HomeMy WebLinkAbout2000-10-03 - Orange Coast PilotI ' . ' ' . ' ...
SERVING THE NEWPORT -MESA COMMUNmES SINCE 1907 ON 1HE WEB: WWW.DAILYPILOT.COM TUESDAY, OCTOBER 3, 2000
The gloves coine off in· first ~debate
•Tonight's presidential debate
offers Bush and Gore first chance
to match wits before voters.
AMx Coolm11n
DAl\.Y PILOT
Llke sweaty spectators at a boxing
match, Newport-Mesa residents are
gearing up for the shtgfest of tonight's
first presidential debate.
Some political watchers are eager.
Others are worried. And some are angry
that nobody but Republican George W.
Bush and Democrat Al Gore gets to step
in the ring.
All of them will be tuning in to see
what, if anything, the candidates have to
offer.
Tom Fuentes, chairman of the Orange
County Republican Party, says he's opti-
mistic about Bush's chances in the
debate, arguing that the candidate hasn't
yet had a chance to show voters his real
sell.
"The media has been a filter up to this
point, not allowing the candidates'
humanity to shine through,• Fuentes
said. "It's a moment of opportunity to
demythologize the screen the media has
so far created."
Across the ring, Jeanne Costales,
chairperson of the Orange County
Democrats, emphasized Gore's stances
on issues that she feels people here care
about: education and prescription drug
plans.
Bush's •warm• personality bas left
Costales cold.
SEE DEBATE PAGE 5
George W. Bush
PHOTOS BY GREG FRY I OAl.Y PlDl
Douglas Bader shares a laugh with his fiancee, Elizabeth Edwards. The couple met th.rough their shared Interests In political activism at
tbe Fund for Public Interest Research In Costa Mesa. They hope to avoid the problems that cause many marriages to end In divorce.
Sending a Alex Coolman
DAILY PILOl
MESSAGE Douglas Bader and Elizabeth Edwards
. aren't sure which is going to be more
difficult: saving the Earth or getting
married.
through
MATRIMONY
They're trying to do both, but their top
priority right now is marriage. Today, the
activists -they are the people behind Any·
Body's Earth Press and the Just One More
HUG Foundation in Costa Mesa -will tie
the knot at a ceremony in Silvera.do Canyon
in the Cleveland National Forest.
Local activists take a break from trying to
save the Earth so they can try to save the
institution of marriage.
Along the way, they said, they're trying
to tum their wedding into a sort of textbook
for other couples who hope to make sure
SEE MARRIAGE PAGE 4
State urges city to update general plan
•Newport Beach
~es form letter
from state attorney's
office, which could use
an update of its own. ...............
OMYPILoT
NBWPORT BEACH -
During bet " yean Pl dty
pemment, Asst. City
Manager Sharon Wood
bMD't M8D a letter quite
lib tbe one the dty
..,.,.. tram Calitorma'I
•
attorney general a few
weeks ago.
In the three-page docu·
ment -clearly a form letter
since lt refen to tbe dty as
·~ Jurildid6oa• end nev-
er u •Newport Beech• -
Atty. Geinerel Ball J..ockYer,
or his chief ... iltant,
' Richard M. Prank,
ap••d CODClm OYer thit
dty'• 1luggilbnell in
updlttng ill~ paan. . ·w. ~you to prepare
and adopt (an upda•I ... u
IOOll as precticable, • the
letter reads. •w. also
Nqueit that you proride UI
an update of your progress
toward completing, and/or
your planl to prepare. a
comprehensive general
plan update, including e
schedule f()f' this activtty .•
Whit foDaws are k>b of
numbers for government
code Hdion• and leiJal
preCedenl9 through Wtd
dtiel and counties haw
been tM8D to court for
falling beblnd b:l their ....
~=~= Dorado County ec ol. v.
Board ol SupervliOra of Bl
•ft.ANMMS
-
FYI
The debate,
which will be
aired on each
of the major
television
networks,
begins at 6
p.m. and is
scheduled to
last 90 minutes. Al Gore
Arts panel
r ccused
of biased
treatment
• Supporters of a
proposed arts center say
city-appointed committee
members are not treating
their case fairly.
Alex Coolman
DAILY PILOT
NEWPORT BEACH
Advocates for d proposed arts
center on property behind the
central l.lbrary charged Uus
week that the city committee
evaluating thetr proposal is
btased against their case.
·It's not fair to me, and it's
not fair to anyone." said Don
Gregory, the oty's arts commis-
sioner and an arts center advo-
cate. •rt just seems to m._uiat
the citizens of Newport Beach
have a right to get an even-
handed hearing on this.•
In dispute is 12.5 acres of
vacant land behind the hbrary.
The proposal of the city arts
commission calls for 3 .5 of the
acres to be used for an arts and
education center, wbile other
plans would convert all of the
land into a park or leave it as
open space.
A city-appointed committee
has met three ti.mes to discuss
the various options. The most
recent meeting took place Sept.
27.
SEE ARTS PAGE 4
HERJTAGE RUN
FUN ~. FACI' -~
Stilt In styte
Some of the T 1Nrts for sale at s.t-
urda(s 14th ~ Harbor ~
Run might loolt familiar -thly're
leftowrs from i.st )'Hf. Arry undd
shirts will be doNted to stllde(1U •
Whittier Elementary School.
For Information. call (949) 645-
5806 •
..
11111
... '°"'------·· QAWfllS 11
ar 11rn.-1
SMIS I
•.-r ' .... ..... •-rod a
. ..
2 Tuesdoy, Odober 3, 2000
Kldslalc BACK
Did you catch
Olympic fever?
We asked students at Mariners Elementary.
School: What did you like the best about the
2<>f>O Olympic Games in Sydney. Australia?
"I liked the men's beach volley-
ball. It was cool for me because
it was the first time I saw the
Olympics."
CHAD DAVIS, 10
Newport Beach
"My favorite part about the
Olympics was the women's div-
ing because it's cool how they
do so many different things in
two seconds.•
SABRINA NEAS, 10
Costa Mesa
"The best part was watching
our country getting to the
Olympics -especially Aaron
Peirsol, because he went to this
school and Newport Harbor.
And because we won the most
medals.•
MISSY SEPULVEd'A. 9
Newport Beach
"I think the running, the four-
man relayTace, was tbe best
because they had teamwork
and they didn't do so bad. They
got first place."
GARRETT GALLEGOS, 9
Corona del Mar
"I like the swimming because
there was a blind guy. He had to
look at a strobe light to start the
race and I thought that was inter-
esting. He got a stlver medal:
ANDREW MCDONALD, 10
Newport Beach
"I liked how
Aaron Peirsol said he was going
to get silver and he did:
JILLIAN URBANIEC, 9
Costa Mesa
-story and photos
by Sean Hiller
.. ....
EDUClnON
Parents aim for safer
schools at meeting
IN THE CLASSROOM
Daily Pilot
PHOTOS BY GREG FRY I DAILY PllOT
Davis
Educatton
Center
flfth-graders
Garrick Vohs
and Lokalia
Hawks, both
10, concentrate
during a spelling
pretest In Jennifer
Hauge's class.
A new way to spell it out
Davis Center fifth-graders learn their own set of
spelling words at their own pace.
D•nett• Goulet
D AILY PILOT
COSTA MESA -Students sat huddled
behind Manila folders propped upright
on their desks. Each wracked their brain
in an attempt to r~mber how to spell
the words on their k1y spelling list.
While the folders gave the distinct and
somber impression that a test was being
conducted, they were not really neces-
sary in Jennifer Ha uge's fifth-grade
class. .
Not because her gaggle of 10-year-
olds is beyond reproach, but because
none of them were studying the same
words. Gone are the days of everyone
learning identical lists of spelling words.
Sure, it starts that way at the begin-·
ning of the week. But· when that list is
given as a pretest Monday, any word that
a student can already spell is replaced by
a word they want to learn.
It's a new way of teaching spelling that
FYI
• Who: Fifth-grade students in Mrs.
Hauge's class
• What Brea k away from traditional
spelling lessons
• WheN: Davis Education Center
Hauge thinks 1s pure genius -and stu-
dents seem to agree.
"l like it this way because then you
can't really cheat,• said Alyssa OeMor-
gaind, 10.
Although the majority of children
agreed with Alyssa's reason for liking the
new method, it's not why they use it.
Under the traditional method, Hauge
found that some students weren't being
challenged; for others, the words were too
difficult.
With each child at differing levels of
ability, this new method allows Hauge to
plug in words from the children's writing
journal that they have spelled incorrectly
Her theory is that if they know the
word and are using it, they should ledm
to spell it.
"I think they're being challenged dnd
learning words they need to learn,· she
said.
Her students eagerly agreed.
"I like it this way because you Cdn
learn more words,• said 10-year-old Thuy
Nguyen.
In short, all 20 words on the weekly
spelling test are words that students did
not know at the beginrung of the week
Since each student is coming up with
their own wqrds and is responsible for
keeping track of their personal list, it also
teaches them responsibility.
"I like it when we have different words
because ·someone can't copy your words
and because people can choose the words
they need to learn," said 10-year-old
Richa rd Martin, who adde d that he
chooses difficult words.
School lunch WEDNESDAY MONDAY BRIEFLY
·MENUS
The Newport-MeY lMffied Schoof District offers
ttwM menu chokes ..ct\ d-v at elementary
lmook.. -.ms 'MY dtOOle • ~ entree
If dMnd. The •led6on --and mll'J be either ...... undwkt\ ot hot ..... Schoof lunches
Muncbeble LwK:h SUad with Oannon
fNlt yogurt or two mlDi cheeseburgers
Wllb lettuce and pickles, cboice of 100%
frWt juk», c:bo6ce of milk
1MURSOAY
.. s 1.75 9lich; the.diltrict does not eccept chedcs
for i.. m.. $17.50. Hern~ being seM!d
MilnChable Lunch Salad or •Brunch for
1.um:1a• -dJe8ile amiJet, three cherry
_..._, lldDi ,, • .,.....,... roll, choke of
~--: 1°'"' truM jma.; ... of inl1k
:roDAY
Munchable Lunch Salad with string
Cbeeee or Prenc:h bread pizza, choice of
fruit, cbmce of milk
VOL Mt NO. ll6
J
REAPERS HQJUNE
(949) 642"6086
Record your comments about
the Dally Piiot °' news tlps.
ADQBESS
Our address Is 330 W. l!lay St..
Costa Mesa, CA 92627.
COMECDONS
It is the Piiot's po(ky to prOfflPt·
ly correct all errors of tublUnce.
l'tMM caJI (949) 574-4233.
m Thi Newport~ Mele
o.l1y Piiot (VSf'S.1 ..... It pUb-
llhd Monday thnJugh ~.
In Newport Bueti and ec.ta MIN.
9Ubtcrlptlons.,. ~ ~ ~
IUOlcrlblng to Thi nm. Orenge
County (800) 252-9141. In ...
OUUide of Newporc hactl ...
Cotta MIN. AAMltplilri tlO the
~ P'llot ......... °"" ~ r'Mll few uo per "'°""" SIClond da9,,.. pMd .. c-.. .....
CA. (Prtc. ~ ... ,, • ClllllJ
.._.,.._.,__,~
TIR: Send..._= .. l"9 ~~ -~'-0.laaHIO,C.0. .....
'
•
CA 92626. Cof¥\ght No news ste>-
ries. lllustmlons. edltor!All matt• or~ herein CM\ be
tepfOduc.ed ~ written per-
mtllion of c:owlght own.-.
HOW IO B£AOt US
~
Thi l1me Orange County
... 252-9141 ..........
CliMIM (949) 642-5671
Dllplay (949) 642-4321
lllaW
..... (Mt) 642·5680
Sports (Mt) 57~
..._ SporU fax (M9) 14M170
Eofftlll: -~fitNS.com
..... OMm
twin. Offke (Ml) 642-4321
Mna , .. (M) 631-7126
Munchable Lunch Salad or grilled cheese
sandwich, glazed che rries, choice of
100% fruit juice, choice of milk
•The Munchable Lunch Salad contains
tossed greens, cherry tomatoes, aaclten
and protein sources such as cheese, sun-
flower seeds, fruit yogurt. honey-roasted
peanuts and dresstng.
No child Is dlscrlmi~ eglMnlt t>ec.... of r~.
seJC. color, ~I origin. 9 ot dlMblllty. If It Is
believtd • child hes been dlicrlmlnlbld ~
wrtt. ~to1he~ry of Agrlculture,
Washington, DC 20250.
WEATHER lllD SURF
TEMPERATURES
Balboa 1
78162
Corona del Mar
78162
Costa Mesa
78162
Newport Be.xh
78162
Newport C<>Mt
78162
... POlllC.AST
Slowty fldlng NW and
SW swells wtth waist-to
chest-high surf and
shoulder-high Mts It
top spots.
LOCATION -.
~
ll&adde's
!Mr Jetty
CdM
TIDU
TODAY
First low
~:AGa.m ...... :=::::-..... i.a
First high
2:29 a.m ............. _ ........ 3.4
Second low
9:09 p.m ....................... 1.2
*ondhlgh
1:12p.m ....................... u
4:55 l .m "'""'""t•tttt••n• ),4
Second low
lO:«>p.m .... , ................ 1.1
Second h6gt\
2:20 p.m ... n•uun"o .. ••M• 4,5
OCC's Alaska Eagle to embark
on five-day voyage Oct. 25
. It's setting sail once again. After returning home
m August from a 14-month stint to Hawaii Tahlll.
Australia, New Zealand and Vancouver, O range
Coast College's Alaska Eagle will depart Oct. 25 on
a five-day trip to the Northern Channel islands.
The 65-foot sailing vessel will explore Anacapa.
Santa Cruz and Santa Rosa islands. The cruise is
designed for sailors with inte rmediate-level sailing
skills. The ship will depart at 5 p .m. Wednesday
and return at 5 p.m. Sunday. The fee for the tiip is
$595 and includes all meals .
Information: (949) 645-9412.
POLICE FILES
COSTA MESA
• ~ 11th Street: PossesMon of drugs was reported In
the 100 blodt at 1:50 a.m. Monday. .
• 1-.t a., StlrMt end Neuupc:rt ...... ...-httefY
on glrtfrfend was reported at 4:31 a.m. ~·
• 0...,.. """'-: A vehicle theft was r9PC)rted In the
1900 blodt at 1!20 a.m. Sunday.
• Ne sepwt .. ....,_. A robbtfy was repor19d In the
18QO blodt at 3:30 a.m. Monday.
NEWPORT BEACH
•~ .. ...._..end OWWMlt ._.Vendellwtte
~to h8llt wrta.n gr.ttltl on• stop 9'gn.,.. .,._
Wllllt"lt 1:17 p.m. ~-
• VIit ............. -..U•* IMelry _.
~It 2:10 •.m. Sund.y.
•VIM-...: A CD.,..,. e ,.,_....._. n ... worth
S1to-.Np0r1M ~ hm I .......... ,..
l*dl. 4:JO p.m. Sund9f.
}~---~----------------_..J • .I
Doily Piiot Tuesday, Qdob8r 3, 2000 3
Seven hurt in Coast Highway pileup
NEWPORT BEACH -
Seven people escaped
with minor injuries after a
four-car pileup Saturday
night on East Coast High-
way, officials sold Monday.
ed them on the spot and
later transported them to
the boeplt.als."
Blauer said.
Investigators believe
the accident was caused
by a woman who •blacked
out as she was driving,•
said Sgt. Mike McDermott
of the Newport Beach
Police Department.· She
was taken by officers for
psychological evaluation,
he said.
Forget about Richard,
here are the real survivors
The accident occurred
at about 10:15 p.m . Satur-
day on the westbound
lanes of East Coast High-
way between Seaward
Road and Poppy Street
south of Corona del Mar,
said Lt. John Blauer of the
Newport Beach Fire
Department.
•None of the injuries
were life threatening,•
BulUer said. •so we treat-
'IWo of the victims were
taken to Hoag Hospltal
and two to South Coast
Community Hospital. 'IWo
others were taken to West-
e{ll Medical Center in San-
ta Ana and another was
transported to Fountain
Valley Hospital. Police did
not release the names of
victims Monday.
Although the accident
was cleared from the road
after an hourt three west-
bound lanes on Coast
Highway were closed,
It was a rare incident for
the area, said Blauer.
•w e don't usually come
across an accident that
involves this many vehi-
cles and so many people,"
be said. -.,...,. Bhllrllth
T he three ultimate sw -
vivors are cockroach-
es, crows and coy-
otes. Lon g after the rest of
life has disappeared from
this planet, those t'hree will
still be here.
Residents to discuss new OCTA bus routes
Anyone who has lived in
the tropics knows about
cockroaches. I d on't mean
the itty-bitty kind the
authorities say frequented
Sid Soffer's steak house. I
mean the great big ones,
the kind you could put on a
horse and play Lone Ranger
with.
Crows I know all too
well. They have taken over
Shore Cliffs. We used to
have lots of songbirds. Now
we have nothing but big,
black, noisy crows.
Jennifer Kho
D AILY PILOT
SANTA ANA -A gTOup
of residents who opposed
countywide bus system alter-
ations has organized a public
forum today to discuss the
changes.
The new bus routes, which
were implemented last
month, straightened many of
the county's crooked routes
and were designed to simpli-
fy and shorten most riders'
commutes, Orange County
Thansportation Authority offi-
cials said.
But members of the
Orange County Citizens' Bus
Restructuring Task Force,
which held a forum in August
to oppose the changes, say
the changes have caused
FYI
• What Countywide
bus riders' forum
• Where: Fullerton
Community Bank
building, 825 N. Broadway,
Santa Ana
• When: 6 to 8 p.m. today
• Information: (714) 525-
3678
generally longer commutes
for riders.
The task force hopes pub-
lic comments at the forum will
either support or assuage its
concerns.
•At the last forum, all we
had was speculation. But now
we will know how people are
affected,• said Jane Reifer, a
spokeswoman for the group.
THAT'S YOUR FINAL ANSWER,
itg ti"'~ ~ot. · · Ml CASA
MEXICAN RESTAURANT
296 E. 17TH ST. COSTA MESA· 949-645-7626
·Some people's travel times
have decreased, but we think
most people have a more bur-
densome trip. We'll find out.·
A high turnout of Costa
Mesa bus riders is expected,
Reifer said, since the city has
the second-highest bus rider-
ship in the county.
Eileen Hogllnd, a Costa
Mesa resi{J.ent and host to
international students at the
English as a Second Lan-.
guage program at UCl, said
one student is moving into her
home because the commute
from his previous residence is
now too long.
·1 have no complaint
because the bus stop where
my students leave Crom and
come in from is exactly the
same,· she said. ·aut I think
it's horrible how some other
people have been affected."
We've always had coy-
otes, but few people have
seen them. They live in
Buck Gully a nd Morrung
Canyon and come out only
at night and the n to g rab a
stray cat. They live mainly
on ground squirrels, but like
a cat every no.w and then
for a change.
Although we have a
decent number of local coy-
No matter what you're doing,
your hometown newspaper
FITS IN .•• Daily Pilot
-~
Mattress Outlet Stor
BRAND NEW -COSMETICALLY IMPERFECT
Get the Best for Less! ' ~ , r
3 165 Harbor Blvd.
Costa Mesa
One Block South of 405 l'wy
(714) 545-7168
Wednesday, October 4, 2000
South ·coast Plaza
Grand Opening Eventl
Robert Gardner
THE VERDICT
oles, most of them !>eem to
have migrated south, proba-
bly because of au the con-
struction work bemg done
between Corona del Mar
and Emerald Bay I have a
grandddughter who hves in
Emefdld Bay. dnd she has
developed almost a siege
mentdhty dbout coyotes that
show up m her ydrd every
night. She hds two Cdts and
a dog.
The cdts dre house cats
a nd dre not inclined to wan-
der around at night. The
dog, a beuutiful female
black Ldbrddor, 1s very pro-
tective, as dogs usually are.
When a coyote comes in the
ydrd, that dog tdkes off in
full vo1ce and chases the
coyote away.
So far so good. Bad coy-.. ote gets chased away by
good dog. However, it's not
that simple.
People who know about
such things have advised
my granddaug hter to keep
the dog in the house with ·
the ccits. It seems that coy-
otes are not only a nui-
sance, they are very smart.
They have a routLOe that
goes somethmg hke this:
Coyotes run m packs
The pack sends one mem-
ber up to the house as a
decoy. The dog comes out
and chdses the coyote
However. waiting at the foot
of the hill 1s the rest of the
pack When the dog amves,
they kill 1t.
So you don't have to be a
cat lover to hate coyotes.
Dog lovers can hate them.
too. Not that coyotes g ive a
damn. Populdrity was never
very high on their Chnst-
mas list.
• ROBERT GARDNER IS a Corona
del Mar resident and a former
judge. His column runs Tuesdays.
(949) 646-6745
Mon-Fri 10-6 Sat l0-5 Open Sunday 10-4
New Ho~ Store
Locaud behind P/Ums .
Special Guests Mickey Mouse, Minni. Mouse & Skating Champion Michelle Kwon
10 a.m. -Disney Store near CarouHI Court
Meet lkatln9 Champion Mkhelle Kwanl
First 100 guesb r.ceiYe o fr.. copy of Michell.' a lot.st boolt
10i30-11115 a.m.
eJ 1SH~f store
·-
Dl1ney lloN Style Spectacularl
An ~ celebiation of muaic, don<» and foahion
11 a .m. • 1 p.m. • 3 p.m. • S p.m. -CorouMI Cowt
Cha-cha-cha with lear ·
from Jim H.nJOn Tel.¥isian'1....,.. in the Big Blue Houw
DI Mef\ WVW'f day on Disney Channel
Noon• 2p.t11.-C..UMICOUl't • Lift~ lty Hel)w•• .. a.c.d•' hceftlli• Art1etS
N1ll1.,.. ..... I ' co algning fallowing perfam.ance 4,.-.-c.. ... ic..t
..... ._.._.u.....,..r1
Stor of Disney•PixOr'• new anim 11t1 II -* -..Z ~ of Star Commofid-
......, lo Win Great"'-' , .......... ,....
................. 'ft.•rl
..._ tier lo lw'"8 a C1C11Wa
111 ............. . ....... 9l1••···--°" ................ ""' and ..... , ..... .....
'·
. ~ 4 Tuetday, October 3. 2000 .
I
ARTS
CONTINUED FROM 1
Members of the arts com-
mission who attended the
meeting said the council
members who sit on the
committee -Norma Glover
and Tom Thomson -gave
dramatically different treat-
ment to proponents of the
arts center than they had
given to advocates for open
space.
IN BRIEF
Debate set for
Costa Mesa
council hopefuls
Candidates running for
seats on the Costa Mesa City
Council will have their first
debate today.
The debate, organized by
the Mesa Verde Homeown-
ers Assn., will begin at 6:30
p.m. at the Neighborhood
Community Center, 1845
Park Ave., Costa Mesa.
Former mayors and non-
profit political groups in the
city have submitted questions
for the debate.
Possible topics indude the
Home Ranch development,
urbanization limits, housing
1Ssues. senior abzens' needs.
West Side redevelopment,
the East 17th Street improve-
ment plan, the city budget
dfld master plan, the use· of
colored water and libraries.
If time penruts, people
attending the debate may
also be allowed to submit
ddd.JtionaJ questions.
Greenlight backers
endorse Newport
colllcil candidates
Proponents of Measure S,
also known as the Greenlight
irutidtive, announced
endorsements for three candi-
dates for the Newport Beach
City Counal on Monday.
They arP: Dennis P. Lahey,
a candidate for Distnct 2i
Patricia M. Beek, runn.ing in
Arts Com.mis ioner Rober-
ta Jorgensen said members
of the nonprofit Arts Founda-
tion, which hopes to begin
raising funds for the center
soon, were told that such an
effort would be futile in
Newport Beach. ·
•Tuey were not told to
stop,• Jorgensen said. •But
they were told that this was
virtually impossible• in the
city.
Glover said .the commit-
tee is giving a fair bearing to
all sides.
District Si and John Heffer-
nan, who sookS to fill the Dis-
trict 7 council seat.
Each candidate has pub-
licly announced their support
for Measure S.
The measure appearing
on the Nov. 7 ballot proposes
to put before a citywide vote
any development that allows
an increase of more than 100
peak-hour car trips or
dwelling units or 40,000
square feet over the general
plan allowance.
Measure T, the so-called
Traffic Phasing initiative,
would add parts of the city's
traffic phasing ordinance to
the City Charter and nullify
Greenlight, should voters
approve both measures.
-Mathis.Winkler
Nautical museum
launches fall
lecture series
The Newport Harbor Nau-
tical Museum kicks off its fall
lecture series today with
Chris Butler discussing #The
Monarch of the Ocean" at
7:30 p.~. at the museum, 151
E. Coast Highway, Newport
Beach.
Michael Jacques will lead
"Nautical Painting 101" at
7:30 p.m. Oct. 10; Dave Grant
will lead The 1999-2000 yacht
race from Sydney to Hobart at
tha same time Oct. 17; and
Scott Kennedy will present
the #Inspiration Afloat• lec-
ture at 7:30 p .m. Oct. 24.
The lectures are free. but
limited to 60 participants
each. Information: (949) 673-
7863.
~ ......
"I'm letting everyone feel like they're losing their
talk,• she said. •w e have arguments, then they start
sent out many, many letters getting oesty and personal
trying to seek input from on you,• he said.
everybody on this issue. I Gregory countered that
want to make sure at tbe end the tone taken by council
or this process that every-, members in their treatment
body has been beard and of arts center advocates has
involved.• made it diffi~t to have any-
Tbomson, wbo also said thing but a personal
the meetings have been fair, response to the meetings.
argued that art center pro-"They we.e grilled and
ponents are letting their editorialized by Ms. Glover
emotions drive their com-and Mr. Thompson constant-
plaints. ly," he said. "That's not the ·u you have people who role of somebody who's sup-
MARRIAGE
CONTINUED FROM 1
their marriage doesn't
become another ca.swilty in
a culture of divorce.
•Js it a valid thing to
attempt, given that the
majority of couples can't
even do m• Bader asked on
a recent afternoon.
He was sitting along
with Edwards in the small
17th Street office of Marilyn
Rothman, a woman who
calls herself a "life coach:
Rothman is one of sever-
al counselors that Bader
and Edwards have been
seeing since they decided
to get married -part of a
grand-scale effort to
become as informed as pos-
sible about the potential
pitfalls of marriage.
In a satchel that Bader
Around
TOWN
• Send AROUND TOWN items to
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Costa Mesa, CA 92627; by fax to
(949) 646-4170; or by calling (949)
574-4268. Include the time, date
and location of the event, as well
as a contact phone number. A
complete llstlng Is available at
http:llwww.dallypllot.'com .
WEDNESDAY
A Turfgrass &po will be held
had brought along to the
session with Rothman was
a weighty pile of books
with titles such as •How to
Stay Lovers for Ute,• "The
1 Habits of Highly Effective
Families,• •After the Hon-
eymoon• and "Beyond the
Marriage Fantasy:
All the research is an
effort, the couple said, to
determine the deep issues
in marriage -what it
means as a societal cus-
tom, why it can be fulfill-
ing, and why it can be dif-
ficult to sustain. The idea
is that their study of the
subject can be a founda-
tion for other hecs.lthy mar-
riages.
. But if there was anything
the recent counseling ses-
sion proved clearly, it was
that the intellectual
approach to marriage only
goes so far.
Fidgeting on a couch,
from 8 a.m. to 3 p.m. Wednes-
day and 8 a.m. to 2 p.m.
Thursday at • the Orange
County Fair & Exposition
Center, 88 Fair Drive, Costa
Mesa. Lawn mower races are
open to the public from 1 to 3
p.m. Wednesday. $5 for races.
(800) 500-7282.
The anvelllng of the all-ne~
Disney Store design will be
held from 10 a.m. to 5:30
p.m. at the Disney Store in
South Coast Plaza, 3333 Bris-
tol St., Costa Mesa. Mickey
Mouse and Minnie Mouse
will join skating champion
Michelle Kwan, Winnie the
14th Annual Harbor Heritage Run
RUN NEWPORT!
Picturesque course through Newport Heiglts offers gen~ roli1g hils, ocean and bay views & cool breezes
51 FEATURE RACE • IK FUN RUN/WALK
Kids' Klasslc Race and Free Fitness Fair
Run or walk for your heallh and the 70-year heritage of quality education at
posed to listen to different
proposals.•
Catherine Saar-Kranzley,
who Is both a member of the
city committee and a trustee
for the Newport Beach Pub·
lic Ubrary, agreed that open
space advocates have been
treated •with kid gloves•
compared to the treatment
of arts center advocates.
But Jan Vandersloot, a
steering committee member
of Stop Polluting Our New-
port, which is pushing for ~
land to remain open, dis-
their hands linked, the cou-
ple sounded less like a pair
of family theorists than two
nervous people attempting
to yrapple with some of
their deepest anxieties
about commitment, couple~
hood and family.
Edwards, who is 20,
admitted her worries about
her father's attitude toward
her marrying a man twice
her age. She said she d~
n't think her family under-
stands the spiritual and
emotional growth she has
experienced. that they don't
fundamentally respect her
decision.
Rothman, sitting in a
leather chair, suggested
that she think about the
issue in a different way.
Perhaps ber fathers atti-
tudes had to do with his
own fears about loss. his
own vulnerability as an
aging man.
Pooh and Tigger. Disney
executives and other guests
to celebrate the opening.
(818) 265-3355.
AJan Kaye, a professor of lin-
guistics and Arabic al Cal
State Fullerton, will present
#Modem Saudi Arabia: Lan-
guage and Culture# lecture
at l :30 p.m. at Orange Coast
College's Student Center
Lounge, 2701 Fairview Road.
Free. (714) 432-5725.
THURSDAY
The Orange County chapter
or the Single Gourmet, an
Newport Harbor High Schoof-a Dllt/ngullhtd School and 81111 Ribbon Anrd recipient r--------------1 RIGISTIATION FORM . I
• Valances & Cornice Boxes
• Roman Shades • Blinds
2
0
0
0
I 2:oa''t..ff~='H.rtt.ge Run DODD
I
P.O.Box 2934 OFACIAL USE ONLY 1
1 Newport Beach, CA 82659-2934 I (949) MS-5808 htlp:1.m..nmuec1k12.ca.~ I
1 .. rnrnrnrnCiiiiimoo' I PltlT WT I
I Ill m ~:.:DD mmDTI 00-00-rn I
Newport Harbor High School I 1
' I I ADOllEll DOOCililIIIIJO[[Il] I
SATURDAY 1 cm D ·1 OCTOBER 7 ~oo 1 ITAll, rn " [Il][[] SK~~· 1
Newport Harbor Hl~h School I ,... =0 0 0° 'd1211111:0 I
16th st & ,...... A N I CH?ONE: • • r.-.rOILY 0...13-15 a I 1v1ne ve., ewport Beach I D Q-le-1a a •ia..-cMCI a 1a-2A a I
W•l'llWlft 7:30 a.m. I nu· -........._...... o 25-a a 1 2K 1:00~ .. ---r • SK I ·30 • (~llld nor....__, CJ 30-:s.-a • i.m. c a.m. I .. ...,, ,_ a 36 so a I
Kids' Kluslc Race emy • lnc*ldll ""'"::: : ~ :C.:--~ o ~ = 44 a 5-7 v .. 11 ....... 19·15 a I ._...,..,~°",...°"' 8 .-s-~ o I 1-"VN ' .m. I 1HIDIKwrlllllm41U.W'lW17 •--50-54 0 8-10year-olda9:30a.m. t a, 1•t11111tZW1u .. -.. ._ a ae-58 a I I W(IQtpl_tllll __ *' __ L--§ 80-8' 8 'I Fftneufllr7:30a.m.-10:00am. 1 •• .,,..,......_.._._..-.'°.. •-• I '------------1 AMIL IL &.... IL-m..._ 10-79 0 ENTRY FEE INCLUDES: I ,...._.__ .._ Al .. .,_. •-a eo ..... a 1 C...T"'*'lflolt.4'lot~ ..,._. • ....._.,.-.a. ,.._
l'MSINTED IV~ 8'0H80fll I ..... ..... .......-:r-....= I COLIJWIU, __ ... I ,,....,...,.._l:Jl.11.9....... •Cllmdlt ...... c.ri.,.r~Mml =:. L_ {cftltw>•101111 I
MD I Chldlln 12 ... undlr.. ·-........ ....-.: I n. Bot.mt Fou1ddon. Datt Piiot. I • ...... °"" ~ I --11~~t.a11f'.-. mAL.aa. '--Q--..11 .... ... ,_._.,, ___ .,..,,,..,,, I "-IAll a Lnf Aowr Newport e.ctt. Mlc"*>ft. IMICI Q.acPAYMLI TO ... nA ",_, ... ._ ............. ,
NIW a.nee, Newport Ortioped I .... ...,.. _, I •-Mtdlcll~ ... Inc ........... ,, ..... I 2 ,, .. .., ......... ,..., .. -..-1 ... VU!', .. I """'·"" ............ I ill 4.................. I TlllldaltAalllr'9 Ford. NlftS PTA .............. ,,=..-.-.. ... 111•1t ....... .... ....,...,_....,...,,, "-......... .,_ ... ... ...................................... = ..... .,.I ..................... ,, .. _... .. ..... ...... ,.....,_ .. .., .... ......., ...... ....., ...... I ........ ,,.-.......................... .....
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1..:'-:::•=•"::•:•:••::•::!::":•:·~--~==·~-~---...!o..:._.J I --------------:J
• Verticals • Shutters • Bedspreads
Complimnt.11ry Co111,,/t.11tion ;,, Yo"r Home
2 ()0 ct I '
<)I 1 :
~'1/te44~
DESIGN CENTER
Factory & Showroom 1998 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa
~~ (949)642-8400 ~"':~
. Doily Pilot --'
missed the idea that there
has been any disparity in the
treatment of the two sides.
•1 think they were listened
to very carefully and courte-
ously,• Vandersloot said. ·1
think (the committee was1
asking appropriate ques-
tions, and I think they've
been very fair about it.•
For that matter, be noted
bis own presentation ln tavo;
of open space was cut off by
the committee because there
wasn't enough time to finish
it.
"I know that intellectual-
ly,• Edwe.rdl said. •But
emotion4lly U'1 very hard
not to have the approval of
your father:
These core concerns -
the fears and W8ak:nesses
that motivate every person
-are even at play in Bad-
er's environmental work, he
said.
"When you analyze what
my motivation is, it's to get
to the people who are most
emotionally important to
me, but spiritually com-
pletely foreign to me.•
The hope, he said, is that
by articulating what usually
goes unsaid, the couple can
enter the marriage with
some degree of honesty.
Whether that will make
for happiness is, of course,
the book that Bader and
Edwards will have to write
for themselves.
international fine-dirung club
for singles, will hold a d.Jrung
· evenl,...al-"'6:30 p.m. at Roy'!.,
453 f Newport Center Onve.
Newport Beach. $73. (q4qJ
854-6552.
SATURDAY
Carl WhJte of Apple Comput-
er Co. will demonstrate the
latest Apple technology fro m
8 a.m. to 1 :30 p.m. in the
chemistry building at Orange
Coast College, 2701 Fairview
Road, Costa Mesa. Free tor
first-time visitors. (949) 770-
1865.
Friends In Service to Human-
ity will host its annual Bredk·
fast on the Bay fund-raiM.>r
from 8 to 11 a.m . at the New-
port Dunes Resort, 1 131
Back Bay Drive. Newport
Beach. $10 for adults, $5 for
children 12 and younger,
mdudes parking and an aU-
day pass to the resort. (949)
642-6060.
The Orange County chapter
of the California School-Age
Consortium and the city of
Costa Mesa will sponsor free
training for people who work
with school-age children,
from 8:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. dt
the Balearic Community Cen-
ter, 1975 Balearic Drive, Cos-
ta Mesa. $15, but free for Cos-
ta Mesa residents,..nd child-
care providers, ud $10 for
California School-Age Con-
sortium members. (949) 460-
2718.
A practlcaJ worlubop tor new
entrepreneurs or those with a
modest budget who want to
expand in a profitable market
will be held at 9:30 a.m. at
Oasls Community Center,
800 Marguerite Ave. $49.
(949) 644-3151.
Parents of high ICbool sen.Ion
are invited to the last in the
series of Pree College Fund-
ing Workshops, at 10:30 a.m.
at Orange Coast College.
2701 Fairview Road. Roger
Edmonds, a 30-year Certi-
fied Financial Pll.J,Qner, will
speak at the event. A $1,000
college scholarship drawing
will take place. Pree. Seat-
ing is limited. (114) 508-
4433. •
Pugtobertett 2000, • IMUval
for pugs, pell and people, will
be held at t 1 a.m. at leWln·
kle Par~. 970 Arlington Ortve,
Costa MeH. S7 for adults, SS
for seniors and chOdren 5 to
12, and fra. for children
younger than 5. (949) 262·
7843.
Costa M..a Seaiof c.tler
wW hold tts annual fund-rm-
lng event, AD evening m
Monte CUlo, from 7 to 11
p.m. at the • center, 895 W .
19th St. The ntat Will
indUde Uq en ............ I, a
IUeht •IJC.'doa. pm.. draw·
•• food -Ol"W'• (Mt) 645-5090.
· Daily Pilot .
DEBATE
CONTINUED FROM 1
•As a woman, I'd just like
to slap his face. He has that
smart-alecky thing that just
drives me crazy.·
If Bush is smart-alecky, it's
Gore who is expected to make
the bigger show of barbed
intelligence in this debate.
Mark Petracca, chairman
of UC Irvine's political sci-
ence d epartment, pointed out
FYJ
The Ad Hoc General Plan
Update Committee will
meet Oct. 9 at 3 p.m. in
the Fire Conference Room
at City Hall, 3300 New-
port Blvd.
Newport Beach's General
Plan elements and most
recent updates:
• land Use Element
1988
•Circulation Element
1988
• ConsetVation of Natural
Resources Element
1974
•Noise
1994
• Public Safety
1975
• Growth Management
no date specified
• The law requires an update
for the Housing Element every
five years. Although the last
update occurred about seven
years ago, Wood said the city is
still in compliance. An update is
scheduled for this year.
that Gore's famously brainy
approach to debates could
work against him. Just one
good line from Bush, he
argued, could be enough to
tip the balance. •
•What each guy has to
avoid doing is saying any-
thing that gives the other guy
an opportunity to use a one-
liner that becomes tomorrow's
headline,• Petrecca said.
Given that the candidates
have lo'woay about sound-bite
politics, Petracca said, he isn't
overly optimistic about seeing
PLAN
CONTINUED FROM 1
Dorado County, et al. dearly
being the one with the most
imaginative title.)
"What the Atty. General is
saying is that if you haven't
done (an update in a long
time,) there could be internal
inconsistencies and we could
be in an uncomfortable posi-
tion,• said Wood, adding that
the general plan's housing ele-
ment was the only one that
required by law an update
every five years.
"It's just a gentle reminder to
move forward with an amend-
ment on all elements,• said
Councilman Tod Ridgeway.
"Some we have updated, but
the land use and circulation ele-
ments we have not updated.·
It comes, in some ways,
belatedly. Together with coun-
cil colleagues Norma Glover
and Gary Adams, Ridgeway
was ready to participate in a
general plan update commit-
tee, scheduled to meet for the
first time Oct. 9. Other commit-
tee membeJs include planning.
commissioners and represen-
tatives from the environmental
quality advisory, economic
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a highly intellectual debate.
•The Bush handlers have
done a great Job of lowering
the bar" of people's expecta-
tions, he said. •George W.
just has to make sure he
doesn't drool on bim.seU. He
can drool, and he can drool
on the podium, but he can't
drool on himself.•
Other political watchers
argued that the very structure
of the two-party debate is to
blame for tts likely lack of
depth.
"What the American peo-
development, aviation and
harbor committees.
"Our first cha.rqe is to map
out the process and agree on an
approach to the ltpdate, • said
Adams, who will chair the com-
mittee. After coming up with a
plan to update the plan, tbe
~p would 9et involved in a
community visioning process.•
•How we would do that is
really up to the committee,· he
said.
Glover, who said that sh e
pushed for a "long overdue·
update ever since City Manag-
er Homer Bludau began work
in May 1999, already had
some ideas to involve residents
in the work. ·
"What I thought would be
great to do is for every single
councilman to take their dis-
trict and determine which wa~
to get input .from residents,
she said. What works well in
getting infonnation in one dis-
trict aoesn't work well in
another district.•
Glover said that she plans
to set up meetings throughout
her district and involve people
that might not even know who
she is.
She'd present them with
' I I ,,. •./ -
C I K I. 0'
ple are going to hear: said
Doug Scribner, vice chairman
of the Libe.rta.rian Party of
Orange County, •ts the same
two ideas with slightly differ-
ent rhetoric."
Scribner pointed out, for
example, that America's poli-
cy on drugs, which Libertari-
an presidential candidate
Harry Browne argues is a dis-
aster, will probably not be
discussed at all because
third-party candidates are
exduded from the d ebate.
But David Nolan, United
different options for the city's
future and ask them to choose,
she said.
"If you want more develop-
ment, what development do
you want?" she said she'd ask
her cbnstituents. "If you want
less development and less rev-
enue (for the city,] what would
be the services that the oty
provides now that we could
take away?"
Personally, Glover said, she
favors a plan to spend city
money on revitalizing areas
I'm not worried,
my agent is
Craig Brown
Insurance
Call today for auto & home
owner's lnsur.incc:!
(949) 760-1255
Fashion Island
. '
States Libertarian Party
founder and a candidate for
the 47th Congressional Dis-
trict seat held by Rep.
Christopher Cox (R-Newport
Beach), said he thinks third
parties are rising in the pub-
lic's awareness -due at least
in part to the availability of
information on the Internet.
·1 think this is the last
presidential election in which
the two major parties will be
able to successfully pretend
that there are no other alter-
natives.• he said.
-J '
such as Mariner's Milej
• U we took monty. and
started redeveloping to make
our oty beautiful, we would
get the high-end tourist,· she
said. "I'm convinced of that."
One final note to the people
m Sacramento: Maybe it
wouldn't be such a bad idea to
update your data base when
you send out update
rerrunders. Honorable he
might be, but Dennis O'N~'s
no longer Newport BeaCh's
mayor, as your letter suggests.
New rt Beach • Uc.-0550290 SAFI! Co·
0 kl2 Ml
eau.•"9•••••.
I ' I . .
·.!.
•
The Daily Pilof gives me the business -plus the news from city hall, the school board,
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"I miss him very much. Wearing his
shirt makep me /eel closer to him. "
How To
REKJIUS
The Daily Ptlot wekomes lettrfs on iSIUeS con·
ceming Newport Beach and Costa Mesa. There
are four ways to ~nd in your comments:
Gay Geiser-Sandoval
EDUCATIONALLY SPEAKING
Tbesorrow
ofpilrental
parting
T he anxiety was building as
the date loomed. I should
have been happy to know
that she was going to a better place;
some might call it heaven on earth.
Instead, it seemed almost like a
prison sentence. Fol the first time in
more than 18 years, we would be
physically parted for weeks on end.
More than just the physic8.l separa-
tion, I knew that we would travel
separate paths from now on.
We will chat by e-mail or phone
about he r newfound friends, her
teachers and activities. But I won't
get to meet them, talk to them or
see her interact with them. I won't
be there to witness her sing, or act
or play sports. I won't see the agony
she goes through each morning to
determine if her butt looks too big
in her chosen outfit.
Unlike some of her friends, who
seemed to wait until the last minute
to figure out what to take and how
to take it, her bedroom had been
the staging area for two weeks.
Each day, the list of what she to
take had more check marks as the
items were labeled and packed.
We knew we were at Ground
Zero when every motel in town had
a van packed to the gills, acces-
sorized with a bicycle. 1llis being a
school of overachievers, the fresh-
men were lined up at 7:30 a.m .. a
half-hour before check-in started.
Family members worked like
teams on maneuvers. One was
assigned to stay in line, while others
began moving bags and boxes
toward the building. The girls
required at least twice as tnuch stuff
as the boys, but were able to fit it all
in their rooms. By noon. m ost rooms
had the furniture rearranged and
the junk stowed.
At that time, pa.rents heard about
reassurtng their children that the
school really did pick them to be
there, and it wasn't some mistake.
As we talked with pa.rents about
their sons' and daughters' accom-
plishments, I was beginning to woo-
der.
The students at the school bad
garnered more Olympic medals this
year than 80% of the countries. OW"
hometown big fish had just landed
ln an incredible ocean. Now I
understood why a world-renowned
doctor and professor would want to
raise his family ln a howe attached
to their dorm. That much intellectu-
al energy bas got to draw young
kids into the love of learning.
As with everything about the
day, the time to say goodbye was
designated. I bad tried to think of
something profound or special to
say or do. But, every time I tried to
speak. I could feel the tears trying to
spew a flash Oood down my face.
So we ended in a group bug with
the words •with independence
comes responsibility.• Sbe said she
was ready for the independence,
but she wasn't so sure about the
~e\ds were ofl to their
dinnEf and the parents were oft to o
perenls' dinner. Our table had
moms and dads from all over the
c:ounby who were brimming with
excitement for their kids.
No one seemed meLancboly. No
one looked like her heart had been
wrenched out No one seemed to
think that dUI day would stand out
1n their memory forever, like when
John P. Kennedy WU shot or the
\J\etnam Wor ended.
I dedded I mutt be the blggelt ' my d aD. It was bU I bad )Ult been
to. fUneql, while Ibey hid hem to
a w9dding. Only lats did I and out
that ... parmtl dkln't llk:k. ., Iba
IChedule. llwy were beck the neat csay and tbe neat Tbey oouldn't raoe
11 my betta' than L
P9rtlDg • IUC:h lw.et 90ll'OW lbal
I mn'l w.at until tbe "monow. Or. In
mycme.~·
• .. I F UJ• INM.111 C..
.............. --.. .... • 1/L ...................
"' ,. ·-· ..
-Chr;s PoLer, on her father, 79-year-old Douglas
Boniface, who was killed on his bicycle in a hit-and-
run accident Sept. 23 on Newport Boulevard.
• LEmRS -Mall to the Dally Pilot. 330 W. Bay
St, Costa Mesa 926727
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All correspondence must indude your full name,
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purposes only).
Tuesday, October 3, 2000 7
Writer's blame for Wen Ho Lee treatment misplaced
A r~nl Letter to release those vieilations should i.ng anything from Cox,· law and unplemented in
the Editor made of the consult Atty. General the letter stated). In fact, the execunve branch. The
three allegations Select Janet Reno's detailed tes-when Energy Secretary most unportant of these
about the unanimous, Com-timony to the Senate Bill Richardson publicly reforms was the creation
bipartisan report of the mittee Intelligence Committee discharged Lee from his of the new Ndbonal
Select Committee on U.S. report this week, available at 1ob m 1999, I cribc12ed it Nuclear Secunty Ad.min-
National Security which I was an www.fbi.gov/pressrm/con as un-Amencan (Lee was 1strallon, wluch has taken
chaired, each of which is irre-gress/congressOO/wen-then o.nlY a suspect, and responsibility for weapons
in serious error. sponsi-holee.hbn). the government lacked security from the dysfunc-
First, the writer wrong-ble Second, the wTiter sufficient evidence to tional Department of
ly criticized the report for politi-implies that the Select indict him) Energy.
charging thaf •theft of cal Committee was in error in I also warned agamst a A!> recurnng security
our nation's top weapons move, Christopher Cox reporting that the Peo-looming "Richard Jewell" ldp~s such as the missing
secrets• was committed intend-pie's Republic of China problem -that 1s, tnal hard dnves at Los Alamos
by a •supposedly diaboll-ed to REBUTIAL stole classified informa-and conviction m the hdve LllustratPd, the prob-
cal man named Wen Ho make lion on U.S. nuclear war-press. My comments were lem!> identified by the
Lee.• The report made no it seem heads. That conclusion widely reported m the bipartisan Select Commit-
such charge. as if has been repeatedly national media (dlthough tee are qwte real. One
In fact, neither the there were a •quick fix• alfi.rmed, and (unhappily) not m the Pilot or the Los problem that WdS neither
classified nor the unclas-to the security problems stands as true today as at Angeles Tunes) and have created nor commented
sified version of the report at our national weapons the end of 1998, when the been reprised as recently upon by the Select Com-
e ven mentioned Wen Ho laboratories. conunittee finished its as Sept. t 7 on 60 Minutes rruttee, however, ts the
Lee. There was good rea-The administration's work. It has most recently and Sept. 25 m The Clinton ddmuustration's
son for this: no member of further misfeasance dur-been validated by a for· Orange County Register. mishandling of the Wen
the Select Committee had ing his investigation and mal CIA damage assess-The Select Committee Ho Lee case
ever heard of him. trial conupted what ment. drew much needed atten-
The Clinton adminis-should have been a legiti· Third, the wnter fdlsely tion to security problems • CHRISTOPHER COX repre--tration's public identifica-mate prosecution for seri-states that I have been at the national weapons ients the 47th Congressional
lion of Lee (who was then ous security violations silent on the govern-laboratories and made 28 District, which includes much
merely a suspect) in the (and any Pilot reader who ment's abuses 10 the Lee recommendallons thal of Newport Beach, in the U.S.
months following the doubts the severity of case ("I don't recall hear-hdve been enacted mto House of Representatives.
READERS RESPOND
Will the craws continue to caw in Neuport-Mesa?
AT ISSUE: Costa Mesa
police used pellet guns to
shoot crows in response to
neighborhood complaints
about the noisy birds.
e have a really bad
problem with crows and
the only way to get rid
crows is to shoot them.
They're very intelligent animals,
smart as dogs, and if you shoot
one the others communicate to
the group that this person is a ·
crow killer and they won't come
back to the house -especially if
one bas died on your roof or
something.
But I guess you have to decide
on what's more important -the
crow, or yourself and your peace
of mind? Crows are not native to
the area and they're sort of over-
taking the Orange County
coastal area and it's quite unnat-
ural. We have .no problem killing
crows and unW we can find
another solution, that's bow we're
gonna get rid of them.
LOREN BLACKWOOD
Newport Beach
I can't believe that the
inunediate response is to run out
and shoot those birds. Anyone
who thinks that shooting one bird
makes no differeace because
they serve no purpose really has
very little understanding of the
balance of nature.
Crows are intelligent; they're
smart enough to move into areas
with lots of food. They don't
deserve to be shot and killed just
because they're making a little
bit of noise.
Helicopters make noise, cars
make noise, people make noise.
You're not allowed to shoot them
without having some other mput
from members of the Audubon
Society or other groups before
they run out and shoot the btrds.
Please don't shoot any more
birds. And poisoning kills all
kinds of species besides the one
you're aiming at. Consider other
alternatives.
SHARON BOUDREAU
Costa Mesa
I live right by Tustin Avenue
and 20th Street, and although I
really love nature and animals,
the crows really are d nwsance.
They don't have a natural preda-
tor so they just keep multiplying,
and they're often in the trees
above us making horrible noises.
Also, they're often on my front
lawn and my children are afra.Jd
to go out and play because
they're so large And they aren't
easy to scare away, so I think the
problem does need to be
addressed in our neighborhood.
There's an overabundance or
crows here and somebody should
look into that.
ELIZABETH BARNES
Costa Mesa
Please do what you can to get
nd of them. We live here and we
go out and we find these little
baby birds laying in our back-
yards. Not only that, the crows
are diseased and they make a big
mess, we have to clean up after
them. All the little birds that we
used to have come around are
gone because the crows kill
them.
I'm for (shooting the crows)
and I'll even buy whatever 1t
takes to get nd of them and pay
for their bunctl.
MARJORIE BELL
Costa Mesa
I'm m support of whdt Costa
Mesa police have done to take
care of the situation I think we
have a sunilar situdltOn m New-
port and hope that Newport will
take care of it as well
FRITZ HOWSER
Newport Beach
I'm delighted to see that
they're getting rid of the crows.
We used to have robms d.fld a lot
of Little birds in our yards. We
found that I the crows! dlsturb all
the nests, they eat the l.lttle eggs
of the birds and they chdse all
the good birds away
All we have are these great
big giants walking around, so
anytlung they can do to get rid of
them would be very much appre-
oated
CAROL FRANK
f'1ewport Beach
HOW TO CONTACT YOUR REPRESENTATIVES
Cln Of COSTA MESA
Costa Mesa Oty Hall. 11
Pair Drive, Costa Mesa,
CA 92626; (714) 754·5223
Mayor: Gary Monahan
Coundl: Elizabeth A.
Cowan, Unda Dixon, Joe
Erickson and Heather
Somers
cmoF
lllWPOIT IUCH
Newport Beach Qty Hall,
3300 Newport Blvd.,
Newport Beach, CA
916631 (949) 644-3309
Meyor: John Noyes
Couadl: Gary Adams,
Jan Debey, Nonna
Glover, Dennis O'Neil,
Tod Ridgeway and Thm
Tbomlon
coan co••••m COWll lllllKT
Distitd Oftloe: 1370
Adami Ave., COit.a Mese.
CA92626, (11')432~
0 ..-..,WlllilmM.
Vega
.... Paul 0 . s.rger,
George a. BrOWit.. w.iw a. HoWald. Jerry .,...,_
IOD ad Anmndo Ruta
ldl9C1
~omc.:-s.A a;;lt..c....Mw.CA
.... (714) Ut-5000
Superintendent Robert
Barbot
Board: Dana Black, David
Brooks, Jim Ferryman,
Martha Fluor, Judy Fran-
co, Wendy Leece and
Serene Stokes
MESA COllSOllDAnD
WITll DISTRICT
1965 Placentia Ave., Cos-
ta Mesa, CA 926271 (949)
631-1200
Boerd: Jim Atkinson,
Pred Bodcmiller, Dana
Haynes, Mike Healey
and 'Ihldy Obllg-Hall
COITAMISI
UIRAIY DISTllCI
t ,
ORANGE COUNTY
IOARD OF
EDUCATION
200 Kalmus Drive, P.O.
Box 9050, Costa Mesa,
CA 92628-9050, (714)
966-4000.
Elizabeth D. Parker,
member, ltu.stee Area 5
(Costa Mesa, Newport
Beach)
OUNGE COUNTY
FAIR
88 Fair Drive, Costa
Mesa, CA 92626; (714}
708-FAIR (708-3247)
Board:
President Emily Sanford:
Vice President Don
Sa.lta.relli1 and members
Jam Bartch, John Cre·
an, Gary Hayakawa, Jim
Undberg, Curt Prtngle,
Randy Smith and Don
W1llet
STAR SlllATI
Roa Johnson (R), 35th
Distric:t. l 8S52 Mac.Arthur
Blvd., Suite 395, lrvlne;
CA 92715; (9'9) 833.0180
or fu=~·06861 ...... Pat.Jqyte
(9161323-1200.
STAIE COASTAL
COMMISSION
45 Fremont St .. Suite
2000, San Francisco, CA
941051 (415) 904-5200;
regional office in Long
Beach, (310) 590-5071
GOYElllOR
Gray Davis, (0), State
Capitol, Sacramento, C A
95814; (916) 445-2841 or
fax (916) 445-4633
U.S. IOUSI
Of llPllSlllTAllYIS
• Chris Cox, (R), 47th Dis-
trict (including most of
Newport Beach), t New-
port P\ac:e, S\iite .no,
Newport BeeCb, CA
926601 (949) 756-22·U
2401 Rayburn Building,
Wash1Dgton. DC 20515;
(201) 225-5611 or fax
(949)251~:
!!·mall clu1rltopher.
codmciU.
~.gov
• 0... aobtabecher, (R),
45th Oilbict (induding com Me. and w..
N9wport).10l MliD St ..
SuMlt~Hu~
..... CA ..... f11't
•ttD
am~~ Wtt=ocasi ~ ll•la (1lta eeo.;ya.
ars•••~ . ............
U.S. SENATE
• Bdrbara Boxer. (D) 2250
E Imperial Highway, ~
Swte 545, El Segundo,
CA 90245 (310) 414-5700
112 Hart Senate Building,
Suite 112. Washington ,
DC 20510, (202) 224-
3553.
E-matl: senator@
boxer.senate.gov
• Dianne Femstein, (D),
11 111 Santa Monica
Blvd., Suite 915, Los
Angeles. CA 90025; (3 10)
914-7300
331 Hart Building, W«Wl·
mgton, DC 205101 (202)
22'·3Ml1
E·m&l: 5enoto
felnsl~Jn.senate,9ov
NISIDEllT
BW Clinton, (0), White
House, 1600 Penmytva·
rue Av&,. Wa1hin~ DC
20500.
Hotline (6 e.m. lQ 2 p.m..
PDTl {2(r.t) :4"6-1 l l 1 or
fu (202t '*2461,
11..-i:,,. ........
~.p .......
'•
-·
'lfs• ... tola_,.., ..... , ... ,..,_. -OdDber 9 honoree
lllMDAM ll<CAUGHIY 1n11e-..us1nalplmesof ...... _.
Dan Glenn. Newport volleyball coach _ ... _
8 Tuetdoy, October 3, 2000 •Sports Editor Roger Coruon • 949..5744223 • Sports Fax: 949-650-0170
·Blowing off steam
• Estancia's Perkins is still perturbed by percieved
officiating lapses in 35-28 loss to Santa Ana Valley.
fa.r as I could see, there
asn'l a doud in the
ewport-Mesa sky Monday
afternoon. But my vision did not
encompass the atmosphere over the
Estancia High football practice field,
where Coach Dave Perkins was
likely still generating enough
postgarne steam over Saturday's
controversial 35-28 loss to Santa Ana
Valley to accumulate some cumulus.
ruled touchbacks not
touchdowns to cost the
Eagles valuable points and
momentum.
viewed as n umerous
mistakes by officials and
said he planned to send a
letter and a copy of the tape
to the Orange CoWlty
Officials Association.
Sending this letter will,
of course, bring as much
resolution as if he'd rolled it
up, crammed it into a bottle
and dropped it from the
Newport Pier. But if it made
him feel any better, those
were words well spent.
He also directed harsh
criticism at Hackney on the
field after time had expired.
During this exchange,
Perkins said Hackney
confessed his crew did not
call a good game. In
Perkins' view, Hackney was
Barry Faulkner
PREPS ... Perkins, infuriated by several calls
-and noncalls -from a crew
headed by longtime white hat and
former Newport Harbor High
basketball coach Al Hackney, vented
plenty Saturday night.
not being sarcastic.
Perkins said videotape review
Sunday proved the first goal-line
fumble clearly occurred after the
ballcarrier was down in the end
zone. Perkins termed the second
fumble call inconclusive.
Saturday was not the first athlettc
interaction between Hackney and
Perkins, who played basketball for
the once maniacal hardwood mentor
at Harbor in the 1970s.
So much for the timelessness of He vehemently protested the
Eagles' second controversial
go<1l-line fumble, both of which were Perkins also documented what he SEE PREPS PAGE 9
• A welcome addition to the Pirates, sophomore
transfer triggers offense with some serious skills.
Tony Altobelli
DAILY PILOT
W hen Orange Coast
College women's
volleyball coach
Chuck Cutenese heard that
Lauren Wilson had enrolled
at OCC, he sent out the
cavalry to try to make her a
part or his program.
"I remembered her from
Huntington Beach High and
when I found out she came
back to this area
and joined OCC,
I sent the guards
alter her,"
Cutenese
playfully said
about the
volleyball
standout. •She is
very serious about
her schooling and
she didn't know if
she could Juggle
both her schooling
and play
volleyball at the
same time, so I tried to get
as many people as I could to
convince her.•
So far, so good. The
Pirates are 6-3 overall and
the sophomore has led the
team in kills every match.
Wilson has 165 kills in
just nine matches for OCC
and with her success, ber
love for volleyball has
returned alter an
unpleasant tenure at
Cornell University.
·1 was anti-volleyball for
awhile when I got home,•
Wilson said. "Our coach at
Cornell was let go for
verbally abusing the
players, the weather was
lousy, there were no
beaches and I got very
homesick. I needed to come
home and I have. I love
playing at OCC. It's been a
real blast."
According to Cutenese,
Wilson is one of those
special athletes who just
don't come around too
often. •She's got the whole
package,• he said of
Wilson. "She's a
tremendous
athlete, she's a
tremendous
student and she's
a tremendous
person. As far as
volleyball goes.
she's one of the
best players I've
had in my time
here at Coast.·
Before her
collegiate playing
career got
underway, Wilson
helped guide the Oilers to
CIF Southern Section and
State titles as a junior in '96.
"She's got a ton of
winning experience, which
is a big factor,• Cutenese
said. "She's a great leader
for us, but it's more by
example. She's not a
rah-rah type of leader."
According to Wilson, it's
the leadership side of her
game that has blossomed
the most at Coast. "That's
what I've learned the most
here is how to be a leader,•
she said. "This whole
experience here has been
fun and very relaxing. It's
also great to have a
supportive coach like we do
here."
A club player since the
eighth grade, Wilson took
some time away from
volleyball after coming back
from Cornell and realized
how much she missed it.
• 1 started to re~e how
competitive I am,• she said.
"I enjoy the competition out
there and I need that to
keep me going."
When Wilson isn't out on
the volleyball courts, you
can find her in the water
surfing, water skiing, jet
skiing and out in Arizona
dove hunting.
"Our whole family goes
out there every year when
the season kicks oft,•
Wilson proudiy boasts. •1
know it sounds cruel killing
the bird of peace, but it's
really fun. Plus they're
really good when you wrap
them in bacon. put a
jalapeno pepper in their
chest cavity and cook them
up. Yummy.•
Bloodshed aside,
following this semester at
OCC, Wilson will head
down to UC San Diego to
continue her collegiate and
athletic career, but she'll
remember her experience at
OCC fondly.
•I'll come back and see
them play next year,•
Wilson said. ·m only be
here a short time, but it's
been a great. ~e and OCC
has been a mcqor part of it. •
HIGH SCHOOL FOOTIALL PLIYIRS Of THE Wiii
(COACHIS' SIUmONS>
NEWPORT HARIOI SAILORS
ROBERT I&\ NICK
CHAI 9 IVK>GIAIXWVI
T-he 6-foot-4,
26>-pound
Junior tack-
le's impres-
sive evening
Inclu d e d
knockin g
linebackers
off their feet
to dear path for -320 rushfng yards.
ESTANCIA EAGLES
DAVID
STODDARD
T he 6-foot·1,
185-pound
s.nlor · two-
wey starter
blocked w9ff at .a..Mend, .... his ::s 1.:C.
1 67-yatd TO jUst -before hetftjmt,
A~-4,
senior defen-
sive tackle,
he made two
of his five
tackles
behind the
line of salm-
rNge .-ld pnMded -a strong pass rush.
RICK
VALDEZ
A S-foot-9,
21~
senior nose--
guard, he
was in on
two QB sacks
and also w•
a runoftop-pf ng force In
the middle
•fnst SA V .. llly.
COSll MESI MUSTANGS
ANTONY~
GRUBISICH I~
ALVIN
NGUYEN
T he 5-foot-10.
245-pound
t w o-way
lineman was
dominant In
the trenches
on both sides of the ball,
blowing holes
and blowing up • opposing runners.
A S-foot-8,
1 5 5 -
Poll"d senior,
he shifted
from dden-
sive end to
outside II~
badcer and
was a bt4
reason Ocean
Vie-.;" struggled-eatty.
CORONA DEL MIR SEA KINGS
TYLER A CHARLIE
MCCLELLAN-ALSHULER
T he 5-foot-1,
19Gi)C)Und
junior's abUf..
ty to hook the end on
numerous sweep ~ys
helped SM
King grOund
gaf'Mwn.. .... ~J20y ...
A6-foot-2, ~= three In~-~·~ I fcMir1h. WM in on 1J tack·
tel 8nd C8Ullht one pill f0r0
•
1"'9fdTD.
Doily Pilot
VOLLEYBALL
-Sailors
swept
• Irvine ends Newport
Harbor's Sea View
League winning streak
in resounding fashion.
IRVINE -Host Irvine
High earned a resounding
15-3, 15-6, 15-8 Sea View
League-opening girls volley-
ball victory over Newport
Harbor Monday, ending the
Sailors' 39-match league win-
ning streak and leaving
Coach Dan Glenn thoroughly
disappointed.
"lt'S one thing to lose and
another to be embarrassed,•
Glenn said. ·we haven't lost
_, a league match in five years
(the ninth match or the 1995
league campaign to Santa
Margarita) and I can't
remember the last time we
lost a match, league or non-
T league. this badly. Irvine beat
us in all phases or the game .•
Included in the Harbor
woes were 21 hitting errors, to
only 15 Sailor kills, rendering
a negative hitting percentage.
Senior outside hitter Taylor
Govaars paced the Tars with
seven kills.
"Irvine had something to
do with that with a big block,
but we hit a ton of balls out or
into the net,• Glenn said.
•(Irvine, ranked No. 5 in
Orange County) played well,
and we didn't. It was kind of
like the Mater Dei match (a
three-game sweep Wednes-
day), in that we just didn't
fight. We have the talent to
play with these teams, but ... •
Newport, ranked No. 3 in
Orange County, fell to 1-4,
while Irvine improved to 6-1.
lAsT WEEX'S IDGH SCHOOL POOTBAU PLAYS
OP 30 YARDS OR MORE
• 83 -Andy llomo (Estancia) kickoff return for touchdown.
• 67 -Davld Stoddard (Estancia) TD pass from Kenny
Valbuena. -
• 51 -Andy Romo (Estancia} run from scrimmage.
• 54 -Blake 8-cker (Corona del Mar) touchdown run.
• 46 -Jeremy Valdel (Estancia) pass from Kenny Valbuena.
•. 44 -Jon· Luke Del Pante (Corona del Mar) field goal.
• 38 -Chrh Mande.rtno (Newport Harbor) touchdown run.
• 38 -Steven Ward (Corona del Mar) pass from Dya,n Hendy.
Gamestoppers
lAsT WEl!IC's a10 DEFl!NSIVB PlAYS} •
CORONA DBL MAil -Outside linebacker Nick Proaer
forced a third·and-long situation with a tackle for a J-yard
loa ... Middle linebacker Tlumata Grey and outside
linebacker 81.ake HIM:ker teamed up to stop a runner for no
gain ... Strong safety Krll Cooper stopped a run for minimal
yardage ... Comerbeck Charlie Allbaler picked off a pa91
setting up a touchdown drive for CdM ... Alsbuler fought d!
a block and made the stop for a 6-yard lou ... Alshulei came
up with hll 1eeond interception ... Grey intercepted a pa91
Allbuler dived to break up a pass ln the end zone, aavtng ~·
touchdown ... Alshuler ended Saddleback'1 final drive with
hll third interception.
NEWPOrr HAUOR -Com e rbeek Bda a.eta dOted C!° turn a sweep into a 3-yaid ao. and end a.net
med• tbe f1rlt of bis two Neb for 1 9-yard loll on
the nut map ... Outside linebacker Cllitl M•....._ Ndted
QB for • 5-yard loll .... End IM 111111 and Mf9ty o..
llltOa combined to tum I woUJd·be balfbiCk pall IDtQ a
• sn~Mmto -
SPORTS Tuesday, October 3, 2000 9
NI CE GUYS FI NISH FIRST SCHEDULE ,
!A~ ~J{§
Runner, 85, leads the way in
Harbor Heritage Run Saturday.
Rld\ard Dunn
DAILY PILOT ..
I t just goes to show that Nice guys do finish
firs~. And, Bil~ Nice, the Newport Beach
seruor long-distance running sensation, has
proved the adage that it's never too late to
s~.something new in life as long as you're
breathing. • "~ ~on't feel. well unless I have a run: It keeps
the 1wces Oowtng," said Nice, an 85-year-old
retired ~line pilot who didn't start running until
age 57. S? I co.uld keep up with my kids on
backpacking trips, primanly. •
Nice, ~r~aps Newport's most mspmng
":111I1~r Wlth innumerable age-group road-race
victones, mostly lll 5K races. will be the oldest,
and one of the qwckest, runners in the field
Saturday in the 14th annual Harbor Heritage
Run at Newport Harbor Htgh. The featured 5K
race will begin at 8:30 a.m.
Nice~ reminded by others how lucky he is to
be ~~ compebtlvely at tus age more often
than mqwnes about his surname. "They say
• Aie you really?' And I SdY 1t depends on h~w
I'm treated," Nice said.
Nice, the U.S. nationdl age-group record
holder in the 5K ror ages 83. 84 and 85 (with the
85 mark still pending U.S. Track and Field
approval), has limited his training to 15 miles a
week. But the winning results are still there.
. "I like that sprint work. It juices you up," said
Nice, who runs in his neighborhood and nearby
Back Bay. and goes to Newport Harbor High
once a week for sprint work with his good
friend, Robert Kay.
"Running helped me quit smoking when I
retired (from United Airlines)."
On July 30, Nice captured first place in the
men's 8S age group at the Turf and Surf SK in
Del Mar, setting a national record in 28 min-
utes 11 seconds and breaking the previous mark
established in 1992 by lS seconds.
Nice has won the prestigious West Coast
Championships in Carlsbad the last several
years. including a nabonal record-breaking time
last year at age 84. Nice also set the national
mark among 83-year-olds at the Carlsbad SK.
Although the weeks of runrung 25-to-30 miles
are ma holding pattern because of a recent
hamstring injury. Nice is geared up for
Saturday's race at Newport Harbor High, which
features a picturesque course through Newport
~eights with gently rollmg hills, ocean and bay
VIews and cool breezes.
"I'm planning on (running), t1 I hold
together,· Nice said .. "I was planrung on it last
year, but I got injured the week before. I've run
in (the Harbor Hentage Run) quite a few times.·
For race details: (949) 645-5806.
No more Mr. Nice Guys
•More-seasoned Sea Kings became running-back friendly in win over Saddleback.
Barry Faulkner
DAllY P\LOT
I f you ran into these guys in a dark alley,
they'd probably hand you a flashlight and
dole out ~ons.
They're pretty much the nicest guys in the
world," Corona del Mar Higb football coach
Dick Freeman said of his starting offensive
linemen. •And that was probably part of the
probleln! .
The •problem• bad been an anemic Sea King
gr.ound game, which produced just 167 rushing
yuds during the team's O..J start.
And while the right-to-left alliance of senior
tackle Dave Richardson, senior guard Matt
Manton, junior center Adam Dunn, sophomore
gu&rd John Daley and junior tackle Steven
lumen hasn't lost its congenlality, it now boasts
IOID8 much-needed confidence.
• The latter came courtesy of 320 ground yards
bi Cd.M's 38-35 nonleague win over Saddleback
ThW'lday. See King tall backs averaged 7 .6 yards on 39
••·••· as many of whlCh resulted 1n double-digit pickups as gains of less than 3 yards
(10.pece). .
•'Ibey didn't hove much experieDCe aa a IP.O!UP «Mlde frOm Manton. jUSt one combiMd
Wlllty ltart), IO they needed time to learn MW
----~ti kl game sltuatiom,. said ......... wbo noted blocks by junior tight end
COWGE HOllORS
1Yler McClellan were also responsible for much
of the rushing windfall. "There's only so much
you can learn in practice, because you can't
prepare them for every defense against every
play that anyone can ever imagine. But they
were picking things up the other night. 'Ibey are
finally working together arid, more and more,
are becoming an offensive line.•
Averaging a now-modest 6-foot-2, 231
pounds, topped by Richardson (6-5, 300),
Freeman and Offensive Coordinator Lyle
Lansdell changed things up in the offseason.
knowing they couldn't ask their line to pound
away at bigger opponenU.
They altered b1ncldng schemes to emphasi2e
quick-hitting plays, so their smaller linemen
needed only an initial saeen to spring running
backs into the seconda.fy.
But, until the CdM liriemen learned whose
progress they were supposed to impede, the only
thing being hlt quickly were CdM ballcarriets.
That all cbanged., however, again.It
Saddlebeck and Preeiium, wbO played guard
collegiately at CC>loredo and ~ Beech State,
believes the a.perlence could lead to future
succ:ea.
• M e lineman. all you have to ~ on ia
Confidenea. Gettmg more tbail 300 yan;ts J'UlbiDg
ts a pteay good deal.-rm S\JN tbef feel a
little bet'8r UOut tMfn lb• tbala Ibey ~
. haft betole ••
Vanguard's Resor GSAC Player of the Week
• Uons' goalkeeper was the key in two GSAC victories.
COSTA MESA -vanguard umversity'S Mott ••fl'S SOCCER
Resor, a senior goalkeeper for the uons, has been ..
choeen u the Player of the Week for the GoJden
State Athletk C.Onference and Region 2 of the NAIA. In addition, he Is tbe
th1rd men's soccer player th1t fall to r«eive Uon of the Week honorw at
Vanguard. Reeor, playlng tn h1I foultb IMIOD al VU, helped the Uons win two
Important GSAC gam11umweekbyklentical1-0 tcen1 ovar ConcOrdia
Unmntty and Baola ~. • •
R_.. recuded eAglll MWI dwing tbe GSAC ,gemes and paeyiett all 180
mlnutli wtUle reccwdlng tbe two lbutoUta. He now bu 1~.5 w ..... , Tbl Urm .. 2.0 ID GSAC play encl an in a "9 tor 11nt p&aee.
..
GREG FRY I DAILY PILOT
Bill Nice takes a breath.er at Ne wport Harbor.
PREPS
CONTINUED FROM 8
the coach-player bond.
Among the oddities in the Eagles-Falcons
nonleague showdown was, Perk.ms said, a
unique interpretation of the pldyer ejection rule.
The CIF Southern Section calls for any player
ejected to not only miss the remainder of that
game, but the entire next contest. as well.
But, though a player from each team was
#booted" following a brief altercation early in the
second quarter, Perkins said officials sentenced
the guilty parties to sit out only remainder of the
first half.
. ~ is. I .believe •. a more forgiving and fitting
ejection policy, particularly m a flash point
physical sport such as football. But it definitely
runs counter to existing rules.
Road rules will apply, once again, tor the
Newport Harbor High boys basketball team.
which will play in a tournament at Shorewood
High, just outside of Seattle, Dec. 20-23.
. The Sailors, whom Hirst liKes to expose to
different locales to enhance their educational
experience: also have an approximate 10-day
summer so1oum to Japan m the planning stages
for this summer.
. Still another Htrst brainchild will take shape
this season wtth the formation of inaugural Bill
Reynolds Tournament.
Named after the former Southern California
College men's basketball coach , for whom Hirst
and several other Southern Cahlomia high school
coaches played and still revere. the eight-team
event (Dec. S-9) will feature teams coached by
SC::C basketball alumni Todd Dixon (El Toro),
Randy McAllister (Rancho Verde), Mike West
(Fallbrook) and Andre Smith (La Sierra).
The tournament MVP will receive a
scholarship in the name of Reynolds, now retired
from coaching.
The event will be played at Newport Harbor,
until the final day, upon which games will be
played at the Vanguard (formerly SCC) gym.
Bill Wettengel, who retired two years ago
after decades as a teacher, administrator and
coach (primarily track and field) at Costa Mesa
High, 1S in his 18th season as the public address
announcer for the Mustangs football team.
Now pursuing his bobby of writing children's
books, Wettengel said his son Blake. a Fountain
Valley High graduate who learned at his father's
side, is in his first season as a student public
address announcer for BYU football games.
Belated contratulattons to Newport Harbor
volleyball coach Dan Glenn and his wife Mary,
who continue to celebrate the Sept. 1 birth of
daughter Hailey.
Hailey is named for the l~aho town in which
Dan and Mary, a Newport Harbor counselor,
became engaged.
Cosa M.a lootball. w oe.fully overrated at
Nd. 1 in last week's CIP Division IX poll, fell lo
No. 8 this week after a 29-7 loa to Ocean View.
I voted the Mustangs No. 10 ttm week. three
spots below where I v<*d them 1ut week.
And while my fellow media voters fioally got
it right by installing Western at No. 1, the '
placement of Sonora at No. 2 I.bows little
wisdom.
Tbe Raiders, though unbeaten. have posted
unimpieSslve ~ (three Willi by a combined
16 points) against opponents wbk:b we a
combined 2·1•. ~ Oivtsioo IX top three IDdudel 8r'M OtiDd.a
(No. 4 tbil week) and Univantty (No. 6 th1s
week).
lllH SCIOOL •ms IOlf
• Coast women's
soccer team hosts
unbeaten Cypress.
The Orange Coast College
women's soccer team will get
to see just how good it is with
a 3 p.m. Orange Empire Con-
ference home matchup with
Cypress today.
The Chargers ( 13-0-0, 3-0-
0 in confererice) are Southern
California's top-ranked
squad and are the defending
state champions.
Led by. Alie Nunez ( 13
goals, seven asststs) and
Tymarie Novak ( 12 goals.
seven ass1Sts), the Chargers' ~
duo has scored more goals
than six OEC tearnsl
In fact. only the Pirates (8-
3-1, 3-0-0) can boast that they
have scored more as a team
(29) than the explosive
Chargers' twosome (2S).
Lilly Lopez (six goals. four
assists) and Cristina Guenn
(five goals, one assist) lead
the Pirates' attack, while
goalkeeper Amanda Bell (35
saves, 1.32 goals against
average) will have the
urtglarnorous task of facing a
team that has scored 62 goals
in 13 games.
Here is today's sports
menu:
• The OCC men's soccer
team (6-1-4, 2-0-1) will play
at Cypress at 3.
The Bucs aie corrung off a
3-0 win over Santiago
Canyon. Matt Moseley
scored two goals, whtle
Miguel Rwz added a single
goal.
• The Vanguard Uruvers1ty
women's soccer team (6-4. 1-
1 in the Golden State Athlet-
ic Conference) will take on
Azusa Paofic on the road at 7
p.m. The Ltons have won hve
of their last six contests.
• In collegiate women's vol-
leyball action, the Lions will
host Hope lntemabonal Uni-
versity for a 7 p.m. GSAC
matchup.
In high school action:
• Top-ranked in the CIF
Southern Section DiV1s1on II
polls, the Corona del Mar
High boys water polo team
will host El Toro. ranked No
7 in Division I, at 4 p m
Michael March, Art.le Dorr
and Chriss Street look to
spark the Sea Ki,ngs' offense
while Sherwin Kim will try to
lunit the Chargers offensive
output.
• Costa Mesa's boys water
polo team will host Cemtos at
3:1S.
• The Newport Harbor High
girls tennis team (4-3, 1-0 in
Sea View League) will host
Laguna Hills at 3:1S. New-
port defeated lrvine, 15-3, led
by, among others, freshman
Vanessa Dunlap, who swept
at No. 3 singles.
• Corona del Mar (6-1 over-
all) will host Northwood at
3:15. The Sea Kings look to
improve to 2-0 in the Pacific
Coast League following their
12-6 win over Laguna Beach
last Thursday.
• Fresh off of Thursday's 14-4
win over Estanoa, the Costa
Mesa girls tenrus team will
travel to University High to
meet the TroJans at 3, while
the Eagles play at Laguna
Beach at 3:15.
• Newport Harbor's field
hockey team (12-0-1, 7-0 in
Sunset League) will host
Marina High at Harper Com-
munity Center in Costa
Mesa.
• Corona del Mar's girls vol-
leyball team, ranked No. 2 in
the Division ID-AA polls, will
play at Laguna Beech, top-
ranked in Division TV-AA,
tonight at 6.
• Coste Mesa and Estancia
will renew their rivalry at 4
p.m. in girls volleyball action.
• Newport Harbor's giJls goll
team will compete against
Woodbridge at Santa Ana
Country Oub at 3: 15, while
Corona del Mar and Estancia
do blttJe at a ate not con-
firmed. Corona Ciel Mar 11 the
holt school
• COit& M .... , girls golf teem
will bmt NonbWOocl at the
COlta Mele Golf and Country
Oub'I Mela Unck coune at
3
LOii AbunHos toppl• Newpoi1 Harbor by 111ne 8trokee
LONG BllACH-TW Newpolt IWtlGr l:lgb gldt .. ._ ...... a OD1 *-
eclftnt.IQe Monday O'Nr DIM ...... SkyllDb CJalf CoUna. but blm l.ol A .....
...m.d M ti-Ide mnl1 gw• 'fldDly. 2*a5.
LMlimPGIWlbat.Uto,_. ...... =:ta:.:. 9«••'' gwllll~ ~·poll•ll-WltilllGf• -~ ..... (lot) __ ....... DI' .. wM ,... .. w .... rei:iald • .. ...
...., .... ,It .-........... -.c. ljc.llb.
•
..
10 Tuesday, October 3, 2000
GAMEBUSTERS
CONTINUED FROM 8
3·yard sack ... Tackle Nlck
Mogbaddam stuffed a dive play for
minus-4 yards ... Comerback Ryan
Spruth broke up a fowth-quarter pass
... Gaeta, a receiver, stayed with a
downfield block to spring a Manderino
touchdown run ln the first quarter.
ESTANCIA -Unebacker Fahad
Jahld dropped the Santa Ana Valley
quarterback twice for sacks, totaling 15
yards ... Jesse Cardenas had a sack 12
yards behind the line or scrtmmage ....
David Rodriguez and Rick Valdez
Doily Pilot
shared a third-down sack, forcing a
Valley punt ... Jeremy Valdes shared
one of Jahid's sacks, finishing off the
quarterback after Jahid's power punch
set hi.r:D up.
COSTA MESA -Inside linebacker
Robert McOueen laid a big hit on a
ballcarrier for no gain ... Inside
linebacker Louis Day sacked ihe
quarterback for a 9-yard loss and also
made a diving intercepti«>n on a play in
. which end Daniel Hunter pressured
the QB ... Tackle Antony Grublsldl
stuffed a quarterback draw for a 1-yard
loss ... Comerback Nlck Cablco made
a tackle in the backfield for 3-yard loss
.:. Safety Pab'tck Hulllger made a big
hit on a snort gain. ·
ORANGE COAST STOPS GOLDEN WEST BY 35 STROKES
Estancia alumni water polo game scheduled for Friday evening
CYPRESS -Orange Coast College was a 378·413 win· JC WOMEN'S GOLF
ner over Golden West in a four-way Orange Empire Con-
ference match at Cypress Golf Club Monday. Jenna Quaranta led the Pirates with
an 86, followed by Maricela Dietrick (93), Juhe Gutierrez-Farley (98), Joyce Roeder
(101) and Undsay Giles (117). Fullerton (355) swept the field, while Cypress (363)
came out on top against Coast and Golden West The Pirates are now 3-4 in the OEC.
COSTA MESA -Estancia High water polo coach John Carpenter has announced Friday as·the date for
lus school's annual dlumni water polo game pitting the current varsity against many former standouts for
the Eagles It starts at 6 p.m.
1~~1
ADVERTISEMENT
FOR BIDS
Subject to c()(ld1toons
prescribed by the under·
sogned. sealed bids tor a
Lump Sum Contrae1 ere
Invited for the tonowlng
Work EXTENDED
DAY CARE CEl'fTEA PROJECT NO.
1190480 UNIVERSITY OF
CALIFORNIA, IAVINE
DESCRIPTION OF
WORK
The proje<:I includes
the replacement of the
eiustmg moctuler build·
tng wtllCh IS located et lhe Comet ot AdObt Cir·
cle Onve and Verano
Road The new taClf1ty ts
a 3.415 s I I-Story botld·
tng. Type V N. Oc·
cupani:y E ·3 and fully sp<onklered. which w1U
be build 1n the current
Parlung lot 31 The
building structure sys·
1em is S1eel, v.1th a slop-
I m OBfTUARtES I
GIFFEN
Guy Scott Giiien,
formerly of Costa
Mesa, pulld aw1y at
hie home In Medford,
Oregon on 9·16·2000.
He moved to the
Rogue Valley In 1990.
Guy 1tt1ndtd Wllaon
elementry, Rea middle
achool, Eatencla high
echool, and gl'llduated
from Orenge Coaat
College. He la survived by his
wife Anna, d1ughter1
Michele Martin, Mich·
ole GIHen, ion Sean
end gr1ndchlldr1n
Bllir and Llyll.
He WH the eon of
Cuolyn Giffen of
Costa Mesa, btothet of
Cameron Giffen of
Hardy, Vlrglnl1 ind
Cuey Giffen of
Hughaon, C.llfornla.
LOCAL
MORTUAllE~
PIERCE BROTHERS
BEU BROADWAY
Mortuary * Chapel
Cremation
110 Broadway
Costa Mesa
&42-9150
MUCNOldl)
1ng metal deck roof. The
bultdtng eX1ertor 1s oom-prt sed of ooncfete me·
sonry units (CMU) and
storefront glazing sys·
tem Contractor Is to
complete the surround·
Ing site work. Including
(but not limited to) grad-
ing, landscaping, paving
etc. Landscape shall be
completed under the
des1gn·bultd method.
The existing mqdular bultdtn~ (approx. I 24'x
60') with attacned open
shed Is not In conttict
with the new construc-
hon and thus could be
U$ed u a Jield olfa
during the coostructlon.
However the modular
butldtng tndudlng all utJI.
Illes foundation and
other support systems
shall be removed from
Unwerstty property and ullhtles capped prior to
completJOn of the Wen
81DDEA QUALi·
FICATIONS: Prime Bidders wflo do not
meet the quallflcetlofll
In the ConllKt Oow-
menta may not be
ellglble for 1werd. Prime Bidders must
submit their Quell·
flt1tlons on the form
provided by the Uni·
veralty, H en 1111ch-
men1 to the Bid Fonn.
Aleo blddert must
certify that the Me·
1onry ind W1IVGlaz·
Ing Sy1t1m1 Subcon-tr1citor1 hive mlt the
minimum quill·
flc1tlon1 set forth In
the Contr1ct Docu· ment1. Bl~ere mult
submit the Muonry
Ind Window W1tl/Glu-
lng System• Subcon-
tr1ctor'1 Quellflcltlon
Statements on the
form provided by the
University, •• an et• t1chment to the Bid
Form
CONSTRUCTION
COST ESTIMATE:
$750.00000
B1dd1ng Documents
Wiii be available IO IJld..
ders on TUMdey, o.:te>-
ber 3, 2000, and Wll be
1$$Ued al
CONSOLIDATED
AEPROGRAPHICS
3182 Pullman Street,
Coate Men, CA 92e2t
(7 t4) 751·2'80
Attention: Rick Be!1otll or Sal o.lgedlllo NOTE; IT IS TitE
CONTRACTORS' RE·
SPONSIBILITY TO
REGISTER WITH THE
UNIVERSITY OR CQN.
SOLIDATED REPRO-
GRAPHICS TO AC·
KNOWLEDGE RE·
CEIPT OF THE EX·
Discount Casket
( I trll.111011 .11111 1\1111.il ..... \ "l
Carmi S<rvrct am/ QNttlil] Guktts for Usl
Direct Cremation .. $495
Immediate Burial .. $995
(/M(udn CAshf)
Prcarrangc'mcm Prognms Aviulablc for
1-uncral Services, Crcmaoocu and Caskets
t ( > \ 1 I'\ I< I .111 c I ' \ \ I
I 'I I
I XXX "> i< \ '-. 1, 1 I
I I' lld/•1 to I \
TENDED DAY CARE
CENTER 810 DOCU-
MENTS. UNIVER81TY
W1LL NOTIFY CON-
TRACTORS WHO HAVE REGISTERED
WITH DESIGN AND
CONSTRUCTION
SERVICES OR CQN.
SOUOATED REPRO-
GRAPHl~1 OF AO-
DEHOA wHICH ARE
AVAILABLE AT DE·
SIGN AND CON· STRUCTION SERV· ICES.
A MANDATORY
PRE·BID CON·
FERENCE AND llAN·
DATORY PflE-810 •J08 WAUC Shal be held u
follow: 1 :00 P .M.
Wednndey October
11, 2000 et Univet9ity °' California. ltV!ne, ~ Villa Houeing, tOOO Ar·
royo OriVe (Comer of Al·
r<710 Drive and Califor·
nla) Conference Room B, lrv!ne, CA 92697
(949) 824-6630 A'TTENDANCE AT
THE PRE-810 CON-
FERENCE AND PAE·
BIO JOB WALK IS
MANDATORY FOR ALL PRIME CON·
TRACTORS; THE
MEETING WILL BE CLOSED AT 1;05 P.M.
ANY PRIME CON·
TRACTORS ARRIVING
AFTER THIS TIME
WILL NOT BE
ELIGIBLE TO PARTIC..
PATE IN TitE BID PRO-
CESS AS A PRIME
CONTRACTOR. S..led bid• will not be accepted .rter.
2:00 P.M., TUESDAY,
OCTOBER 24, 2008.
At: Oeal9fl and Con·
atruction Services. Uni,
versity ol Callfomle,
Irvine, 3500 Berkeley
Place. Irvine, CA
92697·2450
Sealed Bide Wiii be
~ et 2:05 P.M.,
Tueedey, October 2•,
2000.
Bid Securtty In the
amount ol 1 O'll. of the l~ &.m Bue Bid, ...
duding alternates, w•
accompany eacn Bid.
The Surety ilsulng the
Bid Bond .. be, on the
Bid OeadUne. llated In
the latest published
State of California. 0..
partment of Insurance,
fist °' llllUr8111 Admitted
lo T r8/\SfCI Surety lneur-ance In ;rNs State.
The IO(X)88Sfuf Bidder
and Ila Suboontrector1
wlll be required to follow
lhe nondiecrimlnatlon r ..
qulrementa set tonh In
the Bidding Docvmen11
and to pay prevalllng
wage rates al the loca·
lion of the Wen
The suocesstul Bidder
\11411 be required to have
the following Stele of
California Contrector'1
llcenae current 11 the
time of &Ubmiselon of the
Bid.
GerMQl 8uikllng
Cont rector
(UcenM Clualflcetion)
8
(Ucer.e Code)
THE REGENTS ~ THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA
Odober. 2000
Published Newport
BHCh·COsta M ...
Deily Pilol October 3, 1 o.
2000
STARTING
ANEW
BUSINESS?~
• • • • • • • • • •
' I
~
NOTICE
Nob II hefeby alY9fl
that Preferred Bank
h .. dquar1erld at 801
South Agueroe StrNt,
LOI Angefff, Callfoml1
90017. hU flied with the
Federal Oepoelt Insur· enc• Corporetlon, 1n
appllcetlon to relocate the lrvtne Olfloe al 2600 Mlcheleon Drive, Suh1
1470, Irvine, Callforni1
92tlt2 to 2301 Dupont
Drive. Sulla 150. lrvtne,
Califomle 921112.
Afly pel90n wl9hlng to
comment on thla ap·
pllcdon may file hie or
her oommenta In writ.Ing with the reglonal chctor
of the Federal Oepoel1 lnsurenc. Corc>oretion
II ita r9gional ollice (25
Ecl!er S1reet, Suue
2300. San Francieoo,
CA 94105) b1tor1
proceulng of the ap-plication ,_ been com-
pleted. Protffllng wlU
be completed not Iller
than C>aober 18, 2000
The non·confld1nt11I
portlone °' the appllca.
lion are on Ille In ihe re-
gional office end are
avelllble for publlc in·
spec1lon during regular
buslneu hours.
Photoooples of the non-
c:onlldentlal portion of
the epplk:atlon file will be
made 1vallable upon r• quest. Publllhld pursuant
to Section 303.7 of the
ruin and regulallone of
the Federll . Depoelt In-
surance Corporetlon.
Preferred Bank
U Yu
Chairmen al the Boltd s.ptemblr 28, 2000
Published Newport
Beach·Co1t1 Mu• ~~ Pl.lot October 3.
Ii§9
Flctttloua BualnH•
... me Stat9ment
The followlng pefeone
ere doing bueineA ae.
TAILORED BASl<ETS,
&40 S Grand Ave ..
1107. Santi Ana, CA
112705
Undl 0. Young. 2010
Burence, N'ewport
Beech, CA 92eeO
This bulln111 11 con·
dueled by: Ill lndMduat
Hive you aterted
doing buA-. yet? No
Undl 0. Young
Thia atltement wet
flied With the County
Cl81k °' Orange County on 09l20(2000
20008141143
Deily Pllol :;>· 211, Oct. 3, JO, 17, T9!!1
The / "111/ D~ar1mtt11 111 1/N D11ily l'i/.o1 is pk1ZS<d UJ 11.nnounc# • new mvict
now 11wu/.ab/, 10 nrw busiMSSts.
Mo will now SEARCH 1/N 1111mt for JO" Ill M t:xtrr1 t/Nl~ •ntl SAllt yn tlN
timt and 1ht mp UJ tht O>un Hoim in S4nu An.r. 11Jm, of ~rtt, ~ tlft
11'11.rch 11 compktrtl iite wiU fik JO"' Jktiti~ businns NtmL sr.tmrmt with the
CounlJ Cink, pub/uh 0'1rt 11 i«t• for fo11r Wttlu 11J rtq11irttl "1l.w11.NI thm fill J<I"' proof of publit111ion with tht CounlJ Clmt.
Pkast stop by to fik pur fiaitious businas 11111nnm1 "' tht !MJ.11 Pl/qt, 330 W.
&y St, Cos111 Mrta. If you c11nno1 stop by. pm tt1/J us 111 (949) 6'24321 •Ni wt
will fNlkt amm~tmtnQ for you to h11nJJ, 1hiJ pro«JMrt "1 ,,,.;L
. If!'"' 111111/J havt 11ny farthtr 'fUt'ltions, p""1< CdD "'11.nJ wt wlU In ,,,.,, th.in
tfA6 111USbt J<'"· Gold l11t4 in your MU 1Hui11ns!
, '(
FlctltJoua 8u1lnes1 ,..me Statement
The lollowlng persons are doing bunss as:
Internet MarkeUng
Center of Callfomla. 1965 Orange Ave ..
Cotta Mesa, CA 92627
IMCCAL (CA), 1965
Orange Ave.. Costa
M811, CA 92627
Thia business Is con·
ducted by: a corporation
H1v1 you started
dolno buslness yet? No
IMCCAL James Gar·
dner, CEO
Thi• statement w&s
filed with the County
Clerk of Orange County
on 09/14/2000
2000t!M0507
0.lly PllOI Sept 19. 26.
Oc! 3, 10, 2000 T953
Fictitious Bualneu
Name Statement
The 1o11ow1r19 persons ere <brla bueineM as:
Prime Olrectrve Produc· tioN, 1552 E Ocean
Boulevard, Newport
Belch, California 92661
Chase Eoward Corum.
1552 E Ocean Booll·
vard. Newport Beach. Calrfornla 92661
This buslneas Is con·
dueled by. an Individual Hive you started
doing bueiness yet?
VIS, 10/0111997
Chase Coroum
This statement was
filed with the County
Clerk ol Orange County
on 09/28/2000
200oel42122
Dally Piiot Oct. 3, 10, 17.
24. 20QQ T968
I
Fictitious BualneH NOTICE Of' TIWIT&'I
Name Statement SAL.a FIL.I NO. •
The following persons 001.ooaM llltVIC!ft
are doing buslnesa as· • WENDOVIJlt #2'72U11
Cottage Fresh. 1n Riv· llOfUtOWEl • C!NT!:R. erslde Avenue, F900, L.P. YOU Ml IN ~
Newport Beach, CA 'AUlT UN0Et A DIED 92663 Of' TRUIT DATID
Red Barn Com· 111191. UNLm YOU
munltles Compeny, TAKI! ACTION TO PfltO-(CA). 177 Riverside Av· TECT YOU,_ PfltOP·
enue, F900. Newport ERTY, IT MAY II IOU> Beacti. CA 92663 AT A PUIUC ML.I. If
This business Is con· YOU Ne!D AN Dl't.A· ducted by. a corporation NATION Of' THI! ~
Have you started TUM OIF THI! Mo-
doing business yet? CIEMNOI AGAINST
Yes. Aug. I, 2000 You, YOU IHOUU>
Red Bern Com· COHTACT A LAWYEl muntties Company. Lori On Oc:tolllr 10, 2000 et
A. Weigel, Seoretary 2:00 PM, f'ldlllty ,.._
This statement was tlonal f'ofedoewe llled with the County lolutlon1, u duly
08111 of Orange County eooolntad TNIM died on 09/01/2000 ~·trust cllMd ~
2000H392H bel I, 1MI UAIC\ltld by
Dally Pilot Sept. t2. t9, OV~T cei.
26. Oct 3, 2000 T95:4 TEt. L.P. U tniltof, ~ rKOf'ded
NOT1CE Of TRUSTeS Stptt.tnbet 12, 1MI u ••• .. -... .... lnllCtument No. _.... ,..._ ,_ 1"'°"702I In look
OOWOQZllO S.W. " Page al the oMc:lal
WBIXM!ft tl277Am recorda al ttle re-~-~ corde(s alftee al °"" FMJLT UNlER A Dl!!D ANGE County, CallfOI• nta. WIU. NU. AT Of TRUST, DATB> 111111.. PUIUC AUCTION TO
UNLESS YOU TAKE Tl41! HfOHUT 11DOE1t
ACTION 10 ...-OIB:I fOf caeh, Of e.tlhler'I
YOUR flROf'Btn, IT ctiecll (drawn end pey-IMt 81! SOLD AT A able et the time cA e.Ue
P\.alC UL.£. P YOU In llwfUI money cA the ~ANNA~'= United stacea a1 epecl· ~ J.IJNHSf fled In MCtlon 1102 °'
YOU, YOU IHOULO ~:~~~
CONTACT A LANY8l ENTMNCI: TO Tl41
On Octotler 10. 2000 • COUNTY COUIU· 2:00 PM. Rdslly Nlaallll HOUM. 700 CIVIC
'°'9dollnloluUonl,11 CEN~ ~WOT, dAi'I ...,._. 1Nme SANTA AHA. CA 111 wm died Of w. dlllld rtoht. tltk end 1n«wut .._11o~ -••lbw-I, 1 .. ea. convey..s to Ind now 0-.S by CJnrWlll tit-~ by It UflCltf uld ~ ~. • 1N111Dr, Deed al TNet In the
.__, 5'\;:1 .... 12. folloWtng ducrtbed 1• .. llnllrumwf No. property alluetad In tti.
1mMl1'01t In 8ooll -efOfeald County end 11-ue -d the aftldel IUtt, PMCl!I. 1; UNIT
l'ICllfdl d the l'9CClfdlr'I NO. -~1. COHllSTINO dlc:a d OrlnOI Ccu11Y. Of ~TAIN •IPAC:t: ~ Wl.l.111.L. Al ~j)~ IUIU'ACI EL!-P\a.JC AUCT1CN TO -.Nnt, AS SHOWN nt! ~ 11X1Bt AHD ODeMIED IH
for calf\, ot cafllsr'• THE CONOOIWIUM
d-* (chMI ~ PLAN~~LOT ::'":c::dd the ~om ~~ ~ .._ a ~ 11, 11M AS INITIUJ·
fted In lldlDI\ 1102 d the M!N'T NO. ~11
Anlndll Codl~ll ttit M OFFICIAL ~ .....-. ~ °"°' °' ~ a;u• ""'" to COUNTY, CAUfOftNIA.
7'00 ~ Oftw AHO MOft! COM·
VMt, SlrU An-. CA II ~~ ~~ ~ :c'enct "*:: TRUil 1111 OftAN-lt undlt Mid VlUi OfUW NIW·
Dead d Tl'ult In the PORT lllACH, CA fclowtng delcfllad t2llO Al'N NMa-112
:=i ~In:: :: csi= :.':: --. P'"* 1: Unit No. tty fOI' any lncomd· 11. Con1i1111ng .al C9ft11n MU al ttle ltrMt ect-llrlPICI Ind llUlf.:e dllU Md oU'8f ccim-~ .. .__, end rnon dMlgnetloft, If ~In the~ any, lfMMn hlrWI. domiUn .... ,....,,, fOf laid .... wtl bl INdl,
lot 1 °""*" ....,, WU tM wtthoUt CO'ieNnt r.awd.t Augl.lll 11, 1• °' ~· ........
.. lnllNlnlrt No. ... :... ~ ~11 d Ollldm ... ~= Ol'dl d Onnol eounty, the Nl'/lllnllnt ~ ::,.... "'°: :..: "" ..... no:l uld o.d' a1 nu.t. n•r a1 ~ ~ ..._
Qlwwlle Dr1Ye, Newport ttleteoft, .. prO'lkled In a.ct\. CA .-_ N'H 8* ftCMC•). 81Mnc.H,
...,... Thi under· • llt'/1 undlt "" """' ...... 1Nme clldelme al the .... al truet, ""~for "ft lncor· ............ ctwaea
*"-dthe .... end ...... alh ........ °"* com-1nntel ... al "" mon ... 11!1011, I eriy. ntee ~ by Mid ~ .... llld... deect al tNet. .....
.. be midi. tM wldlOIA =· DATID: OCMrWll Of w.nly, 1•:no: 111P dot..._..., NA
....... -...... f'OQC\.OIUU IC). lllon, OI ~ LUTIOHI, ae tN-.
to ~ ... ....... -Clflllno Del No pmdpll """ d .. Nc:wttl, Me 200 1M rdl(a) _...., ~ • ='•o•CA mot 11111 died d tNllt, .. ..,.. ~ .,.
:.....~:=:; =HIMIOW~
I Mltt 111* .. .._ IY: AulMriled 1611ne-
...... d tNllt, .... ""' ASANOl110 ft11, .......... ~ ..... •.-....-10tl.__ ___ _ ...--.. .--. .. " ....... a-.. W-clllllal..._11> ... ~ Ollld: =ai.-: .....
--~DiilMOll\, ...... lln
=-CA :':i7= l7Mt m.a .... ..... '".&:"' ............ WW -. -
CHl1I01111
NOTICE OF
PEllllON TO
ADlllNISTBI ESTATE OF: TYLER 8B&EI I
AKA TYLER P. BENNETT AKA
TYLER PAUL llMElt
CASE NO.
A204281 To ell heirs,
beneficiitriH, credi·
tora, contingent
credltor9, end per·
sone who mev other·
wiH be interested In
the will or ••tate, or
both. of: TYLER
BENNETT AKA TY·
LER P. BENNETT
AKA TYLER PAUL
BENNETT
A PETTTlON he•
been filed by PAUL F. BENNETT in the
Superior Court of
Celifornle, County of
Orange.
THE PETITION
rtQUHt9 that PAUL
F. BENNETT be
•rpoln1ed u pereo,,.
• representative to
edmini1ter the eetate
of the decedent.
THE PETITION
requ eet 1 the
decedent'• WILL end
codicil•. if any, be
admitted to probete.
The WIU end eny
codiclJa ere available
for examination in
the file kept by the
court.
THE PETITION
requeete authority to
edminleter the Hlete
under the Indepen-
dent Admlnieuation
of E1tat .. Act. {Thia
authority will allow
the peraonal repr ..
Hntetlve to take
meny ectlone with-
out obtaining court
epprovel. Before
taking certain very
i~ort.ent ectione,
however, the per·
1onel repre1entative
will be required to
give notice 10 inter·
Hted pereone unleea
they have waived
notice or coneented
to the propo11cr
ection.I The lnd419en-
d1nt edmlni1tretlon
authority will be
prented unleH en
1nterea1ed pereon
fllee en objection to
the petition end
1hows good cet.1ee
why the court
1hould not grent the
1uthority.
A HEARING on
the petition will ba
held on October ze.
2000 et 1 :45 P.M .
In Oapt. L73 loceted
et 341 The City
Drive Orenoe CA 92883.
IF YOU OBJECT
TO the ~renting of
the petition, you
should appear It the
hearing end elite
your object1one or
file written objec·
done with the court
before the hearing.
Your appeerence
may be in pereon or
by your attorney.
IF YOU ARE A
CREDITOR or a
contingent creditor
of the deo9 .. ed, you l
mu1t tu. your clelm
with the oourt and
melt • oopy to the
personal repraHnt•
tlve appointed by tti. ooutt within four
monthe from the
det• of flrtt l1euenca
of lettlt9 • proll4ded
In HCtion 1100 of
the C .. fomla Pro-
1>1t1 Code. The dint
for tMlng cWrne wlll
not ...... !MfOl'e
fou1 monthl ftom
the hMftng date
noticed eow.
VOU MAV EX·
AMINI tha fh kept
by the OCMt. If YoU ere a.,.,..,. inllt'Mt•
Id In the ..WI, YoU mev fh wfttl tha ooun • fonnet ft ..
ql*t fOf lpeolal
Notice of the flling of an Inventory ri
appral.., of fftat1
•Mtl ot of 1ny Pttltlon Of eooOW'it
.. ptOWMd '" "°' tion 1 HO of the C ... fom• ....... ~:}~''°' ~'°"" "9m.dle ......... =::·
CNt1SOJU1
llOTICEOf
PEllUON TO ADl!llUIBI ESTATE Of:
LOfBA
BA&..Dw.WBS
AKALORBIA
BALDWR CASE NO.
A198983
To ell hefro, beneftotariff, ord-
tofl, oontlngent
«edltoro, and pe~ eona who rrwv ottier-wlM be lntereeted In
the wlM or eataW, ot
both, of: LORENA BALDWIN WEIS
AKA LORENA BALDWIN A PfTITION hee
been filed by NEU.A
WEBSTER In the
Superiot Court of
Califoml•, County of Orarige.
THE PfTITION requntt thet NEUA
WEBSTER be ep-
pointed -pwaoNI repraeentotlve t o admini9t« the "1ate
of the deoedent. THE PETITlON
requeota the
decedent' a WILL end
oodicila, If ony, be edmitted to probate.
The WILL end eny
Oodlcitt ara OVllMebte
for txa'ninadon In
the fila kept by the
court. THE PETTTION requNte autholity to edmlni.tar the .... ,.
under the Indepen-
dent Admlnlnotion
of Eatatea Acrt. {Thie
authority will allow the penonal ,...
..m.iiw to take rneny eotione with-
out obt.linlng oourt
approve!. 8efore
Wclng o.min wry
Important aotlone,
howewt, die per· eonal rep.....medw
will be required to ,;..,,. notioe to Int•~ Htad peraone unlffe
thev hew walwd notfoe or ooneentad
to the propoetd
eodon.I The lndep•~ dent edmlnlnretlon authority will be
granted uni ... an
rntarHted parson
filff an obleodon to the petition and
ehowa good oeuee
why tllo court
ehoutd not grMt the
authority.
A HEARING on
the petition wlM be
hotd on October 1 t , 1000 •t 1 :415 P .M.
In 019L L73 located et 341 The City Dffw Orenge CA
UHi.
IF YOU OBJECT
~the enting of
the on. ~ appear et the
hMrlng ilnd ......
your Obftodona Of
file Wrftt4N\ obieo-dona with the oourt before the hearing.
Vour •PP••r•noe may be In peroon or by~' ettorney~ "YOU AM A CREDITOR or a .... = orecltof ot-9 ..... W'I
"""" fie Yo"' oWm with the oowt and
mell • 90PY to the c:-... ,.,......,. ... -= llyf=
"'9fwdw "°"' Iha ueeoffnt .... IGM of~-~ed "' ........ 100 Of ... ~ ...... Mt. Code. The .,.
........... wll ;:. :::;. ...,.. ... ~= no41oedllloW, I
YOU MAY~ AMNlh• lly the....,_" ::::-" .......
m.y .. -:W'::
eowt .............. ;;.~:::~ ..... ,., ... of ....... :=..::..::
:r pt ~~ .... ..
A
GOOD
ADI
..
Polley
Ratts uud drudlin1·, art' l-t1bj1•r1 10
c~t ~·i1ho111 notirt·. Thr puhli!ihrr
~rr('S tilt' rii!Ju 10 rrn--or. n>t·la:-... ifr.
n'\'isr or Tt'jrrt any rla"ifi\·d ·
ad,·rrti~111c111. Pl\·a~· n·pon au~ t•m1r
that muy lw in ~our da:-.. .. ifird ad
immroiuh·I~. Tlw Duih Pilo1 an·1·pb
no lioliility for u11~ mw in u11
udverti~cmt'rll for "hirlr it rrur' he
mporr ... ililr 1'\l't'pl for I hr ro ... 1 ·of 1 lw
parr ae111all~ 11rr11pi1·il Ii~ 1h1• mnr.
By Fax
(9i Q) 6:JJ-639i
(Plea-r iurlude ~our name nnd phone number
and v.'1;11 ,.,,11 ~011 hnrl ~irli 11 pri1't' q1Hllr.)
ByPhone
(Q;9) 6.+2-5<> "?8
Hours
By MaDlln Person:
330 Wr ·1 Bay ~t 1~·<·t
Co tn ~le a. <:':\ Q~u~~
\1 \f"l'"n Bl"I & H.1, "'
\londay ............... Friday 5:00pm
Tuesday ............. Monday S:OOpm
\\ed ne day ........ Tuesday 5:00pm
Thun;day ...... Wednesday 5:00pm
Friday ............. Thursd ay S:OOpm
C:mlit ran uni~ hr ul111i·1•1f for 1fr1'
fust insmiou. Telephone 8:30am-5:00pm
Monday-Friday
Walk-In 8:30am-5:00pm
Monday-Friday Satunl a) .............. F rich~ j:OOpm
. '' '
~ -
101 • 216
WATERFRONT
BARGAIN!
!I
...
--......
The Pl'lct Wll Amea y Olll
Ap!I (Mt) 72W120
•VA.o ........ ,.. COtJHSEL.k1
,_UST~IOES
>UWAREPOS
7fU'4UIO
' '. " . ',1.,11
~1
ADI
,-~••u• C.»Jj R ..
•
470 ·471
'
Index
<J·-.--t . ' .
. .· . \ .
~-
&
410. 416
690. 697
,
............. d••·--
Reach 80,000 Homes Each Week
For Only $28 per week (4 wk, min.)
Cal Lonalne at 6•2·5671 x24
~ ·--·~
' ' -·· ............ -.::: -..... --.. -_--._-... --a.--
........ -l!tMtlD ....,..., .... ,. ...... -............. ............ .......
J
........
..
J 2 Tuesdby. October 3. 2000
lllW 740ll. • CADLl..AC OEYl..LI W
<Htoor, Alpine, wtllte(Mnd Whb, .... "'· low """' (M10964) $43,9116 (789.UI) '24,988 8TtAUNO MW NAIERI
MM4ffl00 tmlH0-1100
BMW 540I 'ti 8lldl/bllc.
llllO, lolded, IC)Oll euep .. G5k ml, •xelllleri cotdloll,
$41.000 pp 818-522-8080.
BMW 3211 'f7
2-doof, greeMand. *" (T~) Sl!e,995
SllRLING BMW
949-145-5900
8llW 740IL '97
30k ml, Prtmlum Sound
(3XHN300) $41.995
CR£VIER BMW
714-835-3171
BMW M3 W 4-dool, Alpine. wllllelblaclc
(E11690) $32,995
SltRUNG BMW
94M45-5900
BUICK C£HTURY '00
CADIU.AC DEW.LE '00
Low 18k ml. $Mr, lellhlf. (~7-48) NABERS $32.8ll8
1714)540:1100
CAOIUAC Eldor9do 'ts
Wilt pell!, ""'· many •xlrls (612435) $8.988
NABERS (714)540:9100
CADILLAC Eld«edo '91
Lo mi. 1an 'lealhef, Nol1hstar (601066) $21.988
NABERS
(714)54!)::9100 '
Cadillllc Stvlllt '99
Low 11 k ml, CD, tlloyl,
(907529) S3l,9M
NABERS
(714)5-4().9100
COAVmE 1184
22k ....... Like New,
Ah ODclont 17,750
94M50-1190
CORVETT! 1195'
8 epd, 73k Ml, $11,750
949-650-7180
00001! CARAVAN 'tS
1481< ml, V-6, a/o, 7 pus. new bnllee and tlr1e nn
Q!!!ll $3600. 94i.&50. 7454
DODGE DURAHGO 't9 Muat SHI 14K 1111, ~ ROVERS2t,950
NEWPORT BEACH
94M40-8445
. '
Bridge
~HARLES GOREN ,_ me ....... ._ OMAR SHARIF =--~~~~ = Ind TANNAH HIRSCH @ ,00!! MN1Mm
FORD F1lli0 'f7 •WO. 10Wlllg, 11111:.t m, ~71 11a,e&O LAND ROVER
NEWPORT BEACH
!!tfl0i445
TOO MANY TRUMPS
· GMC JtMllY ... 4WD, 291(, SEE m
1521001/3007 S1t,950 LAND ROVER
NEWPORT BEACH
94M4M445
HOHOA CIVIC '98 llllo 28k ml, trans, ac, clc. Ml
Nonh·South vulnerable. Nonh deals.
NORTtt
• A8 ~K743 o AKQ96
•QS
WFSJ' EAST • Q 10763 •Vold
i;;i A o Q J 10 9 8 6 S 2 ~ 10 832 0 4
.. 843 • J 1096 SOUTH
• KJ95 42 <;;>Void
0 J7S
• AK 72
The bidding: NORTH EAST SOUTH WEST
to 40 4• ra.u
1.1\em alL
After East's ~pt. it was nigh
impo'5ible to bid the han<l 11e~ntl1i·
caily. Wbalever the meaning of
North's raise to five spades, Tocruny
felt his holdin& would' offer play for
slam. West's double W8f1 grist for Tommy's milt.
L TO, lullhef, btl of warr.
(217819) $17,988 NABERS
(714)5-40-9100
C4ldlllac Seville '93 Sharp!
4-<lr, low ml. cream llhr, new
tires, new battery, loaded!
$10,500/obo. 949-631·7370
Fonf Bronco XLt 4x.4 'II power, am/fm stereo,
Blue/blue, CUS1om wNs, all !! 2.50(). 949-752· t 075
5• Pus 6• Dbl hss Pus ,_
The opening lead of the aoc of
hearu Wll.'I ruffed by Tommy, and 11 was clear that the double had to be
besed on a tNmp stack. At trick two, l.hcrefore, Turnrily led a low 5pOOe
and. when West 1'ollowcd with the
throe, dummy's eight was inserted
and won the trick. Tummy made light
of the rest of the play. Diamonds
were stancd and, when East showed out on the second round, four rounds
were cashed, declarer discarding a
club from hand. Next came the three rop clubs, 11.'l
West followed helplessly. A sP.Jde to
the ace put Tummy in posuion to
complete his coup. He led a hean
from dummy and ruffed with the
nine. West could ovcrrurr with the ICll
but. down to nod!ing but two trumps.
was forced to lead away from the
queen of spades into Tommy's K J
tcnace. All Tommy lost was one
trump trick.
I
CADILLAC CATERA ~7
Beige, low ml, moonrool
(172278) $19,988
NABERS
(714)540·9100
power, CC, lo/C, lint, 140k mi
$5000 94$.2»55118
CHEVY BLAZER '84 Ford Crown Vlctorlt UC
2 cloof, 93k ml, CD playw, '87 White wAllue lealher inl,
gr111 high school Irani. fully loeded, low mileage
$1500. 949-673-2741 949·6"6·6906
HOHOA PRELUOE SI '88 Bfk, 5 SI), toeded, AC, PS. PB. PW, sunrool, well main,
11.flS xtnt, 150K mi, record. $3200 949-492-8972
JEEP WRANGLER W
4x4. 67k ml, big wheels,
Bikini lop, CID, system. $9000 obo 714-317-0164
LA DISCOVERY '97
SE1, 32,000 mllet, cltlnl
Opening lead: Are of i;;i
Some people never learn. Although
everyone at the club was aware of
Trump Coup Tommy's propensity for
turning into a master technician on
those hands where trumps broke
badly, there were still some who
could n« resist doubling on a IJUmp stock. Tommy made mincemeat of
~·""9" ·~~~.,.1-~11-~1 1 -~1
"Employ<'P."
.. Emplt'<zdo. ,. NO MATIER HOW YOU SAY n, CLASSIF1ED CU
Rfll n. ''.t1rbeitnehmn ...
"Eniploye. ·•
Full Service Bookk .. plng
for the small to mid size
buSll1eSS Monthly financ111t.
payables, receivables &
payroll 714-545-6908
POLICY In an effort lo olfer the best
5eMce possible to our read-
ers and advertisers. we Wtl
require Contractors who
advertise 1n the Service
Directory lo Include their Contractors License
number rn their advertise-
ment 't' our co-operatron IS greatly app1eciated
224 AOOr1'10HS /REMODELING
FARTHING INTERIORS Houle CltanJna 15 Yell'I
K'rtchen ·I Bath I Remodel E1pl Good J:teferences,
Room AddillOOS... Visa/MC Reasonable Prices Call
L1560675 949-645-9325 Eva & Kaz 714-7SM132
I ~ BATHROOMS I
HOME flair '
Houle & Window Cleaning
Exp'd • Dependabje • Ral's
Great rates! tmelda/JOse
949·246-6~ 9/548-4285
VICKY'S CLEANING
We olf81 THE BEST
House & Wrndow Cleaning
1 Oyrs experience. mt rel' al
Vld!y'1 714-668-0395
LR DISCOVERY '98
Fun powr, black btMny
1754733/3047 CALL
LANO ROVER
NEWPORT BEACH
949-MM445
LA RANGE ROVER '96
Full power, 42K mllttl
t337&5112834 $29,950
LANO ROVER
NEWPORT BEACH
94M4M445
LA RANGE ROVER '96 Full powr, 42K ml.lest
133766112834 $29,950
LAND ROVER
NEWPORT BEACH
94J.MM445
Speclallzlng • 50 And Ovw
$56.00/Hr, $50 min hour Hook~ • Setv1oe • ·Teac11 Computer at C06tl
24/Hr cell 71W12-3181
MERCEDES BENZ '99 ML430, 3000 mlltll
Llk• "'"' t064757fl645 44,995
LANO ROVER
NEWPORT BEACH
94$-84().6445
Oldsmobile Culltat '99
Low mi, V-6, CO & ITIOl8.
(334952) $13.988
NABERS
1714)540-9100
Oldsmobile Sil~ltl '00
Dual cir, 1211 ml, .......
Men:tdtl 560 SL '88 (211055) S19,918
Showroom cond. chrome NABERS Michelins, 2 topS. lk nu, ltlw, 1714)5-40·9100
local $14,950 714-751·2464 * PORSCHE 993 '91 Blk.I
NISSAN 300 ZX '91 Coupe, blaofl. Tu. premUn
2 + 2. 6 cyl. auto. M;, ful sound. supple fthr int, 62k
pwr. am-Im. tinted. euslom mi. $53.000. 949-719-1111
whls $9,999 949-642·2702.
SELL YOU~ CAR
IN CLASSIFIED
YARD CLEAN.UP
Trees-Pruied & Removed,
Sprinfclera Reoaired, new
lawns. c.a 714-751-3471
&thrub &glaVng
ReglaltdRe1urb1sh
Porrclaon • f1hc111tass
Sinks • Showers
Counters
949-645-7723 1270 I *GARDENING *
COHCRETE I I Reliable & Ouaity WOik 81 /MASONRY 214 sT..V:~ =::-~~~
CABINET I ' MAKING
... CUSTOM CABMTS ~
Installation, re-facing
refinishing, kitchen expert
949-645-4907 leave !1!!Q
1~~1
tr CARPET tr CARPET ~
Repairs, Patching, lnstan.
Courteous Any size jobs. Brick lllodl Stone Tiit
Wholesale! 949-492-0205. Cor)crett, Patio, Oltvewly, Fhplo, 800'1, Ref's. 25yls
exp. Teny 714-557-7594
A to z-..w.....
Ctr1111td B11t Carpet
clea/\ing rne1hod Rated 11
by consumer report Cltana n~ I-!'-great, qulclt dry Try me rw'llJAMI YoU'! lb me 7f4-sowes5 ' 1-~1
K"rlehtn. eaih&~. Wt Gua1111'11H that your
projecl will be llarttd &
completed on lime and on
budQel Ref's. Ll650524.
Catr 949·933·1296 or
714-269·7185
A
ADI
Clll
(11)•·171
CUSTOM CREATIVE TllE
lnelallalionls, slate, cellmic.
maiblt, stone. E1tAll 1975 M12044 Jeff 714412-tlel
FhcGrout.Com
1'111 Alpelr • Aeatorltlon
(714) 2M-1111
Lt 223"3
1.EAKY Showwt Atpelrtd LEWIS CONSTRUCTION ~ & lnNllllon. ~ ~~ DUH Tl.l IMM73-IOl5, • 1 71H4H52t 14'551-5925
\ ,
Wl'TTltOEFT DRYWALL LAWN SERVICE Maintain, ~89/smalllr~w.... clean 141, sprinldtr repair, ,.,.,. 1ret !Rn. ~t $15 a NI 20yls. 1111. est ......... Cal lno Lf.400030 71W39.1447 ...-. • ·
8MALL JOI EXPERT!
DUNCAN ELECTIIC
LOClllOulcll mpontt ~emodtft
20Y ... ~
ll275870 ~7042
LICENSED CONTRACTOllt No joO 100 1111 Al llMctll ""*'· ~ ..... llJI, """ !!fYIC!! •• "" ..
I• •••I
"GRANO OPEMHG"
Mlrecle Touch 150
...... 710 s. lkoolctust IJ, Anaheim 714-758-2871
Range Rover Country '90
4x4, 4dr, V8 3.91tr. auto,
Silver/Ian leather Int fuJty
loaded, sM cassett. alloys,
1304< mi, xlnt cond 19.950
obo 949-721·5700.
SATURN 'W 4 door, 121< ml, afnt concl
manual tnne, CO playw, $7500. IMM73-2'74f
BMW 3181 'f7
5 apd, I.QI# ml, AC 6 M«e
(3XCU702) $19.995
CREMER BMW
714435-3171
SELL YOUR C AR
IN CLASSIFIED
Gtt Mortgage $$$
Online or in person--
ht Ile 2nd Trust Deeds
• Residcnfial
•Commercial
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DRIVER
PRIVATE DRIVER 'i1W1 ,_ twcury car. Prolpalonel &
l)tl'IOnlble. Ntwpoit Coest hued. Call Mt-72M007
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PUBLIC
NOTICE
The Calif. Public·
Utllllles Com·
mission REQUIRES
that •• used house--
hold goods movers
prtnt their P.U.C.
tel T nOOlber. Imo& and chauflets prinl
their T.C.P. numbel In .. acMttilmenls.
If you have a qllet-
lioo about the leoal-
lty " a "10Y9f, ho Off cllauffer, cat.
PUBLIC UTILITIES
COMMISION
714-558:-4151
ftTf Ail'W
WOBDSTO
WORIFOR
YOU
(949 642.5673
Doily Pilot
TODAY'S
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
ACROM 81 Hotlery lhedt
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18 RIMgtoOO DOWN 17 R-. 1 18-wlleeler
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32 Ctndle m...,._, 9 Gives
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40 ~ ftsh 13 God ol love •3 Cooke' wear 18 Confer 33 Fret -49 EJll)lrt 45 Oo the disll/\clron on 34 Sooehlng hert>. SO M..ive
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50 Hobgoblin: VIII:. 26 Leathetwortcing • 1 Guaranllft m.-maid" s 1 Knanna de-.olH tool 42 Ytlloloolt/\lte'• 55 Cenlurton'• 52 POlato 27 HIMISI pf. highway 54 r-28 Rljah'a wife 43 LMng qiiarttf8 56 POiar explorer 57 Secret 29 CroeawlM. In a 44 Type ofnoH 59 Choreographer
58 Ham.on FOfd, alllp 47 lmpolttntaum FotM
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CaU for Answers • ,_,.. _.,_, _
• 96c,,. -1-tOG-31CMMIOO ext. code 500
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SOUTH COAST
MOVESUBEST Careful, Quick,
Full House or 1 Item.
Fiii ES1ViW'ES
UcJT1861l3 Mt.619.nss
BEST MOVERS SeMcing
.. cities, Insured. fast, COIMleous & catelull
1-800-2-00·BEST
loo-246-2378 UT163144
1340 PAINTING I
CHUNG'S PAINTING
fT Y ... Exp • Great Price!
GUlflnltt WOik • Free Eat U375602 714-638-1534
IKE'S CUSTOM P~
PIOflselonll, dean, Q\lllity Work. lntle•t & ciocki.
L1703468 ~9-631-4810
RAIN80W ClRCU: lllAINT
Pllin1fng-Jnt/axt HOUHt'Apl
qullity lob! FrH tsllmett L156989'7 71~
* TOP OUAIJl'Y * Very eon,,.tftlve
UcenHIBondtd/lntutld l.J848228 J!y 94&-§§0-5066
Pt .. tw/Stu«o Pltctr
Serving Southern Caifomia
kif 25 years. l•326864
24 houtsl 714-554-7131
,,_N~hbotftood
Pfumbtrf
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CUAHllG SNCWJST
TWEEDY PWM91NG
949-645-2352 -..
All ORAlliS UNClOGGrn
GOOD J OBS.
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INTBIUJSTIN
7111NGS ro BUY.
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IN
CLUSIFBDI
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