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HomeMy WebLinkAbout2000-12-02 - Orange Coast Pilot.• . . . . ' ........ ...... SERVING THE NEWPORT -MESA CO~UNmES SINCE 1907 ON THE WEB: WWW.DAILYPILOT.COM WEEKEND -DECEMBER 2.J, 2000 eas VOICES •As long as we have the ~/ming support of the citiuns of Orange Count): we are still vety confident that In the long run there will never be an airport at El Toro. 11 -Pulddes Executive director, El Toro Reuse Planning Authority •w. vi.wed MHsure Fas deceptive, a ~ upon the public. M)(/ the ccut ~ .• -0.WEllls Consultant for the Airport Wortdng Group •WP>M )OU have 67.3% of the people •inst the air- port and averwhelmlng public sentiment •Inst .,, airport tl>ere Is no .wy that three people on the Board of Supervisors can force ft down their throats. 11 -"'99 w.ten Spokeswoman for El Toro Reuse Pl1nning Authority ~drafted an Initiative using pol/Ing data and focus groups. They ~ren't conttmed about develop- ing good publlc policy. It wu confusion, at best and It took • judge to $CpOSe tlW' m111~ behaviof.• _...._,...... ~ C"1zens for Jobs and the Economy ~JudidMy should gen-• Bally not~ n.lf in tM lnltiatiw process. HoW- ewt; courts.,.~ compelled to do JO""*' meesures such as Fare so fundam«ttally fl.wed and in violation of IN Constltu- tK>t> arid laws of this state. 11 -Los Angeles County Superior Court Judge ...._ Otero. in his ruling SEAN Hill.ER I DAlY PILOT Airport Working Group oifldals celebrate Measure F losing in Los Angeles County Superior Court. From left are board member Tom Anderson, Vice President Rick Taylor, President Tom Naughton and Treasurer Anders Folkedal. What's next for -El Toro? Alex Cooll'Nln DAILY PILOT Following Los Angeles County Superior Cow1 Judge James Otero's decision overtwning Measwe F. the d1Iferent sides in the debate must decide what their strategy will be. Here's what some of them said: A CHANCE TO COMPROMISE Newport Beach officials and other supporters of an El Toro Airport say the victory on Measure F means an oppor- tunity to start working toward an air- port that will be acceptable to the entire county. "It might make everybody sit down at the table and talk about a reason- able airport,• Newport Councilwoman Jan Debay said. "It opens the door to some kind of constructive work together.• Bruce Nestande, president of Citi- zens for Jobs and the Economy. argued that a reasonably sized El Toro could strike a compromise between South County's desires and the need to pro- vide air transportation for the whole county. "We've got to do what we can do to downsize the auport, • he said. APPEALS AND MORE VOTES But South County airport opponents don't see the possibility of a compro- mise quite so clearly. For them, several other options are possible. First, an immediate appeal of Otero's decision is likely, said Meg Waters, spokeswoman for the El Toro Reuse Planning Authority. SEE EL TORO PAGE A 11 Greener ~ark Park to reopen today • Costa Mesa's playgrourid for pooches returns with fund-raiser to help pay for its upkeep. Jervttfer Kho DAILY PILOT lion and owner of a dog named Thunder. •we've waited six months for the open- ing, and we finally got it to happen. Thunder is looking forward to some real grass and to seeing his pals again.• The park was closed six months ago to allow the dty to add parking and walk- ways to improve access for individuals with disabilities, and to give the Costa Mesa Bark Park Foundation a cha.nee to grow grass. . ble as a fund-raiser to pay for the park's operating expenses. Bark Park T-shirts, calendars and other souvenirs will be on sale as part of the cel- ebration for the 2 112-acre space, which the city has operated for years. Newport Beach hails decision striking down initiative, but still vows to pursue El Toro airport. Alex Coolman and Mathis Winkler DAILY PILOT NEWPORT BEACH -El Toro actiVlSts received an early Chnsbnas present Friday as a Los Angeles County Supenor Court 1udge threw out Mea- sure F. the irutiabve that would have forced a two-thuds vote on any future county airport. Judge James Otero called the initiative unconstitutional- ly vague and a violation of the state requirement that mea- sures address only one sub- ject. "The judiciary should gen- erally not involve 1tsell in the initiative process,• Otero wrote. •However, courts are sometimes compelled to do so when measures such as F are so fundamentally flawed and in violation of the constitution and laws or this state." Measure F, passed resoundingly by voters in March, would have required approval by two-thirds of county voters for work on air- port, jail and landfill projects. For the Airport Working Group, an advocate of an w.r- port at the former El Toro Marine Corps Afr Station, Otero's rulmg was welcome news. "We're happy,' Sdld Dave Ellis, a consultant for the group. ·we viewed Measure F as deceptive, a ruse upon the public, and the court agreed in somewhat harsh language.• SEE MEASURE F PAGE A 11 COSTA MESA -Newly grown grass will meet a pack of dogs' paws today at the long-awaited reopening of the city's renovated Bark Park. •rm exdted, • said Unda West, treasur- er of the Costa Mesa Bark Park Founda- A temporary park for dogs was set up next to the Bark Park, but it wW close at 10 a.m. Saturday as the Bark Park reopens with a free festival that wW dou- Public review of the park renovations led to a heated debate about the ground cover last year. Dog owners spoke adamantly in favor of grass instead of wood chips, but dty officials said they f~ the expense of maintaining grass that dozens of dogs would trample every day. SEE PARK PAGE A 11 SlAN HUEfl I o.q,y "OT Pal, a Labrador, takes a last look at tbe te...,...ry dog park as his owner, Jack Wdght. drtYel Ida 11Way. Fonner student pleads guilty to burgl~g Costa Mesa High •Eric Edward Amos, 18, gets 60-day jail sentence for breaking ihto school ffices, stealing money. to 60 days in ~County Jail. Amoa, who WU arr8lted lbundey ~. W8I ftnt pulled ovW by police Nov. 24 fer an unrelel9d trdlc lllop, Mid o.ea Miiia PCllbi Sgt. Don Holald. •Dmtaa ti'* laf......-, ............. Rift .... aD lblile gummy r..r.,.· llalbd IOI. OIDil R' 7 I cl Amal, but cm MID---............. ...... w'ts'r' Pnl• llMI dslPmtNd A.- • t I altf , ............ .. .. al .. tiila•z• 11111 115l"'5 M QARBS • a 1ua. " -" •Ml•-• SB 11&•?11 I L-Atl .-SM 8 A2 Saturday. December 2, 2000 At Christmas. remember the tmemessage •GocJ granl you I.be light of CJu1stmas, which J.s faith; the warmth of ChriatmQJJ, which l.s Jove; the radiance of Chrlatmas. which l.s purity; the rlghteou.sneas of Christ· ma!, which ls justlce; the belief In Chri.st-· mas, which is truth; the an of Christmas, which iB Christ." • -Wilda English IT bat has to be one of the silliest ideas for a Christmas card that I've ever heard,• a woman said to me years ago. Actually, it was almost two decades ago. I didn't know tbe woman who made that statement. but I sure remember how startled I was when she said it so abrupUy. I was picking up a roll of pic- tw'eS I'd taken of our young daugh- ters. 1 hoped that somewhere in the package would be the perfect picture to use for our Christmas card that year. Actually the picture didn't have to be perfect. l just wanted one where the girls Qndy Trone Christeson MORAL OF THE STORY weren't wiggling and both were looking at the camera. Our daughters were 2 and 4 years old at the time, and it was a challenge to get pic- tw'eS where they both cooperated. f'm sure the funniest picture would have been one of us parents jwnping up and down and acting silly to get the girls to smile. I'd started sending photo cards four years earlier, after our first daughter was born. There are c:ounUess cards and choices now, but at the time there weren't many greet- ings to choose from to be printed under the photo. I think I recall the choices being "Peace on Earth," ·Joy to the World," ·silent Night," "Noel" and "Merry Christmas: I'd already used the first two greetings for two years each and was ready to try something new. •Maybe I'll choose 'Silent Night' this year,• I said to the man behind the counter. It was at that moment that the woman chimed in with her comment. The man helping me looked surprised. I'm sure I must have looked surprised. I looked at the picture again. I couldn't see anything silly about it. All I saw were two adorable, little, bare- foot girls in matching dresses. Their hair still looked good, thanks to the haircut an hour earlier and a little extra help from hair spray. They looked like angels and were sweetly holding hands and holding still. "I'm sony, I must be missing some- thing,• I said. "What is so silly about the picture?" "You 've got to be kidding," the woman said without hesitating. "Those children look plenty full of life and energy, and there's nothing silent-looking about them. How could you possibly choose 'Silent Night?' Are your nights really silent?• I didn't know whether to {eel embar- rassed. mad or appreciative. J looked at the picture again and then back at the message options. •you do have a point.· I said to her .. lbars when I opted for •Noel." A few years later, we started ma.king our own Christmas cards and writing our own meaages. They're usually about God's love, peace or joy. But the most important message about Ouistmas isa't what is writ- ten on a card, but what God wants to write on our hearts. And you can quote me on that. • ONDY 11IANI CHlllSTESON Is a Newport Be.c:tl resident who speaks frequently to parenting groups. She may be reached via e-mail ·at clndyOonthegrow.com or through the mall at P.O. Box 6140-No. S, Newport Beach, CA 92658. RE,ADQ$ HCJDM (949)642..oe& . . I o . . 1IMftl IAT YA.HM Of NEWPORT IEACHllRVINE Temple Bat Y.twn of Newport leldVIMne Is 1 reform congregation whole putpOM Is to wonNp God Jn ~ wtth the f atth of refonn Juct.lsrn; to promote retigba educ.adon; to promote a,ttural and spfr~ tua1 Wetflte of Its members as Jw'5 and as members of the general communfty; and to~ the llbef1I ~of the Jewish trldltlon. w.ekly ~.,..on ~ n I p.m .. .apt on the first FricMy of the month, when e femlly leMce Is held l....ed at 6 p.m. SeNtces .,.. trldttlonal end Include pr.,-s. singing and a te«hlng. 0-Ud care Is provided at 111 terVkes and family actMties. MM'k S. Miiier Is senior r.t>bl. Jonathan Grant Is cantor. The temple Is at 1011 Qmelbldc. Newport Bud\. (949) 644-1999. Dolly Pilot . II THE SPIRIT Harbor _tian Church ADDRESS: 2'01 Irvtne Ave., Newport'Beach. Nearest aoss street 11 Santa Isabel Avenue TELEPHONE: (949) 6'5-5781 DENOMINATION: Christian Church (Disciples of Christ) YEAR otURot ESTABLISHED: 1960 SERVICE TIMES: Sunday wor- ship and communion is at 10 a.m., Sunday school for chil- dren 10 and younger meets at 10 a.m., and adult Sunday school meets before the wor- ship service at 8:30 a.m. On Thursdays, a women's Bible study and prayer group meets at 10a.m. SPEOAL DEaMBER SERVICE: Harbor Christian will rededi- cate its sanctuary Sunday. The church has been repainted, inside and out, and a large cross bas been added. The con- gregation bas designated the day as a special Sunday to wel- come all visitors. A luncheon will be provided for all guests after the 10 a.m. worship ser- vice. For more information, call the church office. otRJSTMAS EVE SERV1a: A candlelight service will be held at 7 p.m. Dec. 24. SENIOR PASTOR: Dennis Short. Short bas a doctorate in humane letters from Chapman University. SIZE OF CONGREGATION: 120 MAKEUP OF CONGREGATION: Parishioners range in age from 15 months to 93 years and are a mix of singles, couples, families and children. The segment of young adults is expanding. There is a group of young adults and singles that has dubbed itself •Tue Young and the Rest of Us.• Junior and senior high school youth groups meet regularly. otllD CARE: Provided at the 10 a.m. service and as needed for other meetings and events. TYPE OF WORSHIP: Worship services are a blend of tradi- tional and contemporary. Con- gregational singing of hymns -including a wide variety of spiritual, communion, praise and ethnic songs -is a large part of the Sunday service. A lay leader leads the litany, chil- dren's sermon and offertory during the service. Pastor Short Faith CALENDAR SPICW MlllS HOUDAY BAU>..R GREG FllY I DN..V Pl.OT Dennis Short Is the pastor at Harbor ChrUtlan Church. where tbe redecllcatton of the aandu.ary will take place Sunday. The church lharel Its apace with the congregatton of Temple llalab. delivers the day's message. The church has a fine choir under the leadership of director Michael Phillips and accompa- nist Mavis Pietila. TYPE OF SERMON: The mes- sage is most often based on a scripture from the Revised Common Lectionary. It is con- temporary, offering practical guidance and direction for dai· ly Christian living. UPCOMING SERMON: The mes- sage for Sunday is titled •Building for the Future.• WELCOME WAGON: The con- gregation has official greeters. but all members strtve to wel- come guests and newcomers with the open arms of genuine hospitality. They consider com- munity to be the.heart of the congregation. OUTREAot PROGRAMS: Har- bor Christian Church supports the work of world missions and homeland missions, which pro- vide both physical and spiritual sustenance to people through- out the world. Pastor Short is co-chairman of the Regional Social Concerns Committee. The church supports FISH-Har- bor Area, the Interfaith Shelter, the Interfaith Hunger Walk and the Tijuana Christian Mission. Pastor Short and members a.re also active in the Newport Mesa Irvine Interfaith Council. DRESS: Informal CHURCH DESIGN: The main building, which is 1padous, open and multi-functional, and sanctuary were built in 1973. The design incorporated ideas from the entire c:ongreqation. Espedally notable a.re walls that surround the building in a manner intended to express arms outstretched to the com- munity and the stained-glass windows. MISSION STATEMENT: Th~ Christian Church (Disdples of Christ) proclaims Jesus as Lord, draws its inspiration from Saipture and the Holy Spirit, witnesses and serves among the whole human family, acknowledges that Christian unity and Christian mission are inseparable, and claims as its particular mission the quest for the reunion of the body of Christ, celebrating weekly around the Lord's table the life, death and resurrection, and continuing presence of its Lord. INTERESTING NOTES: The con- gregation of Temple Isaiah has shared Harbors facilities for 24 years, including some joint ser- vices. Pastor Short is a licensed marriage, family and child counselor and is also very active with Marriage EncoUJlter. He does a lot of pre- marital counseling and presides at many weddings at Harbor Christian Church; Community Church, Congregational (Coro- na del Mar); and other lites around the county. -Michele MarT as well as seasonal hand-bell classics by the California Hand-bell Ensemble. $12 or $10. (714) 564-4000. p.m. Dec. 13. Free. The school. a ministry of Llberty Baptist Church; is at 1000 Bison Ave., Newport Beach. (949) 760-~. SPITZTAUC HANUICKNf CElEBRATION The .l':~le Bat Yahm Sisterhood's annual Han Bazaar will bold a grand opening preview from 6 to 8 p.m. today at Temple Bat Yabm. 1011 Om>elback St., Newport ~ch. Remaining boW'S are 9 a.m. to 3 ~~ and Monday, 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. y Rabbi Elie Kaplan Spitz, a spiritual leader at Congregation B'nai Israel in Tustin. will talk about Jewish views of the ~erlife at tbe Fes· ttval of Books, which wW be held at 1 p.m. Dec. 10 at the Jewish Community Center, 250 E. Baker St., Costa Mesa. Tickets are avail- able at the center. (714) 755--0340. OtRISTMAS MUSIC Cbabad ofirvine will hold a Grand Hanukkah celebration at 4 p.m. Dec. 21 at Fashion Island in Newport Beach in the Bloomingdales courtyard, 905 Newport Center Drive, New· port Beach. (949) 786.5000. WOUSHOPS MEDITATION LESSONS Wednesday, and 9 a.m. to noon Thursday. Nfmipion for the preview is $1.50, which includes cbampogne, hors de oeuvres and a 10% disoount on all merchandise that niQht (vendor sales not included). (949) 64-4-1999. HOUDAYCONCERT The Holiday Festival Con.cert will be held at 8 p.m. Friday at St. Andrew's Presbyterian Church, 600 St. Andrews Road, N"ewport Beach. The concert wW feetw-e the California Master Chorale with Ci.'Ollductor I.any K. Ball, CA t2S2C. Cowight No MM*>-,_ ._...._, .....W !Mttllr Annual Christmas concerts will be held at St. Andrews Presbyterian Church, 600 St. Andrews Road, Newport Beach, at 4 and 7 • p.m. Dec. 10 and 17. The concert wW featwe carols by Alfred Burt. a congregation sing- along and other Christmas selections. $8. (949) 574-2231. SCROOGE REVISED Newport Christian School will perform its Christmas play, "6th Grade Scrooge," at 7 WEAIHER AID SUlf A •lectio divtna • meditation will be held weekly beainoinu at 7: 1r::. Thws- days at Our Lady Angels Parllh Center, 2046 Mar Vista Drive, Newport Beach. Ledio II a style of meditation that includes Uling Satp- ture or a sJ>8d,al reading u a llttmulus. Pree. The Cbrisda.n Meditation Group meets on the first and third Wednesdays of each month kom 7:30 to 9 p.m. at the center. lbe format incudes two periods of meditation with IClln8 instruction on bow to meditate, a talk and a discussion. (949) ?19-1408. P.OLICI flUS "9cofd yo.w o:M••·-aboUt the Delly Not or news tlpl; Of ............. hit.in CM be ,.,raduald wtehcMlt Wltnln ,.. .....,,.. of~ CllWIW • ~ ..... TIDIS TODAY Fitst low COSTA Miii YOLM.N0.287 "'°'' ......... .,.., ........... ftWIOW. Editor U.CNel QyEdltof .,._ .... ~QylcMof •• ••w. ,._.. ldlllor ... 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Jew9lry valued It ---NPO't- ed llllOlen hm • holftl In the 100 ........... ,..... .... .._,.... *"=' 1al11tleG11..._._. ---... ... ........ Z:11ua,.... a 0 .. . ...... ,... .............. . .......... _ ..... , ....... ,, ' . . ' ~ . . Daily Pilot Saturday, December 2, 2000 A3 Bullies, vandals must learn actions have consequences A week ago, actor Robert Downey Jr., out on bail, was arrested in Palm Springs on suspicion of pos- ~n of cocaine and · methamphetamine. The day after his arrest. the prcxiucers of the television series •Ally McBeal, • on which Downey has a recurring role, said they were not sure whether he would be invited back on the program. But two days ago, the pro- ducers reported that the ;\.cademy Award-nominated actor would be invited back and may be offered more work than just the 10 episodes for which he is already committed. One of the reasons that Downey, Darryl Strawberry and our own Todd Marinovich can bounce back time and again is because our society has decided lb.at criminal behavior based on conscious choices is no longer a aime but a disease. But it seems to me that it's only a disease if you're good at making money for someone else. - Steve Smith WHAT'S ~P? Now we read that our schools are under attack by vandals and kids looking for fights. The dirty little secret of recurring vandalism on so many campuses for so long has been revealed in a big way. Even KFI-AM (640), a 50,000-watt radio station that on a clear evening can be heard as far away as Yosemite National Park, picked up the story and reported it two days ago. The KFl news report even detailed an attempt by vandals to blow up the kitchen at one school by leaving on the gas. At Kaiser Elementary Scboot violence has escalated to the point where outside intervention ls occurring. · ls the school hiring a pri- vate detective to uncover the bullies? No. Are they posting security guards on campus to send students the message that assault is a crime and will be dealt with by the swiftest means possible? No. Officials have decided lb.at like Downey, Strawberry and all the other prcxiucts of our leniency, criminals are ill. At Kaiser, students are receiving five "Souper Safe Schools" anti-violence lessons. The program is based on the book "Chicken Soup for the Preteen Soul" and pro- vides teachers with simple lessons to teach kids how to combat violence by, for exam- ple, smiling. The program addresses issues such as "lack of respect, belittling other stu- dents, low self-esteem, the perception that telling an adult is 'tattling.' and taking responsibility for actions or lack of action.· So now the dreaded ·s • word -self-esteem -has again invaded the region. I know this will come as a shock to the authors and to many others, but low self- esteem does not cause crime. On the contrary, history shows that our greatest tyrants bad an abundance of self-esteem and self-co.nfidence. I'm not against the •Chick- en Soup• program as long as it is accornpanietl by a very strong message lb.at perpetra- toJS of violence and vandalism will be punished to the full extent of the law (critics, please read that sentence 'again). And by violence, I do not mean common schoolyard scraps. I mean premeditated attacks on students that in the adult world would constitute the crime of assault. But did we get this mes- sage from anyone? No. Was it reported that when the suspected vandals are arrested their parents will be held responsible for the dam- age? No. Where was the outrage? Where was someone from the Newport-Mesa Unified School District vowing to use every means available to find these criminals, not resting until they are brought to jus- tice? Downey was turned in by an anonymous caller to the police, who arrested him in his Pahn Springs hotel room. lbat call confirmed my belief lb.at no matter who you are, some- one is waiting to turn you in. Police use infonnants to catch a huge percentage of suspects. So the first thing I suggest the school district do is estab- lish a hotline for leads; a dedi- cated line that takes only anonymous calls with tips for the police. This number should be plastered all over every school to act as a deterrent to aimi- nal behavior. Kids know which other kids commit crimes and someone. some- where is willing to tum them in if they are given the right opportunity. Television producer Nor- man Lear thinks Downey is ill As the son of a man who drank bis way through the prime of his life, J will state that it drug addiction, alco- holism and a propensity toward violence are diseases, J am E1vis Presley. But as we know, whenever anyone is ill, they should be given a nice, hot serving of chicken soup. ••• Do yourself a huge favor and make a reservation at the Coach House in San Juan Capistrano to see Corona del Mar's own Brian Barrett and Big Top play three hours of John Lennon and Beatles music Dec. 15. This will be a fun evening; a tribute to Lennon and this fabulous music. See you there. For reservations or infonna- tion, call (949) 496-8930. • STEVE SMITH is a Costa Mesa res- ident and freelance writer. Reade~ can leave a message for him on the Daily Pilot hotline at (949) 642-6086. ORDER YOUR FRESH HOUDAY1URKEY 1VDAY.' RangeGrown No Hormones~ or Growth Stimul.ants WHOLESOME FOODS WHOLESOME FOODS MILLERS HONEY e REG. '7.79 ACEl'YL L<'ARND1NE ,,_.,,._,..., Q9r -500 MG " ............... ] ........ ........... • ,, r REG. Q.rganlc Sugar The altematloe for refined 49 6Ufl'll' REG.•ut 2111. Vitamin E 400 RJ 100% Natural 1-olpM '/bcopherol &mixed ~ IOOG.9'1 •• lOOolo Pure & Natural RawW-dd Honey REG. '7.99 31b. Dead Sea Mineral Bath.Salts Drrn.os out tmins, reduces aches . and pains, M>lmls lkin & relieves mu · • Umcaded Earth Science"' Bath and ShowerGel ...... ~ .... ... FM.llpe • R '4uaut ...... REG. '7.75 Pure• ic Revitallzini BodyWuli Free fu/lslzie Wilh,....,. of ~wash. IUY ONE GET ONE FRHI FARM FRESH PRODUCE I., . •• . . . .. .. A4 Soiurdoy, December 2, 2000 Doily Pilot 1 . r I NEWPOIT·MESI SCHOOL 10111 WllP·UP Workers remove trapped cars Inside EDUCATION WHAT HAPPENED: The board was updated Tuesday on construction progress at Newport Coast Elementary School. The dis- trict is a bit behind schedule and mo re than $10,000 over budget. Major delays stem from problems getting the school's windows and the removal of large boulders, which also put the district over budget. · WHAT IT MEANS: Ba rring a week of rain or any othe r majo r setbacks, the school will open in Janu· ary after the winter break. There will be several tasks remaining that will be com- V HARBOR CHRllTIAM CHURCH i_ (Dlaclplea of Christ) 2401 lrvlne Ave • .t S.nlll label Newpoft IHCll Sund1y Worship · 10:00AM ~Saint Michael & All¥ PaalK v-11 M"'1"""" Coro ... cld M~, • 64+-0463 BlJIWINC OUR liMTHJ UN1NG OlRIST ANDSF.IMNC OURCOMMUNlTY The Rcv"d Peter D. Haynes, Rector SUNDAY SCUl!PULE 8 am • Holy Eucharilt 9 am -Adult Bible Scudy I 0 am -Cboral Eucb.arist NURSERY C4RJ! A VA/LUI.LB SAINT JAMES CHURCH EPISCOPAL ;:~~ The Very Rev Ur.en !mid And.non, Rect>r 3209 VIO Lido Newport Beoch 949/675-0210 • 7:30 om Traditional 9omCa~ 9omehurch 10:"5 om Oiarismatic ondWi Noon @COMMUNITY CHURCH CONGREGATIONAL UNITED CHURCH Of CHRIST To IWtw II to C...; To C... II to 00. Bruce Van Bl1if-. Minist« Chip Fisher, P1stor Worship Service 8:00 & 10:00 am 9 oo.m Milt Chufch School l<H>Oem -Sunday School 'Child Care Provided 61 I Hehotrope Ave., CorONI del MM .. 644-7400 Newpon c.enter United Methodist Chwtb Rrv. Cathleen Coou. Pastor 1601 Margucrirt Avt. wncr of Marguerirt and San Joaquin Hilll Rd <9•9> 6«-07•s MIM,,_ UNrTID MmtOellT CMU9CH 1791 ..... ,C.& W..lhlp&a-dt ..... ........ , ....... °'~ ,,. pleted on weekends and after school, said Mike Fine, the district's assistant super- lntendent of business services. WUI HAPPINIDs Ryan lelu, the student board member from Costa Mesa High School, reported . Tuesday that the student food . drive for Thanksgiving was a success. WHAT II MUNS: Students far surpassed their goal of collecting 1,900 cans. which would have been about one can per student. They collected 2,600 cans. WHAT HAPPENED: The school board on Tues- day set two meetings and canceled a third. WllAI n llUllSs The board scheduled its annual organizational meet- Ing for 7 p.m., ~ Dec.121nthe District Educa-· tlon Center. The board also scheduled a pub- lie hearing for 6 p.m. Tuesday In the District Education Center to allow the publk an oppor- tunlty to discuss the charter school proposal that was sub- mltted by parents last month. The regular meeting sched- uled for Dec. 26 was canceled. NEii MIRING The public hearing will take place at 6 p.m. Tuesday at the District Education Center, 2985-A Bear St., Costa Mesa. The next regular meeting will take place at 7 p.m . Dec. 12 at the same location. Worken used cba1ns Friday to pull out four can that were trapped in a lower lev~ struc- lure ol a build- 1ng near Rhine Channel in Newport Beach. The garage of a 23- year-old building on Lafayette Street caved in Nov. 6, when a rusty sup- port beam gave way. The perking structul'e snapped off the main office building and tipped toward the bay, a portion of it resting on the shallow end of the bay. On the day of the col- lapse, one car was partially submerged. As days went by. two more cars slipped partially Wlder the water. Deniotition o( the build- ing -which was declared unsafe by the dty -will begin Wednesday, contrac- tor Jeff Thnner said Friday. It was or:ig1naDy sched- u1ed for Monday, but has been postponed because dty staff want to review the SEAN Hll.ER I DAILY Pl.OT Jeff Tanner wades through water to get to a car that hu been in a collapsed water-front building. demolition plan. be said · ed. furniture was removed •Originally w e were from the building, and 5anning to bring in shoring work was done. es to bring down the Officials said the demobbon ding,• Tanner said. that oould cost nne than •aut now it looks like we $100,000 is a tricky, chaJ. may just do it by band.· Jenging and unique project Work has been going because of the water, tides on for a week to prepare and the sea wall for the demolition. Utilities were disoonnect· ~Hpa Bharath NEWPORT STONE & D ESIGN CENTRE COMPLETE D ES IGNER SHOWROOM No matte< what you're dotng, your bometown newspaper Fff'S IN ••• Dally Pilot The Church of Yahweh Welcome to The Church of Yahweh. The church on the web. We are always open. It.ND we don't pass the plate . Symbol ls God"s name "Yahweh• "His_...._. dllin1'JllMllM1t/Mff"'' us St. John The Baptist ROMAN CATHOLIC Cm.iRCH for the Traditional Advent Season in Preparation for Christmas See you this weekend Saturday: 5:00 pm (7 pm Vietnamese) Sunday: 8 am, 9:30 am, l lam, 12:30 pm, 5:00 pm (7 pm Spanish) We are located at: 1015 Baker St., Cost.a Mesa (South of 1..-fOS btrwun F~ and Bristol) • "A God-centered parish community, insuucud IJt the Word of God and renewed by chc Saaamena Our Lady Queen of Angels 2046 Mar Vim Drive Newpon Beach, California 92660 (949)644-0200 Fax (949)644-1349 Rev. Monsignor William P. McLaughlin, Pastor IJTURGlES: Satwday, 5 p.m. (Cantor), Sunday, 7:00 (~). 8:30 (Contemporuy). 10:00 (Choir), ____ 11_:30_a.m_. (Canror) and 5:00 p.m. (Conwnporvy) FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST 3303VlaUdo Newpclt Becxtl 673-1340 or 673-6150 Olurc:h 10 am St 5 pn. Sunday Schoel 10 am WIG.OZ,~l pa SECOND CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST 3100 Padflc vi.w Dr. Newport Beach 644-2617 or 675-4661 Clurc:h lOam Sunday Sc:t¥>Ol 10 am """*..:bt ....... • s-• , .. ~_.,., nnoan GtUta Tat 11' 't Ml ht ..... ,. .................... Wllktl ....... . ..... , ..... I .................. . ._..,,ftr ....... Oft•ftr..,_Dmfla.ti.,..._ ...... Hmt- •Do You Have A Hearing Heart?" (Matthew 13:13ac13) ... ttMMO~&emaDe ·~.-. T_ ... . a-.. •'Ila. ti. w.-. • ..,.....,....Caoloo ........... ~-~ ·a-~.,., --c.,. ·-· ........ · __ . ...._ g;,,." g;,/j.{'w ~ 'fil- l'~ .~to UMtO- !aw 4:!6-N ~ 'II~ COi'f ~ ~l'W"-~ ~ I I'\, '"11 ,, I .1111nl I ti\\( I IC11t' \\ 1il1 l ,: •• cc AJ!.cncy AlTfO •HOMEOWNERS• H~I 40 *ars In Business ~~ ~ <.,--~ -~-----./ > #'J 949-631-7740 441 Old"Ncwport Bhd. • Newport Badi (N.r ff-. Hotplcal) Come Enjoy Holiday Shopping •.• The Way It Should Be •.. £ Easy Parking-Front & Rear £ Unique Toys & Stocking Stuffers £ Free Gift Wrapping • D,i.plf's • Cl'iilll • ~. ,... • ,.... I 'I, I t I 1 \ I ' ' . . I " 'I I ' :::. -·-......... ~--_.,,._._.,,,.. __ \ .. Doily Pilot Rock around the chalk •.Newport Elementary School puts on musical with a '50s flavor. Salurday, December 2, 2000 AS Putting the pedal to the mettle •Races for toy cars take plaCe ~y at the f~.though not all the prized autos will be running. m • --Holidmv"C. Show M1d TQV Oriw. Including • pedal CM lnvttationel •Where. Orange Coun- ty Market Pike, 88 Fair Drive, Costa Mesa )c)oldng pees.I mn. ....... tad said. Chuck ADdenclo. .. On&edo ftJlidml wllb. Modll T 1budDg Sb9llt aad, a ma Model T Jllnluuck m11 • ma Model Tpkkup tnJck. illlll* am aren't raced became Ibey are too Wluable. Danett. Goulet DAILY PILOT JENNIFER TAYLOR I DAILY PILOT Studen1s perform "Jailhouse Rock• d~g the '50s musical "Jukebox Jtvtn•• show at Newport Elementary School. ~Kho DAILY Pit.OT FAIRGROUNDS -Dri- vers won't need to gas up to prepare for the car races at the Orange County Market Place today. • Wh9n: 8 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. Saturday • c.: (949) 723-6660 or visit http:Jlwww. ocmartftpl«e.com. Andenon: who ... dd- ven to begin J9StOliDg -_. later building-pedal C81'1 IO he could gtve one to bil granddaughter, Mid il --him between twO and • NEWPORT BEACH They were twistin' and a tumin', they were a movin' and a shakin'. Students at Newport Ele- mentary School began rock- ing the house Friday morn- ing and will continue to do so all weekend long, per- forming an original musical: •Jukebox Jivin' -How My Grandparents Invented Groovy.• A morning sneak preview for students had one young audience member so inspired he began flailing about in a seated rendition of the 1\vist. "Jukebox Jivin'" is a compilation of scenes that depict life in the 1950s, as it was for characters Grandma Molly and Grandpa Alvin. The play, which includes 122 students in kindergarten through the sixth grade, is an undisputed blast for chil- FYI Performances of "Jukebox Jivin' -How My Grand- parents Invented Groovy" are at 7 p .m. today and 4 p.m. Sunday in Newport Elementary School's audi- torium. For ticket infor- mation, call Chris Means (949) 675-4964. dren to perform and a riot for parents to watch. •My favorite scene is probably 'Splish Splash,· because I get to be in the bathtub," said Spencer Ashurst, 10. Spencer was also in a hilarious scene that had poor Grandpa Alvin landing in the clink. Clad in striped prisoner pajamas, students slid across the school's stage on their W'e're Bursting With Quality Furniture at Great Savings! • MIHlll Home FrnwitM1Y • Anti.pes •Art • kcasoria •Arr• RMp d-Morr! C111wm R.eforishi"K d-Upho/mry (949) 646-1822 670 W. 17th St., 102 • c.o.ta Mesa ......... .._ ____ ..;;;;; __ ..... Hnn: Mon.-Pri. J J111n • 4pm Celestino's-.- quality MEATS 1llft FREsHPORK ITALIAN SAUSAGE Hot or Mlkl $34! Celestlno's bas Holiday Wrap Beef Jerky! Makes Great Stocklna Stulfen! knees and swung their hips to Elvis Presley's hit ·Jail- house Rock." •rt took u5 about three weeks just to get ready,• said Brock Scbulei, 10. Prisoners even did acro- batics in the county jail, where the youngest little prisoner was a ldndergart- ner. •What happe ned is, we tried to develop a musical that was inclusive," said writer and director Robin Morrison. "Plays usually have maybe tow lead char- acters, and then the rest are background. We wanted something more active." With 14 scenes a nd 122 students, the production is definitely active. Creative choreographer Deborah Garrett has chil- dren bopping like they were born in the '50s, to such clas- sics as "Rockm' Robin," •Lollipop," "Hand Jive." ·wake Up Little Suzy• and "Rock Around the Clock." The racers -all young children -will rely entirely on pedal power. ·1 think pedal cars invoke nostalgia in a lot ol people,• said Illl Lloyd. spokeswoman for the Orange County Mar- ket Place. •1rs a lot like the attractioo of regular classic or antique cars. They bring back memories of good times. A lot of people who participate tend to be older adults wbo remember the pedal cars from their childhood. It's about remembering the good old days, and at some time or another the cars were part of their lives. They are not so much a part of today's chil· dren's childhoods; technology has changed that. Pedal ca.rs are small-scale models of real cars, run by pedals instead of motors. Between 40 and SO pedal ca.rs -mostly antique or classic car models -have so far entered the first pedal car invitational. which will ~ OUR MEALS ARE A TRIP TO MEXICO ALSO ON O\JR /l\£NU: .FISH TACos· TORTILLA SOUP CHILI SIZE CHILI oum 0/1\UETTt WE TAICE DINING TO THE NEXT LEVEL! part of the first Holiday Car Show and Toy Drive, said Jason RiJDestAd. another market place spokesman. The car show, which will take place from 8 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. Saturday at 88 Pair Drive, will cost $10 and will include U classes of display competition. Pedal car races will start at 10 a.m. and will be held every hour until 2 p.m. The sbow will be free for donors who brtng toys for needy children to the event. Project Cuddle, a 10-year-Old nonprofit organization, will give the toys to foster chil· dren at its annual holiday ~market place decided to include ped4l cars because they are toy cars and fit in with the toy drtve theme, Rhnestad said. But many people take the tiny, shiny toys sedously. •lbere Is a whole culture of building these antique- months to build eecb. car, which can sell for as i:Dud1 • $4,500. Ben Laurence; an Jmne resident who ~ the vice~ the -anapolis 500, bU eoter9d two pedal c:ars in the tboW: a Curtis Midget and a 1926 Bugatti · The Midget took about a week to build. be Mid and the Bugatti -which iJdgbt be a pedal car race oomes.. tant. -took about a month. ·Tuey'n! toys, and every- one likes toys,• said Lau- rence, who built his first ped- al car in 1949 to give to bis son. ·1 was always tnlen!ltled in cars, as far back as I am remember. They were fald. nating and shiny. When I wu growing up, cars had cbnlme all over them. I've always been involved with cars, and I enjoy car shows becaU9e irl delightful to watch kids' eyes bug out when they spot them. Some ot tbe adults are no different. People get adt- ed about tbem.. ~ Me9TWOogj wiln YWDeU&OM!oM;$~ 5~ ,. • I . A8 So!urday, ~ 2, 2000 }, . . . . . . Dally Pilot It's Christmas Walk tim,e again in Corona del Mar ....... TO• tional ii indUded u part ot the f8ltivitiel. Sl for adults and fnle for cbUdren 12 and younger. (949) 723~. C orona del Mar will have Its 22nd annual Cbrtlt· ... Walk from 11 a.m. to 4 f:i'cl Sunday. The event will ude entertainment, children'• games, prizes and a Tuys foe 1bts drive. To par- ticipate in the toy drive, you can bring a new, unwrapped toy that will be distributed for charity. There will also be an opportunity drawing to win prizes that are valued from $25 to $2,680. Partidpating merchants will sell tickets for $1 each, or $10 for 11. Santa Claus will be on band for complimentary photos, and Frosty the Snowman will make an appearance. Enter- tainment will be provided by carolers, strolling musidacs, a balloon-maker an~a magic show called •Magic of the Holiday• will take place in front of the library. There's an amazing selec- tion of orchid plants at low prices at Green Systems lnter- DBUonal. It's open this week- end for its first Saturday of each month sale. The whole- sale tropical nursery is open from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. today and Sunday. It's known as Newport Beach's only commercial orchid nursery. It's at 20362 Birch St in Newport Beach. lnfonnation: (949) 756-1211. The Chrtstmas Tree Jam- boree is back in its 11th year Greer Wylder BEST BUYS of selling beautiful Christmas trees at low prices. 1b1s year, the trees from the Pad.fie Northwest are priced from $32.95 for a noble fir, grand fir and Douglas fir. The bal- sam firs from Nova Scotia are priced from $39.95, and the Fraser firs from North Caroli- na are priced from $39.95. Small trees are priced from $14.95. The Christmas tree Jamboree is at the Newport Dunes in Newport Beach. Look for the coupon in today's paper for a saving of $2 off on a 20-inch or 24-inch noble fir wreath. Belllsstma Oestgner Con- signment Boutique is moving into the former Orangewood Boutique location in Corona del Mar. The move, which is going on this week, will take Bellissima from its Poinsettia Avenue location in Corona del Mar to 2850 E. Coast Highway in Corona del Mar. Information: (949) 675-9756. The ~ted edition holi- day Reyn Spooner abirta have arrived at Al-Ea.e, KQaU Smf Shop and Guys bland. The collectible lbirtB oome in sizes for boys at $45 and men's sizes all the way up to extra, extra, extra large for $65. At-Ease and Ga.rvs Island are at Fashion island in Newport Beach. Kaya.ks Surf Shop is in Westcliff Plaza in Newport .Beach. WUUam Harold Jewelen is having a semtacnl«ll half. off sale just in time for holi- day shopping. The sale will last through l:>ec. 24. The jewelry selection at William Harold ranges from estate jewelry, diamond wedding sets, antique and fine jewelry, and watches. There is also a watch and jewelry repair ser- vice, free verbal appraisals, estates bought and sold, and dealers are welcome. William Harold Jewelers is at 3116 Newport Blvd. in Newport Beach. Information: (949) 673-0365. Fashion Wand is geared up for the holidays. The country's largest Christmas tree -a 115-foot white fir ....... is towering over the Bloomingdale's Courtyard, 8500-81,000 OFF St:op in and ·sea Ona of the Greatest: Salact:ions of Pool Tablas in Orange Count:y .. ,_._ THB MISSION . \ ... • and Santa'• Village ii in full swing n84lby. The Puhion Island management team recommend• that lf you want to beet the crpwds at Santa'• Village, visit Santa on weekday mornings and weekendl before noon. Once inllde Santa's tiny cot· t.age, you'll be able to buy a photo with Santa, a meme- rable holiday keepsake, with a portion of the photo proceeds going toward HomeAid Ora,:1J: County, a nonprofit org ation that builds shelters for the homeless. To make shop- ping easier at Fashion Island, there is a valet park- ing service during all center hours for $5 now through Dec. 26. The valet is between Bloomtngdale's and Neiman MarCUI. There's a year-end clear- ance sale going on at Decor Contemporary Fumlsblngs. All floor models are reduced 20% to 50%. There's also savings on special orders. 1be twniture selection includes modem coffee tables, armolres, sofas, chairs, tables and more. It's at 1800 Newport Blvd. in Costa Mesa. • IEST BUYS appears Thursdays and Saturdays. Send information to Greer Wytder at 330 W. Bay St., Costa Mesa, CA 92627, or via fax at (949) 646-4170. • Send,,....., 10WN ltemS to tn. o.11y PUot. no w. a-v st.. Costa Mesa, CA 92827; boJ fu to (949) 64M 170; 0t by calllng (949) 57~. Include the Ume. ~ -location of the ewnt M Mil • I cont.act phone num- ber. A complete listing Is avall- 1ble It ltttp:Jlwww.d•l/ypllot coni. TODAY A •mlnar for people who pl4n to start a business or have recently established a business will be held from 8:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. at Nation- al University, 3390 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa. The event will be conducted by the Orange County Chapter of the Semce Corps of Retired Executives Assn. $40, with a $.5 reduction if prepaid (714) 550-7369. Orange Coast College'• Marine Science Depart· ment will host a public open house from 10 a .m. to 4 p.m. in the Marine Sd- ence Lab in the Lewis Cen- ter for Applied Sciences, 2701 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa. Free. (114) 432-5602. A holiday car show and toy drive will be held from 8 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. at the Orange County Swap Meet, 88 Fair Drive, Costa Mesa. A pedal car invita- The ()rage Apple Com- puter Oub will Present a program on euy audio for the Web at 8 a.m. in the Chem.iltry Building at Orange Coast College 2701 Fairview Road,~ Mesa. Pree. (949) 170-1865. A one-day "TU Prac:Uuon. en' Institute• will be pre- sented from 8:30 ·a.m. to 4:30 p .m. in Room 119 of Orange Coast College's Pine Arts Hall, 2701 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa. $65. (114) 432-5880. 1be Plecemaken' annual Cblistmas Festival will be held from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday and Sunday at the Piecemakers Country Store, 1720 Adams Ave., Costa Mesa. Free. (714) 641-3112. "Tramtttom," an Empow- erment Series workshop sponsored by the Alzheimer's Assn. of Orange County and other health care agendes, will feature speakers Ann Hablitzel and Shvonne Stricklen from 9 to 11 a.m. at· the Edwards Big Newport Theatre, Fashion Isl.and, 905 Newport Center Drive, Newport Beach. Free. (800) 660-1993. Ext 240. Looking for a holiday gift? Purchase a Duffy Boat Rental GIFT CERTIFICATE The perfect holiday gift for everyon~! Ideal gift for employees and business associates. • Daily Pilot .. fAC1llY 11'1111. ... llE DA1 Oll.1 • SAl. DlC p Don't Miss Tue Chance To Meet Tech. 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Doily Pilot · Some lucky household pets ·are living the high life In the whole world there i. but one th1ng that money can not buy, to wlt "the wag of a dog'a tan." -Josh 11111"91. 1865 F ew things have as much effect on a household as a family pet. Even bickering siblings unite in their love for a four-legged friend. Child· hood memories often center on the loving companion- ship of a dog or cat. My mother stills talks about Skippy and the way he walked her to and from school every day. Even when Skippy was old and unable to make the long trip to the school, be would faithfully wait for her by the railroad tracks on her path home. She tears up every time she tells the story. Apparently, I have inher- ited the same gene. I could barely pull myself together after seeing "My Dog Skip" in the movie theater last winter. I made the kids sit with me through the credits at the end of the film, just so I could pull myself back together. Thankfully, tllere were a few other sappy moms in the audience who went through as many tis- sues as I did. With sentiments like that, no wonder we are willing to go the distance for our pam- pered pooches and cuddly kittens. Whether they are ladies or tramps, we all love to spoil our pets. I recently received a cat- alog in the mail called ·In the Company of Dogs.• It is produced by Petopia and has the most a.mazing selec- Karen W1ght NO PlAQ UKE HOME tion of pet accessories. Just flipping through the pages was major entertainment. In addition to the predictable selection of pet g6odies were items such as "mut- tluks" (booties for dogs), a "little wizzer" fountain (yes, you know what it does), pet "pearl" collars, treat-of-the- month clubs, velvet pooch pouches, matching owner/doggie sweaters, and my personal favorite -a bejeweled doggie tiara for the belle of the ball (as in fetch). If you want an extra smile today, check out http:llintheaompanyodogs .com. Other excesses available Jor your pet include custom doghouses. Contractor Allen Mowrer builds custom dog- gie domains, or should I say chateaux, chalets and cas- tles. One of Allen's works of art resides in our neighbor- hood. This custom doghouse is three (doggie) stories high, has air-con.ditioning, limestone floors, working windows, a "formal" entrance and a large back door for easy access. I don't think anyone would mind being in this doghouse. I wanted to meet the dog of the house and see what kind of pooch had the good fortune to live in such a manor. When I met Ted, I found out the house is the least of the blessings heaped on this lucky dog. Ted, who has received his American Kennel Club canine "good citizen" cer- tificate, has quite the life. In addition to his daily walks, Ted has a standing play date witll another dog (a Chihuahua) and his owner every Sunday. Ted has his own car, a Jeep -and I mean a Grand Cherokee, not a Barbie version - betause Ted (a Bernese mountain dog) cannot fit into the owner's Porsche. Ted is a Parrot-head and even dressed up as Jimmy I• Did You Know? •That you can have bea~tiful color in your garden all year long ? ~ .t friendly and knowledgeable sales staff can show yQu how planting with our quality products can help you make it happen! ~-·® NURSERIES, INC. COSTA MESA SANTA ANA 2700 Bristol St. (714) 754-6661 2800 N. Tustin Ave. (714) 633·9200 COMPUTE LANDSCAPING • 45 YfAIS EXP£RIENa LICENSE I 308553 CASSANO&\ STEFFEN, C.C.N.PRO Allll1Mt Mll-.r Flowetdele Nu...y • C.Glta Mesa Muter Nursery Professional MAGIC FOREST IS BACK AGAIN For The 1 ()th Straight Year ALL NOBLE FIR TREES ($2995) Commercial Trees Also Available ALL DOUGLAS FIR TREES ($1995)· FLOCKING, . FLAME PROOFING AVAILABLE OPEN DEC1 Located At corAer of Arlington/Fairview at the Fairgrounds CoSta Mesa , I 99 I 19 I -II mai.Dtained at th1I house, or should I say, doghouse. Ted's owner gave me the rundown on the pet-friendly places in the area, many of which I did not know about Pets are usually taboo ln stores and restaurant.a, but I learned Hard Rock Cafe in Fashion Island will let you sit on the patio with your dog. Tommy Bahama's in Corona del Mar Plaza will do the same. All <ioga are always welcome at the Three Dog Bakery. Fashion ISland's Barnes & Noble is dog-friendly. Ace Hardware bas always welcomed dogs, and Brett's Photo Express even keeps dog treats for its drive-through canine cus- tomers. Check out http://doglrlendly.com for more local locations. PHOTO COURTESY~ LA P£flTE MAISON The French chateau has a copper roof, bay window and hardwood Doon. What more could a pooch wantt Lest you think that Ted's owner is the only over-the- top pet owner around, I also know Murphy's "mom• had a nonskid pet cushion made for the console of her car - a Jaguar -so Murphy could see outside. Mollie gets a personalized doggie birthday cake every year. Foster gets carried around in a Snuggly on occasion. And a personal confession on my behalf: My dog, Mirna, bas had her portrait done in a pencil sketch. Crazy? Maybe. But con- sidering how much uncon- ditional love our pets give us. it's not surprising. So when you see a dog with a tiara hanging its head out the window of a car, don't laugh, it's puppy love. Buffet for Halloween this year. Ted also has a pet of his own, a cat named Bill. I kid you not. A guilty conscience from Ted's owner, who bas a full- time job to help maintain . Ted's lifestyle, resulted in a pet for Ted . The pet cat, Bill, follows Ted every- where, perches on the roof and waits for Ted to emerge through the doggie door of the main house and super- vises Ted's daily excursions. There is quite a hierarchy OVER 25 YEARS IN COSTA MESA • Now Owned & Operated by Mesa Upholstery • • ICAltEN WIGHT Is a Newport Beach resident. Her column runs Saturdays. INSTAl.LED BEFORE HOLIDAY ALL CARPET & FLOORING CURRENTLY MARKED DOWN 30o/ooff ~s Vinyls • Ceramics Wood • Laminates CALL NOW 642-8400 DESIGN CENTER ''For All Your Decorating Needs!'' fURNITURE Rf!UPBOIJF!J!U •Custom-Made furniture • Slip Covers • Dini~ Room Chairs • Draperies. Sfi8des, & 8edspreads Doily Pilot Donate blood and .help region to maintain critical supplies B LOOD DRIVE: The Costa Mesa-Newport Harbor Uons Clubs program featured American Red Cross speaker Stacy Baker, donor recruiter rep- resentative for Orange County'Red Cross, on Nov. 21. She coordinates blood drives and notes the Red Cross needs to have a seven-to 10-day supply of blood on hand. Many times throughout the year there Is considerably less supply on hand. The Red Cross needs to collect 1,000 pints a day from Orange County donors, otherwise, blood needs to be imported from the Midwest. Costa Mesa-Newport Harbor Lion Art Party, an administrator at Estancia High School, has a blood donation clinic set from 7:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. Tuesday at the school for students, faculty and the public. A number of members of Lions Club have volun- teered to donate blood, and you can also by calling Par- ry at (949) 515-6553 or by calling Baker at (714) 431- 0565. Donate blood -It's for a lifesaving cause. UNSUNG HERO: The Newport Beach Corona del Mar Kiwanis Club honored longtime Hoag Hospital Auxiliary volunteer Frank Brown with an Unsung Hero award at Thursday's luncheon meeting. Doug Campbell, Hoag Hospital Auxiliary vice president, notes there are more than 600 men and women who volunteer their time and talent, and Frank Brown is one who has given 2,500 hours on the wheelchair escort team, escorting patients in and out of the hospital. •Frank Brown Is an unsung hero, one who does things quieUy in the Jim De Boom COMMUNITY & CWBS community and is very much appreciated,• Camp- bell said as he presented the award to Brown. For more information about vol- unteer opportunities at Hoag' Memorial Hospital, call Campbell at (949) 640- 4573. HELP WANTED: SOS is having a huge used toy drive and needs lots of vol- unteers for toy sorting, any time from 8 a.m to 4 p.m . Dec. 2, 3, 9 and 10. U you are interested or have inter- ested high school-age stu- dents who need to fulfill community service hours, call Robin Sinclair at (949) 515-7316. If you would like to help during the distribution, it will begin at 8 a.m. Dec. 16. Parents line up at 4:30 a.m. to get the •prized• toys. If you have gently used toys, books, games, bikes, in-line skates, scoot- ers, video games, etc .. please consider dropping them off before Dec. 9 at the SOS office, 1550 Supe- rior Ave, Costa Mesa. CHRISTMAS BOAT PAJlADE: Harbor Mesa Lions Club will cruise the Newport Bay on Dec. 22 aboard the 109-foot M.S. Phoenix this year in the annual Newport Christmas Boat Parade. The event is a fund-ra.iJer for the benefit of local charities and the Miss Costa Mesa scholar- ship fund contest in June at the Uon's Fish Pry. The public Is welcome to join the event, which will start at 6 p.m . nckets can be bought for $40 per person and include the cruise, heavy hors d' oeuvres, music and dancing provid- ed by a deejay, a no-host bar, and opportunity draw- ings. Santa, Lion John Stansbury, will be there to greet the passengers as they board the ship. For tickets and information, call Arlene Schafer at (714) 546-1429. WORTH REPEATING: From Newport Beach-Coro- na del Mar Kiwanis Club "Scuttlebutt• ... •Young men know Ute rules. Old men know the exceptions.• SERVICE CLUB MEET- INGS THIS WEEK: Want to get more involved in your community, make new friends, network or give something back to your community? Try a service club! You are invited to attend a club meeting this week. Many clubs will buy your first guest meal for you. MONDAY 6:30 p.m.: Harbor Mesa Lions will meet for their annual family Christmas party at the Costa Mesa Golf and Country Club. TUESDAY 7:15 a.m.: The Newport Beach Sunrise Rotary Club will meet at the Balboa Bay Club. 6:30 p.m.: The Costa Mesa-Newport Harbor Uons Club will meet at the Costa Mesa Country Club. WEDNESDAY 7:15 a.m.: The South Coast Metro Rotary Club will meet at the Center Club, and the Newport Harbor Kiwanis Club will meet at the University Ath- letic Club. Noon: The Orange Coast Exchange Club will meet at the Bahia Corinthian Yacht Club for a business meet- ing, and Soroptlmist Inter- national of Newport Harbor will meet at the Santa Ana Country Club for a business meeting. 6 p.m.: The Newport-Bal- boa Rotary Club will meet at the Bahia Corinthian Yacht Club for a program on fue ants. THtJRSDAY 7:15 a.m.: 'the Costa Mesa Orange Coast Break- fast Lions Club will meet at Mimi's Cafe for a business meeting. Noon: Kiwanis Club of Costa Mesa will meet at the Holiday Inn, the Newport Beach-Corona del Mar Kiwanis Club will meet at the Bahia Corinthian Yacht Club, the Exchange Club of Newport Harbor will meet at the Riverboat Restawant for business meeting, and the Newport Irvine Rotary Club will meet at the Irvine Marriott Hotel. • COMMUNnY • a.ues is pub- lished every Saturday in the Dally Pilot. Send your service club's meet- ing Information by fax to (949) 660- 8667, e-mail to jde~ol.com or by mail to 2082 S.E. Bristol, Suite 201, Newport Beach, CA 92660-1740. Gettl!I,. INVOLVED • a.TTWG INVOUllD runs pert.. odblly In the Daily PiJot on • rotMJng basis. If you'd li!(e lnfor- m.ttlon on adding 'f04K organlz> tion to this list, call (949) 574-4228. ALS ASSN., ORANGE COUNTY CHAPTER The Amyotrophic Late.ral Sclerosis Assn., also known as Lou Gehrig's disease, needs volunteers. (714) 375- 1922. ALZHEIMER'S ASSN. OF ORANGE COUNTY Support group leaders, V1Siting Volunteers, family resource consultants and office volunteers are need- ed. Volunteers can work on one-time projects or ongo- ing programs. llaining ses- sions are available. (800) 660-1993. AMERICAN CANCER SOCJElY The Orange County Region of the American Cancer Society seeks office volunteers. The society is also seeking volunteers to answer calls for the unit's Helpline InfoCenter. (949) 261-9446. AMERICAN CANCER SOOElY DISCOVERY SHOP The American Cancer Society Discovery Shop needs volunteers from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Saturday at 2600 E. Coast Highway, Corona del Mar. (949) 640-4777. AMERICAN CANCER SOCIETY ROAD TO RECOVERY Tili.s transportation pro- gram needs volunteers to drive cancer patients to and from medical treatments free of charge. The required commitment is a few hours each week or month. Dri- vers need a valid driver's license and insurance and must be at least 25 years old. Volunteers may use either their own vehicles or American Cancer Society vans. (949) 261-9446 or scomer@cancer.org. AMEltlCAN HEMT ASSN. The American Heart Assn. ii looking for volun- teen to perform varlou.t general office duties in the main office and implement education.al and fund-rala- ing events through Orange County. No experience nec- essary, training '!Yill be pro- vided. (9'9) 856-3555. AMERICAN HOME HEALTH HOSPICE PROGRAM The American Home Health Hospice Program needs volunteers to give emotional support to termi· nally ill patients and their families in the greater Orange County area. 'Il"ain- ing is provided. (71') 550- 0800 or (800) 540-2545. AMERICAN RED CROSS, ORANGE COUNTY OtAPTER The Orange County chapter of the American Red Cross needs volunteers to address community groups about Red Cross services and to act as liaisons with the media in disaster and emergency situations. Judy Iannaccone, (714) 835-5381. ASSN. RENAISSANCE CREATORS The Costa Mesa group sponsors and supports out- reach community service programs, such as the home- less sanctuary. Volunteers are needed. (714) 540-5803. BIG BROTHERS, BIG SISTERS The local chapter is look- ing for men and women over 20 years old who have lived in Orange County for at least six months and have been on the job for at least three months are needed to serve as big brothers or big sisters for children ages 6 to 16 from single-parent homes. (714) 544-7773 BOY SCOUTS OF AMERICA INC. Volunteer opportunities for the Orange County Council include fund-rais- ing, program development and training to ex.tsting troops and packs. (714) 546-. 4990. . . AIO Saturday, December 2, 2000 Daily Pilot Ooity Pilot MEASURE F CONTINUED FROM A 1 Otero's ruling punched multi- ple holes in the Initiative. Its proponents' contention that the initiative treated the single subject of county health and safe- ty, the judge said is untenable. •This subject is so broad that it obliterates the (single-subject) rule,• he said in his decision. •An unllmited array of land-use provi- sions could be considered ger- mane to the health and safety of Orange County communities.• Otero also bit the measure for ereding large obstacles to the construction of jail and landfills, a move. that •greatly impairs or wholly destroys essential govern- ment power: At City Hall, the reaction was al.So jubilant. Mayor John Noyes said the city now should focus on extending tbe Oight caps at John Wayne AU.:~ port and keeping up a dialogue with South County cities. He added that Newport Beach had decided to support the lawsuit to test the measure's legality. A requirement to get approval from two-thirds of the county's voters on new airports or airport expansions could have helped· the city in its hght against a larger John Wdyne Airport, as well. "The invalidation of Measure F is a two-edged sword,· explamed Councilman Tod Ridgeway. Councilman-elect Gary Proctor pronounced himself ·extremely EL TORO CONTINUED FROM A 1 ·w e think the appellate court will take a fresh view of this whole issue." she said. Also probable, she s6ld, 1s the option of creating another mitia· tive with language less vulnera- ble to challenge than that of Measure F. ANOTHER LOOK AT MEASURE A Finally, in his ruling, Otero • pl04Sed" and said it was time to get to work on an El Toro that would be acceptable to the entire county. · •This has got to be a collabora- tive effort," he said. •Not behind closed doors. I don't believe that any portion of the county should try and shove down the throat an unbelievably huge airport at El Toro: Still fiery El Toro opponents said they will appeal Otero's deci- sion. •This is just the first volley,· said Meg Waters, a spokeswoman for the El Toro Reuse Planning Authority, a leading anti-airport group. •n could likely go to the state Supreme Court.• Waters said Otero's opinion, with which she •respectfully dis- agreed,• did not change the fact that most county residents oppose the El Toro project. It also doesn't alleviate her group's concerns about safety at the proposed airport. She said airport opponents, in addition to filing an appeal, may develop a new initiative to chal- lenge El Toro. "Everything is on the table right now,• she said. "It remains to be seen: Bruce Nestande, president of the pro-El Toro Citizens for Jobs and the Economy, said he doubted an appeal of Otero's decision could be successful. Pushing for an appeal ·is the quick reaction that anybody would make: he said. "But when they have their attorney Slt down and go through this thing, they may change their mind." urged El Toro opponents to directly contest Measure A, the 1994 initiative specifying that El Toro should be used for •a pub- licly or privately owned and operated airport.· Nestande said he would wel- come such an approach because it would clanfy the debate over El Toro, rather than bringing prisons and landfills Into the argument as Measure F ctid. ·That's what we've always said." he said. ·u you want to fight the airport, fight the air- port: Saturday, t>eoember 2, 2000 Al1 SEAN HUER I OAl.Y PLOT Grade, a vtzsla, gets a greettng from Angel, a German shepherd, while visittng the temporary dOjJ park. PARK CONTINUED FROM A 1 The City Council approved a plan m October 1999 to allow Bark Park volunteers to try to grow and maintain grass at the park, and vol- unteers said they are sure they can do it. The foundation paid profession- BURGLARY CONTINUED FROM A 1 Police are still investigating if Amos -who attended Costa Mesa High as a senior last year -is con- nected to several other vandalism cases that took place at Newport- Mesa Unified School District cam- puses during the Thanksgiving holiday. Hollard said. At least half of Newport-Mesa's 29 schools were vandalized in als to plant a mixture of rye, fescue and Bermuda grasses -which Oowish in different seasons -so grass will grow there year-round. Volunteers said they already have set up a contingency plan in case the grass needs further mainte- nance in the future. •we have a beautiful lawn right now. It's in better condition than the last lawn was when the park began,• said Pat Bell, consultant and some w ay over the holiday. said Eric Jetta, the district's director of facilities and maintenance opera- tions. Vandalism damage at two other Costa M esa schools -Davis Edu- cation Center and the site leased to Coastllne Community College -was nearly identical to the dam- age at Costa Mesa High, Jetta said. At all three schools, the burglar entered a building by throwing a water main cover, about 3 feet in ctiameter, through a window, Ho!- public relations official for the foun- dation. ·we hope the grass will stay as nice as it 1s now, but if it doesn't. we'll deal Wlth 1t by cordoning off the area in trouble and reseeding it. We have a lot of space, this grass is hearty, and you should see [the dogs) kick up theu heels in 1t. They Wee grass because they can roll in it. The footing is much better than (other terrain), and it's just their nat- ural play area • ford satd. Offices were ransacked at all three sites. During the same four-day school holiday. vandals broke into New- port Heights Elementary School, where they sprayed orange slush on the cafetena floor, put a stuffed animal in the microwave and stole $100 from a classroom. At Corona del Mar High School, vandals hopped the fence to the pool area, cut down the backstroke flags and shoved various items into the water. A12 SokHday: o.o.mber 2. 2000 WEDDlllS ere en ~stems ~ •1nter'Mtlonal 1Br1~sale Orchids $1000 .. $1500• $2000 DECEMBER 2ND Now Open 'I .-t a.turdQ -.Ch Month SATURDAY 8-4PM Somers-Plishker Laurie Somers and Matthew He(bert Pllshker exchanged vows Aug. 19 at the Sherman Library & Gardens In Corona del Mar. The bride Is the daughter of Jean Wick of Moraga, callf ., and Lawrence Somers of Balboa. She Is a graduate of Newport Harbor High School and Stanford Uni· verslty. She Is a consultant and evaluator at Westat In Rockville, Md. Her matron of honor was Alli· son M. Gregory. Kristina M. Smith was her maid of honor, and the bridesmaids were Patri- cia F. Cyr and Prisc:illa P. Pllshker. The bridegroom Is the son of Mr. and Mrs. R. Alan Pllshker of Annandale, Va. His best man was John E. Pllshker, and the groomsmen Included Steven Ingalls, Matthew Reinstein and Peter W. Somers. Pllshker Is a graduate of W.T. Woodson High School in Fairfax. Va., and Colgate University. He is a 2001 master's degree candi- date In business administration at the University of Maryland. 1 OOO's IN STOCK m:MIJt!1!1hM4®1@@4;VJ Newport .. ach'a ontr commercl•I Orchid Nurae~ -&CASH 20382 Birch Sb eet • Newport Beach OIL AND GAS OFFERING 100% Write-oft in Tax Year 2000 "Acquire assets with tax dollars" Developmental Drilling and Exploratory Drilling Blend Low and High Risk -You Choose Oil and Gas Income will be a 15% tax free (depletion) Local management wf th proven success record BROKERS AND FINACIAL ADVISORS WELCOME AND PROTECTED Minimwn investment $50,000 Offered by: MAGNESS OIL LLC Jay Magness, Fund Manager 362437-0305 MORRIS FINANCIAL, INC. ud Georp Monil, Praldut 310-311-2244 Newport Capital Consa.ltut Guy Bryaat, Pretldut !MM93-94Jl Required mJ.a.lmum or $200,000 Tauble Net lncome Per Year to quaUI)' • u lovettor For PraeatatJon Data, call 9-f9..759-0231 ~ 310.318-2244 For a limited time, you can obtain special C~-OUI prjca on Misskin szyle ""1llite, cralttd In qu'*1 $QWtl flTOln °"" In lht d<ri wiiltU flnlllj, Daily Pilot · Siildelar-Betson ' Terry Lynn Slndel•r ~ and Lance Hall Betsor) of Las Vegas, Nev., exchanged vows Oct. • 6 at the People's Uni· ~ tarl•n Church In Cedar Rapids, low•. ' • •I The bride Is the daughter of Arno and ... Joyce Sindelar of Marlon, Iowa. She · works In physician ~ sales and services. Her , , matron of honor was ·~ Aimee Peketz. The bridegroom Is the son of John and Joan Betson of New· port Beach. He Is completing a fellow· ship In urogynecology at UCLA. His best man was Kevin Betson. His ushers were A.J. Sindelar and Jim Haddad. The reception was held at the Indian Creek Country Club, and...attended by 55 guests. . . . ~­E(MNCHITO • Pmlf'TtapToGo • llm1qUel ROOllll Book your holiday banquet now ... While dates are still availablel Costa Mesa (949) 642-, 142 Huntington Beach a, 4) 960-9696 Plmolw. ~ • OllolJP !xDCs •YOON •~ QMliD • ....... • TNMIO •TM 0t • SttAM ~ • MAllMll • WllQHf W409M • l'Ura • ~ ~IW'P • ~ l'.mllaD l"IWiCWN.I • ~ HIM:nf cu.. Olul CMia WESTCUFf PLAZA IMne Avt a 17th St. Nfwpolt Beact1 (948) 831-3123 I ~Oft lownt prlcn,.. olkrtd by Munro's for MlsllOn $1y1t lumlttft. FAMILY OWNED & OPP.RATED SINC£ 1985 I • • ""~.... ... . . ... . . . .. -·· SocIEIY ( . Saturday, December 2, 2000 A13 vent takes locals on a tasty trip to South Africa n cue you were unaware, the Newport- Mesa f amlly has a very e contingent of trans- ted South Africans, eluding two of my person- favorites, Jacqueline ..... ..wr and Hazel Dyer. t week, Dyer invited me 50 guests to dinner or a little •taste of South ·ca: The purpose of the vening was to introduce e local crowd to what the ostess referred to as the mystique• of her home- d. Working with the ewish Community Center, er was encour~ged to Ian a trip to South Africa ext year for anyone wish- g to partake in an exotic oyage to the other end of e world. The dinner was a bit of an introduction to ome of the foods and cus- toms of her native land. "I just became a United States citizen (last) month,• ottered Dyer, the travel coordinator for the center. "I am very proud of the United States and very proud to be a citizen in spite of our voting prob- lems.• Dyer ls excited about sharing her African roots *1th her new-found Ameri- can friends. The adventure i"planned for April 16. 11 Dyer, working with Mel'}'VD Anollk of Safari Catering, prepared and served the dinner, begin- ning with mini-vegetarian 5'D:1osas, originally popular with the people of India ' THE CROWD and brought to South Africa in the late 19th century by traders. A buffet of bite-size beef boerewors (a type of sausage), strips of chicken breast peri-peri, curried and pickled fish and dry- wors and biltong, which are like jerky, were served prior to a wonderful, mild lamb curry. The curry was dished out with pappadums (a type of bread) and assorted sam- bals (condiments). The curry dish, accord- ing to Dyer, also was imported to South Africa from Malaysia and India in the late 1800s. Also on the table was a generous por- tion of one of South Africa's most popular tribal foods called •pap and gravy." Of course, there was ample coconut-banana chutney. For dessert, there were rnini-melkterts and koeksis- ters (pastries). I can 't even pronounce this last dessert, but I can tell you it too was imported to South Africa from Holland in the 1700s. The dinner certainly was a tour of food as history as well as sustenance. SAVE $4.00 31b. BEEF STICK® S9" SUMMER SAUSAGE""' su.99 Ov awud-wlanflll Bed Saldi Is tatofltd Just npl wttll a Ried blmd ot lpk:a and blckory 1moke l'llvoc Pmttt for boUd.111 ptlMriap. NEWPORT BEACH W ESTCLIFF PLAZA Comer of 17th & Irvine Ave. TuSTIN TumN MARKETPI ACE 2943 El Camino Real IRVINE CROSSROADS 3800 Barranca Pky. #D IRVINE ALTON SQUARE 5363 Alton Pity. ··-· ,., ... . .. ... .... . .... , ..... , ••• t ••• ~· •• In the crowd were Len and Nina Balls, Susan and Larry Becker, Inga Behr, Marttn and Tamar Brower, Clalre Brown, Gerry Buch- ner. Natalie ChaJken, Julie Cohen, Charles Dyer, Flo- rence and Gary Feldman, Susan Glass, Zondra and Ernie Knapp, Jacob Lazer- .. ~ Mattress Outlet Store 8IWIJ NEW · COSMET1CAU.Y IMPERFECT Gtt 111e Best ror Less! • en :E ::» Ill ... c • Kodak PROCESSING LABS 3165 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa One Block Sout.b of ~5 l'Wy 54 5·7 168 Susan Becker. left. of Corona del Mar joined Irene Samuels of Turtle Rock and Nina Balis and Leslea Miller of Newport Beach at the Jewish Community Center for a South African dinner. ....__ Larry Becker. left. of Corona del Mar and Newport Beach's Ed Miller and Len Balis indulge their interest in travel. son, Anne and Charles Lesser, Bill Mandi, Helvia Miller and Leslea and Ed Miller. Also on hand for the fun Travel coordinator and South Africa native Hazel Dyer, left organized an exotic din~ with the help of Anne Lesser and Jacqueline Mercer. were Levia Rabinowitz, Irene Samuels, Alan Sneag, Geraldine Solnlck, Tom and Shirley Staple, RJta and Bob Teller, Michael and Diane Townsend, Un- da Weingarten, Seymour Wlgler, Abe Matalon, Elana SUverman, Mary Goldberg, Ariel Rabi- nowitz and Arthur and Rosalie Gottfried. Guests sipped red South African wines and played a game called ·Mala Mala,• which is apparently the rage in Cape Town. To find out more about the planned trip, call Dyer at (714) 755-0350, Ext. 135. • THE CROWD appears Thurs- days and Saturdays. Orange Couniy'\ w1 oy ol !~ .. roa1<nq /(.'< ancl ro1~oanng '305, ~· •tmernbr<~ by 10ngt1mt' 1esl()er!I Ju<Jge ~obetl Gardner obert Gardner's BAWDYBALBO • tt~r±u.er . ·~~"'""' •21 CNV~ ·~ ~~from~ publls/lfr Cindrt"l\~.:><Jf"1177P~Or Sre.F.t l<>Sl ~tJ'.rl Bt'!:tl (.A-J.:663 rti"tllr #,; ~7 ::1Mb~ SlO eacil / J Of mn: $27.ti • l'ICl..d5 la• & shppor€) Prin • ' Al4 Saturday, o.o.mber 2, 2000 Camille Kazempoor, alternating in SCR's 'A Christmas Carol,' says 'bah humbug' to gender roles Young Cluing DAILY PILOT C amille Kazempoor has literally hung up her dancing shoes. In her bed- room, where she sleeps beneath a lavender home- made canopy among stuffed animals and the light of a star-studded lamp, her worn ballet shoes line the rim of a ·1 just enjoy acting,• she said. For Ca.mille, who wears boy's clothes complete with a bow-tie and gauge wrap around the leg to look like 11ny nm, the performance is never anything to get nervous about. "I'm getting better and better,• Camille said, "The more I do it, I remember more and I get more framed painting. The 9-year- old's personal "I'm getting better and comfortable.• style is as femi-better. The nine as her room. Director John-David Keller, return- ing to the show for his 21st year, She wears a glit-more I do it, I tered navy blue headband, a 19705-style white top with pink embroidering and ftared cargo jeans. She has a small gold hoop in each ear. Her hair is straight remember more and I get more comfortable." said the actress is a ·terrific nny nm· who disproves the notion that young chil- dren have Camille Kazempoor Tiny Tim in SCR's 'A Olristmas Carol' and falls to her shoulders neatly combed. She is pretty and petite. A girlie girl. Except onstage. There, she is a boy. Camille alternates the role of Tiny nm with Gre- gory Swanson, 8, in this year's production of Charles Dickens' •A Christmas Carol" at South Coast Repertory. The Newport Coast resi- dent said she didn't think twice about auditioning for the role of a boy. The set- ting of the play -mid- 1800s England -was so foreign to begin with, Camille said she didn't think a gender-change was anything to consider. identity prob- lems playing the opposite sex. "A Christmas Carol,• which has pJayed every year since 1980 at SCR, opened this week and will continue through Dec. 24 on the mainstage. Hal London returns this year as Ebenez- er Scrooge, a role he has played at SCR since the beginning. London said the "repug- nant, reprehensible mtser• Scrooge, who is visited by three spirits and shown his past. present and possible future, is a role that contin- ues to fascinate him. •1t is a little bit different SEE CAROL PAGE A18 • ft.11 WEEKEND .. MAGICAUY OOP•EWLD lhe er-.~ ~19 Ms Centw will pr9Mnt DNd ~.noon, ), • ~ 9 p.m. todly. lhe cen- ter Is at 600 Town <Mlter DrM. COit.i Mesa. S»SSO. (714) 755-0236. is a SEAN ttiER I DAl.V PU>T Camllle Kazempoor, 9, plays Tiny nm and David Whalen ls Bob Cratchlt in SCR's "A Cbrtstmas Carol" Kazempoor alternates her role with 8-year-old Gregory Swanson. Christmas hits the boards in Newport-Mesa By Tom Titus I l's beginning to look, il not a lot, then just a little like Chrisbnas in local theater. Playgoers seeking to get into the holiday spirit may THEATER ~~0R~ tory, as usual. to provide its annual double dose of yuletide cheer. And Costa Mesa's newest theater group has something under the tree for the kiddies.- But Orange Coast Col- lege, which has been alter- nating between a Christmas melodrama and an old-time radio broadcast variety show set in the holiday season, won't be hanging up the the- atrical mistletoe this year. Nor will the Costa Mesa Civic Playhouse, which charmed old and young alike last December with •Tue Best Christmas Pageant Ever.• SCR bas old Scrooge him- self, in the perpetwll person- age of Hal Landon Jr., ready to •bah• and •humbug• his way through the holidays - in fact, the theater's 21st · annual rendition of Charles Dickens' •A Christmas Car- ol" opened Wednesday and will continue through Christ- mas Eve. And downstairs, on the Second Stage, the Hispanic- flavored yuletide treat, "La Posada Magica, • enters its seventh holiday season, playing Dec. 10-24. In both venues, the leading charac- ter rediscovers the spirit of the season, assisted by events that are tr\lly other- worldly. In the absence of Costa Mesa Civic and OCC festivi- ties-OCC stages "The Hostage" through Dec. 10 and Costa Mesa Ovic has •The Sound of Music• through Dec. 17 -the Trilo- gy Playhouse fills the gap, wrapping up its first season in Costa Mesa with a musical production of A.A. Milne's •A Winnie-the-Pooh Christ- mas ThiJ. • The show opens Friday ana plays through Dec. 23. While Landon is appear- ing in his 21st incarnation as Scrooge at SCR, the ghost of Jacob Marley won't be played by Don Took, miss- ing only his second produc- tion since 1980. Took is winding up his role in •Tue Countess.• However, old SCR hands Richard Doyle, Art ~ustik. Martha McFarland, Devon Raymond and Howard Shangraw will be back to bring Dickens' classic to life once more. Performances are being given at 7:30 p .m. Tuesdays through Fridays, 2 and 7:30 p.m. Saturdays and 1 and 4 p.m. Sundays at SCR, 655 Town Center Drive SEE TITUS PAGE A 11 Gloria Loring, Anna Maria Albergh~tti, Marilyn King and Roberta Lii;m to perform. · Loring is best known for her 6 1/2-year stint aa lJz Chandler on ·oays of Our Lives• and for co- writing the theme songs for •The Facts of we• and •Diff'rent Strokes.· t1. Gloria Loring, Marilyn King (of King Sisters fame) and Roberta Unn (the orlginal Lawrence Welk Champagne Lady) for a diverse program of songs and Christmas carols. The 11nger·songwriter sold lbe ts looking forward to working With Alberghetti. Klng and Unn. Daily Pilot m WHA't. "The Fabulous Ladles of Song at Christm.s" • Wlmt a p.m. SatunUiy ..... 0r-. C.omt Cof.. : ·~Robert 8. Moore Theo-• atre, 2701 Fairview 9'oad, Coit.a Mesa a>ft $21·$27 CAI.I.: (714) 432-5880 I t'I four for the price of one. Actu- ally, •1be fabulous Ladies of Song at Cbrlltmu• tonight at Orange Cout College ts five for the price of one, at.nee comedian John Wing ii the 81DL'88. The lboW, put together by man- ager Terry Hill, brings together performen Anna Marla Alberghet- Each powerhouse singer will perform for about 20 minutes. All four will come together at the end with a Christmas medley, wbkb will be rebellned for the first time Saturday afternoon, Mid Loring. •Jt'I wonderful to work with oth- er J)erformen because most often, when you work. you never get to see anyCJ08 else,• the singer-tong· writer said from her Lake Arrow- head borne. ·1 would love to stand iD tbe wings and lee tbe otbet WOOlell perfoem, and ... what tMy bring to tbe •• .,,.,,,,.. and who they are. I and tbat f..,.tuttng, • SU FOUlt Ma All . .DATEBOOK . . . Saeurday, o.o.mber 2, 2000 AIS Notebooks reveal personal side of Rex Brandt · Exhibit of late artist's work shows legacy through ~paintings and never-before-seen writings. ~ 0-. that has never been seen DAILY PILOT before -[his] personal, visual diaries.• REBrandt's <XlDbibulioo to Califcxnja art world in the humble pagel d bis persooal ~. Ink sketches dme in quick strokas. Watermkr drafts delib- eralely tncxmplet.e. Notes in writ· iog, dme in pencil and ink. With words a1:lSSed out He filled a book every year, starting with his high school days, until his death in Mardi at age 85. The pages tell the history of this late Newport Beach artist Today, almost 20 of the notebooks -with pages worn with age -are enclosed in glass. The books and more than 50 of Brandt's paintings are displayed in the Grand Salon of the Newport Harbor Nautical Museum as part of the "Wind, Water & Light, Tue Legacy of Rex Brandt· exhibit "It's a highlight,• said Mar· cus de Chevrleux, the muse- wn's curator. "It's something The notebooks were made available by the Brandt fami- ly. Their inclusion in the exhibit, the first since the artist's passing, is a hint of Brandt's intimate relationship with his city. He created the Newport Beach seal in 1957 and co- founded the Brandt-Dike School or Painting in Corona deJ Mar with Phil Dike in the late 1940s. He also brought attention to the local area on a national scale. During the 1930s and '40s, such East Coast painters as Thomas Hart Benton and Grant Wood fueled the Amer· 1can scene painting move- ment. From Southern Califonua, from the quiet work he did in tus notebooks. Brandt brought attention to the West Coast while pioneering the Cahlomia scene painting movement. "He was a Corona del Mar E>ibc ~a,f.tan T radin! f>ost ~~au~~ ~~~ Holiday Hours 2834 Newport Blvd. Tues. Wed., Thurs., (29th Street at the Alley) 8am-3pm Newport Beach, CA 92663 Thurs. & Fri., (949) 675-2909 6:30pm-9pm ( f,. , if /)cc ] I ) I /)l'f11·cn11tJ WIJS to tht• ,\'m'{IJO ,\'"'"'" STAGECOACH LUGGAGE 50% OFF SKYWAY LuGGAGE CELf.BRn'Y C:OllECllON RECOMMENDED BEST BUYlll BY CONSUMER REeoRJS REG. SALE Expandable Tote 120.00 59.99 21· Expandable Upright 290.00 144.99 26" Expandable Upright 320.00 159.99 29" Expandable Upright 340.00 169.99 Garment Bag..Wheels 340.00 169.99 • 1680 Denier Nylon • 15 Year Warranty <:oma'ml7thA lrvioe Avt., ~-~Bcb~·~== Famous Brand Sleepwear & Sportswear END OF THE YEAR SALE Friday, Dec. 1 t , 8am-6pm Saturday, Dec. 2nd, 9-2pm BELOW FACTORY COST Men's, Women's & Children Thermal Ski J ammies Flannel Pajama's & Fun Prints 941-943 Newhall Off Monrovia/Between 16th-17th Costa Mesa _e-N ____ _ (949) 650-2269 Nf'whall - m WHA~ •w.nd, Water & Light. the Legacy of Rex Brandt• WHEN: 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesdays through Sundays through Feb. 28. WHERE: The Newport Harbor Nautical Museum, aboard the Pride of New- port 151 E. Coast High- way, Newport Beach. ~Free CAU: (949) 673-7863 Many of the exhibited works are accompan.led by such quotes. De Cbevtieux said they come from sources including Brandt's published books on watercolor tech- niques and his personal notebooks. Eggiest.oo's favorite pjece is called ·Low 11de, Laguna Beach.• It is scene with hazy figwes of people, sand and water. "To me, you can tell that the sand is wet.• Egg:lestoo said. "On many bf bis paint- ings, if you look at them. you can smell the ocean. You can touch the ocean. You can see the ocean. All the human sens- es are there.• artist," said G. Wayne Eggle- ston, the museum's executive director. "He was really fasci- nated by the sunlight, the water and along the coast - particularly between Newport Beach and Laguna Beach.• The beaches back then looked different from today. Land was largely undevel- oped and wild flowers bloomed in the spring, while the hills turned a golden hue in the summer, Eggleston said. GREG FRY I DAJl.Y PllOT G. Wayne Eggleston. the executive director of the Newport Harbor Nauttcal Museum, stands on a stairway near some of the SO Rex Brandt works on display at the museum, depicttng scenes from Newport Beach to Laguna Beach. Many of these ocean scenes are set in Newport Beach. One of Brandt's most famous paintings is titled "Pavilion and Bay.• Next to it, Brandt is quoted: "There is no Balboa Bay on any map or chart. It is bigger than all the va.ried islands, post offices and channels which comprise the City of Newport Beach. It is a feel- ing s hared in all the parts and as difficult to define as love.· boats, jetties, sails, fisherman, rocks, waves, cliffs, caves and sea gulls -Brandt produced not-so-ordinary art of his sur· roundings. With all the ordinary things that make up a beach - Next to one of his paint· ings, an oil on canvas titled •First Lift of the Sea,• a Still the best deal on • Christmas trees in Orange County. Pacific Northwest Noble Fir, Grand Fir & . Douglas Fir from $32.95 Nova Scotia Balsam Fir from $39.95 North Carolina Fraser Fir Small Trees from $39.95 from $14.95 Still at Newport Dunes located in Newport Beach Shabby Chic•™ . . Trunk Show I .' , Thurs. Dec. 7th 11-4pm lOo/oOff Plus Gift with Purcha se ri11~5• ~v. ~1·•e cjyp 369 E. 17th St. l_)UlJ.4 Costa Mesa, CA 92627 (behind Jack in the Box) • Invitations • Custom Gift Wrapping • Custom Banners • Peper Goods • Party Goods • Holiday Photo cards • tmrrintcd Balloons • Hchum tank R.cntaJ s quote h orn him hapgs on the wall: "To me, a boat is just anothe r object until that delicious moment when it ente rs the water and com- me nces to dip and dance with life. Move ment is the reality of the vessel.• BMOA lnvitts family, frinu/l ""'1 miploym ta IL •• 2()()() ?I~ f'~ f'eueee · Thursday • December 7th 6:00 pm to 9:00 pm Join us aboard the ~~- Enjoy sp«UUU/ar views of Chrisrma.s lights, dine on a delicious holiday mral Janet to /ivt/y tu.nts of Altu.rllS and sing a fow Christmas carol.s as wt cruise the harbor. "No Host" Bar Opens: 6:00 pm Tkil• ~.._pm• t n•• • lllilal~ c.a.crs Pa ..,_.~ . . .. DATFBOOK Daily Pilot A 16 Saturday, o.c:.mbet 2, 2000 After HOURS • Send #Ta HOURS Items to the Dally Piiot, 330 W S.y St., Cost.a Mesa, CA 92627; w to (949) 646- 4170 or call (949) 574-4261. A com- plete listing may be found at htt;p:llwww.cJ./lypilotcom. SPECIAL MARKET PlACE The Orange County Market Place takes place from 7 a.m . to 4 p .m. SatW'days and S\lll- da~in the Orange County F ounds' main parking lot,, Fair Drive, Costa Mesa. $2 for adults, children young~r than 12 are free. (949) 723-6616. MUSIC ORCHESTRA TRADffiONS Orange Coast College's Sym- phony Orchestra will present the second concert of its 40tb season with a program fea- turing works by Brahms, Mendelssohn and Richa(d Strauss at 7:30 p.m. Sunday in OCC's Robert B. Moore Theatre, 2701 Faiiview Road, Costa Mesa. $6-$10. (714) 432-5880. FREE RECTAL Orange Coast College piano student Janelle McConnell will offer her sophomore recital at noon Thursday in OCC's Music Room 101, 2701 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa. Free. (714) 432-5725. OUSSET PlAYS RAVEL French pianist Cecile Ousset will perlorm Ravel's Pia.no Concerto in G with the Padt· ic Symphony Orchestra at 8 p.m. Thursday at the Orange County Perlorming Arts Cen· ter, 600 Town Center Drive, Costa Mesa. $12-$52. (714) 740-7878. KING OF CALYPSO Harry Belafonte returns to Segerstrom Hall at the Orange County Performing Arts Center at 8 p.m. Dec. 9 to lead the Center's series of holiday presentations. The Center is a t 600 Town Cen ter Drive, Costa Mesa.$45-$65. (714) 740-7878. STEWARr AT MUl.pOON'S Polle recording artist John Stewart will perlonn a free courtyard concert 2 p.m. Dec. 10 at Muldoon's Dublin Pub, 202 Newport Center Drive, Newport Beach. (949) 640· 4110. STAGE HAMLET Shakespeare's •Hamlet• will be performed through Sun· day at Vanguard University of Southern California's Lyceum Theater, 55 Fair Drive, Costa Mesa. Times are 2 and 8 p.m. today and 2 p.m. Sunday. ~. but discounts are available. (714) 668-6145. THE SOUND OF MUSIC Continuing its •Year of the Musical,• the Costa Mesa Civic Playhouse presents "The Sound of Music" through Dec. 17. Perfor· mances are 8 p.m. Thursdays through Saturdays and 2 p.m. Sundays. The Costa Mesa Cvtc Playhouse is at 611 Hamilton St. $15. (949) 650-5269~ BE HELD HOSTAGE •The Hostage,• an acc.la1med 1958 work by Irish play· wright Brendan Behan, will be staged through Dec. 10 in the Drama Lab Theatre at Orange Coast College, 2701 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa. Show times are 8 p.m. today and Saturday, 2 p.m. Sundays and 8 p.m. Thursday and Fri· day. $6·$9. Seating is limited. (714) 432·5880. RIMERS •The Rimers of IDdritch," Lanford Wilson's drama about a small mid·westem town and an unexpected act of violence, finishes oft the year at Estancia Pro'duction ~ Drama a t 7:30 p.m. today, Friday and Dec. 9 in the Bar· bara Van Holt forum at Estancia High School, 2323 Placentia Ave., Costa Mesa. $7 pre.sale, $8 at the door. (949) 515-6537. DANCE ONDEREUA American Ballet Theatre's production of "Cinderella• will cap the Orange County Perlorming Arts Center's 2000 Classic Dance Series with a holiday engagement Dec. 19-23 in Segerstrom Hall, 600 Town Center Drive, Costa Mesa. Performances will be at 8 p.m. with 2 p.m. matinees on Friday and Sat- urday. $12-$70. (714) 740- 7878. Enjoy a Spacious Suite, Sumptuous Dining, Entertainment, Bingo, Crafts, Billiards, Beauty Salon, Transportation to Doctor, Shopping, Fun Trips, Friendly Caring People. From $1,495/Mo. 2283 Fairview at Wdmn CostaMeu. Minimum age 58 For more information please calls 949/646-6300 or Fax 9.e9/646-7~28 · ·~Tbe IONlr-.OW O...•'--...,......,...,, ... ~ l.edDmaa,wbo . ..•. .., ..... tbatlO ..... fa1md. JO!.& bave tobeafdmd. +o... ... d1er. Gd M. Broww-Nedler • DllllCtan: Jermly Mc:Carthy and Sylvia Keayt +WIWl:6and 7:30p.m. Wectnewtay +WMN:New· port Harbor Higb Scboo1'1 Robert B. Wena Theater, oomer of 15th Street and Irvine Avenue in New- port Beach. COORTESY C6 ~ HADl£Y Brandon Hargraws, left, Is the evil Red Demon and Fern~ Is the Snow Queen 1n "lbe Rescue of the Snow Queen• +CostS2 +ell: (949} 51S.6341 •. ·ANTIQUE ROW & GARDEN CAFE "N~ Uniq~Shopl'(illelL wltJ\I T~(cw yow-Homei1• FiM Home F11milhing1 A11tiq11t1 f:I Colltttibln Tr•ditional to CottGgt Gifts & GGrdm D«or Wi1h List f:I Dtlit1ny G~C~ Cortlm P•tio Dirtirtg 8~151, umcJt, Tu & £spmso Bar c.r. Hoen: Tim-Fri.~ Sit, ;SIA~~ •DitJCOVer the Row, a wonderful Shopping and Dining adventum• C•ndlt1 to Clu111ulins Uud & R•re Boob CM1tom Pkhlre F,,,,,,;,,I Fwmihln Rntor•tion ,,,.,, ''""" monl 949 722-1177 130 Eat 1111s Slrtd Cost• Mno, Cl\ 'Btltind ! ,,,,, '""' !tow Hocn: Tu.-51&., ..,,__A- Botanicare Landscape Design Construction Maintenance 2025 W. Balboa Blvd. Ste D Newport Beach, Ca 92663 (949) 673-5646 Special CbUdren'• Leatue of Orante Couatf ln•ltu You aad Yotlr Prleada to Attead Oar "$hop Tll .You Drop" HolldaJ Boutique Thursday, December 7, IOOO 10:00 Lm.-8s00 pm. South Cout Plaia VUla9e (Loceted a1 Sua~ and Plu9 om.. acrw froia NoNllrom aa SOllCll COlllt ..._, 0ReAT PRICES • f ANTASTIC Sel.fCT10NS • PAMOUS 1.Mm.s • ~ • Dc.>oR PRIZES . PA&ULOUS SHOPPING! • Yoll lft Jllft to flld M•tt'll to ea-.1111,.. t1lilf I .......... ..... ,... die• tr ... ..,...,.. .. ..., Proceedl benefit~. provran'll a .me. tor dlftiopn•..a; ~ chlldren and edulb In the C>Nilfteount;-. 1 I I Doily Pilot HOLIDAY on campus. Free. (714) 556- 3610, Ext. 217. CONTINUED FROM A l4 tti FestivaJ Ballet Theatre Coast Highway and in the will present "The NutaKk- Corona del Mar Plaza, 832 er" at Orange Coast Col- Avocado Ave., Corona del lege's Robert B. Moore The- Mar. The event will include atre, 2701 Fairview Road, entertainment, refresh-Costa Mesa. Show times will ments, a petting zoo and be 7 p.m. Friday, 2 and 7 roving carolers. Free. (949) p.m. Dec. 9, and 2 p.m. Dec. 673-4050. 10. s 15-S 19. (714) 432-5880. * The Balboa Isl and Holi-1Ii Trilogy Playhouse will day Home Tour will be present a musical production held from noon to 5 pm. of A.A. Milne's "A Winni• Sunday. The tour includes a The-Pooh Christmas Tail" boutique at the Beek Center Fnday through Dec. 23. Per- on Agate Avenue near the formance times are 7 p.m. Balboa Island Ferry. S 15. Fridays and 3 and 5 p.m. Sat- (949) 723-4226. urdays and Sundays. The playhouse is located at 2930 * N~wport Harbor High Bristol St., Bldg. C-106, Costa School will present "The Mesa. S10-12. (714) 957- Rescue of the Snow 3347, Ext. 1. Queen," a holiday-themed play for children of all ages. * The Holiday Festival at 6 and 7:30 p.m Wednes· Concert will be held at 8 day in the school's Robert B p.m. Friday at St. Andrew's Wentz Theater, corner of Presbyterian Church, 600 St. Irvine Avenue and 15th Andrews Road, Newport Street, Newport Beach S2. I Beach. The concert will fea- (949) 515-6341 ture the California Master Chorale with conductor Lar- ID Vanguard University P"'' ry K. Ball, as well as seasonal sents "Christmas Fanta· hand-bell classics by the Cali· sia," a treasury of holiday fornia Hand-bell Ensemble. musical classics and contem S10 S12. (714) 564-4000. porary carols, at 7 30 p m Thursday in the Newport ::: Christmas concerts will Mesa Christian Center ?599 be held at St. Andrews Pres- Newport Blvd., Costa M esa, bytenan Church, 600 St. @Junwl(Jl>hiU fr ft r/;/;naJ al r 'f1t 111111 e rll(I! FloraJ '°'" <·''" SPl-.t IALIZING IN ---- \\r~.1111, \ 1nl.11!l \.1111" Chri<;tmas Decor Orn;111w111' r ... ,1d 11•1 c ,1fi.. Tree S~irt' La ng C.11d~ lopi.irll' \lllckings Garland .. \1u11 I ii 10 6. Sal IO'\, Sun 10-4 \(,'J I 1-i1, 'Ml'l't. Co\t.l ~1e~a. CA J>h1111c l'l 111) (H(1 (,-... 5 I \\, 1p .. 11 '<j ~ire J ro" lronr R.alrhs DATmooK Andrews Road, Newport honors St. Lucia, who Beach, at 4 and 7 p.m. Dec. brought foop to the perse- 10 and 17. The concert will cuted Christians in Sweden. feature carols by Alfred Burt, (714) 668-1737. a congregation sing-along and other Christmas selec-$ Newport Christian School tions. $8. (949) 574-2283. will perform its Chrlstmas * South Coast Repertory's play, "&th Grllde Saooge, • at 7 p.m. Dec. 13. The "u PoMda Magic.," a school, a ministry of Liberty contemporary Latino Christ-Baptist Church, is at 1000 mas play written by Octavio Bison Ave., Newport Beach. Solis with songs by Marcos Free. (949) 760-5444. Loya, opens its seventh annual production on the * Apsemary Oooney's Second Stage at 4:30 p.m. "White Christmas Party" Dec. 10. The show runs will come to the Orange through Dec. 24 at 600 County Performing Arts Cen- Town Center Drive. $18-$32. ter at 8 p.m. Dec. 14 at Discounted previews will be Segerstrom Hall, 600 Town 12:30 p.m. Dec. 8, 9 and 10 Center Drive, Costa Mesa. for $13-$21 . (714) 708-5555. Clooney will be joined by a full orchestra, including * The Philharmonic Society members of the Pacific Sym- of Orange County will pre-phony Orchestra and two sent "Fiestll Navidad," a choirs. $36-$76. (714) 746- mariachi concert celebrating 7878. the Mexican fiesta of la Posada with music director * Judy Collins will sing Natividad cano, at 8 p.m. Christmas songs at 8 p.m. Dec. 12 at the Orange Coun-Dec. 15 at Orange Coast Col- ty Performing Arts Center, lege's Robert B. Moore The- 600 Town Center Drive. Cos-atre, 2701 Fairview Road, ta Mesa. S 18-$38. (949) 553· Costa Mesa. $27-$33. (714) 2422. 432-5880. * Gustaf Anders restaurant * The Newport Beach Com- at the South Coast Plaza Vil-munity Services department lage will host a Santa Lucia will hold a "Winter Won- pageant from 6:30 to 8:30 derland" with 20 tons of p.m. Dec. 13 at 3851 S. Bear snow from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. St, Costa Mesa. The pagea~t Dec. 16 at Grant Howald VILLA BELLA Consignment Furniture Time t? redecorate your villa? Think Villa Bella Old \\'orld Luropl·an rl.1ir (949) 515-1884 369 E. 17th St. • Across from Ralphs (17th & Tustin> Mon-Sat • 10:30 -6:00 pm Saturday, December 2. 2000 Al 7 Park, at 5th and Iris avenues In Corona del Mar. An appearance by Santa, holi-day aafts and snowperson building contest are includ- ed. Guests a-re encouraged to bring building tools like carrots and sticks for their snow creations. Free. (949) E).44.3151. * The 92nd annual New- port Harbor Christmas lkNlt Parllde returns at 6:30 p.m. Dec. 17-23 with more than 100 boats deco- rated for the holidays. There are dozens of viewing loca- tions, including the Fun Zone on Balboa Island. $25 for participants. free for spectators. (949) 729-4400. * Pacific Chorale will pre- sent .. ns the Season! H at 7 p.m. Dec. 17 in Segerstrom Hall, at the Orange County Performing Arts Center, 600 Town Center Drive, Costa Mesa. John Alexander will conduct the Pacific Chorale, Pacific Symphony Orchestra and Pacific Chorale Chil- dren's Chorus in a perfor- mance featuring favorite carols and seasonal classics. The concert will include the world premiere of compos· er-in-residence Eric Whitacre's first commission for Pacific Chorale. S 17-S54. (714) 662-2345. e American Ballet Theatre's production of •Onderelta" will cap the Orange County Performing Arts Center's 2000 Classic Dance Series with a holiday engagement Dec. 19-23 in Segerstrom Hall, 600 Town Center Drive, Costa Mesa. Performances will be at 8 p.m. with 2 p.m. matinees on Friday and Sat- urday. $12-$70. (714) 74().. 7878. * Chabad of Irvine will hold a Grand Hanukkah celebration at 4 p.m. Dec. 21 at Fashion Island in New- port Beach in the Blooming- dales courtyard, 905 New· port Center Drive, Newport Beach. The celebration includes Fashio~ Island's annual Menorah-lighting. (949) 786-5000. * Hunger Artists Theater Company teams up with the chi ldren of St. John the Divine Episcopal Church to present "Home for Christ- masH at 10:30 a.m. Dec 24. The play tells the story of two orphans who find a home in the most unlikely of places. The performance will take place at the church, 183 E. Bay St., Costa Mesa. Free. but donations for Court Appointed Special Advo· cates are appreciated. (714) 547-9100. • Pn'fo1U1liuJ Gifts for FrinuJs 0-Family • Uniqia Gift Items For &bus, W?ddinp, Bunnas, Home, etc. • Robes, Whips, EnE/ish linnu, Totu, Towels, Slu"futs d-Morr • Your Oum lums Monoir11111meJ OnlyS7 Open Daily 10 -5 Most Orders Completed In 24 Hrs. r: 226 Marine Ave. ,,,.,, fq "·""~· t Balboa Js'4nJ S ftn DC ft S TL t (949)723-5988 !~Year-En ~CLEARANCE LIMITED EDITION HOLIDAY SHIRT • ~ • • Ill • .. , . • • II • " .. • • • .. .. .. All Floor Models Must Go Save 20°'0 -50% on Storewide plus savings on all special orders I . . .. Al8 Saturday, 0ecember 2, 2000 FOUR CONTINUED FROM A14 Fo~ her 20 minutes, Loring, 53, said she plans to perform S01\9S from her eight compact dis<:s and a Christmas song - •1 Always Will• -she wrote for son Robin, 23, a few years ago. (A song for ber other son, Brennan, 25, is on her latest album, "Tum the Page.•) Loring -who started singing professionally at 14 - said she enjoys singing songs that express people's deepest emotions, whether they're fun or touching. Her favorite carol is ·o Come, All Ye Faithful.· "We always started church services with it,· Lonng said. "That song, to Uus day, I get very choked up.• • DATEBOOK CAROL CONT1NUED FROM A 14 eadl year,. be Mid. •J tla'lnk I bring, to 101De ...... my own tmperi- 8DC:lel that cbang9 the way I tee tbe character ... And IODMltim81 I tee him differ- ently each Iµght. • Bight local students from SCR's Young Conservatory, tocludinq Canlille, are part ol the cast: Alexander Scholnick of Corona del Mar, Carlos Ibarra and Amy BaJklow of Costa Mesa, Sydney Nikols of Newport Beach and sib- lings Alexander, Gregory and Nat.alba Swanson of N,8wport Beech. Tbe Swansons are in two different casts for the show, said Kathy Swanson, the bio's mother. · Alberghetti's favorite car- ol is more secular. The Ital- ian-born singer who won a Tony Award for her role m "Carnival" names "The Christmas Song· as the song of the season, although she favors "Oh Holy Night" on an artistic level. Anna Marta Alberghettl performs tonight at OCC. ·1 can say my biggest fear,• she said, laughing, •is I get the wrong chlld to the wrong program.• ·1 fell ITT Jove the first rune I heard (The C hristmas Song'). It's so musical and so simple in its message," Alberghetti, 64, said from her Bel-Air home. "It just touches me.• Alberghetti said her pro- gram will consist of traditionaJ Italian songs like "Sorrento,• Broadway tunes and one con-· temporary number. The actress-singer, who started perf onning at age 6, said right now is the most exciting time in her life. "Women are always so afraid of getting older,• the mother of two grown daugh- ters said. ·1 wouldn't trade being any age, other than the &ceptional merchandise of t(ualitlJ r11nfitrf from TANSU chests to small t1'e11Sure1 11nd unit{ue bronze and stone 911rden pieces Also Available: Prints • Bronzes • Baskets • Screens • Scrolls • Porcelain • Clothing • Dolls • Ceramics • Lacquer • Kimonos • & Much More 3441-C Via Lido (Ne<ir Vons P.1v il1<'1· Newport 8Pdc h (l)4'J) 723 .:;002 Mon -S.tt 10<.1m •ip111 one I am right now.• In the past year, she has acted in two movies, gone to Europe three times, sung to standing ovations for "99% of the ti.me" and worked on cruise ships, trips she turned into vacations. "What more could I ask," Alberghetti said. mus CONTINUED FROM A 14 Costa Mesa. Call (714) 708- 5555 for more information. "La Posada Magica, •a contemporary Latino Christ- mas play by Octavio Solis, · with music by Marcos Loya, will be staged this year by Diane Rodriguez, making her SCR directing debut. Tiffany Ellen Solano enacts the central role of the embittered teen Gracie, with regulars Te resa Velarde and Denise Blasor returning among a cast of • PCilsada • newcomers. Show times are 8 p .m. Tuesdays through Fridays, 3 and 8 p.m. Saturdays and 12:30 and 4:30 p.m. Sundays through Christmas Eve at the above address and phone number. At the ltilogy, 2930 Bris- tol St. in The Lab, Alicia Butler is directing •A Win- nie-the-Pooh Christmas Tall,• which is recommend- ed for youngsters older than 3. The Milne story has been adapted with music and lyrics by James W. Rodgers. Performances are 7 p.m. Fridays, and 3 and 5 p.m. Saturdays and Sundays from Friday through Dec. 23. Call the playhouse at ~ 5 TART YOUR ~ HOLIDAY SHOPPING ATKAYAKs .. Daily Pilot with comfort, en)oymeat and reflection. • •Cbiiltmlil II always a .... foi Nn8ctloa. tor. ,... awdjNdng al tb8 ~~· • be Aid. ...... time to tmlllt • about people you've Iott m tbi ~. J*.JPl8 who .... doM to J011t peiople dole to '°" ~ don't .. ·-it'• evarytblng Cbrlstmu is about. Tbat'1 bow I want people to respond.. - (714) 957-3347, Ext. 1, for more information. Speaking of the Th.logy, the theater will hold audi-' tions from 6:30 to 9 p.m . Dec. 12 for the vintage comedy •Arsenic and Old Lace." Roles are open for 11 • men from ages 25 to 55, one woman 25 to 35 and the ' two lethal aunties from 45 ' to 55. •Arsenic and Old Lace• will open Feb. 9 for a three-weekend engage- ment. Information is avail- able at the above number. • TOM mus writes about and I reviews local theater fOf' the Daily Pilot. His columns appear Thu~ ' days and Saturdays. WHY PAY DEPT STOR~ PRICES? Visit our AREA RUG STUDIO Rugs & Runners on Sale BRING THE OlITSIDE INSIDE! A moderate climate can help your borne sen. but wherever you live, you can enhance your home's hidden porentlal by brinaina the outside into your home. Minor ·remodeling projects can be tailored to suite your taslC and ~&eL Study the placement of your home on the property. A small window can be mlde larier to let .,more liaht into a room and upllld the vie~. You can create an enienainment area for aueau by lnttallin& I slidin& &IW door which opcna onto your prden or addina a pa1io or deck. The addition Of I atyli&bt io I dltt. room can mato a dramadc impo.emait. You Clft alto conaider ~ eo Cftbance the ouldoOr feanata of '/'*'home and ..... lbeln IMo the livina apace ot your bom. $11(91 Improvements cu • pady increaet !he Vaile ot 1°"' property. l.¥1een and Jeff hut 28 ccr11cldve ,_. otl'lll ...... aperlwt bl Ne~ ......: ,,., .. Coldwell .... ,. •• ..-.r. .. vt111•Mtdt ........... ,_ ... _ .............. .,.., ,..... 'COMM Doily Pilot . . ilJt takes a certain sknJ to conduct these public meet.lngs. It la 1mportant for the mayor to be able to manage City CoWlciJ meetings and allow the opportunlty for people to come before us to speak, but not let the meeting get away from U$. • -Councilman DENNIS O'NEIL EDITORIAL · . Saturday, December 2. 2000 Al9 Trial's sensatio~ shouldn't oversha~ow tragedy M. urder. Mys- tery. Scandal. Intrigue. The Bechler murder trial has all the ingredi- ents necessary for a made-for-TV movie. The characters: the wile, a strong, successful older woman; ~e hus- band, a handsome scoundrel in love with the good life; and a vix- en of a girlfriend vl'no enters the picture a short time after the wife mys- teriously drowns. Prosecutors have alleged, however, that ' Bechler plotted the fatal trip and was attempting to cash in on his wife's multimillion-dollar life insurance policy. Bechler hd main- tained his innocence, saying that Pegye, 38, was wiped out of the boat by a wave into a deep-sea death. The prosecution contends that the victim, a triath- lete, could not have sim- ply fallen into the ocean without first being knocked unconscious. apparently remains the star prosecution witness -unless defense attor- neys can block the taped conversation between her and Bech- ler from being entered into evidence. This is a case that demonstrates the phrase "truth is stranger than fiction." And that fact hasn't escaped the media and those following the trial; with the opening statements scheduled to begin soon, there is sure . to be a feeding frenzy. Eric Bechler, who was at 29 a widower, has been charged with killing his wife, Pegye, d\iring a 1997 boating trip to celebrate their fifth anniversary. To the outside observer, it might .have seemed at the time that the couple, parents of three children and business partners in a thriving company, had much to celebrate. The case is filled with twists that read like a noir detective novel. Nei- ther a murder weapon nor Pegye's body has been found. A 15-hour Coast Guard search uncovered nothing, and at the time, authorities said the July 1997 drowning looked like an accident. Pegye and Erle Bechler ln happier days. Eric Bechler ls DOW OD trial for Pegye's murder. Although the case is fit for an over-the-top screenplay, those involved should not for- get that this is real life. The characters are real people . More than two years recording of Bechler passed before police reportedly discussing the arrested Bechler. But details of his wife's death . when Orange County was provided by his own sheriff's deputies did girlfriend, Tina New. take him into custody, New, an aspiring they used the suspect's actress with a Web site, own words against him. has a scandal of her own. A surreptitious tape-She has filed a $10-mil- j nurner's remarks ·were insulting 8r H. Ron Miiier y unanimous vote, the board of directors of the 5,700-member Friends of OASIS Senior ;<:enter has requested that I :respond to the insulting : remarks ,COMMUIHn about the COMMllTllY city's anior citizens that Measure ·T co-chairman and former mayor Clarence Turner 'made in the Daily Pilot on 'Nov. 10, following the over- whelming victory of Mea- sure S. According to the Pilot, after admitting Measure S proponents were at a •clear advantage• in the growth struggle, because most of them are retired and didn't have to work, Turner said, "Those people (senior citi- zens) tend to think in terms 1 of we-don't-want-any- more-development and are only concerned about themselves.• Turner should hang his head in shame. Does he have any respect for the elderly? It is true that there was heavy elderly involve- ment in the Measure S campaign, and it is also clear that senior citizens are the largest voting block in the city, which carried Mea- sure S to victory. More than 1,000 Mea- sure S petition signatures were gathered at OASIS Senior Center in the early stages of the Measure S campaign. There are 20,000 senior citizens in Newport Beach. Most of us have been here for many years and have very long memories. We have watched the changes in the city, the bay and residential areas close- ly and observed the actions of the Planning CoDllJ!.ll· ~on, City Council, three city managers and the city staff. Most of us are registered voters and most of us vote, and we have long memo- ries. . As for Turner's assertion that seniors are concerned only •about themselves,• it is fact that our elderly in this city are the backbone of volunteer activity and efforts throughout Newport. Now that their working days are over, they serve the community -for example, in schools, hospitals and libraries. You see them everywhere -as tutors and assistants at all public ele- mentary sch0,0ls, at Hoag, convalescent hospitals, Taste of Newport, Sherman Gar- dens, the Shalimar Leaming Center, Continuation High School, the Environmental Nature Center, Meals OD Wheels, polling precincts, boards of directors of chari- table and community service organizations. They even make histori- cal presentations about World War 11 to school stu- dents and atso do fund-rais· ing for charitable causes. We think Turner's com- ments about seniors lie more in bis concern for the •bottom line• of developer and business interests rather than our quality of life here. Turner, in his capacity as Measure T co-chairman and former mayor, clearly owes an apology to the senior citizen communicy of Newport. Hopefully wh.en his working career is over, he will come to see things they way we do. • H. ROSS MtU.D Is a resident of~ BelCh and the ~ uq chairman of the Friends of the OASIS s.n10r c.nter. lion civil suit against for- mer professional basket- ball star Dennis Rodman, alleging that he raped her at his West Newport Beach home. Rodman has denied the charge. Regardless of her own legal battles, New And somewhere, underneath the out- landish details, lies the truth about a tragedy that we hope will not be lost. LETIER OF THE WEEK Rules are rules T here are rules and procedures that potential candi- dates must adhere to. One of.those rules is to witness each signature that appears on his or her petition to pull papers to run for a city council seat. As a prospective candidate, you are reqilired to slgn your petition form, acknowledging you have personally witnessed the 20 to 30 signatures that appear on your papers. Potential candidates should take this process very seri- ously. In the past there have been individuals who have not qualified and were not able to run for a oouncil seat because they did not follow the rules and complete the process accurately. If it is proven that there is an impropriety in Chris Steel's papers, I believe action should be taken. To allow or to overlook a dishonest attempt in the process is a slap 1n the face to potential candidates who follow the rules and to citizens in a community. People who serve as public officials are often aiticized, sautinized and sometimes unnecessarily plaa!d in a cat- egory of not being forthright and honest. To allow any- thing improper to go unpunished would further damage the public's perception of •politicians• and that would be a slap in the face for many of us. . . COllTICT YOUR REPRESEllTITIVIS cm Of COSTA MISA Colta. Mela Oty Hall, 11 Fair Drive, Colt.a. Mesa, CA 92626; (71•) 75"-5223 ... ,.. Gary Monahan Co n • Elizab8th A. Cowan. Unda OixOo. Joie Brkbon and Heather Somen Dk'5k1 omc.: 1370 Mem ~ <:.-Miia. CA--PJ:!.~.._. GI 1P1n N.~ . ,..Q;~~ ............ a. lie• Me ,...,hr na •a. t .... ' ' .. •' . . . ' .. ' ·' Quot• Of --•• . . •If• Ml't hM a bowl game yau never know who would ... Wt.-" Fr-* Me~ Cerritos College football coach Daily Pilot Spom Editor Roger Corison • 949..574-4223 • Sports Fax: 949-650.0170 •Saturday, December 2, 2000 81 The undaunted Daw • s • OCC's James Dawkins is hoping to showcase his talents tonight (7) against Cerritos College at the Strawberry Bowl. Stave Virgen DAILY PILOT COSTAMESA - Regret is just one obstacle James Dawkins has conquered in h.i,s young life. Dawkins, Orange Coast College's star running back, could have played at Purdue University after a stellar high school campaign at Estancia High, 1995-97. But, because he was academically ineligible, he didn't qualify for a scholarship and he turned his focus toward Orange Coast. "There's regret,• said Dawkins, the AD-Mission Conference Central JC FOOTBALL SMACK BOWL After six straight losing seasons, Orange Coast is in the Strawberry Bowl tonight at Cerritos College. Steve Virgen DAJLY PILOT CERRITOS -As if the Orange Coast College football team needed more reason to prove that the Pirates are for real. Tonight's Strawberry Bowl matchup of OCC at Cerritos College (7 o'clock) might not have ever come about. according to Falcons Coach Frank Mazzotta. If you are to read between the lines, one would be inclined to believe. the only reason the Pirates are in a bQwh_E«Jmj' sort, is ~ of the''iJt ...... W orttie-Cerrl • Falcons, whO·managed to win th · last game of the regular season to qualify for a bowl game. Simply put, no Cerritos, no Strawberry Bowl. ·we lost our sponsor for the bowl game,~ Cerritos Coach Frank Maz- zotta said. ·we had to do some fund raising and we had to win our last game against Riverside. We did. If we didn't have a bowl game you never know who would be left out.• And if that's not enough fuel for the Bucs, Wednesday's Strawberry Bowl banquet at Cerritos could also ignite OCC. The assembly of Pirates and Falcons heated an already fiery matchup. Coast running back James Dawkins confirmed a stinging salvo of words exchanged between the teams in the parking lot as the play- ers were departing. Dawkins said he could not repeat the words because it would not be appropriate for print. But the con- frontation will only bring more excitement to the game, he said. Division running back who leads the Pirates to the Strawbeny Bowl tonight (7) at Cerritos. "Especi.ally seeing how Purdue is now with Drew Brees and they're playing in the Rose Bowl. I could've been on that team. It's a lot of regret, but you can't dwell on that. I'm right here right now. I can't think about it and it doesn't make any difference. I'm just going to forget about it and make something out of this.• Dawkins' trademark has been making the most of his opportunities and it goes back to his high school days when he played for the Eagles. Dawkins remains No. 2 in the JC FOOTBALL Newport-Mesa District in career rushing with three seasons at Estancia resulting in 3,209 yards and 34 touchdowns on 452 carries. He was District Offensive Co-player of the Year in 1997. Dawkins holds the second-best single season rushing mark at Estancia with 1,473 yards in 1996. Last year, Marshall Hendricks broke the record. but it took him 41 more carries than Dawkins to do so. Dawkins was on his way to Purdue, but an admitted laziness in high school classes caught up with him. Dawkins said he almost didn't graduate from Estancia because he wasn't serious about his school work and he was •getting into trouble.• Depression set in for Dawkins after reality struck that being a · Boilermaker and playing in the Big 10 would never be. He could've let the sadness and regret swallow him .. He could've sunk deeper into trouble. Inste.ad, he turned bis focus to Orange Coast with the hopes of staying true to his trademark. When he arrived at OCC, he sat out the first year to build strength and learn more about the game. The red.shirt year also gave Dawkins time to improve on his studies. Last year, he played behind Ray Ohrel and Jimmie Banks. He made SEE DAWKINS PAGE BS James Dawkins • Proud programs collide as Brinkley and Mele guide Newport Harbor and La Mirada into CIF Division VI semifinal tonight, at 7. Barry Faulkner DAILY PILOT NEWPORT BEACH -New- port Harbor High football coach Jeff Brinkley and La Mirada head man John Mele, whose teams square off tonight at 7 in the CIF Southern Section Division VI semifinals at Harbor's Davidson Field, have crossed paths before. But since Brinkley left Norwalk and the Suburban League to take over the Sailors' program 15 seasons ago, and Mele ascended from assistant to Matadores bead coach two years later, they've had to follow each oth- er's career from afar. And, with the kind of sus- tained success rarely found at public high schools, there has "It's going to be quite a batUe ... " been plenty of mutual admira-Jeff ... tion, particularly since 1992. , f\M·•-ew1--.....•rm-•~ -Beginning in '92, :Brinkley's Hi:j Sailors have won two section titles (Division Vin '94 and Oivi-__ ·_._z ___ _ sion VI last fall) and two Sea View League crowns and advanced to the section championship game four times. The Tars are making their sixth trip to the semifinals and are 87-24-1 during that span, including an 18-4 postseason record. During the same time period, La Mirada won the ClF Division VIII crown in '92, captured 8 of 9 Suburban League championships and reached the section final five times. The Matadores are an impressive 98-17-2 during that stretch, including 20-7 in the playoffs. Something, however, has to give tonight, when the fowth-seeded Sailors (10-2) tackle the top-seeded Matadores (12-0) before a crowd expected to exceed the stadium's 5,00().seat capacity. •1t•s going to be quite a battle,• said Brinkley, whose Sea View runners-up have gotten here with a physical, ground-oriented offense fueled by senior tailback Chris Manderino (1,797 yards and 29 touchdowns). La Mirada, meanwhile, has blown the doors off opponents with a prolific offense fueled by the passing talent of senior quarterback Erik Meyer (2,788 yards and36TDs). The Matadores have beaten all but two foes by at least 24 points, outscoring the competition. 593-204. Only Leuzinger, a 49..J.4 victim in Week 2, and Fountain Valley, a 35-27 casualty in Week 3, have kept MeJ.eCs starters on the field for the fourth quarte,r. La Mirada senior receiver Bo Price has a.massed The matchup already had some history because Cerritos (7-3), defeated the Pirates last year, 40-17. SEAN HIUR I OAl.Y Pl.OT Newport Harbor Coach Jeff Brinkley wW be seeking the control factor tonight. } SEE PIRATES PAGE BS • He added offensive prowess to a typically tenacious defense to help Cd.M earn ClP title. '-'Y,....., OM'VPllm D the high school boys water polo equivalent of the World sene., Mlcbael Mardi wu Bucky Dent, Don t.enen and Merk Lemke all rolled Into 008 tot ~Corona del Mar High. ~·en MUOn in the lballow end ot ~tioo. the Sea, KlDg ~ twO-metM' der.nder bad tbe kind 0( aP SoUtblm sectkm DtvillOO n c:MiDP.ombll> sreme he'll never Jtve doWD. Had Me.R:h made any~ IPIMb. autbOdtlM wWld haw bad to reftll the u.a.llDonl--t .,.._ p0o1ror~··~DtWdOn1 ftMl. •(t WM mce tD haft IC88 ~·lnalty DOdcl ID9, • Mid~ Wbo, gaAng Uat0 dai.~ 22 llOl llMMdOWD With PKlk co.t.~ m.i um.a.,,. ....... doM9t be'd .. tD .. ..,.,. .... w tll r6dlon' Gii deicoieted UDI !Mlle mm nd"Pd. -~--.. •Senior goalie played like a man possessed. helping the Sailors to first CIP title in 16 years. t -. .. , ' I t" t I i • ;. i ' • I • .r .. .., • . . .. , , .. ' •' -•:.:_POil LINEUPS DIRHsl Reitz claims CIF individual title No. "-yer Ht. Wt.a. ..... f>.2 182 Jr Q8 D 6-1 205 Sr TB f>.1 225 Sr FB f>.3 172 Jr WR f>.2 llJO Jr WR 6-0 238 Jr TE 6-4 265 Jr LT f>.1 210 Sr LG &-4 200 Jr C 6-3 240 Jr RG 6 2 285 Sr. RT NEWPORT CONTINUED FROM B 1 1,41 b receiving yards dnd 22 TDs on 56 cdtches (redChUlg the end zone roughJy twice for every hve recep!Jons) He has also returned three punts to paydJJt. Mandenno, who qudrter- backed last yedr's CIF chdJll- pions and begdO this sedSon under center belorl' stufbng to tailback thP second hdll of •. Gdme 2, hds cont1nut:!d Lo ,.. ;· assdult thC' '>thuol record .. book ~ He is lted for second in sin- gle-season TI)s (on<> tw.tund :: the record), second LO cdreer • TDs (37). sevc>nth in single-~ sedson rushing ydrds, '>IXth in -.. cctreer nishmq yrlrds 12.010) ~: <t.nd thmJ 1r1 Cdn•er gdniP:. ol dt •. I ... east IOU rushmg ydrds (10). •• :: .. Ht. Wt. a. ,.,.. 55S-~ f>.3 218 5r DE ,. c.J. c:ou-r..1 no 5r NG 78 NIClr ""ooM-M 260 5r OT 7 ca-n T90IKAu 6-0 185 5r DE 1 0-M· 6Nl 6-1 205 Sr Ol8 5 ~S-6-1 260 St.MLB 9 ,.,.,y "--f>.J 216 Sr Ol8 4 a.M CiMJA 6-2 180 Jr CB 2A ltvM s..mt S-9 162 5r CB I 0-S.-.. 6-2 172 Jr. SS 20 D.v. 8Alrr09I 6-0 160 Sr. FS Irvine earns title berth with a 23-6 victory. over Tustin IRVINE -The Irvine High football team did ill share to set up a potential CIF Southern Section DM· sion VI title rematch Fri- day, handling vistting Tustin, 23-6, ln the first Division VI semlfinal. Irvine limited the Tillers (11-2) to one 15-play touchdown drive m the second quarter, but the lead l~ed only 12 seconds as Godfrey Young went 96 yards w1th the ensuing kickoff. Irvine (13--0) scored on three of its four second-half possessions to seal the vic- tory. -by Barry Faulkner • Cd.M junior upends top-seeded Lingman. Richard Dunn D AILY PILOT CLAREMONT -The same govemJng body that imposed eligibility restnctions on Coro- na del Mdr High's Brittany Reitz in the first hall of the sea- son awarded her its biggest individual girls tennis trophy Friday at the Claremont Club. Poetic justice? "It really is." Reitz said. Declared ineligible to play for CdM unW Oct. 16 by C.IF Southern Seel.ton officials, Reitz, a juruor, got the last laugh, ripping through two Woodbridge pldyers. Ulduding top-seeded Susdnna Llngmao in the finals, 6-3, 6-1, to capture the CIF 10d1v1dual singles champ1onsh1p "It's very ironic thdt this happened every umc I Uunk about tl. I start ldughtng • Reitz, who lrdnsferred from St Mdrgrlret's and helped CdM Coach Andy Stewart's squad Will d C IP D1vtS1on IV led.ID !Jtle Nov. 20, thought it was "unfair" that CIF scc!Jon 0Hi- c1als did not dllow her to play for CdM unltl thl' !">econd half of the sedson. Instead, HP1l1 became the f1ri.t player 111 lhP '>dme year T(Vf. MCCRANK I DAll.1' Pl.OT Corona del Mar's Danielle Carlson (right) duels VUla Park's Sara Sullivan for possession. CdM dunks foe, 8-5 • Crlrlson scores five goaJs to pace CdM's offense over Villa Park. Tony Altobelli DAILY PILOT CORONA DEL MAR - The Corona del Mdr Htgh girls water polo team needed an extra seven nunutPs to lack-start ilo; offense against VlSthng Villa Park. but sUll pulled out dn 8-5 nonleague wtn Fnddy Fdiling to reach the score- board after one quarter of play. the Sea Kmgs (2-0) responded Wlth four straight goals and never looked back Sophomore Daruelle Carl- son scored five goals to lead all scorers, while tedITUllate seruor Lindsey Daley chipped m with two two goals and sophomore Brittany Bowlus added a single tally. HIGH SCHOOL GIRLS WATER POLO The Spartans were led olfens1vely by Cindy Henn. who scored three goals. H enn's first goal of th<' game came nearly four rrun- utes into the contest. g1vmg Villa Park ( 1-1) a 1-0 advan- tage Corona del Mar finally got on the board and bed the game Wlth a Carlson goal a nunute and a half into the second quarter. With JUSt under two mm- utes remammg, CdM coun- terattacked off a Villa Park offensive foul and Carlson marched down the rruddle and fired a shot into the upper-right comer of the goal, giving the Sea Kings the lead for good. Goalie Jessica Wells came up with 10 saves, induding denying a nicely-placed lob c;hot at thP end of the first half DdJey and Bowlus got into th<> sconng act early in the thtrd quarter dS CdM 's lead grew to 4-1 Villa Park scored twice in thf' third, but Carlson matched the Spartans Wlth two third-quarter goals. keeping CdM 's lead m tact. CdM extended its lead to 8-3 m the fourth quarter off of goals by Carlson and Daley, before Villa Park tightened the score W1th two late goals The Sea Kings will contin- ue nonleague action Tuesday against Peninsula at 3:15 p .m. NOM.EAGUI CORONA Dll. MM I. YI.LA PAM 5 Villa Part 1 O 2 2 • S COf'ona del Mar 0 2 4 2 • 8 VIit. hrll · Henn 3, Colton 2. 5"ves -Konecny 8. C.orone del Mair -Carlson S, Daley 2. Bowlus 1. Saves -Wells 10. on all Ne"' Suburbans & Tahoes st.nee Peninsula's Amanda Basica m 1994 to win the sec- tion'• individual sin- gles title and play on a CIF championship team. Lmgman, who was 3· 0 ui matches against Rettz prior to Friday's CIF final, the CdM standout who played No. 2 singles for the Sea Kings this year (behind Yelsey) came out strong and never let up. ·There we.re a couple of Jury points I lost,• Ungmao said. Llngman, however. rallied to break Reitz in the ftfth game and the momentum appeared to sbilt with Ungman serving at 1-4. But Rei~ kept the pretsU.re on and broke Ungm.an again. then dosed out the match. ,Al.lo. it's the hrst individual ClF singles title by an Orange County player since Anne Mall of Dana Hills in 1990. Brittany Reitz Reitz said she was confident from "the minute r went on the court,· then went on • r wasn't as focused on play- ing consistent and ma.de way too many errors,• Ungman said. The third-seeded Reitz, who defeated Wood- bridge'~ Blizabeth Exon in the semifinals Friday morning, 6-1. 6-2. faced a wide open held heading into the sectton cham- pionships, because defending singles champion Luana Mdg- nani of San Manno and Ins ldlim of Beverly t-WI'>, anothN highly regarded player, dtd not enter. FolloWUlg action tn U1e ('IF Round of 32, CdM tec1mmc1tt' Anne Yelsey, who d1•lf'dtt>d Reitz for the Pdc1f1c Coc1c;t League singles title Nov 2. for- feited against Troy's Ayd Sdko- da because of an 11nµortc1nt family function. ·1 didn't steal 1t," Rc•1t1 ~c11d of her CIF title. "I tell I Wd'i d top contender 1ust likl· c1nybody else ... I wish (Mdgndnt, ldum and Yelsey} would'vl' plciyNl I want to have gredl mt1tchl'S " Agamst the I lctrvdfd -bnuncl to win easily. She became the second CdM player to win an mdividuaJ CIF girls singles title (following Keri Phebus in 1988 and '89). ·(Reitz) attacks but she's dlso really consistent and throws you off Wlth ber spin (shots),• said Ltngman. who <,uJfered her first loss of the sea- '>On ·I didn't feel llke I got in my groove di all.• After Reitz won the opening '>el, she bwJt a cornmandmg 4- 0 lt?dd tn the second set. after brcdkIDg Llngman twice Lingman had the advantage tn the fourth game. but at game pomt and down 0-3, the chair umpire• overruled Lingman's ltnc> cdll on d return by Reitz. lm.tedd of a Llngman wm, 11 hPcdme deuce and Reitz won thl' nC'xt two pomts, including a doubl<' fdult by Lingman c1t brPdk poml. In doubles, CdM'1 Brittany Holland (freshman) and Leslie Damion Ounior) · advaooed to the semifinals, but lost Priday to second-seeded and eventual champion Peninsula (featUring seruors Jamie Pagliano and Chnstine Setian). PaglJano-Setian defeated Holland-Damion, 4-6, 6-3, 7-6 (8-6), in d wild match. then upset the top-seeded team from Claremont in the finals, 6- 1. 2-6, 6-3. Claremont's Carla Hocha and Sandra Rocha woo ldst year's CfF doubles title. For Holland and Damion, they had match point at 6-5 in the tiebreaker, but couldn't hold on • 1 thought (HoUand- 0drnJOn) were going to win the whole ttung, • Stewart saJd. CdM's onJy section doubles chdmp10nshJp was won by Ully Vdldes and Holly Blare in 1971, the hrst year of CIF girls tennis. More than 150 Pre,Owned Class ic & Estate Vehicles The Mercedes-Benz listed here are Starmark Certified far up to one year ar 100,000 miles in addition co the original factory warranty. '93 JOOE Sedan '18,990 49K Mis., Like New (857669) '98 C230 Sedan ~2,990 Fully Loaded. (5~5928) '97 C280 Sedan ~S,990 CD, Phone, Lo Miles. (472751) '98 ML320 SUV S:Z6,990 Beat rhb deal. (015670) '96 E320 Sedan '29,990 Bfack/Bi3Ck, 55K Mis. (014453) '99 C280 Sedan $)1,990 Can't beat rh J'lrict. (679928) '97 E320 Secl1n SJZ,990 ·ZIK MlS. ~ C.. (174970) '32,990 :!!it~!1~[U,dan s39990 '99 E430 Sedan ~Sound, Phone, CD. (901533) '00 £320 Wann b Sound. Loaded. (~184) '97 SSOO Sed1n Ouomes, Black/Bbck. (362816) s44390 '49,990 s49s90 '98 SLSOO Roadster ~.990 x~. a:>.~. (159166) . 'oo cue Cabriolet ssrno Lo M~ L.o.dcd. (036883) '00 MUS SUV t..oaJcd. Hurry. (183972) '98 cuoo tam. t.mnacn. fholw. m{~j) ~7.ttO '60,990 .. IM ~~2,2000 COWll llSIETIALL Bucs fail, in several ·categories, 88-70 • Bwwell nets 15 points, 30 less than last time Bucs saw El Camino. COSTA MESA -J( Miii Thia could be the game that changes the sea.son for the Orange Coast College men's basketball team. so r.ou would think the Pirates earned a bl.g-ttme victory. No, that wasn't the case. After losing, 88-70, to El Camino ln the semifinal of their own tournament, the Pirates stood at the crossroads, so to speak, and were left only to question themselves on what really went wrong and who came to play. •we weren't ready to play,• OCC Coach Mark Hill sa1d comparing the Pirates' 103-94 wln over the Warriors on Nov. 22. ·we didn't have the same type of effort from the first time around.• When OCC (3-3) defeated El Camino, Pirates sophomore Nick Burwell scored 45 points. But at the Orange Coast Invi- tational, Burwell didn't start the game because or discipli- nary reasons. He missed prac- tice Tuesday because he said be was sick and he also did not start In OCC's first round 98-67 win over Victor Valley Thursday. "I'm not used to coming off the bench,• sa1d Burwell who finished with 15 points on 6- of-18 shooting. •1 thought I WdS going to start today after not starting yesterday. I thought today I should've started. It was a must-win game. But there was no disagreement with the coach." He entered for the first time 5112 minutes Into the game. He didn't score until 2:05 remained In the half, a three-pointer that was followed by another three- polnt basket as OCC went on a 9.() run to dose out the half to trail by just one point, 36-35 Bwwell said after Friday night's game that his sickness had subsided and not start.mg wu a reason for his off-touch. He also blamed d lc.lck of com- munication with teammates and playing into El Camino's slow-paced game. lbe Pirates play for third today at 5 p.m. against Long Beach The title game features L.A. Valley College agamst El Camino. And the ronsolation matcbup will have Imperial Valley facing Cypress. a.•-CDASf INVn'A110NAl Iii. c:,._, .. OuNGIE CoAST 70 Pirates hammer Hancock. 80-51 • Bucs duel Bakersfield today for tourney title. SAN LUIS OBISPO -The JC WOMEN Orange Coast CoUege women's basketball advanced to the finals of the Cuesta Tour- nament with an 80-61 win over Hancock. "1\vo games ago, might have been the worst game I've ever seen as a coach,• OCC Coach Mike Thornton said, regarding the Pirates' 57-38 loss to Santa Barbara on Tuesday. •But in the past two games, we've played pretty well. Our shoot- ing has come around.• Kristen Urban (Newport Harbor High) led the Pirates' attack with 16 points, induding four three-pointers. In fact, the Pirates (5-4) were dominant from beyond the arc, hitting 12 treys to just one by Hancock. Karyn Fierst and Jennifer Nikano each had 13 points, while Janette Redmond added nine for OCC. The Pirates will duel Bakers- field today at 4 in the tourney finals. OJESTA TOURNAMENr <hM1pionshlp semlftnals Oll4MGE CoAST 80, HANQOCJC 51 HMMlOdl -Oar1c 13, Garrow 4, Ridenour 11, Drury 4, Hansen 6, Herrero 4, Montepeque 2, Ward 7. 3 pt. goals -Clarie 1. Fouled out -None. Or.-.ge Coast -Fierst 13, Masuda s. Mojica 8, Urban 16, Melville 5, Redmond 9, Takemoto Lions r oll, 78-68 COSTA COUIGI WOMEN MESA - The Vanguard University women's basketball team defeated visiting Grand Canyon University, 78-68, Fri- day night In nonconference action at The Pit. Laura Lee had 16 points to lead Lions (3-1 ), while Robbin Dittenbu chipped In with 14 points and 11 rebounds. Beth Weidler and Court- ne y McKinney scored 12 points apiece. NONCOU £ROIOE VANGUARD lJNNDsrn 78 GttANo CANYON 68 Gnnd c.nyon · Glasby S. Moore 4. Epley 11. Olson 6, Rodrigues 5, Napier 8, Stephens 2, Benson 27. 3 pt. goals -Epley 3, Napier 1. Fouled out -Olson. V...,.,,. -Edmiston 6, Lee 16, Candelaria s. Boeke 4, Huddle 8, Weidler 12, Mcl(inriey 12. Dlttenbir 14, Fikse 1. 3 pt. goals -Lee 4. Fouled out -Candelaria, Boeke, McKinney. Halftime: Vanguard, 39-27. BVLGARI Tire Al11Mlnl11M w•tclr '" aluminium. t1tbbor and •t••I. Avalhbl• in N•~port Buch at . SPORTS MARCH CONTINUED FROM B 1 March, however, changed all that with oppressive defense and opportunistic offense to help the Sea Kings prevail, 15-7, and repeat as Division n champions. The Dally Pilot Athlete of the Week held Peck, the PCL Most Valuable Player and, at 6-foot-6, 220 poWlds, a powerful and prolific scoring machine, to one goal. What's more, March scored tee•edto OWll tlae pool .... CJP dM•plOalblp game neared, tben he emptied the pool wttb a five-goal buntln Cd.M's ts-1 victory ID the title game. DAlY'9.0T PHOTOS BY March said bis marquee performance also earned the app(eclation of several friends, who left him con- gratulatory phone messages over the Thanksgiving break that followed the title triumph. •rve gotten feedback from people at school before, but that was the first time I got messages,• March said. Though it was the second straight CIF crown for CdM, it was March's first, having spent his first two years in the program on the frosb-soph team. five goals of his own, including three of CdM's seven straight tallies to turn a 2-2 deadlock into a comfortable 9-2 cushion by halftime. The 6-4, 225-pounder, how- ever, was obviously a huge addition to this year's 22-5 unit, for which he started the entire year. While imposing to opposing two-meter players, Vargas said finesse or, perhaps "I couldn't be more pleased with how he stepped up when we needed lti,m, • Cd.M Coach John Vargas said. ·His role against Uni was to defend Peck, then. if he got a mismatch on offense, to exploit it." more precisely, deception, were keys to March's defensive dominance. "He has the ability to portray himself In the water as someone who isn't expending a lot of energy, though be is actually · working March dearly exploited the chance to show- case himself on the prep level's biggest very hard,• explained Vargas, noting the behavior made officials less likely to call fouls on him. stage. His performance helped him share ' sion II Player of the Year laurels wi' teammate Garrett Bowlus, an l i-March said his understated style was developed with the help of teammate Artie Dorr's father, Don, a former official who counseled March on the fine points of operating under a referee's radar. officially announced soon. •tte was such a selfless play<'1 , 1 :. great ·vou have to try to keep a straight face, even though you may be making pretty good contact,• March said. ·u you're hitting a guy, you can't have the kind of face that a referee is going to notice.• to see him get the attenti. ri he deserves,• Vargas said. "He was Cl .stent for us all year and his teammat~ ways appreciated him." Cold second-half shooting does in the Mustangs, 56-40. BELLFLOWER -The Cos- ta Mesa High girls basketball team, atter a decent shooting performance. in the ftrlt half, went ice cold ln the second half, resUlting in a 56-40 loss to LOs Alamltos (2-1) in the Mayfair-Bellflower Touma· ment Prtday night. The M~ (l-2) milled 27 of 31 abOll .... In the MCOnd ball anit ac:tuelly had more three po6nten (eight) than two pomtan (m). ·0w protMml WW'e lnltde die arc, -MeN CMCb Jb:n w..a Mid. ·1n eddtdon 1o our cold~. w. gave up 18 Gftmllve reboundt ID die w:ond, Which won't .-C it c1one.· • H' I SCHOOL BOYS BASKETBALL i\/.lesa holds on •Double-digit lead evaporates down the stretch, but Costa Mesa prevails, 52-51, and will battle Trabuco Hills today at 3:30 for consolation title. ANAHEIM -Senior Mike Whittaker scored 14 points, including four three-pointers to lead the Costa Mesa High boys basketball team to a 52-51 win over Troy in the consolation semifinals of the Loara Tournament. The Mustangs (2-1) led by as many as 11 In the fourth quarter and held on for dear life down the stretch. Junior Chad Vakili chipped in with 10 polnts, while sophomore Danny Krikorian added nine points, all on three-point hoops as Mesa heads into today's con- solation finals aqainst Trabu- co Hills, to be pJ.1yed at 3:30 at Loara High. "Our third quarter was probably our best quarter of GIRU HOOPS Nancy Hatsushl and Rbon· di Naff led the Mustangs with 11 points each, while Leigh Marshall added nine points on three treys. Costa Mele will wrap up play in the tournament at 9:30 e.m. at Mayfair HJoh. basketball we've played so far,• Mesa Coach Bob Serven said. •Troy is a very good bas- ketball team and it took a sol- id eUort from our guys to get the job done. - LOMA 1'0UIDMAWNT Con9olatlon MmlflMls CostA MBA 52. TtloT 51 Scare by~ Cost.a Mesa . 14 16 14 8 -52 Troy 14 17 4 16 -51 c.o.ta Me9il -Conte 5, Krikc:>Nn 9, Whittaker 14, vakm 10, Oar1t 2. Payne 12. Millward 0. 3 pt. goals -Whittaker 4, Krikorian 3, Vaklll 1, Conte 1. Fouled out -None. ""°f-Tra. Hardeman 3, Tre. Hardeman 2, Knobke 2, o.lafu 6. Palta 5, CNdN 12, S.lrd 4. Giikes 17. 3 pt. goals -Dalfu 2, Chadha 2, Hatta 1, Tra. Hardeman 1. AYSO REGION 120 Shooting Stars win •Doerr, Merida each score in 2-1 victory. cosrA tvmsA -'tbe Shooting Stars won tbe AYSO Region 120 Dtvilion ' girls IOCCer championsbip with a 2· 1 win OYW tbe Gold Rudletl on Nov. 21. JWty Doen and CmtM • Mertda Mch scored goalS for the St.n, while all·a.round team play WU turned lD by AIJJ1G9 Doerr, AmMr ..... ,Vldoda ... ow ... .....,o .... .._ llHll1•·111i1-. ,,.. f11la1 Jet&•• .. ...,.. ~;'•,...,.'nm•, ,, Dalty Pilot SCHEDULE • •' ~ .. - .. > • • •;.t >c ';: 14 i A ·~· 't11A Do ily Pilot SPORTS Saturday, 0ecember 2. 2000 BS PIRATES OCC STAITlll .LllEUPS CONTINUED FROM B 1 OfRNsl ~ Ht. M. a.,_ Newport Harbors Bnmdoo McLain. atop h1J habitat at Newport Harbor High. The Bucs are read y to make the statement they have been declartng since their upset 26-25 win over M t. San Antonio in Week 4. ,, Nial.... 6-1 195 Fr. QI '7..._Ci••,..•· 6 .... 213 So OE M ..,_._ ~ 175 Fr. g 7SVMO._ M 270 So OT •w e're for real,· said OCC quarterback N ick Higgs whose stable play and leader- ship has been the key for the Pirates' Central Division championship and bowl berth. MN o defense has done anything that can stop us. Any time that someUung has gone wrong it's been because of our own selves. To be 0-3 and bounce back and beat Mt. SAC. Pal omar and Pasadena, we're showing that w e're for real.· 71 lllnwMt '*'° S-10 210 ff Fii 12 Jul1W DN S-9 175 So W9' • ~J~6-1 175 ff. WR 41 .,_ ~ 6-3 245 So. TE 77 -..,_ .,.,,_ 6-3 286 So. LT 7t CiMY "-1nl M JOO So. LG SS OM s-6-1 220 Fr OT •T_,.W.,.. 62 210 So OE u MMn9I JNQDfe 6-2 220 So Ol8 • Durrw o-6--1 230 5o llJ 44 Alr'9t ~ 6-2 240 So OLJ n T• 0oo >10 110 Fr ca 50 LMm ~ 6-0 250 So. c 11 ,.,.__ ~ 5'9 1eo So ca t2 ...,, a.-6-1 285 Fr 'RG 42 ...,_., Ar-. 6 2 200 So SS JS 8-1' a-J 6-0 175 Fr FS 14 MAM ,_ 6-6 lOO So RT Directions to c.rttos C.oHege No rth on 405 to 605. North on 605 to Alondra. Right on Alondra and proceed east. Stadium on right. 2,007 yards and 17 touch- downs completing 144 of his 265 attempts. did earn its chance for a bowl game. "They beat some teams thell we had trouble Wlth, espec1dlly Mt. SAC.• he said "They are d.fl outstdnd- mg team that started out tough. We match up weU in a lot of areas. It's realJy gomg lo be d good matchup, • DAJLY l'!LOT PHOTOS BY SEANHILUR MCLAIN CONTINUED FROM 81 9om: May 10, 1982 HOftMtc>wn: Newport Beach edSier. •w e took an early lead and that allowed me to relax,• M clain said. ·our defense did a great job oC keeping the shots on the outside and to the left I didn't get too jumpy back there and l just waited for the shots to come to me.· "Early in the season seems like two years ago,· OCC Coach Mike Taylor said Thursday. The Falcons. ranked No 18 in the nation Wlth three losses to Mt. SAC. Pasadena and El Camino, are led by quarterback Doug Bdugh- man, who earned All-Mission Conference Northern D1v1 - sion honors as he threw for Similar to OCC's line- bdcker trio of Martin Janzon, Jusl.Ul Blackard and Dustin Davis. the Falcons have a sol- id set of defenders. Philip Per- ry and John Lopez are first- team all-conference selec- tions who will try to stuff OCC's Dawkins and Jared Kemp. A win for the Puates would not only solldJ.fy proof of not overaduevmg. but would hopt>- fully bnng d wmrung trend to Coast, dCCOrdlng to Taylor the first CIF btle for the Sailors since 1984. or JU~l after Mclain's second birthday. ·1 was really ready for that game,• McLain said. "My mind was ready and my legs and body felt good. Heck, two days before the finals, l was ready to pldy. =6-foot-1 170 $poft: Watr:r polo flosltlon: Goalie CoedMs:Brlan Kteotzlcamp and Bill Barnett The mdtchups on the field make the Straw berry Bowl perhaps the most intriguing of the JUntor college bowl gdJlleS today. "We're gldd we'n• playing a good team The~e guys will pldy their hf'drls out dnd that's dU that mdtters, • Sdld Taylor. FIWOffte food: O\ocolate-dllp cookies Accordmg to McLain, It was the two weeks pn or to the playoffs that en dbled the senior to rise to the occasion . Mazzotld noted that OCC F•vortt. movie: "Man in tl'le Iro n Mask" DAWKINS re1uvenated Dawkins. "I've seen a big change in James D awkins Fullerton elnd 133 ydrdi; and lhre<> touchdown'> m the 32-18 victory over SaddlPbc1ck l couldn't wait. I still can't believe it's a" over elnd we won.• It was McLain's first-half performance thal made the difference in the contPsl, according to Kreutzkdmp. a.st llthletk moment •winning OF last week ... Athleta of the Week XII: The 'senior collected eight saves to help preseNe the SallOt'S' 15-9 win over Foothill In the Clf Division I championship ga~. Nov. 22. "That was importcml because that dUowed me to play in all the cruadl games down the stretch.• Mel.din said. "That gave me a lot of confidence • "Looking at the hlms, 1t was even more amazmg than when I saw him play lave.· he said. ·w e had four defensive breakdowns an the first half and he saved u~ on alJ of them. It was 10~5 at the half and at couJd hdve easily been 10-9. • On a team \vlth a reputabon for fast-break. transition-style offense, Kreutzkamp saw one naw that held Mel.din out or a reguJar stdrtlng spot CONTINUED FROM B 1 the most of his role dS c1 return specialist and d slot receiver and earned All-Mission Conference honors for his kickoff return'>. which included d 92-yard touchdown return agdinst Riverside. When division plc!y began for OCC. Dawkins began to run with authonty His elusiveness would lead to big plays for the Pirates and will be called upon agdin today agc1JJlst Cemtos in the past four w eeks ... # Mike Tavlor Orange ~ College football coach "l'vf' sel•n d big change an Jdffif'S Oriwktn!-> m the past tour wPekc,, • Tdylor said ·HP doesn't stop and ddnce an the holes ---------He ge~ mto the Then, this season, Dawkins became exoted because he knew he had the chance to be the featured back. With an 0-3 start and JUSl one offensive TD. a Dawkins 39-yard score. the Pirates' offense wels hardJy a threat and Dawluns' season made no rumblings for a future at a tow-year university. Ddwklns' hole elnd bur'>t through the seconddry • McLain not onJy was a maior cog on defense, his play helped spark the offensP, Wee they needed any more help "The onJy thing holding Brdndon back early, was his passmy on our counterattacks,· Kreutzkamp said "But, by the end of the season. that was not even an issue He'~ a real good dlhlete and a quick let.tm<.•r • efforts m the past five games has mcreased his stock to play at a four-year university, OCC Coach Mike Taylor said Dawlun~ hdC.. JU!->t two more obstacles to overcomP before the yeelr ends Ht- Wdnts to eam tus A'isoc1ate of Arts degree dunng the wmter break so thdt he Cdn be more elttracuve to tht> four-year programs •with Brandon playing the way he WdS, the offense took more chances and attacked earlier. knowing McLam would bail them out if something happened.· Kreutzkamp said. "He w as really playing out of his mind out there." On a team with 10 .,emor.. out of 13 players, McLam knew this wa~ the year to add another chapter to the legacy of Newport Harbor Weller polo. In Delwklns' first five games he gdJiled onJy 149 yards rustung. But rn the second hall of the season •After four long years of hard work,· McLain said. "There was no way I was leavmg here without a (CIF championslup) ring. The guys knew we had the talent to be successful and we busted our butts to g et the job done.• But, OCC defeated Mt. he's gamed 493 yards and sue TDs, four of those scores from 40 or more yards out. And the other obstctcle A win over Cemtos. His goal for the Strawberry Bowl? • 1 Wdnl to get the WUl. To helve a good game would 1ust be the su gar on top." M cLain, the Daily Pilot Athlete of the Week, attributes that potent offense to making his life between the goaJ posts much San Antonio, an u pset win over the No. 4 team in the nation that gave confidence to the Bucs and set up a He fin1Shed the regular season with back-to-back 100-yard games. 159 yards and touchdown in a loss at . ~~:;j I ' .. -r NUC eras 11 w .nm 11 MUC ~ 11 MUC """! 11 w -11 MUC --11 w m I L ~ Mml I l ___ 091UAAE1 _ __, NOTICE OF which la on file in the Ot· 2 Broc:hure dev1lop-ORANGE) sa trid AIMtttJty BoeJd hU 1 Mait<e1ing, 1dvlttis· ATTEST: Ill LIVonne PUBLIC HEARING lice ol lhe City Cllrk, ment 1nd distribution CITY OF recommended the lf'Q and public re141lonl M. Hartdeea, Nolica II tier.oy "'90 i nd 3 Promotion of pt.t>lle NEWPORT BEACH) boundtrln for l•vying 2. Brochure de velop-CrrY CLERK th9I IN City CounCI of WHEREAS. 11141 Act eYent1 I, LAVONNE M 8SHUment bl mod-mant illld dlstnbWon ATTACHMENT: &tllblt City of N requtr111 lhl Crty Counc:it 4 The general promo-HARKLESS. Clly Cllrlt 11.-d, Ind 3. Promolion cl pub11c A -Boundary Map ~ "°"' •wpott '° decllte ns lntentJOn to hon of restaurent trade of the City ol Newport WHEREAS. thl Busi-9Yll)IS. whd1 are to take Publiahed Newporl hearing on":: ~.= levy and coltet -• actMtles Beach C1hlorn11 do nesa Improvement Ota-plaol Of\ or In llT'f Plblic: B11ch-Co1ta M111 lion cl u.. Pwmlt 3121 mentl witllrn lhe Sus•· 5 Educational and hereby certify lhat th• trtd Mvte«y Bo&fd has plac:ee II\ Iha area. Daily Pllol Dec.mblf 2. (114m) on Pf01>41rtY lo-Mn Improvement Ois· training clus11 lor whole number cl m.,,,. reconvneuded tM 1\1/M 4. DecoratJOn ol any 2000 cat.a 11 J.450 Via tne1 tor 11141 neirt tise11 members bers of Iha City Couoal ol the 011trlct be ~ plaol In the .,.., Sa454 Ooott year; and 6 Member9hlpS W'I v1r-is 1tvtn. !hit the lor• ctlanged to lhl Ba1boe s. Publoe 111a Im· ORDINANCE An ..:;,... by the llP' WHEREAS 1he Busi-IOU1_!.. orgato pr~~~ ~"!.:IOrl•solNollllon~lng9 Island _!?u•~·,~. lmt • pr~~~~t'"'• marn-NO. 200C).2A ~ of the Plannlng nets lmprovtmen1 Dis· .,..., ...,,......, ---v Re-v, c:UVV"92 prov~e • ., .,.s '"'' o lei--_ .... -AN ORDINANCE OF tofnmlealon'a rt1toce-tncr li.tMtlcty Boen! hu W1 Newi>Ol1 8eaeh was duly and r99ullrly reflect the 1nelu!!on of 6 The general prornc> don of U.. Permit 3829 nol recommended the BE rf FURTHER RE· introduced before 1nd bu11ne1Mt within the lion of ret1ll trade TtiE CITY COUNCIL OF bUI t leYylrlg SOLVED, that the Crty adopted by th• City Mw boundatlM ectiVtliH. TtiE CITY OF re~~ancI"Tt ~ mer! i: modfled -•· Council al the City of CoullOM ol 111<1 Crtv at • NOW THEREFORE. BE IT FURTHER RE· ~~~fJa B~~~~TER bMl'I dlC'afmined !hat 11 NOW, THEREFORE. Newport Beach shall regular m111Jng ol 111d 11141 City Counal af tM SOLVED. th1t the Crty 3 36 PERTAINING TO ii. calegorlealty extlTij)t the City Couneff af the ettdlCI a pubic hearing Council. duty and r.gu· City of Newport Bach Counctl of the City of THE RECOVERY OF ~r the CIH I 21 City of Newport Beach on Decembe< 12, 2000 larty held on the 14th re101v11 u follows Newport Beach shall COSTS FOR THE PER· {Enboarnent Actlonl by rHolvH aa lollowa at 7.00 pm .. or as llOOrl day ol November 2000. Section 1 The Ctty conduct a public hNring FORMANCE OF CEA· Aegul1tory AganclH) Section 1 Thi Annual lheleall•r as this matter and thal 11141 llmt WU COIJl\QI heret>y decletes on December t2, 2000 TAIN MUNICIPAL requinlm4lnts ol lhe Ca~-Rtpor1 lllid by the may be heard. In the ao pelMd and adopted the intention to levy .... ti 7.00 p.m., or u IOCll S ERVICES. SPECI FI· lornl• Environmental Advisory Board la Council Chlunbere l<>n by the followlng I/Ole, to 11nmenta 1nd :%" ther1after u lhtS matter CALL y TITLE 20 PLAN Oulli1y Ad. 1141reby aPl)fOVed The cated II 3300 Nawport wit the coll.aion of a r11 may be heard, in the CHECKS Notice 11 hereby Annual Report contains Boulevard, Newporl Ayu: Thom1on, HHstm•nt upon per-Coul!Cll Chambers lo· Subl.ct ordinance was lurth•r given lh•t said 1 dlea1ption ol ~ov• Beach, Cahfornla •I Olov•r, Adame, aona conducting boll· eated at 3300 N•wport iniroduced on th• 141h reYOClllon hearing wm menta I nd ictlYttiee to whld'I time the Councll Rlctgew1y, O.ba~. n111 In the BualriMe lfn-Boulevard, Newpor1 be held on Iha 12th day bl provided lor 2001. will hear att lntereated O'Neil, MayClf 'foy.. provt!T141nt Olatrlct lor Beach. Catllornla at dey al November. 2000, al o.c.mbef 2000 1 the arH boundanea. persons for or egainst NMI: None the fiscal year 2001 pur· Which time th• Council and Wll adopted 00 !tie ' ' 1 and 11141 annu1I _,.. Iha utabllsMlent of IN Abaenl! None auant 10 the Act. Suen wtll Mar all lntereatld 28th day of No\l.,,,blr, :: g:;: ~ ~ ment within the Ollltlct Oistnct, the extent ol the Abataln: None bane!~ w 1•ment lhall ,,.raons for or agaifllt 2000 .._ .......... City Section 2 The 1 City 011tr1et and the epeoifle IN WITNESS bl 11 lcflows: · the r-wal cl the Oil-AYES. COONOll MEM- w .. Nr#polt ._.., Counotl ti.rat... deoll types of lmprovementl WHEREOF. I htw 1141r• A Banb llnd finan<llal trict. tile lllllnt al the BERS: THOMSON, Hiii. 3300 Newport Bou-n lntentlon j;;''reMW ~ or actJV!tiN to bl tuoded unto aubacnb•d my 1nat1Miona that ,,.. a•-Oistnct and the epec1fie GLOVER, ADAMS, ~T'~::; BullMH lmprcw.ment by lhe beMfi1 UMU· name and affixed the of· ~ llom OCy btllll'lela types of lmpronments ~fJ'C::w~~N.EIL. end piece any Ind 111 Olllltlct lor the f1tca1 year ment. Protutl may b41 lteial 1111 ol 11ld City 1ana. regutationa lhall or ac:tM1lea to bl funded MAYOR NOYES ,_ lnl.,elled mav Mw.wy 1, 2001 to o.-medt orelly or In wnting, thia 15th day ol Nov· bl .......0 S500 per by tile benefit UHH· ...u:• COONCL ME»-,......-.. .. •• d' ____.._, 31 2001 but If WT!hn, lha1I b4I wnbet 2000 y11r metll Proceats may b4I ---. appMr and b4I ,_r ........ to h Aci pur· filed Witt\ the City Cler1I 181 L..-Vonne M. H1rta-B lneurenca agancie1 made ora1y or on wnlinQ, BEAS: NONE lhaNon. If you ~ Section 3. The m.m· II or bllort the time teu, City C!er11, .._. thal er• IJC~ from but if written. et\111 b4I ABSENT COUNCIL flil project In ~..e .......-of IN Dlltr1ct Wiii filled lor lhl Haal1ng and port Blech, Calltomla City buarnt11 bole lied with tht cay C1t1tc MEMBERS: NONI may bl limlled to ·-• ;;,;h; lhl 11me and contain s ulflclt nt Publlahed Newport reguta~ ltllll be ... at or betofe lhl llml AllTAIN COUNCIL or'ly lt10N ..._you °' wlltVn lhl document•llon to verify Buch·Co1ta M111 IMMd $250 par 'fW. lilied 1111 118 HM11ng and Mat8E.R: NOHE :"'!"'-.. llNhaa~ ~ ~="'~ o1 tM bullflMI owi•INp Ind Diiiy PiloC Oecernber 2. C. Pt raone opetating conllln 1ulflclant MAYOR: JofW'I I. ~,. ·~.,, c of N"J>Orl Bueti Yaltdata lhl pMJouler 2000 one al ma folOWlng documlntatJOn to venty ~Cl..fRK: LaV-. nolot or In wrln«I o«· .,:. be lndudad ~ pro1 .. 1. II written $1455 types of bu9lr1"Me u ~ OWl*wt1lp and M. Haftrlete rNpoodtoca a.tlvl<ed the Olatnd PfOlelll are ~ RESOLUTION an ~ldlpalldtrtl .col'llnlc-validate tile ,,_'11oufar The 11M 11111 II .,.,._ to flt~ at or prior IO Section 4. TM City the ownera of NO ~.. tat In 111 ~I pro1H I It written able lor review In lhe • .....,. F ' ,............ ..~....., lavlff ,__ within tn. Ola-• -owned by lnOthtf -.. prolMts an r-*ved 11Y ,..._.,. ......_ Iha ""'""" or """'""" '""•vr ll'ld. wttkt1 pey lllty I*· A RESOLUTION eon lhal1 be ·~ the owners ol bu1i. Clly ._,., ,..._ fl fll Information ca" (9'4!1) and lmpON9 and ora.r. c.nt or mor• of lie 1ot11 OF THE CfTY COUM-lrom flil 1m11 riot: nesaee wtttlMl Iha Dlltrid C!IY of NeWPOr1 Baadl e«-3200 ~~ cl a benefit HHHmanll to ~ Cll Of THE CITY Of 1. Hair _,.... which pey fifty ,,.roent or 'Pubh1hed Newpott le/ LaVOl'\M M. Hark· =-~'::" ~: l•vl•d. no lurther NEWPORT BEACH 2. NII ... ._. more of Iha total .,..... Buch-Co11a Mua ..... C"YI ... .,. et.tti.N•_, ,,... In Ille Olltrlcl Such procaldlnaa to r•naw PPROVINO TH,. 3. ~ _.... .-manta to be leYled. no Dally Pb o.o.mo.r 2. Publ .,,.., _,...... blntfil lltMtln'*1C llNll the Dt.tl1cl lhlll b4I A "' 0. The Mii rw1t for !Urther PfOCff(ll"O' to 2000 Buch·Co111 Mtu bl u fOlloWI: For lllab-taken 1or a period ct one ANNUAL REPORT 111 other ~ raMW lht Dfatrict w n St1S2 o.lly Pb Decamber 2. llltvnentl • Itta than r-r from IN dttit af Iha AND DECLARING wilhln the a.trict thall be 1akan !of a period cl NOTICE Of 2000 81451 MY_,, (ti) •mployNt, finding of a malol1ty ITS INTENTION TO b41 100 ~ of Iha ont year from the data PUBLIC HEARINO AH0LuT10N-the MtNlfMOl n • be ~,.!Y~M: ~\W:0 ,~88~'! ~ ~ =: ~IM~:vin: ~ .:*: ~-~ NO. 200M2 rllh~·~thForg= 11•uml~~!,. ag•11"~! MARINE AVENUE floor11 h d~r' •.a1tllab-10 Courota~~·.!1 ~ ma!t'I~ the City of Pffwpon a •EIOlUTIOH 01' than tan (10) tlTlf)loy· "'~"' of _ ..... IU81NE99 IM· 1 • p .. au " pro .. ,. "'"' ..-.... 8Ndl w111 hold a pubic "' n -... .....;.... ..... ......, type or typea Of ~ Cn.ptw a 01 cl fll Mu-Iha furnilhlng of a ~ .._.._ _ ............. """" THI CITY COUNCIL ........ ,_..,,, "*"' or actMly wltnln PAOVEIH!NT Dll-n1c1pe1 c0ci. 01f1o type or typea c1 Imo ·-"""to, .............. _. Of THI CITY OF m«11 lhlll be «11111 10 Iha Olltrlcll. t10M typea TAICT FOft THI ,._ Section 2 ·,,_ ....,..,. PfOYemtntl °' activity cllion of the Ptannlng NIWPORT l!ACH 1M amoon& ~'::a.City'• of lmprov•mlntt or CAL YEAR Of JAM-'""'"** 11911 be .., Iha~. lhoN Commillion '° °"'¥ liP" A,,ROVINQ TH! =-~ u = 1ctfYltlat 1h1ll b• UAltY 1 2001 TO ~ ~ flt -· Of typea of ~!Mntl ~:r::: ~ ANNUAL RIPOftT 111had purau1n1 to •hlnlntlld. DICIMiilR 31 , an .....,_, .enti, In Of actMllee shaft b41 u.. '9f'lllll ..._ 1111, AM> ITATINCI ITI CNPal' &'OI cl the~ Further 1nbma11on ,.. 2001. ~-~ ellminl*f ua ,_ _,..., ..._ t~i•vNTIO:. ... T.~ ni:=a;o:;-Tha bal)tlll a:=.~ ,.._,.~E:~ e!1: MWaln .. ·~ ~~Id on ~Ut .... on ~ ': lllNTI FOR 11tl ... 11all'ttntl ahall be Dlllrtd .......... ~ be -lmptO..-.nl Ola-be on ... Illy Of lie .. ~ 14. 2000 le «*Id tl Mtt ....... MtTAUfWff Al-~ by!"~..!' ~C:,~~ lricl Ml .-tllahed In=.:~~~:~,.. •ouleur,. Ttl• IOCIATIOH IUll-;.f; :=c.i;.-;•;; N•wpo11 Boulevard, ~=~a:n:: W11 M .. aantna flt j)topottd :::".':Ce.la dt- Nlll IM,ROVI• ~ In flt Ola-~ .. ~~ 1~0...-nt Ar• Law conlnlJ '° ftlflllllr ot .,._ in.pi~ A .. ,_ ....._ • MINT DllTRICT trtd on 11t *1cl11t lit-·-of 1Nll. C1lll0<nl1 ~ ~'':.':*,1.,"' ~ ,...,.. mtr/ be ~It 1 l• • POft THE PllCAl ~ of • MIMM ~ ~Qall llMI ..,..... and z:tt lectlon ~ ,,_ .....,; :::'ot11fd~ ~~ =~-= =-:. YIM-1 10JAHUDIARCYE•'' ~~,t':V·~ w .. ,...,.... of ~:..._ ~tor ~~ Nawpott lou..-V.rd , et um r:-9..-11111 llt "*"'°" " 11t ,.....,.., ::-"' ' ,v ftl .::, . .., ... Pl'· ,..._. IMdl. ClllOt· _, I a I' 5 '";iiL '!!'...~..1 .~!:... .. ~ ='':Oc'a~ to': onaaln••• "*Of *'~~T: i:-;"'--;j "" -•-,...,. __ """'~ .... ,._.. ~ of marMt9 5 .....,., In .. lllM' Md ...,.., ti'/ ,"'l'": _......... -~) M44l30 ............... . 11ur•nt Aaaoel1tlon re:MlnlnO In lht Dia-• ..... _.,, _. ,. air Courd fDr aedi tlliill"',. The CIJ Ciltltl lflll ,...... · ... % 11111 ....,_. lmptcMIMfll trtah fttCe1 J:'· ttlt pubic llMr• ae:r11:.;..";"' ·~ ,.M w '* ........,,, GI ... -r.. t.W ~~ .. ""=:a..:= .... ---,. .;,":; =-""*""-:.":':'.,~ =-..:.. ~:: ........ and ei.-.. .... be IWpar. ............... M1Mtna A--lult' ldwt7.M ...... !::""""', .......... I$ 7• Ill "'"'~.,,... Nee LMr .,. per ~ i.-MOplOn. ~ ......... ow ..... Del-..... ... .. .... • ........ -~ ,... of 1Mt. Cellforftte ._ ... 11t,.,.. _,bl ~·!, t J: tr~ trtd 1GOO -.... ""°" =-bl-=• .. Ille.. .. pulllC ,_,. .. ~ ~~Hllfl'MIYI .......... ll'lt'IO ... -...... -... -~ .. -,,. ... ""'" ... ......., -· 3'900 .. tllOMll OM tll"*9d ...._, ·~ !Ir flt en1 --.......... i£iS ~ ~..!! patOel'fl ol ,. ...... •ler 111nt1tt1 -'" Wt4I 111 NA. ..-.J. • •. ,,_,, ......,. ,___ .. ....... .. ~""' .... , ......... ~c.M .... ... .... ......... .. en ,,;,..,. l9flOll to bl IJIGllln 1l n. • d tMll!PMt moo. • ....,. 111 ....... • .,.. , ....... -.. tied lltd w-tcl 11¥ Improve•~ incl 111....... L ""8!a. llif .., .-. ~ _,.. I.:' Cir .. -Oilui'lill "' .. --......... .., '°" . ..... ..... ... ~ •• -~.~e,. !.'!! !!'...~~·..:e-: ~~ ........ ~........ .-..::~.,. Hllll ---"'"' -- ---I""' 211 ........ ~....... ~.-....... . .. ......_ ,..., .................. .... .......... y.., ______ ............... ~.----....~..-. .... --~ pubtre h11nng will b4I held on the 12th day cl o.c.mi.. 2000. at Iha hour ol 7:00 p.m. in fll Council Chtmbefs cl Iha Newport Be1ch City Hd, 3300 Newport Bou- llYlld. NtwpOlt Beach, Calllomta. .. WhlCtt time and plaee any and all ,,....an. 1n1.,.s(.a mey appear and b4I heard lhlreon It you cNlange ltlll PfOj«:t In ooun. YoU Inly bl lmted IO ......-ig oriy ltlOM ...... you Of eomeone else relsed al 11141 public hearing de- acribed In this nolJoe or In wntten ()()(· re~ oel1V41rH 10 the City al, or pnor to, the publle heanng For lnlorm1tlon call (949) 6-44·3200 181 LaVonne M. Hark· te.., City Clertl Pubh1hed Newpor1 Beaoh·COlll Mtll Dilly P1lol o.o.mt>er 2. 2000 GLASCOCK dreu of the person whom claims m1y ba fll•d 11. Fr11dom Dr. Thell Glascock. I El«OW. 2 Crvre Plaza. Suite 200. Newport former Sertent on the e..dl. CA 92660 ind Costa Mtu Pollcl 0.- lhe last date lor l1hng l)llrtmtn1 Ind retirld dalms by 1ny crecMor college profnsor 11 llial be Dec 18 2000, Cal State LA hiving Wnidl la IN bus>nen Mfwd 11 chainnln al m y before ttlll sale dlte the Criminal Justice apedl\ed above Dated: 11-30-00 0.l)llrtrnent, l)llSMd BUYER(S) IWIY Hov. 30 ln Sall BAT 0 Ent~ Inc , Like City, Utah. Ha I c.libT1lll CIOrJlOfll!On Wll 63 By: 181 Jamn B1tea, Thell. born In Slknon, Prealdent ID had .i-. of Published Newpor1 1 vi.~., BHch-Costa M1sa 1duc1 llon1I ti· Ody Pl10I Oeoambef 2 l)llrltncH lncludlng 2000 Bigio P hlllpplnu 180658 Sa453 Islands end Uma PtN. Notioe ii hereby Qlven Ht want on to obtlln that the undersigned w.11 hl1 Bachelor's Oe9'" be 10k1 at Publle Auctlon from CSLA, MHttr on Monday, DECEM· Dtgru In Publlc BER 11. 2000. •t H>-00 Admlnlstr1llon from A.M. Ketty & Kat1 Jodi· USC ......... ~ son, K £ AUCTION .,.., ,.,. ...,......_ SERVICES. p 0 BOX from Cl1'9tllont eo.-_____ _.S"'•-'"45~0 823. RIAL TO, CA 1191 . &crow No.: 923n. 909-873-0744. Thell, 1 long time ,.... 34894-KH AUCTION BONO ldant of eo.t1 lhu, NOTICE TO •723-4 1-19 recently rallrecl to CREDITORS OF ALLSPACE. COST A S1lln1, Utah. Wlllle MES A 1535 NEW· II t In C ..... a BULK SALE POAT Bl VD. COSTA V ng Olli -(UCC Sec. 1105} MESA. CA 92627 ht often would bt NoTICE IS HEREBY UNIT 1, NAME f~ncl I t the llf'Wtc. Olll'EN thlt • btJllt .. • INVENTORY of C1lv1ry ;.= '*'°"' to be made n-.. A300, MELOOY Sat'ltll Ana. Ht name(•). bulinnl ad-MORAN MISC I motorcycle r1dln9. «-<•>cl IN Saltr1•l HOUSEHOLD GOODS fllhln;. campl~ .,. lnnov11M Auto-A300. MELODY rld~horMt craft. ~led MORAN C/O R G I ._ lee5 Babcodc Stl'MI. TOULSON. MISC t ti I l&He t...... Ml eou MM&. CA 92827 HOUSEHOl.O GOODS I I Io • n Io y 1 d Doino BualMN u · M30 TIM SHANNON, Mll'dtlng ff# _..,. Muco Aulo P81ntlng a MISC./HOUSEHOlD lndlln m.urala. 8odv WOlb GOODS Hit thrN ctilkhn All OIMr bu91Mu MS>. liOU Y M l uMVt Thell, Kltfly n1m•(s) 1nd ad• NORBY. MISC I lhfcedo of !•~ drHl(N) ueed by Ille HOOSEHOlD G000S ...w.. .._. Q.____.. _. s.t(a) wW11n the p911 P\lbltlhH Newport -. ,.., -., lhlM yMr1. 11 stated by BHch·COlta Mesa C09Ut ~Alene ID, ... th• S.lllr(I ). la/111' Diiiy Piot Novem09r 25, Miki Ol11coe• Of NONE ~ 2. 2000 Coetl ...... Ml .. The nam.(~~!!!" ad-Sa447 blt11td wltll ttft =r :. Iha rn Q Flctltlou9 luefneat grenclchllchri, ~ "'"" ...... a...ment lldtft, TOfy, Mdrtw, ~. loc,, I .._.. The 1o11o=.=-... lthfw, !lljtl\, Aul- foma. COfPO'•lk>n ........ --:" --. .... 10.1 eo.11111n Av.. "9 dalno aa tin, , -S1at*>n. CA 80680 8A8E' FACE · BABY Ind The ~,being ac*i FACE. 235 AYenlcla lhtl!Ofttl eenlcee .,. genar...., claticftbad G r a ne dt . Sa n wttl bl t*d lft ...,._ aa Furnltur9&. lllctut ... °"'*119, CA 82672 lleld, UT on O.C.... IQUl&wnar(. llWltdd In-.. E. Oobble, 235 " -. .._ and al c#llf ... Awnldl Qr~. Sen .., _ _._.......,..._ ___ _ .... wad in fie ~ ~ CA 872 .. -----• '°" Of ... IMll"9I and Thia ""**' .. ~ -loc*ed ti.; ,.., Mme!~ .... ~ MooCll ...... CoMa "'" you •••Mel --.. CA 11W7 **.a ...._. ~? No The bllll .... II • ~ °':: men1 .. ...--IO be oaNUlft-I~ ......... ofllol ot II.cl wlll ... ~ ~ &crow Md °"' d a...~ fie ••It t' • .... -. on '~1111 • • D-. ti, IDOO ~ NII Now II. a n...=..::~ ._,,. ,,.., .......... .. !:. .... eo.. lllllln ., ... .,..., y .,__ ..... J • I .-- I (5): L,J , I EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY Al rlll IStalt ICMl1lslnO In !Ills newsoaper " IUbjlcl fD tlle f'tdetal Falt Housing Ad of 19118 as allltlldea wlllch makei 1t Weoal to llMf1iM •any P<tltftflCI, lmitllion Of discriminltioft based on raic.. color. relkl- lon, sex. Ila~. tamllil stalus 0t national origin, Of an illtenUon to mtlre any such 111eference. Nmltatlon 0t *tltrnilltion • This newsp&p1r wlll not lrnowlngly accept any adYutiaement for real -wlich Is ill vlOlllion of tllt law. °"' r8lderl 111 hereby informtd that aM dwlllngs ICMrtlsecl In this MWSP1P1f are IVllllble on Ill equal= oi:nily bllll. To com of dlscrimi- nallon. toll-free at 1-800-42""8590 ' I '---J ~.uma OPEN IATllUN M 2121,...or.-.a.1 bonua ,.., -end ~:::~~ IEIA VERDI e COUNTRY CWI e OPEN llAT/llUN 1~ I040 c.t w. Offlr9d • '711,000 ~ Anni MoC•l•od 4-640-73551711 ...... New Liiting 38r 281 on 1119' ~Im. l.WldM Gllotl. S450t( PIUdentill Cl ~. Cell 9cb or B.J. IMt-21~2447 NEW HOMES From the ~ $200,000'1 Priv•t• Encllvt of 17 Hornet. Ftt Silr1Jll, R· I Two-SDy 3 8edroomt & 2 1!Z lllfll Two-Cw AllMCtlld <lMgt Up IO 1.505 aqu.. Fttc ~IO~ 8eldl & TNrlgjt SqJn. 94H50-1440 1·=-1 EVERYDAY RUOAT UV NEW~i..tl ........ Up tel ..... 7 cllye • .... flltoed "°"' 117t,OOHM5,000 Not JndueM of llncS .... HlclelW "°"* Aon u ltMIM1IO ~ =Certified Pre-Owned = -aMW -------For ultimate peace of mind, every U:rtificd Pre-Owned BMW is backed by The <:ad6ed ~ BMW ~a Plan, covering the vehicle for up to 2 years or 50,000 miles (whichever comes first) fonn tho dart of cxp1rat1on of the 4-year/50,000-mile BMW New Vehldc Limited Wamnry.0 The Protection Plan induda two key dcmena: ~~ Pre-Owned BMW Limited Warranty ... Backed by BMW of Nonh Amcria, Inc., and ia nanonwide ncfWOrk of BMW etntm, covcrcd rq>ain arc made only by BMW·traincd tcchnic:Wu uting only__gmtine BMW rcplacxmem pans. / BMW Roadside Aaistance ... Peace of mind follows you anywhere in the USA, 24 hours a day, 365 cbya a year. 1998 BMW 740iL *ALL Cad.Sea co lOOK Mi PRE OWNED LEASE FOR CREViETBMW S..ta Aaa Aldo Mall, SS Freeway at Edinpr ---J ' ' I ---d...J., i ................ -. ......... 1_.iill6_..l.._1__ .com--. __ ...................... "~lla..B:t .. ~ --. 5 t Ltlt ._ ctr 11 "AMI ........ ""' NIPWOUtlnd ......... -----••Azs----- Mcmday ............ Friday 5:00pm Thuraday .. Wednesday 5~. Tuelday ......... Monday 5:00pm Friday .. .' ....... Thuralay 5:00pr9.' Wedneeday .... Tuesday 5:00pm Saturday ........... Friday s~·: ... Ona l'l•IC. lower ..,.. a W, ... Mo IO Mo Of 8 mo. Awll VIA>I, 1~lln. Wr'Q,12100~ 1 HTATl SALE JURDAY Ofl.Y IAM ture, CollectJbl11, Orlenlll, AntiQuta much mo<tl 1701 ~ 8elboe Ptnn Poh ~Seit Sit, lam Jlllj,S. eol1, household jt1m1, bo¥• clothln9. epplilncll, boob, CO 1 Wld s:,tl. otht1 ttema. '326 t Bllbol l9lllld Okltr Style Fumlture PIANOS i Col.ltdiblts ............ ~ • ""'-. -• Olroco ,_ $$ CASH PAID $$ ......... ....,....., Floww o.tlgrled oouch, (Ille new) ~ wood, tnttrtalnment center, wllh«t~. llllkt otter. 71'·9eS.~009 GATEWAY PC Pentllft 18' 11 • RAM, CO, Sd Card. 1r lllONa, + ... ----~ i•..,r.ml COAST COIN NE£DS OLD COINS! Gold, IM!, jewelly, watchts, antiqutt, colltctilj. 949-642·9447. LIONE1. TRAINS o-v. inttd Bioktn/Complete oPaldS$ Pr1vatt Party 714-2M-7ff3 TOP SSS/RECORDS! Jul, A & 8, Soli. Rock, elc. SO's ' 60'1 MIKE ~7505 WAHTtD ROl.EX I PATEX fltllffE WAIST WATCHES Pf' MM1W432 Wt R1 Chllr'I llld ~ Seit Slt·Sun ~ Fumll\n IUlh end .-----.... fum!Ue, -dMl Ml Canll INtl 10089 Adlms, tDoll. niqut ~ * Old BtechnorC Piiz.a. H 8 2.200 FllllCllCO Dnvt, 714·963·2066 Neeo!t 8ctl 9'9-548-1333 ::l ~ =::: -, -.. -APPUANOES----, 111• &Wt "-· N.I. for Seltll 2 $otedQI_. c-a.ia .. ~ Seit Fii 10-Zpm, 71'"'32.0)SI Set l ·noon Mtn Women ' ldda c:tohlg end ~ Grell holldey (llflt. Dont m111 ovti Cs.5 Eshr· CM. X St TUllln Ktnmora Httwy Duty Wtthtr Ind Gtt Dryer. Good condltiofl $225 tor boltl Cal 949'&44· 1283 ON THE MOVE? Sell your extn household items in ~IFIED! (949) 642-5678 I -, I I I -·:_ -. -----I I 'I ~· ----~ ~ ~ l Accent l.uunnc:e Recoftry Solutiom Garden Gtoft Our ceam is made up of hardworicing, agrcssive and c:ommined individuals who treat our cwcomcn, and our c:ompnition with the utmost respect and c:ouncsy. INSURANCE PAYMENT AUDITOR F.atablished audicing furn is looking for candidata to represent than on a national level. Experience is required in at lean one of the following areas: hospital billing. refund c:xpcricnoe or health insurance knowledge. At least 35% travel required. Plca1e send or fax resume and s:aWy hlstory ro: Accent Imuraoce Reco.ay Solutions Attn! M~ of Human Raourca 7171 Mercy Road, Suire 250 Omaha, NE 68106 Fu 402·.384-6361 ~ma.ii: Ptnny.Majalci@>lnsunnccRccovcry.com EOE ivHOME™ Eltkr carr com~s home. WORK FOR THE BEST Gerontology Aide I Caregivers/ Companion• FOR PRIVATE DUTY • $350 Sign on bonus fur Live-In aregivm cha1 drive with own car. • Minimwn 2 yean apcrien« with Alzheimer, Dementia or Gcra·Psych. • Ll~ln I Live-Out/ 4ht16hr 18 hr / 12 hr Shift Available. •We offer ac.clleot bcoefia I Training I Top Pay/ 40 I K Plan Join the LlvHOME Te•ml ~. r~ • I . I 1· 1, LosA.n9elM C.U Md~· (323) 93J.5a80 c..JJ :::r.(:::t:l-9410 c.m.rtllo c..Jl AiliMJn • (805) 384·9'88' Vl•lt ua at ouw weltalt•• -.llvhome.cont HILTON Wmrtront leecll Aeeor1 NOW !...al • Codi • P6X Optrator • Stcurlty °"P*twr • Houllptnor\ • Room ~ ...... Bir Allllndlnt • Ceal1ltr lf1llMewt CClllCM:ltd. Mon & Wad 4.30-6 ~ Tut & Tiu to.Tt-12 noon 21100 Peale COllt Hwy, ""1linglDn 8-:tl (114)145-M31 .......... , ... llc«Peepk T•._., llEIW.llVA'llOS AGt3l'S Full·Umc 0.,. &. nmlag shlb 812·815 Top-Producers Higher • Ur.lk.k, llaMI 1-nll H • 40J.ll'W •l'llld...-·i..w-~ ~111198918 C.->kN ~Q -888-311-4744 • I Year or 12,000 Mile -·-----. -;:----' ~"·-,· I (. ' ' . '\\ •••• 1 to I .••.• , I,, •.. , '\1(),1 \ r we are looktng fOr sates Representatives ~o en.Joy meeting and greeting people. Work flexible hours: a~ernoons, evenings and weekends. Explore our successfully proven program throughout the orange countv area. secur1ng new subscriptions fOr the Los Angeles Times. $ Flexlbte Hours: either full-time or part-time $ Average $25-$30 per hour $ N~ sales exper1ence·necessarv s Wiii train the r1ght people IF INTERESTED Pl.EA.SE CONTACT1 Robert Brown '714> 587·1523 r - : 1~ Grc.H Clip~ for I 1.1w j IMMIDIATI OPININGSI •Maft9!: • Assittant Manoger · • :itytist • Receptionist w. Offer 0..-t ...,,. ~t IJChedule, QUOIQl)teed Income, heohh ts, P9•d YOCotion1 odvonced lf~1n1 , P.?'d doyi, bonuM11, oovoncement nitit1, fun atmosphere, creot1,... env1ronmen . Oieniele ond equiP,menl PfOYtdedl Polittons ovoiloble In our brona new location ot Golden Weit ond Garfield 1n Hunlingtoo Beoch os wtll 01 Loke Forest, Plocen1to on<! Rancho Santo Morgorito CAU MARC at 714 366-4549 AT 6ASE MEN l WOMENS tl STORE tl F..nlon letend II IMl!lfl9 _,.tic '*'* ~ --"" u.u-Ru In. Mil tor ... OI Dlnyl ... nt-mt COUNTEA PERSON FT/PT allo Tlilot Of Sternsttta Cal Al Philip lht Clttnt11 MH44-444eNB ••••••••• A .. llurant TEUSCHER CHOCOLATES & CAFE is now opened at fashion lslandl Were loo!Ong for exp'd fun & energetic Coffee makers 10 J0111 our team. PT/FT post- bons avail Ring us at 949·721·1801 to set ~ tnteMew. ••••••••• THE GALLUP POLL • Survey Phone Interviewer •No Sales, Earn $9-12/hr • Paid Training/Benefits • Positive Work Environment • Flexible Scheduling • Full and Part-time For further information: (800) 713-2595 ••••••••• Atllll TEUSCHER CHOCOLATES & CAFE is now opened at fashion lslandl Were looking for exp'd fun & energeltc sales people to J0111 cu team. PT /FT posi- llons avail. Ring us at 949-721-1801 to set ~ tnteMew. • •••••••• WORK FffOM HOME lntemt110n11 Co Raipdy Expendir1G. PT 3-5/lvs per week ewn $500-$ t 500 per mo. FT $2Mvs per ~ 11m ~$6000 per mo Many po6ilion avail W1I lrlln Calt1~ bthappyc:uh.com PUf AFE\V WORDS TO WORK FOR YOU ~4964i5678 ALL NEW 2001 S60's HERE NOW! Certified Warranty • 24Hr RoadsideAssistance • Free Car Washes • Free Shuttle Services ¥70 CROSS COUNTRY WAGON HERE NOW! '98 Land Rover Discovery LE ~:~~::!:.eat.LcBlCri'll .......................... $22,890 1VOLVO540 '97 Land Rover Discovery SE 7 =~~:~2~RG(~4"Cri'll--··--··--·····-·······$24,980 • 90 Down • 90 Acquisition ... • -0 Security D•P .• • -0 1st P•yment '97 Range Rover 4.0 SE :6~1::=~Cri'll ................................................... s33,980 C70 CONVERTIBLE . '97 Range Rover 4.6 USE .VA3723(/) stock #3332 s3s 995 Bld,u.i, VI, Tmr.d.1*. ~ CD(ll&rr, l.ol l.ol IBa, CdlL ' '99 Range Rover 4.6 HSE ·5 XA421682 Stock #3325 48 980 lat,ld. VI, TldllOlld.l*. ah1 Iii. CD<lilfi, S.-c.lilillCdW ' TODAY'S I Bridge CROSSWORD PUZZLE ~CHANaOOAEN ..__• --_ ... _. -·-· .... • -"' -111--y _._ .. _ .. _ .. -· ... "' -·-·-·-Iii _ _.-·_ ... -·_._-·-·-•...,.•-•_ .. -~ mnd -="~H Oulckboolca I Others. 8-llk Itel, setups on/olf I.lie Plf1008flllu6lne ,.... sore1>1e ,.,.. 949-583-n 42 QUICKBOOKS PRO WORD PROCESSING In my home • low rates, fled>le Cal 949-7eo.8023 HOME flair • &Jh b RLrf;a,j l<egl~l'JReiurbt~ Porcelain • fiberglass Sink.' • Showers Counters 949-645-7723 ~IFIED It's the solution you're searching for.whether yoo're seeking ahome, apartmt, fdornew • , ~-.~, ??·~· . . ' .. . '' -~".:~ WEEKLY BIUOOE QUIZ Q l • Neldier wlnenbic. .. South you hoAd: Q ... Boch vulncnble. u Bast you hold: •KQH 0 4 O A!f;Jl1 •AU The ~ has orooeeded: SOlml lVrSt NORTH £AST • AQU Q Q917l o AJ •'7 The biddina bu oroc:eoded: 10 ,_ 10 ,_ NORTff P.AST" sourH •• ... 10 ' Whal do you bid oow? 1NT ... ' Wblll do you bid now? Q 2 • AA Soulh, vulnenble. you bold: Q 5 • Vulnenlble, you bold: • '75 0 US 0 AlltQ876 •Al • .15 O AU o KQI IOU• .U WDT · Ycu dabt·hlQd opponmtoopma the ,_ · bidlttla with oae no trump. wtllt \ The blddll\1 his oroceeded! NOltTll £AS1" S<M1DI t• ,_ i o u ... ' Whal do YG'.I bid llO'ft? actiotl do you IAU? Q J • NddlClf vu1ncnble, IS South you hold: . Q 6 • Vulnerabk. you hold: • A Q J IU o K Q J o 9 J • A 92 Your right~lwld opponent opens the blcldina with one no ttwnp. What llCdon do you take? •A 0 KU4 o AICQU •A lOI The biddint hu l)rOCClCded: 90UJV • WUT filORTH F.AST 10 ..... •10-... ' Whal do you bill now? 11111 MARS $3,000l'lllO. (r.tldc) 20 Yenclllg ...... no OOM\NlllPA. I lwMllo .. ..., -" l9Cll*'d 1-IC0-2tMI01 (Mhrl) StD.L YOUR CAR IN G:LASSIFIED look for answus 011 Monday. * REPAIRS • PAINT * Home I~ end mote Smll jobl ok. 20y!I !!P· G!ty M64W?7 A to Z HolM ~­R1pel11, Elec1rlcal Ind Pfumblng. LlcH50524. Cell 714·211-1115 or Mt=24!:f01!, AtoZHoml~ Rtpalra, Ellc1rtcal end Plumbing llct650524. Ctll 114-Ht-7115 or MN4H0t!. Welter ~ H•ndyman ...... Ctrpllllet 2SYIMIEIPI~ No jct> IOO ll'nll. Pllolll '*610-5385 ,., 714'29N400 JUHK TO THI OOWlll 71 ...... 1"2 AVAii.AiLi TOOAYI t4tt1HM! Cllevy Tlhoe LT 'le p"'9c:I cond. 211k mi, lclilc* Mnedll 111..m SUV, • ltelher, lie., tie. $24,&oo. (033341) 127.lllO 949-246-5882. Fllldler JonM llotorClf'I PUBtlC NOTICE The Cllil. Publlc- U ti II ti 11 Com· mmion REOUIRES that .. UMd ~ llOld gooda moY9fl pftnt their P.U.C. tel T rum.; lmol Ind cheufttra print 1helr T.C.P. runblf Ind~ It you hl't9 • quee. lion ~ .. llalt- l(y ~ • mowr, lino OI ~£....""!, PU8UC UllU1tES COMMISION 714·5SM151 NH1t1401 * TOP QUAUTY * Very~ ~ yt!§22! Jtt !!H6Q:SO!!e INTERIOR I EXTERIOA PAINTING CALL Mt-a1·2111 UCEHSE 1715971 Olds: 1111119 CUlllM .. e.1at. Low 1211 m. ve (339542) 113.988 NAIERI 1ml540=f100 OldMlolllle CUlllM ... WN!e. low ,,.., (339198) $12.9111 MAIERS (714)MM100 -··----·---·~ .... ...... _ 71'-895-6677 • • # .. • ' • . , I ,_ I I 1 ' . , ' ' , Salurday, o.c.nber 2, 2000 B9 '89FORD '91HONDA '93 TOYOTA '921VYOTA '93MAZDA '91 BMW325i MUSTANG CIVIC4DOOR CAMRY LE PREVIA ~ 7 PASS 626 4DOORV6 COUPE . Good transportation Auto, ~etc, PW, PL, alloys, 4DR, white, auto, AC, full pwr, Auto, AC, full pwr, dual Auto, AC, full pwr, a nice, nice ar Auto, AC, full pwr, lIIOOOlOOf and only ... (Pl516) a real sporty car (Pl429A) this is not a misprint (Pl489) air, a steal! (20764A) and a hard to find v~ (Pl493) 52k mi, best buy in town (Pl49J) r I• .. $2995 $5995 $6995 $6995 $7995 $8995 . . . \ . . '96 CHRYSLER '94 VOLVO 850 '96 INFINITI '97 FORD '99DODGE '91ACURA ~' SEBRING V6 4DR, auto, AC, full pwr, G-20 AEROSTAR XLT VAN NEON4DR LEGEND Auto, AC, sunroof, leather, moonroof, alloys, a truly . 4DR, auto, AC, full pwr, Auto, AC, full pwr, tilt, rack, runs Auto, AC, low low mi, a 4DR. auto, AC, moonroof, leather, LX, a sha rp car (20668A) nice car (Pl490) moonroof, leather (20497 A) good, great family ar (P1542) steal (P1375) snow white, a steal (Pl540) $8995 $9995 $9995 $9995 $10,995 $11,595 '96 FORD T-'97MAZDA '99 TOYOTA '90 LFXUS LS400 '99NISSAN '97ACURA CL BIRDLX MIATA ROADSTER COROLLA CE pearl white, the right color, ALTIMAGXE SPORT COUPE V8, ~white. mio, AC, nmnnxi, bdicr, White, stick, ps, AC, windows, 4DR. auto, AC, full pwr, very low auto, AC, leather, moonroof, Auto, AC, full pwr, CD, }Spd. AC, full pwr, bthcr, moonroof, ~alaniulmfa~J8r~ alloys, ass, a bargain (P 1499) mileage~ very low price (Pt442) alloys, a pretty car (206 l 9A) low mi, a steal (Pl413) liU new, acdbt coo! (Pl~) $11,995 $11,995 $12,995 $13,995 $14,995 $14,995 '98HONDA '99ACURA '99NISSAN '98CHEVY '98 VOLVO S70 '96 MERCEDES •' .~ CIVIC EX COUPE ·INTEGRALS MAXIMAGLE · ASTROVAN Auto, AC, leather, alloys, a BENZC230 I~ • Stick, AC, full pwr, moonroof, WR.* Sid.AC. 6il pwr. ~ Auto, full pwr, ltathcr, IOOOIUOOf, Auto, AC, full pwr, like new, truly beautiful car and IDR. ~ auco, AC, lather, •• .., ., . • ••• alloys, a pretty car (Pl407) m, a&o,s. ~ ~ ais Wl52-0 allorsi top of che line (20748A) low mi, a real bargain (Pl419) only (20717 A) moOoroof, a giYmrq (Pl 522) ••• I"' $14,995 $15,995 $19,995 $18,995 $18,995 $19,995 ~ACURA 3.5RL Black beauty, a certified pre".OWllcd car, chromes, on sale (P J 406) $22,995 , I t 1 I I • 1 • \ ~ I I 1 t 1 Q ' I t • t \ I f f \ I t I \ t \ I t •' I t 2000 Escalade SAVE $10,000 --· 2000 Catera . 2000 Eldorado Stookl4543 llSRP $41,917 SALE $29,995 SAVE $12,002 MSRP ~613 SALE $28,500 SAVE $6,113 SAVE $10,000 OVER 50 QUALITY PRE -OWNED VEHICLES AVAILABLE ,f;"l&" '88 BUICK LESABRE '95 JEEP GRAND CHEROKEE V-6, light blue, luper transportation voluel ("61054) 53,988 Low miles, V-8, .itxA., leath.r, CO and morel (78"870) s14,988 . 1 90 BUICK RIVIERA 1 97 CADILLAC CATERA Low miles, excellent ex>ndition, super body st}Ael (106089) 55,988 Black, moonroof, alloys & morel Bal. of warr. (938431) 515,988 '93 OLDSMOBILE CIERA 1 00 OLDSMOBILE INTRIGUE V-6, white, exc.llent oonctltionl (357885) s5,988 2 OYOifable sliafting at ... (133165) 515,988 1 96 OLDSMOBILE CUTLASS Only 26" miles! White, non-MnOkerl (355812) 58,988 1 00 OLDSMOBILE SILHOUETIE Low 18k miles! White, dual doors, ,.,,. air, ptW. rdoll (250418) 517,988 · 1 93 CADILLAC ELDORADO 1 98 CADILLAC CATERA 518,988 Low 58k miles I Black ch.try, leather, alloys & morel (61 osen 511,988 White, tan leather, many extras, bal. of worr. (004752) '93 CADILLAC SEVILLE SYS 1 97 BUICK PARK AVENUE ~, lealher, alloys, V-8 Nonhatar, new car trade-in! (83.4036) s12,988" Ultra, low 21k milea, beige, tan t.oeher, non-smoker, pristine! (625-'58) 519,988 1 96 MERCURY MARQUIS 512,988 '99 OLDSMOBILE CUTLASS Low 12K milea, beige, V6, Jdnt. eond., f"V· 19rital. (339542) Low 2Ak mil., blodt, CO, oloys, & mot91 lal. olworr. (927544) rel • Costa Mesa 1844 ' ' •