HomeMy WebLinkAbout2002-06-25 - Orange Coast PilotS~RVING THE NEWPORT -MESA COiVJ.AUNITIES SINCE 1907 ON THE WEB: WWW.DAILYPILOT.COM
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Clouds early
and sun this
afternoon.
Gotta love it.
•S..Page2
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TUESDAY, JUNE 25, 2002
City fireworks· attenipts fail to· sparkle
• Newport Beach leade rs unsuccessfully have conside red a few
options to keep the Fourth of July tradition. alive.
Jun• casagrande
DAILY PILOT
NEWPORT BEACH -The city's
failure to fill the void created when
Newport Dunes Waterfront Resort
announced it would not offer Fourth of
July fireworks this year isn't for lack of
trying, otfitials say.
City staffers, led by City Manager
Homer Bludau, have considered three
ways to put on a fireworks show of the
city's own, tn the hope of replacing the
beloved Dunes tradition.
talks with Dunes operators, city offic1dls
looked for ways to take the liability bur-
den on themselves, perhaps by cover-
irlg insurance costs along with the coi.t
of putting on the show.
But talks failed to bring firework'>
back to the Dunes.
"The Dunes didn't want to do it, and
also the company that puts on the show
said they are not interested becaust> of
their liability,• Bludau said.
City officials also considered putting
on thetr own show. either from one of
the piers or from a rented barge that
wouJd serve as a floating platform for
launching the pyrotechrucs.
vtewmg the show. And that, ofhc1dls say.
1s more than the peninsula could take.
·Anyone who hds ever seen the
peninsula on July 4th would under-
SliJnd," City Councilman Steve
Bromberg said, explauung the Police
Department's decision to not support
the plan.
Though operators of the Newport
Dunes said they canceled the annual
show because liability costs had spi-
raled out of control, city officials have
looked for ways to bear the burden. in
The problem, though, is that a ltrc-
works show over the water would mak(>
the Balboa Peninsula a good spot for
For the Police Department, tl's a mat-
ter of resources. The West Newport
area has been dubbed by some "Party
Central· during the summer months.
And the peninsuld, a favorite destina-
tion for rowdy summer revelers, sees
some of its most intense action on the
Fourth of July. To keep the party in
check, police usually increase patrols
during the busiest times. And. even
without adding a fireworks show, it's all
they can do to keep the area properly
patrolled.
SEE FIREWORKS PAGE 4
Fllf PHOTO I OMV PILOT
From the bluffs at Castaways Park, fireworks can be seen
exploding over Newport Dunes on July 4 last year.
CATCHING A BREEZE
--------
------=:~ -·~ --........ ____ .... ---_....,... ,., -,,-. ------
-tC t~ l A H A ~
The rainy season has passed , but a kayaker has other idees for his umbrella. The wind moves him along the bay a t Newport Ouries
Waterfront Resort.
Balboa Peninsula loses a longtime 'friend '
• Donald Wayne Moses
made an impression on
people while cutting their
hair at his barbershop,
Mr. Balboa, for 43 years.
Young Chang
DAILY PILOT
tomers he had served for 43 years.
customers who had relied on him
to 01t their hai.r dJld to be a friend
as the tresses were trunmed.
While at J loag Hospital for
pancreatic cancer treatment Otis
month, he asked Wlfe Llnda to
find a new barber to take care of
lus "friends," 1ust in case.
Moses died on Wednesday. He
was 68.
Moses wt•t1nng his usual Reyn
Spooner reversible Hawai1dn-
pnnt shirt '
Donald
Wayne
Moses
Pubhc L1hrc1ry,
sd1d J\1o .. c•., Wd'
the typical barb<>r
m that hP WdS
genwnely rucP.
"You kind of
hcive to be, lo be
a barber,• said
the clerk. who ts
now searching
!or ... omeone new
to cut his hair, BALBOA PENINSULA
Donal4. Wayne Moses had his
wile ~ signs on the door to
their bartiershop in recent weeks
that read, "I'm coming back.~
And though he never made it
back to Mr. Balboa, his Balboa
Peninsula shop, his customers
have been stopping by since his
death with flowers, hugs for Lin-
da and to gbmpse the photo of
•You could not stop by htJ.
shop without lum saying, 'Oh
Gay. come here a minute. Did
you hear lhtS?' • longtime friend
Gay Wassall-Kelly said. "His sto-
nes, they would 1ust slay you. He
knew something about every-
body. It was never gossipy.
though. Always an accompbsh-
ment or sometlung. •
Mike Payne, a 20-year cus-
tomer of the late barber and a
clerk al the neighboring Balboa
branch or the Newport Beach
"B.irbers are
always famous for talking and
sharing the news.·
He was worried about cus-
Bell Gardens proved quite tough
A tone time in my
youth, 1 lived in that
part of Los Angeles
County known as East L.A.
Never "East Los Angeles,"
but always "East L.A." As
the child of a father who was
a nomadic railway w orker, t
had lived in tough towns, but
never in a town a.s tough as
East L.A.
1 bad been living with my
parents in Green River, Wyo.,
where my father worked for
the Un.Ion Pedftc Railway •• a laborer on what wu called
the rtp tract. Where railway
can were lwpalred. lbeN
wu a itrilut, wbk:b my lather =...::= ... tbat my.,...... ... ,..
'
Robertradi•
111VlllKT
suaded to send me to live
w;1th my .... Jllllie on Bal-
boa P9nlb1Wa. After the
grubby llttle railroad towns I b..tbeell== =--Hawevw~t
heaven dJdn't last very long.
After the stnke, my par-
ents couldn't remain in
Green River, so they moved
to Bell Gardens. Why Bell
Gardens? Because my father,
who never learned to drivie,
could walk to work at the
Union Pacific yards from
there. Well, Bell Gardens
was quite a place, especially
after the peninsula. Tough,
tough.
At that time, the cwrent '
heedline murder cue was
that of MedeJyn Obenshine,
wbo bed ldn.d her lover.
Anywa~ day I Wal iQ. ... I , tM local
lddla dlf"W tD 1....-t the
Sii VllDICT ""81 4
llSIDI
SPOll'S
The Costa Mes.
National U ttle
League Dodgen
lost. l -1, ln eight
lnning1 to tbe
Huntington Valley
A'1 Moaclay In tbe
eeelflnel1 of
tbe Dlllrtc.112 *forsDI.,..._
T....-.of a._,....
Mlle ........
•~•P1 b v..,.
See lpaltl, .... ,
SEE FRIEND PAGE 4
EPA seeks
tighter rules
on sewage
dumping
•Regulators suggest higher
monitoring standards for
Orange County Sanitation
District. including bleaching.
Pa u l Cl inton
DAILY PILOT
NE\.\PORT-1\IESA -Federdl and
... 1nte wdter-qudhly regulators have
prupo..,vcl t1ghten10q the standards for
th<' county\ largPSI ... ewagc agency.
RPCJUlc1tors with the Env1ronmentctJ
l'rotrct1on Agency released d proposal
did JunP 18 meellng that \o\>OU1d hold
the Or,inge County SarutatJon Distncl
to h1uhPr morutonng stdndards and
requm• chJOri.ndlJOn by Aug 12
"I \\ould agrpe Wlth the dssessment
that thP'P are more stnngent protec-
llono,, • CPA spoke<;man Mork MPr-
c hant ... cud "In that CdSe, 1t wlll hope-
ful/~ 11nprove \\<tier quciltt~ 10 the
dfPd
The· EPA dnd slalP s Water
Re.,ourr<•<; Control Bodrd hdve ..,ched-
ule<I rt July 19 meeting to consider the
<ha new It would come two day<; alter
Uw cl1..,tnct 15. expected lo deode on
"''hrlht>r to revc1mp its i.ewttge treat-
mf'nl process. to wh1ch oppos1uon has
b<>cn qrnwing tn r<'cent months
Ec1c h clc1y, lhP d1.,tnct releases 243
m1l110n qallon'> ol part1ally treated
.. e ... , <1qP into lhP ocean vta dn ouUaU
pipe on the occt1n 11oor lour miles off
the Sdnla Ana River mouth
Caty leaders m Newport Beach,
Costci Mesa. Hunbngton Beach and
other muru.~1ttes have pushed the
d1stncl ~step up its treatment of the
waste water.
Under the new proposed penrut, the
dtstnct would be reqwred to bleach the
..,t>wciqe. then remove the bleach using
a derhlonnation chemical. Releasing
SEE WATER PAGE 4
.....
ON A IOU
The FraMlins of C.-.
MeS.t met Gh • YllMI
trip, and tMy'Yi ~
attendtng GISinO .....
~since. This Wlilll..,
hit No. 10.
........ 1
<••••11111·••
SUMMER ..
SUMMER FUN
2 Tuesday, June 25, 2002
Kids Talk BACK
Summer
translates
~
to fun and
friends
The Daily Pilot went to
Metro Pointe at South
Coast Plaza in Costa
Mesa to ask kids,
'What's your favorite
summer pastime?'
'Hanging out
with my
friends
because I like
to go shop-
ping or to the
movies.'
JULIE TRAN,
12.
Santa Ana
'I like to go to
water parks
because it's
hot.'
JOSEPH
TRAN, 12,
Santa Ana
'I like to go
shopping
because I
want to go
buy clothes.'
JACQUELINE
TRAN, 9,
Santa Ana
'I like to go on
vacation. I
went to Ger-
many to see
my uncle.'
ANN TRAN, 7,
Santa Ana
'I like going to
the beach
because you
get wet and
you have fun.'
LAURA
SAUCEDO,
13,
Santa Ana
'I like to play
outside. I like
freeze tag.'
ENRIQUE
SAUCEDO, 7,
Santa Ana
1~·-, ,~ ... · _
J . . ' ~ -l
-Interviews and photos
compiled by Oiristine carrillo
Dail¥JPilot
VOL 96, NO. 176
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Newport Dunes Movies on the Beach
Every Friday night during spring and summer, the 100-acre Newport
Dunes Waterfront Resort offers a series of free films shown on the
sand beginning at dusk on a 9-by-12-foot screen. Campfires will be
available for people to roast marshmallows. No admission fee, but
parking is S7. (949) 729-DUNE or www.Newportdunes.com.
s u M M £ 1()s i ~ I 1 £ s
Doily Pilot
PHOTOS BY KENT TREPTOW I OAJLY Pit.OT
From left. Dave Hahn dances with his friend Julie Weber as singer Marvin Gregory performs with his band MPG at Pierce Street Annex's patio.
Dinin' under the sun
Pier ce Street Annex in
Costa M esa offers guests the
opportunity to go somewhat
topless while eating barbecue
Lolita Harper
DAILY PILOT
are also on hand.
About a aozen hungry patrons -turned
chefs -crowded around the unmanned grill,
cooking their burgers to perfecbon.
Adrienne Whipple, a 23-year-old Santa Ana
· Heights resident, said she likes her burgers
medium well, with the buns slightly toasted. To
complement ber perfect.meal, Whipple orders
an ice cold Corona from a passing cocktail wait-
ress.
"It's nice to just bang out in the sun with a
cold beer and your friends,· Whipple said.
From 4 to 8 p.m. Sundays, summer fun is
taken to a new level as Marvin's Band enter-
tains bargoers with live tunes.
S ummer lS undoubtec!Jy a time for back-
yard barbecues and catchin' some rays.
Al Pierce Street Annex in Costa Mesa,
you are more than welcome to do both in
the comfort of their backyard -more formally
called the outdoor patio. Between noon and
sundown, on any day, customers are invited to
shed those pesky layers of clothing that make
for funny tan Imes and hang out on the patio
topless.
Harlin McNees Jams with the band MPG.
Pierce Street tries to accommodate its cus-
tomers with the comforts of home while provid-
ing special perks -such as a fully stocked bar
and live music -that aren't found at the usual
backyard barbecues.
To keep traffic on 17th Street from coming to
a screectung halt, only guys can actually be
topless. Women are welcome to wear tank or
bikiru tops.
burger on the outdoor grill. The "drinking
establishment" -as the popular 17th Street
bar has dubbed itself -has the charcoals hot
and patties ready for a self-serve patio barbe-
cue. Vanous spices and sauces, including
teriyaki and traditional barbecue, are readily
available to season the meat. and condiments
Tanning, grilling and rock 'n' roll combme
for the ultimate summer party. said John
Waters, one of the bar's owners.
If a rumble of hunger emanates from that
bare mJdnff, people are welcome to throw a
FUN STUFF
COSTA MESA
CAMP COSTA MESA
The city of Costa Mesa Recre-
ation Division will conduct Camp
Costa Mesa 2002, a nine-week
swnmer day camp for children 6 to
12.
The camp. which will start
Monday, runs from 7 a.m. to 6 p.m.
through Aug. 23. Only three of the
nine weeks are still open. Those
weeks begin July 1, July 29 and
Aug . 12.
Campers will meet at TeWinkle
Park, and may choose to pay $110
for extended hours of 7 a.m. to'6
p.m., or $90 for regular hours of 8
a.m. to 5 p.m. Children will enjoy
many activities. including games,
arts and crafts, and all-day excur·
sions to places such a.s Universal
Studios, the San Diego Zoo, Dis-
neyland and Knott's Berry Pann.
Camp registration may be
·we get the live band out here with the
warm Southern California sunshine, and it
becomes the place to be.• Waters said.
made at the Balearic Community
Center, 1975 Balearic Drive. Reg-
istration will be an a first-come,
first-served basis. until the pro-
gram is full at the center, from 9
a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday through
Friday. (714) 754-5158.
MOBILE SKATE PARK
The Recreation Division's
Mobile Skate Park travels to vari-
mis park locations throug hout the
city three d ays a week to proVide
skateboarders and in-line skaters
a state-of-the-art skate park.. The
mobile park consists of two quar-
ter-pipes, three wed ges, two
spines, a fun box and rail. Partici-
pants are required to have a
signed Waiver and Release Fonn
to use the park. Appropriate safe-
ty equipment. including a helmet,
elbow and kneepads, are required
at all times. Access the city's Web
sue at www.ci.coata-mna.ca.ua to
get a form. Call (714) 327-7560 for
schedule of days, times and loca-
tions of the skate park.
--J. s-eo.. 8EAD£8S HOTLINE right No news S1orlts, lllustratlons. Art OirectOf SURF AND SUN
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~SupeMtor Dally Pilot or neM tips.
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Our .ctdress Is 330 W. Bay St, Costa ,._•IW! Mew, CA 92627. Office houri are °"'fie--
editorial rNtttf' or advel11setnents
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HQW IQ 8£ACH US
OmMdon
WEATHER FORECAST to 20 knots, with combined
seas of 5 to 7 feet.
SURF
The Times Orange Coonty Ctlme Ind COUltS rtpOtt•. ,,.,, 574-4216 Monday ·Fri~. 8:30 a.m. • 5 p.m. (800) 252-9141
Fog and low clouds will
be encountered early, but
the sun will break through
later this morning. Temper-
atures wHI range from the
mid-70s In Costa Mesa to
the upper 60s In Newport
Beach.
We're still in the knee-to
waist-high range today and
won't get out of this rut
until a southwest swell
helps us on Friday.
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CC>fl8£CTIC>NS
It Is the Piiot's policy to promptly
correct all erron of substance.
P1MM call (949) 574--4233.
m n.e Nlwpor't hlcNCostt MeN Diiiy ""°' C\MS-1*800t Is publlnd deify
In Nlwpor't leach end Cott.a Mell,
IUbla1ptlons .... IMlllab6e orlly ~ tub-
tcrtblng to The Tlmes 0r-. County
CIOOI m -11•1 1n .,...outlideof
Nlwpor't leectl end (Oita MIN. ..
tcrlptloN '° "-Dellr """ .. _, able orlly b, h dell NI far HO per "'°""' CPl'bl lndl* ... ,, ......
... Ind ... -.)~:
Send ..... dw91to n.e~
lled«Olta Mal~.....,., ,o, '°"
1MO, Colta M91e. CA IMM. Cow-
Advet1hlng
Oa551fled (949) 642·5678
Dkplay (949) 642-4321
£dltorial
News (M9) 642-5680
Spofts (949)574-<4223
News FaJC (949) 646-4170
Spotts Fax (Mt) 650-0170
E-m.11: "-ffW>'lotelat/mes.com
M-.Ofllce
lusinets Office (949) 642-4321
luslnets Fu (949) 631·7126
Nlll!Ndfl¥""-~~ ......... °' .. \Gt ,,,....l"-
---Ol/111 ... _..
We'll see much of the
same thraugh the week. ............
www.nws.~.gov.
IOATING PORKAST
The Wllt8rfV wtftds Wiii
blow 10 to 11 knots In the
lnntt'..., this .....
noon, With • ,,~ IWlll
of 2to•fMt. . OUt ,.,..,, the north-w_.., .........
..... ,dtty:
www.surlrld«-.org.
TIDES ...
4:51 a.m.
11:21 a.m.
J-Alp.m.
10'.fll p.m.
Doily Pilot · ' .
Tuesday, June 2', 2002 I
Grune of chance llllfLY II
THI llWI
Bill and Gloria Franklin of Costa Mesa met
on a bus trip to Las Vegas and now go out of
their way to atten d casino openings
Christine C•rrlllo
DAILY PILOT
I t started on a bus ~p to
Las Vegas when Bill
Franklin stoo(j 'up and
asked, •Does anyone
like to play Scrabble?"
Gloria nused her hand
and responded, "I do." And,
as they say. the rest is history.
ThJ[t bus trip, organized
through the Costa Mesa
Senior Center. brought the
Frankllns. both in thetr early
70s, together and, after a
year of courtship, the two
married in 1996.
Smee then, they have
attended casino openings
through.out Las Vegas and
attended their latest opening
Monday night.
With no casmo openings
scheduled in the near future,
lhe Frankhns' hobby hit an
abrupt end, but 1t won't slow
them down.
From dancing to traveling,
playgomg to gambling, the
Costa Mesa couple has kept
their SLX·year marriage active.
"I read two newspapers
every day looking for things
we can do,· Bill said • Peo-
ple always wonder how I
hnd thmgs out, and I tell
them tl'!> till nght there.•
And the two have been
nght there for every casmo
opening over the last six
years.
Having stood with anx·
ious crowds of thouaandl
pushing their way through
the casino doors 'at such
openings as the Monte Car·
. lo, New York New York, Bel·
lagio, Venetian, Paril, Man·
dalay Bay, Aladdin, The
Palms and 'Ihlmp 29 in
Coachella Valley, the
Franklins completed their
10th casino opening run at
the Pechanga Hotel and
Casino in Temecula.
Being a retired travel
agent of 22 yea.rs, Bill bas
always had an interest in
travel and hotels.
"I had always fantasized
about being the first person
in a hotel.• Bill said.
And it was everything he
thought it would be.
While the couple atten ds
the hotel openings, enjoying
table poker and dollar Wheel
of Fortune slots, they don't
always stay in the h otels they
help christen.
They often can't afford to.
Their frequent trips
haven't put more than $1,198
winnings in their pockets.at
a time, but they have had
their perks.
Bill, who frequenUy asks
guests if he can see their
rooms, manage4 to get a
$2,650 a night suite for $39 a
night, Gloria said.
FULL BAR
COCKTAILS
"OUR OWN WINES JUST ARRIVED
FROM NAPA VALLEY•
296 E. 17TH ST. COSTA MESA · 949·645·7626
R ESTAURANTS•
Antonello Ristorante
Back Bay Rowing &
Running Club
Bangkok Four
Birraporetti's
Bluewatcr Grill
BODEGA Chocolates
Champagne Frenctl Bakery Cafe
The Cl ubhouse
Godiva Chocolatier
Gustaf Anders
Magg1ano's Little Italy
WINERIES,.
Anapamu Cellars
Atlas Peak Vineyards
Barefoot Cellars
Byron Vi neyard & Winery
'BV' Beaulieu Vineyard
Caliterra
Callaway Coastal Winery
Canandaigua
Wine company
Clos d u Bois
Curtis Winery
Danzante
Fetzer Vineyards
Firestone Vineyard
Flying Goat Cellars
Galleano Winery
Gallo of Sonoma
Llndemans
Marcelina Vineyards
Maurice Cert1e Winery
Pedroncelli Winery
Penfolds
PhillJps ·Hogue
Quedy Winery
Rancho Z..baco Winery
Robftt Mondavl Wintry
f(mmnount Eltate
Tharftton Winery
WIJIWn Hill WlneJy
Morton's of Chicago-
The Steakhouse
Nello Cucina
Quattro Caff~
Rainforest CaM
Royal I<hY.ber
Fine Inaian C uisine
Ruby's Diner
Vie de France
Wolfg~g Puck Caf~
Z'Tejas
Southweste rn Grill
BREWERIES•
Bayhawk Ales
Firestone Walker Brewing Company
Josef Bierbitzch
Golden ~sner
Karl Strauss Breweries
Steelhead
Brewing Company
Tustin Brewing Company .. Partial Ust
ALL PROCEEU
B ENEFIT
GREG FRY I OAJlY PILOT
Costa Mesa residents BW and Gloria Franklin have made more than 30 trips to Las
Vegu during their seven years together and have collected a number of slot cards.
With deals like that, they
can afford to take trips to Las
Vegas four or five times a
year, often becoming the
envy of their friends.
•our friends think it's
great,• Gloria said. "They're
kind of jealous of us, but
they aren't motivated to do
it. We're kind of the excep-
tion. not the rule.•
The exception among
many other people their age,
that is.
"We like the excitement,
the ambience and the energy
with all the people," Gloria
said.
Having both lived in New
York City at different times
in their lives. the Frank.lins
carry over their love of the
husUe and bustle of the city
streets to their love of the
busy Las Vegas strip.
During each of their stays
in New York, Bill and Gloria
lived in the same neighbor·
·~~ Home Decor• Accessories
Custom Florals ~
369 E. 17th Street. Costa Mesa ~
Mon-Fri 10:00am-6:00pm. Sat & Sun lO:OOam-S:OOpm
Phone (949) 646-6745
hood and worked for the
same company. But they had
yet to meet one another.
After many years and two
divorces each, the retirees
who even lived in the same
apartment complex finally
met on that bus to Las
Vegas.
And they have no plans to
stop.
"We both like to gamble.
that's the bottom line,~ Glo-
ria said
•••Quality Service• ..
d Entenainmenf4••
rwtlVAL
_)OUTH{ (0.A.:>T JD)..A Z.A
c~Trt ~ e>ARRf"h. /MACY'!> HOMr _:;ToRf: 'vJ lN<>
Newport will
dedicate flagpole
In memory ot Kurtil
Kogl, an equipment
operator for th• dty of
Newport Beach who
was lcilled on tM job in
1984, th• d ty will ct.di·
cate a m~ortal flagpole
at its corporation yard. ~
dedication ceremony
will take plae9 at 9 a.m.
Friday at the City Cor·
poration Yard, 592
Superior Blvd.
Kogl had worked for
the d ty since 1917 u a
building maintenance
worker and later u an
equipment operator. He
was killed in an on-the·
job accident at the Coy·
ote Landfill on June 28,
1984.
fOI THI llCOll
A gr•duation list provid-
ed to the Delly Pilot ht
ran In Friday's newspep«
included en ln11«w.<y.
Andre Klyoshl Whftll
graduated from Corone
del Mar High School, not
Monte Vista High
School.
A Thursday story, •l(Mer
voluntffr will recefw
honor,• misidentified Kim
~s city of residencit.
She lives In CosU Mm9..
"fHUR.:>DA Y, JUNE: 2.7, 2.002., 6-9 PM
feAnJRJNCr QPPOR11JNITY DRA'WINCi
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T-' ~TCHE'N APPLIANCE'
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PE:R Pf'R.:>ON r"'OR C..ROUP-' bt ~I to wtru nd will be nod&d by U.S. Meil or 10 OR MORf' By~nnnta ........ .,...... and ita lnlmblrs. dl.t9cton, ~~ ......
odw ttlllld ..,... fralll 1111 encl all llabWty With l'llf'ld '° dw pn... Son ~.,,.,,.
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PIMM ch.up ffl1 C AMIX C VISA C MC
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.. 4 Tuesday, June 25, 2002
POLICE f ILES
COSTA MESI
• AYOt.ado Street: A man was arrested on
suspicion of possessing marijuana and para·
phernalia In the 300 blodc .tt 8:44 a.m. Sun· day.
• ~ lloulevwd: A man was arrested on
suspicion of Indecent exposure and sollcita·
tlon of a lewd act In the 2200 block at 4:05
p.m. Sunday.
• Moorovlll Av.nue: Vandalism was report-
ed In the 1800 block at 6, p.m. Sunday.
BRIEFLY IN' THE NEWS
Man arrested at
OCC swap meet·
I
Costa Mesa police arrested a 53-
year-old Huntington Beach man Sun-
day morning on suspicion of trying to
assault another man with a knife dur-
ing an argument over a parking spot at
the Orange Coast College swap meet,
officials said.
Ronald J ames Colpitts and the vic-
tim, whose name was not released,
tried to park in the same parking
space, Lt. Dale Birney said.
"One got the space, the other didn't,•
he said . •A conlrontation ensued when
Mr. Colpitts brandished a knife at the
victim."
PUBLIC SAFETY
• Relms a.an.: Trespassing was reported in
the 300 block at 8.SO a.m Sunday.
• Small4t)' ROAd: A man suspected of sleep-
lhg in a venkle was arrested in the 3400
block at 6:59 a.m. Sunday.
• Thurin Avenue: An assault was reported In
the 2100 block at 1:42 p.m. Sunday.
•East 11th Street A robbery was reported
in the 400 blodc at 11:01 a.m. Saturday.
NEWPORT BEACH
• BalboA Boulevard West: Vandalism was
reported in the 1100 block at 7:01 a.m. Mon-
day.
• camp.. Drive: Indecent e)lpOSUl'e was
reported In the 4600 block at 10'.09 a.m.
Monday.
• Crown Drive: Animal auelty was reported
at the intersection of San Joaquin Hiiis Road
at 9:24 a.m. Monday.
• Venella: Terrorist threats were reported In
the 100 block at 1:56 a.m. Monday.
• Via Oporto: A commercial burglary was
reported In the 3400 block at 9:1S a.m. Mon-
day.
• Viii• way: A commerdal burglary was
reported in the 2800 block at 6:22 a.m. Mon~
day.
Birney said the victim reported the
incident to Costa Mesa police, and offi-
cers located Colpitts at the swap meet
and arrested him on suspicion of
assault with a deadly weapon. Colpitts
did not injure the man with the knife
but was arrested on suspicion of
assault because of his "prox:i.m.ity to the
victim,· Birney said.
DON LEACH I OAILV PILOT
A Toyota truck crashed through the front entrance to Sunshine Cleaners
in Costa M esa. No one was injured in the incident, authorities said.
truck into a store on Santa Ana Avenue
on Monday afternoon when she acci-
dentally stepped on the accelerator
instead of the brake. Costa Mesa
police officials said. The mcident hap-
pened about 5: 15 p.m.
cials said. The extent of the damage,
however. was not known as of Monday
night, police said.
Truck crashes through
Costa Mesa store window
A 30-year-old woman rammed her
The truck drove through the store
window, causing some damage, offi-
Costa Mesa firefighters also
responded with a paramedic unit, but
no one was in1ured in the mcident at
1658 Santa Ana Ave., Costa Mesa fire
officials said.
l,roviding auto insurance
to dri\'ers just like you!
- --
• No Broker fees • WaJk In or Phone
• Local Office • Personal Ser.vice
• .Multiple Car • Good Driver
Discounts Discounts
jll\ 660 Baker Street • Suite 257 • Costa Mesa
l.OCli owa S. Lewis Insurance •
fj \\ (B~tween Bristol ll!d the 55 Frwyl
Metcury tnaurance (714) 540-4203
Qrou Lie. #0034019
AROUND TOWN
• Send AROUND TOWN items to
the Daily Pilot. 330 W. Bay St., Costa
Mesa, CA 92627; by fax to (949) 646-
4170; or by calling (949) 574-4298.
Include the time, date and location
of the event as well as a contact
phone number. A complete listing is
available at www.dailypllot.com.
TODAY
Mother's Market and Kitchen
Always a Party' Suri C1ty"s Pier 1n Tile Good Ufe. Sailing NewPorl's Coast Peaceful Beauty 1n the City of tile Arts.
Huntington Beacn Laguna Beach
Reach Influential People and Affluent Home s
Don't miss out -be a part of this special secti on
devoted to things we do, places to shop a nd wonderful
communities to li ve.
The section will be dis tributed in our three
newspapers reaching 78,000 homes in Huntington
Harbour, Huntington Beach, Cos ta Mesa, Newport
Beach , Corona del Mar, Newpo'rt Coast and La guna
Beach.
Publication Dates:
Thursday, July 25 th
(Huntington Beach Independent)
Friday, July 26th
(Daily Pilot and Coastline Pilot)
Call Your Advertising Representative Today!
(949) 642-4321
JNf)EP£NOEN1
(949) 642-4321
~
(949) 494-4321
lo~u Inc~
COASTIJNE PILOT
will host a seminar about a
stimulant-free weight loss pro-
gram presented by Brian Byls-
ma of Bio-Sculpt from 6:30 to
7 :30 p.m. The seminar will be
held at the Patio Cafe in Costa
Mesa. Free. The cafe is at 225
E. 17th St. (949) 631 -4741.
WEDNESDAY
A six-week series of land-
scape and seascape drawing
and painting workshops will
be held from 10 a.m. to 12:30
p.m. at Mariners Park. The
series. hosted by the Newport
Beach Community Services
Departme nt, will provide
workshops for both beginner
and advanced students. The
fee for the senes is $66 per
pe rson. with an additional $5
for non-Newport Beach res•·
dents. The pdrk 1s at 2005
Dover Dnve., Newport
Beach. Reg1stratJon 1s
required. (949) 644-3151.
The Jewish Lawye rs of
Orange County will host a
lecture by Rabbi Jack Riemer
on the challe nges of civil lib-
erlles in the Wdr on terrorism.
The program, which will
focus on the Jewish legal per·
spective of the 5th Amend-
ment. will be held from noon
to 1: 15 p.m. at the Stradling
Yocca Carlson and Rauth in
Newport Beach. The program
will be presented along with
the Civil Rlghls Committee of
the Anti-Defamation League
and the Orange County Jew·
1sb Community Scholar Pro·
gram. The Stradhng is at 660
Newport Center Dnve, 16th
floor. The program is $25.
(949) 789-6122 or
apkatz@lacJubs.com.
An after-hours mixer wUJ be
held from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. at
the Player's Restaurant Bar
and Grlll in Costa Mesa. The
mixer will be hosted by the
Costa Mesa Chamber of
Commerce. The restaurant is
at 512 W. 19th St. The event is
$10, or free for members.
(714) 865-9090.
"Raiders of the Lost Ark" wUJ
screen at 7 p.m. for teens in
seventh through 12th grades
in a series of movies present-
ed by the Newport Beach
Public Llbrary's Book Raiders
Dig Reading series. Pree
admission. Free popcorn.
Adults must be accompanied
by their teen. The library is at
1000 Avocado Ave. (949) 717-
3801.
OllTUllY
Victor H. JaSblnsld
FIREWORKS
CONTINUED FROM 1
Now, with those options
offld4lly foiled, it looks like
the city is out of ideas for how
to replace the Dlllles fireworks
show -a loss many residents
say really hurts. Though there
are still plans to have a fire-
WATER
CONTINUED FROM 1
high concentrations of bleach
inJo the ocean wo\lld kill fish
and damage other marine
life.
The proposed pennit
would also hold the district
accountable for keeping the
water clear within three miles
or the shore, from surface to
bottom.
Now, the district is only
required to worry about a top
layer of water 10 feet deep
and three miles out.
The district's 25-member
board had already approved
starting chlorination, in which
the agency uses industrial
strength bleach to kill bacte-
ria and some viruses in its
sewage.
Thal approval came on
March 27. On April 24, the
board authorized no more
than $200,000 to .develop
plans for chlorination, which
would cost $8 million per
year.
On Wednesday, the district
board will consider whether
FRIEND
CONTINUED FROM 1
But Mo~es rarely let on
how sick he was. He never
complained and never sacri·
ficed a smile. no matter how
bad he felt, Linda Moses said.
The Los Angeles native
moved to Newport Beach in
1959, first opening the shop
with his barber father. Moses
became known for bis smile
dnd for how he made even
strange rs smile. He would
stay open past 5:30 p.m. il a
customer couldn't make it in
from work on time. He would
give of his compassion just as
readily.
"He was generous to a
fault," close friend GlilDy
FlSher said "He loved every-
body.•
Moses had surgery in
Octobe r and returned to work
dlmost immediately. For
months he was fin e, unill
about five weeks ago, when
he became ill again.
"But he and I used to talk
about how you need to have
goals and objectives that get
you up in the morning.• said
friend Lou von Dyl, a pancre-
atic cancer survivor. "So
many people accept what the
doctor says. but he and I. we
didn't believe that. We
believed we were going to
make 1t. •
Von Dyl met Moses in
1974. The city newcomer
VERDICT
CONTINUED FROM 1
Madelyn Obenshine case.
They also decided that, as
the new kid on the block. I
should play the part of
Obenshine's victim. Rather
naively, l agreed.
Well, they did a very real-
istic job of it, beating me
until they tired of the sport,
and as they were young and
strong, the beating was, to
put it mildiy, prolonged and
brutal. That was my i.ntro-
duction to Bell Gardens.
1 went sniffling home and
told my mother that I didn't
want to live in Bell Gardens.
My mother agreed and sent
me back to live with my sis·
ter on the peninsula. I have a
feeling that move probably
prolonged my life consider-
ably.
To this day when I am dri-
ving down the Hollywood
Freeway to Los Angeles and
we come to the sign that
Doily Pilot
works show i.n Big Canyon
and at Little Corona, the
Dunes tradition may be done.
•At this point, none of the
things we tried have turned
out to be good options,• Blu-
dau said.
•JUNE CAS~coven New-
port Beach. She may be reached at
(949) S74-4232 or by e-mail at
fune.c11sagr11ndeOlat/mes.com.
to purchase the chemicals for
the disinfection process.
Newport Beach Mayor Tod
Ridgeway, Costa Mesa Sani-
tary District and Newport-
Mesa Unified School District
membe r Jim Ferryman, and
Huntington Beach Mayor
Debbie Cook sit on the board.
The EPA's proposed
changes would alter a waste
discharge permit last given to
the dlstrict in 1998. in 1999,
the state Legislature passed
Assembly Bill 411 , which
lowered the levels or bactena
allowed to be present in the
ocean.
District officials said they
headed to the EPA to request
the change in their permit so
it would conform to that law.
"What we said was 'our
goal for disinfection was to
meet AB41 1 standards,' H said
Robert Ghirelli. the district's
technical services director.
"They took that and created
this permit."
• MUl CLINTON covers the env1·
ronment. John Wayne Airport and
politics. He may be reached at (949)
764-4330 or by e-mail at paul.clm·
tonOl11times.com
needed a haircut and walked
into Mr. Balboa.
·we talked for a few rrun-
utes. 1 didn't qwte agree with
the way my hair should be
cut, and 1 said to rum, 'I Wee
your haircut. Who cul!. your
ha1.r?' • Von Dyl said. •He said
his father.•
The senior Moses wasn't
worlong that day, so Von Dyl
ended up in the younger
Moses' cha1.r.
For almost 30 years, the
two fondly disagreed about
the way Von Dyl's hair need·
ed to be cul and about the
merits of classic Fords versus
classic Chevys. Moses pnzed
hlS 1957 black ThunderbmJ
and was also part of thP
Orange County Thunderbird
CU'cle.
·And I guess we Just con·
tulUed on with the haircuts
and the car shows,· Von Dyl
said.
Moses is also swvtved bv
sons Brad and Scott Moses.
daughte r Gaylynn Moses,
and grandsons Chad and
MaUhew Moses.
Services will be held at 2
p.m. Wednesday at Chnst
Church by the Sea, 1400 W
Balboa Blvd., Newport Beach
A party will follow at the
American Legion. Donations
may be sent lo Hoag Hospital
Cancer Center.
• YOUNG CHANG Is the features
and arts and entertainment writer
She may be reached at (949) 574-
4268 or by e-mail at
young.changO/atimes.com
indicates the next turnoff ts
lnd1ana Stree t, wtuch means
Bell Gardens, 1 turn my head
so as not to read the sign.
That wasn't the end or my
East L.A. experiences. A little
later, my parents moved to
Maywood, and I went to join
them there. While still a big
change from the peninsula
and still a tough place, it was
nothing like Bell Gardens,
and I managed to stick it out.
Years later, I met Aaron
Rosenberg, the former USC
football star who was a major
executive in the entertain·
ment industry. Somehow, I
knew he had grown up ln
East L.A., so as to make con-
versatfon I mentioned that I
too had lived in that area. He
looked at me, shook his head
and said: •vou're pretty skin·
ny. How did you survive?•
~told him 1 was a pretty
fas~er. He nodded and
said, •vou'd h ave to be.•
• ROmKT ~ is a Corona
del Mar r~ldent and • formtr Judge. His column rum Tu.days.
Daily Pilot
NEWPORT BEACH
CITY COUNCIL PREVIEW
On the
AGENDA
JOHN WAYNE AIRPORT
SETilEMENT AGREEMENT
Tonight's council vote on
extending the John Wayne Air-
port settlement agreement.
which will take place the same
night as the Board of Supervi-
sors' vote on the matter in Santa
Ana, will mark a momentous
occasion for Newport Beach. City
Council members have worked
hard to extend the agreement,
which imposes limits on flights
and expansion at the airport.
Without an extension, the limits
will expire at the end of 2005.
WHAT TO EXPECT:
Expect City Council members
to be jubilant as they vote to
approve the agreement.
CITY BUDGET
One of the biggest iobs facing
the council tonight is the budget.
Today is the deadline for council
members to approve the spend-
ing plan, which they're calling a
status quo budget. Council mem-
bers will give the budget a last
look in their study session. which
will begin at 3:30 p.m., before
taking on the matter as a formal
council agenda item.
WHAT TO EXPECT:
In Newport Beach, tough
times do have one advantage.
Because this is a status quo
budget, there's less to fight
about. No major spending pro-
grams will be cut, but at the
same time it means that there's
no money in the coming fiscal
year to approve new projects.
Therefore, unlike in boon
years, no one is competing for
available city funds.
TRAFFIC SIGNALS
Jamboree Road, Newport
Center Drive and Superior
Avenue are just three of the
roadways that will get traffic sig-
nal improvements if council
members approve a $303, 759
contract tonight. The work by
contractor FJ. Johnson would
upgrade the traffic signals on
Jamboree Road at Eastbluff
Drive-University Drive and also at
Island Lagoon-Hyatt Newporter;
on Newport Center Drive at San-
ta Cruz Drive; and on Superior
FYI
• WHO: Newport Beach Oty
Council meeting
• WHEN: 7 p.m. t~ay;
study session will start at
3:30 p.m.
• WHERE: Council Cham-
bers at City Hall, 3300 New·
port Blvd.
• INFORMATION: (949)
644-3000
Avenue at Ticonderoga Street.
The contractor would also install
battery backups in traffic signals
at six locations on Jamboree. six
locations on Coast Highway, and
at the intersection of Newport
Boulevard and Hospital Road, as
well as some other work.
WHAT TO EXPECT:
FJ. Johnson's was not only
the lowest bid for the job, but
it Is also 18% lower than the
city's estimate for the work:
S370,000. Based on the cost
savings and staff's reference
check of the contractor, it's
expected that council members
will approve the contract.
COAST HIGHWAY EZ LUBE
A permit request to build an
EZ Lube auto servicing business
was shot down by the Planning
Commission, but the matter
has now been appealed to the
council. Planning commission-
ers decided that, among other
things, the business would not
fit in well with the surrounding
Corona del Mar neighborhood.
WHAT TO EXPECT:
If the council chooses to sup-
port the commission's decision,
it will mean an end to the pro-
ject plans.
BUCK GUUY SEWER PUMP
Council members will also
consider whether to spend
S762,511 to rehabilitate the
waste-water pump station near
Little Corona Beach.
WHAT TO EXPECT:
Because the station is now
more than 50 years old, it's
expected council members will
agree that it's time to invest
some more in its future.
-Compiled by
June Casagrande
There's Light At The End Of summer
Why struggle In School?
let me prepare your student for the new school year.
How to Improve:
ti' Study 5ki1Js tirl Note l aking
Paragraphing ti' Vcx:abulan•
ti' E!.!>JY Wricing ti' 5pd ling
ti' Tc~1 Takin ti' Rcadin
Improve & Enhance
Mathema tics Skills
Ari1hmecic ti' Prc-CakulU\/
ti' Algebra I, I I Math An.ily~i'
ti' Gcomcm· ti' fn •onomc1rv
Language Science
ti' 'lpanish ti' French
Adult Courses
Available
ti' Bmlogy ti' Chcnumy
ti' Phrncal 'lcicncc
./ Phy~1c~
Educational TheraplJt
& Reading SpeclallJt
Sp«Nllzin1 in Early ~c
ltcadifll 'toblcm1
We UM on audl0'1Vlof°1ol Multi~ Approach. Thll i1 0 . progrom ol See
it. it Hear ti Wnle 11,
Specialist School Failure,
Learning Problem•
ti' ADD/Dyslexia ti' Lack of
ti' Suspcn~ion Mocivacion
ti' Truan,cy ti' PJrcntal
ti' Poor Grad~ Frusmacion
Briefly_in
TH'E NEWS
Newport Dunes announces
Fourth of J uly events
The Newport Dunes Waterfront
Resort has announced its schedule of
events for its 43rd annual Indepen-
dence Day Extravaganza In addi-
tion to all-day events, live perfor-
mances and activities, scheduled
dctivities will begin at 10 d.m and
conti.oue until 5 p.m. They include a
chtldren's water balloon toss, Hula-
Hoop contests, a family volleyball
tournament, a dance contest, bu<e
and in-lme skating parade, a horse-
shoe tournament, and watermelon-
eating contests.
Admission to the beach and to all
activities is $10 per car. The Dunes is
dl 1131 Back Bay Drive, Newport
Bedch. lnformat1on: (949) 729-3863.
New leadership
program for University
"Master of Arts in Organizauonal
Leadership,• a new graduate pro-
gram in business, will be introduced
in the spring semester al Vanguard
University in Costa Mesa.
The university conduded from a
study that effective leade~ must
learn from a vanety of disoplmes.
The curriculum will feature a
multidisciplinary approach to the
study of leadership in a Vdnety of
organizational settings, including
profit, nonprofit, religious, and both
the publ.tc and private sectors.
The innovative program will be
led by Mission Viejo resident
Andrew Stenhouse. the dean of Van-
guard's School for Professional Stud-
ies, who holds both bachelor's and
master's degrees from Vanguard
Uruversity and an education doctor-
ate degree in institutional manage-
ment from Pepperdine Univer<iity.
"Dr. Stenhouse was the ideal
ch01ce to lead this new program,.
Sd1d Roger Heuser, dean of the grad-
Udte school, in a statement "His
leadership, vtSion and gifts will be
vdluable in making tlus a strong aca-
GETIING INVOLVED
• GETTING INVOLVED runs periodically in
the Daily Pilot on a rotating basi~. If you'd
like information on adding your organiza·
t1on to this list. call (949) 574-4298.
AMERICAN HEART ASSN.
The American Heart Assn. is look-
ing for volunteers to perform vari-
ous general office duties in the
main office and implement educa-
bonal and fund-raismg events
through Orange County. No expe-
rience necessary. ll'alning will be
denuc program that will meet the
needs of new graduate students in
our community.•
Costa Mesa foundation
opposes sewage waiver
A Costa Mesa environmental
group has put itself on record in
oppoSlllon to the Orange County
Sanitation District'~ conlrovers1al
federdl sewage wdlver
The Earth Re~ource Foundauon,
With offices on East 17th Street, has
joined nine cilJes dnd a handful of
other environmental groups in
opposi.ng the waiver.
Group leaders have mobilized
their volunteers lo picket the Orange
County Sanitation Distnct's Wednes-
day meeting.
On lhat ddy, sanitation board
members were l o mull a d1scuss1on
about whether to pur~ue a renewal
of d waiver that allows them to dis-
charge more thdn 240 nullion gallons
a day into the ocedn. However, the
discussion, and declSion', has been
postponed to July 17.
Earth Resource Executive Duec-
tor Stepharue Bdrger said the group
sUll will air its views, with about 300
sign-carrying acllv1sts.
''It's very important," Barger said
about the planned rally. "We need to
help the Orange County Sarutatjon
D1stnct do the nghl thing."
The district has come under tire
from environmentalists who say the
sewage should be treated to a high-
er level before hemg d1schdrged
from an out1all pi pe on the ocean
floor 4 1/2 mtles out to sea off the
Santa Ana River.
lnformat10n (949J 645-516'.1 or
www.earthresource.org.
Vanguard luncheon to
focus on leadership
Vanguard Un1vers1ty will ho~t a
Professional Leader hip Senes lun-
cheon today at the Hilton Hotel of
Costa Mesa
The event will focus on survlVmg
business challenges in today's econ-
omy dnd will include a panel of local
business leaders discussing how
provided. (949J 856-3555.
BRAILLE INSTITUTE'S
ORANGE COUNTY CENTER
The nonprofit organization 1s look-
ing for volunteers with a basic
knowledge of Windows 95/98,
Microsoft Word and a willingness
to learn the adaptive equipment
used by its students to parbcipate
in various activities at the Oasis
Senior Center in Corona del Mar.
Volunteers will tutor legally blmd
adult students with the use of com-
puters and other adaptive technol-
Tuesday, June 25, 2002 5
business, educabon and commuruty
leaders can work together to ensure
success in these uncertain tunes.
The panel will be hosted by E.
Read Clarke and include Jon Dietz,
chief executive of Financial State-
ment Service and Regional SmaU
Business Person of 2002, Paul La
Plante, retired seruor vice president
of Ingram Micro: and David Chne,
ch1el executive of Balboa Instru-
ments dnd the NauonaJ Small Busi-
ness Pe~on of 2000
The cost of the luncheon 1s $40
per person or S2BO for a tal11e ol
eight Check-in js at 11 a.m. The
lunch will start at 11.30 a m , with
the d1scuss1on forum 1mmed1ately
follOWUlCJ from 12 30 to l ·45 pm
Vanguard University
names new provost
Notf:'d researcht>r dnd dUthonty
on m1JdPrn lctngud{JP f\.l,1xuno Ro.,..,1
Jr hd., been ndffied thf' nPW provo .. t
for Vanguard UruvPrs1ty m Costa
t-.-fe.d
Ros-.1 hd5 spPnt the ldsl '><•ven
years c1t Azusa Pantie Uruver-.1ty d'>
prole'>~or of modt•rn lanquage'>,
as'>onatE' dean for thP CollegP of Lib-
eral Arts and Sc1enrf"> dnrl, mo..,t
recently, as director of ALusa Pc1of-
ic's Center for lntPrrultural Pro-
grams
In addition to h1'> work at Azusa
Pac1.hc, Rossi spent three: yf'ars d'>
assoc1dte professor of foreign lan-
guages at Jamestown College in
North Dakota, and c;1x years as assis-
tant professor of modem languages
and associate dean for mtematlonal
studies at King\ College m New
York
Rossi has pubh!>hed three books
and wnlten numerous JOUmdl arti-
cles in the fields of Sparush lan-
guage, and Spanish Amencan histo-
ry and l.tterature
H e contnbute'> rl newspaper col-
umn 10 Spamsh lltlt!d "Tran~1c1on y
Cambio" and appPdr!> in three pen-
od1cals: Accento li1spano News. La
lnlorrnac1on and thl• Azusa Gazette
Rossi will replace Augustu~ Ceril-
lo, who will return to the classroom
as professor or history at the end of
tus term.
ogy. Mary Johnson, (714) 821 -
5000, Ext. 2113.
COSTA MESA SENIOR CENTER
The multipwpose senior services
facility at the comer of 19th Street
and Pomona Avenue seeks volun-
teers who can greet members and
the public at the front desk and
volunteers for the Resource
Department with Excel computer
experience and sharp telephone
ski.lk The Senior Meals program
also needs people to deliver meals
to homes. (949) 645-2356.
ff:S~
Mattress Outlet Store
~~
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3165 Harbor Blvd.
Costa Mesa
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A ft er 22 years of business in Newport Bea
Kris ten has sold th s tore to
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on the' Gnll f<lf 4-~ M1n111a $522 1b
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,
6 Tue.day, June 25, 2002
READE.RS RESPOND .
Readers analyze
fashion logos
AT ISSUE: Three Newport Harbor
High School students circulated a
flier to call attention to clothing
lines' insignias.
A s the school year comes to a close, I
thought I would be able to end the
year avoiding getting involved in
potential controversy. However, after read-
ing the letter to the editor wntten by Luke
Surrett and the ·brief history lesson" he
gave ("Silver Star clarifies use of cross,"
June 18) concerning the Maltese Cross,
class cannot be dismissed just yet.
It should be noted that I am of Maltese
descent; both my parents emigrated from
Malta after World War II. Consequently, I
have been to Malta numerous times to vis·
1t relatives and absorb its uruque culture.
In particular, l have visited both the
ancient ruins that pockmark the islands, as
well as the more modem (if you call 16th
century modem) cathedrals that have their
walls adorned with Maltese Crosses. Dur-
ing my last visit in 1997, I spent some time
at St. John's Co-Cathedral, where the
modem Maltese Cross originated. Most
scholars agree that the origins of the Mal-
tese Cross began with its depiction at St.
John's Co-Cathedral in VaJetta, the capital
of Malta. sometune in the 1570s.
Thus. Surrett IS correct about the mean-
mg behind the Maltese Cross, specifically
that 1t 1s a symbol of "charity, chivalry, gal-
lantry and generosity.· However, the cross
I have seen being promoted by Silver Star
is not the Maltese C ross. Further. as one
who has Maltese Crosses at home on trin-
kets brought back from the islands, I find
the implication that Silver Star is using a
logo derived from the Maltese Cross for its
inherent historical meaning to be stretch-
mg the imagination.
The Rev. Michael Foster, a hlstoric
researcher working on a history on the
Order of St. John. dehnes the Maltese
Cross as ·a cross made from four straight
lined pointed arrowheads, meeting at their
points, with the ends of the anns consist-
ing of indented V's." The cross used by
Silver Star (which I have seen in the front
window of their establishment on the Bal·
boa Peninsula) more closely resembles the
Iron Cross, which Burrell also admits to
usmg on his clothing, m its derivation
because the ends of its anns do not end in
Vs, but are flattened out
Why does Surrett unply that the deriva-
tion of symbols used on his clothing come
from the Maltese Cross? Why does he
spend so much effort attempting to "edu-
cate" readers on why he is using a logo
like it? I suspect that Surrett is searching
(or a noble foundation for images he uses
that have been recently interpreted by rea-
sonable, intelligent people as symbols of
hate. While Silver Star may have derived
the symbols it uses on its clothing from the
Maltese Cross, its Juxtaposition with other
chilling images clearly obfuscates any les-
son on the meaning behind the Maltese
Cross.
If Surrett wants to produce clothing that
can "be worn with pride and reflect the
company positively,· then use an authen·
tic. historically accurate depiction of the
Maltese Cross, not some manipulated
knockoff. Not only would it be closer to
the truth, but the Maltese Community of
Orange County (read: my parents and rel·
atives) would praise you.
PHIL D' AGOSTINO
Laguna Niguel
• IDITOR'S NOTE: Phll D'Agostlno Is • Newport
Herbor High Advanced Pl1eement Amerlctn history
tetcher •nd director of M•gellan Academy For
Glot>.I Studies.
I'm 1ure impressed with Luke Burrett's
wealth of knowledge acknowledging the
hiJtory of the Iron Cross. He must have got
out his World Book Encyclopedia or 1utfed
the Net for that discourse. ti h1I jewelry
and T-shirt business wasn't doing so well,
he could alway1 bec:ome a hiltorian.
But I have one que1Uon: Wu Bwrett so
well-vened on the cross' d1stinguahed hil-
tory prior to printing lt on the back of T·
ahirtl or was his intention just to sell T·
ahirtlf
Thia issue la almost becoming u big u
nr.workl pennitl in Newport B ach, for
crying out loud (which lt seemt a lot of
people are, but that'• for another letter).
~ Wltb that aald, I WU in line behind
aolMCllM at Tiie<> Mesa at break.fut Jut
Sunday weumg one of thMe T-1hlrtl, and
Burrwu'I argument mJgbt have h.eld tome
tway 11 Silver Star hadn't overprinted hi.I
compe.ny'1 lnltiall, SS, in a completely
Nui«yJ. fubion over the crou in ques·
t1oQ. Pu&Ung thOM two logos together cer·
._,, .-as Wr.e an homage to Hltler and
bll MCNI ~ but bey, whatever MUI,
biillf Kldl •l tlUI stUtf up. whether they are
aware of tbe m1 •ng or not, or whether
,,~,.,6"-Star IDMftl lllY'bing or not. MIU__,
Calta Mill
. . . • HowTo ..
'I am juai 110 aad. I love hlgh achool so
much because lt'B 10 easy.'
-Costa Mesa High senior Kevin AJe......,, at his graduation on Thursday
GEi PmLlllED
The Del1v ~ wtlcomel i.tt.rs on '*-concerning
~ twn and Costa Mesa. • -Mall to ldltorlal Ptge Editor
.._ ..... It tht Dally llllot, JJO W. Bey St., Costa= CA 92627 • ~ MOn.M -can (949) 642.eoH
• MX -Send to (949) 646-4170
• a.MAil.-Stnd to dallyp_llotel•tlrn.s.com All correspondence mutt Include full name. home-
iown end phone number (for vertflatlon purposes).
The ftlfot rtteNe1 the right to edit 111 submissions for
cllrlty end length.
Doily Pilot
Graduation day brings
teacher appreciation day
I n my last article, I thanked the city of
Costa Mesa. Actually, I just detailed
what I would miss about this city.
Then I began to think of teachers. I'll
miss teachers, too, so why not write an
article?
Yes, I know, ingenuity.
As I realize this article will only
appeal to a limited audience, namely
those who knew my former teachers, I
will boldly proceed without regard for
the feelings of the aforementioned, who,
might I add, were not lucky enough to
have had my teachers. Poor souls.
As a wee lass, I entered Ms. Talia's
second-grade classroom. Upon entrance
and acquaintance with her windshield-
wiper sunglasses, the coolest thing ever
for those rainy days in the sun, I knew
it would be a year to remember. I credit
her with my affinity for writing, and i1
said writing is not to your liking. don't
hold it against her. Or me.
Third grade brought Ms. Clark. She
was so nice. I remember playing with
Legos. I probably learned, too. Without
that one teacher, the one who recog-
nized I could perform at another level
and moreover told my parents, I would
not be where I am today. How tjiche.
Excuse all future banalities if you will.
Ms. Albright was my fourth-grade
teacher. My greatest memory was her
manner of fusing art with writing (cur-
sive, of course) and incorporating rec-
ognized novels through reading them
aloud. Recently, she came across my
photo in the Daily Pilot and subse-
quently sent me a congratulatory note.
This is a woman who
has touched lives and,
heartwanningly, a
woman who still cares
about those lives.
Thank you, Ms.
Albright.
Ms. Montoyer was
an amazing fifth-
grade teacher.
Leo All! Enough said.
11 Ms. Riley was the
life of the sixth grade.
Three words: Inquiries, Inquiries,
Inquiries, sixth-grade play. Ms. Riley
conveyed this energy and intelligence,
often times in less than three words.
I went to high school and envisioned
myself going back to visit those teach-
ers. I never did.
I walked into seventh grade to see
Mr. Klooster, this towering guy with a
pony tail and stem demeanor. He
talked about dead words and told me to
•chill out.· I chilled. For six years.
I met Mr. Battey in eighth grade. I
truly respect this man for he cares about
the young adults he advises. Sometimes
he even bursts into song, songs ranging
from "Who Let the Dogs Out?~ to
"Under Pressure.• It's great, really.
Mr. Cutler was my world history
teacher. The best teacher in the world.
This man, who owns a pair of red pants
and wears a tie every day, is the epito-
me of cool. His lectures, assignments,
projectl, diction, lexicon -everything
-was as satiating as would be that
jug, yes jug, of water he brought to
school daily. He has this style about
him, this omnipotence (to borrow a
word he once used).
Mr. Garcia ls and always will be the
greatest Spanish teacher on the face of
the earth.
Ms. Bloomberg is another great
Spanish instructor. To see her smile or
even to see her around just warms your
heart.
Ms. Freeman (biology} and Ms.
Christensen (history) were two fantastic
Advanced Placement teachers. they
knew what was up. They taught stu-
dents. brilliantly. They are brilliant.
Ms. Lindfors forever remains my role
model of individual greatness. She is
and continues to be intelligent and
spreads her intelligence (currently dis-
trictwide). She is the archetype of what
every teacher should be and bow every
human should behave.
Mr. Lloyd. If you met him, you know:
i1 you haven't, you've misseCi life. My
grandpa.
A big shout out (that means
acknowledgment) to all of my teachers,
advisors and gurus. You are forever in
my heart. I hope that means something
to you. If it doesn't, I will weep. And to
weep is much more agonizing than to
cry, so please, please, everyone go
appreciate your teacher when it will
still mean something.
•LIA AUi Just greduated from Cort• Mesa High
School, where she WIS editor In chief of the Hitch•
Ing Post. Her columns •ppear occ1Slonally In the
Communltv Forvm section,
Social problems pale in these comparisons
T housands of teens, myself among
them, graduated over the last few
weeks. I graduated on Thursday.
The end of my 38-hour day closed a
year of scandal and social drama.
This past school year, relationships
were broken off, insults were traded
and gossip slithered across carpets and
through air vents like smoke. Even
through graduation night, which should
have been a joyous celebration, tears
were shed left and right. Tears of hap-
piness, of course, but also tears of hurt.
The drama has not been limited to
the Uves of high school seniors, though.
This year, every time Principal Michael
Vossen crossed the street without look-
ing both ways, it was covered in the
newspaper. In fact, the kind of stories
that ran in this year's paper• made a
quarter-point drop in the Dow Jones
look the second Great Depre11ion.
This kind of crtsil tnfiation happens
every year. I wonder, what makes
human being• so attracted to drama?
Kids my age want to feel pain and suf-
fering, or at least make 1ure the kid
next to them does. Stories about lewd
sexual aff ain that shouldn't have even
happened in the flrlt place shoot
through school halls faster than Michael
Johnson on steroids. Whoever wasn't a
part of them wants to
hear every tiny,
insignificant little
detail from multiple
sources. It never ceas-
es to amaze me.
At the expense of
sounding like parents
at the dinner table,
people are starving in
Mott Meredith China. But let's face it,
parents at the dinner
table who work all day
to put the food on the table and don't
have time to hear about the latest news
from the cheerleading department know
what they're talldng about. People are
starving in China, just as people are
exploited in Thailand and killed in Israel.
The ozone layer 1s being depleted, ani-
mals are becoming extinct and the fossil
fuels that men die over right now will be
nonexiltent in 50 years. There are prob·
leim in the world, and not one of them
ho to do With prom night.
But people'• attraction to social dra·
ma ii undentandable. The real prob-
lemt of the world are so big and far
away, it seem1 impossible to do any·
thing about them and therefore point-
less to care about them.
lnllgnillcant, local problem• are
manageable. Why worry about whether
or not a Palestinian state will be created
when I can worry about whether or not
my friend is mad at me because I blew
her off a week ago? We create the
problems and so we can control them.
But they can also control us.
I urge everyone, look at the big plc·
ture. Does social drama really matter?
It's just a waste of time, energy and
emotion. Spend energy on things that
are important and solve small problems
instead of letting them get bigger and
uglier as time goes on.
I'm going to college next year, where
I have to live by myself and decide what
to do with the rest of my life. I don't
have the strength left to gossip. If I have
a problem with one of my friends, I sim·
ply talk to them about it. Most of my
friends can't do this because they think
flaUy bringing something up could be
painful. Well, sometimes the truth hurts,
but avoiding the truth always hurts
more. Take care of your troubles, extin-
guilh gossip, focus on real problems -
and finllh your dinner. There are people
starving in China.
• MAn.....,.,,. Just greduated from Newport
H1rbor High SChool ind writes occ.aslonal columns
for 1he Communliy Forum section.
Ensign band can.play 'Anchors Aweigh'
T hank you for the front page article
• Anchon Awey" (June 13) about
the new anchor at Bnalgn lntarmedl·
ete School.
At the dedication ceremony, Adm.
David Janes presented the anchor •• a gilt
•trom the men end women of the United
Statal Navy around the world to the •tu·
dentl of Snlign School" Tba ASB Preli·
dent Jackie Taylor thanked tbe U.S. Navy
and tbe Bn1tgn Navtgaton (the IChool'•
~pport group of fathen) and accepted the
gtrt on behalf of tbe 1tudent1, "Now that'•
an anchor!" And finally, Mayor 1bd Ridge·
w:J':d Councllwoman Norma 010\W'
d ted th• 10, 185·pound ablp'• anchor
u helium belloom were '91eaed and tbe
Bm6gn School Marchlnq lend pLtpd
• Ancboil Aweigh." It wu a greet ..mt.
and I am ~ to have played ,put.
I want to dart.fy a ........ t11M I ...
mdli D1MY Not'!* w•atlll 111 ..
I,
\ .
QUOTE OF THE DAY
"We didn't give it to them.
(The A's) were a great team
!hat put the ball in play ... N
Kim Pederson,
CMNLL Dodgers manager
•. .
MOP£NER
Ill~ 111
Sports Hall ol Fame
1_),i..IJ1"1&111N U , I \I llU lhll
July 1 honor ..
ROB CUNNINGHAM
Doily Pilot Sports Editor Roger Carlson • 949.S7 4-4223 • Sports Fax: 949-650-0170 Tuesday. June 25, 2002 7
Costa Mesa
NaUonal
Uttle League
Majors
Division
Dodgers
pitcher Justtn
Long, who
struck out 10
in five
lnnlngs
Monday
against the
Huntington
Valley A:s,
throws to
first to nail a
runner on a
come backer.
Despite
Long's
pitching
heroics, the
Dodgers
were
defeated, 2-1,
In eight
Innings,
In the
Dlsbict 62
Tournament
of Champions
semifinal at
Mlle Square
Park In
Fountain
Valley.
PHOTOS BY
KENT TREPTOW I
DAILY PILOT
Dodgers fall, 2-1,
in eight-inning
semifinal struggle
in District 62 TOC.
Bryce Alderton
D AILY PILOT
FOUNTAIN VALLEY • When it
gets to the semifinals of a ny
tournament, games seem to get d oser
as pitching a nd defe nse tighten up
and hits become hard to come by.
For eight innings, the Costa Mesa
National Li ttle League Majors
Division Dodgers battled the A's'from
Huntington Valley. But in the e nd.
the A's got the hit they needed, a
single by Chas BouJe to plate Drew
Duffy with the go-ahead and eventual
winning run a s the A's beat the
Dodgers. 2-1. in the semifinals of the
District 62 Tournament of Champions
Monday at Mlle Square Park.
Boule's hit was the third single of
the inrung and seventh hit for the A's.
The Dodgers finished with four.
The loss eliminates the Dodgers
(20-7), who had won their two previous
tournament games, 16-1 and 7-1.
But the Dodgers went down
ftgbtlng, with fearle ss pitching by
Justin Long for the last five innings
and sound defensjve plays that made
Dodger Nick Oliver (left) ls out at second base on a fielder's choice as
Hunttngton Valley A's second baseman Pablo McBetb makes the play.
Manage r Kun Pederson proud.
"The key to thlS team has been
(its ability to) battle all year to get a
win,• Pederson said. "This time. the
bTeaks went the other way. With all
that pressure on, one bad play could
make the difference, but It didn't. We
didn't give it to them. (The A's) were
a great team that put the ball in play.•
Long pitched with runners on in
every inning but the seventh. when
he retired the A's m order. He struck
out the sjde in the sixth. the last two
batters looking with runners on first
and second.
In the filth. the A's again ha d
runners at first and second with one
out, whe n A's second baseman Pablo
McBeth hit a line drive at Dodger
shortstop Juan Guzman. who tried to
make a basket catch on the ball.
The ball bounced off G uzman's
DISTRIO 62 TOURNAMENT OF CHAMPIONS
chest to the ground nght m fron t of
hun. so he was able to scoop up the
ball and q wckJy run lo touch second
base for the force out Long struck
out the next bdtter to end the inning.
Long struck out 10, walked two.
a nd allowed one run
The Dodgers hdd a chance to tie m
the bottom of the eighth.
With two outs. Bryan Ben nett
singled up the middle. but A's relief
pitcher Cody Mordn struck out the
next hitter to end the game.
Benne tt and Guzman had two
singles apiece.
Guzman scored the lone Dodger
run m the second . I le hit a looper
that dropped in front of second
baseman McBeth. McBeth beld ed the
ball and threw quickly to hrst as he
was stum bling to his knees. b ut
Guzman beat the throw.
After advancing to second and
thud on a passed ball and wt.Id pitch.
respecllvely, and a walk to second
baseman Cory Ames, Guzman scored
on Nick Oliver's fielder's c hoice
grounder to short.
The Dodgers dJdn't advance a
runner past fi rst after the s econd
inning.
•(The A's) kept us off balance.•
Pederson said. ·we didn't do a good
job with two-strike hitting and they
did. They had (a bunch) of called third
strikes a nd you jus t can't do that
SEE DODGERS PAGE 8
Cubs end Yankees' extended run
CMALL Minor A squad
bows out in District 62
TOC semifinal Monday. ..,,,,.........
DMYP!u>T
Yankee enora and 15 bases on balls to
advance to Wednesday's UUe game,
are on a noteworthy run of their own.
•w e've won 22 in a row after losing
our flrst three games,• said Cubs
Manager Jun Madden. Who watched
hill pltchin9 tandem of Markus Trujillo
and Jimmy M.tden c:mlbme to split 10
ltrtboutl eYeDly and .now Jult three
Ymkee bib et Coa Me.a High.
DelpAte Ille lopllde(t loll, Yankee
Manager Phil Bagby, u well u his
playen, 111ID9d content, •• well ••
downrlgbt paad, to bn9 gol9la .. far.
....... wblt ......... •ti*G mm.._.•,_..•ClllS(CM,AU.
MlllOl'A) .... Ml .... &otlae
···=·~ .... ... ~ ..... ....... ~I.it ·=.., .. _sh .• , .....
triumph over the Huntington Valley
Rockies}, I was sick to my stomacb. The
second game (a 3-2 nail-biter overt.be
Cost.a MeM Natiooal Dodgen), J was
bound and determined just to get out ol
there. But In this one, I just wanted the
luds to have an experience they coWd
enjoy. I was a liUle lighter than I UIUally
am In the dugout ~
The Yankees, bowing out of th•
~don tournament. ftnilbed
15·6.
Begby'I b\UlCb appeared 1iugpb
from the start. giving the CUbl lb OUCI
lo IC'On two nana tn the demgnated
vtltlOn' fbJt lll·beL
Wiiia two OUll. tine -..pt ......
wlala"l*ag-...ay.w.,.._ID ~ ................. ,.. ... n: ...... -....., ... -.
.., Cllllldl't ..... ...
1'e cm p111111 awa ...... .
ix walks ln the second lnnlng and
scored one in the third, three in the
fourth and four in tbe sixtb.
Cost.a Mesa IW1lng pttcher Chril
Gute fanned five UMl yiekMd just two
bits In bis three~· AUltin Bagby
followed with four ltftkeouts and only
two bib allowed bl three inningl.
But o11 .... w• tb9 prtmlUy problem
for the Yankeel, wbo, afterllM" .... ng a
llnt-mrmg..-. ... tl ~--
nttlred, Ullll Roland Wood~ .......
d.rtve llngla )Ult °"' tbe" llbuftltop'I
glove wllh .. out In tbl ..
Dylili Orn1l1, ..... ..---................. , .. ....,. ... .. .... . .,...... ............... = ......... ,,. ........ ,
••Fl'llQll ,,...,.._......,
M''t .._... .. _ .........
HONORS
Sailors .
commend
Perrine
League MVP in
basketball and volleyball
named school's Boys
Athle te of Year.
NEWPO RT BEACI 1 • Recent
Newport Harbor High grdd1Jdte Gn>g
Perrine. who collected Sea View
League titles and Most Vdludhle Player
recognition m both bdsketball dnd
volleyball as d senior, ,., the school's
Boys Athlete of the Yedr.
'Perrine, who will dltend Chdpmdn
University and play bd!>ketball, wds
a lso chosen Sea
View Boys Athlete
of the Year by lhe
league's athletic
directors.
The 6-loot-t
standout was a
th ree-year varsity
performer m each
of his sports.
overconung a tom
ACL sustamed in
late July. 2001. to Greg Perrine
com e back dnd
flourish in his hnal prep c~mpaign
He averaged I 0 2 pomts per game
at polllt guard m bd.sketball. help1ng the
Sailors claun the school's fust outnght
league title since 1985 T he Tar!>
finished 20-7 after being eluninated in
the second round of the CIF Southern
Section Division n-AA Playoffs.
In his hnal volleyball season at
Harbor. he shared league dfld Newport·
Mesa Dream Team MVP honors with
fellow senior Loyd Wright and was also
a second-team All-ClF choice 1n
OiVlS1on II.
An outside tutter, he was the Satlors'
consistent kill leader, help1ng them wm
the league crown and advance to the
ClF OlVlSIOn a sellllhnals. They brushed
26-7.
Pernne was a second-team dll·
league cho ice in basketball and
volleyball as a 1uruor
As a sophomore. he was second-
team all-league and also played varsity
volleyball
He was called up to the varsity for
the volleyball playoffs as a freshman.
when the Satlors won the CIF D1vis1on
I crown.
-by Barry Faulkner
WATER POLO
CdMtops
Tars for
crown
CdM wins first girls water
polo club tournament of
the summer campaign.
IRVINE • The Corona del Mar High
girls dub water polo team opened its
varsity summer schedule by sweeping
five games. mdudlng a 6-5 title-game
triumph over Back Bay rival Newport
Harbor Sunday. to wm the two-day
University Tournament at University
High.
CdM rallied from a ... 2 halfllme
deficit to defeat Newport Harbor, as
six players shared the sconng load and
Brittany Fullen made a sav
Daniela DiG1acomo. Danielle
Carlson, Bnttney Bowlus, Camille
Hewko, ViVlan LJao and Katya
Eadingt.on each bad aingle goals for
the winnen DtGiacomo added three
steels, whale s.dmgton WU cradtted
with one Ulilt and two lt.eall.
Katie Enc.on ICOled thr'M goels and
bad four .. to pace Newport HertQ.
wblcb .a.o nseened two goAJa and two
ltMll trwa Carolyn Conway. Newport
gode 1lll"rtn Cotta had eight NY91.
CdM lopped El Toro, 12·8, in e
Sunday--.a, ., Mrniag tine
vktortel Satlirday. CdM blew put
'1\allln, 13-4, ..... 13-5, Del~
tM. ...... to SUDdly'I ....
...Mdtiagollll.tlne .... ............. ~ .............
...... M•t
IJOe+ D WeJW $' .. -c ........... 0$ ... , ........ .., .......
8 Tuesday, June 25, 2002
ADMINISTRATION
UCl's Long to fill in
She is named interim
AD until Guerrero
replacement found.
CRAWFORD HALL ·
Petrind Long, a UC Irvine
senior associate athletic
director and the senior
woman adnunistrator at the
school, was named inte rim
dlhletic director Monday by
UCl Chdncellor Ralph
Cice rone.
Long will assume the
duties of Dan Guerrero, who
begins his tenure as athletic
d11ector at UCLA July 1 alter
9 1/2 years at UCI
POLO
CONTINUED FROM 7
godlS against Irvine.
Bowlus and Carlson hdd lour
godls apiece against Agoura,
followed by D1G 1acomo, who
hdd Lhree.
Bowlus led C dM scorers
dunng the tournament with 14
goals, whLIP Cdrlson (13 goals,
Long, at UCI since March
1993, wUI oversee the
athletic department until a
new AD is found.
"The search has already
attracted an outstanding
pool of candidates,• said
Ronald Huff, dean of UCl's
School of Social Ecology,
who will chair an 11 •
member searoh committee
that includes faculty, staff,
students and community
leaders. "The search
committee will assess all
candidates and make rec·
ommendatlons to the
chancellor, who will select
the next director.•
12 steals and nine assists), and
DiG1acomo (11 goals, 12 steals
and four assists) continue to
show the leadership that helped
CdM High win the CIF
Southern Section Division IV
title ldSt wmter.
Eddington amassed six goals
and eight steals in five games,
while He wko compiled nine
stedls and four goals.
Liao finished the tournament
with five goals and six steals.
SPORTS
DODGERS
CONTINUED FROM 7
against their pitchers. You gotta
cred.Jt their pitchers.•
The Dodgers struck out
seven times look1ng, 16 overall.
Jan Abernathy and Long
weren't too shabby on the mound
either. Abernathy started the
game and pitched three innings,
allowing one run (unearned) on
one hit while stiildng out lour
and walking two.
Dodger defense was strong
throughout, with right fielder
Danny O'Neil battling the sun to
YANKEES
CONTINUED FROM 7
work out of the jam.
The Yankees loaded the bases
in the first, when Bagby ripped a
one-out single off the center-field
fence. Gute followed by readling
on an infield error. After another
strikeout, Kyle Myres walked to
load the bases, but another
strikeout sent the Cubs into the
dugout for a round of high fives.
Gravelle's web gem occurred in
the sixth, when the right 'fielder
fielded a would-be single through
the infield and threw to first
baseman l<evin Hclfman in time to
get the hitter for a 9-3 groundouL
Yankees catchers Wood and
e.ttch a line drive 1n the second
and Brandon Grimmett diving
bead first near the A's first.bate
dugout to catch a pop foUl ln
the third inning.
"What more ca.n you bave?"
Pederson said. •No one wins
them all, but I couldn't be more
proud of a group of kids.•
Monday's loss isn't the end of
the baseball season just yet for
Pederson and four Dodgers.
Pederson and Mike Falbo are
coaches for Manager Blll
Redding's CMNLL AD-Star team.
Guzman. Grimmett. Bennett and
Long are the Dodger represen-
tatives on the team. which opens
July 6 against Westminster.
Gute played aggressively all
game, directing numerous
pickoff throws to first and third to
try to nail runners. Wood fielded
a wild pitch off the backstop and
threw to second in time to get a
runner trying to advance for the
first out iD the Cubs' second.
Austin Bagby, Hoffman and
second baseman Matt Mello, who
reached base on a sixth-inning
walk. will 1epesell the Yankees on
the CMAll AD-Star team. which
begins cornpetition next week.
And. despite the loss. the
Yankees appeared eager to
convene for one final postgame
pizza party,
"It's not like we haven't taken
a loss before,• Phil Bagby said of'
hjs players' unwillingness to
hang their beads.
.. . . ..
Doily Pilot _,
Anteaters' Schober
takes new position
UC Irvine seeks
new swim coach to
replace highly
~veteran.
ANTSATElt AQUATICS
COMPLEX Cbarlle
Schober, who coached UC
lrvtne swimming and dMng
program the put 22 yeen,
bas been named UCI'•
Director of Aquatics.
A nationwide tearch for a
new coach bu begun.
Schober, who wu inltru·
mental in the development
of the Anteater Aquatics
Complex, will now ovenee
\dage and maintenance of
tbe facWlles, hire and
supervise lUeguards, plus
aerve u the director for all
UCI swim camps and clln1cs.
He el9o will develop fund.
ralsl.ng and marbling
projects for aJI Anteater
aquatics, including water
,_
polo. In addttioo, Sdlober will
serve as the meet director for
the Speedo Cu(>, the Big West
Conference Swimming a.nd
Divtbg Championships and
other eelected meets hosted
byUCJ.
Schober, Big West
Conference Coach of the
YNrln 1992, coached 36 Big
West lndlvidual champions
durlng bis tenure.
Throu ghout hla coaching
career, he has coached 12
Olympic swimmers.
·we are appreciative of
Charlie's dedication to the
student·athletes in UCI's
sw1mm1ng programs. and to
the university, for the past 22
years,• said UCI Athletics
Director Dan Guerrero, who
announced Schober's new
post. •The coordination ol our
aquatk:s complex and related
programs requires a tun-time
effort and we feel that Charlie
is the best person for that
position.•
NEWPORT HARBOR BASEBALL ASSOCIATION 2002 All-STARS
Elcrow No. 50142.U-
HK NOTICE TO CREOI·
TORS OF BULK SALE
(UCC Sec. 61051
NOTICE IS
HEREBY GIVEN lhat a
bulk salt ls about to be
made
The name(•) and
buMness addrest(es) of
lhl Mll«(s) 1atare SYS.
TEMS BROKERAGE.
INC , a Callfom1a Corp •
1875 Scenie Avenve.
Svile 101. Co.ta Mesa.
CA
Doing bu11111esa as
PAYROLLSYSTEMS
ANO PAYROLLTAX-
SYSTEMS
All other bvstneaa
name(•) and addreu(es)
UM<! by the Mllef{I)
Wlt/lin Ille pat lhrle
)'Hll at ltlt9d by the
Mll«(s), ire Nont
The locatioo In Call· fom4a of the Cllllf IQCU·
rive otrice ol lhe teller la.
Sameuabove
The Mmt(I) Ind
business address of the
buyer(•) IS/are STRA·
TEGIC BUSINESS SO·
LUTIONS. INC , a C.~·
lon'ole Corp. 1875 Scer.c
Avenue SI.lie 101,
Costa Mela. CA
Tht ISMtl bllrlQ
IOld .. gen..ty d•
ICtlbecl H: All °' 1111 dlv.ior. ~ PIO!*·
tiea • ....U.and~
ne11 • • going concem °' IY9r'f kind and nature, rlll. pel10Nll Ot ITOtd,
tangible OI lnllngltllt,
wtllrtv• loc:Mld, ~ Ina. Wfltlollt llmlClion. Ill ~ ...... OoocWI Ind
tight to the UM of ill
ndenamel. end tllMld
eotpOt'lllonl lotmld apecMc:elly tor the buel-
MM oper'lllonl of Mid --and n locMld It
11176 ~ Av.nue,
6'MI 101, Cotta Meta.
CA t2tl29 The bull ..,. ..
lnlllnded ., be ~ "'* .. tit OflCe °' C£HTAAl. ESCROW
INC.. MeO V.WW.
ll\ld , &IMll 1 OI, lot
~.CA 90010 end
........... datl
... 12. 2002 n. bull ...... IUtltlct llO Ctllforra
U'*"' ConwMtdll COdl tdcWI 1109.2.
The,.,.. and ..
~ ol "' pWIOft will ............. ..., .. .. .. c:emw. u-
CN:JN INC . Meo Mo
.......... 10I, Lol~.CAto010 ..... ----..,..,..,...,
... •»t 11 .... Wllllll II .. ._... .,_ ............. ..............
l
..
• •
T
Polley -ii
--~----...
R~1f':o. 11ml tk-111Ui11ri. llrt' M11l1j<•1·1 to
chan,;t• ••itl1uut nolin• Tiii' p11hlii.hf'r
l"t'~rve11 tlw riglll 1•1 1't'11•or. rc·d11~:1i(\,
Monday ............... Friday S:OOpm
Tuesday ............. Monday 5:00pm
• revi..e or r•'jl'A't ""> doi.,,ifi1•1I •
t\(h-C'r1iiw111c·111. Plt·ll'-'' rq H1rt nm· 1•rrur
1hot moy lw in your dui.,.jfet'.i 11;1
imnlC'cJiutrl). 'llw Dai ly 1'11111 111·1·c·pt •
no liohilit \' for am c·rro1 111 1111 advcrti..rt~l'lll (o; 'Afod1 II lllU\ IH' -{'
By Fax·
(<> .. 9) o:l1 -6:>9i
(Plc-oM" ~rlurl,. ~our ""me-011rl 1)ho11I' n11ml)l'r
111111"r11 mll ,.,,u h31·k foi1h 11 pric"t •11111tt'.)
ByPhone
(949) 6-l2-5678
By Malllln 'person:
:i:rn \~'1·i.1 Bii\ S1 n·c·t
Co..,lu \l<' ... a. (~\ <J~h:.?7
\1 ,,.,.11011 Oh •I lit fl11, ..,,
Wednesclay ........ Tuesday S:OOpm
Thu Nday ...... Wedn .. -..luy 5:00pm
Friday ............. Tl11u'o<fay 5:00pm
rt"'>f>Oll'lihlt• CXl'l'PI for tlu ··o~• "' .1 ...
:cp lW(' Hf'ltlUIJ) O(Tllpio·cl II\ tllt' 1·rrotr
Cttclit C'Ull 0111) IH· 111111\Htl (111 th•·
Telephone 8:30am-5:00pm
Monday-Friday
Boors
Walk-In 8:30am-5:00pm
Monday-Friday
Sa1u nJay .............. ~ ri<lay :~:OOprn
fil'!>I i11~nim1.
.. ~
~ ..
. . . '"
~ EQUAL llOUSl..C OPPORTUNITY
M real ISi.iii advettlSlllO
In lhlS newsoalltf Is subjec1
to Ille Ftdtraf Fa" Housing
Act of 1968 u amended
which makes II 1111011 to advtrtlse ·any pret1rence
hmiUtion or dcscrom1nitl0n
based on race. color. 11ho· Ion. su. handicap, fam1hat
status or national origin. 01
an 11111nllon to make any
such prel•renet , hml1a1lon or d1sc:rlmlna1lon •
This newspaper wtll not
knowlngly accept any
1dvert1aem1n1 for rut estate which Is In v1ota1Jon
ol tilt law. Our readtr1 11e
hereby Informed that all dwlfllngs advertised tn U11s
ntWlpaf>tr ar~ Mllablt on
an equal IJl>90'luni1Y basis To comollln ol dlWlmi-natlon, eMI HUD lol·tree 11
1-800-42A.a590
-... -.. :'
, , g
1 •IS
, , II
101 • 216
rJ . . --, . -· ·~
400. 412 . .
420
II
U0·461
Cl
470. 471
Index
r'-~
..... . . ' ... --·
a
410 . 416
690. 697
Sun<la) ................ Friday S:OOpm
.................. ···--
Reach 80,000 Homes Each Week
For Only $32 per weel< (4 wl<, min.)
Call Lorral• at 642-5671 d4 .,_ .. _
1·~l 11'oona:: 1•:&11• ~tll 454 -111454 -11•.-..:=11~11moo:=I
MovHI Sciecial SpaelOU$ -Found 1110 • B'**" at * lf-lf-lf-lf-lf-lf-lf-lf-lf-lf-lf-lf-lf-lf-*
A Commlnding comt1 t& S795 & S850 ond Ing 38r 281 ~. 2 dlcb. Seenle's Be9l Coflee peril· * SHORES l......rRIORS * COAST COii NEEDS Art YCMi
111
entllul4el1lc. ~ AMiil =~ .~ ll1t5 tJCUN9 a...et. lllce new. pool, galld. 2 Fpe. ... to blldl, ,_ ing lot 1n Ccj,I Cal to tO * 1''11111 Ii * OLD COINS! Gold silver ~tun-lo-Mg ~ penon, Newport 8Mdl fvllD ~ "'--~"""
5
custom nome Dile to bell. GtNI *llt1CS & cerpet a pelnt. S240Clt'lno 949-675-<>712 f'-"DIHl'MM ,~..-RY Je'#tl'Y watches ltlllqUe$. _ '° ....... ., ~= nu po111oon tor hogNy
""'" lion ummer 2002 loc 949-!>1s-o303 hr t4t442·!!50 * ~"""'' ""'..,"'" * eolleetiblts 949-642·~7 ••• 'a 111111 motJvaltd rlOIY wt1ll llrong
Str to 8'9 Co<on. and L.oet c.t ~ haired lllbby * ~~E' * NOW ~ FOR compulWr 11\'5 Fu ,__
loollou1 poor.I COlllllna 1155 7.1•=D1 11111~· I di In tq1I ..,, no tags. TOP usn!ECORDSI Wiii sun ' Ho9tlMw to 949-nl-8808 A!!lty. .. .. 7Sto01n VIC al ~ In Newport * a * R 5o.J = ~3 3030 C:O:~e! He9*-"'-to ~ * * Jazz. & B. t. Rock, DRIVERS. OIO'e. Run Wl#l
A 2Br 2.6& home on Ille 94g.548•1.u •••••• * PRICES~ * etc 50s & 60s Mon-Thurs. 2pm_.pm iteM ol lhl ~ FlfWihed • MIKE 94~7505 a COl1'C>lllY Wlll'I ~ 53 Wl#I OUl.Miil ~~ ASSEMBLY AT HOME It v-. ftatbeda. heavy #ff,ooo. Coatlltw ,...,... Coveted Pl 8elctl a a.., TAOVAAE 21r 281 oonc1o, 1 ·-.a1MIOUI I * vticker Rilltdn, Lame~. Arc l"-"4>rll·-. . * t1a1.11 Beotlrta, outstandcng f4f.75f~ln ~r re5ldenllal area Cape Cod lllm-lley, 2c tttadl 91'· ---.an * 2640 S * I I Arts Crafts, Jtwelry AISo pay 3 yra CDUOTR ex· sar 2 ""• -~-__,,_,_..,. Tennie, comm~, "'" -Avon rrC<'I 471 Ell'LOYBT •leclr0111cs. sewing. ryp;ng per1enee Flllbed/HH """' """ ..... ...,.,.... * I * --on yoor spare t1111e Great 83
32 ~ 714·544· 00 utll ~I. .. 12~. 9VL All STE.El BUILDIHGS * Off Hlwri.ldc• & l'<~llk Co,1..,1 Hwy * Fee Wiii train. Cell ;e:~:ib~78 I I ~ tumishtd grMt loc. W/D, + Ill Newport B<'a< l vrrvn•-·-pay No eapenence No 1·800· 5·9471 . \11n1
....., ~ 11 ..--75M ~ 10 80% ottl 30i60. * 949-642-225'> * 800·795-0380 ext 2 · -
NEWPORT llEACH I'• *I ·1-11-..... , 120. ::1~~ust Sell ** *********.* **** ~~A:J. prclesslooal !24'1!rs.l (CAL'SCAH) Mwpt/Seltt P9rlon
THE BLUFFS 0.-'II ,.:,mf Alcll (IOO)T75-1507 • appearanc., type, worldng ASSIST ntE E1.DEALY ~p:',. crr.w~
On lhl b1uf1 11~ SWIMWEAR BETTER 1-'811 11-fll1W I koo'#ledgl al Excel/Word ln·home comp11'1on~lp, ~ ~s 28t 281, Newly remod lg 2br 2bl THAN DHlgner. All
1
Ufll1QCI UYUTOCI RECEPTIONIST ~·or~::.• ::,. on-~-:·,= '*:0oo Prrc~-townhomt,ll!lllg2 e lllldl Motel ~~.~'°st:: . . . -'2 ~Mil. P'T, llUI Car req'd 71~1 ~ =~
IQ!rrt 949-7S9-3733 Oii 1 811 Ill Ben S2900imO MANAGERS to Tenm 0r-1 Open 1.oc111 ~ cats. dogl lor
111
wllllig '° worll wlcerlds ' AYll now 9'9-640-5324 • SPECI •L• aklt, Mon~ Zipper CtWla • • CSA PER5WI edopiorl '*"' or "-· twl'f .._.. have ~ 8ooldletpef.ft/T IM*lJOn BAYFROHT ELEGANCE " Doi. ATHENEUSA.Com KITTEM. Purr·ltc1 Sll·Sun noon-4pm Futocon appearance, computer IVal lor a mor'Olgl com-
BRAHD NEW USTl«l lO¥lly 28r 281 Condo ~ S20 Off wmt AD (CAl"SCAH) 5'.mner1lmt Git ""* Island ANIMAL NElWOAK knowledge htlpfl.ll peny loca1lld 111 N 8 F1t1 S1.lt5,000 ~ dlQ, ~ tx:ti. (Mull ~ .. Ad) I OM Into MM44-mt In. ~~Mull be "'°"
Ru~rent now hiring
E1.p'd S.rvtrt. CC>OU '«*! 3461 V• Udo N B
Fu 111 ... 1ZM170 !Ill M•m-1120 "' gll, no l*S _.... .. 236 11111 & 9*tllllllla. 11'1.Gold NKlll•et. • ~r •YH ''" www.lftllllllnetwof'k.Ofll C*ll '" """"' Boob and 94~16 948338-1125 SiUied on ~ ..... cm. wJdiamond Shots •mo $400 mEE JO DAY WEI GEH£11AL OFFICE ~ .. Pteaa oontaCI
lelldlaiped gr1M1C1a Ef9IYld. 949--451·2025 ••• UST1MG FOA DOGS lot ~ prqec:t. 32 Ills U. VIiie 949-8XMlllOO 0t s.-poeNon .. ...,. .•
Ytcflt .,,_ Loci ol
llM"Y 11111111 kl10fflldgt gt
CORNER OC~N
VIEW S.425,000
JUST LISTED! eat. Mi-723-8120
BMutlful Remodeled
Blufb Townhome. 3Br
1.581 1425.000. egt.
Lindi 714-404-5611
~·~tt· .-,. • .. ,~
.. ,-~ ". .
.... ~ ... · ..
28r 2.581 T wnhM on bilfl
nr beach. fned yd, Fp. clJI ri: • tll111 1P1C1 Pel ? ~95mo !QI 94~2-9699
..... \lerdl 4br 3bl, 2 c
Oil. 2434 gf $2500l'mo rd gatdener 1 yr lie Aval 7 ·22
T ore11 R!y 714-5'4G-73S5
48R & 31A S117S Both ret1.1rbi1hed, n••
carpels, pall'll. etc. Gat. lg
lenced yd. 949-642·2221
FEATVRES 24·Hour apecit1. ~. ~ Mt-451-4tOI I* ....._ tax l9Ulll. 9'H33-9354
Lobby/Direct dtel f 11,0QO!obo 94~1 pl\onts/FIH HBO,
ESPN & OleclPool &
Jecum. Glltll r.un-
dry Cbe ., 40S & 56
Fwys Min'• llOln 0 c
Flllgrdl. colltgl and
bells Wt*lng dts-
llla to lhopl Ind
rtlllurtntl
COSTA MESA MOTOA INN
2277 Hlrtlor lll¥d
Pllont MM4a 4140
E'Slclt CM Twntlm prol'I
lemtlt j)!lf'd, ellln, pvt rm/
bl. Olf, WIO, ~10IJ/m + \II u!I!, !M
""°" A aa.DI There ttt over 100.000 cMdlllll In ... us...,.1ar.,..... ................ ............... r--. a fllwlllllt ·=~ "-DA ...... •n 1.00-1 ....... ........... .. ,. ,,...,.,.. ---
Oc:lc1t kitten•. CFA. FIND PACSFIC VIEW PT llllp ,..-. ., dlMr tlOllrlll g ~ ... 1 Lelpll'd looll ..... 9400 MEMORIAL PARK flyers eroond Newport M.. 11,..... -.. .._......, 1441 --1
1
,.,.""'e•x•ok-ci•,_-.. 'cl•..._.•..;iiii.i ananiii apai ... irtment ____ ,,,_,.iiim~Clll-~---·°'-ta~Be1c1t--Good-•P1Y-•Mull-bt..;.;~;;;"';•';;"i500';;;N;;W0011;;'"' • ~ • .... !pC!!l!d. tot-734-1773 ll'lroUgh ~._, -lo .... 121.-. fltxillt 5e1tl 94M51•1 122 ~I CM t!H4Mtl2
·~· ........... •St .... •Au&ol•Of'ic:4~
$$CASH PAID $$ .,.,.....,.,...,..,...
WI! BUY ESTATES
·~•fMtdr...W.
, CONSIGNMENTS1
, , . I
::~
SOUTH cgAST AUCl'I N
nm ........ ..... -.ca am -•i.c-CAQl6
OAR
rstWdti
Jm'1mis
"-*' J*lliis
• • ~-,_ .•
Have A
Garage Sale!
Call the Piiat·
Claeelfleda
at CB4BJ B41i!·l!IB7B
ta Place Vaur
Garage Bale Ad I
•
/•
10 Tuesday, June 25, 2002
TODAY'S
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
478 EllPLOYllENT
OPPORTUNfTIES
Receptlonl1l·PfT posthon
IS responsible lor gree11no
eustomers and l'llndors
AASW81 tneom•ng 'Calls In I
professiOl\al ette>ent
-and ass.st W"'1 aom111 taw Ut*2e voa maNt·ma~ some ()()fll~er
ptollCJ90Cy. MS W01d. Excel
and M1crosoh Oullook
Please contact Lisa Veale
949·833·8600 or tu re· suma 949-833-9$4
Call Classified Today
949) 642·5671
HM)2 OD:ll\M'_r_s,._"
311 Subl•O S7 -~d_,,.
oomment 511 -WNI of .a Oiyden work ·e.1man• ~I ~ .. ,, resort 60 Olrltr'• optlone 42 Mos! IObu$1 IS I Tizzy
44 Sl.0<m center ~ Oc*1MllClll01g
411 Cont• 85 Extieme -Olghlhood dlgJM
49 Sod!• 51 F\obust 52 Mulleal work ~Abode
56 Ballfo cou1lne 5e Spell! haarMly
WOttl From HocM S 1200-
St SOIYmo PT No 9KP W~I
1ra1n 1 ·888·294-0552 www
successexcie torn/perr1
(4) Vtl«ln R.E. Agenll
Wanted for Balboa Penin-
5ul• olfce Sales & Loatl
comml$IOllS 949-873·7480
12 13
.,..... bl ...,. thll
the 111111191 In thla
~ may rtqUiN you to cell 1 900
number In which
tl\lrt le I ch1r91 per mlnule.
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING
la the l'ffOUrce you c.n count on to Mii
1 myNd of merchlndlN ltern1, becauM our
column• compel quellfted buyerl to call!
(949) 642-5678
Bridge
8v CHARLES OOREN with OMAR SHARIP Md TAHNAH HIAaCH
PLAY OR DEPEND?
Eu1-Wctl vulncroblt. North ~It.
NORTH
•Kl
Q 1042 .;. a
• K 109'5 J 2 EAST
•103
WEST •89754 ~ 9
O AK75.\
•Q
.~ 8
o QJ JOt642
•AJ4 SOtml
• AJU ":'AKJ7653 t: Vufd
• R7
The bklding:
NOM'llf EAST l • p.,.
<I 5C· ,._ ,_
SOUTH WE.4>'1"
l Obi 5 .._
Opcmng lead. Queen of •
{
Study 1hc nucrion Wld dlngrum
11bovc lhen clccidc: Would you 111lher
play n< defend live hearts after the
lead of the 4ucni of clubs? ln a ron1pe11tive 11Uct1on whuc We~• made 11 1Akeou1 double for 'p00c' lllld d111mood.~ over Sooth·~
re~pomc. South wi!itly clecu:d noc to
defend five diamonda. Althouah lhllt
C:OOlfllCI goe. down I Irick, there WU
no &uaralllee ol dw, and five hearu would ~urety llOI be expensive. S\IP008C )'ClU elect to dcCcod and
find ·me bc!lt klld ar the queen of
clubli. Deel.ow coven with the Ulj.
Ea)t WIN with the ICC and cashes the
lack. /\s ~.What do you dilCllf'd'I
)f yoo discard eilhc:r a low ~ or a
low di:unood. ~ will lelld lhe other plain MUI. Declarer Win.\ thc
spl(ie, or NfTJ the dlMnond. dniws
wmps md cla1nil the fCSl of the
trlcb. The aame applitS if you dis-can.I the seven of diamond.• -pat1-
ncr will shift 10 that Mlit and th111 i~
lhll end for the dcfc:n..-;e.
Suppose, however. yuu pitch 1hc
ace of diamonds I PiU1ncT .will work
out lhar f!>'I hlld other ways of a\lclllg
for a \hill. and that you wanl clu~
uinunued.. P;anner follows }'OW' SU¥·
gblion and your quc::cn of hean.s ·~ promoted to lhc sc11in3 trick. Despite th111, however, you should
choose to decla~ All you need do to en.~un: the conlt'llCI is refuse 10 oover
the qllCCn of clu~ at trick one. No
martcr how the dcfcnder.c coiumuc.
rhey cannot ¥ct more l.han two club
tricb since one ruff :.ets up the suu
f0t all the diJCAnls you need and
there are ample cntrie,\ 10 dummy.
1~1
PINN be ftlY of out of ,,., oompanlff.
en.cit with tlll loc.I
lletttr Bu•lr-• Bu-,_, belol'I you lll1d
any~orfeH
lor ..mca. Reed
and undentand 1ny
conlrletl before you
1lgn.
ABSOLUTE GOLDMINE! '° wndlng mecNnM wttll exceltnt roc.tlonl II lor
!!.995 IC)C>.234-QC
AMERICAN VENDING
ALL acASHQ aa LOCAL YlNDING ROUTE 1~24HRS
1-"=I
PAYDAY ADVANCES BY
PHOHE In sec:ondl. Repay
your netl pt¥day Conve-
nient • Fu1 • Conltdenllal No credit clleclc Mvanoe Smancatd • Anytine, Any·
Wiler• 1 -8()0..680-9166
(CAl'SCAHI
Good People
SSCASHU Immediate Clth for Slructured settle·
ments, annuities. real 81·
1a1t, noies. private mon· gege noces. IGddent cast1,
1/ld insurance peyouts.
!800 )7 94·731 0 CAL'SCAN)
I• MITRMMI I
1 ltl Burro 17ft
T re val triller, perfect
cond, Ulld 4 ""'*' Pull • cyl, .... COl'lt.llnld. ...,
512-43t-310I
IMWtl• tedlll W Red wt'llllct.Qwmed whll
$18,911() 1177"8
PHILLIPS AUTO
949-574-7777
BMW 740ll Sedln '11
Wh•e w/blk lttu, fuM powet certified to I OOI( mllelll
'24,980 117512
PHILLIPS AUTO
949-574-7777
Bl.lk:lr Le Slbr9 'M LDT. Low 241c mi, IMlt1ef
(403765fJ83STl $7 988 NABERS CADILLAC
(71'1540-tl 00
Cldllc c.r. ...
6 C'1I, tow m1. 1 owner,
hAI power' leather (081880t'J733P) $14,988
NABERS
19001~
Cldilllc De¥lll 'OZ
Low 1 SK ml. w111. tin lllv, co bllance cl Wiii'. (1~1Pl m.• NABERS
(900} MW5t2
Cldlllac El Don1do 'tt Low 34k Iii. bllc*. IMlher
(920959l'J706f} 121 .988 NABERS
(800) MH5t2
Cldllc El Dondo .. VS, lealher, ful power, low
mllea, I OW!\91, very clean CALVIN KLEINfTOMMY
SI RALPH LAUREN SS
Be The Bossi Big s
FIN lrdo Fr11 samples
901).511-4111
ha-.. bid credit to.
Gel on tlldt
Cell 1.-.11W97'3
14: LDGW=I
I I (607287f3714P) S19,988
-~ _ _,l=IOO=Nr-=:.=~=:s=t2.___
All CASH OMOY Aoutl
Do yo;i earn $800 11 a clly?
Your OW1I locat Cindy IOUll
Includes 30 machines and
cancty all for S9,99S
1 ·800·998·VENO
!CAL'SCANI
ADVERTISE IO ewer 5 mil-
lion Callfomtans wll/I 1
statewide clas5ified Id Ill 185 newsoapera $450 for
25 worcts. Expand your
tionzons FREE informatlOn
plCklQe (916)288-6010,
(918)288-6019.
www c el·&t e n tom
(CAl'SCAHI
• AHAHCE ADJUSTERS • r-> 316-<1295 SELE T FHANCIAL,
SELECT NO OMA. HIGH RlSK-lOW INTEREST
VARIOUS LOAN.IS CALL NOWI
F,_ ~·fast v:f'. HOH PROAT COHSOUDATION CALL
1-tN-794-3331
24 hour~
V~Golf 'll
Tighl '"II'"•· new clulc:h, bmtng bell, fuel pumps, co
pla.y91, 13611 ml, "":e = $1395 Mt-2
ACURA Cl 2.2 't7
Gw;lpf ""· pe. ,,., pb, llec1 Mita • WlnCIOWI, • co c:lllngef, $14,400 pp
714-fe2·1129
Cldlll9c E**8dl '" V8. ll'Wll corwJ. mull .... llM
power, leal!ler, tow p«.g
(4147441'3759P) $26,988
NABl:RS
(900) MW5l2
C.-.C s.flle STS 't7 ve. p./Mlls. cc. it. ~
llltS. leellltl. ~
(8266321JS12P) $15,988
NABERS
(900) 945-5592
ChevrOltt 511\lef'ldo 'M
4•4. tow miles, MO, V8
(227879f.1818T) $10,988
NABl:RS (IOO) M&45t2
Dodal DlllllllO a T W ~ llV, rMr NC
$17,lllO (17181) NI.UPI AUTO MH?tzm
CHEVY S-10 PICKUP 'II
LS, IC, lllloy9,
(~i.. ....,. RoOlne Ford
I00-2n-13M .
FOAO ASPtRE 't5
AT, AC, CllM
(1f:.:8.k,. S397I AoOlrll Ford
900-213-1311.
FORD EMO '11 Van con· version. 460 c1. trailer
towing pl(g, lull pwr, new
lites. 4 ClilCain chin, bed.
TV. VCR, be, grey/wtlt ldl1I
cond. $7600/obo. 949-640-5032 or ~1029
FORD F-150 XCAI 'M
F-150 Eddie ..... '-*' , .. ,., 11171
Tlllodort Aotilll Ford
!00=2"-1311
FORD FOCUS U 00 .
Aulo, ~. cllln
(203872) 111,m ,,_.,,. Aoblrle Ford
I00-2tl-1SN
Ford llillMllnl! eonv. ·oo
WMWn lllv rrif 26k "' $16,980 118057
PHIWPS AUTO
MM74-Tm
Ford Taurua SE ve 'ti
38k ml, mt!JUIC sliver,
1111-lm CUI, lilcl MW cond, f1n1u1lc value, $6,995
t276541 8lir P4H8t 1888
Hondl Civic DX '9" 2dr,
auto, pl ' co pilyef. •llCIP' llOllllly cle1n, runt llfHI
I OOk ml. !Ill! pnc::. $3988 t
lax & lie. Tomato AIM Salet 714·437-1931
lnflnllY l30 ·oo Dark gm11an Int. 36k mi, loaded, moonrt, mini cond, Qlll'IQld, nllmkr
$19,750 MMfW111
JAOOAA XJS Conv. '95
lmmacullll IMMlUI co & Alenn. S23,900
t4Mso-5MO P1r10fm1nceJ1guar.com
"'91i1r XJS 't3 8 cyt, 2 i 2 Coupe, 69k, Bntish rlClllg
green, 1111 lthr. moon-roof.
dlrome wheels, bl1Ubtu1
cond $12.995 1457219
Bkr 949-586-1888
JlgUlr XJI V.fl '14 801c ml,
tllYer sand, oatmeal llhr,
CO, chrome wheel&. supelb
IMChlnicll & body cond,
lantulic ¥aloe. 2 YI WI/·
llllCy mil $9,995 •872518
Bkr 949-586-1888
Lind Rover Dl1eovery
8"111 II 'tt 'Bk ml, luN lad
w1rr, BrllHanl Bliek/grey
lthr, cilll moon root, ctvome
wtil. ,.., -is. gersged. rJ
amkr, 124,250 vt197•21
llkt ... ~1-
Lind Roolw ~ ...
6611 mi, lllver/grey Ith!, dull
moonroot. beallliful origlnal
lb new oonditlon, $13,995
496751 11kt MMlf-1•
WW GS300 Sedlll '15
Golcl W/1111 llhf, ful pwr
$17.980 118018
Phflllos AUlo
•••·574-7777
Uncoln Town Cir 'tt Low 1 Jlt ml, wt-. tin llhr ,,..._, 1_
(7109l22/3836T) s 19 988
NAB I: RS
(900) M5-65l'l
Miil C230 Sedan ...
Smob &IYet w/Creme llllr,
()!lly 5511 mt FIM pwr
$20,!leO 00 117611
PttllUPS AUTO
949-574-7777
~ A.cl StOSL '11
86k milts' Gorgeous! Ntw paint, lots ~ new chrome
rlCOlld1tlonect Palamino
INlhet, Europe111 htld· lighllll $18.900
MH7WIU
1220 A~11270===l l214 ==11~==11'Ta.~11~y·11-
POLtCY --------------"'--------' In an eH0tt IO olier me best
MIVIC8 possible lo our read·
111 Ind ldvtnisers we w~I
requue Contractors who
1dven1se '" 1t1e SeMCI OtrlCtory 10 incl~ tht11 Conrr1c101s License
number in fllelt aaveruu-
men1 Your c:o-operalJOn ;s greatly appreoaled.
1224 ADOnlONI I _ /REllODEUNG _
FARTHING INTERIORS
l<rtcllen 1 Balh I Remodel
and Room Acl<hhons
Ll500875 MH45-9'25
A TO Z HAHOYMAH
lnsllll reface cablnell
lutchenlbalh/doors/wlndow1
Doug 714·5"6-7258
CARP[T CLEllfllNG
Any 3 rooms
onty $79 Local company
10 years In the area.
Famtly Carpel Care &
Upholstery Cleaning
JCM
CONSTRUCTION
WILL CUT THE
COST OF YOUR
REMODELING
JOB BY 10%
Or we'll Mncl you
and a friend out to
dinner at the
Market Broiler.
All ii takes 1s a
6·minu1e phone cell.
Just pull OUI you1 bweat
btd, walk IO the phone and
diet 1 ·800·520·5530.
Read ll'le detalls and
cost and they Wiii
lmmedlately name the prtoe et whicl1 you'M get
the same exact Job,
applea IO apples.
If JCM's ptloe lsn11.t
..... 1~ io-. you•,.
oft IO ll'le Markel 8rollilf.
You 'r• going to
write • cllec:/I to 1omeone.
Why not writ• • •m•ll•r one to JCM Con•trucllon?
-~IJC> Ml7'19
(949) 646-9999 I m. ~ I
II CAAPIT ~ CAAP£1' ft _ _
Repein, P11dllng, lnttan, Coul1eoua Arty ..,. )obi
Whoinale' 9'~92-0205
•
Lou Toms~
Weekly mMll, l1M tnmmlng
& lnstallallon. 25 yeara •llll Uc/ln~l'ld 949-5"8 ... 363
Dirty WOii! Undec:aipe Co.
""lntenance. Llwn Alral·
Ing, Spnnkler Tunt·Ups/ Rep1111, Clean·Ups Ind lnstittation 714·103·8650
dl'1yworkl1nd1cepe.com
... .. . . .
Wha'9vtf You Needl Aepairl of .. , types.
From the roof to the
basement&
everything in between
CALL MELL
949-887-1097
Wllll Ewr You Hiid!
Repeill ol .. type&.
From the Rool lo !he
BaMmenll & everyt111ng In betwMn
CALl MEL
ONE DAY DECOffAT1"GI
We UM Whal ~ lllV91 ,,.. ConNtlllon
949-548-Sm , .. ~.::...1 .. 1 • __ ._._. __ 1
JUNK TO lttl DUMPlll
714-911-IMZ
SELL
r-·-·-
Pl.ANTATlOtl SHUTTERS
Vinyl-Clad Wood, FrH on
home est L1528019 can
Jl!rl 714-227-2911 cell
MOVIN·MAN
Careful • Courteous &Cn.p
PtanOS • Antiques
Fr. Watdrobm
Fr. Eatlmat•
949-376-7825
READYwta
YOU AREi
Low Rates. Since 1981
94~5
PUBLIC
NOTICE
The Clltt. Public·
Utllilles Com· mlsibl REOUIRES
that .. UMd houM-
hold goods movers
l)rint II*' P.U C. cat T number, lmol
and chauffers print tt'ltlr T.C.P. number
In .. adverilmlnls.
" you NrYe • ""'"
don lboi.Jt Iha --fly d a mover, lino
Ot ~l-PU8UC u 11LITIES
COMMISION
714-558-4151
. -1. ._._. _,
• • l i
; ~ l . . "'
CUT 6 ROLL
PAINTING
""'*fl•"'* s .. , .....
Sf ......... Uc/1111' ·····-714.m.a117
~"""'~· ~Professional
Painting Uc f4~
llltedar/lltedar .........
C*lllk ...
Rob Isbell ·Owner
Costa Mtsa. Ca
(949) 646-3006
een 949-887-1"8-0
Plll•IStueco Pllctl SeMng SOU!hem Callfomta
for 25 years Lt3268&4
24 houri! 714-654-7~1
• 9tucco, Ldl. ,,..... •
Restucco. Room AddlllOn,
Palch1n9 REASONABLE' 71W2M'47 904-04!!pgr
...... ,,..U ........ lftc
... l.OCA'flNO
ILlc:'raONC l&Aa UM ~
J~Semce
675-9304
1"'~
DltAIN • -= CLIAllllG SNaAUJT
TWUDY PWMllNG
949-645-2352 --.
Daily Pilot
Oldtmoblll Auroni '19
VB. tufty io.dld, lull pwr.
llhr. G~ cell
( 1 I 5802J3780P) '11, 988
NA8tRS
llOOI 145-5592
OldllllObllt Sllhoulttl ...
Dural <Ill. lthr. CO, !Mr ac-·
(292152/3789Pl $15988
NABl:RS
(IOO} MW5t2
Pontllc Al'IO!rd 'M
T·Top. bllck. many extras
121&Snf.l8'9n s9.988 NABl:RS
(114) 54H100
vw Cllll1o '97
Wlllle, Gt9ll, lun COIN
$10,980 n7950
PHILLIPS AUTO
Ml-574-7777
VW Jetll GLS Sedlll '01 GtMl w.111n, W1t, S-spd. s 15.980 ti 7809
PHILLIPS AUTO
949-57 4-n11
VW Jette GUI Sec*I '97
Black w/Black Int. auto
$12.980.00 118076 PHILLIPS AUTO
94t-574-7m
71 ~ a..tlt Conv. d8SSIC 1np1e wMe conv.
prol'I resund. ah ~ Plllnt eng. top, Cl\lome, llUOOt
CtaSSIC car and ~· $7,950 714·751·2<1&4
I· =I
* CW. For Y0411 Cir • Ptlllllol AW> .. buy your ¥9hlc:ll P9id lor Of noc..
Clllor~or~
• '4'?,7'4.7777
... Femlly Oper1NCI Otlllr
with <Mii <IO yea11 exp wiM Pl'f a very flli( poce tor yo;i1
C'lr Van OI tn.Q petCI tor 01
not. Cell Doell Rey e
714""37 • 1931 or 328-3228
The
Roofing
Se._e~~~
800-939-8846
Al T..-el it.oft a · ·~·C..--W
(949) 548-0769
www.Wh • rll<lf '"m
Im mmrul _ IUT CONTROL •
P£ST CONTROL
As Low As
969°°
F1mil7 Owned
St. Uc PTo2421