HomeMy WebLinkAbout2000-09-26 - Orange Coast Pilot• . . . .
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SERVING THE NEWPORT -MESA COM.MUNmES SINCE 1907 ON ntE WR: WWW.DAILYPILOT.COM TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 200Q
Water deal to help Back Bay?
• Newport Beach considers
selling its share of the San
Joaquin Reservoir; activists
say it would be a mistake.
Alex Coolman
DAILY PILOT
NEWPORT BEACH -The city is
looking to sell its small stake in the
San Joaquin Reservoir to the Irvine
Ranch Water District, a move city
leaders hope will reduce the potential
for treated waste to be dumped in the
Upper Newport Bay.
A local environmental leader, how-
ever, is critical pf the deal, saying the
city is giving up its lone bargaining
chip to keep treated water out of the
environmentally sensitive bay.
Tonight, the City Council will con-
sider selling its 1.18% stake in the San
Joaquin Reservoir, a now empty facil-
ity in the hills east of Newport Beach.
Newport Beach is one of eight parties
that shares ownership of the reservoir
and would get about $13,000 in the
sale.
The water district intends to buy all
outstanding shares for the reservoir
and convert the facility into a storage
lake for highly treated sewage used
for irrigation and industrial work.
Deputy City Manager Dave Kitt
said the move should be an environ-
mental boon to the city because giv-
ing the water district complete control
of the reservoir will reduce the likeli-
hood that excess reclaimed water will
be dumped into the watershed for the
Back Bay.
During winter months, when the
district produces more water than it
can use, the excess could be held in
the reservoir; during the dry summer
months, the stored reserve of water
could be tapped to maintain a con-
stant supply.
SEE RESERVOIR PAGE 4
2000 0~ OLYMPICS
CHRIS OEDING
• Hometown:
Corona def Mar
• Sport Wat.e< Polo
The United States' hopes for a medal in
men's water polo got a boost with a 12-8
victory over the Netherlands on Monday,
and Corona del Mar High product Chris
Oedlng scored a goal. But there is much
work ahead if the U.S. is to make a run for
the podium.
For complete coverage, see Sports.
P•ge 7.
Shalimar
on track
to reopen
• Reconciliation the end
result after Shalimar Leaming
Center officials meet with
neighborhood residents.
Jennifer Kho
DAILY PtLOT
COSTA MESA -Shalimar
Learning Center is on trac.k to
_ reopen aft~r dpzeps . of community
members expressed their support for
the after-school tutoring program at
a meeting Monday evening.
Children held up signs in support
of the center and Shalim.ar's teen
leaders also asked for a reopening,
saying they think of the center u a
second home where they can get
advice, information and supplies
often unobtainable at their real
homes.
SEAN HILLER I OAl.Y Pl.OT
Karen Bennett bolds Beau, a stray puppy that suffered broken front and hind legs In a traffic accident In July, as they gather in their
backyard with Jack, left, and Annie, right. With the support of b1s canine friends, Beau has made a strong recovery.
·we have listened very carefully
tonight and it is very clear that there
is not one person in this room who
wants the center to be closed,• said
Rev. Bill Flanagan of St. Andrew'w
Presbyterian Church in Newport
Beach, speaking for the center's
sponsors. "We're going to work very
bard with you to open the center
again."
Beau
Mathis Winkler
ows ·home Cheers and applause greeted the
announcement.
Randy Barth, volunteer chainnaD
of Think Together, the organ.lzatioa
that oversees Shalhnar and five lim·
ilar learning centers, said staff mem·
bers will meet later this week to
begin the process of reopening.
• • ..DAILY PILOT Puppy severely injured in car
accident and treated by
Newport Beach veterinarian is
doing well in his new home
nett said Monday, watching her "children•
race around the backyard. The 6-year-old center shut ltl
doors this month after child.nm and
parents protested the Sept. 12 flriDg
of Maria Alvarez, a longtime st.Ii
member .
...
• <f • -:::.T· he row of staples in Beau's leg looks • • pretty gruesome. But once the
• ;: • ·: wounds from his latest operation
... • • -• have healed, he'll finally be able to ~:.... :forget about his life-threatening ordeal a few
··:· • months ago.
Beau, a 9-month-old Labrador-terrier mix.
~ost didn't make it after his front and rear
left legs were aushed in a hit-and-run traffic
accident. Turned over to the Orange County
Humane Society, the puppy would have
••
' found an early death if a Newport Beach vet-
erinarian hadn't volunteered his surgical ser-
vices.
After George Katcherlan of the Back Bay
Veterlna.ry Hospital fixed Beau's legs, he
searched for new parents to take in his home-
less patient.
Several people applied. In the end, Karen
and Peter Bennett. a Newport Beach couple
with two other dogs, made the cut.
Annle, the Bennetts' 18-month-old golden
retriever, immediately took a liking to her
new stepbrother.
•She is very gentle with him,• Karen Ben-
·' ...
· ···.·.A bike built for the beach
BMW motorcycles fit perfectly
" .. in Newport Beach. Officers say.
Plus, they're Safe, comfortable -
and the handlebars are wann . .,..,. ......
DMV PllOT
.......
"She's real cautious to make sure he's OK.·
she said. •And [Beau) just feels like he's lived
here forever. There's no shyness, no tentative-
ness. He sleeps in bed with us up near the pil-
lows.•
Originally called •The Kid• by Katchenan
and bis hospital staff, the Bennetts decided to
rename their new housemate.
•At times, he's the cuddliest, sweetest
dog,• said Bennett, who runs e catering ser-
vice for dogs and cats with her husband.
·w e thought the name of a Southern gen-
tleman would fit him,• she said as Beau
SEE BEAU PAGE 4
Barth said the decision to a.a
the center was made because ma
members felt threatened by tbe
angry protests of the community.
Alvarez was let go because lbe
failed to follow a new schedule b
the tutoring program. Barth said.
The learning center rents thJ'M
apartments for its program, which
SEE SHALIMAR MGE 4
• . .
2 Tuesday, September 26, 2000
.... ..
111 •IEF
Alternative to black-tie
8.tTairs offered at OCC
Sick of black-tie events? You're in
luck. nckets are still available for OCC'1
Orange ne Gala on Oct. 1( at the Hyatt
Regency !nine. .
At $125 each, tickets will provide an
evening of dinner, dand.ng, entertain-
ment. a silent auction and an awanls cer-
e~. event ls to help raise money for the new arts pavilion that will open for in
tbe fill of 2002. for more information about the event,
call (114) 432-5645.
Daily Pilot
IN THE CLASSROOM
Paularino pupils practice their P's
Kindergarten class takes on
a new letter each week as
young students wind their
way through the alphabet
Danette Goulet
DAILY PILOT
• IN ntE QASSROOM is a weekly feature In llllhich Dally Piiot
education writer Danette Goulet visits a campus within the New·
port·Mesa Unified School District and writes about her experl·
ence. ' p ' is for the perfect pack of penguins passionately pursuing proficiency at
Paularlno.
A plethora of pupils calling themselves
the •penguin class• read about pink pigs and created
purple and yellow patterns prior to playtime Monday
morning.
Each week in Kathleen Romines' kindergarten class
at Paularlno Elementary School, the young students
learn all about a new letter of the alphabet.
Guess what this week's letter was.
Plenty of little.pusses puckered up to make the pop·
ping sound of the letter •p•.
•Paa, paa, paa, • poofed the class.
To provide a more pleasurable program for her
young pupils, Romines brought in a wind-up pig that
oinks, snorts and walks.
She then proceeded to produce a pink pig puppet
for students to play with.
Perhaps they hadn't ye t perceived a pattern until
she read the paperback "Pigs Aplenty, Pigs Galore• by
Davis McPhail.
One petite person perked up, however, when she
sang about a Purple People Eater -he'd played that
song at home.
Prior to their next pursuit, Romines produced a pur-
ple paper that a pupil bad poked with a pencil. They
would put that in the plexiglass window and let the
light pour through.
Next it was time to pull out the plastic tub packed
with pink, purple and yellow plastic pieces and put
them together to make a pattern. ·
One young man quickly proved his prowess at pro-
ducing patterns -others were pretty to peruse, but
not proper prototypes.
GREG fRY I DAA.Y PM.OT
Paularlno Elementary School teacher Kathleen Romines works with her kindergarten
class as she reads them a story about pigs.
After the pursuit of patterns it was time to play.
Each pupil grabbed their personal packs with
peaches, pudding, plums and Pop Tarts.
With a purposeful flick of her ponytail, one young
person plopped her pink pack over her shoulder like a
purse and pranced out to play.
Newport Harbor High brings hoine the hardware
• Contingent from high
school traveled to Washington
over the weekend to receive
national award.
D•nette Goulet
DAJLY PILOT
NEWPORT BEACH -Bleary.
eyed but proud, a small delegation
of Newport Harbor High School
representatives returned from
Washington, D.C. on Monday, hav·
ing received the highest national
honor bestowed upon a school -
the National Blue Ribbon Award.
While its travels may have been
rough, the group was ecstatic to be
one of only 88 high schools in the
country to receive the award this
year.
"It's a bigger honor than I real-
ized,• sa.id Da Vmd Academy
teacher Joe Robinson, upon disq>v-
ering how exclusive the group of
honorees was. •Jt just says what
we're doing here is the right thing.,.
Newport Harbor was one of only
four high schools in Orange County
-15 in California -to be named a
Blue Ribbon school this year.
Developed by the Secretary of
Education in 1982, the Blue Ribbon
program was designed to identify
and give recognition to outstanding
schools throughout the country.
Before any school can claim a
Blue Ribbon, it must first earn the
honor of being a California Distin-
guished School. Once a school
receives that award, it is invited to
apply for the national award.
•tt was a grueling application
process,· said Robinson, whq. com-
pleted the lion's share of the paper-
work. •Tuey want to know you're as
good as you say you are.,.
Robinson was accompanied to
Washington by his wife, Mary, stu-
dent Meredith Chinn and her father,
and 'feCently retired principal Bob
Boies and his wife, Barbara. ·u was really just a great experi·
ence," Boies said. •trs a nice way to
end my career, but it's also great for
Newport Harbor."
Bven more exciting than the pre-
sentation banquet, Chinn said, was
a one-on-one seminar with other
student-delegates.
"Every student shared a little
about their schooli why they
deserved the award and how you
can have a role as a leader," Chinn
said.
But what most inspired the 16-
year-old student was not the suc-
cesses of other schools, but their
shared woes.
. "It's just nice know that there are
other people out there dealing with
the same issues we are,• she said.
Each member of the delegation
attended their own seminar and
each took something different with
them.
•on a more petsonal note, it's
also saying that not all schools have
bad test scores. Public lchooll can
work," Robinson said. •we're doing
a really good job, I think, and I'm
proud of our school.•
. .
TU Nnpolt·Meia
Umtied SCboOI Dtltrict
often tine menu choic·
es eeda dai' at .-men-
tary scboOk. Students
may moc.e • vegeta.ri· an entree tf dilllred. The
l8lectlon varies and
may be either a salad,
sandwich or hot entree.
School lunches are
$1.15 each; the district
doel not 8ccept checks
for Jess than S17.SO.
Here's wbat11 being
served this week:
TODAY
Muncbable Lunch Salad
with fruit yogurt or
chicken nuggets With
catsup, veggie lrtlcks
with low.fat dip, choice
01 fNtt. cboke ot milk
..-SDAY
Muacbe'M Lunch Salad
ar loaildougb Prencb
1ned cbeele pizza.
.-Ml8cl with ww-f~t -... w.m-1111ri..1ng, choice ol mWt
nutSDAY
Mmxhab&e Lunch Salad
orltmby and cheese iim1dwidi or ••state
·pu-ClCllD dOg, oven-
baked potaliOel with
catsup, choice of fruit,
choke of milk, frozen
100% juice bar
FRIDAY
MUDCbable LUnch Salad
or macaron1 and cheese,
salad wttb iow-rat dress-
ing' cbo6ce ol .fru1t.
cboial ol milt, Patty's
cake
IN BRIEF
Plamling a
vacation? Take
notes at OCC
Since studies show that
people who take rel.a.xing
vacations are happier, health-
ier people, CCC administra·
tors decided to make that
vacation just a little more
affordable.
Prom 6:30 to 9:30 p.m. Oct.
S, a workshop will be offered
in the Robert B. Moore The·
ater on how to find discounts
for vacation time-shares.
The n!gistration fee ls $29
With an additional $15 materi·
als fee that should be pa1d at
the start of class.
lnformation:call(7t•)432· 5880.
Dail;Pilot READ£BS tJOIUH£ CA 92626. Copyright No news Ito-
rie. lllustrltlont, edltorlel nwrtW
WEATHER AllD SURF POUCI flLIS (949) 642-6086
Record your comments about
the Dally Pilot °' news tips.
VOL 94. NO. 2JO ADDftESS
Our ldckess is 330 W. S.y St..
nfOMAI ... JOIM<*. Costa Mesa, CA 92627. ~
TONV oooao. CC>RREQK>NS Editor It is the Pilot's policy to prompt• Ll.CNW.
Oty Editor ly correct all erron of~.
Please c.all (949) 574<4233. ..... _ .....
A1111tant City Editor m •••••MNW.. TM Newport~ Mm F..mn. fdltor O.lly Piiot (\JSl'S.14Wlllt II,... .,..CMllON, lnhed Monday through~ Spo'1I EdhOr In Newport a.ad\ ... a. ..... MMC---~ ........ .,,a, Photo fdltor
MrHOIW NOC. to,,,.,,,,_ er-..
Htwsfdltor County (IOO) 251.fMt. "' --•
,.,. '· Mllf'fOI outside of Newport ........ '•Dll9* Colt.I Mela. ..................
MUEllY Mim• Dillly Piiot ......... .,_
~MINglr INll '°' hO per "*"" s...
NOY .... dllt polUlg9 pelcl .. CMta .....
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CK~ herein CMI be
repnxtuc.ed whhout wrtn.n per· l'IMPIRAlURES
million of~ O#N/I. BalOO.
HOW rg IEMJt us 74161
-Coron.de! MM
Orc:uledon 74161
The Times Orange County Costa Mesa (800) 252-9141 13162 ~ Newport Boch ~(Mt) 142-5671
D6lpl.y ~ 142-021 7&'60
Newport Coast .......
..... .,,.,,142.sa. 7.W1 .,. .,,.,, 574-4.ZZJ
..... Sportl , .. ~ ..... 170
"4MI:~
llllltOflkll .._Otftot .. MMIZ1 ..,..,. ... ,.71.
MIMlllf ... Ci I ._ ...... ........ ., .. '--__.. .... &.DCt ... ..... ----------,....uport ....... .....
CM
TIDIS
TODAY
First low
2:5Sa.m ....................... o.s
First, high
9:13 a.m ....................... s.s
Second low
3:01 p.m ...................... 0.1
S.Cond high
9;06 p.m .... ~ ................ "6.2
-IDAY
Flnt low
J:JOa.m ...................... O.J
"rst hi9t'
9:44 a.m .... -............... 5.7
Second low
1111 3:44 p.m •• """'"""''"' 0.5
1•JM Secondhlgh ,.,.,,,
1:50 p.m._ .......... "'"''"'" 1•JIW
1·3tw -1·1•
NEWPO«I' BEACH
• a.m.. VlnCWs w.. ~ thlowtng rOdts and
broke a window of a home In the JOO block • 2:l0 p,m.
s.turdly.
• 0..,. Drtw: A ,....,tlaf bUrg1afy W91 r~ In
the 200 block• 12:JO a.m. ~
• ···~ .,.... ............ ~ wer'9 NPOf1lld to tM cut down a tree on the pub'6c 1treet
., • hlndMw. 2:15 a.m. ~
• ........ *'•w S1,ooo wt1 NPOftlld....,.. from
... oMot ... wf*"-. pried open. In the 4100 block
• l:JO p.m. ,.......,.
COSTAMISA • "* ..... A rlipl Ml,.,,,_ In the .. beoct It ,. am. SU.-.
• ..... ,. •••• Nal .......... ln .. ,_~ ., ...... ....
••rs 1 tsRC1ea•An.,.....,._,.,arlMlln
.. 2111 .......... ......,.
• .. , • AM•Nft-11, .... ln .. -.... ......,.
' .
Doily Pilot
Navy vs . Coast Guard
in Newporl Harbor
A recent story in the
Daily Pilot about the
first U.S. Navy vessel
to visit Newport Harbor
since 1946 dredged up
memories of the great U.S.
Navy/U.S. Coast Guard
confrontation of World War
II in Newport Harbor.
Shortly alter Pearl Har-
bor, the United States Coast
Guard, which bad taken
over Collins Island to use as
its headquarters, bad a bril-
liant idea. It anchored a
float in front of the King
Gillette house at the harbor
entrance. Prom it they kept
all pleasure boats inside the
harbor, allowed only fishing
boats out, and secured the
harbor from invasion by
Japanese forces.
Of course, the Japanese
were a few thousand miles
away at places like Guadal-
canal and Tarawa, but you
couldn't be loo careful.
And so it was that one
day a 30-foot cabin cruiser
came into the harbor. lt was
one of those pleasure boats
the Navy was converting
into military vessels. Just
how they were going to
convert a 30-foot cabin
cruiser into a warship is
somewhat of a mystery, but
in those semi-hysterical
days following Pearl Harbor,
people did strange things.
Anyway, this boat
manned by a Navy ensign
and two enlisted men sailed
right by the Coast Guard
float without stopping. This
enraged the Coast Guard
ensign in command of the
float. He grabbed a run-
about, which had been
commandeered by the
Coast Guard, took two
enlisted men and sailed in
pursuit of the cabin cruiser.
The Coast Guard ensign
caught up with the cruiser
at about the Pavilion and
ordered the Navy ensign to
stop. However, the Navy
man would have no part of
taking orders from the
Coast Guard and continued
Robert. Gordner
fHE VERDICT
to sail on.
The Coast Guard ensign
pulled his boat alongside
the Navy boat and roared in
tones of which Capt. Hora-
tio Hornblower would have
been proud: •Prepare to
board!"
The Navy ensign
responded in tones of which
John Paul Jones would have
been proud: "Prepare to
repel boarders!"
However, the four enlist-
ed men would have no part
of this foolishness. They just
stood there looking at each
other, rolling their eyes and
giggling.
Finally, the two vessels
arrived at the boat works
where the Navy ensign was
to deliver his boat. The two
enraged officers exchanged
identification information,
each demanding of his com-
manding officer that the
other be court-martialed.
Of course, the command-
ing officers would have no
part of such nonsense and
instead apologized to each
other for the antics of his
junior office r.
End of the great con-
frontation, but 1t was
rumored that the two offi-
cers sent their respective
e nsigns to a Navy-held
speck of coral west of
Hawaii called French
Frigate Shoals, which was
inhabited entirely by
Gooney birds.
• ROBEllT GARDNER is a Corona
del Mar resident and a former
judge. His column runs Tuesdays.
THAT'S YOUR FINAL ANSWER,
it c ti,cl/ 5-or. · · MI CASA
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• Vcrtiw a • Sbunen • ... , re •
NEWPORl·MESA SCHOOL BOARD PREVIEW
On The
AGENDA
KORUN WAR
IEMIMIRANCI
The board will consider
passing a resolution
remembering and honor-
ing veterans of the Korean
War on the 50th anniver-
sary of the conflict.
WHAT TO EXPECT:
Having originated with
the school board, the reso-
lution is expected to pass.
A special reception and
presentation will also be
scheduled for the next
board meeting Oct. 10.
SCHOOL SPENDING
The school board will
consider establishing a list
of ways in which schools
may spend a one-time
grant that was allocated to
each school district in the
state budget.
The 2000-01 state bud-
get divides the $180-million
excess from Proposition 98
funding for one-time
school site grants. The leg-
islation provides that each
school site should decide
how to spend the money,
but the uses must be
approved by the school
board. Each school site
must have approval for use
of the money by May 1 or
the funding will be lost.
Each site is expected to
receive a minimum of
$10,000.
WHAT TO EXPECT:
District staff is recom-
mending the board set a
list of parameters to expe-
dite the approval process. If
2 0
0
0
m
WHERE THEY MEET
• WHO: Newport~Mesa
Unified School District
Board of Education
• WHA't Regular
meeting
• WHEN: 7 p.m. today
• WHERE: District Educa-
tion Center, 2985-A Bear
Street, Costa Mesa
a school's suggested use of
the money falls within
these guidelines, approval
will be given qukkly.
FUND·RAISING DAY
The board has been
asked to approve district
participation in Lee Nation-
al Denim Day. Five years
ago, the Lee Company
began this day to raise
money for the Susan G.
Komen Breast Cancer Foun-
dation. At each business
that participates, employ-
ees are allowed to wear
denim to work in exchange
for a SS donation to the
Komen Foundation. This
year, the event is being
held Oct. 6.
WHAT TO EXPECT:
The human resources
department is asking the
board to approve participa-
tion for the cause.
PRINCIPAL AWARDS
Three Newport-Mesa
principals will be recog-
nized by the board for hav-
ing been the recipients of
the Irvine Company's Princi-
pal Excellence Awards.
WHAT TO EXPECT:
To be honored are
Barbara Harrington, for-
Dlllrtct om.: 2985-A
..., St.. CostA Mesa 92626.
(714) Q4.5000
mer principal of Adams Ele-
mentary School in Costa
Mesa; Lorie Hoggard, prin-
cipal of Sonora Elementary
School in Costa Mesa; and
Karen Kendall,. principal of
Harbor View Elementary
School in Corona del Mar.
Tuesday, Seplember 26, 2000 3
..
4 Tuesday.~ 26, 2000
Daily Pilot
Suspects sought in Rolex robbery RESERVOIR
CONTINUED FROM 1
we've reached with the city."
However, Caustin pointed
out that the dJstrid has had a
string of unplanned environ-
mental mishaps.
ot Newport
.... " to UDeJt II SaDllAna
l•t~WOI lolwaad~t •~--••Mn~• ....... tD epply for the
........ wiiti tbe ltate.
'Tb8 LOcal A9•ncy Ponmlicm C onunfMton, a
..... iO'DCY that indUdeJ
representaUves from
Orange County cities as
will u the coun~lf, will lben make a oq
an wbelblr Newport Bee.ch
sbDuld be allowed to annex
tbeareu.
SboWd less than 50% of
relidents in the areas
oppose the annexation,
Ne~rt Beach could
mcorporate them as early
as na.t Marcb.
While Santa Ana
Heights and Bay Knolls
residents seem to over-·
wbelmingly endorse
mmexation. Newport Coast
homeowners have been
more reluctant to offer their
support.
· To oUset taxes that
include levies for streets,
IChools and other improve-
ments to infrastructure, res-
ident representatives there
have hamm-:red out a de&
with t,Jie city. According to
the plan, the city would pay
residents $18 miWon over
15 years and set a.side $7
million for a civic center,
among other things.
IllD McGee, the presi-
dent of Newport Coast
Committee 2000, said
Monday that his group
would meet that night to
decide on whether to rec-
ommend that residents
support or oppose the
annexation.
He added that the city
appeared to have agreed
cm. some language changes
in the agreement. At the
last council meeting,
McGee had said that with
thote changes in place, he
would hopefully return
with an endorsement of the
annexation plans.
-Mllthls Winkler
SOUTI-1 COAST PLAZA quickly ordered several Although it was a first-ti.me
-Authorities are still looking employees and a customer to experience for Toumeau.
for two masked gunmen who the ground. The men asked jewelry thefts are far from
robbed a jewelry store in one employee to open a dis-alien to the area.
South Coast Plaza on Friday play case, took the · gold ·1n May 1997, two armed
nighl watches and fied in a waiting men robbed South Coast
The men escaped with green Honda Accord, police Plaza's Ben Bridge jewelry
several Rolex watches from said. No shots were fired and store of $325,000 in diamonds
Toumeau Watch Company in nobody was injured. and Rolex watches. A month
the shopping center, said Lt. It was the first time in later, four masked gunmen
John FitzPatrick of the Costa about 100 years of business escaped with several watches
Mesa Police .Qepartment. He that a Tourneau Watch Com-from Charles Barr Jewelers in
said the value of the stolen pany store was robbed. said Newport Beach. Last year,
goods was not known. Anthony D' Ambrosio, execu-. two traveling salespeople lost
The robbers, who entered tive vice president of the New $1.5 million in diamond-
the store around closing time York-based company. enausted jewelry to thieves
at 9 p.m. wearing full ski "We're obviously in in Fashion Island's parking
masks and armed with a shock,• he said. "It's a natur-lot.
handgun and an assault rifle, al response.•
SHALIMAR
CONTINUED FROM 1
serves about 300 children.
Because of space limits, the
program established "teams"
of students who were sched-
uled to come to the center at
different times.
Alvarez has said that she
didn't agree with the schedul-
ing, but did not refuse to fol -
low it.
Many people at the meet-
ing spoke in support of
Alvarez, who did not attend.
"Many of us , the parents,
ran to Maria when we had a
problem or got papers we
didn't understand,· said area
resident Marisol Canas .
•Children turned to Maria for
help because no one helped
th em like she did . She talked
to them and always asked
them if they needed any-
thing. We want Mana back
BIKE
CONTINUED FROM 1
to the sleek, German-mdde
motorcycles -even before the
California Highway Patrol, said
Sgt. Mike McDermott.
The department leases 11
of the bikes from BMW in what
police officials call a •pretty
"Children turned to
Maria for help because
no one helped them
like she did. She talked
to them and always
asked them ii they
needed anything."
Marisol canas
because the children want
Maria back."
No decision concerning
Alvarez was made at the
meeting, but Barth asked for
forgiveness and apologized
for ·any remarks I might
have made that are hurtful to
the community or to Maria.·
All who spoke at the meet-
ing swd the main concern
was the center -and its stu-
dents.
"Educallon 1s the most
sweet deal.•
The irutiaJ cost for each of
th e bikes was $17,400, but the
buyback option on the lease
makes it economically feasi-
ble, said McDermott.
"These actually worked out
cheaper than our old bikes," he
said.
BMW 's 1 lOORT-P is spe-
cially designed for police use.
Officials said the bike's special
important thing we can pro-
vide to our children,• said
Karen Robinson, a Costa
Mesa City Council candidate.
"The dosing of the (center)
has been devastating to this
community. While there is
always two sides to a story, it
is very important to remem-
ber who is suffering each day
the center is dosed -these
children right here.•
~lher major theme was
reconciliation between the
community, staff members
and volunteers.
·we are not perfect peo-
ple," Flanagan said. ·we
come together representing
different cultures, two lan-
guages and often ~o differ-
ent ways of looking at the
world. Because of that, we
often have not understood
each other. We need to work
harder, to learn to listen
before we talk, think before
we act and pray before we
lose our tempers.·
features include the ABS brak-
ing system, an auxiliary bat-
tery to power emergency light-
ing when necessary, and
cooling fans to prevent the
engine from overheating.
But for officers like White,
the Beem er's benefits boil
down to one thing.
•At the end of the day, I
don't feel as tired," he said.
"It's a nice ride.•
115·~
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For any Komt>n Race for the Curt"" panicipanr who
purchases a pair of New &Jana shocsduring rhc moodu
of Septembtr and October, New 8alana Newport will
dona1e S5 to iAf local dupm o( the Susan G. Komcn Breast
Cancer Fourubnon.
Nt"W IWana ts 1 pn:>ud nanonal spo1110r of iAf Komcn Race
for rh Curc6
• ADowiDg them more ptaces
to store reclaimed water at low
demand times goes a long way
towani iedudng or eliminating
any need to diseha.rge intO the
bay,. Kitt said.
The plan would also make it
possible for the water district to
provide reclaimed water to
more customers, according to
staff reports. And it would
restore a •btue water" view to
residents who live near the
reservoir.
.Qut Bob Caustin, founder of
Defend the Bay, contends that
Newport Beach should be using
its smoD share of reservoir own-
ership as a bargaining chip to
push the water district for
greater concessions on its dis-
charge policies.
He said the district, far from
making an earnest effort to
reduce discharges, works to
dump as much reclaimed water
as it can get away with.
"They continue to pursue
permits to do so, and over the
years they have proven them·
selves to be irresponsible and
have allowed discharges into
the bay,• he said.
The water district is only
allowei\ to dump water into San
Diego Creek, the main bibu-
tary to the Back Bay, during
particularly heavy rains.
Greg Heiertz, director of
engineering and planning for
the water district, said comply-
ing with that resbiction is the
agency's policy.
·we have no intention of
making intentional discharges
from the lake into the Back
Bay,• he said. "That's not the
plan. People that are opposed
to those discharges ought to
welcome the agreement that
BEAU
CONTINUED FROM 1
eagerly chewed on a doggy
treat next to her. "But he does
have his terrier moments.•
Jake, a 12-year-old
Labrador-terrier mix and the
house's alpha male, tries to
stay out of the younger dogs'
games.
And while Beau still drags
his hind leg a little -
Katcherian removed the joint
from his crushed hip, forcing
I'm not worried,
my agent is
Cr91g Brown lnsu,.nce
CalJ loday for auto & hotne
owner's Insurance!
(949) 760· 1255
PashJon Island
Jn June 1997, for example, a
broken water ~ pipeline
sent a1moSt 5 million gallons of reclaimed water into a bay trib-
uuuy. The district did not report
the spill for more than 48 hours
and was eventually fined
$10,000 .
In October 1995, another
pipe leak sent 1.4 million gal-·
Ions of reclaimed water into
another bay tributary. The fine
in that case was $45,000.
And in 1996, the water dis-
bict pushed for an agreement
called the Wetlands Water
Supply Project, which would
have allowed it to dump 5 mil-
lion gallons of reclaimed water
per day into the bay during
much of the year. It took a
Defend the Bay lawsuit to pre-
vent the project from being
enacted. Gaining a reservoir won't
change the distrlct1s approach,
Caustin argues. But it will mean
that Newport Beach no longer
has anything but a non binding
"joint statement of objectives"
to use when bargaining with
the district.
Kiff, however, said there will
be enough teeth in the deal.
•we will hold them to that
(agreement),• Kiff said. "That
will be us standing on a bully
pulpit and saying 'Hey. you
agreed to this.' But I think there
is some power in that.•
Kiff noted that the agree-
ment should allow greater pub-
lic access to information about
water district activities, and he
said the city plans to use the
money it receives from the sale
to monitor any discharges.
·we want to do ongoing
oversight of this,• he said.
the muscles to carry Beau's
weight -Bennett said her
family is blessed to have the
little guy in their midst.
"We feel very lucky,• she
said. ·we just have reaped
the benefits. It's great for
Annie and it's fun to watch
them grow up together.·
And at 26 pounds - eight
more than when he first
joinea the family -Bennett
said Beau bad just about
reached ~e right size.
"We don't want you to bf>
any fatter than that, do we
Beau?" she asked Jokingly.
New rt Beach • Uc.-0550290
welcome to One
M<dicol ~ M~i~ ~ E
"Your Southern Callfomia Mobiliry ~,,
• Representing the full
Une of Pride Mobility
Producu
• Setvice &: Rep.it
• ~ Reimbunanmt
Sprcialiu ·
-
Doily Pilot
Gay Geiser-Sandoval
EDUCATIONAi.LY SPEAKING
A friendlier way
to stop alienation
on campus
T he Newport-Mesa Unified
School District Board of Ed u-
catipn held more public
hearings than ever before to le t
the community have its say on the
2000-01 district budget.
The budget, which spells out
how $146 million will be spent in
the next fiscal year, gives much
more detail than ever before and
ties the money to <;}ear, articulated
goals. This is the first year that thv
goals were detemuned before the
money was budgeted.
The hearings had three speak-
ers: two students of nuddle
school-age who had specific
questions about the funding of
programs at their schools, and the
president of the teachers' union.
Apparently, the rest of us are sat-
isfied with the allocation of dol-
lars throughout the district.
However, there is a definite
lack of equality when it comes to
the number of school personnel
needed. For example, our tradi-
tional high schools vary in popula-
tion from 1,063 to 2,273 students.
Yet, there is almost exactly the
same number of clerical workers
at each school: The school with the
least number of clerical workers
has almost double the population
of one that has more.
flbe district has about 22,000
students and spends about $6,500
on each student. However,
because $6 million is spent on spe-
cial education students, the
amount spent on each student is
not equal.)
One campus has three coun-
selors; the others have four and
serve almost or more than double
the same amount of kids. Three
schools have three principals/assis-
tants, while the biggest one has
only four. The ratio of support staff
to students is even more skewed at
the alternative high schools, where
the number of students assigned to
counselors dips to 130 to one, as
opposed to 568 to one at one tradi-
tional high school site.
Our elementary schools range
in size from about 300 to 800 stu-
dents. Yet they each have about
two clerical staffers and, except for
the largest school, one principal.
The budget has a line item for
school safety and violence thanks
to grant funds that became avail-
able after recent school shootings
throughout the country. In New-
port Beach, that money is being
used to fund police officers on sec-
ondary school campuses.
J would like to suggest a differ-
ent strategy that wouldn't take any
money, but just a few minutes of
class time.
We recenUy hosted a dinner for a
~ool choir that was fanned at the
~ of school The kids are from
dU.ferent grade level.I and take part
in different acUvities, so they did not
necessarily know each other.
Within a few minutes, the
teacher bad them play some
"games" where they met and
talked to each other, then dis·
cussed what they found out with
the group. Strangers dilcovered
common interests and tinnly
placed a name to the face they see
eecb day in class.
These types m activities are often
overlooked at the secooduy-IChool
level. lbeie~ can lit iii di.IS
all yeu.. fellow llUdentl
lolely on ec:tiv1 or appearance.
t makes it ~ for alienation to
P>W and bete to foUow.
We should have students pair
• with 101MOM MW Ndl day In
Mch dul a1'd ~ 10 tb1ngl
lbty have in aimmon. Then. u IMJ c:banQe partMrt, they can and
oat who alio lbaNI tboM tnta'Mla. ~ L«'i *'I» ykJlm:a by rMldng ilda ......... ooDmd-d, ""'I 1 GI ba1*'9 lbat .-. atll· I.ii 1111m ma MVe our Ibid ' anca
............ gun tD Clihi ••
i~=~=s==~~==~~·COlll lj ......... ,...,_ ''> ...... _ ...... . _._ ...
The .
safDn
"It was really cool .... I had
no idea he was a medal
contender. "
-PETER BB.DEN of Newport Harbor
High. on the silver medal won by his
classmate and onetime fellow junior
lifeguard Aaron Peirsol at the
· Olympics in Sydney.
. .
The Daily Pilot wetcomes lettaf'I on --conc.eming Ne\1vport leedl Md COit.a Mesa.
lhefe are four ways to send In your com-menu:
• UTTIJIS -~I to the Dally Pilot. 330 W.
Bay St., Costa Mesa 92627
•READUS HOTw. -CAii (j49) 642-tOI&
• FAX -send to (949) 646-4170
• E-MAIL-send to dailypllofe~tlmacom
All correspondence must indude your fuft
name, hometown and phone number (for
verification purposes only).
Tuesday, September 26, 2000 5
November vote critical for Newport Beach
0 n Nov. 7, Newport Beach
citizens will have the
opportunity to vote yes or
n<>on two measures (Sand T). The
results will have a profound effect
on the quality of life in our beauti-
ful city. .
Measure S (also known as
RE.unll Greenlight) is
sponsored by
resident volun-
teers, whe.reas Measure T is spon-
sored by wealthy and powerful
developers.
Measure S would allow voters
to approve or disapprove any pro-
posed major development, which
required an amendment (change)
to the city's zoning plans (common-
ly known as the general plan).
Measure S qua1ilied for the ballot
by obtaining more than 10,000 sig-
natures, all collected by citizen vol-
unteers.
Measure T was sponsored by
developers for the sole purpose of
invalidating that measure.
Another significant difference is
that many of the Measure T signa-
rures were collected by nonresi-
dents who were paid to collect
them.
Marion Bergeson, in a paid
political ad published in the Daily
Pilot, stated Measure S (if enacted)
would force dozens of elections
over the next few years.
The electorate is entitled to
know as much factual information
as is available. Bergeson's state-
ment is grossly misleading, based
not only on Greenlight's election
fr~Huency analysis but also by a
second and independent analysis,
requested and paid for by the city
of Newport Beach.
The same Marion Bergeson ad
stated that "Measure S abandons
representative government•
This accusation assumes that
the current Newport Beach City
Council is in fact representative
government and is therefore acting
on behalf of and for the benefit of
the citizens who put them in office.
But representative government
means that when citizens' wishes
are overwhelming. such wishes
would prevail over other minority
interests, such as developers.
Do we have representative gov-
ernment today? No. We have mis-
representative government, as evi-
dent by the council's bias in favor
of the Dunes hotel, and its direc-
tive to solicit a bid for a hotel in
READERS RESPOND
Marina park.
Such a development would
uproot the American Leqion, a city
park, tennis courts, a Girl Scouts
meeting house and a playground.
The citizens' outcry against both
hotels has gone unheeded by the
current City Council.
Citizens' remedy for nonrepre-
sentative government is twofold:
elect council people whose views
urunistakably refiect the wishes of
residents; and secondly, in accor-
dance with California law, give
voters the opportunity to bypass
the legislative process by resorting
to the initiative process.
Both remedies are being pursued
by the proponents of Measure S.
• FRANK EISENDRAnt is a resident of
Newport Beach.
Who missed the Daily Pilot's Top 103 list?
• AT ISSUE: Readers give
us their picks for the Daily
Pilot's most influential list.
Y ou asked for our input and
here's mine. Yearly I look
forward to your •most
influential~ list -it's fun. This
year I take offense to No. 28,
Supervisor Tom Wilson. Jn our
Newport-Mesa communities,
where many of us worked ardu-
ously to defeat Measure F, you
place one of the opponents of the
El Toro airport in our local news-
paper as most influential. What's
wrong with this picture?
RACHEL PEREZ-HAM ILTON
Costa Mesa
That the Pilot has cbosen a ~ad
West Side swing~ (or one of its ·
perceived most influential is repre-
hensible and recldess for a
family/community newspaper.
Even the selection of No. 58 (I
don't want to give his name any
more notoriety by mentioning it) is
an insult to many fine and very
much alive and unsung activists
who have given to the integrity of
our community rather than to the
lascivious and immoral acts of that
dirty old man (acts which may in
fact be illegal and are very
destructive to any neighborhood
where there are children, as the
courts hopefully will soon deter-
mine).
Great heroes like war veteran
George Grupe, who recently hon-
ored the war dead with a memo,
rable American flag ceremony at
Newport Harbor High School;
George Yardley, the super athlete
wbo continues to host a golf tour-
nament to fund the Newport Har-
bor High School golf team: volun-
teers like VLCki Franco, who helps
daily in the TeWinkle lunch line
and always takes pictures at West
Side events where kids are
involved1 and Kim Farthing, who
seJVes tirelessly as others to raise
money for the Newport-Mesa
Schools Foundation certainly
deserve more recognition than that
dead slime ball •
And don't forget Sherri Hoyt
' and Mary Lou Pinel, who bave put
, ,
lalll '1l01 10' ltJ \rl!l&l \!(110 •
\IPl!llll II JIU • It
t •I ltJ a en IU lll l tlll PltPll
11 111 ••••tlf·•U & <••••••n
Superman
Mm SotUllllllS, 1llE 5Cl100l OISTt1n·~ s 163-#IUIOll IW, IMS Ill! Pilot's lllOSI IWflllOIW UST
.... DACnt, w ...... n
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::..~.::.:.%· ::.:.-.;:--:; ........................ ,.,._..,. ... ,.. ....,_.............. .... .... --.... __ ..,....__.... ..... ......... _....... .... ..._.... .._... . ...._. ..... ...:::.:·.:-.. -::.:--:::.::~--........... ..,. ~ ... ....._. .................. ~--.-. .. ... _.. ...... _ .............. .......
~ ....... o ........ .._.,._ ........... .._ ...... _.._.. _____ _ --......----.. -..........-.... ...... ...., ....... --------~ .._ ..... _,. ....... _ ........ .... :.-c.::-.. -::..--==--. ...... ~ ................. .... ......... . ..,.,._,... .. .............. .. ............... ...,._ ............... .. .._ .......... -. ............... . ----------"'-" ........... .... .................. --.....-..~ _._......... ...---·--__ ...... .._ ...... .._. ..... .... ........ ,___,.,_,.... .... ..... -.. .......... ~ ...... ................ _____ _.. .. . ........ .__. ......_._ ...... . :....,=--== ::-..::-::.-.=·· ........... ____ _.... ......... .....
--~ ... ~--~ _,.._ ... _ ............. .... .......... ---........... . _._......... ... .......... ... ................... ---~~ ... :.::::=i::.-..._ ------
-----............. -............ ----.. ....._ ..... .... ___ .............. .. ....... ,.... _____ _ .. ..__.._ ......... ...,.. ......... _
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....
SCIMJJlllS --... --..:-c., -·-............. _ ... _
~----... --::::.:'" ·--·-... .....:-,;.:::: =~'.:.::'.!'--.: ===-...... .__... ...... :=-s:-................ , ............. ---........ ...,,.... . .... ,._...,.... ... ........ -·~--....... ~ ..... --.. -----
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"""-..... __.....__ ............. __......,, .. __..... ..., __ ---...... ,....,,___.,.........
~ ... .-.. _........_, ,...._.__ __ ... .. -------~ ............. _.._., ................................ ._,..._ .... ,......_ .... _...,..._ ................. _ .... ~ ..... -.. -.. ................................. ~ ..
in counUess hours for Estancia; and
Chris Ludlow, Jennifer Knapp and 1
Michelle Graham, PTA moms from
Adams; and Mary Fewel from Vic-
toria and Bllen Canoll from TeWin-
k.le. The list is endless.
I realize you have to cut your
list off somewhere, but I would
have liked to have seen Steve
Rasch included on your most
influential list. He bas given
countless hours of his personal
time toward the weUare of thou-
sands of kids in Newport Beach
and Costa Mesa as a regional
Shame on you, Daily Pilot!
BARBARA WHrTACRE
Costa Mesa
commissioner for A YSO soccer.
This will be his third year running
the program, which is a year-
round project. I would love to see
him get the recognition he
deserves. Steve and his wife,
Janet, who also donates not only
her husband's tune from the fami-
ly but also is involved in many
phases of the AYSO program, are
residents of Newport Beach,
where Steve is a dentist. They
have three children, enjoy snow
skiing and the outdoors. Steve is
listed on your Hall of Fame page,
but I really think his devotion to
the kids of our city deserves
greater mention.
CHRIS ROHAN
Costa Mesa
For future consideration for
your Top 103 for next time: Deb-
by O'Connor, executive director.
FISH Harbor, lnc.
FISH Harbor, lnc. serves more
than 5,600 low-income families
each year with programs such as
transitional housing. mobile
meals, rental assistance, utility
assistance, food programs, Adopt
A Family programs, child-care
subsidies, and other programs
aimed at helping families and
individuals in crisis become self-
suffident.
Under Debby's tutelage, the
program now has eight perma-
nent staff members and more than
300 volunteers serving primarily
the Costa Mesa-Newport area, but
is now reac.bing out to all of
Orange County.
DENNIS SOtROEDO
Lake Forest
Dan Glenn, Newport Harbor
High School teacher ... Boys and
girls volleyball coach for more
than 12 seasons ... Intense,
numerous championships, in.Ou,
enced many student-athletes,
pre pa.red many for college ...
Many of bis students received
scholarships and have gone on to
fame: Misty May, April Rou ... ts
a great ambassador to the game
of volleyball.
I
. . . .
.... ,,...,k.., ... '*-,. ...... .......... "" ......... .. ._.,. ......... .,,. ..... rs .......
~ Tower141J, women's club champion ---
n . "
. .. Oc*2 .... A.
llUG llACI
6 Tu.day, s.pe.mber 26, 2000 • Sports Editor Roger Corison • 949..57 44223 • Sports Fax: 949-6500170 Daily Plldt
I
Legends
are never
common
•Jim Thorpe, who made his
way in and around Southern
Calif omia, continues to be a
story of his Herculean efforts.
Tie so-called sports experts
f today can talk pro grid
runners 'til they're blue in the
face, but none of them will ever put
a clear measuring stick on the total
life of the great Indian athlete Jim
Thorpe.
Although imagery of bis heydey
in athletics has him fixed at Carlisle
Indian School in Pennsylvania, he
was no stranger to Southern
California and his name still lives
on at Cypress College in Orange
County.
Thorpe, a Sac and Fox Indian,
died in 1954.
By 1976, however, his name
would emerge again in the midst oJ
Don ContreH
SIDELINES
America's
bicentennial
celebration and
former Newport
Harbor High
football Coach
DonJ. Lent
would be a
central figure in
the ceremonies.
Lent, as
athletic director
at Cypress
College, would
greet one of
Thorpe's • daughters, who
had flown out from Oklahoma, and
watch happily as she cut the ribbon
to Thorpe House -the name
finally chosen to fit the college's
physical education division's facility.
The April sun was bright and
smiles were wide after the ribbon
was snipped. Many gathered
around Grace Thorpe to extend a
warm welcome while Lent beamed,
then ex.damed, •1sn't that greatr
This comer covered Cypress
College photography.
Thorpe's daughter then told the
press that efforts were being
stepped up by her family and
supporters to have her father's
Olympic victories reinstated from
the 1912 upheaval. His medals
were taken away because he had
reportedly accepted $60 a month
for playing semi-proi baseball in
1909-10, making him • a
pofessionalr" Thorpe explained to
officials that the funds were only
used for living expenses during the
baseball season.
It was a long, frustraing battle,
but seven years after Grace
Thorpe's visit to Cypress College,
the victories were reinstated.
Replicas of bis medals were given
to bis seven children.
Although Thorpe's name was
fading by the 1940s, actor Burt
Lancaster and the movie-makers
helped revive the legendary Thorpe
SEE CANTRELL PAGE 8
~
Across country racing
I f
• Newport Harbor High 's Amber
Steen ventures 3,000 miles to renew
a rivalry with fellow ~alifornia star.
WEe attention back home focused on
nday's Battle of the Bay football game
between Newport Harbor High and
Corona del Mar, Harbor senior cross country
star Amber Steen was conductirig her own
·&we of the Bei• in North Carolina.
Steen. also the reigning Southern
Section Division Il champion in the
1,600 meters (she was third at the state mee~. said the race, though thoroughly
· enjoyable, reinforced her desire to run
collegiately in the West.
•When I woke up (Saturday) I found
out the race had bee'n postponed
because parts of the course were under
more than two feet of water,• Steen
said. •Tuey delayed the start six hours
(to 5 p.m. Eastern time) and the course
was still pretty messy. But it was a blast
to run.•
Still, Steen said she would prefer to
Barry Faulkner
PREPS
Coach Bric 1\veit believes ls her . :
strongest attribute, gave way to ~
refreshing wonder as she recalled her 1
weekend back east. · • '
•1t was so gorgeous back there. The
trees were so thick, you couldn't seem~
more than 100 feet ahead of you. And•
it was pwe green, everywhere,• she ri
said. • ' ..
The experience was not all
postcards and positives, however, as • •
the muddy conditions may have cost
Steen a brand new pair of running
shoes. ••
Steen, the reigning CIF Southern Section
Division U cross country champion, finished
eighth in the elite race at the Great American
Cross Country Festival at McAlpine Greenway
Park Saturday in Charlotte. She ran the soggy
3.1-m.ile course in 18:26.
More importantly, however, was Steen's
personal battle with Montgomery High of Santa
Rosa senior Sara Bei (pronounced bay}, a
three-time state individual champion who
finished seventh in 18:21.
avoid such harsh weather, particularly snow
and cold, in the future. For this reason, she has
planned to use her five recruiting trips to visit
Arizona, Oregon, USC, UC Irvine and BYU. She
has already visited Tucson and will pick her
spots for the other four over the coming weeks.
She said she would like to sign a letter of intent
the first signing period in November, but she
did not rule out the possibility of delaying her
decision.
•I think they're ruined,• she said.
•Tuey used to be white, but, even after the rain
washed off some of the mud, I probably will
never be able to clean them up.• "
I '
Steen said the condlUom were too much for
a novel insulation method she picked up at tJie:
meet. •To be only five seconds behind Sara shows
me I've improved a lot,• said Steen, fifth in the
Division Il state final won by Bei last fall in
Fresno. NWhen we'd raced before, I was
between 35 and 50 seconds behind."
Once a wide-eyed freshman new to running,
Steen's rugged competitiveness, which Sailors
#I flew in Thursday and watched the college
race on Friday night,• Steen said. #I noticed all•
the runners were covering their shoes with duat •
SEE PREPS PAG6.17
PAULSON SHOWS Hl·S WARES ;·!
PGA Tour standout, who
has enjoyed another fine
year, returns to his roots at
Santa Ana Country Club.
Richard Dunn
DAILY PILoT
SANTA ANA HEIGi-ITS -
Dennis Paulson, who grew up
playing Santa Ana Country Oub
and is an honorary member of the
oldest golf club in Orange
County, brought his clubs along
Monday for a private exhibition.
Then, he indulged the intimate
gallery of about 75 with
jaw-dropping tee shots in a
two-team foursome that included
bead profenional Mike Reehl and
dub champions Chris Veitch and
Marianne Toweney.
•Dennis is very inspiring,
because you can't bit it u rar as
be does. You Just sit back and
watch it, then hope you keep the
files out of your mouth when it's
open,• said Towersey, the
long·reigning women's club
champion a t Santa Ana.
Toweney and Reehl formed
one team in the two-player
better-ball gross format and shot
3-under-par 69, while Veitch and
Paulson carded a 7-under 65.
Veitch, a four-Ume Santa Ana
men's club champion who has
won three straight titles, Mid be
wQD't nervous tMtng it up in the
members-only mrhtbttkm. •
"Not with Dennis PaullOD as
your partner,• said Veitch. who
has played with him before in
rounds at Santa Ana. "Wlth
Dennis, you're playing with boull8
money. Anything else ii just
gravy.•
Paulson, the Costa Meu fiigh
product and former nati<>n.al
long-drive champion, ftexed bis
muscles in a private show,
following a mominq clinic. It was
Dennis Paulson Day at Santa Ana
Country Oub, which provided
the golf course for the PGA Tour
star when he was growing up
with his brother, Dean.
•1t ls fun to do (an exhibition)'
here,• said Paulson, who won the
Buick Classic in June for a
s.540,000 paycheck and his first
PGA Tour title. •'Jbis is why I'm
a professional golfer, because of
Santa An& Country Club and
(former longtime head pro)
Gerald Hall .•
For Paulson, who made five
birdies, it was bis first time on the
golf course in al.molt three years,
the longelt be has gone between
rounds there.
Paul.son is enjoying a mini
vacation before he plays in the
Las Vegu lnvita1ional next
month. Although be bas won
$855,193 this yeor, along with bis
first tiUe, Paulaon said be hasn't \
played well in 2000.
•rve been fortwiate to have a
few good weQI, but I've been
bad u a whole.• said Paw.on. the
first-round leader at the Masters
this year With an opening 4·under
68, finishing tied for 14th. •t.ut year, I milled three cuts,
and I've mined two cuts just m
the IUt moath ... I got a win (in
2000) ind~ wall ID twO
· majon, • Paul.9oa. Who
carded thNe attmght rOwMb
under par at the British Open at
St AJidrews in July, ftnisttlng tied
for 11th.
Paulson, wbo earned over
$135,000 in the Maiten and
Brlti$b Open combined, has
II
• (
, -
played in 23 events this year and , ,
made 13 cuts. He has missed nine
cuts. He Withdrew after two
rounds at the U.S. Open.
Paulson, who turns 38 on
Wednesday, enjoyed a
breaktbrougb year in 1999,
finishing 31th on the PGA Thur's
money lilt frain 317th tn 1998.
Paulloo concider.cl giving up
~ before pleylDg Oil tbe Aldan
Thilr m Iba_, 1990S.
1
He qnallflect tar tbe PGA Thur ,,. ..
in 1994 ud :95 and played 00 the
NIU nNr tD 1997 ilnd '98.
HllH SCHOOL FOOTBILL PLAYERS OF THE WEEK
(COACIU' •LICTIOllS>
HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL
IEWPOIT HIRIOR SAILORS
SCOTT /&\ BRIAN
LOPEZ 9 GAETA
"'rile 6-foot-2,
J.2 8 5 -
pound senior
tackle WU a
dominant
force up
front. help·
tog pave way
for 324 Nlb1ng '!:!..and 21 first •
A6-foot-2,
1 8 0 -
pound junior,
he bad two
lntercep-
Uons, f ow
tackles ,
caught two
passes for 24
yards and kicked • three PATs. _ •
ISlllCll URIS
ANDY ~
ROMO '$Jf
IVAN
GARCIA
.,..... &-loot-2.
J.1 '85· == ,... ....
tD ·oa 11
carrl••·
•aagW * __ ..
~-....... ..........
AS-foot-11,
1 8 0 •
pound senlor,
he hAd ntne tack Jes,
forced a f um·
blo and WU
• conlisteat
force OD ..._
inlllriar nm clef· .... .., .
COSTA MESI MUSTANGS
KEOLA ~
ASUEGA I ~
DANI EL
HUNTER
Tlbe 6-foot-
l. 1. 190-
p o u n d
sophomore
started at
fullback,
shifted to
tailback and
rushed for 158
yards and three •
TDs on 29 came..
A 5-foot-9,
1 8 5 -pound senior,
he rushed for
47 yards on
three carries,
blocked well
and WU aJso
a stalwart at
defensive end for • the Mustangs.
· COIOlll DIL &'..I SU 11185
ADAM jA JUSTIN
DUNN 'flia WALD
A 6-foot-l, J-\.2 2 5 •
poUnd j\inlof,
hlsenortwu
reflected by
downflelcl
pur1utt for tackles, . aD4
.... Uc> m.a. ,.. neu tblt ....
l.AsT WEEK'S IDGH SCHOOL POOTIAl.L PLAYS
OP 30 YARDS Olt'MOlll
• 51 -Rory McXeever (Corona del Mar) punl
• 35 • Keola Asaega (Costa Mesa) run.
~· • 34 -Blake Hedler (Corona del Mar) run.
• 3-4 • ltkble Berame (Estancia) kickoff return.
LA.IT WEEK'S 8IO Dl!f!NSIVB PLAYS
• NEWPORT HAJUIOR -End Gartetl Troncale earned a
6-yard saCk to force first CdM punt aDd IDAlde a stop for
2-yard loss to help thwart second serleS ... Safety DftSd
Sp~ made a •tick along the sideline on a QB saamble
. .. OUtskle linebacker Cbdl MmclertDO returned an :
tnteicept:lon 8 yards into CdM territory to set up ttilid
touchdown ... Comerbeck 8rtaa GMta ioded CdM's lint twb
MC.'ODd-balf pollBltlons with lnterceptiom ... 1lrckle Nkk
~-bed• 7-yard sack ... CometbadC If• s...-t. drilled a receiver after a completion. then dkl the aame tbJJ)I
on the D!Xt play to force an mc:ompletion. '
I • COSTA MESA -End Dimlel H..._. bUlimered a l'lllllilng
back for a 3-yard loll ... Comei'badt Nldl C .... eo came up
fast a:nd stopped the quarterback foi • 1~ -... ~ckJ•
Aalolly <Jnlllllktl mulded lil to atop a nmntng beck for no ,
gatn ... H\inlllr came up with a~ Mm. NIUltlrig ~
• 9-yard loll •.. lnllde Uneb9cks ..... ..., ... ~~=u=i==-~· witb OUlllide llDebec:ker Jolla 0... •a ....... DO .. .,, AMlt"i:.litd•=·· ......... 1
I .. e.r: n. ,.:::ir..::.•.:=:1: ~ I ........ '"'*' .......... , ..........
~
. . . ' ..
Daily Pilot SPORTS Tuesday, September 26, 2000 7
Just a matter of taking· their shots WATER POLO
• It wasn't there at the right time for Misty May and Holly
.McPeak at Olynipic Games, but there will be other times. II
arrived Sept. 19. After watching the
women's and me n's games on the
Thursday, Friday and Saturday, he
was asked what he thought o( these
Olympics.
USA
GETS
FIRST
WIN
Daphne Sai'ldersott for Misty to hit on two which wins
SPEOAl TO THE DAllV PkDT the g~ with a 15-13 score. It lasted
From Sydney -Bondi Beach •6 minu~. .
had been having Then came Saturday mommg
unseasonably warm weather for and the best eight women's beach
this early in Australla's~rtng and volleyball ~ams played for a shot
th d l ed .t Bas . b rts at the semifinals. e cro-:-v ov 1 · g 10 s 0 The fu1al two teams to play
and shirts, or bathing suit tops. ~d , Saturday morning were Brazil's ber~ chested men was the ma1onty s Adriana/Sandra and USA's McPeak
choice of dress. and May. Both of Brazil's players had ~1th th~ quarterfinals the re_ward, played in the '96 Olympics, but each It~y s ~ucilla Pei:rotta and Daniela had a different partner. Adriana had
Gotlt:illi were faang the USA team of taken the silver and Sandra the gold.
HoUy McPeak and Misty May to see McPeak was fifth with Nancy
who. would ~ke the top eight teams Reno in '96. May, a graduate of
for S~turdays play. . . Newport Harbor High, was being
. ~c;ty scored the first pomt by tutored by setting specialist and
hitting cross court, th~ followed former Olympian Debbie Green at
with a huge block to start the USA Long Beach State.
teclm, 2-0. A couple of hitting errors During the eight months Holly
by both teams brought the score to and Misty had been teamed together
3-1.r.. Misty_ repeated the hit and block on the FIVA Tour, they bad amassed
for ;,-1. Mistakes brought the score to two firsts four seconds and a fifth 5-~. Perrotta serv~ an ace, which place am~ng their top eight scores to
Misty countered with another take an Olympic berth. All the other
cross-court spike for a side change at USA teams had had 24 months to
&.4. MLc;takes and an ace by Pe~tta accomplish what McPeak and May
take lhe score to ~-6. Aces and hits had eight months to do.
by both teams bnng the score to With very recent first-and
12-8. ~errotta and Gattelli's bitting second-place eHorts, they stepped on
and mistakes brought the scort:; to the court to go up against Olympic
13-11 . The 14tl\ point comes with medalists and see if they had a
Misty's famous cross-court hammer. medal in their future.
two powerful serves to tie the score.
2-2. It became 3-3, then Sandra got a
line hit while Adriana aces, so
McPeak and May dig and spike to
tie it again, 5-5.
Powerful serves, great digs by all
four and an assortment or tuts and
shots, including hitting over on two,
lies it again. 10-10.
Adriana has two successful blocks
and an ace serve. Misty's high serve
and great cross-court hit brings the
score to 13-12, USA. Misty uses d
chest-high beach dig to stop a hard
driving spike by Shelda, which she
then hits line. Adriana. then Misty,
use the cross-court cut to tie 1l again,
14-14.
Sandra's jump serve gets the score
to 15-14, Brazil. Sandra picks up a tut
and scores with a line shot to ta ke
the game, 16-14. The game lasted
just shy or 49 minutes. Brazil went on
to the semifinals. Holly McPeak and
Misty May are hfth.
·Tuey have been great games to
watch. the teams are all playing very
well,• he said. Asked about Holly
and Misty's last match, he added:
·A 10% increase in getting the ball
down and they would have won the
game."
Tue answer to how they could
have accompllshed this was a
multiple answer. The gist was
changing their attack or defense
whenever it wasn't working, and
doing it early in the points. Butch fell
sure that changes would be made to
help them effectively play against
the top FJVB teams.
As for Misty, she beads out early
from the Olympics. Her final credits
needed to graduate from Long Beach
State had been put on hold during
her time with the USA indoor
national team, then later with Holly
in their Olympic challenge.
She will finish up her fin al classes,
then more bedch volleyball.
She has another 20 years of beach
volleyball ahead and opporturuties to
medal at the Olympics, and who's to
say Misty won't beat Kars:h Klraly's
three gold medals before she's
through.
• Men's water polo
team keeps medal
hopes alive with 12-8
win over the Dutch.
SYDNEY r-"\,Q9
-Coach\ .. :9 John Vdrgas
gave his
players an early wake-up call
and captain Chris Oeding
scored a goal to help the Unit-
ed States men':; water polo
team keep its Olympic medal
hopes alive with a 12-8 victo-
ry over the Netherlands Mon·
day al the Ryde Aquatic Cen-
ter.
'Perrotta counters with an ace and The match started with Misty's
~n ndils the :1"1e for a 14-13. famous harruner going cross court
1 Holly's cJefe0S1ve digs have kept the for the first point. Adriana made a
It must have seemed like deja vu
for Holly, watching the final four
teams continue on without her. Misty
gave plenty of smiles to the crowd
before the te leVlSion crew
surrounded her. • DAPHNE SANDElltSON is a resident of
Corona del Mar and the co-author of
Winning Doubles Volleyball.
~ victory. the Amen-
cans' hrst after pool-play loss-
es to Croatia (10-7 Saturday)
: bclll m play, this time the dig sets up hitting error, but followed it up with
Mustangs No. 1
: • Costa Mesa football rises to top of CIF Division IX poll.
CC::R RTTOS -Though less than HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL
, impressive in a 24-22 win over Westmin-
ster Priday night, unbeaten Costa Mesa jumped from No. 2 lo the lop spot in the
CIF Southern Section Division IX poll released Monday by the section oflice.
The Mustangs (3-0) were awarded the top spot after Brea Olinda, previously
ranked No. 1. was toppled by Diamond Bar, 35-7, Friday. The poll is voted upon by
Southern California media. Western, Sonora and Fullerton, Nos. 2-4, respectively,
each moved up a spot, while Estancia, ranked No. 10 last week, fell out of the top
10 after a 24-7 loss to Canyon. Newport Harbor remains No. 6 in Division VJ.
1
CdM girls volley-'?sl/.A[M] ~[Mss~ b~ll team C?llides {,,;:. j. 0 ",\
with Huntington ~ ~
Beach.
contest against
Peninsula today at 2.
Both teams met in
last year's Division I
finals and it was the
Panthers who pre-
vailed, 10-8, to win
their ninth OF cham-
The Corona del
Mar High girls volley-
ball learn will look lo TODAYS MATCHUPS
: rebound from a tough, four-game loss to
' rival NPwport Harbor with a nonleague
m.:ilchup al Huntington Beach tonight
al 6 pm. nw Sea Kings (~·2) fell t? their
: ne11H·'i1s from the other side of~ Bay,
, 15 7, 10-15, 15-7, 15-5, Thursday at
: Hdr uor. They were led by senior Sara
Denung and Undsay Anstandig each
: hdcl 11 kills, while junior setter Jacque-
, line Becker paced the offense at setter.
It will be a clash or two ranked. The
, Sc.1 Kings are ranked No. 2 in CIF
: SouUll'rn Section Division ID-AA, while
1 the OiJPrs come into the match ranked
: No. 7 in Division I-A.
: I !<•re's today's sports menu:
' • In girls tennis, Newport Harbor's girls tennis
' team gets put to the maximum test with a road
I
i·PREPS I
CONTINUED FROM 6
tape to keep the water and mud out. I
bied it and it actually worked pretty
well. I'd never beard of doing that.•
With her final PNI> MUOD Just
underway, Steen hopes to work herself
into position to do somethlng else
unheard or in California cross country
cirdes: Beat Bei tn the state final.
Speaking of unhMrd or. the Costa
~esa High boys basketball schedule
j:ocludes a Jan. X1 date in tbe N'lke
Jhtrovaganza at Long Beach State's
PyramJd.
Coach Bob Serven's Mustangs will
meet St. John Bosco at 8:30 a.m. (set
your alarm clocks, Mustang fans). The
early start gives Mesa little more than
12 hours to recover from its Jan. 26
Pacific Coast League home clAsh with
cross-town rival Estancia.
•Tua kids won't mind getting up
early,• Serven Bald. •They're very
excited about lt. f think it speaks to the
GAME BUSTERS
.CONTINUED FROM 6
pionship In 10 years.
• The Sailors field hockey team (7-0-1) look to
keep Its unbeaten streak alive with a 3: 15
matc.hup against Santiago at Harper, School.
The Sailors defeated Glendora, 5-0, and have
outscored their opponents, 27-1.
• In girls golf action. Cost.a Mesa and Estancia
will compete at the Costa Mesa Goff and Coun-
try Oub's Mesa Unda Course today at 2:30,
while Newport Harbor and Irvine compete at
the Oak Creek Golf Course at 3.
• In collegiate action, the Orange Coast College
men's soccer team, 4-1-4 overall and 0-0-1 In the
Orange Empire Conference take on Rlverslde at
home beginning at 3, while the women's team
(6-3-1, 1-0-0) plays at Rivef'slde, also at 3.
• lhe Vanguard University men's soccer team
hosts Concordia at 3 p.m. in a Golden State Ath·
letk Conference matchup, while the Lions
women's volleyball team plays at Westmont
tonight at 7.
-by Tony Altobell!
improvement the program has made in
one year and that's a reflection on the
players. Hopefully, we'll be contending
for a league title and this will help us
prepare for the playoffs.•
Estanda High boys basketball,
under first-year head man Chris Sorce,
will face a familiar face in its preseason
scrimmage. The Eagles will meet
Edison. coached by Rieb Boyce, who
resigned as Estancia coach last spring
to accept a significant pay raise as
coach of the Sunset League Chargers.
After three weeks of tbe football
season. upcoming league races are
beginning to take shape.
If I had to pick favorites at this point,
I'd go with University in the PCL and
Irvine. ahead of Newport H4!bor and
Laguna Hills, in the Sea •View.
Mike Pnemaa. a tonne)' football
Ital' at Newport Harbor (Cass of 1995)
and a first-year aailtanl coach at
CdM, bu had better weekends.
After the Sea Kings fell to his a1ma
mater P:rlday, 35-7, he drove to Fresno
to aee bis fonner collegiate team, Cal.
fall to tbe Bulldogs, 17-3.
touc:hdown·sa\'ing tackle from behind.
• BSTANCIA -OUtlide linebacker
Miiii con.y got lo the way of an option
pltcb to force a 10.yard .ac. ... Middle
llnebacar lwlil a.c1a came through
With a bag bit for jnlnhnet yardage ...
lllllde ~.....,.~
...,..,. ln1D a n""*'9 beck for a
l ·yarcl -... ColbJ llilced • W'CJIMt-WS.lang wtlb a big bit for I . .,. ...... ,........, ..... ., ................. , ......... .. ...... ............. ,.... .... .
DMlll II-I If r"'11 .. ilclDlld
bllwlla•1111111••n t•lar•
#' t'•-WMM•• =~·-:::::r"· •• "rlll .....
Butch May and tus wife. Barbar<1.
• Sailor front wall is all about attending
to business, not seeking any attention
rorhey are the cause to the effect, the means to an
J. end and the irresistible force against the
immovable object. But ask them if they care.
Re<:ogmtion is, it seems, as much the enemy to
the Newport Harbor High offensive line as whoever
lines up across the neutral zone.
A reporter interested in a postgame explanation
of their dominance in the trenches figures to meet
with polite indifference. Nothing personal, just part
of the job. A subtle trap block against the trappings
of self-unportance reserved for the •skill• positions.
·They have a T-shirt with a quote that says: We
work the hardest, are known the least. yet we are
the reason,' • Newport Harbor Coach Jeff Brinkley
said of the pistons to his football team's offensive
engine. •And that's really true. Not many people
recognize offensive linemen, but lf any offense is
successful, those guys are the reason.•
But, after a 35-7 victory over Back Bay rival
Corona del Mar, which included 21 first downs, 324
rushing yard.I and a headline-making 226-yard,
three-touchdown performance by senior tailback
Chris Mandertno, theirs was not to reason why.
•1 don't know, l'm just going lo look for my
SEE POLO PAGE 8
parents.• one trench warrior replied sheepishly to a
postgame query about their job well done.
lt was. indeed, work worth remembering for this
work-in-progress starting five. a group which,
before Uus season. had no start.mg experience in a
Newport Harbor urufonn.
Seruor nght tackle Scott Lopez, a 6-foot-2,
285-pound transfer from Santa Margarita, started
last fall for the Eagles. So, predictably. he sets the
tone. He was chosen Offensive Player of the Week
against CdM.
Junior left tadue Robert Chai (6--4, 265) provides
muscle on the other side, while senior guards Jim
Erickson (6-t. 210) and Ryan Devin (6-3, 200) flank
1uruor center Jeff Marshall (6-4, 200) to seal things
ofl inside.
"They've worked hard and have done a nice
JOb, • Bnnkley said. "They're sWl relatively
inexperienced, so to see them come together
(against CdM) was good. But they've had some
flashes or being pretty good the first two games.·
BrinkJey added the group will become stronger
when junior Bryan Breland, who started one game
as a sophomore, returns soon trom wrist surgery.
Breland. who may begin pTacticing this week, will
eventually take over a guard spot.
-by Bury Fnllmer
Newport girls third in tournament
AIJiAMBRA -Kelly Huot and Shelly GOLF
Roberts each shot 5-over·par 40s to finish
among the top 10 individuals and lead the Newport
Harbor Higb girls golf teem to a tbbd-p)ace showing in
tbe 17-team Marie Keppel lbumament Monday at the
AJhambra Goat Courie.
Amanda Campbell (43) and Lindtey Galbraith (44) uo p1ayec:1 wen a tbe Sdon, whole 123 stto~
trolled Palm Deist (11.S) and Blperanu (122).
Coec:h Jim Warrm's 'Tiln open Sea "8w LeegUe
~ today At 3;30, ageimt bmt lrvtDe at Oak Oeek
Oub.
Mesa at the same site. Bm10UMltfWff
.....,_ _.,. 1. Edition, 26); 2. ~ Ml: l . Mllflbn,
269; 4. Woodbridge. 2M; 5. ~ J.11; 6. s.nG AN
V.I~ Jll; 7. CantUrj 347. ·~· b 1. s..a. (Mer). 1': l . ~ tw>. • l K<>valNQl'(ldl). IS; 4. O*' (Mil'), 8'; 5.. &my ((ill. 8';
6 Powttl (MO. • 7. Arnlndl .... GWiit (MR) ••
~Do (lit). 105
Nguyen-P.bam sweep ID doubles
COSTA MESA-lbe COlta Mela HiGh 1111111 doublM ...m of Hang Ng\ayeb and Mlnla-
lby Pbem WDld .. ant .... al ...... bill
Wilting Omml vt.w~ 1'4o&. ID• 'MCIH ..
gidl .... IMldl Y·'f'L ........... ... -................. ..... .. M»-9 ... to J.5. a.a Vlllw tr j uwd to, ..
'Ill
8 T~, ~ 26, 2000
POLO
CONTINUED FROM 7
and Yugoelavia (8·5 Sundoy), put them in
polition to be one of four teams who
advance from Group B to the competition
tor medals, wbJcb begtJ:ll Pndoy.
Vargas, who coaches tbe boys and girls
teems at Corona del Mar High, will lead
his team against reigning world champion
Hungary today. Team USA then finishes
off pool play agaimt Greece Wednesday.
Vargas, hoping to stir his charges after
their first two defeats, initiated a •:SO a.m.
wake-up call for Monday's 9:30 a.m. con-
test.
It worked, apparently, as veteran Chris
Humbert posted three of his team-high
four goals in the first quarter. His early
scoring heroics put the Americans up, 3-2,
and 18-year-old Tony Azevedo, who tor-
mented CdM and Newport Harbor high
I
SPom
9ChoOll &1 a tow-year IWldout at Loag
Beech WU.On, made It 4-2 near the eod of
the firlt period.
Azevedo finilhed with three goeli, while
the llngle tally from Oeding, a former
CdM High •tar and the American'• prima-
ry playmaker, helped give Tham USA
some much-needed momentum.
Woll Wlgo also 1COred and 1et up Hum·
bert's first goal with a dump pa.a. Kyle
Kopp added two goals for the Amel1canl,
while goalie Dan Hackett made 10 11aves.
Dutchman Harry Van der Meer kept hi.I
team close with three six-on·five goals.
Humbert, whom many consider the
world's best shooter from the two-meter
position, restrained a tendon in h1I right
forearm, but said he would be reedy for
today's battle with Hungary. which owns
the most men's Olympic gold medals in
the sport (six).
Vargas said bis team will rise early once
again, m an attempt to rise to the occasion
for the 9:30 a.m . showdown with Hungary.
COl'allaillMar
fflill plG Ill~
CIU'lll01«91,
Iba ...........
ol tlae lJlllllMI
Slalea .. '9
water polo .....
ICOlM • goal ..
the Amedcam'
12..a~over
the Netberlandl
Moaday to keep
alive hopes for a
berth ID tbe
medal roundl
at tbe Olympic
Gamelin
Sydney,
AUltnlla.
OM.Y Pl.OT FU PHOTO
. .
CANTRELL
CONTINUED FROM 6
for the memory book and for
new generations. Many had
never beard of him prior to
the film production in 1959.
It was no snap to portray
the great Jim Thorpe, which
became apparent to the late
Lancaster. Hence, the
37-year-old Lancaster
labored hard lo get Into top
Thorpe had been hired by
the producers to serve as an
adviser dwing the filming,
but had no contact with
Lancaster until one day
dwing the drop-kicking
scenario.
That's when Lancaster
took note of a lone man up ln
the stadium making his way
toward the star actor. One
can imagine Lancaster's first
view of "The Great One•
face-to-face.
"I think I better show you
bow to do that. He then
drop-kicked the ball a great
distance, at age 62.
He was still a.mazing pro
football fans in 1948 while in
bis 60s by drqp-kicldng
50-yard field goels during
halftimes of several NPL
games.
But he made his tint
sterling marks in athletics
more than 90 years ago as a
member of the Carlisle
football team, which was
coached by another legend,
Glerm S. (Pop) Warner.
With the addition of
Thorpe, Warner could
schedule stronger opponents.
In fact, he added major
college powers. No problem.
Thorpe and his mates bad
little trouble whipping most
all comers. And the
won-loss-tie record during
the Thorpe years ls
astonishing: 43-4-1.
physical condition. '
Thorpe, sporting a top
coat and homburg, took the
ball from Lancaster and said,
~· .. ... . .
' ...
VILES v• Loeb Vllll. • 15, peeMd IW9Y ..
ttnlber 10, 2000, In
NftpOrt IMdl, CA.
"""" "' ., Nlldlcl. Ht Wll I Bink Offtclr
for the United 8tltn
N1tlon1I l1nll for ":." ve--.. MnMd
by NI wltt: c.hftne, g..z..~: Victoria ScMHrHn: Dr. Hector Clldeton
Ind 2 ....,lldr-.,:
c.tMttne Ind CMtt·
Int Clldlron.
Funtrll StrvlCH ..,. held on Mondly,
llptembtr 18th. At
1 :'8 p.m., AIYtftldl
N1tlon1I Ctmtttry,
AMrslde, CA. ... It
lt19ln9 Artl 14. ArrlnftlMntl by ,..
ctftc vw Moituery,
N!!po!t l!Kf!. CA.
P. -" -N:. ,.. . . ,. ·~· ._ .. ,
CfTY OF
NEWPORT BEACH
NOTICE
IHvmHO BIOS S..led bldl may be
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the City C .. rk. 3300
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BMoh, CA lne58-&915
until 11:00 a.m. on ltlt 11111 day ol Oetobef 2000. et wtlldl llmt aid! bide lhall be opened and
r-S for
WUT NEWPORT
IOUHD WALL TAAHSPAAIHT PANEL AIPLACIMIHT
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Pro.pectlv• bidder• may obtain OM Ml of
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CA~15. ~rad Contrac10f
lJcenM CINlfflcsllon(1)
raqulfad for .. projac:t:
--_.. BorC-17 r-ll'llRiU For further lnfonna· El _..AY tlon, call Lloyd Dalton,
Mortuary * Chapel Prol•ct M1n1gar 11
C-·tlon (IMO) 544-3328. ,..,,_ Publlahad Nawpon
110 Broadway 8Hch·Co1t• MaH Costa~ :'b~ 2.~ ... liiiilililiiiill• IM.,
I >i,count c :a,kct
j I 1 jl' tl<I J, I " cm,,, Sml/a.,,. ~,, Ou•ltl for Lm
Direct Cremation ... $49S
Immediate Burial .• $995
(INIMMs~
Prearrangement Progranu Ava.iltblc: for
Funeral SCrvica, Ctcmaciom and Caaketl
( ( 1\l l'\1(1 .... 1 ', \\'
I : , ; , .'·, . 'c \ '.I, I I
Havel
Garage Sale!
• .. ,
J
It was not uncommon to
find Thorpe averaging more
than 10 yards per carry.
Out of research some
years in the recent past, one
writer said, •1be skills of the
5-foot-11, 185-pound athlete!
were sometimes described ui
such mythic proportions that
some attl'ibuted to him defy
belief.•
One example: Newspaper
reports (1911 against
Pittsbwgh) say Thorpe's
punts sailed up to 10 yards.
In each case, Thorpe either
tackled the returner or
grabbed the ball himself, as
rules allowed. Once Thorpe
retrieved h1s own punt.
shook off five tacklers and
. . ..
..-aAY'S COUNTS
.... Dlt ~ -3 t>o.ts, 33
tnalen. 6 yeflowfin tuna, 29 bonito,
10f calico bes.s, 11 sand blu.
2 halibut. 29 sculpjn, 4 sheephud.
went on to score a
touchdown, according to the
report.
The Associated Press
named him the greatest
American Athlete of the
half-century in 1950. In 1977,
Sports Magazine named him
the all-time greatest football
player.
Thorpe has been
enshrined in at least six halls
of fame. His Olympic
decathlon perlormances in
1912 set a world record that
held up for 11 years.
·-
Polley
Ruteli and deadli11r.; ore 1111bjrc1 10
d1011~e wi1hou1 notir'" The vublisbcr
~·n (' I ht righ1 w c·rn.,or. rl'rla.isif\'.
rrvL..e 11r n·jl'f1 uuy du.,.,ifircl ·
,_ rulvrrti .. r111r111. Pl1•u.,I' n•port ony 1•rror
~ : ;1h111 1110) lw in ) 1111r l'lu.,.,ifir1I uci
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By Fax
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'" 110 li11liili1) for 1111~ mw i11 1111
1Hhrrti'M'ntr111 fur" hkh ii lllU\ be
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0111J •-c'll rall )Ult bed ..irl1 a1m quocr.)
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II Index
' ...
fl
101. 21•
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,., ...... .....
l.tllC* ..... • dick.
W/O, l 120Clt'Mo. Ulla lncld. P4H7tp073
OCNflK>HT e 1WI It. Winter, tum 3& 2.58a,
Fp, '"'°"" *-· tm-l!!!C IMHT.J.1943
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The lllldc raile Ud the dual advlft--• "'leUiQa. ~ IU1l mid llm-hilll lbe bind to. mirunlum openina I*!. lad peuniUed Sou1h 111 easy jwllp co pmc.
Dec:lalu won the openlna club
lead in dumm1 mid led • dilmood. P..Mt tho(' up wtlh die lci.na and. wbell
11 held. retumed die fiM of clubf -a suit Jftfcrc:nce aianal showina a belrf aury. West ruff eel, duJ y led a lleatt to
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o A J 9 o Alt15U o ICJI •• • 107'3
Opatlna lead; Eip of •
Follow the play of chis hand Ind
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NOie North's decision 10 raiae
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Dependina on South'• rebid, die Lii·
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ObYiously, the aame wu dupljclle
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The Calif. f>Ubllo-u 11111111 Com-
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~--!
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1 ·· ·; ::.. 1
•-·•----I
I . -•
~ .
Over 40 new & remodeled stores
agnes b.,
Ann Taylor Loft
Banana Republic
Bodega Chocolates
BOSS f!ugo Boss
Cafe Pascal
CalifOmia Pizza Kitchen /ASAP
Charles David
Chopard
Crate and Barrel Home Store
Diesel
D & G Dolce & Gabbana
'
dupuis
Espn·t
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gazoontite.com
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Laundry
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Macy's Home Furniture Store
Malm Luggage
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Pottery Barn
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Rangoni Firenze
Robinsons-May
Roxy
Scandia Down
Tumi
Watch Gear
The White Rabbit Children's Bookstore
Williams-Sonoma Grand Cuisine
if shopping here
weren't already a party.
Thursday, September 28
• /Jru/:.:_, (,rand f Jp, 11111~ !. '<'Tl!
• I li11t1· "I '' 1//1 < 11<11! l'la::a
September 28-0ctober 8
• Lntc•rtainnu 111 / I 'Ion
•Celebrity Appearances
,
'
Celebrate A New South Coast Plaza and
The Bridge of Gardenf
Grand : Opening
September 28 through October 8
. .
Grand Opening Events Thursday) September 28
• f)edicatio1z ev e11t far The Bn.dge ef Gardens 11:30 am
·A Taster!f'S"outh CoastP!az a12pm-2pm
• Wo!fgang Puck cooki1 zg rfemonstration and cookbook signing 1 pm and 5 pm
• Live music including salsa, world jazz, reggae, classical and more
.,..
-. .
. . :
Ongoing Events September 28-0ctoher 8
• Fashion and trunk shows and refreshments
• Liv~ music including salsa, world ja;zz,
reggae, classical and more
• Entertainment and in-store promotions far kids
• Celebrity and disc jockey appearances
;
,, ,. -
\
..
• . ~ •
Pick up an event prf!gram
or call the Concierge far
event times & locations.
1-800-782-8888.
Or visit our website at
southcoartplaza.com.
Quality is
I ..
•