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HomeMy WebLinkAbout2001-10-28 - Orange Coast PilotDon't · forget to turn back your docks. Daylight sav- ing time ended at 2 a.m. today . ...... COMMUNITY FORUM He's been a fixture at City Hall for years, and now he's a fixture behind the bar at his own restaurant. It's no easy balance. and so Costa Mesa City Councilman Gary Monahan has decided he won't seek reelection next fall. Still, there are a few projects he'd like to compJete before he's just a barman and father. 5Hhge1J ...... SPORTS Newport Harbor High's frosh-soph water polo teams plKeS li9tOt1d M the' Gray Lunde Touma"*1t, a show- ing' good enoUgh to leave the team satisfied. S..P..-15 ...... LIFE & UISUIE Now's the time to be thinking of that beautiful May garden. It's also the time to start planting fall · and winter flowers. S..Pege5 , ...... CAlllDAI Want to know what's going on In Newport-Mesa this · week? This month 7 Next month? Check out our Uttimete C.lendar. ... ~. PHOTO IU.USTRAllON (ABOVE) AND PHOTO (BELOW) BY SEAN HIUER I OAl;f ... OT AIOVE: As her shadow is_ cast on the wall, Michele Roberge, executive director of the Balboa Performing Arts Theater Foundation, tells haunted stories about the Balboa Theater. llLOW: Stamttng in bis neighbor's decorated yard, Balboa Island resident Jim Jennings recounts a ghost tale. of Newporl·Mesa Yowtg O\ang 0All.Y PILOT ill 11 the other doors on the street open and close. Busybodies rush through, some wearing sun on their cheeks and others, thongs on their feet. Everybody jingles with keys.But the hinges on one Balboa Peninsula door haven't creaked in some time. Its dusty shell resembles a chilled tin can. The windows look fogged. or is it just dirt? The patio is abandoned, leaving a garden to the imagination. And the little gate out front, whlcb may once have been white, is dulled a gloomy gray -the kind that coats the house . Keys don't ever jingle here. Thongs don't flip and flop. The last cou- ple that brought the place to life -they're said to have moved out. Because of the ghost. The sighting happened durtng a loud, heated fight four years ago that would qualify more as a rumble than a lover's quarrel. The couple sat tn the dining room screaming and arguing when a Coca-Cola bot- tle at one end of the table moved, by itself, to the opposite end. • The tigbtioo died bnmedtately. The couple moved out a month later, said their friend, Newport resident Jennifer Wesoloski. Neighbors say they beYml't seen anyone enter or exit the home 5ince. ; The Coca-Cola ghost is just one of the phantom dwellen of NeW· port-Mesa. A specter searches endlessly for gold, another sinkt ~ps. Atew chilling, thrilling and downright silly tales of the town's more spectral residents . 2 Su.)day, Odob.-28, 2001 lllNll' llDIS LIJll•• M111111? Ari a1tport for the dosed El Thro Mldtne Ccirpl Air Station may be an kl9a Iba& .time blil come. Or at Jealt tbet wa the c::e1eJUt week at the~ County 8oerd ot ILIOIO ~~~· · dela~. the board certified the envtronmental report for itl abport plan at the base. The board picked an airport that could handle as much os 18.8-milllon annual passengers a year. As on extra twist, SupervisOr Jim Silva who represents New- port-Mesa, suggested bringing back the Marine Corps for a "Joint use" of the base. The Marines left in 1998. South County forces, of course, vowed to carry on the fight agaimt the planned airport. -.... CllMon cov.rs the.environment .and Joho Wrptte Airport. He Inly be rM<hed at (949) 764-4130 Of ""..,..,.., at paul.dlntonOlatJ~com. The dty's stance against unbri- dled expansion of John Wayne Airport took on national signifi- cance as the City Council approved plans to lobby Washing- ton. Council members decided to spend at least S350.000 on two contracts for legisla-lllWPOIT ttve advocacy. Their IUCI goat: to convince · · Federal Aviation Ac:t:mkUstration and other officials to aide with the dty and extend a settlement agreement now gov- erning some airport impacts. That agreement wW expire at the end of 2005 if it's not extended. The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day'Saints submitted plans to the dty for a 17,500-square-foot temple at Bonita canyon Drive and Prairie Road. PUµis include a 91-foot-tall spire topped off with a statue of the angel Moroni. That steeple wW require special aJiproval by the dty. •1\vo of the beach's worst bath- rooms wW soon be bulldozed and replaced. Public restrooms at Bal- boa Pier and at Washington Street, under a $531,000 contract, will be closed for 12 weeks, probably beginning in mid-November, and repJaced with portables while new facilities are being constructed. -June C•r u •• covers Newport Bff<tt. She Inly be rMChed at (949) 574-4232 ()( "" 9-INll atjuM.aag,..ndeO/a~com .• lllSlllHIG THE FAIR llOllllS ... • tcma At newspaper photogra- phera, we are expected to bring back atand-olone plc- turea that the lnduatry calla •w1Jd art.• These are the type of photos you aee Jn the paper that show a tun moment, like a kid running through the sprlnklers, or a pretty pkture, Uke a beach sun.set shot. Theae pJc- tures help fill out the paper, vtsuaUy, when the neW1 is slow or other stories don't have dominant Images. time to alwaya search for these type of pklures. When there ls time, Ws kind of Uke a trea8ure hunt. YQU never know what you are going lo flnd. The best pictures always come when you least expect them. This wm one of those unexpected aftua- tlon& I was waiting tor my next 08Blgnment al the Newport Dunes when I aaw the reflectlon In the water. So I walled tor .someone to walk through the frame and -snap -I had a piece of •wnd art.• In the dally routine o/ things, there Isn't enQUgh IOWO .. IG HIS WAY OUT OF THIS · Dennis Rodman pleaded guilty Thursday to three criminal mis- demeanor charges relating to noise violations at his 40th birth- COPS & day in May. The former NBA COUITS star also paid ott a ticket he received for speeding his boat through New- port Harbor in August. Superior Court Judge Margaret Anderson ruled Thursday that Rodman pay $1,000 to the New- port Beach Police Department as reimbursement for law enforce- ment expenses and $500 to pay court costs. -Seen Hiiier The judge also ordered Rod.man to pay a $1,080 to settle the speeding ticket. Prosecutor Mike Fell said he was satisfied with the judge's ruling and that he was pleased that Rod- man pleaded guilty on all counts. Rodman's attorney Paul Meyer said his client was singled out and treated differently than others who might have been in the same position. In other news, a suspected child molester, wanted for exposing himself to three Costa Mesa girls in April. was arrested in 1\lstin. Kirk Brian Eggleston, 35, a Tustin Ranch resident was arrested near his home this Week after a sh-month long investigation by TuStin, hvine and Costa Mesa police. He is ~ be1d in Ora.age County jail With bail ~t at $150,000. -..... ._.. aiwrs pYblk Slfe1y Md courts. She may be ruched at (949) 574--4226"' by e-meil at dftpa.bha,..theMtimacom bad asked for, al bOard members alliinid to aplor'e the pcmibttity of mowtug lbe camlval part of the animal fair that usually raqun. Milrbt Plaat vendom to dole~ for tine weeks during the IUJDIDel'. Pfelident curt Pringle allo took about ftve mb:iutm to explain to .. ~ .mmaben the ditlerenat b8tWeen tldl ,. boanl and pelt fair boerdL PrUltrated with 811\imptiam llMlda bY audMmOe memben Wbo WW'8 ojjpo.ed. tO tbe nm.al GI._ ~theater, PiiDgle . !XPk'tMd the.boatd'S mottvation wu not a proftt-teeking one. Residentl charged the new amphitheater would bring the same loud roCk concerts it bad in the 1980s, but Pringle insisted the atmosphere would be different. Horse enthusiasts may have gotten the worst deal w1tb the pro- posed 50% cut of the equestrian center but audience members cheered the decision, as it was far better than the option to cut it entirely . -Lolttll HMper aMf'S Costa Mesa. She m-v be reed*9 It (949) 574-4275 Of "" • m.11 It lolitl~tlme.com. ICIOOL IOID IOUIDS Last week was potentially big one for the school disb'ict. The Newport-Mesa Unified School Di.strict Board 8$ked the c-0unty Board of Supervisors to issue $40 million in bonds to begin the f acili-E DUCITIOll ties implementa- tion plan approved by Measure A. The bonds are for the first two years of construction. 1\vo schools also received $25,000 donations by Harbor Boulevard of cars •Dollars for Schools Program." Estancia High School received $25,000 for two sc6reboards. Corona del Mar received $25,000 for its college/career center and its math clinic. ' -~ .......... COYtf'S edtKatlon. She m-v be rHched It (949) 574-4221 or ~ e-ma111t c#frch.n.wm.no ,.tlme:s.com. •Jt does give ua a Jot ot cred- Jb111ty. The PAA don 1.1.aten. • ---lldaw-. ~ member of 1he New Millennium Group thlt bides M altematM Nl'Nl'I p6en fot El Toro, on pilot endonement of the~ •JI J could do anything with that tac111ty, I would give it back to the Marines. We need to preaerve our mlll- tary alt baae inlrOlltrueture If needed for, a naUoilal emergency." -a.Iha. Newpbl't Mein.,..-., on the ~El Toro Airport. "J was freaking out and upset. It'a a great way to atart my UCI experience." -V.-unMin, a UC Irvine freshmen who ls .inong those affected by 1he ~·s dorm overpopulation. SOUID llYICI "If you think you're going to w1n an appeal, don't do the EIR." -... c-tlft. envirorwnenulist end founder of Defend the ~ on plans by the ltvlne RMld'I w.w District to perlonn envlronmeni.t studies of storing r9dMned Wlter at the San Joaquin ReseM>ir while fighting It In court. ·we're hoping th.la w1l1 be one of the most cuttlng~ge water quality laba 1n the naUon. -0.WIOff, tiSlstant city~ for Newport ae.ch, on a water testing IM>oratoty that 1$ tempcQrfly 90tng In on Shelfm.tcer Island. •rhey noUced It had something that looked like a ceU phone charger on the outside and had wires running lnalde. • -om....,, Costa Mes. Police~ on a bomb san It 11"' Street Ind Superior~. "People have to get out of their-can and Into it0me .art of ma&S tranalt av-tem. • r-~OMM. Costa Mm rMyOt, °"county pbins for • ..,_ ..... JYlletn ~could Include .. In the South COllt Metro ...... Sllf lll 111 rtght:NoMM ........... ... eillottll ,.__, OI ........ . hftln Qin be,....,.... ...... ......, pemillrb1 f//I ~ owntr WEATHER FORECAST Thii "'°"*'9 st.ts off In the high 50s with • chlfQ of • Httle drtzitt. Ind 1hi ~ doeln, --nut. friwn --.. The Cb* Wll ~ ~ k..,ing the.,,.,.,.... • cod 71 °' 72 ..... wtMri tl"'Y ~,,.. WOUnd l p.m. Tht tun might .... ~. bit In the lf&itmOCW t. '""' 11l1ne ~noet.gol( similW wlnda end W9W8. The ... Wiii be from tt. fWth. west. hO\ir~ et ... s feet.. for Costa Mesa, 'sji.rst city clerk Young Chllftg DAILY PILOT A rlington •Arlie• Swartz, Costa Mesa's first dty clerk, wu al.a the first public works director, eventually a dty manager and the man largely aedited for modernizing the dty11 roads. Former Mayor Bob Wilson, who Looldil IAC shaping. served during the mid- '60s and twice again in the '701, even calls Swartz the most impor- tant character in the story of Costa Mesa's But Wll.son wants to tell a personal story about Swartz first. It's a story that'll show just how sweet and humble Arlie -that's what Wilson's always called him -really was. Wilson remembers going to a Con- ference of Mayors in Hawaii where be befriended a leader from Japan. Wilson promised his new buddy tickets to Dis- neyland if the visitor were ever to swing by Southern California. One day, the foreign mayor called. He was in the country and wanted to hit Orange County before he returned to Japan. But Wilson and most of the council members weren't in town that day. So Arlie did what was very typical- ly Arlie. First he picked up his wife Alma and then the two of them drove to Los Angeles International Airport to greet the Japanese mayor and his wife. The Swartz's hosted their guest in their very PHOTO COURTESY Of BOB Wit.SON Arlington "Arlie" Swartz waa Costa Mesa's first dty clerk and later served as dty manager. . own home for a weekend and, of course, took them to Disneyland. "That's my friend Arlie,• Wilson, 84, said. •Everything he did was so gener- ous. He never toot aedlt for anytbing. He was the kind of guy you just bad to 1ove.· A Brooklyn native, Swartz moved to Los Angeles when World War U broke out and be was called to join the Sea bees while Alma Swartz joined the Army Nurse Corps, accord.tng to "From Goat Hill to City of the Arts: The History of Costa Mesa,• written by Wilson. He moved to Costa Mesa in 19'6, took a position at the Newport Heights Irrigation District and also became one of Costa Mesa's first chamber of com- merce members. Swartz played a tremendous role in getting the city incorporated in 1953, Wll.son said. And once Costa Mesa offi- cially became a city, Swartz took on the role of city clerk -one he'd soon shed to become director of public works and, ftnally, city manager. He even got a street named after him. •All of these titles were so tremen- dous, be didn't know what to do,· Wil- son affectionately said. "He wasn't good at accepting titles. He was so very bumble.• Swartz passed away in 1974. • Do you know of a person, place or event that deserves a historical LOOK BACIO Let us know. Contact Young Chang by fax at (949) 646-4170; e-mail at young.changOlati~s .com; or mail her at do Daily Pilot. 330 W. Bay St., Cost.a Mesa, CA 92627. ~-:e~u.e r: l!J ~ --·- -~~·~ Rest au.rant For any Komm Race for che Cure-participant who II purdiascs a pair of New 8a1ancc shocsduring the months ofSqxcmlxr and October, New &lance .,_ ___ Establtshed In 1962 ----- MoruJa, Night Special Newport will donate SI 0.00 to the local chapccr of the 38' Susan G. Komcn Breast Cancer Founda1ion. ~ New &lance is a proud national sponsor of che Komen new "'bdcl'i"*"'..,.I09- Rac.c the Cure~ Onnplm ht* Fi/et Mi" Dinner s1goo,,,.;:: RALPH LAUREN FLOORCOVERING INTlllUCl•I RAL'M ~AURIN 810AILOOM CAIPIT A wOOd M elepnce and sophistlcllOn crlftld fl-. the fini9t ......-. • •l•MI in • rl'9 d exquiille colots *"ii rich tlllthft9 IO complement any .. ._ -fLY II Tll IEWS OCC gets $100,000 gift from teacher One of Orange Coast College's original profes- sors has presented the col- lege with a $100,000 gift. Retired history professor Giles Brown, who started at OCC when the ·college opened its doors in 1948, packaged his donation in the form of a charitable gift annuity, which is a financial gift that provides the donor with an annual rate of retwn between 10 to 20% based on their age. Upon Brown's death, the rest will go to the school's founda- tion for an endowment. The Charitable Gift Annuity Program is a new offering or the school's foundation through the assistance of the Commuru- ty College League or Cali- fornia. Donors are provided with tax-free income, tax deduction savings and cap- ital gains tax savings. . SuoiloiY. Ocdoir 21, -' OCC II only the lbir4 community COJllege In the 5tate to receive Mada • ~ Brown has now Collldhuted gifbl exaledmg $200,000.to the foundation. UCI find could help drugs work: better Researchers at UC Irvine have made a discovery that may help new drugs treat strokes and other brain injuries caused by high blood pressure. Sue Duckies, a pharma- cology professor, and her colleagues found a specific: receptor for the sex hor- mone estrogen in the brain that helps regulate pressure and blood flow there. •This receptor could help explain why women have fewer strokes than men before they reach menopause,• Duckles said. Blood pressure is a major risk factor in stroke and oth- er cardiovascular disease. The team IS now explor- ing other enzymes and genes that may control blood pressure. Donate your vehicle. 1-888-308-6483 Set hope in n1otion to improve local lives . • RVs • Boats • Real £.-.tat<.: • Tax Deductible PIUCI f I~ COSTAmSA ......... _AWhi<te bUldlfV .. ,..... In the t200tai0dt • 1CtH a.m. ~. Sherifrs action at biker fight qµestioneft • ...... Ill.et: Drlnldnci In Publtc Ml NPOft9d 1n·tt.e• block Ill '2:JO p.rn. WldnlldllV· ............. n.p... Ing WM repotted In the 20 btodt at 5:22 p.m. ~. • ~ ler...e: A 1'951· dentlal burglaty was reported In the 300 block at 7:45 p.m. ~- NEWPORT BEAOf • CIH Drive: Assault with a deadly weapon was reported In the 2000 block at 9:55 a.m. Thursday. • Irvine Avenue: A vehicle theft was reported in the 3500 block at 1:50 p.m. Thursday. • flort Mllftlelgh Clrde: An attempted burglaty was reported in the 1700 block at 4:52 p.m. Thursday. • 25th Stnet: A prowler was reported in the 100 blodt at 12:18 a.m. Thursday. COMMENTS CONTINUED FROM 1 participate in that festive tin.al evening of October as follows: l) Costumes. Nothing spooky, nothing gross. In fact, lay off the extraterres- trial stuff as well. For the kids, Disney characters are always a safe bet. I would stick with Tmkerbell and -Winnie the Pooh. Tigger is so wired he makes people crazy. Fruits are fine, espe- cially raisins and bananas. Bananas always get a laugh. Ever notice •bananas· is hard to write? It's like Mis- sissippi. You never know when to stop. Take your pick on the fruits, but vegetables are even safer. Everybody loves can-0ts. Very non- threatening, plus the orange is simpatico with the pump- Jcjn theme, which reminds me of the time Mr. and Mrs. Carrot decide to see what · •Some vendors at the Orange County P~undS say. officials acted too slowly to balt a Friday night brawl. Dwll••NewmM 0AA.Y PILOT PAIR GROUNDS Motorcycle vendona who wit· nessed a bloody brawl between rival gangs at a swap meet on Friday nlgbt said the Orange County Sheriff's Department could have acted more quickly to quiet the melee. •A lot of people got burt and it probably could have been stopped earlier,• said Jon Ericson, one the shoWs vendors. The · fight. at the Orange County Fairgrounds broke out at about 8 p.m., three ,hou:rs after the motorcycle p«rts show started. It life is like outside the gar- den. They make a run for it but just as they get started, Mr. Carrot steps inlo the street without looking and gets hit by a car. They rush him to the hospital and into surgery. Hours later, the doc- tor comes out to talk to Mrs. Carrot. •Your husband is going to make it,· he says, "but I'm afraid he's going to be a vegetable the rest of his life.• OK. For the tully grown revelers, I would stick with famous people, ideally someone comforting and reassuring. For men, you can't go wrong with Jimmy Carter -low-energy, high standards and that gentle Georgia drawl. Very sooth- ing. For women, I'd say Bar- bara Walters. But remember, if you go with Barb, it's •l\vick-a-1\veet. • And that brings us to .• 2) 1\i~k or'lfeat. This is not the time to be running around in the dark knocking on people's doors and ring- im'olved members of the Hells Angell, Vagos and Mongols motorcycle gangs, Mid Orange County SherUf't Lt. Larry Abbott. According to witnesses, the fight started between a few people, but quickly esc:A· lated into a violent confronta- tion as motorcycle parts were used as weapons. Since there were only a few deputies covering the event, they waited for reinforcements before moving in, said Sher- Uf's Lt. Hayward Miller. The fight eventually involved between 60 and 70 people using whatever they could get their bands on, including shock absorbers, ing doorbells. I would defi-. nitely call first. If you must ring bells, stand well back from the door with your hands clearly visible and smile. If you have a DlASk, take it off so they can see you smile. Speak in a quiet, soothing voice and don't just say: "Trick or treat.• 1i"y something like •ntck or treat, I live just down the street and I love what you've done with the house.• It'll be a mouthful for the little kids but they'll get the hang of it after a few houses. 3) Candy. Deciding whether or not to let the kids eat what they collect is always a tough decision. You could let them •trade in• their candy when they get home. Give them a nickel or a dime for every piece, a dol- lar a piece if you live in a gated community. 4) Parties. An excellent choice, whether it's little kids or tully mature. Apple bob· bing, pwnpkiI\ carving, tree Specializing in Sea Faire, Villa Balboa & Versailles, Newpon Beach. MARY Lou KIEHLER lllOllD Lido Park Realty gas tanb and band .... •tt WU really bloiCJdy, • Ericson said .• .,.,, .,.o;ae were~ °"-more peo-: pie were running In lo take put in the fight. It wa pretty scary.• Sheriff'• deputies who were providing tecurtty for the event were Ulilted bY police officen from N9W1>9rt Beach. Costa Mesa, Santa Ana and Irvine. Abbott said the original otticeIJ worked to contain the fight and once the assist- ing otticers got to the scene, things started to calm down. The swap meet attracted close to ~.ooo participants, Abbott said. While some vendors said the officers did the right thing, others harshly criti- cized the department's pro- cedure, asserting that the trimming (may as well get started) are all benign. Nor- mally, I like to read from •Tue Legend of Sleepy Hol- low· and play spooky music. This year, I'd go with a biog- raphy of Washington Irving and Mussorgsky's •Night on Bald Mountain.• The little kids will get antsy but they'll thank you later. Much later. Adults could do a story circle and tell sappy stories about stressful childhood moments: you turned around and your mother was gone, you were the last one in the classroom and the door wouldn't open, that sort of thing. You could finish up with a group bug and some warm cider. Some of you have doubts about this. I can see it in your eyes. I'm telling you, with a little imagination we can make this work. Think of the graveyard scene in the •Haunted Mansion." Between the singing tomb- stones, the June Taylor danc- ing ghosts and the gravedig; 60 I Udo Ptuk Dr., SWie J-.£ Newpon 8acl., CA 921665 949-717-5111 (949) 675·2700 2101 E.C...~.250 Coroaa dd M-. CA 92625 II agbt Md alrMdY ~ by 8-a. 811.f eftort Wal made .., stop ll •ey the time the (full) Sb'eriff'• department came out. the bed guys were gone aDd we're the bad gu11.· Mid vendor Dave Huber. •TbeY.'re paid to protect and serve us, but who are they protectmgi• lbe officers closed the swap meet down and forced all the vendors to clear out and leave their merchandise inside the ball until Saturday .afternoon. Vendors who were satis· tied with the Sheriffs depart· ment's conduct said officers ma.de a wise decision to hang back. •nie original sheriff's · deputies stayed very close. but were smart to stay out of harm's way. They couldn't ger's little dog, it almost makes you sorry to be alive. Finally, a bit of house- keeping. It's a special nod and a raucous cheer for the folks on Country Cub Drive in Costa Mesa for pab'iotism above and beyond the call. It's great to see all the flags displayed across the land. but Country Cub has become command central for the stars and stripes. I drive the street at least twice a day, and they have virtually 100% partidpation in wav- ing the red, white and blue: The colors, and the pride. stand out on house after house.Definitel~two thumbs up. So there you have it. Enjoy your Hal· loween, have fun, be sale, nothing spooky. Just do what Boston Red Sox fans do. Wait until next year. I gotta go. • PEYER IUffA is a former Costa Mesa mayor. His column runs Sun- days.. He may be reached m e-mail at~.com. Illy A. Woll Prudential California Realty MPU* tbe good guys from the bed guys,• sald one '1CJIDID. wbo did not WAIU to give ber name . Motorcycle swap meets can aeete VOiatile lituations, Miller takl. adding th.at in the futW'e more acrutiny Will be giYe.n to such events. •Wbu you get various (motorcycle) dub mem• togethe1, there's always a ~ for aome type of cooflict,. Miller said. One biker, Todd Brown, was arrested for assaulting a police officer. ~! ····~ Mortuary * Chapel Cremation 110 Broadway, Costa Mesa 842-9180 302 Marine Ave. P.O. Box 6 Balboa Island. CA 92662 Desiree N. Berry ~~.~ R&'AW" MAL~ ..... (141) 720-7311 (141) 31Nl11 Hult 11 :a ,_ lafln' W"Vit NO PLAa UKE HOME The times, they. are a-changin' I For the times they are a-cbangin' •accord- . ing to Bob Dylan in 1963. Prophetic on his part, since Bob's given name is Robert Zimmerman (he changed it to the hipper ver- sion when he beqan Appreciation, perfonn- ing). And in 1963, indeed things were chang- respect, understanding and thought- fulness are integral ing. Call components it evolu-in a successful tion,call it revolu-marriage. tion, but the world is a lot different now than it was mid-century. My darling neighbor Rhonda reminded me of this last week when she shared a 1955 Housekeeping Monthly article with me. The title was "The Good Wife's Guide" and it listed 'several helpful hints to maintain harmony m the home and marital bliss. I got a big kick out of reading il Actually, I feel kind of sorry for those men that bought into this lifestyle only to find the rug pulled out from under them as their wives grew older and bolder. I do agree thall.maintain- ing a good marriage is a lot SEE HOME PAGE 8 '. TIPOfmWIU ' FM' W IACI 111D GOOI Ulm STM MCCRANK I DAl.Y Pt.OT JaoeIJe Wiley plants a majestic pansy along with other bulbs, wbJch are good to plant ln the fall. Wiley ts a gardener at the Sherman Ubrary & Gardens in Corona del Mar. TRAVEL TALES Sunday, Odober 28, 2001 5 Local gardeners say now is the time to plant chrysanthemums, pansies, primroses and more, while preparing your spring garden for rest Young Chang DAILY PILOT l es. son No. 1 on life and gardening: Don't obsess about pulling out all the weeds. When you're young, you do this, con- VUlced that being weed-free will fix everything else, Corona del Mar gardener Jedllnette Wells said. But 1t won't. And the weeds always come back. So smell the roses now, while you weed. Lesson No. 2 on life and gardening: Be patient. Dormancy signals a bloom to come. What you do in fall foreshadows the next spring. ·Camellias and azaleas, you need to feed them during the month of October,· said Janelle Wt.ley, a color specialist at Sherman Library & Gardens. "To have a beautiful bloom m the spnng.• . Wiley and fellow Ideal gardeners liken gar- dening to life. And though waiting for plants to bloom may be less exciting then witnessing col- ors explode, they insist that the best gardeners know how to appreciate a good rest. But for those who want to see some color right away, now is the time to plant fall flowers, including chrysanthemums, pansies, English pnmroses. Icelandic poppies, cyclamens and obcorucas. As part of her job at Sherman Gar- dens. Wiley recently planted these to paint the grounds a deeper hue. Anything red or yellow will be more red and yellow , more like its pnmary color, it they're planted now. The obconicas will bloom in pas- tels. The English primroses will burst into deep blues, cobalt blues, canary yellows and whites. And the pansies -they'll birth almost all the colors of the rainbow, Wiley said. She likes planting cyclamens in the fall because they're cold-loving plants that grow well in the shade. SEE FALL PAGE I '~ Hawaiian wedding and honeymoon H erb Kostlan and Donna Pen- nington sent in a vacation pic- ture that looked, sure enough, like nothing more than a picture from their vacation. Kostlan is wearing a white shirt patterned with slender leaves. Pen- nington ls wearing a white 1pagbettt- strapped dress with a white pearl necklace and a wreath atop her bead. They're both wearing leis, boldiilg di(· ferent ends of the Daily Pilot and smil- ing. 'Ibey even look giddy -like newlyweds. During a t:(ip to Wailea, Maui early last month, the two 65-year-olds got married on the beach. Few people came to the ceremony -just Penning- ton's three children, sister and brother in law -but with the ocean before them and a Hawalian sky above them, the Balboa Island residents indulged in a fairy-tale wedding resembling, in near-fictional details, the way they met. It was a blind date two years ago, Kostlan said. but if you bear him out, it become!i clear that the blindness was one-sided. The two Southern Califor- nia natives. first met in the fifth grade in Pasadena. They were playmates and neighbors, growing up together until the 10th grade. Each went their way, each got mar- ried, Pennington became widowed and Kostlan got divorced. 1\vo yea.rs ago, a mutual friend fixed them up on what was said to be a •blind date.• Kastl.ail got the details, though, and knew he was about to meet a friend from bis youth. Penning- ton found out during the evening. . Herb.....,..-.. Doa• ,_......were .-lied In HaW.U 1M1 wlb. TM dao, chllAood ~met• ad1llla oa a blind date two years ...,_ 'TalCX OR TM.AT fUTIVAl 5poll90Nd by. Orange County Mll'bt~ wt-.: Orange County Fairgrounds.. 88 fair Drive. Costa Mesa wt-.: 7 a.m. to 4 p.m. CoR: S2. free for children 12 and youngtf Contact: (M9) 72U660 VBDl'S 'REQUBr SpollWlld by. Padflc Olorale wt-.: Orange County Performing Arts Center, 600 Town Center Drive, Cost.I Mesa ~7p.m. Cost: S1~S55 Cont.llct: (714) 662-234 5. ~!... .. 29 5polwored by. Newport Beach Public library and the CalHomia Center for the Book wt.r.: Newport Beach Central Library. 1000 A\IOQdo Ave. wt..: 7 p.m. Monday Cost: Free Contact: (949) 717-3800 ~a!.-30 5poll90Nd by. Borders Books. Musk Ii Cafe in asaociation with the Edectic Orange Festival Wherw Borders Books. Musk I Cafe It South eo.st Plaza, ll33 Bear St.. CostlMesa wt..:7p.m. Cost: Free COIDd: (714) 279-8933 WEDNESDAY 'Tal0(.()A.1'11!A11NG Spol-lldby. Fashion Island 31 Wlw9: Feshlon Island, off Newport Center Drive In Newport Beach wt..ltoSp.m. C.-t: F1ee Contact: (949) 721 ·2000 ROOtla.JllFIS1 Spot .... by. Rodt Harbor Christian Church and Triangle Square Wtlere:Trfqle ~-.It HMborand Newport boule- v«ds and 19th Street In Cost.I Mesa ~Sto 9p.m. CoR:Free Contact: (949) 548-2600 HAllVUT fllSTIVAl ......... by. Newport Mesa Chrlsti.n c..rn.r wtletw. Newport Mesi Christian Center. 2599 Newport Blvd., Costa ~ ~S:30to9p.rn. c.o.t: SS ~ {114) 966--0454 DaFren Shan's very scary I SPOOIY SPKllL OCTOBER ... ,.,,. ' 2 , 4 s ' 7 1,10n120 1415•17•1'» 21 n n :M ;is » n p!nJl m I MAmt YOUll c:A&.m»ltS J1: Halloween NOVEMBER ... ,.,,. I 1 2 > I 45671910 CD 12oue 0 11 •1'»21 .2ll4 25 •• 21 :19 JO MAMYCMt CALEM>AltS U : Veterans Day 11: Tree lighting at Fashion Island 22: Thanksgiving 27: Swing! at the Center DECEMBER I M T W T F S 1 2 l ' s ' 7 • t)10nl21ll4l5 16 11 • " lO 21 • ZJ;,t fJ ~D2119 JO )1 MAllKYOUR CALENDAAS For young adults, Darren Shan is to humorous horror what J.K. Rowling is to mag- ical fantasy. The Brit, author of •Cirque Du Freak• and •The Vampire's Assistant,• will appear at the Newport Beach Central Ubrary on Tuesday to talk about the worlds he creates. tied when he hears Steve beg the man to make him one too. 9: Hanukk•h starts at sundown 22: Frankie Avalon at occ "Cirque Du Freak• is the story of a boy named Darren and his friend Steve who a.re obsessed with seeing the acts · of the Cirque Du Freak - including ~ perlorming spi- der. Since spiders are Dar- ren's obsession, the show is irresistible. However, the spi- ders handler turns out to be a vampire, ~d Darren is horrl- Someone cares for a night of comedy SWM cam SOIP lllCllll CWIY WI 1111111 Warner Bros. has just bought the fihn rights for "Cirque du Freak" and •Tue Vampire's Assistant,• which continues the story of Darren. Shan, whose real name is Darren O'Sbaughnessy, has said that be considers Stephen King and Ray Brad- bury to be his idols. The event is co-sponsored by the library and the Tale of a Whale Bookstore in Irvine. m wtletw. Newport Beach Central Ubr~ 1000 Avoc.ado Ave. .... 7 p.m. Tuesday CoR: Free Clll: (949) 717-3801. Pl.lllllll lllllD 'RIGOLElTO' Someone Cares Soup Kitchen will hold a comedy night dinner twice on saturday to benefit the kitchen's programs, which provide around 81,000 meals a year. Chef Leon Matthews will be in charge of the meal. The night will include dinner and a perlormance by stand-up comedians. Opera hdfic will pre- sent "Ngoletto" by Giuseppe Verdi as the opening opera of Its RELIGIOUS DMRSIT.Y FAIRE lhe~~w­ gb'5 DivtrShy Fan will be held at UC ntne. m ~Someone Cares Soup Kitchen. 720 West 19th St., Cost.a Mesa wt-.: 5 p.m. and 8 p.,n. COit: SSO In ildvancll, S65 •t the door C.911: (949) 548-8861 comer of west Pett.son and Mesa Road, lnllne we..: 7:30 p.m. o.t: S6-S10 c.ont.e: (941) ~for tickets; (949) 824-5581 for infomwtlon FRIDAY SATURDAY 25: Christmas Day JANUARY I M T W T f I 0 2 l . s 67 1,1011 12 1Jt4151'T1•'9 » 21 f7) n ,,. 25 a n 21 2' JO JI MAMYOUlt ~ 1: New Yun Day 4: 'SChool for Wives' opensatSCR 22: ~ ,acffic opens 'Don Giovanni' FEBRUARY SMT W TFS 1 2 3456719 10 11 12 ll Cl) 15 16 .u • 19J02122ll )425JID21 MARK YOUR CALENDARS 14: Valentine's Day College llUlllllCIU.Y ..... Whwc OCC's Robert II. Moore Thfftre. 2701 FaiMew "o.d. Cost.I Mesa Wlwt:Sp.m. Coll: S9 or S 12 c. 0 ct (714} 432-5*> - -4!'l! ... . . ft·- DONATION: In exchange for a $10 contribution. donon will receive a 5x7 ~ prial of their child on .. add .............. llll•lewilh a s 10 donacion toiho..ante cause. :=~DlnlNUB> FROM ~L~iatobepilatedq~ --tllrilae. 11aer .. to be plin =-~--~··Md~ : look like JlttJe ~to me.• The gdamem bloom for abOQt four months but are peremilal, returning with blOPOllla ev-.r n SHIOPS. "You can replace them every '! •two years,• Wiley Nld. •vou don't ... have to, but they give you a nice " life-span of at leoSt two years.• Wel\I advised tbat healthy growth dep81M:li .largely on how you mix the Soil bed, which tends -to hard• around this time of year. •Jt tat. a lot of time to amend,• sbe leld. •TJiere's a lot of clay, and the clay it.ores the water and you -have to put things in the soil to make it mdre porous.• ~ Her home garden. which you ~ reach at the end of a winding, :. brick path up a slight hill, ts deco-=:a rated by a trellis arch entwined _ with pink and white roses that cas- ::. cade down. : Wells likes to plant camellias, : ~ems and hydrangeas all year -------§HOME -: CONTINUED FROM 5 ----of work, on both parts. Apprecia- -tion, respect, understanding and ... thoughUulness are integral compo- : nents in a successful marriage. : I think Ben is lucky to come :._ home and find all of his children _alive and capable of eating dinner, : much less come home to a pre- -pared meal, clean children and a : roaring fire.Jam sometimes the : roaring fire in our house, and I do : give bb:q credit for being brave' : enough to enter hearth and home = which, on certain days, is also . : known as the battle zone. -After reading the following arti- : cle, I want a #wit~· to make my life ---- round, but her fall collection includes double anemones colored a •true blue• at the end Of a long, green stem. Other flowers on her fall ~ include bulbs in vivid colon that make them look like r.oset, double camellias, tall-stemmed foxgloves pampered, organized, calm and clean. I'd thought I'd share the high· lights of these •helpful hints• with you. Ladies, you can laugh. Men you can mourn. From the May 13, 1955 issue of Housekeeping Monthly: • Have dinner ready -for him. Plan ahead, even the night before to have a delicious meal ready, on time, for his return. · • Prepare youn~lf. Take 15 min- utes to res\ so you'll be refreshed when he arrives. Touch up your make-up, put a ribbon in your hair and be fresh loolcing. • Be a little gay and a little more interesting for him. • Clear away the clutter, gather up schoolbooks, toys, papers and colored a •wonderful lavender• with little cups hanging down and Canterbury bells that often wait an enUre year to bloom. They need to e1tablish themselves, Wells explained on their behalf. •They're beautiful, they really look like bells and they're more run a dustcloth over the tables. • Over the cooler months of the year you should prepare and light a fire for him.to unwind by. After all, catering tor his comfort will provide you with immense personal satis· faction. • Prepare the children. Take a few minutes to wash their hands and faces, comb their hair and if necessafy, change their clothes. Minimize all noise. At the time of his arrival eliminate all noise of the vacuum, washer or dryer. ny "to encourage the children to be quiet. • Listen to him. You may have a dozen important things to tell him, but the mom_ent of his arrival is not the time. Let him talk first - remember his topics of conversa- tion are more important than yours. · • Don't greet him with com- .,,,. ......... ... . .....,... ........ .... .... "9--,, ... .UCO , .. ., ........... Mmfal ...... be MtJ10iialldtllrlll ..... d&t tblli pa;"'+' Ill die fall, fQr blo-*"1 d~ ..... ........ J..., Jw.npUpl ... MdOw·rOated umua1I that .. fun to plant above bulbs, wbicb can ~ through the smaller Oowen. Wells describes beT garden as a potpourri for sights and smells. Wiley sai'd her favorite part about gardening is the process, although other gar~ers might disagree. •When you start cleaning the bed out, getting it ready for the flowers, you don't have color yet,• Wiley said. •And two weeks later, you see color!• She's speaking for the faster blooming plants, but the longer waits prove more. rewarding, she added. •1t•s a lot of hard labor 'cause you gotta make a nice bed for your plants and give them the right companions that join in with them," Wiley said. "But you have the expectancy.• plaints and problems. • Don't complain if he's late home for dinner or even if he stays out all night. Count this as minor compared to what he might have gone through that day. • Arrange his pillow and offer to take off bis shoes. Speak in a low. soothing and pleasant voice. • Don't ask him questions about his actions or question bis judg- ment or integrity. Remember he is master of the house and as such will always exercise bis will with fairness and truthfulness. You have no right to question him. • A good wite always knows her place. • KAREN WIGHT Is a Newport Beach resident. Her column runs Sundays. ~ mr belt frieDd•s :.Z.·1~~1*t =tlllla.IMWOUldn't wbolgot 4Xed up 'A year and with 1a1t a hall ago night I ' got ber alter only six penilil· months of lion to date re-knowing him.· each other, antre' KosUan half ago. proposed to :er only Pennington month.I of during a trip re-know-. ing each to Hawaii. other, Kostl.an proposed to Pennington during a trip to Hawaii. On Sept 6, they got mar- ried. Four days later, they started their honeymoon in -of course -Hawaii. The next morning. Sept. 11, they awoke to news of ter- rorists attacking the East Coast What struck KosUan, within this mournful mind. set. was the innocence of the islands. •Espedally, in light of the heavy heart we had on our honeymoon,• he said. They stayed in Hawaii longer than they intended as flight conflids arose after Sept 11, but neither can complain. •tf the good Lord blesses you and you live as long as we have, be can bless you.· a IUll giddy Kostlan sakl. • ~ you. or someone you know, gone on .., Interesting vaattlon rKentty7 Tell us your adventures. Drop us a line to TRAVIL TAUS, now. aay st.. Cost.a Mesa, CA 92627; e-mail young.ct..ngflUtlmacom; or fax to~) 646-4170. ----------------------------------------------~------------------------------------------------------------------------------~ -~-i-au •. :a .1 • ~ :., ilNG INVOWED runs pen. -OdUlly In the Daily Pilot on a : rotating bml.s. tf you'd fike lnfor- : mation on adding your organlz> -tion to this list. call (949) 574--Q98. --: ACADEMIC YEAR :" IN AMERICA --Costa Mesa families can host :.. a German student and earn : up to $1,000 toward a num- : ber of travel abroad pro- : grams. Dantelle Carpino, I (800) 321-HOST. ALZHEIMER'S ASSN. OF OMNGE COUNTY Support group leaders, Vislt- ing Volunteers, family resowce consultants and office volunteers are needed. Volunteers may work on one-time projects or ongoing programs. °D'alning senions are available. (800) 66()..1993. AMERICAN CANCER SOOETY ROAD TO RECOVERY The transportation program needs volunteers to drive :: ........ liiiiiim_. ...... liliiil ... iiiiEiEmm!!ii!!! ............ . -------... -.... cancer patients to and from ~treatments free of charge. The required com- mibneQl is a few hours each wt;k or month. Drivers must have a valid dri'ler's license and insurance and be at least 25 yean old. Volunteers may use either their own vehicles or American Cancer Society vans. (949) 261·9"6 or http://ICOme~r.org. AMElltCAH RED CltOSS, . ORANGE COUN1Y CHAPl'd The Orange County chapter of the Ameriam Red Cross needlvmunteentoaddress community groups about Red Cross services and to act u Hetsons with the media in dileater and emergency Ii~ at:kmi. Lynn Howes, (714) •81-53?6. llG MOTHaS. llG 5ISmtS nae JoCal ~ii JookiD9' fOr JDeD and women older th8ft 20 wbo have Uved in 9r'iDge CoUnty for et least six months and have been on the Job for at least three months to sezve as big broth· era or big sisten for chUdnm ages 6 to 16 from single-par· ent homes. (71•) 5"-n13. BOYS • GltLS aulS OF N£WPOR'F.M£5A The three area clubl need volunteer coaches and ans and crafts workshop teach- ers. Call for locations. (949) 642-22'5. COSTA MESA OVIC PLAYHOUSE The playbouse nQeds volun- teers for Ulbering, backstage work, mamnga, typing, con- trolling lights and many oth- er duties. (949) 650-5269. COSTA MESA POUCE DEMln'MENT Semon 55 and older are invit- ed to help staff the Westside substation.· Volunteers are asked to work two four-hour daytime shifts per week and ' Christmas at Summerhill I A charming collection to ht/pJOI' ttlelwau th~ 1piril of the season are responsible for answering phooel. b6cyde registration, fingetprinting, data entry and aalstiDg with other citywide projedB. Senion who can speak both Spanish and Eng. lilh are alto needed Call for an applicatioo. Fred Gaeck- ler, (714) 154-5208. COURJ.APPOINTEO SPECJAL ADVOCATES Volunteers are needed to eerve as advocates for abused. neglected and abandoned children. Vol\lllteers work one on one with a child for three hours a week. (714) 663-9034. DISPUTE RESOWTtON SERVICES Volunteer media.tots, case spedalists and outreach assistants are needed to help in a variety of mediation cu· es. Bilingual language skills are needed for office volun· leers and for mediators. (949) 250-<WlJ&. EA.Sml SEALS Easter Seals needs volun- teen for ongoing derical work and to help in pro- grams for children with dis- abilities and in specJa1 events. (114) 834-1111. FAllfVtEW DEVELOPMENTAL aNTO 1be CO.ta Mesa center ii • IOoking for aaften to pe.rtid· pate ln the 10th annual Ho Ho HO-liday Boutique ma a a.m. to 2 p.m. NOv. 14 at 2501 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa. $25 per 6-foot table. All proceeds wW support progrum at the center and programs such u tbe Special Olympia. Charles Johnson (714) 957·5188. FRIENDS OF THE NEWPOU IEACH LaARY The book ltora needs book donatk>m for book ules. G;ood quality cb.Ddren's and nonfiction boob are espe- dally needed. They may be left at any ol the branch librarlet -Balboa, Mariners or Corona del Mar, or ln the sped.al book doeet next to the Priendl Book Store at 1000 Avocado Ave. Volun- teers are needed to staff the used book store that ls inside the entrance ol tbe Central Ubrary. Volunteers must be members ol the Friends of the Library and are asked to WOl'k one three-hour lhift per month. (949) 159-9661. Giil.SCOUTS Girl Scouts of Orange Coun- ty needs volunteen to be trained .. troop leaden, serve on sp8dal tommlttees and give a.cturel, demon· ltratiom or claw11. r? 14) 919-1900. 38"00 ROUTOP DMK •FILE ORA'1·1rn *29998 ' -•33991 MISSION DINING CEDAR CABINETS UTDJTY PANEL BEVELED MIRRORS TEN DRAWEB1~~~~- Co~ST "OVERSIZE & SOLID OAK" 48W x 180 x 568 Josepblna Zaldua. who works at the Dally Pilot. vtstted New York earlier tblt month with Rufina Valdez and grandchildren Benjamin Gonzales and Geoffrey Gonzales • • Kenzie Sboenman, Karissa Jones, Kylee Stone, Kannon Stone and Riley Shoenman braved the cotd of Mammoth Mountain. :Barry and Carol Mason of Costa Mesa vacationed up JlOrth in Lake Tahoe . Marie Krisel and Joan ·E. Smith of Corona del Mar made a treli: to C~da. Irene and Arnold Schapiro of Corona del Mar ate crabs and read the Pilot in BalUmore, MD. .. .Members of the Bahia Corinthian Yacht Oub vtslted Italy in September. This picture was taken on the grounds of the Hotel VWa Clprlani. lbe Hamlltom, Carpenters, llauths, McCal.Usten, Pierces and Probsts spent Father's Day acrou the Atlantic In Ireland. SEAN HIUER f DAllV PILOT ~waits to strut her stuff ln the swimwear category of the dog show at Newport Dunes on Saturday. 90G CONTINUED FROM 1 which sent dogs to help Tl".- cue workers locate v1ctuns of the Sept. t 1 terromt attack in New York City Fashion show orgdruzer ~ Groff said attendancf' this year was better thdn e-xpected because or the lighthearted nature of the event and the time of yeill •After these rdd1cal times, people are looking for diversion,• Groff said. "It's d good family-fun event. as opposed to a scary, Hal- loween event.• The contest fedtured Vdr- ious categories, such as ele- gant formal wear, lingene and muter-pet look-allke Por the look·ahke con- test, Patsy Campbell d.fessed as Mickey Mouse tnd dressed her yellow ldb, &Uy, as Minnie Mouse m red-and-wtute polltd dot dress and little yellow booties. The Disney duo snagged first place. Erin Church dressed her Daschund, Roxy the Doxy, ~s a hot dog, complete with bun, mustard and relish dnd e.nded up with second place 6:l the Halloween costume ~tegory. While most of the dog owners dressed their - 5end ONGOING EVENTS rtems to ~ Daily Pl1ot. 330 W. Bay St. Costa U... CA 92627; by fax to (949) 646- ~Of by c.alting (949) 57~. ~the time, date and loc.ation of .. ewnt. •well as• contact phone ~. A ex>mplete llStlng is clYa•l- at htfp:/lwww.dail'jpilot.com A holiday gift shop wt11 run from 10:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. Nov. 9 thrC?ugh Dec. 24 at Sherman Ubr~ & Gardens, 2647 E. Cotit Highway, Corona del Mer. Handmade needlework, decoqtioris foT the tree and home, holiday cards, and gilt wrap will all be available. (949) 613·2261. canines in unusual cos- tumes, Rdchelle Gable out- fitted her Doberman pinch- N, Athrna, as a fire-rescue dog lo dispel negative slereotypes dbout the breed. "Tht>rE> dre a lot Of nega- tive connotations about lhctr behdv1or and charac- ter, so 1 wanted to reinforce the pos1tJve connotation,· Gable <id ld But 1t was dehrutely ElVJs that stole the show, bedecked in a black wig, sunglasses and a coat ddorned with mage nta sequined stdrs, hearts dnd a pmk Cadillac. And Elvis' dlter ego, Sir Sydney, is endowed with substance as well as style. Lacrosse has taken him to visit terminally ill children at CHOC hospital for many years. and he recently start- ed ass1stmg children with physical therapy following the11 surgery. Pat Guiver, president of the Orange County Soctety for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, said the show helps raLSe awareness for the orgaruzation's programs. incJudmg a new servlce that takes care of the pets of vtc- llms of domestic violence while they a.re in shelters. -Deirdre Newmllft covers edu- cation. She may be reached at (949) 574-4221 or· by e-mail at de1rdre.newmanOlatimes.com. accepted and are tax deductible. (949) 759-9667. The Braille Institute offen free computer classes to peo- ple with fading vision who have difficulty seemg the computer screen. The Oasis Center at 800 Marguerite Ave., Corona del Mar, offers si.x sessions. Call to Slgn up for classes. (714) 821-5000. Marshall's Tae Kwon Do in Costa Mesa offers free seU- defense classes to airline pilots and llight attendants Classes are taught by' three- time U.S. National Champion Tom Marshall. Marshall's is at 333 E. 17th St., Suite 13, Cos- ta Mesa. (949) 574·0122. A spll'ltual care daa meets at 7:1S p.m. Wednesdays at 3400 lrvino Ave., SWte t 1.4, New- port Beach. can to reserve a 5eat. (949) 263. 1462. A ...... ct.. dedgwi tor tntennediate sa1Jon wUl meet from 1:30 to 5:30 pm. Nov. 10 and 11, and Dec. I, •t Orange <:out C~'I ~ Cen· ter .. 1801 w. Coe.t High· way, Newp(Jft 8MdL (949) 64~11 GHOSTS <!ONTINUED FROM 1 the theater ghost wean an usher's uniform and yet another entity has a brown suit wai~ on the bed, in cue be wants to wear it. Local historian Jlm Jen- nings, who has lived on Bal- boa Island for 42 years, has seen this sUit. Por decades, <luring h1s early-mo.ming strolls, be has passed by an Onyx Street home known by neighbors nearby as the Ghost Home because no one has ever been seen inside. But one morning about 15 years ago, Jennings saw a lady in the front lawn water- ing plants and went in. They talked. She and her husband had lived there before the husband passed away, and now she remained the sole owner of the home while living elsewhere. She had white hair and wore a dress that might have been blue, Jennings remembers. They walked through the rooms of the house. In the bedroom, Jennings found a plain brown suit laid neatly out on the bed. The closet was full of men's clothes. A lady's dress was laid out on another bed. In the kitchen, the table held plates. This was all in case the late husband would ever want to wear bis old brown swt and sit down for a meal with bis wife, who would also then wear her designat- ed dress. Jennings didn't ask the woman any questions. ·1 go by that house almost daily,• he said. ·1 have never ever seen her again.• But he has seen painters freshen up the exterior. At least every five years, the lady J ennings met that morning arranges for the beige planks to be colored more beige, the green trims a fresher green. Workers were last spotted iust two months ago. Jen- nings remembers asking one of them lf they planned to go irLSide. •No way, nobody's ever been inside,· Jennings recalls hearing. C'osta Mesa's spint appears more social. It IS said that from the nght angle and at the right, rare time, you can still see bis flame in the window of the Estancia Adobe. In the rrud 1800s, a robber who is said to have stolen gold was being chased by authonties, said Hank Pan- ian, a former Orange Coast College history professor. To hide' bis stash in the event that he was captured, legend A brain tumor support group meets the first and third Thursdays each month from 7 to 8:30 p.m. at the Hoag Can- cer Center at Hoag Hospital, 1 Hoag Drive, Newport Beach. Free. Registration not required. The group is designed lo help patients and their families understand and cope with the illness. (949) 574-6232. St. And.reW"s Presbyterian Church hosts a mental illness support group from 6:30 to 8 p.m. Sundays in Dierenfield Hall C at 600 SL Andrews Road, Newport Aeach. (949) 574-2236. Orlglnal art created by employees of the dty of New· port Beach will be OD display through Nov. 7 al N~rt Beech City Hall, 3300 New- port BlVd., Ne~ Beadl. The exhibit lndudes i>b<J'.to9· raphy, pi.b>ting1, ~ti li.nd collages. (949) 717-3810. ne Co.ta ...._ s.mor-c.- ter bas baDroom daDdnQ wUb liWI mullc from tbe PMecVan Oncbott 'Jlto OD 'JUeilidey nlgbts froda 1:30 to 10:30 p.m at 815 W. 11tb St., COllta Mw. a (1M8t SCI 94. .. We're hoplng that the usher 18 still hanging around there somehow ln the theater. Theaters have to have ghosts for good luck." Michele Rf>berge Executiw director, Balboa Performing Arts Theater Foundation hasitthattherobber stonned into the Adobe, left bis candle on the window sill and walked away unW he could no longer see the name. He buried bis gold in this spot, but only be knows which direction he walked, where be stashed bis secret. He was chased out, Pan- ian heard, and never returned. The treasure is supposedly still there. •u you're at the Adobe at the right time, you can see the candle light in the Adobe. Story goes that it's the robber trying to locate the gold," the Costa Mesa resident said. Michele Roberge of the Balboa Performing Arts The- ater tells of another friendly ghost. This one's in uniform. Two years ago, as Che Newport Beach theater underwent demolition for d renovation that still goes on today, Roberge, her co-work- ers and the demolition crew leader came across an old Polaroid of a female usher wearing a maroon uruform with navy blue piping. She was smiling, her hair was light brown, curly and short The photo was found under- neath a seat m the theater, ·which was bwlt in 1927 Roberge and her cohorts asswned the color picture was from lbe forties, Judgtng from the dothel and hi.ii of the usher. 1ben they real· ized Poi.toldl didn't exist then. And the theater hadn't had uniformed ushers in decades. But what really spooked Roberge was the message on the back of the photo: •To Bob, with love.· The demolition crew leader who was looking at the photo was named Bob. "It was just kinda spooky that this picture ... we don't know how it came to be still there,· Roberge said. "We're hoping that the usher is still hanging around there some- how in the theater. Theaters have to have ghosts for good luck.· Then there's the ghost light. Every theater has one -the Balboa Theater will get theU"S at the end of the renovabon. It's a bare light bulb that sits atop a pole on wheels and solely lights a dark theater throughout the rught, when no one's there. "The more romantic story LS lhdt the stage manager puts the ught out there just to let the spints and person- diltJes dnd characters that huve bee n created on the stage -that a lot of us believe !Jve on -know we'll be back the next day," Rob<-rge said. When the executive director first arrived at the thcdter for a )Ob interview, the building w.as being gut· tc•d <.1nd piles of 1unk clut- tered the grounds. In the comer, Roberge spotted an old office desk cha1r on \ ... hf>els ·And I 1ust saw that and l thought, "Oh, ttus is a very good sign.' because a ghost light -you can't 1ust buy it. You hdve to make 1t. When 1 sdw lhdl old desk chair 1 thought, ·Oh, that's the hMdest pdrt to find,·' RO~ie.id. '.Ibday, the whee.Ibale lits in Roberge'' offiioe, lust wait- ing to be turned bito • gllost light. •it's to let Jhe spants of art and music ai:ad da.ooo and theater know that we'll be back in the mommg, that the show will go on,· Roberge said . "We're about as superstitious a kind of people as they come." Marine ghost-lore hM its own supen;titions: sea gods are said to wreak havoc on boats that change names. So when Gay Wassail-Kelly's boat. which was renamed the S .S. Michigan from its previous name of W J ., kept sinking for no justifiable rea- son at the docks, the New- port resident thought twice about what she had heard: that the ghost of a Norwe- gian fisherman lived on the boat. Joe Warren, a muuster with Universal Lile Church who is authorized to conduct exorcisms. rode over to the S.S. Michigan on a gondola "They came aboard with fire and brimstone and incense and went au around and they bad a Bible,• Was- sail-Kelly said. "What he was doing was he was cleansing the boat of its ghosts and evll s pints. • Warren also brought aboard a smdll object that was supposed to spark up and ward off ghosts. The spark caught fire on War- ren's eyebrows, hat and hair instedd He wasn't banned and the onlookers aboard had a good la ugh "Sometlung backfired, c;o to speak,· WassaU-Kelly Sdld "But we hdve not hdd d problem ever since ' -Young Owmg writes feat\Jres She may be reached at (949) 574 4268 or by e-mail at young chang Ola times.com hav ing trouble h finding s oes in your size? Come join us as we celebrate our first store on the West Coast! Marmi features ladies 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 handb~, hats and accessories also available . 12 Sunday, October 28, 2001 EDITOlllU Losing Roeder would be a ·blow -:tQ__Costa Mesa T he only good thing to say about news that Costa Mesa City Manager Allan Roeder is willing to consider moving to Aiiaheim's top job is that, for now, it's premature. But if Anaheim officials decide to seek a replacement for their city manager beyond the doors of their city hall. it could come at that city's gain and Costa Mesa's crippling loss. Roeder, who has served as city manager since 1985, has won wide praise from the coun- cil members he's worked with and other city officials across the county. While other cities, school districts and even the county have been dragged through the mud for a variety of controver- sies -bankruptcies, sexual harassment charges, embezzle- ments all come easily to mind - Costa Mesa has sailed steady under his firm control. There are a number of rea- sons why Roeder would want to take the Anaheim job. Anaheim boasts professional baseball and hockey teams. not to mention an amusement park called Dis- neyland. It runs its own utilities and is about three times larger than Costa Mesa in terms of both population and area. Its budget of $960 mil.lion is more than 10 times Costa Mesa's. The challenge an,d change is obvioll$ly appealing. But there are still challenges remaining in Costa Mesa. The proposed Home Ranch project -the last major new develop- ment in an otherwise built-out city -is far from a done deal. The Westside awaits redevelop- ment. Next year's election, with Councilman Gary Monahan's announcement that he won't run, ensures at least one new face and therefore a council majority with little experience. The most telling fact may prove to be this one, however: Roeder has spent his entire pro- fessional career in Costa Mesa, starting ui 1974 as an unpaid intern. It is simply natural that he would want to move on. And unfortunate. Competitive UC Irvine taking on. baseball, again A s you know by now, after a 10-year hia- tus, the Daily Pilot has returned to cov- ering UC Irvine. It's an exciting addition,· given the university's academic reputation and the breakthroughs its professors are making in science and .many other fields every day. A.1So exciting at ua right now is the baseball team that it plans to field for the first time since the program was eliminat- ed in 1992. Budget cuts led to its demise at that time, but nearly 10 years later, the. Anteaters will again take the field Jan. 25, and we'll be there to cover them. With the new program comes a new $9-million stadium that is under construction. A student referendum passed in 1999 increased student tees by $33 a quar:ter to support the new field. which ua baseball coach John . Savage says will be •one of the nicest facilities on the West Coast" and will allow the school to attract som~ big-name players. With that said, it wouid appear UCI may eventually field a top 25 team that would provide Cal State Fullerton with some competition for the best baseball team in Orange Coun- ty. As any college baseball enthusiast will attest, Cal State Fullerton has one of the best programs in the nation. We look toiward to extremely ~mpeti­ tive matchups in the future that will give the ntans a run for their money. In the meantime, let's not for- get that college basketball begins at UCI on Nov. 16. After the school's best year last sea- son, expectations are high. We're looking forward to seeing how the Anteaters fare this year and hope we'll be covering their run in the NCAA tournament. THE LAST WORD Keep Halloween fun and safe A s a result of evetything that has occurred on and since Sept: 11, we all have been a bit ~· We can onfy imagme it Will cany over to HallOWeen on Wednesd&y, Wbmi pe.rel;lts will be oVerty I ciUtioUI with ~to the tNatl tbeir c:b1ldren eat. AilCI we can't blame anyone lot~ IUdl ~pre· -....... u IOID8CbtDg luc:b .. ... can:w nnn-.s from ctr111..a.wmaoa1JbDage ...... •• JM GIMd do Wida the candy you band out is store· bought and sealed. Whlle lt may be genumely a nice effort to band out frultl Neb u apples, tJy avo6dlog lt thll ~· After all. they're unwrapped and wW probably end up in tbe trub blil. Save your~· Al alweyt, pumtl abOUld trick-~Jl'Mt With tbeb' ddlcho and be aware OI What'* glNl to tblir llale ...... aiMl flam wbolD. Alli ....... ~'° empl,... .... bigs .. .,. • .,.. fll of ......... . dlldsf31SJIMtW • ... ,... ---~·-" ,., ... ....,..... ......... I .... ..,. •• • Jt's apectacular, It's gorgeous. We're just droollng. In our llbra_ry, we have so many boob that we don't have room lf!r any knlckJcnacb. • • _..._~.(Oita Mesa rllldent. whlle on the 28th .,,.u.1 HOme Tour In Corona def Mar on Tuetday f ATIENTION PASSENGERS, t>UE TO MIUTARY USAGE, WE'LL NOW BE FLYING TO CHICAGO VIA AFGHANISTAN ~L TORO · PUTS ./ INTO Reporter's mom knows Pilot too· well I think reporte r Lolita Harper's mother had it right (•Pastor impropriety rings some deja vu.• Oct. 5). 'This •rag• ought to go directly to the truh can. Why is the Jim Ferryman issue still front-page news ("School trustee suspected of drunk driving,• Oct. 1)? Now we have Wendy teece - how did she ever get elected to the school board~ -chiming in with her two cents that Ferryman ought to resign because "there are laws that we have to conform to and there are consequences even when we as leaders break the laws ("nustee: Fenyman should resign if guilty,' Oct. 5). • While wondering to whom she · may be refening with •we lead- ers,• has Fenyman been found West tido Channel should be in parade Paulo ond John Madison Jr. SOUNDING BOARD guilty between Monday and Pri- day without our notice? I thought Leece was of the •don't judge lest ye be judged• ilk. Shouldn't a school board member whose major contribu- tions include trying to hang the Ten Commandments on school room walls or trying to ban cer- tain books from our school libraries know that the Constitu- tion of the United States is al.so the 14w of the land? Should Leece step down because her transgressions against our entire community-of course, except- ing her own congregation and the Religious Rigbt -include these violations of the equal pro-• . IWLllG tection, free speech and separa- tion of church and state clauses/ doctrines? The Pilot still finds room in the column to plant another reference to Ferryman being one of the board members who recently asked the community to revisit the school district's zero-tolerance policy on drugs and alcohol Let's see now, the Pilot splashes the front-page headlines with Ferry- man's DUI anest. casually o.otes that he's the same trustee asking to revisit the zero-tolerance policy on drugs and alcohol. throws in the offidal opinion of the local branch of the Religious Right. Hmm. What to do? What to do? • .~ -~. Odcbw 21, 2001 13 . It's closing time Councilman Gary Monahan has decided not to run for reelection when his term ends in 2002 • • ~IO :a....: Gary Monahan ~:42 ~HI._.: Eastside for ::14 years ~:Cal State llerton, bachelor's rdegree tn history :J>cft.,.etlofi: Owner of ;Skosh Monahan's at ·~Boulevard and 20th Street. ..J:Mlltr. Wife Deborah; ,daughter Echo, 8; and sons Ethan, 7, Aaron. 2, Quinn, 1, and another .on the way : Hobbl•: Wrth his chit- ' dren, owning a business ~~serving as -. council- •tfnan, he doesn't have : any time for hobbies I .. $TIPPING DOWN ·1 think it's just time to step down. I don't have the uiassion that I had :for a quite long :.time.• I • . I ! 10 llllETS • : •1 think it's been ' t really good for myself, and I think I've done some good things : :tor the city and I I •'the constituency ~.that I feel I repre· sent. It's been a ,., good seven years ~ so far, and hope· fully I'll have one more good year "'' before it's over.• B eing a councilman isn't u much fun as it once was for Gary Monahan and, as a result, the bar owner and father of four has decided not to seek· another stint when bis tee· ond term expir~ in November 2002. But he sWl bas another year left and discussed some issues he'll tackle with Aulstant Clty Editor James Meler at b1i restaurant, Skosh Monahan's, on Wednesday. Wbat coovtnced you not to run for reeledionf I think it's just time to step down. I don't have the passion that I bad for a quite long time. You know, it's been seven years, coming up on the end of two tentlS and elSJbl years, two terms, is enough for anybody. It's time to get out and get a flesh perspective and move on to some other things. I'd have to admit that having four children and one on the way and a relatively new business that requires an awful lot of time are definitely contributing factors . What got you onto the coundl to begin withl I think the real kicker was -well, it all started when the City Council was trying to shut down the Goat Hill tavern, and I felt they didn't give us a fair shake. We made some changes to allay all the concerns, and they refused to listen. insisting that we dose down at midnight, which didn't make sense for a bar. So, Sid Soffet, being the owner. filed a lawsuit. So, I, being the man- ager at the time, became the spokesperson. We had a lot of deal- ings at the City Council meetings, and I was observing what was going on and wasn't very happy with lt. r felt the council didn't listen to the people, that it was very anti-busi- ness. I actually earned myself mem- bership on the board of directors on the C hamber of Commerce, and one thing 1ed to another and next thing I knew I was running for and eventu- ally winning a seat on the City Council. Any regrets In Joining lbe coandll ls that a leading question or what? No, I don't have any regrets. I think it's been really good for myself, and l,think I've done some good things for the city and the con- stituency that I feel I represent. It's been a good seven years so far, and hopefully I'll have one more good year before trs over. Wbat ue yoa p1annlng to do wltb your lut J'9llr DOW tlm you doll1 have to ....uy lllprw myone1 A !=O'Jl)le of things I'd like to fin- ish -things that l"ve managed to get started over the years or have been started while I've been in office. 1be Home Ranch project is a ~ one. It's really time for tbe Segerstroms to develop out ~. and we have that in front ol us right now, and hopefully can answer that question of what the last major undeveloped chunk of Costa Mesa wW look like. I'm still working on improving some softball fields at TeWinkle Park. That's been a mainstay since I first started on the council. Westside redevelopment area - it's going to take longer-Olan a year. My goal has been, since taking over chair of the Redevelopment Agency, to kick-start it. It's been a very slow and quite fractious process to date, and I think it's going to get even worse. The big challenge for me is to keep everyone focused and move that down to where some benefits can come out of it. · Also, ever since the election, the council has been pretty -there's been some rough edges. The re's been quite a bit of disagreement and, hopefully, I can help keep it together until the next election and keep it on a positive note. I'd also like to see us get more involved in the airport process. I've been pushing that for a while, and with Councilman Chris Steel on board there's two of us. But we're still trying to get the commibnent from a third, if not a fourth, council member. We seem to be getting there, but there's still a long way to go. Do you plan on staytng lllvolved In the community In another rolel I imagine I will. Not tbat my life isn't busy enough, but there's other things I'd like to be involved in. like my daughter's school and other organizations that I just haven't had the time for. You want to gQ to a fund-raiser or an outreach meeting, and you've got a City Council appointment on the same night Obviously my responsibility is to the city and to the council. There are other areas I like to get involved. READERS RESPOND How do you tb1nk the Home ltanc:h project will tum outf I think it's running its course. and there's plenty of opportunity for the public to discuss it. There's lots of pros and cons, and I think at the end of the day, I think the council's going to make a very sound decision on it. I think we're getting a pretty good idea of what lt's going to look like, but I thmk the final project may be a little different than what's on the table. You know, you asked me a ques- tion earlier of what got me into this. I think there's a pendulum approach. You go from liberal to conservative. and also trom pro-business to anti- business. or whatever you want to call it. I think one of my concerns is that the little guy gets left out. Again, as Sid Soffer once said and reminds me on occasion, "When my neighbors have more say on what I do with my property than I do, it's time I ~ld it to them and told them what to do with it.· That's one of the concerns I've always had and continue to have, is that so many individual rights get trampled on and, hopefully, I can keep that out in the public eye and, once I'm gone, I hope someone else will pick up on that. Again, it's far too often that the little guy gets beat on. A prime example is the Hal- loween house right now. Code enforcement ts having some prob- lems with the sheds out there. 1b..i.s is a mainstay on the Eastslde -one of the nice things about the Eastside. Someone does this at no profit of their own. and bare tbe dty's beat- ing up on them. Let'• get real here and decide what's important People talk about the cba.ractar of the East- side. That's what I Comider the char- acter of the~. And we need to protect things _The airport's passage sends mixed messages AT ISSUE: lhe C<>unty su~ appraved an 18.8-rrillliOn annual ~- 1.ger airport for the former El Toro Marine base. popularity among Joe& voten. HoweVer. • I tOld the supervisors lij mGDtha 9QO, tbe federal gov• emment lliould not gtVe and Orange County sboukl not tab El 1bro for any U1e except tor an•- port ~ble by .... mlltuy la ... Of Jiiied. I WU Ml'g.....-:1 to·~ my Dlllgbbol', ~ Nlblo, .... g..ajbint-. .............. ago. like that. The character of the East- side really came out of and still is the individuality of each property. We're not in Irvine and, with the more codes and the more develop- ment requirements that pass, the more vanilla the Eastside will become. That's why l live on the Eastside, because I like the individu- ality part. What do you hope happens to the Job Centerf I really haven 't advocated closing il I remember what it was like whe n we bad a lot of workers on the street. especially near Lions Park. It was a nightmare. What I've advocat- ed all along and, for some reason I can't gain any support, is to make it self-functioning. You've got employ- ers that are saving a ton of money by hiring somebody there. U you charge them $5 per employee picked up. that would pay for the center over the course of the yeat. It boggles my mind I haven't been able to get any support for that. Everyone argues about whether to close it or not close at. and I think that would be an easy, in-the.nuddle compromise, at least for now. Part of the argument is that we put a bunch of taxpayer money into it. 1lus would take that out of the equation. Irs a bigge r problem than just that, but that's a start because once you take the money out of it, we can use the money for other things. That money could be used to keep day- workers out of other areas. We can have a special task force out of the Police Department or something. That would. be a logical first step I can't get any support for. Any 8nal tboughbf Just tell everyone to come down to Skosb's and have a good blne. LEnER TO THE EDITOR Bight &'chool valid In t3kiog precautiom As always, thank you fOI' our WOadertul commumty ., .... Olvlnf up eoadtlncl la gobag to hapJ»ll nentually. but I'm noi Jn a hurry .•. • 111111181lllwir;i, vwtMM foacbllll ~ It Sunday, October 2e, 2001 .._. ..._.., ccnon • 9~1 "'422s • 1p9rt9 ,_. 9-'9.oso-0110 Daily Pilot SEAN HliElt I OAl.Y PLOT Newport Harbor High'• Sunset League cbampJomhlp field hockey team. Back row, from le~ Racbae1 Purman, Kirsten Chamberlain, 11ffany Vandenloot. Chrlstina BarbatU, Lauren Blrchfleld, Amanda Wittman. Allllon McKenzie and Sam Scott. Middle row, from le~ Assistant coach Sue Ramondo, Chanelle Sladlcs, Kelly Duffield, Carlln Sdmelder, Caltlln Furell, Kaley Nix. Katie Flores, Chloe Cox. Coach Sharon WoUe. Front row, from left Brianne Parmeter, Jill Whltfteld. Danielle Pfaff and Alhena Vasquez. COLLEGE WOMEN WATER POLO SailiJrs . drill Oilers in the first round ofTojC, 4-0 Newport Harbor High's two-time girls field hockey Sunset League champions bad the home assignment, but had to settle for a Huntington , Beach elementary school site for its first·roUJld match in the lbumament of Champions, and was forced to go without three front-line starten for various reasons, but it mattered little in terms ~ the outcome. Huntington Beach High'• Oilers, stand-ins for a Fountain Valley team which begged off playing the runaway Sunset champions, were no match for Sharon Wolfe's dynamos. who drilled the Oilers to the tune of .(-0 Saturday. The victory sends Sharon Wolfe's champs into Tuesday's semifinal against the winner of Monday's matchup between Harvard-Westlake and Santa Ana. Should Harvard-Westlake prevail. the Sailon are on the road, again. U it's Santa Ana. a coin flip will determine Tuesday's host. The finals are at Edison High on Thursday. 11 was a balanced effort on Saturday as four players scored, three had assists, Newport bad an 18-1 advantage in penalty corners and goalkeeper Amanda Wittman stood around and collected her 18th shutout without lifting a stick as Harbor outJbot Huntington Beach. 15-0. Scoring for the Sailors were Chanelle Sladics, Allisoo McKenzie, Kelly Duffield and Chrl.stina Barbatti. McKenzie, Kirsten Chamberlain and Kerrte Gates, up from the junior varsity, were credited with assists. Duttield's goal was unassisted. The Sailors improved to 18-2·1. 'Anteaters hold off Orange Coast, 8-6 UCI receives biggest competition in form of Pirates. Coast loses three goals because of official's ruling. UCI AQUATICS COMPLEX -The Orange Coast College women's water polo team's 28- game winning streak ended at the bands of an NCAA Division I team. UC Irvine, Saturday. Tbe Anteaters hosted their one-day Fall Tournament and dealt the Pirates an 8~ loss, though UC I did not attain victory easily. Orange Coast answered an 8""" deficit and came within one, before an oftldal's ruling s\.lbtracted goals that were illegally scored An OCC player had received three ejections and received a major. That meant she could not reenter. But she unknowingly did and when the olDdaJs took notice they took away three goals and OCC went from an 8-7 lead to 8..( with three minutes left in the game. UCI Coach Julie Swail said the Pirates gave her team its greatest competition of the tournament. Before losing to UCI, Coast defeated UC San Diego, 6-3, as Neisha Hoagland and Devon Wright IClOTed two goals each. UCI ended the tournament with a 9-7 win over Cal Baptist and a 3-0-1 record. The Anteaters tledCal State Bakersfield. 6-6, and scored vk:tories over UCSD (11~) and San Diego Mesa (13-5). The six-team townament featured a round robin format and three community colleges, Including San Diego Mesa, Long Beach City and OCC, the top-ranked team in the state. Pirates assistant coach Mike Giles said the loss will be on OCC's record. but will not count against the team's state ranking. Olwm CoMr I. UC SM DlleC> J ~y l'l.OT PHOTOS IY OCXJGtAS H. 1C1M UCl'1 Lauren Volcaa (lar left) Is wide open u OCC goalie Helltber Deyden defends. Abow, U<n N...._. hinMDbmgb (4t ldel to dllend -Onnge eo..t sbot ......... wttb. big splMb. UC.._ .. 0.... CoMr t 0r-.eo.t 2 2 0 2 -• UCIMne J 2 2 1 -I Or.ngeeo.t 0 1 4 1 • 6 UCSlnDiego 0 1 2 0 • J a..._. c.... Wl1sttt 2. McDonald 2. Hoeglend 1, Montltwo1. oc:c • HoegMnd 2. 'Might 2. MontaM> 1, Sol• •lfllld 1. S..·~7. UC.. -Smith 1, 1lder 1, Mcm 1. S.. • Col'rlbd 7, MCI 6. . s..-~6. UC...._·"°"'*'~~ 1, Alrw t, fenwldlia 1, 0-...1. S..-Moon7 • Energetic former Gt>sta Mesa High football coach, approaching 10, is Still going strong as Santa ~a Valley High's defensive coordinator. ""',...... DAILY Pll.oT SPORTS DAILY Pl.OT PHOT~ BY STEVE MCCRANK Newport Harbor's Bryan Auer (5), abov~. sets up to take his shot in the Gray Lunde Tournament. Below, D'ever Gregory of Newport Harbor (18) makes a pass in front of the goal in the Sailors' victory over Tustin. :Newport settles for ·second Sailors rumble through two overtime games to reach final, while CdM finishes up ninth. St.Ye Virgen DAILY PILOT NEWPORT BEACH -Second place was good enough for the Newport Harbor High trosh-sopb wate r polo team. The Sailors were satisfied, and a blt fatigued as well. to be in the final ot lhei.r Gray Lunde Memorial TOqmament. a 16-t.eam Invitational in honor of Lunde. a Newport freshman standout, who <lied ot heart failure at poolside in 199.5. Coach Les Cutler's Newport trosh-soph team. wblch captured the title last year with a five-overtime 7 -6 victory over Laguna , Beech, woo two overtime games to reach the : final. but lost, 5-3, to Marina Saturday at the Sailors' pool. f' •1 told the kids, they played great for {Lunde),• Cutler said. "They played at a , level that honored his good name." 1 The Sailors fell behind early to Marina, : 3-0, with 3:46 left 1n the first half. However, Newport made a mini comeback whe n ' Bryan Auer drew an ejection and the Sailors ~ took advantage of the six-on-five. Morgan • La.ldlaw smacked a shot off the crossbar and Auer recovered the rebound to net the : HIGH SOIOOl WATER POLO I . ~cdM falls in final to ~Coronado Sailors' first goal. Marina answered with a goal to retain its three-goal lead, 4-1.. With five seconds left before halftime, Laidlaw drew an ejection and Cutler called a timeout to set up one last play. After the timeout, Laidlaw attacked the cage and threw in a goal from about four meters out with no time left. The Vildngs held their lead 111 the second half. Auer added his second goal when he scored on a tour-meter penalty shot with 42 seconds left in the game. The Sailors earned a 4-3 overtime victory over Esperanza in the semUlnals. Tanner Hill scored a goal with 3:34 Jett in regulation, that wouJd send the game into overtime. Laidlaw ended the game with a goal coming 1:45 into the overtime. . On friday, Newport defeated Tustm, 7- 3, and then scored a 5-4 double-overtime win over Los Alamitos to advance to the semifinals. Meanwhile, Corona del Mar's frosh-soph squad ran off three straight victories after dropping its opening game and finished ninth in the towney. Coach Tun SaJVUlo's Sea Kings lost to Marina, 5-3, Thursday CdM came back later and defeated CaptStrano Valley, 7 -1. In Saturday's action, the Sed Kings recorded victories over Royal, 12-1, and Tustin, 10-1. at CdM. Sophomore Nadeem Hakim Led Corona with 13 goals m the tournament, while Spencer Plrdy notched eight and Thomas Pearson added four. Hakim scored five goals in the win over Tustin, for ninth place. GMT lM llBIQIW flOStt-SOP!t IMMAIOO Alwl MAM1A S. NMParr HAMOll J M¥1~ 2201 ·5 Newport HMbor 0 2 0 1 3 Mw· Luttl 2. Parlter 1, Wqter 1, PachKo 1 s.ves . H<»g 5. ... • Auer 2. IAidlrN 1. Saws • Robinson 8. .mt-NQGAMI °*""' o8. MM 10. TUS11N 1 Tl.lstin 0 0 1 0 • 1 Coton1 dtl Mar l 0 2 5 · 10 CAN ·~ 5, Pif'dy 2. Sheets 1. PNrM>n 1. a~ 1. Saws • Sanford 6, Bi.dcford 3. COMMUNITY COLLEGE FOOTBAll Pirates crushed, 44-2 0 • 2 , -.. Sunday, Odob9r 28, 2001 15 BRIEFS Coasters sweep OCC men, women cross country teams capture respective titles at conference championships. Make 1t su: in a row and the first fo. r Orange Co.sst ~ College's cross country teams gwded by Co.tch John Goldman. The OCC women's squad won its S1.Xt.h strcUght Orange Empire Conference title and the men clauned its fust at the OEC Championships, hosted by the Pirates at the Upper Newport Bay interpretive Center course Saturday. OCC's M.IChelle lcban was crowned the OEC women's cbamp10n with her wmrung tune, 19;09, on the 5,000-meter course. "It's exciting, espeoally for the men,· scud Goldmdn, who lS 111 his sixth sedSon at Coast. #(The OCC men have) alwdys been on the verge. This is a really big wm for us." The Pirates had finished runner-up for the past lhref' years unt!.l climbing over the hump Saturday. OCC sophomore Ryan Bousquet led the Pirdtes with a second- place firush, four seconds short o{ OEC champ Jose He rrera (5·01) of Santa Ana on the 6,500-meter course. It WdS the hrst time ttus season Bousquet d id not grab first pldce. Goldman said the sophomore runner, who transferred from the Uruvers1ty of Anzona, battled a bit of illness, but he'll be at full strength when he dnd Herrera meet again in the Southern California Champ1onslups at Antelope Valley (Lancaster) Saturday. Nevertheless, the men placed eight runners in the top 20 to win the btle with 20 points, a 27-point differential of second-place Santa And. OCC's Joel Guzman (fourth 111 21: 11 }, Juan CamUo (run th 111 21 :30), Rlcky Rehanek (12th m 21 :38), Jason Foutch (13th m 21:45), Victor Lopez (15th in 21:55), Allen Ctuldress (16th m 21.56) and Mark Cipolla (20th in 22:18) also contnbuted efforts to wm the conference lltle. Bousquet, Guzman and Carrillo, with their top-10 fl n1i,hes. earned all-conference honors. On the women's side, OCC placed seven runners m the top 10 to overwhelmmgly distance itself from the compebl.lon The Plrates hrushed with 20 po111ts, while second-place Riverside came m wtth 71. Lindsay Allen (19:53), Katie Mais (20:13) and Suzette Dmoo;o (20:37) came in fourth, filth and sixth, respectively. And Roseann Peters (20:46), Newport HarQ<>r Hig h product Natalie St. Andre (20:50) and Heather Huggins (21 :06) finished eight, runth and l 0th, respectively. The six women, and lcban, also boasted All-Conf erence laurels. Jennifer Urbieta (14th in 21 :33), Natalie Elliott (17th m 21.42). Juhd Crawfis (19th in 21 :53) and Latrice Donaldson (20th in 21 58) dlso finished m the top 20. Anteaters put away UC Riverside in five Victories haven't been coating as often .. the ur I "" I Irvine women's volleyball team wouJd like tlus year. (/\~~ but Friday rugbt's marathon triumph was one which '"1:::::7 the Anteaters will surely savor. The Anteaters, now 3-15 overall and wtlh theu fi.r.;t Big West Conference victory in 10 starts Uus season. used two hours and 25 minutes to dispose of the host UC Riverside Highlanders, 25-30, 30- 26, 30-28, 27-30, 15-11. After splitting the first four games m up-and-down fdSluon. the Anteaters forged to a 13-10 lead Ul the deoder, and after the Highlanders edged to within 13-11, UC! responded with the final two points. ln the third game it was 27-27 before UCl captured three of the last four points, and in Game 2, UCI was hold.mg on to a 26-25 edge before heating up to win it, 30-26. Chanda McLeod led the way for UCI with 24 kills and 20 d1q s Kelly Wing added 19 kills and 14 assists. Ashley Ham had 55 assists and 17 digs. Riverside falls to 3-15, 1-9. ua women take second in conference UC Irvine sophomore Julie Manson and 1uri.lor ~ Tessa Cendejas led the Anteaters' women's cross country team to a second-place finish in the Big West Conference Championships Saturday at the Cuesta College/Fairbanks Memorial Course. Manson finished seventh in 18:42.4, and Cendejas came in eighth in 18:'5.t. Both runners earned All-Big West Conference honors. The Anteaters' second-place finish also came from conbibu- tions by sophomore Kim Ramirez (13th in 18:58.0), JuruoT Amanda Arm.strong (14th in 18:59.0), sophomore Jenna Keith (23rd in 19:19.6), freshman Kaleena Yee (25th in 19'.20.J). and junior Lisa Massoth (32nd in 19:36.2). Host Cal Poly SLO won the women's title with 37 points as UC Irvtne finished second with 65 pomts in the nine-team field. ~ Katie Appeorodt ot UCSB was the individual cbampion. mpturtng first with a time of 17:47.8 on the 5,000-meter course. The UCI men's squad finished seventh with 18? points, as UC Santa Barbara won the men's title with 28 points UCI Junlor lravis Morisoli was 30th in 27:27 .5 and senior Jon Doroski came in 31st in 27:28.7. Junior Brian Hanison was 34lh (27:34:1), freshman David Santos was SOth (28: t 1.3), tenior.J.1ike Arp 56th (28:35.3), freshman Thomas Harley 57th (28:36.7), &nd junk>r Rob Evans was 64tb in 29:10.9. • UCSB's Erie Gans (25:56.4) and Jo&b Horton (25~S9 l) Ona.bed 1-l, nlllpedively. 00 the 8,000-meter course. . . ~28,I001 CONTINUED FROM 14 "I ia • .._going bo.e to c~ the afternoon Of a game aiid ~ ~ Mned up at tbe !enta Bowl to get into the game tNt ~ht,• he laid. BUlwm Coached the COila Mesa vanity for eight ~ (1984-91) and h.aa since worked as a ~lor at Corona del Mar (offense) and Costa Meea {defeme). In addilion to bis prep coechb\g experie~ be spent two seaaons at Chaffey Community CQUege. He was the secondary coach for the Southern cau- folnJ.a Sun Of the now-defunct World Football ~e. He was also director of personnel and vice president in charge of football operations for the AnabeJm-based Sun. 84Jdwin said loyalty to a star-studded junior class at Santa Ana, including standout future NFL receiver Isaac Curtis, was the reason he turned down an offer to join then-coach Jobn McKay's staff at USC in 1968. He believed be owed It to his juniors to coach them as seniors the following fall. After the World Football League folded, he sald he 11pumed opportunities to work in the NFL, instead accepting a more lucrative job selling insurance, in order to offset the debt he incurred when the finan- cially strapped Sun did not pay him his final six months wlth the team. It wasn't long, however, before he was spending afternoons watching practice at Santa Ana High. Saints Coach Tom Meiss asked him to join the staff as an assistant and, after some soul searchlng, BaJdwin soon seized the head-coaching opportunity at Costa Mesa. •I had a doctor who gave me a neat analogy about fllY selling insurance." Baldwin said. •He told me when I played foot~ l was probably the kind of guy who would just tape up a sprained ankle and play hurt. I said, ye.ab, that was right. He said my selling insurance instead of coaching was like playing hurt. I thought about it and decided I had to get out of that dam job.• Baldwin said his first game back as a coach vindicated those instincts. •1 still remember it like it was yesterday,• he said. "(Santa Ana) was playing Fountain Valley at Orange Coast College and I walked out of the locker room down the ramp toward the field and the adrenaline was just pumping so hard. They tried to te ll me that making a big big sale was better than winning a (ootball game, but, for me, it wasn't even as good as ld.king the field for practice.• Baldwin considers his first Mesa team, which finished 0-9-1in1984, among his favorites. "We hatl )cjds who had ne ver played in a winning football game,• he recalled. "Those guys worked so hard and we had a lot of fun. It was one of the most rewarding seasons I've had as a coach. I remember the last day o( practice that season. A lot or kids we.re crying, because they didn't want their season to end: His involvement with the game and with kids won't end any time soon for Baldwin, who still tencbes economics at Mesa and enjoys time with his f.unlly, including his wife or 47 years. Carol. He also has two grown children and six grandchildren. '. . ti.4f-~-. II -·-Iii .. Iii .------• ,..,. ....., "ea ATTENTION ~ RV,.-.* AGENTSI %: ~~'°2.,-= Tf!!!?!!. g JffWf?5! MMllll ltt .. mlT Yout LOCAL MAL mAll °"'"' ,Mii Git• 212 .... .:-.r:~I ..... Olt ...... ED VM DIN -=ttE MAL UTAll IROKIR LOCAL lltCI 1'70 MlllMIQ ....newportlMU homes.com DAl.Y Pl.OT PHOTOS BY SEAN HlilR T:e Costa Mesa Junior Pee Wee Black Mustangs were embroiled in the lint round of the Pop Warner Football playoffs Saturday afternoon agalmt the unbeaten Anaheim Rams at Garden Grove Park. Above, Josh Emo of the Mustangs runs for daylight, and at left. Costa Mesa defender Matt Viles puts the clamps on an Anaheim runner. The Junior Pee Wee Black Mustangs put out a big effort, but came up short, t 9-0. WATER POLO Newport splits SAN JOSE -Newport Harbor High's boys water polo team (13-12) split its final two games at the nu-West caI State Memorial Cup Invitational Saturday, besttng Clovis West, 13-10, then falling to Menlo, 11- 3, at Lynbrook High. Michael Vanderburg, Nathan Welner and Michael Bury led an 8-3 thlrd-quarter counterat- tack to sink Clovis West. Jay Thompson's 2-mete r defense was also a big part of the victory. Also from Friday's com- petition, the Sailors were 12-tb winners over Miramonte, keyel:t by the scoring of Ross Sinclair (three goals) and two goals each from Vanderburg, Brent Ann- strong and Thompson. J1V:W1SJ CM SJAD IMIADOML Nlllllalr ..... 1J. O.clMI -.10 Newport Hlrbor 3 0 • 2 • 13 CloYts West ' 3 3 3 • 10 Ne port -v~ l. Wittner 2. Slndair 2. Thompson 2. Bury 2. Armstrong 1, Lugo'· s.-. Md.ain 3. MIM.o 11, Nll'Man' HM90ll J Newport HMbor 0 1 1 1 • 3 MMto 2333 -11 NcwpcMt ·Weiner 1, Armstrong 1, vanes.burg '. s-. McUln 6. NiNlialT ...._. 12. MR D119 10 Newport Hwbor 4 3 l 2 -12 Mwtm0nte 4 l 2 1 • 10 Ne udpOl't • SlncWr ), Armstrong 2. vanes.burg 2. Thompson 2. Bury '·. Wein« 1, Lugo 1. s-. Md-. 1. TODAY'S SCHEDUll llllllU Co1e9emen-UClrw.11t ....... dli-.12. l!lml College.....,· YI SU!te ~ M UC IMnt. Jp.m. Colege women • c.i l'oly *' u.h Obllpo M UC 1Mne. 1 p.m. . ., .. ....,.,," OAMIFIEIAD 1IO' .... ,,.,.... c:-.. "*"' .... "' p¥t dot*. loWIW ...,.., ~ ..... .,, .i:. ~..,,., .,,. ............... .,,,::.. .. ..:'*111111 lft:llt191 By ...... _ :Ufl ~"'' B., s.,_. l.OMa ~. (~ lf.?b:! r II '"""" ..... •• ... • • f,.i.,.hot~ IJ~ru-l.UOp111 )laiotrt ,. n.111~ •• "lk b1 3-.:iOiom .a 00,lfll \to...At)-lrii&., Mo1.Ja> ..... F'riJay 5:00pn. Friday .. Tu"""'l..1 Mu..J.1 5.00...,, S...w.la1 Wcwlnt!lll11ty. '.fUe1KlaJ i:OOpm Suodily._ Tiau,,..ta,. .. Weil110Jay ';:()()pl SELL TI1w..da1 S.00.- 3.00.-., .. t'rid.y S:OOJ- ~ ""'~. 1, J.. ,;.,t ·~ • ' .... . .,, r .. ~ ~ .. ..\ ~ ,. .. , --4 . '. " ; I j "'' \ ~ , ~..._~ Fllde 36r 2 581, 2500 ., cAll hlll. din, gour ~ lam rm, nllmb. pet oil $3200' mo. Owr!l!c1 94H60-9008 Ellellde 1• 1111 -· Z8r t Be. S12!1G. 198 T ijp rtmOdllld, --ISO L!!d!!y ~ .. -,.....,,., .. ~_ ... _,~,..... ~.,~ . . ~ .. .-c,..:t~ ,_-:.~~ .: Hllt>or Hlal*ndl. Frea111y Oerotllad h 2ba, lam rm, 2-c gar, be4tA yanl, no pe1a. yrty $2700mo 949-723-0622 Cozy 38r 281 Clffltl9¥tn pool home, wondelfut pvt yl/d becks ID fllllKI CU, Pit o!, f3500rn 949-642-6443 ~Y..tyL-. 38r Oii ..... fUrnllMd. ~. Owrv/Atl MH7W777 • 2.581 large ~ ._ Newpof1 Hlll>Cr ~ 246 E 16111 S. I.QI A. S22Cnmo + $240IYsec lgl Dena ~~ vm !Ill ~"9'*A-18r octlage' &ea.Illy gated, pw- llct for Slngle, IYlli NoY 20. S 1450/mo. owr/1gt. 949, 722·8353 ·. ',, . ~ ,·..._ ... .. . . 'l . • k·-. - A all to dlS8l8al . willhdpl (949) 642-5() ,--< ,•.:.... .: : .. prol olb "*' 10 ..... ~ptle­ tice, wtly/montlly rat• aval. Medal or mtfUI hMlh welcofne Or o.y1I a.igh. 949-856-5800 .. Idell tot 8ecf.i.tll nc °' bolting lndullry. 5a1!l8 ID ...,, ~ Nm untum 949-723-3485. .,...._ Wlllta IO lhalt larvt •xiltlng office IP*" lfith same In Newport Bllch. ....25CMCl9 I 1 ·1 c· 1 » : '> i r., --:ir-~ J • • t . ' • ' !L WOlff TA....a BEDS TAN AT IQE IUY '*'ECT All> SAY£1 COMMEACIAUHOME unb "°'" $1119 00 Low lo6onlllly p..,_. FREI Cdor Cmloa Cd t.eQ0.711-015A The Calif. Nlllc- U llli tlts Com- mission REOUIRES htll!.-1~ hold goodl mcMrl prinC Mr p .u .c CllT~tmo. Ind~ P'tnl liair T.CP. IUllblr ii .. 81Mtti11M1111. If )IOU'-'.~ lonlbeulw---· ly ~ I lllCMr, ho or~. Cll: PUBUC llT1UT1ES COMMISK>N 714-SSM151 ...... ~ Anlloln pine wood ~ min. 8'T'H, 4'8"W, 2'0. Plid s 15()()'1111 .... -=rfllc. l100CYobo 949-723-0131 4 UpllotRMed dlnltte cllelrt, 1100. PIHN C::..-:,';"' ·.~··· t,lt.,:_~ ........ J DRIVERS WAHT'ED! 5el 'Pl own ~ PT 0t FT • aYll $75 t k».y Cll .... 251MZ71 Ot lff!ly . ~ ........ __ ............ ....,.., ...... ,. ...... -........... .............. .... ....... .., ..... .. _ a.all ......... ............ _ .... ,. ... = ~Jf...·:: ... ., 2 , ., ......... ,. ••••• ANTIQUE COu.ECTlllO .... loc tot • ,... ~ ,.~ .. tor t/2 COii cl ~ ...... 1117 .. , .-------, ::::': ~--= _ u;.-_...1~41 Alt8ll CounW~lf The Mii Room " Fmih Is 537 Newpolt C1r Or AW1 " p!!!Ol'I Ot Cli ~45 T~ Glw w/QJI IMm Mnnun 6 ECE wits tor FT ll'lllrC. 10dlllt I 2 yell old ....,-QOe POlilionl. Benlllll. Newpwl • Mir 8ldltca beedl 949-955-2e72 S5IOO lo ..... Call C!!PI! !!H7):1200 --wmr --..... ,.:, ••• I . I ' '',I • JW I ,.. oaOSVINO& a.umT lolb ~ Soul'I dmll. war . '' 0 917 NOSl'll •0762 o Alt' 0 lt73 ··"' o J IU2 •Q103% SOl111:I •Altl54 o QU o Al •ICU The bidding: .... -SOUTH WEST NOR111 I• ,._ CNT 50 ... 1• .... ... Opea.ina 1ea1: Nine ol o EAST ... .... In 1973, The Bridfe Worid cmied an llticte by ~ 1\uner in which a defencllsr deJibenttdy made 111 error ltlll would allow declarer to make a oontrw:t. but declarer could not elf onl ID lake advanlaae of IL 11 mites lhe pla)U look ailly, llld gh'CI lhc defendcn. ~ advan- laiC· This <bl, Ul wlUcb a couple ol cards have bceo awhched, Is from the hmd dw appeaRd In this column on Friday. "Em n/,.,., " ""JA'V 1ee. "Empl.e<JOO." ''Arbeitnehmer. " "Employe." ··= ..... 2001 w. ~ c-Hwy IM81 MIMl812 7 DAYa A WEEK 1CMlpm Clllwy Al*o V• .. ... IC, Ml 11"'.t - CAA LOAN l SALES S5K to $20K .. C8rl help. OM "' I c8ll at (1t~ 11,,.,,. "'--~~~~~~~~~~~~--~~~~~--t ill-!5!flt2 1 ...... 21-4317 T ODAY'S SUN.DAY PUZZLE 84 .......... IOOl'N 8eAatonllh ~&Ing 8bout labor 89 ci.op.n'1 Needle. tor one 93 Rowry neddlloe 94 "'Glllnf" Uhof Felber 85-CllSJlla 98 Yemeni pott 87 carp.neiy d10l'9 tooa.mboo....,. 103 C..1'**1 reiMIY9 1040llchn'• dMllc 105 MourUlnMf'• aong 108 81l1V-U-'• m•lrlatlou 1 10 Burdened 111 Mof'8Y9 112 Neid to 113 Stllge d I journey 114~feetur'M 11 e wi.. old bifdl 117 SctlJbtl 11 e ·-.,. hboetlr 119 Sllf.cy egcy. 121 MM9 I cf1dce 122 St.lone nldcnlme 124 Turf 125 Etnerlllda end nA>IM 128 Took by the t.ncl t28AQI...,,..,.. 1301:-" 132 Hiid C8nCIM 1';17~ 142Wen 143 l.AMn end CelHcl 144 CUpkta tllf'D9t 145 EJDtlllr1l inlllrMt 144='= 147 cn. atyte 1480oodl 149 AMce (1 lheep) 150 FIMtl tlood 151 Pwta In. p6ay 152Lmbe 153 Semple lood 72 Mai.ncholy 75 SopMO FllNll 76 nva..dmal ... 181 figlna 71 s..no'a need 79 .... 80 TMCharl' Of9o 12 Stwtl hlllltlt • Wt*9 to 99l •hero -~OOlf\#9 90Po«a 91 Adami d pop 1112 Show hom9ga IMSet\199 9811 notwal 98No,torYaltlln 100 Tl'aYalaf Mateo - 101W•'¥Jd 102New 103 Piece at lnaulatlon 104Qq> 108TwonlcMtl 107 Gouda r.u.tlve 108 T1t11 cos» SIM t 10 PM1e (brwic:haa) 112 WM en omen of 115 Pl'oapac:lo(1 quaat 118 Popeye'• oe...- 117Chalipbln 120 AlY*ltt Elnmln 122Calm 123~mr.. 124 ..... 125 c.rtM\ Jap91W ...,..,_ 1'Z7 Con9apondant ~ 128Damon 129 Ulgullticl aymbof 130Wenq 131A .. hall 132FNl....- 133 Coualn d PDQ 134 Rider'• can..,. Id 1315~from- 1382.2~ 1382001,a.g. 139-..U llldca 1401emel--r 141 91mgad lnllWmanl I, _ ...... ......... Wf711 _ .... .. miM ...... wt. ..... ................ --· ............. ...... .., ....... 111 ... Ymf7 .. ... .. ........ w.11 .. mew llMlll--VMMO .......... ~ 121.-Y0'7'Z .,.sa .. ....,...,, ... WMM ....... ...,., ...... Wiiie llllW54Cll .. ~"1.-v1• llllW74GI .. .... -....... vm74 lllW74Cl'Ot Bl!M~vnm lllW74GI.., llludn 121,111 Wlm lllW74Cll 'f7 ~--Vf21tl .......... Ii I N'e .... *" 1-... ... ........ Win • ...... cum• .... ..... wt., .......... .., ..., .... v ... ............. ........ ¥1114 ........... .., Wlillbwww ...,.. ¥2111 ....... '11 ...... 114,m Vll71t flarlCllllCWNN• ...,._..wm ........ ...., 113,IM V1441 MMSo..5915 CLASSIAEO (949) 542-5678 MAft'f womro WOIID YOU ~~W,~78 SELL YOUR USED VEHICLE . . THROUGH LASSIFIED (949J 642-5678 ave Call the Piiat Cle 111fled11 a t CB49J 84E!·ISB7B 't:o Pl 11 Yaur I A d i lido Isle $7,200,000 Boyfront home with incredible views and boat dock. 4 Bd. 4.5 Bo. Marilyn Read 71 8-2733 Lido Isl e $4,650,000 Immaculately maintained 4 Bd. lido Isle bay front, 52 h. on the water,. dock for large yachts. · Vicki lee & Marilyn Read 718-2722 .. 718-2733 4 Civic lllaza, Ste . 260 Newport Beach, CA 92660 ~ (949) 644-1600 RonHa Canyon $1,349,000 5 Bd. 4.5 Bo. plus library. Built-ins and 3 car garage. Guard gated.community. Merle Mertzel 717...4726 Pelican Polnl $5, 7 50,000 Beautiful 6 Bd . 7 .5 Bo. custom home overlooking golf course and white water ocean view. Sora Hinman & Brod Hinman 759-3705 ... 759-3732 MysHc llills $1.995,000 Consummate contempororr. home. Infinity edge pool. Ocean view balconies. Gourmet kitchen, home theater. Derik Brian 717...4797 C.OLDWeLL BAN~eR ~J l1J_o Isle $1.295,000 Georgous remodel on an oversized lot. 4 Bd. 3 Bo. Office. Formal dining room. Marilyn Read 71 8-2733 Cusbn home wtth libray, theater, game room ooa view. Beautifully landscaped yard featuring pool and~· · Soro Hinman & Brod Hinman - 759-3705,.., 759-3732 RonHa Canyon $1,395,000 ' Sophisticcned 5 Bd. 4.5 Bo. executive/family home. .... Gorgeous hardwood floors. Pool, SFXJ. Esther Fine 717-4764 3377 Via Lido Newport Beach, C~ 92663 (949) 723-8800