HomeMy WebLinkAbout2004-01-06 - Newport Mesa Daily PilotA
B
Serving the N ewport-Mesa com niu n ity sin ce 1907
TUESDAY, JANUARY 6, 2004 .
A CLOSER LOOK
MARK C OlJSTIN/DAllYPll OI
Attorney John Manly, a real estate attorney, staffed representing victims of abuse by Catholic priests five years ago.
-A scandal hits home
Several Catholics who claim
that clergy sexually abused
the m live in Newport-Mesa.
So does their Jawyer, who is
a lso a Catholic.
a <.athulit. priei.l.
Ca.c,lei.J< is among the lhou<;ands of Americans
who have claimed Lhl'y were i.en1ally abused by
pril'l>ls. leading to a scandal that has r.tgL-<l for
Lhc last year.
As many a-. IJOO claims w(•re fill'd '1:11cwide
over the last year hy people who ~d lhey had
hec11 111oles1ed yc:m, ago ,., d 1ikll"l'11. rhl' l'ivil
easel> wew in numhl'r la'>I year af1cr the U.S. Su·
prcrnc Court overturned a \,alifornia law 1hat
had pennilled lhe relruactiv<· niminal pro..,t•n1·
tion of old child n1oles1a1io n Gll>l'"-
the middle of .1 roll call. Iii' dicnts art· i.ui11g
'\e\/Cral priest~. many of whom 1111 longt'r "t'rve
111 Orange County i:hurchc ...
1 he Costa Mci.a-ba!.l'd allorncy·, "a't'' in
el ude' victims who S<Jy 1lwy Wl'rl' ahusl'd by
Daniel Murray of Our l.ady of Mu11111 Canntl on
the B.dboa l'eni1M1la: l\l whacl I Jarri,, fonm.'r
principal of M.11er Dd I ligh School i11 ~111ta
An:i. who used lo tomfuct Sunday nwi.'<'!'> .11 SI.
John Ille Baptisl; and Donald Steven,, " n "lo·
di an at SL Joachim Catholic < h 11rd 1 in < r1'l<•
Me....:t who JJ<l"'-'-t'd away.
Deepa Bharath
Daily Pilot
NEWPORT-MESA -Fur Jodlc Casreix, going
10 church is no1 Lhe same a' it was when she
was a little gjrl.
Ncwport·Me~ tl> home 1101 only 111 l>l'vtral
people who s.1y 1hey were vic1imi., but lo an at·
torm:y. Joh.n Manly, who is reprcsenLing flO cli-
cnis statewide. including eight victim<> from 1hc
Newport-Mesa arl.'a, C.:asreix among them
Murray ha' hl.'en placc<l 011 ad1111111,1r.1hvt'
leave, and I larrb wa .... defrockt•d in 200 I
·n1e 33-year-old Corona del Mar woman says
her failh in the (.atholic Oiurd1, an instilulion
she revered lhrouWiout her childhood and part
of her adolescence, wao; shattered afler she was
'><'X11<1lly abusl.'d by her own high school ll'acher,
Manly'i. li-;1 of alleged abu'K'rs is long. I le r.11
Llci. off prie!'>ts' names as if lw wrn· a tl'arhl•r m
Mui.I of these vrl'lims cannot fill' ;1 1·rn11111al
rnrnplainl hccauw lhl' stalUll' of limi1a11rnl\ h.i'
nm 11u1 1111 thl.'ir c;L\l..,, Manly !>aid.
See SCANDAL, Page A4
Costa Mesa police cars returning to two-tone
City Council a pproves a
change to black and white
patrol vehicles, 4 to 1.
Deirdre Newman
Daily Pilot
COSTA MESA -Police officeri. will
be cruising in their black-and-whiles
again after the City Council approved
changing the color scheme of the de-
partment's entire patrol fleet.
The council voted 4 to I to change
the colors of the police cars from aJI
white to the 1radilional black and
white.
l lle change cmnpletnl'lll l> (foci
John I lensley's effort lo e!->Lahli'h a
communiry-orientcd police fnrn:. 11
will increase officer visihili1y and 1111 -
prove officer morale. I lensley said.
"I do agree wi th the visibility and
morale issues," Councilman Allan
Mansoor said. "I also Ii.Ice the foci that
we've identified a funding sou rel'."
TI1e department transferred 10 all
white cars in the early 1970s mainly to
reduce costs and increase officer com-
fort without having to pay for the
added expense of air conditioning.
Many of the police officers ex-
pressed interest in changing the neet
to black and white. Tiw officers will be
h:ippy wilh thil> decision, '\a1<l Jeff loil
man. pre~idenl of the CoMa Mesa Po
licC' A'iSn.
"As far ao; the rnnk and file, which I
represent, arc concerned. this will be
huge," Gilman said "Since you wnc a
liule ltid, you dream about driving in a
black-and-white. 'lnat'-; the way it's
suppo:.ed to he."
Resident Hobcri <_;raham said he
preferred to sec lhc whit e paint job
lay. Switching lo black a11d while
would make soml.' residenti. uncom-
fortable around police. he said.
"There's intimidation with hlack and
while." Graham said .... lllere ttre posi-
tive aspects with that. but there's also
.
THE VERDICT ..
thl· rnopt'ral i1111 of tlw 1mmigran1
population wl1t·11 fhl.'y'rl' 1111t lhrl'at
l'ncd. Wt• 1wcd that LUllJll'ralion lO
kct•p the l'i1y ~af1·"
Lo11ndlwo111an I .ihby < .owan. who
{'il\t the <li'>!.l'l1tll1~ VO((.', ilh'fCl'<I wi1h
Cm ham.
"I think it\ a 'h'JI h<11'k and pcoph•
art• more will1n~ to .1ppmarh I<• rm1n1I
1•:ir with) a ..,ofter look,"< .owa11 suit!.
l.t. Karl Sch11lcr di,11t1ll•d Cowan\
claim lhal all ·whi<e rnr., wl'rc lllllrl'
appruachahlC'.
"There'!. no empirical data 1h:11
~hows that white cars arc more effcc
See CARS, Paee AS
A message for irate readers: Keep it short, please
F rom time to time. 1
receive a letter from a
reader.
Most of the time, lhey are
short. jus1 a comment sayin~
they knew somebody 1 had
written about or remembered
an event. TI1e exception was a
letter I once got from a lady,
four single-spaced pages of
lrate language aboul
something l had written. I felt
llke J'd gotten the "War and
Peace" oflettt'rs, wh.ich leads
to one of my favorite subjects
-brevity in writing.
While others may think of
ROBERT
GARDNER
the
Invention of
gun powder
or the
development
of the
atomic
bombu the
most woeful
moments In
human
history, my
own choice
is the
abandonment or the goose
quUJ pen. With the etfort It
took to write with a quill pen
}
-all that dipping and blotting
-one thought c.vcfully aboul
each word and wrote with
economy.
People don't seem to realize
the beauty of brevity. On that
Immortal day at Gettysburg.
Abraham Uncoln used 279
words In his address. The man
who shared hls podium
delivered a two-hour
memorized oration. Most of us
can recite the Gettylburg
Addreu, or at least part of II.
Cat1 a_nyone even remember
the subject of the other
speaker. or for that matter, hi.s
namo?
Wllh the Invention of the
typewriter, the dictatinR
machine and word-processing
computers, brevity has
become a thing of I.he past. a
losl art. When the state of
Califomla lnstaJled word
processors in the appellate
courts. the opinions of my
felJow justJoes lncreased in
length, If not in substance, tw
about 2a.t,. TheoreticaJJy.
when word processing. one
can add or delete with ease.
but human nature being what
it ls. one seldom deletes.
I am a great heliever in
writing by hand. If one
dictates, one tends lo fall in
love with one's voice. On lhe
Court of Appeal. I wrote all my
opinions in longhand. As a
result, mine were the shortest.
Although admittedly no11he
most erud1te, opinions in the
state, a matter much
appreciated by those who had
10 read the damned things. It
was onJy when I could no
longer read my own
handwriting that I moved to a
S.. VERDICT, Pa1e M
City
founder
Wilson
dies at 86
Former Mayor Bob
Wils o n , who fought tu
make Goat Hill into
Costa Mesa , also fou ght
illn ess to make it to one
m ore Ch ri stmas.
Deirdr e Newman
Daily Pilot
C ()~I ·\ ll·\1\ lloh \V1l"l11I, IJll' lllall
who gavt' hi' lit-.1n .ind ,11111 111 making
< 111:tt I lill <• ho11,1 lidl' nlv. JM\'l-d away
S1111t.lay.
Wil:.cm, Kn, llll'tl at honll' in Cu..,la
1\11 .... 1 or 'Clll~l''livc
hl«IM f,11hm·.
lhl' 111an wli11 l'lt'r-
'l'Vl'rt'd Ill gt•l1111g
< :t .... w Mei.a 111rnrpo-
-r.11t'tf ... howed 1he 'Wlllll'
dl·lenrunali11n 111 h1.-. fi-
nal da)". \\~hon told
ll w l'ilot la~I 111111nh
11>,11 Ill' w.1111l .. 1 tu
111.lke 11 to < h n .. 1111a. .. '><' Bob WH son
lw 111uld 'twml 1lw dJ}
Wllh f1111r j.{('lll'r.tllllll\ of )11, f,11111ly.
I lb U1rb tnrn., wi ... h 1-.u1w tntl', 111 1lw
1M1µht of h" lan1ily. 111 ln1t· lloh Wil,1111
fa,hion. llaugh\t•r <:.mil Will ,,id.
"II Wil' apropo' ol my l},1tf -t11lalf~
111 ron1111I,1oially m.ikmg 11 hr.1 p1w·n a.' hl·
wanted it," Will said. "I le Jid rt. lw hl'ltl
011."
I ~1.'>t yl·ar, ht' <Ind Wilt lini~lwd wntm~
111' autol11ow;1phy l11r hi'\ lanuly t'•llilll'll.
See WILSON. Page AS
EDUCATION
Meeting
standards
an effort
No Child Left Be hin d .
enacted two years ago,
poses problems for some
Newport-Mesa schools.
Marisa O'Neil
Daily Pilot
Iii ~ome. tlw ft•dl'ral No (J1ild Lefl
lkhind Acr rC'prt''l'nl' t•durn1ional fl'·
form' hadly nct•ded 10 help get under-
pl.'rforming schools up 10 par by se1-
l111g high .standards. To 11ther-;, the
s1;111dards arc too high and lhe help
too lillle.
The federal act, signed into law two
years ago thi!-> week., aims to make ev
See STANDARDS, Pase A4
Dai ly Pilot
AT A GLANCE
ON THE WEB: www dattypiotcom
WEATHER ~
It'll be another partty cloudy
day, with surf that loolcs like it
belongs In Long Bead'l.
SeePaaeA2
SPORTS
UC Irvine tried to push its
Big West record to 2-0 last
night playing host to UC
Santa Barbara.
S..PaceA7
l
I
A2 T~sday, January 6, 2004
KIDS TALK BACK
Fans of
fine art
The Daily Pilot recently
visited Andersen
Elementary School and
asked students, 'Who is
your favorite artist and
why?'
"(lk11l']
Magritte. because
tt'i. inll'rt>Sllllg
huw he didn't
'>how <1.nyb11c.Jy\
faces. ju.-.t put
<1pples 111 fron1 of
them :md LL..Cd
l'veryday
ohjt'cti.."
LAUREN MCLEOD, 11
Ncwporr Beach
"IVmrrn1I v-411
t ttlj!,h 1 likl'
·..,rarry Ni~hr · .11111
how hi· ll'><'d 1111'
hrrle d uh 111 rlw
j)ICIU!l'. ..
SARAH
GOODMANSON,
12
Newpor1 lka1 h
"(loan! Miro.
because he"s cool.
I le painte<l a1J
those Lhlngs
using sphe~ and
lines connectin1<
them 10 make ii
now." ..
M&GHAEL LIAO,
11
Corona del Mar
•t liked Miro.
I fc did kind of
spheres in his art
and connected
them and used
different shapes.·
BENNY
TOWNSEND, 12
Newport Beach
"Wini.low
I h11ner, because
hl' painted lots of
hiMoric pictures,
like of the Wild
West and Civil
War and things I
like to read about.
ll 'i. nice to find an
arti-.1 with lhe same intcrcsll> alt
Ill('."
JACK COOPER, 12
Newpon Beach
"t;corgia
O'Keeffe. I
enjoyed looking
ar all the d ifTerenr
vi(>ws of noweN. I
Hke to write
poetry. and they
ini.pirt.'d rne to
Write."
KATE DUDDY, 11
Ncwpon Reach
-l11ten•i<•11t{ and pliotos compikd
/1y Mnrisa (YNell
ON CAMPUS
IN THE CLASSROOM
DOUGLAS ZIMMERMAN I OAJLY PILOT
Left to right, Michael Liao, Benny Townsend and Jack Cooper from Andersen Elementary School ask Poli Rizco of the Art Masters program a question after
her presentation of Degas' artwork. Rizco gave students some insight into French life during the era in which Degas painted.
Life, Degas style
Andersen Elementary
students learn about
the lives and works of
the m asters of a rt.
M.,lsa O'Neil
Daily Pilot
An imitatt'll life in t11e late 19th
century for Andersen Elcmcnlary
School students Monday.
Sixth-graders gathered 0 11 lhe
curved steps inside 1he '>Chool\
sweeping library to sec a
presentation abour french artist
F..dgar Degas. famous for hi~
depictions of ballet dan cer. as well as
everyday people. Along with
analy1jng lhe artistic menLo; of each
Degas work in lhe slide show. Poli
ni1.co from the Art Masters program
K<1Ve !>ludenl'i a ll"-.'\On on life during
tha1 era.
A.-. '>he Oru.hcd a IJega'> pajnling of
a woman ironing. she told them that
people in Paris at the time didn't
bathe every day. didn't use deodorant
and often UM:d cologne to mask the
inevitable aroma of wearin~ the
s;um· chJth<.'li day after day.
"What do you think those clothei.
smelled like?" lli1.co asked.
"Lots of cologne:· 12-year-old Jack
Cooper replied.
"Laundries i.melled prelly had"
Jtin ·o explainL><l. "They were not rnce
placei. to work. It's not like they could
jtt'>t -.c•t up 1he ironing board and
watch 'Oprah' while they workt-:d."
Sixth-grader Nick Tripi had
another concern about Frcnd1
women at the tum of lhe la..i
century.
"Didn't some women also have
beards and hairy legs?" he asked.
eliciting giggles from h is classmates.
Turning the com er from personal
hygiene. Ri7.co showed. slid~ of
Degas' famous pictures of dancer...
·ri1e anist, she explained, had
unlimiled access and did ske1ches
during perfonnances. backstage and
during rehearsals. giving people
1oday a behind-the·scenes glirnpM!.
She explained the composition of
the pictures. how De{,'<15 did hi-.
'>kctcht:S and what critics al the tjmt•
thought ofhii. art. The srudenti. also
LUNCH MENU
learned lhat live musicians played
music for rehearsals -no boom
boxes back then -and that dancers
spread resin on floors for better
footing.
Through the Art Masters prognun.
sponsored by Andersen's PTA,
srudents follow up their lessons with
a hands-on an class lhe following
day. applying techniques and
concepts they learned in lhe lecture.
Instructors come to the school six
Limes a year, focusing on a different
artist each time.
• IN TliE ClASSROOM ts a weekly
·reature in whicn Daily Pilot education
writer Marisa O'Neil v1stts a campus in
the Newport·Mesa area and writes about
herexpenence
The Newport-Mesa Unified
Sdlool District offe rs menu
c:hoioes each day et elementary
sdlools. Students may choose a
vegetarian entree. The selection
may include a salad, sandwidl or
hot entree. School lunches are S2
each. Here's what's being served
this week:
WEDNESDAY fruit; animal crad<ers; and choice
of m ilk.
THURSDAY
TODAY
Munchable Lunch Salad; or
cheeseburger with lettU<:e and
pidcles; frozen 100% juice bar; and
choice of milk.
THURSDAY
MONDAY
Munchable Lunch Salad; or bean
and cheese burrito; baby carrots
with rancn dip; diced peaches;
and choice of milk.
Papa John's Pizza 1s served one
day a week with vegetable, fruit
and milk at each school in place of
the regular menu.
MONDAY
College Park, Davis, Harbor View,
Kaiser, Newport Elementary.
TUESDAY
Adams, Killybrool<e. Newpon
Coa.st, Newpon Heights and l
Pomona.
FRIDAY
Lincoln, Paularino, Whittier and
Woodland.
Munc:hable Lunch Salad with
Yoplait fruit yogurt; or teriyaki
beef dippers; rice; baby carrots
with rand\ dip; applesauce; and
choice of milk.
Vegetarian health sandwich; or
pasta with marinara sauce and
meatballs; freshly baked
whole-grain roll; crisp green salad
with rand\ dressing; diced pears;
and choice of milk.
The Munchable Lunch Salad
contains tossed greens. cherry
tomatoes, cradcers and protein
sources such as cheese,
sunflower seeds, fruit yogurt
and honey-roasted peanuts
("peanut butter on selected
days).
Andersen, California, Eastbluff,
Rea & Sonora.
No child is discriminated against
because of race, sex, color,
national origin, age or disability. If
it is believed a child has been
discriminated against, write
immedialely to the Secretary of
Agrio.Jlture, Washington, OC
20250.
FRIDAY
Munchable Lunch Salad"; or
pepperoni Hot Pocket; btoocoli
flowerettes with ranch dip; mixed
WEDNESDAY
Mariner's, Victoria and Wilson.
Daily A Pilot
AJlde AobiMon
Politics. business and environment reporter, (949) 764-4330
11/icia. robinson@lllrifl'le!l.com U.'91\11
News assistant, 1949) 5744298
luls.pena@latimes..com PHOTOGRAPHERS
POSTMASTER: Send address
changes to The Newport
Beacll/Costa Mesa Daily Piiot, P.O.
Box 1560, Costa Mesa. CA 92626.
Copyright: No newa stories,
1llustration1, edirorial matter or
advertispments herein can be
raprod~ w ithout wntten
permission ol copyright owner.
SURF AND SUN
WEATHER FORECAST
It'll gradually beoome partly
cloudy today. The winds will
be at 10 mph, from the
northeast in the morning and
from the southwest from the
afternoon on.~ highs will be
"from 66 to 74 degrees.
SURF
The surf hits a low today:
knee-high. VOl.91,NO.&
THOMAS H. JOHffSON Publisher
TONYDOOERO
Editor JUDY OET1lNG
Advortlslng Director
LANA JOHNSON
Promotions Director
EDmNGSTAFF
S.J. Cahn
Managing Editor,
19491 574-4233
1./.cahn~ hltlmes.com
~~ City EditC>f,
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fUcNfd Dwlft
Sports Editor,
(949) 574-'223
rfeh"rd.dunn•l«fmes.oom
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1949) &42..fl086
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Published by Tlmea Community
News, a dlvi.ion of the Lot Angele•
Tlmes. lmu
02004 Tl,,,_ CN. All rivht1
~.
At night, it'll still be partly
cloudy. The Iowa will be from
41 to 47.
lnfonn«don:
www.nws.noaa.gov
BOATING FORECAST
Varieble winds wilt be at 1Q
knots or lighter throughout the
day on the Inner~ The
W8Vft wilt be 2 feet °' ametler
on a weat awetl from 3 to 5
feet.
Farther oot, after .,-nlculariy
dloppy ... , Mondey, the
winds wUt be verieble at 10
lcnota or lighter. The wevet will
be 2 fMt or 1metter on a
~It IW9tl from 3 to 6
fMt.
'
The turnaround will begin
Wednesday, with waist-high
s urf from a northwest swell the
improvement. The surf will get
bad( up to a respectable
chest-high on Thursday. Friday
will begin a stretch of at least
three days of head·hlgh surf or
better.
E>epect no tidings from the
southwest until a week from ..
today.
W.Wqudty:
WWW..turfridef.org
TIDES
Time
1:32 a.m.
7:49a.m.
3:18p.m.
9:69p.m,
Height
2.SfNttow
6.98 feet high
-0.71 feet low
3.61 fNt high
WATER TEMPERATURE
68degreM
. .
. . .
! •
I .
I
I I .
I '
luesday, JttnUclry 6. 2004 A3
,
Newport-Mesa tackles weight gain
HeaJth advocates,
including the
executive director of
the President's
Council on Physical
Fitness and Sports,
share ways to get fit.
Allcl1 Rqblnson
Daily Pilot
NEWPORT-MESA -Fit11ess
advocates are taking advantage
of post-holiday awareness of the
1mUon's Oal>.
Melissa Johnson. a Corona del
Mar 11ative who was named ex-
l'Cutive director of the Presidenr·~
C..ouncil un Physical Fitness and
Spurts in November, is encour-
aging Americans to walk 10.000
Meµs a day. She even gave hl'r
parents pedometers for Uirist-
mas.
"llecause or the ohcsity cpi-
lkn1ic. we're all trying our hcst
latl working to rever!>c that
trend,· Johnson S<Jid.
"Since the 1950s, it's gotll'n
wurse rather than beller. so it'i.
been discouraging for lwalth and
fitness professionals."
Ille problems of obcslly aml
lack uf li1111:ss have also bccume
a problem for young people, 'laid
Johnson , who served as cxecu
live director of lhe California
< ;overnor's Council on Phy:-ical
Melissa
Johnson
Fltm.>ss an d
Sports from
1997 to 2002.
In 2003, only
one quarter of
California stu-
dents who were
tested could
m eet stale fit-
ness Mandanls,
Johnson said.
The coundl
will tak.e un a variety of initiatives
i11 2004 10 encourage fitness nnd
address the nation's ~rowing
problem with ubt:Sity. The coun-
cil's agenda for the year i11cludt:s
persuading governors to adopt
U1e "president's challenge" for
tJ1eir states, Johnson sajd. l11c
challenge is a pledge to cxerc1~e
five days a week for 30 minutes <1
duy for children, and for 60 min·
u1es a day for adults. TI1ol>e who
complete six weeks of exercisl'
can receive a n "active lifesiyle"
award.
Many fitness gums. however.
expel'! tJus January lo ht· like
most others at area litnei;s cluh~
-clients will !.tan Oooding i11
latt'r tllis month 10 shed their
holiday weight gain. but many
won't stick amund long.
"People take a year 111 m;ikl·
the resolution. then it takc-;
about a month to gel in and act
011 it." said Derek Gard, co-
owner of SuperRodit·~ Gym in
Costa Mesa.
February to May b thl· hu!-.ie't
time at SuperHodies bemuse
people want to gel in shape to go
to the beach, he said.
While pt!uple in Southern Cali-
fornia tend lo be more fit than in
other parts of the country. some
are still looking for a quick fix
a11d follow lhe latest fads in diets
and exercise, Gard i.aid. l le esti-
mates that about 25% 10 30% of
the people who cunie 10 his gym
make lasting changes in U1eir
lifestyles.
To keep exercise from hecom-
i11g an unpleasant chore. Gard
advised picking somt>thing they
like to do.
"Not cveryhuJy wanli. 10
w<•ight Lifi live days a week." he
said.
Shape Up Htnc~ Center in
Nt•wport Beach aJso gets <u1 in-
nux uf new clients in January, re-
ceptionist Mike Ivey said. Oasses
such as spinning and Pilates are
wry popular and the gym's per-
sonal trainers arc always busy. he
-;aid.
Ivey also has nor keel U1at husi-
nc~ drop~ off around May. I Ii!.
• 1dvin· wao; for Pl'uplc to incur-
p1m11e ext•rciM' into I hl'ir lile for
the long 1em1.
"Stirk with 11," ltt• "k1id. "rh.1t'!>
1h1• problem. !)ll'opll'I want to
rome in. iLnt.l tht•n tlwy -.top."
_Losi ng weight is a common
New Year's rl'Solut iim, a11d diet
can play a big part in it , «ajd
Mrghan Wagner, a dinkal dieti
lian al I loag I ln<;pllal
Ealing holiday treurs can add
up, but today's 1>onion sb.es arc
a problem year-round.
"Most restaurants serve three
or four limes larger portions
than we need,· Wagner said.
When diners ask Kl super size
thl!ir on.ter, they're also increa.-.-
ing the fat and !>alt content 11f
their meal, sht.' s;.1id.
In addition to daily ext>rcii.e.
Wagner suggcMi. pt>oplt,
should eat well hulam01•d
m eals and watch how mud1
they're eating.
The federal 1•mmcil plan~ lo
work with fast-food rel>taur.ulls
to promote lllOI\' lwalthfuJ eat-
ing and fitnes.o.. offer !.pons din·
ics around U1e country, and Lry
to make ph~iral al·tivitie-. more
fun and prevalent in 11a1iunal
parks. Johnso11 said.
"Our goal 1s to have 21\ miU11111
people 11!-.ing thl' pn•,idt·nt\
challenge in the next two years,"
she said.
l'('oplc shnultl rnk1· i;n1all l>ll'ps
.mt.I srl re<llist1l' goal' fur gt•ll ing
into shape, and gtt !>Upport from
family and frit-11<h. -.lw -.aid .
"Work with a hutldy." Juh11-.on
...Ud. "St.1n1ctimt'' tht· buddy 'Y"·
tem helps h<.'l·au'l' you'rl' ar
countable to "um·nnt•."
Finally. thing!> 'Lich ai. taking
the stair' instt•uc.I 11f the elevutur
and parking tht' r;ir farther from
a destination ran help, too.
''All 1host• lilllt• things rnu111,"
Johnson said.
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Daily Pilot
NEWPORT REACI I -Gearing
up for what's likely to be a com -
plicated and controver<>ial vote
on a luxury resort on Lhe Balboa
Peninsula, the city has launched
a one -stop information source
lo inform voleri. about the
projccr.
More than a month before a
draft environmental report on a
luxury resort at Marinapark is
complete, residents can view a
site plan. read a 44-page prt>-
liminary study, keep up to date
on upcoming hearings. and read
'Orne of lheir neighbors' initial
concerns about the project.
"A 101 of the concern!> M> l<u
have been about traffit• and
parking." Assistant City Man-
ager Sharon Wood said.
Developer Stephen Suther-
larnl has repeatedly said that the
traffic allracted by the project
will be minimal.
"Basically. the main conu~rn
I'm hearing from people is j11~1
that they want lo be '\urt' wl:''ll
BRIEFLY IN
THE NEWS
Newborns and teens
can be treated at clinic
Newport-Mesa's firo;t after-
hours. urgent-care clinic for
l"hildren opened Saturday.
UrgiKids operates from 6 lo 9
ll.m. Monday Lhrough Friday
;ind from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m . Satur-
day and Sunday. It is in the
lloag llealth Center <ll 1190
flaker St., Suite 100 in C:11srn
Mesa.
UrgiKids. which is staffed hy
pediatricians and nurse pracli-
1ioners. treats children from
develop the project the way we
planned it," Sutherland s:.lid.
A draft environmental n·1wrt
is scheduled 10 be cumplcwd
next month but might liJkc a lit-
tle longer, Wood said. The rc·port
will include infurnrntion 011 hmv
much traffic will he <1ddcd 111
nearby roads by the rc'iort
The dran environmental re-
port will l>e made available to
the public. Hesidcnt'i will have
45 days to review the cfocument
and submit corn men ts.
Be ide:. traffic, re!.idents have
already identified a number of
areas they want the environ-
mental study to look at. Em-
ployee parking. traffic safety and
availability or public recreation
facilities on lhc site arc among
the concerns that environmen·
ta! researchers ' are lakin~ into
rnnsideralion.
The Greenlight C.0111mi1tec
has opposed the projert. in part
because it wilJ ;11Tec1 a park now
HI the site. Its memherc; havt•
also said they believe the pmj •rt
.,hould he <;Ubjt>cl In a < .ree11-
ligh1 v11t1' lwcau:o:e the prot·c·s'>
lll'\vborns to young adult-. a~c
Ill for 11 variety of illric•ssc-.. in-
cluding high fever, asthma. car
111f'loction. sinusili\ amJ pncu-
1111111 ia.
It is also connected with (l1il-
Jrcn\ I lospital of Orangl'
Cnunty. For more information.
call 1714) htif\-2540.
Getting free answers to
your water questions
Where does Newport -Me~a'!>
water come from? Who delivers
it and as~ures that it 's sale and
pure? Is there any ehancc 'lup·
plies will run low?
Hesidents who want lo h·nrn
the answers to these and many
other water-related quc'ltion-.
can attend a free course offered
for sending the project to a
C ;reenlight vote would likt.'ly
111ea11 more financial informa-
tion would hc availablt· 111
voters.
"We believe thi\ 'k1r1~ the
C.rl·cnlight requirt•nwnt of full
tl1sdoi.11rc prior to a vott•,"
C irecnlight Spukc-.m<1n Phil Ar-.t
said.
The m<1tler i:. !.lated 10 he on
the ballot in the general clcl tion
in November. l'lic ballot will ask
voters whelht>r they believe the
projec t should he huilt.
The Hcgent Newport Heach
llcsurt is planned as a 110-room
luxury reo;ort at the site of the
Marinapark mobile home park
and Las Arenas Park 0 11 Ralhoa
lloulevard between 15th anJ
lllth streets. The mobile• home
park would be removed. rhe
liirl Srout hou-;e, community
center, tot lot and a portion of
the tennis courts would bl' re-
built at different local ions on
the o;itl'. The land and tlw lwarh
lwhind it wo11ld conti11t1l' to ht•
public prop1•rty.
Information on thl' prujl'cl i~
by the Oran~e Cnu111y W;tter
Dis trict.
rhe couro;e, 0.(.. Wall'r IOI,
will examine a looming global
watcr crisis. how water alfccti.
health, California"; wawr situa-
lion and thc future flf water
-.uppli rs in Orange C<Jt1111¥· The
cla~' will also includl' diM'lli.
sin11'> on high-tech snlutiun'> to
.1lh·via1c water '>hortage' wday
and 111 the lutun•.
Stude11t~ can alll'lld lhc two
hour class from Ii IO II p.rn. Jan.
213. Fch. 25 or l\fard1 24. l'tw
course is ut the water dbtrirt'o;
Fnontain Valley hcadq11artCr!>,
l OSOO Ellis Ave. The class is
free, hut reservations arc rt:>-
quircd. For information and
reservation.;, C;lll (7 14 I :110-
J2 I7.
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For your free copy of Give Your IRA a Second Life, call at (949) 717-5300
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Newport Beach, CA 92660
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\.
I
I
: I
I
M Tuesday, Jilnot1r1 6. 2004
Longtime OCC worker remembered as 'wonderful'
M•rlH O'Neil
Oa~y Prlot
ldumau! K<>ily, " llxrure ur
OranKe (;oust ColJege for more
than 40 y-.:ar~. died Cliris1mm;
Jny at t.hc agl· of 92.
·she was such a wonderful
part of lhb campus.· said OCC
"lpolcc•sma11 J1111 Carne ll. whu
worked w11h Kt'ily. YWhcn I fir1>t
:.tarted ~~orkln~ hc1c 111 1971.
.,hl' hull aln·udy been ht>rc 11
yearto. She 1111rocluct'd mt· lo 1he
depar11m·111 ancJ llf'lped me to
11d)u~1. She st•t>111c>d 10 know
evcrything Jbout tht• l·ampu"
STANDARDS
Continued fr om A I
l'ry '\tlllll'lll profkwnt 111 11111111
and hnglhli hy :WI 1. ~rh1J11I'
1hat flit<,' p1•rf11rm .111t 1· goal~"'~
\illlC'lllllh
"ldt•ally. 111 ol 1wrle1 l "'I II Ill.
kids would ,Ill 111.111 h 1he un1w1
~al tcnel!'t flf No I fold Lt•f1 flt•
hind,.. W1b1J11 hkrnl0111ary
<)chool Pri11nJ):tl < :andy .Sperling
'aid. "Hut kith haw 111lhv11l11nl
needs. StamJ.mf, t.an't .Llw;1)"> lw
univer..Jlly appl11•cl "
Under Nn I l tilll I.di llcl11n d,
,11 leruit I .J Ii''<• of '>lltllt•111' ;it
t·ach school 11111\I ll•'>t pruliul'nt
ll\ Engli1>h. llmJ lf1% 11111!'11 tc:.t
pmficienl in 111ath. Ir lht• 1•111m·
population or Jny :.t~111f11 .int
subr:,rroup -i.uch a.' 1:n1-:hbll
learners 11:,11, hdow that k w l
two ycan, 111 .1 ruw. I.hey i.il'l' la
beled a. .. Pruwa111 lm pruv1•111t·111
~chools.
Th1c1• 1 .11npuM'' 111 1h1• Nt'w
port M1 •,a ll111l11•u ~d1rml l>i!.-
VERDICT
Conbnued from Al
lypt.'Wntt•r, ,111d my 1yp111K l!'t '>ti
lousy that I'm ft1fLNl to go
almost ab slowly ancl, I hope. <I'>
prern.ely a' ii I wt·n· w11t111g by
hand.
'peakin~ ol h•ltc'r'· I 't'nt .i
SCANDAL
Continued from A I
·A simple apoloh'Y 11o just 1101
enough after your whole emo
tional life has bet'n stolen ftom
you: he $aid. "Jail would be nice,
bUI Ifs not po~:clblt" All these
people have left i1o a civil n.·mt.'tly."
The Diocese of ( >mnge lr. doing
lu. best to make ~ure that juslic:e
is served, saJd OlllnceUor Shirl
Giacoml.
The Dloc~c fom1t'Cl th1· St·xual
Abuse and MlsconJuct Ovcl'!>ight
and Review Bnanl 111 200Z who~c
primary joh 1~ to investigate vic-
tlJns' claims und mil.kc a recorn-
mendatlon to thl' hlshop. c,hc
said.
Casteill Joined that boanJ, but
soon resigned.
·1 wanred 10 help." she said.
"But I'd go to all tht!M! meetlngli
and realize that this board had no
power or no hacking. TI1ry were
nothing more thun lnfom1:11lc111ul
ses.<Jions and u ml·.u1' 10 tell
evcryonl' that II wu. .. JIJ < >K. •
But Glaro111i -.;ucl (..astcuc did
not give It a chanrr
"She left 111 l>\•t 1·111hcr when
the board wni. still ht•111g formed,"
she said. ·11 was in a 'ilale oftran·
sJtJon. The proc(''>.'> ur forming the
'
ancJ was a very
popular per-
son.'"
When Keily
•tarted working
In .Orange
C01t5t College's
commurtlly re·
lallon11 office In
ldamae Kerly t 960. ar the age
of49. hcryped
UJ1 the school's
pre~ relcnsci. on a Hoyal
manual typewrircr.
In the early 1970s. they up·
graded her to an electric type-
writer and later to a more ad-
trict -Whirtier. Wilson and f>o·
111onu demenrary bChools -are
IL~tf'd a_., Progmm Improvement
'rh1111b .11\1.l '" must revise their
1·durntional µIan , use funds for
,wff development and offer par-
cnti. 1lw dw1cl.' to seud their
t:hildn·11 to other sch oob. Ad·
Jms. < :oltegc Park. Kal~r. K.illy-
hrooke. Paulanno, Pomona and
Heu d cmentary ~rhoolb. Ensign
uncJ 'lcWi11kk middle !>Chools
und l.:$tuncia 1 liJ(h School did
not ma.kc pt>rfurmance targets
1.1'1 yt'ur jnd will bec:orne Pro-
gram l111pruvcnwnt '>l'huols if
thl·y ""~' 1a11<cl again this year.
In tlw 2lHM·05 'l·hool year. the
.:oat\ 1ump IO 24.4% tor l-.ngbsh
.1t1d lb.5% for malh. l:ach year
alrt>r 1har . thcy continue in·
l'n•a-"'. 1111111 ltll4 when 100% of
•audl·nt~ an• t·xpt'cted tu he pro
fic11·111.
1\\11 t•vcn if I OO'lt ~tudl'nt~ arc
ptolir1t•n1 111 marh aml I nglii.h
hy 1lw11. Ill'\\' !>ludent11 movini:; to
I h.11 dl\I ri1·1 rnuld pott•ntiaJly
thmw otf the !>t:alc.
~uy to pn~on for rape. for many
yt:a~. he M'fll me J Oui~tma'>
card wilh a :.imple. four-word
~n!etinl(; "Wish you were here."
Now 1ha1's the ki11d of message
0111• rcmcmher1o.
Another wa'> a si111ple
p1htcard that said, "You
"'x n .\Jed maniac. how could
you turn loo'e that 'c" tiC'nd
h1)anl wa'ln't completed until
three or fmlr m 1>111hs aftcr o;he
lch."
Bourtl members. who are aJJ
volunlecrs. include people from
different walks of life. Giacomi
sa!J.
• Tl'ley have a difficult job in
front of them," she saJd. "Regard-
less or the outcome of a lawsuJt.
thl'Y must examine the evidence
in a case. They hire an outside in-
vestigator if neces5ary.·
lnwst1gation In such cases is
c.1ifficuh baause som e of them
arc decodes old.
"It'~ hard to find witnesses."
(liat umi said. "And in some
m .. cs. lhc prie.sts 1hemselves have
pa ... !>Cd on. They need to make
"uc 1he victims also remember
l'>.nctJy what happened. We want
tci he jusr to all.·
Hut Casrelx saJd she had lost
con1idenre and hnpe thal the
hoard ~ going to do any ju.s
tice
''It only made me reel more
and more frustrated." he said.
YEARS OF AGONY
For a long time. Castelx had no
idea she had legal options. she
said. For years, she agonilld over
what happened. The alleged
abuse happened when she was in
her junior year of high ~hool.
When Glstebl was struggling with
problems at home. Rector
Thomas I lodgman offered her
friendship and comfort. she said.
"I le told me no one under·
81nod me I.Ute he did," she said.
vas1ced version. Sy the time she
retired ilt 75, sbe had work.ed
her way up to a computer.
Born in Salt Laite City, lda-
mae Campbell moved with her
famUy to Los Angeles as a child.
She married Tom Kelly in 1937
and settJed in Newport Beach.
Alter her husband's death ln
1959, she decided to ta.Ice her
fi~t job. A friend from her
church. Thelma Harwood,
worked ai. a secretary at Orange
Coast College and suggested
Kelly do the same.
·For the next rwo and a half
decades. she was the glue that
"The achievement targets set
for test scores over the span of
eight to 10 years creates an im·
possible graph," sald Judi Con-
roy. director or the single-sub-
ject credential program in UC
Irvine's education department.
"Even eli1e &ehools will have to
meet impossible achievement
goals.#
Schools such as Whittier, Wtl-
son and Pomona, which all have
large Latino populations, face
the added challenge of teaching
·tudenls lo rake a test in a non-
native language. On average.
Sperling said. it takes three to
five years for students lo learn to
speak. academic English weU
enough to understand and take
a standardized test
Pomona and Whittier, which
have only a few grades, test just
~cond· and third-graders. Vet
those schools must st1clc to the
same s tandards with No Oilld
Left Behind.
"Wirh !tthools like Pomona
anti Whittler, that's· diflicuJt,"
McCntcken?" The card came a
few year:. aher I had tried,
convicted and M!ntenced
MrCrackcen. a sex murderer, and
he had been duJy executed. Still,
ii was a rriemorahle ml.ssive -
brier. to the point, succinct,
even if a few years late.
Somehow, 1 remember those.
The onJy thing I can remember
"I le told me I was in love and that
ifs very special to be in love. I was
an innocent 16-year-old, and I've
always been taught in catholic
school that you do what your
teacher tells you to do. So that's
what I did."
She loved the positive attention
I lodgman showered her with,
Olsteix said.
"l was his favorite." she said. "1
relt special.·
But reallty hit her hard when
she became pregnant in her sen-
ior year,
"My parents, at that time, told
me it was my fault," she said. "My
problems at home spiraled."
She started to question her
faith In Catholicism. She still has
problems with her religion.
"I had an abortion," she said.
"So I was going 10 heU anyway. All
I slarted seeing when I saw the
church was hun. anger and fear.
The church does not speak to me
.my more at a 11plritual level. ln
my mind. It's destroyed the hearts
and minds of people and the
bodies of children.·
Castelx says she is horrified
looltlng hack because all the inci-
dents happened right under the
school administrators' noses.
"Ir happened on campus, in his
apartment and even in the school van: she said. "Where was every-
one and what were they dolngr
Emotionally. It wreaked havoc
on her personal life.
"I had a lousy marriage and a
series or failed relationshJps," she
said. "The pain just doesn't go
away. l still struggle with IL It still
affects all my reladonshJps. •
A CHANGE IN LIFE
People such as Castelx need to
get their Justice and thelr day in
coun to find closure to a bitter,
shameful episode that haa tor·
mented their lives for many,
many years, John Manly saJd. •nte Catholic Cllurch has been
doing a nwnber on the kids ln
Orange County.# he said. •If you
were a chlld rapist and were
wearing a Roman collar, that gave
you license. And you wouldn't be
punished but protected, coddled
and promoted In the hlerarohy. •
The oftldals are •tncapable of
telling the truth,• Manly aakL
"What's grott!l8qUe about that ta
they're doing this at the expenee
of children,# he said. "They treat
them IOce human debrla. •
Giatoml said the church ad.
mlla that •poor dedalona were
made" ln the put. ·eur many or ltl08e poor ded·
8'ona ~ oot made In thls dlo-
ceee, ·&he aald.
The public " Judalna the Catholic Olurch by lta cunent
kn~ of pedophWa. G&lct>-
ml Mid. -w. diddc ~ In che 70a
whit we know today lbcxll pedo-pt6." ehe uJd. .,..... wbo
llhowed WlmJal llpl ......
oil 10 be cr.llld lof lllcotKillin
,
held the depanment to~elher, •
Carnett wrote ln his monthly
column. ·orange Slices.· 1n De·
cember.
lo 1989. the school awarded
her an h onorary associate of
arts degree.
£ven after her retiremenr at
age 75. Carnett said he kept a
desJt for ber at the school. She
still came into work a few days
a week. until she was diag·
nosed with leukemia in No-
vember and moved to t11e Bay
Area 10 be closer to her dau~h
ter.
"She didn't want to move out
said Peggy Anatol, director of
curriculum and assessment for
the Newport· Mesa Unified
SchoQ.I District. "They don't have
long to develop students' lan-
guage abilities before they've
gone on to another school. INo
Oilld Left Behind! is a one size
fits all measure that might not fit
a11.·
some people worry that con-
stant testing creates a strain on
srudents and teachers.
"h 's piling more responsibility
on teachers and k.ids," said
Wendy Jawor, a first-grade
teacher at Harbor View Elemen-
tary. •1t•s got to give somewhere.
These are tittle k.lds.. Their brains
aren't ready for some of the con·
cepts yet."
Th.is week. President Bush is
marking the anniversary of No
Oilld Left Behind by visiting
school.CJ and touting its successes
-higher test scores for fourth-
graders nationwide and more
money promised to help strug·
gling schools. At the same lime,
about the four-page le11er is that
the writer was mad. However,
there may be hope. Just as
computers have encouraged
wordiness. they may aJso be a
force to counter the problem. I
have no experience with e-mail.
but I have been told thal more
and more people communicate
by th.ls method and that such
When in fact they were trying to
medicate this siclcness with alco-
hol."
Some or them were even
brought back in\o active ministry,
Giacomi said.
·eut today, witb all the infor-
mation' we have about pedo-
philia. that would never happen.··
she said.
For Manly, It's been a "holy
fight." so far, he says. The actor·
ney, who lives in Newpon Beach,
dealt only with lawsuJts related to
construction defects until 1997.
The course of his practice
changed after he woo a record
$5.2 million for Ryan Di.Marla, a
former Mater Del student who al-
leged that then-principal Michael
Harris had sexually abused him.
The Diocese of Orange settled
with him during the pretrial
stages.
Now the cases keep piling up.
Giacoml said the Diocese has no
Idea how many lawsuits have
been filed.
"We haven't been served on all
the lawsuits yet," she said.
The financial lmpact on the DI·
ocese Is going to be significant.
Gtacomi said.
"It's going 10 have a direct ef·
feet on our services here in
Orange County," she said. "We
don't have reserve money we can
spend on these lawsuits.·
But they don't know yet how
much the legal battles and settle-
ments are going to cost. Giacoml
said.
On the other hand, it takes a lot
of courage for victims to come
forward in these cases. Manly
said.
"These rew people who have
filed these lawauha have p)ven
voice to what happened to ao
many people," he said. "We be·
lJeve that there are hunc:heds if
not thousands of victima In Costa
Mesa and Newport Beach who
haven\ come forward.
·R.epmlenting these people
has been the iveatest honor or
my life." he said. "But It's also
been the hardest thing I've ever
had to do?"
\Yhatrnakesltaotorturous7
''I'm Catholic,· Manly aaJd, his
face bearing a grave expreulon.
"And when you're Calhollc. your
coping mec:hanlam la your reli· pm:
He still goes to chW"Ch with his
family.
"When l RO to mas. and an-
nounce who I am. it'a painful," he
said. "l do what I do becaule l
have • cbok'e. What do you do If
you were a German In \\\:>dd War m l wwi't gotng to keep quiet. I
had to do the rtght thlfl8. ..
He dertwl .,.._a utls&ction
from helping peop6e such ..
John. • former c.o.ta Mesa reU·
dent -a vk:dm who does not
wW'l to Identify hlrmelf. -
John. now 39. d rememben
die Uy he 'Ml "violently mped.
by MkNel Hattt8. who In lddi·
of Costa Mesa.· longt.Lme friend
and co-worker Signe Johnson
said or KeUy. ·occ was really
her home, and we U.lted to take
care of her. But she realized her
daughter wanted her closer and
was totaJJy positive about mov-
ing. Sh e was so easy to be
around. l'U miss her smiles, but
1 feel lucky we had h er as long
we did.·
Keily is survived by her
daughters, Laurie and Kath-
leen. and her cwo grandchil-
dren. A memorial scholarship
ln her honor has been estab-
lished by OCCs foundation.
d emocratic presidential hopeful
1 loward Dean, a former gover-
nor of Vermont. is criUci.zing the
president, accusing him of
spending money on his cam·
paign instead of on promised
educational programs.
Despite any drawback of No
Oiild Left Behind, Newport·
Mesa officials are confident in
the long run.
Though the law is 2 years old ,
it is still a work in progress. Sper-
Un g said. rt sets the bar higl1. but
she's glad thar she at least knows
what the expectations are.
• 1 thlnlc Newport-Mesa can
meet the mark.· Anatol said. "l
think we're all working very dili-
gently to teach to the standards.
And I think It's reasonable to
think we can continue our excel·
lent performance. It just will be
a concerted effort every year.·
• MARISA O'NEii. covers
education. She may be reactied at
1949) 574-4268 or by &-mail at
marisa.oneil@latimes.com.
communications are short and
to the point. If that's the case.
then l may have to look into it,
because I can't face another
four-page, single-spaced letter.
Not at my age.
• ROBERT GARDNER ia a Corona
del Mar resident end a former
judge. His column runs Tuesdays.
tion to his duties in Mater Dei
also visited St. John U1e Baptist In
Costa Mesa
John grew up and went to
school in Costa Mesa. He was
deeply involved In his reUWon.
He was considering becoming a
priest at age 13. He was an altar
boy at church when Harris visit·
ed.
He approached Harris with
questions about dating. which
clashed with his desire to join the
seminary. he said. That's when
Harris statting abusing him, John
said.
UHe said he had to teach me
how to release myself sexually,"
he said. "He took me off campus
and 10 his private residence. He
threatened me and told me never
to repeat what happened to any-
one."
The "numerous" instances of
molestation culminated in the
rape, John said.
"Right after that incident, l re-
member sitting in my parents'
car for 45 minutes. just shaking."
he said. "My first sexual experi-
ence had been with a priest.•
John decided never to tell any-
one about It. he said.
"I decided that I would bury It
so deep that I wouldn't let it affect
me." he said. "But then, I fell
apart emotionally and psycho-
logically..
He has never been married.
"My family was very tradi·
tional," he said. "I didn't want to
hurt them by telling them what
happened. I thought It was only
me that was affected. J could Uve
with IL"
STIJ. FW. wmt FAITH
But something snapped inside
when John saw he was not the
only one.
"I became angry when I saw
that lhe Diocese of Los Angeles
and Orange were trying to brush
this off and that they had known
all along about Harris,· he said.
John approached Manly about
sbt moo~ aao. and that was the
6rst time he had told anyone
about the abuse, he said.
But John adU bas hl8 ~Ugjon.
•1 believe In the CathoUc faith.•
he said "I don't believe in the bu-
reaucrats. lf we tab this on our
\houlders and ftgtlt that bu·
reauaacy, I'm sure we'll win. and
I believe thinp wtlJ refonn in the
CathoUc Oturch."
Penonally. John's pl is to get
marrled and haw a family. he
aaid.
·1 want to make an this nevft'
happens to MOther chlJd ever
again." he Mid. "I want to be abie
to dord therapy and help to help
me not &MOdate eexuallty wtth abU&e..
• ~ IHARAnt covert public
......, end courts. She '"9Y be
r'MCNd. (9481 '~°' bV
e-mail•
..,,..bMrtldl.~com.
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PUBLIC
SAFETY
POLICE FILES
COSTA MESA
• Adefns Av9nu9; A vehicle
oorglary was reported in the
1600 blade at 1 p.m. Sunday.
• WMt Bay StNet: An auto
theft was reported in the 300
blodc at 12:52 p.m. Sunday.
• 8ftnDf StrMt: Graffiti was
reponed in the 3000 bl<><* at
4:08 p.m. Sunday.
• F1Nrview Ro-': An auto
theft was reported in the
2700 blodc at 12:21 ·p.m.
Sunday . • .....,_, A\19nue:
Vandalism was reponed in
the 2000 blodc at 1 :27 a.m.
Sunday.
• HMbor Boulevatd.: A
hit-and-run felony was
reported in the 2300 block at
1;34 p.m. Sunday.
• Merrinu1c Way: A vehicle
burglary was reported in the
400 blade at 10:29 a.m.
Sunday.
NEWPORT BEACH
• Ealt Cout Hlghw.y;
Vandalism was reported in
the 2100 blodt at 11:18 a.m.
Sunday.
• Goa.ta Point Drive: A
hit-and-run was reported in
the 100 blodc at 1: 11 a.m.
Sunday. • MoJo Court: A vehicle
burglary was reported in the
100 bl<><* at 10:03 a.m.
Sunday.
• Plec:entUI Avenue:
Vandalism was reported in
the 1500 blade at 12:S8 p.m.
Sunday.
• Promontory Drive Wert
Grand theft was reported in
the 300 block at 12:29 p.m.
Sunday.
• Santiago Drive: A home
burglary was reported in the
1400 blodc at 10:33 a.m.
Sunday.
AROUND TOWN
• Send AROUND TOWN items to
the Daily Pilot. 330 W. Bay St.,
Co11a Mesa, CA 92627; by e-mail
to luis.pena@latimes.com; by fa><
to (949) 646-4170; or by calling
(949) 674-4298. Include the time,
date and location of the event, as
well as a contact phone number.
WEDNESDAY
Newport Beech Senior Setvlcff
and Recreation will present a
new series of drawing and
painting workshops by artist and
lecturer Mimi Sharon Stein for
beginners through advance
students in mixed-media from 10
a.m. to 12:30 p.m. beginning
today end lasting eight weeks in
the Jorgensen Center at 2005
Dover Drive, The cost is $66.
Information: (949) 644-3151.
ntURSOAY
Book Soup South Coast fttaza
will present mystery writer
Jerrilyn Farmer, author of
"Perfect Sax,· In conversation
with mystery writer Nathan
Walpow at 4 p.m. at 3333 Bristol
St .. Suite 2400. Information: (714)
689-2665,
http://www.booksoup.com.
FRIDAY
The Envtronmenul Neture
Center will present a Full Moon
Walk from 6:30 to 8 p.m,..at the
center. 1601 16th St., Newport
Beach. The cost la $2 for adults
and $1 for children. Information:
(949) 645-8489.
SATURDAY
Th-. wttl be a Computer Fair et
the Orange County Fair 8c
Exposition Center from 10 a.m, to
5 p.m. In Building No. 10 at the
Orange County Fair & Expoaltiory
Center. The coat la $5 for adults;
children 10 and younger get in for
free. Information: (800) 800-6600.
http:Jlwww.ocfair.com.
SUNDAY
TheN wll b9 a Computw felr at
the Orange County Fair &
Exposition Center from 10 a.m. to
5 p.m. In Building No. 10 at the
Orange County Fair 8t Exposition
Centw. The cost It S6 for adults;
children 10 and younger get In for
free. Information: (800) 800-6600.
http:llwww.ocfair.com.
MONDAY
The UC trvlne Cent9r for
Unconvemlonal Security Affa.lre
will hol1 a forum. "Are Sc:hoola as
Safe aa They Should Be!' with
keynote apeaker1 Orange County
Sheriff Michael S. Carone and
CKane-County Superintendent
of Sdloola William M. Habermehl
from 8:30 to 11 :30 a.m. at the
Arnold Ind M1bel Bectmln Center. 100.Academy Way. lrvlnt.
lnfonnauon and reMrvatlona:
(948) ~9670, ouu•ud.edu.
lodyWlee ,.,_ C....wll
offer 1 free axerdM night from 8
10 8 p.m. 81 2901 W. Coett
Hlghw8y, No. 110, Newport
~. Attendant9 can gee free
dpe on for woritou1 routtnee.
I~ lM9) e&o-1880.
http:l!www.~lnfo. ... TOWN,,...,.
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Daily Pilot
WILSON
Continued from Al
"C+ -The life and 1\Jnes of Rob·
en 'Bob' M. Wilson." The grade he
gave himself reOects his belief that
he was "academically just above
average.·
The grade he deserves for his
contribution Lo the city is more
like an A. said Gladys Rt.>fakes.
spokeswoman for the Costa Mesa
I listoricaJ Society and a longtime
friend of Wt.Ison.
"I think he made as many con-
tributions. if not more. than a
good many of the mayors at that
particular time.· Refak.es said:
"Llveryone suddenly became in·
ten:sted in the welfare of Costa
Mesa And as it grew, hi'i ideas son
of grew and went along with all
the new things that came along."
Wtlson was born in 1917 in Se·
atlle and was adopted when he
was 4 months old. n,c Wllson))
raised Bob in Tacoma, \\lash .. and
ht> gJ"dduaLed from high school in
1936. He set his sights on going to
colJege at use but only got as far
as Glendale Junior College, Wilt
i.aid.
Thal was far enough lo mecl his
TOWN
Continued from A4
JAN.14
Shennan library & Gardens will
present "Floral Design Using
Tropicals;· a floral design class. at
9 a.m. at 2647 East Coast
Highway, Corona del Mar. The
cost is $45 and pr registration 1s
required. lnformatio (949) 673-
2261. http://Www.sl rdens.org.
The Newport 8 i:h Public
library Founda ion's Manuscrrpt
Book Discussion Group will
discuss "From Beirut to
Jerusalem" by Thomas Friedman
at 9:15 a.m. at the 1000 Avocado
Ave. library. Information: (949)
717-3890.
JAN.15
laura Schlessinger will sign htK
new book "The Proper Care and
Feeding of Husbands" at 7:30
p.m. al Barnes and Noble
Booksellers. Metro Pornte, 901 B
South Coast Orrve. Information:
(714)444-0226.
JAN. 16
A Home Remodeling and
Decorating Show will be held
starting today in buildings No. 10
and 12 and in the Parade of
Products at Orange County Fair &
Exposition Center. The show will
be open from noon to 8 p.m.
today. The cost is $5. 75 for
adults, $3 for seniors and free for
children y ounger than 12.
Information: (818) 557-2950.
The Commodores Club of the
Newport Beach Chamber of
Commerce will present the
Newport Harbor Christmas
Parade Awards Dinner and
Auction at 6 p.m. at the Four
Seasons Hotel. There wrll be ltve
entertainment and silent and lrve
auctions. Tickets cost $75 per
person and $900 for a table of 12
Information: (949) 729-4400,
http://newportbeach.com.
JAN. 17
Tha TEx•us Guitar Show will be
from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. in building
No. 14 at the Orange County Fair
CARS
Continued from Al
live," Schuler said . "Oflkl·r ~
really favor this, ari d rt will lh:fi
nitely increase morale."
The cos1 10 repai nt lhl' 45
Crown Victorias in Lhe depart
m ent's nee1 will l'>l' ahnul
wife of 65 years. Maryalice. 'Jhey
met at her friends house. but Bob
waited a year to ask her out be-
cause he ~ a starving college
student. she recalled. For their first
date, Bob took her 10 one of his
tmckmeets.
"I guess I wanwd to show off
my javelin lhrowing skills!!!" Bob
wrote in his autobiography.
The Wtlsons bought their first
home in Costa Mesa in 1948 on
f'.AlSt Aowet" Street. ln elr home
soon became a hotbed of activ-
isrv.; those who wanted 10 S<.>e 1he
area become a city met th ere for
brai.nb'tonning sessions.
Wilson was one of the most ar-
dent visionaries who buoyed the
incorporation movement, Hcfakcs
said.
"Most people thougt11 they didn'i
wdllt Lo mak:e chaflbses. taxes would
go up. and ·an sortS of other homble
thing> would happen... Hefak.es
said "But he had the foresight.
along with a lot of other people.
tl1<11 could see a future for Costa
Mesa other than just tile suburban.
COlUlLry·Style town tluit it Wal>.. And
he strove to help uchi1.w a number
of different thing;."
lncorporalion supponrrs tri·
umphed on hme :19, 19S:t
& Exposition Center. The cost is
$10 for adults, children 12 years
old and under are free.
Information: (918) 288-2222.
A Home Remodeling and
Decorating Show will be held in
buildings No. 10 and 12 and in
the Parade of Products at Orange
County Fair & Exposition Center.
The show will be open from 10
a.m . to 8 p.m. today. The cost is
$5. 75 for adults. $3 for seniors
(55~) $3 and free for children
younger than under 12 are free.
Information: (8181557-2950.
The West Coast Reptile Show
will be from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. in
building No. 17 at the Orange
County Fair & Exposition Center.
The cost is $5 for adults and $3
for cnildren 12 and younger
Information: (714) 826-6600,
http://Www.radicalreptiles.com.
The Parrot Education and
Adoption Center. a nonprofit
organization, will have a semrnar
on parrot nutrition from 1 to 2:30
p.m. at the Balearic Community
Center. 1975 Balearic Drive, Costa
Mesa. Information: (949)
631-3606, hrtp:l/www.peoc.org.
·escape from Winter.# a fitness
and fashion show with triathlete
Lokelani McMichael and Pro
-wake boarder Emily Copeland.
will be from 2 to 4 p.m. at the
South Coast Plaza Sport Chalet.
~or every pair of Nike Shox Turbo
shoes that are tried on, N1keGo
will donate a pair of shoes to the
Boys and Grrls Clubs ol Orange
County. Information: (714)
424-9255.
JAN. 18
A Home Remodeling and
Decorating Show will be held m
burldings No. 10 and 12 and m
the Parade of Products al Orange
County Fair & Exposition Center
The show will be open from 10
a.m. to 6 p.m. today The cost 1s
$5.75 for adults. $3 for seniors
and free for children younger
than 12. Information: (818)
557-2950.
The West Coast Reptile Show
will be from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m rn
building No l7 at the Orange
$I 'i,000 1 lw l'olrn· lll'partn11•111
will p.1y for tlw rl'dt·i.rg11, whrl'h
will mch1d~· 1ww dt'cab. mil of 11-.
OWll hudgi•I, .ll'l'lllding lo ;r ~larf
repon .
• DEIRDRE NEWMAN covors Costa
Mesa. She may be reatticd at (949)
574 4221 or bye mail at
rleirdre.newman "lat1mes com.
FYI
There will be a public memorial
service for Wilson at 11 a.m. on
Jan. 31 at Calvary Chapel of Costa
Mesa, located at 3800 South
Fairview In Santa Ana. The family
is asking that donations be made
to the Costa Mesa Historical
Society in lieu of ftowers.
Wllt said she and her father en-
joyed a strong connection, and
she reminisced a.bout following
her dad around on his d vic obli-
gations.
"He (wdSI the best father in the
world, and ~ were very dose,"
Wilt said. "He always took me
along. and I met so many impor-
t.ant people. It w .is wonderful be·
niat same ye-M, Wilson w .is ap· cause I've never been shy to meet
pointed to the Planning CommiS-anybody. I le was just the best.·
sion and served as its chairman. Mary.tlice w.c. especially grate-
ln 1960, he w~ ele<.1ed to the a cy fuJ that her hw.band was able to
Cmmcil, where he served for 16 enjoy one la.!>-.. ChrislJTlaS, espe·
ye<lr.i. including three slints as cially since that day also happens
mayor. to be her birthday .
During his political life, he "It was great," she said. "We had
spearheaded the building of the all the family togelher. I had a
first City HaJJ. heJped bring the birthday cake, imd they only put
Costa Mesa Golf and Co\mLry • one candle on it so we wouldn't
aub ro Lhe city, mid aided the ac-bum the house duwn."
quisilion of the land for f-ailview -She described her late husband
PaOC Me and the rest of a group of as "friemily, ambitious: a doer.·
American mayors he was traveling Wilson described his life and
wilh were taken hosl41b>e in Beirut · Lhe development of Costa Mesa in
in Lhe early 1970s. Luckily. the or-his book "Frum Goat HW to City of
deaJ only lasted eight hours. the Arts: ·111e I listory of Costa
On the perronal front, Wilson Mt-sa. •
had three children -Will. who is
now 58; Sherrie, 54; and Randy,
56. I le is also survived hy eight
grandchildren and Lhree great·
""1f1 dchild ren.
County Fair & Exposition Center.
The cost is $5 for adults and $3
for children 12 and younger.
Information: (714) 826-6600,
http:llWww.rsdicalreptiles.com.
JAN.21
The Costa Mesa Historical
Society will have former Costa
Mesa Police Chief Roger Neth as
a speaker at ils annual dinner and
installation meeting at 6 p.m. at
Captain's Table Restaurant at
Orange Coast College.
Information and reservations·
(949) 631·5918.
The Newport Beach Newcomers
Club will be tou rrng the Orange
County Museum of Art. The cost
is $15. The organization is
designed to help people meet
new friends and to learn about
what Newport Beach has to offer.
Information: (949) 645·9922,
http://Www. newcomers-newport
beach.org.
JAN.22
Hoag Hospital will host
•Nutrition for the lung Cancer
Patient,# a daytim e lung cancer
support group, from 2 lo 3:30
p.m, al the Hoag Cancer Center,
conference room A. The speaker
will be Kathy Pham, a Hoag
Hospital nutritionist. Information:
(949) 760-5542.
The Friends For Planned
Parenthood luncheon, at 11:30
a.m. al Sherman Library &
Gardens, will focus on sex
education rn the Santa 'Ana
Unified School District. Teen
activists from Campfire USA and
Girls Inc. will discuss a
curriculum that only teaches
abstinence until marriage.
Sherman Library 8t Gardens is at
2647 E. Coast Highway.
Information· (714) 633-6373, ext.
121.
JAN.23
The City of Costa Mesa
Recreation Drvision will present
Kids Nigh1 Out from 6 to 11 p.m.
at the Balearlc Community
Center, 1975 Balearic Drive.
Children ages 7 to 12 wrll be
LUXURY PERFORMANCE VALUE ,. .......................
• VOLUME SELECTION
•OUTSTANDING CUSTOMER SERVICE
•GREAT PRICES GUARANTEED
• O~ NEWMAN covers Costa
Mesa. She may be reattied at 1949)
574-4221 or bye mail at
deirdre.newman ,, lat1mes.com.
transported from the community
center to the Arrowhead Pond of
Anaheim to watch the Mighty
Ducks versus the M innesota
Wild. The cost is $20. Information
and registration: (714) 754-5158.
FEB.3
tfoag Hospital will present a
community education class on
"Heart Anack: Signals and
ActionsH by Dr. l ee Carter at 6
p.m. at the Hoag Hospital
Conference Center in New port
Beach. Information and
reservations: (800) 514-4624,
http:llwww.hoaghospital.org.
FEB. 5
Hoag Hospital will present a
community education class on
"Stroke: The Warning Signs" by
Dr. Subbarao Myla at 6 p.m. at
the Hoag Hospital Conference
Center in Newport Beach.
Information and reservations·
(8001514-4624,
http://www.hoaghosp1tal.org.
FEB.10
Hoag Hospital will present a
community education class on_
HWhal is Arrhythmia# by Dr.
Brian Chesnie at 6 p.m. at the
Hoag Hospital Conference Center
in Newpor1 Beach. Information
and reservations: (800) 5144624,
hrtp:l/www.hooghospital.org.
FEB. 11
Hoag Hospital will present a
community education class on
MDrug-Elting Stent: Sening a New
Standard" by Or. Richard Haskell
at 6 p.m. at the Hoag Hospital
Conference Center in Newport
Beach. Informal ion and
reservations: (800) 514·4624,
http://www.hoaghosp1tal.org.
FEB.17
Hoag Hospital will present a
community educatron class on
"Setting the Pace: The latest
Pacemakers and Devices# by Dr.
Neala Hunter at 6 p.m. at the
Hoag Hospital Conference
Center in Newport Beach.
Information and reservations:
(800) 514-4624.
lrttp:l/www.hoaghospitol.org.
DAILY PILOT
Community
Events 'Calender
For Newpon-Mesa
On Sale Now
For $5.00.
Tuesday, January 6, 2004 M
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M luesday. Januaty 6, 2004 Daily Pilot
FORUM
HOW TO GET PUIU8HEO -a..n.ra: Mall to Editorial Page Editor Lolita Harper at the Daily Pilot, 330 W. Bay St, Costa Mesa, CA 92627 • RMd9rs HotliM: Call (949) 642~ Fu: Sen~ to (949) 64;&4170 E~:S.nd to dallypl/ot@latlm~s.com .All correaponden<le must Include full name, hometown and phone number (for verification purpoaea). The Pilot reserves the right to edit all submissions for ciartty and length.
Manure is only one mess
Newport needs to clean up
I'm reading thi amcle about the
cornmuniry and the lU·do with the
horses' manure in Lhe Buck Bay. Well,
you know what? The city of Nt·w1111r1
has a bigger problem, such as th<'
parking and trash around the
properry of work at Flt"tche1 Jonell
Motor Cars -th~ No. I Mercede~
dealer in the United States. I guC!>!>.
People park all on that \trcet ri~hl
acrOS!> from lhe stoplight then" at the
Jamboree intersel'tlon. The me~ on
that .. uect ~ometmws b incredible. It
look!. llke a spread-out dumpster.
Nvw. the problem being not only
that they park there. but it seems
that they throw nil their garhage on
the Kruund and on that little gral\s
above,
f mean. I've seen people do this,
and when I say something to them,
needless to say. they ju111 walk away.
Perhaps nothing is done becaui.e
rletcher Jones is the biggest taxraycr
in Newport Beach. But f would like to
know what givea these people to
rnali»• btg ftlthy mess.
MAILBAG
I'll I I t' \f 11.U
\'ct I< 111/H"l ()(~
lll1!1fl\ f l~fl\(I
llll'd \fl< I'll KF.F.P
Ill l!f 11 ll<"I
"' '11 ' N'm oust f)f<I\ f \\A YS
1 I I \ N I HANKSI
And as far as the hor!!e manure. let
rne tell you ~ometlung: \Ve have more
manure in politics than we will ever
have lrom hor~es. These hor et-were
here a l<>nK time before Sun ta Ana
DON LEACH I DAIL V PtLO T
The city of Newport Beach would hke equestrians to deposit their horses' droppings in small trashcans.
traffic. I !eights was incorporated into
Newport Beach. To my knowledge,
I've never heard of horse manure
heing a delriment in any shape. way
or form to human life, OK?
So I don't know what that'~ all
about, but I Lhink that the city should
have warned these people right up
front, "Hey. your horses can't go to
the bathroom anymore.·
1-riday, Detoy urge!. memberi. of the
Airport Working Group to give up the
fight for the needed El Toro airport.
I le cltei. exmnple-. of connicting
statistics about future joh-. and
income for Orange County. Mu~t ol
the figures mentioned are ba~ec.J on
!L~i.umptions of future growth of the
county with and without the El Toro
airport.
The reason that members of the
Atrport Working Group continue to
work for opening the El Toro airport
is that we know that the airport is
needed for the continuing propriery
of Orange County.
day, seven days per week. It is
dangerous for any cat to roam freely.
with or without coyotes, and any
responsible, loving cat owner should
restrict the cat's outdoor roaming to
an enclosed deck, patio or yard. I am
an animal lover and have two cats of
my own that I let outdoors in a safe
enclosed deck, where I can keep a
watchful eye over them.
SHIRLEY CONGER
Corona del Mar
TOM THOMPSON
Newport Reach
As wi1h all projer tioni. about future
economic activiiy, these assumptions
can vary. Usually. there is a rangtt of
conclusiont-chat arrive al predictahle
trend~. not absohut-figures.
Roaming cats are in danger.
wi th or without wildlife
I think it is wonderful that we can
be so close lo wildlife here in
Newport Beach. All animals have
rights. and aJtJ1ough I feel for her cat
who was attacked. but luckily saved, I
also feel for the coyotes of whom we
have encroached on so much of their
territory.
Fight for El Toro i a fight
for count y's best interest
William Dctoy'i. effusion over the El
Toro airport is understandable,
considering that Irvine's plans for a
"Great Park" are on shaky (and
contaminated) ground.
Some facti. are certain: without the
operutin~ El Toro airport. Orange
County will 11ot create about 100,000
1obs. There will be a substantial loss
of income without the magnet of an
operating airport to attract busines'i.
ln.,tead or the El Toro airport, large
houi..in.: tracts and .;hopping mall~
will hl' built, thus increasing <,urfat·e
After reading the article "Residents
want coyotes out," about the woman
wanting to rid the Back Bay area of
coyotes because her cat was attacked;
I'm not sure what disrurbed me more:
her wanting to rid the Back Bay of
coyo tes or the fact that she lets her
rat roam freely.
The solution is certainly not to get
rid of coyotes, but to learn to be
responsible with our pets and live in
harmony with wildlife.
In the letter titled ''Locals should
relmqui1th l(rusp on F.I Toro" on
She 'lated that it was unreasonable
to keep her cat indoor!> 24 hours per
COMMUNITY COMMENTARY
PAM KNUDSEN
Newport Beach
S tarting the N ew Year on sober fo otin g
By Sue Clark
I Juggt·d down an unui.ually
quiet Balboa Penimula on New
Year\ morning noticing sign:. of
the previous night's revelry.
Empty beer cans. sometimes
entire 'iix-packb. languished in
front of beachfront properties.
1 lalf-empty magnums uf Oat
champagne and broken w111l'
bottles lay scattered acrosi.
usually tidy ratio'>. and forlorn
little party hats were squd!>hed
on the boardwalk. For a few
sleeping within, the murnu1g
would be fillec.J with regret. and
they would be feeling like tho e
hats.
'The holidays are often the last
battle cry for the problem
drinker: yet they open the door
to a new beginning for those
with addiction problems. For
some fortunate women. already
sober for a littJe while, this New
Year's would be the first good
one In a long time. This
courageous group had already
received a boost from the Cosrn
Mesa AJano Oub at a holiday
dinner that marks one of my
favori te memories of 2003;
"Dude. lets go play video
games.·· An 8-year-old -his halr
gelled in spikes -pulled a
yo1111get hoy off tu the Alnno
Oub game room. Ou·cking for
eavesdroppC'r'-. he· quietly added.
"I think s.1111.1\ hl're. too."
l'tl signed on lor a few hours
of pouring coffee anti cokes to
the 300 or so people who
showed up for a holiday dinner
provided by the Losta Mesa
Alano Oub. a gathering place for
those in 12-ster rcrovrry
programs. For the n~wly clean.
as well as the longtime '-Ober.
the club i1> a safe haven,
panlcularly \luring the holidily'>.
• when the media rclenUec,<;ly
assaults the public wilh ads
equaUng holiday fun with
alcohol.
Steve Sweet. one of the
managers of the club, came up
with the Idea last year and
searched for recipients fnr u
holiday fundralser. I le decided
on Women I lelplng Women, an
organization dedicated to
helping abused and nel·dy
women transition 10 economic
self-reliance. Women Helping
Women provides career
counseling. computer training,
job referrals and clothing and
cosmetic makeovers to women
who transition to llnanclaJ
indcpendertce. All funds
generated hy the holiday dinner
go IO help the organi/.ation.
In <1ddi11on. anonymous
~111tas can c;ign up to huy gifts
for the children of women living
a t I ll'ritage I louse. a ~ober living
facility for !>ingle mother!> in
recovery.
Nol aJJ the folk.s attending the
dinner were newly sober. or even
in recovery. Many were there as
cheerleaders. Spouse~. kids.
families and community
membe~ were gathered in
brightly dl•coratcd rooms, eating
a ham c.Jinner and singing carol.,.
The cluh rang w11h greeting ....
hugi. anti merriment. A J:11 wl'
was planned for latcr in the
evening.
I had the best spot in thr
house. as I poured !>Odas,
cappuccinos and coffees to n
tlivcrse crowd. I saw a
I larley-shined biker with a long
gray ponytail discussing
rhilosophy with a 20-something
lhat remembered me from her
high school days. Women living
in I leritage I louse held
blanketed infants or were trailed
by toddlers and school-aged
ldds. 1Wo gorgeously dressed
teens looked as world-weary as
they could. given how much fun
they were having being idolized
by the littJe kids and fussed over
hy the adult~.
"Are you guys bored?" I
poured them a Diet Cokt• and a
hot chocolate.
"Actually. not really," the
brunet sheepishly admitted.
ll)e hlond turned as holiday
music began Ooating In from the
pati<>. ''When does the auction
begin?" she called over her
shoulder as they sauntered ofT to
explore.
I -;aw hundreds of kids
bounl'ing in 1heir folding chair~
ru; Sa111a and h.is elves arrived
with numbered bags. Each child
and his mom from the !>Ober
living house had written a wish
list. and club supporters had
bought and wrapped the
pre!)ents. The tension was
growi ng. along with the pile of
gifts. Steve raced by mumhling,
"We missed one gift for an
8-year-old boyl" I le dispatched a
runner to buy, wrap and hurry.
;\!>San ta called the kids'
names. each beaming child
came shyly up to receive a gift. It
was equalty exciting for lhe
"mystery gifters" to spy on the
kids and see how their efforts
were received.
crowd.
I peered around the crowd of
excited children. looking for a
certain 3-year-old. I spotted a
dad holding some Barbie
clothes. and a small girl seated
on the ground. he wa!.
c;peet:hless as 'lhc looked at not
one but two llarh1ec;. I was still
ncrvou~. One wa~ a real Barbie.
hut ii had been the last uf its
kind at the s tore. The other was
a wannabe. I re!>trainec.J myself
from rushing over II} explain.
Suddenly,. he grinned and held
up everyih111g to show her clad.
I It" smilec.J down a1 her.
"Wow! You mean Barbie ha5 a
l'e>mputer and a cell phrme?
Cool," she said.
If the lit tie girl knew one wa:-. a
8arboid, she didn't let on.
As I looked at 1he donations
being auctioned off, I noticed
each one had a price. "One week
at the Beach House Recovery
Home," read a sign, "wcirth
$135." "Manicure and pedicure:
wonh $25." "Boombox: worth
$1()(},"
I rubbed my ore feet (I
should not have worn sandals to
work the counter). and added
one item to the list:
I lelping people tum their lives
around: inestimable.
HOW TO
CONTACT YOUR
REPRESENTATIVES
CITY OF COSTA MESA
Costa Mesa City Hall , 77
Fair Drive, Costa Mesa. CA
92626, (714) 754-5223
Mayor: Gary Monahan
Council: Libby Cowan,
Allan Mansoor, Mike
Scheafer and Chris Steel
CITY OF NEWPORT BEACH
Newpon Beach City Hall,
3300 Newport Blvd ..
Newport Beach, CA 92663,
(949) 644-3309
Mayor: Tod Ridgeway
Council: Gary Adams,
Steve Bromberg, John
Heffernan, Dicic Nichols,
Steven Rosansky and Don
Webb
COAST COMMUNITY
COLLEGE DISTRICT
District Office: 1370 Adams
Ave .. Costa Mesa. CA
92626. (714) 432-5898
Chancellor: William M.
Vega
Board: President Paul
Berger, Vice President
Armando Ruiz, George
Brown, Jerry Patterson and
Walter G. Howald; student
trustee Madeline levy
NEWPORT-MESA UNIFIED
SCHOOL DISTRICT
District Office: 2985-A Bear
St .. Costa Mesa, CA '92626,
(714) 424-5000
Superintendent: Robert
Barbot
Board: President Martha
Fluor, Vice President Dana
Black, Clerk Serene Stokes,
David Brooks. Tom Egan,
Judy Franco and Linda
Sneen
MESA CONSOLIDATED
WATER DISTRICT
1965 Placentia Ave .. Costa
Mesa, CA 92627, (949)
63 1-1200
Board: President Jim
Atkinson, Vice President
Mike Healey, Trudy
, Ohlig·Hall, Fred Bockmiller
and Paul E. Shoenberger
COSTA MESA SANITARY
DISTRICT
P.O. Bo>< 1200, Costa Mesa.
CA 92628-1200, (714)
754-5043
Board: President Arlene
Schafer, Jim Ferryman, An
Perry, Greg Woodside and
Dan Wonhington
ORANGE COUNTY BOARD
OF EDUCATION
200 Kalmus Drive, P.O. Bo><
9050, Costa Mesa, CA
92628-9050, (714) 966-4000
Elizabeth D. Pa rker,
member, Trustee Area 5,
Costa Mesa, Newport
Beach
ORANGE COUNTY BOARD
OF SUPERVISORS
Hall of Administratic1n, 10
Civic Center Plaza. Santa
Ana, CA 92701
•Jim Silva, 2nd District
(Costa Mesa, Newpon
Beach). (7 14) 834-3220
•Thomas Wilson, 5th
District (Newport Coast).
(714) 834-3550
ORANGE COUNTY FAIR
88 Fair Drive, Costa Mesa,
CA 92626, (71 4) 708-FAIR
Boud: President Ruben A.
Smith, Vice President
Patricia Velasquez. Emily
Sanford, Peggy Haidl.
James Barich, Deborah
Carone. Leslie A. Ray and
Frank Barbaro
STATE SENATE
Ro11 J ohnson (A), 35th
District, 18552 MacArthur
Blvd .. Suite 395, Irvine, CA
92715, (949) 833·0180; fax:
(949)833·0696;Press
Secretary Pat Joyce, (916)
323-1200
. .... ... ..., ..... ... ..
..
:...:.;:
·~·--..... ~:: ....... ......... ......... ...,., .........
~
"Where is he? I hope he Likes
the gift I got him,· said one
delighted man. scanning the r;.:
0JfLflMr you~lf a lo}'al rwldl.:r1
Think yo11 knotu all tl11 nt'UIS tlUJt 11iru
flt to prlnt1 ns1 your knowledgf wW1
this WftkJy quu -a MW foarure for
tlw Thadlzy forum pagr.s -and
lmpms your friends and/amity with
your l.ldSt kn"""'1dl! of local affairs.
I. Whjch prfVlte un.iversJry, geared
ro wolting prof~lonaJs. la moving
tta Founcain Valley location to a new,
67,000·aquare-foot apace on Bristol
DAILY PILOT NEWS QUIZ
trect7
A. Vanguard University
B. the University of Phoenix
C USC Masters Program satelllte
0. Pepperdlne UnJwnlry
2. Oiimayo Grlll al Fashion Island
wtU close Its doors to make way for
what new eatery?
A. Rnuge, a French bistro
8. Sharkeei
C EIOlolo
0. Oalm Jumper
3. Where dJd children go over the
hollday break for nature hikes and
lessons about 14 different California
habitats. lncludlng wildllfe such as
hawks, squirrels and coyotes.
A. the Back Bay
Ii. Crystal Cover State Park c FaJMew Partc
O. the Environmental Nature
C.enter
4. Speaking ot wildlife, what Is
the name of the Park Newport
resident who ls leading rhe charge
to r1d her Beck Bay neighborhood
o( coyotes?
A. Jennifer Johnson
B. CaJ:rfe Thompson "l,t
C Caire Friend
D. Susan Hernandez.
5. Which Costa Mesa councu
member Is asking that dry officials
be allowed to participate In any
discussion between Newport Beach
and counry leaders about future
management of John Wayne
Airport?
A. Allan Mansoor
B. GerJttonaban C ~Cawan
D. Ou1s Steel
An.w.rs: 1B,2A. 3 0, 4 C, 6 A
t
. -. . .. ~:
r ...
"
" ... ... . ....
QUOTE OF THE DAY
"I still believe that we 're
a great team. I still
believe that."
Tami Rappa, Estancia High girls
basketball coach
EYE OPENER
• Daily4'Pilol •
Sports llal ol Fame
ttltl• dmitll• u .. a,..'"'"'w
Jan 12 llooofee
JASON BOYCE
Sports Editor RlcMrd Dunn: (949) 574-4223 • Sports fax: 1949) 650-0170 luesday, January 6. 2004 A7
MEN'S BASKETBALL
UCSB rings
up road win
over 'Eaters _
Gauchos have too much
punch in earning 84 -77
triumph Monday night,
its ·fourth consecutive
over UC lrvine.
Barry Faulkner
Dany Pilot
BREN EVP-NTS CEN-
TER -In the opening
~tages of the 18-round
Big West Conference
men's basketball bat-
tJe. teams are still
searching for their
own distinct identities.
And, having to answer the hell after
a stunning conference-opening loss
at Long Beach State Saturday night.
UC Santa Barbara looked more like
the ring-tested champio n in Mon-
day's 84 -77 win over host UC Irvine
before 2.306:
"All our conversatio ns !Sunday and
Monday! have been about playing to
our level." UCSB Coach Bob Williams
said of his team's dogged determina-
tion n ot to start its regular-season ti-
tle d efense with back-to-back losses.
ihat conviction was apparent sec-
onds before tipoff. when UCSB senior
Bnlndon Fullove replaced the tradi-
tional pregame handshake with a
George Foreman death stare ( 1970s
vers ion}. His maniacal glare, directed
at" UCI freshman s tarter Mark I Jill.
seem ed to announce the Gauchos
had.come to get after it.
.ai11ove, last year's Rig Wes t Player
of the Year, seized control of the tip
and bear rhe Anteater defense to the
bucket to set a ton e the hosts could
never fully m atch in a physical duel
that included 59 foul:..
UCI (6-5, 1-1 in conference) m an-
aged three first-half leads (never mo re trran two points). then kept slugging
along to consistently cut into Santa
Barbara leads in the second half.
-&Mt the Gauchos (7-4. I -I ), the pre -
!mon favorite to ddcnd their con -
~ce crown, answered ead1 chal-
1~ in championship style lo post
tha.T fourth straight win over the Ant-
ccil!rs.
"They have some scitsoned players
and they played well. especially when
the game ~nt tight." UCI Coach Pat
Douglass said of the vi-;ilors. "We're
coming, but we're ju ... t nnt there yet. I
think it's going to hr a while before
we're o ne of the lco11fere11ce'!>I upper-
echclon lt'am'i."
William~. for o nl'. 11> convinced UC:I
will eventually rank among the cir-
cuit'-; heavyweights.
"(The po-;tseason-likc inten!>it yf is
typical of how we play. and it's how
they play. 100," Williams said. "At the
end of the year. these two teams are
UCl's Nie Campbell shoots a
three-pointer. part of his seven points,
all scored in the first half Monday.
going to he in the hunt. We know ii
and they know it."
Santa Barbara n e11cd six firs t-half
three-pointers to forge a :lfl-:'16 lead at
intermission a nd finished fl of 1() frorn
beyond the arc. UCSU sh ot 50% from
the fi eld (27 of 54) against a UC:I
squad that came in leading the con-
fe rence in field-goal-percentage d e-
fense (40.8%).
T he collapsing UCSH z.onc helped
limit UCI 7-foot senior center Adam
Parada to jus t two i.hu l'i -both from
at least 15 feet - and no point'-the
first 20 minutes.
Pa rada re..,ponded in the wcund
half with 16 points, providing the M'n-
ior leadership Dougla'\S ... aid wai. l:Kk-
ing from other Anteater vetl•rani..
Parada also tied hi!> career-high with
five blocked shoti. and hi' nine re -
bounds were nearly a thinJ u f llCI\
:12.
"On e key for us was. our i.cn iori.
had to step up, .. Dou~Ja~-; said. "Th(•y
just didn't provide the kind of 1n11gh-
11esi. and guidance and h1·art w1·
needed ."
Senior <.tarter Stanislav i'.uzt1k. had
eight of his JO points in the fir!>! lu1lf,
but finished with no rebounds. whill'
senior reserves Mall Okoro and Ara'!
Baskauskas combined for fiw poi 111 ...
and seven h oardc;.
• Okoro did provide 'urnt· 'tc1111tl
half -;park. dropping in a puthar k 111
pull the host!. wi thin 52 !iO with 10:02
remaining.
But, with the ·r:a tcri. trailrn~. IJO-75.
with 2 1 second, left. he m i'>,t'tl a pair
of free I h row<;
A Hoss Schraeder jumper <111 wcred
two subsequent C<iuch o foul s h1111> to
make it fl2-77 with nine o;erond' ll'ft,
l<ENT TREPTOW I DAILY PILOT
Costa Mesa High's Susy Trujillo leads the Mustangs into Gold~ West League
~.which begins tonight, wtth a 13.3 scoring average and 24 ttiree-potnters.
UCl's Adam Parada attempts to gain control of the ball in the paint as UC Santa Barbara's Casey Cook. left. and Jacoby
Atako converge. Parada finished with 16 points and nine rebounds, though the Anteaters couldn't come up with a victory.
l>ut Fullove, who led the winners with
17 point~. doi.cd ii out wiLh two free
throw!> with eight ~econds left.
Sophomore guards Mike Efevberha
and Jeff Glogt:'r helped the Anteaters
compete. Efevherha scored a game-
high 23 points. hitting 4 of 7 three
ha lb. while Ginger had I 0 points. a
career-high nine as\i'\tS, a team-high
two i.tealc. and only one turnover.
"Parada h;id a very good ~econd
half a nd tha1·i. the bc!>I I've M:'cn F.fev-
lwrhJ play." William s said. "I thought
I Efcvhcrhal may have been the bl'st
player 0 11 th e floor."
Cecil lkown ( 15 points), Joe See ( 11 )
and Cameron < inett!>Che ( 111 helped
IJCSJI <.'arn a 4fi-J 4 adva ntage in
l>t•rwh scoring.
ZOTS -Monday's loss dropped the
Anteate rs into a four-way tie for
fourth, behind Long Beach State (2-0
afte r defeating Cal Poly San Luis
Obispo Mo nday). University of the
Pacific (2-0 after an overtime road win
over Cal State Fullerton Monday) and
Utah State (1 O), rdle Monday ...
UCSB, UC Riverside and Cal State
No rthridge are also 1-1 ... UCI senior
Adam Parada's nrne re bounds Monday
pushed him past Ben McDonald into
the No 6 spot on the school's career
list wllh 671 ... Parada, who entered
the game second in the 819 West in
held-goal percentage (62.3), hit 3 of 6
from the field He also netted all 10 of
his free throws to lift his percentage at
See 'EATERS • Pa&e AS
GIRLS BASKETBALL
UCl's Mike
Etevberha,
who
scored a
game-tugh
23 points .
rolls
around a
Santa
Barbara
defender
as the
shot clock
winds
down,
creating
enough
room to
score the
bucket in
the
Anteaters'
Big West
Cooference
loss
Monday at
the Bren
Events
Center.
l'llOIOS BY
l>ON l [ACH I
DAllY PILOf
Streaks are at stake
Costa Mesa attempts to
extend playoff run;
Estancia shoots for third
straight league title when
league play begins tonight.
P•tr1ck Laverty
Daily Pilot
Cosla Mesa Hlgh and E.;tancia wiU be-
~ Golden West League play in gir1s
basketball tonight with the hope of .keep-
ing a pair ort\lstorical streaks alive.
The ~ (5-6) need al least si.x
victories to qualify for the Clf Southern
Secdon playotrs, something they have
done in each of the last 14 seasons. ·
f?.standa (3-10) will be looking for a few
more \llctories than that as it attempts to
win Its third straight league champion-
ship and second Golden 'Mlst League ti-
tle In a row.
Both streaks arc in jt-'Opardy as the
•
under.:.i:tA.'li Mustangs
and the inconsistent
Eagle. wiJJ have 10
knock off Occ.'\n View.
SaddJeback and West-
minster. who should all
join the battle for the top
spot in league.
"We're playing pretty
well. We're doing about
as much as we can do.·
Mesa C.oach Jim Weeks
sald "We don't have a
great player Ulce Saddleback and f.stancia
and we're giving up so much height to
Ocean View and Westminster.· •
The Seahawb (9-1} and their balanced
scoring attack enter the league season as
one of the favorites and will s'lay host to
Estancia tonJght at 7. Senior Tunisha
Lewis. averagin~ 26.6 points per game,
leads SaddJeback. which visits Costa
Mesa In the opener tonight at 7.
Ocean View sports 6-foot-2 freshman
O.J. ButJer and won the Centwy touma-
mcnt and finished third in the Smana/
I lorsman Christmas Gus.sic.
Saddleback is led by Lewis -"If you
contain her. you've got a chance.· Weeks
said. -while Westminster, which won
five straight league championships be-
fore Fstancia grab&d the titJe last sea.:;on.
can present problemc; with its height.
The Mustangs wiU need victories over
Santa.Ana and Orange. expected to fin.
ish near the bottom of the league stand-
ings. and at least one upset to meet the
11-win requjrement for playoff qualifi-
cation. If the Mustangs can't k:noc.lt off
Avalon in.a nonleague home game Sat-
orday <1t fall to either Orange or Santa
Ana. at least two upsets in league would
ben:quir~.
Whether the Mustangs are capable of
such could be detennlned early. as their
season opener against Sadd\eback Is fol-
lowed by a date with Ocean View.
HWe'll flnd out how we're going 10
I ................................................................................ !lllm .... ...
\ \
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Al fuesday, Jdnua1y o, 2004 S P O R TS
BASKETBALL
Continued from A7
play.~ Wt-ek.' ~kl. "If wt• play
tJ1em n~hl then I think "''-''U be aU
n~1L~
Senior ~u~y rrujillu. aillOll>\ IJW
Mu,tai1.,..,· tullt~I .. 1artcn. .11 5
foot h. IMlb Mtst 111 -.conHK with
1:1.:1 pc11111~ per J.t•llllt', whill' 'i .I
't'nior poinl h'lillf\J < ~-.t.·y find..
h.b atlckJ 8.7 Pl""~ 55 rv
hound!> amJ 4.5 i.1.'>1>1.,li..
Mud1 of Mesu's !)ucces.s will bl·
tlictatl·d h)' it' three-point shoo1-
rng. me \h~tan~., are avcmgrng
rnoru 1h.111 !>ix Ulrl'l'-pQUltl'fl> a
game.
FstaJ 1r1.t L\ It'd by 5-4 '>t'11tor
pom1 J,ruanJ 'lli.!.ha Wa~. \.\l1<1 ~
.1ver.1WnJ.t 111m· cc.."M!> per game.
arnJ 5 10 .,1•11ior Niuwy Castro, av-
l'l'<l~llJ.t I 'i poi111' anti 10 re-
houruh. ._TY''''' M inu provides
tough ddl·ll:.e, with llw i>.lt•a1' per
J.tame. and l11wkl.1 fll·lla i' .t 1:011· ,,,ll'lll um·Jl hd1111d 1h1· 1hn.>e·
Jllll n t an ..
Bui W<L't' "'ill hl..l'ly dl'tl'nnirw it
till' fatgjl_.., !'all '"'"' llll'll 1h1rd
'lrJIWll ll'.IJ,'lll' I ha111111111"l11p :rl
TODAY
BasketbaU
College men Va11ouard ar Th1:1
Master's, 7:30 p.m
College women Vanguard at TI1e
M11ster's, 5 30 pm
High sdiool boys Fa11mont at Sage
Hill, 7'30pm
High sctiool girls Estdnc1a at Ocean,
View, 7 p.m . Saddlel.Mdt at Costa
Ler gr.ibbittg the P'Jcific C,,oast
l.eab'l.IC title two years ago and
running through tlle Golden West
I .L>ague undefeated last season.
"Trishu Is jus1 a remarlcable
pomt gu.ml.· Weeks said. "She
r.m do a11ything she wants to do.·
l'he Eagles' record is a bit
111blcading having t'asiJy played
lhl' mo'l difficult nonleague
.. chcdult• 111 the league. They
t·11 li.>rrd h•uJ.tue play last season
wllh a 5 II mark and a 1oeven-
gJ111e lo!>111g streak. but didn'c
loH· again un1il the second
round of the playoff'>.
"When \W go into le<lb'UC. tht.yre
a tntally dilfereut Lcam. • fa1ancia
Cuad1 'Jbmi Rappa said. '"11ley're
mnfidencc is alway.. lht!re. But I aJ..
wJys LeU tht.·m. 'Wuming's a habit
and so is k)!\lng.' "
The key for thc Eagles is play-
ing con'\btentJy. They have yet
111 do ~o thii. season, and that
ht" been thl'ir biggest problem .
"We l:an bl·at anybody,· llap-
pa 'aid. ·1 still tielieve Lhat we're
.1 grl'al team. I still believe that.·
1 he l~~le-;, and the rest of Lhe
l~gue, will lincl ou1. beginning
11111igh1.
SCHEDULE
Mesa, 7 p.m.; Newport Harbor at
Laguna Beacti. 7 pm .. Fa1nnont at
Sage Hill, 6 p.m.
Soccer
High sdiool boys -Orange Lutheran
at Sage Hill, 3:15 p.m .
High sdlool girls • Saddlebad al
Costa Mesa, 3:15 p.m .; Estanoa al
Ocean Vterw, 3 p m.: Newport Harbor
at Maler De1, 3:15 p.m.; Kennedy at
'EATERS
Continued from A7
the line from 67.4 to 73.2 ... UCI
freshman Nie C.mpMll scored
all seven of hia career-high
point total in the fir st half ...
UCSB came In last in the
confere}lce In free-throw
percentage (62.7), but drained
22 of 30 Monday (73.3%), the
exact same numbers produced
by UCI ... UCSB hosts Utah
State Thursday. whi le UCI visits
Nonhridge.
!Na West C--...Ce
UC Santa Barbara 14.
UC Irvine 77
UC Santa Barbara • Fullove 17.
Cooke 5 Whitehead 0, Jones 9,
A1a1to 7, Brow n 15, See 11,
Goettsche 11, Skultety 9.
3 pt. goals · See 3, Brown 2, Atako
2, Jones I.
Fouled out • Whitehead
Technicals None.
UC lrvlne · Zu1ak 10, Hiii 4, Parada
16, Efevberha 23. Glogor 10,
Campbell 7, Okoro 3, Schraeder 2.
Bask11uskas 2
3-pt. goals · Efevberha 4, Campbell
1.
Fouled out Gloger.
Technicals None.
Halftime UCSB, 38 36
Corona del Mar, 3:15 p.m.; Sage Hill
at Westminster, 3:15 p.m.
w..ding
High sdiool ·Ocean Vtew at Estancia.
6 p.m.; Costa Mesa at Saddlebadl, 4
p.m.; Newport Harbor at Orange, 6
p.m.
W..poto
High sdiool girls· Webb vs. Sage
Hill, at Corona del Mar. 7 p.m.
UC lltVINE
WOMEN'S BASKETBALL
t
vs.
Pa,ifi'
Saturday, Jan. 10
7l'M
Bren Event1 C1nter
$5 adult&. $~ thi\drin
Sea son tic kets for th e whole
fa mily are on sa le now for jus
$50!!! Good for two adults an
two children, plus two free
memberships in the Junior
Anteater C lub. A $120 Value!
To buy Fam ily Pass Se a son Tickets,
please call (949) 824-6202.
Rf:p'emBa.,._/.
www.athletics.uci.edu
• 15 es:=:::. .•
Tired of that peaky check engine light? See
us today for an electronic engine analysis to
find the cause! A must to be able to pass
the CA smog check!
Oftw valid with ooupon.
TilJC8ll extra.
1131/2004
(
~·
BRIEFLY
Eagles scare Seahawks·
Estancia nearly
knocks off Golden
West League favorite
before faJling in
opener Monday.
F3tancia High's boys basketball
team gave perennial league
champion Ocean View a mighty
scare in the 2004 season opener
Monday, but the Seahawks
proved too tough, escaping the
Eagles' gym with a 52-46 victory.
The Eagles (8-7. 0-1 in league).
coming off their worst loss of the
season. a 78-42 drubblng by Co-
rona de.I Mar, took a 12-4 lead af-
ter one quan er and held a four-
point lead at halftime.
But Ocean View outscored Es-
tancia 18-7 in the third quaner
and the Eagles never got closer
th an fpur points the rest of tJ1e
way.
"The ldds played with a lot of
heart," Estancia Coach RusseU
Klng said. "We just couldn't get
any offensive continuity in the
second half. They upped the
pressure on us and took us out of
a lot of tJ1e things we wanted to
do."
Senior Scon Sankey had 16
points and seven rebounds for
the F.agles and junior Carlos
Pinto added 16 points and six
boartls.
Senior Man Sargeant, who has
commi1ted to Prince1on, was the
lone Seahawk in double figures.
Estancia rt>turm. 10 action
when it host!> Westrni.11Mer
Wednesday at 7 p.m. Ocean View
will continue its swing lhrough
Cosla Mesa with a battle against
visiting CoMa Mesa Wednei:.day
at 7p.m.
Golden West LHJUI
Ocean View 52, Estancia 46
Score by Quarters
O. View 4 20 18 10 -52
Estancia 12 16 7 11 46
Ocean v-Olcwud1bonye 9,
Sargean1 11. Amberry 4, Wurts 5.
Delgado 6, Sweezy 6, Ike 3. Greiner 6,
Kofeards 2.
3-pt. goals -Olcwud1bonye 1,
Sargeant 1, Ike 1, Greiner 2
Fouled out -None.
Technicals None.
Estancia -Pinto 16, McDan1els 6,
Escobedo 6, Kopp 0, Markley 0,
Sankey 16, Viramontes 2.
3 pt. goals Pinto 3, McDaniels 2
Fouled out -None.
Technicals -McDaniels
Mesa wins opener
• BASKt.I Mil.: Sophomo re
Scull Knox scored 17 of his
gamc-high.20 point!. in the sec-
ond half and point guard Brian
Molina added a career-high 15
points as Costa Mesa 1 ligh
downed Satldleback. 58-'.39. in
the boy!> hasl..etball Goldcn
West League opener for both
"iChools.
The Mu'>tang!> (9-5, I -0 in
league) outscored the Roadrun-
ners 39-16 over the secontl and
third quarters lo lake a com-
manding lead. Molina. recover-
ing from a nagging thigh injury
thrit ha!> both ered him all sca-
!.on. added six as!>ists and jun-
ior forward Jeff Waldron had 17
points anti 11 rcboundi.. Knox
added five steaJs and knocked
down four three-pointer-; to
bring his i.eason total to 47.
Cosla Mesa will return to ac-
tion at league favorite Ocean
View Wednesday at 7 p.m ..
Golden West Lea1ue
Costa Mesa 58, Saddleback 39
Score by Quarters
M esa 5 19 20 14 -se
S'back 11 9 7 12 -39
Costa Me .. -Molina 15, Knox 20.
Krikorian 2. Waldron 17, Stankovic 4,
Gandia 0, Wase 0, Aleson 0,
Lefebvre 0.
J..pt. goals -Molino 2. Knol< 4,
W11ldron 1.
Fouled out -None.
Te<:hnlcals -None.
Saddlebacll -Ory 3. EnriQuez 1,
Pederson 2. Sanchez 3, M11y 12,
W11Shington 2. Morales 3, Oetv11I 2,
Zavala 11.
3·pt. goals -Sanche1 l , May 1,
Morales 1, Zavala 2
Fouled out -None. ..__
Teohnie11l1 -None.
Kl Nl lREPTOW I DAILY P~
Estancia's Scott Sankey, right, fights for a loose ball with Ocea~;:
View's Bear Wurts during Monday's Golden West League game~~
UCI falls to USC B
•BASKETBALL: Quistina
CaJlaway recorded her fourth
double-double of the seaM>n
and Ashley Biggins had a i.ea-
son -high in rebounds, but UC
Irvine couldn't upend UC Santa
Barbara on the road Monday.
falling, 70-44.
Callway was lhl· lone Ant-
eater in double figures. fini,lt-
ing wilh 10 poinll> and 10 re-
bounds. Biggins fin ished with
nine rebounds. eiJ.thl on the de-
fensive end for UCI ( 1-9, 0 2 in
Hig West Conference play). Jo-
anna Usher came off the bench
lo added four pointi:. and seven
rebounds for th e Anteater!>,
who had nine players score bu1
shut just 34.7% in the game.
Guard l.ba Willett led host
USCB (IH, Z·O) wi1h 20 points.
The Gaucho., led by 10 poinli. at
hJlftime a nd outscored lJCI :15-
1 !l af1er the break.
Bl& West Conference
UCSB 70, UCI 44
UCI Yadon 4, Callaway 10, 81gg1ns
2, Forguson 6. Urba11 ~" Sranley 4.
Duda S, Ned 4, Usher 4
3 pt yoals Urban 1
Fouled out None
T!!chnicals Bench
UCSB -Ridiardson 7. M ann 7. Grtwn
7. Willett 20, Bauman 5. Taylor 5.
Fisher 12, O'Bryan 7
3·pt. goals Mann 1, Willen 4.
O'Bryan 1.
Fouled out None
Tecilhlcals Nonr.
Halftime -UCSB, 35 2f>
Eagles tie Seahawks
•SOCCER: b;tancia I ligh
fough1 bal:k from a twu·gual
d etic11 LO lie Ckt'ar1 View. :1 J,
Monday in a boy' 'ol:rcr nwct-
ing of Gnldl'n Wei.I I .caguc foe'\.
r he Seahawk..., ( 1-0 I in
league), who opened league
play by defeating Saddlchac.:k,
scored twkc on counter a11acks
in the first haJf. But Fs1ancia (4-
3-3. 1-0-1 in league) -;cored
once before halftime and added
two qukk scores early in the
second half before Ocean View
tied the score late in the game.
Noe Martinez. Narcisco Lum-
breras and Rafael I lernantlc7.
had goals for ll1e Eagles and
Luis Mendo1.a had on e assist.
P..slancia. which Is nearly fuJly
recovered from a team-wide
bout from the nu last month,
returns to the pitch Wednesday
at home against Westm jnster in
the lpird Golden West League
game of the season.
.--·
Saddleback edges Me a_
•SOCCER: The visiting Co~La
Me~a I ligh boY' occer tea.V
played Saddleback l>Coreless fo~
65 minutes. but the Roadrun-
ners scored in the 661h minute
to claim a 1-0 Golden We!>)
League victory Monday.
Mesa junior goalie Eric Var:
ga'> had 12 saves and senior de~
feni.ive midfielder Francist:O
Scrverino was abo credited
with solid play by Mustangi
Coach Eugene Day.
Mesa fell to 0-6-0. 0-3-0 1n
league.
Saddlebal:k's Hafacl Pedrav.a
produced the winning goaJ for
the noadrunners.
The Mustangs return to ac-
tion Wed nesday with another
Golden WeM League con test ai
<k ean View.
Wcrblin lifts Sage Hill ,
•SOCCER: Arny Werbliti
'lrnrcd on a free kick and added
an assist on a throw-in as Sage
l lill School'!> girls soccer lean\
came up with a 2-1 road victory
over Saddlcbal:k Valley Oiri';
tian Monday.
Werblin's assisl W<lS finishe~
off by freshman Lauren Neale:,
recently called up from lhe jun-
ior varsity sl(uad, who provide~
a nil:e volley for the game-win-
ning goal.
c;oalkeeper I.aura GorcUill
111ade a rnuple of fine stops
among her 10 savei. 10 keep the
J.tJme in the Ughtning's favor
<111d impr(ive Sage l lill's record
to 4 -2 this !>Cason.
fhe Lightning are al Wes~
min•aer today.
Eagres dealt first loss
•WATER POW: Los Amigos
'>Cored on a four-meter shot in
sudden-death overtime to hand
E4>tancia l ligh its firsl girls wa-
ter polo loss of lhe season, 12-
11 , in triple overtime.
ll1e back-and-forth affair
went through a µair of thre~
minu te overtime periods before
the sudtlcn-dealh peri od. Sen·
ior Marilyn lleich led the Eagles
(5-1) with six goals. FreshmaJ')
Melissa Buchmann added three
scores and Oielsea Kaplan and
Carolina Barnes each chippei:l
in with one.
Lauren Mahan had 11 saves
fo r Estancia, which opens G'ol-
d en West League play Wednes-
day against Ocean View rura
meets Westminster Thursday. ·
..
:a ;
lr·
le;
tQ
•d
"'
,~
or
I.:·
er .J
s
e
r
d
Tuesday, January 6, 2004 At
l.1111..... .. l.1111 ...
~--~~-=-=-............ 2Ml llpf ..... .. 1.1111 .... --""'-.... --........ Llpl.... -ldl CAUi ...
Olstr1,t: Hunt1n1ton
8HCh Union Hl&h School
DlstrlCI 81d Oe.adllne· .i.nuery 21. 2004. l:OO pm Pttce of Bid Receipt·
Puithulnt Otpartment,
10251 Yorktown Ava.,
Hun11n11on Buch CA
Pro)etl: Bid t906
f1jj11tln1ton Buch Hiell
i
.,s.1100: .r~d1rn1utoon
r. Gu, Sewer
v1m1nts
907 · Huntln11on
... ach Hlah School
E n111toon Project •3
eency ll&hlln1. , ADA Improve·
..... ftlS
ffOTICE IS HEREBY
~N lh•l lhe Hun
llnJIOn Buch Union Hit/I School Oistrlcl of pranae Counly, C1llfor-·nii, act1na ~Y and
l..,ouah lls Governin1
llnrd. hereinafter re-
ferred to as •DISTRICT,"
wlll receive up lu. bul
nol later lhan. lhe above
stiled bid deadltne.
uated bids 11 the place
iden11f1ed above for the
aw11 d ol a contract for
the 11>nve Pro1ecb.
Tht• e woll be manda-\Qr ~ lob walks and
conferences as follows·
Bid #906 · January 8, .!004 al 10 00 am
Bid il907 Janua1 y 8. 2'I04 al 11 :00 am
llrcallon 1905 Main
Sj)eet . Hun I in al on
a{.lch CA 92648
Any bidder laotina to
"f11end the entore 1ob
Wiik and conference will
ti-deemed a nonr e·
•eons1ve bldde1 an~ will
hn• lb bid returned UltOj)lllld
Pro19Ct Oocumenlt 111
on hit 11 the Purchn1n1
Dep11lm1n\. 102Sl
Yorktown Avt. Hun11n1·
ton Btach u tollows
Bid #906 $50 per H I
refund1ble depos(t
Bid #907 $l!i0 p11 stl 11fund1ble dtposll
(Deposit 1tqu11td tor
u ch U I of PrOftCI
Documents to 11u1r1nttt
lht11 rttu1 n in cood condition within love (~)
calender dtys 11111 tht bid openln& date )
In •cco1d1nce woth the
provisions ol Bu11neu
i nd Profeuoons Code
S1ct1on 7028.15 and
Public Contract Code
Section 3300. the 015
lRICl llQUllC$ that the
bidder poueu lhe
follow1na clessllica
llon(s) ol co11h actot's
hc111s•(S) at the lime
lhe bid 1s submllted
Bid *906 Clan A or
C·34
Bid 1907 Clan A 01 B
Any b1ddet nol so
ltctMed II the tome of
the bod op1non1 woll be
rerected es non1espon-
'S'"' lime 11 ol Ille essence
Each bod shall be ac
comp1n11d by a btd secu111y 1n the form ol
cull, a cert1l1ed or
cuhoer's 1!heck 01 bid
bond 111 an amouol not
lus lhan len percenl
llO'\) ol lhe total bod
P• oce, payabt• tu lht
OISTRICl
lht DISTRICI ttserve~
the lllhl to 1 •1tcl any
or all bods or lo W.i•ve
1ny '" 111ul111t1u 01
Policy
lnfort1111ltltt In •ny l>14b
or 1n lht b1~1n1 pro-cess
The Cahto1 nl• Depart
ment ol lndust11al Rel111ons hu deter.
mined the cene111 pr•·
v1lllne rain ol per diem waaes tor the lodhty 1n
which the work rs to be
p11fo1med '°' tho Prol· eel. Copies ol lhu1
w11e ••I• dtfttmona too1u. tnlotltd Prev11lln&
Waae Scale, .,, m11n-
u 1ned 11 the OISlRIC I
olfoce and trt available
al Ille follow1n1 w1bsll1
WWW.di! ct.1ov II th•ll
be m111da\ury upon lht
successful blddtt lo
whom the contract Is 1w11ded, end upon any
subcontractor l1Sted, to
P•Y nut less ll'lln lhe
u1d spec1l1ed ral~s lo
111 wo1kers employed by
them for the Po 01ect
lhe suctentul b1ddei
and any listed subcon·
lrat to1(\) will be re
quired lo abode by the
DISTR1crs labor Com
pl11nce Pro4111m A d111t
ol the l CP currently
under 1 ev1ew by lh•
Deportment of lndusl111I
Relations os av11l11blt 101
review.
No b1dde1 m•y wolh
draw any bod for e
period of "~ t1 (60)
calendar days • tu the
date set for fhe openona
Of bids.
Pursuant lo Pubhc
Cont1act Code Section
22300. tht ~I' cement
will conlaln prov1~1ons
per mottong the w cceu
ful bidder lo subshlule
•ecurilles for •ny mon
1u withheld by the
DISTRICT to 1nau11
0trfort11111u undef the
~•114!menl or pt(mtltln1
p1ym1nt of 11t1ntlons
t uned d1reclly lnlo
u crow.
In accord111c1 wllti
Educ1tlo n Code
17076.11. the Dblrlct
hu • p1rllclp1tlon 1011
ot at leut 3 p11c1nt ot
the ovtttll d ollar
•mounl upended ttch yur for construc1oon fot
DV8E s....., .. ,.
S-..f ··~. OltMIW li'rtCllflMlfll /het 9y (_.,..,., .... ... "" ....... , ''"'''-· Published Newport
811ch·Cost1 Mes• Deily
Pilot December 17. 2003
& Janimy 6, 2004 W271
llOTKI
IM'1W PlOPOSAlS
On December 10. 2003.
the Governonc Bo11d of
the Coast Community
Coll•&• Doslrocl nf 1h1
Count1 of Or •nae. Sitt•
of C•lolor "'"· '" re11ul1r s ession. adopted •
Resolution autl1on1ina
the ~ol1c11a11on o f
propouls to be received
up to bul no later than
4 30 p.m .• on Wedoes day, l•nuary 21, 2004,
•I lhe Purchas1011 Oe
11admenl of lht Ois111ct
located at 1370 Ad~ms
Avenue. 8u1ld1na 0,
Costa MMa, Calilorn1a
11 wh1cll lime the proposals woll be held
unlol lhey are consoderrd
by the Gover nln& Boud
•I thc11 re1ul1rly
scheduled meetona on
Wtdoudu fcbcuuv 4
200•, In the Boe1d Room. et tllt OlstrlCt
\It• et 6:30 p m . or u
soon lh•n •fler n the
•11nd1 for the aov11n
Ina Bo.rd pt1mlh. ,,. ...... -· ....... Mltcrie4 fWI • fifty·
tlwe (IS) .,_ P.-'
'--4th ii.vet. =.,. ,_, ..
I ptefecl •f
.... Olttrtn •"• lee..... et ft.. Nertlt-
we1t 'cen1er ef 'I·
1ttcrttk Orlve •"" A4-t Av-i. ft..
City ef CMte .....
Ceflfw1tl• c-t•l1tlfll
..,-.. 1-tely 'S.7 7 . .,.. ....... ,, .....
i.e.. ••• ,.,...,, .... ...... 1., .... "' ••• , ...... .,.n-"' ,... •. l ... t. All propoHI\ l rt to bt
'" fCCOldlDCI with lhe ProposJI Oocuon .. nu
which are now on hit
end may be secured on
lht oll1ce ot lhe 011 eclo1
of Purchuona of lhe
District altei January 5.
2004 The Governln& 8011d
11servu the privolti• ol
re~l•na 1ny and all
p1opouls or lo waive
any 11re1ula1111u 01
1nto1malll11~ II\ any
proposal or In the
proposal process
s1..,.,.,
/S/ 11 ... , W. Oovl•
Olrectw ef f111rcho1l"tl, c ••• , c-....... 1ry
C.tltt• Ol1lrlcl
""' llU Published Newpo11 e .. ch Cosla MMe Daily
Pilot December 23. 30.
2003 40d JlllUil y 6 2004 T882
swmcamot
~
CMTYOfhp ,,...'-' .....
S41 n. °" Dttwt, P.o.a..14111,ar.,,u
tHIS.1571,
t.....Mllc.C...
rmnolOf ........ ........... .w.. ......... ....
fOI OIAl&I Of llAI(
AllmOllBTOSllOW
CMISI fOI OWl&I Of
llAll
Wl 1111111: A22213 l
TO All INHR£SHO
PERSONS
I Pettllontt Ron~ld
Pluma ;rnd le11n1 l••
Plunoa on behall of l•c.k
Ptu111a. a 111111or ltlc•J •
pet1t1on w1111 lhi~ cuull
lor • decree chtn~1112
name. <h lulluw\ l•t.k Ryan Alb1111ht PlumJ to
Jack lnomAS Alb11.ihl
Pluma
2 !Ill CUUll 1 OHOl RS
th al •II 11•• woo• ont.-1
e't•d 111 tll•• rn•ll., \holl
appor h•<o•• '"" 11llll l at th• ht<111111( 1nd1tal~tl
below 10 sllow c•use ol
any wllv lh• pl!lolonn lur
chana• ul 11•111c ,11oulll
not b• 11' ~nl•!J NOl IC[ or li(ARING
Dalt 2 I/ lJ4 t 11ne 2 00
p111 Depl l/3
lhe •dd'"'' nl th.-C.OUI I
IS \am~ •' 11ul'd •bo_. 3 A cop, ul lhlS Order
to Show t•u•~ shall bt
llow to Place A
publi•h•d at 14nt once
u ch wn-for lout
•UCUHIVI .... h prlOf
lo the dale set fOf
h"""I on th• pelohon
In tht lollow1n11 new' piper of 11ene111 c11cu
lallon. printed m lhi•
co11nty· f:l•w1X>rt Beuh/
Coat• Mesa Dally Piiot,
330 W 61y. Costa Mui.
CA 92672
O.t11 MC JO, 2003
MAllJOall lAlllO cun11. JUOGl Of \'HI su,.•toa COUH
Publnh•d Newpor I
Buch·Cosh Mua 011ly
Pilot January 6, 13, 20,
27. 2004. 2004 T888
fk-.. ..... ... s....... ·r he tollowma P•r5011s ere do1n11 buslneu n .
SPAP Cumpany LLC, 446!> Outttager C11cle
Hunt111atol' Beach, Calll
92649
SPAP Co111pony l ti:
(CA) 446~ Outroue1
Cucle Hu11t11111t un
Buch Calli 92649
lh1s business os con
d111. lfd by t 1m1t~d
L••boloty Co
Ila .. 100 ~ta1lcO 1.h11n11
busonns yet?
Ye' 1998
SPAP Company LLC. Jell HMdersun, M•na2e1
Th1\ slatem~nl was
filed Yl•tll Ill• Cn11nty
Cle1k ol Orun&e County
011 12123103
'l003'9"9007
D•oly Polut Dec 30 7UOJ, J~n 6. 13. 20. 2004 T884
SEU
your unwanled
items \h1 ough clns1hed
The lollowlnt ptr\on•
111 doln1 bu•)ne H ••
Ch11op11cttc R1l1ullon
incl M .. uae fn111py,
9872 Ch1pm1n Ave . •214. G•rden Q1ov1, CA
92841
Tllfany N&uv1n. 11312
fllnl, Gudtn Grove. CA
928'3
lhos bu•intss Ii con·
ducted by an 1nd1vldu1I
Have you •I" ltd do1n&
bus1nu) yell
Yn 12/01/03
Tolleny Nauyen
Thll sltltmen\ wu
filed with the Cou"tY Clerk of Onn21 County
on IZ/09/03
20036967'27
Daily Pilot J111 6, 13,
?O 27,?00<I 188/
fldttlM ....
ie-s.......
1 Ile lollowlna Pt"on~
111 c!o1na business u
Anchor Marntentncoi
1750 Whllller Ave u o.
Cost• Meu, Catolo1n1• 92627
Ardell Stene 1750
Wh1lller Ave #40, Costa
Mes•. C1l1fo1n11 9?627
l hos business os con
ducted b'/ 111 lnd1v1du1I
Have y1>u sta1 led doona
buslnos ye11 Vus, 1981
Ardell Sle11e
fh1• statement w~'
loled woth ll1e County
Cieri! ol Oran&• County
on 1210!>/03
'lOO>•t0207
Daoly Piiot Oe' 16 lJ
30. 2003, Jan 6 2004
1876
IOllCI GUIPWDTO
SILMtGIGUC MMIS
.......... 1 ... 11
..... 16,2003
l o Whom It May
Concern. The Ntm•(•)
ol tile l,ppllcant(•) Is/
111· SIX EIGHTEEN WINF
CLUB INC
The 1pploc1nt1 trsltd
•bove "' 1pplyma to lhe Oep.irlmont of
Alcoholic Bever•&•
Control to s.11 alcllholo<.
b1ver1ces 11 250 £
171H ST STl o. CDSfA
MESA, CA 92627
Type of llcensthl Apphtd fur 'I ON
SALE BEER ANO WIN[
EATING PLACE
Published Ntwpo1 t
Beach-Cnsll Mesa lhily
Pilot Oecoonber 23 30,
2003 . hnu~• v 6
2004 1881
fidlllM t.lnn1 ... s .........
I he follow one prr"111\
11 t! dOll\J bU~UIH!..~ (t\
Hono1 Roll ltatn111~
Center . 14550 Maitnulo 1
SI •!OJ Westmon•t<r Cahlu1111a 9268 I
Oertk C•o 90J9 Buh• A~e •JOS. w.-1m111't•r
Calolornoa 97611 l
1tH~ hu~"''"' " ton
duclull ~y "" 11Hl1v1du.tl
f1~vc YVU >ldl l•d dOo(I~
bu .. ont" Y•I) No
Oorek Cao
fh1\ \ti'tt-rmml °"'''' lolrn wotll lhr t:11t11\ly
Cltr~ nl Ot •II~•· t1111nly
Ull 12•09 01
20036967621
Ddoly Polo! l•n b 1 l
70 ?7 7004 t 886
Ac-. ..... ... s.....
Ttie lollowonc pt1so11•
•re doma busoneu n
Chmttne Jono. NM r 2711 f Cont llW'/
Co1 onA Del Mao , C•h·
forn1• 92625
Chr l1lln• .k111u . 2711
E Coast Hwy. Coron• Ocl
M~1. Ctllforno• 92625
I ht' Dus.me~" '' con ducted by "' 1nd1V1<lu"I
Have you "''led lloma
bu,mon 1et' No
Chri11111e i..n ..
lhtS statetneul .,.,
toled woth tire 1'0111111
Clerk of 0;,11~e County
on IZrl0/03
200,.961117
Daoly Pilot De< 16 23
JO. 200J J1111 6, 2004
1811
ClASSlflfD
Ifs the solution
you 're searching
for -whether
you' re see~ing a
home, apartment,
pet or new
occupation!
..-----Deadlines----.
Rares and deadlines are subject to
_change without notice. The publisher
. reserves the right to censor. reclassify.
revise or reject any cla:.sified
advertisement Please report any error
that may be in your classified ad
Jmmediately. The Daily Pilot accepts
no liability for any error in an
advertisement for which it may be
responsible except for 1he cost of the
:.pace actually occupied by the error.
Credi! can only be allowed for lht: first
inserti on.
CLASS IFIE AD Monday ...................... Friday S:OOpm
Tuc:-day .................. Monday 5:00prn
ANNOUNCEMENTS
& MISC.
GARAGE
SALE
BUSINESS &
FINANCIAL
Collectlbl~
-mcnbllla 1160
Tfir SS 4 lllCOllOS ITC ~ Clt!i5slc, tic. 5Js & Ws a Allee, Spkr. lube ·~ !Alke 9•9 645 7505
ENTERTAINMENT
Sped1I
Events 1310
(QUAl HOUSllG
OPPOIMITY
1111 rul estate adverhs·
ing 1n this newspaper os
\Ub)ecl to Ille Federal
Fa11 Housona Acl of 1968
dS amended wt11ch
rnAkes II Illegal to Advertise ·any prefer·
enG•. l1mt1al1on or discrimination based on
'Mtt. col0t, reh21on. su.
f\llndocap, ftmolial status
or n•\lonal orl&m. Of an
Intention to malle any
wdi preferenu, llm1ta-
lo11n or d1scrim1nat1on • 'tir.i newspaper w~I not
ll1ow1nalv accept any
411lverlosemenl for rul
'llS'hle which 1s 1n
v1olatloo of the law Our
raaderi Me hereby
inf or med I hat all dwell·
llf\'l' advertised in this
'l•~upaper are available
~ll Jn •qua I oppo1 I unity
basis.
1 o complain of dls-
c:<im1natton, call HUD toll·
hee at 1·800-42•·8590
1413
1id.r ~ F11mlturt
NHOS 6 Cofltctlblet ·~··,._.,. .-.....,. ........ ~ ... "'~·
.. CA8H~AID ..
~,....,.,,.,.....
Wl9UYUTATD
·~·~-· ,. .. .,. •.
2305·2490
lost 1506
lOST WHITl MAlTlSl
nn PCM 1n COM early
SAi rn u1 n1n11 271 h.
REWARDI Call Ooa Wash
949 673 41 37
562 841 0481
Y•''-"" C.cli•tell, ,,., on w1n11s Lost near H
~ poonls 11u Soznble
Reward 114 735-1926
Found 1510
~ Y_,o lw f'llotos. dlllq We CDX>. y of Clay &
lrvtne st. c.-~·S944
HOME
FURNISHINGS
ftlmlblrl 3435
QUllM MAftalSS sn
Ot1hapedic. brand new sbl
II\ pUosbt W/wfn Sac $t1Ji can deliver 9'9-~
CHlllllY SUIOH 110
Solid wood, bf and MW 11
boXmusllTIOYe ~ SIDl $1C $25() 9&~
JEWELRY/ 3460
DIAMONDS/
PRECIOUS METALS
c-1tCef1tNM4 Old Corn&! Gold. \liver,
jewelry, Witches, tntlQUeS
colltctlblH 9'~642-9448
UICAl.
INSTRUMENTS
Piiia 3510
IAIV .. ANO fltAMO
alnt cond. mttch~
b1ncll. S1cr1llct Sl
C .. t4t-SU·7HI
Clll 3111
USCUI t11 ltf1'5
Uncetlt1nllu Happen I
Ptl Owntra Netd Htlp.
M1nn1ttd Adult Wtll Cits & bldef Oop RMd
MW ho_,_ Adopt Adutl
Anlm•I• this Xmul lO
4•1 r•lur" Polley
ww...,.1nlm1ln1twotll or1
-:T:a<An .. , ......... " --~110..111191 ................ .............. ~ ~ .............. .... ~~
""" •ftllftaiMtW«ll.«1
By Fax
(IJ491 b31-6594
• l'l<J>C ondurk )Our nJJ1><· ••Ml
rh1•1K llUlllh<I 1111J '"t'lf ••II
)tlU f\11. ~ 14 uh; pPtt' qt1U1< I
By Phorw
(9°~9) M~-567K
I lour!-4
Bv Mail/In P(·r~on:
l lO We,1 Bay Street
Co,1a Mc~.1. ('A 9:!62'1
Al Nrwport Blvd & 1i.1y 'ii
' Wednesday .............. Tue-.<..lay 5:00pm
Thursd3y ............ Wcdnt'.~d.ty 5:00pm
Friday .................... Thur:-day S:OOpm
Saturday ..................... Friday ~:OOpm
Telephon~ 8:30am-5:00pm
Mond11y-Fnday
Wallo. In K: \O.im-5·00pm
Monilay-l'mluy Sunday ...................... Fn<..lay 5:00pm
SE ~
3010-3940
~ L ESTATE
RSAU 5005·5150
~ll'IQI
Spice fof Rent -HH 24hr storage, 400·
MISCEUANEOUS
MERCHANDISE
600!.t ""''' Perlecl 101
vehlclei. low rates call
Cai Olyn 949-863· I 390
MlscelllntOUI
Merd\andlle 3856
RESIDENTIAL RENTALS
ORANGE 7400
COUNTY
HIGH·lNO ktlchen &
bath cabinet' Wtsrnks.
granite/marble lops 1
yea1 old Glas\ sliders,
casemenh, ml doo1s &
bom&1 bees 714 225 4Cnl
All STiil llOGS. Yll Bllboa Ptnlnlull
INO SAUi Up lo 70'1\ 1 HOUSE fO HACHI 2lw, I b3 epl uppt< \JM
w/oa1 vu, La patio $1660m
avall rmmed 949 675-5009
Off• 110140 , !>Od!>,
80xi50. Call Nowl Best
Oller I Roy 800·499 2760
BusJnm Corona del Mar
llr w /ll"'h only, no
1.olcllen. i ' ul loclhon, l750/mo 420 N" cossus
~it 949· 711 4 708
Oppol1unltln
8ullnnla and
fl'lndlbes -St!Hlle Afot full kitchen.
lull b1th, no smk}pels,
S92tf/mo • S60 ut1htoes.
av11l l/6 949 721 1505
~·a. ..... In ec!lfh steps lo l>eacll,
new;p.tnt/floorq. la yd
$DX> Robert 9'9-7fi0. I 7!JO
Slertl"t • t-'l llu1t-
1111•? Need f1n1nc11I
.ssostancel C•" OfS toll
lret ~ 1·866·294·1379 Let us elpl
AISOLU\'I OOlOMINll
60 vtnd1n11 machines
~lh ucellenl locallons ust Sell 800 234 6982 ColllMm
Stv41e Afot., furn'd. nr
Tro Sq, cozy, quiet. n:f
<llO.~~ ......
rVpeC $7"X)t1o ~-2818
Blllnm OppnRty
SIMCll 3910
OUAl MASllll 2+2 li'll
Oil Bll·on ranee/OW, Cov
Pr•na. w1t11/lruh pd,
·~·" now CAU FCHI
2tli'..,.ie-e4e4te _.,..,,_ ......
Busrneu ()pj)ty free Into
I ·800-311 -5618 MOVl-IN Sli'ICIAU
HARBOR VILLAGE H" bor
Blvd ft Mirt1mte Wty I' l SU-Ot42
l'ol• l9 llr toft, QUiii
& wood11y. t,1 patoo, no
peu, $99S/mo 180 E:
21st ST. 949-MS-7776
CllClllllU. -!f..,.,t li'lflMI 1h I ....
to beach & b1y 1157
sqll, $231•/mo Modified
crou Pk1 incl Htah
Visibility 9'9·673-3777 . ~ .... G.s Corm. ~Sq. 2b lbe ...
.... It.-lbl P11b. ~ .. 1!15 -.. ~tI/1-~d.JXI
MISCEU.MEOUS
RBfTALS
RlllllTo ... -,.._,..., •crHt tile
•""-' Zl>r l.Sba no peb SI 191&/mo t&Q; It-. Aw
._, Ml-720-9U2 1203 fll/Oc-Ylew .._
OcH11ffonlJ22nd. f'uole
I MOl C~ ... ltllt
new 2l>t I Sb• IOWfl·
houf.• \lylt 2!il2 Elcltn
1137!1/mo 949·'42·5488
IAJTMOI 2l>t Ouplt a,
f'ncd ylfd, "1 OI,. W/O
llOOlulpa. ow, Newly nifllr bislltd A.LL Uftmll ,...Ql?mom>~ tno2•t 11'·5'45· ..... ... ~= ~d. W/d. 11111 ~Wiw ~~ ";,'
room, unfwn, 1h11e bl.
ullf• paid, no/smt.,
.,ltchenetf1, lndry, lblli
to l'Mwport pier, S7»n. c.11 S.m 9'9>118•7905
(btr-9oem-5cwft). .......... ..
--·~-...... ,1\M Mii in Wtil to beedl.
..... ClOIM\ pool, jltunj •
~,........, quilt.
MJl '°.:Jo.9800tlll0 I• ..... 1m.
Index
~
7402·7466
~ Under the Service Directory Banner
IOOS·l510
~ Reach 80,000 Homes Each We ek
9000-9750
For Only $32 per week (4week minimum)
Call Lorraine at (949) 574-4245
UOO ISU S\'UOIO Studio Concl fer 11..... Ilg Canyon Cond•, 2bt llwff• ley Vl•w ~pp11u liJ 2lw 2t.a hauM on
l a•ge clo\el & h•th, 11111111 ht>m Newp Beac~ /IM ·~i.toou' enlf .. ~ 2800sf custom upg•~•I "'""""ltft.. ''"'~ to bea1h
YIAlll Y UASlS FINI NIWP<HIT HOMlS
llU OtlUNOY llUI. TOllS Ut-475-4161
sunny upo\11r~ $Jfl00110 '{il So II available onomed vitw, prkn~ S2300mo ed 3br + f~moly rotlm 11•W IMont linn<••K I~ vrt
Agl 949-6/~ 6161 ll~l rt•• 714-3/811.>13 <,.111d1.1 /frO ll6·22!Kl $3800/mo 949·11316411'l ~191fllM'"'it 949 /6Q.lt!JO
Bridge
By CHARLES GOREN
wlth OMAR SHARIF
and TANNAH HIRSCH
~)) ~II ll•Nll fl ~~.
.'I• 2b.1 rW NP pw, !J~ !!. ot~t.>i.,.nh. Ip, I , V
W'1 """ s I/ l'J ~2!0-46."C
28r lk. MW lldln\,carpel, z ,,. ~·•do .. l•l(..l\yard. liZ
"~ .. k 111 ....... ., most Ste
siio> rnu ~ l18 "1'¥1'J cal
hl'llM'!en 1).1111 '.ipm Ol'lty
HI' H•l9hh 2br 1ba
IJllWUI Ip hdwd lh . pvt
yNd s._.., 2l 10 f.oral A~c.
$72'.l()'nn 949-647 !'>481'1
SELL
your stuff
through
classifie d!
A Oi\Stl OF I ''l('f.RTi\INTY
WF.ST
• KQ 10
"Q 105
NORTH
• AJ 72
• 43 \) 911
•A Q63l EAST
• 9 s 43
J 10 7 31 .. J 7
96
0114
•KIOH S
SOUTH • 86
c,AKJ8 72 c-A K 5 .,,
~nbiddis<'Aht1 WEST ~ORTll ... ,. ,_ I\'"
... l Q ... ... ,_ 4 ,_
n•1'1d ..,.1111ld I-.. Jlailuhlc). \II Nnnh
<.e11k•J on Ill.: potcnllally ~lcr Rli!JO'·
'Ull ~.&Ille
\\r•t led 1he J•'' k uf Jtamooth. Jnd
Jednm 11>,L, only •hQhlly unh.1pp
"'llJI lhe \!t)OlfUl'1 -With a 3-2 ~
hrnk. nmc l"Ck' lit n.1 INmJ' 11rc
thcl'l' fr1< 1hr Inking Still. foor flcan~
lookrJ ,aft enough Oecl11rer won
th.: oix·mni; 11.'aJ m hand w11h the ~tnll. l•L'h<il Ult' ;ice :inti rutTcd a dl11-
111011d 1n tlurnmy. A hcnn wn.~ led 111
1hc )lid 1111J 4ul'Cll. West shlf'ICil tn
lh<· ~ing ur ,\fllllb, dcdnrct playing
low fn1m !he rnhlr 10 in~c 11
~padc ruff D\ 1111 ctltry b3ci to hand.
l't'ldflc1m now ~witched hor!c~.
ICJKJ1ng lht 1ock of clut,... The queen
11o11~ finc~'O('Q. kl$iR(1 10 lhc king. and
lht; ICll .,, dull-. "II' ldUmOO lo Ille
ncc. lockmg dtlclftrtT in dUITllT\Y All South now nccdt(l w~ 10 &rt
Nck 10 batld safely 10 draw the
rcTiuum"a trumpt.. He ctihcd the ace
11( spades 11nd Wc.\t dropped I.he
1111ccn of ~~ withoot sny i.c .. 1111-
1100 l Aller some thought, declattt
ill-cldcd to BCCCP' thl~ can! at Cece
value, and eltclt(J to ruff a clUb back
to hand. WC$! oYemift'ed wilh the 1t:11
for lbe Rttina crlck. Tbh ddtlltC
would have tiern wllled 1f Solilh ...
ooe rA dlosc dccl.m who b olltivl·
ou' fo whot !ht OJ!llOlltftb do.
TODAY'S
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
57 11C1te<1 on 58 Stare !>9 Auel.on oH
60 Snow house
51 Orcnaro PIOdu<:c
62 I 1!1'11J'a0e uem
DOWN
I Valent1110 rote
2 XfllO•
oompclnor
J Mel stlh?t
WllllrMS
4 Panhan!lle
5 OiQS 6 Loetlleel
7 K'l!n °' LllN! of !I'm
8 L.451 mo
9 Blossoms
11) 0.tOCUlll l!)llln
11 Ellipse
t 2 WitnerO<I 13 Popl.1111
beVe.ege
18 Nows sorvtces
22 Pul'SUI oame ;>4 -&f)Ul'llMtll 26 Rospoocl 27 Grey matter
21! SI~) relvsal 29 tr~
30 Deft oroet
JI Dove -Gluck
32 lctl>otl
~
PAE\/IOU8 PUZZl.E SOl VEO
J3 Pop th4 IOp
35 Fnod~ll
3 7 Gold wetght
38 Runs1io..tv 40C11J11r-~ m199"9
41 Btume
43 AUIU aoct580l)I
4-4 W11tlM 48 T )'Pl! ol illy
47 SuOOefl
!lllp~INH
.a~ ...
~"
' ,
10
49 Reltne otll so Quan s 1 Sprowl OIJI S2 Thea1e1~ .... -lll""" 55 Uniform ''""II'"' 56 POl$000\I~
snake
II 12 •l
••
AlO TUHday, ~ 6, 2004
JOBS WANTED • Automobiles 9000
EmploymlM -AutomClllvl 9004 Wllllld w:uu
LMO ll t"'* c.ariUlln .._..,,
RCt .. d t1ldl Khoo! te.k.he
un -*""' & oo char~••'
c.af 949-644·!816
E""loyment 8500
IOOlllll"ll, -;r to>1 New~1ur t llea<h RC
lll'V•·loper Qu1lhbnuk~
.... ~':) l'ZJ 4701
ltul•I
YAUTPAIDIG
IWGll
Po\1tu.HI) •l~u t1~•1t.tblt
Oot. C.."11n ' "lll""<ldtlb C•ll 949 l2J !1110 UI I••
r c\um• to 949 77 i 811 '>
'8tSONAl ASSISlAHT 4
tn • ...,.. Dulle'. bol
~ '*-.i •UT\JU\n ..... k
With QuUm """ MIJOV)lt Wor kl. r unrq "'• "'ick
s:2IJv CJ49. n-0 IW
ResUur .tnt
SH VlllS 101 I tdo 0111•r
on NB 1 Yea1> HP •~q
C1U 1 •nomy 949 723 8777
Service Directory
TIC TO RlAOCRS
Cahto1 n1a law • e
qu11 e\ that conto 4C
ton t•k1n11 tobs lh•I
total ~ 0< mo11 (lobor 01 mateual\)
b• ltcen•ed by tho
Conl,.clu" Stale
loctn\• Buaod Stale
law •ISO ICQUll•• lhal
'on tr alto" •It( lttde
lht1t hcrn\tt number
on all •dvtr '"'"i Ynu
tall thtt~ lhe \ldlU\
ol your 111 tnud
ton l t"tlu1 t1t
WWW "\lb t" \:''" ur
800 Jll Cl.LB Unll
t en\rd "101t1Al tnr\
t•~lftl{ 1otl\ t h•!
lntAI IH< tMn l~OO
mu\I •late on 111•11
•dver hse-m .. nh th.ti
lhty M• nol ltren\Pd
by th~ Conh~ctor '
Slate I ions• Bo•rd
Tu & Aut. kodMdu.11\ &
B~"" t P°' w 14 YT' e•P Caa tor P1"1nello1"
RM 949 7'> I 4194
Additions&
Remodeling
fAltTMNG DfVtlOl'MINT
Mt1Jn.-ffln1 di t<.lJ\ ll.t11
tarth1n1devtlopmen1 mm
~\ISM' '"9~!1.e>
\rll v1111r ( ur ,,, ciah (Ii"'' '
IMW '01 Z3 ,_,..,
l 0 Swd 23k m1. lull
l•~I wa11•t1ly, \lfver/blk
11111 CO mnd I 91n
wlll• buullful "~' new
•On<I Ion •v••I v~621
VJ 'l.J5 lll•I 949 !>86 1888
www......,W.c-
l ulclo ''I• '011& Aveflu'
Ultr luw mo &old l•n
llh• mm I ro •lloy wfils
thouughuut SI J.99!)
v~i/741 !lkr 949'>ili 1888
www ....... .c-
Codlllo< ·•a Cotero Sot.
ntt blk blk lthr blk
\.dll ldi!t! l(JUI BtJ\t" co.
•"' Im •h• no whls ~old ~k~ buoh recu•d• l1~e
new $799'> vSS7l81 Bk1
90 SH -1111
www.ec,..ltl.c-
CAD SevlH• STS '2002
fully lo•ded purl whole
1mm•c 121'. mo S32 000
PP 949 631 7772
Chevrolet ••t Mo"''
C•1 lu 1111 <oupe Vii .IOI\
dl h-.tl nu, s1lw1 f ett·tn
mctalhl 1..0. beoutotul
lo~• new tond $64~
v872491 Bkt 949 !>86 11188
--.eqico61 . .-
Auto Semen
IAUOA
IMPOIT llPAll
''"'""" ' 60iiieStlO Competitive llates
Conv..W.ntly lo<ated
on the P'eninMG
A -l HANDYMAN
hi.tall 1 elece c•btneh
~00'.lrvv.<n<bw\
r~ Oot.111114 "41)./?Jlj
Clfpet Cleaning
-~ --
liR A" (),,rt & l .1111el
Cle.rn111q Serv1tc
c.t1pe1 tlfilmno soec~I
J rooms & ~JI >1<a1 S69 95
oncluCes p1econi:Mioning
CAU IOOAY Cll.AJI IOOAY
Kevin 714-329·3942 Office 714-698-8110
Carpet Repair&les
CAllPlT CAll,lT ,.,
K•poor\ l'.1lrhon~ ln\ldll
t um t~nu' lltV "'" fOb' Wh"le•~I•' 949 4\U 0205
'" "" l()n"" e<lCe ol yovr home or office
PtOlj•m & lt1twtnot S.~
f•o•"""l lot-;,M Age\ (omp...,,Ropor&
IS , .. , .. , Potient
Jody Morr11
'4t-S4a-..
I
-ituiii1ii1iii••··~·-·· Aldn 1• -Cr-Vlctw .. 'ff UI
221r. ectuel ""· Ofl&IMI elde•lr owneo. w111te/te11
Int. cl11m whl•, beeut
lih new cond, $9,995 vCZS151 lllu ..... . --....... ,_
OMC s,.,.,,.,.._ lH
2500. 4wd. 70k .. ml.
iold/lan llhr, alra seal,
1up11b orla cond
Sil m vS!>2461 8~1 .. ,_,,._, ... --... ..-..,_
J....., 't7 XJ6 B11111h
r.tilna a•een/tan lthr.
CO. t1 bulou1 cond
I hroua11ou t. SI 0,995
v!l9721 bk! 949·586·1888 .-.............
,___. .... XJ• ... "''· melalhc \llver blue, tan
llhr \Unrool, CO, •Uplfl>
cond $6995 v•897241
8rok11 949·™ 1888
-w.~l.c-
LAND aOVH 2000
01>coveo y II 7 •ule1 .
dual moonrh. ""' 1ump
•eals. 1teat1d seat lee
w•rr 36.000 mt, Sl9.995
~ )j"fl 714 Zl.2"5161
Meteecln 't• c2ao
Buutolul b•ICk/crun1
luny IU•ded. showroom
in O<it ~ /14 751·2464
M er .. clu ''S 1320
Black blk beaut iJll opt.
nooe n.c:e. new nMtJC)f
we $10 ?!i() /14 /Sl-2464
Met<••• ''I I 300SL
low mo l•dy owned.
book>. 1eco1d\. whl1lan
int. h11d &. soll top, CO,
mtn1 dose. Lo11n10
wheels, fabulous cond
throu11houl. S 13, 99!>
vt!IB2411 Blu ~1888
www.ec,. ... ,..,.
Mercecle• 'ti S60 SL
Whole ldn 1mmac 111. out
1un> 111eal, new sott top.
f.trCJTe. SlJ..'m 114 151 2'164
Computer SeMces
COMPUTER
H ELP! ......... or-. ...... •• ,. ... o111c1
•PCorllC
·~ • v.;, Pogo 9"-9 •• ·~·Ob~
• Clgal-'"-~
·-~~~ UC ........ ~. 10 y,. c_. hp.
7 14-6 12-2786
PMU»'I AUTO
WMWI._,. Buutlful a._ <>ntr
l< mt (19873) 166.llO
..,~~ .......
8ted1. 2 K m1.
(19899) S25.llO
"Olhnl....,_
Cobra Sliver, Only 7K
ml
(19770) $23.980 ... r.= ...
Ch1mpa1ne. 2411 mt
(19811) $41,980
'91 UAW tuOO
Sliver. 67k mi
(194~1 ) Sll,980. .... __..,"'°
Turbo 011Hl 8t.Cll
(19683l) $26.980
·01 .... , ...
MUJO
S1lv11. 291< ml
(19892) $27,980
'9S,.,..dN 911 ,...,,.
Wllole. T1ptronoc
( 197526) $31.980
-oz A..Jt n o_,,..
Stiver. only 51< mo
(l 9904C) $34. 980
·oz c1wya1... n
VtHIM
Black. 32K mo
(19827C) $14.980
'O I ,,,.,.,..,_, CLSOO
Whtie, 37K mo
(l 9909C) $61. 980
f4t-S7t-n77
M1'SMITO
;'Spr11•
l'-tlec •oo •-•viii•
SE 11 k •ctu1I mo white/
Ian Int. CO, pren11um
sound . alloy whls.
S 11 .995 cost new S28k.
lantestoc value v•l33197
finance anllable. Booker
'49-S .. -1111 www •• ,,....,,, ....
Electrical Services
SMAU JOI IX'HT Local. Quick Responu
Homo. Vard & Dock [lect 20 y~ [ xp °"'1Qn1 [ tedro:;
I ll'l7!1870 9&Qi().104'}
a .l .C. llectrlc low puces
local ton1Jactor. no tob too
sm31. no jOb too 1111. Refs
l4JOf1 r9(JleSt l1Cll).810Jal
(714)142-1410
• ._ ..........
S( l lk echlel mt full
feet werr, bll/nrmel
ltlv, beeutoful Ille new
cond Mu1t IH to
.....-121,.8 ljQL78116 Bllr. ...... , ...
www ....... -
..... .__'ts 4.0
SC n ... ml. bleck/ten
Ith•, superb cond
throustrt. boob. rKOtds
SI0.495 ~ 8't 9&
S86 ·1888 -...... c_
.... ••re• '7• Slhw
Seltdow II, low molu.
a Int cond, but off11
over S.17,(Q) 9&923-5712
.., SAA• too SI
Convttloble. Only 6811.
1UM w/wrnty, V6. at,
FuNy Loaded & e .. uhfvll
9.775 obo 949·644 6646
AUTOS WANTED .. -. nnq Ill net I r\.dl$.
Var1I. p~ Ca!t\ f .. T~ W. oorre to ~
w/r:mtl. PrJ
SlOOl!mSlCXX>.S'.lXX>
Ut-221-SUI
BOAT REPAIRS/
SERVICES
BOATS SUPS/
MOORJNGSI
LAUNCHING/
STORAGE 9680
a OAT Sl", side toe. 6011
p I us ma In cha n n e I
Newpor I Peninsula new
dock 949·67S·S900 ...,,,...
for up to 70ft and unde1 .
949.575.4347
-
D 1•, ·I.' · ~ ~ 1· ..; • ~ ...
714-715-2828
~nJT,.SMus
~'~~ '""~~~·LD'9 l>nQI Wo-.. 0..l.IJl
~~ ... O..ltll.
0. Lift
ce,,.,le te llectrlc•I Tree Senrlce, Yard
Ser'1b New ~. Up-Cleanup. Maintenance.
rvades. Troublesllooltna, Sprmkle1 Repair. Hauhn&
ntocr /(\Jtdoot 714-300 7219 ('4 •) 650-17 I I
l•hli lletk St-e Tiie Con..rete. f'alto. Onvew3y LICINU D CONTRACTOR r ., .. Y No jOb too ""' NI services! Handyma!V
HomeR1p11t f 11 •Pk BBQ Re ' '" " Rep•11. remodel I ans,
[ •P ht1y 714 5!o7 7594 $1)1, new SVC ~ Jr66
c..tam ~ Wortt
Cemeot Bu.I< St~. Tole °'"""""Y'>· etc R~. No ,xi too ..,,...,. 114 61!>-!0il
1 I 0 GIN
YOUR HOMI
IM,llOVIMINT
,ROJICT?
Call a ptumbe1
pa1nler handyman.
Ot arty Of the &real
•crvtcn listed here Ill
our service dtt ec too y'
THE SC LOCAL SVC
PC OPl f CAN llH P
YOU IOOAY•
Drywall SeMca
WITTltOlfT DllYWAU
All phues 5m/lt 11 rob•
CUANI 20yr. 1•11. tree
HI l~ /1' 639-144/
Aooring/Tlle
CUSTOM CJllATM TU
lnslALollOn slate oer »me:,
m.wt>le. ~one ~ 197S
L#6120\4 Jeff 714-012 9961
1.1A1CY ~ Rf'l>'ln d
Rea1oulln & lnilallahon
Ill C 0£ AN 949·613·8065 714-846-8526 / 14 .sm. 2031
Olterg'• Hortlweecl
Cus t om lnstallat1on.
RES TORE • RE PAIR
& RCMOOll ING
Rel1n1shone & Repaln ALAN THI HANDYMAN
Loc•819657 949 929 2811 All wook auaranteed
Plumbtn&. ( lectrlcal. Doors.
f _,, ca<p f'k. 9&~
Oaii't Pi~
l!Vedrhn!l
0xperls
cS.how~ase
Don't miss out on this chance to
promote your expertise In this fleld!
Our Wedding Showcase Full Page ........... $750*
Handymln/
Home Repair
GtM.IAl. IEPAll
'IWNTF.NANCE • ~. CommertUl
No Job 7bo Small
Dawe Hamilton
949-322·8292
fl• ~ S,..cl ... •t. All
types ol repaon. Electrt
eel. ~mbllli. doors, w1ter
heaters. tile &. more
24/7 days 714·366· 1881
Cmlrdll &¥i Carpentry • Plumblna
01ywall • Stucco
Patnlo"i. T tie &. more
20 ... Years E (penence! Ja, ,._ .. ,_577•
Haallng
JUNIC TO THI DUMl'l 11
7I4·968·1882
AVAILABLE TODAY'
949 673 S566
c.-...,.....~
lrrtpllOn, Oesieri. Custom
l)Jaloty Wortunansl'C)
7 l4-642-4271
* JRG MASONRY * Any Type. Bui Prtces,
Repat,. Ok, Quality W«k #7D&I Jose )14·531 7643
Half Page ........... $420*
Quarter Page ...... $275*
Eighth Page ......... $150
2'/z"x3.5" ............... $90
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MMWf ,_ell, ,..,.,, eo.t,
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DailyL Pilot
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• ,', , ..... d 11
'.' . '• •, ... :. ):::::
Open 7 Daya
Low Rates
StOf'&ge Spec1ala
Sine• 1981
949-645-4545
Painting
IUT•PAllTmCI. INTERIOR EX'TCRIOR --"""'*'I -Cw'9 -.... --"'"' """'c._ -·--·-..-.. -~ c..-~ -...... nwii.5660
HST MOVHS SSS/Hr. ChlHlt'• ....... ZNts up
Se1vln11 All Cities Insured Creal P11ce! Cuaranleed
TJ63844 323·997 1193 work roee esl l •375602
323 630 9971 cell 114·S38 1!>34 7·390·?945
PUBLIC NOTICE
The Caltl. Publtc
Ullhl1es Comm1\sion
1equ1ru that all used
household aoo ds
movers point lheor
P U C Cal T number
limos and chaulleurs
potnl the11 T C P
number on all adver
l•sements II you have
any quesloons about
l he le11al1ly of a
mover. limo o r
chauffeur call ,u1uc unums
COMMISSION aoo •11-• .. 1
Painting
•l'J CUSTOM 'AINTING
Pt0fl. clean. quality wook
lnlernH /e• I and docks
l #703468 949 400 I 0!>4
Jor••n' • 'alfltln9
lop Quality. Compettt1ve
Interior/I :..t l l648?28
Call Jay 949 650 5066
ICIVIN LOONEY 'AINTING Quality work, low rate
uA tor """ Hllflldlt
•l791!>4? 714 876 5811
MF DavlH ,olflll"g
lnte1101 & f • te11or
Reasondble R•tes
l •337023 714 638·4034
llAINIOW C9ICU MAINl
P•ml1n11 lnVe•l Hous.,;Apt
Quality 1ob' r ree esltmate
I •569897 714 636·8888
Plumbing
e l eca ""' er B division or
MOIJ88nuN1
SCWlR J[.l llNC
CLCCTRONIC SLAB
LCAK DETECTION
f11cndly Service
•4•-6 75 -9304
-~oom LnS2491 tn•ureo
Plumbing
SIWll
AllD DUIC CllAml6
(94') 645-2352
TretSeMet
~ Ma1te's
TrH Servk• Ir' . a.....i,si., ~Woc\c.a• ..-, 0. Up's, 24/lw
1m,21 )W1~
949-400-4277
Wall Covtttngs
THI STllll'l'Utl
Spec11hzon11 on
Wallpapr Removal
l•5882'1 949 360 1211
THI STllll'l'llll
S~coalwn& on
Wallpap1 Removal
l•588241 949 360 1211
Window Cleaning
GOLDIN WIST
WINDOW SHVICI
HOfffST & lllASOHAIU Sat1sfact1on Cuaranteed
,lUMa1.a 949 631 1562 714·966 !kW.!
I ree (stJ Sm reparrs ocrrcu 0& 714-2J!>.9150
,RICISI ,LUMllNG
RepMrs & Remodehnt
rR[[ £S TIMA1l
l •681398 71 4 969-1090
All T rr," of lt.ooft 8' ~
• IWldcarial • c-.. m.i
(949) 548.0769
wwwwhun O'l('lo, com
' e
your stuff
through
cla ssified!
•
Call (949) 642-5678
P 0 I NT ? Daily Pil ot < 'la ..,..,j l°il·d :ut ... \\Or k for ·' 011 ~
.... I .. ..