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HomeMy WebLinkAbout2000-09-02 - Orange Coast Pilot. ' .. . ' ' . . . fheHst 18 REAL 1n1n .. ' . SERVING THE NEWPORT ~ MESA COMMUNITTES SINCE 1907 ON 1HE WEB: WWW.DAILYPILOT.COM WEEKEND -SEPTEMBER 2-3, 2000 .Group wants clean park water •West Newport leaders are concerned pollution will harm It also features a nurtqer of posted warnings about water pollution. children who play at Channel Place. '" The county of Orange has a sign posted on a wall near the beach noting Alex Coolman DAILY PILOT - '· WEST NEWPORT -Concerns about young children being exposed to polluted water has prompted members of a homeowners association to ask city officials to give #immediate attention" to the water conditions at a local park. But Silcock says he wanted to make bacteria levels in the area exceed state it dear to residents and to the city that standards. people are paying attention to the Another slgn, also from the county, problems of pollution in West Newport. notes runoff from storms may exacer- "What caused me to Write the letter bate the problem because several that about 30-some-odd people pver storm dra4J,s~empty directly into the the the last months have b~en talking to relatively motionless water. me about, 'What is the association · The Harbor Quality Citizens Adviso- doing? What is the city doing?'• to deal ry Committee of Newport Beach has with the water, Silcock said. posted its own sign at '\he beach noting The concerns were raised in a letter sent at the end of May and answered by Uie city in August. The letter was not intended to be a confrontational tactic, said Alan Silcock, president of the West Newport ~each Assn .. which represents area homeowne rs. The focal point for residents' concerns that feeding ducks and seagulls is not a is Uie C hannel Place park at 43rd Street particularly good idea because ·each and Balboa Boulevard. That park, which duck dropping (gulls too) may con- is just out of the hustle of Coast Highway, tribute millions of bactend to the water.• features a broad lawn, a playground for . .J children, and a small, sandy beach. SEE WATER PAGE AS MARIANNA DAY MASSCY I DAILY I'll.OT Signs at Channel Place Park at 43rd Street and Balboa Boulevard in Newport Beach .warn of ·contaminated water. • GETIING DUNKED· MARC MARTIN I DAILY PILOT Mike Fine, assistant superintendent of the Newport Mesa Unified School District, swims with the fishes after getting dunked during a picnic for district employees who are preparing for the first day of school Tuesday., . l .- Hoax Was preve~table, Elllulex spokeswolllan says • Local companies that trade on the stock market vow to pay more a~ention to news stori~ about them. ~ Alex Coolman DAILY PILOT People are trying to sell secu- rity systems to Robin Schnug. All day Friday she fielded calls from salesmen peddling viris- scanning technology and other high-tech methods for prevent- ing fraud and forgery. But the public relations man- ager for Brnulex, the Costa Mesa network computing equipment cornpany that was hit last week by what's been called the largest Internet hoax ever, wasn't buying the pitches. "Until the wire services adopt that type of (security),• Schnug said', "it's not going to prevent that (type of fraud) from happening in the future.• What really is happening, say Emulex ahd other local high- tech companies, is that the fraud · s<:are ts causing them to pay more attention to the way news about their companies gets pre-. sented to the public. The stocl5 of Emulex, a com- pany that makes "fibre channel host adaptors and bubs,• plum- meted last Thursday after a fake press release announced the company was reporting finan- cial losses and chief executive Paul Folino had resigned. The story was in1Uapyieported by the Los Angeles·based news service IntemetWue at about 6:30 a.m. Pad.fie time, just as the New York stock markets were opening. Other news services, includ· Encouraging others _to 'give life' • With local blood reserves in short supply, Allee Johnson is working hard· to recruit friends, family and strangers to donate blood. Mlthlt Wtnlcler 0All.Y Pk.of NEWPORT BBACH -~ P. Johmon will QO -almost -an to get her hands on some blood. • The vtvaciOus .. s.year-okl chats up I*)· pie tn bankl and grocery llorel. SM liGna · up whole companl• to open tbelr vetm. Sbe delignl and diltrlbutM T·lhtrtl that rMd '" To donate blood, • person hlS to be 17 or older. weigh at ·least 11 o po'unds. be in good health and not at rfsk fof HfV/AIOS or other blood-borne Infectious dllNles. The center Is ~n Monday through Frf. • day from 8:30 •. m. to 5 p.m. To rNlce an appofntment at f4oeg Hospital's blood · donor center. call (949) 7'6-5621. • -Ing Bloomberg News and Dow Jones Newswires, quickly picked up the story. The company's stock lost more than $2 billion in value in less than an hour as investors reacted to the phony infonnation. Thursday, the FBI arrested a 23-year-old El Segundo man, a former mtemet Wire ,employee, charging him with sending the fake release. Schnug says Emulex has not yet contempl~ted any legal action against the news services " SEE EMULEX PAGE A8 Dillies resort decision c·ould be on hold · • Developers for proposed 470-room hotel might ask city lo delay voting on project. Mathis Winkler DAILY PILOT NEWPORT BEACH -Developers for the proposed Newport Dunes Resort Hotel are expected to ask the o ty Tuesday to postpone a deasion on the controversial pro1ect unW after the November election. The City Council was .expected to discus~ the proposed 470-rQOm hotel and 31,000- ..,square-foot convention center at its Sept. 12 meeting. However, Deputy City Marldger Odve f\itf said the project would be pushed back t6 a future date, adding he did not know when 1t would come before the City Counal. Tim Quinn, the project manager for New- . . port Dunes, declined to comment Friday, adding it was not appropriate until the ~ • SEE DUNES PAGE A'J"' Coast n:iagazine , sold to local newspaper group • Former owner Jim Wood and his wife, Nikki, will stay on fl:ie staff. M•this Winkler DAIL'!' PILOT Coast magazine, a glossy monthly started" by local entrepreneur Jim Wood, bas been sold to the Orange County Register's maga- zine division, company officials announced Friday. The sale price was not disclosed. Coast, a lifestyle publication with a circu- lation of 45,000 households in Newport Beach, Laguna Beach and other neighbor~ . hoods throughout Orange County, is deliv- ered for free and takes in a nearly $3-mlllion revenue each year, according to a statement issued by the Register. SEE COAST PAGE A9 ' 11111 l6T ... ___ M QAllflDS ... Cll lll&GllS.. AS .. aru rt•• --.AlS .... --All .. At •Milll-Iii .. . .. -I II .., ... • •Qve blood. Gift Ute.• • Moll recGtfy, lbe'I outfttttd ber Mer· c.det with a Uceue plai. t.Ml re1d1 •POr 141, I can be a mOVtng ~ ment, • Jobmon Mid during a coMenadon at Hoeg, Hoepttal'• blood donor centu, wber9 lbe WGl'U u the tmuats. •1 oae penon at a ltopUgbt tblilb, 'Ob pl)' CIOiii. l lboiild (dqnatll blood)...._, lt'I WOtl1a it ... _,...,...,"°' ,...-,..•• •lllMil ....... aw a 11 ._ •ooNeBLD.• Rlll.000 ... AI ·' A2 Satun:Jay, 5.p..mber 2, 2000 Qndy Trone Christeson MORAL OF THE STORY Detours. on mke path' lead to adventure "To ~(sod in everything makes life the greatest adventure there is." -Unknown W hat started out as a three-hoUI tour for Gilligan led to years of the popular television show Gilli- gan's Island. What started out as a three- week bike trip for my husband Jon took a little longer than he expected to complete. 1Wenty-si.x years longer, to be exact. Alter graduating from high school, Jon wanted to celebrate by riding his bike across the United States, but he couldn't convince anybody to join him. A year lat- er, Nick, a friend who was much like an older brother to Jon, agreed to join him for a scaled-down version of the nde. Nick only had a three-week vacation, so they decided to ride from the Canadian border to the Mexican border. Jon and Nick planned on camping at night and budgeted accordingly. What they 'didn't count on was the rain. Day after day it rained, so night after night they ended up in motels, spending food money for warm lodging. "We got tired of the rain and sharing the road with lumber trucks that obvious· ly didn't want to share the road with us,• Nick said. So Jon and Nick flew home (rom San Francisco but planned to finish the ride sometime in the future. Finding ~e time was a challenge, as their lives became busy with jobs, wives and children. Nick and his wife Colleen had two boys about the same time we had our daughters Kelly and Amy. Whenever we got together, we always talked about finishing the bike trip as families. 1Wo years ago we actually set out to do just that. 1\venty miles short or the Mexican bor- der, thou~. our trip came to an unexpect· ed stop when Jon took an unexpected fall and ended up in the emergency room with broken bones and a cast. It was obvious we would have lo finish the ride another time. Last weelqmd, we finally rode the remaining miles to Mexico together. Armed with cellular phones and plenty of prayer, we had a great time talking, laugh- ing and biking. We had no falling rain, no falling bodies and no broken bones. What we did have was the run of finish-. ing an adventure that was started long ago. ·1 tell people it took me 26 years to complete the ride, and they tell me I must be a slow rider,• Jon said with a laugh. • A friend of ours named Guy thought the timing sounded perfect though. ·u I had started a bike trip·to Mexico when I was 19, l'd be finishing it now as well,• Guy said. U Jon and Nick hnished the ride the first ti.me they set out, we might never have ridden it as families. U we had fin- ished it two yeirs ago, we might not have had the impetus to get together on this summer weekend. Life is a lot like. biking. Unfo1'tUD4tely . there are often detours. Fortunately those can lead to some of the most memorable adventures of all. .. And you can quote me on that. • ONDY TRANI OtlUSTESON Is a Newport Beacti' resident who speaks frequently to parent· ing groups. She may be reached via e·mall at cindyOonthegrow.com or through the mail at P.O. Box 6140-No. 505, Newport Beach, CA 92658. Jla~ v~M.N0.210 I nws M. a•• Publllfwr TONY DOIJ9k>, Editor J ....... AIUst.wit Oty EditOf •• MKMNW. ,..,,. fdlriw ..,_°"' .. Sports E.dlt.or --=~ P't'°"1C> Edit.or MIA.A~ fWwl Edit«. la.I J. INlfl'OS ,...~ Mt' ZfDA.AWI. ~M1Ng91' Nl¥'I Ol1'1Wll. o.tftldM\>eo'tllllig u..••• YoungCMng D AJLY PILOT C omedians from Comedy Crusade have gone into pr:tsons and made women laugh. Inmates easily bored have sat through the entertainers' routines. They've laughed hard , perched on the edge of their seats at the Chino Women's Prison. They've also cried hard . The Christian messages in the rou tines touched them. At times, the messages healed them. Nazareth Rizkallah , p;esident of Costa Mesa-based Comedy· Crusade, knows the power of laughter. He knows also that good dean jokes. the kind that aren't perverted or offensive, can still bring a chuckle or a guffaw. •I use the word of God to reach people," he said. ·we put humor in it so people can be entertained.• Comedy Crusade recently launched a Web site, www. comedycrusade.com. where peo- ple from around the country can log on and choose Christian entertainers-comedians, illu- sionists, impressionists, musicians, magicians and a thletes -to work a gamut of functions ranging from church to corporate events. When these comedians a ttend business parties, they don't preach. But they do give a clean performance, with lines that stress their opinions. "It's not just about being fun· ny, • Rizkallah said. "It's about who you are and what you stand for." Part of Rizkallah's routine goes like this: ·People come to me and say, 'Do you teally believe the Bible is trfte~o you believe Adam lived for 930 years and Noah for 960?' I say, 'Yes.' They say, 'How come?' I say, 'Because they did- FAITH CALENDAR SPECllL EVENTS CROP WAL.IC Reauitrnent training will be held from 7:30 to 9 p.m. Thursd.ay at St. Mark Presbyterian Church for the 12th annual Greater United lnterlaith·CROP Hunger Walle in Newport Beach. IJ'he walk will begin at 1 :30 p.m. Oct. 15 at the church, 2100 Mar VJ.Sta Drive, Newport Beach. (949) 645·5781. SCHOOL KICK-Off St. Mark's Presbyterian Church hosts a "Surfin' Fall Kick O(f" party from 10:30 a.m. to 2 p.m. Sept. 10 at 2100 Mar Vista Drive. Free. Children's activities include a moon bounce, face-painting and organized games. (949) 644. 1341. OPEN HOUSE The Jewish Community Center of Orange County holds an Open House from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. Sept. 10 at the center, 250 E. Bak• St. The event will high· light the programs and classes offered by the C0J)ter. ~. Door HOW TO REACH US ~ The llmes Orange County (800> 2521 141 ~ ~.~ (949) 642-5678 ~ (949) 642 ... 321 EdhoNI News (949) 642·5680 Sports (949) 574,4223 • News. Sports Fu (949) 646-4170 E-mail. ~ilypllot04atlma.com Main Offlol BUllnm Offlca (949) 642~21 8~ Fa11 (949) 631-7126 . RRST CHURCH Of OWST SOENTIST The church k at 3l03 Via Lido, N~ Beach. The Christian Science reading room. next door to the church. is open Monday through Satu~ day from 10 a.m. through 4 p.m. Tokens for part<ing ifl the lot behind the church are avail· able from the reading room. for more lnfor· mation. call (949) 673-1340. The First Church of Christ Scientist holds ser· vices Sunday at 10 1.m. and 5 p.m. Sunday school for youth through age 20 Is offered con- current with the morning service. A testimonial service Is held Wed~ at 8 p.m. Child care ~provided at all services for the very young. Daily Pilot Costa Mesa-based business brings Christian entertainers, including comedians,. magicians and musicians, ' to events around tow.n .. TAYA KASHU8A I OAJt.Y PllO Nazareth Rizkallah, jeft, Rich Praytor and Thor Ramsey are three of the comedians available through Comedy Crusade, a €osta Mesa business that offers Christian performers for events. rt't have Denny's back then.'• When stand-up comedian Rich Praytor.tells the s!me jokes he does at church on a secular· club stage, he finds that people consider him a breath of fresh air. . "They tend to appreciate it more and laugh more when you' come in t>etween two dirty comics,• Praytor said . Thor Ramsey. another come- d.idJ'! with Comedy Crusade, tells mom jokes. One of them goes: •I have decided that of all the holidays. Mother's-Day cards are the hardest to buy 'cause they're so fake. 'You're the greatest prizes, a raffle and discount options for class registrations are also planned. (714) 755-0340. FAMILY AND FRIENDS The Presbyterian Church of the Covenant will have its annual All Church, All Friends and Family Picnic following the 10 a.m. Sept. 10 worship service. The picnic is at Wakeham Park, 3400 SmaDey·St, Costa Mesa. (714) 557'"3340. sOOcHOP mom in the world .' Why can't they just make a card that says 'You did the best you could?'· Ramsey said he tries to talk about what is real in his life. And in his opinion, the Bible is very real. "If you produced a lot of things in the Bible into a movie just the way they're written, you're gonna have a lot of vio- lence, blood and sex,· he said. "It's not a sugai--coated book.· Life isn't sugarcoated either. Ask Carol Fitch, who is a seminar leader of Prison fellow- ship, a group with which Come· dy Crusade often works. Holy Days -for members, friends and newcomers to the area at 8 p.m. Sept 23. ll will be held at the temple. 2401 Irvine Ave. (949) 548-6900. SEMINARS FORGIVENESS FOR MRYONE First Woman's Church presents mootbly forgiveness rituals for men, women and children, focusing tn September on "An Amends to Mothers.• The next ritual will begi°n,ot 10 a.m. Sun· day at The La~t Thing, 270 E. 17th St, Costa Mesa. (949) 64S. 6211. PMYER CAN IE PRAC11CAL Fitch said the inmates at Ctu- no Women's Prison respect hear- ing about a comedian's farruly, even if it's in a joking manner. ·Because so many of them have problems with their fami- lies ... and it's good for them an(i healthy for them Ito hear the jokes) because so many of them are hurting so bad.• Ramsey said he honors his mother in the way he treats anu speaks to her. "Bnt it doesn't mean I can't joke about the mis.takes she has made,• he said. ·1 think that's part of the catharsis of humor: laughing at our frailty.• ture titled "Sell Healing from a Spiritist Eye" at 7:30 p.m. Sept 22 at the Orange Coast Unitari- an Universalist Church, 1259 Victoria St , Costa Mesa. (714) 449-3255. WORKSHOPS WOMEN'S GROUP The PresbyJ:erian Church of the Covenant will begin a 12-week women's Bible study group at 7 p.m. Wedn~y at 2850 Fairview Road. Costa Mesa.. (714) 557-3340. WEEKLT EVENTS St. Barnabas Orthodox Church of Costa Mesa will hold a fund-~ raiser "sock ~op• from 4 to 8 p.m. Sept. 10 in St Luke's Ortho. dox Church's fellowship ball, 13261 Dunklee Ave., Garden Grove. A banl:l will p&ay 1950s and '60s music. Proceeds wW benefit St Barnabas' koo J>to. The Latest Thing arid the Rev. Crystal Bujol will ofter "The Practk:al Art of.Prayer & Medita· tion • from 11 a.m: to 1 p.m. Thuilday. 1be. program ia at 270 E. 11th St., COit.a Mes)l. Pree. (949) 645-6211. , IUNESS SUPPORT GROUP Jewish Family Service of . jects. (114) 4~587. OPEN HOUSE SBJCHOT SElfHEAUNG Tempie Isaiah of Newport Beach.COnservative will host an Open House SeJichbt -prayers and preparation for the High Dfvaldo Franco, a Brazilian lec- turer and autho!• will give a lee· Orange County sponsors an ongoing Jewish healing support group for people experiencing chronic illness. The group wW meet at 7 p.m. Thursda)'I at Jewish Family Service, 250 East • Boker St., Suite G, Costa Mela. Pree. Pre·registration required. (714} 4(6-4950. WEITHEI IND SURF Y'lMPUATUllES Balboa - 7°"65 Corona del Mar 7°"65 Costa Mesa (' 74167 Newport Beach 7°"65 • Ne\ovport Co.st 7°"65 W..-c.AST A tn*I tQUthwesterly swell will dellwr Mts In the waist-high.,. .. todly. • LOCA"°" Im v.dge ...... 1 ............. 1•lM NltJpot\-. ... --.... 1·) tw llldde\.-.............. 1·)"' .,., JtttY.-...... -.. 1·) tw ~ ........................ t~JM TIDES TODAY First low 6:26 •.m ............ '""""" 1.1 First high 12:19 a.m ..................... 4.7 Se<ond low 7:17 p.m ...................... 1.3 Second high • 12:AI p.m ..................... 5.1 IUNDAY First low 7:0S •.m ...................... 1.8 Fint high 1:191.mu .................... A.1 5e<ond low 1;32 p.m ................. ft .... 1.5 Second high 1:JI p.m .... -... -ff ........ 5.0 POLICE FllES COSTA MESA • 1tth Street: Some wee youth·a led hllf'ISelf to sleep after his kid-size bike was snatched from his home In the 800 block Wednesday afternoon. The bike wat only worth S100, but it ~ently proved Irresistible fof • ptiSlng prowler. • w.t 1tth So.rt: She~ tattooed, lNI was ~ted and h W6 J;lroke. But that last detail didn't stop a woman from getting • trim at thf Gemlnk IMU1;y s.ton In the 700 bloQ Aug. 26. The woman treated herMff to • U2 halteut Mld then skipped on the bUi._dalmtng she had to go to her air fof the money Police desC:rlbe tht wom.n ., ~ • red •nd ~le tattoo, Mong with tongue and b.lly pterdngs. Her hairstyle • ..._. ....._.., CAlll "short." ..... , ,,_.,,, , .. . ' ( , . , .. ... Daily PJlot SaJurdoy, Septon\ber 2, 2000 A3 Confus~on crojJs Up in the midst of antigrowth and development debates T hese are vecy confus- ing times for the resi- dents of Newport Beach. On one hand, the City Council 1s· detennined to limit the growth of John Wayne Airport -not a t any cost, as we see by their stub- born reluctance to admit the defeat in El Toro. And on the other hand, we.see that all but one of the council mem- bers appears to have voiced opposition to the no-growth !"f ~&Sure s....:!:!>at opposition lS a dear signal there are developments to be devel- oped and that they are.good for Newport.Beach. I'm confused, but that's 9.0t too difficult a t{ick these Clays. According to the Ney.o- port Beach City Council, growth appears to be good if it's more and bigger office buildings, more homes, more hotels to get the , tourist dollar and more and bigger shopping centers to increase the tax base. But Steve Smith WHAT'S UP? growth is not good if it means a bigger J ohn Wayne to bring all those people here. As J said, I'm con- fused. The competing growth Measures S and T (have yo4 noticed that that ugrowth" is also the word used lo indi- cate somethin g foreign on the body which needs to be removed?) are. backed by the forces that stand to ben- efit most from their passdge. In the case of the developer- supported measure T, there ···-·--' ~· is a sho'rt list of l~cal compa- njes that have sent in $5,000 or more to help it along. These companies have ~very right to do so and should not be chastised for their support of the mea- sure. I do not support Mea- sure T, but if it is· in the best interests of these firms to see it pass. they should be free to spend every legal ·· cent they wish to ensure its passage. To demand other- wise would open the door to the constant financial regu- lation of such measures. Do we want private schools to be forbidd en lo support a voucher initiative? And ·do we then bar the teacher organizations from con- tributing money to fight its passage? No, we do not. Moderate development, thoughtful, planned con- struction, is a common theme in this space. Any- one who needs an example ol how the process should work need only review the recent ~xcbanges between Standard Pacific Homes, the Costa Mesa City Coun- cil and the residents near Adams and Mesa Verde. After much publi~ debate and negotiation, a dirt lot will soon be 69 beautiful homes, down from the 90 that was planned only a . few weeks ago. Just down the street, Harbor Center ·went through some.itying times to emerge as a beau- tiful, vibrant additiol1 to the city. The developer, ICI, worked closely with its neighbors to ensure their pec1ce and quiet. This is the way it is sup- p6sed to work. Locals should not have to force a referen- dum down the Uiroat o~ out-of-touch City Council in order to get their way. The residents of Newport Beach clearly do not want an -expanded John Wayne Air- port, c1nd they may soon send a signaJ to the council VITASOY Natural Soy Beverage that they also do not want a hotel at the Dunes, a busier Fashion Island or any other "people magnet: The airport issue is an easy one. The City Council, which has already decided that it can approach the county's board of supervi- sors for support to limit John Wayne's expansion. should get i~ fingers on the help- ing hands of the El Toro Reuse Planning Autheri.ty. Either silly pride or the µtsistence of developers, or both~ has prevented them from doing so. In the mearr time, the 2005 John Wayne curfew clock ticks and instead of spending time fighting a bigger airport with the rest of the.county -most of which also does not want a larger airport - they'll spend their time in court. And when Measure S passes, instead of obeying the wishes of their con - stitue nts, my guess is that they'll take that one to Made With Whole Organic Sog Beans ,... """' UnlMIJetal s,,outed lt1lole court, too. What a good time to be an attorney. The stubborn, arrogant, poorly planned El Toro posi- tion of the Newport Beach City council has been exposed by their conflicting opposition to Measure S. The El Toro tide has turned and npw most residents believe plans for an airport at El Toro should be scrapped (no sci- entific study here, jtiSt my anaJysis _from reading and listening) in favor of an all- out assault against curfew exparisioq by county. state or federal means. This process should have begun the day after Measure F won. A City Council that does not obey the command of lts constituents should not expect their support at elec- bon time. On that, there is no confusion. , • STEVE SMITH is a Costa Mesa res· ident and fr~lance writer. Readers can leave.a message for him on the Daily Pilot hotline at (949) 642· 6086. - Crystal Geyser Alpine Spring Water • Original • v.mma· • Carob • Cocoa • Carrot Raisin lf1-t ..... to &I Bottled at the Source • Ught Original • Ugl}t \aniDa • UghtCoooa • Unsweetened REG. '2.59 • ·G=la • Ginger Zing • Herilape Raspberry •HempP&s • SogPlus REG. '4.l)!J 11.5 oz. • MultiGrain SI39 •Sun Seed •WhoieRw • Millet & lUce REG. '1.99 . 14 o:z. 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Maltl111er1111 ~f'~ • • .... *'· ...... .. a:;;i;r ......... -1 ... ·<XN>rnUD ·&Soa•AM lllll'l.tl ·- $~$~ OUANTUM SEE -Stwlt••nt ·~~-~!! • I A4 Soturdoy, September 2, 2000 Daily Pilot Latino activistS praise state driver's liCense bill _ license must have a Social Security number and proof of legal1esidence. • _ •People want the opportu- • Others say proposed legislation would allow immigrants .to apply for a license while waiting to receive permanent residency approval. nity to make themselves bet- that would allow them to ter and they will find a way to apply for a California driver's be in this country,• said Costa license. Mesa resident and Latino JefVttfer Kho DMY PILOT "It everyone who is dri-· ving has a license, they will have insurance, and that will be. reduce a burden on the state of California,• Madueno said. "Take licenses away from those drunkards who are killing people. But if those people who are working to support their families are dri- ving without a license, that ls a liability for the rest of us, U we hit a drlver with no license or insurance, our premiums COSTA MESA -Local immigrants waiting to be granted permanent residency could be getting behind the wheel sooner than they thought with this week's pas- sage of a state Assembly Bill In Costa Mesa, where community activist Paty there is a high population of Madueno. · + Latlno immigrants, communi-. Madueno, who wrote a let- ty activists are celebrating'> ter in su~rt of the bill, said what they consider a victory. allowing residents applying Currently, anyone applying for legal status to have lice~ for a California driver's es will protect otherdrivers. . go th.rough the sky.· Freecl0111 From: .. WEIGHT PROBLEMS EATING DISORDERS ADDICTIONS DEPRESSION Affordable, Confidential Professional Help • Former Betty Ford Center Clinician • Director·of Drug & Alcohol Treatment · •Author lSf Gifts of Sobriety & other self help books Call for info: Barbara Cole, Mn (714) 429-0888 "God's Promise To Straighten Your Paths" (Proverb!> 3:1-14) '~NOB.,f:W'S rat\I' ·····~ ( .... ,( .. 'ie111r<My. ~wnba 2. 1000. J1)() P.M. S..ncby, Sq>rnnbtt 3, 2000. 8:}0 ec 10-IS A.M. FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST. SCIENTIST 3303 Via Udo Newport Beoch ' 673-1340 or 673-61 50 Olwch 10 am & 5 i:m. Sunday School I 0 am Wednes:lay Meebngs 8 i:m SECOND CHURtH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST 3100 Pacific V~w DI. Newport Beech 644-2617 or 675-4661 Oiwch !Oarn Sunday School I 0 am Wednesday Meetings 8 pm & I st Wednesday 12 noon l'-.llH'.11 < Ill H< 11 The Church of Yahweh www.yhwh.com Pastor Ahyh \ l 1 I I I< I I 1 I" I Cotta Mesa MISA VlltDI \ • UNmD Ml1'HOOl5T CHUttCH 1701 .._, C.M. 1 MA God-ccnrcrcd parish communny, imtructcd by the Word oCGod and rcn~cd by lhc Sacraments" Our Lady Queen of Angels ST. MARK PRF.sBYTERIAN CHURCH Wot lhlp a Chufth School 1130 ancf 1 OtOO a.m. Or. Rld,ord (714) 979·823A t I 111 I" I I \ '-. .. --:::,,,. . 2046 Mar Vista Drive: Nc:wpol't Beach, California 92660 (949)644-0200 Fax (949)644-1349 Rao. Mon1ignor Willi.am P. McLaughlin, Pastor LITURGIES: Sarurday, S p.m. \Cantor), Sunday, 7:00 (Quicc), 8:30 (Conrcmpohlry), 10:00 (Choir). 11:30 a.m. (Cantor) and S:OO p.m. (Conccmpor.uy) TEMPLE ISAIAH .OF NEWPORT BEACH (Conservative) ,r Wltftf1tf AU 0&1r Me1den Anll Frle1th A·Verw Happr New Ye.r 5761 HIGH HOLY DAY SERVICES 240 I lrYl1te A'e11u, New,,rt Bue' RABBI MARC S. RUBINSTEIN 41114 TEMPLE CHOIR 8WCHOT-0pu HOllM SA~Y HPT. 2:1 114!0 PM ROSH HASHANAH FRIDAY l!PT. 29 1:00 PM SATURDAY S£PT. JO '''° AM SATURDAY S!.PT. JO 11JO PM SUNDAY OCT. I '''° AM SUNDAY OCT. I 7t00 PM OCT. ' '''° PM OCT. ' 12100 ... OCT. ' 'tOO PM PM "Open Arms and Open Minds" Worship 9:30 Newport <:eater Uniccd M"ecbodiR Cbaircb Rev. Cathl«n Cooa, Pastor 160 I ~fJUCrilC_ Ave. comer of Marguerite and San Joaquin Hills Rd (949) 6"-074S Fine Ullltcd MeCllcMUIC 0.rdl oteo....Mm 421 w .. ltdi Strid. Cou Mm FeldtllelWGr'llWpJ ...... Ridllwd L £ ..... ,.._ Owdl 8dloel ...._A lt:I.- MJ.s.48-7727 am.c Clliudt hf cite Sea tl11itcd MahoCtilC 1400..,, .... 8hd. ~ 1*dl 9.00LID -=.Sd*li *11111 .. ,~ ... -• (wichdWda.,) 11itlftDi~I.~~ ~ ,,., • HMIOR CHRISTIAN CHURCH _i (DINlplea of Chrtlt) 24011Ntne-.1tl1t11a1Ullef .. ..,.,. hlcll Suftdey WOl'llllfl • 10:00AM Not everyone in Costa Mesa supports the bill, how- ever. City Coundln\an Joe Erickson said he think$ immigrants should become legal residents before getting the advantages that coJJ?e with being tegal residents or citizens, such as the right to drive. •Certain things I think should be given to anyone regardless, such as the ri~ht to eat or the right to live safely, but driving is not one Man robs Costa Mesa bank, flees; losses unknown Costa Mesa police are 'searC:hing for a suspect who slipped a note to a teller and robbed a bank Friday. A teller at California Fed- eral Savings at 2700 Harbor Blvd. reported that at 6 p .m. a man passed a note demand- ing money and claiming that of them,• be said. "There are lots of ways to get around without driving, such . as pubU.c transportation or &· carpool. I <:ertainJy agree with helping people expe- dite the legal process, but L don't agree with giving someone the right to drive before giving them legal sta- tus.• The proposed legislation, Assembly Bill 14.63, is slated to go before Gov. Gra'y Davis for his consideration. he had a weapon, said Costa Mesa police Sgt. Burt Santee. The robber took the mon- ey and fied out the bank's side door. He was Last seen running northbound on Peterson Place. It is unknown how much cash was stolen. No one was hurt and no weapon was seen. The suspect is described as a white male in his early 30s. He was wearing a yellow T- shirt, stone-washed jeans and a faded, blu~ t>Meball cap. He reportedly has acne scars and a thin cleansbaven face. He is between 5-foot, 10- inches and six feet tall, with a mediwn build. Anyone with information regarding this crime is asked to call the Costa Mesa Police De partment at (714) 754- 5280. Labor Day trash collection delayed Due to the Labor Day Hol- iday, Newport Beach neigh- borhoods that usually have trash collection Mondays will have it collected Tuesday. All other areas in the city will get refuse collected one day later than usual throughout the •1 t rest of the week. ' SAINT JAMIS CHURCH . EPISCOPAL ~:m.; n. v.y ltl't. Canon Oowicl Andwicn Rldar ' 3209 VICI lido ~Beodl 949/675-0210 Streets in the city will not be swept Monday. - JEFF & LYLEEN EWING GE'ITING CREATIVE When a selller lists a home with a real estate professional, a lot of brainstonning follows. Who a.re the potential buyers. where do they live and wOft? how can they be reached effectively with infonnatiof that will attract them to th1s panicular property? Professional Realtors use a variety of marteting teehniques tailored to the individual home: they are selling. This may 'nclude different buyer lists to find potential purchasers • telephone and direct mail mait.eting. colorful flyers. seminars and real estac.e and community publicationsa. Contacts wiU be made lO other agenlS who sell homes in the area to encounage them to show. the home to prospective buyers . Realtors combine pro-active nwteting with realiltiic pncing to spell resuJts for their sellers. Lyleen and Jeff have 28 consecutive years of real estate experience in Newport Beach. They ~Coldwell ... ker'• #l llfllll. For profeuiooal 11C1Vlce or ldvice with all your rUI estaco need!!. call lhc £ ...... at (H9)7ll-Wo ·- Put a few words ·to work for you. . Call the l>dPYPi>t C1ASSIFW 1Q.J111 •~-~~-------~~~-----........ ~~--;...f.·~ ....... ...:.... ...... ~--....... ------,-------n1 ........ --....... __ ----.....,.------------~~----.:.-----·----'--......_ _____________ _.~ .... !llll! ., • I ,. ... -. Daity Pilot Saturday, September 2, 2000 AS . Fountain for Youth helps local students ' FOUNTAIN FOR YOtJTH HELPING YOUTH: The coins tossed into the foun- tains at Fashion Island come back to help youth of the community, said Roger McGonegal, Fountain of Youth Chamnan for the three Newport Beach Rotary Clubs and a member of the Newport-Balboa Club. The coin allocation com- mittee consists of McGone- gal, Mary Cockley and Gene Koch of the Newport Beach Sunrise Club; Thyme Hamp- ton, Newport-BalbOd; and Pamel a M orris, Newport- lrvine. Members of the three Rotary clubs clean, dry and bag the cotns in a project ini- tiated several years dgo with local Rotary clubs of Ensena- da. Accorcilng lo M cGone- gal, the Ensenada clubs noticed pr-OgrdffiS and money usualJy go from Americd to M exico and members want- ed to see it go the other way. They helped initiate the Fountain Ior Youth µrogram . in cooperation with Fashion Island and lhe Irvine Co. The allocation committee earmarked $2,800 J.owd!d the purchase of "Reading by Nine" books for the school librartes at Whittier, Wilson and Pomona elementary SChoo1s; $2,000 for d - preschool mtervenllon pro- gram at the Newport-Mesa Unified School Distnct; dlld $1.200 to support future pro- grams of Interact Clubs Jim de Boom A COMMUNITY & CLUBS being formed at local rugh schools. BAGK TO SCHOOL: Lions District 4-14 Gov. Dan- ny Mayer will be going back to school Tuesday to join members of the Harbor Mesa Lions Club in distributing school supply boxes to first- graders at Whlttier Elemen- tary School in Costa M esa . The dub project has been ·headed by Joan Parks, who collected 200 boxes for mem- bers to decorate and fill with supplies. ZONTA MIXER: The Zon- ta Club of Newport Harbor will hold its annual mixer 'from 5:30 lo 7:30 p.m. Tuurs- day at Waters Restaurant in lrvine, 4615 Barranca Park- way. The mixer is being held to tntrod~ce prospective new members to Zonta lntema- tional. Wme, hors d'oeuvres, coffee and tea will be served. Zonla International is a worldwide service orgaruza- tion of executives in busi- ness and the professions working together to advance the status of women. The group has 37 ,000 members in more that 1..174 clubs in 66 coun- tries. Since its founding in 1948, the local Zonta Cham- ber has contributed more than $750,000 to various local nonprofit organizations that support the needs of women. children, seniors .and homeless people. For reservations contact Barbara Sisson a{ (714) 984- 0441 . The cost is $20 per per- son. THE FRENCH CON- NECTION: Karen Evarts, president of the Newport Beach Sister City Assn., reported d delegation of N ewport Bedch Sister City _ members has returned from d Bastille Udy visit to its sis- ter Clty of Antibes, on the French Riviera. The group tourc>d older pdClS of the city, which ddle back to ancient Greece, dS well as the new- er (and ddnling) entertain- ment district of Judn Les Pins. An incomparable fire- works display in oearby Cannes. a sumptuous dinner overlooking the enltre·Cote d'Azur, a side trip lo Monte Carlo and a champagne reception at City Hall rounded out the Vls1t. The goal of the trip, m add11..ton to fun and friendship, was to discuss the details of a 2001 Landscape Design Construction Maintenance .- 2025 W. Balboa Blvd. Ste D Newport Beach, Ca 92663 .. (949) 6 73-5646 -.1n llnd ._One of ct. ar.c..t 8•1eadon• of Pool·Tablea in 0rtRtge CouftCy . THE MISSION student exchange for 15- and 16-year-olds. Call Marie Atkins at 760- 0437, or Karen Evarts at 673- 1432 for information. To get in the mood for "things French,• plan to attend the weeklohg French Festival Sept. 17-23 in our Newport Beach Central ~ibrary. Events are being · sponsored by the City of Newport Beach and the Sis- ter City.Assn. TifE DEBATE: Speak Up Newport will hold a debatP between the supporters of Measure S (the GreenlJght initiativ~) and Measure T (the.Traffic Phasing irutiat1ve) at 6 p.m. Wednesday at the Riverboat Cafe, 151 E. Coast Highway. Speaking on behalf of the Measure S w1U be Phil Arst and Tom H yans. Measure T will be presented by former mayors Clarence Turner and Tom Edwards. The evenmg will begin with a reception at 5:30 p.m. Din- ner foUows and participants can receive $.5 off dny en tree. Speak Up Newport Presi- dent Carol Hottman has recruited BUI Lobdell, eclitor of the Tunes Community News, to be the moderator. Se.atittg 1s limited. The debate wilJ air Channel 3 m the coming weeks. Be sure to be ir)Iormed about both mea- sures before you vol~. S):RVICE CLUB MEET- INGS nus COMING . WEEK: Want to getniore involved in your community, make new friends, network. or to give something back to your community? 1\Y a ser- vice club! You are U.viled to attend a dub meeting this coming week. Many clubs will buy your first guest meal for you. SATURDAY 6:30 p.m. -The Newport Beach Lions Club will meet at the Newport Beac)l Yacht Club for a program by Kathy Leek of Adventures of Sea Yacht Charters. TUESDAY 7:15 a.m, -The Newport Beach Sunnse Rotary Club wiU meet ·at the Balboa Bay Club ford Club Assembly on membersrup. 6:30 p.~. -The Costa MC'sa-Newport Hdrbor Lions Club will meet dl Costd M esa Golf and Country Club. WEDNESDAY 7:15 a.m. -The South Codst M etro Rotary Club will meet at the Center Club Newport Harbor Kiwanis Club will meet at the Univer· sity Athletic Club. Noon -Orange Coast Exchange Club meets at the Bahia-Corinlluan Yacht Club for a business meeting. 1> p.m. -The N ewport- Balboa Rotary Club will meet at the Bahia CorinUuan Yacht Club to hear Leroy Fulton, vice president of Hope International Universi- ty. THURSDAY 7:15 a.m. -The Costa M esa Orange Coast Break- fast Lions Club will meet at Mllru's Cafe for a bustness meeting. Noon -K.twarus Club of Costa Mesa will meet at the Holiday lnn. Newport Beach- Corona del Mar K.Jwarus Club will meet at the Bahia Conri'Uuan Yacht The Exchange Club of Newport Harbor Will meet dt the Riverboat Restaurdnt. The Newport lrvinP Rotary Club will meet at the lrvtne. • COMMUNnY & CUJ85 Is pub- lished every Saturday in the Daill Pilot. Send your service dub s meeting infofmation by Fax to (949) 660-8667, e·ma1I to j de- boomOaol.com or by mail to 2082 S.E. Bristol, Suite 201, Newport· Beach, CA 92660-1740. SABATINO'S Lunch • Dinner • Sunday Brunch 251 Shipyard Way • Newport Beach Please call for hours. directions & reservations. : (949) 723-0621 : Irvine · Ranch Market Quality Fresh Food! •Farm Fresh Produce That Taste Great!•Fine Wines & Cheeses From Around The World. •Sushi To Go!! All Our Sushi is made Fresh Here!" •Fresh Cut Flowers & Custom Floral Arrangements Made By Our On Site FlorisL Purchase Any Packag e of HOT DOGS or SAUSAGE and Receive a ttfREE". JAR of BOAR 'S HFAI> 9oz. Delicatessen Style Mustard ,/' .. ,., . . .. ,. .,; ~ •• .... ,., .. .. • .. ... ""' "' ' ,, ,; .. .. .. .. J ::-. ... --.. .. \ , ... A6 Saturday, September 2, 2000 c Doily Pilot . Tickets available for upcoming Taste of Newport event . / T he 12th 8.nnual Taste of NeW)'.lort is coming up Sept. 15-17. There's a special on admis· sion and taste scrip lfor ,:30. It's a $51 value. If you pur- chase a passport now you'll get admission to all three days of the event and $15 in scrip. The scrip can be used · Greer1YYfaer --for samples from more than 30 restaurants p.nd 15 winer-BEST BUYS ies. There will also be enter- tainment by the Beach Boys, Berlin, Wang Chung and Kool and the Gang. Chll- Expectant moms show~ love the new Japanese <lren 12 and under get in for Weekend Maternity shop free, dnd taste samplings that's opened at Fashion are $1 to $5. A portion of the Island in Newport Beach. It's proceeds wtll benefit near Sam Goody and the Orang~ County chanltes. Haagen-Dazs ice cream Passports can be purchased shop. lf you attend its grand be calling (949) 1.29-4400, opening fashion show Satur- through the We b site dl day from 1 :30 to 2:30 p.m. http://www.newporlbeach .co you'll receive a certificate m or stopping by the New -good toward a free Hug- port Harbor Ared Chdmber brand T-shirt. information: of Commerce ofh ce a t 1470 (949) 644-5468. Jamboree Road m Newport Beach. Zany Brainy is stocked Senior Care Community Plf'mw Conw vi,.;if our Jourrieys0 .: ">t·i~hhorhood Prol(rom Tht• Fi1wi-f in Alz lwimer't1 und l>t•mt•nc in l,jvinl(I full with back-to-school merchandise for kids. There is laptop just for girls ages 6 and up called Non-Stop Girl, on sale for $39.99. It's got a swivel display, glow- Ing bubble light and a sec;ret treasure drawer. It comes with nine language 8!15 and nine math pro- 1 grams and seven other activities. There's a Kids Challenge PC for $24.99 - it's a laptop for kids ages 4 and up. There are 20 built- in learning activities includ- ing beginning letter, spelling, rhyming. counting, addition, subtraction, logic and more. It comes with · three levels of difficulty to help challenge kids. A math bingo game for kids ages 6 and up is on sale for_ $8.99. It helps reinforce adding and subtracting skills by uti- llzing a bingo concept. Gel pens come in two-pack and five-pack sizes in scented and regular for $2.99 to (',.,,,. 11 C "' .. •• .,,,,..,., .. d by Blr1rhrr !ff.nlor ProJ>"rllf'•, @ 11• • ~N.UOtNt I " ,. hlrh Im• bto«n Jedlrn14"fl lo rftrln11 for 949_760_2800 uud ,...nfnf( Srnlor• •lnr,. I'>~'\ :NO I .... < :01:1,,1 I Jwv .. Coro~M Mar info@c·mwnc·ove.com STRAWBERRY FARMS GOLF CLUB -LABOR DAY SPECIAL 2 for 1 green fees, after 12.:00 pm (Golfer must praent dlia ad to receive apecial ofttr) \ Strawbeny Pa:nm ii prOudly eervins cliMcr 11napda19 ud Frida)'I, from Spm to 8pm For raenatiOGI, call (949) ,,t .. 1111 11 Saawberry F.nn. Roid • ......_ c..lifDmia V'..at ut u WIWW.8bawt..a1fll Flf'ca• "' $5.99. Kids love Razor scoot- ers and at Zany Brainy they are on sale for $79.99. It tea- twes a carry strap, foot brake and in-line skate-type wheels. Zany Brainy is in the Corona del Mar Plaza, 900 Avocado in Corona del ~ar. Information: (949) 640· 5131. Joan & David is having a going-out:Of-b~iJ}.ess sale at its South Coast Plaza loca- tion. The store is filled with shoe!>, some clothing and accessories. Everything is reduced 40% to 60%. The store is expected to close mid:September. Joan & David is on the second level of South Coast Plaza, near Gucci and Macy's. lnforrna- tion: (71 4) 549-2125. l Bloomingdale's is having a great weekend sale through Tuesday. Inside the store you'll find bargains on selected ladies' suits reduced F:im1ly Owm·d & Opo:r:iced Since 19<>"5 2198 L.akewood Blvd. ' Long Beach 562.597-~311 30%;.100% cashmere sweaters at $79; ladie's coats reduced 30%; selected hand· bags reduced 25%; Calvin IOein underwear -any two pair for $12; selected bras, children's clothing and men's outerwear reduced 25% to 30%. ln the Bloomingdale's Home Store, there are big reductions on towels, place settings, bed and bath linens, cookware, Krups coffee male·..., ers, area rugs and how;e- waresreduced 20% to 45%. BloomingdaJe's is at Fashion Island in Newport Beach. information: (949) 729-6600. Celestlno's is now offering freezer packs full of meats for the whole family. The typical freezer pack contains five pounds of top sirloin steak, three pounds rib eye steak, five pounds marinated kebabs, three pounds New York steak, five pounds ground chuck, five pounds tri-tip roast and six pounds LIVING-DINING ( BEDROOM -HOME OFFICE Curnmtly o-114 mt/lion of Mlcluuls l/fStocll! "~ore 25 mlnuta from most Sa. Oron11e County dtlu F1mlly Ow~ & 0P"~l~ Since 196S www munl'Olfurnoture.com chicken breast -all for $199. Freeier pocks can be changed to suit yow needs. Celestino's is the best local meat market. It also carries fresh fish, frozen meals, fresh turkey jerky, fresh salsa and Boar's Head dell products. It's at 270 E. 17th St. in Costa Mesa. Information: (949) 642- 7191. Famous F~twear is cele- brating its grand opening at the Harbor Center, 2300 Harbor"'Blvd. in Costa Mesa. There's a back-to-school, half-price sale. You can buy one pair of your favorite brand of shoe and receive the second pair of equal or lesser value at half-price price. Famous Footwear car- ries Nike, Skechers, New Balance and Adidas. • BEST BUYS appears on Thursdays and Saturdays. Send Information to Greer Wylder at 330 W. Bay St., Cos- ta Mesa 92627, or via fax at (949) 646-4170. !:'!.1!~~9:~ J 2189 Lakewood Blvd. Long Beach 562.986-5305 "' i 'I ', I . I I ~' I I ' I , , I I : I ' ~; I 1 ! I I \ I , I \ ~ 1 ( ' • "' I I . i l I , I \ I I ) I ' • \ , , I . ' ' I I \ I ('1 20°/o OFF All custom Framing& Framed Prints with this coupon Costa Mesa • (949) 646-8603 Not valid with any other offers_. Please present coupon at time of purchase, • Offtt expires 9--30-00 I •· Daily Pilot Satvrday, s.pe.mber 2, 2000 A 7 Falt Offers-all of us .a chance to r<!/)iSit our own homes . I. love .the line in •You've Scrabble board, order Chi-~gs frQm 0 the nurse~~~ balls and then •Got Mail• wh~n Tom nese food, invite another These plants will put you in grow into their various Ha.nlcg tells Meg Ryan he family over and enjoy the · an autumnal mood the shapes and sizes. It were as walls of her son's bedroom. ~er the plaster dried, she used subtle shades of green and gold paint to make the large leaf impressions stand out. The result was fabu- lous. woUld send her •a bouquet earlier evenings. minute they're planted. They if each one had a personality of freshly sharpened pencils ff With the change of sea-grow like mad and reward of its own. 1\vo weeks before to celebrate fall -if be only sons come changes in the you with instant gratifica-Halloween we harvested knew wbere she lived. garden. Experts say fall is tion. more than 30 special trea- Fteshly sharpened pencils. I the most important planting One year we planted sures. We shared our bounty ': know just what he means. and feedi.tlg time of the year. pumpkins in the rose garden. with neighbors, teachers and For me, Labor Day is sum- mer's last fling. Even though the best beach days are just ahead, they have a different flavor. A fall flavor with September, fall, school -.,.--Anything planted in autumn It must have been perfect • friends. We felt as if we were they all bring on a mood of Koren W19ht will develop deep roots by timing, perfect soil and P'er· giving away small membei's tbeir·own. Red plaid lunch NO PlAQ LIKE HOME the spring ~d reward you feet weather that year of our family to those' near . - boxes. New school shoes. with. bigger and better because these plants grew in and dear.to us. homier evenings, team prac- tices and new books to explore. 'It marks a transition back to school, back to schedules and back ~ mak- in~ the house a home. · ' Football games. Sparkling blooms six m.onths 'from now. bionic leaps and bounds. As the leaves begin to clean desks. Fresh starts. candles on the dinner table And now is the fune to The pumpkin plan.is soon turn, fall inspires us ~ other The celebration of Sep-and get out the cloth nap-think about bulbs. Some overtook the roses, the drive-ways. tember in our house calls for kins. Fall feels like soup and , bulbs need refrigeration for way and the picket fence. One friend used some of a shift in thought. Time to warm bread for dinner. several weeks before planti-We had pumpkins growing, nature's bounty as a spring- get a little more organized, Roasted anything. Fall is a ng. Think about planting literally, right before our very board for decorating her time to get the languid sum-great time to crack open the freesia, narcissus, and tulips. eyes. home. She used large • • KAREN WIGHT is a Newport Beach resident. Her column runs saturdays. mer frame of mind geared cookbooks. If you haven't planted · It was such a treat to sycamore leaves to imprint up for more productive Fall also is a great time to pumpkins yet, get some watch the flowers tum into into the wet plaster on the thinking. check the stash of firewood. I concentrate more on the Fires in the fireplace on cold house in the fall. Somehow, evenings are one of the the change of seasons makes many joys of. the season. it more important to set the Wrap up herb bundles to table, set the tempo and throw into the fireplace keep the energy level a little along with the wood. Cinna- higher. It seems like a good mon sticks, anise pods, bay time to set out a large bowl leaves, rosemary branches: filled with red, green and They all smell like the . yellow apples. Or better yet, change of seasons -scents' get one of your old lunch , that are earthy and spicy. boxes out of storage and use Fall feels like board it as a serving dish for after-games and cards on a Friday school snacks. night -a great time to Dinners seem more ··nestH with your family and· important in the fall. I set friends. A time to pull out the OPEN AN ATM REBATE CHECKING ACCOUNT WITH DIRECT DEPOSIT AND RECEIVE A $100 BONUSI* '·L · , S FIRST REPUBLic BANK It's a priVilege to serve you• NOW Of'IN NIWPOltT' llACHICOllONA DIL MM ·2fm E COllt ~.Colone Otl Mer 1~ * • 1:>116~~ 1~1>..i ~-~~~~ · Native American Bakery . Hours ~ 2834 Newport Blvd. Tues. Weds, Thurs (29th Street at the Alley) 7 am-3 pm Balboa Peninsula ·PLEASE HELP :us aVE PELICANS 949 675-2909 These threatened Bi'own Pelicans are sick and suffering from botulism after eating bacteria laden fish and they need our help. You can help us save the lives of these magnificent animals, nurse them back to health and set them free again. Your gift of $25 will feed and care for one sick pelican for one week. The Wildlife Care Center treats over 5,000 animals each year. Your gift of $50 or $100 will help us save the lives of injured and orphaned pe licans, grebes, herons, OP'?Ssums, raccoons, foxes and squirrels. Most of these animals are orphaned or injured as a result of negative human contact. Please. help us save wildlife by sending your generous gift today. , Yest I want to help save the lives of injured and orphaned pelicans and other birds and small mammals. Here is my 1?ft of: 0 $25 0 S50 0 $100 0 Other: $. ___ _ Stole Zip Thank you for your gift. You will receive a receipt for tax purposes. ' WETLANDS AND WILDLIFE CARE CENTER 21900 Pacific Coast Hwy .. Huntington Beach, CA 92646 Phone (714) 374·5587 Please make your check 'i>ay~ble t.o: HBWC Wildlife Fund \ . VOfl -emerr-- !fnterlaa ' . . DAY Sii.i 21·71" ... * *~ SAU INDS· IN 2 DAYSI * ............. Lei. c ................. o,.lrl ' . A8 Saturday, Sepetmber 2, 2000 EMU LEX CONTINUED FROM A 1 that publlshed the inaccu- rate information about the company. But sbe says she's- 1urprised by the lack of attention that was given to getting the story right. "Bloomberg bied to verify some facts,• she said. •obvi· ously they dfdil't have any success. They could have called NASDAQ surveil· lance, made one phone call." Part of the problem, said Lisa Geffs, public relations .and investor relations man- ager for the Irvine-based company Procom Technolo- gy, is West Coast compa- nies don't generally start work until the New York markets have been trading for several hours. East Coast writers have to report on companies when the representatives of the com- panies are still asleep. "It makes us especially vulnerable• when incorrect information is disbibuted ear- ly in the morning, Geffs said. To remedy that weak- ness, Geffs says she tells Business Wire, the news service Procom uses, to call her at home when any facts are questionable. "I've bad calls at 11 o'doc::k on Sunday night.• she sakL "They know they can do it• Smtt Allen. a spokesman for the Newport Beach inte.. grated drcoit manufadurer Conexant, said his company has the same policy in plaoe with Business Wire. Jn the wake of the scam, companieJ say they will work to add additional lay- ers of security to their news handling. . "We'll post the press releases on our Web site before they even go out" so investors can verify the information, Getts said. "We've had conversations with Business Wire in the last couple of days specific to this issue,· Allen said. "We're open to ideas in temlS of ways to tighten the operation up" including the possible u,c;e of passwords to confirm the validity of press releases. Schnug said Emulex will also be changing the way it submits press teleases to ~ Business Wll'e in order to improve security. But ultimately, she said, there is no final way to be absolutely secure in the volatile w.orld of high-tech. "I ~ if someone's determined enough (to ere· ate trouble), they'll find a way,• Schnug said. www .fisl<inassociotes.com .. ~ . WATER CONTINUED FROM 1 ' • Dave Kitt, Newport's deputy dty manager, wrote back to the associAtion with his suggestions tor dealing with the situation. •There are not a lot of answers,• he said this week. •1 wish there more:" The association's letter asked about the possibility -·BLOOD CONTINUED FROM 1 Although a regular donor since her college 41lys, John- son said she stumbled into the blood gathering business by chance. "I hardly knew what a red blood cell wa~ when some- body called me to be a recruiter,• said Johnson, who on Friday was dressed in red from throat to toe. With less than 2% of eligi- ble donors ready to face the needle, and the World War 1J generatio.q ~ which is highly committed to donating blood -dying at a rate of 1,000 each day nationwide, John- son faces a tough struggle to come up with enough of the burgundy liqui~ to save peo· I eceive oronly~99 . 2036 Quail ., Newport Beach, CA • • of diverting '1.rban runoff from nearby storm drains into the 1ewer system. argu· ing the situation "demands (the city's] prompt atten- tion.• .But there are several diffi. culties with the area from a water quality point of view, Kitt said. Because it is loaated in the remotest comer of Newport Harbor, the tidal flushing action the beach receives is fairly mi.pi.ma!. ·But at the-same time, the pie's lives. Blood reserves in Orange County have sunk so low the American Red Cross only releases transfusions for emergency room and trauma patients, said Johnson. After four years in her dream job, Johnson is still dearly enthusiastic about her work. With about 5,000 pints of blood she's collected for the hospital so far, Johnson said she was still gallons away from making Hoag self-suffi- cient. Each year, the hospital pipes 16,000 pints into . its patients. But her extroverted nature has earned her a growing pool of'dedicated donors. "I only come in to get my legs rubbed, w said Victor Reilly, 62, \vho works for a medical malpractice insur- ance company and donated blood platelets for the eighth time Fri.day. The lengthy procedure - ere en . sv.me ' . .. ebb and flow of the tides means diverting storm water Dow into the county sewer system. as has been tried at other sites in Newport, is not an option. Kiff said such an approach could conceivably see large quantitie$ of bay water pushed by the tide into the sewers. What can be done instead, he sllid, is to emphasize the use of •catch basins" on Balboa Boulevard and Coast Highway so water donors have to spend two hours at the center to get platelets separated from their blood -takes commitment and Johnson tries to sweeten the deal with Jeg massages and movie blockbusters play· ing on televisions that bang from the ceiling. "l want them to have to most fun they can with a sharp object in their arm,· said Johnson. "The more fun we can make it for them, the quicker they return, the more people they'll tell and they're literally saving lives every time they walk in the door.• Like Reilly, many donors come to give blood for sick friends or family members. While waiting to donate blood for the first time since high school, Buffi Hendrix, a 31-year-old property manag- ·er, said that she was a little nervQus. "It's for a good cause,• she said, adding that a friend suf- 18iMtSaie- orchids $500• $1000 •. $1500 Si Pl EIEER 2ND Now Open 1at ....,....._bob Month SATURDAY 9 •PM Plumeria 1oc1o · . ' . . Doily Pilot running off the street can be filtered to some degree before being dumped in ~ bay. "Filters and education, 1 think, are the best answers,· Kitf sald. Both side$ say they're encouraged rather than frus- trated by the exchange . "They've been effective with me in sharing how strong their concerns are for that area,• Kiff sald. • 1 don't think I rea.liZecl that before.• fering from cancer would hop¢ully receive her blood . Wincing as the needle entered her arm. Hendrix added she'd probably be back for more. •Not bad," she said. • 1 would do it again. And hope- fully I can 4onate platelets, too.• Johnson has been less suc- cessful to get her own family strapped in the donating chair. Al,though her husband, Bill Gray, has so far shied away from needles, he is one of her biggest donor recruiters, Johnson· said . She added that Gray plans to begin donating this year. His daughter Lara, 17, recently experienced a needle. sting at the doctor's for the first time. "Now she knows that it's relatively painless,• said Johnson. When asked if she'll keep recruiting blood donors, she doesn't even wait for the end of the question. · "Por the rest of my h.fe." she jumped in. "I'm not going anywhere. You can't get your teeth in a pr$am like this and then ditch.• WHY PAY DEPT STORE PRICES? Visic our AREA RUG STUDIO Rugs & Runners on Sale Handmade wools, l}'Tltbcric, sii.tls 1663 Placentia St., Costa Mesa (949)646-4838 . .. " . .. • • Do ily Pilot DUNES ·coNTINUED FROM A 1 announcement Tuesday. Opponents of the project said the move would show their protests had been successful. "It's ... a recognition on (the developers') part as to how unpopular the project is," said Susan Caustin, a member of Stop the Dunes. She said the develop- ers probably hoped that opposi- _CONTINUED. FROM 1 •!Jbe Register is looking for tar- geted niche products, and (Coast) fits very well .ipto it." said Nancy Sou7.a, a Register spokeswoman. ·It bits a core area of Orange County." Although Coast will still be dis- tributed separately from the Reg- lster to households that have ' . tion against the project would dis- appear after residents vot~ on two dueling growth-control measures on the November ballot. · That •is a vain hope on their part,• she. said, adding that her group would organize a referen- dum against the pro)ect should City Council members approve it in the fall. Measure S, also known as the Greenllgbt initiative, proposes to put developments that allow an increase of more than 100 peak- hour car trips or 100 dwelling received it so far, t)lis mig ht change in the future, Souza said. She added that with 85% to 90% of Coast's advertisers not placing ads in newspapers, the company would extend its advertisement base. Fonner owners and copublish- ers Jim and Nikki Wood said they will remain at the magazine, with Nikki Wood as publisher and Jim Wood beconi.ing a contributing editor to Coast. • No other staff changes are l et U~ Help You AHoin ,, Req~in Tlw hop<· You DesiN' BODY TONE PERSONAL TRAINING Offers You The Privacy Of An Exclwive Facilicy With Your Own Personal Trainer. WE SPECIAUZE IN: • Weight Loss • Flexibility •Nutrition • Cardiovascular conditioning En~ of Summer Sp?Ciol ,------------Rf..C£.IVl:.l)) I I FRf..I!. PERSONAL I TIWNINC SESSIONS WITH 1 IN!TW. TWELVE SESSION PURCHASE ASl:JQVA/UE ()Ir., Clf""" on 9/ISIOO. Fi"'Tamt01tnuOnly. I ,_ ------- ---... 2801 East Coast Hwy. Corona dd Mar, CA 92625 • M usde Toning & Strengthening • Spon Specific Training • Rehabilitation units or 40,000 square feet over the General Plan allowance before a citywide vote. Measure T would add parts of the city's traffic phasing ordinance to the City C harter and nullify Green.light, should voters approve both measures. Mayor John Noyes said be had not heard about plans to postpone a City Coun_cil hearing on the pro- ject but that he could unc;lerstand the move. • H lf I were the developer, I would postpone it,• he said. HWhy would planned, they said. The Woods founded the magazine under the name Coaster nine years ago and relaunched the magazine under the current name in 1996. Jim Wood, a longtime activist, owned the real estate company Unique Homes before getting into the publishing· business. He also served as the chair of the 'Newport Beach Public. Library board of trustees until recently. Wood said Coast's takeover by . . l want my project complicated by other issues in the dty? I think it's a probably a good decision.• Noyes had suggested a previ- ous delay on a discussion of the project at a council meeting in June. His motion passed with only Councilman Gary Adams dissen(- ing. Councilman Tod Ridgeway was not present at the meeting. "I think they have a good pro- ject," Noyes said. "There are questions that need to be answered. But it could potenliall'f be an asset to the city. • the Register seemed like the per- fect acquisition. u1 don't know that we chose . them or they chose u~. • he said, adding that he and his wife had received a number of inquiries about selling the magaztne. The Register's community inter- est and significant stature in Orange County had convinced the Woods to close the deal, he said. Coast's first edition under the new owneIShip will appear on Sept 28. COAST HIGHWAY. NEWPORT BEACH MILE JUST SOUTH Of RUSTY PELICAN< >N THE BAY SIDE 949/650-55 76 . . SoturdQy, September 2, 2000 AJ ENGAGEMENT Barnett-McNamee ~.H. and Oory Barnett of Newport Beach announced the engagement of their daugh- ter, Bevin Jus- tine, to Dar- ren McNamee of Costa Mesa. The bride- to-be is a graduate of Newport Har- bor High School and · Orange Coast College. The groom- to-be is the son of B.J. Eden of New- port Beach. He graduated from New- port Harbor High School and UC Irvine. An October wedding is planned in Corona del Mar. .. Featuring Exhibits & Merchandise For Sale By r..1 \ . Saturday Sept. 16 Call fur Registration! Mardi Gras Theme "Turn your b!'at into a float" I Benefiti.ng the Boy Scout Sea Base • • · -Two Dillision.s ... ChtJ/nfing or Fu• • -PrUo, ~. Uw Mruic, LilMtitnu · SATc!RDAY, Sept. 16: 5pm-on -'Di• .... ~,,, BlllftlNlln' GnlJ .. . _p..,, "f /Mlt,,.. (LbllhM &trio) c.JJ cnm. PW/Ji,. .,.,.,. .. (1.1IJ ~990m.·14r ~.11'11~~ .... t ,Beach, CA . - (949) 72r-2244 .. 2001Launch 25 (TIN U/Ji1NtU N~ ~) In one's memory, the best times aJigncd r~er 1ikc pearls on a • string. There you'll find the archetypical summers of youth and the c:xpcricnca you loni to rurcatc. Whether cruising ro ~ Bay, skiing or cn~ruining up to 10 gucm, the versatile Launch . 25 can take you back ro a wondrous time while propelling you forward. 201 Shipyard Way Cabin D, Newport Beach, CA 92663 ~pma.ri.ne.com ,, .. 1\10 Saturday, ~ 2poo ·c ,M -~IE'IY . . Doily PilOt jazz, jaguars and golf ma,ke for trio of interestingfund-raisers H oag Hospital raised • an astouoding $15,000 at the recent summer jazz •concert startng Chuck Mangloae. More than -aoo local ana long dJ.stance guests converged u~ the Hyatt Newporter Hotel, Newport Beach for the annu- al fest benefiting the hospital. "It was a huge su~. • commented Hoag's Marla Ramsay represehting the hos- pital and the devoted Sand- pipers, the support group responsible for the function. The amphitheater at the Newporter was filled with summer revelers taking in the jazz and enjoying the scene. Best known for his hit single and album, "I.Feels So Good,• Chuck Mangione bead.lined the list of enter- tainers to the delight of the .. local jazz lovers. Co-chaired by carolyn Mangano and Barbara Shapiro the event was a stellar sell-out. • • • . From jazz to jaguars. the Friends of the Santa Ana Zoo pulled out all the stops for its Aug. 26 fund-raiser honoring devoted animal-loving New- port Beach residents Debbie and Tom Newmeyer and Kathleen and Chris Edman. "This year we went for a pairs theme,• said zoo event chairwoman Paige Kunkle. "Since both couples being honored this year have done so much for the zoo together over the years, we couldn't THE CROWD very well honor one without the other.• Also on band for the fun was animal acttVist and con- servationist nppl Hedren, star of Alfred Hitchcock's classic Wm "The Birds." The annual evening at the zoo, known to locals as Zoo- fari, specifically honored the jungle cats this summer with empha;sis placed on the jaguar. Jay Kunkle serves as president of the board for Friends. OtheJ"S involved inclu4ed Donel Wiles, Curtis Farrell, Roseanne Bye, Cal'ol Carty, Howard Hall and Wendy .Sabins, to ·name only a few. • • • Bee Canterbucy Lavery reports that the Real Abilities Goll Tournament at Pelican Hill, held Aug. 18, was an enormous success as an opportunity to demonstrate the difference that computer technology can make in the W alking is the exercise of choice for millions of Americans, and New Balance is the shoe thac more and more of them arc wearing. But why do so many people walk, and what do you need to get scarred? New Balance Newpott Beach, CA Has the answer C orona del Mar Plaza 932 Avocado St. CPCH & MacA rthur) (949) 7 20-1 6 0 2 Factory Authorized Shaw CARPET & FLOOR C £ N T £ ll AIOYE: Co-chalrwomen Carolyn Mangano, left. and Barbara Shapiro, along with Manha Olin. helped raise more than $75,000 for Hoag Cancer Center through a concert featuring Chuck Mangione, righl IOnoM RIGHT: Kathleen Edman, left. and Debbie Newmeyer pose ~th Elol the Emu at the Santa Ana Zoo. lives of people with disabili- ties. · Physically challenged gollers, most of th~m quadraplegics, teed off with able-bodied partners in a charity tournament. Microsoft provided com- puter software that enabled the golfers to examine the Pelican Hill course via a ~P..uter scr~JJ..in advance of playing the bole. A reflec- tive dot placed on the user's head made it possible to move a cursor using simple head and.fad.al movement. ·Similar technology can be applied to daily living, from opening doors to turning on the lights, for a person with disabilities to achieve more independence,• Lavery said. The technology was developed by Madentec LTD, a Canadian finn work- ing on technology for the physically challenged. The charity organization associated with the golf tour- nament was Teddy's Star ... A Foundation for Hope, which raises money to supply envi- ronment control units and other assistive technology to people who need the help but may not have the finan- cial means to purchase it on · Hodson Lighting SEMI FLUSH MOUNT lfitricately carved in antique gold finish H = 20" D = 19" Quality LJ&ht lna s..,...;.,., for 30 y..,.. ~n Tucs.•Fri. 9·S, Sac. 9-4 1510 NcwJ>o'l Blvd., Cosca Mesa (949) 548:.9341 ~-. ·---· 171~0 All ch Pukwey MC '•'-t "'·• Stt. 100 (9~9) 362 ·8302 (619) 640-2899 ~~ ,t:::t:!t~ ~_..__.~I~ their own. On hand for the incredible tournament was Kyle Ander- sonl 39, of Corona Del Mar, a six bandicar goller and the president o Bradley Medical Products, a company that works with the physically challenged every day. Anderson commented, ·1 bad to be a part of this tourna- ment to help physically chal- l~ged people everywhere.• • THE CROWD appears Thursdays and Saturdays. m.'re Bursting With Quality Furniture at Great Savings! • Model Home Furniturt' •Antiques •Art kcessoria • .Art'a Rugs & Mort'! Custom Refinishing & Upholstery (949) 646-1822 670 W. 17th St., 102 • <:osta Mesa Hnn: Mon.-Fri. JJ11m - ~~M'WJak NEWPORT STONE & 'DESIGN CENTRE COMPLETE DESIGNER SHOW R OOM ···~~~~~ • Marble ac Granite -Slab Fabrication •Tumbled Limestone · Tnwrtine • Slate ··GlauBlodu • Tiie -Hage Selection of IJDpottecl 11Ja • Coriaa • Kltchm ac Bala CAbiJldl ac ~ • 42 Yam .,Bwfatl JWt,,r .. c..,,_ •Fowacaiu·~· Wood Floon. ~ ~ Doily Pilot I .. :curtain ·to rise at local ,By Tom Titus . 'Y ~F wther evidence that Costa Mesa is the the- ater capital of Califor- nia, if.not the entire country west of New York City. arrives next weekend when the 2000-01 season opens ~d the lights go up in four local venues. South Coast Repertory. the elder statesrpan of local the- ater groups dating back to THEITER ~965, kicks off 1ts latest cam- paign with the world premiere of Richard Greenberg's "Everett Beekin. • As p reviously men- tioned in this space, it's Greenberg's fifth play to be midwifed at SCR. The Costa Mesa Civic Playhouse, which also got its start in 1965, reaches back for a 1950s-flavored musical, "Bye Bye Birdie.· For the playhouse, "Birdie" launches an ambitious season populat- ed by musicals, musicals and more musicals. The new lhlogy Play- house, which replaced the Theater District in the Lab Anti-Mall on Bristol Street in January, will be off to see the wizard -"The Wizard of Oz,• that is. This family-ori- ented show replaces one pre- v.iously announced for Sep- tember that was more on an adult level, Tennessee WlDiams' •A Streetcar Named Desire.• After the hectic weekend, the Orange County Perform- .· ing Arts Center will come • alive again Sept. 12 with the •musical "Ragtime.· This show -which.features such early-century personages as Henry Ford, Booker T. Wash- ington and Hany Houdini - is ticketed for two weeks at : the Center, unlike recent attractions such as "Cabaret" and "Titanic,• which played one week from Tuesday to Sunday only. The fun doesn't stop with "Ragtime,· either. Come Sept. 15, two more local the- ater groups will be joining the parade as the Newport Theater Arts Center revives • •Mornings at Seven• and Orange Coast College sets , out in a different direction ·with •Jesse and the Bandit Queen.• South Coast Repertory will be back on the boards Sept. 11 with its reprise produc- tion of Joe Orton's "Enter- taining Mr. Sloane• opening on the Second Stage. •Reprise• might not be the operative word here, sirlce the last time SCR took a aack at "Sloane,• it was at • the Second Step Theater in · • Newport Beach back in 1967. • All in all, theater gourmets • can get their fill at Costa : Mesa's sumptuous banquet : table in the next few weeks, : with a side trip to Newport •Beach. There should be : enough local theater to satis- • fy the most prodigious appetites. • • TOM mus reviews lac.II tneat« for the O.lty Pflot. His r9Ylews ~~ ~ s.turdlys. ' • Next WEEK They work at Newport Beach City Hall by day, but by night ... who knows. What we do know is that this group of city employees spends some off time aeating art. which will be on display at the Newport Beach City Hall Gallery starting ~pt. 11. So1vrdoy, September 2, 2000 All TAYA KASHUBA I DAllY I'll.OT Aorence Radak, 71, of Huntington Beach 'enjoys a dance with Earl Yingling, 80, of Corona del Mar at the Costa Mesa Senior Center. ... . Shall we . .. ance. Older generation steps out to the. band at Costa Mesa Senior Center . . Young Chang DAILY PILOT W hen asked why he !oves to dance, 59- year old Bill McMur- ray sounds indignant: "You get to hold a girl! C'mon nowt• · Tonight he is holding his wife of almost two years, Mary McMurray. Their hot spots are senior centers throughout the county. Things are different now from the way people grooved when pe was a teen. The Lake Forest resident danced on rollerskates back Jhen. Today he's making do with the Cos- ta Mesa Senior Center and the soles of his feet. He gets dizzy sometimes and recently lost feeling temporarily in his toes. But his feet still have bounce. This IS true for most the rouples al the center's Tuesday Ballroom Dance. Founded in 1986 by O.C. Moon and his late wife, Wreatha, the senior ballroom dance changed locales a few times before landing at the senior center nine years ago. Moon, 84, said a plaque for his wife hangs on the back wall of the ballroom. She danced almost right up to her death. On a TueSday 10 years ago, the couple went dancing. That Thurs- day, doctors reported she had a DON LEACH I DALY "-OT Eve Bellon-Fudge sits amongst 1elect works of her late llmballd, Al Bellon. at the Onmge County Mueum of Art at Soutb Coast Plaza. brain tumor. 1'wo and a half months later, she passed away . O.C. Moon still loves to dance. -He and his partner, lvyrose Radisay. dance four nights a week. They know how to waltz, rumba, polka and do almost every dance associat- ed with big band music. Dancing is no casual affair for these seniors. A live band helps them indulge their urge to cha-cha, salsa and tango for three hours once a week. , y • The women go all out. Some w~ar rhinestone-studded black and white tops with satin pants, otheB wear elegant floor-length gowns. Most of the men wear ties. SEE DANCE PAGE A 14 TAYA KASHUBA I OAllY PILOT Myrtle and Forrest Almquist of Tustin show off their moves. STRICTLY BlllROOM • WHERE: Costa M~ Senior Center, 695 W. 19th St., Costa Mesa. • wttEN: 7:30 to 10:30 p.m. Tuesdays. •C~S4. ~ • CAU: (949) 645-2356. P~TOGRAe,HS OF LIFE LESS OR·DINARY Al Belson' s photos of common people transcend in Orange County Museum of Art exhibit Young OMlng • DAILY PILOT You know how some people talk & lot and talk big. But you look at their art, and it's just not all that. Al Belson talked, but his photos lived up to his words. He was a p~otographer who could tell you exactly how he set his shutter speed to take an image and how and why be cropped what he cropped and kept what he kept. " He had a British wit as sharp and poetic as the tonal contrasts between his blacks Clod whites. ' And he had these eyes. These black eyes. His widow, Eve Belson-Fudge, a former student o"his, remembers why she fell for him. Other students, walking through the •Al Belson: A Photographic Reverie• exhibit at the Orange • SEE BELSON MGE A 14 ... • Al2 Saturday, September 2, 2000 After ) HOURS • send Al'TB tQ"'5 It~ to the Dally Pilot. 330 W. Bay St.. Costa Mesa. CA 92627; fax to (949) 646- 4170 or caU (949) 57 ...... 268. A com- plete listing may be found at www.dallypllotcom. SPECIAL . . IO flSI Doily Pilot Beach. Free admission. (9'9)' 476-2001. STAGE THE WIZARD Of OZ 1\ilogy Playhouse at the LAB Antimall presents L. Frank Baum's "The Wizard of Oz" 7:30 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays-and 3:30 p.m. Sundays starting Friday · through Sept. 24. Ad.mission is'$17, $15 for matinees. The playhouse ~ locat~d at 2930 Bristol St.: Blag:-C::-CosfA Mesa. (714t 957r3347, Ext. 1. BALBOA WEEKEND FUN , The Ba)boa Merchants/Owners As~n. will provide entertainment from 12:30 to 3:30 p.m. Sat- urdays and Sundays through Labor Day. The weekend events will include mimes, clowns, ballQOn sculptors, street musidaas.and free taffy for kids. Festivities take place in the Balboa Fun Zone, at Bay Street and Edgewater Avenue. Free. (949) 673-9575. BLADE SHOW Blade Show West, a kmfe trade show, will be held Fn- day through Sept. t 0 at the Doubletree Hotel, 3050 Bris- tol Sl, Costa Mesa. It will include demon\trations of - Japanese sword fighting and knife forging. Hours are 2 to 7 p.m. Friday 9 a.m. to 6 p.Ql. Sept. 9. and 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Sept. 10. $9 a day, $14 for two-day pass or $18 for three-day pass. Free for chil- dren younger than 12. Tick- ets available at the door. (~) 272-5233. Game11sh paintings by SUAD King are on display at tbe Newport 9each Cenlnl Ubrary, 1000 AvOClldo Ave., New- port Beach. through Oct. 1. ~reception for the artlll wDl be held from 2 to 'p.m. SepL 10. Frie. (949) 717-3800. OUTLAWS AND LOVERS Canadian playwright David Freeman's "Jesse and the Bandit Queen• will open at 8 p.m. Sept. 16 at Orange Coast College's Drama Lab Studio, -2701 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa. The play is a sweeping saga of 04Uaws andlovers.Pertormances are at 8 p.m . Saturdays and 7 and 7 p.m. Sundays through Sept. 24 . $5 in advance, $6 at the door. Seating is limited. (714) 432- 5640, Ext. 1. DREAM HOUSES The benefit Project Play- house 2000, a display village of kid-size dream houses, will open from 2 tt> 6 p.m. Sept. 23 at Fashion Island, 90!5 Newport Center Drive, Newport Beach. Tours of the village outside the houses will be held on weekends from Sept. 24 through Oct. 21.'Tickel prices vary. The . playhouses will be auctioned at the exhibit site Oct. 21. Proceeds will go to the HomeAid chapters of Orange County and Greater Los Angeles/Ventura, which are sponsoring the event. (949) 553-9510. MARKET PLACE . , The Orange County Market Place takes place from 7 a.m. to 4 p.m. ~aturdays and Sundays in the Orange County Fairgrounds' main parking lot. $2 for adults, childreJH1nder 12 are free. . (949) 723-6616. MUSIC STEEL DRUM SONGS Repercussion Unit, featuring a plethora of percussion instruments from around the world, will perform 'at 11 a.m. and 1 p.m. Sept. 16 at the Orange County Perform-. ing Arts Center, 600 Town Center Drive, Costa Mesa. $8. (714) 556-2787. GLENN MILLER REPRISE The Bill Tole Orchestra with Beryl Davis, the De Marche Sisters and other entertain- .... iftb&Jtlc.1-. .., .. Sflftl,#lln.an wlllt..., .,-._. •• Discontinued and overstocked items indudi~ slip covered sofas carried by major nationol retailers like Z-GOlleiief Restoration Hardware ana others we can't name but yoo wil recognize. Yoo con special order from over 200 fabrics. Everything here is new, obtained directfy from the factory ·No U..d Furniture or con•i nment item•. BVLGARI T iu A l u11tin/11 m watch .. In 1lumlnium, rubber end tttel. Av1ll1ble In Newport Be•ch 1 1 • ers will celebrate the music of Glenn Miller's Air Force Band at 8 p.m. Sept. 16 in Orange Coast College's Robert B, Moore Theater, 2701 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa. Tickets are $25. Advance-purchase tickets are $22 for adults, $20 for seniors. (714) 432-5902. CHANSONS D' ~MOUR . Concert pianist Terry Alaric and singer Mignonne Pro- f ant perform a medley of French love songs from 3 to 4 p.m. Sept. 17 at the New- port Beach Central Llbrary, 1000 Avocado Ave., Newport Beach. The performance, sponsored in conjunction with the Newport Beach Sis- ter City Assoc., is part of a festival honoring Afltibes, France. Free. (949) 717-3800. COU.NTRY HITS " Moore Theatre, 2701 Fairview Road. Gayle's hit singles include "Wrong Road Again" and •Beyond You." ~eserved tickets are $29 at the college's Commu- nity Education Ticket Office. (714) 432-5880. MUSIC MAN Classical guitarist John Piz- zarelli wiU perform al 7 :3l! and 9:30 p.m. Sept. 22-23 at the Orange County Perform- ing Arts Center, 600 Town tenter Drlve, Costa Mesa. $42-$46. (714) 556-2787. ANOTHER DIMENSION SALUTING SINATRA Vocalist Harry Connick Sr. will join the Nelson Riddle Orchestra for •A Salute to the Music of Fi:smk Sinatra· at 4 p.m. Sept. 24 in Orange · Coast College's Robert B. Moot..e Theatre, 2701 Fairvfew Road, Costa Mesa. (~) 432-5880. POP/ROCK & FLAMENCO Tate 5 -a funk, rock and Motown ack:::;-performs at 9 p.m. Saturdity~t Carmelo's Ristorante, 3520 E.-Coast Highway, Corona del Mar. Solo guitarist Ken Sanders performs classical flamenco tunes at 7:30 p.m . Tuesdays and Sundays. Shows are free, (949) 675-1922. SATURDAY NIGHT R&B Gerald Ishibashi and the Stone Bridge Band plays rock and rhythm and blues OCTOBER LAUGHS Orange Coast College will debut its production of comedian Steve Martin's "Picasso at tbe Lapin Agile" at 8 p.m. Oct. 5 in the Ora- ma Lab The ater, 2701 Fairview Road. Perfor- mances are at 8 p.m. Thurs- days through Saturdays and 2 p.m. Sundays unW Oct. 15. $? in advance or $6 for seniors, students and chil- dren. $9 at the door. Seating is limited. (714) 432-5880. FABRAY IN CONCERT Country music vocalist Crys- tal Gayle will perform at 4 p.m. Sept. 17 in Orange Coast College's Robert B. The 5th Dimension, known for "Let the Sunshine In" and other hit songs, will perform ars-p:m. Sept. 23 in Orange Coast College's Robert B. Moore Theatre, 2701 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa. Ticket prices vary. (7 14~ 432-5880. ~ from 9 p.m. Saturdays to 1 a.m. at Sutton Place Hotel's 1Tianon Lounge, 4500 MacArthur Blvd.; Newport Star of stage, film and the small screen Nanette Fabray will be featured in concert at 8 p.m . Oct. 6 at Orange Coast College's Robert B. Moore Theatre, 2701 Fairview Road. $22 general; $20 for OCC students, senior citizens and children · under 12 in advance. $25 at the door. (714) 432-5880. Guaranteed • premiums .. ; for up to 20 or even 30 years! Find o ut if a State Farm Se lect-20 or Se lect-30 Term Life In surance policy is right for you 350 E 17th St Suire 211 Cos12 Mesa, CA 949/646-9393 Stattlann it tMre for.• SUie ~ llf Insurance ~ny Home Office. Bloomlngron, llllnois • •Swimming • Petci.!!g Zoos •Spanish •Dance \' •Computers •Music and more ... Oauroom Monitorl]g Through TJic Internet RR'J)ort l}Drbor m~ •25 E. lldi Sc.. Um Mesa •Drama • Jumping Tents • Field Tri ps nackBzly m~ (949)650-3442 391 Llllm1117 Or • C-Mm (949)548-3771 " • Da ily Pirot DATEBOOK Saturday, Sdptember 2, 2000 Al3 MAGICAU.Y COPPERAELD The Orange County Per- forming Arts Center will present David Copperfield at 6 and 9 p.m. Nov. 30 and Dec. 2. The Center is at 600 Town Center Drive, Costa Mesa. (714) 556-2122. Tick- ets are $30 to $50. (714) 755-0236. ART Guy Rose, Donna Schu.Ster and Henrietta Shore. Exhibit hours are 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesdays through Sundays, Admission is $5 for adults; S4 for students and seniors; children under 16 are free. It ends Sunday {9/3.) (949) 759-1122. VIUAGEART Works by artists at Cannery Village are being displayed outside the Newport Beach DOU.BL£ TJ:tEAT . City Hall Gallery.3300 New- Two exhibits are on display port Blvd. Hours are 8 a.m. to at the Orange Cg_unty Muse-5 p.m. wee)tdays through um of Art, 850 San Oemente Sept. 10. Free. (949) 717-3870. Drive, Newport Beach: •A Tale of TWo Cities,• a "' CfTY A . RT • mixed-media show by artist Original artwork by Newport Chris Burden, runs through Beach city employees will go SunC:lay. on display Sept. 11 at City •correspondences,~ show: Hall, 3300 Newport Blvd. casing drawin~s and sculp-Exhibit hours will be 8 a.m. tures by Ellsw6rth Kelly and to 6 p.m. weekdays through Isamu Noguchi, will be on Oct. 31. (949) 717-3870. view through Oct. 15. Hours for both are 11 a .m. to 5 p.m. PAOFIC CRAFT SHOW Tuesdays through Sundays. The Wells Fargo Pacific Craft' Admission is $5 for atiults; $4 Show will open at 6 p.m. for students and seniors; Sept. 15 at the Orange Coun- museurn members and duJ-ty Museum of Art, 850 San dren under 16 are free. (949) Clemente Drive, Newport 759-1122. Beach. The event will include musical entertainment and SOCAL CIRCLES refreshments. Admission is "Circles of Influe nce: $25. (949) 759-1122. Impressionism to Mod- ernism in Southern Califor-'MARINERS, MANDARINS' nia Art 1910,.1930" is on dis-"Mariners and Mandarins: play a t the Orange County ' Seafaring in the China Museum of Art, 850 San Trade," an exhibit featuring Clemente Drive, Newport 18th century Chinese marine Beach. The show includ es paintings and naviga..tion work by Mdbel Alvarez, mstrwneots, are on display through Nov. 10 at the New- port Harbor Nautical Muse- um,. 151 E. Coast Highway, Newport Beach. Exhibit hours are 10 a .m . to 5 p.m. Tuesdays through Sundays until Nov. 10. Pree admis- sion. (949) 673-7863. DANCE INDIAATOCC Kathak, the classical dance of In.dia, will be perlorrned by Anjani's Kathak Dance of . India Company at 4 p.m. · Oct. 8 in Orange Coast Col- lege's Robert Q. Moore The- atre, 2701 Fairview Road. Reserved tickets are $22. Discounted tickets, available to OCC students, senior citi- zens and children, are $20. 1ickets are the door are $25. (714) 432-5880. DANCE 204 Dance 204 offers private and group instruction in begin- rung and advanced ballroom, Latin and modem dancing at 204 Washington St., Balboa. (949) 675-9082. SENIOR BALLROOM The Costa Mesa Senior Cen- ter offers ballroom dancing to the music of the Ray Rob- bins Combo for adults from 7:30 to 10:30 p.m. Tuesdays. Singles and couples are wel- come. Cost is $3. The center is at 695 W. 19th St. (949) 645-2356. "-----A----------'f tt r., NI!: "'-------------< ' ~'\\\'11\'t'f ATHL£r1e ti//. ,~ NEW OWNERSHIP! :'<IEW LOOK! ,, STAY COMPETITIVE. 1 THE UNJVERSITY ATHLETIC CLUB -To stay ahead of the competition, it's important to be at your peak physically and mentally. The University Athletic Club with our stare-of-the-arr faci lities can help you meer and exceed your goals. With only a handful of memberships available, be s ure co call for a complimentary tour and guest pass. RacquecbaJI • Squash • Handball • Baslmball ·Jr. Olympic Swimming Pool • Rescauranc • Lounge • Lucsc m Wc1g~t Trainmg and Catdio Ficness Equipment • Complimcnwy Fi mess Coun~liog -Massage • Sporu Rchabilication Therapy • Fresh Worlfout Clothing Provided Da.ily • Conftrtnee Rooms • Complimcnwy Shoe Shines • Corporate Races Available UN IVERSITY ATHLETIC CLUB • .1701 Q!,IAILSTREET NEWPORT REACH (949) 752-7903 Enjoy a Spacious Suite, Sumptuous Dining, Entertainment, Bingo, Crafts, Billi.ardB, BeautY Salon, Transpottation to Doctor, Shopping, Fun niP8, Friendly Caring People. From $1,~6/Mo. 2283 Fairview at Wit.on CCMtaMe.. Mlnlmlmege58 • • DAN5aNE ST\JDIO Danscene Studio offers ball- room dancing at 8 p.m . on the first Friday of every month. Admission is $10. The studio is at 2980 McClintock Way, Costa Mesa. (714) 641-8688. BIG BAND DANONG The Oasis Senior Center holds an afternoon of danc- ing l<? big band music from 1:30 to 3:30 p.m. Fridays. Coffee and refreshments are served. The center is at 800 Marguerite Ave., Corona del Mar. (949) 644-3244. ARGENTINE TANGO Danscene Studio has tango dancing from 8 p.m. to 12:30 a.m. the first Saturday of every month. Danscene is at 2980 McClmtock Way, Costa Mesa. (714) 641-8688. BOOKS ·, I VARYING VIEWS .Readings of ong mol works by members of Multicultur- al Women Writerc; will launch the Newport Be<1c-h Central Librdry\ 2000-01 adult lecture senl·'> ci t 7 p.m. Sept. 14 1n llw J1 brc1r~ ·._ Friends l\.tect iny l{oom, 1000 Avocttrlo Avf'. (<144) 717 -3801. SIGNING BY SHELDON Sidney She ldon will sign his latest book "The Sky is Falling" at 2 p.m. Sept. 17 dt Our ;\~l·nu \\ .t\ I \t.1hli,hnl I hr (>Id I ,l\liinnnl \\ .11 '. Onr Polin \1 \ 1imr Bprders Books, Music & Cafe South Coast Plaza, - 3333 Bear St., Costa Mesa. (714) 556-1185. socaRTALK Soccer coach Rudy Yakzan will discuss and sign his new book • t 05 Soccer Practice Drills" at 2 p.m. Sept. 23 at Borders Books, Music & Cafe South Coast Plaza, 3333 Bear St., Costa Mesa. Yakzart will also hold a soccer mini clinic at the store. (714) 556-1185. . . LITERATURE TALK A Literature Discussion Group meets at 7 p.m. Wedrlesdays at Borders Books, Music & Cafe at South Coast Plaza, 3333 Bear St., Costa Mesa. Discussion 1s free. (714) 432-7854. OPRAH BOOK CLUB The Oprah Book Club nteets al 7 p.m. the third Thursday of every month to discuss Oprah Wutlrey's most recent selections at Barnes & Noble Booksellers Fashion Island. The store is at 953 Newport Center Dri- ve, Newport Beach. (949) 759-0982. POETRY POETRY MOOD A poetry reading and live music will be held at 8 p.m. Sept. 13 at the Alta Coffee House & Roasting Company, 506 31st St. Sign-up begins at 7 p.m. for the open read- ing. Free. (949) 675-0233. THEE WORD THING •Thee Word TI:ung" perf or- mance poetry night beguls at 9 p.m. Wednesdays at Club Mesa, 843 W. 19th St, Costa Mesa. Free. (949) 642-S4•8. DINING/TASTING CUBAN NIGHT The fifth annual ~cuban­ American Celebration" will begin with a recepbon at 5 p.m. Sunday at The Sutton Place Hotel, 4500 MacArthur Blvct.. Newport Beach. Fes- tivities include the annual pig roast and a Havana-style casino. Dinner follows the reception and dancing begins at 8:30. $54 for adults, $10 for children dges 6 to 12. Proceeds will benefit the Cuban-Americcm Scholar- ship Fund (949) 476-2001. CULTURAL COOKING The Jewish Community Center of Orange County and Whole Foods Mdrkets will present a Rosh Hashana cooking dPmon- stration and tasting di 7 p.m . Sept. 18 dt Wholf! Foods Markel. Tndngle Square, 1870 Harbor Blvd .. Costa Mesa. The workshop · will offer a brief expldna- tion of the Jewish New Year trad1lJons a nd history, followed by a ldstmg of tra- ditional foods. Pree. (~49) ~-3800. .A_ Rabbirr Insurance Ai:!ency AIITO • HOMOOWNERS : HfuTH Mattress Outlet Stor 40 Yrars In Bwinm ~ ~ BRAND NEW -COSMETICALLY IMPERFECT Get the Best tor Less! ~-Sr>j ,., -., .... • ••• • r ,, . 949-631-7740 441 Old Newport BMI.. • Newpott Beach (Near Hoag Hrupital) Did You Know? 41That we are a full service nursery with qualified California Certified Nursery Professionals and landscape designers. We can meet all of your gardening needs. Come in today to t~ Nurseries and let us show ·you how." NURSERIES, INC.--- COSTA MESA SANTA ANA 2.700 Bristol St. 2800 N. Tustin Ave. (714) 754~661 (714) 633-9200 COMPLETE LANDSCAPINC • 45 YEARS EXPERJENa LICENSE II 308553 3165 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa One Block South of 405 l'Wy (714) 545-7168 TOM TANAKA, C.C.N.PIO Manager FlowerdaJe Nunery -Costa Mesa Master Nursery Professional ' ' • I \ I t \ I .. Al4 Saturday, Seplember 2, 2000 BELSON CONTINUED ,FROM A 11 County Museum of Art's South Coast Plaza Gallery, recall why they admired him. Belson, who died in 1995 or cancer, opened the Newport School of Photography in 1979. He taught local pho- tographers as well as~­tors, dentists, lawyers d other professionals w ling to learn the craft of g photo taJdng. He knew not only how to take a picture but how to print one, mix the chemicals and then teach everything b e knew, hi$ admirers said. "He was a consummate photographer,• said Mel Cohen, a friend and 15-year student of Belson. For Cohen, there's a sense or nostalg1a an Belson's works. He feels it whenever he looks at the photographs. "It's heartwarming, too." Cohe i;rsdid. "I've always felt it and still do." Belson traveled often to Spain, Mexico and Italy. There the photographer, best known for bis celebrity-pho- tos, took shots of people without big names, people without big jobs. In Italy, he caught the backs of two tourists leaning over a Florence bridge, arms clasped around each others' waists. The lady bas a curly flurry of hair. You can't see their faces, but the photo gives the impression the cou- ple is smiling. Maybe even exchanging"6weet words. In Mexico, he caught a llt- Ue girl sitting on the front steps of her home." Her head is turned to fa ce the camera and her face and eyes rash-• ioned in a forgivable litUe- girl grimace. She has curlers in her hair and wears a sum- mer dress. Belson found beauty i.JH:)rdinary We. At an outdoor market in the Piazza San Marco in Venice. he shot the backs of two Japanese tourists stopped at a vendor. The image is just their two white hats, their two white-shirt clad shoulders and one 'Re«tt'~~ Barbara Lee, M.S. MIT WOfth, f!M~ Couples.}n<Hvlduals & Groups 1151 DoVE STREET, # 105 NEWPORT BEACH, CA 92660 (949) 261-8003 License MH021595 ROSEY's AUTOBODY .... .. ~•••111i~-.L You Have th'e Right to Choose Your .. ~ . ' ....... . •. c. .. .11 Repair F.acility nsist on the Best Lifetime Warranty Full Service Collision Center Insurance Approved Shop........---.• (949) 642-4522 121 Industrial Way• Costa Mesa l .. DATFBOOK Doily Pilot. FYI • WttA~ • AJ Belson: A Photographk Reverie• WHERE: Orange County Museum of Art's South Coast Plaza Gallery, 3333 Bristol St., Costa Mesa. • WHEN: From 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. weekdays, 10 a.m. t o 7 p.m. Saturdays and 11 a.m. to 6:30 p.m. Sundays through Sept. 24. •COS~ Free. • CALI.: (714) 662-3366. . Fudge said. , Belson-Fudge said her late. husband loved the com- mon man. "Without roman.ildz:ing everything, he found a real quiet dignity in how humans did what they did,• she said. "Fruit Vendor, Rome," taken in 1987 by Al Belson, ls one ot the Images on display at the Orange County Museum of Art's South Coast Plaza Gallery. Some of bis subjects were household names. His celebrity portraits include subjects like Sammy Davis Jr., Joan Rivers and Liberace. embracing ann. The hats are so white it's as if they're floating. The background, in tum, is as dark as a black hole. "You jus~ stare and stare and stare," said Nancy Lee, i ' a student at UC Irvine admir- ing bis work. "These are moments that would have passed.• With his lectures about dynamism, harmony, disso- nance, the lure of triangles and the rules of composition, Belson made it clear he was an artist. "The same rules Rem- brandt u.Sed, Leonardo da Vtnci used, they applied to his photography," Belson- DANCE calls dancing her second love. Her husband of 63 · years, Forrest, is her first. CONTINUED FROM A 11 The c;ouple hops from Tustin to Anahenn to Costa Mesa to any other senior center that Myrtle Almquist of Tustin But e~en these were "un- stuffy ... "It wasn't like they were these big interpretations,• Belson-Fudge said. "I loved the cleanness of his vision." happens to offer a dance. "Nobody belie ves we're as old as we are for what we do." said 61-year old Myrtle. She's wearing a hot-p~ and white floral dress for the,,.- dance, with hot-pink heels ----------------------. and dangly hot-pink ear-••• rings. Rer purse is a lighter ••• s299 e••• pink, and her flower petal-., S 289 •• shl).ped ring a pastel pink. _ . · She cares to have the col- .. Bankruptcy •• Divorce/Summary Call Herb the Legal Beagle ors match, like she cares about dancing with ease and precision. Mary McMurray says U she ever won "big money," she'd.buy a big van and chauffer all the seniors who don't have e nough coordina- tion to drive. Law Office of Herbert B. Rhodes -EDllON . .....,.._........ .... t The destination: the Costa Mesa Senior Center. Because they still want to dance. "I like a good lime,· she said. "But I know so many people who can't get here." HEMPHILL'S RUGS & CARPETS Introducing New Barbados Surro und Yourself in · The Natural Beauty 230 East 17th St. • Costa Mesa (949) 722-7224 www rugsandcarpets.com Mon-Fn 10-6 Sat 10-5 No matter what }'OU're doing, your homet<M'n newspaper ~ Druly Pilot . ,, COMMUNITY The > silDIT "I realized I could turn my back on everything society says. I felt free. Doily Pilot EDITORIAL It was like I came out I rom under the water and took a deep breath." t -DENNIS RODMAN, on his Web site, www.Rodmantv.com, that debuted Wednesday. The site offers a peek into his life and his West Newport home, which he has dubbed "Club 4809." Project could balance progress, pres~rvation I t was almost three years ago exactly that city offi- cials began pushing the idea of a luxury hotel in the Marinapark area of the Bal- boa Penninsula. As expectec}. the howls of protest fr6m those who would 'be affected by the develop- ment began then and they continu~ now. What will become of the American Legion Yacht Club? What about the Girl Scouts? Where will the residents ot'the mobile home park go? Those are good questions that deserve good answers. But make no mistake, the pro- ject that City Council mem- bers .gave tacit ~pproval to last week should at the very least be explored. The council entered into negotiations with Sutherland Talia Hospitality, which has plans to build a $30-mi.llion five-star resort with 156 rooms in Italian;style villas, a spa, tennis-courts, sailing and row- ing clubs, shops and ~g. By most accounts, it's an attractive project that would most likely add a needed boost to a Balboa Penninsula area that is becoming more antiquated by the day. Don't get us wrong. We agree.With many members of this community that the quali- ty of life in Newport Beach must be preserved. We agree that traffic, overcrowding and overdevelopment can hurt that quality of life. But we also know that a community that stays stag- nant, that resists any and all change and lacks a vision for the future is in danger of extinction . · So there has to be compro- mise. There has to be a way to continue to grow and improve but preserve the very essence of this town. American Legion club members make a good point. They've fought for our country, they deserve respect, they deserve a place to call their own. We agree with them and Mayor John Noyes who insists no deal qn Marinapark can be f made that doesn't have the blessings of the legion. But we also believe the -. legionnaires need to enter into a spirit of compromise with the city and those who want to create this luxury hotel. What's at stake is the very community they fought so hard to protect. Neighbor to the south offers ideas for airport H ere are some suggestions for John Wayne A.uport: NOISE REDUCTION: Encourage airlme companies to use the quietest airplanes available .to serve Orange County by providing a landing fee sub- sidy m propor-LETTER OF tion to the THE WEEK degree of quiet- ness and/or a landing lee penalty for the noistest planes. Accelerate county funding to buy and/or soundproof homes in the currently affected zones. · More actively encourage Con- gress, airframe and engine manu- facturers to research and fund air- craft noise reduction programs. / Provide seed money to the uni- versities in Southern California to research the problem of no1Se reduction at John Wayne. Connect Southern California airports with advanced high speed ground transportation to reduce local connecting flights between airports and provide better access for local residents. Build takeoff exhaust noise deflectors at both ends of the run- ways to take care of both north and south takeoffs. Currently the south taxiing takeoff notSe can be heard up to eight miles away in Tustin and Irvine. Build out the runways the additional several hundred feet that are available so that takeoffs would be farther from the end of the runway, and thus quieter as well as providing addibonal mea- sures or safety. Investigate the limits of onshore wind velocity on takeoffs at John Wayne as a function of any of the above possible changes. OPERATING HOUR EXPANSION: Combine with South County cities, which are strongly opposed to night flight operations, to form SEAN HUfR I OAlt.Y PILOT Planes wait in in line to take to the sides above John Wayne Airport. a coalition that uses political and market forces to pressure airlines and government to honor a no night flight policy for John Wayne. Those of us who oppose 24- hour airports near our homes have no desire to impose such 24- hour airpOrt operating conditions on the neighbors of John Wayne -as long as you neighbors do not wish to impose a 24-bour operational airport on us. SAVE THE BAY: Limit airport operatibns dump- ing pollutants on the San Diego Creek basin. Eliminating an airport at El Toro designed for two and a hall to five times the capacity of John Wayne is a great start to helping save the bay. bnproving fuels and engines is another solu- tion. Reducing the takeoff fuel con-space at all hours. Also, now surnption per passenger is another. northern takeoffs from John Requiring and actively evaluat-Wayne which proceed north, ing in-depth studies, called envi-south or east regularly overfly ronmental impact reports, bn up-1\.tstin and Irvine Most or us non- basin projects should reduce . ,. Newporters bear.these transporta- development effects on the fragile ti. . pacts without the cooler Newport Bay. OD un Be more proactive and cooper-temperatures.' strong b~es, and ative in basin water <:tevelopment, more converuent access if not a storm runoff, regular drain view of the water enjoyed by most cleanups and plantings. of the Daily Pilot's readers. MISCEUANEOUS: Realize that your neighbors also bear considerable transporta- tion noise and contamination impacts from the freeways, trains, intercounty buses and trucks and low-Oying a.iJ'craft. Aircraft now regularly ~d systematically use the formertY off-limits El Toro air- A good message for you to send to your neighbors is to stop the funding of those spokesmen and politicians whose rhetoric makes cooperation with your neighbors on solving your prob- lems that much more difficult. DON STEWART Irvine s1 .... 1TllK , . We asked people near the Mari~rk area: . What do you think of the c#y's dedsibn to enter intO ·negotiation$ With a deiJe/Oper for Marl~rl?? t ... How TO REW US ,,. The Daily Pilot Welcomes hmMI on .._ ~nlng Newport Beach and Costa Mea. The<e are four ~ to send In your comments: • L£TTERS -Mall to the Daily Pilot. 330 W. Bay St., Costa Mesa 92627 • llEADBIS HOnJNE -(.all (949) 642-6086 • FAX -Send to (949) 646-4170 • &MAil -Send to dailypilotOlatimacom All correspondence must include you,. full name, hometown and phone number. Saturday. September 2, 2000 AIS ' Scheafer should not be silenced •AT ISSUE: M ike Scheafer stepped down from the Costa Mesa Parks Commission last week after he was advised to abstain from voting on the skate park because he had written a letter about the issue to the Pilot. S hould MLke Scheafer b~ silenced because of his views regarding the proposed skate park? Absolutely not! We need more people like Mike to speak up on behalf of the youth of Costa Mesa. Skabng has become a favorite pastime and a healthy activ- ity for many young people m our commuruty. They deserve a safe and accessible place to READERS prdcllce their RESPOND sport, not a postage stamp stzed lot without modem restroom facilibes and ade- qudte parking. With his resignation, Costa Mesa loses a fair-minded, dedicated parks commissioner and the young skaters in our city Jose a voice. Thanks for all of your hard work, Mlk,e. JEAN CHAPIN Costa Mesa I am responding to your question of the day, regarding Mike Scheafer. I don't think Scheafer should have abstained from voting on the skate park issue. They are all entitled to their own opinion, aren't they? Whal shocks me IS that two other commissioners, according to your article, agree with him that it is the wrong location but voted for it any- way! But then again, tlus IS the same commission that voted unarumou51y for 15-root wide concrete roads in Fairview Park. TIM CROMWEU Costa Mesa I am the son of former Parks Commissioner Mike Scheafer. I am a bit appalled at what th.is city thinks to be honest Lawmaking when a commissioner's objections and views are· taken ·as an attack, as biased opinion. I do believe that when someone votes on something, they obviously have a biased opinion due to the fact that is what they' are voting on. It is too bad that this city can't see what is best for the children. It's too bad that they have to find things that are best-for the-adults and homeowners of the city when chil- dren are the future ... I grew up in a city that pretty much kept the children out of a lot. And it was kind of nice to see trust .... things were starting to tum around for children. And to stick them in the Charle Street location is ridiculous. You are taking them out of one bomeowner's eyesight into 4Ilother, in a worse location -in a location where it is dangerous for the chil- dren with less access to facilities a.round. Just in general it's a bad location. I would like to know t.bot my cbil-• dren growing up in the dty are going to be happy and have facilities to do a.rid participete in things. But the way th.ingS are going, it IMIDS like the city is ge~ wone and worse for the Children. R.ec:reatiOn for the cbildteil iS not very w911 adjusted. • And if ~ IOok at other dliel In the Onmge GOUDty ..... Wda • Alito V1ejO, tAguM HIDI: llwr 4ill build dM pub and fadlitlel tbM f:beir mDdNa iMd ID • gOod ---doe and wbal ii belt ....... tar ... cbBlla•--........ ,, ...... .. emt Ii b8it ar wtall p a•ta ........... ,_ ... 'llll!lllllil•liill1dd '° ....... MM9dt1d1 .... ..._ • .......................... .......... :t ...... ,,,,_ ........................ .... _ .... _,_ .. , ..... I i • . . .. • J Daily Pilot Quote Of 111EDAY • i¥11 sail wlft, but• wan't claninalt tllll1S •wt liavt _ • *rt/ "°'71911. Costa Mesa football coach I Sports Editor Roger Corf~• 949..574-4223 •$pons fax: 949-6500170 • SQturday, September 2, 2000 81 Luther Mitchell Antony Grubtslch · Charlie Amburgey Scott Schepens Louis Day • A ntony Grublsicb, a 5-foot-10, 245-pound senior, returns with All-Newport-Mesa District honors for Costa Mesa. He's a major factor ln the offensive and defensive trenches. TAYA KABUSHA I DAILY PILOT HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL PREVIEW t • Costa Mesa's reigniilg Pacific Coast League football co-champions seek school's first back-to-back crowns. Bany Faulkner DAILY PILOT NEWPORT BEACH - Enjoying the .school's longest streak of CIF play- off appearances (four), the first Costa Mesa High foot- ball team of the new millen- nium has now set its sights on another first for the 41- year-old program. Having won a share of the Pacific Coast League crown last fall, its foµrth Nick Cablco league championship but claimed at least a share or the last two PCL junior var- sity championships. Since most of the roster, however, bas not been test- ed wider Friday night lights, Howell was predictably ten- tative about discussing the projected lineup. The following posibon- by-position outline should become much more clear after Howell and lus staff evaluate Friday's 11 a.m. scrimmage against Orange. Quarterback: Senior Pat Hulliger's \.. only its second since the 1970s, Coach Jerry Howell has established back-to- back league titles as one of this year's goals. And while most of the lineup will be new, following heavy losses to gradua- tion from last year's 8-3 campaign, Howell figures tt's time to start benefit- ing from a talent nucleus which left arm should be more than fresh. after having thrown just five varsity passes last fall, completing one for 19 -.. yards and a touchdown. 1111 llUSTAllGS Howell and Offensive Coordinator Tom Baldwin figure to give him much SEE POSITION BY POSITION PAGE 85 ess IS more - • Mesa's new diversified offense could limit points, but enhance victory total. Barry Faulkner DAILY Pll.OT C OSTA MESA -Costa Mesa High foot- ball coach Jerry Howell, whose four straight CIP playoff teams h~ve, on aver- age, nearly doubled the score on opponents during that run, won't have to worry so much about keep· lng-the score down this season. He figures his newly configured offense will do it fo.r him. But, before Mesa fans start won- dering if the old coach bas gotten a little too much two-a-days sun, Howell explains that less, in this cue, could be more, in terms of bet· te.ring the Mustangs' 1 °" poltlelllon red>rd since 1996. •we'll still wtn,' but we won't dominate teams 11.ke we have,• Howell said of a new scheme, which will use formations with as many as fou.r receivers to spread defenses oul ·1n our old offense (a foot-to-foot double wing which repeatedly fun- neled lead blockers and the ball car- rier off tackle, daring the defense to dig in and try to stop it), we could wear down teams which weren't as talented as us. But, against teams which were as good or better, when we had to try to do something else, 'we got into trouble. This should help us compete better against the best teams in our dMlion. • The Mustangs, at leaat according to the C1F Southern Section Division DC preseason poll wh1ch ranked them No. 2 'behind Bree Olinda, could be one of tboae upper-echelon units. Sut the . teiglling Padftc Coast League ccrcbamptom may ~o struggle t.o live up to thole ~­ tions. unless several first-time ltaJ;terl step iii aDd pertonn; Offemtve (1ijaid Lutber Mitchell, a S-f~. ~pound MDior, returm with AD-CIP CNdentials. He WU joined on the AU-PCL first team last season by returning senior defen- sive tackle Antony Grubisicb (5-10, 245) and senior kicker Luis Avalos. But, All-OF tailback CJ. Zuniga, who rushed for 2,015 yards and scored 28 touchdowns en route to Daily PCL MVP honors as a junior, was a casualty of academic ineligi- bility, adding to the loss of 10 all· league performers to graduation from last year's 8-3 squad. Sen1or1 Charlie Amburgey (6-1, 2'5), second-team all-league last year, and Scott Schepens (5-10, 230), join Mitchell on the offensive .front aa returning starters. And senior Louis Day, projected to open at tight 89<1, started all 11 games at wide receiver lut fall. DefeDdvely, Cnibilicb ls joined by returning ttarters Daniel Hunter, a teniol' end, a.od senior fAlCkle Dan- ny Maldlldan, while Josh Strickland aJilo ltiRiKi two games at comer- beda. • Orublaicb started pirie gamet at fullbatk. but will conc:eatrate oa 'I t Your GOlDErtOPPllllNm ilst Iii bettel l I S T w .-E E K .E 1 --0 1111 Orange County's Premier Pre-Owned Headquarters. Special one price .sale this weekend! / $626* "' 1997 LEXUS ES 300 2000·.LEXUS LX 470 Leather, Full Power Black/tan, Full Power, Chrome 'Pw lllDlllll, IU ta. llO lnDllllladDllM IM ..... Ol~Cltdl. f* lo mt 12.9119. ...._ '8,14450. .... 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Saturday, September 2, 2000 83 3l ars -n~t satisfied. with sctjmmage •Sailors ou tscore Mission Viejo and play some stifling defense, but there's·a lot of room left for imp rovement. Barty Faulkner 0 AAY' PILOT M I SSION vtE'J O -The Newport Harbor High football team worked on every- thing but a postgame celebra- tion in Friday's preseason scrimmage with host Mission Viejo. 1 ·our kids tend tO b.b down, unless they totally dominate,• said Sailors Coach Jeff Bnnkley, who was generally pleased with a perfor- mance that was unpressive, if not oppressive, against a team ranked No. 4 in one Orange County poll. HIGH SCHOOL F001Ull blew the play dead. Senior outside litteba.cker Andy Rankin matched Gaeta's thievery with 4Il il\terception of his own and the play of tbe entire starting defe nse ~ the primary positive for: the visitors./ •Our front seven (featu~g four returning starters and Rankin, who played extensively) played well, but we expected that,• Brinkl~y said. •a ut I thought our secondary did very well, also, against a pretty good quarterback.~ Mission Viejo signal caller Billy Hart, wh o threw for more tJ1in 1, 100 yards last fall and verbally eommit- ted recently to USC, did not have much success through the air. Mission's only touchdown came ~ DAllY PILOT PHOTOS BY MEDIHA H ZAGIC OIMARTHO on a 60-yard bomb against the Tars' h (17) · t h d (Mi · d f d second-team defense. Tars' Ded e Jo n son runs an o a 'Jr e o ss1o n e e n e rs. Rankin. outside 'backer Man-Kohan all stuffed Diablo rushing back Morgan Crdlg completed both derino and ends Garrett TToncale attempts at or behind the line. his passes for 10 yards and Ian Banigan, all had sacks for Offensively, Manderino saw most "For the most pdrl, 11 was very the Sailors, who received tackles for of the action at quarterback (6 for 12 pos1llve." BnnkJey sd1d "There are losses by several players. for 64 yards). In four carries at tail-some thmgs we'll evaluate, but The Sailors, defending CIF SOuthem Section Division VI cham· pions ranked No. 4 in the division's preseason poll,· scored touchdowns on a 20-yard quick slant from quar- terback Chris Manderino to Mitch Gray, a 3-yard slant to Gray in a goal-line series, and a 3-yard run by tailback Ryan Ortega, also in the goal-line portion of the contest. New]>ort Harbor's Brian Gaeta intercepts pass near the goal line. Senior middle linebacker Alan back, he collected 26 yards. some Qf oUI problems offeQSively "Stopft Saenz, All-ClF as a junior, Senior fullback Travis Trimble had to do with Mission running a stuffed a Diablo rusher for a 3-yard carried twice for 24 yards and junior · front we didn't prepctre for. We only loss. · Dennis Thornton carried five times spent ..aue_ day prcpdnng for Mis-alsQ intercepted a pass in the fla t, near bis own goal line, and appeared to have nothing but green grass in his path, before a whistle Rankin, tackle Nick Moghad-for 23 yards~ sion. becduse our focus is on (Fri· dam, noseguard C.J. Collins, Man-Gray finished with five catches day's season-opening opponent) Junior comerback Brian Gaeta derino and backup tackle Scott for 36 yards, while junior quarter-Orange Lutherdn. • TOGE TH .ER A GAIN Several former CdM football standouts have maintained a bond with prep teammates in college. Barry Faulkner DAILY PILOT ,. Football coaches universally espouse team togetheme~s. but the current crop of collegiate players from Corona del Mar High have literaUy tdken these teachings to the next level. Pairs of Sea Kings, in fdct, have reconvened as teammates in six different college programs. At Colorddo State, ex-CdM standouts Nick Schaumburg and Justin Shea are toiling for the Rc1ms. Other CdM "twins" reside at Georgetown (George Sumner and Ryan Cooper), Yale (Mike McClellan and Sean Fenton), San Luis Obispo-based Cal Po'y (Tim Thurman and Mike Hayes), USC CAJex and J ay Bottom) and Sadc:Ueback CoUege CMark Hattield and Hunter MacDonald). Schaumbwg, a fonner member of CdM's 1995 Five Crowns offensive line, is a 6-foot-4 senior, 255-pound tight end in Fort Collins. Wearing jersey No. 80, he enters today's season-opening Rocky Mountain Showdown against Colorado as the backup to junior starter Jose Ochoa. . Shea. a sophomore. (6-2, 230) is listed fourth on the depth chart at defensive end. The fonner CdM standouts are joined In Fort Collms by fonner Newport Harbor High star Pete Hogan, who has earned a starting spot at left defensive end. A 6-3, 255-pound sophomore. Hogan wears No. 46. Sumner, a 6-1, 175-pound senior, had 19 receptions for 265 yards and two touchdowns as a junior, after collecting 22 catches for 252 yards as a sophomore receiver. Cooper, a junior, began his career at · receiver, before being shifted to free safety last season. He had nine tackles, two interceptions and broke up two passes for the Hoyas last fall. Thurman. a 6-6. 250-pound junior tight end, transferred from Golden West. College, where be earned All-Mission Conference laurels last season with 31 catches and seven touchdowns. He came into fall drills at No. 2 on the depth chart. but a team spokesman said his impressive fall camirmay earn him a starting nod when the Mustangs open Sept. 9 at Sacramento State. Thurman wears No. 89. Hayes, whose senior season last year was hampered by a broken thumb sustained in the preseason scrimmage, is a 6-2. 210- pound freshman fullback. He wears No. 39. Also at Cal Poly is former Newport-Mesa District MVP and Newport Harbor product Brett Baker. The '5· 11, 185-pound junior.led the team In tackles last season (98) as the starting safety.' He also had one interception, two sacks, six games with double-figure tack.les and returned eight punts. He wears No.32. McClellan ls a 6-0, 196-pound senior quarterback at Yale. He started some games es a freshmen, but bas since been relegated to a r,.serve rote. Fenton, a freshman for the Bulldogs, was lilted at 6-4, 265, as practice opened recently for the Ivy Leogue representative. Ala Bottom a redshlrt freshman walk-on tight end and long snapper, wMis No. 98 fOf the noJans. His younger brother, Jay, an Orange County All·SW: last aeuon. ii a freshman walk-on: Hatfield, who accepted a ldiolanblp to Utah alter graduating in 1999, retmnalbc:me from Salt Uke Oty fOJ 4 McoDd lti"aigbt fd anCl Ml enr'olled at SedclJebKt College. wbel9 he .. projeded to be.~ Uriebecker. MKDooald. wbo PJeved at Pairti91d lat fall. bu a11o land8d rn· Mlllkln ~ wta.n be=-=':=..°:.: Of .. "" QOwm qui.at. Is a .aklf et SMU, ...... be rMUml u the MttDi Clnllllr. Nk:b011 (&-3, 275) wn No. 52 tar IM ....... wbO ... ••tb*OenldJ. ..... DrAmtodm;~Xr • .,,=:,:-.:~:-.wa"'~ ..... -..••M.2t5ilo•qtr*rw• COLLEGE FOOTBALL linebacker. The most notable CdM alumnus of all, Jeff Thomason, continues his NFL career this fall with the PtuJadelphla Eagles. The 6-5, 255-pound tight end is hsted as a backup to starter Chad Lewls, after playing most of his eight pro seasons in Green Bay. Thomason, who played collegiately at Oreg.on, enters the 2000 season with 56 career receptio.ns for 583 yards and five TDs. Additional Newport 1 larbor graduates still competing at the Division I level include Brant Hill, Blair Jones, and Robe rt Cole. Hill, a 6-4, 240-pound redshirt freshman, entered fall practice with a starting job at defensive end for the Wolfpack. He opens the season today at Oregon in jersey No. 92. Jones will likely redshirt as a freshinan offensive lineman at USC, while Cole, a 6-5, 320-pound offensive lineman. began workouts last week at Brown. Jeremy Jehangi(i 1s the only Costa Mesa product at a four-year school. He is a senio,r defensive end at Northern State University in Aberdeen, N.D. A 6-foot-2, 245-pounder, Jehangiri wears the same No. 3 he starred in at Mesa. He had 17 tackles ld.$t season for the Wolves, defending Northern Sun Intercollegiate Conference champions. who bring a nine-game winrung streak and the No. 12 Division II ranking into tonight's opener against visiting Augustana. Former Costa Mesa, Newport Harbor and Orange Coast College product Raymond Ohrel was ticketed for Hawaii after his sophomore season at Coast last fall. He is still trying to get his academics in order, however, according to Pirates Coach Mike Taylor, and he has yet to report to Hawaii. Former Newport-Mesa District Athlete of the Year Danny Pulido, has ended his football career after two seasons as a tight end at Oregon. He is attending an Oregon junior college with the aim of becoming a firefighter. Brett Hlisla, who starred as a junior strong safety last season at Tusculum. bas foregone his senior season. Ex-Sailor Reed Johns, a walk-on at Arizona. has given up football, as has Derek Fox, who bad reconstructive knee surgery after a strong freshman season at OCCin 1998. EddJe Johnson (6-4, 230), a sophomore quarterback and punter, as well as Lance Chavez (6-0, 250). a sophomore offensive lineman, represent the Tars at OCC this fall. Fonner Harbor players Nathan Caldwell (Class of '99) and Mike Gray, who played for the Tars in the mid 1990s, are also competing at OCC. Caldwell ls a freshman backup punter and wide receiver and Gray is a 6-1, 245-pound inside linebacker. John Romm, a two-time all·conference performer at OCC, ls the lone Estancia High ,representative playing at the major-college level. He ts a 6-2, 241 -pound defensive end, listed at No. 2 on the Uoiverslty of Mississippi depth chart behind returning starter and te.nior cAptain Derrick Burgess. Romm bad 20 tackles, including 2.5 Mela and four tackles for losses for the Rebels iast fall. He WMl1 No. 50. Job UebeDfood Jr. ls no longer li$ted es a member of the football program at Chapman University. ~ The Eagles do have two playen at ~c. # tnchlding tophomore all-o>nference ~c,..,­ntumet ,,_ DilwklM and tr.brMD cWenstw liDeman Joe An9yo.. • • DaWkinl is U.O vying fof time at nuin1ng • bedt ud receiver. Calta Mele product 9'"9 lllnog ii woddDcJ out wltti SMdlebeck cou.g.. . ,,..-weld. Wbo ~tram CdM last ~-· &-$, ~ bicbipo81D11te -~-... etocc ..... .,......._ .. =--~..=-=~'== ==~-Z:l:Jt .tll;Mlleft OlllD ........... _. • _. • .._ ... m••.r .......... = .. The new 2001 models are arriving daily. All 2(X)O's are priced for immediate clearance. We can,t advertise the prices of our new vehicles because they are so low they would disrupt b~iness at ~ competitors ,, but right now, during our Year~ End Oearance, you can get the buy of a Lifetime. Starrnark Certified '94 C280 Sedan 'T& 170 Very low mi!. (030430) I '99 SSOO Sedan l~o 1r10 Black/Blad <405386> Jo, ''·j '95 c220 Sedan 'T& 170 White,(;tty (394364) ., '99 L500 Rdstr. J 6 o 1n 0 <Aly 6,600 . (1 83292) ,, "I I~ '96 C280 Sedan 12~ 170 White}Gtty (394)64) I '98 CL600 Cpe. 17R170 8ladJBlack U8S9Q6 > I U, '94 CLK Cabrio. JjL'f]O Wb.l~ (145419) PJ ;~Lsoo·s · W,//! , - • ' . . . . . . . 84 Saturday, September 2, 2000 Daity Pilot Eagles liold th0ll-own against Edison •Estancia doesn't back down from Chargers in controlled scrimmage, who should be Eagles' toughest te~t all fall. IM'ry Feulkner OMV Pu.or NEWPORT BEACH -It just might be all do'Nllhill from here for the Estancia High football team, -~ .• -. , ''· ~' .... -.- which competed admirably with highly regarded Edison in a preseason scrimmage Friday night at Newport Harbor. And that's a good thing. about this one-./ The touch<!own tally was -4-1 in favor of Edison, but three of the Charger scores came in the gool- line portion of the scrimmage, with the ball starting on the Estancia 10- yard line. The Eagles were burned through the ail,' but that was expected with Cal-bound senior quarterback Richard -Scbwartz triggering the Edison aerial attack. •rt that's the 17th-ranked team in the state (ranked No. 2 in one Orange County poll), then I think we're going to be OK,• Estancia Coach Dave Perkins told his team after the two-hour session, which included a seven-on-seven passing series, situational scrimmaging and genuine move-the-chains action in preparation for the Eagles' season opener Thursday against Magno- lia. "If we play teams that have a quarterback that talented, with some good receivers like Edison has, we're going to have a little trouble with our pass defense,• said Perkins, wh~ starting defense was also hampered by the absence of junior safety Preddy Rodriguez (ankle sprain). Rodriguez, however, should be ready to go for the opener, and he'll help back a Loot eight that went toe-to-toe with the Chargers. TAVA,KASHUUA I OAl.V Pl.OT Estanda quarterback Kenny Valbuena (left) unloads. At right. Eagles' Jeremy Valdes (8) rons for yardage. HIGH SCHOOL F001BAU. • 1 thought the big thing for us was. we weren't intimidated,• Perkins said. "They might have have a few more athletes than we djd, but we played very hard and competed real well. I think the coaches and the kids feel real good "I was very pleased with our run defense,• Perkins said. arm and fullbacks Jahid and David Rodriguez found running room on dive plays. David Rodriguez bolted 53 yards for the biggest Eagle gain of the night. before being caught from behind by a defender wbQ punched the ball loose. Estancia recovered at the Edison 13, but a h·olding call stalled the drive. a goal-line series, with senior Shane McGuire darting around left end and following the block of Romero to the end zone for a 10-yard touch- down. Among the defensive standouts were, senior ends Cesar Romero and David Rodriguez, senior inside linebacker Fahad Jahid, and senior outside 'backer David Stoodard. Offensively, senior quarterback Kenny Valbuena displayed a lively Estancia's lone score came during It was one of few times an Estancia ban carrier turned the cor- ner on the Edison defense. c . simulates success • Sea Kings give their coaches some answers after a three-way scrimmage with Villa Park, Pacifica. Barry Faulkner ' DAILY PILOT ORANGE -The blocks, tackles, passes, runs and promise was as real as it gets for the Corona del Mar High football team Friday. But, fol- lowing a three-way presea- son scrimmage agfilnst Villa . Park and Pacifica at El Modena High, Sea Kirigs Coach Dick Freeman emphasized to his players that the experience was nothing like the real ·football they'll experience at least the next 10 weeks. ·we saw that we could hit people, run and tackle,· Freeman said. "Now we have to see if we can play a football game. The next time, there will be a scoreboard and there won't be any 15-rnJnute breaks so the parents oan get the burgers ready.• nie latter referred to Villa Park Coach Pat Mahoney brieny halting action to allow the preparation of the players' post-scrimmage meal to remain on schedule. The Sea Kings did not score, gave up a con- troversial touchdown reception (a Villa Park receiver appeared to drop the pass in the end zone, while an official signaled the score), and made plays on both sides of the ball. But, above all else, Freeman received an affirmative answer to the No. 1 question be had going in. "We want to find out if we have any line- men,• Freeman sfild before the three-team rota- tion began. "On both sides of the ball.• Starting offensive tackles Dave Richardson and Steven Russell, guards Matt Marston and Steve Shipman, as well as center Peter Skoute- las, cr.~ed some running room for Sea King backs an , for the most part, protected qua,rter- backs Dy an Hendy and Joe Barber. Defensjvely, ends Scott Biggs and Shipman, as well as tackles Richardson and Skoutelas, toiled well in the trenches as a starting unit. •we came off the ball and hit people, which CONRAD lAU I DAILY PILOT Cd.M sophomore Mark Ctandulli runs for yardage in Sea Kings' scrimmage with Wla Park. HIGH SCHOOL F001BAU. I was real happy with,• Freeman sfild afterward. •w e weren't very physical in last year's scrinunage, so we're ahead of where we were last year at this time.• Fullback Justin Wald (four carries for 25 yards), backup tailback Mark Cianciulli (gains of 16 and 14 yards) highlighted the Cd.M ground game. • Hendy, a junior Fountain Valley transfer who got most of the snaps under center, had a 13- yard completion, while junior Joe Barber had a pair of completions for 24 yards. Senior Evan Burden, who started last season at quarterback, will concentrate on his starting job at comerback, according to Offensive Coor- dinator Lyle Lansdell. Eric Snell, Steven Ward and Paul Jones. all caught passesforCd.M. Defensively, senior outside linebackers Nick Prosser and Blake Hacker, both returning All- Pacific Coast League performers, were extreme- ly active. Sophomore Matt Cooper also made a huge hit in the initial series. Cooper will start the open'er at middle linebacker, since senior Tau- mata Grey (church activity) and sophomore Mater Dei transfer Matt Boyce (pulled groin) will miss the Sept. 9 debut against Cypress. Backup defenders Tyler McCleijan (two sacks at end), Jonathan Hubbard (a near inter- ception at comerback), Cianciulli and Sean Cobb (big hits) also made their mark. ·our perimeter game was not very effective, but I don't know if that's just Edison's defense playing well, or something we did wrong,• Perkins said. "I'll have to look at the film.· Estancia junior noseguard Jesse Cardenas was sidelined by an injured left ankle, but he was walk- ing under his own power after the action was completed . JC SOCCER Pirates keep • • • on WIDDillg • ace unbeaten in opening three contests following a 5-2 victory over Rio Hondo. WHTITIER -The Orange MIN Coast College men's soccer team defeated host Rio Hondo, 5-2, to remain unbeaten in the 2000.sea- son. Following last season's 3-14-4 record, the Pirates have gone 2-0-1 in their first three contests. . Matt Moseley scored two goals to lead the Bucs' attack. Josh Miller. Aaron Siemers and Gino Vitale-San- sosti each scored single goals. Goalkeeper Hilario Arriaga had five saves for OCC, whiCh travels to Palomar on Wednesday at 4 p.m. Coast_ suffers first loss C<?STA. MESA -WOMEN Despite rune saves from goalkeeper Amanda Bell, the Orange Coast College women's soc-· cer team lost its first game of the sea- son, 1-0, to visiting San Diego Mesa Friday in a nonconference tilt. Both teams had 12 shots and the Pirates. had several scoring opportu- nities, but it was the Olympians' Llsa Samuelson who scored the game's lone goal. The Pirates fall to ~ 1 and will play again on Tuesday at home against Antelope Valley. Ga.me time is set for 4 p.m. DEEP SEA FRIDAY'S COUNTS NeWport l...llrdng • 6 boats, 99 englen. 23 yellowt•il. lO yellOwfin tUN, 1 dof~. 86 bonito, 39 c;allco bm. 265 Mind bass. 7 hllibut. 5 rodcflsh, 8 KUlpln. 2 whlteflst\ 2 blue perch. 11 gl~ squid, 1 sott. o.v.y'1 LoG• . 6 boats, 2,, anglers. 2 yetlowfm tuna. 1 dorm, a yettowt.1~ s 1 giant squid. 5 bonito, 1 51 c;allco bass. 1 o ·Mind bas'l. 2 barr~ 33 ~ 2 Nllbut, 43 twlpln, 5 rockfHh, 74 wNtefistl. 1 SS blue perdl. Mustang· coach Howell-ing mad at. scrimmage •Costa Mesa's discipline questioned after Friday's scrimmage with Orange. Tony Attobelll DAILY PILOT . COSTA MESA ccording to sa High football coach Jerry How the only po tive thing about rl- day's scrimm ge '·with OraDge was the weather. ·1 was very disappointed with bow our guys played out there today.• Howell said. •1 use a scrim- mage to evaluate our team's intensi- ty and d.l.sdpline and rtght now, we have none of that.• The best example of what kind of day the Mustangs bad against the Panthers C4Dle in the first 10 min- utes of the scrimmage. During the kickoff d.rWs, junior apee(lster Ntck Cabtco danced th.ro~h the Panthera' players and rated 90 yards to the end zone. The very nett kJckoff, OrAnge's 1~, JerelN' Poole darted 95 yam. to paydtrt. .. ·we bed '& walkirig to "thett ~ we re out ot sha9' and ~·re still ma~ tnlltake1 thet \we ve told IMih (JllffJ .and over nOt to Mesa Coach Jerry Howell gives bit Mustanp some 'actvtce Prlday. do,• Howell said. •u we don't pick it all up in a hurry, it's going to be a long season.• Despite the le~-than-stellar report catd, the, Mustangs, at times, still managed to have some spark on both sides of the field. Cabico rushed for 70 yards on nine carries and bad a rushing touchdown. •tte bad some big plays for lli todaf, but that's what he's suppoeed to do,• Howell Mid. •we're count· tng on him to~ those blg plaYJ.• Cabico'1 backfield partner eenior Alvin Nguyen collected 60 yardi on Ove cantel, lndudinG a 3()..yard touchdowi1 on fourth down. The Mu.stangt'-puslng game alto 1bow9d oahet of promile. lilniof Pabtek Hulllg9r wu • tot e fOr 49 yUdl, Wbili Juldo"r ADdNw .. . HIGH SCHOOL F001BAU. Stricklahd was 2 for 6 for 28 yards. A couple of dropped passes llinited the productivity of the qtiarterbacks. "Fortunately, we've got some time to work on our mistakes and sharpen our intensity,~ Howell said. "Not to take anything away from Orange. Those guys took it to •us today.• Cabico and senior Saddleback High transfer Lenny Lu.kela each caught two passes· for a combined 54 yards. On the defensive end, strong play was turned in by senior Antony Grubisich. Last year's All-District selection was involved in numerous tackles and recovered a fumble for Mesa. Senior Louis Day had five solo tack.let, senior Josh Carver woe through with four tolo taddel and junJor Robert McQueeil bad three tackles and a~ sack. Tbe MuttaJJ411 went bitten by two long touc:hdoWn pe.-by tbe Pan· thin and tt's thoee type ot playe that WW keep Howell on the walpatb tbil i,pcond941 week befcn tbjy lqU4l9 off wltb SaddlebiM:IL "Our game with SM ~..J \ ~ to be ....... Howllll ) W.'Ye got a long "9YI ID 90 I W9 wml to i!f!' al'' ';j M yw. lt'I D1U ~--................. CGlliMllilJ1'1fkh1k .... LMllDif .... ••O.••• \ 1' •' Daily PilOt .. DAILY PILOT PHOTOS BY TAYA KASHUBA Three of Mesa's best -receiver Louis Day (left), quarterback Pa~ck Hulliger (above) and rwining back Nick Cablco. Saturday, Sep!ember 2, 2000 BS ,_ml PIAYERS 3 lull LYllOl't. WR-OB, 5-11, 165, So. Up from froltt 4 Kw.A AllW.. RB-LB, 6-1, 190 So. Up from froth 5 9ltAD Avas. WR-OB, 5-7, 140, Jr. Newc.omer 6 KllllW lk"I. WR-OE, 5-9, 150, Jr. Up from N 7 LUii AVALOS. PK-DE, 5-6, 160, Sr. '99 all-district 8 AMI-SmquND, QB-LB, 5-10, 175, Jr. Up from N 10 MMCD Fullrils. TE-DE, 5-11, 165, Jr. • '99 tettenn.t 11 ....__ Hlll..IJGa. QB-LB, 6-1, 175, Sr. '99 letterman 12 1'111 lu.llt, QB-DB, 5-7, 158, So. Up from frosh 19 JumN ~ WR-DB, 5-8, 130, Sr. Up from N 20 1'YuR WAIDRON, WR-DB, 5-10, 145, So. Up from frosh 21 81u.Y JoRl>AN;WR-08, S.,10, 155, Sr. Sat out '99 22 Nlcx C..UICO. RB·OLB, 5-9, "Tlll5, Jr. Mater Del transfer 23 &le WY, WR·DB, 5-11, 160, So. Up from frosh 24 c.ilM ~ RB-OLB, 5-6, 135, Jr. Up from N 25 0MM lxtA. WR-LB, 5-5, 140, So. Up from frosh 26 ADAM 11aJ1wt. WR-OB, 5-6, 125, So. Up from frosh 28 Mia ~ RB-OLB-DE, 5-9, 160, Sr. Up from N 30 Al.we NCiuYEN, RB·OLB, 5-8, 155, Sr. '99 letterman 31 MlcHAa McGUIRE. RB-DB, 5-10, 160, Jr. Up from N 32 JASON HuRLEY, RB-LB, 5-8, 180, So. Up from frosh 33 NAntAN HuNra, WR-DB, 5-10, 150, So. Up from frosh 34 JosH STlllCKLAND, WR-DB, 5-9, 140, Sr. '99 Jetterman 36 JwMv ISAIS, WR-DB, 5-8, 160, Sr. Newcomer 40 SHEM CioHAusa, TE-OT, 5-11, 185, Sr. Newcomer 41 8B8*:X DAVID, FB-DE, 5-5, 160, Jr. Up from N 42 Jola>AN PluNzJ. WR-DB, 5-6, 155, Jr. Up from N 43 TNS1IN NGUYEN, WR-DB, 5·8, 140, Jr. Newcomer 44 KMllOA ASUBiA, G-DE, 6-1, 18S, Sr. sat out '99 49 DNmL Hwnu, FB-OE, 5-9, 185, Sr. '99 starter 50 Aw•NDO MYQUllilA. OG·DE. 5-8, 1 S5, So. Up from frosh 51 JosH CLEva, LB, 5-10, 170, Sr. '99 letterman 52 GEoMiE CAlcATURA. OT-OT, 6-1, 180, Sr. Newcomer 53 Luao flooRIGue. OT-DE, 5-5, 172. Jr. Up from JV 54 Oms Rm>, OG-LB, 5-8, 17S, So. Up from frosh 55 PAUL MMnN, OT-OT, ~l. 26S, So. Up from frosh 56 Sam 5atEJ1£Ns. C-DE, S-10,·230, Sr. '99 starter 57 MATT HuciHEs, OG-OT, 5-7, 195, So. Up from frosh 58 JAMES PAUL.SEN. OT-OT, 6-1, 240, So. Up from frosh 60 AMoN LAGAssE, C-DT, 5-10, 248, ~ Up from frosh 62 Alnofly ~ OL-OT, 5-10, 245, Sr. '99 all-disctict 63 DouG ~. Ol·OE. 5-6, 150, Jr. Up from JV 65 DAMYL JottNs. OG-LBJ 5-7, 16S, So. Up from frosh 66 Alc>MW CANcJi, OG·OT, 6-1, 240, Up from frosh 67 MAl1HEW fUJIEs. OG-DT, S-7, 190, So.. Up from frosh 68 PETat LE., OG-DT, 6-0, 195, Jr. Newcomer COSTA MESA tioned convergence off tackle) 25 times like we used to.· including a first-round shutout in '96 and a 14-6 first-round setback last fall in which they did not score a touchdown. 70 CMa..os ~ OL-DE, S-l. 16S, Jr. Up from N ' 71 8uMDoN SI.ANEY, C-OT, 5-7, 200, So. Up from frosh 72 Ol+JLE AM9uRGEY, OT-OT, 6-1, 245, Sr. '99 starter CONTINUED FROM B 1 defense this year, while senior Patrick Hulliger, who started every game at out- side linebacker, will be consumed by his role triggering the offense at quarte r- back. Defensively, Howell believes the taJ- ent level has improved, though he was less committal on this group's a bility to play with the heart of overachieving all- league graduates such as linebacker Jason Rankin and com erback Jake O eveland. Junior Nick Cabico, who saw varsity playoff action as a freshman, but spent last season at Mater Dei, returns to anchor a pote ntially productive back- field. 73 JEssl FMNco. C. 5-7, 165, So. Up from frosh 74 Lunn MITCHELL. G-OT, 5-8, 300, Sr. '99 All-OF 75 BIN 0MMM. OG-DE. 5-10, 185, So. Up from frosh 76 WAYNE HANsEN. OT-OT, 6-3, 280, Sr. '99 letterman 77 JIMMv ~ OL-OE, 6-5, 210, Sr. '99 letterman 78 DANNY ~ G-OT, S-7, 237, Sr. '99 letterman Hulliger's throwing ability has helped Howell and Offensive Coordinator Tom Baldwin, who shifts over from running the defense the past seve ral years, implement an attack that strives for more balance. ·we want to throw as many as 15 times a game,• Howell said , repeating a prediction which has not come to pass in recent years. NBut if Hulliger gets hurt, we'll probably run slam (the aforemen- The new offensive scheme will likely limit the big scores Mesa fans have become accustomed to. Th& last four seasons, Mesa has averaged 28.4 points, while holding opponents to 14.3 .. They have scored at least 40 points nine times, reached the 50s twice, and topped the 60-point plateau once during that span. Mesa outscored the competition, 31.9- 15.5 in '99. Uke the scheme, however, much of the offense has yet to be revealed. Hulliger's 19 passing yards and Day's 130 receiving yards (on 12 receptions) provide the only car'ry-over in produc-• tion from a unit that averag ed 319 yards per game last fall. Sophomore running back -linebacker Keola Asuega, sophomore "lineman Andrew Ca.rich and senior Saddleback transfer Lenny Lukela, a receiver-defe n- sive back, are other newcomers to watch . 79 ADAM GARCIA, OG-OT. 5-6, 179, So. Up from frosh 80 L8iNY LuKa A. WR-OB, 6-0, 175, Sr. Saddleback transfer 81 Louis DAY, WR·OLB, 6-3, 170, Sr. . '99 starter 82 RomJlT McQulEEf«, TE·ILB, 6-2, 220, Jr. Up from JV 83 ADAM l>oNovAN. WR-DB, 5-7, 135, So. Up from frosh 84 Jo5E VAU.1. Ol-LB, 5-11, 18S, Jr. Up from JV 86 ANDREw HINDMJC, WR-OE, 5-10, 145, So. Up from frosh 87 lsAAc Ta..s, WR-OE, 5-9, 143, So. Up from frosh 88 MIKE G.MIJ•a, WR-DB, 6-2, 17S, Jo. Up from N 89 TONY~ TE-LB, 6-1, 160, Sr. '99 lettennan 90 lvAN OW. OG-OT, 5-6, 190, So. Up from frosh B.ut, in five playoff games, the Mus- tangs have averaged just 17 points, POSITION BY POSITION CONTINUED FROM B 1 more of a workout this season, as he triggers an attack which is expected to throw as many as 15 times a game. •He has enough talent, speed and confidence to be effective,• Howell said. ~He's gone to camps and done everything he could to prepare himself.• · Hulli.,ger missed out on junior var- sity seasoning last year, when be ><started all 11 varsity games at out- side linebacker. The latter is a role he figures to relinquish this year, in order to fully concentrate on offense. Junior Andrew Strickland, who dld quarterback the N last fall. is the primary backup. Howell doubts Cabico would car- ry the ball 25-30 times a game, which bas bee n the norm for Mesa tailbacks in recent years. •But if we do give the ball to one guy that many times, he'd be the guy.· , Cabico will also 0e utilized in the slof as a receiver, in order to try to find open spaces for him to display his elusiveness. Sophomore Keola Asuega (6-1, 190) is another gifted athlete, but after missing practices ror a family trip to Hawaii, Howell said be would sit out an undetermined number or games early in the season. Like Asuega, Jason Hurley (5-8, 180) gained more lban 1,000 yards for last year's freshmen, Howell Rwmlng backs: Junior Nick said. He'll be in the mix in the two- Cabico, a former youth football star, back set, which is not conducive to a has been caught and passed in the prototypical fullback-type body. growth department. But while only Senior Alvin Nguyen (5-8, 155), 5-foot-9, 145 pounds, years of gained more than 1,000 yards for weight training have given him the junior varsity as a junior and deceptive strength. After a sterling could be ready to take his turn. He year for Mesa's freshmen two years collected ZS yards and one TD on six ago, he carried seven times for 29 varsity carries last fall. ' · yards in a first-round varsity playoff Senior Antony Grubisich, whose lou to Jtvine. 101 yards on 16 carries would make After~so playing varsity basket-him the leading returning rusher, bell and baseball as a freshman, he has put bis fullback days behind transferred. to Mater De1 and started him. He'll toil exclusively in the for the Monarchs' sophomore team trenches this season. • in '99. Other back.field candidates He t.beil returned to Mesa in t.iDle include senior Daniel Hunter, a to earn All-Newport-Mesa District starter at defensive end, senior new- bonon in baseball last spri.lig, and comer Jimmy Isais an~ )umor lhould help diminish the loss to eli-Michael McGuire. £::".:. of All-CJP standout C.J. • • ~ Lenny ilukela. a &-0, Zuniga earned 303 ttmee for l75-:pouncUemortruilleifroinSad· 2.015 yerdl and scored 28 TDa IMt dlebldl. bM ~How.II Wteb fall. • .... ....... MP and lbould ~ at But, Howell ls thorouablY CIGll Wfdeoa&. ~:.d with this year'• bell ~~.,.r11~ti..wm•il.ll. :;:rand~ fCabkc>) bas looked V9IY goOd. ~ .. aalf jMJl9Dtlel ~ .t0t1r.• How.UN.id. "Hnv•= --. -.... .uona ...... ...., ., .. , .lalow ... w.'I ..... ..... w.ktllik:ll ...... 1He ..,..alda2WO, ......... .. .iii5*i-ddmowealbllcmilllll ilil. •1 tblDk ........ _. I ... don.. He ....... u ,. .......... .., ...... Wmp:Jh>gllipl Benedick David ~Josh Clever with 12 catches for 130 yards and one TD as a wideout last fall, has shifted to tight end. But he'll fre- quently be flanked out and will pre· sum.ably remain a featured target. Backing him up will be junior Robert McQueen (6·2, 200) and junior Jose Valle (5-11, 185). Offemtve Une: Luther Mitchell (5-8, 300) earned All-CIP laurels as guard last fall anc:t is one of three returning senior "starters in this group. Mitchell, however, did not ingratiate himself to Howell by bav- ing to make up several classes to remain eligible. . Howell also said Mitchell needs to sbive for more consistent on-field effort. Charlie Amburgey (6·1, 245) returns at one tackle, while Scott Schepens (5-10, 230) returns al am· ter. Amburgey and Schepens, 'How- ell reports, have been extremely dedkated in the offseason and their bard work 1h0Uld pay off with iJbi>roved play. Andi'ew Cark:b (6-1, 240), a man among boys 00 the freshmen team tMt year.~ ftnd a mudl great« amir.ctllm leYel um ..->n. He's• pnljectM -...w. but lt'I UDdelt ,....... M'll ftt in belt at guard or ..... .. :.~=u:J ) .... rt· 215), --.,...., c... :t·--~ " 121 .... -• f'llllh• ...... , .. ,, ....... . ... ~ ........ .. Cllll'lll .. 92 SEAN BIGGIO, WR-OE, 6-0, 16S, Sr. Newcomer Paul Martin Robert McQueen Michael McGuiie Danny Mardikian could be used here in a pinch. Addit;ionally, seniors Kainoa Asuega and George Calcaterra, as well as sophomore Aaron LeGasse provide depth. Defensive line: Grubisich was hampered by a pinched nerve in bis neck and shoulder last season, an injury which tends to recur. U be stays healthy, however, he could be a run-stopping force. Mardikian (5-9, 237), who lost most of his junior season to injury, is also tough to block inside. He and Grubislch provide a strong inside foundation for the trademark four-four illignment, run this season by first-year coordinator Matt Kel· logg. Seruor Dentel Hunter (5-9, 185), who started eight games last year, returns to band.le one end ~· The other end could be manned by Kainoa As\iega (6-1, 185), JWUOr Benedick David (5~. 160), Velie or ~Ben Oreman. Howell compare1 Oevid to former small. but lightening quick All- Newport-MeM Dlltrict performer NaaXlllL Mcknpa at tKkle tadl• Martin. L.eiCiM9e. c.rtcb. Amburgef Mid .......,.. ... Dia. to start at lhe other. Keola Asuega could eme rge, once he's served his penalty for missmg practice, while McQueen and Hurley are other possibilities inside. • , Outside, senior Mher Bablldan (5-9, 160) was an .early front-runner, with Lukela, Jordan and Nguyen also in the picture. Secondary: Last year's starting trio of safety Willy Franco and cor· ners Greg Stewart and Jake Cleve- land. all graduated with all-league laurels. Cabico and Josh Sbickland ure ahead of the fleld at comerback. whl.le Lukel4, McGuire and, per- haps, Dcly, co"1d·open at safety. Isais is also ln the picture at cot· ner, where Luke.la moy also wind 0 ,I Byfu (949) 631-6594 ByPhone (949) 642·5678 ii By Md/In Penon: Hales noel deadlines art subjttt 10 change without notice. Tht puhljshcr rr:1rn rs the ri¢u 1 o re 1t'i0r. mlas ify, mi* or rrjert any da.-.. ifird ad\'rrtisrment. Plrasr report any rrror 1'1111 may I)(• in your dah~ifii·d ad i111111rtli1ttrly. Tlw Daily Pilnt 11cr<·pt!! 1w liubi lity for any error in an 1111\'rrti*'nenl for\\ l1icl1 it may lw rr~1ion iblr t'Xrept for tltr CO'll of the ~parr ar1 ua.lly occupied b~ the error. Cmlit ran ouJy lw ullmn·d for thr (Please include rour name and phone number and t.t'll cull rou back t.id\ 8 price quote.) 330 West Bay Street Costa M~a, CA 92627 At ~"'port Blvd. & Bay Sr. fiN iu.;c·nion. Telephone 8:30am-5:00pm Monday-f riday ·Walk-In 8:30am-5:00pm Monday-Friday 101. 216 / .m . .. ~ . . ' ·. . - '" . ' ' ~t· . -"" · 1----11,..~1 Arntson daughter, HMty au... NOTICE OF Paint. Mra Arntaon Flctltloua Bualneu APPLICATION TO Margaret H. Amt.on, llved In Laguna a.ctl NMll Statement 89, diad July 13 n the for mo1t ofhtl' llft and The followlnp pe190n1 SELL ALCOHOLIC f'ltult of an automobile participated In auch ar~~= ~ vi:c,, ~Eo':A~~ accident In Santa organlutlona 11 tht 324 Marine Avenue, AppllceUon ' RON, CA where ahe .A11l1tanet League of Suite B, Ba1boe lslend. Auguat 14, 2000 ha• llved for the laat Laguna Beectl. CA 92662 To Whom It May eon-' i.n yura. s.mc.. wlll bl held Jeffrey Cooper 324 cem. Sht la aurvlv.cl~ at Pacific View Memo-Merine Avenue, Batboe The Name(•) of the her eon, J11oma1 . rial Pll'k at 1 p.m. on ~CAC: 21111 Appllcant(I) ia/ara: Arntaon, dlughten-Sunday, ~·pt•m.,.r Raletgtl Avenu. . ea.ta KOL YOUl'HAPONG law, Kim and Joyce; 1Di 2000 Mela. CA 926Z7 K~ applicants listed grand1on1, David Thia bu1inMI Is oon-.oove are apg1y1ng to Hana Amtlon, Thomas ducted l>y: a general the Deoettmeiil. OI Alco. Marc Arnteon and partnership tlollc Beverage Control .Bryen Chrl1toph1r Have you •tarted to 1111 alcoholic Arnteon; grind· ~ ~ yet? No bever1g11 at: 1835 daughter•, Sienna PIBICE lllOTHElll TIQ ~ I NEWPORT BLVD., Merit Paint, Mlchtlt •n• •-•-•v flied with•~ec:i,; 0154 & 155, COSTA • Vlctorl• G11fu10, ~ _..... Cl«t< °' Orange County MESA. CA 92627 Lauren Joy Amtaon, Mortuary* Chapel on 0712NlCXXJ .}1\'9,:.' 4~~~ Ann l11 Arntaon, Cremation 2000M35f72 BEER ·ANO WINE - , ll:i~d="t:::::: 1 ~c::y' =-re:. :@ 1~ EA~:tilh'!:CENewport Jay; gr11t grand· M2·91SO ~·t~e:e~ Flctltloua Bualneu 2. 9, 2000 -Heme StMMMtnt Sa4 l 3 .. The lollowlng f*90nl : .,. doing~-= --o-1u_THE __ -Pumpor1al, 1 POMda, 1' : Ctrint &rvicu1111J Quality OuitetJ for Lat lfvlnet-Califomla 92814 ., Akbar Hu11alnl1•• 1 UQIT172 Direct Cremation .. $49S PONda, Irvine, Cemor-UJ' r £( :! Immediate Burial .. $995 n1a 92614 .. .. ... Thll bulln11• 11 oon-SeJl v:our _._ (lnelwla C.Sin) duded by. an lndlvldual 1 \AUa Preamwgcmcnc Programs Available for Hive you •tarted L ... '.. ..... l. ... U Funeral setvices, Cremations and Cukeu ~ ~.r1 No 1MIXWU Thf9 lletement WU S.-.. in fltld with the Counly llQID ~7~~ Cou'lly <liim'IED! 1 l)'\11'\HI ,,,,f -..\\1 I ;.; ;-, .'\ • 1 < \ '-. f, I I 2000MM'70 {n/,. ) £~'1 r.£ ~:2.~~· \719 U'IV]U78 -STARTING Index .p.... - ' . ·- r__,,.- ,. ' ' ~l"·fl-. ~~"·"'~ ~~~" NOTICE OF NOMINEES FOR PUBLIC OFFICE NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that lhe following persons have been nominated for lhe offices designated to be filled at the General Mwticipal Election to be held in the City of Newport Beach on Tuesday, November 7, 2000. FOR MEMBER OF THE CITY COUNCIL District 2 -Vote for One Steven Rosansky Dennis P. Lahey Gary L. Proctor District S -Vote for One Robert Schoonmalrer r Steve Bromberg Patricia "Pat" Beek District 7 -Vote for One Tom Thomson Bob Wynn John Heffernan ( La Vonne M. Hark.tess, CMC/AAE City Clerk City of Newport Beach P\ablithed Newport Bcach..co.ta'Mela 04Uy Pilot Auguat 26, September 2, 2000 SM06 r. -· ------c-l I " : ANEW BUSINESS?. • • • • • • • • • • • ... ' FIND 18 .,.. = "2-5671 _...__ • . < Monday ............... Friday 5:00pm Tuesday ............. Monday 5:00pm Wednesday ........ Tuesday 5:00pm Thursday ...... Wedn.esday 5:00pm Friday ............. Thursday S:OOpm . Saturday .............. Friday $:00pm ' l . 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No 1Br Upper "811 Ptv11llon, ~. la nolSe lutehen$72• ':!' palblg lof 1 aw, stole & "' Simo irlgt · 303 Edgewater, 5119 Rivel. open Sal & Siil $1100lmo 310·375-5500 I0-2p l"4 9"1 949-650-3883 1··-.:n?J NlwDort .. ""' Ulll* 11111 I Bili Ba w/lul, blifll noolt, Ina. htdwd 1111. 1 pr\g IP $ f200/Mo. 407 Sllh St 714-637-2917 nlamk!l'p!IS STEPS TO SANDI Open Sat I 0-3'00 5023 Rivel f A 3bt 21111. new everything. llplc no arrWpll. I car gar, W/O hkup $2200 Ml C!8dit • mus1 949-645-9913 WINTER RENTALS ~ 2 & 38r, fully Mn. erdsed gar, steps IO beach, no pets. 949-675-7130 bllbolbuc:hrentlls.com 28r 181 Cottage 37111 St. Steps lo bNcll, patlOS, Wltlrfronl Back Bay new = "'""'' •··"""" ""· Ba , gar ,......,, . .,..,_,, cstm hm.""' 2 • designer 600/mo ;early. Winter granite, marble, $3500/mo neg, lurn' oi un-lum. 949-723-t380 (55+ comm) Avail 9/1 c-y IWGll Open Sun. Call For Info. 800-247-8209. ac-i View 1 er Brighi a ' quiel, c1oM to bladl, Fp, Mlo.PfNINSULA LOC. 38r 291 B1yfron1 Trlpllx. new crpVpalnl, n/pels, 1yr Large tlll 1Ba, 1 house IO doWnslllrs-patiol'!f>Slal11, 111. St&otimo tte-m.ast beach, Illy view, newty 2 decks, llllWtic views, remodeled, $1 500/mo gar, W/O, 2 lrplc $2900lmo Naw1y Rlmodllld StucMo YEARLY 94HSO-a828 949·293-4630 UpeUh uri1 ~ '* Incl, 8Vll !lfl, ~ I Call Claaalfled Today I $1~ MNIH1:l0 -(949) 642-5678 - CUTE Duplex 2& 181, welt to bdWhopl. 514 ........ WIO hkup. No pet. $1800mo Bait!!!! 949-240-4198 FABULOUS OCEAN a GOll COURSE VIEWS! • 2.Sb•, 2200lf llolM, meny upgndltt Wood floOtl, huge yd. 147SGl'Mo AVlll S!f!( 1 9*721-6771 2BR 1BA lo.--CllCll cod home Pftn ehuelen, nu ~-mc,~'17:5 Spygllll o-i View Open Sii .. Sun 2-4. 49' Harne,~ Jotwl Hyall. Thi 5ummll RE Group. 949·509-5424 Nft ......... 3bt 1.5ba, """ yd ' cllck. •¥911 """' ""'· Ind C«Ptt. pelnt, 1ppl1, flxlures. $3000 Agt t4H40-7000 X30t 01 c:.11 2»%774 Udo .... Chiming 2bf 2ba. lum lloml. IO J)lllo, ~ gar, S2.50Qllno ( 11 mo lelse) Bil Gnn!Y· • IM9-67W161 Wtlll to llMctl 48r 28a. 1180 llOl~l1111 ~. '~~..::3:.!<f:...:..June.:.=...JF_ .... _:_:~_S/Mo_gar . -· -. !)4·813·1180 E'Sld1 811uty newly SUMMIT 2Br 281 hlrdwd remod hse 2bf lba 2 .... vlUl1 Olils, lrnmac, 2cat ......._. ,,,,; $1875 :.._.~C gar/, gar, W/O hkup, auard-oaled ..,..._, ,.v, """ $2100/mo. 94H73-78oo water, no pet 94~2 940 I t•::1:1J Spectacullr Vltw Home Large 4Br 3.S8a t Bonus room house in gated comm Over 3600 sf, 3c gar, lovely grounds, greal cul-de-sac foe. $5000/M0. Klein Mngt lem?OHI!! Ext. 1212 1 HOUSE TO OC£AHI Spacious ~4ba"ll··--.... -~1..-------... ROOlll FOR RENT luxury ol ocn lront S3000mo wWllel rental 949-675-1 !185. lg 3br 2 Sba. ltvrm. lrplc, ~;;;;;;;;;;~~;;;;;~ lamrm, <hm t gil8lt hM -~ IMm, bf & be. Lo yd & p!bO& $3300 949-60-1~ ,,....5er 4.581 11ov .. 3200 sf., 4 car garage downkMn COM $5900/Mo ,,.... S8r as. hcMlll 3200 st. 3 car garage. w~ S55()0{mo. 949-760· 1750 8onlte Clnyon $6000IMO "9f'dl ooootry 5Br home ., gated oomm. naoc pool & iennis Geo1g1n1. 1g1 949-759-3710 NP Helgllll 4111 2bl Ilse, hdwd 111'1. fenced bl!yd, WIO !*up, 2 car g11, gardenll rc1 f2800mo 94MS9-56n EASTBLUFF: 4BR+2.BA wMn. 1-lewf, me. hlh I delnl 13,mMo. Broker Ml-7»1704 Motil MANAGERS • SPECIAL• $154.00+ lax Wkly (Mull ~ thlS Ad) 235rmt& ~ ~ on bll&itUy lendlcaped grooods FEA T\JRES 24·Hour lobby/Ouec1 d11I phones/Free HBO. ESPN & OlsclPoo & Jacuw. Guesl laun· dry Close 10 405 & SS Fwys Min's from O.C Fatrgids, college and bchs. Walklng dis· tanQe 10 shops and restaurantt. COSTA MESA MOTOR INN m7 Hlrtlot BIYd Phone MM4Ml40 llufl9 Twnhm 38r 3Ba, up-I * TOMNllMRllTALI I grad, approx 2000ll ~ gar, 6-1 llChll. pool. avai ~ 1 $2900/mo. 714-456-9468 Call (949) 642-5678 405 Freeway, Exit Harbor, . South 1 Mile· TOWN CAR Full Pwr, Low Miles, Premium Sound & Morel .. Saturday, September 2, 206o Newport Bea~h 2000 DISCOVERY SERIES II Leather, V-8, A~/FM Cass, Fully Loaded 3 at this Payment LalldRover . 'BT .. . Newport Beach 1540 Jamboree (949) 640-6445 Artwork for illustration purposes only. + 98¢ + tax Closed end lease 39 mo. 12k mi. per year. S4, 999 total to start. Total payments: S 11 ,699 + tax, residu•I S17,852. Subject to prior sale and credit eppro11al. (159711, 258498, YA25872) Priof' rentals. Price good thru 9/11 /00. On Any New 2poo Lincoln o'r Mercury 2000 Lincol 2000 Mercury ntaineer • ' ' ' I I ' L... --..I.~ --• ·l !..--. -. . . : L ·! ._ ~ -'. QoynJC~nl APPDAl!A~ Cenilicd Antique & RcsidcncW Contents Apprailals ......... In er-. 40QO -17,?12., 10W ts.•, VlVlEN L HESSE ...... PaH!'' (714) 841-0473 w ... loul ...... 20% lr1I 111 t85a Dud! CM> tor ..... E-Mail: ldj1C41111 IO Wis1tf Wlldldt Rtluo! 11......_ hessclvi aol.com WOlff TAIHNO 8EOI TAH AT HOME BEAUT1f\8. 8ouvltf dee BUY DIRECT AHO SAYE COMMERCIAUHOME lJ1ll "°'" s 199.00 Low Monlhl'f Paymtnl FAU Coiol C.llloQ Ctl 1-80(). 7' 1-0158 Fllndres pupe, 15 WMb L-.;.;.::::.::::.....~:......J L--_.........::._;.,,,l;,,,,;..~ old, AKC, champion l*l!rilll. • INllla 1 1*1111111 '!@949-723-12" .,.,..., Clttflon 1950'1 OllMlt & MtmU 36" Stove w/grllltvatOI. $650 060 1960'1 wtlite Olk din lbt w/2 lelYCll 6 3 d\aill $2SOlobo 714-54H387r Olcltf Style Fumltufe PIANOS l Colltctlbltt ·~·~ ·-·-·~,.,,_. $$CASH PA.ID$$ ...... Qr ......... wi BUY ESTATES •I~ fnendly - Alllll" (l!Om the rncMe At Good • 11 Gtlli 1¥1:. 111111, 10 WMkl old, Y*Y MtndlY. 11200.00_ ace~ Japan•.. Chin rart female, AKC, 5mol. boy lhJI, alladionaW, houtebrolten. f275. IMHSM763 Locll llManl, ""l. ~ 2 Kly.U, 1200EA. ()ell tor acloplloll .-y _... buffet 6 hutch, $200, Svn'a =tr': Fllthlon rtfrl9 1150. Bott 880, ooJ.l lellflCttnto MH44-~ $50. Otll Wiii unltl, m. ~ 94H 73-5045 • 649-4922.._, 1WWW.1nl111alnttwork.ora · A.re Exotic Wlfd..lootl"9 I 44WITQUUIART I so~c::i8b8T ~~ cFA c-r: COLLECTal!I 22t2 ..... It. $300J$500 =111 ~~!!:!! l.41!.• ..... , Circa Ughtlng '" TllUMINfl & AntliJu.es I I 4IO APPUANCU ~lllMM'Ewrett ~ ,__ ____ _, bench, 7/1~ Trvmpet •Chuw • Sl'111nt • l\c:cf'llOftn • ;".ntlqvf "'°""O' •M • {jdh 130 East 17th St Suite ·c Costa Mesa At Ncwpor1 & 171h bthind 1 larp Inn (949) 722·8586 ,,, Alfl1gai ltol, $200. .. *""" c.11 3mo old. ,,, W811w1Drytr, l15Glle. $250. C11 714-sV-0800 ,,, Ole aove. 1150. Xlnt c:gndl ...... 5141 I I -~ WHIRLPOOL ELECTRIC WAllTB DftYEA, 2 YEARS OLD, ..._ _ _..._ __ _.. GREAT CONOIT10H, $250. MM 31-7698 COAST COIN NEEDS OLD COINS! Gold, IMf, 3 C--4 "'-~ jtWeky' WllC:Nt. ltltiqult, ..,,_.. ..,_, coleclibles IMB-&42·9447. Commercl1I Laundry Drytr1 Model l30CQ. $50/u. 714-832-0338 Management Trainees If ~•sen die rnod¥1don, ltadenhlp llld -.vnunlcallon dells -sary ID run a 1ucceuful ltof"I opendon, - tmtte )'OU w )oln our powinc tam at profeulonlla. these envy-level potltloM are the lin t l9¥el cl our extensive 4-1t11P rnanas-ent procram. In rea.rn for JO" eridludum. -... ~ ~ ..,., wtch ._... ..,_. ~ '-llMill tr.unnce. 401 K UICI mttdlandhe dlsCOIMICI. fW mmedllic. conaldera11on. bwanl your ,__ co: Attn: Sandy Hotchelt/OC090l Fq171 ... 1lMltl ~ ~ =Certified Pre-Owned := bir•MW For ultimate peau of mind, ~cry Ccrufied Pre-Owned BMW is backed by The Cutifled Pro-Owned BMW Protection Plan, covering the vehicle for up to 2 years or 50,000 miles (which~cr comes fim) furm the date of apm10on of the 4-ycar/S0,000-milc BMW New Vehicle Llmi1ed Warranty. u The Protection Plan includes rwo key dcmcnu: ~ Certified Pre-Owned BMW Limited Warranty .. Backed by BMW of North America, Inc., an<t irs na1Jonwidc ncrwork of BMW ccn1ers, covered repairs art made only by BM\1e.zraincd tcchniciaru using only genuine BMW replacement paru. BMW Roadside Assistance .. Pcac.c of mind followJ you anywhere in the USA. 24 hours a day, 365 days a year. 1998BMW 'Z3 P R 2.llL. CD, 17k mi $3495 total to st&n.. IOK ml/yr. TOUIJ ~ymcnlA • $13,862 (4AZX297) 1998 ·BMW 740.i Prem sound. 22Jc mi! $499~ total to start, !Ole mVyr. TOUIJ paymet11j • S27 .070 (0251266) '95 52Si Auto, Pmn. P'q (31.DZ.389) ... : ....... SI !J,99S '97 318i '97 Z3 ~ W .,_., Loir Mi (3XC070Z1 S20.99S 1.91. ~. ~. --27/i N1U!S '97 3181 '97 M-3 ,.... W ·~ i.o. Mi UXO?Sll $21,995 lw!Ot 4ds. SiMr wKAq. i.o.w J61t MILES '97 Z-3 '97 5281 t.91. 'f'ltkellllld. m Ml (&81294) ... $24,995 Auio. Alp«• w/8IKk. Pftm. ..... 28-' M.lLliS '97 3281 '97 $40/ Am.ldW~t-~WM601) .. $25.995 Aido,l!ld:wfSluid,1-W .... 29/tinu~i "3181 '97 jl()I r-.1-. ... wl5IM ~ $27.995 Amo, c-. w/Crq. Bauq! .• _JJ,l MlLI!$ '97 5281 '98 Z,.J Aucio. ~ wl8ladl. t..dld (WA7.ol J). ,UJ,99.J Blade w/!la4. l.11.-m-•• ... ,Ui MILJ!S "7 3281 '98 Z,j c..-. .. LolrMl l4AMVO.JOt -132.m Whfcc~IJL---.-ll-'MILl!S '7 3281 '98 318tl C-••~'-IJt.-W'tVMILES ~u...;..,.._WYTN/. .,7J281 '9831811 r--.wwllsci. ..... "4 .. LOW MILES Amo. BW.wfW..:....-1.0W Ml~ Y7 ZJ '98 J181 Ul.,....l.d ~-lQftNILES ~ wi..~-U•MILBS '98"31 C.-. llksc 'Ill•---.. -·~ MIL/JS • '9832811 Alaeo. ~ wfs.iid (4ANl71f>-.U7..991 '98MJ !wa>, Cd, -idr. s.MJ wlllbdt WW MILES '.98 M·3 C...W CO.SJ.a wlCltr---LOW MILES ~528i ,... .,. "" ..... Mi (4jXCJl6)...~ffl ~54/N -. s,.. ""JMf wfGttr ••. ww MILE$ '98 7#11 a-.. ri.. ftiJ .i...t!f.-r.W'W"MII.E$ ~7">1 Span,,..., h~.LOW M1Ll/S "" 74'HJ . 4 Pim. ...._ Pliont.-·-LOW Mil.BS "8 74IJI """ .... ~-·--ZliMlUJS ·~~Certified Pre-Ownta BMW'• To 0.ooeet •a.-a low u S.9% APR OD Meet lbOdeJ.a. • Cati&ed IO 1 OOK Mi • U.Ht, R.deiclc A.ilcucel CREVIER BMW , ~~ .. -~ ~-:"-_J Anyorl9 Clll Do Thlll I 1111 I WOik lrom homl mom E.lmilg S 1500 + PIT. Ful ~24Hr Toll lrH . ~27 Of www.hol lob!l!!·OO!!l Codi 5678 • ........ ,_ n..a.t ...... 19.....S Al'POllmll!:ln' SEl'll'Jl8 Full·time Day & mailll &hlfta Top-producers hJgher • ·l~llaul1-•t01.(f'I. ...... tlt'lli:ll ·Laiw«m~ Run your ad in the Newport Beach- Costa Mesa Dally I I City Pilot and the 1 z-., Hunting Beach-1 -------- --D YES, SB I MY CAR , I I I I I I Foduntain Valley I IC r.amQdtqpCMds o MC o ~ o AM x I In ependent to 1 ·-I reach over 100,00Q .,__ ___________ EiP_'.bi __ __., I homes. Fax us this 1 ,,,_ "** Ptttklent so. 1 form with your credit I ~ Mill Model--~ card# or mail with I 1°:.~ 8=:.a:·:. 8=.:*a. ~ a check toda"I 1 ::=-A ==a=:--, ,...., aAMf'M ...... 8.,. ... .Run for~ weekl If I a=s=-w 8::...~ .. your car <toes not 1 '.!,... · "'¥"°" .................. .... --~ PIOt 330W.Illy,.,C..~CA1111W7 • sell, w~'ll run It fof L __ ~~~~· _ ~-.!...-. __ _ another week FWI · All tor juSt $10·. f • D!aily Pilot --.1 . J . •' -~ -• ...ll!!I CAiia.UC Conooui.. 15 • ..., ........... Wtlll . '-1.· co. Allowt ca1• m.• NANAS - (714>5*f100 CAiia.UC OEVIUE '11 Low .......... ~ ~NABERS ' {7"!640=1100 Cedl9c ...... ... Low 2211 .......... co (111142) 121.- NAJERI (? Hll40:!100 Cllewolet lllalf 'II 1(6 350 Cl, 4114, 11 -...11o¥ .,,...., ''°"'*· ,,.. ... 114,200 71~37!-9111 CffEVY lllAZEJI ... 2 door, ...... co ,..,, .... .. Ktlool lnnt. p!OO. MM?N741 CORYEm 1M4 22tt mllM. AM new, • IN ootkwlt Sl,750 MMS0.7tl0 FORD MUSTANG OT 'f7 Conv, v ... 5 st-I. Uhr C20720S) 117.• NABERS 17t4)!4H100 llcm.I Trooper ... Bid, IMller, llm>Of, CID, loaded, only 21k ml, $23,500 IMH44-1748 JAGUAR JUI L '17 SEDAN 40 S38,"5 '7-6244 BAUER JAGUAR 714-t53-4IOO JAGUAR XJI L '97 ~40 S37,lll5 17-6243 BAUER JAGUAR 714-158-4IOO JAOUAll JUI .. IEOAH 40 Mt.tM .a. • BAUER JAGUAR 714-ISS-4IOO JAGUAR UI 'f7 COUP£ 40 ..... '7-1223 IAUER JAGUAR 714-HH!OO We'll help you write a gOodad! ]tit adl 1LS and wt'H make it easy for y01d A TO Z MMOYMAN ·~ Ooua 7ttt4f-72S8 ,--.~ L . • ~-:..'~ -~J Classified (949) 642· 5678 Brlclte LIXUI u • -8Y CHARLES GOREN •• with OMAR SHARIF ~ u-c.:r'm and TANNAH HIRSCH Law~ V"IO ....... . . WEFJCLY IJRIOOE QUIZ Q I • Al Sot'lh, vulnerable, you tdd:, • 17' J2 o K J J o '5 J • JU Putner opem the biddlnc with one no uump. What ~ion do you take? Q 2 • Boch vulnerable: as SoUlh you hold: 'Jlie biddinA has~: f.AST SOUOI WEST HORTit 10 Dbl r-l o .... 1NT .... 3"" .... ? Whit do you btd oow? Tbe biddina Im m>ceedcd: SOlTfH WES1' NOllTll EAST 10 ,_ t• ,_ ' . What do you bid now'1 Q 5 ·• Neither vulnenble, 11 Soulh you.hold: •AK <:J U5 ...... KI • AU?U The biddirut Im llnJllllCdtd: SOUTH WF.81' NOllTR KAST I• .... JO ,_ ' What do you bid now'1 Q 6 • Boch vulnetable, u Soudl you Q J • Boch vulnerable, 11!1 Sooth you hold: · hold: • Q J It ts• o 5 o A Q 43 • IU • 15 l o A 7 o K 9 72' •JI 7 6 The bidding has orocecded: NORTII EAS'I' SOU'111 WEST . The biddlilg has~: F-AST SOurH WEST NORTH •• p-•• .... to ,_ lo 2• 2• .._ ? ..... ? What do you bid now? What 1tetion do you lake'? Q 4 -Boch vulnerable, ~ Sooth you bold! /,/JO/., for unswtrs un Monday ..._. MOSL 'a MERCmES C230 VT Dartt chan:oal, showroom, Perfect condition. Metalllc ·2 fOPI, I IOk Ff'MWIY milel, Wl'f, gray Mv 1111. al power, $17,995 obo 949-719-2311 8 disk CO cha11ij8r, sun· • rool, oe-tires, 4611 mi. NISSAN 240SX 'tO $221200/obo IMH75-5848 2 DR. AC, PS, CO, ORIG TOYOTA Und CN1Mr VT .----_,__ ........ OWN£R. OtMt condition. i....thet, CO, Only 3311 ml MEACEDES Ml.320 'tt f2!!5 Mt-717-7152 (31~ 132.117 Fully loaded, lo-lack, OldNlobllt Sllllowtte '00 LfX ~ .. VIEJO 15,000 ml, PP, $34,900 Low 12* ml, WNtl. CD _ _..:;=..::=....=-- MM4Mt02 (111055) $21... TOYOTA 4 RUNNER ..._. MU20 '91 811/WN. 1.000 111. bulll. tog. ;;::· Cl/VO. ca1 covet, 750 pp 71 ..... tlCM. MERCEDES 500 SL '93 unra clean, must _, 871c mite• $44,900 0 Mt-364-1113 NABERS Llmlllld, o..t ~. 4x4 (?t 4 )$40.f I 00 (333111) t21.,271 Lerue llulon Yi.to IOHIH 311 Olde Sllhou.tle VIII '11 .. powet, MO, llr c:ond, 7 llhr 11111. I OM* ltCOldl, 13e5Q. 949-723=1504 SATURN '17 PUf AFEW W-ORDSTO WORKFOR- YOU Saturday, September 2, 2000 TODAY'S CRQSSWORP PUZZLE 4 door, IZK ml. Jdnl concl. manual lrwll, CD G;r· f!OOO. HM!?= 4 Call Classlfled Today 949 842-5678 ~~Mi;o7s srUMPED? cal for Answers I TQC. -..~~~ I &pnr.-1~ext cOOe 500 Tht Cellt. Public-U ti 11 ll ea Com· million REQUIRES lhel .. UMd holm- hold l)OOdl mcMJI ~ lhllt P.U.C. Clll T runbet; lmol Ind c:hauffera pmt lhelf T.C.P. runber In ell~ If you hive a quee. lion about lhe legal. lly cl • rnover, ino Of c:hlUIW, cd: PUBUC UTIUTIES COMMISION 714-558-4151 r7J"'lr~~---~ -' I .-.. • I i. -• .. • f ---- 1 . CUSTOM SLIPCOVERS ; -. . . • • I All New 2001 Aurora . . . . . Daily Piiot PU~CHASE FOR ONLY ~ 9939?.£.:~oo .. u~ f -$ 3,651.03 .. Nobef"s Discount OR LEASE FOR $299~ ~~" 36 month 1eas:. $3410.00 cash 00wn or trac1e equity, plus lncepUon lees, tax on .c:tecap & rebate • $4202.48. 1 only 4493. 12k ml. per year. 2a, per ml. In excess. OR 1 PAY~ENT LEASE 59864~24 months+tax&11c:ense. 12k mt. per year. 2°' per ml. In excess. 2000 Intrigue SAVE S],552 =p~lE5~983* SAVE 56,111 =PPRsrl£1~.9M* "SAVE 55,155=PPR5ffe1~99~· OR 0.9% APR FINANCING UP fO 60 MO. (O.A.C. THRU GMAC) MD SAVI $3,155 2000 Seville STS 2000 Escalade 2000 Eldorado OVER 50 QUALI TY PE< E-OWNED VEHICLES AVAILABLE '94 CHEVROLET CAVAUER low miles, outo, AC & morel New car trode-inl ( 136512) '87 CADILLAC FLEETWOOD Brougham, b.v 53k miles, dassic stylet (704212) '93 BUICK LE SABRE LTD, low miles, leather, white, '*ioblel (436054) '91 CADILLAC DEVIW Low miles, blue, ABS, air bQg & morel (203868) '93 CADILLAC ELDORADO Whil9 pearl, many extro1, ~ aYWOge miles! (612.435) '94 CADILLAC SEVIW . V-8 North11or, white, tan lecilher, excellent condition! (837.429) '95 CADILLAC DEVIW LOW mtl., beige, Jan lealher, moornoof, oloys & morel (230058) '99 OLDSMOBILE CUTLASS .. Low mil., V·6, CD & mcnl Bal. of warr., ~· rwnlall (33.4952) '95 CADILLAC CONCOUR.5 Low 38k miles, 290 H.P. Norhtor, mint condition! (307263) '00 BUICK CENTURY limited, 16" miles, leather, power seat & morel Bal. of worr., pm. r-Mloll (20037.A) '97 CADILLAC CATERA I.ow 1 Sit miles! White, Ion lealher, allays, bal. of wan'., MW CXJr frode.inl 109W9} '98 OLDSMOBIE INTRIGUE GLS low 19k miles, leolher, ~roof, aftoyi, bot. of worr. (389522) '95 CADILlAC ELDORADO Touring, low milet, b«x:k, leather, CD & morel (613692) '00 OLDSMOBIU SILHOUmE lQW 12k mil., cid doon, rear air, a> & mcnl Prev. i-*'. (211055) $18,988 $18,988 $18~988 $19,988 $20,988 '97 CADILLAC ELDORADO . $ . Low miles, beige, tan leather, aloys, bal. of worr. (601068) · 23 t 9 8 8 '97 CADILLAC SEVIW $ tow.-ik mile$, leaeher, cilloys, CO & mot9l Bal. of worr. (811242) 24,988 '99 CADILLAC DIVIW ' S 88 Low mil., whit., tan lealtw, V·8 Northstar, bal. of worr., PfW't'· rnol. (7894'1) 24,9 '97 CADILLAC SMW STS $ 6 88 lo.v mem, ~Id., c*1if..d 6/7fj,. WGIC:Wlfy, tharpl (83.Q76) 2 t 9 •Costa Mesa •• .. •