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HomeMy WebLinkAbout2000-09-12 - Orange Coast Pilot. . .. . . SERVING THE NEWPORT -ME.SA COMMUNmES SINCE 1907 ON 1HE WEB: WWW.DAILYPILOT.COM 1UESDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 2000 Police flush. out, arrest sUspect after 12 hours · • Suspected parole violator was found hiding in the rear of a business office in Costa Mesa. Alex Coolman DAILY PILOT Police pulled 47-year-old Ray- mond Richie Bettis out of the otlice of the Airship and Balloon Design company at 4:15 p.m., handcuffing him on the ground and trisfing him before escorting him to a waiting police cruiser. Bettis·, who was considered by police to be armed and danger- ous, was wanted in connection with violations of his parole. been working and sleeping. For about four hours, said Cos- ta Mesa Police Lt. John Fitz- Patrick, police attempted to lure Bettis out of the build.mg. But police tactics, which included opening the hood of his car, drew no response. SWAT teams were called to the scene around midday and the officers broke out the doors and windows of the office in the early afternoon. COSTA MESA -Police staked out a Logan Avenue business for nearly 12 hours Monday, culminating with an afternoon assault on the office and the arrest of a ·suspected parole violator. The late-afternoon arrest came after a full day of cat-and- mouse games that began at 8:30 a.m., when police spotted Bettis' white El Camino outside the office, where he had reportedJy For hours, however, it was ' impossible to determine if there SEE POLICE PA~E 4 SEAN HILLER I DAILY PILOT Costa Mesa police arrest suspected parole violator Raymond Riehle Bettis after searching a business office on Logan Avenue on Monday. PHOTOS BY MARC MARTIN I DAILY PILOT Elena Martin boards OCTA's Route 180 bus on 17th Street In Costa Mesa on Monday. With the new route, MarUn bad an extra block to walk to reach to her destination. ' NEW BUS ROUfES exact change The Orange County Transportation Authoritys new bus system kicked into gear Sunday, but confusion reigned Monday. Jerw"'"Mw Kho . DAILY PILOT COSTA MESA -Maria GardeOA was lost for more than three bout1 Monday. Sbe rode several buses, but they didn't go where she expected them to go -or stop at the times she thought they would stop. She's not new to the area or to bus-riding, but Gardena said the county's new bus system has left her struggling to regain the comfort of being bus-savvy. •rm lost.• she said, laugh· ing. •1 don't know the routes yet. There are a lot of changes SEE BUS PAGE 6 Orange Coat College lhldent Megan Madrid checka her map to .. U lbe's on tbe right bus to get Iler to tbe OCC CUipas Monday. Robbery may be linked to shooting in Santa Ana •Police searching for man who attempted to rob pedestrian in Costa Mesa; crime may be tied to drive-by shooting. Alex Coolman DAILY PILOT COSTA MESA -An attempted robbery Monday dfterno0n ~ Baker Street couJd be related to a drive-by shooting that occurred soon dfterward m Santa Ana, police said A man tned to rob a pedestnan in the 200 block of Bdker Street at about 3:35 p.m ., Sd td Costa Mesa Police Lt. Tom Curtis. The robbecy was foiled, however, and the suspect drove away in a white Honda without apy of the Victim's money. No one was injured in the mc1dent. Only 12 minutes later, Santa Ana polJce responded to a report of a drive-by shoobng in the 2200 block of South Orange Avenue. Lt. Bob Chavez of the San- ta Ana Police Department srud nobody was hit in the shooting, but the car report- edJy mvolved in the mcident was a white Honda -one that matched e xactly the description of Ult car sought by £osta Mesa police. Chav02 said another car began to pursue the Honda after the shoot.mg on South Orange, but both cars soon crashed. When the Honda crashed in the area of Orange Avenue and Anahurst Place, the OCJ:upants -described only as two males -took off run- ning. SEE ROBBERY PAGE 4 Lane sto~ up swell, stout surf~in ·Newp9rt •Waves from Tropical Storm Lane, a former hurricane moving up the Mexican coastline, could reach 7 feet. J•smlne .... DAILY PllOT NEWPORT BEACH - li'opical Storm Lane pumped up the waves at Newport's beaches Monday, creating a 6-foot southerly swell for surfers and red-flag condi- tlons for bea.chgoen. Ponnerly a hurricane but downgraded to a tropical storm Saturday, Lane was about 560 miles southwest of the Orange County coast Monday evening, said Greg Martin. lead forecaster at the National Weather Service office in San Diego. The storm system, beaded north from Mexican waters and producing wind gusts up to 75 mph. started kicking up waves in Newport on Mon- day afternoon and will likely continue to do so for a few days. Although some weather SEE LANE MGE 4 Cost.a Mesa closes halfway house for women inmates Gaa-----11 . • Mesa North facility didn't comply with city codes, according to recent study. "We've had illBues with group homes within the nelghborhoodll. Some group homes are not good neighbors. " <:a 10,_ I ... ~ .. llmS ' ..,. _____ , '- ON 2 Tuesdoy1 September12, 2000 Kids Talk . BACK So how cool is school? We asked Newport Elemen· tary School Jdndergartners what they enjoyed most about starting 'SChool. Here's what they had to say: I like thE: playground. I can see the water from the playground. You can 8.lso see the big kids' playground. I like the monkey bars the best. I can go all the way across. r also Wse to paint. KArrl"YN COSENZA. 5 Newport Beach Kinder- garten is good. We get to play with the blocks, do puzzles and play with clay . • With the cl9y I can make a snake. The school uniforms are good. And I really, really like play- ing on the playground. That's my best thing. And the music they play in class is cool. BLAKE NORTON, 5 Newport Beach " I like going outside. I've met four new people.' I know some of their names. I want to be an airplane pilot when I grow up. BRIGGS VILORIA, 5 Newport Beach I like the same things as preschool. And today I am stu- dent of the day. It's my day .... We , get to play with things and cut things. I like the moµkey bars. Some- times I go all the way across. And I like lunchWlle. I bring my lunch to MAX NEWSOM, 5 Newport Beach school. My mom makes me peanut butter and jelly sand- wiches. I eat outside on the playgroWld. And in the class- room I like to make art. ' MADISON JABARA, 5 Newport Beach -Compiled by Amy R. Spwveon; photos bylrillft~ Dai~ VOL M, NO. 218 1"0MAI ... ---Publisher TGNYDW. EdlW J .. _ .... -AIMIWlt Cl\Y Editor •&&. "WIW., ,..,,.. Edit« --C'MUOll $plJftl EdlW MMC ..... ,..,.,EdlW Nlrtfllll'l NCX. NlwtEdlW JGllJ.UMGI ... o.lgrter IMJISJllt:.,_f, ~ ....... Nllf .... Cllillftllt Ml a 1111111 aAMMI um. -- ' I o . .. ..... THEWIEI Trauma Intervention Program Judie Cole, with 2-year- old qughter ICllytee. • w.ISS: l\'auma Intervention Program, c/o Costa Mesa Fire Department, P.O. Box 1200, Costa Mesa I" 92628-1200 • ~ S.ndy Hill, (949) 707-9016 • II DS: paper, printing materials. volunteers • WISH: financial donations. corporate sponsors Doily Pilot . MARC MARTIN I DAILY Pit.OT Kaiser Elementary fow1h-grade teacher Dee Mattern does a little role-playing with Chase Palanjlan as they work on a conOict resolution lesson. Sometiines ~ilence is key Fourth-graders at Kaiser Elementary, their hands raised in confidence, say it's cool to be called upon by the teacher. Young Chang DAILY PILOT • IN THE a.ASSROOM is a weekly feature In which a Daily Pilot reporter visits a cam- pus within the Newport-Mesa Unified School District and writes about the experience. COSTA MESA --:-Levi Prairie drops ~ head on his desk. He sits upright again because he knows h e should, but fidgets and wiggles and slumps down and then rises up again. Finally, he throws his anns across his neighbor's desk and drops his head there. Nicholas Mataele, 9, is unfazed by the invasion. He continues punching random numbers into a large, white calculator. Under the desk, ~f course. Levi, 9, wears a red sweater with white stripes down the shoulders. He bas pa.ired it with gray cargo pants and a plaid. shirt untucked beneath tlie sweat.et. His look is timely. And he bas that stare -the com:- plex, amused kind. He'll be one of the cool kids later. You can tell. · But for, now, no one really under- stands cool versus uncool in Kaiser Elementary School's fourth-grade class. Everyone runs out for recess to get to the handball wall first, and everyone laughs when the teacher does something funny. And everyone raises their hand. Even Levi "How do we feel when someone listens to us?• asks teacher Dee Mattern. The lesson is about active listening -how to do it, how it makes others feel and how significant it is for good Thi Newpod-Mela Unified School District offers tmee meau c:boices each day at elementaiy scbooll. SbJdentl may Choose a vegetarian entree if desired. 1be .. ctioll varies and may be either a salad, lllndwtm or bot entree. Here's what's being terved tbil week: TODAY communication. Nine hands shoot up. But no one waves, strains, Oails or cries "me, me, met" Just little hands and silence. 1bis is their proven technlque. Mattern picks Christll\a Sandoval. "You feel like you can understand each other, whether you're a boy or girl," she answers. Elizabeth Cramer explains what j~ happened. ·You can't say 'hey choose met' 'cause then she won't choose you,• said the 8-year-old. "You have to be quiet.• Her friend, Lauren Thagard, nods. ...... It's common knowledge. The.teacher picks one person at a time and if you want to answer the question, the last thing you want to say is "pick me, pick met" she adds. , The consensus is out: it's cool to get called upon. Levi agrees. He answered a couple questions this morning, a feat consid- ering bow many others competed for the privilege to speak. Not much else in the fowth grade bas changed in a generation. There are still more pencils than pens -at least in this fourth-grade classroom. The desks are still rectan- gular with a hollow storage space inside. But there appears to be an unfa- miliar trend in Kaiser Elementary's Room 21: class participation. Levi says answering questions is actually tun, and he has enough con- fidence to try. The Levis of my fourth-grade class never would have said that. MundNtble Lunch Salad with Dannon Fruit Yogurt or .l'renc:h breed cheese pizm, aispy gNell lllad with law-fat dressing, choice of fruit or 100% fruit jilice, choice of milk Of ldwrtisemenU herein CMI be ~without written per- mlf&lon of copyright owner. WEITlll lllD SUIF POLICE TIPS HOW TO BEAOt US Clrculdon The llmes Of_,. County (IOO) 252-9141 ~ Ci..ffled(949)642-5678 . Dllplay (M9) 642..021 lcltDNI News (Mt) 642-5680 Sports (949) 574-4223 ...... Sports Fax (Mt) 646-4170 f~: ~lypllotel-'lmes.com Mlllt<>Mc. '""""' Offlu (949) 642..021 luslnell Fax (949) 631 ·7126 Nllltwd~nm.~ ....... • 4Mllafl °' .. "°' ~ '111-. l'IMPDAnMIS Balboa 72163 • Corona def Mar 72163 Costa Mese 88162 Newport Buch 721463 Newport Coast 72163 WPOMCMT A~IW'ltlwtit detlwf Mts In 1he hMcj.. htgh ... tod.y. ~ ... -......... ~ .. TIDllS • TODAY First low 3:23 a.m ....................... 0.1 Flnthlgh 9:39a.m ....................... 4.6 Second low 3:11 p.m. .... ~ ............ , ... 1.5 Second hWt 9:12 p.m. ...................... 5.6 J:50 a..m, ...................... 0.1 10:o. -.m. ................... A.9 . I* p.m ........................ 1.J _...,.__, .. ,,..,..4'. .... ~.S.7 .._,._'"''"'"'" ....... -c.91. ...................... .....A-al -• • If you live In an apartment. avoid being In the laundfy room or garage by younelf, especially at night. • Install a peephole viewer In your door. Never open your door without knowing who Is on the other side. • ~ P<>Mible1 travet with a friend. Keep your car in good WOtking order, espte.lally before long trips. ~ kffP the gM tri at least half full. • s~ 1n weft-lit ereas as much as poulble when w.1iino at night. AvcMd w.lklng alone or wtth your hinds full. • Walk confldef ~ directly af)d at , steady pace on 1he side of 1he strwt facing traffic. Crlmmati loOk for"'°'* who eppe. vulnlr.tM. • Wiit dose tD 1he a..b. ~ docw~ bUllw and ... wtw. lltldters<.n hide. If t CM..,..,. to be fol.; kM1ng ~ tum end welt "' the ClpplDlltl dNc1lon ot Mlk on the OOlir side of tht strHt. • If you art In dtnoee'; terMfT'I end run toMrd """'ot .... . •~Ioctl c. doOrl ..._ ._.. .. °' ..... W1W -Dan't .... ., .... 1n .... ' I I l I ' .. . ' Doily Pilot Can't forget q jellyfish in the /ace 0 ne of the most vivid memories of my child- hood is watching teams of horses pulling nets full of fish onto the beach in front of the 14th Street grammar school on lhe Balboa Peninsu- la. I think it was about 1922, and I think I was in the fourth grade. If I seem a little unsure of Ute details, it's because fol- lowing my father, who was a railroad worker, from one grubby liW.e railroad town to another, I went to a lot of grammar schools. But I remember the horses drag- ging in fish, and that certainly didn't happen in Wyoming, Nebraska, Utah or Nevada. Regardless of the exact date, when school let out, we would always run out and try to pick up those slippery fish. All the while, the Newport kids threw jellyfish at us Bal- boa kids. Years later, Marco Anich, my childhood friend, told me the facts about that operation. Marco's father was a fisher- man and the teams of horses belonged to him. Marco got to ride one of the horses dur- ing the operation. lt seems that the fish involved were jack smelt. During jack smelt season - and as far as I am concerned, jellyfish season -the local fishermen kept a man sta- tioned at the end of the New- port Pier. His job was to spot schools of jack smelt, which appear as underwater clouds just outside the breaker line. Once a school was spotted -and not necessarily in front of the 14th Street grarrunar Robert Gordner THE VERDICT school -fishermen dragged big nets to the scene. Men in dories pulled the net through the surf and surrounded the school of fish. • The net was too heavy to be pulled in by hand. That's where the horses get into the act. As the net was being pulled in by the horses, the assembled fishermen waded out and scooped the fish into tubs. The tubs were taken to either John Honnan's or Frank Suttora's commercial fish dock. There, they were packed with crushed ice and hauled by the Pacific Electric to the big Los Angeles Mar- ket -located, as I remember, on 7th Street, but I could be way off on that. Marco always denied that the Newport kids threw jelly- fish al us Balboa kids. How- ever, my recollection of that part of the operation is still pretty vivid. You don't get smashed in the face with a jellyfish and not remember the incident with some clarity. • ROBERT GARDNER is a Corona del Mar resident and a former judge. His column runs Tuesdays. THAT'S YOUR FINAL ANSWER, it i ti,cl/ ~o/". · · MI CASA MEXICAN RESTAURANT 296 E 17TH ST. COSTA MESA · 949·645·7626 September 19-23 Parrish leathers, shearlings, In BRIEF Sewage spill closes part of Newport Bay Coltllty officials closed part of Newport Bay to swim- mers and scuba divers Mon- day after a sewage spill at the Lido Marina Village ves- sel pump polluted the water. The affected area, from Lido Island Bridge to 300 feet up the bay ~ong the Lido Village Marina docks, will remain closed to water-con- tact sports until the results of a water quality test are avail- able, officials said. The Orange County Health Care Agency will con- tinue its investigation today. Los Angeles County Superior Court Judge S. James Otero. After listening to argu- ments for an hour and a half Monday mornlng, Otero took the case under submission. Although he dld not give a date for a ruling, be is required by law to reach a decision within 90 days. Measure P, a county ini- tiative that passed by 67.3% on the March ballot, requires a two-thirds voter approval of airports, j'ails and toxic landfills. It was designed to block the county's plans for an international airport at the former El Toro Marine Corps Air Station. · In Maret), a lawsuit to overturn the measure was filed by the city of Newport Beach and two local pro-air- port organizations, Airport • Working Group and Citizens for Jobs & the Econo~y. The suit alleges that the measure is unconstitutional. unen- forceable and invalid. in Newport Beach will hold an opportunity drawing Wednesday to benefit the Balboa Performing Arts The- ater Foundation, which plans to renovate the Balboa The- ater. Estimated proceeds from the drawing are $90,000, a nice chunk of money for the foundation, which still needs to raise about S3 million, said executive director Michele Roberge. And with 9nly 1,000 tick- ets sold, the odds of driving off the lot iJr'1he sleek two· seater are far better than winning the Califomia Lot- tery. Anyone interested in try- ing their luck can still buy tickets from the foundation at (949) 673-0895 or by showing up early for the 7 p .m. drawing at Fletcher Jones Motorcars, 3300 Jam. boree Road. Tickets will be sold until 6:45 p.m. Tuesday, September 12, 2000 3 Cocktails and hors d' oeu- vres wW be served. Entries accepted for photo contest Bloomingdale's is hosting a •Hot Tot on the Block Pho- to Contest• Parents of children ages 8 and younger can enter humorous photographs of their children for this nation- al contest. The pictures will be collected daily· and dis- played on the •Hot Tots Wall of Fame" through Sept. 30. First place will win a $250 Bloomingdale's B-IGds shop- pmg spree, second' place will win a complimentary photo package, and third place will wm a Bloomingdale's picture frame, a free roll of film and photo development. Bloomingdale's is in Fash- ion Island at 701 Newport Center Drive, Newport Beach. lnfonnation: (310) 274-7800. A Newport Beach resi- dent noticed some spillage Monday ·morning while pumping sewage at the sta- tion at Lido Marina Village, said Tony Melum, duector of the city's harbor re'Source division. El Toro airport advocates i5Ei:&11Em!B-!l!!li=:=a=:===:::====:::!!i!!!!5!!!5!5!!!5==::==::===:==::::=::===: A line from the sewer to the pump stabon broke, but there was no way to measure how much spillage occurred, Melum said. The pump was put out of service Monday. 0 Judge delays ruling on Measure F A written ruling on the constitutionality of Measure F is expected to be released within the next 90 days by I'm not worried, challenged the measure on the same grounds before it went to a vote. At that times, a Superior Court judge said she had doubts about the measure's validity, but did not remove it from the ballot. Balboa Theater group drives a hard bargain Ever dream of owning a new Mercedes-Benz SLK roadster? Now's your chance to get one for $100. Fletcher Jones Motorcars my agent is -·"'"" Cr.lg Brown Insurance Call toda y for auto & home..· owner':, rnsuram:c! (949) 760-1255 Fashion Island New rt Beach • L1t.c 0550290 50% OFF TOPIARIES SILK STEMS AND FLORAL ARRANGHIE1'TS Now featuring our new fall designs Mon-Fri 10-6 Sat 10-5 •Open Sunday 10-4 369 E. 17 th Costa Mesa (949) 646-6745 THE l>'dily Pilot • ( l.1\\1f1"d ( Olllflltlllll\ l'\i.nb•tpl,tC!' ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Along with the ;ewelry of Susan Roden, Hawick's of Scotland will be showing cashmere sweaters · for men and women; they have produce4 · fur Chanel · since the 1930's. '\ .. .. .. .. 4 Tuesday, s.pe.mber 12, 2000 CONTINUED FROM 1 reports estimated that break· en could reach heights of up to 20 /eet at south-facing beaches, Martin said New- port Beach's maximum surf would be 1 feet today and Wednesday. The southerly '&Well was welcomed Monday by surfers, who m~de the most of the conditions. However, the waves were not to be taken l;igbtly. Newport Beach life- guards put a few additional staff members on duty and posted red flags Monday to warn beachgoers of the dan- gerous waters. Because the summer sea- son is waning, there was only a small crowd at the beach Monday, said Rob Williams, a Newport Beach lifeguard. He noted, however, that the ROBBERY CONTINUED FROM 1 The car that had bee n pursuing the Honda also crashed, and most of its occupants fled from the I waves were dangerous for inexperienced surfen and swimmers and that Wegua.rds had made six rescues. •1t wasn't out of the ordi- nary -opt tor bunicane sea- son,• Wtlllams said. Hurricane season, which ~ through summer and early fall1 makes for good surf, he said. Swells from the southern hemisphere pro- duce uneven waves and are usually larger. As for any effects on local weather, hurricanes in the eastern Pacific usually behave like Lane has -they lose power and fade into trop- ical stonns or depressions by the time they pass Southern California. Forecaster Martin said this particular storm is expected to pass Newport-Mesa and travel northeast. There will be morning clouds and some humidity, but little, if any, rain is expected. scene. Police arrested the driver of the second car, nowever. Police do not know if the same suspects were involved in both incidents. There are no suspects in custody in conrrection with the attempt- ed robbery or the shooting. . . POLICE CONTINUED FROM 1 • was anyone at all Ulside the building. Despite officers bristling with weapons and body armor scurrying abE>ut in the parking lot and the curious employees of near- by businesses sta.rtng from behind yellow police tape, nothing emerged from inside the shop but a ma'ngy springer spaniel named Mickey. Finally, just when it appeared that all the com- motion may have been ove r nothing, the police )ound their man. "It was way in theback of the back,• of the office, said Police Chief Dave Snowden. •He was in the bottom of one of the bot air balloon baskets with a bunch of parachutes stuffed over him. He was way hidden.• Lt. Ron Smith, still walk- ing stiffly in his he avy flak jacket, described . the densely crowded interior of the shop as •a night- mare from'a tactical stand- P.Oint. There's . so many p~aces where he could hide.• 11o .... TOW • Send AllOllND nMN rmns to the o.11y Piiot. no w. 1ey st.. CM-u MeM. CA 926l7; fM 10 (949) 646- ~ 170 °' Qll (948) 57<M261. lnelude the time. date. and location of the event. as weft as • ~ phone number. A complete listing Is •vall· able at http:Jtwww.dallypflot.com. • TODAY Borden Boo.kl, MUllc ti Cafe will present a free seminar at 1 p.m. on when not to mix sup- plements and medicines and how to detect possible warn- ing signs of substance interac- tions at the South Coast Plaza location. 3333 Bear St., Costa Mesa. (714) 556-1185. Mother's Market will oUer a free seminar on healthy back· to-school tips from 6:30 to 1 :30 p.m. at the Patio Cafe, 225 E. 17th St., Costa Mesa .• (949) 631-4741. WEDNESDAY The Home and Small BU5lness Alliance will meet at 8:30 a.m. at Mimi's Cafe in Irvine, 4030 Barrance Parkway. "Health and Wellness" will be the top- ic. Owners of home and sn'tall businesses are invited to attena. Reservations required. The breakfast cost $6. (949) 786-0030. ~ . • A 1epr• r Mlve frotD tbe c.1 Poly Pomooe admiaions otfloe will vi1it OCC's nanster Cen· ter from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Addi· tiooal visits are scheduled from 2 to " p.m. Sepl 27, 1 to 4 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 rww. 29.1be col- lege is at 2701 Fairview R~. Costa MMe. (714) 432-5072. ReCtred tMcben are lm'tted to a free luncheon at 12:30 p.m. at the Costa Mesa Community Center, 1845 Park Ave. Reser· vations required. (714) 549· 0229. The Newport Beach Public Llbrary Foundation book dis· cussion group will meet at 9:30 a.m. and 1 p.m. to discuss "Shark Dialogues" by Kiana Davenport in the· Central Ubrary's Friends Meeting Room, 1000 Avocado Ave. Free. (949) 717-3890. THURSDAY The Oprah Readlng Group at Barnes & Noble in Fashion Island will discuss "She's Come Undone• by Wally Lamb at 7 p.m. at 953 New- port Center Drive, . Newport Beach. (949)?59-0982. The Costa Mesa Senior Cen- ter will bold the first session of a 10-week workshop titled •Let's Talk About Writing• at . Doily Pilot 1:30 p.m. The center is at 695 w. 19th St. $30. Class space is limited. (714) 965-1176. The grand openl119 of th Republican Headquarters for Newport Beach and Costa Mesa will be held at 5:30 p .m. at Suite 103 of the Newport Towers, 485 17th St. (949) 837-0278. The <>range County HJstort- cal Sbdety will bold a gener- al meeting at 7:30 p.m. at the Sherman Ubrary & Gardens, 2647 E. Coast Highway, Corona del Mar. A garden ·viewing will be held at 6 p .m. with refreshments at 7 p .m. The public is invited. Free. (714) 993-7009. FRIDAY The Crystal Cove State Park and the Callfomia Coastal Commission will celebrate coastal conservation at the 16th annual California Coastal Cleanup Day at 9 a.m. Organizers will set up stations at both the Reef Point parking lot and Pelican park- ing lot No. 4. Parking fees will be waived for participants arriving between 8:30 and 11 :30 a.m. The goal is to clean 3.5 miles of Crystal Cove coastline, from Abalone Point to Theasure Cove. (949) 497- 7647. SEE TOWN PAGE 5 14th Annual Harbor Heritage Run and Free Fitness Fair -~ 51 FEATURE RACE IK FUN RUN/WALK KIDS' KLASSIC RACE Sat.,October 7, 1000 Newport Harbor High School Celestino's quality MEATS The Ffnesr Meat and sero1ce AooJlable Smm.1 Cott11Ma.for,,W,.301"71 Cdatino's All Natural CHUCK ROASTS .BONE-IN s31g FROZEN LAMB .SHANKS · SJ99 lb CelestJnots FROZEN MEATLOAF BEEF OR 'PURKEY s2~ Frcnen TWICE BAKED POTATOES s4~ BICk to Sdlool wtlh CELESTIN O'S ROAST BEEF Daily Pilot TOWN CONTINUED FROM 4 1be 16th annual Estuary Cleanup' Day at Upper New- port Bay will be held from 8 a.m. to 1 p.m. Sept. 16 at Sbellmaker Island, 600 Shell- maker Road, Newport Beach. (949) 640-17 51. As part of Its Week.end Gar- dener Series, the Sherman Library & Gardens will h'ost a #Growing and Propagating Plumeria in Southerp Califor- nia• workshop at 9:30 a.m. at 2647 E. Coast Highway, Corona del Mar. Free. (949) 673-2261. Orange Coast College's Community Education Office otters a seminar titled •Mem- ory Loss, Aging and How to Keep Your Brain Healthy" from 10 a.m . to noon at OCC's Business Education Room 102, 2701 Fairview Road. (714) 432-5880. lntNIMOt the l\nilh Une , The •0tvonie: A New Begin- ning• workshop will be held at 10 a.m. at 180 Newport Center Drive. The ongoing workshop is for men and women in the process of divorcing or recenUy divorced. $40. (949) 64-4- 6435. Newcomers to cybenpace may attend "Tool & Tricks: Internet 101" - a workshop with tips for.finding your way through the Internet -at 10 a.m .. in the NeWp<>rt Beach Central Library's Friends Meeting Room.· 1000 Avoca- do Ave. Topics will include how to use search engines, e- mail and bOokrtlarks. Free. (949) 717-3801. SATURDAY The Costa Mesa Htstorlcal Society will hold an open house from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. at Estancia Park, 1900 Adams.St. Features include a demonstration of making adobe bricks. (949) 631-5918. . . SUNDAY Ora.age Cout College's Community Education Office offers a one-day workshop titled •ttow to Purchase Government Foreclosures for •No Money Down' • from 9 a .m. to 5:30 p .m. in the school'• Science Lecture Hall, 2701 Fairview Road. Registration fee is $49, or $79 per couple. (714) 432-5880. A bird show will be held from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. in Build- ing 10 at the Orange County Fair & Exposition Center, 88 . Fair Drive. Parking is located off of A,rlington Drive. Admission for ad\llts is $5, S4 for seniors age 60 and over and $1 for children between 5 and 12. (11-4) 828-2607. Costa Mesa ftreflghter Curt Yoder and his wife, Karen, will discuss and sign their book "The Heart Behind the Hero• at 3 p.m. at Borders Books, Music & Cafe at 1890 Newport Blvd., Costa Mesa. (949) 631-8661. "French Love Songs, .. a per· formance by composer and pianist Terence Alaric and singer Mignonne Profant, will be presented at 3 p.m. at the Newport Beach Central Library's . Friends Meeting Room, 1000 Avocado Ave. Free. (949) 717-3801. MONDAY AppllcaUons for Univenlty of California and California State University campuses for the fall 2001 term will be available starting today at Orange Coast College's Transfer Center, 2701 Fairview Road. (714) 432- 5725. An estate and Medi-Cal planning workshop co-spon- sored by the Alzheimer's Assn. of Orang~ County and the Orange Caregivers ~ - • Valances & Co.mice Boxes • Roman Shades • Blinds • Verticals • Shuttcu. • Bedspreads ~,., .. ,~· .... pwdwcs a pair of New Balana shocsduring the mo111hs of Sq>itmbcr and October, New Baan<X Newport will donate S~ 10 the local chapicr ol tht' Swan G . Komco Breast Cancer Foundauon. . New Balana is a proud nauonal sponsor of the Komcn Ra.cc for th Cure• I 119· ~ newbdanoe ~a.ACH CoMpli•ntAry Conndt4tion in Your Homt ..-,()',, , I , -c, I •o ' •, ! 1 <>1 .. 1 · ' •ol r11te44~ DESIGN CENTER Factory & Showroom 1998 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa ~~ (949)642-8400 ;,;:.n;=:sc~ For more information: www.theLollroads.com l -800 -378-TRAK (8725) , \ TWENTY-THREE MINUTES AGO THEY WANTED TO KNOW \ ·WHAT YOU THOUGHT. When It comes to business, beln1 ln the right place at the n1ht time can't lte left to chance. TMt'1 why It makes perf'ect bu1inet1 sense to take 11'e T()ll Roads. 'IMnb to • conae-tJon and ~ltrucllon me . drivt, you11 Ft to 1"r llllftdnp and appointments • lot 'luklcer. • What do you th.lnlt about thM? - Resource Center will be held from 6 to 8:30 p.m. at Silver- ado Senior Uving, 350 W. Bay St., Costa Mesa. Attor- ney Fay Blix will lead the presentation. A $10 donation is optional. (714) 680-0122. SEPT. 19 Sid C.ousel 2000 wtll be held at 1 p.m. at the Tee Room, Newport Beach Goll Course, 3100 Irvine.Ave. The theme for this event, present- ed by the Balboa Ski & Sports Club, is "Reaching New Heights." (949) 721- 9316. A . .,presentatlve from the admissions office at Cal Poly San Luis Obispo will visit Orange Coast College·~ Transfer Center at 10 and 11 a .m. to discuss transfer preparation. majors and options. OCC is at 2701 Fairview Road. (714) 432- 5894. Tuesday, September 12, 2000 5 PalneWebber wW lpODIOI' a •Eight Common Mistakes Retirees Can Make with Their F1D41lces• lecture from noon to 1 :30 p.m. at the Hotel Huntington Beach, 1661 Center Ave. Pree with advanced reservations. Lunch is provided. (9'9) -467- 6143. PalneWebber will pretent a "Have Your Own Money Manager Used by Portune 500 Companies• lecture at 6 p.m. at 888 San Clemente Dr., Suite 300, Newport ,Beach. Free. (949) 117-3915. 1be Mllllonaire'• Club for' aspiring millionaires will meet at 7 p.m. at Borders Books. Music & Cafe South Coast Plaza, 3333 Bear St, Costa Mesa. The group will hold a round-table discus- sion on the traits and cha.rac- · teristics ')f wealthy people based on the book •Tue Mil- lionaire Mind• by Thomas Stanley. (714) 256-0353. Welcome to On M..UW ~ M<?li~~5 E e .. You r Southern California Mobility SpeciaJisu" 3C • uupud Showroom Hours Mon-Fri 9am-4:30pm 7 1 l W. l 7ch Sc. Swee A-5 Costa Mesa 949-642-2010 ToU Free (888) 447-9056 • Representing the full line of Pride Mobility Products •Service & Repair • Insurance Reimbuncment Specialist Pride Sciooun from $1495 I 11. I• I .. ' . ... BUS CONTINUED FROM 1 and no one to ask for help.• Gardena is one of dozens or Costa Mesa residents who spent time Monday acquainting themselves with Route 180, a new route. On Sunday, the Orange County Transportation Authority implemented a new system that straightens many of the county's crooked bus routes. Route 57, a route many residents knew well, no longer passes by most or their usual stops. But it was Monday, when many regular bus riders boarded on their trip to work, that the new system was really under review. Doily Pilot •1 don't ll.lce it,• said Elena Martin, a Cost.a Mesa resi- dent •tt's terrible to do th.Ls to us. I now have a longer bus route. Who are these people? This is not fair.• But the most common feeling expressed by riders Monday was confusion. •tt's hard to understand the new system," said Smh Nguyen, who ended up at the Newport ltansportabon Center on his way home lo Garden Grove from OCC. •r•m kind of scared I won't be able to find my home, but people have been really cool about helping me figure out where to go.· Jacoba Guadalupe, who uses a wheelchair, said sht• spent the whole day on the bus to learn the new system. Bus rides are free unW Thursday, when the OCTA will begin collecting its regu- lar rate of $1 per boarding. The transportation author- ity has been working on the system for a year and a half, and officials say they think the result is quicker com- mutes for most of the coun- ty's riders. MARC MARffi I OAllY Pl.OT Driver Steve Jeffenon. reflected in the rear-view mirror of bis bus, says he likes \he new routes implemented by the OCTA. "We really rely on these buses and this is really con- fusing.• she said. "This is dtf. ficult for us with wheelchairs. I think it will be all rlght, but it would be better if the bus drivers were able to help more." ·we anticipated that in the first few days there would be some confusion,• said George Urch, an OCTA spokesman. ·we tried to reduce it with an aggressive advertising campaign and by having transit ambassadors at our busiest bus stops, and actually things are going a little better than we expect- SARAH CONTINUED FROM 1 the study last year, citing con- cerns that too many group homes were corning to the city. "We've had issues with group homes within the neighborhoods," said City ·Councilwoman Libby Cow- an. •Some group homes are not good neighbors.• The study revealed that some group homes had vio- ed. "It's going to take,Jjders a couple of weeks to figure out the most efficient way to get where they want to go. But so far, so good." Officials are monitoring the differe.nt runs to decide if any of them needs to be tweaked, Urch said. A citizens' group, which includes some Costa Mesa residents, has opposed the changes, saying the changes have resulted in more trans- lated city codes. This sum- mer, the city cracked down on eight such facilities, including pressing misde- meanor charges on the owner of a •sober living home• on Orange Avenue for allegedly operating in a residential zone. The city's code enforce- ment office did not receive any complaints about the House of Sarah, said Sandi Benson, chief code enforce- ment officer. However, the home violat- ed city codes that prohibit a.k,...'i..,. ~ fers and more waiting. The bus riders taking advantage of the free fares Monday expressed a wide range of opinions, however. "This schedule works out better for me," said Kathie Curtiss. "I go to (Orange Coast College) in the after- noons, and with the new sys- tem I get home earlier in the evenings. I get home early enough to feel safe.• Curtiss is one of several Costa Mesa residents who correctional referral facilities near single-famlly dwellings and prohibit housing for felons convicted of crimes involving controlled sub- stances, according to the study. •we didn't know (the home) was there," Benson said. ·we think it is a very good thing they are doing. It's just that in 1979, when the house was founded, that use was not allowed and unfortu- nately isn't allowed now, either. We did everything we could, but unfortunately, IT'I A.LL GOOD . --0vER 30 RESTAURANTS. 15 WINERIES. FLAVORFUL COCKTAILS. Rlctt TASTING BREws. SPECTACULAR LIVE ENTERTAINMENT. B ERLIN • W WG C HUNG • Koot ANo THE G ANG • T HE B EACH Bovs "===m-Dsall ~-.., ~ ~ .... @omcast ii Save $21.00 on Admission and Taste Scrip with a Passport! Friday Admission ........ $12 ~a\ Saturday Admission ... $12 a-- ~ v,e\··· Sunday Admission ...... $12 ~o $15 in Scrip ................... $15 VALUE =$51 .. ~llfor . . 0111!1 $~01 Place pr~ale orden on the web at www.newportbeach.com, by phone at (949) 729-4400 or use the form below. ~-----------------------------~ I 1 . ' • . • ' : '\, ' • \ I ' ' I ! I . 1 •, ., I'' ' I I ( I I I I I I I . ' I : I I I -----------------~ -----------F Rl ., SAT. & SU N.• SEPT. 151 16 & 17 NEWPORT CENTER DRJVE • FASHION ISLAND ..... """ ..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . #of Pa88p<>rts ordered __ 0 '30 each Name Addreae: __________ -'---'~~----.;......,.;_ City: Ztp:·___;.;;...___ Phone:"'-------~---....._- MB'JHOOCFPA'l'MBNr. 00\eck O M/C O Viaa ~Amex 1000000QOOOOQOOQO Name en card _____ ......_......._........_ __ _ Exp._ Signature .. __;, ____ _....-.:....__ s.tld che« or end# CMJ"' *>: ttiAoc. ATTN: PllilXrt Oldir, M70J111Nel Ad., H9wpcrt '-"·CA IHIO. F•<*nto~ 1'2M417. No ...... 9-.1t. fW•m11wll natbt•$' ,....,_,lllllllltlll-ClllllM ............. _D ... ,. .............................. llMCC .-.a: L--------~-------~~~~~-~-~----~ .,.. . .... ( said they are pleased with the changes. Some said their commutes are now shorter and others said new stops are helpful to them, including several along Newport Boulevard. However, some riders were upset because their commutes are now longer or because· their stops were eliminated . from the new route system altogether, such as the stop on 17th Street and Dover Drive. group home ordinances and codes just don't allow any group homes to be in that facility.· The city gave the state cor- rections department 30 days to relocate ~ women inmates. Benson said, allow- ing four of the women to be released and the remaining two to be moved to a similar facility in San Diego. The push to bring group homes into compliance with city codes benefits the city's other residents, Valantine said. "We're trying to bring res- idents in compliance with city standards so residenticlJ areas can remain more residential, not commercial." be said. •we're trying to avoid having Bus drivers, such as Steve JeUerson, were also leammg the new routes Monday. "The runs are easier, but it's going to be bard to ledrn them because there a re so many more of them,· he• sajd, ~we have shorter run!>, with not as many turns, and I like that. I'm very positivt' about this change. There 1s o little bit of confusion, but that's just human nature ... it's hard to change." people m a neighborhood where they're mcompal.J bh•' with the area. Grou)> horn<'., often have a large number ol people corningoand going dl all times, more like a hotel than a home.· But Shylo White, a rcprE>· sentative for the Sober Livmq Fou~allon, sajd he think!> the community is losing out and that the need for halfwdy homes is greater than ever. "That's ignorance and stu· pidity for you,· White said of the closure. "People are doing· a good thing trying to get well. Most people don't know that recovery really works, that people can get on with We and be product1v£> members of society. I would 'like to see a lot more of thew started lo help people get some treatment and solv(• their problems." 115~ Mattress Outlet Stor BRANO NEW· COSMETICAU..Y IMPERFECT Get the Best for Less! w..rcu. PLAZA IMnl Avt. ,~ ... ... PGft leedt <'-131-a23 3165 Harbor Blvd. Costa Nesa o.e llllock ....... ot .05 Pwy (714) 545-7168 .. . . . .~ ' . ' My game plan each morning is to read the Daily Pilot. Why? Because the newspaper knows what it takes to win: great local news, proyocative community columnists and plenty of prep sports. The Daily Pilot is the champion of local news. t Got the Pilot? Cllll 1 (800) LATIMEl ID UJlcrl>I • Clll (948) 842-4321 to .,..... I ~· Co MM 8 Tuesday, September 12, 2000 Goy Geiser-Sandoval EDUCATIONALLY SPEAKING Trip to Canada inspires ideas for schools W elcome to all of the new · teachers, students and administrators who have joined our school district for the first time. I'm sure some parents are breathing a sigh of relief that their bored kids will have something to do, while others are working out the balancing act of getting their kids to and fro, as school and fall activities start up again. We just got back from a vacation in the eastern part of the United States and Canada. Our first stop was Dartmouth, the Ivy League school in Vermont. They have the most uncomfortable chairs in the college library. Maybe we should try that technique in our school libraries. Although we visited the province of Quebec, we met Canadians from most of the provinces. They assured us that their school system was far superior to our own. After spending a week in a place where the prima- ry language spoken was not my own, it was an eye-ppener as to how our non-English speaking stu· dents must feel. However, almost everyone there also spoke some English, and would switch once they realized what dunces we were. ln fact, in Canada, students in higb school and college can apply to go to language schools for six weeks during the summer. Because Cana- da has two recognized languages, students learn the one they are not familiar with over the summer. These courses are held at the nation's universities. Applicants that are accepted receive a full scholar- ship, which includes transportation, tuition, and room and board. Wouldn't that be a great idea to adopt in California? Immersing a student in a second language would help in the fields of teaching, medi- cine, international business, tourism, and manufacturing. It would give students the opportunity to experience life at college during their high school years. It would bring students from urban and rural communities together, as well as students from different ethnic and economic back- grounds. If college units w~ given for the intensive coursework. it would ensure more students gradu· ated from college within a four-year time frame. Newport-Mesa has been scram- bling to hire enough teachers. We have been missing a great spot to recruit teachers. We need to send a videotape or our balmy weather and sun-kissed beaches to teachers in Canada when the temperature hits 40 degrees below freezing. Teachers in Canada work more days per year for much lower pay after twice as much teacher train- ing. Many of the school fadlities looked as old and decrepit as those in our district. Finally, if you are looking for adventure, our family has two sug- qestions. The first Is to raft or jet 6oat on the SL Lawrence River out· side of Montreal. You am pretend you are an actor in the Perlect Storm movie as you and the boat get covered with water from the waves. Second, visit an Amerindian ailtura1 site in Canada. We went to the one that is thirty minutes from Quebec aty. There, you stay in native housing: either a teepee. tent ot hogan. We ate caribou pie, soup with wild geese, venison. and native vegetables, bluebeny dessert with maple syrup and medldnal tea. · We cheeked out the anoke bouM, the sweat Jog and the !Iola· tioD buts. We made a dream catch· er and~ lt over uge smoke. We maite lllUlk wttb native Qute and drulD. and butted our food ci&itna ID a blldl c:uoe. We w....nit "*9 laDll tDOUgh for a vtllGD ~but Mam aJlo be aH•9ic1 Jf f'll'I wllll tD Nelly gel tbe .... al ... NlllW American ............... than ...,_. •• _ ... Jalllldon't ..... ._... .......... . , ' ... ' 811 .. "A bayf ront walk would be an lncredible change to Marlners Mlle. We've been very successful in Newport Beach in hiding our bay from everyone." -lli9d...eC.~Ne\r;port~~~. on the possibiJlty of cr..ting a Mterfront. Mic off M.n.ien Mlle to gM ~ llCXatS to the bay. ..... •·mus • 'TM OaHv PlkJt wekonws i.ttef'S on ~ con- <*'nlng N•wport lead'I end CQlt.a tMsa. There are four ways to send In your comments: • Wna5 -Mall to the Daily Pilot 330 W. Bay St. c.c.t.a Mesa 92627 • mADaS MOTLM -can (949) 642~ • MX-Send to (949) 6416-4170 • ~ -send to dallypilotOl1tirMS.com All~ must Include your full name, hometown ~nd phone number (for V'eflfl· cation purposes only). • Doily Pilot Greenligbt: Measure S will $ave the city " • • • ' , I ,. G ovemment by special interests? Newport deserves better! Many more high-rise office buildings! Multiple tourist and conv~tion hotels ringing our ba}Tontl Is our future one of being stuck in massive traffic congestion with impeded access to Hoag Hospital and othe r important places? Until Meas\ire S, also known as the Greenlight initiative, was initiated, a dozen of these types of major developments were being dutifully processed for routine approval by the city. Approval of these major devel· opments and others to come would forever change Newport Beach from a high-quality resi- dential beach/bay community to a congested 'high-rise metropoli- tan city. . Greenlight is a grass-roots residents' campaign to save the character of our city. It came Philip L Arst COMMUNITY COMMENTARY about because ~ut special ~r­ est-lobbied city gove.,mmen os not been adequately add.res ing the impacts of increased traffic and congestion on us residents. Gree nlight will limit develop- er-lobbyist influence on the City Council by giving residents an equal voice. It permits the gov- ernment to function as always except.that voters may overrule the City Council on major gener- al plan amendments. Greenlight will strengthen our city government by making it more responsive to the people. By making them a part of its decisions, local government can restore the lagging public trust. Greenlight is well-thought out. Its drafters are the same group of public-spirited citizens who wrote the original traffic phasing ordinance. That law served the city well for 20 years until it was recently weakened by $e City Council under lobby- ing pressure by the development industry. As the ordinance no longer adequately served our needs, the onginal writers then formu)ated Greenlight as the best solution to reducing the growth of traffic congestion in the city. The same developers that we re instrumental in degrading the traffic phasing ordinance protections have now provided the initial funding for ballot Measure T, which is designed to invalidate Greenlight. Are you surprised that all of the provi- sions of developers' Measure T can be overridden by the City Council? That is the scenario the d evelopers like because they want to remain with the weak· ened traffic phasing ordinance! A yes vote on Greenllght is needed to stave off a dozen pro- posed projects and provide time for thoughtful planning of the city. If Greenlight is defe ated, we will be immediately subject to their being dumped on us plus a continuing stream of high-rise developments in the future. Measure Sis a grass-roots residents' attempt to preserve Newport Beach as a high -q uali- ty residential beach/bay commu- nity. We must act now or lose our city! • PHILIP L ARST is a Corona del Mar resident and a 'Greenlight spokesman. JEff CHONG I DAll.Y Pl.OT This black panther awaits visitors at the entrance of the Panther Palace, a twingen' dub nm by Gordon Oliver ln Costa Mesa. • Panther Palace neighbors have rights, too ... The issue here is freedom and rights. Samuel Horton (•Panther Palace should be free to be dis· tasteful," Aug. 5) states that Gor- . don Oliver's rights are being vio· lated. The RE.unlL First Amend- ment, right to peacefully auemble. Oliver, by his own . admission (or boasting), hosts up to 150 clients at bis so.caJled parties. All day on S~ay peo· ple frolic in the backyard a.pd sing karaoke so loud lt caJ1 be beard for blocks. His backyard bu three immediate neighbors who share the fence and occa· sionally people come over those fences (ask the police who have been called numerous times by the frightened neighbors). And a violation of the Fourth Amendment? The right to be secure in your own house. Yes, Oliver has that right, but it is not the h~e of the 150 party-goers . who would never want this oper- ation, or should I say • assem- bly,• in their netghborhOOds. They come from all over and drt· ve can which line our neighbor- hood two times a week -every Friday and Saturday. Call it what lt is, it's clearly a business being operated out of a residential neighborhood. This is what Oliver ts being taken to court over, not illegal activity. lf anyone's rl~hts are being violated here, its the neighbors who have been suffering with tll1B tor over 20 yea.rs! At the Panther Palace you are charged MO per penon at the door {of course, it ii called a donation to circWnvent the )Aw) and there ii a lilt of activitieY available for an extra fee. Figure it out. At MO per person, that's $6,000 per night! Now that's a lucrative business. My freedom to a safe and qui- et place to live, and that of many other adults and children who live in tbil neighborhood, is being violated by allowing this busihess to continue. I believe all the media attention the Panther Palace has received has probably helped the business to grow and proliferate to the extent it has. Hopefully, it will also be its downfall. The city of Costa Mesa has finally taken the first step and stepped up to the plate to protect its citizens in their neigh- borhood by taking this matter to court. Someday soon I hope the people who live here will get their peace and freedom back when the Panther Palace has finally shut its doon. CONNIE MINE CoetaMesa Quot• Of 1llE DAY ' I •(SriJr tackle <late) Amtugey is real llp'At. He wants us to put it a play *' Huliger tlrows o bal off o defender, so it ps right lo hin .. : Jerry Howell. Costa Mesa High football coach • DalJ• • M• SeptenK 11 haaant SfOln HAU. Of MME ADAM IOLUWClt _...,_ Doily Pilot Sports Editor Roger Corf50ll • 949..57 44223 • Sports Fox: 949-650-0170 • Tuesday, September 12, 2000 9 KllDUU -~~~~~ Murphy, B~, named •Today's big matchups ... to .All-Ain.encan. team Newport-LB Wilson poloists, CdM-Mater Dei girls tennis, and Newport-Laguna girls volleyball at top of me nu. .The ?;lewport WATER POLO Harbor High boys water polo team looks to make the first -0f hopefully two trips to Bel- mont .Plaza with a season-opening matchup with fellow-powerhouse and defending Division I champion Long Beach Wilson. The varsity is set to begin at approximately 6:30 p.m. following the lower-level con- tests. "Our goal is to have our first con- .test and our last played in Long Beach,• Sailors Coach Brian i<reutzkamp said. "We've been working the players very hard dur- ing the off-season, especially our seniors. We need to have a strong • Newport Harbor standouts receive distinctive honors. NEWPORT BEACH -Newport Harbor High girls water polo standouts Jenna Murphy and Jessica Ball received high honors when they were named to the 2000 United States National Junior Olympics All-Ameri- can teams. Murphy, a sophomore at Newport Harbor, was named to the 16-and- under All-American team. She was the top scorer in Newport A, which placed seventh in the Junior Olympics after a grueling 5-4 four- overtime loss to Davis. Murphy is one . of three returning starters on Newport Harbor's varsity team, along with Katherine Belden and goalie Heather Deyden. "She'll have a much bigger role this GIRLS WATER POLO year,· Newport Harbor coach Brian Kreutzkamp said. Ball was named to the 14-and-under All-American team. The top scorer on Newport A. her coach Greg Boyer con- siders Ball one of the top freshmen in the area. She is now a freshman ~t Newport Harbor. The 14-and-under Newport A team also placed seventh in the Junior Olympics. "She's very energetic," Boyer said. "She never stops. She's an El'iergi.zer Bunny type.· Ball's teammate on Newport A's 14-and-under team, Katie Erickson, received honora ble mention. Vivian Liao of Corona del Mar also received honorable mention on lhe i4-and-under team. . . base so we can have a strong finish at the end of the season.· Despite the loss of top players Tony Azevedo and Albert Garcia, Wtlson still has a strong returning nucleus that includes All-CIF first- teamer James Chin. PASS ED HISTORY "They have Chln back, goalie Zack Walter is back and they have some transfer from Slovakia that's ~e. 6-foot-3 or something.• Kreutzkamp said . ·u that guy is as good as people say, they're still the team to beat.• With Newport seniors Peter Belden and Ryan Cook the center of the Bruins' attention, Kreutzkamp looks for big games from seniors Steven J endrusina, Joey Snelgrove and Caine Llttrell "Our big players will be neutral- ized by Wilson's big players,• Kreutz.kamp said. ·we will have to rely on the depth of our team to pull us through." In other action: • With a ton of talent and TElllllS expect¥io~. the Corona del Mar High girls tennis squad opens its 2000 season today with a hcnmr match 11gaimt Mater Dei, beginning at 3:15 p.m. The Sea Kings will face a differ- ent Monarchs squad that finished ranked No. 4 in CIF Southern Sec- tion Division II last year. "They lost two or three of their top players from.last year and that's hard to overcome,• Sea Kings Coach Andy Stewart said. •t don't know too much about their players and quite honestly, my concern is on my own players.• One of Stewart's worries involves the availability of junior Kim Singer. Hampered with wrist problems, her status is doubtful due to a rotator cuff injury. "'She's been bitten with injuries for a while now,• Stewart said. "That happens with some players. We're going to have to juggle the llneup and get ho1'e that some of our freshman players are ready to step up.· . Ranked No. 1 in the CIF-SS preseason poll, the Sea Kings will hope to gain some momentum from SEE GAMERS PAGE 10 Costa Mesa's aerial display in football season opener was one for the archives. For roughly a decade, the only thing West Coast about the Costa Mesa High football program has been its geographic location. So, while Patrick Hulliger's 12 completions Thursday night in a 48-23 season-opening nonleague triumph over Saddleback didn't exactly stir the BYU recruiters, they did represent a significant aerial watershed in recent Mustang history. Bony FOulner PREPS They we re, in fact, the most completed passes the Mustangs have inanaged in a single contest since the seventh week of the 1990 season. Between Ryan McEvoy's 13-for-21 outing that distant fall evening against Century (a 21-6 Mesa victory) and Hulliger's heroics in the first game of the new millennium (12 of 22 for 127 yards and a touchdown), the Mustangs played 104 games. Mesa went 10 games during that run without completing a single pass. Hulliger, then a stout second grader, was probably barely starting to recognize the organized ~ttems of football players on his television screen the last time Mustang signal callers defied Woody Hayes so openly. (You remember Woody, the old Ohio State cloud-of-dust curmudgeon, who believed three things could happen when you put the ball in the air, two of which were bad). DON I.EACH I DAILY Pk.OT The pho tographer was so thrown off by Costa Mesa's switch to the pass (no less than 22 attempts) he was still zeroing In on the running game of fullback Daniel Hunter, seen here bulling his way for big yardage, and other Mesa running backs. And wh o can blame him? Mesa Coach Jerry Howell had made preseason promises of a more productive passing game before. But competitive reality led Mesa fans to appreciate the few spiral sightings that crune when th.e quarterback pitched backward to a tailback headed off tackle. Now, hold onto your wind gauges Mustang rooters, Howell said there's more three-receiver sets where that came from . *We're going to get better throwing the ball,· said Howell, who blamed a big lead and a respect for his opponent on keeping the passing fancy to a minimum in the second half Thursday. So rampant was the Wght of footballs, the cast of six different Mustang receivers was not llnuted to the "skill" positions. Senior center Scott Schepens alertly pulled down a deflection off the hand of a SaddJeback defender late in the first quarter, then managed to shuffle his way back to the line of scrimmage tb prevent a loss. • Howell assures me this is not among the new wrinkles designed to keep defenses honest. And, apparently, Schepens has assured lu.s teammates he'll remain the same old humble trench wamor he was before be started showing up in the statistical summary. •(Schepens) was pretty humble about it,• Howell quipped. "But he will probably ask our equipment man for some of those 1111 SCHOOL FOOTllLL PIAYllS OF THE WEEK (COIC8IS' SlllCllOIS) llWNRT UllOI SAILORS JOE II.;\ GARRE I I FOLEY 9 TRONCALE The 238-.l p ou nd tight end c aught panet for 38 and 23 r.;:a• the lngm:na-~ ~ fumble recovery. llUllCllU- FAHAD JAHID. I T~ JEREMY VAIDES COSTA MESI MUSTANGS. PATRICK 4fM HULLIGER I~ LOUIS DAY . T he 6-foot-1 &erU quaI1erback- set~. cxm- plela(l 12 .,_a 12'1 y8";tl anda rt>emt 8lii*l prall8 b bild1f11•. A 6-f~t-3, ./-\.senior inside line- backer, he was all over the field, hammerin Saddleba~ ball carriers with consistent forcefulness. • COIOll 1111111 SU Kll&S BLAKE CHARLIE HACKER ALSHULER gloves lhe receivers wear • Howell also noted Schepens' unexpecied windfall has created some good-natured Jealousy among his fellow lmeme_p • (Seruor tackle Char~) Amburgey LS real upset,· Howell explained. •He wants us to put in a play where Hulliger throws a ball off a defender, so 1t goes nght to him. H The Newport Harbor High football boosters have launched a unique fund-raiser this fall with the creation of school-themed aloha shirts. Football parent Heidi Dobrott designed the navy blue shirts, which feature images of the campus' trademark tower, the school's anchor logo, the scoreboard at the end of last year's CIF Southern Section Division V1 championship game victory over Irvme, the Balboa Pavilion. a surfer, sailboats and decorabve tropical flowers. While the football program will receive the proceeds, the only football unage on the shirts is the title-game scoreboard. Sailor boosters, as well as several local retailers are selling the shirts for $45. Among the retatlers· Nordstrom South Coast Plaza, Gary's lsland. Kayaks, Weekend Traffic, Surfside Sports and Hobie Sports. They're selling faster than expected and Harbor boosters report "when they're gone, they're gone.· Opening ceremonies for the Sydney Olympic Games are Friday, wtuch gwes Newport Harbor junior backstroker Aaron Peirsol plenty of time to enjoy one of his favorite features of the Olympic Village. · Peirsol reported home recentJy be was awed by the coin-free vending mactunes, which dispense products, such as sports drinks, at the push of a button. . . .~ 10 TU!ldoy, ~ 12, 2000 GAMERS CONTINUED FROM 9 today's match and carry it lnto lbunday'I showdown at Wood· bridge •. •we'll just have to see how our team responds,• Stewart said. • 1b.e two-time YOUIYIAlL defending CIP Division I state champion Newport Harbor girls volleyball squad opens. its 2000 season at Laguna Beach with sights set a little closer to the prn.ent tbftn in y~ars...UflSl. *This year, we're just trying to improve week to week,• Coach Dan Glenn said. •Tue past few years, we've been working toward the end of the year and hopefully this year, we'll still be playing at the end of the year. But right now I'm more concerned with getting better every day." It won't be easy for the Sailors, losing National Player of the Year April Ross (USC), Krista Dill (Duke) and Brenda Waterman (UCI) to graduation, as well as cur- rent senior and UCLA-bound Heather Cullen to a season-end- ing knee injury. ·Tiutrs a lot of talent to try to replace," Glenn said. ·sut we have a ton of talent on this team. Right now, we just don't have that one go-to girl who can put the ball away every time. We're going to have to rely on winning points on . ~· , .. ~~ . " .'..,.~..._-o,.m BSCH.51 SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA COUNTY OF ORANGE, LAMOREAUX JUSTICE CENTER In fie Matter of the ConHIVatoralllp of the Ptreon and E atat• of HENRI LONG, CorlMIVtlff Cut No. A· t 96688 LPS NOTICE OF SALE Of REAL PROPERTY At PRIVATE SALE NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN thtt WILLIAM A BAKER, PUBLIC GUARDIAN, 11 con· NIVatOf of the peraon and 11111• of the abolll· named contervalee will ... .a private aale to the ~ and beet Ml ~ d8f, after deduction of any requeltld brok1r'1 commlMlon, upon the term• end conditions hereinafter mentioned, on Thurlday. October 12, 2000, at !hi ~ of IWelllt o'clock noon. OJ lhertaf\er will*' the time allowed by law. at the of· flee .of the PUBLIC GUARDIAN, 1300·C South Grand Avenue, Room 207, Santa Ana, C.hfomla 92711, 111 right, tltlt, interttt and Mlall of HENRI LONG. conHrValet. In and to lhet ctrtaln reel propel'ty altuattd In the State cil C.llfomla, County ol Or· Inge, described U lol- IOWI LOT 90, OF TRACT NO 3487, IN THE CITY Of COSTA MESA. COUNTY OF ORANGE, STATE OF CALIFORNIA, AS PER MAP RECORDED IN 800I< 122, PAGE(S) 11 TO 16 INCLUSIVE OF MISCELL ANE OUS MAPS. IN THE OfFICE OF THE COUNTY RE· CORDER OF SAID COUNTY. I )i,cou nt (:ask ct ( ' ,,,,, 11111 1 .. 1 '.I"' I\' • Clrl"f Smlkt """ Qu.li11 CAlk~o for las Direct Cremation •• $49S Immediate Burial •• ms (l"'/wla ~ ~nf Programs Available for Funeral SCrvic:u, Cremations and C..lce11 • I I '\ I I • \ I / I ' I I • I ·~ \ \ I I ''':' • I I \ '." I I long rallies and total tM.mwork.• Newport wW look to three-year vanity standout laylor Govea.rs tor the offensive firepower, while setters Katie King and Colby George will help stabilize the Sailors' attack. , "Wllb KaUe and Colby, it's o V:ood one-two punch," GJ.tmn said. Each one provides .omething dif- ferent to help our offense be suc-cessful .• • 'IWo other loc.al high schools will kick off their volleyball seasons today. Corona del Mar will host CaJvary Chapel at 4:30 p.m., while Costa Mesa competes at Mater Qei al 3t30. p.mr --"' • On the college level, the Van- • JC MEN'S SOCCER. Coast rallies for 2-2 standoff SANTA BARBARA -Sta.ring at their fbt loss ol ~ season with a 2-0 defidt in the 60th minute, Orange Coast College's Pirates rallied with Edson Anaya's penalty kick in the 73rd minute and Aaron Siemer's goal in the ?8th minute to pull out a 2-2 tie with host Santa Barbara CC Monday in men's soocer. Matt Moseley was credited with the assist on Siemer's booming shot past Santa Barbara goalkeep- er Jose Pe~. OCC goalie Chris Coburn. playing for Hilario Arriaga, had five saves. The tie leaves Coast at 3-0-3 in nonq:>nference play. Santa Barbara ist-2-3. The Pirates ore a\ Long Beach City CoUege Thurs- day at 4 p.m. for their next start. . guard University women's team will play at Christian Heritage tonight at 7. DEEP SEA DUSTIN DAVIS • In other girls tennis action, New- port Harbor will open its 2000 sea-MOM>AY'S son on the road against University COUNTS at 3 p.m.. Estancia will host Nenport LMclng -5 Orange at 3:15 and Costa Mesa boets. 76englers. £9orn:AuQ.4, 1981 1-~~·10 Welgtat: 1.0 Spart Soccer .... Sw.i!lpef ~Ftethman .;&;lom:Jan. 15, 1981 .l!J. Height: 6-foot-1 Wllght: 230 SpcMt Football Pal: Mike Taylor c will play at San Clemente at 3. s r:,1owta11, • Newport Harbor field hockey 2 llCUda, will do battle against defending ~ ':l~ t,:.e· CIF cbamP. Edison on the Charg-150 W\d bau. ers' field. at 3:15 p.m., while in girls ..... !:.. ~;t,; golf, Newport Harbor will play the 1 ~. High 9Chool: Marine High ""' ~ Betbara Bond & Brandy lW': Sophomo<e High .chool: Mater Del C-* Mike Tayk>r g~ . Interior design FtNwttll faod: "Italian• first half of its nonleague match Dewr'• with Mission Viejo at the Mission Locker -6 boats. Viejo Country Club at 2:30 p.m. l~ ;,~ tiJna • Estancia will play the front nine 1 wtiite seabau. • of its match with Woodbridge 1os yellowtail. • today at 2:30 p.m. at the Costa ~ :r~S.nd Mesa Golf and Country Club's bus, 1 ~Jpin. f11111mtle "'°"'9: "Ten things I hate ~ Vou ;10d Nothin' to Lose.· --~ft-•wtt "Taking home the WNP award mt ~e)'W"' Mlfor: Fitness science hivorit9 food: ·steak• f'awnw rnovw. "FtJll Metal Jacket and Animal House.• .. ""** mmwtt; "'Mnnlng Of.SS OMsian I~ 1988" ~of the Week I! Led 1he team In tac.kJes and scored two points~ a safety in Pirates' opener~ Riverside cc. Mesa Linda Course. g ~K. ...... of iheWMk I! He< strong INdership, con5istency and strong defense. n,lf Pii IWf POot -by Tony Altobel.ll 1 hallbut.6 rodt· fllh, 6 bonito. ~ Jp0t1S~~oo.s Collector sports card series 00-S EXCEPT lliEREFROM All OIL, GAS, MIN· ERALS ANO OTHER HYDROC ARBONS, BELOW A DEPTH Of 500 FEET, WITHOUT THE RIGHT OF SUR· FACE ENTRY, AS RE- SERVED IN INSTRU-MENTS OF RECORD. SUBJECT TO All EX· CEPTION~.1... COVE- NANTS, \AJNDmoNs. RESTRICTIONS, EASEMENTS, EX· CLUSIONS, RESERVA· TIONS, LIENS. RIGHTS AND RIGHTS.OF WAY, OF RECORD Commooly known as: 1582 £Im Avenue, Com Mesa, CA 92626 Bide Of ollera art In- vited fOf tald p=:: and must bt In , and will bt reoelved at the oftice of the PUBLIC GUARDIAN, 1300.C, Room 207, Santa Ma, Caltomia m' 1, or may bt llled wfttl the Oet1l of aald Suptriof Coort, O< may be dellvtrtd to Mid PUBLIC GUARDIAN oersonallY. at any tilN ait.. flra( publication of tN9 noclct end before the maldng of Mid Mlt. TERMS 6l= SAL£: Calh lawful money of the UntlK States. or upon auch term• and -OOnd1ionl u may be ao- ctptablt to the Coort upon conftrmatlon. The IUITI of T "1 Thouaand Ooll1ra (St0,000.00) In calh. oertifltd c:Mdt, cashier'• check. or money order mu11 ac- company each written bid or of*, with tit bal- tl'ICe of the purctlaM price to be peld by de.a of ltCl'OW wtllctl la ftfty- fivt (551 days folloWlng the day of the auc11on. All bide or oftllfS muSI be llAlmmtd on a tonn tumlllhed by the Mllef. The rigl1I to raftd any and an f>lc'9 It hereby ,.. ltlVed. DATED: 8fJ1IOO WILLIAM A. BAKER. PUBLIC GUARDIAN. Conllelvetor ol the Per· eon end E1t1t• of HENRI LONG LAURENCE M. WATSON, COUNTY COUNSEL end R. KATHLEENE PAUL, OEPUTY.L A~ fOf Public -Publlthed Newport Beach·Coata M1aa Olly Plot September 6. 12, 13, 2000 WIOM NOTICE TO delay. In the amount 111 Nct1C1 al TruslM's s.ie CONTRACTORS fort! In the ·'Information TNSltt Sale N11n01r CAUJNG FOR BtDS lor Bidders". '2S35.f You we 111 dllalJll Sc:hool DIS1ric1: Each bid mul1 COO· undlf a deed ol 111111 dlte1 COAST COMMUNITY loon and bt raspon8Ne 04I08l99 Unlta you l.aM COLLEGE DISTRICT to the contract docu· ICllOll IO prOCK1 YC41 prop- Bid n... dll menta. Each bidder eha.H llty, • may bl sold at 1 ...... a ne: aubmlt, on the lorm pi.Clllc sail If you need 111 Septtmblf 26• 2000 at lumllhed wilf1 !ht oon-tJCl)lanallOn ol 1111 niUa of 2.-00 p.m. tract doa.wnents. a l.i of #It ~ IQltnll "'-of Bid Reotlpt Int propoetd IUboon-~you thoUd corUd I Office of Director of tractors on lhl1 p'""'ect On OW111'2001 II Puld\aalng, CoeSI Com-• ..., munlty College District, aa required by the • ....._~ ~ ~ Bldg. "O", 1370 .A.dame SUblttting and Suboon-.._...._ -.-.,.irilioil Avenue, Costa Meu, tractloo Fair Pract~H (TMt11) 23nt Br1clllt CA 92tl2tl Act. Government Code Orrve LIM Fcnsl CA Project ld4tntlflcatlon Section 4100 ti aeq. 9'2630 (949)707-56«1 as Name· Golden Wffl ~= byltialfa ~ 1111 ~ IPPCJll'llld TM1M C ....,. ... _. uno. and our1UWll to the oll1g1 Electronic or cuNet'a chide or bid 0.0 of lf'Ulll -dad Signe; Bid No. t82t bond In an amount not (M/14199 as Ooc"""1t Pl.a. Bide .,. on fltt 1tt1 tnan ten per~ 19990274797 of Offlclal and available at: Offlct ( 10'9) of the toltl bid ~di in lht otfa of th• of the Plwlicel Facllitlea Coordlnalor, Ardith price, payable to the DI.-Recofdll of 0nnge Rich~ COHI Com· ll\ct u a guatan!M that County, Cal~Ofllll. Ex• ·-• ,....., DI ..... the bidder, II Ila propoul aAld by Jayne A Greglia m ... ~ .....,,ege $1.,.,,; 11 accepted, 1hall a Widow -' Mii at Pl.bile •1.~ t!:'9 ~ .. !'f'iJ promptly . ••1eut1 the auction IO the IMghest W. (7t4) 436-4673 Agreement, furnish a dlr lor CISft or cashoers W_.. Sit aa1ilfec:toty FallhflA Plf· chlClt mede peytbll lo N.· .., •: lormance Borld In an IOmlp EQll!ly N1honal www.cccc:t.edulfacllttlH amount not ltll than Corporllion (ptyablt 11 NOTICE IS HEREBY one hundred percent lht 1mt of tale and 111 IC· GIVEN thet the atiov.· (l00%\ of the total bid CIOldlnct '111111 Sec:bon nlllltd School Diltl'lc:t of l ...... ... ...... ,. ....... Orange~. C&llfot· = ~~ ~'~"'.;;~ nla, acting by and ,_ than one hundred 1o 1111 frUllM) at The through ill Goll1mlng .. J:ltotll) Eftlruce tD Botrd', hereinafter re-ptfOanl (t00%) of the '°' f .. DIS 1a1 bid price, and fumWl flt ~ Co4HtllottM errad to as · c:ertlflcatea evldtnGlng 700 allfc c...-Odw TRICr', wlll ractive up lllet the r-•red lnaur· Witt Sad An1, C•flor· to. but not later thin the ...,... Illa all .....,, tlllt nd 1111« above·atated time. anct Is In effect In the •y n, 1 • amoun11 Mt forth In the eat con\llYtd to Ind now Haled bids for the general condition• In held by ~ under said Died •ward of a COl'll18CI for tti9 event of lalture to of Trust 111 the pr~ lhl project dltaibtd u: -.itd Ill _, Counly To lnl1all two lJQht tl'ttf Into the COf11ract CAWorM The AM ad- Emlttlnn Diode (L.E.D.I) and execute the rt-~ ·.. .._ ,..,_,....... quired documtnta, IUCh ctess Of oll\tr COfT'mOt\ • • on · t."' """""'' bid MOJrlty w111 bt lof· dellgrlllion rf any. of 011 111 College Campua felted. The Faithful Per· 1eat propelty detcrC9d located at t 57 44 Golden forn\8l"Q Bond lhaU ,.. hlr1111 ot j)Ufp0!1K lo bl West SlrMI, HUntlngton main In lul force and ... 412 Holnwlood OrM. ~~~~ ftd~the ~ ==.r.s:~ 1 r and "" o1t1er 1o 11e '" period .. tpeClflad in IUnbtr oo.m-t0 Thi appro•1matt1y 4'8" x the Tf.11111D~S~e-IMldlrllll'* rrut1at cfll. 12·9•. The LE.D. ligrll _..... lht lioti 10 rtj&CI c:1am1 111y lllD!lllY for eny win be llfigft laced wtttt a:y °' all bide °' 10 lllCOlftCll'llll ol ti!. ••• lull oolor capedty. Pixel I I Ii adctta end other conmon apeclng to bt 25MM wa vi any rregu " t 11 dlllgrllllOll, 4 any Sllo'M1 <*lttr to oenter end or lnf0tlnaPIJH In any 111r1111 Said alt #I bl conslat of 111· x 10· ": ~:: ~~ !Ndl. """"°"' COV91\1nl OI modulee DiodM to bl I rn of the Calilo<nla -ranly expresstd Of rn- ra:tld at 100.000 hours. ~ Code. the Dnclor pllld regarding *· pos- Vlewtng MQllt ..... be of the 0tpeJtmtnt ol In-~. or tnNTt>rances. minimum ~ 80 degree dl.m1!1al Reldont of the to pay Ille ~ ballnc• vertical •nd 70 dtgtH State ol Callfomla hu of lht obhQl1ion lllCkldlnQ one half lnttntlty oont ... _ 1 lllletlSl llCMncft. and aD angle horlz.onlal Nit ... ttrm ntd the gener· OClllf c:fl#gtl .a.Id by value I* aquara meter ally prevailfng ra111 of Slid pr~y The lotal will bl ~ 5.000 :a.: ~Oii! '°:': ~ ~ of th• unpeid btl- nil at whh belanoe. performld. C()9lff of lllCll of lht ~ ... There le NO CHARGE thtM wage rate de-Cl.feel ~Aid pr~ lllld '°'a:' :J" ~ termination•. entlll•d :' IXPlllSft-:;-: In ,... pl , ... _~.,....,, PREVAILING WAGE vancee 11 lht tme of the ""'" ace """'"''..,. SCALE, era mafnttlned above, and thotl bide at the DISTRICT offiot tllltllll ~ ol lllts No· ahall bt opened and localed at 1370 Adami ta ot SJ17137UJ 011• ~aloud II 08l2Y2000 Attonleys E11-..... lime Ave.. CotUi Mita. CA ...... ltlton.I co.--IOfl -.. 92626; Physical F acll· -., ,.....-and piece. ~ PfaMlng, and a,. OMls. Olugoa ~ In eooordenct wl1h lhl available to eny In· °"*1ment CltJOfl 81211 ='°"' of caflfomi. telMted .Ptrtv UPOfl r• _915 ....... ___.. w12 ...... :2000 ___ _ Section ~.·~ ~ ~111. The Contractor NEWPORT BEACH ihal poet a oopy Of thil CITY COUNCIL lt1ot r.qulrea that lhl bid-document at Moh fob AOENDA dtt PCIMMI tt11 follow· 1119. Tht ConndOf and SUMMARY Ing dullftcation of ~ at'! aboonlrector l#ldtt tractor'I lictlae 11 the II ftll Pit not ,_. '*' September 12, 2000 time 1111 lht oonnct le the ~ PflYtlllnQ PVBllC HEARINGS awarded: ratll of WIO" to all NEWPORT DUNES Conlrac*>r: C45 Uointl WOl'kttl employed In the RESORT (NEWPORT PUBLISH: Septtmbef tllecu!lon of the Con-OUNES PARTNER· 12, 2000 and Stpttmber trtct. SHIP, APPLICANT} • A 111 2000 N bldd GENERAL PLAN WALK THROOGTH H: ~ l_llY ~ ,:•, AMENOMEN'!z ZONING NOWliWBEAUC...,...,. ROUGH period ol 11111y (80~da~ CODE AMt:NOMENT. r Cd i;......, lMlr I no;w.I ..._ ................ __. AND PLANNED COM· and proYlde staff dlrec· tlOf'I on whkh (11 any) areas ol locus Cooncll would like brougl'tt back '°' pogsible ~ta· llOO pliOf to July 4, 2001 NEWPORT COAST & RIDGE/SANT A ANA HEIGHTS /BA Y KNOLLS R E ORGANIZATION Action. Olrec1 stall to place a resokltlon Oil the Couoclra September 26, 2000 a91nda, whioh Wiii reeclnd Resotution No 99-71 and adopt a new RelOlutlon of Applk:a· to on requesting LAFCO'S 1ooiatoon ol proct1dings to rt· organize the territory known as Bay Knolls Santa Ana Heighll, and Newpon Coaat and Newpor1 Rtdge Published N1wpor1 Beach·Cosra Mesa Dally Pilot September 12. 2000 T961 (Ml)MZ..a71 BIO DA~: ~ ;.:;; ;'~ • MUNITY DISTRICT r------------------------1 29, 2000 °11 2:00 p.m. A >aY"*1I bond etlall PLAN FOR THE BOARD DATE! bt required~ to Ill· 100.ACRE NEWPORT STARTING ANEW BUSINESSr • • • • • • • • Oolobef 4 2000 ~•• of DUNES PROPERTY No ..,.ym.n, .nan be ........ on contract AND A CONCEPTtJAL mad9 tot WOltl Ot mN-and tNJI be .... ltll loon PRECISE PLAN FOR A 1111 undtf the oonnct _. btl In Ill oonlrlot HOTEL ANO TIME· .n.. Ind l#d tit A9a-doc:u"*'q· SHARE COMPLEX ...., ol Conn*lrl Wll-flu"tUllll to Sedlotl WITH CONFERENCE ... to lhl DIST"ICT 2230ll GI h P\Alllc ~ MEETING, AND BAN· 1111 lht C0HTRACT0R =-.~ flePf== OUET FACILITIES, ~ ~ -~~ permitting th• IUC• RESTAURANTS, A -lllne iM .......... ..,. ct HIUI bidder to HEAi.TH CLUB AND ... ewwdld. Arf1 CON-__ ..._, ...... f SPA "ETAIL ANO TAACTOR nol 10 __.!Uta Mclun•-0t S!AVICH AREA~ flolr1lld II :,:, lo :;: i= ~ AND SWIMMIMu ... ~~ e-:-:::. d.':; ~ under !he ~~0 ANOOA~~°H = • T:":J 1 ~ Eldl bid MbftlMd _, AREAS (coned "°"' = oonlr**>t" .. ~ ,....... to .. Nolk>I $127/00) In ............... -.... ~ lflllt OONllll, .. 1 bid ~ton R~ from __,., ,....,. "' ieetn ..,...... .......,.... -.ndlr II IN r~ ::.=..:u= ~~and~~ ~'R£~8'NE88 "' llOedllltV 00t•lldor ..,..,. • "" &UMMrA MEmNO ...,.., tit-Connel tot 111 ,.._,, o1 • 9fld ICHEOUt.E. tieWOlttlNI .... ~ ...,.., In ~ and .. ........_ .... ....... ...... .-ud • ~ ..... = -~. wtllCfl ~.-~-,,;;,t' ~:;4=!~ m;~· 5:5~ ·-c 1111 plal'9 for COWICI and "" ........... --c.-. &:::' .... _... ._'Ii..._ c.-Pl~ Newpon ANALYll9 °'POL· ......... lWI II GI IMotl·Cott• ...... ICI Of'iRATIOffS • ::...-:--.'-;.:: Dillr PlaC .... .. ~ •;::, .. oon- .. .,. 11111 ... ..... tt, ti. aooo .. " .. "'°" " ........ ?lY IW .. ,i. ....... lie ... 7 1 $ .. ...... .. fl ..... • "'""" .... ".~ ,...GEIPled ; Dolly Pi1ot GIRU RNNIS Mustangs roll past the nuers, 12-6 TUSTIN -Hilary HClvanl, Sung Lee Kim and Misa ~ swept in singles to Jead COila · Mesa High to a 12-6 seaJOn· opening nonleague girls ten- nis win M~ Tustin. Costa Mesa 12. 1\dtin ' Singles -Havens (CM) def. Ocampo, 6-4, def. Kinsley, 6-0, def. Dang, 6-1: Kim (CM) won, 6-0, 6-0, 6-3; Lee (CM) won, 6-4, 6-1, 6-0. OcM.llblel -Doal\'"Vu (CM) lost to Par1c-Klll\ 2-6, lost to Tar-Chopra, S-7, lost to Gomez•Mehan, S-7; Nguyen-Pham lost. 5·7, won, 7-5, 6-0; Maddox-Lau (CM) lost, 0-6, M,won, 7-6. JC GOLF occ women win Orange Coast College's women's golf team (1·2) got its first win of the season Monday, squeezing past Fullerton at Alta Vt.Sta Golf Course with a 4-strok e mar- gin, 374-378. Maricela Dietrick led the way with an 85, followed by Julie Gutierrez.Farley (88). JennJ'( Quaranta (97), Joyce Roeder ( 104) and Joan Neri '104). Fullerton's Hye Yoon Jung was the medalist Wlth a 75. Polley Hule.<, and dcndline.'l url· 1mbjet·1 1u chon~r ... i1ho111 11oti1·r. Tlw pultli"hrr rr~4'trv~ th<· rigfat 10 c·r11l!(11', r1'rlm.~ifv. tt\il\C or n-jr<1 un~· rw~:iifi1·<I . By Fax (Q49) b~ t-u;)9-t "" (Pk·u ... · inrlu1k· \OUr nauw nnd phont nu111hcr 111111-.,:11 rail ~ou h.irL •irh n prtrc quocr.} , ByPbone (9i9) 642-.16?8 Hours By Malllln Person: 330 Wrst Bnr Strcrt Costa ~le a. C'A 9262? \1 \c•pon Bh1I & Bu~ Si. -Deadllnes --- Monday ............... Friday S:OOpm Tues<lay ............. Monday 5:00pm Wednesda} ........ Tuesday 5:00pm Thursday ...... \\fd nesday 5:00pm r riday ............. Thursday 5:00pm ad"rrtL.,rmr111. Plru'>(' n·11011 nm 1·1l or 1truL OIU) hr in )Otar du,.,ifiNI u;I i1111nc<liI1td). Tlir Duih Pilo1 u1·1·1·ph no lial1ili1~ for u11y nror in 1111 advertbt-1111·111 for "liid1 ii lllU\ lw ttSpOfl~it.lf' l'~t"tpt for tl1r "'"' of r!w spare• anunll) occ·11pi<·1I It~ 1l1r rrmr. Credit t"flll onl~ I'll' ullo\\ c·1I f111 1'11· fiJ'llt i.11srniou. Telephone 8:30am-5:00pm Monday-Friday Walk-In 8:30am-5:00pm Monday-Friday Satu r<la) .............. Friday S:OOpm Index ... 94 . , , , : . ~ • ,6 - G:t fOUAl HOUSING OPPORTUNITY AJ re~ ..Utt acMft•MllO In lhll newspal)lf Is Sllbjee1 10 UM f'edlrll fllr Houslno Act of 1968 as amended which makes 11 ltteoar to lld"'111se •any preference timllallon or dtscrlmtnatlon baud on race. color. retla· ton. sex. handlup, tar1111fa1 sutus or lllliollll oooln. 0t 111 lnm11lon 10 mall• any Midi pnftttnGt, hmrtallon or dila1mlnltion • This fttW19aper Wiii not knowingly acc1p1 any 1dv1r1isem1nt for real tSlatl wtl6cll ts 111 ~lion ol lhLJN. Out rlldlrs n htf~ 1nfOflntd 11111 Ill owellngs llMftlsecl '" this :=: 111 ~on To CD111Tn11:=i Nlloll, Clli HUO tol·lrle at 1-80CM24-8580 1 ·IS 101. 216 400. 412 NPB 30th SI. PENTHOUSE 2br, U bl condo, g11nltt lllt, By Owntr reduced to $475,000 714-t6t-96M PRIME ESTATES Lott & O.:.n Vlewal Call Pltrlclt T tnOf'I Agent 949-85&-9705 OCEAN V1lW CONDO S20t,OOO. Good loc. Cannan &pot lgl PNo Ca R!dy 949-642·3873 THE BLUFFS rtmod twnllm. ()pen Sun 1-6 •20 & ' . . ........ .. \I , "'\ . . ' af ·461 ·El· 470-471 · 2131 VIN l.-clo Popi.Car Coltllgl a.mar 3bf 2ba. ~Condo. 2tlf Iba. G model 4tw :Ill ere! 11111 hM Mn. pdol, lrpic. 2 cat dellehiel_ g1WC1 ...._ _____ _, 1 1 -~MfML 1 -loc-on....::;°'*1-"'-'-'JPIC'--='-'-!VIV-~pool-_gw_w_t>_. 9_mo_IM_$2500 __ • • ID. olln ftAlers ~ Point RMJ.-t flOft UL.I $475.000 Ownerlblu 134 Topez 949-673-8126 QI!, $1800 !82·5!!6)>583 ~ In IMne. r=::...=..:.:~=..:=::.1 949-7 I 8·9614 Olln ill ll'Mdom yo11 Older Style Fumiturt ' IMlonOI Mltlr AlnWI ' dlswt Ind Iha indepand.. PIANOS & Collectlblfl Ntwty returt> b 3ba. 2_.Br from Sl,000-$2,IOO. lflCI ...,., ,..-1or )'Oil • ..,.._ • - •V.A.• ......... ,_COUNSELING FMI UST OF HOMES HUONA REPOS. 71WS41100 I .. LM.• .. ...,.1 1411* ~in QIMI <* Clll lki'T _,.. Aeatty ·-..,..... 8-889! ·-·-·()llQ"'--v' ~ ol 1$ Shered W/O, 1 MH73-7800 ,..Mmenl 800=27 98 $$ CASH PAID $$ FOR SALE gai 1p Se!Jl.Yltt $2800 www lisewlttCOITI Of ca• _....,.._...._ . Agt 949~73·4062 U00 ISLE 28' 211, tip, I • 8 0 0 · S I 8 l I N G ARIZONA NORTHWEST 551-e789 lntellor COUllyatd. 2 Cit (CAI. ·sc ANl 40 icr .. ·$16.900 great ,__ _____ _, garage. no:-. S2800fmo DONATIONS WANTED ........ 1111. nnv....., ..... _ ___;83=.:...1~;;:;..i...1;..;;;135:;;;__ l&i!iiifiiiii!ft!jili;ij;Wi9!tl ......,, ~ ... _, .,., A llwl 3br ..... For R11111m191 Sate. To mountain viewl, good Wiie! -V ""°• Ill fOf c.mo 1.ree Easy terms. Call ~ remod~kllchenS2aMinemow :",:!. ~':; .~.'.'.!· ~ ~ C.. ctr: AZLR 1·888·547·67311 .... ,....., · """' '.--_..., t C yw 1M. VI N. Bay Fronl lrplc, WIO, !!If, St800lmo MM41 ..... 1c1.1.·s ANI Call e1woe-7928 t uht 7f4-865-2999 l I 3&a Welk to 8llboa II. 1br 1111, G = 1 1• M'11 I ::::::.. lie,~::: dlslgMr fum condo. gar, _ _ IA&.IOA lklll, 2 patiol. gniw. Ill' ~ IOI> unit. _.. Olill. p~ IVll. $295(). 949-673-3059 pool $1800 31().440.5227 = j !.: == ,. -.:1°1 ::rH~~1r&"'io 11 ..: I I IAYSHORll COTTAGE 11750 Mf.$!!-5038 I 333 _ _ ::=======~::'.'.;::'.::'.~ 'V'~-:s;:~---. ' ,, ... · ..... .: -. ' . ,. ~ • ~ MANAGERS • SPECIALt $154.00 t tax Wltly PM! llf'lllll .. ~ 23&11111llOlctlnll. ~on~ ~~ lobby/Otrtct -.1 DflonM/FrM l480, t:SPN I 011o'Poo1 I JICUUI, Olllll ........ dry CloM to .eo5 I !6 Fwyt. Wn'I '""' o.c. ~ ........ Miii Wllldng •· ... '° .. lfld ......... COSTA lllESA MOTOR NI .,, ........ ......... _ WOlPP '~ llDI TNf AT HCM BUY DIRECT N«J tAVll COMMEACWJHOME '* "°"' 11 ... 00 ~ ... ~5 Cll l:fOO-ZLJ ............... ..... c.. .. 2111. 11ctlon t 01 SI 100 •.• ll .... ,.lJ, .' .. ' I· I , I ' GE 1 Cydl EDI Lllf9' ..... 1150, HotPolllt Drpr f!OO MNQ-3Cm ,,,, ................ ,,,, W~, SISOlll. ,,,, a.. .... $150. lOnt OO!!dl ........ .. '80·'86 690. 697 Full·Umc Day A "Uilll lhlb Top-prodt.aeeB higher ·~lblil-. ·~-I P. .......... ·r...-... ~ .. , ... c-Naa · ~= .......... 7 .. ................. , ... _. Reach 80,000 Homes E.ach Week For Only $28 per week (4 wk, min.) Call LonalH at 642·5671·x24 21 Bolton Ml* .., Oulr'lal l.-lld! .,,... TEACHERS 250 HP y...,._ 290 In Ou< H~llllg!On Stach $2P 9-5 orly ~?!O=!@ and Fountain Vllfly KinderCerea era 21ft 1• DUffY seatthng lor TMdllfl ELECTRIC BOAT ~ Mlh $ITlillng ,.. kif ............ ... CMd. cu Fii enrolrntn. 5 or Mt P!rly 11....wm more ECE l.nlS FT rel .._benefits_94_H_s_,._,;:n_1_~___ ... 1 _"' __ .,_m __ • __ n___.I , AIR Billing Clerk ........ _. ... ........... ......,.., ... ,.. ..... ... ...., ... ...... ............ ....... .... .., .... II -I $ 8 = ........ ....... _ ..... ,. ... :: •. ·.:= .. .. ............ ..... Slwwd ..... "-50"4 mo 11111ga. m ..... idnl cond. Mbol Yldll BalMe. ~ f9q'd $500!mo, ~· CLASSIC 8udt ,._. 1 .. S.. lb 8-Ay S!.750 ...... -= ..,,,. ==--In -..,..,,r-··-..... ··- I TODAY'S CROSSWQRQ PUZZLE SELL YOUR USED VEHICLE THROUGH LASSIFIED (949} 642-5678 J A GOOD ADI FlxOrout.Com Tiii Alpllt I Aettorlllon (114) 2$M171 Li221443 ... .._.~------~......_..,... ___ -- . ' Bridle TOMMY AT WOii.iC 8ocb vulnenblo. SoWI deall. oewettpdaet .... ROllml ICey..c.d .NORTH Blackwood. wbae the ldna ol trumpe COi.Wiied u a fifth -· Ind melhoCla : ~ J It 9 were availible to Ilk IOI the queen ot 0 Qt 2 ttumpi, .. well. - • AK 9 6 5 We sympathi7.o with Tommy'• WP.ST EA.ST choice of two no trump u the open· ,Ina bid despite lhe -a doubkfoo. • J 1643 • 0107 'Dierowuooway'lbmmywupa o Vold o 16 5 4 3 to deacribe lhi.s holdln& with iny 0 J 6 5 .. 3 0 •• 7 ocher ~ When tlic Staym111 • It I 1 SOUTH • Q J 4 three clobl localed a ~ flt. North •AK 5 2 llked for·aces. Tomm)"• rapon111 o A O t 2 &bowed tbru, and Nonb lnQubed g a about the 11111np queen. By ...,ee-o 3A2 ment, the leCOOd step iDdicaled ~ • leaioo of lhll card, 10 North eJeded ~~ to play. grand st.min hearts. ovu11:t lVEST NORTH EAST Tummy woo lhe dllmood leld In 2HI' .... l• .... hand Ind led • trump to the nine. Ji;i ,_ 4NT ,_ Whereu ordinary moftals would 5• .... 5• .... bav.e been perturbed b;Y lhe S-0 trump U. ,_ 11;1 ,_ break,' Tommy was 111 bis demmL ,_ ,_ Tommy cashed the queen of dia- n..-:~a lead: Fout of o monda. ICC>ting of cha Ind ace-...,......... Dig of lp9des, ddclrdJn& dummy's Allhou&h ~ly Ml average player remlining diamond oo ihe ICCUld except on thotc occasions when ·spade. lrUmJll broke bldly, ThmJp Coup The clOICd baod and dummy -Tonvny WM a student of the pmc. each reduced 10 three !rUrnpl and He loved lddina conventions to his three side-suit cards. A high aoarutr ~. whlch worked wcU when allowed Tommy to rack up lhe lase his putnct was in clw)e of the auc-six lricb while East undcriutfed the lion bw had mlx.ed multi when lase four of lhern helplessly, and 13 Tomm)' mishandled them. His nicks were in the bllg. JAGUAR U 't7 COUPE 40 $40,916 97-6223 BAUER JAGUAR 714-fl3..4IOO LR DISCOVERY '17 Al Iha to¥al Aeacly to got '524780f3055 111,750 LANO ROVER NEW!»ORT BEACH MM40-M45 LR DISCOVERY W FUii powfr, * ml, ~ $19,950 LANO ROVE.A NEWPORT BEACH MM40-6445 LR DISCOVEAY ... F1'I poww, blldt bMUly l7Mn3l3047 ' CAU. LANO ROVER NEWPORT BEACH HH49=f445 LA DISCOVERY '99 Ser1la • low ml, ~ lllMIOf $29,195 LAHO ROVER NEWPORT BEACH MM4M445 LR DISCOVERY 't7 SET, 32,000 mllM, ~~ LANO ROVER NEWPORT BEACH MM4CM445 LR DISCOVERY W SE7, 32,000 .... dlMl 7 pelMCp f56I003l3CM8 $24,850 t..AHO ROVtR NEWPORT BEACH MM40-6445 SELL your unwanted Items through classified A to Z Home ~•'"7Ml•* I Ae11111dllng .-. nillll:lll, qulllly, ,.,. 714-269-7185 !4HJ3:129e -~-;r.- 0.,f' • • ) ' r A ··;.:· . JI. . . ' It. . .. -. LR RANGE ROY£fl 'ti Full poww, 42K mllall 1337851f.!134 $29,llO LANO ROVER NEWPORT BEACH MM4M445 LR RANGE ROVER '16 Full poww, 421( 11111111 133765112134 • $29,llO LANO ROVER NEWPORT BEACH MW40-644$ LR Rarlgl Aovar '16 ~·-.:. LANO ROVER NEWPORT BEACH !4M4CM445 ----------., D YES, SELL MY CAR Run your ad In the Newport Beach- Costa Mesa Dally Pilot and the Hunting Beach- Fountain Valley Independent to reach over 100,000 homes. Fax us this ,,..,.~PltlWllltltao- form with your credit .,., __ Mll<Ali----Molill---- card # or mall with I 8:;-g =:::-.. 8~"":... Pl'OI ----• a~,._. a~5?...._..o.-. a check today! I g:::= g =:..'-:='cs:=---=. R ' kl If a,_~ o c....-.c:-.-a~ ....... un .or a wee g~-g=::.. s=:-.::-= your car does not sell. we'll run it for L _ :_";;'°"">'i::;~~m:-_c.;:..,~-'-_ another week FREEi • • All t~r Just $10'. ~Ot ln~Rel!d.£..1.!! The C&llf. Public· Utllltlee Com· miallon REQUIRES lh8t al UMd t.ous. hold goods ITIOYtfS f)l1nt lhtlr p .u.c. Cll T IUIQw; limol and chaufftrl print tlllr T.C.P. l'IUITib9f lnll~ H you hl¥e a qutt- llcn lbollt .. llOll-- lly al • mo¥1r, ho OI cha\6(, Cll: PU8UC UTIUTIES COMMISION 714-558-4151 I -::-7' " . I t --. -. I • . . PRECISE PlUMlltG Alpeir'I I R«nodell FAEE ESTIMATES L'687398 71~1080 * Roonna 1S p eclallata .,..,,. ,,,..,. ..,. lfAlr 949-722-8846 714-751-8846 '*cl!fW 2