HomeMy WebLinkAbout2002-10-05 - Newport Mesa Daily Pilot'"·
• •
a1 10
Serving the Newport-Mesa community since 1907
SATURDAY,OCTOBERS,2002
~moker wins $28-billion judgment
An L.A. jury orders Philip Morris to pay
record punitive damages to Newport a
woman who said the company's negligence
and false advertising caused her terminal
lung cancer. Company vows to appeal.
damages.
Bullock. who
Im been
smoldng since
she was 17.
primarily
smoked Ben-
son and
Hedges ciga-
rettes, a popu-
lar brand
actty what it deserved·
·Philip Morris did not deny that
they purposely misled all of their
addicted smokers about the dan-
gers of smoking and gave them
false hope." he said. •Mjs.s Bullock
admitted that she was partially re-
sponsible for her fate because she
believed their lies.
smoking. prevent smoking initia-
tion and to encourage srnolcing
cessatiCJn by other addicted
smokers.
"ln this way. maybe something
positive can come from her mis-
fortune,~ he said.
ln her lawsuil, Bullock claimed
that Philip Morril. made and sold
cigarette. that were defective.
Further. l>he claimed that the
company concealed the addic-
tiveness or nicotine and the na-
ture and extent or iL<; dangers. and
marupulated the level of nicotine
to keep '>moker'>. including her.
addicted.
1lle $28 billion L'> the largest
punitive award ever in a U.S case.
Philip Mom' attomev William
Ohlemeyer said the company will
appeal the JUry'<> verdJct l h e deci-
sion should be overturned "be
cause ii 11> incons1..ien1 with the
evtdence and applicable law." he
said.
D••P• Bharath
Daity Pilot
NEWPORT BEACH -A Los An-
geles SUperior Court jury on Fri-
day awarded an uhprecedented
$28 billion in punitive damages to
a 64-year-old Newport Beach
NOTEBOOK
woman.
~ Bulkd. a longtime
smoker with terminal lung can-
cer, had accused tobacco giant
Philip Morris of negligence and
fraud.
Last week. jurors awarded Bull-
ock $850,000 in compensatory
Growing up
with SCR-
an indelible
• experience
•EDITOR'S NOTE: South Coast Repertory will
unveil its $19 million expansion at a gala ball
tonight. The new Fohno Theatre Center will
feature the new Julianne Argyros Stage, a
renovated Segeratrom Stage (the former
Malnstage), the Nldlolas Studio (the former
SecOnd Stage), expanded classroom space
and more. Daily Pilot theater reviewer Tom
Titus has been covering the playhouse since
its earliest days.
I n the 37K years that
South c.oast
Repertory has been
an~-evoMng
component in Orange
C:Ounty's cultural
landscape. there are just
three people who have
witnessed every one of
the 375 plays the
company has produced.
1Wo or them are David TOM TITUS
Enunes and Martin
See Sunday's
paper for more
on South Coast
Repertory
Betty Bullock of manufactured
Newport Beach by Philip Mor-
ris.
Bullock's attorney, Mike Piuze,
said that Philip Morris Mgot ex-
•Philip Morris never apologized
to her," he said.
Bullock knows she will prob-
ably never see any or the money
from the award, Piuw said. I ler
plan is to uc;e the money to set up
a foundation ''to prevent youth
WRIGHT VIEW
"Thi'> Jury '>hould have focu.-.ed
on wha1 the plamuff knew about
the health ri'>b of '>molong and
whether the rnmpany i:ver l>aid or
See JUDGMENT, Paee A9
K£NT TRO'T'OW I OM: T
Benson, the creative
visionaries who
founded the company
and continue to direct
its artistic fortunes. 1be
third is -to borrow a line from Miss Piggy-
moi.
A worker walks past a row of Frank Lloyd Wright's leaded glass windows at the Orange County Museum of Art on Thursday. The exhibition "light
Screens: The Leaded Glass of Frank Lloyd Wright" opens today. See Oatebook Pa1e Al6
It was a fortunate happenstance that I
started covering local theater for the Daily
Pilot the exact month that SCR began
experieodog its birth pangs in OUT backyard.
Well. actually, the birthing ocx:urred a bit
south of us, at the old Laguna Playhouse.
where SCR introduced its first three shows
while awaiting oompeoon of lrs first theater
in Newport Beach.
City attorney Scheer reinstated
I'd only reviewed a couple of shows when
f.mmes dropped in at the Pilot oftice to
spread the word about the new theater
company he and bia felJow 20-so~
~putting~ on our shores.
The ensuing story. published Feb. 11, 196.5.
began: • A new dimemion lo theater is taking
root on the Orange Coe&. SmaD but
deciiaued. South c.oast Repertory is opening
Its first regular seuoo this mootb with a
spring ee:des of five plays at lta first
permanent home in Newport Beach..
The story quoted Emmes as dedaring. "We
want to produce a theater of Sllbsblnce. We
S..SCR,P .. eA9
City Council votes to take Jerry Scheer off paid
administrative leave after three weeks. The narrow
vote brings legaJ shake-up at City Hall to a close.
Lolita Harper
Daily Pilot
a>sTA MESA -CoWld.I members
voted narrowty Friday morning to im-
mediately reinswe City Atty. Jerry
Scheer, who had been placed on paid
administratiw leave three weeks ago
while the council conducted a more
thorough employee evaluadon.
lt is unclear whether their action
will mart an end to the city's recent
legal quandary.
The council's closed vote cap.'> off a
rumultuous four weeks for the city's
legal department, during which the
council voted to halt all busmes.s with
an outside legal firm. audit the Clcy
Attorney's Office. place its top two at-
torneys on paid administrative leave.
set up a subcommittee to further re-
view their perfo""ance, reinstate one
-and three ~ later -the other.
During the closed session, council
Temple vote
appeal uncertain
Daily Pilot
AT A GLANCE
ON THE WEB:
www.~ecm
Homeowners not
sure they will involve
City Council.
June C•Mlf•IMI•
OaityPitot
WEATHER
Fett'""'-morning but.
reminder of eiummet come
tMdlfnoon.
S.,,...A2
SEA BASE
SPORTS
Cotta~ Multangl
dlfMt Omen va.w, at
\v.tmfnllw. 21-l
S.PlpBl
COMING SUNDAY
The~rt...«I~ coe.t._,.tDt'A MW ....,comp.
members voted 3 to 2 to rescind
Schee(s paid adnurustrative leave
and immediately reinstate him as c1cy
attorney. Councilman Gary Monahan
and C:Ouncilwoman Karen Robinson
di.-.sented.
The content of Friday's closed ses-
sion, like the previous four on the
same subject. is considered a person
nel matter by city officials and is
therefore classified State law man-
dates local leaders invite the public to
special proceedings. open the meet-
ing In a public forum and then ad-
journ to •cJosed session." in which
oouncil members discuss sensitive
topics among themselves. Any ac-
tion_<; tal..en by the coWletl ~ a result
of the pnvare deli~mtions are then
reported back in an open forum.
Without commenung on the details
of the pnvate cfucuss1on. Monahan
said he had concerns about the Cicy
Attorney's Office and he thought ad-
mimSlliltive ~was tbe • corTeCt ac-
tion· for the council to take. Although
he found himself on the losing end of
a close vote, Monahan said he would
continue to do his best to ensure the
City Attorney's Office funcuoru; at its
best level for the residenLc;.
"It's just Wee any other 1 to 2 vote."
S.. SCHEER , Paa• M
FAMILY TIME
Happy to have a parental
• • movie companion
'
• ..
(
,....... --
THE MORAL
Of THE STORY From Russia with _faith
Keep your . ~flea rt open for
~ . ~~ opportunity
~· ... ~ ~ God measures a man, He puts the
.,,_around ths hean, not the head."
:--UNKNOWN :;
M y thanks to all of you who showed
your Interest and encouragement
after last week's column. If you
;a.lssed it, it was about a woman named •eoneen Red.it who felt God called her at a very
yoong age to be a missiooasy to India
someday. She heard t1!at specific call at the
age of 13 and when she
was 23, she set off
overseas with no
finances and no clear
focus.
She simply chose to
be obedient to God's
leading, and God has
expanded her ministry
in phenomenal ways..
Hers is an amazing story
or the difference one
man or woman can
make by being obedient
to God
It's been tascinadng to
CINDY
TRANE
CHRISTESON
Four singers from St .
. Petersburg will sing
music .from the
Orthodox Church
tonight at St. Barnabas.
Mlcheie Marr
Daily Pilot ' 'M ake a joyful shout to lhe Lord. serve
the Lord with
gladness; come
before bis presence with singing," a
p&a.lmist wrote.
For centuries Orthodox Oui.stlans
worldwide have been doing this in
their communal evening prayers and
morning prayers. on Sunday during
the Divine Liturgy and at prayer on a
multitude of other holy days.
This evening four soloists -Ki.rill
Sokolov, ~; Aleksei Vorobiev.
tenor; Marina Tchik:hatcheva.
mexro-soprano and Irina Grinberg,
soprano -from Russicum. a
40-member group of touring singers
that is part of the St. Petersburg
choir community, will present a
concert of 14 800p from the music;
of the Jlus&an Orthodox Clturch, as
well u 14 Russian folksongs.
watch bow contagious Colleen's love rA and
obedience to God has been since her talk and
the column. Last week. she sbared that her
latest dream is to purchase land or a building
for a permanent home for the school she runs
in India. She also pmyl to one day complete II
retreat Center with grass and playgrounds. It's
hard to believe there are tllol.maods ol children
and adults who bave ~even seen Bf8M or
open space.
When they are not touring,-tbe
professionally-trained m•isidans
~ as soloists or choir conducton
in pari.Vles of the Russian Orthodox
Olurcb. including the c.athedral of
Our Lady of Kazan in Nevsky
Prospect of St. Petersburg. Tunigbt,
St Barnabas Antiocbian Orthodox
Oturch lo c.osta Mesa will host their
program.
Members of Russicum, a group of Russian Christian singers, will perform a combined program of folk songs
and religious music tonight at st Barnabas Orthodox.Church in Costa Mesa.
A friend of mine oamed Teri told me about
one of her friends who had been praying
specifically for Goda guidance for a month or
two about giving finandaJ support to a special
foreign misQoo project. She was curious what
it would be and how God would make it dear
to her. She heard Colleen when I did and she
was moved and motivated to give her a cbed
right then and there. Since then some other
friends'llarted a n:atc::binggnmt program with
the goal of gtving Colleen the needed funds by
~ It will be exciting to see how the story
continues and what Jives will be~ and
~perhaps~ I've bad many
inquiries about becoming involwd In th.is
particolar orpnizatlon which is caDed
Ouisdan Missions Charitable Dust. If you are
one who felt God's gmtle nudge to lave others
in this way, you can e-mail Mary Kmdricb at
maryh@l/irslfruLQtgOt call her woJk n~
(949) ~5846.
There are many amazing tbinp llbotrt ttm
countr)t Prom sea to lhining sea. dltte are
coundea opportunities and .many worthwhile
organizadons to belong to, and to give to as
well. My calendar and the crisper weather tell
me that we are in the fall, or autumn season.
We are also quickly approaching holidays that
will hopefully remind us of all we have to be
thankful for and of God's love for us.
Maybe God has a unique call for us this fall.
1l1lt Wbnderful thing is that we can contribute
oJr time, our talents or our finances in small
or large ways to make a difference. We can
participate with our f'amllies, with our friends
or simply on our own.
Ruth Peale said it well when she said to
"Fmd a need and 6U it·
AD we need to do Is to open our eyes and
ears or open the newspaper. and we will see,
hear or read about many meaningful
opportwlities. Most of all. I pray that God
would open our hearts.
And you can quote me o~ that
• call1'I TRANE atAISTESON is a Newport Budl
.-..idem who lpeeb frequendy to perenting
groups. She may be r1*hed via &mall 8t
cindytlonthegrow.oom or through the mall et P.O.
Box 6140-No. 506, Newport Bead\, CA 92668.
The four-and five-member
Russic:um ensembles tour for a
month or two each year throughout
the United States, the United
Kingdom or Ewope -to promote
traditional and contemporary
Russian religious and folks songs. ltB
6rst tour of the U.S. was In 1998.
DuriJ:!g the communist era. most
churches in Russia were dosed and
the music of the chun::h was kept
alive only in a few monasteries. The
survival and continuity of the
church's music Is demonstrated by
the Ruakum ensembles' varied
repertoft, which indudes so~
from the early centuries through the
pramtday.
In part. Russlcum was fo\Dlded in
1992 tt> encourage young singers
who enter the field of c:hrlstUin
FAITH
CALENDAR
SPECIAL EVENTS
CANOl..EUGHT SERVICE
The Rev. Dr. Jim Stout and Leah Stout
will speak at a candlelight service
addressing "Faith's Impact on Those
Affected by Mental lllneu" at 5:30
p.m. Sunday at St Andrews
Presbyterian Church, 600 St. Andrews
Road, Newport Beadl. (949) 631-2880.
BLESS TtE ANllULS
Saint Michael and All Angela
Episcopal Church in Corona del Mar
will hold a bleuing of the animals at
10 a.m. Sunday at the comer of
Pactfic View Drive and Marguerite
Avenue. Free. (949) 644 0463.
'f1RST SUNDAYS AT flVE'
A "Arst Sundays at Five" concert will
be hetd et 5 p.m. Sunday at Saint
Michael and All Angela Episcopal
music. The music Is sung a capel1a.
.. The great church fathenJ or
[eadyt times reckoned that
lnstrummts distracted people's
minds from the tbougbtl of God,
therefore only hwnan voices were
allowed to make mu.sic during the
services,• said FJena Smimova. tour
coordinator of Russtcum.
The first singers ol. dJ.e religious
songs were monb. ~men were not
allowed to join church cboha und1
the beginning of the 20Ch ~
•0ur music bu been sung for
thousands of years. Gadsome .
Ught,' for example, from vespers
!evening p~J was compoeed ~
about the .tth century. ribe concert)
shows tbat Orthodox music of the
past is still relevant to today's
worsb.tp, • said Ruth Jbrdedge, choir
dln!ctor at St. Bamabaa.
Some of the muaic will be
familiar to members of her
Churcn In Corona del M.r. The first of the~Ml'ieswlR*ture
Burt9n Karson and friends in a piano
rec:i1al dedicating the parish's new
Yamaha piano. The church ia at the
comer of Pacific View Drive and
Marguerite Avenue. Free. (949)
644-0463.
'ZEN JUMPSTART'
The Zen Canter of Orange County will
offer a six-week program titled "Zen
JumpStart" on Tuesday through Dec.
15 at the Zen Canter, 120 E. 18th St,
Costa M888. Sessions will be hetd
from 5 to 7:15 p.m. Sundays, and the
first and third Tuesdays of fN9ry
month from 7 to 8:15 p.m. $150. (949)
722-7818.
COMMUNrTY SERVICE FAIR
The Newport Meaa Irvine Interfaith
Council will hofd its third annual
Community Service Fair from 11 :46
a.m . to 1:30 p.m. Oct.16at the
lntenecdon of 16th Street and Dover
Drive In Newport Beach. lunch is
$7.60 for people with reMl'Vationa and
$10 otherwise. (949) 660-8666.
congregadon, she said.
"We uae music that comes from
lbe Rulllian tradition because
Antiod!4en (Orthodox chwches)
have tended to take music from
dUJmmuowca For a while (the
ADtiocbllln (bun:bJ had almost
stopped dolo.g Bymntine chant,
al.molt entirely doin8 Russian music.
Only receody have we started a
nMval of Byiantioe music,·
Rudedptakl
Some duud1 music is intended to
tead1 and a a.p part of its text
comes from the Bible, while the
primary purpose of other son~ is
wonbip. ~all of the music
will be introdUced in English and
sung In Jbwsl•n.
Rutledge beUeYes the concert has
broad appeal She sees it as a rare
opportuDtty 6>r anyone who enjoys
choal music to heal a musically
accomplilbed quartet perform a
CMING FOR CREATION
The °'9r1g9 County Interfaith
Coalition for the Environment will
present Caring for Creation V. an
Interfaith conference on spirituality
and the environment with keynote
speaker Julia Butterfty Hill, author, at
8:30 a.m. Oct. 26 at St Marie
Presbyterian Church, 2100 Mar Vista
Drive, Newport Beach. $25 If
pre-registered before Oct. 11. Student
rate Is $15. (714) 508-8972.
"WE BEG 10 Dfi£R'
Temple Bat Yahm will join the Jewish
Community of Orenge County and
the Community Scholar Program to
host• Uve debate on "We Beg to
Differ• on Nov. 7. Michael Lerner ind
Dennis Pr.ger will be featured. The
event will be hefd at the temple, 1011
Camelbadc Drive, Newport Beach.
$18-$118. (714) 766-0340.
WORKSHOPS
ZEN 101
The Zen Center of Orenge County
present.a an Introduction to Zen
FYI
• WHAl: Singers from Ruuicum
• WHERE: St. Barnaba.a Orthodox
Church, 3505 Cadillac Ave., Suite
G·3. Costa Mesa
• WHEN: 6 p.m. today
• COS'r. Free; donations accepted
• CALL: (714) 429-0587
unique repertoire of music lo the
appropriate setting of an Orthodox
Oturch.
In the folk music segment of the
program. ·they are hilarious.. Even
though the son~ a.re in Russian.
they make me laugh. It's a funny.
spirited performance." she aafd.
The concert is free, though
donations in any amowu att
accepted. The ensemble will
perform at several other locadons
throughout Orange C.Ounty in early
October.
Worbhop from 3 to 6 p.m. on the first
Sunday of every month. Upcoming
seuions will be held on Sunday, Nov.
3 and Dec. 1, at 120 E. 18th St, Costa
Mesa. $50. (949) 722-7818.
'FROM SINAI TO CYllERSPM:E'
The JewW'I t.e.ming lnefta wtl
~. OOUf'99 tided "from Sinai to
Cybenpace'" It 7 p.m. Thundllya
Nr1lrlg Oct. 17 Md enclng Dec. 5 9t 1he
Hyatt Newporter, 1107 Jamboree Road.
Newport Beech. $96. (!MS) 721-9800.
ADVEHJURES AT CHURCH
A "Rainbow of Faith Adventure• at
the Child Cantered Churd'I NM
through Oct. 26 at 10 1.m. on
Sundays et Bonita Cr'Mlt P9lt. llt the
interlectlon of University end Le Vida
drives. You can team to "build your
faith muldes;" Free. (949) 840-7343.
DM>RCE AECOVl!RYWOMSHOP
St Andrew's~ Churcn
holds. Oivon:e Reccw-v Wotbhop
at 7:30 p.m. on Thuncs.ys through
Oct. 24 at 800 St Andrew. Roed,
Newpott BNc:h. $25 or $30. (IM9) 67~2214.
Daily A Pilot
DetrdN N9wmen Dally Pilot. P.O. 8oK 1680, CoOlta ,..., SURF AND SUN Eduartlon reporter, (M) 57'-4221 CA 92626. Copvright No news.,,-.
delrd,...,,...,,.,.neJ«Jm..rom l1lullnlionm, «leorilll ~or ~c..... ~·-•t..incwibe WEATHER FORECAST 20 knota. W9V99 will be Newa ealstant. (Ml) 57~ l"8pfOducld wllhout vwtlll9n
dlristi,,..camllo•/lltlm#.oom .,_,,....,., af copvright owns. betw9et'l 1 end a .... on. ~-Plrtly doudv .... end northwest swell of 4 fMt. VOL 98, NO. 278 Selln .... .a.. HMng. HOW 10 REACH US temperaturet In the UPJ* 60I
THOMA8 H. JOHNSON. JoeeJ ...... Don l.Md\, ~,.,..,cow Clrwllltlon ltlrt 1he day, one that certainty SURF Pub119h« Alt Dlrwctot I News Deelc Chief The nmee Of1nge County t-. llte 1"l TONY DODERO, (M) 57'""'22A READEM ttanJllE (800) 252·9141 By noon, how.vw, the eun Llk..aitat condltkn,,.... Edttor ~·l«JtN&oom (IN8)142 .... .. ~ .,... be out. reillng 1he JUCWOElll«t, ... Mae ... Record 'fOW~ ~ .... a ;; Mal142·1517& WOf9e bv the hlgl\ 1lda. h9n
~r Photo SupeMeor Deity Pilot or news• ~ (9491142-'321 1'mpenrlUrel \0 Che "'°" 10I tn ~ StrMt lln't WOltdlig tocley. . (M9)1&M358 ~ . ....... the...,.,.. S*1a of COlta Get out the • ....., Defd, go P'romodone Oit9Ct0f ten.photo •"1flnw..com Our eddNle le 330 W. Bev St.. C-. ..... Mw. TenlC*MufW bvthe ........... MeN. CA 82827. Ofllce hqun .._ (IM9) 142-6880 Wlllm'WIH top out around 70. ~ • l'nO'M. Oo~but
Gina Aleltandtt. l..orl Anderton. IUff. MOftdfy • Fttdey, 8'.30 .. m. • & p.m. lpofta (949) 1574-4223 ~*4:uulillllow: • Good new.. lhough. Pllul SlltowlG, Petllet s.v.. C:onM'lh • ..... ,.. .... ,..,...,,0 WWW./Me.noN.~ ..... It le tN ~ policy to prompdy ....... ,. (141) lllO.o110 ~ ooctdldone .. .,. -.
Cri~°='~· COtl'9d Ill emn ot M.lbMl!nc& ~ dtlllypll«•IMlm..oom BOATING FORECAST WOftlL Bed "9W1? Won't be ......... , ... ,~ ..-.om. """wwtl Sunellv ....... U~•I ..... _a.., ... , Ml~ -:.::= t#tlp&,,,.,....,.,.,._oom FYI .... _ ,_ (148) 831-7129 light .. -tv In..,. WWW. ·°'» .-.=·· The= ~Mlmil DllV .......... wtllllterllll ~,~· ,.,. ( w..eo) .. piMINd ~the-• 10to 11aw.. TIDEI jutNt.~·~ ~.,,,..... ...... c.-,,.. ..... l'M~wll M-. ........... ~orllf 11111119 ,..,...~.at ... i:,,.~nn.er-.. M J tMI on 1lfNll2.fOot eo.nv-... _ . ..... Thl .. wllallftt t:07 a.rn. ~4*1f ~com ~= .. =· -p.olft. ..., ...... ~-= ..... -CDlll fllDldcl Ind er!Wolll'l•I ,.,,..,, ......... .. °"' .... Publllt .. ~T'"'-~ ~~ .., .. attp.m. =-·-.......... =-.. ----...... •dhteion 8'h lM~ ..... Ula.m.. ,_,,,_, .... , ...... ....... ......... '""'--°" ......... ~ .......
Colll-----~ ;ace=.~ _,....al,. ..... ................ ..... , ... ·---.,......_... cm., ... ·---...... ,.,. .... . .............
, . . ..
,,
Newest sChool shines with energy efficiency
Newport Coast Elementary's design
demands less electric lighting and uses
natural ventilation for heating.
Deirdre Newman
Daily Pilot
Fresh air and natwal light
Infuse the claarooms at
Newport Coast mementary
School In Newport Beach.
On Friday representadves
from the state and Southern
Calliomia Edison honored
The Newport-Mesa Unified
School District's newest
school, which opened ln Feb-
ruary 2001, for Its environ-
ment-friendly features.
Principal Monique Van-
ZeeBroeck said the recogni-
tion enabled the st.aft' and
students to reOett on how
lucky they are to reap the re-
warda of environmentally
cbnsdous planning.
Broeck said
EdilOn'a Design and Engi-
neering Services provided
consulting services to the
school'a construction with
the Intent of creating a show-
case project for the .district
and the county.
Drawing on the sunny,
~:rate, coastal climate of
Newport Beach, the goals in-
cluded reducing the need for
electric lighting while mini-
mizing solar heat gain and
using natural ventilation to
provide thennal comfort
when possible.
reduced energy com for the
ecbool by 45~, uvtng
$15,000 a yar, a&ld Unda
Moultoo-Pattenon. cha1r of
the Integrated Waste Man·
agemeot Board in Sacra·
men to.
MouJton-Panenon added
that the green. high-perform·
ance design bu allo been
shown to Improve test scora
ln reading and math by 25%,
according to m:ent stud.lea.
MouJton-Pattenon encour-
aged students to be environ-
mental emlssarles, spreading
the philoeopby their echool
was built on to their parents.
MI hope you all do your
part to protect our planet."
Moulton-Patterson said.
"You are the best role mod-
els."
Many students said they
appreciated the recognition
their school received for be-
ing so environmentally-
friendly and energy-efficient. ·1 forget sometimes how
fortunate we are to be at this
school, to be healthy and
have natural light so (the
students] can learn peace·
fully and quletJy," VanZee-
This was achieved by ex-
terior corridors and class-
rooms clustered around
courtyan:ls, interior and ex-
terior light shelves for day-
lighting and increased roof
and wall Insulation. Recycled
materials were also used,
sending less waste into local
landfills.
In the process, the district
"I think it shows our
school is special," said
fourth-grader Monica Phan.
9. ~1 really like the Ughting
because it's so bright."
S£N4 HILLER I OAILY PILOT
The solar panel structure surrounding ttie school's water heater helped earn Newport Coast Elementary
School recognition from the state for being environmentally conscious.
JUICE MANIA!
~Juices ~~ Piiia~ '=sI~
WAKUNAGA
YOU SAVF S1 I 001
44SlJPER
FOODS/
KYO-GREEN
BLEND
CONTAINS: •Amino Acid Enzymes• Organic Barley
• Vitamins • ChloreUa M~ • Edible flber
• Minerals • Wheat Grasses Harvested at Pw
• Chlorophyll Nutritional Value and
• Protein • A ~t of lmmune Supporting Nutrients
=.=.~ ··~
Mix with water"' JIOUT favorite juice! =.a:
FARM FRESH PRODUCE
Organic Soups
• CMn ChMda'. Cram ol c.rot
• Cram ol Brott.al • Sc* Pa
• Tumato • Sweet Poaao Oaowda' ·"--• Miaestloot
• NIY)'Ban
REG. "1.&9
~.t Meals ~:;, 2 Minutes
~
s--$2 Juices s-$1
JlSt JUST
CRANBIJIRY 8IAallJlalft'
~~SI~
Ap~~
Ooi/v SlrtrfJtlt .
N«urallg Demed
Growth
HonlltOOe
Releuer
:•%999 SOOG. '"99 -1 I. az. '2U5 1 I. az.
October 8 -'IUacl;\v
6:30 to 700 pm
"ARE HXl R&VD'
HlJM3lYI" 11-Sc:i8a al
App«ilP °"""" By Judith 1bdero, N.C
FREE Seminar (CM Patio)
-~"""..... G .... ., ...........
Chips
• Low Salt
October 10-'lbundlt1
&30 to 8.-00 pm
MOVE OVIJR ANl'KJXl.-
DANl'SI s.wr 7*' a.pr
Bg DaOas Clouatre, Ph.D.
mEE Seminar!Book-
~ (CM Pcdio)
Sblttak.e-Ya-
~ Spring
Burgers Rolls
REG. '3.99 14 az. REG. '3.99 10 at.
ECO VER
AllNalural
Liquid Dish Soap
=~sz~
v
l I
. · . . ' ..
r .uall~ MEAT llHipQ I piHMplfE EINll
~ C...MIMJ-ili#jiW-.r 'JI>,_,,
arlic or Santa Maria Old Fashioned
Marinated Tri-Tips Stuffed Chicken Breast
2S Mitu#o ,,, II# iriJJ "'""'-
$ 22
lb.
Apple Cinnamon
Stuffed Pork Chops
Orange Sesame Marinated
Chicken Halves
.,,,, J ,,.,,, 61 350" Grill,,. &flit 45 111m11.teJ
s322.b . $199 lb.
Swordfish Steaks
Frozen -Defrosted
GREAT ON THE GRILL
p,.,,,,, °"' DJi
Hot Roast Beef
Sandwiches
$622.b.
! I I 'I I 'I I ' " '
• • I 4
• e ( I •
I J, /11 ,., ,.,t I >.11/1
•@UllllllRAhi/1
CONSIGN • DESIGN
Quality Furnishings & Accessories For Your Home
Iron/Glass Coffee Table ............................. $12500
Stained Glass Chandelier .......................... $1500°
Pine Letter Writing Desk .......................... $17500
Sofa .............................................................. $200°'
Large Pine CotTee Table ............................ $225 ..
Iron/Glass Sofa Table ................................. $225 ..
Restoration Hardware Occasional Chair .. $250"
Iron Patio Table/4 Chairs .......................... $300°'
Bamboo Table/4 Chairs ............................. $335"
Jane Keltner Bar Stools (pair) .................. $450 ..
Consignmtnls accepted by appointment only
Limil~d to stock on hand
" ,.,.,. .... tu ..... "" ... -In ,..
c.w, ~ "'"""""Qft •. Our School
tor Professional Studies can .mnc. ,o11 In the
ITllrMtpla:e With CDn'4nlent end cornprehlnlNI
--~IOn Ind certifation ptOWlml for
c:ar•-mlndld p.ople in business, ~.
lkhnolcD, educatJon end ministry.
Addlllonll education pays off II helps J'llU stay
on top of the CNll&inc mullet Ind efWIClltl
yo11 pettONlly And at Vancuttd wa undatlland
YQllf needs • • W011c1ns Pfof•ionll, which Is
why we desitl*I our ewnlnc ind week~
cl11M1 to fit )'OIJr echedult. .
R..oy to take ~ ~ ..rid 18 to Ull neict
Mlf COntlet US. We'll help~ l1\4llt It ~.
~--e: ..
..
SEAN HU!R I OAllY Pt.OT
White paint covers the street as well a vktims of a five car traffic accident at 18th Street and Placentia Frid~y evenning. Lamar
Lee.center, and Nobel Stewart,right, both of Costa Mesa are released from the scene by a Costa Mesa Pohce officer.
5 cars crash in Costa Mesa
It was one of those rare traffic accid ents
that could actually be labeled "comical,"
Costa Mesa Fire Captain Lenny Goodsir
said about a five-car crash Friday evening
that left cleanup crews mopping about 20
gallons of white paint off the streets.
May said.
The truck was going eastbound on J 8th
Street and hit a au traveling southbound
on Placentia Avenue, he said. One other
truck and two more cars that were
stopped at the intersection were also in·
volved in the crash.
But the so-called comedy of the situa-
tion had to do with Lhe white paint that
was splashed all over the intersection. on
the cars and even on passing vehicles and
bystanders.
"We got there to see paint splashed
around everywhere,· Goodsir said. ·And
there were all these people covered in
white paint that looked like ghosts.·
"Thankfully, no one got hurt," he said
The crash was caused by the driver of a
pickup cruclc who ran a red light at about
5:45 p.m., Costa Mesa Police Sgt. Scott
"The driver of the truck Oed the scene,"
May said. "So we're treating it as a tut -
and-run."
POLICE FILES
COSTA MESA
•Adam• Avenue and Pinecreek onv.: Vandalism was reported at
4:25 p.m. Thursday.
• West Bak# St1Mt A traffic
collision invoMng injuries was
reported in the 600 blod< at 6:04
p.m. Thursday.
• Briatof Str..t and Sunflower
AV9nue: Possession of drugs was
reported at 3:06 a.m. Thursday.
FAMILY
Continued from Al
and one slightly racy scene. We
fast forward through a few parts
of · Big." too.
Cay and I have often
wondered why foul language,
sex scenes and violent images
are included in some movies
because they would seem to be
just fine without them -
perhaps bener.
We liked "In the Bedroom· in
part because there were 5eVeral
instances in which they rud not
succumb to the usual
temptation to show the violence
or the sex. ln "In the Bedroom,·
scenes were cut just prior to
those events or the scenes were
crafted in a way that assumed
the viewer's intelligence.
In Lhe movie, a young man
becomes involved with an oJder
woman. One day his rather
shows up at home early. His dad
calls out for his son a couple of
times but gets no response. As
he starts to walk upstaira, the
two lovers appear at the top,
fully clothed, trying hard not to
be embarrassed.
The director, the editor or
both figured that people were
Continued from Al .
position to the project. aaJd It la
undear whether his association
members would benefit from re-
Y1slting the Issue. The more Im-
portant issue, he said, i. that
resldeotl now aie all e.ware of a
dllcrepancy between the re-
ported 86--foot hefabt of the es-
lsdq ttU:e centm ateep1e and
ID actual height of 68 Ced, re-
w.led ~ • .-&ml aarwy.
"We'nt a Utde ~ted
wt.ch tbe whole proc:e11,• Brom·
bal llkl. •0ut we cena&nJy fi I
~ .from a ltmdpoln.t of Ju!M polndna our how dlalnpnu~
DUI 0. troup hU been from tM
aet·IQ.· PlulnAftl Comal*'°n <hair·
JNn Stevm CMr made the
PUBLIC SAFETY
• Elden Av.nue: Grand theft was
reported in the 2400 blodc at 9:01
a.m. Thursday
• Newport Boulevlird: Grand theft
was reported in the 1900 blod< at
3:09 p.m. Thursday.
• Pwterson "'-ce: Vandalism was
reported in the 2700 blodc at
11:16 a.m. Thursday.
• ~Avenue: Possession of
marijuana was reported in the
2300 blod< at 1:44 p.m. Thursday.
• West 19th St1Mt A home
burglary was reported in the 500
smart enough to figure ou1 whar
the two were up to. Most
filmmakers, however, would
have to show everything for the
film to have the proper artistic
value.
It should be noted that "In the
Bedroom" is not devoid of sex
and violence. There is one brief
scene that shows someone with
a fatal head injury. And despite
this fine editing, this is not a kid
Hick.
A couple of days ago. my
friend Sandy Bennett ale rted
me to a cottage industry that is
the answer to the prayers of
many parents who want to
share great movies with their
kids but cannot due to certain
scenes.
The industry has produced
TVGuardian, a foul language
filtering technology built into
Sanyo DVD Players and VCRs
and available at Wal-Mart
Other sources of edited
movies are: Myaeanflicb. a
nationwide mail-order rental
service that malls censored
videos to consumers throughout
the country; and MovieShleld, a
company that charges $240 for a
subscription to an online eervice
that allows the owner's
computer to download edJting
credibility issue the ftnt order
of businesa Thursday nipt,
callf.ng forth repreaentattvea of
the Cliurch of Jeaw Ouist of
Latter-day Sainta to uk who
knew about the discrepancy
and why they hadn't polnted It
out.
Onuch architect Ralph Martin
and church repreaentadw Joe
Bentley both admJtted that they
bad known chat the stab center
ateeple WU iele d'8ft 86 feet and
both offered apologies. Martin
laJd that tho .,. bad coml up
In previoua ~ wtth ~ dtJ buc lhll cboM ""c:lfll&Ma
had C>CaU""'1 fo:r11 before ~
std repcllt ... '~ Wttb
the lnciornct --~··me.un u a bli6I for th* l 00.foot teeonl·
~
The 88-foat ~ WU bMild on chi orfjlnll cay Of mm. ap-
blodc 8t 5:08 p.m. Thursday.
NEWPORT BEACH
• BJson AV9nl.le: Petty theft was
reported in the 1200 blodc at 6:47
p.m. Thursday.
• West Coast Highw.y: A
burglary was reported in the 7200
blod< at 12:51 p.m. Thursday.
• San Miguel o.tv.: Forgery was
reported in the 2600 blodc at 6
p.m. Thursday.
•Sea Island Ortw: A burglary
"shields" for selected movies
into a transfer box that is
connected 10 a VHS or DVD
player.
Another company. OearPlay.
also provides editing guides for
selected movies over the
Internet. These edit guides
instruct a computer based
DVD-ROM to ~kip and mute
offensive material while playing
the original DVD movie version.
Sounds great, doesn't it? At
last, parents will be able to share
so many more movies with their
lads; movies that are just a scene
o r two away from being a family
lliclc.
But some industry
muclcety-mucks don't think. that
these filters are a good idea and
they've sued to block the
technology from being used,
declaring that the practice is
illegal and unethical.
"We will fight to express
ourselves on this issue. We will
fight to get control of this
technology," Directors Guild or
America President Martha
Coolidge ls quoted as saying.
"We are talking about a
technology that obliterates Lhe
intention of a movie. Parents can
control what their child sees by
not allowing It in the house.•
-Dttpa Blwrat fl
was reported in the 1000 blodc at
9:35 a.m. Thursday.
• SN.tlore Drive: A loud party
was reported in the 5200 blodc at
10:44 p.m. Thursday.
• Via Lido: A htt·and-run was
reported in the 3400 blodc at 4·14
p.m. Thursday.
• Vl8 Paletmo: An auto theft was
reported In the 200 blodc at 9:06
p.m. Thursday.
• 33rd StrMt: A vehicle burglary
was reported in the 200 blodc at
10:01 a.m. Thursday.
That control pan 1s true. The
rest of Coolidge's statement tS
petty, selfish and JUSI plain bad
business. After all, with th~
technology. potential audJences
of ~me movies could be greatly
increased.
lVGuardian !>pokesman Rick
Bray commented that
"Hollywood should be sending
us a fruit basket every time
someone buys a Sanyo DVD
player or VCR with lVGuatdian
built in."
The Oap is more evidence that
those in charge of the media
have no interest in producing
decent images that kids can
watch. For them. It is strictly a
numbers game to see how much
soap they can sell or how much
they can make off rental income
and overseas rights.
They're in it for the money,
that's all. They don't care about
you and your opinion or what
your kids watch as long as
someone watches.
But thanb to lVGwudJan, I
think I've found my •Hoty Grail.·
•STEVE SMfTli 11 1 Costa Meaa
resident and freelance writer.
Reade" may leave a m...age for
him on the Dally Pilot hotline at
(949) 642-«l88.
temple comes to fruition l 'm cer-
tain that almOlt an of them wlll
be very pleased wtth the effect lt
will have on chetr ~r·
bood.·
Oaytoo ~ that the c:hun::h
bas not )'et Mt a date to begin
work on the new tl!mple but that
they hope lo begin wodc U IOOO
u poaaible after the 14-dsy ap.
peal period.
• JUN!c.Aa~OCMJre
NtlWpOft 8eedt end John W.,-,,.
Airport. 51"9 m-v be reecMd tit
(Ml) 57~ C)( by 9'fNllf tit
~·~
s.ti.day, October 5, 2002 A9 • •
Candace Gingrich gives support to Coming CAit Day
.. •• • ...
•, . .
Speaker discussed the
merits of coming out on a
personal and societal
level.
Deirdre Newm•n
Daily Pilot
Alex lran, a freshman at UC Irvine, is
in the process of corning out as a gay
male. While he has already talked to
friends and family about his sexuality,
he is still coming to terms with accept-
ing himself and feeling comfortable to
disc.lose his orientation if people ask.
So he was inspired to hear Candace
Gingrich speak on campus Friday at the
UCI Lesbian, Gay. Bisexual, 'ftansgender
Resource Center in advance of National
Coming Out Day Oct. 11.
Gingrich was thrust onto the national
radar in the rnkf.90s as the "lesbian sister
of Newt Gingrich.• the fonner conserva-
tive Speaker of the House of Rep~nta
tiVes. Since she had already accepted her
sexual orientation and come out to
friends and family. she said she wai.
psychologically equipped to deal with the
torrent of publicity that followed.
FYI
UCI will celebrate National Coming Out
Day from 9 e.m. to 3 p.m. on Oct 11 on
Ring Road. From 8 to 9 p.m. the Cyber
A Caf6 In the Sd\ool of the AIU wlll
host •say It OUT Loud: an open-mlc
night and coffeehouse.
what it was until high school, when she
chose to ignore her feelings because she
didn't think she was able to deal with
them and djdn't know anyone who was
gay.
"There were no teachers or guidance
counselors (to ta.Uc to) so it was easy to
push my feelings down as rar as I
could," Gingnch said.
It wasn't until college, when she
played on the rugby team and saw lesbi-
ans open about their sexuality that she
felt comfortable enough to come out
For Gingrich. it was a positive, cathartic
experience.
"I felt fortunate because I felt like my
life was coming together instead of fall-
ing apart," Gingrich said. "I didn't stop
smiling for the next year because I knew
who I was."
She then channeled her energy from
the notoriety she received to become a
spokeswoman for the Human Righi.<.
Campaign. Gingrich crisscrosses the
country, encouraging people to live their
lives openly as a way lo empower them-
selves and educate those around them.
Telling her parents was a little more
difficult. since one of the first questions
her mother a.'>ked was, "Where did we
go wrong as parents?" Gingrich said.
She told them that her bemg able to
confide in them meant that they had
done everything right.
DON LEACH OAJLY PIL01
Candace Gingrich speaks to students at UCl's Cross Cultural Center in preparation for National Coming Out Day.
"It made me feel like {gay] people are
out there and are taking a stand," Iran
said.
Gingrich, who jokingly deM:ri~ her
self as a "professional homosexual".
said coming out is important bccau!>c 11
enables people to share their !>lori es
with others who may have expencncec.l
the same conflict in dealing with their
-;exuali ty.
She shared her story, recalling how
she fell there wru. '>omething d1ffcrl'nl
about herself as a chtld, but wasn"t '>ure
Rut !>he wru. !>tartled a few years later
when Newt Gingnch said in an inter-
view to a gay newspaper that gay people
shouJd be tolerated. like alcoholics.
So. seven year. ago. when Human
Rights Campaign asked Gingnch to
share her story on a national level to hu-
manize gay America, she accepted.
Gingrich told the UCI crowd of about
50 that coming our is one of the most
empowering act:. a person can make.
"Coming o ut turns the per;onal into
the pohucal, ~ < .mgnch said. "II frees
yourself and peo ple around you. but
you·re al'><> freeing other!> from igno-
ranee."
And although gay people hav(' made
a lot of strides in being accepted m their
community and at the '>late and na·
tional level, there is still a lot of work to
be done, like the struggle for gay par-
ents' rights, Gingrich asscned.
"We're stiU not treated hkc olher fami-
lies,· Gingrich said. "We can't rely on 1 he
same legal protection . . . We'rt! ju<;t
seeking equality federally. !>lall'w1de and
locally.·
Corning our is also important to o,how
the fuU spectrum of the gay community.
Gingrich said.
.. We have w come out lwrau.,e 11 pt·o
pie ju!>t watch TV. tht'y will thin~ .tll gav
people art' white." c,ingnch -..111.J
he al<.0 cncouraged audll'm t' rrwm ·
bers 10 wnl(· ll'lter., 10 thc1r high 'rhool
gu1darwe counc,elor:. le111ng tlwm knm"
why they cho.,c not to eomt• oul .it th.ti
time 111 1hc1r hfc or how 1lw1r 1 ornmg
out experll'ncc coultl haVl' l>t•t·n better.
Senior fh'nt•t> L.t·ather.,, .! I. who rame
out ao, a b1wxuaJ during lwr fn· .... hnwn
year. '-<!HJ 'IH' W<L' 1mprc.,.,t•d that (.mg
nch tJdJl'd .i vant'tY ot ""lit'.,
.. I think II'> really-1mportanl that 'he
mdudcd '>Ol'IO·cconomit .1rn.l t·tlum ''
.,rn . .,," C ;1·;itht>r'> '>aid.
l ra11 .,.ml he would like to .. ee more
lt•.,h1a11, gt1y. h1.,exuaJ and tran'>gender-
relJtt•<.l rnur,e<; offered by the unjversity.
In .1dd111on 10 providing a re<>ource
tt•11tl'1 and a new tornmg our support
group the college ha-. non d1scrimina-
1 orv h 1r111g pohcit">. offer' health care
Jlld .. urv1vur benditi. for !\ClmC-!>CX cou~
pit·., rt·g1,ll'rcd a'> dome'>IK partner.. and
n·c t·11ll't a j.,'faduate family houo,ing fa.
uht\ .. 1.1rtt·d at cepung '><lnw '>CX cou -
ple., -,,ud l'at \\.aJ..h. d1 rf:'t. lor of t.he re-
'><>UH t· c t•nter and a ... w.tant dean of
'llltklll \
MEPHIST(JM NEWPORT STONE FULL BAR
COCKTAILS ll'\~~~
cm@•~llt!Jli• THE WORLD'S FINEST WALKING SHOES
Complete Design Showroom
"-Where Elegance Is Made Affordable."
FALL WOMEN'S SALE Marblt • Granitt • Slate
Limestone Slabs
"The only tiring bdter than a Mephisto,
is gdting one on sale"
1727 Westcltn. Drive, Newport Beach• 949-642-FEET
Ifs Time To Weigh
All Of Your Options
The
choice is
yours.
The
lledsion
• 1s now.
Surgery for weight control is the only medkally acc!pted treatment wtth
a high proven rate of long-term ~ for severe obesity. Or. Br1an Quebbemann performs
weight toss surgery laparosa>ptcally, so the procedure Is mlnlmally Invasive. Patients may
choose the taparoscoplc gastrtc bypass or the newer option -the Lap-Ban<r adjustable gastt1c
banding system. Or. QuebbemaM was the first surgeon In Orange County to perform the
Lap-Band• surcefY and Is one of only a few surgeons In c.altfomla with smst.111111 eicperUse In
the U5f of thts exdttng new tedlnok>gy.
When conskief1ng a surgeon for this very Important pnndure, ecper1lse In ldvanc2d laparosmpk
surgery Is paramount As Medic.al Director for the premier laparoscopk wetgtlt loss
surgery program In Orange County, Dr. Quebbemann has extensive badcground and Is
highly skllled In both laparoscoplc surgery and bartatr1c surgery. For more lnfQrmlltton,
please a1ll (714} 8&5566 or vtstt the Mt> site at www.~.am
Learn the fads. Lose the. weight
Seating fa Umtted, reservations are required.
AeaM call (800) 52M845.
NO PASSPORT IS NEEDED
OUR MEALS ARE A TRIP TO MEXICO
196 E. 17TH ST. COSTA MESA · 949·64S·7626
Restaurant
Established In 1962
LEGENDS COMING TO IA C4VE
ELVIS IS IN THE BUILDING
SATURDAY, OCTOBER JP SHOW STAKIS AT 10:00 PM
"IT'S A GRFAT MATCH, CLASSIC ROCK 'N' ROU '
AT A CLASSIC RESTAURANT'
j
i'
..
•
I ' '
: HOW 10 GET PU8USttED -a..a.n: Mall to Editorial Plge Editor James Meler at the Deily Pilot. 330 w. Bey St., Colt.-Mea, CA 92827. RI .... HodM: Cati (949) 642-«l86 Fu: Send to (949) fM&.4170
E-fMl:Sctnd to dallypilot§latlmes.com •All conespondence must lndude full name, hometown and phone numbfr (for verifk:a1lon pufPOM9). The Pltot reservM the right to edit all submlask>ns for dartty end length. ' . I
Who's lived in Costa
Mesa for 50 years?
or in the same town since its
incorporation.
KATHLEEN ERIC
Westside
El Toro would carry
South County's share
Now that the planning of
Costa Mesa's SOth
anniversary celebration Is in
full swing (Costa Mesa City
Council wrap-up." Sept. 19).
I'd like to offer a suggestion According to a Sept. 5 letter
to the Daily Pilot and to our in the Daily Pilot, Ann Merritt
City Council: is amazed that people believe
AB ow family has lived in that the answer to eliminating
the same house since 1949 flights over our heads is to
(53 years), we wonder how build El Toro (Airport Debate,
many other residents of WEI Toro would only add to
Costa Mesa have Uved in the pollution"); and so I'll try to
same house for half a explain the situation to her in
century? How many residents as simple terll).s as possible.
do we have that have lived in Orange County is already
Costa Mesa ·ror 50 years, but one of the most populated
not necessarily in the same counties in America, and
domicile? Wouldn't it be thanks to South County cities,
interesting to find out? it is rapidly growing even
Perhaps the Pilot could bigger. One can deny it till
start a series on this subject . they're blue in the face and
and include recollections of bury their head in the sand,
same of~ "o.lcltimers." L _huub.e.fact is without an.EL
know there must be more Toro airport, John Wayne
than just "two" residents who Airport will be forced to
have lived in the same house expand.
MAILBAG
FILE PHOTO I DAILY PILOT
Mike Whitehead gets another nomination to the OP top 103.
It is those additional flights
and pollution that pro·alrport
activists like Rick Taylor,
ShideyCong~~
O'Neil are referring to and
trying to prevent.
El Toro airport does not
have to be a huge commercial
airport, just one large enough
to eUminate the need for our
--eitie&-te ttte-the entire
burden. It is a matter of
taking a faii share of the
responsibility, instead of
LETTER TO THE EDITOR
shoving it all on ow already
impacted communities.
JEAN OLSON
Newport Beach
Parents need to teach
children how to be safe
AB the mother of four
children, I wonder why I'm
not reading this headline:
Parents key to keeping
students safe CA Ooser Look,
~Teachers key to keeping
students safe," Sept. 23).
I remember, growing up, my
parents divorced when I was 8
(a long time ago}. We moved
from a big house to a small
apartment (My mom, brother
and O. Mom had to go to work
(dad refused to give child
support). We were given strict
instructions what to do.
My point is, a lot of parents
are so busy earning a lot of
money, Lh~tnrven't
instructed their kids on how
to behave. It wouldn't surprise
me if some of these high
school students "encowaged"
the teacher.
Wait a minute. 1b.at isn't
right, but this could be the
case: The teachers should still
be prosecuted. Parents: Teach
yow children, at a young age,
.about "good touches and bad
touches." To tell when an
adult ls doing something
that's wrong. Maybe more
education ls needed.
JUOITHHUNT
Costa Mesa
Whitehead for top I 03
I want to ditto the
comment abou·t Capt. Mike
Whitehead for being in the
103 list in for what he has
done and ls doing for our
harbor, boaters, fishermen
and residents (Readers
Respond, "Several names
were missing from DP 103
list," Tuesday). Can Mike
writemore ofthe1n1Vet
stories to other harbors?
DAVE BECKNER
Newport Beach
Pragmatic council candidate misrepresented by letter
I n a recent letter (Mailbag.
"Election choices are easy.
now just make them," Sept.
5), Bill Perkins' campaign
manager Billy Folsom
oversimplifies and, strangely,
turns the nonpartisan Costa
Mesa City Council race into a
partisan analysis. According to
Folsom, aJI one needs to know is
the old left-wing·right·wing
'thing.
Folsom characteriz.es the field
in an oversimplified manner,
and I believe his analysis is way
off base in certain regards.
Olaracterizing his candidate
as a proud shaker and mover
sucll as Colin Powell made me
laugh so hard I spewed my
morning coffee through my
nose. Ow. Folsom's
characterization of candidate
Allan Mansoor was also way off
base. While this ls
understandable, since Mansoor
has never had the opportunity of
sharing his views with Folsom, I
believe a correction is in order.
Mansoor is conservative,
(i;
111 I
HoMEAID
make no mistake; however
Folsom paints a picture of a guy
who can only make right turns
when out driving around town. nus could not be farther from
the truth, as Mansoor is open to
hearing and considering
opposing viewpoints.
How would I lcnow that
Mansoor is open-minded? I have
opposed him on city issues and
was surprised, and impressed,
that he engaged me and wanted
a better understanding of my
position just in case I was
correct in my viewpoint.
Mansoor is not easily
categorized and, interestingly,
his most ardent Costa Mesa
supporters come from the left,
and the right. Strange? Not at all.
as those who have bothered to
get to know him have realiz.ed
that he is sincere and really
wants to improve the city for the
citizens. In closing. I would label
Mansoor as a pragmatist if any
label is necessary.
ERIC BEVER
Costa Mesa
ef6)C ~a{{ J' aire &
:::::::.-:= Pumpfjn Patcli
Featuring:
• Children's Activities
• Nature Center Tours
• Gifts & Native Plants
• Opportunity Drawing
• Food-Bewuges-Musi£
• Silent Auction
• Free Admission!
Sunday Octo6er 13tn
10amto3pm
160116tliStreet, ~'Beach
Part( & 'Enter on 15tfi or 16tli
Pkase ca£[ (949) 645-8489 for
information or to vofunturl
Slardly, OdOW 5, 2002 A7
A works.hop for those
who love words
Scouts break ground on Sea Base
Joseph Wambaugh
and Andrew Winer
to take part in
writing conference
today at UCI.
•Deirdre Newman
Dally Pilot
UC IRVINE -Writing la the
kind of aa.ft in which anyone
can participate. Doing it well.
however. requires finding one's
voice. c:arvlng out a niche and.
If publlab.lng 15 in your future.
procuring a literary agent
Writing, from inspiration to
publication, including fiction
and nonfiction, will be dis-
cussed at a writing conference
today at UC Irvine.
The conference. sponsored
by UC Irvine Extension and the
American Society of Journalists
and Authors, features an eclec-
tic anay of writers. including
Joseph Wambaugh, a former
lAPD detective sergeant and
best-selling author, and An-
drew Wmer, a UCJ master's
program in writing graduate
who published his first novel
th.is year. .
The conference is geared to
appeaJ to a variety of writers -
from those at the beginning of
their careers to those ready to
publish. ··mere really is something
for everyone," said Barbara
DeMarc:o-Barrett, conference
chair and writing instructor at
UC Irvine Extension. "We
realty wanted it to be for wnt-
ers of vanous genres and
stages. H
Wmer helps kick off the con-
ference as one of three panel-
ists discussing how 10 jump
start your wnung. For him. a
career in wriung was more of
an evolution than an epiphany.
A fonner painter. Wmer spi-
raJed into a depression and
clawed his way out by watch-
ing films.
• 1 couldn't afford a therapist
so 1 started renting films,"
Winer said "I became ad-
dicted to narrative -German.
Italian. American:
Drawing on the familiar. he
originally ttied to make his
FYI
•T1ke Your Wrttlng C.rMr to
the Ne>et t..vet• wlll run today
from 8:30 1.m. to 15 p.m. In
Room 100 of the Socltl
Science• Hell. The fH la $166
a nd lncludealunch,book
algnlnga end a rtetptlon for
Joaeph Wambau$Jh. For
Information, cell (949)
824-8336
paintings narrative, but real -
17.ed the art form was not con-
ducive to telling stories. So he
turned to writing screenplays
instead. Bventually. the artistic
soul within him realized poetry
or fiction was more of his
niche and he applied to UCl's
ultra-competitive graduate
writing program
"It w4s a life-changing ex-
perience, really; Wtner said.
"For those two years, you can
call yourself a writer and you
were surrounded by incredibly
talented people -not only
professors. but your peers. The
quality of the work. you were
reading and the analysis of
your own work. was very high ··
He started a novel when he
first entered the program, and
it was published four years
later.
Because Wmer's path to
writing fiction was a challeng-
ing one, he hopes sharing his
story will inspire would be
novelists to persevere.
·1 hope to connect with the
people there by sharing that
part of it, how difficult it is and
sharing a few stories of how it
work.ed out, how I overcame
procrastination," \Vmer said.
As conference chair, DeMar-
co-Barrett will interview Warn·
baugh. His down-to-earth,
self-effacing attirude should be
encouraging to wnter.; facing
bouts of insecurity. DeMarro
Barren said
"He has that Irish sense of
humor. an upbeat way of be
ing, hke 'it's no big deal,'" De·
Marco Barren said. "lie doe~
things differently. I le doesn't
do conventional plots and
outlines. Writers feel that if
they're not doing things ac
cording to how they think
they should be doing, then
they're not doing it right."
Costa Mesa
(949) 631-2110
Dedication cereQtony
ends five years of
fund-raising for the
multimillion-dollar
aquatic facility.
Paul Clinton
Da1lyPil~t
MARJNER'S MILE -What a
long, strange trip It hu been for
the nf!W Scout Se& Bue, which
passed a significant milestone
Friday when scout leaden broke
ground on the much-anticipated
project.
The $5.2-mfWon base. which
is expected to be completed for
summer scouting actfvities, la
nearly five years in the making.
Const.ruction begins about four
months after a long-awaited ap-
proval from the California
Coastal Commission.
With the project. local scouts
are looking at broadly revamping
their cramped existing base,
which was built in the 1930s.
New classrooms, a rowing center
and a new dock to accommodate
the historic Lynx privateer are
expected to double the number
of people who can use the base
and actract a larger number of
scouts and visitors from all along
the West Coast
Nit has been a long time com-
ing and we're thrilled for what it
will do for the children, today
and in the future," said Kent
Gibbs, the Orange County coun·
cil's Scout executive. "The facility
will draw people from all over
the Western U.S."
Scoot leaders. donors and other
community members toasted the
start of construction at a 6:30 p.m.
Friday codctai..I party.
The new base will be double
the si1.e of the exii.ting building.
WHAT'S AFLOAT
• WHAT'S ARDAT is published
penodically. If you are planning a
nautical event, submit the
information to the Daily Pilot. 330
W. Bay St. Costa Mesa, CA 92627;
by fax to (949) 646-4170; Of by
EHTiail to dailypilot ~latimes.oom.
SAILING CLASSES
S.ltboft rentals and private
• Semi-Private for Men & Women
• Lots of Equipment/Free Weights
• Pllates Studk> & Mat Claaaes
• SPINNING Theater-Licensed
• 16 Full Tlme P8f"IOO&I Trainers
• Child Care 8am-noon M -F
• Ample & Convenient Parking
• Yoga, Tai Chi, Stretch classes • a..p, Power Pump, Cardio
• Showera, Steam & Towel&
• adnC....
• a.p..Up Phyllcal ~ Center
• Pelmm•rt Mlllce--Up
Rendering of the new Boy Scout Sea Base in Newport Beach, which began construction on Friday
increasing space from 9.942
square feet to 22,060 square feet,
and allow twice as many scouts
to use its amenities. The base
could serve as many as 60,000
people a year by 2010, scout
leaders say.
Built m 1937, the e:xi5ting base
WM last remodeled in 1900. [)e.
sign-wise. the new base will haw
an L-shape footprinL It's at 1931 W.
~ 1 lighway in Mariner's Mile.
Scout leaders hired Irvine
builder Snyder-Langston, which
has been working next door on
the Balboa Bay aub expansion.
Company president Steve Jones
said they are donating much of
their work. to the scouts.
"It's much more important to
lessons are available at Marina
WaterSports in the Balboa Fun
Zone. Advanced classes include
navigation. big boat, powerboat,
introduction to heavy weather
be emotionally involved in such
a fine project,· Jones said.
"When we see opportunities to
get involved and make a differ-
ence, we do it.·
Scouts alM> plan to expand the
base's offerings. Sailing skills
classes will be available to any-
one in the commuruty, not just
to scouts and school children.
During the swnmer and on
weekends, merit-badge classes
and other scouung-related activ-
ities will probably dominate the
base, but children will be invited
down on weekdays to learn
about the War of 1812.
The base will also serve as a
home for the Lynx. a replica of a
sailing vessel used by the priva-
and first-mate instruction. (949)
673-3372; the Blue Dolphin
Sailing Club, (949) 644-2525; or
Lido Sailing Club, (949)
675-0827.
teers during the War of 1812 to
wage a guerrilla sea war agains1
the British.
The topsail schooner w-as
commissioned by Newport
Beach resident Woodson K.
Woods.
The base has had its share of
controversy. Coastal commission
staff analyst Femie Sy has said
that the sire of the base would cut
off views of Newport Harbor
However. the cornmis.slon. on a
7 · I vote, approved the base in
June.
Scout leaders have raised
about S4 million of the funding
for the base. Friday's event was
also an opportunity for more-
fund-raJsing.
Sailing F9sc:ination oftw'I daaes
in boating safety and ulllng,
year-round for people with
disabilities. Free. (949)
640-1678.
SCHEER
Conhed from Al
be ~ ") Iott and l'D mate che be.t of it. ..
Counc:Omm Ou1a Steel aid m WU pleued with the ¥Ole.
which be Me•wd loog avu-
due. Steel eaid be W8I Dl!9el'
completely ~ pllc--
lng Scheer on adminllb'adYe
leaYe and mn+umdy com-
m unka t ed b1s lveifadoo tD bis
CXJUDdl c:ofletcues CMS' the
put few weeks. The 6nt"""10
cowicilman also aid be l'e'-
gmted f!Vffl QSliQg • ~ to
remOYe Scheer from the ollce.
saying in hindsigN .... the
move was much too hara
·1 was ~ • Sleet said. ·1
didn't realize the fuD c:oose-
quenoes of administra!fve
leave.·
On Sept 9, the ooundl
wwtlmously voted to remove
Scheer and Asst City Atty. Tom
Wood from their offices for at
least three weeks so a subcom-
mJttee could conduct a "more
detailed review" of their per-
formance. Wood was re-
instated Sept 16.
Greg Petersen, a private at-
torney representing Scheer
during the public comment
portion of the closed-session
meeting Friday morning, said
one consequence of the coun·
cil's action has been serious
heallh complications for lhe
63-year-old city attorney.
Scheer has suffered health
complications from lhe stress
and "stigma" of being placed
on leave and remains at home
on hC'avy medication, Petersen
said.
Steel said Friday he was con-
..
c:emed llboul further ...... ac-
dan tam PIClel9oirl on Scb8en
behd'. ~ hm the..,...
Dey\ pubUc ClOOllDeD&I at ihe
pat two epeclal meednp.
Before the COWldl e.d·
jouroed to doled lellloo at
~ spedal meeting on
lhe ~ PmrtOn aDepd •
laundry lilt of wmngdolop on
rhe dty'a behalf and threat·
ened ~ action. Petenon claimed dty ofticlall bad "dJ.
ftJCled <Statements" to both
him and Scheer suggesting the
dty atti>mey "leave employ·
ment of the city.·
He also said the council was
~in continuing to con-
duct closed sessions wtder the
guise of an ordinary petfonn-
ance evaluation when It was
obvious the situation was any-
t:bing but commonplace.
"This Is not a review or a
performance evaluation. Un-
der the municipal code, my
client has been suspended and
there is a specific procedure
set and forth, which you are
required to do in this situation,
which you haven't followed,"
Peterson said.
Peterson said the "review"
had evolved into an investiga-
tion of alleged wrongdoing
and as a result, Scheer was en-
titled to be notified of each
and every meeting on the mat-
ter so he could exercise his
right to request an open ses-
sion.
Terry Francke, general coun ·
sel for the California First
Amendment Coalition, said
the closed-session meetings
held after Scheer was already
on administrative leave were
clearly regarding more lhan a
routine performance evalu-
•
•
~
"Whim • pelmsaent
~ pull~-em.,ao,le Oil ~'-w -pend·
log whateYet kind of enmtna·
don procea they wanl to call It
-what chat uy. la dlei9 are
eome oompl&lnca 01 tomll-1·
ciuliy wrong allepdOOI that
rieed to be reaoNed without
that empkJyee being there. ..
Francke said. "It algnals the
coundl'S sense that aometblng
was wrong and that the dty at·
tomey might well be at fault.•
Steve Hayman, the city'i dJ.
rector· of adminlstrative serv·
Ices, said city oflidals never
oonskle~ Scbeer's leave of
absence as a dlsdpllnary ac·
tion. Administrative leave la •
"fairly routine" procedure wed
by employers lo detennl.ne
whether disciplinary action is
necessary. It Is unfair to as-
swne any wrongdoing as a re-
sult, he said.
The City Council's vote to re-
instate Scheer should resolve
any questions of mJ.sconduct.
officials said.
City officials refuSed to share
copies of a grievance filed
against Scheer by a fellow col-
league last year. nor would
lhey disdose the content of
the allegations. The formal
complaint is considered a per-
sonnel matter and lherefore
not public record, officials
said.
Steel said he discounted the
allegations of impropriety out-
lined in the grievance -which
was part of the material he re-
viewed in lhe past three weeks
-because he fell Scheer had
been completely exonerated
See SCHEER • Pac• A9
H.J. Garrett Furniture
•
Full Design
Consulting
Service
Fine Furniture Since 1960
A Family Tradition of Providing Sero ice and Valut
2215 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa
(949) 646.0275
Open Mon. thru Sat. 10 co 6, Sun. 12 co 5
Quality
Service
Value
COMMUNIT.'f. & CLUBS
When op/J ortunities arise
L ~nie .
opportunldel at the thbd snnual
Newpolt Me.a lnlne fnlafadah
Couod1 Community Service~
held from ll:45 a.m. to 100 p.m.
Oct. 16 at the Newport Beach
Slake at 16th Street and Dowr
Drive.
~nonprodtaindude
Habitat for Humanity,
FJSH.ffubor Area. Share Our
SeMe, Au:nilies Forward, Adopt a
Social Ytblt.er. Hoag Holpttal.
Orange Cout Interfaith SbeJter
and Adult Day Semais of Orange
County.
·0ur goal Is to provide an
opportlmlty for individuals, dubs
and c:;ongregatlons to hear about
banch-on servioe opportunities in
our community without having to
make a commitment to work with
a group," said lane Calvert, board
member and c.hair of the Servn
Fair. "They can ask questions,
hear the opportunities and then
choose for themselves where they
want to invest their time and
talent
"In addition. we will present
awards to individuals, clubs and
groups for the hands-on service
they have given during the past
12 months," Calvert added. l.JJnch
is $7 .50 per person with a
reservation. $10 without. For
reservations, call Calvert at (714)
468-2323, ext. 6003.
ARTS FESTIVAL
The South Coast Fine Arts
Festival will be held from 10 a.m.
to 5 p.m. Oct. 12 to 13 in
Newport Beach at the Newport
Dunes Waterfront Resort 1llis
arts and entertainment event
will feature 100 artists in
dilferent mediums from lhe
Western United States and
Soutlu:m California. All
proceeds will benefit Soulh
Coast Olildren's Society, the
Orange
County non-
profit agency
that provides
homes. care
and treat-
ment for
abused and
abandoned
children.
The festival JIM will blend art.
DE BOOM live entertain· ment. local
cuisine and informative demon·
sttations. A Qilldren's Arts &
Crafts Playground wm be avail-
able where children can make
their own creations. It costs only
$5, and children younger than 5
are free. Newpon Dunes Water-
front Reson is at 1131 Back Bay
Drive, Newpon Beach.
An evening with the artists.
wilh live music, food and wine
and a silent auction, will be held
the night of Oct. 12. Ticlcets:
$125 per person. For more infor-
mation. call (949) 722-3492, ext
25.
WORTH REPEATING
From Greg Kelley of lhe New-
port Mesa Irvine lnterfailh
Council ... ·A hug Is a great gift
... one siw fits all. It can be
given for any occasion and it's
easy to exchange."
SERVICE CLUB MEETINGS
llflS cor.wNG WEEK:
MONll\Y
6:30 p.m.: The Harbor Mesa
Lions Oub will meet at the Costa
Mesa Country Oub for a mem·
bership meeting.
TIJFSD\Y
7:15 a.m.: The Newpon Beach
Sunrise Rotary Oub will meet at
Five Crowns Restaurant.
6:30 p.m.: The Costa Mesa
Newport I larbor Lions Oub will
meet at lhe Costa Mesa Country
Oub.
WEDNESMY
--Did You Know?
*That we are a full service nursery with qualified
"'California Certified Nursery Professionals and landscape
designers. We can meet aJI of your gardening needs.
Come in today to ~ Nurseries and let us show
you how.·
NURSERIES, INC.---
7:15 a.m.; the 2().mernbft
South Coast Metto Rotary Club wm meet at the Center Oub
( WWUtSOUIJta)ostnwtro f'O-
lal)COrg} and the Newport Har-
bor llwanis OUb will meet at
the Untvenlty Athledc Oub.
Noon: The 35·member F.x-
change Oub of the Orange Coast
will meet afthe Bahia Corin-
thian Yacht Oub to bear for a
program by the Orange County
Probation Department
6 p.m : The 55-member Rotary
Oub of Newport-Balboa will
meet al the Bahia Corinthian
Yacht Oub (www.MWpOrtbal-
boa.or&'.
mu~DU'
7 a.m.: The 20-plus-member
Costa Mesa-Orange Costa Break-
fast Lions Oub will meet at Mi·
mi's car~ for a prognun by Jim
Scott on the Costa Mesa Com-
munity Athletic FoWtdatlon.
Noon: The SO-member Costa
Mesa Kiwanis Oub will meet at
lhe Holiday Inn (wwwki~
nis.ory/clublcostamesa); the
Newpon Beach-Corona deJ Mar
Kiwanis Oub will meet at the
Bahia Corinthian Yacht Oub to
hear Kenny Wong of the Orange
County Sheriff's Department
discuss "Crime Scene Investiga-
tion;" lhe 80-member Exchange
Oub of Newpon Harbor will
meet at lhe Newpon Harbor
Nautical Museum for Olctober·
fest with Bratwurst, Sauerkraut
and beer: lhe 100-member New-
pon-lrvine Rotary Oub will
meet the Irvine Marriott Hotel to
hear Jeannie O'Brien of Seeking
People in Need (www.niro-
rary.orp).
• COMMUNrTY a Cl.UBS is
published Saturdays in the Daily
Pilot. Send your service club's
meeting 1nformatton bv Fax to (949)
660-8667. e mail to
1deboom '"'aol.com or bv mail to
2082 S.E Bnstol, Suite 201,
Newport Beach. CA 92660-1740.
COSTA MESA SANTA ANA
2700 Bristol St.
(71 4) 754-6661
2800 N. Tustin Ave.
.(n•> 633-9200
TOM TANAKA, C.C.N.PIO
Manager
Flowerdale Nuney • c.a.ta Mesa
Master Nursery Professional COMPUTE LANDSCAPING • 45 YfARS EXPERIENO
UCENSE II J08553
0;.,<iJ~~ MIKE'I
~~~CARPET$
OVER 30. YEARS IN COSTA MESA
• Now Owned & Operated by Mesa Upholstery •
Lllmln8te Texture-Plmh Ceramic
Flooring ~o~ ~~o"" * 150
Featuring ~LLCX -.rx ft
No Clue lnstillliation / ... ft
Wood
Flooring
Refinishing &
New
·~s
.. ...,.,. Carpet
~v.0"' • 1 u.
Installed 9q ft
Carpets • Area Rugs
Vinyls • Ceramics
Wood • Laminates
CALL NOW
642-8400
DESIGN CENTER
''For All .Your Decorating Needs!"
, . .
. •
• •
• ,.
• • ..
Cc .,.
ak
cU
an
ca
CQ
M
111
kn
th
rte
re
ca
~
s1l
~
se
-i
re
ol
ht
w
$1
ir
Cl
d
p
d
b
((
\1
u
ti
f'
a s
t
F
a
feel -bll¥e lomechlng that will lid tmmeuurably to the whole cu1bJr1J t!llYi.roommt of thls
ara"
Didhyfter.
When I journeyed to Laguna to
aW:h the first SCR &bow, a fardcal
oomnwlAa dell 'arte n:ndltion of
Moliere'& "'llutu&," I didn't know
eny or the actors. nor did they
know mdmaglne my SUJprise
then. when Don Tuok. playing the
neady-adnlded huabend.
readed to David Oements' line, ·1
caughl this DWl trying to seduce
your wife," by 5tonning off the
slD8" and up to my seat He
pointed IUa finger at me and
demanded. "How dare you try to
seduce my wife. ..
"No, no," Clements protested
1bat's lbm nrus. ..
"Oh." 1bok muttered and
resumed bis place on stage.
1bat'a what F.irunes (who had
obviously set me up) meant when
he YOWe<l that "the fourth wall
will be behind the audience."
SCR's performers might not
involve the playgoers quite that
confrontationally, but you
definitely would leave a
perfonnance moved to some
degree or other.
As for the review of "Tartuffe," it
began. "Orange County theater
took on a fourth dimension l~t
weekend with the birth of an
unbelievably talented group won
LO move permanently into
Newpon Beach. Wtkt. raucou..,
and overtlowing with talent, the
South c.oast Repertory ven.iun of
'Tartuffe' burst with incande-;cent
brilliance onto the Laguna
Playhouse stage. leaving iL<;
audiences literally gru.ping with
laughter and clamoring Cor more
at the final turtatn caD."
lt would be too much to say
that the nett 374 SCR producdoos
stir the emodons so bdDlandy, but
many of them did. Of mune. .
~were a fewcumya ~the
way-"Big Soft Nellie," "SIM!d..
"Sub;ect to F\ts" and "La Turista"
come to mind -but the
company\ trade record O'm'8JI
has remained exemplary.
For every misstep noted abc:Ne,
there were a dozen plays like
"Othello, .. "The Birthday Party."
"The c.aretaker." "Mad>eth." .. A
Streetcar Named Desire." "That
Championship Season. .. "One
Flew Over the Qdoo's Nest."
etc., that devated South c:oa&
Rep another ootch in the
playgoers' estimation And all of
these were produced before SCR
ever took up residence on Town
Center Drive in 1978.
SCR rarely tried to mount a
musical. but two shows in that
genre were highly instrumental in
establishing the momentum for
the move from the Third Step
Theater in downtown Costa Mesa
(where the company had
relocated in 1967) to its present
complex.
ln the late 1960s, SCR had
absorbed an acting company in
Long Beach known 3.'> the Actor•,'
Circle Theater. One of the
members of that troupe, Ron
Thronson. teamed up with a local
actress with a musical theater
background named Toni Shearer
to create a rod musical with an
ecological theme.
"Mother r:arm-hur..t upon thl'
scene in early 1971, creating the
same brand of excitement as
"Tartuffe" had six years earlier.
Public resporu.e wa'i so fervent
that the show was brought back
for the 1971-72 season. It even
WHERE'S THE PARTY?
VIP HAIR & NAILS
GIFT CERTIFICATE AVAILABLE
~,,,.,...,..,c.-. ~redtttl~ ............. ...._.
Women Men Children Hair
Haircut Haircut Haircut Treatment
$15 & up $10.00 $6.00 $10.00
. Shampoo Full Set c:J WAXING
Set (Reg.) E~"6"'
$12.00 $15.00 8ldnl .,2"" 00 Underwme., 2""
$1400 . •.•
Man6cure It Pedicure & I PUN:...,...,11'
I
Hllill_.,2""
se.oo Manicure CXllOlt ...,. .., II' Hllill lllg., 2"" Pedicure
-----~ Q4Q 631 3488
spawned a bdef production on
8roedwa)t Then lta aeatoll let
out on dl&rent padll, Thn:aon
to a teaching poGdoo at
Ol8plIWl Uniwnlty and Sbearer
to a prof 'onal lfSWng ~
wider her maiden oame-
'lmnile.
If ecology can •ICceed • a
mtR:al Iheme, why not me
Bible? Sure enough. "Godlll>dl"
81.Tiwd at the end of the 1m-74
eeaaoo and was aJao enoored the
next ymr. That shaw nwbd the
SCR debut of director John· David
Keller. who's been an actor and
director with the rompeny ever'
since. He if now best known for
helming the annual holiday
classk "A Ouistmas Carol." which
began In 1980 and ls stiD fPrlg
strong.Propelled by the success of
these shows, and other sterling
noomusical productions (-rhe
Hot L Baltimore,. "F.quus," "A
DoU's House," "Private lives."
etc.), SCR gathered the financial
ammunition for Its biggest
transition -moving to its present
location near South c.oast Plaza in
1978. The Second Stage-now a
rehearsal hall with the upcoming
opening of the Julianne Argyros
St.age -began operations in
1979.
With the opening of the Fourth
Step Theater, SL""R had more
elbow room artistically and
technically. Bigger, spJashier
productions followed. while works
of questionable merit such as
MAunt Dan and Lemon" and Ille
Gigli Concert" became fewer and
further between.
Actors who would go on to
movie and lV glory performed at
SCR n1e Second Stage was home
to Ed Harris in Mlh.Je West" and
Oennil Fnnz In "Btotben."
Pianz'I old predoct-mate Joe
Spano drcpped by lot a few
ebowl. Jr.an Sbtpletoo played
Madame Arad1 In "Blithe Spirit"
and 1boy 8oberta. Woody Allen'I
lld8ic't In IO many~
tbU"red in~ Becbet KIDed a
Man.. Andmw Roblmcm. who
m.de am P.utwood'a day 1n
"Dirty Han)i" dlrecb!d 'Tue
Beauty Queen of Lenanne..
But SCR'a most significant .
contributlon to the art of theater
has been behind the scenes. lts
c.onaboration Laboratory.
est.ablL<ihed in 1990, has
supported scores of playwrights
such as Richard Greenberg. who
has seen sewraJ or his scripts
born at SCR and will offer his
latest. "'The Violet Hour,• as the
leadolf production on the new
Julianne Argyros Stage in
November.
Thanks to the laboratory. SCR's
audiences have had the first look
at supetb dramas such as Donald
Mruguilies' "Collected Stories"
and Margaret Edson's "Wit."
which earned the 1999 Pulitzer
Prize for drama Other notable
firsts at SCR have been
Greenberg's 1hree Days of Rain,"
David Henry I lwang's uThe
Golden Oilld" and Beth I lenley\
"'flle Debutante Ball."
It's been an incredible journey,
these last 37!h years. and being
able to chronicle it every step of
the way has been the joumali.!.tic
experience of a lifetime.
I lopefully, David, Martin and I are
up for another 37 years.
•TOM TTTUS writes about and
reviews local theater for the Daily
Pilot
---------The Lsgest, rmest,
Frienclest Beauty Supply
& F• Service Salon In
Onmge County
20%
NEW ARRIVAlS OF
z(5)PE!t':'J
~"' '-'""*'
Best Prices -Best Service -
Best Selection
SCHEER
Continued from A8
during due procea. While
Steel considered the allep-
dooa ancient history, he
sensed Schee(s recent leaw of
absence was motivated by is-
sues left wu-esotved from the
In-house complaint
"I couldn't find a single im-
propriety and I thought we
were headed down the wrong
trclCk." Steel said.
Scheer has been with the
City Attorney's Office for al-
most 16 years, providing legal
services to the City C.Ouncil,
the Planning Conunisslon, the
Costa Mesa Redevelopment
Agency and city deparnnents.
Scheer and Woods provide le-
gal counsel and advice during
all official meetings and study
sessions, and are responsible
for the preparation of ordinan-
ces, resolutions, contracts and
agreements, officials ~d.
Counsel also interprets and
applies local, state and federal
laws and conducts and moni-
JUDGMENT
Conbnued from Al
did {anything thatl improperly
influenced her deci ... ion to
smoke or not to qu11:· he .....ud.
The comp.my intend'> 10 file
a motion in tnaJ court to 'lt'I
aside the verc.lict and order a
new trial. I-ailing that, it w1U 3.'>k.
the court to n'duc.e the d.Olount
of punitiVt' damagL" awarded,
Philip Mom' offitial'> c;aid. In
Slhl'dly, October 5, 2002 ,.
ton Ulipdon.
Cound1woman UbbJ Q>.
wan. who was ~ to a
special subcommittee -...
with QrundJwoman him
Robtnlon -to furtbel' a:md-
nlze Scheet'I perfonnanoe., l'e·
f'uled to comment except to
say that she expects Scheer to
return to work.
Steel said he was doubtful
Possible Utigadon aside, two
actions stemming from the ini-
tial performance evaluation of
the legal ad.min.lstrat.ors stlll re-
main: the unfinished audtt of
the City Attorney's Office and
the city's prohibition from us-
ing Costa Mesa-based law firm
Munaugh, Miller, Meyer & Nel-
son. which has frequently de·
fended Costa Mesa in employ-
ment litigation suits.
Hayman said Friday he had
not received any direction
from council members a.bout
those issues.
• l.OUTA HARPER covers Costa
Mesa She may be reached at
(949) 574-4275 or by e·ma1I at
/oltta.harper aJ/atimes com
addition, they said they woul<l
appeal the decision to the state
< .oun of Appeals.
rhe case was ininally filed in
'tale court. It was removed
three ti.mes to federdl court and
-.ent back three tinws to the
'>tale court.
• DEEM BHARATli covers public
safety and courts. She may be
reamed at (949) 574-4226 0< by
e mail 111 deepa.bharath1re
/at1mes.com.
I
I
I
I
J69 E. 17rlt ST. I I Cosu MESA Acaoss fao• RAlphs I
II !.!!~~,~~~:~!~,~~:
Th.1 COU(lO" ~ not be combned ..... any Oii. dilcon OI iale prG
L Oucoum do nc:J opp!)' IO !Or <:'*-produdl. u an & s.tmb procMb ~ 10/31 /<11 ..I ---------------
'I
,,
,
. • . ..
I
I
I
I
-··-· Octablr 5, 2002
AROUND TOWN
·lind~ftMN--tD
theDell\'f'luC.•W.l!lv .... C-....._ CA121Z7; bvtucto
( .. )MM110; ot bv.-no ( ... ) IH-4• 1Ntudtthl*"9.~
Md '11 HllNt of the~ •Will
•I ooM8GI phone number. A
oompl• llldna It waUable at
www.~com.
TODAY
T"9HllWlkt3111Runand
Atnael Ftlr wit ,...,,.,, to Newport
Beecit. The ,.,...,.., went. hosted
bv ~Harbor High Sc:hool,
wftl lnduda 1 t5K Felture Alce, 1
2K Fun ~and 1 l<Jdl1
IOalllo ..-. ....,....8tkwl will
begin It UC11.m. follow9d by
rac. ltlrtlng It 8, 8:30, 9: 16 end
9:301.m. The 1CN>o1 a.1t 18th St.
b9tWMn Dover Drfw Ind Irvine
Avenue. ffee. UM9) 61~11 or
www~t&com;fJhr.
The er.. Coeet College
Community EducltJon Office will
ho.ta book publl1hlng aemlner
for tt'«>M people Interested In
how to gettMfr novels, children's
boob. poetry°' other literary
WOfb published. The seminar
will be hefd from 10 e.m . to 3 p.m.
in room 106 of the Business
Education Division. Registration
Is $99 plus a $40 material fee. The
campus Is at 2701 Fairview Road,
Costa Mesa. For more
informatiOfl, call (714) 432·5880.
St. JcMchlm Church In Costa
Mesa will hold a blessing of the
pet's ceremony at 1 p.m. The
church is at 1964 Orange Ave.
Free. (949) 574-7400.
SUNDAY
The City of Newport Beach will
celebrate Fire Prevention Week
from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. at the
Newport Center Are Station No.
3. The public safety event will
consist of live Are and SWAT
demonstrations at noon as well
as displays from the Lifeguards,
Heftlor ........ ~~
Councy ... Ama.. DMl.Cltme ~ .. ~Al*Mleo..-'Oland
CER't G&Miliwll lllO be allowed
to tour the ftf9 Ind poloe
•dona. Ff9e. The ... "8dott II
It Santa .... ,. Drtve and •
Jam~Aold.
Abl11*'1ofthe ... wllbe
held It St MkNel and All
Ang9fel Epilcoptll °"'rch In
Corona def Mer It 10 a.m. The
dwrch ta It the comer of P9dftc
Vl.w Drive Ind Margwrlte
Awnue. FrM. (Mt) M4 om.
A prGtrwn ebout how 1tte
.,.,.. of the Upper Newport Bev
... t.r, 18111,.,,.. and .... ~
be held from 10 to 11:30 &m. lit The
p..., and Mery Muth lntielp ....
Centlw. The pogrwn, belt Ullld for
egea 6 end up. 'Atl con9lt of
hend9<>n adMtlel gend toward
hefping hunww underlt811d rinel
--. The cenl8r ii It ml
Unlv9rwlty Drfve. ~Beech. $3
per per*>I\. (714, m.am.
A c:11ndlefight MtVlce on the role
of faith In the lives of those
Individual• affected by mental
lllneu will be held from 5:30 to
6:30 p.m. at St. Andrew'•
Pr88byterian Church in Newport
Beach. Refreshments will be
provided after the service. The
church is at 600 St Andrews
Road. Free. (949) 631·2880.
MONDAY
The Alzheimer'• Aaan. of Orenge
County will host a support group
for caregivers from 7 to 8:30 p.m.
at Our Lady Queen of Angels in
Newport Beach. Free. The church
is at 2046 Mar Vista Drive. For
reservations, call (949) 640-1750.
WEDNESDAY
Th• Alzheimer's Aun. of Orenge
County will host two~ at
Our Lady of Mount Carmel Church
in Newport Beach. The first
worbhop, which will run from 11
a.m. to noon, will deal with
mem<>4'Y loss and Its signs, stau-
Spectacular
Savings!
TAHITI 1 D~ c.ARIBBF.AN 7 DAYSI
January Sailinp FREE AIR! Janwzy Sailings Saving Up To 55%
.. S.w an lddidonal $1000.00 Pct Cabin .-&plra 10/lS"
Enjoy Pampered Service W /Only 140 Guests' -Spaciow Cabins!
Romanr:ic • Luxuriow •Liberating • Wonderful -Memorable!
CAl1 Your WJ..Dd.tar F.xpata @ Cru&.e Holiday. Today1
800-4 8-2 2
KJNG: Sale Price Was S1,m
NOW 11,199
Queen: S./e Price Was $1,199
NOW'999
1t1 OCT.17 :;"r
The C°"8 Mlle ChMala• ft# ....
Commerce wiM ho9t 1 ~~ .. ~ boOlt from 1 to l:AI •• :;
e.m. today It th• Cotta M..a
Country Club. $12 If p~ld, 111
at the door. Th• countrv club la :;
at 1701 Golf CourM Drive. For -..
reservetfone, cell (714) 885-9090.'. · , ..
The Newport Garden C8ub wtl •
hold tta monthly m~ng at ~3<1.,;
e.m. In th• Harbor View Club "'
House. The guest speaker wttl h!~
Rex Yarwood. hotticulturllt and .,..
manager at Helter Grove In , ..
Laguna Beech. The club houM I•':'
at 1900 Port Carlow Place, "
Newport Beech. (849l 720-1552. •h
OCT.19
The Harbor ~Mtlan f911ow9tt..,_'
Church In Coste Mesa will holt a·
Mammogram·a·thon from 8:30
a.m. to 12:30 p.m. The event, "',
Ricardo Soto viii direct the Orange Coast College Chorale at noon and 2 p.m. Oct. 26 in a pair
of concerts meant to dedicate the campus' new Arts Center. The concerts will take place in the
Robert B. Moore Theatre, 2701 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa. Free. (714) 432-5880.
aponaored by YWCA Encoreplue
and The Susan G. Komen Brent.
Cancer Foundation, will provide •
breast cancer screenings to the "
community. Free. The church ls .
at 740 W. Wilson St. For more •
information, call (714) 935·9720 ,
or (714) 806-2037.
The Costa M ... Senior CenW
and symptoms. The second
worbhop will run from 1 to 2:30
p.m. and will focua on how to
develop partnerships with treating
physicians. Free. The church ia at
1441 W. Balboa Blvd. For
reservations, call (714) 283-1111.
scholarship awards ceremony at
the UC Irvine University Club.
The reception will begin at 6
p.m. followed by dinner at 7 p.m.
Eight awards will be presented
and National Medal of Science
recipient, Francisco Ayala, will
serve as the keynote speaker.
For more Information. call Mary
Lou Furnas at (949) 644-6789.
performed throughout the
United States and Europe
acquiring acclaim for a style
likened to that of George
Gershwin and Oscar Levant. The
Newport Beach Central Library is
at 1000 Avocado Ave. For more
information, call (949) 717-3801
or visit
www.newportbeachlibrary.org.
will host a Monte Carlo night , ,
Speak Up Newport will host a
Newport Beach City Council
Candidates Forum at 5:45 p.m. at
the Newport Beach Tennis Club.
Refreshments will start at 5:30
p.m. The club is at 2601 Eastbluff
Drive. (949) 224-2266.
FRIDAY
The Adta.v.m.nt Rewarch for
College Sclentlau will hold lta
OCT.13
Co~rt pianist and chamber
musician Sarkis Baltalan will
present a piano recital at 3 p.m.
at the Newport Beach Central
Library. Baltaian, who m ade his
Carnegie Hall Debut In 1999, has
RosEY's AuloBODY
You have the right to
choose your repair facility
Insist on the Best
LIFETIME WARRANTY
Pull Service Colllslon Centw
Insurance ApprovM Shop
949 642-4522
IOSIY'S AUTOIODY
121 lnlbtrial Wey
(.Giia ..
OCT. 16
A bat-themed parent and child
educational program will be held
from 10 to 10:45 a.m. at The
Peter and Mary Muth
Interpretive Center. The program
will provide hands on activities
from 7 to 11 p.m. at the center.
The evening, which serves as the
center's annual fund·ralslng
event, will Include entertainment
provided by the Bob White Trio
(a former lead singer for The
Platters), gaming, bladcjadc,
craps, poker, a silent and live
auction, and a gourmet Chinese
dinner. The center is at 695 W.
19th St. Call for reservations.
(949) 645-2356.
See TOWN, Pa1e Al~
BEDROOM
Treasures Has California~ Largest Selection
Of Bedroom Furniture ... AU On Sale This
Weekend At Guaranteed Best Prices.
Hand-carved
4-Poster
canopy Bed (LEm
luxurious canopy
bed features detalled
hanckarved floral
motifs and rich inlays.
KING:
Sale Price Was $2,499
NOW 51,499
QUEEN:
Sale Price Was $2.099
NOW 51,299
Neo-Classk 4-Post.r led
Four large bedposts wfth gliitnd motif.
Complete with boldly curved hMcfboard d9t.tlls.
KING: Sale Price Was s1,m ... NOW ~
QUEEN: Sale Prfc. Wu $1,199 ... NOW '899
J ' • •
) .
9-!MllOl'I procedures
p will be held from 9 a.m.
2:30 p.m . at Whittier Law
In Costa Mesa. The
lftlhc1n la sponsored by the
Board XI on Developmental
bUitles along with the
e of Administration Justice
Mc:Gt1e>rge Sdlool of Law and
law School. Free. The
I la at 3333 Harbor Blvd. For
rvatlons, call (714) 558-4404.
eo.ta Mesa Chamber of
merce will hol" a businesa
r hou,. mixer at the Country
by Ayres from 5:30 to 7:30
. Free for members, $10 for
ntlal members. The Country
la et 325 Bristol St, Costa
. For more lnfonnation, call
)886-9090.
.H
Luthentn Chwdt and
I will hold its ninth annual
Festival from 9111.m. to 3 p.m .
bera of the Costa Mesa
Department will be in
ance to show some of their
A prognim on how ptWddon
capture their prey and how prey
avoid being captured wUI be held
from 10 to 11:30 a.m. at The Peter
and Mary Muth lnt8f'Pfetive
Center. The program la best
suited for ages six and up. Space
ls limited. The oanter la et 2301
Univ8'9ity Drive, Newport Bead'!.
$3 per person. For reservations
(714) 973-6829.
The 10th annu., lOp Dog Fuhlon
Show will be held at 11 a.m . at the
Newport Dunes Resort The
categories will Include of best
formal wear, best casual wear,
best lingerie/pajamas, best
swimwear and beat master/pet
look·allke. Proceeds raised from
the event will benefit the Orange
County Society for the Prevention
of Cruehy to Animals and
Companion Pet Retreat.
Participants should ched< In at
9:30 a.m . Registration is $8 prior
to Oct. 25 and $12 on the day of
the event, parting is $8 per car.
The resort is at 1131 Bade Bay
Drive, Newport Bead\. (949)
729-0UNE or viah
www.newportdunes.com.
NOV.3
A program exploring the games
N8ttw American dlildren of the
Bade Bay might have played will
be held from 10:30 a.m. to noon
at The Peter and Mary Muth
Interpretive Center. The program
is best suited tor dlildren ages
five and up. Space is limited. The
center is at 2301 University Drive,
Newport Bead\. $3 par person. To
register call (714) 973-6829.
ONGOING
The MOMS Cklb of N.wport
Coast holds monthly meetings
for the stay-at-home mother of
and conducts various activities,
--~
r Mattress Outlet Store
NEW· COSAEOCALLY IMPfRFECT
Get the .... fot Leal
Siltouett~ Originalenl
lumlndte hMcy ~
Vlptt~ window thildings
Palm Beach ni custom shuttm
whldt lndude Pattc. Pool o.y.,
MOMS Night Out. Wd ttlp9,
walking groui-end pleygroups.
The gene...t meedno-.... held In
the·~ at the N9wport Ridge Apel1mentl. Memben1Np
la $30 per veer. The apar1rn•ntl
aN et 1 White Cep L.8ne. ~ tnON
Information, cell (949) 715-3129 or
e-mail npc.monw:/ub•oox.n«.
The eo.t. M.. Ch9pW "'Al l..assen'9 Leads Ctub holds a
weekly meeting for buline9f
profeaalonala to Improve thefr
networking skills and leam how
to obtain new contact&. The
meetings are hftld Tuetlday9 from
7:15 to 8:30 a.m. at Mimi'• C8ffl In
Costa MeN. The caf6 la et 1835
Newport Blvd. (800) 767-7337.
lm.wth couplee with one
Jewish partner are Invited to
partldpate In a diacuulon group
at the Jewish Family SeNioe of
Orange County office. The group
is geared toward dealing with
issues between Interfaith
couples, audl as raising dllldren.
observing holidays, aymbofs in
the home and relationships with
extended families. The cost Is $45
per couple for thnte aeulona.
Preregistration la required. Call to
sdledule date and time. The
office is at 250 E. Baker St., Suite
G, Costa Mesa. (714) 4464950.
Women 50 and older may be part
of a discussion group
coordinated by Jewish Family
Services to address Issues suet.
as anxlefy, depression,
relationships, lonelineas and
family that meets from 10 to 11 :30
a.m. Mondays at the agency
offices, 250 E. Baker St., Suite G,
Costa Mesa. Preregistration
required. (714) 445-4950.
Friends of th• Newport Beech
Public Library Used Book Store
INDEPENDENT
LAND ROVER
SERVICE • PARTS
ere ltklng for petrona to donate
boob to.....,...,, the dwindling
ltodc. Boob may be a.ft at IUfl( of
the three brenc:h Ubrariee at
Bel>oe, Merinera. or Coront def
Mer, or In the book doeet r*'1 to
the Friende Book Store at 1000
Avocedo Ave .• Newport Beadl.
All hardcov9r and paperbac:S
donatk>na, with the~ of
megezlnes and law boob, will be
acc::ept9d and are tax deductible.
·(949) 769-9667.
The .... lnstttuta ofl9n frM
computer classes to people with
fading vision who have difficulty
MHMng the computer SCTeen. The
Oasis Center at 800 Marguerite
Ave., Corona def Mar. offers six
aesalona. Call to sign up for
clasaes. (714) 821~.
A apbftual care dau mNta et
7:15 p.m . Wednesdays at 3400
Irvine Ave., Suite 114, Newport
Bead'!. Call to reserve 111 seat (949)
263-1462.
The Costa Mesa Chamber of
Commerce hosts networlters
lundleon meetings Wednesdays
from 11 :45 a.m. to 1 p.m. at the
Costa Man Country Club. The
cost is $13. The club la at 1701
Golf Course Drive, Costa Mesa.
(714) 885-9090.
A brain tumor support group
meets the first and third
Thursdays eadl month from 7 to
8:30 p.m. at the Hoag Cancer
Center at Hoag Hospital, 1 Hoag
Drive, Newport Beach. Free.
Registration not required. The
group is designed to help
patients and their families
understand and cope with the
illness. (949) 574-6232 .
St. Andrew'• PrMbyt9rian Church
hosts a mental illness support
group from 6:30 to 8 p.m .
•••• Ytet Yt"8 LMll l••llr.11
C.11 U1 Fer A f,.. lttt ..... ••. ,. v .. , Letel ~ .... °"" 40 v .. ,. ., IEntlftt ...
Support Our
Schools
Shop Harbor
Blvd. of Cars
Sundayl In Di.. enftekt Hett C •
800 St. Anckewa Ro9d. tMwpoft
Beed\. (949) 57+2238.
TheJ9wtlh,..., .... ol
Orange Coumy tpOlltlOf'S a
dl8CU9Sfon group focualng on
concerns end responaibillties of
adult c:Nldren and their parents
from 8 to 7 p.m . two Tueedays •
month at the Jewish Family
Service office et 250 E. Bak., St.,
Suite G. Costa Mesa. $10 per
person, per session.
Preregistration required. (714)
445-4950.
The Jewtst'I Family Service of
Orange County has a weekly
parenting support group to help
parents learn strategies for
auoc:essful parenting and helping
them deal with the feelings and
behavior of their dlildren. The
group meets from 10 to 11 :30 a.m .
Mondays et Jewish Family
Service, 250 E. Baker St., Suite G,
Costa Mesa. The group will cover
topics about managing anger,
anxiety and peer pressure
dlildr1:1n experience.
Preregistration required. (714)
445-4950.
The Costa M ... Senior Center
has ballroom dancing with live
music from the Costa M esa
Music Makers from 7:30 to 10:30
p.m. every Tuesday night at 695
W. 19th St., Cos1a M esa. $4. (949)
548-3884.
Jewish Ftimlly Service of Orange
County sponsors an ongoing
healing support group for the
dlronlcally ill. The purpose is to
provide participants with
emotional and spiritual support
to manage illness and its
consequences. The group meets
at 7 p.m. Thursdays at Jew ish
Family Service, 250 E. Baker St .
Costa Mesa. Attendance is free,
•
Salwdly, Octcber s. 2002 All
but reglwatiofl la requlnld. C7M1
446--4950.
ScnbbteClubNo.W .......
from 8 to 10 p .• m. Thuradays 8l
8order9 Boob. Mu*. Cafe ..
South Coat Plaza. 3333 leer St.
In Costa~-$3. New players
are wek»me. (949) 208-9822.
The Cc*t and Stmnp Club .......
from 1 to 3 p.m . Mondays at the
Oasis Senior Center. New
memben Interested In trading,
buying and aeiting stampe and
coins are being IOUght to join
these informal meetings. There
are no fees required. (949)
644-3244.
J.wiah Famly s.vlca ....
ongoing bereavement support
groups for adults at all stages of
loaa. The groups share
experiences, hear how others
deal with grief, receive support
and learn ways to oopa with
sadnesa and losa. One group
meets at 7 p.m. Tuesdays at Beth
Jaoob in Irvine. The second group
meets at 10 a.m . Tuesdays at
Temple Judea In Laguna Hills.
The third group meeta at 1 p.m
Thursdays at the Ezra Center in
Anaheim. Free, but edvance
registration ts required (71 4)
4454950.
Jewish Ftimlly Service of Orange
County provides a support and
discussion group to auiat
participants in their reccvery from
childhood or teenage se1Cual
abuse. The group meets from 8 to
9:30 p.m. Tuesdays at 250 E.
Baker St., Costa Mesa. Advance
regis1ration is required. (714)
4454950.
Two-hour kayak tours with •
trained naturalist guide are
See TOWN, Paa• A12
Moa-Fri 7:00AM-6PM • S.. 7:00AM-SPM
O.....tSand.cy
Lunch • Dinner • Sunday Brunch
251 Shipyard Way • Newport Beach
Please cafl f0< hours. dtrectt00s & reseNatJOns.
: (949) 723-0621 =
creen SV.!!!2!!
SATURDAY
Orchid Sale Orchids $500 to $2500
OCTOBER I, 12, 11, 28 . °"" To ,,.. Public • IMIRY SATURDAY 9-4 P.M.
1 OOO's IN STOCK
...
AU ~. October 5, 2002
TOWN
Contilu!d from Al 1
ofJeted at 10 e.m. Sundeys from
the~ Dunes w.teffront
Re9oct. The reeon It et 1131 Beck
Bay Drive, Newport Beech. $20,
or $10 for Callfomle Wildlife
Campaign end Newport Bey
Neturellsta end Friendl
· member&. (800) 686-0747.
A YQlll end dence ._la held
from~ to 5:45 p.m. Tlleldays
et the Center for Spiritual
Oltc:overy, 2860 Mesa Verde Drive
Eut, Suite 111, Costa Mesa. (714)
754-7399.
The .... Connie AydcJNrt .....
discussion group using the book
"Conversations Witt\ God" from
noon to 1 p.m. Tuesdays at the
Center for Splrttual Dlsoovery.
2850 Mesa Verde Drive East.
Suite 111, Costa Mesa. Bring a
lunch. (714) 754-7399.
Manhal'a TM Kwon Do In Costa
Mesa offers free self-defense
classes to airline pilots and flight
attendants. Classes are taught
by three-time U.S. National
Champion Tom Marshall.
Marshall's is at 333 E. 17th St.,
Christ Church By the Sea
Unncd M~hodm
1400 W B;;ol~ Blvd .• N~tt lku.h'
8 ·~ .... -Aduli \und.oy X/i.JOI
8 )0 ft 10 '-"'-\!;onh.p wl a.Jdmi. !>aad..1 StJ.JOI
Tbc ~. Dr. George R Criap. Pastor
(9-49)673-3805
Costa Mesa
MESA VERDE
UNfTB) METHOOIST CHURCH
1701 Baker, C.M. Worship & Church School
8:30 and 10:00 a.m.
Of. Richard 71 4 979-8234
Newport C.eotcr
United Methodist Church
Rev. Cathleen Coots, Pastor
160 I ·Marguerite Ave.
corner of Marguerite and
San Joaquin Hills Rd.
(949) 644-0745
&m Quur Wbrship Snvia
/Oam Worship and Chrldrmi
Sunday School
Youth mutrng weekly
Costa Mesa First United
Methodist Church
420 West 19th Street,
Costa Mesa
(949) 548-7727
e:v. Michael Bankhead, Pastor
..
n..·ttntaa..e1~
A o..lng wteh DMNW ....-t Bead\ mMta • ta.m; end 7 p.m.
group ....... by JeWleh Femlly at Holpftel Aoed .... Sus*tor
Service of Onnge County. The Avenue. Loee1he ....... end
group• led by an~ · have fun. (948) tll50-:133Z.
,,.~ ...... 191 ....
Qub in.-.. 10 a.m.1he tNrd
w.dlieedey of Md\ month,
8'Ccept July end Dlcembet, at
veried loodone. TM group, 1
IOdal orglrizedon for people .
who have lived In Newport~
for f9wer th8J' ftw ~. meets
for eventa, ldfvtdee end fWd
tripe. (949) 846-9922.
counMk>r end me9ts at 8 p.m.
Tueacleys at the Jewish
Federation Cempua, 250 E. Bater
St., Suite G, Cocta Mesa. (714)
445-4960.
An lntlllfalth couplea eupport
group la ottered by Jewish Femily
Service of Orange County. The
group addressee Issues faced by
couples in which one partner Is
Jewish and the other la not,
including raising children,
observing holideya, displaying
symbols in the home and
relationships with extended
families. The group meets for
three weekly sessions
Wednesday evenings at Jewish
Family Service, 250 E. Baker St.,
Suite G, Costa Mesa. (714)
445-4950.
The Costa Mese Chambw of
Commerce sponsors a
networking luncheon lit 11 :46
a.m. Wednesdays at the Costa
Mesa Country Club, 1701 Golf
Course Road, Costa Mesa. (714)
St. John The Divine
Episcopal Church
183 E. Bay St.
Costa Mesa
949-548-2237
Comer of Bay & Orange Ave.
Sunday Services:
8:00 am and 10:00 am
Sunday School 9:45
Holy Eucharlst at 7:00 am
on Wednesday
The Rev. DJ. Barbara St-art. Rector www.st ncm.
~t Afimad &}JI¥
Pacific View al Marguerite
Corona dcl Mar • 644-0463
A Ctmf'l'Kallon of thr Antfuan Comm1m1on
BU/WING OUR FAllJ/ WI/NG UIRJST
AND SE.RV/NG OUR ('01\fMll/\'ln
Inc IV-ii r~m I> lb~nc-. Rector
'l ~DA) 'I( 111 m;l l
fl .Alli -Hoh I u..h~1111
•) ~m 'und.11 &hool!Allult l\1hk \1udy
I 0 am ·Chor.al I 11lhJm1
NIJRJfNI CAN/ AIAll.Ah/ I
SAINT JAMES CHURCH
EPISCOPAL
"A c.-Jtrw..IN ~ mS.., .... Orist a t.1 m Slriw'
The Very ROY. Canon David Anderson,
R.oor
3209 VICI Udo =~
The See ....... aNp l)el Mer711
of ~County~ a
prog,.,., fOf' boys end Vot""1 men
ages 14 to 18 lnterellt9d In uling,
aeamaNhlp, piloting, rMMgdon
and crufsing. Meetings are from 6
to 9 p.m. w.dne9deya 8t the See
Scouts Sea Base. 1931 w. Coelt
Highway, Newport Beedl. (949)
642~ or (949) 561-8591.
a.. SenlorCentilraftar'S
ongoing asalsta~. counlellng
and refemsl services for aenlora.
(949) 644-3244.
The Coltll Meia Senior Cltlmn
Square and Round Danoe Club
seeks e><perienced dancers to join
its group from 9 to 11 a.m.
Thursdays et the Costa Mesa
Senior Center, 19th Street and
Pomona Avenue, Costa Meea.
(714) 545-5669.
Arthittla Foundation inatJuctof
Hillary Stone leads an e><erclse
class at 11 a.m. Thu~aya at the
The ~aleheNwlpolt
Bead't Public Ubntry eeek boot
donatiON to raise ft4nda for the
library aystem. Boob may, be left
et anv of the three branch
llbrariee, Jndudlng, Balboa,
Merinera or Corona del Mar. They
mey elao be left In the apeclal
book dONt next to the Friendl
Bookstore at 1000 Awc:ado Ave.
All hardcover and paperbadc
boob are eoceptAtble, with the
exception of law boob and
magazines. Oonnons are
tax-deductible. Cell to arrange to
have boob pidted up. (949)
759-9667.
The Thunday Morning Women'•
Club, a 40-yeaN>ld friendship
club, Is seeking new members.
A
+ "A God-cmtercd parish community, instructed by the Word of God
and renewed by the Sacraments"
Our Lady Queen of Angels
2046 Mar Vista Drive
Newport Beach, California 92660
(949)644-0200 Fax (949) 644-1349
Rev. Monsignor William P. McLaughlin Pastor
LITURGIES: Saturday, 5 p.m. (Cantor),
Sunday, 7:00 (Quiet), 8:30 (Contemporary) 10:00 (Choir),
11 :30 a.m. (Cantor) and 5:00 p.m. (Contemporary)
Newport H•rbor
Lutheran Church
tLLC.AJ
798 Do¥W Dr. Newport Beecft
Tradltlonal Lutb•nin
Paetor David Monge
Worehlp Service with
Holy Communion
SundaY 9:18 em
Q9LDCAM AVM•••
ST. MARK. ~YTERIAN
CHURCH
'
Forthe
Advertising News
Wonhtp 10:00 A.M.
HARBOR CHRISTIAN CHURCH
(Dlaclpla of Cllrtsl)
2401 lrriM /llN.
New,otthadl,CA
(141) 145-5781
lllliltlr: Dr. DIMll lllelt --.....
TEMPLE ISAIAH OF
NEWPORT BEACH '
LM:liUrl .... fOr Jewtah and
• ACCEmNG OTHERS"
(Galaoans 2:11-21) RAB~.rur-~
On (WORLD EVENTS)
Every Tuesday at 7:30 pm
. October 8,16,22,29
Donation: $30.00 for lhe
enttreHries.
t
Or. joM A. """"-'· Jr.
l'reo.chm1
Sarurd•y, October S, 2002, 5130 r.M.
Sund•y, October 6, 1002, 1130 ac tO:IS A.M.
Wednaday Njpe lib&e fnady, 7IOO P.M.
Worship 9:30
FIRST CHURCH OF
CHRIST, SCIENTIST
For reeervlltlona C911:
.(949) 548-6900
2401 lrvtne Ave.
NMIWD!lft a..ctl.
SECOND CHURCH OF
CHRBl',SClENTJST
3303 V\a Udo 3100 Pac:dlc View Dr
Nawpr.xt l)e(d\ ~ 8eaol'I
673-1340 or 673-6150 644-2617 or 675-4661
O\wch 1oama6pn. Cud\ lOam
bmy Sc::hool 10 csn SUDcDy SdlOCl 10 am
~MlllllGI'~'"' ti. .. ......... •a.w Z HlrD,_ ... _ ......... ,,, ..... AM .. ..,.., ... _...~._.._.., .. ._..
Alt4 ... ...., ................................ .
•11111h ht•• .. , a • ..... tlllr MDMC... • 1" FiniClldol(lri(Sdail • t'
The ..,. wt.acti lftdudee ootf,
bridge, ..... end gounNl
~mMta.t11 .. m.on1M
Mc:iond l'hurildl¥ of .wHY monltt
8tlhe ~ Hotll In~
Beecft.:T)w lw~ .. $23 end
J~ entertilinment. The hot*
la et *6 MacArthur Blvd. (714)
842-6883. .
1M Newpoft .... Wllclng aub
meec. et 9e.m.end1 p.m.
Mondev through Seturdey, and et
7 p.m. Sunday. Welecen should
meet et the lnteneetioci of
Hospital Aoad end Superior
Avenue. Free. (949) 660-1332.
The Ameftcen Legion wll ..... et
7 p.m. the third Tueedey of every
momh. The meetings, whid'I deal
with vetenin luuee end
community eenlice, will be held
a1 the Costa Me99 Air National
Guard. The national guard la at
2651 Newport Blvd. Free. Mary
Holler, (714) 646-2777; Bill
Mimlaga, (949) 650-0894.
lntllffelth coupe. with one
Jewish partner are invited to
participate In an interfaith couples
discussion group hosted by the
Jewish Family Service of Orange
County. The group is geared
toward those couples looking to
make Judaism and the Jewish
community part of their
' rMtlonehlp. The~ meell In
the ~Inge In the~ oMce at 250 E.W... St., Su,_ G, coae Meu. ,...,,...don a.
requfr9d. (7M) ~ 4960.
Nlghtlymeednee ........ ln
CoN Mesa and NewpOft Beed\
for enyone who warrta to
overcome nicotine edcktlon.
Sdledule or (714) n~1oe or
(800) M2-0668.
The Newport Sports Mawn,.
nonprofit organization, operates
a free museum at 100 Newport
Center Drive, Newport Beedl. The
museum, whldt hH one of the
wor1d'a largest collectfon• of
sports memorebRLI, la open from
9 a.m. to 6 p.m. weekday• and 10
a.m. to 3 p.m. on Saturday. (949)
721-9333 or www.~tUpc:H1S
muS#H.lm.org.
The &tanda High School~
Teacher Student Alan. hosts a
monthly paper drive every
Saturday from 9 a.m. to noon In
the school's northwest parking
lot, on the comer of Eatancia
North and Placentia. Bina are
available for drop off f1\18ry day of
the month for people who prefer
to go at other times. All funds
raised go to the association. Free.
The sdlool is at 2323 Placentia
Ave., Costa Mesa. (949) 515-6500.
PUBLIC NOTICE:
The 2003 Lexus Models
HAVE ARRIVED!
Fa..a,, TIN Donor ~.,RAH &a
Loolti111 For/
A Doctor Who Spends Timc With You TQ Listen.
Robin Ann Ecke~ M.D.
Board Urtifod Family Physician
Dr. ~ is a 8omi ~ ~),' Pbysjcian and a UCLA trained
MedK:al Acupunaunst who spccialius tn integrative Medicine to
promote Opcimum Health and Wdl Being
J-;. Dr. Etlln11• A IW a-w.-Pr.ft.,. . c:...~ n. IWJ..;., r.,c
\lindl11l11l" H.l\l d \t1l" Ht dt1l l1011 1\I1\\1<
. ThroiWl a variety of presentation ~11a, you wiU be
mcroduccl co conccpa includin~ breathing, movement exercises
and mcdfranon practic:cs
You Arc Cordially Invited To Aacnd The Pollowi~ ..
FREE!/NTRODUCTORr
IJECTURES
Thand&yOct.. 10 & 17
, . '1_'p.m. -9 p.m.
~ is liti#MI. ·WJ"""'" ranw M'' }/Md I OCMllld • t 2o E. I Sch Strciet. Co.ia Ma. Por.~nuncna Plate CID • M9.i2s.oooo --Dw•••• ••
I
I
f
IN THE WINGS
The heart
of the
theater
R ae Cohen's smile spa.rk1e.s
as she greets me in the
lobby of the Newport
Theatre Arts C.enter. In my
two-plus years as features editor
at the Daily Pilot, fd heard a lot
about the small theater on Cliff
Drive with a view of the Wcller.
But until ~. l hadn't
gotten around to visiting.
What prompted me. sony to
say. was an
accidental
exclusion in
the Pilot's I 03
fviost
Jnfluen tial list.
As president
of the center
for the past 10
~Cohen
was supposed
to share No.
100 with the JENNIFER
Jeaders of two K MAHAL
other
SIUdly, October 5, 2002 All
<:ommunity theaters in Newport
Mesa -Damien Lorton of Costa
Mesa Ovic Playhouse and Alicia
Butler of llilogy Playho~
Unfortunately, a wrong file got
pulled and Cohen was left off the
Ii.st.
That didn't seem to matter to
her as she showed me around the
90-seat theater, which is CUJTently
.presenting George Beman1
'.Shaw's ·Mrs. Warren's Profession.·
Cohen, a short-haired. motherly
'woman whose eyes beam
'happin~ has been involved
with the center's board for all 24
years of its existence.
KENT TREPTOW I DALY Pl.OT
Sarah Vure. curator of the Orange County Museum of M, points out a detail on one of Frank Lloyd Wright's leaded glass windows on Thursday. The windows
show the influence of Japanese design on Wright's work. The exhibition ·ught Screens: The Leaded Glass of Frank Lloyd Wrighr will open Oct. 5.
• P.ven after 24 years. I still run
4nto people who say 1 didn' know
there was a theater up there!'" she
sa.kl
ln 1979, when the~ of
the Newport Theatre Alts C.enter
was aeated. c.ohen was the
recording seaetary. Though she
1814 she didn't know much about
theater. she knew 00.V to take
minutes. •So I came, got on the
board and learned how to do
everything..
• Everything" encompasses
most of the business in show
business. As president of the
I I ·member board. the
60-year-old mother of three is in
charge of~ beips with
play selection, oversees ticket
sales -season tickets are on sale
through Oct 13, she reminded-
works with the city and watches
· over the center's spending.
·11 is so much fun,· Cohen said
• 1 've met people here that I'd
~run into o~ in regular life..
See TlfEATER , P .. e A16
An exhibit of Frank Lloyd Wright's Jeaded windows
at the Orange County Museum of Art shows the
influence of Japanese culture on America's architect
Youn1Ch•n1
Daily Pilot
I I is said that an:hitect Frank Lloyd
Wright once thought of windows
as a pan of his job that forced
him to •cut holes· in his
creations.
But when he started doing ~at his
contemporaries were doing -creating
original stained glass for residential
buildin~ -that attitude changed. And
in typical Wright fashion. he got artistic.
His windows. called •light screens"
for their inspiration from Japanese shoji
screens and for their ability to mesh the
outside with the inside, are anything
but stained glass in the cathedral sen~
They are delicate looking. embody hLc;
stages as an artist and are as
contemporary in feel as stained gl~
·can be.
They are aJso hanging on walls and
not as part of houses for the Orange
County Museum of Art's exhibit titled
·ught Screens: The Leaded Glass of
Frank Uoyd Wright,· opening today
and running through Jan. 5.
·They were all very modem in their
day,· said 1ulie Sloan, curator for the
exhibit and a stained glass expen in
Massachusetts. ·eerore Wright.
windows looked like the ones from
Tiffany's, from the 1880s. They were
colorful. they were definitely
representational.·
The Tiffany that Sloan speaks of is
Louis Comfort Tiffany. the son of the
well-known jewelry family.
But Wright's windows. made between
1885 and 1923. are abstract and feature
a lot of clear gla.s.\.. Some are a mix of
Japanese screens and prairie motifs. a
mix of Japanese screeru. and confetti. a
mix of Japanese screens and subtle
glass pieces of green and purple to
evoke nature.
"I le was one of the biggest dealers in
Japanese prints and he was deeply
interested and very knowledgeable
about Japanese an: Sloan said. "He
was really quite fanauc about it, though
he never ad.mined that Japanese an was
of any infiuence to him.·
The exhibit is divided into three
sections.. The first is titled ·A
~It's all about the applause
Dale Kristien, known for her work. in
'Phantom,' returns to OCC tonight for a
concert of Broadway favorites
It's part of the reason she was
able to play the same role for
more than four years and the
reason she first started to Jove
performing.
·1 absolutely hated woridng on
stage." Krfstien said of her first
show in b.lgb school •1 hated It
'cause it was so much wodt. Until
open1og night when the audience
applauded. Then I reahed there
was payback. 1be audience feeds
)'OU."
So did wod:lng wtth the
odglnal Phantom, Midlael
CDwbd.
lrilderl bu sung wtth six
pbanqJml In her run wtth the
~ abow, but saya "you
newr b.ga your &It•
~WU cbe fhlntom. •she
met. •1 never t.d to act. He was
just there and being that guy. so
he broke my heart every night·
She wiD sing favorites from
•Phantom of the Opera· and bits
from other Broadway classics
tonight with a friend.
Kristien started slnglng when
she was 18, when she raliUJd lhe
could. She was too shy before
then to rully belt It out and~
anyone tell her she Ml (J>Od. But
nearly two dec:edel of..,..
around YOally wttb her twin
sisttJr ga\le Krlsden Che •
coofidenm to audition b a pis)'
·1 p..-whit J hid deiideoi
was I ccUd ling better thm cbe
people I hid beard at ICbool.•
sbellld. •
A few )'fllll later lhl landed
FANTASTIC FIVE
MONDAY TUESDAY
Vocabulary of .. orm ·· and chronicles the
item!I and styl~ that influenced Wright.
ln one glass window are German
educational toys his mother bought for
him when he was little. They taught
him about lines. fonn and panems.
The section also shows Wright's early
windows. made for somewhat Victorian
looking houses. He u~ what are called
"curvilinear forms.·
The second section is titled ·A
Language of Patterns.· The windows
here show d eep traces of Wright's
prairie style and his use of "rectilinear"
forms. ln his prairie style. the architect
used a 101 of autumnal colors.
asymmetrical and chevron shapes and
slopmg roofs
"It was supposed to. m some way.
echo the rolling hills of the prairies ...
See WRtGKT • Paa• Al6
Soprano
Dale
Kristien
says she
likes
wonangon
home
~ projects, a
tar cry from
1heimage
sbe's
presetrted
as Chi istine
Dlaein
"Phnom~
tbe()peq.•
WEDNESDAY
5 Cll I I ' I W EdMf'd 9lllftl ~Gt ....... -. ..... ....... ~ ...
... JDll ..... QllW~--tllia -....... = 5 ... ~-. ........... . ........................ ,.,...
•
A&4 Satwdly. Oc1l>ber 5. 2002 .. SOCIETY
THE CROWD
Three on a mission .
to save the Mission
T bree prominent Newport
Beach women with hearts
as broad as their smiles
jo1ned fonnldable forces to chair
"Romance of'lbe Mls8ton: a
gala fund-raiser for the
preaervation ofMlssion San Juan
C&pistrano. Cedlla Nott. Ann
Rm8y and ..... Qml \\Well
cha1red the recent celebration
that attracted hundreds of local
supporters under the ampk:eS of
Friends of the
Mlssion.
whidl isled
/ by the
dedicated
fJecta
Andenon.
The
·Mission
Preservation
Fowl<iation
Board B.W. COOK considers the
task of saving
the Mission a project ·
tantamount to preserving what
they call "The American
Acropolis."
"The Mission is the birthplace
of Orange C.Ounty infused with
more than 220 years of glorious
and turbulent history. It is our
story and our heritage," Udo
peninsula's Nott said, attending
the gala with husband Bruce.
Museum administrator Gerald
Miller was on hand to welcome
and thank honorary chairs
Sandy Segerstrom DanJels and
John Daniels for their generous
underwriting of the event. The
Daniels family shared the special
occasion with their daughter,
Tiffany.
Another pair of very generous
donors were Dick Marron! and
Priadlla Moore, joining John
Oravtnsld, Nella Webster, Erin
Honeycombe, Heathyr
Manclark, Joycelyn Lutter. and
Bruce and Cecilia Nott's
daughters Tracy Gottlieb of Lido
Isle and Amy Nott of Newport
f
NEWPORT BEACH
'30 UDO PARK M .
949-675-3474
WWW.
From left, Nella Webster, Cecilia Nott, Electa Anderson, Mary Roosevelt, Ann Raney and Janet Curci
Walsh spend an evening at the Mission San Juan Capistrano.
C.Oast.
The evening began with a
reception at the great stone
church monument and Mission
gardens with hors d'oeuvres
served by Olef John Rlwra
SedJar of SedJar Southwest
Kitchen. Grilled pineapple and
melon salsa served in
molcajetes, a Mexican mortar,
were passed to guests along with
dried Spanish chorizo and
Manchego cheese served on
eggplant olive tapenade crostini.
At dusk. the black-tie crowd
moved to the main courtyard of
the Mission for an official
welcome. Dinn er was served as
the final sun set to the west with
Olef Cluistlan Rasslnoux of th e
Ritz Carlton, Laguna Niguel,
collaborating with Sedlar on a
very special presen tation of
California cuisine.
Jim Dale served as master of
ceremonies and auctioneer, with
dancing in the courtyard
continuing late into the evening.
The event was also supported
by Orange C.Oun ty developer
Anthony Molao, with wife
Melinda. Anthony Moiso is
president of the preservation
board, which receives
participation and support from
p rominent Orange Coun ty
citizens, including Wylle
Altken, N. Clu1stlan Anderson,
R.J. Brandes, Willlam
Cwngn>91 Michael Hagan,
-. 5 '~ . ,-n a .. rlJ -•• •• •• •• -•• •• •• ••
Robert McDonough, George
O'C.Onnell, Ruaeell Penniman
and Myron SulruL
The evening at the Mission
has become one of the m ost
elegant and popular events of
the late summer on the
California Riviera The blending
of historical and sp iritual
aspects of the occasion creates a
tone that exudes a most positive
and warm community
association. A few of the lovely
Newport ladies spotted in the
crowd were Mary Roosevelt,
Barbara Carr. Kathy Tuylor,
Wendy Cantor, Janet Ayres,
SandJ Jackson, Elaine Debnan,
Mary Anna Jeppe, and the
beautiful Mary Buckingham.
I 111111 • • • •• • • • •• ,_ -,_. ,_ -,. --· ••• -•• ,,. . , ... , .. a ii• •• ,_ •• •• •• • • • • -
MEN • WE HA VE YOUR SIZE
lllSTOI
2332 North Tustin Ave.
Orange. CA 92865
(714)283-4950
OPP 7 DAY8 A Wl!l!l<l .......~ ,___.,. .... ,...,. ,.,.. . -,,_....
Plug into the Pilot Classified section to find services from
electronics and plumbers, to landscapers and pailters.
Jbrke:..JobnsOn
degree from Vanderbilt
Unfvenltj la NuhvUJe,
1mn. and .. muter'•
degrw frOm Harvard
UnMntty ta Cambodge,
Mau. She is cwnmdy
working u a teacher at
Harbor Day School in
C.Orona del Mar.
The future bridr.p>om,
SOD of Or. and Mn.l>erin
Joluuon of ThoUM.nd
Oab, graduated from
Thousand Oab High
School and received bis
bachelor's degree from Fort
Lewta C.ODege in Dw1mgo,
• Colo. He ts currently
employed with Pacific Life
in Newport Beach.
Mr. and Mn. &Obert .
lllrb of Corona del Mar
announce the engagement
of their daughter, Susan
Elizabeth Ihrke of Newport
Beach, to Sean Pedn
John.Ion ol Newport Beach.
An Oct. 19 wedding b
planned ln Newport Beach.
• WEDOIN08 AND
lNGAQEMINT8 run
Seturdeys. For a form, p1 ....
call Chri.tlne C.rrillo et (949)
The~
graduated troai c.orona del
Mar HJ&b School and •
recetied her bilcbelot's • Pt-C298.
l.ONDON _5345·
MAIS -sass·
MAMCJURr _s3a9· ·
nMm) -SJ90"
ROME -S419"
HONG 1CDNG-S4S s·
8ANGICDK -• J s·
BAu -S69T
-PRAGUE -S426"
When Jn the Cook lalanda .. • • •
.•
..
.c
I •
-
visitor, it ~ that time atallda -*ldecS ~ wllt'I most at the •
still and the whole country exllta .....,_ d • lafoer r..:lf1 but l9l8nng ~
just fol' your pleasure. witti -1oome an 1ntim81e allnoephefe. making ii Ill'
smiles. warm 9Yfl, and a friendly ldelll lor experle11a11g the exotic magic
... MOM o4 humor. ' of the South Pacific ,
11111 7 Days from $1186 ~ '! ....._______ ft--------... -~RllllRB -({)
I ..
AFTER HOURS
•Submit AFTER HOURS ltem1 to
dtt Deity PMot, 330 W. Bey St,
c;o.ta Mesa, CA 92827; by fax to
(Mt) &ee-4170: or by calling (949)
~·A comp.te fist la
~teble et www.dMlypllotoom.
SPECIAL
f'C)OOF'EST
lhe 18th Mnual Food, Wine and
Mic:n>-brew Fest wffl be held from
8 to 9 p.m. Thur8day at the
~·Home Store/Crate &
a.rret wing of South Coaat Plaza,
3333 Brtatol St, Costa Mesa. The telti""· whk:tl benefits Second Harvest Food Bank. will feature
Nmplel from local restaurants,
regional vineyards and
micro-breweries. $40 in advance,
$60 att.he door. (714) n1-1343.
NIT OF Fl.OWERS
The UO Arboretum and Orange
County Ane Arts will present the
annual "Art of Flowers" fall art
and flower show from 10 a.m. to
4 p.m. Oct. 19 at the comer of
Campus Drive and Jamboree
Road on the UCI North Campus.
The event also includes the
Arboretum'• fall perennial sale.
$2, free for children and members
of the Friends of the UCI
Arboretum. (949) 824-5833.
FUND-RAISERS
'LIGHT THE NIGHT
South Coast Repertory will open
the new Folino Theatre Center
today with the 24th annual gala
ball, titled MUght the Night:' The
dinner dance, which will include a
tour of the new facility, will begin
at 6 p.m . with a reception at SCR's
new Audience Plaza, 655 Town
Center Drive, Costa Mesa. $750 or
$600. (714) 708-5504.
FlESTA rTAUANA
Opera Pacific will hold Fiesta
haliana IV from 5 to 10 p.m.
Sunday at the South Coast Village
Piazza at Antonello Ristorante.
3800 South Plaza Drive, Santa
Ana. Along with dinner and
dancing, the fund-raiser will
include a music and dance tribute
to the 1950s and '60s era of Italian
film. S250. (7141 830-6323
BALL£T CHARrTY
The Ballet Montmartre will present
its Ballet Montmartre Charity Gala
at 5 p.m. Oct. 12 at the Village
Crean, 2300 Mesa Drive, Newport
Beac:.ti. ~$60. (714) 241-7424.
GREAT CHEFS
The 17th annual Great Chefs of
Orange County food and wine
JEFF & LYLEEN EWING
The Buyer Interview
The first step 10 matchtng you w11h
the perfect home u.~uall} mvolves
an in-depth interview with the
Realtor who will help you 10
establish a price range and
determine the fcarurcs that you
occd in a home.
Tht agent will ask a lot of
qucatioos. Where do you work?
A.re schools an important factor?
Do yoo have childrco or pets? Do
yoo have hobbies that will create
lpCQaJ DtlClis? The more inf onnatioo
your Realtor bas, thc easier it will
be to etiminlt.e cbe homes dW will
not wen for yoo Ind show you the
ones in your price range that
should fit your needs. A good
Realtor can be a tremendous
resovce in this process by
pmidiq you witb information
lboit the bmnes tbla 11rC available,
u •ell 11 about abopping
f«ilities. commanity service.,
p1blic traosportatioo, aod
~ emc:oitu Thm ii
aore ., ~ a pa& real ~
profe11ioaal tbao merely
~ 11ie belt Rahon are
al10 IM bac littenera ud
event. bendtJng the NMlonal
l<Jdney Foundation, wffl be held
from 1 to 4 p.m. Oct. 20 et the
Sutton pt90e Hotel, 4600
MICAlthur Blvd., Newport Beedl.
The event will featun1 dlahet
from 19 chefs around the county.
$100, $160 ~VIP reception.
(310) 6'1-8152 or
www.kidneysocat.org.
MUSIC
CABARET NIGHT
Broadway legend Polly Bergen
will open the Orange County
Perfonnlng Arts Center's Elvin
and Marjorie Shane Klein Cabaret
Series at 7:30 p.m . today at
Founders Hall, 600 Town Center
Drive, Costa Mesa. $49. (714)
740-7878.
THE RIGKTIOUS BROTHERS
The Pacific Symphony Orchestra
Pops will play with The Righteous
Brothers at 8 p.m . today as part of
its season opener. This Is the
famed duo's first symphonic
outing. The concert will be held at
the Orange County Performing
Arts Center's Segerstrom Hall,
600 Town Center Drive, Costa
Mesa. $26 to $80. (714) 556-2787.
BROADWAY FAVES
Dale Kristien, famous for her
longtime run as Christine Daae in
MThe Phantom of the Opera;' will
perform Broadway hits at 8 p.m.
today at Orange Coast College's
Roben B. Moore Theatre, 2701
Fairview Road, Costa Mesa.
$29-$35. (714) 432-5880.
'A HERO'S LIFE'
The story behind Richard
Strauss' "A Hero's Life" will be
the emphasis at 3 p.m. today
when the Pacific Symphony
Orchestra presents its first
Classical Connections concen of
the season. The concert will be
held in Orange County
Performing Arts Center's
Segerstrom Hall. 600 Town
Center Drive, Costa Mesa $32 to
$50. (7 14) 556-2787.
FAREWEU CONCERT
Giuseppe Verdi's Requiem Mass
will be the farewell piece at 7:30
p.m . Sunday for the William Hall
Master Chorale and Orchestra.
Hall recently resigned as music
director after 47 years at
Chapman University. The
concen will be held in Orange
County Performing Arts Center's
Segerstrom Hall, 600 Town
Center Drive, Costa Mesa. $20 to
$60. (714) 740-7878
DATBBOOK
THE AMAZING MANDY
Tony and Emmy winner Mandy Patankin will appear at 8 p.m. Oct. 12 as part of the Spotlight
series at the Orange County Performing Arts Center. The concert, to be held in Segerstrom
Hall, will feature music from Patankin's latest CD, "Kidults." The Center 1s at 600 Town
Center Drive, Costa Mesa. $28 to $52. (714) 556-2787.
HUTCHINS CONSORT
The Hutchins Consort will
present a concert featuring the
works of Britten, Barber,
Charlton and Jacobs at 8 p.m .
Oct. 12 at Newpon Harbor
Lutheran Church, 798 Dover
Drive, Newport Beach. Free. A
Mfree will offering" will be taken
(949) 640-4707.
SUNDAY MUSICALE
Sarkis Baltaian will perform a
piano recital at 3 p.m . Oct. 13 as
part of the Newport Beach Public
Library's Sunday Musicale
Series. The free concen will be
held at the Central Library, 1000
Avocado Ave., Newport Beach.
(949) 717-3801.
BJORN AGAIN
B1orn Again, the Australia-based
ABBA tribute band, will perform
at 8 p.m . Oct. 19 at Orange Coast
College's Robert B. Moore
Theatre. This will be B1om
Again's only West-Coast stop
dunng its U.S. tour. The theater
is at 2701 Fairview Road, Costa
Mesa. $45 for adults. $16 for
children. Advance discount
t1c:kets available for students,
seniors and children 12 and
younger. (714) 432-5880.
OCC SYMPHONY
Orange Coast College's Symphony
Orchestra will open its 42nd
season at 7:30 p.m. Oct. 20 at the
college's Robert B. Moore Theatre,
2701 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa.
The 60-piece symphony will play
Cesar Frandc's Symphony in D
Minor $8 in advance. $10 at me
door. Discounts availabfe. (714)
432-5880.
MUSIC AT THE TEE ROOM
Newport Beach will present a
jazz trio Sunday through
Wednesday as regular
entertainment at 850 Avocado
Ave., Newport Beach. Hours are
from 5 to 9 p .m. Sunday and
from 6 to 10 p.m. Monday
through Wednesday. (949)
718-0188.
WEEKLY JAM
The Studio Cafe presents
M onday Night Jams from 7 to 11
p.m. every week. "Wanted"
musicians include guitar
players, bass players, singers,
drummers, keyboardists and
others at 100 Main St., Newport
Beach. Free. (949) 675-7760.
The Marie Davidson Trio with Ron MUSIC AT THE ANNEX
Eschete on guitar will perform at
8 p.m. Fridays starting Friday at
the Tee Room. 3100 Irvine Ave.,
Newpon Beach. $10 cover. (949)
756-0121.
JAZZ.TRIO
Gulfstream Restaurant in
Musical acts perform at 5 p m .
Sundays at the Pierce Street
Annex, 330 17th St., Costa Mesa.
Free. (949) 646-8500.
MUSIC AT TliE GRIU
The Bluewater Grill offers live
music on Friday and Saturday
~. October 5, 2002 A15
mghta. GNg Motpn, Nie* '9pet
and tc.lv Gotdlen (known ..
MPG) wtll peit'fofm d-6c roc:t.
Rae and llWfng et t:30 p.m .
frtdr/I, Mervin Gtegoty and
MPG will perform claa.k: roc:t.
swing and RAB et 1~30 p.m.
Sltunt.ys. The rMtaurant is et
830 Udo Part Drive, Newport
Beach. Free. (949) 876-3474.
.. SIC AT THE PELICAN
The Rusty Pelican offers the
music of Common Ground from
Wednesday through Sunday.
The t>.nd will perfonn from 7 to
10 p.m . Wednesday end
Thursday, from 8:30 p.m . to
12:30 a.m . Friday end Saturday
and from 2 to 6 p.m. Sunday. The
rest.urant Is et 2735 W. Coalt
Highway, Newport Beech. Free.
(949) 642-3431.
WEEKEND BLUES
Anthony's RJverboat Restaurant
in Newport Beech will present
The Balboa Blues on Friday and
Saturday evenings and Sunday
afternoons. The program will
feature jazz and classic rode
tunes for dining and dancing.
Anthony's is at 151 E. Coast
Highway. (949) 673-3425.
POP-ROCK ANO Fl.AMEHCO
Tate 5, a funk, rode and Motown
act, performs at 9 p.m .
Saturdays at Cannelo's
Ristorante, 3520 E. Coast
Highway, Corona def Mar. Solo
guitarist Ken Sanders performs
classical flamenco tunes at 7:30
p.m . Tuesdays and Sundays.
Free. (949) 675-1922.
SATURDAY NIGHT R&B
GeraJd Ishibashi and the Stone
Bridge Band play rode and R&B
at 9 p.m. Saturdays at Sutton
Place Hotel's Trianon lounge,
4500 MacArthur Blvd., Newport
Beach. Free. (949) 476-2001.
SENIOR CENTER AFTERNOON
A seven-piece group plays big
band tunes from 1 :30 to 3:30
p.m. Fridays at Oasis Senior
Center. 800 Marguerite Ave •
Corona del Mar S4 (949)
644-3244.
STAGE
'MRS WARREN'S PROFESSION•
The Newpon Beach Theatre Arts
Center will present MMrs.
Warren's Profession" through
Oct. 13. The George Bernard
Shaw period piece deals with
what happens when a young
See AFTER, Pa1e Al6
WO\X' ...
.:;,1 \H' "Bl 'l'\I,,
.l ORGANIC ART
PLANTS & DESlGN 4~
R es taurant
---Established In 1962 ---Rabbitt Insurance Agency
AUTO• HOMEOWNERS• HEALTH
<;,,,/11/,l'f S11tft 195 ~
Grr A Juinp O n \".,,., I ull Plunttng W1al1 A
l·n•1• 4" Plunr (fl A t"ha11n: To Wm
One 0/ Our C u.Html D tt.H/{•U!(J u ... i. .. ,. .•
llundrd.s "/ uru.11~ ltmJ ~ /11.J /"'• """J' I•" di '"""' "'"IJ 1•1 ~-' , .tn.1 0-liJ..'" ,,:._, ' ~'' , u.'t• -m.. .,.-, tf/'f"'~ k.t1..t , 1" t ,._,u._,,, '"" L JllJ the
'•· /"t'fNllm •r"J.~ •f•·l(I' ,..,.mt hcc In 11 im. 1 •"'·ul~U•#l' ,
•. l~·m/.w.,,J.111~ •• ~i:, '"'"' \.•l\•Pl.nt!.• • .,,.JI "IT"\ //,unrri.~ I~-..~• • /uru-1. /'I.nu.. ~·
714.289.0222 U19 N. <;la11fll, OranKt, CA 9ZllM
Optn Do.1ih 9 I\
"'"'" orJtDUi CD1pLm.IJ 'om
.. •Quality Sen-ice• ...
~•Ni d Entenainmeor--
CARP EI
FLOORING
LIMITED TIME ONLY
Prepare f'JOW for the Holidays!
KARAST~
Thi IMrnilt awpiit taf ...-end pialldilL
~.
• • All ~. Oc1l:)Oet 5. 2002
Conti1Ued from Al3
and it bas Ul ln8uenoe ol
nature.• Mid SUab Vure, cuntor
Ill the Orange County Museuin
of Art. of Wright'& wlndowa from
this pedod; "He wanted it to fed
like you were inside a prairie
house looking 1>ut of tbe
window.·
One of the architect's most
famo4s Is a prototype of the
windows made for the SUsan
Lawrence Dana House in Dlinois.
Ibis piece has a "swnac" deslgn.
resembling the pattern of a
planL
The windows in the exhibit are
ones that had previously been in
homes that have been
demolished or are currently in
renovation.
The "ltee of Life• window.
made for the Darwin D. Martin
house in New York. has three
repeated designs. a lot of the
chevron pattern and a lot of
different shades of yellow and
grecn. lrldescent glass was used
to illustrate gold leaves.
"People thought it looked like
trees," Vure said
The third section is ·A New
Poetics," a collection of work
which shows Wright's change in
-;tyle.
"ln 1909. Wright went to
APPLAUSE
-{,i)fttffiCed .from-Ai 3
her first big break -a chorus
pan in "Camelot," with Richard
Burton.
lo<lay Kn.stien's credits include
-.t.Lmng in MShow Boat" with the
I lou.,ton (,rand Operc1.. regional
md theater productions of shows
111dudmg "The King and r and
llie Sound of MW>ic." a
1wrfom1anre for fonner President
Second Annual
OCTOBER
YARDAGE SALE!
25o/o OFF
Entire Stock of French Fabrics
Through Oct 31, 2002
211 Marine Ave.
Balboa Island
(949) 673-0719
Open 7Days
10:30 am-6:00pm
www.lesalp1lles-provence.com
...
f'VI
·Ught Screens: The LMded
GI ... of Frri Uovd Wright•
WHEN: today through Jen. 5.
Mu-..m hourw ere 11 a.m. 10 5
p.m. Tue.day
through~.
WHERE: Oref\08 County
Mu.um of Art. 850 San
Clemente Drive, N9wport Buch
COST: llcktt pricM ..,PY for
this exhibit. $10 for~. S9 fOr
seniors and .Wdenta, $6 for
children b9tWMl'l 8 Ind 17.
General edml_.oh fnduded In
this ticket pnc:ie.
CALl.:(949)769-,122,Ext.~10
Euroi>e and saw modem
architecture by contemporariet, •
Vure said •And be aJao saw
modern art."
The windows from this lt.tge
of his life are more modem.
playful and festive in itJ colors
and confetti-like shapes. Thia
part includes a window from the
Hollyboc:k House in Los Angeles.
"These windows are
considered some of the most
innovative of Wright's.• Vure said
Sloan noted that none of the
architect's windows were meant
to be seen alone.
•He did not ever conceive of a
window as being autonomous.•
she said "Ct was always part of a
series and always specific to the
house they were designed for."
George Bu.sh, lV shows and a
solo album.
"-Her-wiee4uts matured
beautifully," said Galligan. who
has worked with Kristien on
concerts, Christmas shows and
an AIDS benefit called STAGE.
every year for 18 years. "Some
people don't take care of their
voices ... :nlis woman trains her
voice and keeps it in exquisite
shape. It's like someone with a
good figure. She keeps it in
perfect shape..
Momma John
we belong IQ tht
world's '4rgtn fo>oring
re~il group • co-op. wt are tht bif3est
fooring tk4/ns
intliitidUlllJJ oum~tl
11nti opmq«l
~l.o_oo STORE
BurfNG POWER
NOBODY~ ~ INM 11111' ~
y..,;iJl!IM ... "*" '!t!tffW ,.., '*:liitftnl. Ill.
lifetime
Warranty
Lamlilate
-----.....--
... DATEBOOK "·
Conliooed from A13
Wble llhe ilnt¥ 1be
poducdam CID ..... the 1• Dl,IJ ........ WJrnmd
.... -.dllml,.u to lld.
"Molt oltbe bolld am
noo'tldDl'I, • CObiD ml "w,
bnl twudh•tDa ladtbe ..
...... tblk. ""doa't pick
lhcMs we wmt ID be tn or direct.
lnllmd, the bout pkb
lhows they'd Jib to.-. nm
,...... line-up lndudea-....0
1-t. • • contempos.,y mmandc
~by JunesSbennan: ~ lvtf!IY Miil" by
Reginald Role: Ray Cooney'a
*Funny Money" and .<Amping
with Henry and Tum" by Mmk
St. Germain.
Some of the plays oome at a
directon sa_...,n, Olbers
came from board rnenDn.
The members an read pocmtial
playg and discuss them. trying
to pick a beJanced sea,,on of
five. A sixth p(Oduction
featwing children Is held
during the saunmer This year
they did '"The Princess and the MasiCal Pea..
"We try to have a good mix of
wodcs. • Cohen said
Some of the season ticket
holders have been coming for
18 years. Among O>hen's
favorite shows the group has
produced are •A View from the
Bridge," "The Heiress,"
"Quilters" and "Driving Miss
Daisy." People Who baven't
been to the center, she said, will
be surprised by the quality or
the wort.
Actors at the center are not
AFTER
Continued from Al 5
woman finds out her mother
was once a prostitute.
Performances will be given at 8
p.m. Thursdays through
Saturdays and at 2:30 p.m.
Sundays. The Newport Theatre
Arts Center is at 2501 Cliff
Drive, Newport Beach. $13.
(949) 631--0288.
'SHOW BUSINESS'
"Anton in Show Business" will
be presented by Orange Coast
College's Theatre Department
today through Sunday and
Thursday through Oct. 13 in the
Drama lab Theatre, 2701
Fairview Road, Costa Mesa.
Show times are 8 p.m.
Thursdays through Saturdays
and 2 p.m. Sundays. $7 to $12.
(714) 432-5880.
"MAJOR BARBARA'
"Major Barbera" will opeo in
ptelliews at South Coast
Repertory on Friday. It will open
i1s regular run Oct 18 and dose
Nav. 17 on the Segerstrom
Stage, 665 Town Center Drive,
. .
Cobensatd.
"W! need d.mteen i>.r
U8bem or to WOik on abows, •
lbe said. "When I l"'f wort. I
mean m.Jlywork."
'J'be playhouse ii run wfth
paalioll md a tittle luck. 'I'bele
ll'O DO understudies for
performen. but seldom hm a
pedon • llOM been o:Sls8ed.
Cohen can dte almost.every
play .In which that bas
happened-•A View from the
~ • "7.orba the Gleek" and
a tbhd play in which an actor
~a planr. ~the
director on in his place.
"I bad beard theater people
are flaky.• Cohen said. "They
can\ be~ It's marvelou&"
For more lnfonnation on the
Newport Theatre Ar1B Center's
seaso'ns, call (949) 631-0288.
•••
Do you know a local artist.
writer, painter, singer,
filmmaker, etc., who deserves to
get noticed? Send your
nominee to In The~ Daily
Pilot. 330 W. Bay St, Costa
Mesa. c.A 92627, by rax to (949)
646-4170 or by e-mail to
jennifer:mahtll@ /alimes.rom.
• ~MAHAL is features
editor of the Daily Piiot.
Costa Mesa. The George
Bernard Shaw play is about the
dashes in mind 9tt between a
millionaire father and his more
spiritual daught8', Batbara.
Performances will be given 8
p.m. Tuesday through Saturday
and 7:30 p.m. Sunday, wtth 2.:30
p.m. matinees on weekends. $19
to $64. (714) 708-6656.
'BAD SEED'
The Trilogy Playhouse will
present "Bad Seed" Friday
through Oct. 27 at the
playhouse. 2930 Bristol St, Bldg.
C-106, Costa Mesa. Show times
are 7:30 p.m. Friday and
Saturday and 5 p.m. Sunday.
$15 Of $13. (714) 957-3347, ext 1.
'THE MIORTANCE OF BEING
EARNEST'
Orange Coast College's
Repertory Theatre Company
will present Oscar Wilde's ·The
Importance of Being Earnest"
Oct. 18 through 20 at OCC's
Drama lab Studio, 2701
Fairview Road. Costa Mesa.
Show times are 8 p.m. Friday
and Saturday; 2 and 7 p.m.
Sunday. S6 or $7. (714)
432-5640, ext. 1.
•.
THEATER
Murder's not so
funny at Trilogy
ByTomTttu•
W hen the 'Dilogy
Playhome mapped
out its 2002 season.
the October slot was to be
occupied by a musical
comedy on the subject of
murder, •Sometbing's Afoot."
However, the theater wasn't
able to cast the show, so
artistic director Alicia Buder
turned to another play with
the same theme -only a bit
on the darker side.
It had originally been
scheduled for OOogy's first
season and then replaced.
Next weekend, the subject
will still be murder. as the
Trilogy revives Maxwell
Anderson's chilling drama or
a pre-teen murderess. "The
Bad Seed." Old-time movie
fans will recall the 1956
screen version featu.ring
Patricia McCormack as the
lethal young Rhoda
Performances of "The Bad
Seed " will be given Fridays
and Saturdays at 7:30 p.m.,
with Sunday matinees at 5
p.m., through Oct 27. But
don't expect the hoked-up
ending from the movie. Batl
in 1956. people who killed
couldn't just walk away at the
fade-out, so little Rhoda was
struck by lightning -a
jarring switch from what
Anderson and novelist
William March originally had
in mind.
The Trilogy Playhouse is at
2930 Bristol St., O>sta Mesa.
Reservations are being taken
at (714) 957-3347, ext 1.
"The Bad Seed" is
appropriate for ages 12 and
up, but parental discretion is
advised.
No sooner will "The Bad
Seed" hit the boards than the
Trilogy will be holding
auditions for its next
production, the comedy
"Inspecting Carol." lllis is a
farce revolving around a
struggling theater company
presenting Cllarles Dick.ens'
"A Ouisunas Carol."
lryout.s will be held Oct. 15
from 6:30 to 9 p.m. for a cast
of three women. five men
(one African-American) and
two boys. All roles are open
and scripts may be picked up
after 5:30 p.m . on the day of
the audition.
"Inspecting Carol" will be
presented Nov. 30 through
Dec. 15 at the playhouse.
More information is
available at the above phone
number.
WOUSETMP'
AT VANGUARD
Murder la also the theme
at Costa Mesa's Vanguard
University aa Its theater
department prepares to
mount its opening
production of the 2002-03
season, Agatha Ouistie's
popular whodunit "The
Mousetrap."
Th.is thriller -which has
been playing ln London
continuously since the 1950s
-involves murder most foul
at an isolated country inn.
Of course, it's a dark and
stormy night.
Greg Mortensen is the
guest director for the
Ouistie mystery, which
opens Oct. 18 and plays
through the 27th, Thursdays
through Saturdays at 8 p.m ..
with Sunday matinees at 2
p.m .. The plot will unfold at
Vanguard's Lyceum Theater,
55 Fair Drive, O>sta Mesa.
Ticlcet information Is being
dispensed at (7 14) 668-6145.
RALSTON JOINS SCR
CONSERVATORY
Broadway singer and
actress Teri Ralston has
joined the faculty at South
Coast Repertory's Theater
Conservatory, teaching a
new class in musical theater.
Ralston, who has
performed locally at SCR
and the Laguna Playhouse.
began her professional
career in "Jacques Brei is
Alive and WeU and Living in
Paris,· followed by roles in
the original Broadway
productions of "Company"
and ·A LittJe Night Music."
She starred in "Mame,•
dlrected many shows in the
Southland and has appeared
frequentJy on television.
The SCR Conservatory's
fall session for students ages ~
18 and older begins OcL 14
with weekly classes Mondays
through Thursday evenings
for nine weeks. The
curriculum al.so includes
acting. improvisation.
dramatic writing and
playwritlng.,Enrollment
information is available at
(714) 708-5577.
• TOM TTT\JS writes about and
reviews local theater for the
Daily Pilot. His reviews appear
Thursdays and Saturdays.
"Avoid the ordin~,
com.e to Tile Italia."
Ne po'°""'8 .... __.. _ _...
udi-'W•
~..--
We Make It Your Way!
~}~ I .~ ffi fa I I I I EEJ {§
1-"a.----i r-•a.-; 1-»a.~ 1-na.----ir ••-i
-·~--...,.,...., CIWl&lll -----In m.<a~ ....._, T
•• & I I I ffi EJ & I I ii fnJ. .. ·gfl ~:.::.~ ~;:: ... --i ..!:.. r-:-:;; :..:..::;;;4 LJJ 1 c!~
..... ...,.,...., (MAii -~ ... ~
I---,,, .. ---I f---110• --1 -·.a::..~
,,.. J ,,.
l IJ 1--fl• --t 1---ma -----1 r--r -
We custom make your sofa, love seat or sectionals • You Design it
and we wiH have it made for you I • At off the floor prices. Over
800 fabrics to choose from. Slip covers also available.
. I'
~I
Cypress cashes in on
myriad CdM iniscues.
a.,.,, Faulkner
OatyPilot
NEWPORT BEACH -Just three
weeb after an lmprellive aeuon-
openlng victory prompted the Corona
del Mar High football team to dream
t>f playing 14 weeb. the Sea IClnp
Mft knocbd back to equare one Fri·
4ay night by visiting Cypress.
• : The C-enturlon1 cubed In some hos·
pitallty by the 00.C. -three tumoven
;and countleM other mlatakea -and
•tcored wttb 1:37 left to claim a 14-12
.oonleague victory that may either
prove to be a turnlng point, or tbe be-
ginning of the end for a CdM squad
~at came In ranked No. 5 In CIF
~' OcfX>ber 5, 2002 11
HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL
, ..
12
Southern Section
Divl.sion IX.
Coady penalties,
general diaorganl-
zation and ahabby
execution all con-
tdbuted to the
loss, wblch CdM
Coach Dick Pree·
man said his team
gift rapped
-We dld every-
thing we could to
give this one away,· said Freeman,
whose faraway postgame look seemed
to portray equal parts rusmay and dis-
appointment.
"'lbere's no way,• Freeman bristled.
·cnie Centurions) should have had
7.el'O points! We played pretty good de-
fense ~ of the time, but we were on
the field most of the time. We fumbled
the ball ... I don't know what it is, but
our offense bas got to quit making
those kinda of mistakes.·
Despite the miscues. the Sea IGngs
(2-2) were mere moments away from
victory. tbanb to a d~termined de-
fense, a 45-yard fourth-down Jonathan
Hubbard to Kevin Welch scoring bomb
near the end of the first half, and an ef-
ficient. eight-play scoring drive that
covered 66 yards on CdM's first sec-
ond-half possession.
Senior tailback Mark Cianciulli
capped the go-ahead touchdown drive
with a 13-yard run right through the
middle of the Cypress defense with
5:22 left lo the third quarter. Cianciulli,
who finished with 231 all-purpose
yards, including 111 on 25 rushing at-
tempts. carried seven times for 34 SEAN Hlt.l£R I DAILY PILOT
Corona del Mar High's Kevin Welch (2) celebrates his touchdown pass from
See COM, Paa• es quarterback Jonathan Hubbard, covering 45 yards in the first half Friday night . .
RVleSa 'fights through adversity'
Down, but never out,
Mustangs display spirited
play in second and fourth
quarters to win, 26-7.
StenVlrs•n
Daily Pilot
WFSIMINSTER -Costa Mesa High
Coach Daw Perkins' words gave great
aymbollam to what hia football team
displayed throughout the Mustangs'
26-7 Golden West League-opening vic-
tory OYer' Ocean View Friday night at
Westminster.
~Our ldds rud a
great job of dealing
SCOREBOMD with adversity,•
Perkins said.
•(Ocean View) bad
the ball and they
were ready to score
Oate in the first
quarter). But we
stepped up.
Meea 28 stepped up all
e>c.n "14lw 7 night. That's what
you have to do win
football games.·
The Mustangs (2·2, 1-0 ln league)
were also dealing with heavy emotion
enterfug their game against Ocean View.
Nearly a year ago. in the same staruwn
and against the same opponent, Costa
Mesa Jost one of Its own when 17-year-old senior Man Colby collapsed OD the
sideline and dJed hours later of brain in-
juries sustained on the 6eld.
•Man ls always on our hearts and
minds,. Pertins said.
A few Costa Mesa players dealt with
t.hm emotions differently.
"When I 6nt came on the 6eld, I
wanted to cry,• said senior fullback Keo-
ta Asuega. wbo ran for a game-high 140
yards and two touchdowns on 18 car-
rtea. •Me and Man go way back. We
played on the same Pop Warner team
~ we were UttJe. But. honestly. I tty STI\'E McCfW« /DALY P'l.OT
Costa Mesa's Keola Asuega (24) breaks free from the Ocean View defense for a big garn to set Mesa up for a touchdown in the first half of Fnday night's game.
DAILY PILOT HIGH SCHOOL ATHLETE OF THE WEEK
Humberto Rojas
.
The awards and respect continue to mount for the
Estancia High senior, who uses a relentless effort.
\.
.BMW
(Wmai'fy hSid9d)
98 318i SON <~1> ~Owi'8tALlotnalk
95 3251 SON <~> w. wr., ·
96 316 CONY. (1~ llMlk low Mies, Ctttllledl
98 Z3 (1GXJ} modi wfTC¥\ l.talher. 5 Spetd
97 3181 CONY. (t6'68) Ort('5«MM~
98 5281 SON <tee> II on II~ low Altsf ·
00 3231 SON c1as1l) (llfY ~ 11t ,;., ~ l'Owef
POUClll
95 993 CAB c1~1> SllYt( OllOfntd '11tt1s
01 BOxmR 1'' <16CXX> Me!alc w wlT~ m1ts1 llrly'
99 911 CPE c11~> 0cton llllJt 1lpllOOc
97 993 CAB c1a.Mt> w w~ lit 37K Mlts'' ~Spd.
99 996 CAB (10M.X) "*' whfto Bii Liv, Tipllri:I
99 996 CAB cw.'.lb> ~lbw~. 1nvnooAott1
99 996 CAB (145G) SMr. 6-~ 99 996 CAB ttam::) Olock, HorOlop, 26K"~I
00 996 CAB <~ P.ld w~ lh. lbd Top
00 996 CAB c1~> °'tf 2~~ht ·
0'2 996 CPE 08'95) h ~. HKMllsl
... /'
S P ORTS ~. October 5. 2002 •
Orange Coast women
score easy victory.
COSTA MESA -Sophomores
Jaycee Mahler and Pemanda
Velasco each scored a pair of
goals to lead fifth-ranked
~range Coast Co~ege to a 6-0
Victory over viaiting Fullerton
Friday afternoon in Orange
Empire Conference women's
soccer action.
The Homet.s deployed an off-
sides trap that served lta pur-
pose in the early stages of the
match, catching the Pirates
four limes in he first l O mln·
utes.
The Bucs adjusted to the
strategy and solved the trap
twice in the next JO-minute
span to open the acortog.
Sophomore Amber Blake wu
the first to break throup ln the
13th m lnute. Bianka Gratzier
fed a ball through the Hornet
defense and Blab raced to the
goal, dribbling around Stepha·
nJe Baldwin for her second
tally of the Jeuon. Pour min·
utes later, Velasco repeated the
feat off a feed from Lauren CU-
COMMUNITY COLLEGE FOOTBALL
Pivotal issue for Bucs
Wi th two games
remaining on its
non-division schedule,
OCC hopes to use
tonight's matchup at
Mt. San Antonio as a
launching pad.
Steve Vlr1en
Daily Pilot
WALNUT -It seems for the
first time in a long time, the
Orange Coast College football
team is favored over Mt. San
Antonio, as the two learns meet
tonight at Mt. SAC at 6 p.m. But,
Pirates Coach Mixe Taylor
knows becter than that.
"We've only beaten Mt. SAC at
ML SAC twice in the 16 years
I've been on the (OCC coaching)
'>taff, • said Taylor, who is in his
fourth year as the Pirates' head
rnach. "That's a tough place to
play.·
The Bucs (2-1) are ranked No.
14 in Southern California. while
the Mounties ( l-2) are unranked
and suffered a 40-l 4 loss al Ven-
tura before beating up on Santa
Ana. last week. 38-7. In addi-
tion, Mt. SAC has allowed 495
yards rushing in three games for
an average of 165 yards per
game, a weakness that OCC will
most lik.ely exploit.
The Pirates have been averag-
ing l 78 rushing yards per game,
mainly because or running
bads Niles Mittasch (24 l yards,
two TDs. 46 carries) and Steven
Mah~lona (21.4 yards, flve TDs,
33 carries), and the ace offen-
sive line, which includes guards
Keola Loo (6-foot-I, 290
pounds), Donnie Garcia (5-9,
315) and tackles Patrick A.fif
(6-8, 318) and Stephen Herring
(6·4, 270).
Mittasch has be<:n practicing
TODAY
Footb9Jf
Community college -Orange
Coast at Mt. San Antonio College.
6p.m.
High school -Westminster vs.
Estancia, at Newport Harbor, 7
p.m.
W..polo
College men -UC lrvme at
Northern California Toumement.
Community college men -
Orange Coast at Citrus
Tournament, 9 a.m.
Community college women -
Orange Coast at Ventura
Tournament, 9 a.m.
ORANGE COAST LINEUPS
• DEFENSE Yr. Po. No. l'tlry9f Ht. Wt. Yr. Po.
7 Jeeon Knp.wv1Clua ~ 220 So 08
25 Nilell M•~ !>-11 200 So TB .a Tim IWMdl 6-11 188 F< F8
I Coleman MM*• &-2 11!i F< WR
81 DIMd Sere 5-lO 170 Fr WR
12 Juetm ROM 6-3 226 So TE 75 l'Mric*Afrf M 318 So LT
lll5 K*>la Loo 6-1 29D So LG
63 Ed Ftlne I 1 275 So C
88 Donnie GerC1a &-9 3 IS So RG n Stei>l*l Hemng ~ 210 So R'T
throughout the week with a
limp because of a sore thigh.
Taylor said. But, Mittasch plans
to play. Garcia has also been en-
during some shoulder pain, but
he should be ready to go as well.
Garcia, as weU as sophomore
defensive back Josh Gonzalez,
were on the 2000 OCC football
team which upset the Mounties
at Mt. SAC The Mounties en-
tered that game ranked No. 4 in
the nation by J.C... Gnd-Wire,
and the Pirates had scored just
nine points in its first three
games. But, OCC won, 26-25, on
a 30-yard field goal with one
second remaining by Rob Pate.
The victory brought confidence
and motivation to the Pirates,
who went on to win a share of
the M1~1on Conference Central
Divis ion championship and
made a Strawberry Bowl ap
pearance.
Now, Taylor is hoping for the
same type of magic, considering
the OCC offense hasn't been es-
pecially productive in the pass-
ing game. Freshman Derek As-
pinwall will start at quarterback
for the second straight game.
LaM week, AspinwalJ passed for
Ill yards and completed 6 of his
20 throws. I le did not commit
SCHEDULE
High school boys -Newport
Harbor at University, 10 a.m .
Soccer
College men -Alumni at UC
Irvine. 5 p.m.; Vanguard
University at Azusa Pacific. 7 p.m.
College women -Vanguard
University at Azusa Pacific, 5 p.m.
Cross country
High school boys and girls -
Estancia at Yucaipa Invitational.
~· College women -UC Irvine at UC
Riverside, 7 p.m.; Hope
International at Vanguard
University, 7 p.m.
High school gir1s -Newport
ROLLER HOCKEY
53~M111e<
55 .i-Mehelona
51 l.amuTa'etu.
51Btyen~
42 o.ns..i-.
59 Fehad Jahld
31 Chri9 Cauidv
• ic.Mn8-y 17 St~ Turner
27 Adnan Callowwy
4 7 Nldl Oomlnelli
any turnovers.
s-1 225 Ff OE
6-2 280 Ff OT
&-0 280 Fr OT
&-3 219 Fr OE e-o 200 So OL8 &-0 240 Ff MLB
6-1 195 Ff OlB
5-11 175 Fr C8
5-7 180 So C8
6-1 186 So SS
6-2 200 Fr FS
Only one ace receiver re-
corded a catch. Geoff Sylvester,
who is a freshman like most of
Lhe Pirates" receivers. Taylor is
hoping to get more production
from his tight ends, a position
that has delivered key contribu-
tions for the past three years.
On defense, the Pirates are led
by OCC sophomore linebacker
Dan Steinau. who earned Mb·
sion Conference Defensive
Player of the Week honors after
his standout performance
whjch led to the Bu cs' 28-10 win
over visiting El Camino.
Steinau recorded a 64 -yard
interception return for a touch·
down and posted a team-high
13 tackles, two were solo with
one for a loss and the other a
sack. Steinau, along with line-
backers Fahad Jahid and Oub
Cassidy and defensive tackle~
Lamu Ta·afua and Je~se Mahelo·
na helped the Pirates hold F.I
Camino to 64 yards on 33 car-
ries. a 1.94 yard~-per-carry aver-
age.
The Mounties are led offen-
sively by receiver!> Delanie
Walker (1 4 receptioni., 125
yards, 3 TOs) and caJvin Byrd
I 14·215 I).
Harbor at Nike Challenge,
Chicago. quarterfinal, vs.
Downers Grove South. 10:15
a.m.; semifinal at 12:45 p.m.; final
at5p.m.
Aeldhocby
High school -Newport Harbor at
Orange County Invitational at
Marina High.
SUNDAY
Soccer
College women -UC Irvine at
Utah State, 1 p.m.
Waterpolo
College men -UC Irvine at
Northern California Tournament.
Red Wings roll past Rangers
Three fourth-period goals
capped an eight-goal
performance as the Red Wings
fourth and ntth-grade roller
hockey team of the Boys & Girls
Oub of the Harl>or Area defeated
the Rangers, 8-2, moving to 2-0
this season.
The Red Wings' Rusty Sary
scored four goa.11 with JMie
--------......
PalanJlan scoring twice and
Brandon Booth and Ian
Sequdra each scoring one goal
Red Wings' defense was led by
Lopn Newett at goalie with
support coming from Bunter
Gray and Brtdpt Lyooe on
defense.
In the Red Wings ftrst game:
• Red Wlrlll 4, KJngs 3
GoaJa by Sary and Newen in
sudden death overtime help Red
Wings win their season-opener
over the IC1ngs.
Sary finished with two goals
and Sequeira added one assist
on the tying goal Palanjian and
Newett shared goaJtending with
SlQJPOrl coming from Gray.
Booth and ~OS.
1Jty to double the advantage.
Melllaa MangreJlo made it
three Just past the baJf hour,
scoring on a more conven·
tional play. Mahler was sent
through down the leh flank
and crossed the ball toward the
goal. Jessica Bertoni headed
the ball back to Mangrello and
she sent a 7-yard half-volley
into the net.
Mahler took her tum to score
two of the final three goala with
Veluco scoring the other.
Mahler raced through the tqp
in the 36th minute, this time
sprung free by Marissa McGte·
gor, for her team-leading 12th
goal of the season.
point-blank range In front of
the Hornet net. Mahler put
away her 13th goal of the sea-
son In the 75th minute unas-
sisted.
Margaret Landeros recorded
three saves to earn the shutout.
Orange Coast (9· l -1, 5-1-0 in
the OEC) h~ the road on Tues-
day to barfTe Golden West at 6
p.m.
Velasco ripped the nets again
in the 59th minute, Gratzer
providing a cross to put her at
" I \ H \I \ H h
'98 ClJO Sedan $18 ,888 '99 E320 Sedan SSJ I ,888
Blk/Blk, Low Miles. (S414S3) Must S«, Hurry. Won"t Lut. (777242)
'99 C230 Sedan $19 ,888 '99 EJOO Diesel $37,888
lllkJBlk. Extn Clun. (7J9SJS) Hard To Find. Fully Equipped. (727742)
'96 E320 Sedan s2 I ,888 'O I SLK320 Sport s4 I ,888
Silvtt, fully Equipp«d. (OOS6 ll) Chromt Whls .. CO, Loadtd . (I 7S279)
'98 ML320 SUV s22 ,888 '99 ESS Sedan s49 ,888
CD Ounpt. 8oH. Moonroof (044283) AMG. lllad:, Must S«. (822lll)
'99 ML320 SUV s23 ,888 02 Clk430 Cab $59,888
Moonroof. CD, Hurry. ( llSSS4) Two At This Price (120S30. 1262S7)
'00 C230 Sedan s24,888 'O I S430 Sedan $59,888
Blk/Blk. Moonroof. Chrome Whls. (924936) Blad:. CD Cha~. Chromt Whls. (141849)
'00 C280 Sedan ·02 S4JO Sport $67,888
Whitt!Gray. Extra Clt~in. (79748S) SilwrlCMrcoal. lmmKUbtt (226710)
'98 SLK230 Rdstr. $26 ,888 'O I SSOO Sedan s6S ,888
Gorfeous Cu, Extra Oun. (037021) Two At This Price, Hurry. (19SS66. IS7702)
28,888 '02 SSOO Sedan $71 ,888 '98 E320 Sedan
Low Miles. Immaculate Car. (Sll669) Two At This "kit. Hurry. (27SOl6. 2J6 I I I)
'99 Ml430 SUV $29 ,888 '02 CLSS AMCi $I 09 ,888
CD Stuker. low Milts. (11411l) Priotd To Sdl. (024641)
'02 C230 Coupe s29 ,888 'OJ SLSOO Rdstr. Call
Hurry. This One Won't Lnt . ( 1226S6) 3 To 0-. (011)40, 007929, 026429)
'99 SLK230 Rdstr. $29,888 'OJ SLSS Hurry
Sport tdltion. CD Ct..nger, Low Miies. (Ol.S420) Silwr, kcytcss Go. Won"t Lnt (027423)
..
Thutsci~'s fl:Ol9
t •rrmgt-··I . drtl£;1Jdc> t4
fod.lv's ..cores
Coata Mesa 26, Ocean View 7
Senta Ana 62, La Quinta 29
(nonleague)
~ .......
Westminster vs. Estancia. at
Newport Harbor, 7 p.m.
MESA
Continued from B 1
not to think about him too
much. becaru.e you want him co
rest in ix·ace. He's in a better
place now.·
One player who fought
through adver.iry. as Pemns
said, was junior outside line-
backer Daniel Looper, who in-
jured his neck in last week's loss
to Laguna Beilch. Cooper hardly
practiced throughout the week.
I le settled !01 playing sparingly
i'riday.
With 1ti.. \lui,1angs l~ading.
20-7, Looper '><:<ti~ Mesa's vic-
tory when he wad a passing play
perfectly Occ.i11 View quarter-
back Alexander Hicker...on at-
1empted 10 dehver a quick pass
ro the outside to his wide re-
cerver Amcrcrn Lopez, but
Cooper stcppt·d tn front qf Lo -
pez. intercept< ·d 11 and ran, un-
toud1t·d I H \'-'"!'for tht· IOUlh
dO\\ II
-. I SPORTS
STEVE McCRANK I DAILY PILOT
Costa Mesa quarterback nm Iller (12) scrambles for yardage and evades Ocean View's Brian
Daugherty (60) in first half Friday niglll
·We JU.'>l wanted to win the hawks recovered a Mesa fumble
game for (Colby).· Cooper said on the Mustang 15-yard-tine.
·And, we were going to do every-But. Costa Mesa stuffed Ocean
thing we couJd to win.~ View on its next three plays, pro-
The Mustangs displayed that viding momentum.
passion wlum the Ocean View Ocean View had to settle for a
Seahawk.'> (1 -3. 0-1 J earned a 22-yard field-goaJ attempt. That's
grand opportw1ity to score late when Mesa junior Al Rodriguez
in the fiN quarter. H1e Sea-broke through the line and
VOLLEYBALL
blocked the kick.. Cosca Mesa
then went on a seven-play, 75-
yard drive that was capped by a
I-yard m run by Asuega. Asuega
also had a key 46-yard run in the
scoring drive, and Omar Ruiz re-
corded an important 12-yard re-
ception from quarterback Tim
Iller.
Newport sails into quarterfinals
St. 16na tiu~. Piu" XI
blow11 off the cou1 t
in Chicago by the
Sailor-.; Downer..;
Grove South awaits
in tl w quartl'rfnals
tod.iv
N1·" p· 1r1 t l.1rh111 I l1gh., g1rb
vollt>\h.111 tl'am I 11 1011i:h
pool I' .it thl' I\ 1,., 'J1.:ll1 ngc
111 CJ 1~11. ho-.1• I 1,, \le 1l11·r
~Id v l11gl1 . Iii I llJ.
p;.~, •1•l l!i '1 I \I I 1rl{' ..
Cl\I l l~!ll.C'I '
f'lll 1f I ' I •
liw h l,t)
1111 ..... 11
(..OJ ' ' I ( ,11
too 1111.P•• '
f)q i (,fl I\ I
a .Ill l1ll1 ti '"'I I
lllg II 1111
.. lll t'I I 111 t
M 'alls 11 11
I ,I I .. i!fld
ll">J>e<
·rnb
• '"' 11110 ,, .1~~;11n .. 1
: •I 111 15
•II'! elHI ·
I 'I Jh \,
~ ·• 11111,1
.1 ... 1!
11 t er 1 1• ~'1
team. 1wc1-1.Jay tournament is 5
p.m.
Kn ... un McOWle was the
spearhead in the first match on
Friday. logging 20 kills in the
45-mmutt• match. Ally!>on Jen -
ningi. hat.I six kills. Lauren
Mill1·1 had fi ve kilb and Eli7.a -
be1h 11Jyton had three kills.
B;d,u1n· wac, the name of the
ganct for 1 larhor against Wis-
conl>m\ No. I rated Pius XI.
McOunl' t i.!). Mclll'r (II) and
Jennings ( ICJl .1< c.:oun1cd for 31
kilh.
PREPS: Mesa sweeps
r tu Costa Me..a girl-; volley-
ball • .1ni co11 11nued 11!. unde-
ft'Jlt•1 ,,,1.,1111 en the Golden
\Vr•,t I 1·agw· ., 11 swept F.sran-
cca ~rnlay. 15 I ~. 15 12. 15-10,
.111 " \,J fl.h·-..1 ll1gh.
-.1i.11on l>J\ l1•d the Mu!>tanJ.."'
t I ( 11 :n It· 1 •11(') with It lulb
.111.J 11 1111v "i1• ,,1.,.., kt! tlw team
w11 11 i. ............ " I m1lv Abbott
1c •• c1 1111 t·1 Jr1· 111<' 11 dig ... n .• ~
contributed three hlocks.
Estancia is now 1-6. 1-3 in
league.
COUEGE: UCI rolls
UC Irvine's women's voney-
ball team bree-1.ed at CaJ State
FuJJerton Friday night. besting
the titarn;, 30·22, 30-20, 30-23.
in Big West Conference play.
The Anteaters presented a
balanced attack with four play-
ers in double figures in the kiU
c·a1egory.
Kelly Wing led with 15 kill!>.
while 01anda Me l .cod ( 12).
Dana Kurt.bad (10) and Re-
hclc.:a l.ar!ten I JO) -.hared the
-.potJiWit.
A<Jllie Hain was credited with
~6 as.o.i~ti. for thl' Anteater;, who
improved to H-6. 2-3 in tht• Big
West.
Fullerton, wmlc& in four Big
Wt><,! ... rartl>. i.unk to 4-13 owrall.
\JU • .., at lJC. Rive!iide 10-
n114l'11. di 7. for a nonconfercnce
duel
JC: OCC sweeps
Freshman outside hiner Mi-
cheUe Zapiam had mne blocks
to lead No. 2-ranked Orange
Coast to a 30-20, 30-28. 30-25
victory over the University of
Baja California Friday night in
lheOCCgym.
The Pirates' 7..apiain, Krystle
Davis and Jessica IJppi com-
bined for six solo blocks and 17
block a.s..<,ists to help the Bucs
take care of the visitors from
south of the border.
Davis had another soJjd aU-
around game. addmg seven
kills and five service aces to her
blocking total~ Nicole Buckley
had six kills and three aces,
while Lippi and F.Usha Counts
cornhined for 33 assists.
Melissa Sherman led the
Coast defense with 11 digs.
Orange Coa'>t (6-0) visits
Santa Ana in the Orange Em-
pire Conference open er on
Wednf!M1ay at 7 p.m .
COLLEGE WOMEN'S SOCCER
Anteaters rally to stop Idaho, 2-1
MOSCOW, Idaho -UC Irvine's
women's soccer team improved
to J -5 with a 2 I nonconference
victory over host Idaho Friday
afternoon.
The Anteatera got a first-half
goaJ from Caroline l<.abe on a
penalty kick in the 42nd minute
to pull into a I -J tie, and in the
58th minute, Hayley McNallen
came through with a gal off an
assist from Lachelle Manzano.
All New NBTC Fitness Program
•pilates matwork
·non1tup tutal body condatklnlna
-Voea -c&eai your mind, hni• yQltf enetlY
•spinning •mt away Cl.IM & Olrl tncJla
~ardlo ldckbodnc
..biialt 11J1muv, &am•"~
•body blast hirJ·~•tft! c.AA!k.l & boJy a.uJrtlnit
•bOdv boot camp t..Jlts. diinhtnc ..u, nih m&lft
*triathlon training
run, biM, twlm to pelt.,.
•muten swimming
-IUtlU and tcchnlqUe for lmi<ri
•kid swim~
-tnnruc:don & f\s\ for !IF S • tcaw
*kid karate
·boott focu. end""~
•kid dana &. cheer •h:trJ.corw ~la: body il(.q)pi.,.
-much more! ·
Atk About oar rrrW
Plmai MeiDMnhlp!
(949) 6+Ml050
""''... the . se.bawb .... ...... rfib.t blct, u ..,
........ ~ dleir ......
putdal four nc:eMn JDto lbeli
-'-'-~ Hlcbrtoin bit CJL..rn fot a 29-fu!d
toUdMlown pall tbal ~
die Mumnp' ~ mkt* de-
fea& SWeedn ..., DaBed the
polnt·aftei' kick. wbkh put lbe
Se8hawb abeld. 7--6, atnce
Meu'I cwo-polnt conwnion &
tempt failed eadier.
1be Mumngs ~ and
stepped ft up again-before balf-
dme. Mesa eenioc Tyler Waldron,
who recorded an interception in
the second bal£ returned a punt
29 ya,rda to help aet up the Ml»-
tangs' final acoriDg drlYe before
halfthne Because of Waldron's
punt return, the Mustangs
needed to travel only 41 yards to
regain the lead
Mesa eenk>r Nate Hunter
made a great over-tbe-sboukler
catcb for 15 yards, before going
out of bounds at the Ocean View
I. 'JWo plays later, Ruiz, who ran
for 72 yards on 18 canies, scored
from I yard out, with 44 seconds
left. Gary Gom.alez caught a two-
point conversion pass from llJer.
and the M~ took a 14-7
lead into the lock.er room.
Gonz.alez recorded a 20-yard
pass from llJer to open the fuurth
quarter, which helped the Mus-
tangs go on to score. The Gonza-
lez reception put Mesa on the
Ocean View 34. and from there
Asuega took It in, outrunning de -
fenders along his team's sideline.
Aseuga's 34-yard touchdown
gave the Mustangs a 20-7 lead.
Perkins gave special praise ro
offensive linemen James Paulsen
1µ1d David Vemotico. The Mesa
duo filled in for Andrew Carich
and Paul Martin. whom were out
with injuries.
•They did a really great job,"
Perkins said of Paul.sen and Ver-
notlco. ·1 thought all of our guys
realty stepped it up.~
ROJAS
Continued from B 1
h.it you, and you will go
down. In cross country, I
think about that and it
keeps me from going down."
Last week, Rojas
maintained his
aggressiveness and broke
the course record at the
Huntington Beach
lnvitational. He finished the
three-mile course in 15:47
and prou<ly took home the
flrst-place trophy. It was a
feat tha1 was very special for
Rojas.
For the past three years
Rojas tried to break the
record at Huntington Beach.
As a sophomore Rojas won
his race in his division. but a
different runner broke the
record and received the trophy
Last year. Rojas finished third.
·This year I thought. no
mailer what, I'm going to gel
ftrst and I'm going to get the
course record." Rojas said.
After Rojas' performance.
which helped the Eagles finish
second in the meet. Joan
Carlisle. who is also the girls
track and field coach and a
teach er at Estancia. asked if
Rojas wanted to put the trophy
in the school's display case, but
Rojas said. no.
·1 told her, Tm taking this one
home.' " Rojas said.
Rojas also won a tri-meet.
which included Golden West
League foe Saddlebaclt and
cross-town rival Costa Mesa
Sept. 26. The 15:15 first-place
clocking ak>ng with his
early-season success does not
seem surprising considering
Rojas is intent on making bis
senior season special. However,
Rojas injured his ankte in
mJd-August and F3tancia Coach
Charlie Appell became
concerned.
•it looked pretty bad at that
point." Appell said •1t looked
I.Ike he would be out three
week& It happened in
0 14 0 12 -26
0700 -7
IECOM> QUMt1'ER
CM -~ 1 run(runfelled),
7:52.
CN -Sweetin 29 peae from
Hkhnon (Sweedn lddc:), 8:21.
CM-Rutz 1 run (G. Gonz.-PHI
from .. ..,,. ;A-4.
FOUR11t QUM10
CM -M4'9gl 34 Nn Is--failed),
11:34.
CM -Cooper 18 lntercaptlon return
(run failed). 10:41.
N>MDUAL RUlflNG
CM -Aluega, 18-140, 2 TOI; Ruiz,
11H2, 1 TO; Epenesa. 3--5; Iller.
6-mlnu....-; Hunter, :Z..12; Waldron.
3-mlnu...S; Quiroz, 3-13; Moni9, 3-9.
CN -Gonya. 17~; Valenzuela,
2·15; Hldter10n, 3-mlnu.-26.
NJMDUAl PUSING
CM -Iller, 7-12-0, 79; Hunter, 0-2-0.
Knox. 0-1-0.
CH -Hldtenon. 9-23-2, 83, 1 TD.
NJMDUAl RECEMNG
CM -G. Gonzalez, 2-34; Asuega,
2·10; Hunter, 2-23; Rutz. 1-12.
CN -Sweetin, 3-37. 1 TD; Gonya,
1·14; Kim, 2-6; Lopez. 3-27.
Attendance:~ (es1lmatedl
GAME STATIS11CS
Ftnlldowne 1& 9 ~ S>-239 1~
~ ylltdege 79 83 "-no ,. 1~ ~n.2 ,...,_y..... 47 0
S«U-v•deCle 2·.. 3-?6 Ne! y9td8ge 32& 167
l'IH!tl 4-3117 634 ~
Fu~fumbles "* 2· I ).() l'tege. ... y9td8ge 4-3& 3-1~
Time of~ Tl 42 20 18
•f'unl retum..1nceroept>one. ~ rw!\lm.
mid-August, which is a bad time
because the season was coming
quick. But he came bad sooner
than expected and he came back
convincingly.·
Even though Rojas injured his
ankle, he still built enough
confidence that he was in the
best shape of his life. He never
trained as hard during the
summer since he's been at
Estancia.
·(The ankle injury) hasn't had
much effect on me this 8e890n. •
Rojas said ·1 trained harder this
summer because I wanted to
compete with the top runners in
Orange County and at the SCat~
Meet. I want to be up there with
them.·
Rojas plans to nm for Orange
Coast College next year. and the
year after, all the while planning
to transfer to a university. The
plan has become more of a
reality because of the teachers at
I=Btancia, and especially because
of Appell, Rojas said.
·Charlie bas taught me a lot,·
Rojas said
·He's been like my dad
because be taught me bow to
take care of myself in IChool,
and how to concentrate on the
goals. I get along with him 10
much. I know him wd1. He's
more than a coach for me."
COMMUNITY COLLEGE
CROSS COUNTRY ·
Pirates sparltle
RJVDSlt>B-Orange Cout
CoUep'• Michele 1c:ban and
Ava Jona went l ·2 at cbe
Sota.them Callforrua Commu-
nity~ Preview at RMr·
9'de ex: Prlday, doc:kina
dma ot 19:31.40 . ·arid
19:'6.20 fol' the 5~ diltaMe.
wl JMI Gn11u11 IW 1bt
men"• tam to the cbUlp6on·
-.... 20'.SUO, ie6olM ID ... U ... nm ID bath· ..................
Qni!lll o.11'1 M I In
.... -....... lllh• _.._._.olJS .....
SPORTS SIUdly, Odallll' S, 2002 • •
COLLEGE BASEBALL
~'Eaters' rec~its make Collegiate Baseball's Top 30
UC Irvine's baseball
picture continues clear of
problems.
ANTEATER IW.1.J>ARK -The UC Ir-
vine baseball team's recruiting ~ hM
been ranked 24th by Collegiate Baseball.
00 ls one of three Big West schools to be
recogniud in the top 30 with Cal State
PuDertoo (No. 2) and Long Beach State
(28thJ also being honored. Georgia Tuch
took top honors.
Tup 30 teams slated to meet Irvine this
season are Arizona {10th), USC (12th),
Baylor (13th), Ariwna State (14th), Hawaii
(19th) and Santa Oara (30th).
For the Anteaters, ten freshman. two
juniors and a sophomore make up the
13-man nic::ruidng dais. !nine flnllhed
3.1-26 «M!'8ll and 14-10 In lhe Big Wtst in
it.s first see,,on back from a 10-year hiatus
last year.
~ are thr1led that this group of pjayers
~ on campus and wm be joining us in our
second season.. ua c.oad1 John Sov.tge
said. ~ betieve there are a nwnber of
players who will make an immediate im-
pact on our program The 10 freshmen
along with the lrn.nSfers, combined with aD or the returning players. will strengthen the
future of UC lrvine Ba.9ebaD "
Savage's recruiting ~ features the
foUowing players:
• Kris Krise, a 6-foot-6 right-handed
pitcher out of Oescenta Valley High. He
earned a 7-3 record and struck out 60 in
his junior year. He was aJso a member of
the 2001 Oxtgm and An·
gels Elite nmns. a wen
as the 2001 USA Baseball
Team.
• Mark Wagner, from
Mayfair High. participated
in the 2000 USA Junior
Olympics and the Mickey Mantle World
Series. The 6-0 catcher was Georgia's Su-
per 7 Series MVP and was honored with
the Big Stick Award for his .723 hitting av-
erage.
• Matt Millett. out of Ea.st Valley Red-
lands High. was Chino Tournament MVP
last year. The 6-0 lefthander was also
honored as one of the top 100 baseball
players in California and spent the 200 I
swnmer with the Angels Elite Team.
• Outfielder Gary Oudrey, a 5-10 prep
Crom AdiDglon High in Riwnide, ended
the regular aea.u:i wltb a .430 betting av-
erage, while helpblg his team to a 26-6 re-
cord and the 2002 ClF cbamplonsbip
game.
• Ouis Nicoll. a 6-1 dgbthander from
Righetti High in Santa Marla. was drafted
by the Toronto BJue Jays in the 43rd
rowid of the 2002 Major League Baseball
Draft.
• Mike Davern, a transfer from UCl.A.
made nine appearances for the Bruim in
~· The 6-t junior righthander finished
the season 0-2, having pitched in 11 in-
n.Uwi and giving up 23 hits while striking
out four.
• Infielder Man Fisher, a California na-
tive (Northridge), returns after two years
at the Universiry of Oklahoma where he
fl!IQ!lled • a IKiOlkl t.-man The 5-9
junior m8de 3.1 appearaoca fm the
Soonen and contributed l2 nms on 16
bits and ftve RBis to the o&me. Alher
carried a .246 batting aw:ragre as wen as a
.951 fielding percentage, solidifying the
middle infield during OldahomU post
season run.
Rounding out the ua recruiting class
are freshmen Warren Olenier (nght
handed pitcher from Mater Dei), Ryan
Edell (le{t-handed pitcher from l.n:ington
High in Massachusetts). Man Falk (utilny
from Dana Hills High), Marvin Lowrance
(outfielder from Wtlson High in Whnner).
Kyle Rydebosch (shortstop from Reno
Higll) and sophomore Adam Cokon
(right-handed pitcher from Southern Ne-
vada Community College).
HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL
Sage Hill bitten
by turnover bug
Four turnovers
diastrous for the
Lightning, 39-6.
Bryce Alderton
Daily Pilot
NEWPORT CT)AST -By the
time Sage Hill High's defense
showed a six-man front early 10
the second half to try stopping
Saddlebaclc Valley Quistian tail
baclc Brian I larbin the deficit was
100 much to overcome in non-
league football Fnday afternoon.
The turnover bug had already
bitten lhe ughtning four tim~ on
two fumbl~ and two 101en:ep
tions. one rerumed for a 30-yard
touchdown on the game's second
play. and Sage Hill dropped lheir
its conc;ecutive game at Sage HiD
High. 39-6, to the Warriors.
"That's the closest 39-6 game
I've ever coached." said Ughtning
Coach Tom Monarch. ·Not
punching it
SV Chr
Sage Hill
39
6
in lciOed w.
and they
scored three
touchdowns
otftumove~
. Pla~ like
that really
separate
teams score·
wise."
SCORE BY QUARTERS
Sad Vly Chr
Sage Hill
12 13 7 7 39
0 0 0 6 6
ARST QUARTER
SVC Davidson 30 1ntercep1ton
return (k1dc failed). 11 08
SVC Harbin 5 run (pass la1tedl
4 44
SECOND QUARTER
SVC Harbrn 1 run (~ss failed)
8 29
SVC Harbin 36 run !Prendergast
ludc). 206
THIRD QUARTER
SVC Harbin 12 run (Prendergast
kick). 10 52
FOURTH QUARTER
SVC Harbin 32 run !Prendergast
lockl-9 48
SH Lim 12 run ipass failed) 4 28
INOMOUAL RUSHIHG
SVC Harbin, 2().233 5 TDs. Boyd
6 25. Fitch. 1 6. McKee 3 2 Fan
3 minus 6
SH Lim. 12 93. 1 TD. Williams,
5-33, Swanson, 13 24 Fnednchs,
8 13
INOMDUAl PASSING
Sf AN HILLER /DAILY PILOT
Corona del Mar's Mark Cianciulli (20) gets sideswiped by Cypress' Ty Belanger (41) during first-half action of Friday night's game.
With
SaddJebadt
Valley Oms-
tian up 12-0 wilh eight minute-.
remautlng in the lint half, the
IJghtning ~nl on a 75-yard drive
m 11 plays 10 get it lo the I -yard
line. but the Warriors forced a
!mt-down fumble and the Wani
ors recovered.
SVC Fait. 4-S-O. 67
SH Friedrichs. 1().20-2 125
COM
Continued from B 1
yards on the march, which in·
eluded a 22-yard pass from
Hubbard to Tyler Lance and a
defensive holding penal()' that
extended the drive after an ap-
parent incompletion on third
down.
CdM. having had its first con-
version kick blocked. elected to
go for two points to create a
seven-point lead. Welch ap-
peared to wrestle the baiJ away
from defender Oiarles Dobbs In
the back corner of the end
zone, but officials ruJed he did
not have possession and CdM's
defense was charged with pro-
tecting the 12-7 cushion.
The Sea Kings' defense. de-
spite playing without standout
inside linebacker Matt Cooper
(ank.le sprain) and safel)' K.C.
Rawlins (groin pull), among 10
Sea Kings who watched In
street clothes, as well as outside
linebacker Keith Long. who left
the game in the first quarter
with what appeared to be a
back bruise. almost rumed Cy-
prea (3-1) away ... again.
Led by senior tackle Jayson
Skalla. Unebackera Matt War-
saw, Lance and Kris Cooper.
CdM atopped successJve Cy-
pras possessions, the first on
downs at the CdM 26 and the
second when a 33-yard field
goaJ try misfired with 6:53 left
in the game.
CdM'a offense, however,
lpllttered on the ensuing poa.-
aeuioo and Cypraa took over
after a punt on lta own 46.
Penaltlel, yet another abort-
comlng for the hosts. proved
cM1y on the pme-wtnning
drlve u a fue-maaklng call
~ Cypraa one ftnt down
aDd a pua interference call on
1 thltd·and· 11 moved It to the
CdM us.
Nie.It M&hln, a 6-foot·2, 210·
' pound batterlail -~ paowed b -2 . yardl tO dae I on lhli'd-
1 • .... OM, then cburMd ""*
die ........ 00 the nest map.
~ ,_... kk:kid the~·
......... 111.f.12 ..... 1:37
tia;1'illlQliitMd_, ...... .
11?1111•11J IO..,. .... .....aonenln·
Sea King
John
Shanahan
(40) pulls
for yardage,
towing CC)()'
Campbell
(28). Below,
CcMs =54)
raadols
Cypress'
(10) Eric
8urrougfls.
SCORE BY QUARTERS
Cypress 0 7 0 7 · 14
Corona dot M ar 0 6 6 0 · 12
SECOND QUARTER
Cyp Mahin 12 run (Jamir ktdcf.
5 25
CdM K Welch 45 pass from
Hubbard (k1dt bfocllcd), 0.20
THIRD QUARTER
CdM Cianc1ufh 13 run (pass
failed), 5 22
FOOR'Tlt QUARTER
Cyp -Mahin 5 run (Jamir ludc)
1 37
INOMOUAl. RUSHING
Cyp Mahin, 36 173, 2 TD$; Jamir,
1-8; Burroughs, 7 minus-29
CdM Clanc1ufh, 25-111 , 1 TO,
Shanahan, 2 11. Long, 1-3, Hubbard,
4-minua 12, bad center snap,
1·mlnus 20
Cyp-Burroughs, 10-lS-O, 78.
C4N -Hubbard, 7 17-1, 129, 1 TO
Cyp -Dobbe, 8-51; V.nMunen.
3-26; Mahin, 1 1.
CdM-K Wlllch, 3-74, 1 TO;
Cianciulli, 2·33: Lenee. 1-22;
Marin-Ann, 1· 12
Abndanoe: liOO (estilNled).
GMIE STAllSnCS ,
On the next play, Warriors'
quarterback Coleman Fait threw
to a st:realcing Hutton Fitch along
lhc eastern sideline for a 35-yard
gain. setting up a drive that would
last four plays. rulminating on a
36-yard touchdown scamper for
Harbin, his third of five IDs on
the game. The Warriors went into
halftime with a 25-0 bulge. Harb10
gained 233 yards on 20 carries.
"Not punching it in lci1Jed us.·
Monan:h said. "Rut the defense
really buclcled down in the second
half and they rouldn't stop us of-
fensively. I thought ow line did
well and we moved the ball ex-
tremdy well. (SVC) made the big
plays and we need four quaner;
of big plays imtead of just two. -
SVC outscored Sage Hill 14-6 m
the second half. as Sage Hill junior
running back Ray Um tallied 57 of
his team-high 93 rushing yards.
ending his day on the ground with
a 12-yard m run on the 12th play
of a 71-yard drive that saw
quarterback Zach FriedricM com-
plete two passes to Eddie HUong
for l 9 yards and coonecting with
senior wide receMr f.rik ~
for gains of I 0 and 15 yards.. Wil-
Harm led the Lightning in receiv-
~ with 81 yards.
Ultlmatei}4 ft ~ the IUrDOYen
INDMOUAL RECEIVING
SVC Fitch 1 36. Femand8l 1 25,
Harbin, 2 6
SH W 1lhams. &-81, Huong. 2 19
Swanson. 1 17 Cho 1 8
GAME STATISTICS
Ft"I downil
Au"'-v•rd"ljf' Pnaongvar~• P-ng
Ne1 fetUrr'I ya-r-t1.a •
S.O.• va<deoe
Net v•"'-lle Punts
f.uml)lee lumQIM 1()41
Fl11ga ,,.. ve<dage
T1~ol-
SVC 5"
16 1• 33-280 )8. 1113
ff1 11!>
•..f>.O »-»1
!56 •
1-8 2-t
J9!) 2M
().() 393
•2 2 2
&-56 3-32
20-oM 27 11
that doomed Sage Hill from the
outseL 11ley committed four
while SVC lost two fumb&es. one
recovered by Williams on the first
play from scnmmage as the War-
riors were on the Lightning 1 after
freshman Lee Davidson blocked a
punt at Sage Hill's 24
0n the f;U11e0S second p&ay. ()a.
Vldson stepped 1010 the passing
lane to snatt a Fnednchs' pass
and run 30 yanis for a m
Priedrichs. Williams and senior
linebedcer Scott Cho ~ all
nursing injuries. but all started.
Monan:h likes where his team is
despite Friday's las&
-rd be fatlltic if you would
~ told me four Mleb ago that
we would be 2-2.. be said. I think
we're in good shape nexl week
~FainnonL"
The Ughrning traYets to play
host Fairmont Oct. 12 at 7 p.m.
COLLEGE TENNIS
Morton and Fndrikat to play at
All-American Championships
Policy • •
By Fax
(949) 63 I -6594
(Pleme hichade your name end
pllocie number llld -·u cell
you l!Kk with • price quote.)
•
How to Place A
CLASSIFIEJAD -ii
By Phone
(949) 642-S678
Hours
-
By Mail/In Person:
330 West Bay Swet
Costa Mesa. CA 92627
At Newport Blvd. ct Bay St
Monday ...................... Friday S:OOpm
Tuesday ................... Monday 5:00pm
Wednesday .............. Tuesday S:OOpm
Thursday ............ Wednesday S:OOpm
Friday .................... Thursday S:OOpm
Saturday ..................... Friday 3:00pm
llata and deadlines are subject to
change without notice. The publisher
~rvcs the right to censor, reclassify,
revise or reject any classified
advertisement Please report any error
that may be in yoor classified ad
immediately. The Daily Pilot accepts
no liability for any error in an
advertisement for wruch ii may be
responsible except for the cost of the
space actuaJly occupied by the error.
Credit can only be allowed. for the first
insertion.
Telephone 8:30am-5:00pm
Monday-Friday
Walk-In 8:30am-5:00pm
Monday-Friday Sunday ....................... Friday 5:00pm
ANNOUNCIMENTS .. ~ . & MISC. 1010-1110 I • •
GARAGE
SAU
BUSINESS &
"FINANOAL
NUCllOT1CI
OTY Of llWPOIT IUOI
Coly Countol Ch1mbet~
of the Coly ol Newpotl Beach 3300 Newpot I
Boulevard Newpoll
Buch
PLANNING COMMISSION
AClNDA
Reeuldr Meeting
October 17 2001 6 JO
pm
l.SUIJICTr lted ltobl"
lteal_r_I, 917 New-
p ort Center Drive
SUMMARY: Request
lnr d Use Pet mot put
\uanl lo the Alcoholic
Beveiaee Oullel Ordr ndnle (ABO) tu autho
r rte the \•le of alcoholic beverage~ lor on srle
ronsumphon al a pto
postd restaurant to be
lnceted wolhon r l1'hoon
Island
APPUCATION: Un
Pe""lt Ne.
UP2002-0ll
(PA2002-1 IS)
ClQA <oalPUANClr
1 hrs projecl has been
tevrewed •nd rt h~'
been delermoned lhal rt
'" c•teeorically e~empt undu the tequiremenls
ol the Cahlotnra [nvr
ronmenUI Q.lahly Act
undet Clan I ( Mrnor
atteretoon of eustrn1
~lructuru)
O•rly Polol Odob~r 5
?001 SAl55
FldlllM lllillu .... s.......
The followrn11 pel\on•
Me do one bu,oneS\ a~
AUTO cove. 3001 Redh•ll
Ave . #2 210 Co~ta
Mesa, CA 97676
ORP Nr>twork, lnl (CA).
3001 Redhill Ave , #2 11 o. co, Id Mft\~ CA
92626
This bu~ml'n '' tun ducted by d tor pnr ~Iron
Han you \tar trd
do1n1 bu,rnes, yrt> YI'' No
DRP Nl'IWork lnl
'ihah1111 S Almb•do
P .. mdrnt
lh1s statrml'nl wa\
toled wolh th~ f.nunty
C'tetk of Oraro&r r nunty
un 09/20/02
2002H17734
Oa1ly Ptlot Sept 71 28
lkl 5. 12. 2007 SAJ.46 ,......_
.... s.......
lho lollo11111n1 persons ,.,I' dolnc busonen .n
lo11dn Vrrlual 1300
Adams Ave . Costa
"1t1'<1 CA 926?6
ldmes Jord1n Rhodomer.
I JOO Adams Ave . •nc
Cost• Mesa CA 92626
fh11 bus1nns os con dueled by •n 1nd1v1dual
Hive you d1rled
doina busrnes~ yeP N11
James Rhodrmer
Thi1 sl1temtnl wu
hied with the County
Clerk of Oranae County
Dn 08/16/()2
2002 .. 13795
01Uy Ptlol Sept 14, ?I,
28, Oct. 5, 2002 SAJ4.4
i:.....,~
Pedffc View, Oen vrew
Newport V1st1 1058A dbl
1nternm1nl • e•lres
SI0,000 94&-588 5~
Peclfk View &.k
fOf ull. Velued at
$5500 Mall• olftr (f49) s.ta-M6J
.-..
230S-2490
1483 HOME
~========~ FURNISHINGS
OWW Style Furniture
PIANOS i Con.ctibles
·~ ... 1........,.
·S-~·...,...·OllA~
$$CASH PAID $$
CWW~•OI~~
W£ BUY ESTAnB
•lmmedlot•IT..ndly-
AITDI"
~G~ j '\\I(•
I ·'·'" L "" ·1.
.:64M922'e
soumcgAST AUCTI N
Z202S..llllliaSt. ..... AM. CA 12707
-&t..-CAt ...
Fallie 3435
H•,.t•r Gree" ltltr
swivel rocker reclinet.
bou&ht at S700 sac •I SJOO. 9/515-9177
JEWELRY/ 3460
DIAMONDS/
PRECIOUS METALS
<-t<ol,.N...ta
Old Coins! Cold, sliver ,
jew~. watci-. aotiques
colleclrbles 949·642·9448
3610
• Adept. Winter l<lttens.
cats. doe5 r., or ftle.
every S..t Sun 12 4pm F asho1 Is Atwnal Netwc.i.
Info 949 644 2279
WWW M •t • lf!twortulra free
:I) doly Wl!t> ~ 4 doe:i
Rescuen 1-ied
lllAW'Olfr IUrOt OOCATS = 4 x °""""' CJA ..,, ... _Ylld __ les __ 1489_ ~..!; z:~
• CM Fri-Sat, 1 :30-12,
119 SICfks St Baker.
Hawkes. sofll Iv vcr
yrs ol storage etc
NN. SAT $-?, 2501 VliJ
MilnM. K st T~d
~ "-""stuff mthes, ~~ ~. hope <f1eSI.
~ lww1 beds. 2 gr:J/I
<.M'ls. okl a>n"Cllllw
Sot/Sun 10-3 Dul.,.t
dothes womens sz 8 14
& rrl<!m. e-11t-n lutnrttle.
plants, i.~. sm ~ &
rroor el ~7 Promoolor y Dr
w~t Jamboree & PCH. NB
SAT & SUN, 7--lpm
Momlcello Community
rs havona the11 fall &• r aae salpl Ovet JOO
hurnes Located near
0 C. swap meet en·
Ir ance. between f au
vrrw and Van Guard
Gar .... Saa. Sat., Oct 5.
l • Ip Loh of noel! tlltlles'
111 CMnatron So of
8dy~od~. Corona del Mar
..... &-.~~
furniture etc Sat
7 JOam JOO Biii of Santa
Ana Ave Newport He:gllts
General
Amouncemenll 1610
leolil"I fH 1.AUAA 19 .
btunette taH Met in OWCIF 1VZ3 ,.._. 95'-fJ63.
~e@~
RNANCIAlJ
PROFESSJONAl
PHOTOGRAPHY/
OPTICAL
MilceUaneoas
Acceaortes 3735
HUGI llWS> MmOa,
perlect oand. brand -.kJI> sh mes-O'do!r. iw-xsr x vc-. Wiit! 1· beYel. Cost
$450, sell SllS. W• ...._. 1.alllCM73-«t1'
Olcesblem -
IA<• UY <INTH
2651 Irvine Ave, 900sl,
2011 vrew. retail on -sole
714-573-7780
17th,, __ ....
VlewOfflc"
250 I 17at Street
600.f & l ... 9er
949-955-0 f 1 S
WlST MARINI ClNTla
1000 hdfk <-t .......,
1280 ... ft $2240 ......
949-574-1117
PRIMI FaONTA'°l.
Turnlley? 345 E 17th St.
CM, 3000sf. 16 wired
desll, cont rm, d1spl1y
atHr etc ... 7flJ-77S-7775
HOMESFORSAl..E
ORANGE 5G
COUNTY
SERvtES A111t VlllO
Plnonal l.oana 2490 -,..,.--91--l--ov_e_ly-Co_n_clo_.
lnanclal Link
Borrow when need.
Mot l&•ee. Business.
Per~on•I. Debt Con
'olldallon. Home Im-
provement, Auto
lo•nl, Credit R111>•lr,
Quick Approval. low
lnletest, low Month· ly. No fee Apply by
phone call l ·~856-
7039
wNeeJ ........ Wflt
l11d1n1 flnanc:lal re
aourca centet llellHfll
with debt consokSetloM.
mort111u. p1rsonel. Yllhocll or sn1111! busln9s
lo•n• WOfllfl& fwll brftl 1
You m•y qu1hfyl Cell
I 1166-563-5412 flOW lot
more lnt ormellon
Membef of eae·
tp, Pl1nt1tlon shultlfs
in LR. hrdwd fin, 1111ge
has bullt Ina. Quiet tnd·
of-cul de sec, $379,000. eet Phil V11tntl 949-887· 3886, 949.717.1911 e&I'·
Wanttos.I
your home?
Ask ......
SAT, SUN
Rea1Elfwt9
Eclltlon
cal
U..IJnre
949
574-4252
otAllilW-..,
949
574-4249
•••JMO
SOOS·SISO
1204 ~ hy fre.t
Reduced to $3,6'95,000
Build yout dream home
on this landmark lot with
puvete oilr Owners
want often
1111 Har ... ty •..tty
949-.67S-%a66
0.-s.t & s.. 12-4.
1SS6 I . Oc-lt.4.
3Bt Charmrna bHch
house, iirt loc, $875,000
eat. Cheryll, North Holl~
Realty 714 915·2064
Corona del Mir
Spy ... n Hll, Fabulous
ocean vrew. 2·slory 4Br
home. FR, paneled library. Dacor appls, sub
zero. custom chetry
wood c ablnetr. Pella
windows & d oots
thtoueh out Offet ed at
Sl ,775,000 Judy Kol11,
Bkr 949 376-5576
UST 5tol
OPEN SAT-SUN 1-S • 1130 Ch11rle1ton. lb< 2b•
house ovenrH backyd. $360,000
OPINSUN 1-5
334 OGll ti
Beeu home loc rn NP
He11hh area, Jb1 uch
wrth a dec:k Only 4 Un•"' nsoc dues S 12!'1
$.425.000 Tonr Hancock 949 650
0742 949 722 0620 Mar ae lea Realty
• Of'IN SUN 1-4 • 3047 (.-try<._. Dr.
M(SAV(ROE
COLr COURSC
Jbr. 2 Sba completely
111modeled. I story
10,000+ sf lot
$17$,000
An ... Mc<nt-d
714 540 SCI l
714 751 4330
~"Sat&S-1-4 E srde R 2 $785.000
2 del ach.ed homes on I
lot-cozy 28r 18• cottaae
w/1.,•1• plus 38r. den
2.58• w/upstaon laun
dry & wndeck 180 Cos
I• Meu SI Owm/Aet
949 933 6786
MIN SUN 1-5
2572 WfflfMIMtH
Av•. 3 hu&e bt's l new
b• femrm. hvtm. dlnrm.
study TV rms, •wasome
In & out!
Broket 714 &48 9567
l 'al .. Jlr 21•, hetd·
wood floors. f1bulou1
bacllyltfd, w/patlo, and
onrh1n1 plus fruit
bNrlna. tree everywhere.
$489,000 Judy Kot1r, Bllr
949-a7'-SS76 Vec-9
MISA VlllDI OfA 4 Plt11's•Prlde of Owner·
""-'· rr1nc Only ... t. Bill Onmcly 949-475-6161 .,..,.. ·-·._,...._.
..... "' ... & •-.tic S8r •t.oof. 19' & •• t.fltlff
lwed petloa, Th• Inti
rlor hts hetdwoo4 &
tr 1ventln1 floou, • • • ~ ICMl'ft*lt kltck n
and ftl>ulova .irews •It.
Sue StantOfl, 949 240 t'llf, t4«99-13211 a261
II I et1llldl
Index
. __,
,.._,....
w~.._.
wltli ..... & .. _
$1,4 .. ,000
.
..... a-..ec..-
fr-dt <-y htete
$2,295,000
M•I• a.-.1 '"'-·~··...ti McGwlre'a htcrte
$2,995,000
Ardtit_ .. (stet•
-o~ts1.14
$2,Ats,000
,...._,._, cw.e Cay ..... < .. _,
$2,495,000
Mef!Y Other Uatl"fS
Aven.Me
SttH'H.-IMw ...... a
714-i40-10J1
• 48r woth spectacular
ocean & northern
coastline v11ws. all buck
rnteriot patio w/lush
l1ndscap1n1 secluded
spe nHlled rn tall prnes.
best quality throughOut
homa. Sl,395,000 att.
949 494.4333
.WS10
••• ,.. <•"••·· $4S,000/ .... 28r 28a. across from pool •
clubhouse, Iona term
lease thru 2026. Prlorrtr boll slips. MMy Wood. •ct. 949·584·5811
.,,._ frl, s.. & s-..
6 louere. Newpert c,...t ~ ZBr 28a+
loll. new 0/W, stove. ~I &MCllll~
catpet. Periio. p1mL 2 ~
decks, w11k to be1ch, DCUT&I • S389K act 949 646 2011 flQ'l I~
h 80,000 Homes Each Week
y $32 per week (4week minimum)
Lorraine at (949) 574-4245
eWinle< 2br 2ba, Sl600
e Ytly 2bt lba, 1 c: ear.
SlSOO e Yrly or wrnter
furn, 2br • den 2ba. 1
c a•t S2!iOO e Y1ly 2br
l b• + 1unroom. View of
bay S2000 Lora V•nce
Realtors 949-67S-4062
W...._... 41r, 2 .. ,
houu fuHy ot partiany
lurn"d, pt, w/d, er-ut
f)llJO. WW\191' SJ400m 114
Manne Ave. 949-675-8178
BalboaPrimlla
IAllOA PININ POUl'T
w/pter, bay & ocn v11wsl
4br 5111. den. Ip. formel
d1ntm S7500/mol•r• v-• ., 949-673-4062
Corwllll ...
Jbr 2t>a hse. nu fits. wd.
l>•lto, c1Vsm do& <*
$2150 (Of'nl SAT-SUM
11-Jl • 437 0.hlil Ave
tA kevrn 949 851-0424
2w, 21M yrly 11t1tal. fp.
dw, wd ht.up. nu ptlnV
catpel. 2 car landlfn pq Ac1 949 293~
CIMoral .. o-t housa
lbr lb•. utrl Incl. 300ft
from bey, Sl500m Un
$1Gn rim 9&mQ10
leyal4• Vl""9 28r
281, f p, patio, } pools,
w/d. Sl650!n yrly n/f>'lts/
•mll& 949-673-6913
VenelllH $219,000 ~
28t 2Ba. 1ust hsled. YEAalY IAYfttONT J8r least costly on Newport. Rooms 1810 28
603 ,.....,_ Sar 2h, Nr Ho•1 & Bch, 2br
fp. w/d hkups, Irr&, trnt upsr.cted Int•. pr, new
yrd. nu/crpVprit 1vl now 1pj)f's. fitness/pool pt.d
S2SOO/mo 949 400 0355 $1695/mo 949-466-7615
Buch close. aood con· '· newly up&f•ded. ••• 49. 2h "'"-'• 2• 1 .. , u~. o-s ditoon. foll security C1ll MANAGERS ~kna Reduced Cannety Home 2fp. front & "" unit/Iota of Interior
aiienl, 949·!i00-3250 Spec rel S20 alt will HI entals 1·800·247·8209 y1td, La kitchen, 2·c lltf, uparades. lltf. I& deck.
-1 ,._..,._.'*Ad. Zli es "'4.4 "-lb $3200/mo 949-721·5747 W/D lac, mual see. IHclt Cette9e, 2Br ""'• '*11Rllb. se..i e< ce •• -,,-1 $1700/mo. 714·914-9!114 2Bt, quiet comm on on ti.AM lnil 9'dl. fEA. lba, ultl paid, bbq, wd. 1,_4 -w 3 story "-.
areal loc. en1oy Marrna llHS 3' hr ~ remod, 1/2 bit. to bch! ocn view h1l lq) rm. 2 I•...., tlr, 2~ +
and Private Buch clll ~ ttlO. ESl'N Pvl yard 310-476 9975 c p . Pld aedlth9's. dap ...... 1520sf, 2-car pt.
S I 29,500/obo. Mary & a.:,~ & jlc. Cuesl e ON SAND $UH e raq. S37!JO 714.V>8Dl In CJMnbelt commu111ty
Wood, eat. 949-~ 5811 1n1 it. to twys.,... "°"1 ltw ,_ ~ etc. Coda Mal ~..:11~1::!.~
0.-. 1-4 The Bluffs OC llirw'dl. UN, ClOl9-"*• llll.nl. ....._ ps ,,_ ~ ·~ M-f"
J9r 2Ba. Otoll 'ond. Wiii io ~ Pllld 9'&642·2221 -~·lovely 1•l•d comm 714-4S4 ... ,
loWHI priced, I level. COSTAMESAMCJltlllNN OCIAN&IAYVllWSI near Ttr Sqr, IBr, 1111, SUfaal
$49SK 501 Aven•d• 2271 Hlrtoar llW lBR (OfflCE?) IBA 111/stora111 $855/mo+ Lorenzo. att 9/650-0224 ~ furn or unfurn YEARl y SSOO/sec Kleln Mnat Gated. 2 pools. 2 IP•'· 877·704-11649 • 9200 2 ten11is courts. Clbhse, ALMOST NIW RenlltTo Dirt 6030 ~ Oeaw4Wd ~ Gym. SKurt Prk&. Ntral
aOOf TM V11W Sl71o,.Ml nd util 11$/rC> UST StOI upste1n unot. to Hof& Hospital
JU5TUSTID ..... ,_ S.. ,_ ~2 2bt Iba. &M. laundry llr Cet•ll••/O<eee
AGT. 949-723-1120 for rent Wall! to beach, •tier vi-ef lley,IBr. 169 Walnut, Sll50/mo Vlew.$1,ISO.
llACH OUf'UX utoht19s p1td $500/mo le all 11r. all new Matrufa 714-662 3111 21r 21• '•••"-•
llSf Patel 949 675·3009 press 1 carpets, paon( etc. 714 S40·3666 $2190
flewport C t3I 31e JUSTUSTID Nl/Oc....,._. V..WI 1217'/>W Bay Sl800mo •2br25bi 2story• ·~a-W.~e
T-'"-0::1 m:sters AGT.94'·723-1120 Share l& home. S900m 714 915-2064 2 cat &•t yd. $1350/mo ( 49)646-677•
upst.11 s. temodeled krt. IASTllUll LG llVll W>CI amenrti95. ~ pref'd. Jlr 21• ..,,,.. •. Stet" 238 Avocado IC Prt1dlnlral Caltf Rulty
crown moldone. Italian lOT, $724,000. n/smkg 949 723 5434 to bnch. Fp 2c aar. 1 Avail Now' 949 631 0490 '-••• 3Br 2 5Ba limestone and more Lo ._ ...... __ • ., __ T,''• I I lwohme> Coif couru • --,_ year use. no pe "'· • 21r lie rur unot. &•r•&e. work bench w/d aJtr 949-644 1t5 lt 2tw U.. A,t. View $2100/ 626 359 4539 v1e111 Pr1wete localton hk up\, storaae rm Nur £n1Bluf( & CdM mo · 101•1 remodeled. 11 Yd $1200 •II 949 759 3729
$475 000 1 Ph I Twnltu, CJ.er........ HS, ue1I now, uzsmo 0 •••Wit-. °""'9a :.>21'/• 23'd St Sl'>95mo ai 1 Sunny, Spacoous2•)• ..., l 28 949 640 3632 lrnduy lhe llvff•, exec home Valen tr . 949 887 3886. &ar. pool-+ buch acceu ultls Incl (949) 644 9124 I r lower. w/pallo. 2br lb• back bay view
949 717 1911per Sl500mo.!M9•653•6 188 Roomllorn__. -$2300/mo l& 38r 28a •IAST SIDI• Costa one of oocest f)l'opertres •0,-S../S-1-4• ,_. -upper w/balc. $2600/mo. Mew. 38R 28A 'l C aar rn the Bluffs. No peb,
2s-c..,. .._,,..,.___. / 11'"1 toe:. fp, P'•ll completely oedon• luse S2SOO/mo949290
Rare Sea Island 38t 3811 ... .,.....~ NI rooms avell In 11 p1r kin1, W/D, furn , $1750/MO 949 6.116 4316 1081949 760 0815 S VM v-ale home w/pool, pool table, amaz1n1 views. Avail end unrt with • vie w fully furn, ell n1w eppls, Now •at. 94g.795 4038. • IAST SIDI• Sode . lbr Ti.. llvff• 3Br 2 5B•
loolllne out to Slrnatute 4'°r, 4.SM ltltrwy • Must ne 714 746 5158 lb•, troplu air• 111 2 condo, lovely vrew, of
Hole 117. $875,000. est bonuuoom. 1145 W. IAUOA story. 2 k1tchen'5, deck. park. toahls, Bay $2600/ '-'l•Let191e $1,649,000 Spodew llr rn beautiful Steps to OcH n i nd Bty yd, wd, l cnr .. 111ch iar mo Batbara Rltr 949
949-SOt..lt23 1 S Vie ,...,.1• house w/pool & l•c. 38dtm 281th, SZ.600/mo $2000/mo 800 278 1887 644 0195
OPIN SUN 12-S 511t S.Sbe SA00.000 in P'o'1 perfd. ~ + 112 lower of Doplu . •et. • WTSel .... 2llA • OCIANHONT Ha::o!7H~~b:;~tv uperadesl $2,27',000 *& l(fCJJOQZ2.a577. 949-723-UH pool, yard. 2fp"s 421 2& 38r, YHtly/Wrnlet ,... , ...........,......,., Y..ty ..... 38r uppet ~ c. Sl&X)n ~ Sl850m SZllOOm
3br 2ba 2 c:ar 111r•ae. Spectacular loc w/v.ews Mt:O:MUCl'l rll"L.RENTrt.l.S wi den. la master w/walk· ~ 949-651).J~I •It 949 550.4777 complete remod, very 4br 2.5ba Sltldl home. ODAMl'fl: 7.ann In ctsl. vault ceil1. ocean
noce. everth1ne newt $1,690,000 ~ ..VU & bay vtews, qulal loc. """' TaOVAH Jbr 2 Sba $799,900 COUNTY S26SO/mo avall mid Oct popul11 flt plan. up
,,...,_ 714-664-.6493 24 <at•'-Ca ll •ft !M!J.795·4038 L••H ... tloe lili.e slaon, s.nale level, •111
H-"-iifi9• htetH A touch of Italy 4br S2600m • u c twnhm SJOOO 949 293 4630
OPIN SAT-SUN 1-5 2.Sba, Slrad1 home. Balbol~ ••••tlf•I leyfn•t 2br+ den. wd h•. 19l0sf. Hr 2 .51e, 2300sl
17 St. TrepH Sl .7~R~~T~NUM a--.... bfr.: Uppel r~r;~~!"~~!ws~~ 2c pr. 9"9-«il·~ newly remodeled, .. krt. , __ k Vlfln, Oat, Stefa·'-u-ut•• 8 nd T Ch .._...._... 2 rp, 11 bet.yd, S3200mo city lftlot vi•-,,... ...., -1tudt0 •pl. lu I lute. be •y • urnrns •n· _..,...-Avarl 11/1 949-574-9281 5 1,065,ooo 949-715-3156 . dnn1 rm fp. leund yrl ntl, I& bale w/Fo. pr ..___ .....__._. ~
lse SI 150 949 673 3437 p11•rn1 $2900/mo Av.ti ------949-4JS-4000 DICONIT/ Now •&f.. 949-795-4038 .. ,,_, .... 1 3/4 -•
lr .. en,...etected n~u. Great Cat Apt IBt , la ~-U4e ,........_... • 0..--Set-S-1-5 yal'&ftnM deck. onclds utb. quret Spee4 W'-'-on B•I· ......... 21r De. ht & ..... Mf...S1'0..S01t :r4s• Vlsle....., """'"'" end ot lllland S1400mo bo• Ocnfrt. L1 chwlnN'll ""-teMedi,...., ,._, sw t .._
lawtfs t•-"•"'• PROf'ERIT avarl now 949 675 7625 J8r. petio. Jc ,,,-L furfl & .,... W .. t• :,, 1.5tie ~ 0-.:.
New llstbofl 3br, up Cftlll Jt&I I: S2950mo 949-645·4345 ..._.en, ....... -4 =-Ull :,.... ,.
sredld hh model' rvn~ o..r...e., ar 1.,. beach ._.....,.,. ....... new r .. t_...ta. ........ 11 1 ' '*' poaV $399.000 p11nc only holaa Apt Upper lvl dacll ._ ...._ ..,..... s:Bn'lno
Nor alee Paulson Realty "--......_.,, ~ w/B vu"s S1500m 805 '!'pet, pelflt. bttilt·ins, :t:u .. ,.::;: ,_ • ~7JSJ
949 632-~·-.,_,. •...-•r -ld7 W.t Bey SlOOOmo. e•N 1.s•• beautihil .....,,, --------685 9334 949 ~2347 ect. Chef'yll. Nof1ll Hilts '49 .... 7s-60JO w h .. I I d.,.3 b ett.rt.H VI-H-Coif prop. Sein & Realty 714-915-2064 H9-72J-SIJO orne I )'G, J c I"· Y
Uparaded 48r l .58•. 2· winter 11nt1ts. Palm Y...ty I& 38t 281, lower perk SJIOOmo Oonalre
story with sourment kit. S1>rln11. Pelm D1sert unit. houaes to w1l11, ~-.._ Jar, 2h, Wey St 949-645 S7S5
11 P•llo, yerd, golf Also Weahlnaton We 1•r pt111. petlo, quret home MCond from sa11d. * YIAJU.Y * Oc_.,._. on UM und,
cou rse end sunset terfront R1ferr1 I• loc. S2300m. Avell end ~!Z,,,:.le•. ~< -;ia~ l.lASIS 4br 2t>• yrly rental, new • _ _.. p Moch11I Anllf Becker & of Oct ,... 949-~4038. -fvm.d S: Bill GRUNDY Rl .Al TORS t Int .., ii~ii"i"!4iwig'i,OJiiZO..irj~~eFr~·~Bec~k~er;;;R;E~800iiiii;550;;;;3;S2;3;biiiiiiiiiiii•_iiiiii.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~w~l~n~1•~r~.~94~9~·~6~7~5~·8~1~7~8~~~9~4~t~-6ij7~5i-6~1~6~1ji~i$'~J8oo~peii949.i'93~ ••·
ij!be ~~rt Beacb/eosta Mesa
Daily Pilot presents you with a great_~pportunlty to promote andques
&. coUeCtibles. Perfect for aho~, dWen, auctions, booksellers,
decorators, reftnJshers, art -.enes -develop your business with usl
A Special PubllcadOn -.. Just for YOU!
PubUSbes: Oct. 23, 200'l
space & copy Delldllne: oa. t6Ch ... 5pm
Release Deadllile: Prl., ~ JM Noon
<llall tnbau!
Ann Wllley
~-514-4249 or fax your ad
taM9-6.1l~
HOUSI U90 .. 28r +
den, 381, 2 ~fp,
petlo, .., ... , mo ...... , ..... .
•0,.-W/S-1-4• I See<..,•
Awe See •nd 38r JBa
end unit with • vitw
loo401!1 out to SiaNture
Hcilel17.$4500.
-r.~-=r
•IAY'SH099+
Gtrt ... -'ty, 38r
38• home w/b•r. view $4800/-. 949-466-7460
Sir .. In a•ted c:omm. I Ford Road. MOOG/mo.
6-9mos. •· o.w wona 949-CHOOO
Of'llfUl~ 1-4 MIWPOlt't MIMffn
llAMe er1w CUSTOM
38r. Oen. 3.58• Home. 3c pr. 534 CATALINA.
SI .395,000 Assocleted
Rultr 949-689-4200 ....,..Coal
Geit... c-lty 28r
28e, Frpk:, leuncky. very
nice. 12195/mo Call •et
Rodner 949 717-4798
~ ......
,....., It Studio w/lull
kitchen & beth. Fp, le
car. na.I now $850/mo Call :Jt_ 949 795-4038
Prfvlll TlllDrtng 7911
-
fr,1 1 iit·r 111 l'i.t 1111 Maly.,.,., M-'l
U..lnl9Hamr
Begilnilg-Ad¥n!d
(949)813-2246
Emp..,,._. -
cer..,,,•n •• s-••n. Rewardin& po•lllons lo
provide in home Lom
p<1n1onsh1p, homemak
1n1. err end• F le• PT h1 •
or 24 hr sh•fh C~r
reqd'714 444 4881
boc AHht. &Int wrrlltn
& verbal sl11lls. 0•1ain
11ed, multi Inked Word,
[ace I, Outlook, Internet
Fu resume/salary hrs·
torr 949 873 0017 Pally
r OM
HOM£ ANO CET
...-, to Sl.2roSl.5CXVmo
PT 01 16.CX»SB.OCQ/mo
fl Ho lap Hl!edec1
Wlll....W FR££
Recordild lnlo 24 tn.
877 747 2863
Amlulc;
POlKY
In •n effort to otter tM
be1t MfVlct pou1ble to
our readers •nd edver·
t1sen.. we wlll require
Contrac:ton who •dver t1se In the Service
Owectory to lndude thew
Contrector s license
nurnbllr In thew edver
t1sement. Your co
operetlon Is crnllr
1pprecilt~
Adami
Rlm1•1111
ATOl ...... DYllMf
Inst.I. ref11ee cebmets ~ Ciltlll""'*"*'
<t<Am'tt1)<AltPfT1)
A..,.n. ,,~hlftc. IMtell
=~~ Cf11*1
OWllAP<?
$450-S5QOO+. f'T /f T
1 800-248-6602
thtwm!nt!ll!o!yt!on SOT
locept/Offlce Anlat
111ust me multi lulled,
In res w/sel history to
949'-87J.<l017 Petty anu SAUS
HE.WPORT$TATIOHERS
Greet benefits end
quellty wortl envlrnment.
Full or Pert time.
Pw-...1· 949-113· 1200 -
A-41 'tt A• 0'""9re,
41 k m1 silver send,
moonroof. CO. f1bulloua
cone lhrouehl $19,000
lin1nc1n1 & wen evetl
..-4291117 8kt 989116-18118
ILAZ•"OO AC, AC, LOW MIS
(214267) $16,"S
NAlllS cADll.U.(
100-tU-55'2
IMW 'tS SSOI IOOli
m1 OHi lady owner.
books records. bill/bit.
10 d"c CO, Chrome whl,
11ra1ed. tl/SITW, like MW
cond, $12.!R> m Warr _,,.
.,,, 586141 9&5518111
l•W '94 740l1 Blue/
Cler. 7311. miles. lint
cond, or11inel owner.
$15.500 949-644-7968
IMW '94 H5h C..,..
89t. full books & records
Blk/ten, sunroof CO.
superb or11 cond
SI0,995 vt752196 Bkr
949 586 1888.
aMW 'ts 5401 lOOll
ml, black/bleck. CO.
booh. records. buultful
onarn•I cond $12,995
"'626151 Blw ~ 1888.
CIHlllloc '00 lldw .... nc ;.>61. m1. lull factory
warr purl white/oat
mul llhr chrome whls,
1old Pklt Ilk• new sn 995 f1nencrn1. wer·
renty avail v•277952
Bt.r 949·586· 1888
DIYIUl'02
UMDEa 15" "''· lew lntOf'Mf""of .......
(201712) S21,tt5
MAllAS CAINU.A<
800-945-5592
C....,Stnlca timfMd .......... _.
@ rour pece @ your
home or OfflC[ lnd1
vKlu1I coachrnl. 1nlernet set up. softwi11e, trou
bleshoohn& web desrcn
& rRn. o.na 9DJZ)-9J72 n SHOUlO II fUNl
c....,....r ... ~
Hardwere 1nst11lalt0n. " .......... ~ _...,...~-
c.a...aMDRy
lrldi lledi St-Tiie
Coocntta. Petio, Orlvewlly
rnp1c, 88Q. Refs 2'Yrs
Eap. Terry 714-557·7594
C--... __, Fpkil.
88Q. *· done. land· scape, retein1na wells.
L667547 949-254-1048
~ .........
YGUaNO•I •• ,.OVUIPfl ,.OJKn
C•Heplllmkr,
pelftt1r. hendymaft,
or eny of the lfHl
se< vices listed llere In
~ service clWectoryl
THESE LOCAL SVC
PlOPl! <:Aft HELP
YOU TODAY!
PHl.LWS
AUTO
949-57 4-7777
DIV1W '02VI,
Vory ,t.-,
c20·1 ~T s-'Sr. ... s
NAldS CADtUAC
aoo-t4S-Sst2
0...,. •97 2500 v-Conven1on, er een. c~p·
liens seats. rear fold1n1
SQh, TV/VHS, su~rb
mech1necal & body
cond, ••500667 $5995 Bkr 949 586 1888
FWlWOOO'M
UMDOSOll•US
(711476) $14,"5 was CAM&AC ..... 4S-H92
, ... , "so '94, •h4
Blacll, 8511 m1. •Int cond.
runs 1real, very dun. bed securrty boa,
S8.150. 714-271-1215
wtTIMOlfT DllYWAU
All pheses sm/lr1 tobs
CUANI 20yn. falf, free
est. L«nm n4-6J9. t447
eatcllSlnlas
s.-1,.. • .,.....,
Ounan Electrlc: 21Nrs E a.p
loceVQuic* Racionse
ServcelRemodlfs
LllV5II70 949-650-70il2
,,...1......,..
•I ...,... .. o.c..
• Receued lllflbnt
• C.1fln1 fens
• l""'5<epe l1PtM1
• Troubtil Sllootfna 714-SSM17S llc"93150 Int VS/MC
UCDtSIDCONTitACTOll
ND jatl lllo Sii\ M w-'
Repeir. rernodle. fe11s.
"' ,_ SVC 9666-Jli!i6
ftncaO•dl
le•n 'tt LS 400 5611
m1, factory warr. silver/
llTeY lthr. CO. chrome
whls, hlle new, $28,995
fln1nc1n1 1v11I Yill6l4261
Btu 949 586 1888
More ..... '"• 2IO Sil '72 (4.S ) Clftalc, •i..t
llhr, be4y, e109I••·
fv•rythl"I wert.a, el
""''''· 1 •1• .... $4900 94t-67J-S60S ,_lee ·aa 6000 2.1
V6. 89k ml. leisure World owned, fabulous
c:Oftd throupout, luNy
loa~ new reptntt0n
& smoe. ten ific value
Sl,995 vt267974 ht
94._511-IB.
s.ew. '00 SU Q ml,
euto, slfve1. lfl!Y tnl. am
Im. 1arapd. non/smllr
hlle new v97285 l $6995
Ftn werrenty ••ad. 8t.r
(949)5 .. -1 ...
lDlf ...... ReJmed
Repouhn & lnstetubon
0£AH TILE 94!Hi73 8065 11~ n4-8!n2001
Ftnllln I Cablnll
'<I Yters 5¥v1ce of
Cenlnt. Rush. Reed &
Wicker Wort.
510 Old Hewp«t Blvd
PM tBeach
AllDmalhl ._ BOATS
....... ,,, Sl1 5spd r.AlllERS ------A/C, em·fm, new smo1 ,._ Ml:A Pawwlllll 1515
I re1l1tretlon. alnt -•.-• -inechenlc:al I body cond -,_.,--.,-,-,-,SO-S_ta_ndar_d
Sl.195 v•129741 8kr ceb. metchln1 shell.
949-586-1888. short·bed liner. tow pk1.
'" ...., t1ft lnint coftdltioft, co p&Qar &
relrlaeretor Sl,,500
. SIVUI US '00 ......,, ...... va. attl _. fectwy....,.
(1474S.) Ut.ff5
MAIW <AHJ.AC
.OO-.t4S-Sff2
SIVtil '01
Stll tWer fectety
W.-r,L.Mlle•
(I 14470) 525,tt5
NAldS CADIUAC I00-94S-SSt2
sfVIU1 •97 ns
sootW, xun COMD,
MUSlGO.
(Ut260l 5U,94S.
· NAIEiS CADIU.AC
100-945-55'2
SUIUUAN 'tt
2WD, ~4 a-, s-.
0.-.
(SSOlta) 511,995
MAlds CADIU.AC &00-945-5592
Teyot• '91 C-.., U 40ll ml, white/1rey int,
•uto. 11iua1ed. non/
smkr. beeuttful cond
throuaht vl274 382
$9895 Bkr 949·586 1888
AUTOMml.8,
llSCBl.AIEOUS
Wane.d IMS
F...-Y o,..n..e4 ~
With ovf!f 40 yeais up•
w1M pay a very f.,, puce
for your cat Van or ltudl
paid for or not C.H OICll
Rey (Ci> Tomato Auto
s..i.. /14-437 1931 or
71 .... 323-3228
CASH Foti CAllS
W. ~your car paid
for or not Phllhps Auto
AU tor Malcolm
949-574 7777
TOf' 5 4 llECCMU>S nc $
.Im. Clllss:, EE. !'Os & Sh a Allee. ~. 11A1e ~ Mike 949-645 7505
JUNK TO THI DUMPlll
714·968 1882
AVAILABLE TOOAYI
949 673-5566
Cl.NDAI.
611&1N1EUNCE
• lmlalial • C'.cmmdll
0 Job 1bo Slnal1
o. .............
M9-•2M292
erurse, loeded. med blue,
lib new n werranty,
1101500 562·439·3106
TRAILERS
('4t)'46 ....
Wented 2lft Duffy wltl
trad 18f1 + cuh (949)
673·8718
TraUers
DUf" DKl1IK 77 J.r
in. a..lt' ... blOlrflt. m co .. RmdD. 111.a .....
--------$1>~ 1999 lvno 17ft Sell
contained a11 etc Dvffy 0-.tc 11h, 1985
Loaded! u~ed 2 short tood cond, lull cover.
tnps. l 7,600 562 4J9.3Ul6 new batteries, l6500.
949.341-M24 ht. 3
PLUG
IN
Plug into the Pilot
Class1f ied sect ton to
find services from
electronics and
plumbers, to
landscapers and
painters
NfWfOltl Ill AO• • COSTA MESA
MUIA'S
H0ut1d1 ...
Service
f'« Y°"' House Ap.,.._nt or Veuney
~-=--f ,. (stJMeta
Refrrenc.; Av.aallle
10 Years C •penence
CeU ON•r M•ll•
714 ... 21-740
Cell 7l4-22S-17T4
DailyPilot
MMll• ..
IUl MOVDS $59/Hr
..,... .. c1bes Insured
MIC. eowt.ous. careful n...-.. eoo.z•-n18
'1AltO ussows
Get "' tune Witl'I Ms RM
Cell for frM eveluatlon Cl!) 94t_.IO-OMO ............
<OWRACtoes
Mewlyltate
Stllft: 12/ln.
24/ln or UVE·IN.
c... .. ·~·
"Employee."
''Empleado ...
"Arbeilnehm.t!r. ..
"Employe. "
a.-.'• ...... 'ZlYts op Cuet f'nc:el Guar enteed
work Fr" est l •375602 714·538-IS34 7 J!I0.2945
ICl"S CUSTOM PMmNG
l'rofl, dun, qualrty worll
lnUftor/eat and doch l""38 !M9-63l 4610
ecmuJftmmlllBll e-··-ei.m•• t••· ·-M-•ftFBBI <M•1t11
t '""'li··rl • ,, I :!-;,,-;-,·;
•-of M8TJ~
Ptf'[ LOCATING
ELECTROMC SlA8
LEAK D£T[CTION
F uendly Service
949-67S-9J04
-~.am l~muttO
FIEETOUTS Cal Sam 881-197. 7002
www.-~OOfll
~&MAso.tr•
f'lueet.R ll50i586 2044 Off ......, Small
repairs (714) ZJ!>9150
n1os1 PWM._.
AepMr. & R-6elona
f AU ESTIMATE
L'687l91 714 969-1090 ,.. ......
llUI ,Aanc POOLS
..
• BUICK•
I
I "We Arc Professional Grade .. Ifs All Good
I
H 2lm CAl"•AC ESC••• ED
NABERS DISCC>tMT ••••••••••••••••••• $2, 900
• FAOORY REBATE ••••••••••••••••••••• $3,(J()()
85 ,900