HomeMy WebLinkAbout2001-09-29 - Orange Coast Pilot'
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SERVING ·THE NEWPOrrr -f'JC.SA COMMUNmES SINCE 1907 ON ntE WEB: WWW.DAILYPILOT.COM SA1URDAY, SEPTCMBER 29, 2001
Teen sought in· niurder eludes police -
•Costa Mesa authorities say
Victor Garcia is1 wanted in
oonnection with the bludgeoning
death of Ceceline Godsoe, 16.
Deepa8hM'8th
DAR.Y Pit.or
COSTA ?v!BSA -Police are still
looking for a teenager suspected of
bludgeon1ng to death a 16-year-old girl
whose slain body was found on a trail in
Fairview Park on Sept. 21 .
\t\ctor Garcia, 17, fled from his Costa
Mesa home after he learned investiga-
tors were looking for him in connection
with the mwder of Cecellne Godsoe,
authorities allege.
Police officials issued a no-bail juve-
nile warrant Thursday for Garcia's
arrest.
Godsoe's father said he has neither
-------. met nor heard about
Garcia.
"And I'm not sur-
prised about that at
all,• William Godsoe
said. •It would have
been more of a shock
for me if I had found
out that one of her
friends had done it.•
Ceceline Godsoe
Victor Garcia died after being
bludgeoned on the
head by a blunt instrument, according
to an autopsy report.
Officials said they were able to pin-
point Garcia by matching fingerprints
taken from the spot where Godsoe was
found. Police also said Garcia and God-
soe bad met in the park the evening of
Sept. 20.
SEE MURDER PAGE A4
PHOTOS IV SEAN Hl1.ER I OA&.Y P9..0T
AWlld SoU•an, a cbWer for AMPCO System AlqM)d Parldng, 18}'1 business la oft about 50% of normal for the shuttle service at John
~~rt Below, dOled aectlom Of the ~g structure are a grim relDinder that many are lttll staying away from airports. . ,
Slowdown in travel is. having a harsh ripple effect
locally, with a number of businesses slashing jobs
and revenue at the airport expected to drop this year.
Paul Olnton
DAllY PILOT
JOHN WAYNE AIRPORT -
The airport and its workers are
being hit hatd by the a1sis the air-
li.Q.e industry is suffering in the
~ after the Sept. 11 terrorist
attaeb on America.
At this point. only the employ-
ees managing the county-owned
airport have been assured their
jobs are safe, John Wayne spokes-
W01D411 Yolanda Perez said.
Other layoffs are expected at
the ~mes running the parking
SEE JWA PAGE AS
Wllllam
Carlson and his
9-month-old
daughter,
Raelynn, Join
friends Tyler
Dickson,
back left.
Jacob Beaman
and Andrea
Runnells in a
moment of
·silence as they
pay tribute to
friend Cecellne
Godsoe, who was
found murdered
Sepl 21 ln
Fairview Park in
Costa Mesa.
SEAN HILLER I DAILY PILOT
City mulls
limits at
dog park
•Costa Mesa officials may
impose a four pooches per
person rule on the Bark Park.
LoliU Harper
DAILY PILOT
COSTA MESA -City offiaals are
wondering if there's too many dogs
and too few people at the dog park.
On Monday, the City Council will
consider setting a limit of four dogs
per person at the city's Bark Park. a
proposal aimed at maintaining the
improvements made at the park.
Donna Theriault of the Public Ser-
vices Department said the reason for
the limitation was to ensure dogs at
the park have proper supeivision. U
the ratio of dogs to people is wibal-
anced, dogs have more of a tendency
to dig up the grass, run wild or
become aggressive with other dogs,
she said.
•What we are looking to do is to
make the improvements last as long
as they can and be there for every-
one's enjoyment,• Theriault said.
The park was closed in the sum-
mer of 2000 to allow the dty to add
parking and walkways to improve
access for individuals with disabili-
ties and to give the Costa Mesa Bark
Park Foundation a chance to grow
grass. Bark Park reopened in Decem-
ber with a new irrigation system and
landscaping.
Since its reopening, the city has
received complaints of dog wallcing
services bringing groups as large as
20 to the park at once, Theriault sakl.
Responding to the public's concerns,
• city staff members proposed a row
dog limit
•How can you pi.ck up after and
prevent dogs from digging if you
have 20 at a timel* Theriault askecL
Theriault said the dty is not w -
geting dog-sitting businesses. lbey
SEE PARK MGE M
A shaw of
strength and '
compassion
•It ls not how much we have done for
ourselves that God will one day ask us, but
what we have done to better ocu brothers'
lot and how much of the gllta God has giv-
en to us we have been wllllng to ahare with
our hurting brothers and Bister&•
-JOMph Gtlw•
Last Sunday, my husband, daughter
and I experienced a small taste of
some of the ab1mdance cl unity and
community we've seen on the East Coast.
across our country and around the world.
Actually, it wasn't ·
really small at all. as I
heard that possibly as
many 40,000 people
participated in the
Susan G. Kamen
Breast Cancer PoWlda-
tion's Race for the Cure
at Fashion Island in
Newport Beach.
While I've partici-
pated in walks and
races for different wor-
thy causes before. I
have never experi-
enced the Jove and
spirit that I saw on the
faces and heard from
those walking around
me. 1llis wasn't a race
Qndylrone
Christeson
MORAL OF
THE STORY
of competition, but a sbow of oompassion.
Jon. Kelly and I walked from our house
because we live nearby and thought that
parking would be difficult. It wasn't long
before we saw Jong lines of cars pouring
into Fashion Island from every direction.
I've seen plenty of traffic in my life, but
there was something qiff erent that morn-
ing. Nobody horuted or hurried. I watched
in amazement as a row of cars waited
patiently for a driver who stopped his car
and ran back to retrieve an American flag.
As we got closer, we passed one friendly
policeman or volunteer after another. As we
joined the ocean of people near the starting
line, I was overwhelmed by the waves of
love and encouragement that flowed from
one person to the other. People were there
to race for the cure and to show they cared.
While it was dearly an amazing celebra-
tion, it was a solemn occasion as well.
While many celebrated and honored caru:er
swviVors. many were also there in memory
of loved ones. You could not see the pic-
tures or hear the stories of loss without feel-
ing it yourself. I think everybody alternated
between clapping and crying as we wove
through the streets.
We were there to honor and encourage
everybody, but we walked as a group for
our friend Kathy.
"I was ama7«1, surprised and touched
by the community support,• Kathy said. "I
was especially surprised by how many chil-
dren and teenagers came. It felt like
extended family .•
Kathy has inspired all of us with her atti-
tude and her faith.
"I have never been bitter, or said, 'Why
me?'" she explained. "It's thanks to God
and all the prayers. I just pray that every-
one would find God and feel his peace and
hope.
•1t was amazing to see all that f!Very-
body did to make the morning so special,·
my daughter Kelly said. •we'd yell and
clap for the singers, who then "cheeret1 for
the walkers and runners. It showed that
people really care, and that there are so
many ways to help meet each others'
needs. We couldn't help Kathy meClically,
but we could with our prayers and with our
presence. Hopefully we helped. She means
so much to s0 many.• .
I think we are all learning that the things
that matter most in life, aren't things at all.
And you oan quote me on that
YOWtg ChMlg
DAILY Pl!,oT
V ictoria Dendinger and others have
discovered an unexpected place
where God dwells. Irs Q.ot a
church. It's not a temple. 1r,·not in
a remote spot, high atop a mountain.
It's inside their subconscious. In dreams.
Oeodinger and her fellow OUr Lady
Queen of Angels c.ongregants don't ignore
the scenes, stories, characters and emotions
that appear in their shut-eye world. Ws how
some of their most subtle questions get
answered, how some of their problems get
solved. .
"When we're asleep, sometimes we're
able· to h841' God better than when we're
awake and talking all day long,"
I Dendinger said,
FYI
WllA~ Dreams: A Way
to Usten to God
WHEN: 1 to 4 p.m.
Sundays
WHERE: Our lady
Queen of Angels, 2046
Mar Vista, Newport
Beach
COS~ Free
CALL: (949) 219-1408
"Uwecan
assume God is
everywhere,
then God can
speak to us
through the
unconscious.•
She and a
group of about
15-the num-
bers have var'-
ied anywhere
from 50 to eight
-share the
stories of their
dreams every Sunday afternoon and ana-
l~ the meaning together.
The group, called Dreams: A Way to
Listen To God, has be0Il meeting for
more than 10 years but resumed last
week after being dark for much of the
summer.
The Catholic doctrine doesn't specifically
teach that believers should pursue dreams
to hear the voice of God, Dendinger said.'
Her theory is simply th.at God can answer
spiritual needs through dreams, and CQnsid-
ering, he is everywhere, why wouldn't he
tap into the subconscious?
The Old and New Testaments of the
Bible also share stodes of bow God commu-
nicated to people th.rough dreams,
Dendinger added.
"And if U!era's' aomething we think
about during th~ day, and we have a
prayerful atUtude dUrlng the day, then we
can have dreams of a more spiritual
natwe, • she said.
' Doily Pilot
Kathleen Allison, a Newport Beach resi-
dent and member or the church, bas been a
part of the dream analysis group for a
decade. She doesn't~ more than any-
one else, she er:plains, but she's interested
in the messaqea that summon when she's
GflEG FRY I OAl.Y Pl.OT
Vldoda ~.who bead.I up a~ analysll groap at Oar Udy Queen of
Angell Clmrcb. dllplayl a print repn:seutflig dream Imagery of some gro~p atlemees •
. most honest with herself. ·
"I think, when you dream. that's when,
you're the m<>1t wlnerable, • the 60-year-
old said. •It's probably when you're~
younelf, with no way to guard what you re
thlDldng or doing, a way for God to talk to
you.•
and going around and around on a
carousel. Her father suddenly appeared on
the borse in front of hers and turned
around.
After her father's death, Allison said she ·
h8d prayed about issues that hadn't been
resolved. She wasn't &Ure if matters had
been left ·ox.• simply put. The dream
answered. "Yes."
She recalls a dream from about nine
years ago. In the scene, Allison was 5 or 6
"He died when I wasn't pcesent. about
nine years ago. l did not get to talk to him
or anytb.ing, • Allisoit said. •1t was my
father's way of saying that he was OK. I
guess I had felt left out•
The spiritual connection to the dream?
"They get us in touch with our most
intelllgent self," Dendinger said of dreams.
But they •aren't to be taken literally, and
the dreamer is ultimately the best judge of
what the dream means.•
Faith
CILEllDIR
SPECIAL EVENTS
NEW SERVICES
"st Matthew's Oiurch bas
begun a new fall lineup of wor-
ship services at 330 W. Bay St,
Suite 120, Costa Mesa. A family
service with liturgy of the word
will be held at 9 a.m. A Holy
Bucharllt will be held at 11 a.m.
And the Ont Sunday of each
month will be Pantry Swxlay,
Which ii presented with Friends
in Servioe to Humanity. People
IEAQEll$ HOilJNE
~642~
will be asked to bring dona11ons
of nonpeNhable foods, diapers
and toiletries. (949) 6'6-1152.
SPIVTUAL NfO STWESS-AtEE
The Second Cllwdl of Christ
Scientist will bold a ooe-bour
"spiritual meeting without
stress• for bustnelsmen. stu-.
dents, moms, dads and grand-
parents from noon to 1 p.m..
Wednesday at 3100 Padflc View
Drive, Corona del Mar. (949)
644-2617. .
BUSS 1lf£ Ntl•.M.s
St Michael and All Angels
Episcopal Church will ho1d Us
annual Bless1ng of the Animals
at 10 a.m. Oct 7 at 3233 Pacific
~Nonewsttott.i. ~
edltofW INltW Of ... .......,.
.....,Clflbe~~
View Drtve, Corona del Mar.
Pree. (949) 644-0463.
COMMUNl'TY SUIOCAH
The Jewish Federation of
Orange County will host a com-
munity snkkAb to cele~
Sukkot at 7 p.m. Oct 7 at the
Jewish Federation Campus, 250
B. Baker St, Costa Mesa. Sukkot
means booths and commemo-
rates the tents in which Jews
lived dwfng the 40 f881'S they
wandered through the desert.
RefuwblllAllts will be served.
Pree. (114) 755-5555. .
BAT YAHM SERVICES
'n!mple Bat Yabm will hold a
congregational pkn1c in the
sukkah at 1 p.m. Oct 7 before
High Holy Days coodudes Oct.
10 with a 7 p.m. pedonnance of
the Ellis Island Kleziner Band
and a 7;30 p.m. service. Temple
Bat Yahm is at 1011 Camelback
Drive, Newport Beech. (949)
6"-1999.
WN04 roR ALL FAITHS
The Newport-Mesa Irvine
Intedaith Coundl luncheon will
be hekl from noon to 1:30 p.m..
0c.t. 10 at St. Michael and All
Angell Eplsoopal Church, 3233
Pacific Vlew Drive, Corona del
Mar. S1 .so with reservatiom or
• $10 at the door. Reeervatiom will
be taken until Oct. 9. (949) 660-
8665.
SllF Ul IUI ..
"9Cotd ~ comments lbout the
Oely Not Ot news tips. Wl1ailn Plliililliorl of~ OMW.
NMl!fSS
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Doily Pilot '
BRIEFLY IN
THE NEWS
Save Our Youth will
host tournament
Save Our Yovth Center
will host a flve-on-five bas-k~tball townament today to
~aise money for the nonprof-it organization.
The center expects about
60 youths to participate in
th~ tournament. Participants
will be divided into eight
teams. Children ranging ~rom 11 to 17 will compete
m separate divisions ln the
double-deal tournament.
The center is dedicated
to helping disadvantaged
chtldren and providing
them with guidance and
assistance. Center officials
hope to raise enough money
to offer more summer activi-
ties for Costa Mesa youth.
The tournament is at 1V a.m.
at 661 Hdrnilton St., Costa
Mesa.
Information: (949) 548-
3255.
Casbah
' ' . ~.~29,2oo1 As t
Newport-Mesa not well-prepared for attack
• Limited resources
would hamper reactions
to an unlikely
biological or chemical
strike, officials say.
DHpa Bharath
DAILY PILOT
NEWPORT-MESA
Public safety officials say
they are limited in how pre-
pared they can be in the
event of biological or
nuclear warfare.
Newport-Mesa police
and fire departments do
have teams to deal with day-
to-day hazardous materials
incidents such as sewage
spills or illegal dumping irlto
the ocean, but officials say
they are not specialized
enough to deal with large-
scale biological warfare, a
threat the World Health
Organization says all Amer-
icans face after the Sept. 11
terrorist attacks on the
·World liade Center and the
Pentagon. · .
'I don't think we're
prepared for it.
We don't have the
significant training,
equipment or. the
tools to handle that
kind of a situation.'
Sgt. Steve Shulman
Newport Beach
that masks come with differ-
ent kinds of filters that filter
out different types of chemi-
cals. So how are we going to
know what types of chemi-
cals are going to be used in
the attacks, if there is one?•
It seems unlikely that
cities such as Costa Mesa
and Newport Beach will be
attacked, said Teri Dumall,
Costa Mesa's Fire Preven-
tion and Education Officer
who also teaches the city's
"I don't think we're pre-
pared for it," said Newport
Beach Sgt. Steve Shulman.
"We don't have the signifi-
cant training, equipment or
the tools to handle that kind
of a situation.•
----------Community Emergency
Police officers and fire-
fighters in local departments
have a limited number of
gas masks they use in case
of riots where tear gas or
pepper spray is used, but
the masks are not geared to
handle the kind of chemi-
cals that come with war, oUi-
cials said.
Shulman said he has
received several calls from
the community asking about
how they can buy gas masks
and if the masks will protect
them.
#I don't know that,· Shul-
man said. #But I do know
fllUllES .........
Dressings
• Cowgirl Ranch • Goddess
• Gingerly ~(Low Fat) • Ont.anic Green Gaitic (no iinefp')
REG. "l.99 I az.
Response Team training
program.
"The terrorists will proba-
bly target a big city like Los
Angeles,· she said.
But, she added, the Fire
Department is always alert
and ready to face any sort of
disasters. Dumall said the
aty even has a plan in case
of a disaster at the San
Onofre nuclear plant.
*Even if something hap-
pens to that plant, the most
impact we'll b4ve is 1<>me
dust in the air,• she said.
1'he dust would be
cleared out by using some
filtering equipment that will
be borrowed from the couri-
ty, Durnall said.
Most local agencies, how-
ever, do have partnerships
and mutual-aid agreements
with bigger cities and the
county in case of major
emergences, saJd Newport
Beach Fire Capt. John
Blauer.
U is also possible, he said,
that police officers and fire-
fighters might start learning
new techruques to counter
these new problems.
#There is always informa-
tion and lessons learned
with each inodent {like the
terronst attacksJ, • Blauer
said. #They educate us.·
=SanJ~
B~ L~~ t•&m•
•Bladt Samne == S.39 REG. '3.89 .....-.fllI; 21 az.
c.all&nJa Orangk
Basmati Rice
:: S.39
REG. 'US __.-.fllI; 32 oz.
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Ruby Bunt.-Tea ·Kid csz,28 . .,,, ~
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SUGG. '3.• 2t 11111
MOTHER'S DOES INDEPENDENT LABORATORY TESTING
TO VERIFY POTENCY ON OUR VITAMINS f:J SUPPLEMENTS!
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.. , ........ ,. .. Lolttgllln
PARK
CONTINUED FROM A 1
can still come to the park,
she said, but they may have
to make a few more trips.
Although the city Jll4Y
not pwposely target dog·
sitting businesses, the
change wW a.ff ect them,
said Adriana Vailcb, owner
of Waggly Tails dog-sitting
service.
Vaiach u.ses Bark Park
and agrees the small park is
easily crowded.
Her buatness will not be
directly affected because
she provides individualized
dog ca.re, she said. Vaisch
rarely bu more than four
dogs at a Ume anyway, she
said. But she feels for her
colleagues who provide
dog-sitting services who
cannot afford such a small
human-to-dog ratio.
•1 can understand not
wanting 20, but four seems
too small,• she said. •But
then it turm into an argu-
ment of where you draw
the line. I guess the city
thinks four 1a enough.•
Costa Mesa decided on a
four-dog limit because it
falls in line with the city's
existing four-animal limita-
tion per boUlebold, Theri-
ault said. Irvine and Hunt-
ington Beach ea.ch employ
a 1imlt of three dogs per
person, a staff report shows.
~~LYLEEN EWING
THE BEST TIME TO FIX
YOUR HOME UPTO SEIL
The Huntington Beach City
Council voted to impose the
limit two weeks ago.
Responsibility of ma.in-·
taining the park rs divided
between the city and the
Bark Park Volunteer Foun-
dation.
Costa Mesa Mainte-
nance Service Manager
Bruce Hartley said Uie limi-
tation has less to do with
the ratio of dogs to humans
and more with the sheer
numbers of park patrons.
Bark Park incurs much
more damage than other
city parks, be said.
· Hartley likened it to
maintaining sports fields
that are constantly dug up
by cleated shoes. But the
dogs have four sets of cleats
instead of two, he said.
·1 like the challenge of
trying to grow grasS' under-
neath them, but it's not an
easy job,• Hartley said.
Councilman Gary Mona-
han sa'id be considers the
amendment a well thought
out compromise. The recre-
ation department did a
good job crafting a reason-
able limit, he said.
"The park is there obvi-
ously for dogs but not nec-
essarily for the benefit of
dog sitters,• Monahan said
about the alleged prolifera-
tion of dog-walking busi-
nesses taking over the
park.
• Lolita *'Per covers Cost.
Mew. She ~be reechld at
(949) 57~275 or by •mall at
lollta.ha~timn.com.
..
SMITH . • CONTINUED HlOM A1
MURDER
CONTINUED FROM A 1
Her father said he stlJl puts
fresh flowers on the dust and
bruJb-covered trail where
she was found dead by a
friend during the early hours
of Sept 21.
•1t•s been a veiy difficult
time,• be said. "Some of her
friend.I are seriously Upiel •
Godsoe said he is among
many who a.re puzzled about
Gettl~. INVULVED
• GIETTlillCI INYOUllD runs period.
ally In the Dally Pllot on • rot.ting
basis. tf you'd like lnfonnatJon on
.cjding your Otpniudon to this
list, c.all (949) 574-4298.
ACADUIJC YID
Ill llllllCA
C6sta MeM families can host
a German student and earn
ur. to $1,000 toward a number
o · travel abroad programs.
Danielle Carpino, (800) 322-
HOST.
IU ISSll.t. OUllGI COUllTY C11IPTEI
The Aml:phic Lateral
Sclerosis I which belps
individuals who have the dfs-
order that ii ai.o known u
Lou Gehrig's dilease, needs
volunteers. (714) 375-1922.
llZllllllll'S ASSI.
Of OUllGI COUllTY
Support group leaden, Visit~
tng Volunteers, family
resource consultants and
ottlce volunteers are needed.
Volunteers may work on one-
time projecta or ongoing pro-
gtams. 'n'aintng sessions are
available. (800) 660-1993.
AlllllCIN
ClllCll SOCIETY
The Orange County Region
Now you know you always can.
c..u during regular bulbm bows. you1l
talC.b me. c..u ahtr hows. you'll l'C:ICh my
24 Hour Good Neighbor SCMcc9 "Qan. 'Ihm
Good Neighbor Savtco-2'4 bows a~ 1 ct.)'11 ,,,_
m
Anybody with
fntorm.tlon about
Garcia's whereabouts is
asked to c..11 Det. Mike
Cacho at (714) 754-5340
or the Costa Mesa Pollte
Department at (714)
754-5206.
the teenager'• tragic death.
•ne whole incident ta
shrouded in a fog of mystery,•
he uid. •Tbat is because we
don't know who this penon
ta. But in time, police will
recomtruct the inc:ldent and.
unravel the truth.
Pamela Boyd. whose son
wu friends with Cecellne
about three years a.go, said
she was a •painfully shy• girl
who seemed depressed and
hung out •with a rough
aowd.•
•'Ibis 1a just a very, very sad
ltory ot a girl who was in the
wrong place at the wrong
time,· she said. •1 think her
Da!fy Pl1ot
• .... mnild out. --
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It Wll gqM. npl.ad by a
dMr ,...SC cup from • local
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my~ l't Dot lbat I DO
kmgsMwmyWll, buttbat
IQIMCllM9 would llam. a Jet into
a~. tblt tcmeone
elle Would mUldc a cbOd
and tbat anottw penon
wouJd lloop IO Jaw U to ateal
a cbMp Y8l8 frmn tbe lhrine
d.. dMd t.emgs.
What ID tha wodd ii gomg
emf
• ITINI __,.It 1 a.ta Mesa,._
kMr'lt end ftiullnca .-. "-dlts
JTWfi....a m1111g1farhnonthe
~Pb hodll"9. (M9) 142~.
father really tried ban1 to do
what WU belt fot her, and it
was tough for him u a single
parent• .
Gard.a', who ii also known
u Vlctor Manuel Garduno
and goes by the njckname of
"Pumpkin Head,• is
described u 5-foot-8 and 195
pounds with black hair,
brown eyes and a tribal tattoo
on his upper right arm.
A memorial service will be
held for Ceoellne Godsoe at 5
p.m. Tuesday at the Orange
County Unitarian Universalist
Church at 1259 Victoria St.
.
of the American Cancer Sod·
ety leeks office volunteers.
The society 1a al.lo see.king
volunteeis. to answer calls for
the unit's Helpline lnfoCen-
ter. (9'9) 261-9«6.
unteers to give emotional · include fund-raising, pro-
support to termtna.lly W gram development and train·
patients and their families in ing to emting troops and
the greeter Orange County packs. (714) 546-4990.
area. 1\-aining is provided.
(714) 550-0800 or (800) s.co-IOYS & lllU CLUIS
AlllllClll 2545. Of lllWNll-MISI
C111C11 soc1m
DISCORD SIOP
The American Cancer Society
DilcoYery Shop needs unwant-
ed goods, such as dodllng, fW'·
niture, Jewelry, aoceuori.81,
· antiquel and oollecUbJes, to
fund the society's retean:h,
education and patient l8lvicel
programs. The goods may be
dropped off at 2600 E. Coast
Highway, Corona del Mar. Vol-
unteen AN Qo needed from
10 a.m. to 5 p .m. Monday
through Saturday at the same
lnattion. (949) 6'0-4m.
llllllCll CllCll socam IOID TO
llllllClll
Ill CIOJ!1 OUllGE coum c11am1
1be Orange County chapter of
the American Red Croa need.I
vo1unteen to address cxmmu-
nity groups about Red Crea
services and to act as Hnisms
with the media ID disaster and
emergency situations. Lynn
Howes, (7t4) '81..5376.
llllW. 1111WOll
Of OUllll COlllTY
Become a bottle-feeder or
take In pregnant call at your
boma. Mally lhelten kill
~t cats upon arrival
and cats are also avail-llCOVllY • able for adoption.(9'9) 759-
1be transportation program 3646 or http://www.anlmal
needs volunteers to drive can-network.org.
cer patients to and from med-
1cal treatments ,,_ ot charge. ISSN. llllllSSllCI
!be niqutred mmmttment ts a CIUIOIS
few houn each week or
month. Ddven must have a
valid~ liceme andinlur-
ance and be at least 25 yean
old. Volunteers may use either
their own vehk:Jes or Ameri-
can Cancer Society vana. (949)
1be COit.a Mesa group 1p<>n-
10rs and supports outreach
commumty service program1,
such as the homeless sanctu-
ary. Volunteers are needed.
(114) S.C0-5803.
261-9446 or ~av. Ill llOJlllS,
111111c11 11m us11. 111 s1mu
The American Heart A.an. 1a
looking for volunteers to per-
form various general otfic:e
duti.es in the main oftioe and
implement educational and
fund·raJltng events through
Orange County. No upert-
enc:e Deel llllJY. natnlng will
be provided. (9'9) 856-3555.
llllllCll
llOlll IUUll
IOIPICI PIOIUll
1be local Chapter is looking
for men and women older
than 20 who have lived in
Orange County for at leut six
months and have been on the Job for at least three months
to serve as big brothers or big
s1aters for children ages 6 to
16 from single-parent homes.
(714) 544-7773'.
IOYKom
Of llllllCA lllC.
The American Home Health Volunteer opportunities for
Hospice Program needs vol-the Orange County Coundl
The three area clubs need
volunteer coeches and arts
and aaftl worbhop teachers.
Call for locations. (949) 642-
22'C5.
COSTIMISI
cmc PIAYHOUSI
The playhoUte need.I volun·
teers for ushering, backstage
work, mailings, typing, con-
trolling lights and many other
duties. (949) 650-5269.
COSTIMISA
lllROllW SOCllTY
The IOdety ooDKta _,. .. ntt.
tion, photos and uUtacts
rela'1ng to the history of Cos-
ta MeM and the harbor area.
Volunteers are needed for clerlcal tub, computer input
and help in the library. (9'9)
631-5918.
COlllMISA
UTIUCY COllCIL
The CO.ta Mesa lJteracy
Center needl volunteer tutors
to teach Bngllsh u a aec:ond
language. People who want
to learn Englllh u a second
language are also encour-
aged to call. Call to f8911ter.
(714) '35-3310 or (714) 5'5-
3445.
Daily Pilot ' . l I I
~ ~29, 2001 A5
Growth is _ chief Concern of coUnty . residents
•A survey shows they wony
most about development
and population increases.
Deirdre NeWm.n
residents dte the combination of
populaUon growth and develop-
ment as the No. 1 problem. The El
Toro airport was the second growth-
related concern, followed by hous-
ing issues and transportation. The
results are based on a telephone
survey of 2,004 Orange County
adult residents interviewed from
Aug. 20 to Aug. 31.
'II we took Costa Mesa,
Newport Beach, Irvine and
El Toro and got their jobs
and housing 1n balance,, we
wouldn't even be talking
about new connections to
Riverside County.'
ate twice as much traffic u the city's
1990 general plan allows for the Mte.
In Newport Beach, Mayor Gary
Adams was llkewlle not surprised
by the survey's results. He sees the
growth coneerns as affirmation of
the Greenlight Initiative that resi-
dents passed last year to have some
oversight on development.
of Orange County residents believe
that population Jnc:reues will make
the county a lea desirable place to
live in the future With high bollliDg
costs and traffic congestion as top
concerns. DAILY Pu.or
NEWPORT-MESA -Former
Costa Mesa Mayor Sandy Genis is
used to hearing the constant hum of
traffic. To cope, she compares it to
something positive.
The Greenllght measure
#1 always tell myself it's just like
living near a river,• Genis said.
The .survey's results are signifi-
cant because they renect what is
already evident to ma.ny residents
-that a jobs/housing imbalance
and traffic tie-ups are inevitable
byproducts of unchecked growth.
Sandy Genis
former Costa Mesa Mayor
requires residents to vote on devel-
opment above what the general
plan allows. The Koll office project
will be the first issue to go to voters
in November.
Yet there ls still a high percent-
age of residents who are satisfied
with the quality of We in Orange
County -67% say they are very
satisfied with their housing situa-
tion, an 11-polnt increase over 10
years ago.
For Genis, however, satisfaction
will come when certain cities find
some equilibrium between jobs and
housing.
So she was not surprised at the
results of a recent Orange County
survey that showed the most signifi-
cant concerns of residents are
growth-related issues -even sur-
passing crime and education.
Costa Mesa already has . an
imbalance of 2,000 more jobs than
resident workers, Genis said. Yet
she is opposed to the idea of a free-
way from Riverside County to
Orange County that would help cor-
rect that imbalance as it would run
smack through the Cleveland
National Forest.
troversial Home Ranch project,
which was just approved by the
Costa Mesa Planning Commission,
for a site on a former 1ima bean farm
off the San Diego Freeway. The
mixed-use project includes industri-
al .. residential and commercial pro-
jects, including a 308,000-square-
foot Ikea furniture store.
Adams said Newport Beach is
virtually built to capacity in terms of
housing. He expects the review of
an upcoming housing project to
provoke controversy because of
anti-growth sentiment.
·u we took Costa Mesa, New-
port Beach, IIvine and El Toro and
got their jobs and housing in bal-
ance, we wouldn't even be talking
about new connections to Riverside
County. Just these four oties are
really bad and it bothers me
because my city is a big part of the
problem,· Genis said.
nus is the 20th year of the sur-
vey, published by the Public Policy
Institute of California and conduct-
ed by a former UC Irvine professor.
It found that 21 % of Orange County Genis is also opposed to the con-Genis said the project will gener-
•People don't care about hous-
ing in Newport Beach. They don't
want anything to change,· Adams
said. ·
The survey also found that 65%
JWA
CONTINUED FROM A1
lots, cafes and bars, valet park-
ing service, rental car opera-
tions, and other concessions at
the airport.
Nearly every major airline
has announce{i deep cuts in
service since four planes were
hijacked earlier this month.
Two of the planes slammed
into the World Trade Center,
leaving more than 6,000 people
unaccounted for and presumed
dead.
Since then, United,
American, Delta and
Continental have all slashed
their schedules and have
announced layoffs as
Americans stay out of the skies.
Southwest Airlines was the
sole holdout until Sept. 20,
when the company said it
would likely drop lights due to
a nearly 70% drop in travel
volume.
The drops will take their toll
at John Wayne, which relies
on landing fees, passenger ser-
Vice charges and parking fees.
BRIEFLY IN
THE NEWS
In an internal memo, John
Wayne Airport Director Alan
Murphy predicted the airport
would lose $9.2 million in rev-
enue over the next year.
Spitzer asks for reassessment
of El Toro spending
In a Friday memo, Spitzer advocates
a halt in spending from #Fund 14M, •
an account set up lo hold revenue from
the airport. Supervisors have routinely
dipped into the account to fund the
developme nt of the county's plan for an
airport at El Toro.
Airport Director Alan Murphy has
said he expects the airport to lose more
that $9 million over the next year due to
huge cuts in flight schedules by the air-
lines.
Expenses at John Wayne have also
jumped, led by a $12 million increase to
provide increased security.
The airport is expected to
lose $4.5 million in lost parking
revenue. $2.1 million from lost
landing fees and Sl .4 million in
revenue from rental cars. The
remainder will be lost from
reduced business at gift shops
and other concession stands.
County Supervisor Todd Spitzer has
asked for a reassessment of the coun-
ty's spending practices to stop huge
losses expected to occur at John
Wayne.
"I feel it is our obligation to review,
assess and ctiscuss the financial fallout
that will likely occur at John Wayne
Airport in both the short term as well as
the long term,· Spitzer wrote.
The Board of Supervisors will con-
sider Spitzer's request at the Oct. 16
The hit in parking lot rev-
enue has been obvious in
recent weeks as more than
half the spots have sat empty.
Awad Soliman, an employee
of AMPCO System Airport
Parking, said he estimates he's
seen a 50% drop in cars.
Over the past week, busi-
ness nas picked up somewhat
at John Wayne. But compa-
nies dependent on travelers
for business are taking it on
the chin.
Six rental car companies
serve John Wayne -Alamo,
AVIS, Budget, Enterprise,
Hertz and National.
ANC Rental Corp., the Fort
Lauderdale, Fla.-based par-
ent company o( Alamo Rent A
Car, announced Tuesday it
would trim as many as 118,000
vehicles from its fleet of
337,338.
While the cuts are still
being implemented, ANC
spokeswoman Cheryl Budd
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said John Wayne 1s sure to
lose cars.
·Not to strike fear in the
hearts of customers,· Budd
said. "It's a business deo.sion. •
Budd stressed that there
will still be enough cars for
those who need them.
Hertz, the world's largest
rental car company, is also
expected to announce Oeet cuts
and layoffs, company spokes-
woman Robin West saiclr
Both c.ompanies have
dropped their rates to the point
meeting.
that they're offering vehicles
for $20 per day at John Wayne.
The company that manages
many of the food shops, restau-
rants and bars is also reevalu-
ating its business as a result of
the drops in travel volume.
HMS Host Corp., based in
Bethesda, Md., runs the air-
port's Cinnabon, Pretzel Mania,
Pizza Hut, Starbucks, TCBY
Treats and Pretzel Mania.
A spokeswoman from the
company did not return calls
'for comment, but a terse mes-
-Paul Clinton
sage was posted on the com-
pany's Web site:
"While i1 is very dl.fficult to
predict medium and long-term
affects on passenger travel, we
are measuring and studying
the impacts on our business,•
the message.states.
• PllUI Olnton COl/f!r1 the
environment and John Wayne
Airport. He may be reached at
(949) 764-4330 Of' by e-mail at
paul.dintonO/atimes.com.
..
I I
Daily Pilot
. . r • ... .. ..
M ~ s.,..nbet 29. 2001 ,¥ . ,
I?aciftc Coast Tria,th/On raises fa:ndsf<:>r New/?ot! Beach community
C.lub Pnllldent Nmaq' Bell
reports the NeWport
Beach-Corona del Mar
Kiwaail Club sucoemtully
staged tbe fourth annual
Pacific Cout 1HathJoo at
Crystal Cove State Patk ln
August Bell attributes the
race's SUOC&S in part to the
outstanding performance of
volunteers 1rOm such organi-
zations as Boy Scout 1\'ooJ> 901
Laguna Beach Police Explor-
ers; Newport Harbor High
and Corona del Mar 1-fjgh
athletic teams; Newport Out.-
riggen; UC Irvine water polo;
the Corooa del Mar Commu-
nity'Chwch. Congregational;
and not to mention the treoiendous volunteer efforts
from dub members, along
with its Key Oubbers and the
UCI Circle K sponsored
youth.
In keeping with Kiwanis'
2411 lrvt.e -. . ....,..._.,CA
(141) 141--1781
lllllllr: .. .,... a.t
Jim de Booni
COMMUNITIES & auas
primary focus on youth. the
main featwe ot this year's
event was the f:irst-wer
CHOC Kids' niatblon. for
kids 13 and younffie:; Pmnilies participated toge in a
relay with dads performing
one leg, moms another and
kids the third lE19. 1\velve
hundred men, women and
kids crossed the finish line.
llMIWJI
OF NIWPOll IUGI r .,,
CIAHGI ClOIHT'S fWIUST S't'NAOOGUf ...... , .. ,. __ ,_.
tmlMllH QUl8 Ml Wit' MlCXMll. ....... --·HI •
IOCllLnml
The rac;e attracted tome Ol the • four yean ol operatim, the
best athletes iii the ~ trt.atbJon bM made It pomtble iDdudina the upcoming JaHe for tbe dill> to cxmtribute
S'W911. lfa water polo coach, SlOS,000 to the community.
whO took first~ in the TitE NEW BAl.80A BAY
Women's DMskm. 1bis Win CLUB: BarbUa and I were
oould lead to Julie winning two ol aome 1,500 peode who
the silver medal in water polo towed the new Balboa Baf
on the US. women's team. Club Clubhouse on Sunday.
Last year's winner of the The new health and fitness
Padfic Coast niatblon's fadlities and programs offered
Women's Division, Michellie are world class. The new ·
Jones, went on to win the sil· fadlities will be open to mem·
ver medal at the 2000 bers on Tuesday, after which
Olympic 1Hatblon event in the demolition team will move
Australia. in to remove the old health
This year, the local Kiwanis dub fi!lcilities, hotel rooms and
Club contributed $20,000 to ballroom and banquet fadli-
local high school athletic ties. Club President Henry
teams and various Kiwanis-Sddeleln says the new hotel
sponsored youth p~: and banquet facilities will be
Newport Harbor High School, ready in 18 months or so,
Corona del Mar High School. when the club becomes once
Boy Scout Th>opOO, Lagwia again the 60Cial center of
Beach Police Explorers and Newport Beach.
UO water polo. Owing its GOAlllllJ. GO GE'ITEJlS:
ewport r
Lutheran Church
(LLO.A.J 7MDewwDr ................
Jredltlo1111I Lutheran
h9W'o.td-... .......... ......... .w.c..............
luftderl:18am
.
WORSHIP
·otRECTQRY
• t Midiad & All Angds
Poafir v..,.., M_. c.....-cld Ma. • 644--0463
A C...,...,.-l{U. A.p-C---
llUILDINC OUlt W1Ht UMNC al1lJST
ANDSEMMI O<aaJMMCHTr
The Rcv'd Petet 0. Hayna, Rector
SUNDAY SCHEOUL£
8 ""' • Holy Euc:hari« 9 om • Sunday ~Aduh 8ibk Study
I 0 am-Clioral Eucbuitc
NURSERY CARE AVAll.A/JLE
U..IUICI.--*'.,. .... ..,.. ...
1949/548-6900 ........... ____ """"'...,,.· .... --~
"A God-centered parish community, instructed f>t me Word of God
and rcncwcd by the Sacramma
Our Lady Queen of Angels
2046 Mar VtSta Drive
N~~ Beach, California 92660
(949)6#-0200 Fax (949)644-1349
FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST
3303 Vta 1.ldo
Newport Bead\
673-1340 or 673-6150
O\urc:b 10 am & 8 pm. ·
SUnday Schoel 10 am
WildrlMdaf ~ 130 pm
SECONDCHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST
3100 Pad6c View Dr.
Newport lleacb
~2617 or 675-4661
Qnaob IO am
SUnday School 10 am
Wldlm:IOy ...... pm ........ ....., lll'.IOCll ............ ,...... .......
I 1t milb •• ld1 lwltl
Newport Center
Un.itecl Mechod.i.tt Cha.rcb
Rev. Cathlttn C.OOu, Putor
1601 MargueritcAvc.
corner of Marguerite and
San Joaquin Hills Rd.
(9'69) 644-07-45
&lm Quin wonhip StnJict
/Oam Worship aNi Chiltlrm's
SunM] ~hooJ
>11uth mettint Wttlt/y
.... Sdlwmdl of the Mesa
(ioethm Go Geaen ii chair-
woman ot the 4-H week cam·
!Wltee, which will bold a 4-H
Dey oo Oct. 6 ot Harbor Cen·
ter, 2300 Harbor·Blvd. Prom
noon to 2 p.m., -'·H Oub memben will display some of
their various projects. Stop on
by and learn more about .4-H.
EXCHANGE INSTAUS
OFfJCERS: Don Lake was
installed as president of the
31-:memi>er Exchange Club of
Orange Coast at a dinner held
at the Bahia Corinthian Yacht
Club. Servhlg with Lake are Tom=· Shirley ~.Bob .Jeaen. Bob
Scoel, Teryl Scoa. Leopold
VamfeenJdtde and Jack
Wllder. Exchange District
President Dick Freeman had
the honor of inducting two
new members.
VOLUNTEERS NEEDED:
The Taste of Newport, now
scheduled for Friday to Oct. 7
at Newport Center-Fashion
Island needs volunteers to
work four-hour shifts. Volun-
teers will receive free adinis-
sion to the Taste the day they
work and a Taste of Newport :r-shirt. For more information
or to volunteer, call Melisa
Hansen at (949) 729-4411.
WELCOME TO TIIE
WORID OF SERVICE
CLUBS: Dennis Garren and
Marge Chapman joined the
Exchange Club of Orange
Coast, and Robin Dames,
sponsored by George Wines,
joined the Costa Mesa
Orange Coast Breakfast Lions
Club.
SEJlVICE CLUB MEET·
INGS nus WEEK; Upset by
what happened on Sept. 11 ?
Want to make a difference in
the world and our communi-
ty? ny helping your commu-
nity and the world through a
service club. You are invited
to attend a club meeting this
week. Many clubs will buy
your first guest meal.
TUESDAY
7:30 a.m.: The Newport
Beach Sunrise Rotary Club
y.'il1 meet at Five Crowns
The
Relblunant tor a program by
Rob WUllailll on Guadalupe
·~
• p.ia.: 1be Costa Mesa
Newport· Harbor Lions Oub
will meet at the Costa Mesa
Golf and Country Oub.
WEDNESDAY
7:15 a.a: 1be South Coast
Metro Rotary Oub will meet
at the Center Oub
(http:/ /www.aputhooastmetro
rotary.org), and the Newport
Harbor Kiwanis Oub will
meet at the University Athlet-
ic Cub.
Noon: The J:xchange Club
of the Orange Coast will meet
at the Bahia Corinthian Yacht
Club.
6 p.m.: The Rotary Club of
Newport·Balboa will meet at
the Bahia Corinthian Yacht for
a reunion dinner and •Joke
Off,• featuring Fl'ank Hall,
Gordon Bowley, Jim Wien
and Jack Connole
(http://www.newportbalboa.
org).
THURSDAY
7 a.JD-! The Costa Mesa-
Orange Coast Breakfast Lions
Club will meet at Mimi's Cale
for a business meeting.
Noon: The Costa Mesa
Kiwanis Club will meet at the
Holiday Inn, the Exchange
Club of Newport Harbor will
meet at the Newport Harbor
Nautical Museum for a busi-
ness meeting, and the New-
port Irvine Rotary Club will
meet at the Irvine Marriott for
a program by David Simpson
on the future of Orange
County transportation
(http://www.nirotary.org).
SATURDAY
6 p..m.: The Kiwanis Club
of Newport Beach-Corona del
Mar will meet at the Santa
Lucia Clubhouse for President
Vance Thompson's installabon
dinner.
•COMMUNITY • a.uBS is pub-lished Saturdays in the Daily Pilot
Send your service dub's meeting
infonnation by fax to (949) 660-
8667; e-mail to jdeboomOaol.com °' by mail to 2082 S.E. Bris1ot St.,
suite 201, Newport Beach, CA
92660-17 40.
All New ES 300 Has Arrived
"See What
Perfection
Looks Like!"
r I ---1
Only at Our
Store in Orange!
Dady Pilot ~ ~ 29, 2001 A.7
Cookie specialist turns her eye to Southern cooki,ng in latest boOk
SQAD ...,. will 51gn her
latest cookbook. ·eook-
tng with Susan -A Col·
· 1ecUon of Pavorlte Southern
family Recipes• from 11
a.m. to 2 p.m. today at the
Blue Springs, Ala. store in
Costa Mesa. Susan Irby is
well-known for her
lrbyDerby pecan and
IrbyOerby chocolate-chip
cookies that wlll be at the
store and are sold online at
http:/ /www.susanirby.com.
The pecan cookies are $8.50
per dozen, and the chocolate
chip cookies are $6.60 per
dozen. lrby's cookbook is a
traditional Southern cook-
book, featuring more than 95
recipes, cooking tips and
•helpful hints from mom.·
Her next µ>okbook, ·cook-
ing with Susan -Volume
11 , 100 Ways to Make
Chicken,• is due out in July.
A portion of the proceeds
will go toward the Olive
Crest Child Abuse Founda-
Around
TOWN
• Send AROUND TOWN items to
the Daily' Pilot. 330 W. Bay St., Cos-
ta Mesa, CA 92627; by fax to (949)
646-4170; or by calling (949) 574-
4298. Include the time, date and
location of the event. as well as a
contact phone number. A com·
plete li5ting is available at
http://Www.dailypilot.com.
TODAY
More than 200 Yr Cruisers,
Prowlers, Vipers and Chrysler
Concept Cars will be on dis-
play during California
Kruisin' Days from 10 a.m. to
4 p.m. today and 10 a.m. to 4
p.m. Sunday in downtown
Balboa Peninsula. Free. VISit
http:/ I BalboaNewportBeach.
com for more information.
The CHOC Inside Out Regat-
ta, sponsored by the Balboa
Yacht Club, to raise funds for
Children's Hospital of Orange
County will begin with a skip-
pers' meeting at 10 a.m. at the
yacht club at 1801 Bayside
Drive, Corona d~ Mar. Entry
forms available at the yacht
club. or by calling noy H~dema.n. (949) 673-3515.
Monte Carlo 2001, tbe work of
Deana · Martin-Griffeth,
daughter of Dean Martin. will
host 400 gu~ from 6 p.m. to
midnight at the Sutton Place
Hotel in Newport Beach. The
night will featwe a tribute to
Judy Garland's music, a pri-
vate reception, live and silent
NEW! COSABELLA
NEW! LOLAC
NEW! ESCADA
NEWI CHANTELLE
NEWI BlsOU BISOU
Greer Wylder
BEST BUYS
lion. Blue Springs. Ala. is at
369 E. 17th St., Costa Mesa.
(949) 642-3632.
Smart & Final has a big
selection of built Halloween
candy at low prices. The
selections include a four-
pound bag of Tootsie rolls for
$5.39, plain and peanut
M&Ms at $6.49, Hershey's
snack size at $6.99. Starburst
and Skittles variety packs at
$5.99, Hershey's miniatures
auctions, gourmet dinner,
dancing and gaming. Tickets
range from $125 to $250. Craig
Boardman, (714) 832-5669.
SUNDAY
Get a bal.rcut and help the
American Red Cross Disaster
Relief Fund in New York at a
fund-raiser from 7 a.m. to 10
p.m. at Paul Mitchell-The
School, 1534 Adams Ave., Cos-
ta Mesa. $20. (714) 546-8786.
The ninth annual Walk to
Cure Diabetes sponsored by
the Orange County Chapter
of the Juvenile Diabetes
Research Foundation will be
from 7:30 a.m. to noon at UC
Irvine's Aldrich Park on the
UCI campus. Funds raised go
to benefit diabetes research
and the hope of finding a
cure. (949) 553-0363.
at SS.49, Tootsie Pops at
S7 .29, Reese's jt.bnbo snack
bags at $4.29, and M&M
variety bags at $8.79. Smart
& P'inal ls at 707 W. 19th St.,
Costa Mesa.
Tom Stansbury Antiques
is expanding. The new loca-
tion ls called Next Notch, in a
3,000-square-foot space, and
ts filled with fine antique fur-
niture and accessories, paint-
ing and lamps. The new loca-
tion is close to Jefferies Ltd ..
another great antique store,
~t 840 Production Way, New-
port Beach. (949} 642-1272.
Shape-Up Fitness Center
. is offering a six-week trial
membership for $89. The fit-
ness center offers Pilates,
sports medicine, strength
classes, yoga, child care. tw
chi, steam rooms, group
exercise and microdermabra-
sion. There are also corpo-
rate and family memberships
Orange Coast College's
Community Education
Office will be held from 9
a.m. to noon at National Uni-
versity, 3390 Harbor Blvd.,
Costa Mesa. $25, $20 iii
advance. (714) 432-5880.
A seminar on skin care will
be held from 2:30 to 5 p.m.
and 4 to 6:30 p.m. at Nord-
strom South Coast Plaza,
3333 Bear St.. Costa Mesa.
Call to make an a ppoint-
ment. (71 4) 549-8300, Ext.
1064.
WEDNESDAY
The Inside Edge will host a
breaklast forum from 6:30 to
8:30 a.m. at the University
Club al UC Irvine at the cor-
ner of Peltason and Los Tran-
cos. The forum will feature a
full buffet, networking and
entertainment, along with
Robert Maurer's lecture on MONDAY how people create and main-
Caregivers of Alzheimer's lain success lD: work, healt?
disease sufferers are invited . and .rl'.labonsh.ips. M~urer is
to a free caregivers' support a. clinical psychologist an~
group sponsored by the director Of beha:-'lo ral SCl · Alzhenner'~~sn. of Orange enc~s for the Family Practice
co ty-fiom 1' p.m. to 8:30 Residency . Program at tb.e un Santa Moruca-UCLA Hosp1-p.m. at Our Lady Queen of tal $20-$35 (949) 460-424 2 Angeles and St. Mark's Pres-· · ·
byterian. 2046 Mar Vista
Drive, Newport Beach.
Reservations required. (949)
640-1750.
TUESDAY
A small business develop-
ment workshop offered by
lbe American Cancer Soci-
ety, along with the National
Cosmetology Assn., will host
a seminar to tea.ch cancer
patients tips on hiding the
effects of radiation and
chemotherapy on the body
with make up, wigs and tur-
bans. The session will take
Bra & Panty Sale
. Come In Now For Beat Selection!
B u ',' , 1 ,-, \ 2 b r , 1 " -q c• t ttw 3 r cl F R E E '
f~ 1 1 v . i r' \ • ' p. rn t 1 e ~ qr· t the Jr d FR E E 1
No Speclal O~rs
~-8
Lingerie • Loungewear • Gifts
Westclttf Court • t 719 Westcllff Dr. • Newport BMch
Monday -Saturday 1 o-6
(949) 631 -7399
Famous Parking
Lot Party This
Sunday, Sept. 30th
Drawing For $100 In
Merchandise at 2:30!
9AM·4PM
available. Shape.Up 1S at
2101 E. Coast Highway,
Corona del Mar. (949) 760-
9335.
Blvd., Costa Mesa (9'9) 646-
3925.
1be 13th annual Tute or
Newport has changed its
date to Friday and Oct. 6,
from 6 to 11 p.m. nckets
with the original dates may
be used. The event includes
more than 30 local restau·
rants, 15 wineries and live
entertainment. Partici patlng
restaurants include Aysia
101, Bayside, Bistango, Blue
Water Grill, Buca Di Beppo,
Ciao, Clayton Shurley's Real
BBQ, The Clubhouse Restau-
rant, Five Crowns, Gelato
Paradiso, Gina's Pizza & Pas-
tarla, Gulliver's, Haagen
Dazs, Ho Sum Bistro, Kitaya-
ma, Koto. Marrakesh, Mar-
garitaville. McCormick &
Schrruck's, Newport Fish
Company, Pavilion at the
Four Seasons Hotel, Ris-
torante Mam.ma Gina, Royal
Armstrong Garden
Centen is having a spedal
on spring bulbs that should
be planted in the fall. The
selection includes Dutch lns,
10 for $1.991 ranunculus. 10
for $3.991 freesia, 10 for
$1.49; Dutch master daffodils,
10 for $2.97; Dutch tulips, 10
for $3.991 and 18 varieties or
bearded iris, $1.99 each.
There·~ also a special on ros-
es: If you preorder roses,
you'll save 10% off the Janu-
ary price. There are 34 new
roses. and more than 150 ros-
es are available on the Web
site at http://www.armstrong
garden.com. The sale will
last through Tuesday. Arm-
strong Garden Centers is at
1500 E. Coast Highway,
Newport Beach (949) 644-
9510, and at 2123 Newport
· Thw Cuisine, Rusty Pelican,
Sabatino's Lido Shipyard
place from 10 a.m. to noon at
Hoag Hospital, 1 Hoag
Drive, Building 41 , Newport
Beach. Free, registration
required. (949) 261-9446.
THURSDAY
A free support group for
caregivers of Alzheimer's
sufferers will be held from 1
to 3 p.m. at Hoag Heath Cen-
ter, 1190 Baker St.. Costa
Mesa. Call to make a reser-
vation. (714) 593-9630
The seventh lecture ln the
Hoag Cancer Center's senes
on bra.in tumor treatment will
take place from 7 to 8:30 p.m.
in the Hoag Cancer Audlton-
um, 1 Hoag Drive, Newport
Beach. (949) 574-6232.
FRIDAY
The Coco's Bakery Restau-
rant in Corona del Mar will
reopen with a giant pie-cut-
ting ceremony at 4 p.ro. at
3446 E. Coast Highway,
Corona del Mar. Refresh-
ments will be served. Reser-
vations required by Wednes-
day. (949) 599-1212, Ext. 207.
The Oasls Senior Center's
annual rummage sale will be
from 9 a.m. to 7 p.m. Friday
and Oct. 6 at the Oasis
Seruor Center, 800 Mar-
guente, Corona del Mar.
Donattons of clean and
usable goods accepted
through Tuesday from 9 a.m.
to 1 p.m. (949) 644-3244.
Complimentary bottle
engravmg with a fragrance
purchase will be held from 2
to 7 p.m. al Nordstrom South
Coast Plaza, 3333 Bear St.,
Costa Mesa. (7 14) 549-8300,
Ext. 1071.
OCT. 6
The 15th a nnual Harbor
Heritage Run, sponsored by
sausage Co., Sage, Santa
Monica Seafood, Soprano's.1
Tapa, Tommy Bahama's, c
nopic:al Cate & Emporium.
Villa Nova and Wolfgang
Puck Cafe. The Taste of
Newport is at Newport Cen-
ter Drive at Pash.ion lsla.nd.
Summerbill Floral I. Gilb
will open a new holiday store
on Sunday. The original store
has discounted all floral
arrangements by 50% and
has new fall merchandise.
Summerhill specializes in
silk ftorals, home accessones
and custom floral arrange-
ments. It's open from 10 a.m.
to 6 p.m. Monday through
Friday. 10 a.m. to 5 p.rn. Sat-
urday and 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.
Sunday. It's at 369 E. 17th St.,
Costa Mesa. (949) 646-6745.
• 9EST llUYS appears Thursdays
and Saturdays. Send information
to Greer Wytder at 330 W Bay St ..
Costa Mesa, CA 92627, or via fax
at (949) 646-4170.
Newport Harbor High
School, wHI begin al 7:30
a.m. with a free wdrmup
and fitness fair. Free
refreshments last until 10
a.m. The 2K rdce will start
at 8 a.m .. and the SK race
will begin at 8:30 d.m. All
races start and end at New-
port Harbor High School.
600 Irvine Ave., Newport
Beach. Entry fees are $20
for adults, $18 for students
and $15 for children. (949)
645-5806.
Sailors with intermediate
sailing skills are mvtled to
sign up to sail to Catahna
Island and return Oct. 7 as
part of Orange Coast Col-
lege's School of Sailing and
Seamanship program.
Sailors will depart from
OCC's sailing fadlity m
Newport Beach at 9 a.m. Oct.
6 and return at 5 p.m. Oct. 7
aboard the college's Cal 48,
Glin de Mar. $269. (949) 645-
94 12.
A8 Salutdoy, Sepe.mbet 29, 2001
4 beguiling
film premiere
T he diche of Soutbetn
C.a!ifomia culture is tba1
everyone bas a screen-
play. But not everyooe who bas
20, 50, 80, 110 pages Jocked up
in a drawer bas the temerity to
take that bundle of paper and
actually
film it
Newport
Beach's
Justin
Hewko
does. The
22-year-old
Orange
CoastCol-
legegradu-
ate will
premiere Jenrifer Mahal
his first fea-
ture-length IN lHE WINGS project,
•Tue Great
• Banana Beguilement,• on Fri-
day in the college's Fine Arts
Building.
"It's just. I want to see the
reaction," Hewko said of his
first public screening. "You
don't get that chance when
you're making it and watching
it. rm having anxiety over how
it will fare, but it's thrilling, H
"Beguilement, H as it's
called by i~ writer-director,
tells the story of two recent
high school graduates, one of
whom has discovered that he
may be adopted, who don't
quite know what they want
to do with their lives. Hewko
said the movies of Kevin
Smith influenced him.
The comedy was written
in two weeks and shot on a
mix of digital video, 8-mil·
limeter film and regular
video over the course of sev-
eral months. Hewko said he
and producer Brendan Baer,
whom he met at OCC, are
hoping to have it transferred
to 35-millimeter film at some
point. At the moment, the
final product is on video.
Since writing "Beguile-
ment,• the Corona del Mar
. High graduate has finished
three other scripts. He hopes
that his next film has a slight-
ly larger production budget
than the $10,000 or so it cost
to do this one. The film was
financed trom Hewko and
Baer's savings and by loans
from family members.
Many of the actors on the rproject are local -Orange
Coast College drama student
Jason Emyut:izi stars in the film.
alongside UC Irvine's Kareen
Neilson and Wes B. Holl The
fihn also stars 'JYler ll'outma.n,
a Otapman University student
All of the actors were unpaid.
"It was tough to get
everyone's schedules to work
out,• Hewko said.
Some of the actors will be
at the screening, Hewko said
he is hoping that the general
public comes too. .
"It's open to anyone,• he
said.
'Though it is not rated by
the Motion Picture Assn. of
America, Hewko said the film
would most likely receive a
PG-13 rating, as it is free of
violence, nudity and profanity.
"The Great Banana
Beguilement H will screen at
7:30 p.m. Friday at OCC's
Pine Arts Building, 2701
Fairview Road, Costa Mesa.
The screenmg is free,
although donations to OCC's
Film and 'kieo Oub will be
aooepted Information: (714)
543--0202.
• • •
Do you know a local artist,
writer, painter, singer, film-
maker, etc., who deserves to
get noticed? Send your nomi-
nee t.o In The Wings, Dally
Pilot. 330 W. Bay St, Costa
Mele. CA 92627, by fax t.o .
(9'9) 646-4170 or by e-mail to
l*flA~oM'.Mdnte&eoftl.
• •a& U MAHAL Is fMt\nl
Tlle'IOIUll OI Jazz.., end.,..,.. ... Gnlco wllf
heedllne • fllfoN• Afties• conmft et
Orange Comt Colleg9. 4 p.rn. Sundity
et ...... Moen n..tre. 2101
Faltvtew RcMld. eoaa Mesa. The ewning
· wltl allO ,._,,.an 1..-.11urnn1
• otdmtra. S27·S33. (714) '32-59).
Art and horror meet with
'The Predator,' a new installation ..
at UC Irvine's art gallery
re
Young Chang
OAllY PILOT
A mold Schwarzeneg-
ger's 1987 film "The
Predator• inspired
Argentine painter
Fabian Marcaccio and
Los Angeles architect Greg Lynn
to create ~"painting-architecture
mutant hybrid,• which they
named after the film.
If the title conjures up images
of a dreaded beast -well, you
have no idea how dreaded the
beast is.
When you enter the University
Art Gallery at UC Irvine where
the abstract
mutant
dwells, then,
and only
then, will you
understand
what "preda-
torH really
means.
The 30-
foot-wide,
10-foot-high
structure all
but preys on
the. spacious
2,500-square-
fcot room
that holds it.
The enor-
mous figure
causes a
momentary
sensation of
dread, like
something or
someone's
about to get
sucked in by
an entity that's larger than almost
anything alive.
"You have to walk around,•
Marcaccio said from his New York
home. "It's impossible to see it all
together.~
"The Predator" opened at the
gallery for viewing Friday and will
stay there through Nov. 18.
Squiggly like a worm and
ridged like a caterpillar, the piece
was created with silk-screened
"vacu-formed" plastic, paints and
the help of software.
Much of the structure -or
organism, as some have called il
-resembles a gigantic cylindrical
bubble of partly see-through plas-
tic. But like an 8nima.l with a
on an audience
PHOTOS BY GREG FRY I OAl.Y Pl.OT
Gallery docent Seph Rodney wW offer viston lnformaUon-on
the sprawling .. The Predator" eshiblt on display at UC Irvine's
Untventty Art Gallery through Nov. 18. At top, some of the
painted detail Inside the creature.
wounded belly, "The Predator"
looks ripped into at ti.nles.
Inside these tom-off walls of
plistic, Marcacdo has created a
fantastic world of dark kingdoms
nestled in gloomy, ridged clouds,
green cage walls, red bubbles that
feel somehow grotesque just in
their appearance and swirling
flames that remind you, though
you've never been there, of hell.
The effect -a combination of
film, architecture, painting and even
music, as DJ Spooky's custom-madE!
mix will aooompany the installation
-is IDODStrous and cinematic. ·we both like early '80s
movies," Marcacdo said of himself
and Lynn. •sut what we're biter-•
ested in is the level of an lnterior-
ized type of camouflage of the crea-
ture. The idea that an entity could
SEE PREYING PAGE AtJ
Ainod.em
opening to
a classic
season
Robert McDuffie
will open Pacific
Symphony•s
2001-02 classics
season this week
Young Clulrtg
DAILY PILOT
A merican musicians
nowadays don't play
much music from
their own country, said vio-
linist Robert McDuffie.
"And I say that with a lit-
tle sadness,• the New Yorker
continued. "I think it should
be natural for Americans to
play music of their country.•
Contemporary master-
pieces refresh this composer.
They help him avoid musical
ruts, keep his senses sharp
and make· the classics sound
ftesh.
•1t's just another way of
speaking,• McDuffie said of
playing the modem genre.
He will perform one of his
favorite contemporary pieces
Wednesday with the Pad.fie
Symphony Orchestra: Philip
Glass' Concerto for Violin
and Orchestra. Glass, a Balti-
more native, injects a seduc-
tiveness to the music,
McDuffie said. And there's a
"galvanizing nature" to the
piece that entices him as a
musician. ·
McDuffie will perform the
composition this week for the
opening of the orchestra's
first Hal and Jeanette
Segerstrom Family Classics
Concert Season. And he will
partner with a noncontempo-
ra.ry instrument -his 1735
Guarneri del Gesu violin.
The instrument cost $3.5
million and is owned by 16
people, includ.iJMJ himWf.
The investoJS bought the rare
violin earlier this year. It has
been leased to McDuffie for
25 years.
"I just fell in love with it,•
the composer said. •nere
are only 100 left in the world
made by this maker, and
only 1 o of those are truly
elite.•
What ranks the instrument
as royalty is its sound.
"It's very rich and power-
ful, but sweet at the same
time,• McDuffie affectionate-
ly said. •That's what makes it
incredibly special.•
Pad.fie Symphony's musi-
cal djrect.or Carl St. Clair Mid
opening night this year will
SEE SEASON MGE AU
A mix of moV:es
Ballet Pacifica 's season opener next weekend wUl premiere.
· two dance pieces and showcase the company's variety
A D eclectic mix.
excuse the pun, of
short~ pieces
WW launch Ballet Pacifica'• 2001..02
l8UOll nat week u put of the 2001
Bdectk: Orange Pelttftl. .
Start wttb a big ltoiy, a .Robert
SUild druna Ml 1n 18th caotury
Prance wttb cbaract8n Who loYe,
~and bettle while wearing
.
tights and ballet llippen ~
in a familiar story titled
"Ualaons, • tnsplred by tbe
18th century novel •o.n-
gerous Uailom .•
Mcive tlJieQ to a ballet
without a stctj -• Aquilatto. • Jrt a
ambratkla of the da.ncen' uuber-
anoa and~. not a Mtrettw9 tbalWll a lflarr.
I ·~· foUOWw, Pour~
•
Dally Pilot . SOCIETY
~I ~291 2001 'At
Supporting children S music
;programs with a song and dance
'C hildren are the . future,• offered
song and dance
man Bea Vereen, addressing
101De 200 guests of the Big
Canyon/Spy Glass Hill Phil-
harmonic Committee.
The well-dressed New-
port Beach crowd gathered
under the cream-colored
tent of the Palm Garden
R<?Om on the property of the
Pour Seasons in Newport
Beach.
•The young people are
the seeds of tomorrow. And
you, all of you, water those
seeds with your love and
your support, and they grow
and grow and grow,· contin-
ued Vereen, mesmerizing·his
audience with extreme
warmth and pen;onality.
Beginning his perfor-
mance on the band shell of
the Palm Garden with a
slow, deliberate and soulful
rendition of ·God Bless
America,• Vereen took the
crowd from a state of chatter
lnto a silence that was so
thick you could hear the
breath of a guest sitting at
another table. A standing
ovation followed the open-
ing number and led into a
perfol'IIl4Jlce worthy of a
Broadway concert hall.
With only a piano, a gift-
ed conductor named David
Loeb and a microphone,
Vereen sent the local crowd
on an emotional roller coast-
er ride that included a
touching tribute to the late
Sammy Davia Jr., along with
remarks geared toward the
Philhannonic Committee
regarding the importance of
music in the lives of chil-
dren.
•How impressive that Mr.
Vereen took the time to
learn about the work of the
Philharmonic Committee
here in Newport Beach and
include specific and personal
remarks meant for us in this
marvelous performance,•
offered OW• HW, a Udo Isle
resident who was supporting
the event with friends,.
blcluding Ann Stern, Cathy
Lowden, Darleen Welner,
Zee Alred, Suki McCardle
and Maida Saunden.
•'Ibis is an unbelievable
treat,• continued Hill,
dressed in a sleek, orange
designer suit.
A treat it was, as Vereen
poured his heart out, bring-
B.W. Cook
THE CROWD
ing together the themes
relating to America's strug-
gle with terrorism, the great
and special text of American
society and the future of
children. He pranced. He
danced. He used the micro-
phone as if it were some
magical prop. He talked
with the audience and made
himself a part of the commu-
nity as if he were a long-
standing resident of New-
port-Mesa.
In fact, Vereen shared
that his home is only blocks
away from ground zero in
New York City.
"I watched the horror
unfold. I can tell you that the
devastation seen on televi-
sion is nothing compared to
the reality of being there,•
said Vereen, wiping away a
tear. "But we are strong, and
we are proud, and we are
united as a nation. We will
rebuild, and once again our
children will face a secure
future.•
In a sentimental, as well
as comedic, moment Vereen
shared some of his early per-
sonal biographical history
with the crowd.
•Is there anyone here
from Brooklyn?" the enter-
tainer asked. One lady to the
side of the room responded
with glee. Vereen laughed,
and the crowd followed.
"You know we have been
called a lot of things in my
lifetime,• said Vereen, look-
ing at fellow African Ameri-
cans in attendance for the
show. •J've been colored.
I've been Negro. Then not
long after I was a Negro, I
was black. And then I
became African American.•
Vereen had the crowd in
the palm· of his hand deliver-
ing his next line.
·rll tell you what I've
always been, and what I
always will be. I mn an
I
...
I . "
r ·: '
. ,.,,,, .... . .
J&, .......
.... of =:..:st r~WOIW. ...... .. we.
ICM" with. illllrt
llodb.:rhe ~GMt9d with~~ .... w.~
m.dit-tt. I .,.,...mother;
JudgeSheleF..tt
Of Cringe ~ SUperlor Court. who also perlormed
the ~ c:er.mony. There were no bridesmaids.
• The groom Is the son .of Shefte Fell and Keith Meyer and-Alan Fell and Vikki Fell of NWJpOrt Beach. The best man was the groom's brother, MlchMI Fell.
Ottw ~were Longhal Nguyen, Joseph Gee
and Adrian An ~· FIO\Wr girts were Nikki Sosa,
Regine Harder, N.t>bt Tervet and Jacquetlne Nguyen.
The bride and groom are both physicians In San Jose.
They rMt while working on their bachelor's degrees at
UC&erbley .
Ben Vereen addreued some 200 guests of tbe Big
Canyon/Spy Glass Hill Phllharmonic Committee.
American,• he said.
More applause followed,
with even a few whistles
from guests such as Peggy
Goldwat.,r Clay.
This special event was
chaired by Darby Manclark
with assistance from fellow
committee m'embers Sharon
Moore, Joyce Reaume,
Joyce Died.a, Patrtda Lane,
Kim Grubman, Barbara Tay-
lor, Johnnie Cooley,
Gabrielle Chung and
Jacqueline Lokka.
Ruaty Hood looked
smashing in her rust-colored
fall suit. Martlyn Guat was
all smiles. Prominent Holly-
wood television director
Marty Pusetta came down
from Beverly Hills with his ,
wife, Elyse, who was looking
chic in a black luncheon
suit. Local artist Joanne Mix
was in the crowd, along with
best-dressed Pat Cranford.
Philharmonic Society direc-
tor l>eUl Corey was seated
front and center.
The annual event raises
funds to provide music edu-
cation programs for children
in Orange County schools
from kindergarten through
high school. One of the spe-
cial programs of the Philhar-
monic Committee is support-
ing the music mobile vans
that bring orchestral instru-
ments for students' hands-on
experience. The programs
reach more than 250,000
Orange County children
each year.
Vereen said it best, "You
people make an amazing
difference. You volunteer,
you take time to share with
the children, you offer your
money, and you had better
believe that it matters. I'm a
poor kid tropi Brooklyn that
is living proof that exposure
to music can change lives.•
• THI CJIOWD IPPffl1 Thu~
Ind Slturdl)'S.
Smith-Taylor
Rhonda Smith and Scott Taylor, both of Aliso Viejo, ~wedding YOWS at The Big House in :r:;
Bffch on . 4.
The br~s the daughter of Ron and Cheri $m of
Mission Viejo.
The maid of honor was Courtney Hytton, and the
bridesmaids we<e Deanna Centurln~ Katie RinderkNd'lt.
Kelty RJndeftcnedrt and Lindsay Smith. The junior bride-
maids were Jc>nMn Smith and Brittany Bffuchamp, Md
the flower girts were Ashlee Taylor and Brynne 8-ud\emp.
The groom Is the son of John and Judi Taylor of (Oita
Mesa.
The best man was Dan Cunningham, and the grooms-
men were Mike Kennedy, Brian Kreutzkamp, Tim~
~~The ring bearer wm Robert
All WldCting Plfty members -except the children -are CaD Mesa High School graduata .
The~ was hetd at The Big House and WM
atteMed by 200 guests.
The bride ls einployed by Corona Medic.al Center, and
the gtOOf1'.\ wortcs for Santa Margarita H.lgh School. •
I can't believe ..... .
· It's My-Honie
Landtcaping or re-lancbcas>in& it your antwU to a beautiful new look for yow home.
KAY MAOON, A.A.
C.c.N.P.
I •ndapc Dniptr
~ALE can make your land.cape dreama
come true, and increue your home's value, too!
Come in today and diacowr the people who can
make a difference to you and your gUden.
NURS•Rl•S, INC.
COMPLETE LANDSCAPING 46 YF.ARS EXP.I • Licerue No. 308553
SANTA ANA• 2800 N. Tustin Ave.
(7t•> 63J..9200
COSTA MESA • 2700 Bristol Ave. t• 7,, 6661
. .
H.J. Garrett Furniture
· Fine Fumitwe Since 1960
..
jJI SG!urday. ~ 29, 2001
SPECW
FREE FAMILY FllOCS
•Sand J..A)t• will screen today
at dusk as part of the New-
port Dunes Waterfront
Resort's Pree Family Flicks
series, which will condude
with •Tue Uttle Vampire• on
Oct. 6, "Casper• on Oct. 20
and •Tue Ghost & Mr. Chick-
en• on Oct. 27. The Dunes is .
at 1131 Back Bay Drive, New-
port Beach. Free, but parking
is $7. (949) 729-3863.
CALIFORNIA RJN
California Kruisin' Days 2001,
a Balboa Fun Zone event
with live music and street
entertainment, will be held
from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. today
and Sunday in downtown
Balboa on the peninsula.
Free. Information: http://Bal-
boaNewportBeach.com.
CENTER SATURDAYS
The Orange County Perform-
ing Arts Center's ·saturdays
at The Center" series will be
held 11 a.m. and 1 p.m. Oct.
13, Nov. 10, Jan. 12, March 23
and April 27 at Founders Hall,
600 Town Center Drive, Costa
Mesa. Norman Foote will pre-
sent a show of comedy, pup-
petry and music with "Step To
W on Oct. 13. $30 for sub-
scriptions. (714) 556-2122.
SUBMARINES AHOY!
The Newport Harbor Nautical
Museum will present #Sub-
marines, From Nemo to
Nuc:lee.r, .. an e1hibit highlight-
ing the evolution of the Naval
submarine through paintings
and artifacts, through Oct. 28.
Open from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Tuesday through Sunday, the
museum is on the Pride of
Newport Riverboat, 151 E.
Coast Highway, Newport
Beach. Free. (949) 673-7863
MASQUERADE BALL
The Orange County Young
Professionals will hold its
fourth annual Masquerade
Ball for the Arts from 8 p.m. to
1 a.m. Oct. 27 at the Orange
County Museum of Art, 850
San Clemente Drive, Newport
Beach. The ball. complete with
a band and food from some or
the county's finest restaurants,
benefits the museum. $50 pre-
sale for groups of 10 or more,
$60 advance purchase or $7 5
at the door. (949) 759-1122,
Ext. 560.
Music
BROADWAY GUYS
Orange Coast College will pre-
f00l a concert with three "Lead-
' PAIDOI ME IOYS •••
The Modematres, singing "Chattanooga Choo Choo," wW be among the groups featured In Orange Coast
College's "Groups Galore," a concert also featurln9 classic American vocal sounds by The Mills Brothers and
The Ink Spots GeneraUons, at 8 p.m. Ocl 6 at OCC's Robert B. Moore Theatre, 2701 ·Fairview Road, Costa
Mesa. $27-$33. (714) 432-5880.
ing Men of Broadway• at 8 p.m.1
today at the Robert B. Moore
Theatre, 2701 Faizview Road,
Costa·Mesa. Featured perform-
ers include Joe~ Briel, Gary
Mauer and J . Mark McVey.
$29-$35. (714) 432-5880.
'FOREVER AFTIES'
Buddy Greco will headline a
"Forever Fifties" concert at
Orange Coast College at 4
p.m. Sunday at the Robert B.
Moore Theatte, 2701
Fairview Road, Costa Mesa.
The evening will also feature
an 18-piece alumni orchestra.
$27-$33. (714) 432-5880.
MORE JAZZ.
The Hyatt Newporter Swn-
mer Jazz Series continues
with Rick Braun at 8 p.m. Fri-
day and Steve Cole and
Jonathan Butler at 7:30 p.m.
Oct. 12. The Hyatt Newporter
is at 1107 Jamboree Road,
Newport Beach. $30-$38.
(949} 729-1234.
TRIO JAZZ
UC I.rvine's Claire Trevor
School of the Arts will present
an evening of jazz with the
Kei Akagi Trio at 8 p.m. Oct.
6 at Winifred Smith Hall. The
school is at the comer of Uni-
versity and Campus drives in
lrvi.ne. $10. (949) 824-6206.
SYMPHONY SHOW •
Orange Coast College's Sym-
phony Orchestra will present its
season-opening concert 7:30
p.m. Oct. 14 Wlth Orange Coun-
ty violinist Thi Nguyen at the
Robert B. Moore Theatre, 2701
Fairview Road, Costa Mesa. $6
or $10. (714) 432-5880.
DRUM PANIC
The Victoria Chamber Series
will continue at the Unitarian
Universallst Church with
pianist Eva Xia on Oct. 20. The
series will also present piano
duet team Penny Foster and
M'lou Dietzer on Nov. 17.i. clar-
inetist Hakan Rosengren and
pianistAnneEppersononJan.
19, pianist Valentina Gottlieb
on Feb. 16, soprano Keiko
Tu.keshita and M'lou Diet:zer
on March 16, the Del Gesu
string quartet on April 20 and
pianist M'lou Dietzer on May
18. The church is at 1259 Vic-
toria St., Costa Mesa $8 for
adults or $5 for students. Sea-
son tickets are $56 for adults
and $32 for students. The Oct.
20 concert will be free to stu-
dents. (949) 651-8493.
GERSHWIN MUSIC
Orange County Perfomung -STAGE
Arts Center at 7130 p.m. Jan. 'THE ORClE' 22, 24, 25 and 26 and at 2 p.m. Jan. 27 at 600 Town '"The Cirde• will be staged at
Center Drive, Costa Mesa. South Coast Repertory
$25-$175. (800) 346-7372. through Oct 7 at 655 Town
Center Drive, Costa Mesa.
WEEKEND BLUES Show times will be 8 p.m.
Anthony's Riverboat Restau-Tuesdays through Saturdays,
rant in Newport Beach will 2:30 p.m. Saturdays and Sun-
present The Balboa Blues on days and 7:30 p.m. Sundays.
Friday and Saturday $27-$52. (714) 708-5555.
evenings and Sunday after-.
noons. The program will fea-'HOLD PLEASE'
ture jaz2 and classic rock What's so funny about two
tunes for dining and dancing. generations of women? Find
Anthony's is at 151 E. Coast oqt at South Coast Repertory
Highway. (949) 673-3425. with Annie Weisman's "Hold
POP-ROCK AND FlAMENCO
Tate 5, a funk, rock and
Motown act. performs at 9 p.m.
Saturdays at Carmelo's Ris-
torante, 3520 E. Coast High-
way, Corona del Mar. Solo gw-
ta.rist Ken Sanders performs
dassical flamenco tunes at 7:30
p.m. Tuesdays and Sundays.
Free. (949) 675-1922.
SATURDAY NIGHT R&B
Gerald Ishibashi and the
Stone Bridge Band play rock
and R&B at 9 p .m. Saturdays
at Sutton Place Hotel's Tri-
anon Lounge, 4500
MacArthur Blvd., Newport
Beach. Free. (949) 476-2001.
Please" on the Second Stage.
The play will be staged at
7:45 p.m. Tuesdays thrOugh
Sundays, with a 2 p.m. mati-
nee added on Saturdays and
Sundays, through Oct. 21.
SCR is at 655 Town Center
Drive, Costa Mesa. $19-$51.
(714) 708-5555.
'FORBIDDEN BROADWAY'
The Orange County Perform-
ing Arts Center will present
•forbidden Broadway" today
through Sunday in Founders
Hall, 600 Town Center Drive,
Costa Mesa. Show times will
be 7:30 and 9:30 p.m. today,
and 2 and 7 p.m. Sunday.
$46-$49. (71 4) 740-7878.
'THE UON IN WINTER'
.~~·~ R est aurant
Orange Coast College :will
present a concert featuring the
music of George Gershwin at
8 p.m. Oct. 27 at OCC's Robert
B. Moore Theatre, 2701
Fairview Road, Costa Mesa.
$21-$27. (714) 432-5880.
'DON GIOVANNI'
Opera Pacific will present
·non Giovanni• at the
SENIOR CENTER AfTERNOON
A seven·piece group plays
big band tunes from 1 :30 to
3:30 p.m. Fridays at Oasis
Senior Center, 800 Mar-
guerite Ave., Corona del Mar.
$4. (949) ~4--3244.
The Newport Theatre Arts
Center will present •The Uon
in Winter" at 8 p.m. Thurs-
days, Fridays and Saturdays
and 2:30 p.m.. Sundays
through Oct. 21 at the New-
...----Established In 1962 -----
I I
Daily Pilot
port Theatre Arts Center,
2501 CWf Drive, Newport
Beach. $13. (949) 631.()288.
'GOING GONE'
.Going Gone' by Karan Hart·
man will Start south Coast
Repertory's NewSaiptl season
at 7:30 p.m. Monday. The play
is based on the playwright's
grandfather, who became one
of the first sports announceni in
America. SCR is at 655 Town
Center Drive, Cost.a Mesa. $8.
(114) 708-5555.
'FRANKENSTEIN -1930'.
1\ilogy Playhouse will pre-
sent Fred Cannichael's
•Frankenstein -1930'" from
Friday to Oct. 28. Perfor·
mances will be held at 7:30
p.m. Fridays and Saturdays,
with a 5 p.m. matinee Sun-
days. The play)louse is at
2930 Bristol St.. Building C-
106, O>Sta Mesa. $13 or $15.
(714) 957-33-47, Ext. 1.
'APPROXIMATING MOTHER'
•Approximating Mother'" will
be staged at Orange Coast
College Oct. 11-14 and 18-21
in the Drama Lab Theatre,
2701 Fairview Road, Costa
Mesa. Show times are 8 p.m.
Thursdays through Saturdays
·and 2 p.111. Sundays. $7-$10.
(714) 432-5880.
DANONG BEAR .
The Bear in the Big Blue
House Llve's •surprise Party"
will be held Oct. 11-14 at the
Orange County Performing
Arts Center's Segerstrom
Hall. The Jim Henson charac-
ter will take part in a 90-
minute singing and dancing
show at 7 p.m. Oct. 11, 10:20
a.m. and 7 p.m. Oct. 12, 10:30
a.m. and 2 p.m. Oct. 13. and 1
and 4:30 p.m. Oct. 14. $16-
$27. (714) 556-2746.
ARI
ART EXHIBIT
Charlotte Jackson Fine Art
will open with an exhibit
titled "Joe Barnes: Recent
Work• today through Oct. 26
at 2429 W. Coast Highway,
Suite 101, Newport Beach.
An opening reception will be
held from 6 to 8 p.m .. today.
Free and open to the public.
(949) 645-8685.
THE PREDATOR
The Predator, a digitally
designed structure, will be
open for viewing through Nov.
18 at UC Irvine's Beall Center
for Art & Technology at the
Claire nevor School of the
Arts. The piece was created by
Argentine painter Fabian Mar-
cacdo and Los Angeles archi-
tect GteCJ Lynn. A gallery talk
by the artists will be given at 2
p.m. Sunday. A reception will
follow from 3 to 6 p.m. Gallery
bo\115 ~ noon to 5 p.m. Tues-
day through Sunday. and naon
through 8 p.m. Thursday. UC
Irvine is at the comer of Cam-
pus and University drives 1n
Irvine. Free. (9'9) 824-6206.
SEE HOURS PAGE A11
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CONTINUED FROM A 10
CALIFORNIA ON THE WALLS
•Continuity and Change:
Southem California's Evolving
Landscape," an exhibit of
Southern California's scenic
beauty, dim.ate and ag:ricUlture
tn the late 19th through early
20th centuries, will be shown
through Sunday at 850 San
Clemente Drive, Newport
Beam. Museum hows are 11
a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesdays through
Sundays. Museum ad1.pission is
$.5 for adults, $4 for seniors and
students, and free for members
and children 16 and younger.
(949) 759-1122.
JULIUS SHULMAN
The work of architectural
photographer Julius Shulman
will be on display from Mon-
day through Oct. 31 at the
Newport Beach Central
Library, 1000 Avocado Ave.
Free. (949) 717-3801.
ART LECTURE
Experimental video artist
nan T. Kim-nang will dis-
cuss her work from 7:30 to 9
p.m. Thursday as part of
Orange Coast College's Visit-
ing Artist Lecture Series. The
talk will be held in OCC's
Digital Media Arts Library,
2701 Fairview Road, Costa
Mesa. Free. (714) 432-5520.
BENEFIT ART SALE
Boudreau-Ruiz Gallery will
hold a benefit art sale of
works by Jesus •Chucho•
Reyes from Friday through
Oct. 7 to raise money for Free
Arts For Abused Children, a
national group. A reception
will be held Friday from 6 to 9
p.m. Free. The gallery is at
3000 Newport Blvd., Newport
Beach. (310) 313-4278.
lWOSIDES
djr International Art will hold
an exhibit titled ·0ua1 Tradi-
tions: Vietnamese Art on Hand-
crafted Paper" through Oct. 19
at its gallery, 2431 W. Coast
Highway, Suite 204, Newport
Beach. (949) 548-6249.
SURREAL ART
The "Child.head Dream
Series,· a collection of sUITeal-
istic portraits by Karen Feuer-
Schwager, will be on disploy
at the Newport &;:acb Central
Library's foyer through Sun-
day. Free. The library is at
1000 Avocado Ave., Newport
Beach. (949) 717-3801.
PORTRAIT STATEMENTS
"Portrait of the Artist,• an
exhibit of works from the
Orange County Museum of
Art's collection exploring
questions ol ielf and Identity
in 20th century American art.
w1ll be u p through Oct. 7 at
the mUMum's satellite gallery
in Sou th Coast Plaza, 3333
Bristol St, Costa Mesa. Pree.
(949) 759-1122.
LAURA QUINTANILLA
•Rotation of a Dream.• the art
d Laura Q uinhmilla, will be on
~y through Oct. 21 at the
Boudreau-Ruiz Gallery, 3000
Newport Blvd., Newport
Beach. QuintanIDa's ebcaustic
paintings are appearing
beside Carol Stet.n's textile
vessels. The gallery is open 11
a.m. to 6 p.m.. Tuesday through
Saturday. Pree. (949) 675-4766 ..
EMPLOYEE ART
Original art by city of New-
port Beach employees will be
on display at Newport Beach
City Hall through Nov. 1. City
Hall is at 3300 Newport Blvd.
Free. (949) 717-3870.
OPENING RECEl'TION
South Coast Art Gallery will
hold its opening r~ption at
6 p.m. Oct. 13 featuring new
artists including Mark
Jacobucci and Tom Grogg at
3441-B Via Lido, Newport
Beach. Free. (949) 673-0171.
STREET FESTIVAL
The Lido Marina Village
Street Festival will be held
from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Oct. 13-
14 at the Lido Marina Village,
near the intersection of New-
port Boulevard and Via Lido
in Newport Beach. Free. (909)
672-1598.
DANCE
SENIOR BAU.ROOM
·Ballroom dancing to the
music of the Ray Robbins
Combo is offered from 7:30 to
10:30 p.m. Tuesdays at Costa
Mesa Senior Center, 695 W.
19th St. $3. (949) 645-2356.
DANSCENE STUDIO
Ballroom dancing is offered at 8
p.m. on the first Friday of each
month at Danscene Studio,
2960 McOintock Way, Costa
Mesa. $10. (114) 641-8688.
BIG BAND DANONG
An afternoon of dancing to big
band music is offered from
1:30 to 3:30 p.m. Fridays at
Oasis Senior Center, 800 Mar-
guerite Ave .• Corona del Mar.
Coffee and other refreshments
are served. (949) 644-3244.
ARGENTINE TANGO
Tango dancing is offered from
8 p.m. to 12:30 a.m. on the
first Saturday of each month
at Dan.scene Studio, 2980
McCllntock Way, Costa
~~050%-75"-
Draperie• & Blinds
Dreperlea, vertlcal bllnda, mini bllnda,
cellular •hadee, wooda, bedapreeda
Shop Ill home MNk:e •vallable
C.11 for frM Mtlmid!M.
RI,.. BLIND
WINDOW COV•RINGS
1924 N. Tu.Un Ave., 0..199 ·
(714)131-8323
Sauday,~29,2001 All .
. JAZZ All·STllS
Bassist Cbrtstlan McBride, pictured, p ianist Benny Green and guitarist Russell
Malone will combine their talents at 7:30 and 9:30 p.m . Friday and Oct. 6 for a
performance at Founders Hall, Orange County Performing Arts Center, 600
Town Center Drive, Costa Mesa. $39 or $49. (714) 740-7878.
Mesa. (714) 641-8688.
BOOKS
'THE JASMINE TRADE'
Denise Hamilton will sign
copies of her book "The Jas-
mine Thade" at 2 p.m. Sunday
at Borders Books, Music &
Cafe in South Coast Plaza,
3333 Bear St., Costa Mesa.
The debut novel stars young
reporter Eve Diamond, whose
interest in a murder leads her
to discover facts about the
sexual slavery of Asian inuru-
grants. Free. (714) 432-7854.
GROUP FICTION
The Fiction Book Group
meets at 7 p.m. on the second
Wednesday of each month at
Barnes & Noble Booksellers
at Fashion lsland, 953 New-
port Center Drive, Newport
Beach. Free. (949) 759-0982.
OPRAH BOOK CLUB
The Oprah Book Club discuss-
es Oprah Wmfrey's most recent
selections at 7 p.m. on the thud
Thursday of each month at
Barnes & Noble Booksellers at
Fashion lsland, 953 Newport
Center Drive, Newport Beach.
(949) 759-0982.
POETRY
FACTORY READINGS
Michael Ubaldini will sing
songs •punctuated with the
verve of spoken word• at 8
•
p.m. Tuesday at Iba Gn-f •
Den Cafe and Reacting Room J
u pert ol the Pectory Reed·'J
1ngl at 2930 Brtstol St., ~
Mesa. Pree. (11-') 549-7012. m
lllS
STMUGHT STORIES
Children 3 to 7 are mvited to
partidpate in 50ngs and fin-
ger puppet plays at 7 p.m.
Mondays at the Costa Mesa
Ubrary, 1855 Park Ave. (949)
646-88"5.
PJS AND BOOKS
A children's story time is pre-
sented at 7 p.m. Mondays
and 10:30 a.m. Saturdays at
the Newport Beach Central
Ubrary, 1000 Avocado Ave.
Children may wear pajamas
to the evening sessions. Free.
(949) 717-3801.
WEEKLY STORYTELLER
A children's story time is held
at 10:45 a.m. Wednesdays at
Barnes & Noble Booksellers
at Metro Pointe, 901 -B South
Coast Drive, Costa Mesa.
(714) 444-0226.
STORY TIME
A children's story time will be
held at 10 a.m. Wednesdays
and 10:15 a.m. Fridays at Bor-
ders Books & Music at South
Coast Plaza, 3333 Bear St.,
Costa Mesa. Free. (714) 432-
785-4.
DINING/TASTING
COOKING PRESENTATIONS
Executive chef Franco Barone
will host a culinary presenta-
tion at Antonello Ristorante at
South Coast Plaza at 6:30 p.m.
Wednesday. The event will
feature an Arrowood Wine
Dinner and costs $95.
Antonello Ristorante is at
1611 Sunflower Ave., Costa
Mesa. (714) 751-7153.
CHIMAYO GIFT .
Throughout September, Chi-
mayo Grill in Newport Beach
will offer a $10 gift certificate
to all guests who have dinner
there to mark the restaurant's
seventh anniversary. The
grill, at 327 Newport Center
Drive, will also present its fall
version of the •Foods of the
Sun• menu. (949) 640-2700.
SEE HOURS PAGE A1 2
~ .. ,,
~·~
fll 7.-3fl-
. .
All
AmR
CONTINUED FROM A 11
TASTE Of NEWPOln'
The Taite of Newport Will
begin Priday 4.o.d run through
Oct 7 at Pisbioo lilAnd. More
than 30 of NeWport Be&ch'I
restaurants are expected to
provide food, wine, ~ and
cocktails. KC & the Sunshine
Band, the Bangles and Toto
are expected to petfonn.
Hours will be 6 to 11 p.m. Fri-
day, 4 to 11 p.m. Oct. 6 and
noon to 8 p.m. Oct. 7. Gener-
al admission will be $15
(which includes all entertain-
ment). Parking is free. (949)
729-4400 or http://www. Thste-
o/Newport.com.
GOlfGAME
Villa Nova Restaurant's 8th
annual "Hey, Your Fly is
Open!" golf tournament will
be held Oct. 15 at the New-
port Beach Country Club,
1600 E. Coast Highway, New-
port Beach. Registration starts
at 9 a.m. Cost is $195 per
golfer. (949) 642-7880.
DINE IN STYLE
Anthony's Riverboat Restau-
rant offers complimentary
limousine service to and from
the restaurant to Newport
Beach patrons. Anthony's is at
151 E. Coast Highway, New-
port Beach. (949) 673-3425.
TWILIGHT DINING
A twilight dining menu, fea-
turing dishes such as chicken
parmigiana and calamari
picante al reduced prices, is
held from 5 to 6 p.m. week-
days and 4 to 6 p.m. Sundays
al Villa Nova Restaurant, 3131
W. Coast Highway, Newport
Beach. (949) 642-7880.
WINE TASTINGS
Hi-Tune Wine Cellars offers
wine tastings from 4:30 to 8
p.m. Fridays and 1 :30 to 8 p.m.
Saturdays. (949) 650-8463.
SUNDAY BRUNCH
A Sunday brunch, featuring
international seafood and sal-
ac1 buff• roua carved to
aider and triakfut favorileS,
is held from 10:30 a.m. to 2
p.m. Sutton Place Hotel, .C500
MacArthw Blvd., Newport
Beach. $301 s.co with cham·
pagne. (9"9) .C76-200t.
CLUIS
ALTA COFFEE
Musical acts perform at 8:30
p.m. Thursdays through Sat-
urdays at Alta Coffee House,
506 31st St., Newport Beach.
(949) 615-0233.
ATRIUM MAltQUts
A variety of live music is pre-
sented daily at the Atrium's
Airporter Club, 18700
MacArthur Blvd., l.rvine. (949)
833-2770.
BIRRAPORETTI'S
Swing music by the 12-piece
Don Miller Orchestra is pre-
sented at 8 p.m. Mondays at
Birraporetti's at South Coast
Plaza. 3333 Bristol St., Costa
Mesa. (714) 850-9090.
BISTRO 201
Jazz is played at 8 p.m. Fri-
days and Saturdays and 11
a.m. Sundays at Bistro 201,
3333 W. Coast Highway, New-
port Beach. (949) 631-1551.
DtNDINAT
BAMBOO TERRACE
Instrumental music is per-
fom'led after 9 p.m. Thurs-
days and pop and rock is pre-
sented after 9 p.m. Fridays
and Saturdays at Din Din at
the Bamboo Terrace. 1773
Newport Blvd., Costa Mesa.
(949) 645-5550.
DURTY NEU.Y'S
Live music is performed at 9
p.m. Fridays and Saturdays at
Nelly's, 2915 Red Hill Ave.,
Costa Mesa. (714) 957-1951.
FOUR SEASONS HOTEL
Live music is performed Mon•
days through Saturdays at the
Four Seasons Hotel, 690
Newport Center Drive, New-
port Beach. (949) 759-0808.
SEE AFTER PAGE A 13
RosEYs AUIOBODY
You have the right to
choose your repair facility
Insist orl the Best
LIFETIME WARRANTY
full Set .ice Colltion C........
lnaurance Approwd Shop
949) 642·4522
WIAT'S
• The 2001 KUCnC _, •• ~
sj>onsored by '*-Phllwmonk Society of
Orange County. will open FricMy and contioue
through Nov. 11 •t flw venues throughout
Orange County. For tkbts, call (714) 74(>-7878
or visit http:ltwww.Ed«tlcOrange.org. •
SEPTEMIEI
RAMEAU'S 'Pt.ATEE'
The Mark Morris Dance Group and oth-
ers will perform Jean-Philippe Rameau's
"Platee" at 8 p.m. today in Segerstrom
Hall, Orange County Performing Arts
Center, 600 Town Center Drive, Costa
Mesa. The comk opera will open the
Eclectic Orange Festival 2001. $34-$89.
OCTOBER
'All OVER BLUES'
The Muddy Waters Tribute Band will
play a program titled "All Over Blues" at
8 p.m. Tuesday at the Irvine Bare.lay The-
atre, 4242 campus Drive, Irvine. The
band stars Chris Thomas King, who por-
trayed blues man Tommy Johnson In "O
Brother; Where Art Thou." $25-$30.
MARINO FORMENTI
Pianist Marino Formenti will perform
selections of contemporary piano music
at 8 p.m. Tuesday in Founders Hall,
Orange County Performing Arts Center,
600 Town Center Drive, Costa Mesa. $19.
AMERICAN RUSSIAN YOUTH
The American Russian Youth Orchestra
will perform at 7:30 p.m. Thursday at the
Orange County High School of the Arts,
3591 Cerritos Ave., Los Alamitos. $7-$10.
BAUET PAOFICA
Ballet Pacifica will present Robert Sund's
"Liaisons, H Susan Hadley's "Aquilarco, •
Antony Tudor's HSunflowers" and Molly
Lynch's "Different Trains" at 8 p.m. Fri·
day and 2:30 and 8 p.m. Oct. 6 at the
Irvine Barclay Theatre, 4242 campus
Drive. Irvine. $10-$25.
'YOU ARE .HEAR'
The Orange County Museum of Art will
present a musical exhibit from Oct. 6-29.
irtled "You Are Hear," the exhibit will
include musical instrument sculptures. a
video installation of Karlheinz Stock·
hausen~ •Helicopter Quartet." and perfor-
mances of •Poeme Symphonique• for 100
metronomes. The museum is at 850 San
Oemente Drive, Newport Beach. Hours are
11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesdays through Sun-
days. Museum admission is SS for adults, S4 tor seniors and students, and free for
members and children 16 and younger.
CHAMBER ORCHESTRA KREMLIN
The Chamber Orchestra Kremlin will per-
form at 8 p.m. Oct. 8 at the Irvine Bar-
clay Theatre, 4242 Campus Drive, Irvine.
KUmc OUHE
The program will include pianist ltlna
s.ct.nittite performing the WOfi<s Of her
late huSband. Albert. $20-$29.
KROHOS QUARTET
The Krooos Quartet, with guest star Irina
Sc.hnittke, will perform at 8 p.m. OCt. 9-
10 at Founders Hall, Orange County Per-
forming Arts C.enter, 600 TQWn Center
Drive, Costa Mesa. $29.
JOE GOODE PERFORMANCE GROUP
The Joe Goode Performance Group will
perform the West Coast premiere of .
•The Transparent Body,• along with oth-
er dance pieces, at 8 p.m. Oct. 11-12 at
the Irvine Barclay Theatre, 4242 Campus
Drive, Irvine. $30-$35.
'ANCESTRAL VOICES'
A.R. Gumey's •Ancestral Voices" will be
performed at 8 p.m. Oct. 13 at the Irvine
Barclay Theatre, 4242 campus Drive,
Irvine. The play will star Fred Savage,
Mariette Hartley, Rene Auberjonois and
more. $26-$32.
LEONIDAS KAVAKOS
Greek violinist Leonidas Kavakos will
perform Bach, Ravel and more at 3 p.m.
Oct. 14 at Founders Hall, Orange County
Performing Arts Center, 600 Town Cen-
ter Drive, Costa Mesa. $19.
BERLIN PHlutARMONIC
The Berlin Philharmonic will perform
works by Bach at 8 p.m. Oct. 15 and
works by Bach and Richard Wagner at 8
p.m. Oct. 16 at Segemrom Hall, Orange
County Performing Arts Center. 600 Town
Center Drive, Costa Mesa. $34-$109.
NATIONAL BAUET Of CUBA
The Orange County Performing Arts Cen-
ter will present Alicia Alonso's National
Ballet of Cuba on Oct. 18-21 with two
programs: "La Magia de Alonso• and
"Coppella." "Alonso" will be perfonned
at 8 p.m. Oct. 18-19. "Coppelia" will be
performed at 2 and 8 p.m. Oct. 20 and 2
p.m. Oct. 21. The Center is at 600 Town
Center Drive, Costa Mesa. $20-$70.
'CROUCHING TIGER'
Tan Dun will conduct the "'Crouching
Tiger, Hidden Dragon' Concerto for Emu
and Chamber Orchestra, .. set to images
of the film, at 8 p.m. Oct 19-20 and 3
p.m. Oct. 21 in the Irvine Barclay The-
atre, 4242 campus Drive, Irvine. $33-$38.
PHU.HARMONIA BAROQUE OROiESTRA
The Philharmonia Baroque Orchestra will
present 15 short pieces in the eartv Ital-
ian Baroque style at 8 p.m. Oct. 23 in the
INlne lertt.y n.tr•. 4242 C.lmpu:s om.. trvlM. s 29-$]5. .
IENNY GOODMAN:~
The lwr-bown d•kal worts of..,..
'fl1 GoodmM wfll be performed at I p.m •
Oct 24 at the Irvine ~ ThMti'e.
4242 Campus Drive, Irvine. The perfor-
mance will feature clarinetist Richard
Stoltzman. $20-$29.
MIRIMI MAKEBA
"Mama Africa," Miriam Makebe, will
perform at 8 p.m. Oct. 25 at the ltvlne
8atday Thfftre, 4242-Campus Drive,
Irvine. She was the first African recording
artist to be awarded a Grammy. $32-$40.
BENNY GOODMAN: BIG BAND
Works from Benny Goodman's Big Band
era will be performed by the Eclectlc
Orange Big Band at 8 p.m. Oct. 26 In
Segerstrom Hall, Orange County Per-
forming Arts Center. 600 Town Center
Drive, Costa Mesa. $20-$35.
DAVID SEDARIS .
Popular NPR commentator and play-
wright David Sedaris will take the stage
at 8 p.m. Oct. 27 at the Irvine Barday
Theatre, 4242 campus Drive, Irvine. $24-
$29.
YAMATO, DRUMMERS OF JAPAN
Yamato, Drummers of Japan will take
the stage at 8 p.m. Oct. 27 at Segerstrom
Hall, Orange County Performing Arts
Center, 600 Town Center Drive. Costa
Mesa. $15-$35.
PAORC CHORALE
Pacific Chorale will perform Verdi's
•Requiem" at 7 p.m. Oct. 28 in
Segerstrom Hall, Orange County Per-
forming Arts Center, 600 Town Center
Drive, Costa Mesa. s 18-$55.
NOVEMBER
'SOON'
The North American premiere of Hal
Hartley's "Soon" will take place at 8 p.m.
N0v. 1-3, 3 and 7 p.m. Nov. 4 and 8 p.m.
Nov. S-7 in Founders Hall, Orange Coun-
ty Performing Arts Center, 600 Town
Center Drive, Costa Mesa. The theater
piece examines the conflicts bet\wen
the extremes of religious belief and civk
responsibility. S25.
'RIGOLETTO'
Opera Pacific will present "Rigoletto" by
Giuseppe Verdi at 7:30 p.m. Nov. 6-10
and 2 p.m. Nov. 11 at the Orange Coun-
ty Performing Arts Center, 600 Town
Center Drive, Costa Mesa. $25-$175.
'POWDER HER FACE'
"Powder Her Face," an opera by Thomas
Ades, will be performed at 8 p.m. Nov. 9
and 4 p.m . Nov. 11 at the Carpenter Per-
forming Arts Center, 6200 Atherton St..
Long Beach. The opera is based on the
sc.andal6us life of the Ducbess of Argyll.
$45-$70.
Best Service·
Best Selection
) J. I
/ I , ·, ' ,
~· t ' ,
• r·•-.Jl-1-J..•.A f,'1-1 I
.1
O.aily Pilot
MOVES
CONTINUED FROM A8
women deal with the arrtwt of two men. and everything changes as
tbele young women grow older and
love and emotions complicate lives.
Plnally, we arrive at a train station.
•Different nains· offers quick
glimpses Into µie meetings, greeting's
and partings experienced in a train
station.
•w e are a contemporary ballet
company that does a variety of differ-
ent pieces and works with different
choreographers," said Molly Lynch, .
the CODlptllly's artistic director.
·we're always looking at trying to
put together a diverse program.•
So what ties these four dances -
the first two of which are world pre-
mieres -together? The fact that
there is no tie.
•we're always looking for diverse
styles, diverse subject types and
diverse music,• added Lynch, who also
·created "Different 1\-ains. • The four
ballets will be staged in one program
with performances on Friday and Oct.
6 at the Irvine Barclay Theatre.
"Uaisons• will feature the
Baroque music of Bach, Handel and
Vivaldi as performed by cellist Tanya
Tonkins and harpsichord player
Corey Jamason. Sund, a faculty
member of the San Francisco Dance
Center, created the ballet in collabo-
ration with the two musicians.
• Aquilarco, • created by choreog-
rapher Susan Hadley, will showcase
music by Italian cellist Giovani Solli-
ma.
"It's real crossover music,· said
Hadley, who is also a member of the
Mark Morris Dance Group in New
York. "What's so interesting is, a
number of influences are evident in
the work -from classical to mini-
malist to all kinds of interesting folk
references.•
And as there is variety in the
musital rhythms, there is variety in
the dance, she said. 1\vo sections are
so fast paced and rhythmic they've
been compared with the "River-
..
dance" style. Another two sections
are "sleepwalker slow.•
"But there's a great deal of energy
in the work,• Hadley said.
Antony Tudor's "Sunflowers,• with
music by Leos Janacek, will be
staged by choreographer Airi Hynni-
nen, who has been mentored by
Tudor. The dances are reflective of
the Tudor movement philosophy -
everything starts from the body. The
torso and arms and all other limbs
follow what the central part of the
body does.
"It's important to move from the
DATElOOIC".
center,• Hynninen said. "In theater,
that's where the movement comes
(froll})· So does the emotion.·
Lynch's "Different Trains" will be
danced to the music of composer
Steve Reich. Set in the 1940s, the
train station story is relevant in
today's age of transportation and fre-
quent travel, Lynch said.
"You see these people, these are
human beings, they have r~tion
ships, and they're there for a reason,•
she said. "But you're only looking at
one little small point in time with
these people.•
AFTER St., Costa Mesa. (949) 646-
8855.
MARGARITAVILLE days through Saturdays at the
Marriott Hotel, 900 Newport
Center Drive, Newport
Beach. (949) 640-4000. CONTINUED FROM A 12
HARD ROCK CAFE
Live music is performed Sun-
days at Hard Rocle Cafe, 451
Newport Center 'Drive, New-
port Beach. (9'9) 640-88«.
TME HARPINN
HOGUE BARMICHAEL'S
Live music is performed
Wednesdays through Satur-
days at Barmichael's, 3950
Campus Drive, Newport
Beach. (949) 261-6270.
UDO OGAR ROOM
Live music is performed at
Margaritaville, 2332 W. Coast
Highway, Newport Beach.
(949) 631-8220.
MARRAKESH
MULDOON'S
Muldoon's is an Irish pub at
202 Newport Center Drlve,
Fashion Island, Newport
Beach. (949) 640-4110.
OYSTER BAR LOUNGE
. .. • ..
SaMday, ~ 29, 2001 AtJ
PREY.ING
CONTINUED FROM AB
be totally continuous with an
environment."
lbat idea swept across the
big ecreen almost 15 years
ag'o. In the movie •Tue
Predator,• Scllwarzenegger
leads a group of commandos
to combat a guenilla strong-
hold. But the group ends up
being hunted by a strange
creature with camouflaging
capabilities.
•My hope is that people
SEASON
CONTINUED FROM AS
have a •special flavor,• espe-
cially with McDuffie per-
forming.
·we use ba.sicaily the
same type of formula in that
we try to create a huge vari-
ety of repertoire -from the
absolute standard master-
pieces of the classic world,
but then to add to that some-
thing very, very new and
imaginative and creative,•
St. Clair said.
Glass' concerto, coupled
with McDuffie's perfor-
mance, will provide that
modem edge to the perfor-
mance and the season. As
will the world premiere of
Richard Danielpour's "Amer-
ican Requiem• in November
and violinist Kyung-Wha
Chung's world premiere per-
formance of Michael Kurek's
"That Which Remains
Unspoken.·
The rest of the season
indudes such classics as a
semi-staged version of
Mendelssohn's ·A Midsum-
mer Night's Dream.• Dvorak
in America and a perfor-
mance by the Alpine Sym-
.
will .,. quite wowed by thlsi •
Mlcl Jeanie Weiffenbvh.
director of tbe UDlvenlly ~' Gallery and tbe Beall Cmier
for Art and Tedu>O&ngy at
UC Irvine. •1t ii such an T
tnaedible, vdluptuous aea--r rure.·
Marcacdo Mid the piece
invites a "dynamic viewing"
experieooe.
But if the painter had
things his way, he'd do more
than just view •nie Preda·
tor.•
•I would love to live in it if
I could,· be joked. "But it's
always in a museum.•
• WMAT: hOfic Sympho-
ny Ott'hestra's season
opener
• .,._; 8 p.m. Wed~
day and Thursday
• WHERE; Orange County
Perfonnlng Arts Center.
600 Town Center Drive,
Costa Mesa
• CDST: $21-$56
• CAU: (714) 755-5788
phony, including a tone
poem by Richard Strauss.
·we want to bring a great
classic repertoire to several
audiences, but at the same A
time by continuously stretch-
ing (listeners') imaginations
and challenge their ears,• St.
Clair said.
Oyster Bar Lounge at the Bal-at Totally Coffee, 1525 Mesa
boa Feny Landing, 503 E. Verde Drive East, Costa
Edgewater Ave. (949) 675-. Mesa. (114) 435-9367.
2373.
TEE ON THURSDAY
The Tee Room presents its
two-piece band every Thurs-
day between 6 and 9 p.m. at
3100 Irvine Ave., Newport
Beach. (949) 756-0121.
VILLANOVA
Live musk ii performed
Thursdays through Saturdays
at the Harp Inn. 130 E. 17th
Enjoy a smoke with your
drink at Lido Cigar Rpom,
3«1 Via Lido, Suite D, New-
port Beach. (949) 723-0595.
Authentic Moroccan cuisine
and belly dancing is offered
at 5 p.m. daily at Marrakesh,
1976 Newport Blvd., Costa
Mesa. (949) 645-8384.
l..ocal pop and light roclc acts TOTALLY COFFEE
Rieb Fauno plays at the
piano bar at 9 p.m. Sundays
through Wednesdays and
the three-piece jazz and
blues band Mi.sbehavin'
plays at 9 p.m. Thursdays
through Saturdays at Villa
Nova, 3131 W. Coast High-
way, Newport Beach. (949)
642-7880.
MARRIOTT HOTEL
Live music is performed Mon-
LIFETIME
OUARA•TEE CARPET
$19? •. "·
perform Fridays and Satur-Open mike night is held from
days at Newport Landing's 8:30 to 10:30 p.m. Thursdays
WOOl llRIER
CAIPIT
$24?.. n.
AMERIGA'I
LIRIEB ., •.
..
GENIER
APR FINANCING
ON APPROVED
CREDIT
. Every Certified Pre-Owned BMW
co.mes complete with a 6year/ ·
1 00,000-mile Protection Plan and
24 .. hour Roadside Assistance.
See Sterling BMW for details.
UC IRVINE -Coedl Pat
J'>c1'agl-' UC lrvtne mm'I
be9hPhD team II ranked
stllbln tbe ~et! 11m Mid·
Major Top 25 poll by
C'dlegelrwtder.CXJOL •
UCI, after a achool-record, 25-5
seuon last year, returns Blg West
Conference Player of the Year Jerry
Green. Green. who was a honorable
mention AP All-American last season.
ls a 2001-02 Wooden Award pieseeioo
All-American. Anteater sophomores
Adam Parada and Sbm1slav Zu:zak were
Big West All-freshman team members
last season.
GIRLS TENNIS
CdM, Tars
bag 16-2
victories
Santa Barbara, Aliso Niguel
unable to stay with locals.
CORONA DBL MAR -Corona del
Mar High senior Brtttany Reitz posted
shutouts as she swept her three singles
matches, leadPig the Sea Kings girls
tennis team to a 16-2 nonleague victory
over visiting Senta Barbara Ptlday.
CdM sopb,_omore Brittany Holland
and junior ntylynn Snyder also swept in
singles as Corona del Mar. went with a
varled lineup in light '1 the cmnpetition.
Tbe Sea KlDgs (&:-0), ranked No. 1 in
Southern California. will retwn to Pacific
Coast League action at University High
Irvine on Tuesday at 3:15 p.m.
Sea View opener
NEWPORT 9BACH -Megan
Hawldns, Kell\' Nellon and Krtsta
Mc:lntolh swept~ stngles matches to
lead the Newpon Harbor High girls
tennis team te> a 16-2 See Vlew League
opening vlctory over vlsiting Aliso
Niguel Friday.
The Sailors' doubles tandems of
• Erika Buder and Vanessa Dunlap and
Carmen and Diana Kbowy also swept
thelr match• &o improve Newport'•
record to •-1, 1-0 in the Sea View
League.
Newport will host Irvine Tuesday,
play at Laguna Beach Wednesday, and
at Laguna Hilll Thursday. Then, the
Sailors will play in the High School
National All-Star Tournament Friday
and Saturday, hosted by Corona del
Mar.
.,.._ lcllor Roger Carlson • 949-67 44223 • ~ fcua '949-650-0170 Saturday, s.p.mber 29, 2001
Newport
Hart.or Hlgb'I
D.unpn
Jobmon(22)
drawl • horde
of Dana Hll1I
detenden In
Pdday night'•
llOGleague
game. The
Sanon Jumped
to a 24-7 lead at
balftime and
wongotng
away, 41-14,
to ~prove to
3-0-1.
DALY I'll.OT PHOTOS BY
STIVE MCCRANI(
Sailors mix it up and it's no
contest as Newport Harbor
races to third straight nonleague
conquest on foreign soil Friday.
Barry Faulkner
DAILY PILOT
DANA POINT -You .------,
can load up to combat the
Newport Harbor High run.
but you cannot hide.
This was the inevitable
truth revealed to host Dana
Hills High, which saw the K•IOIB
Sailors mix the pass with
the run well enough to fk 11rt 41
earn a 41-1' nonleague .._... 14
football victory Friday
night.
_ ~1 told our guys they should be prepared
to p&ss block a little more tonight, Hecause I
knew, sooner or later, someone was going to
play us a little differently,• Newport Harbor
Coach Jeff Brinkley said .
Coming off two straight 200-yard-plus
rushing performances by jUJllo.r tailback.
Dertangan Johnson. Brtnldey's bunch was
camd. as tbe Dolphins (2-2) aowded the box.
leaving a little wiggle room fOI' Sailor wide
~vers.
The iestilt was 115 ftrst-balf plSliDg yards
by senior Sailor quarterback Morgan 01dg,
who connected on 10 '117 pus attempts by
intermission to fuel a 24-7 balft1me edge.
SEE NEWPORT HARBOR M«iE IS
Doily Pilot ,4"
Mt. San Antonio College invades Orange Coast
tonight in OEC showdown with revenge in mind.
Steve Virgen
DAILY PILOT
COSTA MESA -Call it Game No. 2 out of "The Big
Three,· in the Orange Coast College football team's
2001 schedule. The Pirates (2· 1) are in the middJe
of three games that Coach Mike Taylor looks at as
a measunng stick or how good or how bad his Bucs
will be this year
Last week, OCC passed the first test with a 14-10
come-from-behind win at El Camino. This week, tonight at 7, the
Bucs, No. 15 in Southern CaWornia in this week's California
Commuruty College Football Poll, host traditional powerhouse and
No. 7 Mt. San Antoruo (2-1).
The Mounties will most likely be seeking revenge because they
suffered a 26-25 loss to VlS1tulg OCC last year. Rob Pate kicked a
33-yard field goal with one second remairung to upset the Mounties,
who were No. 4 m the nabon, according to J.C. Grid-Wire.
The Bucs will host Pasadena City next week to cap "The Big
Three," and their nonconference schedule.
"We knew these three games were going to be dogfights,•
Taylor said. "In these three games, we'll find out how good we're
going to be. I hope 1t doesn't look like the Alamo after Pasaaena.
That's why God creoted bye weeks."
It seems as il the Bucs could use a bye this week as they have
been stung by the mjury bug. OCC middle linebacker Marvin
Simmons, the defense's fastest player, will miss his second straight
game with an abdominal strain. His status for the season is uncertain
and there is a possibility he rrught have to apply for redsrurt status
as Simmons hos been dealing with the injury since midsununer.
1TaV1S Lo1dolt, who recovered a fumble to secure last week's win,
COMMUNITY COLLEGE FOOT8All
OCC LINIU~S
OffllNy . DuutsE
.... ~ ttt. Wt.a....,., No.~ Ht. wt. a.,_,
il....... 6-1 195 so. Q8
26 .... ~ 5-11 195 Fr. T8 .... .,.,. ...... 6-1 2A4 Fr. Al
• .... .,.. MoooN 6-0 180 So. WR
3 V.:. Snwlo 5-8 155 SO. WR
10 ==-llAu.. M llO SO. TE 75 ,._ H 295 Fr. LT
68 Ki.m 1..-A 6-1 100 So. LG
6J ID FMll 6-1 262 Fr. c 62....., l.-... 6-1 289 So. RG n s ...... ttlllllfG M 265 Fr. RT
will remain at ouddJe linebacker.
56 Gm 5Mltt 6-2 225 So. DE
99 0-...._ 6-2 298 Fr. OT
76 K'fla ~ 6-0 281 Fr; OT
53 JMm KIM._, 6-2 236 Fr. DE
21 ... n.o-ro.. 6-2 218 So. Ol8
45 'IMllll l.ocol7 6-1 232 Fr. Mll
42.,...... 5'8WI 6-0 200 Fr. Ol8
351111 0Go 5-10 178 So. CB )() oa.. SfMlaa" 5-9 184 Fr. ~
40 JoHN Aant 6-2 198 SO SS
4 LD. MAnMlws 6-0 200 So. F5
Also, defensive tackle Dan Stringer, another standout. will be
missing his second game because of an injury to his right elbow
Chris Render will fill m. Starting free safety Barrett Bwkett, who
recorded an interception in the win over Mt. SAC last year, twisted
his right ankle tn the game against El Camino and he'll be out. L.D.
Matthews, who nursed neck and back injuries in the preseason, will
take over Bwkett's duties, and he should be busy as the Mounties
rank No. 4 tn the Mission Conference in passing. Mt. SAC freshman
quarterback Greg Valenzuela, who Jed the Mounties to a 21-14 win
over Santa Ana last week, is No. 2 in passing yardage (810) in th<'
conference and No. 2 in touchdown passes with nine.
The Sues' offense also took a hit as center Nathan Carreno wtll
miss tonight's gdffit> with an injured ankle, and Ed Fane moves into
his spot.
OCC is dlso undergoing more changes on oUense. The Bucs will
start its third different tailback this season as Niles Mittasch, the AJJ.
State runrung bdck from Oregon's Churchill High, looks to lock up
HIGH SCHOOL BOYS SOCCER
Esparza new Sailors coach
Roger Canson
DAILY PILOT
NEWPORT. BEACH -Newport
Harbor High has
filled its vacancy for
a boys 'iOCCer COdCh ID
the fonn of Kevtn Esparz.d, a
product of Orange High, Santo
Ana College and Chapmdn
University, with a coaching
background ranging from high
schools and college, dS well as
youth levels up to and including
the Olympic Development
Program.
He replaces Matty West, who
resigned earlier m the year
"I plan on winning,• said
MESSENGER
CONTINUED FROM 81
Uus season
Espana on Friday, who adrruts at
this point, with two months
before the regular sedson
begins, his knowledge of
personnel at Newport IS lirruted
to the fact he'll "have about lO
players back from last year's
varsity."
Esparza's accomplishments
are notable -during his days dS
an ass1Stant for a yei)T and head
coach for three years at Orange
High, the Panthers claimed the
CIF Southern Section Division II
championship ( 1966).
And m March, his Southern
C.iliforrua entry in the Olympic
Development Program's national
tournament for boys under-16,
won 1t, defeating Midugan m a
semifinal and North Carolma in
the finaJ
His background includes a
three-year tow as an assistant
for C hapman's men's and
wome n's programs, and he is
the current head coach or the
boys under-15s in the Olympic
Development Program.
A walk-on, he said his
personal goal is to coach at the
highest level, but in terms of
Harbor and his current position,
it's a matter of •establishing and
developmg a program.·
"We'll start training next
week,• said Esparza. a resident
of Orange
of his inslghts into the
game.
lfiggs Mlttasch
the starting role this weekend. Yet, like Ml SAC, the Buor might
also use tailbacks in the form of a committee, indudlng Randy
Gaither and Jared Kemp, who scored a 10-yard touchdown run ID
last year's Wlll over Mt. SAC.
Fonner starting tailback, Leonard DeRoche, who missed 1ut
week's game to see his daughter on her birthday, will move to
full bock where he will be in the mix with starter Travis Trimble, a
Newport Harbor High product, Anthony Campo and Javon Smith.
Regardless of the injuries or the changes. Taylor is convinced bis
Bucs will, as they say, come to play. They remember what a victory
over Mt SAC last year meant: five straight victories and a momentum
thdt led to a Mission Conference Central Division co-championship.
"They're going to be looking to make a statement and get some
r(>venge." said OCC quarterback Nick Higgs, who started bis fitst
lull game agdlllst the Mounties last year. ·we definitely know th.at
Mt. SAC is not the cleanest team to begin with (last year. the
Mounties were Gagged for four personal fouls). We'll try to keep our
composure and let them make the mistakes. You really can't play
tougher games like this. There's not a harder schedule with these
three games.·
The Sea Kings (6-0
through Wednesday) are
ranked No. 1 10 Orange
County, a distinction they
backed up by winning the
prestigious South Coast
Tournament, completed
Saturday. .
Messenger scored three
goals in the 8-6 title-game
triumph over The Bishop's,
from La Jolla, and was
among three Sea Kings lo
score six goals ln three
tournament games. For tus
efforts, he has earned DaJ.ly
Pilot Athlete of the Week
"The goalie has to be
the best passer on the
team. so I learned some
things from him about
passing.· Messenger said.
·And, we also talked about
what a goalie looks for
from a shooter. The ma.in
tbing is, you have to try all
kinds of shots: shooting off
different kinds of fakes,
using a skip and a lob. If
you shoot the same shot, all
goalies are going to catch
on. I've tried to take some
of the the things Billy has
told me and make them
part of my game.·
An Extraordinary Op porlunity.
recognition.
"I just like his attitude,· Sdld Vargas,
who is pleased by his three-year veteran's
transformation. "It has unproved
tremendously. He was pretty squirrelly as a
freshman and sophomore. but he has rea.Dy
matured. 1 talked Wlth him about some
things and he has really rP.Sponded, more so
than your average seruor. He is more focused
on his work ethic and be really enjoys the
game. It really shows in the approach he
takes, even in practice.•
A better-than-average swimmer, whose
development was enhanced by watching
oldet brother Billy, a former CdM· goalie five
years his elder. Messenger is a dangerous
outside Shooter. He also scores frequently on
the Sea Kings' counterattack. .
•1 think my strengths are my shooting and
my passing,• said Bobby Messenger, who
credits his older brother with shaping some
JGpAY'S SCHEDULE
Messenger's game,
Vargas said, is best played
with the ball in bis band.
"He's a very good outside
shqoter, • 'Yllrgas said. "He has great arm
acti~ can really throw it bard,
especially for somebody bis size (5-foot-10,
150 pounds). "His intensity in front of the
goal IS the best on our team. When he's
focused on a shot, nottiing gets in his way.·
MQSS;enger credits an emphasis on weight
training for his shooting velocity, but directs
the credit for his focus to Vargas, who
coached the U.S. men's Olympic team in
Sydney and was recently named men's
coach at Stanford.
"He taught me to really keep my
composure and not get carried away wtth
all the stuff that goes on under the water,•
Messenger said. "The biggest thing for me
was to get back on hts good side. For me, Lt
was important to gain his respect. I think he's
really happy with the way I've been playing
and with my attitude.•
./More than 800 veltide.s in sW!
./Interest rates a111:I lea.se Yafe.s
haven't hun tJti.s low tn JCllYS.
./New 20025 am'vinj JaifJ.
./ Hijh traJ/e-in JlowUtus .
./Mu.st sell 150 &ars thi.s weelenJ.
1993 or f'iewer Starmark Vehicles Qualify for New Car Lease Rates
o\11 the>t M~«.Jr. ~ ttt Sannarlr. C ni1t..-J ,,_,.up t< I ,... ex 100,000 m1ks m .JJ111nn to dw ·~ rx.., nminty.
'97 C280 Sedan av-, Low Mila, Hurry. (4'4S62)
'00 Cl30 Sedan
Whitit/Gfwy, ~ (121"'41)
'00 Cl80 Sedan
LMM. Huny. Won't Liit. ("'8Sl)
'00 Slk230 Roadster u.-... !41doa. CD,...,.. (114ll4)
'98 El20 Sedan
c-t T--. W.... llMty. 6H041)
'O I MLl20 SUV
---s,.w. """" (J4SSJZJ
'00 D20 Sedan
WM9t. ........ A11J. C••N4l
'99 5420 Sedan ,... ....... s..-.... (4»6>>)
'01 E4lO Wan lilll!rY,. N. ..... (111111)
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............... CJ'8nf) ·ooes•••• -. ...... '41!111)
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low .... ~ ........ (421'60)
'00 ESS AMG
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'O I CLK320 CUriolet
LlllillfY,. H.. ~ (..,4S)
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• CD ...... ~~(9*1t)
'02 QIQZO Cabriolets
........... flit( ..... "56S4)
163,881
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TWO
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StllW Virgen
DAILY PILoT
29, 2001
CRAWFORD HALL -After 150 minutes and
five games of seemingly endless rallies, the UC
Irvine women's volleyball team is left searchlng
for its first Big West Conference victory. And, as ua CoacH Charlie Brande said, the Anteaters are
left searching for an understanding ol the game,
as visiting Cal State Fullerton grabbed its ftrst
conference win with a J0.26, 21-30, 30-18, 26-30,
15-10 Vlctory Friday night at Crawford Hall. ·u we learn to control ourselves and our game,
we're going to be a very good team.• Brande
said. "We just made too many mistakes and we are not under-
standing the game enough yet.•
The Anteaters (1-8, 0-3 in the Big West) displayed inconsisten-
cy that began when they dropped the opening game, the one
Brande said they should have won.
With the scored tied at 25, it was the ntans who broke away to
grab the mornentum. Renee Vignery seIVecj for Cal State Fullerton's
last four points, including one point received when UCI was out of
rotation, capping a ilitan 10•3 run to end the game.
And as if that wasn't enough, the Titans maintained the
momentum into Game 2, as they built a 10-1 lead. But, the 'Anteaters
responded and steadily climbed back, grabbing the lead at 14-13
after Fullerton was called for a net violation. UCI junior Chanda
McLeod, who led the Anteaters with 19 kills, led the comeback and
coming off the bench, Rebecca Larsen (10 kills) also contributed in
the rally.
UCI freslunan setter Ashlie Hain. who amassed a match-high 60
assists, fed a nice pass to Larsen for a kill to give the Anteaters a
28-21 lead, in the rally-scoring format game. With Jamie Pilbeam
leJ'Vlng, UCI fuushed off the Game 2 victory, receiving points from
a lift and a net violation.
"Rebecca Larsen and Nicole Nelsen (six kilss) did a great job,•
Brande said. "They really stepped it up when ·they came off the
bench."
The ntans came alive in Game 3, with a 30-18 victory as they
continually earned points by dropping tip hits onto UCl's side of the
net. The Anteaters also committed errors, which proved to be their
demise. They committed nine errors. Also, the ntans scored five
points off of service aces.
UCI, continuing with its inconsistency, jumped back to its steady
play in Game 4, resulting in a 30-26 win. Again, with the game tied
at 25, this time the Anteaters pulled away.
Hain connected with McLeod for an assist-kill combination,
giving UCI a 26-25 lead. Larsen served an ace and Hain and
McLeod hooked up again for a 28-25 lead. Fullerton answered as
Be Holcombe (12 k:l.Us) slammed a kill off a pass that came from Krista
Bebemes (48 assists). The Titans were led by Megan Sabo's match-
high 20 kills.
COWGE MEN'S SOCCER
Anteaters settle for scoreless tie
MORAGA -UC Irvine's men's soccer team outshot host Saint
Mary's, 29-8, but when two overtime periods expired the noncon-
ference game was a scoreless tie Friday afternoon.
Anteaters Jon Spencer and Lawrence Smalls each sent five
attempts tOward the goaJ, but to no avail. ua goalkeeper CJ. Cooper was credited with three saves as UCI
saw its record go to 3-2-2.
Th~ Anteaters are at San Jose State Sunday, starting at 4 p.m .
COLLEGE BASEBALL
11ll
2002
Daily Pilot
COi llGE MWS SOCCER
GREG FRY I DAl.Y PLOT
Coat's Ryan Holt goes up to gain control over defender Carlos Escobar.·
It's Just around
the comer and
UC lrvlne
baseball coach
John Savage has
his Anteaters on the run
as the new basebaD
stacllum OD the UCI
campus coDUnues to be
bullL The Anteaters
offidally started practice
OD Wednesday, with wind
sprints one of the basics.
Bottom. left. Paul French
work.I out his arm In
pttcbing warm-ups under
the supervtsioD of the
Anteaters' staff. UCl's tint
baseball game wru be
Jan. 25 when the
Unlventty of San Diego
vislll for the first of a
three-game series.
OAJLY PILOT PHOlOS
BY DON LEACH
Orange Coast plays to a tie with
visiting Cypress, in a game the
Bucs feel they should have .won.
Stew Virgen
DAILY P1LoT
COSTA MESA -Regret
can be an ugly enemy. But,
Orange Coast College men's
soccer assistant coach Kevin
Smith believes his players'
bouts with what-ifs will
seIVe as a wake-up call. SCOllMAID
After outplaying.
outhustling and outshooting = eo..t g
visiting Orange Empire
Conference foe Cypress. the
Pirates St!ttled for a scoreless tie Friday. OCC
outshot the Chargers, 13-2, and in the second
half, the Pirates applied extreme offensive
pressure, but with no result.
"Maybe we took (Cypress) a little too
lightly" said Smith, who fulfilled 'the head
coaching duties as Laird Hayes was absent.
"This should be a wake-up call for; these guys,
that every game is going to be difficult to win.•
The Pirates' difficulty was in taking
advantage of their opportunities. Midway
through the first half, freshman Stanton Duke
was about to finish off a breakaway, but
Cypress goalie Neil Gilbert. who recorded
eight saves, guessed right and slapped away
his shot.
OCC (5-4-2, 2-0-1 in the OEC) actually
drew closer to scoring in the second half. in the
10th minute, freshman Dante Zena nearly
scored when his shot from 15 yards out hit the
crossbar. Five minutes later, Cluis Coburn sent
a comer kkk toward the goal, but Duke's
header bounced into traffic and out of bounds.
·we should've (beat Cypress),· Zena said.
"They knew th~y were beat before the game.
We had them. but we couldn't finish the oppor-
tunities. 1 was pretty frustrated when (my shot)
bit the crossbar. I'll be thinking about that one
tonight.'
Cypress (1-6-2, 0-1-2) also must have
experienced regret as the Chargers could not
capitalize on a key opportunity. Alvin Alvarez
smacked a shot off the right post in the 19th
minute, for the Chargers' final shot of the
game.
The Pirates, who started the year 1-4, have
won four out of their last slx with two ties
OCC goalie Joey Balbas, who finished with one
save, earned his third shutout in four games
"That game is a peifect example of what we
are." Smith said. "We are a strong and stingy
team. We have to work extra hard to find the
back ot the net. In this game, we didn't play the
full 90 minutes.•
.. SPORTS ·
OAJlY PILOT PtiOTOS BY GllEG FRY
Mesa's A.J. Perkins (left) fires away; at right. Nick Cablco shakes off a wo~d-be tackler and eyes an opening.
Matt Colby clinging to life after
head injury in Mustangs' victory
Cos~a Mesa team in a vigil
after standout fails to regain
consciousness. Colby at UCI
Trauma Center in Orange.
Richard Dunn
DAILY Pit.OT
WESTMINSTER -
Amid a solemn victory
ror Costa Mesa Hlgh,
there were prayers
and tears on the
football held Friday
rug ht. sc-IB And, today, the ~
Mustangs are hoping eo.t...... 53
ror a miracle. OclMlt View 12
Shortly alter the
visiting Mustangs' 53-12 nonleaguewin
over Ocean View at Westminster High,
It was learned that Costa Mesa senior
Matt Colby, a 6-foot, 185-pound
defensive end, was placed on a We-
support system at UCI 1\'auma Center in
Orange. after a head injwy in which a
CT S(:an indicated "no brain activity,•
Costa Mesa Athletic Director Kirk
Bauermeister said F11day night.
In t.he first qua{ter, Colby was
involved in an offenslve play and, after
returning to the sideline, collapsed. He
was taken to UCI Trauma Center by
ambulance.
"He got hit and lost consciousness,•
Costa Mesa Coach Dave Perkins said. ,
Bauermeister said Colby •got bis
heartbeat back, but he still was not
breathing on tus own• when the player
was ta.ken to the trauma center.
'The Costa Mesa players, who kneel
Mesa's Freddy Roc:lrtguez follows A.J. Perkins' block in Friday's roul
in prayer after every game, said a special
one on this night. · • ·
•The team meets here at 11 a.m.
(today), just like they do every Saturday,•
Bauermeister said •Hopefully we'll have
a miracle by then.·
On the field, the Mustangs (3-1)
gained 417 rushing yards on 42 canies,
led by junior Keola Asuega.
Asuega caJTied 14 Umes for 163 yards
and four touchdowns, while senior Nick
Cabico had 114 yards and one TD on 11
carries. Freddy Rodriguez (5--8 l and one
TD) and Omar Ruiz (5--30 and one TD)
also reached paydirt for the Mustangs. ·u was a pretty good night for us. We
ran the ball down their throats,· Perkins
said. ·eut I was very distracted as soon
as Matt went out.•
Cabico, who didn't play last week
because of ari injury, scored on a 43-
yard run in the second quarter to give
Costa Mesa a 33-6 lead, and, essentially,
tum matters into a rout.
"I was just hiding behind my blockers
and saw an open field (on the TD), said
Cablco.·
Ocean View (1-3) took the opening
kickoff and drove 65 yards, all on the
ground, to score early.
But Asuega returned the ensuing
kickoff 75 yards and Mustangs
quarterback A.J. Perkins took his first
snap from center Brett Via at the
Seabawk 10.
1Wo plays later, Asuega scored on a
3-yard run and Danny K.riltorian added
the extra-point as Mesa went up for
good, 7-6, with 7:22 to pla}' in the first.
After the Ocean View punter was
downed after a bad punt snap, Mesa
bad great field position again. this. time
on the Seahawk 11 . On the next play,
Perkins connected with John Garcia on
a touchdown pass.
Mesa scored on seven of its first eight
possessions. The only series in which
the visitors didn't acore came during
Colby's injury.
After Perkins' TD pass to Garcia for a
13-6 Mesa lead, Cabico intercepted an
Ocean Vlew pass on the game's next
play from saimmage, a deep ball thrown
In he/vy traffic by Seahawks'
quarterback Alex Hickerson. .
To end the first quarter, Asuega broke
two tackles on a tbin:l-and-1 play for a 32-
yard touchdown, then Cabico scored on
a two-point run for a 21-6 lead.
Rodriguez forced a fumble on Ocean
View's next sertes and Mesa's Bobby
Orroyo recovered. setting up another
scoring drive.
S<Oll IT CIUMTJI$
Costa Mesa 21 18 7 7 • 53
Ocean VteW 6 6 0 0 · 12
FIRST QVAIJO
av . Gonya 2 run (ldck failed), 8'09.
CM· Asuega 3 run (Krlkonan kick), 7:22.
CM • Gartlll 11 f>i1S5 from Pertuns (kick
failed), 6'02.
CM • Asuega 32 run (c.bko run), 0-00
SKQND QUAITJI
CM -Asuega 12 run (kidc failed), 6'49.
CM · c..t>ico 43 run (run failed). 5'08 av ·Valenzuela 13 p11t5 from Hldtenon
(pass tailed), 2:46
CM -Rodnguez 15 run (kd blocked), CUB
IMIPQUMJB
CM · Asuega ~=kick), 8.53
CM · Ruiz 6 Nr1 (ICr*orwl kid{), 4.2'
Attendaro. 1,000 (tstJfMted).
llfYIUM IU5IM
CM -~ 1~ 163. 'TDs; (.t>co.
11-11... 1 TO; Rodriguez. 5-81, 1 TO;
Ruiz. 5-30, 1 lO, Reed. 3-27; Gwdtnm.
'·3: Glrda. 1-0; W.idron. 1~ Knoll. 1-rmnus-11; Pertdn5, 5-fnlnw.22.
Oii -Morejon. M9; Gonyl, 7·3" 1 TO;
s-tir'I, ~29; valenzuell, 7-25; Unll. 2· 11;
Hidtenon, l-8; Kim. 1~ 91YMMMN
CM -P.!rttins, 5-11-0, 59, 1 lO av· HidtMOO, 7-1~2, 64, 1 TO,
Kim, 1·1-0. ,,
lllDMPUAL •KJMM
CM· Garcia. 2·28; Gonulez. 1-18;
Cabko, 1-13, WlldrOI\ 1-0
Oii · s-tin, 2-22. Gonya. 2-21;
V1lenzuel&, 2-14, Morejon, 1 7; Ur*. 1.,4.
MSW!SOO
CM Oii
First downs 21 7
lb.ah&y~ '2-417 32·112
P-1ng ylr'dlge 59 II
Palng S.11.() ~
Nl't ret\.m ytrm• 19 0
~ 5-)6 2-10
Net Yl"i9 'Sf 220
~ 1-29 ),2$.J
~lost CM) 1-1
~~ 5-45 lNS
TlmeofS)C I m1 21:21 ~
•l'Unt 1WCU'n5. WlleiCi'pCIOI Ir. ~. ~
NEW~ORT HAR~OR: Balance in every category buries Dolphiiis
CONTINUED FROM 81
Craig added a third-quarter
touchdown toss to Adam Kerns, the
MCODd Craig•to-Kerns TD connection
of lhe lil.ght, to finish 11 of 19 for 130
yertls, without an lnterceptlon.
•(Tb.e Dolphins) weren't detacbing
on our wideoub, 10 Morgan threw the
ball out there," Brinkley 5'id. •Ouf
~ii to tab wMt the defeme
giyet us and we had much better
bdeom ~ (UMm pnrv1ou1 week.I).
Mel .. cMicked Off lllto. ~ pw
plafl a we got a coupe TOI out of our
pullDg game."
Tbe s.alcn (3-0.1), riuiked No. 7 ln
OIU .. C:OW.tf au N9. 3 ln ClP
SoolNm Settion DWlliOn VI. ..., dkl
w,,.,..ontbe~.
JJIN•r&;•M f galllltmelblD •. ,.. ... _...., ..... ..............................
tJIJ l" I• ..... ,.._ tla IM lllt
.. o•a .. ••In•• CUJDINO A REVISED
..... •111 A'M1nt SUBOIVISIOH CODE .-.... -lmllll!--~ 111e to1ow1ng ""'°"' (T1'Tl£ 18 ~ THE MU-.,,._ e .... 1b1111 • datlllG ~ u: NtOtPAL CODE! AND ltit pool otl101rt .. lf1Mti0tt.
ai' Newport Harbor AC C 0 MP A NY ING ='""'° ~ .... ! 0.1..-1, b) Hlltlof ~CODE AMENDMENT =-~ ,~;;,,:i· ~. = ,.:::~-..:;-::...·~ ...,i.Fp.,,_, ...
°""'*"' .ui1or. 1 ~ Ind 2 eaoam 1 e.11, ulOll1ded by ..... pool, In 111111:1 COlllllU!ly.
Call 71W57.oo75 8'illl Ana AY9., Coeta on the 28th MAL mATI (llM «*II .... ,,,,.,
....... C111omi11112827 dly of Augutt, 2001, IXNRTI PAGI ~.-tntry ~P:C ~ ............. ~ ... ~ ... ~~ ..
Diane Schette. 1884 11n11 wu ldopted on 111e -· ,-b ,.. -Fl ND Slnla Ana A11e., Coeta 25lh day of September, QM t 112 811 .... a.iy "'°" _., II> l'lldl Ill air COlllClt 181
MIN, ~ 92927 '2001. r !Ill* tor PlteH UN IOI, Tint llldld Ylid Wjldo. Qllt+ 1
Karen Earle, 1833 AYES COUNCIL r Ulla 111111111 Q!pmnln M 71ff12-85'7 tXlra • IPICf. $1~ 11'1 .........
An111111'n Avt., Cotta MElliERS: HEF· ~ On 8undlyll i4!=722·13gllk tor !JR bouf!cllllltd
MIN, Cdfomll 926Z7 F•RNAN, • O'NEIL, ,.... .. ,._,It,,..
Thlt bu11neH Is oon-RIDG&WAY GLOVER, C11 111 11 IJed on ""PtM1b1ocAt ... ~ by: oo-pem.,. IAOllSERO. PROC. MN7'"4m ot tm IP ol Wo "" wllldl 11ave you •tarted TOR, MAYOR ADAMS MM7"4MI *' ltlt ~ IJfMlll
. . r r •
'
l '. ' ~ . ·' . ~ _,.. YfK' No N0!!.1. COUNCIL Nld-. ..,_. nJ em.
Ollljle M. Sc:hllfe llU.ll:IQt: HONE 11ot1 on t ~ "1llt II> P'!'-~~~= . 1'NI ~ wu ABSENT COUNCIL ,,,_, lot. '2,400,lm lf1L
llled w111 the County llEllllHRI: NONE 714-57§:13f I Qlltl o1 Onnge ~ AlllTAIN COUNCIL
on Oll.40r.!001 llDllER: NONE NEWPORT HEIGHT'S
I001117MU MAYC>ft: 0MY HACIENDA
Olly Plot Sept. 8, 15. Adaf'llt E'Sldt v... '4 48r a GREAT VALUE
22. 29. 2001 Sl!03!! ~V~l:R~ ~ RV~ th AGT Mt-,72H120
Flcttdoue ....,_ The endre iut Is ..,. ,,... U1Uti0 -"'ms. ....... St.lament able fof review in the Pmc ~. Cd Pntca
The I~ .,.,.._ Oily Oeltt's office of 1he T!flO!!. IRf. !'N5ff?!!S ~ ~ • City of Newpoll Beach. ~ ~ Publlthed Newport £'Side CMr.. 38r 2Sa.
·Co. 23052 Alicia 8each-Coa1a Mesa IU!ltMy, Fi> In Iv Ill\ RV
Perti.y IH-605, ... Dd)'200Ploe September ~:~ Pllo ~~ l6ln wto. CA 129112 29, 1 ---
Adan.an Ler"= --~~--'S~•=0•=6 10 CUSTOll HOMES C.. Inc., (CA), ~ 3IR UM ... ~ tH-505, "'°' ..... ~~.a: = Opell Hew~ H c1IClld by: a corporallon ~ H
Have you •tarted £0\JAl llOUSIHG SAT IN and IUN 1H
.t..i..... .... ,In t? OPPORTUNITY ZMO Eldin Pllce -·~ ~ eu ya M•nHIOO Yte. MW1 All real estate ldller1islno
Mamton l.andlclPI Ill lhls newspaper Is subject BIKE ro THI! BEACH
Co. Inc.. Rlc::hltd I. to tilt ftdtral Fm Housing 38r ii (J.ill "" II/gt °'W• .~rement WU Act Of 1968 IS amended yanl.F~. ~.~ which makts II Illegal to 2070 ..._.. ~ ........ fled wffh the qoumy ldv1111•e ·any preference. OPEN HOUSE SAT 1-4 Cltttc of OtwlOe Cowlty llmttatloo or dlscflmlnatlon >a. IMH4§-9670 on *17/2001 .._.... -"'· r. --2001 .. 7..... .,._.,on race, """"· re11g· """' Ion. sex. handicap, familial E Sldt CM. 2 ma11r .._ Dally Pllol Sept. 8, 15, status or natloMI onotn. or 2 5Ba Condo, galed QllMI,
22. 29. 2001 St0:40 an Intention to make any 2·Sloly, 2c atlle:ll g111ge, .,.~..... ............... such prttlftllee, Hmltation ~~~ ev
1
-.
.-... ~Uvu. DU •-0( di9c(,mllllllon," • .,._...,.S40 Heme StabNMnt This newspaper will not
The tolowlng pel'IOf1I knowlAgly ICCIPI any FSldt TownflouM 28r we fiolng ~ M: 1d11ertltem1nt lor rtal 2.581, ylld hlghly up-,.!!W• 5 l<enelngton emtt wttlclt Is In Ylolation gredtd. $279,000 Cc.lop
\AM'!, Ntwpolt Beech, of tht law. Our readers art wlbroittf'I. 949-650-7047 CA 11218() hereby lntormtd that all Cel ~1 Glotll Zlgiw GolO-dWellings ICMf1llad In thia =""-"'===-----
bll'g. Inc. (CA). 5 ~ ~ 1r1 mllat>ll on = ~Ntwpolt an;:-~~
Thlt bulinMt It con-nation, call HOO tof.f ret II ~by: a eotp01do11 1-aolM24-8580.
' ... you 1t1rted ------doing butlnlu yet? y-. Mt 13, 2001
Oli#la ~ E;God>ll;.
~ wtlh aw::"'eo:t; d5 of Otange ~ °" •1:v.!001 200111n1n
Oe11y Pilot Sept. 15, 221 29. Oc!. O, 2001 St041
Flctltlou• Buelneu
NafM Stnement
Thi'" lollowtng Plf'IOOI
.. do9lg bulillM .. :
Neuromuacut. Engl-
'*"ng, 8448 Hillheid
Clrclt, Hunllngton
leact'I, CA 92640 Tlf*lee Cecil Vardy,
1448 Hillhlld Circle,
HunlMgton BMdl. CA
12648
Thlt bulinaaa II con· c1IClld ~ an lndMMil H1v1 you atarted
doing~~ No
T81Wa Ced! Vataf
Thlt ltalamenl Wll ti.cl wfftl Ill County CIM of 0.-. CoU1ly on ow12/2001
200111170M
Dally Plol Slot. 15, 22.
2¥. Oct o.~1 s.os
flctl9loUI ..... ...,. .......,..,..
~~
•A.) A PromoClol1a,
I.) AbeokMly Ill a.t,
,
1011 Beach Slvd.,
untlngton Beactl, OA 2e47 •
8t90da PotW, 17011 t=.t°·~
Thlt ......... 000-
--by: lrl ~ Have you ttarttd t.:.'8 411~ y«?
8'.ndl '°'* Thia .... , ....... .. Ill qounty 08/~J:;r ~
•111mso g,... &lpt. 15. 22.
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Experience To Join Our
• FRONTDESK
• FISH MARKET
• LUNCHFOOD
SERVICE STAFF
8uldi Cenlury ~ '01
(15444&'3298A) 1131197
Nabtfs·Pontlle·GMC
Buiek.Cadillac-OldemOl>llt (888) S27-1844
IMa ...... YftOl!D
lllWl*l'OD ---Ytt?IZ
lllW 12111 .. wtllWtJwrlM,lleY._
lllW 12111 .. Gr.-.. 121... Vll0'7e2 ..... ..,
~121-Yn.7 .....
........ ¥1.
•KJU <:I QJ7S O J7 •QH
~~~soum l• llV ,_ 1
Whlf do you bid oow7
Q l ·As Soulh, vulnerable, you
bold:
Q 3 ·Both vulnenlble. m South you
hold:
• 10 9 6 54 'V A 7 S 2 0 4 • Q 7 2
The biddin11. lw vrocccded; NORlll !AS( SOUTH WFST
l .... l• .... 2."ii'T .... ?
Whal action do you IKe?
WES'1' llR)aTil !.UT SOUTH 10 .... ,_ .,
Whll ICUOO do you &IU?
.Q 5 • JU South. vulnmbk. you bold:
•AKl CV KQJU O J •KQS3
The biddlrut has mx:eedetl· NOllTH !AST' SOUTH WF.S r
•• 40 1
Whal do you bid now?
Q 6 • AJ Soulh, vulnerable. you
hold:
•~KJ Q J976 .>AKQJ •73
The biddin has oroceeded: SOlTl'H \)F..q'f NORTH UST 10 ,_ l t,;.l "-
' Whal do you bid now'!
loolt for 011St<vrs °" Monda>
Top Pay, Benefits 401 K
Apply: 2pm-5pm Daily
11061 Los Alamitos Bl.
. Los Alamitos Ca. 90720
8uldi lAelbrt ~ '01
(162331/3272P) 115.1197 Nabers·Pontlae-OMC
Bu!Ck-Ctdtlllc-Oklsmoblle
(888) S27-1844 IMW&a'f7
Buldt P1111 A-., 'M ~ 121.• V13741
Q 4 • EMl·Wesl vulnerable. as Soolh
you hold:
40k aauat m1, cllampeone, Bii'# f 40I 18 grey Hhr int, fully loaded. Nlw......, .... 116 \'0374 "9llltl Care • Front Olflc:e PT 20nvw: SHking
enltlusiUlic, Mlt-motJYated & wet groomed person
I IMI "-IJMI people sk.fts. answer phone&, type, I.,,.. appoentments and be 100'X. proleSSIOflal
1 Ollct up required Compeimve wage can
1 ~. or tu rewne 94!Hif3.6937
~10,995 949-586-1888 Bier. _..,
8uldi AeQll LS '00
(2231e&:m7A) $13,997
Nabers-Pon!lac·GMC
Bll'Ck·Cadlllac-Oldsmobtte
(888) 527-1844
Cedllte c.-. ...
(0566700286f') s 16,997
Nabers-Pontlac·GMC
Buld-Cad1llac·Otdsmob1le
(888) S27 · 1844
RECEPTIOHIST/Cltrieal
EJl)lltenced II.I wne recep-
ttanilt lof busy 1'111 ISlale
ol!ICI l'I Ntwporl Benetu
Fu reeunt. 94~7429
BALBOA ISLAND Celllac eaw. ,.
Two ~ lof S.. (04051213285P) $16.997
Wiit ntabllahed Chi.. Nabers-Ponttac·GMC
dr91'• ~ Sbw end 8udt-<Ad11ltc·Otdsmob1le
~ Cluldfens ~
aohr1g &tole tn CM MUSI
be ~ & dependable
=~~ se::; --='888::::;)'-=52"'-7·.:.:•&44""'--
'--. Call Don Aiw-Cadllllc Stv111t STS 't5 tor turu. lnfOl'lllltion 0 64k mt, metallic camy apple
MM75-4122 red, rpy ~r. c!irome wta, ~Mt-650-2243
SALES POSfTIOHS
openin9 hupe Income
polll'itial. Loolcing tor hl\tilY
stlf motivated persons.
closers. Bnrtt 714-a00-1890
Bott Buslnnt profrtablt,
h19hty v1sable leatunng.
l/ailerabfe fistllng Wal8f skJ,
& lllllrly boa1S lrduded 1$
lloonld in.entoty. trade-ans,
pans, rigging S8IVIOI ~
key, Excetlent empbyees
Some selle1 finanQng may
be olfered $1 ,999,000 The
AMison Co !M9-646-2011
ANTlOUE COLLECTIBLES w..-i: Sertoua Plot* Best 1oc 1or s yrs ProlUble ~ WOftl et '-· Up 10 1st day buy tor 112 COit of
S'l 500-l 7S00Jhr PT/FT tnven!O!Y 949-650-6357
1-800-31 G-0311
www dghomebod com RISK-FREE ROUTE
... ------$3,250/mo (realtS1JC) No Compet111Qn w!ltl 1ntractive
oame. 13 LocaJ Verd"'il
Siies. S9. 750 cash f8QIJl'8d
800-26&-6601
!24 hrs I 131
,.._ 111 _.. flit ACT NOW worlt from home
garaged, nonlsmo«tr, hke
new cond v1nl456724
$11,995 Siu ..... 1.
C.-.C SLS 't5
(814505/3335P) s 14' 788
Nabel5·Ponttae-OMC
Buod.Cadlf'-C·Oldsmoblle
(888) 527· 1944
Cedlllac STS 't5
(808879fl274T) $16,997
Nabers·Ponhac·GMC
Butek·Cad1llac·Oldsmobllt
(8881 527·1844
tt. lldnp In 1hls eam 141 10 $500-$8000 per ~ my ~ month PT or FT Cal ~ Che¥ro6'I CorvtCt1 COm
FOii to c.tl a too 1-I00-$4M4M 'tO 46k 1114, wtM>lk. llllO
n11111"1 In wtllcf'I lttV ctvome wllla, lb ,_,
... _"-__ •_•_dl_•_rvt_Plf__.1--1 $12.995 vint Tn241 OC "''""''· -IOA~ ~ Btuw ~,.
---------~-----------Clwyeltrlmperitl 't3 40ll
Plllll Ill nry of M
of .. COfllPllllee. am ""' .. 1oc11 let'9f "'*-9 Bu· _...,.you-.111
"" money Of ... .......... Reed
llld undlmlind """ ......... you
al9n.
actual mt, whle, INllhtr i"ll,
llrllY lolded. lilril new. $81185 949-~1888 8kt
8llW 7411111 .. ~ SM,IM V329t
lllW 74Cll .. llMln SM,116 V1167W
8llW 740ll 'f7
J8gllS VIII den Piii LWI .. Red'Crelm, SOit ni, ..
,_, $25,500. Pelbmanoe
L 10. Cd 949-650-5860
~ $32,"5 Vt2511 Jlgulr XJe '90 ~ 68k ong ml, excelef'C ~
BMW 740N '91 lion, gBllg8d, bu~.1an.
8ludll $35,195 V"565 $8900 Mt-720-1~
BMW 11 coupe 'tt ltlllll ES 300 'ts Bllci.
8M'td 121,115 Vf0529 gold pkg, chrome wheels, co ctiwigir • .....,... oand,
BMW 113 .. 114,900 * 9&n1'6800
Shslblt $13,115 VnMl7 ...,_.. Benz llll.430 '00
llllW Z3 ,. silwrlblack int, mint cond, .,,_.._ ...... V11123 extras. 21,500 ml, ..,,.,,......, ~---· _., tllru 2004 or 100,ooi>'-,;;f_
--XKI .. Brurcz.WI $44,116 VIM 1'
law ldOO '01 llllrlbll 121,118 Vll715
...._.. CM30 '00
Btue.'Orst 141,115 V5810
lltrcedll E320 ..
Blulllmn 127.• Vft557
~U20 ..
Whlltltllt 131.995 Vl3CM2
...._.. 91500 'f7
wtlllla-...... V2I*)
Pondll llomr '00 AlcMml IS4,t95 Vf021 I
Pondle c.iw. 'ti
BM/Ian llS.995 V"250
....... c.nw. ... llllrpi _.. Vnst2
MMS0-5915
$39,500. 949-823-6914.
Mll'Oldll Benz C220 •
(?7837413314T) $14,997
Nibe1$·Ponble-OMC Bod:~lac-Old$moblle
(8881 S2J.1844
~ SL 100 'M
Black/Black. chrome
wheels, ~ $44,950.
949-412·1257
llERCa>ES S500 't5 Bllcklbllcll. Mly loaded,
861< ,,.._ 'll1' emus Whllll.
Absolutely gorgeous I
$29,500 !MH'ls-484 7
llnldM 4llOSLC 74
Mio. VB. AIC. ~. UI pwr,
pb, pw, pe, am-Im am,
tirUd. CUii .... lhow cat
$12.500 94H40-8092
llerCldll MOSl '17 V-8, r90tllck. ..,, tic. .., n.
alloys. ~· 2 -wJJmnd. sheeptalnS, l.ojaek. "' ,. cords, lllfT. $16.500 Cal
949-916·9914
.............. 00
(038S92/3269P) $9.9'11
Nabers·Ponllee-OMC Butcil-<:adi~
(888) S27·1844 .
C:.:: ~ E.cab 00 Oldl "*911 GU W
(24061&'0509092) $15,997 (367447fl316i) $13,1197
Nlbers·Pontiae-OMC Nebers·Ponliac-OMC
Buicll-cadlllac-Otdsmobile Blliclt-cedillte·Otdsmol*
(888) 527·1844 (888) 527·1844
Hondl Acconl SE 't3 Pon11K Gr'llld Pita GT W
Fully loaded, tow mt, 1 (2406m"J33Tl) 112,997 ::.r·..;f"~ ~
lllml Trooptr 't4 (88!) 5:zT • 1844
~ s10.887 Seib eoo s eanv .. n
... ~~c11•~ ,,.,;?~ ldllll mi, f\11 fact wan, """"'"""' _...,,....,,...... wtliteloetrnell lthr, bladl
---='888='-l =521.:...7·..:.::1844"""--10p, MJ!o, ... ,_, $19,995
ON THE
MOVE?
Sell your extra
household
items in
CIASSIFIED!
(949) 642-5678
What happens if you don't
advertise?
NOTHING.
C~ll the Classifieds (949) 642-5678
-..~~"'Pilot ...... , .... ,,
=Certified Pre-Owned =
........................................................ Bkr949-586-1888
-------~ 8MW -------
Have A
Garage Sale!
Seib IS, ,... .. "*"'
5 api. lllldl. co. mDOlllOCll
fldory wanantt. 116,995 ~5&6-18!! 8'r
for ultimate pe.ce of m.i.od, rtcry Cmi.ficd Pre-Owned BMW is Indeed by The Ccrti&ed ~ BMW
Protec:dM Plu, covering the vchick fur up 10 2 ya.rs or S0,000 miles (wh.~ romcs fim) from cbc datt ti
apirarion of the 4-year/S0,000.mi.lc BMW New Vchick Lnn1tt.d Warnniy ... The: .Pnxcaion Plan mdudcs rwo kq
dcmcois:
<:enificd Pre.Owned BMW Umitcd Wa.mntr .. &cktd by BMW of North America. Inc., and ia
nationwide network of BMW centers, COYCttd repairs an: made only by BMW-mined tccbnicians using only gcouinr
BMW repbwncnt pans.
BMW Roadside Assirtance .. Paa of mind follows you anywbm in me USA. 24 hows achy, 365 daJ1 I Jal.
'9/1318i
Amo, CD. nia! (480U17l .. --·--·-· ... -.$.20.5>95
~328i
Auro. pmnium (V60249) ........ -............... -.......... $23.5>95
~»3iS
Aum, blac:lt (~P61 5) ............. ~ ...... -.... -...... -.$.24.5>95
~s.w
Pftmiilftl piis. low miles. hca1cd sao (W)2138).-~5
~S28i
Planiwn CD, Iii-(W49'U6l-.... -........ _._,_, • .tJ.Zm
,. 740;
White. CD & -(4DJG940l.--.. --.. ....28X MILESI
~$1o;T
~ ..,o. io.. mila(N9026S)--.0Am
~ 32M C....mlW .
Spott. pettni-. .tplWt ~ l."'264JO) .. _ ... « MlLES1
"JMiT Ylp.lfOl"(4C'.sull)_,__ -... ~
"9J.Ui O•ss: r:i61w Alm. Q) (,AJ'270) _______ _
•D ·~..,_wlw.a (f.DtS92-.,_ .. ~ MlUISI
'.98 318TI
Ai.do. allcJ7S (lt{.l.A~96) ____ ,. __ , ....... $17'95
~323i~k
Au10. bllK 14CTSm1 ...... . ........ -.............. m!l!JS
'9.9328i ~ ptmttum plia (4CWX31J). ___ . __ $.2J4m
~MJ
4-Doof. auio & -(Em 11) _ ___,JII M1LESI ,.S2/li
Adb. Spon '*' (T93430) ......... --l.01r Mll.ESI
.,,,23 u $-Spcl. pmai~ '*' (4I>KW,19) __ ,. M1L£S7
"~ >-. pimilm ... <PS1.m>---.ul: MILD . ,.sa;
Auel>. f'l'lll'Ulll l"t (4FIHl'6} .. -~J8" MIUISI
"ZM•1'' 1.ow-.~,--~-......;;-_....-4Jll~
•1"'1L -'OK .... .._ttJ6ST1..-..._..,.~...._-. ..,.~~
• SKYTTE'S • Woodwol1dng, relurt>ish
furniture and repair.
MMl7..ss34
••• QI!' , •• -. • .... ·-· 11
~~.: . t .r..~ ; .... ":\.'>,
2001 LINCOLN
NAVIGATOR
' .. . -. . ' ~·~ . .... __
2001 LINCOLN
TQWNCAR
JUNK 10 THE DUllPlll 71Mll-1112 AVMA81.£ TODAY! MM1MMI
• Viagia suc.cea i.a
dependent on
propel' use.
Cct bilonudoo &i-
a plsytldao wbo ..,.._ .. Sa.al
[)ylfUacdon wt ....
pa{ocme4 owr 12
Vlapa Cliabl Stadia
Calfw t~:
hlNndhettlealth.com
TWO BROTHERS
MOVING & STORAGE
Some Day ServK.
Comm/HouMhold
Antiques & Pocking
949.645.4545
. PUBLIC
NOTICE
The Calif. Public·
Utllilies Com·
mission REQUIRES
that .. used house-
hold goods movers
print their P.u.c .. tal T runber; limos
and chauffers print
their T.C.P. noo1>er
In alt adYeltsmenfs.
If you have a ques-
tion abotA Iha legal.-
ily of a mowr. lino or c:hautler, cal:
PUBU.C UTILITIES COMMISION
71'4-558-4151
1!.tl#ll 'JJtJt (!..
~ Professlonal
Painting
Uc. "494360
Dec:onthe Pabadlg
lltmllltcdar
r.alar latafla
Rob Isbell -Owner
Costa Mesa, ca
(949) 646-3006
Cell 949-887-1480
,.T···~••s r., ••
C~1~I .. I ..
2001 MERCURY
VILLAGER
2001 MERCURY
GRAND MARQUIS~