HomeMy WebLinkAbout2000-10-12 - Orange Coast Pilot/
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SERVING THE NEWPORT -MESA COM>AUNmES SINCE 1907 ON 1HE WEB: WWW.DAILYPILOT.COM THURSDAY, OCTOBER 12, 2000
Suspected 'Soda Jerk 13andit' arreSted
• Police have in custody a
31-year-old Irvine man they
believe to be responsible for
13 liquor store robberies.
DffPll Bhllrath
DAILY PILOT
COSTA MESA -Police on
Wednesday arrested a 31-year-old
Irvine man believed to be the so-called
"Soda Jerk" or "Dr. Pepper Bandit"
allegedly responsible for robbing 13
convenience stores throughout the
county, officials said.
"He seemed to be
disguised in the first few
incidents. But as it went on,
he didn't seem to care."
Lt. John FltzPatrlck
Costa Mesa Police Department
Officers arrested Marc Allen Lewis
around 9 a.m. near his apartment in
the 100 block of Tangelo in Irvine. The
Costa Mesa and Irvine police depart-
ments, working together in a stakeout
outside Lewis' apartment complex,
waited for him to come out after.
receiving a tip from a "citizen con-
tact,• officials said.
Lewis was stopped by police as he
drove away from the area. Officials
said he was · "positively identified•
when he emerged from his apartment.
Lewis did not resist and was arrest-
ed without incident, police said. The
arrest came barely a day after Costa
Mesa police released a video of the
suspect for television broadcast.
Officers found evidence in LeWlS'
vehide that linked him to the rob-
, DON LEACH I DAILY PILOT
Mike Sc:haffer and his 12-year-old daughter, Lauren, launch their TWeety kite in the Wednesday afternoon
sun after cbWy winds cleared the clouds left from a morning rain in Newport-Mesa.
blast
Autumn officially arrived with morning rain and
winds that ruined surf conditions, but spared area roadways.
AlexCoolm.n
DAILY PILOT
A breath of winter ble w
through Newport-Mesa on
Wednesday, bringing gusty
winds and showers that
were, on occasion, rather strong.
The restless weather is part of a
much larger system -one that
stretches all the way from San Diego
to Washington state and inland as far
as Colorado, said Miguel Miller, a
forecaster with the National Weather
Service.
•1t covers pretty much the western
third of the United States and sever-
al hundred miles offshore,• he said.
The low-ptessure system respon-
"Partly cloudy is probably
the worst it could get."
Mlguel Miiier
National Weather service
sible for the showeB is breaking apart
fairly quickly, and should leave the
area with sunny skies by this after-
noon.
•Partly cloudy is probably the
worst it could get,• Miller said.
At the beach Wednesday, small,
dull waves were made worse by the
hacking wind.
1Jfeguard Lt. Brent Jacobsen said
a 2-to 3-foot swell was dribbling in on
Newport's beaches, but the cond1-
tions were choppy and far from ideal.
ABU lousy surf wasn't bad enough,
county health officials announced it
was likely that storm runoff would
elevate bacteria levels at the beach,
possibly reaching levels that would
require t><>sting warning notices.
"We issue the warning as standard
practice" after moderately strong
rains, said Monica Mazur, a spokes-
woman for the Orange County Health
Care Agency.
In the harbor, the gusty winds
proved merciful, said Sgt. Ron Peoples
of the Orange County Sheriffs Harbor
Patrol.
"Surprisingly, we had no emergency-
SEE WEATHER PAGE A7
Newport tO make deposit on park
• Proposal for sports fields
and playground at West Coast
Highway and Superior Av~nue
bas been in the works for more
than 10 years. ............
DMYhoT
to end my eight yea.rs.•
Debay, who will le&ve office after the
November election and bu represent-
ed West Newport Beach, said the park
ptopJM1 for the land on West Coast
~way and Superior Avenue was one
of her C4UllpUgn pla~ in 1992.
The lite •prot>ebly bu one ol the
belt views in the dty,• ahe Mid. •Jt WW
be a real lboWp6ece ••
The depollt will lock tn the ~ for
the lite at nilMUty 14.l mlQktin; De.::3
Mid. l!ight..n montbl ago, the
would haw COil 13. 7 •PHon. lbe Mid.
A year alter making the bdtial
depollt. the dtY Will baw to put dOwD
anodMr 1335, 75o to bold on to Ill adu·
live rtgbt to buy tb• property, Debey
SHMltKM91A7
.
beries, Costa Mesa Police Lt. John
FitzPatrick said. He declined to com-
ment further on the nature of the eVJ-
dence found.
The alleged bandit's mode of oper-
ation was identical every time he
ck. He would.enter a store, pick up
ag of chips, a bottle of Dr. Pepper
take the items to the register, thus
nickname given the suspect by
police.
When the clerk rang up the sale,
the bandit would demand money
while brandishmg a blue steel senudu·
SEE BANDIT PAGE A7 Marc Allen Lewis
O'Neil blasts
council critics
• City official says he felt
compelled to respond to
attacks and def ends
Newport Beach as 'the
best city in the county.'
Mathis Winkler
DAILY PILOT
NEWPORT BEAC H -
Saying he was "somewhat dis-
turbed• by
comments
from City
Council
candidates
about "out
of control"
incumbents,
Councilman
Dennis
O'Neil
lashed back
at the con-Dennis O'Neil
tenders at
Tuesday's City Council meet-
ing.
• 1t does concern me that
we have doubts raised by
these candidates," said O'Neil,
who is not up for reelection.
"I'm afraid that they are not
aware of what we are."
He added that he was com-
pelled to respond to statements
about the council's lack of
dJ.rection and leadership that
he heard at a candidates forum
last week O'Neil commended
Counolman Tom Thomson for
standing up for his colleagues
at the meeting. Thomson, who
represents D1stnct 7, 1s run-
ning for reelection next month
Citing the current counal's
achievements, O'Neil told res-
idents the city was providing
its best sel'Vlces ever.
•Please rest assured that
when you awaken 10 the
morning, you'll be living in the
best city in the county, the
state, if not the nation,• he
said. "You can be assured that
the quality of We will contin-
ue.·
Aside from outstanding
police, fire. manne, library and
SEE COUNCIL PAGE A7
Artsy look proposed
for new Town Center
• But idea is questioned
by one councilman, who
sees it as just another
selling point by the
developer.
Jennlfw Kho
DAILY PILOT
COSTA MESA -Tuning
and traffic were themes run-
ning through this week's City
Coundl study session and the
Planning Com.mission's pub-
. lie bearing on the proposed
Town Center project.
The project includes land
owned by C.J. Segerstrom &
Sons, the O range County
Performing Arts Center and
Commonwealth Partners, LLC.
The conceptual plans lay
out a pedestrian-friendly cul-
tural arts district with classy
artwork covering up the ser-
vice bays and rear portions of
busmesses on Avenue of the
Arts, first-class restaurants and
a "building without walls•
glass design that would expoce
the Nagucbi Californian
Sculpture Garden.
The plans also indude a
new concert hall, expansion of
South Coast RepertOI)' Theater,
easier access to parking and
SEE CENTER PAGE A7
llSPOITS
WIRIPOLO
New,,ort Haf'bor's ,..
le..-n, left. Kores • goal
durtng~
polo rNtd\ agelnlt ~
Hiiis. TM s.1or1 WDf\ 17-2. ... ...,_, .... .,
•
. " I
A2 Thursday, October 12, 2000
WORKING
11111111 llllf .
SoftWare company wants
to donate technology
The NevJl)Ort BeiKt'I software
development compMlY Equatlveoflsft
looking for charities end nonpr
organlutlonS that would Uke to \JSe
its technok>gy.
YMCA lcQdon& and other groups.
The appHcatlons. by Increasing effl.
ciency of lnformatJon flow, handling
databMes and tracking expenses.
can hetp agencies wortc more eff~
ciently, a sPo1cesman for the compa-
ny said. equative will provide software to
nonprofit and charitable agencies
free of charge. Internet access Is
required to use the services. For
mof9 Information, call (949) 221-The company produces Web-
based ttaddng applications that are
used by the United Nations, some 4540.
Doily Pilot
Tickets available for
annual Corona de/
Mar Home Tour
S ix beautiful homes in
Corona del Mar, New-
port Beach and New-
port Coast will be open to
viewing Oct 24 for the 27th
annual Corona del Mar
Home Tour, presented by the
Corona del Mar High School
and Middle School PTA.
Tickets for the home tour are
by pre-sale only. Tickets are
available at the Fash.ion
Island concierge desk, Sher-
man Gardens Gift Shop,
Newport Hills Drugs, Bal-
boa Porch. Ano Dennis
Designs, The Butera Collec·<._
Uon, Corona del Mar High
School's administration office
and through PTA members.
Tickets are $45 and include a
lunch provided by Pascal.
Proceeds from the home tour
will support and supplement
the educational needs of the
children in the Corona del
Mar high school and middle
school community. The
Home Tour Ticket Hotline is
(949) 552-2337.
Greer Wytder
BEST BUYS
fund-raising event from 5 to
8 p.m. today. There will be a
sterling silver pendant with
Swarvoski crystal, which can
be worn on a necklace or
bracelet, available for $48,
with proceeds going toward
breast cancer research.
EXEX is at 2721 E. Coast
Highway in Corona del Mar.
Information: (949) 566-0181.
Jerome Hoban Young Seconds' famous
ski room is now open, an<j..
there are some great bar-\
gains to be found. "We have
a complete inventory of some
of the finest ski wear for all
ages and all about one-third
of the original cost," says
owner Kathy Bell. ·we have
just received a huge ship-
ment of new fine Italian chil-
dren's shoes. Hurry in for the
best selection of sizes and
colors.• Young Seconds is
also adding a new line of
·cottage Kids" furniture that
should be arriving soon. It's
at 436 Heliotrope Ave. in
Corona del Mar. Store hours
are noon to 4 p.m. Monday
and Saturday, and 10 a.m. to
5 p.m. Tuesday through Fri-
day. Information: (949) 673-
2120.
My favorite linen shop,
Scandia Down, is having a
pillow sale through Oct. 21 .
On sale are all down, feather
and blended sleeping and
decorative pillows. Scandia
Down is on the second level
of the west wing of South
Coast Plaza. Information:
(714) 549-9046. HEIS
Delivering piglets one day, design-
ing part of a brand-new barn the next.
A DAILY SURPRISE
Jerome Hoban, assistant manager
at Centennial Farm at the Orange
County Fairgrounds, has a job that's
bard to describe.
He takes care of animals, plants
gardens, helps with the crops and
does various other odd jobs.
•My job is very dynami~" Hoban
said. ·1 don't know what I'm going to
be doing from one day to the next. One
day I'm harvesting for a food bank, the
next day I'm running to the vet I have
an ability to do lots of different things,
and . that's something you need
because this job is never the same.·
AN EARLY PASSION
The job was a natural choice for
Staying in touch with the
land and all it provides
Hobarr, who was involved with farm-
ing programs like the 4-H Club and
FFA when he was a child.
Hoban, who worked summers at
the fairgrounds for eight years and
bas worked at Cf?lltennial Fann full.
time for two years, said he still
remembers tagging along with his
older sister and her b..igh school agri-
culture teacher.
It wasn't until he entered high
school himself that he learned the his-
tory and value of agriculture and
developed a •real interest• in it, how-
ever.
·u·s our culture," Hoban said. ·we
feed the world and I figured there
would always be a job in agriculture.
Everybody's got to eat."
He thinks it's funny when people
ask him what he does for a living.
·r have to smile and say I'm a
tanner," Hoban said. "They just don't
understand how I can live in Orange
County and be a farmer. It always
takes a lot of explaining.•
KID STUFF
The farm has become a patk to
neighboring residents and a popular
spot for elementary school field trips,
and Hoban said watching children
visit is the most rewarding part of the
job.
•Some of them have never seen a
goat or a chicken before,• he said.
-Story by Jennifer Kho;
photo by Greg Fry
New-age ads/or a scent in the post '1984' world
Goodness gracious, it's that time of the
week again I It's the time when we put on
our rose-colored glasses and peruse the
latest in copywriting excess from our
friends at the public relations fums.
It was George Orwell who said that
advertising is "the rattling of a stick
inside a swill bucket,• but we're sure
he would have felt much more affec-
tionate about today's advanced mar-
keting techniques.
'MfCHAEL'
What would Orwell have written
about •Michael,• the new scent from
fashion designer Michael Kors now
available at Nordstrom South Coast
Plaza? Somehow we suspect that men-
tioning •swiJl• wouldn't work too well
with the fragrance's target audience.
Much better, no doubt, are the sen-
tence fragments used in the ad copy on
RETAIL
ROUNDUP
the press release:
•Drop-dead rich.
Drop-dead gor-
geous. Drop-dead
sexy." Mmmmmm. Just reading those
words makes us want to spend money.
LUNCH MEAT IS NEAT TO EAT
And let's not forget the info we got
from the nice folks at Hormel about
Spam-brand oven-roasted turkey, a
product that's been introduced just in
time tor Thanksgiving. The copywrit-
ers for this tinned treat are clearly
geniuses, as evidenced by the follow-
ing excerpt from their press release:
•The cow says 'Mool' The duck
says 'Qwlckl Quack!' But what about
a turkey? The tw'key says 'Spaml
Spa.ml Spaml' "
Brilliant, no? All that's missing is Old
Macdonald slicing up a Spam loaf with
a sharp knife and a big country smile.
Come Thanksgiving, we plan to
pop a few of these meaty little devils
in the oven and surprise our guests
with something really special. And we
can already imagine the comments
we'll get: •This turkey is drop-dead
rich! And drop-dead gorgeous!"
THE GOLDEN AGE
We'll look fab at our Thanksgiving
shindig, too, because we'll have attend-
ed the Freschezza anti-aging skin care
symposium, which happens from 1 :30
to 9 p.m. Nov. 1 at South Coast Plaza.
While there, we plan to have all our
wrinkles removed, our neck tightened
up, our eyes rendered Jess droopy and
our smile permanently stretched
"across the frame of our skull. Then
we'll always look drop-dead gorgeous.
Orwell. it's safe to say. would be proud.
There was an error in my
last Best Buys column. The
new UpSense lip color sells
for $20, not $29. The 19
shades of ultra-long lasting
lip colors can be bought by
calling Cindy Cantwell at
(949) 548-7067.
Rues de Parts is a new
French antique boutique that
opened in Corona del Mar.
It's Orange County's newest
direct importer of fine French
antiques. The collection
includes one-of-a-kind
French antique mirrors,
clocks and decorative acces-
sories, all dating from the
18th, 19th and early 20th
centuries. Rues de Paris is at
3555 E. Coast Highway 1n
Corona del Mar. Information:
(949) 673-0898.
EXEX, a contemporary
sterling silver jewelry store,
will have a breast cancer
Martha Stewart's Every·
day line of linens and acces-
sories are on sale at Kmart
through Saturday. On sale
are all-cotton bath towels for
$4.99, and 230-thread-count
twin or Oat-fitted sheets of
60% cotton and 40% poly-
ester for $4.99. Also on sale
are hand towels, washcloths,
bath rugs, sheets, comforters,
tablecloths, napkins, place
mats, chair pads and kitchen
towels. Kmart is at 2200 Har-
bor Blvd. in Costa Mesa.
lnfonnati.on: (949) 646-7701.
Paula and Michael
Macko, owners of Elizabeth
-Social Secretary, are hav-
ing an October open house
featuring their collection of
custom holiday invitations,
photo cards and personalized
stationery. Through the end
of the month, there is a 10%
discount on all embossed
graphics, stationery orders
and holiday wrapping paper.
There is also a discount on
the personalization of sta-
tionery that is in stock. Eliza-
beth -Social Secretary is at
220 Newport Center Drive,
Suite 3, in Newport Beach.
The stationery shop is open
from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Mon-
day through Friday, and from
10 a .m. to 3 p.m. Saturdays
through October. Informa-
tion: (949) 721-5733.
• maT IUYS lppeerS on Thursdays
Mld 5ltutdays. Send lnfonnatlon to
Greer Wylder It 330 W. Bay St., Cos-
ta Mesa, CA 92627, « by fax et
(949) 646-4170.
I
BEAQERS tf<>NNE
(949) 642·6086
CA 92626. ~t No,_ sti>
rles, lllustr1tlons. edltorlel ITllttel"
Of~ het'eln CM\ be
f'ePl'OdUCld wtthOut Wlittan p«·
rnisllon of copyright owner.
WEATHER AllD SUlf POLICE flllS
VOL M, NO. 2A3
THOMAS H. .MMtNS0N. NllWw
n.y DOGlllO.
Editor U.°'""-Otyldhor
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Record your comments •bout
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Daily Pilot Thursday. Odobe< 12, 2000 A3
A tiring vision of life behind the tekvision screen IN IRllF
Planners straddle
the fence at church
I spent most of last week
in Vancouver, British
Columbia, taking a close
look at the underbelly of
network television pro-
gramming. The experlence
was both fascinating and
exhausting.
I was visiting my broth-
er-in-law, Dan Angel, who
had the great good fortune
-and corollary misfortune
-of having two shows
make it to weekly network
television simultaneously.
Good fortune because it
represents the !;uccessful
culmination of 20 years of
hard, dedicated, creative
and often despairing work
on the fringes of the enter-
tainment industry. And mis-
fortune because it has
required almost superhu-
man energy to meet weekly
production deadlines for
both shows.
This is rather like trying
to sustain two marriages in
the same city while retain-
ing one's sanity, patience
and cheerfulness. Dan has
managed it because the
Hollywood culture has yet
to dent his stability, creative
focus, lack of ego or quite
remarkable sense of kind-
ness and decency.
The two shows Dan and
partner Billy Brown -who
remains in Hollywood to
work with writers cranking
out scripts -are producing
are called "The Feanng
Mind• and ·Night Visions.·
The former goes on Fox
Family's cable network this
month, the latter on the Fox
Joseph N. Bell
THE BELL CURVE
network early next year.
Primarily writers, the
Angel-Brown team first sold
"The Fearing Mind• script
to NBC. which financed the
production of a pilot then
chose not to pick it up. ln
the ensuing months, Angel-
Brown created and sold
"Night Visions" and were
sent to Vancouver to pro-
duce 26 episodes. Then Fox
Family unexpectedly
bought the earlier show,
and the team was suddenly
buried under a cornucopia
of success.
That's what I ran into
when I arrived in Vancou -
ver and asked Dan if I
might tag around with him
for a few days. lWo turned
out to be all I could handle.
You'll understand why if
you follow me through one
of those days.
It started with a plastic
cup of coffee and a muffin
on the run before Dan and I
met his driver. who took us
to an 8:30 a .m. casting ses-
sion for the upcoming
"Night Visions· episode.
.,,~
Mattress Outlet Stor
BRAND NEW -COSMETICALLY IMPERFECT
Get the Best for Less! n I
3165 Harbor Blvd.
Costa Mesa
One 61ock South of 405 PWy
( 7 14) 545. 7 168
There we met actor Bill
Pull.man, who is both play-
ing the lead and directing
that show. A casting direc-
tor fed lines to about three
dozen actors competing for
a half-dozen parts. I
thoug ht they were all good,
but 1 began to get restless
about 1 p.m., when it was
clear there was no lunch in
the immediate game plan.
We finished about 2:15
p.m. and headed !or the
studio where "The Fearing
Mind• was filming. On the
way, Dan called his secre-
tary and asked her to have
some sandwiches waiting
for us. We wolled them
down, went to the set
where we schmoozed with
the actors and director.
watched a scene being
filmed a nd then stopped by
the buffet adjacent to the
set, as required every six
hours by the union. It was 4
p.m. and raining hard
around the edges of the
buffet awrung. This damp
fare -I was told -was
lunch.
Our dnver then took us
to the "Night Visions" stu-
dio d half-hour away. Dan
makes this trip twice a day,
usmg the time lo take care
of his phone messages en
route. The show was film-
ing on locatlon, so some-
time m the early evening -
after Dan dealt with a host
of producuon problems - a
new dnver took us to a
Vancouver sugar-refining
plant bemg used as a set-
ting for a chase scene m
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which a young woman is
trying to get away from a
bad guy who wants to kill
her.
The plant floor was sev-
eral inches deep in black
dust, and the cast and crew
were all w earing surgical
masks. I was supplied with
one, which quite illogically
reminded me that the
effects of my only food that
day had long since worn
off. lWo hours later, we
finally settled down to a
drink and dinner, and at
11:30 p.m. we were back in
Dan's apartment watching
that day's filming, dropped
off by messenger. This, I
discovered, was not an
unusual day.
If I seem here to have
fixated excessively on eat-
ing. I must admit that 1t was
frequently paramount in my
thoughts. Breakfast is
unknown in this regunen.
and the studio buffets come
at hollf!i so odd that
appetite has either become
numbed or satiated by junk
food. None of this seemed
to bother the people
involved in this work, a nd it
occurred to me that if I
were able to sublimate my
a ppetites to my creative
juices, 1 might write better.
I was also taken wtth the
absolute necessity for peo-
ple involved in any aspect
of the arts to refuse to allow
rejection to defeat them.
The waiting rooms of the
casting studio were filled
with eager and hopeful
actors. most of whom would
~
Steak
be rejected that day, and
qwte likely on many other
days. Yet, they were solid
professionals, all -it
seemed lo me -quite
capable of handling the
role that only one of them;
would finally get. I'm sure
this goes on in other lines
of work, but not -I sus-
pect -with the frequency
and personal intensity
experienced by writers and
actors.
I came home exhausted
from all this vicarious effort,
determined to be more ded-
icated to the novel I'm try-
ing to wnte and resolving
to spend less time thmking
about food and watching
sports on television. If I can
stick to tlus regunen only a
few weeks, tl will be well
worth the au fare to Van-
couver.
•
In my column about
Measure S, known as the
Greenlight Initiative, I was
gwlty of an uruntentional
error that was called to my
attention rather gently and
that I would Like to correct
here. I left the impression
that whenever Greenlight
kicked in, a special election
at public expense would
have to be held. Ttus is not
correct. The issue would be
voted on at the next regular
election unless the private
inte rests mvolved want to
pay for a speaaJ election.
• JOSEPH N. BEU. 1s a resident
of Santa Ana Heights. His column
appears Thursdays .
The Costa Mesa Planning
Commission this week gave
Prince of Peace Lutheran
Church two years to remove a
comer portion or chain-link
fence on church property.
The decision was a com-
promise between neighbors'
desire to be nd or th e fence
and the church's mtent to pro-
tect its children.
About 600 feet of the fence
on the property is legal because
it was installed before a 1997
code change prohibiting chain-
hnk fences next to public
rights-of-way went into effect.
About 260 feet of new
cham-lmk fence was added on
a corner of the property two
months after the code's start
date, however.
Neighbors said the fenced
corner. which separates the
church playground Crom the
street, is an • ardutecturaJ mon-
strosity" that g1Ves the inter-
section at Baker Street and
Mesa Verde Dnve --the
entrance to the Mesa Verde
community --an "industrial
look."
Church representative
Kevin Coleman Sclld the church
needs the fence becau se it
moved the children's play area
to the comer to accommodate
residents near the old play area
who had complained about
noise. The church can't afford
an entirely new fence at this
tune, he said.
The planners' deosion does
not require City Council
approval and the church now
has two years to find a financial
solubon, commissioners said.
-Jennifer Kho
MEXICAN RESTAURANT
OUR MEALS ARE A TRIP TO MEXICO
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A4 lhuraday, October 12, 2000
NEWPORT·MESA
SCHOOL BOARD WUP·UP
Inside .
EDUCATION
WHAT HAPPENED:
M ike Fine, assistant
superintendent of busi·
ness services, updated the
board and the public on
various legislative bills
that were passed or
vetoed since the Legisla-
tive session closed Aug.
31.
WHAT IT MEANS:
,I
remember those veterans
each day during the
month of September.
WHAT IT MEANS:
Those veterans who
risked their lives and the
men and women who
died in the Korean War
were remembered and
honored by the students,
teachers and administra-
tors of the Newport-Mesa
Unified School District.
Members of the Freedom
Committee of Orange
County accepted the hon-
or on behalf of all veter-
ans who served in the
armed forces during the
Korean War.
WHAT HAPPENED:
•
' .
Doily Pilot
While none of the bills
are particular to New-
port-Mesa, Fine Informed
the board that 16 bills
were passed, including a
bill revising the age of
admission to kinder-
garten by one month. In
2004, a child would have
to be 5 years old before
Sept. 1 to enter kinder-
garten. Other bills passed
included the pupil disci-
pline bill that authorizes
school officials to require
a child to perform com-
munity service as part of
a disciplinary action, and
seven teacher retirement
bills.
The school board was
introduced to Judith
Chambers, the new prin-
cipal at Newport Heights
Elementary School, and
Rebecca Goge l, who will
be the new assistant prin-
cipal at Estancia High
School.
JENNIFER TAYLOR I OAJlY PILOl
The three fourth-grade classes at Newport Heights Elementary School hold a banner wishing Brianna Olympius well.
WHAT IT MEANS:
Chambers comes to
Newport-Mesa from the
Eden Prairie School Dis-
trict, in Eden Prairie,
Minn., where she was the
principal at a fifth-and
sixth-grade school.
·Rallying around Brianna ·
Bills that failed to pass
included the part-time
playground bill, which
would have required all
part-time playground
positions to be included
as part of classified ser-
vices, and a bill that
would have extended the
notice required for layoff
of classified employees.
WHAT HAPPENED:
The school board rec-
ognized and honored the
armed services veterans
of the Korean War with a
reception, certificate of
recognition and a resolu-
tion that schools would
Gogel is moving down
the hall in the Estancia
administrative offices,
where she has served as a
counselor to students for
several years.
HEIT MEETING:
7 p.m. Oct. 24 at the
District Education Cen-
ter, 2985-A Bear Street.
Costa Mesa.
•Fourth-graders at
Newport Heights
Elementary unveil
giant banner for their
absent classmate.
Danette Goulet
DAILY PILOT
NEWPORT BEACH
Students at Newport Heights
Elementary are· yearning for
the return of one of their
favorite classmates -Brian-
na Olympius.
"I just want her to come
back to school,• said 9-year-
old Desiree Alexander.
"She's really nice and a good
girl..
They are not alone. Brian-
For murt" information \\'W\\.thctollroads.com 1-800-378-TRAK (!17Hl
THIRTY MINUTES AGO
YOUR TRAVEL PLANS
WEREN'T UP IN THE AIR.
Get your trip off to a Oying start by
taking the San Joaquin (73) Toll
Road. You'll enjoy a congestion-
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Wayne Airport and all or Orange
County. Make sure your travel
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It's the best way to avoid any
unexpected turbulence.
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You don't know Whitt ,.u're .......,. ... '··~··· ......... . .... ,.
FYI
For information on how
you can help, call Teri
'arano at (949) 642-
1189. Donations can be
sent to Brianna Olympius
Donations, do Ron
Searcy, 300 E. 15th St.,
Newport Beach 92663.
na can't wait to take her seat
in John Datfron's fourth-
grade class in Room 28, and
doctors hope to have her
back in weeks.
Every fourth-grader al the
school signed a 10-foot, neon
pink banner that they proud-
ly displayed Wednesday as a
get well wish to their class-
mate.
"We did this sign because
she's special to us.• Desiree
said.
Just weeks ago, 9-year·
old Brianna was diagnosed
with a brain tumor and
underwent a grueling seven-
hour surgery that removed
90% of the benign tumor.
As Brianna and her famtly
struggle to combat the non-
cancerous tumor, the com-
munity is rallying around
them by offering both emo-
tional and financial support.
"We're getting goods
donations and there's
promises of more,• said Teri
Carano, a family friend
spearheading the fund-rais-
ing drive.
Commuruty members
have brought food, presents,
laughter, hope and most
importantly cash donations
to help ease the burden of
medical bills during the fam-
ily's tough times. Carano
said.
A representative will be dt
the Environmental Nature
Center's pumpkin patch par-
ty collecting donations, and c1
booth will be set up to collect
donations at the Newport
Heights Oktoberfest celebra-
tion from 4 to 7:30 p.m. Oct
27 .
"That's what we're dotng
so far until we dream of
something else,• Carano
said.
While the efforts are of
tremendous help and com-
fort to the family, it is her
classmates' sentiments that
surely mean the most for Bn·
anna.
"She's really the best onc>
in class,• confided her friend
Ashlee Roberson, 9.
\V . \ '' l ·: I I < > t ~ s I~~
The First, The Original, The Best
Sunflowers ·"'1 lltll'ietia uf' this foO fovqr;te ............................................. -..................... -................ 49¢ ca.
Tuberose • most ft"Krrznt ef ""~ .................................................................................................. 79¢ ca.
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Doily Pilot Thursday, October 12, 2000 A5
Newport councilwoman ventures into Greenlight debate
•Jan Debay cites two
expansion projects as
examples of what the
meas,ure would do, but its
supporters say she's wrong.
buildings would
have to go before
a citywide vote if
the Greenlight
initiative passes.
Supporters of
the growth-con-
trol measure
quickly coun-
tered that Dehay
was misinform-
ing residents of
the initiative's
440.squa.re-foot filing room -are
both located within areas of the city
that have already reached their con-
struction allowance.
•'Jbis means that they have to
wait and go to the ballot,• Dehay
said. ·The whole citizenry will have
to vote on these small additions.•
A competing initiative, Measure
T, would add parts of the city's traf-
fic phasing ordinance to the city
charter and nullify Measme S, if
voters approve both measures.
Debay, who opposes Measure S
and supports Measure T, pulled the
projects -which were approved by
the Planning Commission on Thurs-
day -to illustrate her point.
before the election and voters
would have to decide on the pro-
jects if the Greenlight initiative
passes.
Measw-e S supporters countered
that the two projects would not
require a vote. While large projects
such as the Dunes Hotel or the
Conexant expansion would have to
be voted on, the City Council would
be able to allow smaller projects to
pass without a vote, they pointed oul
Mathis Winkler
DAILY PILOT
NEWPORT BEACH -Council-
woman Jan Debay on Tuesday
use9 two expansion projects cur-
rently before the city as examples of
how small additions to existing
JanDebay
pwpose.
The two projects -a 2,160-
square-foot lobby expansion and a
The Greenllgbt initiative, known
as Measure S, proposes to put
before a citywide vote any develop-
ment that allows an increase of
more than 100 peak-hour car trips
or dwelling units, or 40,000 square
feet over the general plan
allowance.
But because it will take more
than a month for the Planning Com-
mission and the City Council to
complete the necessary general
plan amendment, city officials said
the process could not be finished
ln no way would a person's
home, for instance, be subject to a
Measure S-required vote, said Phil
Arst, a Greenlight supporter.
Gettina. INVOLVED
• GETTING INVOLVED runs period-
ically in the Daily Pilot on a rotating
basis. If you'd like information on
adding your organization to this list.
call (949) 574-4228.
COSTA MESA
SENIOR CENTER
The multipurpose senior ser-
vices facility al the comer of
19th Street and Pomona
Avenue seeks volunteers for a
variety of tasks. For more infor-
mation, call (949) 645-2356
between 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
CORA MESA SENIOR
CORPORATION
The nonprofit organization at
the Costa Mesa Senior Center
is looking for new board mem-
bers. The fund-raising and pol-
icymaking board needs volun-
NEWPORT STONE &
DESIGN CENTRE
COMPLETE D ESIGNER
SHOWROOM
••• t~ dfYan<~ ill mutk
sfiN'vlu~le.
teers who will participate in
monthly meetings, occasional
committee meetings and spe-
cial projects. candidates should
have connections in Costa
Mesa and surrounding com-
munities and an interest in serv-
ing the community by helping
seniors. (949) 645-2356, Ext. 16.
Candidates' forum draws less than full house
CORA MESA
POUCE DEPARTMENT
Seniors age 55 and up are
being sought to help staff the
West Side substation.
Volunteers would be asked to
work two four-hour daytime
shifts per week and would be
responsible for answering
phones, bicycle registration,
fingerprinting, data entry and
assist with other citywide pro-
jects. Bilingual seniors in
Spanish and English are also
needed. For an application or
more information, contact
Senior Volunteer Fred Gaeckler
at (714) 754-5208.
•Costa Mesa hopefuls
trade thoughts on
housing and the West
Side revitalization plan.
Jennifer Kho
DAILY PILOT
COSTA MESA -Only
seven of 11 candidates run-
ning for City Council
showed up this week to
answer questions at the
Mesa North Community
Assn. candidates forum.
Councilwoman Libby
Cowan, Joel Faris, William
Perkins, Karen Robinson,
Councilwoman Heather
Somers, Chris Steel and
Dan Worthington made
statements about their can-
didacy.
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Residents asked ques-
tions about a variety of city
issues, including housing,
traffic and the West Side.
Several focused on hous-
ing and asked the candi-
dates for new ideas.
Somers said she would
strive toward fulfilling the
city's housing plan, which
calls for high-density hous-
ing in the city's remaining
open space, and Cowan said
she .is in favor of seeking
regional and statewide solu-
tions.
Perkins said he favors
using vacated sites for hous-
ing, while Steel said he
backs replacing high-densi-
ty apartments on the West
Side with low-density seruor
housing.
An example Perk.ins gave
No matter what you're domg,
your hometown newspaper
F1rS IN ••• Daily Pilot
was the idea of using the
city's National Guard site,
soon to be vacated, for
senior housing.
Worthington said be sup-
ports converting businesses
into housing once they
begin to move out of the city
because workers won't be
able to find affordable hous-
ing.
And Faris pointed out
that the need for housing is
the result of other cities,
such as Newport Beach and
Huntington Beach, not
building their fair share of
appropriate housing.
Steel and Faris also
offered their opinions on the
city's Job Center, which is a
place for day laborers and
employers to meet.
Development brings traffic_
So Measures lets vou ••
Decide how much developing•
Is best for us to do •••••
Vote YES• S ..t NO .. T
The Original
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~
Steel said the center
should be closed, or at least
moved into the business dis-
tnct and funded by busi-
nesses.
Faris disagreed that it
should be closed, but said
the city should charge a fee
to make the center self-suffi-
cient.
·A man has to work, but
the city shouldn't be paying
for it,· he said.
The next candidates
forum will be sponsored by
the Latino Business Council
from 7:30 to 9 p.m. Oct. 26 at
the Neighborhood Commu-
nity Center, 1845 Park Ave ..
Costa Mesa.
For more information, call
(71 4) 885-9090.
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A6 Thur.day, Odober 12, 2000
Coast college district
budget procedures
questioned by union
•Teachers union alleges
board violated law on
how expenditures are
authorized.
Angelique Flores
DAILY PtLOT
COSTA MESA -After
some prodding by a teachers
union, the Coast Community
College District Board of
Trustees requested that the
administration look into its bud-
get transfer procedures.
"The bodrd of trustees has
consIStently vtolated Title V by
not showing transfers between
ma1or categones, • said Kristina
Brurung, president of the Coast
Federation of Educators.
Bruning approached the
board at last month's meeting to
question the board's compli-
ance with TiUe V, a law that
requires the board to authorize
all distnct expenditures.
Vice Chancellor C.M.
Brahmbhatt said the district
di.ready complies.
While there is no evidence of
any wrongful spending,
Bruning said the federation
doesn't want the board to rub-
ber-stamp the budget district
managers bring to the board.
"There's no major, huge, ille-
gal, wrongful, bad act going
on,· said Jerry Patterson, the
board's president "They're just
not doing things in a manner
that allows for public input.•
Patterson favors a resolution
that would require the boa.rd to
adopt a written resolution when
major purchases in the budget
are exceeded, as well as require
trustees to approve the transfer
of funds.
"That's a step in the rtght
direction,• Patterson said.
"We're not there to do every
check and detail. but they need
to tell us about budget amend-
ments.•
Bruning raised the issue to
the boa.rd six yea.rs ago, but no
action was taken.
"The union has what they
want to do, administration
wants to do what they want,
and the board doesn,'t care,•
Patterson said. "The board
needs to exercise more active
involvement of the budget.•
At last week's meeting. the
board requested that adminis-
trators develop a policy for vot-
ing on budget transfers.
"It's fair,• Brahmbhatt said.
"It's a good check and balance
system for the board.•
Bruning said she won't be
satisfied until she sees the new
policy that will be presented to
the boa.rd at the Nov. 1 meeting
for discussion and again in
December for possible adop-
tion.
Co to Church! Mel
Y uh1 we know how you fuJ. It's not thu
you don't c..ttt. .about God or f.ai~ it's just
th.tt church is .alw.ays so ... Nc:hurc:hy".
Th.it's why we offu somuhins different
u ComustDne Chri.sci;an fdlowship. We
h;aw two diffumt &CMca, depcndins on
when you're c:omins from. Do you h;aw
quutiom .about God, f.aith, spiric.u.ality
.and how it .appliu to life? Drop by .u 9
.am. Do you w.ant .a dupu time of worahip
.and be c:h;allmsed in your f.aith7 The 10:30
.am suviu is for you.
STARTING NOVEMBER 5
Every Sunday at 9:00 am & 10:30 am
In both scrvicu: Live 8.and,, New mua~ ~I Dru., Gru.t
Olildren's l>Yogr.ama .1nd .a Siblic:.af Mu.Nse you c.in rd.au to.
17575 Euclid St.
Fount.tin V~lley
714-g62-5412
. .
Around
TOWN
• Send AROUND TOWN Items to
the Dally Pilot, 330 W. Bay St .. Cos-
ta Mesa. CA 92627; by fax to (949)
~170; or by calling (949) 574-
4268. lndude the time, date and
loattlon of the event. as well as a
contact phone number. A complete
llstlng Is available ft
http:llWWW.da/lypllotcom.
•
TODAY
The Newport Beach Central
Library will present a· free
program on breast cancer
awareness at 7 p.m. in the
Friends Meeting Room, 1000
Avocado Ave. Breast cancer
survivor 1iudy Grossman will
discuss new methods of early
detection. (949) 717-3801.
.,How to OUend Everyone,,.
an a.musing talk by Samuel
Scheibler, a bishop and
anthropologist who has
served as a consultant to the
Archbishop of Canterbury,
will be held at 7:30 p.m. at
Borders Books, Music & Cafe
at South Coast Plaza, 3333
Bear St., Costa Mesa. (714)
432-7854.
PalneWebber Private Client
Group and Fidelity Invest-
me nts . will present An
Evening with Fidelity at 6
p.m. in the third floor confer-
e nce room at the PaineWeb-
ber building at 888 San
Clemente Drive, Newport
Beach. (949) 378-9000.
FRIDAY
A Gem Faire wUI be held Fri-
day through Sunday at the
Orange County Fair & Expo-
sition Center, 88 Pair Drive,
Costa Mesa. Hours are noon
to 7 p.m. Friday, 10 a.m. to 7
p.m. Saturday and 10 a.m. to
'5 p.m. Sunday in Building 12.
$4 for adults, $3 for seniors 62
and older and free for chil-
dren 12 and younger. (760)
747-9215.
Boxes Ken Norton will 1tgn
copies of his book "Going the
Distance• at 7 p.m. at Barnes
& Noble Booksellers in Fash-
ion Island, 953 Newport Cen-
ter Drive, Newp6rt Beach.
(949) 759-0982. .
Orange Coast College's Small
Business Assistance Center
will team up with the Foun-
tain Valley Chamber of Com-
merce to host a golf tourna-
ment beginning at 1 p.m. at
Mile Square Golf Course,
10401 Warner Ave., Fountain
Valley. The tournament is
titled "The George Scott Spe-
cial• for the former Fountain
Valley mayor and council-
man. Packages for four,
including golf. dinner and a
quarter-page listing in the
program, is $750. Individual
players can sign up for $125.
(714) 668-0542.
SATURDAY
Robert B. Mcllhenny will hold
a SAT/PSAT/ACT test work-
shop from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. at
Orange Coast College's Busi-
ness Education Room 102,
2701 Fairview Road, Costa
Mesa. Registration is $120 in
advance, $130 at the door. A
$10 material fee is payable to
the presenter in class. (714)
432-5880.
Re-leaf Costa Mesa's Octo-
ber tree-planting e ve nt on
with your next
dinner.
MouUi-watering encr&:s, a ttlucd
dining aanosphcrc and patio
T seating with a delightful view of
Newport Bay make for a refreshing break in your day.
Open from 7:00 AM. 1 days a week.
(949)729-1144
DINNER THURSDAY -SUNDAY i ... EARLv··1i·1r;·siiiciiL··1
l between_......... i
! 15% off ·
i Dinner spee1111 i ..., ...... "',._ ......... , ........
t ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• fr..!~~t'!'?.
Placentia Avenue will take
place at 8:30 a.m. The group
will meet at 1985 Placentia
Ave. under a canopy. (714)
546-0168.
The Jntemadonal Cat Show,
held by the Cat Fanciers'
Assn. to determine the top
cat in the world, will run
from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. at the
Orange County Fair & Expo-
sition Center, 88 Fair Dnve.
Costa Mesa. The event will
continue from 9 a .m. to 5
p.m. Sunday. $7 for adults,
$5 for children, seniors and
military personnel.· Free for
children younger than 6 with
an adult. (619).267-0787.
The Plecemakers' Harvest
Festival will be held from 9
a .m . to 4 p.m. at 1720 Adams
Ave., Costa Mesa. The annu-
al event will feature 17 5
artists who will sell hand-
crafted items, live country
music, food and entertain-
ment. The festival will con-
tinue Sunday. (714) 641-
3112.
The Upper Newport Bay
Peter and Mary Muth Inter-
pretive Center will hold its
g rand opening from 10 a.m.
to 3 p.m. at 2301 University
Drive, Newport Beach.
Guest speakers, children's
activities, group tours and a
free breakfast will be includ-
ed. (949) 640-6746.
Barnes & Noble Booksellers
in Fashion Island will host a
writer's workshop at 2 p.m.
at 953 Newport Center Dri-
ve, Newport Beach. Local
author and educator Sam
Mccarver wiU share tips,
hints and ideas on writing.
(949) 759-0982.
Doily Pilot
The first art auction to bene-
fit Women Helping Women
will be held at 6:30 p.m. at
the Newport Harbor Elks
Lodge, 3456 Via Oporto,
Newport Beach. $20 per per-
son, $35 per couple. (949)
631-1287.
The Jntemattonal Speedway
National Champio.nships
will start at 7:30 p .m. at the
Grandstand Arena at the
Orange County Fairgrounds,
88 Fair Drive, Costa Mescl.
$17 for adults, $8 for stu-
dents, and free for children 5
and younger. (949) 492-
9933.
SUNDAY
The 10th annual CHOC/Dis-
neyland Community Walk
will be held at 8:30 a .m. near
the Orange County Perform-
ing Arts Center, 600 Town
Center Drive, Costa Mesd
The walk is an event of th<'
CHOC Foundation for Ch1I -· 1
dren, Mighty Ducks Care
and Angels Care. As walk-
ers return to the main event
site at about 10:15 am
three vignettes choreo-
graphed by Disney will
entertain the crowd. Event!.
include signings by
Olympians and other
celebrities, face paint1n<1
and a marke tplace. (7141
532-8690.
Children's advocate and
author Alice Aspen March
wtll lecture on "Testtng th<·
Limits" at 7 p.m. at the MC'!>c1
Verde United Method1-.1
Church at 1701 Baker St
Costa Mesa. $3 donation 1-.
requested. (714) 968-46q7
. and press 3.
Fresh Fish Deli, Chowders, Gumbos, Seafood Tacos, Sandwiches & Dmnl'rs
MONDAY NIGIIT TACO DAY PASTA
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Doily Pilot
BANDIT
CONTINUED FROM A 1
COUNCIL
CONTINUED FROM A 1
intolerance and materialism
has crept into the city in the
past few years.
• 1 think that there are some
things, however, that could be
done in a more proper way,•
he said Wednesday.
tomatic handgun.
He is suspected to have
robbed stores in seven
Orange County dttes, includ-
ing three heists in Costa
Mesa, since August.
FitzPatrlck said the depart-
ment is happy with the arrest
because officers believed the
suspect was becoming bolder
with each robbery he commit-
ted.
refuse services, O'Neil cited
plans to annex Newport Coast
and the council's work to
extend the flight restrictions
at John Wayne Airport beyond
2005 as examples of careful
planning.
"It's time that we start look-
ing at being more tolerant,
helpful and constructive," said
Ridgeway, who, like O'Neil,
is not up for reelection this
year.
"There's a divisiveness in
the city t.b:at has not been there
before," he said. "I ask for a lit-
tle more cooperation to make
this work.•
HI think that we have a
great city, great quality of life,•
he said. H And this was done by
the present representative
fonn of government. But there
are some on the council who
should be more of a team play-
er and take political leader-
ship."
H He seemed to be dis-
guised in the first few ind-
_ dents,• he said. HBut as it
went on, he didn't seem to
care.•
And the city's residents
"pay no more taxes than else-
where in the county,• he said,
adding that no other city in the
county collects trash without
an extra charge.
Bob Wynn, who served as
Newport Beach's city manag-
er for 20 years and is gunning
for Thomson's seat in the Nov.
7 election, said be a~eed the
city, should be proud of its
achievements.
Rather than delaying a
decision on the controversial
Dunes expansion project,
which includes a 470-room
hotel and a 31,000-square-foot
convention center, until resi-
dents have voted o n two
growth-control measures in
Councilman Tod Ridgeway
seconded O'Neil's view,
adding that an atmosphere of
There was also the concern
that he might resort to vio-
lence as time went by, said
Costa Mesa Police Chief
David Snowden.
"He was armed," he said.
·And ·you always have to
assume that an armed suspect
could get violent."
Snowden lauded the com-
m unity for supporting the
department a nd calling in
with tips and information.
Store clerks in local liquor
stores also expressed relief
Wednesday following the
arresl
"I feel very good," said
Yong Kim, who works al Pow-
ers Liquors on Victoria Street.
"He's a bad person. . .. takes
money from others. I'm very
happy.·
The clerk at Hilgrens
Liquor on East 17th Street,
the store that was robbed
Monday, declined to com-
ment on the arrest.
Lewis is being held in Cos-
ta Mesa jail with bail set at
$50,000. He is scheduled to
be arraigned today.
PARK
CONTINUED FROM A 1
said. Altogether, the city
will have 18 months to
decide whether to buy the
land or pursue other
options to secure its con-
version into a park.
Caltrans bought the
land as part of a plan to
build the Pacific Coast
Freeway in the 1960s. In
1971. Newport Beach vot-
ers rejected the freeway
proposal, and the site has
sat vacant ever since.
Hoag Hospital bought
another Caltrans property
on Pacific Coast Highway
to build its lower campus,
Debay said.
A transfer of the land
from Caltrans to the
Ooastal Conservancy, a
state agency that buys,
protects and restores
coastal areas, is one
option to turn the land
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into a park without using
city money, Dehay said.
She added that the city
would work with stale
legislators such as Sen.
Ross Johnson (R-lrvine) to
look into the p ossibility of
such a transfer.
Although the city's
patk funds do not contain
a lot of money right now,
Debay said a developer
for the Banning Ranch
area would have to add
money to the fund when
its projects are approved.
That could give the city
more funds to pay for the
park if the legislative
approach fails.
The park, christened
Sunset Ridge Park by res-
idents, would rnclude
sports fields and play-
grounds, as well as walk·
ways and benches. The
fields would be used only
during the day, and no
lights would be ddded,
Debay said.
CENTER
CONTINUED FROM A 1
office space.
The part of the project dis-
cussed Monday was the
Commonwealth Partners sec-
tion, which JS hordered by Bristol
Street, Anton Boulevard, Avenue
of the Aru. dnd the San Diego
Freewdy.
Jdmes R. Anderson, a part-
nt:r di Commonwealth Pd.rtners,
said the company's part of the
project will be romplet~ in three
phases over at least five years.
Commonwealth has also
decided that t 'Y,, of the money it
spends on the project will be put
WEATHER
CONTINUED FROM A1
type calls," Peoples said. But the
agency has been tSsuing small
craft warnings since late Tuesday
as the stom1 rolled into the area.
The one mishap Uie harbor
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November, council members
should have either approved or
rejected the proposal, Wynn
said.
The other District 1 chal-
lenger. John Heffernan, said
that a.long with the city's dearth
of information on its plans to
prevent an airport expansion
and its lack of involvement in
planning annexation areas
such as Bonita Village,
Newport Coast or Banning
Ranch, the growth-control ini-
tiatives on the ballot showed
that citizens were unhappy
with the current government.
"Initiatives don't come
about because people think
the City Council is domg a
great job,· Heffernan said.
toward art, such as rotating plat-
fornlS to display public art or art
integrated into the paving or
street furniture, Anderson said.
The company's presentation
rubbed Councilman Joe
Erickson the wrong way.
MThey are using art as a sell·
ing point for what in reality is an
entitlement for hundreds of thou-
sands of square feet," he said.
MThe developer seems to be sell-
ing art as a trade-off for enµtte-
ment, which I don't agree with.
Art is nice, but I think we have d
responsibility to the otizens who
have to live with traffic and other
impacts of a very urbanized pro-
ject .•
Councilwoman Heather
Somers said she is concerned
patrol responded lo turned out to
be less serious than it could have
been: a sailboat buffeted by the
wind broke one of the tines on its
mooring and began to swing
armmd in the water. But, Peoples
said, the direction o[ the gusts
kept it trom colliding with other
moored boats.
"We would have had d pret-
Thursday, October 12, 2000 A 7
Wynn gave the fate of the
American Legion Post al
Marina park as another exam-
ple of a lack of leadership by
the council. While members
had voted unanimously to
enter negotiations for a long-
tenn lease in 1997, nothing
ever came of it, Wynn said.
Now, Legionnaires are con-
cerned about their hall's sur-
vival because the city is con-
sidering a luxury hotel project
for the site.
Council members •did not
even return phone calls• the
Legionnaires made, Wynn
said. "That brings out suspi-
cions, uncertainty a11d ques-
Uons regarding the quality of
leciden.hip. •
about the SJ.Ze, density and park-
mg parts ol the proposdl, but
would "certdinly promote incor-
poratmg art and having as much
of an artistic look as possible •
Planrung comrruss1oners and
resident<; at the public hearing
also spoke about traffic concerns.
Anderson said
Commonwealth would like to
have a left-tum lane into a park-
ing garage at the end of a pro-
posed freeway offramp on
Avenue of the Arts, but said the
state Department of
Ttansporl.dllon might not allow it.
Commissioner Katrina Foley
suggested. that Commonwealth
and oty staff consider bicyde
access to the site as well.
ty good boat accident,· had the
wind changed directions, he
said.
On the freeways, slick con-
ditions turned out to be unusually
problem-free. A spokeswoman
for the California Highway Patrol
said traffic on local roads was
Lighter than usual Wednesday
morning.
aoJ:TJ::~~J ~~CH
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I
• ... ..
I • t t I . ON VAcAnON .. A8 Thursday, October 12, 2000
. .
-
' I
. .
Doily Pitd
Carl and Marie Adair of Newport Beach, on their honey-Carolyn and Al Graps of Newport.Beach, vtfiUng C&is Ludlle and Bud Reed, and Shirley Reed Wllllams, at the ·
moon on the Island of Capri, Italy. Castle RulDs tn CMls, Latvia. · ' Reed Reunion in Johnstown, Pa. "•
All from Newport-Mesa, five familles -the Andersens, Kerstners, Karges, Cottams, Ritchles and
Lauren Mobns -vacationing in Naplll Bay, Maui.
Hosted by
AAA Travth\gency &:
Holland Amtrka Wtttoura
... ~ .,...., ..... ,,,...
CAI+ TOOAVRJR RD:RVA'111H
714/424-7876
An American J'amily Operated Business
Strnce 1983
,~\·,~~ TheFloor Guys
~:1\o•\•' Our famtJy Hrving your famtJy
t . for f.7 years
LIFETIME mE COllTY EXCLUSIVE DISTRID
OUARANTEI CARPET OF UFUIME GUARDTEE CARPET
$199 . ~::::: ~~~: ·::::::tyty SQ. FT. LlftflMt Cr11• l1rr11ty
WOOL BERBER
: CARPET
$249~:
INSTALLED llfttlMI Fi•e l1tt1aty ' INSTALLED I'.
4000 STORE BUYING· POWER
C1r~!t C1-C!f The W1rl4'1 L1r1••f C1r~t R1t1ll1r ·
IF YOU'RE NOT BUY NG FROM US
YOU'RE PAYING TOO MUCH
John FREE
UftllMW1....., . .--..... ,
Trlpli '""''' Pe• .............. ... """ ......
FREE * (949} 650~-~~~~=:-~~-
tl4 E. t7t~
Ctlfl 1111 ••=.r. ........ 11.f
Marjorie
and Charles
Ringwald,
,,,
and their
granddaughter,'
Heather
Shields. on a
Holland
American
Cruise.
Sarah Geocarts,
Elizabeth
Geocarls and
Brittanny .
Sturgess of
Newport Beach;
whale-watcb111g
off the coast of
Provincetown
while
vacationing
with their
famWeson
Cape Cod.,
SOCIEIY Thursday, October 1 2, 2000 A9
sophisticated evening to help troubled kids
nvestrnentadvisorBudge
Colllm opened his water-
front estate on Bay Island
week for the Sophisti-
o(ATSC -Assessment
bnent Services Center.
sunset dinner party
ked the 22nd annual
ent for the gals known for
ir glamour and their guts
helping troubled youth
ugh ~e local program. ~
Chaired by NW Steve
and Jeannie 1.awrence, th
evening soiree attracted a
wide following of center
members and prospective
members.
THE CROWD
•sadistic.•
•I ran a mile and half
today,• Wortmann boasted,
·and I actually lived. H "What an ideal spot for
this event. We are fortunate
to have Budge Collins sup-
porting US,. said Nill
Stevens, greeting the local
crush crossing over the Bay
Island walking bridge onto
the Collins property. •A
waterfront garden party is
pretty unique.•
It's a process to get back
into shape and to find an
exercise regune that actually
works. I know because I
walked with Wortmann on
the first day of his health
kick some two months ago. I
barely made it half way
around Lido before I begged
to go home.
ABOVE: Co-chair Nill Stevens, left, Eve Komyei, co-chair J eannie Lawrence and Lana Chandler attended the
Sophisticates of ATSC (Assessment Treabnent Services Center) sunset dinner ~arty at the home of Budge Collins.
ABOVE RIGHT: Barbara Magness, left, and Kathie Porter look sophisticated.
Indeed it is, and the
Collins home, a 1930s vin-
tage English Tudor tradition-
al in original glory, sits on a
comer promontory surround-
ed by lawn, roses and tower-
ing old trees with a bay view
to the west that could trans-
form even the grumpiest of
grumpy folks by the sheer
vista at sunset.
What's the secret? One
step at a tune until building
up to some meaningful exer-
cise. Keep up the good fight
John.
BElOW: Carol Demars stands with the event's host, investment advisor Budge Collins.
BElOW RIGHT: Cathy Louden, left, and Cindy Gates came to support the center.
The enormous orange
ball of fire did its magic on
the Sophisticates as the
crowd meandered the gar-
den setting samplmg the
supper catered by Jason's
Catering and listening to the
music of the Naples Cham-
ber Ensemble.
Taking in the view, Lido
Isle's Anne Wortmann with
her svelte husband, John
Wortmann. Johnny boy has
shed some unwanted pounds
'Via Lindara and a personal
trainer that he labels as
Eve Komyel and her best
man. Stan Hanson, were m
the crowd of good-looking
folks, mdny of whom were
eating the delicious spread,
despite dU the trim figures on
display.
Lana Chandler , Debbie
Newmeyer, Dean Ann
Dierks, Donna Anderson.
Darleen (a.k.a. Darby)
Mandark, Cindy Gates, Bar-
bara and Jay Magness,
Suzanne and Gary Bryant,
Karen Hardin, Martha
Green, Betty Belden Palmer,
Peggy Goldwater and hus-
band Bob Clay, Rene Tuzee
(s1Ster of newscaster
MicheUe Tuzee), Kathie
Porter, Cathy Lowden,
Sarah Corrigan, Olivia Cha-
m! and Nancy Hill were all
on hand for the fall fun.
Each year the Sophisti-
c-ates begin their social and
fund-raising season by we!-
Enjoy a Spacious Suite, Sumptuous Dining,
Entertainment, Bingo, Crafts, Billiards, Beauty Salon,
Transportation to Doctor, Shopping, Fun Trips,
Friendly Caring People.
From $1,495/Mo.
2283 Fairview at Wilson
Costa Mesa
Minimum age 58
For more information
please call:
949/646-6300 or Fax 949/646-7 428
' STRAIGHT TALK FROM HEFFE~NAN-RESIDENTS FIRST/
MEASURE T LESSON# 1: ARE NEWPORT BEACH RESIDENTS ONLY
LOOSE CHANGE IN DEEP POCKETS?
DO THESE OVT-OF·TOWN BIG MONEY BACKERS OF MEAsUBE T REALL V CARE
ABOUT OUR NEWPORT BEACH QUALITY OF LIFE _. OR ARE THEY 1RYING TO PROTECT
THEIR FUTURE PROFITS AT OUR EXPENSE?
1. CALIFORNIA ASSN. OF REAL TORS
2. BUl.OING INDUSTRY ASSN. OF SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA
3. KAUFMAN & BR<W>
4. NATIONAL ASSN. OF HOME BUILDERS
5. TAYLOR WOODROW HOMES
TOTAL
(FROM FILED FORM "10)
$52,000
24,500
11,000
10,000
5,000
$102,500
DO :rHE MEASURE t BACKERS REALLY THINK THAT THEY CAN BUY OUR VO~? MEMYRE I HAS NJEADY SPENT MORE THAN $258,885 AS Of sef'TEMBER 30 • WHICH:
EQUALS ROUGH\. Y $5.25 PER REGfSTERED VOTER IN NEWPORT BEACH, AHO
18 MOAE THAN 13 NID%TMES TME AMOUNT SPENT BY GftEENL!GHJ I yEMlJRE S
HEFFERNAN FOR NIWPORT RACH CrTY COUNCIL-DISTRICT 7
(NO CONT•UTIONI, ITIWGHT TALK & ltlWNTS FIRITI)
"YU" ON I I OR!ENUOHT
-..o" ONT---WYNN BACKI MIAIURI T .
C1J1 ·---JNIMYr
coming community support
to JOin their efforts to support
the center. Dedicated to the
purpose, ·Arrest the Prob-
le m, Not the CluJd. • the cen-
ter works to divert kids from
behaVlor that interferes with
healthy family hfe and soC'lal
relationships and mdy pre-
vent success m school
The center offers profes-
sional guidance counselmg
and evdluation, including
fanuly therapy to those at
risk. di no charge.
• THE CROWD appears Thursdays
and Saturdays
cd3 ~ ~~
Our Specialty Holiday Boutique
(locaced in the old cigar shop location in che Founrain Cou rtyard)
Open Daily From Occ. 7ch, 10:00am-):00pm
rr~, <ffr;ya11 I, ell/et °tb1iyflr r~,{-r/1~ 11 r/
0Y~1t<!a ;/(/ ecoJf ej oS!l Jf?fl-,,'f.~~</ {/r,;!t1
• Silk Florals and Custom Wreath.$, Garlands. Can& and Other Hohd.ly pec1alty I rems
\/~~D~
DOJVIJn' A\'All.AllU
STORE HOURS: MON-SAT 9AM-8PM,
SUN IOAM-6PM (RX CLOSED)
3445 VIA UDO, N.B. NEXT TO PAVILIONS
A MOST UNUSUAL DRUG STORE
(949) 723-5858
. '
AIO Thursday, October 12, 2000 DATEBooK Doily Pilot
The Place to celebrate the fall, football and flame-burgers
Y ou know how a Southern
Californian really knows
it's autumn? Sure, we
have a slight chill in the air,
some or the leaves change on
some of the trees, it gets dark in
the middle or lunch and people
who have firepl.8ces go ahead
and nip the switch. }3ut it is foot-
ball and a hankering for big time
DllllllG comfort food that
really lets us
REVIEW :~::V~all
And there is
only one place, apUy named The
Place, on East Coast Highway in
Corona del Mar where one can
celebrate the seasonal transition
appropriately with football
everywhere and an oh so com-
forting flame-burgers and fries in
front of you.
With satellite receivers and a
television in every comer at
every angle in The Place, you
can watch every game you ever
dreamed of. And for just a few
more weeks, you can catch base-
ball at the same tune. A sports
fan's paradise.
Now you're asking yourseU,
•Isn't she just ta lking about
another sports bar?"
Let me assure you that no, it
is not just another sports bar.
The Place is far more personal
and cozy than any of the chain
restaura nVsports bars and chock
full of local navor and characters.
Just standmg at the door, you
get a view of the sports collec-
tion, booze collection and people
collection -old and young.
The rustic wood walls are
covered In memorabilia, much of
it local. Batting helmets line the
walls, along with Chuck Finley's
jersey, somebody's old skis, box-
FYI
WHERE: 2920 E. Coast
Highway, Corona del Mar
WHEN: Monday through
Friday 11 a.m. to midnight
kitchen open until 10 p.m.
Saturday through Sunday
10 a.m. to 11 p.m., kitchen
open until 9 p.m.
HOW MUOt: Inexpensive
CALL:(949)644--02io
ing gloves, ancient ice skates, a
giant pair of basketball shoes,
cleats from football's pioneer
days, and a lantern. •
The booze collection leaves
no tast.e dry, with 10 different
drafts, a great selection of bot-
Ued beer and a full bar.
And the people collection?
Suffice it to say, there is much to
see, all of it interesting.
And if the surroundings aren't
enough of a celebration of all
that .is American, take a peek at
the menu. The stUff that makes
us famous in medical journals
and iii 1bird World countries -
chili, chicken wings, chips,
cheeseburgers and the diet spe-
cial •tuna with a green salad."
The aforementioned Oarne-
burgers ($5.75) is reason alone to
visit and has made yours truly's
Top 3 best-burgers-In-town list.
This half-pounder is loaded with
all the usuals plus bacon, avocado
and cheese. ll all comes together
just right and is truly a great one.
I hesitated to do this review
because I would have to try
something different. But I
forged forth and tried the
chicken wings, excellent with a
sassy sauce (ma ke sure to order
them well done); the taquitos,
tasty but not a lot of suste-
nance; and the polish sausage
sandwich ($5.25) This is sport-
VILLA NOVA
Award Winnin g lta.fian Cuisine Since 1933
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Music
ing food babyl
Actually Brlan ordered the
polish sausage sandwich and
swore he would again, and
again.
The Place's pizzas are popular
and available for takeout. And
they have a nice variety of ham-
burgers, including a jalapeno
burger ($5.50) and a Philly bmg-
er with grilled onions, mush-
rooms and cheese.
The Place offers a long list of
grill~d sandwiches from the
French dip ($5.50) and the tuna
m~t ($6) to the hot dog, chili dog
and the BLT. This is get-your-
pajamas-on-and-get-the-remote
type comfort.
You can't have a causal
restaurant in California without
at least nodding to the Mexican
food influences. And The Place
nods vigorously with a entire
section from south of the border,
replete with taco salads, tacos,
quesadillas and huevos la placha
($5.25) -eggs scrambled with
bacon, tomato, jalapenos and
salsa, served with tortillas.
Deli sandwiches, daily soups
and a small breakfast menu
round out the choices.
J mentioned that The P}Slce is
full of local flavor, and nowhere is
this more evident than on Satur-
day afternoons when college foot-
ball is in full swing. From LitUe
League baseball tea.ms to grand-
pas with their USC letterman
sweaters, from surfers to fitness
trainers, The Place has them all.
.
And though it can get rowdy
and loud in the re, The Place's
manager, •Mo· (short for
Monique), runs a pretty tight
ship so that everyone can have
fun. 'Tis the season.
; KATHY MADER's dining reviews
appear every other Thursday.
GREG FRY I DAlY I'll.OT
The Place bartender Monique Madar bolds a plate of fried zucchini, while
cook Marcos Escalante looks on from behind the bar. The Place ln Corona
del Mar serves more than Just appetizers. It has a full menu of food.
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Daily Pilot 'DATEBooK . ' .
Thundoy, Odober 12, 2000 A 11
Stiller: needs tap skills of 'Boatmen' when he goes to 'Meet the Parents'
'Meet the Parents'
remake is hilarious
T his ts a spontaneously
funny picture. •Meet
the Parents• ts a
remake of a 1993 movie with
the same names and
improves upon it nicely.
The casting is inspired:
Robert De Niro as Jack
Byrnes, the controllihg patri-
arch whose firstborn is once
again threatening to leave
the nest; Ben Stiller as Greg
Pocker, who REEL threatens to
entice the CRITICS firstborn fro~ the nest; Ten
Polo as the firstborn, who
threatens to leave the nest a
lot; and Blythe Danner as
Dina Byrnes, wife and moth-
er of Jack and Pam, respec-
tively, who 1S wholly accept-
ing or everything that meets
with Jack's approval.
Greg's intention to ask
Pam to marry him is cur-
tailed when he inadvertently
learns that he s hould first
clear this with Daddy. He is
invited to spend the week-
end with Pa.m's parents. nus becomes complicated
when Debbie (Nicole
George Focker (Ben Stiller), right, meets bis girlfriend's father, Jack Byrnes (Robert DeNlro) ln "Meet the Parents."
DeHuff), Pam's younger sis-
ter, announces her intention
to wed within two weeks. She
is bringing her fiancee and
his parents home that same
weekenH to meet her family.
Jack packs his bag with
the engagement ring inside,
and he and Pam head for the
dirport. There are a couple or
very funny scenes when Jack
has to check his bag because
1t will not go through the X-
rdy diea When the airlme
loses his bag, the movte
tdkes a couple of fnendly
pokes at the airl.mes baggage
handlmg syste m.
The real fun begins when
they amve at the family home
on Long Island, and Jack gets
to meet the parents. No one is
better than De Niro at com-
municating
without
uttering a
word. His
nonverbal
opinion of
each of
Greg's
moves is
hilarious.
Greg's
Joan Andre wish to please
causes
total self-consciousness and
turns him into a made-to-
order klutz. Notably, Teri
Polo and Blythe Danner
underplay their roles nicely.
That leaves the interplay
between Jack and Greg as
the whole focus of most of
the scenes.
PASTRY BAKERY
Of COSTA MESA
• TortH
• Rolla & BNed
..
-Mtnu Sampler -
Ftltt Mtpon lrocllttt• wtdl laeon,
Onion and Ptppen wtlb ~-loMaar'Y Olu•
'"'mpftn' l&lnt.ow 1'lwt wttll
HontY Mattard Olals .... ~ ,._. aut
Applt Wood laoM4 .. con ...... Artilf .....
wtth Ancllc>-llOlll')' Glas
llow·oooW leby ..a l&M fluM
wtdl ov hahllltl 119 ..... "'-• l wtUdtt ct.06m ol _, '°"' .. Olpli( °""" 5lltd
All ..,... .-\iH """ Pl'Mh C'Mll 1111 tllt ('ob, ,....,. Slaw
....t c:hoiftof 0.CW.,..... Ma lt'-ar ....._.rot...
Suuo Hf'NtAr • ftrtAf ~toH S:OO· l iOO ,:,..
The built-in clues and cues
for upcom.ing disasters are
spelled out way in advance
-the um on the mantle
which contain Jack's mother's
ashes, the proud fact that the
cat is toilet trained, the simple
statement that their beloved
cat has no outside survival
skills all point you in the right
direction .
Stiller has some of the
best facial expressions on the
screen today, espeoally his
ability to look utterly befud-
dled when, with the best of
intentions, he manages to
flood the cesspool, hit the
um wtth the champagne
cork, set the house on fire
and liberate the cat.
The comedy and laughs
generated by these shenani-
gans and the ability to carry it
off are all indications of thor-
oughly professional performers
and a good script. It is a real
pleasure to be able lo laugh
wholeheartedly at their antics.
"Meet the Parents" is rated
PG-13 for sexual content, drug
references and language.
• JOAN ANDltE, "over 65," is
Newport ~ach r~ident who
does a lot of volunteer work.
'Bootmen' puts on
a tap dancing show
I s ay, guys. Let's get
the gang together
and put on a show! • nus idea worked for Judy
tl ' ytafl .9lue& £k, ~
fF,ync/, .... bdi<pa .fT~
f?7:e most extraordinary collection
of unique, one-of-a-kind, fine quality
French antique fu.rniture, mirrors,
clocks and decorative accessories
dating from the 18th, 19th and early
20th centuries.
Hours: Monday-Saturday, 1 Oam-5pm
--
949 973-0898
3666 8au B~ !H'wJtwtf9
Bq,.qna cUdJffar, Oa(f/Ornia
oOI
Garland and Mickey Rooney
in "Babes on Broadway,· and
it still works in the energetic
"Bootmen, ·an Austrahan
film about a group of young
tap-dancing mill workers.
One reason th.is blne-tested
plot line works here IS
because the film's clirector and
co-wnter, Dem Perry, IS giving
us a qu8S1 -autob1ographtca1
story of hts own experiences
growing up in the Austrahan
town of Newcastle, w,here
Perry founded the dance
troupe known as Tap Dogs.
The 1995 ftlm "Tap Dogs•
mtroduced thts group's exc1t-
mg brand of macho tap
danang. Smee then, the Tap
Dogs have performed all
over the world.
• Boolmen • stdIS Adam
Gard.a, who performed at
the opening ceremony of the
Olympics in Sydney. He
plays the lead role of Sean, a
mill working son of a mill
worker who wants more out
of life than he has.
When Sean was a child,
his mother eneo\ira·ged biol
to take dancing lessons.
Although
bis mother
died when
he was
young, he
has contin-
ued taking
lessons
whenever
he can.
Tap dance,
however, IS
still taught
as an ele-June Fenner gant, top
bat and
tails dance style. Sean wants
something newer -a
tougher, more aggressive
dance style set to the rhythm
of rock and roll
As you might suspect, a
group of male tap dancers m
a mill town is not met with
universal acceptance. Sean's
own father, played by
Richard Carter, has ambiva-
lent feelings about his son's
passion for dance. He is far
more sympathetic toward •
Sean's brother, Mitchell, who
has added car theft to his
pursuits m an effort to raise
enough cash to buy a truck.
Another conflict arises in
Sean's hfe when he an
Mitchell both pursue a lovely
blond hairdresser. played by
Sophie Lee.
But let's face 1L When all is
said and done, what will really
stay with you after you leave
the theater are the fabulous
dance nwnbers, espeoally the
finale.
"Boot men· 1s rated R for
language, some violence and
a scene of sexuality.
• JUNE ~ a Costa Mesa resi-
dent in her late 50s. is vice president
of a WO<k force traioi9g company.
•
. . DATEBOOlC . . . .
A 12 Thursday, October 12. 2000
After Quartet of shows to O/J!!fl this weekend HOURS
• Send APTa HOUllS Items to the Daily ., ...... ntui become waiters and serve up the Pilot. 330 W. Bay St., COSU Mesa, CA 92627;
There are nine scenes repast -JI ticketed for Friday fax to (949) ~ 170 or call (949) S74--Q68. s ometbing new will be in 'Scenes From a Hotel and Saturday evenings, indefi· A complete listing may be found at
added to the local stage nitely, at the Mezzanine Restau-http:llwww.dallypllotcom.
scene this weekend as two Lobby,' one--act pl~ from rant, 19800 MacArthur Blvd. Din-
groo,ps that speda.Uze in unfamil· ner and curtain are at 8 p.m., SPECIAL tar entertainment mount their lat-eight dHferent play-with coclctails served at 7 :30.
est aeatlons, while two other the· wrights. who concoct their Reservations are taken at (714) SHOPPING GALA aten offer more familiar shows. 979·CLUE. The New Voices Playwrights stories periodically around ·uwe Shop of Horrors" at the The opening night gala for the 25th
Workshop unveils its newest· 1\ilogy Playhouse is a musical Anniversary The Christmas Com-
THEATER evening of a preconceived theme .... comedy based on an old Roger pany Shopping Extravaganza will
originals, titled Corman flick and focuses on a be held from 1 to 11 p.m. Saturday
•Scenes From young flower shop assistant's far-with a ·spedal benefactor reception PREVIEW a Hotel Lob-years ago, there will not be a from 6 to 7 p.m. at the Orange
by," at the new~lay by Chrtstopher 'Il'ela, out experiment in botany. County Fairgrounds, 88 Fair Drive,
Costa Mesa Civic Playhouse, who founded the group after tak-The giant plant that results Costa Mesa. The black-tie event is
while the Mystery Cafe, now ing a playwriting class at South possesses a ravenous appetite to thank the patrons of The Christ-
known as the Gourmet Detective, Coast Repertory. and a voice to rival that of James mas Company, which benefits
serves up murder as the main neta and several other stu-Earl Jones.
dents from the SCR class put Opening Friday the 13th. the Junior League of Orange County
course in Newport Beach. Else-"New Voices" together and have show plays at 8 p.m. Fridays, 3:30 projects that focus on child abuse
where, the 'lhlogy Playhouse and adolescent pregnancy preveo-opens the dark comic musical presented evenings of one-acts In and 8 p.m. Saturdays and 3:30
"Uttle Shop of Horro~." and the Civic Playhouse and the for-and 1 p.m. Sundays th.rough Oct. lion. (949) 263-0442.
Vanguard University goes South-mer home of the Theater District, 29. Call (714) 957-3347, Ext. 1, for SPACE AND MEMORY IN COLOR em for •steel Magnolias.• also in Costa Mesa. ticket infonnation.
There are nine scenes in "Scenes From a Hotel Lobby" Finally, the popular all-female Orange Coast College's Photo
"Scenes From a Hotel Lobby," will be played out at 2 p.m. Sat-comic drama "Steel Magnolias" Gallery presents color photographs
· one·act plays' from eight different urday and Oct. 21, and 6 p.m. arrives at Vanguard University by Los Angeles photographer Yoko
playwrights, who concoct their Sunday and Oct. 22 at the play-(formerly Southern California Kanayama from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
stories periodically around a pre· house, 661 Hamilton St., Costa College) for two weekends under th.rough Nov. 7 in the Fine Arts
conceived theme like Christmas, Mesa. Call (949) 225·4125 for the direction of Susan Berkom-' Building, 2701 Fairview Road, Cos-
Valentine's Day, the beach or the infonnation. pas, chairwoman of the school's ta Mesa. TIUed "GHOST -1," the
bedroom. Meanwhile, Orange County's theater department. The play is exhibit features 12 color pho-
The lineup for this two-week-best dinner theater -at least in set in a Louisiana beauty salon tographs by Kanayama exploring
end presentation includes "Wait-the view of Orange Coast Maga-and blends high comedy with themes of space and memory. Free.
ing" by John Bolen, "Ritz Toast" zine -will be back in action emotional trauma. (714) 432-5520.
by Tom Swimm, "Mixed Dou-with an original whodunit titled Opening Friday, the show will
bles• by John Lane. •Albatross" "Darling, You Slay Me.• be staged at 8 p.m. Thursdays MUSIC by Richard Freedman -who also It's 1929 in New York and a through Saturdays. with mati-
coauthors "Cocktails" with Alex new Broadway musical, guaran-nees at 2 p.m. Saturdays and
Donnan -"Knight of the teed to be a bit, is opening. Sundays, through Oct. 22 in the MUSICAL EXPLOSION
Garter" by Penny Rudge, "Zing Beneath the charm and glitter are Lyceum Theater on the Costa The Philharmonic Society of
Went the Strings of My Heart• by passions, conflicts and ambitions Mesa campus, 55 Fair Drive. Orange County's Eclectic Orange
Jack Stanley, "Revolving DooTS" of murderous intensity. At least 1icket information is available at Festival 2000 will begin at 7 p.m.
by Gina Victoria Shaffer and one final curtain will be rung (714) 668-6145. Friday with "Conversation with
•Mistress of the San Sebastian down during the three-course Philip Glass,• a festival preview
Cat Hotel• by Amity Wescott. dinner. • TOM 11TUS previews and reviews local talk with one of America's most
For the first time since the The three-act murder mystery theater for the Daily Pilot. His reviews famous living composers. The
"Voices" began speaking three -during which the actors appear Thursda)'\ and saturdays. event will be hosted by Dean
Corey, the society's executive direc-
•~• Re..Utt'~~ Barbara Lee, M.S. MFT ~ ~ Worth-HaNi.fift Couples, Individuals & Groups
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Doily Pilot
tor. Glass' choral symphony will fol -
low. nckets are SlS-$55 and the
perf onnance will be held at the
Orange County Perlonning Arts
Center, 600 Town Center Drive,
Costa Mesa. The festival will
include dance: original theater; 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 European
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 featured in concert
a( 8 p.m. Saturday at Orange Coast
College's Robert B. Moore Theatre,
2701 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa.
Darren's musical credits include 12
albums, fi~e top 10 singles and the
Grammy-nominated "Goodbye
Cruel World.• He has directed such
television programs as "Melrose
Place,· "Beverly Hills 90210" and
"Walker, Texas Ranger." Tickets
are $21-$27. (714) 432-5880.
SEASON STARTER
Orange Coast College's Symphony
Orchestra will open its 40th season
at 7:30 p.m. Sunday at OCC's
Robert B. Moore Theatre, 2701
Fairview Road, Costa Mesa. The
60-piece concert will spoWght
works by Brahms and Rossini. Tick-
ets are $6-$10. (714) 432-5880.
STAGE
OCTOBER LAUGHS
Orange Coast College's production
of comedian Steve Martin's "PicdSl>O
at the Lapin Agile" will show at 8
p.m. Thursdays through Saturday
and 2 p.m. Sunday at OCC's Dranhl
Lab Theater, 2701 Fairview ROdd,
Costa Mesa. $7 in advance, or $6
for seniors, students and children
$9 at the door. Seating is limited.
(714) 432-5880.
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"This is the first tbne that a public
official has said on the record that
[jails and landfills) were only thrown
in to push the measure."
· HowTO
GET PIBllllED
Doily Pilot
EDITORIAL
-DAVID EWS, a consultant for the
Airport Working Group, who says an
Irvine councilman's statement proves
Measure F violated the state constitution.
The Daily Pilot welcomes letten on Issues concemlng Newpcft 8eectl and Costa Mesa.
There we four Wlf'/S to send In your com-
ments:
• lDTElt5 -~· to the D.tily Pilot. 330 w. Bay St., Costa Mesa 92627
• lllEADBS HOYUllE -Call (949) 642-6086
• FAX -Send to (949) ~170
• E-MAIL -Send to d•l/ypilotOl•tirMt.com
All correspondence must include "f04K full
NIN!, hometown and phone number (fOf verttication purposes only).
Thursday, October 12, 2000 A13
District deserves credit for impressive test
T )lere's something
right in Newport-
Mesa schools.
On this year's statewide Aca-
demic Performance Index
scores, 12 of the district's ele-
mentary schools met or beat
required improvements. Only
three failed to hit the goal, while
the remaining five stayed above
the state's target of 800. Scores
run between 200 and 1,000.
The news gets better at
individual schools in the New-
port-Mesa Unified School Dis-
trict, particularly in Costa
Mesa. Sonora Elementary,
which was suppo~ed to
improve by nine points, soared
90, one of the biggest jumps in
the county. Rea Elementary
improved 83 points, far above
its 16-point goal. And Whittier
..... Elementary leaped 73 points,
while its target was just 15.
Both middle schools, TeWin-
k.le and Ensign, far exceeded
their goals too.
And that is not to mention
Harbor View Elementary's top
county score of 934 or Andersen
Elementary's second-place 931.
School officials chalked up
unER TO THE EDITOR
SEAN HlllER I DAILY PILOT
Erika Myszynski, center, and Chelsea Mestas, right, check out an example as they construct a star finder
in their sixth-grade science class Monday at Kalser Elementary School. At left is classmate Kathy Hyde.
the improvements to intensive
teacher focus and interaction
with each other, student moti-
vation and an emphasis on
basic skills. In other words:
good teaching.
Things aren't perfect, how-
ever. The high schools had
mixed results, with Costa
Mesa and Newport Harbor's
scores tailing. Officials -and
students -say those drops
came largely because high
schoolers are not as motivated
as their younger counterparts.
The tests just don't seem that
important to them.
It is up to teachers and par-
ents to change this attitude.
And high school students need
to ~ecognize that the tests
reflect on their school -and
the better respected it is, the
more their grade-point aver-
ages will mean to faceless col-
lege admission officers.
Much, of course, is planned
at district schools, thanks to the
passage of the $110-million
bond. Once the many construc-
tion improvements are made,
students and teachers alike will
be able to concentrate on edu-
cation instead of wonying
about a cracked ceiling caving
in, avoiding rats or dealing
with any of the other horrors
faced on the campuses daily.
These improvements can
only help students learn.
But mainly, judging by
these results, we encourage
teachers and administrators to
continue on the path they are
already on.
Growth debate comes in no small measure
Editor's job·change
evokes memories
of past battles
• The Issue: Two competing initiatives concerning
traffic and development in Newport Beach are headed
for a November ballot showdown.
I understand that MedSure S
calls for a referendum on projects
reqwnng maJOr exemptions to
the general plan onJy. What I
don't understand is what's so
wrong with the general plan that
major exemptions need to be
granted anyway?
I couldn't agree more with
Joseph Bell (The Bell Curve,
Sept. 28). Greenhght is indeed a
desperate measure necessary
because our elected council is
not listening to us, the folks they
are supposed to represent. W hy are the citizens of
Newport being sent to
the polls to vote on mea-
sures S and T which cancel each
other out? Measure T, known as
the Traffic Phrasing Ordnance or
TPO, is sponsored by politicians,
the business READERS sector and orga-
RESPOND ~:~~~
city money.
Measure S, known as the
Greenlight initiative, is spon-
sored by residents, who hope to
control density of building as
well as density of traffic by
allowing residen~ to vote only
on projects that exceed the city's
general plan.
My dwnb questions are: What
is the general plan? Who pays for
it and why is development
allowed to exceed the general
plan?
All I know about the general
plan is that the dty is divided
into 49 sections and each section
has heights, density and use lim-
its, etc. An example would be
Fashion Island, a sector that
would have a plan different from
the plan that would control the
development ol the Dunes.
1be John Wayne Airport is
another sector with a different
plan.
Wbo pays for this general
plari1 I'm sure that dty business
come1 out of dty toes that we
all pay and that by our votes we
give the Oty Council control ol
its spending.
Tbey decide When tbe ~
ShoUld be am8oded end wbeQ tt
should be rewritten. I think we
all agree that ewry few,.....
cm••••• a.a .... Qrlfd. 77 "* bdw. Cc111a Mm,; CA.._ ,,...,,....,.
't suaa.y....,_
our needs change and the plan
needs to be adjusted. When this
happens, I'm guessing that it
costs money to rewrite this plan.
So, why is development
allowed to exceed the general
plan? lf the citizens are paying for
a general plan and the city feels
one is necessary and the develop-
ers know what the general plan
says,. why do they keep asking
the City Council to amend 1t?
ls this representative govern-
ment? This seems to be business
as usual for Newport Beach and
we the people need to stop Uus!
A vote for Greenlight will help.
Better yet. vote for council mem-
bers who will support saving the
quality of life for all citizens and
not those whose only purpose is
to bdng money to the city to pay
for further extravagances.
JOYCE LAWHORN
Newport Beach
Former mayors Bill Ficker and
Marian Bergeson, and the livine
Co. are all backing Measure T
for •traffic solutions.• Every ad
in the Dally Pilot and the litera-
ture sent to me has been against
Mea$U1eS.
On the upper left-hand comer
of the literature I received reads,
•atizem for 1taffic Solutions.•
Yet, none Of these citizens or the
lrvine Co. lists the solutions.
Would they along With Coun-
cilman Guy Adams, who is a
traflk: eagi.neer, ple6se list all
your IOlutiont to the traffic:: prob-
lems w. now have. How many
aolutions do they really have and
what are tbeyf · •
• ·11ACHBJ.1 E. fOS I Ek
Newj>olt Beech
Co :a BMrebe4b A. Cow-.
Uadl Dam. Joe 8rk:bClla wt
.... Scmils
And if it's so flawed, why
doesn't the council update the
general plan?
Here's the reason, as promul-
gated on the Greenlight propo-
nent's Web site:
"In June of 1999, the City
Council seriously weakened the
Traffic Phasing Ordinance, a law
that had protected us from
excessive traffic congestion. For
example, pennanent gridlock at
an mtersection can now be
authonzed by four votes of the
council. They did this instead of
updating the city's general plan
as that would have required
roads to be developed to match
any desired growth over and
above our present growth plan.
It is clear th41t we need the
protection of voter oversight ol
traffic-generating developments
that require changes to the gen-
eral plan if we are to retain our
quality of life.•
ED VAN DEN BOSSCHE
Newport Beach
l totally agree with Michael
BroWning's letter, publiihed in
the Daily Pilot on Sepl 28.
The Greenligbt lnitiabve is
wrong for Newport Beach. 1be
pro-Gieenllgbt people have been
stuffing our m4ilboZ81 wttb Oien;
some conung through the mail
and others 1ust placed there.
Someone should tell them it's
against the law to stick ~in
people\ mailt>Oses.
No on Meosure St ooumsmn•
Newpona.tb
~'="CA~1llelt ....... .... _ASS .........
ldeally, they should reflect our
wishes, but no, they just don't
get it.
They have adopted the atti-
tude that they know best. 1l1is
paternal ·arrogance of power•
and refusal to curb out-of-town
business interests leaves us with
no other choice.
To those who say we don't
have a traffic jam problem. I con-
tend it's never been worse. We
don't want more hotels and cars.
Green.light may not be perfect.
but it is our only chance to take
back our city.
Dedicated unpaid volunteer
residents are working hard to
bring this message to the voting
public. But we are faced with big
money daily ads (ie. Marian
Bergeson, Bill Ficker) and mail-
ings from ex-mayors eager to
reinforce the old power structure.
Their claims are wrong. For
example, • 15 costly special elec-
tions over the past 10 years.•
Experts on both sides agree that
no special eJectiOns would have
been nece&sa()'I voten could
voice their opinklm at regulii
electioos.
U an overeager, Impatient
builder can't weit for a~
eiecti6ft. be Would have to pay
the cost of any ipecial election.
1be tnlth • that out unre-
Spomift. dM~
cound1 d081 IMJl ...........
thus tbey .._... GNeDl6gbt4I
goel. '° ...... poww '° .. ~ pie.
DnO ••r-... tf woWd c.11 I 611-a.CY
•
. . .. • •
Al4 Thur~ October 12, 2000
2 condo units! 2 BO,
1 .BA upper unit with
central patio. 2 BO,
1 BA lower unit with
courtyard. Fireplace
in living room, lots
of windows and
storage. Please call
Coleen Brennan at
(949) 717-5111 .
Todd Schooler designed
and built home with
4 BO, 3.5 BA located on
a street-to-street lot at
the east end of
the. island. Fabulous
floorpian with large
master suite. Please
call Duncan Forgey at
(949) 7.17-5111 .
1607 Balboa Avenue
located on the little
Island, this cozy
cottage has been well
maintained and offers
a partial view. 2 BO,
1 BA home with 1 BO,
1 BA apartment.
Please call Mike Marr
at (949) 717-5111.
This bayfront condo
has lots of mirrors to
enjoy the bay view
from every angle. Spa
tub & hot or dry sauna
in master bath. Dock
available for up to a 48'
boat. Please call John
and Carol Jacobs at
(949) 717-5111.
102s Wykoff way
Unique custom home
with 2 BO. 2 BA.
Soaring ceilings and
dramatic floor to ceiJing
windows look out on
the hills and some
ocean view. Please
call Marian Phillippi at
(949) 717-5111.
. ··-·~ . ' t t
Courtyard townhomes
and single.famUy hornet
In VMa ell Uigo. Adjacent
to Reftection B.y Gott
Club and features g8'ed
entrance. community
pool and events
pavilion. Ple•M call
Steve Leggitt at
(800)~1803
. .
This 3 BO, 2 BA home
has great curb appeal
and a fabulous location.
Amenities include a
cozy fireplsce, air
conditioning, security
system and laundry
room. Please call
Barbara Mangione at
(949) 717-5111 .
28 Landport
Brand new home
with 5 car g~rage.
Extensive upgrades
Include hardwood floors.
gourmet kitchen and
butler's pantry. Please
call Marian Phillippi at
(949) 717-5111 . -
2362 Azure Avelfq,!.
Remodeled home in
move-in condition with
4 BO, 2 BA. Kitchen
and baths upgraded,
large master and huge
backyard with pool
and spa. Please call
Duncan Forgey at
(949) 717-5111 .
Beautiful colonial estate
adjacent to Virginia
Country Club. Custom
built on extra large lot.
Offers hardwood floors,
winding staircase and
private yard. Please
call J.B. Griffin at
(949) 717-5111 .
This condo offers
sun-filled rooms and a
quiet interior greenbelt
location. Newer decor
Includes Berber carpet,
ceramic tile, updated
lighting and country
kitchen. Please call
Nancy Mataasarin at
(949) 717-5111.
11 Rue ChltMu Royele
-4 BO, 4 .5 BA with
cozy den, spa.
~ car garage and
city views. Please
call Carol Allison
at (9491717-5111.
1939 Santiago
Pristine turri key
single level home
with 3 BO. family
room plus den and
3 car garage. P.Jease
call Carol Allison
at (949) 717-5111.
Charming home steps
from the Goldenrod
footbridge. 3 BO,
2.5 BA condo with
plantation shutters,
lush carpet, wet bar
and French doors.
Please call Mike Marr
at (949) 717-5111 .
Recently remodeled.
1 BO. 2 BA family
residence includes
new brick decking.
walkways and parking
area. Dock for up to a
35' boat. Submit all
offers. Please call John
and Carol Jacobs at
(949) 717-5111 .
Lovely 3 BO, 2.5 BA
split level on choice
greenbelt. End unit
With new carpet end
paJnt. Kitchen and
baths upgrllded. Within
walking dl1tance to
~rk• and shopping.
PfeM8 cal Bin~
at (949) 717-5111.
.,·~~-~ . ., -.
Situated on the f9moul
9" hole of the Stadium
Courw at PGA West,
thi1 3 BO. 3.5 BA
custom home offers
spectacular views and
recently · updated
interior. Ple•M call
Bruce Blomgren at
(760) ne..1e53
. . . . ... ....
Industrial Park
Acreage
4.49 acres! Great
locatiOn for medical
offices. General plan
alowl most UNI. Cute
existing hoUM on
propef1y. Property Is In
county Ind off9t9
150 foot frontage.
PIMM clll 8Mey LWy
Ill (949) 717-6111.
Daily Pilot
A shining
spotlight fbr
Big Canyon
• Women's Mid-Amateur
was a great idea and a huge
success on the BC links.
I t was a near-perfect setting with
Big Canyon Country Club
hosting its most prestigious golf
championship ever.
In a relaxed environment with
an intimate feel along the front of
the clubhouse, Big Canyon showed
the United States Golf Association
what Dennis Harwood and other
club members have believed for
years.
That Big Canyon, despite its
lofty reputation as Orange
County's most exclusive private
club and a place where members
prefer anonymity, can handle the
national spotlight and provide the
USGA with an even bigger
Richard Dunn
GOLF
championship,
like the U.S.
Men's Amateur
or U.S. Junior
Amateur.
While Big
Canyon is not
equipped to host
10,000 people, it
is ideal for 500
or less.
In addition to
thwarting a
public relations
disaster with last
week's damaged
greens caused
by vandals, USGA and Big Canyon
officials operated the U.S. Women's
Mid-Amateur Championship like it
was the most important golf event
on the planet.
"It may not get the galleries or
television (coverage), but the
USGA is going to run this
(championship) just like the U.S.
Open,• said Harwood, the event's
co-chairman with Lee Merrick.
Harwood, a Big Canyon
member si,nce the equity-owned
club opened its doors in 1971, was
part of a group that felt Big
Canyon would be bettei:: served
hosting a high-profile event,
instead of lowering its shades to
the public or any outside attention.
"We've kind of kept the club a
secret," Harwood said, "but to
establish it as one of the finest (golf
courses), you have to have the best
play it (and) you need to host an
event."
'T"iger Woods has been an 1 honorary member since 1992
and has been known to give
impromptu golf clinics to Big
Canyon members. But that was
hush-hush outside of the club's
corili.nes, until Harwood and the
USGA convinced enough members
it was OK to publicize such a fact.
Prior tp Sunday when Ellen Port
of St. Louis, Mo., defeated Anna
Schultz in the championship
match, the club had played host to
only three non-club tournaments:
A qualifying round for the 1987
U.S. Amateur, the 1990 Big West
Conference Championship and
1996 Pac-10 Conference
Championship (won by Stanford's
Woods, who shot a course-record
61 in the first round).
Big Canyon has been the
antithesis of a media-conscious
golf dub. For example: There were
no pre-event news releases or
publicity pieces regarding the '96
Pac-10 Championships featuring
S~E GOLF PAGE 85
Ouoie 'Of
1111 DAY ,.,.,....__,
cnl ow kkk en aware of tt.n .. :
' .
Dave Perkins. Estancia football coach
DllJ.llat . l ·-Odaber 16 --
Sl'Clll'S HMlc:# rMa S11VI llAISS __ .,._
Sports Editor Roger Carlson • 949-574.4223 • Sports fax: 949-650-0170 •Thursday, October 12,·2000 Bl
SEAN HllilR I DAILY PILOT
Blake Hacker ls CdM's key to Its running hopes in Friday's coWsion with Costa Mesa.
A PCL BIGGIE
CdM and Costa Mesa took vastly
different roads to Friday's opener,
but an inside lane to the PCL title
is the only issue that really matters.
COSTA MESA
Though the high school
football teams from Corona
del Mar and Costa Mesa
occupy the same district and
league, they wound up
miles apart philosophically
on an age-old scheduling
question this fall.
So, when the reigning
Pacific Coast League co-
champions square off to
open league play Friday at 7
p.m. at Orange Coast Col-
lege, the winner will help
further one side of the
debate over which pre-
league experience best pre-
pares a team for the games
that truly count.
Bany Faulkner
DAILY PILOT
THIS WEEK"S PREP PICKS
~
squad (4-1 and ranked No. 2
in CIF Southern Section
Division IV). after a five-
week run that included a
pair of patsies, such as tiny
Brethren Christian, a 55-14
victim last week.
"We're still kind of up in
the air,• Howell said. •I
thought Saddleback (a 48-23
victory) and Ocean View
(a 29-7 loss) were pretty
tough games and we played
well in one and poorly in the
other. We'll see how we play
against a team like Corona
del Mar.•
Freeman hopes his team
is ready to extend its two-
game winning streak, which
helped build morale after
losing the first three weeks
to teams that are now a com-
bined 13-2.
CdM (2-3) took plenty of
lumps on its preleague road,
but Coach Dick Freeman
believes the consistently
strong competition helped
his team improve. .
·we've played some good
opponents and we don't want to let that go to
Meanwhile, Costa Mesa Coach Jerry
Howell isn't quite sure what to make of his SEE COM·MESA PAGE 82
•Newport Harbor renews its rivalry
with Irvine in Sea View League opener
with upper hand to the crown at stake.
Barry Faulkner
DAILY PILOT
IRVINE -One day,
when Newport Harbor High
football coach Jeff Brinkley
embraces retirement, he'll
want to pick up the phone
and reminisce with Irvine
Coach Terry Henigan about •
the classic matchups their
former teams strung togeth-
er around the tum of the millennium.
That conversation figures to include Friday's
7 p.m. Sea View League-opening clash at
Irvine, the winner of which will break the
coaches' 5-5 deadlock in head-to-head con-
frontations since 1992.
The Brinkley-Henigan rivalry has featured
two CIF Southern Section title games, including
last year's dramatic 19-18 Harbor win. But,
seemingly every fall for the last nine seasons,
the two square off for Sea View supremacy.
Such are the stakes this year, as Irvine (5-0
for the first time in its history) comes in ranked
No. 3 in CIF Division VJ and No. 5 in Orange
County.
Harbor (4-1) is ranked No. 5 in Division VI
and believed to be the only team that can chal-
lenge a 37-man Vaquero roster that includes 34
seniors.
"We've had some great battles with these
guys and this should be another one,• Brinkley
said. "They have a very good team, with a
SEE NEWPORT PAGE 82
Theprireof
admission
• Estancia hopes to exact toll while
'welcoming' senior-less Northwood
High's Timberwolves to the PCL.
Barry Faulkner
DAILY PILOT
IRVINE -Northwood
High has yet to play a Pacif-
ic Coast League football
game, but the Timber-
wolves' slate is anything but .. ._
clean, according to Estancia
High Coach Dave Perki:ls.
Perkins, whose Ea!Jles
hope to provide a stem PCL
initiation when they meet Orange County's
newest varsity program tonight at 7 at Irvine
High, already is looking to settle a score.
Perkins was a vocal critic of Northwood
Coach Rick Curtis' protracted decision whether
to play a varsity or junior varsity schedule this
fall. And, when Curtis finally opted to play as a
varsity unit, Perkins had to back out of plans to
open this season in Hawaii.
Furthermore, some PCL coaches said Curtis
insisted a condition of Northwood playing var-
sity this season was that it open with teams oth-
er than Costa Mesa or Corona del Mar. The
inference here was that opening with other
PCL foes would enable the senior-less squad to
add seasoning, before tackling schools expect-
ed to form the circuit's upper echelon.
•we remember those things and our kids are
aware of them,• Perkins said.
Added motivation, however, should not be
n~ for the Eagles (3-2), who entered the
season as a league tiUe favorite, but sustained
SEE ESTANCIA PAGE 82
. . ..
82 Thunday, October 12, 2000
' CDM LlllUPS
Oo:a•
Ht.Wt.a. .....
,. O'f\M ...., ""° 160 "· QI ll ...-...._ S-6 160 Sr. Tl
.. Milrf eo.. ""° 190 so. Fl S ,__ WMD 5-9 170 Jt. WR
7 lliWY ...._ 6-0 115 Sr. WR
M 'h'i.-MrQ" M 6-1 190 k. T£ a '-~ 6-2 2J6 Jf. LT .. ,... DMn 6-0 205 So. LG sz ADMI 0.-6-0 203 Jr. c
71 llAJT~ .... 210 Sr.~
7S 0-aa.--6-5 300 Sr. RT
COM-MESA
CONTINUED FROM B 1
waste." Freeman said. "li we
aren't ready to play now, then
I have to wonder why we
were beating ourselves up.•
Both teams will aim to
deliver a physical beating,
though both have been more
productive than last season
through the air.
Mesa's passing game,
however. could suffer if senior
Patrick Hulliger is sidelined
for missing classes.
Hulliger has completed 44
of 84 for 523 yards and three
touchdowns, but Howell said
junior Andrew Strickland will
Dz;•
... ...,_ ... Wt.a.~
.. lllw ---6-J l1f "· Of M ,._.........,.. 6-1 2JO Sr. OT
M --llcM.LA S-9 :ZOO So. DT JI~~ 6-1 22S Jt. Of n a.-...._ S-6 160 Sr. Oll " -r ....... ..., 6-2 220 Sr. Ml.I • Na...._ 5-11 190 Sr. Cl.I ,o ._...._ s-10 160 Sr. a
40 ae..Al.Mla 6-2 110 Sr. a
1 8K Ila&. 6-1 190 Sr. SS
2 ..., Wa01 6-0 152 SO. FS
1. nor
2.C.... .....
l . w..rn
.-; Sonora
S. Fullerton
6. RlnchO~
7 .... Oii*
8.P~·
9. UnMnlty
10.Valenda
Mesa has piled up more
than 1,400 yards on the
ground, while allowing only
470 rushing yards (l,242
total) to opponents.
CdM has rushed for 677
yards and thrown for 614,
while surrendering 1,700
combined yards to the oppo-
sition. start. Strickland has complet-Both teams like to
eel both his passes, attack defensively,
for 18 yards and a though CdM, as it
TD. in mop-up duty has in recent years
this season. against Mesa, fig-
CdM junior quar-ures to alter its tradi-
terback Dylan tional 4-3 front. CdM
Hendy has thrown has used five-and
for 379 ydrds a nd six-man lines against
five TDs (22 of 47), the Mustangs.
but both offenses Defenses domi-
have been most nated last year's
effective on the meeting, a 14-0
ground. Keola Asuega . • .. Mesa win m ule reg-"lt's gomg to be ular-season finale, which
srnashmouth, • Howell said. pulled it into a first-place tie.
The emergence of the Sea The winner will join the
Kings' ground game has coin-league leaders, while the los-
cided with the two-game win er takes a step backward in
streak. Senior tailback Blake its quest for the playoffs.
Hacker has collected most of "In a six-team league, it
his 526 rushing yards the last makes a big difference
two weeks. whether you start off 1-0 or 0-
Mesa has four players with 1: Freeman said. "You don't
more than 200 rushing yards, want to find yourself in a hole
but sophomore Keola Asuega you may be digging yourself
(454 yards and nine TDs on out of the rest of the season. II
83 carries), has emerged as Howell said it may come the featured weapon. Seruor Alvin Nguyen (345 down to an individual effort.
yards and seven TDs) is "We're hoping one of our
another running threat for kids. wl1ether it be a running
Mesa, which welcomed back back or a wide receiver or a
All-CIF offensive lineman defensive tackle, can make a
Luther Mitchell to the starting play to change the game. It
lineup last week. The 5-8, may be a turnover, but we're
300-pound senior had been hoping one of our kids forces
sidelined by academic dJlfi-the issue.·
culties. CdM leads the series, 23-7.
C 0 ST A
OrffNsE
ME SA LINEUPS
DERNsE
No. "-Yer Ht. Wt.a.,.__ No. "-Yer Ht. Wt. a .....
a --5"1oa..<N> S-10 175 Jr QB
4 KMllA "-6-0 190 so. re n JMON ~ s..a 1ao so. Fe
2J Mar CAMI> S-8 140 Jr. WR
_, .._.,. 1.1.ulA 6-0 175 Sr. WR
81 Louis DAY 6-3 170 Sr. TE n ClwllJI ,,,__., 6-1 245 Sr. LT
12 MTOMY a.--S-10 245 Sr. LG
,. SC:on so-S-10 230 Sr. c
M "-w CMICH 6-1 240 SO. RG
74 a.am-Mlroe..L S-8 300 Sr. RT
49 D-._..,.. 5-9 185 Sr. DE
12 Alnolfy ~ S-10 245 Sr. OT
71 D-M•-S-7 237 Sr. OT
50 Joa! 0.-S-10 170 Sr. DE
JO A&#W NGu'fWI S-8 155 Sr. Ol..8
11 Louis DAY 6-3 170 Sr. IL8
a"-'~ 6-2 220 Jr. tL8
l2 ,,._ ~ S-8 180 so. Ol8
U Mar~ 5-9 145 Jr. CB
2 MlcMAa McGum S-10 160 Jr. CB
J4 Jolll S~ 5-9 140 Sr. FS
DAVID YURMAN
T II I , I C I t
INUOOUCIH THI DAYIO YUHU
TNOltOUOHIHD WATCH COlLICTION•
1• Wtl ,.U 01e1111tkl ntcll •1111 ""'' A11trlcan •llltator t1r1p, at,eoo ,..,,... ....... ~ 11tt1tne tllfft eu10111111c ••tcft, •uao .
SPORTS
NEWPORT
CONTINUED FROM 81
bunch of seniors who have
been through the wars.
"And th1I one ii a little dif-
ferent than last year, because
we don't go in as the
favorite."
Last year, Harbor won the
Oct. ts league opener, 12·10,
thanks to Garrett 'Il'oncale
blocking a 26-yard field-goal
attempt with 4:51 left. 'Il'on-
ca.le came up big
again in the CIF title
game, forcing a fum-
ble which was
returned by team-
mate Andy Kalanz
for the winning
touchdown with
10: 15 remaining.
Perhaps haunted
by the memory of
twice losing leads to
m-DMV110Pt1
1.La .... l.vmt,..
J.INIM ......... .............
··~ 7.~ .. Liala'WHllk
9. E1Modan.
10. ec..t "19W
a TD in a victory over Loara.
Irvine's single-back
offense also in.dudes darter
Peter Abe, versatile Dave
Doomey and junior
Godfrey Young.
Abe rushed for
101 yards last week.
the only triple-figure
output this season
for an Irvine back.
Doomey, who
spent his junior sea-
son at Santa Mar-
garita after earning
all-league honors at
Irvine as a sopho-the Sailors last sea-Brian Gaeta
son, Irvine has left more, has four TDs
rushing and another receiv-
ing. Also the kiclcer, his 57
points are seventh-most in
the county. When he's not in
the backfield, he lines up at
receiver and he also sees time
in the secondary.
little to chance this fall. The
Vaqueros, who lead the coun-
ty in scoring, have outscored
opponents 215-43, including
a 164-11 advantage in the
first half. They've built leads
of 21, 30, 41, 65 and 24 points,
respectively, and four players
have scored at least five
touchdowns.
The offensive onslaught
continued last week, despite
the absence of senior quarter-
back 'Il'avis Otott. Expected
to return after sitting out with
a minor knee problem, Otott
has thrown for 560 yards and
10 TDs, completing 38 of 65
with only one interception.
H be can't go, senior Josh
Short proved last week he is
more than capable, complet-
ing 14 of 20 for 165 yards and
ESTANCIA
CONTINUED FROM 81
upset nonleague losses to
Canyon and Santa Ana Val-
ley.
Estancia rebounded with a
43-0 trouncing of winless
Orange last week and hopes
to continue its upward swing
against a 2-3 Northwood
crew, beaten, 34-0, by La
Habra, its only preleague
· opponent from Orange Coun-
ty.
Northwood. with wins over
Granite Hills and Martin
Luther King of Riverside,
does worry Perkins.
"They've been improving
every week.· Perkins said.
"They have a quarterback
who throws the heck out of
the ball and if we give him
time, he will cause us prob-
lems.•
Dan Tomcheck is the
aforementioned passer, who
has completed 58 of 117 for
685 yards and three touch-
downs, with just three inter-
ceptions.
Tomcheck's favodte tar-
gets have been Steve Lucas
(22 catches for 260 yards) and
Bryan Bentrott (10 for 178).
Estancia's pass defense
bas allowed just 30 comple-
tions in 91 pass attempts,
though five of the 11 TDs
opponents have scored have
come through the air.
Offensively, the Eagles
have produced nearly two-
thirds of their 1,694 total
yards on the ground. Senior
Andy Romo has rushed for
453 yards and three TDs oo
61 carries, while senior full.
back Pa.had Jabid has collect-
ed 426 yards on 77 attempts.
Romo, wbo saw limited
action last week after aggra-
vating a minor leg injury, also
bas a team-leading 15 recep-
tions for 150 yards and two
TOs. He bas also has returned
a kickoff for a touchdown.
Young's six TDs indude
kickoff returns of 96 and 70
yards and he was Irvine's
most effective ground gainer
against Harbor last year (73
yards in two games).
Senior Eric Patton, an all-
league safety, also leads the
receiving corps with 18 catch-
es for 3 10 yards. He has
scored six TDs, including one
of four by the defense.
That defense, which uti-
lizes the Buddy Ryan 46
scheme, includes returning
all-leaguers Brian Porteous
Estancia senior quarter-
back Kenny Valbuena has
completed 31 of 61 for 553
yards and four scores, while
tossing only one interception.
Jahid, a starter at inside
linebacker, as well as light
end-outside linebacker David
Stoddard, have provided
strong two-way play ror the
Eagles. Stoddard bad a long
TD catch in Week 4, then col-
lected a pair of interceptions
last week.
Estancia ended a atreak of
six straight league-opening
losses last season with a vic-
tory over Costa Mesa in its
PCL debut.
(end) and Zach 'Dlylor (out-
side linebacker). 1be Vaque-
ros have not surrendered
more than 37 yards to any
running back this season.
The 43 points they've
allowed, about half of which
have come against backups,
are fourth-fewest among
county squads.
"They have a bunch of
athletes who are quick and
they'll bit you. 11 Brinkley ~·
"They're going to put eight
guys in the box and challenge
their comers to handle the
passing.game. You have to be
very disciplined with your
blocking assignments and-
you can't get frustrated if you
have a negative play.•
Irvine 'produced eight
quarterback sacks in the
championship game last fall,
when Newport Harbor was
held to just 6 rushing yards
the first half.
Those sacks were
absorbed by Chris Manderi-
no, who has since shifted to
tailback. The 6-foot-l, 205-
pounder has rushed for 7~1
yards in 11 quarters at his
new position and has scored
nine TDs.
The Tars' passing attack is
triggered by junior Morgan
Craig, who has completed 26
(i Ni!:,_PORT
Daily Pilot
of 41 for :WO yards and three
TOs, without an interception.
Craig'• sound dedlioo mak-
ing bas helped Newport bUild
a plus-seven turnover ratio.
Junior Brian Gaeta bas 16
receptiom for 245 yards and
two TOs and ls also a key fig-
ure on defense with three
interceptions.
Other defensive standouts
for Harbor lndude All-CIP
middle linebacker Alan
Saenz, outside linebackers
Manderino and Andy Rankin,
tackle Nick Mogbaddam, as
well as encls 1toncale and Ian
Ba.nigan.
'Il'oncale sat out last week
with an ankle injury, but is
expected to re~. He has 18
sacks in 17 varsity starts and
bas the aforementioned big-
play history against Irvine.
"We'll need to defend the
whole field,• Brinkley said.
"And we can't give up the big
pass play."
Irvine's dll-senior offensive
line averages 261 pounds, but
Harbor fared well last week
against a Claremont line that
averaged 285. Claremont
produced just 97 yards total
offense.
The game will also be tele·
vised live by the Orange
County NewsCha.nnel.
LINEUPS
DERNSE
No. ptayer Ht. Wt.O. f'os. No. ptayer Ht. Wt. a . ,.__
I -0.-6-2 182 Jr. TB 1 0.. llllMlllll' -lllCC 6-1 20S Sr. TB
44 Tl!-. n... 6-1 225 Sr. FB
10 Mrro1 GMY S-11 165 Sr. WR
• ..... CiMtA 5-2 180 Jr WR
J2 '°9 F«.1Y 6-0 238 Jr. TE
77 "-1 Ow M 265 Jr. lT
50 Ml r.ac... 6-1 210 Sr. LG
M .,,, ..,._~ M 200 Jr. C n 8ltYM ClllaAM> 6-3 240 Jr. RG to Sam lam 6-2 285 Sr. RT
SS WI 11M1oM 5-3 218 Sr DE
5' c.J. Cou.we 6-1 230 Sr NG 1• NICll MooMAOOAM M 260 Sr OT
7 ~T.-cAU 6-0 11S Sr. DE
1 0-M• P PJC 6-1 205 Sr OLB
5 Aw( S-5-1 260 St. MLB 9 ,._.,...... 5-l 216 Sr Ol8
4 ._. GMtA 6-2 180 Jr CB
24 RvM SfwTM 5-9 162 Sr. CB
a o...s.-6-2 1n Jr SS
20 0-llM\'Olll 6-0 160 Sr FS
STEVE MCCAN« I DMY Pl.OT
Andy Romo ls Esfanda•a breakaway threat ln tonlgbf1 game
wttb Northwood ln a Padfk Coast League football opener.
ESTANCIA
OfftNR
LllllUPS
DIRNSI
Ht. Wt.a. .... No. ...,.. Ht. Wt. a .....
H -...v v~ 5-s 220 Sr. Q8
1 "'-' RaMo 6-2 185 Sr. TB
JI ,_ '-5-2 235 Sr. F8
6 ,._., V-. S-9 165 Sr. WI
S KN CM&t..M 6-10 165 SO. WR
• 0-·~ 6-1 215 Sr. T£ M ~-.... 6-2 250 Sr. RT
50 ClllM ~ 6-0 2A5 Sr. LG
72 ni.t VM.11111 6-Q 275 Sr. C
11 ac.n~ 5-10220 Jf. RG 11 S-,_. &-5 270 Sr. RT
S7-.. "--S-9 2lO Jr. DE U Ra Vaua S-9 215 Sr. NG ti.,_ R m s.10 245 Sr. DE
II Min CcuY 5-10 175 Jr. Cl.I
51 ..... AMo\to 5-10 220 "· Ill ............ S-11 1IO St.Ml.I ,. ,_ ,_ 6-2 235 St. u
• .,... ........ 6-1 215 St. Oll
1 JU.,_ 5-10 165 JI(. Cl • ,._., v.-S-9 11s Sr. a
J ,_..,"11 m 6-1 190 kt. FS .
300P Discount
on all Ne"' Suburbans & Tahoes
f
Daily Pilot
The Newport I !arbor High field hockey
team (14-1-1) will look to put its damps down
on another helpless team when La Verne's
Bonita High comes to the Harper Communi-
ty Center today at 3:15 p.m.
The Sailors have allowed only two goals
this season, both to Marina, while scoring 38.
Today's Sunset League matchup is a
rematch of the Orange County Invitational
quarterfinals, won by Newport, 3-0.
Following that game, Coach Sharon Wolfe
gave credit to the entire team for a complete
victory and the Sailors will have to respond
the same way for a wm today.
Scoring in that contest was sophomore
Kayley Nix, seruor Elizabeth Evans and
Junior Brianne Parmeter, while the defense
put another goose egg on the scoreboard.
Newport rebounded from its only Joss of
the season, a setback to British Columbia's
RossJand Secondary, (2-1, on penalty strokes
after a scoreless regulation), with a 2-0 win al
Huntington Beach.
Sophomore midfielder Chanelle Sladics
SPORTS
C ::.
JDgb's
croa country
leam. llke
everyone
ebe,ba.i
clllappeared
OD tb.11
customary day
of nmn.tng,
opttng to point
toward
Saturday's
Orange
County
ChamplombJps
at Irvine Park.
'IWo of those
who figure
prominently
are Corona del
Mar's Travis
Beardslee (left)
and Diana
Hossfeld
(right).
DAILY PILOT PHOTOS BY DON LEACH
TODAY'S MATCHUPS
was moved up to the links position and it
paid off the Sailors. She scored both goals for
Newport, while the defense, led by Sarah
Green, kept yet another opponent off the
scoreboard.
Freshman goalie standout Amanda
Wittman broke her leg in a club soccer match
last weekend and is gone for the season.
Sophomore Chloe Cox will be the Sailors'
full-time goalie.
•Amanda had really been playing well for
us,• Wolfe said. "But Chloe has played well
for us, too. We're just going to hdvP to step 11
upab1t."
Elsewhere today:
• The Corona del Mar girls volleyball team
(5-2, 3-0), ranked No. 2 m CfF Southern Sec-
tion Division Ill-AA, will host Umverslly
tonjgbt at 6 in a Pacific Coast League
matcbup.
Junior outside hitter Eleanor Mack led the
Sea Kings with five kills m their 15-3, 15-3,
15-5 PCL win against Estancia. Corona del
Mar has won four straight, including a big
COMMUNITY COLLEGE WATER POLO
Thuradoy, Ociobef '2, 2000 83
five-game thriller agdlnst D1v1S1on V's top-
ranked Laguna Beach on Oct. 3, 2-15. 15-12,
15-16, 6-15, 15-11.
• Estancia's girls voUeylldll tedm will pldy dt
Northwood, while Costa Mesa ho<;ts Lagund
Beach. both at 3: 15 p.m.
• Newport Harbor's girls tennis tedm, ranked
No. 2 lil Division £11, will host Aliso Niguel,
Corona del Mar, No 3 m D1vis1on rv. will
pldy at dl Costa Mesa. All matches will begm
dt 3:15 pm.
• In guls golf action, Estanna wiU take on
nval Costa Mesa at 2 15 pm at the Costa
MeSd Golf & Country Club's Meso Linda
course, while Newport and lIVlile do battle at
the Big Canyon Country Club at 2 30 pm m
Sea View play.
The Sailor.. are 1ust two ddys removed
from Big Canyon followmg Tuesddy's loss to
one of the top teams m Orange County. Aliso
Niguel, 127-151, also in Sea View action.
Kelly Huot led the Sailors with a 47, while
Lindsay Galbraith followed with a 49.
-by Tony Altobelli
SAENZ ALAN SAENZ
thdn moderate sincerity.
"When 1 got aU those
awards last ycdr (includmg
Newport-Mesa D1stnct
Defensive Player of thl'
Year), at WdS d totdl Bucs roll, 6-1 CONTINUED FROM B 1
It's muscle, as well as
mass, however, which
makes Saenz so dangerous.
The school record holder
• Orange Coast jumps quickly and
never looks back for a surprisingly
easy victory over No. 3 Riverside.
Steve Virgen
DAILY PILOT
COSTA MESA -You can say WOMEN
Orange Coast College's Devon
Wright is a quick study. Wright, under the
direction of OCC women's water polo assis-
tant coach Jeff Hamilton, learned some new
moves, Wednesday, that would get her in bet-
ter position to score. The result: Wright scored
three goals in the first quarter-en route to a 6-
1 Orange Empire Conference victory over
Riverside Wednesday.
Wright said she used one of her new moves
on her first goal. One minute into the match,
she gained favorable position and threw a
score into the cage.
A minute later, she placed herself again in
front of Riverside's cage to get another goal.
And with less thAn three minutes remaining in
the first quarter, Wright scored off her own
shot deflection.
•we learned a couple new moves,• she
said simply as she gave credit to Hamilton.
Wright's new game came with good timing
because the Coast-Riverside matchup bad a
heavyweight-like billing. The Pirates are ranked
No. 2 in the state by the Community College
Water Polo Poll and the TigeIS are No. 3
·vou just get really pumped for it,• Wright
said.
And when OCC cruised past Riverside (14-
6-1, 3-2 in the OEC) Pirates' Coach Mike Giles
was surprised. "Wow,· he said. •That was
really good for us, to beat a No. 3 team like
that. I think we took them by surprise."
Giles, however, quickly noted last year's ,
scenario against Riverside. He said the Pirates
defeated the Tigers, 6-0, twice last year only to
see themselves lose, 3-2, in the conference
playoffs.
·u·s going to be a lot harder to play them in
a big pool,• Giles said. "It will be a different
game.•
The Pirates have a pool that is smaller in
length in comparison to most pools. The short
l!!...'IJtll prevented the Tigers from using their
~. especially when they counterattacked.
OCC (14-2-1, 3·1) took advantage of its
home pool to earn a 5-0 halftime lead. After
Wright's three goals, Daylene Coberly threw
in two scores before the break. Neisba
Hoagland scored the Pirates' final goal with
seven minutes remaining in the match.
•The girls are running the system really
well,• Giles said of his team sticking to the
gameplan.
~--CXHIEMNm
OuNm CoAsT " RMllsm9 1
with a 325-pound clean and
jerk (a mark which would
surpass the current
American school-age
record, bad it 'been done m
sanctioned competition,
according to Harbor
strength coach Mike
Bargas). Saenz explodes at
impact. He also squats 475
pounds.
And, with added
experience, as well as the
respect and responsibility
which goes with being one
of four team captains. Saenz aims to improve
upon the team-leading 74 tackles he
collected last fall.
He made five tackles in Friday's 28-7
nonleague victory over Claremont, which
managed just 84 yards rushing, 13 more
through the air, and a paltry four first downs.
Saenz also had his first varsity mterception.
He has fielded preliminary interest from
big-time college recruiters, but a lack of
unpressive speed has led some to project his
future as a defensive lineman.
Riverside 0 0 1 0 •
Orange eo.st l 2 O 1 •
Five games into his final prep campaign,
however, be bas displayed the type of
movement which could allow him to remam
at his favorite position.
' "He's gotten so big, the main question
OCC -Wright 3, Cobefty 2. Hoagland 1.
Saves: Kennedy 9.
Pirates' best not enough
6 ID8l'k was how well be could move around,•
Brinkley said. "But, to this point, I'd say be
bas moved as well or better than last year.
He has run down some guys in space and he
made a nice play on that interception the
other night in space.•
To ask the self-effacing Saenz about his
own strengths, is to encourage a space in the
conversation. •Playing their best match of the season, the
Pirates run out of time in a 7-6 loss to Riverside.
St.ve Virgen
OMV PILOT
"I still think I suck.• he said with more
YOUTH SPORTS
surpnsE> to me When 1 wds
named All-CIF. at blew me
away. Then, I started getll.ng
letters from colleges, which
was another shock •
Though lazy to d fdull, he
said. Saenz has rocused tus
athJebc passion on football
•Football has dlways
been one or the Uungs I
don't rrund pushing mysell
m, • he satd. "I aJways
thought I'd be going to
Orange Coast College.
but. since I've been getting
some letters from four-year
schools, I wdnt to do
everythlng I can to get an
education th.rough football. I'm much more
serious about school now, too."
Brinkley said Saenz doesn't save tus
intellect for the classroom
"He's always been a good held general,"
Brinkley said, ·and he has good football
intelligence. He does a good JOb of
recognizing what the offense JS domg and
getting us lined up correctly •
Saenz said be en1oys the chess match
Wlth the offense. He frequently spends extra
b.me after practice 4Jscussmg strategy with
lmebacker coach Matt Burns. a former
Harbor standout who went on to have a
successful colleguste career
And while he savors the sabsfacbon that
comes from contributing to a wmrung team.
Saenz maintains some uruque vtews on
on-field violence.
•t don't like hitting people when it's just a
free shot,· he said. ·u I work for ii and I'm in
position, I'll go for a big b.it. But, if I'm getting
there late and another guy is holdmg
(the ballcarrier) up, I'd rather just wrap him
up and fall on him. Even in practice. I have a
hard time hitting my teammates.•
COSTA MESA -MIN
Even though the Cosmic Blast def eats Rancho Santa Margarita
Orange Coast College men's
water polo team suffered the
loss, Wednesday, to Riveraide
Clty, Pirates' Coach Jason
Call thought tbe team played
tt• belt match of the seuon.
OCC's best, however,
could not overcome the
1\gen attack and Riverside
picked up. ~· emphatic 7-6
Orange ,~ Conf~
vktory "Ill the "1•tel' pool.
·Thole lddl played really
well toct.y, • Riwndde Coach
Dew Almquis_t iald ot occ.
•1 WOuldn't want to play them
bent again. 1bey had th•
cMi:ICel to wm. •
1'be Pina• didn't take full ~ of ... 9COllDg =--· llCCGtdllll '° ,..= ...... ...... <•• -occ.. ....................
•' . . ... Srotiffi ..
DAILY Pl.OT PHOTOS BY DON LEACH
Harbor's Kyle Bean knocks the ball loose from a Laguna Hills player as goalie Brandon MclaJn looks on.
Sailors drop anchor
• The loud, thumping sound
was as it hit Laguna Hills over
the head and shoulders in a
Sea View League mismatch.
Tony Altobelli
DAILY PILOT
NEWPORT BEACH -CdM game?
What CdM game?
The Newport Harbor High boys
water polo got its point across that the
loss to the rival Sea Kings on Saturday
is a thing of the past and poor Laguna
Hills just happened to be in the way.
The result was a 17-2 Sea View
League laugher for the host Sailors that
saw everyone on the Sailors' squad
dressed in a Speedo get some playing
ti.me. A good chunk of them found the
scoreboard as well.
Newport (11-4), ranked No. 2 in CIF
Southern Section Division I, jumped
out to an 8-0 lead after the first quarter
and rested its starting group the rest of
the way.
•It was nice to get that big lead ear-
ly to give our younger guys some varsi-
ty experience,• Coach Bill Barnett said.
"Our ultimate goal is a CIF champi-
onship so every win is important.•
Before all the players were com-
pletely wet, Newport got on the score-
board. Senior Steven Jendrusina
scored off a pass from Ryan Cook just
20 seconds into the contest to give the
Sailors the lead for good.
After the Hawks' shooter hit the
crossbar with a shot, Newport's Joey
Snelgrove scored off a long pass for a
2-0 lead.
Cook made it, 3-0. off an assist from
Kyle Bean just 80 seconds into the
opening quarter.
The Sailors had 10 possessions in
the first quarter and scored eight times.
Jendrusina had three goals and two
assists, Cook had two goals and ~ee
assists, Snelgrove added two goals and
Caine Littrell had a goal, all in the
opening seven minutes.
From there, it was first-come, first-
serve on the Hawks' buffet.
Michael Vanderberg, Brett Arm-
strong, Brian Pentz and Jonathan
Hwang each scored two goals in the
final three quarters, while Littrell
scored his second goal of the game late
for the Tars.
HIGH SCHOOL BOYS WATER POLO
Newport Harbor High's Ryan Cook delivers In the Sallors' 17-2
rout of Sea View League foe Laguna Hllls Wednesday afternoon.
·1 was impressed with the way Brett
played out there today," Barnett said of
his (irst-time varsity player. "But all the
younger players stepped up and
played well out there.•
Laguna Hills finally got on the
scoreboard late in the fourth quarter on
back-to-back goals trom Ryan
Andrews, but it was way too little, way
too late.
Newport's level of competition rises
significantly with a Friday matchup at
Laguna Beach. The Artists are tanked
No. 4 in Division Il.
"Today was easy compared to Fri-
day,• Barnett said. "Friday's going to
be a big c.ontest for us.•
SEA VIEW LEAGUE
~ HAMOR 17, l.AGuNA Hus 2
Laguna Hills 0 O O 2 -2
Newport Harbor 8 1 3 5 -17
Lagwwi Hills -R. Andrews 2.
Saves: S. Andrews 8.
Newport Hllt1Mw -Jendruslna 3, Littrell 2,
Cook 2, Snelgrove 2, Vanderberg 2,
Armstrong 2, Pentz 2, Hwang +
Saves -Mclain 3, Johnson 4.
Long day for Estancia, Costa Mesa poloists
• Pacific Coast League water
polo results from Wednesday.
Eagles tumble at Laguna
LAGUNA BEACH -The first half
set the table for the Est.and.a High
boys waler polo team and the result
wasn't pretty.
The Eagles lost to host Laguna
Beach, 18-3, Wednesday, ln Pacific
Coast League action.
Laguna Beach, ranked No. 4 in
CIP Southern Section Divition ll,
jumped out to a 13-2 lead tn the first
half and cruised from there.
Senior Phil Westfall scored two
goals, wblle fellow senior D.J. Glacy
added one goal for the Eagles 6-3, 1-
1 in league). Senior Dan Wotta had
stxsaves.
MC911C COMT LIMIUI
U.• lllMJt t&. lllTAMM J
&tln(ll 1101 -l
LagUNI INch • s J 2 -11
...... W9stf .. l 2. DJ. Gl«y 1. S1WS -
WOtt.16.
~ .
Mustangs struggle
IRVINE -Mike Whibnan's five
goals were not nearly enough at the
Costa Mesa High boys water polo
team fell at University, 26-6, Wednes-
day, in Pacific Coast League action.
Chasen Marshall also scored for
the MU$langs (4-8, 0-2 in confer-
ence).
For University (11-6, 2-0), 12 dif-
ferent players scored goals a.S the
Tu>Jans jumped out to a 9-1 first-
quarter lead and never looked back.
Costa M esa will compete in the
Magnolia Tournament, beginning
Friday afternoon.
MCMC COMT LaMa'I
u.w~ • ColTA MliA.
Costa MeM 1 3 2 0 -6
Unlwrslty 9 5 7 5 -26 c-. ..... -Whltmen s. ~11.
SW.: Sherlden 12. U..OW.lltr • StrMm 4, W l, ftecte l,
Fisher J, Chef'! 2. Nmttrot!9 2. Mt 2.
Chufti.t 2. Shindo l. ShlfW 1, Hkb 1,
Htndweillet 1. SIWt • ChOw 2, I.et.rd l.
Cd.M lightweights roll
CORONA DEL MAR -And the
streak. continues. The Corona del
Mar frosh/soph boys water polo team
remains undefeated after its 15-2
Pacific Coast League victory over
Northwood Wednesday.
The Sea Kings are now 12-0 as
Griffin Gentry scored four goals and
John Mann got ln three. Nadim
Hakim went for two goals, while
Ryan Moore, Juon DiRocco, Daniel
Niehenk:e, Jim Strack and John Mon-
ey each had one.
C dM goalie, Tyler Brundage,
recoroed seven saves as Northwood
was held scoreless through three
quarters.
Among the victortes ln their win· rung atreak, the sea K1ngj boeet
Newport Harbor Tournament and
Chdtger Cup cbamplomblp titlel.
CdM will fece Pootblll Ptiday in a
nonleague game and then the Sea
Klrigs will take on Ca~ Valley
Satuiday.
. .
Doily Pilot
NW RT
TAMES .
WILDCATS
The Khoury sisters as well as Buder and
Mcintosh sweep for strong doubles play in
Sailors' 14-4 win over Redlands East Valley.
mun111S NEWPORT BEACH -Carmen
and Diana Khoury swept in doubles
play to lead the Newport Harbor High girls tennis team
to a 14-4 win over the visiting Redlands East Valley Wild-
cats, Wedn~y. in nonleague action.
Also sweeping in doubles was the No. 2 team of Erika
Buder and Krista Mcintosh. Both teems Jost only four
games in their three sets.
In Singles action, junior Megan Hawkins lost, 2-6, won
6-1, 6-0; freshman Vanessa Dunlap lost, 4-6. won, 6-0, 6-
3· and Kelly Nelson lost, 2-6, then rolled. 6-0, 6-J. Each ~on two sets for Newport, as did the No. 3 doubles team
of A.J. Olson and Bonnie Adams with margins of 3-6, 6-
1, 6-0.
Newport, ranked No. 2 in CIF Southern Section Divi-
sion m, will resume Sea View League competition with a
home matcbup against Aliso Viejo today at 3:15.
NONLIAGlllE ....,_, HAM0a 14, ltllM MDI EAlf V/W.Ef 4
Singles -~ (NH) lost to Nesamoni, 2-4;, def. Brooks. 6-0.
def. Mitre, 6-3; Hawkins (NH) lost, 2-4;, won, 6-1, 6-0; Dunlap (NH)
lost, .W, won, 6-0, 6-3.
Doulll• -K. Khoufy<. Khoury (NH) def. Moses-Oar. 6-2, def.
Utzinoff-Sundquist. 6-2. def. t.ane-l.ovlnitnun, 6-0; Buder-Mcintosh
(NH) won. 6-2. 6-2. 6-0; Adams-Olson (NH) lost. 3-6, won. 6-1, 6-0.
Vanguard blanked by Pohit Loma
SAN DIEGO -The Vanguard WOlllll'S SOCCER
University women's soccer team
gave up two second-half goals and lost to host Point Loma
Nazarene, 2-0, Wednesday. in Golden State Athletic Con-
ference action.
Amy Colunga (60th minute) and Whitney McLawhom
(68tb minute) each scored for the Crusaders. ,
Robin Landauer had six saves for the Uons (7-6, 2-3 in
GSAq, who had won six of their eight previous contests
entering Wednesday's action.
The Uons will host cal Baptist 5aturday night at 7.
Pirates fall to Mt. SAc•s Mounties
COSTA MESA -The Orange WOMll'S IOU
Coast College women's goH team
lost to defending state champion Ml San Antonio, ~ -
382, Wednesday, in nonoonference action at the Costa
Mesa Goll & Country Club's Mesa Unda course, par 70.
Jenna Quaranta and Maricela Dietrick each scored an
86 for OCC (4-7). Julie Gutierrez-Farley (96) and Undsay
Giles (114) complete the Pirates' top-four.
Linda Fu was the medalist in the match, shooting a 79
for the Mounties.
Pirates roll past Saddleback in four
MISSION VIEJO -WO•l'S llAI I KvaAI I Lauren Wilson added to • ...,.. '....,.
her team lead in kills with 19 to help the visiting OJ'ange
Coast College women's volleyball team deteat Saddle-
back, 13-15, 15-5, 15-11, 15·8, Wednesday, in Orange
Empire Conference action.
Natasha Evylnn added 16 kills, while Tula Nguyen
paced the offense with 47 assists for the Pirates (8-', 2-1
inOEC).
For the Gauchos (8-4, 2-1), Ingrid Berntsen had 12
k:ills, while Lauren Henderson added 11.
OCC will continue conference play at Cypress Friday
night at 7.
CIF RANKINGS
HIGH 50tOOl GUtl.S VOUEYMlL
Division J.A
1. Mater Dei; 2. Irvine; J . Newport twtaor; 4. Mira Costa;
5. Huntington Beach; 6. Foothill; 7. Ventura; 8. El [)()(ado; 9. Hart
10. Oxnard.
Division Ill-AA
1. Harvard.Westlake; 2. CoroN .. Mr. 3. Bishop Montgomery;
4. La Canada; 5. Notre Dame/SO; 6. Alemany; 7. Pomona; 8. Gladstone;
9. Rosary; 10. Santa Paula.
HIGH 50tOOl GlllU.S TENNIS
Division Ill
1. Palm Desert J. NNeMw-1po1_.rt fWtaor; 3. Mater Del; 4. Santa Margarita;
5. El OOfado; 6. West T0<rance; 7. Santa Barbara; 8. Burroughs/Burbank;
9. St. Lucy's; 10. Westlake.
DMslon IV 1. Celabasai; 2. Harvard/Westlake; J. Cot'QN c1e1 Mer:
4. San Luis Obispo; 5. Rosary; 6. San Manno; 7. Western;'
8. Sooth Pasadena; 9. Gladstone; 10. Bonita.
HIGH SOIOOL 80YS WAlllt POLO
DMslon I
1. VIiia Pant; 2. Newport fWtaor; 3. Long 8each Wilson; 4. Foothill;
5. Harv¥d/Westlake; 6. Sen Clemente; 7, Loyola; 8. El Toro;
9. Clplstrano Valley; 10. Dana Hiiis.
DMslon" 1. Cof'ON clel Mr. 2. (tie) Sefvlte and Los Alamltos; 4. Laguna Beach;
5. La Habta; 6. Buena Pant; 7. Un~ 8. Edison; 9. Esper.nu;
10. Marina.
HIGH SOIOOL IOYS CROSS COUN1WY
Dlvllloft.
1. Canyonlc:Anyon Country; 2. NMIJ*1~3. St.John Boptco;
... Sult.I~ 5. Rubidoux; 6. V1lencla; 7. Santa Marvarftl; a. Paso Robles: 9. BurroUghill~ 10. Burblnk.
DMllott rv
1. o.t Pan; 2. ........ J. C'.oraM del Mr. 4. Fiiimore; S. SMslan;
6. Big Bew; 7. 'TUcr.a Valley; 8. Laguna~ 9. ~llnltha; 10. Mon'o Bay.
DllPSU
.. .
Daily Pilot SPORTS
Tars gettiy.g high-tech tee time
•Golf tournament at
Santa Ana Country
Club is hoping for
another big year.
Richard Dunn
OAK.'¥' PllOT
SANTA ANA HEIGHTS
-Last year's inaugural Tee
Off for Technology Goll
Classic at Santa Ana Country
Club generat~ $50,000 in
revenue for Newport Harbor
Hlgh's main computer lab.
And, tournament officials
this year are hoping for even
, bigger returns, as Tee Off for
Technology II is held
Monday at the oldest goll
club in Orange County.
In September 2001, Santa
Ana Country Club will
cele brate its centennial.
The goU tournament,
played under the auspices
of the Newport Harbor
Educational Foundation,
enabled the National Blue
Ribbon School to purchase
33 new Pentium Ill 600 MHz
systems in the 1999-'00
school year.
Titis year, tournament
officials have targeted a
$75,000 goal.
•0ur work is not done
and there are many more
technology needs to be
fulfilled, including more
desktop computers, laptops
for teachers to check out and
disadvantaged students to
take home and multimedia
projectors,• said Mitch
Barker, tournament
co-chairman.
Esteban Toledo, a
member of the PGA Tour
who plays out of Newport
Beach Country Club,
provided a morning clinic
last year to about 50 gollers
before the shotgun start.
Mike Reehl, Santa Ana
GOLF
CONTINUED FROM BS
GOLF NOTES
Country Club head pro,
introduced Toledo to the
crowd.
Monday's 19th hole
.festivities for Tee Off for
Technology ll will begin al 4
p.m. following goU. It will
include a raffle and silent
and live auctions. Tickets for
the party are $30. Details:
(949) 723-1212. Visit the
tournament Web site at
www.nhhsgoU.com.
The lhird annual Myron
McNamara Memorial Goll
Tournament will be played
Nov. 13 at Los Serranos Goll
and Country Club in Chino
Hills.
McNamara, who coached
UCl's men's tennis team to
six NCAA Division II
championships, was a
dedicated coach to many
Newport-Mesa juniors lor
several years.
McNamara tutored
countless tennis legends,
including Lew Hoa.d, Ken
Rosewall and Rob Laver, as
well as a very young and
promising Venus Williams.
Keri Phebus (Corona del Mar
and UCLA) was one of
McNamara's top locaJ
players.
McNamara also built and
managed top tennis clubs,
such as the Irvine Coast
Racquet Club (now Balboa
Bay Club Racquet Club),
Riviera Tennis Club in Pacilic
Palisades and La Costa in
San Diego County.
The upconung event
benefits the Myron McNa-
mara Endowment Fund for
the UCI men's tennis pro-
gram. Details: (949) 824-
8366.
Paul Salata and the NFL
Alumni, Inc., are hosting an
the then-Stanford sophomore pbenom,
who would play his last competitive
round of goll in Orange County. There
were no phone calls from Big Canyon
to get reporters out for coverage.
It was as if Big Canyon didn't want
anybody to know about it, for fear,
perhaps, of too much outside traffic
trampling on the grounds.
event Monday to benefit
Children's Hospital of
Orange County.
It's the 22nd annual
CHOC Padrlnos/NFL
Alumni Charity Golf Classic
at Coto de Caza Golf and
Racquet Club.
Each foursome will be
captained by a Hall of
Farner, or former NFL player
or coach, with proceeds
going lo CHOC. The
first-place team wins a trip to
the NFL Alumni Super Bowl
of Golf XXI in Maui, Hawaii.
Details: (714) 532-8690.
Corona del Ma.r's Tom
Schauppner, a golf pro at
Long Beach Goll Center, is
the points leader on the 2000
Southern California PGA
Seniors' circuit and appears
to have secwed the title Wlth
436.30 points.
Chuck Montalbano, a
PGA We Member. is second
with 308 points, followed by
Terry Ferraro of Cathedral
Canyon Cotmtry Club (303).
Schauppner is 16th on the
regular Southern Califomia
PGA money list at $3,403. 16.
Blg Canyon Country Club
head pro Kelly Manos, who
has accepted the position of
Director of Golf at The Club
at Morningside in Rancho
Mirage, where he starts Nov.
1. qualified for the PGA
Western Regional
Championship Oct. 19-22 at
the Makena Resort in Maui,
Hawaii.
In the Southern Califorrua
sectional quahlier, Manos
shot an even 144 (72-72) in
the 36 holes at the Southern
Cahlornia PGA Goll Club.
The top 19 players qualified.
Manos tied for fourth.
Big Canyon ls hosting a
Southern California PGA
Educational Seminar on
Nov. 8. The topic ls
merchandising.
Davtd Graham wUl join
Bruce Fleisher, and Allen
Doyle and Dana Quigley
have been announced as a
team, to fill the Senior PGA
Tour's quota of four two-man
teams in the Hyundai
Matches Dec. 15-17 at
Pelican Hill Golf Club.
Let's hope the Irvine Co.,
which owns Pelican Hill, has
better luck with the weather
than it did last month during
a live, two-hour show on
CNBC that was aired from
the Peltcan Hill clubhouse.
Thick fog never let the
sunshine peek through in the
morning.
Graham, Doyle and
Quigley were the new Senior
Tour players committing to
the Hyundai Matches,
according to Ann Victor of
the Robbins Group, the
pr firm handling the
made-for-television goll
tournament.
The matches feature four
teams from each of the three
major tours competing in
three separate tournaments.
For tickets: (949) 759-5175.
Sponsored by Cal's
Cdddyshack in Costa Mesa,
Spooky Golf is back again.
The unique, Halloween-
based event entails galling
in total darkness, with
the exception of the
glow-in-the-dark balls and
lit-up flags.
Spooky brew. food and
prizes for best costwne are
included m the tournament
Oct. 27 at the Back Bay Goll
Course (pitch and putt) at
the Hyatt Newporter in
Newport Beach. The event
will be catered by the locally
famous Newport Rib Co.
Details: (949) 646-7714.
Big Canyon
Country
C lub's par-5
ninth hole, just
one of several
spectaculars at
the prestigious
Newport
Beach facility.
~TO COURTESY
Of SAU.Y HOLSTEIN
But members like Harwood and
Merrick worked hard to change Big
Canyon's image slightly and lobbied
to host the 2000 U.S. Women's
Mid-Amateur, which proved successful
on all accounts, from the players and
their families to the club members, from
the USGA to the local golf community.
Aside from vandals ruining three
greens during off hours before the
event, it was a great championship
played on a great goll cour5e.
Harwood, a Newport Harbor mgh
basketball player in the 1950s with
Denny Fitzpatrick, worked for the
USGA as a rules official in the early
1990s. ln 1992, he began negotiating
with the USGA to hold an event at Big
Canyon.
Palmieri of Granite Bay, Calif.), a nurse
(Judith Allan Kryrin.is of Toronto,
Canada), an analytical chemist (Carolyn
Klecker of Eden Prairie, Minn.) and a
chemistry professor at UC Berkeley
(Cynthia Friend of Palo Alto).
·vou need good iron shots and good
course management here. You have to
do that on this golf course,· said Port,
the stroke-play medalist and
match-play champion who knocked out
local favorite Marianne Towersey
(Santa Ana Country Club) in the Round
of 16.
Port, who captured her third U.S.
Women's Mid-Amateur title following
victories in 1995 and '96, became the
first three-time winner in the
championship's 14-year history. She
also became only the second medalist
to win the match-play championship.
Carol Semple Thompsotl of Sewickley,
Pa., pulled off the rare double at
Allegheny Country Club 1n 1990.
But Harwood first had to convince
eight other board members at the club
that it would be a good thing. He was
right.
Harwood also said that 21 of the lop
50 women amateurs in the world,
including college players, played in the
U.S. Women's Mid-Amateur, according
to Gou Week's rankings.
The 2001 U.S. Women's
Mid-Amateur Championship will be
played at Fox Run Goll Club in Eureka,
Mo. In 2002, Eugene Country Oub in
Eugene, Ore., will be the host site.
llie fteld of women (25 and over)
was interesting in the USGA
championship at Big Canyon.
There ~as a doctor (Sally Krueger
of San Francisco), a lawyer (Pamela
Debbie Dahmer of Escondido is a
disc Jockey and caddies on the celebrity
tour and on the PGA Tour for celebrity
pro-ams.
There were several teachers and
coaches in the field, including Port, a
high school physical education teacher
who coaches boys goll and girls field
hockey in St. Louis.
Towersey is a golf coach at Newport
Harbor High.
Port earned medalist bonon after
shooting 147 (72-75) on the 5,972-yard,
par-72 layout during stroke play.
But Towersey still holds the women's
course record at Big Canyon with a 69,
accomplished April 25 while playing as
a guest.
• ~DUNN'S golf column •ppurs wery
'rhund.y.
JusUn Blackard Justin Dale Manny Adams
CONFIDENCE
CAN GOA
LONGWAY
More than athleticism or talent,
heart and confidence determines a winner.
I t's amazing what confidence can do. I'm talking about
faith, self-esteem, the "1-can." Amazing. Confidence
creates the greatest of athletes and turns them into
winners.
It's not talent or adrenaline. No. It's confidence -the type
that makes a grocery store clerk into an NFL and Super Bowl
MVP quarterback. And the confidence keeps him throwing
so much that it makes you forget Kurt Warner used to be a
bag boy.
That confidence breeds respect.
It's the same confidence that drove the Orange Coast
football team to back-to-back upset wins over Mt. Sdn
Antonio and Pasadena City, both on the road, both teams
ranked and undefeated.
U you think Warner and the Bucs should not be a
comparison, let's review the facts.
This is the same team that people used to laugh at. The
Bucs were the joke that could go hand-in-hand with the San
Diego Chargers.
No offense Bucs, but really, you had no offense. One
touchdown in three weeks. A quarterback carousel that had
Coach Mlke Taylor saying. "Neither one is getting the job
done.• A 30-0 shutout at the hands of El Camino on the OCC
turf. And then next up on the schedule: at
No. 4 in the nation Mt. SAC. Talk about
against all odds.
So what did the Bucs do? Rely on talent?
Rely on a gameplan?
Nope. Confidence.
It was the little Bucs that could, and did.
When we were all surprised about the
Bucs beating Mt. SAC. they went and did
it agw.n at Pasadena. A fluke? 11unk agam.
Kicker Rob Pate, the same skinny guy
with the wobbly kick who ended the hopes
of a state championship for Mt. SAC,
booted three field goals against PCC. His Steve Virgen
42-yarder in the fourth quarter proved to
be the game-winner. Yes, that's confidence. COASnRS
Robbie was once told he wasn't a good
enough kicker for the varsity team at Edison High.
Confidence got rum to OCC U you were reading about 1t last
week, you already know hls story.
Well then what about Justin Dale? He's the 5-foot-9.
175-pound wide receiver who caught five passes for 131
yards and two touchdowns at PCC.
"I've had the challenge all my We,· Dale said of playing
with his body frame. ·But I have confidence. I don't even
think about it on the field because when I look at somebody
in the eye, we're like even. 1 trained pretty hard in the
offseason. I have confidence in my game.·
Confidence was not just illustrated in Dale, Pate and
Higgs, strong safety Manny Adams and the rest of that
pestering OCC defense stepped up and played huge, just
like they have all season. Against PCC. the top offense in the
Mission Conference, Adams firusbed with 11 tackles (one for
a loss), a pass broken up and and an interception to earn the
coaches' Player-of-the-Game honors. Lmebacker Justin
Blackard also had a strong game, totaling 14 tackles.
And now the Bucs have a bye week before they enter into
Mission Conference Central Division play. I believe they will
continue to ride the momentum and theu confidence en route
to a divisional championship title. The games that will
determine OCC's path to a championship are Oct. 28 at home
against Palomar, and Nov. 11, at Fullerton, an ever-improving
ballclub.
The Bucs have experienced the woes of an entire season
in three losses. They endured the frustrations of an impotent
offense. But, they responded as champions with upset wins
and now they are making believers of everyone. rust up on the schedule, after the bye: Rival Golden West.
An easy win?
Though the Rustlers have become the perennial losers of
junior oollege football, anything can happen. Just ask the
Bucs and they'll be the first to tell you: Confidence can work
wonders.
T
Flctltloua Bualneaa
Nam. Sta .. ,,,.nt
The followtng pe!Wonl
aredcq ~u Brite Enlaperieel, 4207
Slmaburry, Santa Ana, California 92704
Manuel L Laon, 4207
Slmsburry, Santa Ana,
Calltomll 92704 Thia bullllffl II 000-
duc:led by an indMdual Hav1 you 1t1r11d
doing 1>1111ne11 yll? y ... 09t'()9.'00
Manuel L. Laon
Thia llatemenl wae
flied with Ille County
Clertc al Or-.nge COl.rtly
on 10/10/2000
2000ll0230
Diiiy PlloC Od 12, 19, 26. Nov. z. 2000 Th286
Fictitious BualneH
Name Statement
The followlnp peraon• .,.~~ .. :
GLOBAL BRANDING
PARTNERS. 11182
Condor Av11ntie, Foun·
tm Valley. CA 92708 L111 R1lch1rt
McDermott, 1720
Marguerite Avenue, Coe
rona del Mar, CA 92625
Thia bullneaa 11 con· duc:tld by an lfdvldual
Hav1 you 111rt1d
dcq buell-. yflf? No
Uaa Reldler1
McDermott
Thia 1uitemen1 w11
flied with the County
Clerlc al Ofange COl.rtly on 1 Oil Ol2000
2000N43102
Daily Pilot Od 12, 19,
26, Nov. 2, 2000 T!l278
.. •a• .... Ill .... a.. ........ A:•ai• • ...... FU•a• ........ Aa••• bll*I Flcltlloul ........ .. ............ . IGnCI lO ..... • .... • 2 ,.,. ........... 111 ..... lkk•nl ......... lnl ............ .,. ....... .......... ....... _. .. .....
C:O::..°" -~.:~::-.:· .!"'~::· .!"' ... ~ =""'::t..:':" .!"'.::=.::":" .!"'~ .......... -=.=:-.!"'~ CV.C.C. ..... 11. G1C m TtMt • 8'udlo A1t111c 1o1uo-, *9 W. A) 8umrMttMe .,_ F~ M l.Cry by Gnc1Hoa Gelllfy, 21t A~ ~USA. NC7TlC1 ta H!.AHv Tu.In ....... .._.., llou!IQw, 2411 l. Pa· 1on1 8L Lie. MicAlttu BM. 1207, ~..,, I) 188 Ot9cle, at73 HaltlOf Mli1l1it Ave .• lelloe i. 8 OATA EQUITY
01Y1H 11111 •Id! Ille• 8Matl. CA 913 a9o C... HldM9¥. Co-1400 SE ltrtltd, COiee S... 1wA. CA 1R704 OulckKtHn, tto4 llYd., 1295, CCl4t1 llnd. CA '2t82 0 OUP, t04,.~! .._. .., 119 lftldt Th9 OelY' NonMn .._. nlM .. MIW.-CA tram ...... CA ~ J. 11* ~ a.bcocll St., COett MIN. CA 8282111 MletlA1I ZectlOCtlt, leaOfli& Ave.. ....,..,.,. ~ Id-Inga; 123 Tilllln ~ Oof04tl¥ j , NlkelOo lttvtn Arnold lno., (CA), 23M MotM ....._ CA 11129V..mG Otaclt A#lel1, 2tn 21t MllN Ave. a.lbOe Dt1' Mir, CA '2025
al 919 ~ HeWllOft IHoh, CA 2'11 L Pde COM! ~. t~ 8E A~. llVlnt, OA John M Ttcttttt. Hal1M>f ll¥d fHl5, ....... CA Ilea Anttlony ~Petrick
UAN OIANG 92"3 Hiltlwlv. Colone del 8'tlllll. C.. W... CA t2t14 ttnt W.-tiury LI\ .• 0-. ....._ CA 821111 Tlllt ~ II OM-o.y, ,..~ Vl......, ZHiNO end ..,..,_ JMn Anif. Mir, CA llGI '2707 Thia bu11nM9 le con-~ 8"Ch. CA lNt ~ II can-ducMd ~ 111 lndMdllll AYe 1....~ona """' •
XlfifOHONO JIN t2 '"91, 813 ~ Aw, Tiiie ~ II con. Thia ~ II oon-du*d by: a CICllJ)Ol'illlon t2&40 ducMd t¥: an RIMdllll Hive you ttarttd CA w;, Corporate Petlc • IF NiWllOft INdl. CA du*d by: an nlMdull ~ by: an lndlWMI Have Y<HI etatted TJllt bwlrWM It oon-Hevt yov ttarted dOlng t>ul'neu yet? Thie butlnMt 11 oon-IMle CA ' t:zeQ Have you etantd titvt ~ tttntd doing .,......_ 'f'l(I No ducMd t¥: en lndMdlMll doll1Q ~ 'f'l(I No Y-. !W'95 duded by: an lnchlcMll ~ 'DOlnO &.lnw u : lNt buelfltll le oon-dailnO ~ '(fJ!I No dolno butlntll yet? J, 8ftdlt Coi~ Have yO\I tlltled Orldt ~ MJcNal Zlchocht Have you alarted GOt:o<N BOWL ducted by. a tlwblnd Ooiolhy 8. Mlialdo v ... fl"lli'OO Inc., John 8ttclt, ~ doing tMlneu ytl? Thia llatemetll wee Thie t(attmtnt wu ~ bull! ... vtt? No
All ottler butln ... Mid Wit Thie *ltlMnt wu ......_, A. Setvotdtr dent y., June 1817 llltCI Wiii 1tlt County tiltct with Ult County Alfhofly Patrldt ONry
name(•) and ad· Have ~ etarttd flltd with the ~ Thia etattrntnt wu Thie tlltemtnl waa JOJWi TIO.en Clllti d °'*'Oii Coll'ltY CIM d O!w'lgl Cc4df Thie 1ta1ement wu dr••(••) UNd by thl ~ bullr'lell yfJfl1 No OMti of Or.,. Count)' flltd with the ~ fled With the ~ Thll 1tatemtnt wu Ol'I ~ on 10i1~ hied wtttl the County
Seret(t) ~ r. paitt GwV" Norman ...... on OW22J2000 a.ti al OninDt County OMti of OrwrlQ9 CouncY flied )lltth Ult County IOOOM411H 2000tMlot7 Oelt< d Ofange County dv• y1119. 11 ..._, tir Thie •atitmtnt wu IOOOM41'tl on otml2000-on WW2<#f OMti of Of1not County Daly Plot Ofa. 15. 12. 19 ~.Plot Oct. 12, 19, on 09l29l2000 •
Illa 8tll•r(a) la/are: flftd with the ~ o.llv Plot a.it. 28, Oct. IOOOll4'407 IOOOM417ot on OW29l'2000 ft.2000 Dal ft.NOY· 2. 2000 1lJ277 2000fM2tll NONE Clwk a' ar.,. ~ Ll~ 19. ~ Drl25 D* Plot Seot. 28 Oct. o.lly Plot Seot. 29 Oct. IOOOM421M DlllV _Piiot Od. 5. 12. 19,
The name1~anc1 ad-on ()8(1&'2000" ............ _ --·.---5. <2. 19. 2000 1b221 §.12. t9. 2000 'tb249 ~ 0ct. s. 12 .• ''· RctltloUI ._,,... F1ctldoua ,., .. ,.. u,gooo M2
dreM al the er(a) lit' IOOOll.OMt r.o;u._ --~ Th2fi2 ...... lllltilmlnt MllM 8t.ell9fnent .,.. JIHYUN K t1f7 [)lily Plot Sept. 2!J8, ...... ............ '1cdtloul ..,.,,,... f'lctldou9 I .. Thi loloWlrlG ~ The f~ pet"tona FlctltloU9 Bualneaa w.' BAU. ROAD.' •tte, 0c:t. 5. tt 2000 ~,. The foAowlnQ ~ ...,,. .......,...,. ...,... ...:,.,:r ... -.....-•·-•wa .,. tim tiuM-. u .,.. ~ ~ ea: Heme StMement ANAHEIM, CA 82804 .,. doing buli*-M: Thi followfno peraona r"'-v--RSI Mt'l'Al FABRI· Room S.lvlce BfMk· The followtna pellON The ...... being told FlctltJoue IUllnMI I l.OYe Sulhl, Inc., .,. dlq ~ea: The following P«IOnl ...._ lt8tttMht CATION. 11182 Condor fut Served, 353 ate doing bulliltil u:
are geiwally dNCr1bed NllM lldl'll...,. 2/µ0 Harbor Blvd., Newpott R~. .,. ~ ~ u: TtMt foloWlnO ,,.,.._ Awnue, Fountain Val· HaWlhome Rd., IAgtlna THE EXPEF\JENCE. 358 ea: «xtut1, f\mlure end The followlng per'°"9 COiie Mete. CA 82.eat MO Produc:don Piece, al General Tutt>lne, bl .,. doing ~ •: ley, CA 92708 BMclh, CA 9'2e6t Costa Mell SlrHt,
equlprntol end are fo. .,. doing buaNA M : I Love Su9tll, Inc. Newport Beach, CA 0-.1 Turbine and .. Bloproject1, 375 John Plul Reldlett, Oor1 J. Bundng, 353 COiie Meet, CA. 92827
calMI at: 92 Corporate The Shlrpef Edge, ~ 2340 HM>« BIYd., 92963 Fuel Cell, 19200 Von Megnolll Ave.. Coate 1720 Marguerite Awt-HaWlhome Rd.. ~ Bloe HNlthcarl, Inc ,
Pll1c #f IMne. c~ 1978 AMMlm Avenut, MeM, CA t2e2t Ray Alen Eller, Jf.. ~~~M.Sult2 • ....... CA lm21 nue, Corona del Mir. CA a.eon, CA 92851 (CA), 358 C041ta MeN
The bull! Ate 11 !ti-C041ta Meu. Clllfomla Thll ~ le con-1143 E. Everett Piece, """'• ,.,,.,.,""" ....,1 JIM Arnold Jaramllo 92825 Rani D. ~. StrNt Coate Mela. CA.
tended to bl ConlUm-92627 duc:Md by: 1 ccwpordol1 °'11nge, CA 92887 Frederick M. Bloom, 3715 Magnolia Ave.: Thia bullne8I la con-345 Hawlhome Ad • fml 92t27
mated at the of11o1 of: Jamee Roy Tlnnell. Have you 1tarted Thll but1neM 11 con-19200 Von l<annln Avee CGm MIN. CA 827 dudlld by: an ~ Unit. LAgt.1W BMdl, CA Thia bullNM la con· I~ EIC«IW 1976 Anahtltn Avenue, doing butlnt11 yet? dudlld by. an~ nue, Suite "°°· Irvine, Thia ~ II con-Have you atarted 92651 ducted by an lndMdual
Inc. end the ~ Coltl Mete. CA 92e2'7 v-. Nov. t3 Have you 1tarted CA 112812 dudlld by: an lncMdull doing ~ '/fKt No This bulineu ii con-Have you atarted
1114i dal• 1e NO\/ 02. GnlCe Yvonne Tlnnell. I Love SutN. Inc., doing bullneaa yet? Thia llUlinell II oon-Have you 1tar1ed John PILll Rek:nert duc:Sed by. ~ dlq bullneM yet? No 2000 ' 1978 Anaheim Avenue, Wayne Ot*l, PrllldlrC v-. 3r'M)() caded by: 111 ~ doing bualneu yet? Thie statement wu Have you atar1ed 8loe HNlthcare. Inc.
The bulk ..,. ii U>e C04lla .,...., Cllitornla Thie etllefnent wu Ray Alen Eler, Jr. Have you 1tar1ad Y• 1<W2JOO flied with the County ~ ~ ytt? No Brian Grlllittl, Prelldent leCIC IO Cllfomil Uniloml 92627 flied with the County Thie 11.ai.m.m waa doing bullneaa yet? Jake Jaramlllo Clel1< of ar.,. Cotny Ooii J. Bunting Thi• statement was Commercial Code Thll t>Yllnna II con-CIM of OninDt Cotny tllMI with the County YM, ~1.00 Thia "8tement waa on 10t10r'2000 Thlt ltllement wu flied with the County
Sec:tion 8106.2. ducted by: a hutblnd on ~ • CIM al Orange Cotny Fredlric:ll M. Bloom filed With the County 2000IM3104 med witt1 the County Oelt< of -Orange County YESINO y and wife 2000IM1417 on 09f2&'2000 Thia stalemenl ,,.. CIM of Orange COl.rtly Diiiy P11oC Oct 12, 19, OMti of Ofange County on 10/0&'2000
The name and Id· Have you 1tart1d Diiiy PlloC Saot 28, Oct. 2000IM170I filed with lhl County on 1Mn'2000 26. NOY. 2. 2000 ng75 on 10IO:WO ZOOOla.42941 dr ... of the pef80rl wittl ~ ~ yflf? No 5. 12. 19. ~ Jb229 Ody Plot Slot 28, Oct. Oelt< al Orqe Cotny 200011424t5 2000ll42505 Dally P1oC Oct 12, 19,
whom dalma may be ~ Yvonne Tlmell Flctlttou• au.tneaa 5.f2. 19. 20(» 007 on ()9"!812()()C)2000M41IM Diiiy PlloC Od 5, 12. 19, Fictitious Bualneaa Deity PlloC Oct. 5, t2. 19, 20, Nov. 2. 2000 Th28§
flied 1a· lndepenOenc:e • atatement w11 8.,A...,...,r.... OF n.a.. PlloC = 28. "'-26. 2000 Jb269 Name 81lltement 26. 2000 Th270 Eacrow. Inc., l8743 s. flied with the County Name StatMMnt • ,,._...,.., -7 ""'"" The followtng peraons . Fictitious Bualneaa PloM« Blvd., &it• 201, Clel1< of Ortnoa County The following pereons ABANDONMENT OF 5· l2. lg. Th239 .,. doing buable ... Fictitious Bualneu ...,..,. St.etenwnt
A11Mla, CA 90701 end on 09/1~ ... ,..
57
are doing bulilNe aa: USE OF F1CT1TIOUS Flcttt~ Bual=• HOTVISTON2000.COM, Name Swtement The followtng peraons
the laat date lor fifing . ,...,_., Lauifilng Jackal•. 8U81NE88 NAME Flctltloul Bualn.a Name mtemen 187 Topelta. Irvine, CA The following perlOl'la are doing bualnNe u . :::~'t,.bk~yo1cr=~ 8:t.~.~2JN~6 ~~'.. ::1. La,f.~~ ~ ~~~..=°"~ i:n:i!~~ .!'19~~· 92~ Wlndllnger. ~~~J:j8 ta~~0N~·~:
which 11 the bullneaa FlctltJoua Bu-'-aa 8r:"~ 926&3 the UN o( the t1ct1tJou1 are doing bue1r1Na u : AC SOLUTIONS, 2399 187 Topelta, lrvlne. CA Mezo, Miaelon Vlllo, CA #0206, Costa Mesa, CA dly betore the aale date .,,,. Jedulil, LLC buelne• name: New· •) CtlanOe Reeouroe. bf We1tmln1t11 Avenue, 92604 92892 92827 ec>eeifled above Name Stat.rnent (CA), LaFayette port Roaditera, 840 Chance Marine, c Coate MMa. CA 92027 Thi• bullness 11 con-Ilana Richmond, Jiii Suzanne
Dat1d: The ~· Ave.. 1201, Newport Production Piece, New· Chance C°'*lltlng, d Jamff Bourquardez, ducWd by: en lndMdual 22876 Mazo, Ml11lon Hlck1'90n, 2345 New·
BUYER(S). .,, dcq aa: Bllch, CA 92663 port a.eon, CA 92ee3 Chance, 2281 Santa ~~_!9, ~tamlnaM ... ter 'ACvesA Have you 1tar11d Vlelo. CA 92692 port Blvd .. #0205, Coste 181 JIHVUN KIM Ann Chula Clalfn ~ Thia bullneta II con· The Fletitlotla Bull· An1 Av1nue, C<>111 ..... .,.... dcq ~ yet? No Thia bulinffl ii con-M111. CA 92627
Publl1h•d Newport agement, 401 Hamilton dueled by. Limited Lia· ,,... l1llTltl referred to M..a, Cllttomla 92627 92827 Yordanka Wlndtlnger ckldMI by. an lndMdual Tllll bullnea• la con· Beach·Colla Meaa IA, Coate Mesa. CA blflty Co. aboVe waa flled In Of· Kevin Mc:Ce.rtny, 2281 Thia bualneta la con-Thia statement wu Have you 1lar1ed cLocted by• an indlYlduel
Dally Piiot Octobef 12. 921527 Have you 1tar1ed 1119 eotny on Santa Avenue, Coate ducted by: an ~ filed with the County doing bullneu yflf? No H1v1 you 11art1d 2000 Wantena dcq butlnell '/fKt No 04111100, FILE NO. Meea, Ce111omia 9:ae27 Have you 1tar1ed Clellt al Orenge Courtty · tlal\I Richmond doing ~ yet? No
L.A94§743 Th279 Chulepatrcl\Hvfn, 401 Laugtllng Jackal•. 20008825609 TNt buelne• 11 con-dcq ~ ytt? No on 1o.'0el'2000 Thia ltatement w11 Jill Sounne HldtMlon
Hamilton IA, Coata LLC, St11>hanl• W. Ray 11/t.n Ehr. Jr.. ductMI by: an lndMca.t Jamee Bourquardez 2000H42t31 filed with the County Thia 11a1ement waa
Fictitious Sualneaa ~ ~~ai~ll ~ Millef, C 0 .0 427 E. 171h SL, '208. Hav1 you 1tar1ed fu!.1111 _..!atet.'.".!9ntCouwntyu Diiiy Piiot Oct. 12, 19. Clel1< al 0rqe COl.rtly filed with Ille County
Na,,,. Sblt9ment • ·-.,.. ·--r Thl9 ltltemenl wa1 Coltl Meu, CA 92927 dcq ~ ytt? No :::':' ... -:"";....::... r~..-.. 20. Nov. 2, 2000 Th283 on 1o.'0el'2000 Clettc of Orqe County The fol~ ducted by: an lndMduel flled with the Coun~ Larry Wlltlam Pacini, KIWI McCaltfly .._. .. UI ....... 'V"' -n7 2000ll42934 on 1003/2000
ara doing bul aa dolHngave bu~f~ .. •tayr1:~ ~ of Ofange ~ 711 W. 171tt St.. te-10. Thie ltltement -• on 1~000N42t40 Flctltloua Buafnen Deily Piiot Oct. 12. 11J, 2000ll42511 a) OAMEXLA u~ Yn. 09l0112000 ~OOOU41411 Col&a Mela, CA 9'2627 filed with the County Name St.etement 26, N<!Y. 2, 2000 !h2&4 Dally Piiot Od 5. 12. 19,
b) ORMEXLA Wantana n..iL ......_. = "". ,..._ Thia bu11nt11 II con-CIM of Oranga Count)' ~"'-~2 Oc:t.20001~.1 The folloWlnQ peraona .,,..,.,....,,..... Bual ........ a 26. 2000 004 INTERNATIONAL .,.,.,J ,.....,. ..., w. ductld by: a general on 09t'2&'2000 fYi '!Y"·· V1fW 1111 dcq buW"'8 u: .-. .. uuv-,,.. c) ORMEXLA ChulapalrchHvin 5. 12, 19, Jb230 pannership 2000041731 Fuel Oll Poliahlng Name St.tement Flc:tltloua Bualneaa
428 B C.mation Ava • Thia ltllement waa Flctltlous BualnM• Ray Allef\ Ellef. Jr Ody PloC Seot. 28, Od Fictitious Bualneaa Company of Orange The tollowlng perlOl'll Name Statem.n1 Corona c1e1 Mar. C.hfof· ~ ~ ....... ~ ~~ .., ___ 8._.___. Thia atatement waa 5. 12, 19, 200o Th248 Name Stat.ment County, 1733·M· ar1 doing~ aa: The following !*IMS nil 92625 ""-'V"' ..,.....K7 ,_,... .._.,_,,. llled with !hi County Monfovla, Cotta Meta. SE Marine, 2688 ar1 dolrlg bullnetl aa
Tom Alire. 428 B on 09(15/2000 The foflc>oNlna peraona Ollflc of 0rqe Counly FlctttloU9 BualneM The followi~ CA 112627 Blyahore Drive. New· South County Connie C.mellon Avt . Co<ona 2000ll40821 .,. dolog ~ aa: on 09t'2&'2000 Name Sta are doing er. Bruce Leon Roberta, polt BMc:h, CA 92G59 Macie league. 1006
dal Mar, Cilllornla Daily Piiot Sepe. 21. 28. Pubdillrlct.com, 211 2000IM1707tlment Vie NIWrel, 2800 Pllt 1560 Plec9rllla Ave.. Scott W. E9lnlon, Poppy Ctrcle, Coata
92825 Oet. 5. 12. 2000 Jh210 32nd St., Newport Delly Pilot Slot 26, Oet . .,r;:e~fol~ ~o~A ~wport F·IO, C041ta Meaa, CA 9790 Pee.oocll Circle. Mae. CA 92828
Thi bullness 11 con-ActltJoua Bualneu 8elc:h, CA 92863 5, 12. 19. 20(» Th248 n....:.~,t R .... r.... 92683 Fountain Vall1y, CA Reg1n1 E. WIH1am1. duded by en lndrvldual H1n1 Federico C.C. • 832 ~,..,. ''" Thie buliMA II con-92708 1008 Poppy Ctrcle,
H•v• you alerted Name Statement Thurau, 211 32rid St.. F1ctltlou9 Bualneaa South Verona St., Group, LLC (Nevadl}, dUc:tld by: an lndMdull This walnes• 41 con-C04lta M .... CA 92626
doing lkMlnMI yet? No The tol~Jlef'IOnl Ntwpor1 Beach, CA Name Statement Anaheim CA 92804 889 Rainbow Blvd.. Have you 1t1r1ed dueled by. an lncjyldual Thil bullneH is con· Tom Alire ere doing aa: 92863 The following pet'IOl\I Mike Brook1, 832 1835, la• Vegaa, CA dcq buainMI yet? No Have you atarted ducted by· an 1ndhltdual
Thie 1t1temen1 wH St~C& ~22~:... San4tath ~n Shea, 3505 W. ara doing buelnMI u : South Verona SI.. 8~5 bu9'nHt 11 con-8ruoe Leon Roberts doing bu1lnH1 y11? Have you 11ar1ed flied wlJh ~ County "" Balboa BIVd.. Newport Room. ~39 EvergrHn Anaheim, CA 92804 Thia IUll9ment w11 v ... 1992 doing buelne11 yet?
Cieri! ol Orange County Ana, A 92705 Beech. CA 928e3 ~. ea.ta Mell, CA ~ ~:--.:.::: ductMI by: Limited Lii· filed with Ille County Soot1 W. Eginton v ... 0Ml1/00 on HWS/2000 Steve Murray, 2305 This bYlinHe 11 con· 92827 v7 bllMy Co. Cleltc of Orange County This llallment wa1 Regina E. Williama
20009142809 Bell•tt~etalm Sprlng1, ducted ~: a general Lawrance Mlct1111 Have you •••n•d Have you llarted on 09t'29t200C5 flied with the Couniy Tlil1 11111ment was
Daffy Pilot Oct. 12, 19. C~ bYtl par1nerahp Coleman 939 Ever· e~':9a.t~neaa yet? ~:nc~Rr.:ar~ 2000ll421t7 Cieri! of Ofange County hied wHh the County 29. Nov. 2, 2000 Th289 dtleted nea. " COii· Hive you started grHn Place, Costa Miila Brooltt GIOup LLC CMltoptler Delly Piiot Oct. 5. 12, 19, on IOI03/00 Cieri! al Orange County
H by. an lndMdueld ~ bullllMI yflf? No MNa. CA 112827 Tllll lt•lement wu M ~·-Omc.r 29. 2000 Th254 20008M2494 on 09l29l2000
Flctttloua Bualneaa ~v:o.:.,:. ~r1~ This F.=:m ~: Thie buelnMI ii con-flied with the County ·~ Statement wu Fictitious Bualneaa Delly Pilot Od. 5, 12, 19, 20008142117
Name Sta .. ment Steve Murray filed with 1M County duCJled by: an ~ Olfti of Orange Count)' nled with !tie County Name St.tement 26
• 2000 1b268 ~ Oct 5
• tg
The fol~ Thia statement waa CIM of Orange Courtly ~v.:,.r.: ~~ on Ollt"WlOOO C1M of Orange COl.rtly The foll<>Wtna per.ona Flcttuoua Bualneaa -~
are doing u: rlled With !hi County on OW22l2000 L1wr1nc• MlctlHI ZOOOll421H on lQ.l03l'2000 ar1 doing ~ ea: Name S1a'9f'Mnt FlctJtloul Bualnea1 and"'S 1~n~ ~09(~~ COl.rtly Diiiy PlloC ~~ Col=~ WU N Oct
5
'
1~ m ~2~ ~~~~~ 97~rg:,~ ar~doll~~ lt!":.!~·=· zw~ ~· Coate Oely Plot=--~··: §, 12, 19, ~ fll9d With IN County IlQZI Drive. VIiie Patlc, CA. f lnanct.I Servlcea ere ~~ u . ~ M. Andefson, Od 5, 12, 2000 ligij F1ctltloua lualMN Cleltl~ Colny ~ au.lneu .,, ...... ,_ .• a··-• ..... 11ti:,1
Q. PNb. 9781 ~:r,rt' ~OI~ ~~Suit• ~c: 1380 Vllla9e Way, Nam. Stmment on ..._....,. tafllment r""u"""" -·-,,..,_ ,.,,,.,_ Villa o-... IG101 Col&a MMa CA Flc:tltlou. B~neu -11t1 n. following ~ ....,,. aua.menc ._.... ......... ......... 92 7 Mela, CA 112826
926
• • The tollowlng peraona Dllv Plot Slot 28, Oct. -doing~ aa: n. lolowlno pa CA. 92881 Sally eu.ctiek, 41 Donald Wllll1m
PUBLIC NOTICE n!8 bu1tneM It con· ,:me~ ~ rra ~ u: 6.f2, 19. 200o IWl12 ~. 9945 1111 ~Ina ~ Si.pMn C. Peake, Calvado1, Newport Prteton. 295 1efl f"lol. ~,..e OF ... ~_....,. ~~ ....... ,.. ...... --. (. COntr.ctor.. 122 w.............:; Dr w--•-t _, "--~·r tOttf Phelan Drive, Coelt. CA 92657 Coate ....... CA 92626 FfVl9" ........... VJ an R~ .,. doing aia: 4411 Sl, AcJt. A. Newport Flctttloue 1ua1..... ........... •o -· .... .... VVlll Via CA. AVAILABILITY OF Hav1 you 1tar1ed Triune Appetel. 1CIOO 8Mc:t1 Cellf. 92983 "*"*· CA 92683 ServlcH , I 028 Pwtl. 92881 Thie bullneN ii con-Thia bulineM la oon-~Lto ~~~:Tai ~:.~S.:~~~rt1 s~ ~·t o,.~ ... ::r,~~n~ ~~~~~Hu~: :!ti~':r./~eJ:"· ~~ ~ ~•by:v~~ ~•byv':u~
the Internal Revenue Doug And«aon ~82B Mw, BMc:tl. 'Cllit e2ee3 ~.=~• eonc:;., ~~ii~ Anthony Wllllam1, P•~:'!'11Pyou atar1•d ~.~yflf? No ~~J;IC? No
Code. ~ 11 hereby This stalement wu Booth Fellers, 259 Albert Almond, 973 3248 Wuhlngton Aves IM::ted by: an ~ 18028 Hyacinth Circle, doing ~ yflf? No Th& stalemenl wu Thia 11a1ement w11 glverl lhlt the annuel r• tiled INlth the County East Bey St.. Colla Oak Sl, eo.ui Mui, nue, Coltl ......_ Celi· Have ·you atar1ed Fountain Valley, CA Nell G. Peelle flied with the Oounty flied with Ult County
pon for the n.c:ai JN' Oelt< al ~ Mae, CA 92627 Calif, 92627 lomll m215 dcq bulNea yfJfl1 No 92708 Thi• atatement wu Clelll of Orlngt Counly Clellt al Or8nge County
andldBy JuneFam'11y2000F_....,,the on 1~ ... 2939 -Joltlu~ _H•U. 9L Bl/()s ... ~ bY~alneaa la con-, ci.tea Robert Spiclr. Mlchnl Peter Hur1ey ~ ~-~· flied with the County on 09l2IVlOOO on 09(15/2000 •ra ...,. ... a· -.... , .... n1, 1gun1 .,.,..,... : a genera 3248 WuNnaton Av. Thia utement wu ...,. Clerk of Ortng1 ColA'lly 2000N42113 20008140835
!Ion, • priv1t1 founda· Dally PlloC Oct. 12, 19, Niguel CA 92677 partnerah P ea.ta M.aa Cafi. Cou Have you •llr1•d on OW2W2000 D.ity Piiot Oct. 5 t2 t9 o.lly Piiot Stpt. 21 28
lion, 11 availlble at the 20. Nov. 2-. 2000 Th2§8 fhla 0 buelnen II con-Have you 1t1rted ~---' !!..l!_<I ... ~ n...~ r-~ dcq ~ yflf? No 2-• .. 2201 "* 2000 ' ~ .. 4' Oct. 5 12 2000 ~ ..... ,; lound8Uon'I ,............_, of• ducted i..,. ........._ ""''-.,,__, ._,. UI ....,.,'V"' """"'"J Anthooy Wllllaml ...,.,,.... W• JI¥j>l•o """"' .,..,.,..... VJ· co-pat1nel9 -"' ~ ytt? No Thia buslMM 11 con· on 09l29l'2000 -n..J.e [)elyPdot Oet. 5, 12, 19,
lice for lnsoectJon during Fictitious Business Have you etarted Stephen Kent ducted by: an lndMdual 2000ll42IH ..... llatemenl wu ~ !b258 ::!,,.. r=a~:oobu:•: N1me Si.tement ~ ~...:1 No Thia 11atemen1 waa Hav1 you 1t1rt•d Daily Piiot Od. 5, 12. 19, ~ ~11'0!;, =, ., _______ _
5:00 PM by lllY ctttun .,r:•~lolloWl~r:;i• Thi• ltltemenl wu ~~:" the = doing bu1lnH1 yet? 26. 2000 Tb252 on Olll29l2000 Call lt4tl"41·HYI , ... , ........
ta'""' fer P•·
who r-ue111 It within filed _....., ... _ County v... 11/ll'OO 2000042200 -.. Lare o Marketing, .. iu, ,.,. on ChlllN Robert Spicer ,....., .,,..... "-180 dllya after Ille dlt1 11525 M111 Verde Eut Ollflc al Orange Counly 2000ll4142t Thia llai.ment w11 SUPERIOR COURT ....... J ,.,.,. """" 15• 12• 19• ~or..~ ~lion Dr, 1115, C041ta Meal, on 09/19"2000 ~Plot Seot. 28:.g:c. flied With the County OF CALIFORNIA, 26· 2000 Th2SZ
, ,,. foundation'• prin· CA 112628 2000M4otM U. tp. ~ .!.!!!91 a.ni of ~ Col.ny COUNTY OF ~----------------------------.dP91 ofllcl II locelMI .i TemEanoe Corpo· Oally Pilot Slot 21, 28, on 09'Z&'2000 ORANGE 3300 W• Coaac High-rlllon CA). 1525 Meea Oct. 5. 12. 2000 Jb:2!8 Fictitious 8~,,... 2000IM1891 ~y,~wport Beach, Verdi 1115. Coltl Fictitious BU91neu NMM 8tetiement Delly Piiot Slot 28, Oct 341 The City Orlw,
The pMdpaJ men., ~ ~=II con· NafM ~ .,~~ 15, 12, lg, 200o 001 ~angeeiee3
ol the foundation 11 dUdld by • OOIJ)Orallon The followlna ptt90na IN!ne Chan.,., Flcttdou9 Bu.lneea Lamoreau•
SdU>trt H 9rers. Haw you atartld doing .,.. dok'.g buli*' 11: 2285 Chennel Rotd, N.me 8t8ti9ment Jullloe Cet'Mf Frue & 8roderldt, bullrw YtKt YM, CllMic Models, 2857 811bo1, CllMorr'6a 82eel TtMt :oo.::-IN THE MATTER Of Certified Pl.de: Aot:Joutt. !511at2000' Boe Villa Drive, eo.ta a:=r !Nine, 235 a~ ......_ ,.....::-.-THE PETITION OF '8nla. 1llOO Dove 1230 u-.. ,._...__.,, ,,,__ .,_.__ ... -• -DAVID MICHAEL
Newport Blach, CA rat!,~C,":.r.,~ ~~Pd, C11i1orn1a '=51 .......,., :i = ~ GUINTA
92ee0, (9'9) ~I. PrHld1nl 2851 Boe VIit.i Drive, Thia~ ii con-~ Th9 ~ 9803 cl::"~~"' Publlahed N1wpor1 Thia atatement wu Coate Mell, Clllfomll dudlld by: en lndMcLlll La Amapo1e AY-nu. ...--
Beactl ·Co1t1 MHa meet with the County 92828 Have you 1t11ted Founllln van-. CA ~ MAm AHO ~
Oeily Plloe Octobernd!z Cieri! of Oninge Cotny lNt buAWM 111 oon-dlq ~ yfJf11 No 112708 -• DtlPll•tQ NOT'tCI ~ ...._ on 09(15/2000 , dudlld by: lt'I lllCMcMI Nancy IMnl Dawn 0 0.naher CAM NUmlRi
2000M40l22 Have you aterted Thie •temem wae 8903 La ~ A.,. 1. THE~ FINOS
COSCfTYTA MOFES• Daly Pilal Sepl 2t, 28, ~ ~~ ~ ~an:;. ~~ llUe, Fountlln Valley, lhll PtWonlt(a) DAVID ,. Od. 5 12, 2000 Th208 ...,_,. "' .,._.,7 CA 82108 MfCHAlL OUINTA. t1M1
NOTICE INVmNO ltl!Mnent wu on 08r'22/2000 Thia bullnell II con-1wve tied a ,....,,., tor INDS fOA LUS Flctltk»ua lk.l.,neu llltd With the County IOOOll414Cll OUol9d by: an ~ CMllot ot Nll'lll Witt\ THAN LETHAL Clwk °' OrWIOI Colny Delly Plot 8eOt. 2.8...1... ~ Htve you mntd the dlNti d tt111 ooun fOt
WEAPONS AND Name ltat.fMnt on OW18'200Cf o. 12, JR, 200q Il\22? dolno buelneea yet? '" ~ ~ Aflplo
R!LATl!D a~ol!Owl~ Dally Pb=·~~":/ ~ ._,,,... ~-S:,.~ fie~ cantf•l' name frotn:
AMMUNITION H1nct1 On Handt, Oct. 5. 12. 2000 M Name ltaeement Oewn 0. Oanllher DAV 0 MICHAEl.
8fO IT'EM NO. 1086 !~~ Ad~!.._.~Vtnue, ..,...,. ... ___ •• _._.__ Thi folloWlna '*'°"' Thie Mteflltnt Wit =AM'r6HAEL
STARTING
ANEW
B.USINESSf.
NOTICE IS HEREBY ...,... l03, ..,._.,, Mell, ~ --.,. doing bulfiltle M: fhd with the c;ount, GIUNTA
GIVEN !hat Malad bldl CAJ 92626Ell R NefM 9tli .. ment A) Hunltngtofl .. a.oh Olfti <II Orwtae Counfy 2. THE COURT OR· • • • • • • • • • • • wtll be received by the anet en oyal, Tht followlng peraona Drain s.iva, B) F~ on otr'26'200CJ" D!RS
City ot eo.c. Mela to 19729 ClaflCY Lent, .,. dl*.IO ~ • t1ln Valley Drain IOOOll411N L Al :People -..itd
wit; The ~ Cleltl. P.O. ~on BMon, CA A) Huntington lttdl ltMce, C) OOlta Mtt1 Dell¥ Piiot &eoe. 'Qcil. In tt1ll man.t _.., •eo. 1200, COtCa Mtea, Ttllt bu*......... .... ......._ Plumblno l Drain Oraln Service, D) O.U. 11, 2000 JN11 btb9 tit oourt to lhcJw
C.i#Ofnia 92621-1200. dUct.i ""'··an-....::.-~ 8•~. I ) WtllUJ•r Cyprttt Or.in leMot, .,.. Wt'li 1111 ~ on or before Iha 11o1ir of ...,. .............. Drain ~ Cl S.. ~ ~ IMdl Dtl9\ Flcddoue .,. • .,... !Ion fror dwlG8 d
10:00 •m on No¥-Have ~ou •tarted ,.,...
8
Drain ~. D) .. tvlc9, fl) Orano-.._. lkUIMnl ~ not M ~ ...._ t, 2000. 11 1tw1 eo'ng 98bullnH1 yet? uen1 Patk Drain Or.in ltMOt. 0) Long n. '°"°""1cr Pl'90nl on: HHrlno date: be the reeoonelblHIY of •. 1 1 s.tv1ct. &> <>ttnoe 8Mdl Dtl9\ a.rw.. H) .,. ..._ ~ aa: 1"-.. 1.LW't .....,.: i2 p
fie blddt( io 6fltotfi hll .,.,,.. Den Royal Dtl9\ e.Moe.i.."·-~Oltll 'IAIMOn Dnlll't e.Moe, Ole,. INSUAANCl .,..,, .,,,.,J3''"~ .m.
bid 10 fie City Cleftc ()I. Thie ... temenl w., I.hi& Drain --. 0) ~ 0nMt Or9ln HRVICliS 21012 g:f'~ Ciy 01tw, C:.
!lot by ~~ en-~ :"no!!. ~ Hl.Mhdl) I aH°!.'*' ~D I • ft..-.. ~ e ..._,.,,. no:,, Hunls "'°'' CA nounced ,.,.. Dtllveiy ,...,,. ....,~.,.,,.. -ft, ... avtt " n .,._, --· lnalOn 9Mdl. CA ll294t b. A,_., d Ille ordlr IO i.oc.ton· CltY al coeca on ...,. .. l/2000 a.Mot, ~ ~ DNln "**" Or.in • t>w'I A. IMtbOMf tflOW ........ _ 119 pW-
...... T7 ~air ~. o.llv Plot c-::1~ .... l~Ulln Dtl9\ = 1 llton A~, 10041 lpltt Qrde, ~ Ind once a ..... fOt =:,,:1·.;=. Meal. oJ2, 11, 2000 jb230 =-~ =~ c::.o=·.::. I~ ~ ~. c.-...:r, a:ieJ:•:= ;: to":.~":"':: '1c:tldoue lullwt ~ . "'°'*" L. K**'* 21* ~ '203. In The Diiiy"'"
Cb. wlf*I Mid ""9 lr'n-NeMt ..... ,...,,. AldltnS L. Kleckntr. 12'0 11aon Avanut'. =igtol• IMch, CA :.,e~ of"*':; ~llNI ~ The ~ 1280 llaon AY*IUt, ~ ·~· Ullll tf7, .... Thlll bu11r1M1 It oon-.. C.., of=.:
wlltl 111:'1 =:, ll•m ~.,.~ W:., ~ L':. 1~~ rMo8wlt. caMolM ~ a ,._.. :_. "'::. ~~':!
....,_ Mid the ODM-I NY1 oeum.t W,.,. 52'9e0 Thia bllllineM II OOft-Heve ~ 9'ar1td eon(~ Det 91c111 Wfll be Cotti ...... t> Thill "'*'-' It con-u:..ct t¥: an lncMdlAll doing buelntte ref? a. . FllMr. ~ MS Oourmtl Wrape. 320 a. cMMd by. 11n lnlMllll Have you ttarttd v-. .,1M6 J QUWTA
• ., 10-00 am. ltWol an.t, IA. c-. Heve YO\I etantd dGllla bUINte )'l9t? No De.\. A. ...,..... b •• ~ Mother:
'• • eoan lhltlllftlt • MtM, CA m doing ~ No . ~ L:. ~ Thia .... ,,,_. WM IHIMlY Q. GUINTA Pf90tlcaO!e on Nov· IOIOtt N ~ "°'*' ,.._ ............. flltd wtl'I tit ~ Oiied: BU tt aooo
.--·~ 2000, In "" ICA)Mo,4:i,AmlW ., ........,.Thie llMtlMftt WM tlltd wtl'I "'* ~ C1M d 0..-~ .IA•H P. Q"AV C«lld "~ ,5, , CA tt7 ,_, wflh the ~ Otfll al 0.W. OounlY on oti1Mll000"-UUD11 01 tMm eu! Addltlo...i .... of 119 Thie ~ 11 oon-C1t111 d OrallGll ~ on Olf1HOOCI" •HUllU f11NOA COURn ,..... ~ -. '!t"f ou.ct by: a OOIJMll.-On on 08r't~ lllllltt?ll Ollv :-Oau. 1_!.J!i ..,.... fl ......, Jr ~Elff ~ ::'# -=:.~::. ~.~ i'5'! tr.. 'Ti!=·~ ~ !!!!! ~~':o:o~ :SG.:I~ ~~~:-·WM FIND SELL •Ga• ;e.rv'=~ ~···'* ....,.,. ~ d Orlnol = ~ ~ IMdl·C•"• M... aft ~ 9' =4•rl t1111•hoMI haotl·Coat• MMa = ..... ~ 12. ......,.. ...-,. ,~ -...... , .....
----· """TbllO-:1,';t;"1:;; !h!'!!f!&Hld .... ('111'1d ;.io.. l. 1~
Tht ltgal Dtpartmmt llJ tht Daily ~tis pkastJ UJ announct a ntW StrVitt
now 1tll4ilablt tQ ntW lnuintSStS.
~ wiO"""' SEARCH tht "'""'for JO" 11110 atrtz thargt, 11nd savt you the
timt 11Ni tht trip "' tht Court HOUSt in m All4. Thm. of count, afur tht
starrh is tmnpltttJ wt wiO flit Jn' fatitiqus lnuinm """"lt4ltmmt with tht
(;mmJy Clm. ptlblis/1 ontt 1t 111ttk for fowr wttis "' rr~uirtJ "1 '6111 1nJ thm fik
JOffl proof ef pthac. with tht Cnnl] am.
Plast SIQ/ bj 1' ft" JOfff fittitini lnuiw ll4ttml1lt 11 tht ~Pi},,, 330 W
&] St, Cost4 Mt111. /f JOI' wrMt stqp, bj ~ c'1J 1111 (949)642-132J 4nJ a«
wiJJ mUt llmutpmb for"" ""'""' tins""""" b] -~ If you 1hotJJ hlvt "'J forthtr ~ /llMt tJl 11 itrJ • "r;JJ IH "'°" '°'11
t}AJ" •*JIM. CMJ '*'k ;,, ,,,,,, """ t.ma
Polley
Rall'$ and cfrndlinf'~ 1111• ~ul1j1't·I t11
clwngr .,. i1hou1 001ic1.-. rtir puhli11h1·r
l'C!lt'J'\'r!I th~ rij(hl 10 n 'thor. rrd1u,i,if\.
rovistl or t<t'jN'I u11y rltt,...ifo·ll ·
ach-rniiif'mt•111. Pll'.1J-..• n·pon u11y t-rror
that ma) t>f' in lour rlu ... ~iriril u1l
immecli1Ul'ly. Tlw Duil) Pilu1 u1·1·c·pi..
ml liubili1y for c1t1y nmr i11 un
ndverti"4lrt1l'lll for y,.l1i1·h i1 """ lw
mpo11"il1l1· c"u't•p1 for 11"' ... ..,, ·.,r ,,.,.
By Fax
(9i9} 631-65Q4 .
{l'lru.,.. 111d111le 'our 110111<' 1111J 1>l1ouc numl)('r
1u11l ••1·'ll n1ll ~011 harlt ~ilh u µrit'I' 1111oc1'.)
ByPhone
(949) 6't2-:J6?R
Hours
Iiy Mallllia Person:
:t30 ~·, • .,l Buv Strt't't
( :ostte ~1Psa. GA <>:.U12?
\1 \n fH>M Bl•·•J. Ac Rm :0,1
Monday ............... Friday S:OOpm
1\.aesda) ............. Monday S:OOpm
Wednesday ........ Tuesday S:OOpm
Thurstlay ...... Wedne:.day S:OOpm
Friday ............. Thursday S:OOpm spare a1·111ull~ oc-rupi1•d It~ elw ••rfYlr.
Cn'di1 <'llll mil~ lH· 111lu"rcl fur tlll'
fin.1 iu,.,.·rt 11111. Telephone 8:30am-5:00pm
Monday-Friday
Walk-In 8:30am-5:00pm
Monday-Friday Saturday .............. Friday 5:00pm
' , r m '
I• 81
..
'' , ml ..
Gl £OUM. HOUSINO OPPOflTUHITY
All rul ts1llt ldYeltlSlno In thlS newspaper IS subject
to !tit Fedefal Fair Ho\151119
Act of 1968 as amended
whlcll mates it ·~al to ICMltlsc •any PflflftMt ~mbtlon or dlsa1mlnatlofl
baMd on race, ooior. rtllO-
lon, MX. handicap. lamUilt
st.all/I or RllioNl Ollgin. or an lnltntiol'I to tNke any
lUC'h p<lf111nc;1, li1111tatlon or dilcr1mNDon •
Tiiis newspaper WIU not tnowtngly 1ccep1 1ny
advertisement lor rut
..... whicfl ls IA VIOiation ol Che law. Our readers au
hereby Informed that all
dwlllngs adVlrtlsecl In this ntWIPiP« are IYallallle on
111 lqllll= oi: basis. To com °' dilcnl'lll· l\llioft, HUO IOI free al
1.-.H24-8580.
IOI • 216
~
400 -412
• + Loft, 2.58a COndo
1650ll, Fs>. vdld o61ga.
I I
jlcuZZI lb, 2 blks IO OCWI, , · ·n _=9--~---~_0ir«!!!_·_
PRIME ESTATES
Lota ' e>c.t Views! Clll Plb1dl Tenen
•V.A.• ..........
Fm COUNSELING
FMI UST Of t«:MES
HOONAREPOS
7t4-IHIMO
~-----:--:'1
I
I
_, . .,. •.
Apt MMSH105
rm1 Index
420 --=-,,_~
B . '
I ..
' .
ao .... a cm
470 ·478
a
... ..... 6
690. 697
................... , .. _ ...
Reach 80,000 Homes uch Week
For Only $28 per week (4 wk, min.)
c.I La...a ... • 642·5678 Jl.24
RESTAURANT
COOK..f tr E:q> Nee l«/ff
11'1 ptllOl'I Newport S.ach
T enncs CU> 646-640-0050
TNw!day. Odober 12, 2000
FIND
an apartment
lhroogtl classlfled
f ARTltffG INTlllORS ~ I 11111 I Atmodll
Room ~ Vllrr'MC
ll5e0875 94ffitt325
I • IATMROOll I
HOMEflair
8.ubtd ~
Reglaztl°Rffurbtsn
POfcelaln • Fibft-glass
Sinks • Showers Coumers
949..(,45-7723
GOOD JOBS.
RELIABLE
SERVICES.
mllUISilNG
11IINGS ro BllY.
ll'SAU
HBRE
MRmAY
IN
QAUlFPJl
('49) 642·5'78
SELL
your unwanted
Items th'°'91 classified
'-------=
Fl1Qrout.Com
Tiii Alpllr • "'*""°" (114) IM4171 Lt22t441
l~I
f I
Bridge
WOSE LIPS SINK SJDPS
North..somh wlncnblo. Nonh dcala.
NOllTH ••• o AQU o AT3
•KQJlU wur £ABT
• K03 •H o KiU7 o 5J2
0 • .,. Q 6542 •41 2 .,.,.
SOtmf
• AJ98161 OH o KQ 7
•A
The biddina: NOR111 EAST .. .... 10 ....
lNT .... Rdbl ,_
SOtmf WEST .. ....
3• .... ,. Dbl ........
Opmlna lead: Thn of <>
To double 1 voillllWlly bid 'llm
for I ~let Is I losina ~II
11ry form of competition, unless a
saedfic lead IS neccled IO defcaa iL To OOuble Thunp ~ Tummy bued
Oii Ill Ulla trump trick iJ ludicrous.
for cvayooe knows how tho knowl-
edge of 1 bad trump brcalc 111n!f orms
lbmmy from I card plUher into a
whiz. After South' I jwnp IO llw'ee $plldes,
which showed aame·aotna vllues
llld a k1Q1 tuia, NOl'lb 'I rebid al l!ne
no INl1P ~led a I+).' dl.nhuilan. In the linllccoll
lp9de -cirobebly a low card for,
Wida I bicb 'honor, ll would problbty llave been correct IO raiJe three
sp9dca IO four 111.ber d*1 bid tine no
lnln1'· Paced witb two almolC certain ~ IOICtl •• aplde CClNr'lcl. to '*' •la\' w• INlnC, but theft ii no ICCOllDlinl f()f Tommy' biddifta •
lily tlme, IO wby try now? ~·· double WU Pill~ greed, and delerved
tho file meted out to It by Tommy.
Nonh 11 sl*le ren hid become a huae c:ard Oii ihe llJCl.loo. Ind jultifted. I
redouble. Well led tho ten o( dilmondl, woo
in tho elo9ed hind. After caahlna tho ece of cluba, Tommy 11.KX:UlluUy
ftneacd tbc queen ot tarts, then
uaed die entry to dummy ID Nff I
club. The ecea of bani Ind di.-
moods and jlck or dilmooda ICfVCd
11 entries IO tho table to Nff moWr
cfub end two belns. With three c:arda
l'CDllining. Weal WU down IO nochin& but K Q 3 of trump8 while Tommy
beldAJ9.
The icnockOUl blow WU ldminia-lerc:d when Tonuny exited wilh tho
nine of 1n1mps. West won wilh tho
queen. Bur now that defcndcT hid to
lead 1way Crom the ting of crumps
into Tommy's A J tenace. emblina
Tommy to ICCft the last two tricb
md I &lam lhlt required a cak:ula1or
IO toe.II up the ICOre.
fORD ~ ILT '00
4114, AT, it;, llpwr, d/IC, •
ID¥I a "'°" (<WM413) 123.• COIM ....
Unoolll lllllfwry 71+Mff!O
fORD f1IO-.r ~·blll.~ LAHO ..avt.R
NEWPORT BEACH
------..------------!!H4H441 ........ U20 Sedlrl .. I Gita! car. HUTy
BMW a1m • Auto, Law Mite, AC & Men
(4AUM000) $20,996 CAEVll!A 111W
714..U-3171
PORO WINDITAR 'M (531~ ~990
7 puMngef, low mllall L;.._-~~..;...:..~. beige, 1xoeltnt oond1lon llUZ4.1401
lllW l40I • ~ lulcll Pattc A-'t7 (A2331e) se.eea ...,__,., ... _ ._...._.. 800 ml ...... ........_ NABERS ~ -. _,., auto, ...._., aport 5U1P., 10, • _...., ••-" C7'4164HlOO sao. a 11, bladl ~Iii. UCllll1I conclllao, conclllao, 1 -· $14,500. ---11~1 17,11111 $41.QOO pp 818-522-§080. 949-e+H498. LAHO ROVER
OllC ..,., .. NlWPOAT BEACH
BMW .,._ 'IO CADIU.AC Elclondo 't:1 f5tl~ ID s'lJ....., -~!4!!:H40~4~4~45L__ 8t1ckk/black, ltather, White pllll, lln ltathtf, LAHO ROvtR -
"**I. ,,.. -meny lxtnla, redl.adl
NISSAN 200 SX 'It
CJrlof 59K nilea, IT1Ult -(2BFS121) $3.1199 Coata .....
Unc:oln lillfcuiy
714-14o-!ff0
• POASCtt£ .., .., Blk/
~. bllck, ni. pl9ITUn SCl.lld, 114)1)11 ltalhtr lnC.
extended warr1nty. $63.000. $4!-71~1111
I Doily Pilot
I
L :.!. ~
MA FEW
WORDS TO
WORK FOR
YOU
~~M2-~78
llfllW 525 'IO Gold, IUIO,
•• pwr, 150k ml, loaded,
lllllnl '9COl'dt, 1)(1111 wl1ll
$8,000 obo 94H42·3788
llfllW 5211 'f7
lo Iii. 5-tpd, Pl'-.n .:i
(C299096o... 11111 S12,999 (812435) NAIERI S7.988 _.,_~:.'°"!!:~~RT!!!:~llACH~al!__
Unc:oln ~ (714 ... 100
7l4-640-H30 CADl.LAC Flellwood '13 SEl.I. YOUR USED
(~A .:9
71W35-3171
BllW 5211 ..
Lo mi, uo, co. "-' Pko (3XHN300~ ~·,.
71....SW171
llfllW 740ll 'f7 == low mltl, ,..,
Law ...... CO, llk.&fld {71789a~· CO lllds:'f:a (3VOS295) $39.fl95 I ' CAtVIEA lllW NAHAS LINCOlH MARK VII ..
71'"'35-3171 --'171i.:...:..:<
4lMM==1=00'---RIO'grey, lltv, mnrl, U
Cdlac ~ '13 Slwpl "**I. ""'*-cond. llfllW 740IL 'f7 +o-. low ml,~ lh, ,_ (3XDl<581) $12.998
3C»< Ml, co. "-' Sanl tires, ,_ bafttly, loaded! Coata ....
(3XHH300) iw:1,995 $10,500fobo 9'f-e31·73?0 ~....:=:
CAtVIER ---... ._.. .... --..!.ll.!:!!!!!:!!!!!!-_ 11....SW111 ''"'"' .....,._,.. .,.
EZ Monpgc $$$
Oullnc Of Ill pcnon-
hc & 2nd T rwc Deeds
Raidential,C.Ommcrcial ac Home lmproounent
888.933. 5626
WWW.DKWOib:a>m
The Cdf. Publlc-
Utllltl 11 Com· mllllor'I REQUIRES
f)ll .. UMd ~
hold goodl rnoYttl
prtnt tllllr p .u.c.
tel T runber: ""°' end~ pitnt
"*T.C.P.IU'llbef lnll~ • you hM1I I qa9
Ion .. "' llalll-ly al I mlMr, • ft
"'~J.....Cl!...P\.8.IC u' IU' tu COMMISION
7'4·56M151
,
VEHICLE
THROUGH
l.ASSIFIED
(949} 642·5678
PAEClll PUMBINQ
Rtcalrt a Almodlle FREE ESTIMATES LJt87W 714ft109Q
i8f .~ .... • CllOlll ... __ ... _. __
~.-,..,..
NCMl'OI .........
7l4-895-<>677
-~~~Ot~
~
Roonna
S peclallH•
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949-722.a846 714-7Sl.a846
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