HomeMy WebLinkAbout2002-04-17 - Orange Coast PilotSERVING THE NEWPORT -MESA co.v.MuNmEs SINCE 1907 ON THE WEB: WWW.DAILYPILOT.COM
--W.CMI onty
hope fOf IS
be•utlful I day
today IS we had on
M~. But drlttle Is
looldng more like the
buzzword today.
S..hgeZ
WEDNESDAY, APRIL 17, 2002
0€C swap meet vendors plead to City Coup.ell
.
• More than 200 entreprene urs ask Costa Mesa leaders
to help them keep the campus event's size intact.
Lolita Harper
DAILY PILOT
vendor Mike Hussein of Fountain
Valley.
the melting pot of vendors who derive
their income from the venue. One at a
time, they detailed the hardships that
would result from the swap meet
being limited to only one weekend
day and 275 vendors.
not authorized by the city. ,....... m
SWAPPLANS a
meet at
" ft COSTA MESA -More than 200
The pleas came during the public
comments portion of the meeting, but
council members were unable to take
any action on the Issue because it was
not on the agenda. The council mem-
bers listened and took notes, but did
not discuss the issue.
Last month, city officials notified
the college that the current campus
swap meet was violating the school's
1984 agreement with the city. A study
-prompted by Councilwoman Libby
Cow an in November because of an
apparent increase in traffic along
Fairview Road -found that the swap
meet operates with an excess of about
200 vendors and an additional day
City and college officials met to
discuss the study, and the school
readily agreed to decrease the size to
comply with the existing permit, start-
ing the weekend of May 4. An
announcement was sent to vendors
explaining the cum. 4=· to
on both and
~ vendors ftom the Orange Coast
• College swap meet implored the City •:ni...-Council on Mond ay night to ·do
.., something• to keep the shopping
.. venue from being cut in half.
IM~· •These are people who get up Speaker after speaker shared tales
of the wonderful bargains that can be
found at the campus swap meet and
William Pezzulo, a Costa Mesa res-
ident and swap meet vendor, said
Monday be didn't understand why
such drastic action bad to be taken so
quickly. It took the city 18 years to real-
ize the college was violating its permit,
~pl Call our Readers
Hotline lrt (949) 642-6086 or
send e-mail to
dailypilotO/atfmes.com .
Please spell your name and
indude your hometown and
phone number; for verifica-
tion purposes only.
. . . .
.. ·
• early and work really hard to by and ! make a living for their families,• said
A helpful exchange
Israeli students share experiences of living with terrorism in Middle East
during a visit to Orange County Bureau of Jewish Education in Costa Mesa
Deirdre Newman
DAILY PILOT
T en Israeli students got a reprieve
this week from the continwng
violence in the Middle East with
a visit to Orange County to share
their experiences with the local Jewish
community.
The students, all seniors at Hebrew
University Secondary School in
Jerusalem, arrived last week and have
since taken in the sights and surf of the
area while staying with local f arnilies .
On Tuesday, they visited the Orange
County Bureau of Jewish Education in
Costa Mesa -which is co-sponsoring
their stay -to meet
its members and dis-
'I'm really
optimistic
because I
have a t of
Palestinian
friends and
cuss what life is like
as a teenager in Israel
these days.
Their trip came in
lieu of local Jewish
students going to
Israel this summer, as
they have done in the
past. because few
I li Ar b bad signed up srae -a because of the volatil-
friends. I
hope it will
get better
• soon.'
ity in the region, said
Joan Kaye, the
bureau's executive
director.
The meeting at the
bureau Tuesday
enabled more than a
-Moran dozen local Jewish
Kapnovsky residenm to hear first-
hand bow the daily
specter of suicide
-bombers and Israel's retaliation efforts
• affect tbe by's youth.
Yoni Bl , 11, who is making his
third trip to e United States, said the
clim4te ot f is not as pervasive as
many people •vou ~ve be cautious and go to
well-secured ces," Yoni said. "But I
still do th1n95 e dancing and movies.•
The studen arrived in Costa Mesa on
Thursday and lillve visited Disneyland
and other tourist attractions, as well as
conducted a Remembrance Day seIVice
stmllar to our Memorial Day.
On 1\Jesday, Yoni and fellow student
Moran Kaganovaky, 18, wore sweatshirts
from Disneyland with the phrase •No
Pear" emblazoned aaosa them -fitting
SEE EXCHANGE PAGE 4
GREG FRY I DAJ..Y PlOT
Mike Lelkowtt& of Newport Cout makes a point u he cbata with Batel Krause, 18,
one of 10 Israeli high IChool studentl who are vlaltlng Orange County, during a lunch
'IUelday at tbe Orange County Bureau of Jewllh Educatton In Costa Mesa.
Wet paint on a confusing canvas
lynd .... --...
felled by paint-ball rounds.
Remember that it wu Long
who asked rhetorically in an inter-
view with tbe Daily Pilot. "So Ii
th1I man auppoM<I to be anticipat-
ing [tucb an attack)?• And ID the
same stoJy, be later called the
alleged behavior "tnexCUMble."
lbAring that the incident w•
ewpecially unpreCedeilted in the
BedtBey.
Now even the light-witted
might ClCIDdUcle that µJog, and
~tbe~t.wu
men tbln 1'91i0Mbly IUl9 tMl ~:U~-:t .. wl..... bead db en«)l""
bot .... ......
lo wllla .... n, 1117 '¢R1 CID
SEE SWAP PAGE 4
School
cleared
in cheer
scandal
• District report asks
Newport Harbor High to work
on commwricati.on.
Deirdre Newman
DAILY PILOT
NEWPORT BEACH -The Newport-
Mesa Unified School District released a
report Friday that clears Newport Harbor
High School officials of any wrongdoing
regarding the school's cbeerleading con-
troversy.
The report responded to a grievance
filed agamst the high school m January
that alleged Prinopal Michael Vossen
and other school officials handled the
cheerleading situation incorrectly.
Kim Stephens, who filed the grievance
SEE CHEER PAGE 4
Costa Mesa
priest reinoved
froin position
•Church parishioners continue
to support Father Jerome
Henson as he battles allegations
that he molested a boy at
another church in 1981.
Lolita Harper
DAILY PlloT
COSTA MESA -A pnest was put on
administrative leave after allegations
surfaced that he molested a boy from a
former church more than 20 years ago,
otticials said.
father Jerome Henson was removed
from bis active role as priest at Sl John the
Baptist Catholic Church at 1015 Baker Sl
SEE PRIEST PAGE 5
llSlll
z Wednesday, April 17, 2002
PITS Of Ill Wiii
1Wo ~ cats -SWeede, 7, pldured at tSgbt. ,
and Samantha. 10, Who ill blind in one eye -are
not bJood relatives but both have a ma":ible
condition called initabl.e bowel syndrome, is
managed by proper dieC, Mid DiAnDa Pfaff-Martin,
founder or the Community Antmal Network.
•we are hoping that someone in the communi-
ty ••. will see their bea\lty and be drawn tQ br1ng
them home.~ Pfaff-~arttn said. "They do not
have to be adopted together.•
FOR A GOOD CAUSE·
Most pregnant cam 1ote their Uvos at ahelterl,
Pfdf-Martin MJd, •""-Ir ·0ur reecued p~ call ate having~
boblM now,• she Mid. •fftgh volumes ot dolf.uS ate
oonlUIDed in spring. Oonationl ate continually
needed to support the feeding and care ot carlng f°,!"
our mnery ammai.. Poster bomes are needed too.
See other animela ava.ll4ble for adoption at
www.anlmalnetwork.org or stop by Russo'• pet
store at Fo.shion Island between noon end 4 p.m.
on weekends.
IDformation: (949) 959-3646, or wrlte to the
Commuriity J\nimal Network at P.O. Box 8662,
N~ Beach, CA 92658.
Gettina.~
Doily Pilot
Robert Honse INVOLVED
• GETTING INVOLVED runs peri-
odically in the Daily Pilot on a
rotating basis., If you'd like infor-
mttion on adding your organiza-
tion to thl$ list. call (949) 574-4298.
"· Showing off his created environment AMERICAN CAHCER SOCIETY
The Orange County Region
of the American Cancer
Society see.ks office volun-
teers. The society is also
seeking volunteers to answer
calls for the unit's Helpline
lnfoCenter. (949) 261-9446.
W hen Robert House real-
ized his Newport Harbor
High School students
didn't have enough natural set-
tings to visit on field trips, he
decided to bring nature to them.
In 1912, he founded the
Environmental Nature Center and
grew it to depict 14 plant commu-
nities characteristic of California.
The center also re-created such
different settings as a small desert,
a redwood forest, a recycling
'It's a sample
of natural
California in
Newport
Beach.'
stream and
chaparral.
"As urban-
ization
increased in
Newport
Beach and
Orange
County, we
couldn't take
_Robert House, our students
about the on field trips
Environmental as easily out-side to see Nature Center these natural
areas that
were of biological interest,• said
House, who is also a volunteer at
the center. uso we created our
own natural areas.•
BOYS 8r GIRLS aues
OF NEWPORT-MESA
The three area clubs need
volunteer coaches and arts
and crafts workshop teach-
ers. Call for locations. (949)
642-2245.
CRISIS ASSISTANCE
PROGRAM INC.
The nonprofit organization
is seeking volunteers for its
expanding trauma response
program. Some volunteers
assist law enforcement, fire-
fighters and emergency-
type responders by provid-
ing emotional first aid and
support to injured or trau-
matized people. Other vol-
unteers provide dispatch
and office support. No
experience is necessary
Training will be provided.
(949} 588-1414.
LAGUNA SHANTI
Many of the trees, shrubs and
wildflowers sprouting at the center
today were planted al.most three
decades ago by House's students,
who significantly helped him start
his project.
world was long ago and how it is
now.
settings they don't readily get to
see.
tending to the general upkeep of
the center, House helps raise funds
for such projects as a new building
with a new nature center office,
museum and teaching facility.
Laguna Shanti, an organi-
zation that works with sul-
ferers of HIV and AIDS, is
seeking caring volunteers to
assist with running the fron t
office, delivering meaJs,
providing transportation
and providing complimen-
tary therapies such as mas-
sage, acupuncture and chi-
ropractic care. Lisa Toghia,
(949) 494-1446.
Since retiring eight years ago
from the high school, House has
remained a volunteer at the center.
Busloads of students and teachers
visit every day, and the lessons
taught have to do with how the
Programs include teacher work-
shops and nature camp sessions in
the summer.
He leads walks through the var-
ious microcosms on the third
Thursday of each month -they're
called "Walks with the Founder"
-and teaches his 10,000 or so
students a year about the natural
He calls the center a "green
belt nature center" for the area
they sit in, which is near the Back
Bay, on the border of Newport
Beach and Costa Mesa.
•tt's a sample of natural
California in Newport Beach,· he
said. "This is kind of a unique situa-
tion,• said House, a Laguna Beach
resident. -Story by Young Chang;
photo by Steve McCrank When he's not leading tours or
ALMANAC
DUI ARRESTS
SUNDAY
• Eric Roth Blackstone, 2S, Newport Beach
•Kristen Michelle Rebenstorf, 21, Aliso Viejo
SATURDAY
• Jill Susanne Markowicz, 40, Laguna Beach
The following people have been arrested recently on
suspicion of driving under the influence of an intoxi-
cant They have only been arrested on suspicion of a
crime and, as with all suspects, are considered inno·
cent until proved guilty.
• Jennifer Broderick, 2~. Newport Beach
FRIDAY
dint John Mangold, 47, Newcastle, Wash.
COSTA MESA
SUNDAY
WEDNESDAY
• Steven Peter Ellena, 3S, Aliso Viejo
•Wesley Robert Minichiello, 21, Newport Beach
• Donavon Michael Romanosly, 24, Costa Mesa TUESDAY
SATURDAY
• Michael Todd Boone, 49, Costa Mesa
• Kaan Zafer Kilik, 23, Long Beach
• Timothy Steven Trujillo, 38, Murrieta
• Robert Francis Beltran, 33, Orange
FRIDAY
• early Joan Birtchauser, 21, Costa Mesa
• Duglas Vladimir Leiva, 29, Costa Mesa
• Robert James Valdez. 44, Fullerton
• James Leroy Roper, 66, Los Angeles
• Charles Scott Dobbie, 46, Newport Beach
• Joshua Daniel Kalb, 26, (apistrano Beach
REIL ESTATE TRANSACTIONS
COSTA MESA
• Heather Carey·Jones, 22, Newport Beach
• Adrian Alcala, 22, Santa Ana
2060 Federal Ave .. $295,818
2212 Meyer Place, $260,000
357 W. Wilson St, $217,000
2463 Irvine Ave., $385,000
203 E. 20th St., $305,000
117 E. Wilson St, $252,000
335 Rochester St, $420,000
2211 Avalon St., $275,000
• Jeffrey Erin Thompson, 26, Tustin
• Jesse Alan Meader, 23, West Covina
THURSDAY
• Luis Mendez. 2S, Lake Forest
• Jeffrey Lee, 21, Long Beach
APRIL 10
• Drake Eric Dalton, 43, Costa Mesa
• Mark Christopher Allen, 37, Rockford
llEWPORT IUCH
MONDAY
• John Diaz. 39, West Covina
~
VOL 96, NO. 107
lMDMMM. ....... "'*-'°"'~· '*"' NtrloeTIMI.
~Dlf«tof
lAMA ......
'-notlont Ohctor
EanwaSJN!
LL <"""-~Editor M>S7Mnl JMM.~ lttmiacom ...._ .......
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~574-Wl !Vfl'Qjf .......... , 11l0m ,..,,., ...... .............. ~57....ua }ltwtl(W.,..,..,.fll;u-...... ~ ...... °"'"*' t'M9•74-ml ...,.,._IHIP •111&-
NEWPORT BEACH
28 Landport. $ 1.315 million
106 Baycrest Court. $275,000
2238 Alta Vista Drive, $930,000
1842 Highland Drive, $525,000
8 Crooked Stick Drive, $1 .0835 million
3139 Corte.Hermosa, $690,000
2420 Vista Hogar, $465,000
303 Esplanade, $450,000
2 Lessay, $545,000
'-J ..... READERS UQIUME Alt Director (949) 642-6086 (949) 574-4224
}Off.antodtUidmm.com R«04'd ycx.ir comments about the --M&Ow*. o.ilV Piiot or news tips. PhoCo SupenAtor CM>~ ~ ,AQOIESS
OUt .cldfm Is 330 W. Bay St., Costa ,....,...,. ~ CA 92627. Office hours are .,.... ..... ~ • frlday, 8:30 •.m. -5 p.m. ertnw n CX1UtU ""°""· l'J4I) s1....az:H .. '*'-•" •lli1+C0111 COllllCDQNS "-0 .... ft Is • Pllot'S policy to ptOl\'lptly ~"9d! ...... M)S?4'Clll
June.~@ •1&iM•e0111 corr.ct ell tfl'ors of substanc.e.
--.a-u ~ c..11 (949) 574-4233.
,._,....1"'°"4f. (94') S7Mlfl m ~ ...... l{it .. (IOO!I .... ~ The~ e.c:M:ost.t Mu Dilly
~-·•••MC ..... (Mlt?IMllO l'llot (W'S-144-IOO) 1$ pUbllshed cl.tlly.
~d/n~fom In ~a.ct\ Ind Costa Mes.a."°' .......... ~ ... I.Ible only by dJlatb. CCAa _. ,.,.,..., ~ 57......a7S Ing 10 n. nn,.s Orange~ (llQ _,_,...,.... .. __ ..... ..._. ~-9141. In ... outside of Htwpoft
f~~--114-«Ut ~ Wld C'.ostt Mesi, ~•to
~ .... -... "'··-"O.ity Not.,. .v~ onlr by fin\ ..,........, ct. Miit fot $30 ,,., l'llOl'1lh. ,.._
,.,..,.~ .. ,,.... lndl* .. ipplK.lble IUte Wld lot.Ill
~-tall.) l'OSTMMTflt Send ..... .... a -n Cf*PtD'T"*~ ~
Gf9t ~ Oon l.W9dt. Men ..... Mm~"°"''-0 lcilt19IO.c.tl ... ~ -._CA .. c.owwitNofWlllll
NEIGHBORS
S usan Valen-
Hogberg was
named director of
sales and marketing for
the Atrium Hotel at John
Wtl.'fDe Airport. She now
oversees all aspects of the
214-room hotel's sales
and marketing efforts,
including the manage-
ment of 10 sales and
catering professionals.
She has served senior
Susan
Valen-
Hogberg
sales roles for the Hilton Anaheim, the
Doubletree Hotel in Orange and the
Holiday Inn in Buena Park. She was the
marketing director for the former Planet
Hollywood at South Coast Plaza in Costa
Mesa and was vice president of sales for
Valen Thansportation of Anaheim.
VenQuest Hotel Group owns and oper-
ates the Atrium Hotel and the
Guesthouse Hotel in Long Beach, the
Red Llon in Denver, the Ramada Denver
Airport, the Red Llon Salem in Salem,
Ore., and the Quality Inn-Portland
Airport .... Many Costa Mesa and
Newport Beach students attending UC
Sant.a Barbara made the dean's list for
the winter term. The undergraduate stu-
dents earned the honor by attaining a
grade-point average of 3.75 or more on a
program of 12 or more units in the
College of Letters and Science, or 3.5 in
the College of Engineering. The follow-
ing Costa Mesa residents made the
stories, lllustrl'tlons,, editorial matter Of
edvettlsemems herein Qin be reprc>
dean's list with major listed aft-tr their
name: Alem WeWngton Ary, 111de-
Clared; Dana Helen Cassity, CQlfl!nunica-
tion and sociology; BenJamln Wllliam
Ritter, art studio; and Nathaniel Hollis
Bays Thaler, pre-psychology. The follow-
ing Newport Beach residents made the
list with major listed after their name:
Alexei Rex Babazadeh. business econom-
ics; John Joseph Graas, undeclared; and
April Mackenna Moster, pre-law and
society .... Junior Nicole Yoshiko
Stevens of Newport Beach was one of
1,853 students out of 14,747 undergradu-
ates at the University of Oregon to make
the dean's list for the 2001 fall term.
Students must attain a 3.75 grade-point
average with a minimum of 12 units to
qualify for the honor .... Representatives
from a Newport Beach fixed-income man-
agement company announced that
Makoto Takano has been appointed pres-
ident of Pacific Investment Management
Co.-Japan. Takano will now be responsi-
ble for the company's business operations
in Japan. He joined the company in
October after working as an operating
officer and chief of planning and research
with Goldman Sachs Asset Management.
The company's chief executive said the
company manages about $6 billion in
Japanese assets of the $11 billion in total
Asian assets. The company was founded
in 1971 and is based in Newport Beach.
• N£1GHllORS spotlights achievements In the
community. Please direct noteworthy lnfbrmation
to Bryce Alderton via fax at (949) ~ 170, or
send e--mall to bryce.aldertonO/atlmacom.
SURf AND SUll
duatd without written permlulon of
WEATHER FORECAST ccpvrlght owntl'. erly winds wlU blow 15 to 2S The usual morning fog and knots, with 2· to 4--foot waves HOW IQ BEACH U5 low clouds will be accompa-and a northwest swell of 10
~ nled by drlz:zle early today. to 12 feet. Liter, the swell The sun should show Itself In will back down to 7 to 9 feet. TM llmes Orange Counfy Intervals this aftemoon. Highs
(800) 252·9141 wtll be In the low 60s, and SURF Adwrttslng IOWI will be In the low to The swell will continue to Claalfled (949) 642-5678 mlc:MOS. produce kn ... to waist-highs Ofspi.y (949) 642-4321 :JM rest of the weett In with the occ.aslonat ch4llt-o EdtofW Newport-Mesa will be much high set t::.i On Ntws (949) 642·5680 Ofaraput. Wednesday, • sae will bKk Spons (949) 574-4223 ~ doWn. bft. On~-~ Ne'Nsf .. (949)~170 WMWnws.noN.gov. ., northwest ..,, wtll build Sports Fo (949) 6S0.0170 slze9ln .
E-rn.il: "-1/ypllotet.tlmn.com IOAT1NG fORECAST ~ ...... _....omc. The ~winds wlll WWW.IUl'frfdli.C)(V. lialneu Office~) '4l""12t bloW a llght 5 ID o knots
IUSlnesl,.. (949) 611-1126 .. 11y, but wfll becOme wester· TIDES
ly end wlH pick up to 10to 15 ... =-~..!.t1ow NllWwd.,, """"~ ..... knat., with 2..foat Wlftl and ~11•.m.
I w.t IMlt Of I to S ffft. 2:0I p.m • • cMllol'I ftl#tN ~~ 1'IMi.. 2.11 .... """' __ Ol,,...,._ i.-. the same wlH be S:2tp.m. 2A7'-tfow ~ lhoUgh tog wtQ ron In. WAia ...... Gut~ .. nontw ..... AbcMlt•
'
•
" Doily Pilot w.dnesdcry, Ap-1117. 2002 3
UCI opens doors for
Newport-Mesa students
Short films open up long range" of options
. • •
• Newport Beach
festival's 120 choices of
brief filmmaking offer_
surprising depth in
•Annual Latino Youth Conference moves to
college campus this year to provide a real-life
look at higher education for area teens. very little time. Ntwporl 8111ch'fi/m ftitil'al 2002
Deirdre Newman
D~ILY PILOT
UCl CAMPUS -Before
coming lo the university to
study electrical engineer-
ing, Raul Bej,ar went to
Estancia High School in
Costa Mesa and participat-
ed in the Save Our Youth
scholarship program.
On Tuesday, Bejar
shared his experience of
growing up in Costa Mesa,
all the while focused on
going to college, with
more than 200 Latino stu-
dents from the district's
middle and high schools.
While this was the fifth
annual Latino Youth
Conference, there was one
important difference this
year: The conference took
place on the grounds of
UC Irvine to give the
Latino students a personal
introduction to college life.
•By giving them a visit,
they get a piece of what
being a college student is
like and what school looks
like,• Bejar said.
The conference focuses
on increasing the number
of Latino high school grad-
uates and aiding them in
attending college, as well
as providing counseling
and other social services.
Save Our Youth, too, is
dedJcated to helping dis-
advantaged children and
providing them with guid-
ance and assistance.
The idea to bring the
conference from Costa
Mesa to UCI onginated
with Victor Becerra, direc-
tor of the university's
Community Outreach
Partnership Center.
•Many students have
not had an opportunity to
be outside Costa Mesa
and get exposure to a
place where education is
emphasized and valued,•
Becerra said.
The students toured the
campus, attended work-
shops on college prepara-
tion and financial require-
ments, and heard from a
panel of four UCI students
from Costa Mesa, includ-
ing Bejar.
Hugo Cardoza, a junior
from Newport Harbor
High School, said it was
exciting to get a firsthand
glimpse of college ille.
"We learned how they
live here, the way they
treat other people -
they're pretty nice here -
and we learned it takes a
lot of hard work and good
grades,# Hugo said,
adding that he would like
to go to college.
Teresa Sanabria, a
freshman at Estancia, said
she was already planning
to attend UCI for college.
"I learned about the
costs of college," Teresa
said. "My favorite part
was walking around and
seeing the buildings.•
Bejar is confident that
seeing others from the
same background will
motivate the students to
pursue their college aspi-
rations.
"l guess we were seen
as role models today.•
Bejar said. ·we know the
neighborhood, the com-
munity. If they see we're
striving to accomplish our
own career goals, they can
do it too."
Whether You Already Have A
Trust Or Not ...
You Must Attend This Workshop
Yo.,ng ctu.ng
DAILY PCLOT
NEWPORT BEACH -A
really long short should la.st
no more than 40 minutes.
A really short short can be
·about a minute.
"Smackers,• from last
year's Newport Bea.ch Film
Festival, ran one miriute and
26 seconds and earned the
kudos of being a "real gem•
from Alex Melli, director of
shorts programming.
The story revolved around
a clique of girls known for
kissing the mirror in the
school bathroom while not
letting the geeky girls do the
same. The principal gets
involved and, to fix their
ways, asks Bob the janitor to
reveal how be cleans the hp-
stick marks.
He dunks the mop in the
toilet and wipes away. •
•rt communicated a whole
.8tory very quickly and com-
pletely,• Melli said. "The
shorts get all the same ele-
ments of a feature, but it's
simplified and condensed.•
This year's third annual
festival includes 120 short
films, with "Thoth• being an
Academy Award winner and
a dozen being from outside
the United States. Melli and
his staff screened more than
350 works to arrive at their
hundred-some and judged
each film on the strength of
its story, its production value
and the quality of acting.
•But the story is the key to
everything,• Melli said.
Filmmakers create shorts to
experiment with rutting-edge.
rule-brealo.ng ideas that might
prove risky for a feature-length,
Melli said. While features need
to be more publicly consum-
able, shorts can get away with
almost any amount of wacki-
JOHN T. HRANEK,
Attorney at Law
WORKSHOP SCHEDULE
Chart House
Restaurant
2801 W. Pacific Coast Hwy.
Newpon Beach
Wed., April 24th
10:30 am to 1:00 pm
Five Crowns
Restaurant
3801 E. Pacific Coast Hwy,
Corona del Mar
Thrus., April 15th
10:30 am to I :00 pm
I have no planning at all
0 I want to know if the law \
pertaining to my trust, will or
Five Crowns
Restaurant
3801 E. Pacific Coast Hwy.
Corona del Mar
Wed., April 24th
6:30 pm to 9:00 pm
Wells Fargo Bldg.
2030 Main Street
Suite 1300.
lrvine
Sa t., April 27th
10:30 am to 1:00 pm
0 I have loved ones with special needs
(J I want to maximize my retirement
plan
power of attorney are CUI1'ent or I want a smooth transition upon my
whether they need to be updated disability or death
0 I want to minimize estate tax
0 I have an existing plan over
1 year old
I want to save attorney fees
and probate costs
01 own rnY. own business
0 A non-attorney prepared my estate
plan
I want to protect my child's
inheritance in the event of his or her
divorce, disability or lawsuit
0 I want to provide for a significant
other
I WANT A FREE LUNCH
TlllnllNoD •IWdllW•••°" ... 8111halll' 'hd,•alleca•
,.......,. Clm ........ flll JOS ••1dmle, ..t cal .. NIU\'I.,..,. ...... ...
ness and unexpectedness.
"Basically, you're just trying
something, so no matter what,
1t almost can't fail." Melli said ot the experimental types.
"Even iC you don't like it, you
can appreciate the effort.•
He added that it has become
trendy for Hollywood stars to
get involved in short films.
Kevin Spacey narrated "The
Tower of Babble,• and David
Hyde Pierce starred in •Laud
Weiner.• Sometimes they do it
to help out a lesser-known film.
making friend for an afternoon.
sometunes they do 1t tor the
beauty of a quickie.
Filmmakers also prefer
making shorts when they're
on a limited budget and with
limited ti.me. They create short
films to learn more about mak-
ing feature films. And some·
tunes they promote a short to
raise funds to eventually build
a longer work around it.
"It can be very sabsfying."
Melli S6ld of watching a bundJe
of shorts at the festival "Your
odds of seemg something you
like go up quite a bit. It's like
telling a qwck joke as opposed
to telling a lengthy story."
The cruciaJ element in
making shorts is mak.mg sure
everytlung exists for a reason.
"There are some that ...
the movie 1tseU could be told
in 10 minutes, but they try
and stretch 1t out to feel
longer,· Melli said. "The pur-
pose of people going into a
short film is to expect a suc-
cinct story. Viewers can tell if
it takes too much time.•
Cherylin Primero, seruor
shorts programmer for the
festival, is a film student at
Chapman University who has
been an editor of shorts and
made a few hersell.
The challenge m edlting a
short, which is already sparse
m nature, is to ensure every-
Davtd Hyde Pierce atan In •taud Welner," • short Ulm ln
thJa year's Newport Beach FilJD Festtva,l,
thing's tight, she said
"There's a tendency in
short films (of) dlrectors who
want everything they shot in
the film," said Primero,
whose own short work about
a girl's search for her naturaJ
mother lasts just five nunutes.
Melli has a piece in Uus
year's festivaJ title "The
Collector.· rt runs 11 nunutes
IRIEFLI IN THE NEWS
Supervisors stay
neutral on lawsuit
The Orange County
Board of Supervisors on
Tuesday decided not to
take a stance on a lawsuit
that seeks to overturn
Measure W, the initiative
passed in March that
rezones the closed El Toro
Marlnj base for park use.
The supervisors made the
decision in closed session.
where they decided to
and 36 seconds and details a
frustrated young mecharuc's
attempt to con hls way to a
better life.
As a short-film maker, he
understands the mind behind
the art.
•It's a naturally fun and
exuberant group of people,•
Melli said. "They take chances
is what it boils down to.•
remain neutrol while contin-
uing to monitor the lawsuit
The Orange County
Regional Airport Authority, a
loose coalition of North
Co\Dlty cities that includes
Cost.a Mesa. filed the Match
18 challenge. clauning the
initiative is·~
invalid and unenforceable.•
The Airport Working
Group, Citizem for Jobi and
the Economy and Garden
Grove also jOOied the suit.
The anti-airport mea·
sure passed March 5 with a
58% countywide approval
FULL BAR
COCKTAILS
OUR MEALS ARE I
A TRIP TO M_E_><_•c_o--'-----------
'"OUR OWN WINES JUST ARRIVED
FROM NAPA VALLEY"'
..
•
PUILIC SAFER
POUCE FILES
cona•sa .........................
S.,. utor AV9N.* Possession
of a controlled substanot was
reported at 12:24 a.m. Monday.
• NewpOft ~A man
was reportedly drunk In J>l,lblk
In the 2200 block 8t 12:20 p.m.
• ...._. ttr-..t A man was
•n-ested on suspicion of~
Ing burglary tools In the 3300
block 8t 5:20 p.m. • °*"" Md w.IMlt streets:
Police arrested a woman on sus-
picion of burglary and forgery
at 8:16 p.m.
• tc.rtaor llaulevwd: A man
was arrested on $USpidon of
forgery in the 3000 block at
9-.30 p.m.
• s.i Diego Fnew.y Md
tt.tMw 9oulevard: A grand
thrit was reported at 7:08 a.m.
• KMt>or loulevwd: Property
damage reportedly occurred
during a hit-and-run in the 3000
block at 11 :37 a.m.
• SUperior Avenu9: A smoking
violation was reported at a
workplace in the 1500 block at
2:01 p.m.
• Elden Avenue: An auto theft
BRIEFLY IN
THE NEWS
Tiny jellyfish
invade beaches
Hundreds of thousands
of little, globular creatures
of the sea washed up on
the shores Tuesday until
high tide finally pulled
them back home in the
afternoon.
Newport Beach hfe-
guards smd the beaches
were littered with relatives
of the Jellyfish both
Monday and Tuesday
CHEER
CONTIN UED FROM 1
with parent Sherry Black,
said Tuesday that she is upset
no punitive action was taken
toward any of the school
admirustrators
The gnevance involved a
litany of issues surrounding
the cbeerleading controversy
that exploded last fall after
allegations of inconsistencies
in the tryouts' judging process.
was report9d In it. DOC> block
8t3:39p.m.
llWPOIT IUCll
•~~A stolen bleyde
was reported at 12:30 p.m.
Monday.
• "°""""a a d Drtw: A vehlde
burglary was reported In the
400 blocX •t 8~19 am. Monday.
• hit fMwport Drlw: A vehl·
de burglary was reported In the
1800 block' at 12!45 p.m.
Monday.
• ..,.,,_ ltOlld: A petty
theft was reported ,in the 4300
block at 10;30 a.m. Monday.
• Tenmo eo..wt: A home bur-
glary was reported at 7:47 a.m.
Monday.
• SelllhoN: A stolen vehicle
was reported at the summit at
3:35 p.m. Monday.
• 16th Stn.t: A vehide bur-
glary was reported In the 1700
block at 1 :30 p.m. Monday. • a....a,... ~Anon
was reported inside the
women's restroom at 4:15 p.m.
Monday.
• HCNlg Drfv9: A petty theft
was reported on the matemity
1e-k1 of Hoag Hospital at 11:10
p.m. Monday.
morning. The circular ani-
mals are called hydroids
and vary in size from 1 to
50 centimeters.
The small sea creatures
float on top of the water
and are canied to shore by
the wind, lifeguards said.
Like jellyfish, hydroids are
also packed with stinging
cells.
The heaviest sightings
of hydroids were at 56th
Street in the early morning.
High tide rolled in about 2
p.m today, and by 3 p.m.
only a few remained.
Weguards did not
report any injurtes as a
result of their presence.
The report, released by
Supt. Robert Barbot, absolves
Vossen, Assistant Principal
Kathy Slaussen and Cheer
Advisor Jennifer Cilderman
of any wrongdoing and main-
ly calls for clearer lines of
communication between
school administrators md
parents. The grievance bad
called for Vossen and
Slaussen to receive repri-
mands and for Cilderman to
be removed as cheer advisor.
Vossen said Tuesday that
he sees the report as a clear
mandate that the school and
the district need to work
together to allow the school
to handle problems before
they get to the district level.
·1 think a good portion of
the parents were going to the
district because they weren't
Spruce Up for Spring!
50% Off Topiaries
369 E. 17th Street, Costa Mesa, (Locattd behind Plum's Pa1io)
Phone(949)646-6745
Molestation trial of former Mesa Verde man begins
• Melvyn Carpenter
faces four felony
charges from incidents
that police learned
about two years ago.
Loltt.....,,...
DARY PILOT
COSTA MESA-The trial
of a 49-year-old former M~
Verde residen t wh o is
accused of five counts of child
molestation began Tuesday
at Harbor Justioe•Center in
SWAP
CONTINUED FROM 1
he said. Couldn't it take a lit-
tle more time to wait for a
resolution, be asked
City officials say Pezzulo's
criticism is misdirected.
City Manager Allan
Roeder pointed out Tuesday
that college officials willingly
agreed to cut the swap meet
so it would comply with the
EXCHANGE
CONTINUED FROM 1
fighting words for those
who live with terrorism on a
daily basis -as they dined
on tuna fish and potato
salad.
In response to questions
about where the violence is
leading, many of the stu-
dents said they are hopeful
about eventual peace in the
region.
"I'm really optimistic
because I have a lot of
Palestinian friends and
Israeli-Arab friends,•
Kaga.novsky said. "l hope it
will get better soon.·
getting some of the answers
that they would have liked,"
Vossen said. "I'm optimistic
that we can find a way to
make the communication
better.•
Stephens said the district
did little to address her oon-
cems.
"It was a slap in my face, a
complete waste of my time
and their time because noth-
ing was accomplished and
certainJy no amends were
made,· Stephens said. •They
certainly didn't try to console
us in any way."
The saga started in late
November, when the cheer-
leading rosters were posted
and former cheer coach Lisa
Callahan told administrators
she had witnessed irregulari-
ties in the judging that dis-
torted the fin.al results.
In respo~. school admin-
istrators and Callahan agreed
to allow onto the two squads
all 48 girls who tried out. But
Vossen then reversed that
decision, acting on the rec-
ommendation of an ad hoc
committee. Vossen decided to
bold new tryouts to fill two
more spots on both the varsi-
ty and junior varsity teams.
Practices resumed, but
Callahan was eventually dis-
WHAT'S AFLOAT
• WHAT'S AR.OAT Is published
periodically. If you are planning a
nautical event, submit the Inform>
tlon to the Dally Pilot, 330 w. Bay
St., Costa MeM, CA 92627; by fax to
(949) 646--i170; Of' by e-mail to dal-lypllotOJ.times.com.
IOIDOLA TOURS
Gondola Romance otten
dally tours of Newport
Harbor d unng lunch and din-
ner. The tours go out of Udo
Marina VillAge, 3400 Via
Oporto, Newport Beach.
(949) 675..C730.
Goadola totan are otiiecl by
Newport Beach.
Melvyn C~ter faces
(elony aim1Da1 ~81 that
resulted from allegations of
lewd acts with four girls over
the course of a year, Costa
Mesa Police U. Dale Birney
sald.
The DADlel of the victims
are being withheld to protect
their identities. Police did not
release spedfic ages but con-
firmed they were all younger
than 18. .
Birney said Oupenter
faces a possible life sentence
but would not disclose the
city permit.
"That's between the ven-
dors and the college, not the
vendors and the city,• Roeder
said.
College officials were
unavailable for comment.
Roeder said the swap
meet issue can come before
the city in one of two ways:
either the college can reap-
ply for another conditional-
use permit -which would
include both weekend days
-or the city could put the
Reva Furman of Corona
del Mar said the violence in
Israel has affected her as
well.
•we're all making calls
to people we know in
Israel,• Furman said. •we're
all feeling threatened and·
insecure.•
Some of the students said
they were swprised to see
support for Israel here
based on bow they have
seen their country portrayed
by foreign media.
•Here, people don't
believe false propaganda
and biased reporting,• Yoni
said. •They're not blinded
by Palestinian incitement.·
Yoni and Kaganovsky,
like all Israeli students, will
missed from her position in a
memo sent by Lorri McCune,
a district assistant superinten-
dent.
Stephens and Blake filed
the grievance Jan. 29.
Stephens' daughter, Katie,
did not make the team.
Blake's daughter, Erin, made
the varsity squad.
A district-level committee
heard the grievance March
21 . Some of the complaints in
the grievance included accu-
sations that the judges in the
original tryouts were not pro-
fessional, Vossen failed to
handle the situation correctly,
and the civil rights of
Callahan and some of the stu-
dents were violated. During
the , hearing, 10 witnesses
supported the complaints in
the grievance, Stephens said.
The committee made a
recommendation to Barbot,
who issued a final ruling last
week. His report found that
the judges acted profession-
ally. But it also found that
Vossen did not communicate
well with the parentB and that
an open line of communica-
tion was not granted.
Assistant Supt. Jaime
Castellanos said he would
help Vossen enhance the
school's communication.
the Gondola Co. of Newport,
3'00 Vlll Oporto, Suite 102-B.
The $75 cost includes a bas-
ket of bread. cheese, salami,
ice, glasses, a blanket, music
a.o.d a Polaroid picture. Wme
also i.s available. (9-49) 675-
1212.
UYAI TOURS
The Upper Newport Bay
Ecological Reserve and
Nature Preserve hosts two-
hour kayak tours of the Back
Bay at 10 a.m. every Sunday
at 2301 Univenity Drive,
Newport Beach. $20. Kayak.I
are made available through
Newport Dunes Waterfront
details ot the c.ase tbA1 merit • OOC''rred. nor did they roveai
such a n otable punishment. bo' 10vestlgatol"I first heard
Officials in the Orange of the aQegatlom.
County district attorney's carpenter was taken into
office could not be reAcbed custody at Orange County tor oonunent. Jail and held in llou of or
Costa Mesa police became $250,000 ba.1L It was raised to
aware of the allegations $500,000, but C41'Penter
against Carpenter in February prom~tly paid the bail note,
2000. He was arrested on Birney said.
March 17, 2000, at his home in Carpenter bas been out of
the 2900 block of Country custody for more than two
Club Drive after police gath-years. He bas since moved
ered enough infonnation to from his Mesa Verde home,
take action, Birney said. Birney said. but he dec.Uned
Police did not disclose to comment on whether he
where the alleged criibes was still in the city.
issue before the Planning
Commission.
Both options take time and
would not produce results
before May 4, Roeder said.
•Tue best thing (the ven-
dors) can do is try to per-
suade the college to pursue a
new use permit in a timely
fashion,• Roeder said.
Mayor Llnda Dixon
agreed with the Roeder.
She further noted that the
council could not ignore city
rules and procedures. The
not be heading to college
next year but will serve in
the Israeli Anny instead.
Kaganovsky said she would
like to use the Arabic lan-
guage she has learned in
school to serve in the Israeli
intelligence unit.
Siavia Vidor, who came
from Westminster to meet
the Israeli students, thanked
them for coming so far to
share their experience.
•You're doing such a ser-
vice to come here and talk,"
Vidor said. "We're so happy
to have you.•
• DEIRDRE NEWMAN tovers edu·
cation. She may be readled at (949)
S74-4221 or by e-mail at
delrdre.newmanOlatimes.com.
"I think a lot of it is any
time there are issues that par-
ents have, we have to contin-
ue to be as responsive as we
can,• Castellanos said.
·some of those times. we
may need to ca.D parents over
and over again.•
The report did not address
the issue of civil rights viola-
tions because Callahan and
Cilderman were not named
directly, Stephens said. She
and Blake now have the
opportunity to refile that por-
tion of the complaint using
sped.fie names, Stephens
said.
Since she is not satisfied
with the outcome of the
grievance process, Stephens
said she is going to consult an
attorney and will probably
take the next step and set up
a closed meeting with school
board members to discuss her
lingering concerns .
Vossen said the school is
eager to put the cheerleading
controversy behind it once
and for all, and will soon
announce the addition of two
new cheer coaches.
• DEJIUME NEWMAN covers edu-
cation. She may be reached at (949)
574-4221 or by e-mail at deJrd~.newmanONtimes..com
Resort. Call for reservations.
(800) 585-0747.
SAILING HAMS
Orange County employers
may bring their employees out
to Newport Beach on week-
days to enjoy a day of sailing
courtesy of Orange Coast
College. The School of Sailing
and Seamanship offers a
chance for groups to work
with the on-board instructor
on different sailing techniques
while they get advice on how
to pedonn well in business. No
sailing expedence necmsary.
One-day das1es range from
S100toSJ25. (949) 645-9412.
college does not have a per.
mit to operate both weekend
days, and therefore the city
cannot allow that activity, she
said.
"[Permits) apply to every.
one,• Dixon said. •You can't
pick and chOt>Se who you
want the rules to apply to.·
• LOUTA HARPER covers Costa
Mesa. She may be reached at (949)
574-4275 or by e-mail at lollta.harp·
erO/atlmes.com.
SOUTHWORTH
Don
resident of Newport Beach.
beloved father of Steven and
Brian, preceeded in death by
wife Ruby and father Don
SouthwoC1tl Sr. passed 'fMay at
home April 14, 2002 at the age
of69.
Memorial services will be held
Monday, April 22, 11 :00 am at
the Newport Harbor Lutheran
Church, 798 Dover Drive,
Newport Beach.
In lieu of flowers, the family
suggests donations be made to
the American Cancer Society.
BRITTINGHAM,
Betty L
beloYed wife for My two years of
KenneCh A. BfitlirVlam. of
Mei.~ Beach, Calbnla.
passed t1!NaY April 13, 2002 in
~ Beach. Born in
Aod<fcrd. 9nois on C>mJt>er 3.
1928. Attended West High
School in Roddofd. linoes.
gndJat8d from Coachella.
VaJ8y High School In Coachella.
CA Belly was a 1'l1errar of
Della Delta Delta Sorority at
UnMnfty of Caibnia Bel1<efey.
Belly and Ken W9f'8 marr1ed at
the Church of the Good
Shepherd in Bevel'ly Hills. CA
on June 20 1949. They were
members of St Martin of Tours
Parish In Brentwood, CA prior to
moving to Newport Beach in
1963. Betty was a member of
the Westside Guild Children's
Hospital of Los Anoe'eS.
member of the Lido Isle
Women's Cltb, a board
member of the Newpoft Irvine
~ of Orange County
t.\JSic Center, and President of
the lnlersoror1ty Mocher's Cltb
at the University of Soulhem
Callfomla 19~1979. She was
a proud membel of the Na!lonal
SodeCy ol the Daughters of the
American Aevolltion. Her 900,
Kenneth A. ~. Jr ..
pt'80eded Betty in death. She is
SUNiYed bv her hUsband.
Kenneth A. Brittingham, and. her
three chti"en. John Brittingt'1am
(Kathy) of Nonti Tustin, CA.
Debby Jones (Je&9e) of
Newport Beach, CA, and Lo1'1
Viole' (Tim) ol Paaftc Palisades,
CA She Is also auMved bv nine
grandclhlldren, John, Bob, KtfsO
and Mice Brtlllngham, Enn and
Lauren oi...y, and Nlc:de, Tun
"8ritr, and Taryn Vlole'. Masi of
Ctwtstian Butta! ., be held
~. Apt 19th, 10 NA, CM
Lad't of Mcu-. Cermet aud1
1441 W.·Balboa Btl.td. Newport
Beach, with lnBmenl tolowlng
al Good~ c.m.ty In
~·Beach..
•
. • .
Dally Pilot
AROUND TOWN
;1~ 3AltOUN030 TOWN Items to the Dally W. lay St., Costa Me51 cA
92627; by fax to (949) 646-4170; or b<i call-
ing (949J 57~298. Include the time, <t.te
and locatJon of tt1e event, es well es 1 con-
tact phone number, A complete liStf"9 is
avall1ble at wwwda//)f>/loc.com.
TODAY
The Orange Cout College
Friends of the Lt.lmuy will host a
book sale from 9"a.m. to 3 p .m. in
the library at the north end of the
Adams parking lot Take Fairview
Road to Monitor Way in Costa
Mesa. The college is at 2701
Fairview Road, Costa Mesa. (714)
432-0202, Ext. 21058.
The Newcomers Club will meet at
10 a.m. in the Clubhouse, at 1 Ford
Road, for a game day of bridge,
bunco and Cdllasta. Lunch will fol·
low. (949) 644-4032 or (949) 854-
4501.
Learn about veterans who served
aboard the Dream Maker Yacht,
stationed in the Aleutian Islands in
1943-44, al 11:30 a.m. at the Lido
Theatre in Newport Beach as part
or the Newport Beach Film
Festival. The documentary
"Crashboats-Army Air Force
Sailors in World War II and Korea•
will be screened. Call (949) 253-
2880 for tick~ts and (949) 728-0980
for information.
A ttve-day fall crulae to the
Northern Channel Islands will be
conducted by the Orange Coast
College School of Sailing and
Seamanship. The 300-mile cruise
will depart at 5 p.m . today and
•
IEST IET
1bJs year marks the second straight year the Newport Dunes
Waterfront Resort ln Newport Beach will host the Vlnta~ RV
&hlbltton. It will be held from 11a.m.to4 p.m.. May 18. Last
years show attracted more than 5,000 spec:taton, including
Roseanne. More than 15 vintage RVs, lndud.lng a 1936
A!ntream Clipper, UM7 West Craft.1953 Silver Streak
Clipper and a 1946 Curtl&-Wrtght. will be on display. The
event ls free, but parking ts $7. lbose who own vintage RVs
or travel trallen and would like to partldpa te ln the rally
can receive dbcounted rates. (800) 765-7661.
return at the same time Sunday.
Designed for sailors with at least
intermediate level sailing skills,
crew members will be expected to
participate in the ship's operations.
An active cruise has been planned,
filled with sailing to new islands and
anchorages, hilring and exploring
a.shore. The fee is $625 and includes
all permits and meals. The sailing
center is at 1801 W. Coast Highway,
Newport Beach. (949) 645-9412.
The annual open house for the
Orange Coast Middle CoUege
High School will begin at 7 p.m.
and will be held at the Captain's
Table restaurant on the Orange
Coast CoUege campus. The event
aims to present the program to
potential students 1high school
juniors and seniors) looking to
attend CCC simultaneously. Free.
The campus is at 2701 Fairview
Road, Costa Mesa. (714) 432-5732.
PRIEST
CONTINUED FROM 1
after offidals at the Dlocese of
Orange County learned of alleged
semal misconduct with a 13-year-
old in 1981.
Maria S<:hinderle, the du'edor
of human resources at the Diocese
of Orange County. said the charges
hllve not been proven and Henson
was plabed on leave in November
according to Diocesan policy.
#Our policy is that ~ere is an
allegation of sexual m.1sconduct
with a minor, we need to deter-
mine if the priest poses a risk. and
while doing that the priest will be
placed on administrative leave,•
Schinderle said.
Schinderle said she did not
know when or if Henson will return
to bis active position. Any action by
the ~ of Orange County will
depend on the outcome of the
investigation into the alleged sexu-
al misconduct being conducted by
the Dominican Fathers, or which
Henson was a member when the
alleged incident occurred.
Henson has denied the allegation.
Officials at St. John the Baptist
Catholic Church declined com-
ment on Tuesday.
Jean Forbath, a 40-year mem-
ber or the parish and founder of
Share Our Selves in Costa Mesa.
said she was greatly saddened by
the allegations but continues to be
supportive of the priest.
"We only knew good things
about Father Jerome, so we felt
sorry for him,~ Forbath said. "I
continue to pray for him and the
VJctim. U ii turns out to be true, I
sympathize with the victim.·
Wadnetdoy, Apr~ 17, 2002 5
AJthougtJ the DeWW Wal \JJ*M·
ting, Porbatluaid 1h wos proud of
her cbun:b oommuruty tor tbe way
it handled the allegation. Tb
church did not hJde the truth tram
ita panahioners and took measures
to ensure no similar event. hid
happened dunng Henson's tenUJe
at Sl John the Baptist Chuich.
Church members also re1ramed
from childish gOSSJp, she said .
Scbinderle 1&d the Diocese of
Orange County ~ an.noun~
ments of the allegations agamst
Henson in church bulletins at St.
John the Baptist, as well as at St.
Angela Meirci Church in Brea and
St. Anthony Claret Church in
Anaheim, where Henson served as
associate pastor before his Costa
Mesa assignmeot.
The announcements requested
that anyone with relevant infoona·
tion call a, toll-free reporting hne.
There has been no response,
Schinderle said.
Henson has been a pnest with
the Diocese of Orange County
since 1983, and there have been no
similar complaints regarding his
conduct, Schlnderle said. The dto-
cese was not aware or any inappro-
pnate behavtor Wlth a minor before
his a.mval in Orange County.
He is the fourth Orange County
priest to be removed from active
duty m recent months because or
allegabons of molestabon. The oth-
ers were removed from ministry
after the allegabons of sexual mis-
conduct were proved, Schinderle
said. Henson 1s still a priest but
was removed from the parish until
the tnvestJgatJon is completed.
• LOLITA HARPER covers Costa Mesa. She
may be reached at (949) 574-4275 or bye-
mail at lof1ta harperOlatimes.com.
LINES
CONTINUED FROM 1
plot offered here was that the
police were demurring some-
what on their original theory
because they were hoping to
draw out the three young
males seen in the area.
matter-of-fact conclusions
before it bad the evidence to
reach those conclusions.
Which then left me to trod
the other apparent avenue.
That the police still believe,
in my estimation, that
Holdren's fall was paint-ball
related. For if it weren't, 1t
seems to me the three rruss-
ing youths would gladly
spare themselves the inner
turmoil of hiding out, and
save the community the
racking episodes of specula-
tion and accusation in which
it's mired even as you read.
case that seem to direct us
toward a paint ball-related
chain of events where
Holdren is concerned.
support. Others cla.un to
know who the three are, but
express fear of reprisals
should they finger the tno.
Still others, she says, have
suggested she ~move on •
statements, that wet pamt
was round near and on
Holdren as he lay uncon-
scious from an awful and
Vlolent fctll, we are still left
with d community on pins
and '1ecdles, three misstng
pieces and a confusulg and
Ulcomplcte canvas.
the department's behaU last
week, said it could no longer
be sure what contnbuted to
Holdren's tumble, this col-
umn explored two possibili-
ties. The first being that the
department may have
stubbed its toe in the investi-
gation when it -as repre-
sented by Long's comments
to the press -rather confi-
dently and publicly trumpet-
ed its belief that Holdren had
been assaulted. The other
Now the former notion
spawned pained grievances
lo my in-box claiming unfair
criticism or the Newport
Beach Police Department.
But a closer read would have
revealed my skepticism that
the department booted this
one. Why?
Because I believe it's far
too professional an agency to
place its public credibility on
the line by drawing pretty
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Since then, we know a
few bits more about this odd
• Coordination
• Self-Defense
• Discipline
First, the picturesque
neighborhoods or Eastbluff
are stuck in a persistent state
of intense vibrabon over
speculation -and some
claims of knowing -as to
the identities or the three
missing youth.
Meantime, Bonita Young
-Holdren's girlfriend -
says she has passed out 300
fliers in the community ask-
ing for help and has been
peppered with a flood or e-
mails. Some have offered her
• Self Confidence
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The newest scraps or infor-
mabon -wluch have been
the buzz or speculation and
wonder in the commuruty -
come trom Shulman. In a
telephone inlervtew Monday,
he confirmed that wet paint
was found not only near
Holdren, but on him as well.
Paint was found on a
nearby sign also, he said.
So now that we know,
according to official police
Only now the paint that's
on 1t JS wet Or so it seems.
• BYRON DE ARA.KAI. is a freelance
writer and communications consul-
tant He resides in Costa Mesa. His
column appears Wednesda)'\.
Readers c.an reach him with news
tips and comments via e-mail at
byronwnte!'Omsn.com. Visit his Web
site at www byronwnter.com.
Taken
Fen-Ph en
or Redux?
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5757 w CenUy Blvd .. 71h floor
Los Angeles, CA 90045
~
..
6 ~April 17, 2002
NIWPOIT IUCH , .. , ... • CIA..,,..ll~• CIA--"'.
FILM FISnVIL ........ THE PMKIHG Sl'OT UdolhNttr ,,.,_ *""'"' dww-. getWI COtlWf9"
SCHEDULE UM9d Stat-. 2002 Ing ft Giie petting .fl'Ot
OncWr. Joffr• =. Sa111 rwritaf. Joffr. IP.& I
The N9wpolt ~Rim f9tMI wll hold CetJoffre~ _..., dwoUllh ~ Fllrnl wll be 1Uckm1nn. o.mor, ~ Keith A ..... ~(UftMMMe....,
.._, 11'1 ku~ fdwenS Ilg Gtldwtll Edwri llland 2 Running~ 90:00 Mexico. 2001 "-Port. JOO~ c.r.r Ml9, N9wpolt ~ ,,.... J4St ~ 1Wo ""1hdlly wtJlwll mtde on the ame Director: N!'lllndo C..
Udo, N9wpolt ~end~ IMnd night In Jtsl bring~""'°...,,.. Sawiwrltr. AnNndo ~ ltffMI ittgfy dlffwtnt women. 1 tnd 2. "' Nlwpott QnW Ml9, Tonttkti
Nlwpott IMd\. ~ otlwwlle CISt: Vlttor :,; ~ tkbts.,. S7 end~ be pur· 2P.& RUM.Ing time: :00
m-:1 bv c.alllng (Mg) 25). « onllne S.lvedor, • fMlous '°"*'*' •nd ~
-' -~tlhffwt.com. lro dtJctor of• tMvfJlon show kriown u United Stat~ 2001
TODAY Olre<tor: Joe CerdoN. Marlo de Varona ro1:; 1s tm41fted In • *' :z:m'''°' • mitt wtth •sp/r•flonl of t» • profw. CISt: Luis Garo., 1111 Teck, David Fisher. slontl comedftn,
"a.a. iwtte Sotom.yor, Clrmen Nlcole
Running time: 93:00 ,, ... ThrH Miami friends In their 30J are ~Mottle Memottee =to !l'lflke It big In this bl«k Joint~ Al'M <Gone Dong Edw1rds Island 2
United s~ 2001 A fffm ~Ktionlst •nd • pro-K~KuM)
Dlrertor: Kurt Kuenne ~I mode tJ.posit tllW savfngs Udo tel'
Running tirJ!e; 58:00 with tMlr friend, .• hlJstltr; KOl'ff. 2001
A film ~tlon of Amtrlc•\ pl'NtfSt Olr9Ctor: Olan Woolt Part
Icon of )'O«lth. frHdom tnd the wto-2iJ•P.& 5aeenwrlter. O\ln Woolt Ptr1t
~. Whit mitt</ a1 an .wto ptrtt V~lbt-The Ancient One
CISt: 1.M 'Voun9 AA. Song ~ Ho, Kim
ownen buslMu 111nture to rMke -THWoo
HS{i money accldMtalty b«ame • '"'9" E 111tnd 2 "= tlme: '10:00 la ~ ~ l'OfNnct, Ml tnd. Tenztnll. 2000 A shootout •t the K"'"11 OMl
s.nse of community ffourilhed. Director: Ron MuMhlU INdJ to • tortuous "-tlgttlon of
Sa--iter. QueenM T.ylor Mulvlhlll l7Md«. frlMdJhlp tnd tlNt dlarmlng
11aJOUL cast: Amtndlnt Uhtmbl. Barblrto, bNuty of ~mm end ltte night c:ot)-
MwtntJuma All Ht5Sln ~tlon. Sophltt hng hHdJ tn
The Medldne Show Running time: .112:00 lrt'ltStlgetM fNm rerponslble for
Edwlf"ds Island 1 An Afrlon AmMan $lo<tor fotJ"WfJ to uflC'Ollerlng the tnltl1, but soorr finds
United SUtft. 2001 Africa tfrfN securing •n lpPOinOMnt thtt no OM r.alll anything Myond
Director: Wendell Morris with the NatioMI ,.,,ml lnstitvtJon on the fKU of the offlcltl rwconl.
SaMl'!Wflter W~ll Morrl1 ~nz•nla. But her professlontl ~
CM\: Jontthan Siiverman, Nttasha haJ not ~r.d her for the mysterla 7P.&
Gregson W.gner •nd s.ff-<loubt that confront her.
Running time: 100·00 The Power of~-~··-When ~yfor O.rcy Is d1'~ with ., ... tMDat.IUme
c.ncer. he w•ntJ only to left •lone fdwtrds Island 1
so tfult he c.n mock his w.y =t Wiid Flowen (K~) Denl\'l1rtc. 2001
this n'a::,tm11n1 In ~· howltll'l!r, Udo Theater Director: ,,...,. Gl'llll
finds t 'J::l,ple tl'Nt him /Ike• frHk. Czech Republic, 2000 RuMlng time: 60:00
White In . hosp/r.I, zr:.or mHtJ • Director: FA Br•bel Ourlng t visit to Copenhilgen In 2000,
leubml• patient nam Lynn who Is Screenwriter: F.A. Brabel, Oetna the O.ltl LatM said, "The power of
the only person he CM connect with Horvathova. Milos Macourek trvth Is stronger than the power of
during his ordeal. Ctst Bolek Polivka gun." This film 11 made up of lntwvlews
CrMhboltts -Air f'()f'Qt Sallon In
Running time: BS:OO tnd lttt9,,,.,,tJ film«/ during thtt vlllt
A rtttlshlngty bHlltiful •nd ~lnely to O.nmtrt.;::r.powd with new tnd
Wot1d W.,. II a IC-erork MJ.ptation of the 19th century exc.ptioMI ~ge from Inside T1bet
Udo Theater Czedr pottt KJ. Erben) f•mous ~ •nd tM T1bet•n exit. community In United SUtes, 2001 this aptivet/ng film ~m offerJ _,, Dl'Nrtmsal•.
Director: Trish Kinney fairy ~!es that illustn~ •lrMtyptl
Running time: 43:00 themes of seJ(. death. ptJS/on. }Hlousy Short Alml: Youtt. Short8 The Army Air Force In World war II •nd and fam/llal bonds. Edwards Island 2
rhe Air Force In KorH commissioned a
flHr of small, fast boats to support •Ir Short Atma: The "The' Short8 MEAN PEOPLE SUCK squadrons flying m1wons o~r the SH. Edw•rds Island 1 When Kttie ,,,,.s the quatlon, Th~~ the en.sh boa~ designed "What\ the WOfJt rhittg )'OUW ft'W with the assistance of GrNt BriUm) THE QUARRY ®M to .somebody elw.,. her friends
Royal N•vy. who successfu't IMd them It was just• regu,.r 1¥1/es' night -or rHllze they're In for JOtM udtement.
m their c.mptlgn against Gemvns at le.rt it -s ~to be. The nut m World war II. Often mistaken for moming • htndsome foreigMr Is BLUE HAVEN Navy PT boa~ the Air Force cnw mem-fwnd dHd in the quarry behind a A coming-of .. ge ~of frlendJhlp, beri won1 Navy uniforms with Air Force rvrtl "-JeMy home. drNms •nd ~to ~the ,:r-1 trnpes. The boats W'l'r'I ref/red In I 956. of HM!)' Nldlols, who haJ I a
THE TERMS brNtlwd lk•ting ~since he an
NOOll A father and son IM in • artvan In n1member.
the middle of nowhere. When the son
I Don't Know Jd bums down the Urtvt/1, his f•rher QUEST FOR THE HOLY PORCElAIN
Edw;irds Island 2 decides to kill him In a blz•rre •nd con-Eight·yNr-old Wesley Cl•rlc hts • ~
United States. 2001 voluted execvtJon pact /em. Morut.r movies tnd lemoNde
Director· Christopher Leavens proll'I! to be a d1'lerO<Js mix In the
Running time. 91:00 THE DIPlOMAT middle of the nlg t
Jack Nance, made famous in O.vld Thrtt young Italian n1volutlonarles kid·
Lynch\ flm fllm, "Eraserhead," lived• nap •n Italian diplomat's daughter •nd THE LAST RACE
life that baffled his friends, relatives hold her for a St~l/llon rtnsom. A fut-paced look Into the world of
and som~ say himself. A f.scmat/ng underground street rt<lng. In which •
document•!)' on the lit., career tnd THE RIGHT MAN FOR THE JOB )'OUng rtclng •ddlct •ttemptJ to •void
brvt•I dffth of this pop cult Icon. The only thing tougher than becoming t"-pltf11/s of his 11/eg•I partlrM.
We neecl
your help
ancl we neecl it NOW!
Imagine ... a ~ew state-of-the-art library
to replace our aging Mariners Branch .
It wlll It• fuallell withs
• $2 million in state grant funds from Proposition 14 (2/3 of the total cost) ....
• $ 1 million that must come from community donations ~ ,_ 200.t.
Hl•hll1hta el th• 14,000 ... _,... ...... 11~ wlll la1lutle1
• expanded print, electronic & audiovis~ol
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 ... ....,... Ml11 UNIW Mleel Oilllr4ct
• community meeting room 60% larger than
the existing Vincent Jorgensen Center
....,.. ...... '-4ef &Airwy~ ,.......,, .... ~
....,... .... Mllrl.llfwy._..
• a new •safer" parking area
,. ••Ir• ••••••••• , .... ,,, •••••••••••••••••
ef ti•• ••4 ••••Y ••• •••tl•4 NOWI
Please maJI your tax-deductible donation made out to:
•ti1W•M•rlllereut.N17f•MI
Newport Beach Pu~lc Library, P.O. Box 3065, Newport S.och, CA . 92659
Donations of $1,000 and above wlll be acknowledged on a donor wall.
IF th• grant Is not awarded, all chech wlll b• returned to donora.
C.11 ....... 1180.., ........................... ..
I
WHOA
NI Utf»n oP9t9 ~ • 1M11 W19 •t the Wl'Ollf ~ ft the wrong .....
SATtWTt Anreetw!W~~eo Ul""'1stMwl wlllt It mNlll • ,.. • mMI
-and ..-r It ~'t "*"
A unu ltfDEWTION
In M ~ 1Wfti9d111 Mlg#tbor-
hooct. ~young'""' Mfrlettds. powtt)"'tfrkltn and r.dw·
lmbo)( • ......
CJntheNoM
fdMrdl llland 1
Ireland, 2000
DIN<10I': OfYld Cl~ ~ <MtO.n .... ~
Brendl 8 hnM M«LJlm
Ru,,,Vng time: 1CM.'OO lrMdMi. , por#r •t ,,,. DwNrt
Medial CMCJW, ls=wltlt ~ dal mini w, '*""' f*t. f4oWwwr.,,."" • ~ ~ wtthln the tl'dtlveJ of IM ~ hf ~,,.. Mk»s ~,..Mids.
• IP°'IW!t ~~the Newport leedl Con-ldoft M1d Vlsttors I~. Th«• Wiii bit an 1fmr.
saeenlng gala It Muldoon-,, $10. Ora
c.ISUtL
wt..tMR.inUfta(AIM~
UdoTh .. ter
Jtpal\2000
Dlrwdor: Ttlwhl Koizumi
Saftt IWrit'lf. Aklrt ICurouwa
CGt Akin Tll'a. Ytshlko Mlytko, Shlro
Mlfune, Mleko Htradl
R~ time: 91:00 Ti In the storm, a husband and
wi find PffCe wfth their llvft In this
period pl«f set In the Kyoho "'· • A gall rectptlon wlll be held 1fter the
screening to honor clnemat~
Shoji Ueda. The .....,,Ing wtll In with
Talko drumming. $20. Dress ~I.
9a30P.&
The lroken W"9 of Elljalh
Footfal ..
Edwards hltnd 2
United States, 2001
Director: Gabflel Judet·Welnshel
Screenwriter: Gabriel Judet-Welnshel
cast: G•briel Judet-Welnshel, Franck
Oinet, Nlnt Egll
Running time: 45:00
EH}lth Foothlls. • loMly street juggt.r.
d/saJllef'S t vagMJond drcus troupe In • wooded .. 11ey. The film chtru Ell}flll\
low afftlr with NN, the fire brNtMr,
•nd his frlendslrlp wtth lift ~ the dr·
an director. ':tJ onty eight /Ina of dmlogue, Footh 11 mtts , trJStilled story
about ttw es.ntt.ls of humtn low tnd
longing.
10P.&
81ooct: The a..t ~
Udo Theater
Japan. 2000
Director: Hiryukl Klttkubo
Screenwriter: Kenjl Kamlytma
Cast Yould Kudoh, Steml Ntktmur1.
JoeRomena
Runnll time: 48:00
This• me fllm set on HtlloWHn pits •
)'OUng wom.tn of mystwrlous orlgl111
¥}flnst • slew of wmplrn.
Don't run away froID
thiS documentµ-y
Dell LMdt OMYPaor_._ _ _._
· 'Runaway" is a telllilg d~ aboUt the liV• « young women Who end µp in a IOC:ial
ierv1c8I center in Tehran, trim.
The center terves as a temporuy safe baVen for run·
away girll with nowhere to go. The girl.I arrtve here
l>8caU18 theY bave run away m:J!.robleml at home. u~. the abme involves the side of the ~. ._with the father and brotben. •
lut ~•mums" c.an be just u bad lD ~.lit·
ten to a girl wbo ~y tel1i abOut her mother w~
to let bar on fire because tbe ~wants to rape
her. You see tbe fri.lltration and cOnfulkm u the girl
tells her story.
You don't see violence or signs of phf*al abuse
lieie, only the tears that follow. The emotions show how
difficult it ii to liVe in a land where police from the •bat·
t1ing loda1 corruption• \m.it bring you in.
Intimate dielOgue about virginity certificat.el and
~public conduct are shared among the glrli while
the camera remains invisible. Problems are sorted out
by the Statf, who act M mediators between family mem·
bers. The interaction between the sOclal worker and the
runaways tells the storiel.
The film shoWs tba.t sod.al problemi are truly intern.a·
tiooal, with Just the rules being different Do theH
women have a cbancef After eeeing this, you might •
think they do in Iran today.
• "Run.away" w1ll be a/town ln the Udo Tlt~ter at 6
p.m.. Thunrday.
SAVE A LIFE
SPONSOR A PET
For Only $19 You Can Help.
Arc you an animal lover? Herc's a great way to express it.
Sponsor a pct photo on our special "Save a Life"
page publishing on Thursday, April 25, 2002.
• •
Your sponsorship will secure a space for a photo of a pet who is
available for adoption and needs a good home. This special page
has saved hundreds of lives all over the state, thanks to people
like you! Be a part of saving a life and feel great about doing it.
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•
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•
GUCm OF THE DAY
"The (OEC) rules aay, we wm be
governed by the NCAA guide.
I don't think (Golden West)
looked lt up to see that ... "
Fnd ~ Orange Coast College
Athletic Director
Ooity Pilot Sports..._ Roger Corfaon • 949..574-4223 • Sports Pax: 949~50-0170
JC SWIMMING
OCCme1
win OEC •
title after
GWCmeet
res cored
Golden West swimmers were
in too many events. Official
score is OCC, 104-90.
Steve Virgen
DAILY PILOT
COSTA MESA -Upon agreement
between athletic directors from Orange
Coast College and Golden West and
after rescorlng an Orange Empire
Conference dual men's swim meet from
Aprtl 5, the OCC Pirates have defeated
the OEC defending champion Rustlers,
10.-90, Coast Athletic Director Fred
Hokanson said Tuesday.
The win gives the Pirates the OEC
championship and an undefeated OEC
dual meet season (4-0). Golden West,
OCC's district rival, was last year's
conference champion and has won the
state title the past seven years.
The April 5 meet bad to be rescored
because Golden West entered
swimmers ln more than three events,
OCC coaches learned late ln the meet.
The violation did not adhere to NCAA
rules, which the OEC swim teams
follow.
"The (OEC) rules say, we will be
governed by the NCAA guide,•
Hokanson said. ·1 don't think (Golden
West) looked it up to see that.•
The decision made after an
agreement between Hokanson and
Golden West Athletic Director Ray
Shackleford will cause other OEC
schools, Fullerton, Santa Ana and
Cypress, to protest their dual meets
against Golden West this season,
Hokanson said.
Shackleford said rescoring the other
dual meets will not make a difference.
"We have to rescore the other three
matches, but we would still win the
matches,• said Shackleford. who would
not reveal the name of the coach who
made the decision to enter Golden West
swimmen in m«e than three events. •I
won't~ out the name of the coach.
Our swtln coach made an error and
Orange Coast College won the meet.
We're not even sure as to which of our
coaches selected the swimmers for the
events. There ls some uncertainty as to
who it was, but we know we made a
mistake.•
OCC assistant coach Mike Giles said
Rick Graves and John Wright were the
Golden West coaches at the April 5 dual
meet. Brian Kreutzkamp, a former
Newport Harbor High boys water polo
coach, also coaches swimming.
OCC Coach Dave Salo cheered
when he heard the news his Pirates
won the meet. Yet, be had some regret.
"I would rather have won the meet
had we all been on the .same page,•
Salo said. "There was some confusion
by (a Golden West) coach in how many
events the swimmers could swim.
(Golden West) might have swam the
meet differently, lf they knew about the
NCAA rules.•
ln women's community college
competition, the swimmers are allowed
to swim four events.
Mustangs' 16·hit attack
leads to PCL victory over
host Estancia Tuesday.
Richard Dunn
OAJt.Y PILOT
COSTA MESA -In perfect unison,
members of the Costa Mesa High
softball team jump in the air and holler
the nmnber of outs in each inning with
their finger(s) of their non-glove band
pointed toward the sky.
HIGH SCHOOL BASEBAll
Buonarigo saJd his team has
had three tough losses this year.
including last week against PCL
foe Northwood, but added that
each time his spirited unit has
rallied to win the next game.
DAILY PILOT PHOTOS
BY SEAN HILLEi\
Corona del Mar's Jeritt Thayer (2)
makes the throw after Estancia 's
Casey Gates (9) ls forced out at
second. At left, CdM's Wess Presson
(44) steals second as Eric Schaefer
reaches for an errant throw. Below,
Nick Rhodes delivers ln CdM's 18-1
Pacific Coast League win Tuesday.
• u was gone,• Buonango
S&d of Topps' second dmger
of the season. "But the wind is
so strong here. It's really hard to
try to jack something to left
field."
Topps singled to start the SCOlllOAID
game. stole second and third
Topps' shot had no trouble
clearing the outfielders, then
DeMeDo continued the early
rally with a double, followed
by a Kelly Topps single to nght
and scored on Lauren DeMeDo's Ml.9t• 191 12
RBI bunt back to Estancia bglei 1
pitcher Hilary Ockey, whose
only play was to first. and eventual stolen base to put two
runners in scoring position.
But Estancia freshman right-hander
Ockey pitched out of the jam, mtl.rlng
Mesa's 4-5-6 hitters, lncludlng striking
out YmnamOO> looking for the second out.
md.aa
Aciril 22 hOncir ..
CHARLIE BERRY
w.dnesdoy, April 17, 2002
•
CdM
bench
brigade
shines
Warsaw, Frenkiel get first
varsity hits in Sea Kings'
18-1 win over Estancia.
Barry Faulkner
0AILV PILOT
CORONA
DELMAR-One
team's
nightmare can
be another
team's dream, • especially for 5C01110•-
those on the -
upside of an &g... 1 18-1 Vlctory who s.. Kings 18
have waited
hopefUlly for an
opporturuty to shine on the varsity
baseball diamond.
Corona del Mar High's lopsided
Paobc Coast League triumph over
vtsiting Estancia provided a little
quahty time for a handful of
reserves Tuesday. And they were
more than w1Jhng to take full
advantage
Juruor Matt Warsaw lashed h.l.s
hrst varsity tut, an RBI smgle m the
sixth, then repeated the feat in the
same lll.DlDg, as the Sea Kings (8·9,
3-5 in league) batted around twice
to break things open.
CdM freshman Andy Frenklel
doubled in two runs in the sixth to
make the most of his first varsity at-
bat. Freshman Tyler Lance, like
Frenloel spencbng a day with the
varsity because Estancia has no
freshman team, walked to drive in
a run m his first varsity plate
appearance, d.lso m the suth.
In add1hon, senior Matt
Guglmzza, who bad no hits Uus
season through April 8, doubled,
reached on an error and scored
twice during the 12-run sixth for
the Sea Kings.
"My first at-bat, I was a little
nervous,• Warsaw said. "But once
I saw the first pitch, I just tried to
stay back and drive the ball. My
SEE COM PAGE 8
SORIAll
base error m the outfield.
7
"Every coach I talk to tells me, 'You're
getting there,· but our fundamentals just
aren't there yet.• said first-yetU Est.anda
Coadl Marc Rodig. whose team fell to 2-
10, 0-3.
Mesa, wb.Jch travels to Corona del
Mar Thursday, was led by DeMello's
three hits, while six other Mustangs
collected two hits in Mesa's 16-hit attack.
Mesa senior left-bander Tess l.Jndsay
tossed a four-hitter over 67./3 innings to
earn the wm, while freshman southpaw
Jackie Butler made a bid lo become
next year's ace in the drc:le by getting
the 6naJ out.
•
•(The violation) was caught late in
the meet.• Salo said. •A lot ol their guys
were swimming three events. AJ
coaches, we really don't pay attention to
allot that We really pay attention to our
swimmers and our times. But we
noticed some lwimmers bad been 1n
four events.•
Orange Coast and Golden West will
clash again ln the OBC Swimming
Championships April 25-27 at Sad-
dleback..
"They're really, reaDy a team,• Mesa
Coadl Rich Buonarlgo saJd ol his llql.lad,
foDowing a 12-1 Pacific Coast League
ftve-inning mercy·rule victoty Tuesday
over aoutown rival Estancia.
For the second time in two years, the
Mustangs (12-7, 2-1 in the PCL) hit two
home nms on the &gles' diamond, this
time with Jane-B Yamamoto going deep
in the first bmlng with two aboard and
1eaddf hitter Ann Mar:ie lbppl ausbing
a tblee-nm home run in the secood.
Kelly Topps, Mesa's No. 3 hitter,
singled to extend the first inning,
followed by a Katy Renish single and
Yamamoto's deep fly over right fielder
Marlene Malquez's head, which dee.red
the bases. Tb.ere was no fence, so the
ball rolled after getting past Marquez.
ln the second, Alejandra Gallardo
singled to center and Jade Moss bunted
for a single, setting the stage for Ann
Marla Toppa, who connected to deep
left-<:enter field for Mela's fint two-home
ND game of the campaign.
The Mustangs. however, scored three
more times 1n the third to break it wide
open, a rally ignited by Michelle Miner's
double. Miller scored on another single
by Mou and enor in the Estancia
outfield, then Moss came home on
DeMello's second double of the game.
DeMeDo scored on the play after a two-
•(Butler) didn't get nervous,•
Buonarlgo said. •1 thought she would.
because she only started pitching tn
October ot 2001. B~hhe bandied bsseJf u wen.·
COASnRS: OCC ATHLmS Of 1HE WEEK
-
'
GAME SUMMARY PAGE I
IASKDIAll
Green declared ineligible for NBA draft
Two-time Big West Player of Year to compete in Chicago camp next.
UC IRVINB-UC Irvine's for the NBA aald the NBA scouts• Coodwtn & Aslodatea, puUdpetad iD
Jerry Green. who JWtumed t'Oallllll\.ll m Grem was that be was a late the PortJmouth (Va.) 1a'Yttati0aal
to the Anteatert for hi• WlODd-roundpck.iDtbeupcm>ingdratt. Toumament earlier this IDontb and ta
senlor MUOn aDd earned Green '* too anall to be en NBA two-~to compete ID a O.IOlliO amp
Jlil MCODd ltraight Big West guard and does not bave enough for NBA prospkU bl June.
~ Plays of th• Year aper1eoce to play tbe peat. tbe cout n. 6"1oot-3 guud .-..s A• rt F1 I J
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p&aysca ~Jn-one dnft. •My .-a Mt....,..,._'° P1sJ ill ,_,_...,,,.!Ml,.....
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NCAAN\9aatwllwedlorldlNID· 121 mh' 1IM C>J-Mf,..... fl= •
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. . .
COM
CONTINUED ~ROM 7
second at-bat. I wasn't neivous at
all. It felt great (to contrl.bute). You
only get so many opportunlties
(three previous at·bats this year), so
you have to take advantage.•
Frenldel'I bate h1t and Wa.rsawts
pair of singles propelled both to the
top of the team batting-average
leaders.
Several Sea Kings padded their
averages against four Eagle pltdlers,
though senior starter Paul Flory
surrendered just one earned run
through five lnntngs, as a pair of
Estancia double plays helped keep
things scoreless heading to the
fourth.
'Estancia (3-12-1, t-7) broke the
Dmd b --
CmaNdllMlr._I 1 A 1
~6.1.AgLN leld14
Northwood 12. COiia .... s
f'111111r'w--Jill .....
CmaNdllll1ut &M1 ldl
~-~Beid'I a... .... at NDtthwood'
scoreless tie by stringing three with two, apiece, wbi1e Wess PressClo
singles together in its fowth inning. and Long each bad one RBL
Jermaine Snell's two-out RBI single Beau Stockstill (RBI single) and
followed singles by Justin Lund and Blake Coolant (RBI walk) also
C~ ~!!~P· roved to be contl'ibuted to the pincb-hitting barrage in the
the only Estancia runner "He had a CdM sixth.
to pass second base as CdM senior rigbt·
CdM starter Nick Rhodes good lowball hander Taylor Pham
struck out eight and umpire and, worked a scoreless
yielded just five hits to seventh inning ot relief to
his third · in when Nick is earn Vlctory take advantage of bis
as many weeks. successful, opportunity.
"He had a good low-•1 wish we could have
ball umpire and, when he's keeping saved a few runs to take
Nick is successful, he's the ball down with us Friday, because
keeping the ball down, like he did we know Estancia is
like he did today,• CdM going to come back and
Coach John Emme said. today ... " battle,• said Emme, who
Rhodes threw strikes, saw Estancia rally for an
CdM played errorless John Emme 8-7 victory March 19.
defense, and the Sea CdM baseball coach Mitch Valdes went 2
Kings' offense finally for 3 to pace Estancia,
broke through in the -------which also received a
fourth. single from J.B. Gdf. SoeD
After Keith Long reached on the
second of seven Estancia errors,
Todd Macklin cleared the left-
center-field fence with a two-run
blast. With two runners on and two
outs, Billy Eagle yanked an inside
pitch well beyond the left-field fence
for a three-run homer. The two
fourth-inning home runs equaled
Cd.M's total its first 16 games.
Josh Bradbwy and Nick Karpe
paced the Sea Kings' 16 hit attack
made a diving catch in center field
for another Estancia highlight.
The two teams will play the
deciding game of the series Priday at
Estancia at 3:15 p.m.
N CJHC COAST llAG4.I
CORONA oa. MM 11. Es1MCJA 1
Ertanda 00010 0 O· 1 5 7
CorON del M¥ 000 51(12) 0 • 18 16 0
Floty, W'ld (6), Gleason (6), Haus« (6) and
Lund. Crom (6), Lund (6); N. Rhodes. Pham (6)
and KMpe. W • N. Rhodes, 3-5. l • Floty. 28 •
Gugr1UZU (CdM}, "enkiel (CdM) HR •
Madlin (CdM), Eagle (CdM).
QlM overpowers Artists
Corona dal Mar High [][] boy• ten.DJs coach nm
Mang switched hU
stroDgelt Gnglel playen to
win in doublM, while Bryan Wanaw,
lslel s.lda and BrennanRoberts stepped
up in alngles in a 17-1 Padf1e Coast
LM~ victory over host Laguna Beach
1bUnday.
Warsaw, Sakta and Roberts accounted
for eight set victories. 1be doubles teams
of Cameron Ball and Garrett Snyder,
Canten Ball a nd Tyson Huntei, and
Wedef MUI.er and Brik Frisbie .wept to
wtn.t, as tbe ~Kings (17-1, S-1 in the
PCL) mdMd to tbe victorv. PIQBCmm•:=•
~ ....... 17 • ...-....1Mot 1 .
...... -W... KOM) lolttD ~ 1-6,
def. tell\ '-0. def. Sdwnltl. M S.idli ~won. "°' .. 2. ~ Roberts (CdM) WOI\ 6-.\ 6-1, 6-0. 0-...... Cll'n. W.~(CdM) dltf. lt~M,def.~6-1,def, ~ 6-(tClt. W+uar(CdM) won. 6-2. 6-1, 6-1; Miltlr..fftsble (CdM) WOt\,
6-.\ 6-1, 6-1.
Tars defeat Vaqueros
Three Newport Harbor [QJ High boys gollers weTe
among the four medalists
Tuesday to help the Sailors
defeat host lnine, 199-218, for their first
Sea View League victory, at Oak Creek
GolfOub.
Sailors David Motscbenbacber,
Brandon Sowers and Jeff Lerner matched
Irvine's Chris Lavery with a 3-over-par 39
to post the low nine-hole round.
Sean Whitfield (40) and Robert Mowry
(42) also contributed for the Sailors, 1-5
in league.
Fairmont bests Sage Hill
Sage Hill High's No. 1 [][]
doubles team of John
Hamilton and Anthony
Milovantsev won 18 of 21
games, but visiting Fairmont earned a
12-6 Academy League boys tennis win
Tuesday at Racquet Oub of Irvine.
Fairmont(~. 5-0 in league) widened
its league lead over second-place Sage
Hill (4-8, .C-2).
ACAlllllJ LIAM
FMMOeff 1Z. 5MiE Hu. 6
~ • Roeser (5H) lost to ~ ().6, lost to
Patel, 1-6, lost to Nawani, 3-6; Chin (5H) lost, 0-6,
().6, 0-6; Kim (5H) lost, ().6, ().6, 2-fi.
Doubl9. Hamllton-M~ (SH) def. p~
Singh. 6-1, def. lymtH.e. •2. def. Plnch&lCwon.
6-0; 8urton-Myill (SH) lost, 4-6, won. 7-5, 6--i;
Montakab-!Curan (SH) lost, ~ lost, 4-6, won. 6-0.
HAPPY BIRTHDAY
Celebrating the Daily Piiot's Athle~
of the Week series
11 i f 1 r
TODAY
SmlE HeczoG 4'.
Costa Mesa W
football
5'8KBl Md>EAllMoN ~
Orange c.oast W
soccer
KENT TURNER A
Newport Harbor W
volleyball
IAHI&
CdM tops Eagles by 20
COIQD4 de1 Mar High'I [QJ boyS golf team impraVed to
11 ·2. 7.0 Jn the Padfto Coast
League u the Sea King•
dealt .Bstancta a 188-208 defeat at
Newport Beach Country Oub.
Medalilt Nick Sbennan birdied two d
the ftrst three bolal to set the pace and
the Sea Klng9 went on to back Sherman's
2-under 33 with Brad Chamberlin (35),
Alex Cbikovani (38), nm Frohling (41)
and Colby Hackett (41 ).
Peter Baker led Estancia with a 36,
followed by Jason Cassidy (38), Ryan
8rowli ('2), Joey Mueller(«) and Aaron
Frankel (48).
Mesa ratlS to Un£ 12-6
The Costa Mesa High [][]
boy• tennis team'was able
to win six sets, but
eventually lost to Pad.fie
Coast League leader University, 12·6,
Tuesday at Mesa.
Mustang senior Spencer Solomon
won two dogies secs, and earned another
victory when both coaches agreed to
play an extra doubles set. Mesa Coach
Bill Harader said.
Senior Cuong Nguyen also won two
singles sets for Costa Mesa (1-10, 1-4 in
the PCL). Uni improved to 14-1, 5-0.
Costa Mesa returns to the courts on
ThUJ'liday when the Mustangs travel to
Northwood, starting at 3: 15 p.m.
PAOfJ( COAST llMM
UMvasrrt 1Z. ConA MEsA ' ~.Solomon (CM) dlrf. khll.tl, M. won,
6-0, def. Gotdot\. 6-2; C. Nguyen (CM) lost. 3-6, def.
YI.I. •1. won, M ; Halwnon (CMJ lost. 0-6, G-6,
won. 7·5. ~ • Le-Snffn (CM) lost to Mok-Jo, 1-6,
lost to Ajeng-0\ang, 0-6, lost to Funlbw•Wen.
1-6; A. Nguyen-McNaulty (CM) lost. o-6. 1-6, 4-6;
8. Nguyen-VO won, M, lost, 0-6, 1-6.
eve does in Lightning
The Sage Hill High
baseball team erased a I tO I
five-run deficit to tie the ~)
game, 10-10, but visiting
Capistrano Valley Christian ~ept on
hitting to claim a wild 23-14 Acadamy
League road victory Tuesday.
Marty McKee (2 for 3 wlth two RBls
and a stolen base), Matt Komsweit (2 for
4 with two RBis) and Zach Friedrichs (2.
for 5 with two RBis and a stolen base) led
a 14-bit attack for Sage Hill (6-9, 1-7 in
league). But the Ugbtn.i.ng committed
nine errors. eve improved to 8-5, 4-4.
ACADQIJ llMiUI
CNlmANo VAi.UY o..nM ll. 5Am Hu. 14
Capistrano V•lley Ovistiao 007 306 7 • 23 15 3
Sllge Hill 203 1404 • 1414 9 c. Mltdlell. r. Mitchell (4), Hughes (6) and Want
Ffiedrid1&. loptr '4). s.llnger (6) and Dempsey.
W • T. Mitdlell. 2~. l • ~ 2•5. 28 -Tarr (CV).
~ (SH), F1iedrictt (SH). MdCee (5H).
Sage Hill swept
Visiting Brethren Chris-
tian High swept Sage Hill, I ~ : 15-7, 15-11, 15-7, in an ~
Academy League boys
volleyball match Tuesday.
Sophomore Kevin Joyce paced the
f..i9btning (3-8, 2-6 in league) with 13
kills.
Brethren improved to 7-1 in league.
Dally Pilot
CdM ~ Trojans. 12-6
The Corona del Mu[[[]
High soltball team i\ f \
remained undefeated In '<..Y
the Padfii: Coast ~e
with a 12..S win over viSit1ng University
Tuesday.
CdM junior Lauren Loe, who injwed
her leg during soccer sea.son, but bas
been back for four games, contrtbuted
two bits and scored once, wblle Junior
Alissa Zoelle crushed an RBI trlple and
scored twice.
Junior Amy 'fyson, who Usually plays .
catcher, earned ber second straight PCL
pitching wtn. as CdM !Xnproved to 6-6, 3-
0 in league. Uni droDoed ~2 in league. NOflC~ ~,.. MAil 12. U..:eu1t I
UnMnity 000 140 1 • 6 II 2
CoroN del Mar 423 102 IC -12 II 0
Wood, Bak« (5) Md Mdile: ~Md Stam. W
• Tyion. l -Wood. 311 • Zoelle (CdM).
Eagles fall in four
volleyball team rallied for Th• Estanda Hlgh boys I @ I
a second-game victory, but
could not sustain that level
of play as host University earned a 15-10,
14-16, 15-8, 15-4 Pacific Coast League
triumph Tuesday.
Sophomore Josh Kornegay bad 16
kills for the Eagles (4-8, 0-5 in league},
who also received 27 assists from lrevor
Holmes.
Irvine tops Sailors, 13-5
Newport Harbor High [fl]
sophomore Tyler Deck won
two. of bis three sets at No.
1 singles, but host Irvine
claimed a 13-5 Sea View League boys
tennis decision Tuesday at Heritage Park.
Newport fell to 3-8, 0-6 in league,
while Irvine improved to 4-11, 3-3.
SU my llAGCJI
lllvM 13, Nau W I ltAMoa 5
Slngle9 • Dedt (NH) def. Friedman, 6-1, lost to
Parle, 2-6. def. ~ 6-0; OIYis (NH) lost, 0-6, 0-6,
3-6; TWMN (NH) lost.~ 0-6, won, 6-l.
~. LuncK:spley-Jones (NH) lost to
J\M'lg'Gordit\ 2-6, lost to Gama-Ola); 3-6; def
LM.o, 6-3; Yeag«-O'Ellscu (NH) lost, 1-6. 2-6. 3-6;
Uhl-Guston (NH) lost, 0-6, 1-6, won, M
Mesa's Sheridan medal-
ist
Costa Mesa High senior I 0
Bryce Sheridan captured ·
medalist honors, shooting
4._.under-par 36, but the Mustangs' boys
golf team lost to Pacific Coast League
host Northwood. 211-239, al Rancho San
Joaquin Goll Oub Tuesday.
Billy Lund came in with 48, while
Brian Beach and Adam Donovan shot
49 for Costa Mesa (6-2, 0-6 in the PCL).
The Mustangs resume action today, .
facing nonleague host Garden Grove at
Willowick Golf Club in Santa Ana.
SOFTIAll SUMMARY
PA<llC COAST lWUI
CosTA MnA 12, fsvoNaA 1
Smt9by ...... emu Mesa 433 20 • 12 16 1
~ 0t000 . 1 4 3
UncUy. 8utlec (7) and DeMello; Oclt9Y and
Acosta. W • ~ 12-7 l • Odtey. 28 • Miller
(CM), OeMello (CM) 2. 38 • Y~o (CM) HR·
A. Topps (CM), Yamamoto (CM)
TODAY'S SCHEDULE
West at Orange Coast, 7 p.m. ~
High sdlool • Newport Harbof at Aliso
Niguel. 3:15 p.m.
High Khoo( boys • Corona del Mar
at Northwood. j; p.m.; Laguna Beach
at Costa Mesa, 3:30 p.m
Community <X>llege men • Or.nge
Cont vs. Pitlofrwlr It E.gle (Test GC.
11 a.m. SWllllllG
High sdlool boys and girls •
Woodblidge at Newport Hafbor, 3 p.m~
Costa Mesa at Corona del M¥. 3:15
p.m; ~at Unlwnity. 3 p.m;
s.ge Hill~~ GroYe. 3'15 p.m
YOWTIAl1
COl'IV'IUllty college ~ • Goldef'I
10fDMl
Community college • Golden Wet
at OrMge Coast. 3 p.m.
mm
College ~ • Alli¥1t lntemallonal
It VllngU¥d. ~. 1 p.m.
College -• Alli.nt lntematK>nal It Vanguwd UnNenlty. 2 p.m.
High sdlool bcJvs • !MM vs CoroN
del MM, at Newport Beach CC. 2:30
p.m; EsUnda vs. Costll Mesa. It Costa
Mesa GICC. 2:30 p m
IAMlfJO!
CommUlity collegt Or.,. Col5t
at San Diego Mesa, 6 p m
tO"'AnnlUllORANGE COUNTY .
BOAT SHOW
April 18 -21, 2002
Anaheim Convention Center
Hope You Can Ftnd 1lme to COntaet Your Frten<bi
of John McKay and Gather FWlda
..---12 .... ~
12 ... -1 ... 1 .... ....,. .... _ .,._
•
I
Daily Pilot
COWGIWDAU.
Anteaters return to
the diamond Friday
at Cal Poly (SLO)
UC Irvine's baseball team, after an eight-day
stretch, returns to the Bjg West Conference race
Pdday for a three-game series with host Cal
Poly San Luis Obispo with some renewed vigor
and a personnel change.
The Anteaters will take a 22·17, 4~2 a1g West
record to Baggett Stadium wtth a 5 P;m. start on Friday,
f<.>llowed by 1 p.m. starts on Saturday and Sunday.
Among other things, UCI center fielder Jon Horwitz will
be Uyi.ng to extend his 17-game bitting streak after going 3
for 9 in a two-game split at Washington.
He's batting .378 to lead the squad and bas driven in 14
runs on 51 hits.
Another heavy item in the Anteaters' attack has been
catcher Chris Miller, the team leader in home runs wtth
eight. He has a .542 slugging percentage and leads UCI in
RBis (37) and doubles (12).
Outfielder Chris Klemm bas been a big factor of late with
a six-game hitting streak. He has doubled in five of his last
six games and is batting .302. .
Freshman Elliot Salcedo made his presence felt in short
order against Washington.
.Blevated to a starter's role after junior E1tren ltejo quit the
team prior to the Washington trip, Salcedo went 3 tor 7
against the Huskies with four RBis and a run scored.
•our program is just begtnning and learning bow to
compete and 'Irejo no longer desired to be a part of it,· said
bead coach John Savage.
Glenn Swanson keys the Anteaters' mound corps after
being named one of the top four freshman pitchers in the
nation in Baseball America's 2002 College Midseason Update.
The left-hander is 6-3 with a 2.81 ERA The opposition bas
man.aged to hit Swanson at a .214 rate.
Cal Poly is 20-21-1, 5-4.
SPORTS
COWGElllEfS
• Pirates stagger Riverside, 6-5
Orange Coast hands freshman Kyle Allen. Allen Vanguard splits OCC palr advances
ngers their first home retired the aide in order lo five
of the m mnlngs be pitched, defeat of the season. recording three •tri.keouts.
wfthout a walk.
The Vanguard [IQ] Untvendty IOftball j\ /i
team overcame a (...Y
beartbreU:ing t -Q,
Orange Coast [][]
College singles
players Veroruca
RlVl!llSJDE -~ The Orange Coast
College baseball e
team answered a
3-0 defidt and snapped two·
time defending state champion
Riverside's 16-game winning
streak with a 6-5 Orange
Empire Conference road victory
Tuesday.
Coast (25-8, 10-7 in the OEC}
is the first OEC team to defeat
Riverside (32·5, 15-2) on its
home Held this season.
OCC sophomore Glenn
Hedgpeth, who led otf the ninth
inning, crushed the first pitch
over the left-center-field fence
for bis seventh home run of the
season, go give the Pirates a 6-
4 lead.
lo the bottom of the ninth,
OCC sophomore Scott Beerer
came on in relief to earn his first
save of the season. There were
Riverside runners on the comers
when Beerer induced a soft line
drive to third base for the final
. ouL
OCC sophomore Jeremy
Lahmann smashed bis 12th
home run of the season, a solo
shot in the sixth that bed the
game, 4-4.
Sophomore Ryan Marcos
went 3 for 4, while Chris Sinner
finished 2 for 5 for the Pirates,
who also received a steady
pitching performance from
Sommer and Ste-
OIMGI .. <WllDICI
Onnge eo.t .. .,..... 5
lou and reeled o1f an 8-2 wm in
a Golden Stale Athletic Confer·
ence doubleheader wjth host
California Baptist Tuesday.
phanie Chang made it throe¢
their first two rounds of the
Orange Empire Conference
women's tennis tournament
TueSday. Jeneaa Gudvangen
and Ashley Nelson were
victonous m the first round of
doubles at Orange Coast
College.
OrMge Coast 000 121 101 • 6 9 1
RMtnide 120 010 001 • 5 8 1
Wi~ Allen CJ). a..ret (9) end
~ .loMs, Smith (9) end Robles. w . Allef\ i-O. l • ~ 7-J. Sv . ee.w
( 1). 28 -Rodriguez (ft). 38 • Sinner
(OCQ HR • l.AhlNnn (OCQ, Hedgpeth
(OCQ, Hilt (R), MtC.l'1t1y (R).
In the bottom of the 1eventh
mo.Ing with two outs, Cal Baptist
sbomtop Brooke Brosterhous
pounded an RBI double to end
the first game. Vang\lard pttcber
Ga.na Uebengood look the loss,
allowing six hits. while strikmg
out four and walking none in
seven innings.
lions win. 8-3 '!~ un':v:r~i~/ al~~ I ~ I
fielder Joe Cam-~) However, Vanguard (33-20-
1, 14·8 in the GSAC), ranked
No. 20 in the NAIA, came back
in the nightcap.
(lll~c..t~ ..... ~ .....
Brown (RCQ def.~ (OCQ. 6-0,
6-2; Bembe cs.cs> o.f. Noor CM. 6-1. 6-0: awng (OCO d9f ecruy (CXQ 6-4. 4-6,
6-1; 8-l (Sid) def \llk9I) (OCQ, 6-4,
6-2; Suthis.mphilt (Sid) def. Eutlns (IV).
7-§; M; Savin (Full) def. Nekor1 (OCO.
6-1, 6-3; Sommer (OCQ def. Roedel'
(RCO. 6-1, 6-2; Ju (Sid) dtf ...... OICO.
6-1, 6-0.
ahan smacked
two home runs, providmg four
runs, and Matt Caston pitched
seven scoreless innnings to lead
the Lions to an 8·3 Golden
State Conference baseball
victory over visiting Concordia
Tuesday.
Vanguard designated hitter
Lauren Manriquez contributed
a 2-for-4 performance that came
with one run scored and three
RBis, while Cheri Smith went 2
for 3 with one run scored and
two RBis. Marciea Ball
lDlproved her Vanguard
pitching record to 14-9. The
Lancers dropped to 35-22, 8-16.
ArlkoUnlll.,.......
Bffbe-Sut.hNmpNt ~ dtf. Camahan's two home runs
came in consecutive at-bats, as
he lirusbed 2 for 4 wtth four
RBis, while Jason Searle went 1
for 4 with a run scored and two
RBis for the Lions (17-19-1, 12·
10 in the GSAC). Concordia
dropped to 19.22, 8-13.
GOUO STAB ADllDC COllfEIOKI
~ llN'nlT 1, v~ o
Pfanauslti-Saltuma (IV). 6-0, 6-1; Jex·
Slu~llett (s.d) ~. Truong-#ott.lf' OICOi
6-1, 6-2; ~ (ful0 def
V.UO.Uwlon (OCQ. 6-3, 6-41; l.Mnb«t-
Manty (IV) def. ~agou (FulQ,
7-6, 6-3; GudvtngetrNelson (OCQ def .
S.lahihour<.ookey cs.d>. 6-1. 6-3;
Noor-Ezerins <M o.f ""'fl--(RCQ.
6-0. 6-2; Brown-.lri.owsti <RCO def
Bonsova-Slluntofslcy (htll), 6-0, 6-3 VMlgUard 000 000 0 0 3 0
C..I Baptist 000 000 1 -1 6 0
GOUIOI SIAD .ADlll11C COMFllPKI
VAIOMllD 8, CCllllCDIDIA 3
Llebtt lgOOd and Rolle; X..vier aod
funlt W -Xal/IC!f, 11·5. l · Llebengood.
1s.11 28 . Fri. DEEP SEA
Conca<diil 000000 102 3 12 3 V/IMGJMIJ I. CAL 8ArnsT 2 JUlSOAY'S <Ul!1l V•oguard 015 020 OOll -8 8 0
Y4l'l\40lt4,Jones(6), Sagot.n(8)4nd
Candela; GMton 4nd Ga~ W
Caston. 4-3. l -Yamaok4, 2_.. 28 -
Candela <O-HR -Carnahan M 2
V4ngUl(d 000 430 I • 8 8 6 Newpau~ ....... • 2 bolltl, 25
aoglerl. 19 sand bfts, 3 callco I>-. 9
sculpif\ 5 rodcfist\ 21 ~ fi1
blacksmith perd\ 12 wgo, 2 blue perdl.
C..I hptJst 101 000 0 2 5 4
Ball and Rolle, Beaty. xavlef (5) and
Funk. W -B•ll 14-9. l -~ty. 22-15 28
Smith M. Manl'lquez M. Mart1nf!l M-
PAOBA TE reQUMta lhllt 1250 A Requesl IOf
CHARLES S. PECK be Special NotiCe lonn it
appo+nted as i>ef100al 8V3llllble from lfle oour1 ~ 10 adrrwl-ctenc
tS1af' the estate of Ille de-PETmONER(S):
cedenl CHARLES s. PECK, THE PETITION rt-THOMAS J. YOCIS,
questt lhe decedenrs CSBI 111387,
Will Ind CX>diclls. ti any WISE, P£ARa, YOQS
be tdmltt8d lO probale I SMITH, 2'9 E.
The Mii Ind any codds OCEAN BLVD., STE.
art available tor ex-<WO, LONG BEACH, CA
aminatlotl In tile Ille kept 90801
by lfle court. ATTORHEY(S) FOR
THE PETITION it-PETmONElt(S)
questa authonty to Id-PubHahtd Newport nw-.r the 8ltale uncilf Beach-Colla MHa
1he Independent Adnwl-Dally PlloC ~ 13. 17.
iatratlon of Estatn Ac1 20. 2002
(This aU1honty Wiii allow No .106 t 40 SaW t 57
the ~I repr-•-PUBLIC NOTICE a~ IO !Me many ac:· tlonl 'tlllthout ot>ta1ning NOTICE Of SALE
court approYll Before NoC1ce • '*8by grvwt1
to show cause. If any, 'll'hy ,,,. ~lllOtl 101
change ol -should nor be granted NOTICE OF HEARING
Date: JUN °'· 2002 rme 2PM. o.or. L73
Tht addrMI of the ooUll • same aa no4ed at>ow
3 A COf1'J of Iha Order
IO Show Cauee lhal be
publlShed al IMlt once
eac'1 weel( lot lout SUC·
cessl11e weeM prior to
the dale Ml lor heennO on the pellliol\ in the tci-
lowtng newspeper ol
general c1rcul11ton.
pnnled in thla county Newport Beach/Cosla
...... [)Uy Piiot
DA'n: AP'R 15, 2002
JUDGE RtCHAAO 0 . FffAZEE. SR.
JUDGE Of THE SUPE-
RtOR COURT
Linda Ouboll Aon
1954 Port T mty P111ca
Newport Beech.
C.WOOlll 92660
Publllhtd Newport
Beach-Cos la MeH
Darly Ptlol :ti 17, 24. Max 1, 8. W'5§
lalong certain very im· pursuant to secUon1
portant actions. how-307' and 3072 of the
ever, lhe personal niprt-CMI Code ol the State of sentaliYe will be rac:µred Gallfomla lhe unde1-
IO glYt nobCe to 10>-5'grled A-P T OWWlg Wll
ler-*I P8f90lll ineu sell at ~ auction. at
they hive w8IY9d no1et 1022 E ChttlnlA. Slnla
or consented 10 ltle Ana. Cal 92701 at 7 00
prop<>Md action.) The am on May 7. 2002 lht
independent adminls-following described
er.lion tuthority wll be P"ll*tv to wit
granted un1es9 an in-Year 1989. Make MBZ Flc:1~ Buslnese
1-wfed peraor1 ,_ an UCetw 1 2MYG042 Name Statement
otJjeclion lo ... P9llllon Sta tt c Al v IN. The ~ !*'ION
and 1110W1 good cauN WD8CA39E11<-455638 are ctJirlg ~as.
Why tht court lhoUld no1 Said tale IS fOf lht A ) Sbrlt AIChitecture.
grant 1t1e authorlty purpose ol Allslylng '*1 B ) Sllne 4 ThOmsen
A HEARING on tht ot the underligoed tor Arctltltcturt, 819 W
peli1IOr1 Ml be held on towing and aior.ge to-16111 StrNt. Newpo!t
5-9-02 at 1 30 P M in gectler Wiii costs ol ~ 8-:.fl. CA 92663 o.pc -"l·73'". located at Yefbsing and txpenMI DoNld c Sine. 1291
341 THE CITY OR . OR· of sale Dated lhis Sttl Vllta Del Lago. San Luis
ANGE, CA 92863 dly of Apl1I 2002-Obllpo, CA 112'°1
IF YOU OBJECT to ISi: "-' NouWy This busineet ii con-
lhe granting of lhe 1)911-P ubll1h td Newpor1 <1JCted by 11n lndiw1llll
11on. you "'°'*! lq>NI Beach Co111 Meaa Have you started
at lhe hearing Ind "* ~ity Piiot Apt1l 17 doinQ buslnen yet?
your objectb• °' Ille "'~"""-----"W""455""' Yea. 197'1 ~1ten000~ -: SUPERIOR COURT ~ ,;t~l wu
hearing Your tp-OF CALIFORNIA, filed wi1h the County ~~be.:=· C~~Gr ~ o::~ Coi.nr
IF YOU ARE A ~ED-LAMOREAUX 2002M9M04
ITOR Of a contingent JUSTICE ~NTER -Ody Plot~ 17, 2,, ~ of lhe '*-'· PROBATE MaV 1. a. ~ W§ you musl file your claim 3' 1 The City OriYe.
with lht court Ind ma» t Po. Bc>lC 1'171 Fictitious Bualnea
CCVf to the pereonal • Oranae. CA 92883-1571 Name SUtemant
teMnlaliYe ~ ~ PeTlTION Of The lolowlnQ ~
1M court wl1Nn foll( lha DI.Goll Aon .. C11*1g i..... ..:
rnonchl 1rOm ht daee ol FOR CHANGE OF Nnertcan Surting k1r Fictitious ....._
first ilauanoe of ...,. NAME Am ••• u I • • n d ..... Sbtu••
u PfOY\dtd In MCtiOn ORDER 10 SHOW Profenlonal1, ,901 The tolowlrlo .,.._.
9100 of the c.ilfomll c.AUSf POR CHAHGI! Chal1er'8 Qr It Hin-.,. dOl'10 bl.tlN9 • ~ ~ n:.-: cJ: =!R: ~ ~~ ~~. ~ eaplrt before lovr A211NO Jr., '801 Cir .., V*t. CA ll2'10I
monlhl l!om ht heMlg TO AU. INTERESTED 11 . ~ 8-:11, Tift GITwd. 1112'
dltt nollcld lbcw'I PERSONS: CA 92647 Broollhurlt N05, FOi.i\
YOU MAY EXAMINE 1 P9tllloner. Unda Tllla bu11neu II con-lllln Vtiwt. CA 8ll7CI
ttw Ne kapl by f'll oourt. OUbalt Ron tlld a D9f. ~ by en ~ Thie ~ II oon
If you -a P9'90fl In-lion wll\ '* oourt b • Have yov 1tarted ~ by a11 .,..._ i.rettld In !fie ...... -... ~ ,..,. dm1g ~ 'tf/(I No He"9 you ... ,,..
you may IQe WIOI the • tolowa. li1di 0Uticm Jerry Wayne letwMn. .. ~ ~ Ni
court a lonnal ~ Aon lo Undy &..! Jf. Tell A. Gi'lrd
tor Soec:tll Naloa. ('°"" Dubor9 Thia ata""*11 Wiii Thit ... .... -OE·1M) o1 the ~ al 2. THE COURT filed ""1ltl tr1e ~ ll9d .tit! ... ~ an lnvtntOfY and ap-ORDERS ltlal .. P9I"" Cler\ al OrW1119 ac..,.y ~ ol 0-. ~ pralAI al ..,... ...... IOll9 Int.,... In ._ on ()4(12/2001 ''" ~
Of ol tnt ~ 01 ao-matter lhall ...,_r ~ II II Utt
count u ~ In blb9 .. cxut .... ~Nae!"' 17, 2'. ~Plot~ 10. "
PToblte Code ado!\ hwlng lndbilld ....,_ Mn 1. L ~ W4S7 ~~z.....11:1-...11.1.;_. ~-r.-:11Naii1
STARTING
A ,NEW
BUSINESSr?J -
• • • • • • • • • • •
Monday ............... Friday S:OOpm
Tuesday ............. Monday 5:00pm
ltall':ll 11nct <k.adlion an ubjt<'' 10
rh•nw-•hhouc ~. ·n .. r11hli htr
~rvM clw-ri¢n to rtrbOr, "'.""if).
~"i:.«-or reject aoy d.be.ifirJ
ll""l'rti!K'mtnl. Plelltl' R'J">lt any t'm>r
that moy l.e in your'd11:1;;ifif'tl otl
imml'tl iat<'ly. 111<' Daily Pilot urrC'JJfl!
110 llnhility for 1m y rrror i11 tt11
By Fax
(Q49) 631-6594
ByPhone
(949) 642-5678
Wedneeday ........ Tueeday S:OOpm
Thursday ...... Wednesday S:OOpm
By Mall/la PeNOIU
mJv1·r1 iM"mrnt for whit'h ii mm lw
rt'l!flOlu.iblr t•xt·r111 for Liar nllll of tlw
~flllC"t' art1Mltl) oc·cupi"'I 6) 111.-rrror.
Cn·tlit u n uni~ lw uUmr. rel for ll W'
Wll'&M' i114·ludl' your 11111111' 11.,d phone 1111mhu
1md ··e'll ,.u Otl h11t'k •id1 II pril'I' IJ'IMI'.)
fi r10 in&t"rtit111. Telephone 8:30am-5:00pm
Monday-Friday
:r•-.. ~ ' m liiil ·' -I ' ...
. . . . ' , • rt
-.. ·-...k
Gl
EOIJAl ltOUSlllG OPPORTUNITY
All rul esi.te advtrt•SlllO
in this newsp;iper rs subjeCI to the Federil Fair Housing
Act of 1968 as amended
which makes 11 Illegal 10 advertise ·any preference.
llm1ta11on or discrimination based on race. color. rellg·
Ion, sex. handicap, lamlllal
status or national origin, or
an intentJon to make any
such preference. hmltltlon
Of discrimination •
This newspaper wlil not knowingly ucept any advertisement tor rul
n tate Which Is rn VIOlatJOn or Ille law Our readers are
hereby informed that all
dwtlliflOS IC!vtrtlsed In this
newspape< Me ivallable on
an eq~ Ol>l>Ol1uoity basis
To comrlaln ol dlscrimf.
nation, cal HUD lo41-1ree ill
I ·800-424·8590
101. 216
!I
OP£H HOOSE SAT.suN 12'6 E SIDE CM
111 21ST ST.
Allllllf w., ' • ....... From
"" ... l400,000 t4H2H!OO
Secluded Old Hollywood Emit in No TIO\ FOOi·
1'11111 ol Stnla Ana Undef
$750.000 !Ill 94!H23-8t20
4 SAHDY COY£
58r us. ... h'ld
In. U1911dM gelote,
II-tone lloora.
$1,750,000 Sleflllle ...,,.,
MH15-315e
420 •
.-an. CtMll 291, den. 11 WAl.J( TO BAY "
3:i0 West B~y Str<'el Co rn \1t·sa, CA 92627
Ac N""l>Ot1 Blvd. ~ Day c. Friday ............. Thursday 5:00pm
Saturday .............. Friday 3:00pm
Walk-In 8:30am-5:00pm
Monday-Friday
Sunday ................ Friday S:OOpm
-r. -
'·
•••. ••7
Older Style Furniture
PIANOS & eon.ctllles
·~··-·-·()lie.-$$ CASH PAID $$
4WW P*9 OI .... hotM
ft BUY ESTAn&
• ~ lrienClly ...w.
FAITlll"
~ ' .. J ' I ''
' .. •' ' . ..
~ -----:iMMme
SOUTH COAST AUCTION nas.. ... a
... ._CAln07 ..,._,.._CAlllol
-For All Your Home and Businas Neeck -................ -·
React. 80,000 Homes Each We8
For Onfy $32 per weelc (4 ~. min.) c.a Lan .. _ at 642·5678 KM
OCEANFRONT FIXER
Not F« Thi Feint
of HMrt
egt. M9-72W120 ~fr z --=--=--: _____ /!1 __ !=-__ . __ :~·=-"'""W/0 .... 1 I 210 .. • I
~. 1 yr lease. Avail * BAYVIEW HEJGtfTS _ _ Have· A
Garage Sale!
A REDUCED '17',000
48f 381. lg din mv'arta. B Frplc'1 In Iv & cln rm. wall·
11'1 cm... Thllt ... many c fnM .. big .. dodl.
2 Clf midi gw $3.300.000
....... Oii lll-970-3232 D Kim Buton office
81H42-N$4 E Ctl 111,.336-7132
l!omt ol!c! 111-W§ 136
F
-~.... . . l' ' ~ • ~' ' I
I • ·~ . • ,._ ... ,a
BEACH DUPLEX BEST BUY
CALl FAST
AGT. Me.723-1120
ONE R>fl> ROAD
OPEJI IUN 14 ....... Dr
,,....., Ill .. Oct 2001
"-ol oc "°"" ..... 3br z.a., + dll\ L.alll • ~S1,J15,000 .... GoldecllM6dl .,
141-214-3700
14~1
!!f:nM 217
'""'--~""""-'-'-""-.....=---
May $3300/mo. Day r8l1'IOdMld 38r 2 58a. Nwo.
1149-263-3341 °' 3358 ...-.. ......... = _ ....... EYll 949-7S9-91n """" '""""' "-IUile, 1>1"'11 . 2 1118. 2c lllflOI, no pell, S240<Y mo.· @49-752·1025
1"''211 2Dllft 1D llnd ......,,, ...
38r 18a on ~Loe dlM!e ownt11 28r. Fp, WIO OIW, new 2"bltlCll & carport S1650r'mo. lgt. 11 .Mr"t!!r Mf7'H383 MM00-132
Com ...... 1141-1162
Newport Blvd, retell
llofllront tor ..... 2411r
-· MOii. 11~. c.-Sh!rJI M=f1!=7J17
at
Call the Piiat
Claaelflede
C94BJ B41i!·EiB78
ta Place Yaur
Baraga Sala Ad!
IEST ROUT(
P,2.5Gl'Mo. (tMllstlc), NO
CCM1111ttftlon, pi.ntlful
Ytndl1t1 el1el. P ,M5
Ced "Q2ulred. ,.,. !!!! 111'1)
FARntltO INTDllOR:I
KlcNll I Bath I AellWlCllle
and Aoolll Addltlonl .. . L!R7' ..... .
""'' ,~ -~-. ,.. r
l.~l .· -. • . '
CASH TOOAYI 0M.i • ta. Ind Ille OI .........
eqllily. No ad "**-'Y· Instant cutt tor tllltf·
glfQe « ""' ~ Ho Cid cMck. !IOM71~12 (CAl'&CAIO
OYER \~_!!. HEAD in dellC??1 .._. ~?
a.t ptynwtll up IO ~. Reduc:Mlimlnllt lnltreS1 lllllrUln/19buffd Cl9Clt. fret
ev1tu111on.(800)588-15.48
n o n • p r o I I I
www.~org (CAL 'SCA!!)
Anencter dllflculUH?
~I to.11811? No .... 11P lro'1I. C.il T di ht 1..-.m-c41
~'-LY• ----· ~--=----
NO mt
•V.. V IH OAK IUJ
•At7Jl wrsr . EAST • Afl'3 •54 ~JUJ ;:I KQ ft
OU 0 OfU •• , •Tlt'5
l TO 1 IOlll lllPIOYUlllT
... c.ir.:ter " ,....Pita.~
Ddl.iis&"' ~ ..... l.lc#6SOS24
714.269.7115 I• ..... , 1.-.946..JZ57
TIIUflll
C.ustomer
JUNK TO ntE °'91H
11WU.fll2 I AYAILAILE TOOAYI •
MH'TM5M -S.atisfoction -Al phases of ~home ""'*· ::::t• too
"l•MEIJ1t
PUBLIC
NOTICE
The Calif. P\dQ.
UllllCfea Com·
million REQUIRES
tlllllUlld~
hold goOda "'°""' pme ttltlr P.U.C. Cal T IUllblr, lmoe Ind~ prW ,_ T.CP • .....,.,,.,
~ .. .....,.,..,
• you .... ciu-
tlorl lbol.f ht ....
lly cl a mo.. tho or~. Cll PU8UC UTIUTlES
COMMISION
714·56Mtll
"
I
'
'
2
TODAY'S I
CRQSS)\iORD PUZZI ~
Rab Isbell • Owne<
Costa Mesa. Ca
(949) &46-3006
Cel 9'9-887·1480
• a. ..... . . . . ,.,/. ' ' '
VOi. VO S70 '99 55K ml.
SINellbltca llhr ed. beair
blul ong concl s,' 995 ¥46275, Btr 949-586-, 888
VW EllfO'len 't3 xiii cond
b11Ck w\mo 1ll'C. 5 1CX1 ~
ual, front & ,., •C. llaofy 6d1$11,SOltms ,_
"900 94~ 760-1644
..... ,_ .. ·-··-·•+a --·-"'-... •*1
v::al
SeQyour
U'"'1tilfUd
IUrlutbe~asy
way/Pfau a
cla.ssi~d ad
today!
(949) 642-5678
,.-~ __ ., . .
< . ' '
+
i"
'~
•
.
lnslitu/IJ for Highway s.'y (I/HS)
in tile last 1 O
on Polk ConJB1Y lfJ{J/.s1r;iion
BS of 7AJ1AJ1
•
•
--# •
I
I
I
I
No punMse necessary. Umhd fO Subaru Vehldes Only
Expires 5131/02
227 HP TURDO
Automobile Magazine
"Car 0f The Yearl"
,, -.