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PageA2
ntURSDAY,JULY 26, 2001
Poll s ·ows increase in airport support
•Supporters of aviation
plans for El Toro say
growing public awareness
is behind the gain.
Paul a1nton
DAILY PILOT
NEWPORT-MESA -Support
for an airport at the closed El Toro
Marine Corps Air Station has
jumped 7% since March, according
to a poll released Wednesday.
The Orange County Business
Council and Cal State Fullerton
funded the telephone poll, which
was completed between June 19
and July 2 by the university's Social
Science Research Center.
Pollsters asked a random sam-
pling of 532 Orange County resi-
dents two questions: whether they
would support or oppose an airport
at El Toro and whether they would
vote for a ballt>t measure, set for
March, that would pave the way for
a Great Park at the base.
Of the people surveyed -the
10% who were undecided or didn't
answer weren't counted -46.8%
supported an airport versus 53.2%
in opposition. The poll registered a
4.34% margin of error.
Counter to those numbers,
62.4 % said they would vote for the
park measure, with 37.6% saying
they wouldn't support.an idea float-
ed by Irvine Mayor Larry Agran.
Airport advocates were heart-
ened by the study. They attributed
the jwnp in support to a public
information campaign mounted by
the county earlier this month, closer
scrutiny of the Great Park plan and
a troubled economy.
The Airport Work.mg Group has
produced several fliers and televi-
sion ads criticizing the park.
"That's big,• group spokesman
SEE POLL PAGE A12
CAAL HCALGO I DAILY Pl.OT
Newport's Dave Niederhaus bas observed a relattonshlit between' the economy and the amount of trash residents in the dty produce.
Forget Dow Jones,.
it's in e trash
Newport Beachs genercil services
director says less waste means an end
to economic good times
Mathis Winkler
DAILY PILOT
W hen Dave Nieder~us
notices a drop iii the
amount of trash resi-
dents produce, he
doesn't credit successful recycling
programs.
For the d ty's general services
director, a decline of about 2o/o -
or 190 tom -points to an econom·
le downturn tmtead.
•When an affluent community
starts to have less waste, it general•
ly indicates that things are starting
to go downhill.• said Niederhaus,
who recently released the city's
trash 6gwes for the 2000-01 fiscal.
year as pert of a year-end report on
his department's activities.
Niederhaus first noticed the
connection betw~n trash and the
SEE TRASH PAGE A 12
n&mnt.
BY THE NUMBERS
He re's a list of things gene ral
services folks did last fiscal
year, which ended June 30:
• Resldentlal tr-":
39,376 tons
• Ml ... traveled to pick
... tr-": 131,618
• Stnet strtplng:
213,725 llneal feet, up 348%
• 'n'efflc .... IMtalled:
12,574, up 206%
•Cer ..... •ln:
3,570, dOwn 44~
• Sidewalk construction:
49, 744 square feet. down
34%
Dave Niederhaus said the
more street striping work
and traffic signals are a
result of increased demand.
He added that the decline in
car repairs came after the
Police Department started
repairing its own fleet
separately.
QUESllON
FLYING HIGH
Why Is support few .n
airport at El Toro growing?
Call our Readers Hotline at (949)
642-6086 or send e-mail to daily
pilot@latimes.com. Please spell
your name and include your
hometown and phone number,
for verification purposes only.
Qty wants
county to
clean up
discharge
•Newport Beach may
push sanitation district to
further treat waste water
before it gets to the ocean.
Mathis Winkler
DAILY PILOT
NEWPORT BEACH -What's all
but certain is Uus: City Council
members will ask Orange County
Sanitation Distnct ofhc1als to clean
up their act and add another level of
treabnent before they release waste
water into the ocean
But when that w1U happen
remains unclear after council mem-
bers discussed the issue dunng a
study session Tuesday.
Federal law requires sarutabon
districts to treat sewage several
times before it goes into the ocean.
During prel.urunary treatment,
waste water is sprayed to control
odor and flows through bar screens
to catch large solids. Primary treat-
ment then removes the rest of the
solids and leaves a watery sub-
stance. Another procedure, known
as secondary treabnent, adds bacte-
ria that consume organic waste and
kill about 95% of viral pathogens.
The Orange County Sarutation
District. however, operates under a
waiver that allows officials to
release 50% of waste water without
taking it through secondary treat-
ment
With 236 million gallons going
through an outfall off the Hunting-
ton Beach coast per day, the chstrict
remains the largest agency in the
counby that relies on the waiver.
Granted for five-year periods.
district officials must apply for a
waiver extension by early 2003.
"The city has a chance to take a
position on this permit,• said Assis-
tant City Manager Dave Kiff,
adding that Councilman Tod Ridge·
way represents Newport Beach on
the disbi.ct's board of directors.
After about 20 water-quality
activists pleaded with city officials
to take a leadership role in chang·
ing the situation, Councilman
SEE WATER PAGE AU
Nila Keith
SHEIS
Reading your energy and predicting
your future
BREAKING INTO THE METAPHYSICAL
Nila Keith, a Tarot card reader at The
Latest Thing for two years, has been
involved with the metaphysical field for
more than 20 years.
She said she war part of the •swing
ot consc:iousness. and breakdown ot tra-
ditional ideas that started in the 1960s.
• 1 became vegetarian and began
yoga,• she said. •Everyone was doing
astrology and trying to read the Tarot.
Eventually, my pastime became a pro-
fession. •
In 1972, Keith began doing psy-
chometry while teaching classes about
spirituality in Pennsylvania.
She still sometimes does psychome-
try, the reading of objects, occasionally
using a crystal ball, and even bas some
knowledge of palm reading, but now
1 she focuses mainly on the Tarot.
The importance is in the reader, not
the reading method, Keith said.
·vou do them an. more or less, but as
you go on. you pick up an affinity for
Foretelling the future by
tapping her intuition
one,• she said. •They are all the same,
jUst a method of getting where you need
to go.•
THE DESIRE TO LEARN
Keith, 541 said anyone could have the
power to get in touch with his or her
metaphysic41 talent.
"I don't lUre the word 'gifted' because
it's not so much a gift as a desire to
explore beyond the physical senses,•
she said. "It was a talent I wanted to
pursue that became a gift because I
developed it. Anyone could do it, but
not everyone wants to.•
She was a medical assistant for a few
years, adding hypnosis and massage
therapy to her repertoire of skills, but 20
years ago she realized that the more tra-
ditional job was not what she wanted to
do.
But Keith said her hypnosis back-
ground gave her a better understanding
of the subconscious mind and how it
works.
She said the analytical, aitical per-
sonality typic4I of her astrological sign,
Virgo, makes her good at quickly pick-
ing up suboonsc:iot.m patterns within other
people.
Keith says she is not 100% aa:urate.
·r read the energies of the present.
and based on that I am able to predict
with some degree al accuracy what will
happen in the future,· she sa.id. •But trs
not set in stone. A dedsioo you make
today could change that future.· . . ,
THE HIGHS AND LOWS
Tue most difficult~ d be*.Ja read·
er is knowing how much to tell the per·
son you are reading for, Ket.th said
People often ask how sick they are or
whether their husbands are cheating on
them, and if the news is bad she some-
times struggles with how much to reveal.
The most rewarding part is getting to
the heart of a problem and being able to
make changes to help people improve
their lives, Keith said.
"As they grow, I grow, and as they
change, I change,• she said.
-Story by Jennifer Kho;
photo by 5un Hiiier ·
What's all the stink about?
Surveys are just great, aren't they?
Any~ people want to reveal
some information that is beneficial
to them, all they have to do is compile
a survey. Do you think companies per-
form swveys when they don't expect
benefidal results? wen. the people at Olanel have
discovered that wearing fragrance
may lead to wealth, fame and success.
But even that may be misJending. Of
1,000 women surveyed in January,
those wearing fragrance who hoped
tor marriage, wealth and fame out-
numbeJed those who don't wear fra-
grance. Read those as you will.
Men may take note of a few of the
results, though. Wb1le 63% of those
RETAIL ROUNDUP
who don't spray on fragrance cook,
about 36% of fragrance wearers do not
cook. At the same time, fragrance
wearers are more likely to exercise
than their counterparts. The latter
result makes a lot of sense. After an. no
one wants to stink.
READY TO BUY A Sl>EWAUC7
Corona del Mar plaza will hosts its
summer sidewalk sale from 9 a.m. to 5
p .m. Saturday and 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Sunday. Along with the sale, Zany
Brainy will host face painting
Saturday, Model Magic MD have
games to celebrate Harry Potter's
birthday on both days, Bristol Parms
will host barbecue demonstrations, Sur
la Table will demonstrate citrus Juicers
and offer samples, and Baby Unique
will host a tent sale.
Meanwhile, at Three Dog Bakery's
third annual Barkday Pool Party from
noon to 3 p.m. Saturday, visiting
pooches can splash in two w~
pools, play games, participate in a
doggy bikini contest (thole contests
have gone to the dogs) and model in a
beach scene photo shoot. All dogs will· ..
receive complimentary berkday c.ake.
And, lf their ownen make at least a
$25 pwcbase, they'll receive free dog
sunglasses. They'll be 10 cool. like
Benji. Lasme and Hooch.
lfADIBS HODM
(949) 642-tOIS
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llllflY II IUSllnl I
Restaurant honored for beSt wine list
Pood & Wine magllhM preeeoted flemlrig'• Prtme Steak-
bo\118 & wine Bar with * belt new restaurant wine lilt award. n. baDor ....Wted becauJe of the restaurant's 100..wines-by-
lbe..glill prog1'.8m. said Ula Lumsden, general manager of the
~in Newport Beech.
More than too wtne1 are pric8d from $4.50 to $16 per glass at
tba restawant tn additloo, the restaurant hosts regular seminars
and wm tastingl so the staff can keep up with constantly evolv-
ing wine lilt. lbe restaurant opens nightly at 5 p.m.
Doily Pilot
COQl lxlf-gains can be
found during summer
T here are best buys to
be found at Rag Baby's
semiannual summer
blowout sale happening
through Sunday at its Fash-
ion Island location. Every-
thing in the store is dis-
counted 40%, with some
items reduced up to 60%.
Rag Babys carries multicol-
ored hand-batik clothing
and accessories for children.
Information: (949) 644-6369.
Santa Monica Seafood
will host an outdoor barbe·
cue Friday through Sunday.
There will be fresh grilling
demonstrations with seafood.
samples to taste. If you've
always wanted to know the
proper way to grill seafood,
there will be grilling experts
who will share cooking tips.
Many types of 'seafood will
be prepared, from Hawaiian
o~, North Atlantic salmon,
Chilean sea bass and Mexi·
can shrimp. The barbecue is
scheduled from 4 to 7 p.m.
Friday, noon to 3 p.m .
Saturday, and 2 to 5 p.m.
Sunday. Santa Monica
Seafood is on East 17th
Street in Costa Mesa. It's
open from 10 a.m. to 9 p.m.
Monday through Friday,
from 10 a .m. to 8 p.m. Satur-
day, and 10 a.m. to 7 p.m.
Sunday. Information: (949)
5 15-7746.
If you're looking for best
buys on flowers, stop by the
Flower Warehouse in Costa
Mesa. Every week. there are
spedal.s such as tuberose at
99 cents each, gladioli at 99
cents each, Oriental lilies at
$2.99 each, Dendrobium
orchids at 99 cents each,
imported roses at 99 cents
each and carnations at $5
per bunch. The Flower
Warehouse also has a design
department that specializes
in rose topiaries at $19.99
and sunflower topiaries at
$15.99. The Flower Ware-
house is at 1308 Logan Ave.,
Costa Mesa. Information:
(714) 545-0310.
MOdmoto, known for the
world's finest cultured pearls
and pearl jewelry, now has
its Princess Grace Collec-
tion. The collection was
designed with the inspira-
tion of the late princess.
• P~arls were the signature
gems of Princess Grace,
both on and off screen,• said
Kikuichlro Ishii, president
and chief executive of Miki·
moto Co. •Her uniquely ele·
gant persona embodied the
demure and classic beauty
of a pearl. Considering the
importance of classic and
vintage influences in fashion
today, it seemed only natur-
al for Mikimoto to make this
connection through this spe-
dal collection." The Princess
Grace llmited edition series
ls made of high-quality
altoya, South Sea and Ta.hit-
Greer Wylder
BEST BUYS
ian cultlV'ed pearl necklaces
and earrings all bearing a
signature floral clasp. The
clasp is made of 24-karat
gold with a diamond accent
and was modeled after the
Princess de Monaco rose,
named in tribute lo the
American-born princess.
Necklaces from the collec-•
tion will be placed in a navy
blue leather and velvet box
with a •crace de Monaco •
signature plate. The current
collection is similar in popu-
lArity to Mi.kimoto's Marilyn
Monroe collection from a
few years ago. Mikimoto is
on the lower level of South
Coast Plaza, between
Macy's and Nordstrom.
across from Vie de France.
lnfonnation: (714) 424-5440.
At-Ease is having its
annual summer sale. The
traditional men's store has
savings from 30% lo 70% on
popular clothing lines,
including Zanella, Ike
B~har, Bobby Jones, Cutter
& Buck, Corbin, Reyn
Spooner, Barry Bricken,
Axis, Riscotto, Starrington,
Mezlan and Johnnie WaU~er.
Examples of current reduc-
tions are dress slacks priced
from $79.88, ties from $9.88.
short-sleeve knits from
$19.88, sport shirts f.rom
$29.88, Hawaiian-print
s hirts trom $29.88, sweaters
from $39.88 and sport coats
from $99.88. At-Ease is at
Fashion Island in Ne wport
Beach. Information: (949)
759-7979.
The Newport Design
Center has extended its
lease through the end of
July and is planning an auc-
tion on the remaining
antiques. The going-out-of-
business sale has all mer·
chandise marked down by
as much as 75%. Items on
sale include furniture,
antiques, art, bronzes, estate
jewelry and Persian rugs.
The short-lived store is at
353 E. Coast Highway, New·
port Beach. It's open from 10
a.m. to 7 p.m . Monday
through Saturday and from
11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Sunday.
lnformation: (949) 723-6100.
• IUT IUYS eppfffS Thunct.ys
and Saturdays. Send lnfonNtlon to
Gfeer WfkSer at 330 W. lhy St.. COS.
ta Mesa. CA 92627, or via fax at
(M9) '4H170.
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Thole cocdtlons wllt Mo be
the norm come nlghtfall.
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Daily Pilot
Hitting the cen mark
Now 100 years
old, a Costa
Mesa resident ·
discusses
his favorite
composer who
died bet ore his
. birth
M•thls Winkler
DAILY PILOT
Had he been
born six months
earlier, Donald
Leroy Bartels would
have been alive at the
same time as his
favorite composer,
Giuseppe.Verdi.
The Italian died
Jan. 27, and Bartels
was born July 21. The
year was 1901.
• STEVE MCCRANIC I OAJLY PILOT
UHe was a great
composer," Bartels
said Wednesday. "It's
hard to imagine any-
body any greater."
Donald Bartels and his daughter, Catherine Welch, reminisce about Bartels' 100th birthday
party, which was held Saturday at the SUve rado Senior Living Center in Costa Mesa.
Together with his
only daughter, Catherine
Welch, and friends, Bartels
celebrated his lOOth birthday
at Costa Mesa's Silverado
Senior Living home, where he
recently moved from Laguna
Beach. Dorothy, Bartels' wife
of 37 years, died in 1975.
A South Dakota native,
Bartels came to Southern Cal-
tfomia with his parents as a 2-
year-old and grew up on a
<:Al.I. l 'S ...
I ' '
Rabbitt Insurance Agency
AlTfO • HOMEOWNERS • H£AIDI
Sllllnluy Sin« 1957.
/~' ~ ~<::.,~~ . ...,. ... ~ .... ···-~ ./ > ,'J
949-631-77 40
+41 Old Newpon hi. • Newpon Beadi
(Neu Hoeg HOlpital)
farm in Downey.
He was one of two stu-
dents in the first graduating
class from the School of
Architecture at USC in 1923.
*It seemed like a normal
thing to do, " he said.
Bartels, wtio suffers from
dementia, said he couldn't
quite remember what kind of
projects he worked on. Welch
helped out a little and said her
father had designed the inte-
rior of the Robinsons-May
department store in Fashion
Island and built homes in Los
Angeles' Park La Brea area
after World War D.
He also designed a bomb
shelter for a Beverly Hills
businessman.
·we did a lot of things for
rich people," Bartels said.
"That was a normal thing for
MEXICAN RESTAURANT
OUR MEALS ARE A TRIP TO MEXICO
AGR£AT WE SPECIALIZE
SUMMER ITEM IN LARGE
TOSTADAS TO GO ORDERS l£~~~L~'~:=~£oR PHONE AHEAD!
296 E. 17TH ST. COSTA MESA · 949-645-7626
a rich person to want.•
While struggling to
remember his professional
accomplishments, Bartels
began to smile when asked
whether be really was a self.
confessed chocoholic.
*Chocolate? Are you
kidding?" he said, adding
that be prefers the darker
kind. "I don't care for rrulk
chocolate."
Thundoy, July 26, 2001 A3
City Council working to
clean up Buck Gulley
• Newport Beach plan
would help protected
envirorunent off Little
Corona beach as well.
P•ul Clinton
DAILY PILOT
CORONA DEL MAR -
The Newport Beach City
Council has endorsed a plan
to divert urban runoff that
would otherwise flow down
Buck Gulley into the ocean
off Little Corona beach.
The council stamped its
approval on the plan at its
meeting Tuesday evening.
The council agreed to
support a diversion plan
being implemented by the
Orange County CoastKeeper
until Oct. 15. The plan is to
pump runoff back up the
canyon, filter it and sell it
back to businesses to water
their grass.
If it cannot be sold, the
runoff will be sent into
the Orange County Sanita-
tion District's system for
treatment.
About 180 million gallons
per minute flow down Buck
Gulley, according to Coast-
Keeper spokesman Randy
Seton. The runoff reaches
the beach and flows into the
ocean. degrading a protect-
ed environment, be said.
The stretch of land is
one of 34 Areas of Special
Biological Significance in the
state. an environme ntally
protected zone.
CoastKeeper's diversion
plan, an elaborate system of
pumps and hoses, will han-
dle 100 million gallons a
minute.
The program is being paid
for out of a $50,000 grant giv-
en to the group in March by
a donor who has remained
anonymous. ln addition, the
city was awarded a $222,025
grant from bond revenue in
May to help pay for work in
Buck Gulley.
Seton said the group will
try to sell the filtered water to
the neighboring Pelican Hill
Goll Course. A typical 18-
hole course usually uses
500,000 gallons a day to
water the course during
summer months.
The group hired Clear
Creek Sy!.tems Inc. of Bak-
ersfield to in!>taU the pump
system .
The council also agreed to
enter into an agreement with
the Orange County Sanita-
tion · District to receive the
runoff.
In addition to the city's
approval, CoastKeeper must
also get other approvals. Jn a
July 3 letter to the city, the
Santa Ana Regional Water
Quality Control Board
endorsed the move.
Other dgenoes that must
sign on include the Califor-
nia Coastal Commission, the
county and the California
Department of Fish and
Game
GiJOn~i ,
theDAY
..
~ Uke my dad dlWays .
said, "All the good 0 0 ,
stuff is coming back. ",
-o.nn, lt8melnotD, 19, of swing dandng
TWIST & SHOUT
Celebrating Citrus & Sun
-
A4 Thursday, July 26, 2001 DAY 14
PHOTOS BY OON LEACH I OAJLY PILOT
Under deep hypnosis, four parttdpants are slumped over one another, soon to be commanded into action by bypnottst Mark Yusulk.
Believing the ..,_~elievable
...
Those who think they're immune to being hypnotized are in for a surprise at the fair
Danette Goulet
DAILY PILOT
My limbs were tingling
and felt like lead.
I was supposed to be
picturing a blue sky
with a single, white fluffy cloud.
I thought of that sky and its lit-
tle companion, but I didn't quite
picture it.
It was an effort just to pay
attention to what be was saying. I
knew he was directing us, but I
was awfully sleepy.
Plus, there was something on
my right arm -I think it was the
guy next to me.
Oddly, it didn't matter to me
that there were about 1,000 peo-
ple watching and I was about to
nod off.
That was about the extent of
my hypnotism.
Except that while I was in my
quasi trance-like state, hypnotist
Mark Yusuik had tapped me and
given me a number to say
onstage and I didn't know it.
•Most people don't,• he said.
•Most people don't think they're
under because they can hear my
voice.•
But when he went down the
line and did this evangelist head
tap thing and told_people to
sleep, it didn't really work on me.
Oh well.
Hypnotist Mark Ymu.l.k commands Patty Faustner to stng the
Oscar Meyer Jingle durtng a allow on Meadows Stage.
I thought it might not work on
me.
It does, however, work on
about 80% of people, Yusuik
said.
•1t•s not a spedfic type that
goes under,• he said. •Some peo.
ple think it's lea intelligent peo-
ple that go under, but that's not
true. In fact, some very intelligent
people go under because they
can focus."
Children also make good sub-
jects, he said. as it takes a level of
trust.
As someone who does not
relinquish control easily, it proba-
bly isn't surprising that I wasn't
hypnotized, he said.
Yusuik said he doesn't go
under either.
After I saw those who
In the. swing of it
It doesn ,t matter if they know their partners, as long as
their partners know how to dance.
remained on lbe Nge hypno-
tized jumping around, leaping up
-because they thought an invis-
ible dog was under their chair -
and smacldng their, butts, I wasn't
so sad that it didn't work on me.
Besides, the show was an
absolute riot to watch. And the
person who seemed to laugh the
hardest was Yusuik.
"When I stop thinking it's
funny, I'll retire,• he said.
He has fun with it, but Yusuik
also bas to be careful, he said,
because ovJe he puts the con,-.
scious mind to sleep, puts his sub-
jects in a dreamlike state and
makes suggestions to their sub-
conscious, they may just oblige.
So he and bis silent assistant
have to be sure they don't inad-
vertently say something that
could be ta.ken literally.
As the crowds that pack in
around the Meadows Stage at the
Orange County Pair twice a night
are a testament to, the ever-
clumging show is not to be
missed.
U anyone had told four
strangers that they would be
leaping around like the
Backstreet Boys, they never
would have believed it.
MNToi
the DAY
Doily Pilot
BARGAIN of
theDAY
How about a fun, frivolous
souvenir to take home from the
fair7 You can get a~
ltt. 1181d lnflnllble alien for
$10 at any of the six D.ndy
Souvenir stands. The enormous
alien is their biggest and most
expensive item at $10.
DISH of
the DAY
A heaping portion of AultnllM
.. ttwecl Potatoes served with
ranch, cheese or both for Mat
the Aultl'eMM ........ ftota.
to StMd at the comer of the
main mall. These Auuies have
been frying thidc slices of potato
for 15 years.
ATIENDANCE
•WEDNESDAY
asof6p.m.
22.220
• LASTYIAR
asof6p.m.
17,016
Doily Pilot
OUN GE
COUNTY FAIR
SCHEDULE
OF EVENTS
• Fe1r hours: 10 •.m. to midnight
• Felr locMlon: <>range County
Falrgrounck, 88 Fair Drive, Costa
Mesa
• ......... SS. Buses patk free.
• lkbta: $7 fof ages 13 to 54, $6
seniors 55 and oldef and Sl fof chil·
dren 6 to 12. Children 5 and younger
get in free.
• Spec:W: Today ls Seniors Day.
Senion ages 55 and oldef will be
admitted fof $4 and receive free
merry.go-round and Ferris whj!el
rides.
• w..lcd9y wwtstlwnda: AS 10 wrist-
band Is good fof 10 rides of your
choice. Wl'lstba.nds are sold until 8
p.m. and are good fof rides in the
major and kiddie midways. Valid for
all aiges.. Wristbands are not transfw.
able and do not include gate admis-
sion.
• lnfomwtlon: (714) 708-1928 0<
http:llwww.ocfllr.com
Ill DAY
...... ANlm ..wn.1s -Livestock
Area/Maternity Barn
• ~.wry ..... end cWry Qt.
tie -Livestock Area
• Sm9I ----livestock ~II Animal Tent
• 0.,.. end.,...._ Centennial
Farm
• 0....,... a1lte .... displlly-
Collectlons Building • o.a. Em'n.Wdt trlbubt-
Collectlons Building
• Smllll Saile Squedron. luther
guild end Cal,,.... c.v.n
GuNd -r Home & Hobbies Stage
• WooctwOl'bn end a-.
pM1•1 .. IMMWb&tloi• -VISUal
Alts Building
10UL
• lime Light 0.-Pwty -Kids
Part
• Clown Patrol (wrtil I p.m.) -
Main Gate
.............. -Meadows
St.aige
• ...... llNnd\ ...,..__Sun 5Ulge
•Pk I I 11 .. Plw Art C..W (until
7 p.m.) -KJds P..t
lhJOUL
• MAftwtc.i 11ors Chonll-
Sun Stlge
• «>r.,.. County F.ir am. FUn
lllliw\le -Kids Park
llOOll
• Senior Lemon ... Squ •••
CanWt -Heritage 5Ulge ................. ._ .. , ..
~ m.nd-MeadowsSt.tge
.... Roberts of .......
Ubnry Ulli on bedlyanl ~
Ing-Gre Roots Stage ('Fknl
Pavilion)
• Fun In the SW"I illdl ,... -KJds
Park
• Craft dlmonitlallon Home &
Hobbies Stage
• 0..... tNrn prw1bllton
Uvestock Arena
• ft'ri ~ m1gld.n-
Grounds
• Main Street DUlelend Jaa .....
-Grounds
12:30 ....
• Ow1ie K..atng. gt1 riHoww
Craften Village
• Billy Erickson, country musk -Sun
Stage
1P.&
• Senior Goklan ......
...._ .. -Heritage Stage
• ~ c.pet c...v .... -
Meadows Stage
• Somethll19 Special -
Celebration Stage (Youth Building)
...... Wiley of 51wn...,
Ubrary Ulli on flowwan --•-9.-..•-
from your bedryanl -Grass Roots
Stage (Floral Pavilion)
• GrapefNit 8owtlng-Kids Part
Stage
• Craft dlmoawbatton -Home &
Hobbies Stage
• Ind Fftnd\. juggler-Sun Stage
• Gnllt Anw'lan "-'ting Zoo
end Edumtkln Show -Green
Gate Petting Zoo .......... w. "wet (until'
p.m.) -Grounds
h30P.&
• CMamks dlmoa•b•dun -
Craften Viii~
• Med 5der.--Mad Science
Theatre
• uty ~ aMlllltry IN.-k-
Sun Stage
Thoodoy, Juty 26, 2001 AS
-TWIST & S HOUT -
c~WraUng atru ct s""
FOOD FOR THOUGHT
llJOP.&
·aw-.~gl t+ci ••
Crl'fwn Viti.ge
............ mnmrt---
Sun Stage
• Da11l 11 oftheWlld._.-
Newport Nena • Sn.-Saile.. rt Qi\ ........ .........,_Home a Hobbles SQge
...... Sdmtet -Mad Saenc.e
Theatre
•StltveLord.~
SunStage
• ,...,. ~ megldan-
Grounds
4P.&
• Al DI Mew-. vocalist -Heritage
Stage
• ......... Adult smool Une
0.--Me.ctows Stage
• SometNng Spedal -
Celebration Stage (Youth Building)
• wallilr c.olvtr\ ~ (L&rtil 9
p.m.) -Courtyard Stage
4:30P.&
• CMamks ~ISb'lltion -
Craften Village •
• Cnft demot111ration -Home &
Hobbies St.ge
• Stav. Lord. sl~ -
Sun Stage
• RusMtl Brothers Circus -Green
Gate
• ,...,. n--ston. ~i<Nln -
Grounds
• Port CJty Washbo.rd W'azards -
Grounds
SPA
WOP.&
• ,..._ nlgMly CIOMl9t -
Heritage Si.ge
·O......~gl *'hid
Craften Village
• Port City Wliltlbcwrd ~ -
Groonds
7P.& ....................
Millennium Barn
• M9rtc ~ ttnacotfllt-
Meadows Stage
........... othwi am.--Green
Gate
7:30 P.&
•Ceramics -.MMwballcM
Crahers Village
• MMt Sdence -Mad Science
Theatre
• Dew McKelvy nio-Heritage
Stage
• All AlMbn ~ Plgs-
Newpon Arena ., ...
...... Voodoo Oeddy-
Arlington Theater
•Oxen~~
Livestoclt Arena
• Comedy $pofta -Sun Stage
Chef Tommy Tang wlll show off bis c:ullnary Dair at
5 p.m. today on Heritage Stage. The event Is free
with admission to the Orange County Fair.
• Celebrity Chef Tommy Tang -
Heritage Stage
·Spectrwn~
Meadows Stage
• Doo Waitt Rkt.rs -Meadows
Stage
• PortOty~~
Grounds
2P.&
• Senior Remnt Holden Contest
-Heritage Stage
• Huntington 8Md'I Adult School
IJne 0.--Meadows Stage
• Something Spedal -Celebration
Stage (Youth Building)
• Junior cWry gcMit st'""'--"" .... --.. judging-Livestock Arena
• ~ ..S•-Grass Roots
Stage (Floral Pavilion)
•er..-Pwhen -Kids Park
Stage
• Drapen a o.n-Fashion
Show-Home & Hobbies Stage
• Al~ Boys O-W-
Sun Stage
• ltrad French. Juggler -Grounds
• lhwtlng Gwne Show (L&rtil 7
p.m.) -Grounds
• All AlMbn being Pigs -
Newport Arena
2130P.&
• "'-'I •cAtiW'I am. -Green
Gate
• ~ n...tan. m.glct.n -
Grounds
• Doggies of the Wiid West -
Newport Arena
JP.&
• Nifty AfW Fifty -Heritage
Stage
• ...,..........,._Meadows
Stage
• SometNl19 Sped-' -
Celebration Stage (Youth Building)
............ •b•dod -
Millennium hm
• ltrad FNnch. Juggler -Grounds
• Jolwdwt Wiid. oountlry IN.-k-
Sun Stage
• M9li\ Stre.t Dbdelend Jaa a.nd
-Grounds
• Sonwthing Sped-' -
Celebration Stage (Youth Bu11d1ng)
•Milling dltno1dbadon -
M illennium Barn
• Jondyn Wllcl, country music-
Sun Stage
• V....,-d Pac:.malten (L&rtil I
p.m.) -Bl~ and Brews
5:30 P.&
• swv. Lord. slngerfvutt.rist -
Sun Stage
• Orange Cow1ty F.W 0rcus Fun
Revue -Kids Part
• Port Oty Washbo.rd W'czsds -
Grounds
• All AlMbn ~Pigs
Newport Arena
6P.&
• Something Sped-' -
Celebration Stage (Youth Building)
• lllli'ny..cl Fashion hrllde-
Uvestock Arena
• Med 5der.--Mad Soence
Theatre
• The Teny HMtdl ....... (until 11
p.m.) -Bl~ and Brews
1:30PA
• Toucti of 0.. -Heritage Stage
9PA
• MMt Sdence -Mad Science
Theatre
• M9rtc YUIUik. hype.otllt
Meadows Stage
• Port Oty w..hbcwrd wtz.d5 -
Grounds
9:30P.&
• Comedy Spofta-Sun Stage
• o.v. Md(elvy 1"o -Heritage
Stage
10PA
• Doo Waitt Rklers -Meadows
Stage
10-.30 P.&
• Toucti of O.S -Heritage Stage
%wporf
DESIGN CENTER
GOING OUT OF BUSINESS
ALL MERCHANDISE MUST G
TOTAL LIQUIDATION
FINAL DAYS HI
A RARE AND UNIQIJE
ARRAY TO CHOOSE FROM
• FURNITURE • ANTIQUES
• ART • B ONZES
• J9EJEWE
26, 2001
PUILIC SAFETY
POLICE flllS
COSTA MESA
•Artll.-.Aw ....
,......_ Roed: An accident
inYoMng an Injury was reported
at 1:51 p.m. Monday.
•~~A home burglary
WIS reported In the 3100 block
at 6:40 p.m. Mooday.
• 8liltol Street: A hlt·and-run
misdemeanor was reported In
the 3300 block at 3:34 p.m.
Monday.
• twbor lloulwllt'd: Vandalism
was reported In the 1800 block
1t 12:59 a.m. Mo~.
• Linden PIMe: A grand theft
was reported in the 1000 block
at 1 :28 p.m. Monday.
• N9wpOf't lloulwlll'd: A com-
m«dal burglary was reported in
the 1700 block at 6:01 p.m.
Monday.
•Eat 16th Street Vandalism
was reported in the 200 block at
10:21 p.m. Monday.
• Eat 20th Street Petty theft
was reported in the 300 block at
6:45 p.m. Monday.
NEWPORT IEAOt
• Nor'th a., Plant: T~
WIS reported In the 200 block at
1:20 a.m. Monday.
• LIMrty: Veodals reportedly
slashed vehicle tires in the 100
block at 11 :40 a .m. Monday
• Newpolt c.nw Driw:
Clothing worth $4,000 was
reported stolen from The Limit·
ed In the 800 block at 11 :54 a.m.
Monday.
• Newpolt c.ntier Drive: Petty
theft was reported In the 900
block at 3:20 p.m. Monday.
• N•:lpOl't c.m.r Driw: A
cellular phone was reported
stolen from a car parked In the
Fashion Island lot at 5 p.m. Mon-
day.
• Opltl Orde: A purse was
reported stolen from a home in
the 100 block at 1:08 p.m. Mon· .. day.
• Via MariM Way: A stereo
was reported stolen from a car
parked in the 2500 block at 1 :SO
a .m. Monday.
MON.-FRI.
11:30-2:30pm
live Music for your lunch!
MON.-THURS.
6 -9pm
Live Music
FRIDAYS
0-10pm
Live Music
5ATURDAY5
11•m-Opm
FIEE Bounce Houses
UYI Music 6·9pm
•
SUNDAYS
R1911a1 Days 12·4pm
Live Music 6·9pm
FREE launce Houses
• Upptt CNlt Pina
•Vtrgin.......,.
• Who6I Foodl Mllttt
POLICE llllf
F.qw;trian tead8'
pleads guilty
An equestrian riding
instructor who used to
operate his bullness out
of the Orange County
Fairground& pleaded
guilty to one count of
child annoyance Mon-
day, officials said. ·
In April, Garth
Brown, 37, of Costa
Mesa was charge4 with
one count of sexual bat-
tery and one count of
child annoyance when
a 17-year-old girl
accused him of sexual
misconduct.
A Superior Court
judge sentenced Brown
to 200 hours of commu-
nity service, one year of
sexual offender counsel-
ing and three years of
formal probation. He
will also be required to
pay a fine of $2,000,
avoid unsupervised con-
tact with minors, write
letters of apology to the
victim and register as a
sex offender.
Brown operated·
Garth and Brenda
Brown Performance
Horses at the fair-
grounds, where students
are trained in Western
style horse riding. Offi-
cials sajd he recently
relocated the business to
Riverside County.
Robert Adelbert Stef-
fensmeier, a Newport
Beach resident for 30
years, died recently. He
was 94.
He was born on Dec.
17, 1906, in Salem, Iowa.
He retired after working
for 20 years as a Fire-
stone dealer.
Mr. Steffensmeier is
survived by daughters
Elaine Carmichael,
-Marlene Fleet and Pat
·Hill; sister Collette
Brune; 13 grandchil-
dren; 15 great-grand-
children; and sister-in-
law Regina Steffens-
meier.
A service is sched-
uled at St. John Vianney
Chapel on Balboa Island
at 10 a.m. Friday. Dona-
tions may be made to St.
Vtanney Chapel.
TO OUR IEADEIS
The Daily Pilot ~lcomes
obituaries for residenu or
former residents of Costa
Mesa and Newport Beach.
If you want to have an
obituary printed In the
Pilot, ask your mortuary
to fax us the Information ·
at (949) 646-4170 or call
the newsroom at (949)
764-4324.
HAPPY HOUR ON THE BAY
I• T1~.M~~ER iJ ~I Winn" of ASCAP Ptrformint Sonpmt<r Awttrri
SUNDAY, JULY 29 • SATURDAY, AUG. 4 • SUNDAY, Aue. 5
4:00-6:00 PM
Tim l1llS ~d aiulimcn a/Jover tht
Wm Co11Jt. 1tnncd with jwt his
pownfol voia. Ht IMs p~d at tht
House of B/Jus, Tht Galttxy Thtatrt,
and Tht Cottch House.
• ,,1 ··,· , I ,11 I I I
14•1 I I I •Iii I
1131 Back Bay Drive
·Newport Beach
www.newpondunes.com
Daily Pilot
Police haul
awaits owners
• Newport offirers are
inviting people to see if
any of the items taken
in an arrest three
months ago are theirs.
Dff1N at..rath
DAILY PILOT
NEWPORT BEACH
They're still there.
Dozens of golf clubs,
pieces of jewelry, shoes, pic-
tures, paintings and tools ar.e
among hundreds of items offi-
cers recovered from a burglar
three months ago.
They remain unclaimed.
Now, police are inviting
victims in Newport Beach, as
well as others in Orange, Los
Angeles, Riverside or San
Bernardino counties, to come
in to take a look at the prop-
erty if they believe they may
be rightful owners.
The burglar, James Elwyn
Fraser of Huntington Beach,
was arrested March 22 on
suspicion of possessing stolen
property. Fraser bailed out of
jail but was detained on Lido
Island two days later with
property in his possession,
which was later determined
to have been taken from a
home on the island.
A warrant was obtained
for Fraser's arrest. On April
30, be was arrested by San
Berncudino sheriff's deputies
for the Newport Beach crime.
Fraser is serving a six-year
sentence in state prison.
But the recovered goods,
worth more than $50,000, are
still crammed into the New-
port Beach Police Depart-
ment's property room, Sgt.
Steve Shulman said.
·our goal always is to try
and get back the property to
their rightful owners,· he
said. "We know it belongs to
someone, just don't know
who.·
Shulman said he has no
idea how many homes Fraser
stole from, but said people
who think their property
might be in there should
bring copies of their police
reports.
•Thal way, we can match
up the reports with the items
we have,· he said.
This is not the first.time the
Newport Beach Police
Department is extending an
invitation to victims to view
stolen property.
In February, officers arrest-
ed John Robert Hershowitz,
another Huntington Beach
man who police said had
stolen from at least five New-
port Beach homes. At that
time the department dis-
played about 250 items detec-
Put a few words
to work for you.
Call the
l>dily Pilot
RI
Vktlms may come to the
front desk of the Newport
Beach Police Department
between 8 a.m. and
6 p.m. sewn days • week
to view the property. No
apPOintment Is necessary.
The department Is at 870
Santa Barbara Drive.
Information: (949)644-
3681.
tives had recovered from Her·
showitz's home.
During that display, sever·
al people from all over the
county found items that they
said they did not even reahze
had been stolen from them.
LEWIS Heten Paok:h Lewis,
Born April 3. 193f. In Dee Moines. Iowa.
c.lled peae41fulv home to be with
her Lord, July 10. 2001 from her
residence of 20 years In Costa Mesa
She Is tempofa111y per1ed from
Rodney A. lewis, her beloved
husband ol 36 yars. end her
beloved llOO, Mar1l E. lewis. also ot
Costa Mesa. She leaves a legacy of lives tOUdled
by her faith end the power of God the
Holy Spint moving th~her. She was a homemaker, crea oomlort
IC>f her family, frienda and shors
Her fiunlly ~shes to thank their trie~ ministers, end the staH
of Companion Holploe '°' all the Incredible support. aid and care white
they moum their se~rallon lrom this
dear handmaiden of God.
She was buried at Pacific View Memorial Par1l In Newport Beach. A
Memorial Service celebrating her
entry Into the presenc. ol God will be
held at Newp<>fl Mesa Chrisban
Center at 4:00 p.m. on Sunday. August 5, 2001. In lieu of flowers.
please Mod doNlions to the
General Fund at Newport Mesa
Chris11an Cent9' °' the Amencan eanc.r Society.
"The Lord gav9. and the lord has
t8Mn away: b6...ed be the name of
the Loni" Job 1vs.21.
PIERCE BROTHERS
BELL BROADWAY
Mortuary * Chapel
Cremation
110 Broadway, Costa Mesa
842-9150
........ ,,[ ..... .... ..... ,...,.,....
Doily Pilot
lri•flr_in the THE rtEWS
Contribution to film
festival doubled
More marketing, more
screens and additions to the
seminar series. That's wb4lt
the Newport Beach Film Fes-
tival is hoping to do with the
$15,000 that Newport Beach
has budgeted for the event in
2001-02, said festival director
~regg Schwenk. The money
is more than double the
$35,000 the dty gave to the
event for the 2001 festival. •i think 'the dty's been
pleased with the profession-
alism and the evolution of the
festival,• Schwenk said.
"We've been able to prove it
has staying power and that
it's a valuable asset from the
artistic and financial stand-
point as well."
Gettin1,,
INVOLVED
• GEnlNG INVOLVED runs period-
ically in the Daily Pilot on a rotating
basis. If you'd like information on
adding your Of'ganiution to this
list. c.all (949) 57<M298.
PRIME DYNAMICS . Prime Dynamics, a Newport
Beach nonprofit organization
for the 99 and younger set.
needs volunteers for its pro-
grams. (949) 262-7300.
PROJECT CUDDLE
Project Cuddle, a nonprofit
organization, serves the
needs of abused, abandoned
and drug-exposed children.
In addition to office help and
once-a-month, 12-hour hot-
line shifts, volunteers are
needed for an auxiliary
group, fund-raising commit-
tees and to help distribute
stickers to stop babies from
being abandoned in trash
bins. The organization also
needs donated gift items for
mothers and babies. (714) 43~-9681 .
PROJECT TOCETHER
Project Together seeks adult
About 17,000 people
attended the festival this year,
up about 2,000 from the 2000
festival's numben.
The 2002 Newport Beach
Film Festival is planned for
Aprll 11-19.
Council to look again
at church application
The Costa Mesa City
Council unanimously voted
July 16 to take another look
at Lighthouse Coastal Com-
munity Church's request for a
permit to allow Kline School
to use part of the church's
p!U'king lot as a play area.
The City Council
approved the request June 18
but added conditioris reduc-
ing the hours the church
could conduct outdoor nonre-
ligious activities and a
requirement that the church
cannot open a preschool, pre-
viously allowed by another
volunteers to establish a trust-
ing, one-to-one relationship
with children stressed from
family problems and abuse.
Tltis component of the
Orange County Health Care
Agency's Children's Mental
Health Services offers train-
ing and supervision for the
program. Many of the chil-
dren are econoxn.ically
deprived and victims of
neglect. (949) 722-7086.
RUCH OUT
FOR SENIORS
Volunteers are needed to pro-
vide companionship and
friendship to isolated seniors
in Newport Beach and Costa
Mesa. TI'aining and support
are offered, and volunteers
must be 18 or older. (949) 442-
1000.
READING BY 9
The mentor reading program
seeks volunteers to read to
students in kindergarten
through third grade. In Costa
Mesa, Pomona Elementary
School, (949) 515-6980; Whit-
tier Elementary School, (949)
515-6898; Wilson Elementary
School, (949) 515-6995; and
New Shalimar Leaming Cen-
ter, (949) 646--0396, need help
IODAY
EVENT
Addntonal
Discounts
permit, unless it gets a new
permit for it.
Neighbors at that meeting
spoke against the preschool,
expressing concern about
noise, traffic and safety.
On Monday, church repre-
sentatives said they wanted a
rehearing because they
believe the City Council's
action violated the church's
constitutional rights.
Alan Mansoor, a Costa
Mesa resident. said be wishes
the only noise problem be
had in his neighborhood was
a church. ·u we have to restrict
noise, let's start with loud par-
ties, boom boxes and car
stereos,• be said. • 1 think
church is good for the com-
munity. This is a civil rights
issue, and it's going to open a
can of worms. Leave the
church alone."
The council will recorisider
the application and c:ondi-
tions in September.
in assisting students in read-
ing, writing and English.
Mentor sessions may be
scheduled from 8:30 to t 1 :30
a.m. and after school, from 3
to 6 p.m. Monday through
Friday.
SAVE OUR YOUTH
The Westside Costa Mesa
youth organization is looking
for volunteers to help create a
positive alternative for people
12 to 23 years old. Volunteers
are needed to help in areas
such as boxing, sports, health.
-
Tide pools to get
protection money
The Orange County Board
of Supervisors has imple-
mented a program to help
protect the county's delicate
tide pools using state grant
money.
The board on Tuesday
approved the use of $265,000
for seven marine-life refuges.
The county will spend
$185,000 this year to hire a
coordinator, put up signs at
the tide pools and implement
a public-education program.
The county will spend
$55,000 eacb of the next two
years to keep the program
going.
The grant money was giv-
en to the county by the Cali-
fornia Coastal Conservancy
on March 22.
The tide pools in Little
Corona are only one of the 1 marine zones. The coordina-
fitness, aerobics and academ-
ic tutoring. (949) 548-3255.
SENIOR MEALS
IND SERVICES INC.
Volunteers are needed to
deliver meals to homebound
senior citizens residing in
Costa Mesa who are not able
to prepare their own meals
and do not bave anyone to
prepare meals for them. A h.ot
lunch is delivered Monday
through Friday between 11
a.m. and 1 p.m. to the senior's
Tickets and Information: 949--644-5584
All Mata $8.00 -o• r8Wd
Fun fllmlly enteftainment. All performef'9undertheev-of14.
Stan1ng Clalre Ratftelcra Uncoln Mu9tcel Alumni. 3101 P.aftc View
~delMer
n nu a I
SAVINGS OF
30% -70%
from our collections of:
ZANELLA • IKE BEHAR
BOBBY JONES • CUTTER & BUCK
CORBIN • REYN SPOONER
BARRY BRICKEN • AXIS
RISCATTO • JOHNNIE WALKER • MEZLAN
tor will be stationed at the
Ocean Institute in Dana Point
Harbor.
SCR breaks ground
on its Next Stage
South Coast Repertory's
Next Stage broke ground
Wednesday next to the the-
ater's Town Center Drive
10cation, kicking off construc-
tion for the company's new
336-seat proscenium theater
and a number of renovations.
The new theater, to be
named the Judie Argyros
Stage, is set to open October
2002. The Judie Argyros
Stage will also house class-
rooms, office space for SCR's
education department and
other facilities.
This is Mthe culmination of
one incredible journey and
the beginning of another,•
said Paul Folino, president of
SCR's board.
home. A one-day-a-week
commitment is all that is
asked. Substitute drivers are
also needed to fill in for regu-
lar drivers. (714) 894-9779.
SERVING
PEOPLE IN NEED
Serving People in Need, also
know as SPIN, is looking for
volunteers to help prepare
sack meals for the homeless,
Thundoy, Juty 26, 200 t A 7
Other parts ot the SCO-mll-
lion Next Stage project
include replacing the cunent
Second Stage with the 99-
seat Nicholas Studio and ren-
ovating the Mamstage Into
the Segerstrom Stage. The
front of the complex will
undergo remodeling to house
a grand lobby.
About $32.8 million bas
been raised for the campaign.
officials said.
Artistic directors David
Emmes and Martin Benson
also announced a $500,000
grant from the Whittier Fami-
ly Foundations to belp launch
SCR's Youth Theatre Pro-
gram, which will begin in
October 2003.-The program
will commission three plays
yearly for young people and
their families. The first will be
written by award-winning
playwngbt Donald Mar-
guiles, author of MCollected
Stories.•
assemble hygiene kits, dis-
tribute meals and pick up
food for preparation. SPIN
proVldes move-in costs for
housing, case management
and support services to fami-
lies leaving shelters. SPIN
also serves as family advisors
or mentors and conducts
workshops on budgeting and
more. Visit SPIN at 2900
Bristol St., Suite H-106, Cos-
ta Mesa. (714) 751-1101.
SPS Surface Preparation Speclallst
Rick Nixon
Mildew, Rust & Stain Removal ..........................
• eonawte a Dlt:o,... ca._..,
• Cncll ....... CollCfOte Grfftdlnt
(949) 581-o360 or 1-800-581..()36()
SPC. lie. 667230
FINAL
MARKDOWNS
• SHORT SLEEVE KNITS
• ASSORTED TIES
• ASSORTED WOVEN SPORTS SHllTS
• HAWAIIAN PllNT SPORTS SHIRTS
• ASSOITBO SWEATERS
• Duss SLACIS
• SPOlrs com
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flOM $9"
FROM $91'
FlOM $1911
FIOM SI~
FROM S2~
floM $591'
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A8 Thursday, July 26, 2001
EDITORIAL
Newport Beach
should dO the
neighborly thing
I t's time for Newport
Beach to act like a good
neighbor. Officials and
residents in Costa Mesa
and Huntington Beach
want the county to remove
a planned bridge over the
Santa Ana fiver between
19th Street in Costa Mesa
and Banning Avenue in
Huntington Beach, as well
as one at Gisler Avenue.
They worry about the
added traffic and noise the
bridges would bring to both
sides of the river.
Newport Beach officials,
however, see it differently.
More routes over the river
would alleviate congestion
on Coast High way, which is
understandably something
they would want.
But Newport Beach resi-
dents are not the ones who
will be most affected by a
bridge at 19th Street. It is
the people living around
19th Street in Costa Mesa
and around Banning in
Huntington Beach who
have the most to lose and,
by their estimations, noth-
ing to gain by the construc-
tion of a bridge there.
In the past weeks, the
county has been taking
comments on a study of the
proposed bridges. The local
meetings have been domi-
nated by residents demand-
ing the bridges be taken off
the county's arterial high-
ways master plan.
The trouble is, officials
from all four cities in the
area -Costa Mesa, Hunt-
ington Beach, Newport
Beach and Fountain Valley
-must agree on what to
do. And Newport Beach
leaders haven't budged on
their insistence that the
bridges remain as a poten-
tial solution, in their minds,
to the crowded Coast High-
way. (Fountain Valley offi-
cials historically have been
neutral in the debate and
have signaled that they
would vote for the bridges'
removal.)
It is time they do. It is
clear that the bridge is not
wanted, and it should not
be forced on Costa Mesa
and Huntington Bead~ resi-
dents. Certainly, the few
arguments made that a
bridge would benefit those
living in the Westside don't
in any way offset the obvi-
ous problems the bridges
would cause.
According to the county's
study of the bridges,
removing them would
increase traffic, but not
beyond levels that could be
handled with increased
tum lanes, signals or addi-
tional lanes. It is time for
the four cities involved to
begin working on how to
improve traffic through
those methods and relegate
the bridges to where they
belong: the trash bin.
LEnER TO THE EDITOR
Facts must be addressed
in decifilng ajl]lort issue
'Weve made our dedllon, and the
publlc is golng to uphold It or overturn
{It/ and that'• llne. I've already done
my /ob, and now it'a up to /Kon Center
otfldals/ to run the campaign.'
-Newport Beach Mayor Gery At11ms, on the
council's decision to 1pprovt the 250,()()().square-
foot Koll Center exp1nslon, which will now be
decided by the vot!!rs on Nov. 20
MAILBAG
Doily Pilot
DON lfACH I DM.Y PILOT
Kristen Petros, left. and Costa Mesa C:undlwoman linda Dbon stand In front of the Huscroft House.
Costa Mesa fails to keep
historic home up to code
It seems that the city of Costa Mesa
has the time and the money to commit
. perjury to get me out of the City Coun-
cil meetings and the state of Califon$.
The dty has money to hire extra zon-
ing enforcement officers to harass the
locals about an old car or some paint
missing on a house, but does not take
care of its own Huscroft House that is
clearly a public nuisance.
The law says that an old public
nuisance is still a public nuisance.
But when it comes to something that
Costa Mesa can be proud of, like the
Fish Fry, M So sorry, no money.•
SID SOFFER
Las Vegas
• EDfTOlt'S NOTE; Sid Soffer is a f<>nMr Cos-
ta Mesa resident who fled the city sbc years
ago after being convicted of ~ating the
city's building codes at his Bernard Street
rental property.
Museum can call former
Marine Corps base home
Regarding your article •Museum
looking for a change of scenery"
(Tuesday). the Orange County Muse-
um of Art doesn't have to worry
about where they are going to move.
After the election next March, there
is going to be a large tract of land
available at the former El Toro
Marine Corps Air Station, and it
could be available for free.
Wouldn't it be wonderlul if the
Orange County Museum of Art could
be the beautiful cornerstone of #muse-
um row• in the Great Central Park.
CHERYL HEINECKE
Aliso Viejo
Art muse um needs to
display some decent art
What would be a good location for
the Orange County Museum of Art?
If the museum can only house 1 % if
its CUrTent collection, bow about the
nearest landfill for the remaining
99% of its art snobby collection of
gigantic MWbite on White" canvases
along with all the other nonunder-
standable esoteric junk it currently
displays. This way, the musewn
could stay exactly where it is.
As an art lover, I allow Jor those
pieces I simply don't get, but what I
have seen at this museum is less
thought provoking than just simply
provoking. White on White? Give me
a break.
DONALD RAMSAY
Newport Beach
Editor's column hits Crystal
Cove residents on the mark
Please spare us from any more
smarmy profiles about the plight of
tenants at the Crystal Cove State
Beach cottages.
With thousands of hard-working
Orange County families strµggling to
find decent affordable housing, the
Crystal Cove bunch is undeserving
of any sympathy. They were more
like an occupying army. The Daily
Pilot's editor, Tony Dodero, hit the
nail on the head in his •From the
Newsroom• column: •Finally. it's
time to start making those Crystal
Cove reservations.•
The Crystal Cove beach property JS
owned by California taxpayers. For
more than two decades of government
dithering -by the administrations of
both Democrats and Republicans -a
small group of insidem has enjoyed
below-market rents and vacation
homes in a gorgeous and priceless set-
ting. The Crystal Cove bunch worked
hard to trash every reasonable reuse
plan for the property. Their time bas
long since passed to move on.
Getting the foxes out of the hen
house will help immeasurably with
the reuse planning process. Putting
the property under the proper stew·
ardship of California State Parks
rangers and getting environmental
mitigation and cleanup done now is
the right thing to do.
Let's give taxpayers the full mea-
sure of their invesbnent. Help an
environmentally sensitive Crystal
Cove beach blossom through an
open and inclusive public planning
process.
PHILIP F. BETTENCOURT
Newport Coast
Only bold moves can make f or wise pla,nning in Costa Mesa,
Tom Egon
COMUNITY COMMENTARY
AROUND TOWN Thunday, July 26, 2001 A9
• 5end ~ 10WN Items to
the o.ily Pilot. 3)() w. Bay St.. Cos-
• MeM. CA 92627; bv fax to (949) ~170; cw bv calling (949) 574-
4298. lndude the time, date and
location of tM ~ as ~I as a
cone.ct phone number. A complete
~ Is available at ~tWww.dailypilotrom.
II YDAY
~r's Market wUl hold a m seminar called "Holistic Sldn ls In• at 6:30 p.m. at the
Patio Cafe, 225 E. 17th St.,
Calta Mesa. (949) 631-4741.
SllUIDAY
11-th.lrd annual Barkday
Pool Party for dogs of all
br8eds and ages will be held In the parking lot of the Coro-
t)I. del Mar Plaza parking lot
• noon to 3 p .m. Dogs can
Crr games, swim and get
pictures taken. The
Q\tant will take place at the
~er of MacArthur Boule-
tmd and Coast Highway in
Newport Beach. (949) 760-
DOGS.
The New York-based h1sh
Jig-Punk band "The Prodi-
gals• will perform a free con-
oert in Newport Beach at
Muldoon's Dublin Pub begin-
ning at 2 p.m. The Prodigals
!'ill be inducted into the
Guinness/Irish Wall of Fame
oo a 30-foot brick wall in
Muldoon's courtyard. 202
Newport Center Drive, New-pcm Beach. (949) 640-4110
•0ur Feathered Friends ... an
event for children to learn
about the almost 200 species
of birds at the Back Bay, will
be held from 2 to 3:30 p.m. at
the Upper Newport Bay -
Peter and Mary Muth Inter-·
pretive Center, 2301 Univer-
sity Drive, Newport Beach. $7
per child. Children must be
accompanied by adults. (714)
973-6820.
TUESDAY
Mother's Market will hold a
free seminar called "Get
Focused on Your Vision" at
6:30 p.m. at the Patio Cafe,
225 E. 17th St., Costa Mesa.
(949) 631-4741.
WEDNESDAY
lbe American Cancer Soci-
ety will sponsor a beauty
make-over class for cancer
patients from 10 a.m. to noon
at Hoag Hospital, 1 Hoag
Drive, Building 41, Newport
Beach. Free, registration
required. (949) 261-9446.
Violet P. Woodhouse, owner
and operator of A Profession-
al Corp. in Newport Beach,
will present a seminar on the
financial and legal responsi-
bilities and realities of divorce
at 6:30 p .m. a t Lakeview
Senior Center, 20 Lake Road,
Irvine. Woodhouse was
named one of the nation's top
financial advisors for sue con-
secutive years by Worth Mag-
azine. $20. (949) 724-6610.
IUG.2
Caregivers for Alzheimer's
disease sufferers can attend a
support group sponsored by
the Alzheimer's Assn. of
Orange County from 1 to 3
p.m. at Hoag Health Center,
1190 Baker St., Costa Mesa.
Free reservations. (714) 593-
9630.
IUG.3
Tbe public ls invited to the
Costa Mesa/Orange County
Jazz Festival from 10:30 a.m.
to midnight, beginning Aug.
3 and running through Aug. 5
at the Hilton Costa Mesa and
the Holiday lnn Costa Mesa.
One-day badges cost $30,
and $70 for four-day badges.
A musical tnbute to Louis
Armstrong and a reunion of
Costa Mesa's own South
Frisco Jazz Band will be two
of the featured attractions .
(714) 438-4922 or
http:l lwww.oc-classicjazz.org.
AUG.4
Chef Alen Guevara will
tempt your taste buds wtth his
cooking demonstrallon at
noon at Macy's South Coast
Plaza Home Store, 3333 Bear
St., Costa Mesa. Guevara
owns and operates Mechanixx
of Health, which caters lQ spe-
cific dietary needs dlld htness
programs. The demonslrntion
is part of Macy's August Cook-
rng Cellar theme, ·Fresh Cali-
fornia Garlic.· New members
may 1oin Macy's Cellar Club
for $10; proceeds will go to the
Second Harvest Food Bank of
Orange County. (714) 556-
0611.
Beaeon Bay Auto Wash
481 E. 17th Street • Costa Mesa
645-2022
00 Bitch St. (at Dove) • Newi.ort Beach
833-066u r----------------------, I .. , ••. • Fun-service Walla 1 . ! __ .,.. . ..... !
L c-• ----==-----· r---------E• r//Sl/eJ. ... ----------------,
1 ·-···
... _..n••--I
I
I ·--I
I
I
P"'4 E. Basten and Charles
Phoenix will sign their book
titled "Fabulous Lal Vegas in
the •50s• at 2 p.m. at the
Barnes and Noble store at 953
Newport Center Drive, New-
port Beach. (949) 759-0982.
IUG.5
Robln Vttetta-MIUer, con-
tributing editor for Cooking
Light magazine, will demon-
strate a new line of pots and
pans at noon at Macy's South
Coast Plaza Home Store,
3333 Bear St., Costa Mesa.
She appears regularly on
local, network and cable tele-
vision for programs such as
Today on NBC, Good Morn-
ing America, Fox News
Channel, Food Network and
ABC Eyewitness News.
The Temple Bat Yahm wt.ll
hold an open house and bar-
becue open to all members
and prospective members
from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. Visitors
will be able to see the new
Torah Center, which ls still
under construction. 1011
Camelback St., Newport
Beach. (949) 6«-1999.
IUG.6
A he aupport group for care-
givers sponsored by the
Alzheimer's Assn. of Orange
County will meet from 7 to
8:30 p.m . at Our Lady Queen
of Angels and St. Mark's
Presbyterian Church, 2046
Mar Vista Drive, Newport
Beach. Jun Casey, (949) 640-
1759-
AUG. 11
.. Nature Detectives,.. a
chance for children to learn
about wildlife at the Back Bay
and why its not very visible,
will be held from 10 to 11 a.m.
at the Upper Newport Bay -
Peter and Mary Muth Inter-
pretive Center, 2301 Univer-
sity Drive, Newport Beach. $5
per child. Children must be
accompanied by adults. (714)
973-6820.
AUG. 12
8artm'a SenneDa. mdbol' of
•Unfinished Business,• will
sign her book at 2 p.m. at
Barnes & Noble Booksellers,
953 Newport Center Drive,•
Newport Beach. (949) 759--0982.
·0ur Feathered Friends," an
event for children to learn
about the almost 200 species
of birds at the Ba~y, will
be held from 2 to 0 p.m. at
the Upper Newpo Bay -..
Peter and Mary Mu Inter-
pretive Center, 2301 Univer-
sity Dnve, Newport Beach. $7
per child. Children must be
accompanied by adults. (714)
973-6820.
SEE TOWN PAG~ A 10
, w Jamaica with rc,111 -~ 'f r•P.... EvERY .:SUHPAY hl~ Baha
1'21 /.-, 1.1vE REGG,..E 'ha
\[ I P~TIO GRILL • 8UIL!D YOUR OWN ()I? 1
' C l d }' BLOODY MARY BAR
VOODOO PUNCH • SANGRIA
For Reservations Call
(949) 760~8686
I\ ( >1
\ -'
The Costa Mesa Chamber ... of Commerce
wishes to thank the primary spomors
( ); 11//"1 ( II/fl/fl' ... . HARBOR
Market Place
along with the many other major spomors and
contributors, all of whom made the
5th Annual Costa Mesa Community Golf Classic
a tremendous success.
t • Placic: Blue Violet NctWOrks
Dave Schuler, Ed Lynch,
Terry Rftd. Jon Giberson
One OC MaiUt PlaoeTcam
Bob & JdfTdkr
Jim Daily, Fn:d Annetiarii
I0~6-er,...
1.-DMl. IM _,.x.W.
Mlcl ti It t s Dia ......
All l!tunday, Ju!r 26. 2001 ARoUNDTOWN Daily Pilot
TOWN
CONTINUED FROM A9
AUi. 13
A beKJa-tbeae bmd·raller
put on by the Friends of
Orange Coast Interfaith Shel-
ter will take place at 6 p.m. at
the Balboa Yacht Club in
Corona del Mar. Proceeds
from •pant.asy Island Adven-
ture• will benefit the home-
less families at the shelter.
Dancing, raffle, and a silent
and voice auction will be
held. (949) 675-9961.
lbe Sierra Club wtll bold an
informational meeting for
new and existing members
alike, including table displays
exhibits, demonstrations and
refreshments, at 7 p.m. at the
Costa Mesa Neighborhood
Community Center, 1845
Park Ave., Costa Mesa. $25.
(114l 963-6345.
AUG. 15
The California Assn. of Nurs-
erymen-Orange County will
sponsor a plant auction and
chili cook-off at 6 p.m. at the
Orange County Fairgrounds.
The event is the California of
Nurserymen's annual fund-
raiser, and proceeds will go to
charities. Admission to the
silent auction is free, but bid-
ding paddles to be used at the
live auction will COit $5. 1be
chili oook-off will begin at 6
p.m. and costs S2 for unlimit-
ed chili tasting. 1be auction
will begin at 7 p.m. Entel
the fairgrounds off Arlington
Drive, through Gate '· (9'9)
721-2100,Bxt.505.
'"'· 11 Ben Tyler, author ol .. 'J'tkk.s of
the 1\'ade, • will sign his book
at 2 p.m. at Barnes & Noble
Booksellers, 953 Newport
Center Drive, Newport
Beach. (949) 759-0982.
AUG.27
Orange Coast College wtll
begin its fall semester by
offering eight different Span-
ish courses that will meet in
the morning, afternoon and
evening hours. The classes
are transferable to the Cal
State and UC systems. OCC's
fall enrollment fees are $11
per unit. Pall schedules can
be accessed at http://orange
coastcollege.com. (714) 432-
5072.
AUG.29
lbe Consumer Credit Coun-
seling Service of Orange
County Educational Seminars
will hold a free seminar on
_______._,.____ -----
Headline Concert Series
Arlington Theater, 8 PM Nlghtty
Free With Fair Admission!
John Berry, Suzy Bogguss, Billy Dean
Fri. July 27
Howie Mandel -Sat. July 28
Lee Greenwood -Sun. July 29
·~your mooey• ~t 6
p.m. at Colla M9A ·Federal
Credit Union, 2101 Harbor
Blvd., Suite J!-6, Costa Mesa.
AUl.30
1be llnt day of Onnge Coat
College's film as literature
course will meet from 6 to
10:15 p .m. Stu4-ents will lea.in
about cultural, mythic, reli-
gious, historical and philo-
sophical elements related to
film, as well as write on and
analyze important American
and foreign films. OCC's fall
enrollment fees are $11 per
unit. (714) 432-5072.
SEPT. I
Big Brothen and Big SJsten
of Orange County will hold a
Mardi Gras and Casino Night
at the Village Crean Jl.lfansion
in Newport Beach l;>eginning
at 6 p .m. Tickets a.re $50. A
live jazz band, Cajun-style
dinner, silent auction and
casino tables will provide the
entertainment. (714) 544-
7773.
OCT. 23
Bloomlngdale's will host a
Shopping Benefit that will
serve as a fund-raiser, offer
information to the community
and celebrate breast cancer
Fr~1 Julyl7
Twist •n• Shout
llD I IMIS ILOW on
tocla1 Is
s11110RS oAYt
dmitted for $4 SenlotS 55+ :ee ferrts whee\
and receive l rides\ and carouse $6' (Regular admfSSlon ~
IPM • Grandstand Arena
-·------------Grandstand Arena Thrills
Free With Fair AdlNsslonl
'JWfat 'n' Shout Bull Riden Blow Out Fri. July 27 L. 8 PM; Sat July 28, 4 & 8 PM;
Sun. July 2Y, 6 PM
sumval ln oblervance of
Breast cancer ~wareneu
Month-from 10a.m. to 10p.m.
at Pubion Island, 701 New-
port Center Drive, Newport
Beach. Seven local charlties
will be participating in the
event, which Will also feature
healthy cooking demonstra-
tions, live music, investment
tips and a psychic entertainer.
NOY. 7
The Siena Club will hold an
informational' meeting for
new and existing members
alike, including table displays
exhibits, demonstrations and
refreshments, at 1 p.m. the
Costa Mesa Neigltborhood
Community Center, UM5
Park Ave., Costa Mesa. $25.
(714) 963-6345.
OllGOlllG
1be Jewllh Pamlly Service of
Orange County offers a
women's divorce and separa-
tion support group that meets
at 7 p.m. Wednesdays at the
Jewish Federation Campus,
250 E. Baker St., Suite G,
Costa Mesa. (714) 445-4950.
SL Andrew's Presbyterian
Church hosts a weekly Men's
Fellowship Breakfast at 1
a.m. Wednesdays at the
church in Dierenfield Hall,
600 St. Andrews Road, New-
port Beach. The breakfast
costs $2.50, no reservations
are needed, and men of the
church and community are
invited. (949) 574-2239.
Comfort Zone, a support
group f« people living witb a
mental UJ.nea, meets at 7:30
p.m. Thursdays at the 215
Medical Building, flrlt-Ooor
conference room, 275 Victoria st.; Costa Mesa. Free. (949)
5'8-7274.
Tbe Costa Mesa Senior Cen-
ter hosts ballroom dancing
with Uve music from the Peter
Van Orschott 1\'io from 1 :30 to
10:30 p.m. Tuesdays at the
center, 695 W. 19th St., Costa
Mesa. $4. (949) 548-3884.
lbe breakfast referral net-
working group will meet
every Wednesday from 7:15
to 8:30 a.m. at Mimi's Cafe.
Call Angie Stafford for reser-
vations and information, (949)
474-2225.
Hoag Hospital holds support
meetings called •Naturally
Sweet• for sufferers of dia-
betes every Wednesday of
every month from 7 to 8 p.m.
Free and no reservation are
required. Heidi WOoortng.
(949) 760-2065.
lbe Newport-Mesa cribbage
club meets on the second and
fourth Wednesdays of the
month at 6:45 p.m. at the
Oasis Senior Center, Room 6,
800 Marguerite Ave .. Corona
del Mar. $2. (949) 646-5293.
The Pacific Business
Xchange bas weekly break-
fast meetings at 1 a.m. Tues-
days at the Pacific Club, 4110
MacArthur Blvd., Newport
Beach. Free for the initial
meeting. (9'9) &&().()588. f\ .
TIM Co.ea..._. s-lor Cea·
ter otfen a Widow.-Widow-
en Support Group from 1 to 3
p.m. Wednesdays at 695 W.
19th St., Colt.a Mesa. (9'9)
6'5-2356.
Jewbb Family Service oa
Orange County often a
divorce support group Tuesday
evenings at 6. 1be group II at
tbe Jewish Pede.ration Cam-
pus. 250 E. Baker St, Suite G,
Costa Mesa. (714) "5-4950.
Oull Senior Center bu an
Adventurous Walkers Group
that travels to points of inter-
est locally and around the
county. The groups meets at 9
a.m. Fridays at the center and
walks at a leisurely pace. The
center is at 1800 Marguerite
Ave., Newport Beach. (9'9)
644-3244.
a.,aJn Reactton olfen body-
conditioning classes for all fit-
ness levels at 7:30 a.m. and 4
p.m. Tuesdays and Thurs-
days. Chain Reaction is at
3928 Campus Drive, Newport
Beach. $10 each class. (949)
588-2427. .
A women's therapy suppiClilt
group meets at 6:30 p .m .
Thursdays at 11 51 Dove St.,
Suite 105, Newport Beach.
(949) 261-8003. ----
A coed therapy support
group meets at 6:30 p&.
Wednesdays at 1151 D<i1/e
St .. Suite 105, Ne~
Beach. (949) 261-8003.
+ y La WE R -r NEW SHIPMEN!'
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?11ta4 .
DESIGN C:Ef'JTER
''For All Your Decorating Needs! . ~ -
d1¥ of IMne has been run-
mng similar polls for several years, with about the same
~ of aedibility but a great
deal more finesse.
On the creative side, Irvine
fals come up with a ne w non-
atrport use for the El Toro
tpOJ>erty as a fitting comple-
llKWlt to its G reat Park. After
eonsiderable study, a City
Qund.l committee has deter-
mirted that even Irvine resi-
dents die. And because there
istcurrently no place to put
them in this condition, the
CXJl'tlmittee is suggesting that a
cetietery is a more appropri·
lite-use for El Toro than an air-
port. Oh, yes, they also have a
wfVey to back this up.
!:Meanwhile, our neighbor-
it1~town or Orange had dJ1
election while I was gone. and
the results should run up a
Y(iming flag in our own
sthool district. Three mem-
beJS of the Orange Unified
school board were recalled in
,.., .. u
a fight that has divided the
dty and will surely continue
through the next eledion in
November.
The lessons, it seems to
me, are twofold: When either
a religious or a political agen-
da motivates the workings of
a school board, the resuJt is
chaos; and the biggest prob-
lem in school board elections
is apathy. In spite of the
intense, fractious campaign
and the departure of droves of
teachers from the Orange sys-
tem, only 20o/o of the voters
turned out for the election.
And even a personal appeal
to Republican voters for mon-
ey and support from county
GOP Chairman Tom Fuentes
m this "nonpolitical" election
couldn't pull it out for the
mcumbents.
Some scattered bits and
pieces:
•Even an official decision
to deny Lodwrick Cook's
request to move his pier so he
could dock his 55-foot yacht
off Balboa Island didn't settle
the issue. He is now trying to
nose the yacht in, which is
rather like docking the Queen
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Mary OD Lake Elsinore.
• The imminent release of
a new version of •PJanet of
the Apes• reminded me of the
months that the original was
filming at UC Irvine when I
would frequently look up
from my office desk to see a
Hollywood ape peering
through my window.
• The failure of UCI bas·
ketball star Jerry Green -
who must have gotten some
very bad adwice -to be
selected In the NBA draft
means he has lost his senior
year of eligibility, and I'll
have to watch what would
have been the best UCl team
in years struggle without
him.
Finally, we lost some vital
people In the last month.
Frances Robinson, who -
with her husband, Frank -
saved the Back Bay estuary
for all of us and proved that
the detennination and dedica-
tion of one person can,
indeed, make a difference.
Carroll O'Cormor, who
YOUR DENTAL HEALTH
by Deedftea Rich, D.D.S.
PROTECT YOURSELF
As. we iet older ~uh ~viucs tend 10
occur tn 1hc roocs of ctt1h. lu gum
twue r«.cdcs. cttth roots a.re aposcd.
Unltlce chc hud cna.md ch.c coV<n
chc 1csc of che 1ooch. 1hc rooc is
ncrcmdf ~nsmvc 10 accack by
ba.ctcna plAque aetd. As gum
=osoon ~ more root surfaee. u
drannuully 1ncn~uc the ~h•ncc of
de-doping avuio
The fint (tne o( dcfctU< I) tO prcv.:nt
gum rcccu1on M;Uocdusion
(imbalant.cd buc) and gingmm or
pc'roodonc<&.I dU<uc (gum and bone
1nfcc:11on) can lc...d to r«~1on of the
gums. ~ul•r and 1horough dcnc~
exa.m1n211ons (includmg checking_
your buc) c.a.n de1cct early signs of
rcccmon Good prcvcnmi~ and
trcarmenc opuons cxm and vary
according ro 1nd1vidu2l needs. Your
denuu can abo provide you wich
Ouorodc producu co apply to chc
cocxh roou to aucngthcn chem against dcc;ar· Early in1ervcn11on os always
best. And. of course. pro~ional
dental hygiene care I) aJCnual. If we
may be of help co you, c;ill 640-';C.80
al 1441 Avocado. Ncwpon Sc.a.ch fur
an appointment. -
showed up bigotry as Archie
Bunker, and Stanley Mosk, a
tower of judidal strength on
the California Supreme Court
during the John Birch years
-both of whom I inter-
viewed as a joumallsl
And then there was Jack
Lemmon. whom I was privi-
leged to know well enough
that be came to UCI to show
"Save the nger• and talk to
my film class, then invited us
all to Paramount Studios for
the same pwpose the follow-
i{lg semester. One of the
greatest pleasures of the years
I covered Hollywood was
watching Lemmon and Walter
Matthau play off each other.
I was doing a profile of
Lemmon when be and
Matthau were filming "The
Odd Couple• and was visiting
the set wben they did a scene
in which the Pigeon sisters
arrived for cocktails. Lemmon,
in his fussy role, told them
nervously: "Don't sit in the
hors d'oeuvres. -But he inad·
vert~misspoke the line
and totally br~ke up the com-
pany. For the lest of the mom-
mg, every time they came to
that line, the c.ast would disin-
tegrate in laughter, and the
clirector finally gave up and
called a lunch break. It was
the only unprofessional thing I
ever saw Lemmon or Matthau
do.
Jack Lemmon was real.
What you saw was what you
got. The Everyman patina he
wore so well and was so dose
lo his skin sometimes
obscured his enormous skills
as an actor. More than any
othe r actor I was around
enough to see behind the
facade, Lemmon was almost
totally without guile. It was
strange -bu1 somehow
dppropriate -that he fol-
lowed his pal, Matthau, so
quickly to whatever place
"grumpy old men" set up
shop m the afterlife.
• JOSEPtt N. BELL is a resident of
Santa AN Heights. His column
appears Thul'ldays.
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, w/coupon Exp. 7/31/01 • '----------------------------· (949) 515-1884
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Mon-Sat • 10:30 · 6:00 pm
Fletcher Jones III & Paul Hahn
Fletcher Jones ill of Fletcher Jones Motorcars and
Newport Beach Country Oub Head Professional Paul Hahn
stand next to the 2001 Mercedes-Benz ML320 in preparation
for the Tea Cup Classic £ at
Newport Beach Country Club
on Friday at 1 p.m.
TEACUP
Al2 1'hUr!doy. JUtr 26, 2001
POLL
CONTINUED FROM A 1
Dave Ellis said. •we've been
working aggressively. It's
starting to poy off.•
The majority, about 80%,
of the poll's sample was taken
from North County. South
County households made up
20% of the homes polled.
Meg Waters, the spokes-
TRASH
CONTINUED FROM A 1
economy in the 1980s, when
a recession tiptoed about six
months behind a dip in waste.
At the time, he wrote off his
observations as a quirky theo-
ry. But then, in the early 1990s,
Niederhaus witnessed the
phenomenon again. Last fall,
the city's trash volume started
to drop once more amid talk of
a slowing economy.
"Every time, it has been
the bell ringer for the econo-
woman for the 10.city ooali-
tion of South County cities
fighting the countys airport
plan, questioned the val1dlty
of the data;
Waters said the business
council'1 lnvolvement raises a
red flag, because the group
supports building an airport
at the base.
"They've always tried to
give a pro-airport spin to
these things,• Waters said. "U
the business council was not
'It's not an exact sci-
ence. I've mentioned
it to people in the city,
but I'm not so sure
they believe me.'
Dave Niederhaus
Newport Beach's generar
services director
my backing off,~ Niederhaus
said, adding that as residents
become more cautious con-
sumers, less packaging mate-
rial gathers up as waste.
The fact that Newport
Beach actually should have
produced 300 more tons of
trash compared with the pre-
vious year just adds evidence
to his theory, Niederhaus
said.
The additional trash
should have come from about
250 new homes in the One
Ford Road development, with
every household producing
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involved, J would take lt more
serbasly.·
Julie Puentel, the spokes-
woman for the · council,
denied that the poll was moti-
vated by politics. .
Since Ma.rc:h when the last
poll was done, the Great Park
plan has come into tlie
debate. And the high costs of
developing a park at the base
are likely to '!1Way more voters
in favor of an airport, Puentes
said.
• I
•1 think there's bound to
be d\tenchantmeot about the
Great Park u IOOll u the
cost.I come out,• Puentes
said. •A certain measure of
doubt bu started to be aeat-
ed about the Great Park.•
•...,. ~ aw.n the environ-
ment Md John Wayne Airport. He m-v be rNChed It (949) 764-4330
or by .-mall It ·
paul.dlnt.onOJ.tlmucom.
about 1.2 tons of waste per pal Finance Officers, for
year. which he is a board member.
While Niederhaus seems So far, the economy's also
convinced that he's got a still strong enough to have
point. he made it clear that he Niederhaus struggling to fill
doesn't expect his City vacant positions in his depart-
Hall colleagues to start pre-ment Construction workers
dieting Newport Beach's eco-don't feel the need to give up
nomic future by looking at higher-paying jobs in the prl-
trash levels. vale industry and are reluc-
• u·s not an exact science,• tant to seek more secure
he said. •J've mentioned it to employment with public
people in the dty, but I'm not agencies such as Newport
so sure they believe me.• Beach, he said.
Dennis Danner, the city's The lack of workers administrati~e ~ direc-caused a 34 % drop in side-
tor and Wlth it Newport walk construction Nieder-
Beach's top finance guy, said • haus said adding that his
Niederhaus' observations departme~t has a two-year
sound reasonable to him. backlog for nonemergency
»But ~o, I don't have any work.
plans to look at trash vol• Nevertheless, Niederhaus
ume, Danner said, adding said he'll keep watching the
that he preferred l? base his trash.
tax revenue predictions on •That has been the best
economists' advice. He added barometer for the· economy •
that he also keeps informed he said '
by listening to economic ---·-------news on the radio and read-
ing business newspapers and
monthly newsletters from the
California Society of Munici-
• Mllthls Wlnldw covers Newport
Beach. He can be reached at (949)
5744232 or by e-mail at
mathis.winlc~atimacom.
No matter l/Jlat you're domg,
your hometown newspaper
R1S w... l>dily Pilot
. .
WATER
CONTINUED FROM 'A 1
Steve Bromberg said he'd
like to see a resolution
opposing the waiv.er renew·
al as soon as possible.
•The ocean really is a toi-
let.• be said.
But Ridgeway countered
that such a step would be
premature.
•personally, I think it's fair
to wait.• he said, adding that
the district is spending sev-
eral million dollars to figure
out whether the waste-water
outfall is respon:sible for the
contamination of the Hunt-
ington Beach shoreune.
·1 think (district officials)
will learn what they've been
denying,• he said. •And that
is that there is contamination
by the outfall•
He added that the city's
Harbor Quality Citizens
Advisory Committee unani-
mously voted to oppose a
waiver renewal in May and
said he hoped council mem-
bers would follow suit in the
future.
District officials said they
also hope elected officials
and residents would wait on
a decision until results from
the studies become avail-
able later this year and in
early 2002.
"If we do need to change
operations to address com-
munity concerns, we will do
that and can do that.• said
Lisa Lawson, a district
spokeswoman. But •we just
want to make sure that the
community is aware of what
they're asking for.•
Apart from an increase in
cost that consumers would
have to bear, district officials
would also have to find a
way to deal with 25% more
solids that are produced dur-
ing secondary treatment,
• • • ..
..
Daily PllOt
1.a.WIOll Mid. •u folks me CIDiDg ~ a
deeDer ocean. then we~
impedl to the land wtlb
tncreued truck tramc and
more air..,,....,.,.,• La.W1CJO
said, adding that the eoid
waste would have to &
transported to IOID8 pU<ie
oubdde the county. '101
Besides, the cbltr1ct ha
been granted waiv~
because •we have been al>fe
to show that we are not nea~
attvely lmpecUng the ~
environment.• 1.a.WIClll Miit.
But Newport Bear.A,
Huntington Beach and Seal
Beach residents who ~
to Tuesday'• ooundl meeting
seemed to think otberwile.
•1be waiver ii only for
five years, because it's m--
sumed that Ws going .,tQ
endi • said Newport Beodl
resident Jan Vandenloot,
who has been involved witb
the issue since December. •W1len ts tt going to endr
Nancy Gardner, a ~
nent Newport Beach wa~
quality activist, told cound1
members that opposing the
waiver also made economic
sense for the city. ·our houses are worth
what they a.re because ~y
are on the water,• she said.
•1t makes a great deal"Of
sense to make it as dean'~
possible.• ::
And Beb Caustin, an~
water-quality activist in ~
city, said Newport Beaf}i
officials should take actron
sooner than later.
•Now is the time for .Ule
city of Newport Bea~~
lead,• he said. •Now is wa
time for us to take a staDd
and say no• to the waiV.er
renewal. "
• ..... -*-awim'S NewP-
ee.ch. He !My be ruched It
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~ily Pik>t SOCIEiY Thundoy, July 26, 2001 A 13
~enneth Cole store opening lo benefit AIDS research
nn•
W orld-renowned fashion
designer Kenneth Cole
... .> will be in Newport Beach
next Tuesday to celebrate the open-Wff _o_f his new namesake store at
~n Island. The handsome
-square-foot Cole emporium
celebrate a grand opening with
tall party at sunset supported _..,,,..... advocates of Am.PAR
erican Foundation for AIDS ... ).
5 9Cole has instructed the store to ~te 25% of the evening's pro-
~ to the organiUltion, as well
dtoffering opening night shoppers a->~0% discount on his merchan-
dWe. The new store actually opens
'tbmorrow to the public. It is Cole's
flHt West Coast outlet and only one
... our shops nationwide that will
Urry both his men, and women's
lUl.es.
•For more information on the
<ipening night festivities and to
.npport AmFAR, call Jane GWe-
'*"8 at (949) 733-2198.
t1UJ • • •
,..~,The Founders Plus in support of
~ Orange County Performing Arts
Qtpter are organizing their Sep-
1Wqiber gala honoring longtime
~~wport Mesa charitable activists
Nora Hester and Carol and Kent
~WJiken. The 2001 Gala, called
;~ptember Song, -will star vocal-
~~\,Dean Regan, named Artist of the
ear by the Professional Artists
' b'ntact Service.
::::!1
1
"!11e Sept. 23 dinner and concert
n'T"! unfold at the estate of David
"and DaI'l'dlyn MeUW. The party is
W-chaired by Ruth Dlng and Tom
·~n with assistance from Barbara
'Nhannnes. Organizers have set the
ticket price at $101 per person,
W'ftb proceeds going to support the
~ter.
Founders Plus is an organization
comprised of charter members of
the Orange County Performing Arts
-anter. The everung is open to
everyone in the community wishing
to support the cause.
Call Ruth Ding at (909) 734-6252
o(. Tom Moon at (714) 633-4681 for
B.W. Coolc
THE CROWD
reservations and information.
• • •
The ladies of the 1221 Club, a
support wing of the Newport-?viesa
scholarship foundation created by
the Balboa Bay Club to provide
financial assistance to deserving
high school seniors bound for col-
lege, recently held a sum.mer gath-
ering and fund-raising event on the
gTounds of Barbra Strei.sand's com-
pound in Malibu.
Some years ago, the legendary
star donated her Malibu acreage
and collection of homes lo the state
to create a refuge. The property is
open to the public with reserva-
tions, and a contingent of some 40
Newport-Mesa women traveled
into the Malibu canyons by van to
check out the Streisand touch.
Prominent local real estate agent
Mattia Saunders joined Big
Canyon's elegant Barbara Bowie
and Corona del Mar's glamorous
Cerise Feeley for a sneak peek of
the former Streisand digs.
· The diva now resides in a water-
front mansion on the Malibu shore-
line with her husband, James
Brolln, who happens to be a native
son of Corona del Mar.
Also spotted on the trip were
Martha Green, Cathy Lowden, Eve
Komyei, Olivia Cb81nl, Catherine
Thyen, Marilyn Wooten and Bev-
erly Ray.
• ntE CROWD appears Thursdays and Sat-
urdays.
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Entertainment, Bingo, Crafts, Billiards, Beauty Salon,
Transportation to Doctor, Shopping, Fun Trips,
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please call:
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Beef Stropnoff'
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P'alct Mignon .. • . t
• Beef Welliagton
• Chl1ee1lbrilnd Bouquetiere
• Riek olLemb
t:t~
•c..tJIMot*
Above: Olivia Cbaml
and Cerise Feeley
lounge ln the .. deco
bedroom" of Barbra
Streisand's former
Malibu estate. A trip to
Streisand's former abode
was organized as a
fund-raiser by the 1221
Club, which provides
scholanbJps for
college-bound seniors.
left: Marcia Saunders
and Barbara Bowle took
part ln 1221 Club's
recent trip to Malibu.
•
eafood
Swordfish, Salmon,
Or Halibut
(Blackened, PoG.ched, Grilled,
Or Sautted)
Baked Shrimp
Scampi
Deep Fried Jumbo Shrimp
Calamari Steaks
SCallops Belle M~
Fried Deep Sea Sc:a:llops
Ausuilian Lob.ter Tail
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AMloni
SeoaeeahO.... ... a.w. •
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A14 nu.day, Ju1r 26, 2001 DATF.BOOK'. Doily P[?'
. ' ' I ...
Finding where the dinosaurs roam in Jurassic Park Ill'
'
T bey're evil. bod tem-
pered. hunt in~.
ca.re little fot otben
and continually a~ to
Ueidle an inlellect that
really ii beyond tbeh limited
capacities. Though they
should have been extinct
some time ago, they're back
from the dead, starring in yet
another~t
What are theyf Editors?
Unde Don's
VllWS Of Nil RIPU1l .
Uberalsl Pemocrats? Nope,
a more advanced form of life.
Not E. coli, but the dinosaurs
of "Jurassic Park ID." They
walk, they talk, they slobber,
they fly, they crawl and real-
ly do a bad Job of acting.
-=-·---·.,11 -·.....-·-· ....... _._._
4 IJD•-YW·-
Unlike previous editions of
•Jurassic Park,• these
dinosaurs waste no time in
showing up. It's the opening
sketch and a couple or meat-
balls are para-sailing near the
accursed island or Isla Dead-.
meata. A grizzled sea captain
with a Don Johnson "Miami
Vice" shave and some vague
accent is towing these clowns
around the island when a fog
ap~. the music crescen-
dos, the ship's crew disap-
pears and, faster than you
can say "want fries with
that," we've got owselves a
ridiculously contrived begin-
ning to the third rendition of
the reptiles' repast.
We then are taken to some
dinosaur dig where college
students attempt to excavate
fossils with toothbrushes.
Can you say, "jackhammer"?
Up pops that priest of the
Pleistocene, our master of the
Mesowic, the captain of the
Cretaceous, Sam Neill. Back
as the squinty eyed, teniunal-
ly constipated, Indiana
Jones-attired sage of the
sandstone; he's broke, tired,
and willing to sell his soul to
whatever devil writes enough
integers on a check to contin-
ue his research.
The devil of •Jurassic
Park Ill" is William Macy, a
tile and hardware store own-
er (probably from Jersey).
whose kid was one of those
lost para-sailing around the
island. Macy, a real goofy
looking tomato in the most
improbable part of the script,
is married to the tasty Tea
Leoni. This broad can howl.
Put her in the Memorex
commercial and see if.the
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AIOVl:A T-rex, left. and a
sptnosaurus face off in
"Jurassic Park m."
LEFT: Sam Nelli ls
surrounded by computer-
generated raptors.
tape can take it.
Macy cons Neill into
returning to one of them
islands, where the dinosaurs
roam and the T-re.xes and
the raptors prey, where sel-
dom is heard an intelligent
word and the skies are filled
with pterodactyls all day.
They Land on an airtield
more littered than a teenag-
er's room and are immediilte-
ly chased by dinosaurs, espe-
cially the newest one. Larger
and tougher than a tyran-
nosaurus, he's got the face of
a platypus and fins that a '59
Coupe de Ville would die for.
This bighonkinosaurus man-
ages to force down the plane
in which our yahoos are
attempting to escape, and
causes a crash scene that lasts
longer than the car chase in
·Bullitt.• Without a single
drop of gas spilling pr catch-
ing fire, this twin engine rolls
like a fleet of Ford Explorers,
whereupon it's stomped by
the bighonkinosawus.
Everyone escapes. but
like the old •Star Trek·
epls6des, one eyeballs the ,
survivors and then assumes '
that survivability of any par-
ticular actor is directly relat-
ed to his star power. You
know Macy, Leoni and Neill
ain't going down, but there's,
some chump change due to
bite the dust in short order. ·
· The problem with the
d.inos is that they've evidently
gotten smart. According to
Neill, these bad boys had
something called a resonatln~
chamber. A resonating cham~
ber is a large empty area in
the skull. Dinosaurs had very
, large empty chambers.
From this, you and I
would probably assume this
was indicative of liberalism.
Neill assumed this to be
indicative of intelligence.
According to him, dinos
were smarter than dolphins,
whales or humans.
Well, if they're so smart,
and they even have oppos-
ing daws, and they've been
around for millions of years,
how come they couldn't
come up with napalm,
machine guns or tactical •
nukes to defend their sorry '
scaly butts when the soft and
tasty Homo sapiens come
calling on their turf?
Meanwhile, Leoni, Macy,
et al, stroll around, finally
rescuing the lost son, take a
quick Berlitz course in ·cap-
tor,• are chas~ by every _,
conceivable dino larger th@
a trilobite, attempt to tum._
the bighonkinosaurus into ~
crispycritterosa urus and aieii
eventually rescued by sol(l~
military force of indetermt-:
nate origin. As they Oy off in
a helicopter convoy to the :
insipid theme of •Jurassic ..
Park,• the only thought cant-
ing to mind is "midair colli-•
sion.• .
• UNCLE DON reviews b-movies
and cheesy musical acts for the Dai-
ly Pilot. He may be reached by e-
mail at RealfyBadWritingOaol.com
•
j •
I ~ily Pilot
t -
AFTER HOURS
I>·.
"SPECIAL
CINfMA UNDER THE STARS
Newport Dunes Resort pre-
sents family fihns on a 9-by-
12-foot. open-air screen at
• the beedl on Fridays and
Saturdays through the end
of lhe month. Screenings
begin at dusk. •Tue Road to
El Dorado· will be screened
today, followed by •Road to
Bali• on Saturday. The resort
is at 1131 Back Bay Drive,
Newport Beach. Free. $7 for
parking. (949) 729-3863.
I '
I
1·
LAUGH FEST
A comedy festival staged
by Orange Coast College's
Repertory will run through
Sunday at the Drama Lab
Studio, 2701 Fairview
Road, Costa Mesa. Show
times are 8 p.m. today
through Saturday and 2
and 7 p.rn. Sunday. $5 or
$6. (714) 432-5640.
SUBMARJNES AHOYI
The Newport Harbor Nau-
tical Museum will present
·submarines, From Nemo
to Nuclear,• an exhibit
highlighting the evolution
of the Naval submarine
through paintings and arti-
facts, th.rough Oct. 28.
Open from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
1\lesday through Sunda~.
the musewn is on the Pride
of Newport Riverboat, 151
E. Coast Highway, Newport
Beach. Free. (949) 673-7863
IMPORT AUTO SHOW
A Cali!omia lmport-n-
Motion Summer Jam Cus-
tom Car Show will be held
from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Aug. 5
at the Orange County Fair-
grounds, 88 Fair Drive, Cos-
ta Mesa. There will be car
contests, live music, a fash-
ion show and more. $18 for
adults, $8 for children ages 6
to 12. Children younger than
6 enter free. (949) 598-5123.
ENDLESS ELVIS
The second annual Endless
Summer Car Classic and
Motorcycle Show and Elvis
Fest will be held from 9
a .m. to 3 p.m. Aug. 19 at
the Orange County Market
Place, 88 Fair Drive, Costa
Mesa. The event will
include a karaoke contest,
Elvis impersonators and
more. $2. (949) 723-6663.
SEE HOURS PAGE A 16
I
I
I
I
I
ENTIRE PURCHASE
J69 E. 17Th ST. I Cotn MHA Ac1ots faoM RAiphs I
l i!.~~!~ .. ~~~!?~~: ~ffO(nolbe combndwtlt.Otff_Clliier~«~ L Dilcowill do"°' 1o ta;colar lllOCMn, w11an &Sebmliail~ Ea..7/31/2001 .1 --------------
. DA'i'EBOOK Thursday, My 26, 2001 A15
Off the wall comedy at OCC festival
ay Tom Titus
C <medy, as Steve Martin
once obserVed. isn't
pretty. The tow one-act
plays in Orange Coast College
Repertory Theater's annual
Comedy Festival -including
one by Martin himself -cer-
tainly bear out the comedian-
p1aywrigbt's assertion.
They may not be pretty,
but at least three of the fow
offe.rings, ranging from snide
to satiric to derivative, are
nevertheless quite effective.
The fowthis strictly an exer-
cise in sustained ridicule.
The classiest of the quar-
tet is Martin's ·wasp,· a
scatb,ing satire focusing on a
1950s nuclear family
approaching meltdown.
Director Jessica Hutchinson
zeros in on the play's razor-
edged sendups, adding some
well-chosen period music to
bridge the five scenes.
'Il"avis Woods is excellent
as the dad who expounds
from.his dining room pulpit.
oblivious to his family's inter-
jections. Heather Layton's
mother is a splendid study in
plastic-faced frustration,
while the kids (Jessica Seely
and Sean Hesketh} function
in their own worlds, Seely as
a bratty teen and Hesketh
exploring imaginary worlds.
Seely's choir session, veering
...... occ ....,., Con*W feltivel . ---Studio,.... Or~ Co.st Col •• 2701 F.nllw ROid. CoiU Mesa •--= CIOllng ~ 8 p.m. ~through Satur-
-2 Md 7 p.m. 5undltY
•COIT: S6
• 1KiC&tS: (714) 432~ Eict. 1
in and out of reality, is beau-
tifully delivered.
OCC's resident student
playwright, Chris Secor, con-
tributes two originals in the
festival. The first, entitled
•Theater,• strikes a blow for
authors who cringe under
the control of censors and
investors. As the playwright
(Ryan Gray) seethes, artistic
directors Secor and Casey
Colliflower water down his
script and money man Frank
Miyashiro (who also directs)
completes the dilution
process until nothing is left
but mindless repetition.
More ambitious is Secor's
•ute After Beth,• in which
five young campers find their
friendships coming apart at
the seams on an outing
where Mwphy's Law is
strictly enforced. The gim-
mick here is it's all in rhymed
couplets, Shakespearean
style, inspired, most likely,
by •A Midsummer Night's
Dream.· Secor opens the
show by reading a poetic
saga, then the cast continues
to speak in verse.
Secor's tale, which he also
directs, is rambling and often
sophomoric, but his chosen
format is tricky and a chal-
lenge to sustain.
Secor, Colliflower, Lawen
Mora, Phi Le and Rebecca
Muhleman comprise a con-
tentious crop of campers,
while Miyashiro (garbed as a
bear) and Erin Holt (as a for-
est spirit with an attitude)
spice up the procedure.
Finally, playwright Christo-
pher Durang has created
some fine caustic comedies
over the past few decades. So
why do students invariably
opt for ·Naomi in the Uving
Room,• an exercise in over-
statement that should be con-
fined -if disintenecl at an -
to acting classes?
Isabella Melo launches a
bombastic tirade to reduce
son and daughter-in-law
Angel Correa and Nancy
ltoia to dust in this egre-
giously over-the-top piece
directed by Ramsey Scblissel.
The Comedy Festival is an
ideal place for student actors
and directors to try out their
wings. and some invanably
succeed to a greater enent .
than others. Duectors
Hutchison and Secor WUl
high marks for their efforts,
along with actors Woods,
Seely and Muhleman.
All the performers are giv-
en due appreciation. save for
the mouse that scurried across
the stage floor during Friday's
~Theater• presentation, and
then realized he was in the
wrong show. The festiva.J'con·
eludes this weekend.
• TOM TfTUS reviews local theatef
for the Daily Pilot. His reviews
appear Thursdays and Saturdays.
SaturJay, July 28, 9am-5pm
SunJay, July 29, lOam-Spm
S I· D E W A L
SATURDAY • JULY 28
9:00 AM· TO 5:00 PM
Musical £nllrtainment • Kid's Groft Activities
Face Pai~ flan l 1 ;00 AM to 2:00 PM
. . • •
HC>URS
CONTINUED FROM A 1 S
MUSIC
FAIR MUSIC
The Orange County Faits
Arlington Theater Headline
Concert series; at 8 p.m.
through Sunday, will feature
such performers as Suzy Bog-
guss and Billy Dean to fit in
line with th1s years fair theme,
•1\vist & Shout -Celebrate
Citrus & Sun.• Concert admis-
sion is free . with general fair
admission. (714) 708-1928.
SUMMER BLUES
The ninth annual •Hot Blues
on a Cool Summer Night•
concert will begin at 5 p.m.
today at the South Coast
Plaza Village to benefit the
Orange County Performing
I Arts Center. The blues con-
cert and fOod festival WW take
place on the VUlage Green, at
3333 Bristol St., Costa Mesa.
$35.$55. (71•) 556-2121.
HIROSHIMA
Hiroshima will play at 8 p.m.
Friday as part of the Hyatt
Newporter Sununer Jazz Fes-
tival. The concert will be held
at the hotel's amphitheater,
1107 Jamboree Road, New-
port Beach. Future series
guests will include Peabo
Bryson on Aug. 3 and David
Sanborn on Aug. 24. $30.
(949) 129-1234.
THE PRODIGALS
The New York-based Irish jig-
punk band The Prodigals will
perform a free concert at 2
p.m. Saturday at Muldoon's
DubHn Pub, 202 Newport
Center Drive, Newport Beach.
The Prodigals will be inducted
into the Guinness/Irish Wall of
.. DATF.BOOlc'
I
FaJbe on a JO.foot bride wall Aug. 14. Pree. (71 4) 321-7525.
in Muldoon'I courtyard. Pree. ·
(949) 64o.:4110 JAZZ FESTNAL
SUMMER SONGS
Fashion Island's Summer
Concert Series will bring
Scott Wilkie to town at 6 p.m.
Wednesday. The series will
continue through Aug. 22
with a mix of pop, rock, jazz,
swing and new wave con-
certs at Fashion Island, 900
Newport Center Drive, New-
port Beach. Admission is free,
but preferred seats are avail-
able for$15. (949) 721-2000.
COSTA MESA COOL
Sharpsounds will play from 6
to 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at
Balearic Park as part of Costa
Mesa's Concerts in the Park
series. There will be activities
for children and refreshments
available. Balearic Park is at
1975 Balearic Drive, Costa
Mesa. Future concerts will
include Chico at Lions Park
on Aug. 7 and Cold Duck at
the Farm Sports Complex on
The Costa Mesa Jazz festival
will celebrate its secOod year
Aug. 2-5 witb a lineup indud·
ing the Jim Cullum Jazz Ban4,
Banu Gibson & The New
Orleans Hot Jazz, and the
Siberian Dixieland Jazz Band.
Musicians will play 6:30 to
10:30 p.m. Aug. 2, 10:30 a.m.
to midnight Aug. 3-4, and
10:30 a.m. to 6 p.m. Aug. 5.
The festiyal will be held at the
Hilton and Holiday Inn Costa
Mesa hotels at 3Q50 Bristol St.
$30-$.$70, depending on day
and pass type. (714) 438-4922.
ELVIS AT MULDOONS
Elvis impersonator Scott
Bruce will perform a tribute to
the King at 2 p.m. Aug. 12 ln
remembrance of the 24th
annive.rsaiy of Elvis Presley's
death. The show will be held
at Muldoon's Dublin Pub, 202
Newport Center Drive, New-
port Beach. Free. (949) 640-
4110.
Anncxning my
new hours:
Anytime,
any day.
Steven Hill, A1ea 1
Uc.I OC80618
350 £as• I 11h Strec:1 S111tc 211
C:O.U Mwi. CA
949-6'6-9J9J
When you call my office, someone will be
available to assist you. Any time, day or
night Weekends. holidays ... whenever you
call, you'll speak to someone who caiu.
""'" ...... A 24 HoorGood Neighboc ~
Sc. farm l11$ur811CC CompMles
Home Otftce!i: Bloominpon. lllinois
~ .... ceat"'
JAZZ AT TlfE MUSEUM
The Orange County MUMum
of Art wW present a jazz
series supporting its current
exhibit, •American Modern.
1925-1940: Design for a New
Age,• at 5:45 p.m. Aug. :U
with performer Renee Griz-
zle. The museum is at 850
San ctemente Drive, New·
port Beach. $16, or $14 for
mevibers. Cost includes
exhibit admission. (949) 759-
1122, Bxt. 218.
POP-ROCK AND FLAMENCO
Tate 5, a funk, rock and
Motown act. performs at 9 p.m.
Saturdays at Carmelo's Ris-
tonmte, 3520 E. Coast High-
way, Corona del Mar. Solo gui-
tarist Ken Sanders performs
dassicaJ Oamenco tunes at 7:30
p.m. Tuesdays and Sundays.
Free. (949) 675-1922.
SATURDAY NIGHT R&B
Gerald Ishibashi and the
Stone Bridge Band play rock
and R&B at 9 p .m. Saturdays
at Sutton Place Hotel's Tu-
anon Lounge, 4500
MacArthur Blvd.. Newport
Beach. Free. (949) 476-2001.
SENIOR CENTER AFTERNOON
A seven-piece group plays
big band tunes from 1 :30 to
. .
Doily Pilot
3:30 p.m. Fridays at Outs
Senior Center, 800 Mar-
guerite Ave., Corona del Mar.
$4. (949) 644-32'4. J
ART
'WAX AND ASHES'
The Boudreau-Ruiz Gallery
will present an exhibit of
work by artist Javier Cortes
Martil)ez from Zacatecas,
Mexico, called "Wax and
Ashes" through Aug. 26 at
3000 Newport Blvd., Newport
Beach. The gallery is open 11
a.m . to 6 p.m. daily. Free.
(949) 675-4766.
CALIFORNIA ON THE WALLS
•Continuity and . Change:
Southern California's Evolv-
ing Landscape,• an exhibit of
Southern California's scenic;
beauty, climate and agricul-
ture in the late 19th through
early 20th centuries, will be
shown through Sept. 30 at
850 San Clemente Drive,
Newport Beach. Muse um
hours are 11 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Tuesdays through Sundays.
Museum admission is $5 for
adults, $4 for seniors and stu-
dents, and free' for members
and children 16 and younger.
(949) 759-1122.
Donate
your vehicle.
1-888-308-6483
Set hope in motio n
to improve local lives.
• RVs • Boats • Real Estate • Tax Deductible
Super Summer Savin~! ..
15% Off Entire Sfure!*
·~dot, and Ml food. Pri~ ~ ~ Ao~Oll llat
PENS,
' QU01I Of 111 DAY
"I'm glad we play more
than /Wit one game In this
· tournament ... "
Biii Redding. Costa Mesa National
little League manager
.. . . . ..
MOl'-
.DlllllL
S,C..a.lflAune
~"· mlll«iidum
July '° honot9I
NATALIE KING
Daily Pilot Sports ldllor Roger Corl.son • 949-57 4-4223 • Sports Fma 9.(9-6500170 Thursday, Juty 26, 2001 Bl
WOMEN'S GOLF
Santa Ana CC' s
Marianne
Perrenial club champ going for four-peat at Tea Cup.
Richard Dunn
DAILY PILOT
TieTea Cup
Classic has been
a real twist and
shout affair for
Marianne Towersey of
Santa Ana Country
Qub. • In the Newport-Mesa community's
summertime celebration of women's
golf. Towersey has taken center stage
three years in a row, and, for the past
year. kept the event's perpetual
trophy at her dub -about a pitching
wedge away from the Orange
County Fair.
For Towersey, who turned 50 this
year and is now eligible for one of the
game's great rewards (senior events),
she will be a
...-------favorite again
Friday in Tea
Cup Classic V
at Newport
Beach Country
Qub (1 p.m.).
A winner in
17 of the last 20
Santa Ana
CountryOub
CT .& GC!JC women's ~ championships,
Tuwersey is tied
for the
Newport-Mesa
community's
all·Ume lead in
dub titles
(men or
women), a
record she
shares with Dee
Dee White of
Newport Beach
Country Qub.
~-------' But the
Corona del Mar High and Stanfoni
product. who was raised swinging
golf dubs at Santa Ana Country
aub, has taken some unique
fairways in winning three straight
Tea Cup Oassics, indudJng last
year's playoff victoTY over Debbie
Albright ot Newport Beach.
Tuweney, whose golf 1COres
began to plummet3'12yean ago
when she switched to a long putter.
woo Tea Cup Classic D when she
smoked bet home course In 1998,
winnlng by seven strokes.
Then, in Tua Cup Clasak: ID at
Mesa Verde Country Cub, Tuweney
acbieved a remartable feat. after
competing for 35 holes in the
mat.ch-play fto.als ol the Women's
Southern California Champkmships
at Mission Viejo Country aub.
SEAN HU.ER I OAl.Y PILOT
MarWme Toweney, about to defend her tbfte..Ume Tea Cup aown.
After playing in the 36-bole
Southern finals, Tuwersey arrived at
Mesa Verde for a delayed afternoon
tee time and captured Tea Cup
Classic m by seven strokes. And with
a different putter, because she left
hers behind at Mission Viejo.
•Maybe I was too tired to be
nervous (about playing in the Tea
Cup},• Towersey said after winning
lo '99, in whJcb she completed a
53-bole day.
On the first bole in '99, Tuwersey
started with a blrdle, after barely
missing an eagle when she nailed ber
second shot from the left rough to
within two inches of the flag.
She tapped in for birdie with her
driv~. because her putter was
missing (she later borrowed a putter
from the Mesa Verde pro shop).
Toweney opened the round with
only 12 dubs in her bag and added
two putters along the way -one from
the pro shop, the other her own after
Mike Reebl. Santa Ana's Director of
Golf, retrieved it from Mission Viejo.
Last year in Tea Cup Classk: IV at
Big Canyon Country Oub, Towersey
and Albright both shot 4-over-pu 76,
forcing the first playotf in The Cup
SEE TOWERSEY PAGE 82
JUNIOR TENNIS
llTIU LEAGUE All-STARS MAYOR'S CUP
SEAN HlU£R I OAl.Y I'll.OT
Ryan Redding throws to 6.rst as CMALL's' Adrian Armenta slides in.
Waldron's homer '
shocks Nationals
American League draws first blood. 2-1. in eight.
Tony Attobelli
DAILY PILOT
COSTA MESA -In a game neither
team deserved to lose, the Costa
Mesa American Little League Majors
Division AU-Stars team took the first
game of the 2001 Mayor's Cup with
a 2-1. eight-inning victory over the
Costa Mesa Nationals Wednesday at
Costa Mesa High.
"It was a great game and it
definitely took some of the sting off of
some of the big losses we withstood
at the District 62 Tournament,·
CMALL Manager Ted Spoulos said.
"Both teams played great today and
this is going to be a great series.·
Game 1 hero for the Americans
was first baseman Cody Waldron.
who went 3 for 4 and ended the two-
~ hour contest with a walk-off solo
home run to right field in the bottom
of the eighth, giving the early series
lead to CMALL, 1..0.
·1 know the ball carries well here,
but the way the right fielder was
circling out there, I thought be might
have a play on it,• Spoulos said.
•Apparently, he got just enough of it
to get it out of here.•
Waldron may have been the hero
of the eighth Inning, but the rest of the
game belonged to CMALL starting
pitcher Adrian Armenta, who tossed
a compJete-game gem. allowing only
seven hits through eight innings. He
walked nobody and struck out five .
•Adrian was bitting his spots all
night long,• Spoulos said. "Whatever
the coach would call to throw, Adrian
hit the glove every time. It was a great
performance.•
It was a tough night offensively
for the Nationals, who scored their
only run on Matt Jeranko's bome nm.
·rm glad we play more than just
one game in this tournament,•
CMNll Manager BW Redding said.
"This will be a tournament the kids
wW never forget and whoever loses,
the winner won't let them forget it.•
Armenta and CMNLL starting
pitcher Vinnie Valdez each kept the
other team oft the scoreboard for the
fU"St three mrungs. Valdez struck out
five before being taken out in the
fourth. ·He overpitched in the first
few innings,• Redding said. "We've
got a ton of pitchers who can throw
well, so we went to the bullpen.·
After C.J. Ro um opened bottom
of the fowth inning with a single to
right, Andy Dawson walked and
Cody Spoulos reached on a bunt
single to load the bases.
After the next two batters struck
out. Nick Peterson overcame an 0-2
count to coax an RBI walk, sconng
Roum and giVlllg the Americans a
1..0 lead. A strong defensive play up
the middle by CMNLL second
baseman Ryan Redding prevented
further damage.
The Nationals quickly responded
with Jeranko's born e run. which
deared the left-field fence, and tied
the game. "It's always nice to see
something like that happen for a nice
kid like Matt." Bill Redding said.
OvtAll bad missed several oppor·
tunities to put runs on the scoreboard,
but instead, stranded 11 runners in
the game. Valdez and Austin Elliott
each managed to get the big out
when they needed for the CMNLL
The score remained tied after six
innings. forcing only the third extra-
inning contest in Mayor's Cup history.
Both teams went down in order
in the seventh mmng and the
Nabooals bad two runners on in the
eighth, but Armenta managed to
escape from the inrung unbamed.
"Give a lot of credit to Adrian.· Bill
Redding said. "He did a great 1ob of
changing speeds and be kept us off.
balance.•
Fmally, in the bottom of the eighth.
Waldron ended the game with his
solo blast to right. •we figured
coming in we were the underdogs in
this thing," Ted Spoulos said. ".,\JJ
we've beani and read about was bow
strong the Nationals are and they are
a good team. no doubt about it. Tb.is
ii a Jong way from being over,•
Game 2 of this best-of-three
lbowdown is tonight at 5 at ThWintle
School (Gisler, west of Harbor).
Damion K0eps cruising at War by tfie Shore
Gbil 14 llngles standout wakes quick
Wolk Of Leslie B"1IOck ID Round of 16
action at War.~ the Sbcft. She
adVances to the ••lflnela today with
a 1·5, ~3 vtctOry ovs lamlwm Steele.
B2 Thur!doy. July 26, 2001
THE
MAYOR'S
CUP
Adrian
Amleftta
dellven
en route to
seven·hlt. 2-1
victory over
COila Mesa
National
All-Stan tn
eight lnnlnga
ln the Mayor'•
Cup opener
Wectn~y.
SEAN Hl.lER
/OAlY Pl.OT
WAR BY THE SHORE JUNIOR TENNIS
Tuesday,
August 7, 2001
1:00 to 9:00 pm
SACO matriarch recovering
M iaing from the Tea C\Jp
Classic gallery Friday
afternoon will be Pat
Cox of Santa A!;la Heights, the
four-time women's club
c:hampion at Santa Ana Country
Club and mother of perhaps the
best female golfer in Newport-
Mesa history.
Jerry Andenon said Tuesday.
Hahn will also announce the
four players at the first tee.
fitstpla~.
'Ille tour playen ln Tea Cup C1uak: V
enjoyed an average margir:\ of victory this
year of 24.25 strokes over tbelr nearest
competitors at thelr respective club
championships.
And you want to know why we started
the Tea Cup Classic?
Marianne Towersey will play in
Tea Cup Classic V-at Newport
Beach Country Club (1 p.m.) and
try to win an unprecedented
fourth straight Tea Cup title
agaipst a solid field.
A.I cmtonwry ln the Tea Cup
Classic, bole-in-one prizes are
avallAble on the par-3s. At .
Newport Beach's signature bole
No. 17, any hole-ln-one by our
ladles will win a 2001
Mercedes-Benz Ml320,
courtesy of Pletcher Jones
Motorcan. Richard DUnn
GOLF Otber prizes for an ace
include a set of Ping irons, a
titanium driver and a $250 pro
shop gift certificate.
Of tbe four, oenbe Woodard of Mesa
Verde bad the largest margin of victory,
winning l\er sixth straight Mesa Verde
title by 27 shots. Woodard improved her
four-round total of 315 by 20 strokes from
last year (335) to this year. Cox. who loves watching her
daughter compete in tl}e locally famous
Tea Cup, underwent major surgery at
HQag Hospital recently, and, after nine
days in the hospital, returned home
Tuesday.
She ls expected to remain stable at
home, according to her daughter.
"Hopefully,• Towersey quipped, •she
won't show up.·
Cox, who won Santa Ana women's
dub championships in 1947, '52, '61 and
'62, bas been •totally encouraging• her
daughter to play in Tea Cup Classic V.
"Maybe having lower expectations will
make me play better,· said Towersey,
who hasn't played much golf lately,
but doesn't expect to be rusty Friday.
"I certaiJ:Uy won't be stressed over
(playing in Tea Cup Classic V). I've had so
much stress from the other fronl ltwill be
nice to take a day off tiom my hospital
duties, my nursing duties.•
Towersey and her brother have been
taking care of their mother.
Volunteering u tbe offldal
scorekeeper again this year in the Tea
Cup Classic is Newport Beach Country
Club member Bob Prlce, a longtime
Toshiba Senior Classic volunteer.
Serving u Tea Cup Classtc V rules
official will be Newport Beach bead
professional Paul Hahn, dub president
nae perpetuU trophy for wlnnlng tbe
Tea Cup Classic bas been at Santa Ana
Country Club for a year, marking the toast
of the coast in celebrating women's golf.
Each participant this year will also
receive a beautiful aystal with golf
images inside. And, in keeping with Tea
C\lp folklore, players will be given special
treatment with personalized signs on the
practice range -just like the pros.
A bouquet of roses wW also be
awarded to the winner, started last year
by Big Canyon Country Club, which
hosted Tea Cup Classic IV.
That's what it's all about when it comes
to a small community golf event like the
Tea Cup CJass.lc or Jones Cup for men.
Each of the four country dubs -Big
Canyon, Mesa Verde, Newport, Beach and,
Santa Ana -enjoy ownership in the
tournament, and. when it comes time to
host. each has the ability to add a few
details or leave a lasting trademark.
No matter wbo wtm or how anybody
shoots, there will be plenty of "bubbly•
after Tea Cup Classic V in the patio area
at Newpol't Beach.
The intent of the Tea Cup Classic. after
all, is to celebrate all four women's dub
champions. That's what gbl us here in the
Newport Beach'• Debble Albright shot
79 on her home course in Tea Cup Classic
I in 1997 and finished second to Big
Canyon's Selby Schriber (74).
. Albright was alSQ second ln Tea Cup
Classic U and lost in a playoff last year.
Part of the beauty of tbe Tea Cup
Classic is the individual stroke play from
the four women's dub champions in this
newspaper's circulation, battling in an
18-hole shootout for the right to be
crowned Dally Pilot goU queen for a year.
The event draws members from all four
private dubs and has occasionally enticed
the interest of the non-golfing crowd. ln
1998 and '99, the Victorian Tea Society
arrived with a group of ladies dressed in
1890s costumes, complete with parasols.
There are others simply fascinated with
the idea and love watching the ladies play
in the easygoing environment.
lt also creates quite a rooting section in
the gallery from each dub.
Tea Cup newcomer OlMa Slutzky will
try to get Big Canyon back in the winner's
ctrde.
Admission to Tea Cup Classic V is free.
• Richard Dunn's golf column appears ~
Thursday.
TOWERS EV
CONTINUED FROM B 1
history (won by Towersey on
the first extra bole, No. 18).
Towersey, a Newport
Harbor High golf ceacb, has
been involved in memorable
rounds her entire career,
including, at age 16, a victory
in match play over future
LPGA Hall of Pamer JoAnne
Carner (nee Gunderson) in the
fillit round of the 1967 U.S.
Women's Amateur. Towersey
went on to the quartenmats
that year, and a 1999 issue of
Goll World magazine included
Towersey's win over
Gunderson as one QI the
country's 10 greatest upsets
this century.
Towersey, whose strong
showing in U.S. Women's Mid-
Amateur championship last
October led to an invitation in
this year's event in St. Louis,
will try to qualify Aug. 6 for
the 2001 U.S. Women's Senior
Amateur for the first time.
A Stanford history major
who grew up with goU, tennis,
softball, volleyball and surfing,
Towersey has excelled in
athletics her whole life, friends
have said.
Towersey, a mother of two
sons, will try to win her fourth
straight Tea Cup Classic
against Albright, Mesa Verde's
Denise Woodard and Big
Canyon's Olivia Slutzky.
Mike Reehl & Fletcher Jones 111
Santa Ana Country Club Head Professional Mike Reehl
and Fletcher Jones III of Fletcher Jones Motorcars
stand next to the 2001 Mercedes Benz ML320
in preparation for the Jones Cu.p II at
·Santa Ana Country Club.
Neighborhoods throughout Costa Mesa are being invited to join
forces with thousands of communities nationwide for the 18th
Annual National N~ht Out crime and drug prevention event!
Relldenta are asked to lock their dOors, tum on ootllde ligtlts
and IP8"d the evening outlide with ~rs. polce and fire
plllOMll. PoliCa pereonnel wtl be serVlng food ltld lodas,
rdlng various.,.._~ by local bualnelW and having
.... goodl&IM'l8fhn
..
l
I
NOTICI OI llUmJC uu . ""MNlllD.-':::: OIUt, .. ~ ... fllMCJML. MC»atf Thie ::.,_~ ...,.. ......... be .,... ., ,,,., ..,..
·--.. .,.,_...._ ~" ol "• .,. -,,. ...;;; ,,,,_....,.. --·-tlM pill:. .. llOQ ....... Ina. rnr.o; ~ ~ T,.,. om ol ~ COlttf :.:J:tMi*e.. co<rupond-=-d .. == ~1t* mc'o4 8erU AN. Ce ~ F. COnl. 000 1-. a 0.. •A• Oen-:::':''• 8) L88 Ex-on 07f17~1111111ll 2915 ~:°Sri =:r .. ~-:=
,_ • f11td9y ol ~ hMdlre N«woc1unD Ned w11t1-::""~ = :.r-·ia-.. 4540 ~· ~Plot~ 18, 28, ~-.'·Colli MaM. CA 1bOWe-. 2001.at10:00a.m. ~. I~. 3700 Cleitl ol OIMgl COi#( ~be~ '144 Newpof1 Bw:ll' Aw· 2. p. ~ Th3?0 ., .. Ph.,.,ltl .. Fot ""'-WOnMllon The ~ 8 . Suean Jt 12&0, on 0111~1 ~ ~· CA t2ieiiiO P ... Hou .. ,, on IN aw ~ PIOl*lV.Wbelold" S.. Ana. CA t'l704 2001117"41 .-. .., ........!!, ~ FYDltl Anne ......_,, F1ctltloue au.1nNe 134<M Heritage W~. 11orw7 • blllphoiw (714) ~ Thlt ~ II o.11Y Plot J41v 1 -7 "' -,,... I Cem111on ll\ltne ,..,,,. St11111ment Apt, 812, Tue&I. CA 54·5245, Of comt 110 ~~ Mtld by. a~ 20. Aw, 2,A@! ~ ..._.. 111 ~ '° NjlC:t 82818 ' 'CA The folloWtnQ pe ~780 f:oo,~ olowtllon
lnliW-Tll MXXESS· Have you tllrted l:IA6M•-· ...,,_ ~ ~ 11\911 'TI)le bulll1IM la con--=Ina ~ Thomu S Dtvia, Hal), II nF.W of::. Mani.or #M0931J· a.cO dlOlnO bullrllll yfl(I No r ... u ...... t luelneM comply with thl MtldH by. .,., lncMMI M Moon 1e07
13402 He~ 92~· Colli MIN, cat1orn1a. 2900 tCltco u· Pix Wvtdtrl Nllwofklng N8IM 8tlament provltlont of SICClon •v• you 11arted Wl ltd 1.n., ~ 1~/~fotd ..a Publltlted Newport flr9Wll tlPWJB• 'CAT EntarprilM, Flo Rein-Thi followlng penone 1770 lo 1780 lndullw doh19 butlneu yet? 8elch, CA 92tleO K t . 8HCh·Co1ta M'•H 3.500 lllif».l. ~: hatdt. V.P. • ... dolrllJ bulilliN ... of Ille Callfofnia Labo( Y• .. Aorl 19118 Na I. ti• Su Hite = 0
n. lad er a o.ly Pllol JIJy 281.. 2001
PtndultO Pen-nltTM .,,,!?* 1t11am1n1 wu NOi onllne, 3e08 w. Codi· thl PIWlllrCI 1111 Fuzlah Anni Mllstnd Putnem, 1907 Wlodward Thi • CA 92.fl94 ,11389
Cellll ~ Hetd ~ with the (;ounty MacArthur Blvd., Me and .._ of Mg!ll .. Tblt •llt~t WU ~s~ e.acn. CA ~ "b'v~ NOTICE ----
drlve 800.1838 on 01~Jf:r COlttf :g~04Santa Ana, CA ~.: ~ ol ~:"a.!;.~~ Kayla Anne De SI Have you started INVmNG 8'0S
Ga 1 Gatew9Y E-4400; 1 200111701144 Resultt International on Ille w11t1 the Olly 0:: on 07117/2001 Jean. 2021 Diane Lane doing ~ yet? No The Orange ~ lolo.W:,,l'f
1
~; 1 DllY P1oC .Ml 12, 18, Inc. (Delawve) 36o9 of the City ol Colla 2001 .. 7n11 Newport Beach CA Philp M Houser Sanllallon OilCJ1d o1 Or·
FF JOO;
0
_.._ MuCltync 2!. .Ayq. 2. J«U Tb3§5 W. MacArthur ' Blvd. M ... · and thall todelt ~ F'llol J4li; 18, 29, 82880 ' 11i:is :atement wu ange Councy, c.11om1a, .....,....., Flctttloua Sult• ll07, Senta Ana penaillH pre1«lbff Aw. 2. i. 2001 Th3?0 Thlt bualnea Is eon· wi the County wll rece!Ye _..., 8ldl ~a&'*-ni.. Name~ CAn:'~ 11 ~ ~of Mid Flc1tUoue Buatneu ~~~: 1
general ~7~~ Col#lty :::!., l~it =
MWM.2.0,4.10.P71.Corn: The lollowtng peniona du*d by: a QOIPOfllOI• Code. Heme Ststement Have you 1tarted Dally PllOl 2~011171500 a.m. Bids mutt be ,. 12chlft-~..c>4: Ire tilg buli"'8 • Have you atarted MARY EUJOTT .,.~~.. doing buamess yet? Aua 2 9 ~ 19
· 26 ceMld at the Dla1rfd'• 2 ctmr'1 • A..) Thi Wlzatd Line doing bualneu yet? DelMY -.. ::::_'...!. YM, 7/M)1 ·• 2001 Th3&! Purchasing Dllllllon Of·
HOl.2.0.4.P71.PALAL.SI 8.) Tlll Ff/try Pl'oled. c.j V•, 19 June 2001 C1tY of ~ ~ Steven'• Pha~ Natalie Suzette Fictitloua Bualneu b by Ill dMt and *"9
3; 4 chlft -RP· Wlmtda end IMfee.com R..w lntemalional Publlthed New~rt 1525 Mela Verde DI Putnam tUme Statement herein llboY• ... lortl. al
SOP.4.P71PAL. AL5&3; 351 N. Newpof1 Blvd.: Inc • BHeh·Cotl.. MHa ~Cotta Mela, CA Thlt statement WIS The lollow wn.:n llnll Shey .. be
43 Toll! Suite 528, Newport Lawrence E Sturdllo
2
o.ay
001
Piiot Ji#/ 18, 28, ........... Dru Com filed with lhe County are ...._. ... '~as 1
opened ltld lllM*'9d al ~ a.ch, CA 92ee3 Prealdent ._..,.,. 1g Cieri< ol Onwiga Col#1ly -.,, --~ the Otttrid ~ ~ 2l!IO. lnternallonat Or· Thia statement wu Tb3&4 peny, Inc. (CA), 1525 oo 07117/2001 Lt A
2
151 Century Van Otfice 1()8.W Bit A.,.. In thl bale; PH: ~2• ganiullon of Natural filed with the Councy ---Mela Verde Or East 2001H71314 nes. 272
4
S Susan nue, Foumain Va/Wf
01· WOAS072808· FiHlth alterntllvH Clel1' of Orwlgt CounlY Flctttloua Bualneu CCl9la Mia.a, CA 92626 08lly Pikl4 Jdy 19, 26, Street. Santa Ana CA Caltfom11, 927015-7016'
SN:031H5031 ' (CA). 351 N. Newport on 07/10f2001 fUlne StNment Thlt buaineu It con Ayo 2. 9. 2001 Th379
927°" PUACffASE cw ucuo HO 511"1 Ultra 10 &Nd., Suite 528, New· 20011170540 The lolowlng pet'IOnl duaed by. I COlpOrllloll 21st Century Van CA'nONIC #201 port 8elch. CA 92683 Daily Piiot Jdy 12, 18, .,. doing buli"'8 11: Have you started FlctJtlou• Butlnen ~ Inc (CA) 2724 s POlYELECTAOLYTE oa--. E-6400 Thlt butineN la con· 26. Aw. 2.3901 Th3Q() 8elch 5Ufgery • Mecl-doing bu1lne11 yet? N1me Statement usan Street Stnta CHEMICAL
#(GM)A ~i duaed by. a corporation eal Center, Inc., 18080 VM, 100/1988 The following pe Ana. CA
927
04 FLOCCUlENT
HAW ~ J: ~ Have you 11arted FlctJtlout Buslnesa 8elch Blvd., Sulla 101 Harbor Drug Com are doing busfOMs ~ ~:!, bubysmess
15
con· (POLYMER) • .....,_ doloJI bullrlllt ye(1 No ~ Si.tement Huntlngloo Blach, cA peny, Inc Jaran Hair Salon a corporauon SPECIACATIOH NO. ~I0020e980EN72: ~ lnternallonal Or· The lollowinQ pertona 92848 Cll8ltM T. Bonner. CEO 1936 Harbor blvd · Have you staned C·2001-42 ... ""' .. ~: oanlzatlon of Natural at• doing busi18iu as: l.uan N. Nguyen MD Thi• 11at11111en1 WU Costa Mesa, CA 92627' doing business yet? A PRE·BID CON-
......... r,.,__...,; Atalth Allemalivea Geek Speak 2683B Inc. (CA), 18080 eeldi flied with the County Janeth Sanchez. 1936 Yes, January
1
·
1
99
7
FERENCE wilt be held
4
0 G8tewly ..UC Mid Unda Jay Roae, PhD. Elden Avenue' Costa Blvd., SUite 101, Hunt· Cleltl of Orange County Harbor Blvd.. Costa ·21st Century Van •1 8:00 a.m. Mondey,
Tower SHA E 4400; PrHldtnt ' Mesa, CA 92fli7 lrlQO(n Beach, CA 92648 on 07/17fl001 Mesa, CA 92627 Lines. Inc Augu9t e, 2001 kl COn-
Gatewty MTX Mid Thia statement waa Tracey Sypberd flits butlnen It con-20011171310 Ranieri Sanchez p Robert Presh. ~ Room 8 ot the Tower HAW E5400 flied with the County 26838 Elden Avenue ~ by. a corporation D.ily Plot July 19, 26 1936 Harbor Blvd ' resident Admlnlttratlon Bulld-~ Clel1' of Orange Counly Costa Mesa CA 92627 Have you etarted Aw. 2. 9. 29Ql Th3n Costa Mesa, CA 92527' This statemenl was Ing at the abow ad-
SUilMICi'OiYSfli -on 0711onoc>1 Skyltr ' Sypberd doing butlnt1s yet? F ....... -. 8 This bu81nest Is con· ~~ wrth the County dreet. All prMj)eCt)w
model #Cfolebow, w 2001M70580 26838 Elden Avenue VM, 71111999 ••m...,..t ualnn1 ducted by husband and ot Orange County BlddeB are etrongly
#9Y5650SM; a Gi Ody Plot ~ 12, 18, Costa Mau, CA 92627 luan N. Nguyen, M.O.. NlllM Statement wile on 06/20/200l encourqed to atteNI Mk:rOtoft • modif 2f. Aw. 2.~! Th351 This business la con lne. The lollowlng pe'9ooa Htve you started Daily Pilot
2~~~6~~~5:i, lb• pre·bld con-
Moe381&-0EM: 2 0 ir1..-.~-B·-• ducWd by. hu9band and luan N. Nguyen, M.D .. tre doing butlnMs u : doing bu11ness yet? No Aug 2. 9, 2001 ~ lerence. -modlltM-634 r,..u.....,. .,..,,... wife President Giles ~ma Service Janeth Sanchez · · ~ Bids mull be -1~ Name Statement Have you started This statement was 70e N. Harbor Blvd : This statement was The Costa ~na submitted 00 the form ll\'Pti0~8=;,":,p,,:.1i::r..,ll!IC: .. ~~~':"' ~g 11:.U~~ss yet? ~ ~~ = ~·M~~ 708 ~:'tt :th~ = ~= 'ii°m~:~i:: :: ~upplac:,:,.:-wl~
870t°>-T0t0' 03A;=J MARK LARSON · Tracey SypMfd on 07113/2001 N. Harbor Blvd . oo 07117/2001 Thursday August 9 provuins of the ~ GeWwrf ISK• . CARPENTRY. Thia statement was 2001N71023 Anaheim, CA 92805 20011171318 200t 0< as soon as pos· eauons Spedtlc:ations. ConW)eQ 21• 3 1715 11'2 West 8albol llled with 1he County o.ily Plot .U; 19, 26, Thl9 bualneN la con· Dally Pllol Jdy 19, 26 Slble thereafter on the Bid blanks and lut1tl8f MiaOtoft IE0840200MB • Boulevard, Newpon Cieri< ol Orange Col#1ly Ayo. 2. 9. 20Ql llJ366 ~ by .,., illdMdull Aug. 2. 9, 2001 Th380 following items lllfonnabon may 119 ot>-a.ctl, CA. 112963 on 07/10f2001 Have you 1tart1d 1 Minor conditional lained at the 11boYe ld-
Manllor-11 IC!!!! Mn L.anon, 1715 1'2 2001U70547 Flctittoue Buslneae doing bulirlMI ye(1 No Flctltlou1 Bullness use pemw1 ZA·9!H>5 lot dress tei.phc)M (714) NEC MiA 'Y"C FF Well 8el>oa 8Wevard O.ily Pilot .>.if 12 19 tume StM9ment Pedro M. Giles Name Statement an extenSIOO of t1me 10 962·2411
700 INll705; GompeQ Newport Beach CA' 26. Ayo, 2 2001 Jjqo; Thi following P4I Thlt ttatement wu The following persons allow a shafed driveway Published Newport #Pe1123; 8 O G9tewly 92et3 ' ... doing ~ filed with the County are dolllQ buMMlss 85 10< aocess putpo6eS to-Beach-Costa Mesa ~ Thie bu--. la con-Flc:tttloua Business LMng Water Land-~011°'11nooOrar199 C<ulty Stmpfe Pleasures. cated at 330 w Bay Daily Pilot July 26. Hewlea Pecltlrd mded by an ~ Heme SUrtltment tcape, 5601 Helmaide -· 4905 Voroa Ranctl Ad StJeet in a C·2 zone 2001 Th4Q1 ~ ~ 8100 ON, Have you ttarted The followtng p1f10RS Drive Huntington 20011171317 Vort>a l.Jnda CA 92887. Environme ntal de· Flctltlou. B·-'----
MQQ91 IC4211A dolog butlnMt yec7 No are tilg tuilels u : 8elch: CA 92649 Daily Piiot Jl#J 19 26 Kristen MIClleMe Ives. t&rrmnation exempt .._,... ~ • XerQll watt Mane S. Lanon WsterloumeYI. 31701 AnQelQill AtnM Hull Aug. 2 8. 2001 0074 6890 Miiistone Pt 2 Minor OeSIOfl R• tu.me Smte!Mnt _... •10CX: Prodluct Thlt llatement wu Mar Villa AV.., ~ 560f Helmside Drive Yorba li'lda, CA 92887° view ZA·01 ·17 for The following per900I
oodl -MCT: S.AtC7· flied with 1he County Beloc:ll, CA 12$51 Huntington B1act1 CA Flctttiout Bualneae Judlh Jo Carter. 5690 Danny and To Chun .,. dDslll buai*a aa:
081e48 om ol ()wlgl ~ DenMCe Gabbard 92849 ' Heme Statement Mlll1tone Pl.. Yorba !"*II to expend an elOSI· T.F Marine ~ ~ on 0711~1 31701 Mar Vista: This butlnesa It con Thi tollowino perlOl'IS L.nda, CA 9288J ing mgle famtly re11-tnc. 19782 Gtouceswf
r-.-:;-z==.&193810 in 2001117064t Laguna BHch, CA ducl9d by: an lndvkMll .,. doing ~ es Thlt business 15 con· denoe 1ndudlng the ed-lane, Huntlng1on o.iiy PloC ~ 12, 18, 82151 Have you started A.) Ceriln For Family ducted by a general dition ol a seoood lloor. Beach, CA 92648
flt!ore-1U*I 20, Ala 2. JObt Th3ff Thlt butlneu It coo-doing business yet? Matterl, Inc., 8.) C.F M partnersltip IOc:ated at 3108 AooN-T F Marine Systll'lll. liiiHiF. ~ dldld by: an~ Yn, 611onoc>1 Inc., 4152 l<alella Ave ' Have you llarted velt Way in an R-1 Inc (CA), 19782
Olgltal • Ttm*lll Flc:tltloua BuelnMa Have you alerted AngtlQlle A.,_ Hull Sult!t 203, Loe Alamhoa: doing business yet? No zone Environmental Giouc:eai.< Lane. Hun!·
(tilacnad); Phone Name St8lement doing butlnea• yet? Tiijs stalement waa CA 90720 Krislen Michelle Ives Determination exempt "fton 8Ndl, CA 92648 model t>ss·
18 0
· The lollowlng plflORI YM, Jlwlajy 2000 ftled with the County Cent•" For Family This statement was 3. Minor conditional hit bullneas la con-
Si.ndlrd • .,. doing ~ u : O.neec» Gabbard Oe11<. of °'8nge c.ounty Matter• (CA), 415~ flied with the County use perm•l ZA-01 ·18 for ducted by, a OOIPO<lllior•
p AT&T~ lllmi1ll One Minute MOiton. Thia Maternent wu oo 07/1:W001 K-... Ave , Suite 203 Cleftt of 0rtnge County Martin Poekett or Joe Have you alerted ~ ~ alrl, llC, 711 W. 11't1 llled wtlh Ille County 2001N7101t Loe AllmilC>e, CA 90n0 on 07/13/2001 Manson. for a to legahe doing ~lneH yet? ~ ~ 91.., t0-2, Colla Mela, Clel1' or Orwlgt County Dlllly P1oC Juty 18 26 Thie bualllMI Is con· 20011171020 an outdoof truck loadlng Y85. ~ 2000
JI-
-CA~""27 "'°'"""°"' .... Z.2001 -~-~ _.,,,, __ ....,,,,,.,~--~,..:;' s,.,_, _ -...,,. Mini* Millon-200111704al ..... ""'"· AYR· 2. 9. 2901 Th366 lav ootdoOf storage.
11 *-· llC, 711 W. 11t1 Daily Plot ~ 12, 18, Flctffiou9 Buaineee Have you started both.., the parlung tot of Thomas H Faldman,
• .,..,00~_3 ...:iS-. ~·~Costa Mesa. 2f. Auo. 2._1 Th3e2 N.me SUtement ~!. ~ .,.r1 No Fictitious eutlneu C1 LA VAL. localed al Pr~t ,...,., ,.,_ ..,.. ""' -· The 1o1ow1ng P4I ....,,1"' For Family Name St.tement 701 Pleceoba I\ a MG • '"' statemenc wu
The PRll*tv bllng Thlt buM-. la con· ActlUou9 Bu9'Ma .,. Ina ~ Matttfl ~-~ zone. Env1ronmemal m. filed With the County
ICltd W8I owned 01 held ~by. limited Lia· ....... Stallin'nent ~ Di::. p~ AndrOt1leou1. ~~-~':" t&rrnlNlion e= Ciani of Orlngl Counly ~.~at~o:; *Javc;o· you started ~~ ~ ~·-:::. Thlt ttatemenl wu 2l~~t'taphie. us! r!:rZA-01-~io: on °7~11171731
2800 Midllllon OcM, doing bulineM yet? Lanbi' by b S-, lnac*'I 8Mch cA 92&48 fled with the (;ounty C.. MaM, CA ~· Dulin DaofThe ConsuJI.. OM)' Pb .MiJ 2e. hlCI Sulll 060, IMne. CA v ... .Mii 1, 2001 2721 E. P.allc Cout The BM Group ll~ Clel1' ol Orwige Cotny Nadlm Sherman ll'IV Group, authortz.ed 2. 9. 16. 2901 Th399
82912 One Minute Millon-Hwy. &e. 110, Cocona ICA) 7932 w...t.I . on 07117/2001 Ahmed Al-BayalJ. 2t63 agerll tor Amil ~ Flctltloue Bu:tinMa
.. The lrWenay It on alre~CVletor HenNn. dll~CA692825Nbldo Clrcie. Huntington o.iiy Plot
20011171315 Ndon.al Avenue Cosia :':!s ~~ fUlne ~ ~ t-S.::-&t ~ 2721 E. f>.d& eoast ~·~11 con-Aug. 2. t, zt:I 1~ ~CA:~ador ~I cabinets lo The ~ = C::..... ""'::i -"" -""="" C:O::: !:';;.."."c.'::S,. "°""'" =:-'eo"' '-u.. -... -:r., ~"' .?.::! -·":..":'';I .1.': oi.~
rrwy be lnlpacad dul1ng ~177~~r County ~ ~~ Have· you started ,.._ hDment Mela. CA '12627 ~ ~~ &,.!.1'tl~~· =:' ..... !Qn Pllcr to 2001M70SSI Have 'y':u •tarted ~ ~CNo are~~ Thlt butlMSS
11 con-ta1 delerrn11181ion ••· Cralg Doocloo. 316
Thi lllmw d .. o.iiy Plot ~ 12, 18, doing ~ yfl(I No Cletut f . Molacek Mlgl Flora. 120 T:ar, ~ by. ~ and empt Either Street. eo.ia
...: cash In lawful 2f. AMA, 2.~1 Jb350 Ootothy S. Nllalcto Managing ~ • Ave., Sult •A", Newpol1 Have you started 5 Admlnlatrawe Ad-Mela. CA 92927
of 118 Unield-'""""'I Flctltlout But'---• ...!!'"....!.~ WU This .ltatement wu 8elch. CA 112983 . dolllQ iu.-yet? No juslment ZA-01·29 for PaZ'.•r 1:~ ... ~
....
~-"-,...., "'"' u,. County fled with lhe ,.._......... Tooa, Inc. (CA), 2700 ~adlm Sherman ~Young. IO allow a ,.,_..,_ ..... "-• bidder~ 10 ,_ ~ NMMt 8Clltement Clel1' ol Orwlgt eouncy OM of Orlngl ~ W. Gout Hwy , Suite Ahmad Al·Bayatl 3' side selbedt (5' r• CA .. '92eeci Newport Bwlh, ~ Thi lollowl~ on 07l09r'2001 on 07113"2001 ~57.:...-Newport Beacn, Thia statement wu quired) IO convtl'I an 8lC· Th4s .. _...._ __ ... ~
bldclng. Thi Dl°'*1Y .,. doing •: 20011170441 20011171011 ""' _......, flied with the County l5tirig ger1lgl to a on. ...__ -..... .-
"""' be peld b ·Ind TrteSUred lnleriort, Dally P1oC ~ 12, 18, Dally Pilot~ 18 26 Thlt bu11nMt Is coo-Oel1c ot Orange County bedroom apartment. to-duMd by. CX>1J8l1l'lltl removed by thl 308 Mtaa Dr., Costa 29, Ayg. 2.~1 Th383 M 21 9. ~ Th3e8 4aed by. , oorporallon on 07/18l200l cated at 182 Cebrilto In• ,.,!!v~-..: v:;r1.edNo ~ at the time d MIN. CA 812827 aTY Have you aterted 2001u 71448 R 2 ·HD z on• -.. .,.,_H':ctfnot ..... ..E!fel Hether, 309 COST" ~.. F1cUtloue luelneee do.lnaT ~I yet? No Dally Piiot JIJv 19, 26, =:~~n~;=-1
.de· Pa~~·' nonau•
Oelild: Jlity 18, 2001 -Or., CCl9la ~ .. ~ w---.......... OOI, nc. Aull. 2 9 2001 ,..,.,..,.. 1UcMn1 L. --CA 82927 ORANGE COUNTY .;;:--aunwnent ::J:n°" Goodariy,'' JU"P' 6. Zon1ng Appl lion This 1tatemant .,.. -r--..=. ':.":"...:.::-CAU-IA ' .. ...::=,::• p"" :..,_, .., ._ ....,._ ~-:."':..::.:;.... "":: ~ ;""o.!;, = CNe18837~~ Have you lltrted ~=--~·v~ Tt:' ~ :"' Ill qouncy .::-:~~to..,.• 12' oo 07~11m?M
11.29,2001 ~i.:, )'911 No NOTICE IS HE.Re8Y 9'natl, CA 80ll80 " on 177117~r CounlY .,. ~ •· ~~ ~:: Dady P*'4 My 28, AUD AcWoua .. llneee Thie ......,_,
1
WM GIVEN that Haled Cort B. Hlnaz, 7831 200111713" Sling ak Produc:la. lllJ1 review IOf an de· 2, 9. 18. 20Q1 "ni31it
.......__ .. I ..--.cS wlll _ ,.._-.., ptOpOMil for 111rnW*1g VOltcltn Ave., SW11Dr1 Olly Plot .Ml 18 ..., LLC, 109 La Plllcentie, ~ two-slory ae.· -.. I WWW Clerk or er.;;_ c;;; .. I labor, mat"1all, CA 801180 ' A4A &, I, 2001 W San Clemente, CA .~, bu1c1ng behind Flctttloue .........
Fk:ttdoue lueirw Thi ~ l*90nl on 07/10r'200t equipment trwllPOIW-Thlt bu11ne1S Is con-82873 an Pisbng lirigle ~ Heme 9' '31Wlt Neme ltMUA'ient .,. ~ ..__ aa:
2001
117M llon and Mt. oe. fK1. Mtld by. an lndMcMI Ac:allcMa ......._ snr19Pak Products, residence. located at -~ ~'°'•:•
The folowinQ Pt-""' Expreu Office Olly Plot ~
12 1
': 11111 ae llllY be~ · Have you started ...._ .... .....,. PllC ICA). 108 la 2673 Sanla Ana A~ .,. doirlQ bulfnlMM:-envtronrn.lel, 1800 E.
21
Aug.
2 2001
Jb:Mi few TltR' 'AMWAY dDtlg bullrllll yfl(I No The ~ pa laoentla, San In an R1 zone S1J'lncMd 25111 ,,..... Maglc8I Moma.
7921
= Ave.. S.. 215, 4 - -C~fl"I RDAIR Cort 8. ttnai .. ~ ~ °"""'*• CA U7'3 Environmental de-port ~. f8. COlllll
AIWltWa Or 11 Hunt-Ma. CA W1'05 FlcWoul ....,._ ANO ... ...WAIJ( Thfis ttat:emtnt WU OedlCated Hosting Thlt butinelS It con-*"""9tion ex.,. Mau CA 92921 ~~ci12M1 e1~'--0r~· Nw leal•JMnt ~·Cir~ ~:ran::. County SefYicla. 111,...,.. ::'eotiy: Unhd u. ~ ~~o:; ~D Qldar, 2293
.;;;;z.,M ..:::-.... ":\' "l'!.. "':'!l.!: 0-~~· .... ::.;::r:: ... "' °'"""'°' eo.., =-·= ~·~ ... , .. y~ ,...,., -· » _.,, --. t::'.;,,::; OW ~ eMcti. cA .. oon-c K. -Olly ot ~ ..... .. . 20011111011 0..0.-.ct Hoetl ~bUllnlll 'ffll(f No """ ..... a garage.'° !hit bulillell .. ~
82f47 -:.tly.r:,-::: 711· W• 17WI = ~~ c:..1110::: :2.~~ 'M:t S.W... ~ .. ~,;:. llC Pak Producls, the rMr °'an eXlSUng cldlCI by' an 1ncMU1
Thlt bullntols 111 con. ~ ~ ~? 8ullil N . c.. MaM. Cotti Mw. ~ -....... Ave'.:.."""'.':' 241, Leonanl Broogo T,.... :;:r..,•=.s~· ~ff you etartld
ductlCI 11y. en ~ v ... ~ CA 1211121 ..,. ...._ ..._.._ ... 1__ ..,.__ .. ... Ntwoott DetlCn, CA ur"' • _....... _ ........... ~ "" 10~ ye17 No
Have you etatted t..a 1Cq:1p1 ..Chlrlff Kenneth .,. -"' ... ._ r-......,_ 8*3 Thlt ,......., ,... -"' . To· Thll -~ ...... ,..,No ..................... 111. 711 w. ~·.~-= J!.!'M •• '""' ... 11:!.tMINll "con-ni.d w1:9'::"""-~ = .. ~·· ........ --~,..-~ P1ct11oue .... ,... Nine¥ M Kellilf -.ct w111 flt ~ 17lh an.t. Bl* e-a :::.. .. i.; .... "*'-""' ""'°"' -by. a OCltJIOI..,., om ot ()wlQI ~~ ~·Knox s..... ·--· ............ ", Nw ••Ufllllt Thlt llMllMI~ WM °"'al O.W. c..,.y 00. ...... CA 1112117' kt; end :::'> .. dat'8 tluli*t • Have you •tarted on 07111/2001 ..,_.., ~nvi~on:!~~~ 10:]!. OM°' OrWIOI County
The "*'-41111 penona Iii.cl wfll flt ~ on 01/1CW21D01 Thlt bulirlW Iii oart-flt Councl a...: Ood!medll.oom. 311 clcllflO bualMM vet? MH171171 term1na11on on
07~1--· .. ~ ......_ ae: Clerk Of°"'* OounlY llttll?IMI CUMd by' WI~ S..... Mela Dr .. _fil Co.-y-, M~1 Olly Piiot .Ml 19. 21. If lhe . ••""P.l .,.. -··•-
llPM ............ "' °'"-f ... -~ 11.11: •-'°" ...... -,,.;::::•.::.:::: -. CA_, -.. ""'"' 11111. &. L 2!!0l liml _. ~~ ~ 1':'°11111"l"'\:lio, tJM ~ Or 11111111114 AM J,~ ~ dDfltll ..,._ wet No .,.i ol M6rw ~ JoM. ... _.. --------0.. .... ~ IQMf Olly Piiot ~ 12.lt. R CharlH Ktnn•tll but "::' ... ~ ~t ~311 Miia Dr .• t11, r-'""::7'"'. ___ .....;. _ __, __ ~--!...----===:.!.-------.
Prl!lhlf, 20. .Aw. .. ~, ~ =· 8 I 111 .._....,, Ml . .,..... -• .....,_ MMe. CA lte27
-.. OOMa • 11111• ,;; .... t'Mnt ... ~'-:. ~ _:a-Shahanl, Sh~~ZN1rl• ~ ~ ••au ""'~ • flt ~ .at11d1111d ...._ = FOWltaln v=; A~ n;r'..:-.~· ............ 11 -... *:Z.,_ .... , ., mno::t" ~ .... ,.._ol 92701 . '
C.. ...... Q -1' The tollDMlll ,_. .... 11• I .a; '"1111'111 lhll 1111 ....... W. 11'11 Mlnlll .. '*'" ,,. ........ OM--:::. ....... -....... ...._~ ~l'lle.1*1t."11. ==--··~-...... '! ........
::-• .......... 1111 w. ~c.:':i ".: • • ..... ~,~ .. .....,_•-=.:'*=*JOI! ...,,., .A "A..T-r7W -,_ -~= L •!i:rt: ....... lr1' Ill :::-·--=:.--.... "' .n. }. •£ 11.~ MD~:~..... -1111 Int A .. II .. gw; ...,._ -,· ...... ---,·-•i.•• -~"1?5 ::a.•:-=::::=.·.::~ BT ·T~ra..n:;r~~~ Fa-Y=--=-'r-1•·-::. ... ~--= IDa, -:::r. ,, ~·--. :*.na=r~ V":l.*'-'Y~~·( ~ -;VS---1 · -t:i~ =aEl . . '-
~
• • • •• • • •
~
~\WI t'dnJ lbM\ r ooi. 11511 em tan
Fe~ffft Orm~ Ftet Ciovt. Rl!po list. Vfl & Fl{-\
~kome. All areais
hided. (;Jblty
fJHf S...14111
~t!:'.~
~ ' ·i
i I • • • t• •• ••, I~
Can't seem to
get to al thole
repalrjoba
aromd the house?
Let the a111 lflld ..,..Dilldoir
help yoo find
r9iable help.
----0..cllfti----
Monday ........ Msriday s:00pn Friday .......... Thmy s:00pm
Tuaday ......... Monday S:OOpm Satwday .......... .Friday 3:00pm
Wedneeday .... Tueaday S:OOpm Sunday ............. Friday 5:00pm
Thunday .. Wednaday S:OOpm
..
ajk•
COITA MBA I IOUnf COAIT 11EYRO
CMlll*'O .uw. t ....... .., 2 llldraorll 1 81111,
llllftlUldld "' ..... -"' -OlllmVflf cal 714-657~
SELL
your unwwrted
items through classlfied
POLICY
In an tllolt IO olllr fie bell
~ poalblit IO DUI ,..
Ill and ~ ... wil
~uire ConttaCIDrl who
a<IYettlsl In the S1Mcl
Oirectoty to lnduCle thl+r
Conlractors Lice nu
flllnl>lr II h<f ~
~Yu~•
Ql!!l!Y 9fC!!1!d.
OUICKBOOIUI SETUP T111nlng end Support
~..w:..MH_tt-7517
1·..a1
SELL
your unwanted
1lem8 through da9elfied
COMJHNE 11t0SE CHANCt'.8
WF.&'T
• J llU O J154
0 1 •J 1017 SOUTH •AKO o AQ:!
o Q'54 •AQl
The bidet' :
promising 1 minot two-witcr with
•llm inlete9c. With OOl1CCllU1lfed VII·
uea in lbe lllll)On and no rufrll\I vllwe, Soolh sfsned olf, but Nor1h
hid enough IQ l1llke the value ral1e IO
&lam.
Wcsa led lhc ,acJc ol lhc aronp:r
blact IUjl. llOd declarer -ddJ&bted with die oonllllCt.
SOUTH '"\rm NORTH EAST
Since a 3-2 break in euher mlnur
would produce 12 tricls, declarer
wcn1 afier clubs without 111y ado,
cashing lhc A Q. The fint aign of
troubie came when Eut discarded 1 sPllde oo lhe leCOlld club. Declarer
ahifled hones, f llleS6ing !be ;.ck. of diamonds. F.a:n won and reverled lO
spades and, when diamond.• were
aha unfriendly, declarer could 8111lCr
10 ....
3• ....
only 11 trick.I. , 1• .... 1NT .... .JNT .... '1'41' .... ........
Opening lead: Itek o( •
A DI05I unf ortwiate dlltribution.
yet it could have been overcome qull.e simply. Ir West ha!! length in
both minors. I.hat defender could be
i;queeud out of a winner. And lhc actual distribu1ion could be countered ii, after ca.Wng the rwo high clubs,
declarer COOtUlued with a dwnond lO
the ace and • dwoond bac._ toward
the queen.
Dislributlooal qulrb am ruin even
the eoundeai al CXllllrlCls. But do noc lblndon ~ too IOOl'I.. There might
be a n y to n&bf lhe veucl and saJ to 1wehlrbor.
Soolh'• two clubs Wil.\ artificial,
sarong and usually a game f on:c.
Nonh'a two-dillnood rcspoNC with
11 hip. card poinu wu a Mwaitmg"
bid to l1Jow South 10 clanfy the
openina bid. Two no trwnp showed a belanced 23-2A polnL~ and Nonh \
lhnle 1padc1 wu conventional,
lfEa.u nliC.~ with lhe king. declarer
gets home w1lh three tricks in each
suu. so East must follow low and lhe
queen wuis Now declarer can rcven
10 clubs. conceding a tnct 111 the suit
lO West. Th1n, dcdarer 'ICUl'C$ \ix
lncks in lhe ma.JO"l-. two 1hamonds
and four club<.
LOW COST
l...JM..... ~
..... -··-··
.. . . "
FIEEVIOA
You 've huu4
about Vuigra ...
but have you
triul it?
• Vllcra IUccal ii
dependent Of\
propcruae.
Getllllio? , ••• .._ .,.,.... ... "rd I I IR s.a.I °' f ed ....... ,..,..._.,
~<Jlaklll .....
a.It.
.. =.----.~ ,,... ........
AO aA&.£1 lor nllllOIW financill ~ ....., oc ~ s.· .,.. """'
lloofll. llNltl I dilp9y
ldl to CEO'a I CFO'a.
Knowlldgl GI lie _.
lllllMI. Word. ACT Ind
Electric led, ~ r'C I... I wri ... ~ ~"' Higll ~ ~ chlll, balh '81 m a .... na, ,,_ _,....,,.
·--H•nt!ffl
... lilt cn.r ,,, In .... ______ ..................... __
Gpellble COAd Biil °'* --------.. Alln• WOltl ,_ ..... 949-87$·1173 Up to~. M-Rr
I • Ill rn I i ' 1 • -.a11-1 S:t '~o WWW·==~ CCMft • pig ~1·2925 H• AVON
WEIGHT LOSS ---· _.._._ Loolung 1or hVllf mo1111?
CreMe •••
INTERIOR
RE-DESIGN a
ARRANGEMENT ,.., "" ,,.,,, ,,_,,,,-'
•MAJONC TIU ~Of'
WtlAT 'l'OU l\AYI'"
~I.£~
~-o., ......
itWMlll(;U Al</10111!.UUi
5-$clll Dlllgr'I ,.,....
9A9-676-1 853
Oldef Stlte Fvrnitwe
PIANOS i Collectibles . ..,..._..._
• s..,._ • ...,..,.. Ofka f~
$$CASH PAID$$ one,.. • ., ..... ..._
WE BUY ESTATES
·~lnwdy..
CONSIGNMErHS I
r , • I
'
. ' ~~
SOUTH COAST AUCTION
•T-Hunelr• Cakllll11 a Conll911-11 132 Cabnllo SttHt, C M
Haywood·Makefleld lurn Wheeling dishes V1111ag1-
......, AtlllQUe doll
and 10CS more~ Come 1M
I.II. Low, low pnceal
OPEN 11:0°'6:00 T-s.t
MH45-I05t. VISMIC.
PUBLIC
NOTICE
The C.Hf. Public-
U 11111111 Com·
mission REQUIRES
11111 .. Ulld ~
hold goodl mown print~ lhtif P.U.C
Cel r rumber. lmoe
and chauflers print
lllW T.C.P. 1U1t>1r
11'1 11~
I you I-. a~ !IOI\ ltlcU .. _..
ily of • '"°"*• "'° Of dllf.M«, atl:
P\8.IC UTIU11ES COMMISION
714-558-4151
OARlMG IAIY llUfMS More fft11bl1 hOi.111'7
Nice ... pm lnd1p1n<1111ce7 A\IOH t.
110.MCll. wllll you·,. k>o*lngiof
714-tl!-HN Lets talk~
loall ~ Clll dogs l(lf
ldopborl _., Sa{ & Sull
nooll-4pm Falhlon Island ANIMAL NETWORI(
lnlo 949-6«·2279
www ammaln11worl! Ofg
OFFERS A FflU MISSING
PET DIRECTORY
NEW GOlF GEAR CLUBS
8 a.a . Saoowldoe
Caltlonwn • T unkim In·
ML Vllue S860 asU>g
$750fobo 714·~
SURFBOARD 1'6"'
Doc Tri-ftn, round pin.
r=..~n.1151
1--v=1
COAST COIN NEEDS
OlD COINS! Gold SllYtr
flW'ky, watches. lntJqUeS
coftectlbles ~9-642·9«7
CASHIER/RECEPTIONIST
Mon Fn eves v.. Nova
~Busy~
E XP11*1C8 neoetllfY Fax
resume ID 949-642· 7e80 Of
al)l)ly in penon ~ ~
ONLY 3131 W C011t lt!!r
CHILD CARE NEEDED
IOf Churdl '"'J T'llurl
lllDmklg. 9-.30-11 :45 Cal
Retl9I .... ~,-
CUSTOMER SERVICE/ SALES REP b c:er ,......
but 111 C:O.bl ...... FT.
Mutt hive ..... elllllly
lf1d c:er ,.,.. aper. Cli
lten 714-741-f.221
Hotel !root Oesti. malnl,
hOUMkeepn~ Will train FT /PT 5upervllOI & 111111
~ coeu ...... Ml:*ir
llVI 'lZ11 Harbor Bhd, CM
IH1UIOR Pl.MT CARE TECHNICIAN
Looluno !Of reaponaible pertonaicy ID help wi\ntenOf
plal\I e1re Pan·Mle/SUll
Must have ~ble 1uto. good OMV Can
714·747·3«5 bllween
7pm·9pm
MlinteMnc:e Peraon-P/T
25/lvslwMk 10< 11-.oppong
cerner 111 C M Handyman
•!IP P'trd F11 rnune to
3 H>·2 n -0 738 ann R«hll
MASSAGE TEACHER I Buy Sblnlp Collectlona All levels PT FT Call Old 8oolla. ~ 714.964.7744 01 , ..
c.11 Sbln e ~ ~ ID 714-962·393'
' .
Binner for
Two at
Find OUr Hidden
Oa11i6ed Ada & WIN!
c.-iw.:
l. Simply 6.nd out b1ddcn daai6ed .di
tomcwbae in out dwi.fied teedoo.
Cut and pute the .di on the cnay
blank and mail. Newspaper mttia only,
no photo copia will be ea:iepted.
2. All entries mun arriw by 5 p.m.,
the fdllowing Tuaday.
3. Wlnncr will be clM>ten by random
• • drawi.qg and will be notified by phone.
One entry per penon. One winner per
week.
• Contatwill run 7119101through8/23101.
I '
.,. ~J ·~· 4l ..... .-.w. .
FIND
Paste Ads Herc
Paste Ads Herc
Oio.au for 2 Conlat
330W.&y~
COit.a Maa CA 92627
• REPllSSESSIO# • TAX LIEllS •LATE PAY
• BA#KllUl'TCY • JllDBllE#TS
THIS WEEK,S SPECIALS
•11a FORD ·-FORD •113 ""'71AC ·-FOii/i 11111 RIYOTA ... ,,,.,,,.,,
atlllTIU
Clean & Economy
Car (763151)
·-FORD ._. FOllO ·-VOl.lt6
at:#IT LX ut:IMT -LX Wllll AM -E6l:OllT' Vt TEllCS. PllOllE llT EXl"l.OllEll XJ.T JETTA
Great Econ Car AT, AC, c/Ban. Auto, Vsty Clean 4 Door, Clean Auto, 4cy/, Clsan 5-SPO., lthr., AT, f/pw1:., rek Edition, Blk
(35458L) (123417) (603183) (115734) (038414) /oadsd. (113109) lloys (A42254) uuty (099933)
•5976 •5976 •6976 •7976 •7976 •B976 •B976 •B976 •B976
•1111 .,,...,.,,,
llAUlllT
Auto, AC,
Load11d(109461)
•B976
••t:111VY
A6TllO VAii
6 cyl., Auto,
Full pwr (166278)
$12,9~
.... /W,11 ......... Moonroof, alloys,
ltJathBr (148687)
1 14,976
·-~ IWAXIMA
Auto, Beyl,
Loadsd (410096)
1 17,976
.,,., OOOlllE
llAM OOAll cu
Fully load1d, VS,
auto. (516802)
122,976
'NFOllO ,.._
Supt1r cps, Aut
trans (139168)
•9976 . ·-FOllll FOCU6ZTll
AC, alloys, loadBd
(123498)
113,976
'NFO•O
lfWTM
Loaded, low, low
mllss (832727)
1 15,976
'•FOllO
COllTOIMLX
Auto, AC, CltJanl
(126902)
'9976
...... TlllUI
aw-~
AT. AC, sharp.
(165802)
1 13,976 ... ...,., ....
,.,,~ ..
Clsan scono
car (402526)
1 15,976
'• llO#OA ... l'OllO ,~ ~-Auto, 6 Cy/, Load 15 Pass. V-1 O,
(406815) Loadtld (A41730)
'18,976 1 18,976
·-/l'Ollll '00 l"Ollll ...,.. w. ,..,.,,..
Lsath1r, CD, Prem. Edd# a.u.r,
Wh#ls (137083) 4x4,lolldtJd,(C25525)
125,976 $29,976
·-Clllf!VY ...,.,, Liii
Auto, AC, LoadBd
(715648)
•9976 ·-IBllllll Ml/Bl IXl'UlllBI
Lthr, loaded, cln.
(818845)
113,916
... CHIEVY ... ., ..
Full Powsr,
C/Ban (155718)
1 10 976
'•7ClllEVY ... MAZP• ._J'DYOTA .,o,-u PlttlTI!~ COROLLA Auto, 6 cyl., AT, AC, loaded, AT, AC, f/pwr..
oadt1d (203663) (174567) (254664)
1 10,916 1 11 976 1 12 976
'•l'OllO --~llCUll ~ COf/Ull
Auto. ful~wr. V6, auto, co (133 '38) loadsd(634619
'13,976 114,976
• .. FOllD •oo CHEVY ••7 1'111110
Btl'l.Ollll!a Xl.T 610 X CAa ~
Full powsr, Auto, 6 Cy/, Loaded VB, Roush plq/, Raro
alloys (851072) (219045) seats (118371)
116,976 '16,976 '16,976
·-llll'llllTY ·-F0110 ·-FOllO 'OD FOllll ·-JWJt.TD• 14JO lllU6TIW8 •T ~ CMr. ,,,,..,~ llT Pll&UllE
L11ath11r, root, Convt., leatht1r, Full pwr, CD, Lt1ath11r, alloys, AT, alloys, loadBd.
alloys. (603722) toadtld (217484) lloys (213009) loaded (279749) (002565)
118,976 1 18,976 '20,976 '20,976 '20,976
•oo U§fCOI.# ,_t:All
Signature Serles
(871185)
'29,976
·•w ,....Xl.T
Super Duty. Xcab,
Os/ (030713)
'29,976
....... __ ....,
LMtJ»r, full />(/Mf, '°'"' doys (456244)
'12,976
..., l"Ollll ,. .. xa.
Auto, V-8, Full
Power (C02717)
114,.976
-CllllrA6ll •111111111 .IXI
Convt., lath1r,
loadtld. (270373)
'17,976 ·-ClllllVY TAllOIELT
LnthBr, alloys,
loadtld (339842)
121,976
YI I l:8M':S ....... su,,.r cltMrJ. low
ml,.s (326485)
'39,976