HomeMy WebLinkAbout2002-06-01 - Orange Coast PilotSERVING THE NEWPORT -MESA COi'AMUNmES SINCE 1907 ON THE WEB: WWW.DAILYPILOT.COM
--. No doubt
about it. it's
going to be~
beautiful weekend.
SATURDAY, JUNE 1, 2002
Fish Fry dead in the water again
•Costa Mesa event will again pla y hooky, but
organizers settle a related laws uit and promise
the celebration will return ne xt year.
Lolita Harper
DAtlY PtlOl
COSTA MESA -UndPr
normal circumstdnccs, larg<•
c dm1val ndcs would litter the
Costa M esa skyline this
weekend dnd the !->cent of
battered lcelclnd1c cod w ould
waft through the air
Today. however, mMks thC'
second l'Oni.1•rut1v1· yrM lhctl
th<' M1n uc1I Fish r:ry 1s c1bscnt
from thP Co-;tc1 M esa land-
scc11w ctl> the result of a lc1w-
<.u11 lntinC"hed by an Irvine
Wl)lllctn
f\l1kc• Srhcc1lcr. the pres1-
dPr1I <11 the Costa M esa
Ncwpcirt l lctrbor Lions Club,
lurn1c1lly anno unced this
wc·Pk lhctl h1i. club would not
hust lh1· l 'V<•nt th1!> yec1r.
"1\ lot ul th<' rl u b members
didn't want to an y k ind of
plc:1.nnmg -ctnd nghtfully so
until we had our lawsuit
l>Cltled," Schealer said.
The lawsuit that smglc-
footedly brought a halt lo the
57-year tradJbon of the Fish
Fry WdS hJcd by Arlene Wolff,
who claimed she hurt her
ankle when she stepped off a
rurb at O rdnge Coast CoUegP
the site of the 2000 Fish
f7ry. Wolff WdS on rampus for
d computer exhibit but filed d
vcnJ1ed rld1m that she also
attt·ndcd thl· Fish Fry
Wolff, 53, sued OCC 1n
QUESTION I
MISS FRY7
Do you miss the
•nnu11I Ash Fry
held In Costa Meu7 Call
our Readers Hotline at (949)
642-6086 or send e-mail to
dailypilotOJatimes.com.
Please spell your name and
include your hometown and
phone number, for verifica·
tion purposes only
2001 for $80,000, dnd the col-
lege filed a CfO!;.'> mmpld1nt
dgainst the Lion!;. Club, c1:-.k·
iny the dub t<J shdfl· 1n lh1·
1tab1 bty
Thr nvil lawo.;u1t wc1-. ..,Pl
tJ<'d OU! (Jf ( IJU r1 for 'j; !(), ()()()
<1IJ011t tw11 W\·l'k-. t.l lJll
lnsurann _• <di nt•r.., 1111 Lion"'
( 'lub lntc:rne1ll(1111tl ctnd th1 ·
computer <,ho'¥\ ... ,,111 1111· ~1·t
tlemcnt q1v"11 lei W11lit
ldwy<'rs Sdld
WoUI COlllrl n111 "' ..... , hPd
ICJr romm1·111
Oranu<' c ··id..,t < '111l1·q• · we1 ..,
ctbo re1mln11..,••<I fur <111 1h
h•qdl IP"" r!'l,i11 ·d lu tl11-• l<1v.
:.Ult, SdHI l\l tll•>rd f Jc1hf , rill
c1Uor n1·y 1111 th•· ( ·11c1-..1
Community College Distnct.
I >dhl Sdtd the contract allow-
1nq U'>C Of district property for
th1· f1!.h Fry dec1rly outlined
1hc11 th<' cuLiegc be covered
und1 •1 the Lions Club insur-
<1n< t· 1n rPtum for use of the
I rllllf)U'>
"They &cttlf'd c1nd fully
1·xum·rdtNJ thP C"oUege and
th" <11..,tnct," Ucthl said.
Sr hh1IPr Sdld he was sad -
drw·d by the fdct that Costa
f\ fp..,,. w1>ulcl dgdin rruss out on
thr• l1c1<11tJOnaJ C!vent By the
111111· tltP lc1wsu1t wdS settled ,
SEE FISH PAGE A4
Views differ
on possible
view law
• C 'usld ivlPSd r ounciln1dn duesn'I
dC)l('I' w 11h mdy<>r dnd Pldnning
< 0<J111 m1s!'>1u n chd1r on halting
C'1 ·rtc1in ~c·cond -story ddcl itions.
Lo lita Harper
DAILY PttOJ
c <>ST/\ 11::s ,\ ,\ plhJ-.c1nt view
1·r1humc•" nl)t onl)' th<: prop«n\ Vdluc but
11v1•1ull 1·n1oynH~n1 ol l>C1mr homes Clnd
:-.hould b1• µrntcc-tc•d. th1• Pldnnmy
c omm1::.s1on ..,did ld!>t wc·ek when it usked
'1ly plannN!;. to re!>l 'dr< h <1 pos:.il>lf' view
c111ltndnrr•
The• poc;s1b11Jty o l d ll ord1ndll<" -.1.c mmed
from,...,,., ond-story p11Jpo~d1 froin \Vcsts1dr
rt'<;1(1pnt John C lark. lh<' ov.. nN of d home 1n
th(• 11 0() blm k of AVIPrllDfP Tronctr(•
,RfC 'W' I J /\11 •ti '
In r:cbrudry. th,. r 11y 1ontnq aclm1nistrc1-
t€Jr c1pprovrd the udcht1nn o1 a -.pc-ond -;tory
to c1 home on Av1emorr T<'rrrtCf'. <1S wc>ll d!>
th1· C'Xpans10n tJf the· \iround floor, but
Counr1lmc1n ( 'hn!--Stf'1•I upphilc•d thf' dvC't-
'>ton dnd brought 11 lo ttw C ·1tv Counnl
c ·ounnl mr·mhcr!--th<·n ,1•111 !ht• '"'Ill' lo tht•
ronim1ss1on
Orange Coast College President Margaret Gratton, who will be re tiring in July, shows ofi one of he r favorite spots on campus,
the Garden o f Quie t Study In the Horticulture Gardens.
on
OCC President Margaret Gratton will r etire in July, but she l eaves
the colleg e knowing that a stable foundation has b een set
Oeint... Newman
DAILY PtLOl
T hf' skipper who has ndVl~Jrlf<'d the
d1rect1on of Orc1ngc CQast Coll<'gc
for the past six yr cHs Wlll rpt1r(' 1n
July.
Margaret G rc11ton, who lf'd the rollege
through a three-year planning cycle that 1s
just now ending and brought mart' lhan 100
professors to the campus, w ill replace pro-
fessional pursuits with persondl endeavors.
One of her .proudt'st legacies, she said, 1s
rarrying Lht' coUege thro11qh c1 q1•111·1o1t11inc1I
transition.
"We have had a large nunih{•r qt r1•t1n•
ments among the faculty," Cirdll<lll .,,11d
"Being able to replace those• fdrull) 1111•111-
bers and add new ones buildi. th<' louncld ·
lion for what the college Wlll lw <W•'f tlw
next generation.·
The soft-spoken, grarpfu\ leadN < ,1111e lo
OCC from Mt. Hood Community CollC'g<' m
Oregon, becoming the college's first ft'tndle
president -a statistic she wasn't d WcHl' of
when she accepted the 1oh
"l think that I have bC'f•n ctlJI!• 111 :-.l'rvC' dS
c1 role modt'l for other faculty .i 11d c;t<1ff tnlrr·
<'Sled 1n leadership roles,· Crntton -.cl id
"Students have told m e it's h<•lptul to -;f'e a
woman m a leadership rol" "
Gratton said she is also proud ol th<'
three-year planning cycl<', whwh nwt all of
1ts goals.
"Unlike many plans, W€' lookc-d at 1l
many times and did use 1t dS a gwde anc1
reference. Now, toward the end of the cyc:lf',
SEE GRATION PAGE A4
Children, too, need th~r free time
0 ur recent baseball gamP
started at 5:30 p.m ., 1ust
when several local
school open houses were also
to begin. One player didn't
show up for the game. his par-
ents opting instead to have him
usher them arO\md his school
to show off his handiwork.
lWo other kids with open
homes nl4de it to the game,
which was fortunate for us
because our team would have
been reduced to eight players
and forced to forfeit.
M it wu, we staged a late
rally and boet our opponent.
Scbeduling ts about to become
1liclder for many parents u the ..,a of the ICbool year oeen. ,n.-...._.,. bUly trying to
Steve Smith
fAlllYml
fill the empty alotl for the
mooth8 between the end of one
~ IOd the beginning ol • but .... not eesy .
CamJ>I COit money. Some of u.n cwt .. ol money and
•
parents art" forrcd to Limit
those. And tJ kids aren't sent to
a camp, thr y are sometimes
sent to visit Aunt Zelda, whose
house smells of mothballs.
This summer. one of our
·camps· includes a trip to
New York and Washington,
D.C We'U be in Manhattan
about three weeks before the
anniversary of the World 1Tade
Center attack and, yes, we
plan to visit ground zero with
our children.
If the last few days 81'! any
indication, our home ts about
to be turned into Ca.mp Smith
this summer. On a c:ouple ol
days in recent weeks, Roy Ma
SE£ fAMllY MGI M
l{(•!;,tcf cnt:-. uf ,\vt<•1111m• rind ( ;11•n En!Jl"
tenc1ces floodrrl City I ldU ld..,t wl·ek whPn
c·on1nuss1onC'r~ r!'\ 1Pwrd th€' r€•que<,t r1nd
pl<'ddcd with lh1 • Plt1nntng Comm1,.s1rrn 111
prnt1•ct thP1r v11•w<, Con11n1sswn(•r-.
dpprovc-d the ~econd <.,tory ctdc11t1on by d 4 to
I vote, with Ptanniny Comm1ss1on
Chn1rwomctn Katnnd f-oley d1!--SPnhng
r:o ll'y sdirl <;ht> h<'ltPved thC' residents
v1"w' -.ho11ld he µrot<'rted and :-.ensed sen-
m1!> rrluclc1nce from hc-r comrn1ss1on col·
lhHJ\lC'S to t>ndnrse th<' SN ond-story ddd1 -
tion She n111dt• d motion to hc1vC' plannmg
c;t<11f con~1dl'1 d poss1blC' view 01d1nc1nrc dnd
1 ome bark It) the c:omm1ss1on al <;tudy 'iC':.·
o;;1on Comm1 ... -.1oners unanimously o;;11pport-
t>tl the mot111n
C ounnlr11dn Gary M onahan '>did h<' will
dppeal l ht• motion becausf• h1· doC'•m 't
lwl1rve th<• nty needs a view nrdtndnt'"C' rind
h<• thmks th1' Pldnning Comm1!--s1un m·c>r·
sl<'ppcd 11s bounds
"What c1u thonty does th<' Pldnning
Com mission have to d1rC'ct !--lc1117"
M onahan asked. "Their funct1un 1~ to
make recommendations to th<• City
Council. City C ouncil sets the paltry and I
do not want to spend valuabl<' dnd npC'n-
s1ve staff time on projects thc1t dfi'.' not
blessed by the council.·
Foley defended the arnon 11f hc-r com-
m1ss1on.
Newport
Coast. In
green, bat-
Ued DaYU.
ID gray,
durtDg
Friday .. PO.ec.p
.. tdalp.
Pwr1 .... ..... •••
SEE VIEWS PAGE A4
111.111111111
Celebrate your father by
sending a paragraph or
two about why your dad
is so gt"Nt, along with a
photo, to the Daily Pilot
fof publotion on
F~ Day. Send a setf-
-«lr11Md stamped enw-
IOIM If you want the
photo returned post-
pubffmion. The dead-
line for entries .. June
12. Send '°"' a.n.i to
Flllhen 0.,. Delly fllot.
JJOW • .., ... C-.
MIA. CA m2'7. .
-.
1!9.!!_llJThe
FllTll
Baha'i Faith of Costa Mesa
Baha'is believe in the onene91 of God, the onene1a of man and the oneness ~religion'
the unity of the whole human race; the harmony at sdenoe and religion; the ~t
investigation of truth; the elimination of all prejudice and the equality of~~~°:
Baha'i Paith of Costa Mesa presenls weekly fiiesidea, wbk:h present th~~ .
and offer newcomers an opportunity to ask questions about the faith. Pires1dea are infonnal
gatherings in the homes of &ha'is. lntonnation: (714) 780-9516.
A2 Saturday. June 1, 2002 Doily Pilot
Handing
it all to God
IN THE SPIRIT
HI am but o pend/ in God's hand.•
-Mother Teresa
0 ur oldest daughter. KeUy, was mar-
ned last week to an amaz.mg young
man named Ryan. Those two fine
young people have d!Jeady had such posi-
tive dnd powerful impact on others; I can
only 1mdgine what God has planned for
them dnd their mamage.
Mdny people have referred lo KeUy and
Ryan\ union as a match made in heaven,
wh1rh it dearly LS. The entire wedding
W1'c>kc ncl was kissed with special blessings
from Cod, and several
pt:oplc :.ummed 1t up
wt•IJ by Sdying ti WdS
111auwal.
11':. hard Lo believe 11
1Jll hdµpc>ned, as 11 it
was too goo~ lo be true.
I know 1t did, of course.
f Wd!> lhNe. I've sPen
the p1c1 ures and I will
st'e the vtdf'o. There 1s
1t1J WdY I can adequately
tlc~cnb<' all thdt trttn-
~p1recl. but God more:'
lhan dnswNcd the
ntdny prayers lhdt were
orf<•n·d God's hnnd was
dearly t•Vtdcnl in ovNy·
l h111CJ
Gndy Trone
Christeson
THE MORAL
OF THE STORY
Thro11qhuut lhf' weekend, family dnd
fnend<, shored stones of many dtflNcnt
wr1ys they rould SP<' God's hand 111 both
Kelly'~ .. md Rydn's ltvl's. As we rcrrnn1sced
<1hm11 both uf thf'm, I thouuht back to last
Dcn'ntlwr wlwn Ryan look my husbdnd
Jon uut lor hrcc1klc1st cJOd nsk c>d ht!-. pem1is-
s1on to ask lor K ·lly's hdnd in nl<.1rndgc .
C.REG fRV I 011'1 ' I
Pastor Mike Decker ls the splrltual leader of Palm Harvest C hurch, which meets at Costa Mesa HJgh Sch ool on Sundays.
.Jon lhctnk1·d him for the honor of being
risked. but Sclld, ''l{yrrn, you've nlrc•cJdy
won h1•r hl•c1rt r1nd pmvPn your chr1r<:wler
Ym1 <111· ltw r1nswl'1 lo our prc1yt•rs. c1nd yc111
are God'!-. n1un tor Kelly You h.wro uur
blcsstny "
Palm Harvest Church
AltN f<yc1n·s bf'cttt ttful propusctl lo Kelly
and Kl•lly's t•xntcd dtT1·rtc1ncc. Rydn placed
d stunnin!J cngagerm:nt nng on h<•r finger. I
found myself stc1nng dl lhol lln<Je>r dnd her
hdnds frequenlly nvPr thf' roursc• ol their
c:>ngctyPnwnt II I cfo<.p my c•ye>s, I <ctn still
see her hdnc1s nl dll hN clJHcrent ages
I've watrhed those bf'nlltilul hdncls yruw
over tht! yedrs. I ran sl1ll 'i<'C> Kt>lly's little!
hands covP.rcd with (p it pt•n, w1lh pd1nt or
with pldy dough. I rcln ptctur(' them tt l dif-
ferent times. with skt mlllf'ns. Edster glovt's.
cotillion gloves and C'vcn a splint clue• to a
broken finger. Those> fingers hdVl' worn
puppets, ftnger-pamts, st1r kC'rs, Bctnd-A1ds,
rem1nllN nol£>s and occasionally dill('rPnt
colored ndtl polish, Pspcnully bf'lo11• c;chool
sporting events.
Kelly's hdnds hdvc accompltshC'CI much
and hdVf' been roverrd with mony d1flf'1r•nt
thtn~Js, but they had never heforr· bN•n
nclorn1·d with an engagPmcnt nng.
A t thr· rrremony, when Jon WdlkNI Kf'lly
down thf' aisle and took his am1 nfl Kelly
and pldc-NI her arm onto Ryan':., hC' t•ntnt:-.t·
ed our trf'dsure to the mdn who comm11tr·d
lo lnvt> twr till clcdth pdrl!. thc~m. As thl'y
:-.d1cl lh1·1r vows to CdC'h othc-r, th<'y pl<'dgr•d
thC'1r ltJVP, th<:tr ltvt''> clnd lhP1r mctrrtctgr 111
Cod
.Ion dncl I r·auCJhl 011r hrc>alh dnd hl.'ld
handi. d<. w1· wc1tchf'd lhP beaming young
couplf' plc1n• wedd1nq nr1gs on ec1ch other's
fingers After the C'Nl'lllOny, [ watcht•d the
9lowtn~J twosonw d'> th<'y held hand" c1nd
greeted guf!sts Wlwn lhf' lime came• lor
them to depilrt, th1·y h(·ld hands dnd pract1·
c·ally sk1ppC'd nfl 1nl11 n1qht to Stdr1 then
nf'W ltff' toqPth(•r
I dill f!lNnally ~pal1•lul ln God for his
inrredible hlm>stng'> I r1lso praycrtully pldce
rlll OUr IJVC''i lntO ht:-. trustworthy hdnds
And you ran quot(• 111<• on thdt
• CINDY TRANE CHRISTESON 1\ a Newport Beach
resident who speak\ frC'qucntly to parenting groups.
She may be rearhPd Viii e mail at ondyOonthe-
grow.com or throuqh th!' mail at PO Box 6140-No.
505, Newport Beach. CA 9]6'i8
• Address: 1055 El CamJno
Drive, Costa M esa. Worship ser-
vices arc held at Costa M esd
High School. 2650 Fairview
Road, Costa Mesa. A map 1s
available di the Palm Hdrvcsl
Web site.
• Telephone: (7 14) 7 51 -5:397
•Web site: WWW.Palm
Harvesl.org
• Year church established:
October 2001
• Service times: Sunddy worship
ts at 10 a.m . .
• Sen ior pastor: M ichaPI Decker
•Pastoral staff: Diane Chave:1,
ministry rodrh, Robtn Ocrk •r,
worship )('adrr and offte<'
manager
• Size of congregation: oO
• Makeup of congregation:
Primanly young. professional
ruuplcs. ldmtltes with srhool-
r.1ge ch1ldr<'n and parents with
grown r htldrl'n rtncJ yo11nq
grandchtlclr0n
• Child care: Prov1dC'cl lrn
mfanL<;, toddll'fs and prc•sd111ol-
dge chtldr<>n l'drenl'> ar<• wrol-
com1• to hnnq childrt·n ol ,,11
FAITH CALENDAR
SPECIAL EVENTS
AN ENCHANTED EVENING
"Som~ Enchanted Evl'nmq /\
C ·onrert of Stones on LcHl!JhlN,
Lov(' ctnd Life" will begin rtt
1-:10 p.m . today at the Oroniw
Coast Unitarian Church, 1259
Vtrtoria St., Costa M esa
Performers will indude Debra
Olson Tolar, Diane F. Wy7ga
ages mto the worship service
with them. The congregation
feels 1t is important that ktds
know they arc Vdlucd dnd
loved
• Type of worship:
Contempordry c1nd upbC'al I\
worship band leads the serv1rC',
which includes song, prnycr, c1
pastoral blessmg or the chtl-
drcn, testimony dnd a pastordl
message.
• Children's churdl: Srhool-aqP
children attend worship with
thC'tr fannlies untJI aftN the
blessing of the rhtldr<'n
f-ollowtng the blcssmg, they drC
d1sm 1sscd to dll 'nd C hildren's
Chu1 r h, whNf' children met·t m
d!.Jt'·oppropridtc group~.
• Type of serm on: It ts Bible.··
based with d Iii<' dpplt<.:dtton
The topic mdy be drawn lrom
the scnpturcil themf's of thC'
chtldren's Sunday <;chool cur·
nrulum or address partir ular
sp1ntudl 1:1nd prc1ct1ca l needs ol
congregalton.
• Recent sermons: Decker L<. g1v-
111u d scncs of sem10ns t1llf'd .. A
dnd Ltndd King Pru.ill. $1 5 or
$10. (949) Mh-4652
PRAYER HOUR
The Second Church of Chnst,
Scientist will hold an hour of
prdyer at noon Wednesday at
3100 Pacific View Drive, Corona
del M ar. f ree. (949) 644-2617.
SENIOR NIGHT
St. Andrews l'resbyterian
Church will present a nonde-
nominational service and cele-
Bluepnnt for Marriage.• Recent
sermons include "Characteristics
of a True Fnend," ''Help for
Facing C hallenges," "Germs
that Ruin a Marriage" and "How
to Bw.ld Up Your M<tte. • Aud.Jo
hies of Sunc1dy sermons arc
dVctilablc free on the Palm
Harvest Web site.
• Upcoming sennons: The senes,
"A Blueprint for Marriage," will
continue w1lh "Great Sex Begins
with. . " "Affair SaJeguards and
Pitfalls" and "Look.mg Ahead
with Enthw;1asm."
• Visitors' w elcome: Alter the
worship scmce. members meet
around roffee and pastnes. The
atrnusphNc ts low-key,
dc's19ned lo make 1t easy for
111PntlJl'rs and v1s1tors to get to
know cc1ch other bcttN. Visitors
dr<' 1nv1lcd to JOtn m to whatev-
er deg re!' they are comfort.able.
• Dress: Casual
• Mission statement: "Loving
God. LoV1ng others"
•Vision statement ·we exist to
build bndges to people m our
communtty through scMcc. •
bra Lion for graduatmg SC'ntors
dnd their family and fncnds at 4
p m. June 9 dt 600 St. Andrews
Road, Newport Beach. Chns
Milbrath of Grace f-ellowsh1p
Church will speak. Joe Foley
will perform music Free. (949)
611-0595.
MUSIC & SPIRITUALITY
Jami Lulit, a New Thought
songwnter and performer. will
perform at 7 p .m . June 23 at the
Center for Spiritual Discovery,
•Church programs: M ember..,
meet during the week for Bibi"
study in smaU groups of five tu
10 people called "Impact
Groups.· Decker trains the
group leaders, but at the samf'
time they have the flexibility to
address specific needs of mr!nt·
hers in their small groups.
•Outreach programs: Once r1
quarter. the congregation's ch1l·
dren and youth participate in ,,
project to show appreciation to
the city's police officers and firP·
hghters. They have taken
home-baked Christmas cook1C's
and chili to the police stabon
and fire department. They arc
now planning a ·sundaes on
Saturday" event. One Sundc1y
each quarter is Family anct
Friends Day. The next one, a
barbecue and baptism event.
will be held on June 30 at tlw
beach in Corona del Mar.
• Interesting notes: Pastor
Decker describes Palm Harvest
as •a church for people who
have given up on church.·
-Michele Marr
2850 M esa Verde Drive East.
Costa Mesa. $1 0 or$12. (7141
754-7399.
WORKSHOPS
MASTER MIND
New Thought Community
Church will present Master
Mind, a group for those wanting
to ·manifest good" in their daily
life, at 7:30 p.m. every Priday at
1929 Tustin Ave., Costa Mesa.
(9-49) 646-3199.
.lo9e '· s..ntot.. 8EADE85 t:fQIUNE <tom~s. llhxtratlons. editorial ~tter °' SUlf AID SUI .Daily-Pilot Ari D"KIO< (949) 642-6086 advert•\emenb herein can be repro-(949) S/4 4}}4
,01~ wnr·Of9l•t1~ com Record your comments about the duted Wlthovt writteri permisS>On of
~Md::t .... Dally Pilot 01 nr~ tips. copyr1gllt owner. WEATHER FORECAST of 8 to 10 fHt. Phalo Supe<\lkot
VOL 96, NO. 152 (949) 7~J'i8
ADDRESS t:tQW TO BEACH US
Wetl, save a light misting,
t<n photoet.r1mn mm those showers just seemed to SURF lMOMASH.~ Our address is BOW Bay St .. Costa Publ•""" ND1$ $Wf M~ CA 92627. Office hours are Clrcu&ation pass us by over the last couple We should contln~ to see
lONY OOOOIO. o.ep..._... Monday · Frtday, 8: JO a.m. · 5 p m The Times Orange County of days. But this weekend is just thest-to shouldef-hlghs today. (dltN
AIOY O£lll..c:i I """' •nd court• repo<1er, (949) S7~116 (800) 252-9141 going to be beautiful with with the OCCMional ~· ""°"'"'''"'9 0.lf'fl.,. M*Pll blYr•rhel•hrMt.<om CORRECTIONS Advertb"'9 mostly sunny conditions and LMIA ~ JwwCy ,_. It is the Piiot's policy to promptly Classified (949) 642-5678 nighs of about 70 In Costa Mesa
The strength of the IOUthWll5t
l'romotJot'>• Dlrl'ftOI N•wport Bcoach r@90<1e<. (949) ~7~232 correct all errors of substance Display (949) 642-4321 swell, though. II~ 10
1uM cu•g,.nd#el•tlm..< com and the mld-60s in Newport Sunday wtll dlflnlt.ty ,.. • IAf1Mi StMf v-.aw. Pte.w call (949) 574-4233. Edftoriel Be~h. dfop-off In ... bpect ~ LL ~ FHIUr"' r~1. (!M9) ~7~68 rn ~ (949) 642-5680
Another heat wave should ~(dfloo I0<"'9 ~..._""" Sports(949)57 .... 223 waist-highs wtttt the oc:c.esiontl (9f91$7~]) ..... a..-The Newport leadVC05ta Mesa 0 11ly ~Fax (949) 646--4170 begin to take effect on Monday . chest-high. ren.t1.attw!e ~<om Piiot (lJSl'S..144-800) Is publilhed daily. JIMlm ....... Polllou and "Mlo•••C ~ (9'191 M4DO Sports Fax (949) 650-0170 ll1fatnwtk1n: .... ....-.,: www.Wtfrld-Oty tdllor p-.11,cll,,ftln~.mm In Newport 11..ai and a.ta Mesa, sub-E-mall: dallyplloteilltlmfl.com (Mt) 1'oMJ14 laMll ....... tcrlptiorll ere avellllble onty by ~rib-Mein Offtcl
www.nws.noM.gov. .,;org, ,_ ......... ,._,°"' Co<I• MeY ...--. (Mf) 574-4275 Ing to The Time °' .. CcMity (IOO) .... c.tl-. """• ,...,P9f.,.i_t'Om Businetl OffQ (949) 642~321 BOATING fOMCAST ~...,, .,..,......._ 2SZ.ft41. In -outside of Newport 1~.,.. Fax (949) 631·7126 TIDES
~57..wl (du<atlon f't!llOl1*. &e9I S74-4.UI ludl end Celt.I ,_.... dllalptlorw to Winds wtf1 blow 10 to 15 knots .. l'Of9f.CM.. M;. I 4L<Df't df!t/rdfw.ISCIAIP$0 .. ds44Ltom the~ Not ... a\' .... ~ by ftr1t In the lnnet W.-. this ilftw. 1-.ll a.m • .......... a.tlllM~ dim INll b f.JO '* month. (Prkwl ..........,~,,,_~,...... ........... • dMlloll of me Lal...,,.... nn... noon. wttt1 2-foot weves and a 5:01 p,m ~57-Mm '"-....... ~I?~ lndude all~ ...... and local ...... ....,..._lllfll combined -of J to 'fMt. 9'.AO p.m . <MlflM.<»• .... IM•_,, '--) flOSTMAmlt Send -**"-...,,,,,_Cll./111 .... -
=-1>1111-=-'"2n=n a-Dr d*91toh~~ Out f.nhef, the not1h-.,.
.-11~ Ci<9Q f~ Don LMd\ tMtl ...,, a-. Dllli/ Not. .. 0 ... tYO, c.c.tA ly winch wttt blow 10 to 20 ..,_,,...p .... ...... Glr'9.-........, ..... CA 926. Cowtght: No,_ I knota. with ~ not1h'f'tt .....
' .
4
Doily Pilot
Newport Beach creates new Marinapark lease
•New one-yPdr contract has two option years
attdched dnd rdtSP!, rents more to the tune of the
mobtle honw f>drk 's residents.
June Casagrande
DAILY P11 or
Bl\LBOI\ Pf'NINSUl.A
Backing olf cm tJ (H1Jposctl
lhdl would hrivt• rou9hly
doubled ri•nti. di the
MdflfldJJdr k mobdt• home
park, ··1ty offrnctb this week
put their '>tct111p of dpprovdl
on d led'><· lhdl rrH ludp-, only
rnudc•rdtl' r<'nl inc r<'d'>l''>
worlds long-term lease
r c>nts with only short-tenn
lc>dSC security.
with what he thought was a
fair pnce. In the end, city
offrc1als agreed
"This 1s the dpprd1ser thdt
was suggested by the tenant
groups,• said Assistant Clly
Mandger Dave K1ff.
,1<1 11«' f UAll f Pl 0
bon of the spirit of tbelt
mal agreement with tbe tbi9
They say that when
first lease wu signed ill
1985,. they agTeed tMf
would vacate if the dty-~
day chose to build a ...-~
there. In recent yean, city
ofhc1als changed the land·
use designation from a~
to a "visitor-serving use,
such as a hotel.
Crty C 'ounnl 111c•mhN'>
votNt undnimou-.ly Tu<'sddy
lo renew I ht> r<'s1dc•n1-.· l<>dsc
tor one Yl'df, with two 1-y<'dr
rcnewdl option'> Though the>
15 full-t1111c• dnd 41 port-time
res1d<'nl'> hc1d pushl'd lor d
lonq-lcrm ll'dM', rt wds
nonl'lhf'lc.,., ct n·lwf lor ttwm
lo IC'c1rn thc•y wouldn't be
qettrnq lhl' wor'-l of both
To residents, the city's
ldsl dltempl to draft a new
lease dmounted to just that.
Exernsing their legal option
to raise the rents there to
market rates, dppra1sers
h1rc>d by the city surveyed
rc>nls and similar mobile
home pdrks dnd came up
with th<' rl'commendalron to
roughly double what the
wdtPrfront lots now cost
R<''>rclents countered that
thcc,c rdtcs were based on
the• Vdluc of a lot with a
long-term lcdsc. and that
with no secunty, there will
.,1111 tw d mobile home park
thPtP rn a year and d hdlf.
On thrrr bchdll, apprd1scr
Wllltdm Hdnsen camc up
Under the new lease,
rents will remdm the same
until Sept. I. Then moderate
rncreases will go into effect,
bdsed on I l ansen's sugges-
tions. Wdtcrfront lots thdt
now cost $1,225 a month
will go up to $1,550; lots not
on the Wdter that now cost
$925 will go up to $1 , 125;
and the $865 lols will go up
to $1.050 These are much
less thdn the city's ongmal
pldn to chMge $2,300,
$1,850 dnd $1 ,700, respec-
trvely Future annudl
rncrC'ascs will be bdsed on
the Consumer Pnce Index.
Marinapark residents Betty and Stewart Berkshire sit ln
the Uvlng room of their home. The city gave the mobile
home community a n ew lease on Tuesday.
Some say this violates the
terms of the original agree-
ment by retroactively
changing the risks. Many
frgured 1t was a sale bet that ~
the city would never tum a •
revenue-generating proper-
ty into a park. But they •
mJght have calculated the
nsk differently bad they
known the city could tum
the land into a for-profit use
that would bring tax rev-
enue to the oty.
Then the city would rncredsc
rents by 30'X, to 50%
The new ll'ase does, how-
cv<>r, allow the city to sub-
stanlldlly raise• the rents 1f an
owner sells d home there.
The move bnngs to c1
close iust one chapter of !ht•
contenllous MM mo f>d rk
story. City offlcrals hav(•
cxpr<'sscd hopt.• that a luxury
resort will be built there by
Sutherldncl Tdlla Hosp1tahty
R1•!>1dc•nh «I the mobile
honrt• pc11k hc1vc sc11d that
this plc1n c1n10unl'> to c1 v1olt1-
Marina park residents
called for this story could
not be contacted.
~ lowFat Polen ta Organic , UV. , .ac>I.>( f J Pasta Pasta Sauces WHEAT FREE -Mode with Can
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• Rffi. Rotelle '1 .99 12 oz.
EMERITA
YOU SAVE UP TO $7 .00!
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7~ e~1
•
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• Slim -1 polnJ per $OIJ/ng
• Power Brealcfalt $1!! 3poinbper
.ming 11.rs 14 oz.
REG. '5.59 5002.
GIAXOS
ExlraV...gin
Greek Oliwe Oil
H<!;:ms4~
~IcedTea ~Concentrate
Just Add w~ 112 c.lha
~ Organi ~ veUOWcc!
Tortilla Chips sr. REG '3.56
•Whole Mile
• l'lu ~N
• 2% Milk Fat
•Non Fat REG. '3.Z9 1/Zpl.
CELENTANO
~=:.~
• lasagna Primavenl IHFAT II SE#tj
• SpinadJ Brocr:oli
ManirolJi • F,gwJtrrtl
Prrmman REG. '2.99
BIOCHEM
FARM FRESH PRODUCE ...
Fresh Vme ~ 1he White Com CaHf. On Vine
Cantaloupe Tomatoes 3 ears fur _ Str. ~ ~49 9r lb . ._, lb.
Beauty without Cruelty
Make-Up
•
California Scramble
Your choice of eggs or tofu
scrambled with Ma's potatoes,
mixed veggies and cheese. Served
with a side of salsa
and com tortillas. 961'5 .......
..
"'
-I j
I I
I I
A4 Sotu11 • June I, 2002
POLICE FILES
COSTA MESA
• ltrnMl "9c:9: A vehicle
burglary WM reported In
the 2900 block at 8~A.2 a.m.
Thu~y.
• ....... Strwt: F0<gery
was reported In the 3200
block at 11:12 a.m.
Thursday.
• Coorol.-do DIM: A
home burglary was report·
ed In the 900 block at
12:13 p.m. Thursday.
• Mesa "-de OttVe last
A vehlde burglary was
reported in the 1500 block
at 11 :3S a.m. Thu~.
• Placentlai Awnue 8IMt
Victoria Street: Grand
theft was ~ported at 2:AO
a.m. Thursday.
• RlvMI'• Dftve: Grand
theft was reported In the
300 block at 11:05 a.m.
Thursday.
NEWPORT BEACH
... ysw ... Md llson
Avenue: A vehicle bur·
glary was reported at 7:54
p.m. Thursday.
• Mwlgold Awnue: A
vehlde burglary was
reported In the 700 block
at 1:14 p.m. lhursday.
• Newport CoMt Dftve:
Vandalism was reported in
the 20400 block at 8:42
p.m. Thursday.
• ~ Olp Lllne: An
auto theft was ~ed in
the 400 block at 5:30 p.m.
Thursday.
• 54th Street Md the
beach: Illegal fireworits
were reported at 12:43
a.m Thursday.
FAMILY
CONTINUED FROM A 1
hdd dbout hdlf the neighbor-
hood over for Wdter balloon
hghts, lhdnks m part to a
bag of 200 water baUoons
he received from farruly
lne nds Some fnends.
JEFF & LYLEEN
EWING
MlNIMIZlNG THE
STRESS OF A MOVE
Buying or selling a home is
among the top ten produce~ of
s1ress. Moves arc of1cn
a.1,:.ociated with anOlhcr ma1or
stressful situation, such as
changing JObs or getting
mamed or divorced.
The exchange of property I!>
a complicated transaction. and
there are a number of s11uauons
which can threaten a ),mooch
transaction. The apprai.,er
could tum in a low figure or
the title company could find a
cloud on the 11tle. The lender
might get erroneous credit
information. ca'iling a doubt on
the buyers· ability to qualify
for the loan. And even though
there is a meeting of the minds
on price and terms, both sides
may fee l regret at some point
during the negotiation. Any of
these 1>Cenarios can be scary if
you don't know how to handle
them. Professional Realtors
don't have a magic pill which
will make the transaction a
piece of cake, but their
expenence can steer you
through any potential
obstacl~.
Lylecn and Jeff have 30
consocut.Jvc years of real estate
expcricnce in Newport Beach.
For professional service or
advice with all your real estate
needs call the Ewtnp at
Coast Newport C°'dwell
Banker .. (949) 759-3796 ·-...,4"t
PUBLIC SAFETY •
Extra FBI powers draw mixed reviews
• FBI agents will be allowed
to monitor churches, lntemet
sites and libraries, but not
everyone approves.
Newport Beach City Manager
Homer Bludau said it remains to be
seen how the new rules will affect civil
liberties, but added that "it's a sign of
the times."
•it seems like a good way to pre-
vent terrorist activity as opposed to
responding to them,# he said. "Not
many will be pleased about it, but I
understand that it's an effort to protect
our communities."
Gary Collins, pastor at St. Mark
Presbyterian Church in Newport Beach,
said he is not pleased with the ldea of
FBI agents spying on his congregation.
Mil's one thing to observe people
they know are suspects,• he said. ·~ut
there's a separation we need to mam-
ta.in (between church and state)." 0..,,. BhAlrath
DAILY PILOT
NEWPORT-MESA -The Justice
Department's decision Thursday to
hand FBI agents broader authority to
monitor churches, public libraries and
Internet sites for clues to terrorist activ-
ities is getting mixed reactions here.
Under the existing guidelines, FBI
agents cannot surf the Web or simply
walk into public events to observe
people and activities. The new guide-
lt.nes will give the agents more free-
dom to investigate terrorism even
when they a.re not pursuing a particu-
lar case.
Collins said be would be more than
willing to cooperate with 8!1Y FBI
investigation relating to terrorists, but
would not welcome them "infiltrating
his congregation -for the purpose of
spying. . .
While such spying actiVlty can
infringe on people's rights, it may help
to be proactive, Bludau said. Atty. Gen. John Ashcroft and FBI
Director Robert Mueller announced the
changes saying FBI agents in the field
have been hampered by bureaucratic
restrictions and that these new guide-
lines will help them do their jobs better.
They would also have the liberty to
walk into and observe activities in
churches and places of worship.
"We need to learn from the Sept. 11
attacks,• he said. "Our government is
telling us we're going to be attacked
again and we need to make sure that
does not happen.•
BRIEFLY
Jury still out
the gun and that Dokovic shot Marie in
self defense.
The attorneys for both sides made
their closing arguments Thursday.
"appeared to be extremely intoxical·
ed.• he said. Cook was arrested and
taken to Costa Mesa city jail.
in fast-food murder Arrested man dies
in police custody
On Wednesday at about 5:50 a.m., a
custody officer noticed Cook did not
"look too well,# Birney said. Cook was
then taken to Hoag Hospital
Presbyterian, where he died shortly
afterward, he said.
The jury deliberated all day Friday
and will continue Monday in the trial
of Ramadan Dokovic, the man accused
of publicly shooting and killing a 49-
year-old Newport Beach man a year
ago in a Costa Mesa Jack ln The Box
parking lot.
The trial began May 21. The prose-
cution alleges 42-year-old DokoVlc of
Downey killed Mlroslav Mane
because he was disappointed he did
not get a few stolen Rolex watches he
was looking for. The defense argued
that the two men were struggling over
A 59-year-old Newport Beach man
arrested by Costa Mesa police
Tuesday on suspicion of being dnmk
in public died Wednesday, officials
said.
The Orange County coroner per-
formed a preliminary autopsy, but
those tests proved inconclusive, offi-
cials said. They said more toxicology
tests will be conducted in the next few
days.
And only three days ago,
neighbor Ryan C hristopher,
the pitching ''closer" for our
baseball Cardinals, showed
up with another 200. Oh,
ioy. Ryan was accompanied
by his sister Caitlyn and
neighbors Josh and Chris
Alexander and they all had
a blast. The kids managed
to keep the water off nearby
cars but not off their clothes,
which were soaked by the
time they were done.
rt was the kind of fun that
was routine not so long ago.
Unscheduled but not com·
pletely unsupervised, there
was no grown-up telling the
kids how to have fun and no
unifonns to wear to s1grufy
the start of any fun activity.
Just kids playing W1lhout
parents paytng.
We've seen the same
kind of play at fri ends Kathy
and Dave Miller's house,
which seems to be the base
stabon for fun in their
VIEWS
CONTINUED FROM A 1
"I thmk somebody would
have told us if we did not
have the right to do 1t, ~
Foley said about the motion.
"Just because Planning
Commissions haven't been
A"''' Younonpour
'li'I ',; 1,1; 1,
I I Jo 111 ·,
TROPIC ELECTRIC
INSURED • BONOl D ~Owner ~ork s on Jo b
Call J ohn 949·54B·O'l07
No matter what you're doing,
your hometown newspaper
ms l\ti~hr Pilot IN... llAUJ
Police arrested Christopher Dixon
Cook. 59, at about 5 p.m. Tuesday
when they found him passed out on a
sidewalk in the area of Baker and Bear
streets, said Costa Mesa Police Lt. Dale
Birney.
The Orange County district attor-
ney will investigate the case as an "in
custody death.· Officials declined to
comment on the case till an investiga-
tion is completed. He was not wearing pants and
ne1g h borhood.
For far too long, it has
been harder for kids to
enjoy the pure ecstasy of
free play. Parents today are
much too concerned about
harm coming to their chiJ.
dren. In terms of a stranger
becoming the source of such
an event, the fear is unwar-
ranted. Statistics prove that
our streets are safer now
than when I was a kid in the
PleJStocene era
The other big reason kids
no longer get much free
play 1s because their pare nts
reel compelled to use every
spare minute to help them
get ahead. It doesn't really
matter what it is they're try-
uig to help them get ahead .
in, they just have to be
supervtSed at something.
Whether it's sports or aca·
denucs, these kids are
a lways monitored. One soc-
cer parent recently gave me
h1s family's scheduJe for
proactive m the past doesn't
medn they weren't allowed
to be•
The council holds the
hnal decision and if it
deodes there 1s no need for
a view ordinance, then there
won't be one, Foley said.
Mayor Linda Dixon, a for-
mer Planning Commissioner,
WHAT'S AFLOAT
• WHAT'S AR.OAT Is published
periodically. If you are planning a
nautical event, submit the infor·
matlon to the Dally Pilot, 330 W.
Bay St., Costa Mesa, CA 92627; by
fax to (949) 646-4170; or by e-
mail to dallypllotOlatimes.com.
GONDOLA TOURS
Gondola Romance offers
daily tours of Newport
Harbor during lunch and
dinner. Call (949) 675-4730.
The tours go out of Udo
Marina Village, 3400 Via
Oporto in Newport Beach.
UYAI TOUIS
The Upper Newport Bay
Ecological Reserve and
Nature Preserve hoctl two·
ttour kayak toun of the
Back Bay et 10 a.m. every
Shawn McCarty
SMwn McCarty, a long-
time Newport 8Mch rea·
dent wbo at OM tbQe
ownec1 .. cameae
s.ddllry 1 .... CID ieJbOe Wad. died AprO 13 ol
their involvement and I left
the room with a headache.
Yes, they enjoy soccer as a
family activity. that is true,
but the dad also told me
without a prompt that the
extensive soccer commit-
ment kept hts kids occupied.
Too often, that's how it is.
Kids cannot be left out of
sight of a parent for 20 min-
utes lest they become
hooked on smack or get
arrested holding up a conve·
nience store.
f've stated before that
nearly 100% of the kJds we
see going through the soc·
cer, baseball and other orga-
nized sports will never play
professionally and not many
more will play in college.
Still, they are pushed to
excel. That's not a bad thing
unless there is far too much
emphasis on this in the
child's life.
Kids at free play broaden
their imaginations. It's is
applauded the work of the
Planning Commission, call-
ing it "a smart move.• Had
the commission not initiated
the view ordinance, she
would have put the issue on
the council's agenda.
"It think [the action) was
an example of a good, strong
Planning Commission that JS
Sunday at 2301 University
Drive, Newport Beach. $20.
Kayaks made available
through Newport Dunes
Resort. Call (800) 585-0747
for reservations.
SAILING CWSIS
Sailboat rent.ab and prtvate
lessons are available at
Marina Sailing in the Balboa
Fun Zone. Advanced classes
include navigation, big boat,
powerboat. introduction to
heavy weather and first-
mate instruction. (949) 673-
7763; the Blue Dolphin
Sailing Club, (949) 6'4-
2525; or Udo Sailing Oub,
(949) 675..0827.
Sall.lng Patdnatton otten
claases in boating Mfety and
saillng, year-round for peo-
ple with dl.sabWties. Pree.
(949) 6-40·1678.
OllTlllY
absolutely amazing how
resourceful and happy they
can be with so little.
Last weekend, for exam·
ple, our son Roy and his
friend Kohl Jones had two
basketballs but no hoop. No
problem. The boys took a
cardboard box, set it on the
ground and started shooting
the balls into it. Then they
made up a game in which
one person can block a shot
attempt but only by throwing
one basketball at the other.
No parents telling them
what to do or making up
rules. Kjds in charge, mak-
ing fun their own way.
And in the case of Roy,
Ryan, Josh and Chris, some-
times all they have to do is
just add water.
• STEVE SMITH ls a Costa Mesa
resident and freelance writer, His
columns appear Saturdays.
Readers may leave a message for
him on the Daily Pilot hotline at
(949) 642-6086.
looking out for the best
uiterests of the community,•
Dixon said. "I think that is
their pnvy to do this and that
1s what a Planning
Commission should do ...
• LollU Harper covers Costa
Mesa. She may be reached at
(949) S74-427S or by e-mail at loli-
ta.ha~rO/atimes.com.
BOAT RENTAU
Balboa Boat Rentals can put
you on the water in many
ways. with single and dou-
ble kayw, electric boats,
14-holder sailboats, pedal
boats and runabouts for off-
shore use or cruising the
bay. (949) 673-7200.
Electric boat renttis an
available by the hour at Duffy
.Electric Boats, 2001 W. Coast
Highway, Newport Beach.
All boats are equipped with
window enclosures and CD
players. Jee and cups are pro-
vided. Reservations suggest·
ed. An hour rentel is $70.
(949) 645-6812.
Sall alrborae oatlldi
Newport Harbor, pulled by
•motorboat et Ba.JOO. Para-
Niling near the 8aJboe Pun
ZoM. A 90-mlnute tr1p ts
$45. (949) 673-1693.
cancer. He wu 83.
Service. were aliMdy hekt
a t St Jame. BplK'opel
Cbwdl. Mr. McCerty ..
IUrYiYed "" -P9lltdl andMICltML
varies for residents °' former
reslct.nts of Ccma Mee end
Newpon INCh If ,OU Wint IO hl¥t .,, ~ .,,.,.... .. .. ........ ~......., ... .
---~-4110 Of QI ..........
~1'•CDI.
Dolly Pi
GRATTON
CONTINU ED FROM A1
we have reviewed it and
nave adueved almost every.
thing," Gratton said.
She also was lmtrumental
in bolstering the college's
institutionaf 1esearch depart.
ment, which collects 411 the
schools' data.
Gratton said the adminis.
tration has also healed from
the controversy la.st fall
involving political science
professor Ken Hearlson, wbo
was accused and then mosUy
Cleared of harassing some
Muslim students in his class
following Sept. 1 t. After the
independent investigation,
Hearlson received a letter
from Gratton that be consid-
ered a reprimand.
One of Gratton's most
treasured memories will be
the feeling of camaraderie
among the staff on campus
that ~be said was especially
vibrant after Sept. 11.
"What bas helped us
through this year is the very
respectful and caring human
community,~ Gratton said.
MProbably the strongest feel·
ing I take away is the way
people care about each other
atOCC."
She will also miss her
favorite campus spots that
enabled her to escape the
daily grind and enjoy some
quiet meditation. One of those
is the horticulture gardens
where lilac, lavender, yellow
and fuchsia Dowers bloom in
a picturesque setting.
•My favorite time on cam-
pus is right at sunset,"
Gratton said. "There's usual·
ly a kind of peaceful quality.
Strolling around the campus,
you can smell the fragrance
of the eucalyptus trees.•
Gratton said she looks for·
ward to resting for a few
months, before embarking
on some writing projects and
consulting.
"I'd like to write essays
about various subject mat-
ters," Gratton 84.ld. "l also
enjoy writing poetry. J think
there's a book in me somP·
where. I just don't know
what it's about.•
• ~ Newmar'I covers edu~
tion. She may be reached at (949)
S74-4221 or by e-mail at
delrdre.newm.JnOla rimes.com
FISH
CONTINUED FROM A 1
il was too far into the ·Fish
Fry year• to plan for rt,
Scheafer said.
Club members have
already started prelimlnary
plans for next year's Fish Fry,
Scheafer said. Organizers are
looking to move the date back
from the first weekend of
June to sometime after school
is let out to allow for the use of
either Estancia or Costa Mesa
high school campuses.
The return of the Fish Fry
will be a grand affair, Scheafer
said -complete with carnival
rides, booUu and entertain·
ment -a far cry from the p1c·
nic dinner members had
planned to throw this year.
'"This lawsuit al:most killed
the Fish Pry," be said. "But
tba.t won't happen as long as l
have anything to say about 1t."
• LOUTA HARPER covers Costa
Mesa. She may be reached at (949)
574-427S or by e-mall at
lollta.h.t~tOlatimncom.
•
Doily Pilot
Sewage bill passes through state assembly
•Legislation to wipe out Orange County Sanitation District's
sewage waiver moves on to state Senate. '
Paul Clinton
DAllV PILOT
NEWPORT-MESA -A bill that
would require the Orange County
~anitati~n District to step up the treat-
ment of its sewage has sailed through
the state Assembly.
The legislation, known as
Assembly Bill 1969, passed in that
h.ouse of the Legislature on a 62-8
vbte on Wednesday evening. It now
mov~s to the Senate for approval.
Author Ken Maddox. whose new
district in November will include Costa
Mesa, praised the overwhelming sup -
port for the legislation, which would
also short-circuit the district's attempt
to renew a federal waiver that would
keep treatment levels status quo.
The district dumps 240-million gal-
lons of partially treated sewage into
the ocean each day via an outfall pipe
leading 4 1/2 miles out to sea. City
•officials suspect this plume of sewage
is contributing to bacteria contamina-
tion in the surf zone.
"My anti [sewage) measure has
caught a wave," Maddox said. "IThe
plume) is a prime contributor to the
unhealthy condition off the coast."
Maddox introduced the bill on
Feb. 14. It has garnered the support of
environmentalists including the
Ocean Outfall Group, a band of local
environmentalists lobbying toe
stepped-up treatment of the sewage.
Assemblyman John Campbell, who
represents Newport Beach, supported
the bill. Campbell's district includes
several cities that support ending the
waiver -including Newport Beach
and Irvine -and Lake Forest, which
supports the waiver.
After agonizing over whether to
suppoft the bill, which would ulti-
mately force the district to spend
about $400 million to upgrade its
treatment plant, Campbell deoded to
support it.
"This bill is probably overkill, but
we are best to err on the side of
overkill rather than under treatment,"
Campbell said. •r would argue that a
lot of the charm and attraction of
Orange County is based on this being
a beach community."
Assemblyman Tom Harman, who
represents Huntington Beach, is
coauthor on· the bill. l'wo Orange
County a ssembly me mbers. Lynn
Daucher (R-Brea) and Bill Campbell
(R-Orange) voted against it.
Planning Commission adopts certification program
• County guidelines will enable Costa Mesa to ensure that
sober-living homes are legitimate, planners say.
Lolita Harper
DAILY PtLOT
COSTA MESA -The city has one
more weapon in its limited arsenal
against probJematic sober-living homes
after planning commissioners unani-
mously approved on Tuesday a county
certification program designed to mon-
itor the clean-living environments.
The county certification program ___.:
four years in the making -was devel-
oped by a mulb-jurisdictional task
force in the hopes that it will help offi-
cials more closely monitor sober-living
facilities. The Planning Commission
wholeheartedly endorsed the gwde-
lines, saying the program would bene-
fit everyone involved.
"It gives us a measure of control
' over operations, to see('ehat they are
clean and decent and reasonably safe
places to be,• Planning Commissioner
Eleanor Egan said of the program.
The Board of Supervisors
approved the Orange County Adult
and Alcohol and Drug Sober Living
Facilities Certification process 1 ·in
December, and it will take effect in
October, officials said.
Some of the recommended guide-
lines outlined in the county's program
include specific requirements regard-
ing staff, admission and intake, build-
ing and grounds, monitoring and
review and a good neighbor policy.
Planning Commission C hairwoman
Katrina Foley said it was an easy deci-
sion because the county had already
done the preliminary analysis.
"It was all or nothing,• Foley said.
"Uthe city wants it, we have to vote
for it. And we want it.•
The program requires county certi-
fication for any sober-living facility
that wants business from the county
-from the courts or probation
department. Certification is voluntary,
but without it homes will lose out on
business, Foley said.
· "The idea is that everybody will
want to be certified because a referral
from the county ensures that you stay
in business,• Foley said.
Although it is a county-sponsored
program, cities would share the bur-
den and monitor their own sober-liv-
ing homes. Data collected by city
staffers would be transferred to the
Orange County Sheriff's Department,
where additional positions have beerl
created to administer the program.
The idea that the city would be
P •olo~Ri1torante
Q:11TH,NTt<g ITAL IAN CV~ I-;£
ANO flNE W INE
FMJwiug Chef f'llolo Pt'.itlurilw
required to monitor the homes pleased
Egan because the oty would otherwise
not even know they exist, she said.
Under exist.Jog state law, sober-liv-
ing homes that don't offer medical
treatment and have~ix or fewer peo-
ple on the premises a.re not requued
to carry any pennits for operation.
Perry Valantine, Costa Mesa's
director of planning, said city officials
are aT1X1ous for the program lo kick in.
Costa Mesa hosts 106 ugroup
homes," a designation ·that includes
foster and elder-care facilities, sober-
living homes and drug and alcohol
treatment centers, according to a
2001 report.
Sober-living homes have been dn
especially sore spot for city oflicidls in
recent years. Costa Mesa houses 21
sobe'r-ltving homes, the 2001 report
shows, all of which offer no medical
treatment and are therefore exempt
from state licensing.
f!"rom the £Arno11i, h.·wy H1·~1 u11ra111 in .\1·wport Bt•a<'h
OUR MEALS ARE
A TRIP TO MEXICO
IRllflY
Ill THE NEWS
Lifeguard tryouts
to be held Sunday
The Newport Beach
Fire De).>dl"tl1\ent will con-
duc.t Weguard tryouts foT
an introductory training
program Sunday morning.
The events for those
registered for the tryouts
include a 1000-meter
swim, and then 30 minutes
htler, a 1000-meter ·run-
swim-run. The scores of
the two events will be
combined and the top ·20
will qualify to compete for
the program.
Those eventually
selected will be compen-
sated at m.in.i.mum wage.
The Cddet program is an
introductory one designed
for 15-and 16-year-olds. It
introduces the participants
to CPR, first p.id and ocean
rescue skills.
The program also
includes 108 hours of
training over a six-week
period each summer. The
typical schedule for the
cadet program will be
Monday through
Wednesday-for five hours
each day, and an addition-
al three hours on
Thursdays assisting in the
Juruor Ltleguard program.
The tryouts will begin
at 8:30 a.m. at tbe
Weguard Headquarters at
Newport Pier.
/ 714·:373·5399
' Lunltf:' I I 30 2 OOpm Oonn"' 5 00 I 0 fJOpm • Open Tunsdey 1hrough Sunday
"OUR OWN WINES JUST ARRIVED
FROM NAPA VALLEY"
7 61 CENTER AVE, #37 HUNTfNGTON BEACH CA 92647
(/,w11/t>tl in ()It/ II 1irld I ilftiµ,, )11Ml 11jf tlw 405 l'wy)
O verstreet's Wine Merchant
Purveyors of Fine Wines, Spirits, & Gifts
& Overstreet 's Wine 'fasting Bar
3400 Via Lido • Newport Beach • 92663
949/ 566-9463 (Wine)
296 E. 17TH ST. COSTA MESA · 949·645·7626
RETAIL STORE HOURS
Tuesday -Saturday 10:30 am-7 pm
WINE BAR HOURS
Wednesday & Thursday 4 pm -10 pm
Friday & Saturday 4 pm -11pm
-NEWPORT BEACH
SRinklio& ~ QiamRa&!!i:
RETAIL
'Varichon Clerc Blanc de Blanc 9.99
rated Best W111e by W111e Spectator
Domaine Chandon NV 17.99
l<oederer &late NV 21.49
• Laru.cm Brut Black L.abt'I 29.49
Laurent l'crrier NV 30.49
Ta11tinger ia Francaise NV 45.49
Veuve Clicquot Yellnw Label NV 41.49
Billl>cart Salmon NV 37.49
MlX't Brut Imperial NV 'l2.49
Laurent Perrier Ultr,1 Brut 69.99
the ult1111nti• ;,, luxury, 1111 11/tm dry cl1a111p11!1!.>rlt'
Laurent Perrier Grand Siede 111.49
IH:sl pric6 you'// "ft' for tlrh Gmnd Mnrqtte Clu1111pag11e
Dom Perignon 118.99
C11ifomia.
1999 Beringer Private Rcserw 30.49
Chardonnay
1999Merryvale St.irmont 21.49
Chardonnay
2000 Caymus Conundrum 26.99
1999 Caymus Napa Cabernet CaH for LClwest Price
l999 Plumpjack Cabernet Sauvignon 63.49
1997 Sliver Oak Cabernet Napa I 115.49
2000 St. Clement Sauvignon Blanc 13.99
1999 Far Niente Chardonnay 44.99
Some favorjles from Italy
Santa Margherita Pinot Crigio 22.49
this is the world's favorite Pinot C.rigio. The lowest price
you will find thl'l Wini! ditywhere!
199'7 Barbera Dessilani
1997 Barbaresco Monmnbaldi
1998 lignanello
Jq93 Sassicaln
15.99
35.49
89.99
150.00
SALE
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21.49
24.99
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37.99
55.00
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s:;rcal Vtlye Reda from Fr1occl Bucaundy Ac Rhone
1999 Pommard Les Ruglens (only 5() rasn far U.S.) 37.99 29.99
1999 CNP L'Oratoire 30.49 19.99
l999 CNP L.a.tarel Cuvee ExC"epticm(llle 29.49 19.99
1999 Chateau Valrombe La SerWie 27.99 21.99
Wt• an! not n.~ble for typographialLttrors.
We ,_rv~ the right to com-ct prkn. PrQs fubjf(t IO~ without
notlfk<1tion. Stock may bo limited to tupply on hand.
Overstreet's Wine Bar
A place to relax & experienc.e fine wine
& entertainment
FEATURING JACK SHELDON
spectacular Jazz Singer/Horn Plllvtr
Friday &r Saturday Ev~ -Call H9-!f66..9463
•
J
CHATEAU
MONTELENA
2000 FUTURES
PURCHASE
6 btl qty
$ 54.99/btl
CHATEAU
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•Pre·paymenl required
WINE TASTING
WORKSHOPS
at OVERSTREET'S
Visit our Webiite
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or call
9t9·566·WINI
tiD be placed Oil
• TASTE BEFORE You BUY
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• A6 Satu , June 1, 2002 , Doily Pi
Festivities reign ai Tbe Camp ' toda,y for its grand opening
• • •
•
T he Camp in Costa
Mesa, a new shopping
destination, is having a
grand opening from 10 a .m.
to 8 p.m. today. The event
will include a celebration
dlld kid festival complete
with grilling, giveaways, live
music and more. Costa Mesa
Mayor Linda DLXon will
t..1ttend the ribbon cutting
ceremony at noon, along
with an American lnd.ian
Drum Circle and Boy Scouts
of Azr.erica Colo1 Guard cer-
emony. Planned activtties
include: a canned food drive
for Second Harvest Food
Bcmk of Orange County (if
you bring m canned foods,
you'll receive raffle tickets
for a drawing); food and bev-
Gettina.
INVOLVED
• GETTING INVOLVED runs peri·
Jdlcally in the Daily Pilot on a
otating basis. If you'd like infor-
nation on adding your organiza·
tlon to this list, call (949) 574-4298.
ALS ASSN., ORANGE
COUNTY CHAPTER
The Amyotrophic Lateral
Sderosis Assn., which helps
mdiVlduals who have the dis-
order that is also known as
Lou Gehrig's disease, needs
volunteers. (714) 375-1922.
AMERICAN CANCER SOCIETY
The Orange County Region
of the American Cancer
Sooety seeks office volun-
teers. The society ts also
seekmg volunteers to answer
calls for the unit's Helpline
lnfoCenter. (949) 261-9446.
AMERICAN HEART ASSN.
The American Heart Assn. is
Greer Wyfder
BEST BUYS
erage samplings; Smokey
8 ear; balloon animal sculp-
ture; massage therapy; rock
climbing wall; face painting;
cancature artist; outdoor
photography gallery; in-store
activities; and demos. The
looking for volunteers to per-
form various general office
duties in the main office and
implement educational and
fund-raising events through
Orange County. No experl-
ence necessary. lraining will
be provided. (949) 856-3555.
ASSN. RENAISSANCE
CREATORS
The Costa Mesa group spon-
sors and supports outreach
community service programs,
sue.ti as the homeless sanctu-
ary. Volunteers are needed.
(714) 540-5803.
BOYS & GIRLS aues
OF NEWPORT-MESA
The three area clubs need
volunteer coaches and arts
and crafts workshop teach-
ers. Call for locations. (949)
642-2245
COSTA MESA
LITERACY COUNCIL
The Costa Mesa Literacy
Center needs volunteer tutors
0~\96'-'~ MIKE'I
~~~CARPET$
OVER 30 YEARS IN COSTA MESA
• Now Owned .& Operated by Mesa Upholstery •
Laminate Texture-Plush Ceramic
Flooring Carpet ,,.,0,, .. $150 ,~l''t2n .... Featuring ALLOC eq ft ft
No Glue lns1al/ia11on 1 II 8
Wood
Flooring
Refinishing &
New
Bemer Carpet Vinyl
o"' s 1 88 r Flooring
\"\\! •1.u
Installed Sq ft ~~o~\ eq ft
~s .
Camp is at 2937 Bristol St.,
Costa Mesa. Information:
(714) 444-4CMP or www.the-
campslte.net.
One of my favorite cbil·
dren's apparel and gift
shops, TbJ.a IJttle Plggy
Wean Cotton, is having a no
sales tax event Wednesday.
Included in the event are
drawings, cookies cilld gifts.
Artist Tom Stanley will do
"piggy style" portraits from 1
to 5 p.m. The store carries
darling clothes for boys and
girls, and tons of great gifts
including animals, toys and
accessories. It's at Fashion
Island in Newport Beach.
Information: (949) 718-0533.
Zany Brainy is offering
to teach English as a second
language. People who want to
learn English as a second lan-
guage are also encouraged to
call. Call to register. (714) 435-
3310 or (714) 545-3445.
COSTA MESA MS
SELF-HELP GROUP
The Orange County chapter
of the national Multiple
Sclerosis Society has started a
new self-help group in Costa
Mesa for people newly diag-
nosed or with minimal symp-
toms of multiple sclerosis, or
both. The group will meet at
11 a.m. the first Tuesday of
every month. (949) 650-7659.
EASTER SEALS
Easter Seals needs volunteers
for ongoing clerical work and
to help in programs for chil-
dren with disabilities and in
special events. (714) 834-1111.
ENVIRONMENTAL
NATURE CENTER
Volunteer trajl guides are
Carpets • Area Rugs
Vinyls • Ceramics
Wood • Laminates
CALL NOW
642-8400
DESIGN CENTER
,
''For All Your Decorating Needs!''
FURNITURE
RE UPHOLSTERY
• Custom-Mede Furniture
• Sllp Covers
• Patio furniture
• Draperies, Shades,
&6ed$
its eighth annual free
Summer Reading Club to
help encourage kids to
read. The first meetings
begin the week of June 10
and la.st six weeks through
J uly 25. There are four age
groups that focus on age-
approprl.ate books and
activities. To register for the
reading club, you can call
(949) 640-5131 or stop by at
the Corona del Mar Plaza,
at 900 Avocado Ave.
Pink Lemonade is a new
apparel shop for women and
children that carries conT
temporary fashions, gifts
and furnishings. It's at 3315
E. Coast Highway, Corona
del Mar. Information: (949)
673-8033.
needed to help visitors learn
about their environment.
(949) 645-8489.
FISH -MOBILE MEALS
Call (949) 642-6060 to help
Friends in Service to
Humanity assist with the
Mobile Meals program and
provide ongoing emergency
assistance to those in need.
Both always seek volunteer
assistance in a variety of
areas. (949) 645-8050.
JEWISH FAMILY SERVICE OF
ORANGE COUNTY
Volunteers are needed for
Project Caring, \fhlch pro-
vides socialization and cultural
experiences and Shabbat and
holiday celebrations to the
Jewish residents and others al
Fairview Developmental
Center in Costa Mesa.
Volunteers will •adopt" a
facility to provide program-
ming of Jewish content to the
residents on a monthly basis
and will be required to take a
Bernilil is having a sale
on men's clothing of up to
50% off. Shoes are priced
from $75, shirts are priced
from $45, suits are priced
from $395 and pants are
priced from $75. Bernini
specializes in men's lto.lfan
brands including Barelli,
Bernini and more. It's on the
second level at South Coast
Plaza. Information: (714)
432-1786.
The Pour Seasons Hotel
in Newport Beach is offering
special rates starting at $250
per night. There are also
new summer packages that
include golf at Pelican Hill
Goll Course, shopping at
Pashion Island and spa treat-
ments in the hotel's spa. It's
TB test and undergo a finger-
printing background check.
Volunteers are needed to pro-
vide comfort and support to
the Jewish tenninally ill and
their families. The group also
sponsors an ongoing Jewish
healing support group for peo-
ple experiencing chronic ill-
ness at 7 p .m. Thursdays at the
Jewish Family Service, 250 E.
Baker St., Suite G. Costa
Mesa. Free. Preregistration
required. (714) 445-4950.
MOZART CLASSICAL
ORCHESTRA
Orange County's only non-
profit resident chamber
orchestra needs volunteers for
ticketing. ushenng. phones,
mailing and help with recep-
tions. Nominees are also
being sought for the board of
directors. (949) 830-2950.
NEW DIRECTIONS
FOR WOMEN INC.
The recovery center for adult
women with alcohol and
at 690 Newport Center
Drive, Newport Beach.
Information: (949) 270-2083.
The Defore Dace Cente~
in Costa Men is offering
more than 100 dance classes
weekly for kids through
adults. The classes available
include jazz, ballet, tap,
turns, hip hop, lyrical and
Pilates mat classes. There
are also summer workshop
classes available. It's at 151
Kalmus Drive, Costa Mesa.
Information: (714) 241-9908.
• HST 8UVS appears Thursdays
and saturdays. Send Information
to Greer Wylder at grtt""!rlderO
yahoo.com or 330 W. Bay St.,
Costa Mesa, CA 92627, or 'Ilia fax
at (949) 646-417'0. "'
other ct{emical dependencies
seeks volunteers. (949) 548-
9927 between 10 a.m. and 6
p.m.; or Joy, (949) 548-8754.
NEWPORT BEACH
,PREMIERE CINEMA GUILD
The Newport Beach
Premiere Cinema Guild,
which supports the Newport
Beach Film Festival, is look-
ing for new members.
Interested candidates
should want to help further
an artistic and cultural her-
itage in the community,
should have a love of cine-
ma and a willingness to
raise awareness of the film
festival. (949) 253-2880.
OPERATION CLEAN SLATE
Operdtion Clean Slate. a
Costa Mesa-based organiza, •
tion that focuses on graffiti' •
prevention, needs volunteers
to paint out graffiti and assist
with other duties. Michael •
'Howard, (714) 435-0745.
. . :1
·' . .. . .. . . . •• . ~· . . . · • · . . . . . . . ,
. • . . . ·' . . •• I
·' I
I
30 Years of Exce llence ."• Design and In stallation
Call Dian< Chn< @ 949.640.5806 fM an appomrmen. u.~th a Rug~ ' n~~I ... 'T
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Spring & Summer Shoes and Acces:,orieb
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Pit, f.lshion and friendly service!
•
• ·' .: . ••
Doily Pilot Saturday, June 1, 2002 A7
~
Exchange Club honors ace students with plaque, check
M embers of the
Exchange Club m
Newport Harbor
honored recipients of the
ACE award with a $500
check and a plaque to memo-
rialize their achievement.
Introduced by member Bi>b
IO.nton were students Ronald
Hackett, Cole Whaley and
Nlld Kimbell from Monte
Vl.Sta High School; Michelle
Baines from Back Bay High
School; Mellaa Blair from
Corona del Mar High School;
Shannon Maddox from Costa
Mesa High School and
Jessica Artas and Zureen
Naaz from Estancia High
School.
·we hope that some of
these students will be back
as role models in thQ--near
future,• states Kinton.
On June 13, 2002,
Newport Harbor High
School football coach JeH
Brinkley will present the Bill
Wittman Memorial Award
plaque and a check to one of
his graduating senior football
players at the Exchange
Club luncheon help at the
Nautical Museum.
IRREI EVANT WEEK!
lrrelevant Week founder Paul
Salata is out speaking to ser-
vice clubs as l.W. has added
a new component this year,
honoring a service club
Jim de Boom
COMMUNITY & CWBS
member who doesn't always
get the credit for their dona-
tion of time, talent and trea-
sure to the community. Salata
will be speaking on June 6 to
the Newport Beach Corona
del Mar Kiwanis Club lun-
cheon held al the Bahia
Corinthian Yacht Club.
Salata was honored with
•An American Tribute• last
week for his lifetime of phil-
anthropic achievements at
the Grove Theater in
Anaheim that was attended
by more than 700 business,
sports and community lead-
ers from Orange and Los
Angeles counties. Daily Pilot
publisher Tom Johnson,
sports editor Roger Carlson
and I were there along with
a hundred or so Newport-
Mesa folks (John and Carol
C~, Peter and Ginny
Ueberrotb, IUcbud and ·
Sman Luebn, Mlc:bMI
Stevena to name a few) to
hear masters of ceremony
and Daily Pilot columnist
Peter Buffa lead a very
funny and insightful "This is
Your Life" tribute to Salata.
It was a beautiful evening,
celebrating Salata's life while
raising funds for the Orange
County chapters of. Goodwill
Industries (Dan Rogers, chief
executive of Goodwill con-
ceived the tribute ic!ea) and
the American Red Cross.
Back to Irrelevant Week:
Defensive Tackle Ahmad
Mlller, drafted 261st by the
Houston Texans from the
UNL V football team, will be
honored during l.W. 27,
which begins with the
Arrival Party at 5:30 p.m. on
Monday, June 17. The party
is sponsored by the
Commodores Club of the .
Newport Beach Chamber of
Commerce and is will be
held at the Newport Dunes
Waterfront Resort. lickets
are $10 per person and
include food, a jazz band,
cheerleaders, gifts to Miller
and a lot of laughs at Miller's
expense.
On Tuesday, June 18,
UNLV coach John Robinson
will be the special guest at
the All-Sla.J Celebrity Sports
Banquet to be held at the
Newport Beach Marriott
Hotel at 6 p.m. Tickets are
$100 per person. On Friday,
June 21, Miller's day will
include a beach party before
venturing to Sing Sing and
the Crazy Horse in the Irvine
Spectrum.
More information on
Irrelevant Week can be
obtained by calling (949)
263--0727. It is a week you
will.enjoy! See you there.
WOR'IH REPEATING -
From the •Thought for the
Day• provided by Greg
Kelley of the Newport Mesa
Irvine Interfaith Council -
•Appreciation is a wonderfuJ
thing;, it makes what is
excellent in others belong to
us as well.• -Voltaire
SERVICE CLUB MEET-
INGS nus COMING
WEEK:
T\JESDAY
7:30 a.m. The Newport
Beach Sunrise Rotary Club
will meet at Five Crowns.
6:30 p.m. lb·e Costa Mesa
Newport Harbor Lions Club
will meet at the Costa Mesa
Country Club for a business
meeting.
WEDNESDAY
7:15 a.m. The 20-member
South Coast Metro Rotary
SABATINO'S
Lunch • Dinner • Sunday Brunch
251 Shipyard Way • Newport Beach
Please call for hours, directions & reservations.
: (949) 723-0621 :
Club 'will meet at the Center
Club (www.aouthcoaatmetro-
rotary.org) and the Newport
Harbor Kiwanis Club will
meet at the University
Athletic Club.
Noon. The 35-member
Exchange Club of the
Orange Coast will meet at
the 'Bahia Corinthian Yacht
Club for presentation of the
ACE awatds.
6 p.m. The Rotary Club of
Newport-Balboa will meet al
the Bahia Corinthian Yacht
Club for a program by John
Ko:ze on "The Power of
Words."
THURSDAY
1 a.m. The 20-plus mem-
ber Costa Mesa-Orange
Costa Breakfast Lions Club
will meet at Mimi's Cafe.
Noon. The 50-member
Costa Mesa Kiwanis Club
will meet at the Holiday Inn
(www.ldwan.ia.org/dublcoata
meao), the Newport Beach-
Corona del Mar Kiwanis
Club will meet at the Bahia
Corinthian Yacht Club to
hear Irrelevant Week
founder Paul Se.lata, the 80-
member Exchange Club of
Newport Harbor will meet at
the Newport Harbor
Nautical Mtisewn for a busi-
ness meeting, the 100-mem-
ber Newport-Irvine Rotary
Club will meet the Irvine
Marriott Hotel (www.nlro-
tary.org).
• COMMUNITY It a..uas is pub-
lished Saturdays in the Daily Pilot
Send your service club's meeting
information by fax to (949) 660-
8667; e-mail to jdeboomOaol.com
or by mail to 2082 S.E. Bristol,
Suite 201, Newport Beach, CA
92660-1740.
2 0 0 2 h a r b o r a r e a
service
We Cordially Invite You to the .
Most Entertaining & Informative
FREE Seminar You Will Ever Attend!
Alan Haft Sponsored by
Retirement Planner
"Looking For Certainty in These Uncertain T.imes"
Special Focus on 401 k, IRA, and all retirement plans
Learn Ho w To: f~J
• Protect your present assets
• Increase your income without risk
• Reduce or eliminate taxes
• Why you may be wasting money on insurance
• How to stay independent
• Protect your pension ~ IRA $ . -
Who Should Attend: ~
• Anyone who owns a CD ·
• Anyone who owns or is considering an annuity
• Anyone who desires more Income and less taxes
• Anyone concerned about probat~ or estate taxes
·Anyone invested In the st<><;k market
•Anyone 45 to 75 years of age
N o Selling Will Be Done At This Seminar!
U11ned 81111119. l'llllmdlo•, pl1111 all 1 1
rlton Ha I -
r ..
•
,.
" •
I
t
•
----
A8 I June 1. 2002
• Send ~ TOWN Items to
the Dally "lot. now. Bay st., Costa
Mesa, CA 92627; by fM to (949) 646-
4170; «by calling (949) 574-4298.
Include the time, date and location
of the ewnt, • weJI as • contact
phone numb«. A comple«e fisting Is
available •t www.dallypilotcom.
TODAY
Help save lives by donating
blood to the American Red
Cross today from 10 a .m. to 4
p.m. in the Friends Meeting
Room at the Newport Beach
Central Library. Witb each
donation, three to totir lives
are saved. Donors must
weigh al least 110 pounds
and be at least 17-years-old.
Please eat a good meal and
drink lots of fluids before
donating. The library is at
1000 Avocado Ave. (949)
644-3300.
SATllDAY
1be 2111 ....... Coroaa del
Mar Scenic SK p~ted by
the Corona del Mar Chamber
al Commerce and the dty at
Newport Beach Community
Services Department will
begin with registration at 6
a.m. near the comer of Oceari
Boulevard and Heliotrope,
above the Corona del Mar
State Beach parking lot, in
Corona del Mar. Mail com-
pleted registration forrn with
check or credit cards to Attn:
CdM5k city of Newport
Beach, 3300 Newport Blvd.,
Newport Beach, CA 92663.
Walk-in -registration and
packet pickup available from
noon to 7 p.m. today and 9
a.m. to 7 p.m . Friday at the
Oasis Senior Center, 800
Marguerite Ave., Corona del
Mar. Race-day registration is
$30, $12 for Dolphin Dash.
(949) 644-3 151.
ARoUNDTOWN
•
IEST IET
include touch tanks, wate
toun, a shark and ray exhi ·
an' ocean tide pool explo
ration, and an estuary mu
discovery. The isla.nd II at
ShelJmaker Road, Newpo
Beach. Pree. (714) 973-082
or (949) 640-6746.
The Newport Beacb PubU
Library's Young Adul
Advisory Council will host
carwash from 10 a ,m. to
p.m. in the Mariner
Elementary Scllool parkin
lot on livine Avenue. The car
wash was established to r ·
funds for a new, state-of-the
art Mariners Branch Libr
that will al.so serve as a sch'oo
library for Marine
Elementary School students
Donations are tax-deductible
The school is at 21
Mariners . Drive, Newpo
Beach. (949) 644-3150.
U.S. Ambassador Barbara
Bodine will give a lecture as
part of the Spring Porum
2002 hosted by the Cente r
for Global Peace and
Conflict Stud.Jes at UC Irvine.
The lecture will focus on life
in foreign service and is
scheduled from 3:30 to 5
p.m. The lecture is free and
open to the public. It will be
held in Social Sciences Plaza
A, Room 100 at UCI. (949)
824-6410.
The Upper Newport Bay
Ecological Reserve and
Nature Preserve are hosting a
two-hour walking tour along
the Back Bay, beginning at
Shellmaker1 Island at 9 a.m.
Saturday and June 15. Bring
binoculars a,nd sun protec-
tion. The 1.§land is at 600
Shellmaker Road, Newport
Beach. Free. (714} 973-6826
or (949) 640-6746.
The ~th annual Balboa Island Parade wUl begin at 11 a..m. Sunday on Mu1ne
Avenue, beglnnlng at the bridge. Lut year, about 4,000 people attended. Grand
manhals are Newport Beach Plre Chief 11m ltlley and Police Chief Bob McDonell.
The theme wU1 be "All Pl.red Up On Balboa bland• -a tribute to firefighters.
Show up early for a spot in the standing-room-only crowd. Free to enter, though
all parttdpanta must complete an entry form. (949) 675-1773.
JUNE 9
Muldoon'I DubUll Pub wtU
host its fifth annual Darlings of
Dance competition in its gar-
den courtyard from 2 to 3:30
p.m. Ranging in age fro m 7 to
12, the female competitors
will perform in traditional Irish
step·dancing apparel. They are all members of the CeJbc
Gold Irish Dance Academy
The dancers will participate in
a group performance and then
will perform individual inter-
pretive solo performances
against one another. The pub
is at 202 Newport Center
Drive, Newport Beach. (949)
640-4110.
there will be a live celebrity
auction with television per-
sonalities at the yacht club.
Regatta racers who raise
more than $7 ,500 will receive
an all-expense paid fantasy
weekend to New York City,
where they will partake in
activities and racing at the
New York Yacht Club.
Honorary chairs are John and
Donna Crean. Reservations
are required. (949) 644-9530.
A tree seminar and book-
signing on the book "The
Natural Highs To Help You
Feel Good All the TI.me•
hosted by coauthor Hyla Cass
will run from 6:30 to 8 p.m. in
the patio cafe of Mother's
Market, 225 E. 17th St., Costa
Mesa. Reservations required.
(800) 595-MOMS.
The Newport Dunes Resort
will show its final "Movie on
the Beach" for the month of
May. The showing of the
movie Dinosaur will begin at
dusk on a 9' by 12' screen.
Campfires will also be avail-
able for roasting marshmal·
lows and making s'mores.
AddJtional movies will be
shown throughout the sum-
mer months. No admission
fee. Parking is $7 per vehicle.
The resort is at 1131 Back
Bay Drive. (949) 729-DUNE
or www.Newportdunes.com.
The A VPN ext Beach
Volleyball Tournament will
begin at 10 a.m. at the
Corona del Mar State Beach.
Registration will begin at 9:15
a.m. Two-on-two men's or
women's teams can compete
in the AA. A, B or unrated
tournament dJvisions.
Participants must be an AVPNext member. Others Laurie Plrestone, a IOdal sec-
may pay the $10 annual fee retary for former President
to join at the tournament. $30 . George Bush and Barbara
per team. (562) 987-3330, vol-Bush.~ present a lectw"e ?11
leyballiwarp.com or scalvol-entertaining at the White
leyball@yahoo.com. House m,:>m 3 to 4 p.m. The program is part of the Newport
Island Parade will begin at 11
a.m. on Marine Avenue,
beginning at the bridge. Last
year, about 4,000 people
attended. Grand marshals are
Newport Beach Fire Chief TI.m
Riley and Police Chief Bob
McDonell The theme will be
"All Fired Up On Balboa
Island" -a tribute to firefight·
ers. Show up early for a spot in
the standing-room-only
crowd. Free to enter, though
all participants must complete
an entry form. (949) 675-1773.
Learn bird-watching bastes
and take a bike with Junior
Naturalist Leigh Johnson from
9 a.m. to noon in an event
geared toward kids and their
families. Bring sunscreen,
water and binoculars, if you
have them. Comfortable
shoes recommended. Best
suited tar children 8 and older.
$3 per person. (714) 973-6829.
II-
The slxth annual Volvo
Leukemia Cup Regatta, co-
sponsored by the Bahia
Corinthian and Dana West
yacht dubs, will begin
Saturday and continues
through Sunday. The starting
line is in Newport Beach; the
finish line is in Dana Point.
On the night of Saturday,
Did You KnowJ
"That we are a full service nursery with qualified
Calif~mia Certified Nursery Professionals and landscape
desi~ers. We can meet all of your gardening needs.
Come m today to~ Nurseries and let us show
you how."
NUMDl•S, INC.
Beach Arts Commission's Art
Lecture Series and will be held
at the Newport Beach Central
Ub~. Free. The library is at
1000 Avocado Ave. (949) 717-
3870.
SUNDAY THURSDAY
The ninth annual Balboa A 11em1nar on staying young
"Avoid the ordinary,
co01e to Tile Italia."
I >I "I 1 • '-• "l I, I' I ' I '-" I \ I I \ I I• i '.
KITOIEN
COUNTER. TOPS ...... w.w ......
MI.OW M ~.00 SQ.Ft .w.o.wr ..... o.-
.. IWr, .. ~"....bdllia~..,..
..-.~c.,.y ..
•READYTO INSTALL"
GRANITE
COUNJ'ER TOPS • All...,...,c..a..
• 0..-.SWctw. ........ s,i.i.
•O..W. ..........
• ""'26"'1 112"
6
NADJRAL STONE t
FINE PQR<JINNS
SoW ..........
~Prbil
• FIMl'I •,,...
·~
Ile Italia ~Stone ACtM1C1
1!117 8lllS10L. not °"COSL\ M1M (114) 7Sl "4441
Support
Our
Schools
Shop
Harbor Blvd.
of Cars
COSTA MESA SANTA ANA
2700 Bristol St. 2800 N. Tustin Ave.
(714) 754-6661 (114') 633-9200
TOM TANAKA, C.C.N.PllO
M1n19er ~ Nunery. c.-.. Mell
COMPLm lANOICAPING • 45 YfAltS DPElllENCE
UaNSl # :.ssJ
Master Nursery 'f>rofessional
at heart will be held from 6:30
to 7:30 p.m. today at the Patio
Cafe in Costa Mesa. The
seminar will be conducted by
David Steenblock and Marc
Rose. The cafe is at 225 E
17th St. Free. (949) 631-4741.
JUNE I
Mother and daughter are
invited to join Fran, Hani and
Helen Baumgarten in a spe-
cial discussion from 10 a.m. to
noon about having a mother
with breast cancer. The dis·
cussion will be held at the
Center for Psychology of
Cancer, a nonprofit counsel-
ing center. The center is at
1000 Quail St., Suite 190,
Newport Beach. $25 per fam-
ily. (949) 474-4337.
The Newport Bay Naturallsts
and Friends, city of Newport
Beach, Orange Coast College
and the Orange County Sea
Base will host an ocean dis·
covery day at Shellmaker
fslaod. The all-day event will
1'
The Chancel Choir and
soloists of Community Church
Congregational will present c1
fund-raiser concert in the
church sanctuary at 7:30 p m
The music committee will pro·
vide desserts and drinks at
6:30 p.m . on the patio. The
program will include works
by Gershwin, Sondheim,
Webber, Lerner and Loewe,
Rodgers and Hammerstein
and more. All proceeds will go
to the Perpetual Music Fund.
which underwrites aD non·
budgeted musical projects c1t
the church. Child care isavdJI·
able. A donation of $15 per
SEE TOWN PAGE A10
I ' . !' ORGANIC ART
PLANTS & OF.SIGN
Now that the weather's nice -
what's ,,our excuse for not coming in? , 1
· Hundrw of~, hard to find peremUals :. ~all owr tM world in 4", 5" and~ ~·
s~. °""customers apfweciak OUT excellent ~
stock and tM premium qwaiily o{OUT plants. ~·
Custom orders and hmv cfefa.ery are auailabk. · 1
Fru In-Home Con.nJtaiion. ·
' Distribwor few Daw Fross 'Nahw Sons Plants' #
and Gary Harnmn 'Desert to JIOlgle Plant,,' ~·
.,
;
-CMO
714.289.022Z
269 N. <;;1asHI, Or.wt, CA 92866
o,,e.. Daib 9~
~.cam
-:".:,.,~'°~.......__;-=:..;.•:.:••:.:r~
gE/V/OR L/t///Vt7 : ~!!-----=.:==~=
A f/IWll ""'' to atlM'tlu to OUT ""'tun llUltfttl .. !!·1z;;!:~-~·!!!"'~= • ~-··••-M4t" --Here is ANOTHER GREAT OPPOR'nJNITY to get the
• word out to more than 30,000
Newport Beach and Costa Mesa homes!
Call Lorraine O'Donnell for advertising information at:
949-57 4-4245
ftJllH!Sc JUNE ll,.
.. .
..
. ,
I r
. . '
' ..
. . . .
. .
... . .. . . . .,
. . .. ·:
Daily Pilot
. -~· .~
.,
new balcince
11ewport kdclt
932 Avocado Street
Newport Beach, CA 92660
Ph: (949) 720-1602
•
. Cottl'ae 949/566-9339
~· Fu~C).368
Corona del Mar a..r. ,., .... ., ti n-A.'TISb
-.cat~~
l41 l F~ Cmn I~ Su7t'C ml. C'..cnna de:\ \hr. CA 9ZliZ.S
MllO~or.sr ....,._
co.oM Da. llM. CA. 9IWS
1114' IOA.11.-C P.M.
a.n". 11 A.II. -S P ....
336 POINSETil.AAVE.
CORONA DEL MAR
CALIFORNIA 92625
T 949.673.4304
,p 949.673.4360
. '
rlftr.:
r~<in,l,k,
2325 E.Coast Hwy.
Corona Del Mar, CA 92625
Tel: (949) 673-8444
24050 Camino Del Avion, Suite B
Moinarch Beach, Ca 92629
Tel: (949).443-1476
I_.
• •
Saturday, June 1, 2002 AJ
s~-U/t
FITNESS CENTER
Phone: (949) 760-9335
2101 E. Coast Highway
Corona del Mar, CA 92625
www.shape-up.com
www.fitnessconcepts.com
_..E. ~COAST tn81r..Y
COROllA 08. llAlt. CA aas T!L.....-n-1..s
FAX...-n-11M
. !
'
AlO Sauday, Jone t, 2002
TOWN
CONTINUED FROM A8
person is suggested. The
church is at 611 Heliotrope
Ave., Corona del Mar. (949)
644-7400, Ext. 21.
JUNE.11
A seminar dealing with
overcoming addictive behav-
ior will be held t~ay froIP 6
to 1 :30 p.m. in the Patio Cafe
in Costa Mesa. The seminar
is sponsored by Mother's
Market. Free. The cafe is at
225 E 17th St. (949) 631-
4741.
JUNE 12
A seminar for people who
Newport Ha
Lutheran Church
(LLC.A.)
198 Doww Dr. Newport llMch
Tradltlon•ILutberwn
Pater Dewld ......
Wonhlp Serwtce wtth
Holy Communion
.. ....., 9:18 ....
CHILD CAR•
AVAILAaL•
(Ml) 148 3e31
< I I Ii I \ I I \ °"
HARBOR CHRISTIAN CHURCH
(Dlaclpl .. Of Chrtat)
2411 h'vlM /l#e. N..,_.leacll,CA
(141) 141-15711
llllier.Df.o.talllllt
suffer from headaches and
migraines will be held from
6:30 to 7:30 p.m. today at
Patio Cate in Costa Mesa.
Pree. The cafe is at 225 B 17th
St. (9'9) 631-4741.
JUNE 15
• LNm about blnb and their
habitat adaptations, play bird
games and make a bird craft
with the Upper Newport Bay
Ecological Reserve and Nature
Preserve from 10 a.m. to noon.
. Children ages 5 and older are
invited and should be accom-
panied by an adult for the
duration of the program. $.5
per participant. Reservations
requested. Candice Mcintyre,
(714) 973-6829.
JUNE 22
The. Upper Newport Bay
9HA88AT WOASHF
HEBREW 9CHOOl
COUNSEUHO
Ecological Reserve and
Nature Preserve will hOlt a
monthly marine life monitor-
ing program for all junior
high, high ICbool and college
students. Students are
assigned to beach .seine, bot·
tom trawl, water-quality work
or plankton tow, or fish mea-
suring stations. Community
service credit provided. Free.
Reservations required. (714)
973-6826 or (949) 640-6746.
YWCA Encoreplu wW con-
duct free breast cancer
sqeenings for women 40 and
· older of limited means from
8:30 a.m. to 12:30 p:m. at Uie
Harbor Christian Fellowship
Church in Costa Mesa. The
free screening are conducted
in complete privacy and will
include mammogram, clinical
breast exam and self-exam
instructions. The screenings
are also supported by the
·,;' ' ; I \1) I' I
Newport C.eota
United Medloclilt Cluucb
Rev. Cathleen Coots, P.utor
1601 Ma.rgucritc Ave.
comer of Marguerite and
San Joaqpin Hills Rd.
(949) 644-0745
811m Quitt worship Smlict
I Oam Worship and Childrm's
Sund4y School
Youth mttting wttk/y
"A God-«nrucd parish communiry, instruc.tcd bt the Word of God
and renewed by the Sacramcnu
Our Lady Queen of Angels
2046 Mar YlSta Drive
Ncwpo~ Beach, California 92660
(949)644-0200 Fax (949)644-1349
Rev. Monsignor William P. McLaughlin, Pasror
LITURGIES: Saturday, 5 p.m. [Cantor),
Sunday, 7:00 (Quiet), 8:30 (Contemporary), 10:00 (Choir),
,11:30 a.m. (Cantor) and 5:00 p.m. (Conrcmporary)
FIRST CHURCH OF
CHRIST, SCIENTIST
3303 Via Lido
Newpmt Becx:tl
673-1340 a 67~150
Qiurch 10 am l 5 pn,
~School JO am
Wldwb'......,. 7.xlpm
SECOND CHURCH OF omIST,SCIENTIST
3100 Pa::lfic View Dr.
NeW'JX't Beach
644-2617 or 675-4661
On.uch 10 am
Sunday School IO am
~MlllOGlpm
• 1• wa..toy ll noon
MllW ..... IMI _..-.., wMch -'-19 _... ue • triwnph In ChNt, ._,...._...._. .. _ _,._1ow4, .. a.,wln_,-,-..
11 C.to ...... 2114
•fOllCIVEN AND l'ORGMNG" t
(Mnww 6:11-1~ ac 11:21-JJ> ~
Fifdi In. ---... ~.,.,.
-...;_,..I, ma. f&JI P.M.
....... ,... J, JON. .. " •••• A.M.
• 0 , ,...,.. ... ...,,,.. ....
Susan G . · Komen Breast
Cancer Foundation, Avon
Brea.st Care Fund and the
oiange County's Breast
Cancer Early Detection
Partnership. Pree. The church
is at 740 W. Wtl.son St. (714)
935-9720.
OllOINI
'JWo-hour kayak toun with a
trained naturalist guide are
offered at 10 a.m. Sundays
from the Newport Dunes
Waterfront Resort. The re&ort
is at 1131 Back Bay Drive,
·Newport Beach. $20, or $10
for California Wildlife
Campaign and Newport Bay
Naturalists and Friends mem-
bers. (800) 585-0747.
A yoga and dace clul ls
Spiritual Discovery, 2850
Mesa Verde Drive East, Suite
111, Cost.a Mesa. (714) 754-
7399.
1be Rev. Connie Ryckman
leads a dilcussion group using
the book "Conversations with
God• from n~ to '1 p.m.
Tuesdays at th~ Center fot
Spiritual Discovery, 2850
Mesa Verde Drive East, Suite
111, Costa Mesa. Bring a
lunch. (714) 754-7399.
Manhall'• Tae Kwon Do In
Costa Mesa 'offers free self-
defense classes to airline
pilots and Oight attendants.
Classes are taught by three-
time U.S. National Champion
Tom Marshall. Marshall's is at
333 E. 17th St., Suite 13,
Costa Mesa. (949) 574-0122.
Daily Pilot
Jewish .family Service of
Orange County. The grqup is
led by an experienced coun-
selor and meets at 6 p.m.
Tuesdays at the Jewish
Federation Campus, 250 E.
Baker St., Suite G, Costa
Mesa. (714) 445-4950.
held from 4:30 to 5:45 p .m. A Dealing with Divorce sup-
Tuesdays at the Center for port group is offered by
An Interfaith couple• 1up-
port group is offered by
Jewish Family Service of
Orange County. The group
addresses issues faced by
couples in which one part-
ner is Jewish and the other is
not, including rais\ng chil-
dren, observing holidays,
displaying symbols in the
home and relationships with
extended families. The
group meets for three week-
ly sessions Wednesday
evenings at Jewish Family
Service, 250 E. Baker St.,
Suite G, Costa Mesa. (714)
445-4950.
WORSAIP
DIRECTORY
420 West 19th Street,
Costa Mesa
(949) ~8-1121
Rev. Michael Bankhud, Pastor
Adult Sunday School: 8:45am
Children's Choir: 9:00am
Wonhip & Children's
Sunday School:
ChrUt Cba.n:b by the Sea
Uni1td MnhocliM
1400 W. BaJbo°a Blvd .. Newport Beach
8:-151.111. -Adule Sunday School tJh lOfM> UL· ,..., MdQMm s..dly Sdlool
Costa Mesa
MUAVUDI
UNmD MITHODIST CHUICH
1701 9abr, C.M.
Wonhlp a Church School
8;30 and IChOO a.m.
Dr.~ (71 ") 979·82:M
The RcV'd Pttcr 0. Haynes, Rector
SUNDAY SCH EDU I..£
8 am -Holy Eoohvut ·
9 am · SundaySdiool/Adult Bible Study
10 am-Oionl EuchaNc NURSERYCAREAVAl~.BLE
Sr. MAH PusmDIAN
CllulCB
"Optrt,,,,,., and ()pat Miittb•
Wonblp9:31
I
INDEPENDENT
LAND ROVER
2037 H ARBOR BLV!~ 650 586 0 COSTA MESA CA 949
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Snvmt usu Mts4 /11111ilies for ~ 30 yt11n
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112 Lemon
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frca Olis Nol Trcalcd \VIiii Grori Hmm:s
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Italian Veggie
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Fried Chicken and
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worlds of WONDER
•images of the Ancients," an exhibit of photographs of ancient
Mediterranean ruins, will be on display at the Newport Beach Central Library
through June 30. All are welcome at a reception for the artist from 2 to 4
p.m. Sunday. The Newport Beach Central Library is at 1000 Avocado Ave.
Free. (949) 717-3801 .
. . .
Doily Pilot Saturday, June l, 2002 All '
Dancing with the inner light
Members of Saint Joseph Ballet ~ perform three piec~s this
weekend as part of 'Light, Within' at the Irvine Barclay Theatre
Young Chllng
DAILY PILOT
C boreajrapher Melanie Rios cre-
ated "The Music Came Last• for
107 dancers. The dance is about
an individual In a large group, about
bow one can become many and
about how there is joy in the idea of
growth.
to 18-year-olds and result in some-
thing unexpected.
. "You are. one person and they are
many,• she said of working with the
inner dty ballet company. "You put
out some part of yourself and you get
a return a hundred times plus. It mul-
tiplies. By the end of it, you feel over-
whelmingly fulfilled.•
The Santa Ana-based company's
mission is to help low-income chil-
dren gain self esteem, discipline and
ambition through dance and other
programs.
. Bums, formerly a nun at St.
Joseph of Orange, started the group
in 1983.
"I think dance can make a big dif-
ference in people's lives,• she said.
"I do believe that young people, if
they're given the opportunity to
de velop their talent and to use all
their energy in constructive ways,
that we can avoid a lot of ste reotypi-
cal problems in crowded, urban
areas."
Rios understands this sentiment
because when she w_Qrks with the
dancers in the Saint Thseph Ballet,
she witnesses how her instructions
ripple through the massive class of 9-
Rios' dance will be featured along
with Mark Haim's "Los Angelitos"
and Beth Bums' "listen look" for
Saint Joseph Ballet's concert at the
Irvine Barclay Theatre today and
Sunday. SEE LIGHT PAGE A16 The Saint Joseph Ballet will perform tonight at The Barclay.
"'
PHOTOS BY CRYSTAL LAUDlRDALE I DAILY PILOT
Zach Oldham (center) serenades Glynn M ontemayor, Dylan Gibson and Marla Mayenzet ln the comedy "The Skin of Our Teeth" at UCI.
ild for ilder
UC Irvine undergraduates tackle Thornton Wilder's 'Skin of Our Teeth,'
a time traveling play on the human condition, through June 8
Young ONlng
DAILY PILOT
Lisa Clayton gets to break what theater people call
"the fourth wall" while playing the role of Sabina
for UC Irvine's production of Thornton Wilder's
"The Skin of Our Teeth."
Not only does she get to talk to the audience directly
in this Pulitzer Prize-winning play, she gets to step out of
Sabina and into the role of a 1940s actor playing Sabina
-a twist not unexpected in Wilder's atypical writing
style (witness •our Town").
"So it's like you're playing two characters,• the under-
graduate student Mid. "I'm playing a character from the
1940., who's playing a character in a 1940s play ... It's
kind ol difficult, but it's a very fun job because the play is
very interesting stylistically."
Wilder's work was labeled "experimental" when it first
bit stages in the '40s. The play became a Broadway hit.
"'Jbere a.re all sorts of tricks and avant-garde tech-
niques," Mid Keith Fowler, who is directing the all-
undergraduate production. "Everything that Wilder does .
is very clever and rymbollc."
The tricks and turns are bountitul not just in the acting
neceaary to bring alive Wilder's work. but in the story.
SEE W1LOER MGE A 11
THEATER REVIEW
ua's 'S0n of
·0ur Teeth ' a
robust revi,val
By Tom Titus
G iven the sort of cutting-
edge, envelope-pushing,
often bizarre choices UC
Irvine's drama department bas
made lately, it might seem a bit
strange closing the season with a
60-year-old play by the author of
"Our Town" and "The
Matchmaker."
Yet Thornton Wilder's "The
Skin of Our Teeth• beazs a much
closer resemblance to a few of
UCI's previous offerings -"The
Love of Three Oranges• and
"Prome114de• -than it does to
the aforementioned works,
between which it was tucked in
1942. Wilder was yea.rs ahead of
bis time, seemingly anticipating
the avant-garde and absurd.isl
movements of the 1960s and
'70s.
At UCl, director Keith Fowler ·
has mounted a wonderfully
probing production that not only
breaks the fourth wall but kicks
the stuffing out of it. From the
• outset, the audience is in on the
gag, or the succession of gags,
which veer from biting satire to
dark allegory and back again.
The play centers on Wilder's
eternal survivors, the Antrobus
family who prevail for thousahds
of years from the Garden of
Eden (their surviving son wu
named Cain, though aow he
prefers Henry) to a post·apoca-
lyptic period after mankind is all
but devastated by a nuclear war.
One must remember that the
play was written just a year into
World WM 0, when the outcome
was anything but preordained.
Even more, however, its focus
is on Sabina. tbe feisty family
maid and liaison to the audienoe.
Lisa Clayton. UCI's resident
scene stealer and scenery cbom-.
per, finally has a role auited to
her prodigious comic talents. She
attacks it with glee and gusto.
With periodic outbursts of "l
can't play this aceoe," Clayton
remindS U1 tbit tt'a only make-
believe befcft llepptng back
into cberKtir and beautifully
attaddng the lbow'• juidelt role.
Chril WOiie ~the
~ c:bm9Ct8r of George
Antrobiil ::_ ........... of the .......... ,.,ht ..... varioUI
oebs ........... ..
.... ,._ ... ..., ...... nd --·•1112 ·-al d •" • At Mullld, cuupio-._.......,Midi Ma,__
Nil c hair .... the ctiarstie
•TITUS M81A1'
• • • .. • .. . . • • • • • • • • • . . • . • • .. • • • .. • • • . • • . . . • . . . . . • • • . • • . . • .
. •
. •
. • .
. • • . • • • .
.. • • • • .. • • • ~ • '
• • •
• i
------
Al2 Saturday, June 1, 2002
../
Celebrating the not-so-irrelevant life of Paul Sala,ta
I t WU packed with people. It
WU full of laughter. It WU both
wann and sentimental and
downrtght l:rreverent. \Vhatmore
appropriate combination of emo·
tions for a tribute to Newport
Beach legend Paul Salata, founder
of Irrelevant Week, which cele·
brates the last player picked in the
NFL draft. .
The First American Corporation
presented its tint-ever American
1\'ibute honoring Salata for a life·
time of community and.family ser·
vice. It was the pltimate roast. The' •
laughter was contagious, and so
were the tears. \Vhat a show it
was.
More than 1,000 guests paying
$175 and more filled The Grove at
Anaheim last week for cocktails,
dinner and a show worthy of Ralph
Edwards' ·This Is Your Ufe. •
Chaired by Bob and Teny
Callahan, with support from John
and Carol cum, Don and
Dorothy Kennedy, Tony and
Melinda Molso, Paul and
Chandler Tagllabue and Peter and
Ginny Ueberrotb, the event was a
nostalgic romp through the life of a
maverick who rose from obscurity.
Raised by a single mother in the
shadow of downtown Los Angeles
in the early part of the 20th centu·
ry, Salata got his first break in We
when a football scholarship to the
University of Southern California
introduced the rough and tumble
American-Serbian youth to a big
bright world of new opportunities.
ln Salata's own words, the best
of all things happened to him at
USC -he met his future wife,
Beverly. ·she had a car,• mused
the big man, who played pro ball,
dabbled in Hollywood films and
eventually found his way as a
businessman in real estate and
other ventures.
Orange County would become
the base for the We Salata would
build with Beverly. The Salatas
eventually became residents of the
exclusive Linda Isle, and raised
two children. Now they have
grandchildren. Through the years,
they strengthened their associa-
tions with a multitude of sod41,
cultural, athletic, business and
philanthropic organizations and
have made many dose friends.
The Salata family have become a
community treasure.
Surrounded by literally hun-
dreds of friends at the tribute -
B.W. Cook
THE CROWD
Paul Salata stands with Terry
and Bob Callahan.
some famous, including former
Los Angeles Police Chief Daryl
Gates, a childhood classmate of
Salata; Olympian and sports leg-
end Dr. Sammy Lee; and Peter
Ueberroth, commissioner of the
1984 Olympic Games in Los
Angeles -producers told the
story of Salata's life on a series of
four acts, or rather four quarters,
relating to his football career and
his lifelong passion for sports, for
athletes and for life.
Local personality Peter Buffa,
former Costa Mesa mayor and a
columnist for the Daily Pilot,
served as referee, or master of cer-
emonies, for Salata's We story.
Buffa was outstanding. He kept
the show moving, ad libbing lines
to revive the crowd when produc-
tion was thin.
Dinner was served to the over-
flow crowd, as video screens
flashed images of life and times in
other days and other places. An
enormous contingent of lifetime
USC comrades turned out for
Salata. Among them, Newport's
former pro football hero RJch Saul
and his wife Eileen. Gaddy
Vasquez, now head of the Peace
Corps., was in from Washington
D.C. for the tribute.
Local support for the evening
Maureen and Jack Richmond, and Dan Rogen smile with Salata.
Tony Mots<>, Dan Rogen, Johh Curd, Peter Ueberroth, George
Chitty, Paul Salata and emcee Peter Buffa at the tribute.
came from Dan and Shella Rogers,
Con Schweitzer, Tim Strader,
George Yardley, Kae Ewing, Jack
Faulkner, BW Thomas, John
Baker, Steve Monroe and Kenneth
Purcell, to name a few.
In the end, with the tributes fin-
ished, the jokes told, the barbs
shared, what mattered most was
the kiss shared between Salata
and his daughter Melanie Fitch,
the video message from his son,
the hug between Salata and his
older brother and the love
expressed to Beverly, looking radi-
ant in a lavender silk organza suit
with an elegant silk flower on her
shoulder.
It was about community and
family and the generosity of a
whole bunch of people who raised
more than a quarter of a million
dollars to be shared by Goodwill
lndustries of Orange County and
the American Red Cross, Orange
County Chapter. This American
Thbute to Newport's very relevant
irrelevant man about town was a
night to remember.
• THI CJtOWO appears Thursdays and
Saturdays.
Doily Pilot
Moran-Young
Fred end OtlYla MMt.lnez of
Bellflower announce the
,engagement of their daughter,
VYonrle Moran of Costa Mesa. to
fton Young of Costa Mesa. The
bride-elect gradulrt9d from
"0ownev High School
The future bridegroom. son
of John end Connie Walker of
Costa Mesa, gractu.t.d from.
Costa Mesa High School and att9"dld cal State Fullerton. A
June 2t wedding Is planned in
the United ~1st Church In
Costa Mesa.
Or. and Mrs. John G. Miiier of
Laguna Hills announce the
engagement of their daughter,
Jaj Aleundra Miiier of Laguna
Beach, to Samuel Wilson Landis
of Laguna Hiiis. The bride-Met
graduated from calvary Chapel
High School In Santa Ana and
Vanguard University In Costa
Mesa.
The future bridegroom. son
of Or. and Mrs. John G. Landis of
BreinlgsVille, Pa., graduated
from Parkland High School In
Orefield, Pa. and Wllllams
ColJege In Williamstown, Mass. A.
July 20 wedding Is planned in
Bethlehem. Pa.
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'
Doily Pilot
AFTER HOURS
• Submit AF1'lll HOUllS Items to
the Dally Pilot, 330 W. Bay St., Cost.
Mesa, CA 92627; bv fax to (949)
646--4170; or by ulflng (949) 574-
4268. A complete list 11 available at
www.dallypilot.com.
SPECIAL
MOVIES ON THE BEACH
The Newport Dunes
Waterlront Resort Hotel•wilJ
show movies on the beach
every Friday night in May
and every Friday and
Saturday in June. Showings
will begin at dusk. The film
schedule is as follows: •uncle
Buck• today, "Project x· on
Friday, "Ferris Bueller's Day
Off" on J une 8, "City
Slicke rs" on June 14,
•Pother's Dav• on June 15,
·Atlantis: The LoSflfiiip·-u-e.:...-..-'-
on June 21, "Back to the
Future• on June 22, "The
, Borrowers" on June 28, and
"The Flintstones· on June 29.
Newport Dunes is at 1131
Back Bay Drive, Newport
Beach. Admission is free, $7
for parking. (800) 765-7661.
STORYTEWNG CONCERT
"Some Enchanted Evening:
'SOUTH PACIFIC'
DATEBOOK Saturday, June 1. 2002 A13
11 p.m. every week.
•wanted" musicians include
guitar players, bass players,
singers, drummers, key-
boardists and others at 100
Main St., Newport Beach.
Pree. (949) 675-7760.
MUSIC AT THE ANNEX
Musical acts perform at 5
p.m. Sundays at the Pierce
Street Annex, 330 17th St.,
Costa Mesa. Free. (949) 646-
8500.
MUSIC AT THE GRILL
The Bluewater Grill offers live
music on Friday and Saturday
nights. Greg Morgan. Nick
Peper and Kelly Gordien
(known as MPG) will perform
classic rock, R&B apd swing
at 8:30 p.m. Fridays. Marvin
Gregory and MPG will per-
form classic rock, swmg and
R&B at 8:30 p.m. Saturdays.
.. Tue. iestaurant. is .J.acated. at. .......... .
630 Lido Park Drive, Newport
Beach. Free adouss:ion. (949)
675-3474.
MUSIC AT THE PELICAN
A Concert of Stories on
Laughte r, Love and Life" will
be presented at Orange
Coast Unitarian Universalist
Church at 7:30 p.m. today.
Robert Goulet will star as Emile de Becque ln "South PadJic'" Tuesday through June 9 at the 0Tange County
Performing Arts Center, 600 Town Center Drive, Costa Mesa. Performances Wt1l be at 8 p.m. Tuesday through
Saturday and 7:30 p:m. Sunday, with matinees at 2 p.m. Saturday and Sunday. $27.50-$62.50. (714) 556-2787.
The Rusty Pelican offers the-
music of Colnmon Ground
from Wednesday through
Sunday. The band will per-
form from 7 to ·10 p .m.
Wednesday and Thursday,
8:30 p.m. to 12:30 a.m. Friday
and Saturday. and 2 to 6 p.m .
Sunday. The restAurant is at
2735 W. Coast Highway,
The concert will feature sto-
rytellers Debra Olson Tolar,
Dinae F. Wyzga and Linda
King Pruitt. The church is at
1259 Victoria St, Costa Mesa.
$10-$15. (949) 646-4652.
MUSIC
MUSIC AT THE BOOKSTORE
Borders Books, Music & Cafe
at South Coast PJaza will pre-
sent musical p erformances
through June. Pop artist
Roger Kraft will launch the
month today at 2 p.m.,
Harmonia Baroque will fol-
low Sunday, The Singer's
Company will perform June
15, Sideswipe will perform
June 16 and Joseph Yashar
will perform J une 22. All
show times are 2 p.m.
Borders is at 3333 Bear St.,
Costa Mesa. Free. 714) 279-
8933.
PIUGllAL IRAl•ERI
n.IEYGYM
BUSINESS OPPORTUNrTY : =.=Equipment
•M•-.Tllble •~fit~ ~ipment
• Clients and Cash Flow
Call: John
(949) 933-4581
www.tralnbodytech.com
ua CHAMBER WINDS
The VCr Chamber Winds
will perform at 2 p.m.
Sunday at Winifred Smith
Hall on the UC lrvine cam-
pus, comer of Campus and
University drives. Daniel
Katzen will conduct. Free.
(949) 824-2787.
PAOAC CHORALE
Mezzo-soprano Michelle
DeYoung will make her
debut with the Pacific
Chorale at 7 p.m. Sunday in a
program titled #Brahms,
Mahle r & Whitacre# at the
Orange County Performing
Arts Center. There will be a
prevtew lecture at 6 p.m. by
Enc Whitacre, composer in
residence for the chorale. The
Center lS at 600 Town Center
Drive. $16-$50 (71 4) 556-
2787.
I '\ I I < • H I I ) \ '\ I , ( I \ 111 I )
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ua JA12. ORCHESTRA
UC Irvine's Jazz Orchestra
will perform al 8 p.m.
Wednesday at the lrvine
Barclay Theatre, 4242
Campus Drive, lrvme. Guest
artist Barbara Morrison will
perform, with Charles Owens
conducting. $8 students; $10
faculty, staff, aJumni and
seniors; $12 general adJnis-
sion. (949) 854-4646.
ua SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
UC Irvine's Symphony
Orchestra will perform at 8
p.m. Thursday and Friday at
the Irvine Barclay Theatre,
4242 Campus Drive, lrvine.
UCl faculty artist Theresa
Diamond will play percus-
sion. $8 students; $10 faculty,
staff, alumni and seniors; $12
general admission. (949) 854-
4646.
RUSSIAN PIANO
Russian pianist Leonid
Levitsky will present a free
program of classical selec-
tions at 3 p.m. June 9 at the
Newport Beach Central
Library. 1000 Avocado Ave ..
Newport Beach. Levitsky is
the founder of the Newport
Beach Recital Series. (949)
717-3801.
'RHAPSODY IN ROCK'
"Rhapsody in Rock w1lh
Robert Wells,• a
Scandinav1an performance
including conductor Anders
Berglund and guests
LaGaylia Frazier and Sona
Kallgren, will be held at 8
p.m. June 12 at the Orange
County Performing Arts
Center, 600 Town Center
Drive, Costa Mesa. $55 or
$65. (714) 740-7878.
SJ~
Mattress Outlet Store
STEWART PERFORMS
John Stewart, a folk per·
former who wrote the
Monkeys' •Day Dream
Believer,· will perform for
Father's Day at 2 p.m. June
16 at Muldoon's Dubltn Pub,
202 Newport Center Drive,
Newport Beach. Free. (949)
640-41 JO
MUSIC AT THE MERCHANT
The Wine Merchant and
Wine Bar will feature the
trumpet and vocals of Jack
Sheldon at 7:30 Fndays and
Saturdays on an ongoing
baslS. The bar is at 3400 Via
Lldo, Newport Beach. Free.
(949) 566-9463 or
www.bhwinemerchant.com
WEEKLY JAM
The Studio Cafe presents
Monday Night Jams from 7 to
Ne wport Beach. Free. (949)
642-3431.
WEEKEND BLUES
Anthony's Riverboat
Restaurant in Newport Beach
will pre!\ent The Balboa Blues
on Friday and Saturday
·evenings and Sunday after-
noons. The program will fea-
ture jazz and classic rock
tunes for duung and dancing.
Anthony's lS at 151 E. Coast
Highway. (949) 673-3425.
POP-ROCK AND FLAMENCO
Tate 5, a funk, rock and
Motown act. perfonns at 9 p.m.
Saturdays at Carmelo's
Ristorante, 3520 E. Coast
Highway, Corona de) Mar
Solo guitanst Ken Sanders per-
forms classlcal Oamenco tunes
at 7:30 p.m. Tuesdays and
,Sundays. Free. (949) 675-1922.
SEE HOURS PAGE A14
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New Merchandise Arrives Da~ • Hiily In Fer Best SdcctiooJ
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'"· A14 Sa!uttJay, June 1, 2002 DATFBOOK Daily Pilot
I . •
HOURS I
$15. (9'9) 631-0288.
CONTINUED FROM A 13 All
SATURDAY NIGHT RU
Gerald Ishibashi and the
Stone Bridge Band play
rock and R&B at 9 p .m.
Saturdays at Sutton Place
Hotel's Trianon Lounge,
4500 MacArthur Blvd.,
Newport Beach. Free. (949)
476-2001.
SENIOR aNTER AFTER·
NOON
A seven-piece group plays
big band tunes from 1 :30 to
3:30 p.m. Fridays at Oasis
Senior Center, 800
Marguerite Ave., Corona del
Mar. $4. (949) 644-3244.
STAGE
'SKIN OF OUR TEETH'
UC Irvine will present an all-
undergraduate production of
Thornton Wilder's •The Skin
of Our Teeth• through June 8
at the Little Theatre.
Performances will be at i and
8 p.m. toaay and June 8 and
at 8 p.m. Wednesday through
June 8. The campus is at the
comer of Campus and
Univers'ity drives. $7-$11.
(949) 824-2787.
'A CHORUS LINE'
Costa Mesa Civic Playhouse
will present •A Chorus Line,·
clirected by Damien Lorton,
through June 30 at the the-
ater, 661 Hamilton St., Costa
Mesa. Performances will be
Thursday, Friday and
Saturday at 8 p .m., with a
Sunday matinee at 2 p .m . $20
opening night, $15 all other
performances. Student prices
available. (949) 650-5269.
'SWEET CHARITY'
The musical •sweet
Charity," with a book by
Neil Simon, will run through
June 30 at the Newport
Theatre Arts Center,
2501 Cliff Drive, Newport
Beach. Performances will
be at 8 p.m . Thursday
through Saturday, with 2:30
p .m. matinees Sunday .
... wh'"~
ANOENr IMAGERY
•tmagea ~ tbe Andentl, • an
exhibit ot pbotogrepba of
ancient Mediterranean Nini,
will be on display at the
Newport Beach Central
Ubrary through June 30. All
are welcome at a reception
for the artist, from 2 to .( p.m.
Sunday. The Newport Beach
Central Llbra.ry is at 1000
Avocado Ave. Pree. (9"9)
717-3801.
VERY MODERN ART
The Orange County
Museum of A.rt will present
the 2002 Ca.1.iforD.ia Bi~nnial
exhibition through Sept. 8 at
850 San C le mente Drive,
Newport Beach. The works
are a reflection of artistic
ideas and styles. Museum
hours are 11 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Tuesday through Sunday, $5
for adults, $4 for seniors and
students, and free for mem-
bers and children younger
than 16. (949) 759-1122.
SUSTAINABLE
ARCHITEOURE
The Orange County
Museum of A.rt will present
·Ten Shades of Green,~ an
exhibit on sustainable archi-
tecture, through June 30 at
the museum, 850 San
Clemente Drive, Newport
Beach. Museum hours are 11
a.m. to 5 p.m . Tuesday
through Sunday. $5 for
adults, $4 for seniors and stu-
dents, and .free for members
and children younger than
16. (949) 759-1122.
CARSON'S OILS
·En Plein Air,· a show of oil
works by Valerie Carson, will
be exhibited through July at
South Coast A.rt Gallery, 3441
Via Lido, Suite B, Newport
Beach. (949) 673-0771.
ORANGE COUNTY ARTISTS
The Spring Juried Orange
County Show will be on dis-
play ctt Newport Beach City
Hall through July 5 at 3300
Newport Boulevard. Free.
(949) 717-3890.
On Sale Now •••
TUe $1.99 sq. ft. • Travertine $3.50 ea
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LAMINATES
LIFETIME
WARRAITY
111111111 IT THE llLLET
10:30 p.m. Tueedafl at Coat.a
Mesa Senior Center, 695 W.
19th St. M. (9'9) 5'8-388.(,
OANSCENE STUDtO
Ballroom da.ndng 1s offered
at 8 p .m. on the first Friday of
each month at Danscene
Studio, 2980 McClintock
Way, Costa Mesa. $10. (714)
641-8688.
BIG BAND DANONG
An afternoon of dancing to
big band music is offered
from 1:30 to 3:30 p.m, Fridays
at Oasis Senior Center, 800
Marguerite Ave., Corona del
Mar. Coffee and other
refreshments are served.
(949) 644-32..(4.
ARGENTINE TANGO
Tango dancing is offered
from 8 p.m. to 12:30 ail. on
the first Saturday of ch
month at Dal)SCeDe dio,
2980 McClfntock Way, Costa
Mesa. (7f4) 641-8688.
KIDS
STARLIGHT STORIES
~ .
Aterballetto will make Ill Orange County Performing Arts Center debut July 19-
21 with • A Mldlummer Night's Dream.• cho"'°VRphed by artbUc director
Mauro BlgonzetU. The American premlen features music by pop artist Elvis
Costello. Performances will be 8 p.DL July 19 and 20 and 2 p.m. July 21. The
Center bat 600 Town Center Drive, Costa Mesa. $15-:$55. (714) 556-2787.
Children 3 to 7 are invited to
participate in songs and fin-
ger puppet plays at 1 p .m.
Mondays at the Costa Mesa
Library, 1855 Park Ave. (949)
646-8845.
PJS AND BOOKS
A children's story time is pre-
sented at 7 p.m. Mondays
and 10:30 a .m. Saturdays at
the Newport Beach Central
Library, 1000 Avocado Ave.
Children may wear pajamas
to the evening sessions. Free.
(949) 717-3801.
DOG PARADE -
An opening reception will be
held from 3 to ~ p.m. June 9
for the artwork of Ellen Rose
and Dobromir Manev
•Manu" at the Bayside
Restaurant, 900 Bayside
Drive, Newport Beach. The
show, which will feature
Rose's •pooch portraits,• will
be on display through
September at the restaurant.
It will be curated by Studio
Gallery in Irvine. Free. (949)
721-1222.
DANCE
'LIGHT, WITHIN' .
•ugbt, within,• Saint Joseph
CERAMIC $t9 i . n.
LIFETIME
WAllAITY
WOOD
LIFETIME
WAllAITY
Ballet's 2002 concert, will
feature three works through
Sunday performed by more
than 125 inner-city dancers.
Performances will be at 2:30
and 8 p.m. today, and 2:30
p.m. Sunday at the Irvine
Barclay Theatre, 4242
Campus Drive. $15-$35.
(949) 854-4646.
DANaMEDLEY
Dance Variations, an annual
performance featuring
dancers from the Classical
Dance Center of Newport
Beach, will be held June 9-11
at the Irvine Barclay Theatre,
4242 Campus Drive, lrvine.
Show times are 12:30 to 5
p.m. Sunday and 5 and 7:30
p.m. Monday and Tuesday.
$15. (949) 854-4607.
BALLET NIGHTS
Ballet Pacifica will present
·concert 3" with a program
including •Romeo and Juliet:
A Dance Suite• and
•Personal Statements -
Common Knowledge• at 8
p.m . June 14 and 2:30 and 8
p.m . June 15 at the Irvine
Barclay Theatre, 4242
Campus Drive, Irvine. $22 or
$27. (949) 854-4607.
SENIOR BAUROOM
Ballroom dancing to the music
of the Costa Mesa Music
Makers is offered from 7:30 to
WEEKLY STORYTELLER
A children's story time iS held
at 10:45 a.m. Wednesdays at
Barnes & Noble Booksellers
at Metro Pointe, 901-B South
Coast Drive, Costa Mesa.
(714) 444-0226.
STORY TIME
A children's story time will be
held at 10 a.m . Wednesdays
and 10:15 a .m. Fridays at
Borders Books & Music at
South Coast Plaza, 3333 Bear
St., Costa Mesa. Free. (714)
432-7854.
Speed • Serrin • LUXlll'f
Departs From Balboa Pavilion
Reservations Required 949.673.5245
www.catallnainfo.com
• @ununRAMl
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, Dally Pilot
.. Ill Sunset Dinners at 4 to 5:15
IAIMAY LIVE Pt~7M35onwday through Friday
Murray, the spoken a · Coast Highway,
word/garage jaz:i group, will Newport Beach. $10-$15.
pedaim at a p.m. Tuesday at (949) 642-3431.
tb8 Gypsy' Den Cafe 41 part ot ~SUNDAY 8RU.NOf
the ffactOry Readings. The Tb R . cafe fl at 2930 Bristol St Costa e usty Pelican offers
Mela. Pree. (714) 549-7012 Sunday Brunch from 10 a .m. · to 3:30 p .m. every Sunday at
2735 W. Coast Highway,
IOOIS Newport Beach. $8-$15.
(949) 642-3431.
AIOUTDUTY
John Gobbell will sign his
World War U epic, "When
Duty Wbispers Low,• at 2
p.m.. ~une 8 at Bottlers Books,
Music & Cafe, South Coast
Plaza, 3333 Bear St., Costa
Mesa. Pree. (114) 432-7854.
GROUP FICTION
The Fiction Book Group
meets at 7 p.m. on the second
Wednesday of each month at
Barnes & Noble Booksellers
at Fashion Island, 953
Newport Center Drive,
Newport Beach. Free. (949)
759-0982.
OPRAH BOOK CLUB
The Oprah Book Club dis-
cusses Oprah Winfrey's most
recent selections at 7 p.m. on
the third Thursday of each
month at Barnes & Noble
, Booksellers at Fashion
Island, 953 Newport Center
Drive, Newport Beach. (949)
759-0982.
DllllllG/TISTING
WINE DINNER
Fleming's Prime Steakhouse
and Wine Bar will hold a
wine dinner at 6:30 p.m.
June 10 featuring wines
from Beringer Vineyards in
Napa. The evening will
include a four-course dinner
with accompanying vin-
tages. The restaurant is at
455 Newport Center Drive,
Newport Beach. $80. (949)
720-9633.
SUNSET DINNERS
The Rusty Pelican offers
TWILIGHT DINING
A twilight dining menu, fea-
turing dishes suCb as chicken
parmigiana and calamari
picante at reduced Rrices, is
held from ~ to 6 p.m. week-
days and 4 to 6 p.m. $Wldays
at Wla Nova Restaurant, 3131
W. Coast Highway, Newport
Beach. (949) 642-7880.
WINE TASTINGS
Hi-Time Wme Cellars offers
wine ta.stings from 4:30 to 8
p.m. Fridays and 1:30 to 8 p.m.
Saturdays. (949) 650-8463.
SUNDAY BRUNCH
A Sunday brunch, featuring
international seafood and
salad buffets, roasts carved to
order and breakfast favorites,
is held from 10:30 a.m. to 2
p.m. Sutton Place Hotel, 4500
MacArthur Blvd., Newport
Beach. $30; $40 with cham-
pagne. (949) 476-2001.
CLUBS
ALTA (:OFFEE
Musical acts perform at 8:30
p.m. Thursdays through
Saturdays at Alta Coffee
House, 506 31st St., Newport
. Beach. (949) 675-0233.
ATRIUM MARQUIS
A variety of live music is pre-
sented daily at the Atrium's
Airporter Club, 18700
MacArthur Blvd., Irvine.
(949) 833-2770.
BIRRAPOREm'S
Swing music by the 12-piece
Don Miller Orchestra is pre-
sented at 8 p.m. Mondays at
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Haun: Mon-lhur 10-9 • Fri-Sat 1().10 • Sun 11 "6
DATEBOOK
WAYNE'S WORLD
Saturday, June 1, 2002 AIS
DIN DIN AT
BAMBOO TERRAa
Instrumental music is per-
formed after 9 p.m.
Thursdays and pop and rock
ls presented after 9 p.m.
Fridays anc;I Saturdays at Din
Din at the Bamboo Terrace,
1773 Newport Blvd., Costa
Mesa. (949) 645-5550.
DURTY NEUY'S
Uve music is performed at 9
p.m. Fridays and Saturdays
at Nelly's, 2915 Red Hill Ave ..
Costa Mesa. (714) 957-1951.
HARD ROCK CAFE
Live music is performed
Sundays at Hard Rock Cafe,
451 Newport Center Drive,
Newport Beach. (949) 640-
8844.
THE HARP INN
Live music is performed
Thursdays through
Saturdays at the Harp Inn,
130 E. 17th St., Costa Mesa.
(949) 646-8855.
HOGUE BARMICHAEL'S
Uve music is performed
Wednesdays through
Saturdays at Barmichael's,
3950 Campus Drive, Newport
Beach. (949) 261-6270.
UDO CIGAR ROOM
Enjoy a smoke at Lido Cigar
Room, 3441 Via Lido, Swte
D, Newport Beach. (949) 723-
0595.
MARGARITAVlUE
Live music is performed at
Margaritaville, 2332 W.
Coast Highway, Newport
Beach. (949) 631-8220.
MARRAKESH
Comedian Wayne Brady will visit the Orange County Performing Arts Center at 8
p.m. June 15 fQr a one-night-only performance. Brady has been a regular on the
ABC comedy show "Whose Une Is It Anyway1" The Center ls at 600 Town
Center Drive, Costa Mesa. $28-$44. (714) 740-7878.
Authentic Moroccan cuisine
and belly dancing is offered
at 5 p.m. daily at Marrakesh,
1976 Newport Blvd .. Costa
Mesa. (949) 645-8384.
MARRIOTT HOTEL
Live music is performed
Mondays through Saturdays
at the Marriott Hotel, 900
Newport Center Drive,
Newport Beach. (949) 640·
4000.
Birraporetti's at South Coast
Plaza, 3333 Bristol St .. Costa
Mesa. (714) 850-9090.
ere en SV.!1£1!!
BISTRO 201
Jazz is played at 8 p.m. Fridays
and Saturdays and 11 a.m.
SATURDAY~
Orchid Sale
Orchids $5°0 to $2500
June 1, 8, 15, 22 and 29
Open To The Public
llWRY SATURDAY 9·4 P.M.
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Newport a..oh._ ontr commerclal Orchid Nunery • • -&CASH
Sundays at Bistro 201, 3333 W.
Coast Highway, Newport
Beach. (949) 631-1551.
t
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Al 6 Saturday, June '· 2002 DATEBOOK Daily Pilot
LIGHT
CONTINUED ~ROM A 11
The concert, titled "Ugbt,
within," will showcase 137
dance students. BUms said
the show's name reters to
the resource everyone can
always draw upon.
·we have lots of strength
within us and hope ... and
sometimes we just need to
be reminded of what's with-
in us," she said.
Her abstract dance, ·lis-
ten look," emphasizes the
challengeofbnprovised
work and features jazz
pianist Geoffrey Keezer.
The work encourages audi-
ences to look at different
shapes and forms, as the
dancers are sometimes in ·
the light and sometimes not.
•That idea of really look-
ing is what I'm asking [of)
the audience as well,•
Burns said.
WILDER
CONTINUED FROM A11
·skin" takes a New Jersey
family and places them in the
ke Age, in a time preceding
biblical floods and in the
aftermath of a 20th century
war.
•The family doesn't get
older, but it's about how they,
as representatives of the
human species, manage to
survive by the skin of their
teeth," Fowler said.
With so many time jumps,
28 actors play a total of about
60 roles.
•Tue idea of a family rep-
resented over thousands of
years -this kind of fabulous
approach to storytelling wasn't
very popular in the mid-20th
century," the director added.
Clayton's character Sabina
is the ever-present other
woman. In the first act, she's
the maid who gets pinched
FYI
•WHAT: "Ught, within"
• WHIN: 2:30 and 8 p.m.
todaly. 2:30 p.m. Sunday
• WI-= Irvine Barclay
Theatre, 4242 Campus Drive.
lrvlne
•COST: $1 5 or $35
• CALL: (949) 854 4646
Haiin's describes his
dance •Los Angelitos• as a
collection of poetic images
that refiect on situations
that call for angels.
•And then also what I
imagine an angelic life is
like," said the choreograph·
er, whose credits include a
work inspired by Bach's
•Goldberg Variations,"
which was part of the
American Dance Festival in .
the late '90s. •1 WaJJ inspired
by the purity and the inno-
cence of the children I was
working with.• ·
Citing a passage in the
Bible that mentions •on
FYI
• WHAT: "The Skin of Our
Teeth"
• WHEN: 2 and 8 p.m. today
and June 8; 8 p.m.
Wednesday through June 8
• WHERE: UC Irvine's Little
Theatre. The campus is at
the intersection of
University and Campus dri-
ves
•COST: $11
•. CALL: (949) 824-2787
by her master -the head of
the Antrobus family.
In act two, Sabina is the
winner of the Miss Atlantic
Beauty Contest -an honor
given to her by Mr. Antrobus.
The father, in this act, is the
head of the Order of
Mammals. The setting is a
Convention of Mammals in
Atlantic City.
In the last act, Sabina. is a
survivor of a yet unnamed
world war. She's dressed in
8
THE ST. REGIS
Mon.arch Be.ach Reaors & Spa
Earth as it is in Heaven,"
Halm said there a.re
moments of the dance that
combine the two worlds
using dancers as • connec-
tors.•
• 1 approach them in the
same manner that I
approach a profeuional
company,• said Haim, who
has choreographed for bal-
lets including Ballet
Ptankfurt and the Joffrey n
Dancers. •They rose to the
occasion ."
Rios, a Guatemalan
choreographer who has cre-
.ated works for the
Contemporary Dance
Company of the Ballet de
Cali and the National
Modem 'Dance c .ompany,
said her joy comes from
watching her students be
graceful as a group.
•1t•s just kind of astound-
ing to see so many people
on stage move together to
create something beautiful
together," she said.
tattered camp clothes. She
visits the Antrobus home to
see who's survived.
"It's a challenge to tie all
those (characters) together,"
Clayton said. "To play one
character in one setting and
then to play her in a different
setting."
The UCI drama major
added that despite "Skin•
being a period piece, the
themes are universal.
•That's what really draws
me to it most," she said. •1t
relates to things that are
going on in our country today
and issues we have political-
ly and spiritually and every-
thing else ...
Fowler said Wtlder was
experimental in his stage-
craft, but conservative in his
message.
•His theme is extremely
conservative,• he said.
•Middle class Americana is .
his ideal. Small time mid-city
life is always to be preferred
to big city life."
Becoming a Member of
Yo~r Neighborhood.
World renowned jazz guitarist
Peter White, peiform.s live Father's
Day JIJ»i 16th.
Among the pieces to be pedormed tonight at the Irvtne Barclay Theatre ls "listen look."
fill-ins, the latter guise "The Skin of Our Teeth,"
part of a pointed third-act wherein everything but
spoof of the theater in the proverbial kitchen CONTINUED FROM A 11 general. Of these, Bonnie sink is utilized. And in
Walker makes the most the coniic chaos ostensi-
control exercised by the indelible impression as a bly preceding the third
women of the period. statuesque beauty with act, UCI's backstage
Thrust from the wings little between her ears. worker bees are revealed
into an occasional con-Abetted by authentic-assembling and disassem-
frontation with the actors, looking black-and-white bling the elaborate
Chris Smith portrays the newsreels and a break-plethora of properties.
exasperated stage man-away setting superbly Despite its d ark cor-
ager, Mr. Fitzpatrick, with designed by Christopher ners, "The Skin of Our
seething officiousness. Sousa-Wynn, "The Skin Teeth• is an optimistic,
Safiya Fredericks has a of Our Teeth" is satire ultimately uplifting exer-splendid extended cameo with all the stops out. cise that celebrates as a fortune teller in the Samantha White's cos-mankind's survival second act, set on an tumes and the lighting
Atlantic Qty Boardwalk, designs of Jason Byron instinct. At UCI, Fowler's
ensemble revives this off-but still just before the I Teague also are first rate beat classic with an abun-Great Flood of biblical throughout. dance of style and energy. lore. U Wilder spared the
The large and versatile backstage crew with his • TOM TITUS reviews local the-supporting cast fills a scant designs for •Our ater for the Daily Pilot. His
variety of roles frcmn Town,• he made up for it reviews appear Thursdays and
dtnosaurs to undentudy a few years later with Saturdays.
..
•
QUOTE OF THE DAY
"They're looking, acting
and even smelling llke
lootbaU players ... •
Tom MoMrch. Sage Hill High
football coach
"
Daily Pilot lpOrta ..._Roger Cortson • 949-5744223 • Sports Fax: 949-650.0170
TUCK AND FIEU>
Rojas earns
Finals berth
in the 1,600
Costa Mesa's Sharon Day
edvances with ease; CdM's
injured Canary just misses.
Steve Virgen
DAILY PILOT
NORWALK -Estancia High junior
Humberto Rojas continued bis story of
tedemption, once again overcoming great
odds Prlday at the CIP State 'Il'ack and
Field Prelimlna.rles at Cenitos College.
Rojas broke bis own school record in
the 1,600 meters (•:l•.70) and finished
third in bis heat and sixth overall to
advance to his first state finals. He is the
.first Bstanda boy to advance to the state
finals in at least 20 years, Estancia
distance coach Charlie Appell said.
Costa Mesa junior Sharon Day easily
qualified for her third state final in the
high jump after clearing 5 feet, 5 inches.
Corona del Mar senior Kri.sserin Canary
injured her neck on her first attempt at 12
feet in the pole vault. finished 10th and
did not advance.
CdM senior Julie Allen will compete
in the 3,200 final today at 6:25 p.m. Rojas
is scheduled to run at •:28 p.m., and Day
will focus on 6-0 in the high jump at 3 p.m.
Rojas, who suffered minor whJplash
from an automobile accident May 25, ran
a smart race in the 1,600 and broke his
former record by one-hundredth of a
second. set last week at the Masters. Just
as he displayed at the Masters, be turned
on his race-ending kick and passed four
runners over the last 300 meters.
"My neck wa.s hurting a lot,• Rojas
said of being in the car that was rear-
ended last week. "I had to go to the
hospital But. they said I was OK Mik~y
(Casillas) and Abel (Flores) are still
hurting and sore.·
Appell was concerned when be first
learned of the lnJury and Rojas did not
work out on Monday. There were
,,_.. .. to bold b1m out of the race early
ID the week. But. Rojas, a former Masters
Meet alternate, did not want to miss his
dumce to advance. And. now that he's in,
he's focused on just having fun.
"It's my first time there, so I just want
to enjoy it,• said Rojas, who finished
second at Masters. "Everyone from my
school )¥aDts to me to go all oul We'll see
what happens.•
Day did not have to go all out in the
high jump Priday. She cleared 5-3 on her
first attempt and then 5-5, also on her
first attempt. Today, she will have to
complete her Scholastic Assessment Test,
which ends at noon, before competing.
"I'm used to It from playing soccer,
(and then going to invitational meets),•
said Day, who Is taking advantage of her
third year in state competition. "I do feel
more comfortable because I know what to
tmpecl It's a little bit of a relief.•
Canary lost her comfort zone when
&he sprained her neck on her first attempt
of 12-0 in the pole vauJt. She cleared
11-0 on her second attempt, then she
completed an t 1-6 clearance on her third
attempt, to tie her school record.
·1 came down and my body hJt the
mat and my bead kept going,· Canary
said. "lt was like whiplash, and my neck
bit my cbesl It was really bad.·
Canary continued and, on her third
attempt, she injured her neclc.. again. She
bmnediately went to Hoeg Hospital for X-
rays. The pain hardJy took away from
Canary's first state-meet experience.
"It was awesome to be in state; It was
amazing,• said Canary, who will attempt
to make the UCLA track and field tea.m
u a walk-on next year. "I never thought
I would make it this far.•
. .
•
Tina Theriot. right.
gets a hug from
Kaiser teammate
Kayla Hende after
scoring a goal in
Kaiser's victory
over Marinen in
glrls 5-6 action at
t\le Fann Field In
Costa Mesa.
SEAN H1l.LER I DAILY PILOT
Kaiser r 3-2 es,
14-
Tina Theriot scores twice
for Kaiser, which comes
back from 2-0 deficit to
claim win over Mariners.
Richard Dunn
DAILY PILOT
COSTA MESA -Funny things
happened on the soccer field Friday
in Kaiser's 3-2 pool-play victory over
Mariners in a girls fifth-and sixth-
grade division game in the Daily Pilot
Cup at the Farm Field.
Mariners outsbot Kaiser, 23-5, and
enjoyed a 2-0 lead in the first half.
But Kaiser's Knights, the school's
No. 2 team in the Cup, rallied for the
victory and will most likely play
Mariners again this morning to
decide the pool-play winner. The
teams are tied with 11 points each.
Elizabeth Eddy broke a scoreless
tie early in the first half with a goal for
GIRLS 5·6
Mariners, then assisted on Cassidy
Gayner's goal in the 12th minute.
Gayner provided Mariners with a 2-
0 lead when she scored left-footed
from 12 yards out.
In the 17th minute, Gayner bad a
breakaway goal nullilied because of
oUsides, a call that would prove to
be huge later In the game.
Kaiser's nna Theriot avoided three
defenders and scored on a
breakaway in the 20th minute to cut
the Mariners' lead in hall.
in the second hall, Kaiser tied the
game, 2-2, on Kristin Bassler's goal on
a huge bounce over the goalkeeper's
head. Jn the 28th minute, Bassler
booted one hJgh in the air from 35
yards out, and, alter taking a
kangaroo hop over the goalie, trickled
into an empty net.
·1 thought that was going to go
over the goal, but it was a perfect
shot,• said Kaiser Coach Ron Castor,
whose team was outshot In the
second hall, 13-3, but found the net
on its first two attempts while
Manners came up short.
Theriot added the game-winning
goal for Kaiser, controlling a ball from
12 yards out and turrung 180 degrees
before firing successfully into the net.
Stephame Castor, the Kaiser
goalie, recorded seven saves, while
teammate Kayla Henrie played a
solid game.
"We just couldn't put the bail in
the goal in the second half,• Mariners
Coach Park Eddy said. ·we couldn't
put it away. We had a lot of missed
chances. We also bad a goal called
back because of oUsides and the gal
was not invoJved in the play. It was an
interesting call.
"That's soccer. But our girls tried
hard."
DAILY PILOT HIGH SCHOOL ATHLETE OF THE WEEK
Julie Allen
and she continues to tDUltr•te her
passion for her sport. u lhe
competes in the 3,~
ate ftna1 tonight at 6:25 at
Cerritot College.
In Mch race, ADlll ...._ _,,.
about benelf. And, m MCb of Alm'I
*-• .pec:taton ~ lbe I IE •
of dilUnce ~: rbytbm.' 7 ....
Jl l# ............ T ,)ilil• .......
AM'I ............ ... ...... --·--
mOPBB
June 3 hon«•
GLENN BASSETT
Sol\Jrdoy, June 1, 2002 BI
All·STAR· VOUEYWl
Stars align
for South
South All-Stat girls prevail.
Bany Faulkner
DAILY Pll.OT
HUNTINGTON BEACH -W1th club
friendships blumog the lines of traditional
high school rivalries, the Dave Mobs
Memorial OraDge County All-Star girls
volleyball match Friday at Edison High
became merely a prelude to a valuable
photo opportunity that followed.
Corona d.el Mar High senior setter
Jacqueline Becker, who helped the South
collect a 25-20, 25-20, 15-17 victory over
the North m the annual exhibition, said
afterward she placed little importance on
the outcome.
Instead, she hugged and posed for
postmatch pictmes with South teammates,
CdM and South teammate Morgan Smith,
and even a player or two from the North,
including Newport Harbor High setter
Katie King, a former Orange County
Volleyball Club team.mate.
Smiles, high fives and good vtbrations
were enough to all but negate ar.ything
the scoreboard reflected. And why not?
"I know all the girls who played
tonight,• said Becker, who will leave her
Southern California roots to continue her
career at Yale. "Torught wasn't really
about winning and losing. It was just a lot
of fun."
Becker had her share of fun on the
court. as well, distributing eight assists, all
in the first game, before banding the
setting duties over to others.
Becker aJso displayed her ball-control
skills in the third game, passing out of
the back row.
•1 haven't passed since I was 12," said
Becker, who appeared anything but rusty
as she sprawled on more than one
SEE GIRLS PAGE B4
Patten dominan t
for North boys
South All-Stars swept.
Barry Faulkner
DAILY PILOT
HUNTINGTON BEACH -Newport
Harbor High senior Greg Pemne saJd
afterward that Fnday's 26th annual Dave
Mohs Memonal Orange County All-Star
boys volleyball match at Edison High was
all in good fun.
By virtue of a 25-20, 25-15, 15-6 North
sweep of a South squad that included
Perrine and Sailor tea{l\IDCltes Loyd Wright
and Brian Gaeta. however, it doesn't figure
to be the lasting memory the trio of Tars
takes away from Dave Mohs Gymnasium.
Instead. Perrine, Wright and Gaeta will
more likely savor Newport Harbor's tiUe-
match triumph over Northwood to win
the Orange County Championships eadie.r
this spring at the same venue.
There were only sporadic moments of
joy for the locaJ threesome Fnday, as 6-
foot-8 El Dorado senior David Patten
dominated at the net en route to semng
Most Valuable Player recognibon.
Patten, the Empire League MVP in
basketball who plans to conc:entrate on
hoops at Pepperdine, collected a match·
high eight kills, most of which the middle
blocker hammered straJgbt down. The
MVP of the Orange County All-Star
basketball game also bad four stuff blocks.
the highest individual output on a North
squad that amassed 13 to make things
difficult for South hJtters.
"(Patten) does some things technically
wrong, but he' such a good athJete, • sald
SEE BOYS PAGE 14
.... ....
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Daily Pilot
\
SPORTS Saturday, June 1 , 2002 B3 ..
~Scrapes ~rid ~raises
• • "' lo ... ... They're all just part of an athlete's life.
: p rior to 1930, harbor area b1gb school
t students had a choice of attending three
schools at a distance, which featw'ed
Santa Ana, Tustin and Huntington Beach.
The best local student turning to Santa Ana
High was an athlete from Costa Mesa's
Westside named Harold (Hal) Pangle, who
advanced his interests to Oregon State with the
• tum of 1930.
Pangle, a sterling halfbac:k, became part of a
legendary "lron Man" team that stunned ·
mighty USC In 1933 on the Beaver field before
thousands cheetlng. The 1rojans were
undefeated. The Beavers managed to
gain a shoc.lcing 0-0 tie.
And Pangle, at one point, was
oorrunated for All-American honors.
He later became a colonel in the Army
1. during World War D.
• The early 30s also found Newport's
t first athletic director, Ralph King Reed,
l directing buses to local elementacy
, schools so he could talk sports with the
He saJd, "It was one-fourth of a mile of
inegular gravel-strewn surface studded here
and there with rusty nalls, bits of concrete and
broken glass that came as close to what might
be called a trail of torture as one could find.•
He added, "Of course we were all young, ·
innocent, full of beans and rartn' to go. For
some reason, 1 was somewhat favored to win,
particularly by the grammar school crowd from
Costa Mesa. Walt Arnold, Wayne Dye, Jack.
Grady and myself all lined up with the Newport
crowd of dark horses and Reedy started us off
from the ·e ntrance to the gym with a
shot from his famous starter pistol·
He continued, •Off J went
barefooted and bushy-tailed leading
the peck. Up past the first tum on
Irvine Avenue, downhill on the back
stretch, going like the wind and
spuued on by the cheering crowd.
• boys and invtte them to the Harbor
• High campus to examine the athletic
-. facilities. One group would include the
noted Irwin brothers, Al and Ralph,
Don Contrell
SIDEUNES
"I sped around the lower end with
my eyes glued on the finish line,
slightly uphill and about 100 yards
away when suddenly, with about 10
yards to go. my legs began to fail.
Wha t a horrible sensation.•
Phoenix said, "I could see Coach
• from Newport beach.
Although the facilllie11 would impress many
of the youngsters, the recently completed
construction revealed another side, which
.. included debris in all directions. And work;men
had yet to clean up the mess around the
buildings.
Reed chose to stage a colorful highlight for
• the eighth graders from Newport and Costa
~ Mesa by setting up a competitive running event
• as a fitting climax to a high school open house.
One of the best recalls came from Dave
Phoenix, a top four-year varsity tackle on the
• football team, who also had swimming and
:" ruruung talent.
• Reflecting back, Phoerux, who lives in
"' Laguna Beach, said "Late in the afternoon,
• runners all gathered m front of the gymnasium.
~ to compete on what was then a long, oval,
• gravel-covered driveway that led from the
; entrance to the school on Irvine Avenue, down
• past the bdck entrance to the main building to
• the manual arts building, and then back up
.. past the entrance to the gymnasium and the
' resident caretaker's home belonging to Mr.
1 Rollins, lo exit on lrJine Avenue.
Reed, stopwatch in hand, and my
friends and classmates all shouting and waving
their arms when disaster finally struck. Down I
went, slid.Ing full-length in the gravel to within
three or four feet of the finish Une.
"I don't know who won the racC', probably
Jack Grady or Walt Arnold, but I do know it
took me some time to C"ecover from the effects
of that driveway upon my tender carcass.•
He summarized, "Well, that event initialed
my career as an aspinng athlete al Harbor
High. ln those days, cuts and bruises, gravel
runways and hard-packed du1 fields were
standard fare for the athlete -and we were a
Jong way from competent medJcal care.·
lleed would also serve as the school's first
head football coach and would hold that post
until 1937, then turn the relllS over to his 1937
assistant, Dick Spaulding , d native of Elsinore,
who had previously coached dl El Monte and
Fullerton.
ln time, Reed would tum his attention to
baske tball and lrdck a nd field, and wind up his
career with a flow of dwards, trophies antl CIF
honors.
! COWGE BASEBAll
\. : Anteaters sign trio to letters of intent
ANTEATER BALLPARK -
• Gary Dudrey, Marvtn Lowrance
.. and Mall Palk have signed
" national letters of intent with
Ile UC Irvine baseball program,
• announced Coach John Savage.
: Dudrey, from Arlmgton High
1 in Riverside, l\d the Laons to a
20-6 record, balling .439 with
• six doubles, three tnples and -
one borne run. He was caught
just once in 41 steal attempts.
·we feel Gary is one of the
fastest players to come out of
Southerp California this
season,• said Savage.
"His future as a Leadoff guy's
very bright.•
Lowrance, out of Long Beach
Wilson, was a member of the
2001 Area Code Baseball Team.
A left-hander, he hits with
power from a 6-fool· 1, 198-
pound frame.
Falk, a 6·3 utility player, hits
to all fields a nd gives UCI a
number. of options.
"These freshmen will be
impact players at the DivJS100 I
level,• said Savage. . ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ..
· JULIE JULIE AllEN
yellow happy-smiley faces?
Put a· pair of legs on that and
you have Julie Allen.•
.-CONTINUED FROM B 1
Southern Section Division UI
• champion in the 1,600 and
3,200, also finished second ln
the 3,200. ·
Allen, who will run for
Stanford next season,
dropped the 1,600 lo solely
concentrate on the 3,200 for
:. state compebbon. ln the
: 3,200, she completed a
: personal-best 10:33.95, a
• school recofd and the
• third-best time m lbe state, to
: wm the CIF DiVJSion ID title
• May 18.
All the while, she has
mamtained the same atbtude,
never buckling to pressure,
only rising to the occasion.
·"Sometimes she gets me nervous because
• she doesn't get nervous,· CdM Coach Bill
:" Swnner said. "She has 35 seconds until the race ~ and she's under no pressure. there are a few
:: times when she's nervous. but 98% of the time,
it's no problem. I'm trying to get her a little
= wired." Allen sec.ms to have plenty of energy after
., ber races. She's usually the last off the track and
• she always bies to congratulate each runner.
: "She's not looking for people to notice that ! about her,• Sumner sald of Allen's habit of
encouraging everyone. "She's always cheering
• for her teammates, too. She won't leave the
firush line until every girl has crossed. She's
... always this bundle of energy. You know those
But there are times,
though rare, when this queen
40f ruce becomes angry.
"I think I get angry at
myself the most.· Allen said.
"You can co1itrol a race and
improve and when I don't feel
like I do that. that's when I
get a little bit angry.·
Allen has been dble to
overcome the anger. And,
when sh e does, she's able to
be even more calm under
pressure. There's a challenge
-when she's m a race, the
majority know who she IS and
what she bnngs -that Allen
thnves on, so pressure tS
hardly an issue.
"There's dehrutely some
expectancy for me (in each race),• said Allen,
the Padfk Coast League Female Athlete of the
Year. "That can present itself in two ways: you
can look It as pressure or you can look it as an
opportunity to be yourseU and be an example.
That's a neat opportunity. I lhlrik that's
rewarding, to be an example.•
Allen will run her final high school race
today in the 3,200, and she wants lo make it her
best.
"I want to finish strong,• Allen said. "I have
three more races (CIP Stale Finals today, Golden
West lnvita.tk>na.I next week and the USA
Nati6nal Champlonahlps at Stanford June 21).
I'm excited to go out there and let it loose, be
free to just go and oot bold anything back.•
COWGE IASEIAl.l
Miller named Big West player of the week
Huge series against Riverside
creates conference laurels .
ANTEATER. BALLPARK -UC lrvi.ne Junior
catcher Chris Miller was named Blg West Player
of the Week aft~ hitting .500 against UC JUverside
this past weekend in a 2· 1 series wln to end the
regular season.
Miller, who will most lJkely be selected m the
major league baseball draft next week, went 6 for
12 including two home runs to set the UCI single-
!lea$>O record of 12. The record was pnMOUlty 10,
set by Bryant Wmslow in 1991.
Miller's first home run was coupled with a
two-run single as the juruor scored twice and
drove in three in the series opener against UC
Riverside May 24.
His 12th homer tied the game as UCI went on
to defeat the Highlanders, 1().9, Ul the series finale
Sunday.
Miller also led the Anteaters Wlth 55 RBI.a, 19
doubles and 129 total bases.
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1'!1-4-cu M Sauday. June 1, 2002 rllB\ p n..IL Piiot ------~;.;;.;.;.;;...;.:...;;.,;.;:;.;:_ __________________________ ~~ Jiil ______________________________ ......;. ____ _,;, ____ __, __ "'--~
DAILY PILOT PHOTOS BY GREG FRY
Newport Coat flell) and Daw (right) weM locked up in a big match in girls 3-4 action Friday afternoon.
Newport Coast rebounds, 6-0
After losing to Kaiser
Thursday, Newport
Coast capitalizes on
scoring chances to
record the shutout.
Bryce Alderton
DAILY PILOT
COSTA MESA -Coyotes
stretched in a clrcle and jogged
in a single-file line down the
field before a soccer game
Friday.
No, this wasn't the zoo, but
rather the wannup for the
Newport Coast Coyotes Pilot
Cup soccer game Friday against
Davis at The Parm Field.
The Coyotes wanned up just
fine, scoring six times on Davis
to avenge a 4-0 Thursday loss to
last year's champion in the
cl.ivision, Kaiser, a.nd move to 2-
1 in this year's Pilot Cup.
Allie Pries got the scoring
started for Newport Coast a.nd
was soon followed by a goal
from midfielder Alexandra
Reina ch.
At the 10-minute mark of the
first half, teammate Kyla Winkle
made good on her second shot
OD goal in less than five minutes
when Pries found Wmkle in the
center of the field to put the ball
in the net, maldog It 3-0
Newport Coast.
About five minutes earlier,
Winkle booted a shot while
standing just Inside the midfield
stripe which bit the top crossbar,
just m.isstng a goal
The scoring in the first half
was not done yet, as Jlllian
Taylor scored the first of her two
goals in the 24th minute of the
first hall.
Scoring quieted in the
second hall as Newport Coast
Coach Mark Irwin began
making frequent substitutions,
letting more girls into the game,
as Davis continued to show
strong defense, led by Scarlett
Zambrano and Shaylen
McNulty. Erica Pinn showed
acute ball-handling skills,
eluding Newport Coast
defenders on several occasions.
The effort impressed Davis
Co-Coach Devin Denman, who
coaches the team with Emily
Abbott.
"Over hall of the girls have
never played soccer before, so
we were doing pretty well,•
Denman said.
Davis defenders got back on
several occasions in the second
half to thwart Newport Coast
scoring chances.
After the game, Newport
Coast Coach Mark Irwin told
his team sitting huddled around
him to concentrate on ,defense
for the next game.
"Some who are used to
playing the midfield will have to
play defense,• Irwin told his
team. "H no oile scores on us, we
won't lose.•
What was once a team
scrambling for enough players,
as one Newport Coast parent
said. turned into an 18-girl roster
that Irwin bas to juggle.
"I tried hard today to give
the girls the chance to play at
least 10 minutes each half,•
Irwin said.
Irwin received production
Soccer S'i0n-l) p5
(Elln eo.1:11 Mna, Wni NtJWPOl*t Bach)
Wed., ... J une 5, ••• 6pm to 9pm
Thure.,.June 13,.6pm to 9pm
M•rln•re Branch Library
2008 DtMlr DrlvfJ, NllWpOrt. Bach
from many outlets in Friday's
game, inclu din g midfielder
Cynthia Bui, who suffered a cut
lip in the second haU, but
managed to maintain her speed
and lead severaJ breaks for
.Newport Coast down the field.
Elsewhere In girls 3-4:
• Harbor Day 4, Llncoln t -
Jack:le Dion scored three goals
and Kathryn Conner one, with
assists from Melissa Hancock
and Claire Eadmgton as Harbor
Daycameout~ctorious.
Kayle O'Conner, Brynn Johnson
and third-grader Chelsea Barth
were strong on defense.
Outstanding protection came
from goalie Sara Folks.
• A.ndenen ~·Prince of hK'e O
·19Tmnis Coutu . s Pro. w /Gnnd Slam
• sm;.,,,, Gut w I Blra~
·IWIMadtft
Newport
Coast
(left) and
Davis
scramble
for the
ball.
•
-Andersen had its way with a
polished effort.
Prince of Peace, despite the
loss, showed promise with the
fine play of goalkeepers
Elizabeth Howard and Ariel
Sands, who each had three
saves, and the overall
perlonnance of Amanda Duarte.
Julia Nichols, Lexi Copper, Ussa
Morel and Ashleigh Stevenson.
• Marlnera Cbrt1ttan 1,
Mariners Elementary O -
Lainey Barkley scored off an
assist from Sara Mull for the
game's only goal.
Ashley Mitchell (10 saves) and
Brooke Bowles (six saves) kept
Mariners Elementary at bay.
Kendall Landon stood out on
defense in bet sweeper's
position.
......... w ,._...WI
10:JO a.m. • ~ (1) vs. CMden tuat 11 :A5 • AncMnen vs. Ow Lldy
Queen of ........ .,..-......
10:JO a.m. • .Mlrlners Christian vs.
Harbor Oily; f 1 :45 a.m. • Newport
Heights (1) vs. Newport Coast. .
-. .... w ,__...WI
, 0 •·l'fl· . Whittler 'VI. Pomona; 2
p.m. ·A winner vs.Gwinner, 3:15
p.m. B winner vs. F winner. ,_PleW,
10 a.m. · Kais« (1) vs. Newport
ElementMy; 2 p.m. • C winner vs. E
winner; 3:15 p.m.; 0 winner vs.
wild card .
.......... 5
10 1.m. · Davis (2) vs. Hllbor
View.
.............
,..fleWJ
9'.JO a.m. • llltbluff vs. f'rlnce of PMc.e; 10:JO. ,_..vs. Vk1oria; 1:15
p.m. • Hatbor VIM vs. St. Joachim;
2:JO ~Newport flementafy (1) vs.
wild card; 3:45 • Kaiser (1) vs. ·· •
CMden Hall; 5 • IC.aher (2) vs. flool G ·
winner. ............. ...... ...w.
9a.m.·St.~vs.~
10 a.m. • TeWlnki.Gut vs. Newport
HeightJ.; Noon • I winner vs. F win-ner; 1: 15 • c winner YI. f winner.
2:30 • A winner vs. G winner, 3:45 :
D winner vs. second In A.
c-.-. ..... ...w1
9 a.m. • Rea vs. Haibor O.V·Scott;
1 O a.m. • Harbor ys.w vs. Kalser (2).
flltAJ'S SCOllS
IOD HDlt= W SllDI BUI IMll9I
Victoria 6, Davis (2), 3
Mariners Christian 3, Newport Coast 1
Mariners 3, Eastbtuff (2) 1
~t. John's 2, Newport Elementary 1
Anderson 3 over Davis (1) O
1. IOJS DllP= W fOUIDI IUDI DfflSIOI Mariners (2) 7, Eastbluff O
Harbor View 4, Newport Elementary O
OUr lady Queen of Angels (1) 8, Mariners (1) 0
St. Joachim 4. Mariners Christian 3
Ka~r(2)7, Pomona, 1
Newport Heights (1) 4, OUr Lady (2) 1
Davis (1) 2, Newport Heights (2}, o
Newport Coast 4, Whittier, 2
illlS flfTK. W SllDI IWI
Kaiser (3) 6, Vtetoria 1
Kaiser (2) 3, Mariners 2
Harbor View 4, Newport Heights O
Our Lady Queen of Angels 5, TeWinkle O
Harbor Oay 2. TeWinJde (pfeiffer) o
Davis (2) over Newport Elementary (2), 3-0
91LS DIR W fOJIDHWI 1MS1011
Newport Coast 5, Davis o
Andersen 9, Prince of Peace O
Harbor Day 3, Lincoln 1
Kaiser (1) 4, Newport Elementary O
OUr Lady Queen of Angels 5, St. John's 1
Eastbluff 5, Kaiser (2) 0
Harbor View 3, Newport Heights (2) O
Mariners Christian 1, Mariners O ,.
MAY3JUNE2
EASTaUff
Girts grade 3-4
Athena Uvadas
Heather Barrett
Taryn Greenberg
Tasha Greenberg
Jennifer Zimmerman '
Molly Downing
Amanda Garrett
Maddie Schwartz
Kelsey Johnson
<:oreycano
Clr1ie Rinehart
Ashley Svendsen Tm Crane
Sc.ar1ett Fallon
Halley Senske
Riiey Senske
PaytonWolonsky
Samantha Gail
Coeche9: Kathy Fallon and
Phillip Greenberg
BOYS
CONTINUED FROM 81
Newport Harbor Coach Dan
Glenn, on hand to coordinate
activities fliday. "He's going to
Pepperdioe to play basketball,
but I wouldn't be SUlprised if he
played a little volleyball too.•
The Waves, who Jost to Hawaii
in this season's NCAA volleyball
title match, could surely benefit
from Patten's presence, which
dearly was the difference for the
North Friday.
Penine, who shared Sea View
League MVP honors with Wdgbt,
fioilhed out a noteworthy
volleyball career with two ld11a
and a pair of. stuff blocks. He aJao
will abandon volleyball for
basketball at Chapman
University next year. Penine WU
allo MVP of the Sea~~
in buketball and the Sea View
League Male Athlete of the Veer.
Wright, wbo started Friday
and will play dub .oUeyball at
the University of Arlzona,
coUec:ted five um.ta .. one ol
GIRLS
CONTINUED FROM 81
MAY3-JUNf2
REA.-ms
Girts grades w
Kimberly cas.s
Kiara ChaYe.z •
Araceli <Ai•
Angelia!~
Eliubeth H4ndia
Britney Hotton
Susana Nolasco
Angelk.a Ocampo
Brenda Peru
Jeanette Sanchez
Vet'Onk.a Sanchez
Miriam Santiago
Daniela Solis
Laura A. Tetriquez.f'la:sclnda
Melisa Velasquez
COMll: Ozzie Baglione
three South setters.
Gaeta, an All·CIF receiver
who will amcentrate oo football
at Colorado State next fall,
chipped in two ldlll for the South.
which led only once in the entire
match: 5-4 in the tint game of
the contest wblch utilized rally
scoring throughout.
1be North'• wtn c4lbe deapbe
the abeence of~ pl.lyen.
Marina High standouts Beau
Peten and Drew WUloG, .. well
u Vlkirig1 Coach Jeff Caugh-
thran. were at their tMln banquet •
Friday. Mark Lotman from Los
Alamltot allo did not attend for
the North.
Both Marina playen, .. well
u 10 othen, indud.ing Patten,
will reprennt Orange County in '
tomgbr1 all-star ma&cb eg.m.t a
teem of atandoutl from the South
Bay. "lbnlgbt'1 mm wm u.o be at •
EdJloo. The Newport trio wtD not
take .J:: tbe South bged u. only
lead, th• North reeled off 10 •
llralgbt poUlll to llt lbe ... The
Soulh da-.d beck'° ..... 21()..
19, but the Nc.tb pulled away and............. .
oae nun block, w..ue s-10 , Ual•••r tt1g1a _........., •
MM n7= ........ W. ~-~11 .......... ~
blocbmd .............. ....
Scliulb ............ ...
Newpclrt lfMtlar ..... Us
Lord, a5-10EDIMlellloc*er ......................
19C011d ............. .. .................. ,.,.
=~-.....
•
-~-i~P_ilo_t ----~~~-----~~~Pikt<;yp_~~----~~~~~~~--6 Saturday, June 1, 2002 BS
ari11ers 'D'
Thwarting several
Eastbluff scoring
chances, tv1ariner
defenders give the
offense time to score
in 3-1 victory Friday.
lryQ Alderton
DAILY PILOT
COSTA MESA -Mariners
Coach Randy Parole prides bis
team on defense to ignite a rally.
And rally Manners did to the
tune of three goals, which
proved to be enough to stop
Eastbluff, 3-t, in Fnday's Daily
Pilot Cup action al The Parm
Complex in Costa Mesa.
•That is our whole
philosophy, to play as much
defense and our offense Will
come around,• Parole said
Parole stressed three things
during bis team's four days of
practice leading up to the Pilot
Cup.
"Defense, passing and
spreading out on the field,•
Parole said. •As long as they do
that, they'll be fin e.•
But It took awhile, until the
2 t st minute of the first hall
before Clay Friend took the ball
and ran all the way up the left
side of the field and booted the
ball into the upper-nght comer of
the Eastbluff net.
Both teams played espeoally
tight defense throughout the first
haU, with Mariners' Brandon
Parole using his head to deflect
an Eastbluff scoring chance.
Most of Eastbluff's scoring
opportunities came when JeU
Carlson, who has been playing
soccer since he was 5, used h is
fancy dribbling skills to split
defenders and pass to the right
or left sides or the field.
Both defenses showed the
same aggressiveness m the
second half as EastbluJl's Alhe
Nowak made a stop on
Mariners' Peter Nguyen, wruch
was soon foOowed by EastbluJfs
Greg Wolonsky's lock that hit
the crossbar and d ropped
straight down mto the net to
make the score, l -1.
But that was aU the scoring
F.astbtutt would do on Uus day as
DAILY PILOT PHOTOS BY SEAN HIUER
Sean Mangano, 11, celebrates after a
Mariners goal. At right, Eastbluff (dark
shirt) makes a move against Mariners
defender.
Bl!11 Swill made d bedds-up
defensive play running to
defend the net as the Mariners'
goalie had to run out to stop an
earlier shot. Swift used ms head
to deflect a shot by Carlson.
The rest of Swift's teammates
seemingly used that play as
motivation as Garret Heiser
booted a comer kkk right to
Clay Friend, who knocked it in
for his second goal of the game.
Friend was not done
scorin g, however, as he took
an assist from Tobin O~on and
BOYS S-6
kicked the.ball in for d 3-t lead.
After the game, Manners
interim coach Kathy C&lson Sd.id
sbe lhouyhl both tcdJlll> pldyud
weU.
·(Eastbluff) pldyed a good
game,· Carlson Sdid. • n·s tun to
play against other luds from the
same neighborhood. We've had
five luds who have never played
soccer before, so it's exobng for
them.·
Carlson sub!>lltuted as
Eastbluff codch because the
reguJdf codch, Andrew Nowak,
ofticiated the gdroe because a
referee didn't show up when the
game started .
• Mariners Christain 3,
. Newport Coast l -Parker
Rhodes, William Pu, and
Camden Wade scored goa~ as
Manners Chnslldn defeated
Newport COdSl m Pi.lot Cup play
Fnday dt The Farm Complex
·we had great defense by
Carlo Vdldez a nd Taylor
oes ·it
McSundS, • said Manners Coach
Gene Rhodes. "It wdS a really
close gdmc unW the end.•
Greut defen!>e for Mariners
was provided by Morgan
Bowmcin and Connor Benvenuti
with great goahe pldy by GdJTet1
Denndll.
• Uncoln 6. SL John's 0 -Three
go<lls 1n the first 10 minutes
seaJed the decision, and Lincoln
padded the lead with three more
goals m the second ball.
Mitchell Wllliarns had a hat
trick with three <;cores, and
Jacob Goulding, C'drl Wamek
and Erik Rask each clupped m a
score.
Morgan Bromhdl'<., comer-
klck set up on<> i.c-ore and
Brombal hc1d two assists.
Midfielder Michael Bloom was
strong at tus pos11.lon.
Lincoln's defense, keyed by
the play ot Nick Tdylor, KeVID
Kottke, Enk RdSk, KeVID Rask,
Bret Wemberger and Johnny
Heard, allowed iust one shot on
goal.
D~vis mixes it up in-2-0 victory
New team of three
schools puts away
Newport Heights No.
2 in pool play Friday.
Richard Dunn
DAILY PILOT
COSTA MESA -With a
makeshUt boys soccer team,
combining third-dnd fou rth-
grade division players from three
Costa Mesa elernenldry schools,
Davis Coach Chasen Marshall
only bad two weeks to assemble
his squad for the third annuaJ
Daily Pilot Cup.
But the players responded
Friday as if they'd known cdch
other for years.
ln pool play, Davis defeated
Newport Heights No. 2. 2-0, with
a pair of second-half goals at th~
Fann Field. Neither team
advanced to today's quarte rfi-
nals, reserved for pooJ ctu.unpion
Uncoln.
•coming In, a lot of the
players said they had ne ve r
played soccer before, but they
seemed lo pkk ll up pretty
quickly. They seemed to know
what they were doing," Marshall
sakl•lberewereoruyacou~e
d ldds we reeDy needed to teach
the game to."
Devis, a school of only fourth
through lix1b graders, combmed
with Sonora and Paularino to
fonn lls ..ary In the Delly PUot
Cup, and. with just two weeb
for Introductions and pradice,
the .... captured its ftnt win.
In the 30th minute, Denn.ls
MoOdregon IC:Oied for Davis to
break a teoreless lie in tbe
lec:oad bllr, ldddn!J Ill d ground-
b~ lbot from close rdnge.
•1t ~ lipped through tbe
defense,• Newport Hejghta
COid Jim CaQMck Mid.
Dulay 1!1trada added tbe
.......... Daril1Dtbit4'1tb
.............. took lbe bill
ewer ..... Newpolt ~·· ..,...., .. 1111 OWD md llld
..... ·-·· ball Irma ...
.,. Wll • wry gODd .,_,
...... cmlll • ..
IOYSH
wu led by flGt·W gode l}'ler
SWkweatbs (three NV•), who
abut out Devt..
Daria, allo speiked by JOle
PeboNno, WM touigh on dlfeme,
bolcUng Newport Hetghll to
tine lboel CJG goal (nme bl the
HCOAd haU). Porwerd MH
~and WIWden JOlbua
MHH'll, ~ IUelTeld and
Patrick llrtud lilcl Newport
•Tbere was debnitely a miX
of kids on our team,· Manb4ll
sa1d. •1 thought It might gel
clicky, with Sonora kid• only
M,.ang OU1 wtlb Soaora ldds, or
IOID8tbing like lhilt. But tbey aD
mlad wel. 1bay al .llltaned and
go1a1oag.•
l'l 1 • I '8am 0>0¥91 on iil the
CUp, bul lbe memodel (aod T·
lbkta) could .. • loag time.
• OirrLMr Olelll Gf ........
I. 'I I CT Ill I .o.wld a.lad
WaWlkt:md06a ......
..... ....,. .. QMea ..
... II•...._ ' I 1111 .. ........................
,
Chns Bw1te, Jake Pellegrini.
Jack Gerdau and Zack Luc.u
e.cb .cored .. goal. Luc.'81 and
Nea&,O'Hare Wela w:b a1Jdited
wttb tWb-save1.
Pellegrini and Gutbord
shared pMe dutiel.
Defenmwy, D.J. ~and
Micbael Heed lloGd out for Ow
l..ady~ol~.
• .... ,..,, 'at 2 t-0....,
o-eaa1-.. ••. Nldl
ParW .and••' msa, 1111* ... ADdrew a.-. ..... 12
...... bUI ........... llsflt'll ....... ...... ..... ........
, DM.V Fl.OT PHOTOS IY ~ HU.£R
Davia fduk 11W11) dukes It CNt wttla Newport He'91* la
boya gr.-3-4 lldlola Friday.
•MaltMn7,m..a .. o-Pacect
W1tb tbe fact they b4d to WID by
au goa.11 or miilS the quarterfi·
naJs, the boys ol Mariners came
through wttb a aeven·goel
nc:tory.
ea.ton Geidl .. loid enom
tn the goel for Merinen was
paramoal, end Zack Mog·
baddun ud Speacer Joye. ... ....,., nllf .
M.._.. play by MellHI
Clldlimidllllala.• ...
, ...... ..., .. ltll •
t .......... " • ...............
U ' II II lat &
..
.• j 88 Salurdoy, June 1, 200'2
With six coaches and 19
players, instruction is
intensive at first Sage
Hill spring session.
the tint year, ow kids were very
excited aboat their prog.rea lut year.
I think our kids realize they have a
tremendous cballenge this year, but
the attitudes are great And the lddl
we have are the same ones we've bad
before, so everyone is very
Sany Faulkner comfortable with what the coaches
DAILY PILOT expect from them .•
NEWPORT COAST -The Sage With a working knowledge~ their
Hill High football team, prepartng for players' abilW•, liWe time is wasted
its first varsity season in 2002, is evaluating personnel. Instead,
• enjoying its first spring session. But, Monarch and bis staff can work on
Daily Pilot
llGH SOIOOl F001IAL1 .
I with six coaches overseeing just 19 skill development, as well as imple-.. t·· !. · · · ....... --· · ·--ptayers;it'nnore·wanrsprttrgiurol'OO~··-m~a~on~marwm-~
than the more traditional spring incorporate four-receiver set$.
practice. •1 was a running guy at Anaheim
'I
: I : I
t
ii .,
•A lot of kids are getting a lot of (one of Monaroh's previous stops), and
one-on-one coaching,· said Tom we ran about 60% of the time last
Monarch, who bas guided year," Monarch said. ·aut
the program from its we'll probably turn that
inception in the fall of 2000. ., A lot of kids around and throw the ball
•As opposed to working are get Ung about 60% of the time next
seven~on-seven like most year."
programs, we'll break a lot of Brad Gossen, a former
down into individual Washington State quar-
positions. When we're on e-on-one terback who worked with
working with the receivers coaching the LJghtning last year. is
and backs, the lineman ,, tutoring returning quar-
may be in the weight room, terback Zach Friedrichs,
or doing agility drills.· who will be a senior.
The limited numbers. Tom Monarch Monarch, in fact, said
which include four or five Lightning coach the spring emphasis is
playe.rs .who will be a part completely on offense.
of the school's first senior •since defense involves
class, will be bolstered by so much more reactive
the arrival of a freshman learning and offense is so
class incorporated into the varsity proactive, (offense) takes much longer
program next fall. to learn,• Monarch said. "Our plan is
•Next year, the school will be to get the offense ahead and let the
dominated by freshmen and defense catch up in July.•
sophomores,· said Monarch, a. walk-The Lightning started May 13 and
on who is a detective with the plan to go through Friday. Their
Newport Beac;h Police Departm~nt. practice schedule, however, is
Monarch, however, expects to be typically 75 minutes a day.
competitive in the Academy League "We don't want to bum them out,•
next season. Monarch said. "But every minute
·we went 5-0 in Academy League they're on the field is solid football
junior varsity games to win the league work. They're looking, acting.
title last year,· Monarch said . and even smelling like football
"Considering we didn't win a game players.•
Fictitious Bu1lne11
Name Statement
The tolloWlnSI persons
are doing business as:
Guest Service As·
sociatlon, 2351 Bay
Farm Place. Newport
BejlCh. CA 92660 Mo'z Advertising & De-
sign, Inc. 9CA), 2351
Bay Farm Place, New· port Beach, CA 92660
This business is con-
ducted by: an individual
Have you started
doing business yet?
Yes. 03/01/02
Mo'z Art
Maureen Schardt.
CEO
This statemen1 was
filed with the County
Cleltl of Oranoe Coonty
on 05/09/200:! 200211902854
Daily Pilol May 11 , 18.
25, Jyne 1. 200? Sa173
Flctlttou1 Bu1IMH Name St.tement
The following persons are doing business as:
a) Strategic HA Solu·
tioll$, b) Strategic HR, 630 W. Palm Avenue,
Ora~. CA 92868 Aal1z Adrienne Hamil·
ton. 630 W. Palm Ave ..
136, ~. CA 82.868 This buSIOess Is con-
ducted by: an lndivlcalal
Have you stalled
doing business yet?
Yes. 6194 Aalz Adrienne Hamilton
This statement was filed with the County
Clel1I of Otange County
on 04/18/2002
20028900192 Oaiy Pilot May 18, 25,
June 1, 8. 2002 Sa 178
SELL
Pl
t·U
&I
Fictitious 8ualnua Name St.tement
The following peraons are doing business u : Onoe Upon a Table, 1n
Riv"81de Ave., Newport
Beach. CA 92663
Pamela Ann Sarvaant, 177 Riverside Ave., Newport Bea.ch, CA
92863
Kimberly Ann Darling,
177 Riverside Ave.,
Newport Beach, CA
92663
This business is con-
ducted by: CCJ'91lf1ne18 Have you stalled doing business yet? No
Pamela Ann Satgeant
This statement was flied with the County
Clel1I of Orange County
on 04l2M002
2002tl012H
Dally Pilot May 25, Jt.fle
1, 8, 15. 200? Sa182
'" .. ,.
® EOOAl lt()UPIG OPPOflTUNtTY
A.11 1111 ...... 1Mf1111no
in ... fllWlllll* ia lllllject
to the Ftdml Fllr .:= Act of 1MI 11
whidl """" • ..... to ldYtltilt ·enr ,..,.,_.,
llmllllloll Of clliO lmlllllloll blttdon=;,;: :....·· ti( ......
Ill ........... .,, allCll .,,......., ..........
Of ..... ~ ..... Tilll 14 ., , ... 11111
kllOWlllfly ..... = MvtrtlM .... fW ................... of"'-:.:---=-= :::1 .......... ~--· I =-~ '~·
. ~ .
ORDINANCE
NO. 2002·10 AN ORDINANCE OF
THE an COUNCIL OF THE an OF
NEWPORT BEACH ORANTINQ A
NON-EXCLUSIVE
80UO WAITE FRANCalll TO ROCHE EXCAVAnNG, INC. TO PAOVIDE IOUO WAITE COUECTION'
SERVICES UPON ntt!
CITY STREETS ANO wmtN ntE CITY OF
NEWPORT HACH
&A:llecl ordinance was lntroducec:I on the 14th
day of May, 2002, and was adoptld on th& 28lh
day of May, 2002. AVO, COUNclL llEM-IEAS: HEFFERNAN,
O'NEIL. BROMBERG, GLOVER, MAYOR RIOGEWAY
NOES, COUNCIL MEii-
• -·-Iii -ra
',
2002 SCHEDUl£
Fri. Sept. 13 • Midway Baptist (home). 4:30 Fri., Sept. 20 · calvary Chapel-Oowney (home), 3:30
Sat. 51?9t. 28 • at Calvary CMpel-Merit'tt.I, 7
Fri., Oct. 4 -Saddlebadt Valley Ovistian (home), 3:30
Sat., Oct. 12 -at Fairmont. 7 p.m.
Sat., Oct. 19 · caplstrano \falley Christian•
(It Laguna 8Qch High), 7
Fri. Ort. 25 • ~ Star of ttw Sea (home), l:30
Sat.. Nov. 2 • St. Margaret's• (home), 1 p.m.
Fri., Nov. 8 • at St. Anthony's (Clark Field). 7
ThuB., New. 14 ·at Brethren Qvistian• (Oark Field). 7
*denote~ LHgue game.
Sage Hill
quarterback
·Zach
Friedrichs
bas Cliff
Swanson
(back-
ground)
and Peter
Haderleln
(right) u
two of his
go-to
teammates.
KENT TREl'TOW I
DAILY PllOT
!f8R11i_N~ECOUNCIL quireda ·~to, be~ Planning Commission flllp No. 15317 8"d Lot may be limited to raising .. "' V""'--decision submitted by No. 21 (on Honon odf thole issUes you or MEMBERS: ADAMS, clrculat on c:'bllshed the l(iPllc.nt. Carmen OrM) of Tnict 111!p No. eonieone else raiMd at ~ABOCST!OINA COUNCIL and cirtulated 1t1e City Vali. Hogle-Ireland, Inc., 1538t. ttle public heating de-.. ,. of Newport Beach lor on behalf of PllClfic Bey This project has been scribed in this noclCe or
MEMBER: NONE Fiscal Year 2002-03 Homes, property owner, reviewed, and it 1188 In wrllten cor-
MAYOR: Tod W. (July 1. 2002 ·June 30. regarding the denial ot been determined that It respondence delivered Ridgeway 2003). l)aMed Communl1y o. 11 cat8QOl1calty exempt to the ~ at, or prior to,
CITY CLERK: lAYonne UIYonna M. Hettde9a, vllopment Text Amen6-under tfle requirements the pubhc hearing. For
II. HllidaM City Cler1l ment No. 2001-003 ltlll of the California information can (949)
The .. text II IVai-City of Newpcift leech per11ina IO prooeftY lo-EfflirONMntal OualllY f¥-3200. lbta for review In the Published tuwpol1 C8ted 1111 ~Rini Rold Act I.rider 01aM 5 (Minor N uVonna II. Hertl·
City Clertl's oftloe of the Beach-Costa ··'Vaaa The ~ are io: Aller.ilona 1n Land Ute ...., C'7,.= City of Newport Beach. Ody Pilot June 1, 8, C8ted lrt the AERO-Umitatlons). City of Bwh
Published Newport ,.,gQQg_..,,._ ___ .....;Sa=.:.:1&4= NAUTfC FORD NOTICE JS HEREBY NOl!: ~ ~~se of
Beach-Costa Mesa PLANNED COM-F\JRTHER GIVEN that this notice ~Mllrom a
Oaily Pilot June 1$~ Pu~Jel:1NG MUNITY (PC-24) DIS-said public heat1r.g will ~~· .. icant. Ml from
.NOTICE ..._.... .,__, ..__. TRICT. be held on the 1t day ..,... .._.. ,_ The l'9qUffl aougllt of June, 2002, at the PO llshed Newport
INVmNG LEGAL Planned Community 1t18 1111111IJtlM of ir.... hour of 7:00.p.m. In the Beach·Costa Mesa ADVERTISING BtDS Dlwelopmant Text pendant kitchen fllcll-Council Chambers of the Daily Piiot June 1, 2002
NOTICE tNYITINO Am1odn*1l No. .ltlel w11111r1 .... cot-Newport Beach City -~---.,,_S.,.a 1..,8:x5
8'08 to be rec:eived on. (P=t4:c,) tate•· The eleven Hal, 3300 Newport Bou-FICthlou1 BualMH
Of befMe the hour of NOtlCE IS HE~EBY Pfopertlel ll8eOCill1ed llYard, Newpott Beach, Name St.tement
4:00 p.m. on Widnes-GIVEN that the City ~.-!!!. ....... , • ..!'!. Caifomla, at wtlicll lime The follo~' parsons ... y ·~ 12 2002 '-a ....... unwu .. • ...... and ......... any and au are ~n-· as·. .... ' """"' • • "" Council of the City of ~ ... ~ v-on.yeer contract cov-..._....... 0 __ ..... wll hold 1 through I (on pet'10f\S lnterelted may Lucky . 300 Pa· ~ the publishing and ·--....... .....,..., Troon Drive) and lot appear nd be heard ciflc Coast Highway •8.
printing ot 1eg111 notices a public hearing on the ~ I and 19 (on Tim-lhereor. you dl8lenge Huntington Beach, CA i>r other matenal r.: -applica--tion-· _1o_appea1 __ the_ '*TY Drive) of Tl'llOt lhll Pf !.ct In CCMt. you ..;..92""'M_8-.;_.;;...51...;..09.;.._ __ _
Allcla Guevarra. 906 Hurstview St.. Duarte,
CA 91010 This bl.Illness Is don·
ducted by: an Individual Have you started
doing business yet? No Alicia Guevarra
This statement was
flied with the Counly
Cleltl of Orange County
on 05131 l200'l
20021905161
Daily Pilot June 1, 8. 15,
22, 2®2 Sa186
Can't seem to
get to all those
repair jobs
around the house?
Let the Cl•tttled 8ervlce Directory
help you find reliable help.
Polley
Rat~ and deacl~ an ~ubjtci to <"ha~,. .-i1ho1111101kt. Titt
publiwr rr~rve$ the ri~t 10 etn.w. tt'rla.~si(y, "'"i~ or rrjtct M)' dwif ied adnrtistmeol. Plea~ rtr,ort n11y mor tJuu mAy ht in your
da it~ ad immcdiattly. T1:w-Dail} l'ilot 11t•1>tpts no IW>ili1y for any
error in an advtrilienlt.ot for whidt ii may bf> respon.~ibl,. l'ittpt for
tht cost of the spact acmally occupied by tilt error. Cttdi1 can onl)' bf
allowed for tbt Ii~ i~rriou. _____ ....... ____ _
Monday ............ Friday S:OOpm Friday .......... Thur'Aday 5:00pm
Tue.day ......... Monday S:OOpm Saturday ........... Friday 3:00pm
Wtodoesday .... Tueeday 5:00pm Sunday ............. Friday 5:00pm
Thuniday .. Wednelday S:OOpm
,
SaMday. June 1, 2002 17
.;... .
. .... . .
..... oe... ...... "' .... 11\MTt :=..-:.. n.i r.:., ~r:...-=..n • ...._.lie. ~ *I ftM. ..-u...~o.x.:~ MtttHlO§ , ..,..Gol o. o.111. me Mm&. ...... °""' ,_. ~
.... a.et emM HOM. T_.. Aw.1111 at Tllllll, 24.dl WM 17.280. ... NNOSiCoM.ctlih•
Ill u . ,..., dlcorllld C.I. AAO. 30ll5e WM 113.800. • ....,.._. __
Dirt 1t1etaeeeo &111 CMllt,... sniJ: ... •• 50s110 .. ·-·-·"""''-..... Mfll.7171 Dr _, ,._.. 121.IOO. 111 113.IOO 8111 .. CAIH MID ..
.i, 2 .. d W10 Olttfl Mult Sell Wtll --·--• Ollll Vlt UdlltTllllflClll 11b11 w'dlllll. coli. -IWWJtZW -.UV ISTATD ~~=:.:=' ~..::,= . ._..."'-ly_
""""" • •?2H11l C:-,. bemboo ~ n •~ Ml1W ehN. lnOCtltf Ml of e UAUl'IW
mttctllng c:htlrt. dlthtt, It's di dJtbi c:lothtt, llloe•, lllnpt, ~.MC lll
!Di ...... YIM!!
F..itr ol 7 0.,. WI \m1ft ~
llL, lit-1p. Clolhlng. ~· 1-NllUUll& oolJ.ttM .........
INdll, chldrtnl '°" ' t....-1.A--~~ :': C:::.~ tr= M·WllUll so.m@R8A8T ~:;:~~ ~ .. !ie: vm'rt~ ,. .... ...
::" btllll C9ll 11, 15lflmo Gtlndpe'i blmtll Antque 1-~ ......... cuam BE YOOR ow eou. _
_ h:ld. N@-4708 • ......., .._ ..._. ICO'I Im, -•"'-"''»a Conlrtil holn' ~ ~
In -..--a come' Nj nnng, frll lnla. I ~ I ' l CUSSY 29r, lllldr '*" Udo,... da:hed .do In ...... CM .., dl4ldl . • 1938' dtitnl .... Sit. "''111'11-~a• t Cd °' \'\Ill 888-n4-9882 -Gib, 2Fpe, 3 ......, *'I Olcilr OCMn lronl home. Bed qlilt.,.... Mom & IOll. llwr June 1• 111111• 279 h1lfOOd _.. www dynamlclnalttt4u com bellAN. Ollld pelt on~ bl 1 Mptml rec. rm SM! wnt 1111. 0.... NUcrldlt. Sir!!!. Colla M!H ~ _ 12000/mo ,.:"718 '==: ~ """•~1.1122 A11o«J1b1t ....... l11J S 8 •• /P I , 1 · ·--1111!!!!!-·=-·'"·.._ ___ - -* ~7-= • w=z.:J: .. W::~" "'.o~~ ~'ii "•...,. ~MAGERS -,.. .. ,. :..:::::::..-:: pdlrOC'f ''""!!!! :;,.:,.-;m~~ 1~1!i41-2500 Ol • 2111 Nwpl ""* htOtld .:, ~wW:O = .:u .. -;:.:.. "': ~~ = ~ E ..... £ 11 • FUNIW' 1 • ~ Ill. ,,._ ki, trg yd. mo-illO (Mull pllell1I .. NI) ...... .. dlllOld • 2211 Port o.n. Pl ..
I _::II I °' 6m1se '22 f'*1on Aw 235 lml & ldlchenltla. ...... M In la V.... i;;;;;;;~~~~=t ** Jt Jt Jt * * * Jt Jt * * Jt Jt ** f2400'mo. 94&-431-16!!0 = i:= "::' ="'&4~ *
-IM aw 2111 hoult pe1 oll. lg yd. FEATURES: 24-Hour 1 ~ !!II!! to !!Y !l!ri)lou *• SHORES INTERIORS * fl'-lie _. tlllt
2200lf c:en atAl8ll 2 c 1111 Lobby/Olrtct dial 17th ANNUAL FAIULOUS UQUIDAT10H Ille llltlngl In INI ~. ""71W.0.1Q3 ~iH HBO, Pl1nnln1 CotlllltlC PREMIE~!j'Gaft&GE s•LE * E' * cMlgory _, ...... Lg llf 2.5111, l#lQle fllnt1 _ _.::;:M::;;Mf7=-to30=::___ Dllc:IPool & lllrWllY?..., ~ "nA " * ~ * you to cal 1 toO
llcmt, So ol Hwy, lotmll Jlcuzzl, Guest la~ w.a· tt.. IN IA INE TERRACE * * number '" wtllcti dlrAng. olftct, S3200t'mo NP Hll 38' 2.581. 2-tloly drt CIOle to 406 & 55 00!11! cart i4 759=9094 • "*' i. 1 dw1I per
AVll 7/1 94P.n3-5135 Clpe Cod, ocn vu, hi c:ela, r.z:; Mln'a from O.C. I * e"I . / 1 * mlnutt •
., rown11ome 2c on111. ~~·c~.::·~ bclll.rc1aw=: SATURDAY 1:30am-1pm * PRICES~ *
poc1 & 'Pf, Sl90tYm0. S3500/mo. Avau 6-15, 11e tance to aflOPI and LOCATED ON * \\1cker Rat ran. Lamps. Aecessorw-. *
-/~ ....
4, • '
I • fll\1\ ·•
r:orJs1r.m.mns ,
I
• I
I
~ =fti~J. dep $4500 Mt-722-2314 rate~~· MESA PACIFIC COAST HWY * 2640 Avon Strrct *• ** OPa"'" 124 ~~ ........... F1inl-~--MOTOR tNN CAT TAKEN Between * Newpon se.acti
-L IALIOA llYD. I I ....-. -..__ m7 Hlltlor llwd plcUd up bV ..... In * Oft RJvCl'Slde ' Pacific Clkl'>l llW\ * ~~~ -~ ~~· ..::::=. =-~::~ (Jam~L: K~ur) !uit~9::!:.2!~>tu! ::-:!":::',:.:
..... ~ 2AOO " blilwa l9MOdllld, IM 111 '*and bllic cll>le Medicine dtlly. oer•1LS I alldt ..... locll *. 8RAHO NEW! FAIUlOUS AMdy July J. 14,40CM!lo ~-lrel, S700m t ::.;14:.;..t-.:.;54:.;..M..;:.::2:.;..01:____ FOR FURTHER " 1-I-!!!! I ~ I MW &""'-....
dlt home wrUull Mui« 8'. lllckl ~--~!!!!!· 949-51$.3648 0 (949) 805-1008 wn.••-_.""',_'_ :;' =~ = = 2 58a. all 3c gar. beeullflAly Christine !:fg.otn ~-._ 1 .... _ -·~. Reid [~I!!!!~ Ul>Qrlded thfVoOUl W/O, frig CM home pYI entr. pelt nMll "" -·-:ncld S19SOm KLElll E'llull 38r 2.681 ftm prtfd, walk·ln-ctlll, ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~ Local kl!!ene, call. dogS for CLERICAi. R1E Co. Ouua1 ~ ~ =
MNGT 177-104-8&49 19210 Relocltled Townllomt, clun. p~ !um? Newport -• lldopCion IUl °' allioe. -ry Enw. Olllct Aaalttlnt PIT algn. :.:; ~ -="°• Blvd'17111 t 949-723:8495 • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • =~A~e: 20 his $1Mu Fa rt1Umt '------~ -• to 949-75!1-1926 :.W..2111.,~~ =::d.~J:: THE BIG ONE IS COMING!. ~ii~W1 =-EA=RN:...:.::..IHC=Otil-=-E-FR0-11
Andtl'IOWCdM IChool dill. '!" r'~~ • DOGS HOME Vout ~ ~·
$2m'mo 8SM77-0488 • Torelli Realty • US:.:r-460I · Ma11-ordtr/1n1eme1 Fu11
• 11bW1g & Sl4)POlt. Fret mo
Lge '8r 28t dpll. on f'9n. •Udo ~ room • South Coast Metro Annual Garage Sale! • Oclc.t llllttnl, CFA, wwwRicnerSutura2002 com lnllAI Gar. wld. 5ummtf & ~ tl'llr. _.IO LMpord 1oo11 ..... MOO ~1'9
w .. =~~·7342 ::"u:t0~~95.1 :costa Mesa's biggest & best sale with prestigious : ::: =. ~ excJueM Colmtlic SlUdio
• 1Bt c111mq C1C1r1 on. • 2111 upper duplex 1n •neighborhoods. Saturday, June 1st from 8:00 a.m. to e ~~ ~ 'rreve~
....,... Aa01111111n11 M . 11111 bNdl. Fp, dbl Newport Shores. S215G'rno. e 2:00 p.m. Main Cross Streets: Fairview Rd, e 1 • ..... "1!!! I cross. 949-846-139' PAer1uCAm9L"!!_.~~-29rs11~ ~~~ ~ ~.biQ 'fl/5.d.pee('ll !J.;.,,'195. 94~~~·28109151· Cal Dlw I d h D -·-,.,..,., .. """' u .. !f. ;m.9422 ExL 203 AYlln t.i1~. ~-_rvJV" ._ ___ ...... im• 1 e Sunf ower an Sout Coast r. e GAOUNDSKEEP.~.~ .... ~·c~.r."65m:,t1;:r:.'
LG Townllolnt 29r Ubt., CIOM to the llech NPI ,_Hoeg Slllle 2llr e 8 Ahl A t e COAST COIN NEEDS kif larve res prop .....,.. ... Frw tlmDllta.
E'tl>I 2M 11A TflPLEX private la ylld, quiet, ar, 2.b1, 1 ~ 2111ipt*O'lllo +1fl uel • etty e, gen • OLO COM! Gokl, &lfYlr. ~i.~ ~ m~ 1-I00-5t1.01f!, 2.,, ...... --• .... dttn 2011 Thllr1n Ave s1.aA 5 Cell 141·177·1201 -i... ........ ~ •"""uea ~·-v-· n .. -.7._,. 00 ;;;-.; !Q.122.01;. l12'QIMO M~ _,=iAat~~==7100=--141-722·1121 ••••••• ~.... •• • • • • • • • • • • ~t.°H42'.94'41.' CIV1I ~ cl AU AlilEAltAH
Llf'tl • • .-.. •usr SIDE• ~=1~11 =::.= ~,,.,.'~ ::-~v~1 Call Classlfled Today =.=tr==: 0~.::0mo~ ~~ ~ pello, ~ ':....... lf11 ..,,. l'lllllliy.Mlt.WO + lll ...-~':"' :.Tei.off ..... (949 642-5678 =-l!!!x~~~· ~"='9 t!H?Wl!S All 11 t4HJ'S.7IOO _ _;:;:::..:.:.::..•~7IOO~-\!!!!I ~ _
'
JCM
CONSTRUCTION
WILL CUT THE
COST OF YOUR
REMODELING
JOBBY10%
Or ... " eend )'OU 9nd • friend out to dinner et the
llelUt Broiler.
All It takes la a
-minute phone call.
Jull PIA OIA yu IOMll bld, Wiik lo lht phcflt end
dial 1-800-520-5530.
Read tht dltlllll lllid
COii 81-.d they wll ~.,.. ..
p1tct 11 wt1li:tl you1 gel lhl .-ne euct Jctl, IR*kl ...
" JCM'a pltct ..,,, at .... 1~ lowlf, ycu•,.
all to lhl M9tMI Blalll
~.,. ..... ,. .,,,.. . .,...,, ,. ..,,...,...
WPty ,,., .. ,,, •• .,,,.,,., .,.. ,.
Jell CeMlrwtlOflt -~L& .. 174'19
, . ...
A-1 DllCOUN'T ELECTRIC IGiiiiiiLiiiiiil ---Spa • Pool • Sdtr
25 VII Elp. Fl9I ~
@Uc 714t'1Nm
UCIHKD CONTMCTOR No )ab too 11'11. M ..w.t
=:*-=t.'M•
I I
r ~ • - . ' ~
''· . . . --
Remodeling
6 Repairs
• ~. Camn!rcill
o Job 1bo Small
O.we Bamllton
949-32?.1292
Ctwt6n~ FflWI c.;in.,
..... ttywll llUCcO,
11.0laall. WlndoMldoolt. ...... llllcl balldl & piinllng.
Slrior dlloluL F• --C41JoM (714) 83&-8235 ~.-.'
MOVIN·MAN
Clr9lul • Courteous &a..,
Pilr'ICle • Antiquel
Fl'M Wwctlobte
Fr11 &timatel
949-378-7825
READY WHEN YOUARE!
LowRat ...
Slnoe1981
~
PUBLIC
NOTICE
Tilt Calif. Public-
U 111111 es Com·
mlslion REQUIRES
lhel .. UNd houM-
hold goods ITtOY8B
print lhelr P.U.C. tll T runbef; limol
Ind chlulltra print ,_ T.C.P. IU'l'Otr
In .. edYtrlsn'llnll
• you hlYt. ~ ~mAlltlt09-
lly cl 1 mowr. ho
Of cNJ!lr. cal:
PUBUC UTIUTIES
COMMIStON
714-55H151
Rob l8bel • Own•
ea.ta Meu. ca
(949)~
Cell IM9-887-1480
. ..... ".., ...... ... &OCAJWtO
IUC'TllONIC MM LIM Dl1'IC1ION ,......, .......
675-9304
~,,. ·-~
. \
~ ..
..... ..
~ .
I
. . .
B8 Saturday, Jone 1, 2002 •
I
fODAY'S
,,,,... ..clAIR.aQ~S~S....,WwO~RUMD ...... r ... u5imz.z .. L.,E _
Look for answers on Monday.
POWER
BOATS 11 -~1
Dully Eltctltc BOil 't3 2111, 48 't'Oll. Ing. C8, low
houls. very dun, $19.500
818·812·8634
Dully Electlte Bly BOii 20 E~ Mint eond. Custom
1111 MllSI see to eppreaa1e
$8900 94t-51MM4.
I
Duffy 21h Clanlc 2001
navy bllJe, luH tndolurt
heetef. dbl baa p11 & moni $24,500(obo. 949-873-2060
I et1 IALIOATl I
SCHOCK HARBOR 20
While HuJ1 $17,000.
714·989-0216
30ll Olll!'I s 1 S.000 Gf ""' Moonnt S27 ,500 Notlll
Balboe lslend Cllennel. MH7M1ot Im ~1
BOAT SUPS NEEDED Top
dollar peid no '°"' • thni property req, lfllllrtd Clll
lot del8lll 94H7s...a.4 7
Slip up to 45' bo9t. 13
wlcM, 1vlll now. Balboa
Penn Slip i.ip to 48' boll 15'
wide. Udo Isle S11p for J?uf'Y.. Udo Ille Ez 1oce11 AvaH Now Ctft fol prtong
949·675·4847
W1nltd &Oft 1llp In Newpon Harbor lo! Hant111
Spor1 Fisher LOCll private owner 7t4-212·12t0
Audi ..... Sedlll '01
SMr w/1jrty-lrnmecullte
S22.llllO 00 117887 =~ .. ~
Audi M 'tt 2Glt 1111, wl1lt
08lmNI fthr moonrool. co.
hkt ne*. ameU1 new $23.500 W1147S284 811;
949·S86-1888
BMW Z3 ·oo 20k m1.
1 o;wner mini condition. must Mil S2e.OOO obo
M•70f.U11
BMW X5 UI Spolt
Sliver wlchlrcoel .....
Fully l09dedl
141.M0.00 11msc
Phlll~ Auto 949. 74.m1
BMW 3231 Conwltiblt '91
Blue. Alwlyt gll'agtd.
Very ctetn c.r. Low miles.
~op. LoJack, Harmon rden 11ereo. 6 disc CO
chanper. premun pkg. mini
condllion Qnoinal O#ner S26,000lobo 714-269--0677
BMW 32111 Coupe '97 60ll mi, auto, apotts pkg,
SllYer, grey lthr, sunroof,
premium sound, , .. ,
lj)Oller, 11remium whll. au-
pel'b ~ cond, $18,995
vf33602 949-586-1889
BMW 3:2111 Coupe 't7
60k 1111, luto. l90fU pkg.
&Mt. g1ey llhr sunroof, premium 1ound, rear
spoiler. prerrwum w1115. IU-
pert> ~ cond, $18,995 vl33602 94~1188
8llW 5291 6edlrl ..,
13,500 ml, ~ --· llnt cond. $12,500
Ml-633-7772
BMW 740ll Sedll! 't7 Whi.t wllfl T111 L1111w
C*tflld '° 100K mllMll 124,llO.OO 117512 J'hlll~ Auto 949. 74.m1
c..-.c CaliHI 'tt
6 Cyt, low ml, t owner.
"" power, leelhef (0818800~ $16.988 NAB AS
{8001 '45-6592
CIClllc Dl¥lll '02
Low 131< ni, wilt. -llhr. co blllla al WIJT, (1~ NABERS ~
[8001 M5o5$l2
c..-.c o.v-. '00
Low "* bllatlCI ol WllT, VB. Nonhlllr, euper clNtlt ~184YJn.t;t $26,988 NAB AS
[IOOl MM5t2
cadilllC El Dando ..
ETC VB. lldllr, .. IJCI"',
low mies, 1 owner, c111t1 (~15Pl $2.4,988 NAB AS
jlOO) M5o5$l2
Cedllllc: El Dorado 'tt
V8, lealher. lull power. low
miles, 1 owner. very clean
(607287/3714P) S21.988 NABERS
1800) 945-6592
Cedllllc El Dorado ..
Tour, Crimsoo Pearl, tan
lthr, alloys & morel
(608243/380SP) S21.988 NABERS
jlOO) 945-5592
Cedilllc E8Clllclt ...
va. mr4 cond, must -· lul power, lealher, IOW oedtllll8
(41474413759Pl $26,988 NABERS
{IOOI MWSt2
CecMec Sevllt $TS 'W va. p1se11s, cc. Iii. pcMlf .... ledl8r, C8ll8lle
(82663213512P) $18.988 NABERS
{IOOl MS-oW2
C--.C Sevllt STS W
moonroll, al c:lwngtt, low
~clten, vix-
(91 $21,9111 NAB RS (IOO) MM5l2
Ctltmlllt C4f*-...
3.1 V6, orig ownet, blacW grey cloCl1 me. ..,, em-Im
prtlTIUn eound, lul bookl &
*Xlfds. beautillA orig cond.
g11aged, non tmkr, $2,995
firm, Bkr MNll-1•
~ Suburtlln ..
_, JdrMI
$11,911
RS
18001 145=M'2
T --... --.. -• ...-. ..,_,......,....._...__ --~ ---
Bridge
WU:K.LY BRIDGE QUIZ
Q I • 8oth ~~lnerablc, Soulh yoo
hold:
•Qlt15 116 e QJf5 •AH
The biddina hu DroCeeded: NOll11t IA!t'1' SOUTH W&Vr 10 I II:) T
Q 2 • ~le.her vulnerable, you hold:
• Jt94 ~ AKQJl74 0 \\iW • KJJ
Your riglll·hand opponcm ~ 1he btddlna wllh a weak two duunonc:b.
Whal ICtion do you take?
Q J • Neilher vulnerable. as Sooth you hold:
•Kll,54 1;1164 O l(tl •A5
The biddintt hu PllDCftdod: SOUTH 9t'l'.St NOllTH •• ,_ w
T WhM do you bid now7
Q 5 • Al Soolh, vulnenblc. you
hold:
The bidding lw orooccdod:
NORTH EMIT" SOU11t WFSr l• ~ i. 4V
4-5'V T
Whit action do you !Ake?
Q 6 • Both vulncral)le, as Sooth you hold: . . •
•A Q 6 c;1 AQ7 0 1117 • J IU 5
Ford TM#Ut SE 'H 24
va1Ye V6, 1811 ICIUaJ ml.
metallic aapplwe ltd, tan
Font COl'lbl' SE 'tt
39k ml, metallc IMI, 11111>.
power, A/C , 1m·lm
f)ftmlurn eound, ,.. -
cond. S7,795 vinl797815
Bkr 949-58§: 1888.
FORD EXl't.OflER XL T 'tt
ClwOOlll ~t..,. 2WO, !~~'l. ~ell poweri f11lly -. 14K ml, 13,40Cli
Font......, .....
ll'C, kJtf lolded. llov wt.II, Old11n11U1 .._... 'W
like "'"'· $8,49$ Bkr l.e•lll L.8400 't2 Black. Durll~M, mw CO, ,., ec ;:.;:!M::..9-:::586-::...:.:::'8=-88 ---llMllC, llht, moonrf, M pwr, (alZ1 11 ....
r9COldl llom WUI 1-owner NAB RS
090 MMU ... 131
FORD E.360 'It Van con-version, 460 cl, 1rtlttr
IOw1ll\J l>ICO. lul pwr, new
'"'· 4 CljJIMl chllrt. bed. TV. VCR. CB, grey/Whl m
cond S7500/obo.
94~5032 « 8*1029
SEU. YOUlt CAlt
IN CLASSIFIED
~ lull, lilll COUDel GMC Jllwny '01
124,llO.OO tflml I cyl, IUlly loeded, 1111111
PNllpe MAI> 11t, 1 owner
..... 574-7777 (123072/m1Pl SI ..... NAH AS
Ford TIUNI SE VI 'tt (IOO) 9*at'2
38k ml, metallic aitver,
am-Im CMS, like new cond. ltnta1tic nlue, $8,745
1276541 lllct 941t586-1888
$9650 ....,...,., (!00) .....,
Lll•WW'tt One Owner-l.ocll, SUV.llct
WlmllllY· T1upe. llhr $43,980 00 117858C
PhlHlpe Auto
949-$74-7777
IMZ C230 llldtll ..
Smoke SMr wi'Cleme llhr.
Only S5k ml. FIAi pwr S20.980.oo 11rs11 : .. ~
STARTING
ANEW
BUSINESSffi
• • • • • • • • • • •
I , ' I "•"t
~. ,.... . ~ .~. ' ~ •· ~ ..... ·.Ir ..•
Whit
happens If
you don't
advertise?
NOTHING.
Call the
Classifieds
(949)
642-5678 *P.j)ot
Y1llnat111 ........
Rtaa., ol Clttfoiilll
I00-941'"9048
Y0411 money
luye
hope for
women
In need
AU donltton1
nTu~
ttbll Md go to
Yellowstone
Wen I Non-
Profit 501c (3)
Corp. or Call
94M7W894
UTILITY TRAILER
4Xl1 2 ft ..... '475. 714-375-1950
The Legal Department at the Daily Pilot is pleased to announce a new service
now available to new businesses.
U?e will now SEARCH the name for you at no extra charge, and save you the
time and the trip to the Court H ouse in Santa Ana. Then, of course, after the
search is completed we will file your fictirious business name statement with the
County Clerk, publish once a week for four weeks as required by law and then file
your proof of publication with the County Clerk.
Please stop by to file your fictitious business statement at the Daily Pilot, 330 W.
Bay St, Costa Mesa. If you cannot stop by, please call us at (949) 642-4321 and we
will make arrangements for you to handle this procedure by mail
If you should have any farther quesrions, please call us and we will be more than
glad to assist you. Good luck in 1our new business!
Call (949) 642
• " ... i
I
..
Daily Pilot
1 95 IOU
llCOITU
Ar.IC. citi $876
199 IOID
llCOll'l 11
AT. AC I :s;c1n (2819' )
'9976
100 IOl.D
IOCUIU
Auto AC, d8lrl
•203672 ., 1,976
19510•0
CONrOUI Gl
AT. AC IOOOed
1129720
'7976
'00 CHIJIU•
CIUUS I.XI
AT. Fut Power. L.e81h«
(135151)
'13,976
'02IOlllJ
•·250 AT.~new
'Uf76
..
I
't7 rOID
DP&OUIAWO
&;di&
/C1 ~ 1 15,971
. I
BI 0 SaMday, June l, 2002
NABERS DISCOUNT •••• $2,000
FACTORY REBATE •••• + $2,000
(IN LIEU OF SPECIAL RATE FINANCING)
't .
AU IN STOCK
NAllERS C&llB-IPBllll
W UH 11111 A•lll
VI.FWY 1£W)(O. FW. rowB.
I.Wiii. GM C8THD
(11SI02JJ76or)
814,988
'17Cl•••-.al111
VI, P/Wtot, CC, Tit POWU
SEATS, LEATI8. CASSETTE
(126632/3S12" '818988
•w=••maa 6 CYl.. ON #L. 1 0WNB.
FUll POWB, LEATIB
IOlmQ(3733')
818,1188
PONTIAC • GlllC
NABERS DISCOUNT •••• $4,000
FACTORY REBATE ...... + $2,000
(IN LIEU OF SPECIAL RATE FINANCING)
NABERS .DISCOUNT •••• $3,000
FAOORY REBATE •••• + $2,000
ON LIEU OF SPECIAL RATE FINANCING)
NABERS DISCOUNT. • •• $1,500
FACTORY REBATE •••• + $2,000
(IN LIEU OF SPECIAL RATE FINANCING) .
NABERS DISCOUNT. • • • $1,500
FACTORY REBATE •••• + $2,000
(IN LIEU OF SPECIAL RATE FINANCING)
'l'1 ... El 1111 ••••
VI. P/5EA'5. SIBl£O CASSETTE. CD, lt:IN MUS. GM
CllTHD, var CLEAN 021mm2on
811,988
W UJllllll .. l&EllE
DUIAl DOORS, LEATIB. CD.
lfAI Al OON>r'l10tlNG & MOft
(2921.52/3719P)
...... .._.
VI. AUIO, T·10PS. ON MIES,~ ClEAN.
GMCEITHD
(223446137MP)
818;1988 . s17,aea
WC lllTI I •
GUY.llM• MNtf EXYIASl
( 193043/JIOOTI
818,988
WI I llD'llmEIJ
VI, STBEO c.usmt, CD. LEAM1. lOW ncG~ •
Mll5f E. WIJ CLEAN
"*1J62'1/J72AT)
821888
. .