HomeMy WebLinkAbout2000-10-21 - Orange Coast Pilot•
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INllS
• PIEP FOOTIALL
Leguna Hills ..................... 7
Neuport tt.tlor ........... 23
UnlVW'llty .................... 42
Estancia ·•••ou••················· 21
I : I .. . flleMlt la ••111 ..
SERVING THE NEWPORT -MESA COMMUNmES SINCE 1907 ON 1HE WEB: WWW.DAILYPILOT.COM WEEKEND-OCTOBER 21-22, 2000
City officials, candidates to amend disclosures.
To avoid any a ccusations of conflict of inter est,
. city leaders are quick to update financial statements .
Mathis Winkler
D AILY PILOT
NEWPORT BEACH -Half a
dozen Newport Beach city officials
and council candidates on Friday
said they plan lo amend their finan-
cial disclosure statements after real-
izing that they may have failed to
include all the required information
on their stock holdings.
"Yes, I do own stock,• said Plan-
ning Commissioner Steven Kiser,
who had not listed any stocks on his
disdosure form. "But I'm going to
find out real soon -over this week-
end -if I should disclose any of
that. You almost consider whether
you should put everything down.·
Others have already done that.
City Councilman Tod Ridgeway,
Planning Commissioner Michael
J
I_.
Kran.zley and council candidate
Bob Wynn said they had decided to
list all their stock holdings regard-
less of whether the company did
business m Newport Beach, there-
fore creating potential conflicts of
interest.
"I thought to be on the safe side,
I should list every stock I own,· said
Wynn. "So I just listed everytiung. •
City Council members and can-
y
For a full list
of disctosures,
5MhgeA9
dtdates, plan-
rung commis-
sioners, the
city attorney
and the city
officials must list the1I investments
on the form.
manager are
required to me so-called "state-
ments of economic interests" annu-
ally. Those statements are mailed to
the state. City Hall also keeps simi-
lar records for the city clerk, depart-
ment heads and all members of city
boards and commissions, said City
Clerk La Vonne Harkless
The law requires them to list
only investments of more
than$1,000 m companies that are
located or do business within their
jurisdiction.
But here's the tricky part: com-
panies fitting that description are
not llnuted to those with offices in
the junsdtctlon -in this case, New-
port Beach.
In addition to loans, glfts, travel
payments and property holdings,
Ofbcials dlso must dlsdose rnvest-
ments ma company that "manufac-
SEE DISCLOSURE PAGE AS
Robbers make
off with $1,000
• Pair of masked
men held up Coco's
Restaurant early
Friday morning; no
o·ne was injured.
Deepa Bharath
DAILY PILOT
COSTA MESA -Two
masked gunmen got away
with nearly $1,000 Friday
morning after threatening
employees at Coco's Bak-
ery and Restaurant on Har-
bor Boulevard, police said.
Costa Mesa police are
search.mg for the two rob-
bers, who escaped in a dark-
colored sport-utility vehicle,
possibly a Chevrolet Subur-
ban, authorities said.
No shots were fired dnd
no one WdS m1ured m the
heist, police said.
The robbers entered the
restaurant around 6:45 a.m
and one of them pornted a
stainless steel or blue steel
handgun at hve employees
who had Just opened the
restaurant, said Costa Mesa
Police Sgt. Don Holford
They then ordered the
employees into a storage
room and asked the man-
ager to open the safe and
hand them the cash, Hol-
ford said.
There we re no cus-
tomer; m the rPStaurant at
the time of the robbel),
Holford.
Authorities said both
SEE ROB PAGE A6
PHOTOS BY DON LEACH I DAll.Y PILOT
Susan Pallotta, of Costa Mesa, shows ber support for Green Party presidential candidate Ralph Nader, below,
who spoke at Chapman Unlvenlty Memorial Hall on Friday. Students hear hard
truth about drugs GREEN Day
Group of Newport-Mesa residents travel to Chapman University
in Orange for campaign stop by Green Party presidential candidate Ralph Nader
Al•• Coolman
DAILY PILOT
G reen Party presidential nominee Ralph Nader
swooped into Orange County on Friday, and
some of Costa Mesa's Greens made the pil-
grimage to hear him speak.
The lanky candidate appeared before an overflowing
auditorium at Chapman University in Orange, slam-
ming Republicans and Democrats for being the pawns
of corporate interests that he called craven, myopic and
greedy.
•The only difference between George Bush and Al
Gore is the velocity with which their knees hit the floor
when the corporations knock on the door,• Nader said
of the Republican and Democratic nominees for presi-
den t.
Taking in the scene'With apparent delight were res1-
SEE GREEN PAGE A9
Giant strides in baby steps
• Special education teachers often
have special reasons for choosing
the work they do.
Alex COolmain
OMV PllOT
• mn"OR'I mTI: The folloWtng Is the tNrd In• four· s-t _.. ~ on the ltNgglea Md trlunlphl of
the dllibled, thetr t.mllies --thole whO .....
WOftl .. them.
and improve their understanding the concept
of opposites, like small and large.
•ibere was a teeny-tiny woman,• the story
begins. •s he lived in a teeny-tiny house 1n a
taeny-tiny town.• .
By the time a visitor amves to talk with
Belen. the u8rdse is over, her students are at
l'9Cel8o and the 47-year-old teacher ii chuck·
ling about the dilfk:ulty she tometimel bU ln
making sure her Students are undentanding
tbe6r l111w . •'JbilYN wry sweet.. she said. "They llt
.... and nod, and tbeO you uk them to -lllltld ad ........ they don't know wlU
todo.•
..._ tlrtt-In wbat II C9lled en ·lnltnlc·
tlaDlll fllJIPOI' prqgrmn• m.. wlddl pcwkllr
SllTUOBfMIM
• Meeting at Mariners
Elementary offers a
'scary' taste of reality
about the dangers of
drug abuse.
Danette. Goulet
D AILY PILOT
NEWPORT BEACH
The students were shocked
to learn what drugs can do
to the human brain.
Nearly 100 children and
their parents on Thursday
heard results of the latest
research on the damage
various drugs do to one's
gray matter.
·I thought it was scary,
about how they said drugs
could make your brain tell
your body to shut down,•
said 11-year-old Alida Ple-
cas, who is in the sixUi
'" Family counselor
Bill Serry will
present The Parent
Project, a free work-
shop sponsored by
the Newport-Mesa
Unified School Dis-
trict, on Nov. 7.
For more informa-
tion. call 1-800-892-
5558. Ext. 89328.
grade at Manners Elemen-
tary School.
Alicia referred to a video
shown at an anti-drug
assembly held at her school
for students of Manners,
Kaiser and Newport
Heights elementary schools.
SEE DRUGS PAGE A 11
11111
EUUYS A11
QASSllD5 -·" ..
mr w 1m10J1S A.S
a 111n.-A17 _ ... .., -AJ •Nm•-11
IUIU AJ .. All --
-
..
A2 Saturday, October 21 , 2000
SAINT JAMES CHURCH
Saint James Church Is a community devoted
to loving Jesus Christ and serving him as Lord
and savior. A tradltlonal service Is held on
Sunday at 7:30 a.m. A contemporary service
is held on Sunday at 9 a.m. and a charismatic
service Is held on Sunday at 10:45 a.m. Chlld
IN THE SPIRIT
' care Is provided for the 9 and 10:45 a.m. ser-
vices. Sunday school for all children meets at
9 a .m. A contemporary service Is held on
Wednesday at noon. David Anderson Is senior
pastor. The church Is at 3209 Via Lido, New-
port Beach. For mort information, call (949)
675-0210.
Doily Pilot
Zen Center of Orange County
Ondy Trone Christeson
MORAL OF THE STORY
More nitdges
from the Almighty
"It is one of I.he beautiful compensations of
this life that no one can sincerely try to help
another without helping himself."
-Otartes Dudley Wamer
L ast week I wrote about two girls my
husband Jon and I met at a hotel in
Fresno. I sensed God nudging me to
talk to them, and after initial reservations I
did: We ended up having break.fast togeth-
er.
Over the minutes and mouthfuls, we
learned they had recently graduated from
college and were biking from Arizona to the
California coast, then down to San Diego.
Fortunately, Jon has ridden the route and
gave them helpful suggestions. Jon wrote
our phone number on a napkin if they need-
ed anything when they were in our area.
I figured the napkin probably ended up
in the trash, and I'd never hear from them.
At least I'd had fun talking to them, and Jon
helped them.
I prayed for them whenever I passed
cyclists. The next weekend, I stayed home
from a daylong bike ride to finish some
work. I kept picking up my car keys to run
errands but felt I wasn't supposed to leave.
That afternoon, the phone rang and a sweet
voice asked, "Is this Cindy?"
I said yes. ·
"Hi, I don't know if you remember me,
but I'm Shannon, one of the girls you met in
Fresno,• she said.
•I'm so glad you called, I've been praying
for you,• I answered. "How are you, and
where are you?"
·we're in Los Angeles, and we decided
that L.A. drivers don't like cyclists very
much,· she answered. ·we think we'll take
the train to Santa Ana and wondered if you
could give us directions back to the coast."
I told her to take the train to Irvine, where
I would meet them and then asked, "How
would you like dinner, a hot shower and a
place to stay?"
Shannon didn't hesitate. ·wow. that
would be awesome.·
They looked tired but had big smiles &nd
gave me big hugs when I met them. We
talked the whole way home. It felt like an
evening with our daughters.
They took showers, did laundry and sent
e-mails. They helped make a big dinner,
which they consumed with gusto. We talked
about faith and friends, as well as about
boys and bikes. Afterward, Jon showed
Shannon maps while Sarah played the
piano.
The next morning, they ate a bicyclist's
breakfast while Jon worked on their bikes. I
rode my bike with them to Laguna.
•This was such an incredible surprise.·
Thank you for being our temporary mom
and dad. It's hard to always be in charge."
Shannon said.
·vou've really blessed us," Sarah added.
We bugged and went our ways. I've
heard from them several times. My favorite
was a note from Sarah that said, •Thank you
so much, not just for taking us in but for
being a vessel of God. I've talked to Shan-
non about God's love, but you showed it. I
believe that is the reason we ran into you
both in Fresno. God does work in mighty
and mysterious ways.•
I'm glad God nudged me to open up my
home to them. Hopefully Shannon will feel a
nudge from God to open her heart to Him.
And you can quote me on that.
• CINDY TRANE OIUS1UON Is a Newport Beach res-
ident who speaks frequently to parenting groups. She
may be reached via e-mail at dndyOonthegrow.com or
through the mall et P.O. Box 614G-No. 505, Newport
Beach, CA 92658.
READ'BS HOTIJNE
(949) 642-6086
Address: 120 E. 18th Street, Cos-
ta Mesa. Near Triangle Square.
Telephone: (949) 722-7818.
E-mail: zencenter@zcoc.org
Web site: http://www.zcoc.org
Year established: The Zen Cen-
ter of Orange County has been
in Costa Mesa since 1995, offer-
ing a regular schedule for za.zen
(meditation while seated on a
pillow or a chair), intensive
workshops and other programs.
Senior pastor: The Rev. Deborah
J . Barrett. Barrett is director of
Zen training. She is a Zen priest
and has been a serious practi-
tioner for 25 years, focusing on
Christian and Zen awareness
methods. She is a certified pas-
toral counselor, a fellow of the
American Assn. of Pastoral
Counselors and a Visiting Nurs-
es Assn. hospice chaplain. She
also is a lecturer in comparative
religion at Cal State Fullerton.
She has earned a doctorate in
psychology and master's
degrees in theology and psy-
chology. Her dissertation was on
Zen approaches to dying.
Pastoral staff: The Rev. Carol
Aguilar. Aguilar is the center's
administrator. She is a Zen p,-iest
with 20 years or practice. She
owns Zen Home Stitchery. a
manufacturer of meditation
clothing and cushions.
Weekly schedule: Sunday -at 4
p.m .. work practice for members
. and volunteers; at 5 p.m .. two
30-minute periods of ·zazen,
walking meditation, personal
practice interview, service, a for-
mal talk on Zen practice, discus-
sion; and at 7:15 p.m .. informal
tea. Tuesday -from 7 to 9
p.m., zazen, talk and discussion
Size of congregation: 200
Makeup of congregation: A
cross-section -people come to
the center from neighborhoods
all over O range County.
Otlld care: Child care and chil-
dren's programs are not now
available, but will be developed
as needed.
Upcoming sermon: On Oct. 29,
Barrett will speak on •The Zen
of Zen Practice.•
Introduction to Zen wortcshops:
A three-hour workshop is
offered the first Sunday of every
month from 3 to 6 p .m . to pro-
vide small group instruction in
beginning Zen awareness prac-
tice. Workshops are experiential
and include video, lecture and
discussion formats. Handouts of
FAITH CALENDAR
SPECIAL EVENTS
fEW>WSHlt IREAKFAST
The Men'S FeDOWlbip Break·
fast of St. Andrew's Prabyter·
.ian Church will meet at 7 a.m.
Wed.oesday for a w8ek1y ~
fut at 600 St. AJMkWWI Jtled.
Newport 8eacli Tbe Rn. 11m
McQiihnont, j>altol' ol the,,_..
byterian Cliurda ol Costa Mela!
will speak on •C'bo6cel. • 12.50
pm penoa at tbe door for
breakfalt, (949) 5'14·2239.
CAW FOR CMATION
c.,JtDg fol' Cr8daD ....
Orailge County m.«s111t can-raaace cm reltglOa ad tlill
envlroamlnt "'•""*" iil.JJmt
CA 92626. Cof¥1ght No news st~
ries,. llloftratlons, edltorlll rMtter Da~ or~ herein can be Rtcord your c.omments about ~ wtlhout wrttt.n per-the Deily Pilot °' news tipL tNllon °'~own..
VOL M. NO. 251 ADQRESS
OUr ~Is DOW.~ St.. HOW JO BEAQt us
TMOMAI H. JCllSllC*. Cost.I ~ CA t.2627. ~ ""*-The l1mel Orange County tmYDOOaO. COlltKTION5 (IOO) 2SZ-t141 Editor It Is the Piiot\ P°'ky tiO prompt-AdvaM4 U.CAHN. ly correct 111 errors ot ~. a.Hied (M9) 642-5674 CltyldlW Plelite call (M9) 57"4ZJJ. MlafF•&a ~~642~1 -4
....... City Edltof m ........ • l•llMNW.. The Newport IMChtC.ol9 ... .... .,,.,, 6'Q.561()
,..,,..Edlmr Dilly Not (W'$-t ..... ls pW-5ponl ~ 574-4223 --~--llthed Mon6y dlraugh SeUdly. ~ ~ '• (949) MMt70 ~ .... In NMport...,.. ~ c.. ....... E.f'Mlll: dllltypl~com ,,,,,...,,~ ~4 ........ onlyby Melft Oflke NIMfdlllor .._...,., n.nn.er.,. ~ Oftb (Mt) W-4321 .. I. .... :s.o:r: .... = (ICIGt m•Mt. In.,_ """'*',. _, 131-7126 of NiliwSMWt ...., ... ....... ~,.., .... ..,.to .. NllWlld ~,....~NIM. -" .. -.. Delly'*" ........... °""' bV a....-of ltlllWI~ 'l'lmR. :r.:::x mall for '20 ,.. "'°""'·,...., cs..,... ........ c.... ..... __ oc,....,.~
Ollillll' M tlllli4 CA.~ lrO*ll q;T ..... .......... --end loc8' WllloJ flOSTMU. Ttlt s.w ..... ~.n. ....... ...... ,,..,_, lelcHC.olla .... Diiiy °"',.,...... OMlmr ""°"' ,.0.. ...... ClillM .....
GREG FRY I DALY Pl.OT
The Rev. Deborah J. Barrett and the Zen Center In Costa Mesa will be bold.Ing a workshop on
Zen approaches to death and dying Oct. 28.
information are provided. The
workshop introduces the basics
of seated meditation, various
options for postures using cush-
ions or chairs, techniques for
working with breathing and
observation of thought. Daily life
practice is emphasized. During
the final hour, participants join
the regular Sunday schedule for
zazen and wallcing meditation.
Attire is casual, but participants
are asked not to wear shorts,
jeans or clothes with writing on
them. The fee for the workshop
is $35. Preregistration is
required. Registration forms are
provided at the center's Web site
or may be requested by calling
the center.
Outreach programs: The center
sponsors one-, two-and three-
day retreats, as well as a variety
of periodic workshops and class-
es. The center also has a prison
chaplaincy.
Dress: No shorts or tank tops
Churdl design: The center is in a
beautiful, well-maintained, old
Costa Mesa commercial build-
ing in a mixed commercial-resi-
dential section of downtown,
near 'Jtiangle Square. The inside
is furnished with meditation
mats, cushions and chairs for
meditation. A large, outdoor bal-
cony provides 'space for walking
meditation.
Mission statement The purpose
of the Zen Center of Orange
County is to encourage and sup.-
port Zen practice by offering
regular opportunities for za.zen
(meditation), education, training
and service.
Special worbhops: Everyday
Dying: Zen and Death. Saturday,
Oct. 28, from 9:30 a.m. to 3:30
p.m. The fee is $90, or $70 for
center members. Lunch is
included. Preregistration and
payment is required. This work-
shop examines death of self as
lifelong spiritual practice, explo-
ration of personal attitudes
about death and dying, Zen
meditation for dying people and
for health-care providers and
Buddhist practices related to
dying. The workshop is compat-
ible with all faith traditions, as
well as for people with no reli-
gious affiliation. The day will
include presentations, discus-
sion , videos and exercises.
Meditation Practices for Grief
and Loss. Saturday, Nov. 4, from
9:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. The fee is
$90, or $70 for center members.
Lunch is included. Preregistra-
tion and payment are required.
This workshop explores the use
of awareness meditation prac-
tices and guided imagery for
healing and growth from losses
of all~ (death, divorce. etc.).
The wisdom and practices of
Charlotte Joko Beck, Stephen
Levine and Jon Kabat-Zinn will
be highlighted. The day will
include meditation J>ractices,
presentations, exercises, videos
and discussion.
The fee to take both work-
shops is $150, or $125 for center
members.
-Michele M. Marr
by Costa Mesa residents LaRa.e
and Bob Pany, will be held from
8:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. Oct. 28 at
Anaheim United Methodist
Cli\in;b, 1000 S. State College
Blvd., Ambetm. Registration
will b8 beJd from 8 to 8:30 a.m.
$20, 510 for students. T1ie pnce
inchide. breakfast. ltincb and
tome materials. (9'9) 6"2-5264.
event will feature a panel dis· WORKSHOPS cussion about •ne Jewish r • .
THE JEWISH VOTE
Vote" ln the upcoming presi-
dential election. $26, or $20 U
reservations are made by Mon-
day. (114) 755-5555, En. 225.
HMYIST FEmVAL
MEDITATION LESSONS
TM Young Blisiness at Profes-
atouls DivtsloD of tbe Coste.
~baed Jewish PederaUon
ol Orange County will ldck off
ltll ~ "81' with a ip8dal
luncbiOD at l p.m. Oct. 29 at
tb8 CrowDe P1ua. 1 '11t l Voa
Kannan Ave., ~· 'lbe
Newport Mela Christian Cen·
ter wU1 bold a Halvelt Pesttval
from 5:30 to 9 p.m. Oct. 31 .. en altemative to traditkJnaJ
HdDween tnek-a.treattag.
1be festiftl, d8,ltgnjd for cbil· •
dim 2 to ll, Includes rides,
boothl, an ln·N-Out
dinner And Joe. of candy
Tbe mntm' II at 2599
Newport BJvd:, COlt4 Mela.
(114) 186-0t54.
A •Jectio divina • meditation
group will be held weekly
beginning at 7:15 a.m. Thun·
days at Our Lady Queen di
Angels Pariah Center, 2CM6 Mar
Vista Drive, Newport Beech.
Lectio is a ~ of i:neditatloci
that usaa Saiptu.re or a .pedal
~ u a sttmutua. PIM.
Tb8 Christian Meditatioo Grotip
meets on the fiiit and third
Wedneedays ol e8ch maatb
from 7:30 to 9 p.m. at the amtar.
It inCud8i two perilOdl ol medi·
ta~ tome tmtnldic:m CID
how lo' meditate, a talk end a
dileuwlon. (9'9) 219-1408.
WEATHER AND SUIF POLICE flLES
18JB BL'TURIS TIDIS COSTA MESA
Balboa lOOAY
64154 First low • Awocolldo ltrMt: A wt.Ide burglary was~ In
Corona~Mar 11:37 e.m ................... 2.7 64154 First high the 200 block at 1:42 p.m. Thursday.
Costa Mesa
65154 6:29 •.m.-................... 4.4 • Del ... Awnue: Begging WM reported In the 100
Second low Newport 8NCh eftef midnight ........... nla blodt at 6:07 p.m. Thursday.
604
Newport Coast s.cond h4gh • Iowa Str-..tl Gr.net theft WM reported In the 1600
64153 5'.19 p.m ....................... 5.1 bk>dt at 5:22 p.m. Thund.y .
a.fOMCASJ SUNDAY
There will be w.lst-to First low
ct.t-Ngh Wind Mell In 12:21 e.m .................... 0.0 NEWPORT BEACH
momlng. lncrHsing FIMl'llgh •long with wind Ind • ~ Clrde: A. llptop CompWlf was r~
rain Jn the aftlmoon. 1:01 e.m ....................... 4.9 \
Second low stolen from • ~ '""1ing room In the 500 block It
12:41 p.m. ................... 2.0 LOCA110N 11111 1:15 p.ni. ~.
Wtdge l-5 Stc.ond~
Newport 2-4 1:21 p.m .............. _ ...... S.l • w.t ~ 1111:-,. v.ndlll were,....,... to
l&lidtln J-5 hive enlllt9d. Uled Cl!I .... kit.end.,.., ..
"""' Jet'Y J.5 --CdM l-4 ,......... PiWbd CWI In ... JS00 lllOc* M -Nft..,.. .,
. .
Daily Pilot Saturday, Odober 21, 2000 A3
It's time to ft:x a broken devekJpment system in Newport Beach
J oe Bell and l have taken
dillerent routes to the
same conclusion. For
Joe, it was the realization
that if the Yankees could
reach into their pockets to
Q<>lster their $108-million ros-
ter, the same could be said of
the developers who are
backing Measure T. For
them, money may buy a
campaign victory through
repeat advertising.
I stopped following pro-
fessional sports in 1994 after
the baseball strike, when
payroll was at an all-time
high and character was at an
all-time low. It's nice to know
some things haven't
changed.
But unlike Joe, l don't
begrudge the Yankees their
right to buy whomever or
• whatever they need to win a
pennant or World Series, and
I don't hold it against the
developers who'd like to
move forward with a few
special projects around New-
port Beach. As far as I'm
concerned, iJ they made the
Steve Smtth
WHAT'S UP?
money legally and want to
spend it honestly, have at it.
Planes are meant to fly, boats
are meant to sail, and devel-
opers, well, they develop. If
the system stinks, let's fix the
system. Until then, the devel-
opers can and will do any-
thing legal with their money.
This is the most important
election in Newport Beach in
the 15 years I've lived in the
area. Voters must decide not
only on Measures S and T,
but they must also choose
candidates who may vote on
the direction of two more
important issues.
I support Measure S
because I believe that with-
out it, those in charge will
pack too much development
into too little space. I also
believe Measure S will not
prevent important projects,
such as infrastructure or
safety projects, from being
built. To state that the people
of Newport Beach can't tell
the difference between a
resort at the Dunes and a
new firehouse is insulting.
Voters in Newport Beach are
informed and intelligent, and
they will have no trouble
determining their own fate
through the votes on major
projects that Measure S pro-
vides.
Those who claim Measure
S will be bad for the city
have only to look at the
Castaways for proof that,
sometimes, those in charge
can't make it much worse.
Measure S puts the desbny
of Newport Beach back in
the hands of the res1den~
and away from those who
are poised to lead it down
the wrong path.
But there are more impor-
tant issues facing Newport
voters.
It was one year ago next
month that I first heard coun-
ty Supervisor Tom Wilson
use the term •the clock is
ticking" with regard to the
expiration of the 2005 flight
moratorium at John Wayne
Airport. Since that time, no
progress has been made to
con~ce any federal deci-
sion-makers that we don't
want more flights out of John
Wayne. Instead, the Newport
Beapi City Council has
maintained a "see no evil,
hear no evil• approach to the
problem by challenging
Measure F -the so-called
Safe and Healthy Communi-
ties Initiative that was passed
in March -in court and liv-
ing in a state of denial about
the future of air traffic in our
backyard.
A good candidate for City
Council is one who will stop
sqtiandering precious time
and resources on an airport
that will not be built at El
Toro and throw all of bis or
her energy exclusively into a
strategy to continue the
flight moratonwn at John
Wayne. That person will
accept the ol..tve branch
extended eight months ago
by the El Toro Reuse Plan-
ning, Authority and will join
forces to stop airport growth.
The best City Council
candida le will also be
aggressive in deal..tng with
the most important problem
the city will ldce over the
next few years. The ideal
candidate will use every
muscle, every cell , to find ,
fine and purush any person
or company found to be con-
tnbuting lo the pollubon of
our ocean.
The issue of ocean pollu-
bon isn't very !texy. certainly
not compa.red to the unage of
big jets nymg overhead or
gridlock on the Coast High-
way. F1ghb.ng ocean pollu-
bon is d tough sell. Most of
the time, you can't see 1t or
smell it and so 1t becomes
one of those 1mportdnt but
not urgent items on the
council's to-do ltst But the
time has come for the New-
port Beach council to step up
its fight agamst ocean pollu-
tion, whether tl means
unprovmg ptpes or go10g
upstream to track dangerous
urban runoff and illegal spills
into creeks and rivers. What-
ever the poison, from wher-
ever the source, the new
council must place ocean
pollution at the top of the
priority list.
LI I can't appeal to the
ndture side of the cand.J·
dates, there lS the econoouc
· side to consider. Anyone who
doubts the findnCidl unplica-
tJons of a polluted ocean
shouJd check w1th ofhc1d.ls in
Hunbngton Beach
Don't forgf't to vote, and
don't forgPt to take your kids
wtlh you lo mdke an unpres-
s1on. The Yankee!> will hdve
1t wrdpPf'd up by then
• STEVE SMITit 1s a Costa Mesa
resident and freelance writer
Readers can leave a message f0<
htm on the Daily Pilot hotline at
(949) 642-6086
L~~
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YOll SAVl UP TO S!J 951
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A4 Saturday, October 21, 2000
• Bankruptcy . s2s9 •• : . •a-Divorce/Summary S289 ..
r:-- - --:i What i.sal..ivingTrwt?
I LMNG TRUST I It is a legal document that is 2501. OFF created while you an: afj~ to I 70 I make sure )'OW' loved ones will
Regular Low Price $399 be spared from probate if I I something happens to yoo.
I WITH COUPON $299 I inIJJu/a: Husband & Wife, Wilis.
t>FFFR tJCPIRES 10131/00 Power of A1um1rys far H"1lth & Ass<t I COUPON VAllD AT11M£ Of ORDER I ._ _____ _. Managnnmt, AU Notarized
Call Herb the Legal Beagle
Law Office of Herbert B. Rhodes
1-800-965-4621
• HARBOR CHRISTIAN CHURCH .l. (Dlaclplea of Christ)
2401 lrvlne Ave. 11 S1nt1 lubel Newport B11ch
Sundey Worship • 10:00AM
Dr. Denni. W. Short Mlnlst" (949) 645-5781
\\int Micbad & All Angels
Pmfic V-•• Margucruc c..o.u dd ~ • 64-4-0463
Bun.DING ()(JR MlTHi WV1NC OlRIST
ANDS£.RVING OUR <DNMUNTn
The Rcv'd Peter D. Haynes, Rector
SUNDAY SCHEDULE
8 am · Holy Eucharist
9 am • Adult Bible Study
I 0 am • Choral EucharUt
COMMUNITY CHURCH
CONGREGATIONAL
UNITED CHURCH Of CHRIST
ft,.... It to C..; To en i. to oo.
8na Vll"I Bl.air, Minister
Chip Fllher, Pastor
Worship Service
8:00 & 10:00 am
9:00.m Adult Church School
10:COlm -Sunday School
-aiuc...~
61 t Hellotiope -. .. Corona del Mer
6'M-7.t00
CHURCH
"Open Arms and Open Minds''
Worship 9:30
Jambortt & ~tblufr In Ntwpor1 at.ch
01
Science of M inJ Cnmr
Child Centm Servioe-10:00
"IDVl!Y~
Rev. Gail Miller
Ttadltlonal AdlJtt ~ -11 :30
Rev. Ken Gray
N4Hgtlbomood ComnU'llty Center
1845 Ptrk Arie., Costa .....
Sat. Worluhop-10-12nooo
OCT. 28 .. Angel Wotbhop"
Dr. Juandla Evans
1929 Tldi Awe., CoeU Mell
CALL ... ~.
ewport r
Luthe,.n Church CLLO A.I
TM ....... Dr ........... llwft
Tr•dlllooal Lutlwran
het0t'D11"'41 ...... w_.... 8erWloe wtth ..... c.e • ......ton
.......... 1 ...
..
SABATINO'S .
I~ ... : ti I II I \\ I 11 1· '1·11·· If,!' •11~ -' ( ,,
Newport Centt.r
United Methodi&t Church
Rev. Cathleen C.oou, Pastor
16<ll ~cc AYC.
c.onKr of Matgtl(ritc and
S111 Joaquin Hills Rd
(949) 6#0745
&rm Q!Jirt Wonhip Smtirt
I Oam WonhiJ and Childrm's
Suruliry School
Youth m«ting wttltiy
First United Methodist Churcb
of Costa Mesa
420 West 19th Street, Costa Mesa
Fatlvel of Worship JO:OOam
Rlcherd L Ewing. Pastor
Church School 9:00aln & J0:15am
949-548-7717
Christ Chwdi by the Sea
Unilcd Methodilr
1400 W. Balboa Blvd .. ~ Beach
9:00 a.m. -Sunday Sdlool f'or all ages
10:00 a.m. -Worship (wirh child care)
The Rrv. Dr. ~ It CrUp, Putor
(949J 61J.380S
Costa Mesa
MISAVllDI
UNnlD Ml1HODIST CHUKH
1701 aakw,C.M.
Wonhlp & Church lchool
l s30 and 1Ch00 o.m.
Dr. Richard (71~) 97'9·8234
•Dinner
• Sunday Brunch
The Church of
Yahweh
Welcome to
The Church of Yahweh.
77re church on the web.
We are always open.
AND we don't pau the plate.
¥A God-cenrcrcd parish community, inmucted ~the Word of God
and renewed by rhe Saaamena
Film' CHURCH OF
CHRIST, SCIENTIST
3303VlaUdo
N9wpott 8each
673-1340 or 673-6150
Church to am a 5 pm. SUndcrV Sc:hool 10 am
~ a.telllngl • llnl
DOG HOUSES
Your family may call him
.. Fido"-bul your Realtor calls
him "Fang"! A family pet often
presents a major challenge when
a house is being marteted This is
a sensitive issue for a Realtor to
communicate to sellers.
Even though he is just doing
"his job", a dog's bark wi ll
sound ferocious to anyone who
is knocking at the door. This is
usua lly a good 1hing, but when
your home is on Lhe marke1,
Realtors will be bringing a lot
of strangers to the door. Most
Realtors are concerned about
the unpredictability of dogs
they don '1 know. When 1hey are
greeted by a barking dog, they
may no1 be willing to en1er the
house unless the owner is at
home. If your dog is confined
to part of the house. such as a
garage. be sure to put up a sign
informing people of 1hat fact.
Talk with your Reallor about
lhe best way to manage your
pet while your house is ~ng
shown. and make sure 1hat this
information is included in the
MLS listing.
Lyleen and Jeff have 28
consecutive years of real estate
experience in NewpoJt Beach. They
are Coldwell Banlcer's #I agents.
For professional service or advice
with all your real estate needs call
the Ewtnp al (949) 718-1550.
Daily Pilot
\li!\l"I lll lJ l<lf)
\1110 IC11l,
:\o\\ \, .1il.1hk
Rabbitt Insurance ~ency
AUTO • HOMEOWNERS • t&\LTH
40 ~ars In Business
~--~ ~ <:,'-'~ .._.... ..... _ .......... />#~
949-631-77 40 « l Old Newport BMl. • Newport Beach
(Near H~ Hotpiw)
NEWPORT STONE &
D ESIGN C ENT RE
COMPLETE DESIGNER
SH OWROOM
... rolieJY eltyuflCt" rN ,,>ur!t•
u#'Mio6/e.
·~-G.-*-lil.i. -•T-..iU-.-
T..-•SI...
.c;a.. ......
• Tiie ...... w.-. ol
~Tlla ·c..la
·~-... c;.w...·~ •4'_<{.,..,
-.. c:.,. ·-.-·iv..-· --iiiiiii----.... ~-·~ .~ u g;,// _/'1111 g"f/(rfo-cw 'lli-
l:,,,_,,,,VYf9" ,o/011 l.o 'I t.ui {ti,,,.
9.1..1 L· !JJ-<W fh.tftt'fA
'ff"' C'Ult r.&a1. tJwan":r ~r.·
EWPOKT STONE~ DEslGN
19U HA.uoa Bl.YD.• O>sTA MESA
949.645.7799 • 71·t07.n99
I"' I I· I• ..
It 1 I I, I I'\ < •'\
WHY PAY
DEPT STORE
PRICES?
Visit our
AREA RUG STUDIO
Rugs & Runners on
Sale
Handmade woou, srnrhecic, sisals
Daily Pilot
Gettin1.
INVOLVED
• GETTING INVOlVEO runs period-
ically In the Daily Pilot on a rotating
basis. If you'd like Information on
adding your organization to this
list, call (949) 574-4228.
GIRL SCOUTS
Girl Scouts of Orange County
needs volunteers to be
trained as troop leaders, serve
on special committees and
give lectures, demonstrations
or classes. For more informa-
tion, call (714) 979-7900.
GIRLS INC. OJ ORANGE
COUNTY
Volunteers are needed to
offer educational and enrich-
ment opportunities for girls
and boys. For more informa-
tion, call (949) 646-7181.
HUMAN OPTIONS
The organization shelte rs,
counsels and educates
abused women and children.
It is looking for volunteers.
For more information, call
(949) 737-5242 ext. 24.
JEWISH FAMILY SERVICE
OF ORANGE COUNTY
Volunteers are needed for
Project Caring which pro-
vides socialization and cultur-
al experiences and Shabbat
and holiday celebrations to
the Jewish residents and oth-
ers at Fairview Developme n-
tal Center in Costa Mesa. Vol-
unteers will •adopt• a facility
to provide programming of
Jewish conte nt to the resi-
dents on a monthly basts and
will be required to take a TB
test and fingerprinting back-
ground check.
Volunteers are needed to pro-
vide comfort and support to
the Jewish terminally ill and
their families. A training ses-
sion begins at 6:30 p.m. Oct.
16, continuing on Oct. 23,
Oct. 30, Nov. 6 and Nov. 13 at
VNA Hospice in Santa Ana.
For more information, call
(714) 445-4950.
JUNIOR LEAGUE OF
ORANGE COUNTY
This organization of women
committed to promoting vol-
untarism, developing the
potential of women and
improving communities
through the effective action
and leadership of trained vol-
unteers, is seeking new o1em·
bers. For more information,
call (949) 261-0823.
KAISER PERMANENTE
HOSPICE SERVICES
Volunteers are needed to pro-
vide four hours per week vis-
iting patients or doing errands
for them or their caregivers in
communities near volunteers'
homes. For more information,
call (562) 622-3805.
LAGUNA GREENIELT INC.
Volunteers are needed to
assist Laguna Coast Wilder-
ness Park staff and James Dil-
ley Preserve staff and docents
with hiker registration and
general public orientation.
For more information, call
(949) 488-0287.
LAGUNA SHANTI
Laguna Shanti, an organiza-
tion that works with sufferers
of HIV and AIDS. is seeking
caring volunteers to assist
with running the front office,
delivering meals, providing
transportation and providing
compllment3ry therapies
such as mas!llge, acupunc-
ture and chiropractic care. For
more lnlormation, contact
Usa Tugbia at (949) 494-1446.
UFIUll LMll ClmlS
Mentally W adults "'1y on the
Newport Beach center for res-
idential housing. It needs pro·
fealonal fund-raisers to sup-
po~ and maintain this
resource. For more infonna·
tion, cell (949) 675--1700.
1111111 CIHIU Of
1111111 COlm .
Tbe s-forinlog arts organiz4·
tion needl volunteen for
c:omputar tnput, ticketing, fil.
~ and bendling pboael. Por
IDON lnfonnetiOn. cell (714)
556-Q62.
•11111011 c1m1
Sa1urday, Ociober 21, 2000 AS
Undernourished? Interj aith Shelter puts FOCIS on dining
Friends of the Orange
Coast Interfaith Shelter
-also known as FOCIS
-will bolds its ninth annual
·FOCIS on Dining• gourmet
dinner series starting Nov. 13
and running through April 9,
2001. Guests will enjoy spe-
cially prepared full-course
dinners at five award-win-
ning restaurants: Gustav
Anders, Five Crowns, The
Ritz, Pascal and Scott's
Seafood.
"This year, Hans Prager,
owner of The Ritz in Newport
Center, has given FOCIS his w
whole restaurant on a Sunday
so we won't have to turn any-
one away this year,• said
event chairwoman Natalie
Mandel.
According to Mandel, an
underwriter subscription, at
$700 per person, indudes
dining at all five restaurants.
Individual dining events may
be purchased separately at
$100 per person. The series,
which sells out quickly every
year, is the shelter's largest
fund-raiser.
Last year, the shelter pro-
vided 32,000 beds and 80,000
meals to more than 1,800
homeless people at a cost of
less than $15 per day, per
person, said FOCIS president
Freda Warrington.
·111e Orange Coast Inter-
faith Shelter's temporary pro-
gram is a model for others
nationwide in helping home-
less families become sell-sup-
porting, • she said.
For reservations for the
dinner series, call Leslie
Miller at (949) 645-5055.
Jim de Boom
COMMUNITY & CLUBS
GENDER BARRIER BRO-
KEN: The Newport Harbor-
Costa Mesa Lions Club, a.k.a.
Harbor-Mesa Lions, recently
welcomed a new member. At
the October general meeting,
Tom Mazzone of Costa Mesa
was inducted into the former-
ly all-women Lions Club. Past
governor of District 4-lA
Mike Scheafer officiated and
president Darlene Shelley
presented Mazzone with his
membership package and a
gift. Members have
expressed they would wel-
come a male joining. as long
as he was brave enough.
Mazzone, apparently, stood
up to the challenge.
DONATIONS MADE:
Costa Mesa Kiwanis Club
president Joe Panarisi and
member Charlie Markel at a
recent luncheon presented
checks totaling $4,000 to rep·
resentatives of the Harbor
Area Boys Oub; Orange
Coast YMCA; Habitat for
Humanity; Estancia High
School boys' and girls' athlet-
ics; Girls Inc.; Girl Scouts;
Costa Mesa Senior Cenleri
,,. and Vanguard University. The
donations were from the
club's annual fund-raising
activ,ities, including the
Orange County all-star bas-
ketball game and the pan-
cake break.fast.
VIVA LAS VEGAS: The
Harbor-Mesa Lions will hold
their annual casino night,
"Viva Las Vegas." on Nov. 17
at the Costa Mesa Neighbor-
hood Community Center. The
event will raise funds for the
Lions Sight and Hearing
Foundation, which provides
the mobile equipment and
van to conduct sight and
bearing tests for local school-
children. Tickets for the event
are $25 per person and
indude a Mexican buffet dul-
ner, live entertainment, $100
in playing chips and a chance
to win two nights in Las
Vegas. The event will run
from 7 to 11 p.m. Tickets may
be purchased from any Har-
bor-Mesa member or by call-
ing (714) 962-0265. A limited
number of tickets will be sold
at the door that evening. For
more information, or if you
are interested in donating to
the fund-raise r, call Barbara
Hayward at (714) 545-6126 or
Marianne Allen at (714) 534-
3791.
HELPING HANDS: Ray
Stewart of the Costa Mesa
Kiwanis Club notes that
through the Adopt A Sooal
Worker progra'1, the club
helped a singll father with a
3-year-old child. The man
bad lost his job and the Ki~
nis provided him with Mobil
gasoline vouchers and gro-
cery store gift certificates. The
club also helped a single
mother who is pregnant with
another child by paying for
child care.
WOR'IH REPEATING:
From Greg Kelley, president
of the Newport Mesa Irvine
Interfaith Council -"The
biggest room in the world is
the room for improvement•
TiilS WEEK'S SERVICE
CLUB MEETINGS: Want to
get more involved in your
community, make new
friends, network, or give
something back to your com-
munity? 1i"y a service dub!
You are invited to attend a
dub meeting this coming
week. Many dubs will buy
your first guest meal for you.
TUESDAY
7:15 a.m. -The Newport
Beach ~unrise Rotary Club
meets at the Balboa Bay Club
to hear Bridgette Llndquest of
the Newport Beach Confer-
ence & Visitors Bureau.
WEDNESDAY
7:15 a.m. -The South
Coast Metro Rotary Club will
meet dt the Center Club; the
Newport Harbor Kiwanis
Club meets al the University
Athletic Club.
Noon -The Orange
Coast Exchange Oub meets
at the Bahia Corinthian Yacht
Club to hear Ray Guna relate
LIDO PEntn\ULA RE\ORT
AE\IDEnT IAL VI LLAGC
The Bay From Your Balcony
his experienc:es as a member
of an Indy Car pit crew.
6 p.m. -The Newport-
Balboa Rotary Club meets the
Bahia Corinthian Yacht Club
to hear Superior Court Judge
Geoffrey Glass on the Harbor
Justice Center's new drug
court program.
THURSDAY
7:15 a.m. -The Costa
Mesa Orange Coast Breakfast
lions Club meets at Mimi's
Cafe for a business meeting.
Noon -The Kiwanis Club
· of Costa Mesa meets at the
Holiday Inn to see Bruce
Coye present a slide show
titled • 30-year tour of the
Sierras.•; the Newport Beacb-
Corona del Mar Kiwanis Club
meets at the Balua Corinthian
Yacht Club: the Exchange
Club of Newport Harbor
meets at the Riverboat
Restaurant to hear James
Sievers speak on ·An Ameri-
can in Love wtth His Coun-
try.·; the Newport Irvine
Rotary Club meets at the
Lrvme Mamott Hotel.
6:30 p.m. -The Zonta
Club of Newport Harbor will
meet at the Clubhouse in
Costa Mesa to hear Sal Tor-
res, volunteer coordinator of
Friends In Service for
Humanity.
• COMMUNITY & CLUBS is pub-
lished every Saturday 1n the Daily
Pilot. Send your service club's
meeting information by Fax to
(949) 660-8667, e-mail to jde-
boomOaof.com or by mail to 2082
S.E. Bristol, Suite 201, Newport
Beach 92660-17 40.
Waterfront homes with sperlacular views in a resort village with a large swimming pool/spa, clubhouse and private beach.
These luxury homes feature 2 Bedrooms, 2.5 Baths, vaulted ceilings, a family room w/.fireplace, 3 patios/decks, and an
attached garage. Priced frmn $348, 800 exclusive of land kase.
Also available 2 large bedrooms, 2+ baths from 998 aq. fl to 1460 sq. fl Built-in appliances
including washer and dr)'Cr, and a aelcct few with an attaehcd garage. Channing
manufactured cottages with very ~ng architecture. There are no ll!IOciation dues.
Priced~= $145,000*
•tnctuslve of the actual home only and not the lend lease. land lease prices start at $1 ,225 per monft
Lido Resort Homes
Lido Plninsula
14 Anchorage Way
Newport Beach, CA 92663
949.673.6623 tco111:i::.: ..... -..... UllD.praed•' , ... •Ill# lllDdlllltUdDMDM•-.111.•• .. ~ -~ ........ ,..... .... 1-111• ..... . ....... .. ...... 1111 ......... 14 ...
r .. 1ct00-.·•e Ciiilltii._llli .... 1111•••-.•
A6 Sotvrdoy, October 21, 2000
TEACHER
CONTINUED FROM A 1
special education services
for kids that don't perform as
well in school as tests indi-
cate they should.
Though her students are
third-graderi, many of them
have difficulty with basic
reading skills, or are in other
ways not as advanced as
most kids their age.
When recess is over, the
afternoon exercises proceed
in the way they often do in
Balen's class: at a slow pace,
making small moves toward
comprehension.
She leads a unit on punc-
tuation, helping the kids
understand when to use a
period and when to use a
question mark.
What's not immediately
evident from watching
Balen, but what becomes
clear upon speaking with
her, is the satisfaction she
finds in her work. She has a
reason, one that goes deep,
for connecting with the
labor of special education.
Balen's son, David, bas
cerebral palsy. The condi·
tion affects the way he
walks, and it has also caused
him to have learning disabil-
ities.
That hasn't stopped
David.from living a rich life:
he's now 19 years old and a
freshman at Santa Ana Col-
lege.
When David was born, it
changed the way Salen
thought about her connec·
tion to her work. She didn't
start out working in special
education.
"When 1 was initially a
teacher, it wasn't a field that
I was acquainted with,• she
said.
~~· tiieJ\rt Handcraftmanship
1fif{l ~ SQUARE
Event Information
Some Examples •••
. . . . .
~ ..
.~ ..... . "· . ~· : ... ,..
But the process of raising
her son gave Salen an
empathy for the disabled -
something that remains
powerful in her.
·niat's really where my
heart ended up being.~ she
said.
Lynda Vall Kuren,
spokeswoman for the Coun-
cil for Exceptional Children,
a professional association for
special educators, said
Balen's experience is a com-
mon one.
"She's not that unusual,H
Van Kuren said. •Many,
many times (teachers who
work with the disabled)
have had direct contact"
with disabilities in their own
lives.
The challenges of teach-
ing special education can be
daunting, Van Kwen said.
And it's the people who are
best able to relate to the
experience of the disabled
who find it most rewarding.
•Quite honestly, special
education can be very frus·
trating because the kids'
progress is so slow," she
said.
But teachers learn to take
satisfaction in giving of
themselves and in witness·
ing the minor triumphs of
the school day, she said.
"It's the little things: Van
Kuren said. "It's the little,
teeny baby steps that make
a difference.•
ln her punctuation lesson,
Balen k~ps it simple.
"Whenever somebody
asks a question,• she tells
the class, "their voice is
going to go up a little bit at
the end."
Some of the students are
clearly getting it, and
they're straining forward in
their seats. One boy seems
bored, distracted and fid-
gety. Balen works to bring
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'"~·-=-•·r.~ .,, I , . ~ . . .... .,, . • : .... ,.... • I ... ':.·~ .... -~· ~~ • ": ~·..': 1'-.... .\•.a.
them all along, pushing
them gently through the
idea. . Reaching these students
and making sure their
schoollDg is meaningful can
be difficult, Balen said, but
she doesn't think it's that
complex.
And it's not that different
from the way she would
treat her own son: the
teacher simply needs to
believe that the child bas
the capacity to learn. and
that the teacher can help
that learning take place.
•The rewards far out-
weigh the frustration.· she
said.
•Number one, I love the
children. And number two, I
just delight and l?ke a ~eat
thrill in every little bit of
progress they make."
Doily Pilot
ROB
CONTINUED FROM A1
men, who were believed to
be black and in their 20s
wore nylon ski masks'.
Police soid one man was
about 6 feet tall, weighed
170 pounds and was wear-
ing a gray, hooded sweat-
shirt and blue jeans. The
other man was described as
6 feet, 2 inches tall and
weighing 175 pounds. He
was wearing a multicolored
pullover sweater and blue
jeans.
Anyone who may have
seen the suspects or wit-
nessed the crime is asked to
call the Costa Mesa Poltce
Department at (714) 754 -
5206.
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..
Doily Pilot Soturdoy, October 21, 2000 A 7
Plant bulbs now for holiday fragrance
I f you covet the fresh fragran~e
and charm of forced bulbs, its
time to get busy. A little effort
now goes a long way when the
holidays roll around and you're
frantic to deck the halls.
Forced amaryllis and paper-
white bulbs are a welcome addi-
tion to any room, and if you start
now and continue to plant new
bulbs every two weeks until the
middle of November, you will be
sure to have Thanksgiving
through New Year's Eve covered
with beautiful, fragrant and magi-
cal blooms.
The selection of amaryllis bulbs
has grown as big as the flowers
themselves. There are new vari-
eties being hybridized every year,
and the choice of colors and bicol-
ors is breathtaking.
If you want to start your holi-
day bulb planting today, go for an
apricot variety of amaryllis Rilona.
These peach and apricot rippled
blooms would be a magnificent
addition to the Thanksgiving
table. If you want to capture the
color of sunset, try Nagano, with
its burnt-orange hues, or
Charmeur, a miniature that has
bright orange blooms with a white
throat.
Head into the holidays with a
selection of bulbs for every occa-
sion. Do you like the classic
whites? Christmas Gift bas pure
white flowers that measure 6 to 8
inches across. It's a present that
opens itself.
Green Goddess is a miniature
Karen Wight
NO PlACE LIKE HOME
variety that has ruffled white and
chartreuse flowers. Even the
miniature versions have giant
blooms up to 7 inches across. If
you like the look of a double
flower, White Peacock bas a
feath~ry. tropical look with a
green tinge in the center.
Do you long for color? Go for
the classic and flamboyant Red
Lion variety. Each stem has four
or five bright red blooms that
measure 4 inches across on top of
a long, sturdy stem. These bulbs
are impressive.
If you like candy canes, Danc-
ing Queen may satisfy your sweet
tooth. These red and white striped
blooms are unusual and regal.
Arose is a double amaryllis variety
that looks like an old-fashioned
rose with double-petaled red
flowers with white throats. The
hlossoms a.re 8 inches wid' and
the stems are 20 inches tall. Wow.
If unusual appeals to you, try
the miniature variety Papillo.
Each stem has three to five bur-
gundy and chartreuse blooms. It
almost has an orchid quality with
its unusual colors. My favorite
exotic is Emerald. The starry
petals are narrow. and dramatic.
The cerise, bright green and
white markings put an interesting
tweak on the traditional holiday
colors.
Amaryllis are great in pots with
soil, but they can also be forced in
water, just like paperwhites.
Choose a dish, vase or bowl with-
out a hole in the bottom. Forced
bulbs don't need a fancy contain-
er; the flowers speak for them-
selves. Any ceramic or glass dish
will do. Looking for something to
do with an old fishbowl? Bulbs.
Old florist. vases that never get
used again? Bulbs. Mismatched
bowls from grandma's estate?
Bulbs.
Fill the container with pea
gravel, marbles, sea glass, small
shells or glass beads. Set the
bulbs on top, gently press into
place and fill the container with
water until it reaches the base of
the bulb. Place in indirect sun-
light, keep the roots covered with
water, and you will have weeks
worth of beautiful blooms.
Live flowers are a beautiful
way to decorate your home for the
holidays. A little time well spent
will pay off m spades.
• KAREN WIGHT is a Newport Beach resi-
dent. Her column runs Saturdays.
AT RIGHT: This Red Lion amaryllis is a dramatic addition to any room in your home for the holidays.
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California Roll and 4 pieces of Spicy Tuna Roll 8 pcs. ""ss.e .
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A8 Saturday, October 21, 2000
DISCLOSURE
CONTINUED FROM A 1
tures, distributes, sells or
purchases products or ser-
vices on a regular basis. ...
has an interest in real prop-
erty ... [or) has an office or
sales outlet in the jurisdic-
tion,• according to filing
instructions from the Pair
Political Practices Commis-
sion.
Even if a company plans
to do any of the above or has
done any of the above with-
in the last two years, oUicials
are required to disclose their
investments in those compa-
nies.
Planning Commission
. . .
cbaifman Edward Sellcb,
who only disclosed bis
investment in Conexant,
said there was no easy way
to check out the business
involvements of every com-
pany in the city.
•1 made a reasonable
determination,• be said,
adding that he would not
have a problem disclosing
all of his stock investments.
He listed an international
cable company, an agricul-
tural company and a Japan-
ese index fund as examples
of companies in which he
had invested.
The dty attorney's office
plans to investigate whether
Selich violated conflict of
interest rules by participat-
ing in a commission discus-
sion on Conexant's 566,000-
square-foot expansion pro-
posal. Sellcb said he had not
been aware that be sWI
owned the Conexant stock
at the time the discussions
took place. 1
Along with Councilmen
Gary Adams and Tod Ridge-
way and Planning Commis-
sioner Larry Tucker, Sellch
also participated in negotia-
tions for a developers' agree-
ment with Conexant.
Adams and Ridgeway
each own stock in the com-
pany. No decision has been
made on the expansion pro-
ject and company officials
have withdrawn.the propos-
al fro111 the city's calendar for
unrelated reasons.
Word of tbe Conexant
ANTIQUE ROW & GARDEN CAFE
"N~Ur\iq~Shcp~{ill,e,(Lw{tj\, T~(oy yow-H~"
Fiu Home F11mi1lring1
Antiq11t1 & Colltdiblt1
Tr•tlition11l to Cott11gt
Gift1 & G11rdtn Dtcor
Wish List & Dtlit1try
Gc:wdetv Cafe;
<Ardm P11tio Dining
BreU/tUI, LuncJr,
Tu & Espmso Bar
Cafe HccM* Tia.fr(, S.~
BG. ; Sun.~ s.m-
•01scover the Row, a wond11rful
Shopping and Dining ad~ntum"
C11ntllt1 to Cluurtltlitn
Uutl & R11rt Boob
C111tom PictMn Framing
Fumihlrt Rtstor11tion
anti mi.cir mo rt!
949 722·1177
130 !tit 17tlt Slrttl
Com Miu, CA
(lkhind ll11rp Inn)
I t
stock ownership prompted
supporters of slow-growth
Mee.sure S on Friday to ask
Adams, Ridgeway, SeUch
and Councilman Dennis
O'Neil to fully discloae their
investments in the company
•at a time when you may
have been involved in some
capacity in processing the
proposed ... development.•
Although O'Neil said he
owned more than $100,000
wor;th of Conexant stock
during the last year, he did
not have any direct involve-
ment in the negotiatlons1 the
project never came before
the City Council.
Measure S, the so-called
Greenllght initiative, pro-
poses to put before a city-
wide vote any development
that allows an increase of
more than 100 peak-hour car
trips or dwelling units or
40,000 square feet over the
E N I>
f ntlitlf
1r
general plan allowance. The
Conexant proposal was one
project highlighted by
Greenllgbt supporters.
Pair Political Practices
Commission officials said
they advise those filling out
disclosure forms to check
with each company to find
out if it did any business in
their jurisdiction.
•A lot of times, that's usu-
ally one phone call,• said
one commission official,
adding that the commission
usually asks individuals to
file amendments to their
statements if it discovers that
an investment had not been
disclosed.
Mayor John Noyes, who
said he does not own any
stock, said disclosing all
investments seemed like the
right thing to do.
"If you are going to do a
financial disclosure, I'd think
s s
fEATURtNa WESTERN FAVORITES
-Menu Sampler -
F1ltt Mtpon lrochcttt with Bac:on.
Onion and PtpptH with Oran9c-Rotunary Glase
'Campftrc' Ra1nbow Trout with
Honey Mutard Glasc and Cnmc:hy Pcc:an Crut I ·
pplt Wood Smoked Bac:on Wrap~ Shrimp Skcwft
with Allc:ho-Boncy Gluc
Slow-c:ookcd Baby Back i1b• 9lucd
with our Snakebite BBQ Sauc:c
fl•.95
lndudft dlok'e of any Soup or Organic Grttn Salad ,.
All entrea wntd with fifth Com on the Cob, Paptya Slaw '
and choke of Cheddar Potatoes. Herb Fries or Mashed Poaitoes
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For a limited time, you
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Mission Style fumiJure,
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grain oak in the dark
walnut finish.
These are lowest prices ever offered
. . ..
Doily Pilot
you should dlsclose every-
thing,• he said. •Not just
(those companies) llmlted lo
your juri5dk:tioD. •
Councilman Dennis
O'Neil listed more than
$100,000 worth of Conexant
shares in his 1999 statement
and said he has since sold
that stock. While he correct-
ed an earlier statement to
the Dally Pilot that he had
lost money on Conexant,
acknowledging that he
•may have made some prof-
it" on the stock, he said he
has since lost money after
investing his Conexant earn-
ings in a technology compa-
ny based in Northern Cali-
fornia.
O'Neil said be owns stock
in many other companies,
such as Cisco Systems, AOL,
Microsoft, Hewlett Packard
and Texas Instruments. He
added that he had failed to
disclose his invesbnents in
those companies because he
believed he was required
only to disclose interests in
companies located in Ne'<l-
port Beach.
"If I'm wrong, I'll list
them,• he said, adding that
he would check into the
matter. "If it's appropriate,
I'll amend the last statement
and will list all the stocks
that I have. I certainly won't
mind doing that. I'm in pub-
lic office.•
by Munro's for Mission style furniture.
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Doity Pilot So1vrdoy, October 21, 2000 A9 -1;
1:FULL ·
DISCLOSURE
businm In 1he city. (Thomson is
running fof rftlection in District
7)
CIH COUNCIL
CANDIDATES
GREEN involvement and corporate
backing with everything·
they do, he said.
her name only as ·chin-
chilla.·
The anarchists had been '
speaking to attendees for
only a few minutes before
police offtcers arrived and
ordered them to disperse.
A list of~ Bffch city
o~ls •nd councn andlda~
•nd the ffMnclal ln~ts
they h•'le disclo.s«J:
~·CllY COUNCIL
• Gmy Admnc lists eight stocks,
says he owns no at.hen.
• Jlln Deblly: lists no stocks, says
she owns none.
• NomNI Glover: lists one mutu-
al fund and a limited partnership.
• johrt Noyes: lists no stocks,
says he owns none.
• Dennis O'Neil: lists more than
$100,000 worth of Conexant
stock that he sold earlier this
year: ... has not listed stock he
owns In other companies, but
says he'll consider amending his
statement.
• 'RMllUdgew 91---,.~y: lists 35 stocks,
says he owns no others.
• lbm 1hoi1w does not list
M'fll stoOO; says he owns some
stock in a retirement fund, but
none of those companies do
PWllllllG COMMISSIOll
• ShMt ~says he has
Investments onty in mutual
funds.
• Anne Gifford: lists 27 stocks.
• Stwen Kher: lists no stocks,
but says he owns some and will
amend his statement.
• Mld\aet Knnzley. lists five
stocks, says he owns no others.
• Earl Md>m\let: lists no stocks,
but says he owns 268 shares of
Bank of America stodc; says he
decided against listing them
after checking with the city
attorney's office.
• Edwlll'd Sel~: lists 301
shares of Conex.ant stodc; also
owns stock in other companies,
but says he did not believe
those companies do business in
Newport Beach.
• LMry 1\ldcer: lists no stocks,
says he owns none. Lists four
real estate limited partnerships
and one equity shareholding at
Big Canyon Country Club.
W'e're Bursting With Quality
Furnitu.re at Great Savings!
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(949) 646-1822
670 W. 17th St., #02 • <:osta Mesa ~-'-..._ _ _... .... -...._,
Htnm: Mon.-Fri. ll11111 -4pm
DISTRICT2
• Dennis Lahey: lists no stocks,
says he owns none.
• Stwen ltourwky. lists no
stocks, says he owns none.
• Gmy ProdlDr. lists 55 stocks.
DISTRICT 5
• htrlda 9Mk: lists no stocks,
but says she owns Nieman Mar-
cus stock.
• St.we •ar-0t-mbet.-rg:-lists no
stocks. but says he owns 1,200
shares of Disney stock and plans
to amend his statement.
• Robert 5dM>or;inyker: lists
no stocks, says he owns none.
DISTRICT7
• John ttett.m.n: lists 36
stocks, a pension trust and inter-
est in a company; says his
nephew manages an account
fOf him that includes 150 shares
of Conexant stock. Adds that he
will submit an amendment.
• Bob Wynn: lists 78 stocks,
says he owns no others.
CONTINUED FROM A 1
dents Susan Pallotta and Bri-
an Reynolds, who had made
the trip to see Nader with a
group of Newport-Mesa res-
idents.
Pallotta, ll business devel-
opment manager for a soft-
ware company, said she
planned to vote for Nader in
November, having grown
disillusioned with the
options offered by main-
stream candidates. She said
she didn't buy the argument
that supporting third-party
candidates amounted lo
wasting a vote .
"Voting out of fear, voting
to keep somebody else out
of office -to me, that's
wasting a vote,· she said.
And voting for either of
the two ma1or parties 1s a
waste, Reynolds said.
"There's corporate
Friday's event also fea-
tured a speech from Green
Party U.S. Senate canclldate
Medea Benjamin, who
called for a higher mirumum
wage, reforms m interna-
tional trade policies and
massive defense cuts.
·1 think one of the big
surprises come Nov. 7 is
going to be Orange County
going Green," Benjamin
told the crowd.
Not everyone 10 atten-
dance was m love with the
party line.
Student demonstrators,
calling themselves anar-
chists, set up outside th e
auditonum to protest what
they called the authoritanan
nature of Green Party poli-
tics.
"We're against all author-
ity. even if it's fuzzy Green
Party authority,• said one
young woman, who gave
Inside the auditorium,
however, audience and can-
didates seemed to agree on
a great deal.
Nader dismissed Gore as
an environmental fraud and
hammered Bush for his ties
to big business.
"[Bush is) nothing more
than a giant corporation run-
ning for president disguised
as a human being,• he said.
Wouldn't the prospect of
having such a character as
president encourage Pallotta
to vote for Gore? Not any-
gtore, she said.
•Election after election,
people say 'I don't want to
waste my vote,' •she said. "I
find the monopoly of power
of these two parttes more
fnghtening. •
~ T1wllll<G • ~· ~ • Y(l(l.11 • STR'6Tll CIA'!KS • Srff"l"G • T""""'°
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WESTCUFF PLAZA
Irvine Ave & 17th St.
~rt Beach
S'4ff-Ue CORONA DEL MAR
2101 E. Paaflc Coast Hwy.
PCH & Avocado Ave
(949) 631-3623 FITNESS CENTER
949) 760-9335
YAf~B'l1 SIJlll11 .. tJS
llJlllKINC-I~CJ'l1 SAl~I~
Buy direct from wealthy boat owners their surplus boat gear.
Fishing tackle , rubber boats, outboard motors, sails, rigging,
winches, anchors, rope, marine radios and electronics, charts,
portlights, sextants, nautical decor, hatches and tons of marine
hardware. All at "blow-out" prices!!
If you don't find what you want in the parking lot, come into
Minney's store and take 1 So/o off his everyday bargain prices.
Huge shipment of ship models, and nautical decor just arrived.
Do your Ch'ristmas shopping early!!!
If you like this event, show your thanks by doing business With
the merchants on N~n Blvd. lt would not be possible
without their wonderful cooperation. Etinc Mi~
•
•
•
.,
\ \ \
" '
' When something's brewing in town, we read about it first tn the Daily Pilot.
We love to drink in all the local news, high school sports and dining reviews.
The Daily Pilot is the best community newspaper -bar none.
'
Got the Pilot?
Ce11 (800) LATIMES to IUblcrtbe •Cell (949) 642--4321 to adYer1IM
" I
. I
Doily Pilot
Around
TOWN
• Send MOUND TOWN items to
the Dally Pilot. 330 W. Bay St., Cos-
ta Mesa, CA 92627; by fax to (949)
646-4170; or by calling (949) 574-
4268. Include the time, date and
• location of the event. as well as a
contact phone number. A complete
' listing is available at
, http://www.dallypllot.com.
TODAY
A three-hour workshop
designed to show property
management piUalls will be
offered by Orange Coast Col-
lege's Community Education
Office from 9:30 a.m. to 12:30
p.m. in Room 103 of OCC's
Social Science Department,
2701 Fairview Road, Costa
Mesa. $49, plus a $5 materiaJs
fee. The workshop is titled
DRUGS
CONTINUED FR<(M A 1
The video WdS about a boy
named Randy who died from
mixing cocaine and alcohol.
; That combinat.Jon can cause
the brain to begin mstructing
the body's org<1ns to shut
down
It wds just one> of several
graphic slides, videos dnd
descriptions depicting the
reality of drug USC'
• 1 thought 11 was interest-
ing and really kind of surpns-
ing with the stuff they were
talking about. whdt it could do
to you,• said Jacque Steve. 11.
Families dlso heard one
•Landlord Survival lfaining."
(714) 432-5880.
Deborah Newquist. director
of Senior Care Resources in
Newport Beach, will present
a workshop at 9 a.m. about
different types of care facili-
ties that are licensed to pro-
vide care away from home in
Orange County. The event
will be held at the Edwards
Big Newport Theater, 300
Newport Center Drive, New-
port Beach. (800) 660-1993,
Ext. 240.
A three-session workshop
teaching the techniques or the
voice-over business will be
offered from 9 a.m. to noon
Saturdays, beginning today
through Nov. 4, al Orange
Coast College's Business Edu-
cation Department, Room 103,
2701 Fairview Road, Costa
Mesa. $95. (714) 432-5880.
woman's horror story of
watctung her son die of hero-
in abuse.
Judy Davis told the stu-
dents about the death of her
son, Bobby, with the hope
that sharing her heartbreak-
ing story will prevent others
from experiencing it them-
selves.
"That was so sad, her sto-
ry,· sdld Sharon Stewart, who
has two daughters, one at
Kaiser and another at New-
port Hdrbor High School.
"But I guess that was the
point. H
Stewart had planned on
attending the talk with her
daughter, Melissa, a sixth-
grader at Kaiser, where they
promoted the evening's
"Planting a Color Succulent
Bowl,• an early morning pro-
gram about growing succu-
lents in containers, will be
held at 9:30 a.m. at Sherman
Library & Gardens in Corona
del Mar, 2647 East Coast
Highway. Free. (949) 673-
2261.
The annual fall European
Street Pair will be held from
10 a.m. to 4 p.m. in Cannery
Village at 31st Street and
Newport Boulevard, Newport
Beach. Participan~s include
art galleries and antique
shops. (949) 675--0851.·
Parents of cblldren ln first
through sixth grades are invit-
ed to "Tools & nicks for Par-
ents,• a tree Internet work~
shop at 10 a.m. in the New-
port Beach Central Library's
Friends Meeting Room, 1000
Avocado Ave. (949) 717-3801.
events.
But when she heard the
reason for bringing the talk to
the younger students -that
students at Newport Harbor
High said the lecture was too
late for them -she dragged
her 14-year-old along, too.
The third portion of the
evening gave audience mem-
bers a break from the shock
factor and attempted to offer
some solutions.
Bill Serry, a family coun-
selor who also addresses spe-
cial needs and drug problems
at Corona del Mar High
School, spoke about the emo-
tional effects of drugs. He
explained to the students that
it's normal lo feel down some-
times.
Sorurdoy, Oc1obet 21, 2000 Al 1
A 12 Sotvrdoy, October 21, 2000
. . . ~nn · · · ~IE'IY ' ' . '
Doily Pilot
Cekbrities make fat stops in Newport Beach
C elebrity spies are
reporting a large influx
of the famous aowd
dining at Roy's, Fashion
Island. 1bl.s past week alone,
Wllllam Sbatner (Mr. Price-
line.com) bought a Roy's
cookbook following dinner.
Shatner did not make an offer
for the book, he paid the
requested price.
Football legend Joe Mon-
tana confabbed with his agent
over a bottle of the prized
Duckhorn '98 merlot while
Seattle Mariners' shortstop
Alex Rodriguez (known as A-
Rod) also did some agent
schmoozing in Newport
Beach. Thanks to our very
own local sports agent mega-
star Leigh Steinberg, the
Orange Coast has become a
mecca for the athletic set in
search of career advancement.
And speaking of sports
stars, our very own tennis star
Und.say Davenport was spot-
ted dining out with friends.
THE CROWD
Davenport is a regular at
Roy's.
Mr. Romance himself, Julio
Igelesias was in town last
week and dined there with a
party of five guests, including
two very beautiful women
whose identities were not
revealed. The restaurant sent
over a large plate consisting
of lobster, pot stickers, butter-
fish, and Cantonese style BBQ
baby back ribs for the Igelsias
0croBER 21, 2000
(SATURDAY) 10:00AM-8:00PM
NEWPORT HIGASHI
BUDDHIST TEMPLE
254 VICTORIA ST.
(A.cross from Arnuuong Nursery)
I>t2doNsnwJot§ ExH(BITS
• Flowa-Amngcmcnt
•Tea Ceremony
• Bons;U
• Aik.ido
• Tailco (Orum)
• JapanCK Calligraphy
Japannc IOod • -a.bl. .JI day.
• Bonsai
• Japanese DoU
• Calligraphy
• Buddhist Ankles
Tcmplt TOW"t will be ,,_;dtd dt~ ~day by ltnaaid Hiroqwn,,
RA~ will be hdcl on Sew.My, Ocda 21, • 5<00 pn in~ Hal.
Gnncl Ptix: Aomd 1iip 10 Jlf-t b T-
with your next
dinner.
Mouth-watering entrees, a rel axed
dining acmosphcrc and patio
seating with a dclighcful view of
Newport Bay make for a refreshing break in your day.
Open from 7:00 AM, 7 days a week.
(949) 729-1144
DINNER THURSDAY -SUNDAY ----------------------------------------------· EARLY BIRD SPECIAL
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gathering, all served with
sake. Waiters reported bear-
ing singing coming from the
parking valet station later in
the evening.
Now if that's not enough
celebrity for you, wait until
you hear this one. The televi-
sion show "Blind Date,• a
2000 version of the "Dattng
Game," only decidedly more
"in your face," sent a young
couple on a Newport date
that began with, what else, a
water bike ride on the bay.
Isn't that the perfect way to
start a relationship?
Marina Water Sports pro-
vided the transportation, and
apparently the kids bad a
blast. Then. presumably fol-
lowing a change of dothing, it
was off to Roy's for dinner on
the lanai. with the best of the
\)'ine list and four courses of
Polynesian perfection. This
was followed by a nightcap at
Muldoon's Pub, also in Fash-
ion Island. The show will air 6
p.m. Oct. 27 on the UPN Net-
work, locally KCOP-TV
Channel 13.
On a much more serious
note, the Cystic Fibrosis Foun-
Sold 7ea4 'Pati.6 9~
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(comer o( McCllniock It Lopn)
(714) 544-7288
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AT LEn: Bmur Wallerich,
left. Lynn McAJlister, Pascal
Olball and Laura Lee Smith
at the home tour.
IELOW: Megan Kanobky,
Antonio Cagnolo and Carol
Kanofsky at ~ Doloo Vita.
dation of Orange County
raised $106,000 at the recent
•La. Dolce Vita• event staged
at Antonello Ristorante, South
Coast Plaza Villa~e.
The Sunday evening gath-
ering honored the Myron
Kanofsky family for their
valiant crusade against the
disease. The Kanofsky com-
mitment was born out of the
own tragic loss of their daugh-
ter, Sarah, to the dreaded cys-
tic fibrosis.
Organizers were thrilled to
report that the evening
brought in $40,000 more than
last year, with 300 supporters
giving of their time and pock-
etbook to make a difference
in honor of the Kanofskys,
under the leadership of event
organizer Karen Hall.
The ladies luncheon circuit
featured a spirited confab at
the new taf e Pascal under
the Bridge of the Gardens at
South Coast Plaza this past
week. It was the inaugural
luncheon for the donors, who
are giving their time, talent
and their homes -literally
their homes -for Corona del
Mar High School and Middle
School PTA Home Tour 2000
on Tuesday.
Event co-chair Lynn McAl-
lster joined fellow chair Lee
Sm.Ith and South Coast Plaza's
Billur Wallerich (my little
Turkish Tornado) to host the
luncheon. Six families will
open their doors to the curious
to raise funds for academic
enrichment across the board,
as well for such programs as
music and the arts in local
schools.
For last-minute information
or reservations, call Sherry
Hover at (949) 644-8027 or
Lynn McAlister at (949) 673-
4477. The Tuesday tour also
includes lunch provided by
Cafe Jardin at ShPnnan Gar-
dens, Corona del Mar.
• THE CROWD appears Thursdays
and Saturdays.
. '
Doily Pilot
Good, yet
uneven,
'Magnolias'
at Vanguard
By Tom Titus
I l aughter through tears,•
a sentiment expressed
by one of its characters, is the
overriding theme of ·Steel
Magnolias," Robert Harling's
chatty, comic and ultimately
poignant examination of suc
women bound by years of
THEATER
REVIEW
sisterhood in
the deep
South.
Titis all-
female serio-
comedy -so popular that
three versions are being
staged within a month in
Orange County -is given
an attractive, if slightly
uneven, rendition at Van-
guard University in Costa
Mesa.
Set in a home beauty shop
in the small town of Chin-
quapin, La., "Steel Magno-
lias" sets up its audience
with colorful, comic conver-
sation, intertwining the lives
of the women who frequent
the salon while buildlng to a
wrenching final scene. Har-
ling's characters are fleshed
out by the incessant small
talk in which they engage.
The Vanguard production
has a number of strengths
that offset its few weakness-
es. Southern dialects are
mixed, occasionally rushed,
but the camaraderie among
the characters is genuine.
The centerpiece of the
show is Christa Jenewein's
eminently likable Truvy, the
beauty shop operator who
brings a welcome element of
warmth and humor to her
assignment. Jenewein also
has some of the play's funni·
est lines, to go along with the
best down-home dialect of
the cast.
Director Susan K. Berkom-
pas -who was obliged to
step into the role of M'Lynn,
the concerned mother of the
bride, on just a week's notice
-is particularly impressive.
Berkompas, who also chairs
the university's drama pro-
gram, exudes an understated
strength in extremely difficult
circumstances that virtually
anchors -the production.
Kristina Vesna Kuz.m.ic,
the pretty-in-pink, back~talk
ing bride, renders her char-
acter with a feisty indepen-
dence and spirited demeanor
that masks a physical weak-
ness, diabetes, which stands
SEE MAGNOLIA PAGE A16 .
,.
.
Next WEEK
Angelika Nemeth and her Middle Eastern dance
troupe will perform a program of exotic dance at
7 p.m. Thursday at the Newport Beach Central
Library's Friends Meeting Room, 1000 Avocado
Ave. Free. (949) 717-3801
Saturday, October 21, 2000 Al3
•
JENN1FER TAY\.Oll / OAllY PILOT
Mike Cavinder and Katie Woodruff rehearse "Sure Thing," while director Jason Mutz, center back, and stage manager
James Sanderson look on. "Sure Thing" is one of the plays being performed during "Ten or Less."
• ang1ng •
OCC students write, direct and act in series of short -very short -plays
Young Chang
DAILY PILOT
I o 10 minutes, you can talk on
the phone, eat a salad, feed
your fish, clean your room,
wash the dishes, sing a a few
songs or drive 10 miles.
Or you can watch an entire play.
•Ten or Less,• an annual series of
six student-directed short plays,
each running 10 minutes in length
or less, will run for two weekends
through Oct. 29 at Orange Coast
College.
1Wo of the plays are written by
students from OCC's Repertory The-
ater Company. The other foUI were
penned by recognized playwrights.
Each production, like any full·
length play, will have a premise,
complications and an ending. It's
just a matter of how quickly these
elements are thrown out.
Hugh Goodearl, 23, wrote "Bus
Stop #2. • It's a 10-minute piece
about two strangers who meet at a
FYI
WHA~ "Ten or Less"
WHEN: 8 p.m. Fridays and Sat-
urdays, 2 and 7 p.m. Sundays,
through Oct. 29
WHERE: Orange Coast Col-
lege's Drama Lab Studio, 2701
Fairview Road, Costa Mesa
C~ $Sand $6
CALL: (714) 432-5640
bus stop. There is no padding to the
script. he said.
"It's just you have to get to every-
thing quickly,• he said. "You can't
really explore the characters in
depth and you can only introduce
them and then get them out of
there!
Goodearl doesn't prefer writing
shorter pieces over longer ones. But
he recognizes their differences.
The longer the story. the more
loose ends there are to tie up. The
shorter the piece, the easier those
tasks become. Longer plays allow
for more characters and character
development. Shorter works mean
introducing a character just 10 min-
utes before their exit.
Frank Miyashiro, who wntes both
long and short plays and IS directing
Goodearl's play, compares hls work
to a sculpture.
"You can say less with a shorter
play, so your sculpture's not going to
be as big,· he sa..id. "But 1t can still
be powerful.•
In wnting, Miyashiro says it's
harder to complete a 10-nunute play
than it 1s a two-hour play because
there is less time to make a point.
There is an arc, he says --the
characters, the mood and the turns
make up the curve.
"You gotta do the arc quicker,•
he said.
Risko Dokazanof, who is acting
and directing the sell-written play
"Everung Bench,• pref en; writing
something short.
"The short pieces connected
together make the longer piece," he
said.
Dokazanof, who graduated from
the National Academy of Cinema
and Theater in Bulgcma, ScUd hls
play IS more than five but less than
10 minutes long
Jeff Kemper who will appear m
"Evening Bench · and two other
plays, said shorter productJons are
more challengmg because he IS
forced to be more succinct
"You have to warm lthe audl-
ence) faster and you have to be real-
ly to the point,· he said.
As a chrector, Miyashiro under-
stands his actors' sentunents. But
working with Goodearl has been a
valuable expenence for hun. There
is only so much in the story he can
change without disrupting the
writer's intention, he said, and hls
job is only to add to the stage play.
"It's great that I've had Hugh
here, so I can ask him,• Miyashiro
said. "It's not like Shakespeare,
who's already dead •
Surfing the canvas
Glenn Martin's depictions of sand and surf come to Costa Mesa gallery
Young 0..ng
DAILY PILOT
I t's surprising Glenn Martin
doesn't have 59 words for
"blue.• The surf artist's paintings
show water and waves in infinite
shades of dark blue, light blue,
green plue, purple blue, black blue,
pink blue and, of course, baby blue.
friend Michael Ibey, president of
the Art Gallery International in Cos-
ta Mesa where Martin's work was
bung Friday, says a lot of people
paint waves. But Martin's make you
feel like you're inside.
Martin, who has been painting for
20 years, will exhibit more than 100
FYI
wttA~ Glenn Martin's art
WHEN: 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. today
and Sunday
WHERE: Art Gallery International,
1500 Adams Ave., Suite 104A,
Costa Mesa.
~Free
CAU: (714) 444-4427.
pieces this weekend. Surf legend
Jeff Hakman, whom Martin has
painted, will join Martin this week.-
end to sign. discuss and personalize
the works. The duo also will unveil
the artist's newest piece, •Hakman
at Honolulu.•
Each of Martin's unages mclude
some combination of water,
waves, surfboards, surfers, sand,
tropical Tahitian or Hawahan
scenes and boats.
"Glenn has lived in waves all bis
life,• Ibey said.
Martin. 51, still surfs strong
waters. He rode his first wave in
1961. While living in Hawaii in the
'10s, Martin befriended great surfers
like Butch Van Arslan, Kuno
Hollinger, Phil Braun and Jeff HU.-
man. who is also the founder of the
clothing label Qulkstl~er.
Though Martin has sailed 35,000
SEE SMRF MGE A1'
• •
A14 Saivrdoy, October 21. 2000
After
HOURS
• Send AfTIR HOURS items to the
Daily Pilot, 330 W. Bay St., Cosu
Mesa, CA 92627; fax to (949) 646-
4170 °'call (949) 574-4268. A com-
plete listing may be found at
http://www.dallypllot.com.
SPECIAL
HAUNfED HOUSE
Anderson Elementary School
will bold a haunted house and
pumpkin p;!tch fair from 11
a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday and
Sunday. There will be two
haunted houses -one for
young children and another
for the older kids -food.
drinks, game booths, bounce
houses and train rides Sµn-
day. $2. Andersen is at 1900
Port Seaboume Way, Newport
Beach. http://www.andersen
deans.org.
TASTE OF SANTORA
A Taste of Santora, a fund-
raiser for MOMS Resource
Center. will be held from 6 to
10 p.m. Saturday al the San-
tora Arts Builcling, 207 N.
Broadway, Santa Ana.
MOMS, dedicated to helping
low-income pregnant and
postpartum women, is active
in Costa Mesa, holding class-
es at Shalimar Leaming
Center and San Joaquin
Church. The event includes
food from area restaurants,
performances by magician
Johnny "Ace" Palme{ and
Pepe Serna, mus1c by Javier
Godinez and the Cantameri-
ca nio, and a silent auction
hosted by actor Tony Plana
of Showtime's "Resurrection
Blvd." $30, or $25 ln
advance. (714) 972-2610.
BIG MONEY
~e Shark Club will open
,_tJ\e doors to its Halloween
Party at 8 p.m. O<;t. 28 at 841
Baker St., Costa Mesa. Two
dance Ooors, four full bars,
12 pool tables, a 2,000-gallon
shark tank and a midnight
shark feeding are included
in the festivities. V1Sitors
must enter by 10:30 p.m. The
winner of the costume con-
test will receive $1,000. (7 14)
751-6428.
WARHOL MEMORABILIA
Ciao Restaurant and Cypress
Vmeyards will present an
exhibition and silent auction
of eight rare and original
screen prints signed and
numbered by Andy Warhol.
with a reception from 6 lo 8
p.m. Nov. 1 at the restaurant,
223 Marine Ave., Balboa
Island. Free. The exhibit will
run through Nov. 8. (949)
675-4070.
COUNTRY FAIR
The Prince of Peace Church
m-------------------------, 1 Calendar Shows
I Proudly Presents
I ANTIQUE SHOWS
The Costa Mesa
~ ~~1!~i3~~b1~~~0~o;!ell~~~~ptSof
Furniture, Gla~s. Silrier, Art, jewelry, f>nmit1ve., Americana a11d m11cl1 morr ..
EVERYTHING FROM TIN TO TIFFANYt 111
C_~CT. 27 -2 9
flM &las. Porcel•ln Miii R• R .. alr Awallallll at Dnr
Heurs: FRIDAY Ir SATURDAY 10-7PM •SUNDAY 10.5PM
NEWiii Calendar Antique SllOWs Is prouo 10 annoonoe that 1hey wlN be sponsoring a special antique and coOectible ldeotiflcalion booth al tllelr UC>Comlng Costa Mesa ~oe Show. The charge IO< lhla leMce wm be SS per Item
ORANGE COUNTY FAIRGROUNDS, COSTA MESA, CA
55 FREEWAY • EXIT AT FAIR DRIVE
U5 FREEWAY • EXR AT fAIRVIEW ROAD
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Offering U11irJtu Desif;'U To Enhance Any Decor.
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COMPLETE DESIGN SERVICE
C1utom Upholstery
Quality Home Furnishinp
Bali Imports
Custom Window Trtatmmll
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Custom Bedding d-ubk Linnu
Fine China d-Futwarr
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949. 515 • 1825
JtESTCUFFPL42.A • Jf>U /rvi,,,Aw., N_,,.,., &Mi
~ 10-6. s.,,, 12-j ...... , pHt 11#1/tlilM~
DA'tEBOOK Daily Pilot
WHAT'S HIPPEllll II ltucnc OUlll
Here ,. a aelectJon of eventa happen-
ing during the Eclectic Orange Felli·
val. For Uclrel in/ormaUon, ca1J {940)
553-2422.
Qnmge County P~ Arts Cen-
ter. 600 Town Center Drive, COlta
Mela. StS-996.
port Beac:b. 1be William Hall Malter
Chorale will perform the work on the
occasion °'" the 250th anniversary ot
Bach's death. $15-$40.
SATUlllY lllUllDAY IOV. 7
The NOR Symphony OR:beltra Ham·
burg wUl perform at 8 p.m. at the
Orange County Perfomdng Arts Center,
600 Town Center Drive, Colla Mete.
Ouistopb Escbenbecb wm Cooduct
M07.art's "Sinfonia Caocertante• and
Mahler's "Symphooy No. 1." St5-S.55:
naar llm 8altdiiSae Will padorm with
iu. Julhll Drllke at a p.m; m ....... Hall. Orange County Per-
fc;nalaa Am Oints, 6001bwn Genter
Drive, CoM Mela. MO.
Carl SL Clair will oonduct the Opero
Pocific in a colodul ~uctioo ol
Mazart's "lbe Magic flute• at 1:30 p.m.
at the Orange County Perfonnlng Arts
Center, 600 Town Ceoter Drive, Cost.a
Mesa. Performance times are 7:30 p.m.
Nov. 9·11 and 2 p.m. Nov. 12. $32-$107. OU.27
SUNDAY
A BBC Bach Documentary will saeen
at 2 and 3:30 p.m. at the Orange Coun·
ty Musewn of Art Auditorium, 850 San
Clemente Drive, Newport Beach. Ken·
nelh Branagb narrates the documen-
. tary, featuring excerpts from "B-minor
Mass" and "Goldberg Variations.•
Free with reservations. (949) 553-2422.
At 8 p.m.. Julio Boca's Ballet Algenti-
no Wtll perform wc>rb W Latin Amen-
can ~n. plus a new worlc
set to music by tango master Astor
Piazzola, at the Orange County Per-
fonninq Arts Center, 600 Town Center
Drive, Costa Mesa. There will also be .
performances at 2 and 8 p.m. Oct. 28
and 2 p.m. Oct. 29. $12-$68.
NOV. 9
The Borromeo String ·auartet will per·
form at 8 p.m. at the Orange County
Performing Arts Center, 600 Town
Center Drive, Costa Mesa. $36.
NOY. 10
"Failing Kansas,• ~e-opera by Mikel
Rouse, will be show at 8 p.m. Nov. 10-
11 in Founders Hall at the Orange
County Performing Arts Center, 600
Town Center Drive, Costa Mesa. $18.
ocr. 29
Bach's "Magnificat," a performance by
the John Alexander Singers and Musi-
ca Angelica, will begin at 7 p .ltt"1lt the
A Bach B-minor mass will be held at 4
p.m. at St. Andrew's Presbyterian
Church, 600 St. Andrews Road, New-
and School in Costa Mesa
will host its annual Country
Day Fair beginning at 10
a.m. Nov. 4 at the school,
2987 Mesa Verde Drive East.
Free. (714) 641-0990.
SPACE AND MEMORY
Orange Coast College's Pho-
to Gallery presents color pho-
tographs by Los Angeles
photographer Yoko Kanaya-
ma from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
through Nov. 7 in the Fine
Arts Building, 2701 Fairview
Road, Costa Mesa. TiUed
•
-Devoted to GuUk t!r Challenge
the development of Each Child.-
open from 6:30a.m. -6p.m.
Toddler Preschool K-1
Ages 18 Months -7 yrs. Year-round Program
DROPPING A ·FEW POUNDS •••
WILL DO WONDERS FOR YOUR HEART!
HELPING OUR COMMUNITY •••
FOOD DRIVE
OCTOBER 25TH ·NOVEMBER 15TH
Our children arc having a food drive co benefit needy
families in Orange CouncyJoin us in making the holidays
spcc1aJ for disa vantagcd families .
Drop off your nonperishable donations at
NEWPORT MONTESSORI
between the houn of9a.m. -5p.m.
20221, Cypress Sc., Newport beadi, C.A 92660
or Call us for directions
949-756-8855
20221 C ress Street • Newpon Beach • CA 92660
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"GHOST -V the exhibit
features 12 color photographs
by Kana.yama exploring
themes of space and memory.
Free. (714) 432-5520.
MARKET PLACE
The Orange CountyMarket
Place takes place from 7 a.m.
to 4 p.m. Saturdays and Sun-
days in the Orange County
Fairgrounds' ma.in parking
lot, 88 Fair Drive, Costa
Mesa. $2 for adults, children
younger than 12 are free.
(949) 723-6616.
cetestino's..._
quality MEATS Wf8
llw 1'11 le ·-.1 .\lcot 110<1 Sen •in• , \t rc11JolJJe
Servi'1g Cos/A Mesa far owr 30 yt11rs
CA RNEASADA
MADE FROM
SKIRT STEAK
$699 lb
O UR FAMOUS
MAUI BEEF RIBS
$699 lb
CE~TINO'S SAUSAGE
OFTHE WEEK:
POLISH
FULL OF ZESTY FLAVOR
$J49 lb
GREEK MARINATED
BONELESS LAMB
LEGS
$699 lb
BONELESS
SIRLOIN TIP ROAST
$s~g
FIRST OF THE SEASON
FRfsH COOKED
LOCAL LOBSTER
$16~h
Fmh Fuh DelivereJ DaU,,
El Toro Bravo Chips cf Tortillm
Home Styk Talflllla
32 Yarietiq efllommuu/e S4w4gu
w~t::/:iI!!:'h::;;f'/fjrl:Jfri,g,,
> Bowen 1ai1a-CnA. ec r.c. ~
)--Pumpkin Painting w/Color me mlae
)--J Bou.nee Homa > Sp.petti the Jau. I l &.m.·1 p.m.
~-(Belloou, Bubble.. P.. NAO.,, Mlikt l!cc.)
.,r Kida Coma.ate Contat with Prir.a > Swing 0...d.aa ac lnltnKtion 6'30-7130 p.m.
)--Trick or Treating for the ldcb
DATEBooK . .
Doily Pilot Sotutdoy, October 21, 2000 A 15 ..
MUSIC
AFRO-OJBAN RHYTHMS
Av~timeGra.mrnyAward
winner Eddie Palmieri, the
Afro..Cuban legend who was a
figure in the early Latin music
movement., will make his
Orange County Performing
Arts <:enter debut in the J.P.
Morgan Jazz Club Series today
at Founders Hall, 600 Town
Center Drive. Tickets for the
7:30 shows are $42-$46 for the
9:30 shows. (714) 740-7878.
SHAKESPEARE IN MUSIC
William Clark will present
"Shakespeare in Song" at 2
p.m. Sunday at Borders
Books, Music & Cafe at
South Coast Plaza, 3333 Bear
St, Costa Mesa. Clark will
put Shakespeare's poems
and sonnets to music. Free.
(714) 556-1185.
THIRTY-THIRD ROUND
The Pacific Chorale will
open its 33rd season at 7
p.m. Sunday in Segerstrom
Hall at the Orange County
Performing Arts Center, 600
Town Center Drive, Costa
Mesa. Performances include
J.S. Bach's "Magnificat" and
his • Missa Brevis in G
minor.~ $15-$49. (714) 556-
2122, Ext. 225.
A NIGHT OF BEETHOVEN
Pianist Angela Cheng will
Join guest conductor James
Paul and the Pad.fie Sym-
phony Orchestra for a perfor-
mance of Beethoven's Piano
Concerto No. 3 at 8 p.m.
Wednesday and Thursday at
the Orange County Perform-
ing Arts Center, 600 Town
Center Drive, Costa Mesa.
Concert previews will be
beld at 7 p.m. $19-$52. (714)
755-5799.
BOSTRIDGE IN TOWN
British tenor Ian Bostridge
will make his Southern Cali-
fornia recital debut at 8 p.m.
Thursday in Founders Hall at
the Orange County Perfonn-
ing Arts Center, 600 Town
Center Drive, Costa Mesa.
$40. (949) 553-2422.
All AMERICAN
A concert that celebrates the
music, song and dance of
countries from throughout
North, South and Central
America and the Caribbean
will be held at 8 p.m. Friday
at Orange Coast College's
Robert B. Moore Theatre,
2701 Fairview Road, Costa
Mesa. The concert is funded
by OCC's Extended Oppor-
tunity Programs and Services
Department, with support
from several campus clubs.
All proceeds will go toward
funding student scholarships.
$18-$24. (714) 432-5880.
Already Reduced Warehouse Prices
wtlBER INTERPRETATION
The music of Andrew Lloyd
Webber will be performed by
Broadway performers Ray-
mond Saar and Diane
Ketchie at 8 p.m. Oct. 28 at
Orange Coast College's
Robert B. Moore Theatre,
2701 Fairview Road, Costa
Mesa. Musical selections will
include "Jesus Christ Super-
star," "Memory." and "Music
of the Night." $20-$25. (71 4)
432-5880.
BIG BANDS DAY
A musical extravaganza fea-
turing two bands will be
. stage<i at 2 p ,m. Oct. 29 at
Orange Coast College's
Robert B. Moore Theatre,
2701 Fairview Road, Costa
Mesa. OCC's Monday Big
Band, Tuesday Big Band and
special guest artists will per-
form. $5-$7. (714) 432-5880.
STAGE
HOTEL DRAMA
New Voices Playwrights
Workshop will present
"Scenes from a Hotel Lobby "
today and Sunday at the
CQSta Mesa Civic Playhouse,
661 Hamilton St. Show times
are 2 p.m . Saturdays and 6
p .m. Sundays. $12 for adults,
$10 for students and seniors.
(949) 225-4125.
THAT'S ENTtRTAINtNG
Joe Orton's "Entertaining
Mr. Sloane-will run through
Sunday at South Coast
Repertory's Second Stage.
Performances are 7:45 p .m.
Tuesdays through Sundays,
witlfmatinees at 2 p.m. Sat-
urday and Sunday. $18-$47,
with discounts available. The
repertory is at 655 Town
Center Drive, Costa Mesa.
(714) 708-5555.
ART
The ins and outs of friend-
ship is among the themes of
•Art,· which will close Nov.
19 at the South Coast Reper-
tory, 655 Town Center Drive,
Costa Mesa . Performances
will be 8 p.m. Tuesdays
through Saturdays and 7:30
p.m. Sunday, with weekend
matinees at 2:30 p .m . $28-
$49, with preview tickets
starting at $18. A pay-what-
you-will performance will be
held at 2:30 p.m. Sunday.
(714) 708-5555.
STEEL MAGNOLIAS
The 2000-01 production sea-
son at Vanguard University
will play "Steel Magnolias"
at 2 p.m. Sunday. The Sun-
day show is a matinee. $10,
with discounts available. The
school's Lyceum Theater is at
55 Fair Drive, Costa Mesa.
(714) 668-6145.
Boo!
from Hi-Time
Chocolatier
~mem6er us
5or a(( Hour
Oaffowe~n
Cana~ Vle~as ...
SHORT AND SWEET
"Ten or Less,• a series of stu-
dent-directed short plays
each running 10 minutes or
less, will be staged at 8 p.m.
Fridays through Sundays
until Oct. 29 at OCC's Drama
Lab Studio, 2701 Fairview
Road, Costa Mesa. $6, or $5
in advance. Seating is limit-
ed. (714) 432-5725.
ART
SURF DUO
The Michael Ibey Art
Gallery Inte rnational will
present an art show and
poster signing by surf artist
Glenn Martin, with a special
appearance by surf legend
Jeff Hakman, from 11 a.m. to
5 p.m. today and Sunday.
The gallery is at 1500 Adams
Ave., 104A, Costa Mesa.
(714) 444-4427.
ARTISTIC LICENSE
The Artistic License Fair, a
fine crafts sbow featuring the
highly collected work of arti-
sans in Orange and River-
side counties, will be held at
10 a .m. Friday, Oct. 28-29 at
Estancia Park, 1900 Adams
Ave., Costa Mesa. Free.
Items will be sold for $2-
$300. (909) 371-6507.
DANCE
MIDDLE EASTERN DANa
A live performance of Mid-
dle Eastern dance will be
held at 7 p.m. Thursday at
the Newport Beach Central
Library's Friends Meeting
Room, 1000 Avocado Ave.
Free. (949) 717-3801.
FACULTY DANCE
A variety of dance stylti will
be featured during Orange
Coast College's annual Fac-
ulty Dance Concert, at 8 p.m .
Nov. 4 at OCC's Robert B.
Moore Theatre, 2701
Fairview Road, Costa Mesa.
$9-$12. (714) 432-5880.
BOOKS
HAUOWEEN AT BORDERS
Borders Books, Music & Cafe
will present a Halloween
night at 6 p.m. Oct. 31 with a
party and a Halloween cos-
tume contest at 3333 Bear
St., Costa Mesa. Professional
storyteller Laura Beasley will
tell stones dnd children can
play games. The first-place
wmner for the costume con -
test will receive a $30 Bor-
ders gift certificate. (71 4)
558-11 65.
You Are Cordially Invited To Attend
II
II
II
II
~4,
Orange County
FALL GARDENING
CLASS
LBARN ABOUT THE BASICS OF Pl.ANTING P0R
FALL a WINTER COLOR
LEARN HOW TO PLAN FOR YEAR-ROUND
VEGrt.ULES a RD.as!
LEARN HOW TO MAKE SP£CTACULAR
COLOR Wl1'B BULBS
BRINO YOUR QUESTIONS R>R THE '1>0CTOR"
AND LOTS MOU!
· Visit us in our new
designers showroom.
Great Savings
Showroom Furniture & Accessories Outlet
New and Discontinued Items, One of a Kind
Lots of novelties, candy corn, caramels,
pumpkin-ghost-skeleton chocolate suck-
ers, gummi spiders and worms, decora-
tive latex and mylar balloons, and much,
much, morefll
SATURDAY
OCTOBER 21ST
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COSTA MESA
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Mon-Sat 10:00am -4:30pm
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(714) 979-6679
t}t-'¢lm~ lOln~ U((Qrs Visit us at http://Oowcrdale.yourounery.com
Email us at Oowerdalegml@aol.com 250 Ogle Street -Costa Mesa, CA 92627
(949) 650-8463 www.hftimewlne.com
asure S (Greenllgh_t)~
Our opponents are saying things like:
WHOPPER #1. Most of these elections will be over fairly minor neigh-
borhood renovations and improvements.
False. Minor renovations don't require General Plan amendments, and
MCllSurc S deals only with General Plan amendments. No vote is required
for a home rebuild or remodel. nor for minor renovation of a small business.
WHOPPER 12.. Up~r Newport Bay Regional Park, the Balboa Island
Fire Station, a Texaco gas station. and Pascal's restaurant would have
required a vote.
FalM. AH tbele were far below tbe Measure S limits. No vote would be
required. Big J>n>jects, like the Marinapart and Dunes Hotels, and high-rise
otr1ee towers, will bigger Measure S votes.
.. I Next WHOPPER: Donna of election•
ow..i a~ of a l'ri6llk>n doll9r'8 t.a been ~ to defeat Measure S. Ate tne
d9tlelopera won1ed lbout 'fOAI ~ Or .. ttwy out to build oftk:e towwa
wtthoUt voter epptfNll?
They..,. dOn't *ml you to ,., yow own Cttyl
Pat Beik
Jottn 11119'1 mn
~.....,
•
The Original
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ALL CARPET & FLOORING Vinyls • Ceramics
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A 16 Saturday, October 21, 2000 DATEBOOK Doily Pilot
MAGNOLIA
CONTINUED FROM A13
as a constant threat to her
future. She is particularly
effective in one of the play's
early scenes m the throes of
a diabetic seizure.
As the widow of a former
town mayor, Louise Rawson
displays d fine surface glitter
but rushes her dialogue to
the extent that some of her
juicy lines dre ineffective. A
more dehberate approach
would heigtlten her impact
considerably.
The role or the crusty old
neighbor, Ou1ser, fdUs to an
dctress much too young for
the assignment, Shannon
DuVIes, who nevertheless
makes her opinionated pres-
ence felt throughout the
show I fer reluctant capitu-
ldt1on to d late-IJfe romance
1s especially well-depicted.
Shannon Cobb, double
cdst with Kdthlcen Goglin as
the new shop assistant with
d puzzhng pr1st. mdnages to
make her presence felt qwte
nicely in u bdckground
rlss1ynmPnl. Iler succession
or chdfacter chdn~JC'S are
delivered with understated
effective ness, dnd her new-
SURF
CONTINUED FROM A 13
miles throughout his We,
mostly trekking from
Newport to Hawaii and
sometimes to Tahiti, surf-
ing ls bis love.
•surfing/ Martin says,
•1t•s healthy. It's good for
your body, and it's getting
in touch with what makes
the world breathe.•
He takes off on a really
big wave and drops to the
other side, finding he has
traveled the length of a
football fiela in a matter -
of minutes. The speed,
the drop -it's the most
exhilarating feeling, he
said.
designs with pen and ink
on rice paper, which wu
then laminated onto surf-
boards.
The medium taught
him depth and perspec-
tive in pictures, he said.
Each wave has a different
temperament, each scene
a different mood.
Some of his works are
historically personalized.
For one painting, which
shows part of a canoe on
the sand ln front of the
beach, Martin signed his
name on one of the wood-
en planks followed by •DI
97 .•.
He was finishing up th('
piece one night three
years ago when he saw a
mangled Mercedes on
television. News of the
late Princess Diana's acci-
dent had just come over.
Christa Jeneweln works on Shannon Davies' hair in "Steel Magnolias" at Vanguard
University ln Costa Mesa.
Martin said be bas less
of a skill for portraits and ...
non-surf scenes. But he
has mastered the use of
rich colors like red,
His images of Hakman
also have a personal
touch. The two surfed the
same era in Hawaii and
led a similar lifestyle,
Martin said. Over the
years, Hakman became d
surf star and launched
Quiksilve r. Martin made
waves on canvas.
found religious zeal pro-
vides a striking contrast to
the attitudes of the others. nm Mueller's colorful
beauty parlor setting lends a
comfortably realistic touch
to the production. The show
also benefits from Lia
Hansen's contributions in
the area of makeup, hair
and costume design.
50% OFF
TOPIARIES,
FALL WREATHES
AND CORNUCOPIAS
"Steel Magnolias· laughs
through its tears with
warmth and spirit, skun-
ming over its rough parts to
present a most enjoyable
ensemble experience.
• TOM TITUS reviews local the·
ater for the Daily Pilot. His
reviews appear Thursdays and
Saturdays.
FYI
WHA'r. "Steel Magnolias"
WHERE: Vanguard Uni·
versity, 55 Fair Drive,
Costa Mesa
WHEN: 8 p.m. Friday
and Saturday, and 2 p.m.
Sunday. cos-r. s1-s10
CAU: (71 4) 668-6145
orange and purple in
addition to blue.
·When I was a kid,
purple was my favorite
color,• he said. "I wanted
a purple birthday cake."
He thanks his earlier
experience with pen and
ink for his techniques
today. Martin and a friend
used to create watercolor
"That's how artists sur-
vive," he said. •By creat-
ing something you don't
see."·
r.-----------------------~
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Open Tues.-Fri. 9-S. Sat. 9-4
1510 Newport Blvd., Costa Mesa
1 056 Bayside Drive, Newport Beach
(949) 760-0550• Next to Pavilion's 949) 548-9341
-• a•• ... -...... ---· __ ,.u_ ···-· --..
We don't have any future pol/Neal aspirations. But we hove strong 0pnlons
about a political Issue -Meosure S. We believe Measure S wfll undermine representative
oovernment In Newport Beach at oreot cost to the citizens and taxpayers.
We urge you to vote NO on S. qs'..,,_,~ro_ 8~1'~()--~
Unmatched Qualtty of Ute
We were each hono<ed to serve os Moya<
of Newport Beoch. We did our best to
represent the citizens In wOOdng to limit
airport expansion, reduce trotnc congestion
and clean up the Bock Boy. white trying to
keep our city tlnonclolly solvent.
Newport Beach today Is largely the product
of the post decisions by our elected
officials. We hove low crime rotes and high
property values. We hove wonderful muse-
ums. llbror1es. retail focUlttes and restaurants.
We truly enjoy a very high quoUty of fife.
Measure I lrodea our Qualtty Of
Lite -Up to II Cft)Wde llecttonl
over the Past Ten Yean
M90SUf8 S wtll do no~ to Improve our
quality of llfe and much to place It In jeop-
ordy. Meosufe S Is preeented os o measure
that will •require a public vote on mojof
development profectl. • If you reoc:t It you'I
see that this Is not on occ\Kote clalm.
In truth Meosute S requires a P\bllc vote on
Measure s wtU Horribly Divide
our Community and Pit Neighbor
Against Neighbor with Repeated
and Costly Citywide llectlons
If we hold repeated citywide elections over
these ·minor· neighborhood Issues our
community wUI beeome horrfbly dMded
with neighbor pttted against neighbor In on
endless series of polltlcol bottles. Elections
cost money ($2-3 mlhlon alone over the post
ten years If Measure S was In effect). They
also divert attention from Important Issues
such os public safety. Improving our schools
and planning our future . •
Measure S mgkes cltv goyemment
kreleyaof. The time now spent onolyzlng
traffic studies. environmental studies.
economic Impacts and holding public
heorlngs would become mere window
dressing. It would be replaced with endless
8'ecttons determined by llmpllsttc llogons.
Thts won't Improve plonnlng 0< the Quoaty of
our elected ottlclots.
Retain our QUallty of ute
EVERY General Pion Amendment -no mot-Please. join us In voting NO on ~e s.
ter hOw '"'°" -once a "certoln • threthold II Let' 1 retain the quoltty or llte we now enjoy.
reached. Uodlr the tarma of MMetre s we And let'• focus on electing councM mem-
cQ!id bgye hcX1 yp to M dhtw!dlj IHtctlonl beB WhO wll help u. retain out quollty of life.
oyar the pgat tao )(9'11. Wt could hgye And thonkl to much fOf the honor of r9Pf•·
yotod on d)«cb .QOd QrbiQl9 ICboQI qtt-eenttng you on out city counctl
tlooa. b lfgbgnl. try«> Q 7(1) ega qe.to<rt
CK1clt!oo to a m • m ma a 1 IDl ega rye. toot •mqWc)n to Pm'¥"'• ..... got
CoMMlJNITY
Doily Pilot
., A day? That's kind of ...
what about a week?"
-AARON PEltSOl. Olympic
silver medalist in the backstroke and
Newport Harbor High Sdlool student.
upon being presented with a procla-
mation declaring Dec. 2 as Aaron Peir·
sol Day in Newport Beach.
EDITORIAL
How To
GITPm1191ED
The Daily Pilot welcomes i.tters on Issues
concerning Newport Beach and Costa ~
There are four W¥ to send In your com-
ments.:
• LETIUlS -Mail to the Da ly Pilot. 330 W.
Bay St., Costa Mesa 92627
• READEJtS H01UNE -Call (949) 642-6086
• FAX -Send !o (949) ~ 170
• 6MAll -Send to daily-pilotOlatJ~com
All correspondence must Include your full
name, hometown and phone number (for
vetiftcation purposes only).
Saturday, October 21 , 2000 Al 7
Charter school proposal sounds promising T he goal is dear. The The lure of ultra-local control in statewide assessment tests. time and money to spend on allowed in?
hurdles are many. has caused the charter school But otherwise, charter school students could achieve dra-By law, the school's student
Within the next few movement to gain momentum teachers are free to run their matic results'. body must rru.rror the rest of
weeks, a group of Costa Mesa throughout the state and classrooms how they see fit. But we have some concerns, the district -Newport-Mesa's
parents plan to present to the nation. ln South County, the That freedom has led lo including the well-document-population is about 30% Lati-
Newport-Mesa Unified School Capistrano Unified School Dis-some innovative programs, ed difficulty these schools no. We are interested to see
District a proposal to start the
community's first charter
school.
A charter school -while
still public -typically is orga-
nized by a group of parents,
teachers or community lead-
ers. Their specific goals and
operating procedures are
detailed in an agreement, or
charter, with the local govern-
ing school board.
Happy
ending for
cat that was
abandoned
T hree sisters stand in a
row: duplexes origi-
oally, on the bay.
One has been tom
down and handsomely
replaced, ours was just
Llml OF ~edup
111 Wiii :,~ !~ew
noon, and the one on the
comer wu recently emp-
tied of its summer renters
for an upgrade. ....
As we walked by the
empty building, we saw a
Duffy ball of fur on the
iide steps. AD oposswn?
We had seen one the
night before on our deck.
As we went close, we saw
it was a cat crouched
there waiting, probably
tbinkiDg, •Where are
they? My people who fed
and petted me? Surely
they will come back if l
just wait.•
She is a beautiful cat,
similar to our pJatinum-
mlnk Tonldnese kitties
witb gorgeous blue eyes.
Swprisi.ngly, she bad no
tall. An accident? Some·
one was auel1
Woody suggested that
perhaps she was a Manx
breed. wbidl are born
Wilbout taill. Kitty WU
afrUI ol us and it took a
lot ol peneverance to cou Im to Woody's anm.
BUI lb9 ... all our him·
tiUlglr. Wbin we petted
-. .. dllOowled under
tbe laag fUr tblllb9 WU ,....,......,. bstplne
: delNd uDdet ow
.. ,,....,.mentty
.... foaaillr family,
............ and =r•--·Wbf! ............ ......... ..., ....... ....,,... .. ..,.. =-a. ....... --~ .,.1411.~ .. ·~-"'-
trict has just opened its first
and tried this year to become a
charter district, which would
allow the creation of additional
charter schools.
The benefit of these schools,
supporters say, is that they are
generally exempt from most,
laws and requirements
imposed on other public
schools, though in California
they are required to participate
MAILBAG
Crow killings brings
memories of earlier days
0 ne of the darkest days in my lile
was when my family moved
from Los Angeles to Costa Mesa in
1963. Shortly after, John F. Kennedy
was assassinated and I remember
most of the children in my third·
grade class rejoiced. Third-graders
rejoicing over something they could-
n't possibly have understood.
Obviously, they were mi.nucking
the bate they'd acquired from their
parents. As a child living (should I
say Msubsisting") down there. I was
met with constant anti-Semitic
remarks, harassment because of my
liberal political beliefs, harassment
by the cops and jocks because of
my long hair and hippie attire and
harassment by my emotionally and
intellectually unevolved teachers
because my thinking did not corre-
spond with theirs.
One bright day in 1972, I left
Costa Mesa to attend college. I've
never returned. And, except for a
few childhood friends, I've never
given it a thought.
When I heard about t}le recent
killing of beautiful crows because
their charming autumnal chatter
was annoying certain Costa Mesa
households, I gave it a thought.
Nothing changes in small-minded
communities. But how pathebc to
take one's ridiculous anger and lack
of c~trol out on God's creatures.
I' sure glad I'm up here in Los
An les and you're down there
~d the Orange Curtain. Hope-
the crows have gotten the hint
an have moved up to greener pas-
tures. Cheers!
CHRIS USSNER
.Los Angeles
Dad forgotten in story of
girl's fight against tumor
In response to your story regard-
ing Brianna Olympius, my heart
goes out to her and her family.
However, I was saddened again to
see no mention in your article
about her loving and supportive
father, Todd Olyrnpius.
The news story leads one to
believe Sue Olympius is a lone,
struggling single mother .
such as officials at Amino have with raising necessary how that proVlSion would be Leadership High School in the funds and finding a location -followed. Lennox community or Los a problem faced by Capistrano These hurdles -and others Angeles County, where the Unified officials.
school has issued its 140 stu-And we are anxious to see still unforeseen -wiU have to
dents their own laptops for use how students would be chosen be crossed before the doors to
during the year. to a ttend the school. Would it Mesa Leadershjp Academy
Clearly, such creativity and be for gifted students? For stu-open. Leaping them success-
freedom to try new ideas could dents who aren't excelling in f.ully will be the first sign that
be a boon in classrooms in this the traditional public school those leading this charge
community. We are certain environment? Would any stu-would be equally capable of
parents and teachers with the dent who wanted to attend be teadung our childre n. ..
SEAN HWR I OAllV Pl.OT
Brianna Olyrnplus, 9, takes a moment to play with her cat at her Costa Mesa aparbnenl
I personally know Todd
Olympius to be a wonderful, child
support-paying dad who has joint
custody of his children and has
been Lnvolved Ln every step of Bri-
anna's recent struggles.
Thle, the focus of any story
should be Brianna but if there were
to be another story, I for one would
be pleased to see an honorable
mention for her dad. Too often
divorced dads are brushed off as
bad guys and non-supportive and
in Todd Olympius' case, this could·
n't be further from the truth.
MARILYN RUSSEU.
Costa Mesa
Columnist should monitor
who lectures his child
I am writing in response to B.W.
Cook's article •Society's prejudices
hit close to home• (Oct. 7).
Initially, I was not going to
respond, given that the sanctimo-'
nious and morally superior tone of
Cook's arbcle makes it likely he
will view any disagreement with
his position as proof that #hate
exists in Costa Mesa.• However,
the article appears well-intentioned
and sincere, and so l respond in a
similar spirit.
Cook appears offended by the
fact that his daughter attended a
Christian function and, whtle there,
heard an explanation of one of the
faith's long-standing beliefs.
That seems a very silly com-
plaint to me. If I send my chtld to a
social function at a religious insbtu·
tion of any kind, I recognize that
some aspect of religion may very
well be discussed.
That is the nature of organiza·
tional gatherings of any sort, not
merely those of religion. Cook is
angty that Christians teach the
exclustvity of Christ as the only
path to God. However, my experi-
ence has been that they do not do
this because they want to punish or
exclude others, but because their
holy book teaches tlus.
The Jewish carpenter Jesus is
recorded as saying MI am the way,
the truth, and the life; no one
comes to the father except through
me.• (John 14:6).
That sounds pretty "exclusive•
to me. It seems to me that, in reali-
ty. Cook is upset because his
daughter was taught a rebgious
view that disagrees with the one he
teaches in his home. His world
view, religious or otherwise, rejects
the idea that God would redeem
only a portion of humanity.
The Christian worldview takes a
different position. All I can say to
that is that Cook should exerase
more care in choosing the activities
his daughter attends. Do not send
her to any event that embraces an
ideology he would cbsagree with. Of
course, her social lile will be serious~
ly curtailed, but then, maybe Cook
could wrlte about that lnstead.
SALLY IRUYNEEL MDGETT
Costa Mesa
Readers are giving a Greenlight to slow growth in Newport
• the Issue: Voters will be faced with a yes or no vote on
Greenlight Measure S this November, which would put limitS
on development in Newport Beach .
I also don't think that the Califor-
nia Assn. of Realtors (a ~aamento
based organization) should be
allowed to contribute $52,000 to a •
campeign whole sole purpoee 11 to
nullity a measure spomored by •
local group Of relideots wbo have
only ralMd tome S38,000 to dale.
In ot1Mr wont.. I tblDk tb1t .._.
lb<Makt be contrtbuticm lllilll ID
lddlUol\ to • ba on dlNct e111para ..
t'OlllltbUlkJm. Tbe Ma..,.. T cua-
P91gn 11 uilng all tldl adllde......,
IO mafuie tbl YOml bf db I '*wt-
-~ '° .. o.Mr Nat. ..................
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Daily Pilot
HIGH SCHOOL
FOOTllLL
""'~"'"ty ('• J) J 0
I .. ' '' ,, I I ' I ll 1 1
l .1111111,1 n,.,,. h I 1 (,) O J
•
t r1d.1y., .,, or•·
l11d.1y Oct 11(7 pm )
Irvine (6·0) 2 0
....... ~ ... _..r,
'•----'·~""-~
Ahso Niguel (1·6) O 1
*' p mt Hllbor n laglnl Hills 1
Irvine 28, Aliso Niguel 7
Westlake 26, 'M>ocbidge 14
(nonleague)
Thur~cl.•y Oct }f, ( 7 p m )
frid.1y Oct 17 (7 pm )
INSIDE
Ughtnlng, In the form
of the Sage Hill High
football program,
strtkes OD Page Bf.
GllEG ffCV / IW..V Pl.OT
Sage Hill Coach Tom
Monarch gives ~
quutetbac:k. Kevin
Joyce, 10me 8dvtce.
The INlbman toOttiall
team~peda2M
dedaion to s.ddlelNM:k
Valley ChrtlUan.
Quot• Of •DAY . .
"We .... out cnl got ... in -(In ... sec.and half) -•
Scott ~ Newport offensive tackle _,.._ --(ktablr 23 --TOii IALIWll
Sports Editor Roger Carlson • 949..574-4223 • Sports Fax: 949<>50-0170 •Saturday, October 21 , 2000 81
Eagles come up short against Uni
• Costly penalties prove
fatal for Estancia in PCL
loss to the 'Ii'ojans Friday.
Tony AttobelJI
DAILY PILOT
the Trojans (5-2, 2-0 in
league) move down the field,
where they found the end
zone with great frequency.
COSTA MESA -Penal-
ties and the visitors' side of
the scoreboard bad way too
many numbers piled up for
Estancia High football coach
Dave Perkins in Friday's 42-
21 Pacific Coast League loss
to University at Orange Coast
College.
EAGLES
Quarterback Jay Nichols
threw for two touchdowns
and rushed for another, while
fullback Nephi Wheeler
rushed for two more touch-
downs.
UNI 42 ·w e had University on
third down a number of times
and we couldn't come up
with the big stop," Perkins
said. •Either they would find
the open man, or we would
miss a tackle or a penalty
would keep the drive going.• •That was the first time in
a long, long time that I
remember our team getting
that many penalties," Perkins
said, referring to the 118
yards of infractions on 12
penalties. "Our players were
saying that Uni was chipping
off at us and they were retali-
ating. We have to be more
disciplined than that because
the referees are always going
to see the second guy on a
penalty.•
The loss sends the Eagles
(4-3, 1-1) into the middle of
the PCL pack, but with three
league games remaining, STM MCCRANK I DAA.V PILOT
Fabad Jahld loses the handle, but the Eagles recovered. Those infractions helped SEE ESTANCIA PAGE 85
SAILORS RUMBLE
TARS
HAWKS
Newport Harbor erupts for
16 third-quarter points in
3:14 to dispatch. Sea View
visitor Laguna Hills.
Barry Faulkner
DAILY PILOT
NEWPORT BEACH -The half-
time cliches don't apply in the New-
port Harbor High football locker
room, where there's much less Knute
Rockne than stone silence.
The Sailors didn't need fiery ora-
tion to tell them a 7-0 lead over Sea
View League visitor Laguna Hills
•Everyone
reallzed what
needed to be
wasn't quite
what was
expected.
•Everyone
realized what
needed to be done ... • • done," said
Jeff .,.nldw =r Haibor High Hcoach
Newport Har-
bor Coach Jeff
Brinkley, who,
along with a
-------homecoming
crowd of 3,300
watched the Sailors take command
in the third quarter to claim a 23-7
triumph Friday night. •we didn't
need a lot of talking; we just needed
to perlonn.•
The Sailors (5-2, 1-1 in league),
ranked No. 6 in CIP Southern Sec-
tion Division VI, marched 89 yards
on 12 plays with the second-half
kickoff to double their lead.
Ryan Ortega, subbing for senior
tailback Chris Manderlno, who car-
ried nine times for 50 yaid.s on the
drive, sprinted 20 yards around the
right side for the touchdown, cap-
ping a procession which ate 6:33 off
the dock.
DON LEACH f OMV Pl.OT
Newport Harbor's Alan Saenz (S), Andy Rankin (9), Ntck Moghaddam (78) and Chris Manderlno swarm
over Laguna Hills' running back Matt Chandler In Friday night's 23-7 Sea View League football victory.
·Brian Gaeta's conversion
kick made it 14-0, but the
Sailors still hadn't made
their point.
After stopping the Hawks
(3-4, 0-2), ra.n.ked No. 9 in
CIP Division VI, on three
downs, two straight punting
snafus led to more points.
The first began when the
long snap sailed through
l\vo plays after the ensu-
ing free kick, Manderino
burst 46 yards through the
left side for a touchdown to
ice the victory, which will
help Harbor forget a 19-14
loss in the league opener
last week to Irvine.
The Tars' 16-point blitz
required just more than
three minutes.
Scott Lopez said his team's third-
quarter intensity was no accident.
"We just decided at halftime we
had to turn the game over into our
hands," Lopez recalled. "We went
out and got things in order.•
The long touchdown drive to
open the second half matched Har-
bor's first possession of the game, in
which it went 80 yards on 12 plays to
take the lead.
the bands of punter Brian Brian c.et.a
Anderson, bouncing off bis
·we needed this win,· Manderino, who finished with
180 rushing yards on 28 carries to up
his season total to 1,068 yards, had
seven attempts for 39 yards on that
opening drive, including the 5-yard
capper with 2:33 left in the first quar-
ter.
face mask. The melee that ensued
resulted in a 15-yard penalty against
the Hawks {believed to be an illegal
kick), moving them back to · their
own 12. The next snap sailed over
Anderson's heed and out of the end
Brinkley said. ·we were
concerned about the emotion. com-
ing off a tough loss. I was hoping we
wouldn't be mentally out of it, but
we started a little flat-footed. The
second half was much better than
the f1nt.. The drive also included a 38-ya.rd
zone for a safety. Newport senior offensive tackle
•Finally healthy, the senior aoa country standout from Newport
Hatbor High set meet record at Orange County Championshi~ .
... ....... meet n9cord -by Rya • ill ;t l GI a.per.ma lat yw (15.o&).
;I Hi ... ~ )Mel tbe s.tlan ...
.... .. ... "ICllD8 ol tbe blllt aomeoamy ...... ~. ·w.· .. not talldnO about~
IOllle IChlep'I meet record blN,.
Nnpan Cod BtiD 8&ny llkl .
........ o1 ........ . .. .,Cll' .. Cld ..... .... •
SEE NEWPORT PAGE 15
.. . . .. ... . . ..
82 Saturday, October 21 , 2000
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Doily Pilot
' .
. ~ -
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Daily Pilot SPORTS Saturday, October 2 l, 2000 83
Rustlers, Bue~ do battle for the. bell
• After a two-year
hiatus, Orange Coast
and Golden West
square off again as
they renew JC
football rivalry
tonight on the
OCCcampus.
Steve Virgen
DAILY PILOT
COSTA MESA -What is a rival-
ry?
Proximity, animosity and some
sort of tiUe on the line are some of
the facets to a rivalry.
Case in point: the Orange Coast
College football team vs. Golden
West tonight at 7 on the OCC cam-
pus.
The Mission Conference Central
Division opener between the Pirates
and the Rustlers will feature the bat-
tle for the bell -The Victory Bell,
awarded to the winner of the OCC-
Golden West game.
Due to a Mission Conference
realignment, the rival schools didn't
play in the 1998 or 1999 seasons.
•Tuts will definitely be a big
game for us," OCC Coach Mike
Taylor said. ·we have to stay
IWC SlllTllG LlllUPS OCC STIRTllG llllUPS
Duum OffasE DuaR
... Wt.a.,_, No.~ Ht. Wt. a . ,_, ttt. Wt.a. f'os. No.,..,._ Ht. Wt. a. .....
1 -.-i-~ 11S So. Q8
ll RlarYO-S-10 210 So. TB
JI M-. Ho&.-S-7 250 Fr. f8
SI Ma Mwo 6-1 230 So. OE
44 Daw 0.-6-2 265 So. OT
IO JoMlw14NI PM90N 6-2 265 So. NG
11 Na HllDOI 6-1 195 Fr. Q8
M .a.-._ s-8 175 Fr. RB '7 JMm GI•• t 6-4 213 So. D£
75 VMCI S.... 6-4 270 So. OT JO IDOi! VAii.OU) S-11 250 Fr. FB 55 DAiii s-6-1 220 Fr. OT I a.--llMlllA 5-8 175 So. WR 82 lllMDC* IMY I 6-0 165 So. WR
10 ft.oYD w-6-1 212 Fr. TE
11 Joma-M 300 fr. LT
7S 11111M ~ 6-4 320 So. LG 57 ..... , .......... S-11 295 So. c
11 0.-........._. 6-J 265 Fr. RG n St1A111 D1C1eoM1o '"" 280 So. ltT
SI ltYNI LMcA1t9 6-2 230 Fr. DE 12 ..,_ ON.I S-9 175 So. WR 56 GMo s.n. 6-2 220 Fr. OE
focuSed."
OCC (2-3) and Golden West (0-5)
are coming off a bye week. The
Pirates come into the matchup with
momentum as they reeled off back-
to-back upset wins at Mt. San Anto-
nio and at Pasadena City.
The Rustlers are in the midst of a
25-game losing streak and the
understatement here is that they are
hungry for a win. No victory would
be sweeter for Golden West than
one coming against its rival.
Golden West Coach Mike
Shaughnessy believes his team runs
out of energy in games. Yet, ulti-
mately the Rustlers suffer from a
wicked case of bad luck.
They can't escape that dreaded
monkey on the back.
"We certainly haven't had any
... ..,......_ S-11 200 So. l8 M JoMr1WI ~ 6-1 175 Fr. WR
41 ... ~ 6-3 245 So. TE
77 Altrtot'I KllMSC* 6-3 286 So. LT
45 MillnWI '-6-2 220 So. OLI
0 ,,,_.. NuiwA 6-0 240 Fr. ML8 • Dumlt o-6-1 230 So. Ill
.. ......... 6-1 225 So. L8 44 ~ IUa&M> 6-2 2*> So. OUl
21 "'-"-S-8 155 Fr. LC 78 CiMY u...&.Yll 6-4 300 So. LG ll AMllL ~ 6-0 165 So. Cl
27 Joi-. fllM.a S-9 180 So. C8 25 .-...V MooM 6-0 174 Fr. RC 50 &.Ma OIAwa 6-0 250 So. c
12 lllmlT LMaN 6-1 285 Fr RG
14 --,__ 6-6 300 So. RT
21 e....'-S-10 195 So. SS 42 ~ "-6-2 200 So. 55
ZA VMMllA 6-0 187 So. F5
e>r-.. c.o..t-Golden West Series
1966 -OCC. 14-13 1982 -GWC. 44-0
1967 -occ. 10-7 1983 -occ. 24-23
1968 -GWC. 34-20 1984 -GWC. 21-3
1969 -OCC. »20 1985 -tie, 7-7
1970 -GWC. B-0 1986 -GWC. 14-6
1971 -tie, 21-21 1987 -occ. 28-26
1972 -OCC. 10-0 1988 -GWC. 28-14
1973 -GWC. 28-27 1989 -GWC. 17-16
1974 -GWC. 23-20 1990 -OCC. 17-6
1975 -OCC. 31-14 1991 -GWC. 24-7
1976 -GWC. 14-0 1992 -OCC. 29--0
19n -occ. 13-7 1993 -occ. 13-3
1978 • 00:. 34-24 1994 -GWC. 7-6
1979 • GWC. 30-3 1995 -OCC, 31-28
1980 -GWC. 30-0 1996 -GWC. 31-0
1981 -GWC. 18-14 1997 -GWC. 28-6
Golden West leads series, 17-13-2
good luck this season," Shaugh-
nessy said. "You would think that
because we have someone of Irish
descent (coaching) we would have
good luck.
There certainly is a monkey on our
back."
Shaughnessy said his team has
sell-destructed in games this sea-
son. But, he's confident the Rustlers
will be ready for tonight's game
because they are well aware of the
rivalry.
"Absolutely,• he said. *They
know about the rivalry. No doubt
about that."
Taylor expects the Rustlers will
be ready. Thou~h the Pirates'
defense is limiting opponents to 23.2
points per game, second-best in the
division, Taylor knows Golden West
will try to throw in some wrinkles.
The Rustlers have nothing to lose,
even though conference play pro-
vides a new season.
2S 8-T~ 6-0 175 Fr. FS
Golden West will be led by its
quarterback Anthony Zaragoa. a
lefthander who was injured early in
the season but has returned and
done well. His top target is split end
Brandon Hue y, who has been
clocked at 10.5 in the 100-meter
dash. Huey. is averaging 16.8 yards
per catch.
Defensively, Golden West runs a
flex defense, sirrular to the system
run by the University of Arizona.
Linebacker Nick Heinle -the
Rustlers' best pldyer at any position,
according to Taylor -is the key to
the defense as the flex linebacker.
Heinle will attempt to confuse OCC
quarterback Nick Higgs. Heinle
shifts during the cadence in attempt
to disguise that he is playing the run
or pass.
Pirates roll past ruverside, 4-1
• Coast punches out
Riverside in OEC game.
RIVERSIDE The·
Orange Coast College men's
soccer team led for more than
89 minutes Friday at River-
side and grabbed a 4-1
Orange Empire Conference
victory to improve to 10-3-, 6-
2-1 in the OEC with the sea-
son sweep over the Tigers.
Josh Miller, Chris Wim-
mer, Geno Vitale-Sansosti
and Aaron Siemers each fin-
ished with a goal and an
WOMEN'S SOCCER
OCC puts away
... Riverside, 3-0
• Pir~tes sweep Tigers.
COSTA MESA -The
Orange Coast College
women's soccer team capped
off a strong week Friday,
beating Riverside, 3-0, at
home to complete a season
sweep of the Tigers and
improve to 11-6-1, 6-3 in
Orange Empire Conference
play.
OCC has won three of its
last four matches.
The Pirates started the
scoring early Friday, tallying a
pair of goals within a four-
minute stretch at the begin-
ning of the first half. Katie
Ogden scored first, putting
the ball past Riverside goalie
Amy Hall in the 11th minute.
Pirates sophomore Katie
Ogden scored first, putting
the ball past Riverside goalie
Amy Hall in the 11th minute.
Jessica Pearson assisted
Ogden's goal.
OCC's Kristen Hamman
stretched the lead to two in
the 15th minute, finishing for
a goal after a shot by Cristina
Guerin was deflected by Hall.
Late in the second half,
Blair Perry connected for
OCC's final goal, taking a
pass in the 16th Qllnute from
Diane Meza and 'booming a
kick from about 35' yards out
on the right slde into the
upper-left comer of the goal.
The Pirates outshot the
Tigers 19-7. OCC goalie
Amanda Bell had six saves.
JC MEN'S SOCCER
assist for the Pirates Friday.
Wimmer assisted Miller
just 45 seconds into the game
to give the Pirates the early
lead. In the seventh minute,
Siemers assisted Wimmer to
double OCC's lead. Miller
assisted Vitale-Sansosti in the
23rd minute to cap the first
half scoring.
In the 69th minute, Vitale-
Sansosli assisted Siemers to
give the Pirates a 4-0 lead.
Riverside's Monty Mac-
Gillivray scored on a penalty
kick in the 87th minute to
break up OCC's shutout bid.
Pirate goalie Hilario Arria-
ga (Estancia High) bad five
saves, while backup Chris
Coburn had three. Tiger
keeper Roman Dominguez
had eight.
With the victory, the
Pirates have now tripled their
win total from last year, both
overall and in conference
play. OCC finished ·3-14-4,
27 -3 last season.
DAVID YURMAN
T Ill E ' E C E I
INTRODUCING THE DAVID YU RMAN
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84 Saturday. October 21 , 2000 SPOm
SPORTS SPECW
LIGHTNING STORM ON THE HO.RIZON
Sage Hill football, as well as other sports programs,
could become something special at top-notch facility.
RkNird Dunn fllSllMlll fOOlllll
DAILY PILoT
NEWPORT COAST
-One of these days,
Sage Hill School foot-
ball coach Tom
Monarch and his staff
of two, Mike Marchetti
and Al Kom, will look
back on this inaugural 2000 season
and enjoy a good laugh.
Besides, from the students' point
of view, U it wasn't meant to be fun
and part of the total Sage Hill expe-
rience -enrompassing student bal-
ance in athletics, arts and academics
-it wouldn't be pa.rt of the curricu-
lum.
So football is not a matter of win-
ning here at Orange County's
newest high school. Not yet, any-
way.
The first private nondenomina-
tional school in the county, however,
is certainly on its way to special
things with a gorgeous facility in the
Newport Coast hills, a high-end,
high-tech, wann-and-fuzzy setting
for the meager tuition price of
$14,000 a year.
But, aside from the glitz and
glamour of Sage Hill's stunning sur-
roundings and ocean views, a.pd a
courtyard that resembles an Ivy
League school with limestone arch-
ways and umbrellas on the patio,
the Sage Hill athletic department
believes one day the football pro-
gram will compete with the best
high schools in the area.
And, yes, that includes Newport
Harbor.
partidpate in sports, and, 90% of
Sage Hill's football players are first.
year players.
In two years, Sage Hill will com-
pete in the Academy League with
other small schools, but, eventually,
the Ugbtriing can see .themselves
among the elite ln the Orange
County athletic landscape.
The football fadllty, already, has
to be considered one of the county's
best -simply with its view.
"It's a great spot to watch a foot-
ball game,• Sage Hill Athletic
Director Brian Scherbart said. •tt•s
as good as you'll gel•
One day, a press box will be built
and perhaps more bleachers will be
installed. For now, the demand is
low. About 75 people were on hand
to watch Friday's game and the
bleachers were closed off with yel-
low construction tape, aJthough
some took a chance and sat there
anyway.
On the visitors' side of the field, a
greenbelt sits atop a bluff overlook-
ing the Newport Coast hills and
Pacific Ocean, an area so inviting it
could be used for a Sunday picnic.
ry"'he Sage Hill campus, adjacent to J. the San Joaquin Hills Toll Road
and above the Newport Coast Drive
exit, isn't fully constructed. But most
of what is complete could pass as
the finest in educational opulence.
Sage Hill
falls, 26-0
OMV PLOT PHOTOS BV GREG FRY
For now, Monarch is not teaching
his young Ughtning players to bolt
downfield with reckless abandon on
defense, because most of the players
are so green, they're asking the
coach the difference between
Case in point: Tuclced away in a
far corner of the library is a fire-
place. ·we're trying to create places
on campus to encourage studying,•
Scherbart said. •Where else in
America is there a better place to
study on a campus?"
Looking out a window near the
library fireplace is a diamond of a
baseball facility, one helped in vari-
ous ways by former Angel and cur-
rent Cleveland Indian pitcher
Chuclc Finley, a local resident.
Sage H111'1 7.acbary Friedrichs (above) straight
arms an opponent Below, Alexander Cochran
(80) goes up for a pass. It was a scoreless standoH
through the first half, but Saddleback Valley Christtan
dominated the second half to pull out a 26-0 victory.
offense and defense.
•we aren't working on any com-
plicated saeen plays and I'm not
teaching them how to cross block,~
Monarch said. "Instead, I'm teach-
ing them how to get in a three-point
stance, what the difference is
between offense and defense, and • Lightning holds bigger, older team to
scoreless tie at the half, but succumbs.
Richard Dunn
DAILY PllOT
NEWPORT COAST -After a competitive fim
half, Sage Hill School's young football team ran out
of ways to stop visiting Saddleback Valley Christian
in a 26-0 Joss Friday.
"For a hall, we played well," Sage Hill Coach
Tom Monarch said. •For us to hold a team (SVC} that
has played varsity football (and has se¢ors) to a 0-0
tie at halftime is phenomenal. For an inexperienced,
small, slow team like ours, you have to put four good
quarters together. But it was our third game playing
a really tough first half.~
Sage I !ill (0-6) was also playing without four key
starters because of injuries: 1im Wilkins (Corona del
Mar), Edward Huang (Newport Coast), Jason Kim
(Newport Beach) and Alex Myla (Newport Coast).
For Sage 1 lill, Ryan Cohen blocked an extra-
point attempt, while Grayson Ross (Newport Beach)
and Zachary Friedrichs made big stops on defense.
Sage Hill quarterback Kevin Joyce (Newport
Coast) completed half of his 10 passes for 28 yards.
Friedrichs caught four passes and Alexander
Cochran (CdM)
hauled in one for 18
yards, the biggest
offensive play of the
game for Sage Hill.
The Wamors (1-5)
were led by running
backs Ferrari Alali,
who rushed for 131
yards on 23 carries.
and Cole Hoovestal
( 122-t 4 and three
touchdowns).
The Van-
guard Univer-
sity men 's soc-
cer team will
look to keep
its playoff
hopes alive
Else-
where
today:
with a 3 p.m.
Golden State Lions on the road with men's soccer hopes.
• The VU
women's
soccer
team, fol-
1 owl n g
their 2-1
Athletic Conference contest at Westmont Col-
lege in Santa Barbara.
The Uons (8-4·1, 5-1-1 in GSAC) are in
second place in conference play, while West-
mont (14-3, 5-2), ranked No. 8 in the NAIA
polls, remains close behind. .
Vanguard trails second-ranked Azusa
Pad.fie by only one game and with only two
games remaining, every contest is important.
Leading the Uons' attack has been the play
of Diego Goni with 12 go411 and four assists.
Peeding a majority of Gooi's opportunities has
been Josh McLeish, whose 11 assists rank him
among the top in the GSAC.
Next on tho Uon1• sniper list is fresbma.q
Blaul MenCioza. The Estanda High product
ieac:t. the team in 1bota with •t and 11 second
am.ong aD Uons with four goe.11.
Goe.He Mathew Ruor bal played a huge
role iri the Uom' succe11. Hit 62 aaves is neer
ttie top ol the GSAC ronJdngl, u is hll 1.50
g<>Ui = averag . • 1be will dole out GSAC play With a
hOm8 rnatchup egainlt. PrMnO Padlk Tuiiidef
at 3 p.m. Tbl SUnblldll (W, 5-2) are uo tn tbe
tblck ol the playoff l9C'8 and 1\lelday's CG 0 d
could bi tbe dldht1 lector for eltber tdlool.
'
overtime win against the Master's College on
Tuesday, wU1 play at Westmont at 1.
• Both the Uons' aoa country teams will run
their first home race of the year with the Van-
guard Invitational. The race begins at 9 a.m. at
Fairview Park.
• The VU women's volleyball team will com-
pete at Blola, beginning at 7.
• The Orange Cout College men's and
women's water polo teams will COl'ltinue their
tournament action. The men Will play at the
CyPrea Tournament, while the women com-
pete at the Long Beech Oty Tournament.
• In high IChool don, the Corona del Mar
High girls volleyball team. ranked No. 3 ln
CIP Southern Section DiYilion W·AA will play
at San Clemente, ranked No. 2 in Divllion I-
AA at 6:15.
• NewpOrt Halbor'1 cram ~ IMlm will
be8d up north for the Mt. Im Antonio College
brt1tational. 1hl bop g.e ailderway .. 9 8.11\.,
Wbllt tM gllll ti9! at 9:40. • ,,.. s.uan· bofl' ..... polo .... Wiil holt
Loi Alemltoe tor .... 9«:"' .. ~-• 1be &11 DCM bOrl polo tNm WW r..... .... of tllil...,.... 'lburwDilnt wtdl
.. bomit .. plllytng .. l 1:20 Liil. _.,..,A.Ill, ..
l
how to form tackle:
It is a challenge for Monarch, but
he's more than willing to pay the
price and absorb some losses. It's
freshman football and they're learn-
ing. Starting from rock bottom, quite
literally.
•Jt's sort of like talking to the 'Bad
News Bean' sometimes, because
I've got kids asking me. during a
game, what's offense and defense,
and why the kids on the other team
are yelling emotional outbursts,•
Monarch said.
Sage Hill wasn't even expected to
field a gridiron team this year,
despite the school's top-of-the-line
features, i.e. a sodded field, ocean
views and state-of-the-art field-goal
nets behind the goal posts.
The Ughtning opened their cam·
paign with 19 players, but, because
of injuries to four key starters, only
15 suited up Friday in host Sage
Hill's 2~ loss to Saddleback Valley
Christian.
Next year, Monarch hopes the
numbers will double, while •tour or
five good athletes• from the area
have apparently made verbal com-
mibnents to enroll as freshmen at
Sage Hill for the 2001 sea.son. when
the Ugbtning will play a junior var-
sity schedule.
Of the school's enrollment of 120
students (90 freshmen and 30
sophomores), all are encouraged to
There is also a fully sodded prac-
tice field that will be converted into
a softball field.
Sage Hill also has plans to build a
math and science center, a six-court
tennis compound, a high-class
beach volleyball pit and an aquatics
center.
Will the Ughtning compete with
would-be Corona del Mar athletes
in the future? It's easy to see with the
writing on the drawing board.
•from a sports standpoint ... we
want to win, but we want students
to realize othe r things in We,•
Scherbart said.
•we're trying to get athletics,
academics and the arts all on the
same page. We want that to be the
emphasis in the Sage Hill communi-
ty.•
As far as football's concerned,
even the bleachers at Sage Hill are
designed with handrails, a symbolic
testament to the staff's safeguarded
environment for the students.
·1 told our other coaches that
we'll always remember this year,•
Monarch said. ·u we win CIF in six
years from now, we'll remember this
year even more, because of the
things that went on in practice:
In six games, Sage Hill bas yet to
win a football game. But give it time.
As one parent said, regarding
Sadd.leback Valley Christian's War-
riors, who played with seniors:
·veab, they've got some big guys
over there. But wait until ow boys
grow up.•
Sage Hill is also fielding teams in
all fall sports, and plans to fill winter
and spring team rosters.
Bucs zoom intO semiS
•Women's water polo
team wins twice, plays
Merced in semis today.
LONG BEACH WOMlll'S
-The Orange aAIA
Coast College rw.v
women's water
polo teazn sbootl for another
tournament aown today after
earning two vidortes at the
Long Beech Tournament Prl-
day.
The Pinta meet Merced at
noon lo the iemlftDall et CeJ
State Long Beach. If occ Wini
1t WW Play bi the dwnpkMMbAp
at 5:10 p.m. mall e:=-
highly·touted Ooldln The Plra ... e.rned tbelr
semlf1oal bkl wttb an ta. l win
over Centtol ad a 7-1 MciiaD
over San Otego ,,_. ID tlte
MCOnd round. ID the opeMr, OCC'I
ft.ethir IAmliie, ~ 1Cladi:b
and U. ZuHem ICond lour
~ ..m, "* Klll9 ..... udJenallm' ffeDeeo ...a for two ..... occ ,..,... llltcl
Apd IDl ........ 8"_..
IDtbe_,~
ID tbl ..a l'OUDd. tbe
..... (21•1-lt .... la
JC BRIEFS
Diego Mesa behind Nelsba
Hoagland'• three goals. Devon
Wright and Christine McDon-
ald scored two each. Pirates
goaUe Brin Kennedy fildsbed wtthmNftl.
&.a.. llMll •-'•IT .... ~ a. ... CoMf 11, a: •• 1
Cerrttm 0001 · 1 Or-. COlllt 7 6 0 5 -11
oClC -Lena 4, Kllrtd1 .. ~ l. ......... 1. s.cbtt 2, M.tdoll 1, ....... ,. s-. AndWlon .. ............ occ 7 ........ MilA. s.n.,.,-. 0 1 , 4 • ' ar..tCDllt 2 a , 2 -1 oa:. Holge.nd,, ~ 2.
MCDolllld 2. S-·"-"~"
Bum jult m&. 7-6 _cv=_.-."'°
Coat Colllge'I Plratm ...ay
pulled off ... tblrd ...... ol •
top..10 ......... ......
but Iii ID No. 2-n tcd 0...... .......... en.-..... . .......... ,:t .... .... ......
)
' The Pirates, 9'-10, trailed at
halftime, 5·2, but went on a 4·1
run in the second hall to even
the score at 6-6 with 3:15 left
before Cuesta flnally got the
game-wtnner wtth 2:24 to go.
Jeffery Sample 9COl'8d four
goals and 5'eve DUaoer and
Chris Lancel1ott1 each-had one
ror the Ptrat• .
a u 1•-••• O.....J.~c...t•
Cringe COlllt -' f 1 2 2 -' a-. 1411 -7
OCIC • Semple 4-Lii~ 1,
Dugger , . 5-= HerwY 7.
Doily P;lot
CROSS COUNTRY
CdM girls
sweep Mt.
SAC field
• • Estancia boys earn
second place honors.
WALNUT -It scoms as if
no one can stop U1e winning
ways of the Corona del Mar
girls cross country team. .
The Sea Kinys added
another prestigious tiUe to
their season by winning the
Mt. San Antonio Invitational,
Friday, in tl1e girls UiVJsion IV
sweeplakes race.
Not only did CdM win, but
it dominated with 62 points, a
67-point margin or victory
over the next best in a field of
17 schools.
•(The inv~l<1tiont1l) really
went smooth for us,• said
CdM coach Bill Sumner.
•w e're right whrrf' we're
supposed to be.•
CdM's Jenny Cummins
stopped running dftpr a mile
because she suHl•rt1d an dsth-
ma attack. And the Sed Kings
still ran to victory.
Season Mese1 v1 •y led Cc.JM
with a ninth place dl 19:04.
. Kalie Quinlan (19·06) <:dJlle
in behind Mcrservt-y in 10th,
while Diana Hossh•ld (19:18)
finish ed No. 15. Jenny Long
w as 16th in 19·28. And
Katherine Morse postPd a
20:15 run.
In the hoys U.vis1on JV
sweepstakes rt1< t'. Estdncia
eamed second pldc<> honors.
Humberto Rojds wds sixth
in 15:40, with MikP Cdc;tllas
(15th, 16:08), Luis Seqoviano
(19th, 1 6:2~l), Ahcl Hores
(36th. 16:52, Eric Lop<•z (41 st,
17:00), Gerardo OrO?co (44th,
17:04) and Aaron Vnn Geem
(5 1st, 17:10) roundlnq out the
field for the Eagles.
Liz Huipe w<1s lJUt in the
girls event with d 19: 18.
Other girls scoring for
Estancia were Diana Rosete
in 19:58, Stepht1nic Melendez
'in 22:39 and J('Ssic:u Hutler in
23:02.
CdM's Travis B1•ardslee
ran for a 15:33 and Josh
Yelsey foUowP<I with d 15:53.
Dustin Hodges finished a t
17:12, while Mark Pomerantz
came in at 17:16 and Ben
Inouye at 17:37
GIRLS GOLF
Sailors win
PEBBLE REJ\CI I -New-
port Harbor I liyh's uirls golf
team was d 126-144 winner
over host Robert LoYis
Stevenson I ligh at Spyglass
Goll Course dl Pc•bhle Reach
Friday In better bdll of part·
ners.
The Sc1ilors p.ured up Kelly
Hunt and Amanda Campbell
(39), Shelly Rob1~rts .rnd Lind-
say Galbraith (43) and Lauren
Foster and Mdrguret Ander-
son (44) for UH' victory on the
par 36 course.
WPY BIRTHDAY
MCMILLEN
CONTINUED FROM 81
SPORTS Saturday, Ociober 21. 2000 II
Tan'Ryan
°"99•
bl'Ulhes
ulde
~ Hll18
defender
Justtn
HallenbeQl
on bis
way to a
20-yard
TD run
which
capped a
1&-potnt
explosion
In the
third
quarter of
Friday's
23-7
victory.
DON LEACH
I DAl.Y Pl.OT
Scofe ~ qu.ws
Laguna Hills O O O 7 • 7
Newport Harbor 7 0 16 0 • 23
Ant~
NH -Mandefino 5 run (Gaeta kick),
2;33.
Third ~
· NH • Ortega 20 run (Gaeta kick),
5:27.
NH • Safety. punt snap out of end
zone, 3:08.
NH -Manderlno 46 run (Gaeta kick).
2:13. '
Fowth Quwter
LH • Mittenberger 11 pass from
Johnson (Naumescu kick), 1:01.
Attendance: 3,300 (estimated).
INDMDUAL RUSHING
LH • Chandler, 13-41; Klein, 6-11;
Mittenberger, 2-6; Allen, 1·1;
Johnson. 6-minus-4.
NH · Manderino, 28-182, 2 TDs;
Ortega, 7-38, 1 TD; Johnson.
1-mlnus-1; McDonald. 1-minus-1.
NEWPORT
CONTINUED FROM B 1
Morgan Craig pass to Brian
Gaeta to the Laguna Hills
13-yard line.
Harbor's defensive domi-
nance continued until the
closing moments, when
Laguna Hills ended seven-
plus quarters without a Sea
View League point on an 11 -
yard scoring pass with 1:01
left.
for 72 yards, hoolung up four
times with Gaetc1, who col-
lected 55 receivmg yards.
Gaeta also added an
interception and Sc1enz, who
hc1d several big hits, recov-
ered a Hawk rumble to help
Hdl'bor break even in the
turnover battle.
INOIVIDUAL PASSING
LH ·Johnson, 12-25-1, 133, 1 TD
NH · Craig, 7-12-0, 72.
INDMDUAL RECEIVING
LH • Anderson. 4-87; Mittenberger,
2-10, 1 TD; Roselli, 3· 17; Klein, 2· 15,
Hallenbeck, 1-6.
NH • Gaeta, 4-55; Vandersloot. 1 ·8;
Gray, 1-6; Rankin, 1-3.
GAME STATISTICS
LH NH
First downs 12 15 Newport Harbor strug-
gled the rest of the half, how-
ever, as its next four drives
ended with two three-and-
outs and a pair of third-play
fumbles.
Laguna Hills managed
onJy 55 yards on the ground,
28 of which came on one
Matt Chandler run.
Newport's defensive Rushes-yardage 25-67 37·216
Passing yardage 133 72
showing came without Passing 12-25·1 7-12·0
Net return yards* min-7 2
But the Sailors' defense,
led by se{lior All-CIF middle
linebacker Alan Saenz,
helped keep the Hawks off
the board.
The Hawks' Chris John·
son threw for 133 yards, but
58 of those came on a bomb
to spark the scoring drive,
with several Harbor reserves
on the field.
senior all-ledgue end Garrett
Troncale, who rested his
spramed right ankle.
Ian Banigan, C.J. Collins,
Rankin, Mc1nd erino, Jim
Ruthwell, and Dane Barton,
c1munn others, picked up the
~l1Jrk lor the Tars.
Sacks-yardage 3 · 12 0-0
Net yardage 181 290
Punts 4-41.5 4-37
Fumbles-fumbles lost 2-1 2·2
Flags-net yardage 3·25 11-80
Time of possession 23: 11 24:49
*Punt returns, interceptions. fumble
returns C raig completed 7 of 12
Scor'eby~
Universrty 14 7 7 14 • 42
Estancia 7 o 7 7 • 21
Flnte)uwtw
Uni Wheeler 18 run (Sherwood k>Ck),
11.38
Est Romo 1 run (Ramirez kick), 6:04.
Uni · Nichols 26 run (Sherwood kick),
2 56
Second Quwtw
Uni · Pickett 42 pau from Nichols
(Sherwood kkk), 0:55.
nmdQuwtw
Uni • Shefwood 23 pau from Nichols
(Sherwood kick). 6:19.
Est · F. Rodriguez 18 pass from K.
V•lbuena (RAlmirez kick), 2:19.
FCMstb~
Uni Wheeler 61 run (run fail@d), 9:46
Est • Romo 1 run (R•mirez kick}, 9-03.
Uni -Ndlols 1 run (Wheelef' run), 2:49
AttM<l•nce· 1,200 (estunated)
IHDIVtOUAl. RUSHING
Uni • Ndlols. 11-83, 1 TO;~. U2.
2 T0s; Pickett. 8-39; Molway, 2· I 2.
&t · J.Jhld, 14-76; Romo, IS-72. 2 TOs,
F Rodriguez. 2·13, K. V•lbuena. 9-mi~.
INOIVIDUAL MSSING
Uni ·Nichols. 9-1 S-1, 17J, 2 TDs.
Est · IC V•lbuenll. 11·14-0, 134, I TO;
F. Rodr~.z. l·l-0, 33; Petkins. 0-1-0, 0
INDIVIDUAL MCEVING
Uni • Pidtett, 3-64, 1 TD; Conlon, 2-41,
Allag. 2·29, Sllerwood, 1·23, 1 TO;
Molw.y, 1-16.
Est · Stoddard, S-78; f. Rodnguez. 4-52,
1 TO, Jcihld, 2·2.2, 0. ValtMJena. 1· 15.
GAME STATISTICS
Uni Est
F1m downs 18 14
Rushes-yardage 30-216 36-192
Passing yardage 173 167
Pesslng 9-1 5-1 12· 16-0
Net return yardage• 3 18
Sacks-yardage 0-0 4 ·35
Net yardage 382 342
Punts 1-45 4-34
Fumbles-fumbles lost 2-1 1-0
Flags-net ytlrdege 5 -41 12 • 118
DAlY Pl.OT PHOTOS BY STEVE MC CRANK
Uni quarterback Jay Nichols (9) looks down.field as Estand a's David Stoddard pursues.
Tlme of pos~ 27·17 20:43
•Punt returm. interceptions, fumble
returns
ESTANCIA
CONTINUED FROM B 1
Perkins is still very optimistic.
"We're moving the ball real well,·
Perkins said. •Nobody has been able to
stop our offense lately. We just have to do a
better job on defense and we have lo score
when we get the opportJ.mlty. •
University's first scoring opportunity
came before the echo of the kickoff whistle
bad left the stadium. A 53-yard kickoff return, followed by a roughing the passer
penalty Jed to an 18-yard TD run by Wheel-
er and it was 7-0, after 23 seconds of action.
Senlot Jeremy Valdes gave the momen-
tum beck to Estancia with an interception,
gtvtng the Eagles the ball on the 1rojans'
25-yard line. PJVe plays later, Andy Romo ran into the
end tone fiom a yud out and the game
wea tied. 7-7. Romo bad 72 yards wtth two
toucbdowm cm 15 carries, while fullback
Pu.dJabid .cldecl 76 yards oo 14 carries
tJal marcbed beck to regeln the lead on
its oat po11enfan. A 26-yard touchdown
run by Nichols made it 14-7.
The Eagles had a shot to regain momen-
tum when Danny Valbuena recovered a
lh>jans' fwnble on the Eagles' 10-yard line,
ending a Uni scoring opportunity.
The Eagles used a rake pUDt to help
themselves drive 87 yards down lo the no-
jans' 3-yard line, but on fourth down, a
fake field goal attempt was unsuccessful.
•1 think that was the turning point of the
game for us,· Perkins said. ·we marched
all that way down the field and got nolblng
out of it.
Univen!ity took the ball on its own 3 and
scored nine plays later on a 42-yard touch-
down strike from Nichols to Scott Pickett
late in the second quarter, making lt 21-7.
Following the halflitne homecoming
show and another University touchdown,
Freddy Rodrlgue't helped the Eagles cut
into the lh>Jans' lead.
Rodriguez pulled down a Kenny Val-
buena pass in between two defenders ln
the end zone and the lead was cut to 28-1'.
Valbuena was 1l ol 14 paulng for 13'
yards, tnduding that touchdown strike.
Wheeler ended any hopes of an Eagles'
comeback withe 6t-yard to\lcbdOwn run.
extending the 1To1ans' lead to 34-14.
Romo would score again Crom a yard
out. but it was too little, too late.
Perkins' hre got a ll'tt.le hotter late m the
fourth quarter when University went for
two points following a touchdown with the
game well in hand.
•They're up three scores with three
minutes left in the game and they're going
for two?• Perkins wondered aloud. •The
Univers1ty coach said their bolder was
injured. University bas 2.600 students
enrolled, they had players from the N and
frosh-soph team dressed for the game and
they couldn't find any holders? I find that
very lnterei.ting.
•Not to take anything away from the
'Ih>Jans, • Perkins continued. •They're a.
heck of a football team. It was )usl too bad
the game had to end like that.•
Up next for the Eagl is cross-town
nem ls Costa Mesa on Friday at Newport
Harbor High. •u we can get on the bus and not get a
penalty thrown against us, th.it w1Jl be a
~ start.· the cvcr-colorlul Perk.ins Yid.
•Then, w ·u try tog t off the bus Without
getting hurt..
WATER POLO
Newport
wins, 11-8
•Villa Park is Sailors'
second ranked victim
in a four-day span.
Steve Virgen
D AILY PILOT
NEWPORT BEACH -
Afl4:!r sustaining patience and
overcoming a physical chal·
lenge, the Newport Harbor
High boys wdler polo team is
now two lhlrds of the way to
sweeping high-profile teams
m one week.
Vtlla PciTk, No. 1 in CrF
Southern SectJon Division I,
went down on Tuesday. And
Foothill, ranked No. 4, fol-
lowed swt Fndc1y. when the
Sc1tlors broke dWdY from a 6-6
gdme to defedl the Krughts,
11-8, at I ldrbor. ·
The SrtLlors, No. 2 in CIF
D1VlS1on I wLll host Los AlaJD.1-
lo!>, No. 2 m D1vtSion 11, today
at HJ c1.m And 1t is apparent,
Harbor 1s fmdmg its rhythm
by playl.11g dS d team.
"We're starung to play our
gdille, • Sdtd Harbor senior
Ryan Cook. who scored three
goc1ls "In the beginning of
the sed!>On, Wf' weren't play-
ing dS a team. Now we're
corning together • ·
Hc1rbor bu!>ted out of the 6-
6 be m the Uurd quarter to
out~core the Knights, 5-2.
After leadmg 5-4 at the half,
Harbor mc1de its move m the
lhlrd quc1rter and broke open
the ledd to 6-4 when Peter
Belden cap1tc11ized on the
man-up s1tuallon.
But, Foothill answered
with three qwck goals and
took the lead. 7-6, as Blake
Seymour scored with two
Harbor defenders covering
him. Harbor then closed out
the quarter witb three
straight goals to tum the tide.
Cook started the run with
a goal right in front ol the net
with 2: 11 remaining in the
quarter. Then Caine Littrell
threw one in less than a
minute later Steve Jenclrusi-
na took advantage of a suc-
on-hve 40 seconds later for
another score.
Harbor then cnused m the
fourth quarter outsconng the
Knights, 2-1
The Sa.Lio rs d1dn 't start the
game as hot as they played in
the Uurd quarter The Krughts
(14-10) Jumped out to a 4-3
lead to end the fmt qud.rter.
Knights goalle Ian Elliott,
who plays for the 1uruor
national team, recorded five
saves in the quarter and fin-
ished Wlth 10
The Knights unleashed an
onslaught or grabbmg and
pulling on defense in the sec-
ond quarter. Foothill main-
tained its physical play
throughout the contest in
attempt to take Harbor out of
its game, Sailors Coach Brian
Kreutzkamp said.
"This was a physical,
phys1cal game.• he said "I'm
proud of our guys for sbcking
together.·
With momentum gained
from the victory over Villa
Park, Harl)or (16-4) was able
to control Foothill The
Knights' physical play led to
SIX ejections and five man-up
situations for the Sailors. Har-
bor scored on four of the
advantages.
Belden f:irushed with a
gdIDe high four goals. He
scored the last goal for the
Sailors wn'en he completed
the as ist from U ttrell. anoth-
er senior who scored twice.
In the N game, the Sailors
were 3-lwinners. Jan Huang,
Michael Vande rburg and
Nathan Weiner cored for
Harbor. Goalie Alex Stabler
was credited wtth five saves. .....,..,.
NluCllllf ..._. ''· ........ Foothill 4 0 ) 1 • •
Ne\\rport tWbOr ) 2 4 2 • 11 • ..... Foa 3. A-.ndlr 2. 1Wut2.~1. s.... . llllOtt 10.
..... rt ..... -~ ..
Cool l. Jlndrullne J. un..11 2. s..-Mdaln 10..
I .I
Ralt'8 aJJd tlradlines an suhjtct tu clumge
without rlOCioe. The publishtt "'~•rves the
riw11 to censor, rcda ily, revist or reject
any du\iCtNI ad,·crtist-menL PJea..e re11ort
any mor that m11v be w )'OUI cllWified ad
immNliattly. 1l1e l>llily Pilot llA'tt-f.lf11110
liability for llnv m'Or in an ach·tnt!W'mt'lll
(or wf1kt1 ii nuy IJe m.pootible CXCq>I for
the oosr of the spa<'t' actually occupir,d by
tht error. CAKfit mu onh· ht alloft'M for rhe
rm11 illst'rtion. .
. 1.: .. · ·1 .,,, ',
-'-•,:,-.:1~"~;·)
LEGAL NOTICE
NOTICE Of
PUBLIC SALE Of ABANDONED PROPERTY
.:-::~ Mii at public auction,
purauant to Section
21700 of thl ~ & Profeaelonal CocM, the
following deacrlb1d
property to wit: ELLEN
PURVIS. UNIT ce1.
LUGGAGE. TOOLS.
AND MISC. BOXES,
ROBERT SCOTT
HURLEY, UNIT 0·1,
RATTAN FURNITURE,
BEACH CHAIRS. AND
MISC. HOUSEHOLD,
TRACY TAYLOR
LAMPING, UNIT 0104,
DESK, CHAIR, AND
MISC. BOXES, TERRY
WHITHERSPOON ,
UNIT D105, BIKE,
COMPUTER EQUIP·
MENT, MISC. HOUSE·
HOLD
Flctltloua Buslneu
Name Statement
The lollowt~ are doing u: Accu,.te Touch Cleen·
In~. 3395 GreenlHI
Drive' Br••. Cellfomle 92823 Patricia Elizebeth Climer, 3395 Greenlee!
OriYe, Bree, Celllomle
92823
Thia bualneu Is con· ~ by. an lndvlduel
Have you 1tart1d
=-~r~ This atatln*lt wea
filed with the County Clel1c of Orange County
on 08131 l2000
20008831111
Deily Piiot = 30 Oct. 1. 14. 21. Sam
Gl
EQUAL HOUSING
OPPORnJNITY
M 1'1111 tsUtt aovwtbinQ
In Olis lllWSPIPll ls subject
lo Ille Ftdefll fair Housing
Act ot 1968 11 1mendecl
wlllch 11\Ues It illegal to
lldYert• '1ny prtftftnee,
timi11tion or dllcrlmlna11on
blsld on race, oolof, rltlo-
ion. set. lwldlcap, tamilill
status or natiONI origin, °' an Intention to l!llllt 111y sucfl pmerence, llmi11tlon
Of clsaVnlnlllon..
This newspalMf Wiil l1lt knowingly accept any
advtrtlaement for real
eslll1 wllicll Is In VIOlelion
of the law. Our rtadetl ere
hereby informed th1t 111 dWlllng:s ldWltls.cl In this
~are l¥allabll on
an equal= °'nlly basis. To com · n of dlscriml-
llll!On, HUD IDl·free II
1-800-424-8590
Sale will be by com·
petlt!Y1 bidding (written
H8Jed bids may be
eubmltled In advance)
ON TliE 7TH OF P+OV.
10;AM. AT THE
PREMISE WHERE said
property hu betn
Mor9d and which ii lo-cated at AYRES SELF
STORAGE. 1880 WHIT·
TIER AVE.. COSTA MESA, CA 92&27, (949)
550-1282 Landlord r• ~ .... right to bid at
the aale. Purchuea
tnllll be mede by cull and peid for at thl time
of pun:haM. All pur·
c:tlaMd goodl are aold aa II and muat be r• lllOYed at the lime of
ealt. Salt II altJied to
C8/lCllllallon in lhl event
of atltlement between
landlofd and obligated
party. Publlahed on
ocr. 21ST ANO OCT. ·------. 28TH 2000
AYRES GROUP, BOND
NUMBER S-400-1684,
Ayret Self Storage
Realdenl Mana~ra
Publlahed Newport
Beach·Co11a MIH
De.tly Pilol October 21 ,
28, 2000
FIND
an apartment
through
cJ.assUled!
•V.A.-·-··IMll Fiii COUNSELING
FMI UST OF IQtES
HUOIVAREPOS
714.SI• 1100
'.'I flf'.dl .. , .. , I .1:.q
ByPll1•e
(9+9) 642-5678 •••• 1elephone 8:30am-5:00pm
~ridn
Wallt-ln 8:30ain-.~d>Opm
~ridly
Monday ................. Friday 5:00pm
Tueaday .............. Monday S:OOpm
Wednesday ......... Tuesday S:OOpm
Thursday ....... Wednead~y 5:00pm
Friday ............... Thursday S:OOpm
Saturday ............... Friday 5:00pm
-. ""-" II .... ,2
BHutlfvl 11eaa Woode
1..sby 38r pool home, In
""· tlmocWed. $359.000. Elf! & Judv Tlylor, Agta
949.574.3598,
NO MONEY DOWN
Frw 111 o1 pioper1lel
wlfl no dolw'I peymert.
Frw rwoordad -1-W-466-5792 IDt
1043. 111 Team R.E
Mlw Ullllt WI to CIS¥ll\ ~=a:..:r::
lbr, aalMln. Wlllll llllcact ~11so.ooo.s 1.eso,000. f4H1ti031 !pt !l!l!l
:l '•. ......
36
mo
lame
NEW 2000 RANG E ROVER 4 .0 SE
36
mo
lem;e
r ---. . .
I
' :.. ·~· •. -
. -"'"'
",,. ~'.~· ' -. '\. '
i ~-----
L ---.. J
PAIE OfRCE SUfTE
1083ll 0 S2 50 FSG NMr Newport Centtr. AYlillblt nowt cal (213)74U300
3 fllol FM~
--• KIOlll Pnmt Loe: C.M & NB .,.. 1K SqA.
& Up c.. MllyAnn
IM9-722·1eoD l 21 .......... . ,...
HI. w-JGolhlfd
721111 ""' 31oo.f. c.ii tor dlUllt. 71W41-1151
• • 5*day, Ociober 21, iOOO ' BT
I --1°' I r .• -,,. . . -~· ;•
~ -~~--3L.'1
SENSATIONAL
FLOOR SAMPLE SALE
ELEGANT NEW ARRIVALSlll ()tdwStyle~ ftlANOSi.~
IOFAI, CtWA9, WR a MOREi . ......,_._
......... A.-.•°'91~
.co.ta ......
SAT ONLY
IAIMPM
HouMhold ltemt,
clothH, ETC
GOOD STUFFI
CHEAP PRICES!
20452 Senti Anl
Ave. Acro11 '°' S1nt1 Ana
Country Club ,,.
.. CMMMID .. _,.... __ _
•llUYDTATD ........................
COtJSIG W.lHJTS
* CAREGIVER Biby GrVod '*'° ldr1I cond. LIYe-111. S 1 OOOJMo Private w.tlendl $1450 7141457-4863 room & blth, oft Set & Sun-
714/527-<)900 N!Wpo!! Boh, 949-644-I 367
"' Alfrlge!Mol, $200. •CARING PEOfllU ::=:-~ 1 •ma= I ::::~:.= . . '-· 714 ... 4880
StARS Wlltllr I Blctrtc COW COIN NEEDS Ctllropractlc oH needs
Dryw llfll' CIP9CllY IM OlD tolNSJ Gold. &Mr, Fliencly Mll·llllttf PT new U 50fbottl iew91rv, wlldles 11111QUM ~ wll nn till a
714-54M693 ~ &eH42·94-47.' • nee nee 714-662·2118
TOP SSSIRECOflOSI
Jazz. R & 8, Soul, Rc>c*,
tie. 50'1 & 60'• MIKE 94&-645-7505
Grounds Malnten1nce
Worbr 1 FT poe.bon
40/h<t ..... 12 moob year Sal&iy $24691mo
Appicabon dudllne
F oo.y, Ott Vllt 3 30pm
Ocean Vtew School Di11nc1
Huntington 8elCh 714-ll47·4061
Aelt.lurMt
•Dl1hw11her1 •Bue Persona •Hott/ .. s F" rd Plll-llnl Dey end EYll'linO lhlltl. ===-... ~ FM~ ;"'!°" •4
al01 E. c..e Hwy.
... ..._r ... .........
Tew...ll!
APf'Ol.YDll'llT
SEl'ID8
Full·Ume
illy&~shib
812-815
Top-Producers
Higher
•I~ Omlll i-.nlll ·~1-11'11111
•Pud ...... ·i..c-aipa,..
~···· U..Mc:a c::r:-.=
....atl-47
Broy Hilt lomlll dining
room 111. Olk, goClllc llyle. I -~ 1 "'-'~~~~hutcti::.::2::::...~-S2-~-obo-· . .... . ~9-574-9295. 1 471~1 Sales ~VM~ Nice -colM ... S25. Admln Aeellt Pfr general n-l CreKeol encl .... $15, p Clbrlll olb. rrul tw... ~
KVJ<I' $55, Ill' ~ $35, toMnQ .... derc reiUors. APDQAl&l.& macrn $20 114-545-4141 d!p!ndlt!I! eoo-111-1010
Ccnificd Antique
&c Rcsidenrial
Conrcnts Appraisals
VIVlEN L HfSSEL
(7 14) 841-0473
E-M:iil:
h~lviv@aol.com
LINDA'S
TEDDY BEAR DOU & ANTIQUE TOY
SHOW & SALE
Sil, Ott 28, 10'3Cllm-4pn
Sun.. Ott 29. 1 Olrn-3pm °'llllll Colfty F~ 88 F• llrM, Sida. 14 COSTA 11£5.(.
200 + Cira 7§(Ms+ 7 444
FIND
~1 AdmlnlallM Aat to the
CEO 15 Y1$ al ollice exp , con,> lltMlle, heavy exp 111
business c:orrespoodence
Fret 10 lravet and lllle to 811gle PupplH AKC wen on non ICheclAed tits
Ch1mplon l ine lull Non smoldfl!1'no alcohol.
Y e11ow CrMk gun doOa. do-ug lrM enw Able lo home railed $400 malM ldo!ll rd gee along w/peo-
SSOO lenwilel 94M73-2378 pie, must presentable. ll1d
~ Fu rlSIMTll
949-574·8334 °' e-me1I
urtdk Oyahoo com °' cal o.r-949-574-8333
811uly Operelor
Wanlad lor best
IOcdon 111 NB RetQI
()( COOYnlSSIOO Call
949-646-2093
Representatives ~~-
Wanted ~
we are looking tor sa1es Representatives who enJov meeting
and greeting people. wonc flexible hours: afternoons, evenings
and weekends Explore our successf\JllV proven program
tnroughoUt tne orange county area. securing new
subscriptions tor tne Los Angeles Times.
s Fleldble Hours: ettner f\111· time or pa"·tlme
s AVerage 525-$30 per hOur
S No sates eXPertence necessary
S Wiii train the t1gnt people
If INTERESTCD PUA~ CONTACT1
Robert Brown (714) 556-9060
Sign & Drive .
• 'O Down
• 'O Aqulaltlon Fee
• 'O Security Dep.
• 'O 1st Payment
All lbu ...... Uc .... ,..
plus tax. 39 mos., 12k miles/yr, 20$ per mile penalty ewer.
2001 ¥70 TURBO WAGON
=Certified Pre-Owned =
--------blf BMW For ultimate peace of mind, every Ccni6cd Prr-Own('d BMW 1s baclccd by The Cati6ed ~eel BMW
Procecboa Plan, covtnng the vehicle for up 10 2 year. or 50.000 miles (wh1ch~r com~ fim) form the cbrc of
expiration of the 4-ycar/50,()()().mile BMW New Vrh1dc Limned Warnnry. •• The Procrcr1on Plan includes rwo key
demcnts:
CaUfied Pre-Owned BMW Limited Warranty .. &eked bv BMW oi ~onh Amcnct, Inc., and iu
m.tionwid(' nctWork of BMW a:ncm. covered rrpiirs m made onl) by B~IW-1nmcd IC\:hn~ru U)tng only gcnwnc
BMW repbcmcnc pans.
BMW Roadside Assistance .. Ptacc of mmd follO\\'l vou an)whcrc tn die L5A. 2~ hours a cU). 365 cbYl a year.
1998BMW
740iL
25K miles, Chrome • CD &: More
$4995 IOtal ro stan. Zero security
deposit. on approved credit I Ok miles
per year, 25~ per excess mile. Total
payments D $23.227 .00(M10337)
PRE OWNED LEASE FOR
.
PER MO. 36 MO.
•TAX ON APPROVED CREDIT
4j7 318i '99 328i.S 40tWWT11(.lXCU102) ______ $J~S >-.M..W(4f.MN(IOI-WWMILESI
4j7 Z3 4j7 740i.L llhil ..,..,, _________ UJ.991 i-•co.,_-.. ~-"'9..'95
,.Z3 ~7SOIL -.i...-.1J•{eli94m------~ aa.•cn~~ aM:X•auc:6
~~ ~,.,,..~---Ul.m ~W.,.. IDUSI
,..D
1JL S..t..•tcU~-·-....,......_ ... $.27-"1
._ ..... ,.,.. APll .... , .. ..
...
.. '
B8 ~ Oc.ot,.;. 21, 200o .
,-ooA~'s
·CROSSWORD PUZZEE
....,...,.._.. IOUllD
I .. ~ I ~·-?e_EM_PlJ_O_Y .. _ElfT_, . ::·OPPCiiml..,,-_ _ OPPOR'l'UNITIES
INSURANCE PAYMENT AUDITOR
Garden Grow
EIUbli9hed aidting firm Is loolq for carddales 10
repiesent lhem on a natlonel levol. Expe<lence Is
reqUlred In at least one cl the foffowlng areas;
hollpllal bililg, reflxld experienoe "' heallh lrisurance lalowledgt. Al laasl 35-,C. travel ,..ed. Please send
or fax resume and salary hlslOfy to:
~ IMurllMe Recovery Soluttonl
Attn: Ptnny ~ 7171 ~Rold
SALON·H1lrstyll1t
with clients and manicurist needed. Cos1a Mesa, Can
714-429-1411
Hlndymen needed Fill Ill Plft·flme, excellent pay.
Shark CllA> Restaurant/
Night CU> 714-751-0700
STOCK/DELIVERY mutt
be 21 IX OIW wftll dllrl
driving ~record. n . Ii-TIN Wine Cellrl c.11 IMN5N4t3
. .
WEEKLY BRIDGE QUIZ
·Q I · £t.1t-West vulnerable. you • hold:
• AQJ 102 <::>JH ~U •17 .
Partner opcns lhc biddlna with one no lNfllP. Whal do you ~7
Q l · Neither vulrienble, you hold:
•AKJl0152 c::>U 0 1 •Q6S
Partner opens the bidding wilh one
hem1. What do you fl'Sporid7
Q 3 • ~ vu.lnerablte. you hold:
•AJ9 <::>6 0 Jlt9SH2 •J6
• 1'1t7' '7 UO <> AJH •I
Pittner opa11 tbc =~with one cll&b. ~do you
Q 5 • AJ South, vulnenble. you
hold:
•ICQJ <:>KO O JU •'80
~~WEST
•• ro ' Whal do you bid now?
Q ' • As dealer, you hold:
•·U <::>4 0 AKQ106 •AICU4
Partner opens the bidding witll one What is your opening bid?
spade. What do you l,UpOOd7 look for answrn on Monday.
Q 4 • Neither vulnerablo, you hold:
Education
TUTORS
(Part· Time)
Ouaifled mocivlled appff-
CllU needed to provide fn.
dMdual Moring In 1H
academic subjects to
-.
~ 1-. toea v-e, 4-«, ........... pwr. UH'OOI,
111"'1 Cllll. 2 ICQld ~
..... 52k ml. ..... ~
19.590/0tio. 9411-720-3711
BMW Z3 2.3 'ti 131c ml,
chrome paclutge, black/
black, cd w/ premium
twld, loaded. $31,000.
949·574-9295
BMW -._ D0001 STRATUS 'M 4-0r, Alpine WlllW8lnd. Low 1111111. 5·•Pl:i
t:W"41= ~~ ~ 111111epcx111io1$e,988 STEAUH0 _,, NABERS
14M4M900 (714)54tt100
BMW 54111 TT FOAD EXPLOAEA 15
BMW Z3 'f7 ~~ low-= LTD, low milel. llllhet. 11K ml, U llr CREVIER BMW moom>01 Ind lllOltl
(BIOOOO) $23,955 11~ ••"-317·1 (849841) $15,988 CA£VIER BMW ---'-~..._....--=;:;..;.;,o,.;..__ NABERS
Oldlnlcllllll .,... • Aovll
'S1 V• M>, p • .-. NC, pe, pw, pcl, CC, llllllO, MW battery, tires & llalttr,
....... allld. Cll Sin! ..
714-8112-997! S2495 obo.
OldlMollllt ~ '00 Dull cir, 1211 1111, ,., ••
(211056) 111.• MAIERS
(714llf=!100
abused "' ~ yolAh placed In resldenllal fd-
714-835-3171 (714)14M100
.-------------~-------8llW 540I •• 8llclrlblk,
-.. 11 :.-I IUlo. loaded. lj)Ol1 IUlp ..
PONTIAC FIAElllRD M
lties. 2·5 daYt/Week. min-
imal how, English com-
munication required. ======:::! Related college and/IX
experience preferred. ...._ be nry of ~
$12.64/houl. of .... -penlel. Cl** wtlll .. Ioctl You'll participate In a lletttr IUllnlM Bu-comprehen1lv1 aleff ,_, beforl you Mnd =e ti pment progrem lllJ 1110f11Y or IMe
lr1irWlg In lflstruo. '°' Mt'Vlcff. Reed l8driqllls and 1111 fn. lllld undentlnd any
side view CJ( the Juvenile COllhctl before you
Justice Sysiem. Openings sign. are throughout Orange i....,p' .._ ___ ___.
County.
For an applicallon, please send a self-addressed,
$0.55 ·~ legal-size envelope to: O.C. Oecic. cl
Ed.. Attn: HR/Tutor, P.O.
Box 9050. Cotta Mesa. CA
92628-9050. ANEOEJAOA
TEAM ADlllNISTRATOfl
Pll't Tlmt only llexl>le
IChodule In lntf financial
Ind lntemet OClfrC*lY, ~ commission, travel, and bonuses avallable.
P1oase cal 626-272·5262 tor oonsldeBtion.
Hlglt.,,ofli.Marlnt Bual-nesss. SOrell loc, lrddl ..
licenses, franchises, web
de. Sl.696,000. Cal for~
tails. 8!j. 949-646-2011
TME VILLAGE ...
Bal .. AlltllOla'lgt Liq Uc
2Bf Houle+ Apei1menl
AQ!!!! t4M'7MM9
1--=1
rvws;n _, POWER 6lil< !Ti, excelent concllon. BOATS BOATS 141.000 pp s111-522.aoeo.
FORO F1SO XL $13,300 T-llr, 11fop, lo lo ....
LR 00. lie, -*>. ~ AT I ..... 241t ni, wholesale 88 ..... -
'IO Slllpjlcll 24ft
open, new engine, low
holn, lnlief, never lshed. Immaculate, $19,500.
949-642·5488
1-~1
Udo 14.
CoqMlil S500 obo.
c.11 lllrll ()I Calhy
14t-MM715
Q.ASSIFIED
tc•• the .oludon
you're seorcbtn9 for-wheeh~
BllW 7«11 .. 113.325. CM 714-549-2565 (~~ -
"°'· ~Wlllllt'Slnd (111109M 143."5 STE BllW
14t-M5-5IOO
llllW 740! ..,
Low 111111, CO, Premlulll
Package FON> RANGER '97 Al*> AUDI 'f1
(SV~BllW--ir... ~. 4 ,_ h. M, ...._, AT, li:ledld
23k ml. $8,200/0bo. Cal (tA100011) 115,a
I I T14-IS5-!171 ~ ~ BllW 7491 W FOfl> WINDSTAR 'ti
94M78-0101/Weelt days 714-M4-S200
949·644·8559/Weelc-endt
-. ~ ~· ~ 7 pawnoer. low mllel,
llllW Z3 W CMVIER ~-1 beige. excelent condtlonl
17K ml, 1.9 llr 114-IS5-317t (A23319) NABERS S&.988
(~EVIER 8~{195 BUICK camlAY '00 (714)540=!100
71WSW171 LTO, lealher, power SHI, LAND ROVER
!WW Z3 '98 ~1~:"" pr41= DISCOVERY '94 2IK ml, t.9 llr NABERS 83K ml, $9,500.
(B8NJ459) $24,995 C7U)54H100 MHS0-7180 CR£VIERBMW ---'"--~~"""-':..:..:..:;---_ __;:::.:;:..=::...:..:.=---
714-835-3171 CffEVY TAHOE II JAGUAR XJS 134
4x4, TV, e¥Wytftlng Grttn. vtty good cond. ,_
(M09t311 -ttt.711 tlree, lo mileage, $2500.
714-444-5200 .:..71:.z4-322='-"..a!.'72""'1.'----
BMW 3181 '97
* POA8CHE tl3 ..,,-Bl/ ecq,e, **, ni. prernUn
IOUlld. MflPle lelihef Int. ulend•d w1rr1nty.
153.000. 949-719·1111
eta REGAL GS f7
Lo .... loeded, euplf•
~&-.! (12735411 ,, ....
714-444-6200
TQ.YOTA 4-fMtNER 't4
5-tf>d, V• ~casa. al f11t!, NH'OOI, loeded. ..... oond,
deoend1ble. i.w Mlchlllnl. 11~ ni. $13,750. Cal
Steve 949-64S-7332
Omlhl. Ht 1810I
Hiii!; fl9nny.MlfMklOln9W111CtflecoVery.com
tu: 402-3&M311
SELL YOUR CAR
IN CLASSIFJED
STEVE OBRADOVICH
MH1Mt18
... Land Tllll Co. A Sclblldllry of CENTEX
A FOl1unl 500 Co.
you're .eeldn3 a home, apa.runenc..
pee o r new occ:uOOltJonl
4-0r, Black wfT an
(3XCU702) CCCCC$20.995
CREVIER 8llW
714-835-3171 Buldl S1llloll Wegon '92 UNCOLH Conllnerial 'tO
6-cyl, lllAO, e/c, pa, pb. ...... ~ ....,., lnllrlor, cc. WJr'f cteen. $2900. 4-«, lul pOWer, lb new,
PP 94M42·1520 13750. 71t32M721.
'91 FOAD f.150 XLT Spr c.o.. 3-dr, ...... towing t more. Oritv 1411 ml, ~
123.000. pp ~15-4336
POLICY FlxGrout.Com
In en e4lort to "'-the best TRe Alpalr a Restomlon eeMcie poabe to our r98d-{714) 2SW171
era lllCS llCMlfllel'I,. we wl ---=L=.:i2:::::23:..:c«.:.::3'---requlre Coml'ldorl who
advef1IM In the Selvlce LEAKY St-. Repand.
Olret1oly to lnc:lude thGlr Rearoutina & lnstala1ion.
Cont11c1ora LicenH DEAN TIU: ~ IUllber In their adV&ftise. 714-IAl-8521
menl YIM co-openrtion Is ------~ qrn!!y grecietad. 296 CLEANING
I •,.:m:: I /MAINTENANCE
. _ •HATE TO CLEAN?* ResldentlaUofflce 21 VI' oc rers. <Mlity ~ ~
llblt. Bomia 94~548-0054
1
112-=I
-·
r
--; -.. -. .,-i ~
' ' "• I • ~
I ' ' ' J~ .. ~· 11'.·H
UCENSEO COHTRACTOfl No job too 1111. M 81Mc:91
Rlpalr, IMIOClll, ...
"'!9Ylce!MllM*'
l·J~I
r-~~1
r --,
EZ Monpge $$$
Online or tn ~
1st 8' 2nd TNst Deccls
R.csidcntial. Commcm.I
tic Home lmpl0¥Ullmt
888.933. S626 www.~(Oll
The Calif. N>llo-U tlll tlt1 Com·
llillelofl REQUIRES
... .. Ulld houll-
ldd gocldll mcMtl ll'lnt hlr P.U.C. tll T IUftblf; tRo1
Ind ---ll'lnt llltT.C.P.,...
lnll ...........
I WW'-' a Cll9' ............
-~. niowr, ho Of~~-PUaJC u1u1111:.8
COMMIStON
7t4-$5M161
~r-·-----
.. ~
r;g;:~
• 'TT"~
r --- - --. -• -,
~ I
I
-----· -
r --··--··-·-~ ~.-, ....
MIMINll ... lllllUI
714·895..6677
\
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Saturday, October 21, 2000 • ,
4' esa
C .Bll!C~®
2000 MODEL YEAR END
Do Not
Miss this
Once a
Year Sale!
2000 GMC YUKON DENA'I 2000 BUICK CINFUllY cusroM
TV w/remote, VCR, Nintendo
M PM~. 8oM Audio,
8 CD changer, hMd phones
$8 ,500
TOTAL SAVINGS
Front & ,..,, AC, keytess emry,
On Star
$7,16 6
TOTAL SAVINGS
DIJ8I zone * cond. •Ir' fib atkwl
system, mll'Tora, du8I power Driver & right fn>nt ~
3.1 liter ve, auto trans airbags
ITCH THE GAMES HERE!
NFL FOOTBALL
MAIOR LEAGUE IASllALL
&EtmRTO
WIN ••• 46''
NIW .200 I PONTIAC ADllC 4DI GT
$2'' PEI ~: "'°· ctoMd c:i:: Mo .~~down
.JI • Ullng MOO Colege Gr8d
-.;t:44e . =-1~ r: ~ ~ lhef9lftlf. (10 '510238)
Roofr9dl
.. . ' . . . I • I I • . .
Bl 0 Salurdcry, October 21, 2000 Daily Pilot
MSRP $48, INCLUDES
SALE $3:r:995 cO:.~~ER t1W llfCJCI•l R~TE --
2000 Catera
2000 Eldorad o
Stoct< #-4~ MSRP $41 9fT1
SALE $32:000
SAVE $9,997
MSRP
SALE $28,500
SAVE $6,113
OfoAPR
Ul'TO
811611111$
Oil SB.ECTED
MODELS
OVER 50 QlJALITY PRE-OWNED VEHICLE~ AVAILA8Lf--· '88 BUICK LESABRE V-6~i9htbfue, super transportation value! (461054)
'95 ME.CURY COUGAR xRr,leOth«, Aeto Pock098, wper sllOrpt (600148)
'96 FORD WINDSTAR 7 passenger, law mile$, beige, excellent condition! (A23319)
'96 OLDSMOBILE CUnASS OnfY 26k miltil 'Miite, non-~8rT(j35812)
'99 OLDSMOBILE CUTLASS . V-6, CD, IOW mlres;bOI. Of worr., previous rental! (33.4952)
'97 VOLKSWAGEN JmA GLS Low miles:i;fOc:k, moonrOoT & morel New car trade-in! (080076)
199 OLDSMOBILE CUTLASS White, lC,; miles, previous rent0rt -(339T96)
'95 FORD EXPLORER LTD, low milel, ~. moonroof and morel (8498A1)
'98 OLDSMOBILI I~ GLS, loW Tak miles, ~. Cb, & morel Bal. ol warr. (3895221
'98 FORD MUSTANG 01 V-8 auperc.wirged, low miles, 5~, lthr, bol. ol warr. {2698.U)
'95 JEEP GRAND CHEROKIE Low miT.S, V·8,~ Tecih.r, CD Cinamo;;lf78'870)
;~;~=~~31~1
~"n,~~~v~~JLn
'97 CADILLAC DIVllll Low miles, beige, tonleatfl«~ 60rOf warr., v:-!'I deanl (203999)
'97 UDlllAC CATERA Low 15[° mlleifilOcl(, mooni00ftlf.4M04)
~~·ii~,~!!!' Pf*. rnol. (21105$)
~.~~·~or~~fl)I
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