HomeMy WebLinkAbout2001-09-06 - Orange Coast Pilot..
SERVING THE NEWPORT -ME.SA COM.MUNmES SINCE 1907 ON 1HE WEB: WWW.DAILYPILOT.COM
After trekking more than 5,200 miles from New Orleans,
the areas new Coast Guard cutter arrives in Corona del Mar
DON LEACH I DAILY PILOT
Lt. John Kidwell, commander of Coast Guard cutter Narwhal, and his crew land in Coron.., del Mar after 41 days at sea.
Paul Cllnton
DAILY PILOT
On Wednesday. a handlul or eager family
membe{S greeted the crew at the Coast Guard
home base tn Corona del Mar.
W eary. but wiser, the crew of
the Coast Guard cutter Nar-
whal blew into Corona del
Mar on Wednesday after a
41-da.y jaunt through eight countries.
The New Orleans-to-Newport Beach trip,
which began July 27. was the maiden voyage
for the Narwhal. Along the way,. the crew
members learned their new ship inside and
out.
"We know how to handle her," said Lt. John
Kidwell, the Narwhal's commander. "But it's a
day-to-day learning process. It's like a new car.
You hear those squeaks, and you need to find
out where they're coming from.•
Along the trip, Kidwell and the crew
stamped the ir passports in Golfito, Puerto
Quetzal, Caho San Lucas arid a handful of oth-
er exotic ports.
Government officials in each port gave the
SEE PORT PAGE AS
Take the school money. out of Home Ranch project vote
Tie linking together of the
evelopment of a choice
piece of Costa Mesa prop-
erty and a sizable contribution to
local schools by the·Segerstrom
family has caused a great deal of
passionate repercussion in this
community. And well it should.
I've followed the news stories
and the multitude of letters ~v
ering a multitude of positions,
most of which boiled down either
to we should or we shouldn't
The letters have been admirably
literate, free of excessive rhetoric
and to the point. It's dubious if I
can add. much except, perhaps,
to take my own shot at clarifying
J~N.Bel
MECUIVI
the issues involved.
Throughout th.ii dialogue.
there has been a sensitivity to the
word "bribe" that sent me to
Webster. There, "bribe" is
defined as follows: •A price,
reward, gift or favor bestowed or
promised with a view to pervert
the judgment or corrupt the con-
duct of a person in a position of
trust ...
It would be difficult to find a
more precise description of· the
manner in which these two totally
disparate matterS are being.
approached by the Costa Mesa
City Council. If there is one sav-
ing grace, it would have to be that
it has all taken ']>Ja.ce in the open.
No ldddihg around here. You
give us what we want, we'll kick
in some heavy sugar to your
schools.
. Animal saver ~dered by debt
•Newport resident has
been rescubig woilld-be ·
~forfiveyean,butw
.hAVing financial diffiCulties •
. .
It reminds me -in principle,
at least -of a situation I was
faced with some years ago. Paul
McCartney had just done a
lengthy documentary on the Bea-
tles, using a lot of archival film
never seen before. It was getting
a good deal of pre-release atten-
tion, and McCartney had agreed
to do one press interview in sup-
port of the film. lt was offered to
me by his press agents in Beverly
Hills, who said they would pay
all my expenses to and in Lon-
don providing I could deliver the
New Yock Tunes magazine.
SEE BELL MGE A6
.... ••
Wednesday
just didn't pan
out right,, but expect better ainditiona
today with a high of
about 80 and a mostly
sunny afternoon.
SeehgeA2
ntURSDAY,SEPTEMBER6,2CX>t
Democrats
propose
altering
districts
• Under a plan to alter
congressional lines,
Newport Beach would
unite under Cox.
Paul Clinton
DAILY PILOT
NEWPORT·MESA -Even
with the possibility he will repre-
sent a handlul of new cities, Rep.
Dana Rohrabacher (R-Huntington
Beach) finds hunsell on familiar
ground.
A pldn announced this week by
state Democrats to redraw the
congressional lines aJso ldkes a
section or Newport Beach now
under Rohrabacher and reurutes 1t
with the rest of the city tn Rep.
Chnstopher Cox's distnct.
In return, Rohrabacher would
gain 18% or Long Bedch, Palos
Verdes and Rolling Hills. The odd,
new boundary line would put his
45th District on the fence of
Orange and Los Angeles counbes,
returrung it to the layout 1t hdd in
1988, when he first won the seat.
The congressman already rep-
resents about 70% of the new dis-
tnct. Rohrabacher would continue
to represent Costa Mesa
MI think they gave me Long
Beach in order to facilitate a plan
that would eluninate PaJos Verdes
as a thorn in the side of Democ-
rats," Rohrabacher said.
The wealthy coastal community
had previously been represented
SEE DISTRICTS PAGE A4
Activists
ask city to
end waiver
• Environmental groups
want Costa Mesa to join
Newport in efforts to halt
certain pumping practices
at sanitation district.
Paul Clinton
DAILY PILOT
COSTA MESA -Environmen-
talists took their case to the top
Tuesday night, when they began
lobbying the City Council to fight
the county sanitation district's
ability to dump treated sewage
into the ocean.
Members of Swfrider and the
Ocean Outfall Group made their
case for council members to join
other groups fighting to end a spe-
cial waiver given to the Orange
County Sanitation District.
Since the mid-1980s, the
SEE WAIVER MGE AS
.....
Nl1IMl •11111
A2 lhorsday, September 6, 2001 .
WOlllNG
Ardenia
Capanelli
Magically making
what is old seem new
SHE IS
Giving 600-year-olds face lifts
MAKING A DREAM COME TRUE
Ardenia Capanelli has the gift of
an artistic eye and a detailed hand.
With each stroke, she adds life and
color to the canvas.
But the work she does is not her
owni it is usually that of an artist who
lived hundreds of years ago.
Capanelli, 42, has combined her
Jove for old paintings with her natur-
al ability to create her own dream
job m art restoration.
She was formally trained in art
restoration in her native Itdly, taking
an intensive three-year course at an
art school. She is an expert in
Renaissance paintings.
•Where 1 am from, it is a common
profession, but here hardly anyone
seems to know about it,·. she said,
remnants of her homeland apparent
. in her slight Italian accent.
A COMBINATION OF
ART AND SOENCE
Eleven years ago, she brought her
Italian-bred profession to the United
States and opened her own business
in Newport Beach.
To do her job correctly. Capanelli
must be light with her hands and sen-
sitive to colors. She must know how to
add a hand or a fiower here or bright-
en up a color there without drawing
any attention to the new work.
She not only bas to know how to
mix colors and solvents to match
exactly, but she must be able to paint
as well as the original artist to make
the entire picture blend.
·1 am artistic. I just don't want to
be an artist,· she said. •I want to use
my talents and appreciation for art to
provide a service.•.
With painstaking precision and accu-
racy, Capanelli applies solvent to the
painting to remove centuries of varnish
.·
and dirt, she said. Each painting bas its
own damage, and each damage has its
own remedy. It takes a true professional
to know the difference, she said
To mix the solvents correctiy, Capan-
elli must also be familiar with chemistry.
PRESERVING FAMILY HEIRLOOMS
The service she provides allows
for pieces of art to stay vibrant and
youthful despite their actual age.
Her customers often have tears in
their eyes when they see how drasti-
cally Capanelli transforms a faded,
tom or damaged painting. Many
times, the pieces have been handed
down for generations, she said. Over
the years, they have );>eeJl abused, for-
gotten or touched up unprofenimally.
Although' Capenelli spedallzel in
Renaissance paintingl, a lack of 600-
year-old paintingt in the Newport-
Mesa area prompted her to branch
out into other areas, she sa.kl. In
addition to restoring paintings, she
resurrects porcelain and pottery that
have been smashed into pieces.
•it sounds more difficult than it
is,· she said. •When you love it, it's
just a pleasure and is actually very
relaxing ... almost therapeutic.•
-Story by Lolita Harper,
photo by Greg Fry
Making good out of profitable outlets
I l's always good news when popu-
lar businesses and shopping cen-
ters team up to help others. In the
case of American Express, Fashion
Island and other Irvine Co.-owned
centers, the Susan G. Komen Breast
Cancer Foundation will benefit.
Dubbed "Charge for the Cure.·
the program will last through Oct.
31, during which time American
Express will donate $1 to the founda-
tion for every American Express
charge made at Fashion Island,
Corona del Mar Plaza, Bayside Cen-
ter, Eastbluff Village Center, Harbor
View Center, Newport Hills Center,
Newport North Center and Westcliff
Plaza.
1.1'1 addition, Fashion Island has
pledged $1 for every American
Express transaction made at the cen-
ter, or $5,000 total.
The program is actually national
and has raised $500,000 for the non-
DailJ'IPllot
VOL 15. NO. 2J'1
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•••Cl 'pMF l
RETAIL ROUNDUP
profit organization.American
· Expr:ess bas raised $1.3 million to
fight the disease.
So far, the eight shopping centers
are the only ones in Orange County
participating in the effort, but it
would be wonderful if others in
Newport Beach and Costa Mesa
stepped up to the plate.
PASS THE WATER AND APPLE JUICE,
BUT HOLD THE PEPSl7
It's a fact' of Ufa, but when it gets
hot, we get thirsty. Some of us take
to the nice, cold Pepsi, wbUe others
opt for good old fashioned water on
the rocks. Either way, they're going
to do the trick, whatever 1t may be.
However, the National Assn. of
Convenience Stores has released a
report saying the latter, that being
the water, and other noncarbonated
beverages draw a heftier following.
In fact, in the report, juices and
juice drinks were the top sellers
among cold drinks, taking in 30%
more than in 1999. Bottled water
sales increased 26%, iced tea sales
climbed 19% and sports drink sales
grew 1•%. It turns out that sales in
the drink industry increased 15.1 %
in the same period and are double
the sales of 10 yea.rs ago.
The numbers are particularly
impressive considering this scribe
opts for the Taste of a New Genera-
tion-probably accounting for 75%
of those sales (kidding) -and the
occasional Jamba Juice (gotta have
that echinacea).
The real question here, though, is
where are the milk industry people
and how are they doing these days
without the overebundance of •aot
Milk?· commercials?
--J.S-.
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Doily Pilot
It's time to
build a castle
T be 40tb annual Sand-
castle Contest will be
held Sunday at Big
Corona del Mar State Beach
from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. The
viewing is free, but if you
want to compete you'll have
to get a team together and
sign up at the Newport Har-
bor Chamber of Commerce.
• The fees are $60 for the
Master's Class (architectural
firms), $40 for business class
(all other businesses), and
$20 for families and other
organizatioos (civic groups,
youth groups and service
clubs). Prizes and plaques
will be given out for differ-
ent categories, ranging from
best creation, most unique,
most humorous and best
sculpture. All entrants will
receive a free round-trip
ticket on the Catalina Flyer.
Call to make a reservations.
• (949) 729-4400.
Strouds is having its fall
sale through Oct. 7.
Throughout the store, there
are markdowns on pillows,
towel, rugs, bedding, panels
and sheers, slipcovers, mir-
rors, art, candles and table
linens. Sale merchandise is
reduced 20% to 70%.
Strouds is at the Costa Mesa
Courtyards, 1835 Newport
Blvd., Costa Mesa. (9•9)
722-7655.
Friday is Nan national
makeup artist event at
Neiman Marcus. At the
Nars cosmetic counters, you
can preview the Nars fall
2001 colors and get a make-
over by artists hom the Nars
team. To schedule an
appointment, call (949) 759-
1900, Ext. 2019. Neiman
Marcus is at Fashion Island
in Newport Beach.
Whole Foods Market
makes prepackaged kids'
lunches for $2.99. The
Whole Kids On-The-Go
lunch~s are healthy and
come with a free prize.
Whole Foods Market is at
1870 Harbor Blvd., Costa
Mesa. (9•9) 574-3800.
The American Cancer
Dllcovery Shop in Corona
del Mar is having an end of
the summer sale. Select
merchandise is reduced
25% to 75%. The store is
making room for fall
clothes, accessories and the
estate merchandise it's
expecting. It also has brand
new celling fana that
arrived from the manufac-
turer at 25% off. There is a
gilt with a purchase for the
first 25 customers. The shop
is at 2600 E. Coast High-
way, Corona del Mar. (949) 640-•rn .
Hand-smocked children's
clothes will be available
Gr~rWylder
BEST BUYS
today through Saturday at a
Newport Heights home in
Newport Beach. The sale
will be from 4 to 7 p.m.
today, 1 to 5 p.m. Friday
and 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. Satur-
day. Julie Rutter will be sell-
ing the matching boys',and
girls' clothing, Christmas
designs and linens by Ori-
ent Expressed, a New
Orleans-based clothing
company. The clothing
ranges in price from $30 to
$65. Visa and MasterCard
will be accepted. (9-49) 646-
8133.
Sea Schwinn will have a
parking lot sale Friday
through Sunday. The sale is
a final close-out sale, and
bicycles are priced to move.
Also included in the sale are
helmets, bags, pedals, cloth-
ing, pumps, computers and
more. The sale hours are
from noon to 7 p .m. Friday,
9 a.m. to 5 p .m. Saturday
and 11 a.m. to 5 p .m. Sun-
day. Sea Schwinn/l\vo
Wheels One Planet is at 420
E. 17th St., Costa Mesa.
(949) 646-7717.
Mainly Seconds has dis,
counted a lot of its already
low-priced items for a clear-
ance sale. Among the eclec-
tic mix of sale items are 5-
and 8-foot silk trees in
Raphis palms, fichus and
bamboo, doormats, rubber
stamps, calculators, Banana
Boat lotion and sunscreen
and potting soil. Mainly
Seconds is at 1785 Newport
Blvd., Costa Mesa. (949)
548-7710.
Tuesday Mornlng, anoth-
er discount store, is having
a special on Pink Willow
place settings from Royal
Wessex through Friday. The
Pink Willow place setting
includes four dinner plates,
soup/cereal bowls, cups and
saucers. They are dishwash-
er and microwave safe. The
sets are $29.99. It's a retail
value of $150. Tuesday
Morning's next sale dates
will be Tuesday through
Dec. 31. Tuesday Morning is
at 230 B. 17th St., Costa
Mesa. (949) 650-0455.
• llST 8UYI appears Thursct.ys
•nd Saturdays. Send Information
to Gre« ~at 330 W. Bay St,,
C<>sta Mesa, CA 92627, or via fax
at (9'9) 646-.t 170.
SUU lllD SUI
..
..
Doily Pilot • Th~.~ 6, 2001 AS
Costa Mesa to team with schools to assist students
• Despite concerns about bluning lines
between chllrch and state, city leaders agree
religious groups may participate in effort.
LollU Herper
DAJLY PILOT
COSTA MESA Both
Jesus Christ and President
Bush -one considered a
leader of church, the other or
state -were mentioned
Tuesday d\lring public dis-
cussion about Mayor Libby
Cowan's proposed resolution
for after-school programs.
After nearly an hour of
debate, a failed motion and a
final tweaking of the last
paragraph at its meeting, the
City Council unanimously
voted to adopt a resolution to
provide city resources -in
partnership with the New-
.Port-Mesa Unified School
Disti:jct and other nonprofit
community· groups -to cre-
ate educational programs for
students in the city.
On Aug. 28, David
Brooks, president of New-
port-Mesa's school board,
presented a similar resolu-
tion to the board, which also
approved it.
Audience members ques-
tioned the specifics of the city's
role in the programs, how
much money would be spent
and which community groups
would be invited to partici-
pate. Although the resolution
does not provide details, 1t
does allow
for partner-
ing groups
to be
churches or
other faith-
based
organiza-
tions.
Nearly
20 people
Ubby Cowan discussed
the resolu-
tion, seemingly split on
whether designating city
resources on programs asso-
ciated with area churches
would violate -or even give
the appearance of violating -
the concept of separation of
church and state.
During the discussion,
City Atty. Jim Scheer
reminded people that sepa-
ration of church and state
was written by Thomas Jef-
ferson, but was not included
in the tst Amendment.
"If people are going to
quote from the 1st Amend-
ment, I suggest they· do it
accurately," Scheer said.
Leaders of the Presbyter-
ian Church of the Covenant
and the YMCA, both faith-
based organizations with
after-school programs used
as models for ijle city's reso-
lution, said volunteers
understand the difference
between providing a service
to ·the community and
preaching.
But even Jesus Wdmed of
keeplng a division between
the two, said Costa Mesa res-
ident Tom Egan, when he
told his followers to separate
between what is given to the
tax collector and what 1s gw-
en to God. Egan suggested
the council add the word
·secu1ar" to the resolution to
differentiate between the
types of nonprofit agendes
' the city was willing to give
money to.
"Let's stay out of trouble
and keep a bright line sepa-
rating religion and this city
government,· Egan said.
Councilwoman Karen
Robinson agreed and made
the hri.t mollon to adopt the
resolution, which gave sup-
port to only secular commu-
nity orgdnizations.
The motion failed, howev-
er, with both Cowan and
Councilman Gary Monahan
opposing.
"I Cdn'l support adding
the word 'secular.· I think it
would gut the program of a
very key element,• Mona-
ban said. •1 do not have a
huge concern that we will
have a lot ot proeelytiziog. •
Even the presidenf has
suggested using federal
funds to support faith-based
organizations, Monahan
said.
In another attempt to
"proceed cautiously• With
the legal wording of the ordi-
nance, Robinson suggested
the council add a line stating
that the city understands lts
role in any program and
must conform with all laws,
including the 1st Amend-
ment.
The final motion carried 3
to 1. with Cowan opposed to
any changes i.a the wording
to the resolution. She
changed her vote, how.ever,
to show "full support" for the
idea.
Tobacco tax generates school funding for Newport-Mesa
• School district and
UC Irvine are among
the benefactors.
Deirdre Newman
DAILY PILOT
NEWPORT-MESA -The
health services program in
the Newport-Mesa Unified
School District got a boost
Tuesday courtesy of the Chil-
dren and Families Cornmis-
sion of Orange County.
The program received an
allocation of $50,000 to
become one of 40 in the coun-
ty to share a pot of $4.3 mil-
lion that was generated by d
SO-cent sales tax on tobacco
products.
District officials are not sure
how the grant money will be
used because the grant is only
·about a quarter of the amount
the district sought to expand
the Healthy Start Program,
I IL''l\St : l'I .. \ \' Rr~'l'.\l.S
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European St,U:,;:ndlDlches 0..,,.,.,.0.. O..Otilll,
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SfF9u..
based at Rea Elementary
School in Costa Mesa.
Two nurse praclllloners
now provide checkups and
unmunizations to children
three days a week.
"At Uus point, we're very
happy to have $50,000, but
I'm not sure what direction it
will b& going because it won't
even take care of one full-
lime nurse,• said Marcia
BMarthaler, health services
program specialist.
Although the drnount is
considerably less lhan what
officials were hoping for, the
allocation 1s sigmficant
because it will help to
enhance the d1slnct's efforts
at school readines:,, Sdtd Jdne
Garland, the school reddiness
facilitator.
The district is trying to
become a pilot program for
school readiness m the coun-
ty, which would endble it to
reap a portion of the nearly
MEXICAN RESTAURANT
OUR MEALS ARE A TRIP TO MEXICO
FAMltYOWNED FOR 30 YEARS.
OUR TRADITION IS SIMPLE -
WARM ATMOSPHERE.
GREAT FOOD & DRINKS,
AT REASONABLE PRICES
·•• WE SPECIALIZE
IN LARGE
TOGO ORDERS
PHONE AHEAD!
$4 .b m1lhon that the Califor-
nia Children and Families
Comn11ss1on will dlstribute. to
seven to nine programs later
this yedr Now. the district's
school readiness program is a
pubhc dwareness campaign
involving communication
with preschools, kinder-
Qdrlen tedchers, Head Start
staff, pdrents and family day-
cdre providers.
In the future, the district
hopes Lo ddd d resource cen-
ter for school readiness al the
preschool on the Whittier Ele-
mentary School campus, to
put another preschool on the
Wilson Elementary site and to
hire a community facilitator to
work with the entire district.
•So not only will the mest
needy students be served. but
the whole district will be
served," Garland said.
The commission also allo-
cated $90,000 to UC Irvine's
Early Literacy Project.
Sand pi
5th Annual Jazz Con .
Under the St
Benefiting
HoC?g Cancer Cen
Mariemtth
•
September
7p.m .
Hyatt N
Outdoor Amph
•
· A4~·~6,2001
'.
"IUC. ta•m
POUCI flUI
COSTA MESA
·~~An~
dtnt lrwoMno an Injury w•
rtpotWd In the 1'00 block
1at e:iea p.m. 1\.ltsday.
• AIMlape D11Ve1 Vinet.I·
ltm WM rtpOl1ed In the
2500 blodc at 4:20 p.m.
l\lelday. .
..... .., &.oolt: Forgery
Wit Npot1ed In the 2500
block It 3:21 p.m. 'TUetday .
• w.t,._ ltlwt: An lndl·
VfdUll WM repol'Wdfy dNnk
In public In the JOO block It
10:14p.m.~
• lrtltof ttr..e: A petty
th.ft WU rtpOl1ed In the
3300 blodt It 10'.45 p.m.
'1\lesday,
• aullha..-. Roe.tend
MIN v.'lle Drtw: V1nd1l-
lsm Wll Npot1ed It 1: 1 1
1.m. T\Jetday.
• laden A,,.._: A prowler
wu reported In the 2300
block at 11 :55 p.m. Tuaday.
• Pelr Drfve: f1lst Imper·
10n1tlon w11 reported In the
100 block It 3:36 p.m. Tu ...
day.
• ,_.rvlew Rolld: A petty
theft w11 reported In the
2200 block It 11 :56 p.m.
'1\lesd1y.
NEWPORT BEACH
• Cl9WJ ~: A blkt WIS
reported stoi.n In the 900
block It 9:30 a.m. Monday. • eoron. clef Mer meln
bMdt: Faist ldtntlflatlon
to an offlc.r was reported at
2:35 a.m. Tl.letday.
• trvtne Av.nue: Someone
reportedly used a stolen
checking c:-rd to withdraw
more than $6,500 from tht
bank. The Incident was
reported In the IOO block at
1 :20 p.m. Monday.
• JamboNe Roed: Annoy-
ing phone ulls were report-
ed In the 3600 block It 11 :54
a.m. Tuesday.
• MecArthw loulevlll'd: A
vehlclt waa reported stolen
In the 4500 block at 9:45
p.m. Tuesday.
ANIMAL
CONTINUED FROM A 1
with animals from local shel-
ters' death rows and diatribut.6
the reports.
Her involvement quickly
grew to re1cuing animall -
mostly cat1 -t.hat needed
medical treatment to save them
from being killed.
HShe did take some cats that
nobody elle would take that
would have been killed, H 1aid
Madeleine Maddox, the for-
mer rescue coordinator for the
Santa Ana Animal Shelter.
HThere were 1ome that had
eye infections that got so bad
that they lott their eyes, and
she found home• for them. I
know 1he hat a big heart, and
she'• done a lot of good
things.•
Pfaff-Martin'l IUcceA la evi-
denced by the two cage• at
Ru110'1 Pet Experience in
Fashion laland that feature the
an1mall 1he hat 1aved. About
~FREE SEMINAR
PltMnl9d by SCOTT.
OOUN>£lAIS Nf«rrf'f Al law
t..orn Now ~ocobl•
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• AvdtJ fie w. ond ~ ol PlliOClAJt
• ~ 0t ~ ESTAtt JAXD
• Avoid CONS£1WA70f\5HP
llMXEEDINGS (Pfof9a ~ NOl9 It
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~V. 9TIMIO ii, Di, 7.00 '""'-HliVllW .... CINla
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Dolly Pilot
·Power outage haltS Harbor· Center business
Charlotte Dao Nld. •Darkness about 3 p.m.
forcet small stores to
close for the day.
COSTA MESA -Several
1tore1 in Harbor Center 101t
power for almo1t an hour
Wednelday attemoon becau.se
of a broken cable, omc1a1t Aid.
'Ibe outage, which lt.arted at
3:08 p .m. and affected close to
lrleflrJn THE NEWS
V-plan resubmitted
to county omcials
Supporten of an alternative
runway plan for the proposed
Bl Toro airport mobilized their
lignature-gathering campaign
Wejlnetday after retubmitting
their initiative to Orange
County.
The New Millennium
Group, which 11 backing an
initiative to allow the plan to go
forward, has a110 1cheduled a
5:30 p.m. meeting for today at
Coa.tal Canyon Park in the
unincorporated community of
DISTRICTS
CONTINUED FROM A 1
by Rep. Jane Harman (D·
Redondo iseach).
The change1 were fint
announced Aug. 31, but drew
public attention Tuesday with
the announcement by Rep.
Steve Hom (R-Long Beach)
that he wa1 retiring. Under
the plan, Hom'• district would
have· been carved apart.
Tuesday also brought the
announcement from Gerrie
Schip1ke, a Democratic nurse
and attorney from Long
Beach, that she will challenge
Rohrabacher in the Novem-
,/
"'
40 to 50 cats are adopted from
the store in an average month,
1he said.
While the network's adop-
tion fee1 are the highest in the
county becaUJe of the quality
of care given to the animals,
Pfaff-Martin said the tunds are
quickly eaten up by the expen-
sive cost of medical treatment.
She attributeir the $10,000
deficit to the cyclical nature of
adoption -some months see
80 call adopted while others
are much lower.
In addition, Pfaff-Martin
aaid 1he ha1 not received a lot
of fund-railing 1upport from
the network'• board of direc-
ton.
But Kam Cirica, one of the
FluHoiM~
~-~ ~-c-.
Giltt -Gm-. Dicllr
... 3,,18 rultom«t, WU the f9IU1t
ot tome004i dlavina up a cable
at the lnteneafon-ot Pair and
Prine.ton drivel, lidd Southern.
Cal1f0mia Edllon ~Mm4n
P~ulKlein.
"Some were back up In a
minute, about 3:09," be aaid.
"And the others were back up
around 3:59 p.m. •
He Mid the outage affected
those in the area• bound by
Adams Avenue to the north,
Placentia Avenue to the welt,
Vlctorta Street to the aouth and
Newport Cout.
The park ii at the comer of
Newport Coatt Drive and
Ridge Park Road.
. Under the group'• plan, the
croubar runways at the clOBed,
Bl 'IOro Marine Air bue would
be realigned into a 'V" pat-
tern. The initiative won't
ensure that the V-plan would
be implemented but would
only change zoning at the bue
to make it poallble.
In re1ubmttting the mea-
sure, the group IQftened lta lan-
guage. The group began col-
lecting namet Wednesday and
need.I more than 71,000 valid
signatures to get the mea1ure
on a countywide ballot.
Newport Beach CoWldlman
John Heffernan, whote d1atr1ct
ber 2002 general election.
Schipske'• bid to unseat Hom
tailed narrowly last fall.
Cox (R-Newport Beach)
said he ls happy with the pro·
posed change1, though they
won't dra.tically affect the
makeup of hil district.
board members, 1aid the
board'• effortl have been ham-
1trtnged until recently when
the network finally attained
nonprofit status. Cirica hope•
that the new ltat\11 will enable
the board to redouble it.I fund-
railing attempts.
•1 under1tapd DiAnna'1
fru1tration1 because 1he has
10 many little creature• that
need help,• Cirtca 1aid.
"D1Anna'1 been doing a lot of
it herself. Now I hope we can
integrate more part·time peo·
ple and give her more sup-
port."
U the network goe1 under
because of a lack of financial
a11istance, it would be a
tremendous loss, Maddox said,
particularly becau1e 1ome
areas of Orange County have
an overpopulation of felines.
•1t would be a 1hame
becauae there would be a lot of
animals that lhe couldn't take
and 1he did take quite a few,•
Maddox laid. •A iot of (aban-
doned kittens) get put to sleep
becaUH tbere'I just too many.•
PelMeW Road to tbe eut.
WhDe JDOlt buliDIMfll tuf•
fared the outage. ICllM " the blggel' c:lotbiDa and deplrtm8Dt
ttoref did not loM power.
It wu the amaller bUllnell· ea that owners and managers
aald were hurt.
Queen Naill, a nail Hlgn,
clOHd down about 3:30 p.fil.,
almost four boun before it1
umal doting time becaUJe of
the outage.
"We can't uae anything bare
without power,• manager
ii likely to include the cout
after it ii annexed at the begin·
Ding d pext year. Mid he wOuld
attend the meeting.
Police contract held
up for questions
A three-year tentative
agreement that will raiae Coeta
Me1a police officers' and
1&rqeant1' salute• by about
8.4 Yo 11 on hold becau1e
Councilwoman Karen
Robin1on want1 more inf or-
mation, city officials said.
The council member has
a1ked to 1ee bow the percent·
age increa1es were calculated
and what current market con·
ditions are, taid Howard
Perkin•, the city'• penonnel
The new districts, which·
must be flnallz.ed by Sept. 14,
both re1emble those that
were in place from 1988 to
1992, before the last round of
rediatricttng.
Hit's a more coastal district
and returns many of the dtie1
Heather Blsc:h, 13. would be
disheartened as well. Heather,
a 1tudent at Ensign
Intermediate School in
Newport Beach, la a fOlter par-
ent for the network and ii now
nuning a black cat named Jag
back to health from a broken
leg -which the network paid
to mend.
·rd feel really laid beCaUJe
(the network) take1·the ani-
mals and saves the animals,
and without that, those ani-
rnall would be dead and there
would be less animals in the
world and that would be a sad
thing," Bisch said.
In addition to financial
donattops, the network is alio
looking for volunteers to help
with its organization and fund-
raiaing efforts and for foster
families to take care of the ani-
mall before they are adopted.
• DeiNl'9 Ml UAW covers tduc.1-
tlon. She may bt reacntd It (949)
·574-4221 OI by .-mall It de/rdre,,.,....,.
TNneiatimes.com. -
She Hid tbe 111011 used eJec:tridty foe ltl 1pa machlnet.
It WU allo qWet at Nlck11
Phu and Rlatorante, where
chef• were pacing up and
down or taldDg a break from
'the hot kitchen, which wa1
without an air conditioner dur-
ing the blackout.
"We do have gu ovens,•
mana.R•r Blanca Olavarria
wd. But lt'1 too dangerous
for our employffl becaUH it la too dark ln there and very hot .•
manager.
1be contract. arrlved at after
three month.I of negotiations
between the dty and the COlta
Meta Police Alan., wu on the
agenda for council approval .
Tuesday.
The pay raile, U approved
by the council, will increa1e
the dty'1 budget by 1Ughtly
more than Sl million.
1be previoUI two-year con-
tract expired Aug. 31. Perkins
laid the delay will not affect
officen negati'yely and that
adju1tment1 wUl be made
retroactive to Saturday after
the council approves the agree-
ment.
Robinson did not return
phone calll Wednetday.
that I repre1ented before
t992, • Cox laid. •niere Is
historical continuity:•
Rohrabacher welcomed
the addition of Palot Verdes
and Long Beach a. familiar
additiom for more personal
rea1on1. The congre11man
graduated from Palos Verde
High School. He alJo attend-
ed Cal State Long Beach,
g{aduat:l.ng in 1969.
• PMtl a1nton coven the environ-
ment and John W1yne Airport. Ht
may bt reached It (949) 764-4330
or by .mill at
paulcll,,tonelatfmes.com.
BRUSSEAU,
ClertoeMM
(ll)oftle),
Beloved mother and. nana,
wu bom In Rugby, NQ.. on
Nov. 4, 1932 and died In her
Newport Beach home Aug.
30, 2001 .
Clarloe wlll be dearfy
mined by her famlly and
fr1enda. She 11 1urvtved by
her daughtera, Lori
Wllllam1, Kim Jan ... n, Terri
Kraut, and her eon1, Jeff
and Scott. Alto by her
former hu1band, Brue:., and
nine wonderful
grandchlldren, her mottler,
Edwldge {Tutt) SjorUe and
her 1l1ter, Phyflle Retterath.
She II pr.decMMd by her
father, Car1 (Sid) Bjor11e.
A memonal Mrvlce to
celebrate her llfe wtll be
held Thura., Sept. e, at
3:00pm, Grace FellOWlhlp
Church, 3170 Aedhlll Ave,
CM.
In lleu of flowera, fr1end1
may with to contribute to
Hoag Hoepttal Foundation -
o/o Women'• Pavlllon
Daily Pilot
Meeting allows hours of debate
• Residents' group gets
chance to air concerns
about Home Ranch
proposal, which
includes an Ikea store.
Lolita Harper
DAILY PILOT
COSTA MESA -An
unusual PlAnning Commission
study session Tuesday allowed
d ty staff, commlssion~rs and
even the public to have an
open -yet long -discussion
about the controversial Home
Ranch project.
The session was different
because it was f'\lJ1 as a pub·
lie hearing, in which minutes
were recorded, Planning
Commissioner Bruce Ga'?lich
said. The formality of min-
utes did not stop the
exchange of ideas and good
questions, he added.
The session was open to all
but was dominated by some
well-prepared community
members.
The meeting lasted until
well after midnight as the
Costa Mesa Citizens for
Responsible Growth provided
a counter presentation to one
given by the plan's developer,
CJ. Segerstrom & Sons.
The plan for the site - a
former llma bean field bor-
dered by the San Diego
Freeway, Fairview Road,
Harbor Boulevard and
Sunflower Avenue -includes
a 17-acre Ikea fumitW'e store, 79t;oso square feet of office
space, 252,648 square feet of
industrial space and up to 192
residential units.
The group's members out-
lined the host of reasons they
believe the project is a bad
idea for the city, including
)
increased traffic and pollution
and the reduction of the over-
all quality of life.
Members of the public,
planning commissionen and
st.aft were able to ask questions
of the presenters and members
of the residents' group also
asked for certain issues to be
looked into further.
Staff will respond to many of
the questiom raised by all who
participated, Garlich said.
The meeting should enable
dty staff to provide commis-
sioners and residents with
details they need, said
Planning Commission
Chairwoman Kab'ina Foley.
•1 think this project has cer-
tainly provided us with an
enormous amount of info," she
said. "Everyone just needs to
be patient while we proceed
and try to provide the best
review, analysis and decision-
making possible."
COSTA MESA CITY COUNCIL WRAP·UP
Inside on the approval of the per-
mlt, which allowed the CITY HALL applicant to have landscap-
ing setbacks proposed for
Here are some of the 15 feet instead of 20, as
usually required. The Plan· decisions made by the ning Commission also Costa Mesa City Council at required access to the site Tuesday's meeting: co be reduced from two
WHIT HAPPENED: driveways to one. I
The City WHIT HAPPENED: ~ Council voted ~ The council to upholri · voted to the Planning adopt~ modi-Commission's fied ord!nance decision to concerning approve a conditional-use dayworker solicitation. permit for car sales at 2059
Harbor Blvd. WHAT IT MEANS:
WHIT IT MEANS: The city's ordinance
regarding people soliciting The Planning Commis-employment. business or sion's decision will stand, contributions from the and the ~roperty will be street Is now more specific, built wit only 15-foot set· targetini only those backs and one driveway. actions t at could cause On July 23, the Planning traffic da~er. Specific Commission approved a actions in ude waiving conditional-use permit for one's arms, making hand the property. Mayor Libby signals, jumping up and· Cowan asked for an appeal down, or running across
The Original
.MIKE'I
CARPETS
OVER 25 YEARS IN COSTA MESA
• Now Owned & Operated by Mesa Upholstery •
c.~c;ee ~'.~,0 CARPETS
..o~· "'~" PLUSH • I IXTURE
the streets.
After following a Los
Angeles court case in which
a judge ruled the county's
dayworkers ordinance was
too Jieneral, Costa Mesa
sta decided to look at the
wording of the city's similar
ordinance. After reviewing
it. the ci~ attorney's off ice
found a ew places where
the ordinance also might
be too vague and possibly
encroach on a person's
freedom of s~h.
To make t e ordinance
stronger against possible
litigation, staff r~om-
mended a few changes. At
the last meeting, the coun-
di a~proved the initial
dra of the ordinance.
-Compiled by
Lolita Harper
llDMEmlG
WHA't. Costa Mes. City
Council
WllDIE: <:osta Mesa
City Hall, n Fair Drive
... 6:30 p.m. Sept 17
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PORT
CONTINUED FROM A 1
aew a Dag from that country,
which was ~ hung on the
ship's mast -among them
were Costa Rica, Guatemala, El Salvador, Mexico and
Panama.
The ship also passed through
the Panama Canal.
The last leg of the trip was
the toughest, Kidwell said, as
the ship trudged the 790-ntile
leg from Cabo San Lucas to San
Diego. •
"It's a ldller," Kidwell said "It
goes on forever.•
Thanks to careful planning
by Kidwell, the ship missed
Hurricane Flossie by an eye-
lash. The ship traveled more
than 5,200 total miles.
Now in port, the Narwhal is
one step away from~trolling
Newport Harbor. The Coast
Guard has scheduled a com-
missioning ceremony for Nov. 2.
After it's officially put into ser-
vice, the Narwhal can ~ a
variety of duties-most notably
search and rescue and drug
enforcement.
The Narwhal replaces the
Point Stuart, which was retired
from service April 26. The ship
is now in service in the El
WAIVER
CONTINUED FROM A 1
Environmental Protection
Agency has granted the dis·
trict a special exemption from
the Clean Water Act.
The district pumps 243 mil-
lion gallons of sewage treated
to the level of •full pnmary"
status each day into the Pacific
Qcean from a pipe on the
ocean floor. The pipe operung
is five miles out to sea.
Without the waiver, the
county sanitation district would
need to treat the sewage to a
higher level. To do that, the
agency would need to build a
$400-million plant.
Jan Vandersloot, a Newport
Beach resident and the head of
Ocean Outfall Group, led the
groups Tuesday and has led
the charge against the waiver,
..
lhundoy, ~ 6, 2001 AS
• DON I.EACH I OAl.Y N.c1r
Brian ford, left. director of mrdllary for the 11th c:Ulb1ct.
shakes hands with fellow amdllary member Kent Burton
after the new Coast Guard cutter Narwhal docked ln
Corona del Mar, end.lng an eight-country maiden voyage.
Salvadoran Navy.
Except for Kidwell, the 10
crew members all transferred
from the Point Stuart to the
Narwhal.
1r "It's completely different/
said Executive Officer Chuck
Lindsey about the Narwhal. "It's
pretty high-tech. The Stuart was
old. She was built in the '60s. •
Through a series of updates
published in the Daily Pilot,
Kidwell kept the community
informed throughout the
Narwhal's trip.
which will expire in 2003.
But others present also said
the waiver fues in the face of
efforts to dean up the ocean.
• Titis is something they can
change.• said Greg Jewell, a
member of the Huntington
Beach and Seal Beach.chapter
of Surfnder. "They should care
because there are people in
Costa Mesa who go to the
beach. They should be con-
cerned about the safety and
wellness of those Costa Mesa
residents.·
Costa Mesa Councilman
Gary Monahan, on
Wednesday, said he needed to
get more information before
making up bis mind.
The groups' message
"sounds good.• Monahan said,
•but I don't know enough
about it.•
On Aug. 27, the Seal Beach
City Council voted to oppose
the extension of the wajyer.
~ .
Carl Ackerlind, whose son
Mike was aboard the ship, said
he eagerly searched out the arti-
cles to cbeclc the ship's progress.
"It was interesting because
Mike is senior chief," Ackertind
said of the updates. "There are
many different countries they
visited .•
• Paul Olnton covers the
environment and JC'hn Wayne
Airport. He may be reached at
(949) 764-4330 or by e-mail at
paul.clintonOlatimes.com.
Newport Beach has also
moved to join the city, with
Councllman Tod Ridgeway
saying recently it would be
"irresponsible of us not to
oppose that waiver.•
Ridgeway is one of 25 mem-
bers of the sanitation district's
board, wh.tch 1s made up of
officials from o bes, other san-
itation agencies and one coun-
ty supemsor, Jim Silva, who
represents Costa Mesa and
Newport Beach.
Costa Mesa's representa-
tive on the board is Jim
Ferryman, who also sits on the
board of the Costa Mesa~
Sanitary District. Ferryman
couldn't be reached for com-
ment.
• Paul Olnton covers the
environment and John Weyne
Airport. He may be reached at
(949) 764-4330 or by e-mail at
~ul.clintonO/atimes.com.
A8 ~· Seplletlber 6, 2001
BELL
CONTINUED FROM A 1
I called en editor there
whom I k.Qew, and be told
me to put the proposal in
Writipq. I did, without men·
tionlng the expenses. He
called a few days later and
said they wanted the story
and I should get it to them
as quickly as possible. At..
that point, I asked bow the
TI.mes wanted to handle my
expenses, noting -stupidly
-that his press agents had
offered to pick them up.
There was a long pause
before he said: "Don't do
anything. I'll get right back
to you.•
When be did, it was to
cancel the assignment
because the editors felt the
project was tainted by the
offer ol McCartney's repre·
sentatives to pay my
expenses. The editor knew
as well as I did that it
wouldn't affect the way I did
the story. (At least not con·
sciously -and, I like to
think, subconsciou~ly as
well.) But to the Times, the
appearance of bias -or
?ribery, il you like -waJ as
important as the act itseU.
I think this is just as true
m the Segerstrom situation.
The most pragmatic letter
writers said, in effect, OK so
this is bribery. But so what?
It goes on all the time in
government. Quid pro quo
is what it's all about. The
system can't function any
other way.
;'Jbil ii bO«h ~ Ud '
partly true. But ilublci'lbing
toitua~tewayol
governing wOuJd make it
fncreasingfy diftJa&1t to
assess the public benefits or
drawbacks of a project taint-
ed by bribery. And that's
what is so wrong about the
Segerstrom situation. •
l'ln not competent, with·
out a lot more research than
I've done up to this point, to
judge whether or not the
Segerstrom's Home Ranch
project 15 in the public inter-
est. That. and that alone, is
the question the City Coun-
cil should be weighing. But
either through its own
actions (soliciting a bribe) or
the actions of the
Segerstroms (bribery), the
school contribution has
become inextrtcably tangled
up in this issue. That's why
the City Council should
either vote the project down
or rejeq the school donation
and consider the Home
Ranch with an unobstructed
vision.
City Council members
will say -as I did in the
McCartney affair -that
they can weigh the Home
Ranch project objectively,
free of influence from the
school offer. That may be
true, although I doubt it. But
even il it is, true, the appear·
ance of bribery is so strongly
in evidence that any future
problems with the Home
Ranch deal would be imme·
diately tied to corruption,
even though it benefited our
schools.
The Segerstroms have
The~ & flllSf ,
Beauty S..,ly lt F• Servke Won
ii C>n..ge County
mven much to tbiS c;ommu.
Dity from wbich tM,Y bave
also taken much. But lo
regard the Home R4Dcb
project as a kind ol payback
for put generosity ignores
the public interest in the
projectJtself. And to regard
the $2-million cootrtbution
to the schools as simply
.. another example of gen-
erosity 1s lo igno(e two
things:
First, what is an immense
sum to the strapped schools
is probably closer to pocket
change for Segerstrom &
Sons, especially in vie.w of
the upcoming windfall from
George W. Bush's new tax
program.
And second -and more
important -il the
Segerstroms are ol a mind to
help our local schools finan-
. ~ally,'they should simply do
1t. They should not tie it to
public policy that will great·
ly benefit them.
More and more -as the
gap between rich and podr
continues to grow -
monied interests in this
country are simply buyiflg
whatever it is they want.
The old saw from Eisenhow·
er days that whatever bene-
fits General Motors benefits
the country has not only
taken new root but is gain-
ing new strength. It needs to
be countered when the pub·
lie interest dictates other·
wise, and our local city
councils may be the best
place to start.
•JOSEPH N. BELL is a resident of
5anta Ana Heights. His column
appears Thursdays.
Best Prices • lililiiliiliiililii&;liiil;liliit
Best Service -
Best Selection
E 17th St.
................
•
-• Send ~ 1'CMll it.ms' to
the Dally Piiot. iJO W. 8-v St., Col·
t• Meu. CA 12627; bV fu to (949)
646-4170; or by c.1111)9 (949) 574-
4291. tnctUde the time, data ~
location of the event. es well as • con~ phone number. A com·
plete llstlog Is 1v1ll1ble et
http://www.dallypllot.com.
FRIDAY
1be Single Gourmet. a gath-
ering for business and profes·
sional singles ages 30 to 50
who meet and enjoy great
food, will hold its event at 7
p.m. at Pinot Provence in
Costa Mesa. $75, or $65 for
members. Reservations
required. Price includes food,
tax and gratuity. (949) 854-
6552 or http://www.slngle·
gourmeUaoc.com.
SATU,DAY
The Orange County Mineral
and Lapidary Society will
host a rock moving sale from
9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Saturd~ and
Sunday at 2737 Lorenzo Ave.,
Costa. Mesa. (714) 972-8043
or (714) 546·4389.
Big Brothen and Big Slaten of
Orange County will hold a
Mardi Gras and Casino Night
at the Village Crean Mansion
in Newport Beach beginning
at 6 p.m. nckets are $50. A live
jazz band, Cajun·style dinner,
silent auction and casino tables
will provide the entertainment.
(714) 544.n?J.
• Welcoming environment for
singles, intermarried families,
seniors -everyone!
• Uplifting music Jed by Cantor Arie
Shilcler, who revolutionized Orange
County's Reform Jewish music
• Hebrew school & cxmfirmation ~
• Be Part of a temple that's building
an exciting future
• Our New Rabbi Richard Steinberg
brings great enthusiasm and
dedication to enhancing
each member's involvement in
temple life
• Commitment to Jewish education
for all ages and backgroun~
• K·9th grade reUgioua school
enriches Jewish learning through
classroom instruction, music, art,
drama & computer lab
• Adult education programs
•Youth groups plus Children's
Theater & Choir offer fun activities
while reinforcing Jewish pride
•Active Brotherhood and Sisterhood
•Beautiful new sandu.ary,
classrooms & large eodal hall
SUUAY
,,.. .. --SeDdc'""• Contest presented by the
Commodores Club of the
Newport HarbOr Area Cham·
ber of Commerce will take
place bom 11 a.m. to• p.m. at
Big Corona del Mar State
Beach. Anyone is invited to
get a team together to sign up
with the Newport Harbor
Chamber of Commerce. Fees
are $60 for the Master's Class
(architectural fiJins ), $40 for
Business Class (all other busi·
nesses), $20 for families and
other organizations (civic
groups, youth groups and ser·
vice clubs}. Prizes and
plaques will be awarded for
overall best creation, most
unique sandcastle and.sculp·
ture, and most humorous. All
entrants receive one free
round·trip ticket on the
Catalina Flyer. Call to make
reservations. (949) 729-4400.
lbe'Dlvas of the Balboa The-
ater Arts Foundation will host
•Tue Balboa Beach Blanket
Barbecue• from noon to 5
p.m. at the Balboa Peninsula
Park adjacent to the pier.
Free. The event will includ~
barbecue lunch, music by the
Nomad's Surf.Band, kite fly-
'ing. limbo and hula hoop con·
tests, a water balloon toss.
and a cutest "bathir)g beau·
ty" contest for children 2 and
younger. The 'First Surfin'
Ducky Wave Race will also
take place. Ducks for the race
may be purchased for $5. Pro·
ceeds from the barbecue and
duck race go toward the ren·
ovation of the Balboa Theater.
(949) 646·5161.
MONDAY
Orange Coast College's Com·
munity Education Office will
offer a no·credit, introductory
Macintosh computer work·
shop designed to introduce
the basics for the novice and
beginning Mac user. The
workshop will be held from 6
to 8:30 p.m. Monday and
Doily Pilot
Tuelday in the occ J.lbrary
Mac Lab, 2701 Fairview
Roed, 'Costa Mete. $109,
which includes a material fee.
(714) •32-5880.
A lrM MfDIMr OD aaU-.gtng
skin care secrets sponsored
by Mother's Market will take
place from 6:30 to 7:30 p.m. at
the Patio Cafe in Costa Mesa.
Reservations. r~ed. (800)
595-MOMS.
TUESDAY
For those Wishing to start
their own business, Orange
Coast College's Community
Education Office will offer a
workshop to help in forming.
growing and succeeding at a
small business. The work·
shop will be held from 9 a.m.
to noon Tuesday and Oct. 2 at
National University, 3390
J-{arbor Blvd., Costa Mesa.
$25, $20 in advance. (714)
432·5880.
A networ'klng mixer and sem.
inar titled "Building Positive
Work Cultures• begins the
first in a series titled "Build-
ing Business Expertise,• a
free series co·sponsored by
the Newport Beach Public
Library and the Newport
Harbor Area Chamber of
Commerce. The mixer begins
at 5:30 p.m. with the seminar
going from 6 to 7 p.m. in the
Newport Beach Central
Library's Friends Meeting
Room at 1000 Avocado Ave .
in Newport Beach. Corporate
managers, business people
and entrepreneurs are
encouraged to attend. (949)
717·3601.
Mother's Market will host
another free seminar on the
healing power of magnetism
from 6:30 to 7:30 p.m. at the
Patio Cafe in Costa Mesa.
Reservations required. (800)
595·MOMS.
SEE TOWN PAGE A7
Harbor Heritage Run
51 .FEATURE~CE · II FUN RUN WALi .
llDS' KLAS C RACE ~
Sat., October 6, 2001
Newport Harbor High School
For more Information & entry forms cau 949-645-5806
or register online at www.kathytoperevents.com/hhr
Support our
Schools
Shop Harbor Blvd. of Cars
Doily Pilot
TOWN
' CONTINUED FROM A6
Veteran North f ace cllmber
Kevin Thaw will present a
$.lide show and lecture on his
climbing experiences at 7:30
p.m. at the North Pace Retail,
1870-A Harbor Blvd., Costa
Mesa. Pree. (949) 646-0909.
WEDNESDAY
The CalUornia Jletired
Teacher's Assn. will hQl.d a
luncheon with entertainment
provided by the Choral Belles
at noon at the Costa Mesa
Community Center, 1845
Park Ave., Costa Mesa.
Reservations requested by
Saturday. Frances Ceccarini,
(714) 641-3236, or Fran
Goetz, (714) 968-8253.
The Orange County Bar
Assn.'s. Young Lawyers Divi-
sion will host a lunch and
workshop program focusing
on maintaining a balance in
life. Judge William W.
Bedsworth will speak about
the difference between win-
ning and losing from 12: 15 to
1 p.m. at the Wyndham Gar-
den Hotel, 3350 Avenue of
the Arts, Costa Mesa. Lunch
will be served from 11:45 a.m.
to 12:15 p .m. $22-$52. Chris
Jepsen, (949) 440-6700.
Michael Stephens, president
and chie.f executive of Hoag
Hospital, will present "Look-
ing to the Future,• which will
detail the next phase of
expansion for Hoag Hospital.
The free meeting will begin
with hors d'oeuvres at 5:30
p.m., followed by the presen-
tation at 6 p.m . at the River-
front Restaurant, 151 E. Pacif-
ic Coast Highway in Newport
Beach. (949) 224-2266.
Mother's Market wlll host a
free seminar titled "Sinus
Solutions and Allergy
Answers" Crom 6:30 to 7:30
p.m. at the Patio Cafe in Cos-
ta Mesa. Reservallons
required. (800) 595-MOMS.
Ora nge County gardener
Celia Baca win share her
experience in Mendocmo
with a slide presentation
titled "Gardens of Mendoci-
no" at 7:30 p.m. at Sherman
Ubrary & Gardens in Corona
del Mar as part of an evening
lecture series. Free. (949) 673-·
2261.
SEPT. 13
Ermal Wllllams, a profession-
al actor who portrays John
Wayne in commercials, pub-
lic events and movies, will
perform at 8 p.m. at the Sea-
faring Lodge, 1401 E. 15th St.,
Newport Beach. The presen-
tation is part of the Mar Vista
Lodge and Seafaring Lodge
of Free and Accepted Masons
Constitution Observance Pro-
gram. Refreshments will be
served at 7 p.m . Free.
An eight-week bulc cbasta1
navigation class sponsored by
..
lln IET
The~
food. wine and
music feitlval
known as the
1Ute of New-
port wU1 begin
Sept. 14, and
run through
Sept. 16. Host-
ed by the New-
port Harbor
Area Chamber
of Commerce,
the 13th annual
event ls expect-
ed to draw
about 75,000
people to Fash-
ion Island
More than 30 of
Newport·
Beach's restau-
rants are
e~to
provide food,
wine, beer and
cocktails. KC &
the Sunshine
Band, pictured,
will perform
Sept 14, fol-
lowed by the
Bangles on
-ARoUNDToWN
.. A free seminar on Attentloo
Deficit Disorder, presented
by Steve Holmes, will be
held from 6:30 to 7:30 p.m. at
the Patio Cafe in Costa Mesa.
Reservations required. (800)
595-MOMS.
SEPT. 22
The eighth annual Orange
County Peace Walk/Jam will
take place from 11:30 a .m . to
4 p.m. at Triangle Square in
Costa Mesa. The free event
celebrates the United
Nations' International Day of
Peace and will feature live
entertainment, raffles, non-
profit gro:up displays and an
organized walk around the
square. The Rev. Stoyanoff,
(949) 646-4652
Mother's Market will host a
free "Playshop" dnd book
signing on Lesley T1erra's
book .. A J(jds I lerb Block•
from 11 a.m. to noon at the
Patio Cafe for lhe playhouse,
and 3 to 4 p.m for the book
signing at the book depart-
ment Reservations required.
(800) 595-MOMS.
Th~,~ 6, 2001 A7
.
Sl S for breast cancer sur·
Vivora. (714) 957-9165 or
http://www.occure.com.
Boys and girt• ages I to t5
a.re invited to sign up for the
NFL-Gatorade Pun\, Pass,
and Kick local competition.
hosted }>y Newport Beach
Community Services. The
free event will take place
from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. at
Boruta Canyon Park. Win-
ners in each age category
advance to the sectional
compebbon in October. Call
to preregister. (949) 644-
3151.
SEPT. 25
Mother's Markel wlll sponsor ..
a free seminar titled
·Nature's Hope Against Can-
cer crnd Chronic Disease~
from 6:30 to 8 p.m . at the
Pal10 Cdfe in Costa Mesa.
Reservations required. (800)
595-MOMS.
SEPT. 26
Sept 15 and Toto on Sept 16. Hours will be 6 to 11 p.m. Friday, 4 to 11 p.m. Satur-
day and noon to 8 p .m. Sunday. Gene ral admission will be $15 (which includes all
entertainment), with c hildren younger than 12 admitte d free Saturday and Sunday.
Parking is free. (949) 729-4400 or http://wwwrteofNewport.com.
A four-course, semlformal
dinner party open to all
Catholic singles ages 21 to 45
hvmg in Orange County will
be held at 7 p.m. at lhe New-
port Beach Golf Course Tee
Room, 3100 Irvine Ave.,
Newport Beach Reservations
required. (800) 51 4-9090.
A business after-hours JPixer
offered by the Costa Mesa
Chamber of Commerce will
be held from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m .
at the Holiday Inn Costa
Mesa. 3131 Bristol St., Costa
Mesa $10: free for members.
(714 I 885-9090.
SEPT. 28
The Single Gourme t, an
opportunity for busmess and
profe!>s1onal smgles ages 30
lo 50 to en1oy great food and
make new friends, will hold a
dinner at Gustaf Anders at 7
p.m. at South Coast Village.
$77, or· $67 for members.
Reservctllons required. Price
indudes food, tax and gratu-
ity. (949) 854-6552 or
h ttp·//www.singlegourmet
laoc.com.
Flotilla 27 of the Coast Guard
Auxiliary will begin at 7 p.m.
at the Newport Beach Harbor
Department, 1901 Bayside
Drive, Corona del Mar. The
$55-cost includes text, work-
book and graduation. (714)
628-9777 or (7 14) 813-7699.
SEPT. 14
The ftnt of eight 11lm pro-
grams of Orange Coast Col-
lege's Armchair Adventures
travelogue series, sponsored
by the Automobile Club of
Southern California Travel
Bureau, will present· James
Tompkins" fibn "Emigrant
Road : An Oregon Trail
Adventure" a t 7 p.m. The film
will screen in OCC's Robert
B. Moore Theatre, 2701
Pairview Road, Cost.a Mesa.
$9, $7 if paid m advance.
Tickets are available in
OCC's Community Education
Office. (714) 432-5880.
SEPT. 15
A one-session work.abop on
recreational activities for
children will be offered by
Orange Coast College's
Community Education Office
from 9 a.m. to noon in OCC's
Business Division Room
101A, 2701 Fairview Road,
Costa Mesa. The workshop is
designed for adults who
work with children. Atten-
dees will learn how to teach
recreational and educational
games appropriated for chil-
dren of any age. $39. (714)
432-5880.
Thundliy
s.ptember8
Thna
Sunday
&eptember9
A one-day seminar for Hrst
time home buyers titled
"Taking the Mystery Out of
Buying Your First Home" wtll
be held from 9:30 a.m. to 3
p .m . in Room 205 of Orange
Coast College's LeWls Cen-
ter, 2701 Fairview Road, Cos-
ta Mesa. $49, $79 per couple
plus a $10 material fee. (714)
432-5880.
A free Internet workshop
titled "Tools and Tricks:
Internet I 01 ." will be held al
10 a.m. at the Newport Beach
Central Library. 1000 Avoca-
do Ave., Newport Beach The
workshop will focus on med-
ical resources in cyberspace
and provide an overview of
search engines. (949) 717-·
3801 .
The Costa Mesa Historical
Society will present an open
house of the historic Diego
Sepulveda Adobe at from 11
a.m. to 3 p .m. at 1900 Adams
Ave .. Costa Mesa. The event
will feature two speakers and
' II 1,. I'"' ""I' I),,,
I
~! 1(1 '
I • I\ • ~
Rabbitt fos urance Agency
AUl'O·• HOMEOWNERS• HEALTH
Sub1h1J 5111« 1957
~4)_,
""""' ........................ / ,-,
949-631-77 40
+it Old Nrwport BML •Newport Bed
(Near HMg Ho.pical)
a demonstration of adobe
brick ma king. (949) 631-
5918.
SEPT. 18
A support gro up fo r care-
gwers of AJzheuner's patients
will meet from 6:30 to 8:3'0
p.m. at Silverado Senior Liv-
ing-Newport Mesa. 350 W
Bay St., Costa Mesa. Free.
Reservations requested. (949)
631-2212
SEPT. 20
A 90-Minute Breakfast Boost
offered by the Costa Mesa
Chamber of Commerce will
take place from 7 to 8:45 a.m.
at Costa Mesa Country Club,
1701 Gall Course Drive, Cos-
ta Mesa. $17, $12 prepaid.
Reservations requested. (714)
885-9090.
• Dellciou• Greek Food preperwd by
Aegeen C.ft, • Putrln I T1vem11
• Free Cooldng demonstration•
• Free Greell Dence lessons
SEPT. 23
The Susan G. Komen Breast
Cancer Foundation will hold
its 10th annual Komen
Orange County Race for the
Cure at Fashion Island in
Newport Beach with 75°.{, of
the proceeds gomg to Komen
outreach, education, screen-
mg and treatment programs
for breast cancer and breast
health. Many events are
scheduled throughout the
day, including a women's 5K
run/walk begrnrting at 7:35
a.m .. a family one-mile fun
walk at 7:45 a.m., a coed 51<
run at 9:35 a m .. a coed 5K
walk at 9:40 a.m., a breast
cancer survivors parade and
tribute at 11 a.m. and a
health, fitness a nd kids expo
Crom 6:30 a.m. to noon. $35
for adults, $30 after Sept. 15,
$27 before Sept. 15; $25 for
youth 17 and younger and
seniors 60 and older after
Sept. 15, $20 before Sept. 15,
SEPT. 29
Monte Carlo 2001, the wo rk
of Deana Martin-Gnffeth,
daughter of Dean Martin,
will host 400 g,uests from 6
p.m to midnight at the Sut-
ton Place Hotel in Newport
Beach. The night will feature
. a tribute to Judy Garland's
music, a private reception.
live and silent auctions,
gourmet runner, dancing and
gaming Tickets range from
$125 to $250. Craig Board-
man, (714) 832-5669.
r--------,--------, FREE FREE I
ADMISSION PASTRY I
SAMPLE 1
ATCOFFEEI TWO
Boom I
23rd Annual I
FREE
ADMISSIONS
• Uve music by Lftendla I John BlleDIJIM 23rd Annual GrHk FHt1val I
GrHk Fl!!ltival Fnday 5-IOpm I • Spec:i.tty Boutiques. Games • C.mlval rides
• Opportunity °'9wlng-Trip to Greec:.
24 Hour anfo hnc: 949-733-3102 • 949-733-2366
4949 Alton Pkwy .. lrvtne
,Just east of the 405 between Jeffery and Culver Sponsored by St. Paul's Greek Orthodox Church
Pnday 5-IOpm Saturday J'lioon-IOpm I
Saturday Noon·IOpm Sund•) Noon-9pm
Su.ndlly Noon-9pm Valid with coupon only I
Valid with coupon only 4949 Alton Pllwy. Irvine I
4949Altoo Pkwy, Irvine t.ATimea I
LATimea L---------L------L-~
COM
A8 Thur.day, September 6, 2001
. EDITORIAL ·
The excitement of·
the new school Year .
T his year's return to
school might be just
a little easier than
normal. After all, it wasn't
exactly a summer to
remember.
Cloudy weather lingered
through much of the sum-
mer -the longest June
Gloom in memory. The
ocean water mirrored the
cool skies, staying in the
chilly mid-60s through July
and only warming up to the
summery 70s in August.
And for surfers, bodyboard-
ers and bodysurf ers, there
were few memorable
swells, anyway.
It wasn't the summer
Southern Callf omia is sup-
posed to be all aboul
OK, we're kidding. Give
us a summer of rain every
day, a Pacific Ocean that
looks like a lake, and we'd
still not want summer to
end. But end it must, so
there's no use dwelling on
what still could be.
Instead, now's the time
to focus on books and
studying. The first few days
might be bard, but once the
brain starts stretching itself
again in old, familiar pat-
terns, the shock of being
seated inside for hours at a
time should wear off.
Then, it is up to the
teachers to stir the love of
learning that's essential for
success. Their job is
unthinkably tough. If you
don't believe it, try standing
before a room of 20 to 30
children and keep their
attention, let alone teach
them. .
Often under-rewarded,
the people we entrust our
children's learning to
deserve as much support as
can be mustered -aid in
the classrooms, financial
backing through founda-
tions and, perhaps most
crucially, the priceless help
that comes from parents sit-
ting down with their chil-
dren at home to help them
learn.
In a day when it seems
too much of the news from
our campuses ranges from
the disturbing-over-
crowded classcooms -to
the horrifying -acts of vio-
lence -the beginning of
the school year can remain
a time of hope and enthusi-
asm. What books will be
read? What new friends
will be made? What will
these coming months hold?
All those unknowns are
exciting and are the very
reason for getting up and
getting to school.
Plus, remember -next
summer's already just
around the comer.
MAILBAG
J)on't shorten parade,
but educate boaters
With ev~ryone's busy lives
during holiday time, an every
night participation in this sev-
en-day event is near impossi-
ble rchanges afloat for boat
parade,• Saturday~. The five
nights is a nice compromise.
Our family is out on our dock
every night cheering during
the Christmas Boat Parade as
it passes by. And the nights
we are upstairs wrapping
gifts, we hear, •Where are
you, Christmas n-ee?· (Gay
dons a lighted Tannenbaum)
But shortening the route is
totally unnecessary. Here's
why lt takes so long:
• Lack of courtesy: Boaters
who are not registered to be
in the parade cut in and out
whenever they want, leaving
huge gaps. Boaters back out
of their docks during the
·parade with near misses,
again leaving huge gaps
since parade participants
must slam their boats in
reverse or try to dodge them
and go around.
•Unregistered boaters in
the parade: They don't know
the route and make up their
own, leaving out whole sec-
ttons ot the bayfront. And
they feet no obligation to
complete the porade, so they
jUst turn out. leaving a gap.
• Parade etiquette: Get
the word out, no one cuts
into the P8J:ade. Private
bOa .. , C.harten, and sight-
• ~need to courteously
WllAt for the parade to pass.
~ .. think your three tootl
Ol lb8 born mean• that the
~ cal'l atop for you.
• c::ia.rw boetl: Some take
•llNI cbalWn eadl
..... of the parade.~ _.. ....... .,..-ca~ ..,..,._. .. ibeY cut out,
--=·~ . Solution: .. Mligndm· ....... ~11!1! tn the hat· .. ~ . ....... -.....
boun. ::.
you have gone quite a
stretch without yelling •Mer-
ry Christmas" and you spot
. that single little hand waving
excitedly from a two-story
home, you know you've
made their evening.
We say educate the boaters
and put back the portions of
the bayfront you cut out.
Maybe next year, we can
get the S.S. Michigan back
into the parade. Our first
year, she only made five
nights without springing an
oil leak and ... I
Bill KEU.Y ANO GAY
WASSAU.-KEUY
Balboa Peninsula
Govenunentshould
know its borders
Once again intrusive gov-
ernment polices without fiex·
ibility 8Jld compassion are
ripping the peace from the
living quarters of an Ameri-
can citizen, tbe only living
quarters he has ever known
(•Resident trying to save his bedroom.. Tuesday).
Yes, our proactive govern-
ment polici~ intrude into our
peaceful coexistence to tell
us what to do and bow to do
it, when we can do it, and
bow we bad done it in the
past wa.s wrong.
Let's make a man pay a
tine because he bought a
house many years ago that
does not meet today's anti·
septic standards. Or maybe
we StiouJd put him and bis
family in jell if he doetn't
~ bta bedroom to a
~· or can't affOrd to add
a garage on b1I properfy.
Wbat ii wrong in our com-
m~ our government
ln8tlbl ~ wttb our mcse and laW eidorc.
ment ~ ... tllie IDUW·
ty tD be ......... ........ ---..11•tt• .... ,.. .... ,...., .........
lill111d ... ••t"*"afour =-ri.-:~m., . ........... .. •
n
'It's great to see the proce• of
educatlon underway agam.'
-............ ortndoel. EttMde High School.
on the Ot of the new IChoof ~ lrt the
Newport.._. Unified SchoOI Dfltrkt on~
• . ,
IOLTOI
• •
•
• . . .. . . . . . ...
" . ..
f'; .... • :: •6 • -~;~·
' .'1 • " _.,. I'
,."Ii., .. • (!/Jl.• ,i.·..-1
• •
•
~--' ·-~
• • ·.'?
0 •
' •
-'
'I
Does Ikea fit in the Home Ranch project?
be crowded when moving from one
area to the next.
However, I see a trend taking place
with the recent and a>ntinuous build-
ing growth. I have reviewed the gen-
eral plans of 1990 and have been
made aware ol other proposals to keep
the city from henm>lng overdeveloped.
ltis my-opinion that the current
general plans are sW1 applicable in the
~tr,.:.., Costa Mela and lerVe to keep a in its growth. I think growth is
ille\litab1e and change is sometimes
Decllllary. Semible changes that do
not lmpad the dtl7.ens, their heme
values and the ability to move about
the dty are to very bnportant and are
welcomed by most individuals.
Howevs, when dedlions om maqe
that jeopardize the quality of life for the
ID819 Mlidadlon of gnmling approval
to a large oorpoqtlon, one bu to ask if
tbe people at the helm are truly tbio.k-
b)Q and makq ded:ltnns in the best
ll!fereat of tbe people wbo rela c:led
tben1 to HIJl"BI IDt ib&~. ff the
iDterM ii tbse, !MwelihMtUJ• ._ tbe
negatiYe inlped* m Drlia CD ~OD a oommmtty are......._
It appeen that tbil battle II not
the ftnt fol' lkM and when the dti-
UDI Wbo speak out and agbt ege.iDilt
tbe ~Joie, the coiDunird·
ty u • wbcila sufreri. .. C»MEU WnlCJ(
Ca.ta~
ipation, and should not be amended.
KIMWHmS
Costa Mesa •
Daffy Piiot Thur1dcrt, ~ 6,.2001 Al
Planned benefits range fr9m Rocktoberfest to jazz
T bey are calllng it
"Roclttoberfest. • The
group 4-4 Women Por
Children, an am:Wary of the
Orangewood Children'•
Poundation, ta planning a f.U family feltival to be held
Oc.'t. 7 at Oak Canyon Park
1n Orange.
..-The auxUiary ta predomi-
nately made up oJ women in
the Newport·fyieaa commu-
dity, including SUl&D
lalBMU, Sally Clark, r.tatr"u Gordon, Kerl
ipoyte, Dian• Coon, Belly
Plbat, lubarl Kupp, Regi-
na Mulu, SUl&D Kimey,
CUolyn Mclnemey, Nancy
Vot and Sherri Winkler.
The fimily outing will
include mUlic by Pive
I)egree• of Soul, and anoth-
er group called World Tribe. <;>rganlzen will have rides,
arts and crafts, food, wine
and even a bullfrog race.
The group ll dedicated to
helping the chl!dren served
l)y the Orangewood Poun-
4ation, Hpedally teens
. l•aving the fo1ter care sys-
t~m. Proceeds from Rockto·
l>erfeat will directly benefit
the peer coUnJelor fund.
Call (71-4) 636-4781 for
information and reaerva-
t1on1 .
• • •
• The National Multiple
Scleroti1 Society, Orange
County Chapter, ls planning
tD boat what It ll terming a
•1egal day~ on Sept. 22. The
concept behind this special
event ii to offer free legal
coDIUltation with an attor·
ney to people with !flultlple
aclerotia and their families.
The goal l1 to help them
concerning their rights ln
areal 1uch a1 t0dal security,
health care, e1tate planning,
employment is1ues and
much more.
Regiatration for this ser-
Tice-ortentated charitable
,vent ll requi[ed by Sept.
1-4. Call (9"9) 1s2:1seo for
information.
There are morMhan
B.W. Cook
THE CROWD
3,000 lndivlduall in Orange
County fighting multiple
sclero1is, which is consld·
ered the No. 1 neurological
disea1e of young adultl.
There ll no known cause,
cure or prevention for the
disea1e.
• • •
Penny Newman at Nord·
strom at South· Coa1t Plaza is
working yery closely with
Patrtda Manball and Mar·
aha Andenon, co·chair·
women of the Orange Coun-
ty Performing Arts Center's
annual Candlelight Concert
and Gala.
Nordstrom wUl once
again kick off the winter
social season leading up to
Candlelight Concert with lta
dazzling collection of cou-
ture gowns. Organlzen will
redecorate the Bra&1 Plum
Salon at the South Coast
Plaza store, turning It lnto' a
jazz club setting on Sept. 25.
The jazz theme has been
chosen to complement th11
year'• featured star enter·
talner, singer Diana Krall.
PeMy Newman reportl
that she is also planning a
selection of men's designer
formal wear to add to thls
year's show.
• • •
Dedicated local organlz·
era Marte B1uh and Nina
Rattner are co-chairlng a
VIP aponsor reception hon·
oring donon and 1upporten
of the 10th annivenary
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SUl&D G. Komen Orange
County Race for the Cure.
The reception will be held
at Ay1la 101 in Newport
Beach, and more than 350
lllovei Rabbi Bernard
King and hit wUe, Barbara,
wU1 be honored by the
AnU-DetamaUon League ol
Orange County at a Sept.
30 brunch. The Newport
Beach couple wtll be given
the Leaden ol DtaUncUon
Award.
It left: hquel and
Bruno Ledwin wW
al.lo be honored at
the AnU-DetamaUon
League'• brunch.
guests are anticipated to
attend the Sept. 20 evening
tribute.
Stephanie Komen,
daughter of Susan G.
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KoD\en, and Dr. Dava GU·
~ co-founder of the
Orange County Komen a.ffil.
late, wW speak at the dinner
reception. Cal.UomJa Lt.
Gov. Cruz Buatuumte and
it.ate Anemblywoman Lynn
Daucber will also be on -
hand. Local support is com-
ing from Nanci Brown1 Car·
la X..mmack1 Steve, Jane
and Kelly Hll11 Cathy Pear·
IOD; Barbara Pulkl1 Mary
Taylor1 Sharon Tumer1 and
Jtm. Betty and Shelly
Wlnek.
The Susan G. Kamen
Brea1t Cancer Foundation
railed more than $1 .38 mil·
lion la1t year ln Orange
County alone, with 75% bf
the proceedt remalning
right here In th.ls community
for breast health programs
and treatments.
• • •
The Anti-Defamation
League of Orange County,
headquartered ln Costa
Mesa, will recognize the
humanitarian efforts of com·
munlty leaders with lta
annual appeals brunch on
Sept. 30. Bernard and Bar·
bara King will receive the
League's Leaden of Distinc-
tion Award. In addition,
phllanthropls~s Bruno and
Rachel Ledwtn, and Sy and
Reva Alban will be honored
for their tireless and gener-
ous efforts to build a
stronger and more tolerant
society.
For more Information, c:a'll
Ruth Bridge at (71 4) 979-
4733.
• TMI CROWD 1ppHn Thund1ys
i nd S.turdays.
Harrison-Lupo
Mr. and Mrs. L Ski
Harrison of~
Beach announce the enaaaement of their
daijgMer, Undsey Jiii
Hanitori, to Grant
Michael Lupo. '
'The brlc»-to-be Is a
1997 graduate of UC Sant. Barbara, where
she majored In polltk:al
science. Sht 1lso gradu-
ated from Newport Har·
bor High School and Is
enrolled at UC Irvine to
obt.ln a doctorlte ln
polltlcal scJenc:e.
The groom-to-be Is
the son of Mr. and Mrs.
Thomas lupo of Tustin.
He gradulted with • . polltlcal science deQree
from UC Santa '81r61ra
In 1996 and ff radueted
from Dana H lls High
School. He Is a broker
coordinator with
~t>.nc Mortgage In
La Jolla.
A Sept. 15 wedding ls
planned It First United
Methodist Church In
Santa Barbara.
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YOU!
A11 Jhunday.~6,2001 Daily Pilat
s~e over: 'The J)i;!rjp -End; Jade Scorpion ' a light romp,
Beware of f8.lling
into 'The Deep End'
It it a glarlngly bright
momlilg in Reno. A tense,
ghottly looking woman
SUSANNE
PEREZ
knocks on a
seedy night-
club's door,
looking very
out of place.
When it
opens, she
asks for the
manager,
Darby Reese
(Josh Lucas).
She tells the
smirking Reese to •stay
away from my son."
Thus begins the ·The
Deep End," a creepy thriller
with noir-ish undertones
and a beautiful performance
by Tilda Swinton (•Orlan-
do·).
REEL CllTICS
"She's a mother, not a
moron." Perhaps that'• not
entirely true, as we soon
find out.
A body is discovered the
next morning. Believing she
is protectidg her son, Mar-
garet carries out a foolish
cover-up, which could la'nd
her in jail. Her actions place
her in deeper jeopardy than
she could possibly have
imagined when a stranger
comes to her door the next
day (Goran Visnjic of "ER")
demanding $50,000 in 24
hours.
who it both admired and
teased by h.11 colleagues.
With the exception of one.
Helen
Hunt, an
executive
and flancee
of the com-
pany's chief
executive
(Dan Ack-
royd),
ILUNOIE loathes him.
HUMPlllY He returns
the 1entt-
ment, and they spend con-
siderable time insulting
each other. They fool no
one, of course, and judging
by the guffaws, the audi-
ence enjoys the repartee.
Swinton Is Margaret Hall,
a typical busy mom w1th a
husband away at sea. It is
up to her alone to cope w\_th
their Tahoe City home, the
kids' busy schedules, her
dotty father-in-law, and now
this 30-year-old sleazeball
who ts somehow mixed up
with her brooding t 7 -year-
old, Beau (Jonathan Hall).
Neither mother nor son are
good communicators.
Indeed. Margaret can't even
seem to e-mail her husband
about the situation.
The deceptively fragile-
looking Swinton is riveting
to watch. Margaret's panic
gives way to quiet anger as
she tries to make everything
the way it was before, and
at times even ignores the
very real danger of her situ-
ation. It's almost as U she
thinks she can simply make
it all go away just through
the sheer force of her will.
In an odd twist, her
blackmailer, Alek Spera
(Visnjic), comes to her aid in
an emergency, proving him-
self not such a heartless
thug after all. A visible
wave of guilt and shame
come over bun when be
realizes this lS a basically
decent family that he is try-
ing to exploit.
Jeff Brtdge1, left, and Kevin Spacey 1tar In 11K-Pu," a quirky tale about·a man
who sayt he'• from another planet and the psychologist entrusted with his care.
It wll1 open In theaten Oct. 26.
Allen has made such
notable pictures as "Play It
Again Sam," •Annie Hall,•
•Purple Rose of Cairo" and
"Hannah and Her Sisters,"
and has been nominated for
an Academy Awa.rd seven
times as a writer or director
or both. Several of the
actors in his films have also
been nominated and won
under his direction -such
as Diane Keaton for •Annie
Hall ~ and Michael Caine for
•Hannah and Her Sisters.• Siegel have crafted an
involving drama based
•rhe Deep End" iB rtJted
R for some violence and Jan·
guage, and for a strong sex
scene.
• SUSANNE PEREZ, 45, lives in
Costa Mesa and is an executive
assistant for a financial servkes
company.
edged, even by those who
don't like him, as a master
filmmaker, a unique talent
who goes his own way and
scorns Hollywood.
Make no bones about it,
this is just a caper film with
some of Allen's usual self-
indlJ}gences, and it contains
no serious theme as many of
his films have in the past.
The acting is competent. Beau sneaks outside for a
late-night rendezvous with
Reese, thinking his mother
has no clue about them. But
as even Reese polnts out,
While the characters'
actions may not be realisbc,
co-writers and directors
Scott McGehee and David
upon the 1940s novel "The
Blank Wall,• by Elizabeth S.
Holding. Suspense is
metered out at just the right
pace to keep you glued to
your seat, aided by the
beautiful cinematography
-with its many references
to bodies of water -and Stingless 'Scorpion'
haunting score. a winner
Allen has made all of his
pictures in New York City,
including his current release,
~The Curse of the Jade
Scorpion,• set in 1940. And
it's a lighthearted winner
with a good cast, oddball if
thin plot, quite a lot of funny
lines and crisp direction.
The directing is adequate.
The c"1nedic elements are
frequently fresh and some-
times hilarlous.
My friend and I were still
debating the movie after-. Even aficionados of
"The Curse of the Jade
Scorpion• doesn't really pre-
tend to be anything more
than it is, and it serves its
audiences well as a pleasant
summer entertainment.
ward. I leave it for you to · Woody Allen await each As is customary, Allen
plays a bespectacled nerd,
this time as a high-perfor-
mance security consultant
decide, at the film's conclu· new film he makes with a
sion, whether this was also mixture of anticipation and
an unusual love story. trepidation. He's acknowl-
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•rhe curse of the Jade
Scorpion• la rated PG-13 tor
some sexual content.
• • ILEANOllE ~mY, •owr
65, • lives In Cost. Mesa and IS a
political junkie involved with stv·
eral city committees.
~A"Whale : .~eE~Tale ~
(Mt) 8°54-3-a.gT ~
A9o~bW..o#•~ ' ·~ c.sr-~ .. Un!,,....,, Ce!il!:..,...
Sliaron Crtttfi u tfit author of stvrral
btst-ulli.ng boof<s, including, 'Waif< rttvo
:Moons·, wfrrnrr of tfit .Jfrwbrry .Medal
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Oolfy Pilot
••• ... MllTY
. !*-1 IDd Jue Meoazlne
Wll ~ta fall 2001 col·
..,. party in booor of the
wllllMr ot The Chic and
1119 J.OWdown guest editor
ON ' l fronl 1 to 9 p.m.
t!DMy' at D'8se1 in South
COllt Pl.Ua, 3333 s. iJriltol
SI., COlta Mesa. Pree. (310)
401-0702. .
SIW"IN
1be Crilft and Sewing Festi-
vil ii beck at. the Orange
CoUPty PairgrOunds from 10
em. to 5 p.m. today through
• ~·The festival fea-
tura a teries of "make it
"" and take it wol'k.sbop&, •
~ with new products,
tjcbDique ~and more.
Tbe event wW be held in
r .Building 10 at the fair-
groundl. 88 Pair Drive, Cos·
~ ta Mela. $8. (800)_ 962-7238.
FIElDTRIP
, •fi81d ntp• at the Lab wW
briDg bands such as The
Ziggelil, PPends of Desire
and 1'be Soundhead to the
outdoor mall from 2 to 1
p.m. Saturday. There will
be a sidewalk sale, a deejay
:=aways at this back·
event The Lab is
at 2930 Bristol St, Costa
Mees. Pree. (714} 966-6661.
lbe jewelry of
Donna Blurock Is
among the work
that will be on ·
display at the
Orange County
Museum of Art's
Pad.tic Craft Show
from 11 a.m. to
S p.m. SepL 15-16 ..
Free. A kickoff
party will be held
from 6 to 1 O p.m.
Sept 15. $30, or
$20 for members.
lbe museum is at
850 San Clemente
Drive, Newport
Beach. (949) 759'-
1122, Ext. 232.
Theater wW hold a Balboa
Beach Blanket Barbecue -.
complete with a water bal·
loon toss, three-legged race
and more-from noon to 5
p.m. Sunday at Balboa
Peninsula Park, adjacent to
the Balboa Pier. The event
will include a Surfing'
Ducky Wave Race, with
duck en1ries available for
$5, and a harbecOe lunch
for purchase. Proceeds of
the barbecue and ducky
race wW go toward the ren·
ovation of \he Balboa The-
ater. Free. (9'9) 646-5161.
RosEYs AuroBODY
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eo-treepOt (on"tJ91)0)
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NII .............
(949)131.4136
DA'IIBOOK 1nunday, s.p...a. 6, 2001 Al 1
Local the.aters gearing up for n~w season
W hen the calendar
turns to September,
theatergoel'li under-
. go a unique reinvigoration -
at least this one does -
shedding the languor from
th~ dog days of August in
anticipation of new adven-
tures under the spotlights.
The official opening d the
2000-01 stage season will
arrive this weekend as Van·
guard University in Costa
Mesa mounts a muslat.l revue
titled "The Rood Most ltav-
eJed. • It's a tuneful trip through
the pitfalls d cbildhood. high
school and oollege, directed by
senior student Rachel Hart. It
will play two engagements
spaood five months apart-
this weekend and Feb. 21-24.
South Coast Repertory
inaugurates its short season
Friday with "The Circle,• an
oldie from W. Somerset
Maugham described as a
•breezy commentary on one
generation's inability to learn
from another's misfortunes.·
History repeats itself
through Oct. 7 as SCR
mounts a new slate of plays
on one hand and builds a
brand new theater adjacent
to the existing complex on
the other, thus necessitating
a shortened season.
Orange Coast College's the-
ater department -which will
be kept busy with 11 produc-
tions during the new season -
will kick off its schedule Satur-
day wtth several short come-
dies by Russian playwright
Anton Chekhov in OCC's Stu-
dio Theater. 1be program will
nm through Sept 16.
After a pause of a week
and a half, the greasepaint
really hits the fan as tow
productions open locally in
the space of three days.
Starting things off will be the
THEATER REVIEW
outrageous spoof •Forbidden
Broadway,• arriving Sept. 19
at the Orange County Per-
forming Arts Center for a
brief, five-day engagement.
I've had occasion to wit-
ness this irreverent troupe in
action on three occasions
(including its offshoot, •for-
bidden Hollywood•), and it's
always been a tremendous
comic kick, with newer
shows satirized each vea.r.
"The Uon in Winter,•
James Goldman's look at one
of England's past royal fami-
lies that makes today's
princes and princesses seem
almost normal, kicks off the
new season Sept. 21 through
Oct. 20 at the Newport The-
atre Arts Center. King Henry
n and bis imprisoned queen,
Eleanor of Acquita.ine, battle
both each other and their
three contentious sons in a
power struggle laced with
broad doses of comedy.
SCR's Second Stage will be
open for business that week·
end also, starting off with the
world premiere of •Hold
Please" by Annie Weisman, a
play commissioned by SCR
that delves into the psyches of
women in the workplace and
questions just how far they've
come. An all-female cast will
propel the modem comedy
through Oct. 21.
The fowth newcomer of
that week is a play that's been
around a lot lately, Robert
Hatling's "Steel Magnolias,·
which lifts the season curtain
at the Costa Mesa Civic Play-
house. Llk.e •Hold Please,• it
offers male-free theater as six
women in a Southern beauty
shop share the good times, as
well as the bad and the ugly.
It runs through Oct. 14.
Orange Coast College will
.Donate
your vehicle.
1-888-308-6483
Set hope in motion
to improve local lives.
• RVs • Boats • Real Estate • Tax Deductible
How best to take care
of a work of art?
A Rolex timepiece ia truly a marvel of performance
and mdurance. In five yars cl continuous timebepina,
ita btllnr« wheel travels the equivalmt ti 23.333 miles.
Thia kind of performanct daervea proper cm and
periodic maintenance. and Rola rea>mmenda that thGi
timepieces bt daDed and oiled appr:oxim&tcly every
five years. If you\~ i.nveited in a ROia you•w iDldt an
utute decision. Prautt that inffltnltnt by~ tM
.ame .oundjudsment whm itcamea to the meU-••
of your tm.pece, /u ID OftiCial Rola Jeweler ft lft
deOaa.i toh iD-.!tY "~Rola timqiul,
puta IDCl acc 11 acia. Plalt mt ow ltCft
Whlb JOU• ... to cliiO.-tbec:M
and ...... rl~ltola.
be back again Oct. 11 with
Ula Loomer'& barbed comedy
•1be Waiting Room,• which
takes on medical ethics and
sexual stereotypes, to be
staged ln the Drama Lab
Theater on the Costa Mesa
campus through Oct. 21.
The ntlogy Playhouse in
Costa Meso wW be creating
a monster Oct. 12 when the
lights ~o up on "Franken·
stein• -just in time for Hal·
loween. This dramatization
of the Mary Shelley novel
that became a cinematic hor-
ror classic in the early 1930s
wW open Oct. 12 and play
through Oct. 28.
Yet a third play with an
all-woman cast bows in Oct.
19, when Vanguard Univer-
sity takes the wraps oU the
musical "Quilters.• Pioneers
on the American prairie -a
mother and her six daugh-
ters -comprise the cast of
this tale of hardship and tri-
umph set to music by Molly
Newman and Barbara
Damashek. It will play two
weekends, closing Oct. 28.
The ubiquitous OCC drama
program surfaces yet again
Oct. 26 with Henrik Ibsen's •A
Doll's House: presented by
the college's repertory theater
program in the Studio Theater
through Nov. 4.
Fmally, UC Irvine will JOin
the parade Nov. 9 with the
musical version of a popular
movie, "VictorMctona. • This
story of a woman disguised
as a man to be a female
''' Addi • -pheiJe i'MMnOM. fol ltitill -... ,, 'I
C!Plfli'f thtili I a 'S
• South COldl .......... 155
Town c."9r O.M. Co.ta
Miia. (714) 70M595.
• Orange (Giit c.oMlelt, 2501
Fait Drive. eo.ca Mela. (714)
432...tllO . 0r-. C'.ounty ~
Arts Center. 600 Town <Mar
Drive, Cost.a Meul. (714) 740-
7871
• Nelitp()rt Theatre Arts Cen-
ter, 2501. Q;ff DrM. NewpOtt ee.cn. (714) 631-o:tll.
• Costa Mesa Cllllc: ~ •
611 Hamilton St., Costa Mesa.
(949) 65().5269.
• Trilogy Playhouse. 2930 Bris-
tol St., Costa Mesa. (714) 957·
U47.
• Vanguard Univenlty, SS Fllr ome. Costa Mesa. (714) 668-
6145.
• UC Irvine, ~ Dl'tlle in
Irvine. (949) 824-2787.
impersonator comes from the
creative minds of Blake
Edwards, Leslie Bricusse and
Henry Mancini, and will be
staged through Nov. 17 at the
Irvine Barclay Theater.
It's a fulJ plate for local the-
atergoers over the next couple
of months, with more to come
m November and December.
• TOM mus writes about and
reviews local theater tor the Daily
Pilot. His S1orles appear Thursday5
and Sa1urdays.
! I Susla HGll.Sell Jkllld ~·tt••\ LATIN JAZZ Su1ttfG9
~ ... ~ ~-~ 9 . ... ~ • • •• 5: .. p.111 EASTILUFF PARK
cou .. 11 Of VISTA DEL oao & VISTA DIL SOL
..
Daily Pilot
Taco Mesa is topsf9-rftSh tacos
S everal months ago, I
wrote about a local
chain popular with
surfera that speclall:zes in
fish tacos. My seemingly
innocuous ~lumn triggered
a heated debate in the office
where I work that centered
on who had the best fish
tacos in town.
Factions aligned along
preparation styles, fried or
grilled: tortilla type, fiour or
com; and toppings. When
the dust had settled, the
consensus seemed to be that
Taco Mesa, the small Costa
Mesa stand, was the fish
taco king.
Intent on proving out this
proclamation, I've spent
some time recently at Taco
Mesa, and I can tell you
this: They make a dam good
taco.
Taco Mesa, although
diminutive in size, is hard to
miss. The squat brick build-
ing is perched on 19th
Street directly C\cross from
aaY Night Poo~~o1\ft~11 or LolNfe, }'•<'o. ~
Sit PKb sWtlag Sl.M .
Killer Nachos & Quesadlllas
Buy one gel one Free Taco
(F'ISh • Clucken ·Came AsadcJ Tacos)
Beer Pitchers -Bud lite S3.95
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Taco Specif} Days
1'aes& Thurs. Starting at $1.25
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Grilled Fish, Chicken, Lobster
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Modetos Sl.t5 6 Coronu $5.95
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DllllG
REVIEW
the Costa Mesa Department
of Motor Vehicles and next
to a fast-food hamburger
joint famous for serving bil-
lions. All of the exterior
walls are painted bright
blue -all that is, save for
one side wall that sports an
ocean-themed mural that
looks like a Cross between
Wyland and Peter Max.
The front of the building
bas a wrought-iron fenced
patio that sports folding
tables and chairs that are
the majority of the restau-
rant's seating. It's easy to
look at the bright brick
building and imagine that it
was lifted from a dusty road
in Baja and dropped in its
current location.
Inside, bright yellow
walls with windows trimmed
in fire engine red further the
less than subdued theme.
The onJy interior seating is a
row of stools against the
window, and these are usu-
ally filled with patrons wait-
ing for takeout orders.
Ordering at Taco Mesa
takes place at a large open
counter that offers a ringside
view of the busy chefs hard
at work. Menu items are
listed on large placards
above 1he counter, and a
chalkboard features the '
day's specials.
Taco Mesa opens daily at ·
7 a.m., and those in the
know will fortify themselves
here with a hearty breakfast
before braVing the lines at
the DMV across the street.
A good start might be one of
the hefty burrito de huevos.
l like the mexicana's version
.($3.69), a large flour tortilla
stuffed with beans, cheese,
onion. tomato and cilantro,
as well as scrambled eggs.
Any of the bunitos can be
ordered dry or •wet,•
topped with a spicy enchila-
da sauce. ·
Breakfast enchiladas
($5.4~) feature two com tor-
tillas stuffed with scrambl~
eggs and topped with chili
sauce, lettuce, cheese and
pico mesa, a condiment of
chopped tomato, onion and
herbs.
Wash all this down with a
hot cup of coffee and some
freshly squeezed fruit juice.
Taco Mesa offers carrot,
orange, apple or pineapple,
all squeezed fresh on the
premises.
Lunch is when the real
action starts, and we start
thinking about those tacos.
Taco Mesa boasts all fresh
ingredients, and it's not bard
lo believe while watching
the chefs behind the
counter, frantically at work
chopping, dicing and slicing
a \'ariety o1 vegetables,
heros and ineat..
Almost 4ll of the entree
selections feanue the same
choices of fillings: ft.ab, cala-
~ or chicken, plain or
blackened with a zesty com-
bination of Mexican spices,
tender carnitas (deep-fried
pork) or grilled shrimp. Beef
is included either in a shred-
ded and ~ed variety or
marinated e asada.
Choices what it's all
about at Taco Mesa. No less
than three styles of tacos are
offered: traditional ($1.69),
served on white com tortilla
and topped simply with
cilantro and onion1 parrilla
style ($1.89), which sp_orts
red and .nbe tortillas and
romaine lettuce, pico mesa,
sour cream and cheese; or
my favorite, new wave tacos
($2.49), which adds spicy
chili mayonnaise and cab-
bage relish to the mix.
All of the stuffings are
good, and there is no doubt
that this is some great fish
wrapped between com tor-
tillas. The blackening spices
add spicy flavor to the mild
white fish without overpow-
e!iJig the rest of the ingredi-
ents, and the fish itseU is
served in large, moist
chunks, as opposed to being
shredded, which seems to
produce a drier result.
SEWING • QUILTING • CRAFTS • NEEDLE -ARTS
PLUG IN ,
Orange ~ounty .Craft ® :
& Sewmg Festival ® 1
10 a.m.-5 p.m. st Ora~e County f'!lrgrounde~ I
(off 405 exft. F•lnllew. off 55 md' Dt:ltMr/Fair) I
September 6. 7 & 8. 2001 I
I (Com• Thurwtay ~ f7t.h tor Early IJuylllf f"rMlttfH J I
SEWING • QUllllNG • CRAFTS • NEEDLE-ARTS I
See ani:l l:>uy w latest eupplle&. fal:irlce. notlone.
p•tten\6 •nd coole ... •II under one roofl
For •i:ldltlonal &how Information vi~ our 1¥eb.ite •t:
www.craftalldHWlnefeetMll.com
orc.11:1-~.
FRE E ?EM l~~R~ & ',\·~;~J\S HOr S'
(ynur f!I 1-'PI I'-, qr • I '" 1,I '1.1¥'-'
I
I
I
I
I
I ••
Plug into the Pilot Classified section to find services from
electronics and plumbers, to landscapers and pamte<s.
An ~erloali Pemny ·operated. ;au.meas.
Since 1983
~noora~a
Our family aervin.C your family
for,7yeara
LIFETIME Im 9' EXCLUSIVE DrfmTOll
OUARAITEE CAiPET I LIFETIE GUARAITEE CARPET $1 '' . ~:::·:::; :::::~ IQ. ., . n. u1tt1 •• c, .. ~ ••tt••tf
WOOL 8ERIER
CARPET
$24~~:
.
The calamari is also ten-
der, UU. ii·~
becau.e it am be IO difficult
to cook in such a hectic
environment. Caniitas, one
of my favorites, are light and
not the least bit' greasy,
with a pleasant lime mari-
nade flavor.
As if the above pennuta-
tions wel"en't enough to
boggle a hungry mind, Taco
Mesa offers a variety of oth-
er Mexican ~ties, all juice-based beyerag!! that
featuring variations of the literally translates to •tresh
same great ingredients. A water." These refreshing
great choice for huich is a beverages made from water,
torta (Sil.49), a Mexican sugar and fresh fruit pulp
sandwich made on a baked are the perfect libation for a
white roll and stuffed with bot summer afternoon. Of
grilled onions, avocado, course, there's a selection of
tomato, lettuce and, of bottled domestic and Mexi-
course, your choice of meat. can beers, as well as a token
The whole thing is dressed offering of wipe.
with a tangy chili-flavored Taco Mesa is an inexpen-
mayonnaise, and the extra sive slice of old Baja. The
hungry can add a side of portions are plentiful, the
rice and beans for 99 cents. service is cheerful, and the
Vegetarians won't go atmosphere is always fes-
hungry here, either. The tive. And yes,' the fish tacos
vegetarian burrito ($4.49) are awesome.
offers grilled onions, avoca-• Whether you're beaded
do, tomato, beans and sour to a dreaded OMV visit, or
cream rolled in a flour tor-just have a taste for good,
tilla, and there's also a tasty authentic Mexican food, you
vegetarian tostada ($4.29) won't be disappointed with
that tops a crisply fried tor-Taco Mesa.
tilla with beans, cheese, let-
tuce, tomato and sour
cream.
Beverages include agua
fresca ($1.19 or $1.49), a fruit
SAVE TIME!
• STEll'Hf.N SANTACROCE'S
restaurant reviews appear every
other Thursday. Send him your com-
ments at sdsantaOoc-<Jining.com.
"I ' a...; ,, m a 11uppy guy ... .
DtlW PWlllni, COsta MeN HIQti
football coach .
s., .........
GARTH IERGESON
Daily Pilot ...... ..._~Cart.on • 9A9..S7.U223 • ....... fcua 9A9-6500170 lhunday, s.p.nb. 6, 2001 Bl
HIGH SOIOOl FOOTIALL
l FRIDAY· NIGHT LIGHTS
Jay Noonan II
on a maiden
voyage tonight
wbenhls
&tandaHigh
Eagles take the
field at Newport
Harbor agalmt
Magnolia.
Full esteem
ahead for
the· Eagle·s
Estancia and Magnolia
are in search of positive
beginning in tonight's
nonleague opener.
Barry Faulkner
0All.Y Pll.oT
NEWPORT BEACH -e Two football rosters
yearning to feel better
about themselves will
battle one another for that
opportunity tonight, when
Estancia High hosts Magnotia in the
season opener for both schools. Kk:koff •
is 1 o'dock at Newport Harbor High.
Estancia, which lnltiates the Jay
Noonan era. comes off a tumultuous
ottseason, in which lts former coach
and five returning starters left for
crosstown rival Costa Mesa.
The Eagles lineup includes no
returning starters and less than a
handful who saw substantive action
last fall.
Magnolia, on the other hand, went
1-9 ln the debut campaign of former El
Modena coach BUl Backstrom last year.
The Senttnels' malaise appears to be
rooted much deeper, since the pogimn
Ml lost 17 of its last 20 gam«;t and baa
not made the CIF Southern Section
playoffs since 1982.
But, barring a tie, tonight's
showdown will propel one program
toward a brighter future.
Estancia will need to tum.up its
intensity, acoording to Noonan, who
becomes the ninth coach in the 37-
seuon blstory of the program.
Noonan a longtime assistant who
wor.ked most recently at Capistrano
Valley High, has brought renewed
enthuslalm and a whole new aesthetic
to the Eagles.
Estancia will debut its winged
belmeCI and new maroon home jeneyl
tonight. The Eagles also abandon Jut
year's wtng T for a more traditional
two-back pro.set offeme, wbkh will
be triggered by junior quarterback.
Lewis Bradshaw, a transfer from NewPort Hada.
On defeme, tbe ~Will U0 '81111b
an attacking foaNour .-..1n wbkh
pla}Wlwllbe~DattoW....
time reading keysi but mmely aplode
SEE ESTANCIA MGI 12
~y Pl.OT PHO'fO
BY STM MCCIW«
BrtanGMta
Harbor Hlgb Sallon open lbe
2001 football INIOD tomght with
a nonleague game Ill Brea Ollllda
High where a very IOUd 0nnge
Lutberua foe awaits. TIM Sallon.
CIP Division VI ftnaltds a year
ago, enter lbe INIOD with No. 3
credentlab In the pr t meaon CIP poll.
A. BtOCKBUSTER PREMIER
Tars try to extend 12-game winning streak in opener
ag ainst highly regarded Lancers tonight, at Brea Olinda.
a.ry~
DMYPl.or
BREA-The movie studkll would
kill for tbe opening numben the. Newport Harbor High football
program has put up for more
~.decade.
Coec:b ht( Brinkley's SaDon put
a 121Jeme winning streak in seasm openers,
belt· in Orange County, on the line tonight
wben they face Orange Lutheran in a 7
o'dodt M",_'W• battle at Brea Olinda High.
That Harbor nm includes a sublequent
foif8t ti; q.mg. Hlgb In 1~. but the SaOon
are ~nothlngto be~ totbem by
tb8 l..aDain, Wbo bave already railed the
curtain OD tMir teUOD.
Orange Lutheran, 1-0 and ranked No. 2 in
the CIF Southern Section Division XI
presea.son poll, defeated Hawaii Ptep, 28-6,
Aug. 18 in Hawaii and have now won 31 of
their last 35 games, induding last year's run
to the Division XI tWe game.
Newport Harbor, of course, has been no
slouch in recent years, having made back.-to-
back CIF Dtvillon VI~ appearances
and reached Its division final five of the last
nine seasons.
The Sailors' Dtvilton VI champions in 1999.
are 2'"3-1 CM!!' the last two yem, establishing
a ICbool record for victories in consecutive
le. Cl•. Purther. the nus. ranked No. 3 In the
Divllkm VI p e • an pol. are 32-1-t In their last
3' gamel egaiDlt team.I not in tbs Sea View
League. dating beck to the opener ln 1996.
SEE NEWPORT PAGE 12
N : sailors open ~ Witlt a
CONTINUED fROM 81
1bougb *9idr bMig played '1MY have ICOl8d 9" pointa, •
a game glVelCoacb Jbn KuDau'I (I IAmllG$ average of more than 36 per
Lancers a diattnct adnatage, game. ,
-..e oC that edge snay be However, the 1eveo points
leaeoeid by the fact that playing ~ ma.Qaged against Newport
eo early forced them to take a ..._"" last fall. ftnding the end zone on
week otf to 1atisfy tedion rules 1• t.a Mlrldl a J.4-yard 1nside tcreen pua. 1S
regardlng practice days. t ~art...._ the fewest they've SC01l!d In their
Brinkley also believes there is •. ~ last 38 games.
an emotional lntanglble bis 5. El MOd.na And while N~rt's defense,
Sailors Will Juwe over the Lanoe.rs 6· feo4hlll with only one Jtarter back from
tonight. ~ = lut year, wj)) be challenged, the
"'There's something to be said 9 . .,,,.._hit Sailors' offense should provide
about the exdtemenl and antic-10. ~ almlla.r difficulty to the·Ora.oge
ipatioo that goes inlo playing tbat '----------~ L\ltheran defense.
" {irstgame.-BrlnkleysaJd. •ttbJ.nkwe'reanxious Harbor's attack will be trt,ggered bf senior
to play.. quarteJback Morgan c~. wbo tbreW for 1,308
1be Sallors satisfied some of their competitive yards and nine TDs Jut fall.
wges by scrimmaging Mission Viejo Aug. 31. Junior Dartagnan Jobnlon makes his starting
There are, however still questions that can only debut at tailback, operating behind a line BdnJdey
be answernd under the lights. before bleadlerl fuD believes could be the best in his 16-seasoo tenure.
of spectators. and between two sidelines manned That olfemlve line is led by blue-chip senior
by those with hopes and dreams at stake. tackle Robert Chai (6-foot...f, 270 pounds), senior
Brinkley expects a supreme challenge fTorn Montana·bound center Jeff Marshall (6-5, 215) and
the perennial Olympic League champions, who senior guard Bryan Breland (6-3, 245). All three
have made a roncerted effort in feee!ll years to join were starters last year, when Chris Manderino
the county's prep football mainstream. The Lancers led a ground game that surpassed 3,000 yards.
will join the Empire League next fall and, if Newport'• lone returning starter on defense,
divismnal alignments rema.lp the same, would senior Brlan Gaeta, is questionable due to pain
join the Sailors in Division VJ. Ungerlng in knees which underwent offseason
• 1 know they've got talent and they're a team swgery to relieve tendinitis. U Gaeta, who was a
on the rise," said Brinkley, who guided the Sailors fimt·telm All-Sea 'View receiver with 62 receptions
to a 14-7 victory in last year's opener, the first Jut season, can go, he'll be moved from
meeting between the two schools. "I'd compare comerback to strong safety on defense, in order
whdl they're doing in Orange County football with to provide better run support
what Fresno State is doing oo the college level. Both Run defense ls the leading concern for Brinkley
have tried to go out and play everybody big." aod his staff, 1be lllrs will rely on senior noseguard
Ordllge Lutheran's three losses last year were Joe Poley, senior middle linebacker Cory Ray and
to OF division fmallsts, including Sea View League senior tackle Scott Kohan to handle the Lancers'
members Irvine and Newport Harbor. They have interior run game.
.idded Servile and Marina to this years preleague Ends David Marshall and Jim Rothwell, outside
slate. They hammered all five Olympic League linebackers 'JYler Miller and Dave Eridaloo. as well
foes by a combined score of 201-62 last fall. as comerbacks Nick Iverson and Adam Kerns,
Th<> Ldn<. Prs, who, at times, run their veer will be asked to handle option assignments onthe
option attack out of a row-receiver spread, have ~rimeter.
put up big offensive numbers the last two years. Senior quarterback Jason Taylor will ~ger the
ESTA·ICll e
.... ....,_ .... Wt.0. .... ,..,.
l 111 E .UPS
D9INsE
Ht. Wt. a . ,.,._ .... /
12 '-....... 6-J 189 Jr. Q8 61,_.t moMDMB 6-1 195 Sr. D£ 11 ..... ~ -S.11 HQ Sr. RI
21 .... MDI.... 5-1 165 Sf. RI
51.._ IOtel . S.112A5 So. OT
lJ '*'-H: _ ..,, 6-0 170 Sr. M M~~ 6-2MS Jr. OT 12'-......__ i-3 119 Jr. OE
11 ,._"-al 5-1t170 5'. OU 57......... s-9 2AS Sr. IUI ..... -.a. S.10210 Sf. u
lJ .... "'-•• 6-0 170 Sr. ot.I
17 Pw -Sim&. 5-10 175 Sf. CB
17 S -Sim&. S.10 17S Sr. M t .... llMIM S.10 120 Sr. Tl
ltAU 1•c--6-1 195 Sr. LT n .... ~ 6-4 2AO Sr. LG 15'-•• ' 41 S.11 2AO Jr, (
fO ~ 9-5-9 235 So. RG &t..., ~ 6-2 2A5 Jr. '"' 11.._.._ s-tno Sr. a
4 ..... ""'-S41..0 Sr FS
•
ESTANCIA
CONTINUED FROM 81
toward tbc> general direction of
the ball carrier.
Noonan, as well as his
players, are extremely excited
to kklc things ott.
·we have to be prepared.-
Noonan 18.id. ·we are prepared.
we just have to play like we're
prepared. We can't afford
turnovers and rnist4kes and we
can't give up anything on our
spedAl teams.•
That preparation included
Friday's scrimmage against
CabriUo of Long Beach. during
which Noonan said his defense
struggled against the much
bigger Jaguars.
•eabrUJo was ve.ry big and
physlcaJ, • Noonan said. "If
Magnolia saw WI scrtmmage, 1t
wU1 probably try to run the ball
against tJ•. Run defense is a
concern for us."
Noonan is more confident in
his secondary, which includes
returning lettermen Mitch
Valdes and Ryan Grimes, as well
as talented transfers Nate
.Harriman and Jermaine Snell.
Hantman. a speedster from
Texas, and Snell, a late fall
arrival from Fountain Valley, will
al.so start at receiver.
The offensive line will need
to provide Bradshaw adequate
time to find his fleet receivers
down the field. and allo by to
create running room for tenloq
running backs Junior Tanlelu\
and Raymond Romua.
Another issue may be con-
ditioning, since the EagJel have
seven p1ayers 'Starting both
ways.
Little ls known about
Magnolia, which annually faces
an uphill battle for guarapteed
playoff berths with Orange
League rivals Brea Olinda~
Western and Valencia.
Junior running back Tim
Beatty did rush for 65.yards on
10 carries in the Sentinels' 25-8
loss to Estancia last season.
"They have scme good athletes
and they're well-coached,"
Noonan sald. •ThJs should be a
very tough test for ~. •
Magnolia scored 118 points
last season, ninth fewest in
Orange County, and allowed
332 points.
E$tancia'~ senior-laden team
profiuced a school single-season
recbrd 312 points and allowed
281 en route to a 7-4 record and
the school's first post.season birth
since 1995. And while there is
little cany·over from 2000 on
the E.standa sideline tonight. the
Eagles are hoping to take the
first step along a similar path to
success.
The Eagles, 18-18 tn openers,
have won two straight season
debuts, both agahut Magnolia,
and hold a 9-3 series edge
against the Sentinels.
41= C 0-WMD Sr. Dr
II ~ .S.7 t• Ir. NG •= W21SSO. DI t M11SJt' Oll '1.... S-10 ZIO SI. U
• ~ AlmM M tll It. tiU M~J.1tDlr. U 1 s.n '" tr. ou D Hli9 Sr. Q Ml.-NtllSla. Q J._.. Mttltr. fl
•
gainst Orange Lritberan
' ....... ow. 6-2 115 SI. QI J2Dll s1 ,....,6-4 1IO Jr. D
JJ .... PO&.n " 231) Sr ... • .... ... ..J 115 Sr. WR 9 .... MdJ .U H 1t0 k.WR
23 -Mr Ht ll .. .l 1to Sr. lf n -.-row ~ 210 Sr. LT 66 ... ,_.. frJ >15 SI. LG
S. ,_. M·...w. 6-5 215 ~. c
79 9lwM 8lllaM9 6-3 145 SI. RG n -.~ 6-7 JIO k RT
option game most often for the Lancers, though
he'll rotate with senior Robby Hobbs. Taylor carried
nine times for 108 yards in the opener, including
toucbdown jaunts or 30, 15 and 8 yards. He helped
his team roll up more than 260 rushing yards.
Taylor (5-11, 175), however, completed two
passes against Hawaii Prep and made the TD
toss last year against Harbor.
Hobbs (6-3, 205) completed 6 or 12 for 92 yards
in the opener, but threw two interceptions.
Kunau praised his defense for Its work in
Hawaii and has said his offense and special teams
21••·-· Mlall"-J2Jal~ Dn..Mt•M"
21 .......... ,,a.,_
50.. ....
1tNa"'-10"--"-, .... _ , .. ~
5-10 165 Sr. OE
W2'J Sr. OT 6-0 2JO Sr. HG
6-2 190 Sr. DE
5-11190 Sr. OU .. , 190 Sr.IW.a
.. , 180 Jr. Ol.I
S.f 166 Sr. Cl
5-11 160. Sr. Cl
6-3195 Sr SS
6-0 1'° Jr. FS
will need to show the most improvement trom
their initial showing nearly three weeks ago.
If Gaeta can't go, expected to be a game-time
decision, senior Jon Vandersloot is slated to taJce
his safety spot and Kerns will step in at receiver.
Junior Mike McDonald, who caught five passes
for 82 yards in the soimmage, makes his varsity
starting debut for Harbor at receiver and free
safety.
PllKnOll JO lllA OUllt6 llGtl
North on 57 to Lambert. Right on IAmbert, left on Wilde.at
Way. School at 789 Wiidcat Way
COM OF RANKINGS
The Sea Kings can likely
afford no such sluggishness
against the Centurions, who are
coming off an unprecedented
10-2 campaign.
CONTINUED FROM B 1
In addition, junior two-way
standout Mark Cianciulli may
be hampered by a pulled hip
flexor, which will cause him to
surrender his starting tailback
job to junior Keith Long.
Cianciulli, who is slated to
start at comerback. should get
some carries, as Jong as he
remains relatively unhindered.
•Marie ls real close, but he's
been tightening up in practice,•
Freeman said
Entering the season at less
than full speed was a concern
Pree.man hoped to avoid ttm fall,
citing a rapid integration to
game tempo as a leading cause
for the Sea Kings' early season
troubles in recent years.
Cd.M, ranked No. 4 in the
C DM
....... IX
1.SolldlHMI
2.lf'MOllndll
3. Fullerton
4..C.....dlllllr
5.Weafn
.. Loi Am4gos
7.'8dftcl
1.1.aHlln
9.UnMnlty
10. ~ Alamltti5
Olhen; lonlta. Nor1hwood.
ClF Southern Section Division
IX preseason poll. bas lost four
straight openers and is 2-8 in Its
last 10 preleague contests.
"Once we realize we're in a
football game. we respond pretty
well,• Freeman said. •sut we
haven't been ready to play right
away, esf)ectally early in the
see.son.•
Coach Kerry Crabb's squad is
ranked No: 4 in the ClF Division
VI preseason poll and features 6-
. 2, 180-pound senior Jelani
Gamba, considered one or the
top receivers in Southern
California, let alone 0(ange
County. ·
The Centurions will also rely
upon senior Darnell Dodson,
who has reportedly been shifted
from receiver to running back
this year. Last year, Dodson had
33 receptions for 474 yards and
eight touchdowns.
Gamba and Dodson will
need to produce to overcome
the loss of quarterback Justin
Rice and running back Darren
Shorter, both of whom
SEE SEA KINGS PAGE 83
-LllEUPS
DWIJdE
Ht. wt.a. .... No. ,..,. Ht. wt. a. ,_,
11 DnM....... 6-1 tlO Sf. -QI J4 T'n.a M:Qs•M 6-2 210 Sr. DE
MESA
1 ""'" La. 6-1 190 Jr. R8 .. Mvreoo.. f.1 210 k. Fl
5 .,._WAID s.10 150 Sr.M
...... ,._ 5-6 170 Sr. M
J4.,.,._ M:OSIM 6-2 210 Sr. TE
0 .... "-'-6-3 26S Sf. LT
eo-.. DMn 6-1 215 Jr. LG h MMT lwmlN s.10 215 Sr. C
11........ 5-10 175 Jr. RG
68""" ....... 6-3 220 Sr. «T
CONTINUED FROM 81
pe9ltDg yald.s and 23 touchdown
toases last year), powerful
n.iMIDg baCk JOal Gmz•'* (950
yaida and 12 TDa) ud imooeh
receiver lilDael Ilaia (70 Clfcheil
for 923 yard.I and able Tl>s). nu. c.18oted trio be!peid
Sec•Wdmllrell .. pc•11 CD
appearance m ttni Y9lli Jut
... ~ il"'"hbed M.
Meanwblle, tbe M'*9rtC;
who iiailMd the,....
flnt tUneJll ftft 111 JID, ......
e 8-4 record lD 2000, beve a
baDdful QI.,.,. '**' ..... u plenty of npei1~
tranden to belp boltter tbe
~·
54,,.,_luu.A S.10215 Jr. OT
68 S1lw....... 6-l 220 Sf. OT
69 0.. S-6-3 19' So. DE
33 ~ 9IM::a 6-4 200 Jr. Ill ·~eoo.. 6-1210 Sf. u
21 ,,,. -"175 Jr. Oll 7 "-eoo.. 6-2 195 Jo. Oll
20 ..._ CWaw S.f 170 Jr. ca
l ..... Wl ...... S-10165 Jr. Cl
4 K.C. --5-9 1'2 Jr. fS
will be counted upon to help
contain SaddJeback's lnalde
~game. .
lb8 Mela defenlive lineup
aleo lndudea &tenda ttanifers
Matt Colby and Preddy ~oe~W:=-:: ~ due to UbMila:.
Senior A.J. Perkins, wbo
folloWed tu. dad to Meia frolD
Doily Pilot
SACCS 100th
on the ftOriion '·
Talk about bells and whistles ...
His second day on the )ob as general manager at Santa
Ana Country Club 1112 yean ago, Jeff Sc:hllct attended a
.. centenn1al meeting. T.here was already a (centennlal oommlttee) that bad been
meeting for three months before I even got b8le • ScbUc:t said
Wednesday. "So a lot of thought has been put Into tt. •
Schlict and an active centenn1al committee, clMdred by Paul
Watkins, are cooking up what ta expected to be the greatest
private goll oelebratto,i tn Orange County history.
Santa Ana Country Club turns 100 yean old this month and
will offidally pop open the champagne bottles Sept. 22 at an
invitation-only celebration.
"It's not just another party,• Sch1ict said
The club's main dining room will be transformed into a
tum-of-th~tury goll club, complete with a sand putting green.
In 1901, when Santiago Goll Club was formed (a precursor to
Santa Ana Country Club), the first golf boles in Orange County
were played on oil-soaked sand for •greens• and native &OU. or
hard dirt, for fairways.
Food at the centennial celebration will also
be "tailored toward that era,• Schlict said.
The next stop for members and guests at
the celebration will feature a museum. which
will provide an interesting historical look at
Santa Ana Cowitry Club with photographs
and information.
The Santa Ana Country Club Museum
will be open from Sept. 18 through Sept. 24.
After a tour through the.museum,
centennial party-goers will move outside to
the lake at 14, where the large body of water
will represent "the Castaways,• the club's
second of three locations.
Richard Dunn
GOLF. The club originally leased acreage from
James Irvine in the Peters Canyon area, a
small valley two miles southwest of present-day Irvine Park,
where dub pioneers laid out a nine-hole course.
In 1912, the members moved to a 16Q-.acre site at the
Castaways along the Newport bluffs and renamed the club
Orange County Country Club. •
The club moved to its third (the present) site for water
irrigation purposes as golf courses turned to grass fairways and
greens. lo Aprll 1923, it was announced that Orange County
q>untry Club would move to Santa Ana Heights at Newport
Boulevard. The dub paid $71,000 for tl)e prot>erty and renamed
itself Santa Ana CountJy Club.
At the centerullal.celebration, a llve orchestra will perform,
while traditional 1920s food will be served, including barbecued
lamb chops and shrimp.
Following speaking presentations, a 30-minute video of the
club's history will be shown on two large screens adjacent to the
lake, then Watkins, men's dub president Ken Shelton and
women's dub president Janet Cencel will cut the centennial
birthday cake. And, of course, it isn't just any cake.
The large cake with the SACC logo will be flown in from
Washington, where it will be specially made, and cut to serve
500 guests.
After the cake cutting, guests will be treated to a fireworks
display. Spirits and dancing are expected to last until midnight.
(The doors open at 6 p.m.). ·
~we're not going to be here for the bicentennial, so we've got
to make (the centennial celebration) ~ • Schlict said. "It's
going to be wonderful.•
The centennial celebration will also be the final chapter of a
book, which will be available before Christmas and feature a
gllmpee at the first 100 years, capped With photographs of the
big centennial bash.
•1t•s going to be a great party,• Watkins said. "There will be
lots of bells and whistles.•
Costa Mesa junior standout Juon C...Sdy, l!.stUlda Hlg:h's
top golfer, shot 72 and finished second recently at the Southern
California PGA Thunderbird Junior Tournament at lbun~erbird
Country Club in Rancho Mirage.
Cassidy qualified for the SCPGA Desert Tour Tournament of
Champions, but didn't play because of a conilict with the Junior
Amateur Goll Scholars Tour event at Costa Mesa Goll & Country
Club. ·
Cassidy bas already qualified for the.SCPGA Metro Tour
Tournament of Champions at Newport Beach Country Club Dec.
17 with his victory at the Long Beach Crosby Junior evenL
BRIEFLY
lions win in double overtime, t-0
n -115 --·but the Venguanl Uolvenily I ~ I women's IOCC8l' team ftnally edged host Claremont
Mudd-Scripps, 1-0, ln a nonconference double-
overtbne thrtller Tuelday.
Annie Jacobi put en end to the contest after she took a pass from
Sarah Higuera and ICOl'8d wi&h five minutes rem•hrlng ln the
aecood OT. The Ucm' defeme held their ground to preeerve the win.
Goalkeepers Jordan Pr9dr.lben (Newport Harbor High) and
Kim BeCher combined for eight aave1 u the Uons evened their
record to 2-2.
lions sweep past visiting Cat 88.ptlst
SPORTS f •
n..nday, $.erJ'l n~ 6, 2001
SEAN Hll.LER / lilAllY PIDT
Anne Yelsey ls ln her junior season for Corona del Mar High's highly regarded girls tennis team.
..
LOADING UP
Defending ClF Div. IV champs
will get biggest test agamst
Peninsula in two weeks. ·
Richard Dunn
DAILY PILOT
CORONA DEL MAR -Without trying
to "sound too cocky." Corona del Mar
High girls tennis coach Andy Stewart has
a few inspiring thoughts about his 2001
squad heading into what should be a
memorable campaign.
"Our goal is to win every match,• said
Stewart, whose team features six
nationally ranked· players, including
defending CJF Southern Section singles
champion Brittany Reitz and defending
Pacific Coast League singles champion
Anne Yelsey.
"I can tell you we're not going to lose
a match ... we're just too strong in singles.•
Stewart's confidence soared when the·
Sea Kings picked up junior transfer
Taylynn.Snyder, who played at the Weil
Tennis Academy in Ojai last year. Snyder's
brother, Garrett, played on the CdM boys
team last spring.
"For siire I think we're the best team
in the nation now,• said Stewart, referring
to the addition of Snyder, who could play
singles or doubles.
Yelsey, who won two USTA Girls 16s
Super National doubles titles this summer
with Riza Zalameda of Beverly Hills, and
Reitz form one of the strongest one-two
punches anywhere in tbe country. Stewart
said, while sophomore Brittany Holland
has enjoyed a hot summer, winning three
rounds at the nationals.
•(Holland) might be our third-best
player." Stewart said. •And I would put
(Reitz) and Yelsey against any two
players.•
Corona del Mar, which plays
CapJstrano Valley on the road Tuesday in
the season opener, could be in line for a
mythical national championship (by USA
Today), If lt defeats Peninsula ln a
nonleegue match Sept. 20.
"ThJt'• our biggest match,• said
Stewart, whose team lost to the Panthers
' last year, 15--3, while playing without Reitz
and Kimmy Singer, another nationally
ranked player.
The See Kings, who return 11 players
from last yeiu'I PCL and ClF bivtslon IV
cbampJonshlp team, won the mf'thkal
national title In 1997 uild8r Coach 1bn
M4ng.
•Lut year I atU1 tb1ilk we were the
beat team (in CIF Southern Section,
dMpMie lollng tlO DlWdon I Pent•.ala).
We were mili1DO., two girls 1D that
P'rih-.all. mlktl. ~ .s.w.rt mid. •So we'I
... bow good we-. CID two weea)." con.a .. MS. • bMvy fav<de to
...,.. • CIP Dtftl6aD ,V dwn .... ._
aipbnd * ....... Bal 9'eWmt b••s••-tl .. blltlftM~
.,.
HIGH SCHOOL GIRLS
TENNIS PRMEW
• r think this ta the belt t4Mm ever ~
Corona del Mar,• Stewart Mid: •Wltb
YelMy aDd Reitz, and otbais, watl!a out.•
HOiiand tncl 8dor Leile Demkm wan
tbe league doub&es tide Wt ye&r' and
readMid tbia C'IP ejipiwitftneh, ~ to •
PenlNWI .-. Wbich ~won
the Chem,.,....... ta 11ne-. tndudlng
'~In the tblrd. •(IJalllld ... ~ 19Vecllortbe
mMcblll-5, -9 lfQaef walli MftWOD
tbilll .-., I tbillk..., wiailkl tan. WGD CJP.••· ut-.S. ........ ,._.s-. ......
GREG FRY I OAl.Y Pl.OT
Brittany Reitz {above) is the
reigning Padflc Cout League
champion, and Brittany Hollan4
{below) makes you forget the
1-2 noUon -·It's 1-2-3, and
more, when you have to deal
with Corona del Mar.
Sara Bryan and ~ ~ .,. Mio
expect8d to ClDallbiM •-. .. lblit sea Klngl, wblle ..... .,.. :A= ..
llutieff'M•, Wbo WOii two 4D *11 ..
lbitPBD!Mf,iltbe .... 'i--l $cued
pie~ ...... ...... Seliol' 1.-a Cllllii' lilld ....., _
J~ Mutit9 .. .., .... t ....
lutJW"lftllMJ .......... 3 II 06 Alilll& MiMMN ...._ _ ..
rrc..JY.
CdMMI' CCahb;11 U..S,la ..
aPilla-*la ... .,..11 .. at ns
Qub.
BUWTIN IOARD
Punt, Pass & Kick
contest Sept. 23
The Newport [QJ
Beach Community o Services Depart-
ment will host the
NFL-Gatorade Punt. Pass & Kid<
competition, set for Sept. 23 at
Bonita Creek Park.
Youngsters ages 8· 15 are
tnvited and the winners from
edch category will advance to
the sectional competttion In
October.
RegLStrabon is free. For more
mJonndtion, call (949) 644-3151.
Speedway rocks
COSTA MESA ~
-Tncki. wall *' h1ghl1ght ,,
speed way
motorcyde action at the Orange
County Fairgrounds Saturday.
Along with the jumping, a
full program of professional
Speedway Motorcycle racing
will c}1so be on band. National
champions Mike Faria, Chris
Mdnchester and Bobby
•Boogaloo" Schwartz will be
among the elite competitors.
Gales open at 5:30 and the
first race begins at 7:30. The
event and parking costs $10 for
adults. Juniors and seniors are
$6, youngsters 6'-12 are S3 and
children 5-and-under are free.
Ensign tryouts set
for Saturday
1\youts for the. CE]
Ensign Junior
High roller hockey
team will be held
Saturday at noon at the Wayne
Gretzky Roller Hockey Center
in Irvine.'
All skaters must wear i;bin
guards, e lbow pads and a
helmet. Shoulder pads are also
strongly recommended.
For more lnformittion, call
Anne Wong a\ (949) 631·1478.
SCHEDULE
nx>AY ,_...
High idlOOI • Newpott Harbor YI.
Ol'Mgt Luthlrao. at 8'11 Ollndl High.
7 p.m.; ~ .. ""Est.Inda. at Newport Hart>or. 7 p.m.
·-~ High tchoot girts • Newpol1 Harbor
at lAgu'w lelct\ 6 p.m.; s.1tAI AN
at Estande, 3:15 p.m. .... ~ High tchoot • M9rinl YI. Newport
Harbor, ... ...,.,., School, 111tl lf1d
Tustin, Golt.I Mesa.
•
OCC'1
Jaycee
Mahler
(left)
Jfles
through
'the a1r
to
maintain
control
ln
Wednes-
day'•
cont.Mt.
The
Pirates
pull$1
out a
2-1
ded.lton
over
Saddle-
back.
OON Lf.ACH/
QAl.V Pl.OT
Newport Beach
Under-12 Plus wins
The Newport Beach ~
boys Under-12 Plus team ~
from AYSO Region 97 -
. opell_ed its 2001 season with
three~ ln a row at the McMill4n
Invitational Townament last weekend
at the Farm Complex.
Newport's tough defense, led by
Otonlel Guda. Garrett Helser, Robby
Gordon. Taylor PrleDd arid Robert
Joslin, held the opposing teams to no
goals, while the offense, led by Denny
Perdomo, WW llelcbeolteln, Jeremy
Anlsb and Brtan Slemomma helped the
locals to 11 goals 1n the three victories.
The midfield was powered by Calvin
Jbun)bunwala. Jameson Galey al'ld Jake
Carroll Newport placed second ln the
townament after falling to Mission Viejo,
3-0 in the hnal. ·
DEEP SEA
£• < ·r. ·. 'r-· . ~ ...
.. ~ ·'
Daily Pilot
C.Orona del Mar High product
Jaycee Mahler comes through
for Orange Coast women.
COSTA MESA-Jaycee
Mahler, a Corona del Mar
High product, sc;ored her
, seventh goal of the season
to break a late tie, leading
tl:n! Orange Coo.st College
women's soccer teAIJl to a
2-1 Orange Empire
Coolerence victory over ::=:,~ ~
visiting Saddlebac.k Wed-
nesday.
It was the opening OEC game for both
teams. •
Fresh off their Allan Hancock Tournament
championship, the Pirates (5-2, 1-0 in the
OEC) have now won five of their pa.st six.
Mahler scored the game-winner in the 78lb
minute, heading the ball off a pass from
Marissa McGregor. Mahler was stumbling
onto her knees when McGregor, who bas four
assists th.ls season, found her open on the left
side.
Mahler scored a goal la.st week to help the
Pirates to a 3-0 victory over Irvine Valley,
leading to OCC's tournament title. Mahler
won the Golden Boot Award for her offensive
prowess after scoring fou,. goals in the
touranment.
Crisbrul Guerin gave the Pirates an early
advantage when she scored the only goal of
the first half, in the 12th minute.
Guerin took a throw·ln from Costa Mesa
High product Fernanda Velasco !Tom about 30
yards out and booted the ball into the upper
right comer of the goal, past the reach of
Gaucho goalie Brianne Ewmg.
SaddJeback (0·2, 0-1) tied the game, 16
minutes after the break.
Coast outshot the Gauchos 15-6, and
limited them to just two shots in the second
half. Pirates' goalie Laurie Perkins finished
with four saves.
The game was a homecoming of sorts for
SaddJeback coach Brandee Craig. She was a
standout sweeper for the Pirates 1n 1987 and
1988 and spent the past eight seasons as
assistant under OCC Coach Barbara bond.
The Pirates retwn to action Tuesday. when
they play at Santa Ana al 3 p.m.
S£AN HIJ.U I DAl.Y Pl.OT
OCC'1 Weston Langdon (15) 1par1 with Paulo DeRose Wednesday.
~··,. .. ., , ~ . '
Home not cookin'
for Pirates' men
COSTAMESA-
Tue Orange Coast
College men's
soccer team
remained searching
for its fi rst home
victory of the SCOlllO•-
season as the -
Pirates lost 3-0 to Gnnee c-t o
visiting San Diego IO M99e 3
Mesa, in noncon· ------
ference .act.ion,
Wednesday.
Coast wa1 4-1 winners at El
Camino Friday, in Its only road game.
Although the Pirates (1-3) have
been saddled with losses early, they
have come against a bio of teams that
made it to postseason play last year -
San Diego Mesa, Cerritos and R10
Hondo.
Wednesday against the Olympians
(3-1 ), OCC fell behind 2-0 in the first
half and could not recover.
Mesa outshot the Pirates, 12-11,
and goalie Joey Balbas fin1shed with
stx saves.
OCC will go for Its second road
victory at LA. Harbor, Monday at 3
p.m.
• .l~"'-' •
' ' . . I •" "'•''\':J ' , ... ,,_, ...... -~
oC:flr1 .., .......
IMn1Ca OP TRUITll'I SALE UNUM DUO
OP TftUIT YOU ARI IN O&
FAULT UNDER A oeeo ~ TRUST ..J....<!ATED Ot>-
9Gflet 24.~..t-~
YOU TN<£ ""' lUl'f TO PROTECT YOUR PAOPEmY. IT MAY BE SOU> AT A PUSUC SALE. IF YOU NEED
AN EXPUNATION OF THE NATUflE Of nte
PROCEEOING AGAl"'8T YOU, YOU
SHOULO CONTACT A
LAWYER.
NOTIC& i. "-rtby
QfVtln thef STATEWIDE
GROUP, INC., OBA STATEWIDE FORE·
CLOSURE SERVICES, ·~~· •INl*le,O(~
11\1119e, Of aubttltuted
IMIM put1U8nt IO the
Deed of TIUlt eKeC:Uled ~ ,/0 ELI.EN AUEN
SOLE AND SEPA·
TE PROPERTY) Recorded on
04/27/2001 .. lnstfu· ment No. 20010261881
in Boolt P-oe of Ollidiil
rlCOldl In lhl olllce of the County RIOOfder of
ORANGE County. Call· fomia. Ind pursuant to
Ille Nollcf of Default and
Election IO Sell there·
undtf recorded
05/22/2001 In Boole,
PIQI. 11 lnltn.menl No
01·329914 of Jald Of-
llcial Reoordt, WILL SELL on 09/27/2001 al
IN THE FRONT Of THE
FLAG POLES AT THE
MAIN ENmY AREA TO
THE PLA.CENTIA CMC
CENTER 401-411 E
CHAPMAN AVE .,
PL:ACENTIA. CA al
10:00 A.M AT PUBLIC
AUCTION TO THE
HIGHEST BIDDER FOR CASH (payable 11 lhe
bme ol aale In lawful
~ ol the United
Stalea). .. rlltl•. D1le and
lneereet conveyed to and
now held by " under said Deed of 'rru11 In the
property slWated ..,., 'said
~and Stele end .. lollows Al
molt lully dMCribed .n
rlCOf'dt of the Orange
C«ny Aeootder -
APN 458-491-01
SALE INFORMATION
MAY BE OBTAINED. WHEN AVAILABLE, BY
CALLING (619)
291-7825
The 11(181 1ddress
end Olfl8( common des-
ignation, II any, of the
real pre>peny deacnbed
above It putpOlted to be·
21 CARMEi. BAY
DRIVE. CORONA DEL
MAR. CA 92625
The undersigned
T rUIWe dled8lml any 11-
tl*y lor lily lncorrtd.
neas of the 1trMt ad-
d1tu and other com-mon dellgnauon, II 81ly,
sl'lowll '*"' The total amount ol
ll'ie unp11d baa.nee ol
In. obligdon HCUred
by the pnipeny to be
.IOld 8lld reMOnllblt .,..
timet9d COlll, ~
and ~· 11 Ille llme of the Initial poblica-
llon of the Nollot ol Salt
II: $113.517 e6
In eddillof'I ID cuti, the TNltM wW accept 1
cuflie(1 cn.ci< dtewn
on • 11111 or national blnk. • chedc drlWn by
• ..... Of t.def8I credit. ..._, or • cl** dr1l'MI
by • ..... or fedtr.i esv-
lngl and kMlt1 usoda-"°"· llWlgl Haoc:illon or UWlgl benk epecl,
lild In Sedlon 5102 o( .,. Flnllndll Code end
llllhortzed to do bu8'-
,.. WI lhll *"· II\ the
"""" tender OltMlf lhan cuh .. aoc.pted the
T IUllM may wtthllold
U,. iuuanc. of Iha
Trua1ee'1 Deed until
lundl become evalllble
to Ill• peytt or
ll'ldolMt u • matter ol '1Cd .... wll be medt,
bul wltlOUI cownanl Of
~ . .,,.-or Im-
c=-'°c. IUU( UL.I AND
Oft lfTINnON TO
TitANIFI" ALCOHOLIC l!VIRAGI
UCINH (U.C.C. lee. 1101 et eeq..end I a P 240'7'3 et eeq.)
UCAOW NO. 2521a.EM ~=--:r::: lllld • ,,.,..., of ~
tlOllo l.leYet1IOI .... le
9bollt to be made The
natnM, Soda! s.cuniy or Fedwal Tu Nurm.i
lllld eddrNMI of the
Seller/Lfcen,.. are
SUNGTIME CORPO·
RATION, 8oca.1 $eairity
No./Federal Tax ~I) 5823 ALTON
PKWY • IRVINE, Slatl
of CA 82812. The buti'lll ii known
II MAIZURU
JAPANESE RESTAU·
RANT The names So-clll 8ecYrity or F9derl.I
Tax Numbera, and ad•
dftaSM of the Bwtr/
T lanlteree ate CHONG
SUK KIM, Sodal Secur-ity No /Federal Tu
Numbef1, 553-33-6582 2800 PLAZA DEL AMO: 119, TORRANCE, State of Ca.llfomla 90503.
Al llslad by the Seller/
UotnNe. .. other bull-
llHI flllTlel Ind ad· °'"'" used by lh• Sel~(/lteensee within
three YMll before lhe
dale sooh 1111 Wll 1411'11
or delivered 10 Ille
Buytt/Transferee are (If
"none", to state) NONE
Tiie UMll to be llOld
are deecnbed 111 general es FURNITURE.
FIXTURES, EQUIP: MENT, TRADENAME
GOODWILL, LEASE:
LEASEHOLD IM·
PAOllEMENT, COVE-
NANT NOT TO COM-
PETE. and are localed
al 5623 AL TON PKWV IRVINE. CA 92612
The lund of lee-. lO
be 1ran1tarred is ON
SALE BEER & WINE
EATING PLACE
LICENSE and LICtnM
No 41-369530 now IS·
sued for ll'le pren'llSM lo-
caled at 5623 AL TON PKWY , IRVINE. CA
92612
The anliClpeted dale ol
the sale/\ransler ta Sept
25, 2001 al Ille office ol.
United Escrow Co • 11
3440 Wllehlre Blvd .
'600, Los Angeles, CA
90010
Thal the amount of
purchase pnce or con-
Sidtratlon Will'I Ille 1'8111·
ler ol the lloense alld
buflneas. including Iha
estimated inventory 11
ltle IUITI ol $498,000 00 ~ CIOOMts ol Ille lol-
low1ng
DESCRIPTION
AMOUNT.
Cn.cka deposited 1n10
Hcrow by buyer.
$20,000 00
Demand note 10 be re-
placed by buyer 1n
c111'11er'1 cneck.
$479,000 00
PrOfnltsiOnary Note • so 00
It 1181 been egreed be-
tween Ille Seller/
Licensee Ind the tn-
tanded 8uytr/Tr1n1·
feree, u required by Sec. 24073 ol the ~
NH end P~
Code, INI Ille con-
llderatlon for tranlfer of Iha bulllle8a end llcaflH
II to be paid M>/ all«
the lfal\tf• ,,.. been ~ by Iha Dlpelt-
menl ol Alcollollc
Beverege ColM>I.
Dat.ed .My 9, 2001
SUNGTIM( CORPO-
RATION, 1 c.utomla
Ccm>oratlon N: CHING 8UNO CHE~ • .!!'.!,lt'llloen ... N. ~ SUI( ICJM,
Buyer/Tran•ferH
Publllhed Newpon
BHch·COlll MtH Oeil'f Pilot s.p.mbtf e.
2001 292'702 Th&4Q
plied, f8Qllldlng htle, r1 .... w-•• , B·-1--po111111ori or encum-'""'uuvu ..... __
IQllCH, 10 Nlltfy the ....,,. St.mment lndeb~ HCUred The f~ ~~.~-: :*.70\illly .-.. ~ :::i end 1919 Set1lllQo Or., New· fie ...... W port Beec:tl. CA 92880
ance of IN NoM M-JOMph Selene IV. cured ~ Mid Deed ... 1819 8et*GI> Or .. Nw-
ll\ltr•ff thtreon u port 8Mdl. CA 82eeo
prcMded In Mid Note. MallMW Jute WIN,
..... CltwgM llld .... 1819 SlnllQ Or .. New-
,... of IN 1N1te1 ~· CA 82eeo =~wi:~tly ~ :..=
()er.d. 08l'3tn«J1 STATEWIOi OROUP Heve yov 1t1l19d
INC., • 8* Tl\llM, doing bulli'llll 'lfi!1 Ho \OM STATEWIDE JoMotl ~ IV f'OR!CLOSURri Met9hew ... _
Frctlttou• Bualnn•
Name StNtMnt
The followinO per10l\I eretilg~u· Dtecoteca Oloml. 745
W. 19th St, Co111
Meaa, CA 82627
Inna 8onllle Mun'lelta.
745 w. 19111 St.. COiia MIU. CA 82627 Thie bUllNM le con-~ by: In lndlVldl.lll
H••• you 11111td
doing buelMel yet?
Y .. , 19119
l!T'M .Bonllli ~ Thie ttatamltll ...
SERVIC~..,_ 3990 OLD ,_,'™' wlllfl~ WU
TOWN Avt.NUEi.._!UITE QM ... ~ ~ "201, SAN DfEuu. CA t11"' ...... ..,. ..,,,... .. , The to110W1na ~ a110~~·7:rR-on 4/'lOOJ.,...,uo, .,. ~ ~ .. Jr.a TAU8n£ BALE ~ Pio! AA.IQ. tt, ~
°''iC£A I). fttpl LJ!)OlJ!tMIO
~ Newpon h•cll-Co•ta M••• ~ Piiot ..... ttbw I, ,,1.1..JD l!Ot D#t
AMD• ........ ..............
The falaMl\Q .,...,. .............
°"911 ....... -=~~ JDM Dft'9, ....
fUDlrie l ~ ,...,. ........ 1'1111 ~ le c:ion-Tlie . ....,,..,. WU ..... • ' ?lMl c1ded by. a Ol>IPol•• ~ :"or::. ~ TN follollifta , PMOnt Ha"e you NMd on Otl10f200f __ , " dofl'O ·~ • ~ bUll'*' ~ Ht1117MM Alino11 ~ New cer Y• • ..,Al"I ...-, ...._. AeNll. 1400 SE M1ec1 Kottoya. 11\c. ......., .--~ 11, 2', ............ "~ ~ ,.1 ........ L •~-... --30. SML !~1Ih1f7 mo"1 "',. . .__, .,.. Pr~ _...,.,,
lllOtltloue .....,... Melvlnder 811\gll Tllla •latement w..
The
Nw .....,_nt ~· .. ~HllOl*&e 8tllill. ,.; filed wilfl~h = --.... "'" a..ti of Nw ... --tollol!llN Plftone ... 707 • Oii ·-dc*lll ~ _ on 171'ZOO The IQllowlrla Plftone ~ Cieaneft u':,1 Tllll bullnMI II cgn. to01M14111 .,. dofl'O ~ -.
La Pu Rd lte c MMd br WI~ Delv P*it Aull 23, 30. Sn\111 OtlC)hbt. 119"
Laguna Nlguel • CA He•• you 111rt9d Stcl I. J3.20Q!Jb193 Blbc~ St., Coata
826n ' dOlflCI ~ yet? No Mela. CA t:!e2'7 MlcflHI J. Mamelll, ar!~•lndtr Singh Flcdtlow htfneu Chrl1toph1r Rost,
Sr., 27901 LI Pu Ad.. Thll ttalement Wll Heme ~ 1004 8lboix:tl &., COiia
8'9. C. l.agi.N Nip!, filed with the r~.-. Tl'le fOllowlng '*'°"' ~~ ~. 1"'"'•
CA 92fJ77 Cltltl al ~ r='~ "1 doing ~ • ea .... __.. ........,S "'" Thie bualrieea It oon. on Ol/1 • ..-.......... , a..1 Hit Co • 1114 ~ .. ~ Colt• MMd by In lndl'illdUll ...,""' YQfbown ~. to.la -....,. _,
Have you •tarted 2001H74201 MIU. CA ll2IS2IS Thia ~ la oon-
r._ng8/1="' yet? g;,'Ys::" tJ!,,'fi;.~· Y~ ~,:.-·~ ~.by y~ed
MlctiMf Jay Mamelli ,, ..... 1-... au-• .... e MIN. Ca 92e2IS doing bu1lne11 yet? Sr. "'uuvu ........ Tltl1 bulinaee Is con-Y11, 08l01I01
Thie etatemenl wu Heme Statement duded by an lndMdual CM110phlr Ro.a
llted wtlh the County The ~ pereona Have you 11ar1td Thie llat.emenf wu
an of 0ranoe County -:_1~~ ... B 1 ~ builrlW yet? No filed w1t1t "" CounlV
on Olll0r'200200l1H9HU CM> 108. 601 Dove m:'°st=I WU ~oi:1~ County
n..11u Pik>t AuQ. 1:.-23-StrNI. &Jtla 115, N--llled With Iha Coufltv 1001 .. 74901 _, ~2IIO "• ' port BNal'I, CA 92680 Clerk ot Orange Cou~ Derlv Pllol Aug 23, 30, 30· See!. 8-1TM68 Aot>et1a M Lowe, 400 on 08/1712001 ... , Stol 61 !3,2001Tl'IS10
Flc:t.IUoue Bualneu
Heme Statement
The follow!~ .,. doing 18'
Le tofa.111 and Slcln
Cert, 1916 Hatbor Blvd.. Cotta Mau, CA
92827
Le My Dang, 1918
Harbor Blvd . Colla
Mela, CA 92627
Cuong Dang Ngo,
1918 H1rt>or Blvd .
Costa Mau, CA 9'ltl27 Tl'lls butlneu Is con-
ducted by. husband and
wife
Heve you 1tar1ed dOlng bu1lne11 yet?
Yes 8/6/01 Cuong Deog Ngo
This 1111ement was
hied with Ille County
Clefk of Orlnge County on 08/10/2001
20011173'90
Deily Pilot ~ 1e. 2.3. 30. Sep! 6 1 Th469
FlctfUoua Bu•fneu
Name Statem.nt
The followtng l)ef$0fl6
ere doing bualnell u
Cool Sola, 17330
Newllope, F°"'1111n Val-
ley, CA 92708
Charles 8 Lodlco. 220
Huntington St. •8. Hunl·
lngton e.ectl, CA 92&48
Edgar A VIiiareai,
2505 W. Huckleberry
Rd • Santa Ana, CA
92706
TlllS bullness 11 COt'I·
ducted by I general
per1nersh1p
Have you 1tar1ed
doing bu1ineu yet?
Yes. 615/2001
Edgar VIiiareai cnanes B Lodlco ThiS 11a1emen1 was
filed With Ille County
Cltfll ol Orange County on 08/1 Ol200 I
20016173184
Dally Pilot ~ 16, 23. 3(). Sep!, 6 1Th470
Rctltk>u• Bualneu
Name Statement
The~~
-doing bulinels as· Notary DrivH 2 U,
3309 LaDrlllo Aisle,
lrvlne, CA 92606
Mary E. Wells, 3309
LaDnlo AIM. IMN, CA
92806
Thie 00.-. " c:on· cu:ted by: an lndivldual
Have you 1terted
doirlg bulWllll ~ No Marv E. Welle
Tlil ltllernlnl Wll
riled wllll Iha County ~~~County
2.001H73N2
Diiiy PlloC ~ 10, 23, i!Q. Sept 8 !Th471
FlctltJou• Buelneaa
Name Statement
The following per900S aredolng~ae
~ E\191J1 Plan-
ning br c.i... 417 112
'1ellOCl'ope A~., Corooa
dll Mar, CA 82925
C .... ta Mane Ant&·
nuccl, 417 1/2
Heliollope Ave , CorOlll
dll Mer, CA 82925
Thie bullneiu " coo-duct9d by: .,, lncMMal
Have you 1t1rted dolna bullnlll yet? No
c.r..11 Marte
Aneenuocl
Thia llatement Wll Ned Mttl 11'9 ~ an d Onwioe eouncy on oel10fl001
2001H7'N7t Oelr Plot ~ 18, 23,
SQ. Stpt ' 1Tbt72
Villa Suerta, Newpo11 2001H7457t Beecti. CA 92060 Dally Pilot Aug 23 30 Flctltlou• Bualnea
Thie bu11nea1 Is con-Sta! 6. 13.&>1Th.92' Name s .. tement
duc:etd by an lndMdull Tl'le lollowl~ persons
Heve you 11aned Flctllloua Bualnne -doing ~ as ~ buaineM yet? No Name Statement SuperGraenDrink. 518
M Lowe The foflow•rip perlOl'la Wes1m1n11er. Newporl
This statement wea are domg.blsMell 11 Beach. CA 92663
flied wllh the County Graphic Foundry, Inc., Ann Patrice Snell·
Clertc °' Orange County 607 Orchid Ave . Corona Allison, 518 Wut· on 08/14/2001 mlnSlef N "-~ 2001H74206 de4 Mar CA 92625 ' ewport .,..,., n.. .. Piiot Grapl'lic Foundry Inc CA 92663 .,_, ~ 16, 23, (NV). 607 Orchid Ave-Slepl'len Boyd AlllSOll 30. Stp! 6.~1Th4n nue, Corona <let Mar, CA 518 Wes1m1nster Ne..,.
92625 pott BNctl CA 92663 Flctltloue Busln•H
Name Statement
The following persona
are doltlo business as
Grey1liock lnltrna tlonal 624 Terminal
Way, Costa Mesa CA
92627
Jaaon Anthony
Grey1hock. 2 Roe De
Nicole, Foothlll Ranch CA 92610 '
Thi• builness 1s con-
ducted by an lndMdoAJ Have you s18r1ed
doing ~ yet? No
Juon Anthony Greyshock
This statement was
filed with the Coun1y
CleOt of Orange County on 08/14/2001
20016874215
Dally Pilot Aug 16 23
30, Seo! 6. ?OQ1Jh478
Flctltloua Bu1ineH
Heme Statement
The following persons
are doing business as
LlfeSc1ence Ae
sources 302 Marone
Ave Balboa Island CA
92662
A Clarey T ecllooloQy
Group Company (CA).
302 Mar111e Ave .. Balboa
Island. CA 92662
Thi• buSIM$5 \$ oon·
dueled by a ()()(j)Of3JIOl'I Have you starled
doing business yet?
Yes. &WOI
A Clarey Technology
Group Company
Carol Aodnvuei. E•· ecutlva Admln1strator
Tll11 Slllement WU
flled Wilh the County
Clafit °' n--.. County on 08111fiOOT
2001U74573
Dilly Piiot A~ 23, 30,
Sept 6. 13, 1 J!!.!89
Flctltlou• Buelneu
Name Statement
The lollow!ng perlOllt are doing buUlesl as
f'1n11111c Sam'•, 20025 Lake Forest
Drtv&, Lake Forest, CA
92130
Timothy R. Waln,
2752 San Juan Lane.
&.lt4I l300 COiie Mell CA 92626
Vlcbia J w-.. 2752
San Juan Lane. Suitt '300, Colla Mesa. CA
92826
Thie 1>Ualnes1 Is con-
duded by husband and
wife
Have you 111ned
doing buwlMI yet? No
TlmOChy R We'ial
Thie 1tatemen1 wu
filed wtlh 1he County
Clertc of Orange County
on 08/17/2001 2001 .. 74~0 = CT3:'2'8o1~~
This business 1s con· This bustnHS 1s con-
ducted by a corporation dueled by husband and
Have ~ou started wile domg business yet? No H111e you stalled
0r8J)hlc Foundry, Inc doing busloess yet? No
Kent Barkoures Ann Palnce Soel
President Allison
Th11 statement was This s1a1emen1 was
hied w•lh the County filed with the Courily
Cler1t of Orange County Clerk ot Orange County
on 08/2112001 on 08.'21/2001
2001687'959 20016874871 Da~y Piiot ~ 23 30. DaJly P1IOI A.Jg 23, 30
Seo• 6 13.~1Th4?9 Sep! 6, 13. ?Q01Th507
Flclltioua eualneaa Flctltlou1 Bu.In .. •
Name S .. tement Name Statement
The lollOwing persons The lollow109 persons
are dotr1g business 81 are doing busmess as
Exit Path. 2100 Clay Rand Commercial.
$1 Newport 8eficll CA 1550 Baystde Dove. Co-
92663 rona del Mat, CA 92625
M rk Al Ell Tl'le Rand Cofporatlon a an •nger. (NV) 1362 Waterloo ~~~ ~ewport Lane 11 GardtneMlle
This buslneu is con-NV es. 1 O
dUC1ed by an ll'ldlllidual This bus1neu 1s coo·
Have you alerted duclOO by a corpora11on doing busineu yet? Have you allrled
Yes. Auo 1 2001 dotng 1>uS111ess yet? No
Matll Alan Etllfl08< The Rand CorpotahOn
Tn.. Slalement WIS TOO! Btaga Pr9$1dtr\I filed with me County This "element was
Cltnt of Orange County hied w11h Iha County
on 06/21/2001 Clent ot Orange County
2001H74157 on 08/2l/2001 ~ Pilot A~ 23. 30. 20016174870 ~ 6, 13, 1QQ1Th5QQ Dally PllOI Aug 23. 30. Seo! Q. 13~1Ttl506
Flctltloua Bualneu
Name Statement
Tl'le lollowtnp perllO<\I
are dolno busineas 11
Golden Skies Mobile
Home Partc. 100 W Mid-
way Dr., An11'1eim CA
92805 Tim Andereon. 14
Lucerne. Newport Buch, CA 92600
This business i. con-
ducted by an illdMdual
Have you Sllrled
doing bU1ln111 yet?
Vas. 1986
Tim Ander1on
Tiils 11atemer11 wu hied wtth the County
Ci.rll d Onlnge County
on 08/17/2001
20016874850
Delly Piiot ~ 23, 30, Seo! 6. 13 !Th501
Flctltlot.11 Bu1lneu
Name Statement
The lollow1ng persons
are doong bUSllleSS 115
Wont OoClor, 25415
Boone P1aca. Laguna
... CA 92653
Maryam Malek 25415
Boone Place Laguna Hills CA 92653
This l>ulll'l8SI II COil·
duded by an ll'ICillOl8l
Have you ataned dotng business yet? No
Maryam Malek
This statement was
hied with the County
a.ti °' Onlnge County on OfW1 /2001
2001 .. 74117
=~3~~·
A
GOOD
AD!
Cll
(11)11-111
Pelley
Rau. and ~ are subject to change without notice. The
puhlieber re1ma the riiht io cemor, ndusify, mile or ~ IDY
i:laaified adftl'tiaanent~ ~any emr that may be in )'OW' classified ad iJD.mediatdy. The Daily Pilot ICClptl DO IW>il.ity (or ~
enw in ID advutiRmeDt for which it may be ftmponaible Wltpt for
the ooet of the apace acnially occupied by the error. Credit can only be
allowed for the first imertion. _____ .......,, ____ _
Monday ............ Friday S:OOpm Friday .......... Thunday S:OOpm
Tuelday ......... Monday S:OOpm Sato.rday ........... Friday 3:00pm
Wedoeeday .••• Tueeday S:OOpm Sunday ............. Friday S:OOpm
Thunday .. Wedne.day 5:00pm
. . ... _,,..
~ .Mllol, 1 Bldrocrft end 2 Wvom 1 81111, lllllllUlldld ~ ..... pocl, In Qlll9d CCl!nrlldy.
Clll 714-6$7-ooTS
. IC:.~ . -' '
·,. . -~~
..
I \ ,._ ·~-,., .. ··-.
IHOAECUff'S 2/3Bdnnl, 2~th1, 2c garage &
gorgeous oc .. n Ylewt.
Aslllng $450Q.lmo. Carol Rudat, Blu. 94&-723-4455
Cute front bunp1ow 3& 281. front petio, pvt aide
pe!IO, newly "'1CMlld. new
llClPll. 1 gar IPICI w/W/O hk"ilp. S3100'mo. AYll Oc:1.
I, no p!ll. 714-270-2872
IBr 1S. So o1 ::::.· olf
:-' ~ :_ on 50ll
lot.lilt~
.._ Verdi 3br 21111 hol-. Lo lot, Ip, clean, 2 Cit
gtllgt' enclosed palJo
$1975/mo 714-324-44f5.
1 174 ~1
1
15' BA&JOAHOllSf~l!Ul>'TM I ::= = ~ ~ WIO. frig, nlsmkg $3250/
mo Nancy 559-636-9159. -------(-
Udo ..., Apia 3llr 3ba on
the bay S3200mo IYlll Od 111 2llr 1 Wla aYlileble now
$2600(mo 949-673-1283
Charming 28r 1 lleeplng
loft 2Ba conaiie. lrom S24Wmo. no pets Winter or ye111ty 949-723-0653
lluutllut 3,llr 38a yearly
lease. Uppe1 Ulll, shanid
w/d & gar, Wiry $ll8daJ Int
Sleps lo wate1 CaM Gay
1·:n1
Newpon Creal Townhnl,
28r ~ 2c gar, new carJ>ll,
wait lo beach, $185<Ymo.
1 yr lse agt. 949-707-4408
Nlwty remodtlad ttudlo 949-673·8700 or 673-3984 furn. steps to belch. le or Susan o 949-56&0088 Wlntaf Rental 100lt from
prtrg, 11000 949-67~ Sand. Newly ~ '11~1~ ldml r------In Waat Newport. Studio ;...:..;..;:..=..=--"=L:A....-1111 ltOl---1 Ael C.it tQ.72N190
OVEllSl'OCKED d = 2Br. =~:inc:; A call to --~ Bay. Avt Seol 15.
-L-U:!.-1 $18Wmo !M9-464-!i188
Uill33U.lal ...... "* Clwmtr wiJl bcJp! 9 mo furn rerul. 2Br 28e W/ l121 WlMwd -48r 2 58&.
(949) 642-567 =: ~mocomawe:: ~~·~'Tlpl"°:' i:.
1· =I
. . ...,..... -' ...
._ ~ . :....._ '~ ...... ·
Abrams, egt 949-6~ .&Id. 94H60-19llO
r_,. ... -.
~· . ....... , ·..:. ._.,;.
~····--
. . . . . I I
~.s,,auw6,200J S
TODAY'S
CROSSWORD PUZZI E
Both Vulnenble. South deals.
WFSr
NORTH• •OS '1 AK.Q2 0 •• ,2
•1754
EAST
M:Rol8 ~~ ... 1 ~l'lonle _..,..
I ~ U Colleclb.-
10 =. ..........
pltlyed to the fltll trick and, when It ano.m.n 67 :::.
belii. dcdlRf could Ice only lix rue 14 .. mount.llnl .. 51 ~ trick.a. tbrtl mipt produce _, 6111 11 Too& 0. -...,... 111mr trick, bul a dub trick would poi.Illy 11 ....., .. pllq llO FfwM d nW!d
come too Ille to help declarer. 17 "'"*""-~ ~
1bcrdorc, the diamondl would have 11 ~...... --.-
to be developed. ~ '/:: ;:_:: DOWN
• K 10863 QJ986 • 974
Q 7J
o KJH •KJ96
Al Irick rwo the 1en ot diamoocb 22 Sled ~ "' 1 MedlN pe11 was led and. had E88t followt.d low, 23 Fou'1mellrig 2 8lr -~
declarer wouJd have run i1. Whm 24 PIWdcM a lllil l&lppDl1
Gllat WI llellt to OCt'lbey
modem, bright 38r + den.
38a, WIO, frig, 2alr t wtde. $:?tKlO Ag! 949-4Q0-0471
0 87
• A2 SOUTH
• AJ2 0 1054 o AQ64
•Q IOJ
The biddinl:
SOtJTH WEST 10 ....
11'()' .... 3NT ,_
NORTH EAST I ,_
lNT ,_ .... ...,
Opening lead: Six of •
Pay anent.ion to those spot cards.
Keeping alert enabled South to take
the world's cbeapesl line'i.'ie LO land
this 00-ll\lmp game.
South's dedsion to continue 10
game over pwtner's inv11a1.ional raise
with a flat hand. only 13 points 81ld
no source of lriclcs was a distinct
strcleh. However, South more than
justified ii in lhc play.
Dummy's qucm of )padcs was
f..asl COYcred with the iMS. dccla.rcr 28 ~ 4 l(eybowd
ftnced lhc queen as Wea fo&wed 21 ~ l*W«1 5 = With the ICVCSI. South mJUed to lhe 32 0..... a lie 8 p_,
table with the '" o( hearts and led ~ lltllrld -1 EllaMldon
the nlne of diafl\onds, covered by the 3-4 ~ a =--· to kiog and taken with the ace. This
time Wes1 produced the el.gbt ol dia-~ =·= 11 =::,of
moods. 37 Cato! 10 Dart.-buy Anoc.bcr high heart WU the entry 3e • -had Ir 11 Nonllylng blrdl
for decluw to lead the rwo of dia-39 ARM 12 Gu oon1a1nar ~ Wbea Eui covered with the 40 San~ 13 fl-*
lhrcc. decllln:r in9erted the fOUJI Aftc:r 41 G'::'. mai.r1a1 21 wns lndicUor
West discarded, declarer was Ible to 43 Pwa telf\n ~ ~
cash lhc slA of diamonds and run for 44 UN m9mber of ~ ~s.1-m: home with nine tricks -two spades. yore 'u throe hearts and four diamonds. 45 -moss 27 1 compatltor
What ifWesa bad followed with the l"!49_ioo_1a_'llltt...,...•....,....;,28 Amber-colonld
seven and ~of diamoods from an 1 original bo . of 8 7 S? In thaJ
event the deli were always enli-tn--+---t-+--<
tlcd to a diamond, only in this version
it would come on the third round of
lhc suit, when declarer's finesse of
1he four of diamond, lo9e~ to lhc
live!
High Atop Prntlqloua
N£WPORT COAST
Motel
MANAGERS
• SPECIAL•
$175.00 + laX Wldv
(Mull pleeenl lllil .Ad) 235 rms & lutl:tlenetls.
Slluated on bealiifufly
llndlcaped grounds
FEATURES 24-Hour .. ~ .... AMlodtl
ScenlC Part·s.de luwfy wl
City. Canyon, and Ocean
-Gated Community wl Private Garages, European..
S1yfe Klldlens. ln-llome W/ 0, 2 Pools and Spas. Fl· '*'· ~ rd lUil8Ss Ceo1ers 1 Br & 2Bl/28a
• STEPS TO &AHO • Walk lo Mariners Elemen-win.r ,....... rum. 28r llrf S312Slmo .. gardlnlf
From $1450.00 AA lbclUl our $1000. oft ~
$pedal Oii s.i.ct Unltt. Cd an-47Hi725
Lobby/01ract dial
phonas/FrH HBO, ESPN & °'9o'Pool &
Jlcuztl, Guest laun·
drt Cloee '° '405 & 55 Fwys Min'• from o.c
FaltQrds, college llld
bdls Walking dis·
tata 10 shops and
lBI. IJll'· Very clean, no pet Cell 949-51~19.
~~~= I'· .:n 1 .. 1-__ FOR_--_RINT_., ....... I
restaurants • $3.900r'mo 909-556-3179 Nawpof1IFaahlon ll*ld
• '8a ~ end """' Blau unfl.m, """ "'*" BACK BAY TOWNftOUSE Twnhme, "9. 2c gar, gated pllona. prot _.inf, no/
28r den 21h8a, Ip 2c gar comm. w/d. ~spMeM ~ MIO-+ utlls. -pcio., no peti, 11~ $2295fmo. IM9-&4<M972 AVlll ,_, MMU-9515
COSTA MESA
MOTOR INN rm Hlrtlof llhd
"'-MM45 4840
Everyday is a great day
in Classified!
mo. lstM IM~17
CUSTOM ELECTIUC
T roublt call. attic fans,
celllng ""'· lfC 10493823 c.11 71tf1!.GI!
FIND
~
SELL
your unwanted
items throiqi classified
TWO BROTHERS
MOVlllG & STORAGE
PUBLIC
NOTICE
The c.lif. Nllc·
UlllltlH Com· million REQUIRES ..... Ul9d nou.
hold goodl tn0¥9rl
pttnl flllt P.U.C.
Clf T IUNllf: lmol
Ind d*""9 Pftllt .-r.c.P.,....
In .......... llyour..1.-.
lonlbcMh .... ltY al • mGl!llr, ho OI ...,, Cll:
PUBUC UTlUllES
COllWISIOM
n~m
Be a part of it,
place your ad today!
949 642-5678
Older Style Pumlbn
fllANOS .. ~·· ...................
·-·.ti.-.·~,.....
.. CMHMID .. _,.... __ __
•MIYDTATD ........ ....., ....
........ _ ...
....... In .. CllllOfY .., ......
,_ ·tD Clll I IOO
llwMtr Ill .....
..... • ctwgl,. ......
0vER 30 RESTAURANTS. 15 WINERIES. FLAVORFUL COCKTAILS.
RicH TASTING BREws. LIVE COOJ(JNG DEMONSTRATIONS.
SPECTACULAR LIVE ENTERTAINMENT.
-------~ -------
FRIDAY, SEPT. 14. 6 TO 11PM
K-BJG 104 PRESENTS THE DISCO HITS OF
KC & THE SUNSHINE BAND
"Get Down Tungf\t ... ~.the Way (I like It)" • "Keep It Com1n' low"
"(Shab Shake Shake) Shab Your Booty" • "'I'm Yow Boop Man'"
SATURDAY, SEPT. 15 • 4 TO 11PM
I
STAR. 98.7 PR.ESENTS 80's SUPERGROUP
THE BANGLES
'"Walk Ulfe M\ £syptiln" • ~Monday"
"l!temal Flaaw"" • "Hazy Siudt ol Winter"
·SUNDAY. SEPT. 16 • NOON TO 8PM
ARR.ow 93 FM PRESENTS POP/ROCK. LEGENDS
TOTO AND CLASSIC RocKEIU
"'Ho&d the Line" ... Africa" • "Mllce ~
~· • "99" •"1 Won't Hold You~·
---------~ -------
NEWPORT CEb(TER DR.• FASHION ISLAND• NEWPORT BEACH
Run your ad In the
Newport Beach-
Costa Mesa Dally
Piiot and the
Hunting Beach-
Fountain Valley
Independent to
reach over 100,000
homes. Fax us this
form with your credit
card # or mall wttri I
a check todayl
-., OYD,~MYCAR
c °""°"'"a"" a.,. a .. ,
,... °**'Prinn aa..
..,,.., .... Model----
8:.oi-8 =. B=.i"":... Price ---6--§-* §--....... Pt ...... ..__,.._ ·-----a-~aa....-a--·1111ar• 8~-s~ s---..,_ -----..----Run for a weekl If
your car does not
sell, we'll run It for L _ ~::_~~;.~~_:-7-_
another week ,_,
All for just $16·. ~t INDEPENDENT
SANDCASTLE
CoNTEST
SundCl.1
September 9~ 2001
11900 QD\ -4:00 pm
Big Oorcmcl Stc:Lte Seclch
Open to 'Bverycmel
' Prises Clnd. Ccuh
Awozda will be gfi'en!
FREE Aclmla1lcml
eomci Clnd wClt:chl
PCli'dcf p:ants 1et Cln
Offlctcil T-Shln Cl"'1..
Pruentecl by
• iF:C.I TH! COMMOOOHI CLU'I • fl ..-----.--------, I 401' Annucal · I
I Sc:Lnclccistle Contest I I • • ........ a»I • UIOO .... t!OOJ-I
, .... ,..,., ,,, ........ 7, 8111 ,,,,,.., ........................ ...,
T111nNlmt__,---'-------.....-;..:......:.. TemmLAildlt. ___________ ;._.._
Fin~lf g111li. .. on~--------....;_-_;..~
Addr'lll.,_~----~---..:....:-...
Cly St._ ZJp: _.;.....;..._
T•phoo1;."""'---------.;.!..;..:.
~(~one): ..,,_