HomeMy WebLinkAbout2002-04-03 - Orange Coast Pilot~--.._-
SERVING TI-iE ~EWPORT -~SA COMMUNrTIES SINCE 1907 ON.ntE WEB: WWW.DAILYPILOT.COM , WEDNESDAY, APRJL 3, 2002
City Council grants church tempor~ sanctuary
• Costa Mesa leaders overturn a Planning
Commission decision by allowing Calvary
Church to bUild a tent to serve the congregation.
o..p. lharath
DAILY PILOT
at 2115 Newport BJvd. will be
needed to host services for
three to five years, Calvary
Church administrators said.
the agenda, saying the
church'• request is well with·
in the 50-foot height limit,
which 11 the city's standard
for permanent buildings.
Mona.ban added that the
temporary structure would
have no effect on the nearest
residence, which is about
360 feet away, and that a
denial would force the
church to 'redesign its per-
manent structure.
vince c:puncil members that
. the tent· would not become
permanent and would be
removed when the perma-
nent structure is finished in
about five years.
Celek said he was pleased
with the council's decision
and added that the\;;uncil's
conditions for approval would
act as motivation to get. the
permanent building finished
as soon as possible.
"It gets the clock ticking,•
he said. •And that's a good
thing because it is in our best
.
COSTA MESA -The City
Council on Monday unani-
mously rejected a Planning
Commission dedsion and
decided to allow a local
church to build a 36-foot-higb
temporary sanctuary while its
new permanent building is
under construction.
The 7,910-square-foot tent
The council approved the
tent for 2 112 years, after which
the church will be required to
return to council members
with a construction update.
The church may then receive
a 2 112-year extension.
Councilman Gary
Mona.ban placed the item on
Senior Pastor Tim Celek
came to the council Monday
armed with noise and archi-
tecture studies, as well as a
timeline that seemed to con-SEE CHURCH PAGE 4
A rendering of the temporary sanctuary Calvary Cll1lrc:b
plans to" put up while its building ls under comtrudlon.
A new creation
DON LEACH I DAILY PILOT
Computer technologist John W.
Clark adjust.a computen ln a
classroom ln the new Arts Center.
Deirdre Newman
DAILY PILOT
T he visual arts a.re not isolated
endeavors but pursuits that
are enhanced by the synergy
of multiple artistic passions
coexisting under one roof.
That's the philosophy behind the
new Arts Center at Orange Coast
College that opened its sleek glass
doors at the beginning of the spring
semester in late January.
Some of the departments that
have already moved into the 60,000·
square-foot facility include ceramics,
sculpting and six computer labs.
Eventually, commercial art, computer
music and digital media will also
move in.
The new Arts Center will enable
the college to accommodate the
growing interest in the visual arts
because the programs have tripled
their room size, said Sylvia lmpert,
dean of the fine am division. It is
expected to house about .t,000 stu-
dents each semester when it is fully
occupied.
Construction on the $115-million
Arts Center started in August 2000.
The building evokes a techno-indus-
trial feel with monochromatic colors,
high ceilings and black bridges con-
necting hallways on either aide.
1be ceramics department was the
first to move into its new digs early
this year.
·1 was ready to move in." said
Kevin Myen, ceramics professor. ·n·,
a once in a lifetime experl.ence to
have a new Arts Center. l value
that."
lbe building contains new llate·
of-the-art equipment. including elec·
tric and gu kilns and high·speed
computen. And the computer Jabs
contain cutting-edge technology that
SEE ARTS PAGE 4
Orange Coast College's 60, 000-square-f oot Arts
Center will eventually house-about 4,000 students
in the growing visual arts department
DON LEACH I DAILY PILOT
Student Eva Sdawaer works on potteiy ID the Arts Center at Orange Cout College.
Merrily on our way to nowhere at all
I
A.rit we on ocu way to Duver,
' Or going aa.rrfly over,
The Jolly old rood that goe•
to Pl'(m«ith ho' Nol We're merrily, menUy, merrl-
Jy. merrily, mei'rlly on our way
• 7b nowlae18 ln ~
S ome years ago, OiiJiey
ptoduCecl a sprite anbnat·
eel feeture at Kenneth
Grahame .. dMlk: "The Wind
tn tbe WWows.. • ILlpitkk
cbranlde ol tbl caNmlDg Ind
atm'-adftlbluNI ol one J.
~,.. ..... io,.1 :::•:.;s'Ole--.......
1IOdmy'I ....... ~
,
about like a super bell in a cof-
fee can or when true Nmtb
eludeame.
Now if you've brought up
any number at tikes -or are
in the duat cloud ol that torna·
do u you *ld -you know
the tune. But lf you've' forgot·
ten it, we've bumped today's con wttb lyrtcl to nlrelh tbe
JIMIDOIY· ID the IDcMe, Mr. 'Ibid and
Cyril w out tbll .... '°
Nc:k'11r1• •tbiy.wam
...... tba • ., .. CiAiiltlf8'da
WMb Wl1d ....... w.ldDg
down ...... Md.......,
SHLMSM811
Costa Mesa
keeps Job
Center open
• City leaders decide to continue
allowing nonresidents to use the
employment hub but will raise the
fees they must pay.
DeefNI Btuirath
DAILY PILOT
COSTA MESA -Council membeTS on
Monday put an end to the heated debate and
controversy surrounding the city-funded Job
Center, voting to
continue its service
to both residents and , But 1 also
nonresidents.
The council voted understand
4 to 1, with
Councilman Chris
Steel dissenting, to
keep the employ-
ment hub open. But
they added a condi-
tion that the one-
time registration fee
be increased from SS
to $10 for Costa
Mesa residents and
there is another
part of the com -
munity that
sees the Job
Center as an
opportunity to
realize their
to $15 for people dreams, to feed
who live outside the their families city.
The Job Center, and to survive.'
at the comer of 18th ~ Robl--
Street and Placentia ·--·
Avenue, opened in Costa Mesa
1988 to provide a councilwoman
central clearing-
house for contractors
and employers to find temporary work. The
move was a response to years of complaints
that dayworkers congregated at various city
parks and businesses.
The center costs $87,000 a year to nm and
works on a lottery system for people seeking
jobs. Since its opening, police and dty afti.
dals say the center has reduced or eHminat.'
ed the problems associated with unorganized'
solicitation throughout the city. :
Several people who attended Monday
night's meeting wore badges that read •Save'
the Job Center.• Those wbo spoke tn support
of the center at the oou:Ddl meetmg outnwn-;
bered those who spoke against it. •
Council members, who beard people,
speak on the issue for about two bOun. laid
they themselves have had a toUgh time tak·
ing a stand.
"I've struggled with lh1I illue tiw-
dously, • Councilwoman Karen Robinson
SEEJOIMGE4
-It
Nwtport INdt
ls ..t to l•h •Ugete
~-...... .,.torn .........
"'9'~ ............
..
-
•
. . .
2 Wedneaday, April 3, 2002
Piii Of Ill Wiii
Cats and kittens
Siblmgs >~ ad Amilta. DOW
11 iDCmdis old. are still in need ol •
home, Mid OiAnna Pfoff-Martm,
founder ol the Newport Bea<'.b·baled
Community Anlmal Network. Al.lo in
need ol. adoption are kitteDI King 1Ut
and Ram.say, ahe said.
The network received $470 in
donations reoently to pwchase U
FOR A GOOD CAUSE
cam ol kitten milk; Pfaff-Martin said.
Pour ;DIWbom kittens without • molll
d.rtDk one 2'-ounce can ol ldtteD for·
mUla a week for i.ix weUI, abe Mid.
Kitten 1e410n lub throUgb AuQUlt;
See other enhN!Jl• available. Jor
adoption at www.anUnalnetwork.otg
or atop by Rmao'a pet lltore at faabloc
lilAad betwe.n noon and 4 p.m. on
weekendl.
lisformatioo: (949) 759-3646, or
write to the Community An1mal
Network at P.O. Box 8662, Newport
Beach. CA 92658.
Ronald L·ampe
Helping deliver food
to those without it
Roland Lampe is one of the
most welcome visitors in
town. Every Thursday for the
last few years, the Costa Mesa res-
ident has showed up at a loading
dock in the back of Hoag Hospital
as one of about 12 volunteers
who each day deliver hot and
cold meals !or Friends In Service
lo Humanity's Mobile Meals
'program.
•Often, the people are really
happy to see me,· the r~tired air-
port administrator said.
"Sometimes they'll invite me into
their homes, into their kitchens.•
Lampe has a regular route be
follows every Thursday, often with
his wife, Ruth. He delivers meals
to about six of the agency's clients
each day -elderly, disabled and
otherwise homebound residents of
Costa Mesa and Newport Beach.
The hospital p .. ovides the food for
free, the volunteers provide the
labor and use of their ovm vehicles
and, as a result, about tOG people
throughout Newport-Mesa get a
nutritious meal they might not oth-
erwise be able to get for them-
selves.
"Some of them I never see.
They have storage units out front,
and I leave their meals there,"
Lampe said . "Others I get to know
pretty well.•
ALMANAC
DUI ARRESTS
The fol/owing people have been arrested
recently on suspicion of driving under ~
1nffuence of an intoxlant They have only
been a"ested on suspidon of a crime and,
as whit all susp«t:s, are considered innocent
until proved guilty.
COSTA MESA
SUNDAY
1t Takeo Uehara, 65, Aliso Viejo
•Elle Celeste Fennelly, 41, Los Angeles
SATURDAY
•William Shane Sladek, 19, Costa Mesa
•Rudy Loole Garda, 21, Pico Rivera
• Philip John Braun, 38, Portland
• Benjamin Villarreal-Villarreal, 18, Riverside
FRJDAY
• Kim Jean Hoffman, 38, Costa Mesa
"' Kenneth Swanson, 35, Newport Beach
THURSDAY
• Jane Marie Grffl'\, 33, Huntington Beach
•Joshua Glenn Buchanan, 21, Irvine
• Susan Christine Doerryordt. 25, Long Beach
•Rad Davis, 31 , Newport Beach
MAROf 27
• Oscar Monroy Albarran, 33, Costa Mesa
•Franklin Alexander C.brera, 21, Tustin
• Kyle Richard Wiehardt, 25, Newport Beach
llWPOIJ BEACH
SUNDAY
• Jennifer Helen Buser, 34, Newport Beach
One regular on his route has a
fenced-in yard and a rather fright-
ening dog. Though be knows the
dog will be locked inside when be
arrives on Thursday morning, he
• Clyde Devon Matthews, 23, Huntington
Beach
SATURDAY
• Eva Marienthal, 74, Newport Bead\
• Amanda Trysten Tarpley, 31, Newport
Beach
FRIDAY
• Dennis Louis Wetherington. 23, Costa Mesa
• Tlmothy Jerome Hund, 47, Huntington
Beach
THURSDAY
• Michael Denman Miller. 58, Newport Beach
•Ryan Thomas Jasper, 27, San Clemente
REAL ESTATE
TRANSACTIONS
COSTA MESA
2518 Elden Ave .• $272.000
1605 Santa Ana Ave., ~70,000
1741 Tustin Ave .. $235,000
2030 ~ral Ave., $299,000
1929 Monrovia Ave., S315,000
380 West Wilson St., $265,000
2020 Monrovia Ave., $295,000
NEWPORT BEACH
227 Villa Point Drive, $380,000
22 Marble Sands, $1 .6 mllllon
304 Morning Star Lane, $1 .8 million
1921 Yacht Enchantress, $795,000
425 Vista Trucha, $448,000
1421 Newporter Way. $325,000 n Bradbury, $356,000
5 Rivage, $900,000
still follows a safe procedure.
•we have it worked out so that I
put it through the gate,• be said.
just something to help out,• he
said.
Lampe said,be doesn't consider
bis vo)unteer work a big deal. •1t•s
NEIGHBORS
N ewport Beach resident
Kmt F. Strassmann was
named executive vice
president and managing director
of Grubb & Ellis' Orange County
office. Grubb & Ellis is a business
advisory fum with
expertise in real
estate.
Strassmann has
been executive
vice president
and managing
diredor of Grubb
& Ellis' Anaheim
office since 1999.
Kurt P. He will now be
Strassmann responsible for
both the Anaheim
and Newport Beach offices.
Orange County is the firm's
largest and most profitable region
nationally. Stra.ss:mann began his
career at Grubb & Ellis in 1985 as
an industrial broker with the
Anaheim office .... Larry Nichter
and Jed Horowitz, of the Pacific
Center for Plastic Surgery in
Newport Beach. have been rec-
ognized. by the American Society
for Aesthetic Plastic Surgery for
maintaining, on average, the
highest volume of c:omnetic surgi-
cal and nonsurgical procedures in
2001. Nichter and Horowitz were
recoqni7.ed with about 1,500 other
boa.ril-certified plastic surgeons
nationwide as a result of a survey
based on m~re than 14,000 ques-
-Story by June Cesagrande.
photo by G~ Fry
boilDAJ.reS lhllt were mailed to
doctors throughout the nation. ...
Chent Pmne-Myen of Newport
Beach made the dean's list for the
fall semester 2001 at Charles R
Drew University in Los Angeles.
A student in the physician assis-
tant program, Penne-Myers has
organized domestic violence
training for physician assistants in
the program and also helped to
implement domestic violence
training into the universitts cur-
riculum .... Four Newport-Mesa
residents made the dean's list at
Azwia Pacific University. Coma
Meso residents include Lyndsay
A. Bawa, a social work major,
and Chrtstena L J(Jmmel, a phys~
ical education major. Newport
Beach residents and sodal work
majors Jennifer A. Egan and
Mlcbelle D. Way made the list.
wbicb recog:ni7.ed studentr during
the fall 2001 semester maintain-
ing a 3.S or better grade-point
average .... Newport Beach resi-
dent EmUyn Evarta, a junior at
American University majoring in
visual media in the School of
Communication, WU named to
the fa,112001 dean's list. At
American. a student must obtain
a 3.5 grade-point average or bet-
ter for the semester. Amedcan
University is in Washington. D.C.,
and enrolls students from the U.S.
and more than 150 countries.
• NEIGl9GllS spotlights achiewments
In the community.
GEnlNG
INVOLVED
Doily Pilot
• GETTING INVOlll'ED runs perlod-
ially in the Dally Piiot on a rotating
basis. tf you'd llkt lnfonnatlon on
adding yoor OfVanlutlon to this
llst. Clll (949) 574-4298.
ACADEMIC YEAR
IN AMERICA
Costa Mesa families can host
a German student and earn
up to $1 ,000 toward a number
of travel abroad programs.
Danielle Carpino, (800) 322-
HOST.
AMERICAN CANaR SOOETY
The Orange County Region of
the American Cancer Society
seeks office volunteers. The
society is also seeking volun-
teers to answer calls for the
unit's Helpline InfoCenler.
(949) 261-9446.
BOYS & GIRLS auas
OF NEWPORT-MESA
The three area clubs need vol-
unteer coaches and arts and
crafts workshop teachers. Call
for locations. (949) 642-2245.
COSTA MESA
OVIC Pt.AYHOUSE
The playhouse needs volun-
teers for ushering, back.stage
work. mailings, typing, con-
trolling lights and many other
duties. (949) 650-5269.
COURT·APPOfNTED
SPEOAL ADVOCATES
Volunteers a.re needed to
serve as advocates for
abused, neglected and aban-
doned children. Volunteers
work one on one with a child
for three hours a week. (714)
663-9034 .
DISPUTE
RESOLUTION SERVlaS
Volunteer mediators, case spe-
cialists and outreach assistants
are needed to help in a variety
of mediation cases. Bilingual
language sk:ills are needed for
office volunteers and for medi-
ators. (949) 250-0488.
ASH -MOBILE M~
Call (949) 642-6060 lo help
Friends in Service to
Humanity assist with the
Mobile Meals program and
provide ongoing emergency
assistance to those in need.
Both always seek volunteer
assistance in a variety of
areas. (949) 645-8050.
HUMAN OPTIONS
The organization shelters,
counsels and educates abused
women and childreq. It ls
looking for volunteers. (949)
737-5242, Ext. 24.
JUNIOR LEAGUE
OF ORANGE COUNTY
The organization of women
committed to promoting vol-
unteerism, developing the
potential of women and
improving communities
through the eff edive action
and leadership of trained vol-
unteers, is seeking new mem-
bers. (949) 261-0823.
KAISER PERMANENTE
HOSPla SERVICES
Volunteers are needed to pro-
vide four boun per week vis-
iting patients or doing errands
for them or their caregivers in
communities neor volunteers'
homes. (562) 622-3805.
.Da~Wot 8EADEJlS HQJUNE
(949)642~
Copyright No ,_ storiel, illustr•
tlons. ed'itonal INtt.r Of~
ments herein un be rtprOduced with-
out written permllllon of copyright
owner.
SUU AID SUI
VOL H, NO. 100
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m The ,..,,. tMcM:olta Mell o.ily
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In~ leldl Md co.i. Meal,
tUlMtlf:ltn .. .....,._only by IUb-_,..,. .. ,,. ""'* Orenge Couity
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HOW TO REAQt US
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NllllhM ........... CalW ...... ...... •.,...,."!IN'--........ ,._,_ _.._Ol .. .,._
WEATHER FORECAST
• \Ye may see men sun today
tNn W9 did T~ but the
douch will still show 1helr
strength. llmltlng highs to about
63 In Newport-Mesa. Some fog
wilt show up Nrfy .nd a.
toct.y. Wtfl. OWmight towS
'wUI be In the low SOs.
~ Wll prcMde limllar
c:ondlUonl end may ewn drlz.de
• bit. The w..kend, IO far, Is
IOoltlng 1'M • t.d' sunnler. ..... ... .. ......,.,,....,.
IOATING fOUCAST
The IOUthwallllrt/ ~Witt
blow , 0 to , s knob In the Inner
... thll INfnooft. wMt.
foot WMW Md I Wiit IW9I of 1
to J fMt. Tha WlnCli wtll ...
lntotheMin1n9-
0Ut ~the ioUtt*'J
.......... *"t 10 ~ ... ,~--.......
I
west swell of 3 to 5 fHt. The
51lN will be encountered later,
though fog w4tl dev91op.
SURFING FORECAST
Www. should enter tn. tt.....
to w.bt~lgh ~ tod.y end
wUI flrially bl worth tnt!tring
fot the first Ume thlt WMtc;
~ lo<*lng Win bitter
wtth. ~ M9ll building
Wawt to N chest-t,igh range.
FrfdaY. thoukf be slmllet . ..... ..,..~
lt:OfV.
TIOIS ....
1:4ta.m 0.11tMtlow
~P.IY\. ....... ,.....
120 p.M. U1 --__ ,...,...,. ........
Doity Pilot Wednesday, April 3, 2002 s
Reaching back and reaching out • •
Newport Harbor High's newspaper staff have resurrected Spanish-language pages
in an attempt to inform more of the student body . ...
Deirdre Newman
DAILY PttOT
Que pasa? That's the
question the editors of
. the Spanish-language
pages m the Newport 1\larbor
High School newspaper are
contemplating as they try to
put their finger on the P•
of ~e Spanish-speaking pop-
ulation at the school.
The Spanish-language
pages used to be a staple of
the Beacon. but eventually
faded away. They made a
comeback earlier in the
school year because or the
efforts of editors Magaly
Cano and Roger Mendez,
both juniors.
The inclusion of the pages
are important al a school
with a sizable Latino popula-
tion because often these stu-
dents are not aware of or
involved in school issues,
Magaly said.
•1 want the Latinos to
take a stand and not be so
quiet and let their voice be
heard,• Magaly said.
include how immigration has
been affected by the events
or Sept. 11. an article on dat-
ing and an interview with
the school's bilingual com-
munity outreach coordinator.
Kellie, a 17-year-old junior
at the school, said she is
excited about the pages com-
ing to fruition, as it bas been
a goal of the staff to resusci-
tate them since she joined the
Beacon her freshman year.
•It's improved the impact
of the paper because it [now)
reaches out to the majority of
students on campus,• she
said.
Some students responded
with enthusiasm to the
Beacon's effort to reacli out
to the Spanish-speaking
population.
•1t•s good because some
people only speak Spanish,•
said senior Lupe Valdivia,
18. •So it helps them under-
stand and gets them
involved. I'm happy with the
coverage."
But some students are still
not aware of the Spanish
pages' existence.
•1 didn't know,• said
sophomore Maggie Arceo,
16, who said she hadn't
perused past the paper's first
fe w pages.
•
STEVE MCCRAW' I DAILY PILOT
The Beacon is published
once a month and contains
two Spanish-language pages.
Magaly, 17, and Roger, 16,
brainstorm ideas for stones
and tum lo Ectitor-in-Chief
Kellie Brownell for help
designing the pages.
Magaly said she and
Roger will continue to publish
the Spanish pages next year.
Newport Harbo r High School students, counterclockwise from left. Roger Mendez, Magaly Cano and Kellie '
Upcoming articles will Brownell are co-editors o f a Spanish page within the school's newspaper, called the Beacon.
Scoping a source of profit for city coffers
• Newport Beach is set to investigate whether it makes sense
to rent out space for ever-multiplying cellular antennas.
June Casagrande
DAILY PILOT
NEWPORT BEACH -Like it or
not. the city is probably destined to
be home to a lot of cellular anten-
nas. What's less certain, though, is
whether the city wants to profit from
them.
That could get answered now
that City Councilman John
Heffernan has asked the city to look
mto the question of whether the city
should rent space on its light poles
and other structures for telecommu-
nications companies to place small
cellular antennas.
"Tb.is could be a great revenue
source, if it's permissible healthwise
and otherwise,• Heffernan said.
"We should be asking the quesllon:
Does the city want to get mto thlS
business?"
Assistant City Manager Dave K.iff
said any such arrangement wouJd
have to meet city standards: The
antennas would have to meet zon·
ing codes, they would have to visu-
ally blend into the surrounding
area, and the telecommunications
company would have to submit a
report showing the antennas do not
pose a health risk to people through
radiallon.
"Because the city owns so many
properties across town, and we own
the street lights, piers, fire stations,
etc., we get approached frequently
by those that work for the digital
phone services -comparues lured
to find antenna sites.· Klff said. "It
can be fairly lucrative, but the oty
doesn't have a policy on whether or
not to accept any of these, some of
these, none of these.•
The city's telecommunications
comrruttee is taking on the issue, he
said.
The slim antennas used for most
state-of-the-art cellular service
extend 20 to 35 feet high and can be
attached to a vanety of structures,
including light poles and buildings.
City officials cannot yet estimate
the amount of revenue that could be
generated this way, but said the city
could rent space to numerous com-
panies
"The situallon is, right now a
company Like AT&T can either rent
from us or 1ust go right across the
street to the owner of a commercial
or pnvate property,• Heffernan
said. "So, no matter what, these
antennas are probably conung, the
question is whether we wan t to
profit from them.·
Newport Beach to lose income from Internet fees
• An FCC ruling will save
Adelphia users about $2 a
month on their bills, while
BRIEFLY
IN THE NEWS
Bill Simon to
speak in Newport
Republican guberna-
tonal candidate Bill
Simon will stop m
Newport Beach on
Thursday as part of his
hoped-for tnp to
Sacramento
Simon will face Gov
Gray Dav1s, the
Democrat canctidate, m
the November general
election.
On Thursday .
evening. Simon is
scheduled to address a
Southern California real 1
estate trade group in "
Newport Beach.
' the city will no longer collect
about $80,000 annually.
lntemet service will soon seed fee of
about $2 disappear from their month·
ly bills -and the city will see about
$80,000 disappear from its annual
revenues -as the result of a Federal
Communications Commiss1on rulmg
on cable Internet service.
cable companies, including
Adelphia, are expected to immedi-
ately stop charging the franchise fee
that they have been collecting for
local governments.
In 2000, Newport Beach's general
fund received about $122,000 in
cable franchise fees. Cox Cable
stopped collecting the fees last year
because of the Oregon court ruling.
In 200 l, the city received a bout
$80,000 that had bee.n collected from
Adelphia subscribers and none from
Cox.
better service for their customers, but
unfortunately there's no way to guar-
antee that,• Assistant City Manager
Dave Kiff said
The oty 1s renewing its contracts
Wlth Cox and Adelptua m the midst
of a storm of complamts about the lat-
ter company's Internet service. City
offiaals are holding public work-
shops lo gather mput on what resi-
dents want from their cable
providers, in part to try to help assure
better service.
Simon will speak lo •
the local chapter of the
National Assn of
Industrial and Office
Properties. The event
will take place at 6:30
p.m. at the Paahc Club,
at 4110 MacArthur Blvd
Simon is set to discuss
"the importance of com-
mercial real estate to the
success of Califonua. •
. :
June Casagrande
DAILY PILOT
NEWPORT BEACH -Residents
who subscribe to Adelphia
Communications Corp.'s high·speed
The ruling last month upheld an
Oregon court case that found that
franchise fees don't apply to cable
Internet service. This is because
cable Internet is not entertainment
but instead an information service,
the federal court ruled and the com-
mission reaffirmed. As a result, • 1 would hope this could mean
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(949) 723-0621
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Sunset Dinners
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Monday-Friday: 4:30-6:15
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The Real Prime Rib or Filet
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The cost is $75, or S50
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Information: (7141
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Taken
Fen-Ph en
or Redux?
• .. I I
• ' 11 ,!ft' .jl ' •
•
..
llllf LY HI IRE NEWS
Animal bones found
in Newport Coast
Several bAck bones that were
found ln a Newport Coast area
south of Pellcan HID on Sunday
afternoon were determined to be
an.ima1 bones, police said Tuesday.
An officer working on speed
enforcement in Newport Coast
happened to spot the bones, with
. the ribs attached. about 2,500 feet
south of Pelican Hill North. a
police report said.
The officer also spotted what he
described as an ·old blue sweat-
shirt• about 2 feet away from the
bones.
The Orange County coroner
sent the b$mes to an anthropolo-
gist who dt!termined the bones
were •not human and recent,•
officials said. .
It is not uncommon to find ani-
mal bones locally, said Newport
Beach Police Sgt. Steve Shulman.
•1t doesn't look like a prank,"
be said. ·10e sweatshirt seems to
be a mere coincidence.•
In April, a Costa Mesa couple
on Federal Avenue reported lo the
police that they found a bone
while raking the bockyard. After
POUCE flUS
cosu•sa
• .... ..... Mnetand c..a•··· ,.,..._ A trwffic collision lrwoMng
f"tUria WM rePortad at 3:18 p.m.
Mor*y.
• _..._. StlMt: A grand tMft was
t~ In the 3100 block at 10:07 •.m. Monday.
• ,..., tHo ~A vehlde bur-
OC-ry was reponed in the 800 block at
1:01 •.m. Monday. • ""'*www ~A vehlde burglary
MIUCSAfm
tests, the Ota.nge County coroner
determined the bone wu
the lower portion of a human
jawbone.
Cc>sta Mesa Police Lt. Dale
Birney said it turned out that the
jawbone was brought by the pre-
vious owner of the home after be
found it on a beach in Mexico.
•He just happened to have dis-
posed of it in his bockyard, • he
said.
Birney said a forensic patholo-
gist determined that the jawbone
bad •weathered the elements"' fbr
about '0 or 50 years.
Jury convicts man
who escaped police
A jury on Tuesday convicted a
26-year-old Montebello man on
seven counts stemming from an
escape from a police car on the
Costa Mesa Freeway and the sub-
sequent carjacking of a catering
truck in Irvine, officials said. He
faces a maximum of 19 years in
prison.
Jurors deliberated for just a day
before convicting Abraham Derian
of three counts of carjacking, one
count of bwglary, one count of
escape from police custody, one
was reported in the 2700 block at 5:02
Ln:t. Monday.
• lWtln Awnue; Annoying phone
Qfts were repofUd in the 1500 blodc at
11 :GI ._m. Monday. •Walnut Street: A
petty theft was reported at t:06 a.m.
Monday.
• ._. 15th Street: A hlt-.nckun w.s
~ported In the 400 blodc at 7:17 J .m.
Monday. ,.
• bit 11'h Str'Mt 8nd 1Mltln
~:Vandalism was reportad at
7:52 a.m. Monday.
count CJ( •andalism and one count
or battery on a polia! officer.
Deriail had attempted a dra·
matic escape Aug • .4 as be jumped
beadfust from a police car that
was heading north on the Costa
Mesa Freeway. On the way out.
his pants tore off. The result was
be rolled down the highway wear-
ing only a p&r' of black socks and
a T-shirt.
Alter escaping the po.trot car,
Derian, who had been arrested
early that mo.ming on suspicion of
burglarl:z:i.ng a home on Balboa
Island. led police on a wild chase
through several cities.
Once free, Derian scaled an· 8-
foot-high chain link fence on the
ea.stem edge of the freeway, near
Pullman Street. and headed into
an industrial complex in Irvine. He
then stumbled to a catering truck
and kidnapped the two women
and a '·year-old girl who were
inside, using a knife he found in
the truck. He was eventually
caught and arrested by La Habra
police.
Derian was taken to Orange
County Jail, where he fought with
a female deputy, causing her to
suffer a separated shoulder. While
at Newport Beach Jail, he
1EWPOn1uc1
• Anilc c..tte ~ binoaJlars ~
other iterM Wife reportedly stolen from
• whidt in the 2200 blodc at 9:05 ~ .
• 9edl ~ DrM: Annoying phone
at1s were ~ in the 1100 block at
1 :20 p.m. Monday.
• Mrsll .. A ~let was reportedly
stolen from a whlde In the 200 bfodc at
1 p.m. Monday.
• ~ 9GUlauwd:: About $410
WU reportedly missing from the cash
register of a mtauntnt In the 3100
~ed e t lepbotie and ripped
sheets.
Sewage spill closes
3 Newport beaches
Tbe Orange County Health
Care Agency closed a section of
Upper Newport Bay to swimming
and dJvin9 Tuesday morning
because of a sewage spill.
The area of Dover Shores -
including Morning Star Beach and
Evening Star Beach -was shut
down at 8 a.m.
About .too gallons of raw
sewage spilled into the bay
because a Costa Mesa Sanitary
District line was blocked.
The affected area will remain
closed to contact sports until the
results of follow-up testing reveal
acceptable levels of bacteria.
The closures usually last at lea.st
72 hours.
A .4:30 p.m. sewage spill con-
vinced the Health Care Agency on
Tuesday to also close Harbor
Patrol Beach south to Rocky Point
Beach. A grease interceptor that
malfunctioned at the Brio
Restaurant caused the spill, offi-
cials said.
blodc at , p.m. Monda_y.
• Nii part C..W Dftw: A cell phone
w. reportedly stolen from • whlde In
the 700 blodc at 4 p.m. Monday.
• OcMlt 9oulftwll: A diamond wed-
ding ring valued at about $58,000 was
repottedty stolen In the 3600 blodc at 3
p.m. Monday.
• Vista HLw1a: A woman reported that
she found two notes on her dooBtep
lndlcrting they were from her ••20-
~ar-dd secret .dmlrer." The lnddtnt
w. reported In the 2200 bloct at 7:15
p.m. Mon<S.y.
ARTS
CONTINUED FROM 1
PowerPoint presentation at
the beach, and then come
in and it's all ready to go.
You don't need any more
equipment.•
full scope of the class,•
Myers said.
Students agree that the
cavernous quality of the
building is conducive to
artistic expression.
Close proximity to park-
ing is also a perk, said
Eim.suk Arminio.
·1 don't have to carry a
lot of stuff," be said.
eral a rt gallery, a children's
gallery and a restawant,
and it will be the final piece
tn creating an entryway to
the arts on campus, said Jim
Carnett, the college's
spokesman.
can make presentations as
easy as a day al the beach
·we have projection sys-
tems that are permanently
attached to the ceiling, ..
said Wayne Tennant, chair-
man of communication arts.
•So you can work on a
. . . :. . " . -. ~
KENNY 1/,.
PRINTER
•.,•. . .
The spaciousness of the
builc:ting also enables the
students to participate more
in some of the classes, such
as ceramics.
•students are able to
help load and unload the
~and interact with the
)
No matter what you're doing,
your hometown newspaper
ms IN ••• Daily Pilot
--~ Mattress Outlet Store
3165 Hm'bor Blvd.
Costal'laa
OM llloG s-t11 fl .a ""1
(714) 545·7168
•1t•s very comfortable,
easy to work here,• said
cerarruc student Eileen
Montagna as she attached
feet to a clay slab pot. ·u
seems roomy and airy. I
like it.•
JOB
CONTINUED FROM 1
saJd. She added that she
understands there is a part
of the commuruty that bas a
substantial concern about
the use of tax dollars for a
service such as the Job
Center.
·But I also understand
there is another part of the
community that sees the
Job Center as an opportuni-
ty to realize their dreams, to
feed their families crnd to
survive," she said.
Steel, who has publicly
opposed the center, said
Monday that he is not
against people making a liv-
ing but is concerned about
quality of life issues for the
surrounding community.
Steel, much like many of
, his supporters, has main-
tained that the Job Center
attracts illegal immigrants
into the community,
increasing crime, lowering
property values and
degrading the schoolJ.
·This isn't racism... he
said. •it's reality. It's time
w e got out of the Job
Center business.•
Councilwoman Libby
Cowan, who made a motion
to delay a ded.sJon on the
center, .a.id the center baa
been 1uccessful.
•People do oot under-
1tand tho importance of
digruty lD job seeking,• s be
1aJd. •My grandfather 1ur·
vived durlng the
Depre11lon by 10Uciting
jobs ln 1hipyard1 ...• ThiJ ta
about doinp the right
thin • ~~ d ty'a admlniltretiv
aeMce. ltaff memben rec-
ommended that the council
keep the cem.r ~ but
impoM turthit Nlbic:tiom,
1ucb u •Xc:h141n9 day·
w~ wbo do not lift m
CoN M .. and pJadAg
To complement the Arts
Center, a $2.5-million Arts
Pavilion is in the works.
Construction is expected to
start in the fall and the
building is expected to open
a year later. The Arts
Pavilion will include a gen-
...
greater emphasis on check-
ing identification.
Current city estimates
are that 37% of those who
use the center are not Costa
Mesa residents and only
about 51 % of the employers
who hire workers from the
Job Center are based in the
city.
Job Center supporters
said they were thrilled with
the council's decision.
•This is something the
whole commuruty will ben-
efit from,• said Paty
Madueno. a member of the
Orange County
Congregation Community
Organization, St. Joaquim's
Church and a resident
manager at Costa Mesa
Family Village.
·This is about the hands
that peel the potatoes, chop
the tomatoes a.nd wash the
lettuce that goes to your
table," she said.
•Everybody deserves the
right to put food on their
table."
Allan Mansoor, who
expressed bis opposition to
the center, said the sensible
approach to eventually
close the center is simply to
reduce the need for the
center.
"Ultimately. we need to gQSe the Job Center,• he
said. •But this problem did
not come about o vernight
ond ii not going to be fixed
J.mtanUy. Tue problem o{
lotterlng can be gTeaUy
reduced if we take the right
ateps. •
Tho most obviout way to
reduce the need for the
center, h said, •iJ to .top
allowing people from other
c:itiet to UM our taqeyer·
funded center."
....... -•• co.'I .... ..... ., ... ~5he,,,., ....... .
CMt 174-WI ar bf .... •
• 2 tte ..... ,.-
J
•De.,... Newman covers edu-
cation. She may be reached at
(949) 574-4221 or by e-mail at
delrdn.MwmanOlatimes.com.
OBITUARIES
Mary
Margaret Gikas
A viewing will be held
from 4 to 8 p.m. today for
Mary Margaret Gi.kas, a four-
year Newport Beach resident
and real estate agent, at St.
Paul's Greek Orthodox
Church in lrvmL. Services
will be held at 10 a .m.
Thursday. Mrs. Gikas died
Sunday of cancer. She was
62. She is survived by hus-
band Xenophon, sons
Xenophon Jr. and Thomas,
daughters Kathleen Morgan
and Karen Martinides, and
brothers Allan and Nick
Lenio.
Jwie
Hinrichs Keyes
Graveside services for
June Hinrlchs Keyes, a 32·
yeor Corona del Mar resi-
dent and former air bostess,
will be beld at 12:•5 p.m. at
Pacific View Memorial Park,
3500 Pacific View Drive.
Mrs. Keyes died Friday of
cancer. She was 66. She is
sU.rvived by husband Jack,
son Kurt, daughters Linda
Keyes LeC:tendecker and Usa
Keyes Lundrigan, and listers
Janet Sullivan and JoAnn
Hook.
Ronald E. Wright
Memoflal • tetvices were
beJd Saturday for Rooald E.
Wright. • former poft•or at
Va~ uruventty, a
S\.uM)ay . c· IChool teacher at
Newport Meile Chrtidan c.ae.r-tn COiia Mme and e
Janytbm NNpad 8Mdl ....
dn. Mr. Wrtgbl died March
Z2 "'bMlt ....... He .. 71.
Heil~by'de ....
ed •'91"'! eaewm .
Doily Pilot
CHURCH
CONTINUED FROM 1
interest to move to the new
building SOPner. •
The Plannmg Commission
memberS in February decid-
ed against the tent in a nar-
row 3-2 vote beceuse oom-
mtssloners said the structure
would not be compatible
with its SUJToundings and
would set a precedent for
other organiz.dtions that
come to the dty with similar
requests.
• Commiuion Cba.i.rwoman
Katrina Foley said Tuesday
that the counc:iJ's decision
surprised her.
"But I think the process
worked because (church offi-
cials] reviewed ~d revised
their plans to address the
concerns that were raised by
the Planning Commission, ..
she said.
A few disgruntled neigh-
bors spoke at Monday's
meeting, saying the church's
rock 'n' roll music would
prove too noisy for them on
Sunday morning.
·r·ve attended their ser-
vices," Sam Calderone said.
"It's loud, it's noisy. The looks
of the tent presents a carni-
val-like picture ...
But Celek said the tent
will comply with the oty's
building codes, and 1s
tougher and more noise
resistant than the average
"circus tent.· Several parish-
ioners were present at
Monday's meeting in a show
of support for their church .
Calvary Church Newport
Mesa bas embarked on a
multimillion-dollar pro1ect,
which, when finished, wlll
double the size of its exisbng
Orange Avenue campus and
include a new sanctuary,
educational buildings, a four·
level parking structure and a
multipurpose room.
Celek has said holding •
services in the temporary
structure would allow the
church to accommodate its
growing congregation while
church officials monitor the
real estate market to hnd the
right time to sell the Orange
Avenue property. The money
from the sale would fund the
new sanctuary.
• Deepa 8hweth covers public
safety and courts. She may be
~ached at (949) 574-4226 or bye
mall at dee,u.bharathOlat1mes
com.
ies for residents or former residents
of Costa Mesa and Newport Beach
If you want to have an obituary
printed Jn the Pilot. ask your mor·
tuary to fax us the information at
(949) ~170 or call the new5·
room at (949) 764-4324.
l •
.. . .
-
Doily Pilot
LINES
CONTINUED FROM 1
tearing up the terrain on
their way to, well, •nowhere at all.·
The sequence, I think, is
an exquisite metaphor these
days for Costa Mesa as it
:-vtldly veers and sideswipes
!ts way through issues
unportant to this hamlet's
future. Growing and con-
gested and ever more popu-
lated, the city bas residents
who seem more fractious
and parochia.l and of a mil-
lion mmds as to what this
township wants to be. Which
really means it has no idea
what it is or where it's going.
The best evidence of this
-apart from the divisions
and growing militancy in the
various burrows around town
-is the rather edgy uncer-
tainty and foggy actions of
the City Council as I have
observed i~ in the roughly 18
months I've been working
this column gig. And instead
of finding its legs and some
measure of clarity with time
and familiarity among the
folks who occupy its seats, the
council seems mired in a spi-
ral of confusion and hesitancy.
It's as if the mother ship has a
guitar pick for a rudder and
dysfunction for a captain.
Two observations in this
era of wandering are worth
sharing, I think. On the
weighty and vastly complex
issues shaping the frame-
work of Costa Mesa's future
(traffic management, for
instance). the City Council is
infatuated with turning over
the heavy deliberations of
such things to committees of
homemakers and business
owners and other ordinary
blokes. Meantime, the coun-
cil occupies itself by sticking
its fingers in micro issues
better suited for hashing fur...
ther down the bureaucratic
food chain.
In August, for instance,
the City Council deputized a
band of Costa Mesa resi-
dents to examine routes the
city mi'ght take to break up
the traffic logjam on
Newport Boulevard between
17th Street and 19th Street.
The clog there is so bad, wily
motorists are slipping over to
Group presents
service awards
The Orange County
Tourism Council recently
awarded its annual Service
Excellence Awards to John
Crippen of South Coast Plaza
and Barbara Vmd of John
Wayne Airport for the.ir efforts
in creating a positive and mem-
orable experience for people
visiting Orange County.
After working 2 1/2 years
as a sergeant and watcb com-
mander at South Coast Plaza,
Crippen received the award
in the retail and shopping
center category for going
beyond the call of duty.
Vind works as an informa-
tion processing specialist for
the Office Services Support
Department at John Wayne
Airport and received the
award in transportation for
displaying initiative.
r-~1'~&, ...
Lunch I Dinner s920 512~
tl!tirlf'U'#~
""H£r
Lunch I Dlnn•r '1420 s1720
/,N'-m"hlMI
tJ4«.r tJ,;,,,..,.
'16»
c_ .......... r•c,.-o
(7i4)H6MM
w.d~, April 3, 20()2 5
Eostside residential streets to
escape the quagmire.
Called the Downtown and
Eastside 1\'ansportation Ad
Hoc Committee, its charge
from the oound.l was, well, to
figure out ways to improve
traffic on Newport Boulevard
and to relieve Eastside resi-
dential traffic congestion.
That's as clear as the coun-
cil's mandate got. Armed
with that murky directive,
the collUllittee has met just
three times sinee August.
And, say a few folks plugged
into its deliberations, its
meetings have generally
been awash in contusion,
disagreement and twf wars
between parochial interests.
Strangely, perhaps the
most striking recommenda-
tion to ooze from the com-
mittee was the idea to return
$700,000 in Orange County
ous solution for improving
Newport Boulevard traffic -
adding Ulore lanes. That idea
received alarmingly serious
consideration by the council
Monday evening but was
ultimately rejected. That
evening, too, the cound.l
decided to give the commit-
tee clearer directions -a
mere eight months after its
formation. Meantime, the
traffic crawls still.
ti.on of heavy liftinq and
future casting with the coun-
cil's obsessive dial fiddling
over featherweight matters
such as where and when
folkl can park their recre-
ational vehicles. Witness the
trampoline act it performed
over Michael Schrock's bit of
property on Cecil Place. And
take note of the micro dis-
section it performed on
Calvary Church's plan to
build a temporary sanctuary
on rts Newport .BoWevard
property. Indeed. this city-
aimless in its leadership vac·
uum-is merrily on ill way
to nowhere in particular.
And November looms.
• 8VROll Dll A!IAICAL Is a frM-
lance writer and cqmmunlc.ations
consultant. He lives In Costa Mesa.
19 column appeers Wednesdays.
Readers can reach him with news
tips and comments via e-mail at
byronwriterOmsn.c.om. Visit his
web site at www.byronwrifer.com ..
• 'lransportation Authority
grants to study the one obvi-Now lay that little abdica.-
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1/2 Carat Diamond up to .............. $1200.00
1 Carat Diamond up to ................ $4000.00
2 Carat Dlamond\lp to .............. $15,000.00
3 Carat Diamond up to .............. $20,000.00
5 Carat Diamond up to ........ $1,000,000.00
WI buy dJemond8 wfrtl or without GIA Cllllflfbftla
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Large premium for 1111 jftelry with
diamonds, onyx, sapphires or rubles. Alf
deco tJnd collector pieces 111e our sp«:lalty.
I.ET OUR EXPERTS FINO A HI~ J'RfASUM, FOii IOCI IN
\"OUR JEWELRY 80IC OR SAFE DEPOSIT BOX.
INSTANT CASH FOR
STERLING SILVER
Antique Tableware up to ............ $10,000.00
Full Flatware Sets up to ................ $3,000.00
Serving Trays up to .................. -.. $1,500.00
Tea Sets up to .............................. ..$4,500.00
Sliver Bars .......................... Bring For Quote
Franklin Mint Sets ............ Bring For Quote
Private Mint Sets .............. Bring For Quote
Vlctorian & Georgian ........ Bring For Quote
Tiffany & Georg Jensen .... Bring For Quote
Misc. Flatware .................... Bring For Quote
Jewelry & Antiques .......... Bring For Quote
Dresser Sets .......•..•..••...•... Bring For Quote
Candelabrum ...................... Brlng For Quote
WE BUY ALL SOUD SILVER rrEJISI
INSTANT CASH FOR
PLATINUM
Antique mountings up to ·-··----·$2,500.00
Crucibles --·-···---Bring In for testing
Wint & Foll .............. --Bring In for testing
Screens ................ -.--.-Bring In for testing
Thermo-coupling wire _Bring In for testing
PREMIUM PRICES PAID FOR I]t(IPORTANT DESIGNER PIECES
BVLGARI • Cartier• TiCCan • Van Cleef & Ar ala • VVEBB
Knm Faale Buyers n one of tht larg5 volulllf
buytrS in tht world. We have an increasing demand
for 81 types of wak:bes and f.Stau goods In fOftign
~enabling IL'l lo pay top prbs for fine Wlltcbes,
llltique and dlamood jewdry, string silver and
objects d'art. ~ RECElin.Y PAID $435,000
TO lfR. J.S. FOR AN OLD WATCH! AU purchases
are madt la cdl and are strictly ooaftdmtial.
We are particularty interestecl In Patek Philippe.
Rolex, Audemars PiqUd, Cartier, MoVlldo, Vlldleron
& COllSlantin, Piaget, Gubelia, Bua:dlati. Ditisbdm.
'Jlfrany, Cbopard, u Coultrt, Boocberon, J11gtt.
Corum. Bvlpri. Slaatramea, Universal Geneve,
Gl1.leD. Hamilton. B~ Van Cleel & Arpels,
Looglnes. Ulysw NU'dla. Bulova. Elgin. Brdtfulg
and Omep watches. The.w Wllkhes do noe need to be
in nuuling aacllor "ortting COlldition. Pink gold aad
pladnum are very sougltt after. Mm 's watches made
before 19'0 are best. Shapt' aho aft"ects price!
Chiming. comptic:attd and musical watches bring
tht mcllit. CASH FOR ANY CONDITION WORK-
ING OR NOT.
PllJ('l:.' QlOrro AIU. tOR AC'luAt .. ATCHI'..' PlnllllfO
~U. l'tlln .S AllJ. llASLD 0' co .. omo'I Ot .. ATCH.
If YOlll mat• NOT lSTID tllf, .._II AIR A RH CAlll GRiii
PATEK PHIWPE
d flOH Oold ltema Art Nouveau Jew•lfY . .J Oold • Platl"u"' Cun llfllle .J Pocliet WatchH ..J gold Charm 8recel•t• ~ Id Pin• .. lroochH M Cll11•
.Anllq ... DI••""" Sllv .. Diamond Eerrln11• ..J llualcal or Chlmlng WetcMe .J Gold llaaonlc Item• ~ Ant?.1c Humtdo,.. Ler Purl Necklace• LOU • lcart EtChlnQ• .J All trll9• of Oold Jewelrf ,J Old C"oahlme Jewelry
R.AVIT
ESTA\rE BUYERS
Llceneed Estate Buyers
70 v-ra Experience
. .. -
.
COSTA MESI CITY COUllCll WRAP.UP ..
Inside
CITY Hill
Here are~ of the dedslons that~\.
made at the Costa ~ City Council meet-
ing on Monday.
WHAT UPPEllED:
The Oty Councll allocated
community development
block gra'!ts.
WHAT IT MEANS:
Families Costa Mesa,
Someone Cares Soup Kitchen and Save Our
Youtn are some of the local charities that
will benefit from the city's community
development bloc:X grants during the next
fiscal year.
The city has received about S 1.4 million
in grant funding from the federal housing
authorities. On Monday, council members
decided, based on recommendations from
the Redevelopment and Residential
Rehabilitation Committee, how a portion of
that would be distributed to various com-
munity programs.
The U.S. Department of Housing and
Urban Development is scheduled to give
the city S 1.4 million In community develop-
ment block grant funds, of which 15% can
be used for public service programs for low-
and moderate-income residents.
Twenty-four programs asked for a total
of $406,000 in funding, but the city has
$210,750 to give. Costa Mesa also rimits
public service grant funding to 20 programs
per year.
WHIT HAPPENED:
The City Council authorized
the design of ~ seven-lane
roadway on Newport
Boulevard between 17th and
19th streets and a fourth
southbound lane between
19th Street and Broadway. It also decided to
keep and use $700,000 in design funding
from the Orange County Transportation
Authority.
WHAT rr MEANS:
The intersections of Newport Boulevard
at 17th and 19th streets have been identi-
fied as some of the worst in the county.
lllT MllTllG
• WI-.: 6:30 p.m. April 15
• WHERE: Costa Mesa City Hall,
77 Fair Drive
Heavy congestion through thlt area has
caused drivers to cut through the Eastslde
r'e$1dentlal area Instead.
City traffic engineers worked with tran~
portation authorities on a plan that called
fOJ an additional lane for sections of
Newport Boulevard traveling northbound
from 17th Street to 19th Street and a south-
bound portion from Broadway to 17th.
In AUgust, the City Councll approved the
recommendation and formed a committee ·
to review options for Improvements to
Newport Boulevard. Costa Mesa officials
also secured $700,000 from the Orange
County Transportation Authority for the
design of the widening project.
The committee -made up of mostly
Eastside residents and downtown business
owners -reviewed data for the past six
months and recommended postponing the
proposed project.
WHAi UPPEIED:
.
The City Council sent a tw~
story addition for a Westside
home back to the Planning
Commission for review.
WHAT IT MEANS:
Councilman Chris Steel wanted the City
Council to review a previous city decision to
allow a Westside homeowner to build a
second story, saying the addition could
compromise the "integrity• of the neigh-
borhood.
In March, t he city zoning administrator
approv~ the addition of a second story to
a home on Aviemore Terrace, as well as the
expansion of the ground floor. A staff
report said the proposed change required a
review because it called for a 1, 154-square-
foot master bedroom suite on the top floor
and the city needed to ensure the •remod-
el [was] compatible with its neighbor-
hood."
The city found the addition to be har-
monious with the surrounding homes
because many other homes have added sec-
ond floors, the report stated.
-Compiled by DHpll Bharath
BRAZILIAN JAZZ CONCERT
To Benefit Sea Lions
Cuest Speaker Mayer Wayne Baglin
MAYUTO CORREA
Saturday April tith
6pm -9pm
Laguna Beach
High School Theatre
"MAYUTO & SAMBA PACK"· i1 1 w1rld-f11n1u1 12-pieee
hi9h-ener9y 9r1up, ineludi119 1ei1r1I percu11i1ni1t1,
dancers ind w1rld-el111 1nu1iei1n1; they reer11te the
frantic 11und 11 a Br11ili1n Carnii11f
A true legend 11 l1tin jazz, nu1111r1u1 critic 1 hive 1ft1n
called MAYUTO CORREA "the ~11t e1n9a player In the
w1rld." This Ri1 De J1neir1-~1rn percu11i1nl1t h11
played and ree1rded with art i1t1 1ueh 11 Sttfie Wender,
Henry M111ei1i, Fr11k Sl111tr1, S111my D1vi1 Jr.,
S111t1111, M1rvln 81y1 and fell1w Br1zlli1n
Mllt111 N11el111111t1 ••••1 1th1r1.
Pretentation Award Show -Raffle -Musie
AIVAICH TICKETS: $20:00
$25.H 111~1 ~ .. , (If 1v1ll1~l1J
CALL: 7t4.40t.86t0
IPOllOllt IY:
Frlli•• ti ...... L• ........ , ... .. 1011 llFO: wn.tl1fll•1.11•
I
lllEFLY
Film festival reveals
seminar speakers
The Newport Beach Film Festival cm
Tuesday announced the lineup for its 2002
Seminar Serles to be held April 13 and April
14 at the Newport Beach Public Ubrary.
Bxpem from all fields of filmmaldng will
cover such topics as sc:reenwrlting, direct·
tng and film music composing.
Writers Ken Nolan (•Black Hawk:
Down"), David Fra.nioni C-Gladiator•),
David McKenna ("American History X")
and Roger Schulman (•Shrek") are among
Around
TOWN
• Send AROUND TOWN Items to the Dally Piiot
330 W. Bay St., Com M~. CA 92627; by fax to
(949) 64M170; or by calling (949) 57+4298.
Include the time, date and location of the event. as
well as a contact phone number. A complete listing
Is available at www.dallypflotcom.
TODAY
A free seminar on how herbs and planb
enhance the libido will be held from 6:30
to 7:30 p.m. at Mother's Market. 225 E.
17th St., Costa Mesa. Reservations
required. (800) 595-MOMS.
SATURDAY
The UC ln1ne Arboretum wUl hold a
spring plant sale titled •Showers of
Flowers· from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. In an effort
to brighten up .your garden, the sale will
feature early spring perennials and spring
bulbs. The Mboretum is south of the comer
of Campus Drive an Jamboree Road on the
UCI North Campus. (949) 824-5833.
Fashion Island wUl hold a We painting
event from noon to 4 p.m. today and 7 at
Fashion Island's lsl4nd Terrace Food
Court, 62 Fashion Island, Newport Beach.
$100 per tile. Part of the proceeds will ben-
efit children's programs at the Orange
County Museum of Art. (949) 733-2198.
SUNDAY
fidelity Federal Bank and a group of
friends will host a fund-raiser to assist a
woman with renex sympathetic dystrophy,
Daily Pilot
tbe ICr'eeDWOtel'S to speak oo April 13.
OiredOfl, including Roland Joffe (•The
Killing Pieldl") and John Waters
("Polyester•), will ol9o speak that day, as
will eight oostume designers and a team of
production designers. .
Speakers on April 14 will include direc-
tors Michael Lange (9 Ally Mc.Beo.JW), Robert
Butler (•Hill Street Blues") and Cu.rti.s
Hanington (•Pall of \be House of Usher").
ExpertS in dnem4togtaphy, spcdal effeds
and .61m music composition will follow that
day. The seminar series is free but seating is
determined on a f:i.r&t come, first served
basis. The library is at 1000 Avocado Ave.
Information: (949) 253-2880.
a disease of the sympathetic nervous sys-
tem caUsing severe ~from 1 to 5 p.m.
at the Fidelity Federal Bank, 1515 Westcliff
Drive, Newport Beach. An auction will be
held with proceeds benefiting the
RSD/CRPS Moss Memorial Foundation
and going to assist the woman. Donations
and volunteers are sought. (949) 448-8982
or (949) 448-0668.
Youngsten are tnvlted to make the ·mark
at the annual Fashio~ Island Newport
Center We-painting event from noon to 4
p.m. today. The 12-inch terra cotta tiles
will eventually pave the walkways of the
shopping center, adding to the 1,215 hand-
painted tiles now in place. The tiles are
$100, which is tax-deductible, and paid
reservations are required. The center is at
401 Newport Center Drive, Newport
Beach. (949) 721-2000.
The flnt of a three-day vegetarian cook-
ing demonstration with samples, recipes
and handouts will take place from 7 to 9
p.m. in the fellowship ball at Costa Mesa
Seventh-day Adventist Church, 271
Avocado St .. Costa Mesa. Call to register
$20, $25 a couple for the entire session.
(949) 548-6596.
MONDAY
Internationally known scholar of human-
istic inquiry and critical theory Georgio
Agamben will present a lecture titled
·community, Identity, 1Tauma • at noon
The lecture is pa.rt of UC Irvine's 2001-02
Chancellor's Distinguished Fellow Series
and will be held at UCI's Humanities
Research Institute, Administrative
Building. Room 338. Free. (949) 824-7372
or www.evc.uei.edu/cdlsl.
:SEE EILIS INSPIRED , -----RI IRJ -,
NEWPORT
BEACH
FILM
FESTIVAL
..... °"'"'' •l&'t .. ,,...,. & Cata
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ltU•M tr $' •
APllL 11·19 2812
949·Z53·281D
Mewp ortBuc~Fll •Fest .ce.
11'1115
PWU,,.111 Oscar Sl~llfUIH: .............
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Plll-1111151 FUS nm llD 25 ClllRIES.
l
-
GUCm OF 1HE DAY
"The guys are proving that my
expectations were correct alter aJJ.
This is the perfect Ume tor us
to play this well ... "
John Emme, Corona del Mar High
baseball coach
Doily Pilot
Apt! • honota
CRAIG PHOENIX
Sportl Editor Roger Corison • 949..57 44223 • Spam Fax: 949~50-0170 Wedne'®y, April 3, 2002
HIGH SCHOOL BASEBALL The Class
of~52 party
setting up
for Sept. 7
~dM shoots for crown tonight
.
Balboa Pavilion will be the
site of the SOth anniversary
of golden times. _-)
N ewport Harbor High's Class
of 1952, which observed and
celebrated some great hours
in basketbaU and swimming in the
school year of 1951-52, has mapped
plans to salute its 50th anniversary at
the Balboa Pavilion Saturday, Sept. 7,
according to committee cha1nnan
Don Huber.
Huber (who can be reached in the
evening at 714-546-2120) and his
committee are anxious to reach
missing person from their class list.
The reunion weekend will also
feature a revisit to Hentage HaU at
the school, a trip to the Newport
Harbor Nautical Museum dfld
Riverboat Restaurant and a Sunday
morning ·Brunch Cruise.·
The spokesman said the class
committee always values help from
the Daily Pl.lot since, "it has become
Don Contrell
SIDEUNES
dilfi cult in this
day and age to
locate old mates.·
Although 1t
was ashm
football season for
the varsity, Bees
and Cees, the
class was cheered
by a superb
varsity basketball
season. Newport's
hoopsters finished
second lll the
Sunset League.
fourth in the
Huntington
Beach Tournament and advanced to
the CIF tournament, though lost to
Chaffey High.
The cage star for Harbor was a
tall. lean player named Annand
NeWes, who earned hrst team
All-League honors. He scored d
school-record 30 pomts against
Fullerton and was named the Tars'
Most Veluable Player. Jun Roberts
was elected captain and Fred Nesbitt
was named most unproved.
One of the major highlights out of
the '52 season was taking note of
Coach Jules Gage leading the Dee
basketball team to theleague title
(first time since 1941). Gage's dub
dosed with a 17·1 record.
ln time, something more
remarkable would happen -two of
the Dee players would become the
top players ln the pro and college
ranks.
One, Paul Neumarm, would
enter Stanford and later shift to the
professional ranks, starring for the
Syracuse Nabonals. Denrus
Fitzpabick became an ace guard for
the Callforrua Bears and helped the
school capture the NCAA basketball
championship.
Under Coach AJ lrwm, the varsity
and Bee swim teams won league
championships. The vamty, led by
Bruce Baird, Don Preston, Don
Aarvold, Rex Bell, lmun Stawicki,
Tom Holtz, Dennis Mason and Lee
Hambroo, outscored opponents,
4121/2 to 129112.
The Bee swimmers, winning their
third title in three years, were paced
by captain Bob Ibbotson, who was
al.so most valuable and the team's
high point man.
The 1llr gridden defeated Bonita,
13-7, and Lynwood, 19·0, but fell in
seven other contests, though Harbor
slipped behind and lost tough games
to Santa Ana, 28-20, and Anaheim,
see SIDELINES PAGE 9
Nick Rhodes earns his
second straight pitching
victory to help Sea Kings
advance to the Pride of the
Coast championship game.
Steve Virgen
DAILY PILOT
CORONA DEL MAR -Turns out,
Corona del Mar High baseball coach
John Em.roe's expectations of his team
were correct. The Sea Kings won their
fifth straight game Tuesday. They
followed the lead of their pitcher, Nick
Rhodes, and hie; turnaround to grab a
4·2 semifinal victory over Mountain
View in the Pdde of the Coast
Tournament, at Cd.M's field.
•
for us to play th.ts well.• The Sea Kings (7-7), who
ended the Vikings' eight-
ganie winning streak, will
play in the tourney's champi-
onship game against San
Clemente tonight at 7, at
TeWinkle Park.
After CdM lost its sixth SCOlllOAID
straight game, 6-3, to Mountain view 2
University March 22, Emme s.. Kings 4
Rhodes, after losing his
first four decisions, has
rebounded to reel off two
straight pltdling wins against
Laguna Beadl and Mountam
View. He had the right stuff
Tuesday, when he went the
distance and recorded six
stnkeouts. The junior left.
hander also scattered five hits said it was the first time a
team of his played below expecta·
tions. But since then, the Sea Kings
have gone from looks of frustration
with off-rhythm play to sound defense
and clutch hilling with a bit of a
swagger.
"The guys are proving that my
expectabons were correct after all,•
Emme said. "This is the perfect time
with one walk and held the Vllongs
(10·4) scoreless in the second, third,
fourth, sixth and seventh innings.
"I was rushing myself,• Rhodes,
an All-Newport-Mesa District
performer last spring, said of his early
season start, reminiscent of his Sea
King teammates. • AJl I started to do
was slow my delivery down. I was
rushing things Bt the begmning. Now
I'm hitting my spots.·
CdM is redeeming itself as well.
"We're coming together as a team.•
Rhodes said "We're starting to bit the
baD a lot better. We're coming out fir8d
up. No one should take us for granted
We're going to come out fired up for
every game. We showed our youth at
the beginning of the year, but now
we're growmg as a team.•
The Sea Kings answered a 1-0 ftnt·
inning deficit and Ued it up in the
second. CdM sophomore Blake
Contant scored alter sophomore Todd
Mackhn crushed a double to brtog
him in. Corona then scored two runs
m the third to give Rhodes a lead to
SEE COM PAGE 8
Newport
Harbor's
Mike
Jones
can't quite
get past
Costa
Mesa's
Michael
McGuire
as be
reaches
for third
base. He
was out
on the
play, but
the Sallon
prevallecl
ln the
Pride of
the Coast
Tourname
nt
matcbup,
6-5.
DAA.Y Pl.OT
PHOTOS BY
GREG FRY
Sailors make sOme breaks
Newport Harbor takes
advantage when Mesa
commits five errors in Pride
of the Coast dash Tuesday.
Barry Faulkner
DAILY PILOT
NEWPORT •
BEACH -Pro· • ponents of raising
the mound, expan·
ding the strike zone
and generally hel·
ping pitchers in an
attempt to tinut SCOlllOAID
offense, might want Mu1taft91 s
to steer clear of the 5-'lon 6
Newport Harbor '-------'
High baseball dia·
mood.
With offensive statistics remmiscent
of the dead ball era, Sailors Coach
Joel Desguin, just like Jim Kiefer
before him, has had to manufacture
runs for so long, his players likely
belong to a union.
"I've told our guys I'll do whatever
I can to help put pressure on the
defense,• said Desguln, who saw that
philosophy pay olf in a 6-5 vktory over
visiting Costa Mesa in the consolation
semifinals of the Pride of the Coast
Tournament Tuesday.
•You have to run the bases aggres-
sively and make the other team throw
the ball around. The more you force
the other guys to make plays, the
better chanoe theJe is of them malting
mistakes.
•we've been in a situation where
-
. Teammat
es con-
gratulate
Tars'
Mike
McLean
(5) after
scoring
ln
Pride
of the
Coast
duel
Tuesday.
we're forcing teams to work for only
about.four of therr 21 outs. But we've
been doing a better Job of putting the
ball in play lately.•
The sudden increase in productiv-
lt y has led to two-game winning
streak, after a seveo-game slide in
which the Tars beefed up opposing
pltchen' stats. The Sailors will host
Pacifica today at 11 a m. ln the
consolation championship game .
And while the Tars (4·8) rapped
out eight hits agamst two Mesa
pitchers, the Mustangs committed five
errors to help Desguin demonstrate
his point
Newport's only earned run came
in the first. when it rallied from a 2-0
deficit to take 8 3·2 lead 1t f81led to
relinquish.
The first of two Harbor ~rrors
contributed to the Mu~angs' fust·
IIlDing rally, in whldl both nms scored
on an overthrow to second base on a
would-be pic koff throw from the
catdler.
Leadoff man Mike McLean walked
to start things for the hosts, then went
to thi.rd OD a single by Ryan Heenan.
A passed ball plated McLean and
Heenan scored on Jon VandersJoot's
groundout. Ryan Torrey then singled,
stole second and third and came bome
on the secxmd Mesa em>r of the frame.
McLean's RBI single scored And.re
Pinesett, and McLean later scored
when a line drive glanced ctf tbeglove
of the left fielder.
lhlvis Moore scored the eventual
winning run after singling. advandng
SEE SAILORS PAGE I
COAmRS: OCC ATHLETIS Of THE WEEK Anteaters turned away
UC Irvine loses 5-3 lead and
USC rolls to 13-5 win on the
strength of 10-run seventh.
StlWVifVen
OM.V Pll.OT
LOS ANGELES -After 6VJ inniDgl.
UC lrvtne buebell c:oach John Savage's
b~toUSCa~tobana
storybook feel to it, thougb th• bolt not-s puDed out. 13..S DODC'Obl8rmce
win n..daf night
Sa•.g•, th• pitching coech ud
,..,,..., WOi ..... llU9Cflaa i..
3000. ltaltild .. boa9ll ---. Ga.a
la-a1&, wtao w llGI fill:ldt II bf • .......... ua.
lw111ae, wato MnN .. w.a
C 1! mRIMclltllw.lk ....
• ..
'I. •
CIEW
NAC shines
at So Cal
Cup Regatta·
Women's eights lead
the way for the locals.
LONG BEACH -The
Newport Aquatic Center's
junior crew team produced
much success, winning three
races and finishing runner-up
in nine, in the Southern
California Cup Regatta at the
Marine Stadium March 23.
The NAC's two women's
varsity eight boats won their
races. Coach ed by Christy
Shaver and coxed by Lauren
Lorman, the eight won with
Jean Geddes at bow seat, Kate
Me~d at stroke and aJso
included Shannon Packer,
Lindsay Serrins, Devon
McCalla, Michelle Fickling,
Esther Lofgren and Lindsey
Hurban.
Coxswain Lauren Lyon,
along with Sara Wales, Natali
Ekker-Stacey, Gabby Assayag,
Lauren Berghell, Kirsten
Contino, Anne Kircher, Hillary
Ellis and Lindsay Payne aJso
took first place in their race.
The women's varsity double
team of Hurban and Mead, and
the women's varsity four
finished second in their races.
The women's novice eight,
coached by Alicia Cole, also
completed a strong showing by
winning its race. Kristin Collins
coxed the boat that included
Jamie Horowitz, Tyler Murphy,
Meredith Irby, Dana Hunt,
Meggan Brunette, Laurie
Dabney, Jessica Fritz and
Corinne lUrner. The women's
novice four came in second in its
race.
In the men's division,
roached by Rachel Rose, the
men's varsity double team of
Peter Sims and Greg Everett
fmished second, as did the
men's varsity four, the men's
varsity quad, the men's
Lightweight four and the men's
varsity eight.
The NAC's men's novice
learn, coached by Jon Barrett,
also came in second. Coxed by
Ben Hester and stroked by Ken
Ito, the boat also included Blake
Foster, Arik Brown, Fred Fuga,
Tedd Akdag, Mike Dabney,
Kevin Song and Clark Brooks.
Next up for the NAC is the
San Diego Crew Classic, a
favorite of high school dubs and
college teams, on Sunday.
FOR THE RECORD
Estancia photo
A photo on page 8 of
Tuesday's edition featured
Estancia (baseball) sophomore
Eric Scheafer, nol Jeremy
Hauser.
VICTOR LOPEZ
.A.lom: Jan. 6, 1982 & Height: S-foot-5
....... t 130
Sport: Trade and field
Ewntl: 800 meters, 1,500 meters
Y-= Sophomore
High acfloot: Santa Ana Valley
co.ct.l: Head coach John Knox
and middle distanc.e coach John
Goldman.
Mlijof: Uberal studies
FlnlOf'lte food: camaltas
F9YOritle movt.: •Ar.I! Ventura II"
-..t ...... momimlt: "Winning
the Mt. SAC lrMt:ational In 1996."
Athlete al the Week XI:
He recxJl'ded penonal bests of 2.'03
in the800 and 4:12 In the 1,500
met.ers.
Dllr ...
CollKtor sports Olrd JWla OZ.S
BOYS GOLF
Estancia eighth
ATASCADERO -Estancia
High junior golfer Jason
Cassidy shot 2-over-par 74 to
help the Eagles finish eighth in
the 43-team Atascadero Three-
Man Tournament Tuesday at
Chalk Mountain Goll Course.
"' Cassidy's round ranked 10th
among individuals, as Hstanda
finished 14 strokes behind
winner Atascadero.
Joey Mueller (77) and Peter
Baker (81) also contributed for
the Eagles, who also placed
behind such powerhouses as
San Marcos, Westlake, Loyola,
Brentwood, Hart and Palm
Desert.
DEEP SEA
SPORTS Doily Pilot
Condition
for Tars'
Rowe: Fair
NEWPOkT BEACH -
Newport ffarl)or Higb Junior
Ryan Rowe. who underWent
surgery after sustaining a
concussion ln a.n outfield
roDisioD Monday, was in fair
condition early Tuesday
evening, aa::ording to Sailors
baseW ex>aCh Joel Oesguin.
Rowe. wbo bad swgeryto
relieYepessuref:lml ~
In his skull Moodily night,~
in the Intensive Care Unit
Tuesday, doing fine, Desguin
said.
Desguin said the positive
natured Rowe's recr.M!!lY was
reasmlliDg to NewportHartn-
players and coaches, who
were able to focus their effor1S
on a 6-5 PridA of the Coast
Tournament victory over
Costa Mesa Tuesday.
-by Barry Faulkner
• GREG FRY I DAILY PILOT
Who's on f1rst1 We don't know. But on second ts Newport Harbor's Andre Plnesett as teammate Cody Forsythe (24) COM is forced. Mesa defenders Michael McGuire (7) and Adam Jorgenson (left) look on, as well as an outfielder.
SAILORS
CONTINUED FROM 7
"'to second on a wild pitch and coming home
whetl a low throw skipped away from the
first baseman on what would have been a
groundout.
Mesa dosed to within 6-3 when A.J.
Perkins singled in Michael McGuire in the
fourth. then added two unearned runs in the
sixth to create some drama.
Mike Carrasco and Kevin DeSandro both
sing~. then Qrcled the bases courtesy of a
wild pitch, an enant pickoff throw from the
pitcher and another mild defensive trans-
UCI
CONTINUED FROM 7
"We love
playing here,
we want to
play here every
year and we'll
come back
more challenges of
bis homecomings,
UClat USC.
•we love playing
here, we want to play
here every year and
we'll come back
every year," said
Savage, who noted
Irvine's seventh-every year ·.. " inning pitching was
John Savage uncharacteristic.
UCI baseball coach "That's probably the
--------only big inning we've
given up aJl year.
. Those three guys (Michael Koehler, Jimmy
AJstot and Phil Thpoli) have pitched well the
whole year out of the bullpen. Our bullpen has
been one of our strengths. Unfortunately, we
were winning, we we(e in the game and we
let the end gel away from us. We run freshman
out there time after time after time, unfortu-
nately things like that happen."
£lorn: Aug. 2.2, ,. a
-Height >foot-2 W.W•t: 112
Sport Track and fWd .._aoo,,,..,,..._,.
-.: Freshman
High achool: Newport H.rbor
~ Heed coach John Knoec
and middle dlstanc:. coach John
Goldman.
MlliOr: Film
FeWNfee food: Choa>late
FIMwttle "'°"* •t1sua1 Suspects" --~ ..... 11:·8elng
part of a state~
C70ll<OUl'1tJy team 11111 w .•
A..._ofthtWlllt'xt
1\lmed In petlONll bllll Of 2:33 tt
the800 and~ inb uoo ~ ......
0,//ector fPOtU CMd.,,. QZ.S
1,
gression by the Tars.
But Newport senier Cody Forsythe
stranded the tying run at third in the
seventh, finishing out his four Innings of
relief without allowing an earned run.
Forsythe surrendered ha.U of the Mustangs'
six hits, walked two and struck out four to
record the victory.
offense, which was aJso hampered by
having three runners thrown out on the
base paths, including two picked off first
by Newport starter Shane Glenn.
The Sailors were further handicapped
when senior leadoff man Nick Cabico le.ft
the game in the first with a hamstring injury.
"Cody came in and threw well," Desguin
said.
Heenan paced the Sailors with two hits
and a run, while senior shortstop Mike Jones
the game's best defensive play,
g a bouncer up the middle into the
d out in the seventh.
Costa Mesa will host Saddleback today
at 2 p.m. to dose out consolation action in an
11th-place game.
Pl!Dl Of 1MI COAST JQUIUll8fT
eon.o&.tlon .-nlflnM
NNIPOll'I' HAMolt 6. CosrA MESA 5
Costa Mesa 200 102 0 • 5 6 S
Junior Adam Beltran went 2 for 3 with a
walk and a stolen base to lead the Mesa
Newport Harbor 321000x·6 B 2
Cooper, Garcia (4) and Hunter; Glenn, Fonythe (4)
and Moore. W • Fcnythe. L ·Cooper. 28 • Moore (NH)
USC responded to each lead UCI built.
The Anteaters went 'up, 1-0, in the second,
wheq freshman left-fielder Brett Smith, who
reached on a base bit, scored on a wild pitch.
After USC tied it, 1-1, in the bottom of the
second, Irvine grabbed a 3-1 lead after two
runs in the third. UCI junior shortstop B.J.
Eucce led off the inning with a double and
scored on freshman Jordan Szabo's double.
Szabo scored on junior catcher Chris Miller's
RBI single. .
Jon Horwitz, UCI's junior center fielder,
chipped a base bit to left-center in the fourth
to extend his bitting streak to 12 games. USC
avenged a 5-3 loss at UCl March 5.
The Anteaters resume Big West
Conference action Friday at 7 p.m., which
begins a three-game series with visiting UC
Santa Barbara.
!QKOIRIDKI
SountEllN CAufoRMA 13. UC 111v1N1 5
UC Irvine 012 000 2 00 • 5 13 2
USC 010 200 (10)0x · 13 10 1
Swanson, Koehler m. Alstot m, Tripoli (7), Koller (7)
and Miller; Olson, Williams (4). Bannister (B) and
Concepcion. W • Williams. 4-1. L • Koehler, 0-2.
28 • Sz.abo (00), K~ (UCI), Trejo (UO), Euc:ce (UQ),
Sakedo (USC), Lunettl (USC), Peavey (USC).
HR · Anderwn (UO), Barre (USC), Peavey (USO.
COLLEGE BASEBALL
Vanguard slips past
The Master's, 9-8
COSTA MESA -Vanguard
University swvived a wild Golden State
Athletic Conference baseball game with
visiting The Master's College Tuesday,
winning, 9-8, in 10 innings, to improve
to 16-16, 7-4 in the GSAC.
Vanguard won it in the 10th when
Michael Bair, who was 2 for 5, drew a
one-out walk on a full count, stole
second and advanced to third on a balk.
1\vo intentional walks loaded the
bases and then Chad Chop, who was 2
for 4, was hit by a pitch to force across
the winning run.
Jason Searle also had two hits (2 for
4) for the Lions.
GOU>PI STAIE ADtL£T1( C9"HEMCI
VMGUMD 9, r .. MA.smt's a
The Master's 000 050 003 0 · B 12 3
Vanguard 003 050 000 1 • 9 10 3
Hadcworth, Ovrost (4), Smitli (5) and Brett;
Carnahan, Caston m. Echols (9) and Gamer.
W ·Echols. 2·3. L ·Smith, 2-2. 28 · Tishe< (MC),
Jamie (MQ, Bair M 2. 38 · Owens (MO.
COWGE BASEBALL
CONTINUED FROM 7
work with.
Senior Billy Eagle, who went
2 for 4 with a double, scored on
an error, while junior Beau
Stockstill scored on a sacrifice
fly from junior catcher Nick
Karp. Stockstill came in as a
substitute for Josh Bradbury,
who sprained his ankle.
Stocks1ill. who scored the game-
securing run in the fifth, went 2
for 3 and scored two runs.
Like Eagle and Stockstill,
freshman Wess Presson and
Karp contributed two bits each
to CdM's 11-hit attack.
The Vikings lost their ace
and No. 4 hitter, Phillip Peinado,
in the first inning because of an
elbow injury.
•(Peinado) felt something
snap (while pitching),"
Mountain View Coach Ted
Persell said. MThat put a damper
on us, emotionally. He's our big
hitter and big pitcher. That
dampened our spirits a liWe bit.
I'm not making excuses because
a team has to fill that bole after
a leader goes down. Corona del
Mar played very well
defensively. (The Sea Kings)
came up with the big hits when
they needed to. We just didn't
hit today, flat out. (Rhodes) did
a good job of keeping us off
balance.·
Plllll Of IHI COAST IOUlllWlfI
Sernlflluil
CDM 4, McunMt Vnw 2
Mountain View 100 010 0 • 2 5 2
Corona del Mar 012 010 x • 4 11 2
P. PelM<k>, GutlefTez (1), J.cobo (4)
and Hernandez; N. Rhodes and !Urp.
W • N. Rhodes, 2--4. L • GutiefT'eL
28 • Hemandez (MV), Madelin (CdM),
Eagle (CdM), Long (CdM), Prl!SISOn (CdM).
UCI's Swanson grabs pitching honors
UCI pitcher Glenn Swanson
UC Irvine ~eshman left-hander Glenn Swanson bas been named the Big West
Conference Pitcher of the Week after allowing no runs in two wins this past week to
improve to 6-1 on the season. ·
Sw~ had a three-hit, no-run performance in three innings against UNLV in
a 7-3 UCI ~ctory, March 26. Swanson, from Morse High in San Diego, was credited
. with the wm based on pregame notice from Coach John Savage that he would use
multiple pitchers. UCI used six pitchers in the game.
In Friday's 9-5, Big West win at University of the Pacific, Swanson relieved Brett
Smith in the sixth inning and shut out the Tigers, retiring all t 2 batters he faced and
striking out the last two looking to end the game.
Swanson's six wins lead the team and he is second with 50 strikeouts. He bas held
opposing batters to a .190 average and is the second Anteater to be recognized by
the conference, as center fielder Jon Horwitz was named Player of the Week two weeks
ago.
UC hosts UC Santa Barbara in a conference series at Anteater Ballpark this
weekend. Game times are 7 p.m. Friday, 6 p.m. Saturday and 1 p.m. Sunday.
HAPPY BIRTHDAY
Celebrating the Dally Pllot"s
Arlllete of the Wffk s.rles
The Estancia High baseball team punches
out the right numben lo score a 2· t Pacific
Coest League victory over visiting c:rou-town
rival Costa Mesa. Estancia pitcher Vidor
........_paces the Win wtth hit ~t
performance. Mesa actuaDY .outbitl tbe ~.
6-3, but the Must4ngs ltiaDd 111ae ~
seven in scoriilg ~-BNWM fllllbas 1111-Mlli • COSUUM.11 for an RBI *'918 .._.,...
JIM dn Ttie~' ._
leodl oft the MCJODd DlllDO JtObt. He ..... tlllrdad,
away, ... "* .........
~...._t,....rrbll
...
\
•
.. :
'· '·
SPORTS
TODAY'S SOIEDUU ... SIDELINES And Roy Sl4f.ford bec4me widefeated dw1ng
theaeuon. . The search Is on for ... CONTINUED FROM 7 The three tnick teams labored bard, but
nono could capture a tiUe. The varsity bad
won 26 duaJ meets during the three previous
years, but tlnAlly Santa Ana and Fullerton
look the crown away.
Tbe ~ U1I """R'!'G d tan' ...... •.sl: M8IMl
High §d'IOOI • Mdt Of «N C.O...
14-6. TOUll'\llMl'lt. c:Nmp/ordhlp finll
Cqron., del M¥ YS. Siw'I o.m.u.
All·league first team honors went to center
Bob Eggert and Aarvold, a fullback. Tu'ck.le
lbny Pridham was named to the second team
and honorable mention saJutes went to
halfback Rex Bell and quarterback Rolly
Pulaski.
The deceased from Class of '52: Jack
Pelker, Phyllis Dellacqua, Lee Page, Doug
8ouvey, Nancy Millett, Lynn Brown, Cbar
Six, Don Pettit, Dick Jobn.sOn, Bonnie Harris,
Jim Pran.ld, Bruce Baird and Marilyn Hamm.
&.-. AbboU. ~.~ o..._..,, AUdde Berg,
O!*tyw ~. MiJdrOd b1ackWtill. Cw* Bridges, Ron4.td
Bdggl. Broce 8. BroWll, Belb ~~ Ocuismore,
G8orglAPa Dick, ShiJ1ee EWi, Glolg. er.... arid Prank Hansen.
AJllO, PtanceJ H.ariisao, Geraldine ~ Roget H nnck.
... Barbu• H~t, MdlilyD HilliltCr, Rutlilll Hoftman, Bob
Holland; Petet Hood, ArclUe Horvath, Bvelyn Hugbes, BW Uiff,
MArg4ret Johnson. Dklt Johnstoo and at ~
at TtW1nlde hl1I, 7 p.m., <~
c.tlempion5hfi>; P1e1flcl It NftWPO"l
HMbof, 11 •. m .• 11th pl.tee: Seddtebldl
at Costa Mew, 2 p.m.
VOWDA&1
Commumty c.oll1!94! men · Orange •
Coast at GrOS5mOtlt, 7 p.m
•
Other impressive players were tackle Gino
Boero, end Ted McMasters, tack.le Ted Lange,
end Don Pettit, guard Jim Pa.'lcoe, fullback
Austin Smith, end Mickey Retmier, tackle
Lou Abbott, guard Dudley Heller and guard
Terry Gibson.
AthJetic Director Ralph Reed also
introduced cross country in 1951, which was
then a 1.8 mile run. lWenty-five turned out
Also, John Shiga.k:i, Bob Hin.kens,
Dale Coleman, Bill Cottle, Jack Kutter,
Dean Gilbert, Suzie Brocket. Jeny Shannon,
Jack Turley, Jim Parenti, Ian God.soe,
Bob Cubbison, Evie Williams, Jim f1endon,
Gleaves Lowe and nacy Godfrey.
Also, Mark Scofield, Romaine Ou-bin,
Dallas Devinney, Pat Brooks, ~rank Soule,
Joe Peterson and Mickey Meredith.
Also, Bill Kindell, Mary Kieft, Patrld4a ~. Robert
McCmcken, Jan McGill, Mae Morgan, Jack Morris, Esther
Navarro, Joan P~. Shirlee Pickara, Tony Pridham, Chuck
Ralston, Anna Reynolds, Bi.lUo Ross, LOia Sch&rpegge, Diane
Stratton, Dixte Thad~, Ron l'barp, John TooUn, Bobette Wade,
Melba Walker, Conrad Walton, Bob West, Joan Weston, OuUta
Wtllmanns. Jack wtm, Don Whittaker and Freida Yorlc.
Cqntact Pilot Sports (9.t9) 574·'4223 if you have information.
RM
College men • VangUilfd Un~
at "11 Poly Po!Nltle, 2 p.m.
~
High school • Orange vs. C-OSta MeM.
at TeWi~le Part. 'O:lO a.m.
Community college· Orange Coen
at Santa Ana, 3 p m.
I MUC MJTaS 11 MlJC NOTaS 11 ~ N01m 11 MOC NOTm 11 Ml£ MOiai 11 ~ NOTm 11 ~ H011CES 11 ~ ~ES 11 NU NOTUS 11 ~ *"1Cll] :
NOTICE Of ESTABlJSH.. NOTICE OF NOTICE OF TRUSTEE'S Have you started before this court at the aubmlt their Ou•ll· Thomas C. Bland Impact Fee Program 1s Q\l"_;,ts aet forth In MENT Of BRANCH Of. PET1110N TO ~n~·~ SAi..£ TS NO.; doing business yel? hearing ln~ted below flcatlon1 on the form This atatement wu available f01 review by the Bidding Oocumlntl
ACES Thie nollcl II to ADMINISTER 201129'l1 u., No.: 1338 200,9073501486 LOAN Yes. 1983 to lllOW cause. if any, provided by the Uni-flied with the County the pubhc al the Costa and to pay prevailing
lnloml 1111 ~ lhll. ESTATE OF: Tiii Ordlr No: 41.70975-NO.; 1956663282 Michael J. Kincaid why the petition for veralty H •n ettach· Cleril of Orange Couoty Mesa Crty Clefk'5 Office, wage rales at the loo$·
PlftlSll '° 12 c.F.R. GEORGE EARLE •YounlndlfMlundlf FHNVl.'MI NO . qce-Constl\Jcilon, Inc. Change ot na~ should ment to the Bid Fonn. on 03/tS/2002 77 Fa11 Ortve, Costa lion of ttie WOlll. !Jec:llol\ 545.92. Downey KIRl<HAM 211 rn1 YOU ME IN Michael J KJncald. not be granted Bidder• ahall certify 2002689&004 Mesa The succ:easful Biddlf' StW9 8l'ld l..om1 A'*> CASE NO. A212637 a O.S d 1hS dl8ld DEFAULT UNOER A DEED President NOTICE OF HEARING thet the Structure! Daily Piiot Mar. 27. AcK Pubhc Comments in Wiii be required to tieV9
dldon. FA, Newport To an tien, benefi0iarie9, ==to:= OF TRUST. DATED This statement was Date APA 30, 2002 Steel Subcontractor• 3. 10, 17, 2002 W438 either oral or wntten the following State of 8elctl ~ 92660 Is creditors, cootingert 11 maid 11 02/14'2000 UNLESS YOU filed with the County Tlme 2PM. Dept: L73 have met the minimum form may be presented Callfom1a Contr.a<W'• !!!,. • l9q.INl Will tht credt0f9, and peniona II'= .... ~ ba ,.: TAKE ACTION TO Clef1I ot Orange County The address ol the court qu1llflcetlon• Mt forth BSC 11729 dunng the publrc hear· hcense current at the
..,,..... ofTtwift Supr.1aiorl who may ~se be :ii ...,.,, "": 1111 PROTECT YOUR on 0311112002 Is same ~ noted at>ove In the Contrect Oocu-NOTICE OF ing For further infoona· bme of svbmrSSI0'1 of the
("OTS") tor penniulon to ifiWested in the ¥>ill or nlllln of 1111 Pf~ PflOPERlV, fl MAY BE 2002181152711 3. A oopy of thlS Oroer menta. Blddera ahell PETITION tion. telephone (7141 Bid iltllllllll tnnc:h otlloes 10 -~1 both ol _.._ ..,., ..,., SOlD AT A POBUC SALE. Daily Pitot Mar. ,3, 20, to Show Cause shall be aubmlt the Structural TO ADMINISTER 754-5335 or v1s11 the Electncal .... ...._._.. 11721, w-vo .. e. or --,..... ,_ .,. ..,.._. -·-GEORGE EARLE oonllct 1 ~. On ff YOU NEED N' 27. AcK. 3, 2002 W4?9 pubhshe<I a1 least once Steel Subcontractor'• ESTATE OF: Transportation Services Contractor
Ave., Hunlln!llon 8-:h. KIRKHAM 4/t7flfX1J. .. 200 P.M., • EXPLANATION OF ntE SUMMONS each week 101 four we-Qualification Stete· MAURINE Division at Crty Hall, n (Ucel'lse Classiftcabon)
CA 92M7; 2IXl60 ""'1tln A PeTfTION FOA thtcUyllAll**dl'nmll NATURE OF me cessive weeks prior to rnenta on the form H. WILSON aka Fair Onve. Costa Mel>a. C-tO !."4-~.ital..!,.~~ PROBATE haa been filed irdw lrid ~ to PROCEEDING M:WNST (CITACION the dale set lor heenng provided by the Uni· MAURINE CA . Moriday through Ot~~r Pnsero·~SL_' t13S4-2&31 ~ ._...... by KATHLEEN K. O.S o1 tru11 Recotdld YOU. YOU SHOULD JUDICIAL) on the petition In the fof. veralty, aa an attach· Fnday 8 00 am to 5 00 ,.., ,..... ,._..,.
llllil Blvd., Weatches12r, KIRKHAM In the Superla 0&'14rlml, Book WA. CONTACT A LAWYER. On NOTICE TO OEFEN· lowing newspaper of ment to the Bid Fonn. HORTENSE pm flee:
CA 90045; 5200 Slockdlll Court of Galrlomla, Page P¥A. lnllNnent OC122J2002 m 9:00 AM. DANT. (Av1110 a general c1rculat1on CONSTRUCTION WILSON MARY T. ELLIOTT, Bidder Quetfflcatlons ~ Blikertlleld. CA C of""•••ae ~ d of1ci11 LOHESTAR MORTGAGEE Aco~ JACK TRACY pnnte<I in this county COST ESTIMATE CASE NO. A212516 Deputy City Clerlt called for to be 29415· '835 Hlmdon ounty """'' · TUAT DOES t t 20 Newport Beach/Costa $1 54t 000 00 T I fi Published Newport aubmltt-.. .t time of ...._ =-1 ~. ,.. ....,tt· THE PETITION FOR NCOl'dl In thl Olllca of.. SERVICES, LLC. u duly 0 • • . 0 all he rs, bene I• ...
......, \;IOIVll, _...,. -PROBATE ts Iha.I Rlcoldlr d 0nngt lj)90in1ec1 TruatN unoet YOU ARE BEING Mesa Daily Pilot B1dd1ng Documents daries. crednors cont· Beach·Costa Mesa bid Include, but -not
1110!il 91d 9l500 Hllglmlln KATHLEENr~KfAKHAM ~ C1111farn11, -11td pu19Uant IO 0-2 al SUED BY PLAINTIFF DATE: MAR 15, 2002 will' t>e available to Bid-mgent creditors. and Oarly Piiot Ap<ll 1. 2. 3. 4, nec-1ty limited to: Road, B1lsdlld, CA be appolnted as personal aMd by: Robert L SW· TNll ~ OV1&'2000, (A Ud. le este deman· JUDGE RICHARD 0 . ders on Mondey, Aprll persons wllO may othef· 5. 8 9. 10, 1 t ,2, 2002 t. The Contractor "'81 9331~ An; oom-sentative to na, 1 air9t 11111\ • 11 tnlll\lmenl No. dando): ALEKSANOAA FRAZEE, SR. ', 2002, and will be Is· Wise be 111terested rn the M340 have been in business
nW'lla in flMlr or agllinll :ster lt1e est.ate of lNlllar, lyllt Johnaon, , 2000009Q6Cl1. 1n bO<*. KULMATICKI and JUDGE Of THE SUPE· sued at win or estate. or both. of under the same name
b ~ of Iha the decedent 11rig11 _,, • Ber-. pege, o1 Offlo.i Records In VLADIMIR RIOR COURT DESIGN AND MAURINE H WILSON DEFERMENT and Cahfom1a Contrac·
n.:fl albs mull I» c1wy. w1 .. = !he O!llc:e of tna County KULMATICKI Jose Asuncloo Sosa CONSTRUCTION aka MA u RINE OF BIDS to(s License lo< a mfn. IUllmlllld In wl'fllng to Iha THE PETfTION requests adcn u11 to tw fleconje( of On1nge County, You have 30 CALEN· Blanca Huerta SERVICES HORTENSE WILSON Sub1ect to cond1t1ons 1mum of 5 continuous
0TS wit*' 25 dlys d the autho!Tty to administer tJiddW tor C8lh, a State o1 C&Jllomla. DAR DAYS etter this 114<1 W Hlghland St •B University of Califomla. A PETITION FOR l>fescnbed by the under· years prior to the bid
dlll h ~ la lied the estate under the ctwdt ~ bv a.-or ~ by Thomu E. summons Is served on Santa Ana. CA 92703 IMne, 3500 BerWey PROBATE has been signed, sealed btOs 101 a opening date for this ~ 1111 Ttne cop-A'~s·~L of Esta•-nllllarwl i.-. a Cllltillr'• Delli•. a .,ng1, l1WI lfld you to file a lypewntten Published Newport Place. IMne. CA ftled by DOUGLAS C Lump Sum Contract are Pro1ect The license
Ill d yo.I c:ommentl ''"' nUUI• "'a ctwc:1t chw1 by a.-01 Trad Dah4 A 1111gte _.,, response at this court Beach·Costa Mesa 92697-2450 WILSON 111 the Supenor 1nv11e<1 f0< Irle following used to sabsly this r•
lt'°"*I be .,. to: Ad. (This autt1ority ¥>ill ...,_ad inon, 01 a wlK s8'I 11 puOllc auclion to A letter or phone call Oa1iy Pilot Mareh 20, 27, (949) 824·6630 Coun of California. Work Qu1rement Shall be°' the ReatonllDlrectcr Olllcaof allow ll'lll personal c:mlWr'a cl-* ct-. tJv rwghnl blddet 10< cash, will not protect you, your April 3, 10 2002 Hol Line County of ORANGE REPLACE HIGH same type requ11ed by n.1ft ~ Welt rep<esenlative to take a 11* d fldlrll -*9 cashiet's Ch«:IC / cun typewritten response W436 (9'49) 824-8t t7 THf PETITION FOR VOLTAGE SYSTEM. tile coolract
Alglon. ll P.O. Boa 7165. many actions without 8l'ld ~ woclllloi~ equivarent 0< olh« form o1 must be in proper legal Checks tor a non-re-PROBATE requests that UTIUTY TUNNEL 2 The ContractOf s/\all
Sen Fnnc:llco. CA 94120 obtatilng court approval. Sllllrlgl wocllliol~ 01 ~ •Ulholl2.cl by torm II you want lhe Fictitious Buelneas fundable fee will be re· DOUGLAS C WILSON PROJECT HO. 996035 prOVlde a minimum of 3
YOIJ rnay-.,,..... lhll Before taking certa111 very ..wiga '** aplCllld In 292~1 (payllllle ., 11,.,. court to hear your case. Name Statement quired in the amount of be appointed as per· UNIVERSITY OF references for projects
h OTS "'*"" en lrftlr. 1mpottaf'lf ection.s, llCllorl 5102 of 1111 ~ cl sale In lawlul money cl If you do nol file you1 The follow1n~ persons $50.00 per set of Bid· sonal representatrve to CALIFORNIA, IRVINE s1m~ar in ~ and alze
mil at lomlll meellna In ~. tne personal cial Codi ft aulhortmd the Urlltecl Stal8a) 111 .,,. response on time. you are doing buSIDess as. ding Documents edm1n;sler the estate of 011g1nally scheduled to this Protect wllk:h
ac:coidlla wlltl 12 CJ::R. rep<esefllatlve will be to do bualrw In It'll* entrance ro the OrlnOe City mey lo5e the case, and Aurora Marketing. 2400 Checks are to be the decedent tor 2:00 P.M .. THURS. have been successfully
Stldlon 5'15. Such ,.....i required IO give notloe to 1111111. s. wl ba IWd tJv Hall. 300 Eut ~ your wages. money and Harbor Blvd . &Mte 201, made payable to "The THE PETITION re· DAY, APRIL 4, 2002 completed durif'l'g Ille
mull ba corUll-.d In the lnt819$ted pef800S U11ieaS tht cUy appolrllld INllla ,.__ OranQe. Calitomia. property may be taken Costa Mesa, California Regents of the Unlver· quests the decedent's has been deferred to past 3 years ~ commant lltRI', they have waived notice • ._, b11aw, d 11 loll rlQl>I. 11119 rm 1111-without further warning 92626 s1ty of Cahfomta " Will and codcrts 1f any. 2:00 P.M., WEONES-THE REGENTS OF
lt'°"*ldlacrlbelhllllUIS or consented lo the ~ ... ft ~ COOveyec! 10 llld now held from the court. Joseph Raymond TWO MANDATORY be admrtted to prObate DAY. A.PAIL H, 2002 THE UNIVERSITY OF
01 ~ lhll you wllh 1D llfooosed aclion.) The ~tori now held by ~ und9r aa1d Deed cl There are other legal Seboek. 2400 Harbor PRE· BID 0 0 N • The W~I and any codlCllS DESCRIPTION OF CALIFORNIA
dlac:I.-ll the mealing. l~ IJvtwWlalllnlhl.._. Tr\111 .,, the PI009ltY requirements You may Blvd •20t, Costa Mesa. FERENCES AND MAN-are available ror ell· WORK: Mard'I 2002 81'1dmuml tJll)llilnwnyyo11 adminlwallon authOrity lnlftlr dlacrtbad prqmty lituel9d in Mid County end want to call an attorney Cahfomra 92626 DATOAY PRE-BID JOB am1nat1011 1n the me kept Work Includes. bul 18 Pubhsl1ed Newport
blfllt.19 lttll yo.1 'Mi1llrl wt be ~led unlen an undlf Ind pu'aW11 ID h SC.. delenbed u : 11 mo<9 right away It you do not Thrs business is con· WAU<S shall be held as by the court not hmlted to. the folklW· Beach·Costa Mesa coi11•• llol'll -not lnt8r86ted person files an o.tdTn.lll n...... lully dMCntieo II• Iha lbolle know an attorney. you ducted by an 1ndMdual follow5 THE PETITION re· mg Daily P•lot April 3. 2002
addanUo ~ ~ obtecllon to !he petition bl n--. tu ~ men1IOned Deed °' Trusi may call an attorney re-Have you staned 1 :00 P .M. quests authorrty to ad· Replace thirty (30) Ob-W444
,.._ 01 '*=Ill. You "Wf and anows good cause ~ or ~ N'N• !IJ3.Je.290. The ferral servoce or a legal domg busmess yet'I No Frldey, A.pril 5, mln1S1er tne 86tate under solete 011 high voltage
look 11 h nc:idoe end Ill why the COi.rt should not up-' of ln1*d, sirMI ecldlelS ...., OIMf aid office (l1s1ed ln the Joseph Set>oek 2002, llt: the Independent Adm1n-switches and ap· SUMMONS ~lllldlltt.OTS orintlhlaulhority. ~ -. ,_.. comnon dMIQr*ed. "wiy, phone book) nus stalement was Untve~ity of 1stration of Estates Act proi11m;1tely 39 000 (CITACION AlcllOtlll Ollce, "'*' }.. HEARING on the lion, 01 ~ID al ,,. _, ~ Oespues de que le filed with the County Canfomia, Irvine. (This Auttlonty will allOw lineal feet of detenorated IUCh,,...,... _ examcit petJllon ~• be held on PIY h l9'llli*1g ph> deaeribed aboYe 11 entreguen esta c1tacion Clerk ot Orange County Student SelVices I, the personal represent· electncal cable. JUDICIAL)
tJvllwfl'omcllldoan.f OS'02A)2 at 1:30PM In pll un d .. "'*(a) purpolled to be. 15 1udlcial usted t1ene un on 03/<17/2002 Room 203. aUve to take many ac· BIDDER QUALi· NOTICE TO OEFEN· you ,_ S'f qr.*1lonl Dept L-73 locallld al 341 .and by 1111 ~ of ~Court~ ptazo de 30 DIAS 20028895063 Irvine. Gatttomla 92697 uons without obtaining FICATIONS: Prime DANT (AVISO •
COIOlll•ig tw ~ THE CfTY DRIVE. Truat, lnlll'llll ttweon, 8Ncll Callfomla 9266:), CALENOARIOS para Daily Pilot Mar 20. 27, (949) 824-6630 court approval Before Blddera who do not Acusado) NSA OKOHO
clnl, corm::t 1111 OTS ORANGE. CA 92868 ~ ..., c:fwglS The underllgned TMIN presenter una respuesta Apr. 3, 10. 2002 W437 and· taking certain very 1m· meet the quallflutlon• EYO NSA and DOES 1 • ~~It(~ IF YOU OBJECT to the 91d~dhflue.. diacUinw WIY lieltlty tor escnta a maqume en ':00 P.M. portent actions. how· In the Contract Oocu-to 25, lnclusiVe. ~~.... gantlnQ ot the petition, .. .,, ..... amcull(• IO'/ ~ cl 11\e esta corte ADVERTISEMENT Friday, A,p_!!I.· 12. ever the pe~t repre-menta may not be YOU ARE BEING yoo ~appear at the hboflhl.,..~ ..,_ -.,,., Oltl9r Una carta o una FOR BIDS 2002 •• sentabve wilt be required ellglble for ewerd. SUED BY t>LAtNTIFF ~ and stale your c:tllorl of 1111 Nadal r:I comnon dell(11111on. H "'Y· llamada telelontca no le Subject to conditions Universrty of to give notice to In-Prime Bidder• ahall (A Ud le esta defnan-
E or file wntten S.) wllltlfy Id-.,_... .,.,..n. Sal<l ..i. will olrecera proleocion, su prescrit>ed by the under· Calrforma, Irvine terested persons unless aubmlt their Ou•ll-dando) MINI'! NGUYEN ~th the oourt mMltd to ba Mt b1h be made. but -..ittlo'1I respuesta escri1a a ma· signed, sealed bids 104" a Student Services I. they tlave waived notioe flcatlona on the form You have 30 CALEN·
the heating. Yt:1.X below. ThllmOlrimaybe OOllenenl or warrwwy. qwna t1ene que cumphr Lump Sum Contract are Room 203 or consented to the provided by the Uni-DAR DAYS af1er tNs
awearani::e may be in ~ Oii lw dlV of.... .,..,,...., irrc>lied. con las tormahdades le· Invited for the following Irvine, Celifomta 92697 proposed acuon ) The veralty 11 an attech· summons Is served on
.....,.,,,. (Y by your Pi.. d 5* Al f1I NDr1h 01 gales aproptadas s1 Work (949) 824-6630 independent admims· ment to the Bid Fonn. you to file a typewntten
,......_. tn:n ..._ to 1111 reQArdlng lille. ~. usted quiere que la corte GRADUA.TE SCHOOL ATTENDANCE AT tratlOll authority will be CONSTRUCTION response al IN court ~noo ARE A Coll'lty ~ 7tl) ()I~. IO PiV Ille escuclle SU caso OF MANAGEMENT BOTH PRE·BID CON-grarited unless an In· COST ESTIMATE: A letter or phone call
CREDITOR or a CMt: C.. Oltw ~ Nmlini,:O I~ :;"..: Si usted no pr915enta (GSM) BUILDING FERENCES A.ND PRE· terested person files an St ,325,000.00 Wl. not protect you. your contlngent creditor 01 the Sii* Ma. CA ..,. -..,•' su respoeste a t1empo, SEISMIC BIO JOB WALKS IS Obfeebon to the pehtlOll Bidding Documents typewritten response
......... aaed, ...,,., must file Dliicrlc*lc •more = ~~ ':;:: l>U8lle perder el caso. y IMPROVEMENTS MANDATORY FOR and sllows good cause were available to Bid· must be In prop&f legal """"' !,.-;;;,. ~on Mid O.S of le pueden quiter su (PROJECT NO. All PRIME CON· wtiy the court should not ders on WEDNESDAY, form ii you want the your dalm ... u. the 00\.trt TNll Amount of ~ nole(I), Mlv-. H rry, salano. SU dinero y otras ~,224) • IRVINE TRACTORS. THE grant the authonty. MARCH 6, 2002, and court to hear yoor case
and mall a copy to lhe blllla n olw unOlt fie t.,.,.. ol Hid cosas <le su propledad HALL BUILDING MEETING Will A HEARING on the we<e issued at: If you do not file your
personal representa!Ne dwvee: ~75 Deed ot Tr\111, t-. cnaro-sin avlso adlCIOnal por SEISMIC CLOSE AT ':05 P.M. petrtK>n will be held on DESIGN & response on time, you ~led by the court (~SlreetAddre9 11/>d •1'*1-ol the parte de ta corte IMPROVEMENTS ANY PRIME CON· APRIL 25. 2002 al t 30 COl'tSTRUCTION may lo5e the case. and wlltWl tour months from -Clltll' common dlll!>-TMIM llnd al !he tNsts Exlsten otros reQUISI· (PROJECT TRACTORS ARRIVING pm In Depl L73 lo SERVICES yoor wages money and
1'18 dale of flr81 Issuance nlllan r:I tht,.. ~ CtMled t1'Y •d OMd of tos legates Puede que Ho. 991279) AnER THIS TIME cated at 341 Tl1e c.fy Unrveraity of property may be taken
of letlerl as f)l'OYlded in 725 A-*> A--.., Trull The IQlal ""°""' al usted quiera Hamar a UNIVERSITY OF W 1 LL N 0 T BE Olive Soulfl, Orange Calllomia. llVll'le wt1'10ul further wamlng
Probate Code sediof'i Cotonl Dll •,CA 92fi25 1M unpejd belrca al tM un abogado CALIFORNIA, IRVINE EUGIBLE TO PARTIC._ CA 92868 3500 Berkley Place from the court
9100. The time lor fifing APH ~ 93'7-17-016 obllgGOn MCUl1ICI tl'Y Iha 1nmediatamente. SI no DESCRIPTION OF PATE IN THE BID PR(). IF YOU OBJECT to llVIOI. CA 92697-2450 The<e are other legal clalml win not eitplre Thi ll'dll'llgiiMI T,,.._ pl'C)Pel1y ro tit told end conoce a un abogado, WORK: CESS AS A PRIME the granting of the peti-(949) 82Une4-6630 requirements You may
be1ore tou1' montflS from dlec:Wme my lllCmt'i for ~ •l1kNled oosla, puede llamar a un Graduate School of CONTRACTOR. tlOn. you should appear Hot want to can a11 attorney
the nearing date nociced ""f hx:inediw d tht ~ _, .,.,_ at servieio de referenola de Maoagement· Seeled bid• wlll not at the heanng and state (949) 824·8117 nght away If you do not ~MAY EXAMINE the __. ~ 91d oltW ~i!:,: 111e~! abogados o a una The proposed project be ac:c.pte<S after: 2:00 your ob1ections or Ille Check.t tor a non·r• know an attorney, you
oornmon dlllgillillclli. I ofiolna de ayuda legal consists of lhe seismic P.M., TUESDAY. APRIL wntten ootections with fundeble '" Will be re-may caU an anomey re-file kept by the court If .-.Y. .,_, '** "-~ 19· S20G,390 92 Thtl (vea el dlrectorio tele-relrofit ol the Graduate 23, 2002. the coort before the QUlrad in lhe amount Of tanat servtee or a leOal
yo&1 1119 a peraon piqJllty tw--. • btntllc:llllY under Mid Deed fomco) Schoof of Management At Design and Con-heanng Your ap· $25.00 per set of Bid-aid oNlce (llS1ed in the
lnla<Nt9d In the asta1a, icrtlld 11 bllr'G aald "w al Trua ~ adCUlecl CASE NUMBER: and Irvine hall bulldngs stl\JClion Services, Uni· pearanoe may be In per· dlno Documents. phone booll)
you may file wit! the 11'". R.E.F.S. Inc. la• dltlt and deNWted to ""' (Numero def C..O) and all tncidenlal work to varsity of Cafllorn1a. son or by your attorney Checks are to be Despues de que le
CXl011 a Request IDr collc:IOI' lllilmpClng to ~ • wnnen O'CC077U QU1 access to the wOl1I Irvine. 3500 Berkeley IF YOU ARE A CAE(). made payable to "The en1reguen esta citllC40fl
Special Notice (fotm DE· co11c:t • dltlt. Nit Wor-Dlctlnlll<>n al o.tllf.lft end JUDGE araa, providing necn· Place. Irvine. CA ITOA or comJngent cf9d. Regents of the Unrver· ju<llClal usted tiene un t54) d ttle fil#lg of an rNillorl obtllriMI wl be DemWlcl for Sale, end 8 JOHN M. WATSOH aary protections. and re-9269'7·2450 ~or of the dec:ease<I. you sity o1 Cahtomla." plazo de 30 DIAS
inventoly ll1d apprailil °' 1.-d tor 1tt11 J'l'P09I. 111nttW\ NoCiee"' °"'"'"and OE.PT. C15 storing work areu and Seeled Bid• will be most tile your dalm wi1h two mandatory Pre· CALENOARIOS para
eallte assets or of any Oa11ct OYl1J2DQ2 R.EF.S. Election '° Sell. The The name and ed· nntslles to pre-existing opened at 2:05 P.M.. the oourt and mail a bid Conferences and preeentar una respuesla
petition Of eocoin 11 lnt:.,•Mktl'Nllle.1778> unoatli"*' CIUMd N><I dress of the court le. (El oondlllons 10 the satis· TUESDAY, APRIL 23, copy to the personal~ Mandatory Pre-bid Job eacrita a maqu1na en
p<O'ilded In Probate Code Rich SCr-. &All 240, Nodo9 al °"""" lfld nombre ~ direoclon de la fect>on of Ille Unlvefsily 2002. resentabve appointed by Walks W&fe hekl 11 lol-Mt.a cone Secdon 1250. A Request M-. CA.12l514 For Sall Bdon ro Sell to be oorte M representatives The Bid Seounty in the the court within four lows· Una ca111 o una
fOr Special Notice lom1 ta ~loi11111lan Ml ~4-TD7 laCOl'de<I In t11e county ORANG COUNTY SU· work ent.aJls the tollow· amounl of t004 of the months from the date ol Meeting No. 1: llamadll telefonlca no le
1vali.ble from the court Fa Ml 752-7337 By: "'*-the !Ml pteperty II PERIOR COURT. 700 Ing: ~ Sum Base Bkl, ex· Ille flrst lUuanoe o1 let-9:00 AM TliUASDAY. olr-ra protecclOn. au
cllrit ........ ~ ln... IOCal.cl F1nt Amlt1cen Civic Ctr Or. West, •Strengthening of eldat· cludlng ahemates. shall ters as provided in Pro-MARCH 14, 2002 at: rupuNla etalla • rM-AllOfTiev tor Petitionef <>llm ~ aYll, L.endlt9 ~ Santa Ana. Calffomla Ing welded moment· accompany each Bid. bat• CoOe section 9100 University ot Califomill, quot\I Ilene que CUl!l*
CHAAAONO'NElU. OW3,CWIO LonetlW Mo11oeo-92702 frame oonnecbons of the The Surety issuing the The nme I« filing cla#ns Irvine. Prasld4W'it's Con· con 1u ~ le-
O'NEU & WOOL.PERT a.mc... LLC. J Aral The name. address, ellllting steel ffames. Bid 8ood shal be. on the 'Nlll not ex:pore bef01a ference Aoom. Mesa Of· galea aprOf>I•~•• st
1014 PALM STREET Fictitious a elneu ArlllN'IC8ll Wey IMtl AN, an<I tetel)hOne number • ~ of tour Bid Deadline, en tour months from the flea Bulldlng, 4004 Mesa '-*' quiel'9 ~la corte
SN-j LUIS OBISPO, CA Heme Stat~nt CA mf11 De1ad: of pleintifrs attorney, 01 exlatlng ~ 11ee1 6eams at admitted surety Insurer hea11n9 d•le noticed Ad , Suite 3000, Irvine, ncuche au eaao
93401 03f29l2002 Autllollred pterntlfl without an at-Ille foul1h floor elab. fn.. 111 defined in 1118 Call-above C.lifornill 92697 SI usted no pr11ent1 ~~04/11W2 The lot~ persons sqwura: Rlell'do Juel•Z tomey is' (El nombrl, la cklding their end con· omta Cod• of Civil YOU MAY EXAMINE (949) 824-6630 llU f1lllPU4ISla • tltmpo. Cfl&. S74221t are doft'lg ness u : FOi Tru11M'1 Sele dir80CIOl1 y el numero de nectlont1 and the loca· Procedure Section the t•e kept by Ille oourt. Meatlnll No. 2: puede pe!daf 11 CMO, Y
NEWPORT8UCWCOSTA OrangeA~ty ~II· lnlotmmllon Pleuecan 1119-telefono del 80ogado del tlool whe!1I they ll4lPOl1 995.120) II you llNI a peraon in-9.00 A.M. TUESDAY, le ~ qvltar llU wy ftLO peutlc ~nltr. 5ie>1221 ~r demandante, o del de· roof columns (6 IOca· The successful 81dd8f terested In the fflata, ~ 19. 2002 Ill. salalfo, su dinan:> Y Ohl Flctltloul Buslne.9 t370 S. St.. Mortgr,gee SeMcee. LLC. 1Mndatlte que no Ilene Ilona) and iUI Subcontrac;toni you may flle with the Unlvanl!Y of Calitomla, co ... de tu propi9decS
,..,.,. St8tement A~~· ~~ ta • a.Ill collector llboQedo. et) Irvine Hiii: will be required to follow court a. Al(tlJMI for Spe-lrvint. Pfffldeol'a Coo· a1n avito adlcloNI por
The foflc>Wlng pel'&ONI ~-'¥""'RI ce . ~to OOhCI • cMOI LILLIAN TOMICH The pfOPONd proj9cl Ille nondllclimnation re-cial No11Cl8 (torm OE· lerenae Room, Mela Of• pal19 di la oor1e 'ii.~~ fr::4CA), ~st% S. s:;: :r ::w•:• :-:::: ~~~l~t!~~~: ::::~ °'tt1e ~,...:a:= ~r-=~ s~.!i:: ~':cs~"; t . ~~ 1=. IOlex:;lea oltC9~~c:
port S.ach, 2811 Villa =SI .. Anaheim. CA OUtPQM.u;(ll;t!l/'1002 Ssn Manno, CA 91108 bu1k1ng and al lnciden· end I<> pey prevailing estate assea or ol eny CaMtornla 926117 u_SMid ~ lllmar I 'f!~Y92&83Newport S.ach, Thia bull la ~\311 Tele. (626) 287·1248 tal wort! to gain acceaa wage rates II ttle loo$· pet11i0n or account •• (~ 824-8630 un llbogedo .....,. n9l8 con-CHS-DATE. JUN 15. 2001 to 1111 wort1 araa. ~ lion of the Work. provided ln Prot>ate A1'1tM>~E AT THt 1nmedlatament1 SI na
ducCed by:. OOfl>Oflltion NIWPOftf9CMJCOSTA ALAN SL.ATER, c~ Ing necuary protec• The ~fut Bidder Code sac:tion 1250. A PRE·llD CON· oonoc. a un atJoOad<>. Sober t.M.ng by the Have you 1tarted wy p!LQ1 by CYNTHIA McMUR-tlont, and reatoMQ wOltt will be ~to have Request tor S91ci11 No-FEftENCf.S ANO PRf. pued1 H•mar I un ~a 1~ay~c~e!:C:~ ~oino01=es• yet? Flctltloua 8\lelneu RAN, Deputy area• encl llntshoa to the lollow State at uce fonn II evadable BID JOB WALKS IS s.vicio "9 ~ dt •
Beach. CA 92003 es, Name S~t Pubtlthed' Newport pre-exl1lllllJ con<1tt1on1 Cahlornla tractota from 1"41 OOl#I c:teltl. MANDATORY fOR abogaOOa o 1 une
Thia bUlll'IMS •• oon-Otanoe County ,,,.,.. Bt1oh·Co•I• MIH to lht Ntlllacltion of ttle lleenM current II the Attonwr fOf .......,.. • ALL •fUMI! CON· Olleioa 0. •Y\ldl ~
duetad by: 1 oorporatiOn r,:'tlc Riding Center. Tiie fol~"°"' o..tj Pttot March 18, 20, ~2~,.llY rttP'4!,!,'!'.t time OI ~ of tilt SAIHICll'. a can Tf•ACTORI. THI! ivu el dlAICtorio 1ei.
H.ve you atart•d e.rnaci.rt\ All, arvC:::e11 Taen:al 27,~ 2002 ...,._ The li'Oltt ........ Bid. r:.-£OERICK •. Ml!DIHGI CLOSED onir.!.: NUMRR:
doing bu11ness yet? praaldent SeMoee. es WllloWOOd, CN W428 !'-~ "" two-~tr:~ ~:O~~w~ Cr.Mo ~~~~ ~~ ~ ., C.0)
Y11, Ot/01/2002 Thlt atallfMl'll Wat Allto Vlofo, CA 92656 SUPERIOR COURT ttolY ...., ~ (LlceoM CleNlbllon) TVI OR., 1HO ROOR,. AMNQ AFTfR T"'8 01WWAI Sober LMng by the filed with the County Cof-por1ta Teohnlcal OF CALl'OAHIA, end' foun<tltlont _. lf'lt 9 NEWPORT KACH; CA ,_ ft.&. NOT N .,_ name end ad-~ Inc. Ci.It of Ol'llnoe Coun4Y ServlcH (CA). 85 COUNTY OF · eltttftor of "9 bl!IOlnCI It (1.Joenee Coclt) t2d0 ...-..e TO PAln'IQ. c1!eU °' Ill oourt It (£1 ..
lcllaal E. Moore. on 03I08f20()1" Wlllowood. AttlO Viejo, ORANG! h nortl'I •• Connlct· THE REGENTS Of P11bllllfltd Newport l'AlW .. '"' ., "'°" ~r dlf9Cdall di la .. c~ atalemtnt WU o.tly Piiot 2= .. ~~R. c~:2:'..,,... la con-341 The Qty om... Ing the Ml# 10 .... .... THE UNIVERSl'TY Of Beach·COfll Meaa caa .. A ..... SUPcRt6R
liltd ~ d1e County Apr, 3, JO. 2002 ru35 IM:ted bv a corporation P.O. 9oic t4171, lnQ ''°"'*llora CALIFORNIA Diiiy PllOt Matell 2&, QOllTitACTO". ~~NlfOO~ ,
,....... J n.-,._....., H 0 atare·• or.nae. CA • '"""'*•IQ of 9*· MillCh 2002 ~ 3, 4, 2002 ........... _. not """""" "' "fiim-r ..,.,.,.", ave Y u ..., 112~·1671 ~ n:icfhrl*lg OOlll'lllOo Pllbtiahtd Newport lbW1Q ........... ~ 2. .. Of OAANOE. WEST
on 03/lt 2002ee113ot Acttdoue lu8'neea dOl!.lO ~ yet? No l.MnolWU• Mb tlQil Beach·Caala Meta ... .......OAT. JUSTICE CENTO. ...
naflu ....... u~. 1• 20 ...... 8tlltiefMnt corporal• Technlc•I Center • CoNINe!lllQ 12 "" Delly Piiot fitl.rch n. PUBLIC H01'1Ce Mil. 11, .... 914t 1Jll ar.. ...... I ..,_, .-...... ....,. "' :-:1 Servlct1 PETITION OP _,...,0.0. It _.,, A11ft 3. 2002 REVISED CITYMOE M o.ii1r1 I ~ ,.,.,...,~ CA IM83 ..,Z,Z ..... ,...,AIK..._, 3,.. . ...,20Q2..._._..W..,.432.,. The followlf1g pet'10l1t Wlllatn Braderl. P,.._ .......... ,. _ _._..-...and ~l"t ..._twHn t"• W439 fflAF~ IMPACT 11111 ......_ ,,.._ ,.,,_ ~ ....... • .,.. =ii~ U dent ~...;; ;-Batlllf ~ lloGr ---f"E.E PR00AAM Of Cllleo1'Na -~ ~ ,...._ FlctltloU• 8u8lneM Klnca Oonall'UC'llon Thlt .Wtmenl WU of Joie ..,.,. • ~ rod ... eon.ucano ~ ....... The Col1a .... °"' 3900 .......... Place, d I ......,., "' .,:
...... ........,,. Compiny, 4SOO lthld wlttl lf'lt County FOR CHANOE OF tour MW rod MMl ..... ,. •a-hOil • ,.._, IMle CA .. _,~ .._ M •· ..
The ~ C8l'ltJQ Dr .. 1512, New-Clel1c ol Cringe ~ NAME ........... ~ The liallowlt'tl ,._. =tOt Ill ~ ........ iill .. 9: 11!1 ....... II
.,. fr.IQ Moonl:ht poll~,~ ':::Id on 02/2&'02IOOtMtHll OM>P~ =-~"'-= ~ ~_.: .. F• Tl'lffleon= ~~ ::'•-'.:::
8011llqu1, 3 Cape C~. Inc. ~t ~ Piiot M#. '\ 20, CNJll CW .... ~ 119 10Gf......,.... Uot CoroN 1 \.an• dilf. ~ llOGI. • ~ I U idU4. I M ...
Danbury, Nawport 4500 ~~· C U1 Aq. ?. 2002 ~UQ c.-.....,.1 _.. end ti. 'h ....,_ CW Miia; CA -· t:Z 11 m., In Illa Cie.il .. " 119 AL Iii .. M llM ea.ti.~....._.._ N9WPOll, --·· A ---.n>-A11Mlt -.......... "9 ---... C -CNmMtrl d tty Mii. .... d .,, .. ._..,.a . I.JM --......... 92e90;, ni•-_., -dlMlllMls it 1'111 IG:itaOOIN y;; 71 Jiii ~. °""'° r; .. l ..... &Mr ICJllW OF "9W. 3 0.0. ~. Thia buai1M1a II aon-~ ~, :411 p~~!"l'IUfm '°°"'°" ---... CA -' Wk; CA. • 21 11111 L. ... ~ ~ '-<lfeaoh, CA AM:iltd by. I COfpOflllon .;_,,. hi .....::':" s PttMoftlf: JoM e CCII--· _. 'D;i'H ...._ m10 Thi TiSllr ...... ,_ .. ... .... C 'FS
Nteo H.ve 1°" acattec:t ...:::::. J l<lliceld Atuncloll Sota llnd ... ._.. ... lli9li Ooll"I Vefe•. ,,._ ~~ .... .... ... ~'1. .... I TNI bullllMI .. cot1--:Z.......,. ~ ConMNctlOn COl'-'V, ..._ H1W Cl' Wiii .._. =.: .. ,.......... CA... ....... ... -_ ·.....: -=:.;::~ Co.::..IDI•:,"\~. ~~.~ =.t:-.=.:._~ =!ii: I a :r=-=----= :;:::--:,-:; rr..rJ ~ M VMllM'*A ~ lit30'' -CCM1 tor I ~ !.!.P!!, eUAL&-.. r• --
-:. ......_ , .. lMa ••IMAI,_ TNI 11111,..,.e w ~ J tc~ ~~-= ..... ~ 4!'•..c..--=·· ........ .... .. -... ii3i::.:--.. -CG•-1::---..... -, ' -__ .. _ Cllli~IC..-.. ., :"'C.:J::r ~ =~-cA ~ M CCU.T ._.. ..:1'41
.... ::.411--la= • l'lr "' 11a1111m ONJIM' '* .. .-. --• , ,• ~ ee:-:';1 r-.'i.;,'\:I ~"':.le'\:t .:a;:;-..;,:=:.-:::-;,; a;-,;,.,, !DI! tt:-ne,.. ..
..
t
POiley
ttatr~ 111111 d1•111mof'll 111'(' t1ubjf'('I 10 ~
rhungt' without 1101it'f. ·nu· publii.hf'r
rt•1wn t'K the right to t•••11140r, rodo11:1ify,
Monday ............... Friday S:OOpm
Tuesday ............. Monday 5:00pm
l'C'\ W' or l'l'jt•t•I 1111)' t•lt1Sllifi('fl
uilHrti111·n11·11t. Plc•Ubf' n•1><>rt nny t'm>r
111111 111U)' 114· in your d111111ific-tJ uJ
i111111t'cliutrly. ·n, .. Ouil~ Piloc Act"~f>U
By Fax
(<>49) 6:J 1-65<>4
ByPhone By MaDlln Person:
Wednesday ........ Tuesday 5:00pm
Thursday ...... Wednesday S:OOpm
1111 lmltilit~ for 1111~ 1•m>r in UJl
u1lv.-rti!Wm1•11f for whirh it IU8\ llC'
(949) 642-5678 .:J30 We~t Ba,Y. Stre~t
Costa 1esa. CA Q2627
Ar 'f'•'J>O" Blvd. ti. Ba)· Sr
(PltaM inducfto rnur uamt and pbonr munfw.r
and ..-·u rall ~:ou hnr\. •ith • fll'll'I' 11000~.) Friday ..... ., ...... Thursday S:OOpm
n· .. 1x111~ihlc• ''"'"Pl for tl1r 1·o~t0of..dw·
~pun· m·11111ll} ()('1'11pircl b) tht' emir.
Cn-cl11 ru11 0111~ lw nll11\\ rel for tlw
finn in'>('rt ic111.
.HOurs Saturday .............. Friday 3:00pm
Telephone 8:30am-5:00pm
Monday-Friday
Walk-In 8:30am-5:00pm
Monday-Friday
Sunday ................ Friday S:OOpm
II Index
~-
l' ' q I ••• _, ..
~
. ~ . , , II ,, ..
1ttoe~
QHERAL
IOI • 216
!J
180' Wai.er Froocage
Cuslom walelllont home w/
pvt dock lower level
SI 200.000
Walerlron! 3b< 3ba pnvBle
courtyard deck. dock
Membership $529,000
-
... .. 420
ao-46a
. . , r
. . '
. ·-... -470. 478
NP H91ghts 38f 2.Slle,
townhonle, Fp. new carpet,
W/O hk-upe, rg yd. 2car gar,
EASTSIDE HOME 48f 281 $1975/mo !M0-612~
La fronllbeok yard, fplc, __ 181 ... ....,. -~ a.fatm. waler & ~ ..... v_ ... 'Jf '""'''"
p!ld l200Qr!! 714-~ =. "= ~~~
BEACH OUPlEX
LOWEST PRICE
NEW LISTING
AGT Mt-723-8120
2Br 1Ba S120Cllrno. 38' 1 Bl on Huge Lot . eec. lMlt MN7~
S1&50lmo. lgt. Sydney I I
r~~ ,. ...... ·~
. 1
~ . .,
OCEANFRONT
FIXER
Not For The Flint
of tte.t eat Mt-72W120
-
--
Jult Remodeled.
Clll Und91Y 94~2
14MOG-1320 . 111 t .....
E S6de 38t 2.5le OOlldo, .-r"cllJ
2c llf, WIO hlc-..12400t '-------' mo yr ..... no plWamka t4f.11M722 38f Jll $p9dotJI Twntime, Fp. new gllld comm. Frplc.
wld ~ $2e00fmo. ·~
I
" a
.. __.· 480 .....
••o. ••7
Run your ad in the
Newport Beach-
Costa Mesa Daily
..._ .. .., ... adntl rDI•
Reach 00,000 Homes Each Weft
For Only $32 per w~ (4 wk, min.)
Call LonalM .. 642-1678 d4
Name
I Address
I City
CLASSIFIED
(949) 542-5678
Pool T1blt carved
Mahogany legs. inlayed Molhir d PNrl lllS8ls,
Betgun balls. cue Slick Ml,
Wil deliver 949-433-1815
WANTED
Biby Crib end cNnalna tlbll Mt-5tS-oa37
FIND
an apartment
through classified
SAVE S1000 OR MOA£ OH
YOUR HOME THEATER SYSTEM! FREI lnfonna·
lion: 800-89N871 x 321
COAST COIN NIEtDS
OlD COIHSI Gold. sliver, )tWt4!y. Wllehtl, lllllqUet,
colllcbblts 949-642·944 7
TOP S$11RECORDSI
Juz. R & 8, Soul. Rock,
etc. 50'1 & 90'•
MIKE ~7506
---------, D YES, SEU. MY CAR
Pilot and the 1 ~
Hunting Beach-t
Fountain Valley 1 IPhone Qd~ 0 MC 0 VISA 0 ~x
Independent to 1 reach over 100,000 1 C'n!ditCard NLITiw fm Data
homes. Fax us this
form with your credit 1
card# or mail with t
a check today! 6 ..
Run for a week! If
Aease Checlc Perti*1t Sam
Y• Mak: Moda----
oe~ o .._.1a..a o ...,,Aoor iw.... 0 Y-t 0 .._........... 0 llnWd 01M1 rt-__ .....__
O~o n.. D ~Dwi....c;io....
0 48PMd 0 ~11111 Ct..n11u"-O 6 lpMcl 0 ~Ma.... 0 WNW....
0 Ht CoridllloMr 0 OnAle Conlrol c,.,,..... . 111 for. CIM!tw~•-C c:....i. C~~ llnee, 11.ctl
0 '"' llloww' 0 ~ Rl)Of 0 ~ ... Window eddltk>NI llne ,,
...... ~ Piiot 330 w. B4rV St. Collta MIM. ~ ~ ........ 19'111142-5171 ...... (94et 131-te4M --------... --your car does not
sell, we'll run it for L
another week rWWWI
All for just $16". ~ lhll1U1 1 AIHll
INDEPENDENT
I
•
...... _ .. .......... ...., .., ..... ,.. ........ ..... '" ...... ............ .....
IS ATIT PAYPHOtlES lllEDICA&. FRONT omcE ROUTES SS PffllE
NIWPORT IEACtt Hc*Uc LOCAL SITES HUGE SS
plill Niii p!1IClice Usillg F,.. Info ~3470 =-~~ r----------altltude. Typing al!Qla 1482 CAEllT I 11mir LY !!!!A ~33HS35 SERYtCES
NI ANtlunnt lllnng ______ ..,_
f'*1dy s.v.. a Bllllndll
wlup. tor fine lt1ll1111 Cl!!ln! ~2333 !!l!A
PVT llY llllOHEY where
'Pll lllOl#I ii Ind fl giYI
you 7 hat Im.met money mllUng im.s pU $100 al
FtM ~ jl.111 lot Yll-
itlng
hllpJ/lweallhMcrets com/pd
u!!v ICA&. 'SCAN)
~·~~-·. ~-.-.......
IMMEDIATE CAStilll Rt~red Military flNllC)lf
Selw:es Pf 'fS cash ,_ lor
your Mutt m!IQry pe1111011
payments Call
80().586-1325 lor a FREE,
no·obllgat1on 1111m11e
www mtlpensoo n com (CAL'SCAH)
Low fnltrHt Debt
Conlolldatlon & PeoonaJ
Loans lhru lie/bonded
lenders No lee Oud
rHJlls 1.-.21M1t1.
Iii M
ARTISTIC
')'n.E 4-"'D STONE .................... es..•r.-.·s.-
~,'° ,,., -...,, ....
(9f9) 413-TILE I I J
. -.
I
I l"\
BMW 5251 '15 11711 mi, llAo,
dlll\ mllllic '*"· tin ltv. Pltlllilln SOl#ld co balit-
bful ono ainc1. fo,995
m9441 8kt ~1-
BMW MCI! T1
Alie 6 si-d-V81' SM!
w/Perfect BllCll IM1her!I
$31,480. (117486) ::r: .. ~
BMW 740ll ·ts 67\ IT'ii
alpq llt"'1llan lttll. co' books rtaltdl, garaged,
non smllr. s21 ~es
von•HOHOS Broker
9'9· 586-1888
Chevy Z7t 't7 41,' ..
l8llded Slepllde, COIM!fll()ll
package 30 miles,
$16,000 949-706-1323
Qwytllr Concont lXJ' 17
3511 IC2lial ~ ~!WI
llhr. moorwool tut, lolOld
l!o'l9Qld. non smlr belu-W ongnel cond $7995 8kt
949-S86-1888
COMPUTER
HELP! .......... ,...... .. ,.. ........ "l:•---vOll*'i
·~'" l ... ,~
.... S.lWI VI 'tt Carnal rtd/ealhmtre
Wlfr<U07311 19,380 ml
$38,995
=--~
..... S Type VI '01 ~20.139ml WltiGll2<496 . $38,995 =t.r:
J..-VIII din PW 'W
AntMlct!elcashmert
32.657mt • m 1XC87S315 5'2.995 =~:r:
Jagum' XJfl •• liOk ml,
WF3T •OJIUS .J /lfl 0 7
•JH6
One would think INt the fint item
m lbe egeodl for mny declarer wuuld
be to count "''"'.!l"I tncb bd" ore ~ • lint of play How many a:icb ~ need to esubliYI usually
determines your hne of play
The auctlOn ~ routmc. Sooth
lhowed a belanccd hand of 18-19 lind
Land Ao.. '*-*Y
SE7 .,. '!lit "" ~
llllt rear JUll1ll a.ts cWl moonrool. ,.., Ill, beel.Cllli
ono cood, CID $15 995
v•275756 Bkr
9<49·S86·, 888
Brlliah 11c1ng grHn. .... 'ti VIII den PIM
oatmeal lltu, co. SUpllb ~ •• 1 ... -. ong ccnd. $20,995 v78t91' "" ""''" 8kt MNll-tea $35 995
--lCJS '9' 6cyl, oorN' 6(j ~. teal blue. Ollmelf llhr blk top CO. chrome
wheels beaut cond.
S15 995 YW1'457291 Bllr
949·586-1888
: .. .i;r:
Oldlmoblit Auror9 't5 66k
mo champaonei1111 lthr, moonrool. 12 OoSll CID
labulious ong c:ond YV1
779241 S8. 995 Bkr
949-586-1888
Stturn SL2 '95 4dr Sedlll 5111 mi, books. recoros,
5spd. dl1I gree!Vgiey int.
1><emoom sound garaged non sm'1 t>eawlvt ~ono
oond. $U95 8ilr v729965 I
9'9-586-1888
Jlgls XJI '01 W~{M)(y 17.3311111 lllAZDA lllATA 'tt H11ur1 Sedlrt 4dr 'M TOYOTA CAMAAY 'tt
W\11Lf2'292 $l5 9915 A:o. ~I ft.top, 9'ffl $Mr, llWIS bee~ tll'f Only <40ll /Tltle$. IOcllly
,..... ~ --. $4000 on gas 212' 1n1 S 1000 ltlYMI. ""'Y cllln. blll ~d41 pp .. 291~ 14t-7IO-Ot$5 ollel' ~51s-ao99
\\W...doy, Aprl 3, 2002
TODAY'S . """""'--.-~~
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
I, • ~ 11 •~I _I • __ wa8_A_NTE_o_I
VolU'ngln Goll ·91
Vtry delll blldt. snrl >sp
llnl car' ono1111t owner
Pnced lor qucli .....
$5:400/obo 9'9-050-3305
VC/No S7'0 '99 37111 mt lul
bOok.s r9COOls tact wan.
champagn&OllmNJ lllll ' ~ sound hkt ,_
$17 995 vinll69751• Blu
9'9-586· I 888
VOLVO S70 '99 551< rru
Stlverlblacll l1tlr co beau-
11tul ong cond $15995
"462751 Bill 9'9-586-1888
vw Cllbfto ..,
~ SNney Bledl ....
ea.ca~ $13,tlO. tt7U4
P1111ipe A'*>
94•574-7777
SELL
your home
through dassified
CASH TOOA Y FOR CARS
TRUCU I SUV"S. Al
mai.as lllOOlls I/Id YNIS
wanted 94M73-41M.
····11-=rr.:11-------..... ~1
1-... ~,~
-• Rmieriial. Cammall
S... • Sentce • lnltll o Job Too Small ~C::,"':1-:; Dave llamllton
n+!7H211 FM &l 949-322-8292
.
~ ... ""*"' c.. M111•111a, LIWll Aerlll-"'9. Sprndlf TLrlt-Upll ~°"'Wr~ f!r!y!ro!!elPc!t!.com
LAWN SlRYICl ~.
dlln 141. ~ .... trim.
81gii'a11St ... ........ COIM!ldll nwtMOlt
f 111) Cl1AIMIP ,,_
palmalhedgH T1frn,
lltl'ICWll, I04ot.illtr ""' ..... '71:!@·1130
. ......,
. "' I ......
JUNI( TO TltE DUWlll 11 ........ 1112
AVAILABLE TOOAYI
MM1MSM
I REALFSTATE I
..d.~on ~Young
New
Ust~s AWJilablt!
714-432-7873 WWWM)Oll!aArv~
MOVIN-MAN
C.-.fut • Courteous &Ct*IP
Pianos ·~
frM Wwdlotlw
Free Esb'nldae
949-376-7825
-:.c [PC~'"-'rr-, ·.· . \ ) \ ::_.. . ~ ·~ ~ ~
READY WHEN
YOUAREJ
LowAat9s.
Since 1981
9491845-4546
PUBLIC
NOTICE
The Caflf Niie·
UllllllH Com-
mission REQUIRES
hit .. Ulld ~
hold goods "'°'*" print their P U. C.
Cal T IU'IW; lmol
and chaufftrs print
MrT.C.P ~ ilal ....... 1111 " ~ ..... • "'*'" ..-i-. .. ..
lly of • mo., "'°
"' ctlU*. cal: PUBllC UTILITIES COMMISION
714·5SM151
'l!Jo,t """" ~. ~Professional
Painting
lit .. 94350
lntair/Ededm
DultheNldle
Cdor lbhtfnt
Rob Isbell · Owner
Costa Mesa. Ca
(949) &4&-3006
Cell 949-887·1480
1"'~Jftborftoelidl Pbrtbttl ~·--..-:; ~SPICIMJSf
TWHDY PWMmNG
949~2352 -..
All DRAWS IMlOGCID ............ ·-··-.... --·-"'-. .._
(714)•11C7
1i111111c.n..-. ..... lnllEx1 CllltOlll Parnllng.
ITYrs up .............. -------
fl9t tSl •• --
~
H
~ Ou!OOli & furtSter
CrOO~ Throug~ SuOOru Mltors om fur Del3J~. Expires 4oom
.. -
fhe Fumpean AWD w
heS aCk
LL~ H-6
_ can do it al·tor at
fl&mt $8[1000 -~
MODR#2BY
4 At lhb Price 1636935,
#632982,1634124
#63328&
#
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I •
.. _
-······
.. .
WASH .
No pwd\ose necessary. Umifed to SuboN Vehldes Only
~ ' .... Expires 5/31102
New 2002 WRX.227 HP Turbo
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