HomeMy WebLinkAbout2000-09-23 - Orange Coast PilotSERVING THE !)IEWPORT -f<.AESA COMtv\UNmES SINCE 1907 ON 1HE WEB: WWW.DAILYPILOT.COM WEEKEND -SEPTEMBER 23-24, 2000
Peirsol does _Newport Harbor proud 2000 OQ§) OLYMPICS
•Friends and a former coach are
looking forward to seeing the
Olympic silver medal winner.
contender.• really humble.•
Misty May
#; ... w -·
This may seem a
surprising revela-
tion for one of his
close friends, but
according to Peter's
sister, Katherine !-..
·another great friend
of Aaron's -Aaron
did not talk about
his swimming
much with his high
Although he now lives in Irvine to be
closer to his training grounds, Aaron will
be a junior at Newport Harbor in the fall.
His silver-medal winning time of 1
minute, 57.35 seconds in the men's 200·
meter backstroke Thursday in Sydney
was the second fastest time he has post-
ed in his young career. He finished .59
seconds behind world record holder
·-:CostaMesa 16°0~1 • Sport Volleyball ~
Danett. Goulet
0AJLY PILOT The gold-medal hopes of
NEWPORT BEACH -While 17-year-
old Aaron Peirsol swam his way to an
Olympic silver medal Thursday, the
world and his fellow classmates at New-
port Harbor High School watched
intensely.
~-· )j
Costa Mesa's Misty May fell to the court Saturday
night as she and partner Holly McPeak were
upset by Brazil's Adriana Samuel and Sandra
Lenny Krazelburg. ·
Although his former swim coach at
Newport Harbor saw his potential, even
he did not realize the magnitude of
Aaron's ability.
Pires in the quarterfinals of beach volleyball at
the Olympic Games in Sydney, Australia.
•1t was really cool,• said Peter Belden,
who has known Aaron since they were
in Junior Lifeguards together. •At first I
thought he was the second in the United
States -I had no idea he was a medal
Aaron Pelrsol school friends. "He'd never
brag or anything,"
she said. "Ever since they started cqlling
hiJ'll an Olympic hopeful, everyone's
been asking him when he was going to
be in the Olympics. But he's always been
"He won every thing he raced in, so
May and McPeak were defeated by Brazil's
Adriana Samuel and Sandra Pires, both of whom
won medals with different partners at the
Atlanta Olympics in 1996.
For complete story, see Sports, 81.
Steve Marble
N01EIOOI
One.fina4
family fareuell
I promised myself I would-
n't write this. I'm not big
on being maudlin, saying
goodbye, getting teary.
It's my last day at the Dai-
ly Pilot, and I'd thought
about stealing away without
making much of a fuss about
things. But then, I didn't
want to be like the old Balti-
more Colts, packing up the
moving trucks in the dead of
night and moving the foot-
ball franchise off to Indi-
anapolis. Tail lights and a
quick glance in the rear
view. Later, Baltimore.
SEE PEIRSOL PAGE AS
I've been at the Daily Pilot
for something like a bazillion
years, so it's probably high
time I moved on. Starting .
Monday, I'll be at the Los
Angeles limes. I leave
behind good memories, good
friends and an office that's in
serious need of cleaning.
GREG FRY I OA!t.Y PILOT
Ststet Mary vtanney, the prlndpal of SL John the Baptist School in Costa Mesa, has spent 26 years
leading the institution, and she has no plans on leaving.
Funny, but I probably
never would have ended up
in Orange County -let
alone at the Daily Pilot -
had not some long ago cour-
thouse reporter murdered his
wife one morning. The
reporter was in a dark mood,
evidently. Suspicious his wife
was cheating on him, he'd
spent the night drinking,
thinking bad thoughts. He
caught up with his wUe at a
Santa Ana restaurant where
she was waiting to be seat-
ed. He stabbed her to death.
In fact, a patron had to bang
him over the head with the
•Please Wait to Be Seated"
sign to get him to halt the
carnage.
Matter of principal
The net result of all this
was a sudden and very ,
unexpected opening at the
Daily Pilot. I was mulling
SEE MARBLE PAGE A8
D•nett• Goulet
DAILY PILOT
S be had to change her
name. Her career and
home were chosen for her.
But it was Sister Mary
Vianney's decision to stay at St.
John the Baptist School in Costa
Mesa for 38 years, dedicating her
.life not only to God but also to the
school and its pupils.
With the rapid turnover of prin-
cipals here in Newport-Mesa
schools, Sister Vianney, the
school's principal for the past 26
years, is a shining example of the
longevity parents long for.
•1 think Sister Vianney is the
heartbeat of St. John the Baptist,•
said Melody Esquer, a past St.
John student and mother of a cur-
rent pupil. •tam just in fear of the
Race for Cure ge1s personal
•Qty leaders to honor
former conference and
visitors bureau chief in
Sunday's event that raises
money to fight breast cancer.
died of breast cancer, leaving
behind two children.
Sunday morning, thousands of
people will flood Newport Beach in
a contbtUec:I effort to help her keep
that promise by partidpattng in the
SUND o. Kornen Breut Cancer
POundation Race for the Cwe.
1»91•"9 Goulet • Wltb l5,000 partldputl lut
DMY Pk.OT .~yeu, the race raiMd St.38 rnilUOo · lgbt tnut cancer. Tbil year the
NEWP6RT BSACH • B County allllate -one Of
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•My lllter dl9d in tllO,• ..... Wd rac.-. cbU ...., .. Mid. •1t1g1at b8fal9 11111 Aall•ra
C11111 .._lillmd me to do ...... ' 11 Cf "9 ~railed. 75%...,.
--~ ....... CUM*'.· At• .,.-tlllf• Sulm "1zsn Sii MCI fMI Al
While some local
schools have seen
dissension in the top
ranks, Sister Mary
Vianney has been a
steadfast figure at
St. John the Baptist
school for 26 years
day she would leave. She is St.
John the Baptist.•
As a young woman Jn Ireland,
Vianney joined the Mercy Sisters
convent. wanting to study domes-
tic science. But her Mother Supe-
rior chose a different path for her,
deciding she should go into edu-
cation.
Vianney was dispatched from
her home in County Meath, Ire-
land to Costa Mesa, where she
began teaching at the second-
grade level.
To still be at the same school 38
yean later is not common, even
for her order. Most nuns move on
after about 10 years or so, she
said~ut Vtanney never wanted to
leave.
·There is a fantastic spirit at
this school among the parents and
faculty that I fail to find anywhere
else,• she said. "They work bard
for Catholic education -it's not
cheap. There's no place I'd rather
be than here right now.•
Vianney attributes the length of
SEE SISTER PAGE A10
JS
1
Piecemakers
run into
problems
again
• Tensions escalate
between group and
health officials, who
find new code violations
at the country store.
Jennifer Kho
DAILY PILOT
COSTA tv1ESA -A supe-
rior court judge decided Friday
that the Piecemakers Country
Store must correct additional
health code violations county
officials found there this week.
But despite an escalation of
tension between the group and
the Orange County health
department, the judge did not
extend the Piecemakers' pro-
bation period, which is sched-
uled to end in December.
The Mesa Verde business,
tun by a fiery religious group
that tangles often with local
government, had previously
been cited for a number of
other health code violations
and ordered to shut down its
tea room restaurant and candy
counter. It is on probation with
both the city and the county,
with regular, unannounced
inspections as one of the con-
ditions.
According to the inspection
report, the most recent viola-
tions included giving out bJead
samples and selling bulk foods
without a permit, having
incomplete labeling and hav-
ing plants in the kitchen.
Inspectors also allegedly found
three dead cockroaches under
an unused dishwasher.
The judge ruled the store's
packaged foods must have
either •display only• labels or
manufacturers' labels, bread
samples must be discontinued
and, if packaged foods are
stored in the kitchen, the
refrigerator must have a ther·
mometer and potted plants
must be removed.
The violations are minor,
the judge said. Health depart-
ment spokeswoman Pat
Markley agreed, saying the
SEE VtOLATION MG£ A 10
11111 .
Elim . AS
CIAllllS IS
Cll ITI&Gm M
Cll n.-AIS ••1111 All -II llJ _ ....... • ...... • -• -• • mis• •
..
A2 Saturday, SepMmber 23, 2000
Funerals testa,numt
to the difference
they made
"Death is a challenge. lt tens Ult
not to WCL!te time. It tells ult to tell
each other right now that we love
each other.•
U nfortunate
have been
to five
funerals in the last
five months. Fortu-
nately I knew five
outstanding indi--
viduals whose lives
impacted mine and
countless others
while they were
alive. Their inOu-
ences will continue
far into the future.
There were
many similarities in
the funerals. ln
each service, we
honored and
remembered some-
-Leof.
Buscalglla
QndyTrane
Christeson
THE MORAL
OF THE STORY
one special. We eel·
ebrated a loving person who made a dif-
ference in our lives. We sang beautiful
hymns, listened to comforting words and
heard moving tributes from family,
friends and coworkers. We laughed at
some of the funny stories and aied when
we realized the magnitude of the loss.
During each service, I looked around
crowded churches and realized that each
of us present could probably share many
stories about what the person had meant
to us. It would take days for everyone to
recount the love that had been shown
and the encouragement that had been
given. There is no way to measure the
many ways these people inspired young
and old alike.
I recently overheard a woman say to
her friend, #What difference does one
person really make anyway?"
I wanted to interrupt and say, "Let me
tell you about five men and women who
showed that one person makes more of a
difference than anybody will ever know.
The hundreds who filled the churches
proved the impact and influence of an
individual."
While working on this column, I read
the following verses in my Bible: "A
good reputation is more valuable than
the most expensive perfume," and ·n is
better to spend your time at funerals
than at festivals. For you are going to
die, and you should think about it while
there is still time."
l reread the verses and realized that l
bad been to funerals a five people who
dearly made the most ol their time while
they were on this earth. I like to think that
those five wonderful people are oow enjoy·
ing a well-deserved reward in heaven.
I heard a great comment about heav-
en at one of the services. Tbirteen-year-
old Grant was with his grandfather
when be passed away. Afterwards Grant
asked his pastor, "Why was bis mouth
opened when he died?"
His pastor answered, "It's because be
saw heaven and he said, Wow."'
At another funeral, the pastor told us
that our present sorrow is a measure of
the joy that our loved ones brought to
our lives. He added, •pain and joy are.
not mutually exclusive. Joy is not the
absence of pain, but the presence of
God. Let God comfort you.•
Another~ pointed to the future,
saying •God loved each ol you enough to
bless you wilb this person who was so spe-
cial in your lives. He'll be faithful to oontin-
ue loving you even after they are gone.·
The services reminded me to trust
God with my present and my future. The
people, who we will miss and whose
lives we celebrated, reminded me to live
purposefully ud to love freely.
And you-can quote me on that.
• CINDY 11'Mm CHllS1"ISON Is a Newport
Beach resident who speaks frequently to
parenting groups. She may be reached via •
mail at dndyOonthegrow.com or through the
mall It P.O. Box 6140-No. 505, Newport Beach,
CA92658.
Churth Mme: Mariners Church
Address: 5001 Newport Coast
Drive. The main entrance to the
church is on Bonita Canyon
Road.
Telephone: (949) 854-7600.
Web sfte: www.marinen
church.org
Denomination: Non-denomina·
tional, Bible-based.
Year church established: 1963.
Servtce times: Saturday at
6 p.m.; Sunday at 9 a.m. and
11a.m.
Senior pastor: Kenton Beshore.
Pastoral staff: Close to 30 pastors
provide leadership for volunteers
serving in dozens of ministries. ·
Small groups, social events and
bible studies are tailored for men,
women, singles, couples, fami-
lies, teens and children.
Size of congregation: Combined
attendance for the weekend ser-
vices is 5,000.
Makeup of congregation: Demo-
graphically representative of the
Orange County coastal f:Qmmu-
nity ..
Child cant: Dynamic develop-
mental programs for children in
the 6th grade and younger are
held at all weekend services.
Junior and senior high school t
youth meet during the 9 a .m . ser ..
vice.
The church also offers exten-• •
sive mid-week programs for
young people of all ages, which
include kids clubs, junior and
senior high school parties, and
Bible studies. The campus
includes a child development
Center for pre-kindergarten and
kindergarten-age children.
Mariners Church Pre-School is
open to the public, Monday
through Friday. It offers half-and
full-day programs.
~ \ ~ of worship: Worship is a
celebration of one's relationship
with God and with one another.
Contemporary prai&e music is
-led by pianist Bob Gunn. and
includes the choir and the vocal
team. All services integrate mul-
ti-media. Members of the con·
greqation share authentic faith
experiences in their walk with
Christ. The 6 p.m. Saturday
night service is more casual and
offers the best parking and seat-
ing.
~ of sermon: Kenton Beshore
teaches at most weekend ser-
vices providing insightful. real-
life application of God's word
and challenging people to take
their next step of faith. Story,
humor, personal experience and
multi-media illustrations are
used to convey biblical truths in
a range of life experiences.
Faith
CALENDAR
SPECIAL EVENTS
OPEN HOUSE SEUCHOT
Temple Isaiah of Newport.
Beach-Conservative will host an
Open House Selichot -prayen~
and preparation for the Higl
Holy Days -for memben,
friends and newcomen to the
area at 8 p.m. today. It will be
RW>£8S HOIUNE
(949)642~
CA 92626. ~No MWI ..
...... lllustrMlons, edltofW nwcw:
or~Mr.inCMa..
ntpn>duold without wrtttlln ~
VOL M, NO. 228
Record )'(MK c:o1--rn.-mei-.nts-about
the Dally fltlot "' news tipL
ADDRESS
OUf llddrws Ii DO W. Bay St..
Costa Mesa. CA 92627.
COllllECIJONS
It Is the flkt"s polky to ~
ly correct 41111 en'OR of Sl lbsUIQ.
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m . n. NIWport ~ M9ll
~ Not (\JSP5. ,..._ Ii put>.
...... Mondlytfw'Ough ~
In Newport leld\ and Q)lg ......
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County-152 .. 141.ln--outMde ol Nilwport ... ... oi.-.. ............... .. ~ ............ ..,.,
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HOW TO ll£AOt US
Clralllllon
The TIMa ()qnge County
(IOO) 252.f141 .-.. ......
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SAiNT JAMES OtURCH
54lnt Jamel Chutth Is a community devoted to loving Jesus Christ and serving him as Lord
and savtor. A tr8dfdOnM setvke Is hetd on $unday flt 7:30 a.m. A contemporary seNke ls held
on Su~ at t a.m. end a cNrismatk ~ Is held on Sunday at 10:45 a.m. Chlld care Is
pnMded for the 9 end 10:C5 a.m. seMces. Sunday Khool for all children meets at 9 a.m. A
contempe>rary iervice ls held on Wednesday at noon. David Anderson Is senior pastor. The
church Is at 3209 Via Udo, Newport Bffch. For more Information, call (949) 67S-0210.
Daily Pilot
Ill THE SPIRIT
Mariners Church
• SE.AN ..uR I DAA.Y Pl.OT
Pastor Kenton Beshore at the bapUsmal In the courtyard of Mariners Church in Newport Beach.
Recent and upcoming
sennons: "Imagine what God
might do through you."
Welcome wagon: On the week-
ends, visitors can meet with pas-
tors, staff and volunteea; on the
patio before and after each ser-
vice. Ushers give visitors a wel-
come coupon for a free welcome
tape, coffee and pastry available
at the information table on the
patio after services. Also helpful
to visitors is the church's website
at www.mariners
church.org.
Outreach programs: The
emphasis is on getting people
involved in reaching out to oth-
ers, not just writing checks to
suJ1port outreach ministry.
Thousands of Mariners volun-
teers a.re engaged in th~ Light·
house Ministries, which focus
on needs in the local communi-
ty. A particularly unique min-
i..stJ'y, launched more than 10
years ago by church volunteers,
is the Minnie Street Leaming
Center in Santa Ana. In partner-
ship with residents of this
densely populated immigrant
community in Santa Ana, volun-
teers work hand in band to
train, equip, love and provide
for the residents living on Min-
nie Street. The learning center
is located in the neighborhood
and offers after-school tutoring
for students of 4lfi ages. Resi-
dents can take adult classes in
parenting skills, English and
Bible studies. The church's
global outreach provides world-
wide missions partnerships and
held at the temple, 2401 Irvine
Ave. (949) 548-6900.
HIGH HOLY DAYS BEGIN
Rosh Hashana, Jewish New
Year, will be celebrated at the
Temple Isaiah of Newport Beach
at 8 p.m. Friday with a festive
reception hosted by Rabbi Marc
Rubenstein. Rosh Hashana is
Sept. 30. The temple is at 2.401
Irvine Ave. (949) 548-6900.
NEWVISION
New Thought Community
support. Short-term "Faith
Adventures· b'ips provide
churchgoers of all ages a cross-
cultural experience to extend
themselves and God's love to
all nations of the Earth. Volun-
teers raise their own support for
travel and work. Some of their
latest efforts include setting up
a drug and alcohol addiction
recovery ministry with Mariners
Church's sister church in Egypt,
a singles conference in the
Ukraine, and a business train-
ing center in Kazakstan.
Dress: Saturday services are very
casual.
Church design: The church has a
25-acre campus whert ministry
activities are offered seven days
a week. The worship center seats
as many as 2,000 per serv1ce.
The church ls working with the
city an~ community to expand
the campus with a new worship
center, welcoming park-like set-
tings, dynamic youth and chil-
dren's buildings, a wedding
chapel. parking and recreational
areas.
Mission statement The church's
mission is to develop fully-devot-
ed followers of Jesus Christ, peo·
pie who love God, growing in
loving community and reaching
out in love to the world. four
key values govern the activities
of the church: 1) Honor God in
all we do; 2) Teach God's word
and be God's family1 3) Every
believer is a minister with a min-
istry and 4) To be innovative in
our ministry and relevant to our
community.
Church will bold 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.
HARVEST FESTIVAL
Newport Mesa Christian Cen-
ter will bold a Harvest Festival
from 5:30 to 9 p.m. Oct. 31 as an
alternative to traditional Hal-
loween b'ick-or-~ating. The fes-
tival, designed for children 2 to
12, includes rides, games booths,
WUTHEI lllD SUlf
1B V lllATURES
8aR>o. COSTA MESA
Upcoming events; ·Boundaries
in Dating," a seminar that teach-
es some of the secrets of dating
successfully, will be held 9 a.m.
to 4 p.m. Oct. 21 . Call Ext. 349
for more information.
"Single Parent Connection•
will be held from 7 to 9 p.m. Fri·
days. There will be special
speakers and topical discussion
for the single parent family. Call
Ext. 431 for more information.
There will be a workshop
titled "Parenting on Purpose: the
Keys to Raising Great Kids• from
9 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. on Oct. 14.
Call Ext. 3870 for more informa-
tion.
A small group Bible study will
be held from 7 to 8:15 p.m. Tues-
days Sept. 26 through Nov. 14.
For more information, call Ext.
380.
"Men in the Marketplace·
meets 6:30 to 8 a.m. the second
Tuesday of each month. Guest
speakers address issues in the
workplace. For more information,
call (949) 222-1221.
"Be a Contagious Christian,·
which teaches sharing your faith
in a style natural for your person-
ality, will be held from 11 a.m. to
1:30 p.m. Nov. 17 and 18. The
cost is $35 for classes, lunch and
workbook. For information call,
Ext. 583.
"SHAMBALA" is held Tues-
day nights. It is a crazy program
for junior high youth, including
games, cool videos and small
group discussions. Call Ext. 323
for more information.
-Michele M. Marr
an In-N·Out burger dinner and
lots of candy for $5. The center is
at 2599 Newport Blvd., Costa
Mesa. (714) 966-0454.
WO II SHOPS
MESSAGES FROM THE STARS
New Thought Community
Church ln Costa Mesa will pre-
sent an astrology workshop with
the Rev. Bob Pulllam from 10 a .m.
to noon today at 1929 Tustin Ave.
(949) 646-3199.
POLICE FRES
6MS
Corona del Mar
66155
1'W>IS
TODAY
First low
12!51 a.m .................... .0.1
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• E.-t t1th Str.t: Grand theft w~ r.ported In the 100
b4ock at 5:17 p.m. ~.
Colt.a Mela
6&455
Ne'tupOtt had\
"'55
Netuport c.o.st
IMS
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block ft t'.32 a.m. ~
• AlrW9Y A"""9: An auto ttl9ft was repotted In tt.
l 100 btock It 11 :36 a .m. Thunday.
........ ,..... Commercial burv'3ry W9S ~In
the J)OO bloct at4'A2 p.m. ~·
• ... 1rlor Aw: PW)' theft wet nlPOf1lld In h
1700blockat1:26 p.m. ~ .
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Daily Pilot Saturday, SepMmber 23, 2000 A3
Here~ a list of folks who have influence in my life
0 ur group does not have
a meeting room. dues
or rules.
We know of each other
but most of us are not bud-
dies. We are called the
"FOL," or, "Friends of Lin-dA." .
"Linda" is Linda Scbulein,
the first pick on my short list
of those not mentioned in the
Daily Pilot's 103 Most Influ-
ential People edition that
appeared Wednesday.
I have ·bad the great honor
of calling myself a "FOL" for
at least 10 years. During that
time, I have watched Linda
get involved in many good
organizations around New-
port Beach and Costa Mesa,
giving both her time and
resources to help people in
need, or to inspire those with
potential to reach new
heights ..
It is her work at Costa
Mesa's Orange Coast Inter-
faith Shelter, in particular,
that has made a difference in
the lives of so many people
struggling to get back on
track.
l&."l.
Steve Smith
~: Lewer home~
less families where you live,
or no visible homeless, or if
there are kids who got back
on track at school through
inside or outside help, I'd say
the chances are good that
there's a touch of Linda
Scbulein there somewhere.
In the local world of helping
others, the six degrees of sep-
aration leads back to Linda
Scbulein.
Just behind Linda is her
husband, Jeff, our good fami-
ly mend and Cay's employer.
Over the years Jeff has
served as my sounding board
on so many things. He's t.Qld lications work hard to avoid.
me not what he thinks I want That six degrees of sepa-
to hear, but what I need to ration is at work here, too, in
know. Everyone needs a Jeff the local business and family
Schulein in theif life. writing world. In that world,
And there are others who I everything leads back to
believe belong on this list. Chunn Publishing.
Newport Beach serves as Then there are Dorothy
the headquarters of Chunn and Zane Leshner of New-
Publishing, which produces port Beach. Zane is, to me,
the successful OC Metro an<l__ "Mr. Restaurant," for he has
OC Family Magazines, only ~oped some of the area's
two of the many they create finest eateries. Dorothy is
each month. another person who devotes
My association with her time and resources to
Churm dates back to June helping others. Together,
1998, and since then I have they have made oui commu-
contributed at least one story nity a better place to live.
or column fot a Churm publi-Also on my list would be
cation every month, except my friend, and UJe managing
one. editor of Costa Mesa's OC
Steve Churm, publisher, Weekly, Matt Coker, a former
Craig Reem and Kevin Daily Pilot features editor and
O'Leary, editors, are as pro-columnist.
(essional a team as I've ~ver In the five years that the
encountered. Weekly bas been around, it
Their strong journalism has developed an impressive
backgrounds have helped list of investigative stories
define the Orange County and the staff has won many
bu&ness community and tak-awards for their efforts,
en the lead, a sometimes Anthony Pignataro's "Air-
unpapular place to be, on port Watch" was a big reason
issues that other, similar pub-behind the passage of Mea-
~
Herbal Teas
• BtathEasy
sure F earlier this year. Over
the years, the words "It's
someone from OC Weekly on
the phone," have become the
local version of receiving a
call from Mike Wallace of "60
Minutes."
My list would also include
our neighbors for the past 13
years, Norman and Lud.lle
Fricker.
Norman h~ been inspir-
ing students as a champi-
onship debate coach at
Orange CoaSt College and
recently attended a fund-rais-
er for Sal linajero, a former
student who is now a teacher
and a candidate for a seat on
the Santa Ana school board.
At OCC, Sal earned
numerous national and
regional speech and debate
awards, with the help and
jnspiration of Norman Frick-
er. Norman and Lucille have
been Estancia boosters for
years, even now, long after
the graduation of their
youngest daughter, Cari.
It is interesting to note that
although Supt. Robert Barbot,
assistant superintendent
Mike Fine, district literacy
guru Julie Chan and
teacher's union president Lin-
da Mook all made the list. not
a single school board mem-
ber was designated.
My criticism of the board
is no stranger to this space,
but I've applauded them
when they succeed, as they
did recently with the higher
SAT scores and higher num-
ber of Scholastic Assessment
Test participants.
I'd put Dana Black on my
list and Jim Ferryman. too.
Take a good Look at the
103 list.
If you need help under-
standing why they made ttie
List, pay dose attention to the
words accompanying the
photo of Mark Schultheis, iJ1fts year's No. 1.
These are the peop.le who
are malcing a difference
around town, who have busy
lives just as you do, but still
seem to find the time to help.
• STEVE SMITH is a Costa Mesa res-
ident and freelance writer. Readers
can leave a message for him on the
Daily Pilot hotline at (949) 642-6086.
• Vanilla
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SUGG. "17.25
Oaity Pilot
PLlllllG CO .. ISSIOI WIAP•UP ShOres Apartments sail away
Inside
CITY HALL
WHIT HIPPElllD:
Commisslonen approved
plans for an equestrian perk In
Santa Ana HelghU.
WHIT IT MElllS:
The Orange County planning
and development services depart·
ment will submit ~~-·~ the califomla
Coastal Commls-
sion for approval.
The park will
include fenced-in riding and
lunging arenas. An area known
as "the mesa,• which has lost all
vegetation due to hoNe riding,
will be fe~ed off to plant native
plants and restore this section of
the bluffs in the Upper Bay.
WHAT THEY SAID:
"Go ride 'emf• Edward Sellch,
planning commission chairman
to riders in the audience.
WHAT HAPPENED:
Commissioners adopted a rM-
olut1on that recommends City
Co~ncil approval of a General
Plan Amendment. prezoning, and
developer agreement for New-
port Coast and Newport Ridge.
WHAT IT MEANS:
This brings the city one step
closer to annexing the neighbor-
.. HARBOR CHRISTIAN CHURCH l. (DIRlplea Of Christ)
2401 Irvine Ave. at Senta lnbel
Newport BIJ.Ch
Sunday Worship • 10:00AM
Dr. Denni• W. Short Minister (949) 845-5781
\\int Michael & All Angels
P.afic v....,., M~nrc
C.-.. Jd Mar • 644-0463
8l/TWING OUR Mmh lJJVfNG OIRJST
AND SERV1NG OUR <XJMMUNrrr
The Rcv'd Peter D. Haynes, R«tor
SUNPAY SCHEDULE
8 am -Holy Eucba.rUt
9 am • Adah Bible Study
I 0 am -Choral Eacharltt
hoods to the south. WNle the
city would tlk• over flre, police
~community MfVlces. ft would
not get fnvolVed In deddfng on
land UM In the w =-.!:~ cNtge of plan-
ntng until the
dewlopment Is
completed. Commissioner Steven
Kher voted against adoption of
the resolutl0t1. saying he had not
had enough time to review the
development agreement Com·
missioner Anne Gifford
abstained due to a pos.slble con-
flict of Interest.
WHAT THR SAID:
•It's troubling to me that we
are not going to have anything
to say {about land use In New-
port Coast)• Michael C. Kranz·
ley, planning commissioner.
WHIT HAPPENED:
Commissioners approved the
Mariner's Mile Strategic Vision
and Design Framework.
WHIT IT MEANS:
The document proposes
guidelines to give the stretch of
road a more c~herent look by
adding landscap-~ ;ng and <egulat· ing signs. The
document now
will go before
the City Council.
Commissioner Steven Kiser
abstained due to a possible con·
fl let of interest.
ST. MARK PRF.sBYl'ERIAN
CHURCH
"Open Arms and Open Minds"
Worship 9:30
New Thought
Commu.aity Cluardl
"CIUld Centered Service"
Where families with children
panicipatc and and worship
• rogcthcrl
CC.C Savice lOiOO ..,
Picnic, Cake, Games. Fun, 11:00
(Bring Your Lunch)
1 ......... Cllll-c Ft CWt
G-SpeMa Son-ice I 0-.30
Dr.Kn Gray <•> ..... ).---......
Luth.,.n CllUrch
CLL.O.A.J ,....,...... ................
Tretlltlowitl ..........
PaalewDewWM• .... ...................
HotrCel-WfllH ...... ~ .. t•-·
OIMDOAllll AYM•"U
.,Simply A Matter
Of Choice•
(Matthnl 7:13·2?)
....,_ f c I U. 2-. ltJO RM.
,..,. •• a J4, ...... , • ., A.II.
Wiii llllY SAIDI
•1•m YefY heppy to see tNs
kind of effort come to fruition•
5hant Aga~ ~nlng com-
mlaloner.
WUI lllPPllllD:
c~ approved new
sign regulatJons for Balboa
Peninsula.
WHAi II MEANS:
The document encooreges
business owners on the peninsula
~to·-~· signs wtth more
creative~
Outing the first
few years of the
new regulations,
merchants will receive financial
and design assist.ince for new
signs. All nonconforming signs
will have to be taken down 15
years after the new policy takes
effect. The proposal now goes
before the City Council.
SOUNDING OFF
~is has Irvine written all
•The· affordable housing complex in Corona
del Mar was tom down to make way for a
new 00-home, upscale community.
Mathl$Wlnkler
OMV Pit.OT
CORONA DEL MAR -A
few dozen Wed columns
sticking out of the ground are
all that's left of the Shores
Apertments.
John Laing Homes, which
tore down the 120-unit com-
plex earlier this summer,
threw a kickoff party Thurs-
day for the upscale neighbor-
hood that will fill the void.
·This is a historical event
for our company,• said nm
McSunas, d1rector of land
acquisition for John Laing.
The new community,
christened •Sailhouse, • will
inclu de 90 homes, some in a
detach~ cottage style, others
clustered together in larger
complexes along Sea Lane.
The project's ' architect,
Mark Scbewer, told an audi-
ence of more than SO that he
had modeled the eclectic
style of the new neighbor-
hood after similar develop-
ments in Florida. He also
emphasized that the homes
would mirror Corona del
Mar's quaint feeling.
Scheurer added that be
saw casual, well-off profes-
sionals as bis target audience
for the new neighborhood.
•This buyer has money,
like it or not,• he said, point-
ing to a slide of a woman dri-
ving a yellow Porsche through
Corona del Mar. •this buyer
has toys, like it or not.•
Future neighbors added
they were looking forward to
a more classy development
across the street.
Residents of thP. old Shores
Apartments had ·been less
than excited about their
homes' demise. however.
When planning comnus.
sioners approved tl:te project
last January, Shores residents
complained that the demo11.
tion would deprive Corona
del Mar of one of the last
remaining low-rent apart.
ment bulldlngs.
McSunas said that all ten-
ants bad been offered a $5()()
moving allowance and a
reduced security deposit for
Irvine Apartment Commum.
ties. a subsidiary of The lrvme
Co. ·u they chose not go to
there. we still gave the ssoo.·
he said, adding that John
Laing had extended the notice
period from 30 to 60 days.
Model homes at Sailhouse
are expected to be completed
by early 2001, with sales for
the homes beginning soon
after. Ranging from 1,367 to
2,383 square feet, prices for
the homes will start in the
high $500,000s.
over it. .. Gated communities are
not in our character. It doesn't
belong in Newport Beach.• -
Allan Beek, 73, voicing his oppo-
Balboa Bay Oub bartender mourned
sltlon to the annexation of New·
port Coast. •Rey Santos, an employee of the club for
more than 40 years, passed away last week.
tlEIT MEETING
Oct. 5, 7 p.m. City Hall,
Mllthls Winkler
DAILY PILOT
3300 Newport Blvd. NEWPORT BEACH - A
few weeks ago, Rey Santos
·worried more about his broth-
Newport Cater
United Methodist Oiu.rch
~-Cachlcen Coots, Pastor
1601 Margucrirc Ave.
comer of Margucricc and
San Joaquin Hills Rd
(949) 644-0745
&zm Quin Worship Smtirt
/Oam w,mhiJ 11"'1 Chi1'Jrmi
SIU1lllJ Sthool
Yttltlh mtttint wttlt/y
First United Methodist Chu rch
of Costa Mesa
420 Wat 19th Strttt, Costa Mesa
Festival of Worship lO:OOam
Rkhard L. Ewhla. Pastor Cburdi Sdaool 9:00eln .t 10:15alll
949-548-7727
ChrUt Cbo..rch by the Sea
United Mahoclist The Church of
Yahweh 1400 w. Balboa 81\'d,. ~ Beadl
9:00 Lm. -Sunday Sdlool foe a.II IF'
10:00 Lm. -Wonfup (with child care)
Tbc Re.. Or. c-p R. Critp. Putw
('49) 6fJ..3805
www.yhwh.com
Pastor Ahyh
Welcome to
Co•ta MeM The Church of Yahweh.
MllA VllDI The church on the web.
UNTID MITHODllT CHURCH ~ You don't haue 1701 a.ker, C.M. to wait 'tll Sunday,
Wonhlp & thurch lchool We are always .,30 9ftfl 'OaOO ...... open!
Or. Ric:ticwd 171-'l 9'19·823" • s,.bai110ocl'•-"YMw911·
"A God-c:c.nccttd parish community. instructed IJt the Word of God
and ren~ by rhc Saaamcna
Our Lady Queen of Angels
2046 Mar VJ.Sta Drive
N~tt Beach, Califomia 92660
(949)644--0200 Fax (949)644-1~9
Rev. Monsignor William P. McLaughlin, Pucor
LITURGIES: S.turday. 5 p.m. {C.unor), Sunday, 7:00 (Qui«), 8:30 (Conumponry), 10:00 (Choir),
l 1:30 e.m. (Cucor) and 5:00 m. cc.on ) ~~~~~~----
FIRST CHURCH OF
CHRIST, SCIENTlST
3303 Via Udo
Newport 8'actl
SECOND CHURCH OF
CHRJST, SCIENTlST
3 llX> Padac v..w Dr.
Newpcrt 8ladl
673-1340 Of 673-6150
Oturdl 10 am a 6 pm.
~ Sd'Q0& 10 am ~ MM!lro•Pll
644-2611a:675-4661
OlwchJOam
~ Sd'loal 10 am ................ ,.. ., •• ,• •• 11-
1 ·-· ···* ""'7-f • IMrl .. .,.,. _,... ...... " . .,.,
a a
er's life than his own.
Ruben Santos. 59, had
been hospitalized with a bac-
terial infection and Rey, 60,
visited him to cheer him up.
"You're not going to die on
me.• Ruben remembered his
brother saying. •You better
get well so that we can go
and have dinner at Todai next
week."
Ruben has recovered from
his illness. in time to join
about 150 family members
and friends Friday to mourn
Rey's death a few days earlier.
A bartender at the Balboa
Bay Club for more than four
decades. Rey slumped over a
beverage cart late Saturday
night and never regained
..... consciousness. An autopsy
revealed that he died of
blocked arteries. Ruben said.
·u•s almost as if God said,
"You love (your brother) so
much. Would you like to take
his place?•• Ruben said, sit-
ting in a circle with other rel-
atives in his brother's garage.
Santos' youngest son, Mar-
joe, remembered his father as
a •c1assy guy.•
•Dad, since you passed
away -all you have given me
is strength,• the 20-yea.r-old son
eulogized his father at Friday's
funeral. ·1 have no fear of any-
thing anymore, not even death
... One day when I have a son, I
hope that I can be just as great
a father as you are. Dad. you
JEFF 8t LYLEEN
EWING
ENERGY EFFICIENCY
Home buyers in the new
millennium are increasingly
concerned about the rising cost
of energy. It is common for
buyers to ask about utility costs
and energy efficiency when they
are considering a home. One
way to reduce enerJy costs is as
imple u changing your light
bulbs-from standard ones 10
compact nuore50en1 bulbs which
are deslaned to fit most standard
ttght fixtures and lamps.
The initial purchase price of
compact fluorescent bulbs may
seem a little stc:eJ>--lhey aveflge
between SJ3 to $20 per bulb-but
they last at lcut 10 lillle$ longer
than a standard li&ht bulb and
will reduce your energy bills
significantly. Manufacturers
estimat.& that durfna the life of a
sinale bulb you wilJ reduce your
e~ bill by over $40. As an
added bonus, the electric
company will be able to reduce
carbon dioxide emission by
appro1timately half a ton per
replacement bulb. Compact
nuorescenu don't work with
dimmer awitchet, and if UJcd
oucdoott, you should make swe
dw the fi1tru"' la -ell·\'t:otilated
lftd proleCted from rain.
Lyleen and Jerr ha\'e 28
con~uti vo )'CUI Of real estate
••pencnct In Nowpon Be.tch, 11.7 ~ C'oldv.-cll Banker'• ti
.,.nu. For proc~ ~ice
or id¥1oe with all you ~ eMMe = the 1-.,. .. (Mf)
~nt
Rey Santos
used to tell me that Mulldm·
mad Ali was the greatest But to
me. you're the greatest·
Santos' c~at the Ball>Od
Bay club began ost imme·
diately after he his ltvl'
siblings le~ their hometown in
the Philippines in 1958 tQ JOtn
their father in California. iheLr
father prepared vegetable'!> for
the club and got jobs for tus
sons as well.
Rey Santos eventually tned
his luck as a bartender -d
job that paid better than the
washer's $1.45 hourly wage.
Over time, Santos worked
his way up the ladder,
befriending famous club mem·
bers such as John Wa yne.
When he died, he held the btle
of beverage supervisor.
"From the perspective of
an employer, be was perfect,·
said Dieter Hissin, the dub's
director or food and bever-
ages. Together with Santos'
colleagues, he had prepared
food for Friday's memorial di
Santos' Garden Grove home.
Others who worked wllh
him said Santos had trained
them for the job.
•He was a beaulillii" man,·
said Hector Espinoza. ·He
showed me everything in the
world. We called him the
"King Mai Tai.' He got the
best recipe in the world from
a Hawaiian. People loved the
Mai Tai's."
Santos' mentor at the dub
added that Santos was a cor·
dial, reliable and cheerful col·
league, who was loved by
club members.
·we're going to miss bun,·
said C. Joe Devine, 80. "How·
ever, the show must go on."
Santos leaves behind bls
wife, Lawa; his children Lor·
na, Rey Jr., Usa, nna.
Rochelle and Marjoe1 grand·
daughters Cassandra and
Jesstca1 and great-grand·
daughter Kaitlyn.
WHY PAY
DEPT STORE
PRICES?
Visit our
AREA RUG STUDIO
Rugs & Runners on
Sale
..
. . '
Daily Pilot
Bar~ains on furniture, frames and fall holiday fun
C orona del Mar's newest specialty
furniture store, Cottage Corona del ~· is having a grand opening
today with an all-day reception from 10
a.m. to 5 p.m. Festivities include an 11 a.m.
!1bbon-cutting ceremony, cookies, old-fash-
ioned 5 cent lemonade and door prizes.
Most of the items in Cottage Corona del
Mar are one-of-a-kind pieces that can be
personalized with custom faux-painted
decorations, while others are high-quality,
cottage-conducive antiques suitable for
use in beach homes or as unusual decor
pieces in larger houses. Smaller specialty
gift items and collectibles are also avail·
able, and all items except large furniture
pieces CCU) be wrapped for any oc(:asion.
Inside ·the store, the selection includes
bed frames, rusted iron patio furniture,
chandeliers, chintz china, magazine cacks,
vintage vanities, benches, tables, vintage
pillows and picture frames.
Cottage Corona del Mar is owned and
operated by Melinda Kent and Janet Ray,
longtime friends who've dreamed of open-
ing up a business together.
Kent is an interior designer and artist
who began painting murals and fwniture
for friends' homes several years ago. Her
faux painting and decorations were a big
success, and she soon became busy with
people wanting to use her artistic talents
to decorate their homes.
Ray is the former operations manager
for Discovery Science Center and previ-
ously owned and operated the Launch Pad
Science Store at the former Crystal Court.
With Kent's artistic talents and Ray's busi·
ness experience, the two decided to open
Cottage Corona del Mar. Cottage ~orona
Greer Wylder
. BEST BUYS
del Mar is open Tues-
day through Saturday
from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
and Sundays from 11
a.m. to 4 p.m. It's
closed on Mondays.
It's located at 2411 E.
Coast Highway in
Corona del Mar.
Information: (949)
566-9339.
SubUe Tones car-
ries the best pajamas,
lounge wear and
casual clothing. There
is also a nice seloction
of shabby chic-like
home accessories including linens, pillows,
sconces, mirrors, candles, chandeliers and
more. This coming Tuesday is a great day
for moms to shop at Subtle Tones. There is a
story time from 10:30 a.m. to 12 p.m. While
kids listen to stories, moms receive 20% off
clothing purchases. The next story times will
be on Oct. 10 and 24. Story time also
includes treats and fun for kids.
Roger's Gardens always has the best in
holiday decor, and Halloween is definitely
one of their specialties. Every year the
special Halloween rooms change, and
they're always very creative, with eyeballs
roaming back and forth in the paintings,
chairs rattling at the dining table, heads
swirling on dolls and puffs of "smoke"
shooting out from behind a curtain.
Roger's design team also stocks the
rooms with the best in Halloween dOcor,
which includes light, spiders, black crows,
monster hands, pumpkins, cats and more.
Roger's Gardens is located at 2301 S{1n
Joaquin Hills Road in Corona del Mar. It's
open from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. daily. Informa-
tion: (949) 640-5800.
Newport Bedding is having a mattress
and bed super sale through the end of the
month. On sale ~ iron beds reduced 30%
tQ 50%. There are more than 100 wrought
iron beds to chose from. Adjustable electric
beds are on sale; they range in price from
$799.95 to $1, 199.95. There are also twin set
mattresses that range in price troll\_ $209.95
to $649.95. The full set mattresses range in
price from $299.95 to $799.94. The queen
sets range in price from $349.95 to $999.95
and the king sets range in price from
$499.95 to $1,199.95. Newport Bedding is
located at 1534 Newport Blvd. in Costa
Mesa. It's open Monday through Friday
from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m., on Saturdays from 10
a.m. to 5 p.m., and on Sundays from 12 p.m.
to 5 p.m. Information: (949) 646-3991.
Aaron Brothers art & framing is having
a big sale that lasts all weekend. On sale
are frames reduced 30%, mantel shelves
reduced 30%, framed art reduced 20°/.>,
mirrors and wall decor accents reduced
20%, museum image collage frames start-
ing at $9.99, stretched canvas at 50°;., off,
kid's easels al $39.99, compact mat cutters
at $59.99 and paper pads at 50% off. Aaron
Brothers is located at 1714 Newport Blvd.
in Costa Mesa. Information: (949) 645-6880.
• BEST BUYS appears on Thursdays and Saturdays.
Send information to Greer Wylder at 330 W. Bay St.,
Costa Mesa 92627, or via fax at (949) 646-4170.
C OST EFFECTIVE
A ITORN EY
I I \ 1 111 I\\ Ii I I ) I < I I l
\11111 IL11,,
'\.11\\ h .11 l.1hl,
•• AlTJ'O •HOMEOWNERS .~.g
40 Years In Business
THAT'S YOUR FINAL ANSWER,
;tc ti1K11 .~of... Ml CASA
MEXICAN RESTAURANT (94 9) 7 6 0-877 5
KENNY 11''
PRINTER
~~"0 -... -.. -~ / > . ...,
949-631-77 40
441 Old Newport BlwL. Newport .ec.m
' (Near HOlll Hospital)
r.-----------------------~
I I I I
I I
e-----------------------~ r.-----------------------~ I · I
I I I I I I I
I I
296 E. 17TH ST. COSTA MESA· 949·64S·7626
Hodson Lighting
-PRESENTS -
f8eoo
Simple yet Elegant
Bath Models Matched with
Fluted caste Brass Accents
. .
Soturdoy, September 23, 2000 A5
Alleged bank robbers
in court on Monday
• Nearly all of the $1,500 reportedly
taken from Costa Mesa bank has
been recovered.
O..pa Bharath
DAILY PILOT
COSTA MESA -lWo men arrested by
police Thursday afternoon on suspicion of rob-
bing a bank and leapmg officers on a 25-
minute chase will be arraigned in the Harbor
Justice Center on Monday, officials said. ·
Police arrested Sean Linehan, 41, of Foun-
tain Valley and Christopher John Oakes, 30, of
Santa Ana after a pursuit that began in Costa
Mesa and ended in Huntington Beach with
police ramming the suspects' car and forcing
driver Oakes to stop.
Officials said Linehan entered Western Finan-
cial Savings Bank in the 2000 block of Harbor
Boulevard and demanded money from the teller.
No weapon or threatening note was used in
the robbery, said Sgt. Don Holford of the Costa
Mesa Police Department. Linehan simply told
the teller,· "This is a robbery" and the teller
handed him the money, Holford said.
Almost all of the $1,500 that the men took
from the bank has been recovered, he said. The
suspects threw some dollar bills out the win-
dow as they were driving down Balboa Boule-
vard, but officers in patrol cars picked up the
money, Holford said.
uwe also had some honest citizens calling in
saying they had found some money,• he said.
Both men are currently being held in the Costa
Mesa Police Department jail. Bail ~ set at $50,000.
we're Bursting With Quality
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(949) 760-0550• Next to Pavilio n's
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949 548-9341
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. Mlhlinum age 58
I
(949) 646-1822
I can't believe ..... .
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Landscaping or re-landscaping is your answer to a beautiful new look for your home.
KAY MATSON, A.A.
C.C.N.P.
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COSTA M.ESA • 2700 Brisco! Ave.
714) 754-6661
TERRY MEIKLE
. C.c.N.P.
Laodacape Daipu
L'DOR V'DOR
From
Gtnmuion
"' Gntmu#11
..... Marks. MDler
Our~ ~ritual
.. . . . I o
A6 Saturday, Sep!tmber 23. 2000 Doily Pilot
T~~!r:ie to cekbr;::~~~~n::e;::~~o:;~-~~: ~e~J p celebration of the Unit· Dally Pilot read 'Prescbool. We oeed to salute E..,lyn Beach Sunrise Rotary Cub Mesa Orange Coast Brook-
ed Nations' International site of tragedy closes:• •sh.al~ Komuntale for her work in meets at the Balboa Bay fast Uons Club meets at
Day of Peace will be held imar Leaming Center shuts Uganda with AIDS Club to hear Margaret Grat-Mimi's Cafe for a business
today from 11 a.m. to 3 p .. m. downi" "Orphan outreacbr" Orphaned African Children ton, president of Orange m~:~· _Kiwanis Club of
at lttangle Square in Costa and "Promise of day-care Project. Coast College
Mesa. The Babais of Costa meeting offers little comfort." • · Costa Mesa meets at the
Mesa and the Orange Coast It was a depressing front WELCOME TO TIIE e:OO p.m. -The ~ Holiday Inn. Newport Beach-
Unitarian Universalist page. All four articles dealt WORLD OP SERVICE Mesa-Newport Harbor Uons Corona del Mar Kiwanis
Church have plaruled a free Jim de Boom with childreJl and their activt-CLUBS: Hus D. Unhardt, Club meets at the Costa Club meets at the Bahia
afternoon that will entertain · ' ties, or lack of future acttvt-who is sponsored by Dlck Mesa Golf and Country Corinthian Yacht Club to
people of all ages. COMMUNITY & CWBS ties. As I read the articles, Coollng, joined the Rotary Club. ~ hear Aviva Goelman, direc-
Llve entertainment none of the problems cited Club of Newport Beach Sun-tor of the Costa Mesa Senior
includes The Aftermath, fea-UFE MEMBERSHIP: were caused by children but rise. WEDNESDAY Center. The Exchange Club
tunng Hurricane Julie, Brlan Past District Governor Mike by adults. 7:15 a.m. -The South of Newport Harbor meets at
Taraz performing original Scheafer presented a life Unfortunately, the litiga-WORTH llEPEATING: Coast Metro Rotary Club will the Riverboat Restaurant to
Scripture rock and the membership from Uons tion on the Southcoast Early From the Newport Beach-meet at the Center Club to bear BW Ficker speak on
Orange Coast Unitarian Uni-International to Costa Childhood Leaming Center Corona del Mar Kiwanis hear Dlana Carey, Costa •America's Cup -Past, Pre-
versalist Choir. Throughout will go on for years. The Club's Scuttlebutt: Mesa High School principal. sent and Future.• The New-Mesa-Newport Harbor Cl the day, presentations will be Uons Club member Tom leadership at Shalimar "The purpose of educa-Newport Harbor Kiwanis port Irvine Rotary ub
made by Costa Mesa council Leaming Center needs to lion is to replace a closed Club meets at the University meets at the Irvine Marriott
b C b d Rea, who first joined the el members Ub y o en an reopen their doors and do mind with an open one.• Athletic Club. Hot .
Heather Somers, as well as Lions in 1946, nearly 55 what is best for children, just Noon _Orange Coast 6:30 p.m. -Zonta Club of
the NAACP, Amnesty Inter-years ago. Tom's wife, as it has been. The Shalimar SERVICE CLUB MEET-Newport Harbor meets at the
national, the United Nations Dorothy, was present at the Learning Center is more INGS: Want to get more Exchange Club meets at the Zonta clubhouse, 245 Fischer
b f Bahia Corinthian Yacht Club Assn .. the Newport Mesa ceremony as mem ers o than one perso!ll involved in your comm.unity, Avenue to hear Trudy Gross-
lrvme Interfaith Council and the visiting Costa Mesa-The leadership at the make new friends, network, to hear Ray Guna of Bee man, a breast cancer survivor.
Bahais of Costa Mesa. Orange Coast Breakfast Orange County Department or to give something back to Products.
Come on out and let's eel-Lions Club joined with the of Education, the YMCA or your community? ny a ser-6:00 p.m. -The New·
ebrate the Day of Peace and host club in a standing ova-the Newport-Mesa Unified vice club! You are invited to port-Balboa Rotary Club
• COHMUNnY A a.u9S is pub-
li1hed f!VefY Saturday in the Daily
Pilot. Send your selVice dub's meet·
ing Information by fax to (949) 660-
8667, e-mail to ~I.com
or by mall to 2082 S.E. Bristol, SUite
201, Newport Beach 92660-1740.
pray 1t continues until tomor-lion. Congratulations to SC:hool District needs to step attend a dub meeting this meets at the Bahia Corinthi-
row. For more information, Tom on 55 years of service forward to help find addi· coming week. Many clubs an Yacht Club to hear Sue
caU (949) 646-4"652 or click to his community and the tional day-care opportunities will buy your first guest meal Moore of Canine Compan-
on www.oc-bahai.org. .world I for those hundreds of fami-for you. ions.
Gettina.
INVOLVED
COSTA MESA
HISTORICAL SOOETY
The society collects infor-
mation, photos and artifacts
relab.ng to the history of Cos-
ta Mesa and the harbor area.
Volunteers are needed for
clerical tasks, computer input
and help in the library. For
more information, call (949)
631-5918.
COSTA MESA
LITERACY COUNOL
The Costa Mesa Uteracy
Center needs volunteer tutors
to teach English as a second
language. People who want
to learn English as a second
language are also encour-
aged to call. To register, or for
more information, call (714)
435-3310 or (714) 545-3445.
FRIENDS OF THE NEWPORT
BEACH LIBRARY
Volunteers are needed to
staff the used book store
located just inside the
entrance of the central library.
Volunteers must be members
of the Friends of the Ubrary
and are asked to work one
three-hour shift per month.
For more information, call
(949) 759-9667.
MEDIATION CENTER
The Mediation Center of
Costa Mesa needs volunteer
mediators, case specialists
and assistants for mediation
cases. Bilingual-ness is a plus.
For more information, call
(949) 574-5990.
ORANGE COUNTY <X>MMlNTY
DEVELOPMENT COUNOL
Volunteers are needed for
a variety of functions. For
information, call (714) 839-
6199.
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Daily Pilot Saturday, s.p.mber 23, 2000 A7 ·
A livingf ence makes a green screen
0 ur travels this sum-
mer included spend-
ing some time in the
friendly Midwest. In the
land of Mark l\vain, Hanni-
bal, Mo., to be exact. My
favorite aunt and uncle live
near the Mississippi River in
this .quaint town, which I
consider a true American
treasure.
There aren't a lot of peo-
ple, and there aren't a lot of
things to do in Hannibal. But
that's part of the ch.8.nn.
Once you've seen the Mark
l\vain and Becky Thatcher
childhood homes, prowled
the famous cave, ridden the
riverboat and gone miniature
golfing at Sawyers Creek,
you've experienced most of
what Hannibal has to offer.
What's left is warm and
friendly hospitality, and lots
of it.
While we stayed with my
aunt and uncle (and by the
way, we really miss out not
having basements around
here) one of the things that
struck us was the way every·
one's yards flowed together.
No fences. Not one.
Well, that's not completely
true. The one person in the
neighborhood that has a
fence is very curmudgeonly
and not the neighborhood
favorite.
All of the backyards just
Karen Wight
NO PLACE LIKE HOME
roll one into another. Even
the dogs seem to get along.
And you cannot nave a bar-
becue without everyone
knowing what's on the grill.
People in Hannibal think
it's a little odd that we wall
ourselves off. I think it's a lit·
tie odd that they don't.
Obviously, in the land of
Mark l\vain, they haven't
read enough Robert Frost to
know that M good fences
make good neighbors.•
And where would Samuel
Langhorne Clemens be with·
out the •whitewashed pick·
ets" story? Fences do have a
purpose.
Boundaries are a funny
thing. Some people need a
lot of privacy, while some
people thrive in a fish bowl.
In our community, we
have guarded enclaves like
• VoUne Sel&ctlon
• Oubla ICt'lg CUstomer Service
• Great Pl1c:es Guaranteed
-
Belcourt and Bayshores.
Then we have the other
extreme, like the boardwalks
on Balboa Island and the
Peninsula oceanfront.
Whether you prefer priva-
cy-at-all-costs or live your
life like an open book,
boundaries are a good idea.
Lines of demarcation come
in all shapes and sizes and
planting a hedge or a #green
screen• may be your most
appealing solution.
Historically, "hedgerows#
as they are called in Eng-
land, kept wandering live-
stock off the neighbor's prop-
erty and served a very spe-
cific purpose. Property lines
were important when defin-
ing grazing areas and crop
lines.
Hedges preceded the
modem cham-lmk, and liv-
ing divtders are far more
beautiful than thetr metal
counterpart.
The nation's most popular
plant (or hedging is privet. It
can grow quite large, but
with methodical pruning can
fonn an attractive living
fence.
Hedges can be developed
from almost any shrub or
tree. Your only limit is imagi·
nation.
U you choose to have a
planted partition between
you and the neighbors, con-
sider the style of your home
and land.scape.
'A Mediterranean scheme
lends itself to oleanders,
melaleucas, sweet bays and
junipen. ~
Got that island feeling
flowing through your home
and garden ? Consider hibis-
cus, papyrus, banana trees,
and if you have a desire for
reckless abandon, plant
some bamboo.
'fraditional landscapes
have dozens of choices. 1'ry
a row of flowering lilacs -
the Chinese varieties have
smaller leaves and love the
pruning.
Do you like hydrangeas?
Prepare a shady spot with
the right acidity, and these
bushes with the flowering
pom-poms will make quite a
statement.
If you need a plant that
doubles as a security guard,
holly bushes could be the
perfect choice. These beaub-
ful bushes with deep green
or variegated leaves have a
nasty side: their sharp thorny
leaves are a great deterrent
against intruders.
Shrub roses are a good
option for a low border.
These roses are low mainte-
nance, very vigorous and
come in any color you can
imagine : check out Simplici·
ty's choices in white, red
A privet hedge provides privacy and ls a great backdrop
for a Dowering borde.r.
and pink.
U you are looking for a
border that defines one area
from another, you may only
need a very short hedge.
Boxwoods are a logical
choice for lining a path or
separabng '>ne planting area
from another. ·
Cuphea, which has a
compact growth habit,
makes a beautiful low-bor·
der planting. Cuphea has
small white or pink flowers
dnd are easy lo keep clipped
and neat.
Hedges can provide more
than privacy. They can pro-
vide some structural eng1-
neering for your outdoor
areas. Hedges make great
windbreaks and protection
from the elements.
Do you have a patio that
gets the worst of the weath-
er? A strategically placed
hedge can help solve your
problems
Thlnk of your hedges as
giant topiaries. Without
pruning they can get rangy
and wild; with regular mani-
cures they mamtam their
integnty and form. The
enthus1astic gardener can be
architect, builder and gentle-
man fdrmer.
A l1V1ng Jenee could be
just the solution you're look·
ing for.
• KAREN WIGHT is a Newport
Beach resident. Her column runs
Saturdays.
SABATINO'S
ffr,1.111r.1111 ,\ I ulo 'l11p1 .11 ti '.111-,_, 1 "
•Dinner
• Sunday Brunch
251 Shipyard Way • Newport Beach
-P1ease call for hoo~. d rect•oos & rtsl!Vations •
31: (949) 723-0621 •
· Irvine Ranch Market has seen some changes over the years But, you can be assured
the changes taking place now will keep you coming back for more ...
• • • IT IS MORE THAN JUST A FACE LIFT!! IN FACT~ 103 DELICIOUS IMPROVEMENTS
ON DISPLAY THROUGHO UT THE STORt. HERE ARE JUST A FEW!
• • • * c 111-.CI\ orr 01 1< '' \\ s1 ... 111 nu' \IH w '1 • '·" ' ,1 • •. · 1 ., ,fi 11. ,, · . " • . .
~l.\RGl ~UJ.1'llll\1~1·1·>.111:"'>tlll""'' ,, . ''"1 1 ·•
*1T1.1.~1 .. R\1n:u111\\lll'l<IJ'\ln111 111111, •.. ·. q.· .1111111..1111.·"1 ,.
\\I \II\ \\i>o'\ 11'\l'l 11•' ·I• : ! "I' \1 \l•I '1\I \
*FRESH MEAT AND SEAFOOD. EACH DAY WE CUT AND PREPARE THE BEST MEAT'S
SAUSAGES. POl.}LTRY AND SEAFOOD THAT
HAS MADE US ORANGE COUNTY'S
FAVORITE PLACE FOR FRESH MEATS & SEAFOOD.
:;:\\l\F1o.'\.( llH·,I· \fl! 1llf H\1.1.\\: '•·i•\~1 •I.I (' I,•
( ( ) \IHI\ \ 11 (I\ I 11 I ' I I : . ' : ' ( 1 .. I\: • ' . •
.\\l>l\H'tlklt 111\!\I, \ • 111\li'\1,\1 Ill\ 1'.1 ,,\ 1 •1 · · .
• Our Otcese Department is fiUed with "Words that make vou say Chee~!"
Stilton ·Brie • Oiavrie • •Feta •a.eddar •Gouda •
Parmesan • Dubliner • Muensier • Aslago and more .. ,
* FRf:SH CUT FLOWERS A~D CU TOM 1-'L ORAL ARRASG~MENTS. Malle b~ our o~ n 8'tt nori t. Pick and choose ~our o-o arrangement or wt can
• maM the right Ont for ~OU. Glfi ha! ktts l tt now
nailablt ror any oc:a.wn.
Call In your request.
. . .
A8 Saturday. Sef*mb! 23, 2000
RACE .
CONTINUED FROM A1
here in Orange County for
local outteach, education,
screening and treatment. The
remaining 25% gQeS to the
international foundation for
research grants and outreach
programs.
The local funding is a au-
cial, Brinker said, espedally
here in Orange CoWlty.
•1 know that your rate of
breast cancer is very high
here,• Brinker said. ~One out
of seven women in Orange
County will develop breast
cancer in their lives."
It is an issue that hit home
harder thal'I ever in Newport
Beach this year.
Many lives were deeply
and personally touched by
Rosalind Williams, the former
head of the Newport Beach
Conference and Visitors
Bureau.
Known almost equally for
her zest for We and helping to
bnng golf tournaments, con-
ventions and thousands of vis-
itors to the town, Williams died
m June of complications from
a four-year battle with breast
cancer.
Deputy city manager Dave
Kiif has organized a 70-mem-
ber team to walk in her honor.
"I know she had kept the
seriousness of it quiet. so a lot
of us were surprised,• Kiff
said. "We were looking for a
way to honor her and the Race
for the Cure was corning up so
1t seemed like a great way to
honor her tpat would help
women who suffer from breast
cancer.•
Kiff bas managed to orga-
nize a tremendous and diverse
group of city employees,
spouses, family and friends.
Each will wear a T-shirt
embossed with picture of a
license plate that reads
"CNB4Roz· [City of Newport
Beach for Rosalind).
Among the supporters tak-
ing part will be Williams'
mother-in-law, Janie Arnold.
"l just think it's a wonderful
tribute,• Arnold said. "The big
cross section that have joined
in this -mends, family, those
who worked with her and
those who kneV( of her. For
those who admired her afar
and from close up she's an
inspiration.•
The Race for the Cure will
begin Sunday at the Pacific
Llfe Building, 700 Newport
Center Drive, Fashion Island.
MARBLE
CONTINUED FROM A 1
over career options at the
time, and I wasn't one to let
opportunities pass me by.
One of my first editors was
a delightfully old"'5Chool guy
named Tom Mwphine, rum-
pled and austy with a laugh
that always seemed to have a
slightly deeper meaning. He
was a spirited man who
banged out a column every
weekday, chortling softly as
he lampooned the mayor or
Caltrans or any of the envi-
ronmental groups he so
loathed ..
At the end of the day he'd
fire up his pipe, blow a huge
plume of smoke across the
newsroom and lean back in
bis chair. He looked like a
man who discovered content-
ment each and every day.
He called me up several
years ago to tip me off to a
story. A good story. It was the
last time I talked with him.
Cancer caught up with him a
short time later.
Over the years, they came
and went. The reporters. The
photographers. The editors.
One kid went out on assign-
ment to lrvine and never
came back. Into thin air, as it
were. Another moved off to
PEIRSOL
CONTINUED FROM A 1
we knew something special
was brewing, but we didn't
. .
Mexico, COllvinc8c:l the gov-·
ernmmt was watchinq him.
Aocl maybe lt wu. ·still anoth·
er decided to by to drink him-
self to death. He failed in that
• regard.
At night sometimes as I
bead out the door, I .ee the
ghosts. Paul Atthipley, the
cop reporter who moved to
the Olympic Peninsula and
bought bis own community
newspaper. Hussein Maahn1.
the education reporter who
moved to the West Bank to do
missionary work. Jeff Parker,
who fancied up bis name to T.
Jefferson Parker and became
a best-selling author. Chris
Goffard, the tireless word-
smith who always wanted to
cover a war but took a report-
. in.g position with a big-time
Florida newspaper instead.
Bob Barker, one of the best
damn reporters I've ever
known, who now delights in
raising orchids and playing
softball.
But in the morning, the
place is always the same. Edi-
tor Tony Dodero wanders in
with a fresh coffee stain on his
shirt. Publisher Tom Johnson
bounds upstairs with a news
tip. The front desk reception-
ist -usually around 9:30 a.m.
-announces that, yep, the
lunch truck has already
arrived. There's an energy to
the place, a sheer, pure, urue-
know it was this big,• said
Brian Kreut:zkamp, the swim-
ming and water polo coach at
Newport Harbor High School.
Now that Aaron has done
everyone proud, his friends
just want him to come home.
~~~bas always
been able to roll with the
punches. I remember years
ago flying up to San Joie ~th
my editor, Bill LobdeD. to pick uP a general exceDenoe
aw.rd, a nice and fairly pn.
tigious d1stiDdion in our busi-
ne11. At the time I think both
of us felt the paper was near
the end of the line, running
low on money and running
lower on options. We felt fool-
hardy making the trlp yet
content that -U it really was
going to come to this -what
a better way for it to end.
The ink never ran out, of
cowse, and the Pilot now
prospers.
During the Christmas sea-
son several years ago, a col-
league of mine was mur-
dered. She was on her way
home from church, evening
Mass, when a mixed-up kid
stabbed her to death. only
feet from the front door to her
home. Her husband was
inside, waiting for her, l pre-
sume, as she died
Her death was jarring,
arresting, enough to make a
person question the very
meaning of life. But it was
also when I found out the true
depth and the character of the
Daily Pilot
The day of the funeral, I
remember walking along the
Peter is hoping to play a little
water polo with him. and
Katherine just wants to see
her friend.
•1 miss him a lot,• she said.
•He's been gone a long time
-like a month already.•
...... ,..c---......;.~·~--~-·~·----...,-
Dolly Pilot
street to the cbwdl. three
blocks dOwn. two blocks over
from the paper. I looked up
and the street and the side-
walks were filled with fellow
employees. Some of them
worked in the newsroom.
some in advertising, some in
the bus1nesS offices, But at
that moment they'd all come
together. They were going to
say goodbye to a frlend and
vow never to forget her mem-
ory, her Jaugh. her good heart.
You go through stuff like
that, and you know you can
handle virtually anything. You
come to have faith and ttust
in. your team. You go home at
night content that you are
among friends.
Leaving the Daily Pilot is
not an easy thing for me to
do. But it is of my own choos-
ing, and lam excited about
the future. Change is not a
bad thing. S1ill, this will
always be a special place and
l will think of it often.
See you down the road ...
• Ecftar's noer. William Lobdell,
editor of Times Community News,
also will be taking a new assign-
ment at The T1mes. Starting Oct. 9,
he'll be a religion writer-editor for
the Orange County edition. Both
Lobdell and Marble can be reached
at their same e-mail addresses:
bill.lobdel/Olatil"n6com and
steve.marbleO/atimes.com.
Bankruptcy ••• ••• Divorce/Summary
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I
Producing a good community newspaper isn't child's play. But the Daily Pilot,
with its local news, prep sports and updates on the West Side -makes it look easy.
Ifs the newspaper I've grown up with, and I'm staying with. No kidding.
I \
Got the Pilo---~~-~ ..
•
AIO SaMday. s.p.mber 23, 2000 Dally Pilot
um.E RAINDROPS
SEAN HIUER I OAllY PILOT
Brandon Jensen, 4, of Costa Mesa is well
prepared for Friday afternoon 's light rain fall as be
and his mother head for the tius stop near 19th
Street and Placentia Avenue.
VIOLATION
CONTINUED FROM A 1
agency ls much more con-
cerned about the Pieoemakers'
refusal to let the beeltb inspec-
tors conduct unimpeded fadl·
ity impections.
•When inspectors are there
it is often a rather tense atmos-
phere with some hostile com-
ments including, on occa.s1on,
some foul language," Markley
said. "The issue is our right to
inspect the food facility to com-
ply with state law, which we
do with every other food facil-
ity in Orange County. We're
not singling them out, but there
has been a long history of inter-
action between government
entities and the Piecemakers. •
Marie Kolasinski, 76, and
Anne Sorenson, 68, on proba-
tion from criminal charges for
the previous code violations,
said the health department is
SISTER
CONTINUED FROM A 1
her stay to her own detenni-
~ation and the gracious hand
or God.
Her staying power and
love for the school were
apparently infectious.
Five years into Vianney's
stint at the church, Mary
McMenamin joined the
school as a first-grade
teacher.
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Wish Lill & Dtlivny
G~C~
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Brttl;kf_ast, l.Mndr,
Tu & Espmso Bar
Care Houn: Mo~at .. $
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949 722·1177
JJO Etil J 7tlt Strut
Cost• Miu, Cl\
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Row Houu : Tue-Sat 10-.5
responsible for the ho1We
atmosphere.
"l Uled to lhak8 in my boots
and feel lick when ttJey came,
but now I'm ju.st (angry),"
Kolasinski laid. •They're not
satidled that we've shut downi
they're looking foe more things
to bother UI about. This II the
wom harassment you can get.
and it's disgusting. By the~
we satilfy all the codes and pay
for all the permits, our money
will be gone."
The inspectors were sup-
posed to check to make sure
the kitchen is not open for the
restaurant business, she said,
claiming the rest of the inspec-
tion was uncalled for.
Markley said there was
nothing improper about the
inspection because even stores
that only sell packaged food
a.re. subject to unannounced
inspections. ·
The Piecemakers said the
health codes are detrimental
to business.
Thirty-three years later,
McMenamin is still with the
school and has been the
assistant prindpal for the past
15 years.
"It's a family to me,"
McMenamin said. "I have
known Sister Vianney all
these years. She was my
mentor when I was a
teacher."
Vumney admits it was dif-
ficult leaving her parents and
eight siblings in Ireland. But
the family McMenamin
speaks of has made it all
worthwhile.
"We're againlt the codes
and laws that bind the people
rather than serve the people
and I have yet to ... any code
or law by the health depart· ment, • KoJalimkJ said. •we'd
like nothing better than to just
do our Job and serve the com-
munity. Why thouJd we follow
man-made laws that are stu-
pid?" .
Permits only benefit the
deportment that collects the
money, Sorenson said, adding
that a permit and a complete
label wouldn't make the bread
any healthier.
But, Markley countered,
permits are necessary because
they ensure the food has ful-
filled state ~ents and is
safe to eat Labels are important
because people with food aller-
gies need to be aware of the
ingredients that are in the food.
she said.
"These laws protect the
public,• she said. "The public
needs the assurance that the
"What I love is so many or
our past pupils are here with
their children,• Vianney said.
"Parents that I taught in the
second grade are here with
their children. They lilc~d
what they got way back then
and want that for their chil-
dren -and that speaks for
itself .•
Esquer is one such pupil.
She first met Vumney when
she was 7. She was in the sec-
ond grade and Via.nney was
in her second year or teach-
ing.
Many years later when she
food they are buvtno oompliM
with state law, whk.ii II put In
place by elected ~ta
ttves ol the people. People can.
ol coune. talk to tbe6r .... iep-
fl!I 1ta.tlvel if they want to It.art
the ball rolling to change the
law. U there ii enough public
support. laws do get Changed.
But there doesn't 1ee111 to be a
groundswell movement for
what they're asking.•
The Pieoemakers are drcu·
lating a petition in favor of get-
ting rid of the county health
department and "burdensome,
useless la\vs and codes" and
bad collected more than 300
signatures as of last week.
They are also planning to
have a protest marCb at health
department offices.
The Piecemakers hope to
begin a grass-roots movement
to •turn around the system•
and "bring people's bemtl back
to God and have him rule over
the people rather than our gov-
ernment,• Kolasinski said.
was married, but before
beginning her family, Esquer
and her husband bought a
house near St. John the Bap-
tist so their children could
attend the school.
"She is so organized and
kind,• Esquer said. "You
know the saying •eyes in the
back of your head?' She prob-
ably has two sets. She knows
everything that is going on
and she is so fair. That's what
parents love about her. Not
just the spiritual, but the
human aspect, the kindness
and the fairness.•
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DAILY PILOT
"I'm nobody! Who are
you? Are you nobody, too?"
-Emily Dickinson
It was to be a 14-character
play about a rather obscure
female American poet. But
Charles Luce's "Belle of
Amherst" turned out to be a
one-person play that helped
FYI
WHA~Julie
Harris and
Charles
Nelson Reilly
WHERE:
Newport
Beach Cen-
tral Library's
Friends
Meeting
Room, 1000
Avocado
Ave.
WIEN:7p.m.
Monday
COST: Free
CALL: (949)
717-3801
MISC: For
more infor-
mation on
·nie Belle of
Amherstff at
the Laguna '
Playhouse,
call (949)
497-ARTS
give the
poet in
question,
Emily Dick-
inson,
name-
recognition
around the
world.
Actress
Julie Harris
and director
Charles
Nelson Reil-
ly will
speak about
"the Belle, tt
on stage
through
Oct. 8 at the
Laguna
Playhouse,
at 7 p.m.
Monday in
the New-
port Beach
Central
Llbrary's
Friends
Meeting
Room.
Harris -known for work
as diverse as Sally Bowles in
•1 am a Camera" and her
seven-year stint on "Knots
Landing"-hasnotbeen
Emily since 1987, when she
did two performances at the
Laguna Playhouse.
for the .7•-year-0ld
actress, performing the Belle
is llke returning to an old
friend after a long journey.
Hanis originated the role
and won a Tony for her por-
trayal in 1977. Then, as now,
Nelson Reilly directed her.
When asked why she likes
the spinster poet who was nev-
er published in her lifetime,
Harris bas no pat answer.
"Why do you like Van
Gogh? Or why do you like
Beethoven or Mozart,• Harris
queries. •I just like Emily
Dickinson. I think her life is
fascinating, and I think. she,
as a messenger of love, h a
lot to give people.·
Harris' understanding of
Dickinson and her poetry has
SEE BEUE PAGE A 14
Performl•1 SUNDAY .
The 5th Dimension, known for "Let the Sun-
shine In" and other hit songs, will perform at 8
p.m. Sunday in Orange Coast College's Robert B.
Moore Theatre, 2701 Fairview Road, Costa ·
Mesa. TICket prices vary. (714) 432-5880.
Saturday, September 23, 2000 All
SEAN HIUER I DAILY PILOT
Photographer Claire Steinberg has a show of her work entitled "Palette Beaule" at the Susan Spiritus Gallery in Newport Beach.
linages of beauty's underbelly
Photographer Claire Steinberg's 'infatuations with life' hang at Newport gallery
Young Ch•ng
DAILY PILOT
C laire Steinberg went to the
Eiffel Tower and didn't look
up. Others walked away to
view the monument from
afar or climbed it to feel the height,
but Steinberg, a photographer, wan-
dered around the bottom.
She wanted to know what was
going on at the pedestal, at the very
beginning. She found a profound net-
work of structural lines and a sense of
scale. She felt a bit like an ant.
All from the bottom.
•1 want to ~lore the thing that
is not so obvious,• said Steinberg,
whose works will be exhibited at the
Susan Spiritus Gallery through Jan-
uary. "Roses are beautiful and all
these photographers do these roses,
but c'mon. There's more to be seen!•
1.....-~ .... • ............ camellia's underside.
TIU •Faded Beauty," one of her
color images shows a faded camellia
fallen on a path of rocks. It fell per-
fectly, Steinberg said, with no
change in its form. She almost
stepped on it, but FYI editor for Popular Photog-
instead stopped and
admired it.
"There's beauty
in living matter that
changes in its cyde
from birth to death,•
she said. •And the
underside of a
camellia is some-
thing we never look
at because we're so
busy looking at the
WHA~ Claire Stein-
berg's exhibit "Palette
Beaute.•
raphy magazines and
annuals in New York in
1969 and bas had a free-
lance career as a photo-
journalist with "People"
and •Rolling Stone.•
WH81: Today through
January. A reception for
the artist will be held
today and Sunday from
1 to4 p.m.
She bas exhibited her
work at the Museum of
Modem Art in Paris, at
Photokina in Cologne,
Germany, and in various
California locations. She
graduated as an art major
from University of Cali·
fomia, Los Angeles and
WHERE: Susan Spiritus
Gallery, 3929 Birch St.,
Newport Beach
COS~ Free top of it.•
The Los Angeles
resident holds stead-
CALL: (949) 474-4321
fast to the theory that photographers
and artists need to maintain an
interest in what they see, because
~l's only.after you see something that
you feel something.
•rm always saying to all my stu-
dents 'get down and get up,"' Stein-
berg said. "When you photograph a
child, get down to their level. Half
the time I'm groveling and lying on
the ground. But I don't care if I get
my silk shirt dirty.•
Steinberg became the picture
teaches from time to time.
She insists upon full-frame shots,
where what you see is what you get.
"Everything is composed in ,the
camera,• Steinberg said. •I don't
crop my images.•
Artists deal with the edges of
canvases, she said, and photogra-
phers need to accept the edge of
their phot6graphic space. Her sug-
gestion is either zoom in to get close
or use a different lens.
But it's cheating to crop.
Her current show is titled
•Palette Beaute • and explores the
theme that there is beauty in every-
thing -in aging and in vanishing
worlds.
One image she considers pivotal
is of tw~ naked boys clinging to a
tree along the Oronoco River in
South America. They bad the most
beautiful skin color and the most
beautiful J)9Sture, she said. You can
only see th'eir backs, but they're
looking ahead, as if searching for
food. It was a moment she thought
she would lose but didn't.
Steinberg said the picture is
about ·sublime beauty and purity.•
Susan Spiritus, owner of the
Susan Spiritus Gallery, calls Stein-
berg's work unusual, different and
"painterly.•
·1 wouldn't be exhibiting it if I
didn't think it was excellent," Spiri-
tus said. "She has a very beautiful
eye."
By "painterly,• Spiritus is refer-
ring to bow Steinberg's images look
SEE BEAUTY PAGE A14
A tOuch of France in Newport Beach
F.ete Fantastique at Central Library celebrates ties with sister city, Antibes, with mimes ~d music
•
YeungehMg
D~LY Pil.01
T he French flag is
•bleu, blanc et rouge.•
Children at Pete Pan-
tAstique will learn today that
these words mean "blue,
white and red." that trouba-
dours in the old days enter·
talned nobility in France and
that they too can be impres-
sionist painters.
Pete Fantastique, a cele-
bration of Newport Beach's
relationship with its sister
dty An~bes, France, draws
to a close with an
afternoon of activ'i-FYI
ties touching on WHAn Fete Fantastique
everything from WHEN: Noon to 4 p.m.
mimes and ca.rica-today
tures to language WHERE: Newport
games and ballet. Beach Central Library,
Organizers with 1000 Avocado Ave.
the Sister City COS?. Free
Aslodation anttct-CALL: (949) 717-3800
pete at least 200
Marie Atkins,
co-chair of
the Anti.bes
Committee,
"as a French
person living
here, I'm
exdted. It's a
great oppor-
tunity to
introduce
people will attend the festival.
A celebration held last sum-
mer 1o mark Newport Beach's
relationship with its sister dty
in Japan drew 800 people.
young people in Newport
Beach to France."
•tet me tell you,• said
Ken Frawley, a troubadour
from Orange, will tell
medieval tales and sing
songs while in costume - a
blue shirt with gold adorn-
ments, puffy sleeves and
pants that balloon out and
stop at the knees. Oral story-
telling was the way lessons
on humanity and morality
were passed down for thou-
sands of years, he said.
•When (children] get to
see a live performer. they get
to interact,• Frawley said.
"It's not just a screen or tele-
vision or a movie, it's some-
body in front of them."
One French folk tale
SEE FEST PAGE A 14
GlllG MV I DM.Y "-Of
Ia Frawley glW9 ...... af 1111 Prwta ...... .: lld.
' ..
.. DATEBOOK Al 2 SaMda); s.pe..nbet 2J, 2000
Jesse aizd the Bandit Queen' . .
acquitted admirable at OCC
lly Tom T1tus
Among the legends of the Old
West, two of its most notorious figures
were Jesse James and Belle Starr.
The lives of both outlaws were docu-
mented in countless books and
Th•ter
REVIEW
movies, but pair-
ing them never
seemed to occur
to historians.
David Freeman
made that connec-
tion in 1975 when he wrote •Jesse
and the Bandit Queen,• which
Orange Coast College's Repertory
Theater is presenting in its Drama
Lab Studio through Sunday.
Freeman's play is, admittedly, his·
torical fantasy, 'but the premise is
quite fascinating. What would these
two bandits' lives have been like if
their careers were intertwined?
In the OCC production, imagina-
. tively directed by Sean F. Gray, stu-
dent actors Aaron W. Bennett and
Miracle Ann Laurie -both taking
their first leading assignments at
OCC -assume not only the title
roles, but those of various other char·
acters in the lives of Jesse and Belle.
This is accomplished by subtle alter-
ations in costume and the skills of the
FYI
WHA?. "Jesse and the Bandit
Queen"
WHERE: Orange Coast College
Drama lab Studio, 2501 Fairview
Road, Costa Mesa
WHEN: Final performances
tonight at 8 p.m. and Sund~y at 2
and 7 p.m.
a>n $6
CALL: (714) 432-5640, Ext. 1
participants.
The play veers not only in and out
of its characters' lives, but back and
forth in history. The off-center paint-
ing positioned upstage is a focal point
of the drama, since many playgoers
will be aware that Jesse James was
gunned down by one of his lackeys,
Robert Ford, while straightening a
picture in his home.
Bennett and Laurie make a
provocative pair, segueing instantly
from passion to hostility and slipping
in and out of the fringe characters
with a natural ease. Bennett is the
stronger of the two, but also the more
erratic, while Laurie is more ground-
ed and self-assured, bolstered by her
alluring femininity.
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Bennett's Jesse is obsessed with his
eventual place in history, constantly
imagining scenarios of bis death in a
street gun battle. Behind bis rough-
hewn outlaw persona, he projects a
man haunted by visions of his eventu-
al demise. It is a commanding, if
uneven, account.
Laurie stresses her character's
fierce independence, her taunting
pride in her sexuality that she •never
sold it,• though she often •gave it
away.• Her most successful transition
is to Jesse's placid wife, Zee, accom-
plished with the simple addition of a
hair ribbon. Her subtle facial gestures
register the genuirie emotions she
keeps mostly under wraps.
Simplicity, however, is not one of
the play's virtues, and its two actors
are challenged repeatedly to establish
often conflicmig emotions.
Bennett and Laurie acquit them-
selves admirably on this score. •Jesse
and the Band-;i.t Queen• is an ambi-
tious exercise which, more often than
not, succeeds with a flourish.
Closing perfonnances will be given
tonight and Sunday in OCC's Drama
Lab Studio Theater.
•TOM T1lUS reviews local theater fO( the Dai·
ly Pilot. His reviews appear Thursdays and Sat·
urdays.
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,. i • i I •1 ~ i r
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After
HOURS
• Send AP1IR HOtMS Items to 1he
Dally Pilot. 330 W. Bay St., Costa
Mesa. CA 92627; fax to (949) 646-
4170 °'call (949) 574-4268. A com-
plete llstlng may be found at
www.dallypllotcom.
SPECIAL
DREAM HOUSES
The benefit Project Playhouse
2000, a display village of kid-
size dream houses, will open
from 2 to. 6 p.m. today at
Fashion Island, 905 Newport
Center Drive, Newport
Beach. Tows of the village
outside the houses will be
held on weekends from Sun-
day through Oct. 21. Ticket
prices vary. The playhouses
will be auctioned at the
exhibit site Oct. 21. Proceeds
will go to the HomeAid chap-
ters of Orange County and
Greater Los Angeles/Ventu-
ra, which are sponsoring the
event. (949) 553-9510.
LA DOLCE VJTA
The eighth annual La Dolce
Vita will be held at 6 p .m.
Sunday on the South Coast
Plaza Village Green adjoin-
ing Antonello Ristorante,
3333 Bristol St. Tickets for
the Cystic Fibrosis Founda-
tion fund-raiser are $135 per
person and $1,500 for a VIP
table of 10. Seating is limit-
ed. (714) 938-1393.
RHYTHM & RHYME
Sliding Pillar Press and The
Sol Grill will present Rhythm
& Rhyme from 7 to 10 p.m.
Oct. 3 at The Sol Grill, 110
Daily Pilot
Mcfadden Place,~
Beach. Writen, mmidanS
and artists will partidpate in
the event, which is a celebra-
tion of the fourth issue of
•Notes from the Sliding Pll·
lar .• (949) 723-4105.
MARKETPlAa
The Orange County Market
Place takes pl.ace from 1 a.m.
to 4 p.m. Saturdays and SUn-
days in the Orange County
Fairgrounds' main parking lot.
$2 for adults, children under
12 are tree. (949) 723-6616.
MUSIC
MUSK MAN
Classical guitarist John Piz-
zarelll will perform at 7 :30
and 9:30 p.m. today at the
Orange County Performing
Arts Center, 600 Town Cen-
ter Drive, Costa Mesa. $42-
$46. (714) 556-2787.
ANOTHER DIMENSION
The 5th Dimension, known
for •Let the Sunshine In•
and other hit songs, will per-
form at 8 p.m. Sunday in
Orange Coast College's
Robert B. Moore Theatre,
2701 Fairview Road, Costa
Mesa. Ticket prices vary .
(714) 432-5880.
SALUTING SINATRA
Vocalist Harry Connick Sr.
will join the Nelson Riddle
Orchestra for •A Salute to
the Music of Frank Sinatra•
at 4 p.m. Sunday in Orange
Coast College's Robert B.
Moore Theatre, 2701
Fairview Road. Costa Mesa.
(714) 432-5880.
'Relat'~l' Barb ara Lee, M.S. MIT
W~ Hcwlnlj eoup1a.1nd1vtdua•• s. Groups
1151 OOVESTRE.ET, #105
NEWPORT BE'.ACH, CA 92660
(949) 261-8003
Ucense MH021595
Doily Pilot 'DATEBooK .
QASSICAL~O POP/ROCK & FLAMENCO /.----------------------..
RUISian pianist Evgeny
Kissin, 28, opens the Philhar-
.monic Society of Orange
County's 2000-01 season at 8
p.m. Thursday at the Orange
County Performing Arts
Center, 600 Town Center
Drive. Tickets are $45, $35
and $25. (949) 553-2422.
RACHMANINOff REVlmD
French pianist Jean-Philippe
Collard will debut with the
Pacific Symphony Orchestra
with Rachmaninoff's Piano
Concerto No. 2, starting off
music director Carl St. Clair's
elevent,tl season at 8 p.m.
Oct. 4 and 5 at the Orange
County Performing Arts
Center, 600 Town Center
Drive, Costa Mesa. Tickets
range from $12 to $52. (714)
755-5799.
REMEMBERING BENNY
GOODMAN
Clarinet virtuoso Abe Most
and his orchestra will team
up with guest soloist Gisele
MacKenzie to offer a tribute
to Benny Goodman at 8 p .m.
Oct. 21 at Orange Coast
..... College, 2701 Fairview
Road. Tickets range from
. $23 to $29. (7f4) 43l..SS80.
SHAKESPEARE IN MUSIC
William Clark will present
"Shakespeare in Song• at 2
p.m. Oct. 22 at Borders
Books, Music and Cafe at
South Coast Plaza, 3333 Bear
St., Costa Mesa. Clark will
put Shakespeare's poems
and sonnets to music. Free.
(714) 556-1185.
aJ
Tate 5 -a funk, rock and
Motown act -performs at 9
p .m. Saturdays at C&rmelo's
Ristorante, 3520 E. Coast
Highway, Corona del Mar.
Solo guitarist Ken Sanders
performs classical flamenco
tunes at 7 :30 p.m. Tuesdays
and Sundays. Shows are
free. (949) 675-1922.
SATURDAY NIGHT R&B
Gerald Ishibashi and the
Stone Bridge Band plays
rock and rhythm and blues
from 9 p.m. Saturdays to 1
a.m. at Sutton Place Hotel's
Trianon Lounge, 4500
MacArthur Blvd .. Newport
Beach. Free admission. (949)
476-2001.
STAGE
THE WIZARD OF OZ
Trilogy Playhouse at the LAB
Antimall presents L. Frank
Bau.m's "The Wizard of Oz•
7:30 p.m . Saturday and 3:30
p.m. Sunday. 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
Canadian playwright David
Freeman's• Jesse and the
Bandit Queen• will show
through Sunday at Orange
Coast College's Drama Lab
Studio, 2701 Fairview Road,
Costa Mesa. The play is a
sweeping saga of outlaws
and lovers. Performances a.re
at 2 and 7 p.m. $5 in advance,
$6 at the door. Seating is liin-
ited. (714) 432-5640, Ext. 1.
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i I ~...-:;:,. ............... ~ L ••••••••• !!' ••• !..!f.!'.-:9!.~!f!.~ ••...... ~.
THE OTHER HAIRY CONNICK
Vocalist Harry Connick Sr. will join the r(elson Rid-
dle Orchestra for "A Salute to the Music of Frank
Sinatra" at 4 p.m. Sunday in Orange Coast College's
Robert B. Moore Theatre, 2701 Fairview Road, Cos-
ta Mesa. (714) 432-5880.
THAT'S ENTERTAINING
J oe Orton's "Entertaining
Mr. Sloane" will run through
Oct. 22 at South Coast
Repertory's Second Stage.
Performances are 7:45 p.m.
Tuesday through Sunday
with matiness at 2 p.m. on
Saturday and Sunday. Tick-
ets are $18 through $47, with
discounts available. There
will be a pay-what-you-will
performance at 2 p.m. Sept.
23, with a $5 minimum sug-
DAVID YURMAN
THOROUGHBRED WATCH COLLECTION"'
. .
Saturday, September 23, 2000 A13
gested, cash only, and a limit
of two tickets per person.
The repertory is located at
655 Town Center Drive, Cos-
ta Mesa. (714) 708-5555.
A SPEOAL NIGHT
The Newport Beach Central
Library will present •A Very
Special Evening with Julie
Harris and Charles Nelson
Reilly" at 7 p.m. Monday at
the librarys Friends Meeting
Room, 1000 Avocado Ave. The
free program is sponsored by
the Newport Beach Arts Com-
mission . (949) 717-3801.
COOK IN TOWN
Broadway's Barbara Cook
will open the Orange County
Performing Arts Center's
2000-2001 Cabaret Season in
Founders Hall with perf o-
mances at 7:30 p.m. Thurs-
day and Friday, at 7 :30 and
9:30 p.m. Sept. 30 and at 1
p.m. Oct. 1. Tickets for the
early s hows are $49. Tickets
for the 9:30 p.m . shows and
matinees are $45. (714) 740-
7878.
SOUTH PAOFIC
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.
Song~ include •Some
Enchanted Evening,• "Noth-
in' Llke a Dame" and ·wash
That Man Right Out of My
Hair.· Free. (714) 432-7854.
OCTOBER LAUGHS
Orange Coast College will
debut lts production of come-
dian Steve Martin's •Picasso
at the Lapin Agile" at 8 p .m.
Oct. 5 in the Orama Lab The-
ater, 2701 Fairview Road.
Performances are at 8 p.m.
Thursdays through Saturdays
and 2 p.m . Sundays until Oct.
15. $7 in advance or $6 for
seniors, students and chil-
dren. $9 at the door. Seating
is limited. (714) 432-5880.
FABRAY IN CONaRT
Star of stage, film and the
small screen Nanette Fabray
will be featured in concert at 8
p.m. Oct 6 at Orange Coast
College's Robert B. Moore
Theatre, 2701 Fairview Road.
$22 general; $20 for OCC stu-
dents, senior citizens and chil-
dren under 12 in advance. $25
at the door. (714) 432-5880.
SHORT AND SWEET
"Ten or Less,• a series of stu-
dent-directed short plays
each running tO minutes or
less. will be staged at 8 p.m.
Fridays through Sundays
Oct. 20-22 and 27-29 at
OCC's Drama Lab Studio,
2701 Fairview Road. Tickets
are $5 in advance, $6 at the
door. Seating is limited. (714)
432-5725.
MAGICAUV COPPERFIELD
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 is at 600 Town
Cente.r Drive, Costa Mesa.
(714) 556-2122. Tickets are
$30 to $50. (714) 755-0236.
Celestino's._
quality MEATS ,.
The Finest Meot and setulce Aual/able
Smtint Cost11 Me111 for .wr j() ,_,,
( dl·-..1i 11n'-.. "'11111111 1 1 I l~I I /I I~ 11 \I h.
Slbs. Top Sirtoln Steak • Jibs. New York Steaks
31bs. Rib Eye Steak • 5lbs. Ground Cbuck
Slbs. Marinated KabobS • 5lbs. Tri Tip Rout
6lbs. Ch.lcke11 BreMt • 8oM In •Sida On
All for only
s199oo
..
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Al4 Saturday, 5eptembei 23, 2000
FEST
CONTINUED FROM ~ 11
Frawley plans to share ls
"Chanteclair, • the story of a
conceited rooster who th.inks
he's beautiful until the day
be gets bitten by a fox. By
the end of the tale, the
rooster learns about
humility.
Another was taken from a
book containing excerpts
from a woman's journal
about t,lle day she made
soap outdoors and three
Indians rode up to her. The
villagers feared the inclians,
but the visitors just asked to
BEAUTY
CONTINUED FROM A 11
on archival arches drawing
paper, where the ink seeps in.
Steinberg uses a tech-
nique called iris printing
done by Nash Editions,
which does not involve pho-
tographic paper.
•1 didn't want the gloss,"
taste the soap. They tried
some and then rode away.
The woman wrote 1n her
diary that the indians must
have left because the soap
tasted so bad.
Frawley plans to sing
songs be wrote in medieva•
style and tell stories with the
help of dragon and knight
puppets.
"Storytelling is the soul of
humanity,• he said.
Other entertainment
includes a local troupe pre-
senting a behind-the-scenes
look at the components of
French ballet, stQryteller
Barbara Klein telling French
Colle tales and illusionist
Ruben Gerard presenting
a program of mime and
Steinberg said. "The gloss is
like a veneer. You have to
look through it to see the
image.·
She prefers things as they
are.
Her husband, Larry
Greenberg, is a scientist. A
trained observer, he admires
his wife's powers of observa-
tion. ·
·Everything Claire does is
unique,' Greenberg said.
"She just sees things differ-
caricature.
Atkins, a resident of
Newport Beach, will lead
French lessons, teaching the
\)asics like •hello" -"bon-
J1>w• -and "goodbye" -
•au revoir."
'"This will introduce
them to the sound of Pre,qch
language,• Atkins said,
• Hopef~y it'll make them
interested to learn French."
Poll Rizco will teach
about French artists and
encowage children to try
creating their own artwork.
"It's French art for all
ages,• said Melissa Adams,
media coordinator for the
library. •A crash course in
the French masters."
ently from the way I do."
In Italy, Steinberg noticed
a cup or espresso on a pink
damask tablecloth. It was a
perfect cup of espresso, she
said, because it contained
crema, the foaming oil of the
coffee bean. The light fell on
the spoon, moved across the
table and permeated the
image.
•I have infatuations with
life," Steinberg said, "The
trivial is important."
=.;a:; ..... ilit .. i::
~ .... !.:-:-. ·1n ........... .
med to~-...
bleck caU -ay 'This la my iliwadactk& Black
CU...' '* \119 to do ... au u Oa11Mce, • q..gory
said. ·~ow lbe tldlib
about~ fdllltlDed. Sbe,...._... .. ._an
inlmaal<a.I bmly per-
~ IOUDd •If hav-
ing • ltrllDgel; to ....
which lbe ta. 9llii •YI the
same linel, but ibe UUnlEI
abolit it more, lbe ,_..
DJOre."
Gregory, who will mod-
erate Monday, talkl of the
actren and the Belle with
warmth in bis vOice. The
play, which bas been
tramlated into 21 Jan.
guages, ii his favorite of
the ones be bas helped
bring to the stage.
"I just think it's a mira-
cle,• Gregory said. "Tak-
ing what 1n 1976 was an
:a: ...... ldliil
...~-= ......... :LIDwlnd ~=~--= cll'I tn New York Qty.
•1 heard. "Yoll're not in
the book .• And I looked
around and I beard
'You're not In tM bOok' again.. GJegory Ncalla. •t
Mkl 'What book ue you
talld'9 4b0utf8' .
NelloD ltaUly told Cin-
gcxy that he bad been try-
ing to reach tibl;l bY looking
him up m the New Yolk
City phone directmy and
bad been Umucceaful.
·1 Nkl, ~rs because
I live in Loi Angeles,'"
Gregory quipped.
Nelson Reilly asked
Gregory, an established
theater producer, if be
would like to try and do a
play about Oickimon with
Harris 1n the main role.
The rest ls history -
except for one thing. The
play originally had 14
roles in it.
:.si • ......... ------·=· dtflliNid .... d:M"•
wbD ,.·"J:MeJ?h'I' one-~ , .....
tbele '9 DO OQ9 to Jllllp JVG
out U fO..U foriM _.
tblDg, ..... ..w. ·-tbereu DO oDe tD tib ..
buldeD witb you..
But it ii a bUldm lbe
carriel beautifully.
• Julie a. .... llnt ladf ol
the tbeets DOW,• Ciregmy
. said of tbe woman WbD
helped found tbe Ador'a
Studio. •Sbe11 pobablY
the greatest stage~
we have, and lbe npo••
such huge confidence in
Charles Nel9oli Jeilly .•
He d08I u well, credit-
ing the director With
injecting both humor ind
poignancy into the play.
•1t tears you apart and
makes you laugh,• Grego-
ry said.
•
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.. ,. .. _, __ -·--···=•u• -· -·---··--··
Vote ND on Measure S
I have COiied Newport Beach home for more than 40 years.
Our quaUty of life here Is unmatched and I belleW Measure S
places ft In jeopardy. \bte NO on Measure S.
Dozens of Costty ElecttoN Over "Minor"
hnoYatlonl And Neighborhood
Improvement Profecb
Measure S ISN'T about 'giving voters a
·chance to vote on big development
projects.' If you wlll read It you will
see that It requires e>epenslve cltywtde
elections for ALL General Pion
Amendments (large, medium and small)
once a certain threshold Is met.
This means Measure S would force
dozens of elections over the next few
years. Most of the~ elections wtll
be over fairly minor neighborhood
renovations and Improvements.
Under Measure S we wUI vote on o 100-
squore-foot addition to a small otnce. We
wlll vote on on expansion of a small
school. We wtll vote 90 o new meeting
hall tor a church. We Wiii vote on o
modest renovation of o restaurant,
even a ftre stotton.
In fQct. If Meoi !ft S hQd bean on the
bogc.s cMk>g ttw !mt ten WQJ. there
CO\Ad bcMt bean YO to 55 tlectkn
llldec the tarma of the mocw re, Thgt's
neaty 12 ocokt<;fs on the tx*>t eyery
twoWQJ, •
lhe costs fOr al theee electtonl "1K>Uld
hove been Into the mllllons of dolors.
Since the ta>cP<JY9fl have to pay n..
Cotf1 thlS means Meok.we S ~ hove
diverted mlllforil of doklr1 from lmpor·
tant prlOOttel IUCh OI pubic IOfety and
poramedlc tef'Vtce1. Thfl II one reolOn
wt¥ OUf pollce and h oftlclall ltrongty
'-'Q8 a NO vote on~ S.
· ~AN11J>-01 ...
Measure S won't Improve planning or
reduce tramc.
But It will abandon careful study, public
hearings and environmental review • In
favor of on endless series of etectlons
over MINOR Genera P1on Amendments.
Measure S ~ promote piecemeal ·one
piece at a ttme • development -rather
thon on overaH master pion which tokes
Into aocount the needs and wants of the
entire community.
If Measure S Is approved, It's unlikely that
the Newport Beach General P1on wlM
ever be updated again.
I believe In Representative Govemment.
I believe we should elect people who wl
work with tratnc experts, planning·~
and the public to study deYeklpment
proposas -then make the best decilk>n
fOr OUf Community.
Measure s abandON Repreeentottve
Government and promote1 an endle•
setles expenttve ond ~ polttcol
compolgns. tt won't bf1nO about good
planning and It certainty won't Pf9l8'\l9
OUf quallty of llfe.
POiee and h <>flldael. ~· ~.
chUrch teoaen, educOtort. tmal
bullnell OYt'nerl and many ottwa en
oppOl8d to Mlr.9119 S. ... 111 .... llO
onM111ral.
• I
•niey have lh1a cheer In AU6lro1Jo where 18,000
people In Ute swim complex .tart yelllng, "AU&!le,
AWJSle, Ausste, Oy, Oy, Oyl So before Aaron:. final,
I started yelling, 'Aaron Aaron Aaronl Gold Gold
Goldi' The people around u.s muat have thought
I was aome crazy, paycho dad or aomethlng. •
-TIM PEMSOL,, father of Newport Harbor High
student A9roft Pelnol, who won a sl!Ver medal In the
men's 200 meter backstroke finals at the
2000 Olymplcs In Sydney, Australia.
READERS RESPOND
Saturday, September 23, 2000 A15
.. :Residents mourn loss of Alvarez, Shalimar Learning Center . ~
~
. : AT ISSUE: The Shalimar
I . ' Leaming Center, an
l after-school tutoring
1 program in Costa Mesa,
•dosed Its doors this
month after residents
1 • demonstrated to protest
the firing of Maria
Alvarez. The center's
. future is in question. : s houldn't the question
1 be: What does the
community want? It~ like the com-
munity .~ken. They
want the center with Maria
Alvarez. Shalimar was
started years ago to meet
the needs of the communi-
ty. Perhaps the staff needs
to change the rules to con-
tinue to meet the communi-
ty's needs instead of firing
Maria and thus having to
shut the center down.
It is very disheartening
to me that Randy Barth has
tried so hard to discredit
Maria, both through news-
paper quotes and a long
letter he sent out to Shali-
mar supporters.
I've known Marla for
years through St. Joachim
and Shalimar, and to sug-
gest that she •puts herseU
above the well being of the
children • or that she would
"incite the parents" in a
·frightening protest" seems
the farthest from the truth.
It's sad that there is a
difference of philosophies,
• but it seems even sadder
that the staff "feels threat-
ened" by the same commu-
nity it serves. What does
' that tell you about the rap-
, port and respect the staff
has with the children and
mothers they work with? It
makes me doubt Randy
Barth's comment in bis let-
ter that •we are committed
to serving children better·
than ever.•
MARY CAPPfWNI
Newport Beach
As an educator, I am
disappointed to bear of
Shalimar Leaming Cen-
ter's closure. As a person
who cares about children,
I also question the motives
of Maria Alvarez.
Why wasn't she more
willing to work with the
center on the children's
behalf. You can't do a
responsible job with 300
children and disregard the
scheduling required to
make it successful. Chil-
dren understand waiting
their tum; it's part of
school. Parents -under-
stand scheduling; it's part
of life.
Why is Maria· getting
all the support for not
understanding this and
disregarding the schedul-
ing necessary for an effec-
tive tutoring program?
MIKE BARNETT
,,,-, Costa Mesa )
I'm an educator and .
I've also been a volunteer
at Shalimar, and I've come
to deeply admire Maria
Alvarez. Everybody in the
neighborhood loves her. I
cannot believe she's being
so cruelly treated.
In no way did she start
a protest. The people
Maria bas worked with
are the most loving, won-
dedul people. They appre-
ciate how the center and
Marla has cleaned up the
street and made it a safe
and wonderful place.
And to act like this is a
big plot against them and
to act like Maria bad start-
ed it is very, very wrong.
I just cannot explain the
many wondedul things
she bad done, and to top it
all off I think they wanted
to change the nature of
the Shalimar, which had
been a refuge for children,
a place started by a
church they could come to
after school. Now why the
church gave it oveT to this
organization, I don't know,
but they did and this orga-
nization wants to come in
and sort of apply corporate
techniques or whatever.
But it was just doing
such a marvelous job.
Everyone loved it, and to
me it's just incredible that
here's something good. It's
just so disillusioning. I
think there's a certain
amount of strange emo-
tions going on in this and
I hope that somehow
Shalimar can be saved.
MARTHA SARKISSIAN
Newport Beach
It is sad to think that the
actions of a few members
of our community can
DON LEACH I OAl.Y PLOT
Marisol Zambrano holds up sign ln support of Marla Alvarez, who was let go from the
Shalimar LearnJng Center after 5 years of service.
affect the rest of us.
I want to make 1t clear
that not all of the resident
of the Shalimar neighbor-
hood agree with the way
some people protested last
Tuesday. I feel embar-
rassed for their actions.
And I would like to say to
the staff and volunteers:
Thank you for all the
work and generosity that
you've shown us. I hope
and pray that you continue
the vision you once had. A
lot of our children have
benefited from the help
they have received fTom
you. Several of the kids
who started at the center
have now gone on to col-
lege. And I strongly
believe that the center has
made the difference in
their lives.
I would also like to
thank Maria Alvarez for
being a strong voice in the
community. I strongly
respect her for that, and I
just hope that we can all
find a solubon.
Otherwise, the ones who
would ultimately suffer will
be the children of our
neighborhood .
EVA MARIN
Costa Mesa
I was sad when I read
that Maria Alvarez was
fired last week from her
job at the Shalimar Leam-
ing Center. My under-
standing is that she actual-
ly started that learning
center.
However, as a volunteer
at the Noah Project Leam-
ing Center in Santa Ana
(which is also supported by
Think Togethei'). I appreci-
ate the necessity of provid-
ing an environment in
which the students can
learn. If the director of the
center cannot provide such
an environment due to
excessive noise or too
many students crowded
into a confined space, then
I, for one, would not be
donating my time al that
center.
I understand that these
centers are provided to
help students improve their
academic learning with the
expectation that better
schooling leads to better
job skills and therefore to
an opportunity to achieve a
more financially secure life.
For millions of Americans,
this has been the formula
for achieving a better life.
The fact that this formula
works in this country is one
of the great advantages of
being an American.
If the center at Shalimar
was so successful that they
couldn't handle all the stu-
dents, then some bard
choices had to be made. If
Maria. and some of the par-
ents don't agree with the
choice that Randy Barth
had to make, then maybe
they could look for other
sources of financial support
and add another apartment
or two to their center,
thereby relieving the over-
crowded environment
MULKEUY
Costa Mesa
School repa,ir committee needs Wtino voice LEnER OF THE WEEK
Can we get rid of the planes
towing ad banners?
I I t • • L eaders of Costa Mesa's : Latino business com-
: munity were at a loss
1 earlier this month to explain
, why no one from the normal-
ly active group had volun-
' teeredtotake EDITORIAL part in decid-
: ing how the
• Newport-Mesa Unified
, School District should 1pend
: $163 million in boaxf money.
• We are, too.
Por much of the past
: year, members of the Latino
: busmen community have
i made certain their voicea
, were beUd, whether lt wu
' about the U.S. Cemua or
: Costa Mesa's plan to
: revamp tbe West Side.
• But u any iai\ae II pre11·
i art Of COSTA limA
CGl&ia Miia Qty Hall, 11
Ptdr Dmw. Coa MIN, CA
~.(714)75'-5223 .
• Mat•· a.iy..,,.......
I 0.'9d'• ..... A,. Cow•
............. llddl. _ ............ .
'GIYOf•--•
ing and important, it is the
district's $110-million bond,
which was passed in June.
District officials also expect
to add $53 million in state
matching funds.
The approval of the bond
was one of the best pieces
of news to hit the communi-
ty in years. Not only will our
schools get a much-needed
shot of money, but the dil-
trlct'• careful handling of
the vote and its unprece•
dented interaction with the
community bode well for
Newport·Mesa't future
health. 1be lines Of com.mu·
nlcatton between the d1ltrict
and tho.a it serves -which
were bedly fia)'ed by put
problems -are open~
and they need to stay open.
For these reasons, it is
striking that no Latino busi-
ness pezson has volun-
teered. Representatives
from the other 18 groups
the district is seeking mem-
bers from -the two cham-
ben of commerce, the
Orange County Taxpayers
Assn., the Orange County
1'teasurer'1 office and the
California School Employ-
ees As1n., to name a few -
all applied.
But no one from the Lati-
no buslneu community?
Explanations for the lack
of interest included the pot·
libllity that members didn't
undentand the diStrict's
appeal for volunteers
But throughout the bond
process, communicating
with the community bas
been priority No. 1 f.2r the
district. And back ln-1'\'lly,
Supt. Robert Barbot met
with members of lhe Latino
Advisory Committee, which
includes five West Side
businesses.
It is not our intent to lam-
baste Latino business lead-
ers, however. But having
worked 10 hard to be ective
in the com.munify, they
have raised the bu, and our
expectations, for tMtr con-
tinued participetion.
We belieVe th91 should
be pert of this c:rudal, lilflu-
ential committee. There are
163 million reelOQI to dO IO.
~ COllSGl•TID ua•••IKT 1985 Pletwdle A .... COlta
MM9. CA 13827, ..-, ., ....
The city of Newport Beach is spending great
amounts of money and time fighting an expansion
of John Wayne Airport, yet much noisier aircraft
operate nonstop and effectively destroy the ambi-
ence of the weekends of many residents.
All summer long, every weekend (sometimes
long weekends), all day long, one (and sometimes
two or three) small, eicessively noisy airplanes fty
back and forth over the coastline, towlng advertis-
ing banners. They are an inexcusable intrusion
into the quiet of our homes.
This letter is to es.prw our disgust with the
no~e created by the.e small plaD9I that tow
advertising and are a11oWed to take~
over the right of hundreds of Newport Beech resi-
dents to enjoy peace and ~to their own
homes.
Is there anythl.og that we residelltl ca.n do to
stop this bUghtf
JI.Ml• NfO S1IW flOmS
Newpoltllwb
•
Daily Pilot I
ANACUTO RAPf'ING /LOS ANGELES TIMES
Newport Harbor High product
Misty May, ln Manhattan Beach,
eventually e n ro ute to Sydney.
• Gold-medal dreams go
down the drain in 16-14
loss in the quarterfinals.
SYDNEY O§e9 -As memo-
rable a day as
Friday was for
local athletes •
in the Sydney Olympics, Saturday,
was not as special.
Newport Harbor High product
Misty May, along with her playing
partner Holly McPeak were upset in
the quarterfLOals of the beach vol-
leyball competition, 16-14, before a
stunned sellout crowd at Bondi
Beach.
In fact the other U.S. team, Jenny
Johnson Jordan and Annett DaVJS
were also ousted, 15-9, eliminabng
both Amencan teams
May and McPeak were defeated
by Brazil's Adriana Samuel and
Sandra Pires, both of whom won
medals with different partners at
the Atlanta Olympics in 1996.
The lead changed bands four
times before Samuel and Pires led,
11-10.
Four different times, May and
McPeak evened the score, only to
have the Brazilians regain a one-
point,lead, thanks to the strong net
play by Pires.
Finally, after three match poLOts,
Pues slammed LO a winner, send.mg
both May and McPeak to their
knees in disbelief.
It was a roller-coaster year for
May. She, along with McPeak, qual-
ified for the Olympics by accumu·
lating enough points through world-
wide townaments.
"It's like beating Michael John-
son in the 400-meters and giving
him a 200-meter head start,• Misty's
father, Butch May said in a recent
interview. "What Misty and Holly
did in 10 events, it took the other
teams 25-30 events.•
May and McPeak made the
Olympics following a semifinals win
over Zi Xiong and Rong Chi of China,
17-16, at the China Open in August.
Unfortunately for May. a pulled
stomach muscle has hampered her
jumping, running and serving, but
for an opportunity to play in the
Olympics, she toughed it out.
Jordan and Davis were eliminat-
ed by Japan's Yukiko T~ashi
• and Teru Saiki.
Quot• Of --. .
-W. needid that. h was a tau;, week for •1after Moma)
and we needed to come out and play wel _!
Jeff Brinkley, Newport football coach
. .
-S.S-• .. 25 hanar.
Jiff TllOllASOll
Sports Editor Roger CQl'lson • 949..5744223 • Sports Fax: 949-650-0170 •Saturday, Sep'8mber 23, 2000 Bl
it out
DAllV Pft.OT PHOTOS BY STEVE MCCRANK
Newport Harbor's Chris Mandertno (a bove) blasts through CdM's Eric Snell (1) and J ayson Skalla (54).
Below, Sailors quarterback Morgan Craig (6) ls pursued by Corona del Mar's Skalla and Scott Biggs (59).
AN EARLY KO
Tars' defense ,sets tone early, collects four
turnovers as Newport dominates.
Richard Dunn
DAILY PILOT
NEWPORT BEACH -It is a football rivalry almost
four decades old, but no history lesson was necessary
for Newport Harbor Htgh's defense in preparation for
Friday night's Back Bay encounter with Corona del
Mar.
With defensive gems conung from every direction,
the Sailors pushed around the Sea Kings and won
convincingly over their cross-town rival for the fourth
time in five years.
"In our first defensive series of the game, we
stuffed them ... we just shut them down completely,•
Newport Harbor defenSJve tackle Nick Moghaddam
said of the game's tone-setttng series.
Aside from a CdM touchdown in the waning
moments of Battle of the Bay XXXIX. the Sailors
recorded a shutout with their first string on the field.
Sailor defenders were everywhere. And it started
as soon as Corona del Mar quarterback Joe Barber
took his first snap from center Adam Dwm.
The Sea Kings were stopped on back-to-back lat-
eral passes, one for no gam. the other for a loss, then
Newport Harbor defensive end Garrett l'roncale
sacked Barber for a 6-yard loss, forcing CdM's Rory
McKeever to punt before many Corona del Mar fans
had their soda and popcorn.
•1 think that first series definitely set the tone for
the game,· Newport Harbor defensive end Jan Bani-
gan said.
The Tars scored on their first offensive drive, then
the defense shut down the Sea Kings again and New-
port Harbor's offense responded with another touch
SEE SAILORS PAGE 84
SEA KINGS
SAILORS
• Manderino's 226 rushing
yards, three touchdowns,
propel Sailors to sixth win in
last seven games against Back
Bay rival Corona del Mar.
Barry Faulkner
DAILY PILOT
NEWPORT BEACH -Chris Man-
darino, who quMterbacked the New-
port Harbor High football team to a
CIF Southern Section championship
last fall, might have thought that was
a high-profile JOb.
But. in Fnday night's Battle of the
~y XXXJX agamst cross-town nval
Corona del Mar, the seruor showed
the spotlight can be a lJtUe brighter 6
yards deeper m the backfield at tail-
back.
Mandenno, shifted to tailback for
the second half of last week's non-
league loss to Marina: made himself
at home from the start LO tus fl.rst var-
sity start at the position he played as a
freshman.
The 6-foot-1, 205-pounder bulled,
spun, sidestepped and pulled through
the CdM defense for 226 yards and
three touchdowns to key a 35-7 non-
league victory
With Mandenno carrymg the load,
the Sailors (2-1
and ranked No.
6 in CIF Divi-
sion VI, steam-
rolled to the
end zone on
their first four
possessions to
daun the1.r sec-
ond straight
win over the
Sea Kings (0-
3), their sixth in
the last seven
u He's a big 'ol
guy, who
reminds m e of
Wade nit ... "
Jeff Brinkley
Newport Haibor
High football coach
meebngs and their 27th ID the battle
for the perpetual Bell trophy.
Manderino carried 12 times for 74
yards on the Tars' operung drive,
which covered 99 yards on 15 plays.
J1ul.ioc quarterback Morgan Craig's 7-
Y4fd touchdown rollout pass to tight --Je Foley capped the impressive
procession. which appeared to take
any upset asp1.rations away from the
designated visitors.
After a three-and-out, Harbor
marched 74 yards on nine plays, with
Manderino doing the honors on a 24-
yard run.
Mandertno, who also starred at
outside linebacker, collecbng one of
the hosts' three interceptions and
helping force CdM's only lost fumble,
capped the next two sconng drives
with runs of 16 and 15 yards.
After netting 22 more yards on the
first two carries of Harbor's fifth pos-
session, Manderino strolled to the
bench, garnering the appreciative
applause of the home crowd, which
accounted for most of the overflow
5,100 in attendance.
"He's a big ol' guy. who reminds
me of Wade rut (who finished his
three varsity seasons in 1993 with
2,621 career rushing yards),• New-
port Harbor Coach Jeff Bnn.kley said
of Manderino.
•And our offensive line did a fan-
tastic job.•
The Harbor front wall of tackles
Scott Lopez and Robert Chai, guards
Jim Erickson and Ryan Devin. center
Jeff Marshall, as well as fullback
1\"avis Trimble and Poley, helped
amass 31• ground yards. This from a
team which had rushed for 150 yards
combined its first two games.
SEE NEWPORT PAGE 84
. . ' . . . . ' . .
Daily Pilot
..
•
Doily Pilot SPORTS Saturday, s.p.mber 23, 2000 83
HIGH SCHOOL TENNIS
Costa Mesa girls
earn 11 -7 victory
over Los Amigos
• Rain puts a darner on
Mustangs' singles play.
COSTA MESA -The Cos-
ta Mesd High girls tennis
team got its second win of the
season Priday, pushing past
nonleague visitor Los Ami·
gos, 11 -6, Friday at Costa
Mesa.
The Mustangs had a
chance lo sweep in singles if
1t weren't for the rain. Hillary
Havens and Misa Lee took
out Los Anugos' top three sin-
gles players.
Sunglee Kun defeated the
No. 2 and 3 players for Los
Anugos, but the match
against the Lobos' No 1 was
called because of rdin
Costa Mesd won four of
the rune sets in doubles as the
Mustangs unproved to 2-4 on
the season
NONl.EAGUE
CoslA Mf.SA 11, Los AMIGos 6
Slngles Havens (CM) def M.
Nguyen, 6-2, def S Nguyen. 6-1, Haveos
def. Dinh, 6-0; Lff (CM) won, 6 2, 6-2.
6-0; Kim (CM) won, 6-2, 6-0, S-5
(stopped due to rain).
Doubles H Nguyen·Pham (CM) def.
Hoang-Chao, 6-4, def Luster· Tien, 6 2,
lost to L..,Hkuynh, 6 7, Doan-Vu (CM)
won, 7-6. lost. 2-6, 0-6. T Nguyen-Peng
(CM) lost. 2 6, 2 6, 1 ·6
SATURDAY, MONDAY MATCHUPS
The Newport Harbor and
Estancia high school cross coun-
try teams will compete at the
Hunll.ngton Beach Invitational.
The Eagles girls will begin at
11:20 a.m .. while the boys follow
at 12: 10 p.m.
The Sailors' running arsenal
includes last year's CIP Southern
Section Division D girls champion
Amber Steen, who took second
at last week's Woodbndge lnv1ta -
t.1onal with a 17:40.
On the boys side for Newport,
look for Chris McMillen. who
was thud at the Woodbndge lnVJ -
tanonal with a 15:49.
For the Eagles. semor Liz
Hwpe leads a group of talented
gul.s. wtule Humberto RO)as, Lws
Segoviano and Mike Casillas
lead the boys' pack.
Here's today's sports menu:
• All four local high school water
polo teams will continue tourna-
ment action.
Newport Harbor. Corona del
Mar and Costa Mesa will com-
pete at the South COdst Tourna-
ment, while Estanoa takes part
in the lrvine Tournament.
• The Costa Mesa cross country
team will be running at the Dana
Htlls Invitational, beginning at
12:30 p.m.
• ln field hockey action, Newport
Harbor will take part in th e
Orange County Tournament at
Marina, dueling Manna at 9 a.m ..
Santiago at 11 a.m. and Santa
Ana at I p.m. The tourney con-
tinues next Saturday.
• The CdM girls volleyball team
will take on past Sea Kings stars
at 7 p.m. for an aJumni matcJi.
• ln collegiate action, the Orange
Coast College women's vdlleyball
team travels to Moorpark for an
11 a.m. nonconference matcbup,
whale the Vang\lMd University
women host Blola at 7 p.m.
• The OCC cross country team
will host the OCC Classic at
F8ll'Vlew Park, the men starting
at 9 and the women at 10 a.m.
• In women's water polo, the
Plrates will compete in the Diablo
Valley Tournament
On Monday:
• In a h1gh school girls golf tour-
nament at 12:45 p.m .. Estancia
will host a seven-team, 18-hole
get-together at the Costa Mesa
Golf & Country Club's Mesa Lin-
da Course.
In add1bon to Estancia, Mari-
nd, Woodbndge, Long Beach
Millikan, Edison, Santa Ana Val-
ley and Century wtll ta~e part in
the tournament.
• Newport Harbor will take on
Keppel at the Alhambra GolJ
Course at I :30 p.m.
• The Costa Mesa girls tennis
team will host Ocean View at 3.
-by Tony Altobell
Bucs hope to get offensive
• Pirates will host El e o ( ( s T I R T 1 N G L I N E U p S
Camino today at OCC.
COSTA MESA -OfRNsE DEffHsE
Perhaps a httle .. No. .....,_ Ht. Wt..O . ...,.. No. ~ Ht. Wt. a . ,,__
sun 15 JUSt what 11 Nlcll HIGGs 6-1 195 fr QB 97 .i-Gu"'•mw· 6-4 213 So OE the doctor · M ~ ._ 5-8 175 fr RB 75 V1Wa a-6-4 210 So OT ordered for the J7 """-c.-s-10 210 Fr. FB 55 DAN s-6-1 220 Fr OT Orange Coast Col-12 JumN DALI 5-9 175 So WR eo TOWY w-c.-2 210 So OE
J V..-r 5,._ HI 5-3 145 fr WR 45 MA1n1N JNaON 6-2 220 So Ol8 lege footbdll team 41 ..,. Filii:lw:a-6-3 245 So TE a DumN 0~1111 r.-1 230 So ILB
After sconng only nine n ~ ic..,,_ 6-3 286 So. LT .. .M'Tlll ~ r.-2 240 So. OLB
pomts combmed m theu first n GMT a.-LYw 6-4 100 So LG ll "-. ~ 6-0 165 So CB
both t · ht th 50 LNCll OIAw:z 6-0 250 So C 27 Jilt-.~ S-9 180 So. CB two games, a rug · e " oo... GMICIA s-10 HJ Fr RG 42 ~ IVwM 6·2 200 So. ss Pirates (0-2) will bust out the 5t Enmuo HA&L 6-4 210 So RT 25 .._. a-n &-0 175 Fr. FS
sunscreen for a I p.m. noncon-
rerence mdtchup dgalnst visit-
mg El Camino (2-0) today. points per game). 44 passes for 386 yards and
threw four touchdowns. The Bucs lead the Mission
Conference's Central Division
10 scoring defense at 17 points
per game. The biggest problem
is trymg to find the end zone.
Last year. the Wamors
silenced OCC's powerful
offense, 17-3, m the Pirates'
season finale.
Hodge's targets included
wide receivers Devin Pitts
(eight catches, 135 yards and
one touchdown) and Dennis
Jones (eight passes for 106
yards and a touchdown). To make mdtters worse.
OCC is going up against one of
the toughest defenses to score
against m El Camino ( 11 .5
Returning for the Warriors is
last yea.r's Northern Division
Offensive Player of the Year,
quarterback Robert Hodge. ln
last week's 28-20 win over San-
ta Ana, Hodge completed 24 of
El Camino 1s currently
rcmked fourth nabonally by the
J.C. Grid Wue
DIANA
CONTINUED FROM 81
"With about a mile to go
is when I try to make a
move.·
Sumner agrees. "She's
totally the opposite of
Season. that's for sure,• he
said. "She always hangs
around close enough to do
something out there. She's
a patient starter, but she'll
go iI she has to go She'll
do whateve r it tdkes to stay
with everyone else.•
Hossfeld played soccer
as a lud and reahzed at a
young age that she was not
the next Mia Hamm. "I
wasn't very good at all,•
she said. smiling. I got into
runrung by taking part in the Spirit Runs as a
kid and I really got interested in it.·
Attention to Hossfeld's opponents: Don't
let the charming and quiet personality fool
you on the course. "She might be very
feminine off the course. but she's a bully on
it." Sumner said. ·1 think her biggest
strength is that she's tough as nails out there.
People will see her run and they're going to
look at her and say, "Where is she getting
that from?' •
Hossfeld is getting that extra wind from
her tireless effort and preparation and a
desire to help the Sea Kings defend their CIF
Southern Section Oivision IV and state titles.
•rm very competitive against other
teams,· she said. "I will do
anything I have to do to
help this team win agam. •
she said.
With the hours she's
spent on and off the track
Wlth her teammates, it's
almost Wee another family
for the just-turned
17 -year-old.
"The other seniors in ttus
group and I have been
running together for years,·
Hossfeld said. ·1 think that
when we go our separate
ways in college. we'll still
be great fnends and we'll
keep in touch. The people
on this team is what I love
the most about cross
country.•
Now with bigger meets
approaching. Sumner
believe$ that now is the
time to take the elite runners up to another
level and that includes Hossfeld.
"We're going to start raising the ante a
little bit.• Sumner said. "She's definitely in
that top pack of runners we have who can
handle what we throw at her. In fact, I even
believe we're holding her back a little bit.
You're going to see some great times coming
out of this runner.·
Playfully nicknamed. "Ostrich,• Hossfeld
is one bird that will not bury her head in the
sand when the Pad.fie Coast League and CIF
finals approach.
"My teammates call me ostrich because of
my long legs,• sh e said. "I've got a real long
stride.•
DEEP 'SiA
AUOAY'S COUNTS
fMwport l.Alndlng • 6 boau.
92 anglers. 146 yellowfin tuna,
t 70 sand bau, 66 a1lko bau, ~6 sculpin, 2 dorado, 1 barracuda,
2 halibut. 7 rockfish, 1 sheephead
Davey'• Lociler -9 boats,
133 anglers. t 12 yellowfin tuna.
3 yellowtail, 51 bonita,
60 sand bass, 51 calico bass,
7 sculpin, 4 sheephead, 3 halibut.
1 wtliteiish, 8 rockfish.
CORRECTION
It was Ron Tripp
In Thursday's ed1bon fea -
twing #Over the years with
the battles of the bay,· it was
Ron 1iipp who had two mter-
ceptions for Newport Harbor
in the 1970 game. (Not Bob).
BRIEFS
OCC men frustrated;
Coast women win, 2-0
•Men forced to settle for 2-2 tie in OEC opener.
.1t started 75 SOCCER
minutes late
because of tardy officials and
their were six yellow cards
handed out. and as a result
Orange Coast College's
men's soccer team was held
to a 2-2 tie by visiting Fuller-
ton in the Orange Empire
Conference opener Friday.
Chris Wimmer and Matt
Moseley got OCC's goals.
The Pirates are 4-1-4, 0-0-1 in
the OEC.
• In the women's game, Coast
was a 2-0 winner at Fullerton,
with goals by Katie Sutton
and Lilly Lopez. The Pirates
are 6-3-1. 1-0 in the OEC.
Estancia splits
Estancia High's POLO
boys water polo team
defeated host Irvine, 12-7,
the n lost to Mater Dei, 16-6,
at Heritage Park in the Irvine
Water Polo Tournament Fri-
day.
Matt Thorpe scored six
goals in the two games for
Estancia, and Phil Westfall
scored five goals. Cwt Gl.acy
had three goals in the win
over Irvine.
In Col-ELSEWHERE lege volley-
ball, Arizona's Embry Riddle
Aeronautical Unive~ity (6-7)
dealt host Vangwird Univer-
sity (0-8) a 15-12, 15-8, 16-1-'
defeat in women's play ... In
college women's soccer, Van-
guard was a 5-1 nonconfer-
ence winner over United
States international Universi-
ty on the WUlller's field. Brit-
tany Brdun had two goals and
two ass1Sts for VU ... In high
school girls goU, Newport
Harbor was second to Palm
Desert at the Harbor Tourna-
ment at Palm Desert Country
Club by 16 strokes. Harbor's
Kelly Hunt tied for second
Wlth an 82. Lindsay Galbraith
had a 91 and Shelly roberts
had a 99 ... ln High school
lrosh/soph water polo, Coro-
na del Mar routed Dana Hills,
16-3, and Esperanza, 19-1, at
El Toro High's Charger Cup.
John Mann scored 13 goals.
Last year Fletcher Jones
Motorcars sold more Mercedes-
Benz than anyone in the U.S.
We have made a Special
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Sclor'9., Oum ....
CoroNdelMM' 0 0 0 1 · 7 Newport HMbor 6 15 7 1 ·35
... ·Fol~ 7'= =t'alg
(kick blodtid). 3:05. s4ic:ortd ou-ter ... • Mandeflno 24 run (Gaeta kick),
9:32. ... -Manderlno 16 run (Rankin pass
from Craig), 2;34. .
NH • Mander"='1~..U kk:k),
8:16.
... -Ortegll~ ~kk), 6:08. CdM ·Ward 7 ~from Hendy (Del Fante kick), 1 :24. Attenda~estlmated). llUSHING Cdlll -H.cker. 11-59; Hencfy, 3-5; M. C()()f>e(, 2-4; Moore, 2-mlnus-1; Barber. 2-mlnus-4.
NH -Manderino, 32·~2.61 3 TDs; Ortega, 8-42. 1 TO· Trlmo1e, 3·24;
Thornton. 4-20:~JOhnson, 4-13; Gray, Hi; Cta!g. 4-mlnus-·McDonald. 1-minus-2; Miller; 1-mlnus-. INDfVIDUAL MSstNG
QM. ~4-7-1, 41, 1 TO; Barber, 5-14-35. Mt ·Craig. 5-0, 46; McDonald,
1-1-0, 13. INOMDUAL RECEIVING Cdlll ·Ward 3-17, 1 TO· Jones, 2-16; Hadcer, 2-13, MOOre~ 1·27i Alshuler, 1·3. NH • Graeta, 2-24· 1rimb1e 1-13'
Vandersloot. H 1; Foley, 1·~. 1 f6; Gray. 1-4. GAME STATISTICS Cdlll NH
First downs 11 21
Rushes-yardage 18-74 57-329
Passing yardage 76 59
Passing 9-21 ·3 6-6-0 Net return yardage• 0 10
Sacks-yardage 2 -14 1 -5 Net yardage 136 393
Punts 3-45 1-36 Fumbles-fumbles lost H 3-2
Flags-net yardage 6-40 9-85 Time of possessfon 16:22 31:38 *Punt returns, interceptions. fumble returns
SAI LORS
CONTINUED FROM 81
down early in the second quarter.
'·
• Avalos' game-winning
field goal with 14 seconds
remaining lifts Mustangs.
Tony Altobelli
DAILY PILOT
COSTA MESA -All those last·
second, game-ending drills that prob·
ably bored many Costa Mesa High
football players paid up in a big way
Friday night.
Luis Avalos' 21-yard field goal with
14 seconds remaining gave the host
Mustangs a 24-22 nonleague win over
surprising Westminster at Orange
Coast College.
·we work on kicking a game-win·
ning field goal with a no-huddle and
less than 10 seconds left every day in
practice,• Coach Jerry Howell said.
•That's what Luis gets pajd the big
bucks for.•
Avalos' kick capped a 12-play,
92-yard drive with under five minutes
remaining as the Mustangs (3·0),
ranked No. 2 in ClF Southern Section
Division IX, calmly marched down the
field, despite trailing the winless
Lions, 22-21.
Leading the offense for Mesa was
sophomore running back Keota Asue-
ga. Making his first varsity start, the
6-foot-1, 195-pound fullback took over
the running duties for injured Nick
·we knew (the Sea Kings) were going to throw the ball with
their two quarterbacks (Barber and Dylan Hendy). and we
knew their running back (Blake Hacker) could run, so we
knew we had to come out and play defense,• said Newport
Harbor comerback Brian Gaeta, who had two of his team's
three interceptions, the other turned in by outside linebacker
Chris Manderino in the second quarter.
•Defense is definitely a key factor to this team this year.•
Newport Harbor middle linebacker Alan Saenz (6-foot-2,
260 pounds), one of the defensive captains, helped on several
road-blocking stops, induding an open-field tackle on Hacker
on a screen play.
In addition to Thoncale's sack, Moghaddam, a 6-4, 260·
pounder and a standout on Newport Harbor's CIF Southern
Section Division VI championship team a year ago, provided
another on the first play of the fourth quarter, dropping Hendy
for an 8-yard loss.
On the next play, CdM fumbled and Saenz recovered for
the Sailors, setting up Newport Harbor's final touchdown in a
much-ballyhooed game that was played, at times, in a heavy
mist at Newport Harbor and before an. es~eci 5, 100 specta-
tors. --
·we just played our basic defense. Our_g~as to stop the
run. and we stopped them,• said Mogbad~"'bo helped the
Tars limit Corona del Mar to 74 yardl ~on 18 carries,
while forcing four tu.movers.
•(The Sea Kings) played us as bard as~ could, but we
wanted to play harder then them for four quarters. That was
our goal:
Newport Harbor, which controlled the ball for almost the
entire first quarter, thanks to its defense and rushing attack,
treated CdM's next-in-line quarterback rudely in the second
quarter, when Manderino picked oU Hendy's pass at miillield
and delivered the goods an extra eight yards to the CdM 42.
SP.ORTS
MESA
LIONS
Cabico in the second half and finished
with 158 yards on 29 carries and
scored three touchdowns.
Cabico, who suffered a hamstring
strain in last week's 52-0 win over Bol·
sa Grande, suffered a slight concus-
sion in the first half against the Lions.
He did not play in the second half, but
is probable for next week's game
against Ocean View.
For the Lions {0-3), they used an
assortment of plays and formations to
throw off the Mustangs' •efensiv~
plan and it worked.
Starting quarterback Akilah Lacey
turned into the Lions' leading receiver,
catching three balls for 118 yards and a
touchdown, while reserve quarterback
Fidel Gonzales threw for 194 yards and
one touchdown on 6·of·9 passing.
•westminster did some things that
we weren't expecting,• Howell said .
•They did a great job of mixing it up
on us and they kept us guessing.•
A play that nearly worked for the
Uons at the half, paid off at the end of
the third quarter. 1\"ailing, 14-7, Lacey
moved to receiver ~nd Gonzales
found him for a 78-yard touchdown,
tying the score at 14-14.
The Uons tried the same play just
before halftime and it worked for 42
yards, but substitute comerback Louis
Day made a touchdown-saving tackle
on the Mustangs' 2-yard-line as the
gun sounded.
Playing without both starting cor-
nerbacks, Cabico and senior Josh
Strickland due to injuries, Westmin·
ster found a way to finally reach the
end zone for the first time this season.
Once they got there, they went back
again and 1lgain, putting the Mus-
tangs behind, 22-21, with 4:58
remaining.
Prom there, Hulllger methodically
led the Mesa troops into enemy terri-
tory, thanks to the strong running of
Asuega and senior fµllback Daniel
Hunter, whose barreling 22-yard run
put the Mustangs into Lions territory.
Perhaps the biggest run of Asue-
ga's night ca.me on a 16-yard plow up
the middle on third-down, ptltting the
Mustangs inside the Lions' 10-yard-
line.
Doily Pilot
lcM-. e.r QI ...
w.stmlnst« 0 7 0 15 -22 ~ Mesa 0 7 7 10 • 24
seCOftd Qumtiar
CM • Asuega l run (Avalo{kld(), 9:08.
Wm • Colunga 30 pass from tM.ey
(Jenkins kick), 1:17.
lhlrdQllmtar CM • Asuega 1 run (Avalos kick), 1 :33.
'-1hQllmtar
Wm -Lacey 78 pass from Gonzales
(Jenkins kick), 11:51.
CM . Asuega 145 run (Avalos kick), 7:10.
Wm • Olamberlln 13 run (Colunga 1>11s
from Gonzalez), 4:S8.
CM. Avalos 22 FG, 0:14.
Attend<loce: 1,000 (est.llTWlted).
INDMDUAL RUSHING
Wm · CNmberlin. 14-61, 1 TO; I.key,
12 ... 9; Gonzales. 1-9; Mil.ne, 1-0.
CM -Asuega. 29-158. 3 TO; Hunt«, 3-47;
Nguyen. 2-31; Cabi<o, 6-26; Hulllgef, 5-4.
INOMOUAL MS5'NG
Wm • Lacey. 2-4-0, 30, 1 TD;
Gonulft, 6-9-1, 194, 1 TO.
CM -Hulligef, 8-14-1, 79.
tNDtVlDUAL MCEMNG
Wm • Lacey, l-118, 1 TO; Colunga.
3-90, 1 TD; Luna, 1-16; Chamberlin. 1-0.
CM · lukela, 6-67; Gardiner, 2-12
Attendance: 500.
GAME STATIST1CS
Wm CM Rot downs 10 15
~ 24-119 43·267
Passing yardage 224 79
Passing 8-13· 1 8-14-1
Net return yardage• 0 11
Sacks-yardage 2 -18 2 ·11
Net yardage !25 346
Punts H3.3 2..0
Fumbles-fumbles lost 2·1 1·1
Flags.net yard~ 8-35 3-25
Time of~ 25:20 22:40
*Punt returns, 1nte<teptlons, fumble
returns
The interception set up another Newport Harbor touch·
down, its fourth in four turns with the ball.
But, even with a 21-0 halftime lead, there was no quit in the
Sailors' defense.
STEVE MCCRACKEN I OAll.Y PILOT
CdM's Dylan Hendy (18} eludes Newport linebacker Alan Saenz (5}, but ended up being knocked out of bounds.
"In the third quarter, our coach started talking about com-
ing out hard and playing Newport football. ~Moghaddam said.
·we wanted to keep stopping them in the second half, and we
knew our offense would punch it in. This is what we expected,
to beat them, but not this bad.•
NEWPORT was a tough week for us (after Marina)
and we needed to come out and play
third quarter the first two weeks.
In addition to the Harbor ground
attack, which induded nine ballcarriers.
Craig, and sophomore backup Michael
McDonald, were thoroughly efficient
through the air. Noseguard Joe Foley, outside 'backer Andy Rankin and
three others in the secondary, Ryan Spruth, David Sprenger
and Dane Barton, were large factors in Newport's defensive
show.
·1 think our defense is a championship defense, plain and
simple, •Moghaddam added. •we have good players who can
really play the game. And we just play our game and keep on
winning.
•Our defense took it up to another level tonight, and this is
bow we want to play the rest of the season. 1 expect nothing
less than 14 weeks of football this year from this team. I know
bow it feels, and we've got the hunger to go back:
Added Banigan: •we played hard from the first play of the
game all the way to the last play. We just kept it going.•
CdM Coach Dick Freeman said this year's Newport Harbor
cjefense bas the best front seven bis team will see this season.
Additionally, •you're not going to find two better ends and
they have three really good linebackers."
CONTINUED FROM 81
The Sailor defense also did its job,
limiting CdM to 14 yards total offense
the first half and just 71 yards through
three quarters.
The Newport reserves played most of
the final period, when CdM produced a
7-yard Dylan Hendy scoring pass to
Steven Ward with 1 :24 left to avert the
shutout.
"The defense did a good job stopping
the run and I thought our secondary
played well.• Brinkley said.
Both Brinkley and Manderino noted
the win was especially sweet in the light
of the somber mode created by the loss
to Marina, which ended a 15-game
unbeaten streak.
"We needed that,• Brinkley said. •1t
weu.· .
Junior comerback Brian Gaeta inter-
cepted two passes in the third quarter,
senior end Garrett 1toncale and Nick
Moghaddarn had quarterback sacks. cor-
nerback Ryan Spruth broke up a couple
passes and linebackers Alan Saenz and
Andy Rankin joined Mandertno, tackles
Moghaddam and Foley, end Ian Banigan,
and safeties Dane Barton and David
Sprenger to keep CdM's offense under
wraps.
The Sea Kings got some big defensive
plays from senior safety Eric Snell, end
Scott Biggs (the lone sack), Justin Wald
and 'l)'ler McClellan, but Harbor proved
too powerful for the duration.
"That was the best third quarter
we've h9d, • CdM Coach Dick Freeman,
searchirig for (>-positive, said. The Sea
Kings had been outscor~, 49-0, in the
Craig completed all five of his passes
for 46 yards and McDonald connected
on a 14-yard pickup to nimble which set
up his team's final touchdown. scored by
senior Ryan Ortega.
Manderino, who began bis unbeaten
run as the starting quarterback against
CdM last fall, hopes the impressive win
will start another streak.
•This was a big win, because we
needed to start building some momen·
tum heading into (Sea View) league,•
Manderino said. "There was a lot of frus.
tration after last week and you can nev-
er feel good after a loss. And beating
CdM is always big. lt's one of the biggest
games of the year.•
Tars top CdM in Jr. Battle of the B~y, 39-0
• Matlin scores three IDs;
Encinias the bigger for Tars.
smwva..,
OMV PM.or
NEWPORT BEACH-The New-
port Harbor High freshman football
team didn't have to complete a ~
to beat rival CoroM del Mar Thurs·
day attemoon.
Instead, the Tars racked up 269
rushing yards and five touchdowns
-i.ocludlng Matt BndnJas' 123
yards -for a 39-0 victory.
Harbor'1 defense held CdM to
just five yaidl rushing and 81 tot.o.1
yardl (58 c.-ne in one play in the
fO\iitb quarter). Ibe def.me pro·
diloed hi fUlt ahutout of lb• 1eason.
•What I wu pleUed about &oday
11 ttwt we really ran the bd well,• Ne'f'PO'l Harbor Coedl Joe Urban
MJd. "Thal WU euily our belt per-
formance °'the MUQO,.
Newport Harbor K'Ol'8d OD .. nm four pDIHIFlrml ol, lbe ,......
FRESHMAN FOOTBALL
The Tars began the game with good
field position as they started from
i:nidfield after Cd.M attempted an
onside kick. Harbor's Daniel Pack·
ham caught the short kickoff and
the running game took over imme-
diately.
ln just four plays the Tan (2-1)
got their first touchdown when sam
Matlin ran in his first of three scores,
the first from 12 yards oul
CdM (0·3) went three-and-out
and EndnJas returned the punt 32
yards. Two ploys later he dauJoo
the crowd again, bl4.ltin9 oU tight
tackle, boundng oft CdM defend-
ers, os ho broke tour tadde1 for 1 39-
yard touchdown run.
•Just make jt home,• Bndniu
Aid of his thoUGhll wh.lit running
for till MCOnd Tf> bl tbe day. ·rm•
warrior. I'm nOt gotng to go down. J
battle my way ~b, • A1d
l!netnSu.
He mo iild that be owed his
performance to the offenstve line.
Encinias also scored on rpecial
teams. He was the kicker for the
point after attempts. And he had a
punt return for 66 yards when CdM
had to punt because of another
three-and-out on its &eeond posses-
sion of the game.
•They have a plethora of talent,•
CdM Coach Gary Abnquist said.
•They outhit us . They got outside lil
the running game and they broke
tackles.•
1n the second hal.t, Karo Malller·
gian and Cha.le Kelly ran the ball to
u11e up the clock.
CdM a1Jn.Oit acored in the fourth
quarter when SM King receiver
Zackary S.gay jump@d over dalea·
live bow to snag a 20-yard pua,
then running 39 yaidl for tbe 59-
yard_pell play from 1\'ler Wlllan.
Wllloa, who Nl out i.-al GMt
first half With an tmired Wrtlt. .-
to Segay age.in Oil tba ... ....., .....
1\'ler Deck m~ to prll•N
the lhutout
R1:11n 1tml 1~'U1lliii.•, Ul"f' '11h1 ... ·1 l11J·lum"•' Monday ................. Friday 5:00pm
Tuesday .............. Monday 5:00pm
Wednesday ......... Tuesday 5:00pm
• 1tJ111u1 1t01~. ·nu· p11l1li'>llf'r ,.....,,.n1·, 1111·
ri"ht IO w11-.or. n-du.,~1f~. n•\ i"4' or rr11·n
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11
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•to. ••1
.:u: ::! l 00:: ::J I '=:G 11
32 .::NI I I 1=--= 111=--= 11 • ~ 11 ·::13 I I 202
purMl•nt 10 Sections TICE OR WITH A COPY
~~1 1 200 ro~J
Dana Polnl. Female ID
2 1701-2 1715 ol lhe OF THE ORDER TO • CLASSIC OUPlE.X * B4ldl Bly Vu Compound A...
Bualnus and SHOW CAUSE FOR OPEH SUNDAY SAM $1,415.~1.750,000 ~ Newport Crut 38r 381
upgraded, $2100/ltlo.
Available 10/7. David
Prince, ML 14•711-1520
VERSAILLES
Ex·LMge SWo "Turn-l(ef
Motel lhare 3br 2ba ocndo '*'JM
be<tbafl ICIO&I "°"' i-:11 & close IO Riil c.1IOn ~mo Ids rnd • $500
dep Cl!!ney MM0.2154
Proteulons Code, CHANGE OF NAME 5825000 l.Jlrge flonl ~ G8led old 5parlth Mlllwbl Sediol'I 535 ol lhe Penal THE PARENT MAY BE wf.IB(s & large rllf 18' l.ril <Mt 5500 sf. Sc gtr, 111*.
Code. NEWPORT SERVED BY MAIL Ti. IS on noelenl oond pool, lwdwd firs. OYtf 113
MESA SELF ONLY IF THE PARENT MochMI Bnnkman. A9'f1I llCle Musi -.. l.ll1UIUll
STORAGE. 2550 New· IS OUTSIDE CALIFOR· !M9-759·01 n propel!y. Owner/Agent POf1 Blvd., Costa Mesa. NIA. Q.t9-§42·9666
CA. 92627 will sell by ROSALIE NORTHROP largest Mod9l-Plan 4 OY11
compelilive bidding on HAWKS, 829 Santiago 2500 sl & die lowest piicel
October 16, 2000 at Ad . Costa Mesa. CA Beaut1lully upgrtded
10'00 •.m. Auction to be 92626 38r ·tam rm. guard·gited
held •t 2550 Newpon Publtshed Newport comm wl6tenn1S coortt
BIYd •• Cosca Mesa, CA Beach·Cosla MeH H2t ,OOO. Judy Kolar, 92827. Property to be Darty Pilot September Bi.r94f.371·SS71
IOld H follows m... 23. 30 October 7, 14, .--------cell•neous household 2000 Sa418
QOOds, ~I llems.
furniture. apphances,
and cto~belongong to lhe lot :
Name -nrt • Mldlul Ryan. 144
Cai1ol PtKez. 808
Kathy Tague, 1
Enrique Lopez. 751
T .,_. t<rauM, 51
Eric 8ofjkhant. 139
Pnida ao.. 592
o.nlel Cerlanl•. 325
U.. LePote. 226 Thar ... Cla~ 24
RICHARD SIDOERS.
AUCTIONEER
· Published Newport
Beach·Costa M11a
Dally Pilot Septamber
23, 30. 2000
S•417
SUPERIOR COURT
OF CALIFORNIA,
COUNTY OF
ORANGE
341 The City Ortve,
POii Office Bolt 14171.
Orange, CA
92813-1571
IN THE MATTER OF
THE PETITION TO
CHANGE THE NAME Of KEANIE ROZENNIE
NORTHROP,
MINORS($)
NOTICE OF HEARING
TO NOH-PETITIONING
PARENT (COOi OF CIVIL
PROCEDURE
SECTION 1m> CASE HUUBEA A20290t
TO RAMON GUER·
AERO Ill
1. NOTICE IS GIVEN
THAT KEANIE ROZEN-
NIE NORTHROP has
Ned • petltlon to change lhe name al your child Ot
lhe narnee ol yoor chil-
dren.
2. You ~ retllf IO lhe fited petrtlon l0t further
partiQJt.ts (Alt of the
cue documents filed
wftl lhe court are avai..
15l
EOllAL HOUSING
OPPORTUNITY
Aft rul estate aicMrtis1no
m ths newspaper is subjecl
to the Federal Fair HouS1ng
Ad ol 1968 as amended
which makes 11 illegal to
idvert1se ·any p1elerence.
ltmrt11Joo or disc11m1natton
based on rice. color. rebo·
ton sex. handicap familial
stalus or national OOQlll or
an 1ntent1011 10 makt any
such preference. ltmnatton
or discrmnation •
This newspaper win not
knowingly accept any
advertisement for real
esuta which is in V10labon of the law. Our readers ire
hereby informed that all
11wt11nos aiM11JSeO 1n tilts
~are milable on
an equal opporoinlty basis.
• To complan of discrimi-
nation. call HUD tOll·lree al 1~24'8590.
•V.A.• .............
FM1 COUNSELING
FM1 UST c;i; IOES
HUCWAAEPOS
Tf4-134 IMO
able lor examination In -------lhe oue ll4e kepi by the
COUit c:6erll).
3. A hearing on Ille ~ win be held In =03~ The ~.~. , on Oct. l7. 2000 at 2·00 o'clodl p.m.
4. " you fall to attend the hearing and Inform
lhe Court ~ the pell· tlon ehould not ba
granted, lhe COUil may gm the pdon.
DATE: 8+-00 N "°8AU£ NORTH-M>P HAWKS
NOTE: 30 DAYS OR
MORE BEFORE THE
HEARING THE NON-
PETITIONING PARENT
MUST BE PERSON· ALLY SERVED (PUA·
SUANT TO COOE Of
CIVIL PROCEDURE 8Ecnotf 4t5.10) OR
SERVED BY MAIL
<PURSUANT TO CODE OF CM. PROCEDUAE 8ECTION 415 . .01 WITH
22 HOUSESICOMOOS FOR SALE IRVINE
****** BUIU>ER PRICE
REDUCTION II
A£DUCEO TO 17M,OOO
OPEN EVERYDAY TMIS WE£J( 11-W
1101 I 1705 CUFF OAIVl
AGEHT ... m.t121 1101
UOO ISlE COHOOS
2llf 1 Bl tor Ma.500 2lr 1 Bl tor Ml2.,5llO
• To Be SOLD T OQlllllW '
llPP" unit ......
...,. Cdeell """""' ..-.21s.2m
Newty rebtl 3br -ICll* ~l. In ~ Cir ol 181 ShlAld W/O, I g1r fl*>I,
Yrty Ag! 94H7:M052
WINTER RENTALS
Upale 2 & 3&, W¥ ~.
n:llld gar. 111111 lo beech. no pell. 94N?s-7 I 30
belboabeachf'efllals.com
OU> COii -1N 1 W ........... ="° ,...,. .... ~ ...... ...... !!!:~
• Mllon1h WlnW Aenllll •
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94M13·7IOO
~~"'-~~
$1,150
MaryAnn W. McGuire
94M4M770
PrudentJal ca R!!lty
MANAGERS
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$154.00 .. tax VMy
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235 rm& & lallchlnelts Stlllated on beaulllUI'(
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courtyard. 24/Hr guard-
gllleCS OOlllTI, 2 pool, IJIAlrlg
14een. lolness center ,950lmo 542-693-5947
res1auran1S
COSTA MESA
MOTOR INN I ~ -=Ptlc>M='/2TT~=~s.4MO=Blvd;;;SI -• :J
NBIAYI NoY I fem p!tf'd 10 slw 2& 2 Sbl ocndo. enc:lsd ui--2 l ., Wy kl'll.
git. ,poo4'1ems, beld'I els enc:lsd glr. ... ID t..fl.
I I
~~ $85()'lnO • Ml no pell t4!M7S-7130
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AUIO. While, 17lt nu S4,49S.00 IOlal IO tUltl I IOk rrutyr_,
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1.91.. ll'lll. Ilk !04,, s., (UOOOO) ----w."5
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PRE OWNED •RASE FOR
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Lo Ml...A-. ~ UXliN3'01--........ -su.'91
SPECIAL &IYINGS 'M 52~
s.olpl. loMI .• t..dell <•FVP~lOI -.. ~
~ 7$0il m .. ~,.,_..~----"'-'9.S
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Newport Beach
2000 DISCOVERY SERIES II
Leather, V-8, AM/FM Cass
2 at this Payment
39
111()
Lan over
Newport Beach
1540 Jamboree
(949) 640-6445
Artwork for illustration purposes only.
+ 98¢ + tax Closed end lease 39 mo. 12k mi. per year, .1 Sc per mile thereafter. $4, 999 total to start.
Total payments: S15,599 +tax, residual 517,852. Subject to prior sale and credit approval.
(259711, 258498) Prior rentals. Price good thru 9/29/00.
'97FORD
ESCORTLX
I
CUBA CU~tuRAL
TRAVEL·
Costa Mtea Beaed tour op«ator seeks
ADMINISTRATIVE ASStSTANT
6-8 hour9 a day $13.00 hr.+
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onented with strong organlzatlonal and
l'9COrd keeping skllts.
Cell MkhMI at (949) 646-1119
I I
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Mlvlce ltwl ooocwtunl1ltl •
lor ~ With lllrong :
CUllonW ltlWlt ... Ill •
"' lolcMinO -• • Ill N lloWlg Wei on~U. .iec llouuhold, old L tMped ~ 11tt Sola. S
nN!, furn, *' mo -· pd $2200, 181 IOI
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MEDICAL ASSTS !
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(714) 841 -0473
E-Mail:
hessclviv@aol.com
Older Style Furniture PIAHOSi~ . ....,.._ . ._ ...... ...,.09ice~
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• •. I
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SOUTHC8AST AUCTI N
MAHOGANY ROU TOP
$875 GIMI co11tt Ill '*1ron
beet $125 IMM44-2330
Piiio fumltur. . .2 clning
llbllt. 2 chalet, 10 clllks,
2 gllders, $800 for 1a. 949-260-6089.
CPT. ICO.f cocq I JM. • ~ In MO ollcet. • • Pietm call Stephllnle Nelaon. LIMITED
(949) 464-6418 or fax resume XRAY TECHS
to (949) 4M-6310 RequlrH MA, exp.
Wtllle pnctlctlly new aola --------------pllltntd. MO olllcet
bed ~ Sl lletper. 2 AtlW ~ PIO!
yis new 1115 !HHI0-4182 51111 own --.PfOVtm llatPIMeFw PBX
$100,000 • no ~ Tiie llat p-a. Requires experltnct In 4lt Oek DtA wlwle ¥IU'1 Toi ht 877*118L --PBX, 11o1Pta1 preferred. llnWl. l!e new $175. Sallter T9 W..S Mllll bt coqiu1er 11«1i.
computer 13in moni10r & Am: Pli ~PC ID WOlil! ·-end hlndlt hMvy phone p!1nl!t $200 9'!H60-9700 $250-$2500r'wtl PT/FT ar:;;::_n:;n volume.
(888)852-33115 OI .it .-ia a._,.,
,...lpc. lhplt clnlng Mt. www.woRttlttpc.net Full•Umt
S300Y Oueeo-stze bed, CAFETERIA $60. t"Klng Silt, $60 Bookk"Ptf tor Mtwport Day A malng shifts
,... 2 • stands, S4®oOI 11ct1 FT/PT CPA. Ouicll· Top-producers WORKERS/ ,...ug wtlile entertainmem Boob •XI> necessaiy Fu FOOD SERVICE cencer, $50. 714·545-4147 resume IO IM!H!40«l03 higher · -Requlr" exctlltnt com-• llahh, lhW I~ municalion sldlla, lood
•401-KI... MrWlt ·~helpful.
• Peld --KllOWdgt ol Anllllicn Ind • IJ.tltnl ~ lood Miily pllltntd.
~"" •~• NUTRITION
r._.... ,.._ ASSISTANTS r:il cw.: Ml.wt hive ~ com-
l-888-a1M744 llUlicllion lkllt with !ht ~!!!!!!!:!!!!!!!:!!!!!!!I eblily ID Udon irll 1111 = peced t!Mrocment. Food
AOVERTIS#fG
TELEPHONE SALES
NOC Yellow Pegea,
!ht llrgtet lndtptnd-
1111 "'*"' ol ytlow P90tS 11'1 the w-.m ~"..::tt!
1or our T 111tln olfict
Wt 11t 8"IOOg I
Pfolealooll, carHr
nW1dtd lncMUI ""' I~ hdl rtcOld ol ux:.e Wt olltr
.... end lomlll Plid tr1lnlng Exceftenl
CQTC>tnlllion end llAI
bentlill tncludlng
40tk. For 'more ln-
lonnltion look for U1 on tilt lnltrntt 11
www ndcpub com. PIHH , .. your
l'-.nt ID
858·451·0<le9 or
emll ID
vmer1111 t ndpl.t> oom
urvlct experience
prtft<rtd
SERVICE CARE
TECHNICIANS
RequlrH atrong com·
l!lll'lbtlon aldlle, CUtton1tr
MIYict IOitititl. Ml.wt bt •
ltxll6e Ind • wn p11yer "
HOUSE KEEPER
Reqi.fte P't¥ioul holMt •
k~ eJCptllenct, hotP-
181 preferred FT/EvtlWlgl •
Ind Pw <lenWwllblt.
CLERICAL
V1riety ol cl8f1l rolH
lnciudna PT rtglattation. IC!ltdullng, llllng, deli
entry, phonH. cleimt
PfOl*8lng. Mwt bt Ible 10 • type 35 wpm. Prtltt IOITll
llllOWlldgt ol mecbl *"'" nology
Other lobe ., IYlllltlltll •
Job .. (M)71Nm • • =-· oftt ra Hcelltnl : Inducing 21 dip • ~ dmt oft), I•
Childcaiw ~~ : hMllh btnllitl. •
DESK rNt1 100 yee11 old. COAST COIN NEEDS
Cal IM9-25M089 OLD COINSI Gold. .UV.r.
LINE COOKS NEEDED
Ptr I Fff-cofllPtthlvt
wages and benelfla • avail. A«*f In petlOll at MAAOAAfTAVIUE
••••• =.:•lchff. enllqu" .• 949-642•9447
2332 W CST HWY. N.I.
I Cell C1aallM TtRt
. (Mt)MH111
m
LINCOLN .
'98 FORD
MYSTIQUE
AT. AC. PW. PS, rat ipoM. AT. lo mi • .W. Pw. POI. ~Mal!~ p bur dof.-bi& S.SS
AM E R IC AN LU X UR Y '
,
(351'64) (SRURm)
$4999 $8999
'%LINCOLN
MARKVIII
'OOFORD
EXPWRER
2001
LS
40SFNe~
bit Harbor,
Soatlt I Mlle
,,
"AI.I." 2000
TOWNCARS&
CONTINENTALS
, ..
..
we are looking for sales Representatives who enJov meeting
and gre•fng people. Work flexible hours: afternoons, evenings
and weekends. Explore our successfully proven program
throughout the Orange County area. securing new
subscriptions for the Los Angeles Times.
$ Flexlble Hours: either full· time or part-time
$ Average $25·$30 per hour
$ No Sales expertence necessary
$ Wiii train the rtQht peopte
,
• .. • 'It
Bridge
By CHARLES GOREN wlth OMAR SHARIF
end TANNAH HIASC H
.XLY BRJOCF. QUIZ WEE
Q I · Neuher vulnmblc, as Soolh
you hold:
AKIU •J7J MQ6 1,l(J7 •
The bidding h.u oroceeded
SOUTH WF..\"'f NORTH
:
&A.Sr I• P.-l e:> ....
' Wllll do you bid now?
You hold: Q 2 • Neilher vulnerable.
• 10 7 6 l :;; A 10 ¢ 9 4 •
Pannc:r opens 1he biddln
diamond. Whal do you re~
4110
11 wilh one
pond?
Q 3 • Bodi vulnerable, u hold.
Soulh you
• K 10 96 S A 10 Jl •
The bidding has oroceedc:d SOUTH WF.S1' NORn
AK 102
H F.AST
•• Pass 2 .._
Q 4 ·Both vulnerable. You hold.
•8762 ~65 o KQ65 •AIC6
"-rtncr ~l\ll Ille bidding w11h one
di8mond Ill! do you respond?
Q S • A<I Soulh. vulnefablc. you hold·
•J9641 0 6SJ H•KJll
Thebiddln~ NORTH S SOUTH WEST
10 ,.. •• ,_
2<:> ,_ ' What do you bid now?
Q 6 • Ncuhcr vulncrllblc. You hold
•AQ6S K4 KJ ~ • K Q IOJ
Pattner ~n~ 1he b1ckhng w11h 1hrce
spades. h;tt do you respond !
IF INTERESTED Pl.EA.SE CONTACTa
Robert Brown '714> 587·5523
? What do you bid now? Looi: {Of' answrrs CH• Mt>flda)
DRIVER .... 'Tl ..... ,..
...., •• l'rcfmlaflll a ~=-= 'Ill
! . ··-~~
I .-· .. iV 1 A•
Brown EntMrHtses
RETAIL
Williams-Sonoma '' lhe nallon's domlnanl upscale
~lly relalJer ol h9'
quality picdJcls tor lllriool
homl cooka w ... ~
mi11td 10 an ll!VllllMlln1 Malr.aa.~and
recognizes high p11 ·
lomWa CM rlPid growth
and tnnd success IS lull on a teplA8llon tor design.
quality, Ind S8rw;e We CUI· rently have the tOllowing POtltlons, ava4able 1n ou1 SoiAh Coest Plaza Slote
Sales Associate
Shipper/Receiver
Stocker
Gift Wrapper
Temp Associate
RETAIL SAlES
FISI peoed l.aclel Clalttia
Sk>IN In ~ Beac:ll ' Hw!llnglon Seadl IM(lng
•xi> sror. Mgr, _. Mgr ' s.letperlOnl. Pleau call
(949)8SO·S286 or 111
lllUllll IO (310)371-5576
WORK FROM HOME
ln!tmabOnaJ Co R8jllCly
Exptndlng PT 3-~11 pei
~ earn $50().$1500 pei mo FT ~ pe1 wll eam
$2000-$6000 pei mo . Many
potlltlon avaH Will lratn
Ctll 1..oo.eo1-4269
471 E.lllLOYIBIT
SEAY ICES
"'-' be ...,. ht
lht llttlnp In Wt
cMlgoly rney l9qUire
you to call a 900
number In which
"*9 II I cllllge per
Minute.
Wt olfer compellllve
Nllatlee •nd benefita, '°' <Ming • gantrex# dilcoll1I
on marchlrdse lnlemted
c1ndld1IH. call ~2t·2004 ut sm °' .__ _____ _, = ~~34~7:7 e:: , • . ··-1 ()ppol1urwiy E~ 0,fllORTUIMTB _,·
Wllllams-Sonoma
flttlM be WlfY of out
ol .,.. comptnlet.
Cllec:1t with 1111 loc:ll
Bett• Bvalnea Bu·
,., blfor'I you Mild PRE..scHOOL TEACHERS 111y money or 1Mt
Calla Mesa -Mir lhfl. tor ..me... Reid Ilea houra. ECE unrtt (or Incl undentand '"Y current enrollment) Reply comncta before you
IO ~ 811 JCC PrHChoola elgn, 714-~*9340 ext 112 .__ _____ _,
Local Gitt Store wllh
Ty EleetM Biby 1CaU11 tor
aale Please ull Pamela
Ford Crown Vlc1orta LX
WAfflE I BAGEl SHOP '17 While wlbkle leather re,
4 SALE Bdlol lalend. l\Mty loaded $2000
. 949-51 S-0353 {t
GrHI loc .::,:.•nU1I MH41-ftoe
lpm-6pm 94 9914 FORD ESCORT '93
I I dependable auto, 1un1 HO POWER grea1. llgS. anv'lm casa. BOATS pwr steering, ale, 12.250/ obo 949-64~ ______ _.
t 8ft Duffy Eledrlc: '17
like new, all ophons, $14,()()C)(obo 714-42Hm
wk. ~1156 <*I
AC1JM L£GSI> LS 'IO
4-dr Sedan, 1 ownet, Ill
service recotds, xlnl cond,
$6SOQ 949-640-1635
FORD F150 '17
4WO, towing, b1k1 m,
tC'7172iV.ll7I S1 U50 lAHO ROYEA
NEWPORT BEACH
MM4M445
Ford Mustllng GT 6.0 '88
Conv. 68k orig ml, llAO, tuly
CHEVY llUZER 'M lolded. xln1 WOUI. IYC re-
2 door. t:lk ml, co pltyer' oordl $:t2S() 714-751 ·2~
9fNt high ldlool tr-.
$1500. MMn-2741
DODGE CARAVAN '93
I 481c mt V-6, ale, 7 p.a,
new bnikes and lir81, ,,..
grta11 $360(). 949-650-7 454
GMC JMIY W
4WD, 291(. SEE m '521001/3007 ,,.....,
LAND ROVER
NEWPORT BEACH
94!:§40=!445
1•~ss I
HONDA CIVIC 'II IUtO
28k mi. trans. ac. c/c, lull
pow11, am/Im slereo,
$ti,500. 949-752·1075
HOHDA PRELUDE SI '18 811. 5 IP. lolded, N:.. PS.
PB. PW, Sl.R'OOI, Ml mlin
11.N Jh, 15()1( II( rlCOfd $3200 949-492-3972
...., Grind Ctlefollee ...
8leet/blactl, xtnt cooddlon.
loaded, 56k ml, St5,950
l 13TCD230 949-875-3078
LEXUS LS 400 '94
Cetllmere/hory, fully
Loededl low mlleL
(1Ma) $22.917
Lexus Mlulan Viejo
IOO-Mt-5398
UI DISCOVERY '17
SE7, 32.000 mllea, deenJ
7 peeeenolf MSe00313CM9 S24,a50
LAND ROVER
NEWPORT BEACH
MM40-&445
LR DISCOVERY W
F1ll pow., blM:ll bMuty
f754733llCM7 CALL
LAND ROVER
NEWPORT BEACH
114M40-6445
LR RANGE ROVER 'IMS
l"ull power, 42K milMI
133715112834 $29,850
LAND ROVER NEWPORT BEACH
~5
lll9lcedle MO Sl • ShowlOOlll cond. chrome
Mlcitoellns, 2 IOpl, lk nu, lllw,
local $14,950 714-751·2'164
lnsc~1
LR RANGE ROVER 'IMS
Full pow«, 421C mlteel
1337651'2834 $28,950
LAND ROVER
NEWPORT BEACH 94H40-N45
llSSAH 300 ZX 'It
2 • 2, 6 cyt auto AJC. IUI pwr, am-Im, 1lnled CUf10m
wta $9.999 MH42·2102.
Renge Aovet Country 'to
4x4. 4dr, V8 3 911r. aulo. Sdve1/1an lealher Int lully
loaded. snrt cassen alloys,
130k ""· xlnt cond $9,950 obo 949-721·5700
ROUS ROYCE '73
COANICHE HARDTOP
Whlt.ttan, low =· new AC ind CD. 1111 St&,900 94H~7tt3
SATURN 't7 4 door, 12K ml, xlnt cond.
rnanu1l tr1n1, CD P'af«,
17500. MM73-274
Voluw1gen Jett. Gl 'It
wt.le w custom ~ ..nts
CD ~ ~Spd v~ d!!I, 949-650-21
XJS V·12 COUPE ...
'Beeo!rlui. w!lite, like new, al
~1e whls. phn, r\'smkr I obo. 949·67s.&12e
OVERSTOCKE01
A call to
classified
will help!
(949) 642-567S
PUBLIC
NOTICE
The Calif. Public-
Utllilies Com·
misslon REQUIRES
lhl) .. used hoult-
hold goods ITIOYtf1
pnnt lheit P.U.C.
cal T runblt; lmol
and cnaufftt1 pt1nt
hit T.C.P. IU1lber
ri all adWl1ismefU.
If you have a quea.
ion about the legal-
ily °' • "'°"""· lino or dlNler, cat PU8UC UTllmES
COMMISION
714-551-4151
Saturday, Sepe9mber 23, 2000 BT'
I .... .....,.,..l.&TO~D1a1~Y~' ... S ..-... _ J :j . €RQSSWORD PUZZLE .
'
STUMPED? CaJk>f~•T--•-.•15c ,.._ ,~ IX1 code 500
SELL YOUR USED
VEHICLE
THROUGH
LASSIFIED
(949} 642-5678
CttUttG'S 'MIT'lleQ
f7 v .. ElCP • Gl'll1 "*" Gullll1llt Woltt • F191 Ell.
U375602 714-538-1534
IKFS CUSTOltl 'AINnNO P1 of m l c Ill. ctaen, CIUIMY
work. lnClext • doclli.
U7034e8 !!M31410
BEST PAIN11NG -ti • YM
Fw prt.s • ~ ' Elt· llrior Pai't. 10C111 ,..,._
NB 1111. Ron ~!7
RAINIOW CIAClE lllAlfT P~lnl/m ~ QLllllly jobl FrM
u~ 11""3M8lll
I
·-..---·-··-.•. --·-"'--~ ----
!' •• --• .• "4''.
:
. • .. •n..,...,_....,.,,... •
9-t9-7l2-8U6 •
71.t-7Sl-8146 • ..... ..._ .__
r ... ' I .
. .
Daily Pilot
PURCHASE FOR ONLY $28 99391 /~o *
'
$32,845.00 .. Ust Price
· -$-3.851.03 .. Nabers Discount
2000 Alero 2000 Bravada 2000 Intrigue .
Alm>MATIC
AIR Co1omo11111G
AM/FM STEREO
SAVE 56,111 =r,:ll~.!IM* SAV~ ~5,155="PR~1~995·
OR 0.9 ~APR FINANCING UP TO 60 MO.
•One only at this price. After all factory rebates & credit
approval+ tax, license.Jl.ocJ nd smog fees. Vin 1319096.
2000 Seville STS 2000 Escalade
(o.A.c. rH•u GMAC) AND SAVE S3,s55
2 000 Eldorado
, OVER so Q UALITY PRE -OWNED vr.-1 1<-:Lf~-> AVAILABLE
'94 CHEVROLO CAVAUER
Low miles, auto, AC & morel Excellent transportation voluel ( 136512)
'90 TOYOTA CAMRY
low miles, auto, many power features, only .. 1(.430476)
'93 BUICK LE SABRE
LTD, low miles, leather, very deanl ('36054)
'91 CADILLAC DEVIW
low miles, blue, 4.9 V-81 lots cl luxury! (203868)
'93 CADILLAC ELDORADO
White pearf, ton leather, many extras, reduced! (612435)
'96 FORD WINDSTAR
7 passenger, low miles, beige, exoelent~I (A23319)
'99 OLDSMOBILE CUTLASS
V·6, CO, low miles, bal. of worr., pr.nous rwitall l334952)
'98 OLDSMOBILE INTRIGUE
Gl.S, low 18k miles, leather, CD, moonroof & morel Bal. of worr. (389522)
'00 BUICK CENTURY
LTD, leath.r, power seat, bol. cl warr., previous ,..,.tol (217819)
'],988
\ 55,988
56,988
56,988
58,988
510,988
513,988
517,988
518,988