HomeMy WebLinkAbout2002-04-08 - Orange Coast Pilot.. . .. , . --After a foggy
anddoudy
morning, the
sun wiN shine bright~
from the heavens this·
afternoon ..
S..Page2
SERVING THE NEWPORT -MESA COMMUNmES SINCE 1907 ON DIE WEB: WWW.DAILYPILOT.COM lltOM)AY, APRIL 8, 2002
Always re·ady for a city cl9se-up ........ 2112
• It's no accident that Newport Beach is host to an annual
film fest. Its ties to Hollywood and entertainment are deep.
Young Chang
DAILY PILOT
NEWPORT BEACH -Film com-
poser Brian Tyler used to jam here in
garages with the doors scrolled open
and passersby stopping to hang out.
· The skies were sunny, everything
was breezy, the air smelled slightly of
salt.
The mood and overall beauty of
the city helped nurture an era of
bands and rock and roll, said the
Newport Beach native and composer
for "Frailty,• a Bill Paxton film open-
ing Friday.
The same scenic blessings attract-
ed Hollywood heavyweights to New-
port's harbor in the '50s and '60s,
making the city somewhat of a water-
ing hole for entertainers.
Seasid e attractions beckoned
movies to get filmed here and stars to
even stay here.
The city also produced its own
headliners. Newport-Mesa schools
boast an alumni list including Tyler,
screenwriter David McKenna, Sugar
Ray frontman Mark McGrath and
"Charlie's Angels" director McG -
whose Corona del Mar High School
teachers would know him as Joseph
. A McGinty.
•
It's no wonder
the Newport
Beach Film Fes-
tival spends a
~ week every year
celebrating films
-the art, the glitz and the city's con-
nection to Hollywood, which runs
deep.
"I grew up here, I live h ere now
and it is the greatest place in the
world to live except for the restau-
rants,• said McKenna, whose movies
include •American History· X, •
"Blow• and "Body Shots.• "If I could
take L.A.'s restaurants or New York's
restaurants and put them he re, I'd be
in heaven.·
Tyler, who has scored for such
PHOTOS 8Y DON LEACH I DAILY PU.OT
Judith Stuckey takes a deep breath as she blows out the candles on her 100tb birthday cake. Stuckey celebrated
with family and friends at Avalon at Newport West assisted-living fadll_ty 1n Newport Beach on Sunday.
A great cen
Judith Stuckey has 100 reasons to
celebrate her birthday party with f~
and friends Sunday in Newport Beach
Bryce Alderton
DAILY PILOT
F rom an Arizona mining town to tbe California
coast, a hundred years of energy and exuberance
< eotltiQue to ~Jlldith S~ckey's '(elns.-\ J ~
Friends and family helped Stuckey, or "Gi-Gi,"
celebrate her 100th birthday Sunday at Avalon at Newport
West, the assisted--living community Stuckey moved into in
.August after spending 22 years in Leisure World.
· Nearly all of the 20 or so guests had nothing but admi-
ration and awe when they looked at the smiling Stuckey,
wearing a white pearl necklace and dressed in a red
SEE CENTURY PAGE 9
Stuckey'• tOOtb birthday card rests next to a picture
of her with her mother, Embaa Lemosiem.
41
movies as "Panic,• "Plan B, • "Vam-
pires: Los Muertos, • "The Fast and
the Furious,• "Six-String Samurai"
and television series "The Education
of Max Bick.ford• considers Newport
Beach an antidote for the more hectic
pace of Los Angeles, his current
home.
Tony-Award winning producer
Don Gregory cited the same reason
for living here.
"It's a beach community and
there's water," he said. "People find
that very relaxing especially in the
entertainment field where tensions
and stress run high."
SEE CLOSE-UP PAGE 4
For a complete festival
schedule and highlights, see
Page 5. ·
Paint-ball victim
dies at hospital
,
•Newport Beach resident is taken off life
support one day after being declared brain
dead and two weeks after initial incident.
Bryce Alderton
D AILY PILOT
NEWPORT BEACH
After two weeks in a coma, a
54-year-old in-line skater
who fell and cracked his skull
after being pelted with paint-
ball pellets died Sunday, hos-
pital officials said.
Gary Holdren was taken
off life support on Sunday, but
was pronounced brain dead
at 2:45 p.m. Saturday, said
Kathi Gonzales, nursing
supervisor at Mission Hospi·
tal Regional Medical Center
in Mission Viejo. At the
request of Holdren's family,
his body remained hooked to
a ventilator until his organs
could be harvested, she said.
Holdren's body will now
be given to the Orange Coun-
ty Coroner's office for an
autopsy.
•On March 24, the Newport
Beach resident was skating
along Back Bay Drive, a path
friends and family said he ran
or skated along regularly,
when a barrage of paint-ball
pellets caused him to fall
backward and hit his head.
Newport Beach police said
Holdren was wearing wrist
guards but not a helmet when
he was reportedly strucl< with
the paint-balls.
Witnesses told police they
'
SEE VICTIM PAGE 4
Newport Coast
going to the dogs?
•A private dog park and community center will
be among the topics discussed at a meeting of
Coast residents tonight.
June <:asagrande
DAILY PILOT
NEWPORT COAST - A
private dog park and a $7-
million community center
have both come one step clos-
er to reality for residents of
this recently annexed atea.
Members of the Newport
Coast Advisory Committee
have picked the former Las
Coyotes landfill as their firSt
choice as a location for a pri-
vate dog park -even
though the idea is still in the
dream stage.
"There is a large segment
of the community that is very
interested in having a private
dog park and we are diligent-
ly looking for space that
would accommodate that."
said Dan Wampole, a mem-
ber of the Parks .and Open
Space Subcommittee looking
into dog park alternatives .
Residents lost the closest
thing they bad to a dog park
in January when an unofficial
SEE DOGS PAGE 4
PilOt Cup readying its third insti:lllment _ ....
P 11Ht, hey kids. Make sW'e you
don't make any plans between
May 29 and June 2.
Because over those five dayw,
Newport-Mesa school children
between third-and stxth-gr•de will
again be running and kicking and
bOundng aboUt several Costa Mesa
lields for the right to clabn the D4ily
Pilot Cup SOt'Cel' ~;
.. This will be the tblrd lnltallation of the Pilot Cup, a~ of the
~ LiODt Cup tounM1Y tbat ullld to t'Oindde with lhe Pllb Pry.
: POr ti,.-. ·the aoeU• '° siet
• team tram Mda diltlkt 8cbool and
hm elda---ICboal. polllbli. ne eva 11 • eo • illce tldl = ........... ...., ...
• • i.
..
.. . . . . """ f I t • I '
Dive ... SURFACE
FiShlng dasses leave BalbOi Pavfllon at 6 a.m. and retum at 4 p.m.
Mondays and Tuesdays .. $125. (949) 673·2810.
• STEVE MCCRANK/OAlV Pl.OT
Rick Othmer holds a picture of himself on the beach at San Onofre ln the 1950s when be was a lifeguard.
Othmer will discuss methods of lifeguarding from those clays on Thursdi\y at the American Legion.
June C.Ngr•nd•
DAJLV PILOT
A l lrwin and Rick Othrner
were around when abalone
and lobster were free for tbe
plucking from local ~aters. Othmer,
a lifeguard for t O years beginnirlg in
the early 1950s, has fond memories
of clam bakes with fellow lifeguards,
cooking fresh local seafood over fires
right on the beach.
A lot has changed since Newport
Beach's first lifeguards scanned the
shores in the 1920s. But, at the same
time, a lot has stayed the same.
Irwin and Othrner will compare
lifeguarding past and present at a
dinner event Thursday hosted by the
Newport Beach Historical Society
and Friends.
Irwin, who joined the lifeguards
in 1933 and became captain in 1941,
will explore the profession's earliest
years in Newport, starting with the
1920s when the lifeguards first com-
bined with the Fire Department.
Then Othmer will pick up the ball,
looking at lifeguarding from the
WHAT'S AFLOAT
• WHArS AR.OAT Is published perlodicAJ. ty. tf you .,. planning • nautJc.-1 ~ sub-
mit the lnfonNtlon to the O.lty Piiot. 330
W. by St, Cost.I Mesi, CA 9212'1; by fax to
(949) 646-4170; Of' by e-mall to #Hllypf-
loteMtlmes.com.
SAlllNI RUIS
Oruge Coaaty .. ployen can.
bring .theU' employees out to New-
port Bea<::b on weeltdays to enjoy a
day of saillDg cowt8ly of Orange
Coast College. The School 'of Sail·
tng Gd S-•mbip now Offers a ,
Daii,>Pliot
VO&;M.NO.• ,........,.._
~
~~
Newports first lifeguards
will offer a taste of what
it was like at a di.nner
ev~nt this week
1950s until present.
·1 was just making 90 cents an
hour -bard to believe,• Othmer
said.
There were times, he remembers,
when he would rescue eight or more
people from riptides a day. A gradu-
ate of Newport Harbor High who
had none other than lrwin as a
swimming coach, Othmer would
swim out with a metal flotation
device that looked like a torpedo
and then haul in the stranded swim-
mer.
Othmer first started lifeguarding
on Balboa Island. Then, with a little
more experience under his belt, he
moved to the ocean side at 15th
Street. His final years as a lifeguard
were spent cruising the beach at
Corona del Mar in a Jeep-an
chance for groups to work with the
onboard instructor on different sail-
ing techniques while they· get
advice on how to perform well lD
business. No saili.l)g experience
n~. One.oday classes range
frOm $100 to $125. (949) 6'5-9412.
CIUISIS
Tbe~ Lmicll:n9 Belle .. ~
able for weddings and recepti~
cocktail aild sigbtJeeing cruiMi,
and meeUOOS at $250 per hour lmlD-
imum two houn) aild $150 for Mc:b
additi<>Ul bOuf. (9'9) 361·3640.
FYI
• WHAT: Dinner and presentation
on the history of the Newport
Beach Lifeguards, presented by
the Newport Beach Historical ~ety and Friends
• wtEN: Thursday. Wine, soft
drinks and mingling begin at 6
p.m. Dinner begins at 6:45. Talk is
at 7:30.
• WHERE: American legion Post
291, 215 15th St., Balboa Peninsula
•COST: $15
• PHONE: For reservations and
information, call Bill Grundy at
(949) 675-6161 . ...
innovation just introduced in 1947.
But more than the rescues, more
than the warm days enjoying the
beautiful beaches, Othmer remem-
bers the camaraderie. ·
"There were just 20 of us in those
days. There's about 180 now. So we
would have beach parties. We all
loved our jobs.•
PUil 1.Gllie .. Co. rw • .f.5.. I 0
cruise (adults, S6i ~ .....
90-inlnute enme (adults, • ddl·
dren, St), ~ trom Balboa
Pun Zone ~ 30 minutes from 11
a.m. to 1 p.m. ~· A 60-minute
iboWboea ~ aulle (adul11, $6;
cbDdrm. ll) ....,_ tblt Pun Zone at
? p.m. ~· Privatil cbarten ant av••JelM~~.
Cndle .. ~---tlM l!leo-.......... ~-CNUil~ ~-CJll "4•8Vlllltile ~., •• ,.. .... {9'9) 723-
... J. .......
MDw.nor ~57~
READERS HOIUN£
(949)642~
"ec«d your comments ~ •u..
Dally flllot Of MWS tips.
tight No news sto1-. llk.stntlorw,
editon.t INtt.r "'~
hnin can be ~w!Oalt
wtltten J*lldtllon of~ owner.
}CIN~com
~~
"""'°~ (M)764-0SI
~time.com
Ngjl IM °"""' .....
ADDRESS HOW IO ltEAOt US
~ ....,
~...,_, . ...... ow..
otme Md cowts ,..,_,Ml S?~
OUr .ctdrm Is llO W. hy St,, Costa
MeM, CA 92627. Office hours are
MoncMly-FO~ UCh.m. • S p.m, The l1mes Of1nge County
(800) 2S2-9141
..... ..=--.
........ DINtW
...blletuct M:ltw.COM ._, ,.,
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e · •n
COBBECJJONS
It • the "'OQ potky to promptly
corred •• ln'otl of~.
,..... <Ml (M9) 57.-..Ull.
m 'ltle ~ IMcWColta ,..... Diiiy "'°' (USllS.t.......,, II~-In~ IMd'l~C-. ......
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t111Gt2'2.f141,ln .... ~of """'°"..,_end CMI-., ...
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119'Cllle..._ CA-._.,
AdJ••• o.lfted (949) 642-5671
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Daily Pilot
Oh, Canada, how
great your borders are
A hoy.
Good news from our
northern border
neighbor Canada Is that their
CANPASS program for
recreational boaters, shut
down since after Sept. 11,
will be reinstated for the
Dc>ating season.
The CANPASS is a boater-
frlendly system for checking
mto customs after crossing into
Qmadian waters from our
Pacific Northwest I have used
this system many times and I
have only praise for the practi-
c.al approach to helping boaters
check in any time of the day.
Not so true every time I
. deal with the U.S.-Mexican
border crossing ill either
direction. I cringe at that time-
consuming and boater-
unfrlendly check-in system.
However, th05e of you prepar-
ing to head north and whQ are
citizens of either Canada or
the U.S. will find traveling
into Canada from the United
States is just a telephone call
to the Canada CUstoms if you
have a pre-.approved permit
I highly ~mmend get-
ting a permit before you cross
into Canada and you will find
the customs process very easy
even if your vessel is selected
for a boarding inspection.. If
you do not have a permit, you
must first dock at a govern-
ment float that bas a customs
station or dock at an approved
telephone reporting site.
A little tip l use is to call in
after 5 p.m. as most customs
dock offices are closed and
you are more likely to just be
given your customs numbers
over the phone.
When you call customs, be
sure to have the your voyage
itinerary ready, the name,
birthday and nationality of
everyone onboard, vessel
documentation numbers and
anything to declare.
Ob, you might want to
remember to fuel and stock
up your provisions in Wash-
ington as once you cross the
border, the prices are much
higher at the marinas.
One of these days I will
write about one of my scenic
bips into these cruising areas
that l consider the best boating
in the West It's just too bad
the winter gets a little cold -
where did I put that ice pick?
• • •
Back in the United States,
the Bush Administration has
ta.ken dredging for sballow-
draft harbors out of the 2003
fiscal builget.
The dredging priorities are
continually shifted to the
deep-draft harbors that are
used primarily for commercial
shipping. Their reasoning is
based on the economic value
and adtvity that these larger
ports generate to the economy.
I understand lb.at. for exam-
ple, Long Beach Harbor is one
ol tbe busiest commerdal ports
In the worui and billiom of dol·
la.r1 of goods pass through the
• docks, but it is all relative to
the community. Look at the
economlc impact derived from
Mike Whttehead
THE HARBOR COLUMN
Newport Harbor to the area,
which can be affected by the
recent budget cuts.
Dredging is important to the
commercial and recreational
use of the bay, which is directly
related to the SUJVival of the
harbor, sunounding businesses
and all the property values.
Other harbors throughout the
nation are feeling the effects of
their d>annels filling in and
many barbQr communities are
seriously wonied about the
budget cu1S. Some ol these
cominunitief are trying to per-
suade the federal government
to fund dredging for shallow-
draft harbors because the
small baJbors will dramatically
feel a deaease m accessibility.
This will affect the prices of
reskiential properties, as well,
if the bay is not dredged for
safe boating.
Property comparisons have
shown that prices are typical-
ly higher for a home backing
up to a waterway that is
accessible for boating.
Dredging Is a multifaceted,
cost-sharing issue in Newport
extending from the federal
government maintaining the
main channels to state, coun-
ty and city officials maintain-
ing certain channels to prop-
erty owners maintaining theu
docks and bay beaches.
Newport is actively trymg
to secure funding for lower
bay dredging and now you
need to contact your represen-
tative to put pressure on Bush
to allocate dredging dollars.
• • •
Tip of the week: Those of
you heading up to Long
Beach with your boat to
watch the Long Beach Toyota
Grand Prix Race should be
prepared for additional secu-
rity measures in the harbor.
The city of Long Beach will
close ott the east entrance to
the downtown marina from
Thursday to Sunday during
the race. When attempting to
enter the marina, use the
main entrance adjacent to the
Los Angeles River and refer
to your chart number, 18751.
Also, when underway,
expect an in~ of patrol
vessels in the areas by the
race course and I highly rec-
ommend that you follow any
directions given by security
personnel,.
Safe voy~ges.
• l.-cl ...,... is the Pilot's
boetlng and hatbor colUfTll'llst. Send
him your harbor end merl,.,.llted
thouahts and stOfY SUQQtStJons via e-mall to MllceObthi>usttTY.com
or bthcxM7Y.com.
SURF AND SUN .
. . .
Daily Pilot
' I ' I .~ . . ~.April 8, 2002 3
Kelp; reforesting ~o¢d get boost COSll MESA
PLANNING COMMISSION PREVIEW
• California Coastal ·
Commission may give
local group the OK to
plant and tend the
waters of Crystal Cove.
Paiul Clinton
DAILY PILOT
CRYSTAL COVE -Staff
members of the California
Coastal Couunission are urg-
ing their board to allow a local
environmental group lo plant
kelp seedlings on the ocean
Door off the state park in an
effort lo regrow an underwa-
ter forest that has been disap-
pearing since the 1960s.
The commission will con-
sider whether to grant Orange
County CoastKeeper the per-
mit at its monthly meeting on
Tuesday. If approved. the
group would be given five
years to regrow the kelp forest.
For the past two years. the
group has been dropping
seedlings of Calif omia giant
kelp into the ocean in an
effort lo reforest the once-lush
ocean jungles of the plant.
FU PHOTO I OAJl.Y PILOT
Gordan Lehman displays live kelp found near Corona
There is almost no kelp off
Newport Beach today.
del Mar beach. Similar kelp may soon be planted off
Crystal Cove U approved on Tuesday.
The forests have died off in
recent decades for several
reasons. Pollution and sedi-
ment, warmer water temper-
atures during El Niflo years
and the declining population
of sea otters, who feed on the
animals that in tum feed on
kelp, have all played a role.
BRIEFlY IN THE NE"S
Police give Josh
Slocwns citation
Pollce on Saturday night
issued an overcrowding cita-
tion to a Newport Bea ch
restaurant that former NBA
star Dennis Rodman co-owns
after the maximum capacity
doubled, said Newport Beach
Police Sgt. Mike McDermott.
Officers went to Josh
With the permit in nand, the
group would embark on a full.
scale reforestation effort, group
leader Randy Seton said.
Their plan is to cultivate the
kelp seedlings on tiny ceramic
tiles. Between one and eight
juvenile plants are grown on
each of the tiles, which are
Slocums after receiving an
11:30 p.m. call, he said. There,
they counted 266 patrons,
double the 133-person capac-
ity, McDermott said.
The restaurant's security
and bar staff helped empty
the restaurant wit.Pout resis-
tance. Officers then allowed
people back in one at a time
until it reached 133, he said.
"The security staff was very
cooperative; they shuffled
people in and out,· he said.
Rodman, wbo was at the
placed in plastic carts. The
seedlings are attached to the
tiles using latex rubber bands.
Once the plants grow into
their adult phase, they are
transplanted to the rocks off
the cove. The commission's
five-year permit would give
Orange County CoastKee~r
restaurant, comp1ained that
the cilallon was not fair but
wdn't interfere with officers,
McDermott said.
The manager will now
have to go to court and pay a
fine, de termined by the
judge, said Newport Beach
Police Sgt. Trent Harris.
The eatery's manager
working Saturday could not
be reached for comment.
ln January, Rodman was
arrested al the restaurant for
obstructing an investigation
We neecl
your ·help
ancl we neecl it NOW!
Imagine ... a new state-of-the-art library
to replace our aging Mariners Branch.
It wlll It• f••tl•tl withs
• $2 million in state ~rant funds from Proposition 14 12/3 of the total cost) ...
• $ 1 million that must come 1rom community donations lty I••• 2002.
Hl9llD1 ... et tlie 14,000 .............. faclllty wlll l11Cl•tl•1
• expanded print, electronic & audiovisual
collections for children, teens & adults
• 30 additional computers
• enhanced after-school program
• new teen center & added youth programs
• children's reference desk
• additional staff & extended operating hours
• community meeting room 60% larger than
the exlatlng Vincent Jorgensen Cen er
• o new "safer• parking area ..
1.1 .. •..,._.,.I.Ml..-, l•M ,_ ... _ Mar*..,._,, .._._,.a.
1'*-0-.. C..0-°"" ~ c.OMilr .. ,,., .. "
Cll)'el......,.,. ...
... ..,...._... UNIW W.... ~ .......,. .... '-4,,,...,.,,.... ........ ~
.............. ~u-.,,_..
Te •••• ••• tlr••• • reallty, 1••• .. •• ••• ... •••
el ti•• ••ti ••••Y •r• •••tletl •OWi
Pleat• mail your lax·deC:tuctible donation mode out to: ............... ., .....
Newport Beoch Public Ubrory, P.O. Box 3065, Neytport leach, CA 92659
Oonatlona of$ 1,000 and obow w111 be acknowledged Oft a donor woH.
tf the grant la not awarded, all checks will be retur'?_ecl io doaort.
'
I
a rare opportunity in Orange
County, Seton said.
•we (would be) allowed to
do transplants of adult plants
and juveniles,· Seton said.
•we'll be the only people
allowed to grow kelp.•
Another Newport Beach
environmentallst hasn't been
as successful in securing the
statewide panel's en<J,orse-
ment to grow kelp. Marine
Forests Society founder
Rodolphe Streichenberger was
denied a permit to grow kelp
on a man-made tire reef about
300 yards off the Balboa Pier.
After the commission ordered
Streicbenberger to remove the
reef, he challenged the deci-
sion and the commission's con-
stitutionality. A final court rul-
ing has yet to decide the issue.
If they secure the permit,
CoastKeeper will push
ahead, Seton said. Several
hundred tiles will be placed
in the cove as early as May,
Seton said.
On Sept. 28, the National
Oceanic & Atmospheric
Administration gave $480,000
to California CoastKeeper to
regrow kelp. The Orange
County chapter is one of five
statewide; the group can lclp
into that grant money.
"They have done the back·
ground work they needed to
do,· said Robin Bruckner, a
fishery biologist who oversees
the program for the federal
agency. "Now they can begin
some serious restorabon (of
the kelp forest).·
when he allegedly barred
police from entering for 35 min·
utes. Police suspected alcohol
was illegally served after 2 a.m
On the
AGENDA
NIW BUILDING
Vanguard University is
seeking a permit to t:on-
struct a two-story. 38, 776-
square-foot classroom and
f acuity office building on
its Fair Drive campus.
WHAT TO EXPECT:
The Planning Depart·
ment staff has recom-
mended approval.
STORE EXPANSION
Nadel Architects, an
aLTthorized agent for Vons,
is asking for a permit to
expand the Vons store
building on ~ast 17th
Street. The request is to •
remodel all building
facades and the parking
lot of the Costa Mesa Cen·
FYI
• WHO: Costa Meg
Plaoning Commission
meeting
• WHlliN: 6:30 p.m.
ton~ ·~·Council
Chambers at City Hall,
77 Fair Drive.
• INFORMATION:
(714) 754-5245
ter, with a variance to
allow a 42-foot-high build-
ing projection. The maxi-
mum height permitted by
the city is 30 feet.
WHAT TO EXPECT:
The Planning Comm1s--
sion is expected to
approve the project sub-
ject to certain conditions.
-Compiled by
Deepa Bharath
WE DO THINC:.S RIC:.HT!
OUR MEALS ARE A TRIP TO MEXICO
Ml CASA
MEXICAN RESTAURANT
·ouR SIZE IS THE Rl,HT SIZE.
A MEAT PATTIE SMOTHERED WITH
OUR Ml CASA CHILI '9 BEANS.
296 E. 17TH ST. COSTA MESA · 949-64S·76l6
PLUG IN
PU;i oneo lht "*" c ""6lf>rd _.,,, to Ind _.., toom
~-~'°------
Casli for 9'our
O[dJewe[ry
It may be worth
more tlian you tftinKf
Chances are you have "buried
treasure" in your jewelry or
safe deposit box. What's
collecting dust could be collecting cash for you!
For rwo days only, Charles H. Barr Jewelers will have
as our guest Mr. Mark Ebert, an international buyer of
antique, estate and "previously owned'' jewelry.
Mr. Ebert is a former instructor of the Gemological
Institute of America. He is also an author and lecturer
to the trade on antique and collectible period jewelry.
He will be available this Friday
and Saturday to consult with
you on the discreet disposition
of your jewelry for the highest
possible · cash market price.
Dispose of a single ring or an
entire collection. .
AppoiMMnts rrt'OmmmiUJ b.lt IPtlllt.i111 ~
Two Days Only
Friday, April 12
~aturday, April 13
:30 am to 5:30 pm
9 am to4 pm
CHARLES H. BARR
,
,
4 Mondoy. >fril 8, 2002
PUILIC
SAFEn
POLICE FILES
COSYA MISA
• IRISTOl. S1Mft Resist·
Ing an officer was reported
In the 3100 block at 1:08
a.m. SUnday.
• lllUSTOL STREft A petty
theft w11 reported In the
3300 block at 7:15 p.m. Fri·
day.
• MISTOl snu:rr. Grand
theft Jxceeding $400 was
reported In the 3300 block
at noon Friday.
• IAST 11TH STRER A
male wa5 arrested for
allegedly possessing a con·
trolled substance at 7:50
a.m. Saturday.
• f£DERAL AVENUE: Pos-
session of a controlled sub-
stance was reported In the '
2000 block at 6 p.m. Friday.
• FLOWER STREET AND
FUU.EWTOH AVENUE:
Grand theft of cars was
reported at 12:01 p.m. Fri-
day.
• HADOR BOULEVARD: A
person was reported being
drunk In public In the 2600
block at 3:10 a.m. ~urday.
• HAaOlt 80UUVAIU>
ANO NEWPORT llOULE·
VAllD: A person suspected
of driving under the lnflu-
~ reportedly caused
injuries at 2:SO a.m. satur-
day. .
• MWPOllT llOULEVARD
AND WALNUT STREft
Vandalism was reported at
1 :40 a.m. Saturday.
• WIST UK£Jt STREET
AND HA1t80R BOULE·
YARD: Loitering In public
was reported at 6:58 p.m.
Friday.
NEWPORT BEACH
• AUA VfSTA: Items were
reportedly stolen from a
white 2001 Ford Expedition
in the 2500 block at 8 a.m.
Saturday.
•~MY: A woman
~9Cf 1he driver's side
~pa'* arid wheel well
of her 1997 ~~BMW
were scratched In the 100
block at 4:50 p.m. Friday.
•CAROB LANE: A woman
reported compact discs
were stolen from her 1999
gold Mercury Cougar in the
3000 block at 3:06 p.m. Sat-
urday.
• a.Jff DRIVE: Four rose
bushes were reported
stolen from a woman's
front yard in the 3000 block
at 9:26 a m. Saturday.
• IRVINE AVENUE: A man
reported his golf clu~ were
stolen from the front of a
golf course restaurant in
the 3100 block at 6:35 p.m.
Friday
•LAFAYETTE! Petty theft
of a credit card was report-
ed in the 3000 block at
10:07 a.m. Saturday.
• STARRSH a>Ulre A man
reported someone stole
outgoing mall from his
mailbox in the 100 block at
3:36 p.m. Friday.
CLOSE-UP
CONTINUED FROM 1
A sandy spot to
smell the roses
. .
As an active producer about to
remake the 1950 film •Harvey" with
Mira.max, Gregory said Newport's
sights help him to relaX bllt o.lso to
work.
On any given day, with the phone
at his ear and the ocean just out his
window, Gregory said he'll wheel and
deal and aeate and develop and then
stop to notice the sunset and even
smell the roses.
"There's no smelling of roses in
L.A.,• he said.
"And that may be why celebrities
including Humphrey Bogart, Lauren
Bacall, Greta Garbo, Bing Crosby and
a roster of other entertainers spanning
the generations designated Newport
Beach their own tun zone.
The hottest spot was the Balboa
Bay Club.
Henry Schielein, president and
chief operating officer of club, recited
a long list of members and visitors
who parked their yachts on the water
and had tequila at the bar.
John Wayne, who lived next door,
was a governor of the club.
• t I ..
Dolly Pilot
Andy Devine once gave lively
ChrlttmU ahOWI at the bay club.
liaison office with the city 15 years
ago and ~ntinue running it on a 24n
schedule that makes Newport Beach
more accessible to filmmakers need-
ing to shoot on spontaneous dead-
lines.
Cleary said even the city's police
officers have developed a "hipness•
when it comes to industry jargon.
"They know the difference
between •camera left and right' and
'weT0 going camera left arowui this
comer' and 'lock that up,'" he said.
Comedian Joey Bishop is still an
honorary governor, Andy Devine
once made a tradition out of perform-
ing llvely Christmu shows-there and
the late Milton Berle was known to
light up at the club's cigar events.
"The Balboa Bay Club has a lot of
history with entertainment people,•
Schielein said. ·The location has a lot
to do with it.• ,
John ayne, seoond from left. and Joey Blabop, far right. both served as As someone who bas started his
family in Newport Coast with a Wlfe
and a son, McKeJllla added that New
port Beach offers a safeness that elim-
inates having to look over your shoul-
der while at a versa teller machine.
gove on of the Balboa Bay Clob. ·
McKenna, who is now writing the
life story of the most decorated living
soldier. Col. Da'rid Hackworth, con-
siders Newport Harbor an invaluable
asset.
· ·1 have a Duffy boat, my \9U'e and I
take our friends out on it all the time
and cruise around and have drinks
and appetizers. It's an incredible
time,• said the writer, who will soon
make his directorial debut with •Tue
1\velfth Man," starring Meryl Streep.
More than movie stars
But the bay and its famous club
aren't the only spots that attracted
entertaining legends. In the '30s and
'40s, musicians including Stan Ken-
ton, Nat King Cole, Johnny Mercer,
Les Brown and Benny Goodman per-
formed on the Rendezvous Ballroom
stage.
CONTINUED FROM 1
saw three •youthful maJes•
with paint-ball guns in the
area a bout the time the man
was found injllfed, said detec-
tives with the Newport Beach
Police Department.
Police have not made any
arrests in what authorities
d aim IS an isolated incident.
"We haven't had a lot of
problems in the area since the
incident,• said Sgt. Fred Hei-
necke. ·so it doesn't look like
a continual problem. Bllt we
would appreciate being noti-
fied if anyone has fllrtber
information.•
Anyone with information is
encollfaged to call Newport
Beach police at (949) 644-
3717.
• BRYCE ALDEllTON is the news
assistant. He may be reached at
(949) S74-4298 or by e-mail at
bryce.•ld~latlmucom.
ln the '80s, Newport Beach and its
sunounding cities harbored a band
scene that Jyler and his various rock
bands took part in.
•And there were a lot of great
record stores around,• said the com-
poser, who is currently sct>rmg •.Last
Call,• starting Jeremy Irons, Sissy
Spacek and Neve Campbell.
·ucodce Pizza was kind of the hang-
out. I use to ride my bike there, pick
up records, buy soundtracks. My
friends asked me why in the world I
was buying so many soundtracks.•
Through the decades. the city's
beaches and islands also became
popular filming spots for feature-
length works, commercials and stills.
The city gets 185 to 190 permits a
year trom crews wanting to film here,
translating into about 250 production
days a year, said Joseph Cleary, a
Newport Beach film liaison with part-
ner Marty Capune.
The better known projects set in
the city include episodes of •Gilli-
gan's Island;" Francis Ford Coppola's
"Rumblefish • on the 13th Street
school grounds; ·Romy and
Michelle's High School Reunion• at
the Newport Beach Central Ubra~
"The Chase;" Disney's •Tue 13th
Year,• shot entirely in the dty; and
commercials for companies including
Lexus, Chrysler, Mercedes-Benz and
a variety of surfwear brands.
"That's what I love about Newport
Beach,• he said.
Tyler, whose West Los Angeles stu-
dio sometimes doubles as a director's
~op for listening to mU5iC and even
biding out, said be might one day set
up homes in both cities.
"We have the best studio in the
world," Cleary said. "We've got two
of the greatest piers, we've got a Pun
Zone, we've got a very unique 5itua·
tion where we have a private harbor .
.. and we've got Udo Marina Village,
which has been used as a European
village.•
Gregory, a fonner arts commission-
er for Newport Beach, concluded that
his dty offers more than just a pretty
face.
"The surroundings are lovely and
conducive to relaxing, and there is a
certain atmosphere here that lends
itself to the artistic community,· he
said. "I like starting things here and
developing them in this atmos-
phere."
A studio with style • YOUNG OIANG writes ffftures. She may
be reached at (9'9) 574-4268 or by e-mail at Cleary and Capune started the film young.changOlati~com.
CONTINUED FROM 1
off-leash area at the park at
San Joaquin Hills Road near
Newport Ridge Drive
became officially off limits to
dogs. Since then, Coast resi-
dents have considered the
question of how to create a
dog park now that they're
part of a city where leash
laws elfectively prohibit all
dog parks.
One way would be to
change the ordinance. Anoth-
er, and the one Coast resi-
dents are leaning toward, is to
create a private park owned
and managed by homeown-
ers associations that is open
only to Newport Coast re5i·
dents.
FYI
•WHAT! Newport Coast
~Committee
meeting
• WHEN: 5:30 to 7 p.m.
today; pre-meeting dis-
cussion of on assessment
dlstrkt ~is.sues
and an appointment to
the city's Aviation C~
mtttee begin at 4:30
p.m.
• WMIM: Coastal
Canyon Oubhouse,
Ridge Park Road past
~Coast Elemen·
t,aiy.
• PHONE: for more
Information. c.all the city
managen office at
(949) 644-JOOO.
munity meeting space and
other amenities. A branch
library could also be part of
the center. ·we feel~unity cen-ter will weigh heavily to
get childr and adults
involved in productive pur·
suits," Willinger said.
FU PHOTO I DAK.V PllOT
Friends gather around a makesllUt lhJ1ne dedJcat.ed to
Gary Holctren on March 21 while Holdren wu ln a coma.
"That would be Ollf No. 1
choice U a dog park were to
happen,• Wampole said or
the area bordered on the
southeast by Newport Coast
Drive, on the north by the
Corona del Mar Freeway, 6Ild
on the west by the communi:'
ty of Newport Ridge. "It's
away from homes, so we
don't have a noise problem
distmbing anybody. We
believe we'd be able to set up
a fenced area to keep every-
body safe."
The committee members
will discuss the issue at a
meeting tonight where anoth-
er prominent issue will be the
question of whether to build a
community center.
•JUNl~~cownNew·
port 8eacti. She may be reached at
(949) 574-4232 or by e-mail at }UM.U~dmes,com.
·~ru&~~
Spruce Up for Spring!
50% OtT Topiaries .
.. ~
M1H1e11 Outlet Store
As part of the dty's annex-
ation ~greement with Cout
residents, S? million has
been set aside to build a
community center lf and only
if the resldenta wont one.
Otliel'Wile, the money would
be edde4 to the S18-m1l.Uon
asseument ct rebates
residents receive in
increments ov e next 15 yeen .
Now, laid COmm.lttee
member Al Wllllngw, it'•
beginning to look like a com.
mun1ty center COUld come to
be.
·we believe that lt will
have IUblWitial ~ .. from ~. commwuty.' WUllngM'
1be prOJ>Oted 22,00().
lq\IAre·foot f8Clll!J
..
'J
• 6 jf I
F E
Film
festival
to hit the
heigh1s
A note from the
executive director of
the Newport Beach
Film Festival
Gregg M. Schwenk
SPECIAL TO THE PILOT
t is with great pleasure
that I welcome you to
the third annual
Newport Beach Film
Festival. The festival
will bring to our
community the best in dassic
and~ filmmaking.
Over eight days. we will
screen near1y 200 films from
over 25 countries, host 14
Spotlight and special events
and produce an expanded
two-day seminar program.
We are confident that you
will find our Festival to be a
celebration of fllm as an
art form, as well as
entertainment.
The 2002 Festival will
screen the largest selection
of foreign Oscar submissions..
largest selection of Sundance
fi lms, and most diverse array
of film titles In our history.
We are the largest film festi.
val in Orange County and
one of the fastest growing In
California. Our educational
component h rated as
among the best In the
nation.
I would like to thank all of
our sponsors, supporters and
volunteers. t highly commend
our Incredible stiff for
producing a remerbble
event. The programmers.
managers, directors. 8S'listlints,
phone answeren, drivers,
office wotkers, event plan-
ners. thuter managers and
general helpers ere the true
heroes of the festival. tt Is
their efforts that make 1his
festival great.
• A special thanks goes to
Lucy and Leigh Steinberg end
to the city of Newport lffch.
Their~ commkrnent,~~--
both financial and phHOloph-
al. melt• the
Ntwpon hid\ Alm feltMI
pcilllbl!I.
Enjov the lhow.
·-•1a1sm•11.--UIM clr.aor of h ~ .... Mn,.....
B
5
Newport Beach Film Festival 2002 MONDAY. AN1. I. .a• I
E A c H
ON A
INSIDE
Newport Beach Film Festival opens
Thursday, bringing nearly 200 films
/rom more than 25 countries
Among the name actors who play
roles in thelle, mo.tly lndepenckmt.
reJeues are Amuand Assan'8. .I.JM
KUdrow, John Stamos, Du Ayb'oyd.
Brenda BlethyD.. Sbidet Jon..
Johnathan SilVe.nUJl and AJiln Jtk:t.
ID4D.
Beil Of an; you never k'iiOW' WtiO
WW lbow up. At muy of the~
iDgl; «meane b'OID lhe alil or cnw
-WIMdMlr. 6ect«, .........
.aeenWdlr or dtm trgrlll*lr-wm be tblre eo ._.._-.
'lhiD. al~ ..............
weM-ed ..... .,,_COlc? ELIM"'
Alt Of Pl ......... Wllkta ... ,..
doWD wllb • plMI fl•• a ........ a.k ............ . n .. , ........ ..
'"*•··~=~ ..... ,. ... _
....... ~Iii
.. ,.
'
..
THIMMt
Edwri Big Newpon
Austnli., 2001
Dlt'Wdw. ftobert Cannolly lc»w....._. Robett Connolly
c:.t: David Wenham. ,Anthony La
Paglia. Sit¥1a Budd
........ tllM: 106.'00
"The Bank• Is I thril.ler about blnk· Ing. com.iptlon and llWenge. Jim
Ooyte ts a genius searching f« a for.
mula that can predict future stod
mati<et aashes. The potential In Jim's
software fires the imag.lnatlon and
greed of Simon O'Reilly, the CEO of
Centabank. When O'Reilly brings
Doyle on board .t the banlc. greed
and ethics start to W¥.
• Opening night gala will be Mid .tt.r the film In Palm GardM at the
Foor SHsorl:s Ho~. $75. Black tie
optlonill.
FllDIY
11UL
THI OtU1MN OF S8ERIA
(Sii MIAS WM)
Edwank l5'and 1
Lat\IM, 2001
DINdiar: Dzlntni Geka
Sa ......... DZlntra Geb
....... ~53:00
In 1941, more~ 1 S.000 Uitvtans.
lndudlng ~ely 4,000 cffi.
dren. Mf'9 deported to Siberia. Today
some a deported children still live
In LatWI and Siberia.
~~OFWAR
Udo 1'hfftef'
~2001
Dlt'8Ctat. DanietSeltullch
...... time: 74:00
Aw. his 1 dirty secret: it never realty
ends. •Aftermath• weaves 11chiYal
lm-ves and personal stories to paint I
powerlul portrait of lingering ..
Wtion bll58d on the book by Donovan
Webster.
11sJOUL
SHORT NMS: 9UOCET O' SHORTS
EdwaidJ ISiand 2 .........
Four bUddle meet for their WHkly
gOff oUtlng and discoYeJ there's more
t.hlnd 1helr friendships than golf.
QISP
A splf1ted 12.yNr-o!d glr1 hits the wall
af Mrty ado4escenc.e. Her flef'C2 strug-
rjte to retain ~sense of sett. despite
the onsleught of otNr YOkM. ~the \.t\JQOe ~of I
git coming of..._ ,
Wl"MN AM uDss SKY
5ailing amld douds. In a world where
floating castles share the sky with
aNtures that soar on wings of gold,
a young boy contemplates his place
within a society of reason.
1HE LAST GUNSHor
A vivid depktlon of the familial imph·
cations of apartheid in South Africa
during the 1980s unfolds as Helen, a
wntt. teenagef'. befriends Sophie. a
battered. blade servant in need of
medial assist.I.nee.
FROM 1HE R<i ..... NG (DA CAPO)
A pianist gets to relive life's moments
as he sits down to watch his •nte-
mOYle• In a theater where eYetyOne
gets a chance to see their own film.
Erle rents out the extra room In his
apertment to Sophia, a mysterious 17-
year-old who ,..,, awil'i from her
home In upstate New York. ,....,
Meefno and Janb's happiness is
threatened when she Is stricken with
Allhelmer's disuse and he finds him-
self unprepated to face the world
without his companion.
12PA
DANGEROUS SUMMER (MIGA
YASAAA)
Edwards Island 1
l..a~1000
DINdiar: ~ Cif'auba
Scrwiwtte.. Algars Grauba.
Andrejs Ekh, Pauls a.nk<Mkls c.t Uldls Dumpls, Altuf1 $krastins,,
lnese C1uN. Jan.ls Relnls. Eduerds
Pawls
..... time: 112..'00
Historical melochm1 Mt In lM>,
when lndependlnt Latvia ls oc;cupied.
The low betwHf'I • Pl'uslian girt and
I Ultviln radio Jour'Nllst malt• them
confront the atrodtlel of World War
II polltla.
JP.&
Newporl Beach Film Festival 2002
OUAOtAN'S GARDEN
UdoTheam
Q~200t
Dltedor: Uod1 Ohama llwWnt .... 94:13 •
At 2s. Hiroshima-born AWfO
Muralcaml boarded 1 ship to Canada
to IMrrY) man she had never met.
Running rNWf from I secret past. she arrives In Cenada a pkture bride.
Delicately peelll"Q b.ck the layers of
hef grandmother's llfe. Unda Ohama
discoYers Asayo'S past.
JiJQPA
TO PROTK1' a SERVE
Edwetds Island 2
Unittd Sta~ 2001
Director. Joseph Perez
SaMnW1tt.. ~Perez
c.t Jake Walt. Lee Corbin, Ben
Murphy, Angela Harry
Running time: 88:00
This urban satire Is guided by a young
document.arlan out to dispel the Ide-
ologies society has towards cops. In
the coune af trying to come to grips
with his own pest Issues wltf'I c:op1, he
flndl being 1 cop Is 1 c:omplmc calling,
_a low hate reiationshlp.bolhJuHUI.
Ing and dlslltusionlng.
4PA
5HOll1' RLM5: TH111E•s
SOMIMHG RIN IN MY SHORTS
1 Edw.-ds l5land 1
IOMD OP11tl ..as
Has the addition of all the new
Olymplc ewnts left you bonld of 1he
rin951 Watch the U.Sv Russia and
Australia battle for-gold In the ~
Olympic ewnt penmnhlp.
llA11'USHW' CXINl'BMQN
Parisian lowfs, ~ in their left
Bank apartment on I rainy afternoot-"i.
plil'i a humorously petwrte Wf'sion of
the poputar ArneticM\ boat'd ~-
F.\RMD MCAUJSTIR'S ~
MA~
Down on McAIUst.n farm there Is a
haggard man. a shed. an evil wtfe
and a bucket~aded robot; not to
mention, I lust 1t\at wtH t9St the llmfts
of marrlbge and m.MI fatigue.
TH&~
Three anlm.tors sttUggle to mab a
fllm as the dud!IM looms.
PIEJllNG TOM
Teetering just south of puberty,
Thomas Harris wishes to finally• his
dream woman nalced. Thomas' wish comes true, but he peys the price.
EMAl.E
To win the grand prize tor the Squat-
n-Wln.com contest, Dale most be
welded inside his apartment. alone,
for a year living entirely off the
Internet.
GETSIUNNY
Anally sick of media standards, three
friends hit altic.ll m-. kidnap a
model and force her to do the
unthinkable.
I PE (A LOVE STORY)
A look behind the scenes as a master
pie-maker works at his labor of love
R.USH
An OYer·the-top comedy that propels
huma.n lngeoolty and human frailty
to new levels. 111 in the name of love
and hygiene.
PIAM.~11:
PUNMAGEDOON
It's the day .tter the dil'i that will live
in lnfam)'.
900lllEGA
The onwt of puberty has a yciung girt
praying for larger breasts.
SARTYMAN
A 2-<fimemlonal Icon comes to life in
this animated short.
5P.M.
SHO«f RlMS: A SHORT LOOK b us
Udo Theater
I{,
THE DANGaOUS LOVE OP AlM
ZEECiM.W
Alfifl l~inary friend AJ comes up
wltll tnollle plot schemes to •get the
gil1 •• bot when he ui. to put them
into action, the plans end In injury t<i
otherJ.
I01H OP Tl9M (rOUI Lii DIU>Q
The symbolic stOf)' of our wotld. Our
Love. CM hai..
MTTIRS
A horny ladies man~ hk ~sex~ 1,_,..teneed, soorH~ bet friend th.It
he needJ one last Wl1d eCll*M ~.tying tM knot. ...
Ur\lbt9 to g.c It on wtd\ bOtt\ NI mJt.,
tt• lrid NJ v.1fi Mii• ~his
l"IQt ~ .., .... tnppld ~
his own M4* flcSINty.
fT'I A ltlAlmMOAlf MY
My~ dead While~ NI
!Mn. and It IJ~ 1hltna ,....In ttw~ nlllCDmpim .... ~·..,,.. "'.,,...,,.. cOmk ...... -............... ......................
it NL
TICKET INFORMATION
Tkbts: S7, unless
othetwise specified
COfttact: (949) 253·2• or
www.newport:bffchfilm·
feSt.com
THEATERS
Edw ....... Newport
300 ~wport Ct!nter Drive,
Newport Beach
'The Collaborative Art of Fllmmak-
ing, •hosted by
Arnold Kwiert, is
a two-day seminar llE!lies
held at the Newport Beach
Public Ubrary, 1000 Avoca-
do Ave., Newport Beach. All
guest appearances are sub-
ject to change on a last-
minute basis. Each session
will provide participants an
insider's look Into a compo-
nent of film.making. Seating
is limited to 200. All presen-
tations are free and are on a
first-come, first-served basis.
I P.&-(~ DISllll
D ' 1 llh NlldoolrMn •Raiders
()f the u.t Mc·
~ "'°9t-.Men In Black· .... .,...._.Blow·
......... Mlllrov*y-•Harry
Pottw and the Sorcenn stone·
~ ~ -•Lone St.ar"
and passions of five divene women
The documentary features
singer/songwriter Anl Difranco,
activist/poet Linda Finney, police offi-
~ cer Julie Brunzel I, artist/architect
Myrtle Stedman and housekeeper
Jimmie Woodruff.
6sJOPA
n.i 9ROKIN WINGS OF EWAH
FOOWAU.S
Edwards Island 1
Unit«/ St.Ire. 2001
DINctar. Gabriel Judet-Welnshel
Scnenwrt•. Gabriel Judet-
Welnshel
C.-t: Gabriel Judet-Welnshel, Franck
Dinet. Nina Egli
....... tlme:45:00
EUjlh Footfalls, a ~ street juggler.
discown a vagabonc:f"draa troupe in
a wooded valley. The film charts
Elijah's low affllr with Nina. the fire
breather; and his friendship with llja
W111:, the drcus director. Using only
eight lines of dialogue. the film tells a
distilled story about the essentials of
human low and longing.
IPA
ntE BRONZE scaoN
Edwards Island 1
Unit«/ Stare. 2001
Director. Alberto Dominguez. Nancy
de los Santos, Susan Rac:ho
Scrwwwt•. Nancy de I05 Santos,
Susan R.adlo
~dmr.f&'01
This documenuM'y expk>t-.s the contri-
butions of Latinos In film OV9f the
pest 100 yNn. SpotUghttng the
prominent stories 1t\at Latinos have
made In dnenwt history.
• Gala will be ti.Id •ftN rlw moiM at
~ El Torfto BM and Grill 115. DrMs
ca,swl.
POLYUTD
Udolheater Vnlt«I Stare. r 98 r
Dill a"°'. Jot\n W.ten lowfwwt•. John Wat..-s
Cllt: DMnt, Tlb Hunter, Edith =. tlMee 16:00 This film. pr-..n\td In Odora1N. wt!S
the *4'Y trf betrty9d houtewffe
frandne Flshpaw. After her husband
Elmer w.ib out on her for his trashy
teaetaty ~a, Francine's llfetta.rts fllfno lipatt. MUlic Wfm.n bY
llonde\ Debotth H¥ry.
•A post-fllm gala wlll be Mid at the
~NI C~ S45. John
W."'1 """"'lt/)lpMf l.Jnulwl lt'l7ta.
.. ML
SUllDIY
tUL-NECTM
(SICOl9Pml)
RlchMI c. SanftM -•vanishing
Point•
Kevin Connor -•At the Earth'S eore·
V.. a...t-"Expresso Bongo"
MkhMI '-'89-•pasadefla•
John Shlben -•x-A1es•
2:45 PA -flUI mslC COMNSmOll °"*' .. ,~ "To Kill A
Moddngblrd·
llnlCl9 8r0Ughton-·rombstone•
IMTy Cifal4ae -9The Contender"
Don Dftll -"The Matrix•
Ch;ileopher Young -'"'Ole
Shipping News"
...... NW--..-·Unforgiven~
night conver-sation. Major Sophie
Jang heads an investigative team
responsible for uncovering the truth,
but soon finds that no one recalls
anything beyond the facts of the offi.
cial record. -
SIJUIDIY
111.11.
IN SHWT'ING SANOS
Edwards Island 1
Unhed St.I~ 2001
Running time: 90:00
Theum~drtory oftheUNweapon.s
Inspectors In Iraq. and how their
noble miuiort was undermined and
betrayed by Iraq. ttle United Nations
and the United States.
SCllA1Qt MlfCW I·~ Udo,,,_..
IJnlt«I St.I~ 1000
~ "yan Thomas
....... tlme:1&36
A super-t film journey tNt begins In
SouttWft Cllifomll and ~I* for new..._ uperletice, and w1Ye in
Francie, ~ Northern Cellfomla,
~ Mlilda>, ldtt• and AJI.
I P.&
IHORT' Al.Ml: HAWAIM...,....
Edwards wand 1
PM&Y cxn•• O'Dll oa•Nft.Ot ~ C0me ~I orCJUP of IC.amlfwiilerla
School students• 1My ~I to
Tahiti.
MONnlM ........ noN:
OK1NAWM1 • MWI On Jan .. 1900. the ftrtt ()kJnawlOS
to mlve In HonOluW ~the dJU!1"
gle to CMftolM hanfshlpa and preju-
dke tNt would blia)ml • major lnfl~ in the MOfdlng af loc.ll °'"
ture In ~all today.
ltOLO MAI PILI For the ancient Hawaiians. no mvtti ls
more central thW'I the stOfY of the fire
goddesS Pele and her endurin!1 rlvltry
with her sister, Hi'laka.
JP.&
JUWTTA
UdoThelUf
GMnanJ' 2001
Dft<tOI, Christoph Stark
SaWMil ... Jodien Bitzel
CMt: Urlinll Wilson. Bamaby
Metsd'lurat, Matthias Koeberiln
Running time: 95:00
A dramatic teenage 10Yt story set
against the b«kdrop of Europe's
biggest party, tbe Berlin LDYe Plf~.
Max loves Julietta. Julietta loves Jin.
Compilations ensue.
3:30P.&
V10UT ~ (flSIRJME DI
YIOUTAS)
Edwards Island 2
Mexico, 1000
DlndlM. ~ SlsblCh
Sa .......... Jose lull. Mllyie
SlstAch c:...t: Xlmena Ayala,: Nanty ~Z.
Arcelia~ Maril"*' LL* Femlndo~ ........ 90:00
In I fow.da Medco City neighbor·
hood, Yeak;a. I rebellous ~.
mlke5 friends with IN ll'IOff childlike
Miriam. wt)() !Mt in ~conditions
with her single mom, a s.aiespenc>fl at
a shoe sun.
4P.&
....,..~
Edwardl lMnd 1 urilted ST.I~ 1001 .,.,.... • Julie Oavis
JawM; .... A.Ille OIMs
~ Julie O.W. Nick OilnllM'ld. Jeff
Cesario, Mitchell Whltfleld
....... Q:OO
Ntfj ~ •• suacaful Mhof, has
just penned the setf-hefp book -why
l..olle Doesn't Wort .• The book
becomes an ~sucm!IL ~. wnen Arrr; mHts a~ shock
jock. she findl hlnelf dnlwn to the
type of INf'I she's just told ~ woman In Ame(lca to stay Mflf from. •
JP.&
llf1"lltlTAft.
Udol'hMtar
unlfJ!d Stm$ 2001
Dlredmr. Bob Gale
~ ..... ~~ a,.t: Gwy ~ JMleS Mander\
Olristopher Uoyd ........ ..__,,,:OC)
Oepi19 his good IOob and winning
smile, Nffl Ollvef Is c.onflkted about
his life. On his 22nd birthday. he wish-
es for an answer. The wish is granted
by a mythical cti.racter with an
unusual sense of humo< and leads to
a journey along a hlghwil'i that can't
be found on any map.
5:30P&
THE SIAROt fCM JOHN GISstNG
Edwards I.stand 2
U.K. and U.S.. 2001
Dif'IK1IDr. Mike Binder
Scr .. nwrtt... Mike Binder
cast: Mike Binder. JanNne Glrafolo,
Alan Rickman. Allen Corduner
"""""" time: 91 :00 An Amefian businessman and his
wife hlYe their lives tumed upside
down by 1 British co-wofkef whom he
has unknowingly come to London to
replace.
6P&
aooDt THE LAST VAMPIRE
Edwa<ds Island 1
Japa11, 2000
DINdw: Hlryukl Kitakubo
SaMMwuttau.KenjiKamlyama c..e: Youkl IC.udoh, Saemi Nakamura.
Joe ROITlerSI
lblURng tithe: 48:00
This anlme fllm set on Halloween pits
1 ~woman of mysterious «lglns
against 1 slew of vamplra
7P&
SHOllJ AIMS; ACN:JeMY AWARD ~IHOlnS
Edwards Island 1
SINGI
This Is the story of how • communlty
groyp. amid sawrw c:uu In the arts, Is
Mlle to~. chllchn'J chona
tNt ~b Sllonenuys Is the best he h,-!Mrd.
SPBD fOltntl9Wa
Three stage ectors Interact with the
pltlenglft of I New YOf1t City buJ
while fatthfullY pefforming dialogue
of O*tOY'$ -The ........
MOP.&
1MI IMICUHI Of WISiet*
CMLl2ATIOH ..
~Wand1
united s~ 2000
DfrectDf. Penelope Spheerls
...... tlMr.18:00
NI unftincNng documentary look
Into the 11\/eS of the hardcore fans of
pr.-day .punk rodt In Los Angele.
The film combines interviews with hw
perlonnances by underground ba~
Final Conflict, Utmus Green, Naked
AgreaJon and The Resistance.
IOP.&
MITANJ ALIENS
Udol'heater
Unlt«I St.a~ 2001
D1r11ctDr. Bill Plympton
Sa...,...._. Bill Plympton
CMt: Dan MGComM. FrandM Lobts.
George Casden
__.. ... 83:00
Bill Plympton'S animation show5 tht
absufdity of ewf)'day life. •Mutant
Aliens• is the story of an astronaut.
his daughter and the five space crea-
tures 1t\at seek revenge against a
space Industry baron .
•Film wlU be~ by the nine
minutt short film •ut •
SUNDAY
11UL
1HEIAMC
Udo Theater
Australia, 2001
Dhdm': lfobe(t Connolly
Sa .. www11111. Robert Connolly
cast: ().Md Wenham. Anthony la
Paglia, Sibylla Budd
Running time: 106:00
"The Banj(• is a thriDer about bank·
ing. corruption and rwvenge. Jim
Doyle Is a genius sear<Nng for a fOf
mula that can predict future stock
m11ttet aashe. 1he potential in Jim's
software fires the imagination and
greed of Simon O'Reilly. the ao of
Centablnk. When O'~lly bnngs
Doyle on board at the bank. greed
and ethics start to war
5HOtlT FllMS: Yount SHO«TS
Edwards Island 1
_. flEOflU SUCK
When Katie poses the questk>n.
"What's the worst thing y<>Vve eve<
done to somebody else 1• her friends
rNliza they're 111 for 50me excite-ment. rt.
._HAVEN
A comlng-of-.ge story of friendship,
drNms and low told through the
eyes of Henry Nichols. who has lived
and breathed skating ewr since he
can remember.
QUEST fCM THE HOlY llORCEI &IN
Eight-year-old Wesley O.rtt has a
problem. Monster mcMes and lemofl-
ade prOYe to be 1 dangerous mill in
the middle of the night.
THELASTlllAQ
A fast-i*ed loolt Into the world of
underground street racing. where a
young racing addkt attempts to
a't'Okt the pitfalls of his Illegal pas·
time.
WltQA
An urban opera about a man being
at the wrong plac. at the wrong
time.
5ATEUJ1'1
A strwt-wlse teenager struggles to
understand what it means to be a
man -and what It doesn't mean.
A UllU Wll .-nc>M
In an urban, wor'ltl~ nelghbo<·
hood. • drug-.t>uslng young man
befrielldsa ~and
fatherleu boy.
lhJOP.,.
lHI AW OP THI VOi CNfO (LAS
CDIZAS DIL vokAH)
Edwwdl Island 2
*8k\2001 ~ ~o '-ru..ftoudo
.......... 17:00
SQ yean lftw.,, .meet r....oft In
southW9lt Mukx> by the Ztpatlst•
~ • ~ dlN<tor mums to the ... where ,,. ftlmad Ns docu-
"*Uly "The Palft of ttw orearn· to
meet uP ~more~ the protlgO-
nlAs of 1t\at *'Y-
, .. ,.&
-....... _ ... ~ .,._ -.... "··-........
Newport B'ach F l m Fest val 2002 .... ~
Fate wl11 teed you whef• you belong
smoflfT .
A doa.lmentMy .ibout four OYtr·
weight WCJmerl who low who they
ere.
AWOMDAINCf
Jeslal and Myta grow up fri.nds,
dan'llteS and confidants In homes
separated b>J an alley, but worlds
epelt.
tWRV hid man gets hair. Said man gets woman. hid IMO must dloose.
2P.&
THI IWIMY SHOW
Edwards Island 1
Unltfld Sta~ 1001 Dlleaoo. Frank ~ley
Sawwww1 ... .Jol'latNn Marc
Sheonln, Frank Whaley
c.t: Ethan Hawke, C..rla Gugino,
Frank Whaley, Lynn Coen. Robert
Whiley
....... time: 96:00
Jlmmy Is • 1-lled New ~ Invent()(
wtio abandons his work to become a
standup comic. FollOINing sewf'al dis-
astrous shows Jimmy ukes up a new
•profesion• -boozing.
JP&
DESf'BADO SQUARE (l(IKAR
HA'IW.OMOll
Edwards ~and 2
~1000 Director: Benny Torat1
Sowiw1'le.. Benny T0<ati
Cast: Muhammad Bacltri, Vona
Elicam. Nir Levi, Sharon Beginiano l
ltYWng time: 97:00 \
In a small village in Israel. a family
patriarch has passed.away. On the
morning of the comm«n0<1ttion day,
Nislm. the man's son, has a drNm in
whidl his t~r appears and O<ders
him to open the dosed family cinema
one more time to screen a movie. His
mother objects to both the movie and
the opening of the theater.
4P.&
lHI CAHIE (YUH ZHUAI SMOU ZHt
UM)
Edwards Island 1
Taiwltn. 2001
OirKtor: 2Nng Hurleun, Chen
Yiwen
SowMritel. Zha<H>ln Su
c.t.Tai Bao, ~u-Ying Cheng
-..... time: 94:00
When taxi drlvef Su Oaquan has a
gun held to his head, it makes him
think aboot his life and his rellttioo-
shlps with his family. He comes to the
real!Ution that he has fallen in love
with a young police woman. and he
commlb ~ moving violation possi·
ble just to see her.
MHD ME1D: SKRETS BEHIND THE
VOYAQ. Of A UR11ME
t..Jdo Theater
United Sta~ 1001
Director: Peter Jaywo
....... tlmr. 75:00
William Shatnef and ~rd Nimoy
have shared an experience whidl few
(.OUld ~ine. These fnends. whose
careen h.Ve taken them beyond
me<e stardom and transformed them
into cultural kons, share their ·sur
Trek• experiences.
SP&
GMLRVEJt
Edwards Island 2
UnltN Sttte1. 1002
Dltedloi. Michael DIMS
Scnenww I•. Michael D.-.ils
c.t: O\lld Donella, Erinn Bartl~
~fer Morrison
One winter day. artist Sam meets
Hope. a woman with an incredible
smile. The neict time they meet. the
lady has lost her smile and won't say wny. Sam makes it his goal to uncover
her mysterious depression
S:JOP.&
STAN LEE: walfAHTS. MONSllHS
AllD MAltVl1.S
Udo'ThNter
UnltN Sta~ 1002
Dlr9daf: Scott ZMarin
....... time: 60:00
The crutof of Spiderman and The
fnaedible Hulk, St.an lee tells his hfe mxy. along with filmmaker Kevin
Smith.
6P.&
~-budding ~who
contlnualty difNpt ~ ltt..
~busy~~·
movie. They• Spene« to play the lud In Mum fOf '*1t-h91Mng rod
he agrees, only to find out tNt he Is
the stir of. pom film.
IP&
....,. (JllATAS. 9WONll,
Ml'MOS)
Edwards ldand 1
Eqwdol; 2001
DlrediGr.-SebMtJan Cordero s.cn.w.t11w. ~Cordero
CMt: c.nos v.lenda, Mattos 8ustAls ,....._,07:00
The world of s.lv.dol; • young and
NIM petty thief, Is abo< to be shek·
er\ with the arrMI of Ns cousin
Angel, an ex-axwkt In lfftdl of HSy
money and • hid.out.
••.&
SltORf ALMS: ntE POl.Y'IS1Bl
PIUNCS MW> SttoW 2002 lOUR
Edwwds Island 2
MEMOIRS
A journey into the psyche of the
gypsy mind.
JOE'S IN LOVE
Follow our hero as he falls in love In
this animated piece.
lN seMOt Of ntE MMOllS
HOOS& WADID POM
TEN>aLOIN SANDWICH
Eating may~ be the same after
you haw tr.wled the little known
roads and restaurants of rural
Indiana.
l1NY Pl.ANET
Hold on to your seat as we drcumnav-
igate the world.
H01U CEH1'1'AL
Things may never appear as they
were once you've dleded in.
5"'£1l AOfT WURSf SALAT
We webble, we wobble, but we don't
fall down.
THI OIAD LAWLER STORY
Glam rock is not dead.
5"'£1l SUfa I 2000
A brief documentaty on the 2000
~el" Pnnce European Tour.
GUARDIAN
With an angel on one shouldef and a
devil on the other, anything can hap-
~.
THI llED l.ETTEM
A visceral journey Into a dnematic
paradiie.
NOP.&
MAMOVA: COii •ORT GAY
Udo Theater
Philipp/rte$. 1001
DttedOI. GU Pof'tes
Sowl'llWftm. Clodualdo del Mundo
)f.
CMt Dolphy, Loren Legard.a. Eric
Quizon. Jeffrey Quizon
ltunMtg time: 97:00
The stor'I wanders from one man's
frMdom as a homoMJCulll .ttef the
death of his abusive brother to Ns
capture and escape from the QrNI
brutality of Japanese soldien. and to
a litttime's worth of healing.
APRIL 15
llUL
JUUETTA
t..Jdo Theater
Genna01' 2001
DhdDr: Christoph StMk
Sowwwtt.. Joc:hen Bitzer
CMt IAvin4a Wilson.~
Meudlurat, Matthias Koeberlin
......... time: 95:00
A dramlttie tHnage love story Mt
against the badcdrop of Europe's
biggest pany. the Berlin loYe Patade.
Max !<MIS Juli.n., Julietta lows Jlri.
Complieetlons ensue.
MYNimaCM~A
DOll .. CM STORY
Edwards btand 2
United SU• 1001
Dtredlar: Aaron Ma1hew5
....... time: 62:00
Drl'Ning on men thaf1100 hours of
footage and shat <NW< the murse of a
year and a half, this~
chronkl.s the lives of Sandra Ortiz. her~ Bautista. .M Uwlr three
American-bom ~
SHO«r NMS: CM'f GIY INOUGM
5"Dln'SI
Edwatds Island 1
•MISH a. M MaMs
,,. bledt and wtllW stOfY of cutture.
conflict and God.
SIXTY Oft W COfNI
Rldde Clllll5 one. heMd ht~
the m.wn.ntiol led arnounl of JIM
wou4d •stop yc.x heert lb a~
wound~• So, he hits a locoll alf·
fw shop to .. If~ numblr .. up. ...,.,..
10 IOU; A MOC'QltQllK' In 1'2A. C... Hfclllgo "*t• hll ""°'.
Udo ThUter Ing~ swne Wfl1 bad! Nl..., and """""'.$QI-tN1 his grindhlttw cld: ... ,.... U> dger
Dtt d9I. ltobett Mulllgln fol'9tl Ctat mu1t dell wt.I\ tht faca
loou ....... Harper i.... HortOn m.t ~ Otllf tredfdOn 15 beif'I
fOC'l4ll ,.... tit the r.dlo. c..e: Gtego(y '9dl. John Megl\li
,,. <Mtruln 10 ~ .... LOii
........ .._ 12':00 A '6Ctt lltde bar and~~,_.
1-.d on tt. book by HMP" i.., .-,o ems dllCowr 0'9lt bM <*' WOftt Its
KMte Mudllliflblitt• .. ~--....:.own= ii*JifiMIJC: . flitdl M Aftkw And\ a~ In ftt Otp~•SoudlWho...... ntlftllWClf--
. bl.ct""" ...,..., \II... nw.--•=lhlr'N .. ~,;..~ .. ~ .. ~ .......... ~·-.... .. ...,.,.. .................... ..... -. ............... ~.. .. ... ,. ,.., .,.. Ul*I ~ $1S. a.. 1
--..~
1 P.&
HUNTERS MOON (0 DtA DA CAA)
Udo Theater
Brazil, 1000
Dlrwdor: Alberto Gr aca
Sowwwwtt.. Leopoldo Serran,
Alberto Graa c.t: Marcello Antony, Barbara
Schulz. Paulo Vespuoo, Jonas Bloch,
Felipe Camargo, Roberto Bomtempo,
Osor Magrini, Jean-LOUIS Tnbes
RwWng tlrM: 113:00
Nando is commissioned b>J Canosa to
pick up 30 kllos of cocaine from the
Colombian border. Togethe1 Nando
and his old friend Vandef mak.e the
pick up and find danger along the
way. '
2P.&
MANn'O
Edwards Island 1
United sum. 1001
Dlrwdor: Erk Eason
SowwwwllM. Eric Eason
Cast: Franky G., ~ Minaya, Manuel
Cabral, Julissa Lopez. Jes.ska MoralM
"'-'Ing time: 78:00
The flctional story of a day in the fife
of two Latino brothen. Junior and
Manny. Fifteen years 19<>. their neigh-
borhood was dubbed the crack·
coc.aine cap/UI of the wotld. but
today It is transforming into one of
the most vibrant Spanish-spH!ting
cOfMlUl'lities in the United States.
~NA
Edwards Island 2
C..~1000 .,.. ... Jon Gustahson sawwtw. Tom Schloler, 1hor A
Pn>c.ak. Jon EinlnlOn Gustafsson
c.t: Tom Schioler. lhor Procali:
Spinner wam outside of prison to
rope 11tt1e brother Prettiboy Into •
heist Just hours after his release. They
ICM dlefr booty to unsuspecting ~•young woman at 1 Mal gas
stMJon in the cnlddJe of nov.tl«e who
is going to a cabin to write a noYel
and get~ from it 111. Getting the
loot bade become priority. .....
IHTEltSTATt 60
THE JIMMY SHOW
MENTAL HYGIEHE
When Caitlin's mother insists she
attend a fathef-daughter dal'lCe with
the man next d00<, she makes an
unexpected friend and discovers the
truth about first impressions
RRSTOlY
A self-doubting psychologist treats a
paranoid teenage< who suffers from
traumatlC nightmares and a ·mon·
ster· that attacks him in his childhood
dreams.
MAJOR DAMAGE
Fas1er than a speeding comet more
powerful than an alien death
machine, able to leap tall liki's In a
single bound -It's Major Damage
BEYOND 1ME RM •
An American soldier finds a middle
ground between htS duty as a soldier
and his compassion as a human belng
1n a world at war
SP.M.
SHO«T FILMS: BtG OTY SHORTS
Edwards Island 2
m.Of
Bob wants to be a screenwriter After
letting hrs saeenwrltrng software sit
on the shelf tor three years, he is
inspired to load the software with an
attitude and start
JOEY KIRONE: lV COP
JOf!Y Petrone, a former TV star, Is
offered the chance to audition for the
part of• mobster; and must then
decide whether to compromise his
values and play the thug. °' loJe his
one chance fOf a big comeback
RJNCYTOWN
Welcome to Funky Town. where the
film nolr and music.al meet in this tale
of crime. corruption and comedy.
LAUDW£lNO
A parody of the Los Angeles 1lmes
cinema trailen profiling difftfent jobs
within the film Industry. We see fim
hand how gn1ehng the unsung wort
of' Hollywood manager-producer
really is ••. not I , .,
n. couacroR •
Alphonze 15 • trustnrted mechanic.
blttef1y c:lbappointed att.r Inheriting
• dtr.wr of wotthlest trinbts from
his father. Whirl • su.w OJStorner
etriws in 1 rare JpOtts Qr, It's Al~ OM
~to eon his wey Into a bett«
lit.. But is he dever 91'\01Jgh1
-.itNQO
Being an ~It~ couple
is not all It\ a.O.ed Up to.,._ Nl1'dJt
• flurry of~-~
from tM night befoN. Ny~
for lti aftemoori ~· ......
an(9.
.....
IPllL16
11A.&
ACCOM>ING TO 51£.NCD
Lido Theater
United St.I~ 2001 Dtteaoo. St\ane Edleman
So .. Mwtt.. Marissa Ribisl,
Meridith Morton. sn.ne Edelman
c.t: JesR Bradford. Mia Klntlner.
David Krumholtt, Br.d Rowe, Marisa
Riblsi and Giovanni Riblsi
Running time: 97:00
SperKef rents room In a ramshadle
mansion OINned by two hipster doo-
fusses -budding fllmmalten who
continually disrupt Spencef's life as
they busy themselves shooting a
mcwte. They ask Spencer to play the
lead In return for rent-free living and
he agrees. only to find out that he rs
the star of a porn film. . SHORT Fft.MS: A SHORT LOOK AT us
Edwards Island 1
THE DANGDOUS LOVE Of Al.RE
ZEEGMAN
Alfie's imaginary friend AJ comes up
with movie plot schemes to •get the
girl,· but when he tries to put them
into action. the plans end In injUf)' to
~
IOTH Of THEM (TOUS LES DEUJ()
The symbolic story of oor world. Oof'
Love. Our hate
J1'TTERS
A horny fad.es man convinces his
somewhat sexually inexpeoeoced.
soon-to-be-mamed. best tnend that
he needs one last wild escapade
before tying the knot.
INRDEL
Unable to get rt on wrth both his mis-
tress and his wife. Mike discovers his
most intimate desires are trapped by
his own superllaality.
rrs A SHAME AllOUT RAY
Ray drops dead while watering his
lawn, and it is discovered that his
records in the afterlife are incom-
plete.
EIGHT
Through a series of sometimes comic
and sometimes bitter 1119nett~ the
lives of eight strangers collide
11:30 P.&
nt£ TMSMSSEll (O !WA.SCIO
Edwards Island 2
Bruif.1001
Oiredor. lteto Brant
Sa"'*'"lt.. Marca! Aquino, ~o
Brant. Renato Ciasca c.t: Maro> Ricca. Alexandre Borges.
Paulo Miklos, Malu Mader
Rwnng time: 97:00 .
A story of power; friendship ~
betrayal set 1n Sao Paulo. Estevao,
Ivan and Gilberto have been friends
and partners for ovet 15 yean when
Estevao ttveatens to bruk up the
partn«ship. IVan and Gilberto decide
to eliminate their friefld b>J hiring a
professional killer
1 , ...
ARNIUl.ANCE
lido Theater
United Stlt.t. 1002
l>lrect9r: Brad Alan L.ewtS
Running tlrM: 97:00
An uncompromising. honest look at
what it takes to compete for • pl-.
on the US Olympk rowing tum -
one that Is~ for the 2000
Sydney Ofympk team.
h30P.&
NY*E
Edwatds ~nd ,
The Netherlands. 1000
DINCM. Pie'te< Vertioeff ~. Pl~erVeltloeff
CMt: ~ He! ldl idOI. Jef'Oen
WUlems
...... time: 106:00
Nynlce Van Hid'ltum wa the pen
name for popular children's boolt
wrtter ~ 8otmede ecw ~
the reality of hef lift atdlet up 'With
t-. she bruks down In this period
piece abcMlt the role of wotMI' In
sodety.
2P.&
SHCXllT .....s: DOCU$MOllT
O'MIM
Eclwardl lsiand 2
f8TM*'(Of ...... nw ,..., family Nd out fliw CMf
ttwee~ In~....,..
and during thla tilM. ,., Nd~
ctc.cltlkri-..-.... ~ dNtt\. •
WOP.&
SP&
MIU
Edwards Island 2
Untttd Stater, 2000
OiredOr. GrMYt He5IOY
Sow1W1tM. C..ndice lllllenson
c.t: John Carroll LVncti. ~ey
Jones, Stephen TobololNstty, Dytan
Walsh, Valerie Mahaffey
...... dmr.88:00
Walt Hegelman receives 1 mesage
from the Great Spirit to build the
most amazing gott coune in Valhall&.
Wf!st Texas. A Par 6 courw rising
majestically out of the ~ lost to
Walt and his twin sister 20~n ago.
when they were f<>tted to leaYI
town.
x ' Edwards Island I
Japan. 1996
Director. Rmtaro
Scnenwwltw. Asaml Wat.Mlabe,
Nanase Ohbwa, Rintaro c.t: Tomokazu Seki. Jrio lwao,
Keo Narfta
R&aftng dmr. 98:00
In this anime film. the future of the
universe rests on one young man. who must efth« deftroy the Dr9g0n5
of Earth or the Dragons of Hewen. .....
OtEJUSH
Udo Theater
United S~ 1001
DiN<tor: Finn Taylor
SO....tWll'*'. Finn Taylof c.t: Robin Tunney, nm Blake
Nelson. .I.son Pnestley. Uz Phair and
Brad Hunt
~time: 100:00
Zoe Alder, a IOYe-itarwd animator,
spends coundess hours listening to
Cherish radio. losing hefwtf In a
syrupy romantic obsession. She ends
up driving a hijadted car, mowing
down a policeman, and being put
under house arrest fot two~ Zoe
sheds her rose-colored glasses and
becomeS her O'NO ~hero when ~ reallies she Is being st.anted.
• Spotlight scrHning spo11so1'@d by
Fine Line Ffltures.. $10.
7P.&
1ME IHJ IN WEST ADVa1"ISING
Edwards Island 1
Is a 30 f«Dtld commet dal a WlfY short
film and a wey to 1:n.it Into ._.
tures? Ridley and Tony Scutt. MkhMI say, o.vid Andlef and more 1111 c.arne
from the world of~ adoiler·
bsing and leapt to the big IO'Mn. em In West explores iconk ~
i(lg from legencS.wy ~Inducing
ChlaWay and Weiden K~
• Gal• sponsored by Ontngie, Los
AAge#.5 Md San Diego Ad Oubl to
be Mk/ at the HMd ltodc C..'-aftw·
ward. $.20. Casual c:hsJ.
SHO«r ALMS: m> SOC rtm SAY
•SMOlft'S•l
Edwards bland 2
1ME fOUNTAIN All efdetty INtl cisc:DYel'S I founcM'I
of youtt\ In his t.dtyard gr99nhoule.
He gives some w.w to hil bedrlddlM • ~ only to find unopec1:lld cor91-
queflCeS.
MmtPUl ~=--=-~= a conftict among~ WOfNn! ha
wife. her slsur and his~'°'*·
BIW'T'f
At the end of Wo'1d W11 I. two~ ~ ttw deldl mltdm for an~ dNdlW joumty-flndlng. wr/
home. lut ~ ... not ...
,,_ llOCJ« AND 1MI .. '~John...,. ...... ~dd
book fiftedwtth ~~
W'I noc.., he~ a UMf"""°'r ctenm wht\ tts pnMIM owner.
k &Sil090U&.
.,,,. t>'Ua *"Y about • lfit Of dlNtCti
turning polntln• ~
yGUr'9 man\ !He.
DOG ,,.~-~for,..,.. lbout t'IOilf hi& mae. ...... lo,,.
Wtt Md\ Of-. he ........ hOld ..,~ ....... ~·...,, ..... _,.._R IS
Wiii I._ •• _. Udo,...., -----~-................. _
~--~ .... --"""' ....... .. ~---.... .... _.. ...... -..
8 e a c h -Fil"' Festival 2002 N1wpor1
HIMNllTOM
THWlng )Ult south of pub8t)I.
lllofNs Harris~ to ftnllV .. NS
dre1m wonw\ nebd. Thol'IW WW\
comes trw ~ he stlys ~ all rilgtrt
w.tchlng her, but ~the pt1ca.
IMAU
To win the grand prize for me~ n-Wln,c:om contest. OM must be
weldtd Inside his ~8'onl,
for•~ IMng tntirefy off 1tle Internet.
GITSIONNY
Anatly sick of ~ standards. w ..
friends hit o1tk.al tnl:U, kldNp •
model and forc.e her to do the
unthlnkablt.
I PIE (A LOW STORY)
A look behind the scenes as a master
pie-maker wofb at his labor of love.
R.uSH
An OYer>the-top comedy tNt propel$
human Ingenuity and homan frailty
to new l.wls, all In the name of low
and h)'gtene.
NAM. HAMOR U:
NARtMAGEDOON
It's the day after the day that will live
in Infamy.
llOOINE GIA1. •
The onset of puberty has a young girl
praying for larger breasts.
SARTYMAN
A 2-dlmenslonal Kon comes to life In
this animated short. ,, ...
DOGTQWN AND Z-llOYS
Edwards Island 1
United Sta~ 2001
DINCtor: Stacy Peralta
""""'ng Time: 90:00 The high-flying vertk.al style of skate-
boarding is now such a defining ei.-
ment of International youth rultvre
that it's hard to believe it wasn't
invented by a skateboard manufac-
turer In fact. it was invented in the
street. in a place called ~
"where the debris meets the sea.•
• Spotlight scnening spom;ond by
Sony Pictures Classics. $10. Dress~
Is skarewear.
9:30 , ...
IADTIUf'
Edwards Island 2
unada.1001
DINCtor: Walter Vivetiros
Sawtwritel. Walter Viwriros
c.t: Kells James. Brian Frank.
Emanuel C. Albino, Daniel Viera,
Arene Johnson and Sandra Jukk
"'-'Ing time: 88:00
When a skater opens the cover of an
adufts..only comic book, the anima-
tion comes to life.
lPRll 17
11 A.M.
OMfE.fN MOV1E ~
Edwards Island 2
United Stat~ 1001
Dlteetor: Kurt Kuenne
Rurvtlng time: 58:00
A film celebration of America's grut-
est icon of youth, freedom and the
avtomoblle. What started as an auto
parts owner's business venture to
make some easy money accidentally
became a magic.al place where
romance, fun and a sense of commu-
nity flourished.
11:30UL
THE MU>t0NE SHOW
EdwMds Island 1
United State1, 1001
DlNCtor: wendell Morris
Sawetiwt'ttlM. Wendell Monis
c.t: Jonathan Silvennan, Natasha
Gregson Wagner
RUN!ing tlmr. 100:00
When Taylor Darcy Is diagnosed with
c.ancer, he wants only to be left alone
so that he can mock his W'f through
this nightmare in peace; however f.-
f1nds th.lt people trNt him like •
freak. While in the hospital Taytor
meets a leukemia patient named
Lynn who is the only person he can
connect with during his Of"deal.
CRMHBOATS -AIR FORa
SAILORS IN WORLD WM I AND
KORIA
Lido Theater
United S~tes. 2001
Dl1"9Ctor: THsh Kinney
RwWng time: 43:00
The Army Air Force in World War II
and the Air~ 5Pf1'1'M-
s1oned a fleet of StNJt fast bolits"1o
support air squadron flying missions
ove< the sea. Thee wer~ the crash
boats, designed ~ the mistanct of
Great Brit.lln's ~~-Oft.ft~
taken for Navy f'T bo9t:s, 1tle Nr Fon-
aew membefs wore~ unttorri.
with Air Force stripes. The boats ~
retired In 1956.
12P.M.
I DON'T KNOW JACK
Edwards Island 2
Vnlted Sntte\ 1001
DINdGr: Christopher LMwn5
........ tlm« 91:00
Jadt Nanct. m.de f.mous In the
DaYld lynch\ first film-~·
lni.d a lit. which bllffted NJ fr1enda,
relatives and SOfne say hlmMtf. A fm.
dnatlng dcxunwYtMy on 1tle "'*'
Girt«' and bNtal dMth of this pop
cult Icon. •
.... .&
••.& •
WILD "-OWlllS (JlYTla)
Udolheater
Q«h Republk. 2000
DhctDr: F.A. Brabel
So .......... FA Btabel, Deana
Ho!vathov .. Milos Macourelc
CMt: 8oltk PolMca
....... 11me: 85:00
A ravishingly bHutfful adaptftion of
the 19th c»ntury Czed'I poet KJ.
Erben's famous wnes, this film poem
offers sewn fairy tales tNt illustrate
arthetypal themes of RX. dNth, pas..
slon. jNlousy and fllmili.I bond5.
SHOln' ALMS: THE -ntE"' SHORTS
Edwanis Island 1
THEQUAMY
It wes just a regular ladies' night -or
at least It w. supposed to be. The
next morning. handsome~
is found dNd In the quany behind a
rural New Jeney home.
THE'l-..s
A f.ther and son live In • car1111n in
the middle of nowhere. When the
son bums down the CMW¥1, hls tattler deddes to lclll hfm In a bizarre
Ind convoluted execution pact.
' THE l*ILOMAT
Three young Italian revolutloneries
kidnap an Italian diplomat's daughter
and hold her for $10 million.
THE RIGHT MAN fOll THE JOe
The only thing tougher man becom-
ing a CIA agent Is becoming a CIA
assassin.
THE MMING SPOf
Three stories in three genres conve<g·
Ing at one parting spot.
SP.&
A 5ntANGE WORLD (UN MUNDO
MllO)
Edwards Island 2
~2001
Director. Atmando Casas
Sowwww .... Atmando ~
RafMITonduh
CMt: \lktof Hugo
....... time: 95:00
Salvador; II famous comediMl and
conductor of~ show known
as Tolln. Is lll5llUlted in a taxi by
Emilio, II thief with aspirations of
being a !)(ofesslonal comedian.
6P.&
JCMNT 5EOIRf1"Y AMA (GONG
DONG KYUNG• KU YUK)
Udolhate<
KorN.1001
Dhdlor: Chan Woot Park
Sowwwttlll. Chan Woot Parit
CMt: Lee Young At, Song Kang Ho,
Kim TM Woo
....... time: 110:00
A bloody shootout at tht KOf'ffl'l
DMZ leads to a tortuous lnwstlgatlon
of murder, friendship and the disarm-
ing beauty of cigllrettes and late
night convenation. Major Sophie
Jang heads an lnvest!gatM te.m
responsible for l.W1COWring the truth.
but soon finds tNt no one reulls
:r,~~ the fllm of the offl-
7 •.&
THI PCJWBt CW nunt -ACCIDllD-
WG lO THI DAlAI LAMA
Edwards Island 1
Denmarl(. 1D01
Dlredar. Irene Grew
...... time: 60:00
During a visit to Copenhagen In 2000,
The Dalal Lama said "'The Power of
truth Is stronger than 1tle power of
gun.• This fttm Is nMlde of Intel oiews
andst.a~~tNt visit to o.im.tr. with
new and~ footage fnlm
Inside l1bet and 1tle Tlbmn eiOle
community In on..,,....
~Nm:YOUnttHCIRTI
!dwatds tstand 2
--"°"" IUCll When ~poses 1he qullCIOf\
"Wh.lt4J tht wont thing~.,. eY9f'
done to~ Ml her friendl
t'Mlln ttwv'r'9 In for tome~
ment.
...,.HAV.
A comtno«..aoe my of f\19r'ldllNp. •
dreM1I and~-~· the ty9 of Het'lty NIChoft. wM hM llwd
and brMthed ~.,., 9"Q he can NfMmblr.
QUBT '°"1MIMOLY,.,.._.
l!~~C1111thll•
problem, MonlW mollW and ""'°""
adl ptOWll to be ..... lMa "* "' Uie~ofh~
1"1&.MrMCI
A fMti**f loolr ......... of
~CMIO..,... r9dfta """9a
)'OUng rldng addict ....... '° ~hpttf .. of ...... ~
ttm..
l9IQA
Nlwbln Clpl!a *°"''men~
·•thewnlf!I .... ~~ , time. ..
IMIWll ~--"--... , ... " '° widli&ld_...l..,.•1111• ,....,_ .............. ~ •
,
FIVE EASY QUESTIONS
Tm your film ~stlv•I knowl@dge and win frH tfck•ts.
A re you a Film fest fanatic? Wont to w1n U~ to
the Newport Beach PUm Festival'• opening and
cl06Uig galas? The fitat J>e!SOD to e-mail the cor-
rect answers to the following ~WW win a
pelt of tickets for both ~The Bank• on Thursday and "Euge-
nio, l Love You· on April 18. Both sets o( tickets include a
gala after the screening. Four runneTS·up wW receive a pair
of tickets eacb to "To .Kill a Mockingbird,• a meening and .
tribute to Ebner Bernstein • ...._ .. YG" W'WWI to
jennifer.maha/Olatfrmn.com. You will also need to inc.IUde
your name and a phone number where you can be reached.
1 Name the Aaidemy Awwd-wlnnlng fllm that
wilt ..,...,. at the 2002 Nttwpcwt le-" Film
Festlv•I.
2 Name the actor who was nomln.tff foti a 2002
Aact.my Award for his perfonunce In •sexy . a.•st. • Which ...,ae•red at the 2001 Fiim Ffttlvel.
3 What Is the John Wllters film •Potyester"' Mid
to be fllmed In beauH of the acratdHncknlff
cuds hllnded out durl119 lb orlglruil KNenlngl
4
5
Whet femou.s Devld Lynch film did actor Jade
Nance star In?
N•m• three Europe•n countries ....,,....m.d
with films In the 2002 festiv•I.
hood. a drug-abusing young man
befriends a poverty-stricken and
fatherless boy. ., ...
OH THE NOSE
Edwards Island 1
lret.nd, 2000
Dhdor: DaVid uffrey
So .. iwrtt.. Tony Philpott
c.t: Dan Aykroyd. Robbie Coltrane,
Brenda Blethyn. Eanna MacUam
........ time: 104:00
Brendan. a porter at the Oublln
Medical Centre, Is plagued with flnan-
dal strains and a gambler's sordid
past. However, he has found a gold·
en goose within the archives of the
college th.lt may provide the Midas
touctl he needs.
• Irish spotlight spons«ed by the
Newport BHch Coovention and
Vishorl &Jreau. There wt/I be an
after~ng gala at Muldoon's
$10. Dress ca54Jal.
WHEN 1ME RAIN UFTS (AME
AGARU)
Udo Theater
Mpan,1000
DINdGr: Takashi Koizumi
SowMritll. Aklra Kurosawa
CMt: Akin Te<a, Yashiko Miyako.
Shiro Mihlne, Mieko Harada
Running time: 91 :00
Trapped in the storm. a husband and
wife find peace with their lflles in this
period piece set in the Kyoho Era.
• A gala reception will be Mid •fter
the WHfli'VJ to honor cinematogra-
/)Mr Shoji Ueda. The evening will
begin with Taiko drumming. $20.
~casual.
9:30PA
THI MOKEN WINGS OF EWAH
FOOTML1.S
Edwards Island 2
United States. 1001
Dhdor: Gabriel Judet-~nshel
Sawiwrtt.. Gabnef Judet-
Welnshel
C.-t: Gabriel Judtot·Weinshel, Franck
Dlnet. Nina Egli
Running time: 45:00
Elijah Footfalls. a lonely street juggler,
discovers a vagabond drcus troupe In
a wooded valley. The film charts
Elijah's IOYe affair with Nina, the fire
breather; and his friendship with •Ja
Wax. the draa director. Using only
eight lines of dialogue. tht film tells •
distilled st<>ty about the eswntlats of
human IOYe and longing.
IOP.M.
BLOOD: ntE LAST VAMPIM
Udo Theater
Japan, 200Q •
DINcW: Hlryukl Kitakubo
Sowtwrttlll. Kenji Kamlyama
<:Mt: Youkl Kudoh, Saeml Nakamura..
Joe Romena
RWW1ing time: 48:00
This anime film set on Halloween pits
a young woman of mysterious origins
against a slew of vampires.
APRIL 18
11 UL
BARK
Edwards Island 1
United Sta~ 1001
Dir9c:tior: Kasia Adamik
Sa........_. Heather Morgan
<:Mt: Usa Kudrow, Hanlt Auria,
Vincent O'Onofrio, Lee Tergesen.
Heather Morg.ln
...... time:M:OO
A profesJional dog-walker has gradu-
ally stopped using speech and
~ the identity of a canine. This
causes no end of concerned and
emba1Tassment for her husband, who
consults their Vf!lerlnarian, his sladter-
ish best friend and a psychiatrist.
GREAT DAY IN HAVANA
Edwards Island 2
Un~ States. 1001
Dftctlor. Casey Stoll
Filmmakers Laurie Ann ~ and
Casey Stoll dlSCXM!f' the city of Havana
through the eyes of 11 artists. The
crumbling buildings contrast with the
vibrant people and their •rt painwn.,
sculpton,. actors, filmmakttt, poetS,
dancers and musicians, baring the
a ...
THI KISS YOU GAVE .. (B. IESO
QUl•DISftl
Edwards Island 2
IWrtO Rko, 2000
Dlredlor: Sonia Fritz
Sawwhllf. Ell5eo Alberto. Sonia
Fritz, Augustin CUbano
c.t Memb•s: Maricannen Aviles.
Jimmy Navarro
....... time: 92:00
Angela. star reportw Of Ttledigitll TV
Networil. Is married 10 Armando and
they havt an ~-old son. !Yen.
When their m.an1age fails, Nmando
kldnapl Ivan and take him to the
United States. but Angtla. alded by a
lawyer, reQ>Vef'S her son.
hJOP.&
INIDSTAlE IO
Udo Theater
United St.ltes. 1001
Dhdor: Bob Giie
So ......... BobGale
CMt: Glty Oldman, James Marsden.
Christopher L.b/d "'-*" time: 117:00
De!pit8 his good looks and winning
smile, Neal Oliver Is conflkted about
his life. On his 22nd birthday. he wish-
es for an answer. The wish Is granted
by a mythic.al character with an
unusual sense of humor and leads to
a journey along a highway that can't
be found on any map.
SHCMn'-flLMS: TOOAY IN SHORTS
Edwards Island 1
IEGGAR
This film explores the myths we ~
die to one another and the lazines'S
with which we acx:ept them as truth.
DIWALI
The story of I young Indian-American
man who discovers his cuttur.i Identi-
ty as he attemptS to win the love of•
beautiful Indian girt. ...
A harried businesswoman rushes
through her day without ewn taking
tlme to blink.
lllU.Y52a
Enveloped In the c:omfortabfy familiar
world of the lntenwt. the lntrOWll'ted
Billy strugglts to f .. his real-worid
affection for Eve.
CONTISTANT
For his aPPffrance on a TV quiz
show, Danny Is as obsessive about
Ironing his shirts as he Is about mem-
orizing the periodic table. But his
one-vadt mind leads him estray dur-
ing II final pr9'1how haricut from his
Palestinian barber.
~OfSllENCE
A frantic adveftlsing exeartive Is
assembling II c.ampllign for II soothing
vacation padcage wt.lie fielding • bar·
ragt of nonstop phont calls, pages
and faxes. An lntem.iptlon changes
e¥eJything.
iCbt:9NA 11EMNA
All hell breilks loose when foermlna
Medina. an oblMous housetceeper. rur tnds the brand ,....,,, car of a rich
and spoiled kid.
2P.&
~ flnd5 cM. ~he II~ by
hl'I ·~and tMChers. ..... Ufe Is a rat,... OM dlly tht dram
11\aPS blCX Into fOCUI.
UIUJllJU'S WOUNDS
A look et one min\~ ~ Souttl Afr1c.n TMtl and ~ Conw1:illlon for granti-
ng amnesty 101he S*90"...., killed
hlsw!M.
DADOYS um.a GR. <MM'S a-....,, .
A mpectlble femlly man risks his rep-
utation by meddling with a street·
Wilker.
..... I
GMIWNUPS
Edwardl tsland 1
United StJttm.1001
Dhaal. Doug Flnelll
So ...... I .... Doug Finelll, Mitch
Galane
CMt John Slamos. D«liel London.
Meredith Saltngcr, TWa Westwood,
Bill Sagt. Jelle.a Walter, Tony~
c..rolAlt
-....... time: 90:00
Steve and Eric, average guys In their
early 30's. are starting to realize that
50n'le'thlng Is missing. Eric loves to
make silly jokes about how he Ind
Steve should "swap wives.• What tf
Eric's joke became reality.
NMAWAY
Lido Theater
Iran, 1001
Dlteca. Kim L.onginotto, Zlba Mir-
Hosseini
........ time: ff7:00
The story of five Iranian girts who
have run May from home and now
reside In • refuge . The film explores
their experience of male authority,
their longing for re59f(t and freedom
and their hopes for a brighter future.
7P.&
ONE.ftlD KIHG
Edwards lslri 2
Un;ted Sr.res. 1001
onctor: Bobby Moresco
SawMil•. Bobby Moresco
CMt: Armand Assante, William
Baldwin, Jason Gedrldc. Chan
Palminterl, Bruno Kirby
. ....... time: 110:00
Frank Thomas Is faced with the killing
of longtime friend Dennis and his
desire to find the kill« leads him Into
uncharted waters of his home. life
and nelgtlbofhood. ., ...
WILD RDWDS (ICYTKE)
EdwMds Isl.and 1
Cz«h ltepublic. 2000
Dhdor: F.A. Brabel
Saw ........ FA Brabel, Deana
HofVathova.. Miios Mac.ourek
CMt: Bolek PolMt•
...... time: 8S:OO
A ravishingly beautiful adaptation of
the 19th century Czedi poet K.J.
Erben's famous~ this film pMm
often 5ellef\ fairy tales that illustrate
archetypal themes of sell. death. pas-
siof\ jeak!Uly and familial bonds.
lUGINIO. I L0\4Ei)'OU (11 VOGi.JO
...IUGEMO)
Udol'heater
~~1001
DltectDr: Francisco J. Fernandez
SawMift.w. Francisco J. Fernandez c-= Chiara De Bonis, Gluli.n. De
Sio, GiancM1o Giannini, Jacques
Pemn. Annamaria Petrov•
....... time: 90:00 .
Eugenio has I caring flmlly, wort he
belleYeS In. • penonal routine and a
hotJle In the count1y. This seems II
sJmple and ordinary profile, but
Eugenio Is challetlged by Dc:Mf\'s syn-
dromt, and every task of IMng Is a
struggle to achlew 1 sense of normal-
cy.
• CJoslng night g.la will be held after
the sctHnlng. $35. Oras casual.
NO•&
SHOln' Al.MS: IUCXET O' SHOWTS
Edwards Island 2
flOUltSa..
fOt.W buddies meet for their weekty •
gotf outing ~ difcoolet there's more
behind their friendsNpa than gott.
OISP
A spirited 12-yeer-old girt. hits .tht wall
of Hl1y adolnc.enat. Her fierce strug-
gle to m.H\ her serise of self, despite
the onslaught of other volcles,
denotes tht unique~ of a
girl coming of agt. .... ~~~
ttw. the sky wfth
on wif9 of gold. • young boy~ his pl-. .
within a IOdety of,._,,, and int.1-
lect.
THI LAST GUNlffOr
A llMd ~of 1tle fllmlli.t lmpll-
c.ttlcn of llP9l1htld In South Afrtca
during the 1980s unfolds as Heltf\ a
~~.,.,,...,.Sophie, a ~ bUdt llfVatlt ltt n..d Of medic.al~
. ....
Around
-•-----.-'... .
TOWN
• Send AROUND TOWN ltetm to
the Dally Piiot, 330 W. Bey St,
Costa Mesa, CA 92627; by fax to
(949) 64M 170; or by calling (949)
574-C298. Include the time, date
and location of the event as well
es a contact phone numbef. A
complete list.Ing Is available at
www.dallypllotcom.
TODAY
Jmematlonally known acbol-
a.r of humanistic inquiry and
aitical theory Georgio Agam-
ben will present a lectw'e
titled "Community, Identity,
1\'aWJUl • at noon. The lecture
is part of UC Irvine's 2001-02
Chancellor's Distinguished
Pellow Series and will be held
at UCl's Humanities Research
Institute. Administrative
Building, Room 338. Free.
(949) 824-7372 or
www.evc.ud.edu/cdls/.
TUESDAY
Orange Coast College's
19th annual High School
Senior Day will take place
from noon to 3 p.m. in the
campus quad. More than
3,500 Orange County high
school seniors are expected
to attend. Each senior will
receive early registration
materials for fall 2002 class-
es Wlth counseling, orienta-
tion and financial aid mate-
rials also available. Depart-
ment and campus tours will
be conducted for interested
students. A free ba.rbecue
lunch also will be provided.
Free. (714) 432-5125.
A workshop focusing on the
art of selling in business will
be held from 9 a.m. to noon
at National University. The
event will be hosted by the
Service Corps of Retired
Executives and sponsored
by the U.S. Small Business
Administration.TheeventIB
$25 per person, or $20 U pre-
registered. The university is
at 3390 Harbor Blvd., Costa
Mesa. (71 4) 550-7369 or
www.SCORE114.org.
A free seminar OD asthma
and allergies 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.
WEDNESDAY
A program titled •ffow to
Breathe Better and Relax
More· presented by Joan
Nehls. coordinator of the
pulmonary rehabilitation
program at Hoag Hospital,
will be held from 6:30 to 8
p.m. The program aims to
provide individuals with
advice and strategies for
coping with shortness of
breath resulting from lung
cancer and surgery. The
program will take place in
Conference Room A of the
Hoag Cancer Center. Free.
The center is at 1 Hoag Dri-
ve. Building 41 , Newport
Beach. (949) 760-5542.
Jodalko, a UC Irvtne student
organization that performs
taiko drumming. will pre-
sent a workshop at 8 p.m ..
The workshop is part of
UCI's 2001-02 Chancellor's
D~tinguisbed Fellows
Series and will be held in
Winifred Smith Hall. Pree.
(949) 824-7372 or
www.evc.ud.edu/cdfs/.
THURSDAY
The first of a three-day
'BEST BET
The first of the five-day 29th annual Newport In-
Weter Boat Show will begin from noon to 7 p.m.
May 1 at the Newport Dunes Waterfront Resort and
Marina, 1131 Back Bay Drive, Newport Beach. The
show features hundreds of yachts, sport fishers, sail-
boats and speedboats. Experts will be on band to
answer questions and demonstrate the latest prod-
ucts. $10, children 12 and younger are free. Other
U.mes for that weekend are 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. May 2
to 3, 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. May 4, and 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.
May 5, (949) 757-5959 or goboaUngam_erica.com •.
trai,ning conference for con-
struction contractors will be
held at the Westin South
Coast Plaza, in Costa Mesa.
The Certified Contractors
Network will hold its spring
quarterly training confer-
ence. Contractor business
owners and employees will
have the chance to attend
breakout groups that focus
on specUic trades, such as
sales, marketing, produc-
tion, paper organization and
hiring. Contractors interest-
ed in becoming a netwol1c
member should call Gail
McNe~ at (610) 642-9505.
A kickoff breakfast for the
2002 Costa Mesa Senior
Center annual campaign to
help r6IBe money to under-
write programs such as
health awareness, educa-
tion and personal and legal
counseling will be held at 9
a.m. at the center, 695 W.
19th St., Costa Mesa. Reser-
vabons requested by ApnJ
9. (949) 645-2356, Ext. 16.
Envtronmeiital Nature Cen-
ter founder Robert House will
lead a walk beginning at
noon at the nature center
office, 1601 E. 16th St., New-
port Beach. Free, bring a sack
lunch. The walk will take
about an hour. (949) 645-8489
Award-wtnnlng author and
poet Sonya Sones will be on
hand to meet with people at
1 p.m. at the Newport Beach
Central Library's Friends
Meeting Room. 1000 Avoca-
do Ave. Sones' work has
received poetry awards, and
her book ·stop Pretending:
What Happened When My
Big Sister Went Crazy• was
nominated for a Los Angeles
Tunes Book prize in the
young adult category.
Before becoming a poet,
Sones taught filmmaking at
Harvard University, taught
animation on grants from
the National Endowment for
the Arts and has worked as
a s01pt supervisor, a pho-
tographer and a film editor.
(949) 717-3801.
A lecture titled •The Ba1lls-
tic MIBsile Defense Debate:
The Technological and
Political Issues,• will be held
as part of UC Irvine's Center
for Global Peace and Con-
flict Studies' Spring Forum
2002 from 3:30 to 5 p.m. m
the Social Science Plaza A.
Rqom 1100. Patrick Morgan
from the university's politi-
cal science department and
chairs Thomas and Eliza-
beth Tiemey of peace stud-
ies at the university will
speak. Free. (949) 824-6410.
A free seminar on ayurve~
will be held from 6:30 to
7:30 p.m. at Mother's Mar-
ket, 225 E. 17th St., Costa
Mesa. Reservations
required. (800) 595-MOMS.
The Grammy Award-nomi-
nated Asian American
Orchestra will perform in con-
cert at 8 p.m. as part of the UC
Irvine's 2001-02 Chancellor's
Distinguished Fellows Serles.
The concert will be held at
Winifred Smith Hall. Free.
(949) 824-7372 or
www.evc.uci.edu/cdls/.
FllDAY
The 13th annual Southern
California Spring Garden
Show will take place from
10 a.m. to 9 p.m. and will
continue from 10 a.m. to 7
p.m. Saturday, and 11 a.m.
to 6:30 p.m. Sunday on all
three levels of the Crate and
BarreVMacy's Home Store
win~ at South Coast Plaza,
3333 Bear St., Costa Mesa.
The show is presented by
Smit9 and Hawken and
sponsored by the Automo-
bile Club of Southern Cali-
fornia. The show features
Restaurant
---Estlbl""8d In 1952 ----'"-.......,,....
Mo. Nit/nSJ!tcUd
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Sud.•~Ml•C«~
nearly 80 garden e:xhlbiton
that will sign their books
and hold seminars. Children
will be able to participate in
Uve animal and bug shows.
Parking and admission are
tree. (714) 435-2160.
The third annual Newport
Beach Spring Antiques
Show will begin Prtday and
runs through Sunday at the
Newport Dunes Waterfront
Pavilion at the Newport
Dunes Resprt, 1131 Back Bay
Drive, Newport Beach. More
than 50 dealers displaying
American. English and Asian
goods, such as porcelain,
sliver, rugs, · gl,ass, fine art
and jewelry, will converge on
the three-day event that also
features a Luncheon Lecture
Series each of the three days.
Lecture tickets are $50 per
person or $500 per table.
Seating is limited, and reser-
vations are recommended.
(949) 451-4546.
SUNDAY
Sl Andrew's Presbyterian
Church will host a children's
musical beginning at 6 p.m.
at 600 St. Andrews Road,
Newport Beach. ThIB year's
production IB titled "Kings,
Dreams and Schemes: the
Adventures of Daniel. H
Free. (949) 574-2233.
APRIL 15
Ellas Inbram, 28, from
Ethlopia and Alexandra
Veil, 20, from Ukraine will
speak about their experi-
ences of immigrating to
Israel at the Jewish Federa-
tion Camp"Us, 250 E. Baker
St., Costa Mesa. The discus-
sion will begin at 7 p.m.
Free. Reservations request-
ed by April 10. (714) 755-
5555, Ext. 224.
APRIL 16
The Corona del Mar Cham-
ber of Commerce will hold
its monthly networking lWl-
cheon at 11 :30 a.m. at the
Five Crowns Restaurant,
3801 E. Coast Highway,
Corona del Mar. Jerry Man-
del. chairman of the Per-
forming Arts Society, will be
the speaker. Reservations
required. (949) 673-4050.
A free seminar on insomnia
will be held from 6:30 to
7:30 p.m. at Mother's Mar-
ket, 225 E. 17th St., Costa
Mesa. Reservations
required. (800) 595-MOMS.
APRIL 17
Learn about veterans who
served aboard the Dream
Maker Yacht, stationed in
the Aleutian Islands in 1943-
44, at 11:30 a.m. at the Lido
Theatre in Newport Beach
as part of the Newport
Beach Film Festival. The
documentary ·crasbboats-
Army Air Force Sailors in
World War Il and Korea" will
be screened. Call (949) 253-
2880 fo.r tickets and (949)
728-0980 for information.
,The annual open house for
the Orange Coast Middle
College High School will
begin at 7 p.m. and wW be
held at the Captain's Table
restaurant on the Orange
Coast College campus. The
event aims to present the
program to potential stu-
dents (high school juniofS'
and seniors) looking to
attend OCC simultaneously.
Pree. The campus is at 2701
Fairview Road, Costa Mesa.
(714) 432-5732.
CENTURY
CONTINUED FROM 1
blouse pinned with a lily.
"It ju.st blows my mind,
the en~rgy she has,• said
Doug Stuckey, her grandson
and public affairs director for
the Newport Beach Chamber
of Commerce. "It makes me
feel good, there's good genes
in me.•
Stuckey remembered
when his grandmother
climbed to the top of the
football stadium at Oregon
St.ate University in the mid-
1990s, wh~re he played foot·
ball.
•Her system is so well-
kept. • Doug Stuckey said
•She's always in a good
mood, always wants to know
what's going on.•
Sitting beside Judith
Stuckey was her longtime
101-year-old friend Viola
Krahn. The two met in grade
school in Arizona and grew
up going to dances in high
school with their other friend,
Audrey Smallhouse.
·we would walk to the
dances, come home and
stand on the comer and yak,
yak, yak about the dances,·
Krahn said. .
To escape the sununer
heat, the three friends rode
the train all night from
Phoenix to Los Angeles and
then took a streetcar to Long
Beach, where they would
stay for the summer. Krahn
said.
Judith Stuckey held a pic-
ture of the three girls walk-
ing on the beach.
She and husband Hallman
Stuckey. who died in 1977.
moved tcr Newport Beach in
the 1950s from Glendale,
where they had lived since
1923. The couple purchased
and subdivided land on
NEWSROOM
CONTINUED FROM 1
plans to take part in the event.
Over the corning weeks,
look for announcements in
the Dally Pilot on how to take
part in the event. Or Just call
Mcintosh at (949) 650-2827.
As l said last year, a guy
like me has a hard time
understanding how soccer
can surpass in popularity my
personal favorite sports like
football, baseball and basket-
ball.
Of course. I'm still a guy
who snow skis 10Stead of
~ ,,_ llf Pt..ctrl.
J 121 ,,,.,,._ 61.J.
c-. Ill-. C4 J"'26
714-54~
Moodoy, April 8, 2002 9
lrvine Avenue and VUl Mari-
na, where some of Judith's
friends and famtly stil.l.. reside
Her granddaughter, Erin
Locke, spent many days at
the Irvine Avenue h.ome,
building forts. making dress-
es and sitting oo a rock,
reaching up to piclc persim-
mons off a tree. After Locke
picked the fn.uts, Stuclcey
Stuclcey froze them and t,hen
gave the fnut back to Locke
to eat.
"That's one of my biggest
memories, of eating them;"
said Locke, who now lives in
Costa Mesa with husband
Jett, 6-year-old daughter
Kailen and 10-month-old
Joshua. ·1 have her old
sewing machme m my
house. Now I 1ust have to
learn how to sew.·
Neighbors from Laguna
Woods descnbed Stuckey al.
one who chenshes her inde-
pendence, supports her fami-
ly and has a good sense of
humor.
"She was incredibly
cheerful, fun to be with and
was wonderfully supportive
of her fanuly. • saJd Ruth
Goldberg. s1ttmg alongside
her 87-year-old husband lrv
The Goldbergs were neigh-
bors with Jud.tth for 15 years
•She insisted on going to
the bank, dnvmg to the mar-
ket and going to the hair-
dresser by herself. She was
driving a car until 1994, •
Ruth Goldberg said.
As Doug Stuckey lit the
wax candle in the shape of
the number • uro ·· and revel-
ers sang "Happy Buthday, •
Jud.1th Stuckey shared a
birthday wish.
"That everyone be happy
in theu lives," she saJd.
• BRYa AU>ERTON is the news
assistant. He may be reached at
(949) 574-4298 or by e-mail at
bryce.aldertonOlatirnes.com
snowboards, l.J.stens to Nell
Young instead of N'Sync and
still eats ftlet nugnon whtle
the rest of the world turns
vegetarian
Yeah, I don't catch on to
trends very fast.
But I'll tell you tlu!>, the
Pilot Cup IS no trend and.
with Mclntosh m charge. it's
here to stay for many years to
come.
•TONY DODERO is the editor His
column appears on Mondays. If you
have story ideas or concerns about
news coverage, please send mes·
sages either via e-mail to
tony.doderoO/ati~.com or by
phone at (949) 57~258.
WHY STAY HOME
Sunset Dinners
c.Rjstorante !Mamma (jina
Monday-Friday: 4:30-6: 15
....... It ...........
Ca••elO.J.AL Florentina
(with 10up or salad)
JUST $10.90
The Real Prime Rib or Ftlet.
Mignon
(with IOap or salad)
JUST $13.'4>
J
.. ' . QUOTE Of THE DAY
"(Aaron Peirsol) had a great
swim in the morning, then
came back and put the pedal to
· the metal in the final ... •
Dave S.lo, Swim coach
10 Monday, April 8, 2002
.. . .
EYE OPENER
»*-DI
Sport; llal of Fame
tr~ ti"' ml!lMil11u!1J
April 15 honoree
ARMAND NETTI.ES
Sports lcllor-Roger Carlson • 949~7 4.4223 • Sports Fax: 949-650.0170 Daily Pilot
SWIMMING WORLD CHAMPIONSHIPS
Peirsol adds-tWo -world .records
Newport Harbor senior wins 200 backstroke and
is on victorious relay at world championships.
88rry Faulkner
DAILY PILOT
MOSCOW -Newport Harbor
High senior Aaron Peirsol, who
fulfilled an 1 t-year-old promise to
his mother, WeUa, by breaking a
world record last month, broke two
more Sunday at the Short Course
World Championships in Moscow.
Peirsol's winning time or t :5 t. t 7
in the 200-meter backstroke broke
the short course record held by two
others. The short course record,
earned in a 25-meter pool, adds to
the long course (50-meter pool)
record of 1 :55.15 he set March 20
while earrung a victory in the
national long course champi-
onships in Minneapolis.
Peirsol, the Olympic silver
medalist in the 200 back in Sydney,
Australia, also swam the
backstroke (leadoff) leg on
Sunday's victorious 400' medley
relay, which docked a world record
3:29.00.
Dave Salo, Peirsol's coach at
Irvine Novaquatlcs who did not
make the trip to Russia, said
Peirsol's short course record was
unexpected.
•Aaron is not as strong pushing
off the walls as a lot of the top
competitors in this event, so to set
the world record is pretty
significant,• said Salo, who also
coaches the men's and women's
teams at Orange Coast College.
'"Ibe top backstrokers in the world
were there, induding Matt Welsh
from Australia. so he raced some
good people. And he broke the
world record in an event that is not
his strongest.·
SEE PEIRSOL PAGE 11 Aaron Pelrsol
COLLEGE BASEBALL IIfitD
PHOTOS BY DON LEACH I DAILY Pit.OT
UC Irvine first baseman Matt Anderson flips the baJI to a teammate for an out at first Sunday afternoon.
UC Santa Barbara explodes to avert three-game series sweep.
ANTEATER BALLPARK -A third-
inning miscue on the base paths that
negated a would-be grand slam for the
UC 1rvtne baseball team Sunday turned
out to be an omen as visiting UC Santa
Barbara cJaimed a 17-6 Big West
Conference victory.
1be Gauchos ( 15-
19, 2-4 in conference)
averted a sweep in
the three-game series
by scoring t 1 runs in
the finaJ four innings
to overwhelm the
ICOlllOAID Anteaters (21-16, 4-
2). MtNtllln 6 Gaudl05 17 Ironically, the
trouble for the hosts
began after
freshman designa~ hitter R.J. Brown
launched a ball over the fence with the
bases loaded. Brown, however, was
called out after passing teanunate Jaime
Martinez on the base paths, erasing his
homer and forcir\g the Anteaters to
settle for three runs on the play.
The play still gave UCI a 5-4 lead,
but UCSB rallied for two runs in the
fourth, withstood a rally that drew the
Anteaters to within one. then pulled
away with some late-inning produdion.
The Gauchos scored four ln the
sixth, three ln the seventh and four
more in the eighth, matching their run
total wtth 17 hits.
UCSB right fielder Ryan Spilborghs
went 3 for 6 and drove lo six runs for the
wtnners, who accounted for seven S>f
the game'• 10 extra-base hits.
UCI Jtmior center fielder Jon Horwitz
had two doubles and scored twice,
eatending his httdog streak to 15 gamel
wttb a 4·for-5 peJfonnance. He is now
tutt1ng a team-leading .379.
Junior rtgbt fielder Chris Klemm ( 2
for ' with an RBI) was the only other
AnteMet wttb more than one hit, while
Above, UC lrvtne's
Steve Guthrie tries
to outrun a bunt as
UCSB catcher Nie
Rodriguez look.a on
In Gauchos' 17-6
victory Sunday.
At I~ Guthrie,
coC:b and preparet
to fire to flnt bue
after ~g In to
coUed. meekly bit
gl'OQDd ball near
the mound a.ante anc1 the
A ... 1111n failed In
lbllr -mpt to -...t.e uaree-.... .,w ..
co.l•ence .ertes.
Sports Hall of Fame
Celebrating tho rnillen liw11
CRAIG
PHOENIX
Newport Harbor
A tennis standout who, in reality, never found
his true potential during the Tars' early years.
Don Cantrell
DAILY PILOT
A fter a period of n
several varsity
sports in the
ntld-1930s, Craig
Phoenix, Class of '37 at Newport
Harbor High, went on to become
one of the most popular
gentlemen 10 the harbor area as
manager of the Lido Theater for
many years.
Hts s miling face became a
familiar picture every week to
hundreds.of students and their
parents and they came to admire
his kindly approach to people at
the theater.
The entlre Phoenix family
contributed numerous sports
accomplishments and fond
memories to the annals of Harbor
High athJetlcs during the '30s.
The father, Allan,
was a key groundsman
for the high school and
is recalled by old-timers
as the man who cared
for a pet skunk that
followed him often
around the football field.
The football players
valued his care of the
gridiron.
were good players.
"I would play with the
teachers after school,• he
continued. "They always played
doubles and whenever they
needed someone to fill in, they
would invite f1ltt10 come out after
school, so l got my playing time m ' that way.·
Interestingly anough, Phoenix
recalled that athlellc director
Ralph Reed was so involved with
coaching football and track from
1930-37 that he had a math
teacher named Lee Trine
coaching basketbalJ.
•1 don't recall who coached
baseball,• Phoenix said.
Phoenix, who later became a
sharp goller, said, "When I
started at Harbor High, It was
only 3 years old, so you couldn't
expect much to work with, but
each class that followed had
things a little better
than the one before and
today I understand It is
a first-class school.·
Craig became one of
the top two tennis Craig Phoenix
Always a man of
humility, Phoenix, when
reviewing the Pilot's
plan to honor bim with
its Hall of Fame.
indicated he couldn't
say much for himsell
except to say the
athletic years at Harbor players lo Orange
County out of the prep net battles
of '37. He and a doubles partner
went undefeate~ the seasons of
'35 and '36. He also lettered in
varsity football and basketball in
1935 and '36.
He loved exciting tennis from
his prep yean, but bas become
astonished over how the game
has changed since the early days.
There were no blg money
tournaments in bis time.
One of his favorites In recent
yean has been Pele Sampras, but
Craig ls also amazed at the play
of IO many young players coming
up through the ranks today.
It Is falr to say that Phoenix
learned the game on his own in
school days. The tennis team had
an adviser, not a coach, who wu
basJcally a biology teacher.
High, •were a lot of run .•
He was a member of the '36
grid team that featured the
all-league end, 6-foot-4 WaJt
Kelly and the basketball team
that was also sparked by Kelly.
His older brother, David, was
one or the few Newport grtddera
ever to confront the all-time great
Jackie Robinson at Pasadena City
College when It was batWng
Santa Ana Ln football. With some
humor, Dave, reflecting back, wu
overwhelmed trying to tackle th
powerful Robinson, who went on
to fame t.n baseball for the
Brooklyn Dodgen.
Craig's oldest lster, Chnstine,
was one of the super venaWe
female athletes ever to ]1ey fOi'
Newport ln the '30.. Her liatea,
the lete Ketheithe, wu a1IO a fifte
athlete, but not on the ac:aJe of
Chnstlne.
Brown ftnllhed with four RBIJ. five hits in lix at-hilts, Ind~ a home •MR W M
UCI ttertlJig pitcher Paul French rut\, UC IMa ,_,.._ 17, UCI I
•we all seemed to learn on our
own/ Phoeill.x aald. •1 waa
fortunate, as l lived just a bJock
from the school and played every
w kend and most of the 1urnmer
with people who showed up at
the courts. I picked up a lot of
experienco that way and aome
Craig Phoenix and bM ww.,
Paula, who worked fur Newport
Beach Polke Department for
sever41 years, have been reUred
for years 1n Oregon.
WM ~ out to the fourth inning Havens scored three time• and uc Serita lerWI oouoo4IO. 11 11 1
.,._ au1Mdeltng eight bJta and five eddtd two RBLI, While teamm.tl!I JOlh uc hint 20J 100 ooo • • 10 J -.rt Nm. lut Glen Swamon, the McCanne (three Riie) •nd Aody ~ ~ m. Marin tit end
Mdd UCl'I ... pllcbm, abeorbed the C•mpen1l1 (two Ujl) e.c:tt met a P*. Al*t,.C......., Wlr ... ,__.... • _. • .., .. .-2. ot•forttiiwtnnm. MMm-...•w ... w ..... M. • 'Z,ldloolbofl·....,.w.UfMN...,.
•---"--1• euned only hi• UCI ._ Wuhln........., lor •two-~~-~~~.!!, .,. = ..... uc:..._..... 41 ~ac.uo~
TODAY'S SCllDW
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SPORTS .. . .
Dolly Pilot M«day, ,Ap-11 8, 2002 11
COWGE ROWING
Pirates
capture
Cal Cup
Yelsey doubles up
MISSION BAY-The
Orange Coast College crew had
what longtime coach Dave
Grant called ·one of the best
days Orange Coast rowing has
ever had• Sunday, winning the
California Cup at the San Diego
Crew Classic.
PALM SPRINGS -Corona
del Mar High junior Anne
Yelsey was defeated by Iris
lchim, 3-6, 7-6, 6-2, in the third
round of girls 18 singles at the
Easter Bowl. the United States
Teunls Association's super
national spring championships,
Sunday at Riviera Resort. .
Desplte the loss, Yelsey said
her strong performance against
lchim, from Beverly Hills, will
boost her confidence as she
beads into her first doubles
match today.
The Pirates' varsity eight,
rowing before what Grant
estimated as several thousand
fans cheering for the community
college underdog, finished the
2,000-meter course In 5:59,
besting runner·up Colgate by
three seconds.
M.asspc:husetts was third (6:03),
followed by Western Washington
(6:07), Gonzaga (6:17) and the
University of San Diego (6:25).
DON l£ACH I OAl.Y Pl.Ol
UC Irvine second baseman Effren Trejo dives, but can't catch up to single up the
middle.
•I lost, but I thought I played
well," Yelsey said. "I'd never
beaten Iris before and I'd lost
pretty badly. But I had two
match points (Sunday). Things
just didn't go well for me at the
end of the second set. But I
thought I played with
confidence.•
"lllis is the first bme we've
competed for the Cal Cup and
obviously the first tune we've
won it,· Grant said.
The victorious OCC boat,
nwnedforRobJordan,aformer
OCC rower killed in the World
Trade Center attacks, included
Mike Krueger, Alan 1\vig, Jesse
Waldowski, Brian Scheele,
Gints Salaks, Matt Hietbnnk,
Chris Pope, Stuart Blair and
coxswain Sierra Caldwell.
"That was big,• Grant said of
the victory, the hrst in the newly
christened boat. "I'm as happy
as can be."
The Cal Cup, for which 18
schools compete, was the
secondary prtze of the day The
Copley Cup, wluch goes to the
annual winner of the regatta's
invitational race. went to UC
Berkeley. Washington, Yale,
Stanford and Oregon rounded
out the top five m the Copley Cup.
OCC's novice eight made
the six·boat hnal in the 18-
school event, then finished
fourth in 6:20, behind
Washington (5:59), Cal (6:03)
and Stanford (6:18).
OCC's open eight was third
in the consolation final.
The Pirates host thell' own
regatta Saturday at 8 a.m. The
event is scheduled to include
UC Irvine. Long Beach State
and Chapman.
PEIRSOL
CONTINUED FROM 10
Peirsol finished nearly two
seconds ahead of runner-up
Marko Strahija (1 :53.08) from
Croatia. Peirsol's lime was .45
better than the previous record
(1 :15.62), shared by Australian
Welsh (Oct. 13, 2000 1n
Melbourne, Australia) and
Croatian Gordan KozulJ (Jan.
21, 2000 in Berlin. Germany).
Combined with his 400
medley relay performance
Sunday, Peirsol has now·
broken three world records 1n
18 days, making good on d
pledge made to his mom on d
visit to the U.S Swimming Hall
of Fame in Fort Lauderdale,
Fla. that he planned to break a
world record one day.
Peirsol, who qualified
Sunday morning for the final
in a meet-record 1:51.81. swam
splits of 26.46, 28.02, 28. t 6 and
28.53 seconds in the final. His
qualifying splits were 25.56.
28.02, 28.70 and 28.53.
"He had a great sWlm m the
morning, then came back and
put the pedal to the metal m the
final," Salo said. "I think a guy
"Any time you beat
the Australians, it's a
psychological victory
as well ... "
Dave Salo
Swim coach
tried lo stay with hun for the
first 150 meter:., but he JUSt
pulle d away He has been
swLmming a very fast Jast 50
meters m tus 200s and (Sunday)
was no dlfferent ~
The medlE>y reldy vld.ory. on
which Pcrn;ol tedmed with
DclVld Denruston (breaststroke),
Peter Marshall (butterfly) and
Novaquat1c!> teammate Jason
LeLdk (freestyle), was also a bit
of d surpnse. according to Salo
·Any time you beat the
Australians, 1L's a psychological
Vlctory, as well," Sa.lo s&d. ·we
didn't have o ur best breast-
'itrokcr or our best bulterflier
there."
The Australian quartet of
Geoff Hu<'g Lll. Jim Piper, Adam
Pine and Ashley Callus
touched m 3:29.35, which was
also ahf'cH1 of the previous
world r<'cord ot 3:29.88, set m
Bedon IO W. The
~ c&Md lllid
Nalca ol o.r..e .,.,
EJdclrl ID Sii ID 119
PUBLIC NOTICE
REVISED CITYWIDE
TRAFFIC IMPACT
FEE PROGRAM
--In Wit otaltl'f ,.,_.. fll rMI lll'OCllllY II
locllld. l'lrll ,.,....., "-*-~ ~ ..........
...... LLC. I Fhl -.tml.., ..... Ma.
CA a1'01 DMad:
~ Alllholtzed
---l'll:8ldo ...,. For TNlleft 9-M
The eo.ta Mesa Cory Council will held a public
~ lor the AeYIMd
Citywide T ralflC lmpaci
Fee Program on Mon·
day, Aplll 1 S, 2002. II
6·30 pm .. In the CooncM
Chambe,. of Coty ~II. n Fair Dfhle, Costa
Mesa, CA
1999 by an Australian foursome
competmg m Hong Kong.
Peirsol, who al age 15 was
the youngest Amencan ever to
break 2:00 in the 200
backstroke. also won the 200
backstroke at the 2001 world
championships.
The 18·year-old University
of Texas.bound standout,
scheduled lo return from
Moscow Tuesday and begin
competing for his high school
team. finished second to fellow
Amencan Lenny Krayzelburg
in his featured event 111 Sydney.
Krayzelburg 1s on the
comeback tratl from shoulder
and si nus surgery and has not
competed Ul major events thts
year.
After the CIF Southern
Section C hamp1onsh1ps,
scheduled May 8, m which he
is the three·time defending
Division 1 champion in the 100-
yard back.stroke and has added
individual titles in the 200
freestyle (2001) and the 200
individual medley (2000),
Peirsol will begin preparation
for the second U.S. national
Jong course championships this
season. The second U.S.
nationals are scheduled Aug.
14-19 m Fort Lauderdale.
Yelsey teams with Riz~
Zalameda from Los Angeles as
the No. 2 seed in 18s doubles.
After a first-round bye, Yelsey
and Zalameda open today at 11
a.m. against the winner of a
Sunday evening match.
Other local doubles
competitors include CdM High
junior Garrett Snyder, Newport
Beach resident Kaes Van't Hof,
Newport Coast reside.nt Alexa
Glatch and CdM High
sophomore Brittany Holland.
WAnRPOLO
UC Irvine handled
STANFORD -The No. 17·
ranked UC Irvine women's water
polo team fell behind No. 2-
ranlced Stanford, 5-0, and never
recovered as the Cardinal
claimed a 13-3 Mountain Pacific
Sports Federation victory Sunday
at the Avery Aquatic Center.
The Anteaters (8-18, 1-8 in
conference), who trailed at
halftime, 8-1, received goals from
freshman Olelsea Cuhon. as well
as sophomores Erica Homlall and
Lauren Volcan. UCJ junior goalie
Jennifer Moon bad four saves.
Stanford (16-1, 8-1) bad eight
players score. paced by Brenda
Villa's three goals.
UCI hosts UC Santa Barbara
Friday at 4 p.m.
Schaffer. 10 leQallu a Mmouslne MMe. (no
limo repe1r or ~I
with outdoor vehlde
lt0f1IQI. loc:.-cl .. 1731 ~A--lnaC2 zone EtMIOI.,,.,,... l»-
t.nnindon' .....
Clltlrilo SlrMt In *'
A2·HD zone. Environmental de·
*"*'911on· ·= llmnyaflhe
IC1ionl .,.
In court, the chllenge
may be ln*'9d IO otttf 11'1>11 .._ IOflllOM
,.._ II fie Pl.de hMr·
Ing ~ In "" nc>-b or In writl9n cor·
2 Plenning Applica-
tion PA-014 lor. 0.vld
Y omg. fot a vlllancl IO
redla pertcway land• scape~=~ ol 3 fl ; 10 ....
requi • .. 182
~ dlllvered
to the Planning Com-mlalon m, or l)l1or IO,
Wom'llllon ..._ -.,.
~1221 ........
~ lelvlcM. LLC.
le I delll oolectot
...,.,.... IO CDllCt a delll.
""" lnlonllllbl ClbllNI .. 119 \Md fot 1111&
purpoea. OW1:OI:1 ll2002 ..... ,.
The T ralfic lrnpac:t Fee
Program has been es· tlbliahed to hnance 1t1e
lmprovementa nacea·
aary to ad<lreu lhe
cumulative Impacts of
development within
Costa MeH end to
enlUle that the !llandard
level of ~ Is mein· talne<I on the T raffle Circulatiol> Syatem
STARTING
CM-11117'1t
HeWPCWI llCKJC08T A
IM"MDT An aucit of Iha Tt111flc
lmpecl Fee Program 11
available tor review by
the Pl.de II lhe eo.ta
Mela Qly Cleltt's Olflce. n Fu Olive. Costa ......
Publ.c Comments In
tlthef Ofll or written '°"" may be pt--.ced clunnQ the PUbllc ti.er·
Ing. For turther infonna·
lion. lelephone (714)
754-5335 or vlsil the
Transportation SeMcel DMllol'I at Clly ...,., n
Few DIM. Costa Meaa. CA., Monday lhrouoh
Ftldly, a.oo Lm lo 5 00
p,m I
MAA'f T. ELLIOTT,
Deputy City Cllrk Publllhed Newpon Beach·Cotta Mesa
Dilly Piiot Apfll 1, 2' 3 .... 5, 8, 8, 10. 11, 12, 2002 M340
' ANEW
B USINESS?fi
• • • • • • • • • •
Snyder, along with partner
Brett Van Llnge from lmne, also
received a first-round bye
Sunday in the boys 18s doubles
draw. Snyder and Van Unge will
play today at 3:30 p.m. against
Brad Pomeroy from Asheville,
N.C. and Travis Tnplett from
Goshen, Ky. PGmeroy and
Triplett defeated Andrew Hong
from New York and Anthony Ly
from Atlanta, 6-2, 6-3, Sunday.
Glatch, tedmed with
Downey's Lyndsay Kinstler in
the girls 14s, defeated Stepharue
Davison from Port Orchard.
Wash. and Yvette Ly from
Fairview, Ore, 6-2 5-7, 6-4.
Sunday. Glatch and Kmstler will
meet No 2-seeded Flondlans
K.rysty Marc10 dnd Yasmin
Schnack today at 3:30 p.m.
Vant' Hof. who was
elinunated m boys 16s smgles,
teamed with Yevgeny Supeko
from Ojai to defeat Brenton
Home from Texd.S and Robert
Lim from Hawau, 7-6. 6-2.
Sunday night in I 6s doubles
Van't Hof dnd Supeko ddvance
to today's second-round match at
9:30 a.m.
HolJand and partner
Christine Dao from Northridge,
defaulted their first.round girls
16s doubles match against
Floridians Alexis Conti and
Sarah Sabm Sunday
HAPPY BIRTHDAY
Celebrating the Daily Pilot's
Athlete oft~ Wttk sefles
TODAY
JosE QutNTANA f) Estancia
soccer
DEEP SEA
SUMDAJ'SCQUIITT
Newpoft l.Mldtng 2 boats. ~
ang~ 25 Qh«> bass, 21 s.ll1CI bass, 1
rodtfist\ 2 sole
Oawy'\ Lodte< · No report.
..c ... I
AUTO AUCTIOH
4-15-Q2. 10 NA
M IMIW 740 VIN
W8AGJ8328Tt>L36545
CA Ucerwe 4MZM900
wll be IOld at S.. Towing 74n WllM!l AYI
Hlr1llnglon BMdl, CA
714-847-0730
Publlshed Newporl Beach·Cosla MHa Dally Plot Apt It, 2002
M347
Tht Ltgal Dtpartmmt at the Daily Pilot is pkastd to announce a new servict
now availabk to new businesses.
TlllNQ
ro 11/f.
ltSAU
BDI
ft411Mf •
-'
wt will now SEARCH tht nam4 for you Ill no extrtt chuft, anti Sllvt you tht
time and tht trip to tht Court Hou.st in Sanla AM. Thm, of~, 4ftn' tlN
starch is complmd wt wiOfile your jimtitlus butinm Nlme stlllmlml with the
County Cink, publish ona a wttlt for four wulu llS wtpUrrJ "1 '4w anJ thm fik
your proof of publication with tlN °'*"'1 Clnlt.
Pkast stop by to file JOI'"~ lnuinas ~ M the IMiJy Pill>t, 330 W.
Bay St, Costll Mtsll. If JOU tJU1not •p ~ pko aJl • M (949) 642-4321 •M tM
will maltt ammgnnnitsfor1°" to MN& ihisp~ '1y ..U.
If JOU JxndJ htlw ll1IJ ~ ~·,.,, allJ Ill aJ 1W WilJ W MM' """'
gWJ"' llSSist "'"' GooJ hd ;,, ,,_,. w lnubttss!
,J
•
R11tr11 and deadlinr,, an· suhjct·t to
c411111~r ~ithou1 notirt'. Titf puhli. llt'r
n·1o1•m':1 th(' ri~ht to tx•n:.or, redns.sify.
n·\ i~1· or rejr~·t ttll) d11Ksifir<l
111h 1·rti.,.·m1•11t. Plrtt!'t' rtport 1111~ em>r
tl1111 rnuy I"· iu your du.ssifircl nd
i1111111"(li111t·h. Tlw Ouil~ Pilot ntwpts
1111 li11liili1 ~ for um 1·m1t in 1111
u1h rrri.,1·n11•111 for 'A hiel1 ii 11111~ he
n·~prnr~il1lc· 1•\1·1·111 for tlw "°"' of tht
~piw1• .w11111lh 1)1•1·11pi1·tl h~ thr c·rror
Cn·1h1 n 111 onh lw• ullm11•11 for tlw
fiN i11'4·r1io11.
..
ii
By Fax
(949) 6:i 1-6594
ByPhone
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By Maulln Person:
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At \"l'°n Bl~J. & Bay St.
(Pica.~ include rour name and pboc:tf nwnhu
and n "ll rall you bod: •ith a pm quote.)
Telephone 8:30am-5:00pm
Monday-Friday
liil
420
BOlll'S
Index
,,-.,. -,,
..
Walk-In 8:30am-5:00pm
Monday-Friday
a
410 ....
Monday ............... Friday 5:00pm
Tuesday ............. Monday 5:00pm
Wednesday ........ Tuesday S;()()pm
Thursday ...... Wednesday S:OOpm
Friday .... ~ ........ Thursday S:OOpm
Saturday .............. Friday 3:.00pm
Sunday ................ Friday S:OOpm
101. 216 .U0·461 ·.
' T
!J . . ---. ~
. -cm . ., ... , .
Aedec, 2Br 181, un· ••A ~ dlln!IM&••
lurr1llhtd, no pell. FAH, 1.58r flll, 2I05 ...a· k EASTllUJFF 381 nr Boyt & wshr/dryer, moc:ro, frig, 11150/1110 Incl utll. Qllll CUI, blllA ~
$1700mo yity ~ Mtf50-2nl ~ iWd •. gw. poolt ~ 94H44-1491
p· -. . . ··--~
~-.. , _. ~: ':
NEWPORT CREST
38r 389 &rnmer Leese
lo 8131 ,402. S1 ll5Clmo.
IQ!.~
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I
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llDn llOO-e87.'4Q1 • 321
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Call the Piiot
Ct•• lflll11da----............... .-im
at EEl4SJ B41i!-15B7B
ta Place Yaur
Garage Bela Ad I
I
Dai!Y Pilot
-=11 412~~11 411~1
AUTOMOTIVE repelf ~. L11111 from
the belt. Tools • unlfonnl ~ AoolY • 20IO Plac:enli• ....... Co1t1 ..._ aw 1rom MPfll
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F 1ellltln Cultocllen FfT
4-0hrs. weekends 1tq'd,
llard WOl!ltr. moderate kft-
ing Exl:eleot salaty & ben-efrts MH54-7030 UL 38a
~ .. :. ,
•
ANSWDS TO WEEKLY BRIDGE QUIZ
Q I • Vulnerable. you hotel:
•Kl5 c:7 AQ'7 O K65 •1'913
Pinner O(ICnl the biddlna with • weak two-bid In spedc$. Whll do you
respood?
A· What's the problem? Isn't a rabe
to four •Pldes obvious? Yes, but is it
comict? 'That would ell.pate your
tenacee to a pocentl.al dama&lna le.d lhrough. Now let's SUJIPOllC'YOU bid
three no trump. You can expect to
stan with six spade tricks and• bean. and whlche11ersuh the enemy k.ads will be your eighth. Surely a
nuuh l11ck will be euie:r to make than the I 0 you need 10 collect at a
spade COOIBCI?
Q 2 • Neither vulnerable. as South
you bold:
•Q105 <:;I J6J O KQIU •AllJ
The biddlllg has oroceeded:
SOUTH WIS't NOR111 EAST 10 2• l• ,_
1 Whal do you bid now?
A • You have a ba1anoed minimum
wuh a club s&Opper. but don '1 let thl&I
sway you incc rebidding two no
trump. You should _not suppress
three-card support headed by two
bonon in putneT's suit. Raise to thme spades.
Q 3 • Neither vulnerable. u South
you hold:
• K 9 J Q J 7 v A 7 4 • 10 6 5 l
The bidding has oroccedcd:
NORTH EAST' SOUTH WEST i. PaJS 10 P .. lNT ,_ !
What do you bid now?
A • Panner's sequcoce prorm~s a
balanced hand of 23-24 points. You
have a balanced 10 points. Simple arilhmcllc suggests you should be in
a small slam, so go ahead and raise
to SIX no tnunp.
Q 4 • Eul·Ylal vulncnble,u South
you bold:
•Q ltt6 l;;I A'54 0 114 •AIU
The blddina hu pnic:eeded.
EAST SOUTH WEST NORTH ,_ h9 JO I•
20 7
What do you bid now?
A • U you play that a jump 10 three
apadel now invitea game, by all
means make that bul HO\o\'Cver. most
play a jump rai.e in competition as
preemptive. In tlw event, you have
IO c:ue-b4d three dwnonds ta &how
1etious uuerut m game.
Q 5 • Neither vulnerable, as South
you hold:
•AQ76J 1;. KJf62 J J •J6
The badd111g has orocecdcd·
SOUTH WES't NORTH EAST
I• "-INT 2 1
What action do you ta.kc?
A • You opened this dead-minimum
hand because you hold both majors.
Now, although panner docs not have
much, you ~Jd tell him about the
two-suu.cd nal\lrc of your hand whtle
you can do this at a safe lc\lel. Bid
two hearts.
Q 6 -Ea.~t West \IUlncrablc, a~ South
you hold:
• 8 4 2 K Q 7 5 4 Q It 7 6 • 6
The bidding hai. proceeded.
NORTH F.AST SOUTH WEST •• 2• 1
What do you bid now'?
A • Your hand 15 worth one bid. and
jusi one. 50 then: is no poiru 10 iocro-
ducing your heart suk Even 1f you
play f our-catd majors. odds are that
panncr has five spades. so the raise
to two spades. the known eight-card
fit. gets our vore.
l.OOKlHO lot JACK l JIU.
Prr 1 :<XM 30 or ll'.30-9'00 Jadt & JI .,. INm ~
llld are lun to wOltl With.
lll9y alto 91' lldc.es IO con-
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left. Is lhat You? Plldllc
Syinpftony T elefuncllng
RECEPTIONIST
~ Eve & Sits. lri f14-67&-2398
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tabulioul ong cond. WI
77924 I $11,995 Bkr
949-586-188§
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MOVIN-MAN
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714-558-4151
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Painting
Le 148'35()
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Costa Mesa, Ca
(949) 646-3006
Cell 949-887-11180
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~ Suddenly, the-weather report
.is irrelevant.
•ideal driving conditions• means different things to different people in different cars. Someone behind the wheel of a new Jaguar X-TYPE, for instance, can brave a
snow-covered road w ith a confidence that Jaguar's standard Traction 4 all-wheel drive system can provide. The Jaguar X-TYPE also features standard
wood and.leather trim, speed-sensitive steering and complimentary scheduled maintenance. Driving conditions won't always be ideal. You car should be.
'-'.
All-new x~TYP·E
2.5 Liter -Automatic ·
$ 3·4·.·9· ··/month tor 39-inonth
lease on approved. credit
*Plus tax. Total drive off:$ 3,567.15 including title & license fees wilh no
security deposit. Lessee responsible for excess wear 1-.u; and mileage 111 :
at $ .20 per mile over 32,500 miles. Offer available _gn 2002 Jaguar , • ,. \
X-TYPE 2.SL with MSRP of $ 32,420. For special lease tenns take new
retail delivery from dealer stock by April 8, 2002.:.
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All vehicles subject to prior sale. All advertised prices exclude government fees and t8)(es, any finance charges, any dealer document preparation charge, and any emission testing charge. Offer expires 04/08/02 . . I