HomeMy WebLinkAbout2003-04-13 - Newport Mesa Daily PilotCOMMENTS&
CURIOSITIES
Time f or a
City Hall
casting call
T here's a hole. I've seen it.
It's about the size of a
swivel chair and big
enough to fit one person. It's in
the Costa Mesa City Council
and il needs to be filled.
Late last month, Gov. Davis
stepped out on a balcony high
atop the State Capitol and
scanned the horizon with really
PETER
BUFFA
big
binocuJars.
"Gover-
nor,· said one
of his aides.
"what are you
doing'r
·1 need a
judge.• said
the governor.
"Don't bother
me.·
He looked
and he looked
and he looked
some more -across the state,
hlgh and low, inside and out, far
and wide, aJJ those things.
Finally. just before dark. hi.~
binocuJars settled on Costa
Mesa. "Got one,· he said.
stepping back inside. "Her
name is Karen Robinson.·
"She's the Mayor of Costa
Mesa, she's smart. she's a lawyer,
it's perfect. Call her,· which they
dld, and that's what made the
hole.
When there is a hole in a
council, the remaining counctl
boys and girls have three
options: I) Leave the hole alone;
2) Call a special election; 3)
Appoint someone to fill the
hole.
Usually, option No. I is
qukkly discarded. The ortly
time it's used is when you are
left with an odd number of
council members after a hole is
made. "Even" is a good lhlng on
putting greens or runways. but
it's a bad thing on city councils
because it leads to endJess tie
votes, which are the equivalent
of "no" votes. It means nothing
gets done. which means
everyone gets cranky and
out-of-sorts and needs Turns. I
like the plain white ones
because the fruit-flavored ones
leave a funny aftertaste.
Which reminds me, why do
cannibals never eat clowns?
They taste funny.
Option No. 2 usuaJJy gets a lot
of support early on, until people
find out what special elections
cost and how many people vote
in them. In a city the si7.e of
Costa Mesa, a special election
costs about $30,000, and about
22 people vote in it. assuming it
lsn't raining.
And that, more often than
See Cor.ENTS, P .. • M
ltSl>E
ntEPl.OT
I.FE&
l.EISllE
O.sie Ptaywa, a troupe of
eenlor citiana, pet'fonn•
ent91tainlng oomediel that
enridt the audience and
~ ... ,...AS
CoSta Mela tnlCk It.er
SNton Dev lhafll .,...
fHllnga on brMklng 1he
oounty high jump recOrd.
........ M.
'I
SUNDAY E .. D I T I 0 N
•
a1
• I
Serving the Newport-Mesa community since 1907
APRIL 13, 2003
·Leaving
injury behind
PHOT 8YK£N1fll[PTOW OAOPIO!
Maura Hofstadter, above, the scienbflc ha1son at UC Irvine's Reeve-Irvine Research Center. points out details on a mouse's spmal cord while d1scussmg spmal
cord in1unes on Thursday. Top left, re search associate Karla Banos stains bssues for study at UC Irvine's Reeve-Irvine Research Center on Thursday.
Research center at UC Irvine is among the
leaders into finding treatment for spinal cord
injuries. Supporters include actor Christopher
Reeve and heiress Joan Irvine Smith.
Deirdre Newman
Dally Pilot
T he spinal cord is the body's
version of Grand Central
Station,ahubofconstantly
percolating activity, sending
impuJses to the bra.in and
receiving impulses from it to direct to
other part.Ii of the body.
charge toward major advancements. Al
the forefront of the most cu rung-edge
advanced wort is UC Irvine. where one
center has positioned it.self as a catalyst
of re.earch for treating injury and
disease of the spinal cord -conducting
a ~ew of projects in-house while
collaborating with leading researchers in
the fieJd, scientists outside of the field
and spinal cord injwy victims.
A spinal cord lnJUTY can bring thls
hub to a grinding halt. rendering victims
paralyz.ed throughout their bodies.
depending on where the injury occurs.
As treaanent for such injuries evolves.
minor b~ are leading the
The goal of the Reeve-1.rvine Research
Center is to engage this diverse group or
researchers in solving one of the uidciest
challenges of modem science. Rodent spinal cords await study an a refrigerator at the Reeve-lrwle Research
See LEAVING, Pac• M Center on the UC lrvme campus.
TOP STORY
Legend gets his Park Place
For his 103rd birthday, Corona del Mar's
Arnold Beckman, who has donated money
to UCI and several foundations, gets a gift
of his own from neighbors.
June CeH1rend•
Oa.ty Pilot
CORONA DEL MAR -for
decadel. th• iel.ldcn or Shore
Oilfi have known that a legend
lives among the-m.
Arnold Beckman. whose
name pr college buildings
from here to lWnol and whole
lnnovationa ln medical lnatru·
fMnh have helpfd W\told
lives. turned 1 G.l on :rhunday.
fn hll honor, nelthbon of the
IMilde dewJopment Where
Bedcman has Uved more than
40 ~ dedicated a pait lo
honor or~ and his de-
ceased wife, Mabel
•We think he certainly de·
tel"Wll a recc>pUt.ion Ub &his,•
d Robtn Scholler. • 1onltime ~r or Beckman'• Who amona t Beckman fans
who hatched the lde. for lbe
Arnold and Mabel McbMn
Pa.rt.
SchoUet and 04hen held a It·
tJe ce.temony on lecUllUI\
blrthday IO ctedbte the ap•
proximately tOO-foot-by-290-
foot park at the Seawml Road
entryway to the HO homes that
comprile Shore Oiffs. "We
really wanted to honor b1m. •
8edman II tho scientist and
pbilanthioplst behlod the
Beckman Luer Institute at
IMne. the Arnold and Ma~
8ttbnan foundation and the
Beckman c.oulter Co.. which he
founded B«kn\an Insuu·
men Inc.
Hll lt.MmW:te loC'hJewmen
lndUde ~ f.n neonatal
lrlc:Ub4tton and 10 1uer tech· noloo tor medkirie and ~ ~ Hit phDanttvopk a..cy lnC:Wft ma~ Funds
....._ b ~·bulldllwiaa
UC..-... a.pm.. UMvall17
and die tJllt.ra*J OI Dtlnok.
The foundation has also ben-
efited ecologicaJ cau lndud;
1ng a $7 .5 million donation to
the 7.oolOgical Society or San
Diego to help build the Arnold
and Mabel B«bnan Qnter for
RcJ)roduetion or EndanfFed
Sped at San Di WUd
Animal Park.
• About 20 back had
a bii problem In tM ndghbor·
hood With raccoons comi
out of 1kld GuDy and teulQg
up roof of the hOUlai. • Sc:hoU.
er recalkd. -n.e animal Oi>ntro&
~ louW!d ua 1npt but me l,..,_ didn' wolt. The nK'COOlll
woWd Fl the mea1 and lerlW.
They wae trMn« lhln we
... &.aeme ...... M
A2 Sl.nily, """ 13. 2003
EDUCATION
New principal at
Kaiser Eementary
ICaher FJementary School welcomed
their new prlndpal Scacy Kohnes on
Mon41ly. Holmes. who bas~ as a
superintendent and prindpal on the P.ast
Co(l.st. bas more than 30 years of
experience in education. 8art>am
Hanington. the interim principal at
Kaiser smre Sep~ wm remain at··
the school long enough tn make sure
Holmes bas everything under control
For nearly a decade, schools in the
Newport·Mesa Unified School District
have benefited from the services of
community facilitators. Now. the security
of those positions has come Into
question. Since the positions haw been
funded by an anonymous donor, who
will no Jonger be able to provide the
$784,000 neei,\ed annually to keep them
employed. the district will need to find
funding eJsewhere.
On ~esday. the Newport·Mesa
Unified School ~ held a grand
opening for the re-invented Harper
Preschool at Harper Education Center in
Costa Mesa. The preschool. which
opened in February after having been in
the works for the past two years.
encompasses both mainstream and
special education students. The purpose
of the school is to provide young learners
health. opportunities, preparation and
education.
• DBRDAE NEWMAN CXM!f'S Cost.a Mesa
and may be reached at (949) 574-4221 or bv
e-mail at dt!Jirdre.newman@lstimes.com.
BUSINESS
Mistral restaurant
will renovate
Another historic landmalk in Corona
del Mar will see a broad·brush revamp
this summer. Following news of the
restoration of Art Deco movie palace the
Port Theatre, Mistral restaurant. which
has operated as an eatery since the
1940s. is next in tine.
Bon vivant and world traveler Kun
Conrad announced he is dose to
finalizing a purchase of Mistral and
operating it as Svelte, a contemporary
and eclectic eatery.
Conrad struck a deal with the four
current owners to pun:base the
restaurant for $700,000. The deal is
expected to dose sbortt)t
SVe:lte Is expected to open July l .
• PAUl a..wTON covers the environment.
~ness and politic& He may be reached at
(949) 764-4330 or bv e-mail at
psul.clinton@latimes.oom.
NEWPORT BEACH
City C.Ouncil cutting down
on West Newport drinking
The City Council approved two
measures to cwb ~public
drinking in West Newport. Council
members aptx<JY'!d an ordinance to
forbid stores from selling beer out of their
paddng Jots and they also accepted a
grant to add more DUl dieckpoints and
patrol oflioers.
Prank Robinson, a Dover Shores
enviroomentalist who helped preserle
the Back Bay. died Thursday at 84. Ki.9
most memorable environmental work
came against the IMne Co., which tried
to build a marina in the estuary. The
42·year resident died after a long~
Mary Burton. who helped save Corona
del Mar State Beach from private
devdopment. was remembered this
month by friends and famil)L Burton, an
attorney. sc:hoJar and nnowned local
acdvlst. died last month.
LocaJs are gearing up for another
exciting Tummy Bahama Newport to
Ensenada race.
•JUNE CASAGRANDE covers Newport
BMctl and John Wwvne Airport. She may be
--..EK IN REVIE
PHOTO OF THE WEEK
'AWAITING ANOTHER CHANCE TO SHINE'
DON LEACH I OAl.V PILOT
_Lighting can make or break a picture. It can aeate a mood
or help emphasi2e the focal point of the photograph,
drawing the eye inward, to the heart of the image.
We look for light sources already available, like window
light or lamps casting an interesting glow. Once we find the
light source we use this light to direct the viewer's eye
through the image and to determine our composition. Manipulating natural light is always a challenge. Most
people believe shooting into the sun is bad. However, using
the sunlight to back:light a picture can create a glow around a
subject. which helps accemuate the subject with a unique
look.
The dramatic use of light is what separates ordinary
photos from extraordinary ones like Don Leach's photo of
artist E. Dewey Turner.
-Pl1oto staff
COSTA MESA
Services held for fallen
U.S. Marine
Funeral service for C:OSta Mesa
resident and Newport Harbor High
graduate Jose Angel Garibay. the U.S.
Marine lance corporal killed in Iraq,
was held on Thursday and Friday. Ke
was buried Friday at Riverside
National Cemetery. He was 21.
Allan Mansoor was accused of
violating a part of the city's
conftict-of·interest ordinance because
he received $300 from Joel Faris
during his campaign last fall and then
appointed him to the Planning
Co~on. Anything aver S250 is
considered a conftict of interest in
certain sin.a.ations. Acting City
Attorney Tom ~ is reviewing the
allegations and will make his decision
public on Monday.
WShop happy, leave happy" may be
Kohls slogan. but a majority of
residents left City HaD happy Monday
night after the City Council rejected a
Kohl's for the Mesa Verde C.enter.
Opponents were concerned about
traffic and density the store may add
Also on Monday, the council
decided to appoint Robinsod<>
reached at (949) 574-4232 or bv e-mail at
1une.casagrande@latimes.com.
PUBLIC SAFETY
Lawsuit against baseball
coach dismissed
A superior court judge on Wednesday
di9'1lk<led a lawsuit 6Jed by the father of
a foaner Corona del Mar High pitcher
against the schools baseball coach.
alleging that the coach made false and
derogatory statements about his son in
STEVE McCRAHI< /DAllY PILOT
The body of Manne Lance Cpl. Jose Garibay arrives for burial
ceremonies Friday at Riverside National Cemetery. His mother, Simona
Garibay, follows. Jose Garibay was killed last month in an ambush in lraQ.
replacement to the council.
Candidate letters will be accepted
until 5 p.m. Wednesday and the
COWlciJ will start the appoinanent
pl"OceS.'> at Its April 21 meeting.
an interview published by the Daily Pilot
The lawsuit alleges the pitchec was
subjected to public humiliation and
ridirule In the December 200 l story and
also accuses the Daily Pilot and one of
the paper's sports reporters, Richard
Dunn, of libel. saying that they published
coach )ohn Emme's comments about
&-foot·3 right·hander J.O. Martinez
knowing that they were false and
libdolg
Judge Kim G. Dunning on ~y
dismissed the case against the Sea~
coadl. stating that the lawsuit brougtlt by
the pitcher's father, Marc Martinez.
• DEIRDRE NEWMAN covers Costa Mesa
and may be reached at (94915744221 or
bye-mail at
delrdre.newman@latimes.com
woulcl have a chilling effect on Emme's
freedom of speech.
Dunning ruled in favor of the coach.
Marc Martinez must aJso reimburse
Emme's attorney fees.
The Dally Pilot and Dunn remain in
the lawsuit Susan Seager, attorney for
the paper. said the Pilot will also file a
similar ·motion to strike. lf Man:
Martinez does not back out soon
• DEEM BHAMTH covers public aafety and
COUfU. She mey be reached at (949) 57~
or bv e-mail at deepa.bhamh latimes com.
NOTABLE
QUO TABLES
•Joel did give me $100 on ,,,,..,, ~parriu
oam/ons. I appolnud
him to ~/>fanning
OJmmisslon because lie's
a stand·up guy and we
have similar goals and as
soon as all of this was
brought to my attend.on. I
im~lauly notift«l cm
dty attorney."
-Allan Mamoor,
Costa Mesa Councilman,
on being accused of a
conftict or interest for
appointing Joel Faris to
the Planning Commission
"'The sails were already
up and. I am just guessing
at this point, but Mum
probably just about ready
to kill the motor and start
sailing. Bverytllingjust
kind of/ell backux.irrl
there for a lltt/.e bit•
-~V.aendoe.
Harbor Patrol sergeant,
on a sailboat that ended
up running into the
Balboa Peninsula's
eastern jetty
WExcept th.ere um this
one photo of him sleeping
with his gas mask on and
a fl'llJihine gun by his side.
Thar um kind of
emotional -to see my
first·bom child
surround«/ by such
danger.~
-Pam Bergey. mother
of Bryan Bergey. a
23·year·old U.S. Marine
corporal now serving in
Iraq
·1 fttl sorry for him yet I
think it is an honor to
have him ~pan of us
and have him go do whal
he's got to do for the
country.•
-Dan Mudra. a Costa
Mesa Fire engineer, on
coUeague C:OSta Mesa Fire
Capt Kirt Dominic, a U.S.
Anny Reserve called to
duty last week
ul am very pleased we
were ab/.e to move forward
with a commitment for
fireworlcs al cm Dunes this
)'Ml: ~ peopk In this dry e:xp«1 cm 1'm. and
whik owr dt:ies are
doing aUMJ)' with public
fireworlcs on cm Fourth.
we will mow forward
with thi.s tvrnl to be sure
our residents receive the
best show pos1ibk. •
-Stew Bromberg,
Newport Beach mayor. on
the Newport Dunes
Waterfront Resort
agreeing to return
firewor:b ~ the night
sky on the Fourth or July
Daily A Pilot
Conti Wlleot1 BoK 1660, Costa Meta, CA 92626. SURF AND SUN News assistant, (949) 674-4298 Copyright: No newt ltOrl ... ..
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Math brains unite at OCC LOOKING BACK
Teed off about the
greens' greenbacks
About 90 county high school s,tudents play
the numbers g.ame at Orange Coast
College's 47th annuaJ math meet.
geniui., rather than illumlnatt' th~ir room for growth.
·1 1Wit hope I do well: said lfl
year-old Tinny Cllang. a junior dl
Cypress High School "I thlnJc it's
not totally about competition
but also the experience, Stieing
how oth er schools do.·
Christine Carrillo
Daily Pilot
OCC CAMPUS -Some peo-
ple might find it hard 10 get ex-
cited about ta.king a test. but for
nearly 90 high school math whiz-
zes. the excitement lies In being
able to flaunt their caJculaling
talents.
For the 47th year l.n a row,
Orange Coast College held its
math Qleet Friday afternoon that
hosts high school , s1udents
throughout Orange County.
"H's great because they enjoy
BRIEFLY IN
THE NEWS
Sheriff will speak at
Vanguard graduation
Orange County Sheriff Mi
chael Carona will speak. to the
class of 2003 at Vanguard lJni·
versity's commencemen1 cer·
emony on May I 0.
Carona. not a stranger to the
Vanguard campus, has '>pole.en
at the univerc;ity before and hac;
seen a number of sheriff depu·
1ies graduate from the private
school. lie ii. also a friend of the
university'~ president, Murray
Dempster.
Carona·s extensive back-
ground as the head of tht' '>CC·
ond largest sheriff's department
in California, Mar'>h al of
Orange County. co-chair of the
Amber Alert Program and the
onJy s heriff on the Emergency
Response Senior Advisory
Committee for the Homeland
Security Council, univcr'l1ty of
ficiaJs hope, will serve a., an ex -
celJent platform from which 10
spealc about the fu1ure.., of Vern·
guard\ graduate<;.
Governor awards 82
student~ scholarships
Gov Gray Davis recogn11ed
82 students from Costa Mesa
High School with S 1,000 c;chol-
THE VACATION
HOME
By Daw Wong
A great many years ago. 11 ,..a.\n'1
that difficult 10 011tn a ''beaLh 'had ..
as a second home Modern
transportation has changed 1hat
dramariu.lly Where !he beach ~had
used to be cheap bttausc 11 1ool 'IO
long to dnve the narro11t roa<h to
r~h 11. the land where the shack
used 10 be 1s now generally easily
ICcessed by frttway~ and highways
In short. people can live there and
commute to wort
So the VIClllOn home IS erther I
renwbble lu~ury. availlble only 10
the very we1hhy. or a home 1n a
distant locauon 1ha1 is still d1fficuh
10 reach. The latter vacation home
snll uJSts. by the way h may be 1n a
different state. ot near a mountain
lake. or m the beauty or a dcstn II
Just takes research to find 11 ... and 11
should be purohascd with all the care
that 1s normally devoted to 1he
pu.rchasc of a primary res1dence.
Unless 11 is primarily a rental un11
fof Its Ownef, the VICltlOfl home j~
mott likely the owner's "second
home." A m1tal uni! is usually in a
more popular area with easier access
and pat appeal. There art usually
finnt dlai handle the "nlina and
upkeep of the unit, though the owner
may stay there for • limited time
each year, osttnsibly to do rcpajr
wOft ( and t.o Jd in • litlle skiina or
Ailina u well.) The second home.
tbougb. is almoA always nailabk • 1
rdl'Cll lhat may IOmCday bcccmc the
owoer's pnawy ruidenct. Doth
options are well worth explorina
with your real esrate and tu
td¥bon. Just c11l me at
9"9·S33·1200 or visit my
wcb&iu:a ll d,av(WOn~.a>m or
onefotdtotd.com.
Dttt~ '"'"' hN Ht'll "/Ji"' "-''"' ;,, Nnllf!rt &1tlt 1i1UV l!J891NI ii f!.iltb C#sl Nttt,m ~~&ut~
NNUflf/DllHf
getting together with 01her high
school stud ents . · .. and they like
the recognition." said Stan John-
son, the college's dean of math
and science, who participated m
the math meet in 1964. "It's
something the students enjoy ...
and it's also a way for faculty to
meet."
For an hour, the students.
many of whom are taking ~
vancemept placement calcu)us
and statistics at their respective
high schools, moved through
question after ques11on hoping
the Scantrons will reveal their
ar.,h1ps each, in a lt•ller re
ceivc·d la.,t month.
rhe \tudents, rcdp1cnt!> of
the Governor''> St holar ''ward
C\tabhshed three yt•.tr.., dgo.
were selected for thr1r hard
work and acaJem1c· '>UlTC'>'> on
the ~ fAH program cxamina·
lion'> taken '>pring 200£. Ille re
Lip1ent'> -.cored eitht>r 111 Lhe top
10% at their '>Chool or 111 the top
5% rn the !>!ale. n1(' .. rodent~' M:l1olar..lup
rnom-y can be applje<l to the uni
ver..ily, commuruty l'ollege or
techrucaJ -.chool of their \hoice.
Tht> high ... chool.., Parent
Tealhcr Studeni A ...... 11 honored
them during a lunlheon
Wt>dnt'-.day afternoon.
YES to hold annual
feaM and auctio n
You1h Employment ')erviCL''
(Yl'.S) o l the Harbor Area. In< .
will bl' holding 11 ... iOth AnnuJl
Ruman Eea'>t and {)1artt} AUt
1ion on April l4 I ht'} ,,111 ht·
honoring Orangr ( ou111y Pl11
lanthrop1r.t!> LL 'iC'Kt'r...trom Xt
\011... .ind llenry ')t.•ge,...trom,
managing ()artner I hl' com
mun11v l.'vent will bt• ht'ld at 1lw
Co..,ta \te~ Neighb orhood
Commu1111y Lent er .11 I R45 Par!...
Avent.c .
II will ft'a1urc '>llPnt and liw
auctwn•,, Giov111c111\ Penni:'
Pa ... ta and well 1...no~n musician
and YI <., promouonal partnl'r
fhe experience. for some par
licipants, hill> been an annual
one.
Mel Komatsu, a math teacher
at Cypress, has attended the
compeUtion with a team of stu
dents for 29 ye-dli..
"'It'., Just fun. It's interesting
and it's just one afternoon." Ko-
mat..'>u '>aid. •t1t\ lut'I for them to
-.cc how good they an~ and to st!C
'>Olllc to1ally different rypes of
que ... uons and 1e1 learn how to
l>arvy lraylor lo serenade
guc...i ... a'> they dance Contact
< l1rt.,ltr1t' l .arr (~M9} 642 -8306
fm dt'lail... .ind rnforma1ion
about b1·c11ming a promot~I
pMtncr. '>pon ... 11n11g o r donatmg
clll( llOll llC'lll ... .
Student~ ~how
fru strati on through art
rhrt'l' Orangt• C.1>a'>t C.ollcge
'>l\ldt·ni... U'>l'd an 10 exprCs'>
1lw1r fru'>trallon with Califor
llld\ t'XtC'll...C\(' budget CLJI ....
whll h r1:qu1r1:d tht' college 10
turn a¥.ay dhou1 1,700 Mudeni...
lmrn da ...... l • .., 1111-. 'Pring.
M,1ri ... J Hola110• .. Bcverly ( 1111
H'rt11111 ant.I HJ1 ht·I Man~ulJ
1 n-.11ed a w1111lm\ d1~play on
th1 lront of the tollegc\ llt.'\\
,irl' l l'lllt•r th.111.ftop1c1 ... ho~ tht'
$2.H million nmlyt'ar budgt·t
nit th1' -.pnng .111d the murt•
1h.111 Sh million 111 c:uh to
C 1r,1ngt: l tJ.t'>t\ hudg1·t for tltt•
2110 I 04 al adt'nlll } 1•ar art• .11
ft·< trng .,1udt•111,
I ht• d1'pla}. 111 lt•d "Kud8el
<uh ..,hred 'tour I utur.e." d1 ...
play-. ,, large• parr of '><:r... ... <>r-.
l llllrng up a da..,, ... chedulc tnlo
.1 pile ot <.hrl'ddl'd p<1per II t'>
t•xpt•Ut>d lo ht• dt'>plJyt•J
through t\pnl 111
llw purpo'>l..' nf rn:ating tJw, VI
... u.11 t mnmenrary wa.' part of the
'tudeni... Dt..,pl.iy and Vi'>ual l'rl..,
t·nt.iuon da. .... ., 11mm¢1 Ltu ... da .......
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test well.~
While o;ome '>Chools were wt
er-d.OS of the college's math meet.
others were wmpeting for the
first time.
"I think h's a great opportunity
for them tu show o ff." said Ethan
Threadgill. a math teacher at Als-
60 Niguel 1 ligh School, atrcndmg
lhe compeuuon rur the fir~t
tJme. "lti. lond offu11, if you excel
1n a-certain !>UbJect or area. to re
presen1 your '>chool."
The competition included U
high school ... with four '>tudcnts
per team and up to four alter
nates. Follnwing ·the <:ompeu-
tion, the '>tudent!> were treated to
dinner and recognil-ed with
awards horh tndividually and by
teams.
Mangold were given an O()portu·
nity to '>Olvc de..1gn. dbplay and
visual pl"l">entation problem.'> Ul a
public arena.
fhese ... rudents chow 1ht· art
center window tnstead ol a lo·
col retailer\ Ml 1hat they rnuld
expreS!> Llwi r frU!>lration and
concern regarding the fhtal
'>!ability of the '>late\ commu
111ty college'
Home buyers a~si~tancc
still available
Ille <..11y of Costa Mc'.i tk-
developmenl Agency an
nounced 1ha1 furiJ~ n·mt11n
a.vailahle for 1hc Agency\ I lorne
Buyer As'>i'>tance Program I hl'
program offer., down pt1) lllt'nt
ass1stanct' of up 10 S40.000 111
the form of a deferred '>ernnd
mortgage Io household~ t•arn-
ing no more than 120% of Lhe
Orange Counly Mcd1an
Lotlta Harper Da~yP»ot
T bey held up banners
and posters. They lined
the Sttet!ta or Costa
Me63 and demonstrated
outside of Oty Hall
lt was,not a wp they were
protesting. but the
prtvatiz.ation of lheir public
golf'.rourse.
"Say no to American Golf.~
•Keep our course.~
-Golf should not be only
about money.• the signs read
lt was 1992 and the city
was in the nwtet for a
private company to run the
public courses. Since the
courses were open m the
1960s. r.hete had been an
amiable relationship between
the bureauaats -who
maintained the fields -and
Harry Green -who ran the
concessions. Qty employees
made sure the grass was
watered and cut and the
traps were raked while Green
managed the banquets. the
bar and other social
activities.
As time progressed. city
officials realized more than a
third of the games played on
the public course were being
played for free and the
greenbaclcs normally
generated from the green
were steadily declining.
The Oty Council opened
bids for private companies to
come in and nm the enure
c:oor.e. wfuch angered not
only those who benefited
from the current dit,t-own_.,
but Green. who had a lot
uwestcd in the m.mageme111
of conces.sions.
Oty empJoyecs who
maintained the pns ~
became nefVOW. becau..e
new managemenr could,
result in a loss or )Ob<..
. Protesters lined the sUl..'t"lb.
~idents filled count.ii
chambers and uty Hall Wa5
Oooded with cmb and leners.
In the end. an arruc.abJe
sotuuon was reached m
which the city aw.uded a
contract to Mec..a Verde
Partne~ who agreed to hire
the previous grounchkeepers
and offer l'aJ.r pnc~ and
discounL'> to re.idents and
seniorc;.
City Manager Allan Roeder
5ald he believes a good
compromise wa'> made as
(..o<;ta Mesa ha'> '>Orne of the
be'>t maintained publtc
courM>s a1 some:> of the m~r
real>Onable price\.
• LOOKJNG BACX l'\Jm
Sundays Do you know of 11
person, place or event that
deSPf\/es a hlS!orical look bade?
Let us know Contact James
Meier by fax at 19491 6464170,
e-ma1t a1
1ames meier a lat1rw!S corn: or
mail at do Oa1ty Pilol. 330 W
Bay St, Costa Mesa. CA 92627
Pun:ha ... e price ltmth ha\t:
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PUBLIC
SAFETY
LEAVING
Continued from Al
"SpinaJ oord lnjurie.9 are
lmmen$ely complex." said Maura
Homtadler, d.irecltor of education Exposed ~ foe the centet: "It's like a puzzle
cau-~___...,. and everyone is wodcing on their ~~ _,._. u own little piece. What we're trying
Udo lllarid reaident.1 ro be here is a hub and help bring
re~ apoled wtres the puztle pieces together.·
because or a coPapted The center evolved out of
private dock Satwday, ft.re admiration for Christopher Reeve
officials saJd. by Joan lrvine Smith. Smith, an
Newport Beach Fire belr to the Irvine developmenl
dispatch reported, a coJ· and a nor,sewoman who owns
lapsed dock on Via feooa , cwo mn<:hesi was impressed that
and Via Lido North. Wires • Reeve never blamed his ho~
were exposed and te9f • after being thrown from it during
dents were <:ortctmed a competition in 1995 that left
about a possible. danger. ;, • him paralyz.ed. Sfnlth offered a
fire omCials responded ~g grant of s.1 million to
and then ~«;<! city utility start the center.
workers to resolve the "I was very, very grateful, not
Problem. onJy for her generosity, ·but for the
reasoning behind it." Reeve said
In 1999, Oswald Steward was
COSTA MESA
• H•rbor Boulevard: a
1-year-old man was
arrested on suspicion of
stalking n the 1900 blodt at
12:50 a.m. Saturday.
• H•rbor Boulewrd: A
29-year-old woman was
arrested on suspicion of
assaulting a peace officer
and resisting arrest in the
3000 block at 11 :13 p.m.
Friday.
• H•rbor Boutev.rd •nd
SunflcwverAvenue:A
48-year-old man was
arrested on suspicion of
begging from the median
at 10:30 a.m. Friday.
• Irvine Avenu.: A
33-year-old man was
arrested on suspicion of a
hit and run in the 600 block
at 10 p.m. Frid(ty.
• Newport Boulevard: A
28-year-old man was
arrested on suspicion of
burglary in the 2000 block
at2 a.m.
NEWPORT
BEACH
• Am.ctor. A hit-and-run
wasreportedinthe100
blodt at 8:50 a.m. Friday.
• Balboa Coves: Vandalism
was reported in the 100
blade at 10 a.m. Friday.
• lsl•nd A"enue: A vehicle
burglary was reported In
the 300 block at 2:51 p.m.
Friday.
• t.afayette Avenue: Petty
theft was reported inlhe
2800 blodt at 8:55 a.m.
Friday.
• MacArthur Boumt•rd:
Petty theft was reported in
the 4500 blodt at 10:44
a.m. Friday.
• Rfverside Avenue:
Vandalism was reported In
the 200 blodt at 3:59 a.m .
Friday.
8269:i:..-
1 ITtmLEllE
reauited ro head the centet:
Steward, who has a doctorate in
psychobiology from UC Irvine,
made the cross-country trek from
the University of Virginia. where
he was chairman of its
DepartmentofNeuroscience.
Steward is also the chairman of
I.he Scientific Advisory Committee
for the Ouistopher Reeve
Paralysis Foundation, which
Reeve and wife, Dana.
establish ed.
Reeve said he is impressed with
Steward's expeditious approach to
researcll.
UScientists like Oz Steward
believe that the mission is to
solve a particular problem as
quickly as possible and then move on to something else and
as a patient advocate, I of course.
appreciate scientists like Ozzie
Steward and his team at UCJ that
share that philosophy that
research is not an end in itself,"
Reeve said ult is a tool to produce
results and the result that we
want is to relieve the suffering of
people who are paralyzed.·
RESEARCH ON
THE CllTTING EDGE
TI1e 6,000-square-foot center is
housed in the Gillespie
Neuroscience Research Center at
the College of Medicine and
employs about 50 people.
The center encourages
collaboration, cooperation and
communication and the layout is
a testament to that philosophy,
Hofstadter said It is an open
space that promotes a
free-flowing exchange of ideas. in
contrast to most labs that feature
Jong quiet halls and locked doors.
Researchers use mice and rats
to study nerve regeneration since
they breed rapidly and their
COMMENTS
Continued from Al
not. is why city councils
choose option No. 3 -
appointment -to fill the hole
until the next general election.
Come see the new Everwood•
CoumrySlde blinds from Hunter
Douglas. Overlapping
slats creare a beauliful
board-on·bOard design
And the ·seep-up' look
adds depth. dimension
and character 10 any room. And
EverWoocl CountrySide will not
warp. crack. peel or rade. Even In
humJd areas or dJrect sunllfu. Come
see ~ beautiful bliMs roday.
f
.................. .,.,,., ,,,,, ,_. .. ,,,..
genetiq are well undemood,
Hofstadter said. The tiny brains
and ddica~ thread-lib spinal
cords of these animals are
suspended in solutions in a
freezer.
There are three primary
researdlers-Steward. Aileen
Andet'son and Hans Keirstead-:
as well as graduate students,
'post-doctoral students, visiting
faculty and undergrads.
'We want to bdng students In
to pique their interest so they will
pursue spinal-cord Injury
lresea:n:bl." Hofstadter said
In addition to working with rats
and mice, the center worts with
human embryonic stem ce&.
Keirstead. 35, an assistant
profe$50r of anatomy and
• neurobiology. has access to five of
the 63 human embryonic stem •
'cells approved for use in the
country.
"What we have done for the
first lime in the world is to
differentiate the human
embryonic stem cells into a
specialized sub-brain cell type
thougbt ro be neces.sary for
repair," Hofstadter said
KENT TREPTOW I DAILY PILOT
A rat brain encased in paraffin is prepared for slicing by post doctoral fell ow Ann Power at UC
Irvine's Reeve-Irvine Research Center on Thursday.
After they are differentiated,
they are transferred into animals
with spinal cord injuries.
The results have been
extraordinary, Keirstead said.
Keirstead has already given two
Senate pitches for funding of this
type of research. He stressed the
importance offederal legislators
hearing about successful
outcomes during their terms of
office on research some have
supported.
The center is also one of the
few labs in the world that has
obtained pure lines of human
olfactory ensheathing neuroglia
-obtained from the nose -that
have shown potential forceU
repair as well, Keirstead said
Neuroglial tissue comprises the
bulk of cells in the centr.u
nervous system and provide
support for ~e neive cells.
Preliminary studies have
shown that pa.ral)'7£d animals
can walk again after receiving
these cells, Keirstead said
REActilNG OUT FOR HELP
ln addition to the three main
resean::hers. the center now has
14 faculty members as associates.
Because UCI boasts a committed
group of neuroscience
researchers. Steward Wdflted to
pick their brains on the topic of
spinal cord injury.
One of the associates is Sue
Bryant, who studies salamander
limb regeneration. Another one is
Anne Calof. who works with the
development of the nervous
system in humans.
Mlf we can figure out how we
did it the first time, maybe we can
which in this case. is 18
months away.
Is option 3 hard7 It is not.
l've done it. And anything I can
do, you can do too.
You thought I was going to
say "Anything you can do. I can
do better" -then give you
trick the body into doing it
again," Hofstadter said
Aerospace enginee.r David
Reinkensmeyer will soon have a
space in nearby Hewitt Hall to
work on creating robots to help
spinal cord injury victims relearn
how to waUc. The robots will
replace physical therapists for hip
and ankle support.
"When we do clinical trials
with any of these treatments,
rehabilitation will be part of it,·
Hofstadter said MWe're very
excited about it"
Steward also took the initiative
to invite the California Spinal
C.Ord Injury Neural Regeneration
C.Onsortiwn, a group of about 100
scientists, to work on solving the
puzzle. California has the dubious
distinction of producing the
highest rate of spinal cord injuries
in the country, mostly from car
accidents and surfing.
The center makes it a priority
to invite feedback from the
community it was established to
help. It conducts surveys asking
spinal cord injury victims what
they would like to see the center
focus on. Based on the outreach,
researchers found that most of
what they were emphasizing -
helping patients walk again -is
not the foremost desire. Bladder
control is. they found, and added
that to their research. I lofstadter
said.
It also hoi.ts a meet and greet
with the scientists, where spinal
cord injury victims. their families
and their caregivers can talk to
researchers from arow1d the
state.
some useless information
about what it's from and who
wrote it, didn't you? Sometimes
we get a little too sure of
ourselves. don't we? (h 's from
"Annie Get Your Gun ... music
by Irving BerUn, Ethel Merman
as Annie Oakley. It opened at
the Imperial Theater on May
16, 1946. The 1950 movie
version starred Betty Hutton
and Howard Keel.)
A little homework and a few
carefully crafted questions
should telJ the appointing
council members what they
need to know.
But just to be helpful. not
that a nyone asked. I've
included two questions I think
any prospective council
candidate should be able to
answer.
1) How long can you stay
awake? Jt's important. Jf you've
ever been to council meeting
or watched one on TV, you
might think they're really
boring. They're not. They're
really, really hoeing. And
sometimes they're really long.
Owing my tenure, the award
for the Longest Performance by
a 6:30 p.m. Council Meeting
went to a meeting that ended
at 6:35 a.m .. And yes, that's
"a.m .. " as in the next morning.
Do you know what people
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II• 1
----
And it has one other source
with intimate knowledge of life
after an injury. One of the center's
own researchers. Kim Anderson.
31, was injured in a car actident
in Texas when she was 17 that
rendered her a quadriplegic. Her
post-doctoral work at the center
focuses on how molecules are
affected after a cervicaJ spinal
cord injury.
Ml'm very driven to find
treatments of any type to help
people with spinal cord injuries.
especially quadriplegics. which I
am, because we have I.he biggest
burden physically, financially and
emotionally.~ Anderson said.
"And 1 think that people with
spinal cord injuries have a great
amount of information that they
can give researchers about what
hwnans ~ really going through
and can really help the
development of looking at
outcomes when they're looking at
clinical trials."
BACKING RISKY RESEARCH
In 2000, the president of the
University of California asked the
center to administer the
California Spinal Cord Injury
Research Fund (previously the
Roman Reed Bill). The Reed bill.
named for Roman Reed, a Bay
Area man who suffered an
paralyzing accident while playing
coUege football. is state·funded
program that provides $1 million
a year for spinal cord injury
research. The center wcLS
entruSted with developing a
research program for faculty from
the UC system and the rest of
look like when they've been in
the same meeting, in the same
chairs. in the same clothes, for
12 hours? It isn't pretty. They're
all wrinkled and scrunched up
and their eyes droop and they
talk in frog-voices. If you
cannot s tay awale, you cannot
govern. It's the law.
2) Have you ever seen
yourself on TV? This is critical.
You may not realize it, but
council members have a
number of TV monitors on the
dais to see what you're seeing
at home. When someone else is
talking, veteran council
members learn to subtly check
the monitors to make sure
they're not in the background
of the shot. It does not speak
weU for the city to have you in
the background yawning,
stretching, or performing oral
surgery with a pencil to extract
a tomato seed from between
your two back teeth.
But a new council member
who has never seen h1m or
herself on TV is even more
disaster· prone. This Is a true
story. The names have been
changed to protect the
Innocent and feed the rumor
mill.
A brand new council
member, whom we shall call
"Newbie," was immersed In his
or her first meeting, less than
an hour after b eing sworn in.
Someone on the dals was
speaking, which means they
LEGEND
Continued from Al
Arnold
Beckman
"So one
day when
Beckman left
work early,
he wu over
80 yean old
at the time,
mind you,
and went in
hla pnge
and built •
good arap, a
big one, that
really wo~ed. He caught a
bunch of raccoons and then
loaned II to OW neCabbors and ~ tumid the raccoons
over to antmaJ control That)
the lttnd or IUY be wu. Ar eo
yt91111 old you'd, tte him on hJs
roor up thel"I maJdna repalis.
California
In line with its philosophy of
attacking the pume from all
angles. the center disburses seed
money for projects that might be
considered too uncertain by
others., Hofstadter said
"It's a little risky. but we'll get
good information. even if [the
project) fails.· Hofstadter said.
The center gives a smaller
amount of funds to the Roman
Reed Core Laboratory. which ls
part of the center. The goal of the
lab is to expand the number of
people participating in spinal
cord injury research. Tu that end,
it invites researchers with an
interest in spinal cord injwy but
who are not woridng in the field.
uuke a chemist who doesn't
know a rat from a dog and doesn't
know where the spinal cord is,
but wants to explore." Hofstadter
said "We tell them to write up a
proposal. then come play with ~
So a project that would likely
never happen or take years lean
happen! in three months. We're
fast-tracting ideas."
The center ls currently in a
campaign to raise S2 million for
developing human spinal cord
injury studies and treatments and
is about three-quarters of the way
there, Steward said
"We're just really excited about
what's going on," Steward said.
wit's still a unique resource in the
world.M
• DEIRDRE NEWMAN covers Costa
Mesa and may be readied at (949)
574-4221 °'by e-mail at
deirdre.newmanl!J>latimes.oom.
were on camera, with Newbie
in the background. 1 happened
to be watching the monitor
when Newbie looked up and
noticed his or her face in the
background on th e screen.
Newbie was thunderstruck.
and I can only assume, didn't
realize that what was on screen
was going out live, across the
city. Mesmerized, Newbie
turned his or her head to one
side, then the other, primped a
little here, straightened a little
there.
Then Newbie, to my surprise,
slid his or her chair closer to
the speaker's to get a better
view of his or her face, which
was now suspended just
behind the speaker's shoulder
IUc.e a large. puzzled balloon.
Finally, to my horror, Newbie
started through another full set
of head turns and blemish
checks. Mercifully, someone
else asked for the Door a t that
point and the monitor cut to a
different shot.
So that's it then.
Pilling the hole is easy, If you
ask the right questions.
Can you stay awake?
Have you ever seen yourself
onlV?
And by any chance, do you
know Newbie? I gotta go.
• PETER BUFFA 11 • former Costa
Meae mayor. Hit column runt
Sundays. He may be reectied by
e·meil et Ptr641hol.com.
He liked to get things done."
Scholler said that the pa.de at
Shore ours will continue to be
undeveloped open space, with a
bench commemoradng Bect-
man's contrtbuUom..
•JUNE CASAGRANDE coven
NtwPol'\ 8eadl and John Wayne
Alrpcn. She may be N~ et
(IM9) 61~232 or by .mall et
}uM.t11ug,..n"-•l11tftnH.com•
f
----..=----· ,._
. ..
•• •• '• .... .. •• '• ..
• • . ; . . . ..
Io •• .. . · ·: '• '• .. .. . . .
' . . CHECK ITOUT
Not just a
p_lacefor
bo.oks
W ith the fihn festival
finished and images of
misty-eyed Oscar
recipients fading. a look at past
block.busters might be the best
balm for keeping cinematic
magic alive.
Many of the finest are
available as videos and DVDs at
Newpon Beach Public Libraries.
They include
.... ".:l'ti;JI "Wlnp,"the
first movie
ever to win an
Academy
Award for
Best Picture.
The 1927
production
stars Oara
Bow. Richard
ilal.U:::!.:;i.;..;.;:::l!:.:....J Arlenand
MBuddy"
Rogers in a story of two men
who have gone to war and the
girl they leave behind.
ln both video and DVD
versions. find top Best Picture
nominee "AD About ~"
Joseph Mank.iewiC7' cl.as.sic
staning Betty Davis as an agrng
actress and Anne Baxter as IJ1e
jealous fan intent on USllrping
her career. Thls winner of six
Osam was No. 16 on the
American FUm lnstltute's lis1 of
the top 100
mOVles of au
time. Until
1997, 11 held
the record fur
the ffiQSI
Oscar
nomination'>
(14).
Today 11
shares IJ1a1
honor with
WJ1t.ank," the
epic that won 11 Academy
Awards and made a super..tar of
Leonardo DiCaprio. Clleck out
the video of James Cameron's
$200-million production from
any Newpon Beach Public
Library or a DVD version from
IJ1e Central Library. For hardcore
Titanic buffs. a four-video
documentary that rrussed the
Academy's recognition includes
riveting
newsreels,
'>tills, diaries
and
interviews
with survivors
of IJ1e
legendary
disaster. Find
it at the
Balboa
Branch.
Hugely
regaled by the
Academy was "Ben Hur."
Metro-Goldwyn Mayer's 1959
saga about a young Jewish
nobleman and his nemesis. a
Roman centurion. With searing
images of sla¥e galleys.
mammoth crowds and a chariot
race capnmd by 42 cameras. the
VHS edJtion of this monument
to Hollywood's glory days Is
perfect for big screen 1Vs.
All three of the ftJms that won
Oscar's top 6ve awards (Best
S.. CHECK, Pase A7
•
ezsure
Still making a play at it
Oasis Players perform
to the older s·et with
entertaining comedies
that enrich the audience
and themselves.
lollt• Harper
Daily Pilot
J oe Schwein looks dam good in a
pair of tights and a OoraJ-rimmed
haL
The actor and director of the
Oasis Players said he doe.n't usually
sport women's clothing bur an acLress
was sick and, well. the "how mu'>t go
on.
Although he was slightly
uncomfortable in his womanly wears,
he delivers a humorous performance
this month in the one-ace play, "WilJ
the Ladies Please Come 10 Order?" IJ1a1
brought smiles 10 the residents at
Crown Cove senior living home.
The audience was one of the Player;
smallest but it was nice 10 perform for
an intimate crowd, the dCtOl"I \cl.id. f11e
play was about a meeung at the July
1952 meeting of the Center City I ...id1t">
Cultural League. in wtuch the four
officers' true feeling-; are revealed and
they clash in a very Mlady-hke" way
The Oasis Players are a group of
senior citi7.ens who meet every wt.'ek to
study acting methods and have a go at
various monologues or character ..
Once proficient in their charactt'r of
choice, the group takes the .. how on
the road, entertaining reuow ~nior;,
high school students and. ba-.1cally,
anyone who will book them.
The group bills its performanu~ d.'>
comedy entertainment and offer.. witty
monologue such as, Min the Morwy" -
about a get rich quick 5cheme,
"Women's Urges• -about a longtime
wife who is left home alone for an
extended period of time for the ftr..t
time in 40 years. and "Centerfold:
about a senior woman'!> appearance m
"Playboy.M
Members of the Oasis Player.. mu..i
be at least 55, but the membership
ranges in age from 69 to 84, Schulein
said. Acting is a challenge for many
seniors because of the memoro..ation
invotved, Schwein said.
Oui.sta Long. 68, said she very much
enjoys her role in the group The
soft-spoken Long. who was a
professional dancer in Europe and suU
carries wi!Jl her a C.erman accent,
performs a monologue in which she
l.'liH l [R
Residents Lee Pitts. 74, left, and Vadra Day, 89, enjoy a performance by the Oasis Players on Tuesday.
FYI
WHAT: Oasis Players present MComedy
Entertainment~
WHEN: 1:30 p.m. Thursday
WHERE: Costa Mesa Senior Center,
695 W. 19th St.
applies for a job with Santa.
Schulein said it was funny to watth
her cultivate her charactt'r as a 'iwi-.-.
reindeer, e!>peciaJly hecau~e her
monologue had a four-lener word in
lhe '>Cript During wee!Q. of practice.
sweet little Long omitted the expleuve
Once on stage. however. she blunc<l 11
out, JUSt the way 11 Y.'aS '-Cripted -muc:h
to me shock of her thea1rical
colleagues.
She was so mto her character. Mie
felt '>he needed to suck to the ongmal
dialogue, Schwein said. He knew aU
along she was capable of a grea1
performance and was proud.
MPeople usually don't think old folk...,
can do IJ1ings like this but we rou.... .. do .•
Long said. Christa Long of the Oasis Players performs "The Reindeer Monologues· for
See Pl.AV. Paee A7 seniors at the Crown Senior F ac1lrty m Corona del Mar
NO PLACE LIKE HOME
Great houses galore in home tour
C in:Je May I on your calendar and
set the day aside for the Harbor
High Home and Garden Thur.
This year's edition has the best of
everything. There are traditional
homes. an historical home, a modem
home. a home built in IJ1e early
California style. an Eastside charmer
and a garden that will make your heart
sing. My job for the committee Is to
write the home descriptions for the
brochure -;-what a great assignment
-I get to peek at all the offerings
before everyone else. And I'm so
impressed with this year's list, I'm just
going to rave for a while until I Inspire
you to go to Butera and buy a tickeL
KAREN
WIGHT
Remember, thlS L'I
not only a great day
it's a fund-raiser that
supports academic
ennchment at the
high school
Wm-win.
Last week I
prepped you for he
Modem house on
the tour. This
Bayshores beauty is
simply cool.
Polished concrete
Ooors. stainless steel ra.llinp, sleek
cherry wood cabinetry and a
ldck-in-IJ1e-panlS art collection makes
TRAVEL TALES
th1., houM> candy-for the-eyes.
There are twn other Ba}-.,hore<.
home<. on the tour One 1s aero-.-. the
stn-et from the beach and ha<,
'>pectacul..ir V1l~"> of the harbor and
pavilion m almO'>t every room Thi~
hou-;e ha' 1u..c-.t the nght amoUJlt of
pomp and c1rcurm.tance blended with
down-to-eanh beach living.
It ts a te-5tament to IJ1e adage lha1
"great ardutecture lasts forever M
Though the owners have put their own
personal touches m the home. the
"bones" have been left untouched The
house maximizes me "fore~r" view
from almost every room. Whether you
are ln the Uvmg room, breakfast room.
up.,tair> fam1Jv nxim, or master
bt'droorn. the Vie\\ nf the beach.
harbor and h1.-,1om·al p.iV'lhon I!>
hreathtahng
The third homc ""' on tht' largest
mtenor lot in RaY'hon.-s And they do a
lot with IJ1t> lot Th<' houSt> tS tradauonal
wtth a taste of Brill'>h <...olorual. ~
artwork t!> a vaned muc of
rontemporary ranva.sec;. acrylic
sculprure and painting and
photography produced by the
daughters an the family
The home m Newpon Heights is
grand: in scale. design and family
S.. HOME, P ... A7
New Year's in New Zealand breathtaking
.. .. . ... -
...
W Ith my youngest
daughteT about to
enjoy almost a month
oft' ror Ouuunaa break. ahe and
I Jumped &t the opportunity to
vialt my other daughter on the
Nonh Island or New Zealand
near Auckland
~~the addng Loula
VuJtton c:h&Uenpr nas ror the
America·• Qaf. aailln8 competJtloo up doee and
penooal." b1c:k for ua. my
dauabler la on •Wf with the
0uraoor Uft Netwot\ a.od P.SPN
and the uTt.nlled to pt ua on
bOllrd tbl media boeb. WI
WllChed Che lntemedonial
l&-md a'fWI mcM wlth
pe9dllon on thltt llelk mlllon
dollar hoe u the¥ dt1k.""1 tr mtt
on the Hauraki Gulf. Allngbi. the
SwtM contingent. with Rusaell
C.OUtts at the helm. Just clinched
the cup wln apl.nst team New
Zealand.
On Christmu eve, we took
the feny acroa waltanata
Halbot to the hlltoric
waterl'tont town of Davcnpoct
for a uuJy Victorian OuiitmN at
the "&Jplanade." Retum1ng the
nat dly to PameU for a
t'J'ldltlonal New 7.eaJand
<hdstmu day btuncb with I
src>UP of 61endl and collmgura at • Antolnm..
Of c:oune, M COUldn\ leew
the North Wand Without Wddnc
my cou.m and her famil)t. Tht1
Aw In the belutttul wtne
rn '""" nf ~mf'l'u '",an Nf!
M Stiiday, ~ lJ, 2003
PHOTOGRAPHER'S NOTEBOOK
Filmf est fall ·off ascinating_flics ~
1
I
F or the last two years or so
I've covered the openings
and behind the scenes
stuff related to the Newport
Beach Film Festival. I never
went 10 one screening until this
year.
For Oulstmas I got a digitaJ
video camera, and I have tried
DON
LEACH
making some
mini-movies,
so my
interest was
piqued. New
digital
technology
makes it easy
and
affordable to
make a
decent film
on a laptop.
Just µpload
your film into
a laptop computer and you can
make your own masterpiece. or
so you chink. I have managed
to davJe my friends and family
with a few "shorts" of my own
created on my little Apple
computer. Everyone was
amazed, but I know bener. I
have to admit the videos I have
made came out preuy good,
but making a reaJ movie is
something else. So I went and
checked out a few movies at the
festival.
Press pass in hand, I grabbed
the program and circled the
ftlms that generally intt!rt!i.ted
me, mostJy documentaries This
included any travel,
photojournaJism. extreme
sports, music themes and
interesting stories.
Documentary filmmak.ing is
something I am interested in,
and actually believe I am
capable of producing someday
-if I could ever decide wha1
subject (and there are millions).
I started with two
documenlaries in a row. "Pipe
Dreams." which folJows two
Olympic athletes as they head
toward the 2002 winier games,
and "The Wonder of Phil" by
local filmmaker. Michael Stute.
I pho1ographed Stute for an
a. t11.:le in the Pilot a week
b, .ure the festivaJ and I had
l.tl\
23~.
Newport Beaclt Film Ftstival 2003
heard about Phil Shane
through the Orange County
music scene.
J was looking forward to it.
Both were at the Orange
County Museum of Art. As I
walked, in the "theater" was
like a large classroom with the
screen taking up one side of the
wall. Intimate and friendly.
People chatted away in small
groups excited about the film. I
felt like I should have known
someone but J didn't. I chose a
seat and it turned out the guys
in front of me made the film.
"Pipe Dreams," I would learn
later, was one of the berter
movies I saw all week. Beautiful
mountain scenes with
top-notch snowboarding and
skiing. But it wasn't just a
bunch of action, it had
well-woven story. using
photography, music.
interviews. natural sounds and
drama 10 telJ the story of the
snowboarder and ski jumper. It
was shot at all hours in all
conditions. No downing
around and very pro. The t:a~t
of these two never flinched as
the camera followed them
toward the 2002 games in SaJt
Lake City. An impressive and
complete story. It reminded me
of" I loop Dreams," a basketbalJ
documentary, that came out a
few years ago.
I wanted to hear what the
filmmakers had to say, but we
were whisked out by festival
volunteers to make way for the
building audience waiting
outside to see "Phil."
I walked out the exit door
and right back in the entrance
door, took a seat, and wa1ched
a completely different crowd
come to watch "Phil" Where
"Pipe Dreams" was a bit more
serious and smooth, Phil was a
bit more vocal and raw.
"Dreams" was pretty, "Phil" a
bit gritty.
Probably a gopd share or
them were adoring fans of Phil
Shane, the OC lounge singer
who·the film was about. He had
a good cult following IJf OC
nightlifers. schQoled ln vintage
rock. 'n' roll (especiaJJy Elvis).
who came to support him and
the film. It was like a party.
People of all ages including the
well dressed, punks, rockabiUy
types, barflies and the
fashionably cool filled the
seats. Many were in "industry"
shades, even in the dark..
lt was different and
humorous. Again I knew no
one Oaugh). "Phil" was a vastly
different type of film. It was
obvious in the cinematography
and sound. I know its dark and
the sound is not so good in
those small bars, but creative
camera, lighting. sound wouJd
have helped the overaJI look
and presentation to make it
really good.
But who cares, everyone was
loving it and Phil's story was
shared with everyone. Stute
and Phil greeted fans after the
show, shaking hands and
talking about the film. Phil even
signed autographs. A rousing
success.
After work Monday I got back
to the art museum for "Drive,"
another documentary about
Mike VaJJely. Similar to ~Pipe
Dreams," it was beautifully shot
with great music and sound.
Instead of a team of producer it
was only Vallely and filmmaker
Mark Jeremias on a extended
road trip through America.
Russia and Europe.
Vallely hit urban skate parks
aJong the way, sharing his
wisdom and self-expression
with the audience through
narration of his thoughts and
feelings. You watch his amazing
creative ability on the streets,
riding his board, while sharing
the lessons learned in his life as
The Newport Harbor Nautical Museum
cordially invites you to a special exhibit & hook signing
featuring signed limited edition prints by
JOHN STOBART
America's Most Celebrated Marine Artist
John Stobart, Newport Beach-The Pavilion 1910 -We hove the Inst of these prints for sale.
Gallery Exhibit
Prints & Originals
Opens April 12-May 4
/Oam-5pm
Closed on Mondays
Limited Edition signed prints
will be for sale ... 30% will be donated to
the museum
..
Meet The Artist
Book Signing
Wine .t: Chtt$e R«q>tt0n
llam-Jpm Saturday May 3
Sunday May 4 /lam-I pm
featuring Mr. Stobart's new book of paintings
titled '1'he World of Sall and Steam"
THE NEWPORT HARBOR NAUTiICAL MUSEUM
1$1 Eul C t lhgbway (lhc Riverboat), Newpon ~h. CA 92663
949~73·7 ) • emall. nhrun OfJ • www.nbnm.Of"I
Free Adml sion
'
he gives back to skateboarding
community what it has taught
him.
In the film I thought he
might be jaded and bitter.
angry at times tn his deliberate
spoken delivery. The
after-screen question and
answer session cleared all that
up. Vallely ca.me off humble
with a grin on his face as he
took the stage. J-{e ·explained
that he sounded like.he was
-"talking down" to people, but
he just wanted his message to
be clear in the film for kids
listening and watching. And
there were lots in the audience,
some with parents. I le taJked
about the state of
skateboarding and how people
should ~challenge the
environment" and make a
positive difference in the world
through individual effort. Two
thumbs up, and I left with a
poster. A film worthy of a DVD
purchase later.
Tuesday I learned there was a
misprint in the program and I
missed the "Last 7.apatistas." It
was the first documentary I
first circled on my list. So I
regrouped and went to
Edwards Island for the short
films program, titled "And your
Little Shorts Too."
The bigger theater is where
the action is. The reaJ critic:.
come out. People attend these
film festivals for lots of different
reasons, but one universal
reason is to give the film some
kind of reaction a nd feedback.
Ballots are also passed out to
fill out after the show to givt·
more feedback, e~pecially for
the filmmaker and marketing
people.
So much time, t!ITort.
passion, dedication and money
go into these projects. how
could anyone judge them
poorly?
You can, and 1hcy do, and it':.
essential for it to succeed in
some way. It's harsh.
After the endjng of one ~hort
film, "Hannah Can't Swim," I
was confused at the ending and
a bit disappointed after it
hooked me, only 10 have IL
yanked out asking my-.elf why?
I couldn't figure it ou1 A few
faceless voices from the back or
the theater wasted no time
trying to figure it ouL One voice
calmly said one simple "boo,·
another blurted out "why,"
foUowed by a chuckle and
sarcastic "umm ... OK" Ouch!
It's even more painful because
the rpovie had potentlaJ and
nice cinematography.
When the title came across
the start of another film, the
crowd was vocal and clapped in
anticipadon (friends in the
crowd?). It wasn't as vocaJ at the
end and the clap were normaJ,
it wasn't epic like the Oler said
it was. "Ice Cream Sundae"
showed some passion and good
acting followed by appreciative
applause. "Virus" looked
amateurish but had interest.
Why are suicide sit'uations so
popular these days? "Beautiful
Memory Piccure" had a cool
creepy moody edge to it, a.It.a.
Bates in Psycho. I didn't stay for
the end of "Desuny's Oiild."
Wednesday I visited the lrish
SpotJight featuring the film
"How Harry Became a Tree.· It
was this or more shorts. After
the line of shorts from Tuesday
I went for "Tree."
Being Irish I guess I had to
go. Thii. was a real film with
expressive acting by Colm
Meany and directing by Goran
PaskaJjevic. The Foreign
Spotlight films seemed to be
where the ·mm bui'J" took
place. Many fesuval board
directors and advisors were
there and i.poke lo the
audience before the mm.
People clapped and cheered as
thank·you.., went out. A few
council people were al this
screening.
This wru. the most
sophisticated audience yet.
After the screening Meany
spoke to the audience and
answered questions abou1 his
acting and the film. Uke m
"Drive." the main character. be
it real or acting, i.cemed
different in perf.on.
Approachable. not bigger than
life as many people talce actors
lo be. It wru. a special screening
event for the festival since the
screening had problems in
Venice. Belgrade and Toronto
bella bella
SALON
I
eouowing the Sept. i 1 tragedy. 1
when the mm first started j
Meany explained. I left with a •
gift pack of Irish Items I
including tea and an Irish travel
brochure.
MuJdoon's Pub invited
everyone with a ticket stub
from the movie to a post party
to continue the celebration in
true Irish tradillon to savor the
theme. • ~ Finally, being a surfer, I had
to' see what "The Kill Six" was
all about on Thursday. I
convinced fellow photographerl
and surfer Kent Treptow to also ]
check it out. The line was long j
but a nice staff member from l
the festivaJ (J forgot your name, •1 sorry) let us slip in early with 4 the press pass. It was a family
atmosphere audience as '1
grommets, parents, young
adults and surfers of all ages
punched two huge beach balls
around the Udo lsle Theater.
Surf wax, T-shirts and other
surf gear was thrown about for •
free as the kids went nuts. A
surf film is somethjng I would •
love to try to make someday so•
I had to take a look.
This film was basically a
reason for a loud abrasive
soundtrack or vice versa
ExcelJenl surf action sequences
over and over from the world's
top pro!> set to a poppy punk
and aJternative rock
soundtrack. I plugged only one
ear after a while. AJI the songs
sounded 1he same and didn't
compliment the footage, except
when the surfers were slashing·.
the tops off or pulling big airs
edited tightly together. But this
film had gaping dangerous tube
rides by the world's top pros
making it look easy. How about
:.ome island sounds of the
native country or reggae/deejay
grooves when the real beauty
comes in at spots in Tahiti,
Hawaii and Australia
interspersed with the garage
punk in California and Costa
Rka?
These wavei. are beautiful
belching monsters of the deep.
It would have made the film
just a bit more of a culturaJ
experience for many of these
folks who would never sit
through a surf (i)m except for
lunch at (,inaJs or shopping for
surf gear at local surf shop.
Oh well. it was action packed
for an average surfer witb
magical, and often-dangerous
magnificent breaks, most of
these spot!> are well known and
too difficult for average surfers
anyway. I aJmost walked on the
song that sang about someone's
DUI.
I had seen a few films by now
and was expecting a different
son of surf film since Newport
is a surf center and nas
year-round quaJity waves and J
lots of surf industry nearby in / Costa Mel>a. I was WTong. I sat '
through a few question and J
answer sessions that made the
film more worthwhile.
w I
Daily Piiot
A helicopter perspective of the Great Barrier Reef.
TRAVEL
Continued from A5
aboard the brightly-colored
vintage rail cars. After 20 miles
of winding in and out of tunnels
and spraying Wdterfalls, we
arrived at the idyllic village of
Kuranda. Finally, we were able
to hug a cute Koala Bear. We
dangled over the verdant rain
forest and Barron Gorge on the
sky rail for our return.
Next, we headed off to
fabulous Port Douglas, famous
for its four-mile white sand
beach and its proximity to the
Great Barrier Reef. The diving
was only surpassed by the
incredible helicopter ride over
North Queenslands 2.000 reefs
and 700 islands In crystal-clear
HOME
Continued from A5
WcU1llth. Though the house was
completed only a year ago. it
looks like it's been there forever.
This house bas, what I
consider to be, the most perfect
master bathroom 1 have ever
seen. I think more people would
stay married if they had a
bathroom like th.ls. Just the right
amount of togetherness and
separate spaces make this
room(s) faultJess.
Dover Shores hosts the
fearured garden on the tour.
'Ibis yard. on a large
TARYN ROSE
Featured on toll.: ~huws
no1tonw1de. orthopedic
surgeon Di Taryn Rose
designs beou11ful footwear
using only the finesl mole11ols
for lu,(ury ond comfort Just
one step and you will feel
the difference
rurquoise water.
Heading home through
Sydney, we caught the opera,
~Don Giovanni" at the Sydney
Opera House, sunned on
Sydney's surf beaches and
climbed the Sydney Harbor
Bridge. Great fun! We had to
board our Qantas Airways' jet
bound for LAX all too soon.
•TRAVEL TALES runs on Sundays.
Have you, or someone you know.
gone on an interesting vacation
recently? Tell us about your
adventures in about 400 words.
accompanied by a couple of photos
to choose from that do not have the
Daily Pilot in them, and send them
to Travel Tales. 330 W. Bay St ..
Costa Mesa, CA 92627; or e-mail
coral.wilsonflPlatimes.com; or fa>C
to (9491646-4170.
street-to-street lot. is a party
waiting to happen. The
backyard has something for
everyone. With a regulation $iz.e
shuffleboard court. cozy fire pit.
outdoor kitchen and elegant
garden, this outdoor Shangri-La
is aJways ready for an intimate
gathering or family celebration.
The home in F.astside Costa
Mesa is the perfect blend of the
indoor/outdoor lifestyle.
European friends and visitors
have niclcnamed the residence
"Tusca-Mesa": little bit of
Europe that lives within the
Costa Mesa boundaries. The
owner.. walk to the markets. use
seasonal herbs from the garden
TrMtiie 1a• x 18' ............................. " ............................ " .. U 111 a
Cerlnic Tle .. tt ..................... OM•onuo• ..... HUUOU"H.....,. u 9'l l.M**~ ........................ " ............................... u "'
ONGOING
• Send ONGOING itema to the
Dally Pilot. 330 W. Bay St., Costa
Mesa, CA 92627; by fax to (9491
646-4170; or by calling (949)
574-4298. Include ttie time, date
and location of the (rVent, as well
aa a contact phone number. A
complete 119tlng Is available at
www.dailypilot.com.
VoluntiNr drfvwa ... needed
to help deliver nutritiously
prepared meals to homebound,
frail or elder1y clients incapable
of shopping or cooking for
themselves through "Mobile
Meals;' sponsored by
FISH-Harbor Area Inc. a_nd Hoag
Hospital. Call (949) 645-8050 for
more information. ·
Registration is now open for
runners and walkers of all ages
for the 22nd annual Corona del •
Ma-r Scenic 5K Race & two-mile
Fun Walk on June 7.
CHECK
Continued from A5
Picture, Best Di.rector, Best
Actor, Best Actress and Best
Screenplay) are available as
bolh videos and DVDs. Watch
Oa.rk Gable and Gaudette
Colbert play a reporter and a
runaway heiress who fall in
love on a bus in I.he 1934
romantic comedy "1t
Happened One NlgbL" See
Jack Nicholson star as a
-rebellious inmate of a
psychiatric hospital in "One
Rew <Mr the Cuckoo's Nest."
Descend into madness wilh
Anlhony Hopkins as a
criminally insane psychiatrist
in "Ille Silence of the Lambs."
Both non-Hollywood Best
Picture winners are at the
Central )jbrary. On
PLAY
Continued from A5
And all.hough I.hey study
seriously and perform top
quality entertainment. I.he goaJ
is to have a good time.
Mlf all they say is, 'Boy are we
and enjoy the rose covered
pergola all year long.
The Lido home, just a short
walk from the Oubhouse where
lunch will be served. is only
three years old, but the house
looks like a peek at Montecito in
1924. Th.tough timeless
materials and meticulous
planning. the owners have
created a home that persorufies
design integrity.
So you can't to buy a ticket,
right?
Head over to Butera in
Westcliff Court. Harbor High
School or call the home tour
bot.line at (949) 262-2672.
Tickets are $45 and include a
Pre-registration fees are $22 for
the run/walk and $12 for the
Dolphin Dash. Registrst.lon on
the day of the race la S30 for the
run/walk.. Separate races for men
and women are limited to 1,600
runners. Call (949) 644-3161 to
register.
If your orchid .. too b6g for tta
pot, Green Systems lntemational
will show you how to re-pot your
plant during their.free
ordlid-potting seminar wery
Saturday at"2 p.m. A plant sale is
held from 91t.m. to 4 p.m. at the
20362 Bird\ St. facility. Call (949)
756-1211 for information.
Obc:over the MCNta of Clibon
Canyon Regional Partc as you
walk through groves of beautiful
Coastal Redwood trees every
Saturday at 8:30 a.m. Partlng is
$4. Call (714) 996-6252 for more
information.
Team Survivor, a nonprofit
organization encouraging
women who have been through
videocassette. follow I.he story
of an English King and his
wives in "1be Private lie of
Henry VD.I" (1933). On DVD.
check out Laurence Olivier in
"Hamlet," I.he classic version
of Shakespeare's tragedy.
Many more recent winneri.
and nominees are on I.he
shelves. For less than the cost
of popcorn, view such lauded
cinema as "Moulin Rouge,"
"In the Bedroom" and
.. Olocolat" in I.he comfort of
your own living room.
• • CHECK fT OUT is written by the
staff of the Newport Beach Public
Library. This week's column is by
Melissa Adams in collaboration
with Sara Barnicle. All titles may
be reserved from home or office
computers by accessing the
catalog at
www.newportbeachltbrary.org.
having run: I.hen I.hat's me: he
said.
The Oasis Players have been
booked in Costa Mesa, Tustin
and Newport Beach and are
continuously looking tor more
gigs. The next performance is
at I :30 p.m. Thursday at I.he
Costa Mesa Senior Center.
bay view lunch at I.he Lido Isle
Oubhouse with food from
Plum's.
This year's generous event
sponsors are Coldwell Banker
and Coast Newport Properties.
Chairman Sandi Hill has done an
amazing job collecting I.he best
of everything. TI1anks Sandi.
Thank you also goes to I.he
homeowners. sponsors, and the
bevy of fabulous volunteers that
male this event possible -all for
I.he cause, all for the kids and all
for I.he community.
• KAREN WIGHT 1s a Newport
Beadl resident. Her column runs
Sundays.
Oranqc Countn BEST HI00£N TREASURE'
~ .. _,. -. ........ -. . JI<'!• ~ ·~ . .--.. .. ' J -. -. .
~ . . ... ~ ..
....... ~. •·• ' •• p
"COME FEEL THE WARMTH OF THE MEDITERRANEAN
ON OUR BEAUTIFUL PATIO OVERLOOKING THE LAK£10
OPEN FOR LUN(H AND DINNER
WY. <ONVtNllNT PARKIN~!
80 ANTON ILVD. COSTA M UA
(714) SS6-6SSS
www.avos bistro.com
1st Session
$15 Value
Expires 4fJOI03.
5unday, ~~ 13, 2003 A7
cancer treatment to exercaae, n.. Newport a..d'I Wddng
hosts "Walk and Talk" et 10 a.m. Ctub moeta at the comer of
the seoond and fourth Fnday of Superior and Hospital Road in
the month in front of Newport Beadl at 9:16 a.m. and
NIKEgodesa atore in Fashion 7 p.m everyday. For more
Island. Membera meet for lunch infonnatlon, c.all (949) 660-1332.
after at Atrium court. h is free,
and all fitness levels are Th• ,.._ll'pOrt a..d'I Ceke
welcome. For more information, Docorating Club meets from. 7 to
c.all (949) 275-3888. 9 p.m. on Thursday nights at
Superior and Hospital Road In
Newpoft Community Newport Beach. For more
Counseling Center offers a way information, call (949) 660-1332.
to stop the cycle of domestic
violence through the support The Newport a..d'I City .... la
group In SAF.E. Hands. SAF.E. displ~ylng watercolor paintin11s
stands for safety, awarenesa. by Juan Casado. Ned Parsons,
faith and empowerment. The Raymond Otis and Jim
group mee,ts Mondays from 6:30 Teegarden thr.ough Marm 28 at
tt> 8 p.m. Free. For more 3300 Newport Blvd. For more
information, call (949) 721-8079. information, c.all (949) 717-3870. .. • -r..n. .,. invtt.d to~ by th• The Aun. of Busineta s.mc-
city of Costa Mesa Recreation, . hosts a networtcing meeting that
Center from 2 to 6 p.r:n. Monday deals with education
through Friday for indoor and connections from 6 to 8:30 p.m.
outdoor sports and activities. on the second Tuesday of every
The Center is at 1860 Anaheim month at the Holiday Inn at 3131
Ave. For more information, call Bristol St., Costa Mesa. For more
(714) 327-7660. information. call (949) 80f>.-0011.
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A.t~v. Ai>rd t3, 2003 Uaily Pilo\
FORUM
HOW TO GET PU8USHED -l.dln: Mail to Edhorlal Page Editor S.J. Cahn st the Oafly Pilot. laO W. Bay St., Costa Mesa. CA 92Q7 •RH den Hotlne: Call (949) &42-6086 Fu: Send to (949) 646-4170
e.m.l;&md to datlyp/lotfll11timt1S.com •All correapondence must Include futl name, hometown and phone number (for ve~n purposes). The Piiot reserves the right to edit all aubniiuiona for darity and leogth.
EDITORIALS
A vision of
C?rie village
• t ......
T ~~e~tandable
anguish in parts of
Corona del Mar
concerning news that
the city's redistricting process
may end up altering the face of
the "Village."
The news, however, is not as
bleak as may first appear.
Yes, models of how Newport
Search needs to realign its
council districts to
accommodate residents of
Newport Coast continue to
stumble on keeping the Corona
del Mar district as it is. But a
most likely solution -to move
Irvine Terrace to the district
anchored by Balboa island -
does not cut at the heart of old
Corona del Mar.
In other words, the Village is
not going to have a line drawn
through its middle.
One of Newport Beach's
s trengths is ~at it is a city of
communities: Corona del Mar,
Balboa Island, the peninsula,
Lido Isle, Spy Glass and West
Newport, among them. These
tight-knit groups form the basis
for a collective, cohesive city that
-as countless stories in the
Daily Pilot have shown -
quickty rallies itself together.
Corona del Mar's identity may
be the strongest of all, and a
shift in invisible political
boundaries will not change that
It is also useful to note that
divided political lines do not
equal a divided community.
Right now, Newport Beach is
represented by two county
supervisors: Jim Silva and Tom
Wtlson, whose district includes
Newport Coast For many years,
Reps. Ouis Cox and Dana
Rohrabacher shared the city,
with Rohrabacher's piece on the
west, along with his hom~town
of Huntington Beach. These
splits have not proven a
problem. In fact, such dual
representation can mean more
officials pulling for a
community's interests, more
voices arguing on its behalf.
The same, if change does
come, would be true in Corona
del Mar. .
Whatever happens, Corona d el
Mar will keep its own zip code,
its own vision for its future and
its own memories of its past.
It will remain a village, with its
own, distinctive character.
Save Our Yo uth
reaches a milestone
0 scar Santoyo knows
how to keep a promise.
He's been doing so for
years at Save Our
Youth, where he works as
executive director.
Every year, he promises
ch)Jdren at the center that if they
raiSe their grade point averages,
they can cut or shave his hair.
Sometimes, they even dye it. In
1999, he said, "They gave me a
Mr. T cut. It looked pretty awful,
but a deal's a deal"
The Estancia High graduate
has also taken pies in the face
from time to time.
Santoyo and others at Save
Our Youth have shown this kind
of commitment throughout the
1 O·year existence of the
Westside center and have
encouraged those who use the
facilities to do the same. And it
has paid off.
The nonprofit that provides an
alternative to gangs and street
life does more than that. It
provides recreational needs that
are not necessarily available in
the area for low-income families.
Those include the
fully-equipped boxing center
and softball games against the
Costa Mesa City Council.
Save Our Youth also goes out
of its way to help teens succeed.
It donates scholarships to make
college a bit more accessible. It
provides after school tutoring for
middle and high school
s tudents.
In an area of Costa Mesa that
people constantly ask the City
Council to improve, Save Our
Youth is doing just that. It's
working hard on a labor of love
to enable those living on the
Westside to succeed. It's
providing something that might
otherwise not be available.
Save Our Youth should serve
as an example not ortly to other
nonprofits, but also to the
various naysayers who claim
that Westside nonprofits ortly
attract illegal immigrants and,
thus, raise the crime rates.
It seems Save Our Youth aims
to do quite the opposite: lower
crime rates by reducing gang
membership. Perhaps those who
criticize the city's nonprofits
should do a little less arguing
and a little more volunteering.
Save Our Youth and those who
use the center would welcome
the help -and benefit from it.
THE LAST WORD
Seeing a better film fest
0 ne of the documentaries
Jn this year's Newport
Beach Film Festival,
.. Windows of the Soul" by Joao
Jardim and Walter Carvalho,
provided viewers with different
artists' and educators' musings
on what sight is.
In its own way the festtvoJ
also tackles that issue, the issue
of what it means to see. The
festJval provided It.a audience
\ff th more than 300 wlndC1wl to
the waildr811 owr the oowse of
nine days.
From •MfRndi. to •smau
Voice1/' the ft1mt In thla year'•
featlftl J>rovld.ed Newport
Beach lndmate loob If other
cultww and into the mJnck
and imaginations of the
featured filmmakers. Audiences
were invited to see the world
from myriad points of view in
hopes that those perspectives
might not only entertain, but
educate.
We were able to momentarily
aee what the creators taw, what
the world looks llke through
their window of tl~t.
Consratulations to the cast
and~ of the films that were
awaided prlzel at thU year's
event. The fetdvala' orp.nlzen
8nd wlunteen, led by~
SdtWenk. are~ better ~~year· dneloplnc What ls
qUictly becolnlng one of the
area's~ ennual event.a.
BOLTON .
--..
COMMUNITY COMMENTARY . • ,
Yips on helping keep kids safe
-a>m>R'S NOTE: Thia is the second of
four commentaries that wiU "'" lo April,
which i• child abuse prevention mooth.
The final two will run on the next
Thundeys. Joho J. Collins it director of
OOOlmUllit'( progrema for Childhelp USA.
• C°"8 Meu-besed nonprofit that wortcs
for the prevent loo and treatrrient of child
abuee.
John J. Collins
T his week's colwnn bas serleraJ
and spedfic child abuse
· prevention ideas. Keep this in
mind as )'OU read: 909' of people who
abuse children are la.lawn to the child.
and the average chiJd abuee victim
age .is between 8 aod 11 years old.
Begin your safety Claioing early.
Know where your chUd is at all
dmea. Be familiar With their frJends
and dally activities.
Be eensitive to changes in )'OU1'
child's behavior. they may be a signal
that }Otlabould sit down and talk to
your child about what cau&ed the
changes.
Be alert to a~ or adult who
is paying an unusual amount of:
attention to your child or gtving them
Joappopdate or expen8ive gUti.
1each your cbild to trust their own
f'eeltnga, and 8S8W'e lhem that they
hiVe the right to uy •no• to what
they sense is wrong.
UsteD catefully to your chDdren's
lean, and be supportive in all your
dieomions With them.
Thach your child that no one
lhould ~them or touch
them In a way chat rDabl diem feet
uDcomfortable. If eomeone doeS.
the)' aboukt tell you frrUnedfat~
The N8donil Center foi MJesin&
and f..lrplolted OUldren ........ t6e
~bale n.dei for tafecy be
~ to c:bUdreri:
M IOOll u poMblj all chDdrm
lladd mow thetr own .llilepboae DUmbei: mowhOWao rm, .... .,._..,.....,..at any 11me; mow
wbk:hnr..at~ IDc:all
when he1i> 11 m1111¢ mc1 mawwbo
llDd wbm ID -=cw auea ..... y
•Acea. 'Ill 11..aa dliey an Clll IU rmm.,_,........_.3
KQow1111dwdlhllell8
peGple wbO .... pbane
.., .. wry,. ....... ..,. dlld.
..... cllamWbb~dlld wbO -~ ...... -..... r ;1•• mmod ~1111?'-· bie ....-..i40"c•·~ ......... al~,.Wlid'*th
outforeach
others cb.ildren fl
important for
everyone's safety
and peace of
mhld.
"OW!Ck 6n;r"
tells your cb1Jd to
ask your
pertlllsRon to go
JohnJ.Colllns =~
with people they
know. This r;uJe not onJy beJps you to
know where )'OW' cblldreo are but
also provides you an opportunity to
restrict yaur child's movement to a
pla<le or with 80Dlebody that way not
be to your liking.·
The "buddy system" reminds
childl'eri to stick tosether with others
when tmy are out in public and
going to and from pWles. A child
with frle~ or family is less likely to
bea victim
Your child should Jeam tba1 it is
OK to say "no" to touchel that make
them feel uncomft>rtable. coi1fuled,
embarru&e4. or frigbt.erled. They
should be told to say "no" 8nd chen
"go .. and •te11• it they In! bothered by
an inappropriate touch bY tome0r1e.
No one should touch the pu:ta Of the
body aMftd ~the bidlbll IUk; nor
should anyone me -to be tOuched in thoee .,.., Their body ls tpeda1
and prtVate.
Somedmel c:hDdteo are tricbd
into~ !Oippopriate ~ a secret 01ildnm may not confide 1n
adU.lts beCaule they do not wmtto
"tattle" or bec:aUle they are dakl
their ~ts wlB be angry or wtD not
betiew theni;
J1eUe let your chOd mow lhai you
• u.ten to dM!ln ll lbeJ need to ...
)'OU about IOOMllbi•• lhit Dllde them uncOrnfol1lble. ........ yout
Child lbat )'OU wDI ~ -her/him no matter'wbllt happens.
<Mdm1 haW iruW~ feelU9 that help them-wben I ......... ~-............ ,..
cblkl .. uaComfoillbll mound.
peilon or doll not W .. ID a ..... pm..-......... ....
ro11mect.-=..Wllb~ Riil•• J'OUI: CilW ,.,.. •• ... _..~:.77ir~
8aiMdmll --....... ~ lidalll• P"*• ...,.,.. .... _11$' ••:not
~ ............. ,, ......
fJ a• • • fDGllll or .... ..mec1 ..................
1each children to never tell anyone ~
on the phone that they are home '
alooe. The child abould R!Sp<>nd by
saying, "My mother/father can't
co~ to the phone now. can J take a
~" rt is even better ii there is
an answedng macbioe and tbe
chlkhen learn bow to screen the
calls.
Thach children never to answer the
door when borne alone.
D!acb children what to do ii they
are separated from their parencs
while shopping. They should never
leave the store you were in and go to
the nearest cash register and uk for
help. OlJklren should ~go into
the paddng Jot to look for their a
puent's car.
No one should be asking them for
din:ctions or to look for a *lost
puppy"' or telYrag them thal t:betr
mother or father is iri trOOble and
that he will tab b1mlber to them -
m:nember to "cbedc flnt."
"' •
• •
•
••
U' IOmeone tries to tab chem
IOroewhere by forte. quiddy get~ ...
from him or her and yell or scream.
1bb mill ia trying to take me away" ~
or "1lUs person is not my father lor
mother)."
Don't~the
personalization of a child~ clothing
or~ 8elng Ible to klentlfy a
child bY name ii the first step ln
maldng contact with a cbiJd that an
ab<h.tctor Joob fo& Instead. If pam>CS
must identify dW child'• things, oo
it In a place that isn't readilY \lislble,
IUr.e the inlide of a lunch bol. the
Inside of a bad:pM:k or the inllde
collar ot a lhlrt.
n.cti c:blldreo to always crate a
J)hY*aJ dlatance berween
therb8elves and aomeone they doO'I
bJOw. rt they are approaChed. teach
them to *1MI bd Ind be lady to
-
• •
I .
-HOW TO CONTACT YOUR REPRESENTATIVES
Cf1'Y Of. COSTA MESA
Costa MeN City Hett, n Fair Drive, ea.ta
M .... CA 82$28, (714) 764-6223
Ma,of: ICaten Aobfoton
CouM1: Ubbv Cowen, Allen Maneoor,
Gary MOnehan end Q'll1a St.I
CfTY Of. NEWPORT BUCH
N.wpott BMdl CllV Haft, 3300 NeYfl)Ort
8M1., Newport Beed\, CA 82t63, (948)
M43309
· ~ 8'lwe Bromberg
COundt Gary Adame, John tWflemen,
Didl Nkh>l1, Gary Proctor, Tod Ridgewey
end Don Webb
OU.-COUNTY FAIR
88 Ftdr onv.. ~Mete; CA 92628.
(714) 709-AAIA .... ""'°'"'Au* A. Smith, \1Ce Pr-.klent,...,.. \MllqUe&, AendV .
Smhh, Emllv S.rifofd. ,.._Held,
J*"91 Batid\, ~Cerone, LM91e A.
Ray Ind Ff'ank ~
·-~---~-----~---...... ~--___ ;.._,_,,,..-..,_
" STATE SENATE ·•
Rola Johneon (A), 35th Dtstrict, 18662 ::
MecA.rthur BMS., Suite 396, Irvine, CA ..
92715. , .. , 833-0180; fax: (M8)
833-0ele; ,,_. sec:ntery PM Joyce ·:
(918)323-1200 •
" . ..,
••
(
BIO
Age: 17
School: Senior at Costa Mesa High.
,where she competes in tradt and field,
and also plays volleyball and soccer
ChoMf'I ~:Cal Poly San Luis
Obispo, where she will play soccer and
compete In tradt and field
FORUM 54may, ~ J 3, 2003 At
S£AN l-IU.ER I DM.Y Pl.OT
Chosen m.p: Kinesiology
Helght5-8
Family: Father Eugene; mbther Yolanda;
brother Louis; sister Jasmin
Hobbies: Soccer outside of sdlool;
shopping; computer; basketball Raising the bar
OFF SEASON
'After the season was
over last year, I
jumped over a couple
of my friends, but
they 're only about 5
feet tall.'
Costa Mesa High senior and track star Sha_ron Day talks about breaking
the county high junip record and hopes to do it again
ADVICE
FROM MOM
'Just enjoy yourself
Have fun. When you
run track and field
and you compete
really well, you get to
travel and see the
world. So it's an
opportunity she can't
pass up.'
c osta Mesa High senior
SharOn Day set an
Orange County record
in the high jump April
5 with a 6-2 jump at
the Trabuco Hills Track and Field
Invitatio nal and won first at the
Arcadia Invitational on Saturday.
She tried 6-41/•, as weU, in order to
break the national record, but it
didn't work out.
But Day now has her eyes set on
higher heights and has been invited
to partake in other much larger
trade and field events. An all-around
athlete. Day also plays soccer a."ld
volleyball at the high school and
runs in several other events in track.
Wednesday, Oty Editor James
Meler interviewed Day and her
mother, fellow high-jumper Yolanda
Day, at their Costa Mesa home
about her record and the ones to
come.
Well. my mom and dad and brother
have all done so I thought I'd just give it
a shot in seventh-grade trade..
And ol all dl09e family memben,
whn the moet saacx:c•lulf
Either my mom or day. in terms of
You reached 6-2 on Satw-day and
your previous best was 5-11 . Old you
expect to break the~ County
ream! on that particular dayT
Sharon Day: No, not at all. I just went
in on Saturday hoping to jump well. not
really having a height goal.
Was there any point before you
jumped 6-2 that )'OU thought you
could do lt1
Yeah. after my jumps at 5~ and 5-8, I
felt really good And also my jump over
6 feet. I felt like I was getting really high.
so I thought I could do it.
And then )'OU tried 6-414. Thb Is
probably my ignorance, but why not
6-3 or 6-4 OatT
Because 6-4 l-; the nanonal record, so •
6-411. would beat 1t.
Yolanda Day: The more you jump.
the more tired you become so go for it
I'm not sure. When I was actually
jumping. my jumps weren't too great
What's the oat height for youf Is h
6-41/tt
We'll see how I feel the next time I'm
jumping_
Wow. Are you ready for all of this?
I think so. if I keep jumping well.
So do you Jump OYft' famly
members and friends for p....::lb at am
(Laughing) After the season was over
Yolanda Olly: ~ enjoy yourself.
Have fun. When you run track. and field
and you compete really well. you get to
travel and see the world. So it's an
opportunity she can't ~ up.
last year, I jumped over a couple of my Out of the "'° ...-IOtUI' md
Iii.ends, but they're only about 5 feet tall. track, wtddJ do you W1lllt to fake
Yeah.
About 5-8, I think.
So I lhouldn't 88k you to jump owr
met Just bl case.
[Laughing) No.
You obvlomly do weD bl the high
Jump, but )'O'ire alilo In llM!l1ll ocher
eYmb, lrdud ... the 200 and 800
IDden and the l,80CHneett ..,,. Are
theft any others?
Usually the 400 is my primary
running event. but this year. trs been the
200, and it probably will be the rest of
the season.
Whkh do you .,.....
High jump.
fur1hesf
I haven't really thought about it too
much. I think it'd be easier to take track
fwther. But either way ~ fine by me.
Would you bmve cbougbt 11.i .....
ago!
Yeah. I still feel the same.
Yolanda Olly: How about a year ago?
What were you JmnPng a,,,_. ..,r
At~ time, 5-10.
Yolmda Day: She had more confident
in her socrer than in her track became
she's been playing soccer since about
third grade aod jusl started track in
seYentb grade.
So bow do you pt .... lit the .....
Jumpf Do you keep I**, .. •c or do
)'OU bmve IO do a lot al mmde
ht ....
being known in the United States. So what baa happened to you ahxe
breaking the 0nmp County recordf A Who do you look up to In tmm ol
lot~ pm 00 the lw:k from JOID' 11-.:k md fleld lnipbaduof
I really don't do auy type al weight
training. I do drills and stld lib that.
Like hwdle jumps and pop-up drills.
And who baa Jumped the hlgbeltT
My dad
And bow blgbT
Yolimda Day: He claims he jumped 7
feet. but I've seen him jump 6-8.
Queatonb• ti.. atra four lnchest
YollllOda Day: l haven' seen him jump
7 feet. but he says he bas.
daMmataf Any other ema at•a•lk>of
Yeah. everybody at school is saying
congrarulations and good job. And
some of my elementary school teachers
saw the article and others saw it too and
said c:ongrarulations and sent cards.
Ob yeah. I got invited to the
GokJenwest Invitational and the Adidas
Outdoor Ownpionships in North
Carolina. And that person abo said I
could go to the Junior Natiooa.b and
then the Pan Am games in Jwie and July.
FROM THE NEWSROOM
I guess I'd have to say my parents.
They've ran and jumped and done well
And lt't • ..., ....,. with JOID'
QIOID rtgbt here.
\blmda Day: [laughing! She didn'
ha~ to say that.
Whlll\ 1he hW-t )'OU ........
\tlilnla Day. I jumped 6-1 ~
Wlllll me~ dr9d
You run up the bleachers and then
pop otr )'OlU' plant leg. 0r like i>OPl*c
olf a box ro do pop-up driDs irito-tbe pit.
And ewo llMqbtn ........ ,_,...
PDl*c•••d.mdln~ =yodre ...... bd--II
Yeah. it .. bu8d JOUt Clllws and
leg auqth. Allo. lpinl WOik ~
Robinson left an indelible mark on the Back Bay
F rank Robinson'• death this
week made me 8aah back
to the ftnt tlme I met thia
dwmlng gentleman.
It was summer of 1992. I wu
a wide-eyed reporter and be
WU long a legend with the
monlter •GoctfalMf of the Batt
Ba)\"
l didn't know It then. but DOW
I'd wntunt to gueu dW the
tnWonmeoial fights Frank
Rotimlon Ind bill wtle. PnD..
cootupt.alhl .... lllOI..-.
dellllopmmt-lbe ~
to GI'-· ilnd .. dw odwr -......................
the four decedel .ux:e.
TONY
DODERO
lwu
meeting
Robtnaon
that day after
be called to
discusa what
bebellewd
wuanother
menace that
tbre.tened
the priltlne
andnacwi.I
teCttnp olhll
belo'9d
... , ••• Muary-bk)'dbU.
Or IO be ..,edftc. .......
.. ,. ....... Beet Bey Oriwe..
IDbloloa WM cont'emed that
.8a.ck Bay Drive had become a
raceway on the weekends. u
biker after biker tiaed the
twisting, icenlc route to prepare
fo1' the Tuu.r de France or
aomething.
Roblnlon propoaed Wt the
tpeed limit on Bac:t Bay Drive
bl lowered from 25 mph to IS
mph for all Wlblda, to Jlow
people down. But he klleW he
had-• ft&ht on his hanch. maybe not• a,. 11 the laht benwcn
he and dw IMne co. a.is the
,... of the ........ Newport Bey,
but ....... noneO-....
•BlcJdllca W91tl the'* (0
lbe ~•he told me a
lat.11'10TNI alQll
lWlfammDll ......
He.. wwa-irCONti&*t °" ,_ CIO:JS 1U4
pti gQ I J'lfht ,,. .._
,,. 0 '"'
2
1 ....... 1 ~,_.am I,,, • .._,
IO ....... OllNl ... h ·--... ... .......... Ill ..... _. .....
s2, • I •· ... uz •• 7 • ....._, ...... ..,
IL.iC.. .... Qt.~
JOO
Open House Sunday l...fpm
8ayfront estac. with 360 ct.,,.. views.
Prtvac. dock. .. bd. .. ba.
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Open House Sunday I ...fpm
Toal remodel Ub new. Spacious yard.
Gorgeous kitchen.
Jeff Jones 949.711.2715
949.644-9060
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........ 9UC:N tu$.: .. .... _,MMe Gft I 'lfl lot, DcAswlllaln _._ ..... ..._,room..,. boNll.~SoW ...
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Oceanfront-Balboa Peninsula Point. Best
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sunset views.
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The best on Balboa Island. Bepnt custom
home approx. 7 years old features vanfte
counters. maple cabinets, lime.st.one ftoors.
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EASTau••
Of>en House Sunday I ...fpm
Your own ~ worid In a custom expansion
on a vast view locadon.
CobJWwcl t4t.75t.l724
SHADY CANYON u .tts.ooe
Spectacular custom. home with wonderful
panoramic Shady Canron views.
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IWPOaT COAST $t,IH ....
Gorpous Newport Coast esma with 5 bd.
lndudlns sepnte iuest ~ pooUspa and
OGUl'I vt.o#.
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llVI E naaa.cE. SMS .... Oelf&hdul Irvine Ten-ace f'9mOdel under
$1,000,000. Tumby. 3.5 be. .
JohnRIG t49.'44.1600
........
NLCOUIR' KILL Open HocJSe Sunday ,...,,,,,
~sunsets and Catalina views.
l bd. 2.5 ba. plus den.
&chel' Rne 949.717.47'4
•AL&OA fSLAND u .ns.oo.
Location, loc:adon. Hl=rlc IWboe Island home
locamd on the nU'I ch9nnel on the Uaie Island.
949.444.9060
ULaOA 151.AND $ l 699 ,HO
6 bd. 3 ba. home on O\'WStad lot on quiet end °' the littfe lsbnd. Remodel Of' bulJd '°"'"
dram home.
949.644.9060
t49.'44.f060
Mt.717.4741
•
.. ,.
• • • -.
'
• it
I t
' .
-
QUOTE OF ntE DAY
"Any time I can beat the
(John) Emme dynasty,
it's big."
Joel Dequln, Newport
Harbor baseball coach
Sporta Editor Roger Carlson • 19491574--4223 • Sports Fax: 19491650-0170
PRIDE OF THE COAST TOURNAMENT
Cantareii·~ sav~s Sail.o~s' day
Newport Harbor pitcher
wiggles out of ro ugh
spots as Tars defeat
CdM, 5-4.
Rlch•rd Dunn
Dally Piiot
CORONA DEL MAR -Baseball
weather couldn't get any better Satur·
day and neither could the suspense.
On par with some of the storied
Back Bay athletic con1ests of yester·
year. Newport Harbor High's Sailors es·
caped with a 5·4 victory over host Co·
rona del Mar in the first round of the
Pride of the Coast Tournament.
As in moit any case on the diamond,
pitching decided the outcome, the
Sailors' first win over the Sea Kings
since 1999, a year
CdM captured a
SCORE80MD ClF Southern Sec-
tion ntle. So
•
maybe there's
something more
10 this as far as
the Sea Kings are
concerned.
Working out of
Newport 5 jams often wins
CdM 4 games for pitch·
ers. And. while
that was the state
of affairs for Newport Harl>or junior
nght-hander Joe CAmtarella. it can be
damaging for a hurler to keep an in·
ning's door open following a two-out
solo home run.
Corona del Mar (8-5), the Pacific
Coast League leader entering ~pring
break. jwnped on Newport I larbor
with three runs in the flfSl inning. but
the offensive fun stopped there. The
Sailors used one big inning -the
fourth -lo score five runs.
After CdM's around-the-horn mfield
turned a double play. Newport Harbor
1uruor Karo Makserjian cleared the
com er in left field for a solo home run
to end CdM starter Griffin Duro..er's
shutout bid. R J. Muller opened the
fo urth inning by ending Dunzer's no-
hit attempt
But following Makserjian's home run
to cut CdM's lead to 3-1, Newport Har-
bor cleanup hin er Ryan Torrey walked.
INSIDE
•Estancia faHs rn first round. Page 82.
then Ryan Rowe was hit by a pitch to
put the tying run aboard.
CAmtarella. whose sparking relief ef·
fon would eventually earn him the
save, singled to left to plate Torrey,
then Dave Erickson reached safely on
a bobbled infield grounder. a play that
scored Rowe lo ue the game. A wild
pitch sent Ericlcson to second, putting
two runners in sconng position. What
followed was seruor Nick.Sacco's dou-
ble to left field to score both runners
and give the visitors a 5·3 lead.
It was Sacco in the second inning
who did the spUts at first base while
scooping up a throw in the din from
See TARS. P•1e 83
Newport Harbor catcher JeH
Sanchez and pitcher Joey
Cantarella. above. congratulate
each other after getting out of the
sixth inning and holding Corona del
Mar to one ru n m the mnmg.
Cantarella. left, delivers a pitch to
Corona del Mar en route to its 5-4
win an the Pride of the Coast
Tournament on Saturday. The Sailors
will play Dana Hills m the
champ1onsh1p quarterfinals Monday
at home at 11 a.m.
PHOTOSB• lfVf. McCRANK DAtlYPILOT
Mustangs show progress desp ite lo ss
Double play ends Costa
Mesa's comeback hopes in
the sixth as Carlsba d ho lds
on for 2-1 win.
Steve Vlr1en
Dally Pilot
Ille Mu.,tangs 16-8) had dropped two
(,olden West League game<> earlier in the
w(•ck, inc.luding a 7·5 lo~ to Santa Ana Fri-
day. ( .osta Me'><I also lo!>t 9·J at WeslJTUnster
Wt•dne-.day. when Deats said, "that might
havt• heen our wo.-...t effon of the year"
COSTA MESA -After losing a 2-1 game to
Carlsbad. it would seem logical that the
Costa Mesa Htgh baseball team would be
Car1sbad 2
Costa Mesa 1
But that wa:. not the case for Mesa Satur·
day, as Costa M~ opened tl1e game with a
1-0 lead The Mu,tangs were the ·V1S1ung·
team rn the tournament game. Seruor Nate
Hunter ll-d off with a single, and senior
Adam llt'ltr.tn followed with a double. Senior
feeling regret instead. the Mustangs were experiencing
progress. That's how the 2003 season is for the Mus-
tangs, a year of game-by-game. play-by-play apprecia-
tion for Improvement.
SENf HUER I OM.Y Pt.OT
Costa Mesa's Robert Rodriguez, bottom,
coftides with Cartsbads Brandon McClung at
third base on Saturday.
·1 was pleased with the way (we) played.· said Mesa
Coach Doug Deats. whose team lost its first-round
game in the Pride of the Coast Tournament Saturday at
Costa Mesa. •That was a good game. We just came out
on the wrong ide of it We played well ln alJ phases. I
have no complaints at all.·
CATCHING UP WITH
Mike Barga~
A fixture in the weight room , coach bleeds Sailor blue.
Bryce Alderton
~lty Piiot
•
football tradition at Newport Harbor. and
a.spa aaid even lf a head coachlna ofter
wece to arise. he would de6nttely th1nlt
twtce abOut leaving.
•tqya1ty hdped mo get my Job and J ri I
Like J CJWt: (Newport) something,,. ~
Mk1. "It mam It IO much bett r to get
advice from somebody and modify a woatout to
achiew SUCcel& ..
Newport hu had its share oC IUCce9I, winnlng
OF cbampk>nahipl and See VJeW l.eqlie dtle lri
1994 and 1999. while~ to a QF 8nal b>
1992 and 2000.
Though he malnly advieel (ootbeJJ playen.
Dan AnJer earned an RBI after tus r.acrifice
Oy. sconng Hunter and pro,1dmg the Mustangs with
the 1-0 advantagl'
The IAnce.-... (7 5) 'rnred one unearned run m the
bottom of the 'K'rnnd inning to tie the score. and then
went ahead after three straight walks and a hit by pitch
in the founh to gain the 2-1 edge. Sophomore catcher
Brandon McOung. who walked. scored on a throwing
error am1d a p1clcofT attempt m lhe bottom of the sec-
See MUSTANGS, Pqe 83
EYE OPENER
·Datly~Ptb
Spor111 ltd o( ~ ·-•;tU..
Ao<• 14 honofH
TOOD KATOVISCH
Sunday, AQr'tl I 3. 2003 Bl
HIGH SCHOOL
TRACK AND FIELD
Mesa's Day .
establishes
Arcadia mark
Costa Mesa senio r
wins girl s h igh jump
with clearance of
5 feet, l 0 inches at
Arcadia Invitational.
ARCADIA -Winning an mdJVJdudl
title m the A1tad1a lm1tat11mcll ,.., pre<>u
giou'>. but apparently tlwt d1dn"1 total!}
satisfy Sharon I>ay.
Day. the Co'>ta Mesa Htgh ~mor who
is the Orange County and CIF Southern
Section rernrd holder in the high Jump,
won the high 1ump with a 5-foot I 0
inch clearance at the Arcadia lnV11<t·
tional 'Saturday 111ght. Ho\.'\ever. Da}
who cleared 6-L tu '>et lhe recorili. and
win a title at the frabuco I lilb lnvllil
tional last \.'I.Cd ... \.'\J.Olt:'d more.
·1 gue~ Im hap!'} wnh m\ overcLIJ
performance." !>illd Day. lilt' Cff Stall'
defending champion m the high 1wnµ.
"I still won. but I feel hkl• I ~hould havt•
been able to gt•t at lca'>t 'I).. feet I JU't
didn't have 11 ruday"
Freshman I >t·,irt•e (,omJer of Stock
dale fm1~hed wcond (5· IOJ, wlu.le La.Sh
ay Bagsby of ~oulh Baker,field took
third 15 41 Ine Artad1a lm11auonal re
cord m the high 1ump 1' '>IX feet m the
high )Ump
"IDay1 cllmo..i got over '>llC ft"l't, but 11
looked like sht> wa'> thmlmg about It too
much.· said l-ugene Day, Shcl!ons father
and lhe Costa Me-.a iump-. coach.
Sharon Day hit the bar at every height
on her first attempt. and that played
with her mind. '"a little bit." when she
tried to dear six feet, the Costa Mesa
senior said.
"I felt I could have gone higher." she
said. ·rm not completl'ly satisfied.·
last year, the 6-foot clearance W&
elusive for Sharon Day She won the
state title with a 5-11 mark. but ne\ier
reached her goal. But then came Apnl 5,
when Lhe (.O'>ta Mesa -.enior cleared 6-2
and set a new 'ilandard nor only for the
CIF Southern Section, but for her!!el!.
·11 set a high standard for me to lc.eep
for the rest of the ..ea'>On, • she "'lid. ·I
want to just keep 1umpmg higher
Day will compete m the high 1ump in
the Mount SA( lnV11auonaJ. Fnday
Meanwtule. Corona del \1ar en,ayed a
rather succe-.sful da} m the "open" por·
oon of the Arcadia lnvnational a'
everyone who competed for lhe Sea
Kings "got a taste" of a per.anal or re
lay-team record. C dM Coach Bill Sum·
ner said.
Junior Olri~ Ringstrom set a personal
record in the 400 me1ers in 49.64. as he
finished lhlrd. His previous best was
49. 76 and.his rune Saturday l.li still at No.
2 for the fastest time m Orange County
this season.
·He led the race for about 200 me·
ters. • Sumner !.aid of Ringstrom. "With
about 40 meters to go he was passed by
two other runners. He staned out hard.
He was flymg. •
CdM freshman ~ St. Geme con·
tinued her impressive progression With
a PR in the 1,600 in 5:07.n and finished
second. Her previous best was 5:10, but
she produced an electrifying race-end·
ing ldd to movt> from fifth to second
and earned a new personal record.
"She had a huge kkk. a beautiful Jcick
See DAY. Pac• B2
Blrgu blia beiUr1 ~ memben oft.he
voUtyblD &eamll. ~at e.rty u 8 a..m.
bdol9 he ttroo. to hie cf11 ll1>0m on the llWbor
campm to tad> Mallh. .. *10 /llM.'tPl.Ol
....... ,... a Fomw Slilars' footbll ~-. ~ ~ nawit his 1219 ~of cOICMWll..., iport Hirti&
I
IZ S&#'ldlY, Apt 13. 2003 SPORTS
PRIDE OF THE COAST TOURNAMENT COLLEGE TRACK AND FIELD
Estancia shut out in first round UCl's Turp,n,
Pacifica hurler
Mulkern tosses
two-hit gem to lead
Mariners to 12th
straight win.
GARDEN GROVE -Pad6ca
High senior pitcher Drew Mulk-
ern had • perfect game going
through ~ Jnn1np and he On-
t.shed with a two-hitter to lift the
JC BASEBALL
Pirates
comes up
short
With two games left
in the season,
Cypress hands
visiting Orange Coast
Co llege a 6-4
conference setback.
CYPRESS -The Orange Coast
College baseball team collected
10 hits, but lost, 6-3, in an
Orange Empire Conference
game against host Cypress Satur-
day.
The Chargers bad 11 hits. OCC
dropped to 15-16-1 , 7-12 in con-
ference play.
"We just didn't get timely hits,•
Pirates Coach John Altobelli said.
"We bad bases loaded a couple
times, and just didn't do any-
lhing. This team Is capable of
malting a strong run. and we
need to do that to make the play-
offs..•
OCC sophomore Ryan Mathes
.. slugged a two-run home run in
the eigbth to pull the deficit to
5-3, but the Pirates could not
compete the comebaclc.
Coast retum.5 to action in the
College of the Sequoias Tourna-
ment Wednesday through Friday.
The Pirates will close out the
rqular season against Fullerton,
April 24 at OCC and April 26 at
Fullerton.
<>r.,,.. Empire Col .......
cwr-.. a.-. Coest 3
DCC ~~~-JlOO
Cyp<ea no mo "• -• n 3 Treece, Jott0900 (8), Farin (8) and
Hides. Varv-. Our11ngo (9) and
HuKina. W -Vargas. L-Treece. 28 -
Mill« (OCC). Vargas (C). HR -Mdlel
(DCC), Garcl1 (C).
Marinen put F.standa In • Pride ot the Coast 'lbwnament flrst-
rou.nd game at Pacifica Saturday.
Mulkern struck out ftve with
no waJb, while Estancia bad two
baaenmners in the game and
oone advanced to second base.
Padflca (12--0) scored four runs
in the first two lnnlnp, playing
as the "VI.siting" team, and never
loobd bac.k.
With two out in the fifth ~
ning, Estancia junior Matt Roil·
quillo reached on a bunt, but
Mulkern got the next battei out. In
the bottom of the 8eYt!lltb Inning.
F.standa junior a.dlen Qom sin-
gled £or the F.agles' final hit.
'fyler Hoffina.n. the P.agles' jun-
ior pitcher, turned in a complete
game that came with five strike-
outs. He scattered seven bits and
allowed three earned runs.
P.stancla (3-11). will return to
action in the Pride of the Coast
Tournament Monday at 2 p.m. at . .
. COLLEGE BRIEFS
P.standa. where the ~ wfU
tab on the Los Ami~
loser. Estancia bas lost twice In
as many meetings with Lot Ami-
gos this season.
Pnde olh C...TOWMl'IWll
Rratround
P8CMca 7. &ande 0
Pacifk:e ~by~ -7 • 0 Estancia ooo ooo o -o 2 s
Mulkern and Lum; Hoffman and
Crom. W-Mulkern. L -Hoffman, 2-2.
Stanford sweeps UCI
• MEN'S \IOU.EY&\U.: Stan-
ford's men's volleyball team,
ranked No. 10 in the nation. de-
feated host UC Irvine Saturday
night at Crawford Hall. 30-27, 30-
27, 32-30, in a Mountain Pacific
Sports Federation match. , ua·s Jimmy Pelzel led all play-
ers with 16 ld.l1s, while Irvine's
Monte Tucker bad a double-dou-
ble with 14 kills and 12 digs. The
Anteaters fell to 19-10, 12-10 in
MPSF play, while Stanford im-
proved to 17-11, 14-8.
Cwt Toppel led Stanford with
14 kills. while Paul Bocage added
13 and William Strickland 10.
Kevin Hansen, a former Corona
del Mar High standout. ~rded
50 as.sists and chipped in with a
team-high eight dip.
In the first game. Stanford led.
28-27, and dosed out the game
on kills by Sttickland and Toppel
In a riveting third game, Stan-
ford led. 24-19, but the Anteaters
rallied to tie it at 25. The teams
ttaded points to get to 30-30.
William Curtis pounded a ball
for match point and Hansen's
solo block gave the Cardinal the
match.
Lions swept by Azusa
• BASBBALL: Vanguard Uni-
versity Jost its 2-0 lead after six
innings and visiting Azusa Pa-
d.fie rallied for a 3-2 baseball
victory to close out a sweep in a
Golden State Athletic Confer-
ence doubleheader Saturday.
Vanguard (21-22, 10-12 in the
GSAC} lost in the opener, as
APU {20-15, 15-9) scored five
runs in the second inning en
route to an 8-3 win. KaJeo Lo-
pez pitched a complete garoe
for the Uons, striking out nine
while allowing five earned runs
on 12 hits.
~ ~ MtHtk Confwence
Flntpme
Azuu Padflc I , V.nguard 3
Score by Innings
HAPPY BIRTHDAY
Celebratiw the Daly Pilot's
Athlete ofthe Weelc series
I 11 I I 1 I
TODAY •
21 -Sean Fenton
Corona del Mar
Tradl, '00
23 -Kyle McNichol•
Newport Hart>or
Softball, '98
26 -Heather Rogers
SoCal College
Softbell, '98
SAl\JRDAY
18-Roa Slnd1ir
Newport Hart>or
Water polo, '02
A.zuaa 051 002 ooo -a 12 o
Vanguard ooo 021 ooo -l 1 o
Alatot, Bitonti (7), Dzama (9) and
H11ker: Lopez and Bower. W -
Alatot, 3-1. L -Lopez, 6-2. 28-
Mercado (APU), Marcoa (APU) 2,
Dzama (APU). Sautner (APU),
Millward (V). Seeondpme
AzuN Paetflc 31 Vanguard 2 Seo,. bv Innings A.zu SI 000 boo 2<H -3 10 1
Vanguard 020 ooo ooo -2 5 o
Clark. Dzama (7) and Haeker; Harris
and Westerfeld. W -Clart. J.1; L -
Harri1, 3-6. 28 -Dzama (APU),
Radonlcn (APU), Tiathammer IV).
Lions left with 3 losses
• SOFI'BA.U..: The Vanguard
softball team came within one
run of defeating Point Loma
Nazarene, ranked No. 3 in the
NA.I.A. but lost, 7 -6, Saturday in
a game that was continued
from suspended action Feb. 18.
The Lions (22-21·1, 9-15 in
the Golden State Athletic Con-
ference) al o lost their double-
header with host Point Loma
COLLEGE BASEBALL
Nazarene, the first-place team
of the GSAC. Point Loma won,
5-3, and then 5-2.
Vanguard came back from a
3-1 deficit to tie the game 4-.4,
but the game was called after
seveo innings because of dark-
ness Feb. 18. Theo on Saturday,
Vanguard went three more in-
nings with the Crusaders. who
scored two runs In the top of
the 10th Inning to win.
Pt. Lo:.S:.~uard S Score bv Inn s
Vanguard 002 'loo -3 e 3
Pt. Loma 002 300 • -5 t 3
Biii and Rolle; Ludlow and Field. W
-Ludlow. L -Ball. 28 -Bold Ing
(PLN), Rapoza (PLN). Ludlow (PLN).
Pt.=.~ ~::e;•rd 2 Score by Inn s
Vanguard ooo 100 2 e l
Pt. Loma ooo 140 • & 5 1
JeSMn, C.manllo (5), Biii (6) and
Rolle; Vandervoort and Field. W -
Vandervoort. L-Jessen. 28 -Mauro
IV). C.marillo (VI. Smidt IV).
Thtrd pme (continued from
Feb. 11, 1t Vanguard)
Pt. Loma 7. Yaniluard 6
5oof9 bv lnnTnge Pt. Loma 200 061 110 2 7 ll 1
V'guard ooo 100 310 1 • 11 J
Vandervoort, Ludlow (71 and
Bolding; Keltner and Rolle W -
Ludlow. L -Keltner.
Tl)une and Meyer
runners-up at APU
• TRACK 11 Pl.ELD: Fresh-
man Matt Meyer and sopho-
more Jenny Thune finished sec-
ond in their respe<:tive races,
representing the Vanguard Uni-
versity men's and women's track
and field teaDJS in the Meet of
Oiampions at Azusa Pacific Sat-
urday.
Meyer took second in the
1500 meters (3:58.51). while
Thune was se<:ond in the 800
{2:20.60). Thune also finished
third in the 1500 in 4:47.21. a
personal best.
Anteaters answer with 7-1 win o ver No. 10 Long Beach St.
ANTEATER BAUJ>ARIC -UC
Irvine dusted olf it.a 9-4 loss to No.
10 Long Beach State Friday and
came back with a raounding 7-1
victory to de a Big West Conftt-
e:ooe basebeD 8eJies in front of 733
at Anteeter Ballput Satmday .
Sophomore pftcher ~ Smith
stepped up with a brilliant per-
fonnance and WM bracbd up by
DAY
Continued from Bl
(or a freshman," Sumner said.
"That's eomething you can't teach..
Sumner also said he has a,
"controlled excitement,"
when be th1nb of St. Geme'•
potentJaJ. The freshman
aeema to be on the fut tract
1oward atardom, yet Sumner
retu.aea to dlaplay excitement
about bet untU ahe truly dla-
coven Mr apeclaJty event.
•rm not golng to get too ex-
cited until I know what ebo
wanta to race," Sumner said.
·she hu picked her .vent,
a.ad wt Ub for our kida to
pick thdr event. She hHn't
NO tbe (3,200J, to l don't
~fromBl
an efl'ecdve offense that collected
ll bits, and a four-run fourth in-
ning that put the Anteaters in
control Smith struck out five.
scattered six hits and allowed one
nm in eight inninp. Smith lm-
pnM'J(i to 7-1 on the season.
Second baseman Matt IWler led
the Anr.ea1e£ offense with a 3-for-4
~ while~ hit-
know what she'll be able to
do. Right now I'm still learn-
ing about her.•
Junior Kevin Artz, junior
Brandon Borcoman, senior
Matt Morris and Riogstrom
bettered their own time in the
1,600 relay and finished In
3:25.4, good for second place
and the time 11 the second
futeit In Orange County this
aeuon.
l o the girls 1,600 relay, Jun-
ior Sara Outer, junior Whit-
ney Weidner, freahman Kelly
Morgan and sophomore Me-
liua Swigert came lo aecond
at •:Ol.49, which i1 tbelr beat
time and la second In Orange
County thJ• 1euoo, u well.
Swigert also competed In the
400 and flniabed thlrd
(59.!M).
ter Greg Wallis produced tM> RBis. ua imprOYed to 1s-21, 3-2 in the
Big West. while the "DU1bag;. ..
ranked No. 10 by BamlD America.
<bopped to 22-12. 3-2.
The Big West rubber game
starts today at J p.m., with Paul
French on the mound for UO and
C.esar Ramos pitching for Long
Beach.
---~ UC IMr'9 7. ~~St. 1
L 8eadl SC:~ --Z 1 e 2
UC IMne ooo «>O 30ll 1 n 2
l/\ilaeYer, Beu~ 161. Andrade (7),
Paz (8) end~; Smith, N"ICOll (9)
W -Smittl, 7-1. L-Weaveir, 7-3. 28 -
Devil (LB). 38 -Klemm IUCll Wagner
(UCll.
STEY£ McCRANI< I OAl.Y PlOT
Costa Mesa's Shalon Day clears 5-8 mark in the high jump, In
which she took fi'st in the Orange County Championships.
Saturday, she won first place aaain tt the Arcadia lnvltatk>nal.
Tozier win ~itles
at Cal/Nevada
SAN DIEGO -UC Irvine
claimed a pair or indJvidual titles
and both Anteater tmcl and field
teams turned In solid perform-
ances at the California/Nevada ~ampionships · that concluded
at San Diego State Saturday.
The UCI women's squad fin-
ished fifth of 22 teams with 48
polnta as host SDSU won the
litJe with 159. The Anteater
men placed sixth of 23 teams
with 46 points as UCLA ran
away with the team title with
214 points.
UO junior Annmarie Turpin
won the high jump with a sea-
son-best malt of 5-feet, 7Y.
inches. Senior teammate Jessica
Stafford finished second at 5-SV..
Stafford also finlshed ninth in
the javelin throw with a marlc of
128-0.
Sophomore Kaleena Yee fin-
ished second in the 5,000 meters
(17:46.46) and senior Wendy
Chan was fifth in the 800
(2:11.47).
Sophomore Suz..anne Pur-
mort finished fifth in the 400
hurdles in 61.27 for the sixth-
fastest time in Anteater history
and qualified for the NCM Re-
gional Cllampionships at Stan-
ford May 30-31.
Senior Cathy Picha placed
eighth in the 800 in 2: J 5.19 and
senior Amanda Armstrong was
eighth in the 1,500 (4:44.88).
ln the men's competition.
UCI senior DarreU To1Jer won
the 800 in I :50. 12 for the No. 8
time in UCI history and he also
qualifi es for the NCAA Regional
meet.
In other running events, UCl's
Tom Whelan (3:56.48), Ricky
Barnes (3:57.93). Andrew Gar-
ratt (3:58. l3) and David Santos
Curtis ranked
7th in nation
in po1e vault
ANfEATE.R STADIUM -
UC Irvine sophomore f.rin
Curtis has the seventh-best
pole vault mark in the
NC.AA Division I rankings as
she enters the California/
Nevada Champion.shJps at
San Diego State this week-
end.
Q.u1is brolce her own
school recortl with a vault of
I 3-2Y. (4.02 meters) in the
Big West Challenge OJp at
ua 1ast Saturday. That made
ranks third In the West Re-
gion. The national leadef' is
l-1orida Slate's Lacy Janson at
14-4 (4.37 meters).
(3:58.4 1) finibhed 4 -6· 7-8, re-
spectively in the 1,500.
Sophomore Kenny Vinh fin.
ished fifth in the 1I0 high hur-
dles ( J 5.12) and sophomore
Scott Jarvis wa:. fifth In the 400
hurdles (53.93).
In the field evenlS, Anteater
senior Santosh Swamidass
placed fifth in the high jump
(6-8), junior Michael Nguyen
was fifth in the long jump (21-
11) and sophomore Patrick Gro-
gan was eighth in the triple
jump at 46-4Y •.
Another busy week awaits
UCI as the Anteaters compete
in the Mt. San Antonio College
Helays Thursday through Satur-
day and in the Pomona College
Invitational Friday.
COLLEGE WATER POLO
'Eaters finish 2nd at
Long Beach tourney
LONG BEACH -Long Beach
State defeated UC Irvine. 12-7,
in college women's water polo
action Sarurday at 1he Long
Beach State Tournament.
The Anteaters got off tu a
slow stan. but came baclc to
score six goals in the second
half. The comeback. however,
would fall short as the 49ers
took first place in Group B for
the tournament. UCI finished
second. The Anteaters wiU face
UC San Diego and Arizona
State in matches against the
other two second-place finish-
ers.
Junior Rebecca Wedemeyer
scored twice for the Anteaters.
Angelica Garcia led all scorers
with four goals for Long Beach
State.
UCI will face the UC San Di-
ego at noon today and Arizona
State for the fourth time this
season at 2:40 p.m. at long
Beach. UCI has dropped two
matches to UCSD this year,
most recently a 7-6 overtime
game on March 9. The 'Eate('s
are 1-2 on the season against
the Sun Devils going into to-
day's game.
In earlier action, UCJ
The Anteaters defeated the
UC Santa Cruz Banana Slugs,
I 0-8. the 17th win of the season
for UCI as the Anteate rs set a
school record for wins In a sea-
son. Junior ertca Horman broke
her own school-record of 57
goals ln a sea.son. Horman with
two goals in the match now has
59 on the year. Junior Hilary
Horman and junJor Hrib Ranes
each scored two goals for UCJ
u the Anteaters held off the
Banana Slugs, who scored four
tfmes in the fourth quarter.
In th first pme, the Ant-
o~uon l~ngth program,
rook over the deftn.sl~ duties
Jut acason after spending nve
yem Huntington Beach
Hlgh's head coach. I le ls one or
the many coaches Bargu has
formed friendship with.
Running bub coach Bill
Brown and fi hman coach Joe
Urban are two olhera Barga.a
hlghUghttd u having a po tlve
lnJJuence on him.
•Bririkley and I will run
.Mondays.~ and
f\1dayl and we hang Out on tht
~IOf~melt" ....... woo~ to ride hlS ~ ...a INl enlo¥. IOOd niieilil.
......
eaters defeated the CaJ State
Northridge Matadors, 6-4, as
they took a 6-1 lead entering
the fourth quarter and held on
fo r their third win over the
Matadors this season. Wede-
meyer led UCI with two goals
in the match, while Horman
Lied her own school-record of
57 goals in a season with one
goal in the match.
Loni 8Hch St. 12, UC IMM 7
UClrvtne 1 0 J I -7
Lonalnch 2 5 2 J -12 UC1 ·Wedemeyer 2. r:.m1ndez 1,
Fri1h 1, Horman 1, Horman 1. Rines
1. S.v" -Ch1mblee 9.
LSSU • G1rcia 4, ~ 3,
St-art 2, C.mpbell 1, Gordin 1,
Vejar 1. Savea -H1wklns 7.
UClntne 10,UC ... Cnlll
UClrvlne 3 4 0 J -10 SamaCn.ia 1 2 1 4 -I
UC1 • Horman 2, Horman 2, Renes 2,
C.rey 1. F-eeney 1, Fernandez 1,
Lym1n 1. Sav• -Cti.mbtee 3.
UCSC • Erlklne 2, HanMn 2, Ryan 2,
Doerr 1. Forouhl 1. S.vee -Menlnu
11.
UC lrvlna 2 2 2 O -I
NOfthrid9e 1 0 0 J -4 UCI ·Wedemeyer 2. O'Donnell 1,
Volcan 1, Horman 1, Carey 1. S.v•
-Chamblee 9.
CSN • Chriatopher 3, Barba 1. S.vee
• Moody8.
SCHEDULE
~y a.-..
Col'-ge-Long e.acti Sa.te
et UC lrvfne, 1 p.m.
Spare time I not an eully
accessible commodJty for
Barg.as. but that can be •
attributed to t:iJJ ~ dotns.
When not ln the wetght room
ortn th cluaroom, c.he Cotta
M ft! ldtol can be found
attending othe-r Newport
portJns even.ti and wOJ
oc lonalty ~n attend 1 ~
-1 utr co watch water ~to.
1Wimtnln8 and other thlop, •
8arpa aafd. •Sometlmel I wQI
do lunch duty to the kidl
out lde or th duatooGi ••• 10
malr.e lhcn1 ~ youie not ......
I ~but IOmeat>e tJ:wiy can
t .. to.•
()altf Pdot PRID E OF T H E COA!)'f TOURNAMENT Su11daf, ~ 13, 2003 1$
TARS
Continued from Bl
<J101 l'>top and kl•t•prng lw. fool on the
l>;ig a-. Nn"po rt I !arbor -.enior right-
' h;111drr Hyc:ll1 I lt•cn.111 rc1ired the 'ide in
ordl'r IO lwgm a Newport p1tchmg
<;I r111g of four .,1r..ugh1 c;hutout innings.
I h't·n;m l<l'>ll'd 1 nmngc;, givmg up
11111} onl' earnt.•d run and four hit'i,
while .. 1nlu11g oul one and \\itJk.ing two.
(..anlarcUa workl-d the final l.Y.. mmngs
fur tht' ..ave. pum-htng o ut five, yielding
l\'\O illl'> and \'\1gghng o u1 of -;om e
tough ~pol ...
After (..illlla rrlla rt'h('VC'd I lccnan in
rht• fifth w11h one 0111 a nd •~<> runners
.ihoard. he <,Int< k out CdM'<; Josh Brad
hury, 1ht•n \V..1lk<·d R.irrett Sprowl to
In.id tlw h.i'><'" On a lir-.1 -p1tc h fa-;tbdll
t o < dl\1 dcan up h11ter Todd Macklin.
< u11.1n·ll.1 furred turn into an mmng
t'111l111g pop11µ
t ilM .1dut·u a run in 1hc .,ix1h on
~e1 11111 11>-u, Hhou(''. HBI .. mwe 10 ttn
1er licld 'rn1111~ l'yler 1.t·ni... LdM\
Ryan Kelly. howl'Vt'r. reached !>afely on
strikt• three whe n <1 pltr h caromed to
out CdM leadoff h itter Ke ith Long 10
!.lop the threat.
"Joey came in and did a great job
closing it ou1. He got out of a courl(' of
jams and hac; been pitching reaJ well
lately." said Newport I I a rbor < .oac:h
Joel D~guin, whose team improwd to
5-10 and will play Dana Hill' on Mon
day at home ITT the quarte rfinaJc. .ti 11
a.m ., while the Sea King<i faJJ into the
consolation bracket cUld will ho'il Bol..:1
Grande a t 11 a m. Monday
"We made som e cliticd.I error'> .md
didn't hit the baJJ well," CdM <oath
Jo hn Emme said. Cantarella .. tiuwd
the baJJ down our throa1s. so 10 'flcal.
He did a great 1ob."
Adding to the tension in 1he wv
e 11th, CdM's Bradbury opened w11h a
single to center, bringing the pu1cn
lial Winning run to the plate in
Sprowl, the Sea Kangs' No. 3 h1 l lt'r.
But Cantarella struck out ~prowl
swinging, then retired Macklin on a
screamer to center field. where lorrey
was perfectJy plated. Can1au:lla
e nded matte rs by. fittingly. 'tnlung
out Wess Presson.
"They did a good rob I hey heal
us," Emme said of the Sailor!.. who
made all 1hree o f their e rror., in th1•
fir>t inning as the Sea Kings took an ll thr ha< k.~lop, "t'lllng up a til')l-and
1h1rd .. 11ua11011 Hut Cantarella <>truck
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
t•dfly 3-0 lead
Muk.,crjian. h11weve1. launched a 2
,uHI 1 pilt h O\t·r 1he left-lil'ld fenrc
1w.1r thl' foul p ule to tKllllt' a '>t1dde11
rall v.
Left Corona del Mar's Tyler Lents
(22) scores ahead of the throw to
Newport Har bor catcher Jeff
Sanchez The run cut Newport
Harbor's lead to 5 4, the final score
in Newport's favor
Below. Corona del Mar pitcher
Blake Contant. left. and Barrett
Sprowl scramble to f 1eld a bunt
single by Newport Harbor. which
went on to win the game 5-4 . in
the first round of the Pride of the
Coast Tournament on Saturday on
the Sea Kings· diamond The Tars
will host Dana Hills on Monday 1n
the champ1onsh1p quarterfinals.
Wt· had th.ii bt~ '"' out ra lly 111 the
fourth w1lh Karo l\t,t.k-.,•rjtan Ma.rung it
ou1 with u homt' 1 ur1. thl'n we got ,1
rnuplt• or hll'> and then gOI five nlll'>,"
l>l''l{lllll '><lld "Oh\tt1U'>ly ICdM re
lwvt>r Bldh < 0111<1n1 did J greal job
\"hl'n ht· t.1111e 111 It \\ .i.' .i H'r\ hig win
\11} tune I tan ht'al tlit· I mmt dyn .t'>I\,
''' h1K It\ ~rt:al lor lht· program and
grt•a1 rur thl.' ~lh ..
Above. Newport Harbor's Josh
Bradbury chases down a hard-hit
erounder from a CdM batte r
<..1m l.llll J It'll hJ11t.lt-1 <,lruck oul
c1gh1 in three in111ng, ol rchef lie
f.t n ncd thl' .,,de 111 lht· fihh .md 'ev-
l'nth In thl' 't'H'tlll . 1 mt.mt 'ilruck
ou1 '\e\'\-pon I l.irh111 ' ""'· .!.. 3 and 4
h1ttt·r., ~"llh 1lw ba-.t·' In 1d1·d. 'parkmg
.1 hot'>INllll'> < d~I I• •n h l11r 1hc hol·
torn of tlw '>C'\l'nlii
Pride of the C~sl lvUfTlament
Fim rou " Newport Harbor S, Cl>rona del Mar 4
Score by Innings
NuwlJ(Jn OO<I ., ~ 1
CdM i0t. 4 b
HNmt1n CJlll ""''" ., r oCJ :::-• hul Dun/fH' Cor'ldnt ISi trui Kell\ / -He. •n L
011n1Pr S11 l<1'1l,1•P• ~ ;!!,! S.1c·~, INHJ HR
Mahf!q1.in "Iii 1
MUSTANGS
continued from BI
Ill 11
lt1·1 .m. ~"h" n•lw' t'd -.1an£•r I•"'" 1 Coupt·r 111 .. 1.1n !ht•
' •ull fllirt•c..I lht• hr..,I l\'\O ha1
1. r.. ht f.ttec..I
Bur lw \'\Jll..l'd tht• 11n1 1hrt•1·
I 11t rr'> and lht•n Jt11111ir Ryan
11 ·ndri~ k' n11lt•c11•d what
pr. . t d to lH' lhl.' g.111w \\Ill
•.1 'h RR I alter bt:ing h11 hy llH•
"'' l Ii k1 111.in !.I nick OUI !Ill' llCXI
halter to end 1lw um mg M £><,il
111 1111 1 p 1hht·r l1.:1ry c.mv;ih•J'
,·anlt' lJll Ill lht' fifth Jll<I Wl'lll Oil
111 rrun tllt ''" hallt'r' ht• falt·d
111 hLc; !Wo .,hutoul in ning' of
work
hit plaY'>' 1uc;1 happen I1rnt\
par1 of b.L'>t.'b.tll •
lk.il'> wa' rt•femng to the top
of 1he '>L>.th mnmg, when the
\.lu..ian~s hJd 1ht: ha..ec; load~d
wllh om· 0111 but th e Ldncer;
1 ,mu• up \\Ith .1 ilouhll' pla\ Ju11
1.or third ba.,t•man Dann} <..ara1a
heldt·d a w11u11dbaU t.:tgged the
h.i~ for lhl' fortt' and made the
q111t k rhrow 111 fir.,1 10 end the 111
111ng
.. 1 hal \"a' ii rt' ally dutrh pla\."
( arl,bad C..o.1c h Randy Da\ Ila
-,.ud "( "''J \fr<wi made '1lffil'
good dcf('n'1\t' pl.i'r' and 'o did
Wt' Wr go1 a rl.'rtlly well·pllthetl
s:amt' !rum our '>uphomore
1< ody 1 .rnr.ihr.m.i ·
92 plll ht· .... \\hit h kat urcd en et·
ll\t' l 'UrH hath lit: \'-•.1.'> t><1dr.ed
b\ .1 lldt:11w thdt produt ~d thn't.'
doublt' pld)'>
Ahl'• l ~'''d \lt'..a came up
c,hon 111 tht 1 •fl 111 1he '1xth m
0111~ C .m1.tlir .in.1 rt•urt'tl the '>Ide
Ul order 111 1•11tl lhi:: game The
'I. lu~tang ... "111 n·turn 10 anion in
tht• Pndl• of lhl' ( .ci.L'' Toum a
mcnl \1ond.i\. at .! rm . f.:tctng
tilt' \11"'1un \ 1q11 ">.mllaJ(o lu-.er.
JI ( O'>ld \le'>..1.
Pnde of ltle Coast T~
Arst round
C.rtsbMS 2. Cost.a Mesa 1
ScOf'e by lnmngs Mesa 100 00< o , 1 1
Carlst,ad 100 1 • 1
PHOTOS av Sf AN 1• "We plltlH-d well." Dt·.11' urd.
We played '"ry wt•ll ln11 ldc1U
< ,1111ahrana improved 10 ·i .!
on tht' season after h 1' '>Ohd
1 ompll'tt• game perform,mce
I h' 'can c n.•d .,rwn h11i;.. 'truck
oul four and \\.alked one, u ... mg
Cooper Suhr1111 131, Go11aiel lbl and
N Hunll•r C.nworan1111rid McClung
I/It Cant<1bran., 3 2 l -Beltran 28
BPltran CM1 McClung tCI
Above. Carlsbad's Mark Montgomery makes the tag on Costa Mesa's Alex P!sarskr at second t>ase
Saturday Costa Mesa lost, 2-1. Below. Costa Mesa's Dan Bitler, nght, puts the tag on Car l:,b"d's
Montgomery on a safe return to first base Saturday.
-sgges
.. &UP
MountlnltbelMdr'l I ..... atrL
4t'IRES
Oftw .... Oft
Mlecttnl:
1ts/71R11
171/1CMt11
1Ml701U4
s .. Oealerahlp for price & details on tire alzes.
Offer valid with coupon. Expires •t 15/03.
Motorcratt-
011 and
Fiiter
Change
PRllE OF 1l£ COAST
TOlRWIENT
Saturday's results
N4-wpo11 Ha<bo< !>. won• do I Mei 4
Pionroca 7. Esi•noa o
ar111bad '1 c.o.t. Ml'Slt 1
LOJO< ~"19>5 1. C"<Ml'll Ii
Gorden Grove 7. Meyf.,, 6
San I lemente 14 TtlSO<o ~
O.•w H111t 14, 8olM Gr-If' 0
Sef11Jlt(IO !>. M•oon lfletn 4
Monday'• games
CM<llP<Ollllfilp.,...,...,.
I Dane H•11t M Newpott Hllfbo<, 11 em
l ConeolMloft bndi9I
llolu "'--•Coto• dll M... 11 •.m
M•io<\ VMjo et eo.t. Mme 2 p m
<AMN • E.-.ntlll. 2 p m -------
"The Art
of Making
Pizza"
WE OE LIVER NIGHTLY
5.9 PM
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LARGE PIZZA SMALL SALAD I I • BUY ANY MEOILJll,il PIZZA &
I . -GET A Sfl.1AU.. SAl..AO OF I
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• •UbjecMo the foderal 949-137-7070 •a" Hou$mg At l of 1968 -.•rld-dlo.c.,,. :'J \ amended w hich AtSOlUTlGOU>MINEI ,make~ 11 1ll•11al to 60 vendin1tm•chines
1111dvrrltse "any Jlrefft with ucellenl loc•llons
'ent e, llmlt at•on or ~ $10,91.!i 8J0.234.Q'l82
:d1scrlmtnat1on based on A DEAL WITH SIZZUI
,,raLe, color, rel1111on. ,._, Eun $l,800 $2,200 a
oh and1cap, famtltal 'talus week? Work • 6 hr 5./wi<
""' national ort111n, or an Rntoc:k local BATH & ~ntentton to make any BOOY rle SO dn O.AC ,•uch preferonce, llm1ta C M 800 190 7<XJ7 24 hts/
,11on °' d1•• 11m1nallon • • 1~·~ · • Thi$ new\paper will
'!lot ~nn11naly accept
:Sny advul1semrnt 10<
tfHI e•late whlCh " 111 ..,1olatton of th• law Out
tr eader s are hereby
;mf0<med that 111 dwell
,•n&\ adverti,ed 1n lht\
tAewspaper .ore nalleble
"on an equal opp0< lun1ty
)>•\·~
, Io Lompld1n of d"
..-11m1n•lt0n. c.111 HUO toll
fret' 11 I 800 424 8590
1483
64M922'e
>SOUTH cgAsT AUCTI N
22'2S.. .. lt. ._._CAt2701
~~-' ....
1505
.... , 10--4/7, •Professlonal m•keup :<AY. bill* M.c boJ, I'• I'
, l,ost tn Costa Mase by
• f airvlew off Clw'lslOJlh8r
•ln Reward 949 350 7600 ·-iiiiiiiiiilliiilillllillill :~~ENT
:$ERVICES 2600
;Mllallaneous
•Smlca 2605 ·-------; ...... -,,,,.. UClllnl ,re(r.. lontr l•m position ,Wolnlf\ ~ wens P/T •oublde ....,. MMS7 l!i61
AM VlNOING IOUTl
II> ~ Ur1lb.. Ptwne to
C..bon\. $9415() 11--.1 25~
down WK-llX).~9311
Real Estate
Wanted
WANTIO:
3 Of '°' """8 v. de Home r1ur OK May Trade
Hutt.ti Hu1d1!nson
S.~Proi-t-
949-37&-0664
Offke ta •"-• Quiel,
prtmf' Nf'wpo<I Bell loc
by pl Qllr-.e, OSlJ\Af &
Incl Sl50/mo 949 64!> 7883
t !OM£ SI-OR SAi. E
ORANGE 5400
COUNTY
Balboa Peninsula
* Mt Lk1e4-W~I
Balboa Peninsula Pont location, 48r 2Ba. pall of
ocewi flom root top did!
SI ,8>,ID> T •• kmstr<>f1fi
... c:lwl 949 689-1008
Aow11-.f'I.,...,._
NlWlN~D
VIEW DUPUlt
AT THI SAND I
AOT. 94'-72!-1120
Corona del Mar
VI••• Oaf•r•I 4•r
4..S~ Otun 111ews and
er•nbelt _..,. of Bull
Culy Open floor plan,
bl..,,, IOd ktht 3 le
declu., lUflll• cO\lnt.-s,
tn1rb6e llt• .en H.uana
• 185 llnd Hady Chllhlne di.I, 310 376 l!IJ71
IUHONIWIU
HOMlS Ovenuld Corner
CdM Vlttace Location Sl.179,000 BJ Jotloson,
949 721.01H
Prudentlel Cellf Realty
o,.. "-· s-1-4. 174 I Deffo41t 28r/deR,
ouen/colf couru view,
slnrte level $775,000.
B J .lohMOIV Ptud c. Rtty 949-721.0IH
,....,.,,Ans
PATitlaftlltoa
UTIOWWIDI USA Ht-H6.-97H
www p1lrldt1nota.com
On,.
ow. ..... c-...
"'••• ... Spacious 2br
....._,, 11111. .. ' ~ 2 5be, 2c •It pt, pvt 1M•tt• Ml.J lrlg, SIOOO lard end 1118wll!j tledl.
101 111949 ~14 111 '19,000 •II John hffow tu-m MJl
R#Blf1/ 38 ...........
='METAlJ
• • ·-------
'
lUGAHT 4HDltOOM
HACHHOMll
Mote the spec:All ,._.es
of this~~
home wrth a r.-e. exlr-a
~ "WtMte pldlet 1encecr y.d!l This sturt-
,.. and spadOojS ei-n.t
krtcn.n wil luYe ~
breathless. Rein by the cozy-warm. doollla-aded
rock liraplacel nm open
and W'J home IS~
sun-filed wrth dual l*18d.
Freodl windows and
doors. P.,,.,..-)'CU'S4llf 111
the newly remodled cus·
tom ~ inc:Mlln& • r•
laxinc deslfpWlr JacUZZJ tub! u.ree private master suite
wrtll lr-anqui off'~ hode-
awayl Awwd....,. ....__._..,c.,a _.,... ...... ..........
~{IU)JOI 4661 Antt ........ .._
0-............... .
MwtWNewl
OMlY $409,9001
Tw pleasln 111 the --~ -6' thlS ~bmly~
Ptoucly errbirtawt psts
~byrustom
...,...._such & News
~ Ot6an'C '*. ""' wood lloomc. 5~
~ and a raclantly
wsm lirepac;a. Be imp.ad
to PM1l8 ~ tn the
deslplS rernocWed bsths.
Su-w!)'-brVft 1'JDCIOIJ5 ~ luldlel1 wtll dlllill'lt
)'CU d-'! Ran~
PllC'9 to store ycu
worlcly possewonsr n. .... ...,_...,
...... "-"ry ... ~ ..r... ... -.... .
~(llS)JOI ... . Ard, ........ "--
• Ult u...40... ......
...... 40 Old COlne Rd.
~~Modet. 4Br-+tc ok, outdoor Fp &
island 88-Q. lime! Ill
S-1.849,(Xl). Melndl Frolq
9l&U1 .5611) ' l lrl A. Hwclla ~UDI
._....,~
P--'cVlew
o~ par11 buultful
lu'n-key twnhm, 111911ded
thruout. hrdwd fh, bev·
.-S Class ch, •lllllt•,
tWW pela windows, 2
mar1>le tp•s. '""' COiis. ,u.-d pt.d. $849,tlXl
9664G9306
u-.. ......,_, far
$95,000. Bayside V ...
•XO. 300 E COl5t Hwy Chwnwlc Mobile Home
l8r 2ba. approx 162Dll,
23 yHr leue $784.
MIC8612. C11 Flo ~
7256. Cott.eo Homa.
•ONfTA CANYON
Of'lN SAT-SUM 1-S
10 wi.tlwep
38R, 2.58A home Sep·
arate offlce/cuest suite
By Owner· Reduced to
Sl,135,000
949-644-8288
0111 HMO HAO
L•.c•t Batbo1 Model,
llOOsf, 4& J.58•. 3c r•.
lllnclsceped prd, .,...t
locetlon near park.
Sl.l50.000. act O.eca
949--71J.9014
, •11&~
58r 4.5lla llom8 Oft • ta
lat. ....... tnd Pf .... un II dDwt1lbh i.
Sl,195.000 LH. Andlot PtaprilS 9&73).3900
( UllltrWlolla .... o,,.. ...... •••• Many Pl , ..... ......
DIE.~ttwy
~~~
,,_tlSTAflS
PA T1llCX n.llOlll
llAnoetW .. USA .. ,...,.....,.,
www.jllllTidlMnore.com
O<U .. OWT 1M.OCIMVllW ... ..... Aef. St4t~71J.411 ..
U90 nu MOltll
HAVAIUU UITMtel ,_. ..... ,.... •••-t1a .... s1
., .. -Hnor'"'9w 1(111111 r., Git .,.,,.,.
COMM pool/\oe/tennl• ~10,000 ......... 7.Q
..... r..
SOOS·SISO
EmOP1AH STYU 11111111
..... '" the h!lb ~ tookln& the -l8r. off a. cu-ct-pbld rat>
ulous lot W/S(la. C..M lot
mppt. IC!. Steflnle .......
!M9--71$-3156
'MTmA' lM llbo¥e ttw
clollds With -.. -. 2Bt, den. newly remodeled
lutdwi, pied c:ommurvty.
$851,000 act sw-
Mllr• 949-715"3156
rtliMllSTATlS
PA.TIKI TIMOlll
NATIOMW'IDI USA
949_.S ... '705
www.patrlcktenore.com
rttlMllSTATH
PATaKI TINOtu
NATIONWIDI USA
949-156-9705
www.ptltlcktenon.com
Tllldn Ranch
• lUSTIN HtiS located
on one of the most
buuCllul cul de ye lllrMb
ltlls tltbubn. 48r pool
home olfer'5 • spa, IJ'ltSS
.... patios and total
prlv1cy Offered at
S 1.175.000. aet l isa C
Gt.-i 71~7121
RESORT/
VAr.ATION
PROPERlY
FORSAl.£
oa.t Pr"'8ftY 5960
ATTNt DISlllT LOVaS
.... VANWUIN
DYSON & DYSON
#O-S1 ... USS
1M>-11S-nn
GOU ,.....las Sein
& WW1ler renUb. P elm
5p'"~ Palm Oewt Also
Washlncton Waterfront
Referrlls. MichMf Ant.-...._, ...._.,.,
#0-.SSO-nU
MISCEWNEOUS
ROOALS
Rental To Shire &030
NI Sltw• M-w Jlf'
house prlnte room/bath
$550/mo + 1/3 utlls,
fem 1nf 949·887 1472 •
RoomlbRn -
Index
·)7 . . .
. ·' .. . . .
.........
I ... ' I
a.<-1e~a....4
2 I.& Br. 2 ... be, 2< ""· I l50sf. wd th. Le pMio, ~be W50rn ,.,
......... !>115 714-962·7366
G.wa-yT....._
w/pool JBr 2 5Ba
w/panoremlc sunseb
Ofte>n Pvt, qooet toe.
S2991Stm T 714-812·56611
ComMesa
l 'tl4e .... lay uppet
21>1. Ire enclosed pabo,
SI095mo 329 University
Umt J. 949-574-2031
.. _ ..... & a..-1
Pvi J.o"lea, pt.eel. ~.
2Br w/huee bonus rm. 3 hAI ti.. 2c p , I bll lrom
twys Stll!l!im !M!MlJ.64.18
• ......_ F ......
~ LA. ._, 22!11 LI
f'll1a No $2BJlno. Va:artt ~ ....... ~
............. ~74
l'eW. 2 Stwy 4bf, Jba
'-· c1en. 2 c ,. • r p. hwd
""" • llwla en. encl Piii!>/ yd, prdlinw $3iOOrn 714-
437 'HT1. cal 714-856-1428
Privet• Dr 21• "-
on Santa An• Country
Club at Mnt~s Ctrcle
Oen, 2-car 1ar. patio,
S2800/mo, available now
9&466-9427 41S-289«ial
Hldlnglon Beach
'-• 3.!il>a Sf'R, mod
kild\ hdwd ~. rftq> ....
IMnl hk14>, 2 c I" w/1Ult
s.YiOO ~3-71D>
lrvtne
Twtf• l.dl Pt. 2Br
2.5be with loft/office on
corceou • erunbelt
w/views $2550/mo •rt
949. 7 2(). 3900
Nwtt. le...tlfaf 2i.r _., new blllh. hrclwd
"""p, ~ W/sm ..,.. Slmn 9«MM-74155
o.t.4 < ...,. • a. Slrldt story hou9, 2·
c.-.tt pr• A.IC. no pets
S-2250/mo 949 760 1219
...,. ........ I.& 2Br
281. c1n rm, II*, Ui150d,
2c prt.c. ocunw. ... Ill
bell S2300n. 91»598-9347 ....,_ ... w...
2nd "' condo, 2tx 2ba. new pajnt/apt, pied ,,. •
S2!0kn ~. SIJ.311-6222
......., ...... lrc 3Br 2.5Ba w,+etre.t en ,_,
awrm. wfpool. IP8+ pllt YJrd. $DXVmo. lilt. "*!di Tenant ~ ............... -. ... JAr + den 3Ba, ,.. ~
2• c.-. ;i. pirbo, 1.119adt
s.111XVmo (949)646-8473
IAYRlONT w/a-Dodi ~ unit of ~·. 2 blodls to buch 3br 2ba.
Ip, W/O. Iii •-dedl, lea pr. Sl600/mo lnclds
ut1s & dodl 949-Sl<Hi601
~...._.&
~ vtaw.. 3Br 38a
Avail t.by 10 -luly 31
S9900/mo. 949 2.33~146
Newport Coast
2lr ~ 2c ..... fli*;.
pted 'frovan" T CIWl'lhcwre
S2.4!l5m. v-c (eel) 949--
:1)6-25.26, ~l •a41t-c-4o ~-hlbe May
lJly furl\l'unfum S3200m. 'r .. 13l'Dn 1w.MQlJ
ReReabWanlld .,_
WMmD I ar 2Br Apt. ~ ar condo. flan or
unbn en ~ 8-:11.
W. sloi limo or ..,,..,
...... Howe amlll wall ,,,.,...., w..tla. ,....
-..... m-521).8116
Se your
unwanted
Items the
easy way I
Place a
Class If led ad
today I
9 642-5678
Under the Service Directury B a1111L'r
Reach 80,000 Homes Each Week
For Only $32 per week (4week minimum)
(all Lorraine at (949) 57 4-4245
9000 AllUJdwl --._.. ....... '97 LS
Sl.Sk, ... llC, ps. pw •
Mytess entry llllrm. ed.
mocMYool, ·~ p/p •
$95(X) 714-.)34.2528 etl
.._.. ....... '97 LS
S3.5k. ... ac:. ... pw,
keyless entry Minn, al,
moonroof. •-c:ood. p/p
$95(X) 7 I 4-334-2528 cal
...... '99 A4 Q-'fr• 2.8 V6, 2911 ectuat m1.
auto, ~etklinc red/sr•y
llhr. mnrf. CD. looks & ~melts new V456721
St7.995 lln1ncln1 avail,
Bkr 949·Sl6-llll
-·~···Cwvetta '00 Vt White/
Do4t• '91 c ......
Voy•c-V6 wll1ta, ir•y
Int. pn stau, 1•acact.
non/srnllr. lltl• new ~Of)d
v457275 S-5995 Ski. 9&
586-lB www~
D•4t• 't7 ltmopl.t
Sport 3 5 V6, 4711 ml,
whltl/tr•Y 1111, Cat 8Ced.
n/1, like new 16495
ltn1nc1n1 & wan nall
8 "' 948-586-18118 -. ..-..-
DOHI NICMI '2000
S<».+ ml, lOOI< lac wan .
5 sp, blue, crey Interior
1m fm cd, tie.I CJr1111
cand SG5 h\ .. _.
~ VW>192 9&5518M -·" "-
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii-iiii I .~;.. I CUIKAl
Need full 11111• per"M>n
to an1~t with varooul
duhH "4ust be able
tan, auto, handelln1 i>k11.
12k mllu, $32.500 obo
Newport•-~
909·240-0030 cell
Leaw '99 UJOCI 56.Sk
m1, •Int cond, \llv• /
rrey IHlh•r interior
$24.500 949-633·5434
.... "00 ...... a.-.-
6cyt, 2 wd. 3611 actual
ml, t1lur/1rey Int,
alloy•. f ebulous IM.e new
unm1rlled cond, :;~ff.
Win ..,.., v 7517'lJ ,...m 8llr 949·586 1888
w-.e<pei.l.c-
to Input 11 tent
50wpm accurately on
computer, pouen
1tron1 c ustomer service ~tullt, and be
~ndable S9 Per
hour E 1cellent ben
efrt pac••1• ( 0£
S.Rd re\Ume to Judy
Oelt1n1, c/o Oa1ly
Ptlot, 330 WHI Bay
Street. Co,t1 Mesa,
CA 92627 or email to
~.a.nrc@'*'-mm
~ .......
Work I 'lrno6/'f' Positions
•Vll!Wlle c:loM to home
Co T t udl Bonuses. Ben
dib/401(1\) 714 Sl!>-4179
JOIN OUR TEAM and
mah• • dlttefence. In the
C•llfornl• Army N1tlon1I
Guard you can 11et
money for 'olleC• and
catHr lrainlnc. Call I
800 GO CUARD
(CAl •scAN)
SEU
your unw1nted
Item' throuch clawfted
-------------
TODAY'S CROSSWORD ANSWERS
ca/,_ w/,... ...., llnpoltBadt
sh.-• pr. 1\1'""*&/eats. STARTING Jn W Bay Av~ 511
~ 949 646 9412
l 'SIDI CM Twnhme
Greil private rm/b1,
vwy tlHn 1ar. w/d,
n/pets/smkc, femele
prerd S700mo+ 1/1utto
'4t-H6-406S
AfSIOENTlAL RENTALS
ORANGE 7400
COUNTY
Balboa
BallloaPlnllala
OCIAMVllW /Prl•a
r.-..1=1· "'· p prq. peta,
SI ,!550/mo. M!J.
r
IAY .. ONT
ON LIOO PENINSULA
NEW21r21e
conAGH
PrtVllol Beach, Pool
ind Spa Wilk to
OcHn, Shops and
Restaurants lHM
8/mo 2yr • 801t Slip A11aillble
110 uoo PAii oa.
949 673·6030 or
949-723-5830
* YuatY * UASIS
BILL CRUHOY REAt. TORS
Ht-67S41'1
w .......... .....
Da ... 1 & Br.
lO¥lfy c.i Cod styli
~ Rtmodellcl ., ..
_...,~ .. emit ... dlw, • lrllldl
w/d. •!At St •2Br
$1.2915 v 14)=!!!=1592
' .......... 2Br LS.. dun iqw unit,
cllc*. •Id. wood lh. p ,
1150CVMo 714-JIO..M77
...... 2llr lN $f R Clltt tote, nu pMit, 1111 !Nllo/ ~ ' & ~1-'!!""' .... 'ttlll00to-.1J.7IOO
,...., remo4 S ~· c.C!Me, 2 c ..,-. p•tlo, wd..1..~~A11••S-l •t.ulle. ... llf.JM4 ....... --.. """" ........ ~ =-~.::Iii
-
ANEW
BUSINESS?f.
• • • • • • • • • •
Tht Uglli Departmmt at tht Daily Pi/Qt is pleastd to announce a new servit:t
now available to new businasts.
WI wiU IWW SEARCH tht name for you at no exmz charge. and saw you the
time and tht trip to the Court HoUSt in Sanlll Ana. Thm. of count, 11ftn tht
1t11rch is complettd wt wiU file your fictitious.business name stlllnnmt with tht
County Clnlt, publish once a wult for four Wttlts as rtquirtd by '4w and thm fik
your proof of publkati4n with tht County Clm. ·
• , • .
Please stop by to fik your fictitious business TflltmJmt at tht Daily Pi/Qt, 330 W. :
Bay St, Coslll MnL If you cannot stQp by, please ca/J us at (949) 642-1321 anJ Wt •
wi/L maltt """nKtmmts for you to handlt this prottdMrt by mlliJ.
If you shou/J have any forthtr quations, pkast calJ us and wt wiJJ bt mort thtln
giaJ Ill 4SSist yo11.. Good Luci in your new busint.W
Pilot
• ·:
.... ----------------------------------------------------------------------~
I t
........ ._
~· .. This •• ,... ClnliC
Rad w,l\lwl i.ttw Boa. .... tpMd
(116113) S21.91K>
-~-RSSAMO'OJ
IMdy for llTlfMCbt.e
dlllvwy-ful feel wvr
~w/Ch¥c~
(I 9.309C) IHQUIRU$ ,......, ....
C...-'eA......a. +iurry b ltllW perfect
low nlilMel. local one ~nmos
UASl•IUY
'49-574-7777
....uPSAllTO
;'Su .........
CREYIER "' '. ___,, -""' ...... . . .
02003
.. COCffR 'BRG'
l.lllhw & llrtn.ln PKG.
LEAS( fOfl
i1~
PER MOHTH + TAJt
1 Al These T sms
<kl~-Cndit • OTIIRAT
SM.M SAW«iS! .......
+ 98c lJ?llO due et llcJllna '8 month doMd end lea1e no se<Uftly
ffpo$rl. lOK mrle~ per
7•11 Eacna m1ln @>
.ZQe per ml .. ( TC42279) •
LITS ll1TOR!
IT'S~ •••••••• ~FTmAY@mtm
SMTAWAIJTO Ml
(Ill) 123-9808
:sn.DlrldDry
·Am I I
Celifornla law re _..,. tNI conlrK
Ion tMI'"' )obi tl11t
tobl SllOO Of -· ' (lebor or mat•llh)
.. licMsed by !tie
, Contrectors Slate
• Uc-Board Stale
• i.w ebo requires tNt
' cOfftrecton Include
• ttlOir bt10 number
, ee .. edv.rtlU!c. You
• CIHI chodl ttle status
• of 1011• licenud
co11tre ctor el
tfWw.cslb u .• ov or I00-321 ·CSL • Unit
conHd contraetora
to.1111 Jobe tlllt
tote! teas Ui•n $SOC>
mu1t at.tto In their
•dv~tl .. m•nls that ! tho1 ... , not llc.onsed by Ulo Controctora Stet. lic.nte llo«d.• ·--------:u···· : ......... .
:· ,, ,, ... ..,.... ........ r.,,, .. ....., .,._..,., .......... :•ri ·••13G9D :· 6# , I
• -
MR Rl INOM~N
Ncilher vulninble. Nonh deal>
WE.\'T ; ? 105
NOllTH
•ICJ73 AK
AIO
•Q864
() 0 J 10 9 2
•IC J 10 5
SOUTH
• A8 .
F.A~'T
• 9 6 .. 2
1()864 2
86
•9 J
I'> J 109 7J
"'7 s 4 ' •A 7 z·
~~inbsr SOVOI W1B1'
2NT ,._ J Dbl ltAlbl ,_ p-....
Opening lead Queen of
The probkrn " llOI 1e&rn1na • com
pbcaled pil1nCl'Stup \y<>lem -II Ii n:memberin& II I ThJ~ tlcAJ is from I
majar Eu.ropcan pall C~CN.
South's three d1umund5 wu 1
ll1mlcr to hearb and "onJi'-s R!dou-ble. by pllltDerJup agrttmml, dented
lhRe bCaru .. h1lc <Jio.,.,ing l*O o( the
three l()p diemontl honor~ .. II IS OOl
deer whechcr South'\ pau or the
redouble was becau.o;c he forp the11
methocb and mis.r;ed llJ1 ea< y duee DO
trump or dccw:d to roll ~ dice in 1
momenl or spring maJncss
The opening lead or the queen of
dwnonds WI.\ .. oo ,.,,th the lma end
declarer tncd tu ce\h U-0., ace end king
o( hc.oru We"' rufleJ !hr:: ling wlll
conhnuc:J .,.,,lh !hr Jlll.1' ot dllUflUfltb
lu lhc -.:c
Oc.l.!artt cume .,, hmd w1th the ace
of •l*k\ and ~·intinlle\J with a \(>lldt'
to the ,ack. w~h held rhr Ion& of ~ w" c:&.>hcd for 1 l:lub di~ rrum h.intl IUld the: l<!M spade Wll\
rutfcd with the: i.<:~en IUld uvt:mlil'cd
with lhc ~ Wc>I tJtc.,., the remam-
'"IC 11\JlflJ>'>, !ht ddcnJm>' tlurd tnck
11nd rcdocinl! 1hc h.md 1t1 tlm poo.111("1
w11h WcM on lead ·-
·-
• K J 10 5 SOtml ·-J 10
•A 7
. -()8
•'iJ
WN kd .i k1w duh. dumm}°'
queen w1nmn1 A cluh lo !ht-.iLe pro
\ ldcd the entry IO tht de ...al h4nd to
lead the 1.:l of hcam •~'' .,.,oo v.1th
lhc qUClCll. but v.as fon.:J to n::lum .i
hcU1 and dcdl&la'\ ten lieuinc the
fullillmg !rid._ Plus <>40'
Take llllOtheT ~ JI the: iliJgrnm
If West lcaA the long 111 duh-.. 11
re~~ lhe C'Olr)' 111 \(ru1h' h.Jnd
bc(Ott B hc<in lnCk h.J, hl..:n ~\lah
llshcd, and the defendc'r. mu't tome
to ™'O more tncb nu nuttc:r ho11. dee 1arct proceeds.
BOAT REPAIRS/
SERVICES '99 ·-··· w...., .•• 23k m1. (4fZPl l7) white Wanted 9045
w/t1n lulhe1 . $16.62S --------
BOATS SUPS/
MOORINGS/
LAUNCHING/
STORAGE (949) 6'S 2579 PP
Unc '02 N..,,l .. t0<
30lo. mo. full lact Warr
silver \Ind/Ian llhr CO slacker chrome whls
•••r• seat. ~6n518
$?1 99'.> 111 m. hn & waro
avail 8kr 949 S86 1888
--·~··-Merce4ea '99 U20
l lk mo. whole &rey lthr
mnr I chrome whl\
beeut like new cond
v572241 $25,995 hn .vaol
8lir 9&56& UBI
WWW ff '-
aerce4ea '99 S320
LWB S21r. m1 3 yr waro
n11I 11lnr/blk lthr
beaut or• cofld, 11875241 S2S.995 financins ava~
Siu 9"19 586 1888 __ ....,..."_ ,.,...,wt..c..,..
1H6
white w/full tthr • 191'. m1' 6~dl6l TUfbol
(t19222C) SH,910.
, .......... -c .... .
19'1
Sllv11 w/81eck llhr. S8K
ml, !i speed, lull pwr
('11945) $24,910.
,He&.un4UTO
•0-574-1777
,.,_ CWlllil .. , -mr.Wlll~q
-· ,_ IJt. ,.. bnNI !we. $111Xl 9'9~
,..,_ c...919 .. ' 9!lk ,.,.. ..,.. ~.or.
-· runs IJt. ,_ br ..... Ina .. $1800 96f.44-4l!l89
CASH FM CAIS Wl NHD YOUtt CAI
PAM> fOll OI NOT
PttaWSAUTO
AS« fOl &UCOLM
949~574-7777
BOATS
9515
lift Dolfly '90 ~It
recondilion In '02 $I O.<D>
Boal '" Hvnmetoo Hal boLW .... ID>-476 8895
'01 O.,ffy 21 like new
Premier pwr 1)1111. s tereo/
CO, nevy top w/'1 sunrk
fflll w~r. leak aalley
lat*s, $27 :m 9'9-e-9'l(X)
1 Jft •i. ... ._ W1Mohr
Side console s leering
newet 40 HP outboard
molOf Uud in Ir e\h
waler, alnt cond Ir a1ler
incld $3800/obu 949
675·4606, 800 247 8?09
1"7 11' hffy (lertrlt
._. Greet Shape• $6500
Call (909) 838 6927
21 n .OUFfYIOAT
16 i.tt.rin, CS Voll. Ir C.
MW wnlows, dalrl as ,_..us.cm 81"12.QGt
BOATS SUPS/
MOORINGS/
~UNCH ING/
STORAGE 9680
9680
•loat Sllp-Crr•t loca
l10n' I J' ft !>foam len11th
unhmotrd, in B•Y Island
r.ove • 949-922-7777
U rT SU,. AVAii.AiU
IN NIWPOIT HACH
S2SOO llASE
949·SP0-100S
SEU
,..i.-_ ... ~
• PLUG
IN
Plug into the Pilot
Class1f1ed section to
find serv1Ces from
eledronics and
plumbers. to
landscapers and
painters
O Everyday Is a great day
ln Classified!
Be a pan of It,
place your ad todayt
1949) 642-5678
Daily Pilot
Cla'>s1fred Commu111ty Marketplace
Sonday, ¥'11 13, 2003
TODAY'S SUNDAY PUZZLE
ACROSS
1 lmplteO
6 LOCI! or Q.f1
11 Alp ltVOIJl1!
15 Tangy
20Be crary~
21 •l.Jncie Mlllle·
22 Ski slq>e bum()
2• Nebrasu City
25 Tr.admit UMS
26 Cook 'S Smocil
27 "l..otlerljrwf °' -roeca·
28 Rubens' models
29Name In
arenrtecture
30 Alu abDr
32 0\lerlndulge
34 H..-it and ~
36 ·How - -doingT
37 Otldd y's sister
39 Maureen -of
lheacreen
41 5Prhual natur•
43 C>W:t'• roule
44 Broed-antlefed deer
48 t.\'lter -l.oo6
48 OlwolA petrtlon
50Yatery
53 SleeYe pert
SSPasta
57 StYtnk bad(
611-Won k1n
B2Gl1me
63 Aetd units
65P\.norlg
68Enemy
67 Deep-<ooted tear
69 Fair .flnng letlers
10 Clalt's ·0a,1y Planer
~worker
71 Alrtatious
72 Spllntec groups
74 Srta , In Par1s
76 Cleopatra s wooer
77 Otfloe tlll-ln
78 Sound systems
79 Sampras of tenntS
BO Remain undeOded
81 Insert mark
•33
'"°
148
82Pel1onn
83 RAiied plat1onn
85 Cut of! 19 branches
aeOuter -
eeeraz~
90.Jerk•
91VllfYV13
95 ·11 .. -flill
96 cnocolate c:ancly
97 Gl\lll • a ref«enc:e
96Produoe
Ge TIP genUy
100 Kln'1 per1ner
101 Pasture aound
102 Compelled
104 Unks goal
105 EnaoaehmenlS
1 C11 Harldles roughly
109 Valenllne archer
110 Eight on a amdlal
111 Swarm wttn •
' ,,.2 Aoctc-band
booll1ngs
113 -con ca.me
115 Juan's tathef
1 HI Ashing dev"-
118 Patr1ol -Alen
120 Miid 9Xp6&UYe
122 M1n1t>11nd perl
125 Boom bo>C ll9ue
177 Not better
129 One trom Do#ll
unoer
133 Gym danoe
134 Barracks otts
135 Cl'lew out
137 Honey wine
139 Paid nohces
1..0 Striped stone
142 Water shde
144 In the lead
146 TIJ>e •ophies
148 Etllcal
149 Detested
150 Diameter na 11eS
151 Arts1oaa1
152·w1111 Dan<"
153 Shriveled from heal
154 Walked sotlly
1 50 Mallard cousin'
DOWN
1 Aofida cit'/
2Good-bye
3 Secrewy of State
-Powell
4Rage
5Grumptly
6 Ski Id! (hypn )
7Copy
8Foul~
llMottos
10 Young laay 1n Spain
I t Mello haze
12 Holds ooe s own
13Mellow
14 Fosler
15 Sec10<
16 Trendy meet
17 Mubarak's
ptedecimp<
18Molif
19Nobel1St -Alafat
23derelt&
The Oomnos rune
31 Cartoon str18k
33 Dock denizen
35 Mfld reader
38 Playing cards
«> Port-au-Prfnce sne
C2 Symphonic w ()l:I(
43 Bearded flower
45 Faints w·tn pteasl.fe
47 See eve to eye
49 llTlX>f'Wlt decaaes
50 Metcdc p!'lf1lses
51 WWII sub (h)'Ptl )
52 Brother s child
54S1Jcks up
5e Sign before Vr<JO
58 More agreeaoce
59 Troll's cousin
60 Spnm >e locale
62 Tooder twig
640tthe ~y
65 Twine
67 Slice
68Correct
70 Touch down
73 Very sma I amount
75 Inc cousin
78 CloOling mtegory n saeno.r oanc1e
79 Stdel(ldls
80U.O a~
81 Wattodt I mde
83NCJI-...
8A Egypoan DOV-~
85Aows
86 ~Sh p.gment
87 Fatlbld Mrdlgy
12 wdl )
88 HoAeon basetiallef
89 Byte parts
91 TotaUy laaung
92 Vsy ql.lldl
93 Ramp alternahe
94 Lllce a w°'1 s how!
98 Not aer1ous
97 Make happef1
98 BllClnl IPC)l1er
100 Bmrnan creator
101 P\ne
100 Joc:l•Y'• neeo
1080epoM
107 O'Mtool(
108 1n'911ec:1Lia11
t 10 Cargo haulers
112 TeahovSe nostes886
114 ConstrUCllOl"I wor~er
115 Sens·t>IP.
117 Arrow part
119 Deuce
121 Bond rating
1 :?2 See Wor .o a nract>On
123 ~c:cess the Net
124 Not tiouchlng
126 Aroma1lc c:nernicat
128C~note
(tlyptl I
130 Ballroom nL.lllber
1 31 Flwta IJOn
132 Snake sl"lapes
t34 Vend
136 Yielo
138 McClurg of SllOOmS
141 Mal (rum dnnk)
1 43 COior l!ldO tr lbe
145 Ancient Tokyo
147 Stooge w ltl bangs
HI If
HEALTH AND BuSINEss
A TO Z HANDYMAN
Install, relece c.ablnels
~ nw!!J. llDI.! 71~7Z51 • W4il"u.tt. •
Custom llu1tt ins, Crown
Moldmp, Bese 8oatds
LIS77982 949 709 5642
em,.. ... ~
o CAIPITo c.utHTo
Rec>Hs. P1ltllln1. Install
Courtoous eny sin tofl•.
Wholtulel 949 492-0205
We wlll dclt111 )OUf
pe1'90Ml Ot' coml*'z ~b9ite and put you
Oii.line Cm...11n. You
f111Y only hollina feee.
71Ul.J..2'7U
C...&llllmy
lndil&edts-n. Concretie. Pabo. OrMway
Freplc, ~ Refs. 25Yrs
Ear. Terry 1' 557 7594
~
CUSTOM HaODU A•D DUIGN ALL
TRAOCS, JO YEARS lXJ>
l l 337169 949 631·2345
NOD aon aooMt
AIDlllNS • llEMUl.Hi
L'577982 949.709-5642
.,..,. •• Int
YOU.NOMI
IMNOVIMPT
NOftCTt
Call• plumb«, pelnter. hendyman,
Of 811)' of,,.., .. ,
MrvicH ltslod here In
Oill -vlc• ~toryl THESE LOCAL SVC 1"£0f'l£ CAN Hll,
YOUTOOAYJ
UCINUD CotnUCTott "'° '°° too Vt\ ,,. --' ~ remodel. lam,
" ,.. s-.c !M!Mi6-Jlli6
~
THI Dtf'FUOKI
lllWIDt llAUTWUl
&DOUISITL •Lelle-.._ C-e ....... , ...... ........ '-~ 949-SU-1124
CMnm.,_I
IUl#TrlfAIKf
Ho fOb too smell
h•ythin1 from
Cer1**Y '° p .... rrueshm•t• c ... ..,,.,
f.f!J-ZH-llU
.... , ..
llST MOVW SH/Mr
Hf'tm& ell cities Insured
lest. courteous. cenlul
Tl63M4 800 246 2371
PUBLIC NOTICE The Celtl ,.11bhc
Ut11tt-CommluM>n
reqvlr ts that all ined
household 1ood1
movtrs rront their
P U C Ce T number:
lhnoa •nd chaufft11n
print their T C P
number 1n a" ad¥« llMmenb If yOli hn•
Illy questions el>out
1111 l111llty of a
inov.,, !Imo or
chavff-. cell PWUCUT&mlS coaa11SNNe .,, ..... ,
••
,.,.... ...........
Top Qu•lrty Compehbn
• lntMIO<ll•l ll6&8228
Cell My 949 650 5066
IAllUOW c:ma.I IUllfT
P1Untinc~l ~...,.
Queloty )obi Free at.NI•
L l56'J897 714 6J6.8888
fltlmlli&Dml
•S.-.. .............. Restucco. R_,, Addlllon.
'•lchln1 RHsoneble• 714-9:21 1647 ~,,, ,......
S.C. PAINTING
CONTRACTOA
OOMPETITIVE PRJCE
FREE ESTIMATE
SERVICE • CUAIJTY IHTEGRITY 948-412~
I
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