HomeMy WebLinkAbout2002-05-07 - Orange Coast Pilot.·~ . .
SERVING THE NEWPORT -MESA COtvVv\UNmES SINCE 1907 ON THE WEB: .WWW.DAILYPILOT.COM
• ' • fl' • ~~~II=· weather has
changed a bit.
just not necessarlty
for the better.
•· S..P ... 2
1UESDAY, MAY 7, 4002
City, groups to target poSsible JWA laWsuit
•Newport Beach officials
to work with anti-expansion
forces to ensure restrictions
remain at the airport.
June C.ugr•nde
DAILY PILOT
Our Newport wlil credte an alliance
to extend llight restnctions at John
Wayne Airport.
One of the hrst 1ob!> of the fledg-
ling alliance· will be a preemptive
strike to stop d lawsuit by airlines
Wdnting to expdnd the airport.
approved a plan earlier this year Lo
extend the settlement agreement,
getting the approval of the two
groups has loomed as the next and
most crucial step in exten.ding the
restrictions.
As signatories to the original
flight cap deal, they must approve
the extension for it to be maintained.
.
Both groups have said they will
support the extension, but Uus sup-
port won't be official until the parties
sign off on the deal
QUESTIOI I
PUSHING THE LIMITS
What other tactics
should Newport
NEWPORT BEACH -City ~h
cials are optimistic that a meeung
wtth representatives of the Airport
Work.mg Group and Stop Polluung
City Mdnager I lomer Bludau met
last week with representatives of the
two groups to dJscuss extending the
1985 settlement agreement that llin-
1ts flights and expansion at John
Wdyne Airport. Since the Orange
County Bodfd of Supervisors
·nus was about opening up com-
munication between the lhree
groups," Bludau said. ·we need to
make sure that the communications
between us are the best they can be.•
The original 1985 agreement puts
an 8.4 million cap on the number of
pdssenger flights at the airport each
year. ll allowed the addition of only
73 of the noisiest flights each year,
and the addition of four cargo flights
dnd 14 .flight gales.
Ldter. two more cargo flights were
SEE LAWSUIT PAGE 4
Beach use in the fight to keep
restrictions •t JWA? Call our
Readers Hotline at (949) 642-
6086 or send e-mail to dailypi-
lot@latimes.com. Please spell
your name and include your
hometown and phone number,
for verification purposes only.
KENT TREPTOW I DAILY PILOT
Thomas Schriber, left, and Daniel Donahue are belng honored by the UCI Graduate School of Management for their work with
shopping centers throughout the county, particularly Fashion Island in the late 1980s.
Fashioning Fashion Island
Newport Beach partners will receive a top UC/ award
in part for retooling the city's shopping center
Deirdre Newm an
DAILY PILOT
S terile, uninviting, cold -
lhese are some of the
adjectives used to
describe Fashion Island
by the two men who trans-
formed it from a sprawling beast
of a shopping center to an allur-
ing destination.
Daniel Donahue and Thomas
Schriber of Donahue Schriber, a
private real estate investment
trust, redesigned Fashion Island
in the late 1980s using a blue-
print conceived by Irvine Co.
Chairman Donald Bren.
Today, lhc two rt•al estate .
moguls will be honored by the
UC Irvine Graduate School of
Management with Lifetime
Achievement Awdrds for lheir
work at Fashion lsldnd and other
shoppmg centers throughout
lhe county.
"These two were chosen
because of their impact on the
Orange County real estate com-
munity, both m terms of their
projects, their personalities and
their outreach m the communi-
ty,• said Christopher Davis,
director of UCI's program in real
estate management.
Donahue and Schriber have a
long history together. They first
met working in the loan depart-
ment of Caldwell Banker in 1965.
Both wanted to do a bit more
with their careers. So in 1968.
Donahue broke away and joined
John S. Griffith -a develop-
ment and management compa-
ny. Schriber followed soon after.
Eight years later, they bought
the company from its owners but
kept the name because of its
established reputation.
"We used smoke and mirrors
to make it look like It was a 181g·
er, fin{mdally sound company
than it was,• Donahue said.
By the early 1980s, they felt
Limng among a pack rat-and excess stuff
P ack rats are a well·rec-
. ognized branch of the
rat family. They eorn
their names by their habit of
picking up each and every
item they C41l cany and tak-
ing them back to their
· homes. Obviously, their
homes look much like small
piles of bn.&lh, weeds, twigs
and junk.
In the human race, .there
la axlearly defined group
, a1IO known u peck rats.
Now, J want to make one
thing perfectly dear. A pack
rat II not a tbktf. He or she
just pleb up ttUngl that have
no preMnt owner capable ol
fighting Oft tbe pack rat.
It hN bMll my fottuneo
good or bad, to have~
castoff item he comes across,
no matter how worthless.
That would not be of any
concern to me, except as
luck would have it. he th1nk.s
of my garage u his nest.
I will not have seen him
for some Ume, but I'll know
he's back in town when I
walk out to my gar1ge and
find • p6ete ol WOod pilllnted
green or pink or CblrtNuM.
tben I knOw my p9a rat
' frtmd bM ¥tllllld. fie WM
walldng down.._ ltNlt.
•lncllnglllllowalliWP•• .............. al.
tnllb cm ..... _. tA
................. dol oo.• .... ..,
confident enough to change the
name to reflect the new owner-
ship. Their styles complement
each other, they say -Schriber
gets involved with development
and finance,· while Donahue
focuses on the creative side dnd
marketing.
By the late '80s, they were
we1i known enough to be inVlted
by the Irvine Co. to tame the
behemoth that Fashion Island
had become.
Originally developed ln lhe
1960s with three main depart-
ment stores, it had evolved
SEE FASHION PAGE 4
Council OKs
RV parking
restrictions
•Costa Mesa plans to outlaw
motor homes on city streets
but still provide 24-hour
periods for loading purposes.
Lolita Harper
DAILY PILOT
COSTA MESA -The cheers, boos
and hisses of preVlous meetings regard-
ing recreational vehicles were absent
Monday as a highly organized group of
motor home owners formally supported
additional parking restrictions.
The group, known officially as the
Costa Mesa RV Owners Assn., gave a
tandem presentallon delivered by six
consecutive speakers that expressed
their approvstl of an ordinance similar
to that of Newport Beach. It also
unpressed council members.
"I thought you guys did an excellent
job,• Coun cilwoman Karen Robinson
SEE RV PAGE 4
Newport-Mesa
blade incidents
seem unrelated
• Police officials in both cities
say South County razor
discoveries do not appear
to Qe linked but are still
investigating their incidents.
Dffpa Bhar•th
DAILY PILOT
NEWPORT-MESA -Police say they
do not believe razor blade chscoveries
in South County parks are linked to
similar incidents that shocked this com-
munity last spnng, but they aren't
entirely ruling out the possibility.
Between March 23 and May 30,
2001, 13 inc.dents were reported in Cos-
ta Mesa and NeWpOrt Beach parks and
playgrounds. ln most cases, razor blades
and sharp glass pieces were either
planted on playground equipment or
SEE INCIOEN~ PAGE 4
UISlll Ill Ill
Newport' 8eedl resident
Lori OiCMto hl6 .....
Nmed w..-n of.
men's prilon in Chino.
2 Tuesday, May 7, 2002
Kids Talk BACK
Settling in
at anew
campus
The Daily Pilot went to
Corona del Mar High
School to ask seventh-
graders, 'What's the
biggest adjustment
you've had to ma_ke as
a first-year student on a
high school campus?'
'Carrying all
your stuff
around with
you because
you don't
have a desk to
put them in
and having to
go back and
forth from your locker.'
OfELSEA RECTOR, 13,
Balboa Island
'All the peo-
ple. There's so
many kids ....
It's over-
whelming at
first, but I like
it. I have so
many friends.
It's very fun.'
ALEXANDRA DICAPRIO, 13,
Newport Beach
~hanging
:%lasses was a
'"1)ig thing and
carrying books
around was
kind of com-
plicated too.'
TAMMY
TRINH, 13,
Newport Coast
'Changing
class periods,
because they
just give you a
sheet that says
get there at
this time. It's
cool, it gives
you more
freedom.'
OfARUS VICKERY, 13,
Corona del Mar
'Homework ....
It's harder,
and there's a
lot more of it.
It's two hours.'
QtAIS
PfNESElT, 13,
Costa Mesa
-Interviews and phote>S
compiled by Christine Carrillo
Rilot
VOL 96, NO. 127
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•
BRIEFLY IN EDUCATION
Samuelis honored for
support of research
1\vo Corona del Mar residents were
honored Thursday by the Orange County
Music Intelligence Neural Development
Institute, which conducts research on the
relationship ~tween music, reasoning
and the brain.
IN THE CLASSROOM
Herny and Susan Samuell were among
11 people recognized for conb'ibutlons to
the institute.
Henry Samueli trained and taught
engineering at UCLA before his research
led to bis co-founding of Broadcom Corp.
Susan, a math major and graduate of UC
Berkeley, has been a public advocate of
the institute and its Music Spatial-Tempo-
ral Math program.
Doily Pilot
William L Seery teaches a class for parent. pn how to deal with addictive and destructive be~avior in teenagers. .,. "' Navigating .the teen.years
Deirdre Newman
DAILY PILOT
K a~yMWJ:h~d ~up "Wlth .battling be _q,e
daughter. The ~ts
over homework ~
respecting.parental authority were
taking their toll emotionally on
Kathy and her husband. •
So they decided to sign up for a
parenting class with Bill Seery. a
marriage and family therapist.
Seery guides pare nts through a
sue-week odyssey into the enig-
matic "'.Orld of teenagers, illustrat·
ing how to steer children away
from negative impulses and toward
healthy relationships and nonde·
structive behavior.
The class shows parents they
have the means to be effective in
building character and self-control
in their teens.
"I lhmk the parents are the most
powerfuJ influence for good in the
development of a teenager for suc·
SCHOOL LUNCH MENU
The Newport-Mesa Unified School District
offers menu choices e«h day at eler-Mn-
tary schpols. Students may ch~ a ~
tarian entree if d~red. The ~feet
varies and may be e(tMr as.lad, ~ndwfch
or hot Mtree. School lunches are S2 Heh.
Here's whart being ~rved this WHk:
TODAY
Munchable lunch Salad wit h fruit
yogurt or chicken nugg~U with dip-
A six-week course in Corona del M ar teach es parents how
to d evelop healthy relationships with their older children
cessf ul adulthood,• Seery said.
Seery started the Parent Project
eight years ago and brought it to
Corona del Mar last summer. Par-
ents from all over Orange County
attend the classes.
The six-week program starts
with discussions about the nature
of teenagers and progresses to how
to establish structure and negative
conse~ for unwanted
behavior. It involves workbook
activities, group discussion and
question-and-answer periods.
On a recent Tuesday evening,
Seery led provocative discussions
on such topics as dating and sexual
activity.
Seery emphasized that decisions ·
about teen dating must mesh With
parents' goals of developing a
mature person who bas self-control.
"There needs to be standards
ping sauce, green beans. choice of
fruit. choice of milk
WEDNESDAY
Munchable lunch Salad or all·beef
hot dog on a bur1 or veggie com
dog, potato wedges, choice of
100% fruit juke, choice of milk
THURSDAY
Vegetarian health sandwich or pa~
ta with marinara sauce and meat-
and consequences and Qt)rtnal
things that you implement with
any other behavior," Seery said.
When he asked the group how
many of them had ever had a
graphic conversation about sex
with their teendgers, only one par-
ent raised her hand. Seery stressed
the importance of both parents
taking part in the 'conversations.
however awkward that might feel.
•If you can cultivate some posi-
tive [dialogue) with your children,
especially the fathers -you don't
have to know all the answers, you
just have to be there,• he said.
By covering the basic ingredi·
ents of dealing with teenagers,
Seery hopes lo ann the parents
with a recipe for success in tack-
ling any topic that comes along.
"lf a parenting environment
doesn't have these things in it, the
balls, freshly baked roll, choice of
fruit, choice of milk, animal crackers
FRIDAY
Munchable lunch Salad or bean
and cheese burrito with salsa, veg-
gie sticks with dip, frozen 100%
fruit juice bar, choice of milk
MONDAY
Munchable Lunc.h Salad or ham-
burger or veggie burger on a bun.
chances of the parents teaching
the Irids other things and those
taking root are lower,• Seery said.
Muirhead $8id dealing with her
teenage.daughter has become a lot
less contentious since taking the
class.
"It 91ves direcbon to parents
and confidence to know that what
you feel is the right thing to do and
put it into action in an appropriate
manner,· Muirhead said.
Nancy Trevino sa1d the class
opened up myriad 1deds to help
her deal with her two teenage
sons.
"It makes me lhlnk about
destructive behavio{ and how
important structure and supervi-
sion is." Trevino said. "Kids think
they're adults. It's all about reining
them in.•
• IN 1ltE QASSllOOM is a weekly feature
in which Daily Pilot education writer Deirdre
Newman visitS a campus in the Newport-
Mesa area and writes about her expef'lence.
with pickJes, potato rounds, choice
of fruit. choice of milk
• The Munchable Lunch Sal~ contains
tossed greens, cherry tomatoes, crkkM and protein sources sud'l as chefle, sun·
flower ~ fruit yogurt. honey-roasted
peanuts and dressing.
No child is discriminated •p,alnst because
of race, ,.x. color. natlona or~ln, ~
disability. ff It Is beli~ a chi d has
discriminated against. writ• lmtMdlar.ly
to the se<retary of agriculture, Washing·
ton, DC 20250.
.loMl.S..... 8EAl2EBS ttOIUr:.E right: No news stories, 1llustrlltions, S.URF AND SUN MD1rKtor (949) 642-6086 editorial mltttf Of ldwrtiMments (M9)S74-4214
}cw~tun«r com Record\-our commenu about the hefeirl un be ftl>'oduced without WEATHER FORECAST Out farther, a small-craft s.w.~ Daily Pilot or news tips. writtMI ~slon of copyright CNVflitf. l'hoto~ The weather has changed acMsory-will be in effert es the (949) 164-0SI • .;HOW IO 8E.AOf us ICll~COlll ADDRESS but not for the bftt.er. We're northwesterly winds blow 20
Ovr address Is 330 W. Bay St., Costa CJtQMtlon looking et early morning fog to 30 knots, with 3· to S-foot
Naws IWf Mesa, CA 92627. Office hours •• and drizzle, and 1n otherwise waves and 1 northwest 5M11 0...-..... The Tlrnft Orll'9f County
Crime Ind cOUf1S reporter. (M) 57 .... 22' Monday • Friday, 8:30 a.m -5 p.m. (800) 252-9141 mostly cloudy day. Highs will
top out Mir 63 degrffS.
of 8 to 1.t feet. Tonight. the
swell will e.se to 7 to 10 feet. dwf».bhMrldoei.tJn-.com C<>BRECDC>NS ~ JuMC •• Wednesd.y should see the a It ii the l'llot'J pofky to promptly Oessffied (949) 642·5671 Newport._.,~."' 57""9ll correct an erron of substance. Dkf>lay (M9) 642-4321 typical morning cloudiness but SURF
.-......~...._ _ _.. should clNr up by early after· Though the tuthwest swell -..a.. Please call (949) 574<QJ3. EdlDW
~ ~ (Mf) S74-42tl News (949) 642·5680 noon. Hight thoold warm into Is losing ste. , we should still
)OOM!l.~'*rlacom m Sports (949) 574-4223 the mid-to high 60s. s.. some wa ·to chest-high
.... ca.. Thi Newport~ Mell Delly News Fu (949) '*"'170 11• uat11n: sets today. It should hold on . ... Ind.,..,.,,_,...._" 1M"1JO Pilot (USf'S-14"00> " ~ ct.lly. WWW.nM.ftOM.gov. through WednelcMy • SpofU , .. (Ml) 650-0170 ' ~<--•••••cvm In Newport hedl .nd Costa Mele, E~: ..,,,,.. .... IHnes.com ....... ..,,
Colt• ~-=.,,.um MlalpdorwetW~ onty .., ... IOA1ING POlt!CAST '"'*JUm'ldlr.-V. '°'*" to The 1"'* Or-. COUMy M.inOllb . ~,...... ..... _ ..,_ Offlat (Ml) MZ-4121 ~morning fog •rid drlz· CIOO> 252-t14,. In ... eullldl Of .... ..._. Mina fa~ G1-71211 • t greet bomr. The west-TIDES l(Mrellofl ,._....., 57<MU1 ~ IMct'I and eo.. Melt. ... erty winds wtll blow 10 to 20 .... ~high .................. c-' .......... Dellr ............ ......... --~br-flrlldlatillltorl•PI' ~ .. ,.,,.C.;aJJ ..... """ kftOli In the Inner W"9r$ this 7:171.m . ........... '-_,.....,..., lfwnoou, wltt'l 1· to J.foot 1:)1 p.m. G.9Mtlow ................. .,...,.. ............................ ..,.. ........... ___ °',. ......... WIW91nd1MltlMllof Sto tp.m. ..,. ....... -_ ....... ...u ........
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..------..--..~ -
f\
Doily Pilot Tuesday, IWJy 7, 2002 3
-Raising the bar behind bars ,·
s BRIEFLY IN THE NEWS
•Newport Beach
woman has been
named warden of a
men's prison in Chino.
June Casagrande
D AILY PILOT
every bit as suitable for a found a way to apply her
woman as for a man. interests in coWlBeling and
•women are very well rep-education to the role of war-
resented in all ranks in cor-den.
rections, • DiCarlo said. "Your "Public safety and security
ability to be a manager ls not is Job 1, defin itely,• said
gender specific. It's more DiCa.rlo, who was associate
about experience, knowl-warden at the' prison from
edge, understanding of the 1992 to 1996 before being
correctional field that makes ,promoted to chief deputy
· NEWPORT BEACH that determination -not warden and then acting war-N~wport Beach resident Lori o d • d y ur gen er.. en.
DiCarlo didn't start out with · DiCarlo is a 25-year veter-"I think if we give folks the
the goaJ of becoming a prison an of the state's Department opportunity to gain tools dur-
warden, but things couldn't of Corrections, where she ing the time period they're
hdve turned out better if she started out as a correctionaJ here, because many of these
'
1 had planned them. officer -the real title of the folks will parole. they can
D1Carlo, 48, has been people most commonly have the benefit of increased
___ JlPP.Oint.e.cL.by GO¥.-'-GO$fA-ft~.,..-d..,,e""'scribed as prison guards:--titenrcy, meaningful vocation-
Davis as warden of the Calt-She came into the job with al training and a hope of
fom1a lnstltutJon for Men in the goal of becoming a coun-gaining employment,• she
Chino -a Job she said is selor, but in the end has added.
DiCarlo is now holding
talks with University of Cali-
fornia officials to work out a
way for education students to
gain experience teaching in
prison dassrooms.
•I guess when you look at
careers, you never know
when you get into something
where it's going to take you,
but it's been an awesome
experience, ... she said.
Though she finds her
workdays rewwding. and the
36-mile commute •not bad at
all," it's always a pleasant
change of scenery to come
home to Newport Beach.
"I love the community.•
she said. "It's one of my great
stress reducers to just take a
walk by the beach.•
Newport Coast
committee meets
The Newport Coast
Advisory Committee will
meet al 5:30 p.m. today in
the Newport Coast Ele-
.mentary School's multi-
purpose room, 6655 Ridge
Park Road. The meeting
wlll be preceded bf a
:meeting of the subcom-
mittee on a1>Sessment dis-
trict finance issues, which
will likely discuss tax
rebates and the ongoing
inquiry into how the coun-
ty used millions of assess-
ment district dollars col-
lected over the last several
decades. The subcommit-
tee meeting will begm at
4:30 p.m. in the same loca-.
Uon. Both are open to the
public. Information: (949)
644-3000.
Meeting on tree
removal set
Newport BeaJ:h resi-
dents who want to speak
about the removal of ficus
trees on Balboa Peninsula
may attend the monthly
meeting of the city's Parks,
Beaches and Recreation
Commission to{\ighl.
Among the 1Ssues the
conurussion will consider is
whether lo remove 25 ficus
trees from Mam Street on
the penmsula and also
whether to replace them
with 32 coral gum trees.
The meeting will begin
at 7 p.m m City Counol
Chambers at City Hall,
3300 Newport Blvd. lnfor-
mabon. (949) 644-3000.
Intelligent design discussion .Put on hold
FOi THE RECORD
• Newport-Mesa
school boatd decides
to postpone a study
session on the topic
until the state provides
direction.
Deirdre Newman
DAILY PILOT
NEWPORT-MESA -For
the second lime, trustee
Wendy Leece has been
denied the opportunity to
present to her colleagues
mformallon about a sc1entif-
1c altemahve to evolution.
On Apnl 23, the board
was set to schedule a study
session for Leece to provide
fellow trustees with informa-
tion on intelligent d esign, a
movement that questions
Darwtnidn evolution with
research in biochemistry.
The Newport-Mesa Uni-
fied school board voted 5 to
2 lo oolay the study session
until it receives direction on
the issue from the state. The
THE MJH COBPAIY
RUTAN
&TUQ<ER, .......... , ~··
(
Wendy
Leece
scie n ce
framework
that was
adopted in
February and
chaffs what
students
should know
makes no
mention of
intelligent
design.
But Leece said waiting for
the state's opinion is irrele-
vant because any decision to
teach intelligent design
must be made at the local
level.
•It's very dear that other
series can be taught, as long
as dogma is not being
taught,· Leece said. "Each
district needs to come up
with its own set or directions
for science staff on how to
handle this delicate, sensi-
tive. controversial issue
under the law.•
Leece has advocated
intelligent design as science
for the last two years. In Jan-
uary, she withheld her
approval of a science text-
~tag
book because it did not
include the topic.
Leece planned to give a
presentation on the issue in
January but was asked to
wait until April so the district
science committee could
provide its input as well.
But when the board was
set to schedule the 'study
session, trustee Dana Black
suggested postponing it
again because other priori-
ties should take precedence.
"We need to prepare kids
for (the University of Califor-
nia system)," Black said. "I
think this will be important,
but not right now. It feels
like it's coming out of
nowhere.•
Black, who said she didn't
have a personal agenda for
or against intelligent design,
said her main concern was
in determining what part of
the current science curricu-
lum would have to be sacri-
ficed to add the topic.
Supt. Robert Barbot also
said he did not have a strong
desire to pursue the issue
right now. He said teachers
~hoot ·
Wednesday, May B
Prado Olympic Shooting Park
Chino, California
7 Offlcial Events
Sporting Clays I & II
Trap Doubles
Tabor's Doubles
Continental Trap
Duck Tower
Flurry
Optional Events
Olympic Trap
2-Man Flurry
Five Stand
Proa«Js bentflt Hoag Hospltol.
1b participate,« fot "'°"Information,
'*"-coRMlll7~7211.
'
.are allowed to talk about
intelligent design if it comes
up in class. ·
Leece said the study ses-
sion's so.le purpose was to
inform and blamed the
majority of the board for
being uniair in reneging on
its earlier commitment.
·As a board member. a
team player, I yielded to the
president's request,• Leece
said. "The information I
have to share is still wanting
to be shared.·
Trustee David Brooks
agreed.
·1 think it's a fairness
thing,· Brooks said. "My
plan was kind of an updat-
ing -not making deosions
-just using the study ses-
sion for information."
Leece said she will con-
tinue to crusade for the
chance to discuss the issue,
buffeted by the recent pas-
sage of a congressional bill
dubbed "No Child Left
Behind,• which opens the
door for school districts to
discuss a full range of scien-
tific theories.
An article In Monday's Pilot ("Annexation anxiety for
Santa Ana Heights,.) incorrectly reported the day of a
meeting of Santa Ana Heights residents to discuss annex-
ation to the city of Newport Beach. That meeting will
take place' at 6:30 p.m. Wednesday at 20071 Cypress St.
OUR MEALS ARE
A 'tRIPTO MEXICO
"OUR OWN WINES JUST ARlllVED
FROM NAPA VALLEY"
296 E. 17TH ST. COSTA MESA· 949·645-7626
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POINT?
Clas.Wed ads work for
YOU!
CI 1ss1lied Commun1ty M.:irkPtpl.1cr
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open our trade-only
showrooms to the
public in a true
parking~lot-style
sale -come browse
our lot and enjoy
amazing values!
May 3rd thru the 8th
9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
-.. Dining Rooms • LivingRooms
Sofas • Lamps •. Mirr,ors
and .a huge selection of Fine fabrics .
Home Accessories
..
4 Tuesday, Moy 7, 2002 Doily Pilot
PUBLIC SAFETY
POLICE FILES
COSTA MESA
ed 1n tile 2000 block at 11:22 a.m. Sunday.
•West 18th Street: A vehlde burglary
was reported in the SOO block at 10:58 p.m.
Sunday.
lllEflY IN THE NEWS
Car fire backs up
midmorning traffic
the hood," he said. Ra.roon Cuebas, 34, of Los
Huguenin said people from a .__A,ngeles was ~ested Satur~ay
nearby auto shop helped put out night on susp10on of stabbtng
the fire using extinguiShers. two men after a fight at the
"But there was still a lot of reception at Temple Bat Yahm in
smoking parts when we got the 1000 block of Camel back
• AdlMns Avenu4t: A home burglary was
reported in the 1300 block at 12:12 a.m.
Sunday. NEWPORT BEACH
• West Blllcer Street: A vehicle burglary was
reported in the 800 block at 2:20 p.m. Sunday.
• Coolidge Avenue: A grand theft from a
vehicle was reported in the 3000 block at
11.47 a.m. Sunday.
• Not1h Bay Front and ltuby Avenue: A
boat burglary was reported at 2:43 p.m.
Sunday.
A car fire Monday morning at
the intersection of Newport
Boulevard and B&y Street in' Cos-
ta Mesa caused a btief disruption
as it backed up traffic and
spewed heavy smol,ce into the air.
there,• he sa1d. Street. . .
No one was hurt in the incident. The victims, whos~ names
• Bristol Street South: A purse was t
reportedly stolen from.an unlocked vehicle
in the 2100 block at 1 p.m. Saturday,
were not released, are 1.0 stable
condition. said Newport Beach
Police Lt. John Klein, • Newport Boulevard: Vandalism was
reported In the 1500 block at 11 :23 a.m.
Sunday.
• Pflenon PflK4t: Indecent eicp~ure was
reported in the 2700 block at 12:54 p.m.
Sunday.
• Saratoga Way: A home burglary was
reported in the 2400 block at 12:22 p.m
Sunday.
• w,st Coast Highway: Forgery was report-
ed in tne,2300 bloek at 8:10 p.m. Sunday.
• Main Street and East 9alboa lloule-
vard: Two men reportedly ran away with a
cab driver's license after refusing to pay at
12:45 a.m. Sunday.
• Newport <Anter Driw: A laptop com-
puter was reportedly stolen from a busi-
ness in the 600 block at 3 p.m. Saturday.
Ttte · qwners of the car were
driving it back from the repair
shop after getting it fixed about
10:10 a.m., said Costa Mesa Fire
Capt. Marty Hyguenin.
"They tS"uddenly saw smoke
coming from the engine under
Stabbing followed ·
argument, police say
An argument over luming a
light switch on and off spurred an
attempted murder incident at a
wedding reception in Newport
Beach on Saturday night, police
officials said Monday.
Police•said Cuebas reportedly
stabbed a security guard in the
hand and a male guest in the
upper body. Cuebas was a guest
al the reception. He is being held
in Orange County Jail in lieu of
a $250,000 bail. • Wallace Avenue: Vandalism was report-
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LAWSUIT
CONTINUED FROM 1
added. The .plan approved
by the supervisors, which
Newport Beach also backed,
would allow the airport to
grow to 9.8 million passen-
gers each year, and add 85
of the noisiest flights, four
cargo flights and 18 flight
gaies.
Since Measure W's sue-
'FASHION
CONTINUED FROM 1
piecemeal with no theme
linlong the disparate ele-
ments, they said.
•We had Lived m Newport
Beach and had our offices
there,· Doncihue said. "We
fe lt we understood what was
rrussing. •
Armed with Bren's vision,
the pair set about redesign-
ing the center, adding the-
atrical elements s~ as
'
VERDICT
CONTINUED FROM 1
normal pfNSon would? No
way. He stops, picks up this
perfectly worthless piece of
wood, walks several blocks
or miles and deJ)osits It in my
garage.
After he's been around a
few weeks, my garage begins
INCIDENTS
CONTINUED FROM 1
burled in the sand.
The latest finding locally
was reported in October,
when razor blades were
found in Heller Park in Costa
Mesa. Investigators said they
did not know il any or those
incidents could be linked and
that they believed some could
have been "copycats."
The findings over the last
two weeks in Laguna Beach,
Laguna Niguel and Mission
Vie10 don't appear to be con-
nected to the Newport-Mesa
mcidents, said Newport Beach
RV
CONTINUED FROM 1
said to the group. ·1 applaud
your organization and the
manner in which you pre-
sented the information.•
City CounciJ members
easily agreed and unani.
mously directed staff to draft
an ordinance that would .pro-
hibit RVs from parking on any
city street, with a 24-hour
cess at the polls March 5
dealt a blow to plans to build
an airport at El Toro, New-
port Beach· officials have
pinned most of their hopes
on extending the settlement
agreement as a way to insu-
late residents from noise,
pollution and the other nui-
sances posed by a growing
commercial airport at John
Wayne.
However, the Airline
Transport Assn. has threat-
ened to sue to stop the ex ten-
fountains, Lightmg and new
signs lo entice shoppers to
mosey down its myriad
walkways. They also upped
the percentage of establJ.sh-
ments serving food from
eight to 24.
Their efforts paid off as
Fashion Island has become
the heart of shopping in
Newport Beach.
"Donahue and Schnber
were instrumental m the
planning and execul.Jon of
the Fashion Island renais-
'sance of the late ·sos and the
transformation of Fashion
to look like a pack rat's nest.
Among the items he's left
over th~ years are a variety of
lamps, a desk, several televi-
sion sets, a large glass table-
top, surfboards, the sword off
• a swordfish, various pieces of
lumber, shower rods, bricks
and enough dothes to stock a
small department store.
He never uses any of the
stuff, so it accumulates and,
eventually, when I find U dtf-
Police Sgt. Steve Shulman.
·we still patrol the parks
and !city employees), we
believe, stiU inspect the
parks,• he sa1d. "It's still a
concern of ours.·
Shulman said officials
have been relieved there
have been no incidents local-
ly this time around.
"We haven't had any prob-
lems of late. but 1t is very
much an open case that we're
sWl investigating,• he said.
Neither Newport Beach
nor Costa Mesa police bas
made any arrests on the case.
Costa Mesa police. in dTl
attempt to get a better picture
of the person or people
involved m the crime, sent
excepbon for loadmg and
unloading purposes. The law
has a loophole that otters a
72-hour exception lo anyone
who asks for it, but police offi-
cials warned it is not as •user
friendly• as it may seem.
The council gave tentative
approval to a similar ordi-
nance in December .that
restrlcted the parking of RVs
on residential streets with a
24-hou.r exception for loading
and unloading.
The council's decision to
embrace tHat idea prompted
RV owners to flood City Hall
when the law was up for for-
mal approval. More than 40
owners claimed they were
being punished for the abus-
es of a few irresponsible peo-
ple who store their vehicles
on public streets.
The same folks crowded
council chambers Monday to
voice their approval of the
Newport Beach-lik ordi-
nance. The dilf erence, they
said, was the special pro'li·
sion tor an additional 72
hours that can be given by
tbe Police Department.
•we feel the Newport
hlcb anllnac:e ls working
wq_.adlt 611 satilfae· •I AuttilDRV°'"*',• -. .. 1 .... ,, ...... •cat,,
sion of the settlement agree-
ment. rn hopes of deflating
such a lawsuit before it~
even hled, the members of
the new alliance are consid-
ering approaching the Fed-
eral Aviation Administration
to get its input on details of
the settlement agreement
extension. The administra-
tion governs many airport-
related decisions and could
be the determining factor in
whether a lawsuit by the air-
lines would be successful.
Island mto the town center
for Newport Beach rt IS
today,• said Keith Eyrich,
president of retail properties
for the Irvine Co.
Both say they are thrilled
to receive such a sigmficant
award from the school. The
Lifetime Achlevement Award
is presented annually at the
school's real estate confer-
ence
"I'm honored to be assoa-
ated with the previous reapi-
ents, • Schriber said. "There
are a lot of outstanding com-
muruty4aders. •
ficull to walk lhrough my
garage, I call the Salvation
Army or Goodwill and have
them take what they want,
then I sneak the rest out to
the trash. I have to sneak it
because if I left it out there
openly, he might walk by
and it would end up right
back in my garage.
I've trled dissuading him.
He nods anct smiles -and
the next day, my garage con-
1..0fonnation to an FBI profiler.
But even a profiler was not
able to flesh out a helpful
portrait because of the varied
nature of each of the ino-
dents, officials satd.
But the Costa Mesa cases
are sWl being investigated,
Chief Dave Snowden said.
"We've no evidence or no
WdY of knowing if the !recent)
mcidents were related," he
said. "But we're constantly
vigilant and are open to the
possibility that they may be
related.•
• DUPA llHARAnt covers public
safety and courts. She may be
reached at (949) 5744226 or by e-
mail at dttpa.bharathO/atJmes.com.
rules for the eXJ.Stmg 72-hour
law. He recommended the
city follow Newport Beach's
lead but warned that a 72-
hour exception would be diffi-
cult to attain. The loophole is
to allow for mechanical prob-
lems and other emergencies
and would not be available to
anyone who simply asked for
72 hours, he said.
Mayor Unda Dixon said
she wanted to ensure the 72-
hour exception was granted
tor haidships only.
While most of the 15 •or so
speakers favored the suggested
ordinance, RV owner Bernard
Ungrodd questioned the moti-
vation for any new restrictions,
dting a ~ck of evidence or oth-
er lnfonnation that motor homes
constituted a safety hazard.
•I would like to see some
numbers that even demon-
strate a problem,• he said.
Council members have
said they initiated tougher
park.mg restrictions for motor
homes arter hearing from
numerous residents that the
large vehicles are unsightly
and dangerous and that some
ownen use the public streets
to store their veh1cles.
Ctty 1t4f f members Wlll
present the proposed ordi·
aance to the City Coundl for
approval after e
~ on the subject .. ,. .. be lthedw.d.
"It isn't signed yet, so
negollation is sure possible,·
said Allan Beek, a Stop Pol-
luting Our Newport member
who attended the meeting.
"H we go to the FAA before
we make the final agree-
ment, it could be the best
way to get a favorable
response from lhe FAA .·
• JUNE CASAGRANDE covers New-
port Beach. She may be reached at
(949) 574-4232 or by e-mail at
june.casagrandeOlatlmes.com.
Donahue Schriber is
based in Costa Mesa and
owns 55 shopping centers 10
California, Arizona and
Nevada, and manages sue
more. Tlfe company has a
net worth 1n excess of $700
rrullton.
Their advice to aspmng
re al estate developers is sim-
ple.
"Focus,• Donabue said
• DEIRDRE NEWMAN covers edu-
cation. She may be reached at (949)
574-4221 or by e-mail at
deirdre.newmanOlatimes.com.
tains a new treasure. I've
locked the gdrage, but things
still appear. I wish I could
explain all this. Perhaps a
psychlatrlst could. J cctn't.
He's harmless -not a
wile beater or anything like
that. Just a pack rat who has
made my garage his nest.
• ROBEltT GAIU>NEJt is a Corona
del Mar resident and a former
Judge. His column runs Tuesdays.
OBITUARY
Chad Hearlson
MernoriaJ services for
Chad Hearlson, the son
Qf Orange Coast College
political science profes-
sor Kenneth Hearlson
and a Newport Harbor
High School graduate,
will be held at 3:30 p.m.
Monday at St. Andrew's
Presbyterian Church in
Newport Beach. Mr.
Hearlson died Saturday
of an unknown birth
defect in his brain. He
was 25. His organs were
donated. He is survived
by his father, Ken1 moth-
er Dianne Fells; and
brother Adam.
Robert T: 'Matsi'
Matsunaga
Memorial services for
Robert T, "Matsi" Mat-
sunaga, a 50-year Costa
Mesa resident, will be
held at 2:30 p.m. Thurs-
day at Pacific View
Chapel. Mr. Matsunaga
died Sunday of conges-
tive heart fallwe. He
was 78. He 11 1urvtved
by so,r>1 Robert, Joe and
Rudy: daugbten Ber·
bara, Rosemary and
Shirley; brother M.itJuld1 and sister Grace. 1
'
Doily Pilot
• Send AROUND TOWN Items to
the Dally Pilot. 330 W. Bay St., Costa
Mesa. CA 92627; by fax to (949) 646-
• 170; Of by calling (949) S74-4298
lndude the time, date and locati~
of the event. as well as a contact
phone number. A complete listing is
available at www.dailypllotcom.
TODAY
Low-lncome women ages 40
and younger can get a tree
mammogram from 8:30 a.m. to
2 p.m.. at Sl Joachim Catholic
C hurch, 1964 ~ Oran~e Ave.,
Costa Mesa. YWCA B~CORE-
. plus and sp6nsors a.:re hosting
the event. Appoinbnents ·
required. Appointments indude
a screening mammogram. cltni-
,. cal breast exam, informatlon on
breast health and breast self.
examination, and referrals or
flmding (or dia'1DOSIS and treat-
ment services. Call (714) 935-
9720 or (714) 806-2037 lo make
an appointment. Another free
screening will be available
from 8:30 a.m. to 2 p.m. Sdtur-
day at Harbor Chnstian Fellow-
ship, 740 W. Wilson St., Cosld
Mesa.
A free semina r tilled a
National Approach lo Arthri-
tis will take place from 6:30 to
7:30 p.m. in the patio cafe at
Mother's Market, 225 E. 17th
St., Costa Mesa. Reservations
required . (8000 595-MOMS.
THURSDAY
The 37th annual All Church
Rummage Sale will be held
from 9 a.m. to 7 p.m. dt St.
Andrew's -.Presbytenan
Churt:h, 600 St. Andrews
Road, Newport Beach It will
also be held from CJ cl m . to 2
· p.m. Friday. It's all part of the·
church's annual rummage
sale, which will mclude items
such as cloUung, toys, bdby
items, shoes, sporung goods.
electronics, 1ewelry. books
and more. (949) 631-1854 .
The Center for Global Peace
and Conflict Studte!> at UC
Irvine will host a lecture by
Susan F. Hirsch, department of
anthropology at Wesleyan
University, as part of its Spnng
Forum 2002. Hjrsch will dis-
cuss the role of victims in a
capital terror case with a spe-
cific focus on the U.S. Embassy
bombings trial. The lecture IS
scheduled from 3:30 to 5 p.m.,
and is free and open to the
public. It will be held. m the
Social Science Plaza A, Room
1100 at UCL (949) 824-641 o~
Youth Employment Service of
the Harbor Area lnc. will host
the 29th annual Roman Feast
Buffet and Charity Auctlon at 6
p.m. at the Costa Mesa Neigh-
borhood Community Center,
1845 Park Ave. The group
teaches youth ages 14 to 22 the
process necessary to get, keep
and grow from a JOb while also
treating youth-oriented pro-
grams lo increase employabili-
ty. In 2001, the group referred
1,200 youth to local employers.
(949) 642-0474.
A free seminar on the ayurve-
da approach to menopause
will be held from 6:30 to 7:30
p.m . in the patio cafe of
Mother'$.Market, 225 E. 17th
St., Costa Mesa. Reservations
required. (800) 595-MOMS.
FRIDAY
The 2002 Scout-0 -Rama
which celebrates the merits or
the 92-year-old Boy Scout
organization, will begin at 5:30
p.m. with an Eagle Scout alum-
ni reunion open to all individti-
als who have earned the Eagle
rank and will include dinner
and a presentation at the New-
port DWles Waterfront Resort,
1131 Back Bay Drive, Newport
Beach. The public is invited to
participate. beginning at 10
d.m.. a day of canoe races,
obstacle courses, wall climbs
and other acbvities. $5 to
attend Saturday's festivities.
The weekend will condude at
10 a.m. Sunday, when about
250 Boy Scouts will accompany
lhei.r mothers for a Mother's
Ody brunch. (71 4) 546-4990.
The Friends of the Newport
Beach Library will hold a used
book Sdle in the Friends Meet-
ing Room at the Central
Libfdry, 1000 Avocado Ave. A
special members-only pre-
Vlew will be held from 1 p.m.
to 5 p.m. Membership appli-
cations will be available at the
door. Hardcover books will be
priced at two for $1 and
pdperbdcks at six for $1 . The
Sdle will be open to the public
from 9 a.m . to 4 p.m. Saturday,
with books priced at $1 a bag.
Proceeds are donated to the
library syste~. (949) 759-9667.
Plann ed Parenthood's fifth
dnnual Haute Wtred Ball -
themed "Velvet Under-
ground· -will be held.
begmrung with cocktails and
a stlent auction at 7 p.m. on
the lhtrd floor of Ne1m"an
Mdrcus at Fash.ton Island m
Newport Beach. A fashion
show will follow at 8:15 p.m.,
and a buffet dinner and danc-
ing will begin at 8:30 p.m.
Funds rrused wtU support the
group's health education
department. which reaches
out lo more than 10,000 teens
each year. $150 per person.
(714) 633-6373, Ext. 121.
SATURDAY
The Balboa Island Bayfront
Artwalk will be held from 9
a.m. lo 5 p.m. along the South
Bayfront promenade on Bal-
boa Island. More than 75 local
artJsts will be pain ting f r~m
Marine Avenue to the Feny
Landing. Free. (949) 723-6171.
The Pe diatric Ado lescent
Diabetes Research Education
Foundation, the Hyatt New-
porter, Robinsons-May and
Abbey Event Services will
hold the 13th annual Island
Fantasy Fashion Show at 5:30
p.m. at the Hyatt Newporter,
1107 Jamboree Road, New-
port Beach . Hyatt Newporter
staff will kick off the rught
with a silent aucllon, recep-
50%0ff
. Silk Florals, Topiaries, Orchids,
Palms & Trees
369 E. 17th Street, Costa Mesa
(Localed behind Pl111tt:, #'Olio) .......... ~kl.,._,.. ...... , ..
Pbono
ARouNDToWN
llon and dinner, followed by a
fastuon show featuring chil-
dren who have been diag-
nosed with 1'fpe 1 diabetes
and professional models show-
casing sprmg's fashion trends.
Proceeds go to dtabetes pro-
grams offered a t Children's
Hospital of Orange County.
$75, $750 for a ldble of 10. Call
for tickets. (714) 532-8330.
The Orange County Ch apter
of the Sierra Singles C lub will
host a five-mile walk al 5:30
p.m . e t the Robinsons•May on
Newport Center Drive at
Fashion Island in Newport
Beach. Free. (714) 427-0457.
MONDAY
John Hancock Fmannal Ser-
vices. No reservations need-
ed. (949) 729-4400
MAY 15
Newco mers to the Orange
County Sierra Singles Club
can meet for a soaal wfth tive
music and planned activiUc.>s dt
7 p.m. at the Costa Mesc1 Com-
munity Center, 1845 Park AvP.,
Costa Mesa. {714) 505-2404.
"Amazing Amigos," a free
seminar, will lake place from
6:30 to 7i30 p.m. ih the pat.Jo
cafe of Mother's Market, 225
E. 17th St., Costa Mesd.
Reserv&tions required (800)
595-MOMS.
Certified cardiologist Tyson
Cobb will speak during a ll:lft-' MAY 16
cheon and general meeting of • High Prionty, The Breast Can-Environmental Nature Cen-
cer Information Network from ter founder Robert House will
10 a m. to 1 p .m . at the Center lead a walk beginning at noon
Club, 650 Town Center Drive at the nature centerofhcc, 1601
Costa Mesa. $30, include~ E. 16th St., Newport Beacb
lunch and valet parking. Free, b~g a sack lunch The
Make reservations by walk will take about one hour
Wednesday. (714) 2e5-0808. (949) 645-8489.
The Orange County Sierra
Singles Club will host a
spring dance at 6:30 p.m. at
the Costa Mesa Community
Center, 1845 Park Ave .. Costa
Mesa. $10 bnng y,our favorite
beveragq. (714) 505-2404.
MAY 14·
The Center for Global Peace
and Conflict Studies at UC
Irvine will present d pet1c·p
Lecture from 3:30 to 5 p.m .
The lecture, whkh i'> pdrt of
the center's Spring Forum
2002 and co-sponsored with
the Program in Citizen Pcdcc-
building, will consist of a pan-
el of peace scholars and prdc-
titioners from Northern Ire-
land, Israel dncl Palestine.
Guatemala and the United
States. The lecture 1s tree and
open to the publtc. It wtll be
held in the Social Soence
Plaza A, Room 1100 at UC!
(949) 824-64 lp .,.
A free seminar on healthy
weight reduction will take
place from 6;30 to 7::l0 p.m. m
thP pdt.Jo cdle of Mother's
Markel, 225 E. 17th St., Costa
Mesa. Reservations requtred.
(800) 595-MOMS
~
MAY 17
A flotilla will be formed to
greet the Lynx, ctn 1812 priva-
teer, dl about 2 p .m. All
boaters dre welcome to join
the procession dS the Lynx
Tuesday, 1-ky 7, 2002 5
passes through the harbor Loi"
the Newport Harbor Nautical
Musewn, where 1t will dock
and remain until June 30. The
Newport Harbor hreboat end
Coast Guard ~tter Narwhal
will lead the flotilla. The LynX
serves as a history mUSf'WD
under full sail. It ldunched
from Rockport, Mame, 1.11 July.
It will then suck dround for the
Freedom Weekf'nd Fesl.Jval at
the naubcal museum, which
will ldke place from 9 a .m. to 4
.p.m. Saturday dnd Sunday.
Festival ddmiss1on lS free,
though guided tour aboard
the Lynx costs $8 for adults, $5
for chiJdren 12 to 17 and $1 for
th~ younger thclJl 12.
join us in
celebrating
and honoring
ourmamds
A free worksh op open lo the
public l.Jtled HHow to Control
Your Wedlth H wdl be glVen
by Cdfrie MLzera, a hnancial
advisor from Morgan Stanley
dt 5:30 p m at Newport
Beach PublJC L1brdry, 1000
Avocado Ave , Newport
B<>dch, ho<,ted by the New-
port Bet.1ch Chamber of Com-
merce M1zera w1JI discuss
issues such a!> estdte plan-
ning, trust strategies dnd real-
ltfe exdmples of how people
have made rnrrect dectSLons
to control lhetr wealth. Before·
JOimng Morgan Stanley, Miz-
erd !>l'rVPd dS dn investment
advisor representative with
........................... ~LABaby Backs~ .......... ~~i.liill
and Lots ol Other Good Stull
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6 Tuesday, Moy 7, 2002
' Catholic Church
far from ready to
accept evolution
Ila Johnson
LITTER TO THE EDITOR
W ithout getting into the pros
and cons of the various theo·
ries of evolution, so-called
creationism, or the intelligent design
theory, I must take issue with letter
wnter William Bentley when he states
that • ... the Roman Catholic Church
and most mainstream Protestant
denominations accept evolution as the
best present explanation for the vari·
ety of fauna and flora that we see
around us" (Community Commentary,
"Teach creationism. but not as sci·
ence." April 9).
Who made Bentley spokesperson
for the Catholic Church? I cannot
speak to what "most mainstream
Protestant denominations" accept, but
as a pracbong Roman Catholic, I
unequivocally refute that statement
with regard to the Catholic Church.
The Catholic Church has never made
any definitive statement to that effect.
The church's most recent statement
regarding evolution was made by
Pope John Paul 11 in 1996 in an
address to the Pontifical Academy of
Soences, wherein he referred to the
encyclical titled, "Humani Generis, •
issued m 1950 by his predecessor,
Pope Pius XJI. John Paul U satd that
the encyclical "treated the doctrine of
'evolullorusm' as a serious hypothesis
worthy of investigation and serious
.study dlong side the opposite hypothe·
sis." John Paul U further stated that
Piui. XJI added that "one could not
adopt the opinion (evolution) as if it
were a certain and demonstrable doc·
lnne, and one could not totally set
aside the teaching Re~elation on the
relevant questions.;
John Paul If continued: "Today,
more than a half-century after the
dppearance of that encyclical, some
new findings lead us toward the
recognition of evolution as more than
one hypothesis within the the<>!Y of
evolution." ln other translations, the
pope 1s quoted as·saying "new knowl-
edge leads us to no longer consider
the theory of evolution as just a simple
hypothesis.·
This 1s where the confusion arises.
The mdss media deduced and widely
reported that this "new knowledge"
ledds evolullon to be considered a sci·
enllhc certainty by the church. But the
pope's statement merely recognlzes
that science has progressed beyond
the preliminary stage of the scientific
method commonly called a hypothesis.
John Paul continues: "Theory shows
its validity msofar as It lS open to veri-
hcallon, 1t 1s constantly evaluated on
lh(> level of facts, and where 1t lS no
longer demonstrated by facts, it mani·
festc; its luruts and inadequacy. At this
point 1t must be thought out agdin. •
Finally, John Paul D's message says,
·•in closing, J want to call to mind the
Gospel truth which can shed a greater
light on your researches into the ori-
gins t1nd the development of living
matter·
The fclct is, both popes have gener·
ally issued cautions with regard to
evolullon as applied to biology. Nei-
ther "Humani Generis" nor John Paul
II\ message constitute Ex Cathedra
(from the chair of Peter), church doc-
tnne to be definitely he ld in the
deposit of faith. They do confirm that
the church is open to demonstrable
scient1Cic' facts but that with regard to
the ongin of ille, the discovery of proof
to support evolution is perhaps light
years away, if ever.
Furthermore, in the most recent
ed1t1on of the Catechism of the
Catholic Church, published in 2000,
there is no mention of evolution. none
at all, in the discussion of the origin or
the UDllC..erse. There has beenna_
acceptance by the Roman Catholic
C"hurch of evolution as the best pre-
sent explanation of the orlgtn of man
nor will there likely be any time soon.
I also can't allow to go unchal-
lenged BenUey's statement that "sci-
ence is only concerned with oatwa.lll-
tic events that take place in the phys!·
cal world. It ls completely neutral with
regard to the spiritual world, religion
and morality.• This may ~ true for
science ln general, but it fl certainly
not true of evolutionism, which
behaves much like a relJ9i<>n with
chedshed, unquestionable beUef•,
wra~ ttlell 1n the philosophy and
dogma of materlallltk: natur~ and
takes on a decided athelltk' bent tbet
denlel any pu.rJ>OM to ?n4n'I utltence.
Tbe Catholic Chun:b could never
accept ruch a conc:J\iliOn.
• tLA ---k • C..W. Mtli Nllldfnt, ' ,
..
......
... . .....
GET PmlllllED
'Cheu la about looking at your choices. We
don't have to belleve we're limited: If we
have the will,,-ower and self-discipline, we
can recognize and carry them out.'
TM O.itv Pilot w.tcomes ~ oo ~concerning ~inch end CoN MeY. • -Mall to Edlt0tlal Page Editor
-.... Meler at the Qa,!Jl'filot. 330 w. Bay st ..
Costa MeA, CA 92621 I
• MADlllS ~ _! C..11(949)642~
• MX-Send to (949) ~170
• a.MAIL-Send to dallypllotOlatJ~com ,,
-The Costa Mesa-based Orange County Chess
Academy's ~td .. w ...,br, on teaching the llfe
lessons one can learn from chess
All c«respondence must lodude f\.tll name. home-
town end phone number (for verification purposes).
The Pilot reseNeS the right to edit all submissions for
clarity and length. •
Daily Pilot
A salute to .a mom Who's always there
F lipping through an old
photo album, I came
across a picture of my
mom and me from when I was
fust born. I stared into the pic-
ture, seeing the resemblance
in us a nd thinking bow truly
lucky I was to have such a sig·
nificant woman in my life.
advice you sometimes d on't
want to hear.
She was the first person to
give you that extra push when
you're feeling nothing is going
right, and the one .who waits
up for you on a Saturday night
ready to ask a million and one
questions about what hap-
pened that evening.
your life.
Which got me thinking that
Mother's Day was just around
the comer. and it was my tum
to say thank you for every-
thing my mom had done for
the past 18 years of my life. It's
hard to unagine that your mom
could be your best friend, but
when you realize all that she
has done for you, it pretty
much fits the title.
Lauren Loeb She is always worrying
about you no matter where
you are, and pretends to make
excuses as to why she has
called your cell phone 50 times
in less than an hour.
So Mom, what I'm trying to
say is thank you for everything
you do for me. From watching
Lifetime movies together to
keeping our shopping a secret
from Dad, and for always
being there for me. You are
truly an amazing person, who
should be proud of everything
you have accomplished and
know how honored 1 am to be
your daughter and how much I
love you.
Not only did she give you
life, but she is your own per-
sonal support team, she is
there whenever you need her
and she always makes sure
you have e~erything you need
before worrying about herself.
Your mom is the person
who is there to laugh with you,
lend her shoulder to cry' on
and give you that motherly
She is that person who at
times drives you absolutely
crazy and you often think she
doesn't understand you, but
you know you would never be
able to survive without her in
READERS RESPOND
Happy Mother's Day to all
the moms, hope your day is full
of pampering and rela~ation.
• LAUREN LOEB is a Corona del Mar
High School junior whose columns
will appear occasionally in the Com·
munity Forum section.
Writers continue to stipport skateboarders
AT ISSUE: The cities of Costa Mesa
and Newport Beach are looking
into building a joipt-use skate park.
W ith utter disgust, I read the letter
from the Walkers in reference to the
kids on Margaret Drive. I live on
Margaret Drive at the middle of the block
where the ·island" was recently planted with
flowers and weeded by my wife with the
assistance of these "rude skateboarders.•
These rude kids are three sixth-graders, a
fifth-grader, a third-grader and a first-grade
boy who live within houses of the •island.•
And I agree with the Walkers. My wife
knew the kids were sitting on the curb. They
were waiting for my wife to drive them to
their fourth skateboard park that week.
Since my son was •arrested" at the near·
by high school for skating, and the city has
•outlawed" skating at the parks, and the
kids and parents respect private property,
they were headed out of town (again) to
skate. I'm not sure if they went to Hunting-
ton Beach skate park, Laguna Hills skate
park, Fontana skate park or paid to go to
Van's in Orange or Palace Park in Irvine.
My lovely wife has made a career of dri·
ving the ·skateboard types" all over Orange
County four to five times a week. These boys
are not vandals. They are not members of the
"subculture -Of defiance." as tenned by New-
port Beach Mayor Tod Ridgeway. In fact,
they are great students, soccer and baseball
players, not even teenagers, and one of the
boys participates in the GATE program.
As far as being a taxpayer, I am not a dog
lover and my parents have been gone for
many years, but I still supported the idea of the
Bark Park and the Senior Center as a previous
resident of Costa Mesa. These ideas were
good for the community. I'm sure the Senior
Center would cost upward of $5-mlllion and I
wonder if they get over 100 users a day.
I know one thing for sure, half a million
dolla.rs would go extremely far ln designing,
building and maintaining a skateboard park
and you would get more than 100 users a day.
A skateboard park is good for the community.
FILE PHOTO I DAILY PILOT
Former professional skateboarder; Pierre
Andre practtces tricks In Newport Beach.
One last note for the Walkers and others
who use Margaret Drive to get to the,,.high
school and park up and down the street for
games and activities and for those that U-
tum in our driveways and litter the street:
The speed limit is 25 mph; please slow down
and watch out fe1t the skateboarders, they
have no place to play.
STEVE MUROW
Costa Mesa
I was born and raised in Newport Beach
and I do not plan on moving anywhere else
any ti.me soon. lf a.U.goes as planned, I will
have children living here as well.
As a child growing up in Newport Beach,
among the beautiful weather, clean atmos-
phere and a general safe envirorunent, I
took part in a sport that not only kept me out
of trouble, but got me away from video
games and the television. Skateboarding.
Growing up, I would skateboard down
the boardwalk to school. I would skateboard
up and down the boardwalk with friends to
and from different locations. Up unW about
eight years ago, this was all fine and dandy.
Then, before anyone could say a word,
skateboarding was banned from the board-
walks. My ideas for why this happened?
Beca\156 the dty failed to make money off
these skateboards. So instead, they made It
.. illegal. which forced many tourists lo take up
in-line skating.
And if you go down to the Newport Pier,
just about every shop down there rents (and
taxes) in-line skates.
Now, 1 would agree with this move il I felt
that in.line-skating was safer than skate·
boarding. However, this is certainly not the
case. Not only do in-line skaters take up an
entire lane to propel themselves (the side to
side stride of the legs), they also cannot put
down a leg to slow down if needed.
Another reason I feel the city did not take
safety into consideration is because of the
fact that they did not create a separate lane
for skateboarders to ride on. A certain per·
sonal incident happened with me when I was
skateboarding down the boardwalk at night.
after work about three years ago. Nobody
was on the boardwalk, and two Newport
Beach police officers approached me on their
bikes and told me that I cannot skateboard
on the boardwalk, and that I should tak'e my
skateboard and ride it in the alleys.
The alleys? The alleys are about as safe
as riding in the middle of the street. In case
you have not been to the alleys lately, they
are filled with cars, zooming in and out of
driveways, rocks too small to see and avoid,
as well as cracks big enough for my wheels
to get stuck in. This, obviously, is not done
with the intent of safety.
So my suggestion is to build a separate
lane for skateboarders or make the entire
)>oardwalk open to everybody, including
skateboards. Thank you for your time.
BLAKE SINCLAIR
Newport Beach
Growing up in Costa Mesa I went ice
skating, roller skating, bowling and belmet-
free biking at Castaways' •the Jumps.•
Now young people are funneled into
overexpanding malls for purchase of mass-
marketed clothing parents and administra-
tors will not allow them to wear to school.
Kids are not the problem today; the prob-
lem today ts a~ults.
' •
LANCE JENCKS
Costa Mesa
Risks of joint-use library outw~gh benefits
.I
I I the proposed Mariners
Branch Public Ubrary is con·
structed, it will serve as a
•joint-use• library for both
Mariners Elemen~ School and
the generaJ publlc ( Parents
1keptical about after-school prO'·
grams," April 21). Thia will
neceattate the c10ture ol the
Marlnen Elementary School
ca.mpua library, a library with
more lb.an t•,000 book.I and an
Intemet-ftltered computer lab
thot adequately and Nlely
serves the need.I of our tehool·
children.
Kirt Gei1fry umented fact that pornography
-including child pornography
1truction of the proposed library,
please ask yourself two ques-
tiona: •ooes there actually exist
a 'joint need' large enough to
demand the cOllltruction of a
'joint·u.e· fadlity?• ·1s the city
rush.lng into unknown tenitory
tn an effort to claim ProJ)Olition
The plannied fadlU.y wW be
• conttnac"9d diNCtly ~t to
Martnen !Mmentary Scbool -•
tc:bool wttbout a MCUN, feilCed
pertme• -and wtll dNw ~more vlltton frOilD • wtd9r ,...,,..nhic .,.. .,.,.n lt'f! ,..._.
f
COMMUNITY COMMENTARY
1ng public library cummUy
serves.
And while Mariners Blemen·
tary School wW have ill own
entranc=e lead1nG into the ch.11-
dren'• MCtion cL the propoMd
jobll·UM pubUc library, the gen-
eral public canot legally be
baJTed from tbe cbild'rml'• MC·
tSon et any time. 'lbll IMIN that
tbe general public, Including
CODVk1ed , ... and -oftend· en, WW be fl'M to_.. tbe
main ....... ol tbe .... .., and
proe-1 dlra'dy lalo .... dlll·
drm'I -.tiaiD lo lilt ...... Mmfwl lbadlall
I lndnde GMldld ..... llld .... , ..... ·-···--
-is being downloaded from
inside public libraries eaon the
nation. The Newport Beach Pub-
lic Ubrary system doea not filter
Internet acceu 1n the adult lee·
tiont of their br&ncbel u they do
lo their ch1Jdren'I Mdk>DI,
Thele two areu ln the propoMd
new l1br8!f wW be physically
eepa.rated by no more than an open doorway. •
K..., lo mind tbat DO ~r
will our chlldra'I Yllll ID tb8
public llbiarY be an autbodzed iWd atp.wtth bodi ...m. mct
=~-== .... .,..,.....,_,.
..... w
..... IUD«f ......
I
1, dollarlf • '
Butmottlmportantl~
•Does the commwuty t o1
a new library outweigh the
mc:n..111 rtlk to the We!? ol
Mmdwl' ldlookbQdrenf
1b. ·--....,. ol M.m.n........., panmt.1,
dli9 proPWd Mfltllm Btincb Niie..., •"'*9na ... &lid ...... ~ ...... -... .... Ir
. ..
QUOTE OF THE DAY
"We did our job ... ,.
John Emme,
Corona del M,gh baseball coach
Dally Pilot,
HIGH SCHOOL WAnR POLO
Salvino
replaces
Vargas
Six-year assistant
named to lead
Corona del Mar boys
water polo program.
Barry Faulkner
DAILY PILOT
CORONA DEi:. MAR ·Tun SaJvino, who
spent the ldst six seasons as a varsity ass1Slant
to departed John Vargas, was named Monday
to replace Vargas as the Corona del Mar
High boys water polo coach.
Salvino. 36. said he was thrilled to be
taking over one of the most esteemed prep
programs ma hot bed of water polo, at which
Va rgas, now the 'men's coach at Stanford,
produced seven CIF Southern Section cham·
pionships and four section runner-up hnishes
an 19 seasons at the helm. including DiV1S1on
II crowns the last three seasons.
"It's 1:t dream come true,• said Salvino,
who teaches fourth grade at Newport Heights
Elementary but hopes to eventually land a
teaching job at CdM. "It's what I've been
working for and what I've been groorrung
myself for and, fortunately, things worked
out in my fdvor. •
Salvino, who filled in as head coach on
several occasions when Vargas' commitment
to the U.S. men's national team took him
away, said he will strive to continue the
program's strong tradition.
"The challenge for me is to maintain the
level of excellence and to even take it to a
higher level,• Salvino said, making specific
reference to the Sea Kings return to the
Division I ranks next season.
Salvino, who in his second season as head
coach at Tustin High guided the Tillers to
the 1994 CIF Division II semllinals, is also
one of two coaches for the U.S. Water Polo
Zone 7 (roughly Southern California,
excluding San Diego) youth team.
Salvino said CdM players should expect a
smooth transition.
·We will play the sdme system the
program has had the last 19 seasons,• he
said, noting, like any new coach, he plans lo
inject his own personahty into the job.
Salvino, wile Carrie and 9-year-old son
Derek reside in Costa Mesa.
"" BOYS VOLLEYBALL PLAYOFFS
Sailors,
·Mesa, CdM
CIF-bound
Sea View champion
· ' Sailors will host California
in Division II first round.
Newport Harbor Hlgh's Sailors, who
finished their Sea View League championship
year undefeated, will host California of
Whittier In Friday's first round of the CIF
Southern Section Division U boys volleyball
playoUs, the sect.ion announced Monday.
Coach Dan Glenn's Sailors (24-6), ranked
·No. t In Orange County, are led by seniors
Greg Penine, Brian Gaeta, Loyd Wright and
Erik Peterson, as well as 6-foot-8 sophomore
middle blocker Jamie Diefenbach.
From the PadBc Coest Leegue, lbird-place
Corona del Mar (11·7) wlll travel to third·
seeded Ocean View; the Go&den West League
champion, Friday ln the opening round of
the CIP Division IV Playoffs. •
Cooch Steve Contt's Sea Kings are led by
Ryan frunan, John Grod, Kevtn Welch and
setter Spencer Millet.
Costa' Mesa (10-10) galned. an at-large
berth In Division IV and will fece bollt 86ahop
Montgomery, the Del Rey Leegue cbunp6on,
Friday. All matches start at 7 p.m.
1be Multangl are led by Cariol Jaime, BJi
SoUI and Bd MorebO. u ~Newport Harbor would meet
tbe SU a...•Wlil Park wlnw. If they
.... tbll llir, .... SeDan could callde wlb No.
4 Hiiied lopl In Ille May t 7 qwtedli••k, wma• 111WM1raC.-8111Jlil ' gm
tbe *' 23 , • .,._, .... ,
'IMOl:lllD -..OM ....... ..,
......... al PrtMy'l loalll Pn 1•• ..
...... wllmtr In '1\IMday'I ~ ......
'
EYE OPENER
mnn~~ .... ~j
Mey 1 3 honorff
BRAD LEWIS
Sports Editor Roger Carlson • 949-57 44223 • Sports Fax: 949-65().() 170 T uesdoy, /I/toy 7, 2002 7
HIGH SCHOOL BASEBALL
r y fl, r Jt. , '< ...,
Estancia's Jermain~ Snell (left) is tagged out at second base by Costa Mesa's A.J. Perkins in the Eagles' 12-1 win Monday.
Flory, Eagles turn tables
Estancia senior pitcher
wins first varsity decision
as Eagles avenge 16-0
lo ss to crosstown ri.vals.
Richard Dunn
DAILY P1(fbr
COSTA MESA· ln the final stdrt of his tugh
school baseball career, Estancia High senior
pitcher Paul Flory had his greatest moment and,
with one token left, hit the jackpot Monday an the
Eagles' 12-1 Pacific Coast League victory over
crosstown rival Costa Mesa.
Flory, who had never won a
e pitching dec1S1on in high
school, improved to 1·11 this
season, while the host Eagles
. ended Costa M esa's hopes of
gaining the league's third and
fmaJ guaranteed playoff spot.
KOlllO••D Estancia (4-17·1. 2-12 tn the
AA PCL). which pounded out 15
E.et'" 1~ hits against three Mesa
Mustangs pitchers, lost lo Mesa, 16·0,
March 28 and enjoyed every
moment of M onday's big wm.
Flory, a right-hander, ti>ssed a four-hitter and
gave up a run only because of a bad-hop single
in the second inning. •
The Eagles scored five runs in the first inning,
two in the second and five more in the fourth to
butld a lead worthy of a five-inrung mercy-rule
ending, but the PCL does not have a mercy rule.
·we should know if there's a mercy rule,·
quipped Estancia assistant coach Mike Scheafer.
Estancla's Jermaine Snell (3~ beats out an infield single as the ball gets away from
Mesa tlrst baseman Dan Bitter. Both teams square off again Wednesday night at 7.
But Monday was different. wanted to keep running, because of last bme \ou
know. to get a !Jttlc revenge. But I told them no.·
Flory, who played on the offensive line last
autumn on the Eagles' 0-10 football learn. went
winless on the mound bis sophomote year on the
1uruor varsity-starting every other game -and
didn't win a game last year in five varsity dedslo~.
•I didn't pitch my Creshman year,• said Rory, who
spots his pitches and changes speeds well.
·As soon as we started getting runs, I really
started feeling good and I was able to relax and
just pitch," said Flory, who added a two-run
double m the fourth. a soft liner over Costa Mesa
IU'St baseman Dan Biller's head that sqUirted
down the lme with the bases loaded.
Green, who said this was his team's biggest wm
of the season, felt a bit of vinclication Crom lhe last
brne these rivals faced each other, when Green was
upset because Costa Mesa's Nick Cabico
attempted to steal second base with a t 0-run lead
·cost.a Mesa (12-13,6-7), hopmg to lx•dt ~oa
at home Wednesday night at TcWmklc Park at 7
p.m. and earn an at-large berth into the CIF
Southern Secbon Division rv Playoff~ with a .500
record, had 3 of ·4 runners trymg to stecll second
base thrown out by Esldnoa catcher Justin Lund
• U felt good, because (Cabko) has d rcputabon
as one of the fastest guys in the league," said
Lund, who threw out leadoff hitter Cab1co (who
walked) and Nathan I lunter tn the fusl mnu:ig
He then gurmed do}'Vll Cab1ro agdm m the hfth
(wtlh Mesa down 11 runs)
Estancia Coach C.K. Green saJd last month
after a loss to Corona del Mar that Rory was •the
best 0-8 pitcher• anywhere and certainly pitched
weU enough lo win on several occasions, but
was usually snakeblten on a young and inexpe·
rlenced team.
·we were 10 runs up (Monday) and we
stopped running,· Green said. ·we played it the
way it should be played. When (my players)
ca~e into the dugout. that (fifth) inning. they SEE EAGLES PAGE 8
Sea Kings reclaim oWn CIF fate
CdM trounces Laguna
Beach, can lock up CIF
berth with win over
Artists Wednesday.
9ryce Alderton
DAILY Pll.OT ..
LAGUNA BEACH • Win and
you're in.
That's tbe story Une heeding into
Wednesday's matchup of Pactfk:
Coat League counterpeltl Corona
• de1 Mer High Uld Laguna Beech to
dedde Udrd pa.c.-e in league. guer-
am.emg an •ulomdc bertla IDlo
t the CJP Soutben1 Sec.1ioD DtwWoa
IV Pl9y6, lftltlbe Sea Klngl bMI'
pcondld GUI 1811111 ID a 21·7 vldoly
Monday .. i..g.ma 8Mda.
Wiiia McMefl wta .... Colta
Mesa's 12·1 loss
to Estancia
Monday, CdM
(11 ·13, 6-8 In
league) Is Ued
wtth Costa Mesa
K--IB for fourth place in
league, each one
S.. lll1• 2; game behind
Mls1s Laguna Beach.
u CdM defeats
Laguna Beach Wednesday and
Mesa defeats Est.and.a. then there
would be a three-way tie fw third
between the Sea Kings, M\.lllangl
aDd the Artllb. Jn tbM ...no. CdM
would gain the ...... No. 3 bertll
... hM lbe betlS l9CUd ....
the Otbil' two .....
A CdM IWfeP of tbe Artists
wouJd make tbe See ICJD91 4-2,
MeM woald be 3·3 and Laguna
8Nch Wild be 2-4.
But a Laguna Beach wm auto·
matlcally puts the Artists In third
place and leaves lhe Sea K.tngs out
of the playoU pJcture. CdM can't
gain an at-large playoff be{th smce
it can not finish with at least a .500
record.
CdM Coach John Emme's wish
came true. •u Estancia knocks ott Mesa a.nd
we win. then we're tn. • Emme Mid
after Monday's game. before
knowing Estancia had defeated
Com Mesa. ·we did our job.·
Tbe ftnt five bHteri in the SN
Klngl' order coleCliwlly banged out
19 RBll Monday.
lbwtltop Kettb Long led tbe .., ...... 1811. ..... aJlldag
oa • ftnl·bullllG boaie run tbat
dMNd IM llft·tillld r.c.. TIMI
.U..r two.c ... 08 • tft.iftaa
dOllMI '9msdiedIDlift1111111 •
the fourth ummg.
"The last couple of week.s. Keith
has really been sungutg the ball
and not g tting the mo t out or 1t, •
Em.me aid ·so this was much
deserved·
Catcher Nick Karpe and third
baseman Jo b Bradbury each
collected four RBis Karpe went 3 fur
6 w1tb two runs scored, and
Bradbury ttnisbed 2 for 4, walking
tWiCe and l<'OllJ\Q two fUDI,
Freshman left ftelder Weas
Preaon (three RBbt went l for 5
with three runt •cored, and
deUgNted blner Billy Eagle tu.. .
RBllt W9llt l for s, wMh two rwa ......
~ .. Mer ........ ..
............. ...0 ...... ..
lnl
...
8 Tue?day. Moy 7, 2002 SPORTS
BRIEFLY
---~--. -· --....
Doily Pilot
• • GIRLS HOOPS
• Un1v1·r~1ty 11 J Ball out, but CdM reloads :gagles'
Kirby
Coron,1 d"I M.H 6 8
Corona del Mar High [BJ-
sensor Erik Frisbie, who •
usually plays doubles,
replaced senior teammate
• dindied Of Playoffs berth.
Wtdnndar'• am.a
~at C.Glta Miia (Te'Mnkle)
lagll\a Beactl at a.a. .. Mir
Norttl'MXJd at UrWenity
Cameron Ball (ear in!cction) as the top seed
in singles in the Pacific Coast League boys
tennis champioa.Ships Monday di CdM and
swept through the first two round!..
Frisbie defeated Estancia senior
Creighton Chun, 9-0. 6-1, in the opening
round, then went through Ldguna Beach's
Andrew Ghenender. 6-2. 6-2.
SEA KINGS
Fnsbie and Newport Harbor's Andrew
Cho will squa,re off in today's semUinals at
the Palisades Tennis Club.
CONTINUED FROM 7
Ldguna Beach came back
with three runs in its ball of the
hrc;t, talung advantage of two
Corona del Mar infield errors
Cho advanced wtth a 6-3. 6-1 win over
Laguna Beach's Dieter Schmitz and a 7-6,
7-6 victory Ol(er CdM's Wes MiUer in the
second round. University tedmmdtes Jeff
Lawrence, seeded third, and second-
seeded Aaron' Yovan will face each other
m the other semilindl.
CdM added two runs m the
second on Eagle's two-run
homer over the left-field fence.
The ArllSts came back m the
tlurd with two runs of their own
to trim the le<UJ-to 6-5 on a two-
run shot over the right-center-
fi<'ld fence by junior designated
hitter Chris Stansbury. the first of
his two homers.
In doubles at thE> Palisdd<>~ Club, the
top-seeded CdM team of JUntor Garrett
Snyder and rreshmdn Cdrsten Ball
defeated Costa Mesd''> David Lee and
Gd.ffelt Sneen, 6-0, 6-0. Lee dncl Sneen
are both freshmen.
But 6-5 was as clo!.e as the
Art.Jsts would get on thlS day. a!>
CdM then added three runs m
thP fourth, four runs m the fifth,
two in the sixth and six m d
nedrhour-long seventh.
CdM's other doubles tcdm ol Bryan
Wdrsaw and lssei Sa1dd, both juniors,
defeated Northwood's Odvid Eisner and
Kunel Murdia, 6-0, 6-1, in the fu'St round.
then upset third-seeded Anson Hsu and
Andy Joe from University, b-4, 4-6, 6-1, tn
the second round.
Snyder-Ball wdl face the fourth-seeded
team from Northwood, Rydn Aamdes and
Andy Moody, tn today'i. semtiinals, wtuJe
Wdr...iw-Saida will collide Wlth the second-
The run support was more
thdn enough for CdM
'>Ophomorc starter Bldkt•
Contdnl, who pitchNI \IX
mntng!>, sinking out thret• dncl EAGLES
wdlking two. •
"In Uu!> pMk, tI you.y1ve up
run<, you can't think dbout it,"
Emme said, "It helps us a!.
COdches to hdve patience With
the way the pdrk ts built, you're
going to give up runs."
CONTINUED FROM 7
Ln the Eslanoa hrst. Jeremy Hduser, Casey
Gdtes, J B. Goff, Lund and Jorddn Hart had
conserutJVe single!> to open mdtters, mcluding
thref' 1rtI1eld hits dnd cl bdd-hop single.
PACIAC COAST LEAGUE
-CoM 21, lAGuNA 8£A04 7
Corona del Mar 420 342 6 • 21 18 2
Laguna Beach 302 020 O • 7 9 5
Contant. Ounzer (7), Pham (7) and
K.Mpe, Youngnead, Sampson (5), Baumer
(6), Bedt (7) Stansbury (7) and Hrte W -
Contant. 3-2 L • You~ead. 2-4 2B ·
Eagle (CdM), long (CdM), 8<~
(CdM). Metz (LB). labeda (lB). HR • Long
(CdM), Eagle (CdM), Stansbury (LB) 2
"They got d lot ol infield hits and
bloopers," Costa Ml"sa Coac h Kirk
Bauenneister said or the Eagles, who received
dn offensive boost from I lart, who became
eligible to play Monday dnd went 2 for 3
with three RBis, two runs scored dnd a walk.
Hart. d 6-foot-4 first baseman. delivered a
two-run stngle tn the second as B.tancia built
.t7-1 ledd.
In the fourth, Hduser walked, Gates
singled to right. then an out Idler, Lund
Flctltlou1 Bu1lnea1 Carlos Lucero
Name St.tement Th11 a1a1em.n1 was
The toUowong persons filed wolh th• County
are doing business 85 Clertt ol Orange County
Cllrus Drops. 929 on 04119/20022002•900444 Paul&MO Ave . Costa " Mwa CA 92626 Daily PilOI Af)f 23. 30,
Toto Heredia. 929 May 7, 14, 2002 1652
Paulanno Ave . Cos1a BSC 118...,, Mesa CA 92626 ""' Hilda Heredia 929 NOTICE OF
Paularino Ave . Costa PETITION
Mesa. CA 92626 TO ADMINISTER
This business is con· ESTATE OF:
dueled by. husband and HELEN PATRICIA
wile HARVEY
Have you started CASE NO. A2l 3044 ~~~ng3/2~~~~~ss yet? To all heirs. ben•ll·
T110 Heredta coarles creditors cont·
Thta sta1emen1 was 1ngen1 cred11ora. and
loled with lhe Counly persons who may other·
Cl&ftt o1 Ora County wise be onteretled in ltie
on 03/28/200T will °' estate. Of bolh. ol
20026897472 HELEN PATRICIA
Oa;iy Piiot Af)f 16, 23. HAARv~;TITION FOA
JO. May 7 2002 T64§ PROBATE hH been
Fictitious Business f~ed t>v LYNN B
Name St.tement MINGORI In tha Supe·
The lollowmp, persons rior Court of Calllorrua, County ol ORANGE are doing busness as THE PETITION FOR
Jamaa Bergantlne PROBATE requests that
Company, 5609 LYNN B MINGORI be
Seashore Or • Newport appointed 81 ,..rsonel Beach. CA 92663 "v James Peder Bergan-represenlatrve lo admln-tone 5609 Seashore Or . 1Ster tne estate of !he ci.. ceden1 Newport Be1ch, CA THE PETITION re· 92663 Th•• business 18 con· ~Hit the dec:edenl'e
ducted by 1111 lf'ldivQJal ill and OC>dcll. If any.
Have wou starled be admitted lo PfObete • The w'" and any ooclcila dorng ~ 'f.r1 No are 1v11lablt 10< ax· J1mei; Peder Bergan· aminat1on In the file kepi
11ne by the cour1 Tt'ols stetemenl wes THE PETITION re·
flied with the County quests authority to ad·
Clertt 01 Orange County ml'11ster the eallte under on 0312712002 20028197251 the Independent Admln·
Dally Pilot ~ 16. 23, lstrallon of E1fetH Aot
30 M (Thie Authority w1a allow
,IY 7, !647 tt'ot pertOMI r91>rltef'lf•
Flctltl 8 I a""9 to lalc• many te· OUI UI ,.... Ilona withoUt obtaining
Name Statem.nt court epptoval. Befofe
The lollowlng pertona lllcing certaJn very Im·
are doing ~ u ponanl action•, llow·
MH•llno Photogre--· 1f1e '*'°"81 repre-phy, S31 8emard SI.. Mn181ive will be requw9CI
•D. C0918 Mffa, CA to QtV• nota 10 ln-
92827 lerHted petl()fl• unllte Mu1lmo Metanl, S31 they have welved nolloe
Befnllrd St , •D. Coeta or con1«1tld 10 the
Meta. CA 92827 f,roPOMd actlonJ The Thi• bu1lneN 11 con· nclependent a mini•·
duottd by en lndMdultl 11111Jon eulhor11y WMI be
Have you •tarted gr1nted ooleH an In·
doing bu9lr-. y.r? No le<Mted petlOn "'" 1111 MeNlmo Mitani objtc1lon to the pe1111on Thie llltemtnt Wll and lhoWs good cauM
r"-0 with the qoumy wtiy the coun ltlolJld no1
OM Of OtMOI CowllY gran4 lie dlOltr;
on ~fl<Xd A HEARING Oii me
. 2002t111an oellOotl w11 bl held on ~Pb ~ 18, 23, MAY 30, 2002 et 1 30 ~ 1. ~ Tl4f pm In 0eoC. L73 lo-
cated 11 M1 The City ~ luelneee Drive South. Otange,
....... ..........,. CA 92eee
The ~ petlOf'll IF YOU OBJECT to
.. M'l9 .,...,... ... "' "~the ped-An=. "C:· ... : :"thl°"~ Ind"= CA PMtt yoor objlc:tlOnt or Ille
C4ltlOI l.uotfo, 2038 wrttten ObjeCdOnl With
AneMllll. Cotti MHI, tt11 OC)ijtl bflore the CA _. hearing Your IP·
n. ...... • oon-~~Ill 1n Pl'f• ~ ~ -" .,..._ eon or ~ lllOmtY.
Heve toll ltlfted " YOU A CAEO. 6o4"t 1M1NM yet? ITOR Of OOllllllltlt CIW-
Y!! w111• :,::: =·:::
fo .... tlllfl'.111~ ... ODUlf •lnd INll • Qill fMI 142-1171 .., ..
l
resenlatlve appo.roled by
the court wllhin loor
months from lhll date of
the fltsl issuance of let·
18"1 as provided 111 Pro-
bete Code MCllon 9100
The bme '°' lilfflg ctaimS will not expire bel0<e
lour months from the
hHnng date noticed above
YOU MAY EXAMINE
the hie kept by the oourt
II you are e P8f10f'I Ill·
lerested in the estate, you may file wolh lhe
court a Request '°' Soe-coet Notice (form OE· 154) of the filing of an in·
ventory and appraisal of
eslale 8$6815 °' ol any
pe1111on or 8CCOUl'll ••
provided on Probate Code 58Ctoon 1250 A
Request for Special No-
loce torm .a evallable
from the court c:l8ltl
Attorney for PelltloMf:
DANNY R. BOON, eso.
LAW OFFICES OF W.
BAILEY SMITH
4041 MAC ARTHUR
BLVD .. STE. 255
NEWPORT BEACH, CA
92110
Published Newport
Beach·C0818 M•H
Oa~ P1lot Af'<" ~ 6, 2002
Check.a for a non·r•
fUf'ldeble '" will be re-quired in the arnoun1 of
$25 00 per set ol Bid· ding Documents
Checks are to be made payable lo The Regents
of ttie UnlVtfSlty of C&i-
lom1e
Sealed Bidl will not be
accepted effer. 2:00 P.M. ori WEDNESDAY,
MAY 29, 2002.
Bid Security In the amount ol 10% of the
Lump Sum Base Bid, ex·
cludlng alternates. shell
eocompany eech Bid.
The Surety lssutog lh8 Bid Bond llhall be. on the Bid DNdhne. llSled In
the latest publlshell
State of Ceklomia, Oe-
partmlf'll ol lnSUf8noe. kt of lneurer. Admitted
to Tt8M8CI aurety lnsvr·
8n(ll lfl This SCale
A mend1tory Pre-Bid
Conference and Pte-Bld
Job Walk will be con·
dueled on.
WEDNESDAY, MAY 15,
2002 beQlnnlng promptly
at t :OO A.M. Par1iclpanll
ahall meet at:
INFORMATION ANO
COMPUTER SCIENCE
2
Urw8'11ty of catitomla.
Irvine
ADVERTISEMENT &llldlng '304
FOR BIOS Ol'I campus map. Room 136 Subject lo condrtlOf'll Intone, California
prMCribed by the undef· 92697 ligned. IHled bldl lof • lump Sum Cootract are ATTENDANCE AT
Invited lor lhe foffoWlng THE PRE·BID CON·
Work: FERENCE AND PRE·
ENGINEERING BID JOB WALK IS
TOWER ROOF MANDATORY FOR
REPAIR ALL PRIME CON·
PROJECT NO.: .... 12 TRACTORS. THE MEETING WILL UNIVERSITY OF CLOSE AT t :OS A.M.
CALIFORNIA, IRVINE ANY COHTttACTORS IRVINE, CALIFORNIA ARRIVING AFTER 92697 PROJECT DHCRIP· THts TIME W1Ll NOT
W M~!TOPAA-TIOH: Otll lndude1, .--ATI IN ~ IND but It nol llmllld lo the ' _ ....
tollowlng· Remove ap. PROCEii A9 A PAtMe
prolClmalely 2,200 aq. It COHT .. ~R.
o1 roof on lfll '*"10IM ~· In bolh the. ~
and ~ ~ eont.flf'IC8 llf'ld the ~ tooling •yllem Job Welk In their
wt1h lnsutellof'I. Remove lf'ltlrety. wtn be lllowed apptoxlmately 8,4185 eq. lo bid oo the Proi-ct ae It 1urt~ on lhe tOlh l>(lme contractor1. for
floor walking d.cll and ~Uc~~~
replace With • nM wa-partmenl wtthln Oeelgn tlfJ)foof OOflllng l ~ SeMoeit
llTIMATID 8r9nde R Hock~ 81 C 0 N.8 T A U C T I 0 N (949) S2<Mn5 COST. 1190,000.00 The euc:cMlful 8ldOtf Mote~ Prime ....... and Ila &bcontr~ wtlo do Mt ,,_. die .. bl ~ IO lolow =="°"'Doc:..:: "' nondllCf.rNllMIOn ,.. ,_ not be ........ tor quirernenta Ml lor1tl In .. .,., 1111 Blddono Document•
&ldcilng Oocumenll Ind IO pay PflV9illno
w4I bl IVlleflle IO Bkt WIQI r-. It "8 ~
dere on l UHDAY, ~ ~ Blddlr
:::.:·:-and Wll bl wit be~lo !WM
DESIGN a the !Mete Of
CONSTAUCTION Calllomie trec10f'e
8!RVIC£8 =: .:on11of:: lJnllfotrllly~ c.lllorNa. lld La.I ~
)5()0 ~Place l'tCATION: ,..........., UCINll CODI: • .......... -Conlfeocw t2HZ·1450 c:if• (~•t.,..-O· --=.,.... (!41) .... 117 .... : Chaff.
seeded duo from Uni, Mllce Ha.iei and Matt
Chou.
Cameron Ball, who lost to Yovan last
year in the PCL singles final, 7;.6. (5). 4-6.
6-4, w lll not be eligible to compete in the
ClF Southern Sectior:i individual singles
or doubles championships.
CdM routs Mustangs
PA(JfK <CWT llAGUf
CC*NA D1L MM 12. CostA MBA 3
Cofona def Mar 010 00(10) 1 -12 12 2
Cotta Mesa 011 00 1 0 -3 3 5
Zoelle and St~ Llnduy and OeMello. W • Zoelle,
7-4. l • Undsay, 16-9. 28 ·Loe (CdM). 3B • M. 8uhney
(CdM), K. Topps (CM). HR • A.M Topps (CM).
Eagles get PCL victory
• res1gn.s . l arry Faulkner
DAILY PILOT
The visiting Corona del Mar High
softball team combined five[]]]
hits with four Costa Mesa ) (
errors and four walks to
produce a lO·run sixth inning
Estancia High su:yng tog~ther six hits,
all by different players, and scored enough runs to defeat Laguna Beach, 3-1, in a
Pacific Coast_ League softball game
Monday at Estancia High.
The victory was the Eagles' first league
win in two years, saJd Coach Marc Rodig.
COSTA ME~ -Paul Kirby
resigned Monday as girls
basketball coach at Estancia
High, ending a six-season
tenure as head coach and a 10-
year stint with the program.
Kirby, whose Eagles shared
the Paclflc Coa!.t League lllle
last season, the program's first
since 1991, said he could no
longer commit the amount of
time neceSSdry to run a program.
He said he may continue to
and rally for a 12-3 Pacific Coast League
victory Monday al TeWinkle Park.
CdM junior shortstop Lauren Loe
boomed a two-run double and junior first
baseman Meaghan Bwiney blasted a two·
run triple m the double-digit explosion,
which allowed the Sea Kings (11-8, 7-2 in
league) lo move mto sole possession ol
serond place, d game ahead of Costa Mesa
( 16-9, ~3J, wrth one league game remaining.
Loe was 2 for 4 with three RBis and two
runs, while Bunney finished 1 for 3 with
three RBis, one run and one stolen base.
Kianna Jaye (2 for 4 with two runs) and
Andrea Gruber (2 for 3 with one run and
one stedl) also highlighted' the visitors' 12-
hit dtlack. • ·
Junior Allsi.et Zoelle tossed a complete-
game three-hitter to improve to.7-4. She
struck out five and walked only one.
Costa Mesa 1umor shortstop Ann Marie
Topps tut her sixth home run of the season,
among the CIF Southern Section leaders
according to Mesa Coach Rick Buonarigo.
Hl'm pumped . We finally won a close
one," Rodig said. ·It's nice to be on the
other end. We played good fundamental-
l y and put the bat on the ball a couple of
times: key hits at the right time."
The Eagles (3-14, 1-6 in leaguel scored
their three runs on six hits, all singles, the
game-winning RBI coming off the bat of
junior third baseman Laura Morton.
Juniors Karleen C urran and Vivian
l..aopantrak knocked in the other two Eagle runs. ~
Freshman pitcher Hilldry Ockey pitched
a complete game, scattering three hits.
Laguna Beach won the previous
meeting between the two !>Chools, 4-3 ..
• rt's nice to be on the other end," Rodig said.
PAOFK COAST UAGVE
EsTANOA 3, lAGuNA Bu.at 1
Laguna Beach 000 010 0 • 1 3 1
EstancJa 002 001 x . l 6 1
Turner and Fnmond; Ockey and Acosu W -Odtey.
3-14 L· Turnef.
•coach, perhaps dS soon as next
season, but only dS an assistant
Hl'm mamed now, I'm taking
d couple classes and 1 Just cdn't
devote as much time lo coaching
as the gtrl'i deserve," Kirby Sdid.
"I'll finish work on lbe team\
schedule for next season, but
I've already enjoyed my tim<'
off (since the season ended)."
Kirby guided the Eagles to
the CIF Southern Section
PldyoUs five tunes m six season'>.
amas mg dn 82-69 record.
La!.t sedson, the . Eagles
hrushed 9-1 tn league, earned d
ClF Dtv1S1on Ill-AA ftrst-round
bye, then were defeated by
Momin9'>1de in th<! !.e<."Ond round.
crushed d pitch off the left-field fence for an
RBI double. I ldrt lollowed with d walk, then
Flory '>cored Gate!. and Lund with htS double.
TODAY'S SCHEDULE HAPPY BIRTHDAY
Alter the inning's second out, Jermdtne
Snell singled home Hart, then Flory came
around to score from second base on a
throwing error.
l!HIAll
College -UC Irvine 1t Sin Otego Sute. 6
p.m.; Vangulrd VS. Point lorn. Naur-It
Azusa Pacific. 11 1.m
Celebrating the Daily Pilot's
Athlete of Che Week series
R1g~t-hdnder Adam Jorgenson pitched
the final two mningi. for the Mustangs .ind
shut Estancid down. yielding only two hits and
no runs, while striking out four.
Flory, who struck out three and walked
fow, tightly gnpped the game ball afterward.
Hlgl'o school -Newpof't H¥bor II\ ~
bfidge .i Windrow P1rk, 7 p.m.; Sage Hill 1t
Cltlvary Ch1pel (Downey), l 15 p.m
Il!l!l1 TOOAY
rAC1FK COAST WGUI
EsTAHOA 12. CosfA Me.A 1
-High~· Cofon.._...._.,.clf-
k C.oast lffgue f inals (singles and doubles
semiflNll end finals) 1t P1tlloldft Tennis
Club, 11:30 a.m.
KRISTA Dtu @
Newport Harbor
girls volleyball
Costa Mesa 010 000 0 · I 4 1 SOfTWl
Eslanct.l S20 SOO x -12 15 2
(Oc)pef, VMgaS ( 1 ), Jorgemoo (S) and Hunter; Flory and
Lund W • Flofy. 1 11 l • Coop«, 2-4 28 -Flory (E), Lund (E).
Hogti school • Newpot1 tWbor II\, ~
bridge .t Alton P;trlt. 3:30 p.m.
RfcKy 5TEV£N TOVAR @
Orange Coast
football
flc9tlon1 called for to be~attlmeof
bid Include, b111.,. noc
nec:essatfly Hmlted to:
1 The Conlrec:IO< Shaft
have been In butlneu
under lhe Mme name
and Calllom.a Conlrac-
tol'1 Ucenae lor • min-
imum of 5 continuous
years pnor to the bid
opening date for lhls
Project The llcense
used to sat1sf\I this re-
quiremoot ahalf be ol the
ume lype required by
the Contract.
2 The Contractor shell
p!OVlde 1 minimum of 3
referllf'ICe• for plOjectl
5#nllar In ~ and llze
to lhls Protect which hive been IUCCftllully
~eted during the
~ 3 J:E0ENTS OF
THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA
May 2002
Publlehed Newport
Beach-Coste Meu
Daily Piiot May 7, 14, 200~ T655
LEGAL NOTICE
NOTICE IS HEREBY
GIVEN 1Nt the 8oan:1 of
Educ.llOf'I or the New·
porl-MeH Unified
School D111rid of Of· ange Couf'lty wit recelVe
Meled bids up IO 8 00
a m on May 22, 2002, al
lfle P\H'chUlno Ollloe Of NJd School 0..ttlct. lo-
caled al 2985-B Bear StrMI, Coeta Meta. CA
92626, 11 Wlloch time
'8id bid• Wiii be publicly ~ and read for.
Markerboerd1 All bldl Ill IO be In
•CCOftlance With
Condition•. lnllructlon•. and~whlch .,. on Ne in the offlce of
the Purellellng Dtr9Ct«
ol Nld SdlOOI Oltttlc:t.
2885·9 Bear Strnl,
Coell MIN, CA '2820
A Performance Bond nwy be f9QUWed a1 the
dlact9lloll ol ltle Olatt1CI
No bidder may
Withdrew Ne bid f()f • P9'"
rlod ol FORTY·FIVE
(415) dlyt Iller the dale
Ht lor lhe o~nlng
thereof
The Boetd ol Educl· tton of tile M~· MeM Unified 8Ctlool
Dteltict ltMN.. the
""" IO t-tec1 MY or .. bide end nol MClllllly
ICCtP4 "' IOnll bid, end to welw 1111y lno =-=Ot~ln
any NE~·MESA
UNIFIED SCHOOL OIS-
TAIC T ol Orange
County
"' ....... L. CNnt. .. '"'°' of 'ureMetne .,,. ........ ....
71~ ....... 71
PublleMCI Hewpol1
IHCll·COltl Mtll &;' Piiot ·May ~~
.w,, ... , ...... ,.. ,..,,.. .... . ........ ,.. .. --,_ ---
f
LEGAL NOTICE
NOTICE IS HEREBY
GIVEN that the Boerd of
Educlttlon of the New-
port ·Meu Unified
School DtilJlct ol Of·
ange Courlly Wiii ·-sealed bids up to 10 00
a.m. Ol'I May 22, 2002, 11
fie Purchaslno Office ol said School Ots1r1c1. lo-
cated at 2985·B Self Street. Costa Meae, CA
92626, at which lime
eald bids will be pubficly
opened end read '°'' Alumlnum Outdoor Picnic Te61ff
All bids are 10 be In acc:o<dance with
Conditions, lnstrucuon1,
and Specificatlone whlctl
are on file In the office of
the Purohasmg OlrectO<
ol &aid School 011triet,
2985-B Belf StrHI.
Costa MNa. CA 92629
A Petform1nce Bond
may be required el the
chcreclon °' the Dlttrte1. No bidder mey
withdrew his bid tor a pe·
rlod of FORTY-FIVE
(45) days al1er Ill• data
sel for the opening
thereof
The Board ol Educe·
hOl'I of the Newpott· Mese Ufllfled ~
Oostrlct reHrvH the
""" 10 rljeet eny or II bids end nol fl8CMMrily
eccept the lowlll bid,
end 10 waJ111 eny ln-
lonnalily or mgu4arily In any bid received.
NEWPORT ·MESA
UNIFIED SCHOOL OIS-TR ICT ol Orange
County
le/ 9hif'on L. Ctllnf, °'" rectc>r of Puroha1ln9
encl Warefloualng 7141424-SOn
Pubhahecl Newpon
Beact'o·Co111 Meae = Pilot May 7. 14, mz
NOTlCE OF
AVAILAltUTY OP ANNUAL RETURN
Pureuent IO Section
6104(d)' of tl)e lntemal Al\llf'I08 Codi, nollcl le heteOy rJywo thal lhll .,,.
null l9CUm lor the calef'I..
Olr YMr 2000 ol the
JaClc and Adell MMOf'I
F ll!lly Foundltlon, Inc.,
• ptlllet• toundetlon, It
MlltJM .. "' ~-~ Clflloe lor
buelne9e lloutl ri::
ltOO A M IO 5 00 P M
by eny Clhen ~ ,..
qlllet9 • WlltWI 1 IO .,.
Iller"' ... of .. P'b-lielt!On. Tiii lounde·
llOn11" orinc:loel Oflloe la IOCattd It . 1000 °'*' ....... 200 ...... port .,...,, Ca IMeO. .... 112.-. '""' .... --~ ot• ~----· IOfl 00 JolWI L. ~ C., A , tOOO 0...
..... Ml IOOh~ ..... c.. ''*""'" """" 8"efl·Cott1 ftfMa = fllOt ..., ul4
NOTlCE OF
AVAILABILITY OF
ANNUAL RETURN
Pursuent lo Sectioo
6104(d) of the Internal
Revenue Code, nobce la
hereby given that 1he en-
nual ratum for Ille cai.n-
dar ye11 2001 ol the
Jedi end Adele Muon
F 811M1y Foundalion, Inc .
e prillete foundation, Is
avlilable at the lounda·
tlon'1 ptincioal office 10<
Inspection during regular
bu•lnHa hours from 9:00 A.M. to 5:00 P.M
by 1ny ClllZtn who re·
questS It within 1 80 days
altllf lhll date ol this pUb-
lk:aliOl'I The found•· llon'1 prfncipal office Is
located el 1000 Quail
SlrMt. Suite 200, N-· oort eeacn. ca 92660 949-752~. The pnn-clpel manager ol lhe
loundatlon is Jack Ma·
IOf'I CIO John L R~
C.P A.. t 000 Ouall
SltMl. Suile 200, New·
Pol'I Beach. ca. 92660.
F>ubllahed Newpor1
Beach-Coate Mua = Plto1 May 7. T6§5
Flctltloua eualneu
Name St.tement
The lollowlnQ penOl'll ... dolrlO busilMs ..
Bryent Equ11iff. •no
Cllriput Dr.. Suitt 200.
NIWPor1 Beach, CA
92&60
Marie Timothy &vent,
15 AmtUe. AJ!to '<'lefo. CA 92656
This buaineu ii con·
dUClld by: an lndMdual
Heve you llarted
doing bullnlU yet? No
To Place 111 Ad In ClassHied cat! (949) 542-5678
..
Mar11 Timottoy 8'yanl
Thi• 1tetemen1 wu
filed with the County
Cler1I of Orange County
on 05/01/2002
20021901717
Ody PolOC May 7. 14, 2~, 2002 T661
Fictitious Bualneu
Name Statement
The following persons
ere dolflo buslnest aa:
A ) Worklorce, B.) Workforce Magazine,
245 flacher Avenue. CA #82, Cotta Mesa. CA
ACC Communlca·
llonl, Inc (IL). 245
Fltcher Avenue. •B2. Coell Mesa, CA 92626 Thi• busone... is con-
ouc!led by • CO<pOretion
Heve you started
OOlng bu11ness yet?
Yes ll/20/98
ACC Communtc•·
lions, Inc
Margaret Magnu1.
PrealdenVCEO
Thl1 etetement was
filed with the Count~ Cler1I of Orange Coumy
on 05/0312002
20021902034
Delly Pilot May 7, 14, 21.
28, 2002 T662
Flctltloul ButlnHI
,_me Statement
The lollowinQ pert0n1
... doing bueWiela ...
Kai Andereon, 23811•
Alilo Creek Dr 1181,
L1gun1 Nlguel, CA
92877
Kai Bruun-Ancleralf'I,
23811 Aliso Creek •161. Lagune Niguel, CA
92677
Thia bualne... le COil·
dueled by: an lndMdual
Heve you 111ned
buelneae No
"Employee. "
"Empkado."
"Arbeit~h~r."
. "Employi."
,,
Kai Bruun-Andersen
Thi• statement wH hied wrtto lhe County
Cleftl of Orange County on 05/03/2002 20021902179
Daily P11ot May 7. 14. 21,
28, 2002 T658
Fictitious BualneH
N.1me Stlltement
The lollOWlng persoos
If& doing t>usineu IS
A ) Homea & Land
loans, B.) KBA Home
Loans 30011 Ivy Glenn
Or .. Suite 121. Laguna NIQUef, CA mn
l<al Waller Bruun· .Andersen, 30011 Ivy
Glerln Or , Suite 12 1 .
Laguna Niguel, CA
926n Tt111 busln... 11 con-
ducted by an ltdvldUel
Have you 111ned
doing bullnMa yet? No
Kai Waller Bruun·
Andel'1en
Thi• 1tetemen1 wu
filed with the County Cler1I of Orange County
on 05/03/2002
2002190217
Daily Piiot May 7, 14, 21 .
28, 2002 T859
Flctltlou1 Bu11ne ..
Nam. St.aWment
The lollowlng persona
•• doing bullilea .. Sea Countty Hornet,
30011 Ivy Glef'ln Dr ..
Suil• 121, Laguna Niauel. CA mn l<al Bl'Wf'l·Andersen.
30011 Ivy Glenn Dr.,
Suite 121, Laguna Niouel. CA 92677
Thia bualnMS I• con·
dllcted by. en lf'ldMdllal
Have you •farted
doing bu•lneH yet? Yea, 11198
Kai Bruun·Ander"n
Th11 lilalement was
toled With the County
Cle!i< of Orange County on 05I03l2002
2002U02174
Delly P1lot May 7. 14 21.
?8, 200? 1669
NOTICE OF
APPLICATION FOR
CHANGE IN
OWNERSHIP OF
AL COHOLIC
BEVERAGE
LICENSE
Date of Filing Appl1Ca
lion May 1. 2002
To Whom II M1y Con· cem The Name(1) ol
the Appllclnt(s) ls/are
MOON YUMI
The appllclnts listed
above 11e applying 10
the Depa.rtment °' Alco-hor.c Beverage Control
to sell alcoholic
beverages al
930 W COAST tfWY
NEWPORT BEACH, CA
92863
~pe of lieense(1) ap·
lor 41 • ON·SALE R ANO WINE •
EATING PL.ACE
Publlahtd Newport
BHCh·Coata Mell = Pilot Mahoo7j
Can't seem to get to all thoM
repalrjobe
around the houM?
Let the Cl...m.ct a.mce Dlreotofy
help you find 1'9f'8~help.
g ....
Pl "' .... ly PM•e )ly MaMn Penom
(9•9) ~2·56?8 ~ .J!l-0 \\ nl llil\· , Cfl•rl
~ fQUAl HOOSIHG
OPPORTUNITY
All rul ISUte ac!vert1$1ng
Ill dll$ newspaper Is subject
10 tilt Federal fair Housing Act of 11168 as amended
which makts II llleg1I 10
advertise ·any preterence.
lim1tallon or dlwimlnation
based on race. color, reho· Ion. wx. lla/ldbp, tamlW,J
sbtus or national origin. or
an Intention to make 1ny
· sucil prefereooe. limitation or discrlmlnallon." This new5paper will not
knowingly accepl any
advertisement for real
eslJlt whlcll IS in viotabon
of tilt law. Our readeri are
hereby Informed 11111 111
dwellings advertised In this
newspaper are available on
an eqUll oPj)Ortunily ~sis
To comoWn of disa1m1·
llllJOll, taa HUD toll·lree at
1 ·800-42.4-8590.
POU CY In an ltlort IO oller Ille bell
BUY WHOLESALE DIRECT Wholesale
blOlcers ol Ouelrty MhMc·
turtO Homes Save up to
540.000 OUlianteed I.Nm
Ille secrets dtaftrs Oon'
wan1 you to know
1 ·800 ·242·0060. (CAL'SCANI
LEA VE THE BIG CfTY
BEHINDI
New PrfSbglOus bMchsde
homes loclted on /he qi1111
Cfnttal CollSI in Mono Bay.
Pnced /tom the $600,000 mb1yhomt1.com
1·800·576·2811
l'::Kll
REDUCED St 75,000
<48r 38a. lg din rm/area
Frplc's 11 liY & din im, wale· 1n do6ets There are ITl8/ly
fr\111 trees liniflg ttie docl<.
2 Cll a1llc:h gar $3.300,000
MelisA ctl 818-970-3232
Kim Beaton office
818-242·665-4 CeH 818-335· 7632 nome olfice e1e-2~5136
SELL
your unwanted
~ems through claSSllied
wvlol pou1b11 to our reed-CUAHING SERVICE en Ind ldvttbletl. wt d Commelclal Bui1d4n9S,
(equ1r1 Contraeton who Medical OlfrctS and
TERRACES COHOO 55 +
2br 2bt. rWlllly rtmod. wd. ~bO. new.ft llndlclptld. 000 Al! 714-2$3-5842
EASTSIDE AXER
3Br 281, comer lot w/
RV llCCHI. $499,500.
agt. 849-723-8120
OPEN HOUSE
SAT.suH 12-5
E SIDE al
1&t 21ST ST. Amt. w.., 3.
4Br HolMe.. From
tht ... $400,000
• t4H~
33141 Blue lalMfn
Cuatom Home 3200 + If
3br 4be. molt '°'9't lfttr
1trteC In OP. Peell v1tw o1
-. Emit Of Sheron
14•2484507
www.Emlelena1ton.com
t lRVIHEt
Oeorgoue 1 br Condo •
loft. End Unit. .... pool,
perti, !Ml. $242,000 Agt
si.tenit Mtllf9f Ple11num
Proe 9'H15-31M
MOTIVATED SELLER
310 l*°"I
ac:1" Vllw ~ 38t
appro• 34(X)($f 310 l.ool«lut
$1.350.000
Slelnt MeuAlf. lg!
949·715-3156
edVtl1IM in the SIMce Aesldlnllal 20Y11 EJIJ)
Oirtcto1y lO Include thlif Ucensed1Bondtd/Ref1 COMP\ITEA ASSISTANCE UCEHSED CONTRACTOR
Contr1clo11 Llcen1t F'" Eatlmtte. C.M • 'f04Jlf ~ • your home No joll too 1111• AJ -' OIMnbtr in their 1dvtrt1... Geo<~ 714 ~ 11n or OFFICE. lndlvlduaf Repelr, remodel, tar.. tp&.
ment. Your co-oc>t'llion 11 °' 114-954...&oo • Coechlng. fmernet Set Up, new eeMoes Ml 1~ Q!!!!!Y !pO!!Cl!ttd. Sollw1re, T roublMhoolilg w~~ .. :::· I• ...... 1
11\Jmll 11 111 wr.c:wm I rr SHOUlD • FUNr . .Iii . ICOllTIACT'Olll FENCES DECKS PATIOS
FAlmlNG IHTEAK>RS , ,,... •• l R~ ~ Chllnfink
Kik:Nn I Beth I Aemodll ......, eon.trvction • -r:ri48945 ... ~
• and Room 4ddl1Jonl Rtplif & IWW conlllUCtlOn
1· ..... :11 ..._,
1Br 1B1 Penthoule VIiia
Bdloe. oce.i & ba'/m """· ~ ceilingl, S.129. 94lJ..~525 ex! 29
BIG BEACH DUPLEX
681'1. 4Ba. S790.000 Grut
Value. 10t ~g. 723-81 ~
Open Sun 1-3-·98 VI ...
Point Moll allotdab4e YilW
P'oPertY Ill Newpon 2Bt
Condo OYlftoolts badl bay
Code ecceM-343. Bb.Qwls
Coniaan 949·933-3325
* PRIME ESTATES * Ocean Views
Mounllan Views•
agt. Patnck Tenore
949·856-9705
www.j;!atncktenore.com
The Bluftl
2031 Viall C1fon. Sing say, 2tlf 2ba. o-toottl • ..,. ,_led~
Ind~-· ,000 Blf . 14• 720-0:280
GIANT AXER
5+ OEN, 4 BATHS
$790,000 •at. 849-723-8120
..... ~
111 Cell l949l642·S671 1
Pet 1 r .. w1r~•
Ill -It Wit• ftr pt. -I
( :o..i11 \IN (; \ l/:?IJ;!"'
\J "-P'•' llhd A II.I> -.
llous
'lrl1•plto1w u.:10~111-~dlllp111
1~ •• la1-l nilo1
\\ nl~-111 tt<!llJnt-:> 001'111
lkolr> tnd.1
1·-:·n1 8'°"1' Q2AST 11°' IAllOA .tr: I
OPEN SUN 1-6 Rtdtc. 2Br IBt, un·
Strid& S1.475,000 Loweal fum1slled. no peta. FAH.
pnoe in &r11 tor ~ Ocean wsnr/dryer. m~
views! Large ytr T Olal1y lt600mo e 94
~ over $200.000 rllle & Granrte Sle!anie Meurtr 949-715-3156 105 APT8
1.: ~1 BALBOA PENINSULA .
38r 28a Oplx yrty 1 house
lot 4 S.le Colla Mesa to lhe beach. lndry hlt-up1.
2167 Miner SI, 10,70051 rurage. S235<Ymo Avall 11
R-2 You can buld 2 nouses une, 8Q1 949-675-5069
S450K 94~7
1~0f~1 • 18r 1.58a Oen ~ al Ullls pard s 12001mo
• 38r 38t 1 door 10 ocean
rtrlhy remodelld heme $2500/mo yearly
LEAVE THE BIG CITY Aaaocllted RMlty
949-673-3663 BEHIND!
New p~ bNdl$lde ILDEL~1 homes located on lhe quie1
c.ntraJ Coast Ill Morro ~· Pnced lrom IN $600. mb1yhome1.com
1·800·576·2811
Relurblshtd 2Br Apt.
LEAVE THE BIG CITY Ga11ge. balcony 517V2
BEHIND! Goldenlod. Y2blc from PCH
New PresllfllOUS ,,..ch Side & $llOllOlllQ 213-7 4&-6300
home$ located on the quiet
<Antral Cots/ Ill Morro Bay 322 Merguerile Av•. 2Br Pnced lrDm the $600.000 1 58a Twnhm wlltl to bdl & mbayh'1me1.com Ylllge. Fp, ~ PlbO. 1111 pel 1-800-576·2811 oa, 11,550 94g.m:s100
1.158087$ ••l e& em :fnc~:-'~3
!-"71~··~730'~"~'8::.!.7;;...1 ---
PROOEQt COATINGS
W1l1tpll)Of bllcony ays-
::" te~31= 1 • CM•anw I 1111 ==I 1·-;;-1
I I . Rtsidaiill •Cammi ~ R.G~·e11a1111-No i ob roo sma11 I • me. I ., _______ _._ Dave Hamilton . SEIMCU
...... Service • lnellll 949-322-.8292 .._ ____ __.
Ally3 rooms
on1y m Local company
t 0 ynrt In the area. Family Carpet Care & Upholstery~ ,,.,, ~,,,,,
, . . -; .. ,. .
t: ·. ~ r ·, .. •
w~~11T11e1La111111111 !::::====== Aoorl • eoi..r. • Sllowlrl
7'4'f1'H211 Frie Ell
~=~--1 on Ill doof1I A IO Z.
"F,.. ear Uclbolldld ........ _
~oom
-~ ' ...... .x -1
WINE RERUGEMTION .......... .... , ... ~
TOUR&
ON TtMf DllMRY
WI-.~ ..... "' """" ~-.. ............ F111nl•hlnge. FretgM,
AMllU nllal lflcllaMNI,
1..-tl ........ ~
~" ·~ ,.., .. ,,,..,n.uee. n...,., ...
~ """"'~. ~Professional
Painting
Uc.'49&3IO .......
ltt '"'I rrc Clllrllt MI
Rob ...,.. • Owner
~ ...... Ca
(941)84e-3008
Cel .... 7-1480
Polley
R.atH 11wf d .. ,Olin'"' '"' uJ1rr1 10 duu~" wi1hout 1101iN-. Tl""
publi,ber rtsl'l'\h 1h, riitht to (.'('f\S()f. m-ln if' ,..., ~ or "l''fl nm
C'la. ~ifM'd ruhrni'!l'llH'ut. Plr:t"4' "'J~•rUJl~ l'rrot 1h111 111a~ IH" 111 \our
rill ~iflt·d Ad imme<lia1rl~-. Th!' On.11~ Pi101 arrrp•• no liiltiilir)' for um
trrot ill All ll<h fnl.,,.llll'lll for •Tiif'h it Ill;\\ 1* l'f' ll<lfl•ihtl' rlrf'jll fur
1ht C'MI or ti.it •pltrf' m1ualh tirrupttil I~· ,b,. mor ( .rHl11111111111h 1 ...
11lk111 td for rht fi.r,1 Ul'ltniou ·
----.-Deadllnes ----
Mon<la) .... : ...... .Frida~ 5:00pm f'riday .......... n1un.c.la~ ~:<X~lm
Tu~ay ......... Monda) 5:001mi Saturday .......... .F'rid.i, 3:<X)pm
U't'(lnr!lllay .... Tul'l>(lay 5:00pm unJav ............ .F ri1lu) 5:<X>pm
Thun,ciay .. Wrdn.-Mla) 5:00prn
LOYll~Galed Comm I Br 1Ba ·$855/mo w/frig &
ga1 10 7Slmo wlpatio & fe--* catpOlt. lndty lie on sa Wll to T .,_Sqr Klein
MrlQl 8n·~9 x 9200
Hlwport ~ the 5'l..c
281 1 SBa, I c gar, no ptts,
51195/mo 166S IMnt Ave
16 9'9-720-9'22 Ext. 203
E'Sldt 2Br !Ba exei;utiw
aC>I W1l!I pool. lnOry Qc. MW
catpet MW ble baths. IVU-
abft now $1400/mo Ceu
Caboc 949-675-5714 .
E'Side 2Br I Ba
W/O !*·ups ~ garage II
c. no pets S1350l'mo t $950 MC 9'9-645-2146
E'Sldt-a.c:kbty Studio I
1 Bdrm• ~neo. 9*C1.
pool, glfegta tvall. ..,., t..~!!!~!l.l!!!•tdl~~-L..:.....J no p!I!. 714-64MllO
:r,:::i ;: ~~': .. ____ r_uAl'TS_sr_1_N_.l I 154 ~ I new carott/111nyt. paint & • -.-,_,,
appls "" Ulla Pus Avad
Now $725 714-545-0442 2·Bedroom 2·e.th BALBOA ISLAND
1!-...r .~ pt ·~ Cd lor Agent S14 00/mo. I I near IChool. latge PtbO. I br 1 be 1 car gMagt.
.. ,.;wrvni _,."" -mo1e l'1fo 714-731~ 94M73·7800
PAVIG I
Call Classified Today
(949) 642-5678
PRECISE PLUMPfG Reollr1 & Remodllll
FAEE ESTIMATES U687388 711~1080
I* -:r~·I
Oflk:e help I orga11m1lion
Ring sysaema Ml up, ptl)lr
& elutt8r men1gement for
l!omll/olfice 94g..38!·3288
.,
...
LtllllliGr n • ... 1•11•. =--=
..
JO Tuesday, May 7, 2002
TODAY'S
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
USE THOSE SPOTS '
North-South vu.lncnble. South dealt kin& of lllledes? ~ had illOwn • powerful hand
wilb two lak.eout dc>ubla in the fu
of two biddina opponou11. Since It
wa_, obvious 11\at NonJI could hold
lluJc or nochina. South wqdy elected
to bid~ JUrttier. Lucklly~bolh Wu t
and Eait ~ ~ for their
actions (e&pedally fast -:-we would have pwed the one..spade overcall).
liO Nardi produced I l1lO$I usefuJ Card
and declam' made lhc mo.t o( it.
NOITH •U43 \) 105'
"1091
• AJ2 WEST
• K QJ lOl <:>J U
0 KS3
• l08
The bidding:
SOl/Tl I WEST •• •• .Dbl l • Dbl .._ .,_ ,_
NOR111 t.:Alt'T
Pue INT
PHI P1181 J• ,_
Opening lead: King of•
Had lh11 deal cropped up In rubber
bridge, ii would not have hved long
in anyone·s memory. But it came up in a duplkale pam event. wberc
overtrickl arc worth their wc11ln 111
gold. How 1'1'1811Y trick.I can you make
11 tbtee clubs aJ'i.cr the le:ad of the
West led Jhe king of spades, taken petf orce with the ece in hand. Since
the auctioo l1llllkod East with the king
of clubs, West had to have the king of
diamonds for the overcall. With the rocatJon of the kings rrwked, declar-
er fdmd a preuy tine to net two over·
tricks.
Al uic:k two, declarer led the queen
of diamonds from hand! West took
the king and ~ with spades,
declmr ruffing. Dummy was cnicred
with the ace of clubs and lbe ICll o(
diamonds was nm. When thal beJd (coverin~ would have made no dif-
fercnoe 11nce the nine was 1 re-entry
lo the table), declam-switched to a
low cJub ~an:I the ~ Easa roec
with the kmg lltld continued with the
jack, und the ICCOf1d overtrick devel-
oped when hcllU proved IO be 3-3,
setting up the three as a winner.
l•nnl 1--.... -:a-.l l ~l
WANTED
ANTIQUES
Older S~ Furniture
PIANOS & CollectlblM ._........_
•Steir.ot •~ •Offkef"""'-we
$$CASH PAID $$
Ol'lil~-~.-...
WE BUY E8TATE8 • '""'*""• flieftdly ....i..
~~NSIG~M.ENT~
. . I
, · I
1 -~=1
COAST COIN NEEDS
OLD COIHSI Gold. silver. jew.,ry, watdlet. antiques,
oolecWts 1149-642·~7.
TOP SUIREOOROSI
Jtu, R I B. Soul. Rock,
lie. 50'a & 60'1
MIKE IMN4S.7506
Cuato!Nf Service
Laigeet CUllCm doell
eo. needs enef981lc
llld1vlduaJ wlexcttlent
phone & people lkall,
ICCUllte, able to han-
dle mlili tuk1 & IHOO. aoNe. Handlel ICNd-ute. sales flguret, & mo. recap Results
Ol1enled 8-5, Moo-Fri
Fax resume
714-etMIM
e·m111 C111fornl1
clOMt e 101.to111
l''°nl1 ·:n11 -~--1 ~:
• ..... ~ malt ptol 22tZ ....... k
EASTSIDE HOME 481 281 Newpot1 llffch Newer seelts same IO share 41>1 ..... AM, CA t2707 New caipet/p.11111/wlfldOwt Mldilerranian house flNI 2bl hsl. 28r 181 tor ta. llnt ..._,,__CA.,..
I 0 yds fp, alarm. gardtoer Bldl Bay, 2Br 281, I msf. toe. @mo. IMH75-6438
ind $?OOQm 714-240-0330 2c gar comm poo1 epa & I
1
, I ~~,],'/:~ ~.!~=~yell -... ml -~
(rear) Cal Carol. lllll CUSTOM FAMILY ltOMES -• A~or $110
949 574·1848 2 Monfll My and A11g119C OFFICE SPACE NEAR WHMl'/Drytf, $140/N
Hew 38r 2.581 2 11y dllac:ll 1'1111 Ml ~I.Mlle HOAG, 450lf newly deCo-EllOllltnl COndlt1on
oomt1 homeJ"r:••ry. enc:fd Ctll !Sil 11! f?v.'!v!'r:. ::::;~ Mt 141 5141 FIND yard, inside hf(up, 2c ger 281 281 Townllom1, new Wtllrlpool WllMr I 11H
$2100 eat 949-293p ctrpet. new patot, wtiup.1110 .. • I drytf. Almond, auper ct• Free Mo. Aenll E'Slda 38r 2 c pltWIQ~. IPI. temls pacity plut. 1700. Moving!
2e. tg yard, W/O hk.ypa, 2c •aL..~.~9-673-7800 Mint ·cond, IHS-282-1212
an apartment
through classified
gar~ 7) $2195/mo 191~ 114H4S-3883 ~l:cio. ~ u:: Colta ...... 1Mt-111Z I• ""*'-I I •· ....,.. I
I 1~t1 I =-@GO·~ =:.. .:'·.:....r= ----
-.. . ICCllM, 'MOllf. 11500illlo. **************** "'"• 1119 ••• to l!lrld. ,.._. ~ -., ... 7117 ~-:!..~ .:_ ~ ;=" ~ * SHORES INTIRIORS *
Hunllnalon 8alcll 24111wy, ....... 11=!$0!!!o="-'· ~~==:=... ~ 2000lq a. avaJ now. * FAIULOUS UQUllMTIOH •*
28r f""B.., ~· MW $1.75 per ~ foot * E' * =:rJ,..,1::&r 28r ~"°:· ~ llCNS0-3234 5674 * ~
W/O '*-ilP. ... s1 r 1 * • * 1112-1 :::: 1• .... : PRI( ~ : iWli 28r, 11W2Br, 281 ""* .,...,. 10tt ce1ng * Wicker Rattan. Ldn1)5 • .-.cc~"'1r1f.os. . *
191. l1400·S1tsOmo up 10 2500sq fl Also * 264-0 Avon Sfr('el *
Cl.ASS 2BI lllCi' plul
offlf.8. 2Fpt, 3 llY9ts, very
tieaWllA. gated. pvt on pellt
$2200t'mo 949-718-0303
28' 2\liS!I, 2-sty. v-al
ocean, on meadow. Ol"O&'
Cfj>ll, pooVfac:. fp, wld htwp.
$1650/mo MH314011
One Btocll lo the W ""
3Br 281, ~r and lowlf
dec:lt. 2car • '""· WIO. &lie sys, c. opllQllll l>Oll
~. '2500'mo AYI ~I Bkr ShMry Been • Cannaty VI-
~Sales 1·68&-11611-9087
2br~ fl-pie.~.,...
Anl Now. 11~
!41-t7Wtt5
•
!4M7HIOO Meuled outdoor SIOflOI
ti Mt Ml •m tr * Nt"wpon A<·;1< h *
.. STUDIO .. I * ()(f Hl\ll'f'..icJI-.... ~lllr Cru<.t I lwy *
Cloel to the und. , • L01f I * 949-642·2255 *
Agent. Froin Sl50J --
t4M73-7100 r-**************** ______ ...
3Br • 1.1811 Condo new
carpet. 2Clr g119. pebo,
cloll to pool. S2200lrno
2232 Vista 1-iogar agt.
!!411·650-0224
BEACH CLOSEI
38r 2.588. tile floors
& shutters, Fp, S2500m
agt, Yield 949-723-6800
Nlwpol't COMt "SurMllr'
28r + Loft. 3Ba. M1n1.
n:ldl WIO 2c8r p . comm
poof I 11>1. 1270CYmo Avril June 1 114"44-19S8
'
L.oetll Sm!!ll SNl!tru no CL.EAH f\111..U. manrlMI
taos. 'lie al Sal1la Ana Ave, boJ apnng, 1150. Fuklz1
C.M. y,flile wlbteck wa. Futon $150. Call John
lg heir 94H45-1520 • 949-2$0-5.169
LOll1 61) Celloo Cal 1 yr old
Owne11 love & mill hef wry much VICin!ly al Vltyl
Ln. NB. Call Caroffne
~9-646·2726
Ofllca furn, d11k,
ettd'tma. dltll cll!llr, 2 llllllchlng oflloe cfwllra. perlect COlldltlon. SI 000
Mf.ZSM355
Im..,.. I
ADllllHISTAATIVE ASST.
FIT. Fllflloft llland toe. COllWMfCl!ll ptOpllty "'9flll •Ill* t plua. Fu ,.,,.., .... 717.f710
1-~11 --11_-_lj_._1
The Bit One 11 Here!
St. Andrews Rummage Sale
Newport'• ....... a bat Nie to beaeD•
local cbarltlal
Preflew ..._. Por llUious antique hunters cl bargain hoppen
Wed., May 8. 3--6pm ($3 donation @ Preview Sale only)
Tburs. May'·,....,,..,
Frt .. Ma, lt, ,._·lPflt
si. ANrww'1 Prwt>yttttan Church
-St. A..,.._,, Rd (JSUI A Jrvlne An.)
Newport Bt9dl lato: """31-28111
f8TATI Aucnott. eo miniature 11orn1. W•ll Mown • Juel Hotltl" May
18 1!= CilyJ. Of.-OM ( -3718. t:~ frlwllion clarklton,com
ICA!."ICM)
!'!!I II• II ....
' . . . -<"
I
st EARN 111-MtJw
Government Jobs. Paid
training on entry·
prof ... lonal levtlt, p(u4
benela. FOi l!lOfl lnforma.
1ioo call 1·800-330-8310 ext. 150 ,(CA&.'SCAH)
lOOIOHQ for JACK l JIU PIT 1:()().4:30 or "'1:30-ll:OO
JeClt & JI 1111 lllm JUY9ll
and 118 Ml to WOik With, flly ., 1111 lic*eta to a>n-
Cllll & win bonuNt. ~ left. II tnet You? Padlc
Sylllpholly T tllflllldint c-....n EYI & Siii.
'" 114-87~2398 ~~
ptln ,..., Pfacb IJelnO AoPll M4IClnlolh computef. Will 1rlin. PerlonilDll. Good
1U1tude. Typing akilll
l10lv lv m1Q ~
AT19TIOet. NAnotW. ,,..,.. Compeny ....
~-~I c~. ~"' 111111 Exctlftnt tncomt op·
portunlty? 0111111:
I ·888-755-2531. •
(CAL'KANI
FlfWICf PAOGIWI
IM·IOJ.Hff Bonded =r-~~~~
low "-tit lllll • VancM loarh ca!! O.ti.F. TODAY
'1nanclal dlttlcultl117 ........ • lllln..., No .... up front Cllll Toll
"" 1..-.112.c•
REAL ESTATE
MONEY TO lOAH
Alldl A_. 8edlll '01
S41ver w/gray·lmmacutate
$23,880.00 '17887
::t'+mI
Alldl M 'ti • 1111, WNll. Ollmeal lllv. moonrool. co.
llCIOfy WllT!l/lly, Nila ntW.
123,11115 v•407529 Bkr. ........ , ...
Audi Cebrloft Conv '16
IOI! ""· metallic g!Hn, 08\mMI l1hf. co. bttUllful cond. 112,1195 ¥14711521 Siu ..... 1.
OW Z3 '00 20k ml.
1 OW!llf. llWll condillOn,
mu11 .... 12U115 otlo .. ....,., .....
lftfW D 'f7 llllcll w11t1 Ptrtec:I Tan l1hf
Cllromldl ~ rna.1
Slll.880 117&41 : .. :m
c:.-. .... 1 OWlllf ~,."" ... In 2000. 13500 obo
f4HIHl90
Ford C°'*Klr SE 't9
39lc ml, melllic lllYef, !!Ulo, power. AJC • am-Im
premium tound. like ntw
cond 17.1195 Yinf79761 5
Bkt 949-586= 1888.
Ford T111n11 II V• 'tt
38k ml, mtl!!lllo allvtr,
1.m'fm CUI, like MW cond, fentastlc vllut, $8,995
1276541 Bkr IMi-680-1818
QlllC Dlnll ...
Fully loedecl, low, \l9'Y c:ilM. GM Oll'l UA.
(t17337'*21) 127 ,515 NAil Ri
(!00) lfl6.al2
OMC YUKON llT '01 Vl,CO,~lomded. .............
(2301alJM1 121,M HAI RI (!!Ot MH5t2
...... . lOlrTe XE '2000
$Mr, llAO, 2 ~ cir,
V~. t/pc1#tf, day Vwlleell,
ed. 15.083k ml. belllllful
aond S17,900/obo
714-427-0033 Of 595·3741
. Oldlmolllle Aurorl 't7
VI, pltuta, CO, low ml,
GM Clltlflad, vety clttn (121mm20T) 11J,"5
NABl:RS (IOOI MU5t2
Oldtmobla AIKonl '" VI, fUly lolclld, full ,_. lifw, GM cart (11!802/37l0P) S17,"5 NABl:RS
(IOO) Ms-6592
Plthflncllr XE '17 V6. 2
wlieef IS, u , pwr ~
lilt. co. IJnttd Windows.
dllollle ~. S9.700iobo
Runs bealMully Plliect
SUV 714·427·0033
714·595·3741
Ponllac: Trww AM 'ti
VI, Mo, T..... low ml,
vety o.i, GM cart
(22344emMP) $20,115
NABERS
(IOO) t45-65t2
PorlClll C!!lwtol9t 111 .. Arena reel w/b11u blk 11111
ONLY 14K mills Loc!!l C!!b
AYrtlOme! Only
149,980. (17889)
PNllilll Auto 949-574-nn
SATUNI SU ._
Auto, llnlld windows,
Daily Pilot
I
,·~"" ...
V.W. Cebrto OU 'OI
BNIJtiful 8"" Conv. 7\ ml
119.880 '171183 : .. ;;
1-900-C"ARITTI Donalt your vtlllcll drdt to tile oriOlntl, nallon1lly IC· cll#ntd Charity Clli I()()%
Charily • not I UMd Cit dtalerllund11l1tr. 1 ·800 ·Cll1rtty
(1 ·800·242·7011) www 800ch1rl1yc1r1 org (CAl 'SCAN) ·
71 ........... Conv •
clalalc .,.,.. wt1ill OOtrol,
protl llliDllCI, d rwwt PWll ,
eng, IOp. cM>lnt, irltlllor
Cllllit CM Ind ~ 17 ,950 714-751-2A&4
........ ID08l 'IZ Locll
belliy. '*' lltv I toll li:l!J,
phone, co. 2 •. lo ,...
$20,500 714-7$1·24&4
DB I
II> Family Opei'llfllcl Dae11r
W-. over 40 ye111 exp wtll
pay 1 very fall j)(iCt for you1
oar. Ven Of tNck. plld lor Of
not C.11 Dick Rey 0
714-437·1931 Of 328-3228
·COVE
MOTORING
BMW 3231 'ti
G....-Jl!ln 124,915 V'"75
BMW 325ICA '01
Gnlnltan S3l,IM VI 170
llllW '2tlA ...
TllMllue 121.915 ma
BMW S211A '00
Siherfgrly 132."5 '1312
BMW 32llA 'ti
Bl!!cM!!n '29,195 ltt7I
BMW 31t1C V
8lacMlfk 129,"5 '4340
BMW 32*<: 't7
Burwtan 124.915 1'71"
BMW 5211 't7
W""-llan 114,195 VM361
llllW 5211 ..
Blklbl!!dl 121,M '"31
BMW 5211A 'ti ~124,t'5nl51
llMW 52llA 'f7 ..,,,., 124.-15541
BMW 5.2lrT '00 BlrMldi 135,M '5152
BMW 62lfT '00 ~SX,"513473
extras ellC8flent cond pp BMW 7 40f 'tt $7,475 714-540-Qt24 BMlll .,., .. M2l7
V•o S70 'ti 37k/ 1111 lull
boots rllOOlds lllCI warr.
Clllmpagneloetmeat llllf, p,
premium aound, llke new,
$15,500 V1nt697514 Bkr
949·586-1888
vw Gott '2000
Tult>O dleMI, IC, IUIO,
MllOOI, gal 35mpg. ldnt condition Pltva.. Party 115,11115 714-558-1121
1149-4114-4120
TILO'I
Europten Autohau•
MIZ llOO CP 'ti
lhOwfm h9'1. wht4e "" lif!rJ. ph, co. IPOft wtlll 1444900 $311,900
BMW 740ll 'ti ,.
Antttl'll'J 138,1111 MOl3
BMW 740ll ._
Sllvef S30,"5 nllO
BMW 740ll '19 SWVr9Y 1.11,115 15519
lltlW 1•,. Gr..illan 131,tllf to211
• BMW 7'50L ._
Wlllllir'8rl ....... ~
llllW Mela .. ~810.-
SMI toOl 'a SlllJp9J 111.115 11441
ChMo~'M ~ I07l5
.,...., UdO c ·01
.....,., 111.tm v.16
..... UdO 81 '0I ~ l 12MI VV7a
i.... LlfOO.,, ~ln,111Wlll1
IMW ID 'II ~--Yim ... .., ...
..... ....... Ymt .............
..... Yl1'1 .............. ........... v..m