HomeMy WebLinkAbout2002-04-29 - Orange Coast PilotSERVING lHE NEWPORT -MESA COMMUNmES SINCE 1907 ON DIE WEB: WWW.DAILYPILOT.COM MONDAY, APRIL 29, 2002
New faces set to take over school work
• With the departure this week of the inan who was
leading the district's renovation efforts, changes will be
made to prevent too much from changing.
Deirdre Newman
DAJLY PILOT
NEWPORT-MESA -As the
maestro orchestrating the school
district's massive campus repair pro-
ject prepares to depart this week,
those who step in and fill the void of
his vacancy will become crucial in
ensuring that major milestones
along the way are met.
Assistant Superintendent Mike
Fine bas been in charge of the pro-
gram since the $110-million bond
measure was passed in June 2000.
He is leaving the Newport-Mesa
Unified School District this week for
a similar post in the Riverside Uni-
fied School District.
His departure comes as construe-
•
tion is set to start
on the first group
of schools in
December -four
~ months later than
originally sched-
uled because the state has ta.ken
longer than anticipated to approve
the designs, Fine said.
And while the rest of the plan is
on schedule, there are some out-
standing issues that still need to be
resolved. These include deciding
whether to modernize or replace
some buildings at Ensign Intermedi-
ate and Newport Elementary
schools and whether voters approve
two major state bonds that should
complete the Measure A financing
with an additional $63 million.
•Mike has been a major cog in
the whole process; he's been a aiti-
cal player,· Ragland said. "But we
and all the other team members are
willing to step up to the plate and
put in more effort as needed.•
"It will be incumbent on the vot-
ers in November and March 2004 to
approve that statewide school
bond,• Fine said. "That'll be key to
our success.•
Five tea.ms are working on the
designs for the first group of schools
that will undergo construction.
There are four groups altogether.
Stepping up to the plate
Now stepping in to oversee the
program will be Rob Ragland, pro-
ject director, and a district-level
oversight committee.
The drawings are expected to go to
the state for approval in June. To
expedite approval. the architects have
been meeting wtth vanous agen<ies
SEE SCHOOL PAGE 4
Musicians
plan protest
of Center
production
• 'The Music Man,' which
opens this week, is being
performed by nonunion players.
Y0t.tn9 Chang
DAILY PILOT
COSTA MESA -A musioans union
furious about the use of nonunionized
players m an upcoming Orange Coun-
ty Performing Arts Center show wtll
protest outside the theater Tuesday
before curtains rise on opening night.
The Orange County Musicians'
Assn., a local chapter of the musicians
rights-advocating American Federation
of Musicians, is taking issue Wlth a pro-
duction of "The Music Man,• which
will open next week with nonunion
orchestra members.
Below-par treatment of these musi-
cians deteriorates the music business,
union officials say.
PHOTOS 8Y KENT TREPTtm I OAllY Pl.OT
Justin Cooper, 11, left, a youth ambassador for the March of Dim.es, and his brother Daniel, 7, warm up with the Newport Harbor
High School cheerleaders prior to the walk Sunday. Justin benefited from research funded by the Mar~ of Dimes..
Union President Frank Amoss said
unionized musiaans in the area should
be hired to play with tounng shows
when they get to town.
"We think the people in Orange
County ought to know that all the oth-
er shows get accompanied by profes-
sional musicians, and here this produc-
er is saving money, 50%, by not paying
for professional players,• Amoss
added. waiking· for life
March of Dimes WalkAmerica at Fashion Island on Sunday
raise nearly a million dollars to help extend the lives of babies
Bryce Alderton
DAILY PILOT
W hether you know it or not, your We
has been touched in some way by
the March of Dimes.
Those were the words of Valerie Herndon,
executive director of the Orange County Divi-
sion of the March of Dimes, a national volun-
tary health agency that works to improve the
hedlth of bables by preventing birth defects
and l.nlant mortality.
"When you're too young and small and
placed In a neonatal intensive care unit.•
Herndon said. providing an example of how
the March of Dimes can help someone. ·nie
goal is ensuring each birth ls a healthy birth.·
More than 6,000 Orange County walkers
strolled for 5 miles Sunday morning in New-
port Beach for March of Dimes WalkA.merica
.to raise money to save babies' lives.
Walk coordinators estimated that donors
contributed $950,000 for this yeai's race, meet-
ing the March of Dimes' goal. said 1rrna
Arvizu, communications coordinator for the
March of Dimes Southern California Chapter
in Los Angeles.
•1 am happy to be here today,• Arvizu said.
SEE WALK PAGE 4
Amber HoW1er, 15, sports • colorful
balloon headresa at the walk.
"The Music Man• is produced by
Big League Theatricals, a non-Equity
branch of Dodger Theatricals, a prcr
ducer of Broadway shows. The cast is
also made up of non-Equity actors.
A West Coast representative for
Actors Equity said the group will not
protest with the musicians union.
Dan Sher, executive producer of Big
League, said workers should have a
choice about bel.Dg ma uruon.
•Our musicians happen to not be,·
Sher said. •Sixteen of them travel
around the country and play beautiful-
ly."
But the Center didn't book •Tbe
Music Man• as a nonunion show
almost two years ago.
When the Center deeded to bring
the Meredith Willson musical to
Orange County, the acd.allned Dodger
companywasprodudngthewmL
SEE MUSIOANS MGE J
Clearing the air before a story runs goes a long way
A t the end Of this colwnn Heh
week, I provide my direct
phone number and e-mail
addreSs. Wedd the same With our
~eporters at tll8 end of many of thetr
stories, and on page 2, flY&ry day, is an accesa Ult to key editors in the
newsroom.
The reuon we do thil 11 to give
readen or community leaden the
chance to call us with story tipt. or
ronans tbeY may beft ibioUt lto-
rlel or our Nponing.
Of coune, we woUJdn't mtnd if
IOIMOiae W8Dtl to JUlt mil ad elm
or~..._ ............................. ...... =-=~--°'., CDUll~~--~ .............. ., .... .... ....., ........
AliOve the
SURFACE
Scuba training. conslstJng of six ~Ing and two weekend day classes; are offered
at the Aquatic Center, 4537 w. Coast Highway, Newport Beach. $200 to $310. The
center allo offers scuba rentals, spedal trips, repairs and air fills. (949) 650-5440.
2 Monday. April 29, 2002 ..
GREG FRY I DAllY PILOT
The historic Balboa Inn's $1.5-mllllon rejuvenation will include the addition of 2,000 square feet of retail
shops, 11 high-end guest suites and a 24-car parking garage.
June Casagrande
DAILY PILOT
•
A fter what seems like a long
time of waiting quietly and
quaintly by the sea. there
may soon be some activity at the Bal-
boa Inn.
Owners of the landmark hotel on
the water on the peninsula, a staple
sight to Balboa Peninsula beach
goers, have long planned for a face-
lift and expansion on the 1929 struc-
ture.
The hotel, placed on the Nation-
al Register of Historic Places in
1986, will get an added 2,000
square feet of retail shops, 11 high-
end guest suites and a 24-car park-
ing garage as part of the $1.5-mil-'
lion rejuvenation. The work will
coincide with the city's $8.8-million
improvements in the area on every-
WHAT'S AFLOAT
• WHAT'S AR.OAT is published periodically.
If you are plannil'lg a nautical event. submit
the information to the Daily Pilot. 330 W. Bay
St., Costa Mesa, CA 92627; by fax to (949) 646-
4170; or by e-mail to daflypilotOlatimes.com.
SAILING CLASSES
Sailboat rentals and private lessons
are available at Marina Sailing in the
Balboa Pun Zone. Advanced classes
include navigation, big boat, power-
boat, introduction to heavy weather
and first-mate instruction. (949) 673-
7763: the Blue Dolphin Sailing Club,
(949) 644-2525; or Lido Sailing Club,
(949) 675·0827.
Salling Fa.sdnatton offers classes ln
boating safety and sailing, year-round
for people with disabilities. Free.
Dan,t .Rilot
VOL 96, _,, 119 '
TltOMAS M. 0-.
l"IAllltw
lGNYDODaO,
g on the Inn
Face-lift is in the works
for historic Balboa Inn
and will coincide with
city's renovation of
Balboa Peninsula
thing from parking to pedestrian
walkways.
"We've just received today the
final conditions of Coastal Commis-
sion. So we are now in the process of
choosing an architect,• Raymond
Pabusa, a representative of the Bal-
boa Inn, told City Council members
on Tuesday.
Of course, until the architect puts
blue ink to paper, possibly as soon as
this week, the new face of the inn
will remain abstract. But, according
(949) 640-1678.
· BOAT RENTALS
Balboa Boat Rentals can put you on
the water in many ways, with single
and double kayaks. electrlc boats, 14-
holder sailboats, pedal boats and run-
abouts for offshore use or cruising the
bay. (949) 673-7200.
Electrtc boat 'rentals are available by
the hour at Duffy IDectric Boats, 2001
W. Coast Highway, Newport Beach.
All boats are equipped with window
enclosures and CD players. Ice ond
cups are provided Reserv~tions are
suggested. An hour rental is $70.
(949) 645-6812.
Sall alrbome outdde Newport Har-
bor, pulled by a motorboat at Balboa
to Pabusa's report, the end of the
waiting and wondering could be in
sight: The Planners are hoping that
construction will begin before year-
end.
"We are still in the planning
process.~ Pabusa said.
The project has been controversial
because some officials and oppo-
nen_ts_s~y ft will ()tiS\fUct scenic views
of Newport Harbor. In January, the
Coastal Commission disagreed with
this }dea, voting against their staff's
recommendation to allow the work to
move ahead.
And many local leaders agreed
that the work would be a boon to the
whole area. Among them were New-
port Beach Mayor Tod Ridge.way and
Newport Beach Chamber of Com-
merce President Richard Luehrs, who
said in January: "It deserves a face-
lift and expansion.•
Para-sailing near the Balboa Fun Zone.
A 90-m.inute trip is $4,5. (949) 673-1693.
A motorized lounge cba1r may be
rented at Resort Water Sports at New-
port Dunes for $25 per hour. Pedal boats,
electric boats, boogie boards, kayaks,
inflatable rafts, beach furniture and wet-
suits also are available. (949) 729-1150.
Party pontoons, chaparral runabouts
and family pontoons may be rented at
Anchors Away Boat Rentals in the
Balboa Pun Zone. (~9) 673-3372.
Gondola toun are ofleJed by the Gon-
dola Co. of Newport, 3400 Via Opor-
to, Suite 102-B. The $75 cost indudes
a basket of bread, cheese, salami, ice,
glasses, a blanket, music and a
Polaroid picture. Wine also is avail-
able. (949) 675-1212.
.............
An Dlnl<IOf
(949)574-WA
READERS HQTUNE
(949) 642-6086
right No news stories, lllustretlons.
tdltorill matter Of~
'-In can be r~ without
wrttt.n pemllulon of COP'/fl9ht OWN/r,
~ IMfOfttl.trm-com ... McOMll.
"-SupeMtor (949)764-oiJSI
tell photoel.ttitNJ.*'!
NlwlSWf ..........
Record your com~ts about the
D•lly Pllot ot news tips.
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Please aill (,..9) 574-4231.
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Doily Pilot
Neuporl Boat Show
begins Wednesday
A hoy.
As many of the sail-
boats and committee
boats head home today from
Ensenada, the preparations
for the Newport Boat Show
are being finalized for
Wednesday's opening day.
•Tue west's largest boat
show offers the biggest in-
the-water display ever,• the
press release reads. Now the
biggest boat show in
Orange County, the show is
known as being the •Tue
West's Big Boat Boat Show.•
I like this show. which has
the largest display on the
West Coast of in-the-water
boats and a tent full of ven-
dor booths. Every year, my
first stop at the show is
down at the floating docks
to see what's new on Bay-
port Yacht's Carver line. I
deliver lots of Carvers along
the Pacific Coast and at th~
show, I can get my questions
answered while comparing
models side by side.
This year, someone will
cruise away in a brand new
fishing boat worth $25,000.
At the show, there will be a
sport-fishing version of
"Survivor• called Catch-A·
Boat Challenge that is a test
of endurance and determi-
nation. Whoever is the last
person standing wins in a
nonstop around-the-clock
fight to the finish wins a
brand-new 21-fooj Triumph
Center Console fishing boat
equipped with a 150 hp
Evtnrude outboard and EZ
loader trailer.
Ten lucky or maybe crazy
pseudo-anglers will be
selected from a drawing
before the show and outfit-
ted with a roo nett: to' nelp
bold a fishingrod and reel
that is hooked up to the new
boat. This can get ugly as
the pseudo-anglers must
stand not allowing any part
of their body or fishing tack-
le to touch the ground, the
boat or any object outside of
their designated fishing
spot.
If more than one person
survives 24 hours a day for
the full five days of the
show, then a casting shootoff
will be held on Sunday to
determine the winner. My
advice to the contestants is
to bring warm clothes,
gloves and a port-a-potty as
only a 20-minute break is
permitted every four hours.
The 29th annual Newport
In-Water Boat Show opens
noon to 7 p.m. Wednesday;
from 11 a.m. to 7 p.m.
Thursday and Friday; from
10 a.m. to 7 p.m. Saturday;
and from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.
Sunday at Newport Dunes
with ample parking avail-
able close to the boat show.
For further infonnation, call
(949) 757-5959 or surf to
www.goboatlngamerlca.com.
I receive numerous e-
mails from people seeking
nautical infonnation, from
what their boat is worth to
the weather forecast for
Mike Whitehead
THE HARBOR COLUMN
someone's wedding cruise
next summer. I use the
Internet daily and try to
answer or refer every e-
mail. What is nice about the
Internet is that information
may only be a search away.
I am finding that marine-
related Web sites are
maturing to the point of
actual usefulness. At first,
sites basically showed
advertising and contact
information. Now, the man-
ufadurer sites have user
forums to discuss topics,
online 1mctttuals that you
can print <JUt, ·a.mail help,
product upd.ttes itnd
recalls. In addfuoa to·prod-
uct Web sites, tht'tei!a
plethora of boater cruising
information listing services
in harbors, harbor approach
information, weather data
and now cameras are dis-
playing real-time v\ews of
harbor entrances and sea
conditions. Next time I am
on a faraway yacht voyage,
I am going to call my wile
and let her know when I
am passing by a harbor's
Web cam so she can see me
on her computer.
Along with the cameras,
th the near future, I expect
to see the Vessel Thaffic Ser-
vices online with radar
images showing ship posi-
tions in areas like San Diego
and Long Beach. In the dis-
tant future, when boats have
satellite high-speed Internet
access, I can envision boats
automatically sending their
position to constantly update
an area chart showing
everyone's positibd, course
and speed.
Have cm.onboard emer-
gency and now you can
entei-O'le information so that
yow.f vessel will change
appearance on the Internet
chart to what assistance you
may require and to alert
nearby boaters. I feel good
things coming with technol·
ogy so when your engine
hiccups, just have the Inter-
net connection send the
data to the technicians in
Detroit for the diagnoses
and to order any necessary
parts that will await you at
your next port of call. Hey,
can I order a pizza too?
Safe voyages.
• MIKI WHITEHEAD Is the Pilot's
boating and harbor columnist.
Send hrm your harbor and mtrlne-
related thoughts and story sugges-
tions vi• e·mall to
MlkeOBo.thouseTY.com or
Bolthouse TY.com.
SURF AND SUll
WEATHER FORECAST
Well, If you're thinking about
wtShing the CM, )'OU may Wltlt
to think about letting Mother
Nature tal(e c.are of It. Though
It won't rlln on this ptrtly
~ dey. there's • good
dWftClt of lhoMfs on Tuesday.
So, fib • r1ln check on the
Welh;
HlgN wlll be In the mldo-to
upp1r f05 today While lows hov-
fl 1n the 1ow so.. on~.
the cloudy ikhK Ind eecompt.
~ lhoMt1 Wiii cOol "'down
.,_, the low '°'· (njoi/ what you<lft, ... ,~.
.... IMl.noH.p •
lower to about 10 knots.
Out~the~
wlfl(fs wlll blow t 5 to 25 knots.
Wfth 2· to ._foot weves and a
mhctd northwm and south
swell of 4 to s feet. nie stme
will bt found this ftenlng.
SU Rf
Another low tidt wlll pf(M to
be • problem today, ttiOugh the
belt w.va lhould 191ln bt Jn
ttMt ~ rtngt. Sblt Wfll
df'op • nouh on~· ........ ,
~JUrlWIMr.OfV.
T1DIS ,,_ ........
'-"' e.rn. ·1.0U1et low
12:22 p..m. 1.19 ... hilt\
s.'Ol.p.na. , .. Mt low
t1:21~ t.94 .. ..,.
.... 'rlMilBudUM --·
,
. I-
Doily Pilot .J
•
llSlllSCOOP
A very rocky ·council
meeting breaks out
Monday, Ap(tl 29, 2002 s
""'''
,. ..
T he f'iewport Beech "Which cbarocteir were
City Council meet· you?• MayorTod.blg&-
tng found ibeJI in a way playfully coolroOteQ ••
time. warp on Tuesday as ~Youngqujlt. in the~
shades of a ce.rtA1n sweet · ea1iDg that he may know
transvestite possessed about the 11ROC:ky
council mem~rs and Honor• ~than
auctrence members alike. an average mayor.
While discussing Councilman Steve
whether to tinan.ce the Bromberg steered the
proj>osed Balboa Perform-snickering WUllOna Into an
ing Arts~ even open environment Wet-
more, some people, like come to full·~ con·
Gay WUMll-keUy, remi-fessions when he
nisced about the theater in revealed:
their youth, excavating •1 will also admit to
some secrets that perhaps seeing the 'Rocky Horror
should have stayed secret. Picture Show' 42 times,•
"I used to sit in the bal-be announced.
cony, way in the back so During a break in the
my mother couldn't see meeting, theater support-
me," the Balboa Peninsula ers murmured 1n the aisles
resident and activist said. that ~ps the new tbe-
Such closeted memories ater could include saeen·
then started coming out in ings of the •Rocky Horror•
a big way after theater movie. Or even, as one
board member Andy suggested, a live stage
Youngquist said be, too, show.
used to lurk in the back of "No throwing rice,
~e balcony. The discus-though," one said. proving
ston was soon peppered at last that grown-ups are
with allusions to the now firmly in charge.
"Rocky Horror Picture
Show," which used to play
at the theater. ·
MUSICIANS
CONTINUED FROM 1
"Then, as ,t)}e,f!ll.Ow got
ready to go ®i the road,
they ,annow;wc:ed it was
going ~1 be a nonunion
show IUKl Big League took
it over,• Center President
Jeny Mandel said.
Sher confirmed that his
company acquired rights
to the production after
Dodger decided not to go
ahead with the show and
offered it to the theatrical
community.
But the Center. assured
by "resident Broadway
genius" Susan Stroman's
directorial mark on the
show and nationwide posi-
tive reviews, kept the
musical in its season wtiUe
lowering ticket prices,
Mandel said.
·Because we knew it
would cost us less. and we
pass that onto our ticket
buyers.• he added.
The Center's shows are
ahnost always unionized,
Equity shows.
•I don't like to do oon-
Equi\t shows,• Mandel
said. r am very strongly . ...
-CompUedby
Dally Pilot staff
supportive of Equity and
.the musidans union. and I
don't like to do this, and
we will do everything pos-
sible to avoid it, but some-
times the circumstance is
such that we can't.•
Amoss said the union's
goal in protesting is to let
the public know they are
resistant to nonunion pro-
ductions coming to Orange
County.
"We don't expect people
to give their money back,•
he said. ·1 don't think
there's anything we can do
to impact the show.•
Sher said protesting in
front of the Center is unfair
to theatergoers expecting
an entertaining evening.
Mandel is compassion-
ate toward the musidans'
cause.
"Tlley.l\av.e a .right to do
that, and I ~ppr:eciate their
position." be said. "I am
very much a supporter of
musidans, and I'll proba-
bly go out and talk to them
and bring them coffee and
doughnuts.•
• YOUNG otANG writes fea-
tures. She may be reached at
(949) 574-4268 or by e-mail at
young.changOlatimes.com .
STEVE MC CRANK I DAILY PILOT
Victor Becerra, a UCI professor, ls the director of the new Community Outreach Center that alms at improving fife
for Westside familles.
Building bridges in the community
• UCI outreach center on the Westside focuses
on improving education and the overall
appearance of the neighborhood.
Lolita Harper
DAILY PtLOT
WESTSIDE -It is a bridge
of unusual proportions.
Large steel beams are
absent from its architecture
and are replaced by a modest
room with four bare walls and
a couple of desks. Enormous
concrete support pillars are
substituted with dedicated
individuals.
The UC Irvine Community
Outreach Center may differ
in structure from traditional
models but its function is the
same: to provide a link
between two points -the
urliversity and Costa Mesa's
Westside.
The UCl Community Out-
reach Partnership Center, at
740 W. Wtlson St., is a new
venture between the univer-
sity and the Westside commu-
nity designed to strengthen
the connection between the
school and the community it
serves.
Kris Day, the center's exec-
utive director and a professor
for the university's Depart-
ment of Urban and Regional
Planning, hatched the idea
for the program after exten-
sive work on the Westside
with various classes.
"I initially got involved
because 1 taught a dass that
did research on the West-
side,• Day said. ·As l got
more involved, I found that
there were a lot of other pro-
fessors working indepen-
dently in the same area.·
The center will make sure
professors are working to
reinforce each other and see
that the university's resources
are used in the most effective
manner.
University officials chose
the most western neighbor-
hood in Costa Mesa to house
the center because of its
diverse makeup and the
issues present in the commu-
nity. Those issues include
educational quality, racial
tensions, the overall appear-
ance of the neighborhood
and the recent efforts to
improve the area by both the
city and residents.
Victor Becerra. the center's
FULL BAR
COCKTAILS
'Our overarching
goal is to make
Costa Mesa a
stronger
community, and
we want to do
that by helping
low-income
neighborhoods.'
-Victor Becerra.
UC Irvine Community
Outreach Center director
director, is charged with
managing ongoing projects,
cultivating new ventures and
cultivating funding sources.
One of the collaborative pro-
jects involves Keep Costa
Mesa Beautiful - a cam-
paign to pick up litter on the
Westside.
"Our overarching goal is to
make Costa Mesa a stronger
community, and we want to
do that by helping low-
income neighborhoods,•
Becerra said.
Manuel Gomez, the vice
chancellor of student affairs
at UCI, said the real genius
behind the project is the most
basic connection between
education and civic well-
being.
"We cannot enjoy one
investment Wlthout the oth-
er," he said.
Gomez said the center is
about recognizing that the
fa te of any one social pillar
affects all of them, and all
must be strong to build the
proper community founda-
tion.
The center integrates Cos-
ta Mesa busmesses. church-
es, reside nts, social services,
youth orgaruzations, schools
and city officials with UCI
faculty, staff, students and all
the resources the campus
offers.
His hope is that the West-
side community would• grow
stronger throug h its partner-
ship with the university, and
he also believes UCI will
g row and deepen its connec-
tion to the mandate of the
mission, Gomez said.
• 1 truly believe we have
the opportunity lo create a
model of cooperation
between the university and
the Costa Mesa community,•
Gomez said. ·All is in place to
accomplish great things.•
EstabllShed In 1962 ----
St••lt1 • ~•footl • Coel1t•iu
ShoPHlrbor
BIVd. of Cars
• ~ "'LfJlww o-6.
·Plld~ .,.,. ""'""" •T-........
•IW*IJll.I
•A • rS. L##w TM/
•.CW-l(Jtw~'41 . ...., (,_,,.,,,,; .,,
.~ ...... . ,. .....
The Real Prime Rib o~ Hiit
Mignon
(with aoup OJ' •'eel)
. Jl)ST $13.90
· Doily Pilot
, PHLIC SIFEn
lllEFLY Ill THE NEWS
mvestigators search for
answers in triplex fire
times ftxing a place COits a tremen-
dous amount of money.•
Bay Mobile Home Park. 1bey then
used shovels, boot cutbm and fire
extiliguishen to queU the fire,
Sutherland .a.id.
POLICE FILES
COSTAMISA
MIWPOIY IUCM
Investigators from the Costa
Mesa Pire Department are narrow·
ing down the causes of a Saturday
morning ftre that gutted a triplex tn
Costa Mesa.
Marci Resch, JS, wbo lives to &be
up$tain apartment. wu treated for
minor injurtes and anotMt' resident
was treated tor psychological di.J..
tress, but there were no lel1oul
injuries.
•1t wu not much of a fire,•
Sutherland said. •There was a
cbain·llnk fence there. We covered
tbe whole area with dirt..
•.,.... 5ttMI: Drunk In pubNc was
repotted n the 1000 blod at 2:45
a.m SUr!daV· -• COttlil•ltlll ~ ~
of a dangerous WUpOfl was reported
In the 2100 blodt at 1:15 a,m. Thurs-
day.
• Dralkea -· ~ Vandalism was reported In the 100 ~ ~ 1:A1 a.m.
Sonday.
• r.t COMt ....... ~
WilS reported In the 1600 biock at
9:59 p.m. Satur~. • lftl Awnue: Vandalism was report·
ed In the 600 blodc at $'.2S p.m. Fri-
day.
•we are trying to rule out can-
dles and electrical," said Pll1! Capt.
Marty Huguenin, the lead investi-
gator on the fire. •we are certain it
was accidental"
At least four people escaped
along with Resch's two cats, dog,
rabbit and bird.
The fire, relegated to vacant oil
fields near West Coast Highway
and Highland Street in Newport
Beach. was reported at 7:56 p.m.
Saturday.
• Ftllr Driwc Grand theft exceeding
$400 was r~ In the 100 bk>dt at
7:20 a.m. Ttlursday.
• Lugonla Street: Theft was report-
ed In the 200 bloc.I< It 7:15 p.m. Fri-
day.
Raft helps fight
Newport Beach fire Pireftgbters put the fire out by
8:30 p.m..
• Hllft.or llGUlevwd: Burglary was
repotted rn the 3000 blodt at S:OS
p.m. Friday.
• Hllft.or 9oulw...t As.sault ~
battery was reported In the 2400
block at 3:30 a.m. ~-
• Momlng Star Lene: Vandallsm
was reported In the SOO block at 8:29
a.m. 'Sunday.
• Newport c..ntw Drive: Grand
theft was reported In the 300 block
.i 4:11 ~.m. Friday.
Firefighters from Newport The fire destroyed the down-
stairs apartment in the triplex at the
intersection of Westminster Avenue
and Broadway.
• Authorities estimated that the
blaze caused between StS0.000
and $200,000 in dam.age. but one
bas to factor in real estate pcices.
Beach and Huntington Beach used
a raft to cross a 30-foot can.al to
extinguish a brush fire in county
tenitory behind a mobile home
pmi Satwday night. said Ron
Sutherland, Newport Beach Pire
Department Battalion Chief.
Authorities could not detenn1ne
a cause of the fire, but believe
someone ignited it. Sutherland said.
•There are no power lines in the
area and there was no lightning,•
Sutherland said.
• ....,_., "--VancWism was
reported In the 2700 b6odt at 2.:45
a.m. Saturday.
• W.lnut StNet: A vehlde was
reported borglarlzed In the 200 block
at 10:19 a.m. Sunday.
• walnut Street: A vehkle was
reported borglarlzed in the 300 blodt
at 9:14 a.m. Sunday.
• ~ eo.t Dftw: Burgl.ry wM
reported in the 900 bk>dt at 11 :30
p.m. s.tufday.
·vou have to factor Ul construc-
tion costs," Huguenin said. •Some-
Firefighters commandeered the
raft from residents of the Beach and
H lbe fire had gotten any larger,
Sutherland said he would have
called in units from the Orange
County Pire Authority for assistance.
• West ..._ Str'Mt: Resisting ~
officer was reported in the 700 blodc
at 1 :50 a.m. Friday.
•West OceMt r-ront: Grand theft
was reported In the 2100 block at
2:53 a.m. Sunday.
NEWSROOM
CONTINUED FROM 1
of a story. Sometimes. a story
never makes Jt to print
because of a tipster who let
us know some key informa-
tion.
Ironically. though, our
biggest critics are often those
who refuse to call us back on
a story or who later tell us
how we got it wrong because
we didn't know all the
·tacts.•
First, let me point some-
thing out.
ln my expenence, when
we get an allegation that we
don't have all the "facts.· or
that we misquoted someone,
those charges are often
incorrect. We often do have
all or most of the pertinent
"facts• before we report a
story. and our reporters are
not prone to making up
quotes out of thin air.
"Facts• that we can't veri-
fy should not make it into
print.
More than likely, the per-
son involved with the story
just doesn't like how the
•facts• are reported or how
their quotes sound. That
doesn't make our story
wrong. though.
Either way, if the person
complaining that we neglect-
ed to report all the •tacts•
didn't bother to call and give
us the whole story, I have a
hard time feeling sorry for
them.
My advice IS that IS almost
always a cntical error. If you
think you know somethmg
we don't about a big issue,
call us and tell us. It will
make us all look better.
Otherwise, you won't
have much room to com-
plain.
BRAMJ NEW · CooMETICAL.LY IMPERFECT
Get t11t s..t tor Leal
• • •
OK, someone please tell
me. ls the Dally Pilot news-
room on soµie Tiger Scout
Web site or something?
Never in my 12 years of
affiliation with this newspa-
per have I seen more news-
room tours, mostly with
young Cub or Tiger scouts.
Not that we mind. Actual-
ly, it's a lot of fun watching
the youngsters rumble
through the newsroom and
wake my reporters and pho-
tographers up from any
afternoon naps they may be
taking.
And City Editor James
Meler has become a part-
time tour guide through 1t all.
So we urge you to keep
those scouts coming. Sooner
or later, we're going to con-
vince one to become a
reporter I'm sure.
Here's a rundown of our
latest visitors:
Tiger Cub Pack 301 of
Cost.a Mesa checked in on
·Monday, April 22. Those tak-
ing in the various desks at
the Pilot were Kyle Barnett;
Eric Hannan; Andrew
Magee; Robert Murtha;
Arthur Rockwell; Shane Sul·
ton; Kyle Whttestde; and
Christopher Woycheese.
Then, on Wednesday.
Tiger Cub Pack 17 of New-
port Beach stopped by. The
first-graders included Cole
CaminlU; Jake Chavez;
Alexander Greenberg; and
Nathan Warner.
We hope both groups
enjoyed all the sites and per-
sonalities our office offers.
•TONY DODERO is the editor. His
column appears on Mondays. If you
have story ideas or concerns about
news coverage, please send mes-
Sjlges either via e-mail to
tony.doderoO/atimes.com or by
phone at (949) 574-4258.
3168 Harbor Blvd.
Costa Mesa
One Blodt Soatll of .OS PWJ
• (714) 545·7168
PualJTtap•GO
• Enchiladas • Taqu1tos
• Tacos • Tamales
• Gu.camole • Salsa
AND MOREi
SCHOOL
CONTINUED FROM 1
to familiarize them with the
plans and any special needs
· or requirements.
lhlstee Judy Franco said
patience throughout the
design process will pay off.
"It's been a long, lengthy
process but I believe the com-
munity will see as it progress-
es through the sites that it bas
been well worth the wait.•
Franco said.
Public participation
is paramount
The citizen oversight com-
rruttee has been meeting for
more than a year and dose to
half of the school's review
committees are involved in
destgn discussions, as well.
While a few others have
formed, the remainder have
to come together before June,
Fine said.
•A few of them (that are
meeting) are taking too long
to decide what kind of input
WALK
CONTINUED FROM 1
"I'm amazed at the sponsors;
they love this event. It's a _
pleasme to be here and see--
the community come tog.etla-
er to save babies and mm
a difference."
Now in its 32nd year.
WalkAmerica is March of
Dimes' largest fund-raiser. In
2001 , March of Dimes'
awarded $61.1 million in
grants for research and pre-
vention of birth defects.
KOCE-TV anchor Ed
Arnold has seen all 32
walks, from the first one at
the "Big A," now Edison
International Field in Ana-
heim, to the current site at
Fashion Island.
Arnold, a March of Dimes
Orange County Division
board member for 32 years
and walk emcee, worked for
KOCM Radio, the first busi-
ness that opened at Fashion
laland.
to give the architects,• Fme
said ·it's one of those things
that someone will bave to pay
attention to.•
In tenilS of funding. the
district is banking on the two
statewide bonds in the
amount of $25.35 million that
will be placed on the Novem-
ber and March 2004 ballots.
The district is eligible for
$63 million, but may not see it
all. Even if it doesn't get
100% of that, the program
will be fully funded through
March 2006 if the d1Strict
sticks to its schedule. Fine
said.
"There's always that fear
that (certain) schools won't
get their money. but it's my
understanding that the citi-
zens oversight committee will
get the same level of work
done.· said parent Jill Money.
who is on the TeWinkJe site
committee.
Lingering questions
Some issues still need to
be ironed out.
The question of modern-
ization versus replacement of
butldlngs depends on
whether the district can qual-
ify for replacement funds,
which would come out of a
different category of the state
bonds. U the district does
qualify, then the funds they
receive for modernization will
decrease.
•Right now, the budget
supports modernizing. not
replacing. because that's
what we built the program
on,• Fine sai<i #But we're
two years smarter -that's
why we get these questions.
So we're setting down and
doing our due diligence to
say: 'What is the right thing?
what is the best thing?'· -
The questionable bulld-
mgs at Ensign. for instance~
mclude the library and
administration building.
wtuch would represent a net
dlfference in replacement
funds of more than $4 million
At Newport Elementary,
the district will open up some
walls in the 1946 annex this
summer to check for water
and dry rot damage. Replace-
ment of the annex would
equate to a net difference of
KENT TREPTOW I DAILY Pl.OT
Patty Barrios of Orange rejolCleS as she finishes the March
of Dimes WalkAmerica at Fuhlon IJland on Swtday.
"It's a wonderful loca-
tion," Arnold said. "It's fun
watching tb.1.s place grow."
Arnold made sure to give
credit where credit was due.
The walk "is all volunteer-
driven and the (sponsors) put
the money where their
mouths are,• Arnold said.
He gains satisfaction from,
"seeing the youth ambas-
sadors alive because of the
money raised,• be said.
MARCH OF DIMES naELlllE
ln Orange County, 90
cents of every dollar raised
goes into research and pro-
grams to find ways to pre-
vent premature births and
other problems that jeopar·
dlze babies' lives. Among
those ways is a pioneering
surgery that corrects certain
birth defects before a baby is
born and surfactant therapy
that helps premature babies
breathe.
Buena Park resident Deb-
bie Jesselson has volun·
teered during the last four
walks in Orange County and
said she ts glad to give
something back.
Jesselson was born with a
congenital hlp.
•1t'1 a great event, great
turnout, great walkers," Jes-
elson said. "I doll as a way
of gtvtng tbanka It's a great
f ee.ll.ng to help othe who
are less fortunate.•
Clad ln turquoise shirts,
150 employees from Century
21 Real Estate Corporation's
·super1tars, • the franchise
name of th r al eltate com·
pany~ elght Orange County
offttes, walked SW>day.
More than '00 ageott
donated more thari $4,300 to
the MUCh C'il Dtauts, lild
8UllD Wu:Hubalr. dlred6r Ol---~blle a .
..... ftatun. •w•.Hidmll' .... ,,.-m.ff
more than $1 million. The
school board will ultimately
decide on whether to mod-
ernize or replace the build-
ings.
Another issue still up in
the air is how much each
scbool will get for heabng
and ventilation. Right now,
about $9 million is available.
Engineers working at the
various schools have been
investigating options and dis·
cussing solutions to make lhe
ventilation more efficient.
Eventually, two or three ideal
solutions will be selected lhat
can be applied to all the
schools, Fine said.
Still, as Fine passes the
Qciton to hls team. be is conf1-
dettf that the various aspects
of the program will coalesce
in a crescel . pf activity lhat
will make u fcJrEtime ·we belil e o things
are running fillJ a . we'U
pick up the little bit that we're
behind on,· Fine said.
• DEMORE NEWMAN covers edu·
cation, She may be reached at (949)
574-4221 or by e-mail at
deirdre.newmanOlatimes.com
babies born in the Uruted
States. or 450,000, are born
prematurely. More than
35,000 of those babies are
born in Southern Califorrua.
Six babies born every ham in Cahlornia will not
~ their first buthday. said
James E. Stutz, Walk.Amen-
ca Chairman for the South-
ern Califorrua Chapter.
which has nine walks in two
weeks in an area north to
San Luis Obispo and south
to Mexico.
"The.goal IS to generate
spirit to do what we can so
that no parent has to hear
that they will oufilw their
child,· said Stutz, father of
three children. "I'm ln the
second 1:mlf of my We, and
it's tio:>e to start giving back
to Uie community for the
blessings l have.•
Mary Beth Griffin. senior
WalkAmerlca coordinator for
the Orange County Division
of the March of Dimes, spent
a year with seven staff mem-
bers preparing for Sunday's
walk.
"It just wanns my heart to
see these children that 15
years ago wouldn't have sur-
vived, • Griffin said.
Wa.lkAmerica draws near-
ly 500,000 walkers in 1,400
U.S. communities and Puerto
Rico each year.
• BRYa ALDEJnON 1s the news
assistant. He may be reached at
(949) 574-4298 or by e-mall at
bryce.11/dertonelatlrn.s.com.
t
I~ ,._
Quon Of THE DAY ..
"Having a background In
athletics ... helped me
understand how important
athletics can be in a school ... "
Dennis Inns, former CdM principal
EYE OP:ila'
~6honor•
KATIE GROGAN
Daily Pilot Sports Editor Roger Carlson • 949-57 44223 • Sports Fax: 949-650-0170 Monday, April 29, 2002 5
PHOTOS BY DON LEACH I OAllY Pl.OT
UCI third baseman Steve Guthrie fields a throw to third, but not before Long Beach runner arrives safely.
U(:f sweeps into second
Anteaters rally for
third straight win
over 49ers, move to
second in Big West.
LONG BEACH -The Uurd three·
run lnrung of the game was definitely
a charm for the UC Irvine baseball
team, which rallied for three in the
ninth to claim an 11-9 Big West
Conference victory Sunday to sweep
a crucial three-game series from host
Long Beach State at Blair Field.
After the 49ers scored three in the
eighth to forge a 9-8 advantage, the
Anteaters (28-18, 9-3 in conference}
posted their third three-run mnmg,
including a pair of unearned runs, to
knock off the 15th-ranked hosts for
the th1rd straight day.
Steve Guthrie led off the UCI ninth
with a double and Brett Dalton
connected for a one-out RBI single
to pull the Anteaters even . Two
throwing errors on a sacrifice bunt
attempt produced the gd•ahead run
and junior center fielder Jon Horwitz
capped the rally, as weU as a sterling
offensive performance, with an RBI
single.
Junior right-hander Paul French,
who came on with one out in the
eighth, worked a scoreless ninth to
earn the victory and improve to 4·4.
Horwitz finished 5 for 6 with four
RBis to help the Anteaters, on a six·
game winnlng streak. leapfrog the
.C9en (26-15, 8-4}, as well as cal St.ate
Fullerton, in the conference
st.anctlngs. Comblned w1tb Cal State
Fullerton's th1rd straight loss Sunday
to Cal State Norlhrldge, UCI moves
percent.age points ahead of the ntans
(10-5 in conference) into second
place, trailing only Northrldge (12·3).
After Long Beach opened the
scoring with a run in the first, UCI
scored three ln the second and the
fourth to take a 6-1 edge.
UCl's lead was only 7 -6 after a
three-run sixth for the .C9ers and, after
UCI scored once in the seventh, Long
Beach moved ahead with a three-run
eighth.
Freshman second baseman Brett
Dalton (3 for .C} and freshman flrst
baseman Matt Anderson (2 for 6) both
drove in two runs for the winners,
who also received single RBI from
Chris Miller and R.J. Brown.
. COWGE WOMEN'S TENNIS
Above, Steve
Guthrie is in position
to gobble up an
lnfleld grounder
Sunday at Blair Field
during Anteaters'
11-9 Big West victory.
At left. UCJ,
celebrating a rally,
kept sptrlls high by
extending its winning
streak to six games.
French was the fifth reliever to
follow starter Glenn Swanson in the
game that lasted nearly five hours.
UCI hosts Orange County rival
Cal State Fullerton for a pivotal three-
game senes. beginning Friday.
11G wm CCBll8KI
UC llRVN 11, LONG llAOt STATI 9
UC lrww OlO l01 103 • 1t 17 2
I.Ong e..ch State 100 203 030 • 9 1 H
SWlrwon, Koehl« (6). "8ullnlltls ((6), Koller fn,
Tripoli (8). frtflCh (8) end Miller; w..wr.
DelNwia (4), Muniz (8), Jimison (9). Al1lston (9)
end OM. W • Frend\ 44 L • Jimison, 1-1. 28 .
HoMltz (UO), Brown (UCI), Guthrie (UO), Hofius
(LI), OM (LB) 2. 38 • Reed (LI). H1' • R¥ldel (LB).
UCI women upset iii rmal
Long Beach State avenges
re~-season loss to
claim Big West Gonference
team tennis title, 4-2
But Long Bea<:h's No 1 ling)es player,
AnUtasia Dvomlkova. ranked 122nd in
the lateilt collegiate rankings, defeated
8llt·rank8d Seymour, 6-3, 6-.C, to set
the stage f« liDgJes dominance by the
49en.
Long Beech's Cheryl Kindred
def•ted ucr1 Hui lAow, 1·5, CM , to
Mm tbe Jou D. JobDIOD 'nophy given
to the tournament'• Moet Valuable
....,..._Ddlatbll•waaher~
......._.....,.,UC Sat.a Balt>ara and
Cil--~ ............... AllM~ ""*' ucra Af4Y n...tttoo, e-1 , 1.5, et No. 3 lillgliN, wlaUe 4hr Laur• ,. s x •= 1ux::ra AMa a.:1111 e-
J. H. •ND.•..._ ......... -..............
ltit UCI, .. l*I Or ft Ail LI RM, ...
0 Sfi.._.911da .... ~ as r'•W._11--.ua1a-.
regular-season finale for both teams,
April 13. It elsO ended tbe Anteaten'
13-matth ~ntng streak; which began
March 2. lroruc:41.ly, UCI's April 13 win
ended a 16-matdl wtnning streak for
the .C9en. It was the only c:onterence
tou for ~ Beech State and dosed
out• perted S.O Big Welt dual-match
campiign '°' tbe Anteeten. Sulid9y°• ..... dlopped Coilcb Mike
Edlel' ua .... '° 11-1, Whtlll Lcmg
8-dl lmptowed lO 21·2. •
DI Dail,Mlot ·DI
Sports Hall of Fariie
Celebrating the millennium
DENNIS
EVANS
Corona del Mar
Former principal steered the Sea Kings' ship for 17
years, before the Great Principal Swap with Newport.
Rkhard Dunn
DAILY PILOT
As a high school •
pnnc1pal. you
wouldn't lhmk of a
sports Hall of Farner But the
17-year reign di Corona del Mar
High for Dennis Evdns was one
for aU the record books
Evans, later involved in the
Great Pnnc1pdl Swap with
Newport Harbor's Tom Jacobson,
steered a Sea Kmg ship that
voyaged through unprecedented
waters with nearly two dozen CIF
Southern Sectlon chdITlp1onsh1ps
in has tenure.
"Having a background in
athletics, I think that helped me
understand how important
athletics can be m a school," said
Evans, a former Whittier College
baseball player.
Evans, who earned his
undergraduate and master's
degrees at Whittler, as
well as a teach.mg
credential, coached the
Poets' freshmen
baseball team whtle
attending Whittler
graduate school m 1962
Newport Hdrbor, whNe Jdcobson
was the principal
"I probably can't explain why
(we were swapped) t,p lh1s day.•
Evans 'ia1d "We had no inklmg 1t
was going to happen we
thought our own school was
going very wf'll I r~ember
people saying • 11 ti's not broken
don't hx 11 ' But 1t turned out to be
a good thing b<>cause I was
meeting more people, seemg d
different school operate dnd
runrung a a1fl erent school •
Evans, who earned tus
doctorate at use. remamed di
Newport Harbor for four years,
before movmg on to UC Irvine
Evans had already been teaching
at UCI in the advanced teaching
credential program, before a
desired lull-time position opened
up.
Evaru., who hds been at UCI
smce 1992, is the D1rC'ctor of the
Doctordte Program for
Educational Leadership
When Evans wa<,
hired at CdM. hf> was
the youngest pnnnpdl
in Orange County di
age 32, then, pnor to
Nicoli's locally fdmous
Pnncipal Swap. Evans
bad the most tenure at
one school of any
county pnnctpal
• 1 thank 1t can be
tough bemg a h1gh
school principal If you're
ambivalent dbout
sports.• Evans said "It's
a lot better if you like
(sports). Fortunately,
Before coming to Dennis Evans CdM. Evans mdde stops
at Sweetwater, El Rancho, LoweU
and La Habra high schools I've always enjoyed sports.•
Al CdM. Evans and fo rmer Sea
K.Ulg athletic director Ron Ddv1s
formed a sohd administrative
team for almost two decades in
the 1970s and '80s. when only
CJF and stale champ1onsh1p
banners were aJJowed to hang on
the waU~ inside the gym. a
traditional that remains.
Under Evans' dlrecllon, the
Sea Kings managed small
dynasties m numerous sports.
mcludmg boys basketball and
water polo, while guls sports
began to flounsh under TiUe TX
"People come m and Uunk
those are league championstup
banners on the wall,· Evans sa1rl,
"then they do a double take and
realize, 'My gosh, those are CIF
champlonshlps up there:·
Another time, Evans was
successful in getting CIF
sanctions levied against Mater
Del for allegedly "tampering with
some k:lds, • vlewed as a big
victory for the rimall school.
But, prtor to the 1988·89 school
year, a strange thing happened lo
ll\e Ne~rt-Mesa School
District. Superintendent John
Nicoll swapped pri.Dopa.1.s at CdM
aqd Ne~rt Harbor. Evans, who
started as CdM prlnopal an the
1971-72 school year, wu ordered
to move acr th Back Bay to
as a teacher or adnumstrator.
"There were a couple of job
openings in the (Newport-Mesa I
district (in 1971}, including
principal at Corona del Mar and
principal at Costa Mesa. and the
interview was really for one or the
other,· Evans said • 1 re member
I got a call from (former
superintendent) Kevan Wheeler
and he said, 'How would you like
to be the pnnc1pal at Corona del
Mar High School?' I thought that
wasn't too bad •
When word got out that Evans
attended Wlutber College. at
least two CdM coaches -football
coach Dave Holland and
wresthng coach Dick Morns, both
Whittier alums -were lhnlled.
Evans, who enjoyed an
excellent relationship with all
departments at the school, nev r
viewed athletes differently than
others trying to excel in a certain
field.
Evans, the late t honoree in
the Daily Pilot Sporu Hau of
Fame. lives on Udo Isle with his
Wife, Kristine. They b.ave two
grown children, Mark, 36, a
Suzy, 35, bolh of whom gre<lUated
from CdM when the.tr father
pnnapal. They also have two
~ pchildren. Bnttam end C&i'tll
stays
6 Mondo)i April 29, 2002 SPORTS Doily Pilot
HAPPY BIRTHDAY IRIRY
OCC golfers seek conference crown
TODAY
The Orange Coast ~
College men's goU team
enters today's Orange ·
Emplre Confe rence
tou.mament Sunday at USC's Mc.Donald's
Swim Stadium.
lul.-DAMON G)
Coron• del Mar
girts tennis
Championships hopeful of d1tlmlng the
conference title.
Coach Bany Wallace's Pinttel ftnisbed
tied for second with Irvine V4lley 1n the
conference regular season, both posting
14·4 records against OEC competition.
SS>phomores Melissa Fernandez, Erica
Horman, Lauren Volcan and Rebecca
Wedemeyer each scored twice for the
Anteaters, who improved to 16-22.
Senior Ner;tssa Reidenbaugh scored
the other gotll and sophomore goalie
Sunceray Chamblee made seven saves
for the wtnnen;. 5ouEN 5cMNEn>o •
Orange Coast
men's volleyball Saddleback leads the pack Lnto
today's 36-bole competition among five
schools at Los Serranos Goll Club ln
Chino Hills.
The two teams played even in the
first, third and (Ourth quarters. but UCI
outscored the Gauchos. 4·2, in. the seoond
period.
TODAY'S SCllDUll
YaMU.
The top four teams from today's action
will advance to the Southern Calltomia
Regionals, scheduled May 6.
OCC will be paced by Fredrik
SVanberg, who posted the low round of
any OEC goHer last week with a 6-under-
par 66 in the Pirates victory over Riverside.
MaryBlumbertled UCSB (17·17) with
four goals.
!IOUlfM PACIK RD -=pg mt""'
~---High IChool • Allio Niguel •t
Newport HMbor, J:1S p.m. UC IRYM 9, UC 5ANrA ~ 1
UC Irvine 2 4 1 2 -11
UCSB 221 2 -7 DMl•fU
High IChool ~end glr1' -
NtlNpoft Herbor et see View
LNgue PrellmlNrlel et llvfrl8
High. 2p.m.
Svanberg's conference scoring average
of 74.1 ranks third among OEC players.
OCC's Lou Carrasco ranks fourth with a
74.36 average and fellow Pirate Kelly
Wicks (eighth at 75.27) is also in the top 10.
UC lr.l1ne • f«nlndez 2. Horman 2. VoQn 2. ~ 2.. lteidenb.ugh 1. 5-Yls-~ 7.
UC Santll a.w. · llYmberg 4. Rieb 1, GOftletl
1, Kunkel 1. 5-Yls • c.ornd 1.
lightning's McNeill resigns
Gordon McNelll, who [I]
guided the Sage Hill High
boys basketball team to an
High sdlool ~ • Col'ON def
Mir, Coste M98, Esundll et
Paclflc Coest Leegue Flnels
(opening day), et I.Of Serr.oos
GC. 10 llJTI.
Irvine Valley is led by Costa Mesa
High product Jeff Montoya, whom Coach
Ben Burnett credits for helping the Lasers
tum things a.round after finishing 3-15 in
conference last year.
Montoya shot 3-under 69 to help the
Lasers defeat ruverside last week and
ranks ninth in the conference with a
scoring average of 75.55.
8-10 record in its first varsity
season, has resigned as coach.
The forrner Corona d el Mar High
assistant coach, who is also Dean of
Students at the Newport Coast private
school, is moving to the San Fernando
Valley, where his wife has been placed
in a residency program. DEEP SEA
SUNPAJ1 coutm
•Jeff is our team captain and he bas
displayed leadership and courage, as
well as golf talent,· Burnett said.
UCI women finish ninth
Newpon landng · 4 ~ts. 53
anglers 1 white sea bas.s. 48 calico
ban, 5 sand bas.s. 6 hllhbut. l
iO.llptn, 89 rodrfish, 2 ~.
1 ~zon. 1 wgo, 3 ~low fin
croaker, 40 blut perch
Four UC lrvine players ~ scored two goals apiece to
lead the Anteater women's
water polo team to a 9-7
Vlctory over Santa Barbara in the runth-
place game of the Mountain Pacific
Sports Federation Cbampionsh1p
Sage Hill High Athletic Director Nate
Miller said McNeill decided the 90-
minute commute would be too difficult,
especially since the couple is expecting
its first child this summer.
The Lightning 'finished tied for third
m the Academy League. then lost a third-
place playoff game to Brethren Christian
and did not make the CIF Southern
Section playoffs.
~ Lodtw · No report.
Flctltloua BualMH
N9rne Stat.ment
Th• following penlOlll
are ~ bulfneu aa A) AP RNllY
B) Aslen PllClflc Bull· neet Credit, 5000 Birch
St West Tower. St• 3000, Newporl Beach,
Calltomle 92680
Allen Pacific Limited (CA), 5000 8lrctl St W rw Ste. 3000, Newport a..cn. Celllomae 926eO Thia bu~ It con-duded by • corporation
He11e you alerted
dcWlg ~ y-.? No A.r.n Peciflc Limited,
Charlt1 Chw1n·LH ~· PrMldent This llelemenl WU
hied with tilt County
Clettl ot Orange County on 04/1 or.!002
2002 .. 11110
Daily Plot ~ 15, 22.
29.lMy 8. ~ M351
Flctltloua Bualneaa
Name Statement
The tollowlng pereone .,.. doing ~ u .
A) S11i1FAXtlon Com·
munlcltlons Lid
8) e.nklellOhOnv, 5000
Blrch St WHI ·Tower,
Sit 3000, Newport
Beectl, Celifomle 92660 Ralf H. HM. Pmldent
Atlen Pecific Limited This statement wu
(CA), 5000 Blrch St. W. filed wi1h the County t w. Ste. 3000, Newport Olelll ot Orange County
Beectt. California 92660 on 04/12/2002 Thi4 business 11 oon· 2002Htt4ff
oueted by • corporation D~ Pilot ~ 1s. 22,
Have you 11erted ~~ 6. ~ M353
doing bu.W-Yfll? No
A1Ten Pacilio Limited, Flctlttoua Bualneu
CharlH Chwan·LH Name Statement
Shona. PrNldenl The I~ perlOl1a Thll 1tatement wu .,. doWlll bulinMI u :
Ned with the County YAMAKJ.WA, 18281
Clef1c of Or1ll'tg8 County Entelpttte tA & 8, Hunt·
on 04/1 Ot"l002 lnalon 8-:tl. CA 92648
2002aM171 11.B Treding Inc .. OalyP1klC -15, 22. (CA), 18261 Etiterprlte .. ~""""'..._.8,.., ... ~..,..,__;;¥352~ •A & B, Huntington .,........., "·~•~--8-::h, CA 92&48 rKiuuOU9 --This business Is con· Name Stament The followwlg peqon1 ca.ld8d by: 8 eo!pOl ll'loO
.,.. doing buli*-• He11e you started
RT P~. l82el doing bu1lne1a y11?
Ene8lpl!M •A & e. Hin· Y•. 411~ ~ ..___... CA ....,,.,.. H.B. Tlldng. Inc. ._...,, """° Rall H. Hel99, Pl9lidenl
Ananciel Slfv· Thia statement WU
lcH, (CA). 18281 filed with the County
EnetrpltM tA & B, Hunt-C1ef1c ot Orange County
ill!llOn 8-:tl, CA ll2e48 on 04/12!2002 This buslne11 II CM-~ by •• COf1>0ltllon 200211"495
Ha111 you alerted ~ PiloC ~ 15• 22•
doing bu1lnes1 yet? -8· ~ M352 v ... 411~
R.T. Anenclel
Clll ClllllllM Today
(Ml)M2-5•7t
FIND
~
Actltloua Bualnua
N.rtM Stntment
The tollowlng persont
.,.. doing bulln9la 11:
New View HouH,
2043 Federel A111 ..
Colla Miu, CA 92627
Cerol Helen Kent, 3050 S. 8ri1tol 9R,
Sel1le Ana. CA 82704 Karen Stenzel, 2043
Federal A111.. Coste
Mele. CA 112827
Thie bualn... le con·
111.a.d by ClC>1*"*'I
Ha111 you •tarted doing buatf1-e yet? No
Ceiol Helen Kent
Thie ltaleinenl WU
l11ed wllh the County Cleltt ot Or.nge Col.ny on 04/19l"l002
2002tto0371
Delly PiloC Delly Pio! ;&;k 22, 29, Mey 8,;Qi;
BSC 11121
NOTICE OF
PETITION
TO ADMINISTER
ESTATE OF:
JOYCE ANNE
KELLER
CASE NO. A21295e
To au helra, benen-
oiaril1, aedltora. cont·
ln~nl credltore, end
OFFICIAL PUBLIC NOTICE
pet'IOnl who may OCher·
wlM be nter.ted In the
wll Of ~! Of both. ol: JOYCE ANNE KEUER
A PETITION FOR
PROBATE hU been
nled bv MICHAEL T. KEU.EA end MARK R.
KELLER In the Supetior
Court ol C.fllornla,
Colnv °' ORANGE. 'THE PETITION FOR
PROBATE '*'*'* ht MICHAEL T. KEU.ER
end MARK R. ICE1.LEA
be tppelnled u per-80Nll ,........_to lldnli...... the ...... ol
the decedeN. THE PETmOH ,..
QUMll the decedent'• Wll end ooclcle. If llf'f,
be edmMed to p!Cbale. The Wll end wry oocldll .,.. evallable for ex·
lll'*1allon In "' Ill kepi by the court. THE PETITION ,..
QUMt1 llJlhol1ty to eo-
thnlsl• the ..... um.
the lndepelldelll ~
lstr•lkln ot e-.. Ad.
(TNI AuChorily will dow
lhe perlOtl8l r1Pf9H11t· e1lvM lo leke meny 80-
llont without obtaining
COUft •pprovel. a.font
leklng otrteln 11ery Im·
pc>111n1 ectlon1. how·
TWO ORDINANCES OF THE CITY COUNCIL
OF THE CITY OF COSTA MESA AMENDING
TITLE 13 OF THE COST A MESA MUNICIPAL
CODE.
THE COST A MESA PLANNING COMMISSION WILL HOLD A
PUBLIC HEARING FOR CONSIDERATION OF TWO ORDINANCES
OF THE CITY COUNCIL OF COST A MESA AMENDING THE
REGULATIONS CONTAINED IN TITLE 1 3 RELATING TO THE
FOLLOWING:
• DEVELOPMENT ST AND ARDS FOR TRANSPORTATION
DEMAND MANAGEMENT;
• ADOPTION AND IMPLEMENTATION OF AN •ART IN PUBLIC
PLACES" PROGRAM.
ENVIRONMENT Al DETERMINATION: EXEMPT.
This public hearing will be held as follow1:
DATE: Monday, May 13, 2002
TIME: 6:30 p.m. or as soon•• po11lble thereafter
PLACE: City Council Chambel'9 at City Halt
77 Fair Drive, Costa Me1a, California
P-ubllc comment• In either oral or written form may ht! presented
during the public hearing. For further Information, tele~one (714)
764-6246, or visit the Planning DMalon, Second Floor f City Hall,
77 Feir Drive, Co1ta Mesa, Califomla. The Planning Division 11 o~
7:30 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Monday through Friday. •
OFFICIAL PUBLIC NOTICE
I f
Mtller sald the school will begin
looking for a new coach im.medlately.
Interested applicants may contact Miller
at school: (9-49) 219-1365.
•we're real sorry to lose him,• Miller
said. •He was a big part of our athletic
program as basketball coach and of our
school as dean of students.•
CdM's fyson doing well
junior pitcher Amy 'fysoo, . \ /)
Corona del Mar High [[QJ
struck Ln the face by a line 1<__.Y
drive during a Pacific Coast
League softball game at Laguna Beach
Thursday, was released from Mission
Hospital Regional Medical Center
Saturday, her father, Pete Tyson, said
Sunday.
Amy Tyson underwent reconstruc-
ttve surgery on a broken nose Thursday
and was also monitored for post-
concusslon symptoms, Pete Tyson said.
"She seems to be doing really well.
but she's really sad about missing the
rest of the high school season,· Tyson
sald of his daughter, who sustained no
other fractures.
Doctors have told Tyson she could
resume running and throwing in three to
four weeks for her travel ball team,
American Athletic.
Anteaters get results
Three UC lrvlne track ~
and field athletes posted
third-place efforts at the UC
San Diego Open meet which
ended late Saturday night in La Jolla.
Junior Tynisla Edwards was third in
the women's triple jump with a season-
best 39-4 112 and sophomore Jenny Liou
was tlurd in the men's 1,500 meters Wlth
a time of 4:38.92.
Freshman Patrick Grogan was Uurd m
men's triple jump with a mark of 46-5 U4.
Junior Mike Nguyen was sixth ln the
triple jump (44..0) {OT UCL
In the women's 800, the Anteaters
finished fourth. tilth and sixth. Junior
Tessa Candejas ran a season-best
2:1 t.51 to place fourth, followed by
teammates Cathy Picha (2:14.36), a
Junior, and sophomore Jenna Keith
(2:14.68).
Anteater sophomore .Annmarie Turpin
was fourth in the-400 hurdles (63.79).
ln the men's long jump, UCI
s9phomore Joe Lourenco finished
seventh (21-7114) and senior teammate
Jimmy Onizuka was elghth (20-9 114).
Anteater sophomore Curtis Lehmann
was eighth ln the 800 meters with a time
of 1:54.61.
Rowers UCIA bound
Eight members of the ~
New.port Aquatic Center ~
varsity women's c rew, ~
induding Newport Harbor
High seniors Kate Mead and Lauren
Berghell, are among the first recruiting
class for the newly re-established
women's rowing team at UCLA.
Rowing had been a club program at
UCLA in recent years, but will b e
reinstated beginning next fall and
Bruins Coach Amy Fuller was happy to
invite the eight NAC athletes lo help ge t
the program off and rowing.
In addition to Mead and Be rghell,
other NAC standouts who will continue
rowing for the Bruins include Michelle
Fickling and Lindsey Serrins
(Capistrano Valley High}, Shannon
Packer and Lindsey Payne (El Toro
High), Lauren May (Canyon High). and
Lindsey Hurban (Mission Viejo High).
Berghell, who has attended UCLA
football games all her life and had
hoped to attend the school from an early
age, will become (\ U\ttd-generatJon
Bruin.
IUMtltute HC:uritlel IOf
""' rnonllt wllhheld by the Dllll1c1 to ensure l*forrnenot under the
conlrlCI. Each bid IUbmjtted In
r"900N to Ihle ~ wn conteln, u • bid Item, lldeqUat9 lheetlng,
thorinQ. end breclng. °' equlllalenl method, for
"' prdldion ot Iii• end limb In trtnehet and
open excevetlon, whlctl
lh&I confon'n to ep-~.mng ~
ly Wiiiem M. v.,
Ed. 0.. et..ioelol.
C..t C-unlty
Colef8 Olatrtct Publl1hed Ntwpon
8Hch·Co1te MHe Oellv Piiot Apt 29, Mey e.~
M362
aTY OF
NEWPORT BEACH
NOTICE
IHVJT1HG BIDS
SMi.d bide mey be r9Cl8lved • the office ot
the CllF Clerll, 3300
NtitpoH Bouleverd, p s . Box 1788. Newport
8eech, CA 92858-8915 ~ 11:00 Lm on ltl4t 15Ctl dey ot Mey 2002, ••
which time such bids
lhen bl opened and
reed '°' lf'VINI AVENUE
MEDIAN
IMPROVEMINTI
FROM WUTCUFf
DRIVE TO DOVER
DRIVE
l1ele of Protect Conlred No. S27t ,J:iooo.oo ( • bdnwllt
"' ~oo:1. L... ~ WOftla ~
Proepectlve tMdclera 'MY obtetn OM Ml ol
bid docunenla • eca.I coec • 118 otb a1 the PUbllc WOfb OepM·
ment, 3300 Newport
Bouteverd, Newport 8-:tl, CA 82983
Contractor UcenM
CIHtlllcallon(•) re·
rUnod for 1111 PfOled: ~-
FOf lunfler lrlfolme· tJon ceH Fong TH, Proleci M•n•oer •• (IM6) &44-3340
Pubtltlled Newport
8aacll·Co111 MH• o.IV Pio( Aprl 29, 2002
M3§3
Index • II Pl .... -·-m . r; , ... ..... ... !I
,., • 11• r:J ii lyFu By MaMa Penom
(9i9) 0.1 I ·b5Qi I~ wlu.lr ..... ,_... ... 1
pl;., ...... i1wr ···' "' •........ i....i. .otit11lfll'l\ci-••
.l.30 \r~1 na, s..,.~,
(~11 \ll"ll <. \ 'tlo~"'
\1 ~,.,,, llM. to H.1 "4
llolln
'f,lfvl1rn"' 8-:IOi1111-"1·IKl11111 '"-'•lin-1 ,., ..
i11lk-l11 R<rnam-.. •• 00,.111
\l..el11 tnolu
EASTSIDE FIXER
38' 281, comll lot w/
RV ICCffS. $499,500.
1gt. 94H23-8120
105 Al'T'S
Alt real es111e adlltrt1s1no
In this MWSj)lper is subilCI
to the Federal Fair Housino
Ac1 of 1968 as amended
which makes it Illegal to
advertise •any preference
llmltition or dlscr1m1nat1on
based on race. totor rellg·
Ion, so. hln<llcap, tamllial
slltus or national or101n or
an Intention to make any sucn preference llmltat1on or discrimination •
I 2A J11 I .___....P_E_:_1~_ii_~_:_.
• • • 1 Br 1.581 den, perking
This newspaper w111 not
knowlngty accept any
Secluded Old Hollywood
EtUte In No TUll11 Foot-
Mis of Santa Ana Under
$750,000 ag! 94!>-723-3120
aH um paJd s 1200/mo vi¥
• 38r 381 1 door to ocean 1-'Y remodeled homt 52500/mo yea/ty
Alsocllted Realty
949-673-3663 advertisement tor real I I est.ate which Is In v1olat1on 32MEWPORT~~ of the liw Our re.tdets are -...a; CIAS.SIFIED
hereby informed that all IC's the 110tudon dwellings ldvertlSed 1n llUS you're scarch.lng
newspaper lf8 avaiLablt on for-w~ ~equal oCJC)OrtUOlly bas•S I Br 181 P9ntbouM V.. you're~ a
To complain ot d•scrim• Bllboe ~ & bay V'ltfW home. a.,..,.unrnt.
niltOll, call HUD toll·free II hql ~ $329.000 pd or nnv
;:1·=80CH2==4=-85=90===;J Q!!e 8@:~525 IJl 29 ==occu==pa=tlonl==~
l' HOOSWCONOOS 1~
GENERAL FOR SAL£ GENERAL
1~ f'OA SAL£ GENERAL
~ e.,..,. I.I !f u p,..;uti«
3407 E Coast Highway, COM 92625 ~~·) .,, ........ 19<9) .,, ... ,,
~~
Corooa del Mar Proptrties is under new managemeol and looking for
EXPERIENCED agents koowltdgeablt in I.be Corona del Mar and
Ntwpor1 Beach residential markets. Ir }OU art intmsttd in 1 higher
commlssloo split. p~ rootlet us at the numbtrs abou. Ast for
Pbillip Gmnberg or Frank MNiale. P1tase, experia:lad agents only.
Herbof Woode 2br, 2ba, condo. nu bllt'carpet. p&llO,
wld. Ip, 2c 1111. comm pool,
$1 aSOt'mo 714-393-1825
Cotti ...... 1141-1652
Newport Blvd, ret1ll
ltorefront for ...... 2...,
~ 840af. SUOOlmo.
Clll Sh!rt! W.313-7517
Pnme Mlln SL ~tlon.
Approx 2000sq fl. aval now
$1 75 per square toot
949-650-323"4 91500-567 4
STORAGE I
STEEL ARCH BUILDIHGS
• Factory dm1ct• SIVt Thousands on undellvered
buildings' t 6x20, 35180
40lm Ideal~
CaM now 1-300-3"41·7007
www sleelmasterusa com
!CAl'SCAN)
$895. FURN STUDIO GAIN ENERGY
Gated Comm. PooVSpa LOSE WEIGHT
CtbhWGyml\.ndly. Next to Ooct0< recommended
Ho!Q !IQ! 949-646-6no 1ocw. Guar 8811-658-3874
Yerul ... large lbr, stone 1-LOSl • 1 Cdftl/1Br ~ Atntll noor.. lelded glasl, crown
Fabulous ooean YlllW, S11P1 molding, patio pool~ FOUND to belch. pvt em cotlagl. $1~. 94~ ..._ _____ _,_
LMve 3Br 281 S2,950l!no.
714·336-1800 .-.furlboom.com/
torrent.him
3mol$12,000 949-6°73-!111
Sumllllf Rental 3Bt 28a.
1 Br 1 Bl 8IWld ,_, lg liv/ Found c.. young male
I 11
~ I :oe .. :i.~2~ 32 HOO&ESICOllDOS 10t .. --APTS 3 monlh llWI 94~73-«171 1•" . fOfl .ULE CCR*A DEL llAR
NEWPORT lfACH I 1IO "°'llEft I 2St 2Bt. Slmv ~ COSTA a
dtn ..... ~ ttdld lndly. 1lbbr. r_,,. vet war\,
no p9ts/smllg S1 ,15()(rno Bro1dw1y/S1nt1 An1.
rdcl IAll 949-631 ~ Co1Sta Mesa 949-6'1Hi 18 I
28r 1.581 Fp W/O, IC gw, ~ .....,, on Bllloe
PIDO. 1060 al. 1 bklck IO Illy l1t111d. Dec 2001. AVli ~4 $185()(mo ~ 310 E Bax 94~17 Mt 830-3301
PRIME ESTAT£S ~!'CHIS)(~-=
lots & <>c.i Views] Fn1 Ave. 949'675-3336
'PeNllllll dclll ID my I l..o9111 SIMD SNhtnl no
-. Relnod 4br 2111. 11 tmQI. w: of Senla Ana A\19
.... 38' UBI 2 sty dtlldl h. *II Ip, wd. 2 c gar C.M. white wlblaclt tars
home _,..,, tneld ~ MM»-752t long hU 949'04S-1520 •
Local kJtlens calS doQI IOf
ldo(>tJOn ram 0< s1111ie every
Sat·Sun noon-4pm Fashion
Island ANIMAL NETWORK
Into Mt-644-2279
-•.1nlm1ln1tworll.or11
FREE 30 DAY WEB
LISTING FOR DOGS
Ml-451-4606
Oclc1t kltttnt, CFA,
lMj)ord '°'* lllkts S500
rlrt HOiie Crtemk:hoco-
1* apo!l!d. IOt-734-7773
COAST COIN NEEDS
OLO COINSI Gold. •~vet
,e-elry wa!Chts lllttques
cotlecltblts 9-49 6'2·9"7
478 EMPlOYMEHr OPPORTUNmES '
Admln Altittant SmaP COM oll.ce seeks PfT
mult1·task1ng ind1v woth
suong COQlputer & com·
mumcation skills, phones
and attn lo detaM E ·mail
resume wnh salary req
lntoOkeyap!!k111.coni
•••ANNOUNCEMENT ...
NOW Hinng lo! 2002 Pottal
IOb l15t1n(l9 $13 21-$24 50/
hour r:'ult benehtalp1id
trlnir9'JIO exp -'Y· Accepting cans 7 days
1.W.72$-Ql ext 500
1caL'SCAN)
APPOINTMENT SETTERS
M WORK • FIT PAY ....., SHIFTS AVAIL
Full 8entllla, Plld Treln-
lng....,..., DOE
Get llfM Todly.
Cd ldonl 714-t1~702t Call PMricll Tenor9
Agent 94"56-9705 2Br 1.581 Opll Fp. IC a>mtt wd°"I* II'/ -"===..:~=-==:::..
gat+ 1 91*8. Riiy Ni~ yll'CI. Nida l*l.c>. 2c Oii 'flenlnNI 1 hcMM rr-•------.. •CATERING MAHAGER•
Ill the Vlllge, s1n5lmo $2100 !QI 94~~ ._ Ael'llod.., .... 2 I M2 ----1 needed for C11111lot 94~294-8389, 640-5324 MESA VVlDE 2br 1bl -;:: ~=:v.; ... ~LOTS =ti~~:::::'
COM, ecroa from A.... end llllf, llundry hkupe • •
4 SANDY COVE Alf ... ,.._ tl¥ld
In. \JpOfDe "'°"' llmHtone tloor1.
11,750,000
s.tllllt Maurer
MH1f-11M
..--11295/mo. Cet ok. Agt
1tw 1 be, 1111111 view. ... 714· 75 t-4330 ID badl. Ldl of ltofagt.
11215/mo. MM73-101t EASTStOE HOME 48r 281
. .,.
.t.
-·\ ··-· . ."c~ .•.
New carpe11peint LO yardl,
Ip, lllaml, waler & galdtnlr
Ind $2000m 714-2~
BEACH CLOSE! P8Clftc View Mom*Y
38r 2·5Ba, tile lk>oc's 2 Loi> 1 HE I 169f
& shutt81'S, Fp, S2500m Price NeQOtt.ble
agt Vtclo 949-723-8800 Pvt Plll1Y Ml-364-2238
s.tutlfUI o-rtronf
~~~~ 1 440 ~1 mtlon. ~ ~ .. UL.£
v.. ,..,.,.,. ~2 -------
adtt Style Fvmiture l'IANOS' Colledlbtet . .,,.._._
...... --· Olloit,........ .. CA9"PAIO .. ----·--.. 8UY ESTA1D
·~~ ........ ..
l corJs1G rir.mJTs .
Cleenln, Counter P8f10ll,
will ttall'I. lnendly end good
wlcus1omera F't. Mon-F rt
HB 714-648-1011
'... . ...
•
Polley
Rnt~ 11.nd dtadlioo IN' &UbJN'f 10 rltaf1't •ithont noliff 1111' publl~bfor rtbl'r'Mt thf' ri~t to OO\SOr. ~~ify. ,,.,j.,, or rl"jM·11111'
rla'i-iftMl e1kmi~t1tf'fll. Pll'.llM rrport nny rrror 111.11 r1111~ IH' iu \Uur
rlit• ifi,.fl 11d immt'diatl'ly. Tht Dm1~ Pilot ll'fl'flf~ oo lihb1lil\' for 11n~
rrmr 111""111hl'r1L'otflll'nt for •·ltirf1 ii u111~ hf' l't"flOO.iblr f'Xrr111 for
1lif' rt)olt of thr ~1111rt nctualJ) ocrupitd b~ tht rrror. Crwitt n1111111h lw
all11ucl for tl11• ftr.-1 u1o1t.nioo.
---DMdllne8 ---
Mon1la~ ............ Fritla) 5:00pm Friday .......... Thursda\ 5:00pm
TuNla~ ......... ~londa~ 5:00pm Saturday ........... frida~ 3:00pm
\ttdnr!14la~ .... Tuei.<Jay 5:00pm unday ............ .f rida) 5:00pm
Thuno<la} .. \\t"dnei.day S:OOpm
LOOKING fof JACK I JtU
PIT 1 ()().4 30 or 6 »9:00
Jaok & _,,. aie team players
and are tun to worlt wnh.
!hey also QI!\ llcilets to coo-cens & won bonuses They
left 11 11111 You? Pacific
Symphony Ttltfundlng
Campelgn Eve & Sais
Ira fl 4-876-2398
MEDICAL FROHT OfF1CE NEWPOAT ~ H<*sbc
pein re•oel ptactice Using
Apple "4acl/llOlll computer
Wt b'Vl Per10Nb4e Good
anotudt Typ1nq s~11ts
$10nt Lv msg 9'9'33M$35
POSTAL JOBS S9 19
$14 32 • BerielllS No E.ocp
F0< App & EWTI lnlo. Cal
1·800-737-7072 Ext 0600
8am·9p!W? Oars
Re1murant si.fl POlftlont
• Servers • Hosl • Kllehen pos PIT uper'd Ouam1
upscale Amencan cuisine
r8$lliurant on Balboe Pentn-11"8 Apply 111 person 0 Bb
Ame's 205 Mam St . Balboa
MH75-a141
478 EMPLOYMENT
SERVIC£S
Pte9I be ..... lhlt
lht llttlnga In Ihle
Cft90IY NY ""*9 you lO Clll I 900
number In whlcll
llwl II I dllr9' per
minute
"'-be ...., of CMll
of eru compMiel.
Ct** with lhe loc8I
8etW Bl.Ill-Bu-,_, blfofl you a.Id
111y money or .._
fof MfVlc-. Reed
and undentand any
contrlCta before you
algn.
SIGN FRANCHISE llu
w1ll-e111bh1htd locatton
IVIJI iocl"1 M\111 981. No
rHtOnlble offer "fused
No liq> r-*S Full ~ ·~= A CAL YEH KWH/POLO P.rtume l\llrtts Do you
mek1 S UlOK' Vou rxAJtJ' 50
local Sltll FIM samples
1-800-561-0118 2417
M&fll lllARS
$3..00MIO. (..elde)
20 Locll Vending ..... llO ca~t:°'~ I ,.:t:·
1..alll01 (24tnl
A Local v.-g RcM1
1• .. loc8loM. -+ r-iJ. m.-... req. 1~17
e WATERFAONTe
'""" LOClllloll Newport Btlcfl ......,.
rant, Cattnng/81(
Sold .. ln6WMI "'* Cll ..... _
Bid Credit,
Bankruptcy, tow on
aish flow? Cal us ..
be4ieve on you and we1
WOl1l wrth you to Ott
you bacll on track
Theres no up ll'ont
IM, fut appfovll I
very low lntar111
rltH. Cltl loll fl'9t 1~51
BMW 3251 ~ 'IO Red. bid .... ,.. l!lp,
QJlloln wt.Mii. OIMI caond $8000 7fU7W5f7
BMW 325lc '1911
Elaptional 2 dr •llelllltf
Newly l9buttl trans Rl<llt
Elin Alarm sys avalllbte
10 CO/Changer AC, PW
AT SeMce Records Clllmc>lllnl Bronn. exl/rtW/ Browri l'op 1341< mtlel
~.985 L4 ~
Fln1ncl1I dlfflcuttlH? BMW '35CSI 'f7 1~ Needing I foen fat? No .... up fTcnl Cll Toll mtlN, •• records fT9tl l-8U-m..a2'8 Ml ltv OAIOlll wllMll, dt'll oond $7500 9'19-650-2069
REAL ESTATE COVE MONEY TO LOAN
CASH FOA DEBTS
t S1 and 2nd Home
~gages Financing
lor business 5Call up &
eJpanSJOn No lees
attached. all cred•t
accepted ean 24/hrs
1..aaa-110-7532
SSCASHSS Immediate
Cash for structured M1lle-
ments, annurt1es, real ea·
tate. notes pnvate morl· gage notes aa:ldtnl CISIS.
and insurance payouts
(800)79•·7310
ICAL'SCAN)
.. FAST CASH" Fol l'toml-
owners S15,000 p1y
$94 e1·,mo• '50.000 P1y
$31603'/mo' $70.000 Pay
'442.'5'/inol Be9ed on 380
lllOlllhs detll coosolodallOll.
casf'I ed. home
iml)tOYlment. no one •
faller Iha/I GLOBAL Con-
sultlnls' OoMlgl ~ tn 24 hou11 Call
1-8n-S3&-3483 an 3000
::-~·:== m.a liclnM "Bated on
~ liud ,.. motlglgl
al 6 S"-(6 75'J. APR) IOr
Quallfild appic81tl onlV Aalts SUl>ttci to dllngl
without no1lct
(CAL'SCAN)
OYER YOUR HEAD In debt??? Cllldlt caldlltlls?
CUI paymentl up to 50%
Aeduc:elefimlnate lnter"1
ITllllUJnfrebuild Cl1ldlt. fTM
evaluation (800)566· 1548 non·protlt
www.anewhonzon Olg
ICAL'SCAHl
..~·--· •• 1'. -"T"
'C"".a--~ -•
MOTORING
BMW 32llA 'OD
sa-1grsy 532,115 11312
BMW 32llA 'tt
Biid/ian S2U95 '"71
BMW 32tlC 't7 BllcMllll $2$,915 14)4()
BMW S29IC 't?
~ $24.115 •71"
BMW 63m '17
Wllllet'IM 124,915 YM351
BMW 5211 W
BMlltc* Ut,915 '6931
9llW 5211 ..
llUllld S3l.IM MOl2
BMW 5211 W
.,._. ~-Ytl!M
lllW 52llA ..
~124,11513151
8MW 52llA 't7
Sllplr $24,115 '554'
BMW WT 'OD
IMllK* $35,915 '5152
BMW mfT 'OD 9199' ..... 1347'
lllllW Mii 't7 ~Ill l30,"5 '2111
BMW 740! 'It
8tMlll --MZl7
llllllW74GIL'tl
AnWgnr --..,
llllW 740ll ..
Slwr --t2llO 9llW 740IL ..
S1191Y131,t151551t
... 74al. ..
~--*11
-~ .. ...................
mlW MICI 'M
CinM91'r ---SAAi _.., ...., S1,,.. '1 ..
a.-...... Gr.,or., 11711
...... Em .. aaM _.. m11
8 Mondoy, April 29, 2002
I , TODAY'S
_ CROSSWORD PUZZLE
C9dlll8c c.... ...
6 cyl. low mi. 1 -· lull power. le•tllel.
(08188M733P) ttl,9111 NABlRS
(800) t4&oW2
CadlK El Dondo ..
VS. p/Mata. leattler. low mlea. 1 OWll8f. c:teen (eont71'3714P) $23,115 NAJl~RS
(11111) MH5t2
Cacllec EJ Dando
EfC ...
V8, ledlef. "' power, low mies, 1 owner. ~ dNl1
(eoaolrS7tSP) $2',9115 NABERS
(!00) tg:W2
Call Classified Today
(949) 642-5678
CLEAHIHQ 8EJMCI
Commercial Bulldinga,
Medical Ofllcea and
Reeldenlill. 20Yr1 Eicp.
Uc111Md/8onded/Ref'1
F,.. Eatt111a call G.o!9' 11..s34 .. 11 n
or714~
.. -. ::---
) ,_......... .
...... .··
' .. l tjl • ;·
:r '·
Bridge
AN!JWERSTO W ~KLY IRIDGltQUIZ
Q I -Ndlber YU.leenble, u Sowh Q 4 -Boch vulncrablo, you bold:
)'OQ bold:
The bkktlna lw Pl'C>CllCCled:
Norm IAS1" SOlfl'H W&W INT ,_ 2• ,_
:z.. .... ' Whal do you bid now?
A -Your band la worth I ().11 pointa in su~ or spades eo, ~aatdleMof
whelhCr "your range for. one-no-
trump openina l• l'-17 or 16-18,
you want 10 be in game. Bid four
il)lldei. You could also have taken tfiat action a round etrlie£
Q 2 -Neither vulnerable, you hold:
•KJ5 "7 All O A76 •A'76
Your ri&ht-Mnd opponent opens I.be
bidding with th1'lC hearts. Whal
action do you talce?
A -11ie one bid IO be ruled out is
lhrce no tlllmp. With no IOUl'Ce of
tricb. how do you expect to collect
nine? To KCOmpli.lb that. you need
to nnct putner witb a pn:ay aooct
boldlna. and in dw event you cannoc be sure that no tlllmp is the ri &JU
spot. We favor a double -for talco-
out. of coune.
Q 3 -Both vulnerable. you hold:
•AH ~KQl O Q109~ •Q76
Your right-hand opponent opens the
biddina with 11 weak two heans. What
action do you take?
A -With so much or your values in
the opponent's suit. and no good suit or your own, there is no reason for
you to bid. If panncr cannot reopen
the bidding, your hand 11 probably
belief suited for derefl!iC than
offense. Pass.
•AKll7'J ~AJ7' 0 7 •QS
hi1nicr oSJe1J1 lbe biddina with one
heart. Whal do you reapood?
A-What a prrfect hand for the
modem style. A Jump ahift 10 IWO
1pades 1hows citbcr a eclf-1ulflcien1
1uh or a W'Olll fit for petner'• sulL
Slnioe dw &eta clarified early, you
will havo lotll of mom IO explore fOf I.be f>elt contnet IAtet Jump to 1wo
spades.
Q 5-Al·South. vulnerable.you
bold:
• Q 6 \l It 91 7 0 JC Q 6 U • A JC
~~in\~ 10 ... ••
' What do you bid now?
A -With most of yoot points con-
centrmd in lbe 5hcx1 suits, your
hand is DOI as good u I.be poinl
ClOWU SUggatS. For the mome:nl, you
can do DO !DOR lbao mild tw0 cfia. moods. and 1ee bow tbe auctioo develops. One no tlllmp iJ al.so ~.
Q 6 -Both vulnetabk, as South you
hold:
•AQ76 ~AJ7 O KQ7 •AH
The bidding has l)l'O(lCeded:
WEST NORTll EAST SOUTH l\l .... ,_ Dbl
1'11.111 2• .... 7 What do you bid ~w?
A -Be careful. Bear in mind tha1
your partner and Ea.~t. combined, can have only some 7 -8 pointJ, so any
pnicipitate action could be punished sev~ly. Nevet1heless, your hand
does merit ooc try. and two no tlllmp
seems the obvious way to proceed. l•cmll-·-c=m-l l•cml
FORD Diii 'ti ~ Van, 4«> a,
ll8llr IOMlg pllQ. ~ Jl'M',
,_ 111'1$, lV. "VCR. ca,
1361< rm. gr~ xk1I
condillon $9,500/ollo. 94~5032. ~1029
Font '-ZTS '00 Slvwf, ...... co, alloy
..... My lo9dld, 5,032k 1111, GAS SAVERll
S12,750. 714--427-0033 714-595·3741
Ford TMWI SE VI 'II
38k m~ metallic sliver,
\
Ford Coneour SE 'II
39k ml. llllldic ... U>.
power, A/C , 1m·lm
pramium IOUfld. hke new
cond. $8,1195 mt7971115
8kr 94H§6:!888.
am-Im *'• Ilka new cond. ....., XJI 'It
ta111a11lc value. $9,750 ~ 34,Klml
FORO EXPLOYER XLT 'ti
VB. wllftt. O"Y llht intef, pram eound, CO. 72k mt.
garaged. lmmac. $12,900
94tt4§:54M
v.t>od Decks • Ftnoes
Electrical • Orywal
Cerpentry • Tiie • Etc
~ LllClll~ 714.811.Ha
ATOJ ...
lllPIOYlllllT -...c.ar .. ~-~,A~
IW650S24
714.269.7115
Gf.NDALIDlll
•IWNl'f.NANCE * Wlaiil •c-tii
No Job 1bo S....rl
Danllmlilhoa
M9-J2WJ92
"f
1276641 Bia 94~586-1888 ~XC888040 $311,995
GllC DEHAU 'It =~ My to.dad, low ml. fttY de91. Gii C111. 4 .._. dt Le11111 GS 300 'M
(t1m7""2TI 121.115 ~ .. orig, pen.ct NAHAS cond, · 1 fllk mi. lllw, moonrt.
(!00) t4&oW2 $11,800 MMOM1U.
I REALF..STATE I
~.~on ~Young
Nn•
U1tlntt1 A••ollablt>J
714-432-7873 _.,,....,..,.(VIII
ON TIME DEUVERV
Wlltl'I you WWII ... wtMitl
you _,. Ill HouMtlOld
Furnlahlnga, Freight.
Aealdenttal. 1nou.1t1a1.
l..oall & ~ FIAly
l.Jo'lneur9d. R 11 lfWllll
Aetea 114·111·llOI,
Jt4-nt-110I.
PUBLIC
NOTICE
lht Clllf. Public>
UllllllH Com-
mielion REOUtRES MllUltd~
hold goode mcMM'I Print their P.U.C. Cal T rum.r; llmol
and chlufflt'I print
lhW T.C.P. riumber
In .. 8dYel1llmenll.
" you hive • CJ*' tlon .., lht ltQll-
lly of • mMf, iT1o
OI otlUftf Oii:
PU8UC UTILITIES
COMMISION
714-558-<4151
I
~
...... e.u suoo ._ llBZ 5-600 ·oo
Aara V12 oomt, 4511 ml 1 Owner, ahowr BlllA>lk
..._. _., 81.J (117121) onJy 22,184 lo lo ml
c.ii -.. Ul~ Al* S6l,900 1115311
lilnldleU20W..,.,'tl m 1111, booltl. recoo:ls.
ohatcoll grty/oalmlal. ltllt,
txtta ... 1. CID. chrome
whll, garaged, non/smtu.
.. ""'· $31,995 v457269 Bia 94~11188
BMW 740IL '99
Glnlged A Pampered
Whit titan
$37,900 tfl0283.4
www.Tllocar1.com
800-799-8456
Doily Pilot .
...
!.,A .
·--1 , ..
'U«t 'JJdJ, (!..
pt·-1111 ~.--1
~Professional
Painting
Uc.1*35G
lntedar/Eltedm
Decaltln PllatbtC
'*'*"" Rob Isbell • Owner
Costa Mesa. Ca
(949) 646-3006
Cell 949-887·1480
....... t --'C
' "t .• ·~J;._.I ....... (' "\'I
'
n.N~hborltood l'fuiilhrl
OltAIN. -·= Cl.IA..a~
TWEEDY PWMllNG
949-MS-2352 -..
All DRAINS UNCLOGGED ·-.m..-.... ·-··-. .... --·-Ill-...
(714)-*7
~ .. -. :.... . ~.' ., .. ~