HomeMy WebLinkAbout2000-09-09 - Orange Coast PilotPllP FOOTl&ll
Newport Harbor 14
Orange Lutheran 7
• Co>.terage In Sports. Page B 1
~ c.oron. del Mir YI.
~ 1tw...n .._,School
. . . . .
..
........... . ...... . .
SERVING THE NEWPORT -MF.SA COMMUNmES SINCE 1907 ON »E WEB: WWW.DAILYPILOT.COM WEEKEND, SEPTEMBER 9-10, 2000
'--r
Bay and beaches may see .less -runoff
• Sanitation district is considering plan to take in more
water suspected of causing pollution in local waters.
Alo Coolman
DAILY PILOT
The sanitation district, the
agency that handles sewage flow
for the county and cities like New-
port Beach and Huntington Beach,
already accepts into its treatment
plants about 2 million gallons per
day of diverted wban runoff.
district take in as much as 10 million
gallons of runoff per day, said Tom
Meregillano, a regulatory specialist
in the environmental compliance
and monitoring division of the sani-
tation district.
approach,· Meregillano said. He
noted the new plans must be
approved by both the district's tech-
rucal services conunittee in its Mon-
day meeting, and by the board of
dueclors at the end of the month.
everybody who's diverting at that
point to work together to sdy 'Look,
let's reduce it..'·
The new proposal could be d boon
to the agencies that deal with water
quality in Newport Beach, said Mon-
ica Mazur, a spokesperson for the
Orange County Health Care Agency. NEWPORT BEACH -The
Orange County Sanitation District is
considering a proposal to take in
more wban runoff water, a move
that may provide a boost for local
pollution-control and beach and bay
deaning efforts.
But major revisions to its plans
could be approved as soon as the
end of this month that would see the
The district plans to accept up to
4 million gallons per day without
charge, Meregillano said, and it also
plans to expand the period during
which it acE:epts runoff -from swn-
mer only to year-round.
U the level of runoff that is accept-
ed by the district rises to more than 4
million gallons per day, the district
plans to pass along the costs of diver-
sion to all the agencies using the dis-
trict's serv1ces. Meregillano said.
"We're delighted to get (runoff!
off the beach or out of the harbor,·
she said. "But people hdve to under-
stand that these diversions drcn 't the
#The district has taken a new
lead in terms of its watershed
"It's an Incentive to reduce the
urban runoff," he said. #It's up to SEE RUNOFF PAGE A 10
PHOTOS BY OON I.EACH I OAl.Y PILOT
Shiloh, an Airedale, right. checkl out the action while h1s buddy, Star, a Dalmatian. and bis owners, the Morris family, left. watch
at a temporary dog park In Costa Mesa.
-~ark Park make-over nearly done
·.
• Costa Mesa committee overseeing
renovation of d og run in TeWinkle Park
only has to plant grass now that city has
finished its improvements.
Jennifer Kho
D AILY PILOT
COSTA MESA -Dogs soon will be able to run free
in a park that has been renovated just for them.
City Manager Allan Roeder said Costa Mesa has
completed its part of a bargain struck with residents
months ago to improve Bark Park in TeWinkle Park on
Arlington Drive at Newport Boulevaid.
Parking has been added and walkways for handi-
capped access have been laid. Once the Bark Park
Committee plants grass in the park, the dty will be
re ady to reopen the g ates to four-legged park users.
Brtan Morrll 11 aurroundecl by two Alredales, Max and Simon,
along with Star at C~ Mela"• Bark Park, where he and h1I
family went to run the dog.
A temporary park for dogs bas been set up next to
Bark Park and will be open for up to 90 days to give the
committee time to plant grass and give it time to grow.
SEE BARK PARK PAGE A 10
Macy's tests new home-furnishings store
•Three-level prototype at
South Coast Plaza is laid out like
a home without interior wallS,
with an related merchandise
grouped together.
ha.S been set up like a home without inte-
rior )Valls, a concept that company offi-
dals Mid will help make interior decorat-
ing eUier for customers. . ·eyerything for the room is in ~e
place. lt'1 laid out JUlt like a boule. which
lolv8I tbe interior decorating problem.•
Mid Blizabeth Krog~ ~ preildent of
public relations fOI' Maicy'1 W81t.
•u you bUv a table, you don't have to
8* yuunelf. 'What dillMI Would k>Oll fe~
ulolll an that tablet' bt.llUm b8ft dam a
.... ~ ibowlng' WOIDlll bow to -•
ILDI ..... look wllb tlMlr dia. Mow ::a'i:.:=.'°: .n:.=: ...
IDilblrMliq'I Hmm ........... :::r:,a:==~=--=-
llSIDI llDIOOI
Building
activity
• surges m
Newport
•City report shows $220.6 million
was spent on development in
the last fiscal year, mostly on
residential construction.
M athis Winkler
DAILY PILOT
NEWPORT BEACH -The construc-
tion of new homes in the city is boorrung
and by the looks of it, that's not going to
change.
A building ~Wy·C port t . 1.
2000 fiscal year revealed that construction
projects in Newport Beach have exceeded
$200 million for four consecubve years.
During the 1998-99 hscal year, when
developments totaled $302 rrullion, the
nwnbers were skewed because of con-
struction in the newly annexed Boruta Vu-
lage -putting this past year di the top of
the list with projects worth $220 6 rruJJJon
"That's never been known IIl the histo-
ry of the city,• said Jay Elbettar, who
directs the city's building department.
In 1994, construction in the oty was val-
ued at $70.3 million; in 1995, it remained
just slightly less than $80 million.
In 1996, construction climbed to a total
of $145.7 million and In 1997, building
activity topped the $200-nullion mark for
the first time.
A swge in construction and renova-
tions of homes signified the most inte rest-
ing trend over recent years, Elbettar said.
About 80% of all building perm.its were
issued for residential construcbon last
year, Elbettar said. Altogether. the build-
ing frenzy brought $3.5 rruJJJon in permit
fees to city coffers.
The city also approved the demolition
of 112 single-family homes that were
replaced by new buildings, he said.
•That's almost 10 homes a month.· said
Elbettar, adding that 1,112 additions or
alterations to homes were also approved. ·u signifies that the economy is good and
people can afford home improvement pro-
jects .... That's why when you drive around
town, every fifth home is being built on.•
The city also issued 393 penruts for
additions or alterations to commercial
buildings, according to the report.
Only one office building, one hotel and
one parking structwe were approved in
the last tisca.l year.
Meliabera
Ol a ........... ....... •••••wW ..... _ .........
SEE BUILDING PAGE A 10
..
111111
·--... ----------........ _.....__...___... ..
''
A2 Saturday, September 9' 2000
• .
SECOND OtURCH Of a.IST SCIENTIST
The Second Church of Christ Scientist holds ser-
vices SUnday at 10 a.m. ~ tchool for yooth
through age 20 Is offered during the morning ser-
vice. A. testimonial 5itf'Vke fs held Wednesday at 8
p.m. Child "'e Is proYkfed at all services for the
very young. A. noon testJmonial meeting is held on
IN THE SPIRIT
. .
the first Wednltday of each month. The dlurc:h Is
at 3100 P.clfk View Drive, Corona del Mar. The
Otrtstlen $denCe RHdlng ROOn1, at 3500 E. Coast
Highway, Corona del Mar, is open 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Monday through Friday, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday
and 1 to 3 p.m, Sunday. For more information, call
(949) 644-2617.
Daily Pilot
• Iglesia _de Cristo
Ondy Trane Christeson
MORAl Of THE STORY
The blessings
of doing UJithout
"To be without some of the things you
want is an indlspensable part of happiness."
-Bertrand Russell
I f necessity is the mother of invention,
then perhaps simplicity is the father of
satisfaction.
My family and I were fortunate to be able
to eke out one last trip before school started
We went with my extended family for a fun
weekend on my parents' boat to Catalina.
We had great weather and warm water.
We enjoyed wonderful swimming, fun
kayaking and beautiful hildng. We saw
brightly colored fish, a swprised deer and
several buffalo. We also ate many deli-
cious meals.
While we were blessed with so many
great things, there was one thing we did-
n't have. We didn't have a dishwasher.
What we did have because of that,
though, was more time together to talk.
Actually, I should say that we had
many dishwashers, and we took turns
sharing the duty and sharing our lives
around the galley sink.
I remember many special trips to
Catalina with my grandparents. They did-
n't have timesaving devices on their boat,
which was great because we weren't try-
ing to save time. We were sharing time.
We did things together we didn't do
normally. Sometimes the most memorable
conversations took place while doing the
most routine things.
I learned about my grandmother's child-
hood while cleaning com and peeling veg-
etables. I heard stories of my grandfather's
youth and sailing adventures while we
cleared the table and cleaned the floor. 1
picked up bits of wisdom while picking up
afte,r o:ieals. I soaked up their stories while
the dishes soaked.
Some of those stories grew bj!tter over
the years. They were the kinds of stories
that linked our generations.
Did we have to go to Catalina to have
those kiods of times together? Of course not.
You can have those kinds of times
without stepping outside your front door. I
was reminded of that several years ago
when I had my husband Jon's family over
for Christmas breakfast.
I had carefully set ~e table the day
before and fixed as much of the meal
ahead of time as possible. I woke up early
Christmas morning to finish the last-minute
cooking and deaning while sipping a fresh
cup of coffee. The minute I turned on the
garbage disposal to whisk away the coffee
grounds was the minute I knew my day
was not going to go as planned.
The garbage disposal backed up, and
~thin seconds black coffee grounds deco.-
rated both halves of the sink. I turned off
the disposal, said a quick prayer and just
stared at black swirling sludge for a few
minutes. Then I schlepped most of the goo
into the garden and covered the sinks
with wooden chopping boards.
Having no garbage disposal didn't take
away from our fun time together tpat
morning. In fact, it added to it because all
13 of us took part in deaning up. We
emptied scraps into the trash and rinsed
dishes in the laundry room and outside. It
ended up being quite a bonding time.
Modem conveniences really are won-
derful. But everybody ought to do without
them now and then.
And you can quote me on that.
• ONDY 11llANE a.usTESON Is a Newport Beach
resident who speaks frequently to parenting
groups. She may be reached via e-mail at
dndyOonthegrow.com or through the mall at P.O.
Box 6140-No. 505, Newport Beach, CA 92658.
Adc:fn155: 287 W. Wilson St., .
Costa Mesa
Telephone: (714) 775-8042
Year church esubllshed: 1990.
Service .times: 2 p.m. Sundays;
7:30 p.m. Thursdays
Senior Pastor: Jose Uribe.
Congregation size: 50 faJDfiles.
Congregation makeup: Mostly
Hispanic, 30% teenagers.
Child caN: Provided for all ser-
vices and families activities.
'fype of worship: Prayer, a cap-
pella singing, Bible study and
the Lord's Supper.
"fype of sennon: Teaching of the
Scripture applied to daily living
and family life.
Recent sermon: Uribe is present-
ing a series of seven messages
about the seven things that are
ah abomination to God. The
messages are based on Proverbs
6:16-19. The series focuses on
the importance of not upsetting
God with the way we live and of
pleasing him and glorifying him
as our creator.
Upcoming sermon: Uribe's next
series of sermons will focus on
family living. It will focus on the
role good moral values have in
making a family and society,
strong and healthy.
Welcome wagon: Visitors will
find a very warfn and friendly
group of people. They are given
a br.ochure about the church and
its ministry. If they leave their
names, addresses and phone
numbers, visitors are mailed the
church's weekly newsletter.
Outreach programs: The church
Faith
CALENDAR
SPECIAL EVENTS
SCHOOL KICKOFF
St. Mark's Presbyterian Church
hosts a "Surfin' Fall Kick OW
party from 10:30 a.m. to 2 p.m.
Sunday 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. Sunday at the center, 250
E. Baker St. The event will
highlight the programs and
classes offered by the center.
Free. Door prizes, a raffle and
discount options for class regis-
trations 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. Sunday worship service.
• The picnic is at Wakeham Park,
3400 Smalley St., Costa Mesa.
(714) 557~3340.
'SOCK HOP'
St. Barnabas Orthodox Church
of Costa Mesa will hold a fund-
READERS. HQNNE
(949) 642..Q>86
or adwrti.m.nts Wein CM1 be
reprodUCld without WrittM\ !*'-
mission of~ fNlttflf,
VOL~ N0.218
1HOMAS H. JOllNSDN.
Publlther
lOllY DODlm,
Editor
Ma-'8,.
AMC.Int Qty Edltof
••&ZIC 1M1W.. ,..,,. ldltor _aw._
.,,.. Editor MMC...,.
"'*fdltor
... ...,, fl9Q(,
NlwlfdllDr .. .......-
-~ _. lmDil:1ftl,
-..~ ..,, ... ..
~ ..... 11111.., u..•••Nt ,. ........ ..,_ .....
Qllf ...... Ofllmr
Record your wmrnenb llbout
the Dally Piiot or news tips.
ADDRESS .
Our *'dr• ls n ow. aay st..
Costa Mesa. CA 92Q7. . •.•,,• ...... ,,
HOW TO BEAQt US
c:Jraadort
The Tlmes Onlnge County
(800)~9141
~ .....
a.tfled ~ 642-5678 =.. (149l 642"'4l2.1
Nliwl (Mt) 642-5680
$pof'tl (949) 574-4223
News, 5pof'ts P:ax (949) MM 170
t""'IU: cWfypl~oom
MelftC)fla
l lllinlll OMet (Mt) 142-4321
IWINll Feit (Ml) 01-7121
~ llrTlll'-~"""'
....... """ 1.11-......1'1Mi.
Jose Uribe Is pastor of Iglesia de Cristo in Costa Mesa.
has an evangelistic campaign
two or three times each year,
plus weekly summer programs,
when members go door-to-door
with information about the
church and invite neighbors to
visit. A guest speaker is invited
to the church for the campaigns.
The church conducts regular
classes for single parents, par-
ents of teenagers and newly-
weds. It offers Bible studies at·
the church and a free correspon-
dence Bible course.
D.-s: The church does not have
a dress code.
I • • rais~r •po~ Jjop • from 4 to 8
p.m. Sunday in st. I:.uke's
Orthodox Church's fellowship
hall, 13261 Dunk.lee Ave., Gar-
den Grove. A band will play
1950s and '60s music. Proceeds
will benefit St. Barnabas' Icon
Projects. (714) 429-0587.
OPEN HOUSE SEUCHOT
Temple Isaiah of Newport
Beach-Conservative will host an
Open House Selichot -prayers
and preparatton for the High
Holy Days -for members,
friends and newcomers to the
area at 8 p.m. Sept. 23. It will be
held at the temple, 2401 Irvine
Ave. (949) 548-6900.
NEW VISION
New Thought Community
Church will hold a celebration
for its new vision and mission
for a child-centered.church
beginning at 10 am. Oct. 1 at
the Costa Mesa Community
Center, 1845 Park Ave. (949)
646-3199.
SEMINARS
LECTURE FROM RABBI
Rabbi Jossi Mentz, director of
education of the Hebrew Acad-
emy, will lecture at the Temple
Isaiah of Newport Beach at 7:30
p.m. Thursday at 2401 Irvine
Ave., Newport Beach. (949)
548-6900.
SPIRITUAL SIGHT
Divaldo Franco, a Brazilian lee-
Mission statement The church
strives to follow the command of
Jesus given in Matthew 28:19:
"Go to all peoples everywhere
and make them my disciples:
baptize them in the name of the
Father, the Son, and the Holy
Spirit, and teach them to obey
everything I have commanded
you.•.
Interesting notes: Uribe empha-
sizes that religion is not to be
practiced only in church; religion
is how one lives 24 hours a day.
After bis sermon, Uribe some-
turer and author, will give a lec-
ture titled "Self 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. (7141;
449-3255.
WORKSHOPS
STUDY GROUP
The Costa Mesa Word Study
begins its fall study from the
book of Romans at 9:15 a.m.
Sept. 20. A kickoff brunch will
be held that day. The group will
meet Wednesdays through
through Nov. 15 at the Newport-
Mesa Christian Center, 2599
Newport Blvd .. Costa Mesa.
(714) 577-6788.
(:'EE.KLY EVENTS . . MEN'S FELLOWSHIP GROUP
Presbyterian Church of the
Covenant's men's fellowship
group mee~ from 8 to 9 a.m.
Wednesdays at the Village
Parmer restaurant, across from
South Coast Plaza in Costa
Mesa. (714) 557-3340.
DESIGN OF UNIVERSE?
Christ Lutheran Church is hold~
ing an eight-week series of dis-
cussions on •Signs of Inteµi.gent
Design" in the universe. The
meetings ·are from 6 to 7 p.m.
Wednesdays at the church, 760
Victoria St., Room 112, Costa
Mesa. Free. (949) 645-8381.
WEATHER AID SURF
COSTA MESA
BRIAN POBUDA I DAILY PILOT
times tells the congregation that
the sermon is not finished-it has •
just started. He refers to Hebrews
11:6, which reads: "No one can
please God without faith, for
whoever comes to God must
have faith that God exists and
rewards thOse who seek him.•
• A gospel meeting will be held
Sept. 28 through 30, with the
theme "In Exchange For a Thief:
Odyssey of the Sacrifice of
Jesus.• For more information
about the event, call (714) 775-
8042.
--Compiled by Michele M. Marr
AT A CROSSROADS -~ Pt'esbytertan Chutch of me
Covenant hosts "Crossroads" for
sixth-, seventh-and eighth-
graders from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m.·
Thursdays at 2850 Fairview
Road, Costa Mesa. The program
includes dinner, games and Bible
study. A $2 donation is suggest-
ed. (714) 557-3340.
HELP wmt HEALING
Jewish Family Services of
Orange County sponsors an
ongoing Jewish healing support
group at 7 p.m. Thursdays for
people who suffer from chronic
illness. The group's purpose is to
provide particiP.8°'.ts with emo-
tional and spintual support to
help manage the effects illnesses
have on people's lives. Meetings
are at 250 E. Baker St., Suite G.,
Costa Mesa. Free. Preregistration
required. (714) 445-4950.
WEEKLY KIDS' PROGRAM
Presbyterian Church or the
Covenant presents "Children of
Our Lord,• a weekly Thursday
evening program for first.
through fifth-graders. Games, a
speaker and dinner are included
for a $2 donation. The church is
at 2850 Fairview Road, Costa
Mesa. (714) 557·3340.
• Is your church or place of wonhip
planning a spedal event? tf so. send
the typed infonnatlon at least two
weeks before the event to the Dally
Pilot, 330 W. B~t .. COS1a Mesa, CA
92627, a~tlOO:]ennlfer K Mahal.
religion editor; fax to (949) 646-41 70
or e-mail to dallypllotO,.tJmes.com.
POLICE FILES
TBS !EJi:AnMIS
Balboa
82163
Corona del Mar
12163
Costa Mesa
a462
TiDIS
TODAY
First low
2:01 a,m ........... ., .. n ....... 0.3
First high
8:36a.m ....................... 4.2
• .......,. llrMt: Whll4t an Innocent shopper wolled
through the~ of South Coast Plaza the att.moon of
~· 251 • thief WM In search of • few •lections of his
own, particularly a Kenwood sterwo he spotUld Inside an
AoJta. So he ppened the CM up and stole ~ ~ with
... speat(• and a $10 bill on the c:entet ~. 1M
SWreC> wm of the ·~ fece•·v~ but thll form
of removal was men drlStk than the "*"lf.m.nn h.t
lntendtd.
Ntwpof1 Be.ch
~
Newport ~
11164
WllOMCAST rt.. wlll .,. • fading
SW grOUrid IMll and some tr9CJI NW Wlt;d
swell; Surf wtl .,. mo.tty
2.J', wltt\ OCl*lonlf 4'
WI* It -aoc.tlonl.
....... 1111
...... 2-J"
NI )IDrt 2-r
lleddi\ 2-J'
... J9t:IY 2-J'
CdM 2-J'
Second low
1:36 p.m ...................... 2.5
Second high
7:34 p.m ....................... 5.5
SUNDAY
First low
2:32 a.m ................. ~ ... 0.2
Flnt ~
l:sta.m ....................... 4.4
5econdlow
2:0tp.m ...................... 2.2
Seoond~
l:OI p.m. ...................... 5.7
I I I I t I t I I
Doily Pilot Saturday, September 9, 2000 A3
. .
TboUghts on family, development, schoo"/s and community
E d Tomasek is about as
stable a guy there is
anywhere. He and his
wife, Rosie, have two kids,
Eddie, 10, and. Annie, 9.
Last Wednesday, I met Ed
at the flag deck ceremony at
Victoria Elementary School
where his kids go to school,
along with our two
munchkins. The Pledge of
Allegian~ was followed by
fourth-grade teacher Marilyn
Wright leading the entire
school in a stirring renditio.n
of "You're a Grand Old Flag.•
1bis morning ritual, con-_
ducted with respect and
enthusiasm, is one of the ele-
ments that make Victoria a
California Distinguished
School
On my way out, I noticed
that Ed was not wearing a
tie, but was dressed in a T-
shirt and shorts.
·Are you working today?•
I asked Ed.
•No,• he replied. "I quit.•
Ed has been working non-
Steve Smith
·WHAT'S UP?
stop for more than 30 years.
Not long ago, Ed and Rosie
decided that he has earned a
break, so he is taking the
next year "off."
Ed may work a little, he
may not. But the more we
talked, the more he seemed
to appreciate that this is a
rare opportunity to change
his life completely. Perhaps
find a new hobby, perhaps a
new career.
Ed is also taking some time
off, slowing down, to spend
more time with Annie and
Eddie. Ed and Rosie Tomasek
are my heroes today.
• • •
There is some fin~tuning
due on nty comments last
week about the out-of-touch
Newport Beach City Council.
I stand by e-v0rything I wrote
that day, but it's important to
note that µntil now the over-
crowding of Newport Beach
has not been a serious prob-
lem.
For the most part, the
muckety-mucks have llVOided
congestion. Yes, there are
exceptions in Newport Beach,
as there are everywhere.
But the backers of Measure
S are not legislating in a
rearview mirror and while the
city has done a good job of·
controlling growth, Measwe S
supporters want to stop exces-
sive growth before it begins.
I still believe that without
Measure S, the city will
develop Marinapa.rk, the
Dunes, Fashion Island and
more. But in the interest of
fairness, the council's track
record of development
should be noted.
• • •
Will someone please do
something with the Can-
nery? It's hard to sit at the
Bluewater Grill and not think
about the wonderful Moth-
er's Day brunches we
enjoyed there for so many
years. Could it be that those
in charge are waiting for the
decision on Measure S?
• • •
Our teachers, administra-
tors and school board mem-
bers deserve a round of
applause for their gains on
the SAT scores in our district.
More important, I believe, is
the increase in the number of
students taking the test.
Whatever they're doing, I
hope they keep it up.
• • •
There is community
involvement and then there
is community involvement.
The kind with the big impact
was demonstrated by The
Irvine Co. and the Donald
Bren Foundation, teaming up
to donate $25 million to sev-
eral local school districts,
including Newport-Mesa
Unified. This kind of corpo-
rate involvement is
admirable and should be
noted by other companies
who wish to help take care
of our village.
A disappointing note was
sounded, however, by Bill
Habermehl, associate superin-
tendent of the Orange County
Department of Education,
who said. "It's not a donation,
it's an investment They want
to sell more homes.•
So, what does it take?
What does a corporation
have to do to make you
understand that once in a
while, they give money sim-
ply because it's the right
thing to do?
• • •
So now Steven Allen
Abrams has been found
guilty and I can stop calling
~ monster the •alleged•
murderer. He purposely
drove his car into a preschool
playground to hurt innocent
kids -little kids -and be
gets to have a hearing to
determine tI he is sane.
This is absurd. In my opin-
ion, sane or insane, he should
receive the maxi.mum penal-
ty prescribed by law, Wlth no
considerabon of lus place-
ment in a mental institution.
• STEVE SMfTH 1s a Costa Mesa res-
ident and freelance writer. Reader1
can leave a message for him on the
Daily Pilot hotline at (949) 642·
6086.
L--_.._.,..-r Barbara's Bakery (( Motlaers]
Whole Wheat
Bread
0 ~~t~~r~i
• Owx:olote
RBt'9.99
SeptdnlMI'
is
MA1IOMAL
OBGAMIC
M01ft'l1!
Snackhnals
AnJniaJ C.ooiies • """"""* C1tlp
•Oaturtf s~ .y ...
REG. 79e 2.1 oz.
IMAGINE
NATURAL
Puddi•Jg
:~s--19
•lemon .IL Fow
REG . ., .95 3. 75 az. cups
GLENNY'S
Organic Soy Nuts
• Honeg Muslllrd ~ • Ufldlg Sa//l!d • SiJlsa .
• Garlic & OnionSilr 4
REG. '2.75 .....,... .a:; C1L
~45
REG. '2.95 32 oz.
Marin Foods
Fig Bars
• Whole Wheat Hooey
• Fat Free F1g
• Fat Free Wild 919! Ba!y ear
REG. '3.25 12 az.
~~--til~ J11ices
::!e =:-S•89
REG. '3.35 .IL 32 GL
• ~ Fndt·On Botlrxn • Raspheny
:~~la ~ • Black Olm'}'
Reg.• laz.
~Ort;mic .~.a-
• Montaey Jacb
• Mozzarela
Stieb
REG. '3.99 •
. MAGNA -_PAK
A combination of 6 capsules and tablets ·
supply 20 high potency vitamins and 14
minerals in one neat packet!
ao padt;ets s1399
,
A4 Saturday, s.e-# 9, 20oo ....
Suspec ought in liquor store heists
• Robber has twice hit
Costa Mesa stores and
others in Huntington
Beach and Fountain
Valley: police ask
public for help.
Jennifer Kho
DAILY PILOT
Police are asking for the
community's help in collaring
an armed robber who has bit
two Costa Mesa liquor stores
as well as two. others in near-
by cities.
A man armed with a blue-
steel semiautomatic handgun
robbed Minute King Markets
& Delis at 2052 Newport Blvd.
in Costa Mesa on Friday
afternoon, police said.
Costa Mesa Police Sgt.
Burt Santee said the suspect
entered the store at 4:41 p.m.
and stole an undetermined
amount of cash. No one was
hurt.
The suspect fled before
police arrived in a dark gray
late 1990s model four-door
Ford with no license plates.
He has also been seen fleeing
the scene of previous rob-
beries in a dark green two-
door Ford.
A man believed to be the
same robber stole cash Aug.
15 from Buck's Liquor Barn at
1089 Baker St.. said Costa
Mesa Police Del. Bob Fate,
who is investigating the case.
-~~ .~H~
I ~
••••••
Still images taken from surveillance videotape shows rob-
bery suspect wanted by police.
Police describe the sus-
pect as a male between 25
and 27 years old with short
brown hair, a mustache and
goatee. On Friday, he was
wearing dark-framed sun-
glasses, a white T-shirt and
blue or dark-colored shorts
with two stripes down the left
side.
The suspect was also
described as wearing very
similar clothes during the
Barbara Lee, M.S. MFT
Couples. lndlvlduab & Groups
1151 DoVESTREET, #105
NEWPORT BEACH, CA 92660
(949) 261-8003
License MH021595
August robbery.
The robber has also bit a
liquor store in Huntington
Beach and one in Fountain
Valley. Costa Mesa authori-
ties are working with police
departments in those cities,
Fate said. •
Anyone with infonnation
related to the crimes is asked
to call the Costa Mesa Police
Bepartment at (714) 754-
5280.
••••••••
Bring your family anJ frinuU to where the P•llilion,
the Ferry anJ the Pier nun in the heart of &Jbolll
.. ....,.._. ...... ._. ............
In raaapWoa al cblir bit -dYic IUflPOC' al c1w--ic,.. dle..,..~.o-,,,
....__ wil be._..... ......... Oft bcbalf'
o("" fubet. ,.._._ ..... wtio opcmd hil
""'*'shop Oft .., ""'--in 1921.
llic ,,_,_-J 1M _.....J IMOt\ HlMoric
Awa.d .... b. !Mk ....... At.iii..' pm.
.......
t II i 1111 ..... -. 111111 ..___ ....
,_ .. 1211-.... ...... ··---··----......... 91
1111 ..... " ... llllM .......... ..,
Classlfled ads work for
YOU!
M ' . .
iEWPOIT IEACH c1n COUNCIL PIEVl~W
I
Chi .... AGENDA
SlllOI ffUSllG
Newport Beach's affordable housing
task fo~ has concluded that senior dti-
zens have the most pressing need for assis-
tance with housing. The task force, which
includes COWldl members Jan De bay, Gary
Adams and Tod Ridg~way, also says it's
time for 1be Irvine Cd. to develop afford-
able housing required by the general
plan's housing element in connection with
the construction of..850 homes. ·
The task force chose Lower Bayview
Landing as the site where an affordable
housing project could be developed with-
out significant delay.
Zoning there currently would allow for t2o affordable housing units. But city offi-
cials expect that number could be
increased to allow the company to fulfill its
obligation for affordable housing, which
the city can set anywhere between 129
· and 172 units.
What to expect: The City Council is
expected to authorize Oebay, the task ·
force's chairwoman, to send a letter to The
Irvine Co. indicating that the city would
encourage an affordable senior housing
project at Lower Bayview Landing.
SUMMER BREAK
Coundlman Dennis O'Neil asked city
ON THE COUNCIL
Jo~n Noyes, mayor
Gary
Adams
Dennis
O'Neil
FYI
• WHO: NewP<>f1 Beach City Council
members • WMA'r. City Council meeting
• WHEN: 7 p.m. Tuesday
•WHERE: Cit)' Hall, 3300 Newport Blvd.
officials to research the possibility of a sum-
mer break at the Aug. 8 meeting. A summer
break might make it easier for the dty to
coordinate summ~ meetings and vacations
schedules. One optiOn city officials stiggest
is to hold only one meeting in July or
August. THis w= give the council a break
of four weeks. other option is to cancel
meetings for one month. If the council had
skipped its August mee"'1gs this year, the
break would have lasted ~ weeks.
Anaheim, Costa Mesa, Huntington
Beach. Santa AD.a and Tustin city council
members do not take summer breaks.
Irvine and Laguna Beach hold only one
meeting in August and Fullerton skips one
meeting in the summer.
Problems with a summer break include
longer waiting times for applicants and
issues before they can appear before the
council. · What to expect: The city manager has
recommended trying out a summer break
in 2001 by skipping the second meeting in
August Should this proposal cause prob-
lems, the council could always switch back
to the old system.
Jan
De bay
Tod
Ridgeway
Norma
Glover
Tom
Thompson
Enjoy a Spacious Suite, Sumptuous Dining,
Entertainment, Bingo, Crafts, Billiards, Beauty Salon,
Transportation to Doctor, Shopping, Fun Trips,
Friendly Caring People.
From $1,495/Mo .
2283 Fairview at Wtlson
Costa Mesa
Minimum age 58 .
For more informa tion
please call:
949/646-6300 or
Fax 949/646-7428
p i t c h . 'r!.'f: . '
In! ~ . ~~i
September Move-in Madness
Our Senior Community offers
resort style living with:
Swimming pool, puttihg green, club
house, fitness room, full service
beauty salon and gourmet dining .
771--+ .
;;YU:NAISSANCE tlV lil.JNTING ION TERRACE
PAEMIE" S!NIOR LIVING
18800 Florida Street
Huntington Beach
(714) 848-8811
...... No. 906001064
·Doily Pilot .. ' . Sotuidoy, Seplember 9, 2000 A5
Newport children weaved into world p~ace
• Living art project, 'Weaving ~e Dream,' has traveled the
world, making a stop at Newport Elementary on Friday.
Danett. Goulet
DAILY PILOT
NEWPORT BEACH -Children
at Newport Elementary School
became part of a worldwide call for
peace Friday.
Uke hundreds of people in Rus-'
sia, England, Australia and all over
the United States, Newport students i?~ed in artist. Peggy McManigal's
living art project, "Weaving the
Dream."
Each participant brings a piece of
cloth, generally one with personal
significance, that they will weave
onto a circular mesh structure meant
to symbolize what McManigal calls
the •sacred circle• of Mother Earth.
The weaving and tying together
of fabrics in various shapes, sizes,
colors and textures symbolizes
man's potential to come together to
peacefully share our planet.
"Mine's part of my blanket at
home,• said 7-year-old Samantha
Archie, clutching a strip of white
flannel material with little pink bun-
nies on it.
Samantha took that piece of
her childhood and tied it to
those of her classmates. ·
·This matches my home,• 6-
year-old Esme Campos said
with a huge grin as she held
out a swatch of cream-colored
fabric with a chocolate brown
design on it.
The project began in 1987
before the end of the Cold War,
McManigal said, when she cre-
ated a painting titled "Peace
For Our Children.•
That painting, in 1989, was
presented to future Nobel
Peace Prize winner Mikhail
Gorbachev.
"When that happe ned, i
realized that whatever you
dream can happen,• the artist
told the children.
PHOTOS BY BRIAN P08UOA I DAILY Pit.OT
During Prtday's .. Weaving the Dream" assembly at Newport Elementary School, students participated ln
creattng the •sacred Circle."
Since then , she has traveled
extensively, finally returning to the
very school where she attended
kindergarten.
mer Soviet Union, left their native
land before the Berlin Wall fell to
find a better life, she said.
stands in the school's quad for sev-
eral months. It will eventually leave
the school to be woven to the fabric
of the Nagaro aboriginal tribe in
Australia, and countless others.
Pint-grader Annie Bates, left. weav~ a
doth Into the •Sacred Circle'" as her
mother, Susie, watches
It was then l}lat she became
an •artist for peace," she said,
and began this global art pro-
ject to be created in the new
millennium.
Among the students and their
parents Friday morning were Nadia
Lepive and her 7-year-old daughter.
Masha. Lepive and her husband,
who are from the Ulqaine in the for-.
"It's just very meaningful and spe-
cial to me because now my daughter
is tying up a clot)l to the project that
started back in Russia,• Lepive said.
Children in Newport will contin-
ue to add to the art project that
Where the project may stop. if it
ever does, even McManigal cannot
say. But she hopes it will continue as a
symbol of peace for children to come.
ANTIQUE ROW & GARDEN CAFE
"Nl.f\e,Unlq~ShopS'~WUJ\I T~(-<w ,YOW'" HomeA•
FiM HOIM F11nd1lti11g1
Alltilf"" & Colltdibla
Tr11tlitio1111l to Cott11g1
Gifts & G11rtlnt Dtcor
Wish Li1t & D1liHry
•Plec<Mr the Row, a wontlerful
Shopping and Olnlng adwmtu~"
·oh, no! ·
Onfy three
weeks ti I the
special is
over!"~
C111111lt1 to CltodtUns
Uu4 & R11rt Boob
C111tom Pkh"~ Fr11ming
F11mihlr1 IU1tor11tion
11n4 ""''" mon I
949 722-1177
JJO Eat J 7tlt Strttt
C..Mna,CA C~IU"4 ll•rp l11nJ
Row HOW't: Tue-Sac •~~
Nathan
( l111 \..:1 Ill I\\,, I,, ,l.!1,l1,d THAT'S YOUR FINAL ANSWER,
it's ti/IC~ ~of".·· MI CASA
I I l I. I I ' ' "'I 'I \\ " .
I I I,, , ., I I 11 ' \I \ 11 I I I l
••
Al!l'O • HOMEOWNDS =
40 Year.s In Business
MEXICAN RESTAURAN T
~~~ ............... _ .. _ / J;',"J
949-631-77 40
'41 Old Newport Bhd. • Newport Dada
(Near HCNC Ho.pital) 296 E. 17TH ST. COSTA MESA · 949·645·761 6
• • . . -~ -~ . . , ... , ti .... -. . . ~..WO if.,·.-4" . -• ~ . •; .. $-·
~.~', . . -··,~. ,,,., , ~ ; : '~ . -. . . ~ ) . al • • . .• ,.. • .. : .. l;. ... ~.;, ' • • • 't .. • • ~....... . .~., ...... ,.; .. ,.· ' ·k . ........... . . , -.. ~ ~ . ' . ·~·· •. ,. . ,.,. -. '.. .. -r-.. . _. . ~ ~ ..... ,>.. . . -' ~ '--~ ·"99 •
•Fresh<ut /10t0ers, custom floral & plant arrangements
•Full-serolce meat and sa{ood depattmenL •Farm-fresh produce that tastes great!
• An e.xtensioe selection of ffne wines & cheeses from around the world
Now OFFERING FRESH SaSfll TO GO!
Come in and olsit our NEW SUSHI DEPT. wltert you can choose from a large oarltty of preparrd
Sushi, Spky Tuna Rolll, California Rolll, Fresh Sashiml and Sttamed Soybans.
0!1 SPECIAL THIS WEEK ...
For,_~... B s5 99 ..
Cooked &I Roll pcs. ...
Beef Center Cut
Short Ribs s4,, .... . . .. .
•
~6 ~ s.p..mb-0 9, 2000 .
Daily Pilot
Furnishings store for kids opens at South Coast Plaza
S outh Coast P1az.a is celer
. brating another store
opening today. the
much-antidpa_ted Pottery Bam
met.. Tue store is filled wtth
just about everything you'd
need to furnish a baby's room
to a preteen'& room. If you've
a1ready seen the Pottery Barn
Kids catalog, then you'll want
to see the great selection up
~. It's definitely a great
place to find perlect home fur-
rllshings for children. Pottery
Barn Kids is on the first level,
in the Robinson's-May w\ng.
A one-day sale is happen-
ing from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. today
at 1be 01lna Souroe in Costa
Mesa. lbis decorator's favorite
warehouse is having a sale on
all items reduced 40% or more.
The warehouse is filled with
New Thought
C.Ommu.nity Church
"Child Centered Scrvic:c"
Where fami11t'S w11h children
p;iruc1p;i1c ;ind and worship
togcchcr'
CCC Service I 0:00 am
Picnic, Cake. {,;imo. hin, 11 :00
Bring Your Lunlh)
1 ...... ....
c.ta .... c 'JC..
G .... 1 !>pc-alia ~ 8 Rev < ,.J Milkr
Sc.-.1« 10 )()
, .. )148-11•
Greer Wylder
IEST BUYS
antique fumiture, architectural
elements and artifacts from
Olin.a. The China Source is at
670 W. 17th St in Costa Mesa.
Nldd's Secret PremleJ"
labels is celebrating the
grand opening of its newly
expanded shop. The designer
clothing consignment shop
ewport 11a1"1Mw
Lutheran Church
CLLc.A.J
7M Doww Dr. Newport lle8ch
TradHlonal Lutheran
Pa91or O.vld ~
Wonhlp s..vlce with
Holy Communion
Smtclay tt:t S em
CHILD CAR• AYAILAllLm
.(941) 548 3831
NEIGHBORHOOD FAMILY PICNIC
$11'41y, Sept. 10 • 12-3/•
M1rh11r1 Parle
Cerm tf lmu tl4 D"er, Newpert Bm~
SP!fMrt4 •1 St. A'4r1Wt Pr11~rteriu Church
'F .. A Atlrt Ja•p
1 v.11., s.11 J,,.,.,
Cltwa . o •••• s ... RH•
Fut P1l1tl19
C1rlt1tm Attltt
8ar11r ., Hit 019, C.lpt, C.14 Orl1k 114 1 .. Crt1•--.J.u.t..tl•
l1ftnuffM7· 949 631-2810
TEMPLE ISAIAH
OF NEWPORT BEACH
(Conservative)
Wllfllltf All Oiu Me1116ers An4 FMllh
A Vny Ha'" New Yu.r 5761
HIGH HOLY DAY SERVICES
2401 l"hle AMINe, Newport Bad
RABBI MARC S. RUBINSTEIN ad TEMPLE CHOIR
M1VRDAY SEPT. lJ 1:00 PM
FRIDAY SEPT. 29 1:00 PM
SATURDAY SEPT. 30 9:10 AM
SA1VRDAY SE.PT. 30 7:JO PM
SUNDAY OCT. I 9:30 AM
KOL NIDRI SUNDAY OCT. I 7100 PM
YOM IUPPOR MONDAV OCT. t t :JO PM •
YIZllCMt Mt:MORW. SERV. MONDAY OCT, 9 lliOO
NINCHAH MONDAY OCT. 9 S100
NU&NI ClONCWOINC
NIMC& MONDAY OCT. t tcOO PM
CHILD~ AVAILA'~ Children are lnvtt tC> Plftldpn In _...
F., ~ cd 949 Ml 6900
carries popular labels such 8S
ElcMA, Giorgio Annani, Ver-
sace, Chanel and Valentino.
It's at 1 n Riverside Ave., Ste.
G, Newport Beach. InfolD'lA-
tion: (949) 547-0099.
Accolding to Soutb Coalt
Optometry, 8% of the male
world population is color
vision-defident Last Novem-
ber, ColorMax lenses reoeived
clearance from the Food and
Drug Administration as an aid
in treabnent of color vision
de6dencies. These high-tech-
nology lenses cannot cure col-·
or blin~ but can be used
as an aid in most cases, as in
red-green color vision deficien-
cy. At South Coast Optometry,
you can have a complete color
vision analysis with coniputer-
ized ColorMax Technologies
I ',, I I I\ '\, I I
I ! 11 l\t I I
The Church of
Yahweh
Welcome to
The Church of Yahweh.
The church on the web.
We are always open.
AND ~ don 't pass the plate.
ST. MARK PmBYTERIAN
CHURCH
Worship 9:30
(949) 644-1341
·,;: I lt 1! ); 'I
--, ....
N~rtf.eater United Medaodist Church
Rev. Cathleen Cooa. P».stor
1601 MatKUerltcAve.
comer of Marguerite and
San Joaquin Hills Rd
(949) 6'4-0745
OatUt Chan:h by the Sea
Unued Mcthoiiilc
t-400W. e.lboe Bl~. Newpon Bead!
9:00 a.m. -Sllnd.Y School !Or .U ..
10-00 Liit. -Wonlilp (wlch dUld Qft)
,.... ~. Dr. 0-. ll. en.,. ,.._
(!M9) 'f).,..,
Color Test Software and see if
ColorMu lmle& can help you.
If you're interelted to the Col-
cm"Max lenses, they can order
the tested Jens in your pre-
scription as a nonprescription
dip-<>n over your prescription
glasses, or as nonpn!Saiptton
glasses over your contact lens-
es. South Coast Optometry is
at South Coast Plaza, 3333
Btistol St., CO$ta Mesa. Infor-
mation: (714) 540-5768.
MaCf:s is having a spring
and summer ch!arance sale
with merchandise reduced
40% to 75%. There's a huge
selection of clearance fashions
for women, men and kids,
and there are also borne
accessories at reduced prices.
Macy's is at South Coast Plaut
in Costa Mesa and at Fashion
< I 11~ I\ I I \ '-.
• HARBOR CHRISTIAN CHURCH J. (DlsclplH of Christ)
2401 Irvine Ave. 1t l 1m tubel
Newport leach
Sunday Wonhlp • 10:00AM
llUIJ.J:JING OUt BUIB UNINC a.IS"/'
~SD!t'JNC OUt<DMMINrl.
The Rtv'd Peter 0. Haynes, Rector
SUNDAY SCllFDUl.E
I am -Holy EodaaNc
9 ... -Adah BiWe Scady
10 ... a-.J Eaclaarilt
Nu~ CUBAVAl1AJIL£
Island in Newport Beach.
If you love crafts. you won't
want to miss the Ormge
County Craft ~ Sewing Festi-
val this weekend at the
Orange County Fairgrounds.
The latest in fabrics, supplies,
notions, patterns an4 tools will
be shown. There will~ be
free seminars. ~and take
workshops and demonstra-
tions. The hours are from 10
a.m. to 5 p.m. Information:
(800) 96CRAFT.
1be Athletic O ub for
Women is having a bargain
special -one three-month
membership for $99 (plus a
one-time setup fee of $25),
and 50% off on the first
month of personal training.
The special offer is good
through Sept. 15. The Athlet-
ic O ub for Women Is at 2036
Quail St in Newport Beach.
Information: (949) 852-8655.
If you like tropical theme
home fumlsb1ngs, stop by
bland Uvlng whlch spedal-
izeS in vinlage-styled Hawai-
ian furnisbings. Th& store is
filled with reproduction rattan
furniture from the 1930s and
'40s. You can also choose
'from a large selection of fab-
rics to give p~ a custom
look. It'll at 2633 Coast High-
way in Newport Beach. Inlor-
matton: (949) 650-5576.
• IEST IUYS 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.
"The Lord's Thirst
For Us"
Uohn 4:1-15)
FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST
3303 Vk:J Lido
Newpcxt Becx:t\
673-1340 or 673-6150
C\wch 10 arn a 5 pm,
SUndaY School 10 am
Wedned:Jy Meetllags 8 pn
I r
Daily Pilot Saturday, September 9, 2000 A7
Open neµJ doors at home with an attractive entryway
T be spiders and I are
j~ined in an ongoing
battle for custody of
the front door. It seems that
as soon as I clear out the
cobwebs, wipe off the door
and debug the light fixture,
the next round of arachnids
and insects are moving in.
When guests come to my
front door, I'd Q,ke to be the
one welcoming them, not the
creepy crawlies that lurk on
the porcll. I'm not sure I will
ever win the battle of the
bugs at the front door, but I
can meet and greet our
friends with the best inten-
tions.
I think the front dOilr is a
great place to announce the
seasons and other significant
holidays and occasions. Over
the years, our front door has
seen a lot of action. We start-
ed with the obligatory green
wreath for our first married
Christmas, and since then
the whole front door theme
has taken on a life of its
own.
The front door has
announced babies with
appropriately colored bal-
loons and ribbons. We
announce birthdays with a
large (empty} package fes-
tively dressed and hung on
the door. Gifts from the gar-
den are hung upside down
from a cup hook permanent-
ly attached above the cut
lights. Laminated children's
Koren Wight
NO PLACE LIKE HOME
artwork announces certain
holidays. A skeleton claims
the door as home for Hal-
loween.
I think the sky is the limit
for front door decorations.
My only requirement is that
it's slightly weird and unusu-
al. I'm not a big dried flower
wreath girl. Too predictable.
I'd rather put a hanging
sconce with drippy candles
on the front door to
announce a dinner party. It's
out of the norm. but then,
maybe we are, too.
The Christmas evergreen
wreath was replaced long
ago with a needlepoint wall
hanging that belonged to
one of my grandmothers. It's
a little kitschy, but that
makes it all the better.
I like kitsch. It's fun, shal-
low and whimsical. I have
been known to bang. plastic
lobsters on the front door for
a luau. That's kind of tacky.
But tacky and kitschy -
they're related, aren't they?
as~
Mattress Outlet Stor
BRAND NEW· COSMETICAU.Y IMPERFECT
Get the Best for Less/
3165 Harbor Blvd.
Costa Mesa
oae Block soutll at .os rwy
(714) 545-7168
Front door decorattons at the Wlgbt house change with the seasons and for special celebrations. The petite point blrds
are used for Chrlstmas, the large gold package ls the Birthday announcement, the black cat ls one of many Halloween
decorattons and the sconce with drippy bamboo candles announces Thanksgiving dinner.
One of rpy favorite fall
decorations is a dried pod
wreath made by the kids in
their third-grade clas9'. Mrs.
White, the teacher, was
famous for her autumn art-
work. We collected goodies
weeks ahead of time and
shared the bounty-with the
class. These wreaths (we
have two) bring a smile to
everyone's face when we
bring them out of the closet.
Halloween is the most fun
holiday for decorations. We
. don't get serious-scary, but
there is something so fun
about stretching fake spider
webs everywhere. Maybe I
like this holiday because it is
the only time of the year that
I don't feel like I have to do
bug duty with the front door.
At Halloween, the more spi-
ders, the merrier.
In addition to the fake
spiders that nest on a very
large fake web, the real
things are free to be at
home for a couple weeks,
and the bug survival rate
around the house increase1
exponentially.
Just to complicate.the
decoration of the front door,
last year I added a wall foun-
tain to the front entry. I
intended for there to be run-
,,.,,.,, .. tusti nlex us.con1
For Your New or Certified Pre-Owned
LEXUS
Factory
Authorized
ning water in it, but we bad
so much fun putting •stuff"
in the basin that we haven't
put the pump or the water in
yet.
Back to school gets a bag
full of apples. October is a
great time to fill it with mini
pumpkins. Thanksgiving
finds the papier-mache'
turkeys nesting in it. At
Christmas, it gets. filled
with gold and silver orna-
ments.
The kids think I get out of
control with my seasonal
announcements, but deep
down I think they like it. It's
fun for them to come home
and find the front door laden
with red Chinese fans and
paper lanterns. It lets them
know that sometlung specldl
is in the air. ·
And now that I've taken
time to analyze this, maybe
it's my subtle way of saying
that their mean, strict mom
still has an element of fun
left in her old bones. We can
all celebrate the innocence of
childhood even iJ we do
have to wipe awdy the cob-
webs every now and then.
• KAREN W1GHT is a Newport
Beach resident. Her column runs
Saturdays.
...
. .
• I t •
A8 SaMdo); Se'p!e!nbw 9, 2000
Daily Pilot
Rotary Club to take a peek at busi'liess Down Under
R otary Dlstrtct 5320 is looking for four non-
Rotarians 25 to 40
yea.rs old who would like to
participate in a 30·day
Rotary Group Study
Exchange to Australia in
March 2001.
Rotary pays for transporta-
lion to and from Australia
and local Australian Rotary Jim de Bciom clubs provide housing,
meals, visits to local tourist COMMUN~ It 0.UBS atttactions and elC.J?0ri~nces
in similar businesses as the
visiting team members.
~It's a chance to learn how Pamela Morris, Newport
your business or profession Irvine. at (949) 759-1320.
works in Australia as well as Application dea~ is
Australian family life,• said Oct. 31 and candidate ter-
Wendell Sawyer, president views will be held Nov. 4.
of the Newport-Balboa
Rotary Club. SANDCASTLE SUNDAY:
Team members must Don't forget to save some
secure the 30 days off from time Sunday to visit the
their employer and pay for 39th annual Sandcastle
their personal expenses (film, Contest sponsored by the
postcards, etc.) and help plan Commodores Club of lhe
the visit to Orange County Newport Harbor Area
for the Group Study Chamber of Commerce.
Exchange Team from Aus-Contestants will begin to
traha, which will be here in build their castles at 10 a.m.
.May 2001. and will be ready for judg-
For more information or ing by early afternoon as
dll application, contact Inter-they compete for cash
national Service directors prizes and plaques.
Thyme Hampton, Newport-·Representatives from
Balboa, al (714) 546-4990; Newport Beach's sister city
Gene Koch, Newport Beach -Okasaki, Japan -will
Sunrise, at (949) 631-5240; or join with Commodore Club
Hodson Lighting
PRESENTS
Decorative
Ha nging Ou tdoor
Fixture ~•tz..._._,_;:_~
with hinged door
Available in various
sizes & finishes
Quality Llsf>ting Service for 30 YelU'll
Open Tues.-Fri. 9·5, Sat. 9-4
15 IO Ncwpon Blvd., Costa Mesa
(949) 548-9341
members to serve as judges
for the event. The public ~
view the process and the fin-
lshed castles unW 5 p.m. at
Corona del Mar State Beach.
Come on down and play in
the sand,
WHAT A PLACE: I went
with the Newport-Balboa
Rotary.Club a couple weeks-
ago to one of the best-kept
secrets in Newport Beach,
the fiewport Sports Collec-
tion Foundation. It's 4,000
square feet full of sports
memorabilia -baseball,
basketball, hoc.key, golf,
Olympics, pros and colleges.
Some of the displays
brought tears to my eyes as I
remembered players and
teams from years gone by.
One moving display was
made by a 13-year-old junior
high student on baseball's
Negro Leagues.
You will find autographed
baseballs, footballs, basket-
balls, jerseys, hand-carved
wOoden golf clubs, a l)SC
room and a UCLA closet.
Located at 100 Newport
Center Drive and capably
run by general manager Kel-
lie Newcombe, the museum
is open from 9 a.m. to 6 p .m.
Monday through Friday, and
from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. on
Saturdays. Its Web site is
GEnlNG INVOLVED
• GETTING INVOLVED runj?pe<iod-
ically in tlle Dally Pilot on a rotating
basis.~ you'd like Information on
addin your organization to this
list. ca (949) 574-4228.
www.newports,:,Ortacollec·
tlon.org.
It's a great place to take
your kids or grand kids .
CANNERY ll.BUNION: It
has been a year since our
beloved Cannery Restaurant
closed its doors to the public.
The swmner of 1999 saw a
series of special,closing par-
ties for various constituencies
in the harbor area, sponsored
by the Daily Pilot, as the
Cannery was toasted for its
years of good food and ser-
vice to the community.
Teri Halleberg, the fonner
general manager of the Can-
nery, announced that the
Cannery will be holding its
first staff reunion at 7 p.m.
Sept. 19 at Malarkey's Irish
Pub, 3011 Newport Blvd.,
Newport Beach.
All former employees are
invited. No reservations are
necessary. Just bring your
the memories of the good
times you bad at the Can-
nery ..
WORm REPEATING:
From the Newport Beach-
Corona del Mar Kiwanis
Club's Scuttlebutt:
•Don't judge a man by
how he looks to people. You .
can't see wh"'t's inside of hiin .•
ALS ASSN., ORANGE
COUNTY CHAPTER
The Amyotrophic Lateral
Sclerosis Assn., also known
as Lou Gehrig disease, needs
volunteers. For information,
SERVICE CLUB MEET·
INGS: Want to get more .
involved in your community,
make new friends. network,
or to give something back to
your conununity? ny a ser-
vice club. You are invited to
attend a club meeting this
coming week. Many clubs
will buy your firtt guest meal.
for you.
MONDAY
6 p.m . -Harbor Mesa
}..ions Club meets at the Cos-
ta Mesa Country Club to
hear Kathy Hayes on Women
Helping Women.
TUESDAY
7:15 a.m. -The Newport
Beach Sunrise Rotary Club
meets at the Balboa Bay
Club to hear Larry Spitz,
president of the Newport
Beach LiQrary Foundation.
6 p.m. -The Costa
Mesa-Newport Harbor Lions
Club meets at the Costa
Mesa Golf and Country
Club.
WEDNESDAY
7:15 a.m. -The South
Coast Metro Rotary Club will
meet at the Center Club; the
Newport Harbor Kiwanis
C lub meets al the University
Athletic Club.
Noon -The Orange
call the chapter office al (714)
375-1922.
ALZHEIMER'S ASSN.
Of ORANGE COUNTY
Coast Exchange Club meets
at the Bahia Corinthian
Yacht Club.
6 p.m. -The Newport-
Balboa Rotary Club meets
the Bahia Corinthian Yacht
Club to hear a report on the
OkasaJd Youth Exch.ange .
THURSDAY'
7:15 a.m. -The Costa
Mesa Orange Coast Break-
fast Lions Club meets at
Mimi's Cafe to hear Ray
McCann on •Military Acade-
my.•
Noon -The Kiwanis
Club of Costa Mesa meets
at the Holiday lnn; the
Newport Beach-Corona del
Mar Kiwanis Club meets at
the Bahia Corinthian Yacht
Club; the Exchange Club ol
Newport Harbor meets at
the Riverboat Restaurant Lo
hear Windy Kelly discuss
helping kids obtain devel-
opmental assets; the New-
port Irvine Rotary Club
meets at the Irvine Mamott
Hotel.
• cOMMUNrTY • a..uas is pub-
lished every Saturday in the Daily
Pilot. Send your service club's meet·
ing information by fax to (949) 660-
8667, e-mail to jdeboomfUol.com
or by mall to 2082 S.E. Bristol St,
Suite 201, Newport Beach 92660-
1740.
tion, call (800) 660-1993.
AMERICAN CANCER SOOETY
ROAD TO RECOVERY
Bankruptcy
Divorce/Summary
Support group leaders,
Visiting Volunteers, family
resource consultants and
office volunteers are needed.
Volunteers can work on one-
time projects or ongoing pro-
grams. lraining sessions are
available. For more informa-
This transportation pro·
gram needs volunteers to dri·
ve cancer patients to and
from medical treabnents free
of charge. The required com·
mitment is a few hours each
week or month. Drivers need
a valid driver's license and
insurance and must be at
least 25 years old. Volunteers
may use either their own
vehicles or American Cancer
Society vans. For more infor-
mation, call (949) 261-9446 or
send e-mail to scomer@can-
cer.org.
~
Call Herb the Legal Beagle
Law Office of Herbert 8. Rhodes
Saturday
Sepe. 16 •
CaU for
Re . . ' gistrat100 ••
Mardi Gras Theme
.''Turn your b!'at into a float''
I •
Benefiting the Bqy Scout Sea BllSe
-Two Divisions ... Ch"'1mging or ~n
-Prial, Aw11wl.t, Live Music, Libations
SATURDAY, Sept. 16, 5pm-on
-Dinner c•tnwtl by BlwuNiin-Grill
-Plmty of Doc/, IJNIC' (Limild ~)
CJ/ Cristin PotM to lllptn. .. (714) 546-4!>90 ca. 147
2001 W. Com Hwy., ~rt Beach, CA
949.645.6812
www.clu8'7LMt1.com
-~·/';'------------"''--·~-....;...-
Daify Pilot
• Send AROUND TOWN Items to the Dally ~lot. 330 W. Bay St., Costa Mesa, CA
92627; fax t o (949) 646-4170 or call (949) 57~68. Include the time. date and loca-
tion of the event as well as a contact phone number. A complete listing is avail-
able at http://www.dallypllot.com.
IODIY
Orange Coast College wW present a
public ~eminar titled *Making Mon-
ey as a Commissioned Notary• from
8 a.m. to 5 p.m. at OCC's Business
Education Room 101A, 2701
Fairview Road. Registration is $59 in
advance or $75 at the door. A $20
materials fee is payable in class,
plus a $40 fee for the state applica-
tion. (714) 432-5880.
The Oasis Senior Center wW bold a
pancake breakfast from 7:30 to 10 a.rn.
at 800 Marguerite, Corona del Mar.
Cost is $2' for adults, $1 for children. nus event iS held on the second Sat-
urday of every month. (949) 644-3244.
The Orange County Fair & Exposi -
tion Center will present a quilt show
from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. in Building 14,
88 Fair Drive. The show continues
from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Sunday.
Admission is $5 for adults, $4 for chil-
dren age 12 to 18 and $4 for seniors
age 62 and older. (714) 842-0041.
ntangle Square wW present a back-
to-school expo with a day of chil-
dren's activities, storytelling and
educational information provided
by Costa Mesa teachers from 11
a.m. to 6 p .m. Organizers are look-
ing for local participants to coordi-
nate hands-on activities. The mall is
at 1870 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa.
(949) 722-1600, Ext. 26.
. . ARoUNi> ToWN
A Race for the Cure Family Day pre-
regisb'ation will take place at 1:05 p.m.
at Edison Field in Anaheim. The
Susan G. Komen Breast Cancer Foun-
dation-sponsored fund-raiser is sched-
uled Sept 24. Reservations required
for Family Day. (714) 957-9157.
Author Mlichell Axelrod wW talk
about and sign his book •aeattetoons
-The Real Story Behind The Car-
toon Beatles• at 3 p.m. at Borders
Books. Music & Cafe at 1890 Newport
Blvd., Costa Mesa. (949) 631-8661.
SUNDAY
Images Salon will host a benefit cut-
a-thon offering $25 haircuts and $10
manicures from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.
The fund-raiser will support breast
cancer survivor Chava Wortrich,
who will participate in the Avon
Breast Cancer Three-Day Walk
frdm Santa Barbara to Malibu in
October. (949) 675-5531.
SL Andrew's Presbyterian C hurch
will hold a neighborhood family pic-
nic from noon to 3 p.m. at Mariners
Park in Newport Beach, at the cor-
ner of Dover Drive and Irvine
l\Y!ml.le. Cost is $1. (949) 574-2239.
MONDAY
Local compeUtion opens for children
ages 8 to 15 to participate in qualify-
ing rowtds for the nationwide "NFL
Gatorade Punt, Pass & Kick" com-
petition. The local event will be
hosted by Newport Beach Commu-
nity Services at elementQiy schools
through Sept. 19. One winner from
IESI IET
each boys' and girls' age division
will be selected to represent Ne w-
port Beach in the October sectional
competition. Free. (949) 644-3151.
TUESDAY
Mother's Marke t will otter a tree
seminar on healthy back-to-school
tips from 6:30 to 7:30 p .m. at the
Patio Cafe. 225 E. 17th St., Costa
Mesa. (949) 631-4741.
Barnes &r Noble
Puhlon Island
will present \Ito-
let P. Woodhouse,
coauthor of
"Divorce & Mon-
ey: How to Make
the Best Financial
Dedslons During
Divorce" at 7
p.m. Sepl 22.
Woodhouse will
cl1scuu her book
and offer a pre.-
sentaUon about
divorce and mon-
ey. She will take
questions" from
the audience.
Barnes & Noble
is at 953 Newport
Center Drive.
(714) 957-9797.
WEDNESDAY
The Ho me and Small Business
Alliance will meet at 8:30 a .m. at
Mi.mi's Cafe in Irvine, 4030 Barrance
Parkway. "Health and Wellness•
will be the topic. Owners of home
and sm,all businesses are invited to
attend. Reservations required. The
breakfast cost $6. (949) 786-0030.
A representative from the Cal Poly
Pomona admissions office will visit
Saturday, September 9, 2000 A9
OCC's nanster Center from 9 a.m. to
1 p.m. Additional visits are scbeduled
from 2 to 4 p.m. Sept 'J:l, 1 to .. p.m.
Oct. 11, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Oct. 31, 2 to
6 p.m. Nov. 14 and 9 a.m. to noon Nov.
29. The college is at 2701 Fairview
Road, Costa Mesa. (714) 432-5072.
lletlred tea<:hen are invited to a free
luncheon at 12:30 p.m. at the Costa
Mesa Community Cenfer. 1845 Park
Ave. Reservations required. (714)
549-0229.
The Newport Beach Public Ubrary
Foundation book discussion group
will meet at 9:30 a.m. and 7 p.m. to
discuss •Shark Dialogues• by Kiana
Davenport in the Central Library's
Friends Meeting Room, 1000 Avoca-
do Ave. Free. (949) 717-3890.
THURSDAY
The Costa Mesa Senior Center wW
hold the first session of a 10-week
workshop titled •Let's Talk About
Writing· at 1 :30 p.m .. The center is
at.695 W. 19th St. $30. Class space is
limited. (714) 965-1176.
The grand opening of the Republi-
can Headquarters for Newport Beach
and Costa Mesa will be held at 5:30
p.m. at Suite 103 of the Newport Tow-
ers, 485 17th St (949) 837-0278.
The Orange County Historical Soci-
ety will hold a general meeting at
7:30 p.m. at the Sherman Library &
Gardens, 2647 E. Coast Highway,
Corona del Mar. A garden viewing
will be held at 6 p.m. with refresh-
meqts at 7 p.m. The pubbc is mvit-
ed. Free. (714) 993-7009.
50% OFF
TOPIARIES
SILK STEMS AND I
FLORAL ARRAN~EMENTS
Mon-Fri I 0-6 Sat l 0-5 • Open Sunday I 0-4
369 E. I ?ch Costa Mesa
(Across from Ralphs) (949) 646-6745
I
BODY DESIGN
,-- -------l
I N () \\ () rt E R I ' (, I ) \ ' ( I c I \ "" l " ' I
-------- ---_J
• Pilates • Post Rehabilitation • Ba llet Technique Classes • Cardi o Ball et
• Pilates Mat Classes • Massage Therapy • Tap Classes • Swiss Ball Classes
• Personal Training • Endermology • Yoga/Stretc h • Latin Rh ythm
• Circuit Training • Facials • Jazz Classes •Salsa
' ' ' -
I ( ) I "' ( ) l I~
I
\ \ I l \ I ' ' ; ' 11 I ) 11 I I I~ I \ ( I BI I \ \ I I \ I) l I \ I I ' I I~ \ I \ ; '\ I ' l\ \ \ I 11 I I I I I\ \ ; '\ I \ ( ' ~
.
• THIS WOllOUT IS BASED ON VAllED SPllNC LOADED RESISTANCE IATHEI THAN WEIGHTS.
• BY WOllCING MANY MUSClf CROUPS AT ONE TtME RATHEi THAN ISOLATING ONE MUSCU CIOUP THE PltATES METHOD
STRENGTHENS HAID TO REACH MUSClfS
WHAT PloGRAMS BASED ON THE TEACHINGS OF )0$EPH PllATES ARE OFHRED BY BODY l>EslCNl
• All Body Design Instructors are Certified. .
• Body DesJgn is a Certifying Studio. We'll be offering Pilates Certification Programs. -• Private, Semi PriV1te and Group Claises are avallabte according to the dient'• needs and ~
WHAT ARE THE BENEFITS Of THE PiLATES WOUOUT1
•Pab1li••.-.,-'eadmat11DW....-r1...._.,....-•• ...._. _. tlm1'1t•11tu tcW&.
• ,,..._....,. dmMd by JOMph Pllates prowWe 1 high dejree of •Allllo•lmil _. IKll S1rt""'1'
MAQ''S
CONTINUED FROM A 1
The bedding depart-
ments, for eumpte, each
have a bed far display pur-
poses but not for sale, abe
said.
In the new store, the
beds are with the bedding
and next to the bathroom
department, and the dln-mg room furniture ts with
the china, crystal and Jdl-
verware and next to the
living room department.
The ldtcben department
includes tables as well as
kitchenware and a work-
ing kitchen for weekly
cooking demonstrations.
The company plans to
open a restaurant in the
department, Krogh said. ·
"We didn't use props in
the displays,• said Rich
Burford, fashion director
for Macy's Home.
•Almost everything on
display is on sale. It's a real
lifestyle experience.
There's a natural flow
between the departments
and they all work togeth-
er.•
Diane PaJm, a Newport
Beach resident and South
Coast Plaza shopper, said
she thinks the levels are
well-organized.
·I think it's nice,• she
said. "You don't have to
walk around looking for
things.•
The. South Coast Plaza
store has become the com-
pany's flagship, with every
element of Macy's repre-
sented, from the men's
store to the fashion and
home stores, Krogh said.
WHY PAY
DEPT ·.STORE
PRICES?
VtSic our
AREA RUG STUDIO
Rugs & Runners on
Sale
HELPING YOUR
CHILDREN BUY
A HOME
When you buy or sell a
borne, you want to work with
a Realtor who has the
experience to handle such a
complex tranaaction with a
mfoimum amount of strest.
When cboosin3 a Realtor, you
1bould look for technical
competence and interpersonal
lkills.
A11t pro1pective Realtors
several diffe~nt qoestioni.
How Iona ha~ you been in
the buliness? How do your
lel'Vioet differ from those of
your colleapes? Do you have
a principal broker/owner who
works f losely with you and
eerve1 u a backup person If
you are not available? Keep in
mind that there 110 no "rlaht"
an1wer1 to these que1tion1.
Don't rule out a !111
experi~ .,ent who brift&• ~Y and et.llhdum t6 the
• ' You Waftl pene>naliud
profc11ionaJ aenico from
IOllleOOe whom you can true
to lead you throuah tlile
P""*I· Lylffn arid Jeff have 28
coasec•dve year1 of real ...... '5! in Newport IMcll. .. ~ .... .,., .... ti. Por
pot11 'Gd' .,.. or edvice .... ii .... needi, ..... .
("9)~
.-
o I
A dlsplay at the new Macy's Home store.
The home store is near
another South Coast Plaza
home-furnishings store,
Crate & Barrel, which
opened in November. .
Bette Kahn, a spokes-
woman for Crate & Barrel,
said the company does not
expect to lose business
because of the new Macy's
Home store.
"We're delighted that
Macy's will )lave a hom.e-
fumishings ·store so close
to us,• she said. ·we don't
think it hurts us.
"We believe in the con-
cept of a destination shop-
ping experience, where
people who are looJ.d.ng for
furniture can come to one
place and find a lot or dif -
ferent choices.
•People these days are
short on time and we feel
we are saving them time
by being with other retail-
ers that sell like prod-
ucts.•
Debra Gwm-Downing,
a spokeswoman for C.J.
Segerstrom & Sons, which
'owns South Coast Plaza,
said Orange County is fast
becoq:ling a huge market
for home furnishings.
"The growth in popula-
tion and housing in
Orange County has fueled
the huge demand for home
furniture,• she said.
"People need beautiful
things to furnish their
home with and this store
speaks to that demand for
furniture in high-end
homes. With this opening, I
think we'll only see the
horn~ furniture market
continue to expand.•
RTIER JEWELED WATCH COLLECTION
~ ondOflglnal ~
from the Mant of .Hc:Ue Hotlogllte.
0n ......_ trom •.mbef a ttWOl.iQh September 13. 2cm
------
RUNOFF n1
CONTINUED FROM A 1 CUMINT...,.. DIVWION UVIL:
2 million gallons per day
end-all to the urban· runoff
problem. People still have tO
undentand that they have to
reduoe the IOUIO!S of runoft', •
lhesakl.
PllOPOSID AIU DIVWION LEVEL:
Up to 4 million gallons per day at no c:harge.
PllOPOSID M.4-XIMUM DIVWION LIV'E1: Up to 10 million gallons per day. All dtversion over 4
million gallons per day to be billed at the .rate of $321
per mlllfon gallons dlYerted, wtth costs split among all
agencies using the district's 5eMces.
Nancy Gardner, president
of the Newport Beach chapter
ol the Swfrlder Foundation,
had sim1Jar lelltiments.
•This is great,• she said. toUIKI: or_,. County s.nltltJon otstrld.
"Obviously it's going to make
the surf zone cleaner.
"But in our mind, it's in the
same league u storm drain
filters and debris booms.
These are after the fact. and
they're simply putting the
problem somewhere else."
Long-term solutions to
runo:U problems, she stressed,
would require education and
behavioral changes on the
BARK PARK
CONTINUED FROM A 1
A public-review process' of
the park renovations led to a
heated debate last year over
the ground cover. Dog own-
ers were adamant in their
desire for grass instead of
wood chips.
But city officials faared the
expense of maintaining a
lawn that would be trampled
by dozens of dogs each day,
Roeder said.
But the City Council
approved a plan in October to
allow Bark .Park volwiteers to
try to grow grass at the park,
a project that should begin
BUILDING
CONTINUED FROM A 1
Although Elbettar said he
expects a deaease in build-
ing activity after the summer
months, he said it was too
TEMPLE
part of people who live within
the watershed.
The district's proposed
move to year-round accep-
tance or runoff would be a dra-
matic shift from its current pol-
icy, which restricts diversion to
April 1 through Oct. 15.
Even under the new
approach, though, the district
any day.
"It will be interesting to
see if, in fact, grass can be
grown there with so many
dogs,• Roeder said. •n was a challenge put t<t
the committee and the park
has been turned over to the
committee to let them try. r
"If the committee . can
make grass grow, the dogs
will have. grass. H not, it will
rem&n dirt, which is OK with
the dogs too.•
The dty has operated Bark
Park for years, drawing dog
owners from surrounding
cities.
"The park is absolutely
wonderful,• said Nalani van
Ravenswaay of Irvine, who
visits the park regularly with
early to establish a trend for
fall and winter.
By late Septembei, be said,
•we will have a feeling where
we're heading. But it doesn't
look like we're slowing
down.•
The city's building depart-
ment inspects construction
ISAIAH
OF NEWPORT BEACH
(Conservative)
Wflftlftf All Our Menrben And Frlettdl
A Ve'J H"PPf New Yur 5761
HIGH HOLY DAY SERVICES
240 I lrvftte AveftlU, Newport Bath
RABBI MARC S. RUBINSTFJN and TEMPLE CHOIR
SWOtOT -Open Hoae SATURDAY SEPT. 2J 1:00 PM
ROSH HASHANAH FRIDAY SEPT. 29 1:00 PM
SATURDAY SEPT. 30. 9:30 AM
SATURDAY SEPT. 30 7:30 PM
SUNDAY OCT. I 9:30 AM
KOLNIDRE SUNDAY OCT . • 7:00 PM
YOMKIPPUR MONDAY OCT. 9 9:30 PM
YIU<OR MEMORIAL SERV. MONDAY OCT. 9 12:00 llOOll
NINCHAH MONDAY OCT. 9 ,:00 PM
NEEi.AH CONCWDINC
SERVICE MoNl>AY oer. 9 6:00 PM
tHILD ~ AYAIIABLE
:oW Children are lnvitetOParticipate In all services
For rnervatloa led# atU (949) 548-6900
will be unable to handle the
massive volumes of water
that flow through runoff
channels dwing seasonal
rains, Meregillano said.
Those nows, which often
bring with them extremely
high bacteria counts, will
continue to empty directly
into the ocean.
her dog, Bogart.
•All the dogs get along
and get to exercise and
socialize. The dogs like to run
and play, and with all the
leash law.a they can't do that
at other places. Here, they are '
allowed to be dogs.•
Sean Lovelace of Costa
Mesa, who has two dogs,
Buckley and Kaya, said he
looks forward to the reopen-
ing of Bark Park. He said his
pets haven't been unhappy in
their make-do quarters, how-• ever.
"The new one should look
pretty good once it's complet-
ed,• be said. "What I like
about this [temporary] one,
even though it's small, is the
grass and all the trees."
sites to ensure that buildings
are built properly and a.lJ is
done to prevent fire hazards
and make them earthquake-
safe.
Last year, the city conduct-
ed more than 55,000 inspec-
tions -a very heavy work-
load, Elbettar said.
,
•.
WEDDINGS & ENGAGEMENTS
WIDDllG
Bell-Kief er
Molly Anne Bell of Corona del Mar and Mark
B. Kiefer of Yorba Linda exchanged vows Aug.
12 at the Newport Dunes Resort in Newport
Beach.
Th,e bride is the daughter of Michael and
Kathryn Bell of Newport Beach.
• Her maid of honor was Amber Bartlet and
her bridesmaids were Co'rinne Griffin Shannon
f.Cocsls, Jennifer Park and Amy Long. '
The bridegroom is the son of Norbert and
Louis Kiefer of Yorba Linda.
His best man was Brett Weinreich. His ushers
were Shawn Turner, Glen Alciatore, Jason Alcia-
tore and Dave Kirk. ·
A reception was held at the Newport Dunes
Resort and was attended by 200 guests.
Let U$ Help You Attain O,. Reqoin The Shope
You Desire
_.;. BODY TONE
PERSONAL TRAINING ~
Offers You The Privacy Of An Exclusive
Facility With Your Own Personal Trajner.
WE SPECIALIZE IN:
• We.igbt Loa
• Plaibllity
•Nutrition
• Cardiovucu.lar Conditioning
nd of SummeP Special r-----------1 REC£1V£ (3) I FR££ PUS0NAL 1 TRAll'llNG SESSIONS \'VJ1li 1 I ll'llTIAL lWUVE SESSION
PURCHASE ASISOVALUF
Off.. npttt> on 911 S/00 i:.,.1i_ a ...... 0n1y
2801 Ease Coast Hwy.
Corona dcl Mar, CA 92625
Olcl°Fahklbed
STUFFED
CHICKEN BREAST
• Muse.le Toning &
Strengtbm.ing
• Sport Specific Training
• Rehabilitation
French Apple
STUFFED
PORK CHOPS
SJ99 lb
FroRn
TWICE BAKED
POTATOES
C1l11tlllo'l Fretll
0..-R..secl
TURKEY BREAST
I
MILESTONE
Martinez
Anniversary
Cart and Isabel Martinez
of Costa Mesa celebrated
their 50th wedding
anniversary Aug. 16.
The couple moved to a
small home on Balboa
Island 30 years ago. earl,
retired from the aeronau-
tics industry, is a longtime
member of the American
legion in Newport Beach.
· . The Martinez family has
enjoyed living in NewQort·
Mesa, describing it.as an
•enjoyable sodal and
health" area.
' .
Sa1urdoy. s.p..mber 9, 2000 Al I
flow about a bigger
slice of the pie?
• Students state their
case to school board
members who are in the
process of hammering out
the .district's budget.
Danette Goulet
DAILY PILOT
NEWPORT-MESA -When
the community was invited to
either speak up about the school
district's budget or hold their
peace for a year, it was a pair or 12-
year-old students who stood up.
. Ryan Pawell, a seventh-grade
student at Corona del Mar High
School, and Tom Money, a sev-
enth-grader at TeWinkle Middle
School, each had a complaint
about the Newport-Mesa Uni-
fied School District's spending
plan.
"The Corona deJ Mar journal-
ism budget is $500, • Ryan told the
board. "l was wondering if we
could have just a little bit more.•
Although his beguiling charm
worked wonders on trustees, Ryan
was not certain just how much
more the program might need.
All ·Ryan remembered was
that when his sister was on the
school's yearbook staff last year,
she spent most or her time rais-
ing funds, he said.
After promising to work with
Ryari and Corona del Mar prino-
pal Don Martin, Supt. Robert
Barbot asked the youngster to
work out a budget proposal for
the program.
"I'm gomg to a!.k my teacher
what we would need, write it up
and come back next week,· said
the persistent Ryan, who added
FYI
Residents will have another
opportunity to comment
on the district budget at 7
p.m. Tuesday during th~
regularly scheduled board
meeting.
that he was certdm he would get
more money for the program.
With one young community
member satisfied, the board then
heard from another dissaoshed
customer
As a TeWink.le baud student,
Tom was appalled when be
noticed the budget's contnbution
to music progrdms throughout
the distnct He note<l thdt Coro-
na del Mdr had been allotted
$1,000 and that C.ol>td Mesa
High School would receive more
than $2,000, yet there was no
money available for the music
program dt TeWinkJe.
"It's unacceptable,• Tom
declarpd.
After bnnging to tus attention
that those music programs
served grades seven through 12
and not just middle schools,
. board members informed Tom
that a $100,000 music grant from
UNICEF was on its way to sever-
al Newport-Mesd schools
That bit of good fortunP, how-
ever, will not deter Tom from
prepanng a budget proposal
seek.mg further funding. He will
present tus pldn to the board
next week
After dousmg the commuruty
hres, the board continued to
study the proposed budget at a
special meeting Thursday night.
I :~ . \ < . · 1 · < > I~ 'a . ( ) I . · 1 . I . I : · 1 · SABATINO'S
Discontinued•and overstocked items indudi~ slip coYered solos
carried by mai9f notional retailers like Z-GOller'ief Reslorotion Hardware aoo others we can't name but you wil recognize.
You can special order from over 200 fobne:s .
Everything here is new, obtained directfy fTt>m the factory
·No U..d Fumiture °'con · nment iNm•.
fflitgeJfnni~/ Jak
NEWPORT STONE &
.DESIGN CENTRE
COMPLETE DE S I GNE R
SHOWROO-M
... where-~tfi nude gff0rda6k.
• Marble & Gn..nite • Slab
Fabricatioa
•Tumbled Limatone -
Traftltiae • Slate
•GW.Blocb
• Tde • Huge Selecdon of
Imported Tda • Coria.a.
• Kitdaaa k &th
Cabinets & Coatertop•
• 42 Yun of a.,;.,
httHt-n~
• Foaataiu • FueplM:a •
Wood Roon•~.
1~. 'l.1111.1111 ,\ I 11111 'hllll .11 d .... 111-.1:.:1 ( "
•Dinner
• Sunday Brunch
251 Shipyard Way• Newport Beach
-Please ca~ for~. Gr«tJOnS & ~.toons -s (949) 723-0621 ...
• Great Rate
PLUS
Get our Great Rate on a
one-year CD ($.f 5,000
minimum) w~en you also
open an ATM Rebate
Checking Account.
We pay all your ATM fees (even from
other banks) and give you unlimited
FREE ATM withdrawals.
FIRST REPUBLIC BANK
1t•s a priVilcgc to serve you•
NOW OPIN ~81ACWCOMJNA O& MM
2SX> E COl9t Highw9y. CoftlN Oii Mir 1~
LOIMIOmD
3928\Wlhft ~ c--GfWlillml 1.-.m.9507
9593WlllW9 8hd. ... ~ ....,.. 1.a.3114T17
• CtnUy,... &It ....... "~ c....ya., 1.v7.14f.7m umo ................ c..n:IWl SaidoQtr .,.,..,.,
..
•
. . ' .
AIZ Sa!urd!y. ~ 9, 2000 Daity Plld
Improving homes and lives with decoratitJ!! series
.
T he sixth annual series
of programs spon-
sored by the Decora-
tive Arts Sodety of Newport
Beach premieres Oct. 3,
introducing the community
to interior and furniture
designer Barbara Barry.
For those ln the know,
Barry ls one of the hottest
designers among the Los
Angeles circle. Her furni-
ture has revolutionized
home decor internationally,
and she has impacted
every social level, from
the looJc of the bachelor
pad to lbe executive pent-
house. Her topfc will be
•Gracious Uving ... A Cer-
tain Sensibility.•
Then on Nov. 14, the
series will take its guests on
a journey through Amer\can
treasures displayed in diplo-
matic reception rooms. Gall
P. Serfaty, the director of
diplomatic reception rooms
for the State Department
and the curator of The Blair
House, Washington, D.C.,
will share her knowledge of
American interiors with
emphasis on historically sig-
nificant items and locations.
For landscape enthusi-
asts, David StreaWeld,
renowned garden historian..
and professor of landscape
architecture and planning at
the University of Washing-
ton, Seattle, will shaJ"e his
wealth of information on the
pioneers of American land-
scape design. This program,
the third in the series, will
be presented Feb. 6.
Among the most sought-
after fabrics in the world of
B.W. Cook
THE CROWD
~
design are those from Brun-
schwig & Fils. On March 13,
Murray B. Douglu, senio,r
vice presid~nt of Brun-·
schwig & Fils, will reveal
the •ABC's of tolle de jouy. •
Finally, on April 10, the
Decorative Arts Society will
present WUllam R. Sargent,
curator of the department of
Asian export art for the
Peabody Essex Museum in
Salem, Mass. SMgent will
discuss Chinese influences
in American design. Orga-
nizers Me calling his lecture
•Imitation as inspiration.•
All of these event experi-
ences are underwritten by ·
. total de~otees of the design
art world including the
Laguna Design Center,
Nicholson's Antiques, Dan
Marty Les Interiors, Ann
Dennis Designs and North-
ern 1hlst Bank of California.
Newport's Bonnie
McClellan will chair the
series with unfailing sup-
port from a team that is
comprised of founding
members Elana Donovan,
Louise Ewing, Carolyn
Garrett, Margie Jager,
GRAND OPENING
CELEBRATION
Saturday, Sept. 9th, 4pm-7pm
Join Bonnie for champagne
and hors d'oeuvres r:-.•.... ., ":" . -·· ... l : .,. r I. " ..
t· ! ; . . . . ..
Wellness Programs
CREDENTIALS:
Pre-net.al and Post-partum Fitness
lnt.emational Council and Exercise Association
2818 Newport Blvd., Suite A• Nauport Buch
(949) 873-4850
•••rr•,.•••• ..... , ...
•t•c•Jtu ... ,, ...... .
~
u
u
~
~ o . .
~
~
~ .
~
Mary Aw Jeppe, Cedlta
Nott, Joan S-•••11 Demds
Scholz, Janet Smltll, Carole
Steele and Lob 11Dgler.
Also very involved are
Udo Isle's arbiter of fine
' taste MarlOD Paley, Sandra
Ayres, Mereditll Gravet-
ForelDaD, SbaroD Henwood,
Maureen Madigan, Kathi
Ramming, JabDe Sbepbenl-
IOD and Peggy Strong.
The series of five presen-
tations will take place al the
Newport Edwards Stadium
Theater, and the cost ts
$160 for the series.
The decorating series ts
under the umbrella of local
recovery organization New
Directions For Women. With
a commitment to providing
treatment services for
women with alcohol or
chemical dependencies,
New Directions' mission is
recovery.
Providing treatment in a
residential setting, the New
Directions program takes an
individual approach with
each woman seeking treat-
ment. Ufelong after-care is
offered, as well as assis-
tance to the families of
women see~g help. Alco-
holism and drug addiction
are not just the problem of
the afflicted. Families may
suffer as much as the
woman fighting to regain
her life.
In a sense, the coordina-
tion of the efforts of New
Directions For Women with
the lecture series provided
by the Decorative Arts Soci-
ety Me quite compatible.
Both are about building a
better world. Surely, the
personal struggle of a
woman battling depend~
cy can not be compared to )
building a better piece of
furniture. St,lch an odious
comparison would be insult-
ing to the sheer importance
of overcoming alcohol or
drug addiction.
Yet, enhancing our ex.is-
we're Burmng With Q!la/ity
Furniture at Great Savings!
• MoJJ Htmu hmitlln • AIJl'Upu:I • Att ~
•Ami lbtfl 0-Morel Ct11wm Rlfinilhint 0-Upholmry
(949) 646-1822
670W.17thSt., 102. C.-.Maa
September 12-24
·-----. -------. -
tence, seeking a higher
plane of artistic expression
vis-a-vis our personal envi-
ronment, sharing a vision
for a better lifestyle, educat-
ing ourselves on art forms
and historical life trends as
expressed by generations
past Me all ways to enhance
on~s grasp of the real
world. And in so doing, on
one small piane, this effort
represents the goal of New
Directions in its attempt to
help women take control
and reshape their lives.
For more information,
call (949) 675-2415.
•THE CJllOWD appears Thursdays
and Saturdays.
Two Locations to Serve You
WESTCUFF Pl.AzA
Irvine Ave & 17th St.
Newport Beech
(949) 631-3623
5'M£1<e 2~Cout.~y.
FITNESS CENTER AIAvoc.dO www~.com (949) 760-9335
Corne ... tieNewF
14th Annual
HartJor Heritage Run
and Free Fitness Fair
·2
~ ~
Daily Pilot
F.ourplay
to jazz up
Newport
Quartet to bring its
blues-funk-urban style
to the Hyatt Newporter
on Wednesday.
YowtgChang
DAILY PILOT
Fowplay, an award-winrung
jazz quartet, came together
almost by accident.
Ten years ago, pianist and
composer Bob James hired his
three would-be band members
for a project he had underway.
"'
Rehearsals
became fun,
chemistry
brewed and
the quartet
threw around
talk of f-onri-
• WHA'r.
Fourplay
•WIEN: 8 p.m.
Wednesday
•WHERE: The Hyatt mg a group. Then Newporter James,
Outdoor bassist
Amphitheater, Nathan East,
1107 Jam-drummer
boree Road, Harvey
Newport Mason and Beach. • cosr. TKkets guitanst Lar-
are $35 to ry Carlton recorded an S~;.~~·. album. ·~ Theself-
aB) 480-3~2 titled debut
-shot up to
'No. 1 on the Billboard contem-
!pontry jazz charts and stayed
:there for almost 33 weeks.
·Band members and their agent,
Warner Bros. Records, were
stunned.
•Tue group sort of took off
•and got a life of its own, N
:James said. •All of a sudden
• we had given birth to this
'thing .•
• lbe grqup released its sev-
release, •Yes, Pleaser• last
month.
On Wednesday, Fourplay
wtD perform its medley of
, blues-funk-urban-pop jazz at
• the Hyatt Newporter Outdoor
: Amphitheater ln Newport
Beach. The concert will feature
: old and new hits.
.. Pourplay has a romantic
• sound, accommodating its
•seductive group name. Mem-
• bers took full advantage of the
•name's double entendre, James
said, not only with their four·
person arrangement, but with
bed.room-music style.
• "In order to be tasteful, we
• spelled it differently,• said
SEE JAZZ PAGE A16
.. . . . . N~xt WEEK . . . .
""8gdlne" opens Tuesday at the Orange Coun-
ty Performing Arts Center for a two-week run.
The musical, based on a novel by E.L Doctorow,
is a look at three American families and their
lives at the turn of the 20th century.
Saturday, September 9, 2000 A 13
W omen· of
Group of diverse writers to read some of their works at Newport Beach Central Library
BRIAN POBUOA I DAILY PILOT
Multicultural Women Writers members Sarie Sachie Hylkema, left, and Mitsuye Yamada will read from
their works at an event Thursday at the Newport Beach Central Library, 1000 Avocado Ave.
YQW19 Chang
DAILY PILOT
•••---wenty years ago,
,.
Sarie Sachie
Hylkema watched
poet Mitsuye
Yamada read one
of her works at UC
Irvine and cry.
The poem was about Yamada's
mother-in-law, a picture bride who
had been rejected by the man it
was arranged she marry upon her
arrival from Japan because he
thought she was too ugly.
Hylkema, inspired by the poem,
told Yamada after the reading, •I
want to be just like you.•
Their emotional connection
started the Multicultural Women
Writers group, who will read from
their works at the Newport Beach
Central Ubrary this week.
The group consists of seven
women of varying ethnicities who
critique each other's
creative works and
share events in their
lives.
They understand
the hardships of writ-
ing and getting pub-
lisbM as minority
women. They debate
whether it's important
for themselves and for
loved ones to reveal
private family ways,
discuss bow writing
can sometimes be
healing, and support
each other emotional-
ly rather than com-
pete to get published.
FYI
• WHA'r. The Multicul-
tural Women Writers
will read original works.
The readings will ·
launch the library's
2000-2001 adult lecture
series.
• WHEN: 7 p.m. Thurs-
day
• WHERE: Newport
Beach Central Library's
Friends Meeting Room,
1000 Avocado Ave.
• COS'r. Free.
• CALL: (949) 717-3801.
is a chance for us to
gain confidence and
commiserate about
issues that we face in
writing or in real
We.•
A few of the mem-
bers compiled an
anthology titled
"Sowing TI Leaves,•
published in 19B8.
The btle refers to the
leaves used by Pacific
Asian women to wrap
food.
Sanchez, who
joined the group
Victoria Sanchez, 32, said the
time they spend together is more
intensive than a writing workshop
with 12 to 25 people.
about two years ago,
more recently wrote a short story
titled "Albondigas, • which means
·Mexican meatball soup.·
It's a story that takes place in
one Hispanic family's kitchen. The
family discusses the education and
marriages of two young girls. Ten-
sions rise and the albondigas boils.
•Some people have never been
exposed to a great deal of ethnic
writing,• she said. •But the group
Sanchez will read this story
Thursday at the Multicultural
Women Writers reading .
She's one of the younger mem·
hers of the group, who range in
age from 20 to 77. But generation
gaps don't hinder conve rsation.
The women share too much m
common.
·1 think we've all at some point
or another dealt with people who
haven't understood what we're try-
ing to say,• Sanchez said. ·we've
all had experience with people
who want to tune some of the eth-
nic language out.•
At the reading, Yamada, 77, will
share her poems about political
prisoners, one of which is titled
"Playing Cards with the Jailers. N
When asked what the piece is
about. she declines a straight
answer.
"It would be kind of weird for a
SEE WOMEN PAGE A16
'Smiling Fish ' is a fresh film
IS miling Fish and Goat on
fire• is the kind of film
that makes moviegoing, especial-
ly for independent films, exciting.
Every once in a while you get
that thrill that comes from seeing
bright, new talent in a fresh.
original film. REEL 1n this mstante, ·
CRITIC the new talents are
the real life Martini
brothers -Derick
and Steve -who, with director
Kevin Jordan, co-wrote the saipt
about the two brothers they play.
"Smiling Fish~ and •Goat on
Fire• are nicknames given to the
fictional brothers by their half.
Native American grandmother.
Chris, the easygoing, good-
natwed brother, is a Pisc:esi his
brother Tony,
a more serious
type, is a
Capricom-
thus the fish
and goat con-
nections.
The story
takes its time
building
momentum. June Fenner As the film opens, the
brothers, who
live in a great old Los Angeles
Craftsman cottage, are dealing
with the recent loss ol their par-
ents in an auto acddenl While
the young men are dearly bright
and decent guys, neither is par-
tfcularty setting the world on fire.
Chris is purswng a career in
acting and seems content to drift
from one audition to another
during the day -and bang out
with bis buddies in the evening.
Tony is stuck in a dead-end
accounting job and an equally
nowhere relationship with his
high school girllrlend.
But new experiences, includ-
ing more mature romantic rela-
tionships, are around the comer
for both.
A lot of the credit for this
film's success goes to actor/jazz
musidan Bill Hendenon, who
plays Oive, the elderly uncle of
Tony'sbou.
Clive, now ~ated to a
SEE REEL MGE A 16
. .
t
I I
A14 ~ ~9, 2000
After
HOUIS
• Send .......... It.ml to the
Diiiy Not. )JO w. lay St.. c.o.ta
Miia. CA 12627; fax to (949) 646-
4170 « Clll (949) 57~ A ccm-
pletll ~ m-v be found ft
www.dMlypllot.com.
SPECIAL
ILADESHOW
Blade Show West, a knife
trade show, will be held
through Sunday at the Dou-
bletree Hotel, 3050 Bristol
St., Costa Mesa. It will
include demonstrations of
Japanese sword fighting and
knife forging. Hours are 9
a.m. to 6 p.m. Saturday, and
9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Sunday. Cost
is $9 a day, $14 for two·day
pass or $18 for thtee-day
pass. Free for children
younger than 12. n ckets
available at the door. (800)
272-5233.
DREAM HOUSES
The beneflt Project Play-
house 2000, a display village
of kid-size dream houses,
will open from 2 to 6 p .m.
Sept. 23 at fashion Island,
905 Newport Center Drive,
Newport Beach. Tours of the
village outslde the houses
will be held on weeke nds
from Sept. 24 through Oct.
21 . Ticket prices vary. The
playhouses will be auctioned
at the exhibit site Oct. 21 .
Proceeds will go to the
Home A1d chapters of
Orange County and G reater
Los AngelesNentura, which
are spomortng the event.
(9'9) 553-9510.
LA DOlCE VITA
The eighth annual La Dolce
Vita will be held at 6 p.m.
Sept. 24 on the South Cout
Plaza Village Green adjoin-
ing Antonello Rittorante,
3333 Bristol St. ncketJ for
the Cystic Pibroiil Founda-
tion fund-raller are $135 per
person and $1 ,500 for a VIP
table of 10. Seating is limit-
ed. (714) 938-1393.
~ETPlAa ·
The Orange County Market
Place takes place from 1 a.m.
to 4 p.m. Saturdays and Sun-
days in the Orange County
Fairgrounds' main parking lot.
S2 for adults, children under
12 are free. (949) 723~16.
MUSIC
mEL DRUM SONGS
Re percussion Unit, featuring
a plethora of percussion
instrwnents from around the
world, will perlorm 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 MIWR"'REPRISE
The Bill Tole Orchestra with
Beryl Davis, the De Marche
Sisters and other entertainers
will cele brate the music of
Glenn Miller's Air Force
Band at 8 p.m. Sept. 16 in
Orange Coast College's
Robert 8 . Moore Theater,
2701 Fairview Road, Costa
Mesa. Tickets are $25.
Adva.oce-purchue tickets
are 122 for ac:\\&bl, S20 for
senion. (714) 'Ql-5902.
CHANSONS D'AMOUR
Concert pianilt Terry AJartc
and linger~ Profant
perform a medley of French
love songs from 3 to 4 p.m.
Sept. 17 at the Newport
Beach Central Ubrary, 1000
Avocado Ave.: Newport
Beach. The perfonnance,
sponsored in conjunction
.. with the Newport Beach S•
ter City A11n .. , ii part of .a
' festival honoring J\ntibes,
Prance. Pree.-(949) 717-J!'OO.
COUNTRY HrTS
Country music vocalist Crys-
tal Gayle will perf onn at 4
p.m. Sept. 17 in Orange
Coast College's Robert B.
Moore Theatre, 2?01
Pairvlew Road. Gayle's hit
singles include "Wrong Road
Again" and "Beyond You.•
Reserved tickets are $29 at
the college's Communi~
Education ncket Office.
(714) 432-5880.
MUSIC MAN
Classical guitarist John Piz-
zarelli will perform at 7:30
and 9:30 p.m. Sept. 22-23 at
the Orange County Perform-
ing Arts Center, 600'Town
Center Drive, Costa Mesa.
$42-$46. (714) 556-2787.
ANOTHER DIMENSION
The 5th Dimension, known
for "Let the SWlShine In•
and other hit songs, will per-
form at 8 p.m. Sept. 23 in
Orange Coast College's
Rqbert B. Moore Theatre,
2701 Fairview Road, Costa
Mesa. Ticket prices vary.
(7l4) 432-5880.
SAWTING SINATRA
Vocalist Harry Connick Sr.
will join the Nelson Riddle
Orchestra for •A Salute to
I I
the MUlk ol Prank Stiiatra"
at 4 p.m. sept. 2" In Orange
Cout College's Robert 8.
Moore Theatre, 2701
Patmew Road. Colt.a Mesa.
(714) 432-5880.
QASSK:AL PIANO
Ruuian pia.n1lt Evgeny
KJll1n, 28, opens the Pb.ilhar-
monk: Society of Orange
County's 2000--01 seuon at 8
p .m. Sept. 28 at the Orange
County Performing Arts
Center, 600 Town Center
Drtve. llc;kets are $45, $35
and~. (949) 553-2422.
POP/ROCK • FLAMENCO
Tate 5 -a funk, rock and
Motown act -performs at 9
p.m. Saturdays at Carmelo'•
Riltorante, 3520 E. Coast
Highway, Corona del Mar.
Solo gu1tarist 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 Isblbashi and the
Stone Bridge ~ plays rock
and rhythm an'/. b~ues from 9
p.m. Saturdays to 1 a.m. at
Sutton Place Hotel's 1\ianon
Lounge, 4500 MacArthur
Blvd., Newport Beach. Free
admission. (949).476-2001.
STAGE
THE WIZARD OF OZ
ntlogy Playhouse at the LAB
Antimall presents L: Frank
Baum's •nie Wizard of 0z·
7:30 p.m .. Fridays and Satur-
days and 3:30 p.m. Sundays
through Sept. 24. Admission
is $17, $15 for matinees. The
playhouse is located at 2930
Bristol St., Bldg. C., Costa
Mesa. (714) 957-3347, Ext. 1.
OUTlAWS AND LOVERS
Canadlan playwright David
•Swimming
• Petting Zoos
•Spanish
•Dance
•Computers
•Music
•Drama
•jumping Tenu
• Yaeld Trips
and more ...
, ...... _____ ~ \
Rewport l}ZIJ'bor monta.wn
42S E. I ldi St • c.u Mm
BZlcklmy monta.wn
(949)650-3442 ,,. Unnmicy °'·. C.aa Maa (949 548-3771
I I
Freeman'• •Jesse arid the
Bandit Queen" will open at
8 p.m. Sept. 16 at Orange
Cout College'• Drama Lab
Studio, 2701 Pairvlew Road,
Costa Mesa. The play ii a
sweeping saga of outlaws
and lovers. Performances
are at 8 p.m. Saturdays Md
2 a od 1 p.m. Sund!\ys
through Sept. 24. $5 In
advance, S6 at the door.
Seating is llmited. (714)
432-5640, Ext. 1.
THA'rS ENTERTAINING
Joe Orton's "Entertaining
Mr. Sloane" will open Sept.
22 and run through Oct. 22
at South Coast Repertory's
Second Stage. Performances
are 7:45 p.m. Tuesday
through Sunday with mati-
nees at 2 p.m. on Saturday
and Sunday. Tickets are $18
through $47, with discounts
available. There will be a
pay-what-you-will perfor-
mance at 2 p .m. Sept. 23,
wi.th a $5 minimum sug-
gested, cash only, and a
linlit of two tickets per per-
son. The repertory is located
at 655 Town Center Drive,
Costa Mesa. (71 4) 708-5555.
HARRIS AND REIUY
Jbe Newport Beach Central
Library presents •A Very Spe-
dal Evening with Julie Harris
and Charles Nelson Reilly" at
1 p.m. Sept. 25 at the library's
Friends Meeting Room, 1000
Avocado Ave. The free pro-
gram is sponsored by the
Newport Beach Arts Commis-
sion. (949) 717-3801.
SOUTH PAOAC
A Cup of Water will perform
a one-hour version of the
Broadway classic •South
Pacific" at 2:30 p.m. Oct. 1 at
Borders Books, Music &
Cafe, South Coast Plaza,
3333 Bear St., Costa Mesa.
I I
Ooify Pilot
Song• include "Some
Enc:banted Evening,• "Notb-
in' Uke a Dame• and "Wuh
That Man ~ht Out of My
Hair.• Free. (714) 432-7854.
OCTOIER LAUGHS
Orange Coast College will
debut itJ production of
comedian Steve Martin'•
•Picasso at the Lapln Agile"
at 8 p.m. Oct. 5 in the Dra-
ma Lab Theater, 2701
Pairview Road, Perf or-.
mances are at 8 p.m. Thun-
days through Saturdays and
2 p.m. Sundays unW Oct.
15. $7 .ln advance or $6 for
seniors, students and chil·
dren. $9 at the door. Seating
is limited. (714) 432-5880.
FABRAY IN CONCERT
Star of stage, film and the
small screen Nanette Pabray
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
d tizens and children under
12 in advance. $25 at the
door. (714) 432-5880. •
MAGICAUY COPPERRELD
The Orange County Per-
forming Arts Center will pre-
sent David Copperfield at 6
and 9 p.m. Nov. 30 and Dec.
2. The Center ls at 600 Town
Center Drive, Costa Mesa.
(714) 556-2122. n ckets are
$30 to $50. (714) 755-0236.
ART
OTY ART
Original artwork by Newport
Beach city employees will go
on display Monday at City
Hall, 3300 Newport Blvd.
Exhibit hours will be 8 a.m.
to 6 p.m. weekdays through
Oct. 31. (949) 717-3870.
Premier Retirement Living
~tsSANCE a,/;
INN AI THE PARK
'lllM l !fl S !N I Oll LI VIN O
Irvine's most prestigious
senior community offering:
Affordable month-to-
month rentals. gourmet
restaurant-style dining, full . . . . time acuvataes pr~
housekeeping, sch
transportation &
Dolly Pilot
PACJAC CMFT SHOW
1be Welll Pargo Pacilic Craft
Show will open at 6 p.m. Fri·
day at the Orange County
MUMWD of Art, 850 San
Clemente Drive, Newport
Beach. 1be event will include
musical entertainment and
refreshmenll. Ad.miision ls ·
$25. (9"9) 759-1122.
MINIERG AT SPIRITUS
The Susan Splrltus Gallery
will exhibit works by Claire
Steinberg from Sept. 23
through the end of January,
with a reception for the artist
held from 1 to 4 p.m. Sept. 23
and 24 at 3929 Birch St.,
Newport Beach. (949) 474·
4321.
PHOTOGRAPHIC MEMORIES
•Al Belson: A Photographic
Reverie," an exhibit featur-
. ing photographs of Mexico,
Spain and Italy, is on display
at the Orange County Muse-
um of Art's South Coast
Plaza Gallery, 3333 Bristol
St., Costa Mesa. Exhibit
hours are 10 a.m. to 9 p.m.
weekdays, 10 a.m. to 7 p.m.
Saturdays and 11 a.m. to
6:30 p.m. Sundays through
·Sept. 24. Free admiBsion.
(7)4) 662-3366.
DtGITALART
Digital prints by Orange
Coast College art instructor
Lisa Bloomfield will be on
display from 9 a.m. to 5
p.m. Monday through Fri·
day through Sept. 26 m the
college's Photo Gallery.
Free. OCC ls located at
2701 Falrv1ew Road. (7 14)
432-5520.
DOUBLE TREAT
·correspondences.· show·
casing drawings and sculp-
tures by Ellsworth Kelly and
lsamu Noguchi, will be on
view through Oct. 15 at the
Orange County Museum of
Art, 850 San Clemente Drive,
Newport Beach. Hours are
11 a .m. to 5 p.m . Tuesdays
through Sundays. Admission
ls $5 for adults; $4 for stu·
dents and seniors: museum
members and children under
16 are free. (949) 759-1122.
,HEMPHiif'~ iuds&cAEt
~~
Introducing
New Barbados
Surround Yourself in
The Natural Beauty
230 East 17th St. • Costa Mesa
(949) 722-7224
www.rug11ndc•rpet1 com
Mon·Frt 10-6 Sat 10-5
. .
'MAIUHERS, MANDARINS'
•Mariners and Mandarins:
Seafaring in the China
'n'ade," an exhibit featunng
18th century Chinese marine
palntingfi and navigation
instruments, are on display
through Nov. 10 at the New·
port Harbor Nautical Muse·
urn, 151 E. Coast Highway,
Newport Beach. Exhibit
hours are 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Tuesdays through Sundays
until Nov. 10. Free admis-
sion. (949) 673· 7863.
DANCE
INDIAAT OCC
K.athak, the classical dance of
India, will be performed by
Anjani's Kathak Dance of
lndia Company at 4 p.m. Oct.
8 in Orange Coast College's
Robert B. Moore Theatre,
2701 Fairview ROad. Reserved
tickets are $22. Discounted
bckets, available to OCC stu-
dents, senior c:iti7.ens and chil-
dren, are $20. lickets are the
door are $25. (714) 432-5880.
DANCE 204
Dance 204 offers private and
group mstruction 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 Robbins
Combo for.adults lrom 7:30 to
10:30 p.m. Tuesdays. Singles
and couples are welcome.
Cost is $.1. The center is at 695
W. 19th St. (949) 645-2356.
DANSaNE STUDIO
Danscene Studio offers ball·
room danang at 8 p.m. on
the hrst Friday of every
month. Admission is $10.
The studio is at 2980
McClintock Way, Costa
Mesa. (714) 641-8688.
BIG BAND DANONG
The Oasis Seruor Center
holds an afternoon of danc·
lng to Big Band music from
1 :30 to 3:30 p.m. Fridays.
Coffee and refreshments are
served. The center is al 800
-Did You Know?
"That you c.an have beautiful color in your garden all
year long ? ~I friend~ and knowled ~
sales staff c.an show you how planting with our qua ity
products can help you make it happen!
·® NUlllllllll, lllC.--•
COSTA MESA SANTA ANA
2 700 Bristol St. 2800 N. Tustin Ave.
(714) 75+6661 (714) 633-9200
COMftm lANDSC.APING • 45 YWIS ixPEllENa
UCINSE I .SS3
TIMELESS TIMEPIECES
lb.ls 1912 dJamond, pearl and onyx wristwatch ls
one of 15 vintage watches touring the country with
"The Art of Cartter: Precious Timepleces," now on
dhplay at TradJttonal Jewelers, Fashion Island, 62
Fashion Island, Newport Beach. The collectton will
be on dhplay through Wednesday, Store hours are
10 a.m. to 7 p.m. Saturday, 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. Sunday
and 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. Monday tbroµgb Friday. f ree.
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 McClintock Way, Costa
Mesa. (714) 641-8688.
BOOKS
VARYING VIEWS "'
Readings of original works
by members of Multicultural
Women Writers will launch
the Newport Beach Central
Ubrary's 2000-01 adult lec-
ture series at 7 p.m. Thurs-
day in the library's Friends
Meeting Room, 1000 Avoca-
do Ave. (949) 717-3801.
SIGNING BY SHELDON
Sidney Sheldon will sign his
latest book "The Sky is
Falling" at 2 p.m. Sept. 17 at
Borders Books, Music &
Cafe South Coast Plaza.
3333 Bear St., Costa Mesa.
(714) 556-1185.
-
SOCCER TAtx-
Soccer coach Rudy Yak.zan
will discuss and sign his new
book • 105 Soccer Practice
,Prills" at 2 p .m. Sept. 23 at
Borders Books, Music & Cafe
South Coast Plaza, 3333 Bear
St., Costa Mesa. Yakzan will
also bold a soccer mini clinic
at the store. (714) 556-1185.
.Lite' ~~~ou..:'t:..;E~.nd With Alzhelmer'1,
Senior C.U. Coaunaaky
Pleue eo ..... our,.......,. ••
Nelih .. • rll:• •• Pwepw The Flwt I• Al .... •1r'e ead o.--•la Lh'blt1
New Chapter Regine •••
Saturday, ~9, 2000AIS
UTERATUM TALK
A Uterature Discussion
Group meets at 7 p .m.
Wednesdays at Borders
Books, Music & Cate at
South Coast Plaza, 3333
Bear St., Costa Mesa. Dis-
cussion is tree. (714) 432-
7854.
OPRAH BOOK O.UB
The Oprah Book Club meets
at 7 p.m. the third Thursday
·of every month to discuss
Oprah Winfrey's most recent
select1om a t Barnes & Noble
Booksellers Fashion Island.
The store is at 953 Newport
Center Drive, Newport
Beach. (9"9) 759-0982.
IUDS
STARLIGHT STORIES
Youngsters ages 3 to 7 may
participate in songs and fin-
ger ptippet plays at 7 p.m.
Mondays at Costa Mesa
Ubrary, 1855 Park Ave. (949)
646-8845.
PJS AND BOOKS
Ne'wport Beach Central
Library offers story time at 7
p.m Mondays and 10:30 a.m.
Saturdays. The library is at
1000 Avocado Ave. Children
may wear pajamas to the
evening sessions. Free. (949)
717-3801.
TRIANGLE STORY TIME
Barnes & Noble Booksellers
1\'iangle Square hosts story
time on the second and fourth
Tuesdays of each month for
children of all ages at the
store, 1870 Harbor Blvd .. Cos·
ta Mesa. (949) 631..()61-4 .
WUl(LY STOttYTEWJt
Barnes & Noble Book.sellers
Metro Pointe bOlll story
Ume at 10:45 a .m. Wednes·
days for children of all ages
at the store, 901 ·B South
Coast Drive, Cost4 Mesa.
(71-4) 444-0226.
POETRY
POETRY MOOD
A poetry reading and live
music will be held at 8 p.m.
Wednesday at the Alta Coffee
House & ROdStlng Company,
506 31st SL Sign up begins at
7 P·!ll· for the open reading.
Free. (949) 675-0233.
THEE WORD THING
"Thee Word Thing" perfor-
mance poetry rught begms at
9 p.m. Wednesdays at Club
Mesa. 843 W. 19th St .. Costa
Mesa. Free. (949) 642-8448.
DINING/TASTING
CULTURAL COOKING
The Jewish Community
Center of Orange County
and Whole Foods Markets
will present a Rosh Hashand
cooking demonstrabon and
tasting at 7 p 'Yl. Sept. 18 at
Whole Foods Market. 'Than·
gle Square. 1870 Harbor
Blvd . Costa Mesd The
workshop will offer d bnef
explanabon of the JewtSh
New Year tractitlons and his·
tory. followed by a tasung of
traditional foods Free. (949)
574-3800. '
~ & Architectural Elements from China
1:j
~ ·-e one day only ~
1''Alll~DCtlJSI~
. SAI .. I~
all items 40% off or more
TODAY!
.
9 a.m. to 5 p .m.
cavca~ no holds, no pre-sales
ddivcry avaibblc (noc &cc), all items
mwc be removed by 5 p.m. Sept. 12
visa, mastercard. amcx, chcdu accepted
cash, roo
Vlllllllllkllib
In Stoct~!l.diate-
llDllllllllDIDI
..... 1111
Llti11 • Di1i11 • ltdr111 · Office
Ct1lt1JtHrJ Tt Trditnal _.
,,~~---"
1
2189 LIRwvld lhd. • Lona Beacb • Cllifondl
56~986.53051111111m1m11111mum1a
...... .,. .... ·Ill.Ila-·Ill. Dul ...
• f ' '
Al6 Saturday, s.p.nb.r 9, 2000
JAZZ
CONTINUED FROM A 13
James, who takes the blame
for the name.
Ma.son calls their music
·1ove music," a kind that
comes Crom their hearts.
'Ihlck five on "Yes,
Please I• titled •e1ues Force,·
is one the group wrote
together, almost as an
impfOmptu throw-together of
tunes. They rarely do that,
but the combination of cre-
ativities worked.
•we all had good inten-
tions. We were all sympa-
thetic to each other,• Mason
said. "We just enjoy making
good music that people
appreciate."
Each member of Fourplay
brings his own style to the
quartet.
........... _ ... -·
DATEBOOK
WOMEN
CONTINUED FROM A 13
poet to interpret her own
poem,• Yamada said.
Hylkema, 62, will read
a short story about an
Asian custom she remem ..
bers trying to accept as a
child. Uke Yamada,
Hylkema is reluctant to
spell out her story. But she
said people's reactions
have been interesting.
•Sometimes the sile.nce
is deafening when I finish
reading this story,• she
said. •aut you write about
REEL
CONTINUED FROM A 13
Doity PilOt
thing• that stick With you
... and in the process of
writing it, you really can
have some understanding
and dosure with it.•
Whether or not listeners
understand the stories,
they want to bear them,
said Dax Kiger, adult pro-
gram coordinator for the
library.
•You get such a diverse .
group together, and they
tell stories so well," he
said. "It's important not
only for their stories to be
heard, but also because I
don't think many organi-
zations have a platfofll) to
do it in.•
story so simple and
straight ·rorward yet
packed with such a pow-
erful punch. Bassist East, who has
recorded with and for music
giants including Eric Clap-
ton, Stevie Wonder, Phil
Collins and Babyf ace, has
this energetic, optimistic per-
sonality, James said. He
y.'alks in and adds "tremen-
dous spirit to any musical sit-
uation.•
PHQTO COURTESY Of WAJWEA BROS. RECORDS
Fourplay will play Its blend of jazz and pap Wednesday at the H)'4ltt Newporter. nursing home, once led an
adventure-crammed life
during the early days of
Hollywood filmmaking.'
He also shared a passion-
ate love affair with bis If
wife that even death can-
not end. Clive's gusto is
the spark that builds a ~ire
under Tony.
The Martini brothers
will have their work cut
out for them, topping their
first venture into fUrnmak-
ing. But, because I ~pect
they possess the same
qualities found in their
film characters, I think
they'll make it. Carlton, who has 20 solo
albums and two Gram.my
awards to·his credit, bas lent
his guitar style to projects
with Barbra Streisand and
Steely Dan, to name a few.
He's the quiet one in the
group, sometimes even con-
sidered mysterious.
Mason is what they call a
hit-maker, James said. A
drummer, producer and com-
poser, he first shined with
jazz legends Duke Ellington
and Erroll Gamer in the
1960s. With seven Grammy
nominations to his name, he
ROSEY'S AUTOBODY
" ~l•iiii~.._-.._vou Haye the RJght
to Choose Your
Repair Facility
nsist on the Best
Lifetime Warranty
Full Service Collision Center
Insurance Approved Shop ~-....
(949) 642-4522
121 Industrial Way • Costa Mesa
has contributed to several
movie scores, including "The
Color Purple.•
nominations, he's a musician
who likes to ta.lee risks.
James, who said he is
happy with having only 25%
of the responsibility for the
leader-less group, wrote the.
theme for the television
series "Taxi." With a run of
chart-topping albums, 29
solo albums, and 12 Gram.my
•in th.is group there are
two different challenges,•
James said. "One is to
reach a wide audience,
because we're communica-
tors. But the group is also
an opportunity to make an
artistic statement.•
It has been a long time
since I saw a film with a
• JUNE FENNER. a Costa Mesa
resident in her late 50s, is vice
president of a work force train-
ing company.
Freedom From:
VLtABELLA
Consignment Furniture
WEIGHT PROBLEMS
EATING DISORDERS
ADDICTIONS
DEPRESSION Time to redecorate your villa?
Think Villa Bella
Affordable, Confidential Professional Help
• Former Betty Ford Center Clinician
•Director of Drug & Alcohol Treatment
<>Id \\'orld I t11opl·.111 11.tir
(949) 515-1884 •
• Author of Gifts of Sobriety & other self help books
Call for·info:
Barbara Cole, MFT
(714) 429-0888
369.E. 17th St.• Across from Ralphs c11th&Tust1nl
Mon-Sat • 10:30 · 6:00 pm
Vote ND on Measure S
I hove called Newport Beach home for more than 40 years,
Our quollty of fife here ls unmatched and I believe Measure S
places It In )eopotdy, \A:>te NO on Measure S,
Dozens of Coatty Electtonl Over "Mtnor"
Ren.ovatlona And Neighborhood
lmprov9'Mnt Protects
Measul'e S ISN'T about 'giving voters o
chance to vote on big development
projects.· If you wtll read It you will
see that It requires exper)Slve citywide
elections for ALL General Plan
Amendments Oarge, medium and small)
once a certain threshold Is met.
This means Measure S would force
dozens of electlons over the next few
years. Most of these electloru wlll
be over fairly minor neighborhood
renovations and Improvements.
Under Measure S we Wiii vote on o 1~
squor&-foot addition to a small omce. We
wlll vote on on exponston of o noll
school. We WIU vote on a nG' 18 ·,.;g
hall for a church. We wlll e 0 1 o
modest renovation o t a r .touro it,
even a ftre station.
In tgct. If Moos re s had been on the
booka <Mk>o the last ten veep. ttwre
cotjd txr;e been !.Q to 5Ci atacnooa
ll1der tbt tacmt of the mecp p. Ihgt's
oagrty 12 orQtects on tt>e bgllot every
twovecn.
The Costa for al these elecik>nl 'MXicf
hOve bMf'l Into the n-.a • of dolorl.
Since the tacpayirl hcNe to pov tt.....
com thll meant M•can s WCI.Ad have
dlv.rted mllortl al dolarl "°"' ~tant prtorttt. iuCt'I CJI P'dc IClf9ty and
P<JIOll '9dlC ~. lhll II one '9CJIOrl
'Wtt( cu polce ~ .. ofWdall ltrongly
uge a NO wt. on Mec:an S.
· M.na",,~"S"'"'
Measure S won't Improve planning or
reduce tratnc.
But It WIU abandon careful study, public
hearings and envlronmentot review -In
favor of an endless series of elections
over MINOR General Pion Amendments. Measure s wtn promote pleoemeot •one
piece at o time· development · rather
than on ovefoll master pion Which takes
Into occO\Xlt the needs and wonts of the
entire community.
If Measure S Is approved, It's unlikely that
the Newport Beach General Pion Wiii
ever be updated again.
I believe In Representative Government.
'"' · we should elect people who wta
wv 'tro1Rc experts,plonnlng e>eperts
ond 11 , public to study development
proposals -then make the best declsk>n
fOr our commootty.
Measure S abandons RepretentotNe
Goverrment and promotes on endlelt
terlet e>epenetve and dMllve P91ftca1
c~. It won't btlng ObOut good
~ and It Certainty won't pr818Ne
~ quallty ot life.
Polle• ond ftte otftciall. t~ '10UPI·
church leaders. edUcat0'1. .-
bulWl4MI C>wnefl and ma'1V °"*' -CR oppoeed to Meoue s ........... . ..........
I . ,
•
. . ..
Doily Pilot
EDITORIAL · ..
n.. . silDn
"It's so wonderful. It really
changes their behavior. You
can tell that they are taking
seriously what they are doing."
-SHEILA ROGDS. Newport Elementary
School second-grade teacher, on the
new uniforms being worn by
students this at.demk year.
. Chilling effeet on deVeloJiers cOuld take toll
T he list reads like a who's who of
busines5 in Newport Beach. First,
Tble Irvine Co. .
Then Pacific life. Next was Conexant
And now the Dunes.
The companies share a dubious distinc-
tion: they are all casualties of out-of-con-
trol concern over supposed out-of-control
development.
Anti-growth fervor in Newport Beach is
broiling, and developers are running for
cover. One by one, development propos-
als are being pulled -or, at least, pulled
back.
In January, The IrVine Co. led the exo-
dus of developers by dropping a Newport
Center expansion project. Then Pacific
life, the largest life and health insurance
firm in the state~imply scrapped its plans
to expand its Newport Center offices,
instead renting office space in South
County. Tilis swnmer, Conexant, a semi-
MAILBAG
Here's one suggestion
for ~ center site
L isten up ladies and gentle-
men, children and seniors:
A. volunteer grou{> of resi-
dents has been working for six
and a half years to give Newport
Beach and Orange County resi-
dents a cultural art and cinema
center and it's located in Balboa,
that wonderful village by the sea
· where Newport Beach actually
began with the McFadden broth-
ers, the Red Une, the Balboa
Pavilion and Rendezvous Ball·
room (•Residents, city debate arts
center location,• Sept. 1).
Although Balboa has seen much
physical decline over the past 10
years, we believe the Balboa The-
ater renovation will effect the
change that is needed to make this
a vital, thrtving cultural area. It's
been done before in the San Diego
Gaslamp District, Pasadena Old
Town. where the revitalization of a
theater bas made these destination
points for young and old to enjoy.
conductor manufacturer near John Wayne
Airport, asked the City Council to post-
pone a vote on its headquarters expansion
project until after the general election.
And just this week. the proposed
Dunes resort -a 470-room hotel and
31,000-square-foot conference center -
joined the ranks of projects that have
~been derailed or delayed.
Hotel proponents have asked the coun-
cil to wait until after the November elec-
tion -when dueling growth-control
measures will face off -to make a deci-
sion on their embattled proposal.
The Dunes has unwillingly, and proba-
bly unfairly, become the poster project for
activists who sayNewport Beach is too
development-friendly.
Yes, it is high time the dty takes a good
look at protecting what is left of its open
space and preserving its quality of life.
Yes, traffic is a problem. And there is
1be Balboa. Theater could help to revive the Peninsula.
no denying that without a solution, there
is a chance that Newport Beach could
become o~enun with unsightly and envi-
ronmentally unsound developments.
But should developers be running
scared? Should projects be wiped off the
books when in some cases city.officials,
residents and builders worked for months,
even years, to improve the plans?
No new projects could mean no new
jobs and a stagnant economy. And the
consequences down the road could be
heavy.
Newport Beach has long enjoyed a
robust economy and a healthy standard of
living. But residents should never let
themselves believe it is a given.
Newport Beach, like any community,
needs fuel to keep its engine running.
And as more and more developers and
big businesses back into comers, there is
less and less of that fuel to go around.
DON I.EACH I OAA.Y PILOT The Balboa area is unique, the ·
Balboa Theater will be culturally
unique and will offer live theater,
cinema, ballet, musicals and
orchestra. spec:ial programs for
children and seniors, all readily
available in a state-of-the-art 350-
seat theater.
million toward making Balboa a
destination place, certainly one
that should be preserved, that we
are all proud to be a part of.
posed to stretch between them -
sttll face a game of foot-dragging
b,r. those wanting the bridges
( Costa Mesa bemoans stalled
bridge study,• Aug. 26).
Beach requested that the county
do any necessary studies to exam-
ine the effects of taking the ob9o·
lete, nearly SO-year-old bridge
plans off its transportation map.
No, we aren't trying to dupli-
cate the Orange County Perform-
ing Arts Center, or the Ba.relay or
Laguna Playhouse. We a.re simply
making available within our own
treasure, Balboa, a culturally alive
and entertaining fadlity called the
Balboa Theater. The dty of New-
port Beach bas supported our
efforts by purchasing the theater
in 1998; now they've pledged S7 .S
OAYNA PETTIT
President, Balboa Performing
Arts Theater Foundation
Old plans for bridge
are still bad news
Costa Mesa and Huntington
Beach -the only cities that
would have neighborhoods dis-
rupted by two new bridges ~
LmEI Of 1111 WEii
Reader has idea for Sage Hill mascot
C'o Sage Hill School hasn't se.lert·
~a mascot yet (•School bell
Bet to ring at Sage Hill.• Sept 4)1
May I suggest, inspired by~
er developments named after tbe
natQral features~ to
mi.b way for tb8m -for exam-
COllllCIYom
llllMS
an•conaMUA
C011ia Mela City Hall. Tl Pair
Dme. C01ta Mela. CA m261
(714) 75U223 ~1:!.=;t~
Linda Dbma. Joe l!ltcboD ad ............ , cm•-•llMI
Newpmt lwla <;If Hiii. .. ~:.,,~ =., ............
' ple the Pelican Polnt neighbor-
hood. San Joequin Hills nam-
port.ation Corridor end Sage Hill
School ttlelf -bOW about the s. Hill Gnatc:atcbenl
.
..-iLaG..E
Coilta Miiia
. coancomm1•r1 COUlll
Dlltrict C>mce: 1370 Adan Ave.,
Calta~ CA m21.1(7l4)
432"5888 o r1laa
Wllll.m M....,.
_. PalO. ...... OIGlge 8.
lrOWD. W ... G;Haw91d. .flay
N•ICID lild Anando Rull
1be southern bridge, strongly
pushed by Newport Beach staff,
would create a route for shunting
heavy Coast Highway traffic out
of Newport Beach, across the
length of southern Costa Mesa
and Huntington Beach, and back
again to Coast Highway beyond
Newport Beach.
Seven years ago, the cities of
Costa Mesa and Huntington
The Costa Mesa City Council is
right. The cities of Huntington
BeaCh and Costa Mesa have both
halved their growth plans so that
their own traffic will not make
either bridge necessary. Newport
Beach bas not followed suit, and
ill staff is still dragging its feet on
getting the studies completed.
JANET REMINGTON
Costa Mesa
. '
Saturday, September 9, 2000 A 17
·Development,
gfowthmust
be controlled
• M ISSUE: Residems agree
that something must be done
to keep traffic and development
from overrunning Newport,
but what's the better solution:
Measure S or Measure TI
R esidents beware of distortions of
Measure S being offered by pro-
ponents who view Newport as a
commodity to be exploited for profit!
They believe that we citizens need
them to interpret our election material.
Guess again. I am voting yes on
Measure S because it will allow us to
tame development, as thoughtfully
READERS entitled by our gener-
al plan. Only extrava-
RESPON D gant increases to this
plan would go before
the voters in the sub-
sequent, already-funded general e1ec..:
tion. Some I might consider good for
Newport; others. such as massive ron-
vention hotels. I could vote against. •
Remember, the vote would only go to
the people if the council approved the
excess development in the first place.
We residents of Newport Beach,
renters and homeowners alike, have
a big stake in the future evolution of
our city. Overdevelopment -the
wrong kind of development -and
increased traffic, are expensive to our
well-being.
I am grateful to the citizens that
brought Measure S to the ballot by
signing the Greenlight initiative. It's
time to bring checks and balances to
city government.
MARIANNE TOWERSEY
Newport Beach
As the most vocal City Council
candidate in favor of the Greenllght
initiative, I was. more than a little dis·
appointed that the Newport Beach
Police employees. union Mkt they
would oppose the initiative.
It seems rather strange that th.is ded-
sion was made without talking to either
myself or to the Greenlight people. It
appears from the comments attributed
to the police union that they have been
the victims of misinfonnation on the
part of Measure T proponents.
Greenlight (Measure S) and Mea-
sure T are not two different ways to
do the same thing. They are two
entirely different measures. The
Greenlight initiative is to control
development and does not eliminate
the ~c Phasing Ordinance we now have. velopers will still be required
to pa· to mitigate traffic problems
cause<J by their developments.
On the other hand, Measure T
does nothing to preclude develop-
ment. If it passes, its main pwpose is
to kill the Greenligbt initiative and to
put the· present lhlffic Phalin~
nance into the City Charter, w
~ make it more difficult to strength-
en in the future.
I hope the police union will send
representatives of their group to the
debate on the subject of Measure S
versus Measure T sponsored by the
Speak Up Newport group. Perhaps
after hearing arguments presented tn
an open fonun, from both sides, they
may very well wish to reoonsider their
position of op~~
Balboa llland
,
Daity Pilot
HIGH SCHOOL FOODALL
COM
CYPRESS
TOMGHT"s NONUAca• GA.-
Cw m.MM vs. 0.-
• Sltir. Western High, 7 p.m.
• Bottom line: Corona del Mar
enters with underdog credentials
with cypress already having a game
under Its belt. The Sea Kings open
the season with six players going
both ways behind a new
quarterback. Fountain Valley junior
transfer Dylan Hendy. Fourteen
points can win this game.
Runners on the start line.
All four local high school cross
country teams will be cruising the _
domain this morning in invitational
action.
Newport Harbor, Costa Mesa
and Corona del Mar high schools
boys and girls will be at the
Ldguna Hills Invitational at Laguna
Hills High with myriad starts.
For instance, Newport Harbor,
in Division 11, has senior boys at
11:36, 1Wlior boys at 10:24,
1uruor-senior girls at 11 ,
sophomore girls are at 9:48.
sophomore boys at 9:12, freshman
girls at 8:36 and freshman boys
at 8. ·
Costa Mesa and Corona del Mar
are in Division m. with starting
times just off the Division 11 starts.
Meanwhile, Estancia High's
boys and girls head to San Diego
for the University Invitational,
which gets underway at 10.
In other sports action:
• The Orange Coast College men's
and women's cross country teams
will open the 2000 campaign as
Orange Empire Conference and
Stale Chatnpions at the Fresno
Invitational, held at Woodward
Park at 8 a.m.
• Vanguard Unjversity men's and
women's cross country squads will
be at the Ralph B. Clark Park in
Buena Park for the Whittier
College Invitational at 8:30 a.m.
• After breezing past Antelope
Valley. 4-2. on Tuesday, the OCC
women's soccer team will take on
some much stiffer competition at
the Cuesta Cup.
First up on the Pirates' list of
competition is Santa Rosa at 2:30
p.m., one of the top programs in
Northern California, according to
Pirates Coach Barbara Bond.
"I'm looking forward to that
challenge,• Bond said following
the team's win over Antelope
Valley.
• The Vanguard women's soccer
team will continue its action in
Portland, Ore. at the Concordia
University Tournament at 4:30 p.m.
• In water polo tournament action,
the OCC men's water polo team
continues at the Ventura
Tournament, while the Pirate
women continue action at the
Saddleback Tournament.
• Newport Harbor's field hockey
team will be competing against
four to-be-named foes at the Los
Angeles Field Hockey Association
Tournament, held at Westminster
High, starting at 8:30 a.m.
• In volleyball action, the
Vanguard University women's
volleyball team will compete at
Whittier College today at 3 p.m.
Quot• Of --. .
i told .. MS lld'9 spedal tlan we pg
lo hM IO mab a big play far unnlf '9y 61 _ •
Jeff Brtnkley, Newport football coach
..
---
Sports Editor Roger Carlson• 949-574-4i23 • Sports Fax: 9.(9-6.SO.Ol 70 •Saturday, Sepember 9, 2000 81
TAltS
• Newport Harbor comes
from behind with familiar
tricks: No turnovers and a
blocked Pl_lllt give Sailors
ultimate edge on Lancers.
Tony Altobelli
DAILY PILOT TARS
NEWPORT BEACH -After --------• 'turning in a masterpiece 1999 sea-LANCERS
son, how does a predominantly new
Newport Harbor High football team
attempt a second volume? As was the case in Friday night's but he stretched his 5-foot-10 frame
season-opening 14-7 aail-biter enough to reach the goal-line. •
against visiting Orange Lutheran, ·1 told the guys that the special . d · teams were going to have to make a its one one page at a time. big play for us and they did,. Brink-
• 1 thought it was important for ley said. •tan had the big play and
our players to get a win we were fortunate early in the season to get -------their confidence going,• •ThJ8 was enough to cash in on it."
Coach Jett Brinkley said. ch Despite the Lancers
·S-Ometimes it's hard com-pretty mu coming from Division XI, h J no t d Brinkley knew this was ing off an undefeated sea-ow ex,,..,c e not going to he an easy
son with a lot of new guys. it would be. contest.
They might wonder, "How "They've won 20 of
are we going to duplicate Both teams their last 22 games,#
that?' It's a game-by-game batUing it Brinkley said. •This was
process." pretty much how I
With the offensive stats out ···" expected it would be.
at a stalemate and both Both teams battling it
team's defenses control-~ ~ out."
ling the game, it was up to football co.ch Orange Lutheran
the Sailors' special teams almost made it look too
to help turn the tables. easy against the defend-
With the Lancers punt-ing CIF Southern Section
ing on fourth down, Sailors senior Division VI champs, scoring on the
Ian Banlgan busted up the middle to first drive of the game.
block Jon Talmage's kick. waking With a variety of formations and
up the Tar-heavy crowd of approxl-hitches. the Lancers marched down
mately 4,000. JWlior Tyler Miller the field and scored on a 34-yard
recovered the punt on the Lancers' pass from quarterbac;k Jason Thyl<?,r .
9-yard-line, giving Newport i~ best to Talmage. #
chance to tie the score. "They caught us a little fiat-fo<t'·
Senior fullback Dennis Thornton ed out there,~ Brinkley said. •we
took the next two snaps and busted knew they were going to throw lots
through the Lancers defense. The of different formations at l.11· We just
second run, a 5·yard grinder in had to pick up the intensity and get
which be was stopped at the two, to work."
Newport
Harbor
High'• ~brll
Ma.ndertno
(1) and Alan •
SaenzACk
Orange
Lutheran
· quarterback
Jason Taylor
during Prtday
night's
nonleague
game on
the winner's
field.
Manderino
and Saenz,
along with
Joe Foley,
Nick
Mogbaddam
and Garrett
Troncale,
were
responsible
for six sacks
1n all as the
Sall ors
pulled out
a 14-7
victory
over the
Lancers.
DAILY PILOT
PHOTOS BY
SEAN HILLER
•
Harbor quarterback Chris Manderlno runs for tough yardage.
HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL
The defensive line of Banigan,
Joe Foley, Garrett 1Toncale and
Nick Moghaddam, along with Man-
derino a\ linebacker, sacked the
Lancers quarterbacks six times and
hammered any Orange Lutheran
player who would cross their path.
•They're all very smart players
and were well-prepared,• defensive
line coach Mike Bargas said. "It's a
credit to (fellow DL Coach) Evan
Chalmers and the rest of the staff.
Our defensive line was well-
coached tonight.•
Pour minutes into the third quar-
ter, Newport Harbor got a second
big play, this time from Poley, who
recovered a Lancers' fumble on
Orange Lutheran's '4-yard-line.
Seven pla}'1 later, Manderlno
plowed in from a yard out. giving
the lead to Newport, 14-7.
Orange Lutheran pulled out all
the tricks in the second half, but tbe
Sailors' defense held tough.
The Lancers had a successful
onside kick and a successful fake
punt, but still could not find the end
zone.
Offensively, Manderino was 1 for
15 for 104 yards, while Ryan Ortega
ran for 56 yards on 15 canies. ·
·we'll look at the videotape this
week and evaluate the offense and
what we have to do to be more suc-
cessful,• Brinkley said. "It's not easy
trying to replace a running back like
Andre Stewart and it's going to take
thne.•
The Sailors have six days to come
up with some extra offensive punch
before Marina (1-0) heads into
David.son Field Thursday night at 7.
GAME STATISTICS PAGE 13
Pirates unveil the miHenniom edition. tonight
• OCC kicks off the season
at home against Riverside.
Tony Attobettl
OAilY Pll.oT
COSTA ?vfESA-Pinally, lt'1 time
for the bits, tackles, touchdowns and
blood to count for something as the
Orange Coast College footbell holtl
Riverside for the 2000 seuon open-
er tonight et 7.
•we're excited to get under~
way,• Coach Mike 'Thylor aaid. "Me
and the cooches have been loolc1ng
at the ta~ and we appear futer
than we were last yeer, which la •
plus.•
1be Plratet; 4-8 tut YMI' and 2·3
in the Minlotl Conftnnce'• North-ern Divlllon, are gol09 to Deed
fNflr/ blt of speed tO take Oil the ~. Who wallopfid OCC, 48!U,
lUtyear.
·1 think our~ want to
------tblat pl8-ll ... ,._, • 1liylar IUI: •Mn..,-ID ~·
J(_ FOOTBALL
we didn't play too well.•
It was the big play th.at killed the
Pirates the la.st time the two teaml
faoed off. five cl Rivwlkte'• teVeD
touchdowns were on PIAVS of 30 •
yards or longer.
Sophomore Scott SbePant threW
for over 1,000 yards and· to touC.h-
downs for the Tigen, who flnllhed
last year '~ oyensll. 3·2 ln the Cen·
tral DM.sioo.
•They've got IOJne speed a.ad
they've got tome me up the mid·
die,. ntylor iald.
The me up the mkSdle 11 ttM
Jlgen' olfemtve frollt. ·~ 6-foot""3 in belgbt end 310 ~ ln
bullL
•we haft tba attmt. who can
blDcDe the .. guys. .. ~"°' Mtd . . ,.,.. ..... *" ....... Cllllllpl-
Clllid ....... , lbM -,...., .,. .............. ..,,_ ... _ ... llil*.
JC FOOTBALi
TONIGHT AT OCC, 7
.....
,. •• •• t•• ti ,. •• .. # • . , .. . .. .. ,. ,. tf
82 Saturday, s.pe.mber 9, 2000
' ,.
....
~.law dealership under consbUClion . •
.· • lo storaae ••ce ·
·over 350 new Lexus available·
• • -It • • , •
Orange County's· Premier Pre-Owned Headquarters
. .
1997 LEXUS ES 300
Leather, Full Power
"f'w lllOIGI, '*" t.-. eo mon111t cDtcl n ....., on IPINQWN mcll. ~ ~mt S2.M. Redclllll
18,844.60. a.cl on 12K mlll perJ~ 1 !it per mle~ Yin 048001
94 LEXUS LS 400 97~LS4'» Cashmere/Ivory, fully loaded Silver, s certified
Low miles1 : 1194406 fully loaded!
96 LEXUS SC 400 .. ., 99 LEXUS GS 300 Beige/Iv~, ful power, . On~ 24Kml. Every opti0i111 I043171 Woh't lastt
95 LEXUS SC 400 $21.427 97 LEXUS LX ~O Less than 50k miles, Certified Ill loaded with luxury! f042870 37,316 miles
98 LEXUS LX 450 98 LEXUS LS 400
\
$31,987 Blackltv~ornes3 AnUque ~e~ on~ 251< ml Lexus , only 7kml 1148e88 New leXus
\
2000 LEXUS LX 470
Black/tan, Full Power, Chrome
°Pw IDDllll, •• eo,.,.,.. cla.d 'Ind llilll, on arow.i ci.ctt. lotlf ~ Ut S&,500. ,...... S27,822. a... on 12K ntee per.,. 1s. per nae lllertlll• Yin 088728
..
$34,987 00 LEXUS LX 470 $53,987 Demons1rator vehicle,
I078678 Hard to find!! I098G67
$35,987 95 TOYOTA CAMRY $13,425 Whl1e/iv~chrome
I084805 fuft JK1N8r. ' dean!!! 1122593
$35,787 98 VOLKSWAGEN BEETLE S14,887 17" rims, red, CD,
1187488 Only 12k ml! 102e111 •
S40.•7 94BMW740ll *20,887 White/Tan, 79k miles,
113318-4 Loadedlll IEG0042
98 LEXUS GS 300 Blackltv~. ful=I
$32.117 00 LEXUS t;S 300 $42,787 =r1· 20" rtma, no luxury 1ax, 97 VOLVO T/& WAGON 121,987
chrome, Lexus . l023005 ~ due, only 9800 mu I0883•t
Red/Black!
Fully loaded! 1277185
98LEXUS1£ 400 99 LEXUS GS 400 .. ., 97 INFINITI Q45 *28,817 ~~ loaded! =ory·. 08Ylga1lori Stiver/=\ 50k miles I011752 Won't . I001782
'11 LEX• IC 400 00 LEXUS LX 470 .• 1,887, OOBMW328CI $37,878 Wh~1 cleanl Bteckhl~ ctwomaa e1m. won't last! No OMV I I only 6k mil . Certtftedl I Mt728 on~ r'nl, prem. whlsll IN00048 .
-MISSION .VIEWCJ . .
· The Future Is Now~ Whati Nut ... 7
28400~~sr ... ._1.wry,P.b.J&1.800~(9f1)364.Q664 www.I XU mlsslonvl ~.
,Daily Pilot
'
. .
Doily Pilot Saturday, Sep!ember 9, 2000 B3
~br~-· <>range Luther.,.. 7 0 0 0 • 7 NewPort Harbor 0 7 7 0 • 14
flntQuwtar
Ol ·Talmage 34 ~ from Taylor •
(Talmage kidc), 9:41 .
Second Quwtar
NH -Thornto'l 5 run (Gaeta kick) 6:06. •
Third~
NH -Manderlno 1 run (Gaeta kid<) 7:16. •
Attendance: 4,000 (estimated).
INDMDUAL RUSHING
OL -Newsome, 2-29; Taylor, 8-22;
Concoljoo, 4-19; Talmage, 1-12;
Cecil, 1-2; White, 2·1.
NH • Ortega. 15-56; Manderino, 9-9,
1 Tt1; Thornton, 3-7, 1 TO; Trlmble, 1-3.
INDfVIDUAL PASSING
OL ·Taylor, 5-9-0, 57, 1 TO;
ConcollnO, 7·15-1, 36; Talmage, 1-1-0, 15.
... • Mandefino, 7·15-0, 104.
INDIVIDUAL RECEMNG
OL ·Talmage. 8-87, 1 TO·
Concolino, 1-15; Helm. 1-1°5;
Cedl, 2·1; Taylor. 1-min1n-10.
NH · Foley, 2-61; Gray. 3·26;
Vandersloot. 1-13; Gaeta. 1-4.
GAME STATISTlCS
OL NH First downs 10 11
Rushes-yardage 18-116 28-89
Passing yardage 108 104
Passing 13-25-1 7·15-0
Net return yardage* 11 15
sacks-yardage 6 -31 2 ·14
Net yardage 204 194
Punts 6-27.8 4-37.5
Fumbles-fumbles lost 1· 1 1-0
lime of possession . 1 :28 26:32 Flags-net yarda11e ~25 7·37
*Punt returns, lnterc tlons, fumble
returns
Newport chews up lions, 10-0
• Sailors have their way with
Westminster in season opener.
JoMptl Boo
DAILY Pit.or
Bif1~~P~RT FIELD HOCKEY
Well, at least
Newport Harbor High's field hockey
team got to work on its penalty comers.
The host Sailors scored early and
often againSt an overwhelmed West-
minster squad in a honleague season
opener for both squads Friday. Newporf
coasted to a 10-0 victory at Harper
Community Center.
Newport (1-0) bad 25 penalty comers
while Westminster couldn't muster a
shot. For the Lions, just showing up was
a victory in itself as the field hockey pro-
gram at Westminster came perilously
close to having its plug pulled before
Lions Coach Diane Pendergrass righted
the ship.
Westminster scored a goal against
Newport last year, which was a season-
al high point for the Lions. But chances
of that happening this time were nil.
The closest Westminster came to New-
port's goal was on face-offs.
The Sailors' Brianne Parmeter scored
her team's first goal of the year in the
opening minute off an assist by Kim
Erickson. Junior Lauren Birchfield had
Newport next two goals, with assists
from Erickson and Megan Moss.
Sophomore Kaley Nix had a team-
TAYA ~I DAl.Y Pl.OT
Tan' Megan Moss (3) and Elizabeth Evans (far right) light off the Uons.
high four goals, including both of New-Chloe Cox, Newport's second-hall
port's goals in the second half. Erickson goalie, didn't see any shots might not
had three assists, and Elizabeth Evans help when the Sailors play powerful
had one score and one assist. • Edison on Tuesday.
Sophomore Chanelle Slad1cs and "We're kind of at a disadvantage
junior Allison McKenzie recorded two right now.• Newport Harbor Coach
impressive unassisted goals. Slad1c!> Sharon Wolfe said. "We didn't get any
took the ball through two defenders on action, so that's putting our goalie at a
a breakaway to score. McKenzie flipped disadvantage."
a shot over the goalie for her score. And an inexperienced Westminster
Newport had an 8-0 halftime lead, team did not provide a good barometer
and goalie Amanda Wittman got a for a Newport outfit in flux. especially
good-natured cheer for her first-half With a starting midfielder, Lisa Owad, out
shutout. But the fact that Witbnan or for most of the season with mononucleosis.
Coburn saves it for Coast
• Pirates maintain unbeaten record with 0-0 tie.
SAN DIEGO -SOCCli
Orange Coast Col-
lege goalkeeper Chns
Coburn, subbing for Hilano
Arriaga, had a pair of clutch
saves, mcludmg a sensallonal
diving stop, to allow the
Pirates (3-0-2) to salvage a
scoreless tie with host San
Diego Mesa (1 -0-2) Friddy in
men's soccer.
Coburn got the nod wttan
Arriaga suffered a nuri01
ankle injury early in the non·
conference contest.
•He really saved us
today," said OCC Coach
Laird Hayes. "He played a
great game."
The Pirates are at Santa
Barbara on Monday with a 4
p.m. start.
BRIEFLY
• Orange Coast YOWYIAU
College's women's
volleyball team won its season
opener against host Rio Hon-
do. 15-0, 15-2, 15-11 in a non-
conference match Friday.
Lauren Wibon and Kelly
McFarlane each had seven
kills to lead the Pirates.
OCC has its home opener
on Wed.nesaay at Costa Mesa
High against Southwestern.
• Vanguard Universi-SOCCH
ty's women dropped
a 3-2 decision to Seattle Uni·
versity in overtime at the
Concordia (Portland, Ore.)
Tournament. Vanguard scor-
ing was unavailable.
OCC STARTING LINEUPS
C>ff:EJQ DERNSE
Ht. wt.a. ,_, No. ~ Ht. wt.a ....
7 Jusnil s.... 6-0 180 So. Qt n ~o-.. 6-1 1e5$o 11.a
41 ~"-'-5-11 210 Fr. Fl
12 Jusnil OM.I 5-9 175 So Wll.
11 Alntttolt'f v-6-2 195 So Wll. •1 .... ~ 6-3 245 So Tt M 1V»M ,_ 6-6 300 So LT
St E'nllu.o HA&&. 6-4 270 So LG
fl ~LNDI 6-1 285 Fr. C
77 ~~6-3 286 So RG
71 GMY ~nt 6-4 30!> So RT
Orange Coast's men
and women reign as
state champions as the
2000 season begins.
Tony Altobelli
DAILY Pll.oT
COSTA MESA -Despite
a ton of losses from last year's
state champions, the Orange
Coast College men's and
women's cross COWlby teams
come into the 2000 season
with a tremendous amount of
talent, which will be needed
with everyon(' gunning for
them.
"We've got titles to
defend,• Coach John Gold-
man sa.ld with a laugh. "It's
interesting 'because a bunch
of our star runners from last
year are gone. But, we did a
gteat job of requiting. I think
it's the best reauiting. class
we've ever had since I've
been here.• ..,
'Iba men's squad bas the
most returners with five,
including co-captain Sean
Abeyta. •s.an bu really improvect
during the on-aeuon,. Gc>&d-
man Mid. "We're looking for
blm to make a buge lmpKt.
not just on our tMm, but
througboUt the area.•
Muue1 Oro*io, 4 ltt at the
Stat9 Qw1111..,.,..,ipl -~ ego, and 1bny M9gana,
wtth Steve Mildillter
...._ Oomllm round out tbe
NlUIMll. •'111t9Y're ID ccmag Into ........ me•_,. .. ~-IUI. ~ liadl ................ cambllld .............. ...., .......... ....
"'!:' ·.. ... ..wca•ts.
97.W.Gt•• 01 6-4 20 So. DE 75 VMCS..... M 270 So. OT
S5 DM S-6-1 220 ff. OT
IO TCWf w-6"2 210 So. OE a.._..'-6-2 220 So. Ol.8 a °'8M D-6-1 230 So. Ml.8 .. Mm~ 6-2 240 So. ll.8 u ~ ~ 6-0 165 So. ca
J7 loe.-fllMa '>-9 180 So. Cl a ....., ,.,_. 6-2 200 So. ss
Jt ..,._ ,._... 6-1 208 ff. F5
WOMEN'S 'TENNIS
Davenport in U.S.
Open finals today
NEW YORK -Palisades
Tennis Club member Lindsay
Davenport will play for her
second U.S. Open title and
fourth Grand Slam today
against Venus Williams.
Davenport, the No. 2 seed,
reached the finals with a 6-2,
7--6 (7-5) victory over WlSeed·
ed Elena Dementieva on Fri-
day. Davenport had a 5-2 lead
in the second set and was up
40-love before 18-year-old
Dementieva, the first Russian
to reach the U.S. Open semift·
nals, came back to force a
tiebreaker.
Goldman said. •I believe we
were very successful in doing
so.•
On the women's side, it's
freshmen galore for the
Pirates.
With Zolla Gomez and
Bernice Carbajal gone, it's up
to lone sophomore Heather
Shortleff. She took f1fth at last
year's State Meet with a time
of 19:03.5 and was second in
the 3000-meter run in track.
·she's one of the top
returners in the state. as far as
I'm concerned,• Goldman
said. "Heather ts going to do
some good things for the
teem and she's a great exam-
ple for the freshmen to fol-
low.•
That's good because Sbort-
leff is the only sophomore on
the women's lide.
Among the Pirates' new
Wt of runners include 30·
year-old freshmen Cbrlstiane
Reimer. "Sbe'I a marathoner
who bas never competed col·
legiately before,• Goldman
said. 0 Sbe'1 run a 3-hour,
11-mJnute marathon before
and With ... bl .... ty and
leedenblp capabqltiel, abe'I
one ol our co-capUJni. •
Uzidtay Ao.. Laura w .. ver. MelllM ADdenoD.
Ann Gutoe ud Veaeua
GokM .. adlilr lop fNlb. mm OD (Jolctm.en'1 ~ WbOIDc*to ___ ........
• iaipltt cm llae ........_ ·<>Nld, ,. mmlw ....
ed.• Or' I a · --11 ldnk
...... -...., .. eam-... ... ~ •.. ,... ................... ar._. ... _.._.
M .,-..... 11
..... 111111111
I T --·"-:=: .......
WATER POLO
Orange Coast
belts two foes ·
•Pirates run up 10-5
and 14-3 victories in
women's tournament.
MISSION VIEJO
Orange Coast College was a
double-winner in women's
water polo Fr}dfty at the Sad-
d.leback College Tournament
The Pirates S)Vept fo a 4-0
lead in the tiTst quarter en
route to a · 10-5 victory over
Mt. San Antonio College,
then blew out Southwestern,
14 -3, leading 8-1 at halftime.
The Pirates (2-0) play
Golden West today at 11 :20
a.m . then will face either
Rivef'Slde or Sadd.leback.
SADOlBAOt TOURNl'..wf
0CC 10, MT. SAN ANrOMO 5
Orange Coast 4 2 3 1 -10
Mt. SAC 0 1 2 2 • 5 occ · McDonald 2, Hootgland 2,
Hallman 1, Wright 1, Coberly 1,
Montalvo 1, Dolan 1, Klafich 1.
Saves: Kennedy 6.
occ 14, 5ourHwuTaN J
Southwestern 0 1 2 0 -3
Orange Coast 4 4 3 3 -14
OCC · Mlloslav1< 3, S3ckett 3,
Anderson 2, Espinoza 2, Pappas 1,
Lemke 1, Zulliani 1, Bowerl 1.
Saves: Kennedy 2.
Polley
Rates and deadlines are subject Lo • ·:
cban~ wid1out notice. 11te publishtt
rest'rves Ute right to reosor, rerlassify. ·
revist or rejcrt any rla.'>Sificd
advertisement. Please 1Tport any error
tbat may be iu your clas ified ad
immrdiatcly. ·11w Daily Pilot aet~·pt ·
no lifil>ilit} for any rrror in an
advertisemt>nt for which it may be
responsible txetpt for the COSl of the
space actually occupied by the error.
Credit ran onlv hr allowrd for rhr
fmir inll4'rtiffl1.
I· IS
·lo~
" ••
'' 111·216
ii'
Byfu
(949) 631-6594 ,
(Plmc ~Jude your ruunc and phont number
and ,.t II call you back \'ith a pM quote.}
Byl'ltolle
(949) 642-5678
By Mallfln Persoa:
330 W~t Bay Street
Costa Mesa, CA 92627
At . A"J>O" Blvd. & Bay St
Telephone 8:30am-5:00pm
Monday-Frid.ay
~ , ..
liil ••
• U0·'61
Hours
Index
Walk-In 8:30am-5:00pm
Monday-Friday
......
-
Monday ............... Friday 5:00pm
Tuesday ............. Monday 5:00pm
Wednesday ........ Tuesday 5:00pm
Thursday ...... Wednesday S:OOpm
I
Friday ............. Thursday S:OOpm
Saturday .............. Friday S:OOpm
fJ ~
• I-'. '" Reach 80,000 Homes Each Week
For Only $28 per week (4 wk, min.) .. Cal L11rc' 1 .. 642·1671 KM
1
., ... ,.
" ~ .. " ..
Arnt1on
' '·,~ •I
;...~ ... i::-~. ·~· :'" ~~ ,,~
Vlotorl1 01lfu10, end pleYtd footblll un-NOTICE OF
uuren Joy Arntson, dtr . tfowerd Jon11 APPLICATION TO
Ann L11 Arnt1on, from 1927. Active In SELL ALCOHOLIC m H. ArntlOl'I, gr1ndd1ughttr·ln·l1w1 the S.C. 1lumnl BEVERAGES :.,. of!:".:.:,:: Kim; grMt grendlon, naoolltlon, member on of Fifing
•oeldent In Senti J1y; 9r11t grend· of Tro)1n Squ1r111 Appllcetlon
-CA whtr9 dlughtlr, · H-.y ~ Tro)ln Knlghtl, Ph Auauet 14, 2000 ._ IN Peine. llrt Amtlon KIPPI TIU l=l'ltlmlty. T"Wttom It M8y Con-.. hid for the 111t llv9d In Llgune Blec:tl Slfel 1111n1g1r for the cem:
"" ,.... for molt ofller lltt end AlP 1uperm1rktt The ~·> of the
SM la ~urvlv9d partlotpeted In such chlln merchlndlllna Applicant<•> f1/ar1:
,_ IOfl, 1'holw orgenlzatlon1 u the epeaiillt for Y0""9 I ~~\YOUTtfAPONG
~ . ._ • Alllttance Lelgue of RublOln Advtrtl1lng The applicants lilied • '""'°'' Ltgune Btedl. tgtney. Coat GUiid above .,.. apo1y1ng to r:.:d1on1, D1vlo seMoet w111 bt held ReNrve dur1119 Wor1d 111 ~-a. Aloo-
AmDon, Thomlt It Plclfto View 1i1tmc>-W• 2. Hiid t 1'111 ... hotic Bev~ Control llero Amteon l(ld rtll f11rtt 11 1 p.m. on '* ~ lioenM for to 1111 afcoholfc
Bryen Chrl11ophtr su.nd1y, September 50,... end wor1ltd In bavaragH at: 1835 Arnt1on; grind· 10 2000 Sin Marino Ind .... NEWPORT BLVD .• :.:'4httre, Sl1nn1 ' _ ....._.. 0154 & 155. COSTA
......__ u 1 ...... 1. ..-• _,,, MESA. CA 92627 r..,., • .,.,_ Sun1Vld by NI twin ~of ~·l Af>-------HALDERMAN brother, Robert s . tot: •1 • OH.SALE
Hlldtrm1n, hi• chll-EER ANO WINE •
Rlchlrd A. Hlldennln dren; C1thtrln1 EATING Pl.ACE
Som: lllroh 20, 180t Scm..lobrt, llt!Mle Publl1had Nawporl
puled IWI'/ It hll P1fter90n Robert H BHch·Cotla Maaa l'BCI_,... ........ ,
Mortuary * Chapel Cnmatlon
home Sept. 3, 2000 ttllcllrmM, Rldwd A: ~ /f':!'Joo 29· "'*' • lhort lllntu. H1lderm1n Jr., 9 ' • Sa•13 He wu 1 Unlvenlty grendchlldrtn, 15
of 8outhtm Clllfomll grMt grendchlldren.
gr1du1t1 ffmlng 1 Privett 1ervla.1 In
11 O Broadway
Costa Mesa
M2·91aC>
Blchelor of Scltnoe AJtad9nl Sept '· 2000. degrM In Commen:..
He 1'9Celwd I 4 '/W ------footblll tohollnhlp
()i,count (~askct
I I 1 l•I 1'111 ! I\ I•
Grri.tl( ~ 11/fJ Qwii11 CAsltns for las
Direct Cremation •• $49S
Immediate Burial •. $995
(l..dw/a Cuktt)
Prearrangement Prognms Available for
Funaal Senica. C~marions and Caskets
111\11'\l;I ,,,f',\\I
FIND
an
apartment =
Flctltlou1 Bualneu
Hime Statement
The followtnQ PlflOnl .,. ~ buliiMI u :
Nawporl Audio Vklao, 324 Marine Avenue,
suite B. Balboa llllnd, CA 92982
Jeffrey Cooper, 324
Mer1nl Avenue, BaJboa
llllnd, CA 92982
Rldllld Onnano. 21111
Raleigh Avenue, Coate
Miia, CA 92827
Thie bulllleae II con-
ducted by: a general partnaf'Shfp
Have you atartld ~=:'yet? No
Thia statement ...
; .. " , .... :(
'• ,-,, •'..--'·~:"flj
~•, ,:.. I
&_ . v_: ~
1.-> • I ,.J.. .> • ' '~·~·! ' . .
\~~ -I ' I ......... -
NOTICE OF PUBLIC DEARING
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the Planning Commission of the
City of Newport Beach will hold a public bearing on the application by
the CltJ of NclJ.ltOd Beach for the followina:
GPA n..J<c\ •wt Amcpdwnt No. m ere Ng&. n ·• 53);
Nc!!JOl1 eo..tlRicl&L Pntll'"' Gcacnl Piao AnMpdwptl,
l>"P"l'Aln dletrtdlnr mag •• tclt •mmdmtn• •• dnclQpcat
aammcpt '!MW'a to grpytdc for egwpllog of Ille Ncuort
Qmt!B'111' IRA to the City. De "gmttpp IRA It knlcd PW the 12'1fhmt bogclaa of CJtx. toqlh of the Sep JOIQ1llD RIP.
TrwportpUon Corridor.
NOTICE IS FURTHER GIVEN that a Negative Declaration has been
prepared by the City of Newport Beach in connection with the
application noted above. The Negative Declaration states that the subject
development will not result in a significant effect on the environment. It
is the present intention of the City to accept the Negative Declaration and
supporting documents. This is not to be construed as either approval or
denial by the City of the above-described amendment& and other
applications. The Initial Study/Negative Declaration's 30-day public
review period was March 6, 2000 to April 6, 2000, as specified in the
previously-distributed Notice of Intent to adopt the Negative Declaration .
Although the formal public review period is over, comments on the ·
Negative Declaration are encouraged. Copies of the Negative
Declaration and supporting documents are available for public review
and inspection at the Planning Department, City of Newport Beach, 3300
Newport Boulenrd, Newport Beach, Califomja, 92659-1768, or by
calling Larry Lawrence, the City's project manager for the above
applications, at 949-661-8175.
. . . . .... _, ..
-.\ : 7..tl _i.'*.,:n... .
, ' . o o \ , I I I 642-5678
Ned wtltl 11'11 County
QM d OrW1gl CounlY on 07/2N2000 2000N3M72
NOTICE IS F1JKfBER ·GIVEN that a public hearing bas been
scheduled before the Planning Commission on the lll1 day of
September. 2IOO. at the hour of 1&11 p.m. in the Council Chamben of
the Newport Beach City Hall, 3300 Newport Boulevard, Newport Beach,
Calif omia. at which time and place any and all pcnons interested may
appear and be heard the~. -~-~ . .
'
S TARTING
A ~NEW
B USI NESS?.
• • • • • • • • • • •
= Plot :o&i 19, 29, '2. !!. St40G If you challenge.this project in court. you may be limited to raising only
those iasucs you or someone else raised at the public bearin1 dclcribed in
this notice or in written conespondence delivered to the City ll or prior
to the public hearing. For information, caU 9>49-661-817S or 9-49-644-
3200.
Sfinn Kller, Secretary. Pie•• ... C......hr'oa. Cit)' ot~ 8MCla.
PubHabed Newport Beach.co.ta Mcaa Daily Pilot September 9, 2000 Sa41S
I
I
..
-----
. t. ~-
GEARY LONG .
COLDWEU BAN.KEA
14t-11M368
BIO CANYoN YIU.AS SALE/LEASE
105 APTS BALBOA PENINSULA
N IEDAOOMS 11e11ncSa M•1s1-noo s... '° beec11 2Br iea. 1g iv/din frig, DIW. ·2 balconies
Titl llWFFI .. "" bell w t LM.-e _. twnhm.
gar with opener ulJI paid
$ !750 949-548-5038 I 333
............ 2IOO sf top Ntwport .. sngl uppe! Int
upgredlll Mff,000 IBr/iBa w/klt, brlcfst nook, Mm... lrig. tvdwd In. 1 plllg ap
$120Q.'Mo 407 31th SL
714-637-2917 l\lsmllQ'pets
------... -·-
A
GOOD
AD!
, . .
... ~-----------
if ... -~...-.1
,.,... , -CA& , •
28R 1 BA tower newer c:.pe Awtt0mt vtewt 3br 2be. cod home. Pin lhJIWI, nu
l.q)tf, remod kilchen. new Cllpel. lndry, ~1795 carpel. no ptts. S2800o'mo ~TT'JO ~12
yMt lse. 909112 N Bey ~IOIC
Cell 11M06-7m •2BR 180 to:u;• ocun llde of ,
3bf 3bl hM Spac, nice 310 Goldenrod l2200llno
pellO, giat, W/O no pet yi1y Dive MM4MIZ7
$2450/mo + $2:500 dep
707-235-65&5 23S-6584 Hnot View Hllll. lbr 2bl,
tltc ho!M, lllCN1 """ ..... 38' 88a yeatly, MW rent1L Pool. F11111•,
Berber/pin. 11c: W/O, 11-w, $2!0(lhno. Mt-120-1154
hKeils. 2 peboe, grdrv, g11 FUU Y FURH'O Oellgner'1
IVai. $2950.949-673-3059 2ttt/2bl condo, 'tWpool, IPI.
1
115 ---1 ~tier:~
••• -• -Studio South of HWY Ilg & --n;RI ~ kllchenetle, lndry .... ups, petlo, $a50fmo. IMs
WIHTtR RENTALS lnclda. 949-723-0970
Upecale 2 & 38r, fully film, enclsed gar, ltlpS IO bMctl, no pets. 94M7S-7130
belboMIHchflfttll1.com
Cll Wlnllr Renlll 38r 28a. 1h OCfNf YEW CONDO Cute 1 Br/1 Bl So ol Hwy. . b1oc1t to bfft belch. new 38r 281 newly remodeled,
Uot,000. Oood toe. UM ol WO $1250/Mo ( ... ) .... CWM lumrt1n. lb model, 2e ~ 2 ywdt, 21: !!"· W/O, qi.Ml
CerrllM 8'lol. IGL PNd Cl lnddl lft utls Ten-Ey\1 .._ ..C. .. ,. PfkQ. $1975 ~ 1tree1. A~ Oct t()'1.
A!l!!y, 8'H42.~73 Reel Eltall 949-380-9492 L..-------' ldV., din Boelche, a., $1650/Mo 949-854-3246
"Employee."
"Empleado."
"Arbeitnehmer."
. "Employe."
TM~l.r'~ Pilot !'~1= ......
NOIUMR
HOW YOU SAY n,
CLASSIFIED CAN
FIND n.
' I Sotvt'day, $ef*mber 9, ~ .•.
. -·----~"' .. w-....,........,,~
' • ·I
I t 'I
~
' ~ I .. • \ ~ -.:::&
' '•.t . '. ·1 ~-~~·.lit_
=Certified Pre-Owned .=
by BMW
For ultimate peace of mind, every Cenified Pre-Owned BMW is backed by The Ccnilled Pre-Owned BMW
Protection Plan, covering the vehicle for up to 2 years or 50,000 miles (whichever comrs firsr) form the dare of
cxpiracion of che 4-ycar/50,000-mile BMW New Vehicle Limirttl Warnncy. •• The Protcmon Plan mdudcs rwo key
dcmenrs: •
Certifled Pre-Owned BMW ~mited Warranty ,. Backed by BMW of Non h America. In c., and its
nationwide nctWork of BMW centers, covered repairs arc made only by BMW-tramttl 1cchn1mns using only genuine
BMW repla~mcnr parts.
BMW Roadside Assistance ,. Peace of mind follows you a.nywherc in che USA, 24 hour) a day, 36'i days a yc2r.
1998BMW
Z3
2.8L. 25K mi. black. $2995 Toe.al 10 suin. tOK m1/yr.
Toe.al peymenb = $14,329 (3XNV778)
1998BMW
740i
Black/black. 2tk mt. $4995 total to suin. tOk ma/yr.
TOia! payments= S2S.985 (4AQM037)
HUGE SAVINGS ON SELECT Z3's
PRE-OWNED LEASE FOR
$~9.TAX
PRE-OWNED LEASE FOR
f670.TAX
'97 318i '98 528i PER MO. 36 MO ..
S-spd. bbdi w/bbdi, low mt (3XCP7S8l . $20..9.95 CD. pmn pkg • .l6K mi OXHl\300) ...... "4.'95
'97 318i '98 528i I '98 323;
S-Spd. black w/und. low mi OXClT702) "20.m Sport pkg. low mo (4JX(,J261 "'-195 Coov. blw,. 'ur>d loodcd. !GK mt
'97 Z3 '97 740il '98 M3
t 91.. red, t tK mo (80000) ... ......... .w,m CD. pmn IOllr>d, 29K mo IM008711 $41,995 Auoo. CD. 4DR. >1tm wrNa..k. low m1
'98 Z3 '97 528i '98 M3
t.91.. wl111c, 11110, 29K mo (38N)459)... SU"9S Auio. "'P"' wlbbck. to.d.d, 28K mo Cocw. CD ...... ., wlgrq low mo
'98 Z3 '97 528i '98 740il
1.91.. sil.a. t6K rru (E08363) __ -· S25,m A.uo. wbitt w/und. loadal. l'IK mo Blur ,.fund. to.dnlr 271( mo
'97 328i '97 540i '98 740il
AutO. low mi. loaded (}WM60t) ............ $.1S..995 Auto, bbdt w/uocl, bcauiy, 29K mo UWnctt w/Wld lo.adcd. n,; mo
'98 Z3 '97 540i '98 740iL
1.91.. white. auto, 21 K m1 (I S649) .. _ 125.m Auto. JPOl'I wbcds.. bcaucv. 33K mo BID wlbbd. Jvomo. 291.. mo
'98 328iS '97 740/ '98 740il
Auto, spon pkg. low m1 (t\N87t9) ...... SN.m l'ltm. pkg. CD, iilvcr. 35K mi 'Muce "'lgKy. iood<d. l~K mo
'97 318i '98 3181i '98 74.0i
Cocl•, mco, wlutc. low mo (3 WOl687) S27 "9S Auco. siMr w/bbd. loadcd. low nai c;a..., wlblad:, l.iod<d. .!9~ mo
'98 Z3 '98 3181i '98 740i
UL. black. Hpd. 25K mi (jXN\1778) • S1&4~ Auro, black w/block. to.d.d. low mi Bia.! wlbb.1, loackd. ! t K m1
'97 528i I '98 318i '98 750iL
Auto. bbdt. lo.dcd! (3UAZ0t S) ·--'29,.9'5 Hpd. whitt w/bbd. Dier, 2lX nv 'llutc w/und. bauiy. !71< mi
*Many Other Certified Pre-Owned 20 O'rHER 7'S TO CHOOSE
BMW's To Choose! •ALL Ccrti6ed to IOOK Mi
*Rates as low as 5.9% APR • 24-Hr, Roadside Assistance!
on select models. n.. Ullr.-°'Mntl.......,..
CREVIER BMW
Santa Ana Auto Mall, 55 Freeway at Edinger
714/835-3171 www.crevierbmw.com
2000 200 2000
Pre-Owned LINCOLN
SPECIAL
'99TOWNCAR
Full Pwr, Low Mllea. Prwnlum
Sound a Moret
Lincoln Lincoln Mercury
· LS Navigator Mountaineer
..
,--·· --,
~ .~ -I
FY Olflol bldg tot lee ~ Sele Sit soo-11• If ICl"OM lrolll MPll camping/fishing.' 11111 Squ1r1. 1 OHO martn1, lurnltur1 ind
Wlmll' ~we. Alli: Ibo.it houMhc*S lllma. 11 ICWoe
High , SDMCI lnterMt. Court,. M!!pgt er.t.
714-751·2717
Oll'lfl .... Sal, 7-noon
Com M. Cite WM 1rom lumitur1, clolhino. houM-500 rl to 1,500 et; Git loc: nr hold ll•m• & more.
Hert>or Blvd a 405; Mike: 200e Commodor9 Roed. s..: Bier ~ N!wpo!t • ~
tw Cd! ConYntn:ill
130East17th St Suite ·c
Costa Mesa
At Newport ' 17th behlnd Harp Inn
(949) 712-8586
Royal Ci~nl
APPDAl~AL&
ow. ... ,....
PWa & C1lu1IU 11 . ....._.-....... ....... _.Olli._
.. CMllMID .. _,... __ ..._
•muYISTA1D . ._._~ .... ,.
Ht TZU PWNI tll ...... 1'J ......... .... MitHm
I
I -I
COAST COIN NEEDI
AM ~ OLD COINll Gold, lilvtr,
·S.. Bllbllll callee .... ~ wa1dllt, fll'tllquee. 60lx300x22H, dal1I finish, ===-=94;,::H42=.:;;-944""'7"'-.
i.. thin 1 yr old. Net
11800., Mtt 11 11095.
849-717·111154
Newport Beach
2000 DISCOVERY SERIES II
Leather, V-8, AM/FM Cass ...
39 mo
-Land Rove•
Newport Beaeh
1540 Jamboree
(949) 648-8445
nt&ny A Co .. die ~Y renowned jeweler aod specialty
retailer. invites you to join Uf It our South Cout Plaza location.
S111ooa' Job Fair
The Welda SOlatlt COMt Plaza Hotel
fi'rlda1, Septelaber is, 2000
IAM·7PM
We are aeeking qualified individuals with excellent
c.ommunic&tloo and in&ierperaonal akilll who are committed to
providing impeccable tetVice to our c:Ustomers. The ability.&o
wort independently in a fut.-peced environment• essential. Prior'
retail experience ia a plus. , .
Interviews will conducted for the following full and pan-time
ecasooa.l opportunitica:
Sala Profesdonals
Admlniltradve/Ofllce Receptionist
Customer Service Repraentatlves
Gift Wrappers • Penonal Shoppers
Sala Support• Inventory Control Specialists
Tiffany and Co. offcn competitive compensation, a generous
employee dUcount and exceptional training. For immediate
consideration. please forward your resume indication position
desired to: Titrany & Co., South Coast Plua, 333 Bristol
Street, Colla Mesa, CA 92626; Fu: (714) 546-7406: Email:
aoutbcout~any.com. Walk·ln applicants are welcome.
SIHtrt in 011r mu/ilion of exa/Jmc.t.
------ltlolptlo!llM FT poeltlon 8HIPfllNO DAIVEll b we olllnlld lrdY. "* & lnllller, FT, good drMng llelt PIMe fw
Appllclnla must hlvt belle~ In MS Word: Excef, and
undlng/r1c1lvlng
docUmlnll -the Internet. Tiii• Job
requlr" etrong or· ~:.._n l9COld
phone .tklla. front afllc:. record, truck or van •
IPPlflllllO' & llllUll. Mull p!!l!n!d. 714-557~1 n. ~~
,,..,.. belle con1Mlr .... • ------• •• bl ...... ' ... Of\lll'llZ9d. ·-Perteet b mom ..-i beet to TEACHERS ....-rv1P-.-a
poc! lddl. 71+f?t1111 Our Hldnglon 8Motl 8ll'lDS
and Founlllln v.u.y Pull-ti.me RESTAURANT Klndt.Caru art n... &-""' shUb
COOK..ful-Tlrnl Exp Nie lllldllng tor TllChln .,., ~·-
Ndt 1n penon with em11ng *" 1or Top-producers N'.-.port BNdl Tennie cu Fii eniohn. 8 or i.i ... l.er
Qt!>. !4H40:0050 . 11101t ECE Ida. FT Incl u..&fSll
RETAIL SALES =~ E~ ·~Dmllll.-
..._ 1111 ...... :::t~ :::.s""" ... In Ftlh-TMI! QAUUP POl.l • l.Gltlma ~
11111 ,.:i:, '=' = NOW llAltO FT/PT Plid l!mlJlllhcd ta 1989 ID goodl. HMlth blnlllla & lrlllnlng. lllx echldult. no Colllll Mia
l*llion. Fu "' 10 ~ ...... Mm from $&-12/lv, Md~ °'49·840·1213 or call phonl lllWYt. from our Callb-llppi.
M9·M0.9999 IMrlt etnw. RtcrUa: l..._.1.M744.
don duedo IMM74-7900 .. !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!Ii! 11710 =
Typllt & Dlllil PIOClllOIW
...... No exp., .. train,
must own own compitlf.
Earn up to $50 per hour
800·880-9835 or 941-351~14 oodl 120 or villl WlflW.lhlllwclub.com
----------.,
I D YEI, SELL MY CAR
I
I Name
I Run your ad in the
Newport Beach-
Costa Mesa Daily
. Adciess
I
I City
Pilot and the
Hunting Beach-·
Fountain valley I
I r_,
I c QdClldl D MC Ow.A DNIX Independent to 1 reach over 100,000
homes. Fax us this 1
form with your credit I
card # or mall with I
a check today! · I
I Run for a weekl If
your car does not
sell, we'll run It for L
anottler \Y88k iilll .,,
All tor just $10'.
I .
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
i.:..
Pilot • ..
... J ............. ............ ......, .., .....
,_ .... I IOI
....... "' wMefl ............ .....
1-=l
EJectrtc Bolt W"*d 714-390-5236
P1ddltlEl1cttlc Bo11
Blmill top, .... lour.
For lwl °' lilllng. $525/obo. 14H73-8897
SOICI Avtll In NlwPClft '°' e11ctno Boet. 1 •2111, 1l1cUw1ter Included !!).per It. MM7M121
It 11'1111 I people for OC 11ft BoltOfl Wlllr 1914
... to ""' 11000-$5000 ~ Jclvleon, ll'Y loldld, per monlh PIT. c.it lof used onct for only 61111 !!9!0!nlmlnl f00.431>.1231. $U95 obo. IMt-719-2311
Boll ~ on ~ vie-18ft Dulty Elldrlc '17 lb
Ny ~ Groll vol-new, II opllOnl, $14,000
1.mt 11 ~ 5 & 6 Mmol'I obo WOltt 714-424-2777
Cllll Bloklf for dlta!la. Ctl 149-<le6-1155
$1,895,000 or offer 1MH48-201 I 1911 DUFFY 't1
cell 14H83-8911 ClfPel, wlndowt, -bottolll pelnt.
WAffl.f a IAGE1 SHOP . 71 W4M515 4 SALE 811bo1 lllllld. ---"..;..:.:=-='---
Greet loc 11~t1nt11I 20ft DUFFY '92
!!)!!:!en! M! M4... Cuetom, one of 1 kind.
SEll
your stuff
through
classified!
T 1111 elleriof I Inter!«.
MUil 111. 71~15
21 8ott0fl Whlllr 't3
°"'19111 loedld! wlltalier
250 HP Yatnlhe: 260 hrs, $28k 9-5 only 949-76().9656
211t 1195 DUFFY
ELECTRIC BOAT Prof melnlllned, mint cond.
Prlv P!!!Y 714-MMn!
1 -I . ~'·._
CUlllC
IMctAMlll 1914 ., .. =. ffJ5o ....
CAO co..I DIWJ.I ._ -·-a.:i •.::t--· ... ....,
CtiEV't aAZUt ...
2 door~ ... co ,..,.,, ..... ldlOol .... pooo: Mf.m.!'741
CtiEV't TAHOE 'W ............ low ...
FUUY LOADEDll ~•°"" MM42-44M
OOOGE DOMHGO 'W ~14~
LANO ROVER NEWPORT BEACH
• .. ~
Ford &cert 't3 dlQlnd.
llAO, 11111 ~ ... tl'N
Im CIM, pwr ~a.le. ~500/obo. 949-64
FORD F150 'f7
4WD, ...... b1k! 271(. ~ S11,150
LAii> ROYER NEWPOflT BEACH Mt-MCM445
GMC 1M1Y 'W 4WD, 21«, 1& m
1521001/3007 11"50 LANO ROYER NEWPORT BEACH Mt-&4M4U
HONDA CIVIC 'W 1Uto
lrlnl, IC, aulll control,
full poww' '"""" .-.0, $12,800. Mt-752·1075
JAGUAR XJe L '17
SEDAH 40
W,995 17~174 BAUER JAGUAR
7t4-15MIOO
.MOUM JUI L '11 llDM., --.., ....
IAUBI JMMWI nttgtm
JAGUAR JUI L '11 Ewe., m• 11.aa IAUER .wauAlt 114111•
~X.:,'17 ..... 11 .. 101
BAUER .IAGUAll
114-tlMIOO
JAGUAR X.IR '11 COtlPI «> ..... '7-lm BAUER .IAOUAll
71t!!MIOO
LR mcoYERY '11 ~ .... :..r.:
LNI> AOYE.R NEWPORT HACtt ..........
LR DllCOYERY '11 ~ ........ ., ....
UNO AOYE.R NEWPORT llACH t!! !IOH!I
LR ~ 'W :::=r Ille&* lleUy
LNI> AOVtR .
NEWPORT BEACtf MM4CM445
LR DISCOVERY 'II
..... 1 lowml, "°"'' eunroof ~ 121,
LAND ROYER NEWPORT HACH
t4M4M4ta
SELL YOUR USED·
VEHICLE
THROUGH
LASSIFIED
(949} 642·56·78
PART'HltO lfTtNQM 1<1ct1tn I 8dl I P. 'l'IOClll
Room Adlllonl.-v.....c
LMill0815 ~ , .. ~ .. I
CVITOll CREATIVE TU
lnltlilllonl. .... CMmlo,
l!lllbll .... Ellilb 1171 ..., ... Jflff nw1w.t
Fl1Grout.Com 1111....-• ......... (71~1J:::71
Bridge
8v CHARLES OOREN with OMAR SHARIF
Md TANNAH HIRSCH
WEEKLY BRIDGE QUIZ .
Q 1 • Boch wJnenbJe. IS Soadl you
bold:
Whal do you bid now1
•AQJ75 c;;I AO 0 1 •AJtl4 Q 5 • Boch V\llnenblc, IS SoodJ you
bold:
~gbl~~~ •AQIH \;I AQ 0 9 3 •Ktl3
ICtlon do you take? Drm~in\,~~ EAST
Q 2 -Neither vulnerable, as South
you bold:
•• .... 2• ,_
7 What action do you take?
Q J • ,.. South. vulnenblc. you
hold: The biddinA lw proceeded;
SOUTII WES1' NORTH EAST
•K lt165 "1 J 5 <>A52•X:95 ~<> Pat9 2" ,_
Putner the biddin with one Whal do you btd now?
tpedc. =do you ~? LooA for aruwui on Monday.
Q 4 • Boch wlnenblc. as South you
hold:
•AQJIH <:7AQJ095 <>AJ6 •~
The biddint hlls Pl'OOCCdcd: SOUfR lVFSf NORTH EAST •• ,_ 2<> J'-.
'
LR DISCOVERY '87
SE7, S2,000 mllll.
c11en11......,.... ~ l2A.l50 LAND ROVER NEWPORT BEACH
t4M4M445
WACfDfS C 230 17 18,300 mi, a Real Cream
Mlrcedll seo Sl • Showroom ~. MW top, chrome wts. Hke new llhr, $t4,950 714-751·24&4
Mlrcedll 580 Sl ... Dark charcoal. showroom, 2 tops, 110k Freeway miles,
trT;ggs(il)o 949-7f9-2311
Pull, ITIOOIHOOI. 191il rnr Oldl Slltiou.t!t Vin '11
bench, $23,000. call Jol1n llAI ~ 14*> lir oond
949-720-3965 or 463-1062 7 ltlv -i. I cM-rec::ord..
llEAOEDES llll.430 'It
SOOO ml, 111 k~~ IOM757'*9
UNO ROVER NEWPORT BEACH
MM4CMIU
$365(). 949-723-150!
SATURN '17
• do«, l2tC ml, lint eond.
m.IUll tr.., CD ollyer, SIOOO. MM73-2'741
VOl VO Tl.Ibo W~ 940 'll5
SAT\IRH SU '19. • cond. ~ with bt1Ck lthr 3td ...._ .._ lt ~. enm 1111 80K mi. very c:tNn
stereo. 1lloy whHI• $tS,800 94~1162
$13,000. 7t4-~3793 2000 DtSC SERIES I mean S30...,
111ERCEDES 3IOSEl. '13 LN1> ROVER Btut. loed8d, new ltrll. NEWPORT BEACH m ml on ltll na:w. S&.500. ---:!'M::.:H4M441:..===--showroom 94U4 4 44116
MERCEDES 500 SL '93
Ullra dean, must SM! 67k mill $44,900
MHM-1111
r--;---.
I
! -I
PUBLIC
NOTICE
The Cell. NJlo.
UtllltlH Com· ....... AEOUAE1 ..... Ulld ....
hOld OOo:dl lllCMrl
prtnt Mr P.U.C. CllT~lllm -~.. T.C.P ...... ~ ........ ..
l,au .... !!! :--:4-\• ~:mn.. OOfMllON n....,.,.,
Cell (949)642·S671
P•t •few wer41 .... rtr ,., ,. ••
STUMPED? Cal fo( Ai-.• T-.-.. -.,-
e 911opor-1~ ext code 500
t•UT A 11EW WORDS TO .
WORK 110R Yf)IJ! CAU ..
(~IASSIFIEI) 'l1C)DAY!
f)Llf) {)Ll2·5678
CUSTOM
SLIPCOVEHS
All New 2001 Aurora
2000 Seville STS
. . . . . . .
Daily Piloi
:JEASYWAYS
To UR1vE ·,. ~
( 2000. Catera").
~-·
PURCHASE FOR ONLY $28,9939!.{!i~oo .~
-$ 3,851.03 .. Nobera Discount
OR LWE FOR $299/MO . +tax for 36 month lease. $3410.00 cash down or trade equity, plus
lncepUon fees, tax on decap & rebate • $4202..48. 1 only ~93.
OR 1 PAYMENT LEASE -12k:36ryear.~perml.lnexces$. 59864 For 24 months+ tax & license.
• 12k ml. per year. 2oe per ml. In excess.
2000 Bravada 2000 Intrigue
2000 Escalade 2000 Eldorado
OVER 50 QUALITY PRE-OWNED VEHICLES AVAILABLE
"94 CHEVROLET CAVAUER
Low mile,, auto, AC & morel N.w car trade-in! (136512)
"87 CADILLAC FLEETWOOD
~' low 531c miles, dauic tt)iiel (704212)
'90 TOYOTA CAMRY ·
Auto, many power f.atures, ideal transportation earl (430476)
'93 BUICK LE SABRE
LTD, low miles, leather, while, ...liable! (.436054)
'91 CADILLAC DEVIW
low miles, blUe, ABS, air bog & mcftl (203868)
"93 CADILLAC ELDORADO
White peari, many extras, ab0¥9 ~ miles! ·(61 U35)
"94 CADILLAC SEVIW
V·8 Norlhsk1r, whi .. , ton leath.r, ~ Condition! (837.429) •
195 CADILLAC DEVIW
low milet, beige, tan leather, moonroof, alloy. & morel (230058)
I~. OLDSMOBILE CUTLASS .
l.oW miles, V-6, CO & morel Bal. of warr., fnV· ..-ail (334952)
"00 BUICK CENTURY .$ 8 88
limiled, 16k miles, leather, poww Mat & morel Bol. cl warr., f>!8Y· renloll (20037 .4) 1 '9
"98 FORD MUSTANG S 8 88 Saleen, low 18k miles, 5 speed, leather, bal. of warr. (269844) 1 '9
"98 OLDSMOBILE INTRIGUE GLS S 8 ' 88 low 19k miles, leather, moonroof, alloys, bal. of warr. (389522) 1 '9
"00 OLDSMOBILE SILHOUmE . S 88
Low 12k miles, cb:il doors, rear air, CD & montl Prav. mil. (211055) 2 0, 9
"97 CADIUAC ELDORADO S 88
Low miles, belg., Ian leather, alloys, bol. ol warr. {601068) 23 '9
197 CADW.AC SIVIW $ 88
low 22k mil., leather, alloys, CD & morel Bal. of WQfT. (811242) 24,9
'99 CADILLAC DIVIW . S 88 low mile., whit., taft lealher; V·8 NorMiw, bol. of worr., prw. rwntaf. (7894' 1) 2 If t 9
"97 CADILLAC SIYIW 5TS S 6 88 Low miles, bled, lealhs, cal!Aed 6/1flc 'W011cdf, lhc:.pl (83076) 2 ' 9
100 OLDSMOBIU llAVADA . $ 6 88 low 7700 mit., wf\i .. , moonroof, CD & mcnl (206798) 2 t 9