HomeMy WebLinkAbout2002-04-20 - Orange Coast Pilot.. Sunlnlne, Ill
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SERVING THE NEWPORT-ME.SA COMMUNmES SINCE 190 ON THE WEB: WWW.DAILYPILOT.COM SA1URDAY, APRIL 20, 2002
Youth leader suspected of lewd conduct
•Newport Beach recreation coordinator atrested after
police investigation finds photographic images linking
liirn to local children.
DMpll lharath
DAILY PILOT
NEWPORT BEACH -Police
arrested a 31-year-old city
employee Wednesday whom
they suspect of engaging m lewd
conduct with children who par-
ticipated in city recreational pro-
grams, officials said.
Trenton Michael Veches
worked as a recreational coordi·
nator for Newport Beach, where
he ran and supervised several
after-school and summer pro-
grams in which more than 600
children participated in the last
year.
Police said Veches, a resident of
HWltington Beach, #inappropri·
ately touched"
at least two
children over
the last four
years he has
worked with
the city. •
Veches
supervised
programs at
1ftmton Mariners Park,
West Newport
Mlcbael Veches Community
Center on 15th
Street and the Community Youth
Center on 5th Street in Corona
del Mar. The city intend.a to orga-
nize a meeting for parents who
had children in recreational pro-
grams, perhaps as soon as the
end of next week, said Newport
Beach City Manager Homer
Bludau.
Investigators have seized sever-
al compact discs with images ot
partially clothed children who
seem to be boys between the ages
of 6 and 10, said Newport Beach
SEE VECHES PAGE A4
Pofke are sffking those who may have
more Information ~ thk case Of
Investigation. Anyone whO M5 IUCh infor-
INtion shOutd c.an the NwJPOrt IMct\
Police~ at (IOO) 550.Q73.
Additional~ anyone with spectfic CIUft"
tions about the ~s reaNtioNI pro-
grams may call city officials at (Ml) 644-
3151bet\wen8 a.m. Md 5 p.m. today,
Sunday and Monday. Officials will b9 pre-
pared to help the publk wfth ~
Settling fears
and raising
• some money
• A fund· raiser for the new Mariners library
will also serve as an opportunity to assure
parents of the safety issues.
June C.ugrande
DAILY PILOT
NEWPORT BEACH -Promoters of a jomt school and
public Mariners Branch Library hope that a fund-raising
rally will also provide a forum to assuage safety concerns
about the project.
With nearly $200,000 already donated for the project.
today's rally at Mariners Park is designed to accelerate
fund-raising m the face of an early June dead.line to raise
$1 million. Fonner state Sen. Marian Bergeson and
#Chicken Soup for the Sow• author Mark Victor Ha.men
will speak at the event. which takes place from noon to 2
p.m . today at Mariners Park.
PHOTOS 8V GREG FRY I OAllV Pit.OT
Seven-year-old Ayta Loyola shares a smile with a couple of baby goats she ls feeding In the petUng zoo at the 2002
Youth Expo at the Orange County Fairgrounds. The expo will continue today and end on Sunday.
"The response so far has been tremendous,• said
Bergeson, honorary chairwoman of the Committee to
Build a Mariners Library. ·Getting up to St million
requires some large donors as well, and we're working on
those.·
Channeling discovery
Children explore the world through the eyes, and projects, of other
children at 23rd annual Youth Expo .....
Deirdre Newman
DAILY PtLOT
I t's all about discovery this weekend at the
23rd annual Orange CoWlty Youth
Expo. The three-day event kicked off
Friday at the Orange County Fairgrounds.
This year's theme is •Ponds, Pools and Ocean
Jewels -Salute to a Healthy Planet.• And it
may take all three days to check out the more
than 10,000 school projects and array of special
attractions, such as jazz music performed by
various high schools and a science Olympiad.
The expo'• focus instills a sense of pride in
the participants, director Joan Hamill said.
"It's a wonderful opportunity for kids to
showcase what they do and how they do it.
And it inspires adults too,• Hamill said.
The nonprofit educational fair highlights
creative writing, crafts, fine arts, photography,
journal.ism and science.
New attractions this year include Pathways
SEE EXPO PAGE 4
Jonathon Pare)&. 8, bu fun with bubbles u tbe College Park
Elementary student explores the acUvtUes at the Youth Expo.
OIYIClllOI And the film award· goes to .
St9w Smith ind his •f amity
nm.• cOlumn.,. on
~.,.._WAI rttutn lri '*' ~DMlyNot.
• Hono.rs are bestowed
as the Newport Beach
festival comes to a close
with a ceremony Friday.
YOUftl°'MI
OMV Pie.OT
•NM
•
•
SEE LIBRARY PAGE 4
Police needed
to calm crowd
at UCI event
• Group gathered to hear talks on the
Mideast conflict gets out of control, forcing
law enforcement action.
Deepa Bharath and Jon Undsey
DAILY PILOT
UCI CAMPUS -Campus police had to use batons to
quell an angry mob of students Thursday night after an
event that featured speakers on issues relating to the cur-
rent conflict in the Middle Ea.st. officials said.
No injuries or arrests were reported. and no charges
were filed, offic:ia.ls said Friday.
The event titled • Penpectives on Peace: 1bings you
won't hear anywhere else about the Middle East.• wu
organized by several Jewish groups on campua, includ-
t SEE CONFLICT PAGE M
•
.... SOUTH COAST CHRISTIAN CHURCH
South Cout Orlldan Church ailW to relCb and teacb •• tozeach people wtth the ~ Ind
love d the ~ to 'WU\ people to Chrllt and help them gtttW Jn bbn: to teilch GOd • WVR:l
and through fallowlbip and prayer to prepare God'• people to terve the cbu.rCb. the comiitU ..
nity and the world. Warihip ..w:e, with praise c:borulet. tradtt1onal hymns, payer. a lerlnon
aild the Lord'• Supper. ii held at 10:15 a,m. Sunday.. The church is at 792 Vlctoria St, Cotta
Mesa. Information: (949) .S.8-3468. -i
A2 Saturday, April 20, 2002
Sowing seeds
ofGodSlove
•Let ua be grateful to the people who
make us happy; they are the charming
gardene11 who make our sou.ls blossom.•
-Marcel Proust
I looked for a long time for jtm the right
birthday card for my Great-Aunt Mary
Ann. Actually, I never found the per-
fect one. I read card after card but could-
n't find one th.at captW'ed the essence of.
this lovely lady.
I looked in the MSpecial nties and
Milestones• section but couldn't find any-
thing to celebrate someone's 90th birth-
day. Even if I had, it probably would have
said something about being 90 years old,
but my Great-Aunt Mary Ann seems 90
years young to me.
I finally found a
card with a message
about God making
her extra special and
bought a little wood·
en praying angel to
go with it. because
she has faithfulJy
prayed for so many
people for longer
than I can imagine. Ondylmne
Christeson
Doily Pilot
At least 50 family
members of all ages
celebrated Great-
Aunt Mary Ann's
90th birthday OD
Sunday, a major
birthday for a won-
de.rful woman who
THE MORAL
OF THE STORY GREG RIV /OM..Y P'..v·
Pastor Jim Belcher leads Redeemer Presbyterian Church. which be says offers worship that •takes seriously the mind as well as the heart."
has played a major role in so many lives
for so many decades.
"I'm the oldest person I know, Cindy
dear," Great-Aunt Mary Ann said to me,
lovingly patting my hand. "I don't know
how I got to be 90 years old, but here I
Redeemer Presbyterian Church
a.rn .•
"God knows bow special you are to all
of us here,· I said. "You are an inspira·
tion, and you have lived such a full and
wonderful life. Many people would ask
you what your secret is.•
"I'm not sure how to answer that. but
I've always loved God and I have surely
been blessed with loving family; jtm look
around this room.• she answered as she
gazed around a happy house filled with
an adoring audience.
All the people gathered in my cousin
Toria's beautiful home shared love and
appreciation for this vibrant woman. It was
fasciMting to see the family resemblance
spread across the fruitful family tree, and
fun to hear family stories and adventures.
My cousin Susan stood to toast her
incredible mother, who was born the day
the ntanic sank. She affirmed her mom
for her many remarkable roles, not only in
all the immediate and extended family,
but also as friend, neighbor and mentor.
Then Great-Aunt Mary Ann stood and
toasted everybody in return. She looked
stunning, weartng a gold dress with gold
shoes, which matched her heart of gold
There almost seemed to be a golden glow
around her. She thanked everybody there
and commented on how much God has
blessed her and prayed the same for
everyone there.
As I looked around the room, I saw
many magnificent floral arrangements. It
was fitting to have so many beautiful bou-
quets to honor someone of such beauty
and grace. Somehow Great-Aunt Mary
Ann has always known how to plant
seeds of love, watering them with joy and
encouragement
For those of us who have someone
who has had such a positive effect on our
lives, let's take the time to thank them.
For all of us, I pray that we can find ways
to plant seeds of love in the lives of those
around us.
And you can quote me on that.
• ONDY TRANI CHRISTISON Is a Newport
Beach resident who speaks frequentJy to parent·
Ing groups. She may be reached via e-mail at
dndyOontti.grow.com OI' through the mail at
P.O. Box 6140-No. 505, Newport Beach, CA 92658.
MAILING ADDRESS: P.O. Box
4101, Costa Mesa, CA 92628
SUNDAY SERVla ADDRESS:
Westin Hotel, South Coast Plaza,
686 Anton Blvd., Cost.a Mesa
PARKING: Parking is free.
TELEPHONE: (714) 875-0869
WEB SrrE:
www.redeemerprea.com
E-MAJL: jlm@redeemerpres.com
DENOMINATION: Presbyterian
Church in America
YEAR ESTABLISHED: 2001
SERVICE TIMES: 10 a.m .
SENIOR PASTOR: Jim Belcher
SIZE OF CONGREGATION: 50
MAKEUP OF CONGREGATION:
The average age is 32. Members
are mostly young couples (some
Faith
CALENDAR
SPECIAL EVENTS
AWAKEN WITH GRAY
The Rev. Ken Gray will pre-
sent a mastermind workshop
titled •Join in the Awakening"
at 10 a.m. today at the Ught
Touch, 1929 Tustin Ave., Costa
Mesa. (949) 646-3199.
STRING SHOW
The Del Gesu String Quartet
will perform at 5 p.m. today at
the Orange Coast Unitarian
Universa.list Church, 1259
Victoria St., Costa Mesa. The
Irvine-based quartet will per-
form Mozart's "liunt" and
Dvorak's M American• o.t part
of the Victoria Chamber
Series. $5 or $8. (949) 651·
8493.
with children), singles and pro·
fessionals.
CHILD CARE: Child care is pro·
vided.
DRESS: Friday casual
TYPE OF WORSHIP: Worship is a
blend of ancient and modem
liturgy and music. The Lord's
Supper is celebrated weekly.
TYPE OF SERMON: Expository,
biblical preaching
RECENT SERMON:
•SANCTIACATION•: Growing m
Grace•
UPCOMING SERMON: "The
Fight of Faith•
MISSION STATEMENT: Redeemer
Presbyterian Church exists to
ignite a movement of the Gospel
RELATIONSHIP TALK
Temple Isaiah of Newport
Beach will present a panel dis·
cussion at 8 p.m. Friday on the
subject of intermarriage and
relationships at the temple,
2401 Irvine Ave., Newport
Beach. Free. (949) 548-6900.
REBUILDING AS A GROUP
The Center for Spiritual
Discovery is taking part in a
repair and renewal day on a
Costa Mesa shelter for this
year's National Rebuilding Day
on April 27. The center invites
the community to join. Call for
address and times. (714) 754·
7399.
MAKE CONNECTIONS
The Young Business and
Professionals division of the
Costa Mesa-based Jewish
Federation of Orange County
will present a •Connections
Evening,• featuring a dinner,
~l.S..-.. ~ ~. Glne Aleander 1560, Com M9SI, CA 92626.
MOlredDr READERS HQJUNE Copyright: No MM stotlel. IHustt• (9ol9) 5744U4
/oH.-.eNdmft.aim (949) 642-6086 tlons. edltoml matter ot ~
that changes people, in Costa
Mesa, Orange County and the
world, in every di:fnension -
spiritually, socially and cultural·
ly.
VISITOR HOSPITALITY: The pas·
tor and members of the church
wannly welcome visitors. A bul·
letin and guest materials are
proVJded. Coffee and doughnuts
are served after the service.
CHURCH PROGRAMS: Redeemer
University meets on Sunday
evenings. There ts also a mid·
week Bible study. Details are
available on Sunday or by call-
mg the church
OUTREACH PROGRAMS: "The
Commons,• a monthly coffee
entertainment, raffle clrld a
keynote speciker, at 5:30 p.m.
April 28 at the Hyatt Regency
Irvine, 17900 Jambo1ee Blvd ..
Irvine. $36. Reservation dead·
line is April 22. (714) 755-5555.
PRAYER BREAKFAST
The Newport Mesa Irvine
Interfaith CoWlal will present
its fifth annual National Day of
Prayer Interfaith Breakfast at 7
a.m. May 2 in St. Michael and
All Angels Episcopal Church,
3233 Pad.fie View Drive,
Corona del Mar. Speakers
include motivational author and
poet James Bruce Joseph
Sievers. Reservatioru. are $12.50
per person. (949) 660-8665.
THE THREE P'S
The Child Centered Church
will present Rev. Stephen
Albert at 7 p.m, May 3 a.s he
talks about MPeople, Problem
Solving and Personalities· at
house, will start in May. It wUl
feature live music, Chrtst1an
graphic art. coffee and food.
INTERESTING NOTE: Belcher
said, "If you have been search-
ing for a church with more
meaningful worship, more depth
in the preaching, more rever-
ence in its tone -yet is intense·
ly joyful -a church that take&
seriously the mind as well as the
heart. then this church may be
for you. The worship is accom·
panied by a grand piano, sopra·
no sax, flute, classical guitar and
cello. It will stir your soul like
never before.·
-Michelle Marr
Bonita Creek Park Facility, at
the comer of University Drive
and La Vida Street in Newport
Beach. $10 per person or $15
per couple. (949) 640-7343.
LAWYERS LUNCH
The Jewish Lawyers of Orange
County will hold a luncheon at
noon May 7 at the Center Club,
650 Town Center Drive, Costa
Mesa. Attorney Randol
Schoenberg will speak about
"Whose Art is it Anyway?• $36
(714) 755-5555, Ext. 224.
CELEBRATING THE RA.Ba.
Temple Bat Yahrn Will present
its annual 2002 gala, this year
celebrating the silver a.nnlver·
sary of Rabbi Mark S. Miller's
25 yea.rs of service to the tern·
ple, at 6:30 p.m. May 18 at the
Four Seasons Hotel, 690
Newport Center Drive,
Newport Beach. $180. (949)
644-1999.
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•
Doily Pilot
..
g way tO get a grade
• Corona del Mar student and his band,
Altivation, will hold a benefit concert for a teen
shelter Sunday as part of bis senior project.
f YI
• Whlrt: Concert for Laurel
House
• When: 4 p.m. SUnday
music, Turco said. Other
members of Altivation
include lead guitarist
Andrew Norman, rhythm
guitarist Eric Kirst and bus
guitarist Taylor Pham. The
band's name comes from
Turco's sports background.
Jennifer I( Mahal
DAILY PILOT
NEWPORT BEACH
Jonathan Turco is doing
something for his Corona del
Mar High School senior pro-
jQCt that a lot of teens would
love to get a grade for -
jamming with his band.
The drummer and his
guage band, Altlvation, will
play a benefit concert Sunday
night for Laurel House, a
shelter for teenagers in
1\Jstin. Pleasure Company, a
trto headed by Costa Mesa
rtsldent Darnell Wyrick, will
also play at the concert. to be
Qeld at St. Michael and All
Angels Episcopal Church in
Corona del Mar.
"They encourage us to
choose a project, something
we're not totally familiar
with," Turco Mid, explaining
that the project has three
parts -a research paper, a
tangible project and an oral
presentation. "I thought of
putting on my own benefit
concert. I love music.•
After choosing Laurel
House on his mom's sugges-
tion, Turco approached
Wyrick, a family frleod, to be
bis mentor because Wyrick's
group has been involved in
charity events before.
"He's been a great help, a
guide on the process,• Turco
said . "As an 18-year-old
high school student, I didn't
know where to start.•
Wyrick, who has known
Turco since he was 10 or 11,
said he's been impressed by
the amount of work the
senior bas put into the pro-
• WheN: St. Michael and
All Angels Episcopal
Church, 3233 Padfk View
Drive, Corona del Mar
• Cost: Suggested dona-
tion Is $10 for students, S 15 for adults
• C.11: (949) 718-0892
ject, even earning an A on
bis research paper on the
history of benefit concerts.
"I think the most exciting
part for me is seeing how
much energy and effort is
being put into this to make
this thing go," said Wyrick,
who with vocalist Carole
Olivieri and guitarist Jeff
Sergenti is part of Pleasure
Company. "His band has
been practicing hard.•
The concert is a great
motivation to get better at
•Andrew and I both pole
vault at Corona d el Mar, and
the coach is always saying
'get altivation' -altitude
and elevation," Turco said.
Altivatioo will play a com-
bination of classic rock cov-
ers -Led Zepplin, the
Eagles, the Beatles -and
original tunes at the concert.
With announcements being
made at school and fliers
handed out, Turco said he is
hoping at least 150 people
come to the event. Besides
the music, there will also be a
raffle and a representative
from l..g.urel House will speak
about the organization.
"I think it's really impor-
tant for musicians and artists
STEVE MCCRANIC I ON.Y PIDT
Drummer Jonathan Tutto and his band. AJttvaUon. will
play a benefit concert Sunday for a 1'u.st1n teen shelter.
to give back to society and
other people because they
have a big influence on
other people,· Turco said.
Although music is a love.
Turco plans to study the law
when he graduates.
Whether be will do it at
University of San Diego or
University of Southern
California is still up in the
air. Both have sent him
acceptance letters.
Whatever he does,
Wyrick said he tbmk.s Turco
has a bnght future ahead. ·rm sure we'll be hearing
more front him down the
road,· the flute and saxo-
phone player said.
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LIBRARY .
CONTINUED FROM A 1
Teenager injured when thrown from car The $3-uullion fadlity
wouJd replace the aging
Mariners B'raneb Libraiy and
also serve as library to ~e
students of Ma.nnen
Elementary School. 1be plan
is designed to take advan-
tage of an unusual 1tate fund-
ing opportunity for joint pro-
jects. To qualify for the $2 million, the state requires that
the other St million be paid
with charitable donations.
A l9·year~td Newport
Beach man .u.ttered major
injuries Tbundoy night
after be was eJected from a
car that aasbed. The 17-
year-old driver, police say,
was intoncated.
The incident occurred at
10:08 p.m., when a 1996
Camero reportedly veered
off San Miguel Drive north
of Pacific View Drive, and
collided with several trees.
Erik Friedrickson was
thrown out of the car and
POLICE fllES
COSTA MESA
• Anton Boulevard: A vehtde
burglary was reported 1n the 500
block at 4:58 p.m. Thursday.
• 8Mr Strwet A grand theft
was reported in the 3300 block
at 4 p.m. Thursday
• O\k>il Roild: Annoying phone
calls were reported in the 2800
block at 12:32 pm. Thursday.
• Falr Drive: A ~ theft was
reported in the 400 block at 7:35
p.m. Thursday.
• f'dlmore way. Possession of
VE CHES
CONTINUED FROM A 1
Police Sgt. Steve Shulman.
•We have dozens of
images showing [Veches)
sucking the children's toes,"
he sd.id. "But I'd like to
emphasize that we're still
sortmg through severaJ hun-
dreds of unages. There could
very weU be more victuns. •
The investigation was
sparked when a co-worker 10
the recreation d1V1sion
reported to a supemsor that
Veches may have been
involved in mappropriate
behavior with some of the
children, Shulman said.
Pobce looked into the aUe-
gabons. mterviewed the peo-
landed on an emtwmkment
in Harbor vtew Nature
Park, where he wu locat-
ed by police, oftidals said.
He WU taken by heli-
copter to UCJ Medical
Center. Officials said pre-
liminary reports showed be
suffered a concussion,
spleen laceration and vari-
ous severe cuts. .
The 17-year-old, whose
name police did not
release, was t.aken into
temporary custody and
narcotics were reported in the
3000 blodt at 9'.24 a.m. Thursday.
• "-d ttUI A~: A grand
theft was reported in the 3000
block at 1:55 p.m. Thursday.
• s.nat. S1reet: A grand theft
was reported in the 800 block at
11 :21 a.m. Thursday.
• West 20th S1reet: A home
burgla.ry was reported in the 700
block at 1 :1l6 p.m. Thursday.
NEWPORT BEACH
• West llaJboa Boulevwd: A
reckless driver was reported in
the 1000 block at 8:20 p.m.
ple who reported the alleged
crime, and confiscated
Veches' computers in his
office, at home and his' digital
camera, he said.
*The investigation is still
at a very preliminary stage,"
Shulman said. ·we don't
know when the activity start-
ed or how many victims were
involved.·
Investigators, so far, have
recovered "multiple images,•
said Capt. Tim Newman,
detective commander.
·Fifty to 60 of the unages
seem to involve kids fropi our
programs.• he said. That
determination was made
from the background and
setting of the picture,
Newman said.
Newman's detectives a.re
busy scanning the images for
more evidence, he said.
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found to have been intoxi-
cated, offtdals said. He
was later released to bis
parents, police s,a.id.
Friedrickson's ejection
and other evidence in the
car showed he wu not
wearing a seat belt, police
said. Both speed and alco-
hol possibly contributed to
the collision, officials said.
An investigation of the
mddent is underway.
-~Bhanth
Thursday.
• EMt co.t Hlghwa». An
assault w~ reported In the 2500
block at 5:44 a.m. Thursday.
• Con.I "-9: A ~hide bur-
glary was reported in the 1900
block at 7:26 a .m. Thursday.
• Hmpltal ROid: A hit-and-run
was reported In the 300 bk>dt at
9:22 a.m. Thursday.
• 5-tta ..,.,.... DrtV9C An
auto theft was reported in the
800 block at 6:39 p.m. Thursday.
• Si.fish Cowt: A home bur-
glary was reported in the' 100
block at 6:25 p.m. Thunday.
Vecbes is now suspended
from his job and on paid
administrative leave.
Bludau said he is •really
disappointed that this hap-
pened" to a city employee.
·we hope the investiga-
bon will dehne the extent of
criminal conduct.• be said.
•The oty will also look into
what we can do to make sure
tlus never happens again.•
Bludau said the city
already conducts thorough
background checks before
hiring employees. Veches
previously worked in Tucson
and came to Newport Beach
with good references and a
clean record, he said.
Veches has no prior con-
victions, police officials said.
Veches was arraigned at
Harbor Justice Center on
Friday. He is being held at
the Orange County Jail in
lieu of $250,000 bail. A court
hearing is set for Fnday.
• o..pe 8herath (O'lers publk
safety and courts. She may be
reached at (949) 57.._..226 or by e-
ma.il at ckepa.bhiirathOlatJme.com.
But while the uniqueness
of a library to serve a school
and 'the public has created
the opportunity to qualify for
the state Proposition 14
money, it bas also raised
concerns from residents who
say it could pose a safety
risk to the children. Planners
hope the rally will be a
chance to explain why they
feel that the project will be
safe.
CONFLICT
CONTINUED FROM A 1
ing ·Hillel and the Anteaters
for a Pree Israel.
About 300 people -
including several Jewish and
Muslim students -attended
the event. which was peace-
ful for the most part, said
Kathy Hooven. chief of the
UCI Police Department.
•At the very end of the
event, there were some peo-
ple yelling. screaming and
getting upset.• she said.
Hooven said no tear gas
was used but campus police
bad to use batons to control
the crowd.
*There were a few scuffs,
pushing, yelling and scream-
ing,· she said. •Batons were
used at one point.·
One student Sa.Jd the fight
EXPO
CONTINUED FROM A 1
to Adventure, a program
designed to expose f a.rrulres to
outdoor life and activlbes, and
Pretend City, whi.ch teaches
children about the JObs it
takes to make a city work.
Intern • scountRealtors.com
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•
• Wndt
•Dinner
• Sunday Bnmch
•
m
• Wl'9t: •sulld 1 MMinets
Utsrary• ralty will indude
an appearance by
•O,leken Soup for the
Soul• author Mafic Vidor
Hansen; a disc jodcey and
dancing; ~inting fOf
c:tilldren; food booths; and
other act:MtJes. • ~Noon to 2 p.m.
today • wttere: Mariners Park.
lntersectlon of Irvine
Avenue and Dover Drive,
Newport Beach • e.aU: (949) 644-3150.
•we want everybody who
bas 0 question to bring it,•
Bergeson said.
Newport Beach Com-
munity Services Director,
La.Donna Kienitz, who also
serves as the city's bead
librarian. said there's a high
level of community support
for the project. .
"There's is a lot of com.nut-
ment everywhere on this pro-
broke out because of the
inflammatory tone--of the
speakers.
"They literally painted the
Arabs as nothing more than
animals,• Abraham Appel
said. "This happened
because they were told for
hours what animals we
were."
Heather Pobiner, a mem-
ber of Hillel at UC Irvine. said
the goal of the event was to
present both sides of the issue.
·It's not just presenting the
lsrael.t point of view,• she
said. *The speakers .we had
represented Muslims, as well
as Jews. It was meant to look
at the situation and why
things are the way they a.re.·
Fareeha JGbria, a comput-
er soence ma1or, said she
believed the amount of force
used by campus police was
excessive. She sa.id she saw a
campus policeman hit a.noth-
On Friday, students from
Killybrooke Elementary
School m Costa Mesa
roamed the arts and crafts
haU in search of missions
they had constructed.
·It's cool because it's
interesting: said fourth-
grader Leanne Vu. who
paused to admire larger nus-
sions that had been con-
structed by students at
another school.
In the soence and engi-
nee.nng ball.. students pon-
dered such eternal questions
as "Why does ketchup get
stuck in a bottle?• as they
OBITUARIES
Carmen
Rodriguez Weber
A funeral service for
Ca.nnen Rodriguez Weber, a
fonner resident of Corona del
Mar, will be held at 11 a.m.
Monday at Our Lady Queen
of Angels church in Newport
Beach.
Ms. Weber died Thursday.
She bved in Corona del Mar
between 1970 and 1976.
She is survived by her
daughters Ann-Elizabeth
Wagner and Kathleen Payne;
son Robert A. Weber, eight
grandchildren and four great-
grandchildren.
The funeral wW be fol-
lowed by a burial at Pacific
View Memorial Park in
C010na del Mar.
Joanne B. Stem
A memorial service for
Joanne B. Stem, 4 longtime
Whittier Law School profes-
sor, ls scheduled to be held ot
4 p.m. Monday at Whittier
law School.
Ms. Stem died March 21
from injuries she suffered in a
fall at her Costa Mesa home.
Shewas56.
Mt. Stem, who spedal-
lzed in health law, bad con-
ducted research in the field
aod wntten numerous arti·
des OD the subject. Sbo WU
the fouride.r of Wb.lttier law
School'• annual hff.lth law
1ympo1lum designed for
lawyers and health"C419 pro·
feu1onata.
She joinfld the IChOol In
1978 after several yean OI
~ as • prd""onal.
Ma. Stem WU a project 4tlCll•
"" With U'9 NdODil •-&cDiMklt .. .... ~-.,., .. , ... .. ... ~ ...... ,.,.
..
l
Ject. • l(jenitz said. "Irr""" axdW>g.•
To apptt tor Ula GJDt:I
the June 14 deedlloe •
City Council mu.st fiJ'6t v~"
that enough matchJng tunos "
have been railed. l'be ~
meeting of the council bef are ,
that deadlirie is June 11 -tn •
effect. ma.Icing that the fuM ...
raising deadllne as we.11.
The new librarr wowd
replace the exllting Marui.ars
Branch Ubrary at 200SDover
Drive with a facility bUllt at
the southeast comer. Di the •
school campus. The 12.soo.
foot library would be rougbly
double the existing Manners
branch and would include
eipanded collections ~.
state-of-the-art technology.
Separate entrances and sepo.
rate areas for students and
adults have been proposed as
a way to keep kids sale
• ,...._ Cmgi•Mh co~
Newport Beach. SM may be reached
at (949) 57~ Of' by e-mail at
junf!.~t1mes.com
er student.
"He hit him on the larm1
and someplace else,· she
said. •Hfs band was all
swollen.•
Ki,brla said that the student
was tctually the one who was
being attacked by other stu-
dents and police. '
"It was not necessary,• she
said. ·vou don't bit the guy
who is being attacked.·
Hooven said there have
been several p1otests and
demonstrations on campus
over the last 10 years and
police must resort to force
when situations call for 1t
·it's not that unusual.· she
said. • u is our role to preserve
freedom ol speech.·
• o..pe ._ • .,,'overs public \af~
ty and coum. John Undsey 1~ an
Orange Coast College student
Bharath may be reached at (949)
574-.4226 or by e-mail a1
deepa.bha111fh0fati~com.
perused the myriad soenre
exhibits.
Chasen Radison, a ftfth-
grader at Malcolm School m
Laguna Niguel, said hrs
favorite was an exhibit dboul
solar power that featured 4
solar furnace and nun1dture
action figures that had sup-
posedly been burned by 11
The Youth Expo runs from
9 a.m. to 4 p.m. today and
Sunday.
• .,..,.._ .....,._ cowrs edUCJ
tion. She may be reached 1t (949)
57..,..221 or by e-mail at
deirdre.~•times.com
for the National Health Law
Program in Los Angeles.
She is SW'Vlved by her two
sisters Marjorie Stern and
Lydia Winner.
The law school bas estab·
lisbed a schola.r5hip fund in
Ms. Stem's name. Donanons
may be sent to the
Advancement Office at the
law school, 3333 Harbor
Blvd., Costa Mesa. CA 92626
• The Daily Pilot welcomes ob1tuM·
ies for resid4mt:s or tonne< residenti
of Costa Mesa ind Newport Beach
If you want to have •n obituary
printed In the Pilot. ask your mor
tuary to fax us the lnfomiation at
(949) 646-<4170 or (.I'll the news·
room at (949) 764-4324.
' •
Daio/ Pik>t
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A loud, but conservative voice speakS ou ·
• OCC professor who was at the heart of a
national controversy last fall speaks about
academic freedom for all views.
DelnlN Newman
DAILY PILOT
Hearlson mainly focused
on his tundamental belief
that conservatives should be
NEWPORT BBACH entitled to the same degree of
Ken Hearlson, a political sci-academic freedom as liberals.
ence professor at· dee, "If you're going to have
brought his conservative academic freedom for the left,
view1 and torch for academic you have to have the same
freedom to a gathering of standards for the right,"
Republican women in Hearlson said. "You can't
Newport Beach on Friday. have a double standard.•
The Newport Harbor Detaching the miaopbone
--:_..,----, pTelident that be equates
with prior reltraint.
While Heart.on empb.a·
s1z8d the necessity for ac.ade·
mic freedom in the cl,assroOIJ1.
be acknowledged the ambi-
guity of the issUe.
"It's like trying to take a
bowl of Jell-0 and Utt 1t up,"
Heart.on said. •rt moves in so.
many places, you can't grasp
it. ..
awaiting arbltratlon to get tbt
document removed from bis
file -be encouraged a\ldi.
ence memben to get to kn'°"
the diverse offerings avaw
able on Orange Coaat(
College's campua.
He also used the forum to
encourage the audience te
help out those 1811 fortunate,
including Latinos who live tn
Costa Mesa's Westside area.
•Republican conservativt11
can't sit in our beautiful
homes,• Hearlson sllid. "We
have to be with these folks.
We have to help.•
Republican Women invited from the lectern, the passion-
Hearlson to speak at the ate political science professor STEVE MCCAANK / DAILY PlOT
Hearlson said he was sur-
prised when the Muslim stu-
dents took offense at bis lee·
fure and appalled when they
advocated that he should be
fired. He -blamed the back·
lash against him on the fact
that be espouses conservative
beliefs.
Many of the women said
they appreciated the OPPot·
tunity to bear from the man
who gained national protll1.
nence defending his cause.
Bahia Corinthian Yacht Club addressed the crowd of about Ken Hearl.ton. a profeuor of political ldence at OCC,
to champion the freedom of 50 people as be would a class speaks to a gathering of Republican women on Friday.
speech rights of conserva-of college students.
tives, sllid Sally DeBrun, pro-He briefly related the ind· him into the national spot-harassing some Muslim stu-
gram chairwoman. dent last fall that catapulted light when be was accused of dents in class a few days after
"The reason it became
such an issue is because I was
a conservative, and those
views are not well beard in
community colleges,•
•1 only peripherally knew
what was going on,• Bobbi
Cox sllid. •The controversy
has brought this to interna-
tional recognition where It
wasn't being discussed.
Fortunately, be didn't back
down.•
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was eventually cleared of
most of the charges but
received what be considers a
reprimand from the college
Hearlson said.
Although Hearlson is still
battling with college offici~
over the reprimand -be IS
cc3
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Sflend some money to benefit CHOC
A lhopping benefit is
happening this week-
end at At·Eae in
Putuoft lllend. At·Eue will
donate 10% of its salas to
Cbildlen11 Hospital of Orange
CANoty. The event will alto
include entertainment. spedal
onlerl and trunk shows. To-
dey, members of the U.S.
.. Olympic Soiling team will
sign autographs from 11 a.m.
to 5 p.m. And. Bill Ficker, the
w1m)er of America's Cup
196&. Brad Avery, tbe di?ector
<t the occ School of
Se!\Jnnnshlp; and yacht
daigner Gino Mmelli will
gteet customers from 11 a.m.
to 5 p.m. Speny Topm.der and
· Reyn Spooner are showinv
their latest spring and sum-
mer lines. Tu:kets are selling
for $.i or $20 for five to win
prizes that include four Helly
Hansen jackets donated by
Sperry Toplider, two round-
tlip tickets to Hawaii, Robert
Comstock leather jackets and
At-Base gift certificates.
Proceeds will a1so benefit
CHOC.
The new Anne Fontaine
Boutlq1le will host an •even-
ing of shopping and cock-
tNJs" from 6 to 9 p.m.
-ru.day. Durtog tbe recep-tfori. 20% of tbe sales will go
mw.rd the Orapge County
dffilate of the ~ G .
Adults, Max Mini and
Natural varieties. It baa a
speda1 on all 20-gallon
aquariWl'.1-at $19.99,
Sunseed bird seed reduced
20%, Premium Choice cat
litter at $5.99, and puppy
training pads by Bramton at
$1.C • .C9. Pet's Central is at
2300 Harbor Blvd., Costa
Mesa, at tbe Harbor Center.
(9"9) 6"2-5673.
Padtlc Green is a new fur-
niture store in Newport Beadl
that canies furniture made In
Kamen BMeSt C4ncer Tabitt. The fu.n:Uture is band·
Foundation. A new shirt made from palm wood and
dubbed •SUsan, • a limited leather. The frames rA the fur.
editioo, pale pink women's nituJe are reinfofced with
shirt desi~ in honor of the lumbar SllPport and New
foundation. will be on sale z.ealand cowhide. It's at 500
during the event for $150. It's W. Coast Highway, Newport
a three-quarter-length stretch Beach. (949) 631-1266.
poplin shirt that's also avail· The hottest looks for the
able in black and white. Anne 2002 prom season will be
Fontaine is an internationally shown at 2 p.m. today at
known Prench designer. She's • Macy's South Coast Plaza, on
most known for her collection level two. Seventeen maga-
of white shirts. Anne Fontaine zine is presenting a •rockin'
is at South Coast Plaza, on fashion show" that shows the
level one, across from the best prom dresses from
new Aberaombie & Pitch Macy's and shoes from Chi·
store. (71.C) 549-0315. nese Laundry. Fashion scouts
Pet's Central cames from Seventeen magazine
everything your pet would will also be looking for •styl-
ever need at low prices. It's a isb girls and guys" to be
great place to find bargains highlighted in an upcoming
on food, such as a 35-pound issue of the magazine.
bag of Nutroma.x dog food at John L Blom Custom
$15.99 that comes in Max. Photography will have a
spring children'• spedal
through May 31. The &pedal
ia a savings of 50% off on lit·
tings and up to 35 % ol1 on
portrarta. It's on ideal gift for
Mother's and Father's Day.
John L. Blom is at 3732 E.
Coast ffighwa~ Corona del
Mar. (949) 675-3130.
R.CHJer'I Guel.em is sell-
ing a pet-sat~ organic mail
and slug i::ontrol product
called Sluggo. It also claims
to be safe on vegetable gar-
dens up to the day of har-
vest. Sl\Sggo is available in
2.S·pollOd containers and 10-, pound bags. Roger's Gardens
is. at 2301 San Joaquin Hills
Road, Newport Beach. (949)
640-5800.
Sport Mart is having a
sale on fishing equipment
through Monday. Included in
the sale is a Navigator float
tube for $59.97, breathable
waders for $79.97, a digital
scale for $24.97, and a four.
drawer tackle box for $14.97.
Sport Mart also carries tons
of sporting and exercise
equipment, apparel and
shoes. It's at South Coast,
3900 S. Bristol St., Costa
Mesa. (714) 751-9911.
• BEST BUYS appears Thursdays
and Saturdays.
St. Matthew's
Montessori School
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' A8 Soeurdoy, April 20, 2002 ,.e
• Send ~ nMN h:etr1s to
the D.wy PllOt. llO W. lay St., Costa
Mesa, CA 92627; by fu to (949) 646-
4170; Of~ calling (M) 574-4298.
lndude ttw time, date and kx.Jtjon
of 1he ewnt, • Mfl IS • c.ontllCt
phone number. A. complete 11$tlng Is
.vallable .t www.dallypllotcom.
TODAY
11lie MaJM...., of ........
day 0rflllge CoUnty YoUili
Expo will begt1l at 9 a.m. and
nJnS until• p.~ today, and
SUnday at the same timel, at
the 23rd annual Orange
County Pairgrounck, 88 Pair
Drive, Costa Mesa. Pree.
(714) 708-1543 .
You have the right to
choose your repair facility
Insist on the Best
A JllotPW oa llli mt Of Gae hAn01no vegetable garden
Will be bekt at 9:30 a.m. The
program, conducted by
Muter Gardener Herb
Wllk:i1llon, ii part Of a week-
end gardener series spon-
aorecl by the Sherman
Ub,tary & Galdem. Free. Tbe
library ii at 26"7 B. Coast
Higbway, Corona del Mar.
(949) 673-2261.
FILM .
CONTINUED FROM 1
an Italian film baled OD a true
story about · overcomliig
advemties, beat out more
than 70 other featU.rel and
took the best pic.ture award. •r feel Ul1J mm ts a won·
derful selection of what ii
LIFETIME WA RRANTY
ful S-.ice Collslon c.n...
lnauronce Appro¥9cl Shop
949) 642-4522
O.C. 's &elusive Mephisto Dealer
1727 WestcliffDril'e, Newport Beach, CA 92660
949-642·FEET (3338) Mon-Sat 10-6, Sun 10-5
Newport • r
Lutheran Church
CLLC..A.I
'198 Dover Dr. Newport llwh
Tradltlonel Lutheran
Paetor Dnld Monge
Wonhlp ... doe wttt. "°" Communion • ..... 9:11 .... -. --· ... --·
ClttLDCM• AYAILAaLS
y =-~~~~
HARBOR CHRISTIAN CHURCH
(Dlaclplea of Christ)
2401 lrvln• An.
NnrpOft B11dl, CA
(949) 545-5781
atlLD Cf.NTPJllJ) CHuaCH
,....,. Senkii 10... ,,.......c... .........
...... ~Pull Gelltir,
Ualtw ... _. LeVWa S...HPI ··--ft-• .... · Rev. Gail Miller
QI (949) 640-7)45 Of
\II 11 1<>1>1-..I
TllUU ISAIAll
OF lllWPOl'l IUCH
~ ~ ~ Newport C.enttt
United Methodist Church
Rev. Cathleen Coots, Pastor ~)
ORANGE COUNTY'S flllENOUEST 8YMM>OGUE
·vou AA£ A STRANGIEll H£1lf ONLY OHCa"
IHTENNTH CCll.f'UJ ME Y81Y WELCOMI!
SffABIAT WORSHIP
HEBREW SCHOOL
COUNSEUHO
SOCtAl EVEHT'S
1601 Marguerite Ave.
corner of Marguerite and
San Joaquin Hilla Rd.
(949) "4--074S
Bam Quin wonhip Sn-via
I 011m Wonhip and Chi/JNn's
Sundizy School
~uth mutint wultly
"A God-ccnrcrcd parish communiiy, insUUCted l>t the Word of God
wd renewed by the Sxrarncnu
Our Lady Queen of Angels
2046 Mar Vise.a Drive
N~!1 Beach, California 92660
(949)644-0200 Fax (949)644-1349
Rev. Monsignor William P. Md.aug,blin, Pa.nor
UTIJRGIES: Sarurday, 5 p.m. [Canror),
Suncby. 7:00 (Qwct), 8:30 (Contemporary), 10:00 (Chou),
11:30 a.m. (Can1or) and 5:00 p.m. (Concemporuy)
FIRST CHURCH OF
CHRIST, SCIENTIST
3303 Via Utt>
Newport Beach
673-1340 or 673-6150
Orurch 10 am• 5 pm.
S\Jnday School 10 am
~ ...... 7lOPJI
SECOND CHURCH OF
CHRIST.SCIENTIST
3100 Pac:Uic View ~.
Newport Bea::h
644-2617 or 675-4661
O\wc-Jl 10 am
Sunday School 10 am
Wllhidaf w..u. pin •1•~llnoan ..... ...,_.,...._we.. ....... 1 ............. .,,
,_ o.Nt, ........ ,,.,.,. .. w ... ......,,., ·-1• tM:s
• Colt'•: ..... 111•.. .
hdaesrAlk M*O.. • lllc fdQlllQCJ~~ • 8osra1. M--.
I
WORSHIP
DIRECTORY
\II l ll•1lll\I
Costa Meu Fant United
Methodist Charch
420 West 19th Street,
Costa Mesa
(949) 548-7727
Rev. Michael Bankhead, Pastor
Adult Sunday School: 8:45am
Children'• Choir: 9:00am
Wonhip & Children's
Slmday School; 1 Oam
Cluitt CJuudt by the Sea
Ucuted Mahodnl
1'400 W. Balboa BM.. N~n Beach
l"4S.... -AIWt S.-.. Sdioal
Ult H ... -"-illp .J Cliilia&s.Mi, Set.I
Costa Mela
MESA VII.DI
UNrTID MITHOOIST CHUICH
1701 aakw,c.M.
Worship & Church Schoel
8:30 oncl 1 OsOO a.m.
Dr. Richard (714') 979-8234'
SUNDAY SCH EDUU.
II an. • Holy EudlUitc
9 am • Swida)' Scbooll Ad!111 lliblc Swcly
10 •m-a.or.I £uchNilt
NURSERY CARE AVA/LUU
Darty Pilot -
currently available in bide· to brillg the belt OOfttenlpo.
p.ctent aD4 art film releN-rary films hele, • Schwenk
es • said Gregg Schwenk, said. ~tive diredor ot the feati· 'Illk4.ahl KoJ.zumi'a •Ame
val. Agaru • rWben the Rain
•sugemo• allo wm in Uie Liltl) took home an Award of
category of belt actor for • Mertt. Shojt Ueda, cine.
• GlarUrlo GWmini'• portray-matograpber for the film. Mid al~ a dlabled bicbel« who he wu happy to aee 4
mapatee a com.a ~t. Japanese work appe& to the
•ne Bank,• a festival American audience.
opener, also proved a big Many ,of the screenings
wtnner Friday as it won for th1B year ended up With
best director ·(Robert standing room only because
Connolly) and best screen· tlcketa sold so well, laid Todd
play, also Connolly. Quartararo, director of mar.
•Nynke• won twice-for keting.
best cinematography (Paul •There's certainly a buzz
Van Den Bos) and best that bas started about this
ac;tress (Monique festival,• he said. •Not only
Hendrickx). here, but in Hollywood.·
"Dogtown and Z-Boys•
won for best documentaJy.
•Tue jury was faced with a
very challenging situation.
They screened over 600 films
• Young 0..,. writes features
She may be re.ched ~ (949) 574-
4268 or by e-mail at
young.changOlatlmucom.
Learn Language Your Wayl
·C.Onvenient • Pcrsonaliud •All Ap •All Levels• We oome co you!
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WOMEN • WE HA VE YOUR SIZE ,_,, . , .. ~I)\ . ... 1 "' I ~I . ~ OUI-Ill II 112 ·-•• •• •• •• • •• •• ..... •• •• •• •• • • • • ·-• • •• . .. . .. • • .. --,i;; • • ·-•• . -. -•• ... --•• • ·-•• -. • • •• ••• •••
MEN • WE HA VE YOUR SIZE
2332 North Tustin Ave.
C'· ange. CA 92865
(714)283-4950
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEk1 MOft.-M; 1~ • .. tCIMI to 1_... • ._ ,,__....
Celestino's
l'rrnhu t ' • '-it'ilfood • H1·li
SnW1lf Cost.t Me111 fa-ilia far .wr 38 ,_,.,
Boneless From Our Deli Dept. Our
Chuck Roast Own Tender Juicy Roast Beef
Lean & Tender or Oven Roasted Turkey.
s3~b. s6~b.
SirJoin Ttp or
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s5~b.
Try Our Homemade
Veal, Pork, or Chicken
~ BratwurstSausage
From Our Seafood Dept.
Fresh Alaskan Halibut,
Fresh King Salmon
Available Now!
5ee stars in the maki,ng tonight
be 37th annual Orange
County All-Star High
School Boy. and Girlt
Basketball game will be held
tonight at the Orange Coast
College gymnasium. The
finest basketball ptayers tn
Orange County will compete
1n north and south teams for
unsurpassed competition.
The girls' tea.ms will tip off at
5 p.m., while the boys' will
Up off at 8 p.m.
Ke.Q DWey, president of
the Costa Mesa Kiwanls
Club, wblcb spons0rs the
annual event. notes that
more than $500,000 has been
railed from the event to sup-
port the Boys & Girls Club;
Boy Scouts; CHOC, OCC,
Golden West and Vanguard
University scholarship funds;
the Salvation Army; and the
YMCA Tournament Director
Tom Lee looks back with
pride on some of the game
alumni: Steve Beurleln, now
quarterbaclc with the
Cerolina Panthers; OUvta
DtCemllU, playing with San
Diego State; Miles Simon,
who was the most valuable
player of the college Pinal
Four; and Dean Garrett, who
played with the Minnesota
Tbnberwolves, to name a
few. Tickets are available at
the gym door at game time.
GOLF FOil FISH: The
fourth annual Golf
Tournament to benefit FISH,
Friends In Service To
Humanity of Newport Beach,
will be held May 13 at Sea
Cliff Country Club in
Huntington Beach. The day
will begin with registration
at 8:30 a.m., shotgun will fol·
low at 10 a.m., lunch will be
on the coune, and a silent
auction and banquet will go
from 4 to 6 p.m. There Me
contests for hole in one, dos·
est to the pin, longest dnve
and most accurate driver.
Golf is $195 a person (this
is a fund-raiser, remember)
and more information may
be obtained by call1ng Mike
Thompson at (949) 675-1775.
IRREI EVANT WEEK
GOES TO 1llE UNDER-
Jim de Boom
COMMUNITY & CWBS
DOGS: Irrelevant week., in its
21th year, is a fun-filled week
that honors the last person
taken in the NPL draft, which
is being held this weekend in
New York, while raising
funds for various cbarlties in
Southern California. Melan1e
Salata Pltch, chief executive
of I. W., is inviting service
clubs to nominate an under-
dog in their group for recog-
nition during Irrelevant Week.
wlbi.s could be someone
who chaired the annual
fund-raiser, someone who
always volunteers with the
deanup jobs or who is
always willing to lend a
helping hand. Someone who
deserves to be honored but
never seems to receive the
recognition,• she said.
Fitch is prepared to come
to the dub meeting to pre·
sent the underdog with a gift
and recognition from
lrrelevant Week and to invite
them to the lrrelevant Week
Welcoming Reception. For
more information, call Fitch
at (949) 263-1141.
LEADERSHIP TOMOll-
llOW: The Leadership
Tomorrow, a training program
for those who want to become
more involved in their com-
munity, is now accepting
applications for the next train-
ing dass.
The group will hold a spe-
cial luncheon May 23 to intro-
duce prospects to the pro-
gram that meets once a
month during the year. You
will be given the location of
the lµncheon when you make
reservations with Dee Dee at
(9'9) 729-4,10.
SEMCE CLUB MEET·
INGS nos WEeX: Here ls
tb1s week'• meeting IChedule:
TUESDAY
7:30 a.m.: The '0-member
Newport Beach Sunrise
Rotary Club will meet at
Five Crowns Restaurant for a
program by Air Poree
Veterans on POW life in the
South Padftc.
WEDNESDAY:
7:15 a.m..: The 20-member
South Coast Metro Rotary
Club will meet at the Center
Club (www.aouthcoaatmetro-
rotary.org), and the Newport
Harbor Kiwanis Club will
meet at the University
Athletic Club.
Noon: The 35-member
Exchange Club of the
Orange Coast will meet at
the Bahia Corinthian Yacht
Club for the Book of Golden
Deeds presentation.
5:30 p.m.: The 55-member
Rotary Club of Newport·
Balboa will meet at the
Bahia Corinthian Yacht Club
to hear about the proposed
joint city-school district
library at Mariners Park,
(www.newportbalboa.org).
THURSDAY
1 a.m.: The 20-plus mem-
ber Costa Mesa-Orange
Coast Breakfast Lions Club
will meet at Mimi's Cafe for
a business meeting.
Noon: The 50-member
Costa Mesa Kiwarus Club
will meet at the Holiday Inn
(www.Jdwanla.org/clublcosta
mesa), the Newport Beach·
Corona del Mar Kiwanis
Club will meet at the Laguna
Niguel Club, the 80-member
Exchange Club of Newport
Harbor will meet at the
Newport Harbor Nautical
Museum to hear from Judge
Sellin Pra.nk.U.n on Military
History, and the 100-mernber
Newport-Irvtne Rotary Club
will meet at the Irvine
Marriott for craft talks
(www.nlrotary.org).
• COMMUNITY • a.uas is pub-
lished Saturdays in the Daily Pilot.
Buy Direct
from the Source!
Diamonds Cut on the PNmi111
..
..an Quebbemann, M.D., Is one of the first surgeons In
Qallfornla to perform advanced laparoscopic surgical
~ures for weight loss.
And he is located in Orange County, serving as Me-d1cal Director of the
N.£.W.'Program at Huntington Beach Hospital.
Meet Or. Quebbemann in person and learn what thou!.ands of formerty
obese people already knaN. The secret to LONG-TERM weight los.1 is
~h surgery, including laparoscopte gastric bypass and the FDA-
~ minimally invasive LAP-BAND procedure.
CJll 714 .843.5009 todC1y to join us for a
Free Information Session, seating is limited.
At Huntington Beach ~
•
....... TO DlllCI
•o.nc. &c.pe,• ~ worb by UC 1MM gnidu.te ~a~ wflf .t»
staged Thursday through April 27 at the coflege'I Wlnffred Smith Hall. . ~ wtll be held 8t I p.m. Th~ throUgh APrfl 27, wtth a 2 p.m.
matinee April 27. The aimpus Is at the corner of campus and UnlWrsitY drives
In Irvine. $7-$9. (949) 124-2787 .
. 'Salvador Dali' a senSual fantaSy at oce
I
Student di.rector Laura Viramontes works on a ICelle
wtth cut memben from OCC'• productton of Jote
Rover•'• •aetel'ellcea to Salvador Dall Make Me HoL"
19Y1bft\Tttus
W. hen yoll're an Arm}"'wffe stuck
in the Barstow desert wbile
your huaband'• off on military
maneuvers, your bJg~ challenge ts
fighting the interminable boredom
that's u dangerous to your mental
health as the howling coyotes outside
are to your pets' physical well-being.
With a little imagination, you can
dream up a romantic fantasy, such u
Jose Rivera bas done in bis play
•References to Salvador Dali Make Me
Hot.• tint glimpsed at South' Coast
Repertory and now being showcased at
Or3;Dge Coast Coll~e in a sensually
excting production from student direc-
tor Laura Viramontes.
The piece ts divided into four scenes
-the first and last being heroine
Gabriela's fantasy world, the middle
two representing the ha.rah reality she
endures when her husband arrives
home from the field. These sequences
play in stark contrast and offer conflict-
ing views ot' Gabriela's personality, and
of the aching loneliness she struggles to
putinto words. . ·
She and her husband, Benito, occupy
the same emotional planes as Blanche
and Stanley in •A Streetcar Named
Desire,• the irrevocable struggle
between fantasy and reality. Benito's
Anny life and Gabriela's dfnces with
the desert moon are worlds apart. Both
live unfulfilled lives, from which neither
ts willing to escape.
At OCC, Gabriela is beautifully inter·
preted by Angela Lopez, whose clwac-
ter bas limited education but is wise
enough to rea&e she yearns for some-
thing more meaningful. Lopez brings
both dimensions of Gabriela's existence
to life with an urgency born of frustra-
tion in a marvelous performance.
Aa her soldier husband, equally
exasperated with his wife's growing
disenchantment, Andrew L.
• DON LEACH I OAll.Y PILOT
Cellllt AlUaon Eldredge practtce1 for her concert wttb the Paclflc Symphony Orchestra next week. Eldredge la taking part In tbe
Symphony'• tribute to composer Antonin Dvorak, who tnnuenced American clustcal mustc.
jFest has
DVO
at the Center '
Cellist Allison Eldredge joins
Pacific Symphony Orchestra
in weeklong tribute to the
Bohemian composer
Young Chang
OAJlY PILOT
C ellist Allison Eldredge can
name three men wbo have
played leading roles in her
life: composer Antonin
Dvorak, composer Vlctor Herbert
and conductor/cellist Mstislav
".ostropovicb.
With the Pacific Symphony
Orchestra'• ·ovorak in America•
festival, which began Wednesday,
Eldredge and her influences ~e
tangled in a complicated musical
web ln which all roads lead to
Dvorak.
One of the first cello recordings
Eldredge fell in love with was a
duet by Rostropovlch and fellow
cellist Jacque\lne du Pre.
Rottropovich II widely known for
his performance of Dvorak's Cello
Concerto in B Minor, which
Eldredge liked u a child and
watched live when Roatropovicb
performed it with the Bolton
Symphony Iut year.
Dvorak wu iNplred to write
hil f amoUI cello concerto after
hffring Herbert'• Concerto No. 2
in E mtnor f9r Cello and Orchestra
t
in the 1890s. He and Herbert were
both leaders and friends at New
York'• National Conservatory of
Music. Herbert'• music apparently
revealed for Dvorak bow virtuosic
tb,e cello could sound
Eldredge will perform Herbert's
concerto Wednesday and
Thursday as part of the sympho-
ny's nine-day celebration of
Dvorak'• work, other composers'
influence on hil music and bJa
influence on modem composers.
Rottropovicb performed
Dvorak's cello concerto, Opus 104
on Wednetday at the Orange
County Performing Arts Center in
a concert that also celebrated his
7 5th birthday.
•1t•1 cert&inly, in my mind, the
greatest cello concerto that we
have in the cello repertoire," said
Eldtedge, a Boston resident and
New York native. •avery tiine l've
beard it, l've loved it even more.•
· As a celliat, IDdredge haJ a soft
spot for Dvorak'• cello concert.
which Rottropovich played ln an
otherworldly way m BOiton.
SEE OVOAAK 'AGE A15
f YI
• WHAT; •Jt.terences to Salvador Dall
Make Me Hot•
• WHERE: Orenge Coast College Studio
Theater, 2701 Fairview Road, Cosi.
Mesa • WHEN: Fina! performances at 8 p.m.
Saturday, and 2 and 8 p.m. Sunct.y
•COST: S6
• CAI.I.: (714) 432-5640
Vonderschmitt doesn't quite project the
dimension bis role demands. He c:bc:>aJ·
es to explore only the swface facets of
bis character. Doubling as the fiddle-
playlng man in the moon.
Vonderschmitt casts a more romantic
shadow in the fantasy sequences.
The animals that ocx:upy Gabriela's
fantasy world, the cat and the coyote,
are beautifully interpreted by Nancy
'Iroia and Josh Lash, respectively -
SEE DALI PAGE A15
'Innocent'
view of
women
Wendy Marvel's exhibit
at Orange Coast College
explore~ the idealization
of women in media
Young Chang
DAILY PllOT
W endy Marvel ts' disturbed by
the use of the female form in
Western cultuJe.
Women are idealized. and the sub-
jects used tn advertisements and other
forms of media get stripped of an
identity, she said
•A photograph is not a reality,"
continued the 33-yeer-old' art1st
•What our society views as ideal or
normal is actually 11 perfect or nonper-
sonal view of the female form.•
The sub-
jective
becomes
the objec-
tive, what
startaand
begins a.a
an idea gets
mtstalcen
for reality.
Marvel'•
exhibit
1be
lnnooants, •
a.t Orange
Coast
College's
Photo
~~ Prlday,
f YI
•WHAT: •1nncxents•
•WHEN: Through
Friday. Gallery hours
are 8 1.m. to 10 p.m.
Monday through
Wednesday, 10 a.m. to
1 o p.m. Thursday, 9
a.m. to 5 p.m. Friday,
and 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.
Saturday.
• WHIM; Orange
Coast College Photo
Gallery, 2701 Fa!Mew
Road. Costa Mes.
•COST: FrM
• CAU.: (714) 432.5520
communicates the artist'• pc>Gtion on
the image of women.
lba 25-pieoe collection has two
parts -one is 11 series ol photograph·
le: self-portraits on handmade paper
and wax, the other ii a developmental
sequence of girls, young women and
older women.
The self portrait& feature Marvel
nude, arid each photo ii encased in
wax to haze out specific md ~
c:ha.racteriltics of the fa.ca aDd b:eAr.
•1t could be your mother, tt cOuJd
be your d.auphter, it could be auy Ide·
4lized form. Marvel said.
She choee to be photogiapb9d
nude because 1be lou of ~bing
makes it difftCult for the vt.ewet to pin·
poJnt a retenmuat time and pld.
·1 wanted it to be all tilM and .n
place,• the VeDlol resldent Mkl.
Each pin UC> 1bcnn "'Y llgbt,
almolt tndiloemlble buidw::
wbidl ~ iDduded IO the •• woWd qmlUoa the ~·1 DWI ..
SH WOMEN Mel A1
!
•
· ..
Daily Pilot
. .
Safurday, Af>ril 20, 200'l Al I
Ferraro fires up Hoag Hospital~ Circle 1000 bntnch crowd
A I want to talk about the cost ot health care. If
Medicare 4Dd private msurance do not cover my
persoi:W medical bills, I can
afford to pay for the health
care I need What happens to
thme who can't?•
Genldine Ferraro -1984
candidate for vice president of
the United States, attorney,
author, international policy
expert and cancer patient -
addressed an overOow crowd
at the 15th annual Circle 1000
Pounders Brunch in support ot the Hoag Hospital Cancer
Center. Fighting an ongoing
battle against multiple myelo-
ma., a cancer similar to
leukemia, Ferraro came to
Newport Beach last week to
share her story and to send
the message that cancer is not
•a death sentence.•
The breakfast event, held
at the Pour Seasons Hotel in
Newport Beach, sold oµt with
a waiting list. Oose to
$500,000 was raised by orga-
n.i7.ers, including Cirde 1000
founder Sandy Sewell and
Chairwoman Hylea Bertea.
Ardent supporters attend-
ing the meeting included
John and Prances Applegate,
Ronnie Allumbaup. Barbara
Bowle, Marpret BUddng-
ham, Dort Calllouette, Pat
Cox. Ruth Feoenteln. Arden
flamaon, Lula and Marton
Hallacre, Nora Hester, Ann
Howard, Jim and Nora
Johnson, and Marie-France
Lefebvre.
Ferraro's comment on
health ca.re costs sent a chill
through the ballroom filled
with doctors, health care pro-
fessionals and people facing
dilemmas of care versus cost.
Both inside and outside the
city limits of this wealthy
coastal community, thou-
sands of people a.re unable
to balance the scales of ca.re
versus cost.
Ferraro attempted to
human.iz.e the crisis.
I
THE CROWD
"I have been working
in health care issues for dec-
ades,• she said "They we:e
always issues about other
people. Now it's about me.•
The erudite politician who
grew up in New York City
and was raised by her moth-
er and a dose knit Catholic
community of nuns added,
·All of a suddon, govern-
ment policy on health care
has become personal.•
Ferraro was diagnosed
with cancer in December
1998. She shared her personal
shock, experienced by many
cancer patients when they
learn of their illness. Ferraro
was told that her cancer was
incurable.
"Thank God it's me and
not one of my children,•
Ferraro told the Hoag assem-
blage. "This was my very first
response to the news. Then I
thought. why me? Cancer is
not in my family.·
Her doctors wanted
Ferraro to immediately goon
heavy doses of steroids. The
no-nonsense attorney who is
paid respectable sums to
advise multinational corpora-
tions on policy admitted that
she avoided the doctors'
advice because she was
going on a family vacation.
•All my clothes looked really
good,· shared Ferraro, as the
crowd JOmed her in laughter.
Eventually, the steroids
would help fight the cancer,
but the side effects would also
Prom Jett, Katte Flamaon. Arden Flumon, Leslie Moore
and Blllle Flamson at the 15tb annual Circle 1000
Founden Bnmch.
be dramatic.
"They are mood altering,
and~ I couldn't stand
me,• she said
1be steroid treabnent was
just the beginning. Ferraro
underwent stem cell trans-
plants. It was surgery or death.
"I'm a lucky woman.• she
said. "I have the best doctors. I
was diagnosed early. And l
have an incredible support
system in my husband. family,
co-workers, friends and
associates.•
Ferraro was quick to point
out that most people a.re not
so fortunate.
"Every day I consider my
life more of a blessing. What
happens next, only God
knows, and she's not
telling,· mused Ferraro,
moving on to tackle such
issues as delays in Food and
Drug Administration
approval of new drugs.
"It takes two to seven
years for a new drug to be
approved,• she said. "We
must improve the process.•
Ferraro added that there
is increased hope in the fact
that Tommy Thompson. who
is overseeing the FDA. has a
wife suffering from breast
cancer.
The biggest issue of. the
address centered on the role
of big insurance companies in
funding what is known as
"evolving treatment.• In
other words, many seriously
ill patients need experimental
treatment that is not necessar-
ily approved, based largely on
cost factors.
•Private profit can not
override public good..·
Ferraro said.
Major underwriters of the
presentation were 'Julia and
George Argyos, Ginny and
Peter Ueberroth, Ua and
Victor Assad, Susan Bartlett
and Edouard de Umbur1J,
Sandy and Ron Uvtngston.
Hyla and Rk:bard Bertea.
Sandy Sewell and Arden
flamson. attending the break-
fast with family and dose
friends, who included daugh-
ter-in-laws Btllle and
KafhJeen Flam.son, and
daughter Leslie Moore, as
well as Julie Terry, Suzy
Metcalfe, Rita Getzelman and
Robin 1\uner.
Major applause rose from
the ranks as Ginny Ueberrotb
advised the breakfast that
Arden Aamson and her team
Fresh
Bawallan
Ahl Tuna Flllet
$14951b.
Mr. and Mn. Patrick
Hamilton ot Newport Beach
announce the engagement
of their d4ughter Lesley
Maureen HmJri1ton ot New-
port Beoch to Everett
Cameron Powell m of
Tuscaloosa, Ala.
The bride-to-be graduated
from Corona del Mar High
School and USC.
The groom-to-be is the son
of Mr. and Mm. B.C. Powell
Jr. ot Tuscalooaa. Ala., and
graduated from Centr8l High
School and the University of
Alabama.
A May 18 wedding and reception are planned at
Pelican Hill GoJf Oub In Newport Coast
of fund-raisers had reached
$46.5 million toward a goal of.
$.SO million to f\md the
Women's Health Center at
Hoag.
·And in less than two
years,• confided a modest. yet
proud, Flam.son in a private
moment
Ferraro ended the presen-
tation by sharing that her
Can•dlen
cancer is in remission and
WIShing the same for any and
all listening who might also
be fighting the disease. 1be
upbeat and classy lady is tes-
tament to what good people
can do when they set their
minds to lofty goals.
•THE a.owl> appears Thursdays
and Saturdays.
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' Al2 SG!utdoy: Apr! 20, 2002 DATEBOOK
• • •
IFTll IOllS
• Submit APm NCMMI 1t9mS to
tM O.lly Piiot, 130 w. Bay St. CCSta Mes.. (A 92627; t7/ fu to {949)
646-4170: °' bit calflng (949) 574-4261. A complete llst Is rnlt.ble at ~dM/)'pllotcom.
SPICllL
'OtlW:
The Orange County p~ will bolt ·Cbeva1
-Imaginatien at Pun Gallop•
through ~y at 88 Pair Drive. Cotta Mesa. The *7w ol equelbilln artiltry, ae8ted
by the former dnctor d ~
ation fm Orque du SOlei1, will
be held at 8 p.m. today through
Priday, 4 and 8 p.m. Satwday,
and 1:30 and 5 p.m. Sunday.
~. (877) 528-0111.
'
OPERA AND FOOD
Stpgers from the Opera
Pacific Resident Artist
Program will perform at
Gustaf Anders at 6:30 p.m.
Tuesday. Soprano Rachel
Cobb, mezzo soprano Silvia
Vasquez, mezzo soprano
Stephanie Woodling, tenor
Chad Berlingbierl, baritone
Andrew Fernando and
pianist Catherine Miller-
Popovic will perform at the
restaurant, 3851 S. Bear St.,
Santa Ana. There is no cover
charge. (714) 668-1737.
Orange Cout College'• Dance Department will present lta 39tb annual Student Dance Concert at 8 p.m. today
at the Robert B. Moore Theatre, 2701 Patrvtew Road, Costa Mesa. $9 or $12. (714) 432-5880.
HEALING AND ART
Cleo Parker Robinson. found-
ing director of the Cleo
Parker Robinson Dance
Ensemble in Denver, will
give a lecture . titled •The
Healing Power of the Arts• at
noon Wednesday at UC
Irvine's Winifred Smith Hall.
The lecture is part of the
Chancellor's Distinguished
Fellows Serles. The campus is
at the comer of University
and Campus drives in Irvine.
Free. (9-49) 824-2187.
'PANDORA'S BOX'
Storytelling ensemble Tales
and Scales will present
•Pandora'i Box• at 11 a.m.
and 1 p.m. April 21 as part of
the Saturdays at the Center
series. Performances will be
held at the Orange County
Performing Arts Center, 600
Town Center Drive, Costa
Mesa. $8. (114) 556-2181.
MUSIC
'DEAD MAN WALKING'
Opera Pacific will present
•Dead Man Walking" today
through Sunday at the
Orange County Performing
Arts Center, 600 Town Center
Drive, Costa Mesa. Show
times are 7:30 p.m. today and
2 p.m. Sunday. $25-$125.
(714) 740-7878.
--Did You Know1
-That we are a full service nursety with qualified
California Certified Nursef)' Profsionals and landscape
desipfs. We can meet all of your 9rdening needs.
Come in today to 1't1net"'4 Nurseries and let us show
you how.'
INDULGE IN DVORAK MORE DVORAK
The Pacific Symphony The Pacific Symphony
Orchestra will present a con-Orchestra will present a con-
cert titled ·0vorak in ' -cert titled •0vorak's New
America -Chamber Music,• World• as part of the Dvorak in
as part of the Dvorak in America festival, at 8 p.m.
America festival, at 3 p.m. Wednesday and Thursday at
today and 7:30 p.m. Sunday the Orange County
at the Orange County Performing Arts Center, 600
Performing Arts Center's Town Center Drive, Costa
Pounders Hall, 600 Town Mesa. $21-$56. (114) 876-2383.
Center Drive, Costa Mesa.
$10-$34. (114) 876-2383. EROICA TRIO
The Orange County
MUSIC AT BORDERS Perfo~ Center will
Joseph Ya.sha.r will play clas-conclude its 2~ Concert
sical guitar at 2 p.m. today at Series with a performance by
Borders Books, Music & Cafe, the Grammy-nominated
South Coast Plaza, 3333 Bear Eroica Trto at 7:30 p .m.
St., Costa Mesa. At 2 p.m. Thursday in Founders Hall,
Sunday, Mark Bosserman 600 Town Center Drive,
will play pop music. Free. Costa Mesa. The mo will per-
(714) 432-7854. form Beethoven's Trio in B-
lllm1we'vlgottle
perfllctpla b' ~
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PURNITURE
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• Custom-Made Purniture
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TIPS TO SAVE FOR
BUYING YOUR FIRST
HOME
A welkooceived financial plan
can &ive you the modvatioo to
save, but .what about the ICtUal
discipline needed to put money
aside for buyina you dram bcxne?
Here are some tips to aet you
heldcd down the riaht pldt.
Pay younelf fint. Set up a
moolhly draft from Y9W cbcainJ
ICQ)UDt wbicb pa automatically
invested in your biOteraae or
savings account. By treatioa
llviqs U I mandatory obli.111iOO.
Jike a replar bill, you woo 't
squander would-be 11vin1• on
thinp you can do witbouc.
~t your "found money" to
work. When you sec l bump In
pay, receive a tax refund or (mbb
payioa oo car or lt'Udeat loua,
divert thi• "found 11,KlMY" into
your avinp. You won'• die
moaey ii wu not pre.viOUtly
1v1dablc for speodifta. Put it to
work to accelerate 10'"
invtttmentl ~ lld ii Will
IOOn be avli.lable to help you bay
~ ctr.n bomel
1.Jleea and Jeff ha•• ~o
cora:llitt ,.. " -.... ......... • Newpalt llid:
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~
flat major, Martinu's Cinq
pieces breves and Schubert's
Trio in E-flat major. $40. (714)
740-7878.
HOPE, FAITH Ii MUSIC
The Pacific Chorale will pre·
sent "Hope, Paith, Life, Love .
. . • at 1 p.m. April 28 at the
Orange County Performing
Arts Center, 600 Town Center
Drive, Costa Mesa. The con-
cert will include perfor-
mances by the Pacific
Chorale and the Pacific
Chorale Children's Chorus.
$16-$50. (714) 662-2345.
LATIN MUSIC
Orange Coast College's Wind
Ensemble will present the
"Music of Latin America• at 3
p.m. April 28 in the Robert B.
"The Tea Room"
at
The Village Fanner
Rataunnt
I Pason.slly would like
to lnolt. I/OU to ulew the
Tea Room and unique
g{ft ~Uque and efl)oy
II COIJ'Pllmen~
cook le. ~ ,..~
SEAFOOD l!STAUk.ANT ec OYSTlll IAR
Rtir~e.
/(//,6£,-
Lunch I DlnMr s 1410 s1 7m
/;>n;"'" r,,~ CJ~ /)N,.,.
•1(,AQ
--cu ... , ......... ., .
Moore Theatre, 2701 PainieW
Drive. COit.a MM&. $10, or S8
in advenoe. (71•) 432-5880.
WINO CONCERT
Irvine V~ey College Will
pretent a pertormanoe by the
WJnd Symphony at 8 p.m;
April 29 at the Irvine Barclay
Theatre, •242 Campus Drlve,
Coeta Mesa. S6 or $8. (949)
451-5100.
PAQUrTO D'RMRA
PERFORMS
Grammy Award~wtnner
Paquito D'Rivera. a saxophone
and clarinet player, and bis
sextet will perfOIDl May 3 and
.C at the Orange County
Performing Arts Center as part
of the 2001--02 Scott's Seafood
Jazz Club Series. Show ttmea
are 7:30 and 9:30 p.m. $39 or
$46. (714) 740-7878.
ULA DOWNS
Ula Down1 will bring her
fusion 'of Mexican and
American singing styles at 8
p.m. May 3 to the Irvine
Barclay Theatre as part of the
Philharmonic Society of
Orange County's World
Stages Serles. The Barclay is
at 4242 Campus Drive, Irvine.
$24 or $28. (949) 553-2422.
REMINGTON CONDUCTS
Alan Remington will conduct
the Orange Coast College
Symphony Orchestra in a per-
f.ormance at 1 :30 p.m. May 5
at the college's Robert B.
Moore Theatre, 2701 Fairview
Roed, Costa Mesa. $10, or $6
in advance. (71.C) 432-5880.
WEEKLY JAM
The Studio Cafe presents
Monday Night Jams from 1 to
11 p.m. every ·week.
"Wanted• musicians include
guitar players, bass players,
singers, drummers, key-
boardists and others at 100
Main St., Newport Beach.
Free. (949) 675-1160.
SEE HOURS PAGE A13
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MUSIC AT THE ANNEX
MUsicol acts perfonn at 5
pJ:D.; Sundays at the Pierce
Street Annex, 330 17th St.,
Costa Mesa. Pree. (949) 646-
8500.
MUSIC AT THE GRJU
The Bluewater Grill offers live
music on Friday and Saturday
nigb'3. Greg Morgan, Nick
Peper and Kelly Gordten
(known as MPG) will perf onn
classic rock,~&B and swing
at 8:30 p .m. Fridays. Marvin
Gregory and MPG will per-
form classic rock, swing and
R&J3 at 8:30 p.m. Saturdays.
The r~taurant is located at
630 Udo Parle Drive, Newport
Beach. Free admission. (949)
675-3474.
WEEKEND BLUES
Anthony's Riverboat
Restama.nt in Newport Beach
will present The Balboa Blues
on Friday and Saturday
evenings and Sunday after-
noons. The program will fea-
ture jazz and classic rock
tunes for dining and dancing.
Anthony's is at 151 E. Coast
Highway. (949) 673-3425.
POP-ROCK AND FLAMENCO
Tate 5, a funk, rock and
Motown act, perfonns at 9
p.m. Saturdays at Carmelo's
Ristorante, 3520 E. Coast
Highway, Corona del Mar.
Solo guitanst Ken Sanders
perlorms classical flamenco
tunes at 7:30 p.m. Tuesdays
and Sundays. Free. (949) 675-
1922.
SATURDAY NIGHT R&B
Gerald Ishibashi and the
Stone Bridge Band play rock
and R&B at 9 p.m. Saturdays
at Sutton Place Hotel's
Trianon Lounge, 4500
MacArthur Blvd., Newport
Beach. Free. (949) 476-2001.
SENfOR aNTER AFTERNOON
A aeven-pteoe group plays
big band tunes from 1 :30 to
3:30 p.m. Fridays at Oam
Senior Center, 800
Marguerite Ave., Corona del
Mar. $4, (949) 644-3244.
STIGI
'THE DAZZLE'
South Coast Repertory will
present Richard Gt'eenbeJV'•
"The Dazzle" through April
28 on the Second Stage, 655
Town Center Drive, Costa
Mesa The story is about the
Collyer brothers, bow rubbish
fills their home and how
lifestyles change. Show t:bnes
are 7:45 p.m. Tuesday through
Friday, and 2 and 7:45 p.m.
Saturday and Sunday. $27-
$51. (714) 708-5555.
'GETTING FRANKIE MARRIED'
South Coast Repertory will
present Horton Foote's
"Getting Frankie Married -
And Afterwards" through
May 5 on the Mainstage at
655 Town Center Drive, Costa
Mesa. Show times are 8 p.m.
Tuesday through Friday, 2:30
and 8 p.m. Saturday, and 2:30
and 7:30 p.m. Sunday. $19·
$52. (714) 708·5555
DAU AND DRAMA
"References to Salvador Dali
Make Me Hot,• Jose Rivera's
dramatic fable, will be staged
at Orange Coast College
through Sunday at the Drama
Lab Studio, 2701 Fairview
Road, Costa Mesa. Show
times are 8 p.m. today, and 2
and 7 p .m. Sunday. $5 or $6.
(714) 432-5640, Ext. 1.
'YOUNGMAN'
Horton Foote's "The Young
Man From Atlanta• will appear
at the Newport Theatre Arts
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1'
DATEBOOK
'SWiii LAii'
'EXPOSED'
Beth Henley'• •Expoeec:l• will
be read al 3 p.m. April 26 as
part of South Coast Repertory's
Padfic Playwrights Festival
The play is centered around
Winter Solltk:e tn Loi Angeles.
SCR is at. 6SS Town Center
Drive, Costa Mesa. S8. (71•)
108-5555.
'INTIMATE APPAREL'
A reading of •1ntimaie
Apparel• by Lynn Nottage
will be held at 10:30 a.m .
April 27 as part of South
Coast Repertory's Pacific
Playwrights Festival. An
African American woman
falls in love tllrough the mail
at the tum of the 20th century
in this new play. SCR is at 655
Towe Center Drive, Costa
Mesa. $8. (714) 708-5555.
'TRUTH AND BEAUTY'
A reading of Steven
Drukman's •Truth and
Safvrday, April 20, 2002 Al3
which tells tho story of a fut·
tAlklllg con man wbo faDJ in
love with a librarian, will play
at the Center, 600 Town
Center Drive, through May S.
Performances will be 8 p.m.
Tuesday through Saturday, 2
p m. Saturday a.nd Sunday,
and 7:30 p.m. Sunday. $20-
$55. (71.4) 556-2787.
'JOHN BROWN'S BODY'
Orange Coast College's
Theatre Department will pre·
sent •John Brown's Body,• a
Civil War story based on a
Stephen Vincent Beo et
poem, May 2-5 and 9-12 at
OCC's Drama Lab Theatre,
2701 Fairview Road, Costa
Mesa. Show times are 8 p .m.
Thursday through Saturday
and 2 p.m. Sunday $7-$10.
(714) 432-5880
ART
STORYTEUER
Square Blue Art Inc. at
Bradford Gallery will present
"Storyteller,· a show featur-
i
Amertam Ballet Theatre's Julie Kent and New York
City Ballet's Damian Woet.iel will guest star In Pesttval
Ballet Theatre's producUon of .. Swan lake" on Frlday
and April 27 at Orange Coast College. Performances
will be held at 8 p.m. Prlday and 2:30 p.m. Aprtl 27 ln
the Robert B. Moore Theatre, 2701 Pat.rvtew Jload,
Costa Mesa. $17-$20. (714) 432-5880, Ext. 1.
Center, 2501 Cliff Drive,
Newport Beach, through
Sunday. Tue play, which won
the 1995 Pulitzer Prize, chroni-
cles the lives of a couple subject
to a con after their grown son
commits suicide. Show times
are 8 p.m. today and 2:30 p.m.
Sunday. $13. (949) 631-0288.
tells the story of a prostitute in
a pre-revolutionary Chinese
village. Show times are 8 p.m.
today, Thursday and Friday;
and 2 and 8 p.m. April 27. $15
or $13. (949) 824-2189.
Beauty• will be held at 2 p.m.
April 27 at the Westin South
Coast Plaza's Mesa Verde
Room. 686 Anton Blvd., Costa
Mesa, as part of South Coast
Repertory's Pacific Playwrights
Festival. The play centers on
four college friends who are
still close 10 years after gr a du -
abon. $8. (714) 708-5555.
ing the work of Mexican-born •
artist Laura Siqueiros, through
Wednesday. Gallery hours are
noon to 6 p.m. Thursday
through Sunday or by
appomtment (949) 548-1101.
'THE GOOD PERSON
OF SZECHUAN'
The Irvine Barclay Theatre
will present the political play
"The Good Person of
Szechuan• through April 27
at 4242 Campus Drive, Irvine.
T h e
musical/comedy/romance
'99 HISTORIES'
A reading of Julia Cho's "99
Histories" will be held at 1
p.m. Apnl 26 on South Coast
Repertory's Mamstage as part
of the Pacific Playwrights
Festival. The play is about a
Korean woman who con-
fronts her family's past. SCR
is at 655 Town Center Drive,
Costa Mesa. $8. (714) 708·
5555.
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'OUR BOY'
Julia Jordan's "Our Boy • will
be read at 11 a.m. Apnl 28 as
part of South Coast
Repertory's Paafic
Playwrights Festival. The
play deals with disaster in a
young man's life. SCR is at
655 Town Center Dnve, Costa
Mesa. $8. (714) 708-5555.
'THE MUSIC MAN'
Trouble comes to the Orange
County Performing Arts
Center on April 30 with "The
Music Man.• The musical,
INDEPENDENT
LAND ROVER
INNOCENT ART
"Innocents,• a multimedia
exhibit by Wendy Marvel. will
be on display through Fnday
at Orange Coast College's
Photo Gallery, 2701 Fauview
Road, Costa Mesa. The gallery
is m OCC's Fine Arts Building
Hours are 8 a.m. to 10 p.m.
Monday through Wednesday.
10 a.m. to 10 p.m. Thursday, 9
a.m. to 5 p.m. Friday, and 10
a m. to 4 p.m. Saturday Free
(714) 432-5520.
SEE HOURS PAGE A14
(~w.~ING)
R ES TA URANT
Join us for our new
Sunday Champagne Brunch!
Introducing our Ntw Gourmet
Bufftt Stylt Brunch Mtnu!
• Eggs Bentdict &. Omtlettr Bar
• Smokrd SausagtS &. Siclf Disha
• Fresh Seafood & Pasta
• Ham Cuving Station
• Fmh Fruit & Salad Bar
• Gounnrt DtSKrts & Cttpa
Adults: $12.95 Childttn.: $11.95
PIH w and Jlllt11ity
Call Today for Reservations
W11atr.1 Sama A~• Ea;., 1111 ...al °'11illt hoe
949-675-2373
503 E. Eqtwater • Ntwport Beach
Newport-Landing.com
FIJTB ANNtJAL
Newport Harbor HJgh School
Home & Garden Tour
Thursday May 2, Dl2
10AM -3PM
Vtew slX spectaC:uW hOmes and two beautiful p,rdensl
'nc.kets are $45.00 each md avalbble at
The Butera Home Coll«tton (949.650.8570). 1745 W'5tcliff Dr.
Ntldtt Twigs (949.642.8944). 660 W. 11th St
(QU6oset hUtJ oat to Trider ~'s)
Faahloo Island~. Atrmai Court
Par 1DOR tnlonmtlOD QD 949.451.4701
• ..
. . .
"' .
,.
•
•
DATEBOOK
HOURS p.in. Monday through
ThWlday and 1:30 to 9 p.m.
CONTINUED FROM A13 ~~n:r· tree. (7t4) 432•
the college'• Winifred Smith
l'{jlll. Performances will be
held at 8 p.m. Thunday
through AprU 21, with a 2
p .m. matinee April 21. 1be
campus ii at the comer of
Campus 8nd University drl·
ves iJi J.rvine. $1-$9. (9'9)
824.-2181.
UF£, ART a KARAOKE
•Lee Bui: Uve Forever," an
in.st41latlon by Korean artist
Lee Bul consisting of video
and three karaoke booth.a,
will be exhibited through
M!lY 5 at the Orange County
Museum of Art, 850 San
Clemente Drive, Newport
Beach. Museum hours are 11
o.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesday
through Sunday. $5 'for
a<lults, $4 for seniors and stu-
dents, and free for members
and children younger than
16. (949)159-1122.
'LOST IN FRAGRANQ'
#Lost in PragTance, # recent
work by Brad Durham, will
be on display at Art
Resources Group, 3032 E.
Coast Highway, Corona del
Mar, through May 1 O.. The
gallery is open to the public
from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Monday through Friday and
11 a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturday.
Free. (949) 640-1972.
JURIED SHOW
Orange Coast College will
display a juried student
exhibit through May 16 at the
college's Art Gallery, 2701
Fairview Drive, Costa Mesa.
The exhibit of work by 59
OCC students is being curat-
ed by Irini Vallera-Rickerson.
Gallery hours are 11 a.m . to 3 ·
Orgd.nic A11 Plants
l 69 N. CilassclJ
(ltd Tuwnc Or:ut®
fformrrl.v Bullrmip Tr.11 i'.oUl\A;'J)
(i 14) 289-0222
l~Jrn l>:til." !J.:i·pm \\'Ww.or~u11<~>laul~ron1 z •
ELMER RETROSPECTIVE
The Orange County Museum
of Art will present •Tue Art of
Elmer Bischoff," a retr01pec-
tive of the artist who helped
launch the Bay Area BYU BALLET
Figurative Movement, Brigham Youn~ University
through May t9•at the muse-Theatre Ballet will present
um, 850 San Oemente Drive, "Goldilock's Adventure• at
Newport Beach. Museum 7:30 p.m. May 1 in the Irvine
hours are 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Barclay Theatre, 42-t2
Tuesday through Sunday. $5 . Campus Drive, ~e. $12 for
for adults, $4 tot senion and ~dren, $18 for adwta. (949)
students, and free for me.m-85-4·4646. '
bers • and children younger
than 16. (949) 759·1122. FIESTA LATINA
qrange Coast College will
present its third annual Fiesta
Latina at 10 a.m. and noon
May 3 at the Robert B. Moore
Theatre, 2701 Fairview Road,
Costa Mesa. The dance and
cultural heritage outreach
event will perform one-hour
shows for elementary and
high school students and
community members. Pree.
(714) 432-5506, Ext. 4.
SUSTAINABLE
ARCHITECTURE
The Orange County Museum
of Art will present •Ten
Shades of Green," an exhibit
on sustainable architecture,
through June 30 at the muse-
um, 850 San Clemente Drive,
Newport Beach. Museum
hours are 11 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Tuesday through Sunday. $5
for adults, $4 for seniors and
students, and free for mem-
bers and children younger
than 16. (949) 759-1122.
DANCE
'DANCE ESCAPE'
"Dance Escape," new works
by UC Irvine gTaduate chore-
ographers, will be staged
Thursday through April 27 at
J ;,;,Our \,·11·
<JR I\(,/.
I. fl< ·utio11.1
FREE
In-Home Consultation
Garden design with unique
and old-.f.ashioncd pcrrcnials is
our spcci1lty.
Custom orders and home •
dd(vcry arc available. Call
Gregg Davila, owner, at (714)
838-1985 schedule a free in-
homc consultation for planter
beds, containers and hanging
baskets.
CARPET
$19~:
LIFETIME
WARRANTY
LIFETIME
WARRANTY
SENIOR BAUROOM
Ballroom dancing to the music
of the Costa. Mesa Music
Makers is offered from 1 :30 to
10:30 p.m. Tuesdays at Costa
Mesa Senior Center, 695 W.
19th St. $4. (949) 548-3884.
DANSCENE STUDIO
Ballroom dancing is offered
at 8 p.m. on the first Friday of
CASO
NEW'WMU< -5169"
LONDON _5345·
HAWAII _5349·
1'000 -5369.
-· HONG ICDNG-5459.
-RIO _5495·
LIFETIME
WARRANTY
LIFETIME
WARRANTY
t00% FREE
60 DAY EXCHAllE
Costa Mesa
1949) 650·7676
124 E. ·17th
each month at Damcene
Studio, 2980 McClintock
Way, Costa Mesa. S10. {114)
&U-8688.
ING IAND DANCING
An 4ftemoOn ot dancing to
blg band music ta ottered
from 1:30 to 3:30 p.m. Prida.ys
at Ouil Senior Centm, 800
Marguerite Ave., Corona del
Mat. Coffee and other
refreshments are served.
(949) 644-3244.
ARGENTINE TANGO
Tango dancing is offered
from 8 p.m. to 12:30 a.m. on
the first Saturday of each
month ot Dan.scene Studio,
2980 McClintock Way, Costa
Mesa. (714) 641-8688.
KIDS
STARLIGHT STORIES
Children 3 to 1 are invited to
participate in songs and fin-
ger puppet plays at 7 p.m.
Mondays at the Costa Mesa
Library, 1855 Park Ave. (949)
646-8845.
PJS AND BOOKS
A children's story time is pre-
sented at 7 p.m. Mondays
and 10:30 a.m. Saturdays at
the Newport Beach Central
Library, 1000 Avocado Ave.
Children may wear pajamas
to the evening sessions. Free.
(949) 717-3801.
WEEKLY STORYTELLER
A children's story time is held
_5745·
~~ .... -574T
AUCICLAND -S795"
SYDHEY -5795"
r
"'
ot 10:45 a .m. WednesC:tays at
Barnes & Noble Booksellers
at Metro Pointe, 901-B South
Coast Drive, Costa Mesa.
(714) «4-0226.
SlORYTIME
A child.ten's story time will be
beld at 10 a.m. Wedn~ays
and 10:15 o.m. Fridays at
Borders Books & Music at
South Coost Plaza, 3333 Bear
St., Co6t4 Mesa. Free. {114)
432-7854.
10015
'THE INHERrrANCE'
Barbara Olson, author of
··The Inheritance," Will sign
copies of her mystery novel at
t p.m. April 21 at Borders
Books, Music & Cafe, South
Coast Plaza, 3333 Bear St.,
Costa Mesa. Free. (714) 432-
7854.
GROUP FICTION,
The Fiction Book Group
meets at 1 p.m . on the second
Wednesday of each month at
Barnes & Noble Booksellers
at Fashion Island, 953
Newport Center prive,
Newport Beach. Free. (949)
759-0982.
OPRAH BOOK CLUB
The Oprah Book Club dis-
cusses Oprah Winfrey's most
recent selections at 1 p .m. on
the third Thursday of each
month at Barnes & Noble
Booksellers at Fashion Island,
<
953 Newport Center Drive,
Newport Beech. (9-69) 159·
0982 ..
DINING/1ASTING
lWIUGHT DINING
A twilight dining menu, fea-
turinq dishes sueh as chicken
pamuglana and calamari
picante at reduced prices,· is
held from 5 to 6 p.m. week·
days and 4 to 6 p.m. Sundays
at Villa Nova Restaurant,
3131 W. Coast Highway,
N~rt Beach. (949) 642-
7880. --WINETAmNGS
Hi-Time Wine Cellars offers
wine tastings from 4:30 to 8
p.m. Prtdays and 1:30 ~ 8
p.m . Saturdays. (949) 650·
8463. .
SUNDAY BRUNCH
A Sunday brunch, featuring
international seafood and
salad buffets, roasts carved to
order and breakfast favorites,
is held from 10:30 a .m. to 2
p.m. Sutton Place Hotel, 4500
MacArthur Blvd., Newport
Beach. $30; $40 with cham-
pagne. (949) 476-2001.
CLUBS
ALTA COFFEE
Musical acts perform at 8:30
p .m . Thursdays through
Saturdays at Alta Coffee
House, 506 31st St., Newport
Beach. (949) 675-0233.
with your next
din.ner.
_Mouth-watering .entr~es, a
relaxed dining atmosphere
and patio seating with a
delightful view of Newport
Bay make for a refreshing break in your day. O~
from 7:00 AM, 7 days a week.
(949) 729-1144
"NOw Open For Dinner'
Thunclay-Sunday
-
• . .
• DOily Pilot
'
..
WOMEN
CONTINUED FROM A10
•1t wa j\Bl IUJ>PCl'e<l to
e1ICt& tbal 19pclO!lie you see in ---no.· she said. ·vou
.. an ideal waman tn a com-~ ortn any kind of
~.and you don't get
Ill~ from that woman.
n..rt wbat I'm bytng to pin-
~ and thara what bothers
JD&.
The lleCXJDd wan ot
•fnnocw>ta• featwes black
and White pbotol ci women ot
different 111ge1 and from differ-
eot time periods. These women are clothed. with ,
deuer fadal features and a
sttu:.ger sense of identity. But
even these images, which
Marvel found at different
families' garage sales, leave
the question of time and place
uoamwered
•n starts to be an objective
point of view,• Marvel said.
•The viewers read it in the
same way they would my
wax ftgure because there isn't
a sense of identity. They're
idealized and objective in the
way that you can't tell who
these people are.·
A common theme in this
part of •1nnocents• is the use
of half-burnt match sticks lin·
ing each photo. Matches com-
monly represent a spent life
or a life lived, Marvel said.
•And through the use of
oombining that imagery, of
the ma.tcmticks and the
imDges of the women. l want-
ed to aboW the progression ol
that child's innocence into woman.. she said.
A signature touch in
Marvel'a work is her use of
blush makeup in wax. Wax is
used in art to elicit a feeling of
Oesh, she said When she
sweeps blush across the vis-
ceral surlace, it br1ngs the
material IDm'e to life.
When asked why she cares
about bow the female form is
used. Mazvel said it's simply
because she's a woman.
·1 just started thln!dng
about my position in society
and bow I was raised and
how I view myself in compari-
son to what Western civiliu-
tion bas told me I should be,•
said the artist whose compa-
ny, SlendeJfungus, designs
Web sites, merchandise and
other products for clients that
include Alanis Morissette and
Sinead O'Connor.
Chuck Nicholson. acting
photo gallery director at OCC,
discovered an earlier exhibit
by Marvel in Santa Monica
and invited •1nnocents• to the
school
•1 was looking for someone
that was doing something a
little out of the ordinary It's
not obvious. It takes some
thought,• be said of her work.
·Some students tend to look
at rt and don't know what
exactly it means to begin
with, but are in~ed by it.•
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l
DATEBOOK
DALI
CONTINUED FROM A10
they alternate with Jessica Teter and
Chm Meditz. 1roia brtng1 a splen.did
feline sensUallty to her performance,
while Lash Uud.es p4.SSionate cama.l
energy u ti. pursues his domestic4t·
ed companion.
Vincent Torres Jt compl~ the
cast as the 14•year-old neighbor with
raging hormones and sexual designs
on the much older (and married)
DVORAK
CONTINUED FROM A 10
•1 didn't think he could be more
majestic than his recordings, but he
took the audience to a whole new
world with bis playing,• Eldredge said
She and Rostropovkb go way back.
As a S.year-<>ld listening to his record-
ings, she knew she wanted to make
the cello sound as beautifOI as he did.
At age 12, she got to meet and play for
him impromptu at the Kennedy Center
in Washington, D.C. Over the years,
the two cellists pedonned together a
number of times around the oountry.
The story of Eldredge's origins with
the cello is just as fated.
Since the age of 3, the acclaimed
cellist was actually known in her fami·
ly as a pianist. She came from a musi-
cal family of many pianists, and her
parents felt strongly that she should
stick with the instrument.
At age 9, she ran away from home,
albeit for a day, and insisted after
returning that she wanted to join the
string orchestra at school
Her parents, willing to agree after
the runaway incident, took her to a
violin shop to buy her a violin. There
were none left. Eldredge bad a choice
between the bass and the cello. The
former was too big, so she went with
the latter.
AT NltWPORT EAST
u
Gabrtela. Torres succeafully projects
• }'OUllgeT image and • vtrgina1
curiosity u he tempt. bis ~PY
neighbor.
Vlnu:nont• bas fuhioned an
exceptional production m tbe limited
dimensions ot OCC'• Drama Lab
Studio, where scenlc backdrops
(nicely designed by Martina McCrea)
must be hauled in and out of the the--
at.er to establish the play's particular
mood. One nice touch is
Vonderschmitt's Salvador Dall mus-
ta.che, flared up in bis first acene, but
drooping downward as daylight
'" • WHAT: "Dvorak and the American
Indian"
•WHEN; 3 p.m. today
• WHERE.: Orange County Performing
Arts Center, 600 Town Center Drive,
Costa Mesa
•COST: $20 or $10
• CALL: (714) 755-5799
• WHAT: "Dvorak and Plantation Song"
., had found the instrument that
desaibed my c:haract.er and I could
relate with, and I oould express my
voice through It really well,• Eldredge
said.
· lbe Dvorak festival oontinues today
with a concert titled •Dvorak and the
American Indian,• which will higbli ht
how Native· American folk music ~
enced the Bohemian composer.
Sunday, a program titled "Dvo~
and Plantation Song• will show how
Abican American spirituals influenced
Dvorak's works.
Wednesday's concerts will close the
festival with a performance of
·0vorak's New World,• Eldredge play-
ing Herbert's ooncerto and contempo-
rary composer George Chadwick pre-.
senting his own work, which was influ-
enced by Dvorak.
·we're trying to, every year, do a
festival either about an American com-
poser or someone who was influential
nean in the aeoond, wbk:b may be
aedJted to OJICu&e aod makeup
designer JtaQifer Rog ...
•R.eference1 to Salvador Dali
Make Me Hot• ii a labor of love few
director Viramontes, who was on ltal1
at South Coast Repertory when the
play premiered a few seasons ago
and spearheaded lb production at
OCC. She bas created • IMmlual and
dramatically involving production.
• TOM 111\IS revi~ local theater for the
Daily Pilot. His revl~ appear Thursdays and
Saturdays.
• WHEN: 7:30 p.m. Sunday
• wtW: Tlle Center
•COST: S20 or $10
• CALL: (714) 755-5799
• WHAT: "Ovorak's New World"
• WHEN: 8 p.m. Wednesday and
Thursday
• WHERE: The Center
•COST: $21-$56
• CALL: (714) 755-5799
in the American c:lassica1 music world.
This time it's Dvorak,• said Chris 11ela,
symphony spokesman.
In Bohemia, Dvorak's music was
influenced by folk and traditional
music. Leading American musiaans
during the tum of the 20th century
hoped that by bringing Dvorak to the
States, be would inspire American
co~ to integrate more folk and
traditional music in their compositions
Through spending some years in
America -including time in Iowa
among Czech Americans -Dvorak
himself was influenced by traditional
spirituals and Indian motifs.
•Tue 'New World' symphony is
almost a musical story of bow be felt
about America and what be saw in
America." Trela said •There's portions
of the music that makes it seem you're
on a prairie and the wind blowing. It
really evokes images of what America
was like at the tum of the 20th century.•
House Ear Clinic
Announces its new
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714.963.4300
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...
LAGUNA BBACH -The signs of
encowagement Corona del Mar High
boys voDeybeD coach Steve Conti picked
up dwtng Tuelday'1 Padlc Coast League
loa to Northwood, lw'1\ed Prlday night
into foreboding symbols of a season
. heeded, pelbaps inetrievably, IOUth.
-Tbe Sea Kings (S-•, 3-3 in league)
... defeated, 1.S.7, 12-15, 15-8, 17-15,
};y P(:L bQtt Laguna Beach (8-5, 5-1) to
1eil two gemes back ol the second-place ~ with Just four league matches mtJ,
PurthfJ'f, the viliton, who have
•truggled to overcome their lack of
experience all season, continued to
mmmll medy unforced ert'On to sabotage
•
an otherwise inspired
effort.
•our nemesis all
season bas been
unforced errors,• Conti
said. "That's a sign of SC....... our youth, with our
only returning starter ~°'::.ct, ~ having moved to a
new position. But ..._ ___ __, we're getting to the
point where we can no longer use (inex-
perience) as an excuse. There are no
more moral victories at this point. We've
had a couple opportunities now to get
over the hump, which would really help
our ocmfidence. Sometimes tt seemed like
we couldn't get a break tonight, but,
sometimes, you have to make those
breaks happen for younelf. •
CdM, which bas been to the CIP
Southern Section division finals each of
the last five seasons, committed nine, 12
SEE COM PAGE 83
•
HIGH SOIOOl BASEBAll
Nortliw9(>d scores tluee runs in the
bott4m. of the seventh to pull out
the Pacific Coast League victory.
atvtNJr-When tt happens
'h Wdortunate. Twicef It's
Udtel~ .. N!y more than that, it's
•wu
8°"11B~wbeQ lMdlng after
or m«e bming:s. This time,
tbePtdlk Coast League-leading
NClrtln'->d11mbe:rwolves scored three runs in the
ottbe llDtb. which Included two Qilta Mesa
emn; Allld. the bolt. Northwood, won. 9-8, Priday.
TM .Mustangs' meltdown was so sad, even
Northwood Coach Rob Stuart felt sorry for Costa
~~.the New York Yankees' Mariano
~ ..Wthe2001 World Series' Game 7, would
~with the Mustangs:
•1 feel badly for (Costa Mesa Coach) Kirk
{Bauennellter), • Stuart Mid. "He's a bell ol a coach.
I really respect what he's done with his guys and
how hard they compete. Prom an outsider's
viewpoint. I feel badly for them. But as a coach I'm
glad we won.·
After the game, Bauermeister told bis players,
•rni really proud ol you,• and then he told reporters
about the Mustangs' bad luck.
•0ut ol our nine (PCL) games, we led eight of
them~ into the fifth inning,. said Bauermeister,
wbose team is 3-6 in the PCL. 9-t 1 overall. "I have
no idea how to explain it. We have led just about
f!Yf!!C'f game through five innings, and the last oouple
bmings, we get weird bops, and we get bleeders. We
haven't done a good job with the eight and nine
(batten). We walk and hit those guys. But I don't
lmow, I've never seen anything like it. It's the
ibangesl thing I've ever seen ... We just have to play
fiv.inn:ing games maybe, or something. I feel
ten1ble for our kids.•
Perllaps Mese's mountaintop-to-valley type of
game was the reason Bauermeister felt terrible.
The Mustangs displayed the essence of teenage
-
SEAN HIU.ER I ON.Y Pl.OT
SEE MU TANGS PAGE 84 Costa Mesa's Nathan Hunter llldea Into third bue lafely with a triple to left-center lleld.
DAILY PILOT HIGH SOIOOl ATHLETE OF THE WEEK
. \
Ryan lean
c~ •. ......_
ICeYta
Welda (24,,
Bart'Wekla
{12) ud .,.. ......
celebnle
ablg
momnt.
butlatlae
end. It
dldn,
happen .
fortbe
Sealangs,
whololt
to Laguna
Beach In
four
Prtclay
night.
Sea Kings
bombard.
Estancia
Sea Kings break it wide open
in the sixth (seven runs) and
seventh (12) in lopsided win.
Rk:MrdDunn
0All.Y Pk.oT
COSTA MESA -
Smpeme ftlled the air,
almgwith a pedect spdDg
breeze, until the stnb
inning Friday when
Corona del Mar High was s.. 09 23
once again introduced to a ...... 4
new best friend -the
Estancia buDpen.
After Esla.ncia senior right-bander Paul
Flory, who was limited to five innings
beause of the 10-innings-per-week rule,
gave up only two earned runs and came out
wtth,bis squad tramng by one nm.
. 1be Sea Kings broke the game open with
seven runs In the lixtb and an even dozen in
the seventh agamst three Estancia relievers
as they defeated the host Eagles, 23-.C, in
Pacific Coast League baseball.
"Yeah. we were just talldng, and tf we
played five.inning games, we'd have a lot ol
wllll, • Estancia assistant coach Mike
Scbeafer quipped between marathon
mmngs,
The Eagles (3-13-1, 1-7 in the PCL)
enjoyed a 3-1 edge after four innings, but
CdM (9-10, .C-5) raD:ied for three runs in the
fifth to take the lead. •-3, again.It Flory,
arguably the best 0-8 pild\ez anywhere.
•PJory's 0-8, but every rta.rt bu been
exoeDent, • Estanda Coach C.K. Green said
Cd.M Coach John Emme cleared his
bendl as soon as the score got out ol hand.
and what followed w a poignant moment
fOI' recent vanity call-up Andy Prenkiel. •
freshman
Prentie1. pinch-running fOI' N'JCk Karp6,
caused one ol the~ readiom flan the
SEE SEA KINGS MGE M
Tendinitis made the Newport Harbor High team captain
.. stronger and determined to make the mo.st of bis senior J!ar.
•
DMW
{Warony lncided)
93 5251 SON (175M> \'lft wiTon lh! W: ~' $12, 980
97 l.3 CONVc11a.11 Olodl wfTQ!\ lJtv Low~ Owmd Ws $19, 980
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99 3231 CQN (1767&) tiuT'f. ~CCI Ioli !fl fosl4 $ 26, 980
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98 ~ COtfl (17577) Ptfdw~lltr ~lilts! $31, 980
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00 M5 sDN c11e:ro Dlodl wr'Dlodl.16K Mlle11 Foa.Worr. $64, 980
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(Wano~ ~ded)
99 C230 (17611) W.-fl.local~Coi1 $22,980
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•
• .
SPORTS ScJeurda./, April 20, 200'l •
HIGH SOIOOl. IOYS YOU.EYIAU.
... tJniversity stops, Gosta MeSa in five in Pacific Coast League thriller
Costa Mesa Higb's boys volleyball game matcbe.. Eagl i..;..;_,. in d " ' t ~-~attled another PacUic Cout Car10e ihne led Mesa wttb 14 killll, e8 8~.. e1.e8
~u.. opponent Friday, but lOlt the lix tb:ks abd 20 cttgs, While teammet.e The l!sUanaa High boys ~ball J!ib] game against University as the Eli So.Iii added 11 kills and 23 digs and team ~ ..oae a tblrd 9111118 a.way ~1h>iansdefeatedtbeMustaogS. Jeff Collett nine bJocb. Setter Eddie from Padftc: Coast League visitor ~ .. tt, 9-15, 15-8, 5·15, 15-9. Morenobad30a.ittsand 16digswtth Nortbwood. wbidlwoutbematcb, 15,
. •We're battling everybody. We're antnjw9d~beavitytapedrig:htwl11t 6, 15-7, 15-12. Friday.
going softly Into the -·-~. • said Costa Mesa will host its annual Sophomore Josh Kornegay led Coach UJ.YUl, Estancia (4-9, o-6 in the PCL) wtth 14 Dave Sonells, whose team Alumni Match Monday night at 1 kills, while sophomore Brad Lanen ~?, 1-5. tn the PCL) is now 5-2 in five-o'clock. added five kills and four digs.
ailors remain unbeaten in. the Sea View
Nortbwoodtmproved to 14·1, 6-0. •we ~yect veryweD against~
espedally the third game,• Estuda
Coecll Tracey: Helms said. •(The
Northwood coach) bad bil DOJl-st.eJtefS
bl the third game and be bad to put bJs
starten ~ck in. We were so ~ to
taking them. lt W'AI exciting.•
The Eagles return to action
Wednesday at 3:15 p.m., playing at
Corona del Mar.
ugbtning falls .
Sage Hill Hig'h'• boy• voU~
leun dropped a IS-1, 15-', 15-7
A.~demy League dedal.Oo at St.
~'sP.rtday.
St. Margaret's, 9-0 in league,
improved to 11·3.
Sage Hill. Jed by Kevin Joyce's eight
kills, (ell to 3-8, 2-7.
NEWPORT BEACH-Newport Harbor High's
View League-leading Sailors defeated visiting ~Niguel, 15-2, 15-9, 16-18, 15-0, in a leaglie ~volleyball match Friday as the Tars improved J-.0 17-5, 5-0 in the Sea View.
• Greg Perrine led'Harbor with 13 kills, five digs
and three aces, while teammates Brian Gaeta
(nine kws), Erik Peterson (eight) and Loyd Wright
(48 assists and seven digs) conbibuted to the win.
Aliso fell to 2-8. 0-5.
Newport Harbor will play at Irvine Tuesday (6
p .m.).
·ch Would
You Choose?
fimd 11 unforced errors in the three games it lost
"Prtday. The Sea Kings had just six errors in their
:lone victory, when they saw a 12-6 lead disappear
Game 2, then scored the final three points to
edd some atmosphere into a match that that
~~J1tually created playoff intensity from both
imams, as well as their rooters.
~ •1 told our guys, there is only one way to silence
ill! hostile crowd and that's to come out with a ~· • Conti Ba.id. •we didn't do that tonight.·
,. Though failing to execute in the first and third ~es, there was no lack of effort or fortitude
the Sea Kings in the 51 ·minute fourth game ...,........,....,.,..,.
featured nine ties and 70 sideouts. f .;rnCdM jumped ahead, 5-2, before.Laguna Beach t-""tt-~~
• ed for a 6-5 lead. The match was tied at 6, 7, ....,lllP,o!IMI
THifCLASSIC THE NEWEST STAR ~and 9, before a kill by freshman Kevin Welch, ~ John Grod stuff block and a Laguna hitting ~or put the visitors up, 12-9. Cd.M went up, 14-. ftz, and bad three game points, before the Artists ~·.....,.. !oJosed out the match.
New 2000 SL SL600,
0
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J to Choose at this price. Ten '01 and '02
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Pre-owned 2003 SLSOO, Very Low Mileage
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; . •(The Artists) are a real feisty team,• Conti
;::saki. •They deserved to win.•
... : Welch and senior middle blocker Ryan Inman
~the visitors with 11 kills apiece, while senior
.John Grod added nine kills, four stuff blocks and ~1 digs. t Junior Bart Welch totaled 24 digs, six kills and ~~blocks and junior middle Brian Brinkerhoff STEVE MC CRANK I OAJLY PILOT
·lfive kills and three blocks) and Miles Younnan Corona d.el Mar's Ryan Inman puts away '(leven kills) came off the bench to add a spark. , • Junior setter Spencer Miller amassed 41 assists • an overpass In Friday nights Padflc Coast
/or CdM, which will Wcely need to win three of its ~ague match at Laguna Beacll.
Jloal four league matches to wrap up a guaranteed outside bitter Matt Anderson, who pounded 24
'CIF Division IV playoff spot. )(ills. The middle-blocking tandem of 6-1 junior
~ The Sea Kings are ranked No. 4 in Division rv, Mike Chiaverini and 6-1 sophomore ney Chapel
-but Laguna Beach is No. 3 and PCL-leading was also a big weapon for Laguna senior setter
:Nottbwood is No. 2, behind defending champion Ben Dwyer (59 assists). Chiaverini collected nine
:$anta Ynez. of bis 15 kills in the fourth game, when Chapel
'"" Laguna Beach was paced by 6-foot-4 junior tacked on seven kills to finish with 12.
RYAN•FM
happy with the way things
are going. rm going to add
moTe yards slowly (in
my training). Maybe in July
rn be up in normal training.·
"you.are training, you're like:
'ho so Ured of this. But when :ti'• gone you really start to
:miss it. (The month's rest) bas
.notivated me more to get ~ udlrain, I remem6er
~bad it was just watching
~eryt)ne else train .•
Lean, Who also swims for
bvine Noyaquatics swim
dub, ~had.to hear about
,)lls club teammates' bip and
"8Velltual success at the
:National Championships in
:Minneapolis, Minn., last
~th. Yet. though be was a
obit disheartened, bis absence ~ the event last month ~gthened bis cause in high school
;sx>mpetition.
.. ·1 was pretty bummed,• Lean said of missing
:'the nationals. •1 could have been at nationals
;.Dd been swimming good. too, like Hayley
;(petnol) did. Obviously, Aaron (Peirsol's) record
"-pretty inspirational too. I was pretty stoked to
Nllethal..
Lean, who bas been dose friends with three-:.zne world...-ecord bolder Aaron Peirsol since
~two were 8, ls determined ta make this C° memorable for the seniors, induding
'Jf, Peirsol and Brad Dillman.
• Howevet, before be continues to achieve
)uccess, be must remember to pace himself.
!tie can't over-work himself again. 1bal will
~ lead to more intense tendinitis.
• •rve just been taking tt easy,· Mid Lean.
:WOO d89(21bed bbnself u mellow and laid back.
~kind of JUlt go with the Dow. lb.at's why high
~ swtmmlng is nice; it's just having fun. I
"8elly don't want to rush (my recovery). I'm
Lean, who is bound for Cal
Berkeley, hardly showed
signs of holding back last
week. He won the 200 free
and the lOO'backstroke in
automa tic CIF qualifying
times, and also swam the
anchor leg in the Sailors'
victorious 200 free relay,
leading to a 97 -71 Sea View
League victory over Laguna
Hills April 10.
Lean also won the 200
free, swimming bis
county-best 1:44.77, and the
100 free, and took part in
Newport's 200 and 400 free
relays in a dual meet against
Irvine, April 12.
Then, three days, later, Lean conbibuted in
all of the Sailors' three victories at the Milllkan
Relays at Bebnont Plaza, which included titles in
the 6X50 free and the 4x50 backstroke.
•1 actually think (the tendinitis) has helped
bl.m tn a way,• Newport Coach Jason Lynch
said. •1t forced him to take time off and then
get back into training with less volume and less
intensity for a while. But. he's pretty fresh and
pretty strong right now. He's swimming real
well. He's been really dedicated with working
out.• •
Lean calls a CIF individual title in the 500
free, •my main focus.· Last yeer, be finished
third tn the 500 free. Lean also said be wants to
help the Sailors win a league title at the Sea
View League finals and win a team CIP
championship.
•That's som.etbing we can doi it's possible,•
Lean said.
Wrtb Lean, it seems as if anything ls possible .
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MUSTANGS
CONTINUED FROM B 1
years with cheen and high·
fives because of a three-run
rally in the fowtbinning, tbet
broke a 2•2 tie. But, in the
bottom of the sixth, the
Mustangs bad looks on their
faces as if to say: Not Again I
"For some reason we can't
close it out,• Bauermeister
said.
With an 8-6 lead and
Northwood's No.· 7. 8 and 9
batters due up. Bauermeister
went to bis senior leader Nick
Cabico in the bottom of the
~ventb.
·1 would have done the
same thing,• Stuart said
After a Oy-ball first out,
Northwood's Dustin Landeis
picked up a base hit on a high
chopper toward second base.
Cabico walked the next batter
and Ryan Macqueen lQaded
the bases with a base hit.
Then, Cabico had to face
Stanford-bound shortstop
Chris Lewis. Cabico had
struck out Lewis in the
seventh when the Mustangs
won in another wild PCL
game, 5-4, March 19.
This time, Lewis, who had
two RBis by sacrifice Dy balls,
chipped a tricky grounder.
which led to ail infield error
and two runs scored to tie the
game. Northwood Lee
Watanabe put another ball
into play that led to an infield
error and the Timbeiwolves'
winning run. Northwood
improved to 11-8, 7-2.
Junior George Vargas also
SEA KINGS
CONTINUED FROM B 1
CdM dugout in the seventh
inning when he took off from
second on a wild pitch.
There was no need to slide at
third bas• and Emme, in the
third-base coaches' box, tried
to hold him up. But Frenkiel slid
headfirst ·anyway, creating a
huge dust cloud because of the
powder-like dirt in front of the
base.
Emme turned and smiled,
and, moments later, Frenkiel
scored the second run of what
would become a 12-run inning
for the Sea Kings.
·1n the last three games,
including the Northwood game,
SPORTS
OAllY PILOT PHOTOS BY SEAN HILLER
Michael McGulre slides ID aalely at tblrd; below, Mesa's Naflum Hunter Is out at the plate.
I pitched fo.r the Mustangs,
going 3113 innings. He allowed
two runs and gave way to
sophomore Adam Jorgenson,
who pitched through the sixth
inning, providing three
strikeouts and no walks.
Jorgenson also finished
with one hit, two runs scored
and a saaifioe fly RBI. Cabico,
Mike Carrasco, Nathan
Hunter, Dan Bitler, Kevin
DeSandro aod Michael
McGuire also scored runs.
DeSandro added a triple,
that Boated to the gap in right-
center field, and Hunter also
slammed a biple to left-center.
Both came in the sixth inning.
Despite all the frustrations,
the Mustangs are still very
much in the hunt for a playoffs
berth. For instance, a sweep of
Laguna Beach this week,
combined with the possibility
of Corona del Mar splitting
with University, would leave
Costa Mesa, Corona del Mar
and Laguna Beach in a three·
way tie for tlµrd with four
games left of the regular
season.
The Mustangs host Laguna
Beach at TeWinkle Park
Tuesday evening.
rA<IK COAST LEA6U1
NollnMooCJ 9, CosTA MEsA I
Costa Mesa 110 3210-8 7 3
Northwood 011 202 3 -9 13 3
vargas, Jorgenson (4), Cabico
(7) and Hunter. Carrasco (4);
Kuykendall, Burg (5), Miller (6)
and Gragnano. W -Miller, 2-0. L
-Cabico. 28 -Landeis (N),
Morrison (N), Gragnano.
38 -McGuire (CM), DeSandro
(CM), Hunter (CM). Macqueen (N).
' we've been swinging the bats
pretty weµ,• said Emme, whose
team also defeated Estancia, 18-
0, Tuesday. •we need it,
b ecause we're going into a
position next week with a
chance to make the playoffs.•
three runs in the third --------Then Eagle stepped
and maintain its lead "We need it, up to the plate
through four. because we're again in the seventh
• 1 was getting a with the bases
little concerned about going into a loaded and capped
a repeat pedormance position next the inning with a
of the previous loss/ . grand slam. .
said Emme, whose week with "Hey. you've got CdM, which plays University
twice next week, including
'!\lesday at home, had 17 hits,
including three doubles by
catcher Karpe and two doubles
by sophomore designated bitter
Danny Whitaker.
The Sea Kings also received
five walks and five bit batters in
the J>allgame, while four of
Estancia's eight errors
contributed to the seemingly
never-ending top of the seventh.
Whitaker doubled and
scored on Karpe's single in the
first, then Estancia rallied for
team absorbed an 8-7 a chance to to send him up
setback to the Eagles there to hit. You
earlier in PCL action. make the can't tell him not to
Karpe finished 4 playoffs ... " hit it out,• Green
for 5 with three runs said to Emme, who
scored, three RBis and John Emme had walked over to Corona del Mar th Est · d three two-baggers. High baseball coach e ancia ugout
while Brandon Lewis to apologize for the
was 3 for 5 with two score getting out of
RBis and a walk. --------control.
In the seventh, CdM's Josh
CdM senior and UCLA-bound . Bradbury, the winning pitcher
Billy Eagle, slowed this year by who improved to 2-1, was 2 for
by an elbow problem, came off 4 at the plate with three runs
the bench to pinch-bit and add scored and a walk.
a pinch-bit RBI infield single. Estancia scored three in the
BASKDBALL RECRUmNG
IMle 19, ,..art ........ "
LaglN "'!ik.\ Vv\Mb'ldge 1
" ... .,,, a.ti 32
FddQ)Hmn
CG1W dll M11r 23, EstMKla4
UnM!nity 6, Laguna Beac:tl 2
Noi1hwood ,. Costa Mesa 8
DmctatY• 9llDlla li.ll a.m.
UniYersity at CGIW dll Mllr
EsWKla at Northwood
Laguna Beac:tl vs. c.am """-
at TeYJinlde Part. 7 p.m.
third when Mitch Valdes tripled
to right field and scored on
leadoff hitter J.B. Goff's single
to right. Goff scored on Flory's
RBI ground out and Jeremy
Hauser, who reached on an
error, eventually came home on
Cameron Crom's scoring Dy ball
to center.
ID the sixth. Estancia's
Jermaine Snell doubled, moved
to third on a balk and scored on
Valdes' slow chopper to third
base, which turned into a CdM
error.
PAQf1C COAST lWM
CmoNA oa. MM ll. EsweaA 4
Smreh1 ......
COl"ona def Mar 100 037 (12) • 23 17 3
~ 003 001 0 • 4 5 8
BnMhwy, Contant (6), Stodcstill m
and ~; Flory, Hauser (6). Lund m.
Crom mW Lund. Hauser m.
W • 8radbury. 2· 1. L • Flory, o-8. 2B • Snell
(E), Whitaker (CdM) 2. Karpe (CdM) 3.
38 • Valdes (E). HR -Eagle (CdM).
HEAD COACHES I ASSISTANf. COACHES
CHEERLEADER COACHES
Wanted Volunteers • Youth Football
Tars' Perrine to Chapman
Barry Faulkner
DAILY PILOT
NEWPORT BEACH-Newport Harbor High
senior point guard Greg Perrine, who helped
lead the Sailors to their first outright Sea View
League boys basketball championship since
1985, will continue bis playing career at
Chapman University, his mother Kathleen said
Frida~ .
. Perrine, the 2002 Sea View League Player
of the Year, averaged 10.2 points in 20 games.
He missed the first seven games of the season
recovering from surgery to repair a tom ACL.
He scored 26 points bis first seven games back,
which included some limited playing time due
to lingering soreness in his knee. But, the final
13 games. he averaged 13.6 points, including
a season-high 23 against Aliso Niguel and a
game-winning three-pointer in the closing
seconds at Sea View League rival Laguna Hills.
The 6-foot-1 standout, a three-year varsity
performer who is also a key member of the
Sailors' volleyball team. is expected to compete
for playing time right away with Coach Mike
Bokosky's Division ill Panthers.
~I think it's a great spot for him,• Newport
Harbor Coach Larry Hirst said.
10" AnnualQRANG~ COUNTY
April 18 -21, 2002
Anaheim Convention Center
•
DOily Pilot
Sailors
humbled
Vaqueros go on a
rampage to capture
19-11 Sea View1win.
N*'wport
Harbor • High's host
, Sailors
racked up 11
runs on eight
hits, led by ICOlllOAll
J 0 n.
Vandersloot's lrv!M· 19
3-for -5 Salton 11
perf onnance
with three runs scored, a triple
and an RBI, but it was far from
enough as Irvine swept to a 19-
11 victory.
The Sailors (4-14), still
seeking their first win after 1 o
league starts, were victimized
by 19 Irvine hits, coupled with
eight Newport errors and eight
free passes.
Irvine's Vaqueros slugged
two home runs and four
doubles.
The Sailors will try to
regroup for Monday's game at
league-leader Laguna Hills,
. which starts at 3:15.
SIA YIW llAGUE
IRVM 19, NNl'ORT HAMOll 11
IMne 013 570 3 · 19 19 6
Newport Harbor 000 341 3 • 11 8 8
Fuglya, Ryan (5), Oliver (5) and Angel,
Olerry, Pernsteln (4), Glenn (6) and
Sanchez. W • Fuglya. I. -Cherry.
28 • IAYington (I), Ollvef (I), Houle (0 2,
Moen (NH). 38 • Vandersloot (NH).
HR , Angel (I), Oliver (I).
COWGE BASEBALL
Cal Poly
puts UCI
down, 7-4
'Eater starter Tracey
knocked out in
five-run fourth as
Mustangs win Big
West series opener.
SANLUIS
OBISPO
Cal Poly San
Luis Obispo
scored five
runs in the
fourth inning SCOlllOllD
to take a 7-2
lead and AntMWs
Tyler Fitch <:al Poly
4
7
made it stand .._ ____ _,
up Friday as the host Mustangs
defeated UC Irvine, 7-4, in a Big
West Conference baseball game
before 575 at Baggett Stadium.
In the Mustangs' fourth.
designated hitter Bryan Gant
and right fielder Chalon Tietje
had triples, while Josh Wyrick
had an RBI double and Kyle
Wilson, Jason Barringer and
Aaron Escobedo produced run-
scoring singles.
UC Irvine (22-18, 4.3 in the
Big West)
sco red
twice in the
top of the
fourth to tie
it, 2-2, 8J
designated
bitter R.J.
Brown
belted a
two-run
home run,
his second Brown
of the year.
Brown and first baseman Matt
Anderson bad two hits each for
the Anteaters, who will send
freshman right-hander Brett
Smith (3-0 with a 4.64 BRA) to
the mound today as the three-
game series continues at 1 p.m.
Pltcb, 6·.C, worked 7113
innlng• fo.r the victory, while
reUevera Nolan Moser and
KeYln Coneia closed out the
Anteeten for<Al Poly (21·21·1,
6--4). ua stutet Seannaoey, who
entered the geme With a. 6-3
record and 2.52 ERA. l\lftered
the io., gtvtng up l8Ym e«med
runs and 10 bbln32h ~·
Paul French pttcbed 4 t/.,
•corelen lnningt out ol the
. bullpen, but ..... ....,... had
~been doeia .
'
•
~Pilot
IASKETWL
Conte .in
1\ll-Star
' Grune
Costa Mesa High guard
represents South in Orange
Co\Dlty All-Star Game
tonight at Orange Coast.
COSTA MESA -Costa Mesa High
senior David Conte will close out bis
distinguished prep career tonight as a
member of the South in the Orange
County All-Star Basketball Game,
wbkb tips off at 8 at Orange Coast
College.
Conte, a 5-foot-10 point guard
bound for Cal State Los Angeles, is th~
lone local player listed on the roster for
the South, which will be coached by
Mission V1ejo High's Jelf Curmingham.
Conte earned Co-Most Valuable
Player honors in the Pacific Coast
League this past season, helping the
Mustangs to an 18-9 record and a berth
in the CIP Southern Section III -A
playoffs. The 18 wins tied a school
single-season record established by
the 1965·66 Mustangs. Conte helped
Mesa win a share of the Pacific Coast
~gue championship as a junior, the
only league crown in the program's
history.
Conte averaged 21.5 points as a
senior for Coach Bob Se.rven's Mesa
squad, scoring at least 20 points 16
times, including a career-high 43
against Marina in a December
tournament game. Conte, adept at
breaking down defenses with the
drtbble, as well as shooting from three·
point range, had additional single·
game outputs of 39, 35, 32 and 30 points
in bis final varsity campaign.
Conte is also the sole representa-
tive from the PCL, while Patrick
Hadden of Woodbndge represents the
Sea View League.
Newport Harbor senior Tony
Melum, was originally selected to
compete, chose not to play due to a
scheduling conflict.
The North boys. coached by Jeff
Russell from Cypress High, is
represented by seven league MVPs,
including Brice Prather (Villa Park),
Oay Carmody (Sunny Hills), David
Patten (El Dorado), Bryce Sheldon
(Loa.ra) Mark Lotman (Los Alamitos),
Erik Geisler (Brea Olinda) and Turmel
Woods (Savanna).
The top girls players in the county
will square off ln a 5 p.m. contest. also
at Orange Coast.
Tony Matsen (Orange Lutheran) will
guide the North girls, while the South
girls will be coached by Jim Martin
(Laguna Hills).
The game, presented by the Kiwanis
Cub of Costa Mesa. provides proceeds
to several Orange County charities.
Tickets are $10 for adults and $6 for
students 18 and under.
-by Barry Faulkner
SPORTS
YOUIH 1IMI AllD FIELD
They were ott
.I. and running
at the Newport
Beach Youth
Track and Field
Championships
at Newport
HarborHJgh
Friday. Above,
Courtney
Mcintosh, 8,
of Woodland
School ln Costa
Mesa, leads
Megan Kay, 8,
from Mariners
Elementary,
and Anna
Venturlni, 8,
from Andersen
School ln the
Dlvblon 93 400.
Venturlni won
the race. At left,
Nick Potter, 9,
from Our Lady
Queen of
Angels, wins the
long jump. More
on this meet,
including
results, are
anticipated
for publication
ln the near
future.
DAllY PILOT PHOTOS BY
SEAN HtillR
COMU.rf COlllGI 1U11S
Orange Coast's
Chang, Korac win
OEC sillgles titles
Pirates reign in every
direction at the finals.
Orange Coast College
sophomores Stephanie Chang
and Veronica Sommer had a
day to remember, and then
some, Friday 1n the .Orange
Empire Conference tennis finals
at Orange Coast, on the campus
and acrou the street at the
Pineaeek Apartments.
•Our trainer lives over there
and be got them to help us out,·
said OCC Coach Janice Maran
after darkness forced the
doubles final to change venues.
Chang defeated her partner,
Sommer, in the singles final,
6-4, 2-6, 6-4, and the two, both
upset finalists in singles, went
on to claim a berth in the
doubles finals with victories m
the quarterfinals and semifinal.
They top~ Irvine Valley's
Lambert-Marley combination m
the quarter, 6-1, 6-4. then bested
Fullerton's Savln-Aynesworth
entry, 6-7 (7-4), 6-0, 6-1.
In the doubles final, Coast's
dynamic duo finished the day
off in style, stopping Riverside's
Brown-Jankowski, 6·3, 6-4.
Men's tournament
In the OEC men's tour-
nament. OCC sophomore Zoran
Korac won the OEC singles btle
and was named Conler ence
.Player of the Year. "He really
showed dominance as a singles
and a doubles player,• Coast
Coach Rodney Gabuya said.
Korac cruised to the final match,
where he met his teammate
Robert Chu, who was battling
leg cramps and retired after one
game.
Chu rested up, received
treatment and teamed up with
Korac to win the OEC doubles
title after defeating Saddle-
back's Jason Efstathlou and
Chad Widtfeldt
HAPPY BIRTHDAY
TODAY
Jm SAMPLE 0
Orange Coast
water polo
JAYCH MAHLEJt 0 Corona del Mar
soccer
JEN HousToN e
Vanguard University
softball
· SWIMMING
Double for McGhie
Another error in the meet
results sent from Newport
Harbor High swimming Wed-
nesday was discovered In the
boys 100-yard freestyle, where
sophomore Sean McGhle was
listed m third place with a time
of 55.63.
A winner m the 50 free
(23.41 ), McGhie doubled with a
wmning time of 51.87 in the 100
free. He was also part of two
wmning relay teams.
Newport Harbor won the
Sea View League meet with a
117 -50 victory
DEEP SEA
WID!IHDAY'S COUlfU
Neuwport ~ • 2 tio.ts.
20 M"91en.. 69 ahco bAss. 4 w1d bAss.
7 rockfish, 16 blue pm:t1
TODAY'S SCHEDULE
WllMl
Coll•· UC Irvine It Cal Poly San
Luo Obispo, 1 p.m., Az\M Paafic
It Vanguard Univef'Mty, noon
Community college • Orange Coast
1t Sanu AN. noon
IASUDAU
Hlgtl idloof boys and gim ·Orange
County All-Sur games 1t Orange Coast
College, girts at 5 p.m.; boys at 8 p.m
TIAQC NIP flW!
College men Ind ~ · Vanguard
University It Pomona Prtztr lrwrtatJonlf.
10 a.m, UC Irvine •t Mt. San Antonoo
College Ref~
High ~ boys Ind girls • Costa
Mew, Corona det Mar. Estancia,
Newport Harbor at Omige County
Olamplonships. 9 a.m.
SWIMlt!G
High~ boys and gifh • Newport
Harbor 1t Foottull Swim <>-.
WW
College women · CXange ~
UC IMne at Collins Cup at Nortt1 Udo
Channel. 8a.m
~
College • Azusa PKSfic at Vanguard
UnNef\lty. doubletwader, noon.
gf
College men • UC Irvine at U.S
lntercollegiates, St.anf<>fd GC. 7 .lO a.m.
Cl111lflcetlon(a) rt ·
~ lor .. project A
For IUl1Nr lntonna •
11on, ca11 s~ J Luy.
Protect Manager at
(940) &44-3330
Pubff1hed Newport
Beach·Cotta Mesa Delly Plot Ac>fl 20, 2002
SAJ59
STARTING
ANEW
BUSINESSl
• • • • • • • • • • •
l
I
Gl
EOOAI. HOUSING OPPORTUNITY
: All rul estate ~ng
111 this newspllllf is subject ~ to Ille Fedml Fair Housing
1 Act ol 1968 as amended
• wll1cll makes 11 illegal to • ~vert1se •any preference . • f!lnltatlon Of disc11m1naMn
1 tiastd oo race. color rellg-1 Ion, sex. handk:ap. tarn111a1
1 status Of national 011gin. or
1 an Intention to make any • wen preference. llm11ation
• or dlscnmlnatlon."
, Thrs newspaper will not • knowingly 1ccept any
• advertisement lor rul
• tstale whicll 1s tn Vtolallon • of Ille law Our readers are • lltreby informed that all
• 11Wet11ngs ad\lertised in lhrs
• llt'#Spaplr are available on
• 111 equal Olll)Oltunlty basis
• To complaln of d1scnml-
' 111tion. cMI HUD toll-tree at
I 1-800-424-8590. :;::=====:::::;, ~ 1 HOUSESICONOOS ' FOR SALE ' GENERAL
t
:-.• -.. --Of-
THE WEEK
REDUCED 1175,000
48f 38a, lg din rmllfR
Flplc'1 In Iv a din rm. Wiik· In cklllCI There .,. many
""" 11'111 lining 1he dock. 2 -ltllCll gar. 13,300,000
I Mellsu Oii 818-97(>.3232
'Kim S11ton office
: 818-242-6854 C.n 818·33H832
l!omt otfg 818-~5136
Could Be A DUii ......
G!ound ftr, end Id. pool, IV
Dover 1238.SK c.i..alCll 71"65'-4t01 lg!. Pholol
tt: www.lurffill9.m
2431 Vltta HogM
OPEN SAT 1.f
The Bluffs Townhome
U>west Prte 3Br S399K aat. 949-632-8489
2"'2 Vllta HOgtlr
OPEN SUN 1·5
The Bluffs Towt1home L0111'6St Prtc. 3Br $399K
agl. 949-632-6489
E'5'09 1 Br a 28d28a very
clean & specious, lots al
Sloragt. no pell, $1000/m & $1400/m. DnYI by 2n
1 lllh Place 9CU4&-3627
714·540-0130
• Up lo S300 Ol IM •
La 28r, -11c811, fltl, dOae to '-di In Cotti ..... MM7"6134
Wilk to So CoaSI P\121
..,.,. lg 2br 2ba, ~.
pools, spa, tennis, gym
gated $1400 714-444-1414
BEST VALUE IN TOWN S01C 1bf $895 ind rtlng Bille to belcll. Great ttn-
ltllS Ind 1oc. Oulet. Ike new
and Qll8d. ... 541 (M92
e·11c1e quiet rtmodeled
Twnhome style Apt 2Br,
1 Yzea, IXfY9( 2c pkno, n/pel
$1250 YT lse 94Hc2·1073
28r 1 Bl walk to South
Coast Piila, ~ '**· ~ lllfl08 wilt\ w/d llk'i.'PI S1200t'mo. 714·~2513
Quist a.y Ape 291 2Ba. 2c
Onl Font Roed exlanlMI gw gwden Mlbng. ~
upgnidlt. IM courtylld. rrM..y ctoee m Bay
apec:llQMr ylld "''Wit-in $1250fmo IM&-642·5108
88-0 & Fp. Englllll GWln. ~~~.~ 1 ~111 .&.1.~1
Dr. --MttJ!M ~J~11J9
ABANDONED
I BR GIANT U:LOSE TO BEACH :> $790,000 Owtrllad 18r lt50.
AGT. 94t-723-8120 281' 11,170. Y11t1, Indy, p!!!dna.. (714) ~
' ,
~
I I
• '\ I
.,, .... ,
(~9) M:!·5«>78
llyH.wi.PUoam
:i:lO 1'H-t &v St~ c· ta WM, C'A 9'l1>2
~ • ......,... 11\.t ..... ~ •••• T,lrpltot1t IM-0111 ... S:OOpm
"""''_, .... l \\'•lk-ln 8:.'lli-nr-5:00,mi
\i.o.1 •·•tot
, CONSIGrJ~1Er~Tsl
, " -~ ' ' I ' ,. ~ .. . .. :
L ' ::..-
SOVTH CSAST AUCl'I N
..,.
Rlttt and ~lllnH •rt .i1bjttt 1n thA11,, '4' 11 ""'•t nodtt. 11lt VUJ~r ft'itntt thr. ~·to rf'11..cir. ttdo 1'1 , l'f'\ilie or ttjcrt 111~
rl• 1~ em rnik'mmt. rtH"' l'f'port 11n)' trr11r tl1111 may bf: 1fl ynut r~ifird acJ irn100li trl . Tl\f Oail) Pilot 11 <'tpt4 011 lillhility for •ny
trror ut nn c11l\trti"f'll'lf'l\I for" hie h it 11llh llf' R•f'"""'ihll' nttvt for
tlut C'Qlll c1f tht parr a1•11uill)' orr11p1NI b~ 1ht' mur Cndit ran only bl<
11llt1uJ '"" th" fll'l\t in...,.rti1111 .
.---.--.--lte.lllnes -----
Monday ............ Friday 5:00pm FriJay ....... -.Thurstlay S:OOpm
TUf'.tday ......... Monday 5:00pm turday ........... Friday 3:00pm
Wedllf'tday .... T~y S:OOpm undiay ............ .friday 5:00pm
Thul'll(Uy .. Wnloesday 5:00pm
oOAaT COIN NEEDS-Ol.O COIHSI Gold, lilvet,
~llCl1el. e~uea. 949-642~7 .
[~I
Front DHll PtttOll R..tlw'ant now lllring
nMdld for Motil 11 C.M . Hoitt, SeNeft. &.l!t &
WI trlin. llu hot4 cal lor Coob. ~ ~1 VII l.Jclo, !p!!O!l!!!!!!n!. 14M'4-1I05 N.8 Fu ,_ .. 12MT10
lncNIM your "-'ti
Control YOAJr Hourtl
HomHased ~ FIAi
tralnlog. FREE Booklet
www.drHm2AcllleVll.COm
1·888-221·5501
Lltle ,.... • ... 'ror"' = cecr..: • dllknM boutique .. rant. Ill Com .... AfJfkt
Miking I llOf9 Mwgtt In ,.,_ ,._! ::.-= ""' upeflencl. ....... Blvd. c-call M~1S55 -=-'=-='-==-="'-'-'=-
L()()Q«) lot JACK I JIU
PIT 1 «»-' 30 Of 6 30-9.00
Jacll & ..Iii 1111 !Nm pllyert and ar1 fun to worf! With, .._ ..... _____ __.
they al9o oet 1lckelS 10 con--------
cer1S & win bonuses They ,,..... Ill ......
lefl.. Is lllat You? PIClflc thl '"'"" In ""' Symphony Teltfundlng C8tlgOry INIY ""*9
Clllll)llan e.... & Sais you '° cell • too lri fl4-97&-2398 nu111ber In wtllcll
lhll'I ... dwll per minute.
......... doll to lllr •
-. Remocl 4br 2bl, Ille
llta, slll8 Ip, wd, 2 c gar
Gllld ExctusNe Bayshores $27!51mo. MM30-7m S3500lmo 28r, 26a. 2~ l)lr,
2 beachel. ll'..tplc, avM-
lbll M!y 71~-
•CATERINO lllANAG.ER• needed for C11111lo1
RnQunnt In Newport
8eldl.. Cell .......
.. MONTESSORIU
200ft '° Sllld w/rrvni vilw' dlluxl ownert 21lf. Fp. WIO OIW. new 2"blindl & Clll'pOll
11.Mly!!y. 94~
..... '=££ .... .....
'I ' I ...
\ . .
I I
_..,_ ---7 •••
949.642.5678
SPORTS PAGE
O*oprtdlc A.tl6Rlrll FfT TllCMn r!Mded.
lor Nb olb Aelponl.t>le, Cllr'l1tlan b1ekgroulld. ~ w• train 111t11 c.11 Undl •• ~ p!!!OR. Cell ~14'2..
Cul'-a.mo.
LllgNI CUllOm clolel co naedl enafgellc: lndMdua.1 w/exoellent
phone & people llclls.
IDQ.l'llt, .... to -dll llkM llllia I prlJb
ICM Hlndlll IChlcl-
IAI. ... figuta. & mo recap ....,..
Otlenlld. 8-5. Mon-Fn
Fu 19111111
71 .......
•·111111 C1lllornl1
ctoMte1o1.com
DRIVE.RS WAHTED Ntwpott Bledl I COM
Sel yQ1K own IClladulll Part or lull time IVlllblt
SIO+ftw cal ~ or PY!~
R.OWER SHOP SAL.ES = .. =:~ locllon. 71~·
PART TIME FOR PAQAC
VIEW IEIOflAl PARK 2polillollt .........
frant Diil ~--• F-.1 s..ic. Dndor
RtceptlOlllSl mutj WOik
....... Wllll ~
knowledge helpful, 35 llrs
per -k. S10 hr Funerst Serva Oo<ector. w .. kdays
& some weektods, S9 hr Both mull be com· palSIONte. lrtendly and
havt IOlllt PfOltWO!lll
appearance C111
90 ·144-2700 or lu
,__ to 949-721-8584
Aeclptiollflt.f/T 111 CM enteroenc good phone
"'*». op'd II WORD.
W:el & Email Cal Robert
MM~8287
All Sports Card Page
rltl• ~ u de1igned lo •ltowcoM all aHt,.,_• lteN ln our community.
Your cltild can he on lltl• page fw lu•t $2~.oo.
Here's how it works: --
Fill out the form below. Enclose a picture of your
child in their uniform, o $25.00 chedt
mode payable to the Daily Pilot
(or credit cord number) then moil to:
C&ASSIFIED DEMln'MINT
330W.~St.
Coata Mesa, Ca 92627 r.:--
lf it is more convenient for you, feel free to dtop by our office.
We will design o •CARD" b your child and publish it on ou:-
speciol pogel
AU ftHOTOS WJU II ltfTU.,_, TO THI AOOltlU YOU
NOV10f UlOW.
PLAYER'S NAllE • NUll8ER: '"--==--=-------'--------AGE .... :.__....-.,~.
TEAii NA"E: ____ __..._.......,......,~--'----POS"10H~· "---...,.,.,,.._ ___ ~>J.
A ..... for IWIUm of photo: /tHONENUllBER~·_._~___;~~--~~.
St,..~...:.;.._._.._......_ ___ ~.,...-=----....-..~~---~------.-~ ........ ---.0. ....... ~----.:~
City:·----------'---_..... ....... __ ...._ _ _..__ Zip Cod•...._..i.;;-........,....L.....-~"''
It you wMlt to,_, ., wedlt o.rd:
~CAllO. __ ..,_'""""'l"'•flflCAllE.X,,,,,,.__ ......... _.~~
Cllnl~--------~-----~""""""'""------"-'-~'-·....._~----
I
J
' " cd
Aid M .. 2Gk IN, While, Oltmlll .,,,, rnoonlOOI, co,
lldoly WllT1llfY. lb ntw '25.995 vt.07529 Bkr
t!Hlt1!ff
Audi Clllftotl ColW 't5 IOll 1111, tnllllllc grwn. ottmMI llhr. co. bHutlful
cond, S 12,1115 vM 79521 ........ 1.
l lllW ZI '00 ~ ml,
1 owner, mint condition.
111111t 111. S2U95 obo MH?Mlf4
lllW ZJ 't7
BllCi wilt! Ptrflct Tan ltnr
Clvomedl ~ mllffl
fl9,lllO 117841
=-~
. ····---3 . '
~\·-· .. ,,. .. ,.
..... ,
' -...
Ford Contour SE W
llllt ml, IMlallc lllv9I 11111>.
power AJC 1m·fm
prtm1um sound ne new
cond SU95 ~nt797615
Bkr 949-586-1888
Ford F.a m '00 llww, ...._, CO, ""1y ..... Mr loldld, l ,GSa 1111. GAi IAVlRll 112,JSO. 114-427.(11)33
714-§9}37i 1
CllAHIHO KRVICI
ConvnefQIJ Bulldonga
~ OffloH Ind ~ 20Vra~
Ucentld/Bondedffi1r1
Frw &111118. CIM
George 71'·534-71 n
Of 714-~
·~ ----=--J~·
(. .• I " • .· . ' .
--XJS ... eeyt, c:orw. eek IT'ii tell blue. 08lmNI
It!\! bik ICp, co. cMlme
wh11l1, bHut eond,
$15.995 m t457291 Bin
949-688-1898
llBZ MOO '00
WEEKLY BalDOE QUIZ
Q I -Vv.klcral*, you hold;
•QU 0 AllQJll7JJ 0 1 •J
After two pwea, '/04ir riabt-band
opponmt ope!\t lhe 6fddlna with ane
club. Wbl& K1ion do you tab?
Q l -M South. vulnenble, you bold!
'The biddlna bas orocecdod: soum lVES1' NORTH
t• ... 20 JO ,_ JO
' Whit do )'OU bid Ol1W?
EAST .... ....
Q 3 ... Nehher YU!nerable, as South
you bold;
The bidd1111 bas orocccdcd: WEST NOR111 EAST" SOl!l'H to ,_ 2• ,,_
36 .... 1
Whit do you bid fWYW'I
•llQl OQHH 0 1 •JltU
The blddina ... croceeded: NOll11t IA.Br' S0tnH WU'r
l• ... i. ....
... JO '
Whit do )'OU bid °"""'
Q 5 -Nel&.ber vulnenb&e ... SoudJ
)'OU hold:
The biddin.I hu oroc:oedcd: SOl!l'H lVF.81 NORTH to ,_ 1<;;1
t• ,_ 26
1
Whal do you bid oow?
EAST .... ....
Q 6 -As South. vulnerlble. you hold:
•AJtJl . 71 AQ9J • ltl
The biddma bas m>eeeded:
NORTH 2ASr SOl!lll WEST IQ ,_ I• Pue
l • .... 1
What do you bid now?
LoM. for answ~rs Oii Monday
1 OWner, lflowr Blklblk MAZDA MIATA '91
only 22.SM lo lo ml Soft-top, 1uto, grttl
... 1115311 condition! A»..fll
BMW 740ll 'ti
oftgeci a P8ITlf*9d Whltwn
$37,900 lfl02834
'4000 pp t4Wt1.
Remodeling
& Repairs
WxJd Dicks • FtnCll
Electral • Orywal
CMpentry • Tiie • Etc
~ LGClllW\
714.811.11•
ATOllOMI mPIOYmllT -..c.ir.... =.:-:-c.r.-AMlllM. IJllHSOS24 '
714.269.7111
C.ustomer -S.atisfactton ~'-"'*·:I' loo
t j,. .. • . • •
°"l:u"":~ I REALFSfATE I FAX MH'n-7SIO
m ™"' EXP£J!IENC() t;on ~. eomncton .... Young Elctrtc, Plumblng.
Dlywall, ~ L..lc!nftd, 71!! Nn.·
Ml( TO lMI OUllPlll 71 .... 1112
AVAii.AiU TOOAYI
MHTHfft
·.:--,~ , ,.
" :: • '!.
Ustin1tJ itwliluble'
714-432-7873
--~.Qllll
ON TIME O£lJVERV
wi... yoll ..... .._
yoll ... Ill Houlllflolll
Furnt1hlng1, Freight,
RHl<lenllel, lnduelrlel,
l..OCll&~Milt
~-··=-Rel .. 714·t l1-n ...
n•-nt-110a.
PUBLIC
NOTICE
The c.. ~ UtlllllH Com·
lftlleion REQUIRES
.... lmlld .. =or:m till T rurOr. tnoe
Ind "*""' pmt l'*T.CP. ,...-
In ll ...... 1•&
.,..,_~ .. ·ii Ian _ ...........
..... cm: ~ 71..,.,,,
'
TODAY'S
CROSSWORD PUZZI Ii
~'Mkll,e..
~Professional
Painting
I.Jc Mtc350
IDtakr/Elterkl
0.atltePlllillC
Cokr lfltr""C
Rob Isbell -C>wn9r
Costa Mesa. Ca
(9'9) 646-3008 c.a 949-.887-1480
VW EW0¥111 't3 Oii oond
bile* w¥1o brt. S 91)(1 111111-
11111, fl"onl & ,_, &IC factoly
g -9C* "1. I ownet $4900 949-760-1644
vw .... e.tlt ..
Miii w1111 mn lnW Only
3411 ml. 5 lp99d. lmmlc.
S17,llO. '17'111
=4-~
1"'Ntlelfl00rh0odl Pbitb«I
DMll•tlWll'!= a.-SPICW.llf
1'WllDY PU-.o
949-645-2352 -.. ..... .._ .. ·-··-.... --._ ... _ ..._ . .,
• .. •
Dai~ Pilot
DWER DISCOUNT ••••••••••• $4,000
FACTORY RBATE •••••••••• + $2,002* ---
1
•
NET REDUCTION OFF MSRP > ._, &
.. l.D .... 9BUU. 18W IUDE ..,_.II
FACTOIY IEIATE •••••••••• + $2,002 *
NO REDUCTION OFF MSRP > Q ,
• aa • 11 • •raN. ... un
' I I ,, .. llUllCl(IUA'IRfS
• Sl'OCK
DUlD DISCOUNT ••••• · •••••• $2,000
FACTORY REBATE •••••••••• + $2,502*
NO REDUCTION OFF MSRP > '4,
•1&•• ••ra11. ... un1m1 .. •
CERTIRm PRE·O•ED SPECIALS
'97U"•M
a11-v1. MUST SS:. IOW MUS, VBY
aEAN, FW P'OWB. LEATHER
(61UIS/373ST)
•20,995
•crr1v ap•-IR
VI, lCW>ED, LEAnta, FUU POWER,
IOW Ml.ES, 1 0WNBt. VEl'f QEAN
(60l20ll37\5r)
•27,995
'97 .. IMllU -··· VI. rtsEAtS. STllfO CASSETTE. CD.
ll:M Ml.ES, GM CEITIFIED. VBY aEAN <121m13120n
•14,595
•c.-•ac IHUE ..
VI. rtsEATS. STOfO CASS, CO. IOW
Ml., VtlV a.EAN. LEATHEI UNDER FACt
WAllANTY (9132.411361Sf')
•24,395 ---= .. IU
FWY t.c:WlED, lt:NI MIES, VB'Y Cl.EAN, GM
CEITHD, 4 WHEEi. DllM
(917337/3612T)
•29,895
t
'81 IMC • I
6 CYUNDa. FWY tCW>ED.
MUST SEE, 1 OWNEI
< 123072/3701 r>
•18,495
WC.-.IM IEal.E ..
MOONIOOf. co OfANGO
ION MUS, vtl'f ClEAH, RJU POWEi
(9173&5134961')
·~4,595
-] ' -wmc..-
VI, LEAnB. 21Vs. VI)(() GAiii
cotHCTIONS, OW, I owta. VBrr ClEAN
(U6437/370IT)
~29,995 ._
•
-
WCMP•K .......
VI, rtwtot. CC, TU POWEi
SEATS, LEATHEI. CASSETTE
(126632/3S12r)
•18,888
•< YlllD' 'IUIED'
VI. STOfO CASSETTE. CD. LEAntEI.
TOW PKG., MUST SEE, VtlV ClEAH
~/3724T}
•24,595
'81 IMC IWlll 111'
VI, STEl£O CASS, CD, RILY u:w>m. ION
Ml.ES, 1 owta. VE1Y Qf.AN, Rl1 rw1.
LEATIB. GM <DTIFB> 1230ll3/3611TI
•30,995
•n=•• ~
6 CYL, IOW ML, 1 OWNEI. FUU
POWEi. LEATHEI (OllUOJ37l3f')
•18,995
•CA"l*C all-v1. rl'SEATS, LEATtB. IOW MUS.
1 OWNEI. vtl'f CllAH
(6072l7/37WP)
.. •
•25,995
• :
•