HomeMy WebLinkAbout2002-05-26 - Orange Coast Pilot. •
SERVING THE NEWPORT -MESA CON.MUNmES SINCE 1907
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ON 1HE WEB: WWW.DAILYPILOT.COM
SUNDAY STORY
f
. '
~~~m,.
cloudy, sunny.
The weather
gods can't decide.
S..P1992
MAY26,2002
er
UFE & LEISURE
Karen Wight explains how
to create a living space on
the outside of your home.
Robert Border$ of Newport Coast makes toys not for profit, but tor fun
S..P1995
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COMMUN In
FORUM
Daily Pilot Cup founder and
local attorney Kirk Mcintosh
discusses the upcoming
soccer tourney with City
Editor James Meier.
See Page 9
.......
SPOm'S
UC Irvine's base-
ball team con-
tinued its
quest for a
postseason
berth with
Game 2 of a three-
game series with visiting UC
Riverside on Saturday:
S..P-11
ULTllUTI CAlfllDll
Ultimate Calendar is on
vacation for Memorial Day
weekend. It will return next
week.
SALUTING DADS
Celebrate your father by
sending a paragraph or
two about why your dad's
so great and a photo to
the Dally Pilot for publica-
tion on Father's Day. Send
a self-addressed stamped
envelope if you want the
photo returned post-publi-
cation. The deadtlne for
entries Is June 12. Send
your letters to Father's Day,
Dally Pilot, 330 W. Bay St.,
Costa Mesa, (A 9~627.
PHOTOS BY GREG FRY I OAll.Y I'll.OT
AIOYlz Newport Coast
resident Robert Borden,
70, peers lnside of a toy
car he crafted.
llHTI Borden, an
architect by trade,
keeps his t.oy-maktng
lldlvtUes confined to bll
well-organized gar.,e,
which doubles u hb
worlulbop.
TOP STORY
Learning about the way it was
• Interpretive Center event helps children
understand that life in the Back Bay was much
different when Native Americans called it home.
NBWPORT BBACH-
Nicolu Jaber IMmed on Sat·
urday that Native AIMdcan
childNn (and 8dultl, far that
matt.) r.u.d OD .acb and
1tone1 for •tmtUament
beca\m banaml lib ... ,...
tionl didn't .....
Tbey made tqJI called
walnut dk:e oat Of ....... ........................ ,...., CCJmJ••• .... ,....
Dffpa Bharath
DAILY PILOT
T he mechanical hum of a sander pierces
the silence of a qwet, gated community in
Newport Coast. Robert Borders carefulJy
examines the piece of llght-colored wood
in his hands. Tmy dust.particles shine as
they fly around the bright garage while Borders turns
the sander on and off.
He tries to round off the edges and mold the wood
to perfect shape.
He places the piece of wood on the toy car.
•Ahal• he says. with a single clap of lus hands
and a smile
that lights
up his eyes.
"That's a
good fit..
The piece
of wood sits
perfectly as
the hood ·of
the minia-
ture 1935
Cadillac th.at
Borders is
crafting for a Handmade toys dot the walls and
friend. celling of Borders' garage. The 70-
year-old
architect has made toys since he was a teenager
Antique trains with carriages and cabooses. ships.
airplanes of all shapes and sizes, firetrucks. even a
circus train and merry-go-round.
Children -from his own grandchtldren to the
neighborhood kids -enjoy his craft.
"For me, it's the flat pleasure of making somethmg
that someone is going to enjoy.· Borders said.
It all started in Casper, Wyo .. when Borders was
16.
Young Borders got in trouble with the law with his
friends Charlie and Dave, he recalled.
•And there was this wise, old judge who looked
down at us from the bench and asked us what hob-
bies each of us was going to take up to stay away
from trouble,• he said with a laugh.
"He asked me. and I said I was going to mdke
models. Charlie said he was going to study religion.
and Dave said he was going to take up chemistry.
"Well, Charlie went on to become a priest. Dave is a
chemistry professor at the University of Wyoming.
and I still make toys.·
The so-called toys. however, are not sunply done.
Each piece takes hours of work. Borders used to buy
ready-made kits to build his toys, but over the last
decade he has been experimenting with wood.
"Making toys out of kits wasn't just much of a
challenge anymore.• he said. •it wasn't as much
tun.•
So when he wants to make a model, Borders
begins systematically with research. The architect
then goes to the drawing board and draws designs.
Then he gets down to executing his design -pick-
ing the right kind of wood. shaping it and making all
the pieces fit.
Then there are the accessories. Borders has little
wooden chests in his garage tilled to the brim with
interesting, shiny, metallic parts -what he calls
•junk ...
They could be anything from the top of an electrtc
razor to miniature flags that may someday fly over a
toy boat. or skull and bones that may adorn a pirate
ship.
Once the creation comes alive, Borders paints his
model. And that's perfectly done too with coats of
pruner and glossy paint.
SEE TOYS PAGE '
We 'll all remember the
summer of stowaways
S ummertime, summer·
time, sum, sum. sum-...ume. Yes, l know,
nat until June 21. But no one cm. About lbat. Everyone
lmoWI 111111 weeUnd II the
....... ol. •gnmer. a.a....., days.,.
... iUl bllmy •mmw
....... -..... 1ba surf, .. __ .. DaUcl Chi· -••••tla.wmm ___ ._..._.."'
a.&1 za t.w,... ......... .,.. ... , . .... .. _ .. ...
·.
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I
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\ I W .~ ..... ' I f •
EEK IN
I ON HONOR ~ ....
'We say a lot of things about war
and make blocJcbuster movies
about them. We read about them
in novels and books. But very
often, we don't honor the r eal-life
heroes who tJerve our country.'
2 Sunday, Mny 26, 2002
OCC GUDUATES
ITS 54TH CWS
Orange Coast College handed
out 1,370 associate arts degrees
on Thursday at its 54th com-
mencement ceremony.
Newport-Mesa Unilied School
District trustee EDUCATION Wendy Leece is
calling for a let-.
ter-writing campaign to convince
Gov. Gray Davis to reinstate cash
awards for schools that meet their
Academic Performance Index
Goals. Leece Said· it's unfair that the
money was taken out of the budget,
despite the state's financial woes.
-Deirdre Newman covers education. She
may be reached at (949) 5744221 or bye-
mail at deirdre.newmanO/atimes.com.
FAST·FOOD MURDER
TRIAL COMENCES
The trial for a 42-year-old
Downey man who is accused of
shooting a Newport Beach man to
death a year ago began last week.
Ramadan Dokovic is accused of
shooting Miioslav Marie, 49, on
May 18, 2001, in the parking lot of
a Jae.\<. in the Box restaurant at the
Cops & intersection of 17th
Street and Tustin COURTS Avenue in Costa Mesa.
• The prosecution
maintains Dokovic shot Marie
because Marie refused to lead him
to Dokovic's nephew who had
stolen Rolex watches in his posses-
sion. Prosecutor Matt Murphy said
he wanted to get the watches for a
Costa Mesa jeweler, who claimed
the watches were his and had
promised Dokovic $20,000 in return.
Public Defender Dolores Yost
argued Dokovic and Marie were
involved in a struggle for the gun
and that Dokovic fired the gun to
save his own Life. The prosecution
presented many witnesses last
week who gave graphic accounts
of the incident.
Several people who were outside
or at an adjoining strip mall said
they saw the shooting that look
place on that busy Friday afternoon.
The trial will continue Tuesday
al the Orange County Superior ·
Court in Santa Ana.
-Deepa Bharath covers public safety and
courts. She may be reached at (949) 574-4226
or by e-mail at dl!f!pa.bharath@latimes.com.
COUNCIL PONDERS 19TH
STREET ZONING ISSUE
City Council members agreed
to reopen the zoning debate
regarding a small strip of 19th
Street last week after Mayor Linda
Dixon told them they didn't fully
understand the issue.
The council voted 4 to 1 to
rehear the issue, which questions
whether the zoning of a portion of
the busy street should be redesig-
nated for residential use -a desig-
nation it had more than COSTA 25 years ago. Councilman MESA Gary Monahan dissented.
On May 6, council
members postponed any decisions
about the zoning of the portion of
West 19th Street until the council,
acting as the city's Redevelopment
_Agency, has a chance to examine it.
Dixon requested the council
reconsider its prevjous postpone-
ment and examine the area again.
She questioned whether the pub-
lic and council fully understood
the i.Ssue, particularly which busi-
n esses in the 19th Street area
would remain legal if the zoning
changed, a staff report shows.
Monahan refused to vote for a
rehearing because he said the coun-
cil had already made its decision.
•we already voted on this issue
. . -'°"" GtwM. • an ~lzer of the third aMUal Memorial Daw tribute
at Newport Hatbor High School
PHOJ'O OF THE WEEK
'JUST IN TIM~'
THOUGlllS F~ YHE sa.i Photographer Don Leach
had a million things to do Wednesday. He was leaving
for Peru the following morning and had to organize
gear to both surf near Lima and hike to Machu Picchu.
of errands, this call was too importanl to ignore.
Racing to the scene he could see the helicopter
above and realized he missed the main rescue. Bui, he
continued to the scene and photographed firefighters
invesUgaUng the wreckage that had gone off the road. As he walked into the photo room after shooting n~merous assigrunents, a call went out on the police Don was kicking hirnseU the rest of the day for not
making__it there ln Ume, yet, his photo sLill tells the story
that-thli was a very serious accident. _ scanner for a heavy rescue and that a life-mght heli-
copter would be needed. Although, he had mulUtudes -Steve McCrank. photo supervisor
ONE SURVIVOR
AIDS ANOTHER
Amanda Arthur, the
Newport Beach resident
who was in a coma for 11
weeks after a car accident
five years ago, has called
on the community to sup-
port 4-year-old Leilani
Gutierrez. The Costa Mesa
toddler is in NEWPORT a coma after
BEACH a car acci-
dent.
City Council members
adopted a zero-tolerance
for trash attitude by sup-
porting a plan to ask the
state water quality board to
list some local water bodies
as "water-quality
impaired."
l'wo members of the
board of the Newport
Beach Film Festival have
•
DON LEACH I DAILY I'll.OT
Amanda Arthur holds a picture of 4-year-old Leilani Gutterrez.
resigned amid concerns about the board's financial and administrative practices. Carlo Villarino and .
Yves .Rene Siegler stepped down, with Villarino saying in an e-mail he was worried that practices left
board members open to personal liability.
A city lobbyist is fighting a South Bay Assemblyman's transportation bill, alleging that it could mean
expansion at John Wayne Airport. The bill seeks to ensure that each county shoulders its fair share of
the burden for future demand for flights.
Ten men thought to be from China came ashore at about 3 a.m. Thursday, possibly as illegal immi-
grants. Local law enforcement agencies rounded up the men, who were put in the custody of the Immi-
gration and Naturalization Service.
-June ~covers Newport Beech. She may be reached at (949) 574-4232 or by e--mall at june.casagrandeO/atlrnacom.
three weeks ago,• Monahan said.
"Once again, we've changed our
minds. I felt the vote was taken
then, and we should stick to our
decision. ff
-Lolita Hllrper covers Costa Mesa. She
may be reached at (949) 574-4275 or bv •
. mail at fo/fta~ha~ffllatimacom.
' COX GRlm DOCTOR.
RELEASED FROM ISUIL
· Rep. Chris Cox welcomed home
a doctor who was released last
week from an Israeli prison and
discussed with him POUllCS ways to improve the
government's procedure regarding
Americans detained overseas.
Cox met with Anaheim doctor
Riad Abdelkarlm, who was taken
by Israeli officials while he was on
a medical relief mission in the
West Bank providing care 'to
Palestinians. Abdelka'.rim was
released Sunday -after two
weeks in prison -and landed at
John Wayne Airport on Monday
afternoon. The doctor was never
formally charged with any crime.
Cox represents Abdelkarim,
who lives in Orange Hills.
Abdel.karim came lo the Republi-
can's Newport Beach office to thank
him for his efforts and urge him to
help other innocent Americans.
7 o.Hy Pilot st.ff. To contact the news-
room, call (949) 642-5680 or by e-mail at
dal/ypilotOlatlmes.com.
.k!M>.,...,
MOll'«'IOf (949) S7oM214
REAQEBS HO'TUNE
(949) 642-6086
right No new$ stories. llluw1tlons.
edit0f'411 matter ot ~lsements
herein can be reprodvced without
written pennllllon of copyr19ht owner.
Daily Pilot
Notable
QUOTABLES
"Kids get the im,presalon of
what brave or strong ls from the
media. But the real brave ones
are the ones who walk into can-
cer clinics every day. And the
real strong ones are the loved
ones who stand by them." • -IUdr John.
who for the Inaugural ArM!'kan
cancer Society's Relay for Ute at
Newport Harbor High Sitlool, org•
nized a team l/t memoty of his late
wife, Rosalind WUliams, who died of
breast ca'~r two years ago.
"Newport Beach does a darn
good job of making sure we
street sweep and do every-
thing pos$ible to pick up trash.
If you were to have that same
kind of attention pa.id in Santa
Ana, Tustin, Jrvlne, that would
make a big dliterence. • ' 1'
-!lob Cliwtin
of Defend the Bay, on Newport's ded·
sion to get nine water w.ys dedared
•water quality limited"
JUST LOYE·LY
'I t's appropriate
because it's the summer
of Jove. We Jove our
beaches.'
-h••~ "*' MMdox. referriog to the number of his
Assembly bill 1969 that he hopes will
posh for an end to the county sanita-
tion district's sewage waiver.
"This is a case about choices
-terrible, terrible choices.
{Ramadan Dokovic] had a
choice between life and death;
the choice between being
judged by a jury in a trial or
being carried by six people at
his own funeral. "
-Public Defender Dolores Yost.
who is the defense attorney fOf
Ramadan Dokovic. accused of a broad
daylight shooting and mur~ Of
Miroslav Marie at a 17th Street Jack N'
the Box In Costa Mesa.
"There are many, many other
steps that have to be taken
before El Toro can be ruled out.•
-8ed11Ames.
chief of staff for George Nabno, a stn assemblyman from Torrance who has a
proposed a bill that would hold up feder-
al money for areas that don't bNr their
fair share of air transportation burdens.
"He is a guy who steps up
for people who need it. It's
that simple, really. He steps
up, and he puts himself on the
line far these people that are
dloodvantaged. • _.,.,_.....,.,
president and d'llef executive of
Goodwlll lndUstries of Oranii-County.
on local I~ Paul Sal.ta.
SURF AND SUN
VOL 96, NO. 146
THCIMMH.~
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(949) 764-*)51
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• WEATHER FORECAST us with grut surl '°' summer's
kidcoff efther. • ~ coodlttonf
.,. mostty f•lr with .n 1n ~
the 1-3 foot range With oamion-
•• bigger w....., but not much.
Earty morning coildltlorll .. bllt '°' this souttl groundlwtl Ind the set~ .. chest to Milt
high. M.ybe net~ WI! be
better and~.
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l'romoclont Olrenor
lm,pho(O.Mt/nwi.com
Ntwa $Wf
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Ctlni. eod <OUf'U NPC>rt•. (Mt) 57<M226
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Our addr• Is 330 W. Baiy St., Costa
MtM, CA 92127. Office houri ere
Mond9y • ~ aJO a.m. • 5 p.m.
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~--.... '°' .. .. -.c...-tA-.-.: -_,_,,.
HOW IO BEAQt US
Cll'a.tllldon
Tha nm. Orange County _,m.91•1
Mt:aM4
o.lfled (Mt) 6-12-5678
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•
Morning clouds will cleer a lit·
tie by the 1fternoon, allowing
some sun to shine on this
Memorial Dey weekend. There
will be a high of 68 and a low of
57. Not great beach wtlther,
but hey. at least It's not raining.
lt•f•'Mfltlon:
www.nws.noH.gov.
v
..... , •• If:
WWW.wrlrldtr.org.
T1DES .,....
4..'0l-.m .
10-J11.m.
J:J!p.m.
t:40p.m.
........
-UflltlaW
J.ttillhlitt , ........
Ufilt ..
Doily Pilot ·
Newport's American
Legion Post stands tall
Y«KM"g Chang
DAILY PILOT ~
B ill McKay, a first vice
commander of member-
ship for the Ameriean
Legion Post 291 in Newport
Beach, boasts that the post is
the largest in California.
The Newport Beach char-
ter .iS the only one in the
world that has a yacht club
and a marina, McKay said.
He, like the 2,600 members
that make up lookiil the post, are
BA( proud to be
part.of the non-
profit group ..
Everyone involved has bad a
taste of serving their country,
whether it's directly or
through husbands, fathers
and grandfathers.
"Our mission is to support
the veterans organ,iiations
a nd the needy veterans in the
area,· said David Lambert,
American Legionnaire and
finance officer. "We're a com-
munity service organization
generally.•
With Memorial Day coming
up Monday, we thought we'd
take a look back ~t Newport
Beach's American Legion
post.
members rebuilt the Great
Hall and the legion still stands
in the 200 block of 15th street
today. In recent years, mem-
bers battled everything from
lease situations to a develop-
er'& proposal to build a hotel on
their site. 1bat developer
abandoned the idea earlier this
year and it looks Jike the
legion isn't moving anywhere.
Members are made up of
American Legionnaires -
men that served in active duty
through any of the major wars,
the Womens Auxiliary -
women who joined thrQugb
fathers, grandfathers or hus-
bands who had served, and
the Sons of American Legion-
naires.
"Our fund-raising consists
of everything we do,• sald Lin-
da Christensian, office manag-
er at Post 291. "We have par-
ties, we have barbecues,
everything we do to make
money goes to the charities
and upkeep and maintenance
of our facilities.•
Charities supported by the
legion include Boys State,
Girls State, High School Ora-
toricals, veterans and chil-
dren's hospitals, a leukemia
foundation and area law-
enforcement agencies. •Last
year, we donated probably
$40,000 to charitable activi-
ties,· Lambert said.
FLYING FEATHERS
It was chartered in 1924 and
first located on Ninth Street
and Bay Avenue. A dozen
years later, the post relocated
to 15th Street, where it is now.
ln 1950, the Great Hall was
added to the facilities. During
the tail end of the 1970s, the
space was ravaged by fire.
Just a year later, legion
• Do you know of a person, place or
event that deserves a historical Look
Back? Let us know. Contact Young
Chang by fax at (949) 646-4170; e-
mail at young.changOlatimes.com;
or mail her at do Daily Pilot. 330 W.
Bay St., Costa Mesa, CA 92627.
SE.AN Hill ER I DAIL V ~ L
Julio Simon, 10, of Santa Ana g ets acquainted with feathered friends at
the Fun Zone o n the Balboa Peninsula.
Casa Pacifica
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BRIEFLY
IN THE NEWS
Patriotism to hold
court at this year·s fair
Orange County Fair officials
announced Friday that the major
themes found m works submitted for
this summe(s fair are patriotism and
tributes to the heroes of Sept 11.
Deadhne for sending in entries
was last Wednesday and the ae-
ative gems that made it included
patriotic gardens, license plates. and
an ex.hlbit of miniature fire engmes.
Don Roussin, a Placentta resi-
dent, submitted this entry as a tlib-
ute to the members of the New
York Ftre Department.
Other entnes include Statue of
Llberty hgurtnes, flags and pins
and d cross-sbtched American tlag.
Non-patrtobc items include a
collection of Barb1es, classic ca.rs
dnd tredlS Like chocolate peanut-
butter cookws dnd sweet bread for
the Home• & Hobbies Department.
The fdlI WJll be held July 12-28.
lnfonndtwn (714) 708-FAIR.
Top acl~ booked for
Center's spotlight
Mdnd} PdUnkm, Kenny Log-
grn~ dncl other performance
heavvwP1ghts wLll grace the
OrdngC' County Performing Arts
Center\ stdges through its new
Spotlight Series, to begin Sept. 21 .
The !>Nie'> will start with Broad-
war perfonner Lmda Eder in Sep-
tembPr
Pc1tmkm will follow on Oct. 12.
lhP d\\drrl·\\JOOJng Loggins will
perform on UPt 7 and Bill Cosby
,,,11 in.,11qr1tc• lrlughter on Jan. 11.
All p,.rformdnces will be held at
8 p m tor on<• n1ght at Segerstrom
I fall, 600 Town Center Drive. Cos-
ht \ i.how wt.II '>ldrt ell 6:30 p.m.
Ticket.5 cir<> $..15-$55 Information:
(71 41 550-2787.
:\l\\.J'\ .. \lll\K
LH"' . ..,HE~
OjJice:
Pager:
Gina Perry
REALTOR
GinaPerry@ColdwellBanker.com
(949) 552·2000
c.l/Pl09"
(949) 887 -0729
COLDWC!U
BAH~C?R ~J
302 Marine Ave.
P.O. Box 6
Balboa Island.
CA 92662
949-675-4822
949-673-4848
~ Lora Vance Rat.,~r
~ S~1i..: Want to be seen here~ Call us!
Sales 8t Rentals
throughout Newport Harbor
l'ax(M9)87~1
3:14 ....... ~ .............. C& 12882
•
Lisa Rivera (949) 574-4252
Ann Willey (949) 574-424
4 Sunday, Moy 26, 2002
TOYS
CONTINUED FROM 1
• 1 think r·u go with a dull
black for the top and a shiny
back for Ute body," he said
about his latest Gadillac.
Will it have an engine?
·An engine? I don't know
if he's that good a friend,"
he jokes.
Friends and' family aside,
Borders has also made sev-
eral
'He spends
·several hours
a day in the
garage. But
it's something
he 'really loves
to do.'
Ruth Borders
Wife of Robert
Borders, who
makes toys for fun
and charity
pieces
for
chari-
ty -
auc-
tions.
His
wood-
en
play-
house
was a
big hit
at the
1999
Pro-
ject
Play-
house fund-raiser in Fashion
Island. Borders' entry won
the grand prize at the event.
He also made models of a
firebuck and paramedic van
for the Newport Beach Fire
Department as a way of
than.king them for the effi-
cient way in which they
responded when his wife had
a health-related emergency.
Borders' wife, Ruth, said
her husband's hobby is
something that not onJy
keeps him busy but also
makes him happy.
•He spends several hours
a day in the garage,• she
said. "But it's something he
really loves to do.•
Then, there are the toys
he likes to make and keep
for bimsell.
·1 made one of my
friends an antique crane
once because he was a
crane operator," Borders
COMMENTS
CONTINUED FROM 1
mean? An "elementary
school reunion" is pretty
whacked, and we haven't
even gotten to the naked
Chinese stowaways yet.
At about 0200, the girls
see some men, 10 men to be
exact, stumbling and stag-
gering onto shore from the
great, inky, watery beyond.
The girls have no doubt
whatsoever that the individ-
uals in question are men,
because they are all wet,
shivering and naked as a
jaybird.
Why don't we just say
"naked as a bird," by the
way? Why is it always
"naked as a jaybird"? Do
other birds wear clothes? I
don't get it. Anyway, the
naked night paddlers tear
said. "But, you see, I liked it
so much I made one fo.r
myseu.·
H e has more plans for the
future too.
"I want to make another
merry-go-round," he said. "I
really enjoyed carving out
the horses and animals. It
was fun.~
ln Borders' ever-fertile
imagination is also an idea
for a children's picture book.
open some plastic bags
they're carrying and start
pulling out clothes and shoes
and dressing like men pos·
sessed.
According to Bridgett Sae-
man, one of the elementary
school reunion attendees,
"We just thought they were
partying and skinny-dipping
in the ocean, but they were
opening up packages and
bags of dry clothes and
putting new clothes on."
The weird got weirder
when the girls noticed that
the men weren't putting on
shorts and T-shirts, but
designer clothes, including a
few sports coats and business
suits. Bridgett ran back to
the trailer to report the
bizarre scene to her father,
Terry Saeman, who was fool-
ishly trying to sleep in the
middle of an elementary
school reunion.
»She said to me, 'Dad,
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The protagonist? Happy
Blimp. The evil villain? Dr.
Doom.
"It's this story about lhis
Dr. Doom who hates the guy
in the Happy Blimp,~ he
says laughing. "Dr. Doom is
always trying to shoot down
the Happy Blimp."
Borders says he would
love to do the drawings and
concept for this original story.
Does he believe there
·-
there's a bunch of naked ..,
Chinese men fu front of our
house,·" said Terry Saeman.
Terry was skeptical about
the initial naked Chinese
men sightings, which I can
understand completely, hav-
ing been the father of a
teenage girl mysell.
Whenever my daughter
would run iilside and say
•Dad, there's a bunch of
naked Chinese men in front
of our house,~ I'd say "That's
nice, honey. Don't touch
them,• and go about my
business.
But Bridgett and her
friends were persistent, so
Saeman threw on a bathrobe
and headed for the Chinese
delegation, armed with a
diving light and an
entourage of teenage girls.
The Chinese visitors were
now fully clothed, hanging
out on the deck of a neigh-
boring trailer and having a
PHOTOS BY GREG FRY
I DAILY PILOT
ABOVE: Robert
Borders works
from blueprints on
some of his pro-
jects, a practice
he's familiar with
in his career as an
architect.
LEFT: Borders
makes a measure-
ment on one of his
latest works-in-
progress.
will ever b e a time when
he gels bored of making
models?
"Bored?· h e asks shaking
bis bead. "I'll never get
bored. The onJy 'thing that
can slow me down is age."
• Deepa Bharath covers public
safety and courts. She may be
reached at (949) 574-4226 or bye-
mail at deepa.bharath
Ola times.com.
smoke as they pondered their
fate in this strange new land
called Crystal Cove State
Park, som ewhere between
Newport and Laguna. But as
soon as they saw Terry and
the girls heading toward
them, they went into a full-tilt
boogie and disappeared into
the night.
Terry and the g:irls
returned to the trailer, caHed
the authorities, then wisely
combed the beach for the
detritus the night callers had
left behind. '
They found some plastic
water bottles with Chinese
labels and a Large Styrofoam
float with the wordc; •Fu
Ching" on it. which is Man-
darin for "Are we having fun
yet?" No it isn't. It means
"lucky star."
And that simple phrase
would eventually solve the
mystery of the El Morro ele-
mentary. school reunion and
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Doily Pilot
PUILIC SAFETY
Crash shuts
down intersection
A three-car accident
closed the intersection of Har-
bor and MacArthur boule·
vards, right on the edge of
Costa M esa, for an hour and a
half Saturday morning.
··A black Chrysler Sebring
ran a red light while going
southbound on Harbor, hit a
red Nissan pickup truck ,
causing the Nissan ~o sli~e
into a white BMW. driven oy
Costa M esa resident John
Fieldel", said Lt. Tom Winter,
of the Costa Mesa Police
Department.
Fielder was not injured in
POLICE FILfS
COSTA MESA
• Anton Bouleva rd: Grand
theft was reported in the 500
block at 11:19 p.m. Thursday.
• Bristol Street: Possession
of a controlled substance was
reported in the 3000 block at
11 a.m. Thursday.
• Gisler Avenue: An lndivid·
ual was reportedly under the
influence of drugs in the 1400
block at 1 :20 a.m. Friday.
•Traverse Drive: Vandalism
was reported in the 400 block
at 10:20 p.m. Thursday.
• West 19th Street Drinking
in public was reported in the
800 block at 12:55 p.m. Thurs-
day.
• East 20th Street: An auto
theft was reported in the 200
block at 8: 15 p.IJl. Thursday.
NEWPORT BEACH
• Amethyst Avenue: A bur-
glary was reported in the 100
block at 11 :12 p.m. Thursday.
• Baypolnt e Drive : Vandal-
ism was reported in the 2500
block at 10:35 a.m. Friday.
• Jamboree Road: An auto
theft was reported in the
4600 block at 9:51 a.m. Friday.
the 10 naked Chinese men.
Terry's 911 Call might not
have gotten much attention
prior to 9/11, but it got a
whole lot of attention on 5123.
Before Terry could say, " 10 of
them, yes, without a stitch,
that's correct." here's who was
on the case: Newport Beach,
Irvine and Garden Grove
police, the INS, the Coast
Guard, the U.S. Border Patrol,
the California Highway Patrol.
California State Parks and
Orange County Sheriffs
Department and Harbor
Patrol.
ln less than seven hours,
the Naked Night Paddlers'
Excellent Adventure was
over.
By 9:30 that morning, all
10 men were in custody, hav-
ing gotten no farther than
Newport Beach. interesting-
ly, two of the men were
found near the Bonita
Canyon toll road ramp,
which tells me that even
people "from China know you
should use the toll roads
whE!never you can.
Late Thursday afternoon,
the Coast Guard spotted a
rusted, ragged, barely func-
tioning 60-foot fishing boat
about 100 miles off San
Diego. Its name? The Fu
Ching. The two crewmen on
board were arrested and the
boat was ~onfiscated and
towed into Long Beach on
Friday morning.
The stowaways said
jumping from the Fu Ching
and their after-midnight
swim to El Morro were the
last legs in a 30-day odyssey
from Chin8..
They were supposed to be
met by a man whose name
sounded like "Ott.Q," but nev-
er found him. Immigration
authorities said the men were
lucky to be al.Ive and that this
was a very odd run for the
border for illegal immigrants
from Asia.
The typical modus operan-
di for stowaways from China
or Taiwan is hiding tnsJde
shipping containers. or pay-
ing big money for airline tick-
ets and forged documents.
Finally, tbe authorities in
Long Beach are b'ying to Cig-
ure out what to do with the
two tons of tuna in the Fu
Ching's freezer holds. And,
oh, if your name is Otto, the
INS has your stowaways,
So there you beve It. The
beech. the surf, 10 naked
stowaways and two tons of
leftover tune -the perfect ~ ICbool NUldon.
Could you make this ltUff upf
NIMbW maid I. J _.go .
• ........ '11 1 '°'"* CoD 1 .....,. Hll CllllurM"" s..n;. ·= ................... ·•~cir-
the 7 :33 a.m. crash.
Robert Velln. 60, the driver
of the Nissan, suffered a frac-
tured clavicle and abrasions
to his bead and arms. The
Fountain Valley resident was
taken to Western MedicaJ
Center In Santa Ana.
Gilbert Achevest~, the 19-
year-old driver of the
Chrysler, sulf ered swelling to
the forehead while bis pas-
senger. Espranza Jauregui,
suffered injuries to her head
and right leg and was taken
to fountain Valley Hospital.
They are both residents of
Paramount.
Police have turned the case
over to a traffic investigator. I
• Padua Court: An auto
theft was reported in the 100
block at 8:46 a.m, Friday.
•Rutland Road: An attempt-
ed burglary was reported in
the 1100 block at 7:35 p.m.
Thursday.
• Seashore Drive: A loud
party was reported in the
5100 block at 11 :0 1 p.m.
Thursday.·
SCHWINGHAMMER,
Gregory Alfred
Gregory Alfred Schwinghammer,
43, loving husband, son.
brother, son-in-law. brother-in·
law, uncle and friend to many
passed away on Saturday.
May 18 2002 at home in
Greenwood Village. Colorado.
Born on May 4. 1959 in
Minnesota, Greg attended
college at the University of
Kentucky where he played
basketball. He was a member
of the armed forces where he
served his country as an air
traffic controller.
As a Newport Beach resident
from 1989·1995. he met and
married the love of his Ille, his
wife, Kata Lyon Schwinghammer
After marrying October 20.
2001 , at the Community
Church Congregational in
Corona del Mar. they made
their home in GreeNwood
Village, Colorado.
Most recently he was
employed as Vice President of
Machine Logic. a technology
procurement company. Greg
spent the last year of his life
dedicated to assisting and
supporting those who suffered
from drug and alcdhol
dependency. He founded and
ran his own recovery website
www.giftofrecovery.com.
He was an avid fly fisherman.
loved to be near the ocean
and cherished the time he
spent with his nieces. He loved
being an uncle to them. He
especially loved going to the
movies and for walks with his
wife, Kate. They were the best
of friends .•
A Memorial Service will be
held Wednesday, May 2911 at
11 :30 a.m. at the Little Log
Cht,1rch In Palmer Lake,
Colorado. Local service and
private bu(lal at sea date to be
determined.
He Is survived by his wife Kate
Lyon Schwinghammer. mother
~~father
Alfred Schwinghammer,
stepmother Diana
Schwinghammer, sisters Inez
Kang and Mlchelle Bed<man.
b r o t h e r P atrlck
Schwinghammer. In-l aws.
nieces and nephews.
In lieu of flowers, donations
may be made In Greg'•
memory to Vmtey Hope
Association In P81Mr.
Colorado or Alcohollce
Anonymous.
Doily Pilot
.TIP Of THI WEEK
WW YOUR HWAET
lqding Ioele• ell fun ~ bf'eezy and. fCf
the most pwt. .. but the Em«~ NurMs
Alin reports that riding IS • ludtng CMM
of lnfUIY Mnong kids rVJhed '° .,.,.gen<y rooms T
The most lmportM!t tip, the~
f.¥. f« rtdudng the rltt af Mfba lnjwy k wur•nii • helmet. 0n1y ~ of blbn 1n the
<OUf'l1'Y wur helmets. Molt peop6e who die
from bl<)'de .ccidenb succumb to hod injuries
Sunday, May 26 , 2002 5
TRAVEL TILES
.Bright
'lights in
Sin City
Young Chang
DAILY PILOT
A team of Harbor View
moms left behind 23 chil-
dren Wlth able fathers and
shimmied off to Las Vegas for
three days last month.
They slept every night no ear-
lier than 4 a.m. They laughed
their way through the Vegas Strip
and gambled. They really appre-
ciated that the dads took care of
things at home.
Elizabeth Martino, a resident
of the Harbor
View commuruty
who went on the
trip, said it was
ruce lo have
three days IUVADA
where she didn't
have to pick up
SEAN HILLER I DAILY PILOT
Amra Barton, 5-months-old, hams it up for a picture at Haute Cakes in Newport Beach . The restaurant packs picnic baskets.
the kids from
school, dean and
fulfill other moth-
erly dubes.
·Just lo know
that you could
have a wonderful
dinner with best
Pack your
basket
Young Chang
D AILY PILOT
Did you know Newport Beach hds 47 parks? And
that Costa Mesa has 35? Some are redlly big,
some are barely bigger than an average back-
yard Some have views of Newport Bay, some
have baseball diamonds, some have grills, some have
tables, some just have grass.
Which is, in a way, all you need for a picnic. Every
park in Newport-Mesa allows picnicking and the rules
are few and reasonable.
Picnicking in Newport-Mesa is a breeze,
especially at local parks
So the next time you want to pack a basket, roll up a
blanket and eat among the trees and the ants, remember
that your choices are more than JUSt that one big park
you know or across town.
SEE BASKET PAGE 7
BuildiYtg a backyard sanctuary
C all it what you like -
outdoor room, exterior
family space, restful
retreat or entertainment nir-
vana. The appeal of living and
dining al Cresco is pa.rt of living
Southern California style.
ment center.
Denise and Jeff Ludes
approached their backyard
project with several goals in
mind. First was to undo what
the former owners had done.
By removing a labyrinth or
low walls and planbng areas,
they were able to open up
their yard to accommodate
three outdoor rooms.
a low circular table (complete
with overhead chandelier);
and a built-in L-shaped
bench that borders a raised
fire pit.
friends and to know it was lo con-
tinue for three days,• the 36-year-
old said.
The women -who numbe1ed
10 -know each other locally
because they're all in a bunco
group t~ether. Bunco is a dke
game.
·so every couple months, we
kinda take bunco on the road,•
said Jane Owen. "We wanted
something that was dose and had
a lot to do. A lot of fun stulf like
rughtdubs and gambling and we
could go out all rug ht.•
The group stayed at the Rio
and wore matching black tops
that read "Dicey Divas.· They
SEE TRAVEL PAGE 7
• ' • I
Karen W19ht
Treating your outdoor
space with the same mentali-
ty that you approach your
"great indoors" can add func-
tion and versatility to your
home. Don't think patio and
garden. Think dining room,
living room and entertain-
They incorporated gra-
cious dining for six; a .com-
fortable exterior seating area
with four oversized chairs and
Placing a large serruarcular
fountain close to the house,
adding a rose garden m the
side yard and providing
enough grass area to keep
their children happy were also
on the list of priorities.
By approaching the11 yard
in the same way they did the
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and cbalrs, a built-in cement bench sunoundlng a 8J'e
pit and an area with oventzed cbi.ln for reluing.
A.RMeIRE
c
6 Su$ May 26, 2002 ..
Doily Pilot
BASKET
CONTINUED FROM 5
Here's a breakdown of
which park offers what.
In Costa Mesa, picnic
tables can be found at
TeWmkle Park, Wakeham
Park, Shiffer Park, Del Mesa
Park, Wilson Park, Estancia
Park and Vista Park. These
fabulous seven also feature
barbecue stands and
restrooms.
In Newport Beach, parks
with picnic tables include •
Begonia Parle, Bolsa Pafk,
Bonita Canyon Sports Park,
Bonita Creek Park, Buffalo
Hills Park, Channel Place
Park, Cliff Drive Park, East-
bluff Park, Grant Howald
Park, Irvine Terrace Park,
Las Arenas Park, Mariner's
Park, Newport Island Park,
Passive Park,, Peninsula
Park, San Miguel Park, Spy-
glass Hill Park, Spyglass
Hill Reservoir Park, Veter-
an's Memorial Park, West
Newport Park and 38th
Street Park.
Most of the Listed parks
offer barbecue grills. The
ones that don't are Bolsa
Park, Bonita Creek Park,
Las Arenas Park, Spyglass
Hill Park and Spyglass Hill
Reservoir Park.
A group of Harbor View moms, who called themselves
"Dicey Divas," took a three-day vacation to Las Vegas.
TRAVEL
CONTINUED FROM 5
spun slom•<, about what they
were doing ther<' -partly
for fun. partly because they'd
knew they'd never see the
'>!rangers again -a nd con-
vinced one group of people
that th t>y were attendinq a
profe~1onal coach's gam-
bling convention
·That we were hen• to
teach people how to gam-
ble,· said Owen, 42 and a
part-urne teacher
fake jet lag. They were eat-"
ing dinner at Wolfgang
Pucks in the hotel and star-
ing out at what was actually
a fdke scene wi th clouds and
d blue sky.
"It's like you're jet lagged
but your body is telling you
it's day,· Martino said.
The group was surprised
to learn, after dinner. that the
hour was close to nudrught.
Absorbing Vegas left little
chance to keep up with time.
·There's no sense of time
there." Martino said. #No
clocks, no wmdows. •
Two parks that provide
barbecue machines but no
tables are Bayview Park
and Arroyo Park.
~And we don't allow per-
sonal barbecues at the
park,• said Cindy Brown,
office spectalist at the City
or Costa Mesa recreation
division. "It's an ordinance
that was passed that we try
to enforce. That's why we
reqwre people barbecue at
parks that have barbecues
in them." Newport Beach
asks.simply that if you do
bring your own barbecue
machine to a park, that you
don't put it on the ground
-a fire-prevention mea-
sure, said recreation super-
Lntendent Andrea McGwre
Both a lles prohibit alco-
hol a l all parks, expect pa rk
users to clean up lhetr
space and place restnchon
on really large groups ( 150
1s the maximum for one par-
ly for Newport Beach)
Costa Mesa wdnls vehi -
cles to stay off the grass
areas. Groups with chtldren
wantmg to use inflatable
houses (often called bounce
houses or blow-up houses)
in the park need to have a
special permit so the C'1ty
can make sure the bounn •
house companies have
insurance in Costa Mesd
Both cilles run their
parks on a first-come, first-
They had such d good
lime at the VooDoo Lounge
that the musical act on sta ge
asked all 10 of them lo Join
them m song. About half the
group went.
Owen said she dldn't reel
l!red until her second day
home.
#I was still excited from
the trip. But the next day,
after I started taking the kids
to school, I was thoroughly
e~hausted. •
SUMMER TIME
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serve bdslS You can make a
reservallon 1f you want, but
fees vary for reside nts and
non-residents
Now 1f you'd rather be
annoyed by Sdnd fl ymg m
your food mstedd of crawl-
ing ants, then the following
bedr hf's m Newport Beach
offer fire nngs Corona del
Mar Stall:! 8£-dCh dnd the
stri p'> of hedch at B Street,
C Street dnd Bdlboa Street.
Co1ond del Ma r State
8Cdch dbo offers bdrbecue
grills n!:lar the pdiklng lot
dncl p1enir ldbles7.
Mor<• ldblt>s Cdn be found
d t the bf'dCh nedT 15th
Street, di the Balboa Pier
dnd dt th<' bd!>t:! of the New-
Sunday, May 26, 2002 7
port Pter.
•You're not allowed to
hav.e grills on the beaches,·
McGwre said. •And no
alcohol on the beaches
either ·
If gnlling 15n't your forte
and you'd prefe r a lunch of
cold salads, sandwiches and
frwt, several Newport-Mesa
edtenes -mcluding Haute
Cakes Caffe Bakery Expres-
so Bar and Gnlle in New-
port Beach -will pack your
picnic basket for you·.
If you'd rather make your
own lunch but don't know
what keeps best outside,
well, that's a whole separate
story. One we'll get to at a
Idler date
COMMUNITY
8 Sunday, /11\ay 26, 2002
EDITORIALS
Oean waterways
need to be priority
N ext to John WdynP Air-
port and the ever-pre-
sent threat of 1ls
expansion, thc•1<' J'>
probdbly no bigger conc<•m
dmong NPwport Bi.>dch rt's1dent'>
than protecting the wdter qudhly
of the hdrbor, bay dnd bedches,
the ndtUidl resources lhdt dre so
cruc1dl to this town
Wdter polluhon, wh('thpr tre-
ated by SeWdgt Sptlls or SCWd9l'
plumes or by the tum, ot l1I bc1n
runoff thdt spew tntu lh£> BtlC'k
Bc1y t1nd lhP Sanld And River
Pc1ch ye>M, threat~ns lo do sevt>re
hc1rm to Newport's hedlth, dS wc•ll
dS Pnv1ronmentaJ ddmdge to
pldnl'> cind animals
WP dre hshermdn, sailors,
'>W1mmE>rs and surfers. The
hPdches nf'ed to be pristine, tlw
ht1rbor Wdtl'fs clean and l1 et> of
hr1Ctl'nd Our lust mstinct should
llDI lw lo dVOld the WdtC'r, dnd WP
111 •pd to Pn'>ure that wildlllc• c11HI
I 10.,li cc1 n flourish in it.
Tha t's why it was esp£>c1c11ly
d1.,<1ppo111ting to hedf lhol tlw
0111nge County SanildtJOn J)1c,tnll,
wh1d1 pumps 240 nulllon <J<11Jons
of '>l'Wdge a ddy out ol dn outlt1ll
pipe h.>ed t«..'<.I four and d hc1lf mile•"
out from the Sdfltd Anet Ri vl'r, Wei'>
undble to determine if thc1t sc1mt•
sewdge 1s contributing to hlyh
bdc-teria counts m Newport c1ncl
Huntington Beach wale~.
All of thJs alter the sani~allon
tllstrict's $5.1 million study of the
'"-'wage plume created by the out·
fctll pipe lhdt many suspect lS coin-
ing dctngerously close lo shore
Combine that with the inc1lnlJ-
ty to c;tem the urban runoff dnd
trac;h that drrives here from
mldncJ c1lles. c1nd you hdve the•
reasons why we strongly support
recent strong stands taken by
Newport Beach officials.
To start, they hc1ve called for
the elimination or the sanitation
district's federal waiver, which
aUows the distnct to release par-
lldlly treated sewage rather than
sewage that has undergone
much more thorough cleaning.
And now, Newport officials
have 1dentiJied nme local water-
ways as having zero tolC'rance to
trnsh and poUulunls.
Mdyor Tod Ridgeway is firing
off d letter lo lhe Stale Water
Resources Board asking 1t to list
the waterways as "water quality
lirruted."
The Santa Ana/Delhi Channel,
Pelican Point Creek, Pelican Hill
WdtPrfctll, Pelican Point M1ddJe
Crel'k, Buck Gully, Lo!> Trc1ncos
Creek. Muddy C'rr>ek, Newport
Bay c1nd the Sdnla And River are
victims of neglect by those dfore-
rnentiunecl mlt1ncl C'llW!>, st1ys Bob
C'c1uslln. fou11d er of the N<'wport
Bec1ch-l>d~ed Dehmd the Bay.
Cdustm, d longtime ttnd effec-
llvf' wdter-quc1lJly ddvocate, said
Ne>wport Beach rc•s1denLc; and offi-
cials have come cl long WdY
toward m1provmg the runoff
problem, and Uus C'tlort, lw hopes,
• will put the pressurC' on other
olles like Santa Ana, Tustin,
Orange and Irvine to follow suit.
We urge Newport offtc1ctls to
put those who contribute to the
pollut10n here dnd m other beach
cities on notice.
They need to know thdt ll JS
pdst time tor them dnd others to
do their part to preserve our most
precious resource, our ocean and
tht' waterways thdt feed 1t.
Cox deserves thanks for
def ending all Americans
W hen U.S. <01t1zens
become embro1IPd in
controversies over'>C'd'>,
the first place we look for h<'lp 10.,
our federal government.
As Americans, we exp('( t that
our nghts dnd our l reedomc; will
l>e fought for VJgorously by our
leddcrs.
So when Orange Hilli, doctor
Riad Abdelkanrn, on a humam-
tdnan rruss1on to help Palesum-
ans, was detained by Isrdeh
duthonl!es. his famtJy went to
U.S Rep Chns Cox for help
At fust. they were not Sdllsf1r d
with thr response of the Nc>wport
lkdch congressman who rP.prc•·
sf'nls them. But after severtll
lfmsc days, Cox became' d kr>y
intermediary in the light for
Abdelkarim's release, and the
doctor and his family are gr<1teful
for his help.
"Your case gives us the oppor-
tunity lo learn from your expen-
ence and try to work out d gener-
al p rocedure for traveling human-
itarians,• Cox said to Abdelkdrim
in a meeting at the congressman's
Newport Beach office.
We commend the congress-
man for his actions and for living
up to the high expectations that
we all have or him.
For all of us. Abdelkarim's
case is a lesson that w e can learn
from. It highlights the tensions
dnd perceived mistrust thdt those
ol Middle-Edstern dei,cent face in
the Uruted States, espeoally
smce the events of Sept. 1 1 and
the increasing hoi,tility in Israel.
Mt1ny of us hdve difficulty sep-
drdlmg the despicdble and dea~
ly dctions of terrorists from the ·
vast mdJOrity of pedCC-IOVtng
Musluns and Middle Easterners
hNe and abroad.
ConsequenUy, Abdelkarim's
fdnuly complained that because
he was of MJddJe-Edstem
descent, hls plJght m Israel did
not get the same attentwn that
others might hdve
·I dm dn Americdn," J\b<lelka-
nm said. "I am of Palestinian
clPscent, but I wt.1s born here and
rd1sed here and educated here.·
He was simply in Israel lo
uphold w hat he termed, • Ameri-
can principles.• •
"There I was vigorously
defending our system of justice
but not getting that same support
from my country,· he sdid.
As we saJd before, his impris-
onment deserved just as vigorous
d protestation from us.
That's why the actions of Con-
gressman Cox are so significant,
and why all of us should be grate·
ful to him for restoring faith in
those like AbdelkMim that their
ideals will be defended regardless
of their race or aeed or religion.
THE LAST WORD
And the money keeps rolling in
G reat conununities host great
fund-raisers. And Newport-
Mesa proved itsell charitable last
w eekend through the CHOC Fol-
lies and Reloy for Ufe.
With the CHOC Follies, exec-
utive producer Gloria Zigner and
company netted about ~oo.ooo
for thfi Children'• Hospital of
Orange County. In ttl sixth year,
the pioducdon made itl Cotta
Mesa debUt over three days in a
tent edjacent to the Orange
County Performing Am Center.
1bil lnt..VS Relay f« IJf• Ln
Newport BMidlt mMDwhile. r8'Md
d to S70,000 for the Amerfcan
J ,
~
Cancer Society. Peggy Fort, Pat
Smith and Newport Beach City
Manager Homer Bludau helped •
launch the 24-hour run/Walk at
Newport Harbor HJgh School
With events like these ln d.iffi·
cult economic times like these,
nonprofit org8niutttons can be
reasaured they have friends who
wW SU,J?pol't them and their need.I.
We re pleased to see both of
these events do so weU on the
same weekend and we encour-
age them to continue tbetr.efforta
a year from now ln NeWport·
Mesa. It's great work thet certUi-
ly doesn't go unnottc:ed. .
Th~J. SAIDR aY'-..
'/just get interested in something
and I want to do it.'
The Daily Pilot welcomeS letteis on Issues cooceming NewP<>rt Be4'dt llnd Costa Me.Y • t.mlltS _ Mall to Editorial P• Editor
JM* Meier at the Dally Piiot, 330 W. Bay St ..
-Composer Mwvln Hamllec:h on the simplicity of
choosing new projecu. Hamllsch performed Friday and
Saturday with the Pacifk Symphony Pops at the Orange
County Performing Ans Center in Costa Mesa.
C Mesa CA 92627 osta 1ts HOTUNE -can (949) 642-6086
: READE Send to (949) 646-4170 . :~L-Send to dallypllotOlatlmacom
All correspondence must Include full Mme, home-
town and phone number (for verlflc.atlon purposes).
The Pilot reserves the right to edit all submlsslons for
clarity and length.
Daily Pilot
"Wrecking ball. "
. . , ..
Residents will miss Dunes fireworks
AT ISSUE: The resort plans to drop the Fourth of J uJy
bang this year because of rising insurance costs.
H ow could the Dunes do
such a thing (•Fourth of
July fireworks fizzle at
Dunes,~ May 11 )? Breaking with
an American tradition just when
the country needs as much tracli-
tion as it can get.
Just last nigh t I was at a gather-
ing and the people there were
saying that this year because of
Sept. t 1, the Dunes will have an
even more spectacular display
than ever. And now, nothing.
On a personal level , we live
across from the Dunes and have a
July 4 party just to view the fire-
w orks. The invitations are at the
printer. The time of the display
w as part of the invitation.
Forget me, the Dunes is letting
down Newport Beach and Ameri-
ca in their excuse for not being
involved in the community. (It
couldn't be that they're planning
on leaving the community and,
why bother making friends now.)
JOYQWEISS
Newport Beach
Yes. We will sadly miss what
has become a family tradition. A
shame that the damage claims
from a few have ruined something
that is enjoyed by thou.sands.
Thank you for the opportunity to
express our disaPpointrnent.
SUSAN CHESLEY
Costa Mesa
l'm a resident of Newport Beach
and in fact have a boat docked at
Llnda Iale. Bvery year my family
and friends spend the Fourth c:ruil·
ingtheherborandending~eday
watching the glorious fireworks
dlll)lay at the Dunes.
We wW really mis• this local
tradition and would welcome any
remedy to bring back the fire·
woru.
-.&.mlNB
NeWport Beech
I'm outnlged by the l"emllt ded·
11on to cancel Br•wora at the
,
Readers
RESPOND
Dunes. ApparenUy, in Lhl!> post-
lnternet boom economy, the
almighty dolldr 1s more 1mportdnt
than patriotism and tradition
Given the events of Sept. 11
and the fact that we still ht1ve
American troops fighting on for·
eign soil to keep Americd free from
terrorism, it is important for us to
come together as a community to
show our respect for our troops and
those who lost their lives.
Over the past 226 years. fire-
works have come to symbolize the
great price America has paid for
the freedoms that we au enjoy and
the resiliency of the American peo-
ple to overcom e the greatest of
challenges despite innumerable
odds. Unfortunately, the current
(811d hopefully soon to be departed)
owners of the Dunes and the city of
Newport Beach have forgotten this.
AlthOUiJb some would argue
that winning two out of three elec·
tions relating to a new airport at El
Toro lsn't bad, rather than jousting
at windmills, we should have been
asking the dty of Newport Beach
to save a few bucks for the insur-
ance companies.
GEORGE HAMPTON
N ewport Beach
Who isn't upset about the loss of
this July 4 fireworks event? There
is still time for a dramatic re-;cue
effort. r propose funding of the cost
of liability insurance for the event
by imposin~ a $5 surcharge on the
next month 1 d ty waler bill.
The City Council would have no
objection from the community for
this action. Perhaps a few doll4.rs
more for those most lmpected U.ke
ownen closer to the water. Let's
not k>M th1I clMlic Newport Beach
spectacle and creatively fund the
liabWty lnsur™ ==
Newpott 8-dl
f
We're longtime residents of
Costa Mesa, but w e always used
to go over to the Dunes and see
the fireworks~We enjoyed them so
much. Tius ye , even though
Castaways h so many homes
over there, w were. still planning
to go over as we were to be invit-
ed Jor the fueworks. Our friends
have a great big oceanview bay
home, and we were all planning
on a nice fireworks celebration.
We will miss this a lot.
BARBARA AND ART HANSEN
Costa Mesa
I am very sad to see the Dunes'
fireworks go. It has been a tradi-
tion m Orange County for 43
years. It's part of our past that w;ill
no longer be viable for our kids to
see. The tradition will end.
SUSAN BUSH
Newport Beach
I was born and raised in N ew-
port Beach -a 1979 graduate of
Newport Harbor High School -as
well as my entire family. f'm very
disappointed about the Dunes'
fireworks. lt'1 really a tragedy.
I grew up with thoee fireworks.
Everybody in this area grew up
With those fireworks. To cease them
over a liability ~. there'• got to
be some sort of resolve to this I
w ould think. lt'a a loa for the dty.
First, part of the boat parade -
and now this. I juat think the dty'•
going the wrong way. We need to
remember, a lot of things that
made this city a fun place to be,
and not just all about political cor·
rectness and money. We just need
to keep our traditions alive for our
kids It's really important.
11.MNEIUSH
NewpOrt Beach
Of coune I'll tlUn the Fourth ot
July firework.I at the l>uJMI. lt'I a
tradition. How can we hew Pourtb
of July without ftreworbf Could
we mail 1n donatlcn to die DuMI
to help detray the COit af Ila*
lnlurancef .....
NewpaltWcb ---
Doily Pilot
BIO
Name: Kirk Mcintosh
Age: 48
Residence:' Unincor-
porated Costa Mesa
for nine years
Position: Tourna-
ment director of the
Daily Pilot Cup
Occupation:
Attorney at law
Education: Bache-
lor's in math from Cal
Poly Pomona and juris
doctorate from Uni-
versity of San Diego
Family: Wife of 25
years Suzanne; and
daughters Terra.
Krista, Ashley, Al~xan
dra, Courtney
Hobbles: Soccer, ten-
nis, fly-fishing, coach-
ing and gardening
I
A FEW OF HIS
FAVORITE THINGS
'I love to go out
there on Saturday
morning and see
every field going,
to see all these
people. You real-
ize at that point
that this is a major
event. There are
just people every-
where, b uying
hamburgers, wear-
ing their Pilot Cup
T-shirts, different
colors. That 's when
you really appreci-
ate how big it's
gotten.'
r
COMMUNflY FORUM Sunday, May 26, 2002 9
·g the ball
You can definitely say Pil~t Cup director Kirk Mcintosh is much more organized
in his third year of the soccer tournament
N ow in its third year,
the Oaily Pilot Cup ·
will host 83 teams
in this week's soc-.
cer tournament. Schools
throughout the Nevi-port-Mesa
Unified School District field
teams in the event, which will
begin Wednesday.
The tourney's fo under and
leader, Kirk Mcintosh, sat down
at his Westside Jaw office with
City Editor James Meier on
Wednesday to discuss the Pilot
Cup· and the difficulties of get-
ting every Newport-Mesa
school involved.
You ready for Wednesday?
Yep. The only thing now 1s get-
ting the fields ready. We need some
volunteers there. And getting refer-
ees Smee we're not an AYSO-affili-
dted toumdment, we have to JUSt
hope for A YSO volunteers to come
forward dnd ref
Do you think that'll be a problem
at am
It was Ids! yedr. We're better
organized this year We've gotten
the word out earlier and gotten the
schedule done earlier, so we're just
hoping lhPy will step up. That's the
only wdy we can do 1t. We JUSt put
the word out, say, 'Come out to the
Fann Complex and ref.'
Last year , you had 71 teams and
more than 1,000 kids. What are we
looking at this year ?
This year, we have 83 teams and
who knows how many kids, but
probably somewhere in the neigh-
borhood of 1.300 kids. There's about
five schools w the entire area who
didn't put a team out Not one team.
Most schools have at least one team.
Kaiser Elementary hds nine teams,
so KaJSer is the No. 1 partiopcUlt.
And whJcb of those will you
coach?
Kaiser No. 1 guts' filth-and sixth-
grdde f where he has a daughter).
Why do you think those live
schools are still lagging behind?
I don't want to get too controver-
staJ here, but they're all on lhts side
jthe Westside) and they're hedvy
Htsparuc areas and they don't get
good volunteer support from the
parents. Who am I to judge, but
mom and dad are probably both
working and language problems.
I mean it's absolutely clear that
they have soccer players there, lots
of them. Hispanic communities are
loaded. Boys and girls would love to
play. It's just nobody steps up to be a
coach.
ls there anything you1l do to
work on that ln the next year?
For me to personally do anything
more than what I'm doing is pretty
dtfhcult. You JUSt have lo hope that
as the tournament gets better recog-
nized -and a lot of it has to do with
the Pilot, the covera~e that we got
last year redlly sent' message to the
community that this is a fun and big
deal -we're just hopeful that even-
tually some parents will say, "Gee, I
want to get my kids into this.• Or at
least a teacher at the school -it
doesn't have to be a parent, 1t could
be a teacher.
When I was a kid going to school,
the teachers dJd all the coaching
We hdd a school team and every-
thing -footl>all, basketbdlJ softball.
We dlways had school tedms. and 11
was dlways a tedcher. If I were
teaching al Whittler school, I'd do a
team. I'd love to do a team. So that's
what you got to hope for?
What's your favorite part of the
event every year?
I love to go out there on Saturday
morrung and see every held going,
to see au these people. You realize
at that point that this is a major
event. There are just people every-
where, buying hamburgers, weanng
their Pilot Cup T-shuts, cWferent col-
ors. Thdt's when you really appreci·
ate how big it's gotten
Is lt larger than the previous
Lions Cup?
I'm pretty sure 1t lS because there
are more schools uwolved. The pn-
vate schools are now involved, and
we're getting a better response now
from the Corona del Mar side. The
Lions Cup was dorrunatcd by East-
side and Westside Costa Mesa, with
very little response from Corona del
Mar. But now Corona del Mar has
really stepped up. In fact, every
school in the Corona del Mar area is
well represented.
Now, one thmg that's changed
that is cWferent now than when
Lions Cup was gomg on ts that a lot
of the schools on the Westside have
these crazy enrollments. Some of
them are kindergarten through thll'd
grade now. Well, that makes it clilh-
cull for them to participate. Some of
them are still partlcipabng. They're
putting third-grade teams together
and having them compete ln the
fourth-grade division.
But m Lions Cup days, those were
all K·6, so it was easier to get partic-
ipation from them.
How many practices are they
allowed before they play?
Practices cdIUlot begin until Mdy
1, dnd then it's up to the discrel.Jon
of the coach. It used to be four for
Lions Cup, but it's too hard to
enforce. People abused 1t, so I 1ust
said, "Pract.Jc.e whenever yuu wdnt."
I've only practiced my team
twice. We practJce once d week I
think that's pretty standard.
ls lt much more dltHcult from
your point of view to organize a
school team as opposed to an AYSO
team?
Yes, it's more dilhcuJt to do school
because m AYSO, we have a better
way to get the word out. Teams
already have coaches. They're
already orgaruzed Yeah, much east-
er for AYSO.
So It's more challenging for you1
Yedh.
ls that what keeps you doing lt1
I really do enjoy pull.mg together
a tournament I did the Newport
with Tony Amsh, who's the Newport
commissioner. We basically are
working together on th.is one dS
well, but we clld the Thanksgiving
tournament for Newport AYSO dild
it's fun to put a tournament together.
It's a lot of work, lot of time on the
phone trying to get people and try-
mg to gel thmgs orgaruzed.
Every year, th.is has gotten edster
for me. The hrst year I tlld it, 1t was
homftc. I basically didn't work for
two weeks. I was talking lo people. J
had to urge people to get teams
together. I rudn't want to have a
tournament with five teams and a
group. And I didn't get the response,
so I had to call people and say, ·Hey,
get a team together. Come on I
Move! Get somebody• ·oh gee,
well, OK, maybe I'll do 1t. • Then you
don't hear from them for a week and
"Did you get one?" "No, not yet.· ·wen. get one.•
So each year, I've gotten better
organized and the fact that people
remember it from the prior year
makes it easier. Now people will call
j
SlEVE MCCRANK I DAILY PILOT
me. ThJS tournament will end June
2, and I'll get calls in July asking
"When's lhe Pilot Cup going to be
next yedr? Do you have the dates?
We were away. and we just want to
mdke surP we're not away this
Ume."
Are there going to be any
changes this year?
No. Not really The mcredse in
the number of tedms reduces the
number of gdilles that each mruVld·
udl school got to play. It's cWficult to
bracket bec.duse you don't get a set
number II you're runrung <ln AYSO
tourndment, for mstance, you say,
"OK, we're gomg to dccept up to 16
teams. The first 16 teams sign up,
and anybody who i.igns up after
lhdt, sorry, you're too late • Now it's
reaJ easy to brac.ket a 16-team tour-
nament
Well, what 1f 'rOU get 23 teams,
how do you bracket that? And that's
what we hdve in the Pilot Cup. We
don't turn dway anybody So,
you've uot to get creauve m your
bracketmg
What I dtd, for m.,tance, for fifth-
dnd sixth-grade gu:!s. we had 21
teams, we dJV1df'd into seven pools
of three tedJllS, so edch team plays
two gdmes m bracket. If you win,
you rtdvance to d quarterft.naJ, so
there will be seven winners Then,
we need an eighth team to advance
to moke 11 d good qudrterfmal, so
then we hdve a wt.Id card t.n those
seven pools lt's JUSl the way I came
up Wlth 1t
Any HnaJ thoughts?
Just agd.ln, put the word out that
all avat..lable referees show up at the
farm starung Wednesday at 3:30
p m. Just come t.n your urufonn
ready to ref. The games will start
every hour after that. 3:30, 4 :30, etc.
We have 25-rninute running halves
and a hve-minute halftime, so that
gives us 55 minutes for a game.
Then, the next teams just have to be
ready to go You can play Wl about 8
o'clock
Sex. education re.ally ought to start at home
0 n May 16, Joseph N .
Bell wrote about
what be perceived as
the failure of abstinence edu·
cation in public schools (The
Bell Curve, •New studies tell
troubling we·). He dted
studies that conVinced him
that there ls a problem with
teenage pregnancy and lta
prevention..
Bell WU right, there ll 4
teenage pregnancy problem.
ln fact, the Planned Parent·
hood study he dted Memed
to highlight Co.ta MeN'1
IOUtbwelt ~er U perhap1
the went ..... tn Orange
County. Howwver, 8eD ClOUld
not baw bMD men tncorrect
tn Im rMdba to ti-. ftnd. ....................
...._._ eo nm ... .,"""...., ~~1r
..... MlailllllCI echieatloa
Wltbout ft8D canlidertng
that it ltseU was not the prob-
lem. (By the way, should it
be surprising that the zip
code with the highest teen
pregnancy rate -92627 -
is also currently home to a
Planned Parenthood?)
Sex education, ideally,
would perhaps best be
taught at home by either a
mother and/or father or at a
place of religious teacbiog.
Honesty would be the over-
riding guide to follow and
the welfare of the dilld
would be the primary goel.
Unfortunately, UU. type of
family lituation 1a becoming
more and more rare.
Bven in the 1980I, when I
WU a n.dgling teenager, my
atngle mom did the bllt lbe
tbOugbt .... could do to help
me aloag (a IUbecdption to
Playboy and the book.
Joel Faris
SOUNDING BOARD
"Where Old l Come Prom•).
Increasingly, single parenll
are becoming more sophisti-
cated with their less~ber·
rUled teens, however, corn·
moo •n.se still suggesu that
two pereots would provide
the favorable belance.
ID respome to the current
public IChool approach to
1a education, Bell quoted e
teenager u Nying, ·we
want our IChoOll to teech
cooncepebl and bow to
dMl with ... t'omb ....
Bell9N ..... maet ._.....
(wt mmy .,......., alrwty
know euctly bow tD -pregMDt and j\lll bdw tD
•
prevent it. What they actual-
ly need is to stay at home
under the watchful eye of an
adult.
There ts really no reason
to be surprtsed that 10 many
teens a.1e getting pregnant,
considering the lax attitude
to sex and the overwhelm.lng
freedom of teenagers. Too
many young women are
be<'om1ng pregnant too
young and hinder tMlr
opportunities at higher edu·
cation and/or better career
chok:el. This, while the
young men wbo piltk:tpeted e by-making procw
oftlll oft free from .,.
and, perhapa. COO•
Unumg to .pread tb11r DNA.
Sailuold•lw9'1
eatr9Dc'e ln lbe a.... ol
• ldm, but bumaDI .. not
•
without the capacity to con·
trol themselves. ln the May
18 issue of World maguine,
Janet K. Museveni, wife of
Uganda's president, was
quoted as saying, "The
young person who has been
trained to be disdpllned
wtll, ln the final analysll,
survive better than the one
who bas been io.ltruded to
weer a piece of rubber and
continues with •buslneu u usu.I .• ,
SM Mid Udl ln responte
to tll9 Umt.d Natiom'
appoedl ol ·-.ang 000• tmmeokldl.·
WGdd NpOftld that \Jgan·
dabal..,...,...atwo-
tblrdl deJ:MN In tbl rde of
mwHIVI J1c,._cm.
---~ ..... ..... _..., .... ...
Whatever Bell wants to
teach his offspring is bis fam-
lly1s business. r, too, expect
and demand that tight over
my childreft.
Abstinence ls the only
method guaranteed not to
191uJt in pregnancy or being
lnlected with a IUUally
tranlmitted. dilea.le. lb tMcb
otherwl9e ii to take • dMlnce
l am not wtlllng to take for
the Welfare of my futwe
teeoagen and any future
grancldlildl9n.
Allow the lebook, wttb paremaa appruv.i, tD tMcll
the ldlnce at bumen repro-
dUdiaa Ud .. 1 sgerawt
bll 3
: ..... but .. tbe moral~• ma •t
bome.
1
•
10 Sunday, Moy 26, 2002
HOME
CONTINUED FROM S
inside of the house, Denise
and Jeff were able to create
backyard stations that serve
different functions. yet work
together.
A 16· by 20-foot free·
standing open-beamed cover
delineates the outdoor •uving
room.• Outdoor speakers
were installed and a light fix-
ture hung over the conversa·
tion area adds light and
whunsical formality. Adjacent
to the seating area is a large
serrucircular fountdin that·
adds 1ust the nght amount of
ambience and background
noise.
Outside the k.Jtchen door
1s d barbecue drea dfld a
ldrge tedk tdblc with stx dJn·
1ng chairs. Wllh d center
umbrella, the ldble cdil be
used Y<'dr round for casual
lamiJy d ining or overflow
seallilg when entertaLnll1g
thetr ldfge extended family
The Ludes used a n eXlSl·
tng gas hnP (leftover from a
former owner's cook.J.ng sta·
lion) as the new location of a
ltre pit. The rdised pit and
the cement bench were
St. Matthew's
Montessori
School
made-to-order by framing
the desired size for both
bench and pit and having
the cement •furniture•
poured in place.
Denise and a friend hand-
tinted the fresh concrete to
match the interior's open
beamed ceiling. They mixed
universal tints to create just
the right color and hand·
rubbed the potion onto the
freshly poured concrete
bench, fire·pit, fountain and
floor.
Cushions for the cement
bench, dining chairs and
seating area were made out
of Sunbrella fabrics to with·
sUlnd the weather. Denise
brought the same colors out-
side that sbe used inside -
reds, yellows, light greens
and aqua. The interior and
exterior flow together to give
their home added space,
dimension and functionality.
This former Northern Cali·
fomia family is looking for-
ward lo a Southern califomia
summer al fresco. It's like
having three new rooms
added to the house -extra
space to watch their flowers
and their children bloom.
• KAREN WIGHT is a Newport
Beach resident. Her col umn runs
s.mdays.
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• Extensive extracurricular programs
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WAY
CONTINUED FROM 1
the group of children and
parents in the morning of
games, crafts and history
lessons. ,
"We talked about the way
Native Americans lived on
the bay, the things they
needed to live, how they
made homes out of reeds and
willows, and for hunting,
how they needed to be quiet
and cooperative," Mcintire
said.
Daily Pilot
later used for play. Nicolas
and Jl1s group of seven
friends, visiting the center to
celebrate his birthdoy, deco·
rated round •kicking sticks"
with black markers and
kicked the m around outsid e.
The Native Americans
used to kick them for 25
miles at a time.
The boys then designed
their own totems on fla t
stones.
• "They are all projects
·that, no matter how you do
it, it comes out looking
neat,• the ranger said.
People. of the Tongva
Nation lived in the Upper
Newport Bay 200 to 2000
years ago. They spread out
all over Orange and Los
Angeles counties. from the
San Gabriel mountains to
Laguna Beach. The people
later came to be known as
STEVE MC CRANK I DAILY ~LOT
. Kids start a race of kicking sticks, which ls based on a
game Native American children would have played.
· Nicolas' mothe r Rondi
Jaber said she brought her
son and his friends to the
Interpretive, Center because
the experience is more than
just fun.
the Gabrielinos. O ther
Native-American tribes
inhabited the area up to
10,000 years ago.
They were careful not to
pick every plant they want·
ed to eat, 6-year-old Eve
Morris learned, because
they had to leave some for
the animals.
To survive, the Indians
also kept their minds active
as everyone participated in
making music, art and being
creative.
•Whether you're a good
artist or not, everybody did
art,• Mcintire told her group.
The Native Americans
also learned life skills from
playing games.
One such game was
meant to sharpen people's
hearing. The Native Ameri-
cans lived in areas with rat·
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Uesnakes, so it was crucidl
that they learn where the rat·
Uing sounds came from.
Children on Saturday
played a similar game m
pairs. One was bhndfolded.
the other shook a rattle. One
child had to locate the rattle
by ear.
·we like to do something
dilferent, but also something
that encompasses a learning
acttv1ty, • the Newport
Beach parent said. ·A
choice that the boys would
experience somelhtng dJf.
fe rent than an average
birthday party.·
"I thmk there's somelhing
intwtive about the way people
lived off the land that faso·
nates the kids.• Mclntue said
For most of the morning,
childre n made crafts they
• Young Cha"9 1s the features
and arts and entertainment writer
She may be reached at (949) 574·
4268 or by e-mail at young.chang
Ola times.com.
Jn Mnnory of Those Mm 4nJ WOmm
Who Gllw the Full mu/ Final Measure o/Thdr
Devotion for Our Freedom
Amnican Legion Newport Harbor Post 291
in ff"pmztUm with ·
Pacific View Memorial Parlt
invita :JO" to annui fix
44th Annual Service on the
143rd Official Anniversary
Memorial Day Service
Mo1J;(lay, May 27, 2002
11:00 a.m.
Pacific View Memorial Park
3500 Pm:ific Vuw Drive. Co'°"" Ml M11r. UJiforni4
949. 644.2700
I
I
BALBOA PENINSULA Support
Our
Schools
«>PEN' ~«>I.TSE
Tuesday, Friday, Saturday and Sunday• lpm to Spm .
Come and preview this new spectacular custom home, which will
truly be a landmark of Balboa Peninsula. Come and discover the
unique architectural design,
composition and craftsmanship
that distinguish Monaco Homes
from the competition.
Onlg
1
Left
-----
•
Shop Hamor:
Blvcf.ofCSS
I
. .
QUOTE OF THE DAY
"We knew going into the
series (the Anteaters) had
to sweep, but we weren't going
to let that happen .. :"
Chris Smtth, UC Riverside starter
Doily Pilot
Recall~ng
John Ikeda, ••
the patriot
His spirit will always grace
the halls of Newport Harbor.
r
W:th Memorial Day on the
calendar this week, it
prompts a fond
remembrance of the late John Ckeda,
a 1941 quarterback at Harbor High.
who was interned during World
War ll with 120,000 other
Japanese-Americans. He always
showed warm compassion for his
mates and the ones who went off to
war.
lkeda, who later came to !>erve in
the Army infantry, always honored
"his country,• the United St,,ites. dnd
flew the flag at proper limes,
according to his family.
He long remembered his old _
friends who died ln World War 11. He
would buy colorful flowers for all and
personally deliver them to their grave
sites. He also did that for h1s family.
He never forgot fnends and famtly,
his widow Margaret once said.
It.confirms what many or the
oldumers felt
about lkedd d!> d
rare human
being.
Sports Editor Roger Carlson ~ 949-57 4-4223 • Sports f ax: 949-650-0170
EYE OPENER
di Dailyft>t 1111
. ports Hall or f &rnl'
May 27 honoree
BIU PIZZICA
Sunday, Moy 26, 2002 11
BOYS nNNIS
Snyder,
Ball win
CIF title
CdM tandem wins every
postseason match in straight
sets, capped by Saturday's
victory in finals over Los
Alamitos opponents.
Richard Dunn
DAILY PILOT
llUNTINGTON. BEACH -Corond del
Mdr l hgh 1unior Cidrrett ,.
Snyder ii.n't mtere'>lt•d m •
going ford thn·e·pedt
next Yt'dt in doublc·s. c>ven
though no ont:> in lhC' 80-yedT h1'>tory of
the CIF Southern <;<.·cllon 10d1v1dudJ
boys tcnni'> chdmpion!>htp'> hd'> done it
beforP
•I'm def101tely qomq to pldy '>mgles
next yPM 1m the po'>t'>Cd'>on)." Snyder
Sdld dfler "inmny ht'> '>t-cond '>lrd1ght
CIF doublt·'> t1tlc th1'> t1 m(• with
frcshmdn lP.dnlnldl<• Cdr'>tc•n Brtll
Two of hlS '41
team favonte!>
were legenddry
fullbdck Harold
Shefim and the
rock-nbbed
tackle. Mdnuel
Munlz.
OAll.Y PILOT PHOT JS llY 1£ JE I/I RAt;1
UC Riverside base runner Brian Wahl brink (7) crashes into UCI first baseman Matt Anderson ( 17).
The runner was out for interference, but it didn't really slow Riverside down, which never trailed.
Snyder dnd Bdll d lell·hdndcr were
!,Ceded :-..o I entl'nng Fndd~ \ Round
of lb dl SedC:l1ll Tt•nni'> Club dnd
continued thPir po.,l'><•dwn m11c,t1·ry on
Sdturddy, deledbng '>t•nior. John Mdno
dnd Jd'>On \\ood ol Lo'> J\ld!ll1lo'> m thE'
hndb. b-3, 7-S. the tough<"•l <h<1ll('nge
of the po!>l!>Cd!.On for the Cdf\I tdndem
Don Contrell
SIDELINES
Although he
was a smaJJ fellow
up from lhe Bee
team to boost a
13-man varsity, he gedfed up for the
big guys his first day at pracbce, only
to find two of them, Sheflin dnd
Mwtlz. grabbing him on the way out
to Davidson Field and canying him
the rest of the way. Ikeda once
laughed to recall, "They did that au
the time, not just once.•
Years later, Shentn pointed a
thumb at fkeda and told thlS comer,
"He used to be small.•
Ikeda was amused and said. "l'U
have to wear elevator shoes next
time."
Ikeda only weighed 124 pounds
when he played varsity. It IS
int~sting to recall that Ikeda was a
lineman on the Bee team and his Bee
mate, Ed Stephens, who moved to
varsity with him as a guard once
played left fullback on the Bee team.
1Wo other middieweights were
called to the varsity by the coach,
Wendell Pickens, who then had 17
players to play out an entire season.
He could never afford heavy
scrimmages due to injury concerns.
Stephens, a running guard next
to Muniz, once recalled his
newspapering days prior to World
War U. He sold the Herald on the
streets of Balboa with Billy Dickey,
who became a three-year baseball
letterman at Harbor High.
He said, •They were three cents
each and the front page was green.
Billy showed me how to rold the
paper with your right hand as you
took it from beneath your left arm so
SEE SIDELINES PAGE 12
Time sout Snyder, who won the CIF doubles
chdmp1onstup la.st yedr with thC'n·wruor
Bnan f\lorton (now dt UC' lrvulC'), dnd
Bdli cru1wd to lhC' hndl'> with d b· 1. fi.
I semlf1ndl win ovc•r Jon Rubf'n'>t<'m
dnd Jdffil"• ThdyN of l larvdrd·
WesUdke. Anteaters' postseason
hopes appear to vanish,
as UC Riverside wins, 8-2.
Steve Virgen
DAILY PILOT
ANTEATER
BALLPARK
Sometimes
despeWtion is not
enough, especially
when UC River-
side junior Chns
Smith is pitching, SCOlllOUD
and especially uc Riverside a
when the frantic Antleetlln 2
UC Irvine baseball
team bas trouble
ending the third and eighth innings.
Visiting Riverside (30-27, 10· 13 m
the Big West) and Smith set a cloud
over llvine's post.season hopes with an
8-2 Big West victory Saturday, which
featured Smith's recordbreaking
night. With today's game the last of
the regular season, the Anteaters (32·
26, 13-t O} dropped down to fifth rn
the Big West. as Cal Poly defeated UC
Santa Barbara, 10-9, to regain fourth
place. Irvine's best scenario is a fourth-
place finish.
Smith, a right-handed pitcher.
notched his Big West-leading eighth
complete game and broke the school
single-season record for stnkeouts
(127). as he fanned 15 Anteaters to
also break the UCR single-game
record for strikeouts. Smith, who
logged 143 pitches, improved to 9-8
and provided. his coach. Jack
Smitheran, with tus 900th win.
Third baseman Steve Guthrie
throws to first under duress.
"You have to give Snuth a lot of
credit.• UCI COdch John Savage said.
"He came out and dominated us.
Whenever you get dominated like
that, you have to play perfect baseball
dnd we didn't. We gave them a couple
of runs early. I think Smith is one of
the best pitchers m the (Big Westl
dlld his numbers show that."
The Highlanders grabbed the
eMly momentum Wlth a four-run two-
out rally in the third. and then sealed
the wm w1th d three-run two-out rally
m the eighth.
Meanwhile, Srruth did not allow a
hit unbJ after 4'/J inrungs wben Alex
Gdscon ctupped a base hlL.But. Smith
ended the mmng with his eighth
tnkeout
·we knew going into the series
(the Anledters) bad to sweep, but we
weren't going to let that happen,"
Smith said. "We're the better team
and I thmk wt· '>howl'Cl thdt tonight."
The Antcdler'> collt>clcd three of
their !.ix hit'> in th(• eighth inning.
when they !>cored two run'> with two
outs. UCI hr!>t bd!>t'mdn Mdll
Andt>rson pounded out d two-run
smgle lo '>Cor(' Gregg WdLII'>, who
doubled, and B.J Eucce, who '>tngled
Then. Chm. Klemm cdme up Lo
bat, and on h1'> <,econd '>tnkc. UCI
assistant coach Jdson G11J de.puled
the cd ll dnd Wd'> c1ectPd Smith
finished Klemm with d '>lnkt•out
Smith hdd hv<' !>tnkeoul'> to end
mrungs. mcluchnq the• ninth
Irvine. on the other hdnd, dealt
with pitching problems coming into
the gam<' In ddd1t1on, UCI freshman
Michael Koehler took the bdli for hlS
first Big West '>tdrt and could not la5l
past the tturcl mnmq, q1vmg up lour
runs. Frcshmdn Jon Koller went the
next 4111 innings, aUowmg one run.
"(Glenn) Swanson (elbow) and
(Paul) French (bdck mui.cle in1ury)
are not on the 25-man (roster),"
Savdge said. "We are very lim1lt~d on
our (pitctung) opbon'> The onJy other
option might have been (to startl
Koller I really believe thoo;e quy!> did
a ruce JOb. If we make some pldy!>
early m thot game, (the score) 1'>
probably 1·0 gorng into the eighth •
The senes wrdps up today dl 1 pm
llG WIST CONffHN<t
UC Riv9tsa I, UC~ l
SclofW ~ Innings
UC Riwmde 004 100 O)O • 8 10 0
UC IMne 000 000 020 • 2 6 3
Smith and Arodenotl, Koehler, Koller (3),
Raullnaitis (8), Schroer (8), Tt1polt (9) end Mill«
W ·Smith,~ L Koehler. 0-3 28 Se\& (R),
filUllcM< (R) HR • Arodenotl (R), Emmons (R)
"Thetr rt·dl good mdtch Wd.., the1r
semifindl wm." CdM C0<1ch Tun t--1.:tng
said "They pldyed excellent tenm'> "
Mdno dnd Wood, the No J '><'Cd,
defeated !>e<'Ond-seeded Gd!Tett Leight
d1ld Jonathdn Dutton ol Beverly Hill'>
4·6. 6-3, 6·4, in the othN '>Cm1hndl
"It Wd'> no '>urpn.sc to pld} (Mdno
and Woodl m the hndl'>. even though
they 'Erp not '><'l'dc·d "Jo 2. • Snyder
o;aid I ttunk the two bc..,t tedm'> in the
toum t pldyecl un th<.• fmdh) -
Bali dnd Snyder did not lo'>e d '>el m
20 posl'>ed!>On setr, Wlth thetr I 0-0 mark
in five PaaJ1c Coast LeaguP mdtches
and 1dent1cal record m the CIF
indlv1dual champ10nc;tup
Snyder. who pldyNi No. 2 smglc>S for
Corona del Mar dunng the regular
!>eason. won the mtrr..cholasbc doubles
tJUe this year at the Qiai Valley Tennis
Tournament with CdM c;en\or and
Uruversity of Anzond·bound Cdmeron
Ball, who played No. I -.mgle!> for the
Sea Kings but nuc;!>ed the PCL Finals
becau!>e of dn ear mlection.
Snyder became the 12th player m
history to capture bock-to-bdck CIF
doubles titles. but only the sixth to
accomplish the feat with d1ffc rent
players.
Carsten Bdll ~ the first fre hmdn to
win a CIF doubles chdmp1on tup sm<'e
Parker Collins of La Canada tn I <}96
CoU·lOS, now at USC, later tran ferrE'd
toCdM.
Snyder and Ball became the seventh
CdJ-.1 doubles team to win a ClF cham-
pionship. Jim Curley and Jordan
Otterbem won CIF doubles btles for
the Sea King m 1975 and '76
Paul Smolinski
..
Fourth-year Anteater men's golf coach has revitalized ---~-v·--
program, while gaining peer recognition at the same time.
Even though Smohnslo won the Coach of
the Year award, he credits bls players for the
team's uccess. Coaches of the nine Big
Tie first creek at coaching has gone
airty well for Paul Smolinslcl. In just
our years, the 32-year-old men's
golf cooch at UC lrvme has led the
Anteaters to consecutwe Big We t
Conference champlonshlp1 the last two
seasons. along wtth being named Big W t
Conference Coach of the Vear for the second
straight year this seuon.
The team's conference champaonship In
2001 was the program'• tint m 23 years.
The Anteaten completed tbetr 1eUOn
Saturday at the NCAA We.t RegtonaJ
championShlpt b\ Albuquerque, N.M.,
ftnWdng 22nd.
Smolinski led the tM119 lo lbe NCAA
Chempnnthlpl ln 2001 aftlr tbi AW
lh!Mlwd tblrd m the NCAA~ ....
----lbat~.---ClMf"ltlng the '8UI. ...... -· .....
gOlf •
We t schools vote for the Coach of the Year.
·obviously rm exoted to recesve an
award given by my peers, that they think
I'm dolJlg a good job Wlth the program,"
Smolinski said •1t was grabfyi.ng at the
same time. The guys do all the work. Th4.11
performance allows me to look good.•
The Anteaters won the conference title
by 13 shots over secood-place Peciflc et
Serrano Country Club ln El Dorado Hill~.
April 22-23.
Smolinski credits reciUiting what he CAili
•quality playen and quaUty peopae· .. tbe
main l'MIOD .. prognun ... ~
ia.el In tbe Wt two HMOM.
• 1 Mt out to do (recndllng) trolli the
vM-90· ud ti tumed out....., well..
~ ..... ..,,.. ............ ..., .. IOG:d lad , ...SFOl•*-goll
•
'SPORTS' • I
Doily Pilot 12 Sunday, May 26, 2002
Costa Mela"I Sprt:De
Seled AYSO boys
undel'-12 team WM
unbNten ln league play
and won twice In tbe
playoffs before being
ellmlnaled. Centered.
In front: Toay Flores.
Kneeling, from left:
Amir Nastri. Ramln
Tasblbdd, Ulo Apllar,
Gabe Sancbn, M&tt
Glascock, Joe
Brancheau, Rk~y
Saldana. Stancling,
from left Coach Dennil
Dlslnger, MartUn
Angulo, Daniel Saldana,
Jnan Guadarrama, VU
Vega, Jaybenny Quiroz,
Andrew Nlles, Coach
Andre Branceau. Not
pictured: Cesar Amador.
COLUGE TRACK
Magana sparkles
OLATHE. Kan. -Three
Vanguard University track and
field athletes completed their
seasons at the NAIA Outdoor
Track and Field Championships
over the weekend in.Olathe, Kan.
"Former Orange Coast
College and Estancia High
runner Tony Magana crossed
the finish line six1h in the men's
10,000 meters (3 1 :30.24), short
of h is qualifying mark of
31:28.51.
Junior Sarah Hall placed
16th 'in the women's 10,000
(39:45.33), after entering the
event with the 10th-best
qualifying time of 38:23.02.
Nicole DeRoin of Has tings
College won in 37:20.38. Beth
Weidler cleared 5-2 •/• to tie
for 12th in the women's high
jump.
SMOLINSKI
CONTINUED FROM 11
course.•
AYSOSOCCll
SIDELINES
CONTINUED FROM 11
you could hand the customer
the paper and cup your hand
for the three cents an at once.''
He added, ·u you had to
make change, you were OK as
long as you could do it from
your right-hand QOCket. Wb.en
they gave you a dollar it meant
putting down your papers. A
dollar for a three-cent paper
was a big deal, lots of change,
mostly in pennies.•
He said, "I remember the
excitement when the trucks
came down from L.A. with
extras earlier or later than the
usual delivery time. We would
roam around the streets of
Balboa shouting, 'Extra and
Extry and -J had seen this in a
movie -Wuxtry, Wuxtry' and
people would come running
over to buy all our papers and
it was all very exciting. You
would think I would
remember what some of the
extras were but I don'l I was
too young to understand what
all the shouting was about, but
it seemed important at the
time.•
One highlight in travel time
came to Stephens once on a •
long flight. One pilot passed
by bis seat and suddenly said,
#Well, Eddie.•
. Stephens said, "It was Billy
Dickey.•
Dickey was an outstanding
Navy fighter pilot in World
War U and was honored
numerous times. His younger
brother, Don, a '48 basketball
guard at Harbor High, recalled
the many efforts.
Sadly, Billy contends
today from Alzheimer's
Disease, but is well cared for
in Dana Pt>int.
molding this golf team.
The players also spend time in the weight
room, lifting weights and strengthening their
conditioning on ihe treadmill or stair climber.
Smolinski encourages bis team to play what
he calls "percentage golf.·
Golfers Nick Asbrock, Mike Lavery, Brandon
Murray. Kevin Stevens and Nate Yates were
honored as Big West Scholar-Athletes at the
teain's annual banquet May 13:
"We try to eliminate the bi~ number,• he
said. "We try to get the ball in the widest part of
the fairway, playing conservative shots to
eliminate slighting ourselves on the greens.•
Requirements for this award include
maintaining a 3.0 GPA over three quarters or a
3.2 GPA over two quarters for freshmen.
Student-athletes must also earn letters in their
sports.
On the course, Smolinski said the team
usually practices five.times a week, either
hitting balls on the range or playirtg a round.
But that's not all the work that goes into
Smolinski schedules weekly practices and
tournaments, recruits players, fund raises,
travels with the team to tournaments and
instructs golfers at a UCI summer camp for
players ages, 7-17, who vary in abilities from
beginner to more advanced.
Some of the UCI golfers have their own
instructors who work on the player's swing,
Smolinski said.
I
One of the unfortunate
happenings in 1934 was when
the sophomores at Harbor
High lost the annual War
Whoop to the freshmen,
beaded by future grid stars
Rollo McClellan, Glenn
Thompson, George Lumel and
Ralph Irwin.
The sopbs chose to avenge
the upset.
McClellari said he and a
bunch of frosh were gathered
up and tossed into the back of
a pickup truck and driven to
Huntington Beach. He said the
student body president, Judd
Sutherland came along to
make certain the sopbs kept
the rough stuff under control.
The sophs finally stopped
and forced the frosh to take
some Ex-Lax, then forced .
them out to walk home.
McClellan laughed, then
said, HWe survived, but Judd
didn't. The vice principal took
him out of his student office.•
YOUTH socaR
It's just arotind the corner
MAY 29-JUNE 2
P1UNCE Of PEACE MTlllOTS
Girls grades 5-6
Julie HUbbard
AllyWebb
• Hannah Schmidt
Ale.x cameron Briana Williams
Alissa Salvati
Natalie Plascencia Rebecca Alward
Chelsea Pumphrey
Madeline Stade Tiffani Chol
~nel.opez
\Nhitnev Seartey
Kayla McComb
Coldt: Dan Stade
MAY 29-JUNE 2
MNUNERs SEAHAWICS
Boys grades 3~
Peter Ngyyen
Cailen Sulliven
RY.an Mc:Kennon
Billy Martinez
Grant Bissell
Sean Mangano
Kevin wright
John PaulTumball
Brandon Parole
Richard De. St Jean
Coby Peterson Cory Hanley Amin Tavakoli
Jack Robison
Garrett Heiser
Edgar Vargus Oay Friend
Taylor Friend
Ben Swift
Tobin 01.son
Eduardo Gonzalez
c.o.ch: Randy Parole
'
MAY 29-JUHE 2
~amsnAN DCUl-Bavs grades 3-4
OougRoot •
BradWebster
Christian Andenon Kvle Beane Alex Bekken
Nick Brewer
Drew Diller
Michael Gills Ryan Grable casey Jones
Cole McCrea
Brandon McHugh
Austin Metzger
Chase Nugent
Preston Rfsser
JD Root
Reed Russell
Cole Vanc:e
Austin Webster
eo.ches: BradleV Webster
and Doug Aoot
PikiCu 1Jmp
MAY 29-JUNE 2
KAISER KNIGHTS 11
Girls grades 5-0
Crystal Mena
Alexandra Mc:lntosh
Katie Kay
Chelsea Head
Carly Ruiz
Alesha Young
Tia Shefffette
Caprice \Nhite
Alice Cope
MeganMuoce
Malia Hohl
Shelby Porter
Cayla Porter
Emily Olhaver
Coldt: Kirtt Mc:lntosh
"Obviously we want them competing and
we want them working on their game full
lime,· Smolinski said. "They're at this level
because they're committed to the game. It
doesn't take a lot of coercing on my part.•
senior out of Yorba Linda.
Prior to joining UCI four years ago, Smolinski
was the head golf professional at Coto de Caza
Goll &'Racquet Club.
That's when former UCI men's golf coach
and current director of golf at the school, 1Wo UCI golfers, juniors Lavery and
Jeff Coburn, qualified for the California
Amateur Goll Championship at Pebble Beach
Golf Unks and The Links at Spanish Bay June
17-22.
Junior Ryan Armstrong won the Big West
Conference individual title, edging Coburn and
Pacific's Matt Hanson in a three-way playoff,
after all three had finished with a 7-under-par
209 for the three-day tournament.
The Anteaters lose only one senior, Kevin
Stevens. and Smolinski has been busy
recruiting, signing two players, a junior college
transfer from Mission Viejo and a high school
Jeff Johnston, told Smolinski he would be
leaving the position. Smolinski hadn't coached
a team before.
"l was excited about the opportunity and
maybe was a little nervous with exactly what to
expect,• Smolinski said. •But things have gone
well and I'm sure happy I made the decision
now.•
When he isn't recruiting, coaching and
instructing at tbe golf camp, Smolinski
likes to fish and spend time with his family.
Smolinski and wife, Lesli, live in Rancho Santa
Margarita.
Index llowto~A
g .... • .... 91.
...... ,
NOTICE OF
INVmNG BIDS
CfTY OF
NEWPORT BEACH
MOORING PERMITS
J·714 ANO K-14,
OFF·SHORE
MOORINGS RATED
FOR 35' ANO ~1-~0 S-81, AN ON-:>HUHE
MOORING RATED 18'
ANO UNDER.
Sealed bide may be reotlved at lht ofllct of
lhe City Clerlc. 3300 Newport Boulevard,
P.O. Box 1768, Newport
Buch, CA 92668-8~15 until 11:00 AM on the
30th of MAY 2002, at
wtllch lllM luctl bids
thaH be oC**1 and
rHd.
...... 8'0
M,ooo RIA M1
tl,000 FOR Jo714
MCI ~14
The Cl1Y of NtwpOft
8Mctl ,...,_ lht """ 10 rlfld Ill bide. A 25"lt. ~ mutt llCCIOm• pany 'MCll bid.
~ due on Of betota MONDAY, JUNE
3, 2002 fOf !tie IUC•
CIMflA blddet. Celhlel'I ct** (J( credit card
only. Proepectlvt blddtf'I
1MY vllw Mooma J.714
1nd K·14, located bay1111rd from t tfh
81rMt. ~ 8-11 II on 8oull 8jy t:ront,
8llbol llland. F« fldier lnf1111n1llon a.II w.. Armand .. .......... ..,. -.,. ..... ., .:.,.,.~
a.~.-=: D.ilr PlaC • 22-0" M. •.• .!!! !!!!~
~ EOUAl HOUSING
OPPORTUNITY
All real esUlte ldvtftlslng In this newspaoer Is aubjecl to tilt ftcleral Fair HouslnQ Act ot 1968 11 amendtd
which 1111kes It llltgal to 1dwrtlse •any prefe11nce, Qmltatlon or dhcflmlnltlon blMd on race.-CO!or, rellg·
Ion, .... hlndie.ii. familial Ntus or nlllonal origin, or
an Intention to 1111ke any
such prlflrtoce, llmltatlon or dltcrtmlnatlon. •
TN1 newspaper will nol knowingly 1cc1p1 any advtrtlaement tor rul
""''' which Is In vtolltJon ot tilt law. Our rtldefs are
htrtl>y Informed IMI Ill
dWtllingt ldYeftlMd In this llfWSPIPlf 111 avalabll on
an tQUal~ oc bills . To com n of dilcrlml-n&llon, HUD toll•lrlt 11
MIOCM24-8590. ,
LM.,_OI ._. ................ :='..::
I
• -·-!;I -....
Cl ---
1·:n1
R£DUC£D 1171.000 48r 381, lg din rmlartL
Frplc'a In t.I & din nn. ll'dl·
In cloMCa. Thert .,. many ·~ tr-lining llw dodc. 2 car 111actt gar. 1.1.300,000
MelMa c.I 818-970-3232
Kim Bt11on olllet
818-242-6854
Cell 818-335-7832 ltonw olllc! 818-2ti138
• -·-Gil -la -·-
OASSIFIEhJ&D
.,, .... e
(1>41.1) O.ot:.!·5'· 71\
By MlllHll Pea M
~ ... ,.,., e.. ... s.,..,.., c..,..,. 1'>"-. {JJI 'l'lC'.127 "~"'·~•llo1llo ....
r . ··~ ~···-;
'.i;. . . :i
t ' ... ·. ..· '"
(
-T..J'"'_..., s.:~o.,,._o;,oo,,m _..., ....... ~
W1tlk-ln U::m,..,.,......,00,,.,. "'_..,....,....,
....
< • It. -I ro" ~ j... ...... ~
,_. .. . ..
.\Ji:f: ., ...
-------o...lllne8 -------
Momi.., ............ f'ri.U)' 5:00pm Fritlay .......... Th1uwJa7 S:OOpm
1\u-Jay ......... Mon<.lay &:()Opt1l S.Wmay ........... Friflay a:OOpm
W..Jne.Mlay .... Tltf'Mlay S:OOpm Sund.ay ....... ,-••. f'rid~ S.<>Opm
Thu......Jay .. Wcrlne.<lay 5:00Jvn
t~--:
• , I ~I
. t' .. ,. """
·•· ... ~ '.: :• ·~ ! l .. '..? -~ -t· •
CloM to the Beech
2br, 2be. \ C8r .,....
, SllOO-SltSO
Ag! MM13=7800
•NEAR N£WPOR'T PIER•
3br, 2bt pertdnQ. $2100/M(), ~
ARI 14H73-7800
.... MANAGERS
• SPECIAL• S20 OFF WltH AO
(Muel P""l1I .. Ad) 235""9 &~ 6'tulled on btlutitulty landaped groundl
FEAl\JRES 24~
lobby/Direct dlal
pho1*1Fr1e HBO, ESPN I OiecJPoot & Jacuu1. GUHi 11~
dry Cloel to 405& 66 ~ ....,., llom oc
Fllfllrdt. c:ottege and
belle Walking dlt·
llnct IO shops and r111auran1s
COSTA ME~ MOT~ INN 2217 tMlt)or Blvd
Phone 14M45-4&40
HUlf'l'INOTON HACH *******•••Jt-Jt-Jt.•** P~~ 8lclgl * SHORES INllRIORS * ~9;A ·! FAIULOUSUQUIM110N ! -~-:,-1 .. .., ... =,.:..~=E=-'=-! H:!E! !
rated Days 94H45-6680 *• -11#1!.r ey . J . 1 ** Evt!l\!!!!!!!d! t'H7S.7175 r~ ~
<:-. ....., a.-. lilYtt * Wk.Jo.er Raflill), Lan1>'i. Actes.sones... *
olllce. &NI 1 .... .,,., * * mo. lftdlldet u11. a-2640 Avon S1rce1
rour own P1lnt ind * N<wport Beach *
Catp!linl. 71....,.., * 04f RI~ a Pac:lfk• coast tfWy * * 949-642-2255 * **************~*
PMM M~n Sl Loce~ A=:~ , .,,_.,
Applox 2000lq II. IVd now. no., 11111 8t SllMil ~1 .... -------
$1.75 per aquere IOOI C-. ..... Plwwllw, EARN INCOME' FROtl
t'H5().3234 0/~5074 Illy 21111, M~. HOME VOA¥ own 1Minea!
E'Slde CM Twnhrll Plol'I I r ce11coplef, • Mlll-«der/internet Full
1eme1e 1>1.rd. c1ean. IM rm1 I a LOIT a PC'" MACS, .. 1l'lbla a Sl4lPOlt-F• lt'llo be. oar. W/O. rVplta S7tXVm FOUND ~ ~=' wwwffich11Su1ure2002.eom
llMch blocll June 02"°3 t th * 94!§4H065 • ·~ 11111 ....._ !00=4!H14t 3br 21111 h ,dtllJMvm. ______ _. ._.bendl.-dolle.COlll SALES POSITIOHS ~2; '*:"',.~ ss::" ~!~ I * ro-m:I: I ;'~AAOY2! ~:T,:-:, m .. 2wn1 :...~ ~ =
5154IOI 702-4ft..t903 • • ...... gan. """'ton errlor I I 2loM E COllt Hwy. Corona
;n'U Don .. ~ -"" Oii ....... Wiii nln.
l)oofw snor.. 58J U BI NP8 ,.. Hoeg Shlr't 2br r-------. LiftllOCI call ~
2.400 "· being ~ 2bl • S64Ctmo I 1f2 utl 1440 ~ I Mil '°' Johnnr CK Liii Reedy July 1. S400Clt'lno. Ct 11 t 41 • e 77 • 12 0 8
Chllttlnt MH42-ot73 149-722·1921 FOii SAL! Locel ldnenl. cata. doge tor Nlgtn Auditor/Front Ottk
• • edopllol1 11111 Of lhinl. -V lor Travel l..Ddge in C.M. I -11-v• I 3-STEEl BUILDINGS s.t-Sun ~ Flilhlon w• tlwn. ~ Ill person -FORAOOMIRENT /llEI AU 24w32 was $7,280. 1111 l&tand AHll,W. NETWORK 949-650-2999
$3.480, 30x56 WU $13,900, Into '*444-2271 1111 SS,890, 501110 was www.1nlmatnetworll.org Now Hiring! Ruetr l'.ac.n
$26,900. se1 $13,900 Belt FREE IO DAY WEB ~ Front dt9ll &
Udo IUt dti.c:ned SluCllo 111 Beldl blodl Wldy 3fJr a., Otter• Must Sell• Walt UST1HG FOR DOGS ooddlll~ ~ 2735 W. otcltf ocean front home B«t 2 c ..... J • 1eoo••t"·7I03 MM51-4eOI COllt ~~-3431 ba & canarale rec rm $685 ....,119, une-.. "9. -~ • -.... S2000lwll t dtp, Mtl •PERSONAL TRAINER• Oclc11 lllllene, CFA, 1or Corone Del Mir leave rnest 94~51·1122 S1WIOI 702-4tt-9903 .. ,------, 441/C~ We'll help you write _ .
· a good adl
~0:-=~ t1c111t14H7~~87 Liu
Im !pC!l!!d. -.m.1173
.lust call us and we'll malte it easy for youl
'\ t TMUu"Pilot C lassified ' ~!i'M1 .. (949) 642-5678
TODAY'S PUZZLE SOLVED
.. -"' ., ,._ .. . . . . ..
COWUTEA AllllTAMCE
• your PICll • your "°"" or OHtCE. lndiv1clu1I Colchlng. lnltfNI Set Up, Softw1t1, T IOIJbttthoollng Web OeeiQI\ I/Id more .,.... M-12H112
IT IHOULD If Ml
~~ -.......,.
•• .-•.,& L.• .. I
RESTAURANT WANTED 2 c.i. 10 1DWto hm 0renge & ...... Celico t ero.w 4yrs. Til\UES fixed, doo'c:hld tnencly, II· !l feelionatt"I ..... ~.
HEAD LINE COOKS otc:t.r S~e Furniture
PIANOS & Collectibles
$$ CASH PAID $$ I• ma:'& 1 :: ~ s~!=r
• • Island 111 Newport Belldl
or.~Ot~ .....
WE BUY ESTATES COAST COii HEEDS
OLD COIHSI Gold, s.IYe!.
jt!Wllry. waldles, ltlbqUe5,
collectitliet 949-642-944 7
TOP SUIAECORDSJ
Jui, R & 8. Soul. Rock
etc 501 & 601 MIKE 949-MS-7505
.:64M922e 1 ·11~ I
SOUTH COAST AUCTION
2202S.. ... St. a.. AM. CA t2'107 t...rdla•l ...... c..A•'6il
1454 RRl1\ME I
CHINA HVTCtt f l( x 4ft
E.cellent condrtton S39S Obo94~
" Alln: WC1111 ITOfn Home
Our kids come to wOlll e1111y
up IO $500-7Klmo PT IF"(
800-83!>-0301 Free 1!oc*1et
www.ex1remecuhnow com
BEAUTY
M1nlcurl1t PT/fT
Georgette Klinger
Salon 714-850-1212 br
fax res to. 714-aSO-Ol 14
has •~al
CJpllOrt\Jnlbll tor Head Line
Cooks at OUf ~. 1151..pac:ed ,....._.. (lulj.
rited candldattt wlll hive pre1110Us expe,.ence with
superv111ory reaponsibil~1es
Both AM/PM shrtls avlll-
11>11 C.( 949-644-2223 10
ld*""8 111 .,.,..,_ EOE
DAILY GRILL
A CAL. VIN Kl.OWOLO Perfume routes Jom lhl
tetm1 Oo you~ $15()1(?
You coutdl 85 local sites
Free ......
•·•00·611-0111, 2.411
1· ·-=I
IREAL ESTATE I
.d .... Ron ~Young
N~
Ustill&J t'.1'<Jllabl~!
714-4.12-7873 .... ..,.,.......~
Sunday, Moy 26, 2002 13
-. .. . . ... . . .. ·_ ~~
Wedding
Experts
...... loll!? Oo6d crtdll, ... _. llO,.,......
-"
9 tot • low lntert1t rete. Cell 1 ...... 275-tatl
(No !Pr!!!!! F.-}
ctASStFIEO (9'49)5"42'5878
HOWCASE.·
'J<each 42,000 'l<eaders in XeOJporl Jleacb,
Corona def'Jl(ar, 9CeaJporl Coasl, Cos/a J/(esa
7Jon 'I J!(iss Ou! On I.his C£ance lo
promole y our experience in /his fi eld/
Our WJeddin9 JboflJC<J.fe
?u6/icafion 7Jafe: 72.Jednesday, ;June I 91 2002
Jpace l Copy 1Jead/ine: lVednesday, ;June 12, 2{)()2
7/Juerforia/7Jead/ine: Wednesday, ;June I 2, 2{)()2
Camera 'i<eadyl'i<efease 1Jeadline: 'Jriday, !/une f.J. 200!.' , '
°'1~11Pilot ANN IE
~-(949) 574-4249
READY WHEN YOUAREJ
Low Rates. Since 1981
~
PUBLIC
NOTICE
The Calif Public,
Ullhtlu Com-
mission REQUIRES
that all used hoille-
hold goods ITIOYel'I
prinl lhtlr P.U.C.
Cail T 1U11b1t: imol and chauffers pMt
lhelr T.C.P. nunblf
ln ll~lll
If you hrte. ~
llOfl .._ 1he llOlf-
lly of • mo.. ho
Of chlul'ltf, cal:
PUBllC UTILmES
COMMISION
714-558-4151
~'JJdte. .
~Professional
Painting
Uc.~
latakr/Eitem
Deo•4M,..,
C*llekldne
Rob !$bell , Owner
Costa Mesa. Ca
(949) 646-3006
Cell 949-887-1480
c::llullt'• ,... mr .. GIHI Ptlcel GuaranlM WOii( , FIM Etl L'375802
71H38-1634 7fJ¥():?9!5
CUSTm ,MNTltO
nMMiorll&. clNn. quellly tnterlolt.I end docb
t!H31~19
·~-
. : . ·~'
..... ., ...............
PRlOCAltNO
ILIC1"aONIC MM LIM llftlC'TION
~ ........
675-9304
I* -='~I
Ollcl .... Orgwai.!01
r~~:nisi:
l'tOmtlotta P!~23IO
lm IUUTES I _ ..._ COllTROL _
P£ST cc.rnMJt.
As low As •r famHyOwned
St. Lie ProZ42 I
,/
26,2002
A~SDIU.GHT
But-Wal vulnml>le. Soudl deilt.
NORTH
• KJ1'5 . c;:;>'
0 143
• AKJI
The biddin :
SOt11'H ~EST 1• ~ ~ .... .... ....
AAST ·~10 3 <:? '43
<> J f2
•Q9l
NORTH EAST
:JV .... .......
Opming lead: King or <>
Suc:cunul declarcn ll'C pessimists
who llways bem" in mind MUl)ily's
Law: If somedling bed can happen, it
will! Declarer lhou,hl th.at four
1plldcs would be a sJJTiple conlIICt.
bul failure to take due care proved
upensive. North 'a thrce-healt cue-bid showed
a limit raise or better in s!>ldcs. The
vulnerability wl.'I wrong for East to
oonlmlplare 1ny ICtion ll1d North-
Soudl duly came to rest in four
"E ,,..,., " mpl;V1ee.
"Empleado."
"Arbeitnehmer. "
"Employe."
~led die kiQa ~ dilmoodl llld
Soudl ... dclilJ*d wltb 1hc dwsny lhlr..,.,.. _<Ill • lood dly. -12 .-iCb ~ pouibie. Dllc:lllw wcm lbe openlna lad in hMd nl c-'*I
lbe .cc « 11P9des. Welt'• hall1 db-cG'd WU I (ilow, Now eidler I lllC-
c:a&ful cit.lb r .. or In endplly
would be ICQuircd IO 111\d 10 trfcb, lni1 South aarted out on the endplay
by WUnt widl I diamond. • Thls WU oot IO be declarer'a dly.
Welt defended well by wlnnina Ind diiJ\ina to I club, tiUn In dummy
widl t6e ldna. Declarer aoin aiWd
with 1 diamond, but West's club mum forced doclarer iruo the fineue
-down one.
A sUghl dlaoF in liming was all
Ulll WU required to act home.
Declarer muat allow the klng of dia-
monds IO win the first trick. A club
shift now does not help the defenx u
the canla lie, since lhe Iona club pro-v ides 1 parting spot for one of
Soulh's diamonds. Aswming a dia-mond coalinualion, declarer wins,
cashes the ICC of spedcs 11\d, on find-
ing the 3--0 split. Ctihes lhe ICC of beliu 11\d ruffs I heart in dununy bef~ eJtiting wit}) a diamond. After
winninf the club llhift wilh lhe king,
king o spldes IOd anOOier throws
East on lead where the defender must
eilher yield a rufT-sluff or lead a club
into the table's A J tenaee.
•llATIEI •YlllA!.'L DUlllEllM •n.
~ ... ir.T~":' CALL , .... ,...... ,.., cg
..
.~ J •
1113 DUffV
Slut & Whit. I owner,
Ul:llllenl COldlonl '10,llOO ......
SCHOCK HAMOR 20
WhMI Hull S17,000.
714-tlt-0211
W1nted IOft •llp In Newport Hll1>or tor Hatllfl&
59()11 Aaller. local prlvlll
OWJ!!! 71WIZ-12!0
What
happens if
you don't
advertise?
NOTHING.
Call the
Classifieds
(949)
642"5678
NOnCa Oii INVlneQ ..
a'TVOI NIWPORT 9IACH ~Q NIWIT ,,_114 W IM4
O,, ... HORE MOORINGa Mtm
FOR_. AHO 40'
AND l-t'lt.~!L Oft. IHORE llU!lmlNG RATED 11' AND
UNDER
S..i.d bide may bt r9CllVed at the ofllce of
Ille City Cieri!, 3300
Newport Boultvtrd, P.O. Box 1788, Nt1WDOt1 BHctl, CA 92658-8015
until 11 :00 AM on lht Ml dlly of MAY 2002,
lit wtlldl twne M:tl bldl
lhell bt opened Ind reacl.
11 .... UM BIO 14,000 fof 1-11 ... ooo J-714
Ind K-14 The City of Newport
8tlctl llMIWI lht right
to reject Ill bldl. A 25%
depo9h mult accom·
ptny tlCh bid.
8alanet dut on °' be1o1a MONDAY, JUHi! 3, 2002 tof lht IUC-
ctllflll bidder Cuhltrl
check or crtdlt card onfy.
Prospectl111 bldd111
may view Mooring J-714
and K-14, loc111d
baywarct trom 19 Street. Mooring 8·18 11 on
South Bay FIOt'lt. Bal>oa
Island.
F°' furthef Information
call Was Annllld at
949-M4·3043 Approvtd by Tony
Melum. Harbor Reaourct•
BMW D ·oo 20k ml,
1 -· mini condlllon, must .... $28.000 obo
M•70f=P11
lllilW J1• Sedan ... Atd .... .Qwmed wtlll
$11,..,.00 t17749
PhlHlps Auto
t41·574-77n
''""'''' ,, • (1 /..!-~(1 ;-.': ~~
TODAY'S SUNDAY .PUZZLE
ACROSS
1 &wgizle (2 wda.)
80ldty
11 DudlyarWkt
18 SnMk In IM'llnvled
21 Llcorloellke flavor
22 Ft.wy
23 l..oYe affair
24 Eagkt'•,.,.. ..... -'-....
25 Jones OI ~'?!-.!~=!· 2!1Pria ..
27~
28 Dem d ,.,,.
29 Years on end
30 \lldng letter
32 P\a the llngef Q"I
:MSquMhed
38 Not leWll
38 Umer1clc Wlfter
Nalh
39 Sorrel or bey ooat
40 Corrals
'1 Wak»lttl ._
42 Earllet
43 Anllq.'8 photograf)h
45 Rn pert
48 Pickpocket
49COm.,
50 Brewing need
54 L.eaps
55Thomy~
58 0\4 d the wind
57 Ramble
58 NY Giants hero
59, • -Aooomp'ny Me·
SO Tabloid topics
81 N<Mlkand
Biiiinger
82 Heat uni
83 P9dcure targets
55 Gambling aka
86 A single time
87 ~ L.ou!111in
SSNMl
59 Formdty
70 Minnows, e g
71 Bia lt.tion
72 -Wld OUll
73 Not Mri'lg
75 Buy Ill audicn
78 Woru fl(e a horw
79 eonee 1ervers
80CU910m
81 Clinleed
86 Bed-and«taldMts
98MW.
87Sawy
88 Town nMr
Oeldancl
89 ·At - -riddle.
90 Body d Wlllef
91 Bumpe ....
92Tqy
93Exilt
94Copy
9e Melv111e .. "Blly -·
97Tlhe
98Arab!Uer
99Rald
1 DO Compoe mentll
101 loc911Ues
10:Z Hillldes, to N1gUS
103 Baton wielder
106Hemng
108 Br1nk
107 Cetwnlc piece
110 Better late -never
11 1 Ffalgtter haz.ardl
1128'.my
11 e Soun Pole
conqueror
118 ProtlCtion
119 SAC i.ttere
120 -Dtlebl
121 Powel1Uf ray
122MUlm
12ASeuhort
12!1 Slngtfw Hall and -
128 SpuTed on
129 Pink ...,..
130TOMlm....,
131 Plllfti -day 132Tahtalk1
133C.tty
134 Hero's ad•
1315 Scnmpcloue
DOWN
1 Errand n.innere
2Jolo up
3 Mover's challenge
4 Ptl0-1 D 9Ctlool
58qUntlng
8 Longbow'• aol.M
7 Prod on
8 Fal behind
9 More llghl .ftlled
10 Preceding (2 Wdl)
11 Expert
12Du1ng
13 A&JQ arid Feb.
14Sewing kit item•
15 H"" pelllc In TWUy
18~•
17 Come bectc
18 A9 --(generalty)
19 Sql.s Clll' b&Ml9f
20 Coln-toee word
31 ·a-. lor Hane
33 SM, ID YVes
35Whal•--
37 Jewelry Item•
38 Picture window
39 Swell. as a river
42 Gramm and E9poako .s Wk. day
44 Tert ho60ar8
45~1tem
48 Genetator J*t
•1 Made • declSN:lf'I
48 Sincerely
~Iceberg
111 Jazutyte
52 Stwry prefix
53~•WNr
(hyph.)
55Coabputa
158 Later
57 Alf. "°'· 59 Mv«'IJ.le i-.
80 Tiii
81 Ooeoace
84 Armllrong and
Simon
85H•acold
66 Malt~ klln
67Shel
89 Perlman and Sliver
70NU19anoe
71 Small-time
73 Muck or llime
740rt~ haurda
750rlgln
78Corcnet
noayone
78Not~
79Arm bone
81 Kk9 around
82 Burro lltematlve
83 Halroftliting
&4 T exlile WClf1<ers
88 Shi1 featun1e
87 Cross the creek
88 Stephen "1noent -
90Type91Z8
91 Roman Hera
92GreekZ'a
95Molmed
96Farmbui~
97 Bonng
98 Wrher Bombed(
1 DO Am a 1°*11 (2 Wll!I)
101 Joined
102 Suqwiletl (2 wdl.)
104 Harvest• wool
106Declne
108 Genedc •rand
107 l.Aal eXcli'lg
1 D8 Skielctl
109 Charge ahead
, 11 Btd81hat honk
112 -Fwit, co
113 T\.l'l'ltl ...
114 McMe critic Roger
115 Stale
117 Ji.ne honoreee
118 MelloW, .. wtlllkey
119 Pre-owned
123".JUll--~r
125 l<lng beater
127 Ex d Frank
c.-.c El Oondo .. ve. illlhlt, ""' powtt, tow miles. 1 owner, ..,.,., cltan
(eo7217M14P> '21,• NAllA8
llOOI M=lff2
c.-.c e Oondo 'ti ETC V8 • ...,_, 1u1 power,
low mlM. I owner. c::lltrl ~As:lAs 124.•
llOOI MH612
Cadllle EIClltdl .. ve. 1111111 oond, _. -.
ful poww, ltfw, tow pkg
c•14744117W) m.• NABlAS
llOOI MH6l2
C.-.0 Stv\111 8l.S ...
mooqroff, cd cile"91'. low ~c::ltan, Vpowtl
(11 121.• NA AS
llOOI Mt@
C.-.C 8tvlle STS 't7 ve. ....... cc. Ill, "°"" ........... c....-
(82tml3512P) 117,911 NABt!AS
llO(!l Ms.6512
FORD EXPlOAEA XLT 'ti
Cfltr'cotl ~. 2WD, ~';, •.'" · '°"'i ru11y MK 1111. 13.40Qf OIO !!ffU-4131
FOAO UIO 't1 Ven con-
vtlllOll, 480 cl, lraller
towing ollo. 1111 pwr, new
Orea, TV. \/CR, C8, grey/
wilt idol cond. $8,500lobo ~5032 Of 640-1029
FClfd Mtrcury Cougw Xfl
VI Coupe .,. blue. em-Im co. ~ loldtd, uctllM ~~·
Ford TllH'ut SE 'It 24
valve V8, 18k ICtual ml, metallic MPOhlre red, tan
int, fUtf tolded, •llov whls, like n1w, $9,996 Bkr 949-58&· 1838
Ford TMWlll 8l 'ti
24 -.,, w. 38lc ml. llMI. =., tfll, alloy wtlla, ,.., btlU11~ orig cond,
$9,25() Sb 949=586= 1888
F0td T111ru1 SE VI 'tt
38k ml, metallic sliver, am·fm cea, lilct ,_ oond. fentutlc value. $8,745
n76541 !Ila 949-586-1888
GMC Jimmy '01
I cyl, fully lotdtd, mutt -·'-(123072/3701P) m.-NABlRS
(900) !4ffll2
HOHDA CAV lX '00
Sport Utility, 4 cir, 4 cyl
2.0 Ill. IUIO, 2WD * ml Ill poww, 117,IOO.
MM74-4244
Hondl CAY 2000
$Mr-Only Ill( l!lllMI
$19.980 00 t17616C
Phllllpt Auto
941-574-lm
lnflftltl oo on 1 ~k milll . Peart wNll, ltalhtr, aupelb
oond, 6 disk co. garaged.
highway molts oommuted
Newpon ID Oncario. ,9,400
t4•71C>-1144
JAGUAR XJS Com. '95
lmmlc:ul&1t lhlu-out co & All/In, 123.llOO MH50-Ql0
l'erfor"l,•nc!J111uar.com
,,.._ XJI V-# 'M llOk ml.
allwr 8llld. oelmtel lttv, co. c:MJml wllllll, 144*1>
mtehlnlcal & body cond,
fll'llUllC value, 2 yr war· ranty avail. 110,995
1em1e Bier Mffi!t1888
.--XJI COlw ... .... "" .. ~ ..... 117115
Ptlllllpe Auto Mt-~74-nn
Ln111 LMOO 't2 8llCl, immac. llhr, moonrt. lul pw!,
lllCOldl "°'" Lexue 1~ $8.900 Mt§OH133
LNlll 8C400 Coupe 't5 Red w/Perltct Tan lthr.
All9 V8ll MooMloll
$18,980.00 117880 =·~ ll8Z C230 Stdlll ...
Smoke SMt wlOtml lllv,
Only 55k ml. FUI pwi $20,980 f171l11
Phllllpe Auto
t4t=S7'-1777
l'*CtCIM ""' SUlOO 5'lol1 2003
Otsigno SMr·Betttr Then
Ntw'1 Oflll Plldl
PhllNps Auto
141-574-nn
.......... £320 45k ml. wllite, oelmeaJ llhr,
ctlrome whit Beau orgin
cond. $27,995 v~211751
bkr !Mll-Sll&-188§
Toyota Corolll 'ti
5spd, A.IC. pw. pl, cassette, good cond
$8,995 obo Mt-212-41424
VolklftaOn Ctlltlo '14 ,_ englne, good interior/ •rtor grell llUlllfTltf i;er S2895· 949-7~
vw Ctlltlo 'f1
Wh«e. GrM1 fun Conv
$10.980 ()() 117950
=·~
VW El.rovan 't3 xn oond.
black wi1rno bnl, 5 lex! man-
ual, flOnl & rear lie, factory
8 dolk. 90k ITllltl. J owner suoo Mt-1~1144
2 Jeep Grind ~
Ud. '94. Whlea. $13.500
& '98. ""*· $21.500 M lmrlllculll!I lllide & cu.
M rnedllnlClly in top oond.
lo milMige & MW bftkM.
14M40-1121
Yellowstona
Women•
Recovery of
C1llfomla
"DONATE
WHERE rT
COUNTS"
YOUR car,
bo1t, tr1ln,
'pl1ne.
Anything thlt
movH. lf you
want to help
1 wom1n In
trouble
800.941-9048 Your money
Buy1
hope for
women
In need
All don1tlon1
are Tax Dtduc·
tJble Ind go to
Yellowstone
We are I Non-
profit 501 c (3)
Corp. or Call
949-673-6894
1-~1
UTIUTY TRAILER
~X8, 2 ft lldet, $47f,
714-375-1150 1
S.Uyour
NlfN/4,.,.d
UfmlJllbeeasy
way/ Pldee a
d4u6t/fed'"'
1°"4yl
(!J49) 642-S67.
Ha1e A
a rage ale!
is our community. We live and work
-1 want to make a difference. We
e education is the biggest single
· Newport-Mesa School District So far, we've
~nated $200,000 this year! We've fs.t
...
/
t I . Sunday, f.kJy 26, 2002 15
LEE & READ 718-2733
104 VI.a Udo Nont • Open Sun 1 -4
BOB & MARY EUEN WEGLARZ
24 Roddngh.m • Open Sun 1-4
759.3761
BRIAN BACKSTROM 717.4736
2155 N. GrMnvlew •Open Sun 12-4
~ HYATT 799.1749
Just llt9cluced
4 Bd. bayfront, 52 ft on the water, dodc for
large yachts.
4 Bd plus family room, large country kitchen,
nice rear yard with spa.
Upgrades galore compliment this fabulous
estate size home.
Custom 4 Bd. with oce1n viewa. Oce1n side of
PCH. Sk}ort w1lk to the be1cti.
A COJ.DWELL IANKER Nl.T COMPANY.
-'
.. ........ • 1 ...... .,,..... ,., •
MARTY Ale ME.INOA JONES 717.4784
733 VI.a Udo Soud • Open Sun 1-4
MARTY AND MELINDA JONES 717.4784
232.4 Pon CMtlsle • Open Sun 1-4
IOaMMI 717A70I
J6 ~ ... O,.. lurt 1-4
I
Wonderful 35 Foot bayfront locatJon with
prwate dodc. 4 Bd. 4.5 Bl
Gorgeous remodel on an OllefSl28d lot 4 Bd. 3 Ba.
With office. Formal dining room.
Explnded H1rbo< View home. 5 Bd plus
bonus room and office.
Large key lot. G1ted. 3 Bd. 3.5 81. Uk• new.
Bright 1nd sunny.
i
• ,
f •
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•