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SERVING THE NEWPORT -ME.SA COMMUNmES SINCE 1907 ON DIE WEB: WWW.DAILYPILOT.COM WEEKEND, OCTOBER 7 -8, 2000
• Quirk in age group requirements for Harbor Heritage Run
almost kept one 11-year-old girl out of today's event.
Danette Goulet
DAILY Pit.or
NEWPORT BEACH -Since its
inception tow years ago, Leslie Boler has
run in the Kids Klassic races at the annu-
al Harbor Heritage Run.
go to Newport Harbor High, consists of
two races.
The first is for 5-to 7-year-old chil-
dren who run a quarter-mile lap around
Newport Harbor's field. The second is for
8-to 10-year-old students who run two
laps, or a hall-mile.
Leslie said.
She didn't get her way, but she also
won't be left out.
This year, Leslie will leave the track
and the Kids Klassic and hit the streets
with the adults today.
Leslie plans to run the full two kJJo-
meters and she's even managed to rope
a few classmates into joining her.
•rve got like five friends to do it with
me,• she said, adding that it was difficult
to coerce a few of them. A tomboy
through and through, Leslie's favorite
pastimes are playing soccer and climb-
I
She was planning on running in it
again until she was told that as an 11-
year-old in the sixth grade at Mariners
Elementary School, she was too old to
run.
Race creators failed to realize four
years ago that sixth-grade students are
often 11 and 12 years old. It was a snafu
in the system that no one noticed until a
frustrated Leslie put her hands on her
hips and said, -No fair."
ing the ,huge tree in her backyard. ~EAN H1uER / OMV PllOT
Leslie Boler will compete in the adult portion of the The Kids Klassic, meant for elemen-
tary schoolchildren who eventualJ.y will -it was fun and I liked doing it," SEE RUN PAGE A9 annual Harbor Heritage Run today.
"These are parents who thought
they were going to have a beautiful,
gorgeous baby, and something
happened."
Unda Sm ith
Director of Family Support Network
Shanel Ames. second from left. wtth fellow
gymnuttcs students Sarah Clark. Lauren
Halle and Kate Verone, waits her tum while
studytng the routine of another student.
With the help of others who
understood her sorrow, Costa Mesa
woman learned to let go of darker
thoughts about her daughter's future.
Alex Coolm.n
DAILY PlloT
Her first reaction was not one of joy.
When Sandi Ames realized that her
newborn daughter, Shanel, had Down syn-
drome, a host of other emotions flooded her
mind, aowd1ng out any
simple reaction to the birth. • BJn'Olt'S NOTE: The
There was confusion followfng Is the first in
and guilt. There was •#ow-part series focus.
sorrow. And there was Inv on the struggles
fear about the future. and~ of the ~ theW flf1'llties What there wasn't -and~ who liYe and
at least, not lnitially -wen wtth them.
wa.s the kind of delight
that inspires a parent to
plan for the future. The pa.in of those first \
moments wounded Ames' abWty to hope.
When you talk to the '1-year-old Costa Mesa
PHOTOS BY GREG fllY I DAl.Y "OT
Shanel Ames, who has Down syndrome, ls encouraged by gymnastics Instructor Marti
Gangnes u she makes her way across the balance beam ln an lndlvlduallzed dass.
resident today, however, it's apparent that
Ames has regained her strength. And when you
watch her interact with Shanel, who is a viva-
cious, slightly mischievous 7-year-old, there is a
love so fierce that it seems like a physical thing
ln the room. \
Going from that initial reaction of fear to a
position of strength, Ames said, was not some-
thing she could have done alone. She drew on
the experience of another parent who had a
daughter with Down syndrome, finding encour-
agement and support in her story.
• 1t helped me open up my doors of under-
st.anding to what the possibilities were.· she
said.
WATCHING A MIRACLE
On a recent afternoon at the city's Downtown
Community Center, Ames watched as Shanel
walked gingerly across a balance beam. An
instructor held her hand at times, and at other
times she balanced alone.
Uke many others with Down syndrome,
Shanel has low muscle tone, which can affect
SEE STRENGTH PAGE A9
INSIDE THE DAILY PILOT ... , INlll
f OO'flllL ICOlll
FttlOAY'S RESULTS
Newport H•rbor .................. 28
Oaretn0nt. ........................... 7
WeistmlNter .............•..•........• 15
Col'ona del Mar ..................•• JI
llltnla ................................ 4J
~ ................................. o
Col'GIY
delMan
top ....... ....,., ., ....
MM
Y9111ey,
Ill&• .... ••• .... ,.. ....
Measure T
has spent
more than
$250,000
Mathis Winkler
DAJLV PILOT
NEWPORT BEACH
l'wo hundred flfty-e19ht
thousand, eight hundred
eighty-six dollcm..
That's the amount of
money supporters o! Med-
sure T have spent so far.
accordtng to campdign
finance Sldtement!>
released Fnday
Measure S, the op~
ing growth-control med-
sure appearing on the Nov
7 ballot, has spent only
$19,124 -about 13 bines
less than the Med.Sure T
campaign.
SEE MEASURE T PAGE AB
Home
Depot to
fix trash
• can IIllX-up
Mathis Winkler
DAILY PILOT
NEWPORT BEACH -
Home Depot ofhoals have
said their stores will
exchange any rubber
trash cans that do not ful-
fill the oty's new require-
ments for the correct ones.
The move comes after
city off1oals had planned
to ask the company to
exchange about 1,500
trash cans that don't com-
ply with new dty regula-
tions that the store had
apparenUy sold to resi-
dents with the assurance
that they dJd comply.
SEE TRASH PAGE A8
_.
QAllB5 _ _._....__...17
0 ff,_ A1S
I •1111 Al1 -" ..-S9f u
.. ...
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. . .
A2 Saturday, Odober 7, 2000
.. . .
ST. MICHAEL NtO ALL ANGE' s 9'SCOMI. CHURCH
St. Mid*" end Al~ E ... Di .. Oud'I ..-. •to wonhlp God In word .ld uaamenu., ptocWm 1he good news of J9.ll
Ow'tst '° ... end 10 leld Wthful and~ ~bi/ Ullr1g Goers glftl 10 ~ 10 Medi wtchln 1he perW\ 1he ~
nlty and the wof1d end to be ....... -..rdl of ... a.don.· n. ~worship Is Eudwist-<* .... ~ 1he trd
tJonll and ClOlttempol'W'J boolcs of common~· S.W. .. on SUncMiJ •I and 10 a.m. Child me "prcMded. 11>1t Sltuctt for ~ meets• t a.m. and cNdrwl'I ~ .._ 11 llt 10 a.m. owtng 1he unmer rnonh. 5uncM'/ -W.S ... 11t ' 8.m.
and 5 p.m. &tie study Is not offwwd during the uwwner monh. Child ewe II pO'A:dld fot the 9 a.m. ~. '9ter Haynes Is
senior pestor. The c:.hurctl Is • 3233 P.tfic View DrM. CotoNI dill Mar. For moAI lnbYNtiof\ c.all (949) 644 046.l .•
Ooity Pilot
IN THE SPIRIT • ,
Fairview Community Church
Ondy Trane Christeson
MORAL OF THE STORY
Letting go is ·hard
to do sometimes
"The art of living lies in a fine mingling
of letting go and holding on.•
-Havelock Ellis
T wo weelts ago, Francesca, one of my
nieces, started kindergarten. I
remember how monumental the first
day of school was for both our daughters,
so I had been praying for her. I also ·
remember how monumental those days
were for me as well, so I had also been
praying for my br~ther and sister-in-law.
If I close rpy eyes, I can still see both our
girls all dressed and ready for school, com-
plete with big backpacks and big bows.
They walked into their classrooms with
shining smiles and shiny saddle shoes.
I remember that some of the mothers
were thrilled and were practically skipping
to their empty cars. But some of us wres-
tled with our emotions as we stood and
watched our children enter a world where
we were no longer in control.
I called Frances, my sister-in-law, and
asked how she was doing. Understandably
she had mixed emotions.
"I'm really happy for her, but I'm definite-
ly sad,• she said. "You can't go backwards."
Frances left her daughter at school, then
drove home and wrote in a journal for
Francesca to read someday. She wrote
about how well the morning bad gone and
about Francesca 's school and teacher. She
also wrote about some of her feelings.
"I'm sad because my baby girl whom I
used to rock endlessly in the rocking chair,
singing to and holding for hours, bas now
taken one of many major footsteps forward
in growing up.•
She concluded the journal entry to
Francesca that day with, ")'ou are a trea-
sure and a blessing my child. l know and
trust God to be with us every step of the
way through your footsteps of growing up."
I called my niece that afternoon.
"What was your favorite thing about
school Francesca?" I asked.
"Ob, everything, Aunt Cindy,• sbe
answered.
I realized my question was too broad so
I tried to be more specific.
"Did you like the other boys and girls.•
"Yes,• she said without hesitation.
"Did you like your teacher?"
"Yes,· she said again.
"Did you get to play games?"
"Yes,· she answered. But then there
was a pause. ·1 liked everything Aunt
Cindy, but I guess my favorite thing was
the Popsicles.•
Last week our daughters also started a
new school year. It's been a long time
since they were in kindergarten though.
When a little boy asked me what grades
Amy and Kelly were in, I said. "Well, I guess
you could say they are in grades 14 and16. •
"Wow,• he said, shaking his head.
"They must have learned a lot.·
"Yes, they have,· I answered. •And so
have we.·
I thought of Frances' words. I have
learned that I can trust God lo be with us
every step of the way.
I talked to both our daughters after their
first day at school. U.ke Francesca, they
enjoyed the other students and the teachers.
I forgot to ask if they played any games.
Uke Frances, I also wrestled with mixed
emotions as they left for school. Then I
thought of something Francesca said.
Maybe it's time for me to have a Popsicle.
And you can quote me on that.
• QNDY TRANE OtRISTISON Is • Newport Beach
resident who speaks frequently to parenting
groops. She may be reached vfa e-mail et
dndyOoniMgrow.com.
READERS HOTUtilE
(949) 642-fi086
Address: 2525 Pairvjew Road at
Pair Drive in Costa Mesa
Telephone: (714) 545-4610
E-mail: faircom@gateway.net
Web site: www.falrvlewcm.org
Denomination: The church's
denominational ties are to the
American Baptist Church,
which emphasizes congrega-
tional autonomy and democra-
cy. This congregation intends
to provide for the spiritual
growth of all people. Members
come into the congregation
from many branches of Christ-
ian heritage.
Year church established: 1949.
The congregation first met in
the Newport Beach American
Legion Hall. The developer of
Costa Mesa's College Park pro-
vided the grounds for its present
location.
Service times: Sunday worship
is at 10 a.m. Children and youth
share in the opening of the ser-
vice and then go to appropriate,
age-related programs. During
the second weekend of October
each year, anyone coming to
worship for the first time will
find a sign on the door telling
them that the congregation is
away. The congregation meets
for worship at a retreat fadlity
near Crestline that weekend.
Other programs, such as Adult
Bible Study, are scheduled
throughout the week.
Christmas service times: Christ-
mas Sunday services will be
held at 10 a.m. and 7 p.m.
Pastors: Gary Barmore, who 'bas
served as senior pastor for 25
years, and Joyce Smith. Bar-
more recently announced his
decision to retire from full-time
professional ministry. He sub-
mitted his resignation as senior
pastor of Fairview Community
Church, effective Dec. 31. To his
congregation,hereznarked,
"The coming seasons seem
quite appropriate. My birthday:
how time has flown! Halloween:
this feels a bit scary. Thanksgiv-
ing: gratitude is the attitude!
Christmas: awaiting surprises,
comforts and joys within God's
gift of grace for new journeys.
Carry on, sisters and brothers,
carry on.•
Pastoral staff: Catherine Wright,
the church's full-time secretary,
and a number of ministry asso-
CA 12626. Copvright No news sto-
..... ~ edhot\al rn8tt9r Da~Wot R«ord YOVt commems about Of ~ herein c:an be
reproduald ~ M1twn ..,. the 0..1y p;Jot « news tlpL mllllon of ~ owww.
VOLM.N0.240 ADQBESS
Our ad«a Is 330 W. Bay St. HOW IQ REAOf US
Costa MeM, CA 92627. ~
The l1rne Orenge County CQMECDOHS (800) 252-9141 It II the Pllot"l Pof~ to ptempt-,.. ..... ly correct ... 9TOf'S of~ o.tfted (Mt) 642-5678 ,..... QM{M) 574-42Jl. ~ (949) 642 .. 321 m ........
The Newport llMchtColta ...... HewS ('t4') 642-56'0
DtlfV Pilot (USPS-1...._ II ~ SpotU (Mt) 574-4223
llthed~~~ NMt, Spons , .. (949) 6*4170
In Ntwpol1...., end c...-.. ~ deit1'1'llot«ttlmeuom
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Meo1blng to The Tim. er.,. ---Offb (Mt) 142411 County~~"'·"' ... lmn. , .. (Mt) 01-7121 ~of ~leldlend
C.0... Miii. ....U •tlo U> h NlllNd11¥nn. ~Nilwl ~Not.,. ...... iflly *" • ...... 0("" "".,.... ""--INlll for uo ,,,., monl\. ......
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GREG FRY I OAl.Y Pl.OT
The Rev. Gary Barmore stands In the balcony of Falrvtew
Community Church In Costa M esa.
dates, who lea\ nrograms for fype of worship: A blend of
youth, childr~~d choirs. ' contemporary and traditional
Size of congregation: Worship styles, so that every generation
attendance averages 130. Active is touched and taught to value a
membership is 150. wide expression of music and proclamation. The mix brings
Makeup of congregation: Varied free-church exuberance and
and inclusive, primarily families liturgical responsibility together.
whose adults have educational fype of sermon: Sermons are
and/or professional careers and based on the Bible, which Bar-
children. Most of the congrega-more and Smith interpret with
tion's members come to the historical consideration to apply
·church with some kind of to real-We situations. They aim
church background. Many bad to reach each listener, both
abandoned church participation intellectually and emotionally,
because of what Bannore calls through serious thought and
"one of the three • A:s: adoles-powerful proclamation.
cence, apathy, and anger.~ Recent sermons: The church
He estimates that 70% to 80% has just completed a series of
of the members arrive .while messages on applying a pledge
seeking a church in which to be of nonviolence locally and
married. globally.
Child care: Professional, licensed Upcoming sermon: Pre-Cbrist-
child care is provided during mas messages will come from
worship and for social and study the Book of Jonah, a drama that
programs. makes the case for God's inclu-
faith CROP Hunger Walk will
start 1 p.m. Oct. 15 at St. Mark
Pres~ Oiun:h in New-
port eeam. 1be leV8ll kilome-
ter walk a1orig Upper NewpOrt
Bay, sponsored by the New-
port Mesa Irvine Interfaith
Council. benefits in part JOcal
food pentries, including Share
OUr Selves a:nd JeWilb Painily
Services. The c:burtb is at 2100
Mar Vista Drive In~
Beech. (949) 645-5781.
HARVEST FESTIVAL
~rt MeM Cbdltian Cen-
ter Will bold a Harve.t Peltital
from 5:30 to 9 p.m. oet. 31 aa
an alternative to traditional
Halloween tdck~~.
The festival. ~ for cbD·
dnm 2 to 12. induct. ridM,
games booths, an In-N·Out
burger dinner and lots of can-
dy for SS. 1be center is at 2599
N~ Blvd., Costa Mesa.
(114) 966-045'.
SUllllUS
HIGH HOLY DAY GUEST
Religiotis educator and actor
Peter Small will represent the
story of Jonah in English. •
impenol:.atmg thi Biblical flg-
we, at Temp.le lsai4h of New-
port ~at• to 4:30 p.m.
MoDday, Yom Klppw. Small,
Wbo Wtll 1118bt Rabbi Marc
Ruben1Ce6n; ii • history
tilfM:ber' Whole character
impnllaoDI range from
~~:~
IMtlng, '° nwervattOm are
WEAIHEI AND SUlf .
'l'IMPIRA1WIS non COSTA MESA
sive love.
Welcome wagon: The congre-
gation meets visitors and builds
friendships durlng a time of
refreshment and fellowship. A
garden courtyard adjacent to
the sanctuary provides a warm
and hosp itable setting.
Outreach programs: A food and
cash offering for the needy is
collected each month. Volun-
teers go out to serve at various
community assistance agencies.
Many members of the congre-
gation are involved in the activi-
ties of local organizations like
Fish-Harbor Area, S.O.S. and
the Interfaith Council. Environ-
mental concerns are also regu-
larly addressed. Members work
in a variety of ways throughout
the community at large desiring
to help make the community a
better place for all.
Dress: All types of Califomia-
style attire are seen, from suits
and dresses to jeans and shorts.
Church design: Barmore says
that people frequenUy tell him
the church ls like the church
they grew up in. The sanctuary
interior bas high beams, panels
of natural mahogany and cush-
ioned oak pews. The center
aisle leads to the Communion
table and a raised cross. The
building is set among well-tend-
ed grassy areas and gardens. A
California-Mediterranean court-
yard provides a place for quiet
meditation, suppers and parties.
Mission statement We are
called by God to create, enj6y
and extend gracious Christian
community, which is character-
ized and recognized as accept-
ing, not judging; including, not
rejecting; connecting, not isolat-
ing; serving, not vaunting;
empowering, not exha~g;
healing, not hurtfuL intelligent.
not mindless; faithful. not flashy;
zestful, not dull; Christlike
lnterestjng notes: While pastor
at Fairview Community Church,
~ore has also taught the We
and nmes of Jesus classes for
the religious studies department
at Orange Coast College for 15
years. The church bas inaugu·
rated a program called •fantas-
tic Fridays" for kids of the
church and neighborhood.
-Michele M. Marr
POLICE flUS
hlboe TODAY • ~ sn.t: An auto theft w. ~In the 72160 First low 800 blodt et 1 :30 p,m. Tuem.y. CO<ON def Mar 12:JO a.m ..................... 0.7 • Joenft llreft A home bwgllwy was~ In the 72160
Costa Mesa Ftnt~ 600 blodt • 2:20 p.m. 'TUelday.
72160 7:JI a.m. ........................ •.2 • loullt Cwt Drive¢ A COt!W1...oal bUrg1wy w.
Newport 8e«h Second low report9d In 1he 900 blodt It 9'.22 p.m. ~.
72160 12:45 p.m. ................... 2.7 • V-... o..tc An Mo theft was reponed ln1he
Newport Co.st s.a..thlgh 800 blodt It 1 :30 p..m. ~.
72160 6:21 p.m ................... p 4.7 NEWPORT 1EACH
__.PCMICAST • C'.-1 ... DZ)U•s•w ..._._A_., phone SUMMY A slow buitdtng ~ Wll !"PO"*I *"" from • Wlhldl • , , : 10 a.m. 'ftmdly.
west swell wffl brtnO Flrlt low • 11115 ..... w Ai.,. compuw_.. NipCWt-
1 :17 a.m ...................... 0.5 chest· to~ td itolln from the pnton oMc. M ltit NI\"'°" C.-~. Look for W9lleS F1nthlgh ter Unlt9d ~Church« G p.m. ~ by the 8ftemoolt/ 7:S7 a.m. ................... ~ .. •.s •F ............. , ... .._..,..... .....
~. Semndlow ~ thot. Qt wftt°I • ..... gun,..,,. .....
, :ll p.m ........ __ .. p .... 2.1 lnO .. c.t'l leg . ~ -• ... C-..1.., asp loM Plftlwerth .,..,. w.dge J.Sw Secondhlgh 7:f11 p.m_._ .. _, __ ,.o ..... from. bolt ..... .,, the a.llld. 12'.JS pa .... uport 2·JW 'Mldri 11 dtl)• lleddn ,,,. •PI ...... &di IRllllll••U.W--RhwJltty . J.5w
CdM 2-Jw .. .... ........ .,.... ............... .........................
. . '
Daily Pilot Soturdoy, Odcber-7, 2000 A3
Time to say farewell to two ·important people in my life
I f ever you needed proof
that timing is everything,
the next week would be
it. Next week I will say good-
bye to two people who have
been instrumental in Uie
development of my life dur-
ing the past eight years.
I first met Bill Lobdell in
August 1998, when I won a
contest for this job. OK, it
may not be the most elegant
way to start writing for a
newspaper, but from day one
Bill treated me as a colleague
and made it clear that this
was serious business. Our
first meeting was brief but to
the point. "There are two
rules,• Bill said. "No anony-
mous sources, and no more
writing for the Register.• That
I had to stop my contributions
to the Orange County Regis-
ter was a given, but the
anonymous source rule had
me saatcbing my head. It
was only a few days later
thatlstartedto\mderstand
why Bill told me that.
I was killing time in the
checkout line at a supermar-
Steve Smith
WHAT'S UP?
ket, scanning the pages of a
tabloid newspaper that was
reporting on either an inva-
sion of penguins from outer
space or the man with two
beads who was suing a bar-
ber for charging him for two
haircuts -I can't remember
which. But I do recall reading
many versions of the phrase
"sources tell us that .. : It
seems the sources in that
trash either did not want to
be or could not be identified,
and it made terrible reading.
Along the way, Bill and I
have disagreed about a few
important local issues, but
the discussions were always
civil. We stuck to the facts
and left out the emotion that
drives so many people to
take one side or the other.
Bill is moving on to the
Orange County edition of
The Los Angeles nmes to
write and edit the religion
section. Bill's tenure at the
Pilot has left us all better
informed. And over the past
two yea.rs, Bill's couµ.sel has
made me a better writer (if it
doesn't show, I take respon-
sibility for not taking his
good advice).
Thanks, Bill, and best
wishes at your new job.
Next week is also the
week I say • adios• -not
goodbye -to Dr. Laura Sch-
lessinger. For the past six
months, I have been editing
Dr. Laura's national maga-
zine, the Perspective. With
the help of h er intelligent
and dedicated staff, we
managed to post dramatic
increases in circulation,
renewals and two-year sub-
scriptions. One issue was so
popular, it sold out -a first,
t believe, in the magazine's
five-year history.
Dr. Laura is on a very
high pedestal in our home. It
was her inspiration that
drove Cay and me to take
Bean out of full-time day
care and limit Roy's to about
a month. That was eight
years ago. Four years ago,
when 1 started to make the
switch to full-time writer, she
supported my efforts by
posting my book on her Web
site.
But there is a side to Dr.
· Laura that you do not know.
one that may never make it
in the newspapers or onto
• 20120: As a Daily Pilot
reader. however, I'm going to
share this secret with you: Dr.
Laura is gracious, kind and
very funny. Here's another
juicy tidbit: She is driven to
helping children. That pas-
sion is the motivation behind
nearly everything she does,
and she walks the walk. 1
LUNDBERG
Orgmdc Rice Cabs
•BrownRb
•Nos.I
know because I have seen
her in action.
These are not the best of
times for Dr. Laura. When
you're on top, you become
the easiest target to shoot at,
and it does not matter that
you have spent your entire
career successfully motivat-
ing people to reach beyond
their fears and do something
with this precious gift of life
they have been given.
Because of her, there are
untold children spending
much more time with their
parents and plenty of Steve
Smiths who did a 180-degree
turn on their lives and have
so much to show for il
Instead, writers, broadcasters
and tiny, narrow-minded
social groups prefer to use
her temporary setbacks for
their own gain, whether it's
for readers, ratings or publici-
ty. They are cheap shots all,
lacking in any depth or imag-
ination.
It works both ways. The
same person many of them
wrote and spoke about not so
long ago, the one who was
giving America heck and
gave them something to talk
about -and praise -is the
same person they now use
for target practice. All of
these people with the very
short memories should be
ashamed of themselves.
My relationship as her edi-
tor is over; I have lo leave
because I am working far too
many hours and my family
life is suffering. The~ is irony
in that. Yes, I'm leaving, but
Dr. Laura knows that if she
needs me, I will be there for
her.
When I gave her the news,
she looked at me sternly and
said, "I'm glad you're quit-
ting: Then she smiled and
said, "Because you're quit-
ting for the nght reason.•
That's the real Dr. Laura
story.
• STEVE SMtnt tS a Costa Mesa
resident and freelance writer.
Readen can leave a message f0<
him oo the Daily Pilot hotJine at
(949) 642-6086.
:~S•49
Rice Cale REG. '2.&9 .& 8.5 crz.
8"':'..,,»;" S-.75
REG. '3.25 ......-~ 32 crz.
• Balemic • Halim
• Green<>We. ~I9 • SunDried
REG. '3.• 21 crz.
Yllll SAVI SU Oh
DAILY NUTRl'l10N PAK
A Speclel CGmNnatlon of Vitamins
.... a.lated Mintrals
30 Padcets, f!ada conllllns a fuO dap
..,,.. of vitamins & mlnenlls
.'1DI9 ,!'~ ....... SUOG. '21.25 _,
ORGANICALLY GROWN PRODUCE
BAR 8 ARA'S •
• Shndded Oats
• Puftins
HlghFibet' s399 ](}()% Natuml
REG. '6.19 32 crz.
Casbah
CousCous
•Nun.ICwaaal :~r
. RBI. ~.19 7crz.
'brt"''~.,,,,.t H.-.~ 1
,., ) "'{{ « 7 J
Elnetwlcl Foreat -... -<>mmlO-,__
&10 to 7:30 pm
DBCENFAA'l'IVE
DISC DISEASB
BIJ JudiJh 7bden>, N.C
FREE Seminar
C>t
Fat Free Yogurt
• ,,... • Aprimt ~
• 8bheny. ~ tor == ..... • Ke)ime REG .• .& I crz.
Glaceau
Vitamin Water
omk 11-w.+zu\v 2rnes.•-.
-BBHN>ASPlllN"
/JI; NatQ "'"' Iii &NIMJ~
lAGUNA \WODS-S • 4PM
~ MESA-6:30,.. 7:311M
. . . . .
1iny bubbles in harbor a mini-inyst.ery
•City officials and water activists say the
phenomenon, whi~ resembles carbonation,
is probably methane rising from bottom.
Ale• Cool.men
0AllY PILoT
NEWPORT HARBOR -
They're coming up just off
the stem of the Bonhomme
Richard, rising to the surface
of the water like the efferves-
cence in a glass of Coca-
Cola: small bubbles of gas
emerging from the harbor
bottom.
The boat, moored
between the southern end of
Udo Isle and· the northern
edge of Bay Isle, is virtually
surrounded by spots where
gas appears to be bubbling
up. In a roughly circular area
about 100 feet across, the
bottom is sending up stream
after stream of gas.
llichard Jones, known to
IN BRIEF
Costa Mesa
woman convicted
of mail fraud
COSTA MESA -A 34-
year-old Costa Mesa woman
~ Midiad &AllAngds
Paa&c y..., • Mari-tw
Co.ona dd MM • 644-0463
aUILDING OUR Mml: UNINCaaJST
AND SERVING OUR <X1MMUNIT'l
The ~·d Pcm D. Haynes, Rector
SUNDAY fHEPUl.E 8 am -Hoy Eucha.rilt
9 am • Adult Bible Study
10 am -Cbonl EudwVt
COMMlNTY~ CONGREGATIONAL
UNrTED~Of
To ........ to c:..: To"" .... DO.
Bruce Van BWr, Minilt9f
Chip Fisher, hltor
Worship~
8:00 • 10:00 trn
9':00lm Adult Chwdl School
1 OlOOlm -Surldey School
·0111d c.. f'rcMded
611 Hellotrope A\19., Cofone del M«
6'4-7G>
many residents as a wooden
canoe craftsman, said he
started noticing the gas nows
about four weeks ago. He
doesn't know what made
them start, but he knows that
they give off a satisfying pop
when ignited with a dgarette
lighter.
His favorite theory about
their origin, which he seems
to be advandng in jest, is
that a volcano is starting to
poke up through Newport
Harbor.
•we could have our own
little Mount Saint Helens,•
he said, looking rather
pleased about the idea.
Newport Beach Deputy
City Manager Dave Kitt said
the explanation for the phe-
nomenon is most likely
was one of three people con-
victed of 24 counts of mall and
wire fraud and eight counts of
money-laundering Thursday,
officials said.
Department of Justice offi-
cials said Doreen Woods,
along with Robert Flarlda, 32,
of Anaheim Hills, and Jason
Garcia, 26, of Corona, orches-
ST. MARK ~BYTERIAN
CHURCH
Worship 9:30
..................
llolrCI hR ........ i._
"Punuing The Prize: · ~
Practitjng Faith In A
Careless Culture"
(PhiUppi1nt 3:12-16) STANJ1RF.W"S ~;:-""~
"All of Newport
Harbor and most of
Newport Beach ls on a
big, gas-producing
methane bed. We
have frequent calls ·
from especially the
West Newport area
about a [gas] smell
coming out. "
Richard Jones
somewhat less dramatic.
•All of Newport Harbor
and most of Newport Beach
is Qn a big, gas-producing
methane bed,• caused by
decaying organic matter, he
said. ·we have frequent calls
from especially the West
Newport area about a (gas)
trated two illegal telemarket-
ing operations that defrauded
about 2,200 victims, mostly
elderly, of $1.2 million.
All three participated in a
widespread scheme involving
a phony magazine business
from June 1995to May 100'1 in
Garden Grove and Santa Ana.
officials said They lured about
+.
Newport C.entet
United MechocUat Chu..rch
Rtv. Cathleen Coots, Putor
1601 Marguerite Ave.
a>mer of Marguaite and
San Joaquin Hills Rd
(949) '"-07~
smell coming out.•
Local water-quality
watchdog Jack Skinner
pointed out that the city bas
small fadllties for dealing
with the naturally prevalent
methane.
Near Hoag Hospital, he
noted, a pair of towers draw
methane from the surround-
ing ground and burn it off to
avoid dangerous accumula-
tion of the gas.
· "It actually comes' up from
purification of organic mater-
ial deep in the soil, and it
comes up right where the
hospital is planning to build
more units,• he said.
Kill said be didn't think
the probability of a volcano
erupting 1n Newport Harbor
-or anywhere else in this
area -was particularly high.
·we're just lucky we don't
have more basements• in
which natural gas can col-
lect, he said.
1,900 elderly victims to take a
magazine subsaiption, promis-
ing them .valuable" pri7.es.
Many received nothing,_
while some received inexpen-
sive watches or certain maga-
zine subscriptions that were
worth much less than the vic-
titns paid, officials said.
-0...,. lhwllth
&inn tif MW <Am
Child Centered Service-10:00
"Au. I SEI Is P.AU OP Ml"
Rev. Gail Miller
Trlcltlonll w a.vtce-11 :30
Rev. Bob Pulliam
NeWlbootiood Communllr c.. , ...... -..eo... ....
Su. WC>fbhop -10-12 noon
OCT. 14 "MmftmlcAL 8llLI"
Dr. Doo Sbarc:r
1•1'11111~=-.... CAU.tMlt
A .~:::~~7.!::~:
2°"6 Mar Vista Drive
Ncwpon Beach, Califumia 92660
(949)644-0200 Fu: {949)6#-1349
ltv. MoNiPof WUlilm P. Md.auPlia. P1lltof
l.J'IURCIES: ~ S p.na. (Caatot), ~ 7:00(~).1:30 (i ), 10:00 (Choir),
111'° .... (CiiMlt) .. 5:GO (
. . . • • f •
II lllEF
'
Newport police,
fire departments
ofTer open house
NEWPORT BEACH
Residents can get up close
end personal with SWAT
teams, live fires, a helicopter
and police dogs th.ls week-
end.
The city's police and fire
departments will celebrate
their 10th annual Public Safe-
ty Day on Sunday at Newport
Center Fire Station No. 3, at
the comer of Jamboree Road
and Santa Barbara Drive.
Each year, the day com-
memorates Fire Prevention
Week and brings local police
and fire departments togeth-
er, said Lt. John Blauer of the
Newport Beach Fire Depart-
ment.
Tb~ event is also an oppor-
tunity for residents to get to
know their officers and fire-
fighters.
"They can ask them ques-
tions, raise concerns,• he
said. •And as for kids, they
get to see that these people
are their friends and are the!'e
to help them.•
Public Safety Day will fea-
ture tows of the fire and
police departments, firefight-
ing, SWAT, h~licopter and K-
9 demoll$trations, and infor-
mation booths from agencies
such as the American Red
Welcome to
The Ch~h of Yahweh.
71te church on the web.
~are always ~n.
AND WC don't""",,,. plate.
Doify Pilot
Croll, Harbor Patrol. Orange
County Bum A.an. and Ani-
mal Control, among others.
The event will begin at 10
a.m. and demonstrations will
start at noon. Pree child iden-
ttfication cards will also be
available.
Information: (949) 644-
3104.
-Qeepa lhwath
Woman dies
after jump from
Hoag Hospital
NEWPORT BEACH -A
39-yea.r-old woman commit-
ted suicide by jumping from
the seventh floor of Hoag
HospUal on Friday afternoon,
police said.
Hospital authorities said
the woman was a patient.
After she jumped at about
12:45 p.m., she was treated in
the hospital's emergency care
unit but succumbed to her
injuries at 1:09 p.m .. officials
said.
Police said the woman
opened a window and
stepped onto the ledge. A
nurse tried to talk her down,
but her efforts failed, said Lt.
Andy Gonis of the Newport
Beach Police Department,
adding that the woman land-
ed in an area of the hospital
that was· not visible to the
public.
No further information was
available Friday.
-Dffpll Bharath
FIRST CHURCH OF SECOND CHURCH OF CHRJST, SCIENTIST CHRJST. SCIENTIST
3303 Via Ult> 3100 Jlac9c Vllw [),
NNpcrt 8n:h N9wpart llaetl
673-1340 or 673-6150 644-2617 or 675-4661
O\wd\ lOarn• 5pn. OUd\ lOmn
~Sdm lOam ~ScflOOl lOam
w.dlmoy ...... pm :c:.:.,-w::
... J/G.tl .. ,.,, .. --,....., .., .... .,."'
. l' ~mr·' . ~· ~,,: :... . ., ---. . --. ---..• ' .. :'-1... .. ''·, :·•I .. I .
I ,., ' \ • .. I ·• -I ~. . ---~ -. -------
.. ..
Da ily Pilot
Great .find: lip color tha t doesn 't smudge
I f you're tired of your lip~
stick bleeding or sticking
to your teeth, or U you just
don't like seeing it on cups or
glasses, you'll want to try
UpSeose, a new lip color that
lasts almost all day. LipSense
is not a lipstick; it's a lip color
that last from four to 18
hours, depending on your
body's chemistry. It comes in
19 colors, and a tube lasts
four months if you use it
every day. There is a lip liner
and a gloss that is meant t~
be used over the ct>lor that
has an SPF 15 sunscreen. In
case you make a mistake
applying LipSense, there's a
product called Oops that will
remove the color. The lip col-
ors a.re $29, the lip liner is
$20, the Oops product is $6,
and the gloss is $12. Cus-
tomers I've talked to are
hooked. They love the idea
that it looks good all of the
time. To buy LlpSense, call
Cindy Cantwell at (949) 548-
7067.
The Art Resource Group
Gallery is a local art gallery
that's exhibiting a selection
of 20t.Q century American
and European artists, includ-
ing Sandra Chia, Alexander
Mohr, Donald Karwelis and
Maria O'Malley through
Nov. 20. The Art Resource
Group Gallery is also a pro-
fessional art advisory and
appraisal service that has
recently moved to Corona
de! Mar. The owner, Miriam
Smith, has more than 25
years experience in the fine
arts. The group gives expert
guidance on fine art acquisi-
tions, sales, project design,
public art rotations, estate
matters, and appraisal ser-
vices. Clients include some
of the largest U.S. corpora-
tions, pnvate collectors,
museums and government
entities. The art gallery fea-
tures a range of artists that
include emerging artists and
masters, and the collection
includes paintings, sculp-
tures, drawings. prints and
photography. It's at 3032 E.
Coast Highway in Corona
de! Mar. The Gallery hours
Greer Wylder
BEST BUYS
are 9:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.
Monday through Friday.
Information: Miriam Smith at
(949) 640-1972.
Newport Beach will host a
public safety day Cor the
entire family from 10 a.m. to
8 p.m. Sunday at the New-
port Center Fire Station No. 3
at Santa Barbara Drive and
Jamboree Road: The open
house will include tours of
the fire and police stations.
Other activities include Live
fire and SWAT team demon-
strations. displays from We-
guards, Orange County Sher-
iff's Harbor Patrol, Red Cross,
Orange County Bum Assn.,
DARE, an animal conlTOI
agency and more. The
demonstrations will begin at
noon. Food and soft drinks
will be available for pur-
chase. and proceeds will go
toward the Orange County
Bum Assn.
Bellini, one of the top chil-
dren's boutiques for furruture,
bedding and accessories, will
have a trunk show from 11
a.m. to 2 p.m. today featuring
the latest baby and children 's
bedding from Wendy Bellissi-
mo. Bellissirno will be at the
store during the show. The
store is at 1822 Newport
Blvd. in Costa Mesa. lnfor-
mabon: (949) 631-2229.
For an early selection of
Christmas decor, stop by
Summerhill Floral & Gifts. It
has a new holiday store
behind Plum's Patio on East
17th Street in Costa Mesa.
Lnformation: (949) 646-6745.
Saatchl Jewelry is having a grand opening special at {ts
Newport Beach location, at
607 E. Balboa Blvd. The spe·
cia.ls include up to 80% sav-
ings on jewelry. Other spe-
cials include watches up to
50% off, pearl stringing at
$19.99, diamond setting at $5
each, watch batteries at
$2.99, watch bands as low as
$4.99, and soldering gold and
repair at $5. Saatchi Jewelry
offers free apprai$a.l, jewelry
cleaning and polishing. It
also otters cµst.om-designed
jewelry and watch repairs,
wedding bands and bridal
sets. lnformation: (949) 673-
5518.
America's llre Co. is hav-
ing a grand opening celebra-
tion with specials on tires. lt
carries top name brands,
including Pirelli, Michelin,
Yokohama, BF Goodrich,
Goodyear, Arizonian and
General Tue. It's also offering
a Firestone voluntary safety
recall. The store can replace
Firestone factory recall tires
and help you with your reim-
bursement (up to $140 per
tire.) Specials include a free
emergency roadside kit with
the purchase of four Michelin
tires; Pirellis starting at $40;
80,000-mile warranty tires
starting at $50, while supplies
last; and Goodyear tires start-
ing at $30. The store is at
2915 Bristol St. in Costa
Mesa. Information: (714) 979-
1155.
• BEST BUYS appears on Thurs-
days and Saturdays. Send informa-
tion to Greer Wylder at 330 W. Bay
St., Costa Mesa 92627, or via fax at
(949) 646-4170.
Wt! re Doing Business
RECENT CLOSINGS
West Creek Apu .
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Rancho 39
$2,300,000
Mobile Home Park
Stanton, CA
396 Unit Ponfolio
$14.373,500
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Los Angeles, CA
Kensington Plaza
$2,685,000
M.iud Use
Sui Diego, CA
Fout Seasons Apts.
$1 ,400,000
Multifamily
Costa Mesa, CA
Office Building
$4,935,000
Ground Lease
SanDi~CA
Get Rapid Response to Your
Multifamily and Commercial
Financing Needs.
..... ., r: .-:·
Rick Ca~nter
Vice Pre1ldeilt
BAm,..
Since 1937
71
WEDDING
Gwm-Creath
Sherri Jane Gunn and Jeffrey Raymond
Creath exchanged vows May 20 at the
Chapel by the Bay at the Mandalay Bay
Resort in Las Vegas.
The bride is the daughter of Cricke t
Gunn of White City, Ore., and James Gunn
of Orland, Ca.hf.
Her matron of honor was Natalie Elliotte
Garcia, and her bridesmaids were Jonelle
Dresser, Kelli Karnes and Jazzlyn Phan.
The bridegroom is the son of James and
~ylene Creath of Newport Beach .
His best man was his brother Steven
ENGAGEMENTS
McFarland-Blumenthal
William and Romy McFarland of Newport
Beach have announced the engagement of
their daughter Michele McFarland to Darren
Scott Blumenthal.
The bride-to-be is a graduate of Corona
del Mar High School and UC San Diego.
The groom-to-be IS the son of Mel and
Paulette Blumenthal of Los Angeles. He
graduated from Crossroads High School and
the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor. He
Saturday, October 7, 2000 AS
Creath, and his ushers were David Smith,
Kerrison Stoffa! and Bany Walker.
The reception was held at the Mand alay
Bay Hotel.
earned his master's degree in fine arts at A N 25 ddm 1 ed th F USC's School of Cinema and .,..,elevis· ion. ov. we 9 is P ann at e our '' Seasons Hotel in Mdw.
Dodd-La nce
Barbara Hannd of Newport Beach has
announced the engagement of her daugh-
ter Shannon Dodd of Huntington Beach to
Darren Lance of Long Beach.
The bride-to-be is a sales assistant for
Morgan Stanley Dean Witter.
The groom-to-be is the son of .Jerry and
Bunny Lance. He is a financial advisor for
Morgan Stanley Dean Witter. The couple
met at work.
A late summer wedding is planned for
next year.
THAT'S YOUR FINAL ANSWER,
it'c tilf<I/ [o""··· Ml CASA
MEXICAN RESTAURANT
OUR MEALS ARE A TRIP TO MEXICO
ALSO ON OUR 1'\£NU:
"FISH TACOS'
TORTILLA SOUP
CHILI Silt
CHIU CH tut O~lETTl
TAKE DINING
TO THE
NEXT LEVEL!
196 E. 17TH ST. COSTA MESA · 949-645 -7626
Same Place ••. New Face ... Irvine Ranch Market
Quality Fresh Food!
Irvine Ranch Market has see n some changes over the years But. you can be assured
the changes taking place now will keep you coming back for more ...
Come In And Visit our Deli Department, and taste some of our great new
Prepared food entrees and hot foods to go. On Special This Week ...
ROTISSERIE CHICKENt;:t--
$ . 9 Whole Chicken ·' -S9 Rosemar Garlic or Traditional
............
Center Cut Center Cut
Pork Chops Porlc Roat
. . . .
AG Saturday, Ociober 1. 2000
Annual Okasai~i, youth exchange an
lmlANNUAL
OKASAXI EXCHANGE:
Pour junior high school stu-
dents from O)tosaki, Japan,
accompanied by two adult
advisors, have participated
in a whirlwind week as part
of the 18th annual Youth
Exchange between Newport
Beach and Oka.said, spon-
sored by the Rotary Clubs of
Newport-Balboa and Okasa-
ki South and the respective
Sister City Assns.
The four Newport stu-
dents who went to Okasaki
ln July hosted the Okasaki
students this week, the
same students who hosted
them during their visit.
Bernadette Carroll of
Ensign Middle School host-
ed Yurt Narus, while Coro-
na del Mar students Katrina
lledelsbelmer, Evan H.lrsch
and Marcus Hoffman hosted
hosted Ald Hayakawa .
Hiryoyasu Homma and
Atsuro Yamada, respective-
ly. Newport delegation advi-
sors Gordon and Annie
Marte McNelll hosted
Okasaki advisors Yoshtkazu
Uchida and Hiroko Fu)lta.
Gordon is a seventh-grade
math and history teacher
and basketball and baseball
coach at Corona de! Mar
High School. and his wife is
a medical student at UC
Irvine.
The week has included
visits to Ensign Middle
School and Corona del Mar
and Newport Harbor high
Jim 'de Boom
COMMUNITY & auas
schools, and a day at Knott's
Berry Fann.
On Thursday, after a tour
of the main Newport Beach
Public Llbrary, the Ok.asaki
students were met by Rotar-
ians Steve Vickers, Wendell
Fish, Newport-Balboa Club
President Wendell Sawyer,
International Service Direc-
tor Thyme Hampton, Coro-
na del Mar teacher Gordon
McNeW and translator Max
Yamada for a day full of
activities.
Driving a 15-passenger
van on loan from Theodore
Robins Ford, they headc::d
for a meeting with Newport
Beach Mayor .John Noyes
and a tour of the Balboa
Peninsula. Officers Pat Dou-
glass, Pat Fergus and T.
Smith provided a tour of the
Sheriff's Harbor Department,
Bo Glover provided a tour
of the Environmental Nature
Center and Ranger Dave
supervised the kayaking at
we're Bursting With Quality
Furniture at Great Savings!
• Motk/ Hom~ Furniturr •Antiques •Art • Arcasories
•Arra Rugs Cr Morr! Custom &finishing 6 Upholstny
(949) 646-1822
670 W. 17th St., 102 •Costa Mesa ..._ ______________ _
Ho11n: Mtm.-Fri. 11 am -4pm
The Original
MIKE'I
CAllPETI
OVER 25 YEARS IN COSTA MESA
•Now Owned & Operated by Mesa Upholstery•
ALL CARPET & FLOORING
CURRENTLY MARKED DOWN
30°/ooff
~s
the Boy Scout Sea Base.
The Okasaki students
e11Joyed a traditional Ameri·
can lunch of hamburgers,
French fries and malts on
the top deck of Ruby's at the
Balboa Pier. Thanks to the
thoughtfulness of Jenntfer
Dorr, Ruby's marketing
director, and Claire McMa-
hon, Ruby's marketing coor-
dinator, each Okasaki stu-
dent received a souvenir
Ruby's T-shirt.
The day concluded with a
good, old-fashioned Ameri-
can barbecue and pumpkin
carving at "Moe Hamm
Park" on Private Road in
Newport Beach. It was
attended by the students,
their host families, members
of the Newport-Balboa
Rotary Club and the New-
port Beach Sister City Assn.,
headed by President Karen
Everts. Hamill, wife
Dorothy, da~ter Teddi
Gold and theii Private Road
neighbors have hosted the
event for a number of years.
Rotarians Sawyer, Hamp-
ton, Vickers, Fish were
assisted by Dick Dickson ,
Bob Silver, Roger McGone-
gal, Ed Rennie, Moe
Hamill, Rick Wllllams, Bob
Thayer, Elmer Blggentaff,
Danny Frankel, Dean Reav-
le, Bob Wood, Bob Krone,
Hunter Cook, their spouses
and even their children in
setting up the site, prepar-
ing food and cleaning up
after the barbecue.
NEWPORT STONE &
DESIGN CENTRE
COMPLETE D ESIGNER
SHOWROOM
•.. tuht!N <fpo.nce tir moue
t#'rirdoDle.
·-•C..-·~ ..........
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-.. c.,.. .,_ . .......,. . ...._ ______ . __
.~a f/Wll,fMll ~ '/("
t;,,~ .'II-'°. 'fl:.il "'-~~!Aw-I !/Jog-.
'II~ «U'lf&a.t~~lr ~
EWPORT SToNE 8c DESJGN
1913 H.wlOa BLVD. • COSTA MEsA
949.645.7799 • 71U 37.7799
I I I ' •
I 11 I I ' '
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642-8400
DESIGN CENTER
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fURNITURE
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SIJp Covers
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• Draperies. Shades,
& Bedspreads
The Ok.uald students
will return home Monday
with many memories of a
great week in Newport
Beach, new friends and new
experiences.
HANDS ON SERVICE
OPPORnJNITIES: The
Wednesday luncheon meet·
ing of the N ewport Mesa
hvine Interfaith Council will
focus on hands-on service
opportUnitiesforcongrega-
tions, service groups and
individuals in the three-city
area, said Greg Kelley,
council president.
The noon luncheon meet-
ing, set for the Orange
Coast Unitarian Universalist
Church, will feature 10 to 12
local organizations that need
volunteers to build a house.
mentor a student, deliver
food to the needy or help a
senior citizen. "The groups
won't be asking for money,
just sharing conununity ser-
vice opportunities,• Kelley
spid. The public is invited to
attend. Lunch is available at
$7.50 a person, and reserva-
tions must be made by 5
p.m. Monday by calling the
Interfaith Council office at
(949) 660-8665.
SERVICE C LUB WEB
SITES: Several of the local
service clubs now have their
own Web sites that provide
information on membership,
meeting location and time,
future programs, listing of
officers and directors and
community service activities.
Check out the new site
. .
Dolly Pilot
.... ~~for all involved
for the Rotary Club of New-
port Balboa, designed by
member Steve Vlc:ken, a t
http://www.webworldlnc.com/
newportbalboal and the site
designed by member Tom
Anderson for the Newport·
Irvine Rotary Club at
http://www.nlrotary.org.
cnchost.coml .
WELCOME TO 11IB
WORLD OP SERVICE
CLUBS ... Jen Kelder,
Nancy Kimes and Tom Maz-
zone joined the Newport
Harbor-Costa Mesa Llons
Club.
WORTH REPEATING:
From the Newport Beach-
Corona del Mar Kiwanis
Club's Scuttlebutt ...
•There is a great deal of dif·
ference between knowing
and understanding.·
SERVICE CLUB MEET·
INGS nus WEEK: Want to
get more involved in your
community, make new
friends, network·or give
something back to your
community? ny a service
club. You are invited to
attend a club meeting this
week. Many clubs will buy
your first guest meal for you.
TUESDAY
7:15 a.m.: The Newport
Beach Sunrise Rotary Club
will meet at the Balboa Bay
Club to hear Wayne Eggle-
ston, director of the Newport
Harbor Nautical Museum.
6:30 p.m.: The Costa
Mesa-Newport Harbor Llons
Club will meet at Skosh
Monahan's for an • Adven-
ture in Dining."
WEDNESDAY
7:15 a.m.: The South
Coast Metro Rotary.Club
will meet at the Center
Club; Newport Harbor
Kiwanis Club will meet at
the University Athletic Club.
Noon: Orange Coast
Exchange Club will meet at
the Bahia Corinthian Yacht
Club for a program by
Leopold Van.steenktste on
"Flax in FlMders."
6 p.m.: The Newport-Bal-
boa Rotary Club will meet at
the Bahia Corinthian Yacht
Club for a debate on New-
port Beach ballot Measures
S (Greenlight) and T (l)'affic
Phasing Ordinance).
THURSDAY
7:15 a.m.: The Costa
Mesa Orange Coast Break-
fast Lions Club will meet at
Mimi's Cafe for a program
on Proposition 35 by Vlc
Oplncar or Boyle Engineer-
ing.
Noon: Kiwanis Club of
Costa Mesa will meet at the
Holiday Inn. Newport
Beach-Corona del Mar
Kiwanis Club will meet at
the Bahia Corinthian Yacht
Club; The Exchange Club of
Newport Harbor will meet
at the Riverboat for a busi-
ness meeting; and the New-
port Irvine Rotary Club will
meet at the Irvine Marriott
Hotel.
• c~fTY • a....s 1s pub-
lished ~ry Saturday in the Daily
Pilot. Send your service d ub's
meeting information by fax to
(949) 660-8667. e-mail to
jdeboomOaol.com 0< by mail to
2082 S.E. Bristol. Suite 201, New-
port Beach, CA 92660-1740.
NOW IN SEASON
LIVE ;
LOBSTER
$) J. 991b
or Biq 3 LHn.n
for 110.99•
. . ..
Doily Pilot
Kids' rooms are a place for fantasy and the fantastic
I think kids' rooms are
some of the most fun
rooms to decorcl~. With
a kid's room, you can go
over the. top without feeling
garlsh or grotesque. The
magic is in the deslgn
deta11.s, and a child's room
has plenty of room to let the
imagination grow.
I'm not the only one that
thinks kids are where the
action is. Children's furni-
ture and accessory sales
have taken on adult propor-
tions. Look at the numbers:
Products for juvenile furni-
ture have ballooned from
$850 million in 1980 to more
than $4.5 billion by 1999.
And national furniture
stores have jumped on the
bandwagon of children's
specialties. Pottery Barn has
a catalog devoted exclusive-
ly to juvenile design. Expo-
sures Home has devoted a
large share of its catalog
space to target the lunch-
box crowd.
Susie Hilliger, wife of
Tommy, recently took on a
store for children as her new
project. Her upscale chil-
dren's furnishings are in
demand: "Tommy' bassinets
may be on the way.
Children's rooms are the
perfect place to choose a
theme and then play it to
the hilt. Do you want nauti-
cal? Go all the way: white
headboard, navy walls, nau-
tical maps, signal flags,
wooden ships, vintage life
Koren Yf eght
NO PlAQ UKE HOME
preservers and plenty of
red, white and blue.
Are you living with a
flower girl? Give her a gar-
den theme: a white picket
headboard, a potting bench
"desk,' butterflies floating
overhead and plenty of
flowers for her to ·blossom·
with. I
ls your son living the
Endless Summer? Anything
Hawaiian is hot, hot, hot
right now. Get some Hawai-
ian-print bedding, install a
ceiling fan with grass-cloth
blades, hang an old surf-
board on a wall, and get a
surfboard rug or some sea
grass for the floor. Let him
doze in a "green room' of
his own.
Sports are always a pop-
ular theme. Crazy for the
Angels? Get some pennants,
posters, and other memora-
bilia to indulge the dream.
(Maybe Joe Bell could give
us some pointers.)
SPECIAL EVENT
Call for Fine Art & Seasonal
Handcraftmanship
Event Information
Location: ll1angle Square Entenalnment Center In Costa Mesa
• Home or Nlketown, Virgin Megastore, the Gap. Edwards
Theater, Sames & Noble. The North Face, Johnny Rockets,
The Yard House ...
Datu; December 1st, 2nd, 3rd 2000
Hours: Frk1ay. 3pm-9pm: Sal\Uday, 1oam-9pm;
Sunday. loam-7pm
Entry Ftt: $100.00 a day or $275.00 all three days.
Fr1day Is opttonal)
Application Dtadllnt: Ndvcmbcr 1st
for Questions/Application Please CaU: Artisan (949) 764·94 74
Also taking place during the show ...
• Auctlonlfundralscr • raising money to provide art Instruction
to Elementary classrooms In our community which do not
receive funding ror such classes
• Local Gallery Survey or new up and coming artists (all media)
•Winter Wonderland (or Chlldttnl Snow, crafts, animals.
games, gUt wrap ...
• Christmas Caroling
• Seasonal Plays presented by local schools
• Live Entertainment Every Day
with your next
dinner.
Mouth-~ en~ I rducd
dining 1awphm md s-tio
aring whh • delpd'ul view ol
Nf.wpoct e.y maJre for a rcfralaiog blalt in ,_r ~
0pm from 7:00 AM, 7 ~I wem.'
(941)721·11.C
DINNU TBUUDAY -SUllDAY r··1iav··-·----·-i .
I I_,_
t..=--··········· .. ···-.-1••••.u••~
1 didn't have a •theme•
when 1 was a kid, but I do
remember my sixth birthday
very vividly. f bad seen a
lavender bedspread 1n the
Sears catalog, and I thought
I might expire if I didn't
have the regal beauty for
my own. The bed skirt had
three layers of purple
flounces, each layer a deep-
er hue. It even had match·
ing curtains. I thought a
lavender bedroom was as
close to heaven as l could
get.
I was really on a purple
roll when l was 5, soon-lo-
be 6. I even asked for a
lavender birthday cake. We
created a fabulous version
with Welch's grape juice.
Life doesn't get much better
than that when you're in
first grade.
My dream <lid come true,
and on my sixth birthday
my Mom and l put my new
bedspread and bed skirt on
my bed. I didn't get the cur-
tains to match, but the bed
was, literally, a dream come
true.
l have always tried to
make my kids' rooms both
fun and functional. When-
ever we moved lnto a
house, the kids' bedrooms
were always the first priori-
ty.
We have been in our cur-
rent home almost 12 years
-long enough for the kids'
rooms to have seen at least
two evolutions. Nurseries
tum into kids' rooms. Kids'
rooms tum into teens'
rooms.
I am currently morphing
my t5-year-old daughter's
room. The lavender is leav-
ing (the apple doesn't fall
far from the tree) and being
replaced with an undersea
grotto theme. The walls are
light turquoise (which I plan
on glazing to give them a
watery feel); the antique
mermaid prints are framed
with grass-cloth and bam-
boo. I found a lamp that bas
campy turquoise paillettes
that are reminiscent of bub-
bles. I found a 1940s Hawai-
ian-print tablecloth that I'm
usingforpillowshams.The
fabric has all the right colors
and a few merma.Jds dJvmg
in the midst of the islands.
To really push things
over the top. she requested
a lava lamp. She has want-
ed a lava lamp for three
years. I have stalled the pur-
chase until now. We are on
our third version of color
combinations to achieve our
desired effect (long story),
but our aqua world lS begin-
ning to take shape.
With some careful plan-
ning and a little irndgina-
tion, it's possible to create a
cozy cocoon for your chil-
dren to crawl, dream and
eventually fly.
• KAREN WIGHT is a Newport
Beach resident. Her column runs
saturda~.
Visit us in our new
designers showroom.
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New and Discontinued Items, One of a Kind
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Mon-Sat 1 O:OOam -4:30pm L--.-..---~
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TOWN
• Send AROUND TOWN items to
the Deily Pilot, 330 W. Bay St,
Casi. Mesa. CA 92627: by fax to
(949) 646-4170; or by alling (949)
574-4268. Include the time, date
and kx.atlon of the event, as well
as • c.ontact phone number. A
complete listing Is available at
http://www.chilypllotcom .
TODAY
Carl White of Apple Com-
puter Co. will demonstrate
the latest Apple technology
from 8 a.m. to 1 :30 p.m. in
the chemistry building at
Orange Coast College, 2701
Fairview Road, Costa Mesa.
Free for first-time visitors.
(949) 770-1865.
friends tn Service to
Humaruty will host its.annu-
al Breakfast on the Bay
fund-raiser from 8 to 11 a .m.
at the Newport Dunes
Resort, 1131 Back Bay Dri-
ve, Newport Beach. $10 for
adults, $5 for children 12
and younger; includes park-
ing and an all-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 chil-
dren, from 8:30 a .m. to 12:30
p.m. at the Balearic Com-
munity Center, 1975
Balearic Drive, Costa Mesa.
$15, but free for Costa Mesa
residents and chJJd-care
20%
OFF
MENTION Ao
Saturday, October 1, 2000 A7
providers, and $10 for Cali-
fornia School-Age Comor-
tium members. (949) 4&0·
2718.
A pradk&l wotlulbop for
new entrepreneurs or those
with a modest budget who
want to expand 1n a prof-
itable market will be held dt
9:30 a.m. at Oasis Commu-
nity Center, 800 Marguerite
Ave., Corona del Mar. $49.
(94'}) 644-3151.
Parents of hlgb school
seniors are invited to the ldst
in the series of free college
funding workshops at 10:30
a.m. at Orange Coast Col-
lege, 2701 Fairview Road,
Costa Mesa. Roger
Edmonds, a 30-year certified
finanoal planner, will speak
at the event. A Sl ,000 col-
lege scholarship drawing
will take place. Seating is
lirruted. Free. (714) 508-4433.
Pugtoberfest 2000, a festival
for pugs, pals and people,
will be held at 11 a.m. at
TeWinkle Park, 970 Arling-
ton Drive, Costa Mesa. ~
for adults, $5 for seniors and
children 5 to 12, and free for
chLldren younger than 5.
(949) 262-7843.
Costa Mesa Senior Center
will hold its annual fund-
raising event, An Evening in
Monte Carlo, from 7 to 11
p.m. at the center, 695 W.
19th St. The event will
mclude live entertainment,
a silent auction, prizes.
draW10gs, food and games
(949) 645-5090.
NIW ARRlvALs OF FALL MIRCHAIDIE
Shorts, T-shirts, sweatshirts, Swimwear and Trousers.
Casual & Surfer Clothes for the Entire Family
Pk111e join "'for nr
42tulA.aniHrury ~
&ginni"t w~ OitolHr 4th
.A Sp«W Showl#t ./
7lw OJ>M. ~Omi.r
bJ A#_,,_,.,..,• ti..,. .n, WM, JWnhir •
20-5096 OJf
s..1r•10•
a. .. ,. ..... ~···
..
A8 Sa!u!day, October 7, 2000
MEASURET
CONTINUED FROM 1
•1)wn's 46,000 voters here
and we want to reach them,•
said Clarence Turner, co-c:hair-
man of the Measure T cam-
paign. •we're txytng to get the
facts to them .... and you're
dealing with extremely com-
plicated issues.•
nuner said he didn't know
why the campaign had missed
Thursday's deadline to file
campaign firumce statements.
Measure T, the so-called
"frafftc Phasing initiative,
would add parts of the city's
traffic phasing ordinance to
the City Charter and nullify
Measure S, the Greenligbt ini-
tiative, should voters approve
lx>th measures.
TRASH
CONTINUED FROM 1
·we went (to Home
Depot) and did see that they
The Greenlight initiative
proposes to put bef()f1' a city-
wide vote any development
that allows an increase of more
than 100 peak·bour c.ar trips or
dwelling units or 40,000
square feet over the general
plan allowance.
•The big out-of-tQwn
developers, now led by the
Irvine Co., are desperate and
trying to buy our dty out from
under us,• said Phil Arst, a
spokesman for the Meas\U'e S
campaign. "That's why they're
outspending us 13 to 1. It
reveals their real level of fear
and desperation because our
polls show the residents' word-
of-mouth campaign is winning
handily.•
Arst added that the Mea-
sure T campaign had spent
almost four times as much
money previously spent on a
bad the notlces on the wrong
containers,• said David E.
Niederhaus, the city's gener-
al services director. He
added that other hardware
stores in the area had not
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•
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(949) 673-7705
is
. .
Newport Beach political c:am-
paign.
~ sak1 be wasn't con-
cerned about how much mon-
ey his opponents bad ~l
"We are putting the infor·
mation out there,• he sakl. "'H
(residents) vote for us, great H
not, at least we've tried to let
the public kDow what the ram-
ifications of these two mea-
sures are.•
Although Measure T sup-
porters have spent more than a
quarter of a million dollars
already, the campaign bas
raised just $204,061. Turner
said be didn't know where the
restmthemoneywouldcome
from, adding that the cam-
paign would keep raising
money until the election.
The Measure S campaign
still has $23,106 in its coffers.
made the same mistake and
had marked the right cans.
The cans sold by Home
Depot have movable han-
dles. The city's new regula-
tions, which were put in
place to prevent injuries to
trash collectors, require
fixed handles.
A company official said
the Harbor Boulevard store
in Costa Mesa had only sold
500 trash cans over the last
WHY PAY
DEPT STORE
PRICES?
Visit our
AREA RUG STUDIO
Rugs & Runners on
Sale
Handmade wools, synthetic. sisals
A ALDEN'S
I Ci63 Placcnria Sc., Costa Mesa
(949)646-4838
na
TOP~ 10 MIAStJlf 'r.
• c.lltDrnla -..,, Of "9lltGn
• lhe '"*" Co.
• ,....,.. ........, AIM. ol SoUdMfn C.lllfGmla
• ~I ...... LA. ....... hame .. llDP91
• ~""""" Inc. • ~ Alln. of Home lullden
• MlchM K. ~ IMnt
• Cafffomla Pedflc Homes
• Bruce E. Nott. Costa ~b•ed Investor
.• s.r.. Regis Gtoup, lrvlne-o..d
propeny rnaNlglfMftt end constrlKtlon firm
s~ooo
$J400D
$2'500
sn.ooo s10.ooo
$10,000 s 7,000 s 5,000 s 5.000
s 5,000
BIGGEST EXPENDITURES, MEASURE T:
• Campaign 1-.Ve and malllngs
• Polling and SUfYey melfch
• Pwtition clrculatlon
two months. FYI
$55,768
$45,040
$42.439
Doity Pilot
·~ .......
• AtttatlliW•llll
• ?mi~ lOMIASUa S:
.... w.w............,
• Ken~ I igh. consult.Mt
• LM1Y W lmaitment --
• SlylnOur IMlc. mired
• Allen Beek, r9tlred
• Nancy Skinner. housewit.
W,550
S1'-000
S1U64
SJ,000
$2,000
S1.290
$1.000 sn2.so
$750
BIGGEST EXPENDITURES, MEASURE S:
•• eampaign litemure and m.lllng5 $7.098
• Signs Sl, 700
• LeglJ serviceS anchcMc.e S 1,615
•Post.age s~
·we realize that Home
Depot did not sell all (1 ,500)
trash cans," said Chuck
Sifuentes, a Home Depot
spokesman. Still, the compa-
ny had decided to exchange
the cans for anyone who can
prove residency in Newport
Veterans Charities of Orange County is offering to pick up
old trash cans and deliver a new one for $12.50. The price
includes the cost of the new can. Call (714) 547-0615 to
arrange delivery.
Beach. ·
Residents can exchange
the cans at any Home Depot
store in Orange County,
creen SV.~J!J!1.!
Sifuentes said.
City Manager Homer Blu-
dau said in the meantime
the city would not e nforce
the new regulations until the
1DAY Orchid Sale
Orchids $500• $1000• $1500
/iH
Now Open 1at s.turday •ach Month
SATURDAY 9-4PM
Plumeria ~000
-&CASH
20382 Birch Street • Newport Beach
issue is resolved. Oct. 16 has
been set as a new starting
date for the enforcement of
the regulation.
When the new regulation
becomes effective, trash
must be placed in container~
that:
• do not exceed 35 gallons
in capacity; • are not made
out of metal;
• do not have an attached
lid;
• do not exceed 50
pounds when filled to capac·
ity;
• do not have movable
handles.
The city will not collect
trash until it is placed 10
either approved cans or
plastic bags.
Put a few words to
work for you. Call the
Daily Pilot
CLASSIREDS 642-5678
l\1,l\ll;' 1;1:0 :1 11>
\11111 1~.tl·
'"" \,,1i1.i1.i.
•• tt Insurance Ailcncy
AlTJO •HOMEOWNERS;~
40 Yt-ars Jn Busintss
~~~ ........... _ .. _ .. ./ > .. 'J
949-631-77 40
+6 t Old Ncwpoit aw. • Ntwpott Be.di
{NairHMSHoewMcal)
•
Daily Pilot
STRENGTH
CONTINUED FROM 1
her health and motor skills.
But she has kept up in the
gymnastics class, which is
not geared specifically
toward students with dis-
abilities.
Ames said this kind or
scene -watching her
daug hter move with grace
and pleasure through com-
plex physical tasks -was
not something she thought
about before she began to
speak with other parents.
It was only through their
encouragement that Ames
realized that her ideas
about having a disabled
child were darker than they
needed to be.
·1 got a chance to see
how my image of the devel-
opment of Down syndrome
was maybe not a reality,•
Ames said.
Not only were there pos-
sibilitieS' for Shanel to have
a happy life, Ames decided,
but many of those possibili-
ties depended on the atti-
tude that Ames took toward
pushing her daughter to
grow and learn.
The sorrow often felt by
FYI
Here are some places
that can help:
• Parent Connection,
(888) 372-2229
• Family Support
Network, (714) 543-7600
• Comfort Connection,
(714) 748-7491
• TASK (Team of
Advocat es for Special
Kids), (714) 533-8275
• Regional Center Family
Support Services,
(714) 79~5299
parents of disabled children
can be crippling at a crucial
time in their child's devel-
opment, said Linda Smith,
director of Family Support
Network, a Santa Ana-
based organization that aids
Orange County families.
"These are parents who
thought they were going to
have a beautiful, gorgeous
baby, and something hap-
pened," Smith said.
"They're grieving, they're
scared. their dreams have
been shattered. It's a very
rough time.•
A SOURCE OF STRENGTH
What the Family Support
Newport Dunea Reaort'a 8th Annual
'Top Dog~·.. -~
Fashion Sho ..
6eneflt for the OCSPCA and Com anion Pet Retreat
,. SATURDAY, OCTOllR 14, 2000
•••at Newport Dunes Waterfront Resort at 10::30 a.m.
•• 4'• Inter,._ pooch to wlnl
• A Year's lupplJ of FRll Dog Foocl
....... PITCO .w•••ll to the "1'4tp Do9'" ••• 4'· 1n1w,._0o9 In_, of thw cata11rt11:
Caeual Woar • Swim Woar • Lingerie I Pajama&
Halloween Coetume • Formal Wear • Ma&ter I Pet Loolc·Alllce
~ feo le t 7 per~ If r~i.t«ed ~ 5 p.m. Oct. ~. fll per dog lit tM docw.
FRE E
!.o watch
the ehowl
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• 9593 Wihtft etvd. (It O.yton~ a.v.tv.. 1.aoo.311.om
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tDO \fanU• Blvd. (II laurel~ M .). 5ado City .,. 752.oTI
. . .
Network and other organi-
zations like it try to empha-
size is that parents of spe-
cial-needs children can
learn from each other. draw
strength from each other
and help their kids to
develop as much as possi-
ble.
•A lot of times, the best
support you can provide is
just to have somebody lis-
ten," Smith said.
Ames compares the
experience of raising the
special-needs child to a
poem •. "Going to Holland,"
familiar to parents in her
situation.
It's as though you had
planned for months and
months to travel to Italy,
she said. You read book
after book, you learn a little
bit about the language. you
buy all the nght clothes for
the journey.
Then the plane lands,
and the captain says "Wel-
come to Holland."
·At that point," Ames
said. "You have no other
choice but to get used to.
it."
But that doesn't mean
Ames and other parents
have to do it alone. Like
the woman who helped
her, Ames now serves as a
..
GREG FRY I DAILY I'll.OT
Shanel Ames gives it her all as she does a pull-up during
her gymnastics class.
counselor. She volunteers
with a group called Parent
Connection to assist other
pare nts of children with
disabilities.
And it doesn't mean that
the experience of parenting
has to be any less joyful
than it should be.
Ames couldn't help
laughing at the antics of
Shanel in her gymnastics
class, and at her daughter's
tendency to ham it up in
Barbara Lee, M.S. MFT
Couples, Individuals & Groups
1151 DovE STREET, # 105
NEWPORT BEACH, CA 92660
(949) 261-8003
Ucense MH021595
the presence of an audi·
ence.
"She's a little girl with a
long ponytail, with a zest
for life and a big soule and
an ability to get in trouble,"
Ames said, watching
Shanel stepping across the
beam. •And oh yeah, by
the way, she has Down syn-
drome."
Saturday, October 7, 2000 A9
RUN
CONTINUED FROM 1
Her favorite subject in
school is physical education.
Although the children'•
entry fees bring 111 a only a
couple hundred of the
$25,000 to $30,000 the Her-
itage Run raises annually, it'is
one of the elements that
makes it a true community
event, said Heritage Run co-
chair Connie Cherry.
"It's more to get them used
to it for when they're in
Ensign intermediate and
Newport Harbor High
School,• agreed Harbor
Council PTA president Lisa
Boler.
Cherry, who orgaruzed the
maugural Kids Klassic,
laughed about the situation
and said they'd JUSt have to
tweak the system.
The warrnup for the race
begins at 7:30 a.m. today at
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AIO SalUrday. Oc:tob« 1, 2000 Daily Pilot
Society's prejudices hit close to the Cook borne
S ociety coverage is
more than just the
reporting of events. It
is· also the reporting of
issues that define the social
. fabric of the people.
This columnist has, from
time to time, ruminated on
the state of our local society
affected by drug use, alco-
holism, spousal abuse,
divorce, political trends and
religion .. The dichotomy of
one day writing about fash-
ion and extravagant enter-
taining, and the next day
reflecting on vital social
issues may be disconcerting
to some readers. However,
it is of utmost importance to
this columnist to hand.le
social issues, as weU. as
social functions.
In truth, I am proud of
my need to speak out and
grateful for this column,
which affords me a pulpit
for my opinion, well
received or vilified. I also
believe that discussing
social issues adds credence
to the coverage of society.
All that fund-raising for
all those causes is not just
about getting dressed for
the party. There are people
in need of help. There are
wounds to heal. There is
. progress to be made toward
B.W. Cook
THE CROWD
achieving peace in our com-
mull!.ty and in our world via
dialogue and respect for dif-
ferences. Enough explana-
tion.
Earlier this week, I
picked up my youngest
daughter at a friend's home.
She had gone with her
friend, a warm and intelli-
gent young woman from an
exemplary family of high
moral standard, to a church
function in the neighbor-
hood.
My child got in the car
and was pensive. This in
itself meant trouble.
•\Vhathappened?" I
questioned.
#I felt so awful,• she
said. •1 wanted to speak
out, but I just kept quiet.•
She retreated back to her
pensive state.
•speak out about what?•
I pressed.
•tt was just honible.
They kept talking about
Jesus, and that everyone
who is not Christian and
does not believe in Jesus is
going to hell. lt was beyond
just a little mention. They
kept pressing the point and
praying and going on and
on: I couldn't wait to get out
of there,• she said. •1 want-
ed to tell them that their
God loves all of bis chil-
dren, Christian or not, but I
just kept quiet.•
My child was actually
very composed, expressing
her feelings on the experi-
ence. I lost my temper.
This has happened to this
child before, when she was
very young and went to
Sunday school with another
friend, also a great kid from
a nice family. The same
thing happened in the first-
grade classroom.
Only in the first grade, it
was traumatic, and my child
did not understand. She
was crying. Today, at 14,
she has a grasp of the world
that is adult and civilized .
#How closed-minded,
how very bigoted they are,•
she added.
Indeed.
All that fund-raising for all those causes ls not
just about getting dressed for the party. There
are people in need of help. There are wounds
to heal. There is progress to be made toward
achieving peace in our community and in our
world via dialogue and respect for differences.
Seriously, let us analyze
the real hate in society. It is
not exclusive to the Chris-
tians, the Jews, Muslims or
anyone for that matter. It is
exclusive to those that
exclude.
And, frankly, I am always
offended by any religion
that claims exclusivity with
God. There is a popular
bumper sticker that reads:
·God is too big to fit into
any one religion.• And any
religion that is so narrow-
minded and small as to
insist that God only loves
those people following that.
faith is sending a message
of hate.
There are those who will
disagree and cry foul. They
will claim that it is their
d uty to God to spread his
word, to convert the nonbe-
liever to his way. The only
thing this course of action
has managed to convert
over thousands of years is
live people into dead peo-
ple.
And it continues
unchanged today. In the
national arena, we witness
Israelis and Palestinians
killing each another over an
interpreted affront by a
staunch conservative Jew
who stirred up Palestinian
hosWity over Jewish control
of their former territory.
In Costa Mesa, on the
local front, a church group
is pushing the evangelical
envelope to maka its follow-
ers feel empowered by their
conviction, at the expense
of human understanding
and love of thy neighbor.
Yet, it has sadly always
been so. Even in times of
harmony and peace and in
nations as glorious as this
United States built on free-
dom of religion, a veil of
mistrust and hatred exists
between Christian, Jew,
Muslim and other religions
because we just do not
share the same path to God.
The funny thing is, all of
these religions share the
same Father. Like in our
own mortal families, this
just does not seem to matter
enough, as the children
fight among themselves for
power and control.
The message of Jesus
was one of reform at a time
when the world was con-
sumed by hate, violence
and greed. It was a nol'Il)4.1
occurrence on a daily basis
for the Romans to crucify
any number of people for
any number of reasons. The
streets were lined with the
dead and dying.
And in the Jewish world
of Jesus' time, there was a
great divide between the
haves and the have-nots
trying to survive under
Roman authority. There was
corruption and dupllcity ·
within the ranks of his own
people.
He wanted to heal the
wounds, to make the
wrongdoers and hatemon-
gers realize the enormity of
God's message to mankind
to love one another, and to
treat one another with love,
with respect and with digni-
ty. The disciples of Jesus,
the creators of Christianity,
have often lost the message.
So, then, my child, who i$
being raised in a Jewish
-home bµt comes from a lov-
ing family of mixed her-
itage, both Christian and
Jewish, must learn that bate
exists in Costa Mesa, as it
exists in Jerusalem and in
so many comers of the
human map.
It may be up to each one
of us to create the Messianic
age that is God's desire for
his children. How do we do
it? One act, one day, one per-
son, one thought at a time.
Let's begin immediately.
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· Fest of fun,
food and
philanthropy
Food, Wine and
Micr<JBrew Fest will
help feed the hungry in
more ways than one.
MeletM Shaffer
SPEOAL TO THE DAILY PILOT
Seared ahi poke stack. A
1997 pinot noir reserve.
Shrimp cocktail. Egg
rolls. Truffles. Rigatoni bolo-
genese. Chocolate porter.
Smoked salmon. California
pale ale.
Hungry?
Thousands of Orange
County residents go hungry
each month. But at the 16th
annual Food, Wine and
Micro-Brew Fest, benefiting
the Second Harvest Food
Bank of Orange County, you
can help feed others by treat-
ing yoursell to these and oth-
er delicacies.
Approximately 1,500 peo-
ple are expected to attend
the festival from 5:30 to 8:30
p .m . Thursday in the Macy's
Home Store/Crate & Barrel
wing of South Coast Plaza.
·u·s a fun way for mem-
bers of the community to
support the cause and have
fun while showing off the
best of Orange County's
restaurants, wineries and
microbreweries,• said Mar-
cella Barba, Second Harvest
Food Bank's development
director.
The event will highlight
samples from more than 50
area restaurants and special-
ty food companies, wmeries
and microbrewenes. The
event also will mclude live
salsa dancing and music.
There will be opportunity
drawings for prizes such as a
Surf Prescriptions surfboard,
a performance snowboard, a
luxury suite at Edison Field,
a wine dinner for 12 at Sun-
dried Tomato Cafe and food,
wine and microbrew pack-
ages. There are more than 75
prize donors, including Blue-
water Grill, Seafood & Oyster
Bar, Callaway Vineyard &
Winery and the Newport
Brewing Company.
Hoag Hospital, Macy's,
Orange County Printing Co.,
the Orange County Register,
South Coast Plaza and O.C.
Metro Magazine are some of
the event's sponsors, helping
to stage the event this year.
·we partner with the Food
Ban1c on a daily basis
through the Food Rescue
SEE FOOD PAGE A14
. . 11~xlWEEK ..
"Picasso at the Lapin Agile" opened
this weekend at Orange Coast Col-
lege. Theater reviewer Tom Titus will
tell us what he thinks of the play next
weekend in Datebook.
. Saturday, October 7, 2000 A 11
GREG mv I DALY PILOT
Artist Marilyn Ellis sits amid her monoprints at the Newport Central Library. Her art ls on display there ln an exhibit titled "Magical Realism. ..
Exhibit of artwork, original poems at librmy explore magical realism. •
Young Chang
0AJLY PILOT
I n Gabriel Garcia Marquez's • 100
Years of Solitude,· people in the
town of Macondo live for more
than a century. Some resurrect after
death. One dead man's ghost visits
his killer's home to look for water 10
the kitchen to use on his wounds.
This is •magical realism,• a term
that describes Latin American litera-
ture during the 1960s. The tech-
c
FYI
WHAT: Magic Realism, an
exhibit of original mono prints
by Marilyn Elli' and poems by
John C. Harrell
WHEN: An artist's reception
ruque is to make magic seem real.
Most people connect 1t with litera-
ture.
But Marilyn Ellis, a Corona del
Mar artist, has translated the style lo
'
will be held from 2 to 4 p.m.
The exhibit will run through
Nov. 1.
WHERE: Newport Beach Cen-
tral Library, 1000 Avocado Ave.
CALL: (949) 717-3801
visual mono prints, a technique 1.ll
which the artist pa.mts on a sheet of
plexiglass on an engraving press
that is then used to create one print.
The cactus and flowers in her
paintings, the birds and the frwts -
they will never leave the paper.
They will never dle and they will
nev~r change . They are magical in
this way, but in Ellis' art world, this
is reality.
Poet John Harrell's words
accompany Ellis' prints. She asked
hlDl to write a poem for each
image. He asked not to be told
anything about why and what she
SEE MAGIC PAGE A14
Lou Rawls playing at the Pacific Symphony Pops
Three-time Grammy winner to open the
2000-01 Pops season tonight at the Center.
YoungOYng
DAJL'I' PILOT
S lnger Lou Rawls and conductor
Richard Kaufman have never
worked together, but they have
one thing in common -cartoons.
Rawls was the singing voice
behind Garfield the Cat on televi-
sion. Kaufman was music supervi-
sor behind Henry Mancini's "The
Pink Panther• theme.
Toniobt it ii Pops music that
brings the two artists onto the same
stage at the Orange County Per-
forming Arts Center. The first half
of the performance will feature
Kaufman, in his 10th season as the
principal Pops conductor of the
Pacific Symphony Orchestra, lead-
ing the Pops in a tribute to the film
scores of Dimitri Tiomkin, includ-
ing •111e Pall of the Roman
Empire,• •Cyrano de Bergerac,"
•High Noon,• and ·01d Man and
the Sea.•
Rawls will perlorm his bits,
including •i.ove is a Hurtin' Thing"
and "You'll Never Find (Another
Love Uke Mine),• during the
night's second half. The two perfor-
mances will open the 2000-2001
Pacific Symphony Pops Season at
the Orange County Performing
Arts Center.
Rawls, who has sung gospel.
blues, jazz, soul, pop and coubt:ry,
is at a loss when asked which style
is his favorite.
•Music is my favorite,• he
decides.
Gospel is special, though,
because it was his first. The Baptist
church in the south side of Chicago
was his first stage -be was 7 -
and from there he moved into the
secular field.
• 1 feel that there a.re all types of
music, why not try to engege Dlf9elf
in iU" he said. •And you've got all
types ot mUliC )overs in this workl. •
"' WHA'r. Lou Rawls opens
the Pacific Symphony Pops
2000-01 season
WHERE: The Orange County
Performing Arts Center, 600
Town Center Drive, Costa
Mesa
WHEN: 8 p.m. today
COS'r. S14 to S72
CAU: (714) 755-5799
1be three-time Grammy winDs,
with one platinum and five gold
albums to has credit. along with a
gold single, inslstl upon llDgiDg
10ngs that have ·~ut.·
SEE POPS MGI AM
., ·A 12 'SaiutdoY, Odob.-7, 200o ·
Aft• HOUIS
• Send N"8 MOUll5 Items to the o.uy Pilot. no w. aay St.. eost. .
Mesa, CA 92627; fu to (949) 646-
4170 or call (949) 574--C268. A com-
plete listing m1y be found at
http://www.dal/ypllot.com.
SPECIAL
SHOPPING GALA
The opening night gala for
the 25th Anniversary The
Christmas Company Shop-
ping Extravaganz4 will be
held from 7 to 11 p.m. Oct. 14
with a special benefactor
reception from 6 to 7 p.m. at
the Orange County Fair-
grounds, 88 Fair Drive, Costa
Mesa. The black-tie event is
to thank the patrons of The
Christmas Company, which
benefits Junior League of
Orange County projects that
focus on child abuse and ado-
lescent pregnancy preven-
tion. (949) 263-0442.
SPACE AND MEMORY
IN COLOR
Orange Coast College's Pho-
to Gallery presents color pho-
tographs by Los Angeles
photographer Yoko Kanaya-
ma from 9 a.m. to 5 p .m.
through Nov. 7 in the Fine
Arts Building, 2701 Fairview
Road, Costa Mesa . Titled
"GHOST -1 ." the exhibit
features 12 color pho-
tographs by Kanayama
Bankruptcy
exploring themes of space
and memory. Pree. (714) 432-
5520.
MAAKETPLAa
The Orange County Market
Place takes place from 1 a.m.
to 4 p .m. Saturdays and Swi-
days in the Orange County
Fairgrounds' main parking
lot, 88 Pair Drive, Costa
Mesa. $2 for adults, children
younger than 12 are free.
(949) 723-6616.
MUSIC
POP NIGHTS
Lou Rawls will join the Pacif-
ic Symphony Pops for the
opening of the 2000-01 Pops
season at 8 p.m. today at the
Orange County Performing
Arts Center, 600 Town Center
Drive, Costa Mesa. Rawls will
perform hits, including "Love
is a Hurtin' Thing• and
"You'll Never Find (Another
Love Like Mine).• Tickets are
$14-$72. (714) 755-5799.
MUSICAL EXPLOSION
The Philharmonic Society of
Orange County's Eclectic
Orange Festival 2000 will
begin at 7 p.m. Friday with
"Conversation with Philip
Glass,• a festival preview talk
with one of America's most
famous living composers. The
event will be hosted by Dean
Corey, the society's executive
director. Glass' choral sym-
phony will follow. nckets are
$15-$55 and the performance .,,.
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Dolly Pilot ·
II INTERPRETIVE Gill \
2101 Fairview Road, Costa
Mesa. Darren's musical cred-
its include 12 albums, five top
10 singles and the Grammy-
nominated •Goodbye Cruel
World.• He has directed such
television programs as ·Mel-
rose Place,• •Beverly Hills
00210· and •walker, Texas
Ranger." Tickets are $21-$21.
(71.C) 432-5880.
SEASON STARTER
Orange Coast College's Sym-
phony Orchestra will open its
40th season at 7:30 p.m. Oct.
15 at OCC's Robert B. Moore
Theatre, 2701 Fairview Road,
Costa Mesa. The 60-piece
concert will spotlight works
by Brahms and Rossini. 1lck-
ets are $6-$10. (714) 432-
5880.
REMEMBERING
BENNY GOODMAN
.. Back Bay Sunset" by Salm Caglayan of the Laguna PleJn Air Palnten Assoc. ls among
the Items up for audion 6 to 9 p.m. Thursday at .. Open to Interpretation." a fundralser
to debut the n~w Upper Newport Bay Peter and Mary Muth Interpretive Center. The
event Includes food. live entertainment, a live and a silent auctton. the premiere of the
film .. Salt Marsh Seasons" and toun of the new fadllty. Benefiting Newport bay Natu-
rallsts & Friends, tickets cost $135 each. (949) 640-6747.
Clarinet virtuoso Abe Most
and his orchestra will team
up with guest soloist Gisele
MacKenzie to offer a trtbute
to Benny Goodman at 8 p.m .
Oct. 21 at Orange Coast Col-
lege, 2701 fairview Road,
Costa Mesa. nckets are $23-
$29. (714) 432-5880.
SHAKESPEARE IN MUSIC
William Clark will present
"Shakespeare in Song• at 2
p.m. Oct. 22 at Borders
Books, Music & Cafe at
South Coast Plaza, 3333 Bear
St., Costa Mesa. Clark will
put Shakespeare's poems
and sonnets to music. Free.
(714) 556-1185.
will be held at the Orange
County Performing Arts Cen-
ter, 600 Town Center Drive,
Costa Mesa. The festival will
indude dance; original the-
ater; and orchestral, cultural
and musical performances. It
will feature Ballet Pacifica at
8 p.m. Oct. 13 and 2:30 and 8
p.m. Oct. 14, the Rosetti
String Quartet at 8 p.m, Nov.
30 and Ute Lemper, a Euro-
pean cabaret queen, at 8 p.m.
Dec. 1. (949) 553-2422.
FROM MUSIC TO TV
AND BACK
Veteran singer and actor
James Darren will be fea-
tured in concert at 8 p.m. Oct.
14 at Orange Coast College's
Robert B. Moore Theatre,
SABATINO'S
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THE CLUBHOUSE CELEBRAns ITS FIRST ANNMRSARY.
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~T-..u> ROUND
1'be Pad.fie Chorale wUl open
it• 33rd l8UOD at 1 p.,m. Oct.
22 tn Segentrom Hall at the
Orange County Performing
Artl Ceiiter, 600 Town Center
ortve, Colt.a Mesa. Pedor-
mances include J.S. Bach's
•Magn1ficat• and h1s •Missa
Brevil in G minor.• Tickets
a.re $15-$49. (71•) 556-2122,
Bxt. 225.
BOSTRIOGE IN TOWN
British tenor lan Bostridge
will make h1s Southern Cali-
fornia recital debut at 8 p .m.
Oct. 26 tn Pounders Hall at
the Orange County Perfonn-
·tng Arts Center, 600 Town
Center Drive, Costa Mesa.
Tu:kets are $40. (949) 553-
2422.
AU. AMERICAN
A concert that celebrates the
music, song and dance of
countries from throughout
North, South and Central
America and the Caribbean
will be held at 8 p.m. Oct. 27
at Orange Coast College's
Robert B. Moore Theatre,
2701 Fairview Road, Costa
Mesa. The concert is funded
by OCC's Extended' Opportu-
nity Programs and Services
Department, with support
from several campus clubs.
All proceeds will go toward
funding student scholarships.
Tickets are $18-$24. (714)
432-5880.
WEBBER INTERPRETATION
The music of Andrew Lloyd
Webber will be performed by
Broadway performers Ray-
mond Saar and Diane
Ketchie at 8 p.m. Oct. 28 at
Orange Coast College's
Robert B. Moore Theatre,
2701 Fairview Road, Costa
Mesa. Musical selections will
include •Jesus Christ Super-
star,• "Memory,· and "Music
of the Night.• Tickets are
$20-$25. (714) 432-5880.
BIG BANDS DAY
A m~cal extravaganza fea-
turing two bands will be
staged at 2 p.m. Oct. 29 at
Orange Coast College's
Robert B. Moore Theatre,
2701 Pal.rview Road, Costa
Mesa. OCC's Monday Big
Barut, Tuesday Big Band and
Special guest artists will per-
form. Tickets are $5-$7. (714)
432-5880.
TO JUDY GARLAND
Song styli.ats Peter Marshall
and Lisa Donovan will pre-
sent a tribute to Judy Garland
at 8 p.m. Nov. 25 in Orange
Coast College's Robert B.
Moore Theatre, 2701
Fairview Road, C.osta Mesa.
Marshall and Donovan will
perform Garland's greatest
hits. Tickets are $20-$29.
(714) 432-5880.
POP/ROCK & FLAMENCO
Tate 5 -a funk, rock and
Motown act -performs at 9
p.m. Saturdays at Carmelo's
Ristorante, 3520 E. Coast
Highway, Corona del Mar.
Solo guitarist Ken Sanders
perfonns classical flamenco
tunes at 7:30 p.m. Tuesdays
and Sundays. The shows are
free. (949) 675-1922.
SATURDAY NIGHT R&B
Gerald Ishibashi and the
Stone Bridge Band plays rock
and R&B at 9 p.m. Saturdays
at Sutton Place Hotel's Th-
anon Lounge, 4500
MacArthur Blvd., Newport
Beach. Free ad.mission. (949)
476-2001.
STAGE
THArs ENTERTAINING
Joe Orto.n's "Entertaining Mr.
Sloane" will run through Oct.
22 at South Coast Repertory's
Second Stage. Perfonnances
are 7:45 p.m. Tuesdays
through Sundays, with mati-
nees at 2 p.m. Saturday and
Suqday. Tickets are $18-$47,
with discounts available. The
You Are Cordially lnfttecl 'lb Attend
II
II
II
II
1fo~4,
Orange County
FALL GARDENING
CLASS
L8AJlN ABOUT 11IB aAllCS C1I ft.AHl'INO fl(>a
l'ALL a WMl&a COLOa
LllAJUf llOW'IO ft.AM ... ~
TIGSTA.m•a .....
L8Aa.N HOW 10 MAD 99t'l"ACVL.Aa
COL09 W'ID--
repertory is at 655 Tuwn Cen-
ter Drive, Costa Mesa. (11')
708-5555.
OCTOBER LAUGHS
Orange Coast College's pro-
duction of com~ Steve
Marti.n's •Picasso at the Lapin
Agile• will show at 8 p.m.
Thursdays through Saturdays
and 2 p.m. Sundays until Oct
15 at OCCs 0Ja.IQ8 Lab The-
ater, 2701 Fairview Road,
Costa Mesa. $1 in advance, or
$0 for seniors, students and
children. $9 at the door. Seat-.
ing is limited. (714) .432-5880.
ART
The ins and outs of friendship
is among the them.es or •Art,·
which will start in previews at
8 p.m. Friday at South Coast
Repertory, 655 Town Center
Drive, Costa Mesa. The play
runs in previews through Oct.
19. Its regular run will open
Oct. 20 and will close Nov. 19.
Performances will be 8 p.m.
Tuesdays through Saturdays
and 7:30 p .m. Sunday, with
weekend matinees at 2:30
p.m. Tickets are $28-$49,
with preview tickets starting
at $18. A pay-what-you-will
performance will be held at
2:30 ,p.m. Oct. 21. (714) 708-
5555.
STEEL MAGNOLIAS
The 2000-01 production sea-
son at Vanguard University
will open with ·Steel Magno-
lias" on Friday and will play
again Oct. 15 and Oct. 19-22.
Performance times are 8 p.m.
Thursday through Saturday,
with 2 p.m. matinees Satur-
day and Sunday. $10, with
discounts available. The
school's Lyceum Theater is at
55 Pair Drive, Costa Mesa.
(714) 668-6145.
SHORT AND SWEET
•Ten or Less,• a series of stu-
dent-directed short plays
each running 10 minutes or
less, will be staged at 8 p.m.
Fridays through Sundays,
Oct. 20-22 and Oct. 27-29 at
OCC's Drama Lab Studio,
2701 Fairview Road, Costa
Mesa. nckets are $5 in
advance, $6 at the door. Seat-
ing is limited. (714) 432-5725.
BUU.SHOT CRUMMOND
A parody of 1930's low-bud-
get British detective movies,
"Bullshot Crummond • will be
staged by Orange Coast Col-
lege's Repertory Theatre
Company from Nov. 10-12
and Nov. 18-19. Curtain call
is 8 p.m. Friday and Saturday
and 7 p.m. Sunday, with a 2
p.m. matinee. Tickets are $5
and $6. Seating is limited.
OCC is at 2701 Fairview
Road, Costa Mesa. (714) 432-
5640, Ext. 1.
MAGICALLY COPPERFIELD
The Orange County Per-
forming Arts Center will pre-
sent David Copperfield at 6
and 9 p.m. Nov. 30 and Dec.
2. The Center is at 600 Town
Center Drive, Costa Mesa.
(714) 556-2122. Tickets are
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~ SEOEI> HONDAY • Fttr>AY ft.OH S:00-1:00 M .
$30-$50. (714) 755-0236.
WHITE CHRtSlMAS
Rosemary Clooney will bring
her "White Chrlstmas Party"
to the Orange County Per-
fonning Arts Center at 8 p.m.
Dec. 14 at Segerstrom Hall.
600 Town Center Drive, Cos-
ta Mesa. Clooney will be
joined by a full orchestra,
including members of the
Pacific Symphony Orchestra
and two choirs. 11ckets range
from $36-$76 and are avail-
able starting Oct. 29. (714)
746-7878.
ART
STEINBERG AT SPIRrTUS
The Susan Spiritus Gallery
will exhibit works by Claire
Steinberg today through the
end of January, with a recep-
tion for the artist trom 1 to 4
p .m . today and Sunday at
3929 Birch St., Newport
Beach. (949) 474-4321.
MAGIC REALISM
The Newport Beach Public
Library will present an exhib-
it of original mono prints by
Marilyn Ellis, titled •Magic
Realism,• through Nov. 1 at
1000 Avocado Ave. An artist's
reception will be held from 2
to .{ p.m. ·sunday at the
library. (949) 717-3801.
DOUBLE TREAT
·correspondence s,· show-
casing drawings and sculp-
tures by Ellsworth Kelly and
lsamu Noguchi, will be on
Soturday, Octob. 1, 2000 Al3
view through Oct. 15 at the
Orange County Muteum oJ
Art, 850 San Oemente Drive,
Newport Beach. Hours are 11
a.m. to 5 p .m. Tuesdays
through Sundays. S5 f 01
adults, S4 for students and
seniors, museum members
and children younger than 16
are free. (949) 759-1122.
OTYART
Original artwork by Newport
Beach dty employees ls on
displa}' through Oct. 31 at
City Hall, 3300 Newport
Blvd. Exhibit hours are 8 a.m.
to 6 p.m. weekdays. (949)
717-3870.
WATERCOlORS
The Jewish Community Cen-
ter will hold an art gallery
show featuring the watercol-
ors of artist Judy Chabler
through Nov. 3 at the center's
Jewish Federation Campus,
250 E. Baker St., Costa Mesa.
Showing times vary. Free ..
(714) 755-0340.
•MARINERS, MANDARINS'
"Mariners and Mandarins:
Seafaring in the China
nade, • an exhibit featuring
18th century Chinese marine
paintings and navigation
instruments, are on display
through Nov. 10 at the New-
port Harbor Nautical Muse-
um, 151 E. Coast Highway,
Newport Beach. Exhibit
hours are 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Tuesdays through Sundays
through Nov. 10. Free ad.mis-
sion. (949) 673-7863.
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Al4 SaAAdoy, October 7, 2000
FOOD m
~Second Harvest
CONTINUED FROM A 11 Food Bank's Food. Wine
and Micro-8rew Fest
program.· said Mark Jacobi, WI-. 5:30 to 8:30 p.m.
chef and co-owner of the Sun-Thursday
dried Tomato Cafe in Orange, ....... Macy's Home
which is donating a prize for StotWC:rate a Barrel Wing
tlie event's drawing. ·eut we of South Coast Plaza
COS?. S«> if purchased participate 1n the Food Fest before the event $50 at because it 1s rewarding to the door, $30 each for come and see the community
unite for such a worthy cause groups of 10 or more
CALL: (71 4) n1-1343 -fighting hunger. [The Food
Bank) utilizes a lot of our
products that we can't use to ney, president and founder of help others." the food bank, based on 1990 The food bank began in census information there are 1983 under the auspices of the 400,000 people in Orange Council of Orange, Society of County at risk of going hun-St. Vmcent de Paul. Among its giy -at least one day a services, it promotes aware-month due to the high cost of ness of hunger in Orange housing in the area. County, involves community
volunteers, and solicits, collects Last year's event attracted
and distributes food and other 1,300 people and collected
commodities to nearly 350 approximately $60,000 for the
area nonprofit agencies that charity.
feed the needy. Food is collect-Barba said proceeds from
ed from grocers, restaurants, the event go to the food
tanners and other sources. bank's general fund to help
According to Daniel Har-support operation.
POPS Rawls said. ·w.th •vou'll
Never Find (Another Love
Like Mine),' anybody can CONTINUED FROM A 11 relate to that no matter what
• U 1 get a song and it does-their nationality."
n't seem to have a universal His voice-over credits
theme, like'romance, then I induqe "Here C'Omes
don't want to mess with it,• Garfield,• "Rugrats: The
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DATFBOOK #
Daily Pilot
It allo will help Newport
Beach and Costa Mesa reli-
dents in need.
•This eoablea us to pur-
chase food (at a lower cost)«
get food from the Second Har-
vest Food Bank so we can get
food to feed the worldng poor
in this area," said Debby
O'Connor, executive director
of Pliends and Service to
Humanity, a Costa
Mes4/Newport Beach organi-
zation that delivers food to
needy area families.
Jean Wegener, executive
director of Serving People In
Need, Olso said that the event
would directly benefit her
· organization, based in Costa Mesa, by helping it stretch its
food budget and provide more
for the people it serves.
•What makes this event
unique is that 97 to 98 cents of
every dollar generated goes
directly to Second Harvest.•
said Anton Segerstrom. pa.rt-
ner in South Coast Plaza and
a member of the Second Har-
vest Food Bank's board of
directors. "It goes directly to a
person 41 need.•
Movie,• and "Captain Plan-
el• Children's programming
is fun for Rawls. In his opin-
ion, Garfield is a •cool dude."
Kaubnan is a longtime fan
of Rawl's. Between conducting
and playing the violin, Kauf·
man has bis hands full
MAGIC \
CONTINUED FROM A 11 .
pain'8d. 1be poems are IOlely
Harrell's interpn!tatiom.
Tbe Newport Beach Cen·
tral library, which ii exhibit-
. Ellis' work through Nov. 1, d hold an artist's reception
and a reading of Harrell's
poems by Orange County
poet Lee Mallory from 2 to "
p.m. Sunday.
•There is a magic to life, to
dealing with llvtng things,.
Ellis said. •Even with my
abstrQct work, [the ideasl are
taken from living things.
She believes magical real-
ism in visual art may be more
difficult to pull off than 1n lit-
erature because the visual is
usually more concrete. What
you see is what you see, and
there is less left to the imagi-
nation.
•My kids are so much bet-
ter off with books than with
TY,• she said
But her prints are lively.
Apples are blood red and
He said he enjoys conduct-
ing the most because he gets
to work with •great• musi-
ciaos and perlonn •great•
music. About 65 members
make up his average sym-
phony. He can hear every
instrument.
watermelons are lighter red. .Thil 1qled Garden.. The
White birds ling and look pfint lhows red and= blurry fnJm the motion of their flowers, dark yeDaw Na
featben and mmiDg necks. and IOID8 sprays ol b&ack. The
PlanD are very green and bl6c:k might be a vase, 1t
~·ii excited by.the ener-might be tree bark. But foe
both artists, the Oowers are
gy of living things. Her previ-c:elebratory.
ous bouts with melanoma and 1be last vene of the poem
breast cancer lharpened her reads: •My mind aocepbl
attention to life. The callG'eC what it sees, the peace these
was detected early. and she' flowers bring, then thanks the
never underwent cbemotber-timeless hands that planted
apy or radiation. It is dormant here, for others to enjoy.•
Harrell, ao Anaheim C now.
"There's something more who has published four ks
to life than putting food in of poetry, rarely hears of two
your mouth.• Ellis said .. artists creating works speci.fi-
• •ReOechir.' It's an important cally for each other's art. The
verb in French. It's important process was fun, be said.
to reflect." ~ · •1t was very interesting
Women typically complain that when I found out later
about being old, she contin-some of the background on
ued. They count the years and the paintings, we did harmo-
get depressed. She is comfort-nize," he added.
able with aging, saying it has It is Harrell's hope that
a beauty and importance of its exhibit visitors will add their
own. own imagination to the works.
Harrell's poems, for the • 1 want them to be like
most pa.rt. are in bannony me,· he said. •vou take a
with Ellis' intended messages. word image and a visual
For the image •Fieures image, and hopefully it'll cre-
rouges, jaunes avec noir, • ate a third image in (people's)
Harrell wrote a poem titled minds.·
"You better be able to, or symfuhony orchestras through-
you won't work,• Kaufman out e United States.
said. He and the Pacific Sfur-
pho~r/~ rehearsed or Besides his work With the exa minutes Friday Pacific Symphony, Kaufman is afternoon -the amount of in his third season as princij)al time allotted them. When Pops conducto~ of the Dallas asked if that's enough, he
Symphony and has conqucted said, "It has to be .•
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Long-time Newport IYHldent Inez Howold
uroes No on ~e S.
Measure I Riska Our auallty
of Life
t...t's Iring Newport Together
-Not Tear H Apart
Sometimes we toke for granted the
wonderful quality of llfe we enjoy In
Newport Beach. In my ~ passage of
Meca#e S would do much to place our
~Of llfe at r1sk.
' Megee !ft S wQlAd dylde CM cttY. fdlkXlb<X-
hOod '9"* wt nM;tbothood. by torcRJ al
lcloc.ta of • anr: reoq,;gtlor4 q>d npoye:
meo1I to bl goced onto dtywtda Wcttgn bc*>fl. . .
When I want to pr818Ne 1<>methlng In my
dfy. I WOrt to bulld c:Ot..,.. and obtdn
my repr111 ntott;,e·a eupport; If ~ don't
aupp6ft °" wtlhel.: I WOflc to vote them out.
I've IMr'I N WOft<. and 'It wll conttnue
wtitlOUt cMdlng UI.
~--.....---
Grant and I spent so much of our rives hying
to reinforce the sense of 'community In
Newport Beach. Whether It was Boy Scouts.
chi.Keh octMtles or senior progams. we lent
o hand to help lmpt'ove our c~.
Mft<Ji m s woo·t !lei> bOOQ Newria1 Blcx;tl
tQ(lltber. tt won't ltoQ tmmc on Pa;lt
Coalt H!Qhway. It wl cg• CQD'bpa
poltk;QI p Ktl'*l(> oww comgl@x
~ ._ thQt lholM3 m•ertv
be deck1ad by Oll locgl a9c18d gfllrtt*
wtlb 1ba kAJt of tNt cgtnrmdy at Pt*
hagrtlgl.
EvefY momlng; I taf •thank you fOf another
oa., In parO<M. • I h'lk we a1 do. we hcMt
~ this far ~ let'a atoy togethet.
t hOpe you wtll JoW'I me In vottng NO
on ~ s. tt'a the belt ctlOlce for ht
COnYnUl'llty.
t:z_~
rn.n
"Isn't it great? We're doing
something right. Those princi-
pals and their stall are doing
something right. "
EDITORIAL
-Newport-Mesa trustee
MARTHA R.UOlt on the
district's jump in test scores
districtwide.
I
I
I
I
.1
.... . ,__
The D.tlly Pilot wekomes i.tmn on i9&lfS
conc.eming Newport ...... end cast. MeY.
Thete we four W¥ to send In your com-
ments:
• LlnlRS -Mall to the Daily Pilot. .330 W.
Bay St., cast. Mesa 92627
• MADlllS ~ -Call (949) 642-6086
• MX -Send to (949) 646-4170
• ~-MAIL -Send to dllllypl/o~f/me.com
All correspondeto must Include your full
Nlme, hometown end phone number (for • verification purpoRS only).
Saturday. October 7. 2000 AIS
Shalimar's troubles should teach us a lesson·
H ow could there have
been any doubts
about reopening the
Shalimar Leaming Center? If
there was ever a question that
a tutoring program is needed
in the Shalimar neighbor-
hood, the children are the
answer.
Six years ago, the Shalimar
Learning Center first gave its
students a push toward acad-
emic excellence. Since then,
several of the center's chil-
dren have graduated from
the Newport-Mesa Unified
School District and become
the first in their families to go
to college.
And when the center tem-
porarily closed down -its
future uncertain at the time -
the students said their grades
suffered, both immediately
and drastically.
With the teen program
back and the rest of the cen-
ter expected to be up and
running Tuesday, many stu-
dents are flocking back.
I
J •
DON LEACH I DALY Pl.OT They say the center has
worked, keeping them off
the streets, in classes and
Residents protest the firing of staff member Marla Alvarez at the Shalimar Leaming Center In Costa Mesa.
on track to success. One imar neighborhood, which is for the children of the com-schedules. reestablishing the tutoring
teen said he was sure he
would have joined a gang if
not for the Shalimar Leaming
Center.
marked as a recognized gang munity, thanks to those at It's a shame the students program in the community.
area by authorities. According Shalimar. could have suffered the loss The Shalimar officials
to Costa Mesa Police Depart-But it is inexcusable that of the center because adults should simply learn a lesson
ment figures, gang-related the center's operators for a were immature. There is no from the situation.
• The city's crime statistics
are also evidence the pro-
gram has worked in the Shal-
crime has gone down 60% in while lost focus and forgot reason to assign blame -Because, after all, there
the past year. that the children are more pointing fingers would only is no doubt: Education is
For what they've done important than egos and prolong the process of priceless.
ChriS Cox iS the hero
in the Wen Ho tee case
D avid I Anting's long di.\tiibe in the
PBot (•Chris Cox's 9oUnd bites
..... to be telned in," Sept. 28)
• .... ~· Oritdopher Cox's apt wam-N feglnlng tbe tb1at of COmmuniat <-...to our aatloaal secwtty ~
. ' • t
~.,,.., -:·
I
and undeserved cloud -and lucky be is
to be living in th8,Umted States. In a
number of countries~ China, be
would have beell dealt With ctiffenmtly
and SUIJllllai1ly and much more banbly
as ~the atme.
AS Janet Reno Mid. tie's no bero OD
this one; Cos ii.
BAWl.Uat.MS
~Bwb
REBUTIAL
The good and bad of schools
S omething that was nev-
er done before usually
does leave us a little
frightened or uneasy. How-
ever. there are ways to face
fears that Gay Geiser San-
doval has brought Up in her
column and the unknown
straight in the face.
1\vo of the strongest
weapons are fact-finding
knowledge and just plain old
common sense.
Proposition 38 (regarding
school vouchers) fears are
easy for me to face. I've sent
my kids to private school and
public school There is good
and bad on each side.
PACT: Any private &ehool
that does not do achieve·
ment scoring does not get
(student) enrollments.
PACT: After three yeors in
private education, my son's
Stanford 9 test scoring was
post-high school in three
subjects. Upon returning to
public school one year, his
scores sunk dramatically.
FACT: He did not achieve
these lofty scores at a fabu-
lous lush campus the likes of
Sage or Mater Dei. These
scores were achieved at a
more typical small, austere
private campus. Definitely
not the lush rolling campuses
like Harbor High or Ensign.
Will they accept a strug-
gling child who ha.s learning
disabilities that costs more to
educate?
Actually, frankly, that
desaibes my son. They not
only accepted him, they
taught him th.at he oan
succeed.
UnllOfnlWIK
I appreciate the time that
teachers in public schools
use to teach my child, espe-
cially those who dare to chal-
lenge him.
But it is disappointing to
me to hear that a child belly-
aching over first day home-
work can set the year's
precedence.
My son came home with
no homework that dayl Th be
honest. the private schools
would not be as sympathetic.
The teachers of private
schools know th.at their pay-
check depends on their
amount of determination to
teach. which includes~
verance.
• And that's it in a nutshell!
• Mm AUllNI DIMll Is .....
dint of N9':uport leech.
crows are part of the natural landsC&J)e
W hen I mowd out to
Orang. COunty from
tbe bleak wtntill'l In Wl9oon-.......... , .......
inld at2 o'c:IDdl ID tlae
After all. God cna..S tbe
birdl before be-.. U.
mlltUe GI aedDg tbe
b\UMll rec:e. ............
avwl, ·--· .... tllL 1.91•--· ..... ............. _ . ... 19'-·•••t•••• :..·:amr:.. ..
. . ' .. ..... . . . ' . . . . • I t t t I
Invites· you to .·
The Ultimate-.Drive •••
'
~he more you drive
the closer we get to a cure.
The Ultimate Drive is scheduled
to take ·place at:
October 7 , 2000
10:00 a.m. -6:00 p.m.
Join us in The Ultimate Drive TM
to find a cure for breast cancer
and have the time of your life •••
·The Ult.imate Drive invites you and a
friend to be BMW's guests ~t a ve~
special test drive event. For each
mile you test drive, BMW will
contribute $1 to the Susan G.
Komen Breast Cancer Foundation
u drive. the miles, BMW donates the dollar
Also at
this event ...
U.S. WOMEN'S
•
MID-AMATEUR
• ~ TH~E .... ~ ;:. ~
.. CMrtoet OUmrt c.
Marianne Towersey
Towersey
bows out
against the
medalist
• Putter tails Santa
Ana Country Club
standout in the U.S.
... Women's Mid-Ama-
teur Championship.
Richard Dunn
DAILY PILOT
NEWPORT BEACH -
No champion likes going
down, but at least Mari-
anne Towersey of Santa
Ana Country Club was
knocked out Friday with-
out sniffling back to the
clubhouse.
In the Round of 16, and
in one of. the strongest
women's amateur fields in
the world, Towersey, the
Newport-Mesa communi-
ty's unquestioned goU
queen, met l\er match in
the U.S. Women's Mid-
Amateur Championship
SEE GOLF PAGE 83
SATURDAY
NIGHT FEYER
WARRIORS
C.osrA MBA vs. .. ,,_,a-MN
• 5"11: CJatk Reid, long Beach. 7
• 9ottom llne: There'll be
men suspense It the
moYieptex than It this final
preleague tuneup, but Cost.
Mesi (l-1) seeks rave reviews
from Co.ch Jerry Howell, In
addition to decisive win.
warriors (1-2-1) figure to
wither under CoN Mesa's
superior physlul strength.
HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBlll
Quote Of --. .
-W. hM lo aMslt WI Oii not cWy how, but WI
can luf llclns diJiig l I~ WI cM M ~ "'•
Dtdl ~ CdM football coach
Spom Editor Roger Carlson• 949..5744223 • Spom Fox: 949-6500170 •Saturday, October 7. 2000 BJ
Newport Harbor wins a wet one
• Newport Harbor sloshes its
way for 415 net yards and the
defense holds foe to 97 yards.
Tony Altobelli
DAILY PILOT
LA VERNE -The Newport Har-
bor High football team found the per-
fect ingredient in its recipe for stop-
ping host Claremont's potent offen-
sive attack.
Just add water.
Under a steady light rain, the
Sailors completely shut down the
WoUpack's offense en route to a 28-7
nonleague win Friday night at Bonita
High.
TARS
WOLFPACK
"That's a good team we just beat
over there,• Sailors' Coach Jeff Brink-
ley spid. "They have tremendous
speed and talent. It was just a great
team win for us. When you travel this
far, it's nice to get a win.•
Dominant on both sides of the ball,
Newport (4·1) sloshed its way to 415
net yards, while holding the Wolfpack
(3-2) to only 97, 77 of those yards com-
ing on one play.
·we didn't do anything too fancy
on deJense, # Brinkley said. ·We
played with a lot of intensity and we
were able to bottle up thelr attack.·
For the Wolfpack, the only fire-
works on their side of the field came
during the halftime homecoming
show. They managed only four first
downs and had 13 plays go for nega-
tive yardage.
Offensively for Newport Harbor,
senior tailback Chris Manderino
rushed for 156 yards on 28 carries and
had one touchdown m three quarters
of work.
·He's .a mudder, • Bnnkley said of
Mandenno. "With his strong running,
that enabled us to open up our
offense.·
It was vmtdge smashmouth foot-
ball for Mandenno. who only had
three of tus carries go for more than 13
yards.
Despite the unpress1ve numbers.
Mandenno ~b.ll prefers dryer condi-
tions.
"I feally don't ltke lhe rain,· he
SEE TARS PAGE 86
CdM rolls
past Lions
• After eating up yardage
on the ground, Sea Kings
take to air to put it away.
S.rry Faulkner
DAILY PILOT
NEWPORT BEACH -It took
the Corona del Mar High football
team four weeks to finally eke out
-a victory. Now, in its final Pacific
Coast League tuneup against vis-
iting Wesbninster Friday at New-
port Harbor High, the Sea Kings
have a blowout to show for their
preleague slate.
And, perhaps most important-
ly, CdM (2-3), which thumped the
Lions, 38-15, has something to
show opposing PCL defenses wbo
aim to tum the box into their own
personal mosh pit.
COM
LIONS
backers flooding the cente r-guard
gap on every other play. CdM
juruor quarterback Dylan Hendy
rolled out of the pocke t and
began rolling up the score, con-
necting on two tlurd-quarter
touchdown passes wtuch eventu-
ally allowed CdM coaches to
empty the bench.
Hendy tut Charbe AJshuler,
who bad maneuvered 10 yards
behind the secondary, for a 27-
yard TD one play after seruor out-
side linebacker Nick Prosser
intercepted a Llon pass m the flat.
SEAN HI.I.ER/ DAllY Pl.OT
Corona del Mar's Matt Moore (7} and Westminster defensive back Mark
BrunsC>n (88} go airborne In Friday night's duel. The pass fell incomplete.
CdM failed to complete a pass
in six tries before halftime against
Westminster's eight-and nine-
man fronts. Thanks to a methodi-
cal and explosive ground attack,
however, the hosts did manage a
10-7 lead.
But, after making some block-
ing adjusb:nents to pick up line-
The score, the first of !our
SEE CORONA DEL MAR PAGE 86
Eagles put Panthers away easily
• Orange proves to be just
what Estancia needs as it
completes nonleague slate.
Rkhatd Dunn
DAILY Purr
ORANGE -H Estancia Hlgh's
football team needed a pWlching
bag to release some frustration Fri-
day night, the host Orange Panthers
provided a cushy underbelly for
plenty of licks and blows.
Following back-to-back losses,
including a controversial setback
against Sant.a Ana Valley, the Eagles
bullied Orange in the final non-
league game of the season with a
'3-0 victory at m Modena High.
•'Ibe kids bad a tough loss last
week (35-28), but we bad a great
week of practice, and you play the
way you practice,# said Estancia
Coach Dave Perkins, whose squad
(3-2) will open Pacific Coast League
play Thursday against Northwood.
For the Eagles, it was their first
shutout since the 1999 season open-
er, when they blanked Magnolia,
35-0.
For the Panthers (0-5), apparently
on thelr way to another dismal cam-
paign, it was thelr 27th loss in the
last 28 contests .
"It was a nice win going into
league, and we did it without our
best player (senior tailback Andy
Romo, whose leg injury limited him
to only fow first-hall carries),"
Perkins said.
By halftime, Romo, fullback
Pahad Jabid, quarterback Kenny
EAGLE 43
ORANGE 0
Valbuena and running back Freddy
Rodriguez ea.ch had at least 22 yards
rushing, but no more than 29.
"We bad some good balance, run-
ning and passing,• Perkins said.
·And our quarterback did a good job
throwing (the Panthers' defense) out
of it, because they were geared to
stop the run. We spread it out a llttle
and broke them down.·
Estancia, which scored m every
quarter, gained 2•8 yards rushing on
38 carries, whl.le Valbuena complet-
ed hall of his dozen throws for 123
yards and no intercepbons Valbue-
na's 65-yard touchdown strike to
Kyle c:asnias was the biggest play.
"We're trying to get more bal-
ance,• said Perkins, whose team also
benefited from five Orange
turnovers.
Leading the ground game was
Jahid (81 yards and two touchdowns
on 17 carries), while Rodriguez.
Jeremy Valdes, Richie Berame and
SEE EAGLES 'AGE 8'
•Whether it's sparking the offense or anchoring the defense,
the sailors' junior is a major piece to field hock\!Y title pUzzle.
' ' ,, ' ' . . . . . . ..
. Daily Pilot
..
Daily Pilot SPolUS
PLAYING CATCH-UP
Trying to stay in touch with
out-of-area athletes is not
as easy as it would appear.
I t's like dropping a bag of
marbles on an angled tile floor.
li'ying to get every last one isn't
easy and neither is trying to
hunt down the whereabouts of
every local athlete now playing in
colleges and universities throughout
the country.
I've managed to track a few of
them down and here's what they're
up to.
In the football world, former
Newport Harbor standout Brett
Baker is still the No. 1 defensJve
force for Cal Poly San Luis Obispo.
After leading the Mustangs in
tackles with 98 last season, Baker
has already posted 45 tackles and
has two interceptions. Baker is also
the Mustangs' punt returner with
seven attempts for 51 yards.
Baker's teammate and former rival
at CdM, tight end Tun Thurman, is
a major spark for the Mustangs'
passing game, catching four balls for
35 yards with one touchdown this
season.
Meanwhile. at Georgetown
University, CdM products Ryan
Cooper and George Sumner are each
GOLF
CONTINUED FROM B 1
at Big Canyon Country Club.
Following an outstanding
performance m the second
round Fnday morning against
Carolyn Creekmore or Dallas,
Texas, wmning 5 and 4, Tow-
ersey squared off against the
championship's medalist,
Ellen Port or St. Louis, Mo.
making major contributions
for the Hoya.s.
Cooper, a free safety who
had nine tackles, two
interceptions and broke up
two passes for Georgetown
last year, already has four
tackles to go along with the
responsibility of being a
starter.
on.ship squads, is making a
big ilnbression for the
Anteaten.
The freshman is fourth
on UCI's squad with 95 kills
and is second on the staff
with 127 digs. In the match
with Ross' 'Irojans,
Waterman led UCI with 15
kills.
Sumner, a Hoyas' wide
receiver, is on track to
eclipse his receiving totals
from the previous two
seasons.
Tony Altobelh
COLLEGES
Oh yeah, that Ross kid
is doing' pretty good too.
Ross leads the 'Irojans
with 109 kills and is second
with 93 digs, helping use
to the No. 1 national ranking. He currently has 16
catches for 177 yards and has two
touchdowns. In his two previous sea-
sons, Sumner totaled 41 catches for
517 yards and two TDs.
On the women's volleyball front,
Duke University's Krista Dill, a major
factor to Newport Harbor's
back-to-back CIF Division l state
championships in 1998-99, is third
on the Blue Devils with 270 kills.
Dill has helped Duke jump out to
an 11-4 overall record and a 1-t
mark in the Atlantic Coast
Conference.
For those that saw Dill's former
teammate, April Ross guide USC to a
win al UC!, the Anteaters' Brenda
Waterman, another former Sailors'
standout from the state champi-
On the soccer front, Fonner
Estanda High boys soccer scoring
machine Esau! Mendoza is getting
is feet wet to collegiate soccer at
Vanguard University.
The freshman, who helped guide
the Eagles to the CIF Southern
Section Division IV title with 46 goals
as a senior, has two goals for the
Lions and lias helped take some
pressure off of VU sniper Diego
Goni.
Goni is third in the Golden State
Athletic Conference with nine goals,
or hall of Vanguard's production.
Another former Eagle goal-scorer,
freslunan Edson Anaya, has two
goals and two assists for Orange
Coast College, while fellow Costa
ersey helped correct it.
"Marianne put a Kleenex
box in between my elbows as
I swung, and it kept my
elbows in,• Foster said. •0ut
of all our coaches, she's the
only one who can teach me
anything.•
Part of Towersey's clinic
Fnday afternoon induded
refrairung from throwing goU
dubs into a lake. There were
moments she probably want-
ed to.
But Port made qwck work
of Towersey, winning 9 and 7,
with six birdies (induding a
conceded putt on the last
hole).
• (Towersey) played great
in the morning, and getting
that far (to the final 16) is
great, and if she could have
beaten Ellen, that would've
given her national recogni-
tion,· said tournament gener-
al co-chairman Dennis Har-
wood of Big Canyon Country
Oub.
MARC MARnN I OAJLY PtLOl
Santa Ana Country Club's
Marianne Towersey, when
at Big Canyon Country
Club earlier this year.
"Th.Ls IS the worst I've ever
played,• Towersey said after
missing her putt on the eighth
green.
Port, a boys golf coach and
girls field hockey coach in St
Louis, earned medalist honors
after shooting 147 (72-75) on
the 5,972-yard, pa.r-72 layout
Tuesday and Wednesday.
Port, a lugh school physical
education teacher, is a two-
time U.S. Women's Mid-Ama-
teur champion (1995 and '96)
and is a member of the U.S.
Curtis Cup team.
• 1 wouldn't want to face her
on another day,· &aid Port,
regarding Towersey's rough
afternoon, in which the putts
simply rudn't fall. "She's a
great player. I can t~:iU by her
swing."
Port, who shot 6-under-par
after 11 holes to win in less
than two hours, also won the
Missouri Women's Amateur
championships in 1992 and '95.
Towersey, a Newport
Port birdied the sixth and
seventh holes to go 6 up in the
match, then on tbe par-4 No.
8, Port got Op 1lllZI" down for
par from the rough, while
Tower9ey missed a five-foot
downhill putt. Through eight
holes, it was Port. 7 up.
On the par-5 No. 9 (475
yards), both players matched
increruble approach shots,
with Towersey, playing in
front of a hometown gallery,
sticking it to within 2 1/2 feet
of the Dag, following Port's
approach.
With a 7-wood, Port's shot
over water from 190 yards
landed an inch from the jar on
the ninth green.
Towersey, of Newport
Beach, conceded Port's birdie
tap-in, but then missed her
own putt as Port assumed a
commanding lead at the tum,
Sup.
·I can feel the teeth (at Big
Conyon), • saMl.. imt. also a
mother of twO toddlers, •but
you just have respect for the
golf course and have a conser-
vative game plan.•
On the final hole, Tow-
ersey's chip landed m the
water on an aggressive shot to
the green, a do-or-die situa-
tion. She walked over to Port
to shake her hand.
But it was a tremendous
run for Towersey in the first
USGA championship in the
area since the 1993 U.S. Junior
Girls Championship at Mesa
Verde Country Club.
Towersey. whose family
has a rtch history at Santa Ana
Country Club, has captured
16 of the last 19 women's club
championship there.
Mesa native, Jesus Cervantes has
tallied three goals and four assists.
In other Vanguard University
news: ..
The VU women's soccer team has
started the 2000 season with some
spark in the offense, scoring 33 goals
in 10 games en route to a 6-4 overall
record.
· Setting the pace for the Lions'
attack is Ganesa Cobb.
Cobb has eight goals and four ~
assists, while Betsy Nienhuis has
added six goals and four assists.
Where better than Hope
International University for the Lions'
women's volleyball team to post their
first win of the season.
Congratulations.
After 11 matches and two
near-misses. the Lions found
themselves on the winning side of
a 15-12, 15-7, 15-0 win on Oct.
3.Megan Godfrey led the Lions'
attack with 12 kills and 13 rugs.
for former coaches, b1ends and
family members who are interested
in keeping the Pilot in touch with
those hard-to-find, out-of-area
college athletes from the Newport
Beach-Costa Mesa-Corona del Mar
triangle, fax any and all information
to (949) 650-0170, or call me at
(949) 574-4222.
Saturday, October 7, 2000 83
Cl'#z~ ..... ...... ..... ..... .....
YOUTH HOOPS
Tryouts coming up
for the All Net boys
The Newport-Mesa Chap-
ter of National Junior Basket-
ball will be holding tryouts for
the 2000-01 fifth-grade All
Net boys team Friday, Oct. 13,
fTom 6:30-7:15 p.m. at the Lin-
coln Elementary School gym,
at 3101 Pactfic View Dr.,
Corona de! Mar.
For more information, call
Rob Boyer at (949) 678-2940.
DEEP SEA
FRIDAY'S COUNTS
Newport Landing . 2 boats,
65 anglers. 159 yellowfin tuna.
Beach resident and goJ! coach
at Newport Harbor High, was
dearly frustrated with her
putting, yet couldn't really
afford to miss considering bow
Port was playmg.
1\vo of Towersey's Newport
Harbor golf pupils, juniors
Lauren Foster and Kelly Hunt,
were official placard carriers
for the Port-Towersey match.
In adrution, Towersey has
won three straight Tua Cup
Classic titles, the locally
famous women's summertime
event in the Fletcher Jones
Motorcars/Daily Pilot Club
Championship Series.
More than 150 Pre.-Owned Mercedes.-Benz in Swck.
For example: On the par-3
hole No. 6, Port yanked her
tee shot left. then holed out
from the rough, about 20 yards
away, with a Job wedge for
birdie. ·1 didn't mean to hit it
so high, but it went over a
Sycamore tree and went in,·
said Port, 39.
Asked if there were any
good lessons to be learned
from the match, Foster
quipped: "Sbe's not crying, so
it's a good lesson."
Foster, whose father, Marc,
is Big Canyon's incoming
president, said she recently
bad a hitch in her rlgbt elbow
in her golf swing. But Tow-
Towersey, the course-
record holder al Big Canyon
when she carded a 69 on April
25, qualified for match play in
the U.S. Women's Mid-Ama-
teur Championship by firing a
161 (80-81).
She won the Women's Cal~
ifomia Amateur in 1981 and
2000.
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'• . . . . . . I ' I I
84 ~ Odobor 7, 2000 SPORI'S Oaity Pilot
NATIONAL HIGH SCHOOL TENNIS lll·AMERICIN FOUNDATION GIRU TEf_M INVITATIONAL TOUllllMENT
Torrey Pines KO'd by Beverly Ili11s
' Jean Watt,
Npt. Bch. Councilwoman, 1988-1996
Greenlight's Truth
Greenlight Measure S is precisely about
giving voters a chance to vote on big
developments.
Greenlight Measure S clearly calls for its
ballot measures to be included on existin!l
municipal election ballots. Special w-
tions are not required.
"T" people apparently object to the
General Plan's threshold and want to
expand indefinitely. The point of Green-
light Measure S is to let voters decide how
much development above and beyond the
General Plan shall take place. In areas of
the city where General Plan allowances are
already exceeded (the "threshold"), Green-
light Measure S keeps piecemeal increases
from continuing unless there is a vote.
Minor renovations and improvements do
not require a General Plan Amendment.
Greenlight Measure S deals ONLY with
General Plan Amendments.
Greenlight Measure S never calls for a vo~
where there is an existing property right or
entitlement, such as remodeling or rebuild-
ing of homes or minor expansions of build-
ings. We presume the fire station men-
tioned is the one on Balboa Island, which
would not have required a vote because the
area it's in has not been built beyond the
limits of the General Plan.
'The City Council hired a consultant to clar-
ify this point. He found that if Greenlight
Measure S had been in place over the past
ten yea.rs, it would have caused an average
of only I .S (one and a halt) ballot votes
(NOT election ) per year.
Greenllaht Measure S never requires a
lpecta.I electJon. It takes no money from
vita.I services. Special eJeedons for
Greenliaht-related votes can only take
place if a developer wanu one. Developers have t0 pay the cost of special elections,
not aaxp1yen.
DAlY PILOT PHOTOS BY GREG FRY AND SEAN HIUER
Corona del Mar's Anne Yelsey (above)
and Leslie Damion (left) vie against
Granite Hllls. Below, Newport Harbor's
Megan Hawkins tunes up for her clash
with Clovis West of Fresno.
• Corona del Mar wins twice, faces Beverly Hills
in today's semifinals; No. 1 Peninsula wins big.
N E W p O R T The champi-·
BEACH -Every-onship will be
thing was going "It wa.sn 't decided at 6 p.m.,
along like clock-following the
work Friday at the just the two third-place final at
Corona del of them 4. M a r I P a vi li o n s While Beverly
National High (Iris lchlm Hills was the eye-
School Tennis All-and Riza opener, the rest of
American Girls Invi-the favorites rolled
tatioanl Team Tour-Zalameda) ... " in convincing
nament at five sites, fashion.
favorites were win-Top -s e e de d
ning, hopefuls were ~ Stav9nl Peninsula kept its
1 · til 8ewfty Hilts High unbeaten record osmg ... un sec-
ond-seeded Torrey glrtS tennis coach, intact with an 8-1
Pines ran into a cou-on her tum's victory in the sec-
ple of ninth-graders ~ 5"" victory ond round over
from Beverly Hills. over NO. 2 seeded Foothill. following
In a shocker, the Torrey Pines. a 9-0 rout of Edi-
Nonnans of Beverly son. Hills Coadcb Susan -------Corona del Mar
Stevens unloaded on the Tor-was a 9-0 winner over Gran-
rey Pines Falcons, with four ite Bay, then the Sea Kings
singles players netting victo-put lfoy away, 7-2, with Anne
ries en route to a 5-1 lead, Yelsey, Kim Singer, Leslie
eventually closing it out at 5-4. Damion and Brittney Holland
The keys? Freshmen Iris all sweeping to victories in
lchim and Riza Zalameda, singles, and teaming up for
who both eased to victory in two doubles verdicts.
singles, then paired to put The Sea Kings will go up
Torrey Pines away in No. 1 against the two freshmen
doubles. from Beverly Hills at Balboa
"It wasn't just the two of Bay Club Racquet Club today
them," noted Stevens, who at 11 a.m.
has guided her Normans for Menlo's two victories put
27 years. Also coming up with the Knights up against Penin-
singles victories were Kate sula in the other semifinal.
Jolson, a junior, and sopho-Newport Harbor bounced
more Irina Sheff. Even the back trom a 9-0 drubbing at
two losing singles pushed the hands of Torrey Pines in
hard, Jessica Gordon falling the opener to apply a 9-0
in a 5-7 tie-breaker, and Ash-whitewash or Clovis in the
ley Gleibnan with a sterling consolation bracket.
effort in a 6-4 setback. Megan Hawkins did her
The victory sends Beverly roe in by a 6-0 count, and the
Hills into today's semifinal rest, Kelly Nelson, Vanessa
against host Corona del Mar Dunlap, Krista Mcintosh,
in an 11 a.m. duel at Balboa Carmen Khoury and Bonnie
Bay Club Racquet Club. Also Adams, all won by decisive
at the same time and site is scores.
the other semifinal with No. The Sailors tangle with
1-seeded Penisula going up Monta Vtsta in the consola-
against No. 4 seed Menlo of tlon semifinals today at 2 at
Atherton. Palisades.
.SCHEDULE
~ At ...... 911yek.e ........ ~ °*"''°' ..... Mmtftnah 11 a.m. -Menlo vs. Penlnsola
11 a.m. -Beverty Hills vs.
Corona del Mar
~lllhlp flNI. 6 p.m.
(1hlnl PIM9 .... 4 p.m.
At CoroM ~::r Flfthplla
8 a.m. • Dana Hiiis vs. Foothill
10 a.m. ·Torrey Pines vs. Troy
Atlllllbo9911yek.e Recqilel~
2 p.m. -Fifth place final
2 p.m. • 5ewnth place final
AthlleadeeTC
Conloldon Mmffirwlls
2 p.m. • Woodbridge
vs. San Marino
2 p.m. -Monta Vista
vs. Newport Harbor
,4 p.m. -consolation final
4:30 p.m. -11th place final
Athrt&Newport
1Jth.p111Cle Mmlflnllts
11 a.m. • Canyon vs. Edison
2 p.m. • 13th p'ace final
At CoroM def Miii' High
Noon • Granite Bay vs. Clovis
2 p.m. • 15th place final
INDMOWU. MATotES.
S&MGEBS.
TEAM SCORES
Ant~
~9.EdhonO
PINslnton Foolhil S. Woodbnd9~ 4
0-HiHs 8. 5-1'1 M«lno 1
Altw1lon Mink> .. AnltWn CM1)'0fl 1
Corona del Mir 9, Gr.tnite Bay 0
Troy 8. Mont.a Vistl 1
8-1y Hilb 9, OoYls West 0
TOfTey tl'irMS 9, Newport H¥bor 0
Clw'flploellhlp. 1r'*fhllllh
Peninsula 8, PIMsanton Foothtll 1
Atherton Menlo S, O.n. Hilh 4
COtON del ~r 7, noy 2
8-1y Hills 5, Torrey Pines 4
Cot•al don .,1'1ilortle..i1
Woodbridge 6, Edhon 3
San Marino 5, AMhelm C.nyon 4
Monti Vista 7, Granite by 2
Newport H.mor 9: Clovis West 0
The ad below was paid for primarily by
Evelyn Hart ,
Mayor of Newport
Beach, 1983-84, Councilwoman '78-'94 dever t's full of outright falsehoods.
I have coled Newpott Beach hol"rl$ tor fT'IOffl ftlOn 40 raon.
Our QVOlty of lf9 here Is tnnatch«J ond I~ M6oM9 S
places It il )9opofdy. \.Ote NO on Meostn S. (tfgned) Marlon ~
.,_.of°°"" lleolot• Over~
.... , llllloe• And····~ .._,......,......,...
Measure S ISN'T about 'gMng voters o
Chance to vote on big development
projed$.' If you will reod It you wlll see
thot It requires expensive citywide
elections tor All General Plan
Amendments (lol'ge. medium and small)
once a certan ttveshold is met.
This means Measure S would force
dozens of electtons <Ner the next few
yecn. Most of thet8 elections will be
over fairly mlnOf nelghbof'hood
r~ and Improvements.
U~ Measure S we will vote on a 100-
equor&-fbot oddltton to a small otnce.
We wll1 vote on an expansion of a small
echool. We 'Wiii vote on a new meettng
hall tor a church. We Wiii vote on a
modest renovotlon of a restaurant. even
a nre station.
In fgct If MeQ.ve S had been on the
books dlmg the IQst tea yecx&. there
CO!.*' hgv@ been up tg 55 etectloN
...... the flQDI of the !DOQU9. Ihcirs
rwrty 12 ~ go the tx*>t every twomxa
Measure S won't Improve pk)nnlng or
reduce troftlc.
But It w1ll obondon caetul study. pubic
heortngs and envtronmental review -In
favor of on endlw -* of electtor\I
Otlef MINOR Generol Plan Amendments.
Measure S wl promote plecemeol "one
piece at 0 ttme• d8\.le6opment -rothef
than on <MWOI rr}Oltef plan whld"t toket
Into account the needl Ond wonts of
the ent1re ~.
If~· S'11 ~ lt'1 Lrikely tt..ot
the Ne'w'pol't 8eoCh Gif'*°I Plof'l wl
ever be updated~·
Join usl Vote YES on the residents' Measure S
and NO on the develope re T.
Greenliyht'i;, Truth
GreenJight Measure S has already prevent-
ed an increase in traffic. Huge projects like
the Dunes Hotel and Newport Center high-
rise office buildings are on hold, waiting
for the vote on Greenlight. Vote YES on S .
Keep traffic under control.
All environmental review prooesses stay in
place. Councilmen will know that any pro-
posal to change the character of Newport
Beach must be justified to the voters.
Piecemeal development is going on now.
Greenlight people have asked for an updat-
ed General Plan for over 3 years. 'The City
Council declined to do it.
Just the opposite. 'The mere threat of
Greenlight Measure S has caused the City
Council to finally begin deliberation$ for
updating the General Plan.
We agree! But sometimes "representatives"
don't represent their constituents. Residents
point to hearings on the Dunes Hotel and
the American Legion site (the proposed
Marina Park. Resort) as examples of the
city's failure to listen to resident&.
Public dialogue over serious community
issues should be encouraged rather than
oonsidcred divisive.
Good planning and the preservation of OUf
quality of life for DlUlY decadel hU been
the result of citizen involvement. citii.al•1
initiatives resulted in elimil\llion of~
PIK;ific Coast Freeway, tettina heiaht limila
aroUnd the bay. aavina thekk Bay, and
putting in place the Tl'1lffic Phuini Md
Part Dedication onlinMCet. Thia ndidon
continues with Oreenli&N MeuUN S.
I Daily Pitot
;
DINIS SUMMARIES
FIRST ROUND SECOND ROUND
r Plr•isui A 9, EDISON 0 PD••• A I. Foonta.L 1 I CM..._-.YClub I (at ...... Ne~ I bequetClub) I Singles: Joshi (P) def. =Joshi (P) • KUmleS, 6-, ock (P) def. Hui(, 6-0; Thanlwlwa\ 6-1; Comstock (P) Setlnn (P) def. Warm, 6-2; Lang I def. Rice, 6-0; Setlan (P) def. (P) def. 8. ICrlstal, 6-2; Harkins I lwanabe, 6-1; Liang (P) ~f. I (P) def. D. Kristal, 6-3;
' =r, 6-1; Harkins (P) def. Labrucherie (P) def. Hammel. 6-0. I ter. 6-2; Labrucherle (P) Doubles: l.abrucherie-Holt def. Zeek. 6-0. (P) def. Warm-8. Kristal, 6-0; I ~ Harkins-Fisher (P) I def. Feichter-Rice, 6-4; Jurewitz-Jurewltz.fisher (P) def.
I Holt (P) def. Boyer-Rea, 6-3; Hammel-D. Kristal, 6-3;
I Lewallen-Parsa (P) def. Murphy-Rief (F) def. I Parsa-Lewallen. 4-6. I Blrtc-l.orenz. 6-2. I
I Focmtlu. 5, W OOOMIOGE 4 An8ION MEN.o S. OMA ~4 I . (at .. ,boll .. y Qub (at Newport a.ad\ TC) I Singles: Lipton (M) def. I bcquetOub) I Singles: U'.'bman (W) def. Thompson, 6-4; Pooler (DH) def. I Mok, 6-3; Leutzinger (M) def. Kummer, 6-0; on (W) def.
Huk. 6-1; Warm (F) def. Wilson. 6-3; Vyhronis (DH) def.
Besharatti, 6-3; 8. Kristal (F) Hudson, 6-4; Lee (M) def.
def. Roth, 6-5; Rye (W) def. Bronowicki, 6-2; Maracini (DH)
D. Kristal, 6-1; Hammel (F) def. Fonte, 6-4.
def. Hustedt 6-3. Doubles: Mok-Leutzinger {M)
Doubles: Lingman-Exon (W) def. Pooler<otton, 6-3;
def. Kummer-Huk {F), 6-0; Reames-Thompson (DH) def.
• Warm-B. Kristal (F) def. Fazeli-Upton-Hudson, 6-3; Lee-Looney
Utmanovich, 7~; Hammel-0. (M) def Bronowicki·Wilson, 6-1.
Kristal (F) def. Hustedt-Rye, 6-4. CcMoNA DEL MM 7
DANA HIU.S 8, SAN MARINO 1 l'Rov 2
(at Pn Newport) (at P•flsades TC)
Singles: M~nini (SM) def. Singles: Yelsey (CdM) def.
Thom~n (DH , 6-4; Poolac Fermin, 7-5; Singer (CdM) def.
(DH) f . Ya~, 6-0; Wilson (DH) Sakoda, 6-0; Damion (CdM) def.
def. Lo, 6-0; 1ghnis (DH) def. Clobanu, 6-2; Holland (CdM)
Wang. 6-1; Browinlcki (DH) def. def. Fermin, 6-1; Lee (T) def.
Rincon. 6-0; Maradioni (DH) def. Griffith, 6-3; Eitan (T) def.
~2. Muttke. 7-5.
Pooler-Carlton Doubles: Yelsey-Damion
(DH) def. Luong-Wan, 6-2; (CdM) def. Fermin-Sakoda. 6-0;
RHmes-6ronowickl (DH) def. Singer-Holland (CdM) def.
Muraslma-Lee, 6--0; Pazonik-Lee-Fermin, 6-3; Claster-Tenerelli
Ayers (DH) def. Park-Hsu, 6-0. (CdM) def. Dinh-Eitan, 6-1 .
Antm'OH MENU> 8 BEvatlv Htus 5
ANAHEIM CANYON 1 TOMEY P\NEs 4
(at N9wport a.ad\ TO (•t S.lbo. .. y Qub Singles: Fin (0 def. Upton, ~Qub)
6-3; Mok (M) def. Hohstein, 6-1; Slngles: lchim (SH) def. Pere,
Leutzinger (M) def. Sadler, 6-0; 6-3; Zalsmeda (BH) def. Duncan,
Hudson (M) def. Rad, 6--0; Lee 6-4; Jolson (BH) def. Erick.son,
{M) def. Ou, 6-0; Fonte (M) def. 6-3; Shet (BH) def. E. Bartell, 7-5;
Jiminez, 6-1. L Bartell (TP) def. Gleitman, 6-4;
Doubles: Lee-Toonly (M)
def. Rad-Du, 6--0; Gail-Chen
McBride (TP) def. Gordon, 7-6.
Doubles: lchim-Zalameda
def. Jiminez-Holstein, 6-3; (BH) def. E. Bartell-Duncan, 6-2;
Tonte-Hapman (M) def. Perl-Erickson (TP) def. Shet-
Hurley-Tsai, 6-1. Gleitman, 6-2; L Bartell-Chang
(TP) def. Jolson-Gordon, 6-2.
CoRoNA oe. MM 9
GuNnl BAv O WOOOMIDGE 6, EDlsoN l
(at c.o.tll MeM TC) (at Cost.II MeM TC)
Singles: Yelsey (CdM) def. Singles: U~an (W) def.
Soygrent. 6-3; Damion (C) def. Thanawiwat. ; Exon (W)
Battig. 6-0; Holland (CdM) def. def. Pece. 6-0; Besharate (W)
Fisher, 6-0; Griffith (CdM) def. def. twanabe, 6-2; Boyer (E)
I Balknap, 6-0; Malakil (CdM) def. def. Roth, 6-3; Rye (W) def.
I Hansen, 6-0; Tenerelll (CdM) def. Feichter, 6-2; Spitz (W) def. .. Watters, 6-0. Zee!(. 6-2. '*..._. Oamlon-Yelsey Doubles: Rice-Fister (E) def.
I ~M) def. =:,nt-Battig. Rye-Utmanovlch, 6-3; Fazele-
Hoftend.K (CdM) def. Be9twlr1te (NJ def. &oyer«Rea.
Her)sen.8alknack' 6-3; Fuller-6-2; Blrk-Blalr (E) def. Roth-Spitz.
Bryant (CdM) f. OIJurrassic-6-3.
Gomez. 6-2.
5MMtMN05 • l'RoY I. MoNIA VtSTA 1 A.l!WmM CANvoN 4 ' (llt Costa MeM TC) (llt hlludm TC) l Slnglel: Leora (MV) def. Singles: Un (SM) def.
s.1na, 6-~ Ayafetode (T) def. M.!f.nanlt. 6-0; Yang CO def.
• Lazyu. 6-2; Ciobanu (T) def . R , 6-2; Hoherstein (SM) def. • Chen, 6-2; Formea (T) def. Tran, WanNi• 6-1; sadler (SM) def. Lo, ' 6-1; Lee (T) def. <:.alerlna, 6-0; 6-3; inc:on (Q def. Jimenez. 6-1; r Elton (T) def. <:.alvlna. 6-2. Cheng (C) def. Kean, 6-1. • Doubles: Furman-Ayastoda DoUbles: Un-Hoherstein (SM) • (T) def. Gelblum-Yee, 6-4; def. Wa~ard, 6-0; Mi_nanl· ' t t.ee-formea (T) def. Tran-Chen, Y•~O • Rad-Sadler, 3; • 6-1; Elton-Blnh (T) def . Mar irna-.Lee (0 def. OU-• Just.ls-0\eng. 6-0. Jiminez, 7-5.
• MoNTA VISTA 7 ~ llvuta.Y HILLS 9 • Ca.DYIS WOT 0 CiMNr1'E BAY 2
I (atP .. ISlldftTC) (at Cost.II Meu TC)
Sll•les: lchlm (BH) def. Ho, Singles! Wolfgram (GB) def.
6-0; Zllaneda (SH) def. Gulbum. 6-3; Yu (MV) def.
Thompson, 6-0; Jolson (BH) def. Battig. 6-2; Chen (MV) def. ., Asher, 6-0; Tran (MV) def. .. ~in, 6-0; Shof (BH) def . Belknap, 6-1; Fustar (MV) def. ~' Rodriguez. 6-0; Gllntmane (BH) t def.~ 6-0; Gordon Hasoo, M ; Oteng (MV) def.
M<Waten. 6-2. • (BH) def. Ca , 6-0. Doubles: Getblum-Yu (MV) l Doubles· Jolsopn-Un (BH) def. def. Wolfgrarn-Waten, 6-3; Ho-Rodrlguei. 6-2; Uly-Gllnt· Battig-Hanson (GB) def. ~ mane (BH) def. Thom-~ Tran-Chen, 6-3; fustar~ ney, 6-0; Elsenspeln-llbennan (MV) def. Fisher-Belknap, 6-. .. (BH) def. SWaln-carveth, 6-0 . • t T~,._,9 -.C.1 tw.c. 9
I Q.waWlsTO ~tw.c.O Cet .... ltliyaub CM h11t1del TC) ...... auD) Sii~ Perl (T'P) def. Sii 9111: Hawtclns (NH) def. H.wk ns, 6-4; Duncan (T'P) def. Ho, 6-0: Nelson (NH) ct.f. Nelton. 6-2; Erickson (TP) def. Thompton, 6-2; Dunlep (NH) Ount.p. 6-2; A. Bartell (T'P) def. def. Sw91n. 6-2; Mcintosh (NH) I C. Khc>ury, 6-3; T. Bartell (TP) def. Rodr~ Khoury def. Mdntosh. 6-1; McBride (T'P) (NH) def. , 6-3;
def. Adams, 6-1 . Adams t:t> def. CIMth, 6-3.
E*tlil• s. Blrteli.-Ounc.ln DolLtl : H.wklnt-Mclntosh
(TP) def. HMklns-Mdntosh, 6-1; (NH)dlrf. ==z. 6-0: L Barte!J..Eri<b>n (TP) def. Nelson<. Khoury ) def.
Netson<. K=1; lhompson-swafn. 6-2; ~rldt Mf. Dum.Adems (NH) ct.f.
Dunll!P-Adams. 6-2. ~6-1.
JC Mlll'S SOCCER .
Pirates sutf er
ftrst lost in
comerence
OMNE -Orange Coast c.onege•1 men'& soccer team
at for the second time lb.is
l9UOll and the tint time ln =:pl.Jo Conference =~ 1-0 at trvtne Vel-day. n. Plratee (7·2~. 3·1·1 ln
N OIC) pla~ more tbaa
bddlema ~ aftli 0.0 VIW.-knlOIU,
wb6 Md • bat tdck for ~ot ~ Wt Wttb • card
JDlail mlnule. n. maleb waa ICU'tl-•
......... but IVC. a.cl .... ;:rr:.=
SPORTS Saturday, ~ 7, 2000 •
•RIEFS
NH boys sweep; girls take three
•Unique Sea View League
cross country meet provides
four separate matchups.
firs~~reeln ~ CROSS COUNTRY
View League cross country meets, the
Newport Harbor High boys team
grabbed four wins over league foes,
while the girls earned three at Irvine
Park Friday.
Harbor's Chris McMillan led the
Sailors as he came in second at 15:30.
Jesus Santana (15:43), John Peschelt
(15:56), Ivan Romero (16:13) and Joel
Furman (16:14) also finished in the top-
10 for Harbor.
For the girls, Amber Steen earned
first place coming in at 17:44. Sailors'
Erin Friedman (19:01) came in fifth and
Lauren Paul (19:19) finished ninth.
Newport Harbor, Aliso Niguel, Wood-
bridge, Laguna Hills and Irvine use a
scoring system to cater to the five-team
league. In the first two league meets, the
runners' finishes are transferred into
dual matchups and in the final meet, the
team with highest finishes wins the
meet.
The Newport Harbor boys are now
4-0, while the girls are 3-1.
SEA VIEW LEAGUE BOYS
M .... MWlllllpcM_.rt twbor 11. Aliso N§ 43
Newport twbor u.. Woodb. 37
Newport twbor 17, LllgwY HI Is 46
Newport twbor 15. '"'1ne 44
1. Haddan (W), 15:21; 2. Mc:Millen (NH), 15:30;
3. Santana (NH), 15:43; 4. Metcalf (AN), 15:48;
5. Peschelt (NH), 15:56; 6. Wamer (LH), 16:01;
7. Heitzman (W). 16:07; 8. Romero (NH), 16:13;
9. Furman (NH), 16:14; 10. Rollins (AN), 16:16.
SEA VIEW LEAGUE GIRLS
WoodbrWge 2A, Newport ~ 31
Newport twbor 17, LllgwY Hiiis J6
N9wport twbor 15, Alfso Niguel 45
Newport twbor 20, li'vlne ~
1. Steen (NH), 17:44; 2. Kanin (W), 18:19;
3. Berglas (W), 18:29; 4. Bellotti (W), 18:39;
5. Friedman (NH), 19:01; 6. White {I), 19:07;
7. Oelschlager (W), 19:09; 8. Cox (LH), 19:15;
9. Paul (NH), 19:19; 10. Hakimdvar (I), 19:23.
ALLISON
CONTINUED FROM B 1
Women coast to semifinals
sou'T:e ~n't~ WATER POLO
scoring punch, Orange Coast College's
women's water polo team won two match-
es at the Ventura Tournament Friday. The
Pirates (11-2·1) play in the semifinals
today at 9 a.m. against Ventura College.
The wtnner faces Fullerton {or the cham·
pionship later in the day.
In the first round, OCC took out Rto
Hondo, 11-2, as Christine McDonald
scored three goals and Daylene Coberly
and Heather Pappas scored two apiece.
Plrates' goalie Erica Anderson had six
saves. OCC then defeated West Valley, 11-
2, In the second round. OCC goalie Erin
Kennedy had nine saves.
Coast men split at Citrus
GLENDORA -wma POLO Orange Coast College's
men's water polo team split its tint-round
matches Friday at the Citrus Tournament.
falling to the host Owls 10·8 and then beat·
Ing Long Beach City 12-9. The Pirates drop
to 7-6, 2-1 in the Orange Empire Confer-
ence).
~bns Lancellottl scored three goals for
the Pirates, while Michael Vaillancowt and
Jeffrey Pratt had two.
In the second game, Coast took oft to a
7-4 balftune lead on the way to a 12-9 win
over Long Beach . Lancellotti had four
goals, Pratt linil.hod Wlth three and JeHery
Sample scored twice.
OCC will fdce Ven tura today at 9:50 a.m.
Newport Harbor wins a thriller over Santa Margarita
RANCHO SANTA MARGARITA -Newport Harbor H1gh's girls
volleyball team outlasted host Santa Margarita lD five games for a 15-VOLLEYIALL
6, 7-15, 13-15, 15-12, 16-14 nonleague victory Fnday. TilP S.ulors won the final game
when they came back from a 13-11 deficit. Kirl>lin Mcl'lune, who had 11 kills, served fpr
the final two points.
Taylor Govaars led Harbor with 24 kills, while Allison Jt•nnmgs had 16. Liz Lord and
Claire Allen slammed for 14 kills each.
CdM duels LB Wilson today after Fridafs two victories
IRVINE/LAKE FORESf-Corona del Mar H.Jgh's boy:. welter polo WATER POLO
team won its first two matches in the S&R Sport Water Polo Cup that
was played at Heritage Park In Irvine and El Toro High Fnddy.
CdM first played Davis In a match that went mlo overumc alter a 6-6 regulation finish
at Heritage Park, outscoring Davis In overtune 5-1 for the 11-7 victory.
Garrett Bowlus led CdM with five goals dnd f\11chciel ,._,ldrch had three. Bobby Mes-
senger, Chase Emery and Chriss Street scored one goal eclch
Tlie Sea Kings played their second m<ilch cit El Toro where they defeated San
Clemente, 9-4. Artie Dorr led CdM with threP goal.i, and ~larch hdd two. Street. Bowlus,
Messenger and Marc Pantuliano bad one gocil earh. Sea Kmgs goalies Kim and Beau
Stock.still combined for 13 saves.
CdM (7-2) will face Long Beach Wilson today dt 1 30 p m dt Hentage Park.
Irvine Valley College puts away Orange Coast in three
IRVINE -Irvine Valley CoUege was a 15-5, 15-11, 15-8 winner over
visiting Orange Coast m Orange Empire Conference women's volley-VOURIAll
ball Friday night. led by the play of Newport Hdrbor High product Beth Waterman, who
had 18 kills. Coast's leader, also with 18 kills, was Lauren Wtlson Coast is 7-4, 1·1 in the
OEC. Irvine Valley improves to 8-0, 2-0.
Al I 15'>N Mct<ENZIE
the ball,• Wolfe said. •For only a junior,
she's very mature, both on the field and off.
That's why the girls selected her as one of
the captains even though there's a bunch
of seniors on the team.•
With the ball, Wolie sees McKenzie as a
steady offensive weapon. "She doesn't do
dllytlung too flashy out there,· Wolfe said.
"But, she's always domg the right thing.
Allison put In a ton of hours in the summer
workouts and her gdJJle has really
blossomed."
As a captain, McKenzie takes the role
fairly seriously, but also isn't too absorbed
with the title.
McKenzie first got into field hockey only
a couple of years ago when she first stepped
foot at Harbor.
·1 saw field hockey In all the regiStration
packets and it sounded fun,• she said.
·1 play a little golf and a little soccer and I
thought that field hockey was a nice combo
o1 both.·
After a few practices, McKenzie quickly
realized which sport field hockey resembled.
·u•s definitely more like soccer,· she said
with a laugh .
According to Wolfe, making the transition
from position to position is not as easy for
some players as it has been for McKenzie.
·she does it happily,· Wolfe said. •she doesn't get rattled
out there and she adjusts to whatever's going on very fast .
A lot faster than most players.•
Newport is currently 13-1-1 and is on the right track to a
Sunset League title with a perfect 8-0 mark, outscoring its
opponents, 36-2.
•1 think ow defense is so strong because we always know
where we all are on the field,• McKenzie said. ·we know
bow to read each other and we communicate well. Plu.S,
our two goalies (freshman Amanda Wittman and sophomore
Chloe Cox) have played great all year for us as well.·
JC WOMEN'S SOCCER
Coast falls to Irvine Valley
COSTA MESA -Orange Coast College's women's soccer
team struggled Friday, losing 3-1 to Irvine Valley to fall to
8-5-1 overall, 3-2 in Orange Empire Conference play.
The teams played a scoreless first half, but the Lasers took
the lead for good with a goal in the 48th minute. rvc (7-5-2, 4-
1 in the OEC} added a score in the 66th minute and stretched
the lead to 3-0 on another goal.
Coast's Diane Meza with an assist by Ully Lopez broke up
the Lasers' shutout bid with a goal in the 87th minute, mark-
ing the second consecutive match the Pirates have a avoided a
shutout with just three mJnutes .remaining . On Tuesday, Und·
say Myers scored Coast's lone goal in the 87th minute against
Cypress.
Pirate goalie Amanda Bell finished with nine saves.
·l'n try to mobvdte il that's what we
need, but my teammates don't listen to
me.· McKenzie joked •it's not as an insulL
It's just that we're all such good friends
they'te just like, •Whatever, Allison.' But
I'U put in my two cents whenever I can.•
McKenzie's hard work on the field also
carries into the classroom, according to the
junior dass V1ce-pres1deot. "My free time is
pretty limlted, • she said. •All of my classes
are honors or AP classes so when I'm not
playing field hockey. I'm studying,
studying, studying.•
Despite her solid play, Wolfe still sees room for improve-
ment. "I'd love to see her become more of an offensive
weapon,• she said. •Her sconng, assists and her lateral
movement can all improve. The ruce Uung is I have her for
another year. I don't thlnk she realizes JUSt how important a
player she is for us.·
Does Mc.Kenzie see herself playmg field hockey beyond
Newport Harbor?
"I'd like to play, perhaps on a club team or on an
intramural team,· she said. ·1 have the feeling I'm going to
be extremely busy with schoolwork when l get to college.
I really do like the sport, so we'll 1ust have to wait and see
what happens.•
....... , .. . . ....... .
.,rc•htt.
••tU 1tt.••t
,•
f
86 Soturdo}j October 7, 2000
SclOfe br OU.WW
Newport Harbor 7 6 15 0 • 28
Oaremoot 0 0 0 7 -7
Ant Quster
NH . Manderlno 2 run (Gaeta kick),
3:04
Second QuwW
NH. Ortrga 15 run {kick failed),
6:07
Third Quwter
NH • Gaeta 26 pass from Craig
(Gaeta pass from Craig). 5:12
NH ·Gray 26 pass from Craig
(Gaeta kiclc), 0:45
Fourth QullrtM'
C . Stone 2 run (Lopez kick), 6:54
Attendance 3,000 (estlmated).
INDMDUAL RUSHING
NH • Manderino, 28-156, 1 TO;
Craig, 2-minus-12; Ortega, 12-92. •
1 TO, Tmnble, 1-8; Johnson, 1-minus-1.
C • Walkf?f', 16-114; Fractious, S-
minus-1; Patton, 1 ·2; Stone S-minus-9,
1 TD; cast1llo, l·minus-2; Team. 1·
minus-16.
INDMDUAL PASSING
NH · Craig. 11-17-0, 149, 2 TDs;
McDonald, 0-1-0.
C ·Stone, 3·10-2, 13.
INDMDUAL RECEIVING
NH • Smrth, 1-6; Gaeta, 6-98, 1 TD;
Mandenno. 1-2; Foley, 1·11; Johnson,
1-6; Gray, 1-26, 1 TD.
C Walker, 1-8; Terrell, 1·3; Patton,
1·2
GAME STATISTICS
NH C
First downs 22 4
Rushes-yardage 43·256 27-92
Passing yardage 149 13
Passing 11-18-0 3·10-2
Net return yardage• 21 0
Sacks-yardage 1 • 11 2· -8
Net yardage 415 97
Punts 3-41 .3 5-30.5
Fumbles-fumbles lost 0-0 5-0
Flags-net yardage 6-65 4-30
Time of possession 29:35 20:25
•Punt returns, interceptions. fumble
returns
TARS
CONTINUED FROM 8 1
conle'>sed "It was hard to cut
hdck, so I kept 1t right up the
nuddlc. •
fv1dndenno's running allow-
ed Junior quorterback Morgan
Croig some time to pick the
Wollpdck apart, which he did to
the tune of 10-of-17 passing for
149 yards dnd two touchdowns.
"Morgdn's play was a real
big lift for us,· Brinkley said.
"He looked more confident
bdck there and as each week
goes by, we're going to ask a lit-
tle more rrom him.·
Craig's favorite target was
Junior wide receiver Brian Gae-
td, who caught six passes for 98
ydrds and had one touchdown.
Newport set the tone on its
first dnve, marctung 59 yards in
15 plays, with Manderino find-
ing the end zone on a two-yard
run.
The Sailors' defense allowed
only 14 total yards of offense the
entire hrst hair, while the
offens(' controlled the clock
with long sustaining drives.
Newport scored again when
seruor running back Ryan Orte-
gd, who rushed for 92 yards on
12 Cdmes, plowed up the mid-
dle for d 15-yard score .
After d large helping of
ground offense, Newport went
to the au and found success.
Craig hit Gaeta with a 26-
yard touchdown pass midway
through the third quarter and
later, hit wide receiver Mitch
Gray with a 26-yard touchdown
stnke. bloWU\g the game open.
lci9fwt.,~
Westmlnlter 7 0 0 I • 1 S Corona ~I M¥ 7 l 14 14 • ll
Ant ~ CdM • Hacker 43 run (0.1 Fant• kick,). 9:l0.
West • CNmberlain 40 run (Jenklm kkt),
S.47
'
. . .
Daily Pilot
Smr'ellir~
~a ' 14 7 14 . 43
Or.nge 0 0 0 0 • 0
AntQu9rter
Est • IC. V1lbuena 1 run (Romo run),
4:18. Second Qu9rter
Est -J1hld 6 run (RMtlrez kick), 11:57
Est -Stoddard 35 Interception return
(Ramirez kldt), 0:50. 1Nrd Quwt9r'
Est · Casillas 65 SNS1 from Valbuena
(Ramirez kick), 7:01.
Fou'th Qu9rter
Est -J. Valdes 14 run (Ramirez kick).
7:20. ~ Est· Jahld 13 run (Ramirez kkk), 0·30
Attendance: 800 (estimated).
INDtVIDUAL RUSHING
Est . Jahld. 17-61, 2 TDs; Berame, 3-37,
Romo, 4-28; J. V11des, 3-26, 1 TO;
IC. Valbuena, 5-25, 1 TO; F. RodngVt!z.
4-22; D. Rodrlooez. 1-16; Peticins, 2·9
Org ·Van Wenkle, 12-16; Moss. 6-13.
Franldin, 3-7; laYl4 4-5; Netty, 1-mln·1,
T~jo. 5-mln-4; Poole. 4-mln-8.
INDIVIDUAL MSstNG
Est· K. Valbuenl, 6-12-0, 123, 1 TD.
~ins. 0-1-0.
Org . Trejo, 4-14-2. 72; franklin, 0-1-0
INDMDUAL RECEMNG
Est· Clslllas, 2-80, 1 TD; Romo, 2·19.
J. Valdes, 1·12; Jahid, 1-12.
Org ·Franklin, 3-46; Lund, 1·26.
GAME STAT1ST1CS
Est Org
first downs 19 7
Rushes-yardage 38-248 35·34
Passing yardage 123 72
Passing 6-13-0 4-15·2
Net retum yardage* 71 O
Sacks-yardage 1 -4 1 6
Net yardage 438 100
Punts 3·32.6 4-37.7
Fumbles-fumbles lost 4-2 4. 3
Flags.net yardage 9-70 5·50
OAl.V PllOT PHOTOS BY STEVE McCRANK
Estancla's David Stoddard returns the ball after lntercepttng a pass ln Friday's 43-0 victory over Orange.
lime of possession 24:09 23 51
•Punt returns. Interceptions, fumble
returns
EAGLES
.CONTINUED FROM 81
David Rodriguez alJ shared the spot-
light in the backfield WJtb double-dt91t
gains.
"Maybe it's a good thing that Romo
got hurt,· Perkins said. "It allowed oth-
ers to play.·
Roma's injury, an upper Uugh brwse,
is not expected to hold hun out of the
PCL opener against Northwood.
Early on, it appeared Orange was
knocking on an upset door as Teny
Franklin recovered an Eagle tumble on
the game's series. But the Panthers'
offense sputtered and a sack by
Estancia outside linebacker Matt Col-
by on Uurd down forced Orange to
punt.
On Estancia's second drive. the
Eagles moved from the Orange 31 to
paydirt in six plays, capped by Valbue·
na's 1-yard sneak. Romo provided a
two-point conversion on a run and the
Eagles en1oyed an 8-0 edge with 4:18
left in the first quarter.
But that was only the beguming of
Estanoa's fireworks display.
On the Eagles' next possession,
which continued into'the second quar-
ter, they scored again, this time on
Jatud's 6-yard run. In the eight-play
drive, Estancia recorded a fiISt down on
its first four plays to march to the Pan-
thers' 17-yard line
Later in the second quarter, Estanoa
stopped Orange twice when Ivan Gar-
cia recovered a Panther fumble and
David Stodddrd intercepted his first of
two passes.
But Estancia failed lo convert on
either possession.
Late tn the first hall, Stoddard
returned his second pick 35 yards for an
Eagle touchdown with 0:50 left, and
Javier Rdmtre1 kicked his second of
five PATs.
Orange quarterback Justin Treio
threw a ball in heavy traffic and 11
bouru:ed off an Estancia defender
before landing deanly lll Stoddard\
arms.
Estanaa's 22-0 halftune advantdgt>
over Orange meant the Panthers hdVP
been outscored, 119-7, m the first hdll
this season.
Midway through the third qudrter
Valbuena connected with Casillas, who
was wide open on the left side m front
of the Estanda sideline and spnntPd
about 40 yards to the end zone, sconnq
untouched largely because of Vaid<'~·
block on Ray Rogalski, perhdJh
Orange's best player.
Estancia's Cesar Romero (avove) forces a fumble with a wicked hll At right. Kenny Valbuena goes up and over to score a touchdown.
CORONA DEL MAR
CONTINUED FROM 81
straight Hendy completions, gave CdM a 10-point cushion with 10:15 left in
the third quarter. But the aerial fireworks had just begun.
CdM fumbled the ball away on its next possession. the team's third lost
fumble of the night. But, after one of Wesbninster's six punts, CdM needed
just four plays to march 72 yards and make the outcome all but academic.
After two runs and a short pass earned them a first down, the Sea Kings
agai;n went to the air, as Hendy lofted a sideline strike to .senior wideout
. Matt Moore, who outran his toasted defender for a 57-yard touchdown play.
Jon-Luke Del Pante, whose 42-yard field goal midway through the sec-
ond quarter broke a 7-7 deadlock, added the third of his five conversion
kicks and it was 24-7 with 46 seconds left-in the third quarter.
Joe Barber came in for Hendy on the CdM's subsequent possession and
completed all three of his passes, the final connection an 11-yard toss to full-
back Matt Cooper, who found paydirt to cap the five-play, •3-yard proces-
sion.
It took the Sea Kings 35 offensive plays to get their 10 first-half points,
but. finding success through the air, they scored 21 points in 13 offensive
snaps after halftime.
·we handled the pressure. which is something people have given us
trouble with over the years," CdM Coach Dick Freeman said. •we made a
(blocking) adjusbnent and our quarterbacks finally relaxed back there and
made some throws. We have to establish we can oot only throw, but we can
hurt teams doing it. I think we did that tonight."
Hendy finished his perfect second half (4 of 4) with 129 passing yards,
while Barber (3 for 3) added 37 passing yards.
Moore had 77 yards on two catches while Alshuler chalked up 67 on his
two grabs to complement a running game anchored by the bard~g
senior Blake Hacker.
Hacker, who went for 209 yards in last week's 38-35 trtwnph over 5ad·
dleback., bad 133 of his 151 yards Friday night by halftili\e. HlS 42-yard scor-
ing jaunt just 2:30 into tho contest capped a ~Hiiian Which began after a
91-yard Moore kickoff return to the end zone was nullified by offsetuftg
penaltJes.
Hadcer carried seven times on a J 2-play march that set up Del Pante'•
field goal.
But Westminlter (0~·1), wtildl bad not ICOl'8d in three Of its games UUI
faD, anlW8ted Hadcer'• first ICOr8, tet up when Tony Pldr9I recc:Mn'ed •
CdM fumble at the LiOna' •S.
After a 15-y&rit run, Chrildan Chamberlain bolted 40 yardl around th•
Daily Pilot SPORTS ..
Saturday, Odober 7, 2000 87
Pirates see another shocker
-• After upset at Mt. SAC, Orange Coast on road
again in hopes of another stunner against Pasadena. OCC SIARllltG LINEUPS
StlW Virgen
OAllV fllLoT
the conference in passing and
second in rushing.
OfRNsa OfRNsl TODAY'S MATCHUPS
PASADENA
Orange
Coast College
footba l l
coach Mike
Taylor called
it the biggest win the
Bucs have had in a long time.
Last year, OCC (t-3) stole
a win as the Pirates scored
two touchdowns in the final
1:36 for a 29-26 victory at
Lancer Stadium. The loss was
Pasadena's first at its new sta-
dium. PCC was 4-2 going into
that game and then went on a
five-game losing streak to
dose out the season.
" Na "'°°' 6-' 195 ff. Q8 J4 ~ "-5-8 175 fr. AB
JO £-. VMAD 5-11 250 fr. fl
12 A1mt D11&a 5-9 175 So. WA
II Jounwl 1M:UC* 6-1 175 ff. WA
,, .._. ....,.._ 6-3 245 So. TE
11 ""'-ic-6-3 286 So. LT
71 GMY ~YN 6-4 300 So. LG
50 LNG Ouwa 6-0 250 So. C
66 De-. GMaA 5-10 333 Fr. AG
M ADAM ~ 6-6 lOO So. AT
Ht. Wt. a. ,,.,.,,
t1 .IMEI G••w•• 6-<l 213 So. DE
75 VMa 11M91 6-<l 270 So. OT
SSDMS-6-1 220 Fr OT
56 Cimo s.nt 6-2 220 ff DE "~ ~ 6-2 220 So OL8 I Dul1W DAVIS 6-1 230 So. IL8 "...,.. aum-6-2 240 So. OLB
21 "-AlcaAOI 6-0 165 So. CB
27~ ...... S-9 180 So CB
'2 .._. ,__ 6-2 200 So SS
JS &wilf........, 6-0 17S Fr FS
Both the men's and womrn's cross country tea.ms for Orange
Coast College will lake part m the lrvlne Invitational, held at
Irvine Park today at 9 a.m.
At last week's Coast Invitational. the Pirates' women took first
place, wtu.le the men placed Uurd
Leadmg the way for the women':. team was the 1-2 combina-
tion of Heather Shurtleff and Chnstiane Reimer.
Shurtleff finished the 3.2-rrule course first with a lime of 18:50,
while Reimer was runner-up with a 19:37
On the men's side, the top OCC runner was Tony Mag~. who
placed 10th on the four-mile coun.e wit;i d lllne of 21:-18. Last week, the Bucs
accomplished the impossible
as Rob Pate khocked in a 33-
yard field goal with one sec-
ond remaining to shock then-
No. 4 Mt. San Antonio. The
Mounties fell to No. 11 on the
JC Grid-Wire this week.
This year, the Lancers are
4-0 with some dose wins of
their own. Last week, PCC
edged visiting Santa Ana 28-
24. The Lancers scored the
game's final touchdown with
1:18 left and then intercepted
a Santa Ana pass in their own
e nd zone with 15 seconds
remairung to clinch the victo-
ry.
COMMUNITY COLLEGE FOOTBALL
Elsewhere today:
• The Vanguard Uruven.1ty cross country teams WllJ run under the
lJghts at the B1ola Uruversity lnv1tdllonal, begmmng at 8 p.m.
OCC's focus on consisten-
cy will be needed tonight as
the Pirates travel to Mission
Conference leader Pasadena
City College.
last week's victory. He ranks
third in the conference in
passing yardage with 1,073.
in the conference in total
defense. Yet Taylor said be
thinks his team can score
points, 1ust as 1t did against
Mt. SAC.
• The ace men's Wdter polo ted.ITI will conl.tnue action at the Cit-
rus College Tournament, while the women's team resume play at
the Ventura College Tournament.
• The Vanguard men's soccer tedlll play at Hope International
University for a 1 p.m Golden Sidle Athletic Conference matchup.
The women'!. learn will also pldy di HIU with d 7 pm. contest.
• Vanguard'i. women's volleybdll tedm will compete at Azusa
Pacific for a 1 p.m. GSAC matchup
1be Lancers (4-0) have the
top offense in the conference.
They feature a balanced
attack that has them first in
Pasadena's offense fea-
tures quarterback J osh
Knight, who passed for 350
yards and four touchdowns in
Knightwilllooktoconnect
to his trio of playmaking
receivers in John Moore,
Calvin Byrd and Gary Cole-
man. The Lancers' rushing
attack will be led by James
Samuel, who owns a 7 .2
yards-per-carry average.
Pasadena's defense is also
solia as the Lancers are third
He said quarterback Nick
Higgs matured extremely in
last week's wm. Higgs went
18 for 37 for 210 yards and a
touchdown, connecting with
seven different receivers.
Tonight's kickoff is sched-
uled for 7.
• ln high school actJon, Corond del Mar and Newport Harbor
High's girls tennis teams will re!>ume dclJOn at the CdM-Pavilions
All-American Classic.
• In boys water polo, The Sdtlor!> and Sea Kings will continue
action at the Southern CahlomJd Tournament, held at Heritage
Park in lrvme. -by Tony AltobeW
Index
II II g ....... ... -F'J la ....
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.------Deadlines -----.....
M11ndu\ ............ Fnrla> 5:00pm Titul'll<fo~ .. WftlnN11.lay 5:00pm
Tu.--.tl11·, ......... Momliiy 5:00pm Fr itlll\ .......... TI1ur.cfay 5:00pm
-.i. Oii ......... ,. .. .,. aMI -\l JIL-lu lt:J0..111-.'l:flOpo1
\l.•~1"4 nolo•
\lt-dn~da~ ... Tut-...Ja~ 5:00pm Sa1uni,1~ .......... .Friday 5:00pm
Ml& ... I w--11 ..... I
Flc:tttlout Butlneu PUBLIC NOTICE SUPERIOR COURT N11rM si.tement aTY OF OF CALIFORNIA,
The folowwla pet10M NEWPORT BEACH COUNTY OF .,.. ti'11 ~ a: City Council ORANGE
Accur9te Touch Clun· Chemben of the 341 The City Drive,
Ing, 3395 Greenleaf City of Po.t Office 8ox 1•111.
C>tlw. Brei, c.llfomla Ti Beech Oranot. CA 82823 • 92&1~1571
P1trlcl1 Ellu~th Newport IN THE MATTER OF
Cllmef. 3395 OrHnleaf Boulev1rd, THE PETITION TO
Drtv1, Brea. Californla Newport BMch, CHANGE THE NAME
82823 PLANNING OF KEANIE ROZENNIE
Thia bulif-. II con-COMMISSION NORTHROP.
clldld by. an lnclYldull AGENDA MINORS(S) H1v1 you 1t1rt1d _..., Meedng • NOTIC€ Of HEARING =-~J?a.: October 19, 2000 • TO "3~1HO
This ltaltmlnt WU 7:00 p.m. (CODE Of CIVIL
riled with thl County 1. SUBJECT: Koll PROCEDURE Clldl of Or1nQ1 County Center (conl from SECTION 1277)
on 08131fl000 9-7-00) MacMhuf Bou-CASE NUM8EA
2000tl3t151 levafd/Jambofff Roed A202tot
Olly Plot Slot. 30 Oct. SUMMARY: Review of TO: RAMON GUER· 7. 14. 21. 200q $t4ij I General Plan AmenO-REA<> 111
11'111'11 and PIMried Com-1. NOTICE IS GIVEN
PUBUC NOTICE munlty Amendment to THAT KEANIE ROZEN-The City of Cott• allow 1n additional NIE NORTHROP hi• Meu. Pli>llc Servk:MI 250,000 gro.. equare filed a petition to c::hlnge
EnglnHrlng Dep1rt· IMt of dfice llM witt1ln lhl name of your~ Of
tnll'I(. II Miking a con-Office Slt1 B of the Kol h f\lmM of your chl-
dant ID pnMdt ltd-Cenl9' NIWP0'1 (KCN) dren ~ ..w. lot tie Planned Community. 2. V04J may twter 10 lhl
Fairview Ro1d and The a!Mlldmenta win filed petition lor further
Bllcef Sll'Mt ~-Pl'OYldl fOf lhl ClOl'lltn.lo-perticulata. (AH of thl lion ptOjlc:ta. To receive lion of a 1eO-stoly olliol cue doeumentl filed
a «qlY of lhl ReqlJelt to-r. wlltl lhl OOUl1 are 1'111-
fQr PfopoM1 (RFP) fOJ APPLICATION. able tot examination In
the M1iect rw"'ecta GPA 97-3(8), Zoning h CM1 lie kept by lhl
1 FAX ~ ,....., • Ameod1n11'11 806, Traffic court dtc11). ~:, 7,cur~i: Study No. 118, and EIR 3. A hearing on lht
t entlon: "'"MAHER No. 158 pltltlon will be held In NAWAR. CECA COMPLIANCE: ~ 703 ol lhl
MARY T. BJ.JOTT, Thia pnitld hu been,. Orang1 County St4*1«
DelMb ary a.ti vi.-ct. n • hll beln eoun. 1oc:atec1 at 34 t
Publlahltd N1wport dlttnniMd that It ii cat-The City D11ve, Oranot,
B11ch-Co1t1 M111 lgOlloelly exempl l.Wldlf Callfomla. on Oct f7,
Dally Plol ~ 5 8 ltl9 ~of lhl 2000 at 2:00 o'cloc:k
7, tooo ' . Celllomll E~ p.m.
Th2f7 OUlllY Ad. •• If you tal 10 lllend 3. SUBJECT; Coco'I the heating and lnbm Bakery R11taurant. lhe Court wtrf lhl pel-
3+'6 East eo.1t ~ tlon ahould not be
,_ ... .,..
IBllllr.AY
Mom.my • CMpel
Qwnetlon
wagl.JMMAAY: ~ :;;:-:. 'i:.:;"' may
to amend condllOn • DATE: 6-1-00 .
pn>vat No. S2 of UM /II M>SAUI NORTH-f>erml1 3e78 II IP-M>P HA~ ~ lhl .~ NOTE: 30 DAYS QA
8, 2000, ~ ~ =NOBE~ J:
a remodel and tX· PETITIONINO PARENT ~ of the Interior MUST BE PERSON·
dining lfff kif a full. AU Y SERVED (PUA· Mf\llce rt111urant. Tiie SUANT TO COOE Of
Nqllllf II to rrw:d1 h CIVIL PROCEDURE r~ to retnOde4 SECTION •15.10) QA flt tw ol flt tlllllllr1ll to SERVED BY MAIL ......., 1tw ~ 10 (P\JASUANT TO CODE
1o04 alliy' ll4bedl. to If. OF C1VL PAOCEDUAE
1Dw ....... d "' _... SECTION 415.~ WfTH
Ing ~ oenel A COi"( ~ nt8 NO-APPLlCATtON. U. TICE OR WfTH A CX1l'Y ~ 3879 OF THE ~ TO
CEQA COMPLIANCE: SHOW CAUSI FOR T'N1 ~ hM '*'I ,. CHANGE OF NAME •
....S. end a Illa -., THE PAMH'r MAY • ....,,._. ... a II -SERVED IV MAIL eooitaaly ...,...,. UftdW Ofll. Y F THE PAllJ!Ellf ~~ crl .. 8 OUTSIDE ~ £iw4rolllNl"91 NIA. ~ HtWpoft =: ~ IHotl.Cotta ..... M., cc.ea ....... CA DllV Plot °*'* 1, .... IOOO ~ ...,.., :====::;~~ htctl·Cott• ...._ Ollf ..........
;,• a.lier -..~
Gt EOOAl HOUJINQ
OPPOfHUHrT't'
AA "81 esutt ldWttlslno
In tt1ls MWSpaC>er Is subject
10 the federal fair Housing
Acl ol 1!188 as amended
whiCt1 llllUs 11 l~I to ldYlltiK ·any prefe<enu
llmrtabon or d1KM11111tton
bl$tCI on ract. COIOf, rttig·
Ion, sax, handlelp. tamlllal
lbllls or Nlbonll origin or an t111e11tion to mau any
Aid! Pftltttnc:c. lnnt1'tlon or lllScrlnllNllon. • This newspaper wtfl not knowingly accept any
adve'1isemenl lor real
est* wtlich IS m Y!OilllOn of the laW our raders .,.
hertby i11lormed that all cllWlllngs adVtrtlsed In lhts newspaptr an1 IYaftablt Oil
an equal~ o blsl5 To c ol diScnml-
11111011, HUO lol-tree II
1-«JIH2H590
•V.A"
1·::Kl11
EXCHAHQE lfY
28rl2.sty 8llbol lli.nd
home lor a homelrtnlll
~ or a a.-om -Mw M me 94H75-6049 or ~7846
1·c::111
c-~ 0-n vi.. Home opt#!
floor plan w/hlgh oeillngt, two mulM 1*kooms + 2
"'1rtly Of ~ bctm ....
llld """' """ Shown by If!!! onl't ~ Ja).-0303
• ClASSIC OUPlEX • OP£M SUNDA y ,_.
$825,000 Lwoe ftcril "°'*
wl38r's & .. ,. 'Br "" Thie • In UCllllnl c:ond
Michael Bmlunln, Aglr1I
9•9·75~1n
I Hnl
299 MESA DR.
3 NEW HOMES
Elt9an1 Elecutlve 28r 258a + den T~ SpeciloLClr OClllll & city
~ viewl. Open s.t ' Sun 1-5, 31 ·~
Court In IWoourt .. ~
Trisha M1rah1ll 11
714·296·2038
THE BLUFF$-Remod
lWM.()pln Sun 1-6
21• vi.. L.ndo. PopAiw G Modll 4Br 38 .. nclt.nt.
loc on open 111*9 1111r poot '4e2.500 Owner/Blu
949·718·9614
'
ENTEAT AIMERS
DELIGHT Open SUH 1_.
2027 Oeborlh Ln 4br
3 5bl house, lg loC. pool. 1p1, fire pi!. ,_
roof. xlnl ~ nr
schools park.I By
Ow"•' $7t5K
9•9-5'48·5126
NEWPORT BEACH
BEACH COTTAGE S425K FUN l.OCATIOH
AGENT MH23-8120
~ 4 Bedroom Townhome
2.S-Blth, att 2c garage, good loc
on the greenbett, clean, 1 .ft new
·---= . , ......... .............. _.
•M • I • ·--.
carpets, Lowest Priced 41l. ~ast so. IAYfROHT ..ooc« UDO ISLE Conlln1I 2Br 2111. FP. BAYFRONT ESTATE of the Bly. $339,000. Patio, Jee, W/O, Sip ll30' * l2Q CMYOM * MONACO CONDO 48f~SF =-.. ~ 1NA BARNETT, AOT.
Bolt. l'IMa. $3.~ 48R 3.5BA view of GERRY LONG ~ ~u~~~ COLDWELL BANKER Mt-m-oen
9'2.llA .....,
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l"::al
LAGUNA HACH ARTIST RETREAT
$515,000 DOWNTOWN
AGENT .... 12.NUO
~~ 949-71&-2368
1
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~-15 t mortQlel COl'l'4*IY loc Newport &di.~~ CO!!!!!: <Wt Rt
.......,_. FT
P!Mle ~ In HB NQ FT
lot mllnl & ,... °'*' ~cementtm.
• FUii ~Ji t
401 K EOE Send l'INnl wl .-y l9Q to; PCM % Huntln~ Landm1rk, 20880 Uni, H.B.
OA. 92e48. Pllul Cllt
71~75ori. r-.rne lo 71~.
NEWll'APER RACK
AOUrt ~I* ..... 8
runt I* week ltllt It 12:30lm or 11111. Oen, be
... ~ .. 11111 don1
Cll. Plck~or Vfll 1 nut
et.t I!!!!· 94H48-~
' I
P.O.S.H.
A 0.,. c.:r-: ,.... .... ..... ... ....... In ,....... .. CIUIWllllr ..... ..,
....... ~ .. 111111 • .. ~ .... 11111 1111111111111.T ...
0 ..... .. ........, • ~ ........ ...............
Reotpttonllt Boat..._ eve &
Wr'lor ..::::1 roc. •t.ll r'.:i CUM conlld. conw ~ Compullr Ill (IAc Fu 191 w/ulMt hl!!!!!y to ......,.
Recep41oMllCllftOll
Pff 32 ~ SMtr NBICM AREA. ENG Olllce Fu Reune. ~ Ce!! 94H45-2422
RESTAURANT
f;OO«..ffr EllP Nie. ::Ji · Production 1n Plf90I' ~ ~Ytylld.,.,.. T.n. CU. 400050
lolcMlng poellorll tor l.M Ftdly ... PW Alt LagLn &di. I n A n1 II • I m : !Wiiy a ._ conwn. Miid ~. w~ hM "'°"" = .... TIG), Midi Set· , bc:tlgrncMol.i .... Mlllt ..,... fu l'IUllt 81M01~ $!OCkm1f 714-1039. or ell Liiie ftHOt@I
.·. . . ]
................ ... ............ . ....., ......
-liD ...... ~;;....; .. wtlllll ............ ........
I -._]
L __ _
'\'\~•••• tc• I .... ,. I ,,, ... ~1()~ I '''f
w e are looking for sales Representatives who enJoy meeting
and greeting people. Work flexlble hours: afternoons. evenings
and weekends. Explore our successfully proven program
throughout the orange countv.area. securing new
subscriptions for the Los Angeles Times.
S Flexlbte Hours: either ftJH· time or part-time
$ Average $25·$!0 per hOUr
$ No sates exl)8f1ence necessary
$ Wiii train the r1Qht people
CHRlS1Wf PRESCHOOL Ql,_......_._.PT
AllorPll S dlwl.tllllll
of ECE. .. .etM nt °'
1 •F INTERESTED Pl.EASE CONTACT. I
Rolllrt lrOWft 171 .. 111-152~
..... •MMS1@
Run your ad in the
Newport Beach-
Costa-Mesa Daily
Pilot and the
Hunting Beach-
Fountain Valley
I Name
I
I Adli9SS
I Qfy
I~
I
Independent to 1
8town flrttMPfffiej
Cl YES, I" I MY CAR
react:"! over 100,000
homes. Fax us this 1 r------------_._..;..;...;.. _____ _,;;.;;
form with your credit I
card # or mall with I
a check today!
Run for a weekl If
your car does not
sell , we'll run It for. L
anOther w.eek Fi&ll
All for J4st $10·.
.... :J
... ~ ...... ·.~· ·-----~
~·-.-~
.I • --J'.l
IJ•··--. -..,._, r ... ....... .,,
~--___ _,..
IUICK camMY ._ L"'P.i ...._, 1111 tf w.r.
(2111119 111.-NUlltt
V14ff:t!OO
lllW 54Cll 'II ~ Wcl "" A~ 'W IUto, loeded, IPOl1 Mp., 10,800 ml, Nnd, txc:.lellt 8511 rri, t~ canclion, caniib, 1 owner, tUl,800.
111.000 pp fl!§22.«l80. e..tt4+4498.
STARTING
ANEW
BUSINESS?fi •••.•... ~ •..
CAOLUC CATIM T7 ................
(1722711 t1t.• NAHAS
1714164M100
CADIUAC DEW..LE ._
Wtllt. lln llv, low mite,
(788441) 124.988 NA.BEAS
(714)640.1100
Tht Ltgal Dtpartmtnt at tht Daily Pilot is pkastd to announce a ntw service
now availabk to new businesses. '
W? will now SEARCH tht namt for you at no extra charge, and saw you tht
timt and the trip to the Court House in Santa Ana. Then, of course, afar the
starch is compkttd UJt will fik your fictitious business name statement with the
Counl] Ckrk, publish once a wtek for four wteks as requirtd by law and then fik
your proof of publicarron with tht County Cltrk.
Pltast srop by to flit your fictitious business stattment at the Daily Pilot, 330 W.
Bay St, Costa Mesa. !Jyou cannot stop by. pltase ca/J us at (949) 642-4321 and UJt
will make arrangements for you to handlt this procedure by mail If you should haw any farther questions, pltast ca/J us and wt will bt mort than
glad ro assist you. Good luck in your ntw business!
. . .
Bridge
:b CHAAl.ES GOREN OMAR SHARIF
and TANN.AH HIRSCH
WUIU.\' llUDCE QUIZ
Q l . Al South. vulnerable, you
hold:
Whit do you bid now?
• AQIUJ o 7l O A4 •I lll Q 4 • Neilher vulnerable. you hold:
Thebiddin~ •IC o ICJfO o QU74l • 1t
NORTH SOlJTR WF..8T Partner opens the =with one IV ,_ •• .... club. Whit do you lNT .... ' Whit do you bid now'! Q 5 • Both vulnenble, as Souch you
Q l -Neither vvlnmlbte, u Souch bold:
you hold: • t 0 Jt o A Q I 5 4 J • A 10 4l
•Alt o Q O 1053 •10tl'54l The biddind has proceeded:
The biddin~: WEST N lrJ1t B~ soum •• lNT .... ' NOR11f SOl1111 WEST Whal do you bid now? l• Dbl 7
Wlw do you bid now'! Q 6 -8olh vulnentble, as South you
Q J • Neither vulnerable. as South hold:
you bold: • 106 v 9J AKJ tSl •431
• AQJ165l o tot 0 \'oW • KJtl The bidd~ has proceeded. ' The biddin~~: WEST N RTH EAST SOUTH
SOVTH NORTH EAST •• ,_ .._ 1 •• ,_ 20 ,_ What action do you take?
26 ,_ J o .._
? Look for ann.us on Mondav
1-..,.1 1-,~1 1-c:::.1
CADIU.AC DEVLLE '00 OOOGE DUflANGO ._ JAGUAR XJf 'f7 Low 18k Iii. Siver, .... Muet Sttl 14K 1111, SEDAN 40 (224748) $32,988 M007S3l'2ll2 .., 134,115 97-6101 MAIERS LANO ROVER BAUER JAGUAR
(!14MM0-1100 NEWPORT BEACH 714-tU:4!()0 14~5 CAOlllAC EJdondo '93 JAGUAR XJf 'f7
WN ft:'· lh, 11W1Y mr.. Ford "-XLT 4x4 •
l SEDAN 40
(612 $8.988 *-·• 97-6244
NABERS BlieAllut, QlllOm whls, .. BAUER JAGUAR (71415*1100 power, CC, A/C, tilt. 1Q ml 714-153-4800 $5000 Mt-2»65ee
CAOlllAC EJdondo 'f7 JAGUAR XJI 'f7
lo ni, WI ltllhtr, Nalbt.w FORD F150 W L Sf.DAN 40
(60Ulll8) $21,988 4WO, towing. b1k1 m., $31,115 97'6174 NABERS IC73724l2f7I S11,150 BAUE.R JAGUAR
(? 14)540:!100 LANO ROVER 714-t53-41GO NEWPORT BEACH
CIClllc 8e¥lle '" Mt-640-6445 JAGUAR XJS 'IS
Low 1111 1111, C'O, ellop, FORO MUSTANG ._ 2 + 2 Colwtftlble (~ ss1.-$31,995 IH241
NABERS Sallln, 5 &pd, "" BAUER JAGUAR
(714)540:!100 (269844) m.• 714-t53-4t00 NABERS
CtcMtc 8'vllt '93 Shelp! (714)5~1100 JAGUAR U W
4-«, low rri, CJeem ltY, new SEDAN 40
tifM. ntW btttely, lotdtd! S3l,ll5 17-6212
!I0,50<Wobo. 949-631·7370 GMC JMIY ._ BAUER JAGUAR 4WO, 211(, SE.E m 714-f53.4t00
cttEVY llU2EA .... 1521001/3007 $11,151)
LANO ROVER JAGUAR u 'f7 2 door, t3lt 1111, C'O pleytr, NEWPORT BEACH SEDAN 40 greet lll9h tchool llMI. M~5 131,995 t7-6241 !1500. MMn-2741 BAUER JAGUAR
cttEVY COHVT 'IS 714-t53-4t00
Cavalitf RS, rte! wlnew JAGUAR XJI 'f1 JAGUAR XJI '17 Vtndtll ,._ Sedell 40 b1ec* lop, am-Im c.a. VS, 134,115 '7~15 SEDAN 40 f\j pw!. AC,, Al*>, idr1C cond. .... 17-6115 981< ml, pp I -$6500( BAUER JAGUAR BAUER JAGUAR obo 949-72HlS31 714-HH!OO 714-tSMtOO
JAGUAR XJA IE>AH 40 JEEP~ '93 CORVETTE 1914 --'7-6223
221l Milll, LJw New, BAUER JAGUAR •••. m m1. blQ wheell. a.In! top, CIO, ~em,
All =· $7,750
714-t53-4t00 S9000 obo 714·317 164
94 50-7160 JAGUAR JUI '17
CORVETTE 1915 Vtndtll "81 Sederl 40 ~ SC 400 Coupe W .... '1"241 WhlWlan. phone Nik. a> 6 lpd, 7311 Ml, $17,750 BAU£A JAGUAR txc:ell«ll c:onlhon, pp
MMS0-71110 71~ $34,000 MH40«l92
Soturday, ~ 7, 2ooo ...
TODAY'S
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
LR DISCOVERY ._
Ful power, bleclt bttuty
t1S47S3/3047 CALL LAND ROVER NEWPORT BEACH
MH40-M45
lR RANGE ROVER 'ti Ful poww, 42t< 1111111
'3379511'2934 S:tt,9150
LAND ROVER NEWPORT BEACH .. ~
llaJdl Nlvljo LX 414 '11 MERCEDES 100 E '11
Blue, llAO, V6. al pwr, new 108k ml, rtbUik enginl.
linll. cc. nm. AJC. s.seoo Metallic 51w1xny lntllltor,
obo Jdnl cond 9$548-1S37 ~ oon:fllon, SICl.575. M
MERCEDES BENZ ._
llll430, 3000 1111111
Ukt new fOIC75712M5 ..... LANO ROVER
NEWPORT BEACH ..~
Go Fall! Cel ..-2182
OldMlollllt ---.. Dull di', 1211 1111, ... *· (211055) S1 ....
NABERS
(71 4)MM100
~<>:l:i~<>
OF ORANGE COUN1Y
SANTA ANA AUTOMALL
WWW.\IOLYCM>C.COM
s2~JOO °'
plus tu. 38 mo cloMd end lelae. On
Newport Beach
2000 DISCOVERY SERIES II
Leather, V-8, AM/FM Cass
2 at this Payment
Land ~
36 mo
Call (949) 642-5678
G ET THE PO I NT? l>aily Pilot t l.1-..-..ifi,·cl ~•cl-.. \\cn·I, lcn· , .... ~
A
GOOD
ADI
• CUSTOM CASIE'S <1111
lnatallallon, re-facing
refinlslllno, kitchen expert
9'9-646-l907 leave msg
1~cm:.:1
~ CARPET fl CARPET fl
Repalri, Patching, Install,
Courteous. Ally size )obs.
Wholetalel 9'9-492-0205.
Houle Clewllna 15 v ...
Exp! Good Jlef1r10011, ReUOlllble Prices. Cell
Ew & Kaz 71H'M .. 1S2
VB, ,..,,,.,., filll power, moon
roof, ~A luxury "°""' horM ,,,,. a '"°"'
LICENSED QUALIFIED
HANDYMAN I
GENERAL CONTIACTOR
No job too llG oumal
Ucf5779'2 (949)837 ·5642
SEMI RETIRED
COtHRACTOR
A to Z HcxM ll'nprowlnera
Repalra, Ei.ctrlcal end
Plumbing. llc1650524.
------Cell 714-28t-7115
i'
2000
Mercury
Cougar
Ht-13S-12ff
'84NISSAN
200SX
Only59Kmiles.
m1111a!
\ (2BFSl21)
$3,999
'96UNCOLN
MARKVIIl
Rall""' lilir.111111( f1loidrd.
immac.. CIOOd.
(3)(1)1(591)
'90BMW
735iL
$12,999 _$}2,999
The Caul. Public· Utltltlu Com·
mission REQUIRES
lhat al Uled house-
hold goods ITtOt'9r8
print their P.U.C,
Cal T runber; linoe
and chauffera print lhelf l .C,P. oomb«
in an~.
If you have a ques-
tion about the • ity d a mowr, limo
or chaufler, cal:
PUBLIC UTILITlES
COMMISION
714-558 ... 151
I
I
STUCCO PROBLEMSI
Cncb? Mildew? FWD"" Pcidlng1 w.~~ Wclu~ution
du.1 wiJl laa I
UfETIME!
Guaranteed.
JEMSTAR BUD.DER$
Lie , 4"4690I
949/642-9419 McmbcrU.S. O.....bcrolC-.-
m
OVEBSTOCKFJ>
A call to
dass.lfted
wWhdpr
(949) 642~S67
LINCOLN
AMERICAN LUXURY
• CllOllX • ·--· ·-· --~ ... ,..,...
MCMllOllmlmll&A11
714-895..(,677
. . ' ...
·~.;.:.
Call (949) 642-5678 '
GET THE PO I NT ? l>aily Pilot c 1;,...,,,1"·cl ;1d ' \\c11 I,'"' \ct11~
A
GOOD
ADI
FIND
an apartment
through claseifled
.._ a.Ma 15 v ...
Eapl Good Titltftneff, At1eonablt Prices. Call
EYI & Kaz 714-754-4132
~
2000 2000
Mercury Mercury
Mountainee Cougar
VB, IHthM, full power, moon
roof, convenlllnf» a luxury
group, hom. llnk a mottl
0.900
APhpto36-.
OA.C.
UCENSED QUAURED
HANDYMAN I
GENERAL CONTRACTOR
No Job too llG ournal
Uct6""2
<9-'9)837-5642
'84NISSAN
200SX
Oniy 59Kaul!s. •
mm19ll!! ~ {28FS121)
-$3,999
'96LINCOLN
·MARK VIII
R.td/"'7, ldw, -rna.dcd. immac. a>nd.
UXDKS91)
'90BMW
735iL
The Calif. Public·
Utllltlea Com· mlulon REQUIRES
lhat d L9ed hcue-
hold goods mcMtl
print their P.U.C.
Cll T llllTblr; lmoe
and c:haulleB pl1nt
ttl8ir T.C,P. runber In al ld\ .... illlltl.
" )'OU have i ~ tion lbolA the ,_..
ity ol 1 mover, ino
or ctllUffer. ail: PUBLIC UTILITIES
COMMISION
714-558-4151
$12,999 s12,999
2000 LINCOLN
TOWNCAll
40S FtffUJGY,
EDI Harbor,
Solllh J ,,,, •
•
OVEllSTOCKED
A call to
daaeJfled
willhdpl
(949) 642-567
LINCOLN
AM E RI C AN LU XU R Y
~
Roonng
S p eclalls ta
•r... ,,._..._,,I••#•
949-722-8846
714-751-8846
U..17-
A11Y.-lllMA: • ·~·c..-mi
(949) )48-0769
www."°"' .c:xmt
' .
f •. ~.~·I .-•ir-';.i.·.J
. . I I I I I ' . It I t t. ' . . ..
Saturday, Oc1ober 1, 2000 B 11 ~
. . . . . . . . . . . .
B 12 Saturday, Odober 1. 2000 Daily Pilot
2000 Gatera
MSRP
SALE
$34~613
$28,500
SAVE $6,113
Stodc #C053795Y
.
On ALL New 2000 & 2001 Oldsmobile Models
A/e ra • Intrigue • Aurora • Bravada • Silbouette
2000 Escalade
MSRP $46,925
SALE $38,995
SAVE $7,930
INCLUDES $1000 CONSUMER REBATE
SlOdt 14551
"Elccludel GMSIGMO/lnf dMler employee sales on malnulnlnce portion only.
2000 Eldorado
MSRP $41,997
SALE $32,000
SAVE $9,997
Stodc 14543
OVER SO QUALITY PR E-OVVN ED VEHICLES AVAILABLE
1 96 DODGE STRATUS
low miles, 5-speed, excellent trasportotion earl ( 15632n
195 MERCURY COUGAR
XR7, leather, /wo package, wper sharp! (600148)
1 93 CADILLAC ELDORADO
White pea~, ton leather, many extras, reduced! (612435)
1 96 FORD WINDSTAR
7 passenger, low miles, beige, exoellent oonditionl (A23319)
1 96 OLDSMOBILE CUTLASS
low 37k miles, leather, alloys ond morel (3~ .
199 OLDSMOBILE CUTLASS
V·6, CD, low miles, bal. of worr., previous rentoll (334952)
1 93 CADILLAC FLEETWOOD
Broughom, low miles, rear wheel driw, CO and rnof'el (717898)
'95 FORD EXPLORER
LTD, low miles, leather, moonroof and morel (M9fM 1)
1 98 OLDSMOBILE INTRIGUE
GLS, low 18k miles, leather, CD, moonroof & morel Bal. of WOCT. (389522)
56,988
6,988
57,988
$8,988
59,·988
$12,988
$13,988
$15,988
$15,988
100 BUICK CENTURY
LTD, leather, poww teat, bal. Jworr., previous,....'°' (217819)
198 FORD MUSTANG GT ·
V-8 supercharged, low miles, 5-tpeed, hhr, bal. tl W'OIT. (2698.44)
100 OLDSMOBIU SILHOUE11E
OUal door, ,... air, CD & morel Bal. tl warr., pwtt. rwd. (211055)
197 CADILLAC DEVIW
Low mile., beige, tan leather, bat cJ warr., vetty ~I (203999)
195 JEEP GRAND CHEROKEE
Low miles, V·8, AxA, leahr, CO and morel (7M870)
196 CHEVROUT TAHol LT
Low miles, leather, 'ZND, many._, n9W e« trade-in! (349652)
197 CADILLAC CATlllA
Beige, low milet, ,,....,. & mar.I (172278)
~97 CADIUAC ILDOltADO
1.ow ..._, v.a Norhb, ....._ 1an lealhs, iaal. cJ wan'. (601068)
100 CAN1 AC llCALADI a.ow Hie...._,.,..., tan liicl6er, W. of worr., ~ ...-11 '1~)
2lt00 HarbOr Boulevard • Costa M
•CREDIT
· _ -~ftUNION
llll,iJIRECT
; ~
(714) 540·9100
www.11abenaut0.con1
516,988
516,988
517,988
518,988
518;988
'519,988
519,988
5 21,988
534,988