HomeMy WebLinkAbout2001-10-13 - Orange Coast Pilot' I
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SERVING lHE NEWPORT -/.ii.SA COMMUNmES SINCE 1907 ON ntE WEB: WWW.DAILYPILOtCOM SAnm>AY, OCTOBER 13, 2001
DA investigating possible Brown Act violation
• Costa Mesa attorneys say
they are confident there
was nothing wrong with
meetings about the
Home Ranch project.
Lolita Harper
DAILY PlLOT
COSTA MESA -The Orange
County district attorney's office has
opened a preliminary investigation
into a possible violaU.on of the
Brown Act by the City Council and
Planning Commission, officials said
this week.
Deputy Dist. Atty. Pete Pierce, of
a special unit designed to investi-
gate government officials, con-
firmed be is looking into a possible
violation of the Brown Act. the state
law that governs public meetings.
Part of that law mandates that
the public must be notified in
advance i1 an issue is going to be
discussed by a formal committee set
up by the City Council.
The investigation was prompted
by a letter from Costa Mesa resi-
dent Paul Flanagan, who claimed
the city violated the Brown Act dur-
ing the early subcommittee negoti-
ations of the development agree-
ment for the Home Ranch project.
Flanagan is a member of the Costa
Mesa Citizens for Responsible
Growth and a vocal opponent of the
proposed development.
·we are satisfied that there
haven't been any violations," said
Assistant City Atty. Tom Woods, in
the only comment the office was
willing to give.
Flanagan declined to comment
about his complaint.
Teny Francke, general counsel
for the Califorrua First Amendment
Coalition, said the city may have
violated the law by allowing a for-
mal steering committee to discuss
the development agreement
behind closed doors.
During the Feb. 20 City Council
meeting, council members voted to
authorize the formation of a steering
committee -consisting of two
membeni from the council and two
members from the Planning Com-
mission, as well as staff -to directly
SEE BROWN PAGE A7
'I knew we were in unique
territory, but we had
r ulings from the city
attorney before we
proceeded with the
discussions. It was merely
a sharing of information.'
Libby Cowan
Costa Mesa mayor
'On the one hand, it gives y ou a sense of security, , School board b ut on th e other hand it mak es you uneasy i t needs to be there.'
Lory Harman, traveler
SEAN Hill.ER I OAJLV PILOT
A National Guard member monitors a checkpoint Friday at John Wayne Airport. part of new security measures.
~ under· guard
Paul Olnton
D AILY PILOT
T ravelers boarding planes at
John Wayne Airport passed
under a more watchful eye
Friday. as members of the
California Army and Air National
Guards oversaw security checkpoints.
lbe guards, dressed in full fatigues
and armed with pistols and M-16s,
monitored the screening process at
the X-ray machines as they patrolled
the Thomas F. Riley Terminal.
They are there to send a clear mes-
sage to travelers, Slaff Sgt. Genaro
Franco said.
•1t is sending a message to the pub-
lic that the airport ls safe," Franco
said.
Passing through
security at the
airport now
means getting by
armed military
personnel
Air travel at John Wayne Airport
bas not returned tQ the levels it knew
before the attacks of Sept. 11.
The number of passengers using
the airport dropped 33.2% in the
month of September, as compared
with the same period last year, accord-
ing to an airport report.
Commercial flights were down
15.3%, and total operations. which
includes all takeoffs and departures,
slipped 27 .6% during September.
lbe numbers bear testament to the
fact that fewer people have returned
to air travel since the terrorist attacks.
Passengers noticed the heightened
security level at the airport, but
weren't all reassured by it.
Lory Hannan, who was heading
back to Salt Lake City after a trip to
Orange County for business, wasn't
comforted.
SEE JWA PAGE AS
In ~tters of health, batteries aren't erippgb
member faces
two charges
• In what he says will
be his only comments
on his DUI arrest,
Jim Ferryman pledges
to stay in office.
COSTA MESA -The
Orange County district
attorney has charged New-
port-Mesa Unified School
01Strict trustee Jun Ferry-
man with two criminal nus-
demeanors in connection
with driving under the
influence of alcohol, officials
said Friday.
Prosecutors have
charged Ferryman, 53, with
one count of drunk driVlDg
and a second one that states
he had a blood alcohol level
of more than .08, the legal
hmit, said Tori Richards,
spokeswoman for the
Orange County distnct
attorney's office.
·He also had a prior DUI
that happened 30 years
'I pledge this will
never happen again.
I understand
I must face the
consequences.
I certainly don't
condone my actions,
but I offer to you
that 1 am human and
I made a mistake.'
Jim Ferryman
School board member
ago.· she said. thou~ exdct
details of that arrest were
unavailable.
As of late Friday, offiodls
did not have information on
what Ferryman's exact
blood alcohol level was at
the time of tus arrest. He
took a blood test. the results
of which were submitted to
SEE CHARGES PAGE AS
Infant in critical condition
after nearly drowning
An infant girl was in 01t-
ical condition late Friday
after she almost drowned in
a pool at a home m Cameo
Shores, officials said.
Newport Beach firefight-
ers and paramedics respond-
ed to the call about 3 p.m ..
Capt. John Blauer said.
He said when they
arrived at the scene, the
child's mother was giving the
1-year-old girl CPR.
The baby was in compete
arrest as paramedics took be:r
to Hoag Hospttai Bkuel" Said
"She WU not breathing,
and she did not have a
pulse." he said. ·But on the
way to the hospital our para-
medics continued to give her
additional advance life sup-
port treatment and were ab&e
to get a mild pulse.•
Blauer said the baby was
reportedly underwater for an
·unspecified amount of
time.•
Hospital officials declined
to provide further infonna-
tion on the condition o( the
dlild Friday to potect patieDl
privacy. -Deepe81wwth .
'I ' .
MESA VERDE UNITED METHODIST CHURCH twtnmln
Mela Verdi United~ Claurcb bil tbl 'filloa:...., ~ lrielMI~ =and 10 .~.
iltry. • Woinblp, featu.tiilg • mullc progrma wllb .,.... ~ ·• 8 30ooa.m. Sunday ICbool far Child cue Ii available· al IM>th Ml'Yicel. Adult Bible lbldy -: Baker St c voutb __..at 8:30 and 10 a.m. Didt OeOlge ii ..mar putor. 1be c:burch 11at1701 • Oita
Mesa. lnformatiGD: (714) 91~.
A2 Salurdoy, Odob.r 13, 2001
Acting out ..
.. God's goodness
•Be a lMng expre&Slon of God~ ldnd·
fteu."
-MotherT.,_.
I was so enthralled watching the sweet
scene 1n front of me that I didn't
notice the woman behind the counter
lignaling me over to her register. Pinally
the man behind me tapped me on the
shoulder and pointed to the WODlAD,
who was patiently waiting. I IDAde my
apologies and after paying for my books,
walked a few steps away to quietly con-
tinue watching. What I saw made me
smile, and I'm sure God was smiling too.
A c:Ute girl who looked about 3 pre-
tended to read a
book to her little sis-
ter 1n a stroller. The
girls were in match·
tng pink outfits and
had matching dim·
pled smiles. The
book was upside
down, but that didn't
seem to stop the
words, the inflec·
tions or the gestures. OndyTrone
Christeson
Daily Pilot
The little sister
smiled and giggled
as she tried to grab
the book out of her
big sister's band.
The woman, I
assumed must have
MORAL Of
THE STORY The Center for Splrltual Dllcovery's Bm Wolfe says he mes art to convey the presence of God.
been their mother, was watching nearby
while also looking at some books. Then
an elderly gentleman asked the mother
something and I heard her say, •Of
course you can. She would love that.
Thank you for asking.•
The man bent down and held out
some stickers for the girl. The girl hesi·
tated, looked back at her smiling mother
who then nodded approval.
"Oh, yes. Thank you very, very
much,• the little girl said. ·can I have
one for my little sister too?"
Celebrating creativity
and. the spirit
I was impressed that one so young
hlsd such mature thoughtfulness. The
man seemed touched as well. He gave a
sticker to the older girl, and put one on
the pudgy hand of the little sister. The
little girl looked at the sticker, then back
up at the gentleman and back at the
sticker again. She squealed in delight
and left the sticker on her hand. The
man patted the older sister on the shoul-
der and slowly headed for the door.
A teenage girl with a colorful outfit
and a friendly face had also been watch-
ing. She put a book back on the shelf
and walked quickly over to the door to
hold it open for the gentleman.
•God bless you," the man said, as he
patted her on the shoulder and walked
out the store.
Sunday Night Alive, meeting
monthly in Costa Mesa, seeks
to match the arts with divinity
YCMmg CIMlng
DAILY PILOT
Bill Wolfe's pants have smatterings of
stripes, Dowers and spirals in every
ooloc of the rainbow. His shirt is a
loud green. His hat has spokes shoot-
ing out like a jester's.
The ensemble is a symbol of bis spirituali-
ty -a belief that artistic creativity is a
divinely inspired product that is present in
everyone, Wolfe said His position is that the
spirit is nondenominational and encompasses
any religion.
all have that spark.•
front of a group, her knees have literally
stopped quivering, her Mnds have stopped
shaking.
"Part ol spirltuality for me is a Jovtng envi-
ronment.• Kaplan said. "Creative expression
to me is ... spirltuality Is always a.ting."
Por a special Halloween celebration on
Oct. 28, the group wW sing karaoke, put on
skits and dance at a Huntington Beach
clubhouse instead of its usual Costa Mesa
location.
In November, participants will return to
the Center for Spiritual Discovery for a
program on Native Americans and
Thanksgiving.
"Take Beethoven," Wolfe said. •Music
was divinely inspired through him. That's
what happens in the community. We have all
different kinds of levels of ability, but every-
one has that sense of and the presence of
God and the beauty of music.•
I was still feeling warm inside as I left
the shopping center and headed to the
m.8.rket. While stopping at a major inter·
section, I was touched again by what I
saw. A repairman pulled his truck over
and hopped out to help a woman with a
cane as she crossed the busy street.
Everybody waited patiently, not only
unW the woman bad crossed safely, but
al.so while the man ran back to his truck.
Several of us spontaneously waved and
yelled "thank you· to the repairman.
As the director and founder of Sunday
Night Alive, a self-expression group that
meets monthly at the Center for Spiritual Dis·
covery (previously known as the Costa Mesa
Church of Religious Science), Wolfe heads up
bis actors. singers. dancers and writers by
talk1ng the talk and wearing it too. As a
musician, he said he uses his art to convey
the presence of God.
Every month, participants from a gamut of
religions perform using almost every art
medium. Wolfe, a composer and conductor,
plays the piano at every Sunday Night Alive
gathering.
Wolfe -who has been involved with Fil·
ipino Baptist, Methodist, Religious Science,
Unity and Episcopal chwdl.es -started the
group 16 years ago from a workshop called
•Ufe Song,• which had the mission to ·ce1e-
brate creativity ln people.• •To me, there's only one God,• Wolfe
said. •And he bas many different names.
So there's only one source or energy you
could call it because I believe that God is
present in everything and everyone. We
Sometimes they pray. Sometimes it's more
of a humorous, lighthearted program. Sunday Night Alive shares that mission.
·it's a place for people to try different
things that. under other d.rcumstances, they
would be made fun of,• Wolfe said. I talked about this with my daughter,
who had also experienced people help-
ing one another recently at the airport.
•tt seemed lilce everybody was look-
ing out for each other,• she said.
To Arline Kaplan. Sunday Night Alive
offered a safe place to overcome her fear of
public speaking. By speaking and singing in
I've heard it said that kindness is
God's goodness acted out. I pray that we
all find ways to spread God's love, th.at
random acts of kindness become less
random and common courtesy becomes
more common.
And you can quote me on that.
• CINDY 1llANI OIUSTISON Is a Newport
Beach resident who spMks frequently to parent·
Ing grc>Yps. She may be r~.ched via e-mail at
cl~thegrow.com or through the mall at
P.O. Box 6140-No. 505, Newport ae.ch, CA
92658.
............
Mortcmr •
~17+4224
Faith
CALENDAR
SPECIAL EVENTS
SPECIAL SERVICE
The Child Centered Church
will meet at Bonita Creek Park
Center at 10 a.m. Sunday, with
Mark Wood and his daughter
Lacey appearing as speda1
ltW>Ell$ HCJJUNE
(949) 6.Q.fi086 •
guest musicians. The park is at
University Drive and La Vida
Street in Newport Beach. Pree.
(949) 640-1343.
MEDfTATlON RETREAT
Father Tom Hand will give a
nonresidential meditation
retreat through Sunday at Our
Lady Queen of Angell, 2046
M,ar YlSta Drive, Newport
Beach. Call for times. $20.
(949) 219-1408.
right No news 9lOfies, ~
ldltotW "*"' Ot -.. dlei "*"' t..elnc.'lbt~~
EXPLORING WORLD RELIGIONS
Fairview Community
Church will begin its series
titled •A Common Spiritual
Journey: Exploring World Reli-
gions in Ught of Christian
Experience" at 1 p.m. Wednes-
day with Imam Moustafa
Qazwini of the Islamic Educa-
tional Center of Orange Coun-
ty. The series will continue on
Wednesdays through Nov. 14
at the church, :i.s.s Fairview
Road, Costa Mesa. Free. (714)
545-4610.
RUMMAGE SALE
St. Michael and All Angels
Episcopal Church will bold a
rummage sale to benefit the
Episcopal Service Alliance of
Orange County from 8 a.m. to 3
p.m. Oct. 20 at the church, 3233
Pacific View Drive, Corona del
Mar. Pree. (949) 644-0463.
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Daily Pilot ' . '
Inaugural 17th Street fair
•Merchants brought
together to fight road
widening now celebrate
together.
Lolita Harper
DAllY PILOT
COSTA MESA -Brought
together a year ago to fight the
widening of their street, the mer-
chants on East 17th Street will bold
a fall harvest festival today to thank
the community for its support and
to draw more attention to their
businesses.
The 17th Street Village Street
Fair and Pall Harvest Festival will
span four blocks and include music,
dancing, pumpkin painting and
face painting. Most merchants will
have special treats for participants,
ranging from a live band at
Diedrich Coffee to free floats at
Ruby's Diner, said Stephanie Barg-
er, the event's chairwoman.
In addition to celebrating their
success in keeping a narrower 17th
:\.I \\ .\1 \'\.-... c>\\ :\.
FYI
• WHA~ 17th Street Village
Street Fair and Fall Harvest
Festival
• WIEN: 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. today
• WltaE: East 17th Street. from
Irvine Avenue to Newport Boule-
vard, In Costa Mesa
Street, Barger sald the merchants
want the community to be aware of
the variety of shops that can be
found on the busy thoroughfare.
#There are just too many stores
and services to list. People who just
drive by don't get to appreciate
what a great shopping street this
is,· said Barger, who is also the
executive director of Earth Resource.
Foundation, 230 E. 17th St.
The merchants hope to cultivate
the character of the street and cre-
ate a one-stop shopping environ-
ment where people are comfortable
walking around.
·our goal is to create an
atmosphere on 17th Street where
REG. "l.15 21a
people come, park, walk around
and shop,• sa.id Doug Adsit, co-
owner of Pierce Street Annex, 330
E. 17th St.
Adsit said he is elated the
•quaintness• of the street was pre-
served md hopes to see more land-
scaping, improvements along the
walkways. Adsit and many of his
fellow . merchants have been on
17th Street for 25 years or more.
The mix of the old shops with the
newer and more mainstream busi-
nesses makes for a .perfect combi-
nation, he said.
In addition to being neighbors,
the business owners are more con-
nected after banding together to
fight the proposed widening, creat-
ing a strengthened sense of com-
munity, Adsit said.
Most of the merchants on 17th
Street live in the area, Barger said.
Therefore, they care not only about
the bottom line but the neighbor-
hood itself, she said.
"The secret to a healthy society
is having a sense of community and
getting to know one another,#
Barger said.
~Vegetarian ~Chili
• Mild • Mild -No Salt • Spicy
• Spicy -No Salt
: ~~-No Salts• 49
REG. '2.29 .& 15 az.
. ' '~. ~ 13, 2oo1 As
search for suspect
heightens wifu reward
• Police offer $.5,000
for information leading to
17-year-old accused of
Godsoe murder.
0...,. lhllrath
DAILY PILOT
COSTA MESA -The Costa
Mesa Police Department has
announced a $5,000 rewar.d for
any information leading to the
arrest and conviction of Victor
Garcia, a teenager accused of
bludgeoning 16-year-old Ceceline
Godsoe to death last month.
Godsoe's body was foWld lying
fully clothed on a brush-covered
trail in Fairview Park in the early
morning hours of Sept 21.
Police believe she met her
alleged killer at the park the night
before.
Officials issued a no-bail juve-
nile warrant for Garcia's arrest
Sept. 27 but have had no luck in
arresting him so far. Police sus-
pect Garda beca~ his finger-
prints matched those taken from
the spot where Godsoe was fOWld.
Detectives working on the case
suspect Garcia fled to Mexic.o.
Police say it will be a long and
arduous proc~s to track Garcia if
he did escape south of the border.
Godsoe. a Costa Mesa resi-
dent, died of a blow to her head,
according to the Orange County
coroner. '
Police also have not been able
to detennine a motive for the crime
but say it does not appear to be
gang-related.
Garcia, also known as Victor
Manuel Garduno or Pumpkin
Head, is described as having
brown eyes, black hair and a trib--
al tattoo on his uppk left arm. He's
about 5-foot-8 and weighs about
195 pounds.
Those with information are
asked to call Det. Mike Cacho at
(714)754-5340 or the Costa Mesa
Police Department at (714)754-
5255.
HFTER™Efflf
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MOTHER'S DOES INDEPENDENT LABORATORY TESTING
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POLICI FIUS
COSTA MESA
. .
........ , ....... p~
llOlll lWU* Ari AUto UMft w. report9d at 4:2S p.m.
Thuttdey.
•C'All111-..... .....
.... WltllOn Mre9t:
UnJewful possession of a
shotgun was reported •t
9:1S a.m. Thursday. ........ 8ouiev-* Pos-
session of • controlled sut>-
stance was reported in the
3500 bfodt at 4:30 p.m.
Thursday.
• Newport......,,.,. An
individual was reportedly
under the influence of a
controlled substance in the
1900 block at 8:S8 a.m.
Thursday.
• South CoMt Drive: A
grand theft was reported in
the 900 block at 7:25 p.m.
Thursday.
•Welt 19th Stnet:: Posses-
sion of an open container of
akohol in a public parlt was
reported in the 500 block at
5:30 p.m. Thursday.
NEWPORT BEACH
• Avoaido Avenue: A com-
mercial burglary was report-
ed in the 800 block at 1 p.m.
Friday.
... lboe Boutev.rd:
A petty theft was reported
In the 2100 block at 6 p.m.
Thursday.
• C.fnlM» Drive: An auto
theft was reported in the
3900 block at 6 p.m. Thurs-
day.
• West Coast Highwlly
m'Nf Riverside Awnue: A
reckless dnver was reported
at 6:04 p.m. Thursday.
• West c.o.st Highw•y
m'Nf 1Ustln Avenue: A hit·
and-fun was reported at
4:52 p.m. Thursday.
• Newport 5hot.s Drive:
An attempted burglary was
reported in the 6000 block
at 9:30 a.m. Thursday.
• 511nti-vo Drive: A home
burglary was reported in the
1800 block at 3:21 a.m.
Friday.
• 41st Street: A loud party
was reported in the 100
block at 2:06 a.m. Friday.
Dofft Pilot
Ju<;lge orders limits on group home residents
•After a protracted
ba:We, recovery center
will only be able to
serve six people
per house.
Lolita~
DAILY Pilot
COSTk MESA -An
Orange County Superior
Court judge decided th.is
week to restrict an Orange
Avenue group home to no
more than six residents per
house.
Briefly Jn
THE ·JtEWS
CHOC community
walk set for Sunday
When Debbie Lambert's
son was diagnosed with
leukemia five years ago. she
turned to Children's Hospital
of Orange County for his
treatment.
What she found there was
a group of concerned staff
members who became her
second family.
"They answered any
questions, they filled in any
blanks,· Lambert said. ·1
couldn't have done 1t without
them. They were a godsend.•
Children's Hospital has
been serving residents of
Orange County since 1964.
On Sunday. the hospital 1S
hosting its largest annual
fund-raiser, the CHOC/Dis-
neyland Community Walk.
About 10,000 walkers are
expected to participate m the
five-kilometer route around
the perimeter of South Coast
Plaza in Costa Mesa.
Newport Beach resident
Laurie Eastman is looking
forward to her third year as a
participant. Eastman. and a
team she created with some
of her neighbors, has raised
$3,300. ·a just kind of snow-
Calta Mesa alleged the
home violated oty codes that
prohibit more than stx people
from living in a residential
service facility. Because
Coastal Recovery Uving is
run out or two homes -at
1976 and 1978 Orange Ave.
-the total number of tenants
will be 12.
The judge also ordered
owners Robert and 1Tacy
Thmeny to pay for the city's
court costs. The Tamenys
could not be reached for com-
ment Friday.
Cound.lman Gary Mona-
han said the ruling marked a
balled," Eastman said. ·we
just hope we can make a dif-
ference.·
Nobel Prize winner
got start at UCI
A recipient of the 2001
Nobel Prize in medicine
started his academic career
at UC Irvine.
Leland H. Hartwell
received the prize for yeast
experiments that he began in
1970.
Hartwell was one of the
founding faculty members in
UCl's Department of Molecu-
lar Biology and Biochemistry
in 1965, the year the school
opened.
It was here that Hartwell
became a pioneer in the field
of cell cycle research. which
was considered radical at the
time because only a few
researchers used yeast in
their work. Hartwell used
yeast mutants to identify
genes that control protein
synthesis and other cellular
processes.
Hartwell has since discov-
ered more than 100 genes
involved in controlling the
cell cycle. which bas a signif-
icant effect on cancer
research.
Hartwell is director of the
Fred Hutchinson Cancer
Research Center in Seattle.
He shared the Nobel Prize
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Umiffd lo ~ on ltoitd
.......... lal ................ ., ..,, .... ., ......_ ___ ..._._,., ..
victory for the dty, wblch hll
been trying f« yean to limit
the number ol 1'81idents at
Coastal Recovery Uving U.C,
_ allo known as the Orange
House.
•we won. lt4s taken a long
Ume, but the dty bas been
successful," Monahan said.
home did not fit in a residen-
tial neigbbomoOd next to a
preschool and a church.
Although the house is not
being shut dowb, the number
or residents will at least be
reduced. be said.
The house at 1976 Orange
Ave. bas eight bedrooms and
the one at 1978 has four,
Coldwell Banker employee
Roger Davis said last year
when the homes were up for
sale.
Ralph R. Cannon, 96,
of eo.ta Mesa, a super-
intendent for Padlic Bell
Telephone Co., died
Wednesday from natur-
al causes. Mr. Cannon
was born on July 28.
1905, ln Denver.
He ii survived by his
wife, Kay R. Cannon.
Private family services
wW be scheduled.
Mote than a year ago, city
officials dropped criminal
charges again.st the home but
filed a civil lawsuit in its
place, asking for damages
and an injunction to stop the
Tamenys from operating the
home.
Orange House resident
Paul Daoy said he shared a 9------~-iiliill!Sil room with another man for
Monahan said the group
with R. TI.mothy Hunt and
Paul M. Nurse, both of the
Imperial Cancer Research
Fund in Great Britain.
Lawyers group
to hold meeting
For a quarter of a century.
the Orange County Women
Lawyers Assn. has been sup-
porting and encouraging
women in the legal profes-
sion and will celebrate it
today at the Robert Mondavi
Wine and Food Center, 1570
Scenic Ave., Costa Mesa.
Speaking at the event will
be California Supreme Court
Justice Joyce Kennard, who
will honor Newport Beach
resident Lynn Tomalas for
her longtime volunteer work
with Costa Mesa Habitat for
Humanity Women's Build.
Tomalas will walk away with
the coveted Woman of the
Year Award.
Free automobile
inspection today
Anybody who has ever
gotten into their car and
wondered what that strange
sound was is invited to a free
vehicle inspection today at
the Automobile Club of
Southern California.
Car owners can have their
vehicles inspected for free
during the Auto Club's day-
long Car Care Fair. The
event is designed to help
$110 per month.
motorists drive safely and
save money. officials said.
Inspectors will be on hand
to check out the belts, lights,
fluids. hoses and tires on peo-
ple's cars. Also on display will
be the Funny Car of Gary
Densbam of the National Hot
Rod Assn. and other profes-
sional race cars.
The Car Care Fair will be
from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. at the
Auto Club Administrative
Offices, 3333 Fairview Road,
Costa Mesa.
Health fair to
off er checkups
Residents are encouraged
to stay informed about their
physical well-being and
attend a free health fair today
sponsored by Families Costa
Mesa.
The fair will offer free
immunizations for cbtldren,
diabetes and anemia screen-
ings. and blood pressure
checks. Participants also will
be entertained by Senior Tap
Dancers, The Navigators and
members of Wanda's Dance
Studio.
Children are welcome to
play games for prizes and
enter a raffle for a free
bicycle or scooter. Free
popcorn and soda also will
be provided.
The fair will be from 10
a.m. to 3 p.m. at Save Our
Youth, 661 Hamilton St.
Information: (949) 574 -3970.
MEXI CAN RESTAURANT
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your vehicle.
1-888-308-6483
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THANKS TO OUR
NEIGHBORSI
.. ~ .... ,.,._~.._C I' 10 ........ _.. ~· .. ,..L.=:~:----m•u .. ..., .... -, ......
TORRES
RONNIES.
Ronnie S. Tones • .W, of Foun~1n
Valley died Tuesday, October 9
2001 of con¥>11cationa from an
abdomiMI cbordef at Kaiser
Foundation Hospital In Anaheim CA Son ot Rut>en and THM
Torres. Ronny wu bom on July 8
1957 In Nofwalk. CA. He attended
Gt11ndview Elementaty School 1n
Monterey Paitt. CA and Schurr and
VaM High &::nools In Montebello.
CA.
Alter ~lion. Ronny enlisted 1n The l.Inlted Stat .. Navy He was
stationed at various beses around
the wOl1d Upon muming IO Costa
Mea. CA. he mam.d and staned a
small landlcaOlna business. In 1995, he and hie lamlty relocated to
Draper. Utah, where they owned a
Mrs. Fields Cookie franchtSe and
oonhnued hlS landeca.plng and
carpentry businesses They
remainec:l In Ui.h f0t five years
Ronny and his family returned 10
CA In the ran of 2000 and settled in
Fountain Valley.
His family and friends wiH loV1ngly
remember Ronny '°' his sense of humor. lor his kind and giving spmt.
for being a greet cook, and tor maklna lhe best Bloody Mary 111
town! Fie has been dac:obed as aom.one wilt\ •a c:hMrlul epint.
always happy and sweet. always willing to help lll'f way he coukl •
His Wife of 20 yeers, Tern Lopez Torre.. and his daughters o.nlelle 17, and Lindsay, 18, IUrvtYe him In
addition he Is survi¥ed by .. mother T_,. TCWTM; hi* broel'ler
Rldty T0trea: 1'161 ...... Rull "Cootde" T~ Roaemarie Torres
Johnson and ROb06e lOOM Nlc:oh
his nephews CMAophef Negrete
and Ruben Johnson, his nieces
~~.Reina Ton91. ~Tones, Emma Johnson
and T .... Johneon, 1'161 halt lister
Roberta "SobM" T00'81 B&akemon.
and his~ dog Coton&. His
hathef Ruben Ton'M and hil brother
Ruben Tones. Jr. ar9 deoeaaed
After cnmatlon Ill Pac:lfic: View ~ry on Tuuday, October 16 1n
Newport Beach, CA, Ronny's
remalna will be tcanered at sea
Mem0f1a1 eervloea will be held at gptn on Tuesday at St. Mark
Presbvterian Ctiurch, 2100 Mar
Vista. ln Newport Beech. CA
(949) &W-1341
In lieu of flowef'I. dOnatlons may be
Mnl to the Ameftc:an cancer
Society °' the Boys and Gifta Club ~ councy (In pel1icular.
f I f l-
PIERCE llROTHERS
BELL BROADWAY
Mortuary * Chapel
Cremation
11 O Broadway, Costa Mesa
M2·9180
Daily Pilot
CHARGES
CONTINUED FROM A 1
the district attorney about
two weeks after the inci-
dent.
If convicted, Perryman
faces up to six months in
prison and a $1,000 fine. He
could by law, however,
remain on the school board
despite a conviction.
Ferryman did not return calls
Friday.
He was arrested Sept. 27
on suspicion of driving
under the influence after be
was involved in a collision
on Newport Boulevard in
Costa Mesa.
He and another driver
collided as they were head-
ing northbound and trying
to merge mto a single lane
because of construction,
Costa Mesa pol.ice offlcials
said.
During Tuesday's school
board meeting, Ferryman,
for the first time, spoke in
public about his arrest and
its aftennath, saying he had
rejected the possibility of
resigning.
"I'm obviously very
deeply regretful of my poor
judgment,• he told board
members. d1strict officials
and others present at the
meeting.
~~
•t pledge this wU1 never
happen again. l understand
I must face the conse-
quences. I certainly don't
condone my actions, but I
offer to you that I am
human and I made ~ mis-take.•
Perryman said he con-
sidered resigning from the
school board but was asked
not to do so by his support-
ers in the conununity.
•After consulting staff,
my fellow board members
and many, many, many oth-
er members of the commu-
nity who unanimously
urged me to stay, with the
exception of (fellow board
member) Mrs. [Wendy)
Leece, I have made the
commitment and the deci-
sion to stay on the board,•
he said.
Leece has suggested
Ferryman resign if he is
found guilty of the charges.
Ferryman called the
arrest and the events fol-
lowing the incident •a per-
sonal matter I've been dea,1-
ing with and facing all of
the ramifications head on.•
"I hope the community
will be supportive of me fin-
ishing my term [on the
board).• he said.
Ferryman is a 39-year
Costa Mesa resident and a
respected member of the
community who received
Restaurant
Establlshed In 1962 -----
MoruJt& Night Special
Cmnplm Petiu Fi/et Mignan Dinner
s J 9°0 per pn-son
Steven Hill, Agent
Lie.# OC80618
350 East 17th Street Suite 211
Costa Mesa, CA
949-648-9393
HATI fAlM
> f 'I 1 I 1, r n' 1 ,, q1
A
the COit.a Mesa Chamber of
Commerce Man of the Year
award in 1992.
A graduate of Costa
Mesa High School, he has
been involved with several
community organiz&tions,
including Costa Mesa and
Newport Harbor Lion's
Club, the Harbor Area Girls
Club and the Mesa Del Mar
Homeowners Assn.
He also has held various
positions with the Costa
Mesa Chamber of Com-
merce.
Board member Dave
Brooks said Friday that Fer-
ryman should remain on
the board even if convicted
of the alleged misde-
meanors.
The charges •have not
changed my views on the
issue at all,• he said. Ferry-
man •is an excellent board
member. He does so much
for the community.•
Other board members
could not be reached for
comment Friday.
Ferryman will be
arraigned later this month
on the charges.
• Deepa ltMlnrth coven public
safety and courts. She may be
reached at (949) 574-4226 or by
e-mail at deepa.bharathO
lati~.com.
JWA
CONTINUED FROM A 1
"It's a dichotomy,• Harman
said. •On the one hand, it
gives you a Mnse of security,
but on the other hand it
makes you uneasy it needs to
be there.•
The guards are members
of the 222nd Combat Com-
munications Squad, based in
Costa Mesa. Guard members
did not reveal how many of
their 110 members were sta-
tioned at the airport.
Last week. guard members
received training from the
Federal Aviation Administra-
tion before they could start
work at John Wayne Airport.
Franco said he could not
discuss the guard's training or
what specific duties members
would perform.
Airport spokeswoman
Yolanda Perez said they
aren't meant to take the place
of the sheriff's deputies.
"The presence or the
National Guard at the airport
came from the highest level
-the federal level,• Perez
said. "They're here to supple-
ment the aviation security
already in place.·
• Paul Olnton coven the environ-
ment and John Wayne Airport. He
may be reached at (949) 764-4330
or by e-mail at
paul.clintonOlatimes.com.
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Members of a Costa Mesa-based National Guard unit
patrol John Wayne Airport on Friday.
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1 ' I (l.1·,'.ifl·'d ( !1lllfl1ll'1 1•'. r. I\''.:
-Did You Know?
M !c!Way. October 1 '3, 2001 Doily Pilot
A chance for NeujJprt-Mesa, to.fight hunger, here and afar
H unger in our cnnmuni-
tiel, the United States
and Wound the world
remams a.problem many peo-
ple in the faith community are
concemed about and acting
upon. You are invited to
become a part ol the solution
as the 13th annual Interfaith
CROP Hungei Walk, spon-
sored by Wahoo's Fish Theo,
takes places at 1p.m.Oct.21
at St Mark Presbyterian
Church in Newport Beach.
Some 250 walkers of all
ages are expected from sever-
al dO'Zell congregations,
including St Mark Presbyter·
ian Church, Harbor Christian
Chmch. Mesa Verde United
Methodist Church. Congrega-
tion Shir Ha Ma'lot, Our Lady
Queen of Angels Catholic
Church, University Syna-
gogue and St. Eliz.abeth Ann
Seaton Catholic Church to
l I I I\ I\ ! I \ '\.
E Ill---
! We've lried
them all too!
Wonhlp 10:00 A.M.
HARBOR CHRISTIAN CHURCH
(OlaclplH of Christ)
2401 Irvine Ave.
N .. ,ott leach, CA
(941) 845-5781
lllllltlr.Dr.0-.Aoft
Jim de Boom
COMMUNITY & au1s
name a few, volunteer Robert
Johnston said.
You don't have to be a
member of a faith community
to make the 1K walk that will
begin and end at the St Mark
church. You do need to want
to make a difference in the
lives of hungry people by
finding sponsors for your
walk. I have walked before
+
and kDoW that you Will see
frieoda and make friends
while walking.
1Wenty-ftve percent of the
~of what you raise
will go to local organ17.ations,
such as Share Our Selves,
Shelter for the Homeless,
Jewish Family Selvices,
Catholic Worker, Orange
County Interfaith Shelter and
Friends In SeJVice to Hwnani-
ty. Seventy-five percent will
go to worldwide charity
groups that feed the hungry.
Helping to sponsor the
Hunger Walle are the Daily
Pilot. OC Metro Magazine,
OC Family Magazine, Coca-
Cola, Disneyland, Knott's
Berry Fann. Hornblower Din-
ning Yachts, South Coast
Repertory, Mimi's Cafe, Back
Bay Rowing and Running
Club, Carl's Jr., In-N-Out
Burger, Pad.fie Screen Print,
'
ewport rt.or
Lutheran Church
-(~.A.)
1'N Dower Dr. Newport~
tradltlonalLutberan
Peetor D8¥ld Monge
.............. wtth
Hoer Communion
9unchlr 9:UI •m
CHILD CAR• AYAIL.AaL•
(M9)548H31
A .A God-<.<nrcrcd pamh communiry, arutrucud by me Word of God
and renewed by me Sacnmcnu" .
Our Lady Queen of Angels
2046 Mar Vista Drive
Newport Beach, California 92660
(949)644-0200' Fax (949)644-1349
Rn. MoMignor William P. Mclaughlin, P.u1or
LITURc;;tf.6: Saturday, 5 p.m. {Can1or),
Sunday. 7:00 (Quiet), 8:30 (Contemporary). I 0:00 (Choir).
11 :30 a.m. (Cantor) and 5:00 p.m. (Con1empor11y)
FIRST CHURCH OF
CHRIST, SCIENTIST
3303 Via Lido
Newport Beach
673-1340 or 673-6150
Olurc:h 10 am & 5 pn.
Sunday School l O am wu ..... ,~1l0pn
SECOND CHURCH OF
CHRIST, SCIENTIST
3 l 00 Pacific View Dr.
Newport Blach •
644-2617 or 675-4661
Olurc:b lOam
Sunday Sdlool 10 am
w.dlwda' ......... pn • ltt ~ 11 noon ,,_.,.. .... """" ..................... _ ..... "... ,, ........... ..,., ............... .. ............................
.... 41112 ._..,,new.ra.ftti •ne,..
ST. MARK PIF.sBYTERIAN
CHURCH
WorshJp 9:30
Pavilions Market, Banana
Boat, Arrowheed Water and
AAoneUtbO.
• To receive the entry fonn,
call Johnston at (9'9) 644-
4949 or the Rev. Dennll SbOit
at (949) 645-5781. Make a dif~
feience.
552 CLUB MIXEll: Mistral
Restaurant will be the host for
the Oct. 23 552 Club Mem-
bership Mixer, which will
begin appropriately at 5:52
p.m. Complimentary hors
d'oeuvres will be hosted by
Mistral while beverages are
on your own. Guests are wel-
come to the 552 Club event, a ·
support group for Hoag H06-
pi:tal. For more information,
call (949) 574-7208.
CA.RING FOR CREATION:
The ltev. Bob Parry of Costa
Mesa notes that the fourth
annual Caring for Creation
Conference is set for Oct. 20.
WORSHIP
DIRECTORY
I I' I '\f l 11 •\I
' t Michael & All Angds
Pao&V-•~• Corona dd Mat • 6«-0463
A C-,,.,.,..,..fllwht.'-• c. .. -
IWIUXNG OUR FNT16 IOl1NC aDllS1'
A/t/DSDMNC OU1l CDMMUNl7Y.
The R~'d Pt't<r D. Havnn. Rector
SUNDAY SCHEOUU
8 •m • Holy Wchamt
9.,,, Su...Uy SchoOl/A.duk Bible ~y
I 0 un~ a.o.al E.oc:huW
NURSERY CARE AVA/1.A81.E
SAINT JAMES CHURCH EPISCOPAL
~:Ju;
1he v.y Riv. Canon Dom And.ion,
Rtdar
3209 VIO lido
Nlwpott 8eoch
949/675-0210
•
7:30 om Troc5tionol
9omC.O.~ 9omehurdi
11 om Chori1malic
oncl Noon
Newpon <:enter
United Methodist Church
~. Cathleen Coots, Putor
1601 Marguerite Ave.
comer of Marguerite and
San Joaquin Hills Rd.
(949) 644-07•5
Sam Quiet wonhip Snviu
JOtlm Wonhip 1ma Chi/Jmii
SuntlAy School
~11th muting wuldy
'Jt wiD be held from 8:30 a.m.
to 4 p.m. at San~ de Cam·
postel.a QllhoUc urch in
Lake Forest Keynote speaker
will be the Rev. Jlaa Coaloll.
director of the Sophia Center,
College of Holy Names in
Oakland and author of sever-
al bobks, including "Geo.Jus-
tice: A Preferential Option for
the Earth" and "Earth Stmy,
Sacred St!lrY." Jn addition
there are· a dozen work-
shops on a variety of envi-
ronmental iSsues and the
faith community.
For more infonnation or to
mgister, call Brlan Chrtstof-
fenen at (114) 637-9448 or
Sherri Loveland at (11-4) 508-
8972.
WELCOME TO 1HE
WORLD OF SERVICE a.UBS:
Dick Demmer. sponsored by
Wally Ziglar, joined the
Exdlange Oub ot Newport
Harbor. Renee Ebert joined the
Rotary Oub of IJVine.
WORTH REPEATING:
From "Thought for the Day"
provided by Greg Kelley of
the Newport-Mesa Irvine
Interfaith Council: "The ulti-
mate measure of a person is
not where they stand in
moments of comfort and con-
venience, but where they
stand at times of challenge
and controversy.• -Martin
Luther King Jr.
SERVICE CLUB MEET·
INGS TIDS WEEK: Upset by
what happened on Sept. 11?
Want to make a difference in
the world and our conununi-
ty? Try helping your conunu-
nity and the world through a
service dub. You are invited
to attend a club meeting thls
week.
MONDAY
6 p.m.: The Harbor Mesa
Lions Club will meet at
Zubies Restaurant for dinner.
TUESDAY
7:30 a.m.: The Newport
Beach Sunrise Rotary Club
will meet at Five Crowns
Restaurant for a program by
Mike Darnold on Rotary's role
in drug abuse prevention.
6 p.m.: The Costa Mesa
Newport·Harbor Uoos QUb
wW meet at ZUbiel Chicken ~·
7:15 a.a: The South Coast
Metro Rotary Club will meet
at the Center Club
(http:/ lwww.aouthcoamnetro-
rotary.org), and the Newport
Harbor Kiwanis Oub will
meet at the University Athlet-
ic Club.
Noon: The Exchange Club
of the Orange Coast will meet
at the Bahia Corinthian Yacht
Club.
5 p.m.: The Rotary Club
of Newport-Balboa will meet
at Newport Beach Brewery
for a vocational visit and
dinner (http://WW..V.newport-
balboa.org).
THURSDAY
7 a.m.: The Costa Mesa-
Orange Coast Breakfast Lions
Club will meet at Mimi's Cafe
for a program by lton WUder-
mutb of the Orange County
Water District on the ground-
water replenishment system.
Noon; The Costa Mesa
Kiwanis Club will meet at the
Holiday Inn, the Newport
Beach-Corona del Mar Kiwa-
nis Club will meet at the
Bahia Corinthian Yacht Club
for a program by BW Var-
doulls called "lfansportation
Initiatives: Moving lfaffic and
Goods between Orange and
Riverside Counties,• the
Exchange Club of Newport
Harbor will meet at the New·
port Harbor Nautical Museum
to hear Gary Adams, mayor of
Newport Beach (http://www
nhexchangeclub.com), and
the Newport lrvine Rotary
Club will meet at the lrvme
Marriott for a program by Jim
Coleman on the Rotary Foun-
dation (http://www.nirotary.
org).
• COMMUNfTY a CLUBS is pub-
lished Saturdays In the Daily Pilot
Send yoor service club's meeting
information by fax to (949) 660-
8667; e-mail to jdeboom•ol.com
or by mall to 2082 S.E. Bristol St.,
Suite 201, Newport Beach, CA
92660-1740.
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Celestino's
quality MEATS
Prc11lt1< c· • ""1 ·.il11cic l • l)c·li
C•lestbaos N•w ~UC• s,,.cl41$
PU/d F,_•lt Iceberg or Fresh Hand
Romaine Lettuce Chopped Salsa and
59¢ "Guacamole"
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C•i.•dno1 Dell Now OJHn All Roast Beef Homemade
Sandwiches Chicken Salad
SJ99ea r-°""'" s499 • ",,,... lb.
Lemon Garlic
FISb Kabobs
$699 lb.
Garlic Lamb
Sa~
s4" lb.
epld8to of Newport
Beach ts having its
t sample sale at 10
a.m. Wednesday. H you hap-
pen to wear a sample size -
men's size 8 and 8 1/2 and
w_pgien's size 7 and 7 112 -
~ f1nd bargains at the
f!\l'llDt. M!J>hlsto specializes
in Mndmade walking shoes.
MlChael La Moria at Mephis-
to Newport Beach says
Mephisto ts one of 5% of
'1loe companies that still
manufacturer shoes by hand. •nus feature allows the
shoes to be torn apart and
e~ti.J'ely recrafted at a facility
in the U.S. that takes the
shoe down to the leather
uppers,• La Moria said.
•eustomers who invest in
the brand, and who care for
their shoes by moisturizing
~d polishing the leather,
can make their shoes last a
lifetime.•
La Moria has customers
who have worn the same
shoes for 10 to 12 years, and
even one as long as 20 years
The cost of a recrafted shoe
is $65 for sandals and $85 for
all other shoes. Mephisto
was developed by Martin
Michaeli in Sarrebourg.
France and has grown to
more than 300 stores world-
wide. It's considered a leader
in the growing trend of com-
fort footwear. Mephisto New-
port Beach is open from 10
a.m. to 6 p.m Monday
through Saturday and 10
a.m. to 5 p.m. Sunday. The
store carries the entire col-
lection of Meph1sto footwear
SMITH
CONTINUED FROM A 1
half-dead.• Understanding
the liberty I took with my
speech. Eckerting replied,
"True.• Then he added: "But
we also get a lot of men in to
be tested because their
wives have convinced them
l'O come.·
'That second group
indudes yows truly. Of the
tunes I have been to the doc-
tor in the 16 years 1 have kJWwn Cay, I'd guess that
nearly all were because she
prodded me lo go. And each
tt=e, I was better off after
~ treabnent.
Since Sept. 11 , we have
been told that our lives will
never be the same, but most
peQple forget that the
changes are not all doom
and gloom. Most of us have an opportunity to make the
positive changes we've been
putting off, if only because
we now realize that life is a
lol more fragile than we real-
ized.
One or those changes
should be that men stop
treating their bodies as
though they run on batteries
and start getting serious
about preventing disease.
Men need to start treating
diseases such as colorectal
'ancer with the same serious
~ttitude displayed by women
about breast cancer. After all.
more people will contract
cok>n cancer than women
will get breast cancer. And
that's a shame when you
Greer W~der
BEST BUYS
for men and women. includ-
ing dress, casual, comfort
walking, sandals, outdoor
hiking and trek.long, and
goll. It's at 1727 Westchff
Court, Newport Beach. (949)
642-3338.
Newport Center Orthope-
dic Inc. Medical and Surgi-
cal Supplies is having a one-
day sale Wednesday. All sup-
port stockings will be
reduced 20%. They're
designed to improve blood
now, reduce swelling, relieve
the pam of varicose veins
and help reduce fatigued
legs. During the sale, repre-
sentatives from Jobst stock-
mgs will be available for
quesbons. Free with pur-
chase IS a Jobst skin care
travel pack and Jobst Jolastic
washing solution. Newport
Center Orthopedic is at 400
Newport Center Drive, Suite
104 , Newport Beach. (949)
644-0065.
The Environmental
Nature Center will have its
con~ider that colon cdncer is
one of the most preventable
cancers known.
U common sense won't
sway you. here are facts:
• Colon cancer is the sec-
ond leading cancer killer.
Lung cancer is first.
•This year, about 56,300
men and women will die
from colon cancer.
• More than 60% of the
Americans who should be
tested are not tested.
Cay and I were invited to
the dinner by Carl Merkle,
whom I met at the Saturday
coffee sponsored by Assem-
blyman John Campbell sev-
eral weeks ago Merkle
unpressed me with his sm-
centy and his genuine, sell-
less desire to put the brakes
on colorectal cancer.
A few days ago, I asked
him why he cared. •My wile
bas a condition known as
Pall Pa.ire and Pumpkin
Patch at 10 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Sunday. The annual event
will include a silent auction,
nature center tours, chil-
dren's activities, opportunity
drawing, food, beverages,
music and gilts and native
plants. Local sponsors
include Sblrley•s Bagels,
SunFlour Bakery, Haute
cakes Caffe, Clayton Shur-
ley's Texas BBQ, lbe Pizza
Bakery, lbe Btiboa Bay
Club, ln-N-Out Burger, lbe
Irvine Photography, Ml
Casa, Newport Landing,
Newport Workout, Nlkki's
Flag Shop, A'Maree's, Bal-
boa Island Ferry, Brett's
Photo Express, C'est SI Bon
Bakery, Clnderella Bakery,
El llanchtto, El Tonto Grtll
and John L Blom It's at
1601 16th St., Newport
Beach. (949) 645-8489.
The inaugural 17th Street
Vlllage Street Fair will take
place from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m.
today between Orange and
Irvine avenues. The Fall Har-
vest FestJval theme will
include crafts, music, food,
pumpkin patch, face paint-
ing, pony rides and a petting
zoo.
Cost Plus World Market 1s
having specials on all kinds
of items in the store, includ-
ing striped and solid rugs at
$6.99 each. two for $25 wood
folding trays. two for $29
wood folding chairs, two for
$12 hand soap and lotion,
25% otr on all kitchen tow-
els, 20% off on all dJnner-
ulcerative colitis that makes
her hJgh at risk for colon
cancer,· he answered. She
gets a colonoscopy annually,
so she has become a bit of an
expert in colonoscopy .•
Merkle got heavily
involved in the Colorectal
Cancer Network, a nonprofit
orgaruzation established to
increase awareness. Merkle's
goal for the group is "to get
a strong awareness program
started here in Orange
County that can be replicat-
ed nationwide. If it gels
golng well, and generates
sufhoent funds to operate on
its own, then the need for my
skills as a facilitator of
change will diminish.•
Men and women older
than 50 or older than 40 with
a history of colorectal cancer
should see a gast.roenterolo-
gist such as Eckerting now.
Even, ladJes, if you have to
PERSONAL TRAININC
CONDUCTED IN OUR
SUPERSLOW CERTIFIED
CLINICAL FACILITIES
FOR MEN & WOMEN OF AU AGES GAIN MUSCLE & BONE
MASS • LOOK l FEEL YOUNGER
IMPROVE BLOOD IPRESSURE • LOWER STRESS ~ ..!!;!..~ 1949 7!:_80401
NO CLAS'",ES •NO MUSIC • JUST ONE ON ONE
BLESS AMERICA
ware, 20% ott on open stock
flatware and 20% off on all
cafe barware. The sale will
end Sunday. Cost Plus World
Market is at South Coast, on
the comer of Sunflower
Avenue and Bristol Street.
(714) 957-6553.
Benthan.a is having a
grand reopening special for
its new sushi bar -hand
rolls are $1.95 every day, and
sushi is $1 Saturdays and
Sundays. Benihana is at 4250
Birch St., Newport Beach.
(949) 955-0822.
Flowers Direct offers
weekly bargains on flowers.
Examples of specials are
Casablanca Lilies at $5.99
each, ranunculus at $3.99
each, sunflowers at 99 cents,
Ecuadorian roses at 99 cents
and dahlias al 99 cents.
Rowers Direct also does
weddings, funerals and par-
ties. It's at 882 W. 16th St.,
Newport Beach. It's open
from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Mon-
day through Fnday and 9
a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday. (949)
650-5700.
Home & Garden Vintage
FumJture 1s having a liqui-
dation sale. Some pieces are
on silent auction, and the
final day of business is Nov.
30. It's at 369 E. 17th St.,
Costa Mesa.
• BEST BUYS appears Thursdays
and Saturdays Send information
to Greer wytder at 330 W. Bay St ,
Costa Mesa, CA 92627, or via fax at
(949) 646-4170
drag him there. And if the
thought of a colonoscopy 1s
disturbing, consider the
altemabve.
For more mformation,
contact the Colorectal Can-
cer Network at (949) 559-
1142, Ext. 2, or visit the Web
site: http:/ lwww.colorectal-
cancer.net. Eckerling can be
reached at (949) 727-1232.
• STEVE SMint rs a Costa Mesa
resident and freelance writer.
Readers may leave a message for
him on the Daily Pilot hotline at
(949) 642-6086.
\mc.:riL.I tht·
lk.rntifu l - :
Rabbin Insurance Agency
AUTO • HOMEOWNERS • HEAUli
Sub1bry Sinrr 1957.
~4)J ~ ... .....,..., .. ._,....,,._, ../',. ..
949-631-77 40
441 Old Ncwpon Bhd. • Newport Bcacb
(Neu Ho.g Holpital)
JEFF & LYLEEN
EWING
LIFE PRESERVERS
Tille in!>urancc is like a hfc
preserver on a boa1-you will
probably never need it. bul 1f
you do. you will be very g1ad
thal you have u! A litle search
will be ordered before you buy
a home to make su~ that the
scllcts legally own the
propcny. and that no one else
bas a lcaaJ interest in it. 1be
title company will also check
lh.rouah lbe ownaship records
for any lien . cucmct'ltS, anC1
other cncumbnnce~. Thi,
iie&rcb should tum up any
1rannct1on, that may not
appear on 1hc public ttc:u?d,
1ucb as aa un ound trusfcr
lhM occumd many ye.an &JO.
1ltl• tnsurance procect yQO
qaiftt( (utld'e clai• .;alMI
ya. lltomc. Y<* Reehor c.a
Ii" 10• .oft apccifk
............. co.tol llllld 90£ __ .,.,..,,
~ ........ ht yow
Saturday, Ottober 13, 2001 A7
BROWN
CONTINUED FROM A 1
negc&te the Horne Ranch dewl-
opnentagreelflent Maytr Ubby
Cowan and Councilwoman
Karen Robtn90ll were selected
to represent the Oty Council,
and Planning Commission
Chairwoman Katnna Foley and
Commissioner Bill Perkins were
later chosen lO represent the
Planning Commission.
Members of the committees,
staff and representatives from
CJ. Sec}erstrool & Sons had cm-
ference sessions to weigh the
proposed mitigations and pub-
lic benefits that may have been
included in the development
agreement. Cowan said.
"J knew we were in unique
territory, but we had rulings from
the city attorney before we pro-
ceeded with the dJscussions, •
Cowan said. ·n was merely a
sharing of inlormabon.'
Regardless of what was dis-
cussed, the meetings should
have been open to the public.
complete with agendas and
proper public notification,
Francke said.
Because the steenng com-
rruttee was formally created by
the City Council, it is subject lo
the Brown Act and all the open
mPeting rules that come along
with 1t, Francke said.
Cowan said the pubhc was
not notified of the meetings but
added that there was never a
voting bloc present, whJch in
Costa Mesa conststs of three
members of' the counaL Theses-
sion were stopped after
increased public soutmy
• 1 was really disappomted
when we abandoned 1t. I
thought we had a really uruque
process that was very informa-
tive and beneficial,• Cowan
Sdid.
CoundJman Gary Monahan
said the allegation is iust an
attempt to thwart the Home
Raodl project.
•Costa Mesa C1t:i:z.en1 for
~Grow1h as shooting
anow1 at anything thdt moves
and hoping one w1U stick,"
Monahan said.
If tbe d&strict attorney deter-
mines a violation of tbe Brown
Ad has been committed, a civil
suit may be filed against the city,
asking the court to void the
development agreement. said
Assistant Dist. Atty. Doug
Woodsmall
Criminal penalties muld also
Uldude up to six months 10 )all OT
$1 ,000 fine fa-the rnisdemea.Dor
of violating the act, Woodsmall
said.
·But no one will get any-
where near that,• Woodsmall
said.
Robinson and Foley -both
attorneys-also could face fur-
ther punishment from the
Cahfornia State Bar.Uthe c:ase
went to criminal court, they
could be subject to pos51ble sus-
pension or ethic exams by the
State Bar Court. said California
State Bar spokesman Marlon
Villa.
Disbarment is only consid-
ered 10 the most egregious CdSeS,
Villd said, and is not a Wcely out-
come.
The rnvestigabon marks the
second time in recent weeks that
lawyers have questioned
whether the aty vtolated the
Brown Act.
After the Sept. 11 terrorist
dttacks. the council went mto
an emergency session to chscuss
a contract with the Police
Department. Lawyers with the
Califorrua First Amendment
Coalition said it was quesbon-
dble whether the attacks were
enough for the counaJ to go mto
a dosed emergency sessJon.
• Lolita tc.rpet' covers Costa Mesa.
She may be reached at (949) S74-
4275 or by e-mail at ·
lohta.harpet'Olatimes.com
SABATINO'S
•Dinner
• Sunday Brunch
251 Shipyard Way• Newport Beach
-Please call fOI h0\.111. datec1oos & reser;atoOnS •
• (949) 723-0621 •
Only at Our
Store in Orange!
MEN -WE HAVE YOUR SIZE
•Jn • • 1 "' I " . .. II -II •• u .... H m II -•• • •• •• •• , . 1• •• --l•il I • 1• 1• •• • J~ •• •• •• -• I• • I• -•• --,. • 11 • •1• • 1• -• e 1• • •• • • •• ••• •• •• • •1• • -•• •• • 1• 1• • • •• • •
.......
• Orange Coast College's Symphony Orchestra wtll present Its suson-
opening concert 7:30 p.m. sunct.y with Orange County violinist Thi \
Nguyen at the Robert B. Moore Theatre, 2701 Fairview Road, Costa
Mesa. $6 or $10. (714) 432-5880. • 4 •
A8 Saturday, October 13, 2001
Speaking through the erhu
Musician Karen Han will play the
ancient Chinese instrument next
week in a world premiere of a
Tan Dun concerto based on
'Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon.'
YOWtg Chang
DAILY PILOT
T he Chinese erhu has just two
strings. Its neck is thin and long.
its sound-box base is small, the
resonator is made of snakeskin and the
bow of horsehair.
See Page A11 for a c.alendar
of Edectlc Or..-events.
about love, peace and beauty through
music. And were it not for the erbu -a
precursor to the violin -Han, whose
first language is Chinese, would not be
the communicator she is today.
atre. The perf onna.nce is part of 'the
Eclectic Orange Festival. sponsored by
the Philharmonic Society of Orange
County. The concert will also include a
West Coast premiere of composer Tan
Dun's •concerto for Water Percussion
and Orchestra in Memory of Toru
Takemitsu, • with soloist David Cossin.
On Tuesday, Han will also perform a
solo at Borders' Books, Music & Cl,\fe in
Costa Mesa to demonstrate the erhu's
sounds and its traditions.
•1 feel there's a lot of things some-
times I cannot use my voice or speech
to talk about,• the Walnut resident said.
•But my music will explain it. My
instrument is kind of like my equipment
to get in more contact [with) the world.•
Han moved to the United States from
China in 1988. By then, she had
..
The erhu, which first appeared as a
musical instrument 1,000 years ago, looks
frail. But the musical relic bears a heavy
load when in the hands of Karen Han.
It is with the erhu that Han speaks
The virtuoso erhu player will perform
Oct. 19-21 in a world premiere program
of #Crouching Tiger, Hidde.n Dragon
Concerto for Erhu and Chamber
Orchestra" at the Irvine Barclay The-
Karen Han will play the erbu In the world premten of 'a
SEE ERHU PAGE A12 concerto based on "Crouching Tiger, HJdden Dragon.•
Coloring
the comic
world
W hat Dan Kemp does
for a living can be
summed up rather
quickly. if cheekily. He puts
the color in Spiderman's
tights. He
also puts
the orange-
yellow
Dames in
Ghost Rid-
er and will
soon return
to adding
some dark-
er hues to
Spawn. Jennifer U-1.-1 Kemp, a muru
Costa
Mesa resi-IN THE WINGS
dent, is a
comic book
color master. For those of you
who think that means be just
stays between the lines, you
haven't been looking at his
work. The way he uses color
has the power to give abnos-
phere, to suggest mood, to
tell a story.
•Kemp L? doing something
with the color, though, that is
really bringing this stuff to
life,• said Paul Weissburg. a
aitic at http://comlcbook·
galaxy.com, of Kemp's work
on The Amazing Spiderman
No. J.(, •Big Bang.•
Creating a comic is a
series of five processes -
writing, penciling, inking,
coloring and printing.
"The colorist is the guy
who g0Et5 in there and gives
it 3-D shape,• Kemp said,
over a tuna sandwich at the
Gypsy Den Cafe.
The 24-year-old has been
working in the comic indus-
try since 1995. He colored
Daredevil's return, written by
Kevin Smith of •Clerks•
fame. He's worked on Mid-
night Nation, a series written
by J. Michael Straczynski,
who created #Babylon 5" for
television.
This week, he's been col-
oring Straczynsld's Spider-
man saipt about the World
'lhlde Center.
•tt's ha.rd<0re, • Kemp
said. •1t11 exciting for me to
be involved with ruch an
awesome creation."
Kemp, a practldng Bud.-
dh1st, bu a lot of stmlles for
b.11 work.
• Color is llke chess -
wb1ch he started studying
recently -in that he'• vwaya thinking about the
moves ahead.
"It's like the Beetles," be
ileJd. "They got to th& point
SEE MAHAL MGE A12
PHOTOS BY DON LEACH I DALY Pl.OT
Grahame Welnbren superviles the setting up of bis lnteracUve art exhibit, "Frames," at UC lrvlne's
Beall Center for Art and Technology. •frames" will be on dlsplay through Dec. 2.
Interactive exhibit at UC Irvine explores psychoanalysis and
imagery through photos of women in 1800s insane asylums
YOWtg Chang
DAILY PILOT
I t sounds intellectual, Grahame Weinbren says,
but the interactive cinema work that is his his-
torical, philosophical and artistic creation is
really just a game.
#Frame$,• which opened Friday and closes
Dec. 2 at UC Irvine's Beall Center for Art and Tech-
nology, makes all kinds of statements about psycho-
analysis, the truth in photos, the perception of
insane people and even the matter of a viewer's
relationship with art.
But it's juBt a game, Weinbren repeats.
There are three gigantic acreens, each connected
by wire cables to a vertically banging frame about
10 feet from it. Each frame frames the image on
each screen for the person standing in front of it
The black-and-white images are of women incar-
cerated in insane asyluma during the mld-18005.
The women were photographed by Hugh Diamond,
an asylum director and amateur photographer who Used his photos as psychiatric tooll to diagnose the
inmatel. I
But stand in front of a frame and point through u.
at '::9nJ:;,oto, arid the voiCe of an 1800I doctor, John
Co , wW give you a detcrtptioll al the patient'•
condition. Poiilt again and the photo wW morpb into
a modern-day actrea trying to transform heiwelt
into the a.ndent madwoman wbO pnteeded her.
Keep potri~ and ftgw-8 out the belt rhythm for
your pointing to help the actrell completely become
the intendecf inl4ne penon. Slowly, the sleeve of the
adrell' con~ red T...awt will chaDge into
the 10ng aJeeve of the inmate'• oki-fuhkinec:l drea.
Wlth an appropriate ibjtbm that's not too fut nor
too slow, tb8 actress wW become tbe woman tn the
photo -down to the audftt neclrJece D8ltled oo
her cheat.
SEE ~E MGE A12 •
Doing the
'Bear Cha
Cha Cha'
TonyDodero
DAILY PILOT -• • • S o there we were, my wife :
and L catching a Broad-•
way-style show at the ~
forming Arts Center on Th~
day night. ....:
As we peered about the ,._
crowd at the Center, it dawnecr.
on us how things change, t><C
THEATER
REVIEW
with us and mi-:
the crowds~
run with. -AnopeniC
night usuanv-
brimming with cultured folla
dressed in black tte and evenlD
gowns was now a bustling baC
of toddlers adorned with their:
best Pampers and Huggies. •
In between us our daughteC
Danielle, a 2 112-year-dd :
cyclone of energy who wo.s oq:
hand to give me her impresskiil
of •Tue Bear in the Big Blue :
House Uve, • a stage show :
based on the popular televisiog:
program of the same name. -
Well, let's just say it was J><!
ular with this crowd, who •
squealed with delight as all ttwe
famillAr ch4racters from the teli-
vision show -Bear, baby heal:
Ojo, Tutter the mouse, neelo D
ring-tailed lemur and twin PUC
ple otters Pip and Pop -all -
appeared on the stage. :
If you don't have klds, you:
probably have no Idea what rm
talldng about. At least that's hiiW
I remember those days that ncD
seem so long -ago. :
Por example, I recall grab-: :Ht!, press release out of m~ x one day .everal yeaii:
ago and taking a gander at tbl"
photo. It was a gJouy of a big;
pwp1e dinosaur. ·
I asked my editor, prone to•
playing practical jokes on me,-
wh4t the heck the photo WU
and why wo.s tt in my mail~
"1bat's Barney," be Mid.
•Who's Barney,• I uked1
•you don't know who J3e4
111· he chuckled..
Barney, ct coune, ta the J>O!!
u1ar puxpJe dinoMur who~
and daDoel each !Doming OD
public broedcat telmDon = cbaruWs. But for a guy who
grew up with BOio the~
and Capt. KangaroO. that w..r:
all D8WI to me.
• I bed a mnu.r explltmce
When I exdaedly lbared wttb
news aew that tba •BMr in
Big Blue Houle" WM cxn'ng. COltaMea .. ~butblDIE __ ..
But INlt me, tM Beer II
2000 ¥mllan al aam., or
~ 91be-.... .................
DuMIDtbepalure •
•••WMll
...
Daily Pilot
• .
Tbe Crocketts show style under pressure for the Guilds
T he words •taste• and
•style• are bantered about
freely in society ex>lumns. ~y, there are only a minoli-ty Of people in any given ex>mmu-
nity at any given time that pos-
~ an innate sense of style that
1' ~ressed ln their daily lives.
-OK, lt sounds elitist. It sounds
saobbish. And I suppose in an
""1Uflent, I would lose this
debate when asked, •ttow do
yoµ define taste and style?"
nleed, the definition of style is
inlerpretive. Certainly, it is
~hly subjective. I can tell you
thot I know it when 1 see it.
What is style? It is an original
expression that defines and
retlects the intellect and the
heart of the individual. Style ele-mes us from the ordinary, open-
ing doors and giving us the
opportunity to see our world
frQm a perspective that we would
~ve never imagined possible.
Style is often about studying
artistic elements of hwnan
endeavor including art, architec-
ture. literature, world dvili7.ation,
religion, music, fashion and every
in\aginable expression of culture.
Taking knowledge, the individual
puiSessing that special sense of
style applies what they have
learned to their own point of view.
1llis week I was invited into
the home of a woman that has
both taste and style extraordinaire.
Actually, some 200 Newport-Mesa
Citizens were mvited into the
horne of Sally Crockett and her
husband Randy Crockett for a
pcijron cocktatl reception hononog ihe Sound of Music Chapter of
fhe Gwlds of the Orange County
P~·rforrning Arts Center.
Amvmg at the front door of the
Crockett home on Pelican Point,
B.W. Cook
THE CROWD
Sally summoned gentlemen attired
in red Cartier doorman uniforms to
greet her guests. The foyer of the
Italian Mediterranean coastal villa
held wbite-gloved waiters pounng
flutes of French champagne while
hostesses in beautiful silk Asian
kimonos and straw hats spiked
with spiced skewered appetizers
delighted the crowd as the servers
bowed their heads to serve the first
bite of the evening.
It was just the beginning of a
party filled with surprises created
by the hostess, in what I later
found out was something short ol d
miracle because the Crockett fdllU-
ly had experienced a house fire
only two days before the event.
·rm glad you didn't see the
side of the house that's ban-
daged," mused the hostess
wearing a very tailored scooped
neck red cocktail dress. • Appar-
ently the fire started in a utility
closet and burned for some lime
before we were alerted by our
son, who came running into the
kitchen to deliver the news.·
Crockett went on to explain that
her neighbors had already called
the fire department and their fast
response averted disaster. The next
day the Crockett's bwldmg con-
trad.or arrived on soene to assess
the damage and help the family
prepare for The Sound of Music
event. The party went on without a
hitch. and nobody knew. That's
what you c.all style under pressure.
Orgarozers of the evening
included the dynamic Eve Komyel,
Karen Gregor, Diane Palumbo,
Manha OrUn. Tracy Martin and
Palsy Marshall. The ladies wel-
comed 79 active members of The
Sound of Music Chapter, along
with 40 patrons of the guild with
their husbands and escorts.
Guests explored the Crockett
residence as cock1ails were served
at SllllSet. while dinner was being
artfully prepared by a catenng
company from Pasadena known as
Explonng Foods. As supper was
announced in the Crockett dining
room, the table setting was
unveiled, worthy of a museum dis-
pldy and garnering sighs and
gasps from the appreoative crowd.
The Asian-themed feast was
presented atop massive crystal vas-
es filled with gleaming fresh fruit.
&mboo trays overflowed with del-
IC'does. Candles flickered, lights
were dimmed, and the elegant
room, which featured a massive
Ctunese CoromcUldel panel screen,
trdllSported the local crowd right
mto d scene from the film "The
King And I.· I expected Deborah
Kerr to dppectr at any moment.
Pe rfomung Arts Center Presi-
dPnt Jerry Mandel mingled with
h1!. stnkmg bride Whitney Man-
del. chatting up the crowd along
with the handsome couple Terry
and Judi Jones. Terry Jones IS
VJce president of development
for the Cente r.
The lovely Jerri Goodreau,
chairwoman of The GwJds,
en1oyed the stylish eve ning
along with Diane Howe, ~r
of support groups for the Per-
forming Arts Center.
The evening was an opportu-
nity for The Sound of Music
Guild to celebrate and to
announce its upcoming annual
dinner gala, which will be co-
cha..ired by Patsy Muahall and
Diane Palumbo. The evening,
set for March 9 at the Four Sea-
sons Hotel in Newport Beach, Is
beJng billed as "Easy Rider
Returns With Peter Fonda.•
Fonda is scheduled to attend.
Adding to the excitement of
the Crockett reception, Cartier
Inc. at South Coast Plaza, under
the management of the most
capable Carollne Jones, JOined
forces with the Crocketts and
The Sound of Mui.1c Chapter to
assist in the producmg of the
rrudweek reception.
Jones adorned exqu1s1le mod-
els m radiant d1dmonds, sap-
phires and pearl!.. They stood
manneqwn-hke on pedestals
fronting the drbstJcally created ,
mosaic-tiled C rockett pool facing
the golf course and the Pacific
Ocedn m the d1stdnce
Enjoying what Wds surely one
of the most stylish receptions of
the fall sooal calendctr were Ann
and Mike Howard, Martha
Green, Cathy Lowden, Harriet
and Sandy Sandhu. Kath.le and
John Porter. Kelly and John
Hague, Kimberly and lloss F-ein-
berg, Diane and Rick Allen, Pab1-
da and Otis Cranford, Kimberly
and Scott Matteson. Robin llae
and Delvin lewis, Stade Spitzer,
Carol Dallon, Roslyn Rtmigian.
and Barbara and Jay Magness
• THE CROWD appears Thursdays and
Saturdays
SoMday, Odober 13, 2001 A9
IUck ... Colleen
Jotn of NftrJport
hed'I MnOUnCe 1he
~oftheir
deught8; EJtubd1
MnrMrie Johns Of
Newport lwh, to
Matthew August
Hotder of Newport
BHd'I.
The t)(lde.to-be gr~uated from Mater
DeJ High School end the University of the
Pacific In Stodtton.
The groom-te>be Is the son of Tom •nd
Myrna Holder of Newport Beach Mld gr~u
ated from Costa Mesa High School •nd the
UniYenlty of Southern <:.llifomia.
The wedding is p~nned for June 15 at
Our Lady Queen of Angels Churdl in ~
port Beach.
Qark-Vtllanueva
Lisa Anne Oar1t of Newport Beach and
Jose Luis Villanueva of Rancho Santa Margart·
ta exchanged wedding vows at the Jon~ Vte-
torian Estate in Orange on June 23.
The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Calwin W. Oar1t of Newport Beach. She wore
a strapless gown of Italian satin.
The groom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Jose
Villanueva Sr. of Rancho Santa Margarita.
The bride's maid of honor was Carrie
Oswald and the matron of honor was Sandra
Marshall. The bridesmaids were April Mayer,
Katie Busch, Jill Gibson and Dennell Jangaard.
The groom's best man was Brother Luis
Villanueva. The ushers were Kevin Newman,
Patrick McOonagh, Mark Mimsci and Michael
Fletcher.
One hundred sixty-five guests attended
the reception.
The couple took a wedding trip to the
Mediterranean and now live in Irvine.
Lisa is a counselor for the Orange Unified
School District and Luis 1s a Web designer at
Pimco.
• WEDOINGS AND ENGAGEMEHTS run Satur
days. For a fonn, please call Bryce Alderton at
(949) 574-4298
MIDORI .
~•MM ~llMlfl
CAMELOT RFsrAURANT
~.9'
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ill «Lf~ !ilatpJ!lltx.
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.... s;11.1:eo "'" ...... 714-557-7)1) 1"9 ............. c.e..Maa
h:n:. '-Saecr Blocbcn
OP! N 7 llAY\
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A unique ladies shoe store
grand opening!
Come join us
October 12th -14th
Mattress Outlet Store
BRAND IEW ·COSMETICALLY IMPERFECT
Get the Best tor Less! lS 3165 Harbor Blvd. e ·-:--·-• Costa Mesa Jill!~ .a c714)54s~7i68
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fashionable, European influenced footwear in sizes 4 to 12 & 13 in a
great selection of widths from super-slim to wide. Marmi offers the
latest styles from Sesto Meucci, Van Eli and Rangoni of Florence in a
boutique-like atmosphere, with personalized service.
Select handbags, hats and accessories also available.
Receive a FREE Manni spa foot kit
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All SGMday. Odobir 13, 2001 I
IFTll IOllS
SPECIAL
CENTER SATURDAYS
The.Orange County Perform-
ing Arts Center's "Saturdays
at The Center" series will be
held 11 a.m . and 1 p.m. today,
Nov. 10, Jan. 12, March 23
and April 27 at Pounders
Hall, 600 Town Center Drive,
Cost.a Mesa. Norman Foote
will present a show of come-
dy, puppetry and music today
with •step To It.· $30 for sub-
scriptions. (714) 556-2122.
FREI FAMILY FUCKS
The Newport Dunes Wate r-
front Resort's· Free Family
Flicks series will conclude
with "Casper" on Oct. 20 and
"The Ghost & Mr. Chicken"
on Oct. 27. The Dunes is at
1131 Back Bay Drive, New-
port Beach. Free, but parking
is $7. (949) 729-3863.
SUBMARINES AHOY!
The Newport Harbor Nauti-
cal Museum will present
"Submarines, From Nemo to
Nuclear,• an exhibit high-
lighting the evolution of the
Naval submarine through
paintings and artifacts,
throug h Oct. 28. Open from
10 a.m. to 5 p m. Tuesday
through Sunday, the museum
1s on the Pride of Newport
Riverbodt, 15 1 E. Coast High-
way, Newport Beach. Free.
(949) 673-7863
MASQUERADE BAll
The Orange County Young
Professionals will hold its
fourth annual Masquerade
Ball for the Arts from 8 p.m. to
1 a.m. Oct. 27 at the Orange
County Museum of Art, 850
San Clemente Drive, Newport
Beach. The ball, complete with
a band and food from some of
the county's finest restaurants,
benefits the museum. $50 pre-
sale for groups of 10 or more,
$60 advance purchase or $75
at the door. (949) 759-1122,
Ext. 560.
•111c
111111111 AT
111 IAICIAY
Pacific SYQl~y OrmeltR
will open its inaugural cham-
ber orchestra series at 3 p.m.
Sunday with "Cb«al Spec-
\acularl • a part of •Beethoven
at the Barclay.• Among the
pieces to be performed are
lWo Romances for Vlolin and
Orchestra and excerpts from
"1be Ruins of Atbem. • The
Irvine Barclay Theatte is at
4242 Campus Drive, Irvine.
$30-$40. (949) es.M6'6.
SYMPHONY SHOW
Orange Coast College's Sym-
phony Orchestra will present
its season-opening concert
7:30 p.m . Sunday with
Orange County violinist Thi
Nguyen at the Robert B.
Moore Theatre, 2701
Fairview Road, Costa Mesa.
$6 or $10. (714) 432-5880.
ERHU PERFORMANCE
Karen Han will play traditional
Chinese music on the erhu, an
ancient Chinese instrument
related to the violin, at 7 p.m.
Tuesday in Borders Books,
Music & Cafe at South Coast
Plaza, 3333 Bear St., C~ta
Mesa. Han will appear in the
Eclectic Orange #Crouching
liger, Hidden Dragon• con-
cert Oct. 19-21 at the Irvine
Barclay. The Borders concert is
free. (714) 432-7854.
PIANOS PLUGGED IN
Internet Pianos, a concert of
music for computer-con-
trolled pianos and synthesiz-
ers, will be held at 8 p.m.
Wednesday at UC Irvine's
Winifred Smith Hall. The uni-
versity is at the comer of
Campus and University
Drives in Irvine. Free. (949)
824-2787.
JOHN SCANLAN
Violinist John Scanlan &
Friends will perform at 8 p.m.
Oct. 20 at Winifred Smith Hall
at UC Irvine, at the comer of
Campus and University
Drives. $10. (949) 824-2787.
DRUM PANIC
The Victoria Chamber Series
will continue at the Unitarian
Univenalilt Cbulda With ~ l!Ya Xia Oil ()ct; 20. 1bll
--wlD allo pr ..... ....,
duet teem Penny Poltm-and
M"ba °'8tler CJD No.. 17, dar-
tnetilt HakaD Rcw-9• .ad
p6inilt Anna BIJDera1 Oil Jen.
19, p6anilt v.feOttna Goalleb
OD Jleb, ·16, IOpl'aDO Keiko
niloefhtta aod M'1ou Dietzer
00 March 16, the Del GelU =quartet Oil April 20 and
: 'M1ou Dletzer OD May
18. 1be cbureb is at 1259 Vic-
toria St., Costa Mesa. $8 for
adults or S5 foe lt\Jdents. Sea-
son tlckets are S56 foe adults
and $32 foe students. The Oct.
20 coooert will be free to stu-
dents. (949) 651-8493.
PIANO AID VIOLIN
Violinist Sandra Azzoni and
pianist Christine Az:zoni will
present a medley of standard
repertory and neglected mas-
terpieces from 3 to 4 p.m. Oct.
21 at the Newport Beach
Central Ubrary, 1000 Avoca-
do Ave., Newport Beach.
Free. (949) 717-3800.
WIND SYMPHONY
Irvine Valley College's Wind
Symphony and the TVC
Small Band will perform
works of classical music for
wind and percussion instru-
ments at e p.m. Oct. 22 at the
Irvine Barclay Theatre, 4242
Campus Drive, Irvine. $8 or
$6. (949) 451-5366.
GUIE DAYS
Theater star Jason Graae will
perform his song-and-dance
routine Oct. 25-28 as part of
the Orange County Perform-
ing Arts Center's Cabaret
Series. Graae, tbe voice of
Lucky tbe Leprechaun for
Lucky Charms cereal, was
hailed for his portrayal of
Harry Houdini in #Ragtime.·
Performances will be 7 :30
p.m . Oct. 25-26, 7:30 and 9:30
p .m. Oct. 27, and 7 p.m. Oct.
28. $43 for 7: and 7:30 p.m.
shows, $39 for 9:30 p .m.
shows. (714) 740-78?8.
CHORUS FESTIVAL
The All-American Boys Cho-
rus will take part in the sec-
ond annual Fall Harvest Fes-
tival from 2 te 6 p.m. Oct. 27
at the Davis Education Cen-
ter, 1050 Arlington, Costa
Mesa. The chorus will per-
farm at 2 p.m. tbat day. S2 far
ec1ubt St for ieldol't ud cbll; •
c.tien betwwl 6 and 12, frM
for cblldien S and under.
(714) 708-1670. .
MISIWll •llC
Orange Cout College will
~t a concert featuring
the mUllc of George Gersh-
win at 8 p.m. Oct. 21 at OCC's
Robert B. Moore The$tre,
2701 Pa.1.rview Road, Costa
Mesa. $21-$27. (714) 432-
5880.
n1 UQUllM
The Pad.fie Chorale will pre-
sent Verdi's •Requiem• at 7
p.m. Oct. 28 at the Orange
County Performing Arts Cen-
ter, 600 Town Center Drive,
Costa Mesa. The concert will
feature soprano Camellia
Johnson, mezzo-soprano
Robynne Redmon, tenor
Philip Webb and bass
Stephen Bryant. $18-$55.
(714) 662-2345.
TWO BANDS
Orange Coast College will
present a musicaJ extrava-
ganza featuring two jazz
bands at 1 p.m. Oct. 28 in the
Robert B. Moore Theatre,
2701 FairView Road, Costa
Mesa. OCC's Monday Big
Band and Friday Big Band
will perform. $5 or $7. (714)
432-5880.
SOMER·SIAGE
Suzanne Somers, a comedi-
enne, actress, dancer and
author, will perform at 8 p .m.
Nov. 16 at Orange Coast Col-
lege's Robert B. Moore The-
atre, 2701 Fairview Road,
Costa Mesa. $37-$43. (714)
432-5880.
'DON GIOVANNI'
Opera Pacific will present
#Don Giovanni" at the
Orange County Performing
Arts Center at 7:30 p.m. ·Jan.
22, 24, 25 and 26 and at 2
p .m. Jan. 27 at 600 Town
Center Drive, Costa Mesa.
$25-$175. (800) 346-7372:
WEEKEND ILUIS
Anthony's Riverboat Restau-
rant in Newport Beach will
present The Balboa Blues on
Friday and Saturday
evenings and Sunday after-
nooas. The program will fea-
ture jazz and classic rock
tunes for dining and dancing.
Anthony's is at 151 E. Coast
Highway. (949) 673-3425.
SEE HOURS PAGE A 11
~i::reoi.~Wlllbe
Ul ... i•Oe "41 WOil ........ ,.. bUt not the
~·--~nr. ...... ~ todlt UI odgi-
::-~ ~~ or*Ml to ~11ent Romnhll lJnDeJ't Sp! MolJDtalti,.
ilDd wm .,. hnkting aucu-
.._ fOr 8lgbt men and
... WQIDm MondaY and ~Jn tbii occ Dri·
ma Lab 'J'bellbe. ,w. i'edy didn't get the
rtgJ1t am o1 aicton tor that
sboW (~Carol')
~our auditions. so
we've d8dded to switch
~and offer 'Sand
Mountain,'• commented
. director~ Golson.
•Sand Mountain• .actual-
ly is a pair of intmtelated
short pJeys •in Thn-
oeeaee'I Smokey Mountains.
•Jbey pre.tent two richly
humorous sNdiies of life oo
the frootier;. Golso'1 s&d.
• ond they allo present a
strange. yet cxmpeDlng, ver-
sion of the CbrisbMs story.,,
lkyouts will be MQnday
frOm 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. and ·
Tuesday from 7 to 9:30
p.m., with all IQles open.
The show goes up Nov. 30
for two weekends,
Meanwhile, occ will
be keeping bmy this
weekend and next.with
•Approximating Mother,•
Kathleen Tolan's humorous
play about what it takes to
have a baby today.
John Feriacca is direct-
ing the production, which
~ 'IbUJ"ldeys through
Saturdays at 8 p.m. and
Sundays at 2 p.m. until
Oct. 21. Call (714) 432-
5880 for ticket information.
No~ will ·Moth-
er• be Oft tbe Drama Lab
~than Henrik Ibsen's
•A Doll's HoUSe" will antve ID tbe pneoe; StUdiO
Theatre, a peeentation. of
the OCC ~The
atre Company. ltt depic-
tion ol • rebellious house-
wife railed eyebrows in
Norway when lt first hit
• • •
South Coast Repertory
bas a new liter8ly aasodate.
Unda Sullivan Baity bas
relocated mim Dellas to join
the SCR literary staff that
already includes dnunaturge
Jetry Patch and lttermy
manager Jeonifer Kiger.
•IJnda's experience and
expertise wm be a tremen-
dous asset in OlU' cmgaing
mission to launch new work
by our finest playwrights,•
Patdl commented.
Baity comes to SCR from
the University of 'Thus at
Dallas, where she recently
received her doctorate in
humanities, aesthetic stud-
ies, with academic concen·
trations ln dramatic litera-
ture, literary translation
and creative writing. ;
Over the coune of her "'
career, Baity bu b;en an •
actress, dkector, play-
wright. dramaturge, tram-
lator, arts·in-educatiOn
advocate, administrator,
public speaker aQd edUOI!
toe. She establWwl and
managed a ~D:mal
pertomling arts series few
young aUdiencis in P\a.DO,
lex.as. . • '
I'S IOlll 01 WITH
ICLICTIC OUllE .
lllli1tothe
llOIFISTIVIL
avou ME HEAR'
1be Orange County Muse-
um of Art will present a
musical exhibit through
Oct. 29. Titled "You Are
Hear,• the exhibit will
include musical instrument
sculptures, a video installa-
tion of Karlheinz Stock-
hausen's "Helicopter Quar-tet.• and performances of
•Poeme Symphonique" for
100 metronomes. The
museum is at 850 San
Clemente Drive, Newport
Beach. Hours are l 1 a.m. to
5 p.m. Tuesdays through
Sundays. Museum admis-
sion is $5 for adults, $4 for
seniors and students and
free for members and chil-
dren 16 and younger.
'ANCESTRAL VOICES'
A.R. Gurney's "Ancestral
Voices" will be performed
at 8 p.m. today at the Irvine J3arclay Theatre, 4242 Cam-
p~ Drive, Irvine. The play
will star Fred Savage. Mari-
~tte Hartley, Rene Au~
jonois and more. $26-$32.
LEONIDAS KAVAKOS
Greek violinist Leonidas
Kavakos will perform
Bach, Ravel and more at 3
p.m. Sunday at Founders
Hall, Orange County Per-
forming Arts Center, 600
Town Center Drive, Costa
Mesa. $19.
BERUN PHILHARMONIC
The Berlin Philharmonic
will perform works by Bach
at 8 p.m. Monday and
works by Bach and Richard
Wagner at 8 p.m. Tuesday
at Segerstrom Hall,
Ont.nge County Perform-
ing Arts Center, 600 Town
\:enter Drive, Costa Mesa.
'534-$109.
.NATIONAl
IAUET OF CUBA
The Orange County Per-
orming Arts Center will
resent Alida Alonso's
cttional Ballet of Cuba on
unday through Oct. 21
• 'th two programs: •i.a
Magia de Alonso• and
"Goppelia.. • •Alonso" wW -:.fbe perfonned 8 p.m. Thurs-
' ~day and Friday. •cop-
r~pelia. will be performed at
•••2 and 8 p.m. Oct. 20 and 2 ,~ :':p.m. Oct. 21. The Center is
~
'/ .-.... -'1 ··.~ e
at 600 Town Center Drive,
Costa Mesa. $20-$70.
'CROUCHING TIGER'
Tan Dun will conduct the
"Crouching Tiger, Hidden
Dragon' Concerto for Erhu
and Chamber Orchestra,.
set to images of the film. at 8
p.m. Friday and Oct. 20 and
3 p.m. Oct. 21 in the bvine
Barday Theatre, 4242 Cam-
pus Drive, Irvine. $33-$38.
PHIL.HARMONIA
BAROQUE ORCHESTRA
The Philharmonia Baroque
Orchestra will present 15
short pieces in the early
Italian Baroque style at 8
p.m. Oct. 23 in the Irvine
Barclay Theatre, 4242
Campus Drive, Irvine. $
29-$35.
BENNY GOODMAN: Q.ASSICAL .
The lesser-known classical
works of Benny Goodman
will be performed at 8 p.m.
Oct. 24 at the Irvine Bar -
clay Theatre, 4242 Campus
Drive, Irvine. The perfor-
mance will feature clar-
inetist Richard Stoltz.man.
$20-$29.
BENNY GOODMAN:
BIG BAND
Works from Benny Good·
man's Big Band era will be
performed by the Eclectic
Orange Big Band at 8 p.m.
Oct. 26 in Segerstrom Hall,
Orange County Perform-
ing Arts Center1 600 Town
Center Drive, Costa Mesa.
$20-$35.
DAVID SEOARJS
Popular NPR commentator
and playwright David
Sedaris will take the stage at
8 p.m. Oct. 27 at the Irvine
Barclay Theatre, 4242 Cam-
pus Drive. Irvine. $24-$29.
YAMATO,
DIWMMERS OF JAPAN
Yamato, Drummers of
Japan will take the stage at
8 p.m. Oct. T1 at Segerstrom
Hall, Orange County Per-
forming Arts Center, 600
Town Center Drive, Costa
Mesa. $15-$35.
PACH: OfORAl.E
Pod.fie Chorale will per-
form Verdi's •Requiem"
at 1 p.m . Oct. 28 ln
Segerstrom l:fall, Orange
County Performing Arts
Center, 600 Town Center
Drive, Costa Mesa. $18-
$.S.5.
F10e Home Fu.mishinp
Antiq~es 8c C.01.lectibla
Tnditional to c.oa.ge
Gifts & Guden Duo.r
W"tlh Lilt & Ddhay
DA'iF.BOOK . ~. Oc:d. 13, 2001 At 1
HOURS .
CONTINUED FROM A10
'POP·ROCK
IND FLAMENCO
Tate 5, a funk, rock and
Motown act, perlorms at 9 p.m.
Saturdays at Carmelo's Ris-
torante, 3520 E. Coast High-
way. Corona del Mar. Solo gui-
tarist Ken Sanders performs
classical flamenco tunes at
7:30 p.m. Tuesdays and Sun-
days. Free. (949) 675-1922.
SATURDAY NIGHT R&I
Gerald Ishibashi and the
Stone Bndge Band play rock
and R&B at 9 p.m. Saturdays
at Sutton Place Hotel's Tri-
anon Lounge, 4500
MacArthur Blvd., Newport
Beach. Free. (949) 476-2001.
SENIOR CENTER
AFTERNOON
A seven-piece group plays
big band tunes from 1 :30 to
3:30 p.m. Fridays at Oasis
Senior Center, 800 Mar-
guerite Ave., Corona del Mar.
$4. (949) 644-3244.
STAGE
DANCING BEAR
The Bear m the Big Blue
House Ltve's "Surpru.e Party"
will be held through Sunday
at the Orange County Per-
forming Arts Center's
Segerstrom Hall. The Jim
Henson character will take
part in a 90-nunute smgmg
and danong show at 10:30
a.m. and 2 p.m. today, and 1
and 4:30 p.m. Sunday. $16·
$27. (714) 556-2746.
'HOLD PLEASE'
What's so funny about two
SPECTACULAR IEETHOVEN
Concertmaster Raymond Kobler, pictured. memben
of the Padfk: Symphony Orchestra, Paclftc Chorale's
John Alexander Singers and the Claremont nio will
open Pacific Symphony Orchestra's inaugural cham-
ber orchestra series at 3 p.m. Sunday wtth .. Choral
Spectacular!" a part of .. Beethoven at the Barclay."
Among the pieces to be performed are TWo Romances
for Violin and Orchestra and excerpts from "The
Ruins of Athens." The Irvine Barclay Theatre is at
4242 Campus Drive, Irvine. $30-$40. (949) 854-4646.
generations of women? Find
out at South Coast Repertory
with Annie Weisman's "Hold
Please" on the Second Stage.
The play will be staged at
7:45 p.m. Tuesdays through
Sundays, with a 2 p.m. mall-
nee added on Saturdays and
Sundays, through Oct. 21
SCR is at 655 Town Center
Dnve. Costa Mesa. $19-$51
(714) 708-5555.
'THE LION IN WINTER'
The Newport Thedtre Art~
Center will present "The
Lion in Winter· at 8 p.m
Thursdays, Fndays and Sat-
urdays and 2:30 p.m. Sun-
days through Oct. 21 dt the
Newport Theatre Art~ Cen-
ter, 2501 Cliff Dnve, New·
port Bcdch $13. (949) 631-
0288.
'MIDSUMMER
NIGHT'S DREAM'
·A Midsummer Night's
IJream" w1ll play th.rough
Oct 21 at the Costa Mesa
C1v1c Playhouse. 611 Hamil-
ton St Performances will be 8
p m Fndays and Saturdays.
dnd 2 p m Sundays. $15.
(q49) 650-5269,
'APPROXIMATING
MOTHER'
"Approx11ndllng Mother· will
be '>taged at Orange Coast
College through Oct. 21 in
RosEYs AUIOBODY
You have the right to
choose your repair facility
Insist on the Best
LIFETIME WARRANTY
Full Service Collision c.nter
Insurance Approv.d Shop
(949) 642-4522
Candles to Olanddjas
UKCl & Raft Booka
Uutom ~Framing
Fu.mihlft Racoratioo
ucl macb more I
130 F.AST 17'9 ST.
COSTAMFSA Al,.,,,.,., 0-FAii I,_ SIMr
('49) 7U.:lli7
the Drama Lab Theatre, 2701
Fairview Road, Casta Mesa.
Show times are 8 p .m. Thurs-
days th.rough S.\twdafl and 2 •
p.m. Sundays. S7-St0. (714)
432-5880.
'f UllllllSTEll -
1930'
Trilogy Playhouse will pre-
sent Fred Carmichael's
•Frankenstein 1930"
through Oct. 28. Perfor-
mances will be held at 7:30
P·~ Fridays and Saturdays,
wtth a 5 p.m. matinee Sun-
days. The playhouse is at
2930 Bristol St., Build.mg C-
106, Costa Mesa. $13 or $15.
(714) 957-3347, Ex1. 1.
'QUILTERS'
Vanguard Uruvers1ty of
Southern Cahlonua will pre-
sent "Quilters,· a musical bY.
Molly Newman and Barbara
Damashek, Oct. 19-21 and
Oct. 25-28 at the Lyceum
Theater, 55 Fair Drive, Costa
Mesa. Show times are 8 p.m .
Thursday through Saturday
and 2 p.m. Saturday and Sun·
day. $15. (714) 668-6145.
'THE HOMECOMING'
Harold Pinter's "Homecom-
ing" will be staged Oct. 19
through Nov. 18 at South Coast
Repertory's Mamstage, 655
Town Center Dnve, Costa
Mesa. $19-$52. (714) 708-5555.
'A DOLL'S HOUSE'
•A Doll's House" by Henrik
Ibsen will be staged Oct 26-28
at Orange Coast College's Dra-
ma Lab Studio, 2701 FalTVlew
Road, Costa Mesa. Show bines
are 8 p.m. Fnday and Saturday;
2 and 7 p.m. Sunday. $6 (714)
432-5640. Ext. 1
SEE HOURS PAGE A 13
..
Al2 s.dar· Odaber 13, 2001
FRAME
CONTINUED FROM AB
~
The objectiWt al tbe game
is to transform the actrea. M
there are three IC1Wll. you
do this on either the left or
right screens. When an actress
is sucxessf\Jlly transformed,
she appears on the mJddle
screen. When two players at
the left and right &CJeens suc-
ceed at the exact same time,
the two actresses meet in the
middle saeen and interact.
They tight. They talk. They
are very much alive.
OK, so it's not just a game.
•1rs a lot about coming to
know these people,• said
Weinberg, a new media artist
who lives in New York. •Get-
ting a relationship with a sub-
ject on th&screen in a way
you can't have when you just
watch so~etbing. When you
MAHAL
CONTINUED FROM AS
where they had already done
all of the obvious work and
then it was the time to do
everything we shouldn't be
expecting.•
Kemp also writes music.
"For people who think that
every song has been written, 1
would say that they haven't
studied music,• Kemp said.
"Only a few have been
done.·
Kemp's notes are hue and
saturation, light and dark val-
ues.
"Think of how many com-
binations there are,• he said.
"Then there are all of the
themes. emotional themes ...
where art fonns start to cross
each other.·
It was a friend that inspired
Kemp to go into the world of
comics. While going to high
school at Lake Braddock Sec-
ondary School in Vll'ginia. he
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~ bec&Ul8 they J>C*'d,
tot the artist, questions about
the photographer's role in ae-
ating a photograph.
• He obviously had asked
them to poee in a way that he
tboughtbestbrougbtoutthe
nature of their condition,"
Weinberg said of Diamond.
•So he sort of made them into
images of hysteria or religious
mania or alcoholism.•
This question ol perception
and portrayal can extend to
· all photography, he continued,
because a photo is the image
of a world as seen by the
photographer.
Jeanie Weiffenbach, direc-
tor of the Beall Center, com-
pares the notion to phrenolo-
met John Bergerud, a 20-
something-year-old who
worked in the local video
arcade. Bergerud started a
comic, •Godhead,• which
sold 3,000 copies for his own
label, Anubis Press.
"He made a buck per
copy/ Kemp said. "Thal got
me thinking."
Though he wasn't heavily
into comics, Kemp became
inspired to start his own. He
wrote it. found people to pen-
cil and ink it, but couldn't find
a colorist So he took over the
duties himseH.
Kemp got interested and
started to study the way color
was being used. He said he
took advantage of the open
field in the world of colorists
in order to get into comics.
·1 didn't go up against a
barrier,• he said.
Kemp taught himself Pho-
toshop. conning his high
school teacher to let him teach
it, even though he was still
learning it. After graduating,
he w;ent to community college
gy-wben ~ Ul8d lo
0 2 8 we~'bymea
~ tbe me ot a bndn.
1be ablbit ..... WMb the
~al~lo
lmillpet a P• m. • Weiaen-
bKh lllid.
•But it's a "'Y Jarge-ran.g-
ing work.• she added. •1t bas
the added tntaett al being
very complkwtad bistoriCaDY
and art biltcriallly, and in
terms ol the larger areas ol
the hwnanities like psychoan-
alytic discotirie. • .
•frames" also puts a dif·
ferent slant on the truth of
photography. After all; if an '
image is alterable, what does
that mean?
•And the work deals with
the whole notion of bowmen-
tal sufferers are portrayed,
and, by extension, how any-
one is portrayed,• Weiffen-
bach said.
But for Weinberg, who is
quick to dismiss the intellect.
in Sacramento-·1 said,
that's where Bruce Lee's
from• -.. and decided to cre-
ate a portfolio.
· From the beginning he
started to get job offers.
Spawn's Steve Oliff invited
him to come to his studio, in
his garage. Kemp, then 18,
started hanging out with him,
learning some of the tricks of
the trade.
"The artists taught me that
I was an artist, • Kemp said. •I
didn't know this stuff. I was
going into it as a schemer.•
He left Oliff and started
working for Extreme Comics.
which he desaibes as a
"sweatshop,· working 12
hour days as a norm.
•I went in there as the guy
with no art experience,•
Kemp said. ·1 went in there as
the guy with more ambition
than the rest.·
After a disagreement with
the bosses at Extreme, Kemp
found himself working for
Brian Haberlin on Spawn.
"I'm one of the luckiest
M.,,..4bC.,.,.l~
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• WI-: UC Irvine's Beall
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drives
•COST: Free
• CAU.: (949) 824-6206
technological savvy and
intrigue behind bis aeation.
and who repeatedly calls it tust
"a game,• one ol the objec·
lives m ·Frames· is to think
about bow we see the world.
•Really, what the piece is
about is having this quiet. sort
of intense experience where
you have a relationship with
these people,• he said.
guys you'll ever meet,• be
said, desaibing ho"{ Haberlin
bad asked a nwnber of col-
orists to work on Spawn, only
to be turned down because
they were all busy.
His partnership with
Haberlin continues to this day.
Kemp has a number of
non-coloring projects in the
works, induding music and a
film.
"I've gotten out of the art
form of pleasing people and
into the art form of pleasing
myself,• Kemp said.
• • •
Do you know a local artist,
writer, painter, singer, film-
maker, etc., who deserves to
get noticed? Send your nomi-
nee to In The Wmgs, Daily
Pilot, 330 W. Bay St., Costa
Mesa. CA 92627, by fax to
(949) 646-4170 or by e-mail to
jenni/er.mahal@Jatimes.com.
• JENNIFER MAHAL Is features
editor of the Dally Pilot.
WOOL IERIER
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. .
bllcl..-~-t.aitellueb•J.!W
PaftNttl.MMfraret 1batcbs a._.,,._
ld8Dt.......,CUW.
'Ille ..... ~ ~wben-
ber =-::::Ill tbe ~ tar111e ·LUt
l!inpillor• ~ tbe
ICOl'8 gamer an o.c.r.
noogh tbe ICOl'8 for
•ClvudUDg ~ Wiii oriatnaDY wrltteu by Tan I>uD with the ertau ill · ·
mind; Han .. not Oil tbe
score. Th8 ftlmmaken
decided to go with Y~ Yo
Ma playmg • cello
instead. .
However, her television
and filni credits do
include -perfonnances tn
the "Uttle Mermaid,"
"The Joy Lucic Club,•
"Hercules• and the docu·
mentary •Pavarotti in
China."
•1 feel vmy pleased to
be living in this world,
e7spedally after COU1ing to
· America [because] there's
lots of love I received
from the audience, from
the people, from the com-
posen, froln the musi·
dans, • Han said.
She also enjoys her
treed.om.
When Han left China,
she abandOned a more
restricted mUsical
upbringing where music
was supposed to be acer-
tain way. Sim:e the age of
six, when she first lea.med
to play the erhu following
ln her father's footsteps,
Han had always adhered
to the instruction of a
teacher. She inserted
, vibratos only when her
teacher said she should.
Sbe played everything
the •correct• volume.
But moving to America
and learning American
~~gavebera
mUilCal freedolil. Iii tact,
Han has even mmbined
the .emu with gel!l'8S
Pal
FABRIC
25 TO 501.r
All Yardage through
October 31, 2001
111 Mlrlnc Ave.
lalbOa Island
(Mt) 67J.0719
Open 7D~s
11:31 am-6:11pm
..
Dally~ -a
indudi!IQ ~and new ·~ age. •
•Now I even play a lit-t·•
Ue bit more longer than "'
the bar the composer w
wrote,• Han said. "I just
folloW my niOod and my tP
f~. Just trying to h
show the love·1 C4J\ o I< show.• ~J
And ihe bu a lot of it.
Enough t~ ~· Ill
"B1peda.lly in America,~
peoi>le work SQ hard, thet ..
have not enough time to
have the chance to think
deeply [about] what they •
want. Han said. •lbe
feeling that what I want-
ed to tell people is that
bow much love there is in
this world. There's much
more love than they
think .•
Her message seems to '
be getting out. ROM Cbe4"
ung, a CbiDeS4h~nwmcan .. ,:-
board member of Bravt 9, ·
a nonprofit group that •• '
promotes cross-cultunll "\ 1
understanding through
the arts, bestows Han a :
comparison to Yo-Yo Ma. • -
"When he plays cello, •
you can see his emotion, •0
said the Irvine resident, vC.:
whose group is a sponsor~
of the •crouching Tiger• ,..
concert. •Same thing ,, f,
with Karen. You could 0~
tell. She's truly emotion-• :::
ally involved and the ""'
audience can feel that
directly... 1;.
Por Han, this means
her mission ts accom-:-r
pllsbecl. !~
"Music is (an] instru-_
ment, • she ta.Id. •To feel -
deeper, to feel more, to bl":
more sensitive to each I -·'---. . ~. .
i
~ily Pilot
BEAR
CONTINUED FROM 1
"'Ibundays lbow. •He01
wile and understandinq and
likel to Jilten to what kids are
thinking about. The Bear is
really talldng to the kids.•
And the ldds love it. lbundaha°f?ht was an hour and a of singing.
dancing and fun for the chil-
dren at the C.enter, who were
sort of at rapt attention.
Set 1n what appears to be a
forest 1n the Northwest, the
Bear, three live performers
and all of bis fellow inhabi-
tants of his Big Blue House
~in playful stories and
that, much like that
old purple dinosaur, teach
children about the importance
of friendship, playing and get-
ting along with each other.
The main event for this
show centers around planning
a surprise party for Tutter, the
small blue mouse, and it gets
the whole audience involved.
For the most part, the
music from the show has a
rustic, folksy guitar sound and
the most popular songs from
HOURS
CONTINUED FROM A 11
'NOSTALGIA'
Lucinda Coxon's "Nostalgia"
will receive its world pre-
miere Nov. 2 though Dec. 2 at
South Coast Repertory's Sec-
ond Stage, 655 Town Center
Drive, Costa Mesa. $19-$51.
(714) 708-5555.
ART
OPENING RECEPTION
South Coast Art Gallery will
hold its opening reception at
6 p.m. today, featuring new
artists including Mark
Jacobucci and Tom Grogg at
3441-B Via Lido, Newport
Beach. Free. (949) 673-0771.
STREET FESTIVAL
The Lido Marina Village
Street Festival will be held
RI
WHAT: •The Bear In the
Big Blue House Live•
WIEN: 10:30 a.m. and 2 p.m. today, and 1 and 4:30
p.m. Sunday
WHERE: Orange County
Performing Arts Center's
Segerstrom Hall, 600 Town
Center Drive, Costa Mesa
COST: $16-$27
CAU: (714) 556-2746
the 1V show, "Welcome to
the Blue House,• "Where or
Where or Where is Shadow·
and "The Bear Cha Cha
Cha,· got everyone in the
audience dancing or singing.
No Bear show would be
complete without the dosing
"Goodbye Song• sung by the
Bear and Luna the moon.
As for Danielle, she nod-
ded vigorously in wide-eyed
approval when I asked if she
liked the show.
Created by Mitchell Krieg-
man in coordination with Jim
Henson productions, the cre-
ators of the Muppets and
Sesame Street, the New York-
based "The Bear in the Big
Blue House• is wildly suc-
cessful across·the nation and
from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. today
and Sunday at the Lido Mari-
na Village, near the intersec-
tion of Newport Boulevard
and Via Lido in Newport
Beach. Free. (909) 672-1598.
TWO SIDES
djr International Art will hold
an exhibit titled "Dual Tradi-
tions: Vietnamese Art on
Handcrafted Paper• through
Friday at its gallery, 2431 W.
Coast Highway, Suite 204,
Newport Beach. Free. (949)
548-6249.
LAUU QUINTAlllLLA
"Rotation of a Dream," the art
of Laura Quintanilla, will be
on display through Oct. 21 at
the Boudreau-Ruiz Gallery,
3000 Newport Blvd., Newport
Beach. Quintanilla's encaus-
tic paintings are appearing
beside Carol Stein's textile
vessels. The gallery is open
11 a.m . to 6 p.m . Tuesday
through Saturday. Free. (949)
675-4766.
I I I I
Saudav. October 13, 200 t Al3
with attics. In its fourth year,
it's already won two Bmmys.
Even if you have never
seen these Muppet-like char-
acters (they appear exclusive-
ly on the Disney Owmel), the
live show, in its second year
on the road, is, as DuMars
sald, a perfect way to intro-
duce children to live theater.
So pack the kids head on
down to the Performing Arts
Center for a casual evening
of tunes that you'd never be
caught dead singing when
you're out with your football
buddies.
Who knows, you just might
find yourself doing a little
"Bear Cha Cha Cha.,,
• TONY DODEltO Is editor of the
Daily Pilot. He can be reached by e-
mail at tony.dod«OO/at/~s.com
NATO has supplied for Immediate sale standard Issue gas masks for its frtends
In the United States. These are brand new Israeli gas masks wtth a separate
screw-on NATO filter. They are available In both adult and children's sizes.
Assembly and deployment on
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Sunday October 14th• 10 am -5 pm
join Us for Fun
Free Festivities Featuring
The Gregg Tapper Band
Local Musicians
Taste of Udo Marina Village Restaurants
Arts&C~
Free Gondola Rides
Popcorn &: Balloons
Sidewalk Sales and MuCh more.
Fabulous R8fllc Prizes
(proceeds going to the New York Fire Depmtment Relief Fund)
,
In
taking
owrtbe
Orange
County
Per-
forming
Arts
Center
thb
week-
end wtth
tbelr
Uve
show.
•ERICA'S
llRIEST
BMW
CENTER
THREE STORIES!
Quori Of THE DAY
.,We called a keeper. Morgan is
a winner and he showed that
tonight ... "
Jeff Brinkley, Newport Harbor
High football coach
Sailors
escape,
14-9
Defense strong once again
for Newport Harbor, which
makes just enough plays to
handle pesky Aliso Niguel.
Barry Faulkner
DAILY PlLOT
· ALISO VIEJO -
Newport Harbor
High quarterback
Morgan Craig rrught
hdve done only
minimal damage
throwing spirals SCOlllOAID
Friday night But
with the Sea Vie w Newport 1•
League football Aliso Niguel 9
opener on the hne
against host Aliso Niguel, he launched
hunsell into the air to complete the last
big play m a game full of them.
"I was kind of eyeing the sticks,·
Craig !>aid of his quarterback keeper
around the nght side on third-and-nine
with 2:00 remaming. ·1 got a couple
blocks from (receivers) Jon Vandersloot
and Mike McDonald and I made a dive
for 1t. •
• • tf .. m•ma
~15honoree
DICK FERRYMAN
Spom ldilot-Roger Carlson • 949..5744223 • 5porta Fcua 949.0500170 Saturday, Odober 13, 2001 8 I
HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL
Craig's dJve vaulted him to his own
37-yard line, good enough for 11 yards
and a first down. The Sailors then ran
out the dock for their fifth straight win.
DAILY PILOT PHOTOS BY 5(AN HlillR
Corona del Mar High's Dylan Hendy looks for running room as Estancla's Mitch Valdes (4) b"les to cut him off ln Friday's PCL duel.
Newport's defense, which came in
aUowmg just 5.6 pomts per game, had
several more heroes for the Sailors (5-0-
1), ranked No. 5 in OTange County and
No 2 111 CIF Southern Section Division
Vl
But 1t was Craig, who scored the
Sculors' first touchdown and threw for
the visitors' second, whom Brinkley
trusted with the game on the line.
·We called a keeper,• Brinkley said.
·Morgan is a winner and be showed
that tonight. He made some plays with
his legs. when he wasn't necessarily
throwing a lot. He found a way to win
and that's the way we measure the
success of our quarterback.·
Nearly all of Harbor's success came
m the first half against the Wolverines (3-
2).
Craig, intercepted for the first time all
year on the Sailors' first series, capped
an eight-play, 80-yard touchdown drive
with a 23-yard sneak after Aliso senior
Stephan Bemelring's 30-yard field goal
attempt went wide right.
On the scoring play, Craig lunged
forward as the Aliso defensive line
submarined beneath the Newport front
blocking wall. Landing on both feet,
Craig then spun out of a tackle and
found an open lane to the end zone
with 1:42 left in the first quarter.
Adam Kerns added the first of two
conversion lckks for a 7-0 lead.
The margin doubled with 1 :00 left in
the hall, as Craig, rolling right after a
play-action fake to the left, found tight
end David Marshall all alone for a
5-yard scoring toss. The TD capped a
Eagles' mistakes provide Sea Kings with great field
position in Pacific Coast League opener and Corona del
Mar takes advantage en route to an easy 35-6 decision.
Richard Dunn
DAILY PILOT
NEWPORT BEAC H -The
suspense ended early Friday night.
but Corona de l Mar High football
coach Dick Freemdn might have a
slight change in holiday planning.
"I'm hoping I'm on Dick's
Chnslmas card list now,• quipped
Estanaa Coach Jay Noonan, following
the Sea Kmgs' 35-6 Pacific Coast
League-operung victory over the host
Eagles at Newport Harbor High.
Thanks to the Eagles' first-quarter
chantable efforts. Corona del Mar
pounced on Estanoa with a three-
touchdown lead 50 seconds into the
second quarter, then stuck it m cnnse
control and unproved to 4-1-1 overall.
The Sea Kings, ranked No. 7 in
CIF Southern Section Division IX,
scored on their first possession.
recovered an Estancia fumble and
scored again. then soooped up another
loose ball from Estancia's offense and
scored again.
knocked out by these guys last year
(27-24). They always play us tough.•
Junior running back Mark
Cianciulli carried 20 times for 129
yards and one touchdown to lead the
Sea Kings, whose ground forc:e (283
yards OD -48 rushes) continually moved
the chains ( 15 of their 23 first downs
came on the ground) against the
Eagles (0-5, 0-1).
Even CdM left tackle Steven
Russell got ID Oil the action, pidang up
15 yards on one carry. "He's as close
to a second-team fullback as we've
got,· said Freeman, whose
quarterl>ack.. senior Dylan Hendy. also
enjoyed a big night. complebng 12
of 18 passes for 155 yards and one
touchdown (no interceptions).
SEE NEWPORT PAGE 84 CclM'a JCeltb Long (1) lunges over Estanda .. Junior lBnielu (11).
·w e kind of let up after that,•
Freeman said. •You know, we got SEE COM PAGE B4
DAILY PILOT HIGH SOtOOl ATHl.m Of THE WEEK
Katie
Newport Harbor senior setter is all about mnJring the most of
her opportunities, more so because this is her final season.
. Bl Sa!u!day. OttOb.r 1 ~. too 1
. • • Dally Pilot • ' . . • •
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Daily Pilot ·SPORTS ' Sotlrday, Odober 13, 2001 m
HIGH SCHOOi IOYS AND GIRLS CROSS COUNTRY
CdM defends Orange .. County crown today at Irvine Park
Newport Harbor boys will also try
to defend their title this m<:>ming.
Steve Virgen
DAILY PILOT
IRVINE -Winning the Orange County
Championships Division I title tor the third straight
year won't come easy for the Corona del Mar
High girls cross counby team today.
Nevertheless, Sea Kings Coach Bill Sumner
says his girls won't give it away at Irvine Regional
Park.
The meet starts at 8 a.m. with the first varsity
race, the guts varsity Division I sweepstakes with
Corona del Mar in the mix, scheduled to begin at
930
The CdM boys team will run in I>Msioo Il (at
10:30), wluch includes Back Bay rival Newport
Harbor, last year's Division I sw~ champion.
Both Co5ta Mesa squads compete tn [)Mgon m and
Newport's guls will enter Division 0.
The Orange County Championships rank its
three dJVisions based on strength of program.
•For the last three years, the (CdM) girls have
gone there to win ... , • Swnner said. •And nothing
h?~ changed. I don't think (the top teams are) sig-
nificantly better than we are. U they want to win
this llung, they're going to have to earn il I'm not
prepared to give it away. I'm prepared for them to
take it We want to give it a good whack.•
Last year, CdM senior Julie Allen won the
Division I sweepstakes race, while running for
FountdJJl Valley (she transferred to CdM in the
spnng). She Hrushed ahead of Newport Harbor's
Amber Steen, in t 7 .22. Allen's victory capped a
back-to-back run and she'll be going for a three-
peat today.
CdM won the sweepstllkes title last year by
placing five girls ln the top 29. However, just one
of the five return for the Sea Kings th.ls year,
Katherine Morse, wbo was the fifth, placing 48th
in 19:41. Sea.son Meservey. who led CdM (ninth
in 18:35), has relocated and the other three girls
were wentors.
So, now, the challenge of repeating falls on a
young cast and its senior leader, Allen. who won
the Laguna Hills Invitational and the Stanford
invitational this season.
Allen, a three-time CIF Southern Section and
state finals partidpant, set a Division m course
record at Laguna Hills in 17:35, 45 seconds faster
than the previous record.
CdM senior Becky Cummins also bnngs much-
needed experience for the Sea Kings, the two-time
defending state l)ivi.gon IV champions who feature
six sophomores. including Keelan Culyer, and
two freshmen, including Melissa Swigert.
Newport Harbor, which races at 9:45, is also
experiencing the youth trend as the Sailors' No. 1
runner is sophomore Lauren Paul. Lisa Evans,
another sophomore, is Newport's second runner
and freshman Courtney Marshall is yet another
young runner who Coach Eric 1\veit says is
showing quick improvement Sophomore Amanda
Abbott returns from illness which had her out for
more than a week and her return means the Sailors
will be at full strength for the first time this year.
In addition to Newport's youth and inexperi·
ence, senior Louisa Alvarado will run her first
varsity race Saturday. 1\veil said her raw talent
might surprise and will definitely make the Sailors
STATE HIGH SCHOOL RANKINGS
CIQSS C<Mlm
lloys DMlion • DMllon•
1 Bantow; 2. &uftcM; 3 Nordhoff; .. 81.m>Ughs
Rldg@oest; 5 SO UnMnlty City; 6 San Luis Obispo;
1. St. Fr.ncll; 2. Mater Del; l Mira Costa; 4.. N1111.11rtttllrtlar,
7 MtrMnOnte, 8. St. lgNtiU!; 9. Aalaoft; 10 V•lley CenWr.
Glris DMllon 11
5. San Paqual; 6. Rio Atneri<Mlo; 7 StodldW; B. c.ntenni61;
9. Sen9fr: 10. (tie) v.-11e and Carondelet.
DMllon• 1 San Lorenzo Valley; 2 Ulmpohndo; 3. SO Unillenity City;
4 Sacred Heart cathedral. 5. C.0.-del Mr. 6. Oovis East;
7 Enl«PfM; 8 Nordhoff; 9. St Francis; 10. St. k>5eph.
1. Halvanf..w.sti.ke; 2. El Molino: l . UnM!nfty (SO);
4. Bishop Montgom«y; S. C.0.-del Mm; 6. Pr~IOrl.
7. Ye>5emrte; 8. Palo Alto, 9 St. Joleph; 10 Enterpriie.
MOTORCYCLES
Elite vie for national title
at Costa Mesa Speedway
U.S. National Speedway Championships are set
for 7 :30 start tonight Orange County Fairgrounds.
COSTA MESA -A 20-man field, including the holders of nine
Uruted States National Championships, will lead the battle for the
Coors Light U.S. National Speedway Championship title at the
Costa Mesa Speedway on the Orange County Fairgrounds venue
torught.
Costa Mesa's Bobby "Boogaloo" Schwartz and Scott Brant will
be among the competitors that will contend for the title at the track
on the Orange County Fairgrounds, as the racing action begins at
7:30 pm.
Schwartz, 45, ls a former National and World Champion, while
Brant is looking to overcome past bad luck at the Costa Mesa
Speedway. 1be 32-year-old Brant has recently oome out of retirement
that had him away from racing for the past five years.
Brad Oxley, the 1999 national champion, who also won in 1987,
looks to create the high-intense mystique of the event. Josh Larsen,
the 2000 U.S. Open champion, has placed himself ahead ot the field,
compiling the most points throughout the year (502), followed by
Gary Hicks (497) and Chris Manchester (476).
Unlike past national championships, this year's event features
20 heat races which wi1l push the top 10 racers of the evening into
two five-man, four-lap semilinals. Then, the top two finishers from
each semifinal will advance into the title's final event. Second-
and third-place finishers from each semifinal move on to the "Last
Chance," where competitors will face their last opportunity to
qualify for the final. Only the top four scores out of each semifinal
and the winner ol the ''Last Chance" will compete In a winner-take-
all, four-lap war to settle the championship.
Overall. 2A heats of Ownpionship Speedway motorcycle racing
will unfold in just over two hours.
Tidtets can be ordered from the Costa Mesa Speedway office,
(949) 492-9933. General admission for adults is $17, children &-12
is $8 and 5-aod-under are free.
KING
CONTINUED FROM 81
Sage Hill falls in 3
Sage Hill High I @ I girls volleyball
coach Merja Con-
nolly said her team
showed Improvement in a 15-1,
15-7, 15-3 Academy ~e loss
to visiting Brethren Christian
Friday.
Sophomore Gina Kossavella
led the Lightning (2-6, 0-4 in
league) with hve kills and 11
digs, while Samantha Burns
conbibuted three kills and seven
digs. Nicole Notrica added 11
assists and seven digs. The
Warriors improved to 5-6, 3-1.
TODAY'S SCHEDULE --C.olegit ,.,., • UC lnllrle .i Nor1hern
c..ltfornle T-8' sc.nford.
Comm&rity coll9ge -• Or-. Coest
.iOlrwTOUtNIY*lt.
High tchool boYi ·The lilhop'S 91 ~
HMtlof, 2 1un.; ~-Wily et CotON d9I
M-, 1 p.m, ESIMlde NcMct TCIUfNINl'lt.
lll&l1ll&A
College -• UC IMne .wt Long Beach St.11•. 7:JO p.m; Azuu P'Kfflc o11 ~
7 p.m.
CIOSS Q!W!ll
Comrnunfty col9ge "*' ~ -. Or-. eo. -Senta a.twa lr'MUllioNI. t&.11\.
Hlgfl Id-' ~ ~ gifts • Corone dal
Mer, C-Mil-.~ HartlOf M Or.,.
Co..nly 0...1.---M IMne ~
l&.11\.
assists in that match and she
used the loss as more
motivation for the rest of the
season. With memories that
are highllgbted by a CIF
Division I state championship
that came when she was a
sophomore, King wants to
create more memorable
moments before season's end.
She says Lt's not all about
winning, though. It never bas
been.
•1 really value the
coaching be.re a lot." King
aakl. •Tbefe ts a lot of stuff I
have learned, penonally and·
about life. I met IOIDe nice
frlendl, I'll treasunt that • lot.
I made tome valuable
fri8ndlbip1 that I tblnk will
1.uta~ume.·
K1QiJ Mid lhe bu created
more~ um year
b8CaUle ol youngtir .... ud flMJDINte,
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SEAN HUER I DAILY PILOT
Newport Harbor High's girls have a 9:45
a.m. starting time for the Division II race.
more competitive.
"I'm very excited,· Twe1t <>did "We've
improved greatly in pracbce. By tht' C'nd of the yedr
we're going to be pretty qood We're going to
have six girls in this race. I look for us to run our
best races of lhe year. I think we ran do pretty
well."
The Costa Mesa girls tedm, rompeling di 10,
will be led by its No. 1 runner. 50phomore Chnstine
. Bjelland. Coach Eric Davies '>did 'iC'nior Cynthia
Tran, like several runners from different high
schools, will not compete Saturddy becdu!Je she
must complete her Scholdstic A'>'><''>Sment Test.
Mesa senior Eileen Bello is also one of the
Mustangs' leading runners.
In boys competition, Coach Sim Barry's Sailors
will be hard-pressed to repeat m their title quest
this year as they are still recovering from injuries
which bi?lped lead to th.e1r first loss in the Sea
View League in five years at this same site last
week.
Cbrls McMlllen, who won the Div1S1on I boys
sweepstakes race last year, completed b.lgh school
m the spring. Also, Jesus Santana, t ttb 10 15:35
last year, moved to Riverside.
Junior Alec Urtusuastegu1 now leads the
Sailors. He finished 19th m 16:16 last year, and,
wtule nursing lup mjunes, completed a suru1ar
course in 16:23 at Irvme Park last week in the
Sea View League invilationaJ.
Sophomore Nick Miller and seruor Joel Funnan
give the Sailors hope that they will soon return lo
supremacy, or at least respectability
The Corona del Mar Sea Kings, also coached
by Sumner. will be led by seruors Dustin Hodges,
Ben Inouye and Mark Pomerantz Junior Blake
Dtllion and sophomore Kevm Artz will proVlde
depth.
In Division Ill (startUlg at 10:45), DdVles' Costa
Mesa Mustangs featwe seruor Lrwm Sdlds Davies
said his boys have been trauung ·very hard· in the
weeks leading up to lhe OC C"hd mp1onships and
that sets up Salas to compete dt hh best.
"It's his race to make or bredk." said Davies,
who will not attend the meet becduse of pnor
commitments. "He's done red! well m the past I
believe he's going to be reddy I le hds the talent.
And now if he puts that talent to what he does, the
sky's the lirrut •
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MAILIAG
NorthwOOd
foothaD coacll
Curtis refutes
Costa Mesa
accusations
(To) Barry Faulkner
For Dave Perkins to
question our Integrity
publicly without any facts
is the lowest blow to me
and my staff.
I would encourage
anyone to speak to the
coaches and athletic
directors in Orange
County and ask them
about my reputation and
the integrity that I have
developed In my 25 years
of coaching.
(Thursday night's) game
was dearly over and we
were running the ball to
run out the dock. The
play called was a power
running play, however
when our receiver broke
from the huddle he was
left uncovered by the
Costa Mesa defense and
they were blitzing their
safety No. 22.
Our quarterback read
the uncovered receiver,
as he did several ti.mes in
the game, and threw the
ball to the open receiver.
He had worked on it all
week in preparation for
the game, and it was a
natural reaction to throw
the ball, not a called play
from the sideline.
U the game is over.
why are they blitzing
their secondary and
leaving receivers
uncovered? U you check
around with any coach
that I have played you
will find out that I have
never run up the score on
anyone, no matter what
has happened in the past.
We would never step a
player off the sideline to
cheat another opponent.
It is totally against all that
I believe in I
While our film did not
show us breaking the
huddle, No. 1 Dave
Andeison is dearly inside
the Dank official who
makes sure that all
players break the huddle
prior to the playl Dave
Anderson took the play
into the huddle!
To also question our
lack of compassion is
totally absurd and a
tremendous blow to me,
my staff, players, parents,
and community.
1) I was one of the first
persons to call their
athletic office to offer my
condolences to Athletic
Director, Kirk Bauermeister,
and his staff.
2) We worked
diligently to make a
timely wge donation to
the memorial service fund
and the scholarship fund
in Matt Colby's name .
3) I spoke with Dave
Perkins on Sunqay prior
to the game and asked
what he would prefer us
to do in reference to the
Costa Mesa roster, as well
as signs to prepare for in
Matt's name.
4) I, along with
players, parents, and our
athletic trainer attended
the memorial service for
Matt Colby on Monday,
October 8 at Orange
Coast College. We all
prayed together and crled
together for the Costa
Mesa and Estanda's
families, players, and
friends.
5) I made sure that we
had a moment of silence
prior to the game in Matt
Colby's memory.
6) We a.re wearlbg No.
9 on our behnets in memory
(of) our fallen player in
the Pacific Coast League.
7) As a Christian, I
have prayed for Dave
Perkins as a coach, bis
team members, Matt
Colby's family members
and all of his friends. I
w1ll continue to do so,
and as a Christian I wW
forgive all penons for
tbelr ldiOO•
While I have not
nteetved the fax yet. I am
tOld bf my ediriiDiltratlon
tbM Cbe CoM Mela
~ lsleridtng
over an apiOlogY lot
(ThurilMy) ~ugly .,,...,
~.
Newport Harbor quarterback Morgan Craig
(6) takes off for a big gain In the Sallon' Sea
View League victory at Aliso Niguel Prlday
nigbL Betow, Tars' running back Dartangan
Johnson (22) ls off for some of his 204 yards
on 33 carries.
. Daily Pilot
ommem
Mf -04119 2l run (K#IW kkk), 1 :42
HCM9M!!f!
Mf -o. ManNM 5 pm from Craig
(Kerns kktl). 1 -00.
JWWllll
AN -Stwtart 63 pm from Brown
(lemelcing kktl). 7:20
fMJHCIUMID
0 ·14 2 . 9
AN • Safety. Omernik tackled quarttri>ad
In end I.OM, 1Ct.A9.
Att~: 2.200 (estimated}
pllDUMIUSIMG
Mt. Johnson. 3~20ot; Oaig. 11-n , 1 TD
M -Clrroll 10-58; Mffde. 6-12.
Latimer, 8-1.
lllMllUAl PASSllG
Mt-CtalgS.-9-1,41, 1TD.
AN • Utim«. 10-24-1, 79; Brown. 1 · 1-0
63. 1 TD.
!NQIYPW ltaMl!G
Mt. McDonald. 1-14; Erlduoo. 1·12.
Kerns. 1·7, D MarsNll, 1·5, t TD,
V~1-3.
AN · Meade. S-24; Hawthorne, 3-14,
Stewart. 1~3. 1 TD; Hammon. 1·25;
Browr\ 1-16.
GAMI SJAnsncs
Mt AH
flmdowm 14 8
Rush&y~ 44-281 21-88
Passing yardq 41 142
Passing 4-9-1 1~25-1
Net return yards• 9 18
s.du-yardage 0-0 l 17
Net~ 331 231
DAILY PILOT PHOTOS BY STEVE MCCRANIC·
Newport Harbor's David Marshall gets a winner's hug from Cory
Ray (11) after Marshall pulled In a 5-yard scoring pass from quarter-
back Morgan Craig in Friday night's 14-9 victory at Aliso Niguel.
Punts 5-29.6 7-47 8
Fumble-fum~ lost 1·1 1-0
Aags-net yar~ 7-48 7 SS
Time of possession 24'58 23 01
•Punt ret\Kl'6, lntefteptJOns. ~
mums
NEWPORT
CONTINUED FROM 81
10-play, 72-yard procession, o n
which C raig scrambled for pickups
of 21 and 9 yards.
Craig's running helped comp-
lement junior tailback Dartangan
Johnson, who surpassed the 100-
yard mark on the second play of
the second quarter and finished
with 204 rushing yards on 33 ca.mes.
Whatever momentum the Tars
took into halftime, however, quick.Jy
vanished as Aliso played inspired
defense and delved deep into its
offensive playbook to rally back
into the contest.
COM
CONTINUED FROM 81
~ Corona del Mar marched 59
yards on eight plays to open the
game, capped by Hendy's 23-yard
touchdown pass to Steven Ward on
a fade to the nght side. An 1 t -yard
screen pass to C ianciulli, a 10-yard
rush by running back Keith Long
and an 11-yard carry by Cianoulli
set up the first score.
O n Estancia's second play from
scrimmage, Long. CdM's outside
linebacker, recovered a fumble and
the Sea Kings took over on the Eagle
41-yard line.
Seven plays and four penclllies
later, CdM fullback Matt Cooper
plunged into the end zone with a 1-
yard touchdown, while K.C. Rawlins
added the extra point for a 14-0 lead.
Estanoa, however, following a
33-yard kickoff return by Mitch
Valdes, fumbled again on its second
play from saimmage, this time with
Cooper getting the recovery to set up
the Sea Kings' third touchdown in
three series.
"We can't keep makJng
mistakes,· Noonan said. "It's getting
real old.•
Estancia lost its sta rting center,
Joe Hernandez. for the week
because of an injury. and it appeared
to make a difference as the Eagles
fumbled five times (losing two).
After recovering its secmd fumble,
Corona del Mar set up shop on Its .46
and ran out the final 3:01 of the first
quarter, before scoring early in the
second on a 3-yard keeper by Hendy.
The Sea Kings missed a 45·yard
field goal and lost a fumble in their
final two possessions in the first half,
in which they had control of the ball
for 17:39.
After an Estancia punt to &tart
the second half, CdM drove again
"We let that third quarter
momentum get away from us and
that's something we oormcilly hang
our hat on,· Brinkley Sdid.
After a three-dnd-out on
Harbor's first offenstve series, the
first time since the season opener
Harbor failed to score a touchdown
on its first third-quarter possession,
Ahso's Scott Brown took a reverse
pitch, pulled up belore readung
the left hash mark and threw d
strike to Mat Stewdrt, who hdd
worked his way behind the
secondary.
Stewart made a cutback to eludt!
the Harbor pursuit and the result
was a 63-yard ra.zzle-dazzle soorlng
play that e lectrified the born~
crowd.
Harbor fumbled the ball away
and scored on its first series, keyed
by a 30-yard pass play from Hendy
to Ward and capped by Long's 1-
yard tollchdown run.
Estancia, which bad only one lirst
down in the first half, gave CdM
excellent field position dga1n ,
following a bad punt snap, which
forced punter Lewis Bradshaw into
a 15-yard 10$$ and allowed the Sea
Kings to take over at the Eagle 22.
He ndy hooked up w ith two
receivers (Cooper and Ward) on two
plays to move the ball lnslde the 10,
then Cianciulli camed for a 9-yard
scoring run with 7:.t5 to play in the ·
thlrd quarter. Rawlins kicked the
extra point for a 35-0 lead.
In the fourth~. Estancia got
on the scoreboard as Brodshaw
ended a long drive with an 11-yard
touchdown run on a keeper wttb
2:22 left.
In the drive, which started at the
two plays after kickoff, setting up
Ali!.o dt the Tars' 38, but the defense
answert!d qwckJy.
Five plays later, McDonald made
d s lJdmg interception in the end
zone to turn dWdy the threat.
Both defenses stood their ground
until d Bemeklng punt (he averaged
4 7 .8 ydfds on seven punts, including
boorners of 68 clJld 66 yards) pinned
the Scillors at their own 2.
On the first play, Aliso linebacker
Addm Omernik tack.Jed the Harbor
ball Cdrrier ln the end zone for a
!><ifoly to mdke 1t 14-9 with 10:49
left.
But a p<ill of Utird-down sacks,
one by uuddle llneback.e:r Cory Ray
and dnother by Marshall, playing
end, forced Aliso punts on the
Wolverines' final two possessions
Eagles' own 11, Bradshaw teamed
with Junior Tanielu on a 22-yard
screen pass and found Jermaine
Snell on a 21-yard pass play, high-
lighting the 11-play series.
"The CdM kids played great,•
Noonan said. "They're as solid and
bd.lanced as l thought. We had our
shots and opportunities ... we've got
to break out of our own shadow
sometime.•
ln the third quarter, Estanda's
Bubba Kapko recovered a fumble
at the Edgles' 25, and, on the fim
play, running bdck Raymond Romua
earned S 1 yards on the ground --
Estanda's longest play of the game.
Brad.show carried to the 2-yard
line on a 14-y&rd keeper, setting up
first-and-goal. But the Eagles were
•topped on four plays, including
defensive gems by CdM's Jaywon
Skalla and Cooper for 1oases and a
fourth-down J>4SI incompletion.
to help Harbor earn only its second
league-opening win in the last
seven seasons.
Craig finished with 77 rushing
yards on 1 t attempts.
Jim Rothwell, Matt Casserly. 'JYler Miller, Warren Junowich, Matt
Encinias, Kerns, Nick Iverson, Scott
Kohan and Bryan Breland also
c hipped JO defensively for the
winners.
·we played great defense the
whole night,· Brinkley said. "We
knew we'd come down here and
(the Wolverines') hair would be on
fire to play us tough. Tllis is the
kind of game you want to make
sure you escape with a win.·
Aliso managed just 71 yards on
the ground and 79 though the air,
aside from the long gadget play.
N c-wport H.ubor 1 0
L.igun.1 lidh 0 0
Irvin• 0 1
&ida"JHIDI
Niii +at "Nm Ng...el 9
'MX>dbt idge 35. IMne 21
Orange l.uttleran 17,
!Ag. Hills 13 (nonleague)
Qd.ll911m1al
lrviie at ... •mt Hlllbar
l..wp'\I Hits \4.
~idgeatr.-irle
$(Qll rt OUMiaS
Corona del
Mar's Steven
Ward (5)
goes down
hard, losing
his helmet
as Estanda's
Lewis
Bradshaw
(12) falls
across
Coroni de! MM 14 7 14 0 · 35
an Estancia
tackler.
n...•n-m
QIMw.~•..W.
MU-m
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RIST QUAIIll
CAN • Wiid 23 Pi1S5 from Hendy
(Rawlins Ide~). 1:A2.
CAN • M. Cooper 2 run (fta..Mins kldc), 3'.36
SJCO!ID CIUM!B
CAN· Hendy 3 run (l\lwltns kidt), 11 10
Dm9UMBI
CAN • Long 6 run~ kkk), 7'45
QN · Clandulli 9 run ('ltlwtinl kick), 5 37
fMDIQMMJll
Est • Bradshlw 11 ""' (peD faUtd). 2:22
A~ USO (estlmlted).
ll!MDUM IVSIM
CAN· ClanduUl, 20-129, 1 TD; Long. 13-78.
I lD; Hubblo:I, s-41; ~ 1-15; M. Coopef,
).10, 1TD;~7-3.1 TD;Wlllon.1-1.
Elt . llcmua. ~ ~ 1).26, 1 TO;
Tanielu, 6-23; M. Valdll., l-15; S.. HMriman,
1-12.
Emotion-plagued Perkins apologetic over incident
Costa Mesa coach believes disputed ID was not an illegal play.
lany Fau"'ner
0AA.V PILoT
COSTA Ml!SA -Costa Meaa High
football c:oadl Dave Potldns .aid Friday ho
regrets and apologlzet for hi• auerdoo
Thund.ay night that NorthwOod ran an
Weg&l ~Y to nan up Cbe 1C01• during
Northwood'• 31-6 vk1ofy at ll'Vine High.
•1 got mact and f believe any ~ch
would Mve bNn uptet. • Pwldlll Mid; •1
don't think it Wei a panNd p&.y Mid I
don't thlllk they wen tryfDg tlO cMeetve
us. r will apologize for that.
Perkins said he Al.lo told his players
Thliilday sdght that bis piiltga.me conduct
wuwrono.
Perldnl Nld the death of Mu1tonv1
leNor linebacker Matt <.:ulby pt. 29,
arid the events 1lnC4t, have taken en
........ toll• blmMU, hll at.ft and b&
playen. He admlned frayed nuve1
c:onb1bue.d tlD )UI outbWM 'JbUndlf ....
Pmklnl. bOwever, Mid Cudll W Ii>
dltfUM tb9 IAtuatiOb ,... tbe .,.... by
off erlng any erplanaUon for • 43·yard
lcot1ng pa.a that tlMlized the llCoc1ng with
2:31 left in tho game.
Perldnl said when Cw1il faUed to 14Y
anything dul1ng their postgame
h4nd8hake, hll ~ lria....ct. He a1ao
Mki hit &n1tleJ outbWtt toward Northwood
uilltaDI COldl• came bi 14111,POaM to •
c:umment lude bY. Nonbwood .........
•1 t11e tablM bad bllD ~•id. I Waukt
be\19 CXllM aaa. the allld md llMidf IUl9
ltb8~a.tal11•1w•iod1beWball t1i1Mlklia,• hddDI llld.
COlta W.. Attildr DINc:tor Klrll
&.USll'J 11..., Mid be fned the following
•u1uut to Northwood late ThUJ'ld.ay
mgllt:
•1 Cwtab) to •po&ogite for UM •Cdom ol
our footlNlll coechlng 1t1ff (Thun4Aty
night). ft bu been a v.tty ecnotional Weilk
and I tblnk lhat our emodons got thii bell
OI ua. I would like to altlDd to you -..-..-anc1 .... u...,_,..
~our apology. PIH• .... .._
~IDyuurMalfand .... •Wl&l•
elibetr•11d and upeet bf ..
....... bople ...........
_,n' MMolplftDMt•1t111~·
Daily Pilot ·sroRrs ·
• DAILY PR.OT PHOTOS BV GREG FRY
Orange Coast's Jaycee Mahler
(left) and Lauren Cassity (above)
run past Santa Ana Friday en
route to 4-0 victory. Mahler had
a hat trick.
Mahler (hat trick) shines again
Orange Coast College freshman dominates the
field as she leads Pirates' women to a 4-0 triumph.
COSTA MESA .ldycc>c•
Mahler '>COrf'd three gocJI<. to lw
the Ordn<Jt' C"oa'>t College
single·M'tt'>on mark ot 24,
leading the• P1rcJtec, wornen'r.
soccer team to a 4-0 Orange
Emprre Contert>nce victory over
visitrng Santd And Fndc1y
Mahler. a Corona del Mar
.l hgh product, '>COrf'd hN hr<it
goal Jll '>I f1Vl' minute!> in otr a
pdSs from Man .. sa f\1c(;rc•gor to
give the P1ratt'" (13-3, ~-Im the
OEC) thP lead for good
M cGregor now hai. a tt>am-tugh
11 dSSl'>l'>
• Krbten I lt1mman '>COrr>d ht•r
i.1xlh goal ot the ::.cason 1n the
25th mmute otr an assl!>t from
Alicia Sanltago
Mahler'<; fllldl two gOcJL'> cdfTle
four minutes apart, midway
through the second hdlf She
netted her second goal m lhe
Polley
66th mmute and m creased
OC'C'::. lead 10 the 70th minute.
Her 24 gOdls Uus season match
the school's single-season record
set by Newport Harbor High
product Taylor Yurada in 1998.
Mahler IS fifth on the school's
two-yedf career charts, 10 goals
behmd Yurada's record of 34,
Wtth six regular-season games
remammg. The OCC freshman
forward has four consecutive
mult1-goal games. seven in
Coast's pdSt nine outings and
nme overaU this season. The
Pirates dfC 11 --0 when she scores.
OCC' goalie Laurie Perk.ins
had lour saves and posted her
fourth shutout of the season to
help send Sant.a And to 6-6-2. 4-
3-2
The P11ates return to action
Tuesday at 3 p.m .. when they
play at FuUerton.
Hall·• u11tl 1h·111ll1111·· urc· .uhj1·c1 IO
1•lutUJ.!1' "ttfu·••• tu•ttr•1• I It~ puh1i..,,lu•r
n· ... ·1" • II" 11:ih1 '" • • 11••11 n-. lu,..1f~.
r•·\ ,,,. "' n I'• 1 "'" ''""'''""''
El -
Pirates break through for 2-0
men's victory over Fullertort
Holt, Zena connect; Balbas makes them stand up.
FULLERTON -After playing to a scoreless tie through 77
minutes, the Orange Coast College men's soccer team scored
two goals in the final t 3 minutes to earn a 2-0 Orarige Empire
Conference win at Fullerton Friday.
The Pirates, who have played well defensively but struggll.>d
to score all season, were on the verge of being shut out for the
third time in four games. However, Darite Zena scored his
team-high seventh goal of the season In the 7 8th minute to get
OCC (7-6-2, 4-2-1 in the OEC) on the board. Ian Buchanan was
credited with the assist
Nine minutes later, Ryan Holt scored off a tow throw-in
from Ryan Lancaster.
"Just like in Tuesday's game against Sant.a Ana. we played
a great game defensively,• Coast assistant coach Jason Smith
said. •Offensively, we really picked things up today. We deserved
two goals and we got them.·
OCC goalie Joey Balbas stopped five shots.
The Pirates return to action Tuesday at 3 p.m., when they host
Riverside.
Sotu<doy. Oc:Jobe, 13, 2001 •
COLI.EGE BRIEFS
OCC women durik
two in tournament
The Orange ~ Coast College
women 's water
polo team open ed
the Citrus College Tournament
with two dommatmg victones
Friday m Glendora.
In the first round, lhe Pirates
(19-0), the top-ranked team in
the state by the Community
College Water Polo poll, blew
past Rto Hondo, 15-t , as Neisha
Hoagland and Tia Montalvo
scored four goali. each. OCC
ou~cored Rio Hondo, 7-0, in the
thmJ penod, extending its lead
tot 2-0
liodgland led the Pirates
dgdin tn lhe second round with
seven goals m a 17 -1 victory
over College of the Canyons.
OCC built a 9-0 lead m the first
penod and never looked back
Devon Wnght scored six goals.
The Pirates advanced to the
semifinals and will meet
SaddJeback at noon today, at
Citrus College. The finals are
set for 6 p.m.
<mus <OUH1 JM HE? Ant.__
Orange eo.t 15, Mo ........ 1
Rio Hondo 0 0 0 1 • 1
Orange Co.st 1 4 7 3 . 15
lliottandD-Gatbo1 S-·
Toim.sor.6
occ. ~'·Montalvo ..
Wright 2, c.ontren1s 1, Logllfl 1,
Nicholson 1, Sonnenfleld 1, Dolan 1.
Saves · Deydefl 3, F~ 1.
5-tdAound o.w.a CoAsT 17
CClu.IGE OI 1MI CMrrcm 1 canyons o o 1 o . 1
Orange COMt 9 3 3 2 · 17 coc. Mc:Mi111¥1 1. ~. ~i.no 1. occ. Hoagland 7, Wright 6,
Contreras 1, Nktiolson 1, Md>oNld 1,
M11oslavic 1 Saves · Mlloslwic 2.
Monalvo 1
Orange Coast women nip RCC in five
Ort1nge Coast College's women's voUeybaU team I @) I
remdiru. unbeaten after surviving a ltve-garne scare
from visit.mg R1vers1de CC Friday mght tn Orange
Empm.: Conference pldy
The Pt.rates. who improved to 10-0, 4--0 m lhe OEC, pulled out
a 30-20, 29-31, 30-21, 27-30, 15-9 victory.
CX-C had a 24-18 lead m Game 4, but the Tigers' Stephanie Burks
ran off 11 i.tra1ght points to lead lhe Riverside surge.
In the deciding hlth game KrysUe OclVJS had four lolls to pace
Ort1nyc> Coast's v1ttory She hmr.hed with 13 Kat1a Muller led
C"oc1'>t m k.iUs for the> eighth lime 1n 10 matches wtlh 24. while
Cc1M•y Petersen had 10
Anteaters drop 4-1 decision at Pepperdine
thre<• goab in the> -.econd hdlf and lost to host f....i. .11
The UC lrvtnl' women's soccer team surrendered ~
P<•ppt•rchne, 4-1. m nonconference t1ctton Friday. UCl's 'i';J
1 ldyl<'y M cNallC'n -.cored on an t1i.s1st from Erin Tuvey
to lie lJdme, 1-t. Jll'>l l>efore halitime But, unbeaten Malibu-based
Peppcrcltne (8-0-J) re::.ponded with the three goals.
G1>dJ1e CheL-.ec1 t-.kCarthy recorded four saves for the Anteaters
(4-4-1)
DEEP SEA
FRIDAY'S COUNTS
NeoCll)Ol't IMdng 3 boats. 34 anglen 103 roclcfish. 2 mako st\ill'lts. 2 blue sNrb
(relNsedl
o.vey"s Lodler . s boats. 95 anglef\. 86 yellowta1I, 53 bonito, 28 calico blm,
22 sand t>Ms, 3 halibut. 109 rockftsh, 40 bluepe<ch, 10 sheephead, 5 sculpin. 1 ~
~. 1 wt11tef1sh, 90 mi>Ckff'el, 1 mako shark.
Monday Fnday S:()()pm
Tut>~ay ...... MonJuy S:OOpm
"'" , . .,,., "" ,., 1•1..,, ....... I"'" ""~ ··rn•r
""'' 11111\ IH Ill'""'' l11••1fi1·1I ;••' ByPhone By MaDfln P........: Wt"<lnf'MiZAy ........ Tu~ay S:OOprn
Thuf"ii<IHy .... Wed~ay S:OOpm
ByFa.
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1111 l111I 01l1I\ fur 1111\ ''""'Ill 1111
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Te lephone 8:3t )am-S:OOpm
Mo nday-Friday
liiil ·-II
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lo. ....-......
Wal k-1 n 8::i0am-5:00pm
Monday-Friclay
:·. ,
AlllimON
Alllflll ....... "_ .., ta. LOCM. ...... ....... ......... ==
Friday
Saturda~
rhul"Miay S:OOpm
Fnilay 3:00pm
Fm.lay S:OOpm
Siii ~ o.n..
Do yoll know whel9
your CHll 11?
• Olidd>oolcs -up :~-.....~ ~";'~w Professional, DelcttCe
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Q I • Bolh ~ • SOGlb you bold:
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Q 2 • Vulncnble, you bold:
The biddirw hll Dl"OClleded:
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Q 5 • Al South. vulnenble, you
bold:
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• ,4J S o AK J o KI • IC Q 117' The biddioa bu oroccedcd:
P11u. ........ the =· wkh one WIST NOaTlt &AST SOUTH .....--•• '* ... ' chab. Whit do )'OU Wbll ICl.lon do you lake?
Q 3 • Neithef vutnenble. • South
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The biddina hu orocaded: SOl11'H lVIS1' NOllTH EAST
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The biddina tm oroceicdcd:
NORTH IAS1' SOUTH WEST I• ,_ l o ,._
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2001 :r.c.a ~Hwy
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· The Newport Beach/Costa Mesa ·
Dally Pilot presents you with a great opportunity to promote antiques
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2002 2002 2001
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