. .. '*• l11tonned tMt .. dWllllllll IMlllld In .... ..................
---~· To of
Nllon, HUD tot-• It 1G-424...,
.
:.·~). ~ .
J •
WHY MAKE
YOUR
LANDWRD
RICll?
will play In leOOOd-round adkm~.
Sec:ood leeded Brtttmy Ho&iiDd bu
the ftnt round olf ad wm. play 1\Mldat
in Girls 18 ....... will Emily Boyd
and Kelly Nellon. Brlttany Mlmia (11
a.m.), Cermen Khouiy (11 a.m.), Sara
Bryan {2 p.m.) and Meagu Hawldm (2
p.m.) wD1 see action Monday.
In Boys 10 singles action, second
seeded Charlie Alvarado and third
seeded Carlie Corum rece1ved 1lrlt-IOUnd
byes, while Daron Arnold (11 a.m.), C..{.
Chomeau (2 p.m.), Rory Kew (~ p.m.),
Chris Damion (2 p .m .) and Ertlt
Hetmstaedt (5 p.m.) wtll all be In action
Monday.
It will be a local showdown ln Boys 12
singles as Parker Rhodes takes on Brent
Pham Monday at 8 a.m. Other singles
action Monday lndudes Henri Cbomeau
(3:30 p.m.), Andrew Singer (3:30 p.m.)
and Daniel freeman (3:30 p.m.).second
~Ryan Caughren will ~Tuesday
after a first-round bye.
Jonathan Kroopf will compete ln Boys
13 singles action Monday at 3:30, wblle
third seeded Jake Pham. sixth seeded
Fabian Matthews, NicboW Gingokl and
Sean Pham wU1 all play Tuesday.
Costa Mesa's Andrew Hinger will
compete against Newport Beach's 'fyter
Deck in first-round action ln Boys 16
singles, as will Randy Herrel, Robert
Khowy, AJeunder SweJdan and Hashem
Al-Attas. Shaun Maguire, Bryan Warsaw,
Brennan Roberts and lssei Salda each
have first-round byes.
Doubles action, featuring locals in
every division, will kick oft competition
Tuesday.
______ ...... _____ ..
Monday ............ Friday S:OOpm Friday .......... Thunday 5:00pm
Tue.day ......... Monday S:OOpm s.twday ........... Friday 3:00pm
Wednesday .... Tuaday S:OOpm Sunday ............. Friday 5:00pm
Thunday •• Wednact.y S:OOpm
I
-· ~
...... ·_ --·. .
-· -·~ ~ .. ~. . l . .. ' . ' : .... . .• _.,,,. >~ .. (
. ~ . . .
~..... " ... . . '-. •• , .j, ........
Office IPICe
Fountain Vllley,
8700 Warn« Avt (Baach/Magnoll•l
41711. 800ll. 1000lf.
167511, 1819•1.
202111, 294011 I
3l82tt avail now,
cMllblt. ... '*""' DSl I ph symm <>=.. ~:!j..!·F
114-MHl12
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Older StYlt FllrNbn
PW«>S .. Colledlblel .-.,.....-.,.,.. ..... oms. ........
.. CMMPAID .. ....................
Wft llUY llTATU ........... ........,. .....
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Ytc:lrt Sklflt*' w111Mc1. ... htvt txp. local and
mtlCic:tn Wlltft Llcenll
prtt'd. tu '"WM 10 714-437-9271 lnquWat ..
b!~-
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you to call • too
nulftbef In wtllcll ...... dw'81 I* minute.
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Sunday; July 22, 2001 15
Have A
Garage Sale!
Call the Piiot
Classifieds
at C949J 642-5678
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Opening lead: Kina of•
The 1em1 ••fine.e" 1PPlies 10 sev·
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Nonh '• 1umo mbe in 6pldcs was invitational. 'howina some 10-12
points with at least four-cant support.
That mi&hl seem rather timid bcre
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Sooth wu u clted enough to start a
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Fabulous opportunity.
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Sara Hinman & Brad Hinman
759-3705 ... 759-3732
Pelican llill $3,67 5,000
Custom 6 Bd. 6.5 Bo. home.
large lot, JX>OI, newly decorated.
Betty Comegys & Nancy Peterson
717...4750 -717-4749
4 Civic Plaza, Ste. 260
Newport Beach., CA 92660
(949) 644-1600
Corona Jel Mar ·$1.S95,000
New home in the village. M:Jgnificent views. .
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Donna Wall 759-3717
Currentfy two, 4 Bd. 3.5 Bo.
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Jeff Ewing & lyleen Ewing
759-3796 -759-3786
Newporl Coasl $2,390,000
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Jim Kline & Shirley Harris
759-3771 -759-3727
LOLDWl!ll
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Gigi Thomas 759-3784
Corona del Mar $3,950,000
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Jeff Ewing & lyleen ~wing
759-3796 -759-3786
WynJover Ray $1,800,000
Must see lo believe. 4 Bd. 5.5 Bo.
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Gigi Thomas & Rick Langevin
759-3784 -759-3759
3377 Via lido
Newport Beach, CA 92663
(949) 723-~800
Charming Cape Cod style home on oversized IOt.
3 Bd. 3 Bo. Sunny polio.
Marilyn Read 718-2733
'