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HomeMy WebLinkAbout2000-09-30 - Orange Coast PilotPREP fOOllAll SCORES Oceen View .......... 29 Costa Mesa ............ 7 S.. Sports, P•ge 81 ..... . . . LOok ... far ...... .... ..... ..... I SERVING THE NEWP.ORT -MESA COM'AUNmES SINCE 1907 ON lHE WEB: WWW.DAJLYPILOT.COM WEEKEND-SEPTEMBER 30 -OCTOBER 1, 2000 . ). ' I• Reclaiined water leaks into tap systein •The Bluffs has irrigated with reclaimed water since January, switches back to potable; officials sa'y water is safe. Mathis Winkler DAILY PILOT NEWPORT BEACH -The Bluffs homeowners associJltion has stopped using reclaimed water in its irrigation system after city offi- cials discovered it was leaking into the drinking water line. "Unless we can be assured of no possible reoccurrence, we are switching back to potable water,• said Kevin Shannon, general man- ager of The Bluffs. On Sept. 18, city water crews found a so-called • cross-connec- tion" between The Bluffs' water systems. In a letter to residents, City Manager Homer Bludau wrote that 80 homes in the area had been affected by the back flow. While reclaimed water may con- tain Giardia lamblia and Cryp- tosporidium -two parasites that can cause gastrointestinal illness with symptoms such as diarrhea, stomach cramps and nausea -city officials said no bacteria or para- "We think that the intrusion was so small. We also strongly believe that the flow wasn't consistent and only happen ed when the pressure was down." Dave Kiff deputy city manager sites were found in drinking water after the leak was discovered. "We think that the intrusion was so small,• said Dave Kiff, deputy city manager. "We also strongly believe that the flow wasn't consis- tent and only happened when the pressure was down." from releasing reclaimed water into the Back Bay, the city agreed to find several areas in the city that would use the water for irrigation instead. The Bluffs is a neighborhood of 64 7 homes bordered by Corona del Mar High School, East Bluff Com- munity Park and the East Bluff Vil- lage shopping center. Along with The Bluffs, the New- port Beach and Big Canyon country clubs and the city made the switch to reclaimed water. The Bluffs switched from potable, or drinking, water to reclaimed water to irrigate its 80 acres of greenbelts last January as part of the 1996 Green Acres Pro- ject agreement made between the city and the Irvine Ranch Water District. Eastbluff Elementary School began using reclw.med water for its soccer f~·eld, as well. City officials said that because the school bas a brand-n w system. no cross-now between irrigation and drinking water systems at the school could occur. In order to prevent the district SEE WATER PAGE AS Back Bay annexation not a big hit • County has been e ncouraging citjes to annex unincorporated areas since the 1994 bankruptcy. Jennifer Kho DAILY PILOT COSTA MESA Residents living in the unin· corporated area around the former Back Bay High School did not warmly embrace the possibility of joining the city of Costa Mesa at a meeting Thursday night. "I don't want any part of annexation to Costa Mesa,· said Mark Morris. "I don't think (Costa Mesa) bas stood behind us. rt didn't help us fight the John Wayne Airport and 1t dragged its feet and didn't get our water rights I don't think the consensus of the commuruty is that mo!:".t · people want to go to Costd Mesa." A number of people SdJd they would rather become part of Newport Beach. ·We've always been coun- ty,• said Kenneth Lindberg "lf we have to make a change. we would want 1t to be Newport Beach.· Not everyone at the meet- ing with city, county and Local Agency Formation Commission representatives to discuss the possible annex- ation was so set in their opinion. Lisa Lawson, a neighbor- hood resident, was one of SEE BACK BAY PAGE AS GREG FRY I DAILY PILOT Chris Potter holds a sign at the intersection of Industrial Way and Newport Boulevard, pleading for any wit- nesses to the acddent that killed ber father to come forward. Douglas BonUace, 79, was struck by a car and killed as he rode bis bicycle through the intersection SepL 23. Upconrlng Heritage Run could net $30,000 Searching for justice •Annual fund-raising event critical for PT A to maintain programs at Newport Harbor High School. Daughter of longtime Costa Mesa resident Douglas Boniface seeks witnesses to the accident that took her father's life ~Bhllrath DAILY PuoT Chris Potter was wearing jeans and a white shirt with blue pinStripes. The full-sleeved shirt was a little loose on her -for good reason. · It was once her father's shirt •1 miss him very much,• Potter said Friday morning, a tiny t~p danc- ing in the comer of her eye as she stood at the comer of Industrial Way and Newport Boulevard in Costa Mesa. •wearing his sb.iit makes me feel closer to him.• It was at this very intersection that her father, longtime Costa Mesa ~i.: dent Douglas Boniface, was killed Sept. 23, bit by a speeding vehicle as he was cr~sing Newport Boulevard FYI If you have information about this incident, please call Investi- gator Floyd Waldron at (714) 754·5264. on bis bicycle. On Friday, Potter stood there in his shirt. holding up a sign asking any- one who Qlight have seen the acci· dent to call police. •This intersectiop is never quiet.• SEE JUSTICE PAGE A8 O•nette Goulet DAILY PILOT NEWPORT BEACH .J lt's exactly one week away. Once a year, students run their hearts out to raise the money that keeps their PTA mothers running around all yearlong. It's the 14th annual Har- / Speedway pikes .keep rolling into 2001 Daily Pilot names new city, features editors • 0ne-year extension reached with Fairgrounds; popular motorcycle racing -~ •. -......,.u.rviYe a.tleast.anotber sea.son. bor Heritage Run -the Newport Harbor High School PTA fund-raiser and momentous community event that draws nearly 1,000 runners and even more supporters. •Jt's our only fund-raiser and has been for years,• said Barbara Yeager, PTA president. "It's also a won- derful community event tl\a.t supports all the programs we put on." Next Saturday, hundreds of athletically inclined com- munity m embers will huff SEE RUN PAGE A8 11111 QA9ID5 ____ ..;JS mrrim ,..__,__;.JIS ---.:.All Sfm5 _____ ... , W.S"' ·----A- . . . •• ST. JOHN TME OMNE EPISCOPAL otURCH St. John the Olvlne f~I Church Is 1 liturgic.II church. which muns that the focus of the wonhlp Is on God and includes Hoty ~ (which Is the S1Ctamentil r.atlling of the Last Supper), f'ffdlng of the word of God ind 1 wmon. The sermon met1egrt Is based on the Scripture re.ding fot the ay ind gives 1 prectic.al appk.ltJon fot Christian IMng. 54.lndly worship ~ we n I and 10 a.m. NUf"llltY care A2 SaMday, ~ 30, 2000 Is provided from 9:30 to 11 :30 1.m. Sunct.y tchool for children ages 4 to 10 meets from MS to 1 ~ 1.m. Con- rad Nordquist is senior pastor. The chutch Is n 1&3 E. Bay St.. Costa Mesa. (949) 548-2237. Daily Pilot High Holy Days are here Jewish temple and center prepare for Rosh Hashana and Yorn Kippur Ondy Trone Christeson MORAL OF THE STORY Touches of Gods providence •For those who beUeve In God, no expla- nation is needed; for those who do not believe In God, no explanation is po&&ible. • -Father John Lafarge I 've heard amazing stories about people who were in tough situations when someone appeared out of nowhere to help. Sometimes the people disappeared as quickly as they appeared, and many have wondered if they were angels. Similar instances have happened close to home, and I thank God for sending the needed help. A friend of my daughter recently told us what happened when her tires exploded while she was driving. She pulled to the side of the freeway and called the auto club. A car pulled over, and a man walked up to her window. His appearance made her ner- vous, and she only rolled the window down an inch. »Don't worry miss, I just want you to know that I'm going to stay parked behind you until your help comes," he said. When the tow truck appeared, the man drove away. Another time, my friend's son was moun- tain hilting with two friends. They were almost five miles up the trail when Robert crashed and severely injured his right leg. One friend rode down to call the para- medics, while the other stayed. The temperature was dropping, and the two knew they needed to somehow get down the mountain. Robert propped his bad leg up and used his left to propel himself. There was a long uphill section, so Robert's· friend jumped off his bike and pushed him for almost a mile. At th~ top of the hill, they encountered two other riders. Robert's friend ran back to his bike, while the two mystery riders helped Robert down in the dark to the waiting paramedics. The most recent experience of God's prov- idence happened when one of our daughters was driving home from Northern California. She had car problems before the Grapevine and pulled into a gas station to call us. A young man asked if he could help. He said he did road construction with his father and friend, and they would check her car. She felt very ~mfortable talkjng to them and called u,fl'from their cell phone to dis- cuss the situation. When she finished talking, she forgot to turn off the phone, so Jon and I heard one of the men say, "What we're going to do right now is to pray and put this in God's hands." He then told her they would follow her up the Grapevine and reassured her by say- ing, »If you have any problems, just pull over and so will we. You'll be fine.• She only drove four miles when the prob- lems returned, and she pulled over. Sure enough, a great big construction truck with flashing lights pulled right behind her. After more calls, she rode most of the way home in a large construction truck. One of the men reminded her that God never leaves His children alone. Were these special people angels? Per- haps. They could also be people whom God put in the right place at the right time. I imagine that God has used some of you in surprising ways to help others too. 1n any case, to those who have helped, and to God who sent you, I give my deepest thanks and appr8CUstion. And you can quote me on that 8W>Q$ HOTUN£ (949) 642-6086 Yaw19CNng DAILY PILOT C hildren from Temple Isa- iah of Newport Beach will send helium balloons will\ paper promises tucked inside up to the heavens Sunday. ' The promises, their Jewish New Year's resolutions, include •1 will be kind to pets,• ·1 will not steal" and "I will be a better person." All week, the children have been working on the project, which is their way of starting off fresh, Rabbi Marc Rubenstein said. Adults will.do the same this Rosh Hashana, which means "head of the year,• by taking stock of who they've been and who they want to be. The celebration marks the beginning of High Holy Days, which includes Yorn Kippur, the Day of Atonement, starting at sundown Oct. 8. "It's a time of introspection,• said Selma Sladek, director of arts and culture for the Jewish Community Center in Costa Mesa. "It's a time of looking 'inward and setting goals for the new year and looking at what you didn't accomplis,h. • Even singles and people who aren't affiliated with a local tem- ple had a place to go Friday, the evening of Rosh Hashana. A sin- gles service was held at the cen- ter because this is a time of year when Jews like to come togeth- er and celebrate their roots, Sladek said. High Holy Days services at the center will continue through Oct. 9, when a memorial service will be held. Jews fast on Yom Kippur to ignore their physical desires and instead concentrate on spiritual needs -prayer, repentance and sell-improvement. A break- the-fast supper will follow the memorial service, Sladek said. The center plans every ser- vice according to the mahzor, the High Holy Days prayer book, Sladek said. The center follows the order of services and prayers according to the book's instructions. "It's very much a time of prayer and making amends and asking that we be inscribed for a We of goodness and justice and love and peace,· she said. "The belief is that our fate is sealed SPIC lll EYllTS NlWVISION NeW 1'Might Comin~ Cln:iidl Will bokl a celebration for Ill new vlllori Gd niillkm for a dJlikenWllld diutdl biigin· milg II 10 a.m. Sunday at the 0... .... CMnmaUty'CAilltt. 18'5 IWtt Ave. (9'9) 646-3199. 5IWIUAI. HEAIJNG ~ ..... SilganywW talk ---two boOb •'Jbe 0.. Ol ID&w PeeC8: A Jour. ., ..... ~IMJm· .. t'Jtfili ~ 8* 111Ui• • 3:10p.m. Od. 8 It Vlllaail • ~~..::. "«Md ~comments llbout the Deily PKot Of M'M tips. CA 92626. ~No news sto- t1el, IHUltnrdont, ecfitotW ITlllttllr or ~'Its herein c..n be Npfoduc9d wfttlollt Wfttt.n pet• rnill6on of~ owner. VOL 94. NO. 234 ADQUSS °"~Is 330 W. l.y St.. C.olU MIN, CA 92627. ·····'··~ ..... , .. HOW IO B£AOt US ~ n.11ma Or1t9t County 1(900) 252-9141 MsaM4 Olilllfted (949) 642-5671 ~(Mt) 642..W1 ........ Nlwl (Mt) 642·5"0 Spor1I (M9) 574o422.J N9wt. Sports,. (Mt) 646-4110 (~!~{Of'll MllllOlllCll Mlf'9OMca(Mt)142..W1 ........ , .. ~Q1-712t GREG ffCV I DALY Pt.OT Rebecca Brown, 10, tries to blow the shafar, a ram's born used to call people to worship, while Leah Cohen, 7, holds her ears and AleDDdra Lee, 6, center, contillues to work on her Rosh Hashana project at Temple balah of Newport Beach. for this time period, and there is a communal confession of sins.· Temple Isaiah has lined up an upbeat service, Rubenstein said, with messages touching on such contemporary issues as the Olympics, presidential and vice presidential candidates, the mapping of human genes, and the right to We. »That makes High Holy Days come alive for people, instead of just prayers read out of a prayer book," the rabbi said. "I certain- ly am trying to be a catalyst of transformation to create a new spiritual year.• Friday night's service includ- ed a festive Oneg ShabbaVRosh Hashana reception. naditional morning services will take place today and Sunday. On Oct. 8, a Holy Kol Nidre service will be held. •Kol Nidre" means "all vows" and is the name of a litur- Will lign autogmpbi 8Dd '8ed. a ~-and-answer I PnOOo. 1be theme of ber ledlue :Will be •Creating Balance and~ ny tn Your Bv8iyday Life." At 4:30 p.m. shit will lead • gl'9Up channeltng. SUgany II a trance cbanriel and ~lhamank beUer. (!M9) 65Me29. HAINEST flSf1VAL ~Mam CJariltian center wm bold a Harwlit PeltWa1 from 5:30 to 9 p.m. Oct. 31 es an anemattve tO tnidttlonal Hal- loween trick-«-t1811tbig. 'Jbj f..uvaJ.. ctei;JMcl far cbDdrm 2 to u. tndlJdel ddm. ........ bootbl. an ln-N-out burger 4tn· Del' and Iota ol ~for t5.1'be FYI • WHA~ High Holy Days services at the Jewish Community Cent.r •WHEN: 10 a.m. today, and 7:30 p.m. Oct. 8 and 9 a.m. Oct. 9 for Yorn Kippur. A meJllorlal service at 5: 15 p.m. Oct. 9 will conctude High Holy Days. A break-the-fast supper will follow. • WHERE: 250 E. Baker St., Suite C. Costa Mesa • CALL: (714) 755-0340 gical fonnula chanted by Jews on Yorn Kippur. The all-day Yorn Kippur ser- vice will begin at 9:30 a.m. Oct. 9 and last through sundown. A break·the-fa.st meal will also be served. Rubenstein sums up Rosh center ii at 2599 ~Blvd., C.olta MIN. (11') 966--0454. SIMIU IS WllTHll lllD SUIF llliUBIA'RMIS 8eit>o. COSTA MESA • WHA~ High Holy Days services at T4lmPle Isaiah of Newport IHCh • WHEN: Services at 9:30 a.m. today and Sunday. The Holy Kol Nidre service will begin at 7 p.m. Oct. 8 and the all~y Yorn Kippur service will begin at 9:30 a.m. Oct. 9 and ron through sundown. A break- the-fast meal will be served. • WHERE: 2401 Irvine Ave., Newport Beach • CALL: (949) 548-6900 Hashana by saying it's about two things: hope and reflection. Peo- ple pray confessions and for for- giveness because there's a differ- ence between error and sin. •we put erasers on pend.ls,· Rubenstein said. •God doesn't expect anyone to be perfect.• 7"62 Corona del Mar 7M2 Cost.a~ 7"62 TIDIS lOOAY First low • C..,... Df'twe: ~of drugs WM~ In N8port Be.ch 7"62 Ne\'l'pOtt eo.t • 7"62 ._.POMCAIT At i.t,. thet9 le some wtf, bpea .... to dwt-high WW9I wtth welt~~ ...... 5:06•.m ...................... 1.2 First hagh 11:11 e.m '""""""-... 5.7 s.conct low 5:55 p.m .... "' ... " ........... o.s Second high Aftit midnight. ........... ~. ~y flnt low S:Ma.m. ...................... 1.1 Arlt hlgt'I 12~•.m ....... -.......... ~ SICOnd low 6:41 p.m .. nH•HHMU"""'0,7 ileaildf#' , 1:51 p.lft;.-.. -........ s.s - the 2300 blodt at 1 :lO p.rn. ~. .... "'"•* We of drugs wa. r9POf1*t In tM 1100 blOCk 9t 1:10 p.m. ~. .... , ........ POSlelMon of drugl ... ~ ed In the 600 bkKt .i 12:05 p.m. Thundey. Doily Pilot Solurdoy, September 30. 2000 A3 Take a look around· We're shortchanging our children, rs a bad time to be a kid. Hollywood has just dmitted that for years it bas been systematically mar- keting violent images to our children to sell more of their product. Many of us remember the violent images of our youth as the Road Runner ftatten- tng Wile E. Coyote with a steamroller or flipping the cannon over to fire the ammunition into Wile E.'s head. which, after the smoke cleared, resembled a strip of cooked bacon. No matter: four seconds later, the coyote was back, opening his next shipment from the Acme Corp. A couple of weeks ago, I took my son, Roy, to the office of Steve Dunn, the creative director for Perspec- tive, a magazine I am edit- ing. Steve was working on the images for a story report- ing the Federal lTade Com- mission's children and vio- Steve Smith WHAT'S UP? lence study, while I was proofreading the copy. In the next room, we had put Roy, who is 7. to work on a computer game called •Bonkers,• in which a gnome was trying to blow up or pound the living day- lights out of furry animals. Bonkers is a lot different than the real-life violence that has been foisted upon our children. Still, as despi- cable as this conspiracy is, it cannot be executed (no pun intended) without parental complicity. Parenti are not doing an adequate job of screening the 1V. movies and video games seen by their children. It's a bad time to be a kid if your parents want to put you in full-time day care. County funding for one day-care program was just cut off, affecting a center in Costa Mesa1 and the South- coast Early Childhood Learning Center has just closed too. The center is the Costa Mesa day-care cente r where murderer Steven Abrams ran over two children. There is a lawsuit pend- ing against the center, which is accused of negligence in the children's deaths. And despite the attorney-speak to the contrary, the lawsuit is only about money and its toll has forced the center's clo- sure. Steven Abrams. not the center, was responsible for the deaths of those children. I must admit, however, that these day-care center . closings may be a good thing for some of the kids. ., Day care used to be a safety net for parents; now it's a crutch. Perhaps now a few of the displaced kids will get to stay home with mom or dad. It's a bad time to be a kid if you live on the West Side of Costa Mesa. There, the Shalimar Leaming Center has been closed. The center is a good idea that should continue for the benefit of these kids. These are the same kids whose schools reported shockingly low test scores three years in a row. Those scores were revealed almost three months ago. ana at that time we heard some outrage from board member Martha Fluor, but nothing has happened since. The Shalimar Learning Center may reopen soon to help the teens who have fallen behind, but once again the evidence is clear: The West Side kids don't matter to the string-pullers in Newport-Mesa. And I'd love to be proven wrong on this point. It's a bad time to be a kid if you play soccer too. At the Farm Sports Complex on Fairview (an Interesting name considering that the only sport played there is soccer), neighbors have already started complaining about the noise after less than a month of operation. The noise comes from the cheering of the teams and crowds, especially at night when the neighbors are try- ing to settle m. Let's see ... six soccer fields wtth crowds, right next to private homes. Welcome to College Park North. Kids always get the shaft in these situations. They trust adults to present movies. games and 1V shows that ace not bannful to their upbringing, and we cheat them. They trust us to stay home with them after they're born, but too many parents choose material possessions instead and stick kids in full. time day care. Kids become the footballs iO our political and fiscal debates, and because they have no real power, they are at the mercy of adults who often do not act in their best interest. There was a time when the best interests of children took precedence over profits, politics and pettiness. But what we see happening far too often these days IS our kids suffering because adults act hke chlldren. • STEVE SMfTH is a Costa Mesa resident and freelance writer. Readers can leave a message for him on the Daily Pilot hotline at (949) 642-6086. Small Curd Meusli ••,Special ....... (Mothers ] Squaw Bread Cottage'= KASHI Cdeals • 'lb Good Friends == S.~9 -,..-~ 14& I&. '4.11 NEW EAR I I IRLSE EVERYDAY LOW PRICES F/ r P :q ... ~· \}' 'l EARllllR ...... lfJOtW6* a&..99 ---~ FAR11IRISE-SPIRULINA An Amazing &lpfWfood &1 •••B 'DwAI w.' 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Alex Coolman DAILY PILOT Victor Villasenor was paddling in the waters off 15th Street on a recent morning, 'Showing off the moves he plans to use in the sixth annu al Surfrider Foundation Clean Ocean Paddle, which takes place today. The 17-year-old Costa Mesa resident was paddling a 19-foot- long banana yellow surf ski, <\. vehicle that looked like a cross between a kayak and a top fuel dragster. •Anything faster than this,• he noted, "would be the Olympic class." Most of the paddling a ction to be hdd in today's eve nt, however, will be of a more modest speed, said event coordinator Ge off McAdams. The paddle, which runs from Balboa Pier to Newport Pier and back agdin, is not intended pri- marily as a speed contest but as a fllfl excuse to get in the water and raise d little money. "It 's a really kickback race,• McAdams said. "People tum around when they ge t tired." FYI For more Information about· the Surfrider Foundation's Clean Ocean Paddle, call (949) 31~3021. Ir The event is a fund-raiser for the Surfrider Foundation and will benefit the group's programs that brtng water-testing lessons to several local schools, including Corona del Mar and Newport Hlubor high schools, McAdams said. A second race for kayakers will run around Udo Isle. Jim Smiley, owner of Paddle Power, a kayak shop on the Bal- boa Peninsula, has been coaching Villasenor in his efforts to become a paddling speed demon. He said the young man has clocked some impressive laps around the island. . "He's doing laps in the 20 (minute range]," Smiley said. "He can start the race at nine and be at work by 10." There will also be a beach cleanup on the peninsula between the piers, McAdams not- ed. Entry donation for the paddle is $25. Participants should meet at Balboa Pier or -for the Lido Isle race -at 15th Street, on the bay side of the peninsula, at 8 a.rn. Races start at 9 a.m. · ABOVE: Members of the Surfrider Pounda- Uon, induding, from left. Alisa Grim, Geoff McAdams, John Wright, Victor Villasenor, Ali- son LeBoeuf and Jack Hamilton, will be par- UdpaUng in Saturday's Clean Ocean Paddle. ABOVE: Jlm Smiley, foreground, owner of Paddle Power, and Villasenor demonstrate their paddling abilities. Daily Pilot OIRUIY Dorothy Be~ ?Jelinski J)oralhy Benb 7Jelinlld. a former IDUydme Calta Mala r9iideot. died Sunday in M9a. Adze She Wal 79. Mn. ZWirwkt WM born lo laylor, la, ID August 1921 to o..ech immi- grants. Sbe.Q'1'W up on a ilinilll cotton farm and T8ised tbrea brothers and a smer. At 17, lbe attended college at Hermann Hospital in Houston and receiVed a bacbeJOr's degree in nurs- ing. During her career, Mrs. Zielinski as a surgical ward nune, a college coun- selor and worked in public health with heroin addi<:tS, as well as a clinic for young pregnant girls. She tetired from nursing in fall of 1992. After college, she enlisted in the Navy and was promoted to the rank of ensign. She met and married Edward •Ski• Zielinski in August 1943. The couple first lived in Costa Mesa from 1949 to 1952. In 1961, they returned to the dty, where they raised three children. They moved to Mesa, Ariz., less than two years ago, but kept in touch with their former neighbors. The couple was also active in tb'eir church, Sl Joachim. Mrs. Zielinski was involved in many phila.nlhrop1c dubs. A memorial service was held ThW'Sday iJ1 Arizona. Mi's. Zielinski is survived by Edward, her husband of 57 years1 her three children, sons Michael Zielinski and Christopher Zielinski and daugh- ter Patricia Kulurisi and eight grand- children: Courtney, Nicole, Dustin, Taryn. Stephen, Mason, Zac dnd Kelzi. r;-------., NAIL CARE FUU SET •ACRYLIC • Acrylic w!Wh1t1 Tip • Plnlc & While Po~r • Lume Gel •Slit Wrap • AcryllC •Pink AUS • Pink & White • Lume~ •Silk Wrap I •1e• I '20"' •2s• I •2s• I •25-1 A Pt11rtptrlng EzptrltMI Clk1ttf Ntlltr Forrtt! • MMtlcule c..11rt1• 11--.o • Pedc:uf9 110 I ·10" I '18" ·1s-I •1s· I '6 I ! HARBOR CHRISTIAN CHURCH (Dlaclplea or Chrtat) 2401 lrvlne Ave. at S1nt1 Isabel Newport Beacll Sunday Worship -10:00AM \'Saint Michael & All Angels p,._,r,. V1rw .. M"ll""""' Giron> dd M 11 • 644·046.~ BUILDlNC. OUR FMrlb WV1NG oousr ANDSEIMNG OUR COMMUNrTl: The Rev'd Peter 0 . Haynes. Rcc1or SUNDAY SCHEQULE 8 am -Holy Eucharist 9 am • Adu.It Bible Study I 0 am -ChonJ Eucharist NURS£RY Ci.RE A VAJI.A8LE ST. MARK l>mBYTERIAN CHURCH "Open Arms and Open Minds" Worship 9:30 J1mbortt & Eastblu:ff In Nt'lfJ)OM llfaclt (949) 644-1341 '\.I\\ lll1ll1 .1 1 1 < 11 l I.'< II Child C entered Church Servioe Come Celebrate o VISION -Oct. ht New Thought Community Cbwch "Child Cenrcrcd Servic.c" Where funilics with children participate and worship together! CCC Serrice 10!00 am Picnic, Cake, Games, Fun, 11 :00 (Bring Your Lunch) , ........ Clltl 11111 C 7J CWP Rn.~MUJcr ewport a:::tn;;-i Luthel'lln Church CLL.O.A.) 7MDoverDr ................ XradWOMI ......,..._, Pastor DnW II• .... ..................... Hotrc .... i..a ... ~ .. t•- OHILOOAM AVA•••• ., An lnvitarion Prom The King" (Matthew 22:1·1 .. ) sr~15 l'it11YTHIAN CHUI<" N~rtCenter United Methodist Church Rev. Cathleen Cooa. Putor 16<>1 ~tc Avt. comer of Margucricc and San Joaquin Hills Rd (949) 644-0745 Sam QuiLt Worship ~ict /011m Worship and Chi/Jrmi Sunt!Ay Sthool ' Yo11th muting 1«ek/y First Upfted Methodist Church or Costa Mesa 420 West 19th Stmt, Costa Mesa Festival or Worship IO:OOam Richard L Ewing. Pastor Church School 9:00am & IO:JSam 949-548-7727 Cbn.t Church by the Sea United~ 1'400 W. 8albol Blvd., Newport IXadi 9:00 LID. -Sunday School fur aJl lgCI 10:00 a.m. -Wonlup (w11.h child care) Tbc ~. Or. Gcorp It CNp, Putor ("69) 61)-3805 Costa Me.a MISA VlltDI UNITID Ml1HODIST CHU.at 1701 a.kw, C.M. Wot ehlp a Church School la30 .Ml 1 OtOO a.m. Or. Richord (71.C) 979-823' The Church of Yahweh Welcome to The Church of Yahweh. The church on the web. We ore always open. AND we don 'I pass the plate. •A God-ccntc~ parish community, instructed j,t tht Word of God and renewed by the Sacraments Our Lady Queen of Angels 2046 Mar Vista Drive Ncwpon Beach, CaJifornia 92660 (949)644--0200 Fax (949)644-1349 Rev. Monsignor William P. McLaughlin, Pasror LITURGIES: Saturday, S p.m. {Cantor), Sunday, 7;00 {Quiet), 8:30 (Contanpor.uy), 10:00 (Choir), 11 :30 a m. (C&ntor) and S:OO p.m. (Conton ) .._...__ ____ ....,,.. f'IRST CHURCH OP CHRIST. SCIENTIST 3303 Via Lido Nwport Beach 673-1340 or 673-6150 Chwch 10 am• 5 pn. SUnday Sc:hool 10 am ... -*'J ....... •P'l'I SECOND CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST 3100 Ptx:ltk: v.w Dr ~Becx:r\ 644-2617 or 675-4661 Owrm lOam S\lnday Sc:hool 10 am Wldl.,.,, ...-0. P'l'I • t•WlllchdJf 11- • ..,. ""' 0-' ........... . cm..6:7(•1) • • Kldl H O Manlcult ' Ped • Hand Pwltlln WAXING •Eyebrows •Upper Up '10' '10'"' '5· I I '7" I '6., Great Rate PLUS Get our Great Rate on a one-year CD ($25,000 minimum) when you also open an ATM Rebate Checking A 'ccount. We pay all your ATM fees (even from other banks) and give you unlimited \t FREE ATM withdrawals. FIRST REPUBLIC BANK It's a privilege to serve you• Daily Pilot Find bargains on golf supplies U nfortunately, Gou Day has filed for bankrupt- cy and is going out of business. No one really knows when it will close: it could be two weeks or two months, depending on how long the liquidation process takes. Last week, the merchandise was discounted 10%. And more than likely, as it gets closer to closing, the merchandise will be discounted further. Golf Day ~ at niangle Square in Costa Mesa at 1815 Newport Blvd. Information: (949) 642- 0315. A holiday portrait sale and a wedding sale is going on at the Yuen Lui Portrait Pbotog- -rapby studio in South Coast Plaza. The holiday portrait special includes a sitting fee and one 8-by-10-inch color photograph for $38. It's regu- larly a $100 fee. One special is offered per family. The wed- ding special includes seven continuous bows of photogra- phy and two custom albums. The wedding special is avail- able for Sl.485. It's regularly a $1 ,895 fee. To schedule a sit- ting time or wedding date, call (714) 545-8845. The studio is in the Crate & Barrel Wing of South Coast Plaza. Early Halloween shoppers will like the new Costume Castle at Fashion Island. It claims to have Orange Coun- ty's largest selection of adult and children's costumes, masks, hats, wigs, makeup, accessories and decorations. Information: (949) 640-8833. Roger's Gardens is the ide- al place to find fall home accessories for the home. The garden and home shops are filled with glazed ceramic fruits, ~pkins and other gourds, hens and roosters; potted peppers accented with French ribbon; dried wreaths; wheelbarrow cache pots; dried wheat stalks: and a nice WHEN TIME IS AN IMPORTANT FACTOR Your Realtor has jusl brought you an offer on your home, and you want to think about it. You would like your agent to contact the olher people who have shown an interest in your home. Whether your home has been listed for two days or two years, there ls always a desire to hold out for more money, and sometimes sellets feel a lex of resistance to maklna a ~ision. Some buyera will include a de8dline for ae•tina a ~ In their offer. bvt ewn if there bn't a deadline, you should respond to a buyer's offer quickly. Tbe period between the time an offer 11 aubmitied and 1 ruponte 11 m~ ie a crudal one bee.-lhe buycn .. free lO withdraw hvm the trlftNCrion. Bwt1 ~p they ..e mentally ltndlcapina your yird and anwiaina their dWl&a In your rooms. they may allO be afraid tMI O.Cy will pc .... hoaM and. therefore, are utremely vulnerable 10 ...,... . ...,.... I ~ .. ,.,, ... ._ 21 c mlllvt,_..of..a .... . ,, ' • •*·c~ .....,.;c11:aa1M. "'Cn' t.,. .,.. .... Greer Wylder BEST BUYS selection of white ceramic urns, tureens, pitchers, plates, pumpkins, vases and servers. Roger's Gardens is at 2301 San Joaquin Hills Road in NeWJ>9rt Beach. Information: (949) 640-5800. The Oriental Rug Outlet & Home Furnishings offers out- let prices to the public on more than 500 rugs. The rugs come in sizes that vary from 3- by-5-foot to 9-by-12-fool The rug selection includes rugs from Persia, India, Pakistan, Turkey and Nepal. There are Aubusson weaves, as well as machine-made and modem rugs. The Oriental Rug OuUel also offers deaning and repair on rugs, and will buy or trade your old rug. It's open from 10 a.m. to 7 p .m. Monday through Saturday, and from 11 a.m. to 6 p .m. Sundays. The store is at 1931 Newport Blvd. in Costa Mesa. Information: (949) 642-3600. Michael's Atts and Crafts store is having a big sale on just about every crafts-related item you can imagine through the weekend. On sale are art and craft brushes for 99 cents, candy melts for $1.68, paper mache at 40% off, aaylic paints at 77 cents each, all open wood frames at 40% off, as well as all pine swags, wreaths and garlands at 40% off. Michael's is at 610 W. 17th St. in Costa Mesa. Informa- tion: (949) 548-6053. , Foranttquelovers,lbe Antique Row & Garden Cafe is a great destination. The row of shops carries somethihg for everyone, from fine home fur- nishings to gifts and garden decor, and just about every- thing in between. There are also great service-oriented shops, such as the furniture restoration shop and custom picture framipg shop. The Antique Row & Garden Cafe is at 130 E. 17th St. in Costa Mesa, behind the Harp Inn. The shops are open from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesday through Saturday. The Gar- den Cafe is open for patio din- ing, breakfast, lunch, tea and espresso. It's open from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Saturday. Information: (949) 722-1177. Psardo's Mesa Upholstery is having sale of 30% off on carpet and flooring and 20% off on fabric and labor of upholstery items. It specializes in custom-made furniture, slipcovers, patio furniture, draperies, shades and bed- spreads. It's at 1998 Harbor Blvd. in Costa Mesa. Informa- tion: (949) 642-8400. • BEST BUYS appears on Thursda~ and Saturdays. Send information to Greer Wylder at 330 W. Bay St., Costa Mesa CA 92627. or via fax at (949) 646-4170. THAT'S YOUR FINAL ANSWER, itg ti11<t1 ~or-.·· Ml CASA MEXICAN RESTAURANT 296 E. 17TH ST. CO~TA MESA · 949·645-7626 tveARRIVED. • Volume Selection • OUtstordng Customer Service • G<eot Prices Guaranteed ' -. ~ --* -.-.. -.-. ln•sace tbe f\nish line ~ ~ For any Komcn Race fur the Cw-e-puticipant who pun:lwcs a pair of New 8alantt &hoadunng me months of Sqxmibcr and October. New 8abna Newport will donate S5 to the local ch3pccr of the Susan G. Komm Brust Canc:tt Foundation. DOES YOUR CAR WAX GIVE YOU BETIER PROTEalON THAN YOUR OIT·RATE CAR INSURANCE? Walk this way • A group of Newport residents will take part in the annual Walle to Ctrre Diabetes on Sunday. Deepa Bharath DAILY PILOT NEWPORT BEACH Charlie McAuliffe and Joanne Laufer are neighbors. They live in the same condo complex. But that's not all they have in common. Laufer, 46, and 10-year-old Charlie are both diabetic. And on Sunday, they will be co-captains of the Shoot- ing Stars, a Learn of 63 walk- ers from Newport Beach, in the annual Walk to Cure Dia- betes at UC Irvine. For Charlie, who was diag- nosed with diabetes two years ago, it will be his sec- ond walk. Talking to people Like Laufer, attending camps for diabetic children and partici- pating in events like the walk have helped Charlie gain confidence in his ability to deal with his condition. But the first year was terrifying. he said. · ·1 was very scared because I didn't know anytlung about diabetes,· Charlie said. "Now, I know a lot more .... I'm not afraid anymore." Saturday, September 3o, 2000 AS GREG FRY I OAJl.Y "-OT Charlie McAullffe, 10, with the support of his mother, Charlotte McAulllfe, left, will co-captain his team during this year's Walk to Cure Diabetes on Sunday with neigh· bor Joanne Laufer, righl Laufer, who was 10 when she was diagnosed, knows exactly how Charlie feels. "It was terrible growing up." said Laufer. "You have to juggle your food, your exer- cise, your insulin, your emo- tions. And you have to do 1t every single day." The walk is an opportunity to educate people about dia- betes and to give others a chance to help, said Laufer. ·We need to work for a cure, at least for the k.ids, • she said, "because it's so unfair." As a youngster with dia- FYI The SK Walk to Cure Diabetes begins at 9 a.m . at Aldrich Park at UC Irvine. Registration begins at 7 a.m. betes, it is a challenge lo lead a normal We. said C harlie's mother, C harlotte McAulitfe. "He wants to eat candy like other kids,• she said. ·Hal- loween's just around the cor- ner. That's a big challenge." \ Hodson Lighting -PR ESENT !lJeco Simple yet Elegant Bath Models Matched with Fluted caste Brass Accents Available In Polished Brass or Chrome QwJic.v Ll1htina S.•rvk-.. for 30 Yean Open Tucs.-Fri. ?-5. Sat. 9-4 I SI 0 Newport Blvd .. Costa Mesa 949) 548-9341 Same Place •.. New Face ... ·Irvine Ranch ·Market Quality Fresh Food! 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 ... Now OFFER/NG FRESH SUSHI TO GO! Come in and visit our NEW SCJSHI DEPT. where you can choose from a large variety of prepared Sushi, Spicy Tuna Rolls, California Rolls, Fresh Sashimi and Steamed Soybeans. ON SPECIAL THIS WEEK ... Califomia & Spicy Tuna Roll Combinatio~: ~ Made fresh to go, a combination of 4 pieces of $4 99 .. California Roll and 4 pieces of Spicy Tuna Roll 8 pa. ,.. ~e • . ' ' . . A6 Saturday, September 3o, 2000 'Wow!' factor high on Corona del Mar Home tour C orona del Mar High School has six stylish jewels in its aown for this year's Home Tour. The assortment is treinendous, everything from a European farmhouse with a carriage house to a secluded Asian retreat with an infinity-edged pool. I was lucky enough to get a sneak peak at three of~ year's selections. My gui~ were the chairwomen them- selves, Lynn McAlister and Laura Lee Smith. Talk about the royal treatment, I definitely felt like a queen for the morn- ing. We began in the port streets with a recently completed estate. This large lot accommo- dates a lovely home, carriage house, four-car garage, ample yard, pool, out.door fireplace and an outdoor kitchen. One of my favorite items of archi- tectural interest was the dis- tressed walnut flooring. I love walnut. The floors are not too dark but not too light, and the wood has a fine, tight grain that has a bit of a formal feel- ing. Lovely. The backyard was a dream come true. First of all, the lot is huge, so there is plenty of room for a long wish list. The carriage house really caught my eye. Lots of emotional appeal and a practical design. Karen Wight NO PlAa LIKE HOME Entertaining a crowd in this home would be a pleasure. Next on our tour list was a house in Irvine Terrace. The outside just hinted at the unbelievable magic behind the front wall. A big clue to what lay ahead was the front door that pivots, not just swings open. Add to that a frosted glass floor that is lit from the courtyard below and a two- story water fall complete with water garden surrounded by bamboo. The "Wowl" factor begins to take over your sens- es. The home has a large two- story atrium. The view of the harbor is magnificent. The rooms are well thought out, and the materials used are unusual and breathtaking. The use of glass throughout this home is amazing: reeded or frosted glass is used to obscure the view when neces- Ros~v·s AUTOBO~ .. .. -.~_You Have ~he Right ~~ . to Choose Your Repair Facility nsist on the Best . . .. • J\ ... -Lifetime Warranty Full Service Collision Center Insurance Approved Shop ..,....---.• (949) 642-4522 121 Industrial Way• Costa Mesa sary for privacy, and custom glass enclosures hide storage and closet areas. lbe home's colors are subtle: greens, golds, taupes, blacks and an occasional red lacquer piece thrown in to shake things up. This house has integrity. The third home I had the privilege of touring was an art deco-influenbed multileveled house built on the cliff on Ocean Boulevard. 'Jllis house has incorporated many trea- sures the ownen; have found on their extensive travels. One of the charming collec- tions includes more than 100 small bottles of sand collected from 100 different beaches from all over the world. Every piece of artwork in the home has personal signifi- cance and the home amenities include an eight-seat theater comple~ with ticket window, a refreshment bar with pop- corn machine and framed movie posters (one is from the couple's first date). There is a sun room that feels like a tropi- cal hideaway. The master bath includes the most comfortable- looking sauna I've ever seen. All of this comes with a 180- degree view of the ocean. In addition, th.e owner of the home shared a few stories with me: her humble beginnings in Brooklyn; the significance of their collections; the fascination with optical illusionary art- work. Thllc about the personal touch. 1bere are three more homes to enjoy in addition to the three homes I was able to visit. I can't wait to see the house with the bamboo wainscoting. In addition to the Home Thur, the ticket price ($45) includes lunch provided by Pa.seal's at the Sbennan Library and Gardens. 11ckets can be bought through Corona del Mar Hig~ School, Butera Col- lection, Ann Dennis Designs, Balboa Porch and the school's PTA members. The hours of the tour are 1 O a.m. to 4 p.m. Oct. 24. Addi- tional infonnation is available at (949) 552-2337. So on be.haJf of my rival high school, a sincere thank- you to the homeowners for generously sharing their lives with the community to improve our public schools. Without this generosity and philanthropic spirit, we might not have such events to look forward to. Good luck to Lynn, Laura Lee, Cathy and the hundreds of volunteers that make this event special. Your efforts are greatly appreciated. Somehow those Friday Realtor previews are not quite the same ~g. See you on the 24th. • KAREN WIGHT is a Newport Beach resident. Her column runs Saturdays. l el U Help You AHoin Or Reqoin The Shope You Desire BODY TONE PERSONAL TRAINING Offers You The Privacy Of An Exclusive Facility Wich Your Own Personal Trainer. WE SPEClAUZE lN: •Weight Loss • Flexibility •Nutrition • Cardiovascular Conditioning End of SummeP Special r-----------1 R,J:cav£ (J) I FRU PERSONAL TRAINING SESSIONS WITH 1 INIT1AL nvEl..VE Sf.SSION PURCHASE. Al /SO VALUE 1 06'tt"'f>lrcson 9/ISIOO. I Fin< 11me Oirou Only. 1 ___________ .. 2801 Easr Coasr Hwr: Corona del Mar, CA 92625 • Muscle Toning & Strengthening • Sport Specific Training • Rehabilitation (949) 673-7705 PLEASE HELP US aVEPEUCllS Thank you for your iift. You will receive a receipt for tax purpoee8. WETLANDS AND WILDLIFE CARE CENTER 21900 ~ CO..t ff"J,, HwWnetoo a.iacb. CA 99848 Phone (714) 374-6687 Pi.• JlaaM ~ cbeok ..,.bi. tlo: HBWC Wildlife Pu.ad - - -f\UllCW•llAILftMI - -ti " • .. Daily Pilot BRIEFLY Hoag Hospital kicks off sporty blood drive Hoag Hospital's blood donor center is participating in a sporty blood drive. • Playing to the area's USC and UCLA football team fans, the center has joined 18 other hospitals in South- ern California to stage a blood drive that coincides with the Nov. 18 game between the rival teams. For each unit of blood dqnated, the donor's •team• will receive one point. Platelet donations bring three points to the team. · All blood donated at Hoag will stay at the Newport Beach hospital. Although players will have to wait until the end of the game to find out who's won, blood donors will know by halftime which team had more fans donating blood. Information: (949) 760-5621. Newport trash can r egulations effective Monday As of Monday, the city will refuse to collect trash from more than 2,000 Newport Beach residences that still haven't replaced old trash cans. One of few cities in Orange County with free garbage collection, Newport Beach adopted new trash can requirements in February to prevent injuries to col- lectors. New containers cannot exceed 35 gallons in capaci- ty and must be made of plastic or a similar, nonmetal watertight material. Fixed handles must be located below the top edge of the container. It must also have a watertight cover that isn't permanently attached. Veterans Charities of Orange County offers to pick up old cans and deliver a new one for $12.50. The price includes the cost of the new can. The organization will continue to provide the service beyond the Oct. 2 dead- line to replace trash cans. Call (714) 547-0615 to arrange delivery. Sold 7ed 'Pati.6 ?~ Teak is now Affordable! We Buy Direct, Eliminate the MJcldleman! Compare our ~rices! Teak~ Costa Mesa Showroom by appointment 1240 Lopn Ave. Unit H (_, ol llkOlatodl ........ , (714) 544-7288 www.teakoutdoon.com Whatever your landscape or Maintenance needs, Lloyd's can do it all ... . . Daily Pilot Irrelevant Week ~tes $5, 000 to local athletics Paul Salata, founder of Irrelevant Week. pre- sented a check for $5,000 to the Orange County Youth Sports PQUDdation in rea>gnition of the group's longtime charttable support of community youth athletic organizations and graduating high school scholar-athletes. The money represents part of the proceeds from the recent 25th annual Irrelevant Week celebration honoring the last selection of the National Football League col- ~ lege draft. During the last 29 years, the Orange County Youth Sports Foundation bas con- tributed more than $700,000 in scholarships and aid to needy community youth sport organizations, including $18,000 to 12 graduating high school 'Seniors from through- out Orange County this sum- mer, said Ken Purcell, presi- dent of the foundation. Irrele- vant Week is relevant. BREAKFAST ON THE BAY Friends In Servia! to Humanity, also known as FISH, will be the beneficiary of the Breakfast on the Bay, to be hosted by the Newport Dunes Resort from 8 a.m. to 11 a.m. Oct. 7. For $10 a per- son -children 12 and under are $5 each -you will enjoy a sumptuous breakfast buffet provided by the Dunes, live music, opportunity drawings Jim de Boom COMMUNITY & CLUBS fo.J adults and kids, a silent auction, free parking and a day pass to the Dunes Resort. Friends In Servia! to Humani- ty, based in Newport Beach, serves all of Orange County with the goal of •catching people before they become homeless and hungry.• Tick- ets or information: (949) 642- 6060. MONTE CARLO NIGHT People of all ages are invit- ed to join the fun as the Costa Mesa Senior Center holds its star-studded annual event, Monte Carlo Night. Oct. 7 at 695 W. 19th St., Costa Mesa. Tickets are $25 a person, with a $5 discount for seniors and includes a gourmet dinner, entertainment by the Bob White 1i1o {formerly of The Platters), opportunity draw- ings and $100 in playing chips. Funds raised will be used for the senior center. Information: SaWldra Abbott at (949) 6'5-2090 WORTH REPEATING From the Newport Beach- Col'Ql14 del Mar Kiwanis Club's Scuttlebutt: •'Ih.tth has no special time of its own. Its hour is now -always.• SERVICE QUB MEETINGS Want to get more involved in your community, make new friends, network, or to give something back to your community? 'Dy a service club! You·are invited to · attend a club meeting this coming week. Many clubs will buy your first guest meal for you. TUESDAY 7:15 a.m. -The Newport Beach Sunrise Rotary Club meets at the Balboa Bay Club to hear Mike Keyes and Ken Water discuss the Internation- al Yachting Fellowship of Rotary. 6 p.m. -The Costa Mesa- Newport Harbor Uons Club meets at the Costa Mesa Golf and Country Club for a busi- ness meeting. WEDNESDAY 7:15 a.m. -The South Coast Metro Rotary Club will meet at the Center Club; the Newport Harbor Kiwanis Club meets at the University Athletic Club. Noon -The Orange Coast Exchange Club meets at the Bahia Corinthian Yacht Club for a business meeting, Soroptimist International of Newport Harbor meets at the Santa Ana Country Club for a buslness meeting. 6 p.m. -The Newport- Balboa Rotary Club meets the Bahia Corinthian Yacht Club for a visit by District 5320 Gov. Price Shapiro. 6:30 p.m. -The Newport Beach Uons Club meets at the Newport Beach Yacht Club for a membership meet- ing. THURSDAY 7:15 a.m. -The Costa Mesa Orange Coast Breakfast Lions Club meets at Mimi's Cafe for a program on designing amusement parks. Noon -The Kiwanis Club of Costa Mesa meets at the Holiday Inn; the Newport Beach-Corona del Mar Kiwa- nis Club meets at the Bahia Corinthian Yacht; the Exchange Club of Newport Harbor meets at the River- boat Restaurant for a business meeting; the Newport Irvine Rotary Club meets at the Irvine Marriott Hotel. • COMMUNfTY & a.uas is pub- lished every Saturday In the Daily Pilot. Send your servke club's meet· ing information by fax to (949) 66(). 8667, e-mail to jdeboomOaol.com or by mail to 2082 S.E. Bristol St., Suite 201. Newport Beach 92660- 1740 . Bankruptcy .. • Divorce/Summary s2s9 •• :. s2s9 .. SABATINO'S r': - - - - -:'1 What is a Living Tnut? LIVING TRUST 1t is. 1ep1 document thai is II 250/.0 OFF II created while you are aliYe to 7C mah sure you.r Jowd ones will be Jpared from probate if I Regular Low Price S39<J I 10mdhing happens to you. I WITHllFCOf•a~~1°'$J12/0099 I lodwkJ: Husband & Wfft. Wilis, " <..AT•"'-' PoUKr of Attomrp for Heabh & Asset I COUPON VALID Al TIMF OI OROFR I Manargnnmt, All Not4riud ._ _____ _. Call Herb the Legal Beagle Law Office of Herbert B. Rhodes 1-800-965-4621 Weclnesclay, October 4, 2000 South Coast Plaza Com Grand Opening lventt Speclol Guests ~ MouM, Minnie MouM & Skating Champion Michelle Kwon 10 •·"'· -Dl.....y Store near CorouMI Court MMt lkatlN Champion Michelle Kwanl first 100 guests rec4tM o fr .. copy of Michelle's latest book 10a30 - 1 h1S a.m. Di1ney Store Style lpectacularl Alt energetic ~ of music, dance and fothion 11 a.-. • 1 "9"'· • a P·"'· • 5 p.m. -CoreuMI Court Cha Cha-Cha With ... , . hm Jim H.nton Tele¥ition'• ~ in the aig 8kie HouM" Ot Men~ on DiSMY ChonMf ...... • 2 P-"'--c... ..... c... ) u,,. ,......_ ... ~ H11)wooil ._..., .._ ... Altl1ta N1• olfy's Aft9911 co ....... Wo wl.19 perto. .. ice •...-.-c-.... 1c... .... a .... 1uau....,..r1 SW of Oftnty•Piw't MW ......... --9lua ~ of s.. ~ legilllr ID Win 0... Mw .......... ,.... ..•. ,. .. ., ..... .... Ort ................. .... -·~ Lunch • Dinner • Sunday Brunch 251 Shipyard Way• Newport Beach Please call for hours, directions & reservations. : (949) 723-0621 : . • • Saturday, s.p.mber Jo, 2000 A7 GeH1'5. INYULVED • GiTnNG IWOWED runs peri- odically In the Daily Pilot on a rotat- ing basis. If you'd like information on adding your organization to this list. all (949) 574-4228. KAISER PERMAllEllTE HOSPICE SERVICES Volunteers are needed to provide four hours per week visiting patients or doing errands for them or their caregivers in communities near volunteers' homes. For more information, call (562) 622-3805. lAGUNA GREENBEIJ INC. Volunteers are needed to assist Laguna Coast Wilder- ness Park staff and James Dilley Preserve staff and docents with hiker registra- tion and general public orien- tation. For more mformation. call (949) 488-0287. LAGUNA SHANTI Laguna Shanti, an organiza- tion that works with sufferers of HIV and AIDS, is seeking caring volunteers to assist with running the front office. delivering meals, providing tr,ansportation and providing c'omplimentary therapies such as massage, acupunc- ture and chiropractic care. For more information. contact Lisa Togbl.a at (949) -'94·14'6. LIFEUll lMlllCENnlS Mentally W adults rely on the Newport Beach center for residential housing. It needs professional fund-raisers to support and maintain tbJs resource. For more infonna- tion. call (949) 675-1700. MASTER CHOULE OF OUNGE COUNn The pertonnin9 arts organi- zation needs volunteers for computer input. ticketing, fil- ing and handling phones. For more information, call (714) 556-6262. MEDIATION CENTER The Mediation Center of Costa Mesa needs volunteer mectiators, case specialists and assJStants for mediation cases. Bilingual-ness is a plus. For more information, call (949) 574-5990. MENTOR PROGRAM YMCA Community Services needs mentors to make a last- ing impact on !i young per- son's life. Students from 10 to 18 years of age are matched with mentors to improve their school performanoo and self- esteem while developing positive peer and adult rela- tionstups. For more informa- tion, call (714) 549-9622, ext. 35. . . . "' ,. A8 Saturday, Septemb.r 30, 2000 IN llllf Candidates forum in Corona del Mar The Corona del Mar Residents Assn. is hosting a City Council candidates forum Monday. The meeting is free and open to the public and will start at 6:30 p.m. at the Oasis Senior Center at 5th Street and Marguerite Avenue. Police expecting new equipment The Costa Mesa Police Depart:rrient will soon add new nonlethal weapons, an evi- dence storage system, cameras and a digital imaging system lo its crime-fighting arsenal. The City Council this month approved the estimated $119,000 m purchases, on the recommendation or a citizens advisory cocrunittee. The money comes mostly from a·$107,293 grant by the U.S. Department of Justice. RUN CONTINUED FROM A 1 and pu!f and raise thousands of dollars. Meanwhile, back at the school's track, supporters will mill around a huge health fair set up with food, chiroprac- tors and masseurs. Last year, the event raised $32,000 for everything from an overhead projector for the math department to the -v- . SAAT~HI JEWELl(Y JUSTICE CONTINUED FROM A 1 Potter said, watching a nev- er-ending stream of cars whizzing past her. •rm swe somebody saw what hap- pened and was touched by what they saw.• Potter stood there Thurs- day and Friday between 7 and 9 a.m .. hoping that rou- tine early morning com- muters, cyclists or surfers might offer a tip. Jason 1illery of Newport Beach, driver of the car that hit Boniface, was arrested on susp1c1on of vehicular manslaughter and driving under the influenct! of an intoxicant. He was released on $100,000 bail Sept. 24 and is scheduled to be arraigned Oct. 24 at the Harbor Justice Center. At the time of the incident, Tillery was driving 60 to 70 mph in a 45-mph zone. $10,000 salary of a guidance counselor technician named Becky Carey, who is invalu- able to students. AJthough the run has typi· cally made about $25,000 in past years, event chairwoman - Kathy Glover is anticipating the proceeds to be about $30,000 this year. "In the past 13 years we've distributed $271,000 to the school for teachers, for com- puters and athletics,• Glover said. AJtbough when compared VIP Members Discount WATCH BATTERIES· $2.99 • WATCH BANDS· $4.99 SOI.DERING GOl.D & REPAIR • $5.00 PEAAt. STRINGING -$19.99 •DIAMOND SETTING -$5.00 EACH Gow ITAJ..JAN JEWELRY, CHARMS, CKNNS, EAARINGS -$12 PER GRAM WATCHES UP TO 50% OFF ON BIWKJ NAMES DIAMOND TCT. EACH Sl.H C()(.OR -$3,000 DIAMONOS .50 CT. Sl,H COLOR -$500 DIAMONOS .25 CT. Sl,H COtOR • $300 MOUNTING i'tATIMJM RING, EARRING. BAACELET. NECKUoCE $35.00 A GRAM MouNnNG & FINE TBK Gow JEWELRY $18 PER GAW WHfTE/YEUOW Gow MOuNTING & F1NE T 4K Gow JEWEi.RY $12 PER GRAM WHITEIYruow Gow FREE APPRAISALS, FREE JEWEi.RY CLEANNG, FREE PousHING. CUSTOM Df'slGN, EXPERT JEWELRY & WATCH REPAIRS, ENGAGEMENT RINGS, WEOONG .. BANOS, BRIDAL SETS, ENGRAVING $1 PER LETTtR .....,ft.:~,..,lfWW/lt .. ~""""'"fQlll~,.~ 607 8. EAsT BAl.BoA BUIO., NEWPORT BEACH, CA 92663 T•L: (949) 873·5518 • T•L+PAX: (949) 873·5908 .. The Original MIKE'I CARPETI OVER 25 YEARS IN COSTA MESA •Now Owned & Operated by Mesa Upholstery• ALL CARPET & FLOORING CURRENTLY MARKED DOWN 30o/ooff . ~ . . . according to Costa Mesa Police reports. ·we're looking for people who might have seen it first- hand,· said name Inyestiga- tor Floyd Waldron. Pind.ing those people would help detennine the fads of the case, be said. And any additional infor- mation might help determine in court if Tillery's actions were voluntary or involun- tary. So far, passersby have had nothing to offer Potter but empathy. One teenager brought her a cup of coffee as she was standing on the side- walk. A cyclist offered his condolences. Another woman gave her flowers. •rm just overwhelmed by the support my family has got from this community," said Potter. "But we just lost a very special person. Our lives will never be the same again.· Douglas Boniface was young at heart, a healthy 76. to foundation dollars and oth- er magnanimous contribu- tions, it may not seem like a large sum, but it is what keeps Newport Harbor going. Just like mom and the PTA itself, the money seems to be a nywhere and everywhere, no matter how large or small the need. In the early years, the Her- itage Run money paid for a computerized attendance system to help keep track of students. In 1994, the money paid for a new paint job for the gym. In 1996, money from the event bought $15,000 worth of computers and software, and in 1998 it paid for needed WHY PAY DEPT STORE PRICES? Visit our AREA RUG STUDIO Rugs & Runners on Sale 1663 Pla·ccntia St., Cosca Mesa (949)646-4838 Vinyls • Ceramics Wood • Laminates CALL NOW 642-8400 DESIGN CENTER ''For All Your Decorating Needs!'' i ' : ' ,\ 1' I l • I\\ , ' ' • FURNITURE REUPHQUTERY • Custom-Made Furniture • Slip Covers • Patio Furniture • Draperies, Shades. & Bedspreads ' I ; I ~ 1· ) I I , ; ) r r ' I ... ' o I • ' t It • • ~ Every morning, at the crack of dawn, the retired carpenter would head for the waves on hJs bicycle. He loved the beach. He enjoyed taking brisk walks along the shore. And when he came back home, his wife would. have his favorite breakfast waiting on the dining table -bacon, eggs, fried tomatoes and onions. But that breakfast was never eaten last Saturday. Boniface ne\rer came hqme. He will be sorely missed not just by his wife, two daughters and eight grand- children, but also bis friends and neighbors in Costa Mesa, where he bas lived for 40 years. •He was always ready to help people,• said Potter. •He'd take out trash for neighbors. He would make punch for bis line-dancing friends. He was just a really neat person.• folding chairs. This year, the largest sin- gle expense will again be the $10,000 stipend for the guid- ance technician, followed by $8,000 ip scholarships, which was divided last year among 22 students going anywhere from Orange Coast College to Princeton, Yeager said. A new item has also been added to this year's wish list -the PTA will give $3,000 to the Associated Student Body to hold more on-campus events for students. The remainder of the mon- ey will support PTA programs such as Academic Boosters, Academic Decathlon, the leadership conference, career center, and the academic awards ceremony. BACK BAY CONTINUED FROM A 1 several who showed up with an open mind. "I think at this point we're just here to find out what ifs all about• she said. "I want to know ~hat changes we'll have to get used to." Officials were pleased with the turnout of about 50 resi- dents. "We feel we received a sub- stantial amount of infonnation relating to the residents' issues and concerns,• said Tamara Campbell, seniol' planner for thedty. The neighborhood, cover- ing about 65 acres between Del Mar Avenue and Mesa Drive, is an unincorporated part of the county. The city bas been working on annexing it and other unincorporated areas since 1996. The Back Bay High School neighborhood annexation was on the City Council agenda in October 1999, but was with- drawn. Both the county and city provide services for the neigh- borhood, which is "ineffitjent government," Campbell said. The county has been WATER CONTINUED FROM A 1 Shannon said that only one Bluffs resident had contacted him to find out what steps bad been taken to correct the prob- lem. · An illegal tap line from a home into the irrigation system likely caused the leak. Shannon added. For most of its 37 years ol existence, The Bluffs had used drinkable water tor irrigation; it is suspected that a former home- owner likely tapped into the sys- ~-----------------------~ $600 DRY CLEANING OFF · -"· ~~~t;:., 1 056 Bayside Drive, N ewport Beach (949) 760-0550• N ext to Pav'lion's I I I Doily Pilot encouraging cities to annex Wllncorporated "lslands• since its 1994 bankruptcy. ' One benefit of the move for the city is that it would receive 70% of the area's property taxes -aboui 20% more that it gets now. Changes that would affect the neighborhood are tougher residential development stan- dards and a slight increase in property taxes-about$4.14 a ye{U for a home valued at $100,000 -for three years to pay for a general obligation bond. But if the neighborhood is incorporated, residents will see quicker emergency response times and will no longer be required to pay nonresident fees for services if they hurt themselves in town, police and fire department officials said. The neighborhood residents already bypass nonresident fees if they receive fire services at their homes, but currently pay the fees if they require help in Costa Mesa. City officials said they will try to minimize zoning changes and work with residents to maintain the area's identity if the annexation is approved. The City Council is expect· ed to vote on the issue early next year. tern to reduce water costs. Should the country clubs and the school decide to stop using reclaimed water as well, it is possible the water district could ask the city for permission to release it into the bay. Kiff said no discussion had taken place about what would happen. "Our concern is not with reclaimed water in irrigation set- tings, but with reclaimed water near residential settings,• he said. The city bas agreed to shoul- der the difference in water costs for The Bluffs until the problem has been resolved. The a.Ssoci- ation annualJy spends about $175,000 on irrigation. Since potable water is 20% more expen.tj:ve than reclaimed water, the city will pay about $3,000 per month to make up the dif- ference. NEWPORT STONE & DESIGN CENTRE COMPLETE DESI GNER SHOWROOM ... to!IU¥ e!fytvtt't" 1it nuule (V/1H'tlo6/e. •W..W.•C..-·M -.-...-. _ .... •Ga--. •Tiit ....,w....1 .....,...,.,.c:..m ·-·-~·c-..,. •U_<(.,.. -.. c.,.. • -• iv..,i--. ;:::::::;;:::::;;:::::;;=.1-..-·~ .~ u .%// .f:., p/'f/(..P,..-.w '111- 1:,.,._,,.,W~ y,,,, ro 'I l.t11 ~,,. !Aw .t. !A--1 YJ.w~., .. "'" "'"' r&d r,,Po",.;, !h<tiv EWPOIO' STONE & DFSIGN C Premier Retirement Living ~rJi'ssANCE a£ INN AI THE PARK PREM I Ell SE!\11011 L IV ING Irvine's most prestigious senior community offering: Affordable month-to- month rentals, gourmet restaurant-style dining, full time activities program, housekeeping, schcd transportation & 10 M~uette, Irvine Ca 92612 Conftrucndy loatcd narl1C lnine at the comer of Hamid 8c M~ (949) 854-3766 I Marshall ·ouffy"' Duffield OWner Duffield Electric Boats ... , .. I get a Charge out of reading the Daily Pilot. The paper's coverage of local news, prep sports and the waterfront is electrifyjng. Whenever my batteries are running low, I plug into the Daily Pilot for some local juice. Got the Pilot? Clll 1 (IOO) LAT1ME8 to~• Clll (141) 842-4321 ID ....... - • AIO Saturday, s.p.mber 30, 2000 'lbnyl>odero S.J. c..fln ...... Lee ....... ~ Edltof City editor Assistant city editor Sports editor • CM!rsees dally • Assigns and edits • Edits news stories • Edits dally sports news operations news stories, and and supervises section and edits handles corrections reporters (949) 574-4223 community forum (949) 57~233 (949) 764-4324 roger.arlsonO page mVM.cahnO /asmlne.leeO latfmes.com (949) 57~58 fat/mes.com la times.com tony.doderoO la times.cam Don Leadt .,...,. llNlrath JenntfWKho Mllthls WWtler Chief Photographer Reporter Reporter Reporter •Oversees Daily • Covers crime • Covers Costa • Covers Newport Pilot photo staff and courts Mesa issues Beach and JWA (949) 764-4265 (949) 574-4226 (949) 574-4275 issues deepa.bharathO jennifer.khoO (949) 764-4348 fa times.com latimes.com mathis.winkkrO latimes.com ~}' Barbara Lee, M.S. MFT Wortht Hew~ Couples. lndlv1dualt A Groups 1151 DoVE STREET, #105 NEWPORT 8F.ACH, CA 92660 (949) 26 1-8003 License MH021595 ffG~ Mattress Outlet Stor BRAND NEW -COSMETICALLY IMPERFECT Get the Best for Less/ l 3165 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa One Block South ol 405 ...,. (714) 545-7168 Greg Fry Photographer (949) 764-432 f ................ featl.lf'WS editor • Edits and designs datebook and faith sections and ha.ndles special projects (949) 574-4282 }«111/fw.mahalO la ti tries.com Dan.tta Gou'-t Reporter •Covers Newport- Mesa schools (949)57~1 danette.gouktO la times.com s.... ..... Photographer (949) 764-4321 Alllholwf'9dl ........... News Editor Lead designer • Edits stories, • Designs pages proofs pages and graphics (949) 574-4295 (949) 574-4224 anthony.~lcO jo~.santosO latimes.com /at/mu com AloC.oolm.n Yowtg<hang Reporter Reporter I news • Covers polltlcs, assistant environment.al • Writes feature and harbor issues stories and handles (949) 764-4330 calendars a/ex.coolmanO (949) 574-4268 /atlmes.com young.changO fatimes.com Daily Pilot --.McOMk IUdYll'd DuNt ~ ........... Photo AssJgnment Assistant Sports Assistant Sports Editor Editor Editor • Handles photo (949) 574-4225 (949) 574-4227 assignments and rlchard.dunnO barry. t.ullcn«fl photographer tat/mes.com lat/mes.com schedules (949) 764-4358 tcn.photoO la times.com lbny Altobelli SwwVlrgen Kenyflynn Sports Writer Sports Writer Execut.lve assistant (949) 574-4222 (949) 764-4325 •handles tony.alto~ffiO rte~. virgenO administrative fa times.com fatimes.com matters (949) 574-4219 kerry. flynnO la times.com CONTACTllG THE NEWSIOOM The Oalty Pilot welcomes letters on BleS con- cerning Newport Beach and Costa Mesa. There are four ways to send In your comments: • l&i IW -Mall to the Dtlly Pilot, 330 W. Bay St., Costa Mesa 92627 • MADIRS ~ -Call (949) 642-6086 • MX -Send to (949) ~170 Arnwa Agulw Designer GJna AluMder Designer • E ~ -Send to dallypllotOMtimes.com All correspondence must indude your fuU name, hometown and phone number (for Wrifi.. (949) 764-4292 a~ra.agu/farO fat/mes.com (949) 764-4294 glna.afexanderO fat/mes.com cation purposes onty). W'e're Bursting With Quality Furniture at Great Savings! • MoJel Howu Ftmait11rr • Anhfua •An • A«asoria • Ana Ruf.1 d-Morel CJUtom Rrfinisbint d-Upho'1ury (949) 646-1822 670 W. 17th St., 102 • Co.ta Mesa Htnm: Mtm. -Fri. I I""' -4Jmt --------;;;;;;;;;;=6. ... DAVID YURMAN Celestino's-.- quality MEATS . ,. THOROUGHBRED WATCH COLLECTION"" • The Finest Meat and service Auallable Snmt Ont. Mtu for tn1tr 30 yun Ctlestlno's Old-Fuhlontd MEATLOAF MIX 50~ Groand Slrloln 25fji, Grollnd Veal 25fji, Groeacl Potll You Add Your $J99 OwnSpk:a lb Boneless LAMB LEGS s5~ LAMB STEW 56~ GROUND LAMB'49l Ctlatlno's All Natural BEEF TRI-TIPS 5 lbs of Ctltstlno's ALL-NATURAL GROUND CHUCK 112 TURKEY BREAST Bone-In, Skin-On ApproL WL $259 5-7 lbl lb CELESTINO'S SAUSAGE OP nut WEEK: CHICKEN ITALIAN HotorMUd s2y: with your next dinner. Mouth-watering en~, a ttJaxcd dining aUD01phcre and pario tearing with I delightful view of Newport e.y make for a refreshing biak in your day. Open from 7:00 AM, 7 days I~ (949)729-1144 DINNER THURSDAY -SUNDAY :--·-·-------·······-----·--··-··--·--·······--: . ·~Half-Price Appetizer with I i Dinner 1ntra1• at a. i I I I -·.-- 1 ·------; I ' ! -0."4fl'*'::,. ............... .... ~---------~----~!'-'.!) .. '!!~:!1!.'!'..... : ···-·---· 11 JI IAa IAI Olin • N....,.T luc.i 0" JAM-... • 0.. M.OCll IAIT Of f'CH Random acts of kindness Catherine Ryan Hyde will sign her book. 'Pay It Forward,' in Costa Mesa on Sunday Young Chang DAILY PILOT Catherine Ryan Hyde wonders how her book dazzled Hollywood. School districts she can understand. Parents of young children and the children themselves -they're capa- ble of hope and uncompen- sated kindness. But Hollywood? There's only one explana- tion: optimism. The story of 12-year-old FYI WHA~ catherine Ryan Hyde will sign copies of •pay It For- ward• WHEN: Noon, Sun- day WHERE: Borders Books, Music & cafe at South Coast Plaza, 3333 Bear St., Costa Mesa COS~ Free CAU: (714) 556-1185 Trevor McK- inney and his idea to do good things for three people so those people can, instead of paying him back, pay him forward by doing ruce things for three others, "Pay it Forward" is optimistic. The virtue is so rare in Hol- lywood. it's nearly alter- native. It sparked a cord among top entertainment executives and actors Helen Hunt, Kevin Spacey and Haley Joel Osment, who will star in the movie version of the story opening Oct. 20. •Jt's a little different from a lot of what's being put out in Hollywood right now.• said Hyde, who will sign copies of her book Sunday at Borders Books, Music & Cafe at South Coast Plaza. "It kind of shows people stepping up and being decent, and I can't help wondering maybe we've had enough of the other.· Some schools around the country have caught onto the good-deed streak, th.inking • up ideas to pay nice things forward themselves. The Santa Barbara Community Foundation has invited all Santa Barbara County ele- mentary and middle schools to come up with their own versions of the project. The first 15 schools to respond will win a cash endowment. The Pay It Forward Foun- dation.· started by Hyde, pro- vides educational materials and funds for middle school students nationwide who qualify in trying to develop their own Pay It Forward usignment. · Though local schools in the Newport-Mesa Unified School District haven't incor- porated the book or its con- cepts into lts cwrtculum. dis- trict officials respond opti· mlstlc:ally to learning more about lt. •we'd have to figure out tt would ftt ~ow cuittcu1um,. M.ld18CMY Anatol, d1rector ot seamdary SEE PAY MGE A 1J FOR KIDS . Borders Books, Musk & Cafe will present a Namla Storytime at 10 a.m. with storyteller Peggy Armenta. The event will include Namla games and activi- ties. Kids will be able to enter a drawing and win a complete set of The Olronides of Namia books, authored by C.S. Lewis. Olildren can also enter an art contest. Borders Is at 3333 Bear St., Costa Mesa. (714) 432-785. Saturday, 5ep1emt.-Jo, 2000 All SEAN HlilR I DA.lY PLOT :rracey Liltz rocks out during a karaoke session at Kona Lanes in Costa Mesa. Karaoke performers·grab the mike and hit the stage for a variety of reasons Young Chang D AILY PILOT I t is almost the end of the song, and Diane Newell's rendition of Whitney Houston's #I Will Always Love You• has quieted the room. But anyone who is anyone in the karaoke world knows, it ain't over yet. That last note, if she can hit it, will make her everything she has presented herseU to be in the past two rrunutes. Jt comes. She makes it. She's pulled off a "A lot of people have really nice voices, but we'll never be the Whitney Houston~ and Christina Aguilera 's. " . n'acey Uitz karaoke singer Whitney. Newell, 35, saves this song for when she's the most blue. The vocal release and the cheers that follow make her smile. Wearing a lavenderT- shirt, laven- der jeens, a white sweat- shirt tied around her --------waist and white sneakers, she's an incompic· uous Tuesday-nighter who steals people's attention through song. She thrives \n her moment of karaoke-induced tame. Donald Miller, a karaoke host at the bowling alley, Kona Lane in Costa Mesa where Newell sings, calls the pastime a culture. Chante· ten in Bruce Paltrow'• recent release •Duets• portra~ tt u a • Donald Miller announces the next singer during karaoke nJgbt at Kona Lanes in Costa Mestl Wednes4ay. ., lifestyle -one that liberates a burnt-out traveling salesman (Paul Giamatti) and brings a father- daughter duo (Gwyneth Paltrow and Huey Lewis) closer together. "Some people like line dancing," Miller said. •They jump around from plaoe to place. People who ling karaoke do the same.• There's no pressure and no rules. No one makes money from going onstage. A few with natural talent get serious about their singing. The rest get a little mike-happy and ling thelr bad day away. The audl· ence drinks and carries on. And that's the thing about karaoke, pronounced kada-0-kay: It's not for listening, said Yuki lwai, a customer at Kariyushl. a Japane1e restawant in Costa Mesa that fea- tures karaoke. It's for singing. •Better to listen to a tape," he said. •or watch TV: But when a meal has just been bad and a few drinks have just been drank, when mends are around and nothing seems capable of turning bad, the microphone beckons and you follow. You take the literal meaning of the word-•kara• mean$ •empty• and •oke" means •orchestre." so •empty orchestra• -and fill the one-man pit. •we don't care -good singer or bad singer. We should sing,· Iwai said. Patting his stomach, he shares another karaoke philosophy: •Good for health: SEE KARAOKE MGE A 1J REEL CRITIC Better to sing solo than see 'Duets' ~ From the commercials and movie previews, ·ouets• seemed like it would be a fluffy, enjoyable liWe comedy. Wow, was that impression wrong. ·ouets• tries to be a comedy while offering few laughs and a n -. . : ~ . c.· drama, but bas little depth. T.noa· • Behle Following II six people involved ln the .. ~ . . world of bard-core karaoke com- petition would 188111 to be a great idea for an am\lling lark of a movie. For -reuon. writer John Byrum felt the need to a1sO add~ wt ...,.tidal com- men&ary on llllv:llm IDdlty. Tbe ~II aftm palnlully bed. Tbe ectklll wl lntsactioal of the dmedil'I .. bmd and unmbnl.~ 111 •• flm ii. tchl"OJllu'"*-.. ~ noneofata .... It ii ...... '° .,, .... tbat t.Umt- -....... a.. ...... ~-==a-=-~ • A12 Saturday, s.p.mber Jo, 2000 After HOURS • Send Ana HOU9tS Items to the Dally Pilot. 330 W. Bay St., Costa Meta, CA 92627; fax to (949) 646- 4170 or call (949) 574-4268. A com- plete llitl"9. may be found at www.dallypllot com. SPECIAL RHYTHM & RHYME Sliding Pillar Press and The Sol Grill will present Rhythm & Rhyme from 7 to 10 p.m. Tuesday at The Sol Grill, 110 McFadden Place, Ne~ort Beach. Writers, m usioans and artists will participate in the event, which 1s a celebra- tion of the fourth 1Ssue of "Notes from the Sliding Pil- lar.· (949) 723-4105. FILM NOIR Orange Coast College profes- sor H . Arthur Taussig will moderate a three-part series on film noir starbng at 6:30 p.m. Friday at the Orange County Museum of Art. Taus- sig, author of ·Film Values/Fanuly Values: A Par- ent's Guide,• will mtroduce each film, starting with Billy Wilder's 1950 noir cldssic, "Sunset Boulevard." The series will be held the first Fridays in October. Novem- ber and December. Tickets are $6. The museum is dt 850 San Clemente Drive, New- port Beach. (949) 759-1122, Ext. 204. MARKET PlACE . The Orange County Market Place takes place from 7 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturdays and Sun- days in the Orange County Fairgrounds' main parking lot. S2 for adults, children uDder 12 are free. (9'9) 723-6616. MUSIC ( RAOtMANINOff REVISITED French pianist Jean-Philippe Collard will debut with the Pacific Sympbony Orchestra with Rachmaninoff's Piano Concerto No. 2, starting ofi music director Carl St. Clair's e leventh season at 8 p.m. Wednesday and Thursday at the Orange County Perform· ing Arts Center, 600 Town Center Drive, Costa Mesa. Tickets range from $12 to $52. (714) 755-5799. FRESH FUNDS The Four Freshmen will hold a concert to benefit the Bal- boa Performing Arts Theater Foundation at 8 p.m. Thurs-· day at the Balboa Pavilion. 400 Main St. at Balboa Boule- vard, Balboa. The vocal jazz quartet has been nominated for a Grammy six times. Tick- ets are $50, $1 00 for VIP seat- mg. (949) 673-0895. POP NIGHTS Lou Rawls will join the Pacif- ic Symphony Pops for the opening of the 2000-2001 Pops season at 8 p.m. Friday and Oct. 7 at the Orange County Performing Arts Cen- ter. 600 Town Center Drive, Costa Mesa. Rawls will per- form hits, including •Love is a H urtin' Thing" and "You'll Never Find (Another Love Like Mine).• Tickets are $14 to $72. (71 4) 755-5799. MUSICAL EXPLOSION The Philharmonic Society of DATEBOOK LUCI OF THE lllSH The 2nd annual Orange County Irish Fair starts 10 a.m. today at the Orange County Fairgrounds, 88 Fair Drive in Costa Mesa. The fair bouta an "ancient" lrllh village, music by bands including The Fen.lam, a "Rlverdance··style show of lrllb step dancers, rides and events for children, bagpipe band.I, sports and even an lrllh dog show. The tesUval takes place 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. today and Sunday. Tickets are $12 for adults, $10 for students and senton. Children 12 and younger wtU be admitted free. (714) 284-9558. Orange County's Eclectic Orange Festival 2000 begins at 7 p.m . Oct. 13 with ·con- versation with Philip Glass,· a festival preview talk with Daily Pilot Oct. 1.f, the RosetU Strtog Quartet at 8 p.m. Nov. 30 and Ute Lemper, a European cabaret queen, at 8 p.m. Dec. 1. (9'9) 553-2422. FROM MUSIC TO TV ANOIACK Veteran singer and actor James Darren will be fea- tured in concert at 8 p.m.. Oct. 14 at Orange CoaJt College's Robert B. Moore Theatre, 2701 Fairview Road. Darren's musical credits include 12 albums, five Top 10 singles and the Grammy-nominated •Goodbye Cruel World." He bas directed television pro- grams such as "Melrose Place," •Beverly Hills 90210" and "Walker, Texas Ranger." Tickets range from $21 to $27. (114) 432-5880. SEASON STARTER Orange Coast College's Sym- phony Orchestra will open its 40th season at 7:30 p.m. Oct. 15 at OCC's Robert B. Moore Theatre, 2701 Fairview Road. The 60-piece concert will spotlight works by Brahms and Rossini. Tickets are $6 to $10. (714) 432-5880. REMEMBERING BENNY GOODMAN Clarinet virtlloso A be 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 Col- lege. 2701 Fairview Road. Tickets ra nge from $23 to $29. (714) 432-5880. ANTIQUE ROW & GARDEN CAFE one of America's most famous living composers hosted by Dean Corey, the society's executive director. Glass' choral symphony will follow. Tickets are $15 to $55 and the performance will be held at the Orange County Perform- ing Arts Center, 600 Town Center Drive, Costa Mesa. The festival will include dance, original theater. orchestral, cultural and musi- cal performances. It will fea- ture Ballet Pacifica at 8 p.m. c;>ct· 13 and at 2:30 and 8 p.m. 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. "Nlnet U ttiq~ Shcp~(illluL wid\I T ~few yow-HottW111 Fine Homt F11mishings A11tiq11ts & Colltcliblts Tr11ditio1111I to Cottage Gift• & G11rdm Dnor Wish List & Dtlivny Ga.t""~C~ C11ntllt1 to Clt1111tltlins Uud & Rart Boob C111tom Piclvrt Fr11ming F11mihlrt IUstoration and m11ch more! 949 722-1177 Cardni Patio Dining Broa.kf.ast, u111dt, Tu & Esprnso &r Cit Hoeft TUM.fri. 9.tlll"'tpm: "Dl6COVer the Row, a wonderful Shopping and Dining ad~nture• JJO Eal J 7111 Slrttt Costa Mna, CA (8tldrtll """ '""' s.e.. : SIMI.~ 9'flt' ! . I L FACTORY CLOSE 0 Lowest Prices Ever! For a limited time, you can obtain special close-out prices on Mission Style furniture, crafted in quarter sawn grain oak in the dark walnut finish. These are lowest prices ever offered by Munro 's for Mission style furniture. FAMILY OW"'>ED & OPERATED SINCE 1965 s500 to 8 1,000 OFF SELECT TABLES * EXP. 10-31-00 i.ow Hoen 1-. 2189 LAKEWOOD BLVD, LONG BEACH Mt ft 2S,,....,,,,.. So. Ou., County dtJn 562.986 .. 5305 Stop in and See One of the Greatest lelec:tione of Pool Tabl• In Orange County I I \I 111 H'-Ii I 111 1 I I> \11111 H.11•, "'"' \, .111..t.i. •• AUTO• HOMEO'IVNE.ltS ~ 40 !'ears In Business .. ~~ _.., ___ ,, / > :.,,,, 949-631-77 40 441 Old Ntwpott Bhd. • Ntwpott Bed (Near "--Hoepic.I) The Long Beaeb Coin e3 Collectih/eJ Expo PreJMIJ Tbe 16" Annual Fall &po Octoher5-8, 2000 I C)'\,(, Bl\{ II ( ()'\,\l'\,fl()'\, ( l '\.111~ 100 So. Pw Ave., Long Beach, Calif. (&trana d Parking On Pim Ave.) Sh01wiJe phone (562) 4J6-J6J6 www.IOngbeOchshow.com . HOURS: THURS-SAT 10am-6:30pm, SUN 10am-3pm Coins • Stamps • Sportscards • Phone Cards • Collectibles •Jewelry • U.S. & Foreign Coin Auction F&rIVRING: THE SWP OF GOW -$20 million in gold coin1 and ban from tl:ie "S.S. C..Otral America•; The Bureau of Engraving and Printing billion dollar diaplayU Auctiona by Heritage Numismatic Auctiona and Ponterio & A.uoclate.. • Plus LOBEX 3'00 (stamp section) Futurin& the ·0n m1 honor I wiU do my best ... • Boy Srouts of America stamp .. nAll THATS ENTERTAINING ART OVERVIEW Joe Orton's "Entertalnlng South Coast Repertory dra- Mr. Sloane• will run through maturge Jennifer Kiger and Oct. 22 at South Coast director Marie Rucker wW Repertory's Second Stage. present a free overview ol two upcoming SCR plays at 7 Pelfonnances are 7:45 p.m. Tuesday through Sunday p.m. Thursday in the New- with matinees at 2 p.m. on port Beach Central Ubrary's Saturday and Sunday. Tick-Friends Meeting Room. The ets are S.18 through $47, ~p will discuss Yasmina 's •Art" and Gregory with discounts available. The repertory is located at Murphy's "The Countess.• The library is at 1000 Avoca-655 Town Center Drive, do Ave., Ne~rt Beach. Costa Mesa. (714) 708-5555. (949) 717-380 . . SOUTH PAOFIC OCTOBER LAUGHS A Cup of Water will perf onn Orange Coast College will ~ one-hour version of the debut its production of Broadway classlc •South comedian Steve Martin's Pacific• at 2:30 p.m. Sunday "Picasso at the Lapin Agile• at Borders Books, Music & at 8 p.m. Thursday m the Cafe, South Coast Plaza, Drama Lab Theater, 2701 3333 Bear St., Costa Mesa. Fairview Road. Perfor-Songs include "Some mances are at 8 p.m. Thurs- Enchanted Evening.• "Noth-days through Saturdays and in' Like a Dame" and "Wash 2 p.m. Sunddys until Oct. That Man Right Out of My 15. $7 in advance or $6 for Hair.• Free. (714) 432-7854. seruor'S, students and chil- PAY She kept her eyes open on lhe freeway for someone CONTINUED FROM A 11 who might need d hdnd. Then she got to thinking. wouldn't t1us be an mterest- curriculum and K-12 assess-ing force in the world? One, ment for the district. "But it and then 10, and then sounds interesting. lf we did mdybe 10,000 people JUSt three good tlungs for others, wdnden.ng Mound owing the world would be d better favors but to no one m par- place.• ticu1df7 The story began, appro-In 19Y1, the busmess priately enough, with a ran-where Hyde worked dS a dom act of kindness. TWen-pastry chef went out of ty years ago, Hyde was business. Unemployed for d stranded in a bad part of few months, she woke up Los Angeles at night wtth a one morrung rememben.ng car fire going strong and no d promise !.he bad mdde to one around to help. herself -lo one ddy wnle a Two strangers pulled up, novel if she hdd llln<' extmgwshed the fire and The book lS ded1c-dted to drove away &fore she Vance Hyde, the duthor's could thank them. mother. who provided shel- "I could never recilly J>dY ter and monetruy help them back or thank them,· when her ddughter WdS a Hyde, 45, srud "So the only low-incom~ strugglmg thing I could redlly do Wds wnter. The fttmily's tinanoal look for somebody else to situation is dramdbccilly dtl- help.· ferent toddy, espec1dlly with ia~ PRESCRIPTION PHARMACIST SINCE 1917 THE PHARMACY IN SOUTH COAST PLAZA I \\I l'IU\C RIPTIO\ \I K\ I< I • McMI Pmcription lnsurwt Plans Accepted \\O\U\ \ HI .\I fH PIH>t>L :< f\ • Pregnancy & Ovulation Test Kits ·~ust •Ost~ • Varicose Vein Treatment • On Sitt Nutritionist • Aromatherapy • First Aid ,, ' • sm Cm • Oitt ~ts For Weight Control • lnttrna~I Pharmacy With Shipping All Ovtr the World < Conveniently located in South Coast Plaza level 2 -Sears Wing 714-444-1600 'DA1EBOOK . Saturday, s.p..mber 30, 2000 A13 dren. $9 at the door. Seating KARAOKE is limited. (71.C) 432-5880. ART CONTINUED FROM A 11 WATERCOLORS Veteran karaoke per-The Jewish Community Center will hold an art fonner Joe Buffardi sang gallery show featuring the EMs Presley's "Can't Help watercolors of artist Judy Palling in Love• for his ill Cbabler through Nov. 3 at mother over the phone, and the center's Jewish Peder-then by her bedside two ation Campus, 250 E. Bak-years ago. before she died. er St., Costa Mesa. Show-When he was 10, she took ing times vary. Free. (714) 755-0340. him to watch "Love Me Ten- der" in a Philadelphia movie DANCE theater. Buftardi, now 48, INDIAAT w~g a chair to the SEAN Hllt.LER I OAl.Y PlDT ORANGE COAST COLLEGE record table to play the Kevin Cable performs Weird Al's song, ., ~ Parad.lse• The classical dance of India King's hits. will be performed by Anjani's Today he sings them at Ko na Lanes on Wednesday nigbl Cable ls the Friday Katha.k Dance of India Com-...... onstage, often at the Kona and Saturday night karaoke jockey at the bar. pany al 4 p.m. Oct. 8 in Lane bar. accompanied by Orange Coast College's FYI Robert B. Moore Theatre, · music, a mike and a televi- 2701 Fairview Road. sion with vanishing words. WHAT: Karaoke at WHERE: A bar at the back Reserved tickets are $20 to Karaoke brings back memo-K.,-fyushi Restaurant of this bowling alley, 2699 $22. Tickets are the door are ries, Buffarcli said, especially WHERE: 1907 Harbor Blvd., Harbor Blvd. in Costa Mesa. $25. (714) 432-5880. of his late mother. Costa Mesa HOURS: 8:30 to 11 p.m. Tracey l...11tz, who per-CAll: (949) 515-1990 Tuesday through Thursday fonned Beth Hart's "L.A. WHAT: Karaoke at and 8:30 p.m. t o 1 a.m. on Song" in what resembled a Kona Lane weekends. the book's current connec-small impromptu concert. lion to Hollywood. loves the momentary dppre-ly ruce voices, but we'll nev-she said. ·so t1us is their Vance Hyde said she ciation. er be the·Whitney Hou~ton's llme to shine and practice thinks the succ~ss of the •A lot of people have real-and Christina Agullern's, • lheu glft. • book may perhaps be linked to someone doing something good for them. "We never thought it would be like th1s. • she said DUETS much better roles on tele-·Free bird• deserve to be Crom her home in Cambria, vision. in a far better movie. Calif. The only bright spots m The saddest thing The little red log cabin is CONTINUED FROM A 11 this film ~e the karaoke about "Duets• ii the where the mother-daughter pau sit on the front porch acting skill is still evident numbers. ln these musical waste of so much acting cLnd watch the whales go here, but her character segments, "Duets" has and singing skill. If the by. Catherine Hyde said she • Liv, a good-hearted the sparkle and joy miss-script had stuck to the fun will never move, despite ing entirely from the rest initial premise, •Duets• her recent financial success, dimwit, wears thin very because this is home. quickly. of the movie. Paltrow has might have been a charm- And her life, as it is now, Maria Bello as the a surprisingly fine singing lng comedy. can safely be called a overly raunchy Suzi voice, and Braugber •Due ta• is rated R dream come true. Loomis and Andre shows true singing skills. for language and some "I think it's a really good Braugher as criminal Reg-The duet between Pal-sexuality. example of how, when you gie Kane do their best in trow and Huey Lewis on do what you thtnk you were badly written, horrible Smokey Robinson's • TIUOA llEILE. 31, liv~ in put here to do, t1us is kind roles. They both have "Cruisin'" and Braugher's Newport Beach and validates of the reward that people get when they follow their done much better work In a cappella version of software. dreams.· Hyde srud. Already Reduced Warehouse Prices 'Vuit us in our new designer's showroom. (}reat Savi~ Showroom Furniturt 0-Accessories O,,t/d New 0-DisamtinlUll /tnns, Ou-ofA-KinJ New Merchandise Arrirjng Daily 14th Annual Harbor Heritage Run and Free Fitness Fair SK FEATURE RACE IK FUN RUN/WALi KIDS' ILASSfC RACE Sat., Odober 7, 1000 Newport Harbor High School Enjoy a Spacious Suite, Sumptuoua Dini~ Entertainment, Bingo, Crafts, Billiards, Beauty Salon, Traneportation to Doctor, Sh~ing, Fun Tript, Friendly Carins People.· From$1,~ 2283 Pail view at WU.O. Co.taM11a "'*""" •• • • • . . . . . .. . . . . . . . Al4 Sotvr Doily Pilot Bridge of Gardens opens with style at South Coast Plaza RUlllllll8 DOWI I CURE T be operative word is DlOlt definitely style. South Coast Plaza cele. brated the opening ot the Bridge ol Gardens, its massive contemporary art form with function that spans Bear Street with a pedestrian walk- way joining the retall center on both sides of the street A Thursday midday cere- mony featured everything from an orchestra perched atop an elevator shaft to the release of hundreds of white doves to the blasting of con- fetti Suitable for your basic 5th Avenue ticker tape parade. Style, style, and more style. Moreover, the mood was elecbic. Not your average shopping center ribbon cut- ting. "The bridge is a local mon- ument to art, architecture and usability,· offered Betty Shafer, a Costa Mesa shopper standing on the sidelines of all the hoopla. "I've walked it, and it is a wonderlul experi- ence. You feel like you are walking on air: Following brief tributes by dignitaries -induding Costa Mesa Mayor Gary Monahan, South Coast Plaza managing B.W. Cook THE CROWD partner Henry Segerstrom and members of the bridge design team, induding lead architect Kathryn Gustafson -invited guests and the public at large was invited to cross the span to the new South Coast Plaza stores on the west side of Bear Street. In the crowd were high- ranking executives from Macy's, representing the new home store that recent- ly opened in the new build- ing. •Just cross the bridge and tum right," said the ranking Macy's boss. teas- ing the crowd to come and experience the massive _.1142 $2 I home center. "It is fabulous. Absolljlely inaedible, • said Irvine resi- dent Cathy De Meco, who bad aheady been shopping at the Macy's stor.e,_ "The selec- tion and the merchandising is remarkable. They have everything.• So, as a pood correspon- dent following directions, I crossed the bridge and turned right. There we were in the most impressive home store one can imagine. De Meco was not exaggerating. Macy's has created four floors of home showing unparalleled in Southern Cal- ifornia. There were even lava lamps for those seeking.a lit- tle retro. Shoppers can just pick the grouping of their choice and have an instant room with dec- orator sensibilities. They even have designer pialic tables. And china with a cow pattern, which to me was just not kosher. After all, how could · one eat a hamburger on a plate dE!Signed with cow spots? Turning left from the cow- imprinted china and ending up in the middle of the Godi- va chocolate section of the u ...... __ ,... .... _,_,... --·-· ..... --... ----... • store, waiters appeared with trays of beverages to wel- come guests to the opening luncheon in honor of the bridge and the union of Macts and South Coast Plaza. Hosted by Macy's, aeam- colored drapes were drawn by waiters in black tie with red carnations in their lapels, while servers in blue cham- bray shirts and starched white aprons were very busy transforming what is most probably a delivery space into a salon worthy of photo- graphic duplication in high end magazine publications covering the world of dining and catering. · Wolfgang Puck, who was demonstrating his recipes at the other end of the store, had the Wolfgang Puck Cafe restaurant at South Coast Plaz.a handle the luncheon duties. While guests enjoyed the Puck fair of salad a la crab sushi. beef sirloin and halibut, followed by creme brulee, South~ Plaza was orchestrating a massive din- ing event on the upper floors of the new center, calling the luncheon •a taste of South More than 350 people attended the 9th annual Komen Orange County Race for the Cure VIP Sponsor Reception on Sepl 21, co-chaired by Nlna Rattner, left, and Marte Blash, seen with Komen founder Nancy Brinker. The reception honored sponsors for the race, which raises money for breast cancer research, education and !Creenlng. -- Coast Plaza: It was far more than a taste as the multitude of dining experiences at the Center set up booths to serve their finery. OK, it's all about business. South Coast Plaza and Macy's and even Wolfgang Puck are there to make the green stuff. Did You Know? They are the first to admit it. Nevertheless, this was a wonderlul afternoon of pomp, circumstance, food, furniture and a magical new bridge to unite it all. •TIE CROWD appears Thursdays and Saturdays. ~That we are a full service nursery with qualified California Certified Nursery Professionals and landscape designers. We can meet all of your gardening needs. Come in today to~ Nurseries and let us show you how." · - NURSERIES, INC.--- COSTA MESA SANTA ANA TOM TANAKA, C.C.N.PRO Manager 2 700 Bristol St. (714) 754-6661 2800 N. Tustin Ave. (714) 633-9200 Flowerdale Nunery • Colta Mesa Master Nursery Professional COMPLm LANDSCAPINC • 45 YEARS EXPERJENa LICENSE # 308553 We don't hove any future polltlcal aspirations. But we have strong opinions about a polltlcal Issue -Measure S. We believe Measure S w/11 undermine representottve government In Newport Beach at great cost to the cfttzens and taxpayers. We urge you to vote NO on S. q)-~ 8u-4 -&ci:L-{) ~ U n m atchrl Q.Jality of Life We were each honored to serve os Moy°' of Newport Beach. We did OUf best to repfesent the cltlzens In wOfklng to Umlt airport expansion. reduce traffic congestion and cleon up the Bock Boy. while tTylng to keep our city tlnanclally solvent. Newport Beach today ls largely the product of the post decisions by our elected officials. We hove low crime rotes and high property Voll.Jes. We tlave wonderful muse- ums. gbfor1es.. retail foclllttes and restaurants. We truly enjoy o very high quality of life. Measure S Erodes oor QJali ty of Life -~ to 55 Citywide Electi cns over the Past Tun Year s Measure S will do nothing to Improve ~ quality of llfe and much to ptoce It In jeop- 01cty. Meosure S Is presented os a meosure that wlll "require a J)l!bllc vote on major devetopment proJects.· If you read It you'M aee that this II not on accurate clolfT). In truth Measure S requires a publlc vote on EVERY General Pion Amendment -no mat- ter hOw srnotl • once a ·certain· threshold Is reached. Uodlr the terms of Me!w u S we CQUd have bod UP to 55 citywide alectloos over the QQlf Ian veaa. We couKt hbve wttd on ctuc;b god Qrlygbt acbool gdcl- tlool. ,... ataHool. tMKl Q 7W IQYQ!t fpgl oc?t1tton to a CJllMtlD CXld a 1 .(II) pge; foot tygyyWl to emca·a [MtgLICllt. Measure Swill H:::lrrihly Divide our Community arrl Pit Neighbor Against Neighbor with Repeated arrl Costly Citywide Elections If we hold repeated citywide elections Ovet' these ·minor· neighborhood Issues our community wlll become horTlbly divided with neighbor pitted' against neighbor In on endless series of polltlcol bottles. Electtons cost money ($2-3 mlHlon alone over the ~ ten yeas If Measure S was In effect). They also divert attention from Important Issues such as publlc safety. lmpro\llng our schools and planning our Mure. Measure S makes cltv goyernmeot laefeyaot. The time now spent onoly2lng traffic studies. environmental studtes. economic lmpocts and holding public hearings would become mere window dfes1iog. It would be replaced with endlea etectlons detennlned by slmpllsttc slogans. This won't Improve planning °' the quollty of ~elected otnclols. Retain a.ir ()Jality of Life Pleo9e. Join us In voting NO on Meoue S. Let'• retain the QUOllty of llfe we r,aw etlOY· And let's fOCUI on eleCtlng COU'lCll ~ befs Who Wiii help UI ret~ our qUoltt'f Of lfe. And thonks '° much for the lionOf of repre- senting you on our city councll COMMUNiTY Daily Pilot .. •The Irvine Co. has shown 11.s true col- ors. It ~ to join the other developers in order to pave over Newport Beach with a dozen major high-rise buildings.• -PHR. AllS't Greenlight Initiative INder on the news that the Irvine Co. has endorsed rival Measure T. EDITORIAL Saturday, September Jo, 2000 A15 Saying ·,goodbye to Zubieta Area athle~es keep Olympic torch lit I said goodbye to a friend today, not a close friend but a good friend. John Zubieta passed away last week. We were separat- ed by a generation, but many of his close friends are mine also. I've always thought that a man's friends LITTll Of are a reflection 1111 Wiii of him. U that is truly a mea- sure of a man, John was one of the best. John was a hard-working, generous man. He always sponsored our softball and over-the-line teams and treat- ed his employees extremely well John was not perfect - none of us are -and those who are close to it usually aren't much fun to be around. John was always fun to be around, he always had a smile when I saw him and I genuinely enjoyed being around him. He liked liked a practical joke and loved to laugh. qualities I ad.mire m a person. John was a good friend and a good man, a m1lrl whose time with us was cut far too short. All of us who knew him will miss him greatly. JEFF GRANT Costa Mesa REBUTIAL Gay agenda is what bothers some parents J oseph Bell's colwnn (•oop·s 'compassionate conservatism' should extend to gays," (Aug. 10) reflected gross misconceptions regard- ing Republicans' stance on homosexuals. The problem is not with individual homosexuals but instead with an agenda per- petrated by homosexual activists and supported by liberal Democrats. One that gives homosexuals special rights and promotes their lifestyle in our public schools. A plan that silences all who disagree with them. No wonder Republicans are concerned. Public schools already struggle to teach just the basics to students. Why are Democrats so eager to spend the money and take students' time for purposes of sod.al engineering? It is the aggressive homo- sexual agenda thatlnost par- ents find •just plain dwnb," as Bell put it. not the GOP's stand against it. ANGELA GAUAGHEtt Costa Mesa 0 lympian. What a sweet-sound- ing word. Just speaking it evokes images of athleticism, power, coi:µpetition and greatness. The Olympics, a show- case of athletic talent from the entire world, has always managed to lure even those who have lit- tle interest in sport. Much of that is thanks to tele\rision. Over the decades, the box in our living room has beamed those images to our liv- ing rooms from such places as Mexico City, Munich, Seoul, Atlanta and now Sydney. And it's hard to not get hit by a strong dose of both patriotism and pride every time we watch a fellow country- man or woman compete. In fact, Americans have an almost folkloric attachment to these sporting heroes, their names embedded in our memories forever. Jesse Owens, Bruce Jenner, Carl Lewis, Mark Spitz, Janet Evans, Florence Griffith Joyner, the list goes on and on. And this year as New- port-Mesa spawned sev- en more Olympians, MAILBAG City should allow house to reopen Regarding the shutdown of Orange County's only b.alfway house for former female inmates: The House of Sarah bas been our neighbor for more than 21 years, and I can tru- ly say we knew nothing of its existence until a few months ago. It was that unobtrusive. Our neighborhood is not without its problems. We have freeways on two sides, Fairview Road and Baker Street on the other two. We have neighbors renting out several bedrooms in their ·. . . . , ' t >. • > REUTtRS /IAN WALDIE Newport Harbor lllgb School's Aaron Peirsol, right. embraces Lenny Krayzelburg after winning the silver medal in the 200-meter backstroke at the 2000 Olympics in Sydney, Australia. Krayzelburg took the gold. locals were able to feel a special attachment, a special burst of pride watching the Games. These names, along with other Newport· Mesa Olympians from years past. will be pre- served in our communi- ty's sporting history. Weightlifter Cara Heads-Lane, volleyball five-bed.room homes, thus filling our streets with cars, and sometimes it appears we have become the grave- yard of old motor homes. But the House of Sarah was not a problem, and everyone concedes it was doing a good job, a much- needed job. Don Lamm, Costa Mesa deputy dty manager, con- ceded in an interview that there bad never been a com- plaint, that the facility was very well run and much needed. But the laws have to be enforced, he said. Bumble, in Dickens' Oliv- er 'IWlst, may have said it best "If that be the law, then the law is a sick ass and an idiot.• Change the zoning or phenom Misty May, ten- nis great Lindsay Daven- port, Corona del Mar water polo star Chris Ceding. sailors Pease Glaser and Charlie Ogle- tree, and, of course, back- stroke speedster Aaron Peirsol are all a teStament to the sporting champi- ons that have long been a fabric of this community. give them a variance. This place is an asset to the com- munity. Let's try harder to keep our assets and not waste them in the name of law and order. ' EUEN AND Bill WRIGHT Costa Mesa. -Beauty is more than skin deep We live in a community of million-do\lar homes. Why, then, )Vhen I visit Ensign Intermediate School dot see paint peeling and patches of ugly black mildew on the walls? None of the showers work in the gym. 1be band room bas 50- year~ battered instruments. What are we sayingf We And while it is only ~eirsol who will be able to come home with a medal -the silver in the 200-meter back- stroke -that the others were even able to par- take in the glory of the 2000 Games in Sydney and represent our coun- try is worthy of praise enough. look beautiful on the outside -Newport Beach -but the basic foundation of decent well-kept schools is not important? Shame on us. RUTH SHAW Newport Beach Traffic in Newport is out of control To anyone who Mi lived in the Newport-Harbor area for any significant amount of time, the statement •traffic and development in New- port Beach is not out of con- trol" sounds ludicrous. In my 37 years, I have seen traffic go from a July problem, to a July and August problem. Then it was a summer-only problem. Still, Peirsol's achieve- ment now seems all the more impressive . And since the New- port Harbor superstar is only 17 years old, we are excited at the promise of even more greatness down the road. We can hardly wait for 2004. Today, traffic 1s a 365-day-a- year headache and getting visibly worse every year as the city continues to approve more and more develop- ments. You really have to be new to not see the change. Ever driven down Coast Highway between the hours of 3 and 1 p.m.? No, you are not in LA. I This is Newport Beach, my good neighbors, and that is bumper-to- bumper traffic. Many folks moved here to get away from that kind of grlcDock. only to contribute to it here. Enough is enough! Voters must take control through Greenligbt. It is out of control DAVIDIHK Newport Beach • • .. .. • • # Special Lease & Flnance Incentives Available throygh BMW Flnandal Services.* . ' FINANCING! 5.9% up to 60 months :> S L I~ I L S 7 S I : I{ I I : S \ 1 S L I~ I I S .. , .... ................ ...... (Wlll1) •Ull ,J ·--~"" ..... .... "'1fl}f/lef (-) nuaa . .... -. ........ ..... (W1111a) ··-.............. ..... (WJ1111) M740IL ,..,..Llls••ew (.-07'11) •1• , ... dt1'=r· •1• .......... ,. ..• (1111111) ..,. ......... A' ', ..... c-. " ... . ----Quot• Of 111EDAY 'We •• up, 7-0, but then we made o lot of sly, sty mis1akm -,, .. Jerry Howell, Costa Mesa football coach . . . . Doify Pilot Sports Editor Roger Corison • 949..5744223 • Spom fax; 949.050-0170 •Saturday, September 30, 2000 BJ SllUIDAY 1111111 FIVER TONIGHT'S FOOTBALL GAMES CAUSE TO CELEBRATE EAGLES FALCONS Area should be proud of local athletes in Sydney. So how are you holding up as the Olympics draw to a close? Tued of hearing the results before seeing the contest of television? Are your fingers bleeding from trying to access information on the computer superhighway because NBC refused to show live coverage? with our four local athletes, Chris Ceding, Undsay Davenport, Aaron Peirsol, Misty May or Cara Heads-Lane, as I was, you found out quickly that this was no easy task. until 1 :30 in the morning to find out at home U Peirsol knocked off Lenny Krayzelburg in the 200-meter backstroke finals. Talk about need.itig a life. I'll always remember the feeling of. name-dropping pride --•"'when I saw that Aaron Tony AJtobelli won the silver medal. Talking to Peirsol's do so well, it's hard to keep an objective viewpoint. So when talking to Ttm, as well as Misty May's father. Butch, it was like talking to long-time friends, boasbng proudly of the accomplishments of their children. SANrA ANA VAU.F.'I vs. EsrANOA • Sia: Newport Harbor High, 7 p.m. • 8ottom line: Estancia High's 2-1 Eagles are spoiling for some lost respect after watching unbeaten record go by the wayside last week. Eagles should not have trouble being focused, Santa Ana Valley won last year, 21 -20, and Estancia entered as the favorite. Chief concern for ~he Eagles is Santa Ana Valley's potential in the passing game. ·1 tell you what,# Corona del Mar High cross country Coach Bill Sumner said. ·1 started to watch the Mexican television stations because they were more up to date. I understand some Spanish, but anything I didn't understand, I'd figure it out by seeing the action. ll was better than waiting eight hours for the results.• . With the time changes and with different web sites posting different times for each event, 1t made the search as headache-inducing as Woodstock '99. But with the headaches and the frustration, there PERSPECTIVE father, Tun, on the phone from Sydney the day after was just as special. Even when some of our locals didn't win or were eliminated from competition, the pnde and under· standing of how much work it took to get there far outweighed the sadness of seemg them not medal. Hopefully, this community also feels the same pnde and excitement I do about what's gomg on down there came a serious interest and near-obsession in the outcomes of our locals. I got phone calls galore wondering how •we# did over there? lbat genuine interest got me hooked. lbe coolest thing about wribng here is that I'm writing about my hometown (Sailors, Oass of '89). Seeing Peirsol and May and Heads-Lane, all Newport Harbor graduates as well as Oedlng When the athletes get home, let the the pride come out with a handshake or a pat on the back. U they say some goofy Aussie expression, don't be d.Janned. If you were trying to keep up I even went so far to stay up (fellow Class of '89er from CdM) all That goes away alter awhile. Mustangs throw a shoe MOU NTI ES MT. SAN ANroMo vs. OltANGE Co.uT • Site: Mt. San Antonio College, 6 p.m. MESA 7 ov 29 • Bottom line: Mounties (3-0) enter with the favorite's tag, by plenty, with high-powered attack (42 points per start) and are fourth-ranked in the nation. Orange Coast (0-3) has scored nine points in three games, lendin9 to speculation that the Pirates are gotng to have to get off the dime, right now, If they have any hopes for winning. See page 84 for preview and lineups. HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL •Stanford Invitational a key cross country event; Newport Harbor water polo will bring out the heavy cannons for the Tars' matchup with University. Three local high schools are mak- ing the trip northward to compete in the Stanford Cross Country lnvita· tional, held at the Stanford Golf Course today at 9 a.m. ·it's a big, competitive meet that will give our runners a marker as to where they stand among the best in the state,• Sailors' boys coach Biro Barry said. •Now if I had to cho6se betweep winning this meet and win- ning CIF, I'd choose CIF, but it's a great opportunity to see some of the top runners in Northern California and see where you stand.: The Sailors, See Kings and Mu.S· tangs are just three of over 50 schools competing at the invitational. For the boys, one pleasant surprise bas been the running of junior Jesus Santana. . "This is only bis first year running and he's ~eady made big strides,• Barry said. •Already, he's anywhere from our No. 1 or 2 runner out there and he is a nice complement to our team.• For the Must4.ngl' boys, they are led by junior Irwin Sala.s, who took first lo their dual ~t with Laguna Beach with a time of 11:34. SEE GAMERS PAGE 84 Below, Costa Mesa defenders Alvin Nguyen (30), Patrick Hulllger (11) and others swarm over Ocean View senior tailback Jason Rhoads (6). • Estancia High senior sdlool record holder looks for bigger and better things as 2000 cross country campaign swings into full gear. 1bny AleobelM the girl.I aoes cowitry record for EW.v Pl.Dr Estancia when she posted a fifth~place For Esta.ode High girls cross country time ot 17:57 last year at the Pedftc ab ls Cout League Finals, the tint Eagles' standout LD Huipe, 8 still girl to run wider 18 minutes. working bard and going through PrOm there, Huipe qUalilled for the numeroua pain of running lhoel CIP ltate a'Oll country meet for the becew ol PM.I' prwure. MCCDd year tn a row and nm.Md ninth. PoDowtng ber rumatng ltint at .Wltb Us. tbi qudty 11 time,• "DIWIDklll Jumor High. Hut.pe wa about _... -..u ~ .. _ 'I tD qull l\IDldng wbm lbe wu c:oaed Colidl °'8rtie A,...--· • -"" bltD trying out for S.epda by • fn.nd ol Nil • ton ol 111Cet tbil 1.-r just jWI. '° ..... ~=·'=there.~~.!~ ...... •1 w. al Ill to_,=::= namer ._ '"'.,. _ -..... .-i...... • __.... _ . ._.._--.. ID PCL. • ...... to·•--······:t·•----11111..,..1a1~1111 ~:;;_~..:,.!.*:!'.:I ca t • • • 1111 PCI.. Wiiii Cm LI ... :=t~-==--==·· ,' ;w.::.i::&:,:::::. Mlt11 ..... .._,,.._..balds muz...,..,..• • • Seven turnove rs spell doom for No. 1 team in CIF Div. IX, as Ocean View records all 22 second-half points en route to surprising nonleague victory. Barry Faulkner DAILY PILOT NEWPORT BEACH -After beat- ing itseU for three quarters, the Costa Mesa High football tedlll appeared happy to hand the chore to visiting Ocean View, which gladly firushed the job for a 29· 7 nonleague upset of the No. 1-ranked team m CIF South- ern Section Division LX Friday at Newport Harbor High Borrowing from the the~e of a balltime "Mission l.mpossibre· sklt. the Mustangs (3-1) seemingly seU- destructed close to every 30 seconds. or 30 yards, at least, comnutting seven turnovers. Mesa's generosity sabotaged its chance for the second 4~0 start in school history. Mission impossible, indeed. Mesa dominated early. as sopho- more Keola Asuega rolled for 1 l I yards before intermission and the hosts bettered the 3-1 Seahawks m total offense, 145-83, at the break But, three lost fumbles and an interception helped keep Ocean View in the hunt, until the visitors finally found the trail to victory. That trail was shortened even more in the second hall by conb.nued Mesa miscues. A tumble on the Mustangs' first third-quarter play set up the Sea- hawks at the Mesa 19. Five plays later, sophomore Rick Sweetin booted a 25-yard field goal and the Mustangs never sniffed the lead again. The Seahawks first touchdown-was also set up by a fumble recovery, this time on a muffed punt re<:eption at the Mustangs' 36. ·we were up. 7-0, but then we made a lot of silly, silly. mistakes,• Mesa Coach Jerry Howell said. •Tue turnovers took us ou\ of position to do what we do best and Ocean View took it to us. • Howell also acknowledged his team •faded a little bit,• in the fourth quarter, when Ocean View ignited its dorm.ant running game, began stuff- ing Mesa's trademark off-tackle slam SEE MUSTANGS PAGE Bl . . Daily Pilot SPORTS So1vrdoy, Seplember 30, 2000 83 MUSTANGS CONTINUED FROM 81 play and even openly taunted the Mesa sideline after two of its hnal three touchdowns. "We've been on the other end of it, too,• Ocean View Coach Harold Eggers said of the plus-six turnover wmdfdll. ·We've shot ourselves in the foot, at tunes. this yedr, so we know what it feels like.· Eggers told his tedm afterward the second-half effort was the Sedhawks' best hall of the cam- paign. The opposite was likely true for the homecom- ing hosts, who mdnaged just 62 rushing yards and 47 passing yards the final two periods. Meanwhile, Ocean View senior tailback Jason Rhoads, who, dfter d a 14-yard gain on his first car- ry, netted mjnus-3 on his next seven (including six for no gain). began finding runrung room. On the ldst pldy of the third quart.er, be burst off nght tackle for the first of back-to-back 22-yard rumbles. He eventually cdpped the eight-play, 65- yard touchdown dnve with a 1-yard plunge to put the v1S1ton. on top, 17-7, with 9:19 left in the game. Sclof'eby~ OcunVlew o 7 3 19 -29 Costa Mesa 0 7 0 0 • 7 Second~ CM -Ke. ~ 1 run (Avalos kick), 7:58. OV -P. Smith 5 pass from Campbell (Sweetin kldt), 0:51. 1Nrd~ OV · Sweetin 25 FG, 8:26. Fow1h~ OV -Rh0etds 1 run (Sweet.In kick), 9:19. OV -P. Smith 14 pass from Ca1Y1pbell (kidc failed), 2:38 OV • Campbell 60 interceJ)1ion return (kid failed), 1.40. Attendance: 2,800 (est1!1'fated). l.NOfVIDUA.L RUSHtfltG OV · Rhoads, 16-104, 1 TD; Campbell, 8-1 CM • Ke Asuega, 29-138, 1 TD; Hurley, 4-20; Hunter, 2·5, Hulh9er, S-3; Cabrc.o, 1·5 INOMDUAL P'ASSING OV -Campbell, 12-23·1, 139, 2 TDs. CM -Hultiger, lG-26-3, 81 INDIV1DUAL RECEIVING OV · P. Smrth, lG-138, 2 TI>s. N. Smith. 1-2. Balderas. 1-minus-1 CM • lukela. 3·25, Gardiner, 2-20, Cab1co, 2-15, A 5'1dcland, 2-12; Day, 1-9. GAME STATISTICS OV CM After Mesa turned the ball over on downs for a second strd1ght possession, Seahawk quarterback Patrick Campbell connected with Phillip Smith for a 14-yard sconng pdss for the clinche r with 2:38 remairung Campbell ddded frosting with a 60-yard inter- ception return, ledvrng Mesa its final nonleague game (Ort. 7 agdmsl Brethren Christian) to find its rhythm before ente nn9 Pacific Coast League play Oct. 13 agdtnSI Corona del Mar. , SEAN HIU..ER I OAJlY PILOT First downs 13 17 Ocean View's Phillip Smith loses control of ball as Costa Mesa defender Nick Cablco attacks. Rushes-yardage 22 126 40-174 Passing yardage 139 81 Asuegd, who Cdpped the Mustangs' 15-play, 80- yard sconng d nve with a 1-yard slam, finished with 138 yards on 29 attempts. 26 midway through the second quarter, but the subsequent celebration penalty became yet anoth- er way for Mesa to impede its own progress. Day and Robert McQueen were defensive stand- outs for the Mustangs, but Campbell, Smith 110 catches for 138 yards and two TDs) and Rhoads eventually got the best of things. Passing 12-23-1 1G-26-3 Net return yardage• 60 21 Sacks-yardage 2 -21 1 -3 Net yardage 304 273 Punts 4-30.3 1-36 Campbell's first interception ended the threat and Mesa never again penetrated the Ocean View "Costa Mesa is a good football team and we're hoping this is a step in the right direction for us," Eggers said. Fumbles-fumbles lost 0-0 5-4 Flags-net yardage 4-38 8-55 Time of possession 20:32 27:28 35. . Lows Ody inlerc0pled a pass at the Ocean View Tackle Antony Grubisich and inside linebackers •Punt returns. ~terceptions, tumble returns COMMUNITY COLLEGE SOCCER Pirates' men, women blank Santiago Canyon • Moseley scores twice to pace men to 3-0 win. SANTIAGO CANYON - Orange Coac;t College was a 1-0 winner 1n men's soccer Friday afternoon at SanUdgo Canyon College, dropping the Hdwks, 3-0, behind the scoring of Mdll Moseley and Miguel Rwz The vKlory tnl proves the Pirates' record to b-1-4, 2-0-1 in the Orange Empire Con- ference. Sanuago Cdnyon falls to 5- 3-1, 1-2. Moseley started the scor- ing in the I 9th mmute with a shot off a pdss from Btlly Pena It wasn't until lhe 73rd rrunute that the Pirates could break through for another score, this tune a RU11 shot off an assist from Aaron Siemers. Moseley added his second goal, with an assist from Geno Vitale-Sansosta seven nunutes later Htlano Amaga had seven saves and Nick Adams had hve for the Bucs. LIZ HUIPE CONTINUED FROM B 1 Hwpe is quiPUy keeping up with the pack "I see her qudbfymg for CIF again and doing real well there,• Appell srud. At the Huntington Beach Invitational last week, Hwpe took h.rst place in the sut-tearn Division II race with a 20: 12. That wm followed her hrst-place mark m the Eagles' dual meet with Northwood (19:10) Women roll, 2-0 COSTA MESA -Orange Coast outshot visjting Santia- go College, 20-1, and were m command from start to flrush in Orange Empire Confer- ence women's soccer Friday. Meredith Lake and Katie Ogden each had a goal and dn assist in a 2-0 victory for Coast 18-3-1, 3-0 in the OEC). Assistant coach Brandee Craig, however, wasn't espe- cially impressed with the Pirates' performance, which she characterized as "spurts.• ·we have no focus right now," she said. ·u we play thts way on Tuesday (the Pirates host undefeated Cypress} it could be pretty bad.· Ogden scored first off a pass from Lake in the hfth minute, scoring on a soft lob over the goalie's head as she came out to challenge. Lake scored in the 44th minute to finish off Santiago Canyon (3-4-1, 1-2). Santiago Canyon goalie Alisa Morrow had 15 saves. LtZ HUIPE HAPPY BIRTHDAY C.W.adnu the o.lly ,...-. A~ofthe ........ Toct.y RYAN EARL ~ ORANGa CoAsT Cou.EGe IASKl1WA&.L WATER POLO Coast falls, 12-11 SAN DIEGO -Orange Coast was a 12-11 overtime loser m men's water polo at San Diego Mesa Friday, falling to 5-5, 1-1 in the Orange Empire Conference. Jbhn Smalley and Jeffrey Pratt each scored three goals for the Pirates and Doug Jacobe had two. Also with smgle goals were Steve Dug- ger, Chns Lancellotti and Jef- frey Sample. DEEP SEA FRIDAY'S COUNTS Newport~ 1 boan.. 28 ""'9'"' 48 )'9llowf1n tuN "My goal al the beguuung is to make as little work as possible at the end by keeping up early,• Huipe said. "I'll just try lo keep up with the pack in the first mile or so. I'll let other people take the lead before 1 try to turn it on with about a nule to go.· A track and field slarldout, Huipe was third in the PCL in the 1,600-meter run and fourth in the 3,200. ·1 just try to go out there and do the best I can,• Hulpe said. "It doesn't matter what race it is, I try to go out and try to win. When I'm running, I'm pretty competitive.• "The race agamst Northwood was much better for me than the invitational.• the Daily Pilot AthletP of the Week said. "Some of the course in Huntington Beach was run on thick, wet grass and it slowed me down . I felt better against Northwood.• The key to Huipe's success on the track is finding the rtght time to make her move. Hulpe uses a goal-ori- ented approach for her success. "Coach Appell taught me that 1f I have a goal, that 1 should shoot for it,• she said. ·1 try not to worry about who I'm running against. I just go for my goals.• 300~ Discount on all Ne"' Suburbans & Tahoes ~~1PZJ.fiW1tJI' . gtJ~""'"' More than 150 Pre--Owned Mercedes--Benz in Stock These are all Starmark Certified for up to one yr!fu. or 100 ,000 miles in addition to the original factory warranty. '97 C230 Sedan ~4,990 Wltw'. Only 15.00J Mtb (5'46805) '94 E320 Wagon ~S,990 Whire, Chrorm.><;, 3rJ $(a1. (89395) '99 C-230 Sedan ~7,990 Bla...k/Bl;iclc, Lo MUe). 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CALL! CALL! CALL 84 Sotutdoy, S!plemb.r 30, 2000 'SPom · .. .. Doily Pilot GIRLS YOWYlllL Sailors fall Pat CdM.blk lor, .... ...,.. one. JUlt MtNanll....,._ .................. lll!iiJlll ..... .......... ~ • 11-.... ~ aw wtl1 ............ ~ bn#nt' N IDdayMla.a Another tough test for· Pirates • HWltington wins in four at Newport. Tony Altobelli DAILY PM.or NEWPORT BEACH -With Sea View League play right around the comer, the Newport Harbor High girls volleyball team is in the unfamiliar role of student, rather than teacher. Unfortunately for the Sailors, passing grades came few and far between as visiting H\.\lltington Beach pulled out a 16-14, 15-12, 12-15, 15-5 non: league decision Friday night. ·we're just making too many mistakes out there,• Coach Dan Glenn said. •Against a team like Huntington Beach and on Monday against Irvine, you just can't make silly mistakes and be successful.• The Sailors (5-4), ranked No. 3 in ClP Southern Section Division l-A, were led by senior outside hitter Taylor Govaars, who pounded out 15 kills. Por the sixth-ranked Oilers (5-2), ~erena Boun- tour and Jennifer Gardika each had 17 kills, while Lindsay Verhand chipped in with 16. ln Game 1, Newport fell behind, 9-0. went on a 14-2 run and had three game points, but the Oilers battled back to take the last five points. The Sailors started slowly again in Game 2, falling behind, 11-3. A 9-2 Newport run cut the lead to, 13-12, but the Oilers managed to hold on. The tides turned in Game 3 as the Sailors jumped out an 8-2 lead before Huntington Beach battled back to take the lead, 12-10. But strong play by Govaars and middle blocker Llz Lord kept the Tars alive with a Game 3 win. Jn Che See ICIDgl' .... mMt with the ~ Ben InOUye. "nlWll ........ Jolb Y~. Blake DWlon; DuaUn HOdges and Jobn GrOd all ao•ed tbe amsb line abelld of any Northwood rwmer .and all fmilhed wltbln ll8V8ll l8COndl of. each other (16:33-16:40). On the girls' side, Newport is led by senior standout AJJlber Steen. The reigning CIP Southern Section Division ll croa country champ took eighth at the elite Great American Cross Country Festival 1n Charlotte, N.C. with an 18:26 last Saturday. For the Mustangs, Eileen Bello took third place with a 21:31 againc;t the Artists in a PCL dual meet and will look to improve on ·that at Stanford. For Cd.M, it's another log jam at the top of the list. Season Meservey (19:05) took first in the Sea Kings' dual meet with North· wood as Elisha Morgan (19:05), Diana Hossfeld (19:21), Jenny Cummins (19:21), Lindsey Vour- man (19:41) and Jennifer Long (20:09) each finished in the top- eight. • HiMpolt ........ 0.0..1 -~ ............ ~ at Iba Oi'aDge ~ JIMladoa· 111. 1be SeDom meet Bonita at 10 a.m., have anottwr game at noon, and~ at 2 or 3 p.m. • Newport Harbor'I boyS water polo team. ranked No. 2 in CIP Southam Sedioa Division D, will play at Univ8nlty l:tig.b today at to a.m., whili COlta Mesa com- petes in the Wla Park Towna- ment an day. • In collegiate action, Orange Coast College's cross country squads travel down to the San Diego Invitational, held at the Del Mar Race Thack. while the Van- guard University teams also.head up to the Stanford Invitational. The Uons .will oompete at 4 p.m. • The VU women's soccer team competes at Biola University today at 11 a.m., while the Lions' men host the Eagles at l . • ThJ! VU women's volleyball team looks for its first win of the season with a home match against Fresno Pacific tonight at 7. -by Tony Altobelli OCC breezes ~y San Diego CC •Pirates respond to the injury bug with 15-5, 15-1, 15-10 win. Steve Virgen DAILY PILOT JC WOMEN'S VOLLEYBALL more loose (than on Tuesday).• served for 14 straight points that closed out the Game 1 and started the Game 2 with a 7-0 run. Smith hit with precision as the ball came within inches or the net and then dropped for four aces during that 14- point run. •Second week of nationally ranked opponents lands Pirates at Mt. San Antonio tonight at 6. Tony Aftobelll DAILY PILOT WALNUT Another week, another nation- ally ranked / opponent. For the second week in a row, the Orange Coast Col- lege football team gets to play against one of the top teams around, according to the J.C. Grid-Wire, with a noneonfer- ence battle at fourth-ranked Mt. San Antonio tonight at 6. •J'll be glad when this stretch of our season is over,• Coach Mike Taylor said, referring three straight weeks against top-25 teams. OCC lost to No. 5 El Camino, 30-0, last week and following tonight's clash with the undefeated Mounties (3-0), take on No. 16 Pasade- na City in Pasadena next week. "When we saw our sched- ule, we felt that if we could get through this stretch of the season healthy, we should be able to put together a strong run when division play begins, •Taylor said. "So far, we're somewhat healthy and JC FOOTBALL our spirits are up.• It's been a frustrating sea- son for the 0-3 Bucs thus far. Despite allowing fe wer points than anyone In the ...Mission Conference's Centralbtvislon (21.3 points per game), the Pirates' offense has be~n nonexistent, scoring only nine points in three games. ·1 know the offensive group IS working hard at try· ing to figure out a way to be successful. ~Taylor said. ·we need to take advantage of every offensive opportunity that presents itself." The Mounties are coming off a 51-34 win over Santa Ana. Quarterback Jeff Cordova threw for 285 yards on 17-of. 24 passing and had two touchdowns. The bulk of his passes went to sophomore Andre Cyrus (seven catches. 142 yards, 1 TD) and fresh- man Aaron Hosack (six pass- es, 116, 1 TD). "Mt. SAC's offense is very good and they have a lot of weapons, "Taylor said. "Defensively, I don't think they're quite as stout as El Camino was last week.· OCC's defense was led last week by sophomore line· backers Dustin Davis, Martin Janion and Justin Blackard. The trio combined for 40 tackles (26 unassisted) against the Comanches. COSTA MESA -For the Orange Coast College women's volleyball team there was time to joke with one another. laughing was allowed, and even poking fun at the official was cool. OCC responded well to its loss at home to Palomar Tuesday. Pirates Coach Chuck Cutenese said the team also responded well to losing three of its starters, Tasha Evelyn, Kelly McFarland and Brooke Kuhn to aknle injuries last week. •1 feel like that's my role,• Smith Sclid or her serving. ·1 take that real seriously. I get put in for that purpose and I just like to stay concentrated.· OCC STARTING LINEUPS OfRNSE l>ERNsE The Pirates' light approach was one of many reasons for their 15-5, 15-1, 15-10 nonconference win over San Diego City Friday at Costa Mesa High School. "It took them a little longer for them lo work together,· Cuteaese said. "There have been injuries. But the positive is that people have come in and stepped up. Lauren Cassity has stepped up.• Cassity, a product or Estancia High, was one of many Pirates who •stepped up· against San Diego City. Tina Nguyen had 26 assists. Daylyn Kelley, a product of Costa Mesa High, felt nght at home and finished with eight kills. San Diego gave OCC a slight scare in the third game. With the Pirates leading 14-7, the Pirates couldn't dose the game out and San Diego came back to puJJ within four. But then Smith came in the game and delivered the serve to end the match. No."9yer Ht. Wt.O. ll'ol. No. "9yer Ht. Wt. a . Pos. 11 Na HloGs 6-1 195 Fr. Q8 M ,_._ 5-8 175 ff. RB J7 ~ C-5-10 210 ff. FB 12 Jul1'lll DAU 5-9 175 So. WR J \1-.r STMM> m 5-8 145 Fr. WR •1 ... Am!MXIOW 6-3 245 So. TE 11 ~ llNunoN 6-3 286 So. LT 71 GMY "-LYN 6-4 300 So. LG t7 JMm Ci!••wr 6-4 213 So. DE 7S VNU 8-6-4 270 So. OT SSDM~ 6-1 220 fr OT IO TOWY W-6-2 210 So. DE "We were all just having fun out there tonight,• said Lauren Wilson, who fin- ished with' 15 kills, seven coming in the second game alone. ·w e had a really good practice yesterday. We got more comfortable with the lineup and we were And then there was Lori Smith, who "I look at the areas and just take my time,· Smith said. "I'm really comfortable serving because I've worked so much with it." 50 LMCll OWllZ 6-0 250 So. c M De-. GMCIA S·10 333 Fr. RG St En&l.o HM.I. 6-4 270 So. RT 45 MAlnllil JMllON 6-2 220 So. OL8 8 Dusiw DAVIS 6-1 230 So. ILB "Alrrw llMJCMD 6-2 240 So. OLB 2J ~ AlclMoe 6-0 165 So. CB 27 ---......, 5-9 180 So. C8 '2 Mww ~ 6-2 200 So. SS 25 9-r a-n 6-0 175 ff. FS Index g II II ..... .. .... Polley . , ... r'J ra Rott'll w11l 1lra<Uinl" an-&uhjttl lo t'firut,.rt ~ i1hout 111.iwr. TI1t pultlhlwr "'""n'"-tlir ri,rl11 10 tTll'OI'. n>tia. .. ~ir,, "'' i-4' or rrjl'f1 Rll) rla !\ifK'il ac.hrni~nrm. PlrA..i;c-n'JIO(I 1tn' rrror thAt mo' ti.· in )OIJr clru.~iflt'd ad imnll'tliu1rl1. ·nit' Doih l'ik11 &'t~pt~ no li8hili1\ for am· rrror in 0111uht'ni-c-nlt'111 for whK-h it 11111' bi- rr-1x11i.Siblt l'Xttpl for iJir <'Oil uf the •puce U<"tuull~ ormplNI h~ tlM' trror. (.n-11i1 ran 0111~ br allo .. eJ for 1hC' fir.I iu...-nion. !I ...... •• CJ iii let .... Byfu (<H'>) 6.1 I ·<•~9i ByPllw (Q.+OJ 6i'.:!·~78 ByMllMDP...,. J:!O \\'r<it Oa, 'uwt <41111 MCM. c:A •,-.!6:.!7 \1 '"'""' llk•L a. 1111 ~ SEIZVICE DIRECTORY , ,;.._ ~.,1 ... 1r •••tr ......... 1 1.I~..,. ""'"'"" 11"1 n 'II •oil ,.,. t .... L •llh•t'•lt1 'l"'~"I ------Deadllnes ------. llear8 Monday ............ Friday 5:00pm Thunday .. Wednesday S:OOpm -f'Of All Yoyr Home Md BUlinal Nttds -'li-ltplHJnf' ll::lOam-.>:0011111 '~-"rf ralil1 Tuesday ......... Monday 5:00pm Friday .......... ThursJay 5:00pm GIEM Dtvld AJlln Glem, luct- dlnly on Sept 27, 2000 beloved hutbend of Donni °""' end flthtf of Sutan, Julle Ann, Sttc.y, Htldl, Scott, end Robert Otem. Funeral to be helct It Luthtren Church of Ult R11urrtctlon, Mt2 HM!llton, Hunt· 1ngton IMch, ea. Sit leptMnbtr 30, l:OOPM. •nttnntnt !!!!vete. Call (949)64f.S671 ,, .. '"' .. , .. ... ,.,,... ... reil ............. .. \lftlk .. fo 8:30.m-M>Ol"n \li...,wnJn Wednesday .... Tuesd.ay 5:00pm Saturday .......... .friday S:OOput ....,tt ... ~·W~•M•N71d41 Noclce It glwn that purlUalll to Sections 21701·21715 of lhe Bu1lne11 end Prof111lon1 Code, Sedlon 535 of 1he Penel Code, NEWPORT MESA SELF STORAGE, 2550 New- j)Ott BMI.. C09ll Mela, CA. 92627 wlN Mii by competitive bidding on October 1&, 2000 at 10.00 a.m. Auollon to be held at 2550 Ntwport Bl'ld.. Colla MIN. CA. 92827. Pr~rty to be aold .. lotlQwt: ml•· callan.ou1 houHhold OOOCll. pereonal ttema. fumtturt. appllancN, and ~~longing to the Name. ' MlctlNI ~. 144 e..toe Peru. eoe ~Tagw,t £Mque ~z. 751 Tareee~.5t Elle~ 138 Pntcla Golt. 682 °""' c.r.w.. 325 Liii LePort, 220 Ther9ee C&MI. 2A FUCHA"O &IODERS. AUCTIONEER PublllMd Newpof1 8HCh·Co1ta MtH Delly Pilot &..-'llber 23, 30. 2000 lt41Z r•--11 wamll ---1.._1 __ ............... ~ .... . .... ,....... ... ... _-. ' l~.·-~~;;~·~ SUPERIOR COURT ALLY SERVED (PUA· lion noled above The IWalecl In COUit. yo1.1 rn1Y Hal. 3300 Newpoft Bou-Ct.plef 20.42 Matinera OF CALIFORNIA, SUANT TO COO£ OF Ntgtlivt Declaration bt .limlled to l8lllng «IV 19vard, Newpor1 BMdl, Miit and cr11t11 COUNTY OF CIVIL PROCEDURE llalll that the aubject ltlON laauM you or c.liloml, It wtllch time Cllll*' 20..57 wtllcltl llltl OR "NGE SECTION 415.10) OR <Wwelopmeut wit not ,.. aomeone t1M ralMd 11 and pltce 1JJY Ind 11 be t naw Oll'll1ay dlllrtct ,. SERVED BY MAIL 1U11 l'I 1 ~ e11ec:t the publlc heanng de-pef90nl lntefMltd rn1Y OOV9l1ng Ille oommtn::ia1 34t The City Dltvt. (PURSUANT TO CODE on tht envlronment. It 11 IOllbed In lhll noclct 0t appear and be heard propet1fea on tht north Poe Office Box 14171• Of CIVIL PROCEDURE the prutnt 1n1tn11on of In wrltttn cor· lhel9on. "you dllllngt elde of Coalt Highway ~·15~ SECTION 41540) WITH the Clly to ac:cept tilt respondence detivertd thll ptaject In oourt, you t>etween Rocky Point IN THE MATTER Of A COfYV OF THIS NO-Negative Decl111tlon to tht CiCy It or prior to mey be ~ to rllillng and lht Bede Bay Rldgt. 1he pot>llc hearing. For lnform4ltlon call (949) &44·3210. /SI Lavonne M. tt.rk· ..... ~ °"':illh N= 811ch·Co111 M111 OaHy Pllol Stptember 30. 2000 THE PETITION TO TICE OR WTTH A COfYV and aupporting docu· the public hearing. Fot «IV tl'IOM ...... you or The ~ MW and OF THE ORDER TO menta. Thie II not to be Information. call tomlOfll tlM rlliMd et amended dlvelopment Sa11 9 CHANGE THE NAME SHOW CAUSE FOR oondutd u 1111114' 'P" 949·&61·8175 or tilt public hearing de-IUlndardl lndude but -------Ja;z..ut OF K.EANIE ROZENNIE CHANGE OF NAME prCMll or der1let by tilt 949-044·3200. ICtlbtd In lhll notlCe or ara not limlttd lo Im· NORTHROP. THE PARENT MAY BE City ot the aboVe~· /81 L.aVonnt M. Hark· In written cor· proved urt>an dulgn, ~(~ HEARtNO SERV.ED BY MAIL 1crlbed 1mendm1nt1 ..... C~ r11pon4ence dtllv11td lendtcaplng, new aJgn TO NOH.PETITIONING ONLY IF THE PARENT and other 1P01icalion1. City of 8..oti to 1he City at, 0t prior IQ, ragulallona and ntw PARENT IS OUTSIDE CALIFOR· Tht lnlllal . Slud~/ Publlah Newpol1 the publlC heating. For lance 11andardl. Addi· (c,,.,.. OF CIVll NIA. Ntgallv• Oeclarallon 1 811ch·Cot1a M111 Information cell (IM9) tlonelly, tht amtndment .,..... · ROSALIE NORTHROP 30-day public review .,._ DailY Piiot Stpttmber &44·3200. Will cr11te 1 Otvttop. PROCEDURI! HAWKS, 829 Santla~ rlod Wat Masch 8, 2000 30, 2000 /81 LaYonne M. Harts· ment Plan rtllitW pro-HCTION 12m Rd Co... ....... £ I a...a .. 2000 ,..11u CASE NUMBEA .. ••• ......,_, " o ,,.,,. u, • aa apte· 'S1121 ..... ~ c... wtlert the "''T ,.. A202t09 92&28 "l.d In lht prtvlously· City of llMofl Wrw1 ntw ~' Put>lllhtd Ntwpor1 clltriboted Notice of In-NOTICE F Publl1h Ntwpor1 ~ pienl •. llghdng TO: RAMON GUER· 811oh·Coat1 M111 ltnt to adopt the 0 Btacl'l·Coata MeH _. Ind t911 ' foi oon- REAO IU Delly Piiot Septtme>er Ntgallvt Deolaratlon. PUBLIC ~RJHQ Dally Ptlol September fomllnOe to Int ne'# 1. NOTICE IS GIVEN 23, 30, October 7, 11, Although tilt lonnal pub-Notlot II ·-"""'1 gMll 30, 2000 Mndltdl. The a"*'6-THAT KEANIE ROZEN-2000 St1!1 Ile mftw pellod II Oll9f. lhet the City CoUnC11 of §t120 ment 1'141 not chanot .... NIE NORTHROP hat comment• on lht tht CitY of Newport nlellng pennltted U1M llltd 1 petlllon to dwlll' NOTICE OF Nagatlve Declaration 8eacfl Wiii hold • publo NOTICE Of or !Mtrlct.d bulldlng lhe ,,.,..... °' 'f04ll c:hld or PUIUC HEARINO .,. tnCOUrlOld. CooiM heating on 1hl lllOllct· PUllUC HUNNG heiQllt9 .... Nllntl of 'f04ll cH-NOTICI 11 HllRHY of lht NeoalM Otdata-lion of ............ tor ....__ nile · ~ hM bMn cken. ONIH that the ~ lion and' 1uppor1lng U.,.,.... .... -on Noeloe 11 ~ ....... ~. and II ha 2. You n,.y rn to lhe ,. _ __,. ..., ...... ,...... documtrQ .,. awilaOli prope1ty IC'icAded 11 111 llll lht Clly CoWd of bMfl ~ flit • llled petltJon for furthef """'""" "' .... "'"l lor _ ....... _......., ...... IE.Mt ..... ""' 1he CllY. of Newpoft .. ~ peltbjlarL (All of the Newport 8eacfl wll hold ,,_ ,.,,,... •ou In-8MCtl WIJ hold I l)IMc 08'9g0r'_,.T.ra. ceM document.I flltd • Pldo hMltno on lhe ~ II 1he PllMi1a A UM '*"'* t :f. !\ta ring on th• ~ · Ill wWI Ille oourt .,. 9Wlll-l(lfllk:allon ~ lhe etty Oe9anment, City ol pnM • w.Mlf 01 • Marl"•r'• 11111 of 11\1 1lllornl1 1ib1t for txamlnetlon In of ""'4Ht IMOfl for Newport a.ch. 3300 mMt P.lftlinO rlQU!re-~ V.... eM1 EmAn>ltfMIQll ~ .,. c.ae 111 kapt by lhe JM ~ Nt~n Boultvard, ::::. ~ • l*90tlll OM6ti' ,......,. Aet........ , h .... COUl1 dttt\) GPA H •3(C) and Newpol1 Beed\ Celllof· .:C,":;'.: eMI A"mf•rnt Ne. ...,.,... •I "'"' 3• A heating on 1he Al'lllndl'Mlnl No 902 nla. m5'-1711. or by ~( l oi.tClt TN ... Thi llr9'ICllO yt. = =;: 1111cS petition wttl be htld In (PC No9. 52 and 53): °':"! L.any Lawrenoe. :J:•t lnellld.. • elon and '~ lllld on.,. 1 ~ ~ ~ 703 Of tilt ~~ 8:':~ ~ :·.::.""; Of .UC (t) ~ =:=-:.:-... 0... ... ;;Tfle =-~ ~I~ ::= W:,":d ~=~~·~ "='~ NI ta.\ = IO .. t ~ =::: ~~0::,-·&T,: ~~!'~ OfYIN lhtl t PIAlllc ~~"..."': .......... -:-... ~=-·i:f. 2000 at 2.00 o'oloctl ...... ......,..., ...... ..,,. .... , ... " t...tng ._been aohldo II ~ ...,... ... ~ *-lflll h .._.. INdl p.m rteem•ry '° pnMdll tot uled.,.,...,. Pllnr*la Clut t (Ae;M.c11Mnl .,,...,.., .,,.. ...... ~at"'*" .me ~ !!..,.e!.!allndto 1~ C'anne=41ht .,:= COlr• ·u1tt1 on lhe 111fi ~ ~) ~ =-•-=-• ~ lflll ,...... .., .,.. e1 ,.,. '~_."'¥ I '""'"' l":.U -.. ..__ dlr d 0.-., ..... 9f -... ~ .. ......_. ---UL .,.,.... ....... d - lhe ~-·~ lht pell-.,.. j;;'10.;M:1t.;;;; N "°"' oe 7:11 ,..._In tfle ·colllornlo ;;;",;; ~ ~ ......, Md 111 t.e;:d tlori ,,..,..1d not bt IOllllNll boUndMy ol .. ;r.a.m. or Etwlror.ment84 Qua8'r IOIOI of 0 ....., ....._ I ~ aNllr'll Jtanetd, JM oourt mey City -"' °' the Ian .. IMdl CIJ Aot. ~...-. .:... w 1'111 .,..,_ In ...., fOll v;:Tf.'!' ~ ~ ... ,,.,.,.,. H11, ~ 1c1U-ri.::ice le~·= ...... , .........,._VI-,.._ ......... ~ Ill "°9AL• *"""° lllllil c:.tilOr. =.."T"~": MID ~"" .. 111 ~In ..... d "'°' == =-~ : ROP """"' NOTICI • ~ .,.. ... l/llfl/ .,,.. II lllld •'ii;-.., d f;.;;' Avenue •"41 "' pullla :=-£ • 'We'll A GOOD ADI PUBLIC NOTICE PROPOSED NOTICE OF AV AILABIJTY OF ANNUAL RETURN Punuant to Section 8101(d) ~ the lntam.I ~ Code. lhlt fll annual return tor the YMr ending Feb. 28. 2000 al THE EDWAAO O. THORP FOUNDA· 110N, • prlY9te loundl· llon, la IYaWlle for l)lb-lic llltplClon by llff Jn. *Mlild dlllel'I Who ,.. qutela • 111 tht ~· tlon'• Of1ndpel oftlce lo-cattd . at 21 Rldgell!ll Or,, Newpof\ OMcfl, CA t2ee0. Ttltphont (~) 759-0740; ~ lhe ... of 11on anc:1 for 1 diva ......., cMtng nomllll bullrwM houn. of~~'T'9" EdwlnS O. Thorp. Put>llal\td N1w90rt 8Hc:h·Co1t1 M'111 ~Plot -- £=~·~ ~:. ~·= ..... ~·~d,..., =~·~-:. ..... = :.r: .. r.= ..... ~.. • THE NON· ~ ~ .. C1J d ..,__ ...... MMI ~ r-flllt ........ ~ 11 '"' H eor• rr.HT&;: ;:;;"'..:-:;,=: ~ ~ 1111 .....,... a.r !:TX,~ ........ .:t:Pn.,-:::. ______ .... ......,._..u., 11111 ... __ \ Doily Pilot I'• ... ,•, 11 i·I I did! . . Christine Carma (949)7n.8120 Eu.109 OPEN HOUSE SAT a SUH 12-6p 2504 w. Oountront s Levels On The Btedl 111 clesa, wlllllt water-.. Un.Qy. h.m. sale Of .... Aslong $1 8M Bl PICbtd 71~7300 • 229 NPB 30th St PENTHOUSE 2bf, 2.5bll condo, fll'lnlte tllt, By Owner reduced lo $4751000 71Wff.96M NEWPORT BEACH 1747 Cenella Pl-. 4BR 28A. moodenztd keh. ::c 2 Cit lllldl 911 sac, grt '*"'· 8,000SI lot. ready IO move In Af1. Joan 949-293-463' Burr While 94~5-4630 PRIME ESTATES --·~ . ·, I ...--.-. ....1'• • I ·a . ....... : ·-..... leer gar. large, lighl & AM ._, ::::.;~""800/mo"-"11...::.':.::.===-=~:..:..blacll_._· I 11• IDPORTHOIWCllEM:lfll!2f. I bnghtl 949-642-4917 ' t ,.. Ofllclt .... 57511 ' 1 Ol3tf • $2.0I F60. ,..., NlwDOlt en.. Avtil now 1213)'7*@!0. NlWPOAT CINTIR Shell olbldlltt epece. ~ Rt1I E1t1t1 related t4M44-T714 &t 222 WANTED STUDIO Of 1 Br lor pol'! .,. wllmll sw.t dog N B. Of H.B. p.'efd. 949-574-4221 714·374-7104 .. MOVING SALE J-·· Antiqutl 50% off 2111 lal1yttte, Canlltfy VIiiage. Ut.,.73·5118 Seel 15111 IO Oct. 15'11 Oldet Stv6t fiWllltln f'IANOS • ColedllMs .....,._._ •S....•AIMt·~~ MCASHPAIDM ... ,... .. _ ...... WE llUY QTATU ·~!Nindly-.. -.,... --~ COtJSIGW.HNTS ' I . . .:1M22e SOUTHC8AST AUCTI N 22tZS..Mlllk .._Am.CAmtl -·~CA•ll' • JAFCO ExecutlYt wood olla lumiUt, s dtlka w/ left return. 4 Credinus 5 Ht-bade Exec cha#s Nor1ft. 1 ... _• __ .. _• __ ; _•_IT_.l I • ~ I ::.::::;::.g.w..::.~::...:"IOl..:..~:.:~;:..sys-=222=::-more_Man-_1 SENSATIONAL FLOOR SAMPLE SALE ELEGANT NEW ARRIVALS!!! SOfAS, CHAIRS, LAMPS & MOREi SHORES INTERIORS 2640 AVON STIIEET, NEWPORT SCH CALL 949-642-2255 Moving mu1t Mil 3pc. beige leather sofa set. $1500 Lg lramed mirrors $100ea obo 949·278-1'233 1456 TOP -.-COROS1 Jlzz R & 8, SolA, Rodi, lie. 50'• ' llO'• MIKE 94H46-7§05 ........ ,_ 8clltPeeple TeWMt &PPOWl'JIE.YI' S£l'llJlS Full·Ume Illy & C\'tlllnj( .-.hills 812·815 Top-Produecrs Higher • Ua.llll. ln1.tl l111o111W't • \Ol·Kl'lu • PU! ..... 0i .. ' U,...t<'fltl Cftlj.l.~lll<'lll Eiiull~l-Jl.,l 1t1 l'IM!l 10 C•-M,...., -'"'""''"ii (,.U b ·oi•• -888-313-4744 lnttriOf 0.1lgn Office FT/Pro1ec1 AccountanV Bkeepet needed lmmed tor pncinc;'blll1ng receivables, project flit mgmt, CUSI serv. Excel/Word. gen oftice slulls. P O/lnvoict mgm1. high vol ptptrwork Hcelltnl ve<b111writt1n ekllls. A per19ct pos for matufe bus person 111111 wails IO WOl1t tn I creatMl enw. ~ be a Mlf•lal1ef w/pos anrtude Con1ac1 LYM by lax 94g. 759-0 t 29 CPK NEEDS YOU ASAP! ~at Sov& C-. Plua! C1hrotn11 Piiu bdlm 11 bmpia Ill NEW and INNOVATIVE ASAI' Q)IMqil to Coll• Mal' Ou~ -ioa.-wlll p!O'flllf a high quallfY CPK -1n an tmrf!llC qud·Krvt cnmonmtm. ASAP lam mcmbcfl cnioy: FlcxlWt Sclledlllel • Gftac .., MgmL ear-Pmihs • Es.c. T'nia1111 ·~ Heal1lt leMlita -NOW HIRJNG- •P-iualP&fttrJ <Ml. ·!'Pep Cool. .c..lllcn .o;.i. w...J.n Apply 1n ptrson, Mon·Sat, 9am·7pm SOUTH COAST PLAZA Ph 71057.1279. 2ocl Ln-d,1211 (~ &om lelb. Body Wiwtia) wwwcpk.mm • IJIOO.CPK.TAJ.IC ·- INSURANCE PAYMENT AUDITOR Glrden Grow Eslablished 11.0tlng hrm 15 lookng tor cendidlltes lo rep<esem them on a nabonal level E.lpentnce 11 requ1rld 111 1t !tut one ol the lolowwlg ar-; ho5ptal b6ng refwld e.cpenence or hlllll tnannet knowledge Al IMSI 35•. trawl req.arld I'-.. ltnd or la< resume and &alaty history IO Acc9nl ._._. Rtc:o'tery Solutlona Attn: P*lny lrlljelltJ 7171 lltrey Roed Lota & Ocean Vlewll • BAY FRONT • .,.._ C.11 Prtriek Tenore Upstairs 28r t Y26a, l/p, :!.,, "r!nc:• ~ i.;; Local kitl-, Cltl, dogl lor adoption -r Safa I Sun'• noon-4pm F11hlon ltland ANIMAL NETWORK Info 94M44-227t Omalll. N! 68108 l-illlll: Ptnny .Majflkl O lnautlllCtR.coVtfY .colll lu: 402·384-1361 Agent 94MS&-9705 ~· .~· lrig, no f!'S· sand, I catpOfl W/O. 9 mo .................. ~-11 Y!!l!V $2700 949-673-7800 GREAT EXERCISE; Wtd/ Sun J.l Opm 8 Genia, 7 ladles 6h • Sq daoot r~t ASAP. car pool Sherman Garden• F11 IHDI _.. VERDE 1141 TINll °'· 58R U8A fonnal din, fOJlllll 11~111 w/marblt lrplc.. te 15,000 Agt Anni 714-$40:7355 OCEAH VIEW CONDO S2ot,OOO. Good loc. Cannell &pee, llgl Prud Ca Realty 949-642·3873 WATERFRONT BARGAIN I The Price Will Amin y ou1 AQ!lll (949) 723-8120 "Employee. " uEmpleado." "Ar'beitnehrner. '' "E~." 949-548-7839 I I . Mloldh .,.... RenUll • 15' :a -2~_.:..;E.=~-=-:.:.::""Rtel'-12-:0_v . Nlww 3Br 38a yearly, MW 120 3Sltl St, IJl'MI unit, 3llf 1402 =t I Bert>trt...:..O aJ wtO. ~ 2bt, 2 cs '*'-W/O, 1ar91 . . ,_.., c, · • clHn, vault ctll, OW ,__ _____ _. ~~73-3ot ~ 14H73-7IOO Found C.. tm ~ htlr Calleo, very 1tlecli0nalt YICS1ly Sl Mlctlei. Newport A1d9e Newport Coa11 V..,_ SI 949-7~1870 Newpor1 lallnd 28' 'Bl. baytront, tum upper unn Nov t ttwu May 31 No IJll', or W/O S1800/mo Dim Princt 94!H18-1520 Ont Fon! Rd Bal>oe Plln 4Br 4 SBI, lam rm, den, b.rtlarl crtyTd, 24Mr po. gelid oorrvn 2 pool. pua.ig LOST BLACK CAT Big, malt, 1111 e toet on .. loot. Grttn ay11, vie, Ptlurlno/Brleltl CM. REWAROlll 714-557·7095 ... ~11 gfffn, htness ctnltr, .---------. ~.950/Mo S62·693-5!)47 1412 ~ I •U)C) ISlE Clwmng 2Br 2811 lwn home. IO plllO .__ _____ _. ?cgar. $2300/Mo Elin ~ • 949-67Ht61 Plclllc Vllw ...._.., llC. Ocean VllW • Lot 834 • Graves A & B ·Vllued $7600.. sel lor $5SOCY11.. Of e... Oler ~i51-5990 I '4, Mm&MT I www.anlmalnetworlt.ota . /COUECTIIUS . = ~ = very loving S300 ·S500 I'\. _1 ( l 949·646-M73 i.l\!)111 rc...:en M>PQAJMIA 4IO MUSICAL Certified Antique INSTRUMENTS & Rc~idential Comcrm Appraisah \ IVll:.N L H ~'5EL (714) 841-0473 E-M.iil: hessdviv@aol .com BALDWIN PIANO only S9150 Alto SAXOPHOffE new In c.... s.450. 714-45 7-4163 714-527.otOO Admin A11istanV Event Coordinator FIT, Monday·Fridly Tua BBQ Catering C..A HI00·557-41U Archlteclurt • CAO DRAFTER • loolling tor a change? busy Newport Bead! hrm needs 'f0'1' he4p Musi be ptOhclent 11 AIAc>CAD 14. '2000 & able lo oemonstrall knowledoe ol conSI Syslem$ malenlls dela!llr)g PC ktmcy Arch CAO chttm exp req d. Fax resume IO feylor & Aaoc. Archittc;ts 949-574-1332. BANKING EEO Plcltlc Mefcanttie 811111 a las1 growing hlgn-recn COITVMltly bank llas an ou1StlnOng car88I QllPON1ltY lor .a Ml trme CuslOlner Selva RepresentalM! fl)( °" . Newporl Beach olflOe. Ouallficallons Must 811JOY a last.paced 81Mronment one year tetlef expenence, '"1emel banking ,savvy, Wold. Exc:S & rn f)'e!fl!Ted excetent aJStome! serw::e II* PMB ot!etS corrc>elJM ~aid~ excelenl benefits package 1'ldudinQ a ~1(k) plan. medal. denial. Y1S1011 and tie f\Slla/lOe 11\ease ,,,_tax Of e-mail resume 'll'th salaly hcs*>fy IO PACIFIC MERCANTILE BANK 450 Newpon C«1* Dnve. Sle 100 Newport Beach, CA 92660 ASSEMB L y SERVICE I ... ~Fax··~~:;;;;1~E··=·.:;;;;;~oom--.. TECH Local arta. good PIY I' CAil CIASSIFIID TODAY AND GET TIIE WORD om TOMORROW! and b8nefits No txpenenoe Went.cl la!e model l1IQMTl-required Toll Fru benl exercise tit.• -tJecyde 18n·250-4791 -Olamoocl>aclt Of equrvaleol CLERICAL CUSTOMER SEfMCt Entiy LeveUGtnlfll Olla Pan'41me lor pollll lliOl'I " Computer/No Exptntnee F ........... ~ <AL. wt S11 82 to $18 57/hoor aslDI _... •• ""'"" e.neti1S & Paid Tranng :::!r.i:.:.....::M::tl;.;:14=:•~1245=-- 1-818-942-{)245 tl1 C5516 tnnd. Jacll 949-675-9826 ATnl: PIA YQ1Jf PC 10 work' $250-$2500~ PT/FT I • lilERCtWOSE I (888)852·3395 Of YISil WANTED •-.wortthltec.n•t con. Shop In Cdll needs . . personable lun ptlWOll. 4-5 •CARING PEOPLn days a wtell. lun easy jobl 01t1 ProctllOf/Typett needed H9i tnoomt ~ hal 1111 hour• basic computer sklll required. Sales politions tJso °'*' (949) 642-5678 Needed PT/llt1 hrs to ApplY II 3131 E. PCM. 1111111 • din.-'" the ._ of the lildtrty In ..., t1ow. 7UU•'llO 800-990-9835 or 941-351 5514 or ¥$11 WWW ltl9llwcllA> com =Certified Pre-Owned := b)f BMW For ultimate peace of mind, rvcry Ccnificd Pre-Owned BMW is backed by Tbc Certified Pre.owned BMW Protection Plan, covering chr vehicle for up 10 l years or 50,000 miles (whichever comes first) form che date of cxpimion of che 4-ycar/50,000-milc BMW New Vehide Limited Warranty.•• The Prorccuon Plan indudcs rv.o kcv dcmcncs: Certified Pre-Owned BMW limited Warranty .. &eked by BMW of Non.h Amcria. Inc., and iu nationwide nctWOrlt of BMW centers, oomed rep.airs are nude only by BMW-trained tcdtruoans using only genuine BMW rcpla.c:cmmt p.ms. BMW Road.side Assistance .-Peace of mind follows you anywlmt in the USA, 24 houn .l day, 365 cbys a year. 1998BMW . Z3 '97J18i S Sped.'-Mm. liA. & ~ OXC'L':'llll - "97 3 18i ~S.-llwMahlyl..wO.~-~ ~2.J , , ........... t...M.lo. 'ft.(01~1--$24.m ''.HD 1.u ... .-....1 ... MJO. ,.,..,411."'>'~"-"~ WJ.Mi u.•s,,..,...._.~,.fm _iam ,.S»l i-.. ~m,........,Cl.Wi .......... ~APR •4;12: ..... PRE OWNED FOR $ 'j7740iL l.ewM.IQ.(l),•s.ltsVOS.'ffi---.-~ '97740il. CD, ....... s-1 -Sil~ .,, 741NL ll~~CD(~'Rfl CASH.MU£~ ~740iL m.._ W~(WC.14ri-..---.-,U1IADlllJI 4.N7Jllil. . --~1191,,..-~--A .... VTl'I ..,..,., •• lwSta '• 1 ._- -· ' 1 · - I . L ' -. -· 0.. ,., ..... ,..,, ..... .................. =:: ............ = ........ ..... .....,.. .... . . ., .. ,41, ... ,. Of wtett. ,,........, .... DttHWASHfRS Nn~ ~ end E¥rilg ehlfta. Rea bau!I grtlt W0(1dllg enW. Ollll 1*11111. ""'=.: c:..,. Ill! !i CGllt !!!I· WY PHOHI WOM ....... llO~ ........ "'" ·12Av. ~ t-tooGt.f717 I --~"4"cliS ""'~ ••r•; I Newport Beach 2000 DISCOVERY SERIES 11 CAFETERIA WORKERS/ FOOD SERVICE ReqWfM ~ com- munk:atlon akfllt, food MrYlce upldencl """" Knowlldgt d ldlllon .,., food slflly pNlentd. NUTRITION ASSISTANTS Mull h9YI IX~ com-IMricatlon ... with the llbi8y lo Udon In • ,... plCld tnWonmenl. Food 111vlc1 up1rl1nc1 Pftftrrtd SERVICE CARE TECHNICIANS Requires 1trong com- munk:atlon lklls, Qlltomel' ,.rvice abilities. Must bl ftQlile end • teem player. HOUSE KEEPER Requlm preYlous house keeping experietQ, holpi- 111 preferred. FT/Evrilgl end Per dienv\11111bfe. ''." .. I 0 I . " " I ' ••.• '' ( ) 'I \ ~ · Sales ~VM4:-Representatives~~­ wanted we are k>otlng fOr Siles RtpresentaUVeS wno •nJov meeuno and greeting r>tOC)le. WOf'1c fleX1ble hoUt'S: afternoons. evenings and weekends. EXPIOre our successf\lttv proven progl"lm throughout ttle or.nge Countv area. sec:ur1ng new sut>Scrtpttons tor the Los Angetes 11mes. • $ Rexlble HoUrs: -. ftllt. ume or pert.ame • AWr'eoe 125.ao .,., hOUr t NO ..... ~ MCllllll'Y $ Wit tnln the l'9M people I IF 11'1 Eiits I ED Pl.EASE CA>N1M:'r1 I ~---(714)SSl-I~ Einhorn Yoffee Prescott Mission Crltlcal Facllltles Group • This internationally rec~nized architectural and engineering firm specializing in design and consulting services for doto centers and web hosting focilities is seeking professionals with experience in the areas listed below. • UPS System Maintenance and Operation • Doto Center Facilities Operation • Electrical and Mechanical System Commissioning • Electrical System testing to verify design intent and monufocturer specifications This is on excellent ~nity for experienced ~ofessionols to meet the challenge of high capacity and high reliability focilities f()( the corporate ono internet rr community. EYP offers a competitive COf'npensotion that includes medical insurance ond 401 lk) plan. · Daily Pilot ; _] ...... .. .., ..... ti W 119,1, I Cllillr ........ ............ ......... ,.. ... ,,,, ..., .... .. ..mo.. ... ........... flf'I ........ J'llU •'•"· 11ft Duffy Eledrtc 'f7 Ilk• MW, aM optiOOI, 11•.000'obo 11<M24-2m ... ~1165otl 21 FT DUffY 'f7 xlnt cond. CO. ll1Q. new cowr S17K 94~ c:tl 94•28}!§71 1-==1 WANTtD Slip tor • ~ tlful exceptlooeHy maln- lllntd S3ti Mffbolt. 12ft blem ASAP. 94M73-4737 °' c:tl ~9:§3:H737 BMW l3 'f7 Ul, 19d, 1t K Ml, SIP (1llOOOO) 123,9915 CREVIER 11111W 71'=@H17t Leather, V-8, AM/FM Cass ~~·~ee= Visit our w.bsite at: eypoe.com .. • ' PTO (plld 1i1nt otl). 1 36 mllCtiig 401(k) plln. onlllt Cllldcare c... end peld hetllh bentfib. ~....__ Hoeg HotplW Send resumes with cover letter and salary expeciotions to: a...Scott Einhom Yafhe Prescott Architecture & Enaineerina. P.C. ~-~ Minion Criflcal ,..,... tlfoup IMW 1211 't7 the ~I luildina lo 1111, AT, CO, More AIJany, New Yori' (3V°':2~A ..,:o·• =·============j"".=:'°7:=~:·~ 71HJWt71 CLASSIAED AOV£ATISING BMW 5211 • It the l'llOUf'Ct you CM count on to 1111 ~ml. .-, a:;:. I myrtad ct merdlandlaa ...... '*"-our CREVIER BtlW columnl compel quallfted ~to call 71+gH17t 2 at this Payment 949 642·5678 Land -Rover Newport Beach 1540 Jamboree ,, (949)640-6445 STARTING ANEW BUSINESS? • • • • • • • • • • • Artwork for illustration purposes only. + 99c +tax Closed end lease 36 mo. 10k ml. per year, .20c per mile thereafter. $4,999 total to st•rt. Total payments: $12,599 +tax, residual S19,881. Subject to prior sale and credit approval. (259711 , 260232) Prior rentals. Price good thru 10/1/00. -lAtJMeiot FIND an apartment through claSsified ~ 2000 Mercury Mountaineer '90BMW 735iL '98MERCURY MYSfIQ.UE AT. lo mi, ABS, P"I'. POL Wlbld. loldal. CD, Iii, .W.. 'ffZ'f aic:c. immaciUr $8999 $12,999 200 '96 LINCOLN '00 FORD IS MARKVIII EXPWRER {' 40$ FrftUMIY, Exit Harbor, Soatlt J ,,,,. m· LINCOLN AMERICAN LUXURY ' "AI.I/' 2000 TOWNCARS& ONTINENTAIS - Daily Pilot ' --~·-·.::1 ---·~ -----------., D YES, SELL MY CAR Run your ad in the :-:~-:------------- Newport Beach- Costa Mesa Daily Pilot and the Hunting Beach- Fountain Valley Independent to reach Oller 100,000 homes. Fax us this Allllom,.._._ form with your credit .,._ __ ... -.----lblll--- card # or mail with I a check today! Run for a week! If your car does not ..... 0., .... IJCIW ..... Cmla ....... CA .. l sell, we'll run it for l __ "!!""'!."'~ ~·"!:' ~·~--__ another week FREE! JM:l..JID:ln All fo~ Just s10·. '!~! llVt lnd£~n4ef!! POLICY In In "'°" lo °"" .. bell MMct pol.tllllt lo IN ~ "' Ind ~ .. wl require Contred«1 who ldYtrtiM lo lht StMct Dirtdofy IO IOCludt tlltlr Cont ractors Llct nH _.,.,in thtir.,.,,... mM. Your~ la p!y appedlltd. A GOOD ADI • <:Um* CMATM TU • 1 I 1 ... .... CllllmC. ,..... .... &9111111 !f!IM! M nttJ.., f11Gtout.C. Tit .... " ..... '"LI.::" r-----~--- * M1110CUMt ft " 'I ........ 11111 OC ·= ..... ....... ...... ir-"-,.,--. -~ L_~ ·-. -_:_ .. rr-----1 ~.__ -~--· Bridge '°"'mo-... .. WEEKLY BRIDGE QUIZ Wllllt, 1411 M. lolded, 9000 Q I ·Neither vulncnblc, u South tow .. 1 ..... cond. you hold: 125.~ Mf1Mm OllC.., .. 4WD,IMC,IH m ta1001/3007 t1t,llO LNID lltOYO NEWPORT IEACff MIUOU41 ••••• ...., DMlloft 'W ~ .... ~ ltONDA CMC ._ Mo 28k ni, '*-• IC, cJc, kJ1 power, am/Im aterto. ll2.500. 94i-752·1075 •At (;)AJl OU •KQtUJ The bidding has~: SOUT1I wur NORTH I• ,_ I ' What do you bed now? W1' ... Q 2 ·Neither vulnerable. as South you hold: The biddJn tw ~: NORTH f.AST" SOUTH I• ,_ INT Zr;:) ... ! What do you bid now? Q 3 • Boch vulnerable. a:. Soulh you bold: •AICQ5 OJ 5 OAQ10870 •~ Pinner opens the bidding With 00C club. Whit do you respond? Q • -Boch vulnenble. u Saudi you hold: •KQIOJ O AQlUJ O K75 •t The biddln& has~ SOUTH WF81' NOITH 1\7 ,_ i. ' What do you bid now? Q 5 • Boch vulnen.1>16, u South you hold: •AJIJ (;)AJI O Q •K17'5 Pattner opens lhe bidding with coe club. Whal do you respond? Q 6 -Boch vulnerable. as South you hold: • Q 765 .., 15 0 Q12 • .11196 Partner opens lhe biddin& with two no trump. What do you re&pood? /,1111k for 011:."K'C'fl 011 Monday . HONDA PflElUOE SI • Blk. 5 sp, io.ted, AC, PS, PS, PW. MWOOI, wt11 main, nn llnt. 15()1( M. r9COld. JAGUAR XXI .. JED W'AAHGLER '13 MtfCtdll -Sl • $3200 949-492-8972 JAGUAR JUI 'W SEDAN 40 133,1115 '7-6212 BAUER JAGUAR 71'-95l4IOO eon-elt 2D 4x4. 67lc ni, big whtels, Showroom cond, dlromt ..... -..6313 Bllllni top, CIO, aystem. t.lchlh, 2 lope. • tw. lllr, BAUER JAGUAR $9000 obo 714·317-0164 local $14,950 714-751-2464 71WSMIOO JAGUAR XXI 'ti Con"'1lblt 2D .... 9M207 BAUER JAGUAR 71W5MIOO JAGUAR JC.II '17 SEDAN 40 ' JAGUAR 2000 ~Type 131,1115 '7-6244 BAUER JAGUAR 71W6MIOO .&AGUAA w. SE>AH 40 -.-M17' BAUER JAGUAR 71~ JAGUAR XXI 'W vt Sedlrl 40 M2.tl& OM2S3 BAUER JAGUAR 71•..-...00 COUPE 2D ***** Mt.• '7'6242 Jeep CMrollM UtNttcl BAUER JAGUAR .. ~...._ 714-153-4100 ~ Scll#day, Sepe.nib. 30, 2000 B1 -~M.111,ai&.;TuO~D~~ ... ~"-''S._.. ___ ,,: CROSSWORD PUZZLE _ SELL your home through classified can c1m1t1td TNay (Ml 142·5171 Cen't eeem to gettoalthoM r'9pllirjobs around the house? Let the Clanlfted s.ntce Dllw:-.r help you find reliable help. WIDlllY 11-:=.a 11 ....... • ___ __. ;~ I 0 • j • • ! ... _ -• J. --J.._ •• QMll) OfilJ9eQ" Mlrac:le Toucll tit -.. 710 s. 8loolftnl IJ, An!l!!l!I 714-?Mml ~-w-1 t.. -.. 4 , - ' BEST MOYfRS SeM*'IJ al dlltt. lnand, .... C011t10u1 a mnM 1.-.~IT -.aewm&.mf!!M Cllll'll ··-··-·--i.mm•-1-.. ....... _ 714-895-(,677 .. ,.. .. • t .. ; • . -. . . B8 Saturday. Sef*mb! 30, 2000 . . Daily Pilot . 3 EASY .WAYS ~ To DRIVE (2000 Catera) _ ..• tar -. $ PURCHASE FOR ONLY $28,9939!.(.~~oo .. Ust •oce -$ 3,651.03 .. Nabers Discount OR LEASE FOR s2991. ~9or 36 month 1ease. $3410.00 cash oown or trade equity. p1us Inception lees. tax on decap & rebate • $4202.48. 1 only 4493. 12k ml. per year. 20C per mi. In excess. OR 1 PAYMENT LEASE Sn8643~24months+tax &license . • ~ t2k ml. per year. 2o. per ml. In excess. 2000 Ale ro 2000 Bravada 2000 Intrigue Alm>MATIC AIR CoNDITIONING AM/FMSnREo SAVE $6 MSRP $32,105 ,111 SALE PRICE $25,994* SAVE S5 155 MSRP $28,150 . O t SALE PRICE $22,995* ·One only at this price. Alter all factory rebates & credit approval + tax. license, doc. and smog fees. Vin 1380602. OR 0.9 ~APR FINANCING UP TO 60 MO. (O.A.C. THRU GMAC) AND ~vt $3,155 2000 Seville STS 2 0 00 Escalade 2000 Eldorado O VER 50 QUALITY P R E -OWNED VEHICLES AVAILABLE '90 TOYOTA CAMRY low miles, auto, many power features, only .. 1(430476) '95 MERCURY COUGAR XR7, leather, Aero p<>dtage, super sharp! (600148) '93 CADILLAC ELDORADO White pearl, tan leather, many extras, reduced! (612435) '96 FORD WINDSTAR 7 ~, low miles, beige, excellent oonditionl (A23319) '96 OLDSMOBILE CUTLASS Supr., low 26k miles, squeaky dean! (355812) '99 OLDSMOBILE CUTLASS V·6, CD, low miles, bol. of worr., previous rental! (334952) '98 FORD MUSTANG GT V-8 supercharged, low miles, 5-speed, hhr, bot. of worr. (269844) 55,988 ~1,988 58,988 s9,988 Si,1,988 513,988 . $15,988 '00 OLDSMOBILE SILHOUETI'E Dual door, rear air, CD & mcnl Bal. of warr., prev. rental. (211055) '97 CADILLAC CATERA Beige, low miles, moonroof & morel ( 172278) '97 CADILLAC ELDORADO I.ow miles, V·8 Northstar, beige, ton leather, bol. of""'°"· (601068) '99 CADILLAC DEVIW White, ton leather, low miles, bol. of worr., previous rental! (789441) '00 OLDSMOBIU BRAVADA Low 76(YJ miles, white, tan lealher, CD, moonroof & ,morel (206798) '99 CADILLAC SIVIW low 1 lk mil., CD, aloys, bal. olworr. (907529) '98 CADILLAC SEVIW STS Low miles, block, lealher, CD & morel Compare! (926871) 519,988 519,988 $21,988 52 4,988 526,988 531,988 5]1,98·8 1 98 OLDSMOBILE INTRIGUE $ 6 88 GLS, low 18k miles, leather, CD, moonrooE & mcnl Bal. of worr. (389522) 1 '9 100 BUICK CENTURY S 88 LTD, leather, power seat, bat. ofwor'r.1 ~,...IQI (217819) 4 17,9 '2000 CADILLAC DEVIW Low 18k miles, 1t1wir, .._, bal. olwarr., Pf*V. rwltall (224746) 532,988 ,.----537;9'8 '99 CADILLAC SEVIW STS Only 4200 m"-, CO, aloys & morel (928671) NABERS 2600 Harbor BOulevard • Costa Mesa (714) 540·9100 ,