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HomeMy WebLinkAbout2002-02-19 - Orange Coast Pilot. . SERVING THE NEWPORT -MESA COMMUNmES SINCE 1907 ON ntE WEB: WWW.DAILYPILOT.COM ,. J' .r y ~ J ~rv I .., y p Tony Jeronimo, 9, Jessy Munoz, 7, and Anthony Lara, 9, from left, play a game at Wilson Elementary School during a city parks cµtd recreation program. The city program kids share the playground wtth students Ln the Project Success program. er-school c~ • New collaboration between Costa Mesa and the N ewport-M esa school distr ict is giving students 'more bang for our buck' Deirdre Newman DAILY PILOT I l's d mtld afternoon and cl group of hfth-grc1ders ctt W11son Elementary School are wntmg d play dbout Encyclopedia Brown solv- 109 the case of the Bubble Gum Shootout ·tt·s my fttvonte chapter,· said Vane sa Venitez. 11 The playwntlng 1s pdrt of the Proiect Sucre s ctfter-school progrdm, w hlch focuses on lit- eracy for the low-mcome tu· dents 1t serves Pro1ect Success as 1ust one dfter-school ucces story under thP umbrella of Co ta Mescl Carei., a colldborauon between the etty ctnd the Newport-Me a Unified School D1stnct cement- ed last tall. There are even SEE SCHOOL PAGE 4 Jlmmy Cabvantzl, 10, Jonathan Camacho, 10 and Jose Rey , 11 , work on a math exercise as part of Protect uccess. New Westside candidate plans run •James Fisler, who has run twice before, says he will make an issue of the Costa Mesa Job Center, charities. Lolita ...,.,.,. DAILY PILOT COSTA MESA -An outspo- ken o1tk of th Job Center and two·tim City Counctl candidate said Monday he will make another run for a seat at the dais. And if James Fisler doesn't wm. he say be wan to at lea t make at inlere ting. flSJer, 50, said he plans to hed hght on vanou1 oty ~su -anduding whdt he calls the •third-worldmg• of Costct Mesct -dunng candidate debat U he c-an't win based on hls own ad a , Fi ler hope to ctanl)' where other counctl hopefuls tdnd on some ot the city' mo t controversial as uc , mdudmg the Job Center, chantie dnd ille<1al Ulllltigrnlion 1 l~ campaign will lack d few frills, uch expensjve llteratur • dnd adv rw.ements -maybe ev n lb $900 ballot <rtal ment -but at will be nch Wllh drbdte and infonnatlon, h !d. "Th degr in whlch I'm compctltlv larg ly bmited by hnances, • he SdJd. ·aut di IPast I can run for rrco. • F1 ler ran in 1996 and 1qq9 Both Cdmpaagn • ne1thN of which were heclv1ly fun<ted, produced dismal re ult" • 1 finished la t. but 1 got u lot o f encouragement from d1f· f~r nt p ople in the communi- ty I'm a ea on~d vetercrn now.· h e aid. SEE FISLER PAGE 4 Tales of the-perhaps gian t-octopus T he rec-ent stories in th Pi.lot about the good ship Muri 1 certainly dredged up memones. For tbe bene- ftt ol tboee who dkln't reed the ato- riel abo\at the Mwiel. I would edvtM that lbe we • shlp that wwt l9ound at the harbor emmca 1011Mt um. during the 1920s. Al tbat moment. lhe became my plafijliiiiiDd. my home away from~ ....... In wblc:h ........... A..,.) ..... ll¥9CIODOl'WI' ........... a1.., ....... , !mow.._ .............. . .......... ..,_ ........ _ ...................... midi 37 1'111DWllllw• ... ............ .,\•tr ..... 11111111 al a '911.. I ..., .................. .... ...... P1rtly cloudy or partly sunny? Th1t depends on your outlook. Expect temperatures in the mid·60s. 1\JESDAY,FEBRUARY 19,2002 RV law before council • agam • C ·osta Me'td leaders will debdte propoM··cl restnct1 ons on pdrk.mg of recrea t1ondl vPh1cles on ctl't '>lrc•el'>. Lolita Harper DAILY PILOT COSTA J\IES \ Thi-dehdlC' over J><Hkrnq recrt>cJt1uncil \ (•h1<1P'> on c 1t~ '>lrcPl1; go<.'!:> l>dc I. lwlorf' thl• < '1t\ Counc 11 tonight ''1th a propo di thdt ulhca,al<, hopP '' 111 plt>d"'' 1>nouqh of the pPople. enouqh of thP tmw The mo'>t rN(•nt pt>rrmt propo.,dl t.ake<, into con.-.1dPrdtlon n<•t1rl} PVCI"\ c onct>m 1d1..,ed by rounc 11 rnPmbt-r<, It include<, <In IO(f(>d\f> 10 tnps dllOWPCI pPr y<-ar onhnt> rC'g1str.1t1on, ''~< lu· -;ions for extrc:>me hdrd<,h1p dOd 'imdll· N pdrkmg rtPcal-. An 1denttf1cdt10n p<•rrrul proc1rnm W<J!:> <JISO \Uggc•sl<>d. rr•qumnc] CO..,td 1\ le!>d WCH'dllOncd Vl'htdt• ownpr.., to n•g1slN tht•tr nq dnd pion• ct -.mctll '>ltcker on thf' left rec1r bumpvr <,o olh· Cf'f<• cdn chstmgut'>h l>t't\\l•t>n lo<cd ctnd out-of-town motor homP' Tonight., me(•ltnCJ ,., lhL• luurth llnw the motor home 1 \UP hc1' b(•l•n bc•lon.· the City C'ounnl In its 11r .. 1 mrctrnd· taon, 1l wet<; propo £'d d.., u :!4-hour bdn on res1dent1al .,lrt>N., IJc)p1t~ the prot tc; of ct few dUdwnc" m •mber . rouncil members c1ppron•d ct prehm1- ndry chdnge But when th•• 11 .. m «mil' up Im lmcll dpprovdl. dbout 4) r<"'ldPnl.., OJ>po ed the ordmdnCl', promptm<1 lht• councll to end 11 bork tor rt>\ 1.,ion In 1t<, second ver<iton th.-""~ Iii\\ was propo ed in lhP turm of er c 11\ · wHlf' pldCdrd "} stc>m dnd hmttt>d motor home own Pr., 1 to \IX ·round tnp • per yedr Agc1tn d numlwr of re,1denl -ubout 20 -"J>okt• ctgdtn..,t II, Scl~ mg II WdS too r(.• ... tnCU\l• dOd dQdln the council .,cnl 11 bctck for retoohnq At edch mceung ct dedm:lled grnup of resident have pok n m fctvor ol ct bdo, cdllmg the IMge veh1de un 19htly and d<lngcrous rounCll member clddres cd their concern.., b\ dcknowlrdgmg something mu I b(> done to hnut the number of motor homei. -<1nd other lctrge rommt>rc1al vehicle<, -on the street ·we ht1\'e cl respon 1b1hty to pn>· tect tho t• who don't wdnl an R\' - especially one the} don't own - pctrked m lronl of their hou e. • < ·oun· cilwoman Libby Cowan .,tlld Now 11'-; back, an vf'I dOOthcr revtSed lorm. In a tctlf report. Co .. ta 1e:Mt Police Lt Karl chuler xpldln d thctt onc-e an own r ha reg1 t red, h<l or ht" ccsn requ t a pemut that \\oulrt i llow lht'! recreational vehicle to be pilrkl'd on city tr ts for 72 hours tor loachng und dnother 72 for unloadmq SEE RVS PAGE ' .... ...... -~-~----" ----· ___ ..__10 ..s _______ , ~ ........ AILI .. _..... ..... ,... ........... 7 ldl. ON 2 Tuesday, Febrooty 19, 2002 lid1 Talk BICK Much to celebrate for two presidents The Daily Pilot went to Pomona Elementary School in Costa Mesa to ask third-graders. 'Why does America celebrate Presidents' Day?' 'George Washington - b@cause he was the first presi· dent.' DIANAUlml.. 9. Costa Mesa 'Celebrate the presidenjS Abra· ham Lincoln and George Washing· ton. They helped our country. Abra· ham Lincoln was the 16th presi· dent and George Washington is known as the fath~ of our coun- try. He was the first president. Abraham Lincoln married Mary Todd and George Washington married Martha.' EUZABETH GOMEZ. 9, Costa Mesa 'Because of Abra- ham Lincoln and George Washing- ton. They celebrat· ed and wrote let· ters to people that didn't have food. didn't have dothes, shoes and sock5. Abrat\am l.Jncoln wrote letters to people from faraway countries.' ANGEL letNA1.. 8, Costa Mesa 'Being a president like Abraham Lin· coin and George Waihington. George Washing- ton helped peo- ple and Abraham Lincoln was the 16th president. Both had a war and ~ soldiers died.' MIGUEL MEJIA. 9, Costa M~ 'George Washing- ton treated~ nice, Abraham Lincoln freed all the slaves. George Washington was the father of our country. They fought against the English ~ they didn't want to pay taxes to the King of England.' ~MUIUUO, a.com Mesa VOLM,N0.50 -eL-MlltflW --... """"--. ... ........ ...--... I,..._, • Daily Pilot II TIE CWSIOOM f'HOTOS 8Y GREG F1tY I OAl Y "OT Newport Harbor students Magaly Cano, 18, and 17 year-olds Estella Pinon, Lupe VaJenda and Yadira De I.a Rosa, from left. are 10me of the most experienced students ln the AVID program. Cre·ating avid students The AVID program at Newport Harbor High School has put several students on the road to a college education Deirdre Newmlln DAILY PILOT Newport Harbor High School freshman EdU4Tdo DeLaCruz saw his grade in history Up from an A to a D ln the last month of last quarter. ·1 didn't do the projects because I didn't have a computer at home," Eduardo adnutted, adding that he was too shy to tell his teacher why be didn't tum them in. His teacher. Angela N wman, however. was perceptive nough to realize that while Eduardo may have lacked resources, h did not lack potenbal. ln fact, he wu a perfect candidate for the Khool's Advancement Via lndivtdual Determination program, a four· year college-prep program for underachieving, yet capable 1tu· dents. Newman, the director of the AVID program and ltl first-year teacher, says the goal ii to catch the middle-of-the-road students n N'\t ("r ab le. Cf 1 I"> I' • ~ r.-· 'A,).(' • :c 1 4 1c. nc u.nc.. nO \.. -:' Tor·a1ue 1?-i.nn \_ .. ,re.'~ .J CH.u~P :-l 31 rc. 're.~ .. fl ~ K:!Ct.~~f \) fu .\ ; f\C(t"\ Teacher Angela Newnum writes a UJt of vocabulary words on the board designed to give students a good start on SAT preparations. who tend to fall through the cracks. This is the fifth-year the AVID program bas been challenging stu· dents at Newport Harbor. Each year, the program has expanded to reach more students. Currently, there a.re 140 students enrolled. Even g tting into the program is intense -students go through an lnterview process as eighth· grad rs and have to show motive· tion and comml.bnant to make it through all four years. The four-year program ls taught by a different teacher with a differ· ent area of expetU9e each year. Newman tackles the fTelhmen and whips them into shape with a study 1killt program that helps them make a 1ucceraful transition from Junior high to bigh IChool. All •tu· dents in the program a.re expected to mAlDleun a 3.0 grade-point aver- age or above. College student and older AVID tudents act tutors, help· mg the younger tudents Wlth con· cepts they don't fully understand m class. They don't g1ve the answers. but faolJtate discussaon that will ultimately I d the students to a tug her t vel of understand.mg. After only being m th program for about a week, Eduardo as work· lng hard to keep up with tbe d mands of tho cl • ·She g1ves us a lot of homework and I struggle oocau.se I have a lot of homework from my oth r class· es.· he said. Fr hman Su ana Rios, who tarted ln th fall, said she bas already teen b r grad improve. •The tutorlAls help me study for tests,· Susand sa.ad. "It provid~ extra help and lS a good expen· ence as a freshman· Newman al o provides a he4.llhy dose of We kills, infusing her lectures with ethJcs and vdlue discussions to keep the tudents focused on their goals. She also gets them started early on the enure college appllcabon process. ince many will be the flrst m their famtlJes to go past tugh school Although Newman doe n't work Wtth students after their freshman year, h still keeps tabs on them as they progress through the rest of the program. • 1 have to tay more on top of them than a counselor would.· Newman wd. Wtule the AVID program Is mtense. it as also meant lo function as a family of support for tudents The atmosphere ln the da ls laid· back as students engage an a col- laborabve proce5S of analysis and dlscu.sston On a recent afternoon. some tudents were dolng math problems on the blackboasd wtule others were workmg ln dusters talking about various loptcs. Eduardo, who said be wu a lit· Ue h tanl lo gn on because h was afraid it would be boring, said he was pl sanUy swprtsed. •1t•s a r ally fun abnospb re because I know everyone and everyon t41k.s to each other and ls helpful: Eduardo said. •No one JUdg you." ... ,, ....... Aft~ .. ~ ntmnttQDM ~w~ nght; No----.......... SIU 1111 Sii je#t ••II -.......... ........... .. llMm '°""".... - 5 lwr ......... Clllilt w_.. ,..._.,... 51Mia " ,,. ..... -.... c 0 .. ~ ... ,.... .. ,,..... ,,,. ....... -........ ,__,..,..., .. .,~ ........ " -....... .--. ...... u: .............. •••Uni' -.... _,., c..e ............. ll!Mlft ..... $ • I ----................. ....., aiuw •• -.,._ .................. """ I • I ..._.. 'J04ll '*"'""'"'~WI OMly ..... °' ,,... ... tMMS5 Our ..... 1)0 w 11¥ St., CGlt.ll Mlle, CA 817. oMca houri ... ~. ~ tJO •m... 5 p.tn • • , ~I • , ...... ....., polky to Pl•• ... .............. 111 .. ,._ell .. SJ4-GJ1 m ,.. ........... ..a.. ..... .... .... ..._ .. "',., ..... ............... c..-. an r;, •-.ullMl•llr.., ....... ._Cllilil'llca..r _ ....... _ .... .. ............. --.. .. ctr ... ..., .... ... .................. ,. ................ , ,, ..... """"9r Ot ......... .. hlN!nCln .. ,...,.._..~ _...,, ,.. •• h1'r.e1 of~°"""" ttQW JO llAOt us a.a.• $ The""'* Ot ... Cour'ICr -nl·tt" Wt .. . a ...... _. .. i-s111 U.....,_.I042, _.. --~IG-----~'16GJ ... ..... ~." ,.... ....... " .._.*''"••ia.-. ---............... ....... ..... .,.,,. _._.,._a ... -.... -.... ....-... ----·- IOMM.OflltuT ................... .............. MIMtOtD ,, ......... Mme ... ...................... .. .............. . ••.,._,tarnu & T ..,, .......... .. _I_ ....... ..... Funhet out winds w6ff be out of the northwest .t 10 to 20 knou. lJIP9(t Wft9I to be about 1 to l t.el. There wtll be • sw.fl out of the north-west at I to I fMt ............ ••11 .... kl.:...... ,. ............ .IA' ........ ... .., ... U" --u 5 '"' 7 a•P I I Mlslltq .... Daily Pilot COSllMISI cm COlllCIL PIEYIEW 01 TIE AlllDA '" CAllOPY CIAHIS Council memben tonight will review changes to the city's ordinance regarding automobile canopies at car dealerships. car- washes and In resldenttal driveways. The councll·eartler postponed the canopy luue, saying it needed better definitions of what constitvtes 1 canopy, tarp or tent before making changes to the existing ordi- nance. Code enforcement staff has included more detailed analysis of the technical differences between the three categories of coven and what would be allowed in residential zones. J At previous tnfftings. audience memben were opposed to any coven being used in r~ial neighbOmooc:ts. saying they loohd bad. The Planning Commission recommended that canopies be allowed at c.ar dealenhips and c.arwashes but not In residential areas. Despite the recommendation, code enforce- ment staff suggested the use of canopies on residential property if they are being used to shade cars in driveways leading to garages. WHAT TO EXPECT: The council Is expected to approve prelimi- nary changes to canopy guidelines. JOHN WAYNE AllPOIT SEnLEMENT AGREEMENT A resolution encouraging county officials to extend the John Wayne Airport settlement agreement is on the •nd.t tonight. The counc.il will review~ and decide whether the oty wi11.Q9 °" record as officially supporting~· The currJ .gfffment puts a cap on the number of ~ at JWA and the tirnes for takeoffs and landings. It will expire in 2005. WHAT TO EXP£cr: Council memben are expected to approve the resolution to support the extension of the John Wayne Airport settlement agreement. GINEUl FUND NET IEYENUE The city has about U.6 million 1n extra revenue funds and needs to decide how to spend it. Council members will review the options for the use of S2.596.420, whk h was reported • WHO: Costa Mesa City Council meeting • •-= 6:30 p.m. today • WIW: Council CMmbers at City Hall. 77 Fair Drive as general fund net revenues by an lndepen· dent auditor. The finance department is suggesting the council vote to saw 35% for next years' bud- get, 50% on various capital Improvement projects and 15% on the recently Identified community objectives. Some of the recommended capital improvement projects include decorative sttMt lighting on 19th Strfft from Park to Placentia avenues. paving of 19th Street from Anaheim to Park avenues. and the design costs of the police department expansion WHAT TO EXPECT: The City Council is expected to approve the designated allocations. lllSTOl STIEET COMMITIEE The council will appoint members to a committee that will oversee some major changes along Bristol Street. Changes ere designed to improve the por· tion of the street between the San Diego Freeway and Redhill Avenue by way of new requirements and zoning standards. Seven people applied to the committee; four were local residents and three were affected busi- ness owners. In August, the council discussed several options for improvement. Some ideas includ- ed creating an ovenight committee and hir· 1ng a consultant. The first order of business would be to recruit members for the committee and. once their findings have been noted, start the bid· d ing process for a consultant. the report stat- ed. A contract would then be awarded by the council. In addition to those appointed tonight. the committee will include Councilman Oms Steel, Planning Commissioner Bill Perkins and Kim Pederson of the Parks. Recreation Fecili· ties and Parkways Commission WHAT TO EXPE~ The council is expected to appoint all sev- en who applied. -Compiled by LoUta Harper CONGRATULATIONS TO ORANGE COUNTY'S TOP RESTAURANTS FROM THE 2002 ZAGAT SURVEY* PINOT PROVENCE .. Top Food -28, •• Top Service -25 " ... 'Anyone who loves Provence wUI love Plnot' ... " TROQUET Top Food -27, Top Service -24 " .. .'The next best thing to Paria' In a 'lovefy Mtting' ... " GUSTAF ANDERS Top Food -27, Top Servtce -25 • ... "The beet cU"9d salmon In the unlverae' ... •a ciaas act for al eternity' ... " GUSTAF ANDERS ' BACK POCKET Top Food -2e, Top Servtce -24 • ..• '&N9dl8h COftlfort food' ... 'bMt-kept MCntt In Santa Ana' ..... ANTONELLO Al8TORANTE Top Food -25, Top 8enlloe -28 " 'Aomantlc p9l0 zzo-lke .. ttlng .. : • MORTON'S OF CHICAGO • TH• 8T•AKHOU8• Top Food -28, Top ...... -23 • .•. '8upetb' 'huge .... '8. end ·~dltg .. dMlhee'.,," Tu.day, ftbn#y 19, '2002 1 Safety in cell phones •Legislation is in the works to lift the current ban on cell phones for local school districts. O.l'*-N9wman DAILY PILOT Some high school tu- dents say they are in 'favor of legislation making its , way through the Capitol that would Wt the curr nt ban on ceU phones for local school distncts that wanted to set their own rul . ·1 thlnk lcell phone I should be allowed.· said Kristi Koon. a ophornore al Newport Harbor High School ·u somethmg hap- pened, we would need somethmg.· C urrently the phones. along Wlth pagers and dny other electronic s1gnahn9 deVJces. are banned on school sites by tale law The d1stnct also has its own policy against cell phones and other electronic dCCe'i· sones because of their dis- ruptiveness, said tru tee Martha Fluor. The legisJallon, co-spon- sored by John Campbell (R- Newport-Mesa), wouldn't automabcally make cell phones legal -1t would give school districts the authority to remove the ban by creatmg tbetr own regu- lations. He .says it's a matter of convenience and safety, ·My son, who goe to school in Irvine, has a cell G fll:f t DALY "'-OT Newport Harbor sop homore ChrlstiJla Thurmolld makes a call o n her cell phone he lea school concerns. •Th kids pornted out that the fU"Sl calls to 91 l from Columbm came from a tud nt on campu with a cell phone,· Campbell said ·Also at Sanlldgo [High School!, a whole bunch of parents werf' relieved to hear from i.tudenl . with thetr tllegal cell phonf's • Derek Spires, a opho- more at Newport Harbor I ugh School, agrees that cell phones and safety go hdnd- m-hand He says they are neces ary for "whenPver you need to get dhold ol your pctrents for emergenoes • And ophomore Brdm Rebard lamented the fact that now Sludent have to bnng ch.ange and Wdlt to u e lhe pay phones. •If 1l' not a d1Srurb1mce. I don't Uunk it hould not be allowed.· Bnan aid Fluor s.s1d tf the 1GqlSla- t1on pd<> es. a healthy debatP 1 n d •d at the bodrd le\el I lowever. tru t Wendy Leece .,aid he's already made up her mmd m favor of cell phone on campu for one> purpo e only -•m the Cd'>• of d d1 a ter -an edrthquokt.• or ">Orne unfore- seen trayed-y where you had to get dhold of the mom or dad or tht-child quickly.· Cdmphf>ll'., bill pas e d the Aswmhly 73 to 0 m ear- ly Februdr\ t le did he expects the lc91 ldUon. co- author1 cl with Democrat Carol I.Ju to mo\ e qwckJy throuyh lht> "icnate. A uru- lar bill. thdt would re move th bdn dilogelher and clllow school bodrds to make reguldllon' to pre-.ent dls· rupllons ., mdkmg its way through thl' endte d well phone and I didn't even---------------------know they were tllegal. • Campbell saJd. ·We got h1m one because tf be needed to be picked up from school or anytlung bad happened at school, we wanted to be able to get a.hold of hun, or him of us.· It was students m Irvine, m fact, who ftrst msptred Campbell to 1ump on the cell phone bandwagon wben they VlSlled him last year. expressing s1m1lar WE DOTHINC:.S RIGHT! OUR MEALS ARE A TRIP TO MEXICO Ml CASA MEXICAN RESTAURANT WETAl<E DINING TO THE NEXTLEVtl! WE SPECIALIZE IN LAl\GE TOGO ORDERS PHONE AHEAD! 296 E 17TH ST COSTA MESA · 949·64S·76l6 WINTER SIDEWALK SATURDAY, f [ 8. 23 GROCERY. DRUG & HARDWARE ~ FmUwe 646·1411 St.-. 4rvgs 642-2211 Cron A<• Kordwre .• '42·1U3 APf>AREL a.,.., ......... 64H73t 0r.-·s & 0-s .. 646-SS!t bpb Serf si., •• '31 m6 SPECIALTY GIFTS & HOME otcot c.w.. We . .S4t '"' .. .... . . . 611illll --... . """s .. ..in1' HEALTH & 8EAUTY .............. '46 574' w.u..,.. w. . 646 71'7 FOOD 4 Tu.day. Febtuary 19 I 2002 llllfLY II Tll llWS Police detain robbery uspect Costa Mesa pollc nabbed • robbery suspect who left tbe smoking gun In the back of hl1 cu. ln this case, tbe 1mok· Lng gun was • loaded 22· calib r riOe, which Andrew Perkins allegedly used to rob tbe 7 • t l mar- ket on Gt ler Avenue on POLICE FILES COSTA MESA • •rl1tol Street: A petty theft was reported In the 3300 block •t 7.40 p.m. S•turday. • Coolidge Avenue: V•nd•I· ism w•s reported in the 3000 block •t 11 :55 p .m. S•turd•y. • H•rbor •oulev•rd: Posses- sion of • controlled subst•nce was reported In the 3500 block •t 1:37 p.m. S•turd•y. • Newport •outev.,d: "eslst· 1ng •n officer was reported in the 1400 block •t 8: 17 p.m. Saturday. • West Wiison Street: Some- one with an open container In a public park was reported In Sunday night. Tbe clerk w.. .~. to Crovide ottlcen with the cenM number from the 1u1pect'• 'I'oyota 4·Runner; said Sgt. Mike Ginther. Officers traced tbe own· er to a resadence lo the 1600 block of Sandalwood in Costa Mesa and when they got there. found the suspect'• vehicle parked ln front wltb the rifle lying acron the back Hat. Perkins w.. charged with armed robbery and ls being held on sso,ooo ball. the 300 block •t 11:30 •.m. S•turday. llWPOIT llACH • McNeil Une: Grllnd theft was rep<>fUd in the 200 blodt at 2:53 p.m. Friday. • Ocewt ~ Larceny was reported In the 2300 block at 1 1 :26 p.m. S.t:urcUy. •Y"P!wd W.,: Objects ~• I epottec} st°'9n frOm a whide In the 100 bk>dt ~ :33 a.m. s.turday. • S'9MI llBM: Suspicious per- sons were repotted In the 300 blodt at 5:08 p.m. S.turday. • S..•rior Awelwe: A commer· ci•I burglafY wu reported In the 500 block at 6:48 •.m. S.turd•y. • )?th StNet •nd ... bo. loulevard: Vandalism wai reported at 2:37 •.m. Sund•y. !&~ Mattress Outlet Store T1JOAY SM lOST Ml RIST 1WTll TOMOllOW Sll'll • 1111111~u--10W sma. t.a •• .._ .._ • ...,_ Qoke U9 C.-.. ...... ftM. (')M .... "'"'-di.·-rhmi .... ttw--'d Tlw .. .,...,. .. ... "'" ..... dw woriJ 11111~ ~ •'•fW'~ fiDO..ty llJ ..... ....... ... thu wll9r ~ And ... Sc:ha6la a.--a.. ~ Pbftawinllllw,._~ -Wilh.._..• ... ..._ ___ tlnihlirT--' ~ m r a '"' ~a.-.. cwi ~ ....,.. l'U C'hdila ~ b ~ CXGllr nw "u.. ..._ c.1 sm a* leiw *9 ,I ., 1 (I Mr• Al-717-Mll ~SMJTii~ Celestino's Girlie or Smoky Western Marinated Tri· Tips s5~·b. Apple • Cinumon Stuffed Pork Chops s3~b. Old FasbJoled Stuffed Cbidrll Brtllt • s~ Miid tr Bot ltalla1~ s~ SCHOOl CONTINUED FROM 1 "' . programs altogetbm'. rang· lD9 from the Boys & Girls Oub homework asmtance program to a new commwu· ty outreach progra.m with mentors from lJC Irvine. The bool d1itrict wonted to help students who needed an extra boolt of literacy but did not want to reinvent the wheel, said trustee David Brooks, who was lnstru· mental in aystalllzing the coUaborotion. •With some tudents, they live wtth three or four othel"i In an apartment where there's nowhere to lie a Oat book. They will just become another statistic.· Brooks sa.id. Project Suc:ces$ operates at eight schools and pro- vid 460 tudents with RVS CONTINUED FROM 1 Unlike the previously suggested large, Ouorescent placards, the new ones wouJd be small cards to be be reading skilll, Eng· Ulb·iengu.ge deve)oplnent and homework wace. Teacben ~ from the dis· trict provtde the Ut racy com~ent while at.aft from the Costa Mesa Recreetion Department provide ltr\lC· Cb.red ou&door actlvtbu. . ·we·re getting more bang for our buck tnce w •re ervlng the arne population,• aid Cnlhl Pierson, lnterlm prtndpal at Harbor View Slementary School. Alter ldlool, the students usually get some time to work on their homework. Then they tart working on various projects, ruch as writing plays or making col· !ages based on books they ·hove read. ·u's a little bit of tructure, clisdplin • intere5t m r d.u1q to stlmulate their nunds and do something interesting every day to enhance thcir placed on Ole windshleld. The new ordinance also allows for a total of 24 round trips per year. Although conce ions have been made. many res- idents feel any restriction on motor homes. other than the current law, is excessive. Resident David St1Uer • Sta.kt • Safoocl • Codccajlt • Qulitr ~ma •Nipdy £a1uuia•ttU • Valance1 & Cornice Boxes • Roman Shades • Blinds •Verticals • Shutters • B~spr~ads ~.) .. -. . < >I I ?•~ DESIGN CENTER Factory & Showroom 1998 Harbor Blvd., C<>5ta Mes.i ::...~ (949)642-8400 aMIMty." .u:t I*go Sal· durilp.. tMdWI aide. SNdentl ID &be program MY tbl'y llljOf tbe ~to get • head stert 00 tbeii home-work and participate iD ~,::=·we like reading.· Mid litth1J111der Kun Nguyen. 10. The coUat>cntive recently applied f« two grants -one to expand a.fter-tehoOl set· vicel at all schools and one to start a new Project sucam program at Costa Mesa High School Cotta Mesa'• grant writer helped the YMCA wrtte the grant for the dis· trtct, said ecbool readi.De:SS facilitator Jane Garland. •That's exactly how the collaborative should work. so no money changes hand.I. just expertise,. Gar· land said. While the grant would provide S5 per tudent per day. 1t costs the collaborative \ does not own a recreauonat vehicle but bas been vehe- mently opposed to any stricter ordinance. Stiller charged th.at the city has no c1ata outlining the number of complaints received about motor homes. nor has it presented any proof of the dangers associated with them. •Without any objective evidence -or actual num· bers -you ore being arro- gant and arbitrary,· SWler told the counal at the last meebng . FISLER CONTINUED FROM 1 Although Fisler lives m Mesa Verde, be bas galned the support of a faction of Westside activists who believe the Job Center, Illegal immi· grallon and the presence or charities are driving the quality of hfe down in their neighborhood. Councilman Chns Steel said he Is anxious lo gel someone such as Fisler on the dais with him: •He 's conservative like me,• Steel said. ·u I can't get the council to show 1 some leadership on some of these issues, the resl· dents are going to have to look for two reliable, con- ~ervallve, credible candi- dates for the seats avail- able.· Mayor Landa Dixon and Councilman Gary Mona· ban are both up for reelection. and while Dixon said s he will fight to keep be r seat, Mona· han has decided to bow out of pollllcs. And Councilwoman Karen Robinson has launched a write-in cam- paign to unseat Orange County Superior Court Judge Ronald C . Kline. Robinson said she will re main on the Caty Coun- VERDICT CONTINUED FROM 1 pt ce, l tuck my spear down th hole, and out came a tentative lnch or so ot tentacle. The inch became several. then got bigger and blgg r, wh.Ue more tenlades emerged. and finally out of that hole emerg.td the blggest, lnad· delt octopus I had ever seen. When an octopus ts dJI .. turbed, be emits • pwpae Uquld. Suddenly, the clear water became muttry pur- ple, and \lllderneetb tbal mwky purple wae. lurked • giant octopul jutt wait· lng to marl me tor hil lunch. It never-blPl**t. When tbe .... dMred. the Odlplll. .... ti tbil- Ol'OUI t 4 ...... ped. M.. W HllD· ............ Jtl •• ... U I ti llllple ... • • .,. ll•C.. ...................... _,.... ............. '110)1 Doily Pilot - tbout ,.,, to S8 per day 1.o fund • Project 5l\1. dent, Garland added. CC>lta Me.a Mayor Ubby Cowan allo bu• commuru. ty obtecttve ol piecing $500,000 in • long-nn fund for the coU.borative so th• city 11 able to apply for matching fundl. Th Caty Council has Already approved the objectlve and will dJscusl earmarldng the funds at its meeting tonight Wblle t 2,000 children live i.n the cliltrtct, only t .000 are being served by Costa Mesa Cares. But at leut 6,000 to 8,000 need this kind of after. school support. Garland lamented. •rt•s a well-oiled coUabo- raUon. • Garland said, ·but we want to make it better.· • ~ ........ COYefS fdu.. c..don. She ~ be reeched •t {9'9) 57~1 OI by •mail It "-lrdre.MWman9UtlrMS.com '" Whet: Costa Mesa City Council Meeting When: 6:30 p.m. today Where: Oty Hall, 77 Fair Drive lntorm.tlon: (714)754-5225 • Lolfta Kwper coven Costa Mesa. She may be reiKNd at (949) 57~75 or by e-matl at loi. tll~tlmucom. '1 '"I ' cil duriqg the cam· palgn but would resign If she WIOS. Wh i l e Steel is looking for like· James Fisler minded c andi · dates to he lp hlm win majority votes. he could bt> removed from the council . If convicted of two lelony charges for alJeged forq- mg of signatures dunny the last two City C ouncil elect.Ions. Steel has plead· ed not guilty to both. Fa h•r 1s the most recent City Council hopeful to ma kt> lmproving the Westside central to h1s cand1d1tc·y Others include Allan M•n· soor and Joel Fans. bur neither have formallr announced a candidacy The increasing numbPr of candidates focused on the Westside could end up hurling their collective cause, Steel said, H they e nd up splltling votes. • 1·m worried the re might be too many run- ning,· Steel said. Other pro~able con tenders are Planning Com{l\issioners Katrina Foley and 8111 Perkin& and forme r councll mem· ben H ether Somers and Jay Humphrey 110 ara.t~ Coetll M..a .... t. Doily Pik>t TODAY The YMCA l3NCOREplu1 wU1 sponsor free breast ca.n· cer screening for wom n 40 and ol der at Harbor Christ- ian Fellowship, 740 W Wil- son St.. Costa Mesa. Screeni.ngs lnclud a mam· mogram, clinical breast exam and self-exam lnstrucllons CaU to ch~· uJe an appointment (714) 935-9720 or (7U) 806-2037 A program ttUed ~Ferm and Staghoms• will be conducted at 9:30 a.m. by Don Wood, (or· mer president of the Los Ange. 1es lntemab.onal Fem Society. The program. wluch is part 0( the Weekend Gardener Senes, will be held at th Sherman l.Jbraiy & Gdrd ns. 2647 E. Coast Hlghway, Corona del Mar. Free. (949) 673-2261. Oreb.Id growers and vendors from around Southern CaU- fomh\ will converge at the UC lrvme Arboretum for the annual Winter Orchid Show from 10 a.m. to 3 p m. at the comer of Campu DnvP and Jamboree Road on the UC lrvme North Carnpu $2. ctuJdren 12 and younger and members of the Fnend of UCI Arboretum are free 19491 82•-5833 lbe 2002 SwH tbeart Ball lo help raise ~ tor the Hoag Heart w\l1 beqm at 6 p.rn. at bn South Coast Plaza Hotel m Costa Mesa The dance will be put on by the 552 Oub of Hoag Hospital Foundabon and nf{any & Co. S.50 per couple, $225 per Ul<il· V1dual. Reservabons rcqwred. (949) 574-7208. SUNDAY •Sunday Night Uve," a perlonnance ln ell-expres- sion through music, ong. dance, comedy and readings. will begin at 7 p m. at the Center for Spmtual 0 1 ov- ery, 2850 Meso Verde Dnve East. Costa MCSd $8, S5 for seruors ag 60 and older, S3 for chtldren age 10 and younger. Attendee will have a chance to perform before the audience. Call to arrange to perform (714) 969-4778. Temple Bal Yah.m Unlvenl· ty's Rob Gr nfi Id OIStm- gwshed Speaker Serles con· bnues with author Stephen Bloom. who wrote "Po Mlle, A Clash of Culture ' m Heart.land America.• The lecture will begm at 7 p.m at Tempi Bat Yahm, 101 l Camelbeck St.. Newport Beach s~. $10. $5 senion and studPnt.s. Call for r r- vab.ons. (949) 644 • t 999. YUISDAY A cookJ.D9 dau and book· ign.ing for • 8e Nourished Cooking Cla • • presented by Eden Foods d author R becx:.I Wood, will be gtv n hom 6:30 to 8·30 p.m. tn tb ~tio C4fe of Moth r's Mar- ket; 225 I!. t 7th SL, COlt.4 Mesa R abons required (800) 59.S·MOMS. WIDllSDAY n.. Newport BHch New· comers Club will meet at to a.m. at th Colony Plaza at Pashl9n Isl.and Ul Newport B a.ch to honor its past presi- dents during lunch and a howtng of new pring fa h· ions by Chico' . (949) 644· 4032 or (949) 854-4501. Irvine Mayor l.uTy Agran and Bruce Nestande w1U debate Mea ure W, which will appear on the March 5 ballot, at a luncheon hosted by the Orange County Coast Aun. at l 1:30 a.m. m the Bayview Room at the New- port Dunes Re ort, 1131 Back Bay Dr. IJl Newport Bedch. $23, $20 for as oc1a· bon members. Reservabon deadline 1s Feb. 18. (9•9) 660-8665, Ext 3. Tbe Calllomla ReUred Teachers Assn. will tfold a proc;ra.m about the ongms of the Amencan flag at 1 p.m. m the Costa Mesa Commuruty Center The program will be condurted by Charles Kissel, who owns . a ltuge coUeellon of tustoncal flag replica The commuruty center. 1845 Park Ave , CO'ita Mesa Free. (7 14) 549-0229 A free seminar on heart heaJth wlll be given tn the patio cafe of Mother's Mar- ket from 6·30 to 8 p.m 1n the patio cafe of Mother's Market, 225 E 17th St , Co td Me a. The Sierra Club wtU host a commuruty meetmg dedJcdt· ed to the preservation of Ban- rung Ranch. the 420-a.cre pa1- ccl of land adjacent to the Orange Coa t River Park, wtth bicycle. waUung trails, arroyos a nd picnic areas The m etmg will be held at 7:30 p.m at the Costa Mesa Com- munity Neighborhood Cen· te.r, 1845 Park A\ e . Co ta Mesa. (949) 645-6621 1949) 6-45-6621 The Cost. Mesa H1stor1cal Sooety will host Dave Lester. who will peak about his per· onal expenences in th European Theater dunng World War JJ at 7:30 p.m at 1870 Anaheun Ave m Costa Mesa. (949) 631-5918 THURSDAY A 00-mtnute bl'Hkfut boost held by the Co ld Mesa Chamber of Comm rce will be held from 7 to 8•5 am at the Costa Me a Country Club. 1701 Goll Course On· ve, Costa Mesa. $12, $17 at the door. Re ervatlon . AROUND TOWN Tuesdo)', febNary 19, 2002 5 flllAY TM 0..-.. Coaty .kwbb Conunuruty Sch<>lu Program and th &.lboo Petfomung Arts Theater Foundation pro- nt A.B Yeho hua ·o.n llraell William Faulkner· New York nm todcay. A pn- vat r pbon for apon ors will began ot l l a m., the lunch and program for dU oth· er gu•t.s wtl1 begm at 12 p.m The program will bo held dt The Center Club. 650 Town Center Drive, Co.ta Me a Tickets a.re $36 and ting ~ llrn1ted. (949) 673-0895. Th• Boutenko famJly will present two Vldeos and host d dinner and lecture on raw food at 6:30 p.m at th New- port Hills Club House. 1900 Port Carlow Place. Newport Beach. SlS for dinner and lee· ture. Reservations requ ~led (54 t) •88-8865 Orange Cout College wtll host a Fnday Night Planetcm· um Senes at 7:30 p m at lhe school's planetdllu.m on cam- pus at 2701 FallVlew R0c1d, Costa Mesa. $10 per show, $25 for erles ot lhr~ pro· grams. Future ctas es Wlll be March 1 and 15, Apnl 5, 12, 19 and 26; May 10. 17 ctnd 31; and June 7 and 14. The sene!. is designed for ddulls cunou'> about the cosmos (7141 412· 5880 or www.occtJckcts.com FEI. 24 The American n. of UnJ- vers1ty Women of Laguna Beach. Newport-Mesa. and the Women' \lub of Laguna Beach are co-'>ponsonng d lecture g1vt>n by Kathleen Melez. who ued UCLA in 1993 for wrongful temuna- uon. ex dtscnmmahon, reldl· 1atJon and defamation. from J to 5 p m dt the Womdn s Club 286 t Ann's Dr. m Laguna Bedch She will relate her expPnences m her quest for JU tic<> Call f949) 4q4. 3034 or (949) 4<+3-44 23 for more tnlom1alJon HI. 26 The YMCA ENCOREplus will pon or a free breast can- cer screerung for women •<> and older ttl St Joacb.tm Cathollc Church. 1964 Orange Ave . Costa Mesa Screen•ngs mclude a mam· mogram. chruc-a.I bredst exam and elf-exdm m tructJons. Call to !K'hedul • dn appomt· ment (71•) <l35-9720 or (7141 806-2037. A tree workshop on reOuol- ogy, promollnq health and welln whtle reducmg stress and fatigue, will be presented from 6.30 to 7:30 p.m in the pallo cafe of Mother' Market, 225 E 17th St , C ld M a R servauon required. (800) 595-MOMS. la WU•ut. wbo Mel tb• researc:b t that cloned the world'• first mammal. a lamb named Dolly, will giv a lee· ture a\ 7 p m . ot the UC lMne Bren Events C nter u pu1 of the uruvemty's Biolo{Jica.l Sd· ences and Allergan Founda· uon lecture ri•. Free. Reservattons required Th cost is SS to park m the M Structure . Re ervat1ons requested. (94'•1 824-72.52 or www.bio.uci.edu/wUmut. Naturalist and author Terry Tempest Williams will lecture dt 7 p .m . tn Orange Coast College's Robert Moore The· atre, 2701 Fauv1ew Road, Costa Mesa. She will held questions from the audience and read selections from her work. She's wntten e1ght books and numerous a.rbcl ex:pressmg her love for her native Utah land.scape. Free (71•) 432-5880. HI. 27 Building ownen wtlb plans to re-roof sbouJd att<>nd a workshop on the Cool Sav· mgs with Cool Roofs Program provided by the San Diego Regional Energy Office The workshop on saving money will be held from 1 to 4 p m at National Uruvers1ty, 3390 Harbor Blvd., Costa Me a. The free workshop will focus oo the benefits of mstalling a cool roof. along with how to take advantage of accompa· nymg rebate . To register. v1s1t lhe Web 1te at www.sdenergy.org/event or call (619)699-0728 The Orange County Cal Alumru C lub will hold 1t 2002 Spnng Speaker Dl.DJ\er at 6 p.m at the Wesun South COMt Plaza. 686 Anton Blvd , Costa Me a $60, S45 for young aJumru from 1991 -01. $55 for 0Tange County Club member Reservations requested: Orange County Cal Alumni Club. 4200 Park Newport, Suite 2 1b. New- port Beach. CA 92bb0 (714) 641-7738. A business afte r-hours mixer 10 a.s oc1abon with South Coast Metro AlliCiJlce will be held from 5 l.O 7:30 pm •l tbe Orang County Perform· Ing Arts C nter, 600 Town Center Or1v , COlta M • St O, t ror me . (714) 885-9090. fll. 21 . Tbe Hoeg Healtb Cent.er ID COita Mesa will hold a rru - nar obout symptom dnd method• for controlling du.1· dnm's asthma at 6 p m dt l 190 Bak r St .. Cosld M a Free R ervabons requttt>d. (800) 514 ·•624 to reg~ter (9•9) 760-55•5 for more Ulfonnation. MAICH 1 The Mighty Ducks ol Anah.eun and the Nauon.sJ Mulbpt Sd rosis Sooety of Orange County have teamed up to host th Mighty Ducks uclh annual Ca.smo Night Aucbon, ·canuvale m Rio.· from 8 p m to nudrught dt the Four Seasons H otel. b!-~O Newport Center Dnve. New- port Beach. (9491 752· lb80 or (800) FlG HT MS MARCH 2 The Newport Beach Tennis Fe tival will be held ·1rom 11 a .m. to 5 p.m at 880 lrvme Ave.. Newport Beach. Th~ event ls put on by the Pacl11c Coast Tenrus Foundat.ton and ts open to pldyers of all d9~ and levels Prot 1ondls will be on hand mstrucung play- ers, d.nd there wtll be d nuxed doubles round-robm touma· ment Wlth pnzes m dddtbon to double and single erlub1- bon matche Free food pro· \/lded by BdJd Fre h. (94ql 4 72 -5504 pactl 1ccoastten · m '4' hotm4tl ~om Tbe first of • two-day, 13· hour nationally accred>ted baby· 1tting course for boyi. and guts ag 11 to 13 '-':tU begm at q a m today m thP lioag Ho p1tal Conference Center, l HOdg Dnve, New- port Beach The econd course will be at 9 a m. Mdrch 9. $45 for two b 1/2-hour es· s1ons. PartJapants will learn hrst-a.id help for choklng. etl· quett u and bAn R fVdW>nl 532-8881 to 760·5S4S A non<nHllt ...u1ng c btlf!id "Bcisi Cruising r fCJJ U\div\duals IJller• tcd m 11\Cj C cn.u.w,n9 M.lflC'8tJOn will ht! otf r t by ~ fl( Cu..t!ot Coll ~J SrhOOl of • ll· 1ng dnd S aman hip. Th._, thret•-we k <Id "'111 moot Irmo 9 d m to 4 p 111 M..rc-h 2, MMch ~• and M rch 16 .st OCC\ Sailin!J • ntPJ, 1801 W. Coo t H19hwdy, NPwport 8<-d<"h 0 19n id for 1nchv1du· db with int •nnod.ialP 1l1ng i.k.t.11.s but with lunitad. LI any, expcn<•n • runrung aud-saz auxili.uy cnrumg ~Jd~. U1 c-our will cover Ua JC S}")· terns, radio oper•bon. kippe1: mg r ·~pons1b1ht.t a.nd practJ· cct.l -.lulb R :y1 lrollon cc. are $175 19"4ql 625-!M 12 MARCH 3 Tbe Amer1can Cuttr Sod· ety 01 CO\lf'f)' Shop will ho t a Bnddl Fem• th med ·conunu Up Ro • ., • from noon to • p.m dt lht• Amf'ncdn Cun<.<'T 5ont>ty Ot!>< ov<'f) Shop 2600 E COdi.t H1qh\\d) in Corond dt>I Mdr free. Tiw dc.t>' will include dn informal bnd.ll fashion show. wedding CdkP. tdst1ng. chttmpdgn£' punch dnd door pnzC?'> fQ4~1 640- 4777 Cdn<er MARCH 5 A tWo-~Uon, compreben- s1\'e intt nnt"'d1dh' c-0c1c;tctl na\'· 1qat1on rol.ll')P will tw of!Prcd by thP Oranq ( c>d l CoUt:gc> School ol Sdilinq (1nrt · d · manc;hip throuqhout '\larch A four-week sC!Ctlon '' 111 m<:>et ~ 1clfch 5 MctrC'h 12 ~ tcUch 19 and "-larch 2h trom i to 10 J'l m .\ thrN•·Wt:'ek o;.(>C tton will m(>el from l to 5 pm Mc:Hch q Mdrch 16, dnd Mcirch 21 Both 'l.'< tmn" an de 1gned tor md1v1dudl'-"'ho hc1Ve alrPddy c omplf>tc>d o heguuung -.ruhng cla'" dnd w1U m Nat tht• Oru.nqe C:0c1-;t Colleqe SdJ.l.Lnq Ct•nter. 1801 W COd t H1ghv.d\. N •wpon Bedch R('<Jt tralJon co .. l.l. dn• $60 1<W~1 1>4~·9'41! UCI @ALLERGAN The School of Biologkal Sciences prtsllts The Allergan foundation l.edures in Modern liology Series "To Clone or Not to Clone" o lecture by Dr. Ion W ilmut The Ros /in Institute, Scotland Or Wilmut led the team that cloned the firlt adult mommol-'Oolly: • 1997. lcll ....... d .. ....0.... .... .. larrb d s h cbled M Oat, C-. IO M o ldlr fat 0 -al ddi5 .. ~ °"" Cl1d lui1ll doiq • wilb a ti .. foal on •u111s M** ...-.cn1 ... ,.,.~ felwvaiy 2'S, 2002 7:00 p.m. -.,_, hwltt. CanMr, UCI This ~• la fr .. and open to the public. ReMMJhoru '9quit9d POltting $5-Metel ~ing Slrudure Map O¥O lob'e onltne at www.bk>ud.edu/wUmut COMM ' 6 Tumoy, February 19, 2002 LEnER TO THE EDITOR Battle bullies with the Atlas ' approach T h. e school dislnct's policy on bullying is OK as for dS 1t goes, but school hould also lnu.n children how to counter ctlmost anything a bully might throw at them. To dch1eve lhlS goal. students should be taught counterbullying skills upon entenng the school system, cmd have age· and gender·dppropn· ate updates each year therearter We should take the Chdrlcs AUas approach and teach our 98· pound weaklings how to protect themselves from sand-lucking bullies. I don't know that the cur· nculum should actually butld muscle and teach hsucuffs. but 1t ought to strengthen a student's abihty to prevent dnd defend agamst bullying For example, a student who as well trained in playing •The Dozens· (a game an which peo- ple pepper each other with ver- bal ansults to build up immunity and confidence) should have bl· lie to fear from a verbal bully If we can teach fonnal debdt· mg slulls. we can teach mformal verbal JOustmg sk.tlls. Why ihould schools be tasked w1th teachmg yet another nonacademic subject? A short answer is that students are sitting ducks in today's v1olence-saturat· ed world. The social fabnc that as used to proVlde some protecuon from anllsoc1dl behavior has been rented a thousand wuys. Another short answer as that tf luds take over many of the coun- terbullying respons1b11tt1e!>, teachers can better concentrate on dCademics So, even on cl purely tax dollar basis. a counter· bullying skills program would b<> well worth the effort My rPddang of the Nt:>wport- Mesa Unified School Dastnct pol· icy reveals that 1t mtends to dis- courage hullymg only by thf' force ol higher authonty (that 1s. school arlrrumst.rators1 dare<. ted dt the bully, along wtth ddmage cont.Toi for the victim. The di tnct policy may offer &om<' protection at school, but that's not enough Every <Jay, every student htts to walk out of the schoolhoui,e cocoon mto the cold, ho hie world And dlter gradudtaon. stu· dents will have to deal with bul· hes for the remainder of their hves From the trenchc!. ol d mJdrllt! school. a tudent wrote d devastat· ing analysis of the bullying isi.ue ByTOn de A.rakaJ quoted hlm m hls Sept. 19, 2001 colwnn ("One k.ld's plea for an end to schooJya.rd taunts"). The boy constd red the efhcacy of the new g l-lough poh· cy. ·When the students at my school heard that there wa a zero· tolerance policy, they became uptight and stopped for only ct matter of two weeks. I h ve y t to see any students held c:iC'OOunwble by school ofhoals for their verbctl abuse.· He had tned home·grown soluUons wtth mixed r ults "Ignoring them ls one answer. but after a while at becom vc•ry dUOcult I've tried tgnonng at for nine y ars It doesn't aJway work." Tho weU-meAning poUcy .,nd up being count rproductiv becaUH lt tends to crtppl stu· denll' abillb lo rely on th~m · Mlv to prot tham.selv . lb y ar encouraged, ln1t d, to rely on hJgh r aulhorlty It' anal· ogous to bulldln.g a p.dded room ln which your beby can learn to walk without getung hurt • But U you kept yow baby so ptotecwd until b or lh• gradu· eted ftom high 1ehool, you would ha.a prevented your child from 1eamin9 a cntiul W kill· How to cope wUh gravity. Bullying ll blce gravity: lt'I not going to go away. Just u kid 6.ve to IMrn boW to dMI wath CS"· tbiy ..... '°a.em how '° with bUUytpg. ow ICboolil can, and lbOWd. .....,, tmm ~ vital~ ..... JOMllM C...Mlml -' 'We are concerned about any changes being made Jn the future of John Wayne Airport. Jt 'a not /uat pollution, but safety, nobJe and quallty of life.' ·-Newpott•M.s.t tNStH 0... llaadc. on the school boilrd's concerns ~tdlng 1 JWA e>epansion ..... -- Doily Pilot Support can help 'resist verbal minority' N ewport HMbor Just had ats annual Winter Fonnal dance and, as always, 1l was a colossal succes . Tall or short. Creshman or seruor. cheerleader or non-cheerleader, every guy was decked out in his bow tie and cununerbund just as every girl was sportmg her new, one- time-wear $600 dress. Knott's Berry F~. the site of the dance, proV1ded drinks, danC'lllg and good llrnes foT all. But for many of the high school's stu- dents, Winter Fonnal didn't start untll about l a.m. As JS the case year alter year, a large percentage of high school tudents look at fonnal dances as a precursor to the inldlllous ·after pdrty. • When the tuxes and lugh heels are shed, weary students crowd into small houses to dnnk unul sun· nse. Vagrants and valedictorians alike stand hand ID hand in Uus pseudo-adult party setting to laugh. dnnk and be merry. By seruor year. the "after J>d.T· ty• becomes a staple of high school We People talk more about posl·fonnaJ plans during the dance than they talk about the dance itself Fl.l'St penod on the foUowmg Monday as tet>nung with eager storytellers, boosting of teqwla hots and 17-hour naps fol· lowed by gruesome hangovers. Rarely does anyone speak of clllY trouble =~=-Wlth Matt Meredith law enforcement. Even more rarely docs anyone speak of the dan- gers of illegal alcohol use among nunors. By second penod. many students who did not engage m Uus ntual are left wondenng. •Where was my Jack Darnel' on fonnaJ rught19 Here is real peer pressure 11us isn't that after-school pe· ctal. ·come on Timmy. ev ry- body does W nonsense -Uus as th real th!ng. Teens look around. hear their respeciable fJ;'lends telling great tones of all the fun they had and start to th1nk that maybP dnnking 1snt so bad -1f It's )ust for speoal occasions. After all. no one had a bad night, no ono got caught and no one was killed -that rught. Next fonnal. th lads go to the partJ and boast of their escapctd . and the n ver·endmg cycle conbnu Tills as the kmd of peer pres· sure that DARE didn't prepare us for. Drug Abuse R astance Education ofhcers told us ampressionable fourth.graders that we would always know the ngbt answer. When someon - asked us to do drug , the chal· lenge wa n'lpeading whether or not to do those drugs. 1t was deciding how to say no ·Just say you're not mto that klnd of Uung, • they told us •Just say you don't feel Like at.• they told us. ·Ju t SdY no.· Not one DARE officer ever told me how to nervously rrule. heJplessly shntg and make up some lame excuse as to why I have to leave all of my fnend because we JUSl amvl'd al d pelf· ty Wlth beer. DARE officers also told LI!> impressionable fourlhiJTac.lers that we were members o f thP !>O- called stlenl ma1onty This meant that although non or us had the courage to peak out, we were strong ID number This was supposed lo gwe us ~loce When we would he 1tllllg alone at home on tl Saturday mght. we would know about all the other klds satllng aJone at home. No DARE officer ever told me that the ·verbal minonty" would consist ol 90''., ol the people I i.peak to We cdn throw all the trick.'i out th<' wmdow. As great as 1t looks on TY. no plky·halred dude ind Violent Fe.mm jack- et as ever gomg to walk up lo you and i.ay, •Hey. bro, want a beer? You'll be cool &I you dnnk it,• JUSI o you can mugly shake your head and saunter off with your 20 friends m lie-dyed shuts ln truth. the r istance to do drug rome completeJy from Wlthtn Whether Uus inner confl· dence com lrom good parent· mg. a naturally tugher level ol matunty or an unexplamed inherent mored '>C?Uple as a myi.- tery So what IS the answer? I there any one ttung that DARE. our fnend or our funu.lles can teach us that wilJ prft nt the e casual dnnk.lng esqipadesl Probdbly not But lugh chool as d wne of learrung. alt r all, so maybe WJth the constant uppon of these people. we Cclll all come lo I.he reallzauon of what Uus lo.nd of drug use dctuaUy is· at best a d f)f'rllt<' and wm what pathet· 1c fonn of PSCapasm, dnd at wor;t a self-is uNi dc>ath ~entf'nce. • MAn MIMDn1t is • senior at N~ pol1 ~rbor High School wher~ he IS an ed1t0< •t the S..Con H11 columns w ilt appe•r on an oc~I btils 1n tM COmmun1ty FOtum wcttOn Tb e Olympics-athletes who defy the limits E ven sinc-e theu very begmnmg, the Olympics hdve been so much more than Just a ports tournament. From 77b B C to 393 A.O .• the dllctent Greek o vllizabon began the trad1uon of hononng the god bus through compebbOn m th Olympic-games. Dunng the fest&Vll1e wars would ce and people lrom aU areas of the Grf>{'k world would gather together to parUcapate. Alter centune of religious wars and cultural tnfe. a French plulosopher by the name of Pl<>rre de Couberttn fought to re tablish the Olympics games m hope of pro· moung peace around the world. The fust modem games held m Athens, Greece, m 1896. hatled a new era m global unity. Though th modem Olympics still uphold the same creed as the ana nt gcunes. they were initiated m th honor of over· comtng confUru between cul- turi and n4Uon , LitUe more than a cen· tury later. the Olympic Games have grown into the mot revered fonn or ath- letic comJ)f'· Utlon an Ule f • ::~~s ~ Kellie Brownell unprec~­ dented opportunity for people to com together. The Olympic trad1lions are rich m symbolism from the ant rlockmg of the nng to the dances featured in the Opening C remorues. At this partlculAT Olymp cs, a nal1on having to deal with llS btulaJ past cheered hundrE'd of NaUve Am ric:ans they donced into the arena. Ev n among them· Iv , 1t w th hrst Lim all th d&ffer nl tribes had com tog lb r in peocefuJ monn The gorgeous artisllc d~playi. and perlormclllces matched up Wlth a sladlum pack<'Ci with people from all arett ond cul· t\lf' • suggests a progr ion in worldwtde ha.nnony For the thousands of ctlhlete who spend their enllte llves for d IO-second skl race or lhree- manute perfonnance, only a handful waU return home wath the gold But the other compeU· tors have tho honor of rarrying on a trad1llon of striVUlg for the highest reach one IS abl to c:timb, the fast t we are able to go and the trength that allow athlet to g t up aft r a fall or to s.kate on on lnJured foot (Cttius, Altius, Fortiu -the Olympic motto). Durlng the Olymp1 • you see triumph and you deve • talion, but through lt oU, th re is a nse of t\ ro m that th alhlet made 1t th t far. By j~t bemg eb to walk m th Open· lng Ceremoru and being ab to say that you parudpetad ln the Olympic Games prov~ one' dedJcdUon. courage and pers~verance to defy luruts. medal or no medal But tn the overall Olympic scheme of thmg • the ports only act ru. a veruc-1 m which art. alhlellram. culture and uni- ty can be c l brated m an mter· n<lUOndJ context Essenbally, it is 17 day!> in wtuc:h peopl frotn all over thf' world. viewrng from thel.T hom or m Salt LAJce City. can comm moral humaruty's ability to peacefully encourage ea.ch other to put forth their best and nse to th challenge - evt"n If It JUSI ror two W ks Ov r the n xt coupl we-eks. obs rve the 4lhJ t who have sacnflced o much to get so tar and he ln ptrcd by theu v\cto· nes, fo.Uures and, most tmpor- tanUy, experienc:.u. • uua WWI • " • ~ Harbor JunlOf whose columns will ~ on .,.. ~I b1M$ in the CommYNty FOtUm l«tlon. Intelligent design isn't good theory or science David L Rector COMMUNITY COMMENTARY G ertrude S in Mkl. •'Ille troublo with OftkJe.nd · no lher9 there.• The same could be l4id for int W· g nt d n. th hodg.podge ot objectionl to the theory of urural seJectlon lMt Wendy l..eK'e wants to folll an Newport-Mesi biology eta.. C ·~ conturuo. the UMDiglmt D crusade,• Jan. 14). n. ~t deiign ·theory· CXllltidM .....,_. theory al ...... nor 1 theory o1 ., <r =11 ......... '°.t:'''' ~In It. PCtu of .. an Eu1b that prGJI a ".., cauM not hew ................ .., MfuraJ 1111 Ctlart md would .... knCttlld h1tl::sr :::..-=~ 1•• .... gm ......... = -Chi.ear~ar ML ................. " ... n.-, ....... ...., QUOJI Of THE DAY "We're 'mirror images. I think It wJJJ be a matter of who wIIJ show up and play well ... • Kevin Reynolds. Villa Park High boys basketball coach . .. EYEOPENER I • ~ntiot. .. RON DAVIS . Doity Pilot Tueldoy, FebNory 19, 2002 7 Something special in reserve Newport Harbor High boys basketball team is sitting pretty, thanks m large part to its crowded bench. T: N wport I ldrbor I ligh bo~ basketbdU lt•.tm would bvlously not ht1ve be<'ome only the school' fourth 20~Jdm • wmm•r without its pnmdry wvt•n· ur etghl·man rotatJon But. pcrhd~. OO(' \hould wond r where the Sculo~ would Ix> without thelr axis. a group ol t.:1ght seruor-s and on JUnJOr who help Coach Lany lflrst's 17-man roster lead the county m high fiv , good·natured 91bc and road-trip head C'OunL'I •Having l 7 quy" 1!> d hlllc unusual.• adm1!! I hrit of h1 .. t-xtendcd bench. wtuch tncludt•\ more player.. who play pctnngly thdn tho who are typ1C'aUy tn nt1onNI ln the tct1m\ new peper &rt1d •A lot of my COd<. htnq buddw!> mng when tht>y h<'dr I hdVC 17 guy.,, Barry Faulkner PREPS but II\ jU\I d IU"il· cla~ group,· I ltnt said "There were pl nty or chance dunng the umrn r. the presectson and ttmt>s in between. wh •n they could he.IV<' \did to tht>m.,elvt''> 'ThJ'> IU'•I l!>O I worth 11 But no ont• <hd t1nd thdt .. Wh ) I dt'< 1dt'<l to keep them dround Th y dll hdV(' <lft>dl character und thl'Y wunt to Ix• involved m lhl' cxpt•rwnn• Thel't' " no romphlinmg or mopinq Imm dny or them, ever ThNl' L., nor <1 <"dOC'Pr among them · Th r lS, h OW('\ll'r rdfl' J>t'r'>JX'f'lJVC and UfU' •l<>nting po<,1l1\'1t). which pervades C\' 'f)' d\pt'fl of h•dm hJl• • Everyont> hd ct mh• .md. for some. 1t' com1c r('hc>I. • I hl'\t -..t1d "Wh n !><>me guy., on the lt."dm q1•t down. th rt' I.) ctlWd).., wm 'Ont' lhl'rl' to enrourage tht•rn or try to LOJect some humor I wdlk into the lockN room som lJmt>'> tx•fore .i big game and k.id arc dll on th(' floor ldughing That' 1ust not tht> Wd) thmqs are upposed to be but thc•y C'etn't help 1t It' not like tdnd·up at th£" lmprov, but we've ncvPr lx><'n hqht for d game, I can !(•II you tht1t much • Seruor!. Bt•n Boyd. Lu Castillo. RO!>!> FortJ r, Dane Louvll'r, Drew Mclc1ar. Jlm Rothwell, Collin Tully and Jon Vandersloot. ~ well d )umor Nie Cld.ss1c, fom::i the ""Pl><>rting cdSt. of wtuch eighth n~n Chdd Rord n. t1 JUnJOr, could ht> ronsldc>rt>d a fnnge m mber Boyd. t1 b·b 'iemor. hd C'Offi(' dangerously clo to pl•ymg too oft('n to be mclud xi And though th -bl•nch bng<1c.J has combined for 65 points tlus ason. roughly two layups more than th Sallon are av ragmg per game. all rune m moors have scored. rortJ r. by th w•y. cum>nUy holds ultimate br ggmg ngh , having buned a pair of t.hroe-pomt ""'an ct Jan 1 l a V~W lea U horn WLD ov r lrv1ne to earn th group' mgl am h1 h: lx polnts . Hint saJd be baa .Jtrud1l.Nd prdcti to ovoid stratihceboo bctw n th • who pldy and who don't • 1 trunk on reuon th re remains 50 moch J>OllUlvo n rgy with ~ group that w v ry ldom pit the hnt trlng agilinlt th nd in practice.· Hint 54Jd. ·in ow compoUtJv drill5 we mix the lddl up and mo.t ol l~ time wb n w so1nuMg , th two tHma on the floor Nlve only two tart •rt. I th1nk tl bu.ild.I cunar9derkt when thG fint teun wi't elway. bNttng on the nd te.m. I remem.,_r thole da mv-lf. I w fourth tt.rytg •• Hlnl,..,.. IJ ,..,_.ta M Sdan' 19-e8 ftnt·round CIP SoutMm 5tK1iOn OMliOn II p&eyoff wtn OYW Loara Prid.ty, but Rochwe&I ..... ~the ttMrwV =:.;:.: to c.ontnbute. wttbDul ever taldng oa Ml wannupe. Wllb 3:38 left ....... geme •• coll1laD lmDdllld pa.y.. kt ... -. ........................ ....., dnw ...... out; ..... +btih- ,,_ IM blDCla ao Ille =is•! ao •a._. qulddr 11p Mwm ltm11oaolllll ..... Of IM• 11 11--.l9L'lla11 ............... Mt.._..Ua , ...... ~ SEA VIEW LEAGUE BOYS IASKmAl.I. CHAMPIONS • grevenge Ne wport hosts No. 3-se d d ViUd Park. which e limmated the ailors from last YPdr 's C IF Pld yoffs. Bany Faulkner O AllY PILOT "'EWPORT BEAt 11 T!ll' '-t!wport Hcirbor I hgh hoy' b.t,kNl>.tll nt'm "'' tour ronllnu~ toruqht '' h(.'O Uw St11k1"' ho t No 3-~\·d \ 11Jt1 PcHk in t1 Clf Southern l•< 11011 IJI\ l\llHl II· \A second-round pl.tyoll q11m1• ~Pt to lip 1111 di 7 30 Havtng dlrl•t1cly .,,, 1 •pt ......... \ 1ew u•ctcfUI' m; di Woodbndge to< I.um lh1· prtMfr.tm·., hr'>I outnght ~ champio1~p .. mu~ I ·~s. Coa< h l...Jrry I hr..t-. T.irs 120-bl ctr<' dlll•mpllnq to •IVt•ncw tt 74-h I lov. to th~ Spctrtaru. 125·.l I m lt1 I y1•t1r\ ("If ()1\ 1'1011 l·A qudrterftndh Villa Park dl-.o ddt>dt<'d l'<c·w1><>rt. r,(l. 'l I 111 tht• Sd1Jors Gt-or<w 't1rdlt') "ummf'r c •t1q1• c ·1.1 .... 1< in July •There won't tw ,, whoh• lot nl llnw 'lll'lll prepanng. h£'<'t1UW both lt'•lrll'> kno'' ..u m111 h t1ho111 l'dC'h othN, I hr;t 'did Both COdchP c1cknnwh clqt> ph•nt) ol <,tnultm · lJe!>. •it houJd tx• d prl•tl)' qood rht 'mute h , l>l'< dU"' wt> are prt>tty '>Unddr tt•ttrn' • t hr,1 '>did • 11 could be d very mtere tJng gdml' Imm a tt1ct1cdl .,tandpmnt. JUSl to the dd)USlffi('Ol'i mctdf' hy both lcdl'> dOd how both of k.1d will try to 1nt<'rpr •I thow mstruruons and C'dfTY out th•• ydmt• plan • Villa Pctrk C'oaC'h Kt vm Rt•ynold<,, who m his v<>nth year at thE' h<>lm hd" tumc•d ttw. f>itrtans mto a pefi nm.al Ordnqe ( ·ount)' J)(>WN, "41Jd he w.es a lot of tm t am Ln tht• '-Ulor. •We're rrurror tm110 . R ·ynotch "4•ti "I think 1t will bed mdtl of who will .. how up .ind pl y w •U l)('CcUJW W(• rf' very cum1l.11 Both tlhl Stulor.t dnd ourwlvt•'> lt>nrl to ht>dl h1dn1'> up with OUJ !>LlC IO\lllt• '" th1 .. w1ll lw d mn• c ht1Uen~w • Thr Spt1rlt1n'>, C'hctmp111n., 111 th1 C'1•nlul) Lt>t1q11e, have bl't1ll•n lt•t1111'> _.up "1th yn-'t1ll•r coru.1 h•nc ) thctn th• Tt1r\ \ dJd Pdrk ., t1vcrct<J1 m<1rc110 ol \'IC'IOr) hd bt'l'n nt•t1rl~ 21 po11it ... indudmg t1 7<1-.ib IW>t-mun<l trmtnnnq uf C'hdpcitrdl Fndt1y Tht.• Spdrtt1n\ .. thn•e h1-.w'> h<1\ 1• rum1· to Cdpl'>lrdno VctlJc\, ~lc\lPr ()(•1 .tnd Ct•ntury O\dl El \tod1•nt1 Tiw~ tlrC' on ct M>\'l'O·Cfdlllt' "mnmq \trl•ctk ''It could be u very interesting qome from a tactical standpoint, just to see the adjustments made by both staffs and ho\.\. both et. of kid~ \\.ill t I) to interpret tho ~ in tructions Larry Hirst \.\>1>odlmtlq1• h~ < olll'c tin4 U point 115 1lf .!Cl lwld-qcidl '>huollncJ>, eight rE'hound ... 'l'\ 1•11 u.,..l'>l'> ~nd two blockt•d ~hot' in " 74·hK hr..t·rounc~ \\in ti\ <•r Lt1dhl Fmlt1'y !\l1'lum a...1u.,t .i:'I point' Imm tymg tlw ..rhool .,mqlP·~'d'On -.cunnq A'C.'Ord ol hl~ poinh '''' h\. Ju.,tm Mclnll>e in 1 ~14\ .4.! ~n1or point 111111rd Crt'<I f>Prnnt• ,., .moth1•1 lhtt~··~ 1 .tr 'dt'>ll)' 'landout for thl' ~t11lor<i ...,in< 1• rt•turr11nq .iltt•r lt•c.irmq lu'> \{ L 1n thl' .. ummt>r h1• i.. dH·rdqing 111 .t po1111, .md pro\ 1d10q th~ rloor lt>dd1·r .. h1p I hr t cuunt' u~K>n rum lor Th(' Sd1lor-.. only th1• lourth " .. ,,port tedm m 7 2 'df'>ll\ ''"'"''n" lo H'dC'h lhP .?O·\'YIO pldh!dU. drl' trymq to JOIO lt1'>t Vl'dr'\ .,qUdd d'> ont> ot uni\ lour lldrbur ll'dnl'!> to not<·h I\\ 11 lll"l'>h.1!>00 \\In\ \nllct Pdrk' \'1.C'ttpcm., mrludt• h·lool· 8 wmor 't>nlC'r Bn<'t> Pr.ithcr, h·~ J11ruor Enk Pt·h~rwn ,, ••· i wniur < tup m H pp(J dn<I ..., .1l'>o lhc• ll!am., lf•ddtntf d1•tt"ndt'r "h1IP h·H 1uniur "'-t•d1m Pa)(>\ 11 . d\ 11r<1q1nq i K pf>q dnd 1 .C'umintJ ofl d l 4·1>01nt 1 :;:n•bound ---------· Pffort dflatn'>l Lwrd Newport coach ""'cJll l'h<ilN h·l tltn1or potnl 'fUdnl Con·~ 1'.hllt•r dnd h·., 1umur '>Wll\CJ mdn Kyh• l l()(J•lll PrdUWr.., d\ l'rcUJLOCf 18 .J potnl'> tlnd 11round mnP n•bound., per qamt'. whl.lr Phcllt•r who htt'> 14h th.r('(?-potntPrs th.I!> ">ecl)()n. Ii ch1pp1nq m 17 11 puint' r1nd around <>iqht n•bound' pN cont1•.,1 \.tillN lt>ddlOq thP C'OUnty di ffi()fl' t.l'ldn e1qht. ""'tSts pt r (Jdlllt' dVNdQ<'S nt...i.rl~ l'KJhl putnts. whtlt I loqan d\"<'rdqt'' 10 potnl n Mly e1qht rebound'> dnd C'lo t' 10 hvt> a ists per outmq "\\'p th.mk H<>gcln could bt.• tht• X l<1c1or. • I hr t '>did °"«""port 1 keyed by ti-t> r •turnmci AJl·Clf~ wtrrtln Tony ~leklm , who hds S.('Orcd .sci pc int th Id t two qam(K> to up h.i ~onng dVt>rctge to 22 per gamt• Ht• followed a 2b·po1nt. P ·r ound iwrtonnancP m the I •49ue-bU -cli.nc-hinn wm "'.., Jt11mP · l>111lt'nh<11 h d h·8 'uphomun could dhO he c rue 1<111111 th•· T.tr' "h1le JlHll<H .. 111111nc1 11uiird <:ha.,1• Ct1m1•ron c.1nd -.ophomort• bJckcourt r~·" l' .\Jldrt· l'ln .. ~·n 1ound out l lir<il" pnmdl)' mtt1tl1m Rt•'f noltl' 1dt>nll11<·d r1•hcn111din11 ,,, 1tw k1·~ tu hl' ll'dlO \ 'UC'<(.'.,.. dOcl itl\11 n111t•d hl'> 1 ll·dt•1•p rot<1Unn includmg '<>phomon• Uo) d Cotton 1uruor ( 'hn., "4..lJn,ky dnd wruor 8nt1n lit•1,m•r a., dnothcr potC'nllc.11 dd\,lOld!ll' for the Spdrt•lll'> I lll"t hopt•5 JdffiJktC"k1'<.1 hum1• •f\ m l<ipN1c.1ton. t1n• dd\1 !ti to dJTl\t• l"drl't ., nc>t to 111· tumt"tl 11\\,1~ I \\ill pro' 1d •di\ emouondl t'fkft Uut Rt \-O.thl<. p1Kn ·out, h" h•dm ""on dll four \drtJIP\ tournament qanw dl 'c•\\ port l~"t \umnwr "\\'p h I g~ at cwing m th rr. • R~ynold' said, "The la.'>t lJ.mP \H! when• th• re w1• I I · '"'J10rt U\ . the •nuhnal 11nd l\.1.1t r r~·1 m th•• hn11l • . Catching up with .Harbor heroes Here's the late t on some of the local favorites. Th though m ny oldlun .,., huve Olt tr ck ol on" Ottily Ptlot ports JI.ill of Fom 1 n.1mt~d J rry 1( 1thley, Cl s or 1 J S ut Newport Harbor l hgh, ht p • nee b4J finally bet'n d~t t l on th horuon. K tbley, .., out& ndinc1 ~ mgman ind puntr.r for the Ta m thP-tttl 'JOI, now liv in LA Quint~ Cahl • attafchng to his okt t nunat • Al lrWln. who later benme e <h t N wport. Orang c t 1nd U lmne. Irwin. wbo AJw•ya Ntc.t k>ft words for K~. lil\ked up w\th b.un • l8C'Ond tune ln 1936 .c Co or the Pedfk:. ~. who AIWl)'I dilJ*)"'tt tbe -" of • polllhed MllniniMl•tOf, Cl'Hld• ...,_N remrd tftlr ha ,_. ~ ID Md. 1Mt mme llO ..,.. • • ctty ..,.._ o1 s.ortaon. ,..., AllD ... OMlilnd ..... .......... 2 ---:.we. 11Wti1 dlll lilllll ~ ICriltlllry • •• 18 Fllm'W ........ ..... p I Fllli I 1•1111 ...... la 1i1>11'tlalMIL U1 8 rU!!doy, F!bruory 19. 2002 tlGH SOIOOl. IOY socca PIAYOFFS Sailors host the No. 1 seed today Smaller fieJd should increase Newport Harbor's chances for Divsion 0 upset of ·LOS Alamitos. IMyf.ulkner DAILY Pll.oT NEWPORT BEACH-Fortunately for Newpon,Harbor High, today's 3 p.m. CJP Southern Section Oivilloo U second-round boys iOCCer playoff game against top- seeded Los Alamitos wW not be played on paper. lo fact. the venue It wW be played on, the Sallon' vamty football field, provtd even more hope that Coecb KeWl Esparza's underdogs can bld for aq uptet. "The thing that concerns me ls the size ol the field,· Los Al Coedl Trey Scharl1n said. ·We're used to playing on a much bigger 6ek1. We hke to play with the ball on the ground with a posaession·type game.• The football fie.Id, more narrow and shorter than a typical prep rooce.r field, will not give the Gnfflns (23·1·1) as mucb room as they're accustomed to. It also figures to help the Sailors, who typk:ally play a more physic.al game than most ot their opponents. The Sailors ( 1~1-2) will hkely need all the help they can get lo knock olJ the Sunset LeagUe champions, who have not lolt since Dec. 8. a span of 20 games, 19 of which have been victories. Since dropping a 1 ·0 tournament loss to Marina. the Gritfln.s have out.scored opponents, S.-8, including a 4.0 first-round win Friday over Foothill League representative Valencia. Their goal advantage for the season Is 65·9. Los AJ, which won the 2001 Sunset League crown and l05t in last year's Division I semlfinals to eventual champion Mil.llka.n, bas played beyona already high expectations this season, according to Scharlin. ·After having the success we did last season. we knew we'd do well (despite graduating three All·CIF performen, including goalie Jam.le Ackennanl, • Scharlin said. •But I didn't expect us to' play as well as we've played this year.· The Griffins Alt! led by seruor forward Jon Bornstein (18 goals). wbUe seruor midfielder Cameron Kolovos. a returrung second-team All-CIF performer, has 14 goals Sean Cima, Dustin Venegas and Nick Koromela.s have seven goals apiece for the GnffU\S. Kolovos. Korometas, Venegas and EvaJ> Perley scored agamst Valencia. Goalie Jeremy Uhl recorded five saves Fr1day to po5t the tea.m's t6th shutout. Newport Harbor. m its second playoff appearance in five seasons, ddvanced with a 2-0 first-round win at Santa An.a Valley Junior forward J<M.e Serpas scored both goals to double his season total, but he should have a little more help. according to Esparza. "The Newport Coach sa.id after Fnday's win, the program's Jlrst playoff tnumph since 1997, that seruor 1\'son Wahl, who missed bis JWl.lorseason wh.ale trau\lng with the nabonal under·17 team In F1orlda. was expected to return after nus lng five games with a strained back muscle. The Sailors dre dlso expected to welcome back seniors Redge Bendheim and Adl\m Kerns. who were not available for the first· round contest Esparza said Fnday he knew tittle about Esperanza. but he planned on collecting detatls from some Sunset League coaches with whom he ls acquamted ·1 know they have d lot of speed at the forward spot. so playing on ow field should be an advantage for us,· Espana saJd. The Sailors. runners-up in the Sea View League, are also keyed by seruor sweeper Kevm Cdmpo , their lone All·Sea View returner from last season Outs1dl" of three South Torrance Tournament games. the scores of wtuch were unreported, Newport has outsrored oppooE..1t.s, 21·26, this season "I know Wahl and Campcx. ct.re very good players. because I've seen them play on the club level,· Scharbn said. Today's Wlnner advances to meet either Rubidoux (8-3-6) or San Gorgoruo ( 18-"4·31 in Thursday' quarterfinals COSTA MESA ON lilSTORIC RUN Streaking Mustangs attempt to break new ground today in CIF game at Notre Dame (Sherman Oaks). "lwry Faulkner 0AJLY PILoT SHERMAN OAKS -C ta Mesa High. wtuch b.u. at varlous times pinned 11s 6thlebc prominence on boys water polo. girls basketbalJ, boys and girls cross I country, as well as a fairly cons1Slent run of football success, has now, arguably, become a soccer school Who knew? The Mustang · boys soccer team will try to fortify this new impression today at 3 pm . when 1t vistts Notre Dame of Sherman Oaks ln the second round of th ClP Southern Section Dtvtsion IV playoffs. With a teeond consecut1ve Pacific Coast League title and a MCOOd straight flrst·round playoff victory already under ds belt. No. 4·1eeded Mesa. und r second·yeu head coech Eugene Day, w1lJ try to go where no Mustang unU has ever been: 1bunday'a quar· te.rflnalJ LaJt year's tquad was ellminated 1n the te<'Ond round, wben Bisbop Montgomery prevaJAed ln penalty kkks &ltJ r regulation and overtlme faUed to produce a winner. The Mustangs (14·3·3), who band.led flnt·round v1lltor Padfk:a. 3.0, Frtday, ant on a •rlous roll. They tMve ouDcored opponents, 54-8, during their rurrent t&-game unbMtien llbMk. wbkb they be punctuated wtth lO ahutouts. · Not.re Dame (14·3·5), t.be tblrd-place team from the powe.tf\.al Mission Le gu • bas outte0red playoff roes, 7·1, thus far. Th ~bandied S&n1I Ynez. 4· l, tn a wtld<erd game Feb. 13, then dispetched Santa Fe l..Mgue champ on Cathedral. 3-0, tn Prtdoy'a ftnt round. Coech Colm Mcfeeley'• -auad advanced lo the Dtvilk>o IV tenUftMJs a var ego, aft r flnWung th1td tn the Mli80o Leigue. 1bey w ... elimlnated, 3·2. by aventual ch&mptoo St. Prandt and llnWMd 16-9-1. s9ior forward Nick Polk WU a Ont·tNm AJl..QP leAedion Miit )'Ml ID OMUoo tv. the onJy returner among the Knigbb' tbrM All· CD' boocM'eet CoU ~. whk:h hid never been to'the p&ayotb bilfcn IMt --. ...... by MNOf cw..-et! TbolDll, tie MuMDgt. kme All..clP hooone a year ego, when M earned ..._...._ ...... 11ae ~ en allo led by NNon D Scill 4illd .. 111 I Qua. balla 1W1urninG All·PCL perfonnen, 11 Wt11 11 apill zl•a trt " ....... AJfomo PIMda . .................... ..-MU&eo..:t1 ....... 111 .. a 7 I 11 =ID wllktl dlity °'*"81 llllS M $ '"' 194 .,.,, .. ...., ......... ~.._ ...... :r llD!:: ~Nt ••'J EMwlMgaadt p'11lllillt"'" .. n .. 011 ..... •• 'aoa1c1M111aw111.1 ...... ._. " ' .......................... , ......... , .... .,. .._ .... .. SFORTS Doily Pi'°' No Mercy rolls 11le ..... ,, ~·· gb1I .... °'No tMr'Cy dlda'J ~ .... tor .. , .. u rolW to tM regloMI dMepMmsNp adw.toetotbeArea ..... .,.,,_ loUg to Soula SMM, 3-2. B.a row, from left: A ... •at (:OllCb LelllY Mello, SpeDcer Tonldneon. Allga&I Mello, Cbe.._ Wiid. Kelly Parker. Elbabetla Nealy ucl bHd cOKh NaldO Cabanlll• Proat row, 1ro1D left: Brytnee Wrttbt. Nalaba Jt.menez. Ama&bell• Storda. x.te R.MCb, Ashley ..... ICelMy Daan. Carrie C.Nnlllu ad Daaielle Tbertot. Not pictured: Marte Kapelke. Costa Mesa All-Star champions eon Joe G.-.aw4a Calla ..... ...... 12t-.,. ...... H All-ltlln .. M9a q ct r"Jm wllll a .. 2-J rwtL ............... --,._ Nlrwpalt .............. ,... ... C....Del M&~aluau w,..,..byatc Well. 0-.., Alll1 I , Awa.__, M9K'O Solo,..._ ...... .,_ Ml 11, ............... ~Mills, ...... ll1a*ldlloa ... LllllZ., h TM.._ ................ 1~111 •••• 11le oa••lll•ll ll1hn11 of &Miio C1 t .... .._ .... mn. ~ Mlll?a1a ... Nick ......... WM a ~--.Mm11"1 .............. . .......... , .. ,. ....... .... ,_ .................. ~12 .,... ..... o •••nm. SOFTIAll Riptide qualifies for national tournrunent The Newport Beach Ripbde, a 14·and·under gtrls fastpitch softball traveling team, placed thud out of 20 teams lll a two-day nabonal quaWying tournament last weekend to eam a trip to the Tnple Crown World by Markle Blngenbelmer in the second 11UUng. but tht> Quakes answered with three> runs to take a 3·2 advantdge lnning, Grumman lut a line dnve to bnng Jullune Bus and Ha.nisQn home. Riptide sealed the WlO in the htth when Lohrman. pmcb·runntng for Jenny Tompkins, stole second and third a.nd scored on a passed ball. . ln the RipUde third game Saturday, Newport fell to the Orangf' County Blaze, 2· t The BlctZe capitalized on two errors in the fourth ror two runs. Ripbde tarter Chrllttne KuUdl gave up only two tuts . Sen National Toumam nt Riptide fell. 8-1. to San Diego-based TNL in a serruflllal Sunday ln a quctrterfinal cont t Sunday, Newport ca.me away with a 5-4 win against the Nort.hndge Quak Pinch·runnerTaml Dtvtno scored a run and SUha Grumman and Shltan tu each drove in a run in the third to put the Rlpbd up. S.3 In the Riptide's lu~t gam of the qualifying toumamt'nt Saturday agalmt the Straight A's, Ashley Gleason p1tc-hed d no-hitter to leed Newport to a 5.0 victory Against Qwcksilver from Laguna Niguel, Ferguson pitched a three-hitter to le.td the Riplld to a 4-0 Wl1I Riptlde scored two in the third LeadJ.ng the Riptide oflens1veJy 10 the tournament were Bingen.heimer, with a .58.1 batting average. and Tompkins, who hit 500 _9JM Cal&Uao was perfect on defense. on ing by Blngenheuner, Lohrman and Tompluns The RipUde lS th brst In the second inning. Bing nh uner drove in a run ln the fourth and Hamson had an RBI m the hlth to close out the 1COnng , Newport Beacb·based team lo quahfy to play in the World Sen , wtucb will be held tn Colorado in August Alu bJtulilb.I and ptnch·runner Heather Lobrnum scored on a tnple Blllgenhf'lDler ingled to score Tort Harri.son and Kelsey Ferguson. In the thud AYSO Costa Mesa Courage prevails The C°'ta M Courage girls under· 12 Gold AU-Star soccer team from AYSO ~on 120 but out Newport Beach. 1-0. Lac:ey Louno scored on a left.footed bot to give Costa Mesa th advantage. Sh w upported on offenw. by Jenna Tiumer and Cbutel O'Toole. Cootnbuhng tn m.ldfieJd w e OUvt. Clark. Julia l)eedan, Cort C1MlpUl. Cort Palelsld and Alu hyzaat. The Courag def nse of MMt.IN Arellano, ~ Jow, M.sellne Stlld&. MartU lalley and goalkeeper Dlana Gonz•le& held the opposibon ICOrcJ . In anolh r game, Coai. Mose was d f atcd by North IJVtne 'nlnner scored C'mta M •s onJy goal wtlb dn a from Clark. ln boys und~ 14 SUvor AD-Star action: • Costa M {'ame out on top in both of lll pool·play game1. tiMd1ng up th M defeme were goalkeepers Lala Coaa. .... Plalo,........, Md"o91•1d and Mlilt G...u. wUh aupport from JOllll K= •r and Kyle 1'1ilotm 1• In 1 6-1 vtctory over South lrvlne, Alberto N•~• scored on a ~ from Ba.ke Plato Benny Ed.lea and McDonald scored to glv M a 3-0 halftime lead. Cona sc:ored twic in the second half and McDonald bad OD goal With an · t from AmUD ~to Sff1 the wm. In a wm ov r North lrvi.ne, Evett scored with n lrom Mc.Dona.Id to open the game. Mlnutes LateT, N.va conv rted on a d1red tree IOck and McDooaJd dosod out the ball with Mesa' third goal. Pinto opened th• socond half with a goel on a croa from .....U. Zk:Ja and Edi flrusbed lhlng oU by finding th back of the net for Mae. The M olf w 100 by Edlea and Ev tt wtth midfield upport from Zich, Nava. 7llgio Mir,.. •nd WUllaa lrtMno ln gitll Uv~r AU· tar action: • The Costa MeM Army Chicks but out South lrvtne, 1«0, Aly.. N.... acored on a tn.kawey to gtvo the Cbk the advaotag . ~ offenM wu ancbcnd by Alie~~ Seit• ..... &nd 'hylOC' Welt. Contnbuting ln midf1f.ld Newport ........... .. •••••••• ....... ..... .... 1• -J tc ._. ......... ~C'MI I l iW • wen-Aubrey Brown. Saa Strodel and J..ale SantykL Goalkeeper 1-lc4 Jba.brlg'bt made key sav The defense was led by Sabra Tella. SMlby Fen1a. Amy Hob and a.. s.ttll. Sw per c.rlee .....,.. and goalkeeper Alna AgWJ.ar bad solid efforts. lo guts under· t 2 Gold AD·Star action: Corona del Mar racked up an 8-1 • l record with .even butout victories to cla1m the pool championship ln an arena whkh lnduded Newport Beach. Tu.stin, Irvine South, lrvlne North and Ca.ta Mesa. Next for Corona del Mar the lnleJMdloo&l Tournament at Cenitol. tarting March 2. and Corona deJ Mar will be there wtth the COila Mell CJusk avwn tucked wider ltl belt. • well. Coach Doug 5':heD's tMm cOM1t1 of So· Via •c11w, CMl•1 De1M. A•m*8 ..... Aw,...._, E...a ...... ..-.. ...,.. Al3ad HIP -. lllllt'M lAN, a.cw ........ Oloe ...... KlilatJ• ..... c.-~ Wlae and Mlltl Z-t M Mika Low tt Sct..al'I ...mtant coecb. f .. Daily Pilot SPORTS llOllMAN · , SCAN HILER I OM.Y PILOT Derek Rou ls trying to follow the footsteps of Lance Armstrong ln hls battle against Leukemia. ONA A product of UC Irvine's crew program, Derek Ross "Nothing much scare' me dnymore .• h 1d tSkydwmg) JU t book me up has experienced a lifetime of emotions in the past dOd thdt wa 1t You havt" a pennanent mile the n•'>t or the day • two \afS and has lived to tell about it. Ro 's t'x.pt•nt>nce also renewed his Stew~ with mor passion to overcome nsc of humor Throughout the DAILY Ptlor d pres Jon and br ak out of his cht'mothN•lflY. Ro\i. mclmtcWled an doldrums oplurusUc .ind conucaJ outlook on We. I ronic how aomeOung w deadly, so vicious. ean tum out to be on man' tre ur . Thu happened to Derek Ron. Hu bouts Wlth I ukem.ia have ctually brought hlln a m anlngful and chansmabc per\pec1M• on We R , a UC Irvine dlumnus who wa o UCI crew member for three y~d,..,, bet~ chosen to make t\i~ n r-death experience inspiration Tor thu • who a.re in search of m arung, much hk he wa . He's abo rawng mo y and shctnng tus story so that peopl h.ke tum c n ov rcome lf'uk mw or cancer. Rou joined th 1.AnC'f! Armstrong Foundation And tn Aprtl he will nd with ArmltJ'ong and oth r cane r "Luckily, I w nt through canrer H JOklnqly call :<I htm lf. before h died,• R <>aJd, dasplaymg "Ch<'mO·\ttb1, \tmllar to the Lon h1S n wfound ability to find the good m Ranqer' '"l<.'loc k any bad ·1 was abl to cope with hc>r ·11 t evc·l')onr know that nothing d ath. My mom died from canC'N dnd can top mt'. Ro " s.ud "Only what that meam I hav to live f have to hght you I l lop 'You, C'dO top you I have to ev n bard rand live for her. I --------tJkl' 11 on day at a tun I made 8 procrui;e on her don t think I'll be abl to do d thbt-d and Id. 'I'm gomg ., You have to thf' full tronman, but I want to tobeat1t 0on·tworry•• enjoy the dotht>halflronman meday. So far. so good AJt r I know I hav to do tt to prov dr.mic pains from moment ... " It to my •U I hav already chemotherapy, doctors put ~Ross found \lerythtng I nHd." R ' I ukemia ln remts on ..,__ R I also chenshing the just before Judy dted Bui Leukemia survtvOf oµportunity to m t th n lb Mruck back \nn trong. who b n the He would have to break ull.ln1cste ro model for Roa down and ba~ through chemotherapy Anmtronu. a canft'r urvlvor and a once egaan. th ·Um Wlnn r of th Tour De •t .iwey need a chalJ ng : 1d Fran • rontinu to uupt many wtul survtvon ln the annual Rkle for th RONI to raiR mon y and awar n the tigbt lgtinll cancer. R , who edlDod e baC'h lor of art raalng mon y for h cause. for d nte ln nvtr0nmt"nl4l arw.ly and R -h n tra.tru.ng for th d ign at UCJ tn 1 7. "Maytle that's 40.mil bike nd and bu bffo "It'• reUly done a number of wonderful things for me.· It · Mid ol I.ha 1ieUUada be WU diag'noMd Wtth April 19, lOOO. ·1 rN.Uy went to hare W...t I went through with otb« people. You don't need this kind of W.:~ d....._ to make a cMnge ln your We Hopefully. people mn IOoltl et me and rMlble that they don't ..... to go through that day and IDllMd daMge dgbl DOW. Tbll WU my ..-....1 •• ....,Mdl6Mt. I WM ....,. ........... bed wey ... .... Yo.m.::.to=~~. .............. , ..... ~ ............... ae .... « r•••llill-•-...... Wbo .......... J .. 1l 1tlll16oamd ..... ... 2 ..... ws •••. ____ ............. . .. . _ ... ...... ....................... ... = .. c._..,.p. ............ ... ... --:I=====- why I was aearch1ng for som thing and praC11n ng C"onv •Ntiom he wouJd hev cancer wu the answ r. It was the with Armstrong Roa sakl be would ulumate C'balle.ng I w 'able to race u. f I comfortab talking with AnDICroDg So far, tt 1oou like I'm ov l't'.orrung It because th y hdv both expenenc-ec:t tbe Owrroming cancer d n't n rUy NIM type of triAli. They c-an identity 11lNn you have wviv 1t. lt means with one anoth r. you·,. able to Uve with It. TMl' the way R faaid d alb and h now moYed you beet cancer, ln 1 way • on with v r and for UI , Oocton gave R • n w drug. • 1n lif • • lot ot times we are running Trilenox, whkb allo helPed m tM away hom death,• Rt.m Mid. •1t'I ~ ~and allowed him to C'hulng you and you dOn't want to look IUC.'C'tlllhaMy endw. a bone IDUTVW beck. If you kJok beck then you ..... tnMplenl ldUaDY ... dMtb and tl'l iary. iADd •Tbey tue OUliftlY boM manow. you don't want to IM lt. "1Mt .._t wlMm ... deen,• Rolil Mid of the kwcet you to *P and dellla .. ._up opendon. "'They up -w11b dlemo wllb JOU· You aooll 11 ... lrl .. Md .... .-... to ldl ... It .. rMly bid ...., enymcn. In r.ct. h bu .... ... llU8.ADd ..... tb9ybuld-bedllO pMt GI .. l'lj•-al-..... .............. c:4111-...gommy .... ......._ .. ~,_.._.._ .._._aow.Bulthltc:t..no•hll -.ttolllollb9ctl•Olepllllatl .... ~~· ~~n.-..--~~ Now .... llMdl•wMIMaill. a S' t'Yw' ... dllllW• ... . .... ,,,,.°' ............ al ... ,.. ............ .... fl ...................... -. .. ....,,-....~ .. I It ·~----.. 1 I f •• ,..-:... .. ::.: J1· ... ,·-,. ..... ..... .. .... . lf'llllJtl•MI kw n. ....... ... • ' Tue.day, februory 19, 2002 9 Valentine for Ofange Coast full of love New all·weather track shown off in grand fashion. Tie blrthday of Oran9 COdSt Colleg ' 411-wt>ath r tr ck bad that torybook feel to 1t. AJter years of runrung on plain old di.rt and losing athlet to other schools becaw.e of 1t the Parat welcomed tht>11 new llack with a fest.ave mood on Valenl.lne's Day What an entranct> for hnt- year coach John Knox Who knows what this fonn r QC( track athlete has m tore for dn encore Yet, to give credJt where credit ls due, Knox acknowledgt'd he walked into a great 1tuallon when he poke to the many on hdnd h1r the operung ceremorue\ whu h preluded a tn-meet won b\ OCC over SdddlebdC'k dnd Irvine Valley The Pl.rat victory wai. thP cbmax of Uus story, wh1rh mcluded sma.lei. 9C1Jort• from everyone mvolved with tht• track and held progrdm to thl• college's acadE>nuc adrrunistrall<>n game bcqm • It mu t hd\'e been ct pecia.I dt1y for Hokdnson. who r0ttchCld th track dlld fa Id tedJll from 1978-2000 Though he nught wonder dbout tl>f' gr •tth'r dlhJet ht-would hd\le land ~ Wlth dO ctll- wet1ther track. hf! W<ib thoroughly plect~. non th I·., "I think thP. thmg that\ so n •ctt about 11. t:i. thdt lha was a r ell coUe<J • cffon to get the lMck. • \did I lokcm50n, who wekom1~d tht> use of track to th • rommumty ·we don't hdv<• our gates locked. We JUSI d\k to \tay off th track with \kctte., or blk~ or t10ythtnq with whl'('I~ But we want this rnmmullJty to u'K" 1t. We'r JUSl lhnllt"d • For longUme tstanl lrcKk co.irh Cordi<> FllZ<'l \tdlenlln€'., Day 2002 wa dlso A good story dlways comes with drama The OCT track was set to opt>n la t yedr. but the tnS1de lane did not meet regulation standurd However. that didn I stop the Pirates They worked to get the operung ready before th1s track season Steve Virgen COASilRS cl ddy to n•member Fttzel who came out of retucment ldst Yf'clr to <"Odeh the tedm \'Ohlle Hokdn~n served as A D .., bdck on the N>dchmg '>tau Uus yl'ar Ldst yf'ctr, he Wd<> ndmed Orange Emput-C"onJer nee C0ctch nf the Year "l'v" been here :.n yectr.. dOd 1t has ltndlly happened," F1tzel 'idld ·All the And d gredt operung 1t wai. COdch Dave Sdlo's mens and women's swim teams broke out of theJT pracbce to 1010 th~ fun, as did Coach Churk Cutene and h!S men's volleyball team The Pirates' lldbonaJ champion ch~r dnd dance teams di.so attended th<.• ceremony Jam Carnett. the dtrector of commuruty relations, opened the ceremony. eyes beanunq with pnde Carnett has been worklng at OCC for 30 years and h was one of many happy to see the new trdck put to use Carnett llllroduced OCC presid nt Margaret Gratton. who cut the nbbon ctt the hrush Un to ~ymbollZ the operung of the track Knox then made tus debut ·1 f I like Lou Gehng at Yank Stadlum saymg I'm the lucluest man alive,• Knox said, moments after has lrdCk and held alhJet gave rum d JUbllant oval1on ·1 walked rnto a great 1tuauon. The athJ Uc duector !Fred Hokanson) WdS my fonnl'f coach and someone I can tum to when I need help Walking out here. 1t' nice everyday and I walk with a ~mile on my hsce ev ryday. • Knox p nted a peridJ award to Jun McllwAUl, who C'Odched I.he tr ck and b Id t am from 1975-78 McOwain OCC' vtce p ldent ot dm.uustrabv• sem lS known lhe person m t re.sponstbJe for the all·w th r track H followed through on keepmg the trade ldee dbv wh n so many obstad cam his way. Knox also 04IDed Mcllwain, Hoken5Qn and Gratton honorary capt for tM n F1ttmgly. Gratton ended tho ceremony by Mytng, •t.et the yean. dll the tdllung 1t .,eemed like 11 WdS hopeless I don't know how MclJWdlll did It Thb is why I stuck dround bccau I wanted to r 0ctch one more yecu with the dll-weathN trark I didn't want to reure dnd hd'\ e lhls here without m(• • · In other OCC n•ws: H1lano Amaga the goctlkeep<>r who helped I ad the men· ~r lt'dm to a stole runn r-up hn1Sh m 2000, is planrung to come bdck to Coa t He attended d ff'!w Ei.tc10caa boys soccer gdmes this 'ieai.on and told hts former coaC'h 'teve Cr.-n haw, clfld rnends thdt he had gamt.>d vt1luable ('Xpen<>nce. whil trammg lll Mexiro Uus pct.st yedr ArridCJcl nevN played prof 1ona.Uv. c;o he plans to try out for the P11dt~ th• Wdllls to edl'D bdck tu.s tarung ~pol dlld will do whatev<>r 11 tdk to plot~ \OC'Cl'r ag411l hopdull~ for tht• Pirate.~ Amaga s.ud Anotb•r Esliand~ produd, current '>t'naor M1cdh Young S<Jf he will play lo..etbalJ at OCC next MOn Young, who ton> tus ACL tn th SE'C'Ond game of th in. "'a a 6·1oot·J forward wbo h raw, playground-type sronng kills th•t would make him .., intnqumq pl.a} r for C rb Stt've J1' nccr Donate your vehicle. 1-888-308-6483 Set hope in motion to iq>rove local liv •au..•..a~•Tul>tGwlllie TM e.wu:s. HJgh tiOYI ~ teana opens the CIP Soutbern Sectkxa DMikla W·A playoffs wtth • 5..145 win °"' bmt La Qu6nt4. f.standa uw la lriod Selwra Meua; Jw Dawtdm ad S.. Nllllell to eem the vtcUNy. ManMll KOr. 20 pomtJ, tnduding fOW' th.re. polnten, wblle O.wkim addl lfi po6ntl end two three-polmon. NeMoa contributes 14 pou.u, seven rebowM:ls 8nd two bloc:U. TM Newport Hartl« boys IOC'Cler team dominates Velenda and wins, l.0, ta tbe fiila rouDd of tbe CIF DMlllion m playoftl ea ICUer Elementary ScbooL Qdl .......... ...., ...... w weekl -.I lluee ..... COD ..... WO a gsola llljUly ... ... k'Or914'.~ tbilt MCUNll the win. wblle GmNll I 7 ...... OM kl for a l.0 a.d. GMlllseeper ZMll ............... ..,,.., The Pitill'dn bDys IOCCS teal '**"' • lft ham .... ..... Lara mdMlg\ill ~ '° delMt ~ 3-2. lli .. .... round ol lbeCIP DWWuu JV~ ZeJmya.._ oal ..... ulilla. JOiie QuWeoe, lmoWa to .. -··Mn-. ...... • tt'GNI twogolln. ...... -a.. .. ... 1be Ne~IWtagllll lm .......... Crullle~ YilMtag Vala dA; 71~, ID tbe ftrll lamd al lbe CIPU.... m·A pilnpoilli. lr1 n lnliNk (20 pomll), C.111• .... (19). iU. a.,. (I~ wl Ailltl-flot-ID•Me ...... a.,.. ...... Nboemdi 1. Doity Piiat COUIGE WOMEN'S GOLF U<Xs Lee third at Lady Aztec Invitational . SAN DIEGO -lJC lrvioe'I women·• Goll team placied ftfth ln a fteJd ol 20 Jn the 1...-ty AZl1lC Jnvtt.adoftal lh&l ccmcluded Monday at the Lake s.n MeRlOI Country Oub. . Colorado Stale woo tba teem title with • 3&-bole 9COl"8 ol 626, two~ abeed ollOtb·nmbd Wubington. No. 22 Kent ~le WU third at 633, 14th·ranked Michigan fourth at 643 and UCJ fUU> t 6'5. UNLV"I HwlJ'\hee Lee wu the toumam TU medalist with a .c • over total ot 150 over the 36-hole tournament. MayumJ Motoyama ol Colorado 9-te was tecOtld at $.over 151 and UO frelbman Stelld Lee fin1sbed lhlrd at 6-over 152, 11\ootJng 78 in the final round. UCl't Hye"Yoon Jung placed stxth at 154 rn·T1). Shelly R4wortb w 59tb al 169 (82-87), Sunny 1.ee was 80th at 174 (88-86) and Karlie Ward placed 88th ot 118 (95·83). TODAY'S SOIEDUU Dml College women • Vlf'l9l*d ~ .. lio&l. l p fft, iml C0119 women • UC IMlw at LAldy Aztet ~tloNI mt WI Oil9(> S"* mg H~ Ktiool boo/t • OF...,,.. DMlolon 11. WClDf-.d round. Loi Al«nltol at NlwpOtt .woor. ) p.m~ ~ rv. lieClOlid round. Costa M9Jil et NoU'9 Dime.~ Olla. ) P-"" •'' -: ; . "'-1· . . . .. . ,,,....., .. ~ ' . ~ -- ' f R.itt1 and ~•<Dh are ubft'•·• 10 chafW' widW>11t ootkt. TI~ fluhll h r ratn tilt' riPu 10 1..-11MW. rwl11~~ify. reVbe or "'i«' an) r Hitcl MhtnWnw11t. Pif-Mll«' ttpon au\ rrrur dJal may be io )Ultr daui~l ad lmrntdlatl'I)'· Th,. 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HOME•AUTO T ...a ~TERM CARE 10261 Ac/ll:IA Srlm'r. SUm. 2.lO Nt.,, 1'Cl«f BEAot. CA 92660 '426Ul1J •Fu M.J61.1114 ... -.... dlaldlbrot.D.coni ·~i··~, • ~'!!:~:=r a> ~ .,, ~ J i ~ ,-0 § -w -~ In addition to everythin·g else,· we had the audacity to make it all-wheel drive. It's ob~ that we, at Jaguar, simpty can 't leave well enough alor_le. The new Jaguar X-TYPE was a desirable automobile even befbre we added the standard 'ft±11llft. _....,.,,,drift. After all, it already had im~cable styling, standard wood and leather trim and speed-sensitive steering. Not to mention the c0n.i•s•IWY8Chedua.d maintenance and HMltecl •••ilMY included. The new Jaguar X-TYPE is indeed a car with everything. And then some. All-new X-TYPE 2.5 Liter -Automatic s349·1month for 39-month · lease on approved credit ·p1us tax. Total drive oft:$ 3,567.15 including title & license fees with n0 security deposit. Lessee responsible for excess wear / tear and mileage at $ .20 per mile over 32,500 miles. Offer available on· 2002 Jaguar X- TYPE 2.Sl with MSRP of $ 32,420. For special lease tenns take new retaJ1 delivery from dealer stock by February 28. 2002. XJ Sport 1s799·~~~ 'Plus tax. Total dnve off: S 3, 137.16 ildldng title&. bnse tees will no seariy deposl.. Lessee responsi>le for excess wear I tear and mlleaoe at $ .20 per mile CNer 32,500 miles. Oller avalable on 2002 Jaguar XJ8 Sport Mh MSAP of$ 59,975. For~ leelt terms take new retail dehvery from dealer stoc« by Fe.bruary 28. 2002. S-TYPE Sport 1s4·99· */nmth b 39-nmth 3.0 Liter -Automatic · -· ·... _ lease on~ aecit 'Plus tax. Total drive off: S 2. 72.'l. 78 h:kJding title & license fees Wllh no security deposl. Lessee responsible for excess wear I tear and mlleaQe at S .20 per mile over 32.500 miles Offer available on 2002 Jaguar S-TYPE 3.Cll will1 MSRP of S 48.320. For special lease terms lake new retail delivery from dealer stock by Febru~ry 2~. ~- XKR·. Sports Car 370 . H ORSEPOWE.R Available in coupe or convertible. Special lease offerS availalbe. ....,_ § • c