HomeMy WebLinkAbout2002-07-12 - Orange Coast PilotI • • .
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' ' -Cloud under
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turned toward
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_SERVING THE NEWPORT -MESA COtv\MUNmES SINCE.1907
Tackling · C.osta Mesa's difficult topics
· EDrTOR'S NOTE: Two weeks
ago, a Web site focused on Costa
Mesa Issues became the center of
controversy when a group of resi-
dents questioned several posts
made there by members of the city's
Human Relations Committee.
Questions of racism and homo-
phobia triggered angry responses
from those charged, including one
City Council candidate.
Today, the Pilot continues its
three-part series looking into who is
involved in the Web site and how
their debate about the city's future
led to such controversial allegations.
•While many debates on
a city issues Web site are
frtendly, the few that aren't
have b~ought unexpected
attention to its member8.
Lolita Harper
DAILY PILOT
COSTA MESA -Anything that
affects the quality of life of city resi-
dents -from school test scores to
local politics -is fair game on a
local Web site, and at any given
time, day or night, somebody has
something to add.
The issues raised on the Con-
cerned Costa Mesa Citizens Web
site are diverse, spanning from the
benign to the controversial.
And those who take part in dis-
cussions are equally as assorted,
varying from political hopefuls
looking for recognition to anony-
mous contributors who duck. it.
The site was started as a venue
for residents to discuss possible
solutions to some of the problems
they say plague Costa Mesa. The
well-intended site bas now become
a topic of contention as a group of
young activists has questioned
PART TWO OF THtfPE
COIWING SATURDAY: Who and
what were behind charges made
about allegedly racist and homophobic
comments on the Concerned Costa
Mesa Citizens Web site 7
some postings made by three mem-
bers of the Costa Mesa Human
Relations Committee that the
activists call homophobic and racist.
The focus was on a handful of
posts. Thousands more about possi-
ble developments, Cos~ Mesa crime,
a Skate park and rezorung the West-
side bluffs -just to name a few -
were ignored by the group of
activists. Also kept out of the spotlight
were other contributors to the site
whose views have caused much more
debate on the site than those of the
questioned city committee members.
The site bas 90 registe red mem-
bers and is open to anyone who logs
onto Yahoo Groups and registers
with the search engine. Although
the world is welcome to join in. the
site is focused on Costa Mesa issues
and encourages membership by
residents only.
SEE TOPICS PAGE 7 .
3 teens arrested
after alleged rape
•Police say the _J
17-year-olds drugged
the victim at a party
in Corona del Mar.
The trio could be
tried as adults.
Paul Clinton
D AILY PILOT
CORONA DEL MAR -
Three teenagers have been
arrested on suspicion of drug-
ging and gang-raping a 16-
year-old girl at a Corona del
Mar home, authorities said.
third was taken into custody
at-10:15 a.m. Thursday in San
Bernardino, Shulman said.
The girl, who also lives
outside Newport Beach, was
physically uninjured during
the episode, Shulman said.
She was given a common
"date ra~" drug and was
unconscious at the time the
three teens had nonconsensual
sexual in"tercourse with her.
Shulman said. He would not say
what drug exactly was used.
"l would characterize the
assault as difficult to compre-
hend, • Shulman said, saying
that he had not seen the tape.
"It's horrendous to think some-
one would do this sort of thing.•
Counseling has been offered
to the girl, Shulman added.
One of the teens is a fami-
ly member of Orange County
DON LEACH I DAILY PILOT
Ramon Ocon applies brass polish to the carousel as be prepares for opening day of the Orange County Fair.
The assault was video-
taped by the teens, all 17, and
occurred during the evening
of July 5, Newport Beach
Police Sgt. ~teve Shulman
said. The teens were in town
to party that Friday, he said.
Newport Beach police
arrested two of the teens in
Alta Loma and Rancho Cuca-
monga on Wednesday. The
. Assistant Sheriff Don Haidl,
who has overseen the sheriff's
reserve deputy program since
January 1999. .
Leap the gates
Orange County Fair kicks
off today, with much
that"s new and crowd
favorites back again
Young Chang
DAILY PILOT
P romises started sprouting this
, w~k at the Orange County
Fair.
' Promises that your onion
rings would be •colossal,• that your
com dog would be "jumbo,• that
your sourdough bread would be
•world famous," at least for the
,duration of the 16-day fair, which
:starts at 10 a.m. today
· The signs and their trailers moseyed
onto the fairgrounds on Saturday.
: By Wednesday, the vendor at Ice
:c ream Desserts was baking his waf-
fle cones and rolling them into fun-
nel shapes. His comer of the fair
:n ear the carousel ride smelled the
·buttery way fairs shoUld.
The gates hadn't
even been opened, and
the first tickets hadn't
ye t been stubbed.
lllSIH
For all that's happening today at
the Orange County Fair, see the
fair schedule, Page 6
At the carousel,
workers polished gold
poles supporting the r "Water Drop,• which drops
horses. riders 100 feet onto a net.
At the game booths nearby, There's also a new ride in the car-
gargantuan stuffed animals got d e-nival area called the "Mega Drop.•
robed of their plastic bags and hung New entertainment features
neatly along the borders of .. booths. include a Bluesfest, a LOcals Livel
Some workers hammered away. Music Fest, performances by Weird
Yet others hummed to Smokey Al Yankovic and Carrot Top, and a
Robinson's "Crµisin, • blaring from a roster of artists that includes fair
portable radio somewhere, while opener Huey Lewis and the News
they worked. and the Indigo Girls. •
"Within a 72-hour period, we kind New foods ~elude a deep-fried
of go from an empty container to being -Snickers bar sald to be the rage in
a mini-city here,• said Steven Beazley, England
deputy general manager of the fair. . •Although it's non-scientific, we
"With all kinda of amenities popping try to J!O by the 80-20 rule,• Beazley
up, including foOd stands, restrooms, said. Eighty percent we try to keep
entertainment Venues, ... we become tha.sGDe. and 20% we. try to bring in
a mini-city that has an the support ser.. the btand new because we tl#nk.
vices a nonnal city would have." '
Ne wcomers to this city include a SEE LEAP PAGE 4
'1
SEE RAPE PAGE 4
Newport Beach to look
at El Toro spending
•Pro-airport groups that received city money
welcome look into their finances, saying the
funds were 'spent properly.'
June CaM19r•nde
DAILY PILOT
NEWPORT BEACH -City
officials want to know how two
groups spent a $3.67-million
grant to educate residents
about an El Toro airport and
whether any money is left over.
City Cound.lman John Hef-
fernan has asked the dty man-
ager to begin an inquiry and
audit of the grant the city issued
in March 2001 to the Airport
Working Group and to Citi7.ens
for Jobs and the .Eronooiy.
·1 want to know what hap-
pened to the money,• Heffer-
nan said. "This is a multimil-
lion-dollar expenditure of city
funds. We should know what
we got, what it was used for.
And if there's money left. we
should get it back."
Heffernan cast the sole dis-
senting vote last year against
awarding the grant.
Heffernan made a similar
request earlier this year but
failed to get any support on the
council But as Measure W won
voter approval in March, dash~
ing the d ty\ hopes an airport
could be built at the shuttered
El Toro Marine Air base, Hef-
fernan ren~ed his ieRUest~
see SPENDING PAGE 4
. \
Finding peace through stret~hing
aching muscles eventually gave
way to lnc.reued flexibility and
an amazing feeling ot oelmnea.
And the pain ID my back started
to sublide u well. 72 · <D W 11 • M-. •The Princess Di•ies" will be
shown .t dl'* toct.y during the Movies at the BNC:h
setlft hosted by tM Newport Dunes Watwfront Resort.
The hotel is.t 1131 8lldt Bey °"'4J, Nevvport Beach. Free
admis'slon. $7 J*king per CM. (949) 1'l9-0UNE.
After a '8w yem c:l dc*1g
hatba. I w.. bungrJ b a new
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"'The Dirk eomer• w1i1 be shown • pert of the Friday Night Fiim Nolr series at ~ M~ of Art at &:JO tonight. The museum Is at 850 San CllJ•.,.... ~a.ch. Suggested donation ts $4 or $6. (949) 759-1122.
, !CENT TREPTOW I DALY Pl.OT
Laguna Beach resident Andrew Winer, a UCI graduate, sits outside LaUtude 33 bookstore wltla a poster of Illa
new book, "lbe Color Midnight Made.• Winer describes~ novel u ... contemporary coming-of-age story." .
Being -the character . .
Mary A. Castillo
DAILY PILOT
A cross the table at the
Coffee Pub, UC Irvine
graduate and-novelist
Andrew Winer admit-
ted that the first time he saw his
debut novel, "The Color Mid-
night Made," on a bookstore
shelf, he was too exhausted
from the editing and promotion-
al work to get excited. ·
•I thought it would be this
huge moment.· the Laguna
Beachresidentsai,.<!.leaning
back in his chafr:'"-·i.was so ~
':'involved in the behind-the-
-scenes work that it was anticU~
.·mactic."
But as Winer prepares to
embark on a reading and book-
signing tour that will take him
through the West Coast, he is
anxious to interact with his
readers. Many have already
contacted him through his Web
site, surprising him with their ·
insights into the book.
•During the composition, it's
a completely private endeavor,
and then suddenly it's out in the
world," he said. "It's an expo-
sure, but it's nice to see those
characters, especially Conrad,
out in the world."
Wmer refers to the smack-
talking yet sensitive 10-year-old
narrator, Conrad Clay, who
absorbs the tragic realities of
adult life between his parents
~
VOL Mr NO. 19:t ......... -.
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, . .
Novelist and UC Irvine gradua~e
took steps into the life of the subject
in ~The Color Midnight Made'
view of the character," he said.
Although Wmer and Conrad
share some experiences in com-
mon -both are red and green
colorblind and were raised in
African American communities
by single mothers -the author
maintains that this is not a
straight autobiography. His
mother hasn't read it yet nor is
he partictilarly looking forward
to that event, he admitted.
and his best friend's mother. Tht!
character first emerged in a
short story Wmer wrote when he
first moved to Los Angeles from
New York. moving from life as a
painter to that of a writer.
"I was still an artist, but I
began living a double life writ·
in short stories and screen-
, said.
Eager to be part of a commu-
1lity ol writers, he applied to
UCI in 1996 unaware how slim
his chances were of getting
accepted, The program accepts
six students per year, three men
and three women.
When Wmer traveled to the
campus to interview with the
program director, Geoffrey Wolff,
he walked in without any letters
of recommendation and a copy of
"Men'& Uves," by Peter
Matthiesen. Wolff overlooked the
former and honed in on the latter.
"It was obscure enough and
up Geoffrey's alley that he let
me in," Wmer remembered.
The experience changed his
life.
Winer found a haven in
which he worked with fellow
students -all of whom are
published novelists -including
Aimee Bender, Charmaine
Craig, Glen David Gold; Alice
Sebold, Maile Meloy and David
Benioff. It was a place where ~e
could develop his writer's voice
rather than try to emulate his
favorite authors.
"I went from living in L.A.
writing short stories in isolation to
a safe place where I could really
believe I was a writer,• he said.
After settling in Laguna
Beach, Wmer dived into Con-
rad's adventw:es, taking trips to
the Alameda, where the novel is
set. When he rt>uldn't get up to
the Bay area, he spent a lot of
time hanging. around the Circle
Kon North Coast Highway,
where he became addicted to
soda and junk food while
befriending skateboarding kids.
"My diet mimics my novels,"
he quipped.
Although it seems ironic that
an author could create an
authentic working-class experi-
ence while taking walks on the
beach in between writing ses-
sions, Wmer said the distance
freed him in a sense.
"Living away from Alameda
allowed me to imagine it and
create a world from the point of
"I didn't start with a clear.
idea of what I wanted to do with
this. book," he said. "The pain of
learning the frailty of adult love
and the experience of growing
up around some pretty wild
characters found their way into
the core of the book.•
As Wmer hits the road with
"Midnight" and gets back into
the head of Conrad for his read-
ings, he anticipates the fall
when he can begin his second
book. If anything, he'll bring a
greater understanding of not
only the nuts and bolts of the
publication, but the single dri-
ving f6rce that makes writers do
what they do.
· "You need a lot of faith to
write a novel.• he said.
Wmer will read from and
sign "The. Color Midnight
Made" from 4 to 6 p.m. July 20
at Latitude 33. The bookstore is
at 311 Ocean Ave., Laguna
Beach. Information: (949) 494-
5403 or visit www.andrewwin-
er.com.
• right: No news ltOfief, lllultrltions, •
editoNI IMt'9I' OI ~
henlln csi be reproduc9d wtthout
~ permllllon of~ owner.
HOW m 11EAOt us
·~ The -nm. Orenge County
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Daily Pilot
CIEl?l IT OUT·
Adventures
in the comjori
of home
L ooking for tbrllls that don't involve
risking life and limb on the world's
blghest peaks or deepest rivers?
Check out new adrenaline-pumping
sagas to experience true-life adventure
from your favorite armchair.
If you're a fan of nauti-
cal exploits, get on board
for Tami Ashcraft's ordeal
on the high seas in •Jled
Sky In Mourning." When
she set off from Thbiti
, with her fiance to deliver
a yacht to San Diego, the
24-year-old yachtswoman
never suspected she'd
lose her sweetheart in a
hunicane and face a 41-
day solo journey back to civilization. Sub-
sisting on canned food., beer and cigars,
she endured fatigue, injury and near
mental breakdown before being rescued
off the coast of Hilo in Hawaii by a
Japanese touring vessel.
Storm survivor John Rousmaniere
shares equally electrifying stories of dis-
aster in •After the Storm.• From the
chronicle of poet Pmcy Shelley's demise
at sea to the wreck of the supply ship
Pollux off the Newfoundland coast dur-
ing World War ll, these are riveting reads
for anyone interested in true-life yarns
about seamanship, loss and recovery.
Ellesmere Island in the Canadian
Northwest has claimed numerous vic-
tiJDs of ships gone awry, but it was a
deliberate destination for
Jerry Kobalenko. Read
about his exploits in this
desolate Arctic land-
scape in "Tbe Horizon-
tal Everest,• in which
the intrepid photojour-
nalist reflects on wildlife,
historical expeditions
and the meaning of
extreme adventure.
Reftections on a century of adventur-
ous exploits are featured .in .. Points
Unknown.• With 41 pieces about moun-
taineerlng, trekking, navigating and
spelunking -including ~e story of
Earnest Shackleton's last expedition, Jon
Krakauer'& misguided ascent up Devil's
Thumb and Chuck Yeager's historic flight
-editor David Roberts puts the pull of
uncharted territory into sharp focus.
Had they focused on warnings about
ethnic strife, drug smuggling and mill·
tant Islam breV!ing in the "Yosemite
Valley" of Central Asia, four American
climbers might not have headed there in
August 2000. In what .
began as an assignment
for Climbing Magazine,
they spent six days at
gunpoint, after being
kidnapped by Islamic
terrorists. Read about
their nightmare in •Over
the Edge,• in which
Greg Child re-creates -·
the Ian Fleming-type
drama that ended when
the terrortzed climbers committed an act
none of them thought they ever could.
If you prefer adventure stories deliv·
ered live, mark your calendar for 4 or 7
p.m. July 18, when world trekker Jim
Wood will present .. A Week In Havana"
at the Newport Beech Central Library.
Wood. likens his sojourn on the
Caribbean's largest., least commercial·
ized island to playing a role ln a Predrico
Fellini movie. Cast yourself in it by call·
ing (949) 644~072 to reserve a spot.
• OtECX 1r our 1s wrttten bv the staff of me
Newport a..ctl Public Ubrwy. this week's column Is by Melma Adams 1n c:dlabomion wtth sieven
Short. All tides ~be ,_ ved from home or office computers ~ the catalog at
WWW.~l~org.
SUlf All SUI
calm. With light 1 o to 15
knots winds. The swell will
be from the northwest at 5
to 7 feet.
SUltF
11de continues to hun "rtv
morning ••loe-. lut there~
enough IMll In the MW
for more f8'Y ..-.. Frfdly
night lilllan could be good. .........
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•
Daily Pi!ot Friday, Juty 12, 2002 3
· Support growing to end waiver
• Opposition to controversial
sanitation permit is nearly
enough to ensure its defeat,
with Supervisor Jim Silva
joining the opponents.
'I'm very concerned
about our beaches and
harbors that are an
asset for this county.'
stance.
"A lot's going to
depend, for these
swing cities, on
what is said by the
staff," Vandersloot
said. "It was good
that Silva did that.•
Cannery Wtllage lofts
get needed approval
P•ul Cllnton
DAILY PILOT
NEWPORT-MESA -By sayipg
he opposes a controversial sewage
waiver, Supervisor Jim SUva hu put
the Orange County Sanitation Dil·
trtct board within one vote of quash·
Ing that agency's bld to extend the
permit.
Silva, who represents Newport
Beach, Costa Mesa and Huntington
Beach, becomes the 12th member of
the board to support dropping the
waiver and requiring the district to
&tep up treatment of itl sewage.
Right now, the dittrlct releases
243 milllon gallons per day of par·
tially treated sewage from an outfall
pipe on the ocean floor. City leaden
and environmentalists have said
they 1uapect this plume of treated
waste water is at least partly
responsible for beach postings and
closures in Huntington Beach and
Newport Beach.
"I'm very concerned about our
beaches and harbors that are an
asset for this county,• Silva said
Thursday. "The entire board ls con-
cerned about the quality of our
water.•
Silva, a former Huntington Beach
mayor, holds a seat on the district's
board. Nine of the 21 cities repre-
sented on the board and two of the
three local sanitary or water districts
are already on record as opposing
an extension.
On Wednesday, the district is
-Supervisor Jim Sllv•
scheduled to decide on a treatment
m ethod for the sewage and whether
to punue ita 30th waiver, which it
has held lince 1985. It wu ienewed
in 1998 and ta up again this year.
The Environmental Protection
Agency granted the district the
waiver, which hu allowed the dJJ.
trict to skirt 1tandard1 laid out in the
Clean Water Act of 1972.
Uke the bid to build an Bl Toro
airport, the waiver ilaue ha1 divided
the county into two comp• -only
instead of the rUt being between the
north and south, it ta beach com.mu·
nities pushing for higher treatment
and inland communities that have
resisted the 1teeper price tag.
However, in the laat several
months, dty coundl.s in Pullerton,
Orange, Irvine, La Palma and·Buena
Park called for an end to the waiver.
Representatives from Anaheim,
Santa Ana, Garden Grove, Fountain
Valley and a number of other inland
dties have withheld their support for
any effort to drop the waiver. Foun-
tain Valley Mayor Laurann Cook,
who holds a seat on the board, did
not return calls for comment.
Newport Beach resident Jan
Vandersloot, who as a member of
the Ocean Outfall Group has led the
push to elimlnate the waiver, said
he wasn't convinced the 13 holdouts
would stay entrenched in their
JlmSUva Huntington
Beach, Newport
Beach and Seal
Beach were among the tint cities to
oppose the waiver. Costa Mesa San·
itary Diltrlct board member Jim
Perryman ha• said he would not
1upport a renewal.
Bacteria haa been found as close
u a half ·mile from the Newport
Beach coastline. And, perhaps most
notoriously, a rash of closures in
1999 kept the beaches of Surf City
virtually empty.
, Perryman, and others, have said
they would not vote to apply to ~e
BPA for an extension of the waiver.
They believe the district will ulti·
mately need to move to the higher
level of treatment, a decision that
will cost less if it is begun sooner
rather than later.
Joining the rising tide, Assem·
blyman Ken Maddox -who will
represent parts of Costa Mesa when
district lines are redrawn after the
fall election -introduced legisla-
tion in February that would elimi·
nate the waiver and force the sani-
tation district to treat its sewage to a
higher level.
The legislation, known as Assem-
bly Bill 1969, passed through the
Assembly on a 62-8 vote in late May.
"I know the sanitation district
realizes how close the tWednesday)
vote is now,• Newport Beach Assis-
tant City Manager Dave Kilt said.
NThey may see the writing on the
wall, H
ED~
Mattress Outlet Store
BRANO NEW ·.cosMETICALLY IMPERFECT
Get tht Belt for Leal
•Plan for live-work units
along Rhine Channel
clears final hW'dle.
lune C.qgr•nde
DAILY PILOT
NEWPORT BBACH -On the
heels of a unanimous California
Coaatal Commi11ion approval.
the developer of the Cannery
Lofts said he expects to break
ground on the project sometime
in the next two months. ·
This week's coastal commis·
1ion vote was the final hurdle for
the controvemal development of
22 live-work units in the Cannery
Village. Though the deveJoper
had to get special approval to
exceed the 26-foot height llmit by
7 feet, it was the overall aesthetic
of the project, not the height, that
was the biggest cause for resi·
dent concern. Some said the 22
similar-looking units would over-
whelm the rustic atmosphere of
the Cannery area.
Ultimately, planning commis·
sioners disagreed with the argu-
ment, approving the project in
February and clearing the way
for the final approval at the
coastal commission.
On Monday, coastal commis-
sioners came out in unanimous
support of the project after adding
requirements for additional park-
ing and some other concessions.
"I think the commission felt it
was going to be an exciting pro-
ject, one that will be very differ-
~ 3165 Harbor Blvd.
11mi1 Costa Mesa
• 0ne Block South ot •o& rwy
ent for that area." Commissioner
Shirley Dettloff said. "That area
is currently changing, and I think
having a mixed use will be an
exciting use."
The commi11ion considers
matters such as coastal access
aod the environment, but is not
charged With reconsidering the
aesthetic i11ue1 the Planning
Commi111ion had ruled on. Dett·
loff added that the anall public
park that ls part of the develop-
er's plan will increase public
access to the waterway.
The Cannery Lotti iJ slated to
be built along both 1ide1 of 30th
Street between Villa Way and
LaFayette Avenue. The 22 lofts
will be free-standing units, about
3,000 square feet each. Pour of
the units will be on the Rhine
Channel waterfront. A public
walkway to the waterfront ii also
part of the project. The artist·
inspired units combine down-
stairs commercial space with res·
idential lofts.
Developer Kevin Weeda said
about 200 potential buyers are on
a waiting list. The waterfront lots
will be the first ones built and will
cost about $2.5 milllon. Those lots
will probably be completed in the
first quarter of next year. Interior
lots will start at 1ust over $1 mil-
lion and will probably be finisbed
by the third quarter of next year.
"We're thnlled we got a unan-
imous vote from the commis-
sion,• Weeda said. "We think this
is the right pro1ect at the right ·
time for Newport Beach.·
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•
4 Friday, July 12, 2002
POLICE FILES
COSTA MESA • .... Stre.t: A vehicle bur-
glary was reported In the 1100
block at 12:11 p.m. Wednes-
day.
• hlrvlew Ro.ct Md Hllnovw Driw: A 38-year-old
woman was arrested on suspi-
cion of possessing a controlled
substance and related drug
paraphernalia and being
under the influence of a con-
trolled substance near the
intersection at 2:55 a.m.
Wednesday.
• Maple Street Auto theft
was reported In the 2200 block
at 12:31 p.m. Wednesday.
• MoMovla Avenue: A vehi-
cle burglary was reported in
the 1800 block at 8:47 a.m.
Wednesday.
• ftanons Street A 48-year-
old man was arrested on suspi-
cion of sleeping in a vehicle in
the 2000 block at 7:10 a.m.
Wednesday.
• Vktori• Street A home
burglary was reported in the
500 block at 1 :37 p.m.
Wednesday.
• West S.y Street Prostitu-
tion was reported in the 300
block at 6:50 p.m. Wednesday.
• West Wilson Street: A vehi-
. '
de burglary was reported In
the 300 block at 7:57 a.m.
Wednesday.
• West 18'*' Strwet: A 34-
year-old man was arrested on
suspicion of resisting a police
officer while being detained
for an out-of-the-area warrant
In the 700 block at 12:06 p.m.
Wednesday.
NEwt;»<>RT BEACH
• Coast Hlghw•y East: A SUS•
pect was arrested for allegedly
causing a public disturbance
while drunk in the 3900 block
at 10:39 p.m. Wednesday.
• Jllmboree ftOlld Md llison
Avenue: A car fire was report-
ed near the intersection at
9:16 p.m. Wednesday.
• OceM Boulevwd: An
assault with a deadly weapon
was reported in the 2100 block
at 10:18 a.m. Thursday.
• Redi.ndl Avenue Mtd
O•y Stnet: A loud party was
reported near the Intersection
at 12:44 a.m. Thursday.
• VI• Udo North: Road rage
was reported in the 200 block
at 7:05 p.m. Wednesday.
• 46th StNet: A suspect was
arrested on suspicion of home
burglary in the 100 block at
4:31 a.m.
No matter what you're doing,
your hometown newspaper
FfTS IN... Daily Pilot
~~ R es taurant
---Established In 1962
•••Quality Service .....
••*Ni d Entertainment**•
·TONIGHT I
July 22 O.C. •FEI
JUiy 25 ftm ···-~. bnClrlleftlMfl
JUIV 2A ITYJI
JulV21 ---··· Juty21
Mfr7
JulY21
• •
PUILIC SAFER
. ' "."'--.. I
••
Daily Pilot ,
Bugw;me Neely
PuDllal •ricel for :&1:1:~ Arrest made after attack
In a Costa Mesa hotel lobby
llllflY 1111111 lllWS
Police ftnd stolen construction
equipment .in pawnshop hunt
Newport Beach police have nabbed a
Costa Mesa man who allegedly stole con·
struction equlpm~nt and sold it at local
pawnshops.
A 30-year-old Irvine man was arrested
Wednesday on suspicion of committing a
violent hate crime after attacking a man in
the lobby of the Hilton Costa Mesa, police
2:30.-_.=• . tcVlllW• ~· Mr. Neely di9d w.-.. day of .naiural mu-. He
wa 93.· Mr. ;:w• born m LOI on
Officials arrested Andrew Mackie, 34, last
month in the 900 block of West 11th Street.
said. Officers responded to the hotel on Bristol
Street after receiving a call of a disturbance .
in the lobby, Costa Mesa Police Lt. Dale Bir·
ney said. Upon arrival, police arrested Travis
Dale Phillips in connection with the assault
of a man who remains unnamed to protect
Oct. 22, 1908, llYed ln
Corona del Mar for ~
~· He 11 sumved by
SOD R.icbard Neely, da\J9h-
ter Cecile MKBetb, broth-
er Robert Neely, .eight
grandchildren and two
great-grendcb•ldran.
Mackle allegedly stole the equipment
from .homes that were being remodeled or
repalred. Three victims have been identified
so far. Investigators were tipped off in mid·
June during the review of pawn transaction
slips. One of the slips was for a commercial·
grade compressor that was sold, not pawned,
at a local pawnshop.
his identity, Birney said. •>'-
Birney said the victim apparently s~ered
injwies to the face and neck, according to
police photos. · . .
After further investigation, arresting offi-
cers determined the alleged assault was a
bate crime, which is described as injury or
threat to a person, or threat to property,
because of specified beliefs, Birney sai~.
Construction workers often pawn their
equipment with the intent of returning for it
later, said Sgt. Tom Tolman, who found the
slip ..
When the compressor was checked
against reported stolen property, it was dis-
covered that the compressor had been
stolen.
Further investigation uncovered many
other pieces of construction equipment sold
by the same person, officials said.
Police officials did not release details of
the alleged attack nor did they specify
whether the crime was motivated by factors
involving religious, sexual orientation or
racial beliefs.
Phillips is being held in Costa Mesa .Jail
on $10,000 bail and is scheduled for amugn-
ment today at Harbor Municipal Court in
Newport Beach.
Straltlff,
These items were recovered from pawn-
shops, and some have already been returned
to the victims.
RAPE
CONTINUED FROM 1
cooperative with investiga-
tors."
Until 1999, Haidl worked
for Nationwide Auction Sys-
tems, based in the city of
The assault occurred at 1 Indusby. Haidl left the com-
Jade Cove, in the Big Canyon pany on good terms, a com-
section of town, Shulman pany spokesman said.
said. Voting records show Police began their investi-
that Kathleen Haidl lives at gation after acquiring the
the address. Calls to the videotape on Monday, Shul·
home were not returned by man said. Local police have
press time. been working with San
:,Assistant Sheriff Haidl is • Bernardino police on the
botlP shocked and saddened case.
by the allegations,• said Jim No charges had been filed
Amormino, a spokesman for against the teens on Thurs-
the Sheriffs Department. "He day. District attorney spokes-
has been most helpful and woman Tori Richards said her
SPENDING
CONTINUED FROM 1
And this time he had sup-
port. ,.
City Cowidlwoman Nor-
ma Glover said shedding
light on the matter should
clear up any perceptions that
the cowicil has been in any
way remiss in overseeing the
funds.
"Some have infened that
we are trying to not be fully
open with the public on how
we're using these funds con-
cemtng the airport,• Glover
said. •So I say let's go back
two years to all the ... fund-
ing and bring everything out
in the open.•
Glover took Heffeman's
proposal one better by sug·
gestlng a two-year audit of
both groups instead of just
looking at the groups' books
for a one-year period.
Representatives from the
Airport Working Group and
Citizens for Jobs and the
Economy said they welcome
the inquiry.
"It's the public's money,
and we welcome the review,•
said Dave Bills of the Airport
Working Group. •1 think that
after this the public will have
confidence that their money
WU spent properly.•
Ellis said flll group does
have a small amount of mon·
ey left over from the orlginal
grant, but added that he did
not know the euct amount.
LEAP
CONTINUED FROM 1
QUISTIOll
AJRJNGOUT I ........... ........
.......... 1Dnt ___ ..,_
111 It? C..11 our Readers
Hotline at (949) 642-6086 or send HMll to dallypl-
lotelatlmes.com. Please
spell ycM.w Mme and
Include your hometown
end phone number, for
veriflcatJon purposes only.
Bruce Nestande of Citi-
zens for Jobs and the Econo-
my said his group has no
funds left over.
"We will totally comply
with requests for informa-
tion," Nestande said. "Every·
thing we have done has been
overseen by attorneys from
both sides.~
City Manager Homer Blu-
dau said a letter will be sent
to the two groups probably
sometime next week and
that the groups would be
given at lea.st a couple of
weeks to gather the request·
ed information. An outside
auditor eventually will be
hired to peruse the docu·
men ts.
• .IUNI CASAGRANDI covers
Newport Seidl and John w~
Airport. She imy be ruc:hed" It
(949) 57 ... 232 or by •mall 1t
)UM .casagrandeel1tlmacom.
1With1n a 12-hour
period, we k1nd of
go from an empty
container to being
a mlni-clty here.'
-Steven huley,
deputy generel meneger
of the felr
It wun't. to abe lowered
the left ltde the tin1Mt bit.
Huy nan. an msployH et
Mark Antbany'1 Nifty 50'1
boodl. fald9d eao.cuw. T·
lhidl llllD WIOW ltdpl ad
dra ........... lftmt
.... d .. dllplaJ. n.
k:alll .... .S • ....,.. from
Bettr~to .... n ·W.~llllltl9'-llJ• wlMie.. 'Dlia ...... •4'1111 trr· mg to ...... good dllplly .•
office is investigating the
case. The teens could be tried
as adults, Richards said.
• PAUL QJNTON covers the envi-
ronment and politics. He may be
reached at (949) 764-4330 or by e-
mail at paul.cllntonO/atimes.com.
Robert H.
Bom Sepember 9, 1922, Robert
Slrailift, a 50 year resident of
Newport Beach, cled ~ at
his home on July 10, 2002. Bob, a
~ Ayng Cross
decorated WNll bomber pilot, was
orignally from Greensburg, Pa After
rTlO't'ing to lhe WetJ. ~ folowiog
wwn, he plJ'SU8d a careef' as a
petrolet.m engil88f in Southern
Caiomia.
A beloved husband and loving
father, he is Sl...+Jed by is wife
Benri:e Batday Slraitift, dalq1ler
Susan Sigler and her tubind
l.Jc¥j Sigler and their cttieo
Gtetdlen and Uoyd Robert ~.
Son Steven and wife Cathy and
!heir dtien DeYon and 8tynn.
Selvices to be prMde, In lieu of
ftowers. send donations to Hoag
Cancer Cena.
. PROVOST,
John Sumner
JOHN SUMNER PROVOST, 59 of Indio, CA, cled Jl:#f 6, 2002. He was born
June 20, 1943 In Lima, Ohio to ~ W. and Gertrude I. ProYost His mother
survives In Lima. On December 20, 1988 he married Carole Irene
(Sederqulst) Meister, v.ilo survives in lndo .
Mr. Provost ~ed for lhe YWCA for 33 years In Ohio, New YOl1t and
C8ifomla. He retired as Vice President -Na1h Olstrlc:t & EX8CUIMt Director of
lhe Central Orange Coast YWCA on Oec:elT'ber 8, 1999. He was a 1961
graduate of Una Senior Higl School where he was an Al-American a1hlete
i'l balkelbel and basebal. He went on to play boCh sporta at Bowing Green
Stare University and gaduated In 1966. He signed with the New YOik
Yankees as a catcher. After a shotider injury, he began WOl'kilg with the
YWCA. He is past President of lhe Kiwanis CU> i'l San Peao, CA and a past
rnerrber of Cabrillo Beach Yacht Club in San Pedro, CA. Cunenlly, he was
President of lhe Men's Golf Clli> at Heritage Palms Country Oki> and
~ singing at a local restaurant twice a week and at many private pal1ies
in lhe area
Survivors also include his son SteYen ProYost (San Diego, CA) and daug,ter
Beth (Britt) TrcMt>ridge (Elgin, MN), datqur Suzann (Frank) LoCooo (San
Diego, CA) and son Brian Meister (Covina, CA), and two grandchildren,
ArOf1N Provost and Jacqueline LoCoco.
A memorial selVlce is scheclJled for Sunday, Jliy 14, 2002 at 2.'00 p.m. at the
Heritage Palms Country Cftlb In Indio, CA. Donations may bl made to the
Central Orange Coast·YMCA, zm Universey Ortve, Newport Beach, CA
92660 or San Pedro & Peninsula YMCA, 301 South Banc:lnl Street, San
Pedro CA 907,31 In lhe named John Prowst.
CLARKE,
William D.
Wllllam D. Clarke, a long time
teacher In Orange County, died on
Tuesday, July 9, 2002, 8l the age of 72.
He WU born on December 13, 1929, In
Loa Angeln, California, the fourth of
ftve chlldren bom to Lalla and Joseph
Clarl<e. Ht married Loi• Davis on
September 1, 1950, and they
celebrated their fiftieth wedding
annlverury almoet two year• ago.
They have four chlldren and eleven
grandchflc:trWt.
Biii loved hit famlly and frtenc:t1 and had a paulon for
teechlng. He Mmed hl9 teechlng crtc:tentlal on the GI 8111 after
iervlng hit country In Korea. He began te.ohlng at Newport
Harbor High School In 1956 and later became the head of the
Engllah Department at Costa Meaa High School, teaching
thlf'I untll 1970. Since then, he taught Englleh at Cypresa
Community College untll he suddenly fell 111 In Merch. He won
n8llonal honorl a Outstanding Faculty of the YMr. aw.Old In
Austin, Texa In June of 2001 . Thi• award ~ a fllCUlt)'
member who hu demonstrated outatanctlng tMohlng at>Uttllt
wtth a Cl"Htlve learning environment, llttentlon to the lndlvktuel
needs of ltudenta, expertlM In the iubjeot matter. end the
ablllty to go the extra mlle to motivate and .~courage
etuc:Mntt. Hit gift for tHChlng haa bMf'I demoNStndlld over the
yu,. u he haa touched countt ... 8tudent9' uves .... w11
•topped very often at publlc pl.off and told by former
ltudenta how much he had Chengtd the courM of the6r ltYl9.
8111 aleo touched countJeu peopte with hie "*1Y ltt.k>nQ
ftlendahlpe. He WU' known for hi• extr9or'd1Mry warmth.
ktndneu, Md oompss 1lon. BIM and Lola ·~ ·"*'Y roed-
trtpe anc:t ~ tr8ve19 wtth their ds•IMt fMndl-~
eepeclally enjoy9d jazz "1Ullc and rnomente among 1'tendl =I~=~:: wtne. Famly WM tt'9 ..-lmpOlt8nt ..... ..,ID_·---~ deMy .... n .. Ill 1Gr9iy ..,.be ··-·r ,.__ ... ..._Wlldlft ....... ttlll
·-In our~!--wt ClnY m'i waaaMd ._ • -.. ......... "*"'°"" and ................ "' = ... ~------:-: u,.... Loll. lllltawldd ... ~ Nl..._Ra111._. ...... lilld::., "'=u "-!!!.. ..................... bl ~ 11C10,,ea:~_,.Julr 1• • PMIM VllWU."°"'lt1
1111. In lllu Of-= Dr .. Nls•mt ..... -. ......
D. Cl.e Memotllll .:a:.-:;:-•tlie-: :="' .. ~ °="~=r.:'· ••. Ml -
Doily Pilot
This outfit from agnes b. featur~ brassiere noir, a black sport top (SSS), a blouson b.
tM!rlast gray front-zip jacket (S98) and a pantalon jau black pants with a cent~ front
logo at the waist (S88).
WHY STAY HOME
Sunset Dinners
<.Rjstorante :M.amma qina
Monday-F~iday: 4:30-6:15
Eggplant Parmigiana or
Uuuieffoni Alla 'Florentina
(with soup or salad)
JUST $10.90 ,_,
The Real Prime Rib or Filet
Mignon
(with soup or salad)
JUST $13.90
Sandabs Piccata or Salmon Alla
Checca
(with soup or salad)
JUST $12.90
(949) 673-9500
www.mammagina.com
251 Ea.st Coast ffjghway •Newport Beach
ByB.W. Cook
f rench designer agnes b. has teamed up with
Everlast Worldwide Inc., a brand of bo'Xing and
sporting apparel, to present a new collection
called b. everlast. The sportswear is wild, sexy
and only available at agnes b., at South Coast Plaza.
The unconventional line incorporates performance
fabrics with technical details that maximize ease of use.
Tank tops, T-shirts, sweatshirts, sweatpants and hooded
robes are all inspired by boxer gear.
Friday, July 12, 2002 5
Lyndsay Archer, a full-time sales associate at agnes b.
and a recent graduate of the Fashion Institute of Design
and Merchandising, models for The Look. Ready for the ring or other adventures. Lyndsay Ar<her shows off
a black hooded robe with a white Everlast logo on the back (SSS).
Archer is wearing T-shirt Brando, a black T·
shirt with the yellow Everlast logo (S38) and
Jupe b. evertast, a black and white skirt with a
drawstring waist (S78).
Archer models 1 blouson b. ever1ast black
pullover sweatshirt with red detaillng along
the sleeves and zippers (S 108), with a pantalon
b. everlast black sweat pant with red detailing
along the side of each leg and zippers (S88).
PHOTOS BY DON l.£ACH I DAILY PILOT
Archer models a bikini top (S45); a white
blouse (S98); a long, pleated skirt with elastic
waist featuring the Everlast logo (S 138); and
black no-lace sneakers (S108).
m our collections of
Zanella •Axis
Barry Bricke
Riscatto • c;drbin
(
6 _Friday, July 12, 2002
\
OUN&E
COUNTY FAIR
SCHEDULE
OF EVENTS
Events are subject to dla~ at the
/ ..,,, ....... Show-Green Gate
•-.tin~ c.mw-He<·
~Stage .
• Let's Do Lunch aMd -c.et.
bratlon Stage (Youth Building) • ~ SUn llllton....,.. _
sun Stage
• Piauo's Place Art c.nt«
(until 8 p.m.) -Kids Park
d~tion of the Ora~ County ~Ir. · 11 sJO A.II.
• Fair hows: ·10 a.m. to midnight
•Fair lomelolii: Orange County Fair·
grounds, 88 Fair Drive, Costa Mesa
• Partclng: SS. Buses park free.
• Tkkets: $7 for 89fl 13 to 54, $6
seniors 55 and older, and $3 for
children 6 to 12. Children 5 and
younger get in free.
• Spedal: Today Is opening day,
which has been designated as Salute
to Heroes Day. All active members of
the U.S. military. as well as fire and
police personnel with valid ldenttfl..
cation, will be admitted free with
one guest from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
• lnfonnetion: (714) 708-3247 or
www.odalr.com.
• Clraa Fun Revue -Kids Park
Stage
IOOI
, • n.nc. Center -Heritage Stage
• Emma Mcob. vocalist -Cel~
bratlon Stage (Youth Building)
• s...hlne Generation of Aliso
Viejo-Sun Stage
• Oxen 1INln preMntatJon -
l,lvestock Arena
•John ~ on .. Compatible
Perennlats• -Floral Stage
• LMther Guild demonstration
-Home and Hobbies Stage
12:JO P.&
•
HEU Ill llEWS
• M..s•"" of DaMe .., Dorthea -Cetebrltion Stage•
(Youth Building)
• ,.,.. wts •nocwts•llon -
Visu.1 Arts Bultding
Js30 P.&
• Owtie Keeling, glutNoww
-Crafters Village • China painting .&.def-m'""IOf _ _,..ma.
tion -Home and Hobbies Stage
4P.M.
• Dance Etc. Musk AlfS -Her-
itage Stage
• Gr.at A.merkM'I P9tting Zoo
and Educational~ -Green
Gate ·
• Vostal..,,... O.W.-SUn Stage
• Rodcettes of C.ltfomla a.ton
and o.nce -Celebration Stage
(Youth Building) ....
• ff'og Legs CIC>fttest-Kids Par"
Stage
• Russell Brothen Cirws -
Green Gate Area
Doily Pilot
6sJOP.&
•a.tie 9'1111,.. II rt lower
-er.tters Wl-ae ...........................
2Gl5 -Mad Sdeflm lhelter
• Leap llllO u...o com..t -
Heritage Stage
..... lhurweon, IMllktan-
Celebratlon Stage (Youth Bullding)
·7p.a.
• HJpnOtht MM'k Yuaulk -Sun
Stage • ..._....~ ..... arms -
Green G~e Area
• Kilnlok• -·eelebratlon Stage
(Youth Bulldlng)
• All-A.IMl&an "9dng Pigs -The
Meadows
7:30 , ...
• Cenmlcs demol•tration -
Crafters Village
• the All Amerk.an 9oys °'°'' -Heritage Stage
• ~ 1hunton,, magician -
Kids Park Stage
TODAY
All DAY
• Opening Cl9Nm0f1ies -Main
Gate and Heritage Stage
• Unde Sam memorabilia -
Collections and Memorabilia Build·
ing No. 13
• MMI Sdenc:e Mission to Mars
2025 -Mad Science Theatef
• Chartle Keeling. glitublOwet'
-Crafters Village
1 P.M.
• All·Alasbn Racing Pigs -The
Meadows
Hue y Lewis and the News will ~onn at 8:30
tonight In the laU.mes.com Theater at the Orange
County Fairgrounds. The band is responsible for such
hits as .. The Power of Love" and "Hip to be Square."
The concert ls free with fair admission. Reserved tick·
ets are available for $15. Information: (714) 708-3247
4:15 P.M. ) ·~~Hams-Green~
• M iiking demonstration -Mil· I P.&
lennium Barn • llead'l TOya _ Sun Stage
4:30 , ...
• Ft-ank Thwston. magician -
Celebration Stage (Youth Building)
• Mad Science Mission to Man
2025 -Mad Science Theater
• Uly 'ad Limbo contest -Kids
Parle Stage
• Oxen le.wt presentation -
Livestock Arena
• Newborn animals -Livestock
Area/Maternity Barn
• Small animals -Livestock
Area/Small Animal Tent
• Fine arts demonstration -
Visual Arts Building
• Grut American P9tting Zoo ..t
EducMlonlll Show -Green Gate
• Demonstration -Home and
Hobbies Stage
2 P.M •
• Janelle Wiley ~ "Flowering
Annuals for your Garden .. -
Floral Stage • Oxen. breeding beef and
pygmy goats -Livestock Area
10 ••••
• Tustin Dance Center -Her·
itage Stage
• Academy of Dance by
Dor1hea -Sun Stage
• Dance Etc. Music Arts -Her-
itage Stage
• ~nee marathon -Kids
Park Stage/Xids Park
• C.llfornia Sun Baton Tewn -
Celebration Stage (Youth Building)
• Rain Fote$t Soaker contest -
Kids Park Stage
• Rodcettes of C.llfomia Baton
and Dance -Sun Stage
• Rabbit showmanship judging
-Livestock Area/Small Animal Tent
• 4-HIFFA HOf'M Show -Eques·
trian Center
• Open breeding beef judging
-Livestock Arena
• SUnshlne Generation of Aliso v .. jo -Celebration Stage (Youth
Building)
11 A.M.
• GrNt Am9ricwl P9tting Zoo ..t
1:30 ....
• c..ramics demolastrlltion -
Crafters Village
'!/-s ••• • ~ @!~
. . FLORAL & GIFTS
Home Decor• Accessories
Custom Florals ~
369 E. 17th Street, Costa Mesa ~
Mon-hi I 0:00arn-6:00pm. Sat & Sun I 0:00am-5:00pm
~ Phone (949) 646-6745 L:I
• RUSMll Brothers Orcus -
Green Gate Area
• Ft-ank Thwston. rnagidM'I -
Kids Park Stage
The Costa Mesa
Community Golf Classic
I
ENTRY FORM
"Cl'H""s &llrf,,_,,tWI 0,,-..,.111.n
/o' Orup C•11•11 Slllc• IH'"
Name _________________ _
Oty ___________ State __ Zip, __ _
Telephone: Home Wor-____ _
Foursomes -best buy ... singles are welcome
Names Shoes~
1. ------------mcn __ women __ I
I
2. ------------men __ women--1
I 3. men __ women--1
I 4. men __ women __ I
$ ___ Golf. Lunch & Dinner $250 Single I
$ ____ Golt Lunch & Dinner $900 foul8()Qle (Save $100) I
____ Tee Sponsor $125 each (plus promotional g1fl to golfers) I
----Awards Dinner & Auction only $4-0 per person
$ ----Sponsorship ol OK>ke (Call for avaUabUlty)
__ Total
Tournament SpoDSOJ"8hlp Opportunities sUD Avallable.
For Information on Purcbulng SP0080J"8hip
Opportunities call Ed Fawcett-(114) 885--9095
Please make Oiecks payable to:
Costa Mesa Ownber fl <:omrnerce Golf Tournament
1700AdamsAve., SuJte 101. C.ou Mesa. CA 92626
voice (714) 88S.9090 Fax (714) 88S.9Q94
2:15 ....
• Milking demonstration -M ii·
lennium Barn
2:30 P.M.
• Mad Science M ission to Mars
2025 -Mad Science Theater
3P.M.
• All-Alaskan Racing Pigs -The
Meadows ·
• Southland Ballet Academy -
Heritage Stage
• Tadpole Toss contest -Kids
Park Stage
• Tap-A-Rhythm -Sun Stage
• C...amlcs demonstration -
Crafters Village
• Demonstration -Home and
Hobbies Stage
5 P.M.
• Wonderful World of Dance -
Heritage Stage /
• Wlndynltes, a music.al duo -
Sun Stage • Jeub Wilson ..t Company-
Celebration Stage (Youth Building)
• All-Alaskan Rad~ Pigs -The
Meadows '
5:30 ....
• Orms Fun Revue -Kids Park
Stage ,, ...
•Fine Arts demor.sbation-
Visual Arts Building
• Pac:ifk Coast Homs -Green Gate
• Glesele International Stol'y
Telling -Celebration Stage
(Youth Building)
• Polymer day demonstration
-Home and Hobbies Stage
6:15 ....
• Milking demonstration -Mil-
lennium Barn
• Speedway -Grandstand Arena
1:15 ....
• Miiking demolastrlltion -Mil·
lennium Barn
1:30P.M.
• Huey Lawis Md'the News -
The latimes.com Theater
• Mad Sdence Mission to Mars
2025 -Mad science Theater
• Wartime RAlldlo Big Band -
Heritage Stage ,, ...
• Hypnotist Maltl YUIUlk -Sun
Stage
• lbmell •others Orals -
Green Gate Area
• All-Alalbn being Pigs -The
Meadows
9:30P.&
• the All American 8oys Choir
-Heritage Stage
• Padflc COlllt Hams -Green Gate
10P.&
• 1141.-ch 1iOya -Sun Stage
10:30 ....
• wartime Radio Big Band -
Heritage Stage
"AN EVENING OF HOPE"
PRESENTING THE FOURTH ANNUAL
ERIC MARIENTHAL
AND FRIENDS
CONCERT
FEATURING PAT PRESCOTT
FROM THE WAVE
SUNDAY, JULY 14, 2002
6 P.M. AT THE
HYAn NEWPORTER
THERE Wltl--BE A NO HOST BAR, HORS D'OEUVRES,
A GOURMET COFFEE BAR AND A TEMPTING SILENT AUCTION
PROCEEDS FROM THE EVENING BENEFIT
HIGH HOPES, A NON-PROFIT ORGANIZATION DEDICATED TO
HELPING INDIVIDUALS RECOVER FROM BRAIN INJURIES
TICKETS: $40 VIP TICKETS: $t2S
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Doily Pilot
TOPICS ·
CONTINUED FROM 1
GRAFFm SIGHTINGS AND
SKATEBOARD PARKS
Most posts on the Web site are geared toward city issues
and stem from contributors'
efforts to improve the city. Pop-
ular issues include sightings or
graffiti or vandalism. needed
street improvements, questions
-and subsequent answers -
about proposed developments
and periodic reminders to
attend city ro~tl.ngs. ·
This week, resident Paul
Bunney, who signs on as
"cmimprover, • announced
that a new traffic light on
West Wilson Street, designed
to eliminate jaywalking
between the Kmart and
Home Depot shopping cen·
ters, was up and running.
"I hope it is not a waste or
city dollars as I saw a young
man jaywalking to cross Wil-
son between the new light
and the intersecbon at Wilson
and Harbor,• Bunney wrote.
A couple of members
responded, each detailing
their opinions of the success or
the new signal -and so goes
many of the less controversidl
issues discussed on the site.
Another popular topic: has
been the skateboard park
issue. Joel Faris, a regular
contributor and also one of
the Human Reldtions Com-
mittee members who wds sin-
gled out for allegedly map-
propriate comments, posted a
link to another grass-roots
Web site designed to cam-
paign for such d park.
Faris' post received five
responses, all commenting on
the need for such a pdrk in the
city. Costa Mesa resident and
city employee Bill Folsom
'informed members thdl he
has been active in the hghl for
a skateboard park for nearly a
decade and suggested
Fairview or TeWinkle parks
as the most feasible s11ei.. Oth-
er writers recalled youthful
skateboarding memories
"When I was a kid, my dad
used to drive us dll the WdY
Crom Whittier lo Carlsbctcl so
we could use the only skate
park within 500 miles,· wrote
Web site member Eric Bever.
"We drove around 150 miles
round trip to get in a few
hours of fun.·
Bever said he feared that
some people would continue
to oppose such a park for fear
of ·skateboarding maniacs.•
•Part of the reason skaters
are seen as outlaws, is
because they are, and always
have been, forced lo impro-
vise and seek appropriate sur-
faces,• Bever wrote. "Perhaps
simply providing the proper
venues will eliminate the bad
image skaters get for their
usage or existing structures .•
SERIOUS TOPICS
OF CONVERSATION
Other issues tend to spark
louder debate. Issues such as
illegal immigration, the Job
Center and various charities
ih the city have been frequent
topics of conversation -and
subsequent controversy.
Many contributors to the
Web site contend that illegal
immigration is a relevant and
serious city issue because of
the problems they say it caus-
es LO the city. They see an
LOcrease in litter because_ of
the increase ir1 people, unsafe
living conditions with large
families crammed irlto small
dpartments and dangerous
cultural divisions that stem
from those who do not speak
English and are therefore
unable to participate in main-
stream society.
The problems are not root-
ed in racism, people say, but
LO the fact that illegal immi-
gration is just that-illegal -
and should not be condoned.
Costa Mesa resident Mar-
tm Millard -until recently, a
frequent contributor to the
site, often posting three or
four items a day -would
chime in on various city
issues but spent most of his
time writing about charities
and illegal immigrants, as
well as the problems he says
both bring to the city.
Millard contends the chari-
ties are magnets for illegal
unnugrants and that a steady
stream of illegal immigrants
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Lunch • Dinner • Sunday Brunch
251 Shipyard Way• Ne wport Beach
Please call for hours, directions & reservations.
: (949) 723-0621 :
and low-income families have
overcrowded apartments and
schools, overtaxed city ser-
vices, increased blight and
gang activity, and subsequent-
ly lowered property values.
stopped contnbuting to the
Costa Mesa site about a month
ago because those who did
challenge his views resorted lo
childish arguments that wast-
ed his time.
The outspoken advocate
for improvement speaks his PREWDE TO A FIGHT
mind not only on the Web site Others continue the
but at nearly every City Coun-debate, however.
cil meeting and regularly City Council candidate
sends letters io the Daily Pilot James Fisler, for one, has pro-
editor. Millard's writing is also fessed views that are similar
regularly featured on the Web to Mil.lard's.
sites of the Council of Conser-ln a May 6 post, Fisle r
vative Citizens and New described a series of crimes in
Nation News. Both organiza-his neighborhood, ranging
lions have been identified as from burglary and reckless
extremist hate groups by the driving to vandalism. Fisler
Southern Poverty Law Center, also commented on the grarti-
an organization that keeps ti near the triruty Broadcast-
labs on hate groups and fights ing Network building and on
civil rights irljustices. various freeway ramps. He
Mil.lard denies that his writ-ended his posts with a ques-
ings are racist and defends tion to other members:
them by saying he is not afraid •Kinda makes you want to
to take on any topics that he celebrate diversity doesn't
describes as ·sacred cows." it?" Fisler once wrote.
Race has become one of those Fisler defended the ques-
issues that people are afraid to tion Thursday, describing it as
speak out about, Millard said, a "smart-cileck comment.•
and he pushes the envelope Fisler said he does not buy
when commenting · on irlto the popular belief that
provocative subjects. diversity and_ multicultural-
"1 write about the human l.$m should be celebrated and
condition and will take on "' worsfilped.
any issue out there,• said Mil-"Obviously our increasing
lard, who has also written two diversity has led to some
books. "Read it all and decide balkanization, ethnic politics,
for yourself." gangs and graffiti," Fisler
His articles on those two said. "I see a correlation Lhat
sites describe "the gertocide" of as. our diversity goes .up .. o~r
distinct races -the while race crone has gone up. This city 1s
ir1 particular -as the world attracting an illegal element."
moves toward "the tan every-It was such comments that man: Millard explained the led to the blowup at the
writings by saying that with the recent. Human . Relations
while race as the global minor-C?mnuttee ~eetmgs and
lty, it is important to preserve its City Council meetings,
distinctive features. regarding allegedly offensive
"It is difficult when you are po~ts by some members of
a minority people on the the city committee.
planet to survive as a distinct Responses from corruruttee
people,· Millard said ir1 a members lo posts regarding
phone irlterview Thursday. immigration. race and homo-
The outspoken resident sexuality caught the eye of a
said he also rails against reli-couple of new Web site mem-
gion, genetics, intelligence -bers, who in turned aired
"all kinds or things• -and their concerns ir1 the public
has also been published on forum and sparked the cur-
Web sites that have no racist rent controversy.
affiliations.
And though his posts on the
Costa Mesa site were directed
to city issues and were not as
controversial, Millard said he
• LOLITA HARPER covers Costa
Mesa. She may be reached at (949)
574-4275 or by e-mail at lolira.harp·
erO/atime1.com.
Speed • Service
Departs From Balboa Pavilion
Reservations Required 949.673.5245
www.cata.linainfo.com
NOTEBOOK
CONTINUED FROM 1
twlce -no meditation, no
chanting, none of the things
frequently associated with
yoga.
Your body feels like a giant
sponge, squeezing out all the
toxins as you move through
the positions. When the class
is over, I can hardly move, and
the thought of falling asleep
for the night right there on my
yoga mat is so tempting. How r make it home I have no idea.
l can just see a police officer
pulling me over for driving too
slow and tryt,ng lo explain that
it's because I've just done
yoga. You know -a DUY.
The next ddy I am so
relaxed that nothing bothers
me. l don't sweat the small
I ,. : I
Friday, July 12, 2002 7
stuff because there's nothing
left to sweat My appellte
dimirushes, so I actually eat
fruits and vegetables ford day.
My mental cld.nty increases I
feel like l could solve the con-
flict in tht:, Middle East. reduce
global wamung, or at JedSl
reorganize my closet
For the next few days
after that, I also feel a sort or
natural high -stmilar to the
effect from Jogging
Many people prdcllce
yoga every day, or four to five
ti.mes a week. For me, once d
week is enough. If I were too
relaxed, the threat of an
Impending deadline rrught be
brushed away like a pesky
fly, and I might never finish
another article agwn.
• DEIRDRE NEWMAN covers edu·
cation. She may be reached at (949)
574-4221 or by e-mail at
deirdre.newmanOlat1me1.com
C•nlRI Wrlat•alld DaJS
Mondays, July 15 ' 22
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Plxohese a $1 o v.ffltband for 1 o r1des.
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Kids· Dars· ·
ruesdays, July 16 & 23
Children 12 & under admrted FREE
seniors Dars
Thursdays, July 18 & 25
Seoors (55~) admitted for S..:
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.
QU01I OF THE DAY
'One of the proudest moments for
me was (Wobrock) over-ruling the
umpire. We tell our kids to be honest
about plays 11.lce that ... "
St.we HarTts, NHBA manager
MOPEIB
Mt 15 honot9e
GRANT GELKER
8 Friday, July 12, 2002 Spom W1or Roger Carison • 949~74-4223 • Spam fcua 949.650.0170 Daily Pilot
South offense· loaded with localS
Back Bay quartet tries to inject production into defensive-dominated Orange County All-Star Football Game tonight at OCC.
S.rry Faulkner
DALY PILOT
COSTA MESA -U the South is to
help the O range County AU-Star
Football Game shake the offensive
doldrums that have plagued it the last
dozen years, Back Bay representatives
Mo rgan Craig, Brian Gaeta, Jeff
Marshall and Steven Russell should
have plenty to do with it.
All four recent local graduates wW
play offensive roles for Mission Viejo
High Coach Bob Johnson's Rebels,
who square off against the top
graduating seniors from the North in
the game's 43rd renewal, set for 7:15
p.m. at Orange Coast College.
Craig, the Newport-Mesa Dream
Team's Most Valuable Player, as well
as the Sea View League Offensive
Player of the Year and an All-CIF
Southern Section Division VI choice
for Newport Harbor High last fall. will
alternate at quarterback with South
teammate Colt Brennan (Mater Dei).
Gaeta , a standout receiver and
defensive bade for the Sailors, is among
a receiVU1g corps that has impressed
Johnson. He was All-CIF as a senior as
well as all-league and all-district each
of his final two prep campaigns.
Marshall, a 6-foot-5, 245-pounder
bound for the University of Montana,
will play right guard, while the 6-2,
275-pound Russell, a Corona del Mar
High product bound for Orange Coast,
will play left guard.
Craig, who will walk on at USC,
threw for nearly 3,000 yards as a two-
year starter, during which time the
Tars won 20 and tied one of his 25
starts. He completed 124 of 196 passes
(63.3%) for 1,614 yards and 23 TDs to
help Harbor win the 2001 Sea View
crown and advance to the CIF Division
V1 semifinals. As a· junior, he guided
the Sailors to the CIF title game.
Johnson, who declined to name a
starter, said Craig, who threw only four
interceptions last fall, wW play one full
quarter in the first half, as will Srennan.
Playing time1n tbe second halfwiDbo-
• to.the most effecttve'perlormer.
Gaeta, a 6-2. 200-pounder set to
walk on at Colorado State, overcame
surgery on both knees anb a debili-
tating ankle injury to catch 27 passes
for 337 yards and t1uee TDs as a senior.
His career numbers includ e 89
receptions for 1, 128 }lafds and nine
TDs and he also collected seven inter-
ceptions as a Sailor, playing both comer
and safety.
He is joined by a receiving corps
that includes Julien Petit (Mater Dei),
Akilah Lacey (Westminster) and Nick
Garton (Dana Hills).
Marshall, a two-year varsity st.arter
at center, and Russell, who dominated
at left taclcle for the Sea Kings last fall,
will help protect Craig and Brennan,
while also trying to clear the way for a
running game led by Fresno State-
bound standout Robbie Dubois.
Du bois, a punishing 5-10, 205-
pounder, rushed for more than 2,000
yards last fall to help Mission Viejo go
Wobrock's honesty
shines in victory
NHBA All-Star pitcher
comes clean, and helps
team to 13-9 victory in
opener of tournament.
Stfte Virgen
DAILY PILOT
LA MIRADA -Placentia Manager
Gal)' Stegmann put 1t best when he
personally congratulated Newport
Harbor Ba..seball A.15odation All-Star
pitcher Austin Wobrock.
•very cl.auy. That wu the play ot
the game,• Slegmann told Wobrock
after NHBA'1 Mu1tang •e• team
defeated Place ntia •a•, 13-9,
Wedneld.ay ln ~opener cl the DlltdCt
t Mustang All-Star Tournament at Loe
Coyote• lnteJ'11)edlate School to La
Mirada.
Por the record, Wobrock'• •ptay•
ban9y cbal1eoged the outcome of tlllt
,._. Yet, b1' bonetty ovenbadow.d
lbit 111111 end rum ICONd.
Jn .. bolt.om" the tlftb bullDcr wtth WObrOck pitching and llfHBA ri--g a M Jwt. Woblock ipltlad .......... sa-ed bdand 1lft
..... .... ..... to la»f'9.
'WollrOm dlwpped the ball, While ~ .aL but Wobrock'e beCk Mamli '" ... *"· AftlS .. m lM:llROOC M9I ti I, .
STEVE MCCAANK/OAlY Pl.OT
~aeta,, seen here with a m reception against Westchester, is one of the South's key aerial targets.
14-0 en route to the CIF Division II
crown.
Johnson, who guided the South to
a 21-7 victory in 1988 and was also
the South coach in the 1983 clash that.
ended in a scoreless tie, knows full
well how difficult it can be to try to
piece together a cohesive offense in the •
short time both teams have to prepare
for this summer showcase.
"It's toug h for both sides
(offensively) and certainly the defenses
have an advantage for both teams,·
Johnson said. "It's usually very hard to
run the football against defenses in
this game, but you never know. I just
hope there's enough offense to give
the fans their money's worth.•
Producing points h as been
problematic in recent years. Since a
17-17 tie in 1989, the two teams have
not combined for more than 31 points
in the last 12 contests. The winning
team during that span has averaged
16.6 points and has reached the 20-
poinl plateau only three times, with a
high of 24 points by the South in a 17-
point victory in 1999. The losing team
has averaged a mere 7 .1 points in the
last 12 games. with a high of 14 in
1997, a three-point South triumph.
Johnson said the strength or his
team has been its defensive line. The
Rebels will rotate Kelly Talavou
YOUTH BASEBALL All-STARS
(Fountain Valley), William Johnson
(Tustin), Mike Davis (Irvine), B.J.
Parsons (Wood-bridge), Brian Ruziecki
(Huntington Beach) and Mike Leiter
(Santa Margarita) in the defensive
front. They average 6-3, 263 pounds
and have been making things tough for
the South offense in practice.
The North, coached ~Y Jon Looney
from Brea Olinda, includes quarter-
backs Tim Bessolo (Los Alamitos),
Mike Hicks (Western) and Steve
Stagnaro (Brea Olinda), who wW throw
to a receiving corps paced by Orange
County Athlete of the Year Rbema
McKnight (Kennedy).
The game is presented by the Brea
Lions Club, which d istributes the
proceeds to several charities.
The North, on a two-game winning
streak that included a 23..J oonquest
last year, leads the series, 22-17-3.
In with
new for
Russell
Pride of Sea Kings eager
to go back to offensive
guard for All-Star game.
F~=::: DID ~=~works .
as a courtesy clerk al a grocery
store in Newport Beach. Simlliar to
his role as an offensive lineman,
the former Corona del Mar High
standout is the employee in the
background who makes the
system work. He bags groceries,
cleans the store and gathers all the
shopping carts from the parking
lot, along with other grunt work.
It's not glamorous. He's known
as a bag boy. But his duties make a
difference and
the discipline is
preparation for
the job he'll
have in the
future. The
same can be
said for
Russell's
scenario on the
football field.
He wW attempt
to be a Steven Russell
difference-
maker playing at left guard for
the South J.n the Orange County
All-Star Football Game, tonight
at 7:15, at Orange Coast College.
He was a tackle for the Sea
Kings, and has not played guard
since his sophomore year.
However, the training as a guard
will most likely prepare him for his
role in the fall, when he plays for
the OCC Pirates.
"This game prepares for me
OCC, what college football wW be
like,• Russell said. "l want to have
fun and I think this game is going
to be fun. (Playing guard is) like a
new position. I'm not used to
bitting those bigger guys. I have lo
!earn the trap blocking again. But,
I might play it at OCC, so it's good
practice.·
The 6-foot-3, 265-pound Russell
brings the strength and agility
required for a guard. His power is
the reason he's versaWe enough to
make the transition to a different
SEE RUSSEU PAGE 10
.
WhalenS double keys Newport win
I
The two-run blow propels
NBLL National Mctjors
All-Stars into District 55
winner's braCket final.
The clutch conn ection -------reach of the second
ruined Troyer's mound gem, "(froyer) was baseman, ranging to his
w hile rewarding Newport right in an attempt to keep
pitcher Chris Rosen, who on a roll, but the ba ll from reaching
battled control problems and / had cente r fleld. Newport
w ha t bis manage r termed caught a break on
less than his best stuff, all confidence Northcraft's single, when
night, en route to a complete-in our guys . .. " DiaJynas' aggresstve turn
game two-bluer. around second base drew a
"(Troye r) wu on a roll." Bob Rovzar throw to third from the
Rovzar saJd of tbe smooth-Newport Beach center fielder. The ball
throwing right-bander, who National Little skipped past the thlid
mixed an above-avera ge l.Ngue manager bueman on a bop and both
fastball with a devastating Dlalynas and Northcraft
curve to conslstenUy moved up, letting the age
confound Newport hitte rs until the for wtWen.
fateful fifth. ·But l bed conftdence ln our Whalen fouled an 0·2 pltch olf to
gll)'I. • uy alive, before drilllng the game.
After aurrendertng tint-Inning willner, wide.II cootlDued bis ltrong
linglei to Andy Rovzar (a bouncer up pelfonnen"9 tn the toummunt.
the middle) and Scott Colton (a •He dkln1 look very good his ftrit
lwtngirig bunt down the third·bue tine two ...... toalgbt; tiUt ....... beea.
after 1 llelder't choke produced the ltud for ua, •,·8ob.lomr IMd. •He bit
tecond out), '.Jtorer retired 12 llraigbt. • lea4Dff bomer lD our flnt playoft
ldcludlng 1111 ftftb IDd Uth ltrtboull .....
to .wt the ftfth. After a 11-pttdl nnt. MltOvwNid Whalen'loppa911e-
Troyer uaad Juat 28 pltcb•, 22 for aild poll9 wu id out Of CbUaW for
llltbl, ... Mil tm...,... to aulM ........
IDllolM .. Of tbeff1--ballnw, ·w. ---............. aclllr*8y) .., .,~.................... .. ... -.-.......... ·=111111
.......... tol50llhe201*111'tht .... ...... .. ,._ -...... -........ .. .. OW.,WIMd•~---.. . == ... =-..--.,::;,:;:r:r.. P!9
6
just one man past first base. The run he
allowed was earned, but it might have
been negated bad his defenae not made
its only miscue on the play.
With San Clemente runnen on the /
come rs with two outa in the fourth. San
Clemente tried a double steal Newport
catcher Garrett Amon>IO, who 1parkled
defensively all game, threw to the
shortstop, wbo bad charged ln to cut the
throw off on the Infield grus, wblA
appeared to be pdme podion to nail tbi
nmns fnlm third trying to ICOl"e. But•
throw bome MDed wide " Amo~ •
gtvtng the delipated vtilton a 1 ·0
lead.
Whalen, MCODd bueman Sban.
Bai'u, Aoeen Uld lint b111men ~
Jcm.dAmon.Qu.,..."~
for tbe wtanen, Who fece ~ ~
Saturday at e p.m at the MID• 11te;
.,.., Nlwpolt win Setunlay, It Coul4
Iba dlDda &be dillik1 crown wtda ==-=TbundaJi ...... llld. IMda Ltl6t a.-.. ... adtliliDicl to ... Cllill!lcl
wtt ntn:t1tlllll1DaGO.bal ...................
adAa•a• ....... llilt ...... ...-' ..
Daily Pilot
I
, .. •
\\
Fowler returns
f()~er Newport Harbor High football standout
enjoyed a huge career with the navy.
ettred Na,vy Capl John
wler, a one-time
arterbacking ace at
wport Harbor High, Orange
¢oast College and Arl.zona, ~ returning home after abnost three decades in the navy.
His surprising announcemenC
Coincides with plans for his
teeond marriage July 28 in
Newport Beach to Sonny
Elliott. Both had been manied 19 years unW their spouses
passed away.
Fowler said a number of his
old sports mates are expected
to attend the colorful event.
He will be departing from his
home in Florida.
A one-time Balboa
Islander and prepster,
Fowler mixed with
grid great Ralph
freitag ln football
and with Hall or
Farner George
Yardley in basketball
at Harbor in 1945-46.
time at Arl.zona, but didn't
appreciate the coaching and
wound up transfen1ng to
UCLA. Noted college tutor
Henry "Red" Sanders once
caught a glimpse of Fowler
throwing passes at a distance
and sent word for him to visit
his office.
While astonished at the
request, Powier chose to visit.
He found Sanders asking why
he wasn't trying out for the
UCLA grid team. Fowler
explained that the transfer had
made him ineligible for a year.
Sanders urged him to return
the next year.
During his naval
career, Fowler was
cheered once when a
naval offidal invited
him to serve as a
football coach for the
Pensacola Naval Air
Station team. He took
the otter and gained
considerable
experience. In reflecting back,
Fowler said he
enjoyed playmg
football at Newport
ln '45 for the late Les
Miller. He recalled
Miller as "a
Don Cantrell
SIDELINES
Fowle r, a versatile
athlete, spent his
years flying any
number of jet fighter
planes and also came
classroom teacher, not a.
coach,• but said, "He did the
best he could. He was a terrific
gentleman.·
As for b is historical debut at
Orange Coast, Fowler said,
·coach Ray Rosso was the
greatest coach 1 ever had. He
taught me more football than
anyone else I ever met in
that sport. He conducted
one-on-one coaching and I
always valued that.·
Coast opened in 1948 and
numerous Harbor High
grtdders turned out for the first
squad. Fowler became the first
quarterback while Brian
Hanzal became one of the first
halfbacks. Boyd Horrell
became the first center.
Both Hanzal and Horrell
added to the history in the first
game won by OCC over
Riverside. Hanzal scored the
school's first touchdown and
Horrell kicked the first extra
point.
Although Coast only won
three games the first year, the
record was impressive since
the scores were tight. It set
OCC in motion for a great
year ln 1949, when the Pirates
went 8-2 and were invited to a
bowl game, though they
~ed down the invitation
due to injuries.
Fowler favored most of the
to handle the
helicopte r.
In the Navy, be once
encountered another Harbor
High grad, Jim Seely, who, in
time, became a rear admiral,
and had also earned numerous
combat medals, Seely, a
former Newport swimmer,
graduated from Harbor in
1950.
One of Fowler's greatest
days ln football came ln 1945,
when Newport was
desperately trying to
overcome invading
Huntington Beach, which was
leading, 7-6. And Newport
appeared headed for a winless
mark at the rate it was going.
Fowler chose to leave his
tailback spot and wander out
to a right end position.
"I am still seeing him, •
Coach Miller once said.
Fowler flew down the
sideline, outraced the
Huntington defender to the
end zone, then leaped near
the back line of the end zone
and caught a pass from tbe
powerful Freitag that covered
73 yards in the air. It was rare,
then and now, for a prepster to
hurl the pigskin more than 10
yards.
Fans were amazed at how
fast Fowler ran that day, but
be can't respond, since be
coul~ never rec411 his times in
the century at Harbor High.
YOUTH ROLLER HOCKEY
Storm strikes twice
Local players crowned at Gretzky Center.
IRVINE -The Storm Mite a ub (10 and under) ~
and the Squ1rt Club (12 and under) roller hockey
~ams captured league titles for the second season ·
ip a row at the Gr etzky Center.
The Mites won their semifinal, 9-8, over the Panthers with two goals in the last 58 seconds, then defeated the Red Bulls, 1-3, in
th..e championship game as Ryan Iverson, Mitch Merten. Mu
McCourt, Joey Amonl, Blake Kelly, Chad Hom. C.J. P1z, Matt
Stob.avtch. Steven Kaulty and goalie A.J, Allen contributed.
The Squirts dominated playoff action by beating the Patriots,
6-3, in the semifinals and the Cobras, 12-3, in the final. Iverson,
Merten and Allen, along with Richard De SL Jean. Ryan PaneU..
,_ylor Roy, Gavin Torres, Luc Heriog, Andrew Hodel and Jon
Druary contributed to the title. /
SIGNUPS
Wlnterball program approaching
The Costa Mesa Pony League, for ages 13 and 14, ~ ,vm have a winterball program. Practices begin in
I,tte AuguJt and games begin the second week of
$eptember and wt through early November. Games
'18 on Sunday afternoons and there will "8 at leut one practice a
Tieek. Regtstration is $60, which lndudes a bat and abUt.
For tboee interested in Joining the Costa Mesa league, call Lou
DeSendro, (114) 546-9191, or LuAnne Pilanki, (11•) 966-1948.
SPORTS . . .
A SIAM DUNK • Newport's girls 14-and-under team tops Arizona cha,mpion, 2-1, joins
three teams in M«µyland for national championship later this month.
SALT LAKE CITY -The Slammers FC girls
1.C-and-un4er soccer team from Newport Beach
will join the best Dllnois, Georgia and Maryland
bU to offer wben the four teams vie for the
utlonal championship at the U.S. Youth
National Cup Finals in Bethesda, Md.,
beginning July 24.
The Slam.men qualified for the national
champ6onlbip by defeating the Amona State
champion, 2-1, in the U.S. Soccer Western
Regional Championship, a week-long
competition ln Salt Lake Oty ~State Cup
champions from 14 states in the Par West
Region.
Coach Walid Khoury'• team began its
journey by winning the California State
OwnpAombip in May, outlcodng its oppooems,
23-0.
A't the regional championship the Slammen
defeated Ste Cup champions from Artzona.
New Mexico, Ha~ Wubingtop and Oregon.
Khoury u.o coacbes tbe giits-12-and·under
Slam.men team that also won the Western
Regional title.
WcJcome to the 2002 Pacific: Coast Triathlon and Bastille Day Festivities.
:wlm's bot ~ ycad KIDS! Kids ~ the future of our 5port and our commwlity.
;Jldlyar'1C¥Cl)twllJ feaurc the mum Clf•llloac•d counc (-300 yard swim,6 mile bike, I mile run) r.att bqouth .. l3 and undtt. Our.i>c:\15:1k pwt ldaNc>o txmpll6es good health and a fun activity for kids (ANO their parcnt.S).
M JD~ ,art the.re wil al9o be a NoYtce/Fftt11mer, ~tlvc dlvlsion doing the full sprint dbtancc
(1/1 Ii* ftrtm, 12 mile bike, 3 mlk run).
'nae~ 150" 1m'Cwtll be bade due ro popular~ICyoo ba\.'C one of the top 150 PR's oo tbt COW5t
la eMt.r DX> or 2001 (JI ... and~) ft d ~a tpedal swting w.n'C for you. "Toe to uie with ~ pros!·
" Friday, July 12, 2002 9
lOOAY
STIVIN ltutllL&. G>
Corona del Mar
wrestling. 01
Anteaters honored
The UC Irvine ~ women's cross
country team bas
been accorded an
•All-Academic Team With
Distinction• honor for 2001~2
by the United States Cross
Country Coaches Association.
To qualify, a team had to
maintain a cumulative grade-
point average of at lea.st 3.25.
Coach Vince O'Boyle's squad
also received UCJ's Faculty
Athletic Representative Award
for the highest team GPA at the
university.
This was the 10th time that
one of O'Boyle's cross country
teams has rece1ved the award at
UCI.
Becker leads club
team to crown
and-unde r girls ~ The Asics 18-~
Laguna Beach X@
Volleyball C lub,
led by former Corona del Mar
High standout Jacqueline
Becker, captured the national
ch ampionship a t the 2002
Volleyball Festival in Davis.
Becker, an All-CIF setter for
the Sea Kings last fall who will
play at Yale next season, helped
Laguna Bea.ch defeat Santa
Monica-based Sports Shack ln
the final on June 28.
n.... wvdl 3 deep in each dM9loft' With uf ~ ... to the overall male aOO fcmak winoenl ~ coal.111111c~uncl more: l.ni>rmadoQlf' to www.~n.rom or~ 7~9229 Be safe, be ftt .. Wc'll scc you at .... . '
•6~
Co .. TIOn1ft..,... ~ Mom'I Cooldll. nlnl Anfl ... Dllm. SC*dO
'I 11111.Ml'I S Aln::NID, l'l*"Y ~ EMoi•••illl--VQb.
...... CWS. ..._GI N9lllpal1. Oil.-Colar PmM. K F Slldlll.
Received After 7 /1 ~ S 10 late fee• Payment Make check« money order to: Plldk COlll Trilllloft
Mall to : WB PRODUCTIONS 2821 Golfvlew Drive Fallbrook, CA 92028
O "Sprint Race• S8S.OO O "Youth Triathlon" $45.00
6 "Tllm ~· s.ns.oo o ~ ~ "'' • """-" s1s.oo 1Nlin ,_....__ _______ __,.. -.. llMt,,.,.. •out Din or~ rNll .i lotwi ....... Ct.ck your.-~ llll_ ltul\.;__ •
Name _______________ Sex.._Addms. __________ Clty ____ State. ___ _
Zip. ____ Day PhoneL__l ______ Age Race Day __ DOB~~-USAn ____ "°"""--------
AP Group_ Cl~le I AthenL-Novktt'Flrst Tlmer_ Pro I Eli111_ T·Shlrt Size S M l XL PCT\Courw PR. '00 '01 __ _
I undwllllld 11111 If I an nol rhow. CVl!Wnl IJS.\T lic.-11 eapoon Sat. 7/131 v.111 PIY ·-day,_ leed S7.00~J.SO ~c-'I etld • ..,..,_, ........... H undlf 1~
ANZI •flPllMd helmei 11 fWll.llrtd, 1r-i11on ,,... clote 11 •:lbam slo.oo lddltlotlll M fcllhl b Sunday~ pecUI pldwp • hlatt 6j)()wn Ol!ly.
I 0 Friday. Ju'>' 12. 2002 SPORTS
WOBRO<!K
CONTINUED FROM 8
allde, Wobrock showed the umpire the ball and the wnptre
called Barraclough out. Bul. less than a mmute later,
Wobrock told the umplre he had dropped the ball and
the umpire changed his call.
RUSSELL
CONTINUED FROM 8
poaltSon.
RUll811 built that power during the off-sea.son before hil aentor
year. Ht wu determlned to make hit ttne1 year at CdM prove
meaningful. ffia motivation: a CIP cbamplonlbip ring.
AQUATICS
Murphy, Hewko picked
for national polo team
•One of the proudest moment. for me wu (Wobroc:k)
overruling the umplre, • NHBA Manager Steve HanU
said. ·we tell our kids to be honest about plays 11.ke that.•
Wobrock, who pitched two innings. recorded thrff
strikeouts and walked three.
Last sum.mer. RUIMD eet a acbool record in combined weight in
bll mt.: bench pnu (325 pound.I), aquat (485) and power clean
(285)
Local products earn way onto team after three-stage
tryouts and will travel to Australia next month.
On offense. Wobrock went 2 for 4 and 1cored thrff
runs. ln the top of the fllth, he 1ent a hard·b1t ground bt.1l
past second base for a 1lngle. He ltole aecond, then ltole
l.htrd, and bolted home alter a throwtng tnor that came
He didn't clabn a CIP cbampiomblp in footbl.11. but oo the mat.
R\.l.IMU Mmed the 2002 CIP Southern Section Otviaton m
heavyweight uue in wreatllng. Plue. bil football aeuon wu
definitely noteworthy with an effort that reeulted in the All-Star
game.
Jenna Murphy and Christina Hewko of Newport Harbor ~
and Corona del Mar hlgb schoola, retpectively, have been
1elected to the U.S. Wa.ter Polo National Youth Team.
To be selected to the team, Murphy and Hewko, both of 1
when he waa on hil way to third. , 1
Wobrock beat the throw home with a perfect 1Ud1.
Ju a tackle Jor the put two r:...,. at CdM, Ru.uell earned
MCOnd·team All·P1dllc Collt ague recognition u a ju.ntor,
and then ftnMe&m All·PCL hi.a senior year. Ht alao oolltet9d
Ntwp0rt·M1N All·Diltrlct honora hll Nnlor MUOn. tn 1ddJt1on,
RUIMll wu umtd tht ICbool'I Boyt Athltte of the Yter.
whom will be aenlorl ln thefa111 pe.rtidpated in local. regional and nation41!
tryouu. Alter mak1ng the 2'-member teem, Mwphy and Hewko were then,
aelected to a 14·member aquad that will travel to AuatraliA ln August andi
repreaent the United State• ln lntemationol competition. ,
Lut fall. Hewko WU choeen the CIP Southern Section Dtvllion [V Player:
of the Vear, while Murphy wu a ftnt·team All-CIP Olvilton l honoree. ,
Kyle HoJgate and Spencer Rautu1 allo IClOrtd ln th• fifth
to put NHBA up, 9-'. Holgate ICOred on a puaed ~ and
Nel•on Simon1' lnfleld llngle brought Rautua bomt. CdM Coach Dick PrMman deecribed RUIHU'• Mnior-MUOn
performance a1 •domtnant,• yet hi.a demeanor hardly coindded
with the atereotyplcal otfenatve lineman. CdM defeats ID Toro, 11 ·9 ~ ... L~ ~
After P14centia ICOred two runa in the bottom ot the ftfth,
NHBA lncreaaed Ill lead with four NN for a 13·8 1Hd.
Leadoff hitter Riehle Lowery, Jack YNgtr, Wobrock and
Holgate scored the run1. Lowery and Yeager walked,
Wobrock reac)\ed on an error and Holgate plated Lowery
wtth an RBI aingle. Rautu1 1110 had an RBI ln the tnnlng.
•1•m not that mean,• Ruaaell Hid. •1 try to play emart. l really
don't try to make a big hit. I Just try to do my job and make the
play.• ·
Ruaaell made aeveral key play1 at CdM and he alao made a
po1ltsve tmpre11ion on Doug Smith, the OCC offtn1lve Une coach.
Runell knew be would play for OCC early in the Cd.M football
aeaaon lut fall and ht ruade the molt of the lltuation, which ii
what he plana to do for the Piratn.
Artle Don acored four goall end Juon DiRocco added ~
three u tht Corona dtl Mar boy• club water polo team
defeated m 1bro, 11·9, In the Tultln Wednesday Night League
at Tuttin Hlgh.
Kevin Amendt added two goa.11 for CdM, while David DtRocco and John'
Money had one each ln the win. Beau StockatW (nine 1avu) and 'fyler
Brundage (aeven) were 1olld ln goal for CdM, which improved to 17·5 in
theawnmer.
Yeager came to the mound in the 11xth after Placentia
scored three runs. He induced a ground out, struck out &
batter, and then; with the ba1e1 loaded, he led another
batter to a ground out, which he u11.1ted.
Jason Harris. who aerved duty on the mound in the flrst
three lnnlngs. pounded out an RBI triple that 1cored
Holgate ln I.he first lnning. He al.lo bad a double ln the th1rd
lnnlng.
Parker Norton, Angelo Angelldea, Gabriel Gomez,
Preston Vv1leeler and Ertk Helmataedt also contributed to
the vtctory.
•He'• an extremely tough young man,• 1ald Smith, a 14·year
NPL veteran who earned 11x trlpt to the Pro Bowl u a Loa Angelea
Ram. •we alwaya like a guy who can play more than one 1port and
we're very happy to get him. We'll utilize hia 1k:1lla real well. He'll
be able to help ua out and we'll be able to help b1m out.
Welner All-American
Newport Harbor High boys water polo 1tandout Nathan IAJ :=~~~~~~ h~~=:~~=~~-~~~~ ~ High School All-American team. •
The NHBA All-Stars will take on St. Hedwig's •A•
squad today at 5 p.m. tn the 10-team, double-ellmination
tournament made up of 9-and 10-year-olds.
"He seems like a very humble young man,• Smith continued.
•He seems Wee a tearn-ortented guy, and that's exactly what you're
looking for at any level. He's helping us with his destre to perform
well, and those are the kind of things that make you proud u a
coach."
. Welner also 1wam on Harbor's All-American 400-yard freestyle relay
last spring and competed on the school's CIP Olvt.sion 1 championship boys,
swlm team 1n 2002.
l'lctltloue Buelnee• Heme StatMient
Thi lollowlng pereon1 .,. OOlng buair-u :
Am«loeri Flnlinoltl, 230
E. 171hJ..~•· 217, COiia
Mela, ""' 112827 Steve ~ "Slllnho" 230 L ..JM. S1*. 2u: COiia MeM. CA 92627 Pt1tr C. ~z. 230 E. 111h, Ste. 217.
COiia ....... CA 112927
Thi• buelneea .. OM-ducled by: • lmlltct pe,,.
n.rahlp
Have you 1tarted dollla bullrlMe .,.., No
8hilllo 8l9W ~ Thll Nltmtnt WH llltO W1th the County
Cltltl "' Orange CountY on 08/t llt'02 200Hto71S4
Qely Plot JuM 21 28 JYY o, 12, 2002 WS
BMch, CA 82961
Thie buelna11 la con·
duOted by: an lrdWlual Have you 1tartact
doing bUllr1"e ytt? No
Sharon Ytndle Thie ltlttmtnt waa lllld wllh ttl• County Clatll ol Orange Col.w!tY Oil '08/1 M>2
200HI072to
Delly Plloc June 211.. !': .MY 5 12, 2002 ,.~
CLAUS ORNAMENT, PERSONS: BOXES OF HOUSE· I . PetltloMr: J11n
H 0 L 0 G Q 0 0 9 M.arta Sumoter AKA Rt·
PILLOWS, STUFl'ECS btoC1 JN.nne OIM1ttto
TOYS llltd t Dltlllon Wlll'I tllla Aa62 • RANDALL 8. court tor a dtOtH
FORSYTH, 8001<· changlllg Mn* u fol·
SHELVES;. OFFICE Iowa: JHn Marte TABLE, vORK 8Ul· Sumpter AKA Fltbtcoe
LETIN 90ARO, MISC. •Jtannt OIMatllao to Re· BOXES, WICKER beoca Jtame 01Matteo
STORAGE BASKET 2. THE COURT
AZ70 • BEN RUE FOR ORDERS that all ptr· M. HARTERT, 1S RU& eona lnt""*I In thla BERMAID CON· matter 111111 appear TAINER,,~ ClOTHING before tNa court llf 1tMt CONTErn~. 13" T.V;.r. llMl'lng Indicated below
1 RUG, 1 STORAuE to lhow eeutt, If any,
CHEST, T,V. STANO, why '"-pethlOtl for
ASSORTED HOUSE· Clhlnge rJ neme llhould HOLD 00005 not bt granltld. M63 • JOH MAAPt..E NOTIC£ Of HEARING
ASSORTED Fili! O.te: 7/30l2002 BOXES, T&l.EPHONE Time: 1:00, Dept.: l '73
SETS, TYPEWRITER, The addr ... ol lht OOl#1
000 SEO la MIM 11 noted above
MllO-NEWPORT EX· 3. A 009t of ltllt OrdOt OTIC CARS BY; ftAY to 8tlOW CecM lfltll be
NAKADATE. 21 ~at !Mat once
HOUSEHOlO GOODS MCltl --!Of '°"' euo-IH BOXES, 2 SETI Ol1' otMIW ,,...... pi'1ol' to
OOlF CLUBS, 1 cot'· the dttt MC lot hMtlrla FEE TAllE, 1 HANO. on Ill petllon Ill the~
HELD oa.F CAAT IOWlno newepa~r or
8 3 I 2 • • I( IM oentftl clroulellon, I< 0 L l ETTI, A I · Ot!Mt<I Ill ltlle county;
SORTED 80)(!8, Tiit ~ Piiot, 330 ~~o 00001. = ~ =. Co.la
8' U • R 0 CU R OATil: .Ml '" toll BRAGG. PINO ~ JUDOI M:ttAftO O.
Cl.UIS, MATI'RHI l f'RAlll~ ll'RINQI (KINOl, JUDQI IU,._
MllC. MIU< ORATll NOft I WflTORACH, MllO. Jffll Mirta l\.lmpl ...
IOXll, LAMI' l NM R-.. JMnne ~l Dt.4dt0, I~ Ofa'!% Lim'1i ~~ :~1 C-. Meea,
MATTNll l ,MMI l'*llNd N•wpott AHO II llOICU 1 .. 01\·0ffll Mitt l'uOllflMd N~ Dlllw 'llllt """ M. f!.LtH~Ollt MIU A.JI. t' M ~ l'tlol Mt '!Ii
IK12I052
llOllCI Of Pl1mDI TO
MQBfa ISTAll °'1
'JACID. BAii wno. u1n
To •II h1lr1, b1n1fl· cl1rl11. cr1dltor1, con·
tln11nt credltora, ind
per1on1 who m1)' oth·
erwl11 be lnteruted In
th• will or 1tt1t1, or
both, of: JACK 0 . KEENAH
A PETITION FOR PRO·
IATE h11 bMn lll1d b)'
ROIERT I . PHILUf>S In
tllt Superior Court of Calllornl1, Count)' of
ORANGE. THE PETITION FOR
PROIATE raquot. th1t
R09EllT I . PHILLIPS bt eppolnted H peuonel
repre11nt1tlv• to 1d· mlnlater the 11t1t1 of
th• decedent. THE PETITION requ1tb
th• dectd1nt'1 Wiii and
codlcll11 If any, be 1dmltt10 to probet.. Th•
Wiii end 1n)' codlclla et•
n1ll1ble for 1umln1·
tlon In tM Ille ketlt by
the court. A HEARING on Ult
petition wlll II• !Mid on AUGUST l , 2002 1t 1:30
p.rn . In Dept. L1J
loc1tlld 11 Ml The City
Orlva South, Ot1n11, CA .... IF YOU 01.IECT to the
111ntl111 of tlM petition,
you allould eppeer 1t th•
h11rl"' •and 1t•t• your
obe:tfolla or Ille written
ob tlol\a with th• court bl ore the hHrln1. Your
1pp11r1nc1 m1y be In
peraon or b)' your 1ttorney.
IF YOU ARE A CREOI·
TOR or contln11nt
creditor of tlM dec1111d,
you muat file )'Our clelm
with tilt court ind m1ll 1 cop)' to the paraonel
repr111nt1tlv1 appointed
by th• court within four
month• from th• d1te of
th• 11111 l11u1nc1 of
l1tt1ra H provided In
Prob1t1 Code atctlon 11100. The time IOI' fllln1 clalmt wlll not expire
before four 111onth1 from
tilt h11rln1 d1t1 noticed
1bov1. YOU MAY EXAMINE the
1111 kept by th• court II
you ere • person In· t1t1tl1d In tlM Hl1t1,
you m•)' hie with th• court 1 R1qu11t for
Specl1I Notice (form OE· 154) ol the flllna of en
Inventory and 1ppr1lt1I
of 11tet1 .... 11 Or of
1n1 petition or eccount
H provided In Prob•t• Code aectlon 1250. A
ll1qu11t for Specl1I
Notice form 11 1v1ll1ble
from tlM court clef~. A~fwPt'"'-'
JAYO. fUUMAJI, llG.,
A PltOfllNONM COW. IOO t . llACN llV'!~ HI. A. LA MAia.A. ~ .....
Publlahed Newport
l11ch·Co1t1 Mui D1ll1
Piiot July 0, ll.1-)J..i. 2002 F I 1140U
The fottowl111 paraon1
'" doln1 bualn111 11: South Co11t ftnclnft C1nt1t, 15481 R1dhl
Ave., Suite C, Tu1tln, CA
92780
R11I Ftncln1. Inc.,
(CA), 15481 R1dhlll Ave.,
Sult• C, Tuatln, CA
92780
Thie bu1lne11 It con·
ducted b)': 1 corpor1tlon H•v• )'Ou 1l1rttd
doln1 bualneu yet? Y11,
Mey 1. 200i
ltHI Ftncln1. IM.
Mlaua H. P1tMlftl1n,
Vici f"r1ald1nt
Thi• •l•t•m•nt WU
flied with the county Cllrh of Ouna• County
on08/12/02
IOOHtOtlH
Oallr Piiot July 12, lllil
2'. Aua. 2. 2002 FOl
fktlam ..... ... --..
Tiit followln1 p1oon1 .,, dolna bulln111 u :
C.pacltor lntern1tlon1I OlltrMlutcwa, 2l40 Oree•
L1111, Unit "H", Cotti Mtu,CAl2'1t
M1nutl R. H1v1 l20 C111t11 tl4, Cotti MH1,
CAll262t
Thia bUllMll la COii•
ducted by: •n lndMdu1I
H•v• )'ou 1t1rt1d
clolnc bu1ln .. a yetf No
M1m11I R. Nin
Thia 1t1t1m1nt wu
flied with ttla County
Clerk of Ou111• County
on 07 IOll/02 IOOHtot421 01H1 Piiot _July 12, 111,
26, Aua. 2, 2002 FOOi
fktlam ..... .........
Tiit lollowlna peuona ,,. doln1 bu1ln1u u :
Th• Modern Form, 173.3
Monrovia, Coat• M111,
CA92'27
Oou1 Griffith, 1733 Monrovl1 Avenue, Co1t1
M111,CAll2'27
Thia bu11n1 .. la con·
ducted b)': 1n lndMdu1I
H•v• )'Ou alerted clolna bualn111 )'Ill No
Oou1 Griffith Thia 1t1t1m1nt w11
flied with the County
Clerk of Ounce Count)'
on06/28/02
2001H08HI Delly Piiot Jvly 12, 111,
26.Aua.2.2002 FOlO
fktlam ..... ..........
The followln1 par1on1
ere ctolna bualn111 u :
MJS Wholeult, 10
Lemon Grove, lnln•. CA
92618 ~Ill J Sor1naon, 10 Lamon Orova, lrvlnt.
CA 92'11
Thia bu1ln11a I• con•
ducted b1: •n lndMdu•I
H1v1 you atlrtad
dolnc 11111111 ... yetf No
Mkllttl J, SOftnton Thia 1tetem1nt w11
llled with tlM County
Cieri! of Ot1n1• County
on 01/lo,{02 IOOHtotlff
01lly Piiot July 11, ltJ it. Auau1t l. 2002 FOl1
To all tlaln, b1nall·
clarl... cradltora, con·
tlnpnt cr9dlt0f'a, and
panona wllo m11 ottl·
arwlM bl lntar11tad In the wlll or ut1t1, Of'
both, of: HOWAAO C.
PAlMER alll HOWAAO
CHAOWICI( PALMER
A f'ETITION FOR PRO·
IATE hu bMn llled b)' STEPHANIE PALMER In
tlM Superior C0t.irt of
C11flornl1, Count)' of
°"ANOE.
THE PETITION FOR PROeATE raquHtl that
STEPHANIE PALMER be
eppolnt.d 11 p1raon11
r1prH1nt1tlv1 to •d·
mlnlater the 11tet1 of
tlM dlclden t. llt£ P£TITIOH r1quHta the dlc1dent'a WIU 1nd
codlcll1, If eny. be
edlnltttd to probate. TIM Wiii and 1ny codlclla ,,.
1v1ll1ble for eumln•· tlOfl In the 1111 l\ept b)'
the court.
l}t( P£TITIOH r1qu11ta
1uthorlty to 1dmlnl1ter
th• 1at1t1 under th•
lnd1p1nd1nt Admlnlt·
tratlon of Eat1t11 Act.
(Thia Authority will allow
lilt p1t10111I r1pr111n· t1tlv1 to t1k1 m1ny
1ctlon1 wlUlout obt.ln· Ina court 1pprovel.
lllore tehln1 cerllln
vary lmport1nt ectlona1 however, the pef1on1
rll)f1Mt1t1tlve wlll bl required to 11111 notice
to lntwnlld peraona
11nl11a they h1111 w1lv1d
notice or conMnt.d to
th• propo"d 1ctlon.) Thi Independent •d·
mlnl1tr1tlon authority wlll be arantad uni• ..
en lnterHted p1r1on
flll1 an obflctlon to the
petition end ahowa aood
c1u" why the court ahould not 1rent the
1uthorlty.
A HEARING on t1M
petition wlll be held on
AUGUST 1, 2002 at 1:30
p.m. In Dept. L73 loc1tad It 3C l The City
Drive South, Or•nc•. CA
112161.
IF YOU 08.IECT to the
ar1ntln1 Of Ille petition,
)'Ou 1hould •Jlt)e•r •I the
h11rln1 end 1tall your
obetron1 Of file written ob tlOlla with the court
be ore tlla h11rln1. Your epp11t1nce m•)' bl In
p1raon or by your
ttfOf'ntp.
" YOU AM A CllEOI· TOii or contln11nt
crldltor of h dec11M4.
you m111t fli. your cl1lm wilt! tlM covrt •nd mill a
Cotl1 t~. tt _tlle l)erlOflll r.-1Mnothl'I IOPOlnlld
lly the COIHt within lour
montltt ll'om ltlt d•t• of
tlll flf•t 1 .. 11enct of
i.tllra •• PfOVtdff In l'robtt• Code aectlon 1100. Thi time fw llllfl1
clelm1 wlll not uplfa
llttore four montlla ffo"I the llMflnt dlte notleed
•llo••· YOU MAY IMM!Nl tM
ftlt ""' by lM OOlltt. " '911 ••• ~ lft· teraatM "' Hit ....... '911 IMY fill wltti IM .. .,,t a lt..,.at for .............. ( .... lllDl·
114) .. "" ..... Ill
.........,, •lld '"' .... ' .............. of .............. :&; ~=···· =~~'lltviMIHll *::,=....
E5 ..,...._n-aiM
IK1 ...
ll01ll Of ""'111110
Al•Bta ISTA11 Ofi
IUlt.SIUC*
WHO. AJl4117
To ell helra, b1n1fl· clerl11, credllOt"t, con•
tl"'•nt cr1dltor1, and peraona who m.1 oth·
arwlM bt lntarHt1d In
the wlll or 11tat1, or
both.1. of: NEAL D.
SHELuON
A l'ETITION FOR PRO·
IATE hH bHn filed b)'
ESTELLE SHELDON In
1111 Superior Court of C1tlfornl1, Count)' of
°".ANOE.
THE PETITION FOR
PROIATE r1qu11t1 th1t
EST!LLE SHELDON be 1ppolnt1d 11 peraonel
repr111nt1tlv1 to •d· mlnlater th• 11ht1 of
th• dec1d.nt.
THE PfTITION r1qu .. t1
th• decedent'• Wiii end codlclla, If 1ny, ba
1dmlttad to prob1t1. Th•
Wiii •nd 1n1 codlclla are
1v1ll•ble for 1umln1·
tlon In the Ille ke.,t by Ille court.
TH£ PETITION r•qu"b eutllorlty to 1dmlnlater
tlM 11tat1 uncter the
lnd1p1nd1nt Admlnl1•
tretlon of Eat1t11 Act. (Thia Authority wlll 1llow
the peraon1I rec>r-n·
t1tlv• to take many
1ctlona without obtain· ln1 court 1ppronl.
Before t1kln1 cerllln very lmPort1nt 1ctlot11,
however. the pwaonel
reprH1ntatlH wltl be
required to 11111 notice
to lntarNted ptraona unlffa tllt)' h1v1 w11v1d
notice
or con11nt1d to th1
pr090Md 1ctlon.) The
lndeplfld1nt tdmlnlatr•·
tlon 1uthorlt1 wlll be
ar•nltd unlea.a 1n Ill· tar11t1d paraon flle1 en
obflctlon to the petition
1nd 1how11ood ceu11
why the court ahould
not 1r1nt the euthorll)'.
A HEARING on th1
petition wlll be lltld on
AUGUST l , 2002 tt 1:30
p.m. In Dept. L73 louted 1t Ml Thi City
Orlve South, Or1n11. CA 1121U.
IF YOU OIJECT to
the 1r1ntln1 ol the
petition, you should
eppeer 1t tht h11rln1 and ttltt your ob)tc·
tlona or f111 written oblectlona with the e0t.irt
bttOf'e th• h1trlnc. Your
1ppe1r1nc1 m1y bt In petaon or. by your
1ttorn1y. IF YOU ARE ~ CllEOI·
TOR or contlnaent credltOf' of tht dec1ned,
)'Ou muat Ille )'our clllm
with tlll court ind melt • copy to the pertoftll
recir-t1tlv1 IHOln\ld by Ille COVIi wlttlln four
month• ffom ttle dlt• ol the flrat l11uanc1 of
lett•• H provided In
Prob1t1 Codi Mellon 1100. Th• time for iHln1
cl1lma wMI not Hplre
ll•fort four ll'IOfltltt from
tlll hHf 1111 dtt• noticed 1llove.
YOU MAY utAMIHl t.ha flit kept lty tll• c-t. If
roll •ra I "'"" Ill• t••tatl In thl ntet., )'141 111ty 1'lt wlttl tit•
court • llttlll"t ftf lpeclal Notte• (fOfm Of. lM> tf tMJll!le of 111
l11wt11torr • ..,,.1 .. 1 •f .... I ..... .,., ... , .............. . i~ Ill ftytMtt ..._, ... A
• .... flf .~:1::~ "'"' .. ... .....
•
• '.
Policy
Rates and deadlines are subject to
change without notice. The publisher
reserves the right to censor, reclassify,
revise · or reject any classified
advertisement. Please report any error
that may be in your classified ad
immediately. The Daily Pilot accepts
no liability for any en;or in an
advertisement for which it may be
responsible except for the cost of the
space actually occupied by the error.
Credit can only be allowed for the first
insertion.
AlllOUIKEMENTS
& MISC. 1010-1770
GARAGE
SALE
IUSlllESS &
FINANCIAL
........... .........
The follow1n1 Pef aona
•re dolna business H :
Hollywood Cellini. 5102 Stone Canyon Ave.,
Y0tba llnda, CA 92886
Rhond• Lynn
Lewrenu, 5102 Stone
Canyon An., Yorbe
Linda, CA 92886 This buslnas b con·
ducted by: an lnd1v•du•I
Hn• you sterted
doln1 business yet7 Ho
Rhoncle Lynn leWJence This atetement was
hied with the County
Cleft! ol Onn1• County
on07/10/02
2001HotStt Daily Ptlot July 12, 19,
26, Aus, 2. 2002 f014 ........... .........
The foltowln1 persons .,e doln1 business H :
frM the Muona Minis· try, 3073 Johnson Ave.,
Costa Mesi, CA 92626
Betty (eke Mer1eret
Ell11beth) Petroff, 3073
Johnson Av1., Coste Mese, CA 92626
This bualnest Is con·
ducted by: an Individual
Hne you at•rted
doln1 business yet? No
Betty (M.E.) Petroff
This statement was flied with the Coufllty
Cler\ ol O.anp County
on06/ll/02 2001HMS7a
Daily Pilot June 21, 28, Mrs. 12, 2002 f007
BmRTAllBT
1311 11 --...-..n
All ,... •l•te •dv•· u.inc Ill this -...
Is &ublect to the Feder el
Felr Hcwllf'll Aet of 1911
2305-2490
'corJs1GrJMErJTS 1
•,
1411
._ .... s.i. s.t, 8a·49
7/13. berylh1n1 must
aol f1Hniture. campina equip, surfboards,
clothin1, etc. 316 Grend c.n.1. Llttle Btlboe Island
Ol-1MlliiD-'w , ......... Sehl
AllUquu, hon-.~
decor 11tts & collecUbles Sun, I0.-6p 1M1 S..-&.r,CM l·~So.
171.h St Oe•i.ts Welcome
OMIAOISAU
Seturd•y, 7em·7
3042 Country Club Or .• Costa Meu. Furniture,
lamps & HSOJted
hou11hold Items.
Ceet• ••••• 4 51
C•Mltr14•• Cir, '" lrvl-, SA a.t , lefr'9,
•-. ltlliH, detltH, f*lc,-•I o.r.,. S4ile s.tw.My,
hm·Zpm, 309 Slanal, Newport Beach. Clothes,
furniture, •rt & assorted
mlsultaneous Items.
Nice Pine furn, hutch,
coffee tbl, aofa lbl. Nest tbl, chairs. speakers,
M:rHn, twin beds, su1f
board, lu11•1e. art, china, children misc
SAT only 9·2, 2127
Arall•. NPB (East Bluff)
CINI SAT 1-T I• ... y upst11rs, 523 Dehlle, blll
ltellan bedrm Ml, con· temp dhuet, couch/
loveseat, coffee lbl,
32"TV & stend, creden·
11, morel 714-612-6381
COM SAT 8·1, 336 Hue! Houuw.,H, nlc·n•cs,
enllciun. lV. OW, ate .•
llOUMYlaMll
1511
es •mended which FOUND Yar1 Sw11t, m1lles It 111•1•1 to Blkll, fem, short hair,
advertise •1n1 f)ftfll'· doc no tall on JULY 4TH
ence, lhnlhtlon pr Cosl1 a.. .. foldham &
dlsc:rlmlna14on bHed on hir, 714·557·8235 rece, color1 relllion, .. _, a--.i
.,.....,, rM!lllel st1tu• -•
"',..... .. Ofieln. Of .., JI 1 111m 1111 ............ lo mllle 111r
lllC1' ,,.._lflee, llmltll• ADVlllftll to over 5
Uoft f/lf tllct1Mlftal6ofl." mlllloll'C.llfC>fnlelts wlttl Tiiie ...,.,.,., •Ill 1 st1tintl4e classlfi.d ad not _,......r ....,. 1t1 1• nowp..,.rs. $450
eny ..._....._. ,., for 25 -•· Ealll1!d
l'MI ...... ...._ It M '/Ollr heft.a11s, ,ltEE ................ ow ...............
, .... n .,. --:::1 m1,__.,.0; m•>• ~ tMt.. • Mtt. -.ue--.c-. • ...,t1w1 t.i ... M=JCM> "'""' .. ., ..-.......... _ ... _ ....... .
Ofl Ill .... ..-blMt't = ..... To~ of•· lllL!l all!•._ caltM>..,_ • ., .... , ..... a ca
•
. . .. . .
How to Place A ---Deadlines---• • CLASSIFIE6D Monday ...................... Friday 5:00pm
Tuesday ................... Monday 5:00pm
B Fllx By Phone
(949) 642-5678
By Mail/In Person: Wednesday .............. Tuesday 5:00pm
(949r631~94
(Pleele Include your natK llnd
phone mimbef Md we 'II celJ
you beet with a price qllOle.)
330 West Bay Street
Costa Mesa, CA 92627
At Newport Blvd. & Bay St.
Thursday ............ Wednesday 5:00pm
Friday .................... Thursday 5:00pm
Hours Saturday ..................... Friday 3:00pm
Telephone 8:30am·5:00pm
Monday-Friday
Walk-In 8:30am-5:00pm
Monday-Priday Sunday ....................... Friday 5:00pm
Index
--DI
·'"""· M1WMO
11.Aa.ESTAn
lltR SALE
Reach 80,000 Homes Each Week
SOOS-SISO For Only $32 per week (4week minimum)
Cal Lorraine at (949) 57 4-4245
Rlcordl,Tapa co•1nD11a 3315
TOP $$S/llCOllDSI
Jtu, R&B. Soul. Rock, Etc.
50's .. 60's
MIKE (949) 645-7505
HOME
FURNISHINGS
New s,rtl•n Htll1 llstln1. Grut opporlu·
nlly, pool •nd s11•. 48r
2.5Ba, lar1• lot. over
)2.000 sf. S949,900.
b1vld T. Sanford. •at. 714·•12-8955
21r 21• l level p1tlo condo. N•w decor,
oceanside of PCH, walk
to all. $43911. Owner/8kr
949-760-3187
• 0,.... s.t/S-I -5 It Ve.._ BHutlful
R1va11 58r 51 ht>a. PIKI· hed •if' sys, 3c 1•r. clubhouse with fabuloin pool, ltnnts courts. Low
Mello Roos •&l , l•urle
Leuio 949-509·8923
OP9t SUN 1-5
11~ .... --""*""'--....... ,...,,_
$1,MD,000
S..::::1~56--
MOBILE HOMES/
MMUFACTlJRED
HOUSING
* ,_, l.ecafe-* In Newpert leedi
l , 2 & 3 Bedfooms. Newly Remodeled.
Huee Patios, Tons of Clout $pace HHted
Pool & St>•. Fit.nus Cent11, Pet Friendly.
f•om 1280.
••1-561-1546
YIAl!. Y UASIS Bill GRUNDY REAL TORS
949·675-6161
Apt 2br 2be Nwpt Hets
$1250. 1feat area, like nu, vault ceils, tile
counter lops, sunn1 &.
briaht. 949-760·1713
* le"flt C .... 11 * w .... , .... ,_ .........
H_/..._.. Mont.Tat
38r, ~/t8•, nvbl Ors.
hceptlonall ltnj ~ U.
S3950rn ¥ 949.Q0.1156
JOBS WANTB>
IMW '97 740k SDN
Wht W/blk lthr, Clfl
to lODK mt, coml sots
S23,980 117512 P...U.SAUTO t 4t-574-7777
IMW'ts S2SISDN
Will w/p:ay int. only 8611 ml. Sl5,980 08084
'HILWSAUTO
94t-574-7777
IMW 't 7 ZS l-4.1w
Wht w/tan Ith•, 3Sk m1
Sl8,980 118098 ,HfUIPS AUTO
t4t-574-7777
Chevy 'ft Swltv.t.-
1500 LT 414, low, 37.5
ml, l'•Y· alnt cond, TVs,
VCR. $?4.500 9&675-7564
L.•" GS300 'ts S• Gold w/tan Ith• Ip,
$16,980 •18018
PHIWl'S AUTO
949.574.nn
MH'U JOOCl Clun.
Chere blk, lo•ded. lo m1 alnt cond. SI0.000 Pf'
Ht-675-6006
MIZ 'ti MU20 New
tiru/bnkes, blk/blk,
lo•ded, pp $25,900 •ft•• 6pm. 949-723-1081
MIZ'HS..._
C230 smk sll w/crm lthr,
only 5511 mo, full pw• Sl9,980 •17611
'HIWHAUTO Ht-574-7777
Cltryale•'OO SOOM SDN Mercecles l1ta 'DI Gr•phite w/tan Ith•, lull ML320, white, llkmi, 1
pwr, pflm whls, Only owner, Eacellent cond.,
$18,980 #18099 $33,500 949-551·8074 pp PH.U.SAUTO
t4t-574-7777 Mitsubishi ·97 Diamante
, ...... y o,., .....
Deel« with over 40
yHrs eap• Wiii P•Y • very fair puce IOI your
ca• V•n °' !tuck pe1d
IOI 01 not Call Dick Rey
@ Tomato Auto Sales
1!4'-437·1931 Of 714-328
3228
CASH fott CAllS We need your car Peld
fo• o• not. 'i.1111,. A11te. Ask IOI Malcolm 949.574.7777
... 4 u.lh "' •••• v ...... •II 2br Iba, nice
MoblltMnflCtund
Homa -COSTA MISA Pt.yperf
Moblle Home Park 55+ 2br 2J>a, w/d, $55,000
Br Owner 949-fiJS.9221
I Bd almost 800 sf. Newly remodeled.
Huae patt0, Tons ol
closet spece. L11ae Pets Welcome! Only
$1280. 1 at this pike.
Aast • .,....,, PT for
Self Storaae, 2 days Ptf
wuk. Office wo•k, computer knowled11 and
h&hl malnt r•q. Newport
Buch. 949·644·270
GAllOININO ASSISTAMT
PT S7.50/hr. 8·t2, Mon·
Fri, Tree trfmmlna, plant
and lawn care. For Sherman G•rdtns In
COM. 949·673·2261
OINl!tAl OFfKI n for uteb company Musi
handle incom1n1 c•Hs for Cha•tera •nd have 1ood
communlcetlon skills
C•ll Betsy 949·675·9444
OaA,HIC DUIONU
Newpc>rt BHch Merkt!·
1n1 Dept look1n1 lo• ar •phic desllheJ who Is prohc11nt In QuarkX·
PJess and Photoshop for
macs Will c1e111n and piepare to p<1nt direct
mail pieces, ads •nd promoltonal ltenn fT
Wtlh benefits
Ch•ysler '98 Sebtln1 JXI Sll~!,5:~~n1~!~e~l0t', ~a•nr-Convert1ble ( 118172) • 51"c ..._ set Lt pin•.
rnd pedestet atess tbl 4
chairs, 911 by 9lil <£ hr.
.. -· Man 9496&21ClA a;;;tfhi MCtlelMt and
standard sin couch.
Both new cc>nd. "'* -.
Price z n "'841-1ns
JEWBJIY/ 3460
DIAMONDS/
PRECIOUS METALS
c-•<•M_. Old Coins! Gold, silver,
,....iry, watches, antiques
collectibles 949-642 -9448
3515
leWwi.M .... llOr-"
,,.... w/piano disc
player. Hl1h Luster
Ebony lint cond S9,900 (949) 474-8600. 111
Clll 3110
'-' ....... -.. .. ............. ......._. ;:a.. s:-s-....:.2-:
..trW.~2219
--I I fww ..... ........ ~ .... 4""rMMS1~
Oc1cat kittens, CfA,
Leapord look .._ t"J(I) .... "'.~ C °'.,.7773
mceJMEOUS
BCIWIDISE
1111111 ... .......
a•ea. I& arassr r••d. low vac•ncy S669,900 •I~ ... .,, _ _.,..,.s-ate
1n Mesa Verde, 2 twnhm
style units. •ti w/a.,•1es & pvt backyerds. David
T. S.nford, Bk• 714 .. 12· 8955
E•CM 4+15+~ Gor1lllla,
bnla, ....... Bua 118 2llll6d ~ ..,, -.c»t
11'-est n4-0-9695
~Blldl
ll•fh •• ,. u .....
Me4el lst time on Marh1tl Absolutely
wonderful. I slOt'y 3bt, spect arnbelt view In eH
the Bluffs. Huit landsc
••p·around patio over·
lootlln1 reflection pond
In orain sect. Shown by appt. By Owner t4t-644-5464
leecl1 Cett•t•• As· sumabte Loni Term
le•st until 2026 at S89' pet mol All new Interior
28r 2Ba, all new tppls.
slip marina with Jesldent
discount. $199,000. Mery
Wood, •1t. 949·584·
5811, 949-717·9816
MISCBJMEOUS
RENTALS Call tod•y for appt.
... -561-1546
6010 It 2ltr 2IMI, •a patio
fp,taund f•c, pool, b1H11d ---MAHA--GE_R_S__ rm. Util incl SI 600
Specl•I S20 all• ta Barbat• 949-673-7800
ad. hUt ~ .. Ad. Z!i c..-2 M•ter Br.
ms & llldw1llll. Slll.-i 28a, lvna rm, Ip. dinin1 on-.... llndl .a FL\-•ree, newer hit •PPIS.
J\RS: ~ IY trJbbW1hd Incl lri&. w/d. els to
c111 ~la:\ ESPN beech, luaury resort s.tyle MAIUCOING ASSIST
& 0.:. pool. & 11C-Qm livinc @ Ville &lboe Newport BHch Market
lwld ct. to lwys. Mn tan Sl850m0 Isl 714'.964.7222 1n1 Oept lookln1 for 1 OC.:::: ~ CLOSE TO HACHI h111'1·eneray lnd1v to join
COSTA IW.SA MlTCJI INN 2b1. 2ba, bale, hrepl•ce, their team In a last
'lZJ7 ltlrbar 8MI 1 cer pr. Sl850 •at paced piolesst0nal envl ~ 949-673-7800 ron1T1ent. R1qulr1ments
38r 2Ba duplu, steps are strona people skills RmlTOShlrt 8030 to beach, tp, 2 car aar, •nd the ebllit1 to mull!·
l year lust. no pets. task, mac operienc1 •
S2100mo. 626-359-4539. plus. F'T with benefits ...............
white with perfect Tan 6 cyl, am/Im cd·tmm•c·
IHth11, •ulo, pilc1d to ulat1t only SI 1,980.00
ull last. Only Phillips Auto su.980.oo 949-574-nn
Phllhps Auto Nie.., •ta •••'-SI 949.574.7777 AT, AC, PS/8/W/Dt../M
0Hee '9t 0--.. SlT vll6472J.2909 SI l,4'9S Whole, w/ten Uhl rur NOIM UIVIS MOtlfOA
AC. co Stadler •X4 •aa-540-74&4
S16.980 •17968 --------PHILWS AUTO s-6 't2 90Ck Sspd, Ht-574-7777 86k, srn/lan llhr, 10 disc
..........__ 't• ~4 l .5 ca, snrl, runs ar .. t. ski -.......... rack, ••lr• set/snow Y6. blue/sry In • luhy h li5100 o11o 96723-lSllS lo•ded, beautiful 0tllln•I cond. $4595 v•879241 s......... 'H SU 14k
Bkr. (949) 586-1888. •Ctual ml. full I act warr.
fer4 •oo Mwt-. c-boolls. reco•ds, auto,
White/tan lthr. metalhc bu•1undy/1f•Y
ONl Y 261( m1lesll int. Gar•&ed, n/smkr,
Sl5,980 • •18057 hke new. Y'457212 ,HIUIPS AUTO $8795 Bk• 949-586-1888
949.574.7777 SATUtlM '01 Sll SOM
fercl 'tt Mwt-. c_,, Al, AC, PS. Dl, 1111, Blk/btk Int. Must see! stereo, cass, lmmac
Sl3,980 117959 •Y2.._.537 Sl0,595 PHllUPS AUTO IU·S4D-7414
A-._..._,. Room
w/shefed bath 1n • 3br,
2be, house, no pets
S700m+ 1/3 utll. 604
LllfMptjr. CdM C.I for
.,.al Cato& a4a 88:1 9151
E'slde Twnhm, fem seek
aame, cleen, pvt rm/b•. 1•r. w/d, n/pets S700
mo+utls 949-646·4065
lay View c-4• 949 717·4783 Of ema11to
Refurb 2Br. 281, S2150m pht.mll@comcoest fOllD '00 MUSTANG N-crpVpainl, epp<OK ~ p /D 1100.l It, lndr~·}ec;· Convt, AT, AC, S, W l ,
949.574. 7777 s,. ...... H ···-'65 This is one fun Porsche·
look conv lo• summer!!
S17,980 1181522 CL_ .. 71 -751·278 1t219 w-··" Halper 5 days tilt, CD, •lloysl _.. • wnk for hie house 1Vl986"• St• """ JD p.-M .... t, loK. "" ... """ .....,....... ·• keeplna & assklJnc semi Ul-540-74a4
T_._ 2llr 2ba. iww lnvelld $9,:1! !M9-~ fw4 •oo •:.t; XlT
cspet. ._ Pll1l wd !Wei. lllt~ M--..• • door 6c I t ti it ~ pool. ..,a. .., Susana HHlty Gou•met vlB2327S-~i2 Sll,595
'~AUTO t4t-574-7777
Ml ,_......_ Apt ....,._ 11t. S22lX> 9&m.46l> • last srowtf'a co needs NOll.M IJIVIS HOllOA ~ "A ,_ ... _.1, la 28• 28a, w/d. 1/, utls, Wl5TCllff • 2i.. exp'd mana1er to run Ul-S40-74M offer" wlll buy a 2br 2ba $825/mo.+ $800/dep. ..._, !I ~ 1-_ pJoducllOn llnt -llchtn .. __ ,9 • ....__ ,._..._
Teoyeta't7~U
AT, AC. CC, Utt, alloys vl060463-3170 Sl0,995
MOUi auws NOMOA
.... S40-74M
949-723-2322 Av••I Now1 ~ $~ Hi·volumn, Urick recipe _. • ,...,_ -+ office upptf level ~ :,~5600 & portion control, recipe AT,AC, PS, Must Mal
G••nvllte Unit on NB RESIOENTIALRENTAl..S -develoe>erMnl, culln••Y vt0UM59-3152 $4,495 Counlty Club By owntf U4e ,...._. a...n delfee piefd, bl uniuil, NMM HrvlS NOMOA
Celt for eppt de'/I ORANGE 7400 Buch Cottace Enl/St>•n 1,.,,,.. ha ..._540-74*4
949-721·0013 COUNTY 28r, 28•, W/D, 111 avail res to John at 94!l·8JJ· H-4e'" Acc..,. U.
Bluffs townhm, 3b• S2250/mo. Poot, 5'1•. pvt" 2939 or cen 833·2929 AT. AC, PS/8/W/Ol.
ci.an • updeted Open beKh, wall! lo shops, a .. --.. now hlr1n1 vfl64723·2909 Sl0,9915
Set·Sun Redu_>1d to ...... Cllll rest•ur•nll•ndocean. eap'd Suvers, Busbota MC>aJlllffVISNOMOA
$3119,000. Also Avail for ~Dan°' Anna & am line Cooks Apply Ul-M0-74a4
r•nt $1975/mo. T,,_.. U. 2h condo, S & Uf's Sle9S to bey. M·W 3pm·St>m 3461 Y1• H-4e '"Accer4 U.
Hot .... Paul$on Reetly turn·key, 2c att'd 1•r. umm pools & spa. lido NB or fu resume AT, At;, PS, P8, lllt.
M9-632-6419 tennls1 comm pooV19•, Meny to chose ffoml 94t-71J-a770 vJIOU633·3016 S14,595
TOYOTA '00 Cl
AT, At;, PS, W/Dl. tilt. CO, !Ille new!
IV322181 S12.595 ua.-540-74U
Toyota '01 Celie• CT S H/8 (118174)
6 speed, ftclOf'/ ....
r•nty, full lo•ded.
-roof!Only
S19,980.00
Phillips Auto 949-574-nn Condo ~s.t/S-l -vut IOC,~fri& + Sl200/mo·S2300/mo. RITM S.W.. lll'll*loul MOlMtlllVISMOM9A
S ..... ._L.......a ... , ell utts. · •1t. Bkr. 949-642-3850. hWW ~ lnclw b Nl-140--74*4 -"° Elvira 949 .t66·7536 ff .... In hWI end ~~=,r~.E CHAIRS ::.~~do~~·\:~~.~.~::: ........ =~~2.;~ nwl'I =s .. In NB. ~:~p~~~I~
new upholstery Hole •17. •at Laurie w1tber, tennis, pool, 1ott Sophhtlcat casual • •V542088 Sll.995
Teyete 'HS'-XU
AT, AC, PS1 !,"OOf"OOI.
v#OI0684·3u3 s 14.996 MOUi lllV1S MONOA
... -540-74" $400949·760-9351 lqalo. 949·509-8923 ..._...._. vu.S2500m 949-640-5274 r.art -~ Ml-S40-7'M CMVIMIU1M~OM•Y ..-lbrlba,yrly S-Falre$1.SIO. "*' 2!Mi6. .... .. ......·ooca-v SS a.M'H N SS 0.-S-lt-4. rental $3950/mo. Ea L.s 28r 281, Grt P•tlo, ~ Olfllll PW/Ol, Ult. CC
Be The Bossi Blt.S Tr•n~~.1::::; 3Br 949-752·5l8l · F•ont Row Catelln• '::-t.r:::::.. "t:; UC AT, AC, PS, P8, lilt,
Freelnlo.lnvestReq. 2.5ei,2 atorvlns•lad ... ,...... Vlews,NewRemodel, 2 Y!'l i'IUI ~In ""005036·3116 S\7,995 800•561·0118 , Whit• 0.COI. MlfyAnn ..,.,.... Git for .... IUVH MOMeA
comm. '879.ooo. Bhr. a... It., lie, Gae W Mc1ulre 949-646-6770 1dvencement. Xtnt ..._~ ... .... "-M __ 1_1_4._53_2_·9545 ___ nfc:e view, stow, dbl\· • PrudC•llfRHlty blllllMld. dllllal. «>U(. ........ ._..UC
,,,.... Office , ........ IUM l •I , wshr, ""' S1175m Incl O&lii PllCNf1' Ar .. ---.....,. -tit AT, AC, l"S. cc, Alls. tilt. A .... He.,,O,t C~ area, SO......_ Of, utl, no pet 949-721.-& t..c pttlo on ulld, 2 c Fu,. to 714'4l2•1 vM14211·27'8 116,995 2fiO Newpott Or J>r.. T.....,.m, beeu tancllc I 1., ... , wd ,..,,, •at s.1es ...._. C-'Y MOUi •ms.._.
2121 E Cout Hw •• dolchn 3br • 2.5ba, •Ja-mine. nu mp. SJOQOM9-293-46.JO f•lr. Demo women's ... _,._7 ...
Dc••n view, Cell Chlrleis ellllfl m•rble. $191,000 ..... ., 2 ~ T_. .. •lllll slllft CMt -... ._ ...... "--Co~.,.,."_ Owll«/llllr M9-7I0·9729 = -'Oft SttHt 38r 28e, 2c F,.t -.,_.., -~ ........ & 11r. frtsll '''"' • """Cl Trelnllla. ,, • AT.ACl"S/9/W/Ol.cc ......... 11~_,_ Ylllee, ft ee!!D up~r•ded . A• view $7 50 to at11l. fut1 lo'! Tiit, 'l rft/nors
W -S. lt-4 Cllm...... '3200/-94g..11a..2• ..... ""3147 .voo3924 Sll.995 ..... , T ..... Aaet.W...... ...-..... 74M
f«dl-"'opertln c.ew.,.. ( ... 21k Ila. to ht4p Khool photot -.. iii WC1¥K ........ ..._ ... °"* l •c ..... ,,, .. , "° peb, ·-flf)lllf. Oo yo11 Iii• AT,AC,l"S,CO,.aloys,
TOYOTA ... 1T .... PU, AT, AC, PS, CD,
Cond, Must Siii IV184571 JU,995
..... S40-7"4
Y...,_'97HOSMI
White, w/t•n Ith<, 1 OWlt
A ntee, frntl tu• In II
Sl2,9IO •18080 ....... MfO
'49·174-7777
Yehe"97••• Wlllte, W/tlfl lttv, 1 o-
A *-· frall tr• t.111 S\U IO ttlOll
....... MfTO ~17 ... 7777 Mf . .,,..7700 w/d, -cr~t. IM, ,......_ ....... _ -'5:!/~IMNret1 Ill • f'YS4115l $12,495 .............._It/I.__..... -fM •aid •7»19 .....,. --t1111 e et C.n W.:..._7\M YW .. 7 ~ ----...__ ...... .,.......-e. ._.. ....... ,.,... ....... _ ........... Ulla. c..-~· • ,,~. llfl>f-. ~ .. , ,... atG.I• . •l7llO ........... ._,.... .. ............ -''"' .. , L_....,....... ...... ....
=/_;;: .... :::;1.:::.,~~ ... =--:o'~"t,~~=~ ~,..:1~ ~H-1111 .,._.....,..._ £:. _. '';':.~ 114-L 1• .._,,....Hi ._ .. ._JlnA
..... fe I I.. "':-..,.... ... MIN: ....,_.._ .. -~ 1111, ~-···· .... ~,..,. ........ . 291,........... ~ 1411•1Pa.i .. tMJ7.• •.-~~·· .. .
2002 enclosed trailer.
5a8, IS1n tifes. lockable
doon, $1450 must "e'
714-375 1950
free apc>lteahon, last el)C>foval HON PROFIT DEBT CONSOLIDATION
CAll
1·866-764·3338
24 hout consull1tt0n
BOATS
9615
'tt DtMy 21h Mint
cond, 'llv11y option, lull
cabin encl, ~
mrhd. $19.!m JQ;.3IJ)O)
2001 21h Ouffv hk1
n•w. fully loaded, shp
•vailable S28.500 obo
(t4t) 474-•too al I I
BOAT REPAIRS/
SERVUS
9111
NOTIC(
OF IHVITING BIDS
C'1Y Of NCWP<>ltl
BEAai OFfSHOR!
MOORING PERMITS:
A..65 RAT£D AT 50',
C.a6 R•ted fOft 35' AND f · 15 RATEl> f'Oft 40' s .. 1ed bids mey be •e·
ce1ved at the office of
the CltY C1«11: 3300l'Mwport
Boullnrtl. PO. BOil
1768 H41wport BMch, CA
92651-8915 unllt 11.00
AM Oii the l8UI of JU\. Y 2002, •t which t-such bids shell be oPlned elld
read .......... s..ooet.r
bchMoorlna
•I t Jt l•"t' , ...... -"------cet-iilHI l11c:•-· .......... MeeaD ir1.(ioo ..... ,. ••cn•llMM• ,.....,_....,.,.:..._.....__ ... ,,..... ~· w••P* "'....,. L~· ........ l&f1il! "I 1!fc1~~J:.:t',I. wwac~.:_~~ :: .. •&-::: =-~~ IPlll•lllSl't•t -~a::t:::=.:: fVI~ ..... ~. tf:r:t"r• .,........,.rn ........ ..=.."" _ .. , ..
Ill ........... = _,.~ ..................... ....
=..i,-'llo ... ='"' .. ':' --~ =-~ Elii.F :.........:-...=: ' ... , ... ,. ~ -= ... --.............. ..-="·=~ li'&IF= rr.:-.:u ._-ma., &i's 1 §1 MitllJlli ~ ,. 'mlW
'
. . A12 t~. ~ i2, 2002 .
Run your ad in the
Newport Beach-
Costa Mesa Daily
" Pilot and the
Huntington Beach
Independent to
reach over 100,000
homes. Fax us this
form with your credit
' card# or mail with
·· a check today!
Run for a week! If
your car does not
sell, we'll run It for
another week FREEi
All for just $16'.
~<Mf'IT~U.ff (1-Repalfs, Petchlnc, Install
Courhc>us. eny sin jobs.
wtloltultl 949-492·0205
' '
--------------------, D YEI, IB1 MY CAR I
I . --o.., o-0AMX
01~ s-a...,_ Pllm ____ , a,,.. -a--a--a-J a-co.. a . .,.. o-..o..-,. a...... a .... -a--a~~ a°"""-a,.,,_ ·a1e1o1• a--a-a-~ .... ,,_,, o,.._ a""'-a-.--dliolllfh
.. • IWy Plot 330 w. a., Sl. Colle Miii, CA ll:!e27 ..... \9481642·587'•'-"931-8'
I
I,
JM;"1\;Pik>t llu~to•CllO• llAC•
!!..A}!f.:._ INDEPENDENT ·
. . . '
Nilltlllr wlnenllla. Soultl dllll.
NOlt11t
•A4 ~6UJ O AQU ......
EAST . " .. , O KQJJt
O•J 107
•ll
SOlfl1I •053 ~.o
O IU6 •AK1t6!
~~ NOtn'H EA5T JNT ,._, i. .._
20 ,._3NT .._ ........
Opening lclid: Six o( •
Finetaea ml&Jlt SI.In out "free." but
!here is oft.en • price to pay. Consider
Ibis deal
Despite the ~ °' lho twin IUit. the~ valoe 10 .p.dcs t&vinced North of lhe Wdom of
pro6ioa for • 1>9"ibk 4-4 bean fit with the Stayn\IO toovcntion. When
South denied • four~ major,
. )
.. ·
Daily Pilot
" CLASSIFIEDS
. ; .. ._" ,· I
!
i... Twre• '-49c... QUAUTY ClAITSMAN
weekly 1Nirt N trmrq 20 YEARS EXPERIENCE
IWIPAClflC
POOU
Construction
Remodels • R19ain Swva
llST MOVDS $St /ttr senin& alt cities, Insured fast, courteous, careful.
Tl63844 800·24&-2378
8-ICll s.mca
U<JNSID COMTIA<TOlt
No P, too sm. M ..w.i Repair. rtwlOdlt, fafls.
.... -~ MMJ46.Jlil56
SMALLJOBEX
DUNCAN ELECTRIC
l..oclVOtAc:lt Reepoiwe
ServlcelRemodet 20 Years Experience
Ll275870
94H50-7042
Dirty Wwfl '-49aipe
Malnfenance. lewn Aer·
atin1, Sprlnlller Tun·ups
& Repairs, C ... n·ups & ~ 71A-70Ufi60
...... !! I ,, -
& Cleanup. 25Yrs up! rM YOUR HANOYMANJ
licftnSured 949·548-4363 MARK (t4t) 6SO.tS2S
TrM Senke, Y1rd
Cleanup, •lntenance.
Stlflnlller Repair, Hauh111 ('4t)H04711
Gl1tFDl. IDlll •IWNllNMD * Rtsidaal * r.c.aamai o Job 1bo Small
Da~ llamlltea
949-322-8292
JUNK TO , .. OU.,.111
714-968-1882
AVAllMILE TOOAYI
949-673-5566
... ._.,Ally type
Best t><lcts. Repairs oll.
Quelity work. frH est.
l'3730089 714·731-5643 .......
Call Claaa led Today
(949) 642~78
• Licl 796148
(t4t) S76-t710
PtrMMIANAst-9
Enerratic outaoln1 indivicluel w/ucellent references aveitablt
tor Hourly/PT/FT
posttion w/famlly or
busy uecutlve. Eaperienctls with ..... _ .......... ..
•••••••••-••1111t1t & pet cse. Errands. Well
or11niuct end very efficient. lnqult'es 949-645·3160 or
k attbl.c:om
PUBLIC NOTICE The C1llf. Publlc
Ulihtles commission requires that all used
household aoods movers print their P.U.C. Cal T numb«;
limos end chauffeurs
print their T .C .P.
number In 111 1ctver-tisements If you have any questions ebout
the te11llty of • mover, limo of
chauffeur. call: PUS· UTILITIES COM-
M 1 S SIO N 714·558-
4151
.... , ..... ~c..
.. .._ ....... c.r.
Pr..t4e4 l~••P· refs i RFALESTATE I ~~~slhou!ty 4 . ._Ron med'~-~~
~Young Plllnlll
New
U.rtingJ Avalloble!
714-432-7873
--~
CUT 6 ROLL
PAINTING
<Mr'• ....... 1JYrs mlP Great Price! Guaunteed
work. Fr" est. U375e02 714·SJ8..1534 7. 39().29'5
IU'S CUSTOM PMITIN&
Prof'I, dun, quality wort!
lntwi«/eat Ind docks.
Ll703468 949-631-4610
UINIOW cmal MMfJ
Paintinc-Hlut. ~ Qu~IFr .. ~ l 7 714-636-8888
Rob l.t>ell -Owner
C08ta Mesa. Ca
(949) 846-3006
Cell 949-887-1<480
HOiiSf & IUSOUal
Pt.UMBER l'506586.
2044 Off labor! Small
repairs (714) 235-9150
PikiSi PUIM-Repalts 6 R._ ....
FR££ ESTlflMlt
U1687398 714·969-1090
SELL
your stuff
through
classified!
n ·~n!
Cal
• ,
I • r""' I
.. 5 Certified Pre-Owned E
'· by BMW
• Certified by BMW for 6 Years/100,000 Miles
ftOm Date of Original New Car Purchase
• 24 Hour Roadside Assistance
New 2002 BMW 325Xi . ·
Automatic, AWD •. Premium & _Sport Package lease ·
for
SPECIAL FACTORY PURCHASE
2002 BMW X5 4. 4i ·
V-8 with lellther Interior •.
t
NOW IN STOCK!
New 2002 BMW 325i .Sedans
& 325il Sport Wagons
Per Mo.
Plus Tax
2 at these terms
•
IPH70711 IPH91141 •
•
... gownmetlll Ceea llld llllel. .,
finmlce chlrgn. 111y dealer document
preparation charge, and any emission
testing charge. REBATE IN LIEU OF
SPECIAL LOW RATE FINANCING.
l At This Net Cost 1 At This Net Cost
(618938)
'99 FQRD CONTOUR SE V6 19K Miles, Pampered, One O~ner, Auto, Full Pwr., Best Buy (4HGW208)
_, '
~99 FORD RANGER SUP.ERCAB 4.ooor, V6, Auto, Air, CD, Chromes (6835822)
I I