HomeMy WebLinkAbout2002-05-15 - Orange Coast Pilot•
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SERVING THE NEWPORT -MESA COMMUNmES SINCE 1907 ON THE WEB: WWW.DAILYPILOT.COM
/
. ...... a A compromise
has been
reached. We'll
settle for an early
morning mariM I~ •
mostty sunny afternoon
and cooler temperatures.
Not a bad deal at all.
S-Pege2
WEDNESDAY, MAY 15, 2002
I . ..
Going wookie for 'Star Wars' at Big Newport
, .
.
• Fans of the two trilogies spend the week counting mostly "Star Wars" stuff.
The world outside their
microcosm reacts in different
ways to their passion, or so-
called obsession.
down to the 'Attack of the Oones' opening Thursday.
Deepa Bhareth
DAILY PILOT
NEWPORT CENTER -For
Matthew Aston, waiting isn't a
chore.
Newport theater at Fashion
Island hoping to snag some of
the best seats for the first
screening of "Episode H:
Attack of the Clones· at 12:01
a.m. Thursday.
"( always hear the good
stuff,• Aston said. "I always
hear people yelling, 'You peo·
ple who love "Star Wars" are
awesome.'"
· . Every second is fun. Every
minute is laced with merry
anticipation. And every hour
that passes snowballs into a
gigantic force, charged with
thrill and powered with excite-
ment.
Aston, like most others, has
been waiting for the last 10
days.
Kaszynski said she hasn't
heard those people -not yet.
"I've never felt bored wait·
ing." he said. "I love to social-
ize, me~t people. You know, we
do have at least one thing in
common.•
"I've aJways heard people
yelling out thul we're fre aks,"
she sajd.
"You're listening wrong,"
Aston remarked with a laugh.
Aston, a Santa Ana Heights
resident, is one of several "Star
Wars" fans who have pitched
tents outside the Edwards Big
That's how he met Laura
Kaszynski. They hang out
together and chat about stuff -
"Oh, come on,• Kaszynski
said. "People throw eggs at us
SEE STAR WARS PAGE 4
PHOTOS BY DON ll AC~· t UA1 'f PILOT
A Coast Guard rescue worker dangles above the ocean's surface as a helicopter lowers him Into the water during seasonal water
rescue tra1nlng at Crystal Cove State Beach. The operation Included helicopters, lnflatable craft and personal watercraft to aid ln
the technical aspeda of making safe water rescues during summer months.
Orange County Sberttr1 Department memben stand on the helicopter skids as
tbey bead out to tbe ocean to be dropped oU and r~ed u part of the tra1nlng.
Motorillg into the fray
•Dave Goss of Costa Mesa
bad no plans to become
involved in the dty's volatile RV
debate. But he's locked in now.
,
COSTA MESA -Dave GOii wu
~a two-moalh vacatiaa aero.
the IOUthwelt tn hll motor home when the CClllla Mela City Coundl
ftnt talked about NMrtdlng puldnv
olcwem.d_.,_,
Tbe 86-,._-olcl WM rW3:'n1 ID moeor bmne ...._ o1 Quutlllt9.
ArtL, ............ 8poltll, v .....
opposition to more stringent parking
restrtctiom.
•uttJe did we know that while we
were enjoying ounelves at the RV
show that our own RV privileges were
being aaaulted by the Clty Cound.l, •
GOllNld.
In December, council members
began examining propoeelt to tighten
the uilting 72-hour parking ordi-
nance tc. OYersized veliidel, Nylng
U., bed ree8'•-.d DWDel'OW com-
plaints about the unsightly and dan·
gel'OUlly Jarve recnetiooal vehldee.
ID the lall .a moathe. tbe aJlmdl
bM coMdenMS and IUblequmtiJ
..,..., .... aboultMdlBlr-
... prqi r rh AlaDg h way, a .....
groupOlmatorbGIDe OWW'I .....
Training day
S everal agencies countywide partia-
pated in a drill at Crystal Cove
State Beach on Tuesday.
The drill, which began about noon,
included swift-water rescue trairung and
seasonal water rescue traming for multi-
ple agencies.
Air crews also received training in
water currents. Some of the the local
agencies involved were the Coast Guard,
the Orange County Sheriff's Department
harbor patrol, the dive team and the
Orange County Sheriff's Department heli-
copter patrol unit.
aDdlV ............. .....
........... HdlD mMOTONNG .. 1 ...a-....
'
cam pen
have
posittoned
them.selves
atEctwuds
Newport
Cinema to
be among
the ftnt lD
line to see
"Star
Wars:
Attack of
the
Clones"
Thursday.
DON LEACH/
DAILY P1LOT
Cove funds
proposed
as. promised
• State budget plan released
Tuesday would send about
$9.2 million toward preservation
of the park's cottages.
Deirdre Newman
DAILY PILOT
CRYSTAL COVE -Cottage sup·
porters breathed a sigh of relief
Tuesday when they learned that Gov.
Gray OaVJS kept intact budget funding
reportedJy earmarked for the restora-
tion of the state park's historic district.
ln his budget proposal. Davis set
aside $9.2 million of Proposition 40
tunds for the restoration pro1ect, saJd
Laura DaVIck. founder of the Alliance
to Rescue Crystal Cove Proposition 40,
passed in March, proVIdes for a total of
SEE COVE PAGE 4
District unfazed
by governor's
budget revision
• Newport-Mesa Unified
schools should slip by
somewhat unscathed, thanks
to conservative planning,
superintendent says.
Delrctr. Newman
DAILY PILOT
NEWPORT-MESA -The gover-
nor's sleight of hand in creating the
revised budget tor 2002-03 on Tuesday
is being met with guarded optimism by
school officials.
·At first glance, I think we're going
to be OK,• said Newport-Mesa Unified
School District Supt. Robert Barbot.
"We just want to be careful that we're
SEE BUDGET PAGE 4
·-· IOYI' YOWYIALl
Coron11 del Mair H,.,'S SN
Ki~~ MSy WM•*' In OF PlayofTI action ~
South~on
T~ night. Newport
Hwbor, meanwhHe, w.a
imlotved In a 1hrtllr wtlt'I s.n o.n...ite. and won.
S-,...7
LOCALS PITS Of Tiii Wiii
Kittens
More than 25 JDttmw were abown over
the weekend. PolMr mom1 celebrating
Mother's Day Went ...... t to dilQm the
detaill of each hand-railed kitten. Mid
DlAnna Pfaff-Martin, founder of the
Community Animal Network.
brinal ID mucb pleuure to adoptive pareritl. ··flud·ralled anhnala are top:.quality
pets unliU lbelter klttem that may have
been found tn a bush and have bad little
bandltng. Our animals have been railed u
part ol the family and need special ho.mel
that recognize their value.• abe added.
z w.dnesday, Mat 15, 2002
K elly Smith loves ani-
mals. And the Costa
Mesa High School
sophomore knows bow to
show it.
Kelly is a volunteer
•foster mom• to two kit-
tens she picked up from a
shelter. She will continue
to take care of them until
·1 love
animals.
This is
something
I really
enjoy
doing.·
they are
adopted.
It all
started last
year when
Kelly
befriended
a stray cat
-afour-
legged
friend she
named
Sugar.
·0ne -Kelly day, Sugar
Smith ran under
my bed,"
Kelly said.
•And when I looked there,
I saw four kittens about
two or three days old.•
So she decided to raise
those kittens until they
were ready to be adopted.
Kelly still has one of the
kittens, which she named
Tiger. She also adopted a
cat, Cuddles, from her vet.
This year, she found an
advertisement in the
paper from the Newport
Beach-based Community
Animal Network animal
shelter asking for foster
homes to take in pregnant
cats.
•They wanted someone
to let the cat have the kit-
tens and then take care <>f
the babies and the mom
till they're ready to be
ALMAIAC
DUI ARRESTS
The following~ haw been
arrested =on wspldon of driving under lnfl~ of an
intoKJc.ant TMy have only~
~on~ofaaime and, as with a/ suspeca. are consid-
emJ lntlOC«lt until proved guilty.
COSTA lllSA
SUNDAY
•Jose Crisofero Silva·Tecpan, 3}.
Costa M4!Y
• Jose G~lupe Castillo-Calvillo,
25, Costa Mesa
• Frandsco Serrano-Estrada, 31,
Anaheim
• Stanley Dun Sewell, 49,
Huntlngton Beach
SATURDAY
• Unda Christine Denney, 30, Costa
M4!Y
• Si.de Renee Browne, 36, Orange
• P.ul T.yl« Bloodsworth, 48,
Tustin
FRIDAY
• llm LM Beine, 32. c:ost. Mesa
.)}>Jloa
VOLll,N0.1JS _ .. _
~ --~ ...
..,,~ ........ oncw .-.-......... oe.... __ ..,,
u.~
-=---==· ---.-.... ...... ---· .==:..
J$ •a'=::-:=:::.
' k:l 1 --...., ..... ......... ....... ;at• 7.. ... ===' ... ,,, plU -
•lbe demand for k:ittem ii greater than
the amount ot ~ being donated to be
able to rescue them. lhe said. •Pleue con-
sider bow valuable your donation b and
See other anbnall available for adoption
at www.a.nbnalnetwork.org or stop by
RUllO'I pet 9kH'8 at Puldon llland between
noon and 4 p.m. on weekends.
Information: (949) 759-36(6, OT write to
the Community Animal Network at P.O. Bo~
8662, Newport Beach1 CA 92~.
f
FOR A GOOD CAUSE GEnlNG INVOLVED
Kelly Smith
Caring for1kittens till they,re ready to leave .
adopted.•
Now she has a mother
cat, Konstantine, and her
two kittens, still nameless.
Does it get pretty crazy
with five cats around?
•Not really,• Kelly says.
The only challenge is
when Konstantine and
nger fight, she said.
•They don't really get
along,• Kelly said. •So, it
can be a problem some-
times.•
But they are
•adorable,· she is quick to
point out. ·u·s going to be so hard
to let them go or give
them up for adoption,• she
said. ·sut that's something
that'll have to be done.•
Taking care of the ani-
mals is also part of Kelly's
school project, part of her
40 hours of community
service she is required to
complete this year.
The kittens are now
three weeks old. and will
continue to stay with her
another 10 weeks and
then wait to be adopted.
Kelly said this is some-
thing she will continue to
do long after her project is
over.
·I love animals,• she
said. •This is something I
really enjoy doing,•
-Stotyby
Deepe Bharath;
photo by Greg Fty
• Christine Antoinette Canzoneri, Costa Mesa IEIGHIORS 33, Anaheim
• Sharon Lynn Schroeder; 48, Tustin
• Christine Krygsman Vasquez. 48,
Glendora
• John Michael Kendall, 44, Las
Flores
ntURSDAY
• Kevin Joseph Murray, 29, Cost.a
Mesa
MAYS
• Ronald Fred Weiss, 44, Santa Ana
NEWPORT BEACH
SATURDAY
• Max Robert Gonzales, 46, Cost.a
Mesa
FRIDAY
• Yvonne Laura Wheeler, 30, Long
Beach
• Dominic Anthony Mantella, 27,
Newport Beach
•Steven Allen Houghton, 51,
Newport Beach
• Martt Gary Colonese, 44,
Oarttston, Mich.
THURSDAY
• Kathleen Marie Kidwell, 40,
Tustin
• Antonio Munoz Hernandez, 30,
-•wr 0...,.--
0tlne end CIM1t ......,,. " 57-Mllt ... ~ ... "'·-... , .. ..
~ ... """"' """17oMll2 ~ --.a.. ....,.,.....,.,, Ctlll 57.W. ,..,.., ........... _ ... a... ._... ................... ....
~--·. -c.w ..... a::..a:.174"4m
• Michael Robert Pittman, 50, Los
Angeles
MAY I
•Justin Kain Kroening, 21, Seal
Beach
•Jared Douglas Wood, 27, Corona
REAL ESTATE
TRANSACTIONS
COSTA MESA
2330 Vanguard Way, $227,000
2838 COM> Pl.tee, $450,000
3116 Sumatra Place, $300,000
1784 Hawaii Orde, $380,000
3148 Sumatra Place, $350,000
2316 Rutgers Drive, $299,500
2744 canary Drive, $485,000
lllWPOIT IEACH
2014 Barranca, $340,000
230 Agate Ave. $960,000
3 ~Court. $33~
526 Aliso Ave., $500,
463 Bolero Way, $270,000
6 Balboa Cove, $1.755 mlllion
220 Nke Lane, $280,000
3 Klez. $1.06 million
1523 Dolphln Terrace, $512,000
RW>E8SHOJ\M
(949) 642-6086
~ ~ comrM!ltl ~the
D.ity ll'lot « news Ups.
ADQIUS
Our~ aJJO W.1.-y St..~
Mel-. CA Nll7. Office hours ..
~ • "-l:JO a.m. • 5 p.m,
• ... ·-"'II• •
It la the Naft polq to prompcty
awrecl ...... of ........
,.._al (Mlt S1<MDJ.
m
'"'9 ...... ~ .... -............ ~ ... ,,'c .. .
"' .......... andClllll ..... ... ............... _ ......
The Ebell Cub of Newport Beach bas
awarded $30,000 in scholarships to 13 teens
at a luncbcon at the Bahia Corinthian Yacht
C ub. Students awarded were Jetlery Lee
of Corona de1 Mar High School; Jacqoellne
Newton of Costa Mesa High School;
.Jemk:a ADM and Allyne Gmda of &tancia
High Schooli Ronald Hackea and Chrts
Cmdelada of Monte Vista High School;
J-a. Bode of Newport Harbor High
School; PbDtp Szmto of Orange Coast
Middlefligh School; and Chrlt Hmm,
Ycmg Cbot, Jamie Slaolwd. 1\1et Pham and
Qaym Npym of Orange Coast
Foundation. The EbeD Cub was founded in
1909 and provides both cultural and educa-
tional opportunities for the Newport Beach
commtmity. The dub was instrumental in
founding the first libmy in Newport Beach.
In the past year, the club bas funded
$100,000 In projeds .... Marine Corps Pvt.
Joee J. De Anda. a 2000 Estancia High
School graduate, completed basic training
· at Marine Corps Recruit Depot in San
Diego. De Anda suoce8SfuDy oompleted 12
weeks of training that tnduded physical
oooditioning, and damoom and 6eld
assignments such as lea.ming first aid, com-
stoftes. illustTatlonl, tdltoflll tMttef Of
~ hlflln CMI be rtpfO-
Mild~ wrtttlrt ~of
~OMW.
HOW TO 11EACH us
Oio*llcn
lhe 11'MI Orange County
(I00>2Sz.t141
i\dbuM4
a I a...., 142-5671
~..,IG-4l21 ...... ..... .., . ....,
...... IJMUJ
........... ,10
,,..,.. ... 90110 .....e: .,., 11 ., dl1aaim ...........
• GETTWG INVOlVID run1 perlodlal.,_
1y In the Dally Pilot on • rotating b.lsls.
If ye>U'd like Information on adding
your organization to this list. all {949)
574-4298.
AMERICAN HOME HEAl.nt
HOSPICE PROGRAM
The American Home Health
Hospice Program needs volun-
teers to give emotional support
to terminally ill patients and
their families in the greater
Orange County area. 'n'aining is
provided. (714) 550-0800 or (800)
540-2545.
COSTA MESA MS
SELF-HELP GROUP
The Orange County chapter of
the national Multiple Sclerosis
Society has started a new self-
belp group in Costa Mesa for
people newly diagnosed or with
minimal symptoms of multiple
sclerosis, or both. The group will
meet at 11 a.m, the first Tuesday
of every month. (949) 650-1659.
EASTER SEALS .
Easter Seals needs volunteers for
ongoing clerical work and to
help in programs for children
with disabilities and in special
events. (714) 834-11 t t.
JUNIOR LEAGUE
OF ORANGE COUNTY ,
The organization of women
committed to promoting volun-
teerlsm, developing the pc)ten-
tial· of women and improving
. communities through the effec-
tive action and leadership of
trained volunteers, is seeking
new members. (949) 261-0823.
KAISER PERMANENTE
HOSPta SERVICES
Volunteers are needed to pro-
vide four hours per wee" visiting
patients or doing errands for
them or their caregivers in com-
munities near volunteers'
homes. (562) 622-3805.
NEWPORT BAY NATURAUST
The Upper Newport Bay Nature
Preserve is looking for volun-
teers to assist with naturalist-led
tours and programs, spedal
events, and habit.at restoration
projects. The interpretive center
is at 2301 University Drive,
Newport Beach. (714) 973-6829.
bat water survival. marksmanship, hand-~
hand combat and weapons training. De
Anda and other recruits also received
instruction on the Marine Carps' core val-
ues of honor, cowage and cnmmttment. •..
Greg Romen from Newport Beach WU put
of a three-member team from Central
Missouri St.ate University that pla<aS first In
crime-scene investigation in the 65th annu-
al American Criminal Justice Assn.
National Conference in Cheyenne, Wyo.,
hekl March 18 to March 22. Students from
the university captun!d three first-p)ace
awards, two aeocmd·plaoe honors, two
third-place flnisbel and a top academic
award at the cooferenoo that had -400 stu-
dents reprelellting more than 40 colleges
and univeratties. Central .ent aeven ltu·
dents to the competition. Before the <Xllllp&-
tttion. students were required to take a
written ex1uninetioo that focused 00 such
areas as juvenile justloe, oorrectiom, atmi-
nal law and police administration. They
also participated in pbysical agility testing,
firearms competition and crime 101me
investigation.
• NIJGI •DRS spotlights achiewments In the mm-
munlty. Pie.-direct noteworthy lntorm.tion to
Chmtfne C.rr111Q.vla fax at (949) '46-4170, or~
e-mall to d•llypllotOlatlrnes.com.
SUlf AllD SUll
Out faf'thef, the~
winds wlll blow stronger• 15 to
25 knots, with 2· to 4-foot..,.,
and • nofthwest sw.ft of 9 to , ,
fMt. lhe same wffl be found thk
ewnlng. f'og will~
tonight.
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Doily Pilot Wednesday, I-lat 15, 2002 3
Teen forum will discuss high pregnancy rate
•Friday night event will address the above-average
numbers in Costa Mesa-and seek ways to lower them.
forum on teen pregnancy rates
hosted by Planned Parenthood of
Orange County and San
Bernardino. Dixon proposed the
dty offer a venue for teens and par.
ents to communicate with each
other.
sense that we have a presence
there to promote comprehensive
sex education." f YI
Lolita Harp.r
DAILY PILOT
Costa Mesa.
• WHAT~ Communh:y Forum.
"Teens Deal Wlttt Teen
Pregnancy Issues: Communk.lite
WrthThem"'
COSTA MESA-Efforts made to
combat teen pregnancy by city oUi-
cials, parents, school board mem-
bers, nonprofit groups arid adults of
all sorts are an integral part of the
prevention process.
But who better to explore the
issue than teens, themselves?
•The forum is to unite Costa
~esa community membeTS who
normally wouldn't get together to
talk a.bout how to pre vent teen
pregnancies,• said Priya Runyon, a
Speak Out! program coordin(ltor.
"The teens want to present a united
front in combating the problem and
get a pulse on what the community
thinks 'about prevention methods.•
• Dixon said Tuesday she support-
ed the teens' effort to bring the
community together and regretted
she could not be there because she
is performing In the Cbildreo's
Hospital of Orange County Pollles
show. · .
Newport-Mesa Unified School
District trustee Wendy Leece was
critical of the forum and views 1t as
an attempt to alter sex education m
the schools.
"I just wonder if the people that
are putting on the forum have read
the state Jaw, which, as far as I
recall, does dictate hQw sex educd·
tion should be taught in our pub!Jc
schools,• Leece said. "It's very
definitive, very clear.•
• WHEN: 6 to 9 p.m. Friday
• WHEM: Costa Mesa Senior
Center, 695 W. 19th St.
• INFOMMTION: (714) 83&-
9991
A group of concerned Costa
Mesa teens will host a community
fotum called ·Teens Deal With
Teen Pregnancy lssues:
The group has invited clergy
members, police officers, city offi-
cials, parents, teenagers, grandpar-
ents -virtually anyone in Costa
Mesa who wants to contribute.
•More power to them,• Dixon
said. "I'll be interested to see how it
turns out.·
Leece did not confirm whether
she would attend.
pregnancies for young women ages
15 to 19 m 2000, showed the south-
ern region of Gosta Mesa had 91
pregnant teen mothers per t,000
teenage girls The average for
Orange County 1s 42; the state aver-
age is 48 t
Communicate With Them• on
Prtday night al the Costa Mesa
Senior Center. The teen advo-
cates, who arc members of Speak
Outl, part of Camp Fire USA
Orange County, are inviting any-
one and everyone to discuss the
disturbing number of teen births in
High teen pregnancy rates affect
more than just the young mothers
and their babies, Runyon said. It
aflects the quality of life for the
entire city.
Mayor Linda Dixon reached the
same conclusion after an earlier
Kimberly Custer, spokeswoman
for Planned Parenthood of Orange
County and San Bernardino, said
representatives from her orgaruza-
t.ion will participate.
•All of our programs focus on
reducing teen pregnancies. That is
our priority,• Custer said. "Costa
Mesa has an incredibly high rate of
teen births, and it would make
Studies by the Caufornid
Department ol Health Services
identified the southern region of the
city as a teen pregnancy •hot spot.•
Research -which broke down its
study areas by ZIP Code -found
92627 lo have more than twice the
number of teen pregnancies thdn
the county average.
The other Costa Mesa ZJP Code
area stud1ed was 92626. The study
found thdl drea to have 24 teen
pregnancies per 1,000, which i.s-
wcll below the county and stat~
The study, which rescarcht?d averdges
Brieflt_in
THE NEWS
Outdoor store right
fit for Th_e Camp
If your idcd of Vdcation is
spending a night under the
stars in a remote outdoor
location, gel ready lo take
ddVdillage Of the grand open-
ing event al Adventure 16
Outdoor & Travel Outfitters at
The Camp this weekend.
03 fiscal year budget early
this year to spark community-
wide discussion about the
financial projections.
City Manager Allan
Roeder has provided copies
at sites throughout the oty to
reach as many interested res-
idents as possible.
The public may view
copies of the proposed bud-
get at the city clerk's office,
77 Fair Drive; Costa Mesa
Public Library Branch, 1855
Park Ave.; Mesa Verde
Branch Ltbrary, 2969 Mesa
Verde Drive; or on the city's·
Web site at www.ci.costa-The new 12,000-squMe·
root. store, dedicated lo the
outdoor lif~style, will host a me~~~aci:i:inciJ members will
1 O·day event showcasing discuss the 2002-03 budget al presentations by moun-truneer:s, outdoor authors and a study session at 4:30 p.m.
gear demonstrators. June 10 in City Hall
Adventure 16 will also host a Conference Room IA, 77 Fair Drive. Two additional com-weekend climbing wall, and munity meetings will be held
olfer free drawings and sale but have not yet bee n scbcd-merchandise.
The event will run from uJcd.
Bristol St., Costa Mesa. A UCI chemist creates full schedule of events ca
Saturday to May 27 al 2r3'1'
be found al WWW.adv · helpful amino acid
lurel6.com. " An amino acid created m
Costa.Mesa releases
new budget proposal
the laboratory of a \JC Irvine
chemist holds the potent.iaJ of
aiding research for new
drugs that can regulate the
Costa Mesa officials have activity of molecuJes involved
delivered the proposed 2002-with cancer, HlV and neu-
SABATINO'S
rodegenerative diseases such
as Alzheimer's disease.
James Nowick, UCI pro-
fessor of chemistry, working
with a UC Davis researcher,
created the anuno acid. The
findings appeared m the May
8 issue of the Journal of the
American Chemical Society.
OCC student earns
annual leader award
A total of 186 students
weTe honored for leadership
and service at Orange Coast
College's 44lh annual Honors
Night Awards Banquet on
May8.
Student Body President
Traci Travis Cdptured these<:-
ond annual Sharon K. Donoff
Student Leader ol the Year
Award. Travis received d
$1,000 scholarship and d
plaque.
Cat protection group
will host open house
The National Cat
Protecbon Society m
Newport Beach will h ost its
annual open house and fund-
raiser Sunday.
The group, founded m
1968, finds homes for cats
and lottens. maintains retire-
ment homes for older cats
whose owners can no longer
keep them and educates the
public about responsible pet
ownership.
The open house will be
held from 2 to 4 p.m. al 6904
W. Coast Highway.
Refreshments will be served
A raffle and silent auction
will also be held. information:
(949) 650-1232.
Pavilions opening
benefits 2 schools
Two Newport 'Beach
schools will benefit from the
opening of Newport Coast's
Pavilions.
Pavilions, the anchor at the
Newport Coast retail center,
will open today, and before
the cha-chlng of cash regis-
ters can be heard, store ofh-
oaJs will present $500 checks
to Newport Coast Elementary
School and Corona del Mar
High School.
The new store will feature
numerous conveniences,
such as a hot bakery, full-ser-
vice deli, an extensive fine
wine selection, a natural
foods department and a full-
service floral department. It
will also offer a Starbucks,
one-hour photo service, dry
cleaner and pharmacy.
ln its first month, Pavilions
w -c. un 1'1Ulai.atw..JntM~!uda-....) • ccm... 1 I MIHIMU fuMIMlllll o,.· .• ..._o-u•••ua.oo,.• -------------Lunch • Dinner • Sunday Brunch
251 Shipyard Way• Newport Beach
Please call for hours. directions & reservations. -~ (949)723-0621
Cle•n, Comfo,.,,,ble, UncroWded
More Penonal Attention to
Our .. mben
• Semi-Private for Men & Women
• Lots of Equipment/Free Weight~
• Pllates Studio & Mat Classes
• SPINNING Theater-Licensed
• 16 Full Time Personal Trainers
• Child Care 6am· noon M -F
• Ample & Convenient Parking
• Yoga, Tai Chi, Stretch classes
• Step, Power Pump, Carcno
• Showers, Steam & Towels
will hold a sweepstakes ror a
seven-day Canbbean crwse
and instant giV<'aways.
The store is at San Joaqwn
Hills Road and Newport
Coast Drive
Study weighs in on
empathy teachings
Physicidns are divided on
which approach lo use lo
ledch empathy, a UC Irvine
College or Med1one study
·shows.
The study, released m the
Apnl lSSUC or Acdderruc
Medicine, is believed to be
one of the first to shed light
on how empathy 1s taught lo
students. It demonstrates that
hm1trng the teaching of
empathy to acuons suc-h as
eye contact dild body ldn·
gudge won't alone help stu-
dents learn to better under-
Sldnd their patients.
Johanna Shapiro, profes-
sor or farruly medicine, found
thdl medical school faculty
usually combine comprehen-
sive behaVJoral and speof1c
acuons when teaching empa-
thy lo _students, but often djs-
agree on which approach is
more effective.
"Before this study, we
knew very little about exactly
how empathy was taught lo
OUR MEALS ARE
4 TRIP TO MEXICO
med1cd.I students. Empathy is
an important part of a med-'
1cal career, where a doctor·
must be dble to put him· or·
herself into the patients'
shoes and understand what
they're feel.mg.• Shapiro said
in d statement "It can be
ldught, but there is some dis-·
agre<'ment on whether spe-
c1hc acllon-based lesSQns are
better thdn a broad, attitud.l-·
ndJ model· ·
Shapiro mterviewed 12
UCI primary care faculty'
members who had been rec-·
og nv.ed for their outstanding
l<'aching abilities. All faculty
mC'mbc rs said empathy
should be dn integral part of a
medical student's education.
The faculty sunieyed
dcknowledged that empathy
was dlfhcull for new pbysi-·
CJdns lo use effectively, given
the pressures of medicaJ
trauung and the tendency of •
students and doctors to dis· :
lance themselves from ·
patients' ills and emotions. '
·empathy isn't sympathy;
it's not feeling sorry for a •
patient but understanding
what they're going through." ·
Shapiro srud. "Proper training
10 empathy for patients may 1
help physicians. avoid the
cyruosm and harmful self. ·
prolcctlve strategies that crop '
up dunng a medical career." ·
FULL BAR
COCKTAILS
"'OUR OWN WINES JUST ARRIYID
FROM NAPA VALLEY•
196 £. 17TH ST. COSTA MESA · 949·64S·7616
NEWPORT BEACH
BACCHUS . .
SOCIETY • . • 4-~I IESt o,.
OrangeCou~ •
T l
• Shape-Up Skin Care Center
Estheticians & Nurse Practttioner
• Shape·Up Physical Therapy Cenbtr
Best Business Lunch
with Ther -No......,. Arches
Newport Beach .
...
2002
I
15,2002
PUBLIC SAFETY
POLICE FllES
COSTA MISA
•Avocado Street An lndT·
vidual reportedly brandished
a weapon In the 300 block at
5:21 p.m. Sunday.
• Brfltol Street A petty
theft was reported In the
3300 bloci at 4:34 p.m.
Sunday.
• Harbor 8oulevard: A rob-
bery was reported in the 2700
block at 2:30 p.m. Sunday.
• Newport Boulevard:
Possession of drugs for sale
was reported in the 2200
block at 9:43 a.m. Sunday.
• Newport Boulev~rd and
Paularlno Avenue: A traffic
collision Involving injuries was
reported at 11:07 p.m.
Sunday.
•South COllst Drive: An
individual was reportedly
drunk in public in the 1500
block at 4:34 a.m. Sunday.
BRIEFLY IN
THE NEWS
Corona del Mar
man sentenced
A Corona del Mar man
was sentenced Tuesday to
seven years in federal
prison for running a Large
Ponzi scheme that
defrauded about 350 vic-
tims of nearly $8.7 million.
Steven HeveU, 38, was
sentenced by U.S. District
Judge Alicemarie H.
Stotler, who also ordered
that Hevell pay about $8.6
million in restitution.
The victims were
defrauded by a hlgh-tech-
nology invesbnent scheme
that Hevell operated
behveen 1994 and 1997.
Hevell pleaded guilty in
February to three counts
of mail fraud. A Ponzi
scheme occurs when
someone uses money from
new investors to pay inter-
est owed lo previous
investors.
When he pleaded
guilty, HeveU admitted
that he induced victims lo
invest in three high-tech-
nology companies by
falsely promising that they
would nave substantial
revenues from selling soft-
IEWPOIT IEACH
• ....,_ 9oulev..ct: A petty
theft was reporteCI in the 3100
block at 1 :27 p.m. Monday.
• Campus Drlw: An auto
theft was reported in the 4200
block at 12:51 p.m. Monday.
• East Coast Hlahw.-y: A
commerdal burglary was
reported In the 2800 block at
9:46 a.m. Monday.
• Cotton StNet A vehicle bur-
glary was reported in the 300
block at 7:41 a.m. Monday.
• Irvine Av.nue: A commercial
burglary Wa$ reported in the
1100 block at ~.m. Monday.
• ~ : A vehicle
burglary was reported In the
1100 block a\ 8:52 a.m.
Monday.
• Ruby Avenue: A hit-and-run
was reported in the 100 block
at 7:44 p.m. Monday.
• S..faring Drive: A traffic
collision involving injuries was
reported in the 100 block at
10:34 a.m. Monday.
ware that electronically
transmitted radiological
images.
The case was investi-
gated by the FBI.
Public safety expo
to be held Sunday
The city of Costa
Mesa's annual Public
Safety Emergency Expo
will be held from 11 a.m.
to 3 p.m. Sunday at the
Placentia Avenue fire sta-
tion.
The expo will feature
displays from the city's
Fire and Police depart-
ments. Demonstrations
will include extinguishing
a live structure hre,
extracting someone from a
vehicle using ·jaws or
We," arson prevention and
the canine unit.
There will also be sev-
eral other public service
displays and informational
material for distribution to
the public. The event will
also feature food and
games.
The fire station is at
2300 Placentia Ave.,
across from Estancia High
School. Admission and
parking are free.
lnformation: Costa Mesa
Fire Department, (714)
754-5091.
WHY STAY HOME
Sunset Dinners
<Rjstorante :Mamma qina
Monday-Friday: 4:30-6:15
._,laat Parmigiana 01'
Cannelloni Alla Florentina
(with soup or salad)
JUST $10.90
The Real Prime Rib or Fdet
Mignon
(with soup or salad)
JUST $13.90
www.••••91'•1ic.m
2,1 Eat c:o... HJafnNy. Near-rt 8wla
STAR WARS
CONTINUED FROM 1 '
at 8 ln the morning and yell
nonsense.•
•w ell, they're just being
ruce, • Aston said, smiling
broadly. "They're making
sure we get breakfast." .f.
ll everything goes weu,
Aston will be dressed as a
Jedi knight for the big evenl
Justin Emilio, a Golde n
West College student, won't
be in costume this time.
•1 was for 'Episode 1,•• he
said. "I was Luke Skywalker
with Yoda on my back. lt ·was.
pretty cool.•
Emilio has been a fan since
seventh or eighth grade.
"The movies are great
because of their vastness,· he
raved. "The different charac-
ters, great story, the drama -
there's this mix of a lot of dif-
ferent elements that make
these great movies.•
Passersby glanced curi-
ously at the tents, most of
which seemed comfortably
furnished with couches, tele-
visions, stereos and video
game centers.
Kaszynski says. around
here, you can't go wrong try-
ing to make friends.
COVE
CONTINUED FROM 1
$2.6 billion to help protect
California's air, land and
water for future generations.
Supporters slty it has
been a long struggle to pro-
cure funds lo restore the 46
dilapidated cottages on the
beach. And they are espe-
cially hearte ned that Davis
withheld the budget ax in
dealing with a $23.6-billion
revenue shortfall:
•I believed that . this
would be coming, but still,
BUDGET
CONTINUED FROM 1
• U you run out m stuff to
talk about, you could alwayt
say 'How about Darth
Vader?' and the other peTIOn
goes 'Yea.hi' and it's all cool.•
Barbara Thomas, wha
works in a building nearby,
couldn't stop smiling as she
wallted by the theater.
"We look out of our o!fice
windows and get a kick out of
it,• she said. •J think it's a fun
thing for them to do. rd never
do it. but l think it's cool the
theater allows them to do it.•
Cool or uncool. for fans
like Aston, it's high priority.
"We've bad great weather,
and rd love to go to the beach
and surf,• he said. •But when
it comes to 'Star Wars,' there's
nothing mo:re important.•
What makes it worth the
wain For Aston, "the legacy
of Darth Vader" -mostly.
But it's not just that.
"It's everything,• he said.
"Hanging out, chatting and
waiting in line to walking into
the theater. Then the lights
are turned off, the film rolls,
and everybody shuts up with
pure respect that we've got
another one.•
• DEEM BHARATH covers publk
safety and courts. She may be
reached at (949) 574-4226 or by e-
mail at deepa.bharathO/atimes.com.
with what's happening with
the governor's budget and
the tremendous amounts of
cuts, it was a somewhat
risky situation,• Davick
said. •It further demon-
strates that Davis is commit-
ted to the preservation of
the historic district as he has
siUd. •
When Proposition 40
passed, state parks agency
officials promised that the
cottages at Crystal Cove
would be high on the list of
projects recommended for
use with those funds.
In &dclition to the $9.2
million, the revised budget
thoroughly. To be safe, the
district will hold back 20% of
categorical funding -money
tied to specific programs -in
its own budget until officials
not celebrating too soon.• get a sense of the
Gov. Gray Davis' proposal Legislature's reaction to the
caUs for a combination of state budget and to give them
budget cuts, revenue increas-some breathing room.
es and a combination of refi-· Even if the state eventual-
nancing, borrowing and ly decreases its categorical
transfers to compensate for a funding, it would not have a
$23.6-billion revenue short-major adverse effect on the
fall. school district because it tries
To prevent cuts in educa-not to rely on this kind of
lion, Davis is proposing to funding, which can fluctuate
shift $1.12 billion in educa-with political tides, Barbot
tion spending from the cur-sa.id.
rent fiscal year to 2002-03. The district is also expect-
This manipulation is possible ing an increase in federal cat-
because of previous over egorical money, Barbot
funding of Proposition 98, added.
which passed in 1988 and And the di.strict is also fair-
guarantees minimum levels ly immune from st.ate budget
of school funding, sa.id Sandy woes because of its conserva-
Harrison, spokesman for the live spending practices and
state department of finance. the fact that it gets most of its
Barbot said district officials funding from property taxes,
will take some time to pore which Barbot believes will be
through the budget more slightly increased from those
·~~ Home Decor •Accessories
Custom Fl.orals • 369 E. 17th Street, Costa Mesa
Localed behind Plum's Patio
Mon-Fri 10:00am-6:00pm, Sat&: Sunl0:00am-5:00pm
Phone (949) 764-1745
~
Mattress Outlet Store
~ 3165 n.bor Blvd.
..... eo.t.Neea
• o.e ........ -''°'"" (714) 545·7168
I
., ,
DON.LEACH I DAILY P!tOT
Ao Edwards Blg Newport Cinema employee looks back
at the marquee after changing titles to announce the
opening of "Episode U: Attack of the Clones."
also allocates $96,000 from
Proposition 40 for sewers
and $800,000 from
Proposition 12 for El Morro
Stale Beach, whid) hosts the
trailer park slated to be
evicted in 2004 .
The state has spent about
$1 million to start renovat-
ing the cottages, and the
California Coastal
Commission agreed to hand
over $2.8 nullion, but the
major work awaits a hefty
cash infusion as the project
is expected to cost behveen
$12 million and $20 million.
If the state park funds last
until the final budget, it wHI
received last year.
Trustee Wendy Leece
echoed Barbot's cautious atti-
tude about the budget.
"It's good news,• Leece
said. "The governor is known
for saying a lot of things. but
the reality is we'll see if it
matches up.•
A critical part of the com-
munity college program
received a significant boost.
CalWORKS, a nationally rec-
ognized program that pro-
vides welfare recipients with
training and education to
become self-sufficient, had
$20 million restored to its bud-
get after facing a $.SS-million
cut in the January budget.
The governor bas not pro-
posed any increases for the
University of California and
California State University
systems.
• DEIRDRE NEWMAN covers edu-
cation. She may be reached at (949)
574-4221 or by e-mail at
delrdre.newmanOfatimes.com.
OBITUARIES
Jean Elizabeth
Inserra
Services for Jean
Elizabeth Inserra, a 38-
year COit.a Mesa resi-
dent, will be held at 2
p.m. today at St. John
the Baptist Catholic
Church In Costa Mesa.
Ms. lnaerra died Sunday.
She WU 69. Sbe ii l\lr•
v1ved by daughter Ula
lnlerra, son Cbnltopber
and brother Andrew
Inserra.
Mattie
Jane Tiiiman
Private .me. wW
be beJd for Maltie.Jane
nJlnlan, a 4J-yeer
Corona del M.r ... dmL ML ,.._. dliid ....... °' ......... ..............
Wtl&ll '&:-...... !.'·=--= ........ ..
expedite the restoration
process, said Bette
Anderson. president of
Village Laguna, a JO-year
organization dedicated to
preserving Laguna Beach's-
character and environment
··w e will be able to move
forward with preservrng the
cottages at Crystal Cove dnd
make them available to the
public, which is a wonderful
goal all along.• Anderson
said.
• DEIRDRE NEWMAN covers edu
cation. She may be reached at (949)
S74~4221 or by e-mail at
deirdre.newmanOfatimes com
WJTHROW
Dorothy A. Withrow,
55, passed away Wectlesday.
May 8th, 2002. Otglnaly from
AJ<ron, Ohio, and a resident of
Central Florida for the past 7 /,
years. She was owner and
operator ot o.w. Properties.
She Is survived by her husband,
Philip 0. Withrow of Ortando, A;
son, Bryan PaUI Wltlvow (Stacy)
of Moo, OH; Dalqlter,
Daneale Santana (Jesse) of
Palmdale, CA; gandchlldren.
Nathan and Joshua Santana;
broeher, George Mils (Pat) of
Kingston, TN; sisters. Alice E.
Mils of Boonevfle, NY, 8eYerly
V. Mills of Akron, OH, and
Sharon L Mils Vodden alsO of
Booneville, NY.
Donations may be made to:
Ameican cane. Sodety 1601
W. Colonial Dr .• Or1ando. A.
32804, (407) 843-8680, (800)
'01-9954.
•
Doily Pilot
• Send AROUND TOWN ·~ms to
the Daily Pilot, 330 W. Bay St., Costa
Mesa, CA 92627; by fax to (949) 646-
4170; or by calling (949) 574-4298.
Include the time. date and location
of the event. as well as a cont.act
phone number. A complete listing Is
available at www dallypllot com.
TODAY
Newcomen to the Orange
County Sierra Sil"gles Club
can meet for a social with live
music and planned activities
at 7 p.m. at the Costa Mesa
Community Center, 1845
Park Ave. (71 4) 505-'2404~
"Amazing Amigos,.. a free
seminar, will take place from
6:30 to 7:30 p.m. m the pabo
cafe of Mother's Market, 225
E. 17th St., Costa Mesa.
Reservabons reqwred. (600)
595-MOMS.
THURSDAY
Environmental Nature
Center founder Robert House
will lead a walk beginning at
noon at the nature center
office, 1601 E. 16th St.,
Newport Beach. Free, bring a
sack lunch. The walk will
take about one hour. (949)
645-8489.
Orange Coast College's
School of Allied Health
Professions will conduct an
open house to demonstrate its
high-tech human patient sun-
ulator and newly remodeled
Allied Health Saences facili-
ty from 1 to 3 p.m. in Rooms
109 ·and 110 of the Allied
Health Soences Building at
2701 Fairview Road. Costa
Mesa. No other community
college west of St. Lows has
the patient sunulalor. KeVJn
Ballinger, dean or consumer
and health services, (714)
432-5531.
The Center for Global Peace
and Conflict Stud1es at UC
l.rvin e will present a peace
lecture from 3:30 to ~ p.m.
The lecture, whkh is part of
the center's Spnng Forum
2002 and co-sponsored ..yith
the Program m Citizen
Peacebuilding, will consist of
a panel of peace scholars and
practitioners from Northern
Ireland, Israel and Pdlestme,
Guatemala and the United
States. The lecture ts free and
open to the pubhc It w1U be
held in the Socidl Science
Plaza A. Room 1100 at UCI
(949) 824-6410.
Restaurant critic and food
writer Sharon Boorslt.n will
cl.J.scuss her memoir cookbQOk
•Let Us Eat Cake: Memones
of Food and Fnendship" at 7
p.m. at the Newport Beach
Central Library. 1000
Avocado Ave. Included m the
memoir are recipes from
celebrity chefs Julia Child,
Wolfgang Puck and NelJ
Newman. (949) 717-3801.
A free seminar on healthy
weight reduction will take
place from 6:30 to 7:30 p.m. in
the patio cafe of Mother's
Market, 225 E. 17th St., Costa
Mesa. Reservations rcqwred.
(800) 595-MOMS.
A Newport-Mesa Unified
School Distnct meeting lo
discuss Measure A plans will
be held at 7:30 p.m. in the
Ralph Recd Gym at Newport
Harbor High School. (7l4)
424-5000.
FRIDAY
The privateer Lynx will ~ve
at the Newport jetty at 2 p.m.
accompanied by greeters to
open the Preedom Weekend
Festival, celebrating
America's first defense of
freedom in 1812, which will
continue from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.
Saturday and Sunday at the
Newport Harbor NauUcal
Museum, 151 E. Coast
Highway, Newport Beach.
The weekend festival will
continue with music, display
period armament, sword
fights and games from the
early t800s. A gala exhibit
opening of the Lynx will take
place from 6 to 8 p.m. Friday.
1be 24-b¥or Relay for Ufe
walk and run will raise funds
for the American Cancer
Sode~ beginning at 7 p.m. at Ne~rt Harbor High
School's stadium. Teams of up
to 20 people pay • StSO regla·
tnldon fee and wW walk or
run throughbut the 24·bour
period. Each team member
mUlt alto ralle at leut St 00 in
donettam. Lumi.narial. which
~7~
LftmbMry c.....;; ~;1;
punt ld.albe..entfor•
'
..
AROUND TOWN
BE$T BET
More then 75 vintage RVs, lncludlng a 1936
Alrstream Clipper, 1947 West Craft, 1953 Silver
Streak Clipper and 1946 Curtis-Wright, wlll be
shown at Newport Dunes Waterfront Resort from 11
a.m. to 4 p.m. Free. Parking Is $7. Last year's show
brought in about 5,000 people, including, above
from left, Becky Pentland, Roseanne, "At Home on
the Range" co-host Barbara Venezia and Judy
Tenuta. For reservations to bring an RV or for more
information, see www. vintage _vacation. com.
Newport Dunes is at 1131 Back Bay Drive, Newport
Beach. (800) 765-7661. www.newportdunes.com .
suggested $10 donation.
Tents and sleeping bags are
encouraged. (949) 261-9446
or www.cancer.org.
More than 300 Costa Mesa
Gtrl Scouts will salute the
corrununity's hometown
heroes al the annual Costa
Mesa Girl Scout camp-out dl
the Orange County
Fairgrounds. Girls from 6 to 18
wlll attend the event aimed at
celebrating the organizations
that serve the Costa Mesa
community. A flag-retiring
cemmony will be held Friday
evening. Among the activiti~
1s a frog-jumping contest·
involving 340 scouts. The
ca.mp-out runs through
Sunday. Costa Mesa has 40
Gul Scout troops and more
than 400 registered Scouts.
Carol Hamilton. Costa Mesa
Gui Scout Assn. ch&rwoma.n,
(949) 646-8512, or Margaret
Rutledge, (714) 646-5687
SATURDAY
Assemblyman John Campbell
will host a coffee from 9 to
10:30 a.m. at the Diedrich
Coffee House Mesa North
Center. 1170 W. Baker St.
Stop by, have a cup of coffee
and share your tho\)ghts on
the issues fa cing California.
(949) 863-707Q.
Adams Elementary School
wiU host its fifth annuaJ coun-
try fair from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m.
The fund-raiser and commu-
nity outreach event will be
held at 2850 Clubhouse
Road Costa Mesa. ll will fea-
ture 'a 30-fool slid e', dunk
tank, pitching maclune, stl~nt
auction, carnival games, live
entertainment. festive
dancers, pie-eabng ~onlest
and food. (714) 557-4312.
Hike with the Orange County
Sierra Singles Club for five
miles along the Newport
Back Bay at 10 a.m. Meet at
the Upper Newport Bay
Nature Preserve on
University Drive in Newport
Beach. Free, bring one quart
of water and money for
lunch. (71 4) 996-1738.
Chung Newport Beach
Tnathlon, the longcst-run-
rung triathlon in U.S history,
will be held al 6·45 a m. in the
Back Bay near Newport
Dunes Waterfront Resort. The
ract-consists of d haU-rruJe
swim m the Newport Back
Bay, a 13-mLlc bicycle ride
and a threc-rrule run. More
than 1,000 athletes arc
expected lo partici pdte.
www.pacificsportllc.com.
The fourth annual Volvo
Junior Leukemia Cup
Regatta wtll begin al 8:30 a.m.
at Bah18 Corinthtan Yacht
Club, 1601 Bayside Dnve,
Corona del Mar. Participants
m the race include juruor and
adult racers who pledge to
raise donations to help find a
cure for leukemia. Not only
will racers compete for the
Leukerrua Cup perpetual tro-
phy, but they'll also compete
for pnzes for rdlSmg the most
donations Classes Include
Sabot A-CJ, CFJ. Lasers,
Harbor 20s, Srupes and Lido
14s. Th.is year's event will be
dedicated to yacht club mem-
ber A.rt Guillord, who died of
leukemia 10 April.
Reservations are needed.
(949) 644-9530 or (949) 645-
9898.
Costa Mesa Public Safety
Emergency Services Expo will
truce place from 11 a.m. to 3
p.m. at Fire Station No. 4, 2300
Pldcentia Ave., Costa Mesa.
ActJVJties will include a tribute
to the New York firefighters
clJld police departments by
Costa Mesa Fire Chief James
M Ellis, an automobile extri-
cation demonstration, a high-
nse rescue and rappelling
dcmonstrabon, an anbque fire
cngme di.splay, helJcopter dis-
plays, a Jump house, and free
train ndcs. Free. Park at
E.st.anoa High School.
Visitors can tour six kol ponds
ranging in size from 1,000
gallons to 50,000 gallons from
9 a.m. to 3 p.m .. $6. (949) 548-
3690, (7 14) 968-5624 or (714)
633-8619.
mclude goU, a cocktail recep-
tion, d.inneT, silent and live
auctions and an award cere-
mony with celebrity host Rlch
Saul. The Orange County
Chapter of Chlldhelp USA
raises funds to provide con-
tinued support and care for
abused children. Debra
Violette, (949) 829-6922.
A free seminar on osteoporo-
sis prevention and ·treatment
will' take place from 6:30 to
7:30 p.m. in the patio cafe of
Mother's Market, 225 E. 17th
St., Costa Mesa. Reservations
required. (800) 595-MOMS. ·
MAY 23
Cb.rt.stine Hayashi, assistant
director of the Cancer Legal
Resource Center, will speak
on cancer and the law from 2
to 3:30 p.m. in the Hoag
Conference Center at Hoag
Hospital, 1 Hoag Dnve,
Newport Beach. Free, no reg-
istration reqwred. (949) 760-
5542.
The Newport Beach
Chamber of Commerce will
host an after-hours network-
ing mixer tbat will include an
evening of comedy, mystery
and networking at the
Gourmet Detective's Home at
the Mezzarune Restaurant at
the Towers, 19800 MacArthur
Blvd., Irvine Free to chamber
members, $10 for potential
members. Reservations not
needed. (949) 729-4400
MAY 24
The third annual student-
supported patnottc event to
mark Memorial Day will be
held at 1 l a .m. at Newport
Harbor High School below
the clock tower. The event
began m 2000 and is h~ld
every Friday before Memonal
Day to remember and honor
those Newport Harbor H..tgh
graduates who dted wh1Je
fighting in American wars.
More than 200 people attend-
ed last year. (949) 515-6300 or
(949) 721-8090.
u
I I
fJ)
fJ)
:s u
MOTORING
CONTINUED FROM ,
up at meetings to help
steer their city leaders in
the right direction.
Goss did not land on the
scene unhl February,
when the council was con-
sidering a detailed permit
process that could limit the
numbe r o{ trips motor
home owners are allowed
to take in any given year.
When he did land, he
made an unpress1on.
The unassuming,
retired engineer came
back from his trip and
turned a rowdy, fragment-
ed group of motor home
owners mto an organized
force to be reckoned with.
Goss took the advice of
council members and
started the Costa Mesa RV
Owners Assn., of which he
1s president.
"I've never gotten
involved with an issue like
this one," sa1d Goss, who
has owned a motor home
for 11 year. "I don't know
what motivated me to get
into it to this extent, but r
was upset and thought the
city was trying to enforce a
lot of unnecessary restric-
tions.·
Goss has done exten-
sive rcsedrch on recre-
ational vehicles, loolong
up laws from other cities
and aligning himself with
the two largest motor
home owners assoc1ations
m the country -the Good
Sdm Club and Famil y
Motor Coach Assn
He accessed member
lists and got m touch with
Costa Mesa recreational
vch1cle owners who may
not have known about the
city's efforts to buckle
down on oversized vehi-
cles. Goss also started the
Costa Mesa RV Owners
Assn. Web site, on which
he posts relevant mforma-
t10n.
"He 1s definitely a man
that 1s dedicated to his
Wednesday, filcy 15, 2002 5
cause,• said Costa M64
Pollce Lt. Karl Schuler,
who has been charged
with drafting the city's
handful of possible over-
siz.ed vehlcle ordindllces.
Schuler has spoken
with Goss many limes
about the concerns of
recreational vehicle own-
ers smce the issue sur-
faced.
"It is obVlOUS that he IS
working more for RV own-
ers than those on the Qlher
side of the fence -so to
speak -but there is noth-
ing wrong with that,"
Schuler said. "Mr. Goss
made sure to poml out that
there are responsible RV
owners. And he 1s no
doubt one of them.•
Goss stores lus motor
hdme off the street and
understands that people
who don't own recreation-
al vehicles should not be
forced to look at them. At
the same time, he wants to
•ensure that motor home
owners are not unfairly
targeted.
"We are really trying lo
be tau,· Goss said . "We
know people don't like
seeing them stored in the
streets, and we are not
advocating thdl. We just
want the city lo listen to us
a IJttle bit and meet us tn
the rruddle. •
The council seems to
hear Goss' message, as 1t
1s considering dn ordi-
nance thdt has garnered
the approvdl of the Costa
Mesa RV Owners Assn.
Thdl ordmdncc would
protub1t RVs from park.mg
on any city street, with a
24-hour exception for
loading and unloading
purposes The law has a
loophole lhal offers a 72-
hour exception to dnyone
who asks for it, but pohce
offioals warned it is not as
"user fnendly" as 1t may
seem.
• LOLITA HARPER covers Costa
Mesa. She may be reached at
(949) 574-4275 or by e·ma1I at
lol1ta.harper@lat1mes.com.
The Costa Mesa Historical
Society will bold its annual
open house from 10 a.m. to 3
p.m. at the society's head·
quarters. The event will con-
sist of an array of one-day
exhibits displaying old sheet
music, hats and irons in addi-
tion to the regular local hlsto-
ry exhibits. Free. The soci-
ety's headquarters are at 1870
Anaheim St., Costa Mesa.
(~9) 631-5918.
The Costa Mesa Chamber of
Commerce will host a wine
tasting and auction from 1 to 4
p.m. at the South Coast Plaza
Village Green, 3333 Bristol St.,
Costa Mesa. Among the par-
ticipating wineries are
Mondavi, Clos du Bois,
Ruffino, Burgess Cella.rs,
Moel, Ravenswood and
Lancaster. Participating
restaurants include Morton's
of Chicago, Antonello
Ristorante a.nd Blue Water
Grill. Proceeds will benefit the
Orange County Perfonning
Arts Center, Hoag Hospital
and Ctnld.ren's Hospital of
Orange County. $100. Call
(11-4) 885·9095 to purchase
tickets. (800) 782-8888.
j oin Presenting Sponsors Donna & john Crean
and the Alzheimer's Association of Orange County
Orange Coast College will
host its 32Dd annual Student
Ftlm and Video Festival from 7
to l O p.m. in the college's
Robert B. Moore Theatre, 2701
Fairview Road, Costa Mesa
SS. More than 175 students
havo worked on projects in the
college'• FilmNideo
Department this year. The film
fest will 1ndude filml, videol,
drames. c:omed*, animatioo
and publk leivtce announce-
ments. (71') 432~. ..•. ,
n. u• ..,.... Krtll9 ,.
·YUISDIY
The Orange County 0..pter
~ ChUdhelp USA will host
the 20th annual Celebrity
Golf Closltc at Pebc.an Hill
GoU Coune in Newport
Cout. RegWtration will begin
at 9:30 a.m. with • lhotgun
lltart .. 10:30 •,m. S500 per
golfer, le•elJ Of corporate ~ f.-are Sl,000, .ooo and 110.000 ......
The Crean Classic
Golf Tournament
10th Anniversary
Pelican Hill Golf Clubt Newport Co.a t
Thursday, June 6, 2002
Become a Sponsor
Sign Up Your Foursome
join Sports and Entertainment
Celebrities including
Vince Femigamo and Bill Murray
Celebrate "A Dtcadt of Ma~ing a Dfjftrtnct"
at one of the most prestigious, awanl-
winnmg golf clubs on the West Coast.
ALZ·~·
CaD ( 714) 183-l I l 1 or las oa M WWW.AUOC.OIG
I
I
I
I.
I
I . ;
6 Wednetday, May 15, 2002
; "" .
/
• f
CM·900
. On Sunday, May 19, 2002
On the grounds of
South Coast Village Green • Costa Mesa
1 :00 p. m. ,., 4:00 p. m. W7ine & Food Tasting
Silent Auction
Live Auction
&
Grand Prize Drawing
$ ]00°0 Admission
WI NE RI ES.-BREWER IES ( R ESTAURAN TS
ROBERT M ONDAVl ANTONELW RJSTORA.NTE
)ED STEELE WINES
BLUEWATER GRILL
ALLIED 0 0 MECQ
CARAVELLE WINES CALIFORNIA PIZZA KITCHEN
BERINGER WINE EsTATES
SCHIEFFELIN & SOMERSET Co.
CLAYTON SHIRLEY'S REAL BBQ
. \, .
FRANCISCAN fsrATES M cCoAA11cK & ScHMICK's SEAFOOD RfsrAURANT
CAYMUS VINEYARDS/HANNA/LANCASTER EsTATES
STIMSON LANE
CROZE
FESS PARKER/RAYMOND VINEYARD & CELLAR
BEER PROVIDED BY
BIRRA MORETTI & M URPHY'S IRISH
WATER PROVIDED BY
EVIAN
M o RroN's STEAKHOUSE
PINOT PROVENCE
PLUMS R.EsTAURA.NT
Z'TEJAS SOtrrHWESTERN GRILL
C M 900 IS SUPPORTING HOAG MEMORIAL H OSPITAL P RESBYTERIAN AND C HILDREN,S H OSPITAL OF •
ORANGE COUNTY IN THEIR EFFORTS TO MEET THE HEALTHCARE NEEDS OF TH E C HILD REN OF OUR
COMMUNITY. BOTH HOSPITALS ARE WORKING TOGETHER TO PROVIDE PEDIAT RIC HEALTHCARE SERVICES
TO UNDER-SERVED CHILDREN IN COSTA M ESA.
H OAG H esPITAL/CHOC P E DIATRIC COMMUNITY CLIN'IC
'' FO R TICKETS & RESERVAT IONS CALL 714 885 9095
r'
• ,, )
,,
Doily Pilot
•
-J
'\ QUOTE Of THE DAY mOPDB
"They beat us in
San Diego, but I think
we can take 'em ... "
Loyd Wright. Newport Harbor
senior
.Dal .. Ill
Sports Hal flFalBe
I .r'o-brl\l#111 u"" '1~!Ull u
May 20 hon«M
GLEN GRIFFITH
Daily Pilot
Sailors
smother
·rritons
Balanced attack, led by
Gaeta 's 25 kills, propels
Newport Harbor into the
CIF Div. II quarterfinals.
Barry Faulkner
DAILY PILOT
NEWPORT
BEACH -Those • looking for
Newport Harbor
High heroes
Tuesday night,
n e e d e d
peripheral vision. KOlllOAID
But, amid a San Clemente 1 lineup of S.llon 3 standouts in the
Sai.lprs' 15-8, 10-
15, 15-4, 16-14 CIF Southern Section
D1vls1on II second-round boys
volleyball victory over visiting Sari
Clemente, senior outside rotter Brian
Gaeta seemed to be jumping 1ust a
little higher and swinging just a tad
harder than tus talented teammates.
"It's just the playoffs,· said Gaeta,
who pounded a match-high 25 kills
to help the Tars (26-6) advance to
Friday's quarterfinal at No. 4-seeded
Royal (22-3) In SIJTli Valley. "League
is great, but it's all about CCF. That's
the way it has been for me in football
and volleyball.·
An All-CIF receiver who has all
but finalized plans to play football at
Colorado State, Gaeta brings
gridiron intensity to the volleyball
court.
•He plays volleyball like a
football player,• summed up
Newport Coach Dan Glenn, who
was pleased with his team's balance
against the Tritons (15-5).
•(Senior setter Loyd Wright) did
a great job of spreading the ball
around tonight and our balance
helped us key on the other team's
weaknesses. We're lo the point
where I don't have to change my
lineup.•
Harbor did ubhze its normal sub-
stitution pattern. but the dominance
of standouts Gaeta, Wright, Greg
Perrine. Erik Peterson, Brett Perrine
and Jamie Diefenbach, was never
more apparent than the deciding
final moments of Tuesday's two-hour
tussle.
After losing leads of 4-0, 7.5 and
8-6, San Clemente pulled away from
a 9-9 lie for a 13-9 advantage.
bringing the real threat of a rally
scored fifth game.
But. after a Triton hitting error
gave Harbor its Toth point of the
game, crucial kills by Brett Perrine
(sideoul), Greg Perrine Peterson,
Gaeta and Gaeta (all for points)
again pushed the hosts to a 14-13
edge.
After the South Coast League
champions pulled even on a Harbor
error, the last of the Ttitons' 19
service errors gave the Sailors the
chance to close out the final match
on their home floor as four-game
victors.
A Peterson stuff block put the
hosts on top. 15-14, then Diefenbach,
a 6-foot-8 sophomore. reached high
to tip .an overpass to the floor.
triggering a celebration from the
appreciative Harbor faithful.
"That was very important,•
Wright said of avoiding the often
treacherous decider. "The best team
doesn't always win in rally scoring.•
Wright amassed 66 assists, most
of which went to the senior trio of
Gaeta, Greg Perrine (21 kills) and
SEE NEWPORT, PAGE 8
Sporta lcltor Roger Corison • 949-574-4223 • .Sporta Fax: 949-650-0170 Wedrw»doy, May 15, 2002
HIGH SCHOOL BOYS VOllEYIALL
I
DAILY PILOT PHOTOS BY DON LEACH
Miles Yourman (22) and his Corona del Mar teammates celebrate as South Pasade na ls sent home in less than an hour.
tames Tigers
Corona del Mar is able to sit Bart Welch (ankle), as it
easily defeats South Pasadena in just under an hour.
Steve Virgen
DAILY PILOT
CORONA DEL
MAR -Steve Conti
hoped Friday's five-
gam~ match would
serve as a wake-up
call for bis Corona • del Mar High boys KOlllOAID
volleyball team.
Tums out. the five-So. Pasadena o
game victory over s.. Kings 3
host Ocean View
served as the ultimate smelling salt.
The Sea Kings came back swinging
Tuesday, and as Coach Conb put it,
they took care of business with a 15-
2, 15-8, 15-2 CIF Southern Section
Division IV Playoffs second-round
victory over visiting South Pasadena.
"I was kind of disappointed bow
we came out on Friday at Ocean
View,• said Conti, whose team
advances to the quarterfinals, hosting
Harvard-Westlake Friday at 7 p.m. ·1
think we came out with more of a
purpose tonight. We know our next
opponent is going to be a very good
opponent. At this point in the season,
you gotta play with a purpose because
every match It's: You lose. you're
done.•
Conti also said be was pleased that
Cd.M's purposeful play allowed junior
Bart Welcb to rest a sore ankle, which
be injured in the first game of the
match on Friday. Welch, who Conb
said has been improving bis status
with each day, plans lo be ready for
Friday's match .
Welch rested mainly because of
CdM's imposing play in Game l,
which set the tone for the match. Conti
had the opportunity to play all 13 of bis
athletes as CdM junior setter Spencer
Miller led the way with 20 assists, one
service ace and one kill, while senior
Ryan Inman struck for nine kills.
"The key thing for us this year is
getting out to good starts in big
matches.• Conti said "When we've
been able to get out to a good start,
we've been able to carry it out
throughout the match.•
Corona (13-7), the Pacific Coast
League's tlurd-place representative.
buJlt a 7-2 lead, receiving three
straight points off of Tiger enors,
prompting a South Pas timeout. The
Tigers (16-7), the champions of the
Rio Hondo League. committed 10
errors for Sea King points in Game 1,
eight in Game 2, and eight more in
Game3.
•n·s kind of hard to see what they
were like (coming into Tuesday) from
watching video I bad,• Conti said.
•(Kevin C ram) was unstoppable In
that match. I don't know if he bad an
off night (Tuesday). l think for us it
was just playing -at home and not
SEE COM, PAGE 8 Ryan Inman (rtgbt) II lllere lo block a South Pasadena prayer.
7
COASTERS: OCC ATHlETIS Of THE WEii . HIGH SOtOOL IOYS TENNIS
' ' •
TAKING CARE OF BUSINESS
Sea Kings cruise into the
second round.of the CIF
Div. V Playoffs with a 16-2
victory over visiting Sage Hill.
CORONA DEL MAR -Corona del
Mar High junior Pat Abeam and
frwhmen Nk:k Gingold .... the IDOll ~
tbetr opportun.lty and helped lead th•
Sea l(.lagll' boys ._.. teem to a 16-2
SoutMlll Sectkm DMlkm v ant-round
vtctary cws ftddag 89 HID 1'iillday.
Pley1D9 iD lillglel, tbe CdM duo,
wbidl ....., • Ml411111 OD tM Jun6or
nntty .................. tbe ..... .
....... ap ...... ,. .......... ...
'
their sets.
"They bad some nice
efforts,• said CdM Coach Tun
Mang. whose team improved
to 21·2. "They didn't mess
around with their opponents
and they put them away.•
The No. 1 teeded See Kingt
wW play s.n Juan Cap61trano-uae •••
bued St. Margaret'• TbW'lday .. D.-
al a llte to be detsmined by a
com mp toct.y.
Por Sege Hill, Anthony ~
and JobD HamtltcJD eunlld one ......
vtdary wta. Tbe Ugblnmg, cx..cMd b;
A.G. l..oDgada, are la....., lllnganl
..... o1.....,c .-....
'
Tbe Sea Kings, last year'•
undefeated CIP Oivtalon V
cbampklm, won aD the6r l8tl In
doubles, featuring the CdM
tandem • "Of freshman W•ley
Miller and Jw.uor Ala Nguy9l.
juniors -.1 $.Ide and Jonlu
Brokelahiln, and JU.Dion Bryua
2 W81MW and ADdreW HIDgs. ,.
my I
•
•
COM
CONTINUED FROM 7
having to travel. and just the prestige that
Corona del Mar has In volleyball. It's a big
advantage.•
CdM's serving. which led to four aces,
also kept the ngers out of sync.
·we weren't i.q a rhythm,• said South
Pas Coach Todd Terzian, whose team
finished fowth in the Rio Hondo League last
year and missed the playoffs. "(The Sea
Kings) played their good, solid game that we
were expecting out of them. We would have
had to play our best volleyball so that we
could be dose to being competitive and then.
maybe we could get a break. But we were
out of sync, a:nd part of that was some of the
lhinjJS they were doing. particularly on
defense.
The momentum got rolling their way and
we couldn't find a way to pull them down.•
The Tigers battled with CdM in Game 2
and earned their first leads of the match, 4-
3, 5-3. But, the Sea Kings outscored South
Pas, 12-5, the rest ol the way, which featured
three stralgbt points with senior John Grod
seivlng, and four straight points when Miller
was serving.
With Grod serving, CdM tied the match,
5-5, after Inman went up for a block. He
followed it up with another block for the Sea
Kings' lead. Then, Grod served for an ace.
"SpenceJ's setting was Incredible,• Inman
said. •He was money with every set.•
Miller lived up to his teammate's words,
serving for four straight points in Game 2.
Miller assisted one of Grod's six kills and
served for an ace, for a to-7 lead, tba t led to
a South Pas timeout.
NEWPORT
CONTINUED FROM 7
Peterson (J4). Die fenbach, however, added
10 kills and Brett Perrine chipped in eight to
keep liiton blockers guessing.
•I couJdn't make a bad decision (on who
to set),· Wright said. Peterson and the
Perrine brothers all had four stuff blocks
apiece, while Diefenbach finished with a
team-high five.
Greg Perrine and Redge Bendbeirn had
SPORTS
DON l!ACH I DMY Pl.OT
Corona del Mar High'• Gunnar McClellan (left) and Bruuloa Slllenk:ll-Odom
attempt to block a South PMadena assault in Tuesday's second-roand match.
"We came out quiclc and they got a little Corona b\Jilt an 8-1 lead in Game 3, as the
nervous." Miller said. •1 don't think they Tigersgavesixpointsawayonenors. Down
were readrtor us. They got a little tentative the stretch, CdM finished the match with two
and they kind of fell apart.• straight points with senior Charlie Stafford
After the timeout, the Tigers COmrrUtted serving.
an error, and then 6-foot-~ jlutior Bric Jones The Tigers bad another error and then
planted a kill. Jones slammed three kills in junior Brandon Sherrick-Odom slammed a
each of the first two games and two more ln kill on a junior Greg Gabriel~ to end the
Ga.me 3. match.
ace serves, while Mike McDonald, Nick
Kelly and Matt Casserly aJ.so contributed
for the winners.
San Clemen te proved to be all Glenn
thought it wouJd.
·we knew it wouJd be like this, because
they played us so tough m the Orange
County Champ1onshJps (a best-of-three
Harbor win March 15)." Glenn said. "I love
great volleyball and both teams showed us
some tonight. There were some great rallies
in this match.·
Glenn praised San Clemente juruor Bretl
Simpson (a team-high 22 kills) and junior
TENNIS NOTES
setter Brian Thornton (64 assists) for the ir
supreme efforts.
• (1bomton) did a nice job of mixing it up
and Simpson is their heart and souJ, • Glenn
said.
The Sailors will need all the heart they
can muster against Royal, which defeated
Newport, 15-9, 15-13, to sweep a best-of-
lhree dash in the San Diego Tournament of
C hampions March 9.
Royal swept Ventura, 15-6, 15-9, 15-7,
Tuesday.
"They beat us in San Diego, but I ttunk
we can take 'em,• Wright said.
Arizona-bound Ball ·advances
Big week for CdM senior includes win at open qualifier last weekend at Costa Mesa Tennis Center.
Richard Dunn
0 AlLY PILOT
A n edr tnfectaon ke pt Corona del
Mar Hlgh senior Cameron Ball
bedndden for ne arly a week and
forced him to withdraw has top seed in
singles last week in the Pdcilic Coast
League boys tennis championship~.
But Ball, the son or a tennis pro, has
bounced back with one of the biggest
weeks of tus career, wtuch indudes
making a verbal commitment to the
University of Arizona.
Ball, who missed an opportunity lo
advance to the ClF Southern Section
individual championships because of his
PCL withdraw, was spotted by Arizona
men's tennis coach Bill Wright during last
month's Ojai Valley Tennis Tournament,
in which he won the boys interscholastic
doubles tiUe with CdM junior Garrett
Snyder.
"Cameron liked the (Tu cson) area and
it's a great campus,• Syd Bctll, his father,
sa1d Tuesday afternoon. ·we like the
whole situation. It's a good deal for him.
He's happy and he Wees the coach very
much, wtuch is very important.•
The other part of Cameron Ball's big
week mdudes winning the Mercedes-
Benz C up community pre-qualifying
tournament at the Costa Mesa Tenrus
Center, where he enjoyed huge V1ctories
Saturday and Sunday in the semifinals
and Hnals, respectively.
By capturing the event at Costa Mesa,
Ball qualified for the Mercedes-Benz Cup
Wild Card Tournament JQly t 1-14 at
UCLA, site of the Mercedes-Benz Cup
featwing Andre Agassi and Ueyton
Hewitt July 22-28. The winner of the Wild
Card singles event earns a n automatic
entry into the main draw in the Mercedes-
Benz Cup on the Association of Tennis
STEVE MC CRANK I DAILY PILOT
Cameron Ball
Professionals Tour.
Balboa Bay Club Racquel Club. As
sophomores in 2000, Ball beat Yovan for
the league title.
lbe club o:change season. wbJcb ls
always popular, is picking up steam at the
Newport Beach Tennis Club. Club
exchanges are long, but fun-filled days on
the tennis courts.
On Saturday, Newport Beach 'wru
travel to Coto de Caza Racquet Club for a
four-dub exchange that includes Nellie
Gail and Dana Hills, NBTC Director of
Tennis Scott Davis said.
The Palisades Tennis Club ln Newport
Beach will host its first Sexiest Guys of µte
Palisades tonight at 6:30 p.m.
1\vo of the men voted by Orange Coast
magazine as the Sexiest Single Men in
Orange County will be playing -USC's
Parker Collins, a CdM product, and Robin
Walker.
Sandy McDougal, current Mater Del
High heartthrob Kaes Van't Hof, Seth
Bowen, Chris Ayres, Brad Smith, Mick
MickJer, Steve Vaughn, Glen Cassey,
Larry Sherwin and Mark Angiono are
among the participants ..
Ball, who won hve matches in the 32-
man braclcet at Costa Mesa, defeated
longtime University High nemestS Aaron
Yovan In the finals, 7-5, 6--1, but his best
win was a 7-5, 7-6 (5) victory over Luke
Shields of Grand Junction, Colo., the
highest ranked player ln the field (top 25
in the boys 188 in the United States Tennis
Association).
The event will be rocking the hed.rts of
the female members of the Palisades.
USC men's tennis roach Dick Leach.•
Palisades member, has announced his
retirement at the end ol lbis season
following a long and storied career.
Leach started as the Trojans' coach m
1980 and in 22 postseason appearances
won NCAA team titles in 1991, '93 and
'94. Also, be coached two NCAA singles
champions -Robert Van't Hof in 1980 and
Cecil Mamlit in 1996 -and three NCAA
doubles champions.
•(Shields) has beaten Cam two weeks
before al the National Open
Championships in Las Vegas, but he
turned the tablet on him,· Syd Ball said.
In last year'• PCL singles final, Yovan
defeated &ll, 7-6 (5), 4-6, 6-4, at tho
Leach, 62, coached his two sons, RJck
and Jon, at use for four years each.
EQUESTRIAN
CdM riders crowned
The Corona de1 Mar High dub equestrian team won the
varsity team championship of the seven -show
Interscholastic Equestrian League season.
The CdM riders were presented with the award for
occumulatlng lbe most overall points in the seven IEL
shows at a recent banquet in Dana Point.
Several CdM riders also earned individual honors, led
by Julia Koetting, who was named overall varsity points
champion. Koetting also earned first-place honors in bunt
seat equitation. equitation ovet fences and worldng hunla'I.
She wu also the runner· up 1n the BngU.h plea.sure event.
CdM's Nicole Kim was first in vanity IEL medal. seoood
in hunt seal equitation and third in equitation over fencet.
•Anne Schroeder, repre.enting CdM in the junior vUllly
dMlion, was runner-up in the overall points category. Sbe
ea.med ftnt·1Jlace honors 1n working huntera and IEL
modaJ and wu runner-up in English pleasure.
TODAY'S SOIEDUll
CdM'• KaUe Jones wa• recognized in the novice
dJvisk>n, where •bP was overaU runner-up. She was alto
18CODd in equ!tetion ewer fences and working hun._.,
while ftnilhtng third tn hunt seat equitation.
llDMl
~ tdlOOI 01' OMtlon rv ~ flnt
round: C«one cMI Miit lit "-'d1o ~
):15 p.m
Other Cc:tt.f rtden who contributed th.it teUOn ,..._
ElyM A~. ~ca CerdeJucd, Sydner Paner, saM
Mendelton anit Le\D'a Peck.
Anyone lnteAllted In com~ for CdM nnt ......
should CODltet Ron Howard et (949) 515-6013.
Doily Pilot
COWGES
Cream of ·the crop
goes very deep
with the Anteaters
UC Irvine honors 142 scholar-athletes.
UC Irvine Athletics honored 142 student-athletes as 2001-02
Big West Conference Scholar.Athletes at the an~ual. banqu~l
Monday night at tbe Crowne Plaza Hotel This year's list bnngs UCJ s
total to 2 051conference scholar-athletes since 1984.
Requlrements for this award include maintaining a 3.0 grade-
poinl average (GPA) over three quarters or a 3.2 GPA ov.er tw~
quarters for freshmen. Student-athletes must aJ.so earn letters m their
sports. . B' W The Scholar-Athlete award was implemented by the .1g est
Conference to honor those student-athletes who have mamtained
a bigb level or scholastic excellence while participating in intercol-
legiate athletics. UCI expanded the award to include teams that do
not participate in Big West-sponsored sports.
In addition to the 142 scholar-athletes, UCI will also recogru.ze
several individuals.
Women's basketball player Cindy Oparah was honored as Lauds
& Laurels Outstanding Senior Athlete, the most prestigious award
given by the UCI Alumni Association. She is a two-time first-team
All-Big West seledion. who ended the season ranked Zlnd nationally
in rebounding. She was named Big West Defensive ~yer of °';e Year
and ended her career fifth in UCJ all-time rebounding and sixth in
steals. UCl's Big West Scholar-Athletes of the Year are seniors
Kareen NiJ.sson (cross country/track) and Se~ Gesell (soccer). .
Nilsson, a senior, is a double major in English and drama and 1S
minoring in Education. ln track, she flnished 11th in the 10,000
meters at the 2001 NCAA Track & Field Championships and
captured the 5,000 Utle at the 2001 Big West Conference
Championships. Nilsson owns the second fastest ti.me in the 10,000
and the third fastest time in the 5,000 in UCl history.
In cross country, she won the 2000 Big West Conference individual
cross country title, capturing 2000 Big West Female Runner of the
Year honors. Her list of honors include 2000-01 third team
Verizon/Academic AD-America by the College Sports Information
Directors of America (CoSIDA), Academic
Nilsson is the chair of the Student-Athlete Advisory Committee.
Gesell, a senior majoring in film studies, was a 2001 {irst-team
All-Big West selection as a defender. He was the team defensive
MVP who anchored the UCI defense that finished the year ranked
13th in shutout percentage and 19th in goals agamst average
nationally last fall. Gesell also helped UCI to a school record t 0
shutouts in 2001. He was a Mountain Pacific Sports Federdllon
(MPSF) honorable mention choice in 2000. In the classroom, Gesell
was a MPSF All-Academic selection in 1999 and 2000 as well as a.n
All-Big West Fall Academic selection. He received the UCl Athletics
Leadership Award in 2000 and has served as the chair of the
Student-Athlete Advisory Committee twice and is currently holding
the position of Vice Chair for Conununity Relations.
Former men's basketball player Malachi Edmond will receJve the
University's Academic Challenge Award from the UCI Admissions
Office.
Gesell will also receive the UO Athletics Leadership Award, while
the women 's cross country team will accept the Faculty Athletic
Representative Award for the highest team GPA. It is the 10th
time head coach Vince O'Boyle's team has won the award.
2001-02 UC ltMNE Sotol.M-ATHLETES f.9'0M OMNGI C.ouNrt
B..a..11
Michael Koehler -Fountain
Valley High undeclared
Phil Tripoli -Huntington
Beach/Golden West College-
Soclal sciences
Mens bask.tt>all
Jesse Obrand -Laguna Beach
High -History
Mensaww
Michael Chen -Westlake High -
Biological Sciences
Cavan Cuyler -Corona del Mar
High -History John Dashtara -Woodbridge High
-Economics
Lawrence Kao -Irvine High -
Information & Computer Sciences
Peter Skoutelas -Corona del Mar
High -Biological Sciences
Mens golf
Mike Lavery -Irvine High -
Psychology & Social Behavior
Nate Vates -Woodbridge High -
Polltical Science
Menssocar
Cameron Rossi -El Toro High -
The Arts
Saul Wolf -Woodbridge High -
International Studies
Mens swimming
'iuruk Pattanasinth -Irvine High -
Computer Engineering
Menst.nnls
Greg Bio~man -University High -
Economics
Mens tndl end field
Viken Jermakian -Marina High -
Mech & Aerospace
Engineering
Curtis Lehmann -la Habra/Sonora
High -Psychology
Santosh Swamidass -El Modena
High -Computer Engineering
Mens volleyball
casey Swenson -Capistrano
BeachlS~n Oemente High -
History
Menswat.rpolo
Phil Garcia -Fountain
Valley/Servite High -Aerospace
Engineering
Dan Noon -Saddleback High -
Mech Engineering
Women's volleytNlll
Erin Tomlinson -Golden West
College -Social Sciences
Women's aww Stephanie Andersson -Mission
Viejo High -Psych & Social
Behavior
Jessica Graham -Irvine High -
Social Ecology
Erin O'Donnell -Mission Viejo
High -Social Ecology
Diana Shea -Huntington
Beach/Mater Dei High -Electncal
Engineering
Teresa Tovar -Los Amigos High -
Social Ecology
Women's cross COW1try
Lisa Massoth -Yorba Unda/
Esperanza High -Information &
Computer Sciences
Pamela Smith -Yorba Unda/
Esperanza Hig_h -Sociology
Women's gotf
Sunny lee -Garden Grovel
University High -undeclared
Women's soccer
Julie Scheppele -Fountain Valley
High -Sociology
Women's swlrnlng
Katherine Ishihara -
AnaheimlKatella High -Sociology
Sara Showalter -University High -
Information & Computer
Sciences
Women's Uftnis
Amy Trancklno -Laguna
Ni9uel/Dana Hills High -
Criminol~, Law & Society
Women'• tnldl end field
Lauren Adams -Fountain
Valley/Mater Dei High -Biological
Sciences
Women's vollep.11
Rebecca Larsen -Kalona, Iowa/
Golden West College -Biological
Sciences
Brenda Waterman -Newport
Harbor High -Economics
Women's Wilter polo
Justine Basom -Trabuco Hills High
-History
Meghan O'Donnell -Golden West
CollegeA.aguna Hills High -
Criminology, Law & Society
Lauren Volcan -Anaheim
Hills/Canyon High -Social Sciences
HIGH SOIOOl SOFTBAll
Mustangs CIF opener switch to home
Costa Mesa's softball t(am will host Western in
the CIF Division IV first round Thursday.
COSfA MSSA-lbe Costa Mesa High IOflbaD team,~
to play on the road Pridey, will~ bolt Weitem tn tba lrill nJUDd
of tbe CIP Soutbcm Section OivtDon IV p&eyOffa, 1buriclty 1t 3:15
p.m. al TeWinkle Park, Mustan9' Coach RJck Buonartgo Mid
1\ietday.
Western Coach Ivy Pinkerton called Buonango uld.ng that the
game be changed to Thunday becaUM the Pioneers have tbetr pan
on Friday. Buona.rtgo agreed to change the g&JDe lo Thunday, but
on one condition: lbe Mustangs bOlt the game.
·That'• really good news for u.s, • Buona.rlgo Mid .
-by Steve Virgen
GUI lACIOSSI
Newport W takes ll8CODd
1\IST1N -TM Niapai1 Harbor H-dllb gldl 11cr01M W
nnlabed *-d In die Int Orange c.atyll.Gil Ang.._ CMe
Lacroue ~ la1'11tift CID S.IUIMy.
Newpolt .......... dllilf1rhdC.alMljoVally1-2 wt s.n .. o.n..
Valley 6-5 bef ont kMdng to St. Marvaret'• In UM cb&mpkJnillUp,
r
•
. . .. .
Dolly Pilot SPORTS
White seabass, barracuda are here
Things are really heating up,
and to make things even bet-
ter, the albacored appear to
be just around the. comer.
•rt was good bite on
seabass weighing in the 18 to
25-pound da s w1th calm
conditions allaw10g WI to
move right in oo the beach,•
Bullard sa.ld.
white seabass.
B lg schools of bdrracuda popped
up early this week off
Huntington Beach and sport.
boats ~g out of Davey's Locker
and Newport Landing Sport.fishing got
into good fishing along the coast.
Anglers on board ball and 3/..clay
trips caught limits of legal barracuda
and then captains topped off the trip
with some pretty good sand bass adion
closer to the beach. The movement of
banacuda into local waters was most
likely triggered by warmer water
CWTents and plenty of baJt.
~ LocaJ anglers on board the
·pacific Star• were David
Gandstutf of Cost.a Mesa who
docked hls first white seabass
that scaled 24 pounds, and
Coslct Mesa resident Robby
Oxford won the Jackpot by
landing a 281/2.pound
seabass. Both flsb were
Tex Regan of Newport
Coast booked a.nto a 25-powuJ
white seabass this week u
CaplalD Richard Ruffinl of
Costa Mesa anchored up an
the right spot on the back side
of the island. Even without
Uve squJd on the bait tank,
Regan soaked a •popskle"
(frozen squid) to entice the
bag seabass to bite., Jim Niemiec
OUTDOORS The wateTS around
Catalina Island are stacked up
with white seabass and the
steady bite could continue well into
June.
WbJte sea bass are schooled up on
the back side of Catalina Island and
the one lish limit bas been the ruJe for
anglers on board sportfishers and
private yachts. Captain Mike BuUard,
owner/operator of the "Pdcilic Star,·
operating out of Davey's Locker in
Balboa called in to report fuU lumts for
anglers earlier this week.
caught on live squid, wlucb has
continually been the bait of choice
when heading over to the island to fish
sea bass.
ln addition to limiting out on
seabass, passengers on boa.rd the
delwie sportfisher also also had a
pretty fair pick on calico bass fished
along stringer kelp.
The fast Sl.X·pack charter boat
•Bongos n • operating out of Bongos
Sportfishing Charters, (949) 673-2810,
in Newport Beach, is returning to the
Pavilion docks datly w1th limits of big
Everyday is a ~t day
lfi Classified!
Be. a part of h,
pip yOll ad todayt
(969) 862·5878
Harbor area anglers looking to tlnd
out what's going on off the coast should
head over to Angler's Center on
Newport Boulevard Saturday. Tbe
inaugural Saltwater Seminar and
TackJe Show will take place in the
Angler's Center parking lot from
9 a.m. to 5 p.m. The evei-.t is
co-sponsored by South Coast
Sport.fistung magazine and some
of the biggest names in offshore
and bay hshlng will be on hand to
un.swer quesbons and talk bslung.
ln dddition to learning from the
experts, there will be cast.mg dJld
k:not-ty\ng contests, raffle pro.es and
great buys on saltwater tackle.
Por more details on the event,
call the Angler's Center at (949)
642-6662.
Fisherman's Landing, San Diego.
The first sport caught ratches of
albacore were made about 100 miles
south of Point Loma late ldst week.
According to upda ed reports, the
ocean became extremely tough and
recent trips have only been producing
a few jig fish. "Qle aJbaes are weighing
in the eight to 15-pound d~. wtucb is
typical for the early season run.
Captain Buzz Bnzendine, skipper
of the sportfisher •Prowler· feels
these schools of longfms could move
up the coast and be hshable within one
day range before Memoncil Ody
weekend. Gale force wtnds to 35 knots
blew up earUer this week. and 1t most
likely wt1J take awhile for the seas lo
settle down and boats to relocate
miqrabng schools or albacore and
bluefio tuna.
w.dnesdoy, May 15, 2002 9
HIGH SOIOOl GOlf
Sea Kings' boys
tee otr Thursday
COTO DI! CAZA -Corona
de l Mor I hgh JUQlOTS Tlro
Frohhng and Ntck Sherman will
too off Th~y at Coto de CU..
Golf Club in the ClP Southern
Section Individual Boys GoU
Secbonal, relocdted Tuesday by
the CIP oJter pl4y was post·
ponce.I Monday because of a
nearbyfuc
Sherman dnd FrobllnJJ will
tee off m a shotgun start It 2:30
p.m. at the South County course.
• :
Ordnge County Shentf's •
Department authonues evac-
UcSted players and coaches off
the course Monday at Tijeras
C reek Coif Club an Rancho
Santa Margdllld, the ongina1 site
of the tournament
Frohling and Sherman had
completed about SD' holes before
play was suspended.
Monday's scores will not be
counted, as all golfers will start
fresh at Coto de Caza Thursday
The top 22, and bes, advance
to Monddy's ClF lndivaduaJ
Fwd.ls at Canyon Country Club.
LEGAL NOTICE
NOTICE IS HEREBY
GIVEN !hal lt1e Boeld ol
Educa11on of the N-· port Men Unified
SctlOol OlstflCI ol Or· ange County will ,_
MNlled bids up IO 101l0
am on May 23. 2002. at
lhe PutctlatlnQ Ollioll of
said School Olstnc:t' lo-caled al 2985-8 Bear
Slreel Costa Mesa. CA
112626, at which tlrne
said bids Wtll be ptillicly
opened and read for.
Reproduction end
Document
~ S-Vlc:ea M bid5 are to be 111 ac:cordance ..th
Conditions lns.lructions
end 5peaficel)()nS whdl
are on , .. 111 Iha olfice ol
the PurctlaMlg Di<tclOf·
of satd School O.stnct
2985·8 Bear Street
C()gj8 Mesa. CA 92626
A Pertormanoe Bond
may be reQUlfed al the
dilcretton cl lhe ()slnct.
No bidder may
withdraw his bid for a pe-
riod of FORTY-FIVE
(45) days after 1he dale
sll for the opening
thereof The Board ol Educa·
hon ol me Newpor1·
Mesa Un.hid School
Ot5lr~t reurvet the
nght to r..-:i w:"'f °' al In. and not necessanly
accept the lowHI ~.
and to waive etry in-
lormellty or ~ t0
any bod rtc81V8d
NEWPORT·MESA
UNIFIED SCHOOL DIS-
T Al CT ot Orange
County /ti SNfOfl L O\lng. ~
rector of Pvr~hulng
Ind Wereri-ing
714142.4-SOn
Published Newport
B11ch·Cost1 Men g; P110t Mey 8~
1' w.dnetday, May 15, 2002
Polley
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NOTICE TO
CMDITOM Of llUU IALE ~1104· 110I U.C,C.) ESCROW NO. MtlWK
Nob II her9by glvel1
10 cndllot'I of .. ...,
nemed ...., .... WI!
.... II llbolA IO be made
of ltw ...... dllatbed
below Tha name(•) Ind bull--
Mii ad«eN(I) of !tie s.a.r are:
AMACHI JAPANESE
RESTAURANT, INC.
2975 IMn9 Awnue, ID,
Com Mela, CA 92627 The locatlon In Cdfor· nla of the chief tOCUllve office of the Nl.ler II:
2675 IMne Avenue, 10,
Colla Mela. CA 82827
. -........ ,.,. '.,.,.,. ~ . ' ' 'f• .. ~ ...
Al~bylfle..._,
all other Du11n .. 1 ~ and addr111M UMCI by IN Ill« wW*l
ltwH yMl'I tltfota the
dllll IUClh ... ... tent Of~IOlle~ .,.. NOHE
The name(•) Wld ~
MU addrea(I) ol the ~.,..
Miii Hui Teujluchl and
OM 8ooa P~ 2f175 Irvine .(venue, tO,
Coala Meta. CA 82827
The ...... IO be told .,. dMal>td In Qll*al
.. ~Wldllloau.d at 2675 Irvine Av· anue, •o. ea... Meta.
CA 92627 Th• bullneu name
UNd by lhe Miier at that
locatlon 19:
AMACHI JAPANESE
RESTAURANT
~ ·-.
., ..
I . .r.'s..i
TRANSFEREES
181 Min HUI T tUtlUdll It/ Dee Sung Pllltl
Publlltttd Newport
8HCh·C01ta ' MHI = Pllol May 15. 2002 32 WIZO
NOTICE OF
INTENDED TAAHIRA OF
RETAIL
ALCOHOLIC
BEVEAAGI!
LICENSE UNDER
SECTIOHS 24073
AND 24074
CALIFORNIA
8USINE88 AND
PROFESSIONS COOE AHO UCC
8101 ET SEQ
BULK SALES
UCENSEE(Sl NAME(S)
(s.litr) YUN GILL YU
~YOUNG~ YU
PREMtSES ADORES&
TO WHICH UCENSEIS)
HAS/HAVE BEEN S.
SUED 734 W. 19'tl Shtt. Cct'8 Mela. CA 82127
LICENSEE'S MAILINO
AOORESS 20151 cape
ColtAlgt L..nt, Hunt· lnCllOft OMdl, CA 92e4&
APPUCANT(S) NAME CT,.,.,._ or Buytt)
YOHO MO YUN AHO
El.ENA JIN YUN
PROPOSED BUSI·
NESS ADDRESS BAME
MAILING ADDRESS OF
APPLICANT 30 Puo
Roblu, lrvlnt. CA
92602 l(INO Of LICENSE IN•
TENDED TO BE
TRANSFERRED OFF
SALE GENERAL LIO·
UOR LICENSE TYPE
Daily Pilot
21 TOTAL AMOUNT /91 YOUftG JI VII
ESCROW HOLDER/ '420,000 00 APPLICAHTS SIONA·
GUARANTOR NAME The pertltt aor-INI TURE (Tl'lllllllefN Of
CHAPMAN AVENUE hi COi~ lor Ill Bvytr} ESCROW ESCROW ...... of Ill bueltltla /91 Yong Mo VIJii
HO. I '191-MC Wld lflt llolnM(1) la IO f8J Ellrle Jil Yun
ESCROW HOLDER/ be peld onty 8"• flt Publlehed ~ GUARANTOR AD· ~ of AlcohOIC Baaeh-Coata MHa
DRESS 1205 E Chip-8tvtflOt Control Ml ~ f'llot May 15, 2002 "*' Avenue, ~. ~ IN PfopoMd ~ WIOI!
CA 921118 trenaltr Tht pe..U.. 1-------TOTAl CONSIOERA· allo IQfM and herein FIND T10N TO BE PAIO FOR clt9d the ~
TIE BUSINESS AHO eecrow hOlder IO tnlkt •
LICENSE INClUOIHG payment Of dltU1bution
I NVENTORY Wtf*la.....,,...llml
WHETHER ACTUAL after lht complellon of
COST, ESTIMATED lht tt1n1l1r ol lti.
COSTrOR " NOT-TO-lieeMt u provldtd lf't EXCEED" AMOUNT Stctlon 24074 of the
CASH Cellfonlia 8YllntM end
CHECKS 10,000 Profealonl Code.
DEMAND NOTE LICENSEE'S SIONA· 4!91~.oo TURE (Traneleror 0< T l'V'«j!BLE ANDIOR IN-Seiter)
TANGIBLE PROPERTY /SI Yun Gil Yu
an
apartment
~
---Deadllnes --
Monday ............... F'riday S:OOpm
Tue t.day ............. Mo11day 5:00pm
By Fax By l'tlalllln Per8ons ByPhofte WecJm:sJ uy ....... .'l\wsduy S:OOpm
Th11"'4<luy ...... Wt"dnf'1uJay 5:00pm (1>4'J ) <>:11-(1.')C) ... (<>49) <>-n-!"167H · :tw Wt·~1 Buv 81 n ·1·1
( :11 ... 1 II \1t'1'11, (:A <>2<>27
\t ~""''flltl"I Uhol, b. 811)' S t.
( Plru~ uwhut.-\ uur uu1uf' n11tl pfHnw ut1111l.,·1
"'"' .... II • 1111 , ..... ,., ....... "'' II ,,.;, .... , .... , •• )
Telephorw 8:30am -5:00pm
Monday-Friday
Ft80 No tleetllcal aholl·
IQll, 3fJ log llYll llomt
with 72 llCIUdld llCf" In
Wl1itt lobnu-. °' Mzona Veranda, Kol Pond.
1253.000 Ho VA, FHA
112J.337·27&e
ICAl'fCANI
"
---
la
420 • U0-468
Cl
470-478
Hours
Index
---..
Walk-In 8 ::30am-5:00pm
Monday-Friday
480-486
l'riJ11y ............. ThursJay 5:00pm
Suturcluy .............. Friduy ::J:OOpm
Sundoy ................ Friday S:OOpm
ERVICE DmECTi
-For All Your Home and BusineN Needs -............... 11, ... _.
. . _.Ir-___:__ ••• -697
Reach eo,ooo Homes Each weeac
For Only $32 pet' week (4 wk, min.)
c.11 Len .... • 642-9678 x.24
...
COAST COIN NEEDS
OLD COIHSI Gold, sliver. jeweliy, waldlll. enllquea,
collecltlles !MH42-9447
TOP SUIRECOAOSI
Jan. A & B, Soul. Rod.
lie. 50'1 & 60'1 MIKE t49'645-750$
•
!!'Y Pilot
eWATERFRONTe ,,.. LOCldon
IMpol1 8-tl .......
rant, Caienng/Bar
Sold .. lrdYldull 111111
call .... 21M181
FllllftClal dlfflc:uttlea?
.......... mt?
No ... • fnlM. Cell Toi ""1.-.m-1241
FIMMCI PAOGRA1i1 ...__...IO Bonded
prGl1lllVI ~ IOI 1911 nMdll ~ rilk lendillg • IQw ,._ ....... Vll'loul
~ C!1 0 H.F. TODAY
Outly 1 lft Elldrle ...
110,$00. -CClfllllon. 1 OWMt. Mf7S.391 I
BMWZ:S ~ ~'00
Blue wlNavy llhr. 6 cyl~
51( '*5. This II I bee $26,980 1179 9 Phlllot Auto
M•S74-7777
BMW Z3 'DO 20k m1,
I ownt1. mint conditlOll,
must MU, $26,995 obo MM73-tlt4
M8Z E.320 Wgn '00 FOleSI Greeo .. Parchment
lllv. 3111 NII Only 14K m1. S39 980 ,, 7825
Phllllot Auto
149·574-7777
BMW 3251 eom.tll* 'tO
Dodge Grllld SE ...
llnlvlri, 7 peq, U Iller Mwcecltl lhnz CLK15
Wht. dull alld dn, 2 IC, Cab '2002 Blaclllllllc*. lully pw. pell,",.. wtll,.. equlpllld. 47511 mllM.
IOy wNI, -.,_PP. Lin! we pl!!! rTl-362{1717
Sl,llO MNSt•tst ._ ... ?ff:\MO ..._.. 230 SUC ... canv, Blldc. IN new,
Ford Contour SE w 1 owner. gartgtd low
39k IN, meldic l!Mlr, auto, mlltl, lbll l#ldef Wllllnly
power, A/C , am·fm $25.995 941Hi44-1po7
ptlf'lllUlll IOUnd. i.u new
cond $7,995 m t797615 TILO'S
Sb 949-58&-t888 European .Autoheus
fOflD EXPLOftER ... M8l S500 CP '98 1• m1, 1u1y lolded tfl1*I showrm fresh. white tan
wind, all the belle Ind lthr, ph, co. sport Wills
whl1llul 110,500 '4«900 $36 900 71~ •
ford lllefcury CCIUglW Xr7 VI~ 'M bllll, lm·fm CO. toay lolded. 1xcellen1
mechanicaVbody eond4iof1. 13995 Bkt 9C9-58&-t888
Ford TIUl'U9 SE VI '99
38lt rru. i'netalltc allver,
am-Im ca56, lil<I new cond,
rantasllc value, $8,995
1276541 8kt 949-586-1888
Ford T aurva SE 'ff 24
valYt V6. 181! actual mt
metaJltc sawtu1e red. can
Int, Uly toaded, •"°Y whlS,
like new, $10,995 Bkr
949-586-1888
Land Rovw '00
Blkil18Y lltw. Gna Guaro's, CO. chrm wllls.
Exec cond. Wont last!
'4«900 $36,900
MBZ S500 '00
One owner. sharp. clean
car. CO. moon-roof,
leather loaded!!
•oen56 $67,900
MBZ S500 '911 Black Beauty. MUSI see,
blactl leather' phone.
loaded! Low, low miles!
1302649 $34.900
Red bllck lealher. new lop HOHOA CAY LX '00 BMW 740 n. '98
calypso Red, shatp,
color wllan. CO, moon-
rool, Prestine Cond.
cu5IDr!t wheels gi'etl cond Sport Ullllty, 4dr, • eyl 2.0 $8000 71W74-Mf7 Iii, auto. 2WD 311( ml. Ill
8MW 3281 Convl 'ti
White wlpetfea lttlr ontar
low IN lftlrlr IOft ~ $21,980 00 , 1 T73oC
=--~
power, 117,100
'41·574-4244
Honda LX 't2 73k llWeS.
IVIO. d power IJU:ellel!I
cond•llOll, 1-<l'#ller, $6300
Mt-723...te13
Jlgl* XJ8 COfM '98 White w/Wl 11111, me V8
moontOOI On"f SJll.980 (17680) =--~
#24999 $32.900
BMW 740! '00
lmmac, silver black
ThlS IS 1 sharp car1 CO,
moon·rool speaal whs
S39.900 *N78752
www Tilocars com
80(). 799-8456
Bridge
8v OHAAlE8 GOREN wilt\ OMAR SHARIF ~ TANNAH HIRSCH
TnTIOOK ot:n:N
NoM-Soulh vulnmblc. South ebb. IJl)Clldll bid ~ • h.tlld ol 16
point• or morr. North'' douhle ~1m
ply showed 11aJuu. '°'1ll! ~R po100, bU1 aince pirtntr rilled IO have •Omc-
ltt111J In htarb. Sooth cfe<;ltd in play
for nine Wb II 00 trump l'1llher lhan
IOtn •J*b WFSI'
•1
. NOITH
•0116
:J 11153
' AJ 96 • 114
.;I I(" lt7Hl •K98J
SOlTTif •AKJtJ v31 ( IJ
•AQJ
The bidding:
SQl!TH WEST NORTH
w~ e1U1tked v.llh • rourm be\l
diamond and dc:c:h1rcr natur.illy pl~ low from dummy. Elt\I v.in·
nin• with the .. '"i Given the oppor• turuly. dcclattr could now run oine
U'ICU, but w1 wt) h<111inl! none of
tha1. At trick cwo the dl!fcndcr \h1fl«l
co the nee of hclllts and, 1n l\.~!>C
co pi111ner'• •ii:nal wuh 1hc -.cvcn,
t:onunued w1lh .i low h(an 10 the
'1.mg. Wc\I pcr.c\rrrd "'Ith lhc 'uic
llll4 i:.ti1 '• J 9 of heans O\.Cr dummy\
10 ~allowed the dcfcnde" 10 co11e<;1
two more LrK.lt.\ in the ~uic for a one-
tnck Id.
l• l¢. OM •• .... i. JNT ,_ ,_
Opening lead: Four of
Mlf'C«lll 110e ·• Green, al pwi, sunrool, $2599 obo
MerotdM 500 sa. 'It me
oond wf. IUlll good 11 Ilk
orig m1, S249S JN9
C!Mrohe Loredo 'It
black. mutl -S2750 obo 949. 722-2581
Mll'cedle .. E.320
4Sk ml. wMI, Ollmeal lthr
chrome wtlls Beau OtQt11
cond $28.995 V'429151
lit( 949-586-1888
Ultlublehl 3000GT Sl '15
Convt Pear1 Wht1e wlblack
lltv ONLY 34k mo. Fun IOI
summert i me
523.98000 (17&t31)
Ptlllps AIAO Wholesall
ld-245-3090
Por9dle CIDr1ollt 111 ...
Cl!'tly 79li llli4es Local. lfldl in.Na' Ivory w choool11e
lfw & CftOC Solt IOP'
$21.980 (17&431)
Phtlllpa Auto
t4M74·7777
Note lhac a low heart 'h1fl 11>ould
not ha"c been cnouth. A~um1ng
dcdam follow' w11b clic dclk.c from
lwnd, the dc(cnde" would only he
ubl41 LO UU.c three tnck' m 1hc wit
bcfore gi1111111 up the lead. 111low111g
dcclan:r w coll~1 mne cri<.lt.' and the
WlllnlCL Al.;o llOIC that. v.1lh nonnal
play. dccl~r h.i' only nmc 1n..k' .it a
spade COOlruct
Sllum SU W 4dr Sedln
Hit ml, books, r1C01ds,
51pd, drk greerv'grey Int,
Pftf'l•Ulll aound. garaged. non smkr, bMUlllul ong
cond, $3 899 8b v729965i
949·586-1888
SAT\IAN SU 'ti.
Auto, llnttd windows
extru. 11cellen1 cond • pp
$7,475 71 '"'54(M)924
Toyau Corolll '98
5spd, A/C, pw. pl.
cassette, good cood
$8,995 Obo
949-212~24
voi.o S70 'ff 37111 mi 1u1
books llOOrdl faci Wiii, champagne/oatmeal lthr, p. premium 50Ulld, Mke new
S15.500 m t697514 8111
949·58&-1684
78 &..,., a.... Conv.
da$SOC ~ White COflY,
1>1oft restofed, al new• Palrll eng IOp, c.tHomt, llllellOf
Classc: car llld llMSlmenl' $7 950 714·751·2464
SELL
your home
through classified
Yellowstone
Womens Recovery of
California
"DONATE WHERE rT COUNTS" YOUR car
boat, tra\n, plane.
Anything that
moves. lf Y.OU
want to help a woman In
trouble
800·941 ·9048 Your money
Buys hope for
women
In need
All donations are Tax Oeduc·
tlble and go to
Yellowstone We are a Non-Profit 501c (3) ~·or Call 94H73~894
ffoME, HEALTH AND BuSINEss --·
'~,Jio/ 15, 2002 11
TODAY'S
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
Cllil1*~ '3 Odil l'CllOl'I es,._ -•F•i.n.• 87 ._, ee F.,mo
ail Pollh
70 lmpr...cl
, 1 "'°°' Montlnd
DOWN , w.IOp
llPoli.e
3 P81\0l USI :=up
er~
Ill*#!
7 IMQ9Y-
ll ~ a#WlM
"-10 ...
10 t.bll!ll'ltle
11 Oartl9icl01
'-nale
12 Roal
~ 13 ........ up ~1 p.,_Macin
aclf-23 'The e ... o1 81
2!)~ Z1 S..WOlld
lllr Kf!Ofl 29 ·-1toe
• c .. h FOf YOAK C. * Phlltlps Auto will buy your
vthlcle peld '°' Of not.
Call =Of "*°""
When you writ£ a classified
ad indwle all the facts and
get the results you want.
'°' 8ldl .. 94 574-1171
... F1111lty Opera1ed 0....
wtl/1 over 40 years exp Wtl
pay I ""Y IU pnce lof 'PJI
Qr V111 Ot lruCll pl!!! lat Ot
not Clll Doell Rey 0
714-437-1931 OI 32&-3228
Call today and wt will help
you put it all together!
CLASSIFIED
949 642-5678
I• -11~11T~11-COA~11~==l l'--'wml j112 =ot I 1340
POLICY PAOOECI< COATIHGS
In an 11'1ot1 ID ollef Ille best WatelJlrool balcony sys·
a.w:. OOllible IO our rNd-CLEAHINO SERVICE ltm1 New/tepllr guaran· "' ""'ldvtrtillts. .. Wll Commeroal lklldhga. ... '810216 714-31~
rlQUlre ConlJIClors wllo Medal OlflCel and
llMr1lll in 1ht SeMce Reeidll1llll 20Yrs Ellp
0.flCIOf'y lo include lhelr LicellHd/Bonde<URel'1 Contr1ctor1 LlctnH Frw Eatl111ttl. Call
r1llllW In their ldvert... Geof911 7 t 4·534-71 n
mini. y OUf co-operation Is 01 1I4-954-48IO ,...., IW!?l!!d
l·--=l1m ==I
FAATHltO llfTERIORS
Kltchell I Bllh I Aemooel
and Room Add11Jona
1.15g75 ..........
ACME
ITANDA&D DOoa
lnalllftaliool & Aepalra
oo all doora A to Z
"Free E.r Uc:ibooded
MM49-Slll
OOomllpcom
11Mllll Oaotcom
8ridl 111oc11 st-Tiii
Concrllll. P1110. Orlvewly,
Ft1eplc. 880'1. Rel's 25yrs
exp Terry 714-657-7514 I I I • CAI• amw I COICllTI , .. a:.vrc~
lllSOllY WOii -----Fireploc. WITTHOUT OflYWAU ~ L' BllGYt, All plluew1111111Vl1i )Obi RMoln~~· CLEAHI 2<¥1. lllr. ,.. 811. A·~-LMOOGIO 71...,._14'7
rt;-.: I "'""'a1lf • 1 ·~I
Ally 3 rooma l._IN ______ I ~ • r • , E ·"i 'I 'J ·
onty$71 Local company
1 O v-ers In the area.
Fltnily Cwpet Cart &
Upholltely C!Nolng ,...,,
.ustomer -S.atisfoction -Al~of (~,...;;;;r"'
PUBLIC
NOTICE
------.... ~'IJdl,~.
~Professional
Painting
LI: 149'350
Rob Isbell • CMner
Costa Mesa, Ca
(949) 646-3006
Cell 949-887-1480
tblNtighborltood
Plumb«!
DMlf t SIMI • •
Q&NlllCi lltOAIJST
1W££DY fll.UMBING
949-645-2352 -..
Office .... ~ ~Mll4>~ flOll\IJolfa~
IL=r=j '
PEST CONTROL
As Low As
S69°°
12 ~May 15, 2002
~.
UTDACK WAGON
, .
....
•
New 2002 WRX221
227· HP TURDO
Automobile Magazine
"Car Of The Year!"
· 1 At This Price
. . i
Daily Pilot
S25,888
..
t 'I , \
'