HomeMy WebLinkAbout2002-10-06 - Newport Mesa Daily Pilot• I
INSl>E
TtEPLOT
LIFE&
LEISURE
Dressing up your
pooch 1s not that
unusual come October.
Between Halloween
and the upcoming
#Top Dog" fashion
show. there are plenty
of opportun1t1es to
make your pup look
snazzy.
See Page AS
SPORTS
It was a long night for
Estancia H1gh's football
team as they tackled
Westminster High.
See PageA12
• SUNDAY -..
EDITION
Serving the Newport-Mesa community since 1907
OCTOBER 6, 2002
. SUNDAY STORY
"We just sometimes look back in amazement at how far we 've come."
~ E.mme1, Co-fooodet of South Coast Repertory
PHOTOS BY SE.AN Hl.LER I OAl.Y PILOT
The glow of the lights sets the mood for opening night of South Coast RepertOf)"s new Folino Theatre Center Saturday in Costa Mesa.
Taking its first bow
COMMUNITY FORUM
Peggy Anatol, director
ofasse~mentforthe
school district, shares
her views on
standardized testing
with City Editor
James Meier.
SeePageA7
UIJ1MATE CALENDAR
Want to know what's
going on in
Newport-Mesa this
week?
South Coast Repertory unveils its three-theater
complex, ending months of renovation and
construction with a gala on Saturday
Youn1Chan1
Daily Pilot
L i.ke expectant fathers, David
F.mmes and Martin Benson
stood in the gut of a
barely-there theater last April
and spoke of a stage that
soon would exist.
They beamed in a dusty. hollow shell
or a place. They paned. or was It more
like petted. a wooden fence that
separated the soon-to-be stage section
from the audience. They boasted that
the space between would be, at most. 39
feet from anywhere in the house.
announced all the good things -all the
dollars and donors and endowment
plans and new programs -that have
and will come with a $19-million
expansion project.
Uke dads. they have been gushing
good news.
Their baby, meanwhile, has grown up
just the way architect C.esar Pelli's
portraits promised it would .
SeePageA8
For a year now, the fowtc:len and
artistic directors of South Coast
Repertory have celebrated flrat step. -
the groundbreaking, the placing of the
last steel beam on the Julianne Argyros
Stage and the naming of the various
parts of SCR's new Folino Theatre
Center. And for a year, they have
What was for so long just a massive
mess or noise and Home-Depot-esque
comers suddenly got a face this month,
a sleek and modem one with a whole lot
of windows and silver steel borders. The
three theaters -the Segerstrom Stage,
the Julianne Argyros Stage and the
Nicholas Studio -grew personalities.
And the fancy, windowed lobby
stretcblng aaoss the whole complex
began to aasume enough shape to do its
job, to hug Its three stages. Mimes Merissa Fuentes and Tom MacMaster float through the crowd,
See sow, Pq• M entertaining guests Saturday evening at the gala for SCR.
TOP STORY
Taking the long way to school
AJ'ound 1,000 people exercised their legs
Saturday to suppon Newport Harbor High
SC::hool chufug the Harbor Heritage Run.
COMMENTS & CURIOSITIES
The distraction
of baseball
; I
I
NEWPORT BEACH
A steeple decision
that is start of debate?
Months of debate over a Mormon
temple and It.a towming steeple came to
a conclusion Thursday as the Planning
Commission voted to approve the
17,575-Coot temple with a steeple
reduced Crom 124 feet to 99.75 feet.
They also required that building tights
come on no sooner than 6 a.m. and
that they be turned off at 10 p.m
Locals were relieved to finally get
word Crom the new owners of the
Newport Dunes that they currently
have no plans to build a hotel theie.
Goldrich at .Kest and 'Ima Vl8ta
Manlgement. whlcb took CM!!' the •
property ln August after the $25.5
million aale cloeed, say they want to
bring back July 4 firewor:b to the ftllOl't.
Lobcter season ticked off lut week
with not-bad-but-not-giathaull by
local lobster fishera. But It's still good
news for lobster lawn. who cm enjoy
the fresh c.alifomla spiny 1oblten '
through March.
•JUNE CASAGRANDE covers Newpon
Bead! and John Wayne Airport.~ !NV
be reached at (949) 574-4232 or by~ .i
june.casagrande#llatlmn.oom.
SCHOOLS
High bar hurdled
Results from last Mareh'a state exit
exam showed that only~ of
Newport-Mesa Unified School Distrlct
students still need to pass the math
portions and 14CJfi still need to J>8l8 the
English section of the test required for
graduation for the class of 2004.
Although a majority of district
students have passed the test. some
members of the state Boani of
Education have expressed concern that
not enough students statewide will
clear this hurdle and may decide to
postpone the requirement when they
meet next August.
A facility snafu for SAT test-taklng
was resolved this week when 385 area
high school students foWld out they
can take the cpllege admissions test at
Newport Harbor High School in
November, free of charge. The students
had originally signed up to talce the test
in October but no one was available to
administer the test. so the students
were transferred to a high school in Los
Angeles. After a flurry of phone calls
between parents and the testing service
and efforts by the school to find
som eone, a staff member finally
volunteered. The school just needs to
confirm the volunteer's application,
said principal Michael Vossen.
• DEIRDRE NEWMAN covers education.
She may be reached at (949) 5744221 or by
e-mail at deirdre.newman(IJlatlmn.oom.
COPS & COURTS
A second arrest no substitute
A 35-year-old substitute teadlerwbo
once worked at Corona del Mar High
and TeWinkle Middle School wu
arrested for a second time oo Monday
after he turned himself in at a Newport
Beach courtroom. Tudd Jerome Halucb.
of Huntington Beach faced a eecond
arrest warrant with additional c:barges
alleging tbat be indulged in laLaal adl
with several Ceinale students.
Haluch was arrested for the ftnrt time
on Sept 13 on suspicion of 13 counu of
felony sexual aaaauJt. He waa ~
after posting a $250,000 bail. A second
warrant issued Sept, 26 reOec:ted four
felony counts of een.aal acta wtth a
female juvenile and one count of
witneu intlmldation.
Newport Beach police aald they are
ln the process of interviewing more
Aa the intern for the Daily Pilot's photo department, I've
bad the privilege of working with a talented group of
people who aR always teachlrig me and encouraging me to
take advantage of great photo opportunities in and outside
the community. At the start of the fall semester I began
woddng as the photo edltor for the USC student
newspaper, the Daily Trojan. The photo staff here
adamantly told me what a great opportunity I bad,
especially in terms of sports access. I take the advice of my
mentors with me ~rywhere l go. and when USC played
Oregon State University I was ready and looklng for a
portfolio shot In reviewing my wort after the game, I
found a shot that my mentors and I could be proud of.
ENVIRONMENT
A base to camp at
Local Boy Scouts dug up fresh
ground on a new Scout Sea Base on
Prtday after almost five years of
hurdles and hard woit.
The new $5.2-milllon base. which
should be completed by June. ran
into some objections at the
Caltfomia Coast.al Commission, but
secured an approval in June. The
commission staff h:ad objected to
the si7.e of the building, saying it
would block too much or the view of
Newport Harbor.
-Crystal Lauderdale
The new base is expected to allow
double the number or scouts to use
it. As a part of the more than 22.000
square feet, the new building will
include more space for classrooms.
a new dock and a new rowing
centeL
A rendering of the new Boy Scout Sea Base in Newport Beach, wtuch
broke ground on Friday. The ba se is expected to be complete by June.
On Thursday, Newport Beach
pinned down $786,000 Crom a l 999
oil-spill settlement to Install a
boardwalk and viewing platfonns
aJong the western edge of Upper
people who say they have been
victimiud
In other news, five Colt.a Mesa
fbefigbters formed a team to make up
the city's first ever Anon Investigation
lJol1. The group. which trained (Ml' the
last three yean mainly wlth Costa Mesa
police detectives, wOl be called
wbeneYer arson ts IUlpeCted.
The team allo trained at the FBJ
Academy In Vlrglnla and the National
Fl.re Academy ln Maryland. During th1a
period. they learned several upec:tl of
aimtnaJ lnwldption tndudlng
photograpby, lnvesdgadon of what la
known" ai me "odcln and cauae· of the
ftnt., buic atme tcene in\Wtlpdon,
wbnees inunlew tec:h.niquee, lepl
pmawtlnp 8nd courtroom tadmony.
• DEEM IHAAATH covers public aafety end
Newport Bay.
Orange County gave over its
share of a S 18. l million settlement
paid out to areas'1ffected by the
l 990 spill in which 400,000 gallons
soiled the Huntington Beach
courts. She may be reached at (949)
6744226 or by e-mail at
deepa.bharath@latimes.com.
COSTA MESA
City attorney finds
himself back in action
• The Costa Mesa City Attorney's office
was restored to full staff on paper last
week when City Council members
voted to reinstate the city's top legal
oft'icial after placing him on paid
admlnistratlw leave in the course of a
pedormance review.
In reality, the office is still reeling
from four chaotic weeb that lnclu<fed a
shoreline.
• PAUL a.JNTON covers the
environment and politics. He may be
reached at (949) 7~ or by e-mail
at paul.clinton §lat/mes.com.
flurry of council votes to dig deeper
into the city's legal dealings and the
removal -and subsequent return -of
both the city attorney and assistant city
attorney.
And although Oty Arty. Jerry Scheer
was formally invited to come back,
without suffering any disciplinary
action, the 63-year-old remains at
home in poor health as a result of stress
from being placed on leave, said Greg
Petenon, Sdleer's attorney.
Now Costa Mesa faces possible
litigation Crom the man whose job it is
to make sure the dty stays out of legal
trouble.
• LOln'A HARPER covers C09tAS Meaa. She
may be l'MChed et (949) 57~275 or by
e-mail at lollt•.h•,.,,.r•l11tlmn.com.
~·-,
NOTABLE
QUOTABtES
"17111 ls1(r l«UlaT and lhts
isn't just for tlNI bro/bra.
It's for tM recrwulonal
surfer, tlw profoa#onal
surfers; ft'J far,,,. """*
8'JITIUL"
-Alain Maul', dlrector
of public .relations for the
Op Newport Oullc, on
the five.day mdlQg evellt
that ended Smlday
'We nMJtl IO think out1lde
of dw box a Ila» bt llrmll
of ordlnonca."
-GsJ l'HdDI, Nt!wport
Beach ooondlmu, on
why he ubd dtylld to
taJce a look at bow other
cities deal with
overcrowded events.
Proctor is looking for a
way to curb
Independence Day
mayhem in the city.
'We have goM into rm
tmnsaction happy IO run
the property as is for rm
timebdng.·
-Mk:b8et Gelfand
president of'Iena Vista
Manage:menl. ~along
with Gddrich & Kest
Industries bougbt the
Newport Dunea Waterfront
Resort on Aug. l
"It's on itJ UKI)' now We
have all rm approvals. We
have jumped through
~hoop and mJery
wicket..
-Dne ...... c:baJnnan
of the Boy Scout
committee oveneetng the
new Scout SN Bue. on
the groundbreaking
ceremony Friday for the
$52-mJIUon project. The
Sea Base la apec18d to be
finished in June.
•Philip Morris dJd not
deny that tlwy pu~ly
mtsU!d all oftMtr
addicted smoars abous
the dangers of nnoktng
and gave thon false ho~.
Miss Bullock admlttal
that she uw partially
responsible for he /aU
~she ~Ualed thN
lieJ..
-Mlb Plum, attorney
for Betty Bullock. a
Newport Beach woman
who woo a S28-blDlon
judgment aga1mt tobacco
company Philip MomL
Bullock aaJd the
compaoy'a falae
~and
negligence cauled her
lung cancer.
DailyAPilot
Dllrdr8 Newnwt •
Education reporter, (948) 574-4221
Mlrdrw.n.wman•hlrlm#.com a.....c...
SURF AND SUN·
New. ...._nt. (IMll 57~
dlrl.VM.t»nfllo•IMJnw.oom
P'H01'0GMlt4EM ~ Hiiier, Kuang Hwlng.
Don l.eed\, ic.11 T""*1W
RIADl"8 ttOTUNI! (848)"2..eoae
Aeoord your oommem. •bout the
Deily Piiot Of',... dpa. ......
Our~ le l30 W. '4ry 8'., C.O...
Meeii, CA tml Oflloe hour9 n MoncllrY • Mdly, l:IO 1.m. • I p.m.
Cs 111bns • It,. ... l'lloe't policy to~
OOrT9Ct all enora Of eubetenoe. ,.....call (148) 57~.
WEATHER FORECAST
What 1 beautiful dey In .. rty
fall. tt ~II be deer and eunny
tOdly, with • high of 80 and 11'1
overnight low of IO. It wttl be
Wlnnest •round 3 p.m.
The Wl"'*t It hu...,.,
been on~ *'f Wll In 1W'12.
when 1ha thertnornetitr
,..,. 81. The co°"9t ft hu
e¥9r been 'Ml In 18&6. tt 'Me ._...then. ............ .:
~tMl.noM.l/OV
knots from the nc)f1h...'l0ftt\1Mt
wm "*'coming tom the
not1hwelt 11t 10 to 20 llr'°'9 In
the .tlw1M>On. ~ ...... of 1 '°' ....... ~~· nofthweetllWlll of4fMt.
SURF
....... ... , .... _ ........ ... , ......
Ullill"""
WA111l 119DA11111
LOOKING BACK
Hammett's history
not limited to WWII
Youn1Chan1
DailyPnot
B ob Wilson had been telling
.. me foe months, maybe a
year, to write a Looking
Back on Jack Hammett.
I'd say, unaware of my tolal
ignorance, ~But Mr. Wt.Ison, Jack
Hammett's been In our paper and
we know he's a Pearl Harbor
veteran."
Wilson would k.eep Insisting
there was much more to the
story. I'd keep saying, OK. maybe
next week.
And then I read up on
Hammett -learned that he Is a
former mayor of Costa Mesa.
former planning commi.sslon
chairman, former police reserve
officer, past chamber of
commerce president and the
person who helped start Bristol
Part Medical Group.
I finally thought, Hammen
would make a great history
column.
So here's his story.
We'll start with what he did for
Costa Mesa and who he w~ for
the cicy.
He startt.>d Bristol Pru1c MedjcaJ
Group in 1960. lhe business now
hai. seven offices throughout the
county and employs almost 1,000
people. In the beginning, there
were five, maybe six doctors. said
Wilson, a friend of I lammetts
and a1M> a former mayor of C..osta
M~
Ille Pearl I !arbor \Urvtvor, who
was s1.auoned then-al the U.5.
Naval Hospital ru. a pharmarut'!>
mate. joined the C .. osta Mt">CI
Police Reserve. in 196 l and held
the po~11ton of o;cruor reserve
officer unul 1982.
I le joined the Costa Mesa
Planning CommJSS1on m 196.1
and was chairman for two of Im
-.even years.
I le WdS ele<..1ed to tJw lily
rnuncil in 1970.
I le became mayor in Hl72
I le al'iO, during these year;,
. ..erved on the Costa Mesa
01amber of C..ommerce and Wds
president of the group for two
lerms.
"I've had a rather diverse
history." said the 82-year old
Hammett. who lives in Costa
Mesa.
When
asked what
his favorite
role in the cicy
was. he said,
Naturally, I
enjoyed being
the mayor.
The head of
the
government. Jack Hammett it's always
nice to be."
The Oewiland native said that
his biggest accompUsbmenta as
mayor included woddngdose)y
with the state's Department of
Transponation to get Highway 73
put in. improving the Bear Street
offramp and ligllting TeWtnk:Je
Pad:.
Wtlson said that as an early
reserve officer with the c.osta
Mesa Police Department,
Hammett was one of the first to
Oy a helicopter In the city.
"He flew them very often when
it came to planrung problems."
Wi.lson said.
Hammett would Oy with
photographers who would take
aerial photos o f big stretches of
land that would later be used by
the Planning Commission.
He also had some stature on
the state level. 'Jben-govemor
Ronald Reagan appointed him to
the California Aeronautics Board
and the California Medical
Examiners Board Leo J.
McCarthy, Speaker of the
Assembly. appointed Hammell to
tJ1e Department of
Transportation Advisory
Comminee.
lbday. I lanunen is sull dct1ve
as chairman of the Freedom
( .ommiltee of Orange County.
Ille group i.s made up of
ck.unguished and decorated
mm bat veterans. TI1ey Vl'>lt
..choob and speak.
"Our message to school!> 1i. that
freedom i.'> not free:· I lammeu
-.cJld "It \ been paid for."
• Do you know of a person, place or
event that deserves a historical
LOOK BACK? Let us know. ContaCI
Young Chang by fax at (94.9~
646-4170, e-mail at
young.chang1a latJmes.com; or mail
her at c/o Daily Pilot. 330 W. Bay St.,
Costa Mesa. CA 92627
Costa Mesa
(949) 631-2110
~. Oc:tOf>er 6, 2002 AJ
Group protests Bush's stance on Iraq
Members of the No War on Iraq Sponsoring
Committee occupy Costa Mesa comer
Saturday, holding anti-war signs.
A few passersby honked
their car horns in solidarity
with those standing outside lo
the heat.
The committee of protest·
ers gathered on a Saru.rday for
the firsl time this week.end.
The group normally protests
on Fridays and have been
gathering at the same inter-
section for 52 weeb. Their
first protesc was against
bombing Afghanistan last
year.
war ap1nst Iraq other than t o
steal lbelr oU. •
Paul Kelly, a retired aero-
space engineer from Coat.a
Mesa. said be has shared his
anti-war stance in the form of
letters and phone callJ to Ins
representatives and senators.
Youn1Ch•n1
Daily Pilot
COSTA MP.SA -Chuc* An-
derson ded a body bag around
a lamppost Saturday aftet-
noon as part of a protesc
against the United States go-
ing to war with Iraq.
"If the U.S. goes in umlater
ally. it is a war of aggression,"
Kelley~d.
He and about 35 others
making up the No War on Iraq
Sponsoring Committee occu-
pied all four comers at the
lmersectioo of Bristol Street
and Anton Boulevard in front
of South Coast Plaza. The
group carried signs that read
"Honk For Peace," •war ls also
Terrorism," "Stop Bush.~
"Thou Shale Not Kill," "Doo'c
Invade Iraq" and other slo-
gans protesting President
George Bush's proposal to at-
cack Iraq preemptively if it re-
fuses to comply with weapons
inspection demands.
"What we're prote sting
Joyce Georgjeff's poi.ter ad
vocating peace instead of war
included a photo of her
grandchildren.
BRIEFLY IN
THE NEWS
Grocery store to offer
public flu vaccinations
Going to the grocery store could gel
you more than the usual loaf o f bread
and can on of eggs this month at your lo-
cal Stater Bros.
fhis month and next, the Stater Bros.
on Baker Street in Costa Mesa will offer
public flu vaccinations for people 18
years or older. Vacc inations will be given
by a team fro m OnSite Wellne'is Medical
on a first-come. firl>t-served ba!-.i!>.
l'ypes and 'strains of the influenza virus
change t::very year and many medical
professionals have encouraged vaccina-
tions to keep familie., healthy through
the winter.
Gent::ml SJ'TllptOm'> mdude fever. chilb.
headach~. dry cough. runny or ~tuITy nose
and nu&le ach~. experts say.
According to the Center for Disease
Control. II is ec,t1mated that more than 40
m1ll1on Amencanc, develop the flu each
year and I 00.000 are ho,pilali,red. offi-
c1aJc; c;aid.
~tater Bro\. will offrr vacunatwns on
C k t 27 and Nov i at 11 75-C Haler St The
l'Ol>l 1'> $17.
lnforma11nrr (7 14) 437-0754
Steve Nelson named as
outstanding teacher
Ma1hernatlC!>, Engi neering, :-.nence
Achil'Vl'ment !MESA) has chosen Costa
Mesa I llgh School math tearhcr Steve
Nel<,011. .l!-. OutMandmg High School
lnowl is the intended attack
against Iraq," Anderson said.
"There is no reason to go to
"I thinlc that foreign policy
needs to be ba&ed on 1ustke,"
sh e said.
Teacher of the Year. MESA 1s an academic
program to help educauonally disadvan-
taged students excel in math. c,c1ence
and e ngineering.
Nelson won the honor because of his
unique program built around radio-con-
trolled cars. Through designing. testing
modifying and rebuilding the cars. c;tu
dents learn p ractical skill-. and then they
get to have fun by racing them
After six years, Nelson ha ... been exu!p-
Lional in getting the studt>nt!> exuted
about science and hru. received suhMdn-
tiaJ donations from model car manufac
turcrs near his school. Now the re I'> a
waiting list for his ninth grade ML!'>A
class.
MESA executive director Michael Alda
co said in a press rclea<,e, "We are plea!>ed
to honor Steve Nelson fur h1!> outstand
ing work in helping pre-college student ....
to succeed."
Kish joins UCI development
team as its seni or director
UC Irvine ha-. a new ..enior director o(
development and university advance-
ment, Bnan Kash l.eaving hi' po!>1t1u11 a.,
rurector of annual giving programs M the
Iowa ~tate Univer'>ity loundal1on. Kl'>h
stated in a pres" relt-a\t'. "I'm e1Cc1ted tu
join one of the hl''t puhht l1111verc,1t1e .... 111
the country.'·
Kish will be re,pomible for annual g1\
ing. UCI Oiancellor\ <Juh ,111d ma1or do
nation developmen1 -.ud1 J' tdt•phnrw
o utreach and direct m.uhn~
His past 1-ucce!'.'> with lhl' Iowa "'•alt'
University foundation mduded duu
bUng the annual giving dollar~ i11 the past
six years and raising $4.7 rn11l1on in the
past ·year. Its p rogram has bt•come bt'·
came a model for otht>r .,chooh.
Vtce chanceilor for university advance
ment, Thomas Mitchell said he corwdcr.
Kish a national leader in advancemenL Kt.Ji
will take his ne:w position starUng C kt 14
Mimi Cafe's essay contest
to show the ·write Stuff'
M1m1's Cafe I!> sponsoring 11'> e ighth
dnnuaJ "Write Stufr essay wnung con
teM for t:hildren. "What I have to be mcl\I
thanlc.fuJ for ... ." 1s 1he 1heme for the con
test and the prize is a $1.000 Series r I
U.<.,. ~avmgs Rand. The contest I'> open lo
a ll l1rst through sixth grade students.
1:..s,ays mu't be a maximum of one
page in leng1h and must include 1he
child\ name. addre~. age, grade, school
and phone number.
"itudent'> are only aUowed to subm11
one e'>~Y Hnalist'> will be judged 111
1hree different categone'> acc.ording to
age group and 15 finalist'> Wlll be asked to
read their -.ubm1ss1on' at a <>pecidl
luncheon
Otht'r awards wall mc:ludl' $250 ~ne.,
l:E lJ ~. Sa\1ngs Bond<i and dinner t:ert1fi
cale'> tor Mimi's Cafe.
Pre<;1denl of M1m1., Cafe. Ru'>'> Bendel.
cun!>tdt'r' the theme of the lOlllest to be
especially i.;1gnificant for the world today
Bendel '>aid in a pres' releac,e. ·As they
u<,e lh1 ... cont~l to cultivate their writing
'>lull!> and hone their 1mag1na11on,, the<,e
youngster<. will. no douh1. help all of u'
gain murh needed per,pet'llvt' in our
own livei. as they convey 1lw1r 111l''>l>age'
of thank<. and hope ..
b;say~ mu'>t be !>ubrn1t1t'd no lalt>r than
by noon on Wedne<,day. Nov. b to Tlw
Write S1uff. c/o rrank (;rnff. Int . :17JO
Ea!>l Broadway. Second rloor Lon~
Reach, Calif .. 90803.
Information: 1562) 491 IOOO
Re-engineered both inside and out to set a
new standard in entry-level AF SLR cameras.
cauou
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FITNESS PATROL
An Exclusive
Private Training Center
BOW
CciflthJed from Al
On Sa~, the new tbe9*
complex embftced ill ftnt
ofBdal vialton u the~ de
lao~me or Newpon·Meta
todety an1ved to take part tn
SCR'-'"Ught the Night" Gala
Ball. The gllttertna crowd paid
between $500 and $750 per
penon to be the 8nt to glimpse
the theater company's new
home.
F1NSHlfG ON DEADLINE
SE.AN Hl.l£R I DAILY PtlOT
Dennis Astl, project manager
for Construction company
Snyde,r Langston, said the
pressure to finish on deadline
weighed heavy on bis staff. It
wasn't a matter of tenants who
were promised the space by a
certain day. It was, instead, an
engagement scheduled to
attract Orange County's who's
who that propelled Astl and his
crew to make sure patrons
decked out in frills and cuffs
wouldn't arrive onto an
unfinished, gravelly theater.
Workers cement the front wal<.way of South Coast Repertory.
What they floated into
instead was an elegantly lit
Folino Theatre Center.
"It was an aggressive
schedule to start with, so we've
been pushing very, very hard
here at the end.· the project
manager said last week. "We're
not at a point where we think
there are onJy 1he small things
left. That'll be Oct. 5."
The small things included
hinging the doors on the
bathroom stalJs. replacing a
benr ceiling grid, fixing a light
and making sure the carpets in
all the rooms stretch to all the
corners.
The big things actually
added 38,000 square feet to a
40,000·square-foot complex.
The construction meant
closing the theater -both the
former Mainstage and the
Second Stage -for the
summer and scheduling the
Hispanic Playwrights Project
for multiple venues, including
holding play readings at the
Orange County Performing
Arts Center.
Here's what went into nearly
doubling SCR:
• Building the Julianne
Argyros Stage, a 336-seat
proscenium theater with an
orchestra level. a mezzanine, a
balcony and four boxes.
•Renovating the 507-seat
Segerstrom Stage, which now
has new seats, new Ooors,
newly painted walls and
acoustic slides In the ceiling.
• Renovating the Nicholas
Studio, which has gone from
housing 161 seats to 95 and
will now be used more for
children's productions and
workshops, while productions
previously held in that space get
the prQscenium treatment in the
Argyros theater.
•Building a large, all-window
lobby that stretches across all
the theaters just mentioned.
• Building what officials call
EJa's Terrace. named after
Elizabeth Segerstrom, the
harlequin-patterned area right
outside the lobby blpoming now
with great myrtles and other
pretty plants.
• Constructing a set of offices.
classrooms, prop rooms and
dressUW; rooms within the
complex..
• Expanding the box office and
restrooms.
REMEMBER!NG WHEN
E.mmes remembers when SCR
started as a touring company,
staging plays like Moliere's
"Tartuffe• at the Laguna
Playhouse. before they rented a
marine hardware store on
Balboa Peninsula in 1965. The
space, which became known as
the rtrst Step Theater, was big
enough to seat just 75.
By 1967, the theater group was
operating out of the Third Step
Theater, what was previously
Sprouse-Reitz Variety Store on
Newport Boulevard in Costa
Mesa.
ln 1978, Emmes and Benson,
who had first met at San
Pranciaco State College in the
early '60s, moved SCR into its
current 1bwn Center Drive
home. They bad an operating
budget of $250,000 at the time of
the move, a growing staff, drama
awards and $3.5 million toward
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their first pennan.ent home.
Season subscriber Catherine
Thyen, who saw her first SCR
show In 1974, remembers the
groundbreaking of more than
two decades ago and how
everyone involved with the
theater was so proud. The
theater's support group, which
Thyen belonged to, provided
all the food and beverages for
the event. .
"It was an exciting time to
have a theater built just for
theater," the longtime SCR
supporter said.
Em.mes added that another
exciting time for SCR was when
it received its Tony Award in
1988 -a regional theater Tony
given out once a year to a
nonprofit stage.
"l feel just totally exhilarated
to know that we've had a
remarkable odyssey of growing
from a homeless touring
company into one of the
leading theaters in America,"
Emmes said. "We just
sometimes look bade in
amaument at how far we've
come."
In the past 37 years, SCR has
premiered such plays as
Richard Greenberg's "Three
Days of Rain," Donald
Marguiles "Collected Stories/
Margaret Edson's "Wit" and
Beth Henley's "Debutante
Ball." Among the actors who
have trod its boards are Ed
Harris, Dennis Franz and Jean
Stapleton.
RAISING FUNDS
other band, was more a matter
of touching up.
"All we did was refinishes in
the theater," A.stl said. "The
space Itself did not change and
the type of equipment did not
change. But It has all new seats.
new flooring, new painted
sidewalla and acoustic slides in
the cdll.ngs."
The Nicholas Studio was
repainted by SCR's workers,
sttipped of Its sets and seats,
re-filled with new risers and
seats and newly carpeted by
Snyder Langston.
The end result, especially the
Argyros, hardly varied from
Pelli's original design.
•Tue design team did I think
a phenomenal job. This
building was very, very
complex. with all the different
finishes and a very limited
amount of space, .. Astl said.
When things didn't work
according to Pelli's designs.
problems had to do with
minute details like a steel beam
not fitting or something not
lining up.
"Everyone really looked al
this with who the client was
and knew everyone had to do
their best," Astl said. ~That's
how everyone looked at it and
everyone came through really
well."
TAKftG THE STAGE
So that's the outside.
Inside, SCR officials plan to
mount classics and modern
classics on the Segerstrom
Stage while showcasing new
The fund-raising goal of the and contemporary works in the
"Next Step· campaign was $50 Argyros. With everything from
million over five years, which improved wig rooms to
draws to a close at the end of expanded stages, especially on
2003. 'flle money will cover the Argyros Stage. Emmes
both building and new expects the increase in creative
programming costs. Major tools to ultimately result in
donors were the people who better shows.
got their names immortalized "While we were able to
within the theater's walls. Paul produce a number of, I think.
Folino and his family donated very exciting and important
$10 million. Julianne and wod: within that stage, it was
George Argyros donated $5 tactically limited," he said of the
million, Stacey and Henry T. former Second Stage. "There was
Nicholas lII contributed $2.5 no backstage and we had
million and the Segerstrom dilliculty in doing multi-step
family and foundation gave plays ... we felt that was really
almost $3 million in money an artistic UmJtation."
and land. An increased number of
"That is a great testimony to audience seats will also
the vitality of Orange County, oda the tremendous audience that accomm te more patrons
We've built through the years when shows begin selling OUL
and the extraordinary ·And perhaps importantly as
community leadership that we well, we bave more than
have been blessed to receive." doubJed the size of the ladies
said &runes, ofSCR's restrooms,· Pnunes said. "We
community donors. th.ink that'• going to shorten the
Work on the Segerstrom lines conslderabty.•
Stage and Nicholas Studio All that's left now is to party.
started in May, after the Well, aort of.
theaters flnJshed their seasons Though the Nicholas Studio
and went dart. Construction resembles something of a
on the Argyros started last storage space, as Its dedJcation
September. Involved ln the ceremony ls set for Nov. to.
construction were 64 officials at SCR have scheduled
subcontractors, 150 persons (at a season of celebrations to
Its peak), 1,362 pieces of steel foUow Saturday's Gala Ball.
for the Argyros Stage and the "Major Barbara.~ the first
new lobby, miles and miles of show on the Segerstrom Stage,
electrical wiring and an will open for previews and Its
immeasurable amount of first audJence on Oct. 11. The
cooperation between the George Bernard Shaw show will
lOO·some people regularly celebrate its oflicial opening
Involved. nlgbt Oct. 18, with a dedJcation
•Everyone did a really of the stap u well
phenomenal job of workin.g Rlcbud Greenberg's "The
together to come up with the Violet Hour" will OJ*l for
beat solution to make everyone prevtewa on the Aqyroa·Sblge
happy," Ast1 said. tor the theater's ftnt a.udience
The Argyros Stage wu Nov. 5. The lh0w'1 opening
1taned from scratch. • nl8ht and dedkatlon of the
Irvine-based Snyder Lanpton •• iwtD hlpptD NOit 8
began by building a ~e of The Nkbolu 9tUdio ~be
the theater, paving the uphalt, dedlmaed two daJt i.a.r.
powtng 38,000 aqua.re feet with Tbyeil ~ ~ SCR
concrete, wtrlngup everythlns flnt8llhild....,'.lbWD<Ariter
mechanical, electrlcal and OrtW ID .. ._ no., tioW
plumbl"8·related, aloplng the i..-. tllouPt tbiy bad
cetUns at three d.lflerent anatea reeCMd •81918111 alibi11ne:•
Uoi: ecouiMlc Ud lilhf ·llne • ..__ diilt •IM'led =.~the ev•,.._ ............
~Y"dlildmet10fthe '":\WW·•.._lW_. "'~_._..._ID ..... ~ .............. bli!L .. ;~tilltOlllW dldltl .............. .... ;;;;;::;;;z:-•= . • ............ .
T'•·~ ..... ~ .... ,...
ftlll 9 TMM:a._.,anthe
PtJBLIC SAFETY
POCICE FILES
COITAIEIA
.............. anctSanl:Maeo
~A trefllc c:ollitlon
lmiolvlng lnjuriee _.
~et10'.4'•.m.
Thunday. • Colondo ,.._Grand theft
from. veNde W8I ~In
the 3200 bfoc:t • 6:19 p.m.
Thur9dly.
• W.. 'ltlh 9trMt A home
bul'glerY W rtpOfttd In the
~ bk>ic* • • p.m. Thunday.
,...,OIT llEACH ........... ,,..,..... .
c.,... lll!Mt ANt ..........
--~·2:8&m.~ ........ WIV:Ahome
........,, ... repcwt9d In the
4200 blcx* M 8:35 a.m. Friday .
• NliwpNt C.... o.h9: Grand thd Wl8I rtpOf1led In the .
23000 bloc* et 11 :08 a.m.
Friday.
SE.N4 HILLER I DAILY PILOT
Newport Beach firefighters prepa~e a driver for transport
after his vehicle rolled over late Fnday.
Two days , two rollover accidents
1\vo rollovers. both involv·
ing people suspected of driv·
ing under the influence. were
reported in Newport· Mesa
during the weekend.
A Huntington Beach man
was arrested for driving under
the influence after his Ford
Expedition IUI a light stand-
ard, Oipped over and rut· and
injured a pedestrian Friday.
Newport Beach police said
Gregory Smith, 23, eollided
with the light strucrure on Pa·
cific Coast I lighway just east
of Balboa Boulevard al 10:20
p.m. Friday. His car rue 52·
yeac-old TI10ng Oluenjit of
Laguna I tills, police said.
Omenjit was taken 10 Hoag
PIERCE BROTHERS
BELL BROADWAY
Mortuary * Chapef
Cremation
110 Broadway. Costa Mesa
842-9150
Hospital and later released.
Sm.Ith ~ taken to Western
Medical Center in Santa Ana
and treated for abrasions and
pos.Wle internal injuries. I lo<.-
pital officials declined Sall.lrday
to release his condition.
A 1wo·car collisJon caused a
car to roll over in Costa Mesa
at 4:48 p.m. Saturday. The ac-
cident occurred at the inter
section of L9th Street and Pla-
centia Avenue.
Police confinned report~ of
a trapped driver who was rt'
moved and taken to Western
Medical Center. One of the
drivers is suspected of being
under the influence. pohc.:e
said.
H. BRADFORD,
(BRAD)
ATwOOD
H. Bradfof'd (Brad) Atwood
waa a foundi ng
administrator at the
University of California
Irvine. Atwood's ftm job at
the University was to
accompany NBC newsman
Chet Huntly and Chanceflor
Danial G. Aldrich on an
lnapectton of the treeless
grassland that was to
beoomeUCI.
Before the first cianes In
October 1886, Atwood began appointing and organizing personnel for public
Information, publications, development and alumnt offtceS.
He was Instrumental In the fonnation of communtty support
groups for the new university .
After his retirement In October 1968, • A11l1tillnt CNncellor
Emetftua, he WU elected President of the UCI A9thes and
Emeriti Auoclation. His two former UCI ~ hMds
cntated a scholanahlp fund In hl1 name at the Graduate
School tor Management at UC Davia.
He was born on February 17 1918 In Dana.a.on ct of a famtty prominent In textile~· .., mov.d ~Burbank,
CA In 1927, and graduated from BU.b.nk Hlah School In
1933, where he earned 9 lett .. In five tpOf1a. Ae ~ed
from UCLA In 1938, and had Mrned a 19ttef In tr1iiCk. running
the 440 and mile l'9lay on the conftr9"09 ~Mlhlp ...,,,.
After graduation from UCLA. he wu epotta editor of the
Burt>ank Daffy IMlew and a atr1nger for the Loi ~ nm..~. doing ptay-by·ptay announcing of ool9ge and htgh achoof foo1bll games. •
In 1948, he WM~ of the au.t.nk JwW Qwnber' of ~· and produced a Mf1H of llve tele¥1elon ~on Don lee ~t.111 etatlon, WGXAD b9fOf'8
It becerne Channel 2. A~ ~ a cMt te111urtna 811 ew-~~ofthe Mge1ee~e11JlhllCU>. ••the first llVe, eoripted epona ettoW on Loe~ -~L ~= C:!! beoolne the pubic --· dlreoW of the tOOlt8 ..._...:::-~~In 1MI Md 1 ... He ttten Pldftc,.,,., • :PUbllc • __ .. •JteOUlhle ....... 8outf*r1
of the = i.=.~~ .. pftd ....... pwtctlnt
Amerto. .. ~'":f---"=o::'= = = ~ Cilloue& He ~ on pUIJlo ' ID a •tearY oouncla tar ... ~ . ~ =Md GuMr\ of .. Qf.. ... . ,,.,._°' .. ~ Aftg1l1eeow.r.-a..9'd• = r:::::.14 ·.:~ °' .. r of .. _.-., (MaW: =:===~~~o:r-== ==.!;••. "'-* ..... ...:.·~ t=:.-=..-::= -If ....... Of°'*"*
~. October 6. 2002 ,.
••
eisure
NO PLACE
LIKE HOME ·
The beauty
of making
breakfast
B reakfast is a big hit at the
Wight House. By popular
demand, breakfast often
appears at the dinner table, ready
for an encore performance. It's one
of the few meals in our family's food
repenolre that never gets groans or
grimaces.
Since we rarefy have time to cook
a full breakfast
on weekday
mornings,
placing it on the
dinner menu
seems to award
an appropriate
amount of
respect for a
meal that
transcends Its
time sloL For all
of the evils that KAREN
breakfast WIGHT
embraces -fat •
grams and sky-high carl>ohydrates
-ii is the ultimate comfort food.
Pancakes, wames. bacon, sausage,
butter, syrup ... they may be bad
for the diet but they're great for the
soul.
Some of my favorile cookboo~
are devoted solely 10 breakfas1
foods. My copy of ·The Breakfasl
Book• by Marion Cunningham is
covered with stains: the true sign of
a well-laved cookbook.. Just reading
the table of contents makes my
mouth water. With creations lilce
Bridge Creek Heavenly Hots, Fresh
Ginger Muffins and Featherbed
F.ggs. this book honors the most
American meal.
F.ach of my Irids has a favorite
brealcfast food that lops their Hst of
special occasion treats. For Annie
it's a Dutch Baby. This is a ma'i.s1vc
popover baked in a large pan rather
than in restrained individual
portions. It is served hot oul of the
oven, raised high over the rim of the
slcillet I serve it with wedges of
fresh lemon and powdered sugar.
One Dutch Baby just isn't enough 10
feed the troops. Th keep quarrels to
a minimum. I always have a c;econd
Baby waiting in the wings.
Breck is young man after his
father's heart. His choice is Egg!>
Benedict. English muffins,
Canadian bacon, poached e8lri and
time-consuming Hollandaise. He
loves it, and that's enough to
encourage me to bring out the
whisk and create his favorile
masterpiece.
Mary Rose has a sweet tooth.
Between doggie
fashion s hows and
Halloween,
Newport-Mesa's
pooch population is
finding itself all
dolled up in October
Youn1 Chan1
Daily Pilot
T hey have ii better, in a way.
Because how many
humans can pull off
"dogtJJla" on Halloween?
A hotdog?
A simple pmlc ~weater?
Dogs (or 1he1r owner..) JUSt have way
more fun.
You probably saw pugs prancing
around in cos1ume-y ensembles
Saturday al TeWinkJe Parle for
Pugtoberfcsl. On Oct. 26, the Newpon
Dunes Waterfront Reson will bold its
I 0th annual "Top Dog" Fashion Show.
And for Halloween, area dog-fashion
experu. predict a little of the angel and
a lot more of the devil
·r ve !teen a lot of interest in the
devtl costume,· said Debbie Lane,
owner of the Newpon Dog Groomery.
.. The red horn!>, 1he red cape.·
Tammy Limon, who manages the
Rarkery on Balboa Island. dresses her
black pug Pepper almost everyday,
without occasion. Pepper is often seen
wearing her "Tiffany" neck.lace, which
isn'1 aclually from Tiffany's but looks
and costs like ii might as well have
been. It's a s terltng sliver rope with a
silver heart charm.
On Friday, Pepper had opted for a
combination of silver and plastic,
wearing both her nJTany piece and a
Halloween neck.lace that has
glow-in-the-dark bats.
"I don't know if she realty likes it all,
bu1 J think it's fun to pul on her. And
once she puts ii on and people start
adoring her, she'U start prancing
around," Limon <>a.id.
Peppers Sunday outfit is always her
Miami Dolphins jersey, a teal, blue
and orange number.
Other favorites (of lirnon's) are a
leather Harley Oavtdson jack.et that
comes with a hat and a trendy, sparkly
littJe shirt that ha!> flames on the front.
Pepper's favorite is a red. while and
blue sweatshirt that keeps her warm
in the winier.
"A 101 of people like the hot dog
costume," Limon said. ·l\vo buns.
and they're hooked together and
there·s mustard on top.·
The mustard actual}y zigzags across
the dog's back.
That translates into pancakes or
waflles. lf I really want to be a hem,
toppings include fresh st.rawbeme~
and whipped cream. It's even bener
if I throw a few chocolate chips 1n10
the batter. Can you get too much of
a good thing? lf you're 9 year8 old,
the answer is •no.•
Limon's Halloween predictions for
pooches include Batman outfits,
"dogzilla" suits. pumplrins. angel
wings. devil ears, Halloween
bandanas. Halloween bows and
sweaters or shirts decorated with
pumpkins and spider webs.
CRSYTAL L.AUO£ROALE I DAILY PILOT
Tammy Limon holds her pet pug Pepper who is decked out in one of the Barkery's most popular Halloween
Now, to infuriate the
health-conscious. my entire tribe
loves breakfast meats. To quote
EmerU l.agas-;e, •port rules.· Just
the smeD of bacon brings everyone
into the kitchen. Whether I bake tt.
fry It or microwave it, bacon wortcs. Sausage comes in a dose second.
Maple sausage bas that very
•breakfast" taste and has an
intoxicating aroma
SM HOME, Pace A9
The most common accessory for
both occasions and everyday is easily jhe necklace.
·A lot of customers have necklaces
for a whole year -Halloween,
Ouisttnas, YaJentines Day. Summer
Beads ... They're crazy. I mean, I am
crazy 'cause I love animals." Umon
said. ·She's my lcid, so she gets
anything.·
Jack Unscott's pampered pet -a
costumes. the hotdog. Limon changes Pepper's outfits daily. ·
French poodJe named Babe -will
participate in the "Top Dog" show.
She'U probably wear a pink sweater, a
pmk hat, her usual patriotic-colored
sunglasses and her newiy manicured
pink nails.
"She likes to be coordinated," he
said. •She's quite a fashion plate. She
wears glasses because she doesn't lilce
IO be recognized.•
Which isn't too common among
dogs. Lane says some will tolera1c
TRAVEL TALES
sunglasses for a short time but most
won·L
"Most don't lilce anything on their
heads,· she said.
Ginny Nelson. receptionist at the
Costa Mesa Animal Hospital, SaJd
there are thin~ to remember if you're
thinking of dressing your dog. Avoid
anything that's too tight and anythtng
that's too frightening.
"lfyou put sungla.">SeS on them and
they're not accustomed to It. then that
would he fnghtenmg to them,~ she
<;atd.
Owner; <Jlould also stay away from
too tight collars and ham~
.. You have 10 be very carefuJ
because 11 can cut off the an::ulation,"
Nelson said.
L1mon added that when 11 comes to
necklaces. owners should be watchful
and make su~ the chain doesn't
SM DOG, Pac• AS
A honeymoon ·hunting for English treasure
Yotm1 Chane ,
OaltyPik>t
•My wife and I found colna
from the first to 3rd century A.O.
and we found colna and artifacts
up to the 20th century," &aid
Fred Booth. of Costa Mma.
"Thete an! actual archeologjcaJ
utea -old medieval vi.Dagel. or
what remaln.t of them .•.
There's a tftmtodoua amount of hWory to be dua from the IOU
there.
1be Boothe went to 8nlland
to puticip< ln the UIUlf IOUi
dn:uit-Bll8en; ~
Palace. mutmmt-Md ileo u ~ ~JUaiji-. a dOWn
apartof~Tuuri IDdil; ... olw.t..fta
IDtemadool1.. trwure bundni ~ ......... The
pq>:\:bDed In~ MM ..... b.-.. ""°'the ~dlb~· -.r~ ....... .. ~ BciOelt.ddtd 1bll ,f·-.-~ .. woUild ..
,
... -
,. ~. October 6, 2002
FORUM
EDITORIALS
Newport-Mesa
school district
sets good example
T he Newpon-Mesa
Unified School
District serves as a
good example that
the California exit
exams are passable. State
officials ought to take notice.
About 86% of the district's
students in the Class of 2004 -
the first for which the exams
are a graduation requirement
-have passed the
English/language arts portion,
while about 71% have
succeeded on the math part.
And those students who need
to pass it stllJ have seven more
opportunities.
Statewide, only 48% have
passed both sections so far. As
a resuJt, state education
otncials are considering
yanking the test as a
requirement for graduating in
2004 and beyond.
But Newport-Mesa Unified
Supt. Robert Barbot says he'U
continue to use the test even if
the state drops it, saying "l
don't envision taking a step
back for something that our
students have accomplished."
Bravo to Barbot.
The state has created this test
and it needs to stand by it.
After aJl, schools s tatewide now
focus on preparing -some
better than others -their
students for it. After all of that
hard work, why baclc away
from the benchmark? lf one
continues to lower the hurdles,
eventua1Jy every hurdJer will
leap them. But it will not mean
anything.
If Newport-Mesa
sophomores can pass the test,
the district's teachers have
done their jobs. Those who still
have to pass it still have seven
more attempts to go. Certainly,
the teachers and district will
continue doing their jobs in
making sure those remaining
students succeed.
Why shouJdn't the state ask
the rest of its school districts
and teachers to do the same? It
shouJdn't be too much to ask
that graduating students know
how to perform junior high
school math and ninth-and
10th-grade English.
The state shouJd support its
test, encourage schools to do
their jobs and be patient -
there are seven more
opportunities for these
students.
Barbot, his staff and teachers
throughout the district deserve
praisE1 for reaching, and
wanting to maintain, high
standards for their students.
A funding plan with
some artistic merit
A plan in Costa Mesa
City Hall to encourage
and fund public art
looks interesting after
the first few brush strokes.
The idea. approved by the
Planning Commission last
month, would require future
developers of projects worth
more than $750,000 to donate
1 % of their building costs to
some sort of artistic display. For
the city that wants to be known
as the City of the Arts and is
home to the Orange County
Performing Art~ Center, among
other venues. it seems a fitting
addition to Costa Mesa's future.
The plan, which still needs
City Council approvaJ, would
aUow developers either to seek
out their own artist to create an
outdoor work of art or simply
put 1 % of the development's
worth into a city-controlled
pool of funds. Judging by how
most developers hand money
for affordable housing over to
cities rather than buiJd the
low-income homes, it is
reasonable to assume that most
of the money will end up in
Costa Mesa leaders' hands.
That raises one looming fear:
That like nearly every other
piece of public art -the
·Copper Curtain in Thousand
Oaks and, nearer to home,
Huntington Beach's newly
insta1Jed and widely criticized
Surfhenge -the ones Costa
Mesa leaders will approve will
be awful. The CuJtural Arts
Commission, which will be the
first line of decision-makers,
would do well to tour a few of
the less-than-stellar pieces that
are around.
Some critics also are certain
to say that the 1 % couJd be
better spent on other project.
whether it's road
improvements or aid to
charitable organizations. But,
while it is difficuJt to quantify,
there are plenty of anecdotaJ
reasons for putting art in
public places.
Art offers commentary on
who we are and what ow
society is. It encourages
thought, introspection and
debate. It is, as silly as some
may find this, an important part
of our lives. Costa Mesa is right
to make it a part of the city.
THE LAST WORD
No roundup ~eeded .
Would not got a second
thought.
DO owners ftoben aod
Beverty Cohen haw any moral
obQgatton to keep the OUb't
~Shore PfM bOine aa lal No.
So, In thl9 cue. Iii better stand
down the poeee aDd ccirTaJ the
hOnea. But II die Cohem want
10 buy. TOUDd "'.......,.at the~ lie DD. that WoUld DOI be ..... .,..,,...,
~.., ... ,.,..,,,Wild
~'! 11.1
BOLTON
I
SOUNDING BOARD
Solutions for air needs and
noise exist, but at El Toro
By Wllll•m KHrn1
ln the Aug. 25 Daily Pilot, there were
five letters complaining about airplane
noise In the Mesa Verde area of Costa
Mesa caused by Long Beach-bound
OJghts (Readers Respond, "If it's not
one airport, it's another"). I have lived
in Mesa Verde North for more than 31
years and l, too, was surprised at the
recent Increase in noise from airplanes
bound for Long Beach.
A letter from Danniel J. Wexler
attributes the cause to the "seemingly
ever-growing population here in the
Southland for commercial Oigbts." He
is only partially correct.
The ftlghts In queatlon are not all
local, but originate as far from
California as the East Coast. Those
planes are on an FM-mandated flight
pattern at an altitude of 3,500 feet that
aligns their approach with the Long
Beach 10,000-foot runway. 'Ibey are
lndJcative of the growing national
shortage of airport capacity to bandJe
the 1ncrusing passenger demand,
including that of the Southland. \\Uler
made an excellent request that the
Dally Pilot provide more lnfomlatlon
on airport matten for the readers.
However, Jam frankly surprised at
the level of discomfort expressed in
those five letters. These same planes fly
directly over my house, but when cars
pass my house, they drown out the
noise of the planes. The friendly police
helicopters that Oy at any time, day or
night, at low altitudes and shine
searchllgbts into my patio at rnidnlght
are far more annoying, although
necessary.
Slow, low-Oying private planes are
noisier that the jets Oylng over at 3,500
feel nm Cromwell's suggestion that
Long Beach lnbound OJghts follow the
San Diego Freeway ls not aligned with
the runway. He Is right about one
thing: the freeway would drown out
the noise of such ftlghts. I know
because I hear the freeway noise all
day and all night So we aeem to have
Nllnbya everywhere, not just In South
County.
Jn contrast, I found the cooperative
attitude expressed by Roger Summers
of Santa Ana Heights ln an ln·depth
lntemew with Delly Pilot City BdJtor
Jamel Meier showed a refreshing
undentandlng of the combination of
airporu and good lMng areas 1·Pav1ng
the way to anneudon(a)j.
However. all bets on our community
noise control are off if El Toro airport is
not reopened to absorb the
ever-growing appetite for Oying by the
rapidly expanding, afDuent population
of South County. Otherwise, John
Wayne Airport settlement agreement
notwithstanding, John Wayne must
expand to accommodate this growing
demand if South County will not do its
fair share to meet the passenger
demand of its own population. That
expansion could phytlcally engulf
businesses in Costa Meaa and Newport
Beach.
Reopening El Thro will realign
Orange County OJghts lnto a sensible
pattern whene the planes will have two
comfortable 10,000-.foot runways on a
4,700-acre airport and where no one ls
in the noise zone because of the
isolation provided by the attached
21-square-mile buffer zone. Compare
that to John Wayne. which hu one
5,700-foot runway on a tiny airport of
500 acres with no buffer zone close to
many homes and bu&1.,..... ln the
noise wne.
• WILUAM KIAANS 1-1 to.ta M ...
realdent
HOW TO CONTACT YOUR REPRESENTATIVES
CITY Of COSTA IEM
Cotta M ... City Hall, n Fair Ortv•,
12828, (71.C) 7~5223
Meyot: Unde Dl>e9f'
CouMll: Ubby Cowlin, Gety Mon•h•n,
ICaren Robin.an end C11rie &-.. .
1oW: Pr.al~nt Judy Ftanoo, vt• ~ M•rth• F1u0t, Cl...t&erene Stot., Oen• llldt, Jim f.errymen,
Ot~ lroob.wf w.ncty I.Hee
-.cOHIOllWID Mamm.cr
,........,...,..., CoeeaMtiM12127.
( .. )'31-1200
............... JIM Alllliieor., Vkle
.......... t ... ......,,,lNdr ~ ...... ,.....~-·· ....... E. ...........
BIO
Age:55
Occupstion: Director of assessment for
the Newport-Mesa Unified Sctiool
District
Education: Bec:tlelor'e In English and
epeed'I from Unive,..ity ofWiaconsln:
master'• in organizational
oommunlcatlon from long Beach State;
doctorate in educational administration
from USC
ftuhS.nce: Huntington Bead\
femly: Husband of 29 years Kari, a
retired Long Beech State provost
HobbMe: Traveling to London;
gardening; reading; cooking and baking
PASSING THE TEST
We're sitting pretty
well right now. I think
86% have passed the
English and 71%
have passed the math.
And they 're just
beginning their junior
years, so they'll have
three chances their
junior year and three
in their senior year. So
six more chances, and
we anticipate quite a
bit of intervention and
remediation.
A LOT OF
TESTING
There are a lot of tests,
but how does one
know if they
understand the
information unless one
assesses. I think what
people are asking now
is: Is it possible to fold
anything into
anything? ls it possible
that this would count
for this. I know the
county office is
working with the state.
So if you 're taking the
Stanford 9 and you
have a standards test in
algebr~ to extend it
one day, tack on the
Golden State to ihat
testing wmdow and kt
your scon count for
botll. So we need to
meld JO~iliing. It is a
lot of testing.
PORUM ~. October 6, 2002 A1
'State standards ·rule'
That's the motto for
Peggy Anatol, the
Newport-Mesa
schools' director of
assessment, when
discussing
standardized testing
T he first results for the
state exit exams that will
be required for high
school students to
graduate beginning in
2004 came out last week. Students
will have a total seven
opportunities to pass the test,
comprised of English/language
arts and math, during their
sophomore, junior and senior
years.
Newpon-Mesa Unified School
District students performed well
o n the tests overall, and City
Editor Jamee Meter caught up
with Peggy Anatol, the district's
director of assessm ent, on
Wednesday to discuss the results
of those and other tests.
The eadt mam results came out
earlier th1a week. How lmportant are
thoee reeuJu to youf
Well, they're very important to us as
a district. Our district has always had
what you call exit criteria -types of
graduation proficiencies or an exit
test -good assessment for what you
know as a high school student. Those
results mean a lot to us since they
measure how weU the students are
mastering those proficiencies that we
need for graduation. We monitor
them, we're attentive to them. we're
ever hopeful after every testing
period.
A.re theee taken by both freshmen
and 10phomoreef
Just sophomores. The first time you
get to talc:e it 1s as a I Oth·grader.
And they &re le.led OD ninth-and
IOth-gnde 1tanda.rda for Bngllah,
and atxtb and ~nth grade. for
math, rightf
Sixth, seventh and eighth, because
there's some algebra. It doesn't go up
to geometry but it has some algebra
questions on It.
The first time they take it lS in the
spring of the IOth·grade year.
Doea It surprtae you at all that
more atudenta pua the Engllah than
tbemathf
I think I was surprised at first
because I'm an English teacher. When
we first gave it, 75% of the students
who took It passed English and 55%
passed math. And it was at that point,
I think. I realized that they're
slcill-based questions, that If you don't
understand the pre-algebra and the
algebra, then you're not going to
exhibit success.
EngUsh Is two writing exercises and
a lot of muldple choice. So I think the
only surprise I had was when we first
got the result.s wu that It was as high
as it was in terms or overall
population. We gave It to I .548
students -and they were ninth
graders, so they hadn't experienced
some of the J 0th-grade standards. I
think It speaks well to the
intermediate education -the middle
sch ool education -because you took
It in March of your fresh.man year
coming straight out of eighth grade.
Why wen they gtvtnc the teet to
the "-hmenl
That year. lt wu a voluntary test
and It wu golnl to be given to all
freshmen -that was their Intent -
but then they realized the expense. I
think the reuon they changed wu. l
think there wu a phrue •opportw1ity
to learn.• You really muat provide all
of the lnfonnadon before you ac:ceta
It. That's wby they Wnpd It. Now
your ft.tat time ii In March. We'1J pe
It again now In Novanber to all or
those current l lth graders who have
not been a\.IC'Celaful
What .... ~ ot...sor. tlo J'O'I
apect wvdt ........ ,.. ...
c.tf
~re atmn, pmty well d&ht nOw. J
think .. ba"9 pwed the !btilM''
and 71" bn9 p..ed the llMllb; And
they'n Juat ~ tbltlr juDIOr
,......~..,.chl.ec:Mnom
tbmjuab1911.nd Cbnlil In ....
--~SO M&monm.w.. ud
WI anddp9ta qultit a a. ol
m~wt ....... ~
So._.... ~1111 .._ b m mpllt.
lOCJla of COrOM ............. .
currentJy have a pass rate in English
-we're pretty sure because we've
had experience with the high school
graduation proficiencies -that tt's a
very, very small amount of students, if
any, that don't get a diploma because
of that one item. We have other
concerns in terms of grad
requirements -uni rs. There's a lot on
the srudenLs' plates right now
So obvtoualy lf they pus the exit
ex.a.ms, they're not guaranteed
graduatlonl
No, we got a couple of calls from
freshmen who passed asking "Where
can I pick. up my diploma?" We had to
explain you still need 230 units.
algebra, 40 hours of community
service, computer technology. senior
p roject. There's sliU things to do.
Those are new requirements for the
senior class. Ten of the 20 units must
be in algebra fhe board increased
the requirements three year. ago to
take place in 2003.
So whJch or those were not
required previouatyt
They didn't have to have algebra.
The community service wasn't
required as a district. Corona del Mar
and Newpon Harbor had '>Orne
requirements for it. Computer
technology is n~w and the senior
project was pan of Corona del Mar
and 8tancia, but we've just kind of
grandfathered the other schools into
the fold. We've been coming aJong at
it for the last three years, but tt's now
come to fnulion.
So certalnly no surprise to these
studenuf
Hopefully not We've been
informing them and telling parents
via leners and counselors have been
holding parent meetings. Newport
Harbor has put things on their Web
site. And we've been informing
parents all along that it's coming, but
sometimes. lclds will forget
Now, what do you concentrate on
since the 1tudent.s have 90 many
1tate teata to takef
The Stanford 9 was given every
spring, but ifs over now. Now, we will
be giving the CAT·6, so that's the
state-required testing for all students
grades 2 to 11 . That's one test we're
concentrating on.
A second test that's very Important
to us ls the CEIDT -the California
English Language Development Test.
All 6,000 Engli11h Language students
in the district take that test. It's an
intense one·on,one for the listening
and speaking and then It's reading
and wriang. That's given by many,
many people throughout the d.lstrlct
at every site and through the summer.
So that's a big test.
We give Advanced Placement.
Golden States, many disutct tests -a
district writing test and a dlatrlct
math for elementary.
About every month, there lt
another upect or uaesament. Our
concentration la on standardlzed
teeting ~pa.radon and where w.
want to go next down the line la
dutroom-bued uaesarnent -t.n
eod·of·COWM es.am. or are JOU ue-'ns what the 1ta111~ content
ltand&rda are. Tba.t'a another ara
~explore th1I yeer.
AM..__. olc:om..-__.. ._._. .... , .... ._ ....
'l'Wd bt more diptdc:b. mld·,.ar
c:IMd:I. HOW Wll ue JOU dcMni ln
these algebra standards or how weU
are you doing on chemistry? Can we
see how weU you're doing on the
standards? Can you exhibit
proficiency? So that that way, it can
help teachers diagnose how to
change their lesson. We've had many
teachers already doing this. gearing
tests toward state standards, having
luds do self assessments
And this year, for the fir;t ume, the
state released the California
Standards Test numbers so you can
see how well your school did. And
that\ going to be part of your
Academic Performance Index. your
APL
So if the luds art·n t getting 1t. it's
time 10 rea .. -.c~., m dnother d1recuon.
Let's '3·•Y in ll.'>. history. vou·ve spent
too much lime on the Civil War to the
detriment ol -.omething t.>he and
when 1he child goes 10 talc:e that
standard11ed test, maybe their
lmowled~e depth isn't enough to
exhibit proficwnt or advanced
~o Lhe Lahforn1a Standards Test, 1f
you had to ask what one asses~ment.
1s where we're really, really
concen1ra11ng because that's going to
carry the most weight for the API in
the future It's going to look reaJ small
tor the CAf·6. It's been 36%; it's going
to shrink doWTI to 29%. Then the next
imponant will be the pass rate on the
California high school exit. Ifs going
to be 15% of your API.
So you're teaching to the standards
in math and English these next two
years and then down the line m
science and social science.
Is there e'Vl!r a point where ldda
will be over-tested?
There are a lot of tests, but how
does one It.now if they understand the
informauon unless one assesses I
think what people are aslcing now is:
Is it possible to fold anything into
anything? Is it possible tha1 this
would count for this. I know the
county office is working with the
state. So if you're taking the Stanford
9 and you have a standards test in
algebra, to extend it one day, tack on
the Golden State to that testing
window and let your score count for
both. So we need to meld something.
It is a lot of testing.
Some of the high schools did the
standardl.z.ed testing in three
minimum days as opposed to
dragging it out over two weeks.
Elementary schools don't like to test
on Mondays and Fridays. so they put
their testing a little bit Tuesday,
Wednesday and Thursday. One
benefit to that. to us, ls the parents
have saJd they love it because there's
not usually bomewott.. so they can
have some family time during that
testing window where they can
dinner t~er and go to the llbruy
and walk. down to the beach. There
are a few benefits to the standardlzed
testing.
More and more parents a.re calling
looking for the results u soon u the
paper aaya dwy'~ goJnc to be
available. So I think pa.rent'I a.re wry
attuned to the uaeument even
though lt'a .fuat one telt one da)t
WllJ diliSt.... I llJtmy .......... .._ __
Nm 0 , .... ...,..
SEAN HILLER I DAILY PILOT
sometimes, the PTA and the principal
stt down and work around field trips
and other events. But they know their
wmdow a year in advanced
Does that flexible window throw
off the CU1'Ve at a1Jf
No. because the window from the
state is comtant. You go the 153rd
day of instruction and then you count
10 days on either side of that and it's
normed to that. So whether you go
Monday or Friday doesn't usually
seem to have an effect. Newport
Harbor tned the minimum-day
scheduJe two years ago and had good
success
So what do you think the dJstrlct
needs to work on as a wholef
When we look at all of the numbers
and chan them all up. I think one of
our ma1or areas to look at is reading.
comprehension and
reading/vocabulary acrosi. the grade
levels 2 to I I. That's been an area thal
we continue to focus on.
And ifs interesting, a couple of
years ago. we had a grant (AB I 086)
that helped teachers teach readsn~
better. And the next year, our math
scores went up, which 1s I gue'" a
common result because student'> can
now read those word problems better.
They stiU may not be able to tackle
that whole passage as weU, but they
can read short and work the
problems better. which I thought was
interesting.
We've seen our math scores grow by
leaps and bounds in the district
We continue to be above the
county and state averages at all grade
levels. This year, l think we had one
dip in seventh grade, but other than
that, we have continued to
outperform the county and the state
and have stayed weU above the norm,
which is the 50th percentile.
We had no schools that were in the
lowest deciles. which for the APl go 1
to JO. We had none in the lowest, but
we always look at how we can
improve.
I think uurospection Is importanL
We've all met together already to look
at our scores. We've turned the comer
in terms of asking effective questions.
We're now asking •What is working?
Why is it working?" As opposed to
"Why dJd our reading go down?· It's
kind of a different spin, a different
mind-~t. Well. "Math is wofkin8 and
it's wort:lng because or these
reasons.· We're moving Into "What
can ~ do about itT Why does th1$
happen, to the best of our
knowtedget• Why things happen.
who knowsl It could be that group ol
kid.L It could be a new book. lt could
be that teacher.
But what can we do about ltl If our
reading la low at 10th grade. what a.re
some thlnp we can dol We can k)Qk
at a new aeriea. We can group kid.a
dUl'ereody for reactJ.na. We cm look at
IOmethJ.nc called Blecttoolc
Boobhelf. M.ybe kids loYe to .,
Online U oppoeed to lit:t:lns down
wtth • boot. Wt apon Che why and
then eome eobldonl. We"n! dolns
tome a.lhe bnlDltonnlnc toptber
•a 4'lmct. ...... out ol the~
•• -.,,... tnao the~ lboWd be..
w1""!.=.~~ratioa
~ ......... ,. ....... ....,waibd Mid
ON ..... ,.. ..........
• z l'c,.._-.tafAhc..._ -s .. ub? 1' _....._.,. .................. ..... .............. ......
l
TODAY
8lESSINO
Ofntl!PETS
SpcMieoted by: St.
Michael end All
Angela Eplacopel
Church
WW..: St. M ichael and All Angels,
comer of Plclflc View Drive and
Matguerite All90Ue, Corona del Mar
When: 10 11.m.
Cost: Free
Conact: (949) 644-0463.
FIRE SAFETY 5f>onaot9d by: City of Newpon
8eadl
WW..: Newpon Center Are
Station No. 3, Santa Barbera Drive
and Jamboree Road, Newpon
Coast
When: 10 11.m. to 3 p.m
Cost: Free
MONDAY
'DIGfTA1.
PHOTOGRAPHS' 7 Sponsored by:
Orange Coast
College
Whefe: OCC'1 Photo
Gallery, 2701 Fairview Road. CoS'la
Mesa
When: Through Oct. 28. Gallery
hours are 8 a.m. to 10 p.m.
Monday through Wednesday. 10
a m. to 10 p.m. Thursday; 9 a.m.
to 5 p.m. Friday and 10 a.m. to 4
pm Saturday
Cost: Free
Contad: (714) 432-5520
TUESDAY
'LIGHT SCREENS' 8 5f>onaot9d by:
Orange County
Museum of An
presents the leaded
glass of Frank Lloyd Wright
Where: Orange County Museum
of Art, 850 San Clemente Drive,
Newpon Beach
When: Through Jan. 5. Museum
hours are from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Tuesday through Sunday
Coat: $5 for adults, $4 for seniors
and students, and free for
members and children younger
than 16
Contact: (949) 759-1122
SPORIGHT
Sampling
food to help
the hungry
Want to taste gourmet food
from some of the area's best
restaurants while helping
people out? Then -attend the
Second Harvest Food Bank's
18th annual Food. Wme and
Micro-brew Fest on Thursday.
Past chef participants have
included Oayton Shurley
(right) of Oayton Shurley's
BBQ.
FYI
Whet Food Wine and
Micro-brew Fest
Wh.,.: Macy's Home
Store/Crate & Barrel wing of
South Coast Plaza, 3333
Bristol St., Costa Mesa
When: 6 to 9 p.m. Thursday
Cost: $40 in advance, $50 at
the door
Contact: (714) 771-1343
WEDNESDAY
NEWPORT BEACH 9 CANOIOATES
FORUM
Sponsonid by:
Speak Up Newpon
Where: Newpon Beach Tennis
Club, 2601 Eastbluff Drive
WMn: 5:30 p.m.
Cost: Free
Contert (949) 224-2266
'BONE ORCHARD'
Sponaored by: Mary Cecile Gee
Where: The Shed. 3000 Newport
Blvd .. Newport Beach
When: Through ~ov. 17
Contac:t (949) 723-34-06
THURSDAY
'MRS WARREN'S 1 0 PROf£SSK>N'
Sponaored by:
Newport Theaire
Arts Center presents
George Bernard Shaw's period
piece about a woman who finds
out her mother was a prostitute
Where: Newport Theatre Arts
Center, 2501 Cliff Drive, Newport
Beach
When: Through Oct. 13 ..
Performances will be 8 p.m.
Thursdays through Saturdays and
at 2:30 p.m. Sundays
Coat: $13
Cont.ct: (949) 631-0288
FRIDAY
SEAN CURRAN 11 DANCE COMPANY
Spotl90f'9d by:
Eclectic Orange
Where: Irvine 8aTday
Theatre, 4242 Campus Drive, IMne
When: 8 p.m. Friday and Saturday
Cost: $30 or $35
eont.c:t:(949)553-2422
'MAJOR BARBARA'
Spomored by: South Coast Rep
Where: Segerstrom Stage, 655
Town Center Drive, Costa M esa
When: Through Nov. 17
Cost: $19 to $54
Contac:t:(714)708-5555
SATURDAY
niUTRE 12 ZINGARO: 'lllf'rn<'
Spon.at"ed by:
Eclecuc Orange
presents an
equestrian spectacle featuring the
music of Stravinsky
Where: Zmgaro Village, ad1acent
to the Orange County Performing
Arts Center. 600 Town Center
Drive, Costa Mesa
When: Through Nov 8
Performances will be held at 8.30
p m .. with no shows on Mondays
or Thursdays
Cost: $45 to $75
Com.ct: (949) 553 2422
OCTOBER
s M T w T F s
1 2 3 4 5
6 7 8 9 10 11 12
13 14 15 16 17 18 19
20 21 22 23 24 26 26
27 28 29 30 It
MARK YOUR CALENDARS
31: Halloween
NOVEMBER
s M T w T F s
1 2
3 4 5 6 7 8 9
10 11 12 13 14 15 16
17 18 19 20 21 22 23
24 25 26 27 21 29 30
MARK YOUR CALENDARS
28: Thankagiving
29; Hanukkah
DECEMBER
s M T w T F s
1 2 3 4 5 6 7
8 9 10 11 12 13 14
15 16 17 18 19 20 21
22 23 24 25 26 27 28
29 30 31
MARK YOUR CALENDARS
25: Christmas
31: New Year'• Eve
NUMERICALLY
SPEAKING
The number of windows at
the Orange County Museum of
Art's "Light Screens: The Leaded
Glass of Frank Uoyd Wright"
exhibit, running through Jan. 5
GEi llNG
INVOLVED
... I .... INVOUIED NM
~In the Delly Piiot on a
rOtdng buf9. For lnfonnatton on
eddlng your organization to thl1
Ptt. cell (949) 674-4298.
AMEJtlCM Hf.ART ASSN.
The American Heart Assn. la
looking for volunteers to perform
variou• ~I office duties in
the main offtce and Implement
educ:.tlonal and fund-raising
.ven1I through Orange County.
No expert.nee necessary.
'fl"almng Will be provided. (949)
86&-3566.
AMERICAN HOME HEALTH
HOSPtC€ PROGRAM
The American Home Health
Hospice Program needs
volunteer• to give emotional
eupport to terminally ill patients
and their families in the greater
Orange County area. Training is
provided. (714) 550-0800 or (800)
~2645.
AMERICAN RED CROSS,
ORANGE COUNTY CHAPTER
The dlapter needs volunteers to
address community groups
about Red Cross services and to
act as liaisons with the media in
disaster and emergency
situations. Lynn Howes, (714)
481-5376.
BRAIUE INSTlT\ITE'S
ORANGE COUNTY CENTER
The nonprofit organization is
looking for volunteers with a basic
knowtedge of Windows 95198,
Microsoft Word and a willingness
to learn the adaptive equipment
used by its students to participate
In various ec:tivities at the OaSls
Senior Center in Corona del Mar.
Volunteers will M or legally blind
adult students with the use of
computers and other adaptive
tectinology. Mary Johnson, (714)
821-5000,Ext.2113.
COSTA MESA
POLICE DEPARTMENT
Seniors 55 and older are invited
to help staff the Westside
substation. Volunteers are asked
to work two four-hour daytime
'Shifts per week and are
responsible for answering
phones, bicycle registration,
fingerprinting, data entry and
assisting with other citywide
projects. Seniors who can speak
both Spanish and English are
also needed. Call for an
application. Fred Gaedcler, (714)
754-5208.
COSTA MESA SENIOR CENTER
The multipurpose senior services
fadlity at the comer of 191h Street
and Pomona Avenue seeks
volunteers who can greet
members and the public a1 the
front desk and volunteers for the
Retource Department with Excel
computer ~a •nd aherp
t9lephone ....... The 6eNot
Mule program 8'eo Nedi
pee>pM to defMlr meela to hofnee..
(M8) ~2'3158.
EASTER SEALS
Eeatet S..ls Mede volunteera for
ongoing clerical wort end to help
In progreme for chlldren wfth
dlaabllhJM end In ipeelal 8Veflts.
(714) 834-1111.
ASH -MOBILE MEALS
Call (949) 642~ to help
Friends In Service to Humanity
aullt with the Mobile Meals
program and provide ongoing
emergency assistance to those In
need. Both always seek volunteer
aaaistance In a variety of areas.
(949) 645-8050.
KAISER PERMANENTE
HOSPICE SERVICES
Volunteers are needed to provide
four hours per week vislting
patients or doing errands for
them or their caregivers in
communities near volunteers'
homes. (562) 622-3805.
LAGUNA GREENBElJ INC.
Volunteers are needed to assist
Laguna Coast Wiiderness Park
staff and James Dilley Preserve
staff and docents with hiker
registration and general public
orientation. (949) 488-0281.
NEWPORT THEATRE
ARTS CENTER
A variety of jobs need to be
tackled, including set
construction, ushering, mailings
and assorted tedlnical duties.
Scheduling is flexible, with a two·
to 20-hour commitment per
month The Newport Theatre Arts
Center is at 2501 Cliff Dnve. (949)
631-0288
ORANGE COUNTY CHILD
ABUSE PREVENTION CENTER
The center needs volunteers to
work with high·risk families and
children, providing weekly
emotional support to families,
infants and first-time mothers in
1heir homes. OCCAPC is asking
for a three-hour weekly
commitment. (714) 543-4333.
REACH OUT FOR SENIORS
Volunteers are needed to provide
companionship and friendship to
isolated seniors in Newport
Beach and Costa Mesa. Trammg
and support are offered, and
volunteers must be 18 or older.
(949) 442-1000.
READINGBY9
The mentor reading program
seeks volunteers to read to
students in kindergarten through
third grade. In Costa Mesa.
Pomona Elementary School, (949)
515-6980; Whittier Elementary
School, (949) 515-6898; Wilson
Elementary School, (949)
515-6995; and New Shalimar
Leaming Center, (949) 646-0396,
need help in assisting students in
~~
Re-s t au rant
---Establlshed In 1962 ---
.. ~ty Sum:c···
F.ntutainmeor-••
SABATINO'S
CATERING
AVAILABLE
FOR ALL
OCCASIONS
reeding, wmlng end Englleh. SEIMNG PEOPLE IN NEED Mentor 1allioi'\t mr( be s.Mng P9ople In N.d, ateo ~led from 8:30to11:30 a.m. know .. SPIN, Js kM*!ng for
Ind efter school, from 3 tlO 8 p.m. volunteere to help Pf9PllAI
Monday thr~ fridrt. aadc meels for the hom1lw,
SALVATION ARMY
auemble hygiene ldta,
dlatribute meals end pk* up
OF ORANGE COUNTY food for prepemlon. SPIN
lndlvldu1l 1nd group vofunteera provides mov.ln coltll for
are needed to help during the houaing, cue management
upcoming hollday MalOfl. and 1t1PP<>ft MMcel to
lndividuel volunteer families leaving~-SPIN
opportunities Include being • also serv• a family lldvlaors
Christmas warehouse woricer, red or mentors and conducts
kettle befl ringer or organizer for workshops on budgeting 1nd
school, churd'I group, service more. Visit SPIN at 2900
club, business or corporation Bristol St.. Sul1e H-106, Costa
volunteer sign-ups. Group or Mesa. (714) 751-1101.
family volunteers are needed to
adopt·•family, sponsor an angel SHARE! HIGH SCHOOL
tree, hold a canned food or toy EXCHANGE PROGRAM
drive or make a special gift or Host famfliea are needed In
donation dlrectfy to the Salvation the Costa Mesa area to
Army. (714) 832· 7100. provide a bed, meals and a
SAVE OUR YOUTH loving home for high school
students from more than 28
The Westside Costa Mesa youth countries, induding
organization is looking for Germany, Japan, Brazil,
volunt8er$ to help create a China and Poland. The
positive ahemative for people 12 students, all between 15 and
to 23. Volunteers are needed to 18, participate in
help in areas such as boxing, cross-cultural exchange to
sports, health, fitness, aerobics learn about America and
and academic tutoring. (949) share their()wn culture. The
648-3255. students stay for five to 10
months and are screened
SERVICE CORPS OF twice for academic excellence
RETIRED EXECtlTIVES and proficiency in English.
Join other business professionals (888) 533-8514.
to help small businesses succeed
by leading seminars and SHARE OUR SELVES CLINIC
coaching entrepreneurs online. The clinic, which provides
The corps is a nonprofit emergency services to the
chari1able organization needy in Orange County, is
composed of 11,500 volunteer looking for volunteers to
business mentors, both working deliver and pie* up food from
and retired, who counsel local restaurants and grocery
businesses from nearly 400 stores, help with medical and
offices throughout the country. dental staff, data entry, assist
(714) 5S0-7369 and ask for with food sorting and
membership. distribution, to help at the
front desk and some other
SERVING PEOPLE IN NEED duties. The group also needs
Serve as a guide for homeless translat9rs. (949) 642-3451 ,
families by helping them set Ext. 257.
goals and maintain a basic
budget. Bilingual skills needed. SHERMAN LIBRARY
Orientation and training &GARDENS
provided. Theresa Rowe, (949) You could assist with the
757-1456. garden, work in the gift and
tea shop or become a docent
SENIOR MEALS guide for children and adults
AND SERVICES INC. at Corona del Mar's botanical
Volunteers are needed to deliver garden and historical
meals to homebound senior research library. Stefanie
crtizens residing in Costa Mesa Kristiansen, (949) 673-2261
who are not able to prepare their
own meals and do not have
anyone to prepare meals for SOUTH COAST
them. Volunteers are asked to REPERTORY TliEATER
donate at least one hour per week The South Coast Repertory
for a six-month period. Substitute Theater needs vol unteers to
drivers are also needed to fill in help with ushering (see plays
for regular drivers. (714) 840-6611 tree) and other functions.
or (714) 891-0804. (714) 708·5500.
• Kitchen & Baths
• Room Additions
• Patios & Outdoor Living Areas
• New Homes and Rebuilds
~<?~:nP.~:s;-s-r~
• I •, ' c ti ! I -: 1 ..l 2 .! -3 0 ~) -
-~ @IUfllTl1JA1ull -9 FLORAL & G IFTS
50% OFF
FALL WREATHS & BASKETS
NEW FALL MERCHANDISE
Arriving Daily
369 E. 17th Street, Costa Mesa,
Moo-Fr110:00am-6:00pm. St1t & Sun IO:OOmn-5·1)()pm
Phone (949)646-6745
CONFUSED BY THE MARKET?
c9
• Custom.i7.cd Income & Growth Portfolios
• Quarterly Performance review
• Fee Based-No Load
c9
Suero Portfolio Managa,ncnt
CaU Toda.yl.
LANTZ E. BEU
aeldr •w
~. Odalllr 6, 2001 •
HOME 2 tabMlpooi• mell9d t.'9IW
Contilued from A5 PrehNI chi ~to••--8Ullllf. 12· ....... Combine
Fedlng beaJtbyT Oatmeal, lng'9dient:a In • blilndat end pour
fresh bananas and llttle brown Imo aldtlat. e.ei. ait 410for15
sugar are good all day long. minutes. Reduct hMt to 3l50 end
Omeleta are a quick. bake anothet 10 minut.a.
one-atmet dinner. The only limit Serve at once with fr.-h lemon
is your Imagination. F.gp. fresh and powdered auger.
spinadl. aballoll. mushrooms
and brle make a wen-balanced ~r...
meal. One large omelet or From ·The Brea6cfnt 0oot•
frittata can easily serve four 6 alioes butleted bt9ed
salt and pepper people. 1 112 ~ gratea cheeM Breakfast ingredients are (Cheddar, Gouda, Provolone, simple. You probably have Brie) everything you need ln your 1 1/2 cups milk pantry or fridge. ~. milk. 6 egga, slightly beaten butter and Hour -simpl e (any meat, heft>, fruit or staples that make any meal of vegetable of chotce) the day memorable.
Arrange bread in a ahaJlow,
B.ud Gennan Pancau buttered belong dish. Sptud with
(or Out.ch S....) cheese and ingredients of choice.
From ·The Breakfast Book• Combine milk and eggs. Pour
This eggy batter billows up to milk mixture over the bread and
amazing heights and tums cheese. Refngerate overnight.
golden. Serve wUh fresh lemon Bake at 350 degrees for one hour
and powdered sugar. until puffy and lightly golden.
3 eggs, room temperature
1/2 cup milk • KAREN WIGHT is a Newport
1/2 cup flour Beach resident. Her column runs
1/2 teaspoon sah Sundays
DOG because she geti. afraid of being
attacked.
Continued from A5 But on any other day, she's
more than cooperative of
choke or tnp the dog. dressing up, going ou1 and
But when it comes to fabric!>, gelling attention. Babe ~. in fa.ct,
almost anything can go, Lane a past photo subject for not only
said. No ma1erial is par11cularly .area papet"'>, but television
irritating or harmful. stations too.
And ~hoes? There are c,peciaJ ·n1e dogs are nonchalant
LittJe "booties" made to Veino about it," Linscott said. "Some of
around the dog's ankle'>. but them are really foolish (looking),
most dogs don·t like thing., but they don't reali7,ed that ... In
restricting their feet. this hecnc world, it brings a
Lin!icon said Babe won't be -.mile to people\ faces and that's
dn • up for I lallowt'en what people nL~d. a smile.·
TRAVEL white swans came up the river,"
he~d.
Contmued from A5 • Have you, or someone you know.
weather had been dreadful for gone on an interesting v&eation
most of the Uip with rain~torms, recently? Tell us your adventures.
Fred Booth said Drop us a hne 10 TRAVR TALES,
·But 11 wa<; a beautiful, sunny 330 W Bay St., Costa Mesa. CA
day ... we sat on the river, had 92627. e mail
sandwiche'> and tea. and as we young chang n lar1mes com; or fax
were there, about eight to 10 to (949) 6464170.
e Si~tf'® Origini~T ..
• Lumirwttt PrivKY ~
• Vipttt® window sNdin~
• Palm SeKh N custom shutttt1
• Provenena n1 wovtn wood sNdes
• P~ramoun'® vtttic.1.1 blinds
WINDOW COVERINGS & ACCESSORIES
• Draptties • Btdding •Upholstery• Shutters• Top Trufmeftb •
: • .. 11 tt • •1 ... ~1 111i11· •., •• • 1°1.r '
I h h t PI .\ ( f ' T I \. C 0 \ T \ \ \f " \
CJ-t 1l-1t-t1i --t H W . . ..... ' . . . . ..
... ORANGE COUNlY If ..JI PERFORMING ARTS CENTER
'ilGERSTROM HAll fOU,.or~ llAIL
I (714) 7.S.5 0236 GllOO' SAi.ES I (714) 740-7878 (714) .556·2717 INFOUAATlON
(714) 556-27•6 m . OCPAC OltG t OX oma lOAM-6'111
~ > , , ,.. . ,.
ONGOING
EVENTS
• Send OMK!llCI IYBn'a """'-.,
O'lll Oelv Ploc. SID W. Bev 81.. COICi
~CA 112121; bv fax to( ... )
84&4170: or bv c.lllng (...,
57<M291. lfldud9 the time.~ llfld
loC9tion of the 9Wftt, .. well•.
oontlCI phone numb«. A~
ll.clng "~at
www.dailypllof.com.
The R9v. Connie RydcmM .....
dl11cu•on group utlng the book
•eonv.ruttona wtth God• from
noon to 1 p.m. Tuelld.9ya et the
Center for Sphituet DlllooYery.
2860 Meu Verde Drive Ent.
Suite 111, Cotta MMI. Bi1ng e
lunch. (714) 754-7399.
~ ..... -..Kwon Do In eo.t.
M ... off9rl free Ntt-def9nse
daaee to elr11ne pllot9 end ftlght
attendants. a. ... are taught by
three-time U.S. Nllttonal
Champion Tom Marshell.
Marshalt't It at 333 E. 17th St,
Suite 13, Costa Meta. (949)
574-0122.
A Oulng with Divorce eupport
group 11 offered by Jewlth Family
Service of Orange County. The
group 11 led by an experienced
countelor and meett at 6 p.m.
Tuetdaya at the Jewish
Federation Campus. 260 E. Baker
St, Suite G, Costa Meta. (714)
446-4950.
An ln18tfafth cou,,._ 1upport
group Is offered by Jewish Family
The ~ Computer
Tutor
Computer Software Training
Usc:r-fricndly lnmuct1on -"'1nJs on!
Tutoring • Gasses• Consulting
Thi& Week:
M: ~· f'hoio6hop. ~· Word
T: E·man 101, Keyboardine
W: 8ef. Computtr, etq. &al
Th: Outloo~ Int. Exul
F: ~lck8ook&, KA
5: New Act 6.0, Word/EmaH
Classes Start at just $99
NO HAJtD DMVE (WE'RE LOCAll)
C&L .. •Km Sii• ra-
(Ml) Ml•H95
WHAT ABOtrr HOME
INSPECTIONS
BJ D.# 11{,,.,
Ycan ago, ttaJ esttte ttansactioM
usually included an 'inspection of
the home by the buyers shonly
before escrow was co dose, The
poinr of this acrcisc was co make
sure che home was in pretty much
the same condition as when the
buym made che offer in the first
place, but all too many buyers
made it an opponunity ro decide
they want the chandelier in the
cnuy hall replaced by a more
modem light fixture or other
objections dw had nothing at all
to do with the tnnsaction at
haAd.
The eo.te MMe ChMtber of
Commerce aponlOf"I •
networtdng lu~ at 11:.46
a.m. Wednetdeya et the eo.te
Meta Country Club, 1701 Goff
Course Road, Coate Meu. (714)
885-9090.
The W.lldng Club of N9wport
Beach meett at 9 a.m. end 7 p.m.
at Hospital Road and Superior
Avenue. Lose the weight and
have fun. (949) 660-1332.
The SN Scout9' .. Del Mer 711
of Orange County offers a
program for boya and young men
age• 14 to 18 lnteretted In ~llng,
seamanship, piloting, navigation
and cruising. Meetings are from 6
to 9 p.m. Wednesdays at the Sea
Scoutt Sea Base, 1931 W. Cout
Highway. Newport"Beach. (949)
642-6301 or (949) 651-8691.
Ouis Senior Cent...,.
ongoing aaaistance, coun1ellng
and referral services for aenlor1.
(949) 644-3244.
The Coste M ... Senior Chtzen
Square and Round Dance Club
seeks experienced dancer1 to join
1ts group from 9 to1tT:m.
Thursdays at the Costa Meaa ·
Senior Center, 19th Street and
~-..not l•• a
~ ..............
cilllil 111nL"'-~111tht
Jliwtllh SenlorCMW, 210E.
8ebr St., coeu ~ (714)
51N841.
n.t~._.N .. ......,..
Oub.,...... 9' 10a.m.tht1hlrd
\Nlcl!IWilr'( of Md'I mond'I,
axcapt July end Decembe(. 9t
v•rted lomtlone. The group, a
todll organlladon for people
Who have lived In Newport Beldt
fot fewer than flw yeer1, mMtl
for 9V91lb, actlvltlee and fteld
tripe. (949) 84W922.
The,...... of the Nwlport
Beach Public Ubrary Miik book
donetlona to ralee funde for the
library aynm. Boob may be left
et eny of the three brand'I
llbrartea, lncludlng, Balboa,
M1rinert or Corona del Mar. They
mey •Ito be left In the apedal
book~ next to the Frtenda
Boobtore et 1000 Avoc.do Ave.
All hardcover and papert>adt
boob are acceptable, wtth the
exception of i.w boolct.and
magezlnea. Donetlonl •re
tax-deductible. Cell to arrange to
have boob pidted up. (949)
7~9687.
The Thundey Morning Women'•
Club, • 4().yeal'<>ld frtendthlp
dub, It seeking new members.
The club, which Includes golf.
bridge, walklng and gourmet
aectlon1, meets et 11 1.m. on the
second Thursday of rNery month
at the Radluon Hotel In Newport
Beech. The luncheon la $23 and
Tncludt1 en1ena1nment. rne-Mtel
11 at 4645 MacArthur Blvd. (714)
842-5863.
1\adilly. Odoba-22,2002
10::00 .... to 4a> pn
SS0.00 liditt pn incbies ~
~ m:l Qdpwdal tnakfam at
Wimab in QIM Pla:m, LAmm bi'
Pn:al ci O* Jardin al ~
Linry l Gtldem. Aftmxxm rm:p-
ti::m at The MD Oir.din <11 W:!dl.
Opportunlly DmwiDg
WID mlOO ~ !1B a IWim
llllat. mlOO ~ ... Scdh
a.it Pim. +~
1JdBt Pfe.S I Only
/Milnbje It QIM lftb Sdxd Offn.
Shamm Gmlrm ~ Sbq>, New]Xlt
Hills Drup. 1be a.ma CoDedioo •
~. Faslmo 1slarxl Coociergr.
QIM Cook Book
>a.illtie u ame at the UdmJ
• 9lermm Linry l Qadrm
ooly $20.00
v •• baiuCJful homes Ill~ ndcltllDrnoodi
olc.dM 6c ~ C...
For nv.11 oodb-ddca lnbmldon all:
(9t9) 451.aiOO
COPAtENTS ·~for 47 J'WI ol ..................... ..,....,
CanlMd tom Al llld --••.. pirtWIJ • ...,om111e .........
~So 11rm 1 lltde . bec:a•• .... beUeWd dlieU lie...
Cllalmct.t and ttDM and lMty Do you ... read the
-..... me. Pay attenlkML,,.,, •conec:dcml"' c:ol\imnlf (do. I
go fut and then I'm aom. to 80 reed Iba! and the Obltulriet
Uedawn. every da)t ActulDy, I~ tcan
Are we done wtth the flcut the oblnwtM to tee If anyone
treesl la men anything-a wu LD tbeU mJd-SOI. If not. I
word,. =-that bun't feel better. But tbe correctJons
been uJ yet? How about tb1a: columna are peat. I tblnk '°
let's~ecalled an~. OUn ii called •Pot the
"""""' rw.com. Rec:o •
Once you log In, you can cllck Heie'a one from Oct. 2: "In a
on •Fla11 nee.." "fU&hta From Sept 29 atory, 'Back on the
Long Beach" or "Anlmala," market,' Gloria McCormack was
which will tab you to "Ducb miltabnly ldentUled u having
on Grand Canal" or "Dog Who lost her job from Blizabeth
Can't Walk on Beach."' Arden. McCormack quit the
What ii the problem with the cosmetics company after her
405 southbound between husband wu ttanaferred out of
Harbor and the 55l Not the her home et.ate of Texas." Ob,
whole thin& mind you, just the OIC.
two right lanes. Can anyone From the L.A. nmea: "In an
explain tbatf If you can. call me. article in Monday's Southern
Actually. don't. I do.dt want to California Uving ... the name
talk to anyone right now. Abdul WU incorrectly
And what ta the hubbub with translated as 'son of.' The
the C.osta Mesa City Attorney's correct translation is 'servant
offtceT I don't get ll · of.'" Seel Good to know. From
A M·yetr old Newport Beach the LA. Tunes, Oct. 3: •Marlin
woman, wbo has smoked since Simmons, a junior at Long
she wu 17 and bu terminal Beach Poly High, is 15 years old.
lung cancer, sued Pbllip Morris His age wu incorrect ln a
for concealing the addictive Sports story Wednesday." Oh.
power of nicotine and sorry, Marlln.
manipulating the amount of it LA. Tunes, Oct. 4: "'A Sept. 16
in their ciganrttel to keep her story ln Section A stated that
addicted. On Friday, a Jury in the northern part of Iraq is not
L.A. awarded her $28 bWion predominantly populated by
and yes, that's with a "b." A.a to Mualima of the Sunni sect. In
whether his clJent bears any fact, the area la a stronghold for
RUN bor's water polo coach Jason
Lynch reportedly told his team
Continued from Al that if he 6.n.tshed before any of
his players, the team would have
Don Webb, Newport Beach'1 to run the course again.
former public worb director Jennifer Hernandez and Lau-
who ls running against Allan nm Celek. both sophomores and
Beek for a Qty Council seat re-basketball players at Newport
presenting District 3, ran with a Harbor, said part of their reason
team Saturday. Newport Har-for running the SK was to sup-
Help keep
our city clean!
~,\i;Spuk ~~:y-Up
· 4-:~ Newport __ _
Wednesday, October 9, 2002
Monthly General Membership Meeting
At Newport Beach Tennis Club
2601 Eastbluff Drive
Reception: 5:30 p.m. Program: 5:45 p.m.
Please bring your neighbors and friends.
Guests 818 always welcome
Information (949) 224-2286
Newport Beach City
Council Candidates Fon1m
l€&l~IE£1~1
lwdl. Who ... ~lliiiiil -; ~butaotAnb... • Ub•==:a' , .. ~ ::-Aod)' r.cdltlf pt ff' I I IL -
Mtb Mi•• II OD die • 8''1 r
list With I pubi-=uid •t = need m0l'9 on 9'iDlil MCC
In ROtthem lnq .. ~ l'D •
get back to you. Oll
The stranp .... ofNtwport-
Beach lawyer HUSh = ::: McDonald ended thla ID a •
m1strla1. McDo~ WU -
accused of mwiierlQI the wife -
of one of his cllentl In 1997, bu1 ..
prosecutors were never Ible to •
come up with any phyalcal .
evidence leading to McDonald. • •
What shifted the cue from the , , :
sordid to the surreal. though,
was that a few days after tbe
murder, McDonald allegedly -.... staged his own death u a -suicide from the Golden Gate
bridge, even leaving behind his"' ·
watch, his buainesa card and 1 -
recorded "suicide note" on tape •
for bis family. McDonald spent :
the next four yean ln hidlng, ..
not at the bottom of San
Francisco Bay, but ln Utah.
Lobster season opened on
Wednesday, I don't want to
refinance, and yes I know about :
the $1.99 Charles Shaw wine at
Trader Joe's. Anything elset
Good. Don't talk to me until
next week. I gotta go.
• PETER BUffA it a former Coate
Mesa mayor. Hl1 column run1 ..
Sundays. He may be ,.ached vie ... ..
e-mail at Ptr84§aot.com.
port their school. -·
"It's just really fun," Lawe.
said. "Plus we're doing It foe-
basketball. And just to get bl-
shape I guess."
• YOUNG a4ANG writes fNturee.
She may be reached at 1949)
574-4268 or by e·mall tt
young.dl11ng§l11timff.com.
Put a bug in
someone's
ear Call the
Daily Pilot
CLASSIAEDS ·....... .
oNE 9A~
ACOU STIC f . ANO
C EILING ClJ'>TO'-"
REM O VAL TEX TURlf'c(,
.. ... • .. .. ..
..
Alm YOU 11RllD .
I OflTMATOLDFAMONID ··-POPCORN CllUNO't I WI CAN MMOYI "'°" YOU NfO ""'-YI . ANIWIMOOYM..._..~
• 1N JUST 011• DAY I .
I FAST·CLUN f:
: Emt:l•NT ~
I 'OR PRU anun 1 ~
1 CALL 800-I~
1 91~1UNQ 1:
I SAVE COUPON I.
I FOR 10-Ye 01'1' 1·
L Uc.1748842 ------.J
ART llEsTOIATION
We rcp1i.r c1iumpi:
• PoRCElAIN • ClrmL
• PAINJ'INQ
• OmCA. Gull• GIWHla
•·flAMls AND OnaAIS
Cou&im.a rroo-P"Fen1
1 1~ on onua t0a.., oa U1?11
.. __________ ..
Jttry Reopene and Karen and Joe Nedza, all of Newport Beach,
went to Santa Barbara to compete in the 2002 Santa Barbara
COunty Triathlon.
Kirk Dawson, Don DeVries and Jerry Tardie caught fish oo the
legend in Mexican waters . . •
• • • • • . • • ,.
• • •
• • • • • • • • • .. -• •
.r
Support Our
Schools
Shop Harbor
Blvd. of Cars
Jackie Amster and Stacy Edlund of Corona del Mar went
parasailing in Maui, Hawaii.
Pat and Ed McFarland of Costa Mesa v1srted Shennon Stream on
the Yangtze River m Chioa.
PLUG
IN
Plug into the Pilot
Class1f1ed sect100 to
find seMCes from
electronics and
plumbers. to
landscapers and
painters
invites you to
benefit ART auction
~
Thunday, October 10
Support your museum's exhibition and education
programs while collecting world-class art .
5 30 VIP Preview With CUratONI Tour
6'30 Cocktails. Hors If oewres & Auction ~
8:00 l.Jye Auction begms. followed by cotfN and desserts
TICK.Er'S
VIP TICkets $75 Members. S 100 Non-Members
Gener3l TICkets $50 Members: $75 Non-Members
F•tarlas w.b ~
Ann Hamilton NatNn otiwn
Jaco Oen Hartog 1<91'\ Price
~Hendee ~Reed
o.vld Hockney ....,.. RoMnquist
P9t•~ Allen~
F. Scott Hns Ed Ru9cN
1<91'\ KaQy Suun Silan
Owies Long tQlcj Smit
Jeln LO#I v-...s-.
Mlf1in Mull S.111hlnie ~
~ Mul1wt Wllilfn W..,111n
• ......., a.te ..
A•••1nt
..
QUOTE OF 11E DAY
"It'l llN olll d41.--. I
you ridler got 1pftt:l or
you 're dlasU., it.,. .
-~NHAlll.~Nitl
• • footbil coldt
Al2 S&RSly, October 6, 2002
111h.,........._~Run
~ .
12-under-1. Arnulfo Bustamonte.
19:47; 2. Scott Lync::h, 21 :11; 3. Mike
lkemura, 22:08.
13-15-1. Nidc St. Andre. 17:46; 2.
Daniel Avitia, 17:48; 3. Nathan Todd,
19:10.
16-18-1. Raphael Asafo-Agyei.
17:01; 2. John Ciampa, 18:14; 3. Victor
Schimming, 18:20.
19-24 -1. John Pescnett. 18:05; 2.
Daniel Davis, 18:10; 3. Guy Ouffner,
18:58.
25-29 -1. Dominic Bulone, 22:05; 2.
Ryan Carey, 22:11; 3. Henry Chian,
23:32.
/
30-3.a -1 . .Art Canales. 18:56; 2.
James Zeigler. 19:13; 3. Bill McCarthy,
19:15. /
35-39 - 1. Kevin Vidan-Balde, 16:02;
2. Kirby Lee, 17:16; 3. Gecko Cachero,
18:16.
40-44-1. Art Hernandez. 18:21; 2.
Dale Hutchinson, 18:69; 3. Adrian
Moreno, 19:07.
45-49-1. Jeff Snyder, 17:31; 2.
Robby Conn, 18:60; 3. Irv Dawson.
18:56.
50-54 -Ken Koestner, 20:10; 2.
Roger OeYoung, 20:53; 3. Ed Escano,
22:19.
55-59 -1. Robert Sullivan, 21 :39; 2.
Greg Henk, 24:31 ; 3. Clifton Uyematsu,
26:43.
60-64-Mike Harrison, 22:16; 2.
Thomas Baker. 23:12; 3. Tommy
Martin, 24:22.
65-69 -1. Merle Lauderdale. 23:49;
2. Nate Spunt, 24:04; 3. Bill Fordiani,
25:02.
70-79 -1. Lloyd Marchand, 29:32; 2.
Robert Kay, 29:38; 3. Vahe Meshrouni,
31:53.
Female
12-under-1. Cindy Sandarilla,
23:8&, 2. Paige t.vncti. 25:14; 3. Darcy
Cox. 27:02.
13-15-1. Hilary May, 21:10; 2.
Brittanee Martcsbury. 21:28; 3. CaitJin
Mai, 22:14.
16-18 -1. Lisa Evans, 21 :44; 2 .. Jenny
Wilder, 22:57; 3. Zarah Mahler, 26:38.
19-24 -1. Kim Ramirez, 19:08; 2.
Lynn Rinek. 21:41; 3. Sarah Galbreath.
21:53.
26-29 -1. Laura Monson, 19:60; 2.
Keira Kirby, 21:48; 3. Nina Riga, 22:30.
30-34-1. Laura Knight. 18:41; 2.
Ginny Story. 21:35; 3. Julie Thomas.
22:52.
35-39 -1. l)lmmy Motsunami, 22:00;
2. Amy Miller, 22:29; 3. Vidci Wadman,
23:15.
40-44-1. Susan Leonardi, 21:55; 2.
Sherry Boston, 22:19; 3. Julie Hart.
22:42.
45-49 -1. Brenda Colgate, 22:48; 2.
Pilar Boaenmeyer, 23:03; 3. Helen
Briglio, 24:58.
50-54 -1. Ann Fordiani, 23:43; 2. Jo
Meredith, 23:52; 3. Mary Lear, 26:14.
55 59 -1. Carrie Slaybadc, 26:40; 2.
Janice Aldendifer, 35:14.
60-64 -1. Elizabeth Khoury, 45:03; 2.
Diane Bailey, 46:05.
66-69 -1. Nina Hixson, 33:39.
70-79-1. Eloise Farrell, 40:58; 2.
Marityn Slaughter, 48:38.
Spora £clbw Ro,aer Car1son • (949) 574-4223 • ...... Fa: (949) 650-0170
f •
STEVE MeCAANK I DM.Y Pl.OT
Estancia's Javier Ramirez (28) attempts to scoop ·up a pass while Westminster's Livingston Tautua (26) tries to defend. The pass attempt failed.
Lions dev.our Eagles
Westminster has too
manyweapons on this
particular night, 41 -7.
Richard Dunn
Oaity Pilot
NEWPORT BEACH -If F.standa
High's football team could find victory
in time of possession, the P.agtes
would've been dancing in the streets
Saturday night like most Angel fans.
But visiting Westminster, the de-
fending Golden
West League
champion. SCOREBOMD
showed up with
unteachable
speed and left
the P.agtes shak-
ing their heads
following the U-Lions 41
ons' 41-7 league-Eagles 7
opening win at
Newport Harbor
High.
·1 thought we controlled the line of
scrimmage tonight. but it's the old ad-
age -you've ei\:her got speed or
you're chasing it.• sa.ld Estancia
Coach Jay Noonan, whose team (1-3
overall) squandered opportunities of-
fensiw.ty, losing three fumbles.
Westminster (2-2), wbkh scored on
the game's opening drtve and never
trailed, provided big plays on offense
as senior quarterback Fidel Gonzalez,
• I
I
I
I •
I
! ..
STEVE McCIW« I OAl.Y Pll.OT
Estancia's Lewis Bradshaw makes a reception on a long pass wfl!le skirting the sideline in Saturday's game.
a thild-year staner, made the moat of ,
SH EAGLES, P .. e A14
COLLEGES
Peirsol finds himself at the No. 1 school
Texas No. l in Sports
mustrated poll.
Stanford. The Cardinal
indudes CdM products Kevfn
Hal*'1 (men'• volleyba11),
Jlmle Brownell (women'•
wlleyball) and Marcello
Pantuli.ano J9 on the men's
water polo t"81D, which .ii
ranbd No. l ln the nation and
It coached by former CdM
heed mml JOhn Vaqpia.
Lut week. UCLA. whkb le
ranted NO. 11 1n SI, faced Off STEVE .
....... tca.rMJ use ranUct VIRGEN
No. 21 In the JnlPlJM. "' IDlll'tWIW~tbe~who
.............. ~product
Wt ........... BnalN,
... llidlliill """'°"' HilbOt ~
•
UCIAAll-American in
volleyball and former
basketball standout at
Newport Harbor High in
the 1970s will be inducted
with eight athletes this
weekend into the UCLA
Hall of Fame.
Bryce Alderton
Daily Pilot
D ennls Qine admits be wu
obsessed with basketball,
He played pn Newpon
Harbor Higb's basketball
team and dreamed of playing
collegiately, but when he played
against Santa Monica High in a
-.,-.
. . ;...
h: ~··J '.
volleyball game for
the Newport
Harbor High club
team, his future
changed forever.
UCLAS
legendary men's
volleyball coach Al
Scates recruited
Oine to play
volleyball for the
Bruins, and Denny Cline volleyball is the
reason Oine is
being inducted along with eight other
Bruins into the school's Hall of Fame
at ceremonies Friday and Saturday.
This past spring Oine received a
lener from then-Athletic Director
Peter Dalis telling him of the honor.
Oine admits he was "shocked.·
Denny Oline
Standing at 6-foot-3 and a middle
blocker, Oine played on ucu;a
national championship team.a of
1974-76. He was captain of the '76
team and gained All-American
honors while at UCLA.
In Scates' 39 years at UCIA u hNd
coach. his teams have woo 18
national championships, an NC.AA
record for a single-sport coach and
his teams have compiled an
1,019-167 (.862) record.
Scates has coached 48 first-team
National Collegiate Athletic
Association (NCAA) and 26 Unlted
States Volleyball Association
All-Americans, among them Qine.
Oine's father, Neil Oine, was a
defensive end on UCLA's football
team in the early '50s, and
contributed to the establishment of
high school boys voUeyball at
Newport Harbor.
NeU, along with Gene Popko, who
lived in Los Angeles in the early '70s,
formed a boys volleyball league in
1972 made up of six high school
teams from Orange County and six
teams from Los Angeles who played
one another in what came to be
known as the beginning of organized,
high ~hool volleyball in Orange
County and L.A.
''When I was at Harbor guys didn't
play volleyball," Oine said. "In the
'60s and '70s boys volleyball was a
countercuJturaJ spon played by guys
who weren't the conformists of the
world. (My dad) was instrumentaJ in
starting the league, but we were
truthfully riding the cusps of
something he helped lay the
gf2undwork for."
· arne played on Newpon·s team ai.
a senior in 1972. and he said the
league rapidly expanded from 12 to
24 teams, then to more than 50.
"I WU~ excited when I waa
r.aUlhKt by UCIA. said Oine, who
bu quite a lineage of family who
have attended the Weatwood
campus.
Dennla' mother Pat also attended
UCLA u did Dennis' grandmother,
b1a great aunt and uncle.
Ahr gradaa•rtng from UCLA in
1977 with.~ in political
tdence. CJlne ltayed on as an
aaaistant COKh to Scates until 1984,
then entered Boalt Hall to attain his
law degree &om UC Berkeley.
As an ualatant to Scates, Oine
reali7.ed the brains behind the
succe&lfu1 coach.
"I understood just how good he
was,. Oine said. M He was a master or
getting the most from the taJent he
baa on the lloor. He was the best
coach for the guys on the Ooor:
The 19th Annual UCLA Athletic
Hall of Fame Dinner and Induction
Ceremony kicks off Friday with a
reception and HalJ·ofFame open·
house at theJ.D. Morgan
lntercoOegiate Athletics Ce mer on
the UCLA campus at 5:30 p.m. with a
dinner to follow at 7 p.m. at the
James West AJumni Center.
He will then be introduced, aJong
with the eight athJetes that include
professionaJ golfer Duffy Waldorf and
ex-NBA player Don Maclean, during
halftime of the UCLA-Oregon football
game Saturday al the Rose Bowl in
Pasadena ..
The 2002 inductee lives in Santa
Monica with wife, Kerri and their
three boys. NeiJ, 15, Kenny, 11. and
David, 9.
Nell plays volleyball on a club team
while Kenny has gotten into
skateboarding after giving up soccer.
David has got all the athletic skill:.
and ability, Oine said.
"I know nothing about
skateboarding but they all seem dam
good at it," Ome said.
Slntly, ~ 6, 2002 All
"When I first opened it I thought
they were aslcing for money,• said the
48-year-old Santa Monica resident,
who now is a lawyer for the film and
teJevision industry. "I am very proud
and somewhat Oabbergasted to be
selected for this honor. It's really a
reflection of the strength of the
program. we had some very good
teams.~
NeedJess to say Oine never
envisioned himself playing for Scates'
heralded program. While attending
Newpon, Ome aJso competed on the
school's track and field team and was
the salutatorian of the Oass of '72
before attending UClA.
Oine's brother. Terry. and sister,
Susie. both graduated from Newport
Harbor High. Susie lives on Lido Isle
and Oine's mother lives on Balboa. Former Newport Harbor High standout Denny Chne reacts to a big moment.
TENNIS Co t t I .
S . 1 d. h d d as s rugg es 1n a enzor a zes ea e 6 l
for the nationals at 2 -10 oss on road
Newport Beach TC
A record 73 entries
wiJI play in three
divisions in USTA
event in Newport,
,starting Monday.
T he sweetest. ~iest
and most dignified
ladies of all -those in
the 6.5s. 75s and 85s -
will convene at Newport Beach
•Tennis Oub starting Monday for
the ninth annual United States
lennis Association Senior
Women's Hardcoun
Championshi~
from the Racquet Oub of Irvine
finished fourth. while captain
Adam Kranson's Southern
California Section-based squad
featured four local men al the
Moore Tennis Academy in Palm
Springs.
John Cross (Newport Beach).
O~tes 8ae'L (Corona del Mar).
Peter Finch (Newport Beach) and
Marc Kelly (Newpon Beach)
competed on the men's 5.0 team
that fini.Vled 1-3 in the desert
(5-7 in individual matches).
•••
Newpon Beach Tunnis Oub
will host an Open House Oct. 19
with free tennis lessons And. with the kids
back in school and the
bulk of the tourists
•gone for the summer,
•it's an Ideal time for the
: top senior women
;players in the U.S. to
;Wit Newport Beach.
.------. and clinics bqpnning at
3 p.m. The event is open
to the public and
available to pJayers of all
levels.
A reconi 73 player
'entries are registered
I on draw sheets,
;acx:on:Ungto
1 tournament director RICHARD
in addition to the
diDic:a and lessons. there
will be food and a live
band. scheduled to start
at 6:30 p.m. Wayne
Bryan's band wUl
entertain the audience.
1be event is expected to !Nonna Veal ·it's DUNN
: probably because of a
: new in8ux of people reaching the
651-and people lib coming
~-Veal said. • And. let& face it.
9-11 did hurt us !Mt )'mt .•
Thia ytl8r'I record entry list
lOJM the previous mark set two
~ ago. when 59 players were
p<MltlJd.
"We'll bl.Ye 9eYSl entries tn the
&St for women Angles. wbkh ls
mtwbhle," Veal aid. :nu. b
fiumldc for w to set that~
It II nice that (the J.dlel> ~
cooqbact.• For..,.. In the -the,. ol A.maq CinCe, the top e8ecl Is
R!DOMled USV.-.ndout Do Do
O...,olLi~IM'Wh*ol
,._325 ISJilS blll; ....
..... fil.l"N.no 11..-.S lnl In
.. '&. .... ~
Wf' llJD(P ~lathe
topiilld .. lbllk UMll~:
............. Hi;Wlilpd °' ............... ,.., ... la .. .
·-..........
f
last deep into the
evmlng. Oet:ai1s: (949) 644-0050.
•••
t
Pirates fall behind
early to Mt. SAC and
never find comfort
level they usually
display at home.
Steve Vlr1en
Daily Pilot
WALNUT -lhe Orange Coast
College football team's second
loss of the season created con-
cern for Pirates Coach Mike Tuy-
lor. The Bucs' 26-10 loss to Mt.
San Antonio Saturday night also
exposed glaring problems for the
Bucs' offense.
Coast, ranked No. 14 in
Southern California. lost Its sec-
ond straight road game and
never dlscovered the rhythm it
has shown when at LeBard Sta-
dium. Instead, the Mt SAC de·
fense took advantage of the Pi-
rates' limited offense, meanwhlJe
the Mounties (2-2) provided an
example of what a balanced of-
fense is all about
"Obviously, we don' play as
well on the road u we do at
home; Ttlylor said. •(Mt. SAC) Is
a pretty good team. They came
ready to play. Their defense
pushed us up Inside and we had
to run to the sidelines. We
couldn't run betwftn the tacit -
les."
OCCs running attack. which
entered the pme ~ 178
yards per game, was held to a
mere 43 yards from the Pl.rates'
fonnJdable bedcfieJd of Nlles
Mittuch (10 cantes, 25 yards)
and Steven Mabelooa (4·18). lbe
MOWldel realized the Bua do
not haw tpee(1 on the outside,
"Obviously, we don't
play as well on the
road as we do at home.
(Mt. SAC) is a pretty
good team. They came
ready to play:'
-Mike Taylor, OCC
football coach
and since there wru. not a wide
receiver deep threat. Mt. SAC
stacked the line and sruffed the
running back.c;. The Mountiec;
also reconied five sacks.
"We're not blessed with a
bunch of fast receivers," Taylor
said. ·we have a lot of guys who
are more possession-type guys.
You can't play with what you
don~ have. We lost in the last
minute to LA Harbor, and we
came out here and we didn't play
very well to start out the game.
We didn't taclcJe very well"
The Pirates (2-2) went three
and out on their first three offen-
sive series. while Mt. SAC built a
13-0 lead. The Mounties could
have made It 19-0, but receiver
Delanie Walker dropped a 4-3-
yard touchdown pass in the end
zone.
However, the damage was
done. Mt SAC scored on Its first
offensive drtw, right after send-
ing OCC three and out to open
the game. The Mounties used
just five plays to travel 65 yards
and scored after Corey Hudson
found paydirt on a 2-yard jaunt
The drive wu keyed by Walker's
49-yard reception from quarter-
back Zac C.onnora.
Connors started the season a.,
the Mounues' third-string
quarterback. but injuries to Mt.
C\ACs starte r vaul1ed him up the
depth chart. I le .unassed 233
yards on 13 of .!S pa<;sing. Hi<.
receivers. mainly Walker and
Calvin Byrd. made CX.C spread
out its defense. creating gaps fo r
the Mountie<;' nmnmg game. Mt.
SAC.. rushed for 169 yardi. and 3
TDs on 39 carriei..
• Tlli.!. is a big win for w.," Mt
SAC Coach Bill fok 'laid. "We
saw OCC on film and noticed
that they were a reaJ physical
team. For us to beat them wiU
bring us confidence."
OCC managed to score before
halftime. The Pirates used IR
plays and nine minutes. which
resuJted in a Bryce Sheridan 35-
yard 6eJd goaJ, with I :44 left in
the second quarter. But. Mt. SAC
answered back. driving down the
field, and Hugo Barajas nailed a
28-yard field goaJ as time ex
pired. The Mounties took a 16-3
lead into halftime.
In the fourth quarter. trailing
26-3, the Pirates found some life
and took advantage of a Mt SAC
roughing-the-passer penalty that
put the Sues on the Mounties"
34. From there. OCC quarterback
Derek AspinwaJJ tossed a pass
out in the Oat to MJttasch, who
went the distance for the 34-ya.rd m . Sheridan hit the point-after
kid. and OC:C trailed, 26-10.
Sheridan lhen recowred his
own onside kid. but the Mount-
ies sent OC:C thrtt and out. that
Included two sacks.
The Pirates play at Pasadena
Oty, the No. J team ln Southern
C&llfomia. next week. to wrap up
non-division~
SCHEDULE
11:JWW .........
C.oleQe men -UC lrYlne at
Ncwtt.n• c.Mfotn&a Toumernenc.
.tllleblo ~ Collge. Ya.
UClA. " I.ft\.
SCORE BY QUARTERS
occ 0 J 0 7 10
Mt SAC 13 3 3 7 26
FIRST QUARTER
Mt. SAC Hudson 2 run (8ara1as
ludd 10 48
Mt SAC Scott 18 run (k1dc fatledl.
6.14
SECOND QUARTER
OCC Sheridan 35 FG, 1 38
Mt. SAC -Barajas 28 FG, 00
THIRD QUARTER
Mt. SAC Bara1as 24 FG. 8·42
F~QUMTER
Mt SAC -Soon 1 run (8era1as kldtl.
14 55
OCC M1ttascti 34 J)8$S from
Aspinwall (Sheridan lodl), 12.27
INDMDUAL RUSHWG
OCC Mtnasdl. 10-25, Mahelona.
4 18. Aspmwall. 7 mmua-13
Mt SAC -Scott, 13-56, 2 TDs;
Hud11<>n. 10 56. 1 TO Guerrero. 1~.
Nembhard 7 12 Huggett. 1 16,
Wtlltams. 7 25
OCC -Aspinwall. 18-38 O. 176. 1 TD
Mt SAC -Connors 13 25-0, 233.
OCC -Bera, 3-32. Menke, 4 22.
Gonzalez. 2 17; Mittasctt, 3~, 1 TI>,
Sylvester. 2-14; Rose. i 13, Hawttev.
2 JO, laa11, 1·2.
Mt. SAC -Walkcw, 2·55; Hodlon,
1 9. Mi1cnell, 2-29; Nembhard, 3-35;
Byrd, 3-54, Scott. 2-43
GAME ~nmcs
DCC -MC
11 ,. ,..,., ·-n• m I~ tJ-JM)
lJ •
'-1t M
ZM -Wle ...U I 1 ,.. ..... ,. 21.M ..,,.
·~ ................. 11=•1 .. ~-
DEEP SEA
I
lc:c. ff( QUM1IJtS
~ 14 713 7 ~ 0 0 7 0
....,QUM"fa
Mn -8rooll9 1 Nn (run felled),
8!36.
Wm-Bl'OOU 78 run (laurel run),
<>:32.
SECOND QUM1ER
Wm-T8Utua 74 S*11 from
GoNalez (Cruz kk*). 8:44.
1l9ID QUM1ER
flit-MK!n 2 pua from B. Young
(R8ml..-z kldd. 8:43.
Wm-Chamberlain 83 PM' from
Gonutet (run fllfled), 6;.45.
Wm-Broou SS fumble return
(Cruz kldd. 4:1t.
FOUmt QUARTER
Wm -Smith 28 run (Cruz kidd.
8:38.
Attendance: 360
Wm -Broou. 13-142, 2 TDs; Smith,
4-48, 1 TD; t...urel, 7·24: Alcala, 2-9;
Gonzalez, 2-7; Garcia. 1·5: Co1tales,
2-0.
Est-Kaplco, 11-29; Maclat, 6-26;
Cahill, 3-24; McKendry, J..11; B.
Young, 11-6.
1 I t t I I
111 100
t a o • t o
, , 0 • ' 0
The Uooa, who pined 506 net
yuda, fncbwlt.. 235 OD the
pound and 206 In the ak. added
a fourtb..quarter t.oucbdowo
when bKkup nmn1ng back J.'t
Smith tpdnted 28 yatda to pay-
dirt untouched on a .weep.
-ibil " the fatst owraD .-wffe bad al WestmJ.mter.
Mee l'Ye been here," McMiDen
l8ld. "We got 80JDe breeb to-
nJab.t. But dlla pme WU doeer
than the ICOl'e indicated Their
otremlwt llne did a great job In
the eecond hll! ~ were hum-
bled the way they moved the
beJL•
COLLEGE
WATER POLO
Anteaters
win .twice
atNorCal
UCI, UCLA vie today.
PLBASANT HJU -UC lrvlne
aenJor Jell Powtfrs atole the baJl
and peSMd to sophomore Dan
Noon. who scored the game-
wtnnlng goal agalnat Ofth-ranJted
Pepperdine Saturday as the UC
Irvine'• men's water polo team
advanced to the semifinals of the
NoiCal Men's Water Polo Tuur-
nament at Diablo Valley CoUege.
UC lrvtne is now 3-0 against
Pepperdine this year.
The Anteaters (8-2) face sev-
enth-ranked UCLA In a semifinal
match today at 11 a.m. at the
Spieker Aquatics Complex in
Bemley.
N>MDUAl. PASSING
Wm -Gonzalez. 5· 11 0, 2·6, 2 TDs;
Le, 0-1-0.
SID'E MCCAANK I OAILY Pl.OT
Estancia Quarterback Brad Young ( 15) delivers a forward pass in Saturday night's league opener.
~ wbk:b bad a bfg edge
tn time of poaelllon (27:46--
20:14), allo OODll'oDed the foot-
beD longer than the Uon.s In the
first baJf (13:02-10:58), despite
loeing by tMJe toucbdowna.
Sophomore Orea.son Barry led
the 'F.aten with four goals and
Powers added two. Senior goalie
Doug Finfrock recon:led eight
saYeS as Pepperdine (5-4) was led
by Jesse Smith's four goals and
three from Josh Acosta.
Barry scored with 5:33 remain-
ing to give UC Irvine a 9·8 lead.
but the Waves' Michael Haus-
mann evened the game at 9 with
a goaJ with 4:0 I remainlng.
Est -8. Young. 10 20-0, 128, 1 TD.
INDMOUAl. RECEMNG
Wm -Ren!(. 2·25; Tautua. 1·74, 1TD;
Chamber1ain, 1-63, 1 TD; laurel, 1-44.
Est-J. Young, 3-31; Ramirez, 2·31,
Kapko, 2·20; Bradshaw. 1-33; Valdes,
1-11 ; Mecias. 1·2, 1 TD
GAME STATISTICS
First downo
~ ..... doge
"-'"11 var·~ ..... ng
Net r.cum ye<de" Sacb-v•·~ Netyllrd-
P\Jnta Fumt>en-fumt>les lost
FleQs-n.c yerdege Time of pc>eMMlon
Wm &t
15 13
31 236 27 120
:>06 128
!). 12-0 10-20-0
615 :n
none 6 2•
506 20 3.32 !>-314
2 I 4-J
13· !03 &-«>
20 ,. 27 "6
•P..mt return•. 1nterceptt0m1 fumbte return•
EAG~ES
Continued from Al2
his five completions in 11
throws.
Gonzalez threw for 206 yards.
including touchdown passes of
74 and 63 yards to receivers
Livingston Tautua and Parker
Olamberlain, respectively. and a
44-yard pass to running back
Michael Laurel on a play over the
middle. All three plays were
catch-and-run receptions with
the receivers outtunning Estan-
cia defenders.
After Lhe Lions built a 21-0
halftime lead, the fagles battled
back early in the third quarter.
starting with the second-half
kickoff' as Geo Macias recovered
his own fumble and returned it
42 yards to the Westminster 39.
After eight straight running
plays, which lnduded convming
at fowth-and-2 from the Lions'
6-yard line, Estancia quarterback
Brad Young rolled out to his right
and hit Macias on a screen for a
2-yard touchdown pass..
The Eagles' only scoring drive
or the contest was spubd by
fullback Mike Cahill's 15-yard
burst on third-and-long from the
Westminster 21, setting up Es-
tancia's foµrth down at the 6. Ca-
hlll powered hls way to the U-
ons' 2 for the first down.
Westminster, howevec. scored
on its second play from saim-
mage on its ensuing series, a 63·
yard pass play from Gonzalez to
Ownberlain on a catch and run
over the middle.
On Estanda's third play of its
next possession. Westminster
defensive back Carlos Brooks re-
covered a fumble and returned It
65 yanh for a touchdown. Jose
Cruz added the PAT and Lions
enjoyed a 34-7 lead with 4: 11 to
play in the third quarter.
•0nce we picked up that fum.
ble and ran it back. that was (the
baUgame).· Westminster Coach
Ted M.cMillen said.
BRIEFS
After an Eltaoda punt late in
the tint quarter. Westminster
ecored oo Im flnt play as Brooks
took a pit.ch right and outran the
Estanda defmae; going 76 yards
to the end mne.
Bstanda moved the ball from
ita awn 20 to the Lions' 26 on a
drive lud.ng 3:36. but the series
ended with a loe:t fumble.
Westminster scored again on
lt.s first play from scrimmage as
Gonzalez connected with nwtua
on an out pattern for a 74-yard
touchdown paM, In which Thu-
tua never lost his stride.
"They're a big-play team and
that hun us,· said Noonan.
In the 'Eaters' first game Satur·
day, Powers scored five goals and
Barry scored four in the 13-4 win
over 20th-ranked Air force. Fin-
frock made 12 saves as UC lrvinl'
led 8-1 at halftime.
NOACAl TOURHAMEHT
UC ltW'9 13, N• Fo<ce •
Hallllme: UCI. • 1 N -Hom 1, Morgen I ~ 1 0..brf I s.--Shrovw a uo -~ !>. Berry • Noon I M<o<ln 1, a.cu 1, Genrry 1 s.--f1nfnx* 12
UC IMne 10, ~dine 9
~UCl.&-3. "-!> -Smilh •. Aoolc.a 3. Rodr\vo-I. Ham
""""' l s.--Soll!• t ua . 8""Y •. ~ 1 M9rio 1 Goonw 1, Gera. 1, Hoon 1 S..... -Finfrodi II
Harbor comes up short in semifinals
Sailors settle for third
place at Nike Challenge
in Chicago tournament.
Newport Harbor High's girls volley·
ball team, facing three nationally
ranked teams in one day. lost in Lhe
championship semifinals Saturday
and captured third place at the Nike
Olallenge in Oticago. ho~tt'd by
Mother McCauley High.
Coach Dan Glenn's Sailors (II · 2)
defeated Downers Grove Soulh of
Olicago in the quarterfinals, 9-15.
I 5-8, 15-13, behind senior middle
blocker Kristin McOune (25 kills) and
junior outside hiners Alyson Jennings
(16 lcills and two aces) and Lauren
Miller (I 0 kills).
The Sailors lost to Assumption\
Rockets or LoulsviUe, Ky .. in the semi-
finals. Assumption, the No. I -ranked
team in the country last year, rallied
fora 13-15, 15-3, 15-0victory. MWe ran
out or gas. and (the Rockets) got on a
roll: Glenn said.
McOune, an all-tournament c;elec-
llOn. had 14 lcills in the semifinals,
while Jennings had seven and Eliza·
beth Gayton five.
In a battle for third place, Newport
Harbor defeated Wahlert, the top·
ranked team in Iowa. 15-IO, 8-15, 15-
13, as McOune had 14 lcills. Jennings
( 12 kills), junior Emily Turner (I 0)
and Miller {10) alw reached double
figures in kills.
CC: Mesa sparkles
On a course where the Golden West
League meet will be held, the Costa
Mesa Hlgh boys and girls ~ross coun·
try teams both competed in the Cen-
tral Park Invitational Saturday with
both finishing in the top 15 in CIP
Southern Section Division 11.
The girls took 11th out or 16 teams
and were led by freshman Katherine
Connell (21:56) and followed by Sarah
Bryant (22:39), Anna Rodriguez
(23:15), Hanh Nguyen (23:27), Cara
Ooone (23:30), Araceli Mendou
(23:42) and Kendra Bailey (24:42).
Senior Olristine Bjelland sat out
the meet to rest her sore ttght hip.
Mitchell's boys team finished 12th
out of 20 Division II teams, as Carlos
Ibarra led the Mustangs with a 16:57,
placing him In the top 30 out of 140
runners.
Mesa's Mario Herrera ran in 17:31
followed by Marco Huipe (17:33),
Tommy Payne (18:25) Saul Palomar
(18:38), Jorge Raya (18:38) and Ste·
phen Kosnosky (19:27).
POLO: Coast women win
Orange Coast College's women's
water polo tearn(l7-4) won four times
to claim the Ventura Tournament
championship Friday and Saturday.
Among the victims: LA Valley, 17-3;
West Valley, 6-0; Ventura. 9-2; and
Cuesta. Hi.
F.ricka Nicholson scored seven
goals and Amber Braly and Sheri
Meyer scored three goals each against
LA Valley.
Courtney Robertson scored three
goals and Heather Deyden had t 6
savea ln the win over \Vest Valley.
Robertson and Nicholson each
scored twice against Ventura.
Dey.den bad 13 saves against
Cuesta and Robertson scored four
goals, two in the fourth quarter.
POLO: Salon top Uni, lo-6
1\vo goals aplece from Brent Arm-
strong, Oay Jorth and Michael Bury
paced the Newport Harbor High boys
water polo team to a 10-6 nonleague
win over University Saturday at New-
port Harbor High.
Scoring slngle goals for the Sailors
included Nathan Weiner, Thevor
Gregory, Rosa Sinclair and Jay
Thompson.
Newport bad 16 steal.a, four each
by Weiner and Armstrong with three
from Jorth, who abo added an uaiat.
a.a Bury colleC:ted two ateals with
Bryan Auer. Gregory and goalkeeper
Michael Roblnaon each maklng one
steal. Robinson flniahed with seven
eaves.
Nathan McLain had two saves.
NOM.EAGUE
Newport Harbor 10, Unfwrslty 6 Score by Ouarten
University b 1 • 1 fl
Newpol'1 1 2 ~ I IO
NH -Bury 2, Jorth 2, Armstrong 2. Sinclair
1, Gregory 1, Weiner 1, Thompson 1 Sav"
-Robinson 7. Mclain 2
VOU.EYBAU.: UCI wins
UC Irvine was a 31-29, 30·22,24 30,
30-27 winner in a Big West Confer·
ence match at UC Riverside Saturday
n.isht in women's volleball.
Kelly Wing led ua with 26 kills and
15 digs. Ashlie Hain had 55 assists
and 14 digs. Chanda McLeod added
18 ltilla and 13 di~
UQ is now 9-6, 3-4 in the Big West.
VOU.EYBAU.: Uons win
Vanguard UniveTSity deaJt vbiting
Hope International a 30-21. 30·28,
28-30,30-26 defeat in women's volley
ball Saturday. The Lions improved to
5-11, 2-7 in the Golden State Athletk
Conference.
COLLEGES expectations and continues to
dominate as a highly effective a t·
tacker and blodcer. •
HIGH SCHOOL FIELD HOCKEY CROSS COUNTRY
Continued from Al2
• In other college news:
Jennifer Gelsbauer, a fresllman
on the Vanguard University
women's volleyball team, has
been named Uon of the Week.
Geisbauer led the Uons Ln three
statistical categories last week.
and she led Vanguard to an up-
Id over Ouisdan Heritage,
which ranked No. 25 ln the NAlA.
She hammered 13 kills ln the
b.S' pme match. Lndudlng the
fbW two points of the fourth
piDt to cap the 3-1 victory. She
M Jed the team with elgbt serv-
ice ..-and reglrslered four
bk>Ct .....
Gelb-1• leads the team with
114 kill and 27 block ustsu In
14mecdw
1eladlat WIS MnJJted to the
~~propmto m.ta .n ~impact.• U·
Cini Caodi .Bdkb Gulbranson
.ad. •SM hiiil dilly a,..,.,. our
• Vmce Strang. a former
Orange Coast College wide re-
ceiver, scored on a 55-yard
touchdown reception to help
lead Callfomla to a 34-27 upset
over No. 12 Washington Satur-
day.
Strang. who finished with 64
yards and the ID on two
catches, scored with six minutes
left in the first half and gave the
8eal'l a 21-J 3 lead. His SS-yard
TD re<:eption was thrown by
quarterback Kyte Boller.
Strang was a member of the
2000 OCC football team that
won a share of the Mission Con-
ference Central Division title. cal
ttght end Brandon Hall wa UC>
on the Pirates 2000 team. 1bey
both p13)"!d for Coast Coach
Mike Tuylor la.st year. u well.
Newport Hatbor High product
Chris Mandcrino. Cal's ltartlng
fullback. contributed row ywdl
on one carry ancJ M>Ud ~
.S . Championship coming
,,
Speedway. ~nenJ ~
dcktU for adults an Sl7, wblM
children 6-12 are $8 and ... 5
and under are free. Pll:tbc W
alto rrm Geaee open ii &JO p.m.
Pot moie; CN9> 492.....,,
Sailors dominate Rojas keys Eagles' victory
Newport Harbor's
varsity and frosh-s0ph
field hockey teams win
tides at Orange County
Invitational Saturday.
Senior's 15:50 leads
F3tancia boys to title at
Yucaipa Invitational.
'
16:35. Also. Aaron Van Geem (
8tb,17:21), Abel Aores (ninth,
17:22). Panfllo Elias (10th, 17:23),
Matt Zlch (13th, 17:31) and Ger-
aldo Orw.co (20th. 17:51).
Diana Roaete ran to fhlt over-
all (19:13). Abo. OyataJ Rincon
(22:52), Areli Flores (23:52), Lucy
Leon (2';02), Britany Stam
(U: 17), Fadrna CArresoo (25;0 l)
and MadDa Abdul (25:20).
FOOTBALL
How to Place A ----P-0licy-·---
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--------,_,;~.;....::....;.,...;.;.;;..:.;....:~;;;::;;=::.;.,;:;:;:::::c:.:•~IMl:.:.::.;U~t-GU:.::.::.J
At Newport Blvd. A Bay St.
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Thunday... Wednetday S:OOpm -------
........ va.w. Oen view
Newport Vista 1058A dbl
Internment + ••has
$10,000 949-588-59(3
hdfk View Leh
for sale. Vatuad at
$S500.fllllllaotfer
t"t)US-H6S ---OMlllmTY
All real ast•t• adver
tlslrt1 In this ~wspap9f
is wbjKt to the feclerel
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al amended which
melt.es 11 1ll11al to
edvertist •any prafet·
enca. llmiltt1on or
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race, color. reh11on, sa1,
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numb¥ In ttlelf achar
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operation Is 1rHtly p lldltiid. :'t••• n.n ...... ........ ,...,
Qd., / Bllfl / !Wnodll
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SAT&SUN,1-1,_. •-k ... <-•tv 1s hav1n1 their fall 111
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Sandy al 949-673 2423
~ ·-lA&MA 29. brunette, tel Met '"
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88Q, hie, stone, land
scape, retalnln1 wa"s,
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~Nltlltdl4
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MSOWn QOIDPllE '° ................ ............. ,. ..
$9,"5 ~2'4-Mll2
C-.lar'--6m
IAQ IAY CIMTtl
2651 lrvme Ave, 900sf,
1011 view. rettil on site 714.573 7780 ,, .. ,, ....... .
., ... Offk ..
2SO l 1791 Stl'eet
6009f&~
94t-9SS-4flS
CM, 300Dlf, 16 wired
dail, conf r111. dbc>l•y ..... •-no.m-n1s
HOMES FOR SM.£
OM& 5411 coum
Wanttos.11
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Ask about our SAT, SUN
Real Estate
Edition
Cal
UsaRfvera
949
574-4252
or Ann Wiiey
949
574-4249
1204 s-tti hy ,,_,
Reduced to S3,695.000
Build your dream home
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want olle"
.. .......... ty • ..tty
94t-675-2a66
H•atar Grae• ltltr WIST MAatell CIMTD
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Pla~:J'.!ur ad yt (949) 843--5e78
WmMOln DllYWAU
Alt pll•ses sm/lr1 jobs.
CUAMI 20yrs, talr. IT"
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eata1snc.
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Duncan Elac1rtc 'tJrfrs C1p
Local/Quldl Rapoma ~amodels
Ll2758'10 ~l'OQ
,,_h ...... ..
•1 ........ 0 .(.
• Recessed Llllttin1
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71.t-SS._..7S LIC"6n150 Ins V$/WC
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No jab too 911\,. __,
It..,_, remodte, faM,
,.. -s.: 9966-Jll56 .....,...
llMY ...... R..,.ad
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OEAH TILE 94U73-ll065
71~ 714-M3-4!031 ,.. ..... c....
WI ftX nMNmlltf
40 Yurs Safvlce of
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5100ld Newport Blvd
t Balldt
IHITYWOH
l.AllOSCAPI COMPANY
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14 ckl JOUt' orty Worll t ,...,[...,
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( ....
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21). v ... b,,.,._.. .,. ........ .,7.
JUNI TO THI DUMPlll
714-968 1882
AVAllABLE TOOAYI
949-673-5566
0.-s..t & s-12-4.
1$3' I. 0c-ltw4.
3Br Charmlna bHch
house, art loc. S875,000.
qt, Cheryll, Hotth Hilb
Realty 714 915 20&4.
Ccnlldef ... Spy.._. Htl. Fabulous
ocean view, 2 story 4Br
home, FR, paneled
hbr<1ry. O..cor appk, sub
zero, custom cherry
wood c abinets Pella
wrndo ws & doors
lhrouah out Ottered et
Sl,775,000 Judy Kol••
Bllr 949 376 5576
IAST SIDE
OPEN SAT-SUN 1·5
1130 Charleston lbt 7b•
house, oven1ze b~ckyd
$360.000
OPEN SON 1-S
3J40GU •I
Beau home loc in NP
He1ahts area. 3br each
with a deck Only 4 un11~1
assoc duu S 125
$425,000
Toni Hancock 949 650
0242 949 722 0620 Mar
ee lea Realty
• Of'lN SUN 1-4 •
3047 C.-try O..lt Dr.
MESA V(RDC
GOLF COURSE
lbr. 2 5ba completely
remodeled. I slory
I 0,000.. sl lot
$875,000 .._.ce. ...... d
714-540 SELL
714 751 4330
OPut SUN I S
2572 w ........... t.r
An 3 huae br's 2 new
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Broker 714 848 9567
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$489,000 Judy llolar. 8kr
t49-376-SS7' Vec.n
MEJIA'S
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References Available
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714-821-740
C.U714-22S-1714
I REALF.3TATE I
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Sue Stanton, 949·240-
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llllndnlDllacb
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lbr I 5ba remod lutch &
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949-650-0242 722 0620
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949.494.4333
... .,...., Cr••• ,., , ••
1...i.... Dual masters
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hmestone and more la
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S475,000 il&I Phil
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949 717 1911 Pill
•O,.... s..t/s-t ••
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R•re Sea Island JBr 38•
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orlN SUN 12 5
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S799 900
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17 St. Tre .. ea , __ lc View•, Oat,
dty lltht view• Sl,065,000
949-435-4000 ,, ........... t•<t'"'
o,._ Sot-S .... 1 5
24 56 Viste H990r .............. .._.
New 11.11,..1 Jbr 11p
&• aded hk' modell $199,000 prin, only
Nor alee Paul,on Realty
949 631 6489
• Ho.-bor View "-•• Uperaded 48r 7 5Ba 7
~tory with 1nurm1?nl k1I
lg PdlltJ yMd iiulf
LOlH\f and \UO\tt
¥1ew\ Ant hnr Pr opt!r
lies 949 0 720 3900
leoc h Co tto9•,
$4 5,000/obe. 78r 1Ba
acro's hom pool &
t lul>house lnnR lerm
lt .. s• lhru J076 P1:or:tv
boal shp\ M.uv wo .. d
~&I 949 ™ !>811
Hn MOVHS $59 /Mr 0.-,'a ,_,.,.,.~MP
servin1 all c•he\ Insured Great Price' Gu11rM1leed
l•sl, courteous careful w0<k Free n t l •375602
Tl63844 800 ?46 7378 714-538 1534 7 390 2945
PUBLIC NOTICE
The Calrl Public
Ulll1lles comm1nron
requires that ell u"d
household 11oods
moYer s p11nl then
PU C Cal T number;
hmos a"d rheutfeurs
pnnl theH T C P
numbef rn all adver
hsemenh If you h•ve
any questions eboul
the le1al1ly o l e
mover. limo o l
chauffeur, call PUB·
LIC UTILITICS COM
MISSION 714 558
4151
PIA.NO llSSOMS
Get 1n rune with Ms RH
Cati fOf frH avatueltor1 c•2> ....... '°'""40
.. ln ...... Cll'I
(OlfTU('TOltS
Hourly lteta
Shift 12/hl'•.
24/hn or LM Ii.
c..I 14 IH-M71
8ll"'S CUSToal rAINTING
Pron. clean qoahty work
lnte,.or/ul and docks
L•703468 949 631 4610
IAINIOW c.oJ MMfT
Paintma-tlVe•t. House/Apt
Quality JObl free .stimate
Ll569897 714 636 8888 Ptaw.I•' Sllcco
rt..ter /Stwce '"'dt Servtn1 Souhr'n c.orn.
for 25 year~ llJ26864
24 Hours (714) 554 7831
PlimlMng
""'9 Nelgl_t1nnrnnaa1
f'fuiitberl
DU!Ma._ ·~~l'ICW.ST
TWEEDY~
949~2352 -..
~"""~ ~Proftaaional Pllnting
Uc. ....
Op.ft Fri. S.t & s.,.,,
6 lnc•r•. Newport
''"' Condo ?Br ?Ba• loll new 0/W \love
Cdrpel p,.,an 1M1nl 2
deck\, walk lo bedth
S389K aet 949 646 2011
v .... 111.. s219.0oo
2Br 7Ba fU\I h\lrd
least cn\tly 1n NPwpor I
Beath do\t 11ood ton
d1tron lull secur11y l".all
agent 949 500 l?SO
leach Cot109e. ?Br
7Ba Qlllf'I crrmm on
great l,.t •n101 Mat1n.t
and P::val~ Bt'<1th
1 179 500 obn Mary
Wood agl 949 '>84 '>811
Of'9" 1-4 lht Blutts
3Br ?Ba ""ll < nnd
lowrsl pr:: ed l lpvrl
S49Sll. '>01 Avf'n1da
lm enw ~&I 9/6'>0 0224
ALMOST NlW
•OOF TOP VIEW
JUST LISTED
AGT. 90-723-1120
llACH DUrux
llST rltJCl
JUSTUSTlD
AGT. 94t-723-1120
T ~ r • .,.~ ..... of
M81Jllltn-1
PIP( LOCATING
HCCrAONIC SLAB
llAA Dl HCllON
f nendly ~r vtee
94t -675 9J04
-~CXlfTI l f 7S2'91 IOM.:ff'CI
bper1 0 •• 1 .. 0.-"'t
Plumb1n1 r~a1r~. over
25yrs ••P All work p .,..._, 5""" 71 ~ '\682911
FREE TOILETS
Call Sam 888 897 700'1
www umaut0ld com
HOMIST & llU.SOMAIU
PlUMBER L•506586 20'{. Ott labnr 1 Small
repaws (714 ) 71!> 9150
NfCJSf f'lUMllMG
Repa1is & Remodehn1
fRCE E SllMAT£
l~J98 714 969 1090
Pool Slrvlcl
1wt rAClfK roou
Cnnstructlon
Remodles • Repairs
SerYie:*
l"•796148
lASTllUffLGllVll
lOT. $724,000.
lart.ares-..,..1.
..... 949-644-4195
Newport Coat
5v1.v-a1.
41tr. 4.Si.. ttt.r..-, +
bnnus room
Sl,649,000
lSVleP.a.dl<t
Sbr 5 Sha $400.000 m
upgradt\' $2,279,000
Specluular lex w views
4br :? 5ba sir 1da home
St..490.000
24Cet.a1-
A •ouch ol Italy 4b1
7 Sba S Ir 1d1 home
SI 729 000PlATINUM
PROPC R II[ S
Sletant• Meurt!r
949 715 3156
Window Cleaning
~-WmdowCare
~.,.~ ...
• Window ( bru!'&
• Mm1 Bland Wash
• \crcrm Fi1 & Rqwr
4 . 2 . 123
.... ~"""' topttw s1r., ....a "' 9'l ............. 3m!B1'D,._Tm
.... a..111 ..... ......_~
'w' •I .... Molle
............... l,all .... _,,~~
WllCuz ....
SBl
yow stun
th'°'41f'
classified!
t •
'Pta=.r•d • r (...., S6'71
.... ,_.__
for rent. Walle to ~.
utilftJn p11f $500/mo
94W15·300911fest 1
Nl/Oc...,,_. YI-I
Shere ._. home, $900m. Ind ..... ,,. ,...,d. 11/1m~1. 949·723·5'34
,._O GUARANTEES
a-...Mt brllht llf'I*' aludlo 11pt. fuh llitc, be
, drst11 rm fp, leutld ytl
be Sl 150 949-673·3437
.s;cw;i ....... lbr
lb•, utll paid, bbq, wd.
remocl, 1/2 blll to bch1 'yt yerd. llo-476-9915
e °" SAM S11H e lair fll'IW ~ elc..
....,.-:: .pll'tq. ..
pllll ·2221 -
OCIM & IAY YllWSI
28R (Off ICE?) lBA
Fur11 or unfur11 'YtAAL Y
Nlwo.c.-#d ~ S171~1nd·~ Mt-41~
Apt. Lowty.11te4 COllll'll
near Trl·Sqr, ~~-' frla. 1~/1tor.... JIDl)/mo+
'500/sec. Klein Mnft.
177-704-11649 I 9200.
rASf SIDI u,ntalr1 unit,
Zbr lba, 111. 1-undry.
169 Walnut, Sl l'°/mo.
Merisel• 7l4-662·3ll l
714-540-3666
• 2bf 2 5ba 2 st0<y •
2 car 111. yd, $1350/mo
238 Avoudo IG Anti Howl 949 631 ·0490 NGilcber vulnelllbk. N~ deals. one uapper in lhe enemy suit and a
mere I .S points is a v~J bus).
neQ. so South's two-di O\ler·
Cllll hu the endonemenl of this
departinent. Nor1h 's heart cue-bid iJ
,.!her ~ivc f<lf" OUT tasleS, eipO-
ralJy 11noc the quec;ri of healu iJ of
doublful value. Bui even a raitc to
lhrce diamonds would probably have
Sod IO the Slll'IC 6naJ contract.
iiiiW View ef .... lBf".
le att ,., • ell new
carpets. P•int. etc ... 12171/t w. 81y, $lll00mo 714·915-2084
• 2~ 1.. '"' unrt, tol•I remodeled, 11 yd.
2211/t 23rd St. Sl595mo.
949-640-3532 Lindsay
WFST
•0109 11 653
>Q84J .,,4
NORTH
• AJ42 1:1 0111 0 I{ 7 5
•832
SOVTH
•853
l;l K 7
F.AST
• K 76 A J 1094
.) 2
• K 10 7 5
v AJ 109 6 •AQ J
Hr 2h ...... St.,._
to be.ch, Fp. 2c I"· I year luM, no pets,
.$2100/mo 626-359-4539.
0 ....... .,.,,...
LI 2Br low•, w/p•tk>,
$2300/mo. L1 38r 28• upper w/balc. $2600/mo
lfUf loc, fp, 11ara11e parkln11. W/0 , furn,
amazin1 views Avail
Now. 11t. 949 795 4038.
1145 W. IALIOA
•EAST SfOh Costa Meu, 38R 28A, 2 C gar,
completely redone.
Sl750/MO. 949 646-4316
• IAST SfDI • Side, 3bf Jba, t11plu, xtra lg, 2
story, 2 llllchen's. deck,
yd, wd, 2 car attach gar
S2000/mo. 800-278-1887
e IASTSIDI ~ BA •
pool, yard, iJ,&'.;.· 421 Can~<> ..-nbrtlcVschool5 ~ll51 The btdding: NORl H EA!.T Paw I , SOlffH Wt:S'f
2 p-
In keeping wi!h the modem Sl)'Jc,
West led low from lhrce worthlcsi
c~ in partner's Mt. East insencd
1be nine and declaiu's kin& won.
Sou!h rcall1.ed that, even if the dia.-
mond ~uit yiolded five ll'ick.s, the club
llne$Se WOU Id still be needed (CK lhe
contnc1. so Soudl couJd afforo io
lose a trick in diamonds as long u West could be kcoc off lead. Losing a
trick tu Ealll would do no hann. since
the ~ of hewu would suU be a
posilional Slapper.
Steps lo Oce1n and Bey
38drm 281111, $2,600/mo
Lower of Duple• •at. , .. _72,_ I l6S
nine
l•••• on tke Loli• S2600m uec; lwnhm
2br+ an. wd hll. 1930sf,
2c gar 9'1!M5M~
r r-JNT ,_ .._ ....
Operuna lead: Three o(
We have lftqucntly n:m.:srked Ihle
pcssimlsa make lhe best ib:l8":B -
lhey 11e always alert lO means «> ~-ombel possf61y evil dcs1nbu11ons
before pla.Y_ll'.lf IO thr finu trick. Bue
there IS still plmty of room f <If" opll·
llU5l11 at lhe LI.bk:. If )'OU need a cer •
llirl card IO be nafll to make )'OUI
cootnct. aMumc 11 is and thc11 ,plan
the rcs1 of )'our campaign. How
would you fare at lh1s lhrllC-no-trump
roolnlCI'!
To 3"\lrc four diamood tnd:s, oo
manrr how the suu split, while ~
ing dununy·~ entnes tilt.act to r.Uc
IWO club f~ 1( ~. clcclac-
U ran the jack of diamonds 111 !ride
lwo. When thn1 won. declllrer conun-
ued w1lh I.he ten of diamonds. a dr•
mond lO I.he king and a club IO tbe
µck. When lhis fme<;.;c al<0 won. 11
was pcrfcclly safe for SouUi 10 get
bllcl. to the table wilh the ace of
spades f <If" llOOlhcr club f UleSliC and
wntp up I 0 tricls.
Nocc !hat it would be wrong 10 first
ciuh lhc ace of diamond~. Now
declarer can collc:c1 only lhrcc dia·
mond tnc!c_~ before Wesl gains the
lead Md a hca11 through the queen
re~ult~ m declarer falling a trick
short.
Y..ty ._ .. 38r upper
w/den. 111 mast ... w/w1lll
1n-clst, vaull ce1ls, ocean
& b•y views, quiel loc,
$2650/mo avail mid Oct
C•ll aat 949 795 4038
leoutlful lo1fr•11t
upper. Charm1na 2Br 2Ba, 1or1eous views ot
B•y and Tutn1n1 Chan·
nel, la bale w/fp, 1ar par1une $2900/mo Avail
Now act. 949 795 4038
S,.-4 Wlttter on Bal
boa Ocnlrt Le charm1n1
38r. pallo. 3c prka. furn
$2950mo 949 645 4345
...,.,,. Bad!
IATFIOlfT
~-ll4e .. _1 ..... i.~21 ..
""""'• beod., ..... &.,...w .. .. , ...... ., ......... ..... r•••--· 1,,_...._ .....
710 lU. ... rll Dr.
949-473-6030 ...
94t-7U-SUO Had EaM p~loed. Sourh would
have opened one trump even U\lnj! D
16-18 11111gc -the guod diamond
~wl is cully wo1111 a poinl or 1wo.
Bui overcaJling one no trump once
panner ha.I p:15..ed and hokhng only
1-tlful llr JI•, new
carpet, painl, butll·ms,
1217 West Bay S3000mo
airt. Cheryll, North Hills
Realty 714 915 2064
* YlAltlY * UASIS
BILL GRUNOY REALTORS
949-67S-616t
TODAY'S SUNDAY PUZZLE
ACROSS
1 Vcll.llteers
11.Mze lhe library
12Cut
17 l<nlgflt's weapon
21 suage space
22Glonfy
23 High.grade ootlee
24 Per1 of NYU
25'Mg
28 See orea11ses
28 ocean movement
29 Cd>bler'I tool
30 Part '1 FBI
32 Nautloll position
33 AoWer part
36 Sine qua noo
37n.tla
38 Designer -St
Laurent
38 Gets~ blllng
40 A f\lnny Murphy
,,.2 The ltllng's
43 Vlclualt
44 Pootfl dlange
46 Ruminates
47Smear
48 Cowboys' beds
49 R1ar·s tl11e
525on
53 Ukraine capUal
S4 Goes ID the polls
55 S1n1mer montn
59 Hare a:JU!llln
61 Fracas
62 Crawling 1nsedli
6S Eagle's nest
64 Follow upon
e5 1lwow a tanlNTI ee Mist -war11o1
fi1 Oelne&n9
68 P'lyctie
components
89 Oln 100 Rus9efl
70G«apeld
12 -Kea vdcano
73 German ar11c1e
7,,.W.lkuoftly
1s ·-Rae·
76 CMI offense
77&ney
80 Prize lgh1S
82Tsntorles
83Hew
84 Verdi opera
85 'Mlen glacters
advanced (2 wds )
87 Kernel holders
88 Go hang-gliding
89 Xerox
compeetor
90 Mother's ststers
91 Roll up
92 Needle end
94 Companion
95Selnes
96 Be apprehensive
97 Lendl o1 tennis
98 Doze o1'I
99 Legal matter
100Cannon boom
101 verse
102 Showed fnght
104 Thin material
107 Keep away trom
108 Paid maker
100 Humdinger
113 Good budclles
114 Hol brews
t 1S89redat
117 New Vont canal
118 Aeoommend
119 Raw minerals
120Gallenes
122 - -premum
123 Nectar ga1herlr.l
124 Basic
127 Memorable bmes
129 Sttp al Wood
130 Qverdo a role
131 Winier drnk
132Gavet
133 Famous lioness
134 Challenged
135 Blooms
136Scoms
DOWN
1 Fuel rating
2 Moved Hke lava
3 8.mped illegaHV
4 Telepathy letters
5 Shipwreck cause
6 E>cpenslve
7 Oilcatds
8 Tl1es lll!ry hafd
9 Sahara mountains
10 Child's toy
11Trtdcy
12Gnnned
13 Aolshes lasl
14 Toottt protllem
15 Feminine pronoun
16 Foolslools
17~
18 'ZDo resident
19 Apple drinks
20 Makee level
27 Kind deed
31 E¥ery morning
34 Reproving eludes
36Shldy
38 • -Got a Friend"
39lheaters
41 Elake or Jazz
43 Go on the lam
44Zany
46 Elting 11"8
47 Uwr'I OU1put
46 Pledges
~ lJnbowld
50 Grating !Md
51 Llk• a sponge
53 Frei-party orders
54 SajU's -White
55 Hat1ow of ftlm
56 Poles1Br
OOl ISSeMeillOll ( 2 Wd9 )
570ecelW
56 Siivey choice
60 Com"'*' vehicle
81 Oocuplff .... post
63 Touch
65 Clndmatl nlna
GeT.m.aet
67 Org tor OYer·SO's
69 PeCructuo·s intended
70 Biiiions of years
11 s111 e>dst
72 Boggy wasteland
7 4 Jowly canines
75 SetflMsly
76 One °' lh06e
78 Love madly
79 Huffs and puff!
81 Equine fodder
82 Flctlonel swordsman
83NE state
84 Sigh ol oooleol
85Jofln, In Abefdeert
68 Pool hall Item
87 S-shaped
88 Thlllland, once
89Managed
91 Doubles over
92 DeYOU1
93 Balcer's must
94 R~en of baseball
Q6Rambled
98Dubbed
IOOM1nus
101 Temporary state
102 Yellow fruils
103 Slag's mate
104 Tl1aJ
105 GlrdM inserts
106 Obi wearer
107 Appeared
108 Pa~er tabnc
110 Soottlsa yer
111 Dulcimer COU91n
112 F«meollng agents
113 Aeaop story
114 Banal
115 Elegance
116 COnSlderS
1 HI Smell
120Sleeplike --
121 Breacltl
125 Adren -Tl'Mman
128 Sgt .. for one
128 ~111ng shout
ar, • yrty rentll, fP,
dw, wd 1*119, 1111 palnV carpet. 2 cet tandt~
pk1Act9'9·293--4630 a-.... .... thollH lbr l N . lltlf .... .JOOft
from lie~. ft-. flln ~ ..........
ltiy•l4• "..... 28r 28if, F p, .-tio, l .-,
w/d, S l650in ,-., ll/rlMal Sml\&. MM7H913
Nr Ho-. A lch, 2bl'
uparaded int.I', ,.r. -
11119(s, fitJleu/pool pl9d
$1695/mo !Mf..4e6.7615
21ir 1 h. upper. OWMn
urlll/lots ef latlt'rOr
upar1ctes. pr, II cleU. W/D fac, 111Utt SH.
$1700/mo. 714·914-9514
East ..... ~. ,.... + -. l 520sf, 2-c« pr.
on 1Veenbelt community
w/pld. AVll now Sli50m.
Sm pets welcome. Wiii
ftJW ~ &.2:.:1> M-F
714-U• ....
SlAFAJll
Gated. 2 pools, 2 IPH.
2 tennis courts, Clbhse,
Gym, Secure Prll1. Not
to Hoac Hospital
1 Ir Cotolh10/0ceen
View• S 1,150.
21r 21• Pe11t'1euH
S21tO MoryAM W. McGuire
(949)6•6-6770
Prudential Calif Realty
e-.~ 38r 2.581 Twnhme Coif course
view Private location.
$2200 •et 949.759.3729
21w 2.SM ._ ~
condo on aolf course, 2
c 1ar. w/d. refrla. pool,
spa No peVsmk $2450/
mo. yrly 909-780-8382
n.. lluffs, uec home
2br 2ba beck bay voew
one of nicest proper hes
1n the Bluffs No pels,
lease $2500/mo 949-290-1081 949-760 0815
O<l.ANFIONT
2 & 38r. Ye1r1y/Wmler $1850m S2800m.
•11t 949.550.4777
UOVAH Jbr 2 5ba
popular fir plen, up-
stairs, ~male level, •Kt
$3000 949 293 4630
31r 2.Slo, 2300sf,
newly remodeled, I& kit,
2 Fp, la bckyd, SJ200mo
Ava1l l l/I, 949 574·9281
GdeO--.W~I 31.rll/4""'-' ............... +
ht & .. "9-370-3019 • "°" Street Holfte • 4br 3.5ba w/loft. ~
~. ml !IChlals. Hr pool.I l1J1'llll'A,.,.,., 11-1 s:BX)'mo
................ 7153
e41R 2.SIA bMutltvl home! la yd, 3 c 1•, by
park. $3800lno Bon1iu
Way St. 94~5755 Oc....,_ on the sand,
4br 2be yrty rental. new
~pet, MW paint .act
$3800 949-293·•630
HOUSI UDO ISU 2Br +
den, 381, 2 St0<y, Fp,
patio, canae. SJ900/mo
9•t-473-1914
•Ope. s.t/S-1-4• 2s-c-a
Rare Sea Island 38r 38a
end unit wilh a vl11w
too1<1111 out to S1anature Hole 117 $4500
.... t.Yrf•l'ftle .. 9-5ot~f2J
•IAYSHOalS•
Goted ·--lty, 3Br
38a home w/bay view.
$4800/mo. 949-466. 7 460
llr 31o In a•t•d comm
1 Ford Road $6000/mo
6-9nio,. •at. One Wona
949-463-2000
O::.~SUM 1-4 M HUGH TS
lltAMD NIW CUSTOM
38r. Oen. 3.58. Home
3c pr 534 CATALINA
$1,395,000 Assoc1aled
Realty 949-689·4200 ....,... ... Get., c-lty 28r
28a, FTJ>lc, i.undry, """ nic:e. $2195/mo. can a1t
Rodney 949-717 4798
SCllll l.agn
Y_.., 11 Studio w/lull
kitchen & bath.~ f p. le aw, 1vail now $850/rno
Call •at. 949 795-4038
Prtnll TlllDltng 7191
lt' .. 1 lir1 ,,; Pi.11:11
MaryclePlale,MM.
te.s lft Yu Home
legialiig-AIMN!d
(949 813-2246
<-~· ,. '"'°"· ._.,... position• to
pro..W-Tn-ho.me com· ,...........,,, homem•k·
lnr, ernnds. Fl•• PT hrs or 24 1w shifts\ C1r
r!(dl 1tiM44-481&
-:1:' NOU IVlllY WIDI Top Pey ,_Mite
Phnlon-1 M1jorlty drop-n·hoc*I
Requires CDL ·A
w/Ha!Mat. Stuct.nt
111du1tes 111eour1ced to
epply Open Sund1y U.S Xpr'eu IOQ.131.QISS
www.lfprnsdrivers com
b.ec Aatkt. •Int writlOft
& verbel sll1Hs. or11ln
lad, mulU-t.slled. Word,
Excel, Olltlook, Internet
F111 resume/sai.r~ his·
torr 949·873-0017 Pttty
MANAGIMINTa
Team for Assistant M•n·
aaers @ l111e 1loraa•
facility "'2 d11s per weelt. Elp a +, but will train. Ext,. Sl0t•lll HB.
714-841·4466
Gift w,....,_ W ......
FT/l"T, 8-5, M F SJ 50
SS.SO/hr Must be 1ood
w,1\llllds end colors. Cal
Rita 949-724 9244 UL 11
OWN APO
$450·$5000+ PT/FT
1-800 248 6602
lh!mT!l)tn\Wlu!Jon com
Rece,.t/Offlce A11l•t must me multi tasked,
lea rtt w/sal history lo
949 873-0017P1tty
RITMSWS
NEWPORT STATIOHERS
Creel benefits end
qu1hty work env.-nment.
Full or Part time.
Personnel· 949-863-1200
Audi 'f9 A6 Q...nre,
41k ml, ~•Iver 1tnd.
moonroof, CO, fabulious
cone throuahl $19,000
hnanc1na & wan •n•I
vt42!IB17 8kr ~58& 18118
RAZD'OO
A<. AC. lOW MUS (214267) $16,995
MUOS CA.OtUAC
I00-94S-SSt2
...... ...._ . .,
"1necy Mii 11dt ... ..tth ulfa
delft lM W. mtOP11reof, lf•al .,,,. ..... .
•111u ,, .. ... ..............
Con<t.
Bladt with tall IUw', 5
speed. only '221< mllu
11119471 $14,tlO
Merc.4n ion 'ts ... 1mok1 1lf<t11 with
parchmtflt lntM lor ·die·
HI, OHi WO & Low _.. .. _..
•11M1 s••,tao
.................. 6 ~
Blacll with hn lltlr, Ollly 6711rnl~
111272 $10,HO
Y ..... S40S.-..'01
Whlt1 with Cfeme lthr,
factory .,arr. moonroof,
full power
1111621 $17,HO
Pelltloc 'Hy,_ AM
Conv 5.7 It, Gold with
Charcoal le1ther. only 8,500 miles.
11111531( $1',910
IMW 3 Ill S. ..... '91
One owne< •uto, su~·
roof, full power
111111441 $13,980
Merce4H ML.320 '91
Sliver w/arey Inter.
ONLY48K ml
•11490 $23,910
H-.t. 'ti Attwd IX
5 .....
Ch1pe1ne/t1n int, full
power, utra cleen!
1111571 $12,HO
PHIWPS
AUTO
949-574-7777
IMW '9S SSCN IOOll
m1, Ofll lady ownet.
books. records. blll/blk, 10 dm CD. Chrome whl,
1ara1ed, n/vrflr. lille MW aind, Sl2.985 fin _, _.
vi ~141 ~Ul!ll
IMW '94 74011 Blue/
Grell'. 7311 miles, lint
cond, 0111inal owner.
$15.500 949-644·7968
IMW '94 J2Sl1 c ....
8911 full boob & rec0< ds
Blk/tan, sunroof CD,
superb one cond,
$10,995 v'752l96 Bkr
949 586· 1888
IMW '9S S401 lOOll
m1. black/black, CD,
books, records, beautiful
0111mal cond $12.995 11«'626751 11111 949-~ 1888.
Ce4111oc '00 I......_ nc 26k m1, full factory
warr, pearl wh1te/oal·
me~I Ith•. chrome whls.
1old pka. like new
$22,995 lonanc1na. war·
ranty 1¥111 vM277952
Bllr 949·58&-1888
<AHU '99 ~-100lt ••• ( ... Alec Cwt.
(004904) $15,ffS ltAIUS CAOIUAC
IOO-t45·S592
lWS ....
Ml'IOMIS
WWW.TIOCMS COi
1.-s~
D'IUeAIKI Vl'ff Y.yde-.._.S..
(7HSSI) $t2,ff2
MAllASCADtUA.C
IOO-t4S-SS92
Olvall '02
UNDI• I H •I, lew ......._._ .......
(201712) $2t,HS
MA.lliS <ADtUAC
IOO-t4S-5st2
OIVllll '02 YI, Y.ry._,
(201 r:r ~ ... 5 ..Aiiis~c .._t45-Sst2
De4p 't7 2500 Y•
Convetslon, areen, c:ep·
liens seals, 1 ear lold1n1 seats, l'i /VHS, superb
m•chinac•I & body
co11d, vMS00667 $5995
Bkr 949·586·1888.
ESCALADl 'H
Stll u...ier FM'tert
W•rr.tty (409122) $29,HS
ftAll'tS CADIUAC
100-945-5592
FUITWOOO't6
UMDU SOii MIUS
(711476) $14,995
MA.Hts CADIUAC
100-945-5592
,.,, F1 so '94, 414
Black. 85k m1, •Int cond.
runs cr••t. very clean,
bed securily bo•.
$8,150. 714·271 1215
,..... "so 't4, 4••
BIKk. 85tl m1 •Int cond,
runs Rf eat, very clean
bed security bo•
$8150 714~271 1215
F-4 'ft T--lX J3k
m1 , Wh1le/arey int.
1ara1ed non/smlu hl<e
new cond, v621541
$6995 Bk• 949-!'>86 1888
Infinity '92 020 5•pd,
ssvauu• ....._10flM .. ,n. ·•-'-........ ..., (1474JI) .... ... ..... s CAN&A< •
..O.t•S-Sfft
Slft&.l'01
Stll ........ f.-y· w .... &.o ...
(114479) SU,"5
MUdsCAK&A< loe .. 4$-SHt
SlVW.U't1SfS ~.xuncOMO, MUSTN.
(IJH60) $1 S,94J. NAUtS CAINLl.A(
SOO-t45-SS92
SUIUHM'ff
2WD, Jnl ·-· s..t, a-.
(5S0121). $11,tfl
NUliS CMNUAC
IOO-tU·SSH
T.yeto '91 C~ U
40ll ml. white/cr•Y Int.
auto, 1tra11d. no11/
i.mkr, b11utiful colld
throu1ht vl27082
S9895 Bllr M9-586-la
AUTt.-EI,
~ .... -
,.....,~...,
With ov• 40 )'Ur'I up!
will pay • -1 fllr price few yow car y.,, or Ind
paid lcw cw noL Cal Didi
Rey @ T OINto Auto
Sales /14-437 1931 cw
714 J2B. 3228
CASH fCMl CMS
We need your car, p11d
few or not Phillipa Auto
Asll for Malcolm
949 574 7777
TOP s 4 lllCOIDS nc $ .-a. Qmc, Ek !Os & EDs a All«. spir, t&AJe ~ Mike 949·645·7505
A/C. ps, pw, pb, llhr int. l'aunl:IHP new tires, xlnt cond, non/ """"'PW
smkr, no accidents 104k
mi. $3,900 949 757 0341 Campen l250
J..,... '00 JUI VI,
Aulo. A/C. tealher, lull
power. cc, sunrf, altoys,
$35,900 949 375 1742
.... "" Gr.oil Oooor.be lTD Sport 2wd. 6cyl,
Fer4 '97 F1 SO Slllnd.-d
<.•b, m1tc hln1 thell,
shot l bed liner. tow pk,1.
cruise. loaded, med blue,
like new JOit warr1nty.
SI0,500 562""39-3106
TRWRS
new shape, 75k mt,
auto. fully loaded,
met•lhc buraundy, ten
lthr . moonroot. CO,
premturn wflls, fabulous' Tfllllrl -hlle new cond throucfloul --------SIJ.995 Y952675fHl Wiii 199' 1...,. 17ft Sell
IHll Bkr 949 586-1888
USAHf'OO
&-..... a1• •. certlft ... (lff~ $17,595
MA CAOIUAC
IOO-MS-5592
contained. air ale
La.dedl UMd 2 short tr; $7 e 5112...c»-3106
IOATS
--~--------
THE GALLUP ORGANIZATION
Has openings for several Surwy Phone Intel • ..,.
and one Japanese blllngual phone Interviewer. -Not a
telemar1<etlng position. No sales! Full-time and part-
time positions avallable with flexible scheduling.
EmaJI: don_dusatko@gallup.com
Apply today at: www.gallup.com/careers
Please call (949) 47 4-2710
''Employee."
"Empkado. "
"Arbeitnehmer."
"Employe."
'9t Dwffy flft mint
condition, CO player &
relri1eretor $19.500 <•••> ..........
Dvffy a...k llh, 1985
aood cond, lull COWtlf.
new b•tterles. $6500
949 34&·9424 (.d . 3
••ma ==:1 ... n.
' /, I ' ' I I ; ' ' I • ' I I . ! ~ ' ' : ,· :
.
' . • ,
~ .
II'
8-dul ~ In s. ""'1d. ,.... ldtct.'I Md
mudtmcn.
~KERNS · 949.759.3758
~home whh detailed i.dlaipifig. aJStom
pool Md .... 3 Bd. 5 s.. 180 degr'M Yiaws.
LOIS~ · 714.350.5482
4 Bd. ~bonus room. s 11pilig city Id* ....
Gllll9d corrrnunity.
L.OMBND a JOHNSON 949.759.3751
5'nila, l'l'ICU1t.W\ C8r¥Jf\ .... f*lt. oms'I, h.bar
Cftlllna Wand Md city light views.
RICK l.ANGMN 949.759.3759
tJa port Haighel CUlllDm ........ ,._, 4 Bd.
3.S a.. ao. to --echool.
CWID PM«:E 714.812.5661
O.an ...mdwW» on.~ lat. P'oal. ..-, ~
.......... Md ........... It'**'· 4 8d. .d d9n.
CARL McOONEU.. 714.565.6825
f'flDl'1t pawT'*-'Y W. ~ om.t md
,...,. gall aJUr9.
MNN El1£N a IOI WEGLARZ
O:wlR:witrUuyh:ime. ,. ....... .._,,....-Md
c.lr19--. 3 8d. 2.5 .. ....,,dee*.,~
al SOiONlAU 949~