HomeMy WebLinkAbout2002-03-15 - Orange Coast PilotFires bring
forth deep
-sentiments
-I remember the first time
my husband brought
home a fire extinguisher
from Home Depot.
It was about two years ago
-a day after we beard that
our close friends, a couple in
upstate New York, lost their
apartment and most of their
belongings in a fire.
They jumped out of their
bed in the middle of the
night, and ran out into the
cold, snow-covered lawn in
their pajamas and bedroom
slippers. Sometimes, the line
between nightmare and real-
ity seems very, very thin.
The day after, their clothes
smelled of smoke, their new
computer and stereo system
were damaged because of
the water and the expensive
couch they couldn't really
afford, but had lovingly
picked out anyway, was
burned.
But apart from all that
loss, which was not covered
by renter's insurance, what
hurt my friends the most was
the loss of invaluable, little
things and souvenirs ~y
had collected over the years.
Photos from trips they bad
taken together and with their
families, a little, ornamental
table her parents gave her
for their wedding in India,
her precious red and gold
embroidered wedding sari,
the stuffed teddy bears and
Beanie Babies she collected.
They were all gone.
It was hard for me to go to
sleep after I spoke to them. I
looked around my apart-
ment. Sure there wasn't
much stuff in there. But what
little I had suddenly seemed
extremely valuable.
The next day we got our
little fire extinguisher and
purchased renter's insurance.
My friends have probably
somewhat recovered from
their trawnattc experience
two years ago. After the ini-
tlal shock, I didn't think
about it too much either.
But the fires that have rav-
aged the Newport-Mesa area
in the last two weeks are
dling that bordble feel-
g that was burled some-
bere deep in mt suboon-
sctous.
I've witnessed traffic fatal-
itles and beanl people talk in
graphic detail about murden
and~ atmes. &cit
home in India, I've seen the
SEE NOTEBOOK PAGE 4
,
ON THE WR: WWW.DAILYPILOT.COM . FRIDAY, MARCH 15, 2002
Candidate
urges court
to remove
judge's name
• But Costa Mesa resident will
have to await ballot ruling related
to besieged Superior Court official
as it will have to be made in Los
Angeles County.
LollU Harper
DAILY PILOT
COSTA MESA -A judge accused of
child molestation and the Costa Mesa
woman who launched an uphill write-in
campaign to unseat him make strange bed
fellows but nonetheless find themselves
aligned in one area: Both want the
besieged judge's name removed from the
November ballot.
Gay Sandoval, a former Daily Pilot
columnist, and Orange County Superior
Court Judge Ronald C. Kline, who faces
charges of child molestation and child
pornography. both Oitlcized Thursday any
attempt to block Kline's request to with-
draw from the race.
Kline received only 33% of the votes in
the preliminary election, despite the fact
that hLs name was the only one to appear on
the ballot. Eleven write-in candidates com-
bined for 67% of the vote, with Dana Point
attorney John Adams taking the majority,
according to preliminary tallies of half the
handwritten votes.
lf Adams retains the majority of the
write-in votes, he would face Kline in the
November runoff.
Kline, however, wants his name
removed from the ballot because the con-
troversy surrounding his aiminal charges
has caused ·an unbearable strain upon
him,• a statement from his attorney read. If
Kline's name is removed from the ballot,
Adams would face the next highest vote-
getter among the write-in candidates.
Enter Sandoval.
With nearly half the precincts counted,
Sandoval -who was the first to challenge
IO.ine's automatic reelection -is in distant
second with 17% of the handwritten votes.
RICK EGAN I SALT lAICE TRIBUNE
UC lrvtne forward Jordan Harris steals the ball away from BYU's Daniel Boblk In NIT
action at the Marriot Center in Provo, Utah. Hanh scored 13 points, but the Anteaten
were unable to give Brtghan Young even a scare ln the second half. BYU won, 78-55.
See Sports, Page 7.
1\vo things stand between Sandoval and
a spot on the November ballot: the court's
decision to allow Kline to withdraw bis name
and an offid.al tally of the votes, securing her
SEE CANDIDATE PAGE 4
Susan Street offramp plans slow freeway project
•Officials from Costa Mesa, Caltrans and C.J.
Segerstrom & Sons are now detennining the costs related
to plans to ease congestion into Home Ranch.
LollU Karper
DAILY PILOT
COSTA MESA-Oty and trans-
portation officials met with Home
Ranch representattves this week to
assess the costs of a sudden halt in
fieeway improvements related to a
new Susan Street offramp.
Representattves from the dty,
California Department of 1\'ans·
portation and CJ. Segerstrom &
Sons called an emergency meeting
Tuesday to figure out who would
pay for the building delay of the
Fairview Road onramp to the north
San Diego Freeway, said Peter
Naghavi, the Costa Mesa manager
of transportation services.
A Susan Street offramp,
designed to give direct access to the
· Home Ranch lite just north of the
San Diego Freeway, would require
an extension of the Fairview Road
onramp, Nagbavi said. Existing
designs for the Fairview Road
onramp project -one of many
improvements in the works to alle-
viate congestion -would conflict
with plans for a Susan Street
offramp. The onramp would be par-
tially demolished if Susan Street
were approved, Nagbavi said.
1b avoid upenstve baclttrack-
ing. officials stopped construction
wblle waiting for final approval
from the Federal Highway Adm.in·
istratton to change the current
design to accommodate a Susan
Street offramp. It was granted last
week, Naghavi Mid.
•This was a att1cal path. We
wert losing Ume, • Naghavi Mid.
"The more time; the more~
tlon1 the more costs to reverse.•
C.J. Segerstrom & Sons agreed
to front another $500,000 for the
integral. yet unoffidal part of ~
Home Ranch project, Segentrom
spokesman Paul Freeman said. 1be
Segerstroms already gave the city
$1.5 million for construction c:osts
and will ask the coundl Monday to
accept the additional SS00,000 to
make up for loaea during tbe dellliy.
Although transportation autbod-
ties have not endon8d any formal
designs for the pro1>9Md SUND
Street offramp, Freeman Mid tbe
changes in the Fairview Ro.cl
onramp are a $0lid first step. He ii
optimistlc the Susan StnMt oftrunp
SEE OFFRAMP MGE 4
Two 0C<;: .professors Will share honor ..
: •Colleagues name ftne
arts and math ~uc.ators
Faculty Members of the
Year at the college.
2 Friday, !Jach 15, 2002
<:Soprano %nee !Jf em/ny, r;vho sinys .
Ounday as par/ of !.he Cenler's 'Vo.tees
in c5ony' series, hear~ens back' lo 1£e
oriyins of 1£e Q)()rd'chua'
Jhe '
Young Chang
0AllY PtLOT --:<7< enee Pleming sang jazz 85 an y, undergraduate student in
Potsdam, New York. At the
time, singing #music (that
was) 300 years old" was
unfathomable to her peen;.
But as a graduate student at the Eastman
School of Music, Fleming found herself turn·
ing away from the rhythms of Cole Porter
and George Gershwin. Instead, she fell jn
love with the classical genre. Today, she is a
diva of the opera world -the same archaic
...,orld she al.most. didn't step into.
t While teen sensations give 'diva" a funky, contemporary rap. Fleming reminds
us of the original definition -"divine or
god."
The American-born sopr~o ea.med the
title for her acclaimed, expressive voice, her
far-reaching repertoire and her experience
in singing just about everything, whether it's
Gershwin or Strauss, opera or jazz.
Her program for Sunday's "Voices in
Song" concert at the Orange County Per-
forming Arts Center reflects Fleming's diver-
sity, with works by composers such 85 Han-
del, Strauss, Puccini, Debussy. Gershwin
and even some emotional Rachmaninov.
Jerry Mandel, president of the Orange
Cowity Performing Arts Center, said diva is
a fitting title ror Fleming because • diva is
just what you call the person who is the
superstar.•
BRIEFLY IN DATEBOOK
Newport Dunes to
hold Easter egg hunt
The Newport Dunes Resort Hotel will hold
an Easter egg hwit to benefit 26 youth from
the Orange Coast Interfaith Shelter, a Costa
Mesa-based organization that helps families
support themselves, at 8 a.m. M4rch 30 at the
Dunes, 1131 Back Bay Drive, Newport Beach.
Children between 2 and 13 are welcome
to participate, and the cost is $3 per cblld. A
pancake breakfast, costing $4 for adults and
$3 for children, will follow the hunt. Informa-
tion: (949) 729-1144.
FYI
• WHAT: Soprano Renee F1etning performs
• WHEN: 2 p.m. Sunday
• WHERE: Orange County Performing Arts
Center, 600 Town Cemer Drive, Costa Mesa
• COST: $25-$65
• CALL: (714) 740-7878
Having first appeared at the Center in
1990 singing the role ol Donna Elvira for
Opera Pacific's *Don Giovanni,• Fleming
returns with a greeter seme of the su~
status.
"With her work UoUnd the world, slie's
just become a major, major perform.er,•
Mandel said. "Her discs sell, she's really-
captured the imagination of people in the
opera world."
lo the past dozen years, Fleming bas cap·
tured a Grammy Award for her album "The
Beautiful Voice" and sung in roles including
Desdemona for Ve.rd.l's "Otello," the
Marschallin for Strauss' "Der Rosenkava-
lier" and title roles for Massenet's "Manon·
and Strauss' •Arabella.•
Fleming's concert credits include perfor-
mances in jazz, German Ueder and art song
genres with orchestras including the Berlin
Philharmonic, the Vienna Philharmonic, the
Chicago Symphony Orchestra and the
Philadelphia Orchestra.
Her favorite operatic; role bas been the
Marscballln from "Der Rosenkavalier. • She's
a 1700s German woman who romps through
the romantic comedy with a much younger
Throat singers, sitar
part of World Stages
The Pbil.bannonic Society of Orange Coun·
ty and the Irvine Barclay Theatre recently
announced its 2002-03 World Stages series.
Anou,shka Sb.ankar will open the series on
Oct. 16, a group of Tuvan throat singers called
Huun Huur Tu will follow, Afro-pop guitarist
Habib Kotte will perlonn Jan. 16, the Tunity
Irish Dance Company will perlorm March 15,
2003, a program titled •Mu.sic, Dance and
Martial Arts of Manipur. IndJa" will be staged
April 1, 2003, and the Orquesta Aragon, a
CUban band, will close the series May 3, 2003.
All performances will be a t the Barclay,
•
lover.
•She's just on emaoJdinarlly complex
afld teal human being," Pleming said. "The
Marscbal.lin also, I find, epitomizes the femi-
nine experience and I find it doubly ,interest-
ing that she was composed and written by
two men."
Fleming has also sung the part of Violet-
ta, a Parisian courtesan who looks for love
but meets a tragic end, for Verdi's "La navi-
atta.•
•I do a lot of unusual repertoire, not a lot
~ of blead and butter repertoi?e, and I felt that
was a role-tbat .,..ould suit me and in which I
could <'" a • •ate something lpedal, • ·
FlllliP.g said . ~her broad taste in musical roles and
a bU!y penorming schedule that b.as her jet-
ting around the world, Pleming says she bas
to guard against getting tired.
• lt takes a physical and vocal toll,• the
43-year-old 14ld.
She calls the voice a •frail instrument,·
especially the way it's used for operatic
singing.
"Even doctors don't fully widerstand bow
we produce th~ &0unds we do and not harm
the vocal chords," she said. "In a way, it's
controlled screaming."
Many sopranos have ended their careers
early, Fleming continued. But she plans to
be like Australian soprano Joan Sutherland,
whose ~areer lasted more than four decades.
•I'm just approoching my prime, so I
hope I'U be around for awhile,• Fleming
said.
4242 Campus Drive, Irvine.
Information: (949) 85-4-4&&6.
Arts Awards dU;mer
set for April
.Art$ QrGJlge County will bola its Orange
County ~ Awprds ~er, "Vfhicb recog-
n.i%es cultural achievements in the communi-
ty and tributes the efforts of area visionaries,
April 18 at 'the Pour Seasons Hotel in New-
p<)rt Beach, 690, Newport Center Drive.
Among the award categorf es are the
annual Achievement Awards and the Cultur-
al Legacy Awards.
Information: (71-') 556-5160.
DailflPilot
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Daily Pilot
CHECK IT OUT
Tbe telling
of the green
Y ou won't need tbe =the
Irlsh to find ...-t for St.
Patrick's Dey at Newport Beach
Public Libraries.
:i
C'
Just out from Irish author Niall
Williams is •ne Fall of IJgbt," a
dreamy epic that follows the travails of
four brothers and their father during
the 19th century potato famine. As their
destinies carry them to Hungary, Amer-
ica and Africa, clan members are sepa-
rated and united several times in a saga
replete with disaster, unabashed
romance and sometimes
b:nplausible adventure.
In the same general
genre is "My Dream of
You," Nuala O'Faolain's
debut novel published
on the heels of her best·
selling memoir, ·Are
You Somebody?• Hero-
ine Kathleen de Burca
-a middle-aged Irish
travel writer living in
London -shares O'Faolain's personal
despair 4ver a loveless family life and
the plight of Irish women. Her search
for passion provides the basis for a
complex portrait of a cynical yet ever·
hopeful romantic.
The romance is rooted in affection
for Irish culture in
Andrew Greeley's
"lrlsb Love." In his lat-
est mystery starring
singer/psychic Nuala
Anne McGrail and her
American writer hus-
band, the prolific priest
pens a tale about a
series of crimes linked
with a century-old mass
murder. Descriptions of the wild Irish
coast and a carefully constructed histor-
ical framework add interest to the
somewhat formulaic whodunit.
Also set on blustery
Irish cliffs is "lbe
Nature of Water and
Air,• a debut novel
from award-winning
poet Regina McBride.
The coming of age tale
about a young girl
stumbling into forbid·
den ·romance as she
chases her mother's
secrets combines folk-
lore with gothic romance. Descriptions
of the dark Irish soul are as hypnotic as
the complicated plot., likely to appeal to
fans of brooding mysteries.
For those who enjoy both a good sto·
ry and good history, Peter Stevens pro-
vi,des a dramatic report of a real-We
adventure in "lbe Voyage of the "
Catalpa: A Daring Escape, a Perilous
Journey and Six lrlsh Rebell' Flight to "
Preedom." Read about struggles for
independence following the attempted
uprisings of the 1860s, involving
escapes from Australian prisons and a
rescue via whaling ship in this stirring
account.
There's hardly a better example of
feisty Irish courage than that displayed bJ
Ronan 'fynan. best known as one ot the
three Irish tenors. Aft« having both legs
amputated below the knee, releamiDg to
walk. winning 18 gold medals and 1•
world records in the Paralympic games,
and becoming a doctor, 'fyn4n wrote
"Halfway Home: My We 'tll Now." If
you've ever looked for lnspiratioo for
overcoming adversity, ftnd it in this new
autobiography offering ample testimony
to the power of the human spirit
• CHICK " our Is wr~ bv the rt1ff of thti
Newport Bffch Public Ubf'ary. this week'~
Is by Melissa Adams. All tltfes ~ be r~
from home or office computen by acxesslng tfM!
catalog at www.~li~org.
Doily Pilot ·
Newport Harbor senior's fi.ght wins an award lllEFLY IN
THE llEWS
• Carly Geehr, who started a chapter qf Students
Ag~t Drunk Driving at the school, is rewarded
fur her dedication.
Deirdre Newman geois, the school's activities
DAtLY PtLOT director. "She's just real pas-
sionate.•
UCI CAMPUS -A. New-Carly also is a top swim-
port Harbor High School mer for the Sailors, having
senior who saw a gaping been named a Scholastic
void in the campus's .drunk All-American and was , on
driving prevention effort the U.S. Junior Pan Ameri-
and filled it by founding a · can team.
chapter of Students Against During her presentation,
Drunk Driving scored a Carly pointed out some of
$1,000 scholarshlp on the steps the SADD chapter
Thursday. uses to accomplish its mis-
Carly Geehr was one of sion. Foremost is spreading
five semifinalists who com-the word throughout the
peted . in ~e final round of Newport Harbor High
the Hitachi Safety Scholar-School community about the
ship Competition at UC perils o( dnink driving, such
Irvme. as holding a Grim Reaper
Part of her presentation Day.
Students see
the real world
Newport Beach
high school students
got a whiff of the real
world on Th'Ursday
when they paired with
mentors in the field of
their interest.
1\venty:five stu-
dents from Newport
Harbor and Corona
del Mar high schools
followed ,their mentors
to places including
restaurants, photo-
graphic studios and
the fire department to
see them in action.
showed how students' atti-And this year the chapter
tu?~s about drinking and is starting·a new concept -
driving had changed as a ottering a $500 scholarship
result of her efforts. to the student who writes the
PHOTOS BY STM MC CRANK I DAILY PILOT
Newport Harbor High Sch~I student Carly Geehr presents her project on how she
ls attemp~g to reduce alcohol consumption among high school students to a review
panel of Orange County community leaders during the Hitachi Safety Scholarship
compeUUon Tlmrsday on UCl's campus.
The event, spon-
sored by the Newport
Beach Chamber of
Commerce. started
with a breakfast at the
Radisson Hotel.
Keynote Speaker
Jang Huang discussed
the angst he went
through trying to set-
•Any recognition sh.~-best essay on how one per-
dents can get is a step son's decision can affect oth-
toward fulfilling our mis-.ers.
sion," Carly said. •And any Carly was able to prove .
extra money is good for col-the success of drunk-driving
lege. • prevention on campus •She showed a lot ot guts
and strength of character
and resolve. lt'S nice to see
her get some recognition
tle on a career before
settling down at
Scholarship ·Jaguar Cars North
competition America.
reviewers, After participating When Carly came to through a survey where 71 %
Newport Harbor High of students said SADD had
School as a new student her increased their awareness of
sophomore year, a student the consequences of the act.
was killed in a drunk driving One of the judges, Kevin
accident. Carly waited for Cowell of the Tustin Police
someone at the school to Department. said he was
take some action to help impressed with CarJy's
prevent a similar tragedy tenacity.
and rewa.rn .~~ t.>.!'!!,.~~ -.. ........ .-,-
front to in activities like mak-
~ tt...:t.~ -.; ___ -• ··~---TharP out the b<>wels of, John
from occurring. "She has done a great job
No one did. of making people aware,"
The following year, Carly Cowell said. "I'd like to see
-feeling more confident in her successful in whatever
her surroundings -took the she is doing.•
said.
The winner of the compe-
tition, Margaux Thomas of
Laguna Beach won a $5,000
scholarship.
• DEIRDRE NEWMAN covers edu-
cation. She may.be reached at (949)
574-4221 or by e-mail at
deirdre.newmanO/atimes.com.
Leslie' Wa~ne~ and
White getting a make-over,
d ~vin the students and their 80 mentors came back to
Cowell the ht>tel for lunch and
listen to shared what they had
Geehr. learned.
initiative and founded a And Carly's mom. J .T ..
chapter of Students Against said she is extremely proud
Drunk Driving. of her daughter's passion for
"Carly herself has really helping others avoid the
taken a leadership role at fatal repercussions of drink-
\he scho~l. • said Kelly Bour-ing and driving. f!S~ WE DO THINGS RIGHTI
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CANDIDATE
CONTINUED FROM 1
second-place fin.lsh.
An Orange County Superi-
or Court judge deferred Kline's
request to Los Angeles County
ThW"Sday nfomlng to prevent
any conflict of interest.
Adam's formal objection to
Kline's petition could bar
.
BRIEFLY IN YHI NEWS
Students honor
inspirations
Students from the five
Newport·Mesa Unified
School District high
schools honored people
who have made a differ-
ence in their lives during
the Golden Touch Awards
ln Tustin on Wednesday.
Laura Morton from
Estancia High honored
businessman Fran Ursini.
Sandoval from the runoff
because a court woWd be less
likely to grant the judge's
request lf tbeTe 11 opJ)9S1Uon,
political pundits Said.
Sandoval saJd Adams'
decision to object upset her
not only because lt hwts her
personal chances but because
it demonstratee selfishness.
H It is disappointing to
think that any judicial candi-
date would put personal
AJliloD Coleman from
Costa Mesa High ~
nized hiatory teacher
nacey Olguin.
1Wy1'-Odume from
Newport Harbor High rec-
ognized ~t volunteer
Susan Rinek.
Nana Kuban! from
Corona del Mar High boo·
ored English teacher and
baseball coach John
Emme.
And Michelle Baines
from Back Bay High rec·
ogimed security guard
Harold Reynolds.
interest above the communi-
ty,• Sandoval said. •As a
judge, you have a Jot of
opportunity to act selfishly.
This is a bad sign.•
Kline's attorney ogree<l.
"The act of withdrawing
from the election is the honor-
able thing to do in light of the
circumstances. Any objection
to his request would a.rise
from a motive of personal
g¢n and would not be ln the
OFFRAMP .
CONTlNUEO FROM. 1
concept will become reality.
MThe fact that we are
putting up another $500,000
-for a total of $2 million -
should be taken as a measure
of our confidence (that it will
be approved,)" Freeman said.
"We would not spend $2 mil-
lion for the privilege of having
the offramp 3 feet higher."
While the new offramp
was not officially part of the
developer's application to the
city, it was touted as a com-
munity benefit, as it is
\
. '
best interest of the voter1, •
Meyer's statement read.
The statement also
affinned Kline'• innocence.
Adams CX>Uld not be reached
for comment Thurtday.
The Dana Point ottomey
has reportedly said he object-
ed to JO.ine'a request because
he believes it would invali-
date the will of some voters.
Mark PetTacca, a pollttcal
science professor at. UC
designed to move traffic off
Fairview Road and Harbor
Boulevard. .
Naghavi said the city has
taken a proactive role ln the
approval of the Susan Street
offramp because it would solve
existing traffic woes without
costing the taxpayers a dime.
Susan Street designs must
undergo environmental
review before they are for-
warded to transportation
authorities for approval,
Naghavisaid. Environmental
consultants are being sought.
• LOLITA HARPER covers Costa
Mesa. She may be reached at (949)
574-4275 or by e-mail at lolita.harp-
erOlatlmes.com
' .
Irvine, said JOine's request
was bigbly unuaual.
•1 don't think Kline needs to
go. out c1 his way to tell people
not to vote for him,• Petracca
laid. •Tue reeson to (ask for
removal from the ballot) would
be to give voters a real choice.•
• LOU1'A HAJU'lll coven ~ Mes.I . She may be relChed at (949)
574-4275 or by •mall at loflta.harp-
erOlatfmes.com.
NOTEBOOK
CONTINUED FROM 1
devastation caused by floods
and hurricanes. Here in Cali-
fornia, I've seen the terror of
earthquakes.
But nothing affects me
. more emotionally than see-
ing people and their posses-
sions destroyed by a. fire.
Take, for example, the rela-
tively small fire at Roberti-
no's, a tailoring store on
Newport Boulevard.
The owner of the store, a
young woman, stood watch-
ing tearfully as firefighters
cleaned up her store. It was
her fifth year owning the
business -a shocking
anniversary present
The Monticello fires
shocked an entire townhome
community in Costa Mesa.
Two unrelated fires in the
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· In Newport Center,
between Edwards Cinemas & Muldoons
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FURNllURE LIQUIDATION
killed a man and brought
people scurrying out of their
homes with its thunderous
explosions and another bare-
ly two days later that gutted
a home and killed five pets.
Then another fire that
destroyed a Udo Isle home
left six people and their pet
homeless.
The most recent one was
the biggest shocker of them
all -a spectacular blaze that
destroyed a two-story com-
mercial complex in Costa
Mesa. They were not homes,
but there were J:lusinesses in
there that people had owned
and cherished for years.
One of the employees
kept a ring that belonged to
his late father in bis office.
Another man had plastered
his office wa.lh with a whole
collection of family pho-
tographs. All that remained
of that building was charred
wires and bent beams.
All these five fires in the
area happened within two
weeks and officials say they
were unrelated.
Sure, a fire is a disaster
like any other. And I have
often asked myself why it
gets to me more than the
sight of a man lying dead on
the street after a traffic acci-
dent or the scene of people's
homes crumbling after an
earthquake or a hurricane.
I guess it's because, in my
mind, traffic accidents are so
common that I somehow got
desensitized to them. Earth-
quakes and hurricanes -those
are not under anyone's control.
I guess fires set my feel-
ings ablaze because I always
feel that they could have
been somehow prevented or
controlled. The waste of life,
the Joss of possessions that
can never, ever be replaced
seem meaningless and
unnecessary to me.
A part of me thinks I'm
superficial for mourning the
loss of the only business a
woman owned or feeling sad
about a man who lost bis
family photographs or anoth-
er poor guy who is missing
his dad's ring.
I guess I'm just a senti-
mental fool.
• ~ IHAAATH coven public saf.ty and courts. She may be
rHChed at (949) 574-4226 or by •
mall at dHpa.bharathOlatimacom.
Doily Pilot
PUILIC.
SAFETY
POLICE FILES
COSTA MESA
• AMlmtST ROAD: Vandal-
ism was rwported In the 200 blocX at 3:11 p.m. Wednesday.
• llUSTOL STRll't. Petty
theft was reported In the
3300 block at 4:15 p.m.
Wednesday.
• MIR DRIVll A robbery was
reported In the 100 block at
1:m. 'N9dnesday.
• VINMI DltlVI ~A vehlde burglary was
reported Jn the 2.700 blod at
9:47 a.m. w.dnesday.
• SOUTH COAST DANE:
Vandalism was reported In
the 900 blodt at 10:22 p.m.
Wednesday.
• WEST WILSON STUn
An auto theft was reported
In the 300 bloct at 1 :39 p.m.
Wednesday.
• WEST 11nt STREE"r. A
home burglary was reported
in the 700 block Jt 3:37 a.m.
Wednesday.
• 1tnt SlREn A home
burglary was reported in the
800 block at 4:54 p.m.
Wednesday.
NEWPORT BEACH
•NORTHUY~A
boat theft was reported In
the 1400 block at 3:12 p.m.
Wednesday.
• IEACON UY: Ttespa.ssJng
was reported In the 100 block
at 6:51 p.m. Wednesday.
• NEWPORT BOULEVAllD:
A hit-and-run was reported
In the 2600 block at 1:41
a.m. Wednesday.
• MlM ~ VandalMI
was reported In the 300 block
at 12:21 p.m. Wednesday.
• SAN JOAQUIN HIUS
ROAD: A theft was reported
In the 2500 block at 8:25
p.m. Wednesday.
DouglaaOrr November18,1952to
March 8, 2002
Corona del Mar native and
longtime loon, Doug leaves
hundreds of loving friends and
family. Doug has been a familiar
figure In town and touched
many lives through his yeais at
Corona del Mar High School
and his oontinued Involvement
In their sports program. Doug
has been known as the "Voice
of the Sea Klngs", announcing
for a number of sporting events.
A La Verne College gra<Ute,
Doug is a member of Marinens
Ctuch and hu been • docn
at the Nixon Lbaiy 1ino1 Its
il08Pliof'i,
Doug leaves his molher
Metody, his fathef and
stepmother Omar and Carol,
his three brothets Dan, Dave,
and Jamie, his .. Diane,
seven nieces and nephews,
and two great-;iephew8.
Doug wu our MVP.
SeMces wi. be held on
Saturday, Maron 18, 2002, at
11:00..m. It Marinn Church.
If you would lb to make •
donation on NI behalf, the
tanly • .. ~ fllYOftle
chatlty Of Doug'1 faYOflll
dwtty, the ~ Ind Gita Q.t>
of the Hatbor ~ EMl>ll•
tnnch.
. . ... . i>oily Pilot Friday, Mofch 15, 2002 5
' This sexy pink silk flare dress retails for S 1,800.
The complementing shoe retails for S390.
..ByLW. Cook
I n the world of high fashion, the house of Escada has risen to the pin-
nacle of respect. Expensive, exquisite and essential wardrobe ele-
ments have made the Escada label a must-own for the well-dressed
woman.
The Eurppean house, headquartered in Germany, is represented by
fine stores in Orange County, including a signature boutique at South
Coast Plaza. The Escada lines intlude fabulous evening couture, worn by
some of the world's most famous women, to classic suits in the Solo Bian-
'::::----~co~l:in:e,~c:hi~c s:po:rtswear from the Tutto Nero line, retro inspira-tions from Sexy Graffiti (based on the '60s look},
as well as animal fabrics and designs from the
Nairobi collection. Our Escada model shows off
This animal-print
strapless dress
retalls for S 1,240.
To spice up this
look. add a
glamorous evening
sandal (S410). The
swinging hearts
nedd.tce in 18-
karat yellow gold
retails for
S18,400.
the range of the collection accented by jewelry
available at the boutiques.
This great black
polk>dot iklrt
with matching
shoe and bag
retails for S 1, 100.
The bag Is avail-
able for S800, and
the shoe retails
for MOO.
,
Glamorous in °' out Of the
spotlight. this bffutlfully
contoured dress r.talls for
S2.000. Add the perfect
«CtMOty. the elite
dl1mond ring In wtllte
gold, rtlrtlng It S~.900.
This great suit with lace detailing is for the Escada
woman -the woman on the go wtio changM her
look at 1 moment's notice The jacket ret11ls for .. _______ l~::------------Sl,550, the pant for S650 and the shoe for S400
PHOTOS BY DON l!ACH I DAILY PILOT
~ ******************************* * * k* * .
m * WE WANT YOU TO HAVE A *
: VOICE IN THE CITY OF :
: COSTA MESA'S RECREATION: H: MASTER PLAN PROCESS :
* * * * * The City Of Costa Mesa ls looktna for *
! : Individual• from local sports leagues, non-profit: * organizations, school districts, and other * ~. * * Interested residents to become a part of our *
: Master Plan Process. Team. We need your Input :
* to help us plan recreational pro~ and *
I : faclJltles tha~ meet the needs of our ! ·
*community. . * * . * ,. . *«
: The flrat of three meettnaa will 1H1 held u:.. . .. * Where: Neighborhood Community Center. 1845 Pull A•ewj
: When: WednelHlay. March 20. 2002 , : * Time: 6:30 pm *
* * * Re&e•hmenta will be provided *
* * * PLEASE R.S.V.P. :r<>: (714) 7~5300 * * * .. *
t•
-Custom-Made
Window Coverings
From the finest materials ...
~
lOO's of patterns to choose from!
" . ' ·' .,
C'I
( -,, I ./ .l -I
\''It .\ ~
J. ; LV• ·r:. .. ' I! ~' " ~
• PROFESSIONAL ASSISTANCE
•IN-HOME MEASUREMENTS
• THE BEST INSTALLATION
• SPACIOUS SHOWROOM
Also find blinds and shades available in a large
assortment tJf styles, colors and patterns to add the
finishing to any home.
•LEVOLOR" ~
JOHN BLOESER CARPET AND~~-........
NDOW COVERING CENTE
~-,,.,.,
2927 S. Brinol Street, Coita Mesa
(714) 751-2324
www.bloaif~com
AuO•~ ... "°"""''"-''* ..... QIJ)'1141JI ....... Nit ............. ,,... ....... ..
Free Delivery
Sl~ Min. Purchase
Votilll Top .11 Pma Ia O.C..
BfAOL ~ spttWiu in Nnu ~'~ Styk
PiaA. PIUtlU, $41Uiwklm. inJ
di/ aro11nd pd 'f"4lity food.
~.oom
949/722·1212
1173 lrwtM '"· Cotta ....
6 Friday, Morch 15, 2002
• Send AROUND TOWN Items to
1he Dally Pilot. 330 W. Bay St, Costa
Mesa, CA 92627; by fu 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 compl~e listing is
available at www.dallypllot.com.
TODAY
More than 175 dealen selling
glass, pottery, art, paper, fur-
}liture and jeweliy will be on
band for the Costa Mesa
Antique Show and Sale that begins today from 11 a.m. to
Please join
CONGREGATION
Shir H~-M~ ~l"t
for
Passover Seder
at the
YRVINE JltARIOTf :J(6TEL
18000 VON KARMAN
IRVJNE, CALIFORNIA
Thursday, March 28, 2002
5:30 pm
f?Aabbi f!llichard Jreinberg
&
-fffantor drie Atkler
will conduct this 2ttd Night Seder.
Adults: $48.00
Children: $20.00
Advance resen•ation &
payment required by March 201h.
q/l,JJ/:PJJ. to
(949) 551-0839 ext. 244
NEWPORT
BEACH
FILM FESTIVAL
.. ·.AROUND TOWN Daily Pilot
8 p.m. and continues Satur• ter will bolt a dinner theater
day March 16 from t1 a.m. to titled •Everything I've
8 p .m . and Sunday March 17 , Learned About Women,"
from 11 a.m. to 5 p .m. ar the starring Joseph Schulein
Orange County Pair;grounds, from 5 to 1 p.m. at the senior
88 Fair Dr. in Costa Mesa. S6. center in Costa Mesa. $9, S6
(760) 943·7500. www.calen-for members. (949) 645-2356.
darshow1.com.
Mondavt Wine Center kick.I
off an exlu'bition of more than
100 paintings presented by
'the SQuthem California Plein
Air Painters Assn. at "J p.m. at
1510 Scenic Ave., Costa
Mesa. The exhibition will .run
through May 14. (714) 327·
8300.
A talent show sponsored by
the Exchange Club of New-
pon Harbor Will be held at
6:30 p.m. at the Oasis Senior
Center, 800 Marguerite Ave.,
Corona del Mar. Contest is
open to cb.µdren ages 6 to 18
and awards will be given to
winners in three age groups.
(949) 673-8701.
The Costa Mesa Senior Cen-
l.aurte GarNU. the only Joµ.r-
nallst ever-to Win all three
major Joumallsm awards,
will lecture on her book
"Betrayal of Tnlst: the Col-
lapse• of Global Public
Healtli, • at 7 p.m., wtUi din· ner following the lecture.
She will speak·at 2 p.m. Sat-
urday at the Newport Bea~
Public Library, 1000 Avoca·
do Ave. nckets are $55 for
-FJiday; and_$18 Saturday.
Garrett's specialty is med-·
ical/science writing and she
writes for New York News-
day. Call for tickets. (949)
717-3890.
SATURDAY
A garage sale to benefit the
GRAND OPENING
Lunch • Dinner • Sunday Brunch
Steak • Seafood • Salads •Hamburgers
Join Us For Brunch
•Over 10 Hof Item Entrees
• Seafood Station
• Omelette Station
•Carving Station
•Salad Station
•Dessert Station
Make Easter Reservations Now!
Happy Hour M-Fri. 4 -6pm
Free Appetizers
OUR PRNATE DININ ROOM IS AVAILABLE
FOR 0
M~
WcdL£ye; Sn£q>per
L.Onch I Dinner
51.410 ~1720
IpMVidv Fried!
C~Dl+'w¥
516~
Newport Deocn (949) 675-3474
( torrnetty t>elclMy's)
South Coost Pima Village
( oaoss SunfloWtf from Hofdsnoms)
(714)~74
www.bluewat.rgrlll.com
NAC Jr. Rowing Team will be
held from 1 a.m. to 1 p.m. in
the parking lot of Mariner's
Elementary School on t!te
comer of Irvine Avenue and
Dover Drive. Newport Beach.
Baked goods, coffee and
juice available for small
donation.
Club will sponsor its 32nd
annual Angleman series of
yacht raceit beginning today.
Subsequent races will be
beld'1n the following Satur-
days: March 30, May 18,
June 8 and July 13. Two of
those rac;es will be, for the
first time, jointly cond~cted
with the Balboa Yacht Club's
A seminar for small·bustness 66 Series. The race is open to
entrepreneurs will be held all skippers belonging to a
from 8:30 a.m . to 4 p.m. at Southern California Yachting
National University, 3390 Assi;i. Club or a recognized
Harbor Blvd .• Costa Mesa. U.S. Sailing Assn. club. 'fro.
The seminar, conducted by . pbies will be distributed after
the Orange County Chapter each. race. The Hugh Angle-
of the Service Corps of men Trophy will be present-
Retired Executives Assn., will ed at a special awards ban-
include professional discus-quet in the fall. (949) 644-
sions on various areas of 9530.
business, marlCefing and - --
advertising. The fee is $40, Ptecemaken' Spring Country
with a $5 reduction if pre-Craft Fair 2002 will be held
paid. The cost includes band-from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m March
outs and materials. (714) 550-16-17 at Piecemakers. The
7369~ celebration will have 175
Maxine Cohen offers a
divorce workshop titled
"Divorce: A New Begin-
ning," which will be held
from 10 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. at
180 Newport Center
Drive.Newport Beach. $40.
(949) 644-6435.
booths ·with handcrafted
items for sale, live couptry
music, food and entertain-
ment. Dutch, Piecemakers'
fine scissor sharpener, will
also be there, so guests are
encouraged to bring their
knives for sharpening. Piece-
makers is at 1720 Adams
Ave, Costa Mesa. (714) 641-
lbe Bahia Corinthian Yacht 2883.
with Body Beaute•s European
Slimming Treatments
1et. TIME
introductory off er
ONLY $:IO
(A $132 Value)
"The Body Bca.~c~ is offcrir1.g yot...a
chis on.e cimc $ 1 p in.crocl~c:cory
offer bec:a.~se we war1.c yo~ co
k.Cl.ow h ow c:xt:ra.orclin.a.ry e>t...ar
.E.~ropea.r1. Slimmin.g "Xreat:mcn.t:s
arc. "This offer is av-a.Habl e t:o
t:hc:: flrst: 32 appoin.t:~en.t:s
c:hac men.c:ion. t:his ad.
Restaurant
~--Estlbllshtd In 1962 .o.;..;;.;.-..;..;;.;-..-_.._
auon OF ·THE DAY ·
"I t sounds like they've
reinvented the ~heel ... "
..
D•n Glenn, Newport Harbor High
volleyball coach
,I ,,
t • Doily Pilot
HIGH SCHOOL SPORTS
·New
·playoffs
'formula
passed
byCIF
Strength of programs, rather
than enrollment, the criteria.
Roger C.rtson
OMV Pu.or
Frustrated coaches ln tennis and
volleyball have been granted a repneve
of sorts following Thursday's CIF
Southern Section Council Meeting in
Long Beach where a proposal was
passed which will allow every sport
aside from basketball and track and
field to be grouped ln the playoffs by
strength, Instead of enrollment-based
considerations on a league-by-league
basis.
Among those most affected are
volleyball programs at Newport Harbor
and Corona de! Mar, and Corona del
Mar tennis.
"It sounds like they've reinvented
the wheel.• said Newport Harbor
volleyball coach Dan Glenn, whose
teams have been stuck in Division II·
AA for the past few seasons
·EYE OPENER
~ Ill
Spor(8 Hall of Fame ..,,.,.. ....
Mlrch 18 honorM
Gil-BROOKJNGS
Sports Editor Roger Carlson • 949-57 44223 • Spom Fax: 949~50.0170 Friday, Mofch 15, 2002
COLLEGE MEN'S BASKETBALL
ltaditionally a Division I program, it
would appear the Sea View League
would move back into the DiVlSion I
arena with other volleyball powers,
such as the South Coast League, Bay
League and Sunset League.
PHOTO BY RICK EGAN I SALT lAKE TRl6UNE
Mike Hood gets booked up with BYU's Daniel Boblk (left) as they try to come up with a loose ball. Aras Baskauskas (right) bies to asslsl
Newport Harbor was a Division II-
AA school last year by the scant margin
of seven students in the enrollment-
based system. Eight less students and
Nwpo1t Harbor would have been in
Division m.
The new format will not be
concerned with enrollment, but
strength. And, leagues will be grouped
in the playoffs, not individual schools.
"This ls great, this is good news,•
said CdM boys tenrus coach Tun Mang.
Corona del Mar. by virtue of its small
enrollment, has been relegated to
Division V compebbon m the tennis
playoffs. The Pacific Coast League,
with University and Laguna Beach
involved, as well. would appear to be
I in line to return to Division I status.
Corona del Mar volleyball coach
Steve Conti said he wasn't sure where
his Sea Kings would fit in the overall
picture. although they would surely
move to a hlgher division
"I think it's good news,• said Conti.
"But I'm not sure where we'll go."
The general consensus is that the
system will place the strongest teams in
the higher divisions. The downside is
that some third-place schools, which
earn a playoffs berth, will find the
waters deep because of being lumped
in with the bigger divisions because of
the league's high status.
This ls why until recently, single
schools could opt to move up. leaving
the rest of the league's schools ln a
competitive circle. That, however, was
shot down by a Los Alamitos High·
based proposal which passed in recent
years to end the option of small schools
to move up in classification (l.e. Corona
del Mar volleyball moving to Division
I status).
Corona del Mar, for lnstante, was
the CIF Divmon I boys tennis cD.ampion
In 1999. 1\vo years later the Sea Kings
were champions again in Division V.
COWGE BASIETBAll
The Anteaters come up flat at the
wrong time, and th~ ·wrong place.
Barry Faulkner
DAILY PILOT
PROVO, Utah -UC lrvme men's date that has accompanied all four of
basketball coach Pat Douglass said the Anteaters' NIT berths, didn't help
playing in the National Invitation either.
Tournament can be tougher than The same was largely true about
playing in the other tournament that Green 's lackluster fmale. The
occupied the Qabonal consciousness ho norable mention All-American
Thursday. scored SLX points m each half, was 6 of
But BYU Coach and UC! alumnus 11 from the field and O of 1 from the
Steve Cleveland actually credited the free-throw line m 27 minutes The
flurry oftelevised NCAA Tournament subject of frequent double teams,
action for inspiring his team's 78-55 Green didn't reach double figures
victory in the first round of the NIT until 7:25 remained.
Thursday night, before 6,288 at the That bucket, a 19-footjumper that
mildly mad Marriott Center. capped a 10·2 Anteater run, drew the
•t think one of the big Uungs that visitors within 60-51.
helped us tonight, was that our kids But 7-footBYU center Dan Howard
watched all those games on TV then made 1$ first basket of the game
today,• Cleveland said, after the while belng fouled with 6:29 left.
Cougars extended the nation's longest Hansen then drilled a three-pointer
borne winning streak to 36 ft.om the left corner 52
games. •our kids showed ----~-==:-=-set'Onds later. after a three·
up tonight with a bounoe in "We were shot Ur.I possession
their step.~ I d " b seemed to sum up the ucr (21·11) had a e ate ,o e visitors' frustrating finish.
bounce of its own early, in the NIT. And lt wasn't long before
muffling the home faithful We would both coaches emptied the
by pounding the ball inside benches.
and crashing the offensive have gone to "BYU canned some
g1Ms to build leads of 19-11 Timbuktu ii three (six in all supported
and 25-20. by four traditional three-
But an 18-3 BYU run to we had to . .. " po1nt plays) and that was
end the first half, 20 crucial," Douglass said.
second·balf points from Pat Douglass ·And (Creen) never
Cougar junior Travis UC Irvine men's reellygotgolng. When he'
Hamen. and a scoring con-~ketball coach not going well, it really
trlbutlon frOmall 12 player$ affects us. There were
on the ro1ter, helped times when we had four
bounce the Anteeters from sopho mores out the re.
their fowth NTT. • ~ jbOuldo't be playing li ke
It wu the second straight firit• .ophelmorel at this poUll, but they did
round NIT ult fOt UCt, whlcb also toni~bt:' aaidgoodb)'etoHnk>tcareer~ •J thOugit about bringing Jerry
1eeder Jerry Green. tbe ~Unie mg In (• ti! IMd v&niahe"d before
West Conference Player of the Veer. hall'lbne), b6t lf he'd gotten a third
•Jt we C:oukt have quit ih8r the fouJwe'dhawteallybeenupa~
ftnt 10 mlnulill. w. would beve been lt. •
Une, • DoµQlul N.ld Wltl • ~ MUd ~put Na reectiOn to the
• Jsrl got m foUI ~ (bmtW loN Ill tmobonel termt, D0uglu1
for tbe llDal 1:08 d tM flllt Mlf Wilb deliYerecl Qae NIH DO•DODHllH twolaullJ IDd9111¥e'l lddl tld• ...._ approacla ,..._, bes led to 60 UCI
)Db of bliblg ... Jiit,. ..... --~· ~ IUt tbfff •••IODI, -W. .._.II talliilw Cll" W 1 » ._ program'I flnt
21) about com••1 oGt IDI 111.,..,. Ud •
.................. p ........ .
~--~ ............. rit911 ... ~
7
8 Fri , Morch 15, 2002
..
A wea:ttraNdt ~WY\/ w
~Ot'\lfY-~,
Met.rclv 22, 2002
Vonft~lt!
T he Daily Pilot is publishing an exciting
new special section
featuring day trips, top surfing locations,
travel tips, vacation packages and anything
that has to do with fun and relaxation. For
our out of town visitors, this provides
wonderful suggestions on where to go and
what to do/
Deadline for space & copy: Monday March
18, 2002 at 5 p.m.
Released/Camera Ready deadline:
Wednesday March 20, 2002 at 5 p.m .
.
Call your advertising representative
today at (949) 642-4321
u
AUUuitbra
Monlca
Camacho
goet high
for
nothing,
and
ChrllUna
Rodriguez
(4) goes
high to
hold
Bearden
at9'coD.d
after a
wild
throw ln
1bUl'lday'1
no,oleague
game.
Newport
rolled, 9-0,
for the
unbeaten
Sallon'
seventh
straight
victory.
GREG FRY I OAlt.Y Ptl.OT
Sailors' streak
reaches seven
Newport Harbor is off to its best start in years
. as it records its third shutout of the season.
s_,,. vtrven
DAILY Pit.or
NEWPORI' .
BEACH -,_. How good ts
the Newport
Harbor High
IOftball team?
Here's an
indication: At SCOlllOllD
this time last ~ 0 year the s.Mort 9
Sailors were
3·2·2. This
season, the Tars have a 7-0
record after a 9·0 victory over
v111Ung Alhambra Thursday.
Laat year, Newport tied at
Alhambra, 6·6.
Thursday was a dllferent
story, as everything seems to be
f8.l.ling in place for the Sailors,
who used 14 hits and nine runs
after three scoreless innings to
overpower the Mooi:s.J3·2).
Newport has omscored
opponents, 51·11, and this was
its th1rd shutout of the season.
Freshman pitcher As~ey
Gleason, in her first game in the
drde as a Sailor, completed a
two·llltter with five strikeouts,
and no walks. She had a perfect
game through 4113 innings.
Junior Kim Moore, who played
third base, led Newport with a 3-
for.J perf onnance that induded
two runs scored and an RBI.
"(The Sailors) play con-
fidently now,• said Newport
Coach Jess Martinson, who
noted bis squad la off to its best
start 1n five years. •Actually, this
ls maybe the best start in 10
years. They believe that they
can win when they go out there.
Somebody ls going to have to
take it away from them because
they're not going to give it away
at lhla point. It's a confidence
that they've never bad as long as
I've been here.·
BRIEFLY
The Sailors broke open a
scoreless game in the fourth
innlng With tour runs and six
bfts, highlighted by freshman
Julianne Bass' two-run double.
Bass' blast down the third-base
line rolled across the left-field
line and was eventually ruled a
ground-rule double. But, it was
s t i l l
powerful
enough to<>
score Bailey
Bearden
and Shelby
Crisp, who
both singled
to reach
base.
Newport
junior
catcher
Amanda
Campbell
went2 for3
with one
RBI and one
run scored,
w h i l e
Kim Moore
wu3 for3
with two runs
scored and an
RBI.
Gleason, Athena Vasquez,
Jennifer Gummerman and
Sabrina Couch finished with a
hit and a run scored each.
*Typical of all the othe r
games, except against North-
wood, they bit the ball real
well,· Martinson said of his
squad. "That's been the key this
year. They're hitting the ball and
scoring the runs. Now, it's just a
matter of time before we start
scoring. U we swing hard and
put it in play it wW happen. I
don't have to tell them that
because they're believing In
themselves.•
llOIWGUI
~ HMmm .. AIJl•lllm" 0
Allwnbta • 000 000 o · o 2 4
Newport Harbor 000 414 11 • t 14 0
MonrMI and V. MollN; Gleeron and·
Clmpbell. W • Gleaion, 1-0. L • Mon<MI.
21·9-(NH).
-UCI tops Central Florida
The UC Irvine[][] men's tennis team
pulled off a minor
upset Thursday,
topping 7.&th·ranked Central
Florida, 5-2, in nonconfereru:e
action.
The Anteaters (6·10) won all
three doubles matches for the
first point, while juniors Sean
0 ' Connor and Carl Lumsden,
and freshmen Dontla 1-taynes
and Brian Morton all won in
singles.
UCl hosts No. 55 Clemson
Saturday at noon.
Sage Hill Cil1 Hlgh'l'boys tannlt
team was a 12·6
winner over
Brethren Christian Thursday
afternoon, with Jonathan Baskin
and Ian Uvingston leading the
way m a double1 swttep t01Jive
the Ltghtntog Jts tirst·ever
Academy 1A4gue ~.
The Ughtnblg II now 1 ·3, ti.
0 in league. Bretlilen Chriiti4n
fall to 0-3, 0..1.
OCC women romp
The Orange [][]
Coast College
women's tennis
team defeated
Orange Empire Conference host
Irvine Valley, 9-0, Thursday.
OCC's Veronica Sommer
notched two 6·0 game victorles
in singles, while Stephanie
Chang, Ashley Nelson, Tracy
Vdiuso and JeNea Oudvangen
posted.one 6·0 wtn,,eacb.
The Pirates (6·2, 3·0 In
conference) host Saddleback
Tuesday al 2 p.m. ---COllllM 0..-0WY t. ._ VMUY 0
....... • SorMw (OCQ .,, Hoot. '"°' f.O; Owng (OCQ .,, ~ 6-3,
6-4; Neilofl (OCC) ... ~ 6-2, f.O;
Ulw9on (OCQ dtlf. flrlnMld, ..... •J:
Valulo (OCO <Mt. l.Mnbert. 6-0. •2;
GYdYangen (OCQ .,, Mwtly. 7-5, 6-0.
~ • SOmmlr<hlng (OCQ <Mt.
Noot-Enr1nl, W; ~(OCQ
... l'rlln-Serrano, W; Gudvangen.
Valulo (OCO ... lAnl*t~ .... ,
Pirates mercied
The Orange LI]]
Coast College (\ f 1
1oftball team ~
allowed 11 rum in ~ ·
the fir1t inning and never
recovered ln a 13·0 loss tJ1 five
Innings to Orange· Bmpll'e
Conference }\ost Cypresa
Thund~y. . The Pirates dropped to 8-9,
2·6 in the OBC, while Cypress
Improved to 19·0, 6.0.
OCC hosts Riverside
Monday at~ p.m.
Pirates win again
The Orange [][]
Coast College
men's tennis team
swept to its third
straight Orange Empire
Conference w1n after an 8·0
victory over vtstt1ng Irvine Valley
Thursday.
The Pirates (5·1, 3-0 in
conference) swept in singles and
won two doubles matches. A
lhlrd doubles was not played.
OIMll INll COllllllKI O.W.. Co.MT I. ._ VMJll 0
...... • 1C.ork (OCC) _,, Kula, 6-2.
6-2; OIY (OCO ... LM. 6-J, 6-3; Hoang
(OCQ <Mt. Ronc:e, M. ~ hpte COCO <Mt. Collar. M, 6-3; YIN! (OCC) ...
O\lng, 6-l, M; C*"o (OCQ., ~
H(S). 6-3.
~·~(OCQdflf.
~ 6-3, 7.f (S); Mlhdavt-ll"ept9
(OCO vs.~ ctnpi ~
Ylnll ... lrojri-Shlild\, M, 6-0.
Vanguard spli~ 4
Doily Pilot -----s--Po-~ltTs
TODAY'S SCHEDULE ...
c:olltge • Caflfomla at UC lrvlnt, 7 p.m. ~ tmool • UnMnlty at Com Mesi. l.15 p.m~ IMne at Newport Hllbor, 1:15
p.m. ~def ~r tt Northwood, 1:15 p.m.; IAgunl le.ct. at f~ J:1fp.m.; S. Hiii it Glplstrano V.lley CMstlan. ):15 pm.
yq&&mM1
College men • UC lrvtne et VO.A, 7 p.m.
CAlftvnunity college mtO • MoorPlrit et Orenge ~ 7 p.m.
High tctlOOI bovs • Costi ~ It s.nt. Anl. 3:15 p.m.; fmndl et Slddltbeck, 3:15
p.m.; Cofone-de! ~rand Newpon Harbo< It Orange C.OUnty ChampionsNpr. pool
pley 1t Edison High. Coro01 del Mar 111. Edison, l p.m.; CoroN dll ~vs. Founteln ~ 6:A5 p.rn. Newport HMbcw \II.~ 3 p.m.; Newport HMbof Ill. Sin Olmtnte, 5;30 p.m.
t!T'Si '
C.ommunlty college men and y.iomen ·Orange Coast at Cuesta lnvftltloM~ an d.y.
High tctlOOI bovs • Corona del Mar et Capistrano Valley lleleys Prellms
It 5addllblc:k College. 3 p.m.
High IChool bovs and girls • ENnda at Orange, l p.m.
1IACI MP unp
Community college men and~· Orange Coast at lakenfleld Relays, 9 a.m.
High IChool bovs and g1m ·Newport Harbor at Huntington e..m, 3 p.m.
.lllll1
,.. College men • Oemson It UC IMne, noon
1 Col1egt women · Idaho at UC lrvfr~. 1·30 p.m
Friday, Morch 15, 2002 9
CdM's Jimmy Strack (left) and Bobby Messenger (above)
are two of Corona del Mar High'• malruJtays entering
today's prellms at the Capistrano Valley Relays.
BOYS VOLLEYBALL NEWPORT HARBOR BASEBALL ASSOCIATION
CdM, Newport
in pool play today
Newport Harbor and Corona
del Mar high school boys
volleyball teams take their shots
on the opening day of the
Orange County Championships
today at Edison High. each with
a pair of pool play matches
Mud Hens outlast the River Dogs, 10-5
Corona del Mar duels the
host Edison Chargers at 3 p.m ..
and follows up with a match
against Fountain Valley at 6:45.
Newport is matched up with
Esperanza at 3 p.m .. and San
, Oemente at 5:30.
Saturday's play begins with
the final pool play matchups.
Corona del Mar meets
Capistrano Valley at 8 a .m. and
Newport duels Santa Margarita
at 9:15. all at the Edison site.
The top two from each pool
enter the quarterfinals and
semifinals, starting at 11 a.m.
Third-and fourth-place
teams from each pool advance
to the consolation bracket (ninth
through 16th), also starting at
11 a.m .. at Manna High
The championslup match is
at Edison on Monday.
• Pool 1 (at Edison) Edison,
Fountain Valley. Corona del
Mar, Capistrano Valley.
• Pool 2 (at Marina) Wood-
bridge, Huntington Beach.
Laguna Beach. Mater Dei.
The Newport Harbor Baseball
Association Mud Hem.scored five runs
in the eighth inning and then retired
the River Dogs in order, ending the
game on a 1-6-3 double play to earn a
10-5 Pony Division victory.
Mud Hen pitcher Brendan
Salisbury struck out five in three
innings of work and Nick Frazier
fanned six in five innings. allowing
only two hits.
Offensively, the Mud Hens were led
by Brice SWlman, who had two hits
and three runs scored, nm Cramer,
who also had two hits, and Frazier. who
pounded a home run and scored lWlce.
Cody McDonald, WW Klatte, Jose
Gutterrez and Salisbury each chipped
m with two hits. Gutierrez's tut was key
as it scored Klatte and tied the score,
sending it into extra innings.
The River Dogs were led on offense
by Jamie Oblahve r, who finished with
two hits, while Chris Lomenzo, Erle
Wright and Blake Sanke each had one
hit.
In other NHBA Pony Divi.slon action:
•STORM 14, Buu.s 2 ·Five pitchers
combined to toss the Storm's first
no-tutter of the season. Pbllllp Martin
started on the mound for the Storm and
provided three strong Innings of work.
Nathan Todd, Carmen Ctm1nl, Taylor
Harris and Jeff Moore followed and
held the Bulls without a hit the rest of
the way.
Cimini led the Storm offensively,
• scoring three runs on a single. double
and two walks. Harris added a
three-run home run to deep left field in
the sixth Inning .
•It was one of the best all-around
games I've seen a team play.· said
David Paine, Manager of the Storm
(5-0). "The pitchers were dominant, the
players never let down defensively and
our offense was very opporturustic,
capitalizing on most of our chances to
score runs.·
in Bronco Division action:
•DODGERS 10, D IAMONDBACKS 4 ·
Good pitching and defense was the
factor for the Dodgers. Pitcher R.J.
D'Cruz started the game with three
solid innings of work, allowing one run
and striking out six. Danny Moskovtts
dosed the game for the Dodgers,.
pitching one inning, wtule stnlung out
two. John Swift struck out two and
Spenser Vengas struck out one.
The Dodgers' defense was
highlighted by catcher Peter Kinney
throwing out a runner at second base
and.Travis Knalson malung a diving
catch in right field to end the game.
The defense was also anchored by
Holden Gray-Keough at third and
Matthew Waller in left held. The
offense was led by Chrtsttan
Hoagland. who finished with two hits
and two runs scored, wtule Brandon
Davis blasted a double and scored one
run. Moskovits also added to the
offense with two runs scored, Swift had
a lut and a run scored and D'Cruz
contributed a single and a double with
a run scored.
• Rm>s 10, METs 2 ·The Reds relied
on defense to grab momentum and
pitchers Troy Seeber and Nick
Suenchen led the way with two innings
of work each to go with three stnkeouts
each. Catcher Ronnie Dunmore threw
out a Mets runner. while Stefan Brysha.
Erle Holland and Eve)l Fullerton '
played solid m the outfield. Jeffrey
Frum, Spencer Rlehley and Michael
McKay also added qreat defensive
support.
Westley Parks led the Reds' offense
with a double and a single.
In Mustang DiVlSlOn action
• D ODGERS 6, I NDIANS 5 · Ryan Albert
led the Dodgers with a 3-for-3
performance. includmg a triple and
three RBis. while John Caroompas
earned two RBis and AwUn IHos
collr:cted an RBI. Victor Done also had
a hit for the Dodgers
Albert and Rios. the Dodgers
pitchers, held the Indians scoreless
during the last four innings of the
game. The Indians were led m
pitching and overall play by Angelo
Angelldes, Jason Harris and Justin
Todd.
• Ann.Encs 5, RANGE.RS 4 • Josh Jaye
completed an all-around sparkbng
performance to lead the A's to Vlctory
Jaye pitched three scoreless uulings.
Later. with the bases loaded, he blasted
a bases-dealing triple. Pitcher Spencer
Rautw also had a strong game for the
A's, while Bobby. Okvlst made a
highlight-type catch in center field
Stuart Newsome contnbuted a single.
which brought in an Ms run.
• YANKEES 6, D ODGEllS 4 · DWan
Freiberg struck out seven and pitched
three strong innings, and Preston
Wheeler's two-run double m the hrst
and two defensive gems le<.i to the
Yankees' hrst victory.
Elliott Kaufman added a two-run
single and closed the Dodgers out
1-2-3 in the final inning to help the
Yankees improve to 1-1·1 m
Wednesday's game at KaLSer
Elementary
The Dodgers' Ryan Albert had two
hits and struck. out suc m two sharp
innings of relief. and teammates AusUn
Rios (two ruts) and Zac Porteous (one
hit) !>tood out
In Pinto D1VJS1on action
• THE MARINERS and B LUE J AYS
created lughhghts for their fans Ill a
recent matchup. Manners' catcher
Chase Whiting turned in a valuable
effort. while teammates Anthony
Carrese and Riley Peterson
contributed with steady offense.
proVldtng solid hitting. The Manners'
Michael Eden played solid defensively
at third base
• Pool 3 (at Marina) Marina,
Northwood. Canyon, Dana Hills.
• Pool 4 (at Edison) Newport
Harbor, Santa Marganta,
Esperanza, San Clemente.
SENIOR MEN'S WAnR POLO HAPPY BIRTHDAY NHBA
PERFECTION GOLF
Fields increase
next year on
Senior Tour
The Senior PGA Tour
announced this week that
beginning next year the non-
invitational fields will increase
from 78 to 81 players.
The criteria for players
entering tournaments will
remain largely the same, except
a new •career victory" category
bas been added, which wul
allow two additional playeri lo
enter tournament fields. A
sponsor exemption will also be
added.
The changes will affect the
Tosluba Senior Classic at
Newport Beach Country Club.
Newport fourth
The Newport Water Polo Foundation won two games in the
Premier League Tournament, which inducted a donunating 12·
3 win over USA National Team Northeast.
In the 12-3 win, seven second-hall goals sealed the victory
for Newport. Goalie Genai Kerr, who coaches the Sage Hill
High boys and girls water polo teams, posted 10 saves in the
win. Dan lOatt led the way with six goa.ls.
Newport also defeated USA National Team Southern
California. 6-4. Omar Amr scored a team-hlgh three goals. while
UC Irvine star Chris Kirchwehm notched two, including an
insurance goal with 56 seconds left Kerr stopped 12 shots
Garrett Gentry, a former Corona del Mar High standout, led
USA SoCal, scoring all four goals.
Newport lost. 8-5, to New York Athletic Club, to begin the
townamenL Klrchwehm scored two goals, while Kerr recorded
13 saves.
New York Athletic Oub is the leader of the Premier League
with a 6-0 record, while Newport is tn fourth place at 3-3. USA
National Team Pacific (5-1) is in second and USA National Team
Coastal California (3-2) is in third.
CWB ROWR HOCKEY
Corona del Mar stops Capo Valley, 3-1
Corona del Mar High's club roller hockey team was a 3· 1 winnor
In an IHF varsity B league match Tuesday at the Gretzky Center In
Irvine.
CdM rallied to tie it at 1-1 in the second period when Adam
Freede took an Austin Chase pass and scored.
, Gery Smith followed that up just 'J..lh minutes later when be sped
down the right side and fired a 1hQt that was deflected by Cole
Reddin Into the net. With two minutes left in~ l8CODd pedod. David
Bolton fed to Chase, wbo scored again to up the count to 3-1.
CdM goalie Erle Mirowit2 had 14 saves.
Celebrating the ~//y Pilot's
Athlete of the Week series
I 1 I I 1
TODAY
CHlumNE McDoNAu> (i)
Orange Coast College
water polo
ClasnNA GEURIN (i)
Orange Coast
soccer
SAl\JIDAY
MAXWAWCK @
Corona del Mar
golf
Newport Stonn pitchers combined for a perfect game
Wednesday rught at TeWinkl~ Park dS the River Dogs were 14-0
Vlctims Ill a Pony League game The Storm unproved to 5-0.
Phillip Martin. Carmen Cumru and Nathan Todd did not allow
a smgle base-runner No hits. no walks. no errors. no notlung.
"It was pretty U11press1ve when the guys tossed a no-lutter last
Saturday (a 14·2 win over the Bulls with five pitchers shanng the
glory)
"But then they tum nght around and do thts, ·said Stonn
Manager David Paine.
All three pitchers contributed wit.h their bats. Martlll went 4
for 4 with a tnple. three runs scored and two RBis. Cururu was 3
for 4 with a double. sconng three runs. and Todd tut a three-nm
homer m the lhlfd mrung to break 1t open.
Enc Patne had a two-out. two-run smgle, and Charles Aguilar,
Timmy Olsen. Kns Packwood and Jeff Moore also had hits.
SABATINO'S
I\, -1.1111.11.1 ,\ I ,.1 .. 'li'I'' ".t '"'. . •
(949) 723-0621
·10 .
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""'~-~ . . .
-:.> _._-_J'>.._ L.. .,
I
Acna..-II frml =c.;1 •~ i:t1 ..... It I atnl Pf!\°"'-: L73, 141
Ttlll tolOWlnCI P9'tonl C11Y ORIVE, P.O. M ~ ~~ Ut70, ORANO!'!ll lntllllfYe ,. .. _ ... ._, CALIF lll2lllS3
217 Of'r(i A'te ~ PROBATE = ~~~ i: YOU ':"~ 1el!
Ave.biei. ~ • llOn. ~ ~ CA et IN l*""I end Thlt ~ II con-110n1 or ~ '1f: WI lndlYicllll =.,, ~ Wlt$I
Have you 1ta11ed lhe OCMt before the • doi1U bullrllM y.n No hHrlno Your •P· 'Wie ~9mlfll WU .,..,.... mlY be In pet-I
filed wfttl IM ~ 'fF' ~o8Y Ill A~ 1
Clerk of~ _.,, ITOA or a oc>11i111ge111 on 03/1 ...... 111 ..... , er.-ol ._ ~ • • .,., ~ ""* ... )QI' dlllm Ody Piiot Mat. 15. 22. wllh lhe co,.irt Md 11111 •
29, Apr. §. 200'Z f3t1 tPflt tQ the piMIClnll l'l_P-I
N011CE Of ~ illoolr*d. by '
P'"'"'"O. N • the OCMt Wlttlln four .. ' ' ' ' monlhl flcln Ille dlll8 of TO ADMINISTER f1rtt ~ of 1etW1 1
ESTATE Of: • ~ In Prob9 .. I R08ERT JAMES (;ode ..aiol'I $100. The I
MARSHALL time tor ftllnG dU'rll wt I
CASE NUMBER: not eJCl)ll'e before tour I A2123H monlhl flcln lhe hleMg I _ .. .._._ ..._ ..... ._ dale"°**'~-To .,, ,_,., ...,,_,.. YOU MAY EXAMIN&t
clattH, credrtOfl, cont• b f11e kepi by 1h4t ONMf: -4 lngent credltora, and If ~ .,. 1 pet'IOll-~'U
petWCn wt1o mey oht· i.Mled In lhe ~ _. bl lnlllr.-d In lhe me file with l'-
wll"' ...... "'bat\, at; ~ • ~ for ~ ROBERT JAMES dW Notice (lonn 0~
MARSHALL -_.. ~ A PETITION FOR IM) al Ille ·-• "' an
PROBATE hat bNl'I -*"'/ and _....,
1t11d by LILLIAN __.. ...-°' of any L.ABANA in the Sup«tor petltlon or account u
Coul1 of C1Ufornla, ~kled In Probate ~ of ORANGE. NC111cx1 1250. A Reql.-t tor Spedll No-PETITION FOR 11ce fonn ii 1ve1labl1 PROBATE reQUeltl 1lllt LILLIAN LA8ANA bl Iii>" flcln "'9 coult clM.
pointed .. Olf90nll rep-1:':!?. ~ ,...,.,... lo edmlnllMI 89127, i•~SAN
the 11181• al the dice-FERNANDO MISSION
dint VIEJO CJWF 92$92 THE PETITION ,.. PubtllMd N1wpol1 =.'!r ~.tour::; Beach·Coata M111
the lndeplndenl Mn*!-~ Man:h 15, 18.
lstratioll °' EllMll Ad. fM3Q5 (Thil auhxtty wll 11ow Flctltlous lk.lalnea
"" Plf$OOll .....-nt· Name Stlltement atlvl to 1111• many ao-The 1o11ow1ng persont
Ilona wlltlout oblalning .,. dOlng ~ ...
oou11 approval Befor1 1 Expedite Signing ~ C9f1lln vety m· S.rvtcea 3268 Tur1odc •
portant aotlon•. hOw· Or., coita M"8. CA
ever, lhl penonlll rept": 92626 ~ Wll bl r9QUlfWd ...,., 01wud. 3268
lo give ~ lo In-Turtodl Dr. Costa MIM!'1
tlr9llad plf100I unlell CA 92626 .n
ltlly have waived nolicl Thll bullnlN 19 con:· or cooseoted to the dUcted by .,, inclvldll9I •
PtOPOMd action.) The Have you 111111d Independent 1dmlnl•· dOlng buslne8I ytKt No''
tratlon authority wlll bl NaJet Oawud '
granted un'"8 In In-Thie 1t.a1ement wu..
Wiiied petlOll 11111 "' filed wt#I the County • objlc:bof1 to !hi petltiotl Clet1I of °'8nol Counly
and ltlOWS good C8l.lll on 00/1 'l/21JIYI I Why lhl COUf'{ lhould not 200zetf!Mf7 I
grwil the l&lltlOrily. Olly Plol ...., 15 za.
A HEARING on lhl 29 Apr. s. 2002 F30¥
STARTING
ANEW
BUSINESS?r
• • • • • • • • • •
The f.Ltttl [Npartmmt at the Daily Pil.ot is pkmtd to 11nntn1nct 11 n~ 1"111cc
n<IW 11lltliJUJ.c to MW busiMSSa. ~ wiU now SEARCH the NZmt for you aJ no extra ch11rt,t. """ SllW JOU tht
timL 11nJ the trip to the Court Houst in Sllnu Ana. Thm. of coum, ".ftn. tht
sMrth is compkml ~ wiU fik J""r fictitious businm 1111mt sutJtmmt unth tht
Count} Cln*. P"blish onct 11 ~tit for four wults 4I rr'lwrttl "1 l4w IUUi thm fik
JO'" poof of public11tU>n with tht Count} Ckrlt.
Pk11.1t 11Dp by 10 fik pr fktiti~ businm 1111ttmmt 111 tht Daily Pil.ot. 33() W.
&y St, Oma MesA. If JOU unnot rtap by. pk4It c4'J us ill (949) f>ef 2-4321 11nd ~
wiU wuiltt 11m1ngmrmn for JOU to INtnJk thiI proctdurr by ""1iL If p sM#lt/ INtw 11ny farther 'luntions, pluzst C4iJ us 11nJ Wt wiU bt 11f1Jrr than
t""' to llSSist JD1I. Good lmlt in pr MW businm!
ij!he Newport Beach/Costa Mesa,
Balbda Island, corona del Mar
Dally Pilot presents you with a great opportUnity to
promote antiques & collectibles. Perfect for shops,
dealers, auetions, booksellers, decora~ reftnlShera,
an galleries -develop your bustness wt~ usl
..
~ EQUAL ltOUSlllG Of'f'OATUHITY
Alllll.UCt~ In Ills lllWllllC* II subject lo tlMI ftdttaJ Fair HouSlnO
Act of 1968 u amended
wllldl makts It llltQal to ldvtrtlM ·any preference. Imitation Of d!Wlmlnatlon bMtd on l'ICt, colO<, rellg· ic?"1 MX, hlndlcap, familial
1m111 Of Nlllonll Oftgln, Of an lnltnllon to makt any auch f)tlfeftnct, llmh&tion °' clllc:tlmlNllon .•
Thie """""* will not kltOWlngly ICCtpl any
advtrtlatmtnl lor real
111111 wtllcll Is In YloUllon of ttlt llw. Our readtn are htrMV lnlMrntd tllat all
dwtlllllgS adllertised In lhis
~ are nallablt on
Ill tq\111 oc basis. To com ISCrimi·
nation, olHree ill
1-80CH24-8590.
t . .-.1
11-~ ...... ~' ,·~:l
t .
• "i•,
:-.. f~
~ .
-.. ,., ..
Aleil ••• ~·Ai: .......
W1dllt1d1y ...
·~to ........ .......
LOCAl;
11111 .....
llclon Cll~ II Ull
RIVERA ...,..._
AE WWY ......
38r 1..581 ~ custom Condo Melblt. gtllnite. lmlmile Top ol fie lirll
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A MUSI See! Offered 81
$999,000. eo.lllne Rellty
949-75M1n
°"LY 4 LEFT
CUSTOM HOMES
38A 2.SBA
FROM S461.000 SAT/SUN 12-5
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OPEN HOUSE
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Amber Wrt 3 6
48r "°"*-FIOlll
the higll. S400,GDO
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.. ~ -1:a·-"""'
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)
• ·-·-iii -ii
OCEANFRONT
FIXER
Not For The Falntoo-
of Heer1
1gt. Mt-723-8120
Waterlront P1mor1ma
90ft Frontage
$595,000
agt. Mt-723-8120
..
Friday, March 1 s, 2002 11
--·Polley
lyP'-e By Mll&'lll Penom
Ratt~ aud rlt.dlinH art Rlbjecl to tMJl~t •1d)()t11 ll<Jtjff.. TI1"
publi.•her rM«VI'$ tbt rlPtt ro rttbOr. rH"IA ~rf,. l'f'\ i-t l)C l't'jN-1 110~
rlM,irtffi achtrti~t. PltaAt ""R°rt 111~ l'rrot 1hit1 n1.1~ lw u1 ~our
<'iru-.~iflt'rt ild iounediar,.ly. 'Tilf' OiUI~ PU01 11inpti. no linhilit ~ for 1111\
tmlr i11 an 11d\mi5tmt111 for "'hi~·h i1 may ht l'f"(po1111Jrl,. l'Xt'#pl fot
1ht 1-w.1 11( 1ht pn ANuoll~ orrupitd b' 1l1t trror Cr ... L1 ra11 <H1J~ lw
111~>' t<I for 1h.t first itwnion.
(9iQ) bi2·'.X> .. 8
•
.J.:U) ,..,_. Ba s. reef
Co•I& \I,... C. \ 9'.?<>2"
\1 ..,..,.., 1114. & ., "4
8--s
I rl .. phoii.-8~30a111·~>:<>0v111 "' ..... ,~"'~ \t" nlk-lu 8::iOon,.__):OOt•111
1i... • .ti.,-~rio:~
Gl..i OcMrl VIN 1Br
Bright & qune. di 10 bNch, Fp. ,_
~ ,,,_~ ·-,,,..,_ year IH . reduced S1295m ,.._224-3151
.-----..-ones ---
Monda) ........... .r riday 5:00pm Friday .......... TimNln} 5:00pm
TuMy ......... Monday 5:00pm Saturda~ ........... Fricla} 3:00pro
\\ffinl'ti<lay .... Tuesday S~m 1utda) ............. Friday :i:OOpm
Thu™fay .. WrdneiMlay 5:00pm
Remodeled Studio IJ9P'I 2Br 1Ba ~ttxlltd um ~. no pelslsmkg """' 1 .... S 1, 125/mo i* oncld. avaA ca.,....·· rg y ......
""' ' --VM IOI ~ no pt1S MW C9lp«. ~. ~ ...... ~ and blinds $1075/mo management 949-222·Sn 949-722·1342
Sunny 28r 1Ba w/F'p. deell. comm pool, 2 calJ)OltS no LARGE TOWNHOUSE
Newpol1 View Blrgllnl ()pen Sunday 1-5
Model -'te1 3Br fs& NEW LISTING
pets, 432 Seaward. 211< ~.5ba. vete larvt * * * * * $1300/mo 949·64<H 208 YIRI. cllen. 30 s_. to Sand, Sluclo,
$1 MM73-5535 I 6 29rf1S.. S1050t'Mo. 6 ""'' 4 SANDY COVE houM W/pnvllt ,.., Y•rd Sb!. 4 5ba $1.850000
w/comm pool & epa. 8gl Stetan111 ~eurer
P Tenen, egl 949-85H106 949-715-3156 www.petr!clttM!ort.con1 __ :..:..:...'--'..:..='----
OcMnelde of c-t Hwy $180Clr'Mo. MH42·25M Wille To 8eedl & Vllllgel
2 Twnhms. 20. 1 58a each
small pol ok. s 1650 & $1750 111 Near Hoeg.. 2Br 2Be. S 1250m & 3br 2!be. S 190Qrll * 2\IJlk. 2\ll8a, Slo\le. tng
end garaoe. w•d hk·upa. •'<1 garage Fplc $2500/1'1
pal!O, no pecs ~ 28r 1B1 Apt. ~"""9 $1450mo ttM7»039 I U J11 I I :.r ofi:f~ I 1':0::"; I Completely Renovl1.ed ~Atwgt' s& ssa. 4 ~ :v~~t: .. ~~-""-Glted-"1•-fteom_~_rn._1_.a~ -~-rldgM-'1...;.14-M.-Locatlon;::...;A=~=24~~--12_8::_ 1 •M J!i I • 48r :ZS. Duple• •
100 t*d. small bay ..... Fp. WIO gar ,_decor no
pe1 $2900!!!0 949-61s.e1m old homt, Ul9*ill gelO(t. "~ tBa S855/mo wlfng & ... _
prot'I larldlclptd Wltti jlc., homes located on U. QIJt6I get 10 751mo w/pal>O & re-
childrtlll nelghbo/hood c.ntral Coast Iii MoflO Bay st!Yt<I carpon, lndry lac on WALK TO THE BEACHll
Opply Knocb Bc:ll CloM St,350.000 Shown by Appl Pnced from Ille $600,000 srte wane to Tn-Sqr Klein S400 Move-In bonus! Na Tum-Uy 1..ux, tplClous Only. ~ PrwfelTed mbayhomu.com MnQt 8n-704-8649 x 9200 2Brf18a Sl17~. on 1
Bayfronl Y Mtty Renlale
4br, 2.5bll on It. Bayfront
• Ruby Beach-Ntwly
remodeled SSOOOlmo.
AllO a 3bf, b , on S.
•BALBOA ISLANO•
1br 11141 1 _. ~
S1400/mo. Agent
t4H7l·7800 TwMle, ~ 2000 st Owner/8lu. 949-59!H125 f-800-576-2811 year leele 714-~2468
WIS 40. now 3Br, 2.Sba. lg ~=::::::::::::::=::...:..=.:::::::::::===~
2c a!lldl 1191 $409,000
Ethel l(/IWlz • ~ 949~321
-tttielllnwrtz COtrl
• .... -·~
'
'
Newpor1 Acro.t the Shel
CLASSIFIED 281 15Ba. 1c garage. no Ador1ble 28r 1.581,
peta. 51195/mo 1665 IM'le Twnt. (5 ~) ,_carpi
.__ _ _.( ..... 9_4_9 .... )_5_4_2_-_5_6_7_8 __ _, ~~" 9"9-720-9422 :\~~~-=
HoultdMnlng • EQ'd
Wldy/Bi-wkly/MonthlyfWHk·
ends. Greal ra1ts1 !meld.I 949-!)48..4Z85 91278-()837
1-SEAV=I
IREALFSTATE I
c:~:ung
Fflr All Your
Rt'al &leltt' Nrt'tl\!
714-432-7873
WWW.rtlll)~com
PUBLIC
NOTICE
The Caltf Pubhc·
Ut1lt1ies Com·
mession REQUIRES
lhal .. used house-
hold ~ moYerS pont their P.U.C.
cal T ntrnt>er: lmos
and chaulfers print
their T C P number
in an ~ertisments. If you have a ques·
!ion aboul the legal-
ily ol a mover, lfino ()( chaullet. cal;
PUBLIC UTILITIES
COMMISION 714·5~151
::=o.~~~ Selly • Rlllllbold Reelty
t4H75-4l22
2Br 2 j8t 2 story
T OWllllomfi' Fp 2 palJc5 2c
Qi1 CXllMI poa 62 Navane
IQ! $1650mo 949-~
-=I
[M;;iiG;'.~ 1-l1l'l• I
LENll Sf'M9t MOW
EJp'd SA UDr M IQll & --=----. i I
12 f!lda.t, Mon:h 15, 2002
8 .. Dlll*a I ,_ IO
bMdl $2200llno.~ 281. S1800lmo ,_ Clrptt/
dow C0'4lln09 Y11r 11111 7\HZ4-(l!l!)~
-..... -·--] • .
I . a:. ,, ' ._ f • '
WEST .,
<;;> J84 2
o KJ98S
•985 sovm • AOlOHJ
<;;> Vofd
<:> 17'42
•AQJ
The bidding: . EASI' SOUTH Wf.ST NORTH J~ I• 19 U ,_ .. ..... .. .... Pus ,_
OpcnlJll lcad 1\tio of
When you are in ~hill soenu 10 be
an ironclad COOITllCl, don your pcs-
~---~~., I 1imut's hi! Ind look Coe wtm. ti llllY· =could impcnl your venllll'e. U e:ll1N. 1ee .r a coumer ii • • 1llc main pomt or 1nlCf'CSt an die
auction i~ Noith's decision co bid four
spiides with only a doubleson brig.
S'mce North would llkely hlive mled
LOST OR STOLEN
Last seen Dec. 14, corner of
Wilson and Newport Blvd.
LARGE
REWARD
For Info
(conftdenti•I)
Jack Russell
Terrier
949-548-1235
NEJGHBOAHOOD IALf IATUN>AY 7:IOAll ~ fumltul'I. l..otl
of 111"1 --1315 ~ 11~ OIMJ!l iw..-n N.8.
H.B. Sit llm
Evttyttilng from ~to toy•ll
ttl w. o.:.i front
.,.... -··. • v .,.,.. • • ..,.. ~I
c:· -'Al':· ~'"' ...... " ... '* ')1,
T
....... lie -1111 the 11stin91 In INt
catlgory nwy ,.......
you 10 call a 900
number In wtllcll
theta II I cNrge per 1'1lnull.
-
l.i--... --· ~•4o-.:a..
COVE MOTORINO
BllW SZlla ..
lllulllln --m.
BMW sz-. .. llllc:Mall 121,115 "'71
..... 32llc '17
IMM:Mlll --VMS40
BllW 32Mc '17
9w9'M SM.• m•
BMW 330I '01
$31,111 Mto
BMW 52!!11 '01 Gt..wn '31,115 Vmo3
Z3 'OD
~ ..... Vn40
-------....,:r;.,: ::.a
c.-.c s.v-. m
VI '17
pM'tl. cc, .. ,_., ..... ..... ,__...
(~121') 111.115 NABERS
(714) 14M100
c:.Ms s.v-. as '00
...... -. cd, llloyt,
flll ""'' lltlr ('144002) &21,HS NABERS (714) 540-ttOO
~ .....
LT 4llA W
low ml. Yflf'J dl9n. IUI pwr,
.... -pdlg, 3rd ..... ,.. (116195) $29.5115 NAIEM (714) t!HllO
Pofttltc Gnnd All SE '01
4 cyl. PW, pcl. a, ct
('620Q7) 112.lt5 NAIEAI
(114) f!Oi!OO
' .
Avlomalte, l'lan1vm .filvet /8/a~K !eat/Jet
s
All
· '99 BMW Z3 Cpa
BlitV""1l &~~ f(J/2(}26/
'99 BMW 323i
IJIW, """' (~/
I I • • ' t I 1 f t t t
s39 995
Center of
2002 Excellence
AWARD
From BMW North Amertca
The Crevier Advantage: * fetvioe loan Cat~ B!I At fOintment * Patt.f & fetvioe ();;en fatt1ttl9!1 * Eve'!/ Alew BM(J) lnolvt!M
.J '49t.f /.J6, 000 Mi/M of
ht/I Maintenanoe! * Oot11iMg Oar (J/a.fhl!.f * Oomtlimenla'!f li;nJ of
Ga.f w1f/J Pt1roha.fe * Oom(Jt1let Worf ftelion.f * (J/e// ln!Otmetl Olient Atlvi.for.f
JOIN US IN SUPPORTING THE REBUILDING OF THE
BOYS & GIRLS CWB
OF LAGUNA BEACH. IMI t'-1 bw Htlpl
~LEASE CALL 949-494-9300
. . . .
....
I I • I I
. .
SERVICE SPECIA·LS
.
• OH 8nd Fitter C~
• Rotate and Balance Tires
• Drain *ld Refill Cootant 1 gallon •Drain 8"d Refill 1l'mlaml.aalon 5 qts.
• ReplaCe Fuel + Air Rtter
• TMt & Service Battery
• Top Off Flulds
l'Ne llliltl Point ln1p1CUOn
80,000 Md 90,000 Mlle Tune-up Extra
' .
. ._,
USED CARS
'97 CHRYSLER CONCORDE
'97 CHEVROLET ASTRO
I
'00 MERCURY MYSTIQUE
Auto AC
'99 TOYOTA 'SOLARA
'01 FORD WINDSTAR LX
Power wtndowl, locks ABS, rear AIC tha I 4BAR283
'01 MERCURY MOUNTAINEER AWD
Moonroof, co C r, Leathef, v.a, Sharp! '™0~872)
'01 LINCOLN CONTINENTAL
Uncoln Cet11fted, low Mllet, lmmac Cond. (4PLA047)
'00 MECEDES BENZ C230